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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-09-02 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa17 t ' •....-0 •+ a ,..,... -. . • • ·-1n IXOll ee a . . . . " ·--~- llleano Mourners ~Jtoq11-ing Iftto (;dM-· ; .•. .. . . • • ; . . • • • • • • . >::". •• . . - For Salazar Bites . . ,. I ..... . .. • •· ' ' " ... • • .. . • • ---.· Dana Point · Th1ef ·. --'• -,,.. ;• ' - i : lnJUate Charged~~'. .. ---- .. Juclg·· .~. Or.ders " . , DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * . WEDNESD~ Y.AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER .2, J 970 ' . _.._ --. '"' . ··- Us Cl .... . · •· -aoos .. : .. Pl·oof Egypt Bi·oke .Tr:Uce ' . :·. WAS.KINGTON ,(tJ;P[') .- Admlnbtratlon ...., ... , oa»I ,loday ,the United States now bu evidence·of ita own thal EiYJJI and llllllla haye .tolaled the ceue!lre agreement In '11\0 ~ Eul. • 'They aal~ lhla ev~, u ~-~·the· , diplom1Uc coriipllcaUona l~ ,..,,_, ~ dilcUsaed in detail at Pru~ ~11 meettng_ l!l the v.;eatem ·'!"U~ '~ I I • ~~~ites nraw Ma~y Wrom LA Area W .• w· 11d~es~es · · 10_·_.__Two:. Se """"·es~ l· , • . .• . 'l'Ullldal' _>;with ll!! ~~::.1911 -..... tlo' ·~•!ill):" · <.~ov;. ., , , . •-'"" COl)C)1!,11v~ ~Pl'! '----l • m;w~ of --Yeral 1•"4-.; auUalr<\'lft mi,.ilu In ilie l!andollll-oo tbe Welt barit of tbe illili, M iNll M . ' conUDued work on ·aeme. ,ol' the enipjlce!Jlenta w~ich' ,..,;,;, ~;~ ~ ..... By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ) 01 tfM D•!lf 1'1191 ll•ff • ~ Mourners including the poor of the farg~t Mexican-American barrio in the ~orld and White House emissaries Ca.thered in Co11>na de\ Mar tod.aY, for the ftine ral of a man who tried to bridge their two'worlds. . .Last rites !or newsman Ruben Salazar, 42, were scheduled for 4 p.m; at Pacific View Memorial Park. Even as 10-year-old Chevvies and Fords, plus black government limousines arrived at the cemetery, wrangling continued over re sponsibility for the i'ioting in which he was slain. The death toll, meanwhile, rose to two as Angel G. Diaz, 25, died Tuesday night of gunshot wounds in the head at th.e prison ward of Los Angeles County • USC Medical Center. He was shot while driving his car into a police barricade. Mr. Salazar, of 3118 S. Rita Way, Sa,tta Ana. was killed Saturday night when sheriffs deputies fired a teargas missile into a nearly-empty bar and it arnasbed into his head. ·'fhe body lay in state four hours Tuesday at Bagues · &. Son Mortuary in the 'riot-tom East Los Angeles sector that Is home to a million Chicanos. Thousands filed by hifi gray casket., They crossed themselves and cried, or only stared down al the Los Angeles TiJlleS coluni:nist and KMEX-TV news · director who .had championed their cause for a better life. , "\ii.by, brotfiet .. why?" sa:kt one yo6pg Chicano who l>rdte down in sobs and hlad (Ste SALAZAR, Pase Zl Letrer w Lib, G~oup Do~s It By JORN V ALTERZA 01 "" 0.lb' ..... , lf•ff It tobk a letter to the leaders of the women's liberation movement to insure a victory for 50 waitresses at a posh San Diego hote l who will break White House tradition Thursday night and help serve President Nixon and his 600 guests. The waitre.sses, livid at being told by their bosses that men would lake over their jobs Thursday night, took the spoUi&hl away from Cambodia, .the Middle East and even Spiro Agnew' Tuesday as White House aides ·made al! impassioned "clarification" of the biggest headache of the President's current . working vacation in San Clemen e. And the sometimes scathing and plaintive clarification of th e Hotel Del Coronado Hassle domina ted Tuesday's press briefing. · Connie Stuart. Mrs. Nixon 's secretary and head of arrangements for state dinners, wearily announced a 50 . 50 sol ution to a howling C<1ntroversy only women could launch. and other scathing blastll ensued. Some of the spumed ladies started complaining to Women's Lib. And the hassle reaching all the way to the White House grew. "I've been bugged out of mind about waiters and waitresses,., Mrs. Stuart said in rufneH tones. She added that the criticism leveled at the President 'was ''complet e l·y unwarranted and highly unfair." CLEAR IT UP ·She said she would "clear up Che thing once and for all." At least 50 male employes -waiters experienced in serving White House style from huge trays -are being recrui ted through a San Diego waiter's union local, she said , detailing the solution. The gals, she added. will share equally in the duties and will "help serve the meal," Mrs. Stu art said. "If anything, it's called equality," slie added. It's no secret that the huge, plu sh for- mal dinner her boss ordered during his HOTEL CULPRIT trip to Mexico turned out to be a colossal The hotel management, Mrs. Stuart job of work "for the pretty Mrs. Stuart. said brusquely, wa s the culprit in the And the injection of Women's Lib into great waitress war. . the flap makes thin gs even worse. She said the heads of the historic hotel Her feelings about both the dinner and "prematurely" told its · 50 night-shift • the movement came out late lli.!lt \lleek waitresses that they wouldn 't be needed · when the secretary told Joell Soroptimists fOr the dinner. . that the task of organizing the dinner hy The women were creslfallen. phooe from Mexico and Sa n Clemente Some had bought new wigs. was monumental. . All had proudly heralded their Mrs. Stuart also said she wasn't upcoming assignment among friends and particularly interested in Women's Lib. famil)'. She reiterated half of that platform for And what's more, they were not going reporters Tuesday. to be paid for Thursday night becaU!e "It 's very difficult to organize a stale ~ they 1Weren1t going to work. • ·dinner in II days while you're on the Ange}, clamor that President Nixon road,' she said in ·pleading.::tonts;-<(and "' was not adhering to the "American Way" (See WAITR!'MF3, P11e Z) ForSAWoman Bv TOM BARI.EV Of t1M: o.ttr '"' lllH Two state prison terms of one to five years each were ordered Tuesday for the woman member of a gang of drifters accused in I.he "devil cult" killing of a Mission Viejo teacher aJJd the hatchet slaying of a youiig service station attendant. Superior Court. Judge Samuel Dreizen se t those sentences for Melanie Mae Daniels, 31, of Santa Ana in the -wake of ·pleas by Deputy District Attorney Martin J . Heneghan that "if there was ever a case for consecutive sentencing then thi.! has to be it." · Judge Dreizen .qu ickly agreed and ordered consecutive terms on the two convictions of being an accessory to murder. He ordered the tall brunette's immediate shipment to the Frontera Prison for ' Women and cancelled the balance of the probation term she was serVing for a recent narcotics conviction •. Mrs. Daniels was serving that iime in Or~nge County Jail when investigators linked her to the killings o.f 1"1rs. Florence Nancy Brown, 31, of El Toro and service station attendant Jerry Wayne C<irlln, 21 of Santa Ana. Mrs. Bto'wn's body, minus its Heart, lungs and right arm, was found last June 15 in a shallow grave off the Ortega Highway. Three members of the gang of drifters to which Mrs. Daniels was attached were indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury for her murder. Carlin was hacke<I to death with 11 hatchet last June Z in the wash room of hi s Santa Ana service station in a ki ll ing that· left the · once handsome young man -in the words o( an investigator - "absolutely'unre cogriizable and soaked in (See DANIELS, Pa~e Z) ficker'~:Crew 'Prepared' for Cup Win By ALMON LOCKABEY 01llr l'llft hlllllf E""'° Winning the right to defend the~ America's Cup is second only to actually' 'deefnding the most highly prized kudo in ~ world yachting. It has been said that the skipper who loSes the 119-year old bottomless pitcher ·~ to a ,foreign challenger will .have his held ' botred to the pedestal in the New York .Yacht Club trophy room where_ the Cup now stands. Bill Ficker, 42-year old·Newport Be.::h arc.hilt(\~ stands on the threshold after defe~ting thrze. riVaJs who.were hopeful or defending yachting's holy grail, After} the tumultuous. celebration of being ~led to defend the" cup wu1 . • ' aver, 1 talked to Ficker in the living room of the ·beautiful, rambling borne at Price's Neck where he and his young crew have spent two tension filled months. I asked him .jf he had any qualms about meeting the AWltralians and Gretel J( when the big show starts Sept. 15. Bill thoughtfully rubbed his bronzed bald pate.--8is_pale blue eyes were confident. Said he : "I never worry about winning or losing. All I w.orrk about is be_ing prepared. If We a:re preapred we will win. If r..ot we will Jose. Yacht racing ~ a game in !,tWhich the crew whi ch makes the fewest \mistakes wins." · Ficker and his crew on Intrepid were obviously well-prepared dui-lng the long hot-summer -from June through August. As a result, Intrepid won the right to defend the Cup for the second co nsecutive lime. I asked Ficker to fevieW the three months of trials leading up to his defeat of Weatherly, lleritage, and finally Valiant -all manned by veteran skippers and crews. "We treated the June series on Long Island Sound as we thought it should be treated - as a .tune up, &e(ies. We weren"t really prepared -'here. ~ boat· was launched a _month late, and we had decided ·not to get' any new sails until 1Jte11 th\ June trlal.!1. We wanted to find out If some things we had done on the boat were really practical, before we got committed £o things like ns,ooo worth of new sails. We knew that it.would>tiurt our petformance in June, but we were 'willing to take the 'knocks. , : •i'f'rom the• SUI.rt we were poinUng to August. We set ·up our campaign to be as s ood as possible In August. We also continued tank testing rlght through the June and July trials. "Our. perfonnance against VaUaot wasn't too impressive In June becauae o( these Uilngs. W.e were lucky to com'e as close io thtm as we did -1 believe it · was· four for Valiant and three for us. -They were obviously better prepared. (See FICKER, Pase 14) .. . I ------- AdmlnlltraUoo olficllk HI!! tbe united State.s also has concluded . uiai ..E()'pl. • with the ualltan<e of ~ · ~· probabJy moved 110mt·• nJ ·1aIrcr1.:lt mi.ISlle batteries into. t!ie atani11t1D SQM during the night 'o! Au(; 1.a· w~ .the ceasefire began. The State Department aeCJ.ined any immediate comment on the reports of the violations which were said to hive iaktn place ~ days Arter the ceueflre went Into effect. The~adminiatntlon ha1 · been unwitting to dllcms , th.• · 'l!""U411.· of vlolaUoos publicly ... gri>U1lclS: Ulal .It'll ,..king to,work lhil1ga oul.tl1rolJlll '.'quiet diplomacy... · .. •· ~ • · · · There Was no Immediate lnfOh'rfat.fpn ~. as to just what II ,any' atJuon .'~~ip~ · States might take., ~, N11.r~n . administration fa:ced a cµt!icult~ ~ on l}Qw to ~andle ~he ~t\a' .~,'vi~o...,.... in v.iew of ;.ncr~mc eyldenct tha ~1 rnighl be dismayed to the·: ~ ol. _.UP,IT~' Budne•• ..l'.rip Jaqueline. Kennedy , Ona ssis,. wea~ing white slacks, ~ rain- coat and dark · sweater, leaves London's Claridge's. It is re. port·ett that She ind her hus- band are headin~-for Belfast Saturday to · ViS:it ~he shipyard con~truct.ing_ tw9 tankers for Onassis' fleet. ··· Former Da,na Man Slain in . Prison; . Probe · 1:Jeg~ · A former Dana Point man who was -convic_ted on , grand theft chai:ges in Oringe County 5\1perior C.ourt has been killed in .a· fracai. between inmates at ,a· · Department o~ Corrections facllify ·in central Califonrta: ' · Jnma(e Ko~ Sandoval ha.!1 been chara:ed with•morder· In the k1tife slayinf of B<D]amln:·;tr.derlck Ranuey. 42, former!)' of:..3a4 ,El Enc11nto St.o officers at Plum Creek ConservaUOn Center have rePortid~ ; . • ' • Investigators Stdd 1the kllllng occumd Frlday~lg\lt and 11· s(lll be in( probed. • Ramsey J astar'rette<lJo J~µary, 1967 ln Orange ·COUdty and charged with the ' theft of $18,000 from the0 Colony"Klich<n restaurant-In Sail Juan Capistrano where he worked u assistant manager. Ramser. Jeter admitted thlt he took th• cash antt rctiecks over the ·Christmas weekend a'nd was sentenced on·the grand theft. count ·by Judge Byron It McMOlitn •. He was ordered to repay the money over a five re•r term. • .. actually,refuaing to_1:9nUn~ pelce ta1:b- Some Israelis have threatene<t to ·~ the· cei.!leffre, but that WM ft!>' yet ~­ seriously in Wash!~. ' , , , ... · ..... Administration officlat1·.prj~a!_efy,' >\dly_' expres.Rd the vtew Qtat~ die' I~ violatioos are not. as. ICl'iOus 11 Israel · claims and ahould '.not tie ~.to jeopardize the pe1Cttiilk'.I beftieen IlrBI • on the one hahcl and Egypt a"'1·Jordin aq theothei.'• · ·: ? ·11·:.:1 Thffe 'talU have betim .ai the U_.. , ~ (See 'MIDEAIT,Pal'I, ~·_) • ' --~ The clouds ari'd low fol· wtD ron in harder alOnl the l>nnp coast in the evenin,& 8~" · Ing · hours Thursday, b . ski~! wu1~ be the· order .... da~light period with lem~ turea in the 70 to.85 i1n1~"\ ' INSIDE 'TOD~Y ' ' Th< fbvorile perform<n o~ . ''~c fld'.1 . at. • jh~. H".ntine~) I , I Beach Plat1hoUat afe"rtcopi'itdi I J ot tht ,Ultaltrl't . aXnual oibcirdi:, I f?Onq•<I. ,:;_ • • E\ltcrtalnl!W11~ I I Pagt a7. (1. • ··~,, .. '1 •t·• 'l\ !-I l, • •. ~ • ..... ~ =· .. CIMftnl.. 1 ' ' t1 . _.., (•,_ cw-" ,....... ,... •• Clllcllillt U.. IJ ......... Mftlt " W CIHlll'... 11... =-ll Ctfllk• ~ I . . .;, ,,.,. l ) c,......,.. . .. . , .. Dtllll """"" 11 ·:p " Dl'Nf:• 11 ·-,.. ••n.n-1. ,... 6 T II' ·~~ ..... »rt "'""" : "1 "°J ,.,.., D-tl ..... • ........... ,. " ......... ,... .. ............ : • --'1'-... .. . I ----_--:t __ ____!_ _._____~_ - :e DAllY PllOI • ~ -Nfdrwsday, September 2, 1970 Agnew Says Asia Chief s Reassured 'Ibt Nixon Doctrine of Vietnam withdrawaJ, coupled with the U.S. thrust against communists i1 Cambodia is giving !rlendly Asia leaders a sense o( security, saya Vice Prealdeot Spiro Ag1tw. Briefing the pre:u at the Western White House in San Clemente after his llkh•y Asian mission, Agnew emphasized troop withdrawal mu~ be supplanted with heavy economic ak!. He made his remarks after rePorttni to President Nixo1 and the Natiooal Security Council on the 30,000.mile trip in which he visited five Asian 11ations. The vice pruident plans to stop off lo vislt.Jon:na-President Lyndon Johnson in Te1~1 ~ will~ ~pend a weekend at Oce1a,qit)', Md1, ~ up. · Quoetlooed about def,.t of the End-the- War bW ii~ Tuesday, he u.id the vote ·apmt the· McGovern·Halfield Amendmerit is significant. "l Wnk it will bave a salutary eHect," bel'llllirliea. • · AP;4old the Cambodian lltoation •PP"ll'I •f9, ~ wtU Jn bad, predicting that u.~~ .~ Premier Loa Nol is now .U]IUrled or a strdng dlance to liiurviVe tCaiftll communlst offeuives. Breath of Life • • -Taxes • Really Lower ' . ~· • Rate Boost Works Out to 20 Cents Les~ .. • -· . - By IA.CIC BROBACK and other tiling requirements: imposed · °' "-Del" ,.._. s11H • in past yeark make it possible. ror~~~~~-::ur:t11e1mn-ntml1l<19.76 · the dismal aitfmaUvea open to them. • then voted to raise ~ general fund TAX BREAKDOWN property tax rate by three cents. He broke the various decreases and Tbey reetl\;'.ed some paradoxical good also ln<:Jeases in taxef 1 imposed as oe\U In their attemoon lllS'ion. . 'follows : . \ •. Orange County AucUtor..controller -Vic -Harb9r Diltrict-down 3.82 centa from A. Heim allll0\Ult9d that even with the Jut 'year's rate of a.es cents to 4.83 new three-cent le\ty, the overall county cents; Flood Conlrol clown 10.ae centa tu rate will be nearly 20 centa lower th.ta from 35.'ll cents to 25.05 cents; school year lhan last. institution rate up .llll cents, school Decreases in tu 1ssessmepts for the modification~ aid rate or 8.3 cents Harbor District, Flood COntrol District, eliminated entirely; development canter ' Frem P.,,e I . WAITRESSES WIN •.. there's a guest list of 600 and billions Clf other details. It's only natural to have a few sniall flaps . • 11We still haven't seWed all the problems of aervice/' she said, answtriilg queries on how the green st.a!f would be- tralned in oaly two days. "As a matter of fact, 'right now it seems like we'll be lucky if all the plate, reach the right guests." What does It cost to run estate dinner on the road? "Not much extra. except for more grief for pec1ple like me ," she retorted. that we·u be there.:• ''There is no such thing as a 'normal day' at the White Houee," Mr!. Stuart t.old the Soroptimists ii Sin Clemegte Wt week. She proved it Tu_esday. From Page I DANIELS. •• a pool of his own blood." Heneghan .told Judge Dreizen Tuesday that Mrs. Daniels washed the blood off ' rate up .14 cents, county general rate up three cents. Othrr cjlang,. I[sl<d by Udr, include<! an lncreaae tn state-collected In lleu tu:es of $366,000, an increase in county fees for clerk filings of $22{1,000 due to a new $le law, a decrease in the reserve set aside Cor disputed oil royalty tal:es of $4.5 million. The school modlficaUon rale which al'COllnts for a a.ktnt reduct.ion is possible because County A s s e s s o r Andrew Hinshaw's percentage of 23.S percent of mark et value on real pn_>perty is at or above the statewide average for the first time .since 1962. Flood control is down 10 cents because the special one-year 10-eent levy to repair damages caused by the 1969 floods is now eliminated. IL! LESS TAXES The 19.76 cents tax reduction will mean that the owner of a $24,l)(M) hof!le wUI be taxed $12 less this year than last. This iS partiaJJy oUset in many cases. however, by a 17.~ percent increase in assessed vaJuali ons. County Administrative Officer !\Obert Thomas has the job of eliminating some $1 .9 million more in department budgets within ty,·o weeks to meet the reduction from the $1.75 cent rate supervisors thought they were going to ha ve to levy and the $1.70 rate they arbitrarily established in the Tuesday morning session. Possibilities for achie\•ing the $1.9 million reduction include the elimination He said Lon Nol is aatis£ied with his S4D million aidProa:ram and is not askJDg for sophisti,cated military gear, only some helicopters and patrol boats. Estimates as to the number or comml.D'lists wiped out -in Cambodia differ, but the White House says 14,000 were·Jdlled amQDC 35,000 preseat, adding 1,000 more· hive infillrlted. Six-year-old John Brock of Fullerton gets a reassuring smile from LA Rams qu.arterback Roman Gabriel, a• member of the National Sports Committee for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Current Cystic Fi~ros~s "Breath of Life" campai.e:n for funds to combat children's lung diseases runs through Sept 30. • t The news that the wome11 of the Hotel Del Coronado night shift had won was- greeted with glee among lhe ranks of wedgie shoes in San Diego. ''Whether it was. a misupderstanding ,()r a backdcrwn is. open to que.stlon," one pensive waitress said, ''What counts is the hatchet that was used to kill Carlin o( a $1 million budget item set aside ror and dJsposed.of the $40 to $50 taken from beach acquisition, and the ellm.Jnation of the service station. $000,000 from various dep ar t m.e n t budgets. · The.re pi no proof that she was present The $1.75 rate was based on 00 cuts In at the kiDing of Mrs. Brown , he said, bUt department budgets and the .absorpUon of ~ vict president warned api nst ,. DIS• honored Hero his office is satisfied that she urged the a $3 million loss of state revenues from chopping off ol Mrs. Brown's fingers to-MediCal allotments from the state. • consktering the war civil in nature, declaring 75 percent of the communists came in via North Vietnam. He also saJd a request by 14 Senators 'that an immediate cea.se-fire be p-Op)sed in Paris is nothing 11ew and that Nixon recommended such a plan last year without auceess. 'Family' Case Girls Lose prevent identification and that she DELINQUENCY ALLOWANCE To Get' Marker suggested that the dead woman's teeth be Heim also told the supervisors that the ki cked in for the sa me reason. budget included a four p e r c e 11 t 0 G h L Investigators confirmed Tuesday that delinquency allowance (estimate of 'taxes Still, be remarked, the cost of fiahting the Vietnam War has been reduced from '28 billion annually to hall that figure. Bid for Attorney's Room n rave y aw they have not been able to "positively levied which will not be paid ;); and $16.l link" Mrs. Daniels to the Satanic rites million to be held in res,erve because of One American · GI who won his that were conducted before and after the disputed tax rate on Irvine Company Mrs. Brown's death -those rituals and ·other properties. in the U""""'. country's higbeat honor for bravery in included the eating of the woman's flesh Newport Bay. "_., But the U.S. will have to give assistance 1n helping the economic readjusbnents requirtd due to reduced m i l i t a r y BJ>Ondlnf. Suspects Clear In Murder Ca~ LOS ANGELES (AP) -The judge at the Sharon Tate murder trial turned down today a request from the three women defendants to use a jail attorneys' room for jnterviews. "I find no evidence or any harassment,'' said Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older. The thtee had complained that they were denied use of the room and forej!d to interview witnesses by telephone Two ............ arrested on murder through a glass Partit!On, w h i c h -,..--hampered communication. charges in ·E1C011dldo when the body ofa ,..-~Th~e,_judge,-w:ho-inspected-the-jail -~-Newport youth-was-found-tn-thetrcar facillties Tuesd&'y, agreed that nonnal have been relaued. Escondido police said '11 Tueadl Ute of the glass-telephone setup made y. d h three-way communication b e t w e e n Theodore Busch, Jr., 22, an Kennet tt 1. . ;Hull, 17, both of ESCtlndido, were cleared a omey, c 1ent and witness impossible. :or complicity in the death of William But he suggested one party could move to ;Andenpn Evans , 17, whose body was an adjoining booth and by using tft'o •found in their car. phones,.. mak e it a t h r e e • w a y : The cause of death is still under communication. Jail ofticials denied use jlnveatlgation, but San Dlego Coroner's of the attorneys' room on grounds the .deputies speculated that the teena;tr three had abused the privilege by turning :_died of a drug overdose. s,uAA99ed legal conferences into social affairs. . ~Anaheim Youth . !Beaten by Gang : Racing ahead of a gang of youths he :never saw before, an Anaheim teenager :was beaten up Tuesday night after they :pursued him right into the Costa Mesa :Police Facility parking lot. : Kenneth A. Shaffer, 18, broke free after l>eing pummeled by the four attackef'I, :aged IS to 18, and ran imlcle to report the :incident to police. : He aald they bepn barusing him at a i:tiamburger drive-in a\ Hai'bor BolJlevard :and Wilson Street, then fpllowed when he .s ot into his car-and dr'ove off. Shaffer was not Injured. DAILY PILOT ....,.,. hecll H19tlllf'111 II.ell L""" IHu h1lltel1 Y•ll•r C .... Mn. S.. Cflw!lllHI Tbe prosecution, after a three.day re&ss .due to the illness of defendant Suslin Atkins, schedul ed a series o f witnesses it said would try to link the Tr~ps Disperse Irish Battlers BELF-AST, Northern 1reland (AP) - Romap Catholics and ProteslanU tangled tn a rock and bottle-throwfug rree-for·all at turgan Tuesday night and British . lroops moved in with nausea gas to break up the battle. The trouble erupted after hard·Hne Protestants met to hear the Rev. tan Paisley. unbending enemy of Catholicism, .speak on Main street. An army spokesman said the meeUng broke up but the stone·throwing started. Early reports said none was injured and none arrested . Lurgan is 20 miles from Belfast. defendanta to the killings with physical evidence. One, a prMecutor uid, would be a fingerprint expert who would tell of prints found on doors at the Tate mansion. Miss Atkins had ,been hoapitalized since Monday · for ·treatment of what was described as an impacted colon. Charles M. Manson, 35, head of a hippie type clan, is on trial with the thrte women followers, charged with murder- conspiracy in the deaths of Ml" Tate and six others. MansOn complained last month of being forced to interview witnesses through a screen he Siiliffiampered vi.!lion and voice comm~.caljon. The judp said be found no basls !or the complalnL batUe will get a headstone on his and the cutting out of her heart and other County Counsel Adrian Kuyper and unmarked graVe as the _result o( a law vital orgarus. Hinshaw do not agree on the assessment signed by PreSident Nixon Tuesday in Mrs. Brown was pulled from her car on procedlires in that area and the issue will San Clemente. . Sand Canyon Road and driven to an have to be eventually settled in the He later died after being discharged Irvine orange grove wbfre she was courts. murdered. The Daniels woman ha s Heim concluded his recommendations di shonorably and was thus ineligible for · · ed th .. 1ns1st at she did not see the woman by saying, "you (the supe~rvisors ) should the simple marker. tll h th bl k un s e saw e an el-covered body in be ve ry proud· of your accomplishment in Whoever he was, he wa s not identified the back seat of her statio'n wagon. reducing the overall property tax of the by either name or place of burial - nor Indicted for the two killings are county by almost 20 cents." war in which he serv.ed with valor _ in Herman Hendrick Taylor, 17, and The supervisors heaved a great sigh o[ Stephen C. Hurd, 20, both traruienll. relief and approved all of the auditor-the acUon Tuesday. H .. ~ f · tr.al N 9 and w.u aces 1ury 1 ov. Taylor controller's re c ommendations The Secretary of the Army was ordered wlµ go to ~rt Sept.~ f~r •·hear}ng on a unanimously. , , • +_ 1 22 years 'ago. to furnish to'mbstones. or motion ~ re~ect that indictment. During the morning session, board grave-marlcers-forall-dcad-members-of Jlth him m mur_t_on...lbaLdate...will-be-rnemberrwrestled-for alt~er the the ~1d .Fqr~, if 1n," · last.Je,rm rt Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse, 16, of dilemma of increasing tile tax rate b)J-1.4 seriAM end""'hbnorablyt.-;-"I ' G.arden Grov~. who .Is accused of the cents or cutting some $.1 million out of ,..... killing of Carhn. He will ask for dismissal the budget they had adopled several Presideot Nixon's edict Monda y will of the murder charge. weeks ago supply the ~ldier Jn the unmarked graye Orange County investigators In the · LBJ fO Attend with a stone to remind the world that he macabre Brown-Carlin case are seeking COMPROMISE RATE the extradition from Oregon or Superviso r David Baker suggested tha once served honorably, not matter how Ch · .. h "G " Gibbo r1s wp er ypsy ney. 17, or "C<lmpromise" rate of $1.70, reasoning State Dmn' . er he was discharged. Portland. He is indicted for murder in the th at some fat could and mus.t._be cut from Military authorities who t es l Ifie d Brown killing. the adopted general tax rate budget of ... before Congress about the case ''l have looked very carefully at the $21 5 million. Jn San Di researched their files and found 2,198 transcripts of this case and listened Clarence E. While of the Orange ego military men have won the Medal of attentively to the arguments by attorneys County Chamber of Commerce H for both sides," Judge Dreizen told the governmental affairs committee urged Lyndon B. Johnson has accepted ~~:·man ordered to receive a markc~ calm and apparently unmoved Mrs. that the board hold the line on the 1969-70 Tuesda y's Invitation by his successor to for his grave Tuesday was .apparenU y the Daniels before sentencing. general fund rate of $1.67. attend the huge state dilller honoring lhe only one not honorably discharged. "I can only come to one conclusion," he "You should do what business and t · ~ ·d sakf. "Society needs to be proteeted from industry have found they must do , .• ou gomg s-1-.::s1 ent of Mexico in San I lik " 7 peop e e you. these tight financial times," White Diego. Frona Page 1 argued. "If you eliminated some of the The former president a n n o u n c e d county employes your department heads accepta11ce 'of the invitation th.is morning MIDEAST Soviet .. Plane Stoned will find that they can and will get more from his home in Johnson City, Texas. • • • productivity per man. That has been Before LBJ leaves for San Dlego PARIS (AP) -Four youths smashed industry's experi ence ." Thursday he will receive a briefing of Nations under the auspices of U.N. the windows ()f AeroOot, the Soviet Supervisor Robert Battin wanted the sorts from Vice President Spiro Agnew ~iiddle East negotiator Gunnar Jarring. airline, with' rocks Tuesday night just entire $3 million deficit cut out of the who will stop off in Texas today ~ The White House in San Clemente said before midnight and left behini:Ya poster Orange County Medical Center's budge} discuss his trip to the Far East. after Tuesday's meeting that it was in Hebriw and French saying "Let my saying, "The center is the cause of a~ After today's discussions wlth Johnson, "assisting in the surveillance of the people go. International Students Day, in our trouble. Why penalize o the;. Agnew will fly on for a few days o( rest ceasefire and we are In touch with both solidarity with Judaism in the Soviet departments for what that institution at Ocean City, Md. parties." Union." didn't get from the state ." The former president wa1 reported to Ii~===============================''==='========::::; be planning to sit in 01 discussions between President Nixon and retiring l\1exic:a" President Gusta vo DJar. Ordaz Thurs<lay afternoon before the dlruier . Hundreds of gueats are expected at the event, including movie star1, political figures aid other celebrities. Wyler lncc8flex ()J;A,H(;[ COAST P'U8Ll$HIHG COMP'AHY lto'ii•1t N. w,,, "'""""'' #Ml Pvblhl>tr J·~• 11. c ... 1,.,. From Pege I i Bm24 most~ unusual·' I \ll<t P'•f•"'"'' lnl {;.cM<1I M-lt" lh•"''' K,,,;1 Ell»r Tho..,11 A, Mwr,hi11• M-91ftt Ell!., ltich1ri '-N11I S.W/11 Ortllllt C"""tr Edlltl' ,.,,,MUI: "6 Wut lt'I' $f!'tfl H~I l ffdl: nu wet l11t101 lloulcv•"' L..-1 .. c11: m ""'"' Av"'"' HllO'l ... tefl IHtfl: 1111J lle1cll ll:iultvtrd 1 ~fl Cltmll>lt; »I Htrlfl El ''"'""" 11:111 ~.,..!_ , .. ~ OAILV P'll.Of, 'wlt!I W'llC!'I .. t-iMd IM ,., ..... iorwn, It ...,&U1i.td NII' t•'"' Sun- ''' In ... rett "'"'°"" i.< l.•GVN .... ,11, NtlJl'-l lttdl, (Mii Mttll, H ..... !~IO~ ••ell ·~" --l•lfl "''""'· ...... 11~ ,_ "011NI td1119M. ()r-t (oHt P'ltltlllt!fl'lf ,...,""' ,...,..,... ~1111 '" " n11 """' l tltlol 11 ..... Ht-I •11(11. •~II UP W.I •• , '""'· Cttlt -·· • Tel.,._ 17141 64J.11121 c1..iw AMrtl•I .. ••2 ~•1• S.. Cha 2111 AN ~,.~: T ....... 4f2·4420 Gtn'rJtllt, '"" O•lfltt (GUI. P'!A>llttl!"t Gtn\llf"r• Ht MM \IOf'ltl, llll,ltlr'1""1, tOlll1*111 l!Wltf9' ... ,, .... u ......... ,. lltfllll IM1 "' ,..,..,.l,o(tll •llltltfl .,.111 ,..... ,,,...... • CWl'l'lll'll ""'*. .._,.. (llU ,_letf ..-14 •I Hrwwt ltl<ll ..... 0.M ,._ (tt!Mmll. a.<fi.ii... t'I' _,ltr OM ~fl' tv ..,.11 U .. -Ml'l'l ...i..,,. *'""''*"· n,• INllll'lt1'. SALAZAR RITES to be led out into the bright, smoggy sunlight That' was the question being asked eJsey,·here in many styles of language, and hastily ansv.'ered by some . Los Ange les County Sheriff Peter J. Pitchess said In a television interview that his deputies were to be commend~ for restrained handling of the Sl million outbreak. Others blamed lhem for it. ROdolfo "Corky" Gonzales, founder of lhe DenVl!r Crusade fur Justice, a Mexican:American civil ri ghts group. had just been released from jail on $1,250 bail. He said his charges of susplcloii of robbery, ca rrying a concealed weapon and carrying a loaded firearm in a car were tromped up form! of police harass ment. He blamed la,vmen 'for disrupting the Chicano Moratorium observance lo protest deaths or Mex1can-Amerlcans In Vietnam. Eduardo lternandez.. coordinator 'of Chicano stud lea st UC Btrkcley. agreed and joined other leaders ln dernandlng a federal probe. "Another \'lci-Ous, brutal repression ••• that has become char1cteristlc by this American society lo 1ny form of dissent," he charged. Speaking in Los Angeles. U.S. Attorney Robert L. Meyer, however. disagreed. and said he has launched no full investigation because S~r-Uf Pltchess' office is working well and cooperatively. "Hundreds of provoc1Uve acts were ·committed by known dissidents who came to incite and foment trouble," f\.1eyer charged. Thousands came Tuesday to pause be.side Salar.ar's caskel President Nixon aM0W1ctd at the Western White House that he v.·ould be represented at the Salazar funer1l by his special adviser. Robert H. Finch.· The former secretary of Health EducaUon ind Welfare wu expec ted to be among hundrt!ds and maybe thousands present for !he rites. Private Interment will follow and lhe Silar.ar family sugg-eiU contributions to a Ruben Sala11r Foundation. They .may be aent to KMEX, the Spanish language station he joined as news dlr~or In the hope of better serving the cauie of harmony between· the two separ1te aocletles. • CONVENIENT TERMS BANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE -----·--------------------------- watch.· Marks time on 24 hour system. A n•c•11ily 1or onyont who lro.,..11, th• militory, or "''" who prize the un u1uol. Wotch diol 1how1 all 24 hours, ln- 1ttod of ju1t 12. Ruggedly good look ing. The lncaflea balance wheel is guaranteed ogoinfl ihock for th• Ifft af th• watch or replaced fret if ever broken. Gueronte•d wot•rproof 01 loni 01 th• cry1tol 11 intact, e•nvln• Wyltr por11 u11d. 1123 NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA . ' H YEARS IN SAME LOCATION PHONE 541-340 I • 7 7 • • -' . . ,-Buniingion ~eaeh , 1 r . EDITION . ., . TOday~s Fbutl ' ' '• ..,~··.• VOl. 63, NO. 210. 4 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, -CALIFORNIA ·' WEDNESD~ Y, SEPTEMBER 2, .reN CENTS 'I --. Marina Palace Hearing Denied By RVDI NIEDZIEUIKI 01 the Dlllt .. lie! Sltff A request to transfer the license hearing for the Marinp. Palace and its ~litical implications to Superior Court failed Tuesday .. as witnesses for the prosecution . contin)Jed to d e t a i I allegations of sexual misconduct and narcotics use among its patrons: "This should go to Superior Court," Oemanded Councilman Harold Holden, one of five men who will decide whether or not the teenage dance hall will be able to keep its doors open. "Ttlis is a farce." Althougtt seconded by Councilman Lloyd Gummere, the motion failed and the Uceore hearing, which is taking on au aspects of a sensational trial, conti'Dued before' a half.filled McGaugh School auditorium. Lee Case, the city's police chief and prosecutor of the charges. called to the witness stand the g~l friend of a Long Beach police officer who testified that she accompanied the policeman on an undercover investigation of the Palace July 18. ''This place disgusts me," Cindy Breitbarth;-!O; of-Long .Beach, said she told her boyfriend Albert George after visiting the pa1~e, according to the testimony . Specifically slle mentioned. the following : -A cOuple lying on the floor in a dimly' 0,111• MAP DESIGNATES VARIOUS LAND USES PROPOSED IN HUNTINGTON•S 'TOP OF PIER' PLAN ~,' A Tim• f.w..D.fcision_ls APe!Oaching on Redevelopment of the City's Downtown Sector --· -------- ·Parking Showdown Nears Will -L4--Acres of Asphalt Help Huntington BE)qch? By ALAN DIIUtlN 01 1111 Dtllr '11•1 Stiff Will 14 acres of asphalt vltalize downtown HunUngton Beach? -· The pros and cons have been weighed. juggled, and weighed again. Now the time for a decision is approaching and city councilmen may make it at their meeting Tuesday evening. Tne project -to level five prime blocks fronting CoaSt Highway from Sixth Street to First Street, add it to a vacant five-acre parcel east of Lake Street and Create a 1,878-space parking lot -would be at least a $5.2 million gamble. That's the cost invo1ved. Thars the extent of the risk if the plan works. But some are not predicting success and see a J>l)Sible $200,000 loss every year. Ifs not just a financial question. Tr~ also a political issue -big government versus private enterprise. To some, it's part or an overall plan ror a thriving downtown distrjct by 1990. To others, it's a governmental land grab, a step toward 1984. "Regardless of what decision is made. even if we do nothing, there will be extreme criticism," points out City Administrator D o y l e Miller w h o neve rtheless stands firml y behind the project and is urging the cou~cil to act promptly. "If I had my choice of a catalyst to turn around the downtown area, a parking lot would be way down the list," offers William Foster, general manager of the Huntington Beach Company. He said he favors upgrading the downtown area but doubts the feasibility of another municipal beach parking lot. "Without beachfront parking, you will have no freeways. no arterials, no city," belil!ves the .project's strongest proponent, Harbors and Beaches Director Vince Moorhouse. "'ho has guided the city Parking Authority's first 2.100-space lot' to apparent success. "To take the most valuable downtown property for parking seerits foolish to me _ it's bad plannfng economi cally and esthetically," iS the opinion of Robert Terry, president of the Downtown Property Owners Association, the group which has been asking the ~ouncil to give Spiro Has Ne'W 'Fill-in' Ball Vice President Spiro T. Agnew says he now has a personalized golf ball, as President Nixon does. but the Agnew ball is different The President gives out balls bca.rlng the-presidentiatseal. He gave Agnew one Tuesday and the vice president, who ,has hit a couple of competitors accideutal\y with misdirtcted tennis and golr balls this yeer, remarked : .. I've got one that says 'you haYf! ju·~t been ~truck by' and t~cn I sign it." This is the fir.st in a aerks of three articles by Daily Pilot West Orange County City Editor Alan Dirki11 dis· cussing detailed aspects of Hu nting- ton Beach's proposed Top of the Pier Plan. a program calculated to revi ta· lize the city's downtown area. private enterprise more tlme to develop the area. These are some of the conlrary reactions the proposal engenders. What is it all about? Officially, the project is termed expansioo of the Parking Authority~ The Par)hJg A"uthority is an agency created by the council two years ago to coordinate the land from First Street to Beach Boulevard and build the present oceanfront parking lot. It was the redevelopment tool the council picked when it started to implement recommendations of a $30.000 study made in 1965 by a group of private hind developers. the Urban Land Institute lULI ), The recommendations have been carried along by a citizens steering committee, a Dody that has d<>l!e such a good job of keeping the five-year-old report before the public that in Huntington Beach ULI seems as common a set of initials as UCLA. The steering , committee appointed a planning consultant -Costa Mesa's Ted Adsit -to study the report. The grand design lHlt evolved out of seulons between Adsit and the citizens group is called the Top of the Pier Plan. .. It covers 375 acres and envisages a specialty shopping <'enter, hotels, motels. high-rise offices and a civic auditorium in the area by the year 1990. A respected fit'.m of economi c consultants, Economic R e s e a r c h Associates of Los Angeles CERA) was commissioned to see whether .the plan will work. It has given three reports on the feasibility. Each time the answer was go ahead. The construction of the oceanfront lot from First Street to Beach Boulevard was considered the indirect first step in the development. although the Top of the Pier Plan itself was not adopted by the council until later. last November. The second step is the expansion of the Parking Authority, namely the build ing of a parking lot on the inland side of the highway. Top of the Pier proponents believe this second lot is essential to the avowed purpose of the scheme -to spark development of the s u r r o u n d fn g properties by private enterprise. But some say it isn't that simple. Their views will be examined Thursday. Attorney Admits Property Owners Didn't Form Unit Arthur Guy, 'Ne wport Beach attorney representing owners of property in downtown Huntington Beach, agree"d today that his clients had not met a city council de rri.and to form a legal entJty that would -launch · d o w n to w n redevelopment. "There is no entity," Guy said. "My clients are moving along the lines of consolidating the properties into a cohesive whole so that there can be a package Offered to private enterprise to · carrie in and make an analysis." The council had gi ve n the Downtown Property Owners Association until Sept. 1 to form a legal entity, such as a limited partnership, made of owners o f properties committed to redevelopment. Guy said that he had infonhed c:ity attorney Don Bonfa that th' city dem3'nds· "wl!re 1mpciislble." . "We have made enormous progres.'i," r.uy said. ''We ha\'.C 60 percent of all tjw lot.~ under opt.Ion and mariy ·more are anxious to participate. But others are dlJCOUragcd by the attitude of the counc·n which seem5 to be headed toward " \ condemnation anywa y." -The properties in question cov~r a five- block stretch along Coast Highwa)' from 6th Street to 1st Street. The city council instructed Bonfa to Jile condemnalion proceedings -4•immediately" if the entity was not formed by 'Sept. 1. The city is planning a 1;878. space parking lot along the 14-acre area. _.' , Guy said that the city attorney's office had asked his client to come up with a complete plan by Feb. I. "That's a date I've never heard of before. They se nt us a list of arbitarily selected people and wanted us to get ,all their signatures. Many are out of state-it's impossi ble to do it." Al.though the___de_adline was S!_pt. I Bonra said that he would not file condemnation proce~s until receh•ing addiliontll council instructions at _the next council meeting, Tu~day, Sept. 8. He said Ufat mayor pro tem Jerry Matney · had postpo:ntd the action by staling at a recent meeting of the Cdllncit that a decision shO\lld be delayed un til Sept 8, lit comer of the dance hall. He was fondling the girl. -A chalkboard in the woman's restroom With vulgar language and four letter words. -A girl who was "like in a stupor,'' laughing, crying and m u m b 11 n g incoherently. -A YQung man caressing and kissing a braless girl in plain view or everyone.· Miss Breitbarth's admission that an earlier tape recording 6f what she saw a~ the Marina Palace wu played back for her a day before hv twlmony in the · police chief's office brought a n immediate .request from defense attorney Russell Bledsoe for the"lape. His client, William "Bill" Robertson, 71, former ·operator of a legal poker palace .when Seal Beach roared even more than · it does now, has iKUed a subpoena of police ~rtment records lo prove that chirges against h i 1 est.abllshmeni were politically ,ritivated. Flight ·Figl;it . . The de!e~l.!e case, whlch "ls not expected until late next week, is n:~ted to hinge largely . on whet.he~ the charges were initiated.torstifle Robertson1s criticism of potential high rise develoP.ment.s in Seal Beach. Many of those subpoenaed b y ,Robertsclil compri9e the city'i pblitlcal and civic leaders and ilready include Chief· Case, City Manacer Dennis Courtemarche, Mrs. Morton Baum and IS.. PALACE, Pop I) Seen Meadowlark Delay lr~s Residents A three-hour meeting on f 1 y i n g activities at Meadowlark Airport, broke up in mild uproar in Huntington Beach Tuesday oight with h o m e o w n e r s demanding action to close a runway ad~ition and remove night light!. The meeting became heated when • Robert Dingwall, chairman of a city Council-appointed c o m m i t t e e to investigate the airport s i t-u at Jon, announced that the committee would reconvene Sept. 10 -two days after the next city council meeting. 1 ".\\'hy two days after the council meeting?" exclaimed homeowner Bud Carter. Another resident. Dan Schwartz. 5352 Caliente Drive, protested, "Aren't you going_!o_h!l"!'Ll!lY -"'2mmj!ndali,Q.ns ~ the coW!.cil?" · DOUGl, ... S GETS ' . ' FAT CONTRACT " W~!flNGTON (AP) -Tbe Na- tiOnal Ae,.,.utics and Spece Ad!lll!!- istration has awarded a '90,918,000 supplemenlal contract to McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Company, Huntington Beach for work on the Skylab Orbital Workship. Sen. George Murphy (R-Calif.), said the supplemental results primar- ily-from changu in .the launch~ve­ hlcle. Mideast Peace- Role Becomes Major Problem By RICHARD p, NALL 01 th• ()elt)' ,lllt '''" Jeopardized by Ru ss i an missle movement, Middle East peace talks hung in the balance today . as the Nixon Adminstration pondered Its next move. The President continued to n1eet with top advisers in an all-day session at San Clemente today after deciding to pass on a trip to the American Legion-Convention in troubled Portland. The U.S. peace-keeping role became more difficult with introduction of photographic proof that the cease-fire agreement which began Aug. 7 has ~n violated by movement or SAM m155le sites Closer to the Suez Canal. The U.S. in initiating the 90-day cease fire had guaranteed Israel it would not suffer a military disadvantage j n accepting. Top Mideast advisors met 'With the President Tuesday to ponder the situalioii and thf! U.S. response while the Israeli cabinet fretted. - Administration prospects ·over its -Indochina policy werf! brighter, however, after the Senate vbte'd 55 to 311 defeat for an amendment to force withdrawal or U.S. troops from Indochina by Dec. 311 1971. Presidential Press Secretafy Ronald Ziegler said Nixon ~as "pleased with the overwhelming victory." He reiterated tbe President's statements that It is a necessity to maintain flexibility 'ln Southeast Asia. Vice · President SpirO Agnew Tuesday Crom the la\1{11 of the Western White llouse said Cambodia now has at least 1 fighting chance for survival. I~e stressed that Southeaat Asia11 allies will need both military and economic aid for an inde!inlte ptriod after withdrawal of U.S. troops. AgneW praised acceptanc·e Ot1lleNlxon Docti'lne by SoUtheast· Asian allies. Thi'? vice president flew to the LBJ Ranch near J ohnson City. Tex. to brief former Presidt!nt Lyndon B. Johnson· on his rive-nation Asian tour. . Both are to attend the Thu.r&day iitate dinner at the Hotel Del Coronado for Mexican Presldet1t Gustavo Dlaa Ordaz. ' ' Dingwai\ replied llillt he wtiuld make a repOrt ·to the council but n o recommendation. "If you don't do it, the community wilt be up in arms," ~wattz replied. "We'll be f~-lQ go to a lawsuit·." ~a@wartz dellJJ!..nded tl)st the five members of the committee be polled on whether they agree not to prnf!nt a recommendation Sept. 8 but Dingwall re!used, stating, "We will investigate the situatio~ ail rapidly as we ,can as a committee.'' Dingwall, a printer and pilot, is p~sid~nt of the HOME Council.· This group was appointed· by the city council Aug .. 17 .to _study the fdeadowl ark affair follo~ing complaints by ~omeowners that _a_:IOO-JP:Ot a_dditivn· l!> !he_runw.ilY by Heil Avenue was causing .planes· to· land ··-·1 --: WLRES, HOM-1!5.-AND .P.LANES the Me1doWl•i'k Question A~D DRAWS BONUS IN COLD CASH Cold cash -$50 more I.ban she was asking foi -w11 ihe kind of oiler thi! refrigeritor· ad got for the adv er. tiser who placed it In the DAILY, Pmt>T classified want ad section : AMANA 17 z.dr refrig- frcezer. Ice maker. Avo- cado. Like hew. $250. xxx-xxn. And. of course, the ad sold &he re- frigerator, -to a school teacher wlth ri.ve children. S~ ,•1s one of t~e first to .call. 1'l'hc ·caller who olfeted the 450 bOnu-s was too la'te; the salt! hid already been Made. Make your safe. can a DAILY PILOT ad-vl.stt at 64UQ8, • nearer theil: homes. Resid.enl! also complained that the addJtion of night lights was causing ·more p:lanes to fly at night. 1 · "'No city pennits were obtained for the additions but the City council'suspended a cease and desjst order after Dingwall told the councilmen that s~te aeronauUcs engineers considered the ~ditidns made the airport safer. The council agreed · to hold action against the airport unUI Sept. 8 pending the presentation. of documents from the state board that the· airpon is safer. A crowd of about 80 attended Tuesday night 's hearing in the C.Ommunity Methodist Church. There were some bitter exchanges between residi?nls and piiots but generally the meeting was calm e(lOUgh until the end. • Couuty DiJ,ers Slightly Hurt , ' ' In Kxplosiori Two Orange County divers were burned sU,htly when an explosion ripped a Huntington Beach commercial tioat as it docked for fuel· in Cerritos Channel Tuesday night - Lot Angeles Harbor authorities said Larry Parker, 29. La Palma, and Larry Beal, 22, Tustin, suffered minor burns when they leaped from the 25-foot cabin cruiser' as it exploded. Both men wre treated and released at Harbor General Hospital Jn Torrance. The boat, owned by Mr, and Mrs. Ro~ L. Hartman ~f 1822: Mon~y Lane, Huntlngtofi Beach, was "pretty . weJl burned out," harbor authorities said. Los Angeles Fire Department ofiicialt estimated the damage to the' boat at more than $1,500. The explosion was . aP.parenUy caused by gas fumes striking a hot pipe in the bilge, fire officials said. Harbor offlcialS said the boat, named ••Father's Foll!y," was reglsiered for commercial dlYing. It ";~ docked for fueling at the tlrnt of the e.z~IOll<>!'· •. Parker and Beal both leaped into tJ1t Water when they heard the . explosion, with' Parker buined on the Jen elbow and leg and Beal on both feet ' County GI Killed Army Spec. 4 Rex T. Allen, l;OTI of Mr. ahd Mrs. Delbert D. Allerrt ·of Anaheim. Was killed In the war in SOutbeast Asia. last week, tbe U.S. Defense. Department announced Tuesday. ' Orange C.U( I Weiltller The clouds and low fog will roll in harder along·the Orange Coast in the e'vetllng and morn'- ing hours ThUfsdl)'.._ b_ut sunny skies will be the order of the d·aylight period with tempera- tures in the 70 to SS range. INSIDE TODA 't' ' " j, ' - f DAIL V PllOT H Wtdntsday, Stpttmbtr 2. 1970 • Waitresses Win Battle ---Eor Dinner By JORN VALTERZA 01 ftle Dallr l'n.t Staff Jt took a letter to the leaders of the womeo'1 liberation movtment to inaure 1 \'ictory for 50 waitresses at a posh San Diego botel who wW break White House tradilloa :Jlu!rsdly night and help serve Pres.ideat Nb:on and his 600 guests. The waitresses, Jlvid at being told by their bosses that men would take over their jobs Thunday night, took the 1potJ.laht IWIY from Cambodia, the MJddle East and..._ even Spiro Agnew Tuesday as White HOuse aides ma.de an impas&kmed "clarificaUon" of the biggest headaCbe of lhe Pre&ldent'.s current workln& vacalioa in San Clemente. And the. tometlmes scat.bing and plaintive clarification of the Hotel Del Coronado Ha.ssle dominated Tuesday's press briefing. Connie Stuart, Mrs. Ni.Ion's secretary and head of arrangements for state dinners, wearily announced I 50 • 50 sol~ to a bowling controversy only women could launch. The Mt.el management, Mrs. Stuart said brusquely, was the culprit in the great waitress. w.ar. ~ She .. id 11>!1 ~,.ds o! the historic hotel "prematur<ly" told ill 50 nlgh~shilt waitresses U..,t they wouldn't be needed for the dinner. · The women· were eresUallen. Some bad bought new wigs. Ali bad proudly heralded t b e I r ,. upcom!D&.~t _.,. fri<oda and lamily. • And what's more, they were not goina: to be paid [0< Thuraday night, because they weren't toioa: to work. An&!lr, clamor that President NU:on was not .~ to the "American Way" and other scathing blasts en.wed. Some •of the spurned ladies started complalJline to Women's Llb. ·And.the baule reaching all the way to the WhiteHouae grew. ''I 've been bucged out of mind about waiters and i aJtreases," Mrs. Stuart Aid m rumed tones. She added that the c:rltlciam leveled at the Preljde.Dt was ••com plet ely unwarranted and htebly unfair." She said she would "clear up the thing once and for .all." • .At ltut 50 male employes -waiters ,.~Ji)~ While !l<>ute style from hdge tnys '-are being recniited through a San Diego waiter's union local, she said, detallla& the soluUon. LBJ to Attend State .Dinner ' l~:~J~e~o aeeep~ 1\lelday's lnvitaUon by his SUCttSSOr tQ .ltend the huae at.ate dhmer honoring the ¥1oin& Pre1ldent ol Me1lco in San l»ego. The former preaident a n n o u n c e d ~ of the invitation this morning fiom his home in Johnson City, Texas. ·Before LBJ leaves for San Die10 Thursday M: will receive a briefing of sOrts from Vice President Spiro Af{new, who will ltoP" off In Texas today to diSCUSJ hls trip lo the Far East. After today's 'dl1CUJ1ions with Johnaon, Atntw will fly on for a few days of rest at Oce1n City, Md. Tbe former preald.«i wu reported to be planning to ail ill oa dl!cussions between Pruident Nixcm and reUrln& Mexico Prealdeal Guatavo Diaz Ordaz Thurad1y altemooa: before 1he dinner. " Hundreds ol ,_ ore espeded at the event, incl~n1 'movie stars, pollUcal figures and Other celebrities. -- DAILY PILOT oa...-1 COAl1 ,.US\.l~HING COMl"AN't l•"•rf N. w •• ~ '~•1'1411'110 ....... Je t~ R.. C11rl1v Viet l'rt'll9enl .tn<I ....,.Ar•I M.o,..W Tho1111• K11•il ieo:IO<" 11!01111' A. Murpl!in1 M1!1fflnl £•- Al1n Dlrkin Wal Oo lllH (-Ir IEdllllf ' Albert W. l1t1J Al-Liit EdHW Hnthttte11 he4• Offlc• 17175 l11ch ltult •••f M1ll!l'lf Ailil1110: P.O. lo• 1•0, •1•41 Ottler Offltn llfllo't SH(ll! ttJ f'-1 _.._. C.tl Mftl: :15 W1ll lfl" $Hitt N...,.,,1 l1Kll: 221 I WM! St\"91 e .... i.. .... ,,i i.n c--t•: -N.,111 El C•rnlrlot 11.ttl . ' Breath of Life Six-year-old John Brock of Fullerton gets a reassuring ile from LA Rams quarterback Roman Gabriel, a member of e National Sports Committee for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. C~rent Cystic Fibrosis "Breath of Life" campaign for fWlds lo comblit children'i J~ng diseases runs through Sept. 30. Valley Councilman ru.·per Triggers Finance Df.hates Fountain Valley Councilman John -around which C1Jght to be tempered. Harper swung a verbal hatchet at city l'm satisfied." { · · . bu Shenkman then 9frered to take Harper f1nanc1al reports Tuesday night. t and Stephe s t dj,nnEr _ "I'll pick up found himself ducking the assaults of his the tab" _n so ~e ~ncilman could ask fellow rouncilmen. all the questions heiwanted. Harper started the lively session wilh a "Anytime you can show me facts and complaint. "For the past lhree years figures where you are confused I'll be we•ve p.sitd bi:lanced budgets, but we glad to listen,'' Scott iJ4ded, to Harper. · , , · • ,. · Shenkn'Lln spoke ag'li.n, "John, there receive money 'far jn, excess of our seems to be $500,000 there, that is sbo!'n, budget. I want more extensive fina.oclal but you can'f seem to see it.'' reports lo show where it goes." Harper, his feathers a bit ruffled, "I've wad reports until they're coming ended th!l discussion with, "I don't· work out of f{lY ears,11 interje ted ,fianr for M>' fello,r COlfPciJJJ)an. The cl1f ·~.r E1::•rd lljll , workl for me~and I want more We've acaunullted almost $2 million inlormatlon.1: In lhree years 'lhat liasn't beeD &eCOlll'lted for," Harper said. .. 'Mr. Harper, let'a get one thing straight! Every penny we have has been accounted for. That's a loose term you're using," ·Just replied. "''I don't think. there's sufficient kn9w1edce around the council on where money!pmes from," Harper countered, as the Jlscussion warmed up, Supervisors To Purchase Par~g Area Ficker S.ur·e of Win • Preparednes~ Secret of Cup Victory By AI.MON LOCJ[.\BEY meelin& tho Alptrallans and Gretel II "l:iih , .. ...,.. ••• .Jht_ bl& lhow 1tartl Se~ Bill -:--wtiiDliii the lliht. to defend the thoughtfully rubb<dliis--iiiOnzed bald America's CUp is l6CODd onJy to actually pate. His pale blue eyes were confident. deefnding the most highly prized kudo in Said he: world yachting. . '.'I never worry about winnlna: or losing. It has been said that the skipper who All J worrk about is being prepared. If •loaes the 119-year old bottomles.s pitcher we are preapred we will win. If nol we to a foreign challenger will have his head will lose. Yacht racing is a game in bolted to the pedestal in the New York / which the crtw 'fhldl makes the fewest Yacht Club trophy room where the Cup mistaies wins." now Stands. f Ficker and hi! crew on Intrepid were Bill Ficker, 42-year old Newport Beach obviously well·p~ during the long architect, stands on the threshold atteJ hol·summer -:from June through defeating three rivals who ·were hopefdi August. As a rtsult, Intrepid won the of defending Y?Chting's holy grail. i right to defend the Cup for the ~nd After the tumultuous celebratio~ conaeculive lime. beini selected to defend U1C cup/ ju I asked Ficker to review the three over, I talked to Ficker ln the Uviftg~ months of trials leading up to his defeat of the beautiful, rambling. horn at of Weatherly, Heritage, and finally Price's Neck where be and his Valiant -all manned by veteran crew haYe apent lwo tension . r:n and crews. months. Z\ "We treated the June aeries on Long I asked him ii be bad any qualms ~ut land Sound as we thoogh.t it should be ! treated -as a tune up -· Wt .wefen't realJy prepartd here. -The boat was launched a month late, and we had decided not to get any new sails until alter the June trials. We wanted to find out ·if some things we had done on the boat were really practical, before we got committed to things like $25,0I)) worth of new sails. We knew that it would hurt our performance in June, but we were willing to take the knock.s. "From the !tart we were pointing to August. We set up our campaign to be as good as possible in August. We also continued tank testing right through the June and July trials. "Our performance against Valiant wasn't too impressive in June because Of these things. \Ve were lucky Co come as close to them as we did -I believe it wa.s four for Valiant and three for us. They were obviously better prepared. (See FICKER, Page %4) Susan Cries , V Seal Beach Cltief Says Out in Pain In Courtroom LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Susan Atkins, crying out loud and holding her stomacb in apparent severe pain, held up the start or the Tate murder trial for an hour today but finally took her seat in the courtroom. The 22-year-old Miss Atkins · wa1 leaning heavily on a woma1 ba.iWf ·and tears were streaming down her face as she entered the courtroom with the jury watclµng her hesitant steps:. Within a few minutes she was taken into the chambers of Superior Court J udge Charles H. Older who previously had received the findings of a medical examination to the effect that she was physically able to continue at tht)rial along with Charles MaJtSOn and two other female defendants. Miss Atkins complained that she was ill pain but decided to go on with. the trial aftef the judge told her lhe alternative was to lie in a bed ·in an antiroom and listen to the proceedings via loudspeaker. ~puty District Attorney Aaron Stovitz indicated that he felt ?tfiss AtkiAs w8~ overemphasizing her illness which has brought the trial to ; virtual standstill since last Friday. . "She's putting on an act worthy of Sarah Bernhardt," Stovitz remarked to newsmen. Robertson Libeled Him Polict chief Lee Cate alleged Tuesday that he was "libeled and. slandered" by da~ hall operator WUliam Robertson during the, current license proceedings agalMt the 5eal Beach Marina Palace. The police. chief, who has been acting as prosecutqir of misconduct ~barges . against the h,Jh ·during the City Council hearing, made the disclosure as he attempted to quash a subpoena to appear on the stand himself at the hearing. Part of ._. that document cOntains an application for a "subp6ena duces Personnel Post Open in Valley tecum" -a subpoena of records -ln which the allegations against the chief were made by Robertson. The subpoena was released to several newspapers one day before it was served on Chief Case. Case termed the allegations as "vicious" and said, "I've been libeled and slandered in a press release even before 1 was ser\'ed." He did not, however, say whether he would file charges. · ' Later, he asked the City Council t() remove him as prosecutor of the Marina Palace case because he felt himself to be in a conflict of interests. He said the ronflict had its basis in the fact that he was occasionally arguing with the·same people he wa:;; working for, the Seal Beach City Council. The chief asked the council to request Fountain va"lley School District is assistance from the Orange County · looking ror a resident ·to fill an empty slot Counsel for legal aid In the hearing. on its three·man pusonnel commission. "I have become personally involved in a way that is absolutely immaterial to The seat became vacant with the this case and J ask for relief," Case resignation or Don Whan, who has been commented. on the commission since 1967. Both of the chief's pleas were denied by Applications will be accepted at dislrict a majority of the City Council. offices, Number One Lighthouse Lane, The chief's demands were supported.by Fowitain Valley, through .Sept. 14. Councilmen Lloyd Gummere and Harold The personnel commission establishes Holden. and admiaisters policies for classified Mayor Morton Baum. and Councilmen employes of the district. The commission Thomas Hogard, and Conway Fuhrman, is an executive arm of the board of however. were against the idea. tru9tee_s. . . Said Baum, "The chief has done 1 .Applicants mu~t liYe within the .school difficult job and tJe's."done it well up t1> dislrMll . boundar1e1 and be _reg15tered this time.· I see no reaSon, at this time, to V?"f:I· F~ further informalion-·pltone-nave additional counsel present the city's d11tr1ct offices at MM651. case. The first witness as tbe trial got under. way was M. Joseph Granado, a police department blood expert, who Was Israeli Arsom·s4. lestify\ng about die findings at the Tate II "To have another lawyer would only Insure that we would have more of a circus than some people are attempUog to have now." and LaBlaJ1ca homes. . From Page 1 PALACE •.. In a brief session Tuesday with Miss E Caught Atkms absent, Paul Filzgerald, lawyer SCa pes, for "MaftSOn family" member Patricia Krenwinkel, argued that the rights of the TEL AVIV (AP)·-Denis Michael three women defendants were being Rohan, the 29-year-old Australian sheep JUst',then turned to fellow councilmen Ron Shenktnan and George Scott and asked, "Mr. Shenkman, Mr. &ott, are y9u saUsfied?" handicapped because of the setup for shearer who set £ire to the Al A.ksah ·A big step was taken Tuesday toward talking with prospective witnesses at the Mosque in Jerusalem last year, excape.d the acquisition and development of the women's jail. today from the mental hospital where he Councilman Lloyd Gummere. Scott replied, "This is what we have Howard Stephena (finance director) ror. I'm s~ed." SbaWDan added a few stronger words. "Yau~re tbtowing terms -unaccounted * * * '11.adio Show Quip Not Very Funny, Says Councilman Mark Fountain Valley as one of history's famous lost cities with Atlantis and Pompeji. But don't write in Ink because City Councilman George Scott hopes to amend the situation with a Jetter to the Loman a nd Barkley program on radio staUOn KFI. Tuesday night Scott asked City Manager Jim Neal to write an official letter to KFI giving the location of Fountain Valley. "I was listening to their program this morning in my car wheri _they re.ad a• commercial wlfn& list · of cities," Councilman Scott said. "\Vhen they got to Fountain Valley Loman said, 'Where's that?' " "Barkley replied, 'It's under Fountatn Mountain.~ " "They got a big kick out of it." Scott said, with a slight smile. ''But I didn't think it was so funny." Suspects Clear In Murder Case Two suspects arrested on murder charges in Escondido when the body of a Newport youth w111 found in their c11r hav.e been relea~. Escondido police said Tuesday. Theodore Dusch, Jr., 22, and Kcnnelh l{ull, t7, both of Escondido, were cleared of complicity In the death of William Anderson E'·ans, 17, whose body was found In their car. "rife ca use of de&lh is still under Investigation, but San Diego Coroner's deputits speculated that the teenager died of a drug o"erdose. heart of the community of Sunset Beach He said the young women were on one is confined. But police caught him 30 tnto a county parking Jot for beach goers. side or a soundproof glass screen and miles away. County supervisors signed a $958,950 they could talk with visitors only by The director or the Beer Yaakov granl agreement with the federal . telephone, makillg it impossible for the Sanitarium said Rohan'.s condition had gove~t for acquisition of 6.89 acres, attorneys to join in the conversation, deteriorated and "he had become more the f rmer Pacific Electric right of way Judge Older went to the jail to inspect psychotic." in th aside community. the procedures for taJking with witnesses The fire on Aug. 21, 1969 caused The Federal Bureau of Outdoor and denied the request to use the exten.sive damage to ...9ne of Islam's Recreation has approved a grant of half attorneys• room. holiest places and~ctied off anti-Israeli that amount for the purchase or the Miss Atkins, Manson. ?tliss Krenwinkel demonstrations ughout the Arab property from the Southern PaclfJc Co., and Leslie Vu Houten are on trial for world. ~in u , adjacent to the the present owners. 1be county will put the slayings last August or actress Wailing Wall sa:red to the Jews, is in the up the other half. Sharon Tate and four other persons at Arab sector of Jerusalem taken by the If Southern Pacific accepts the figure her home and the killings of Leno Israelis in the 1967 war, and the fire consummation of the purchase could be LaBlanca and his wife the followilg refueled Arab demanda for the return or When asked as to how he would prove political innuence in the charges against the Marina Palace, Robertson promised "It will aU come out during the hearing." The next session is scheduled for 9 a.m. Tuesday to give the police chief some time to devote to his administrative duties which he says have. been neglected while he was proseciuting the case. Follov.•ing the Tuesday tneeting, It is expected that the hearing would be continued on a daily basis with the po"ibility of morning, afternoon and e\'enlng sessions to wrap It up. achieved within six months, county night. the old city. orficials said. But if the railroad company I~===============;:::::;;=======================-;­decides to fight the condemnation figure in the courts the acquisition vme could be extended to two years. Development of the Sunset Beach proper~y into a 2,(1()().car parking Jot was urged almost two years by Second District Supervisor David Baker. · Baker today estimated that if the land acquisition is accomplished in siJ months v.·ork rould begin on paving the area sometime after ne.xt July l . The county's share of the almost $1 million purchase pr:Jce will come from road department funds and state gu tax allocations which are alre,.dy earmarked for that purpose. Wyler lnceflex BM24 A most unusual· But. Baker· explained, the estimated $60,000 necessary to pive the parking area is not in 'the current county budget and will have to be included in the 1971-n bud&et if the projeCt is to be carried out. 2 Moon Flights Cut; 4 Remain WASHINGTON (AP) -The Space Agency conceled out two of its remaining Apollo moon missions Wednesday, culling the program to four more flights. Dr. 1bomas O. Paine, outgoing administrator of the National Aeronautics and .Space Adrnlnislration, told newsmen the two mis$lon.s, Apollo 15 and 19 ar~ being dropped despite · the s: t r o n g recommendationa of two advi~ry boards that the entire Pl'Oiram be nown. The rtmainlng missions will be redesignated 14·17, and will be completed ln tirrte for the launching of the skylab space station program ln November, 1972, Paine said. • L CONVENIENT TERMS BANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE watch. Marks time on 24 hout system. A nec:t11ify for anyon• who trovtls, the 111ilitory, Of n1t11 , who prit• th1 unu11.10I. Wolch dial shows all 2.4 hours, in· If.ad of iurt 12. Rugg1dly good looking. Th• lncofl•x bolo nee whe1I i1 guoronletd ogoin11 shock fot the lif1 af th• watch or reptoctd fl•• If t ver broken. Guoronteed woterproof 01 long ClS the cry1tol is intod, ttnuin• Wyltr port1 u1ed. J. C. JJ.u1nphrie<J Jeweler& 2• YEARS IN SAME LOCATION !Ill NEWPORT AVE. • COSTA MESA . ........ , PHONE 148·HQI • Hundreds Mourning Salazar By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ~ ~ ~" ~11•1 "'" Mourners ' inc1ud lng the poor or the largest Mexican-American barrio in the ~·orld and White l·louse emissaries gathered in Corona del l\1ar today for the funeral of a man who tried to bridge their two worlds. Last rites for newsman Ruben Salazar, 42, were scheduled for 4 p.m. al Pacific View Memorial ·Park. Even as 10.year-old ChevVies and For:ds, plus black government iimOusines arrived at the cemetery. wrangling continued over responsibilily for the rioting in which he was slain. The death toll, meanwhile, rose to two as Angel G. Diaz. 25, died Tuesday night cf gunshot wounds in \he head at the prison ward of Los Angeles County -USC ?.1edical Center. He waS· shot \\•hile driving his car into a ,police barricade. _l\lr. Salazar, of 3118 S. ruta Wa;t, Santa Ana , was killed Saturday ni&hl when sheriff's deputies· fired a teargas missile into a nearly-empty bar and Jt &mashed into his head . The body la y in stale· four hours Tuesday at Bagues & Son ~1ortu_?-ry in the riot-torn East Los Angeles sector that is home to a million Chicanos. Thousands filed by his gray casket. They crossed themselves and cried, or only stared down at the Los Angeles. Times colwnnist and KMEX-TV news director who had championed their cause for a better life. "Why, brother, why?" 11aid one young Chicano Who broke down in sobs and had to be led out into the bright, smoggy a:unlight. That was the question being asked elsewhere in ibany styles of language, and hastily answered by some. Los Angeles County Sheriff Peter J. Pitchess said in a television interview that his deputies were to be commended for restrained handling of the $1 million outbreak. others blamed them for it. ROdolfo "Corky" Gonzales, founder of the Denver Crusade for Justice, a ~Iexican-American civil rights group. had just been re leased from jail on $1,250 bail. •le said his charge~ of suspicion of robbery. carrying a concealed weapon and carrying a loaded fi rearm in a car '"·ere trumped up forms . of police harassment. He blamed lawmen for disrupting the Chicano Moratorium obseivance to J>rotest deaths of fl.fexican-Americanll in Vietnam. Eduardo Hernande?.. coordinator of . Chicano sludies at UC Berkeley. agreed - and joined other leaders in demanding a federal probe. "Another vicious. brutal repression that ha s become characteristic by this American society to any form of dissent.'' he charged. Speaking in Los Angeles, U.S. Attorney Robert L. Meyer. however, disagreed and said he has launched no full investigation because Sheriff Pitchess' office is \\'orking well and cooperatively. "Hundreds of provocative act~ were commitied by kno\vn dissidents who came to incite and foment trouble,'' fl.1eyer charged. Thousands came Tue sday lo pause beside Salazar's casket . President Nixon announsed at the Western \Vhite House that fie would be represented at the Salazar f~neral by his special adviser. Robert if. Finch. The former Secretary of Healtil 'Education and Welfare was expect.eel to be among hundreds and maybe thousands present for the rites. Private interment will fol\o\v and the Salazar family suggests contributions to a R.uben Salazar Foundalion. They may be sent to KMEX, the Spanish language slation he joined as news director in the hope of better serving the cause .of harmony between the two separate societies. Business Trip Jaqueline Kennedy Onassis, wearing white slacks, ·a rain· coat and dark sweater, leaves London's Claridge's. ft is r~ ported that she and her hus- band are heading for Belfast Saturday to visit -the shipyard constructin.i? two tankers for Ona ssis' fleet. Supe1·vi sors Pla11 for U".S . Ae rospace Bids · Needled by unemployed aero.§pa~­ workers, Orange County supervisors Tuesday named a two-man committee to develop a plan of action to gain new aerospace contracts for the county. Named to the co1nmittee were Supe rvisors David Baker and William Phillips. They will meet soon with legislators representing the county to explore the possibility of directing new federal contracts toward local firms. The two supervisars will also meet with jobless technicians. scientists, engineers, and ·employers of the space firm s to determine how much cutbacks in defense contracts and the resulting layoffs affect smaller firm s performing satellite work for the larger space firms. About 75 unemployed space workers jainmelt the super visors hearing room and heard one of their leaders, Donald E. Lucius. criticize the board for not. previously recommending a plan of action. Baker admitled that the s pace unemployment problem. "is a serious one lhat has a residual effoct as far do\\'n as the lunch counte r around the comer froni the areospace plant. Fewer workers mean fewer lunch customers." "rt is a deplorable si tu ation,.. added supervisor \Vi\liam Hirstein. "Some 10.000 aerospace workers have been laid. off in the past year." Representatives of a new organization, "Experience Unlim ited " in a letter lo lhe board of supervisors urged that county officials work toward higher welfare assistance. County lax Rate Drop s 20 Cents By JACK BROBACK 01 ._ O.b' PNM l t•tt .. ' Orange county supervisors -hurting for needed funds -Tuesday considered the dismal altematives open to them. then voted to raise the general fund property tu rate by three cents. • They re«elved some paradoxical good news in thi!ir afternoon session. Orange COunty Auditor.controller Vic A. Helm announced that even with the new three.cent levy, the overall county tax rate will be nearly 20 cents lower th.ls year than last. Decreases in tax assessments for the Harbor District, Flood Control District, and other taxing requirements imposed in past years make it PoSsible. Heim said the 1970.71 rate will be 19.76 cents Jess. J~e broke the various decreases and also increases in taxes imposed as follows : , -Harbor District down 3.82 cents from last year's rate of 8.M cents to 4.83 cents; ·flood Control down 10.86 cents from 35.91 cents to 25.05 cents; school institution rate up .\18 cents, school modification aid rate of 8.3 cents eliminated entirely; development center rate up .14 cents, county general rate up three cents. Other changes listed by Heim included an increase in state<ollected in lieu taxes of $366,000, an increase in county fees for clerk filings of $220,000 due to a new state law, a decrease in the reserve set aside for disputed oil royalty taxes of $4;.5 million. The school modifiCation rate-which accounts for a 8.3-cent reduction is possible because CoWtty A s s e s so r Andrew Hinshaw's percentage of 23.I percent of market value.on real property is at or above the statewide average for the first time since 1962. Flood control is down JO cents because the special one-year JO-cent levy to repair damages caused by the 1969 floods is now eliminated. The 19.76 cents tax reduction will mean that the owner of a $24,000 home will be taxed $12 less lhis yea r than last. 'TbiS.is_p.artially offset in many cases. hoY:eve r, by a 17.6 percent increase in assessed valuations. County Administ rative Officer Robert Thomas has the job of eliminating some Sl.9 million more in department budgets within two weeks to meet the reduction from the $1.75 cent rate supervisors thought ltiey were gOtrig to-flave to 1tvy and the $1.70 rate they arbitrarily established in the Tilesday morning session. Agnew En Route To Portland For Convention Vice President Spiro Agnew boarded Air Force Two al El Toro Marine CorJ>ll ·Air Station this morning for a surprise drop-in -visit to the American Legion Convention in Portland. The announcement came rron1 the \\'estern White }louse one day after President Nixon armounced he couldn't go. and only moments before the big jet took off. American Legion Commander J . ~1ilton Patrick told over~·helmed clclegales they would have lunch with their second-in-command at midmoming. Attorney General John Mitchell was also scheduled to attend the convention, but it was not explained whether Agnew would appear in his place or along wilh him. He was scheduled to fly out of Portland after lunch for Bergstrom AFB in Texas and a helicopter flight to the LBJ Ranch to brief former President Johnson on his Asian trip. PLATES F 'ighting SMOG You Pay Your Money and Y ou Take Your Choice By PATRICK BOV l,E 01 ll1t 01111 ~iltt Sti ff The Department of Molor Vehicle.~ today finds itself thrust into the role or CENSOR by Gov. Reagan's recent signing or the personalized license plate bill . The legislation. authored by Sen. ~1ilton f\farks (R.San Francisco). provides that for an extra $25, a car owner can get a license plate with almost any combination of letters or numeral!' on it. The revenue wlll be used for smog control and other programs to protect the environment. However, the tal!k of censoring cbjectionable plates has been left up to the OMV. But there ha\'c been very few (lbjections so fn r. according to Elmer Brown, deputy registrar of the OMV in • Sacrrmento. "\\:e have hAd none lo dah: that 're \ object~onable," e'rown ~aid in a lelephone interview. He said that of the 300 or so .ippllcations received so fiir. there have been a few for PEACE. one for TRIAL. nne for LA \\1, and many number·lellcr combinations that. he did 11ot.. Cl'en understand. The plait. program is expected to draw <1bout 200.000 applications .. Brow11: noted. guidelines. •\\•hich Would afi'IOun t to about '[Wd percent IIe said that one request that may be of Lhc 10 million motorists in-Californ ia. rejected i!I FRESNO, which could be l{c saicl motoristli in ~1assachusetts and interpreted to give the vehicle official Ne\v York have si mil:-ir of)portunities and status. his investi gations of those states showed He said th at such combin11Uon11 as FBI that three pefcent availed themselves.of or CHP were out, and that the !he option. department would probably not. a1Jo_w . Out or the $25 dollar fee, be said, $20 'USNAVY'or USARMY because they, too, ·will go for anti-Pollution while I.tie would imply 'ficlal status. remaining $5 ·will be used to make tlld Names would probably not be rejected, send out the platf!1i. Brown said, eve11 if they are unusual. The plates will continue to be "We received a letter from a man manufactured by the inmates at Folsom named Donald Fink the other day," he Prison a~d the fir~l ones ~ill not be i~ _said; "and y,·e thought he was go"lg to the m111l lo the applicants until -l1avc FJNK on his plates. But we read the November. Jetter and he wanted DON." One drawback of the late delivery. he ·erown said that any dupli c ate ~11icl. wa1; that the owner wi ll have to pay ;ipplicatlons received until Sept. 22 would l'ln ;idditione1 $10 to have hi s registration be filled by lottery. After that date. the renewed in .January. making the new plates would be given Out on a "first- platcs only valid for aboul--two months. come, firs t-served " basis. -. E~ch year. the applicant "'ill have to "\\r~ have received ~ Jot of applications pa=' an adclitiona1 $10 rot re newal or the -for PEACE llO far." Brown said, "but plates. and II he trani;fers the plates to thr.:oe will bl' ,Tiore tha" one _PEACE. another vehicle, he will have to pay a $12 Slnoe it Is only a five letter word, it Can charge. These ·funds will also go to fight be preceded or followed by a number. So pollutlo1t · th .:c are 22._posslb'· ... i.· .. .,+\ons." . ' Bro\11n said th at ~lncc no objectlonable \\'Ith all of the possible words.to choose rcqut?sts for plaleli ha,-e been received. from, Brown did not think that anyone the dep:irtmenl has not set up any would choose VANITY. > -l -I-- WtdntSCl'av, S1pttmbff 2, 1970 H DAILY PILOT :J 'Devil Cult' Deaths Woman. Rec.eives· 2 Prison Terms· l A111111ln11tlon Try King Hussein escaped assas- sination· attempt by "unknown persons" who fired on the Jor- danian king's motorcade Tues- 4ay as he wu driving to Am· man Airport. The Palestinian guerrillas, whO' oppose Hus- sein's acceptance of the U.S. Mideast peace move reported new fightin2 broke out in Am· man. (See story. Page 5). Disho11ored Hero To Get Marker . On Grave by Law One American GI who won his country's highest honor for bravery in battle will get a headstone on his unmarked grave as the result flf a law sign~ by President Nixon Tuesday in San Clemente. He later died after being discharged dishonorably and "'as thus ineligible for lhe simple marker. . \llhoever fie was, he was not identified by either name or place of burial -nor war in v.•hich he served with valor -in the action Tuesday. The Secretary of the Army was ordered 22 years ago In furnish tombstones or grave markers for all dead members or the Armed Forces, if their last term of service.epded honorabl y. President Nixbn's edict Monday will supply the soldier In the unmarked grave with a stone to remind the world that· he once served honorably, nOt matter bow he was discharged. -Military aulhoritles who l ei ti ( I t d befm;e Congress ., about tfle ca• e reoiirched their rues and loulld l ,lil mllitary men have won tht Medal of Honor. B.t TOM BARL~Y Of tM £Hiit Pllrll ll1ff Two state prison terms of one Jo flve years each were ordered Tuesday fo~ Ule woman member of a gang of drifters 1accused in the "devil cult" kllllng· of a Mission Viejo teacher and the hatchet slaying of a young service station attendant. Superior Court Jtldge Samuel Dre.izen set those sentences for Melanie fl.1ae Daniels, 31, of Santa Ana in the wake of pleas by Deputy District Attorney Martin J. Heneghan that "If there was ever a case for consecutive sentencing then this has to be it." Judge Dreizen quickly agreed and ordered consecutive terms on the two convictions of being an accessory to murder. He ordered the tall b ru n ette 's immediate s)llpment to the Frontera Prison for Women and cancelled the balance of the probation term she was serving for a recent narcotics conviction. Mrs. D11niels was serving that time in Orange County Jail when invesUgators link~ her to the killings of Mrs. Florence Nancy Brown. 31 , of El Toro and service station attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin, 21 of Santa Aha. · Mrs. Brown's body, minus its: heart, lungs and righf arm, was found last Julie 15 in a shallow grave -off the oriega Highway. Three members of the gang of drifters to which Mrs. Daniels w:as attached were Indicted. by the Orange County Grand Jury for her murder. CarUn was hacked to death with a hatchet last June 2 In the wa sh room of his Santa Ana service station ln a killing that left the once handsome young man -in the _ words of an investigator .._ "absolutely unrecognizable and soaked in a pool of his own blood," · Heneghan told Judge Dreize n Tuesday that Mrs. Daniels washed the 'blood off the hatchet that was used to kill·Cai'lin and disposed of the $40 to $50 taken from the service station. There is no proof that she was present at the killing of ~t rs. Brown, he said. but his office ill satisfied that she urged the chopping off of Mrs. Brown's fingers to prevent identification and thal she suggested that the dead woman's teeth be kicked in for the same reason . Investigators confirmed Tuesday that t~e~, have not i;>een able to "positively hnk Mrs. Daniels to the Satanic rites that Wert conducted before and after Mrs. Brown's death - those ritt.i als includ.~ the eating of the woman's flesh and the cutting out of her heart and other- vital orgara. Mrs. Browri was pulled trom her car on Sand Canyon Road and driven• to an ·• Irvine orange grove where she Was Our :Jradilio.n . • Dad's style ••. junior's toughness BUSTER BROWN. ~· - FREE murdered. The Daniels woman baa insisted that she did not iCe the womaii until she saw the blanket<(OVentf body in ·. the back seat of her station wagon. -·• Indicted for the two kllling1 are ~ Herman Hendrick Taylor. 17, and '.·. Stephen C. Hurd, 20, both transients. ., Hurd faces jury trial Nov. 9 and Taylor ...... will go to court Sept. 8 fpr a hearing on a. motion to reject that indictment. , • With hiht in court on that date will be " Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse, 16, of · Garden Grove, who is accused. (If the ': killing of Carlin. He will ask for dismissal~; CJ! the murder charge. ... • Oran-ge County investigators tn the : macabre Bro\vn-Carlin case are seeking '; U1e extradition frorp Oregon o f'i..: ' Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney, 17, of ._ Portland. He is indicted for murder in the Brown killlJlg. · • "I have looked very carefully at UM! .. , transcripts or this case and listl!ned •• ·attentive ly to the arguments Sy attorneys .:, for both sides," Judge Dreizep told the ' calm and apparently unmoved Mrs ...• Danie ls before sentencing. . : "I can only come to one conclusion," he:".' ~id. "Society needs to be protected from · . people like you." Asia Leaders Fee~ Secure, Says Agn.ew ·, .•. .. '• " The Nixon Doctrine of Vietnam .;, withdrawal, coupled with he U.S. Uuvat-. against communists: in -.Cambodia ' 111 • giving friendly Asia leaders a seD.8e (If• security, says Vice President Spiro Agflew. Briefing the press at the Western White llouse in Sa n Clen1e.nte alter bis lo.daf· Asian ntission. Agnew em phasized troop ,,·ithd ra"'·al musl be supplanted with_ heavy economic aid. · lie macle his remarkii after reporting to , President Nixon and the Nii.tional . Security Council on the 30,000.ntile trip in · which he visited five Asian ftations. The vice pre_sident plans to stop off Ui : visit former President L}rndoft Jol\n'Son \ft _ T&it.s and wi\11.h't.n-'s~nd an..ttebnd a\· Ocean City, Md., reSting up. · Questioned aOOut defeat of the End~· \Var bill -in Congress Tuesday, he aaid the'.. vote agaiJll:St the .McGovern-}{atfiel-1 Amendmen!IM iljrilfl!inl." I t..f 1 "1 think It will have a aa.lofMy t flett, 1· he rem_arked. ~· CLASS-TIMI CLASSIC: WITH • • HU. VENL Y FIT IN EVERY STEP With ••"'J ,.1r of u11t1r .. •1 school .-, -vt<J oww C:OMPL~ PINC:IL IOX. Hurry and 91t yoursl • .. ' OUR FASHION ISLAN D STOR E OPEN SUN. SEPT, 6JH FROM 12 TO S • 30 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH e WESTCLIFF PLAZA , .. r I . I f DAILY PILDT Author1Ue1 are lnvestlgatin1 the case of the stalr-climblng mules in De1 Moines, Iowa. A witness said somebody drove four mules and a wagon up and down the steps of the Grimes State OUlce building during the annual Iowa State Fair parade through downtown Aug. 211. Authorities investigated, and con- cluded It did occur -the steps are badly chipped. ~ • Tempmaturc1 _,., m tM 10•1 and 90'1 GI tht Uttlt flakt1 ftU, cooCrtno 1Vt1''1/thing toith a thin blanket of whUe. It wam't inow. SOfll<bodJ forgot lo coott tho dust control detnct1 a:t the Col- \ gatt Palmoliot ·pltznt, M Clarks- villt ht4. A ra:in.ihown ftll, rudl flowd in tM ltrtttl and "10t1J> batu'* ro1t and ftU on Clark.I· ville. • U.S. Rop. Robert Toft Jr., R-Ohlo, has decided to ignore a mimeOgra- r.hed letter for financial aid.' The etter asked the Republican senator· !al nominee to contribute to the campaign of his opponent, Demo- crat Howard M. Metzenlfaum. • Fair goers whistled and applaud· ed Mondar, at shapely American film "star ' Lorraine Lorrlmer as •he opened the Frimley fair In Eng· land -But then they came In for a shock. After judging the fair queen competition, Lorra-ine took off her blonde wig and dark glasses to reveal local hairdresser Trixie Hall. Sbe agreed to the hoax when ra;.r organizers failed to get a real &tar. • The Rei>ublican senatorial candl· date for Greenwich, COM. received a bipart assi.t Monday and it wao like pennies from· lieeven. A large banner plugdng Roplibllcon L-•11 P. Wolclcor for lbe Senate fell from the tail end of a Pl81le over Long Island Sound near Greenwich on Sunday. Welcker's campeign headquarter1 received a telephone Cllll Monday· lrom Ted Darash ct Stanford. D•· rash said be was cruising in a boat - on the l!iOund when he saw the Weicker banner floating down Sun~ aay. He hau1ed in the banner and said it was drying on his front lawn. "By the way." Oarash told Weick· er's office, "I'm a Democrat." • Municipal Judge John Charnock &nawrs Vrge Viet Ceasefire · - ... WASIDNGTON (UPI) -A blpartila1 1ppeat urging Preald•.nt Nixon to propoM a allDdlUU eeue-firt t h r o u 1 b o u t Vletnom 11 tbe Senale'1 lllest dfort lo hulen tbe pullout of u .S. troop1 from lndocblna. 'Jbe 1ppeal, ii the fonn of a letter to Niton at the Westem White House in San Clemente, sugaeated th( withdrawal of all forelpi: mllltary forte! from Vietnam wtqiln • specifl<d time alter Ibo ctue- fln fOOI Into eflecL Tho JetleT WU mode public Tuetclly only boun afler the Senale deleoted, 15 to 39, an elfort to .et Feb. 29, 1972 u a deadlloe for Nl>m to brt.i home all Amerm U.Opo from llldocblno. Seriate Republica1 Leader Hu1h Scott and Sen. Henry M. Jaclmon (l).Wuh.), who origioated the letter, den.led It WU I trtol bllloon floated 'on behalf of Ibo Niloo Admlnistratloa_. Aaied about the liming of the letter, Seo~ and Jackaoo "1d Ibey waited unlil the 0 End of the war" amendment wu defeated so It would JIOt be interpreted a:s an attempt to divert votes. Scott, nolinc the chlef negotiatora for both 1ide1 are in Paria, said "It WU a good time to stir IOn'lethlng up." Tbe letter wu signed by lf Senators, including Democratic Leader ?if l k e Mansfield. The lponlOl'S covered the entire poliUcal spectrum of the Senate. * * * Cambodia Calls For Air Support PHNOM" PENH (UPI) -cambodlan called In air stril:ea and ortlllery Tuesday night against a mount.ainaide BuddhiJt pagoda turned into a gun posltb}. by the Viet Cong, the CambocfJan command aald today. Maj. Am Rong, cambodiae Wonnation Offi~r, said the decia.ion to fire on the pagoda WU reached 11 part ot efforts "To kill as many Communist.! at ,pouj. ble." He said the Commun.Uts bad an estimated 1,200 troopo around Srang, 26 miles S<llth of Phnom Penh. "'Ille more relnlm:en-they send lo, the more we can kill and the best way to kill tbem Is with air and artillery," Am !tong 181<!· '!be U.S. Command In 5aiCon nld , toa, -ly a,oetl' American lroojll from two lllfanby outflts llalioned arounct Salg<n ·will be withdrawn from South Vietnam by OcL 18 u part of the Nl>m Admlni!tra.Uon's Phase VI pullout. Informed military 10urces s al d ,, however, the entire· complement of the two units would be withdrawn numb,erlng around 10,000 men. Soviet Cholera Cases Treated VIETNAMESE TROOPS HOLD EARS AS MORTAR FIRES Fl,. ot 5-rt BoM O'Reilly Aimed at Suspoctocl Rod Poslt lona Youth Held By Police In Three St~ Paul Blasts ST. PAUL, MIM. (UPI) -Police today held a youth who received minor injuries in the first of three uploslons that came within 38 minutes of one another in Downtown SI. Paul Tuesday. Two other men :were injured. Police would not llY whether the unlde~Uied youth had been charged. He told lathorities ltt was pualng the 1lte of the fint explosion -a warehouae on 2nd Street' noor tho SL Paul Dlspetch and Pioneer Press -when the blast occurred, sligbUy injuring bim. 1be other two blasts occurred 38 minutes later. One was at the Burlington Northern Railway's downtown office, where two.men were injured. The other was placed beside pipes connecting two 17,000-gallon petroleum :storage tanks at a Gull 011 Co. The most serious of the blasts was the railway offices, but authorities said the bomb at Gulf Oil could have blown up the enure facility. Instead, it went off under an electrical circuit and merely bent IQme pipes. Donald Miller, 42, was hospitalized in fair concfiUoo and George Peters, 34, was treated and released after the explosion at the railway offices. said he believed there was a connection between Tuesday's bombings and the oae at Dayton's. He aaid be would not 10 into details until charges were filed. One wllness to the expl<>:slon at Burlington Northern. Jim Hafiz, a wklng lot manager across the street, iild "I knew right away it ,was a dynamite explMloo. You could amell it." But police said the investigation was still under way "to determine the origin and composition of the explosions." • Tltreat to Seeurit11? Israel Considers Action on Bases llrael, alarmed ot what It eooslden • major tbr<aj to Ill -=!ty, la aerloully conslclerq tatlnl action a g a J n • t Egyptian mlsalle bues which It N)'I have been moved cloeer to the Sue& C..nal in violaUoii of the ceu&-ftre, dlplomaUc IOUfcet aald today In Jerusalem. 'Ille llOOrCOI said Def-Minister Moohe Dayan feels Ibo United State. hu failed In lls obllgatloo u the· instigator and negotiator of the ceue-fln and that Israel must be free to take actlon to prevent any further vlo1atlona. Israeli newspapers said today Prime llllnlster Golda Meir told a meeting of labor membert of Parliament Tuesday that a situation may arise uDder _which Israel may be compelled to take action agalnat the SAM 2 bues. 'Ille SAM21 are higb·alUtude Russlanbullt mlsalles. Newspapers carrying the "action" · rtporl Included 'Ille JeruMlem POii Nebraska Con~ Hold Two Guards, Press Demands LINCOLN, Neb. (UPI) -Thirteen maalmum security prlsonen beld two guards hostage today and ofiiclals at the Nebruka State Penitentiary said the I ringleader of tbe rebellion Is 1 man serving two terms for murder. Warden Maurice Sigler &aid the prilon gates would not be opened to get the guards ttleased . "When a man comes to work here," Sigler said, "he is told he may be taken tlostage. These gates will not be opened for any hostage -even me." The guards were identified a:s Lt. Vance B. Schrader, 49, and Erwin Siemerui, 53. Sigler said theo prisoners were peaceful during the night and allowed Schrader and Siemens to sleep. Sigler said the prisoner who captured Schrader and Siemens was identified as Charles McCleUand. 49. who is serving two life tenns, !or murder. The warden said the prisoners presented seven demands which must be met before the guards are released. He said the demands r e I a t e d to administration of the muimtun security ward, where McClelland and the others have been confined. Sigler said the demands a r e unreasonable. "We have strict ruJes In the-segregation ward;" he aald~''Thete men are usually there only a few daya and we don't want them to lib it. That'• why rigid handling i1 neceuary. '' Haaretz, Davar and Al Hamiahmar. The. meeting wu lea'tt and there were no direct quotes from Mrs. Meir. There WU no hint U to What IDJ' "action" might tse put tn the paat Itrul hu bll tbe mllalle buea with Pbantom jell and has used bellcopttr-borne ... u1t troopo ag;Unst radar bues. Since thon Russia sent tn SAM3 missiles whlcb u. used at low altitude to protect the SAM2t. Any lsraell action against the mlaile sites would encf the IO<lay ceue-liro which began on Aug. 7. In the tne¥J1UmeJ there were lndlcatJons from both i.ae.1 and Egypt that the New York peace talks ..Owd be cut off before Ibey reall,y begin. . In Jerusaletn, an Israeli cabinet rneeUng failed 'l\Jesday to decide on wMa. to send amballailor Yoeef Tekoab bock to New York. And In New York, the Egyptian ambassador lo the Unllod Nations Indicated Egypt mlght not want to continue the peace ti.lb after the JO. day truce ends. Any decision by Israel to take actloa against the-mia:sile sites would repraent. a victory for Dayan who was reported threatening to resign if peace talb begin under the threat of Egyptian misailea. Diplomatic sources said be bad the support of Mrs. Meir in his tough st.and. The cabinet was said to have agreed unanimousl:9' on the gravity of the missiles crisis but that the ten hawkllb members -Foreighn Mlnia:ter Abba Eban and Deputy Premier Yigal Allon - shied at action to counteract the buildup. Reports that Egypt might not wont lo extend the 90-day cease-fire came from the United Nations where Ambuaador Hauan El·Zayyat met with U. N • Mediator GUOJW V. Jarring Tllelday ond Indicated Egypt might not want lo talk peace when the truce lapses Ncw. 5. • Israeli poUUcal IOllfces said support was growing in the cabinet for the Dayan viewpoiat and that he would havt1 majority support in Sunday'• regular cabinet meeting. In last Sunday'• meeting, the Eban-Allon side bad majority support, they .18ld. United Citi.Zens Now Legal Party in SC- COLUMBIA, S.C. AP) -Tb o predominantly Negro United Citizens party became South Carolina'• fourth • officially recognized polltlcal p a rt y Tuesday. The aeaetary. of state certifltd it after determining that its peUtlms bad the required 10,CMX' aignaturel of --regtsterea votm~ The other parties in the ltate are tbl Democral, Republlcon, ond t b. Indepeadent party. wears a Spiro Agnew watch bu't he doesn't want everyone to know about it. At the conclusion or a busy day Wednesday ln Charleston, W. Va. Cbarnock: was seen strapping the watch on bis wrist. A friend Inquired why he didn 't wear the watch iD open court. "I'm afraid if C wear it in the courtroom it might prejudice some of my decisions," · lhe judge said. MOSCOW (AP) -Cholera eues In three IOUthem Soviet citie1 ll"e belnt treated IRICCfllsfully and there la no sip of the d19ease spreading ln the Soviet Union, Deputy Health Minister !poly B. Av<lllt said today, In an explosion at Dayton 's department !tore Aug. 22 one woman was seriously tnjured . Police recovered an une1ploded bomb at Dayton's at that time. Permanent press and electric dryers do your ironing for you. - • Seven rolls of copper wire turned ap in a Pacific Gas & Electric Co: parking lot in Chico, Calif. along with a note Crom a repentant but eonfused thief. 111 am sorry I stole lhis wire." the note read. "I decid· ed that the best thing to do was to return it which I have proceeded to !o." He signed it: "The Mistake Maker." PG!iE officials said the wire was not stolen from them. Ibey don't even use that kind. He aaid "preventive and antiepidemlc'• meaaure1 are still ia force tn the aoulh but "the situation is now atablllzed and the C8'.lten: of the dlseue have been localised snd, for all practical purpo,.., elfmfaated. '' He did not say if any of. the Soviet cases have died or bow many cases have been recorded. The cities named by AveUt were Odessa, on the Black Sea, Kerc'h, on the Crimean Peninsula, and Astrakhan, where the outbreak started. St. Paul police chief Richard Rowan Tanker Runs Aground TAIPEI (AP) -The 34,700.ton Norwegian tanker Kong:svang r a n aground today on rocks near Green Island, 15 milea off eastern Formosa. The ship was empty, on her way to the Ferslan Gulf, and her ownera Aid none of the 40 crewmen wu hurt. Mercury Ranges 80 Degrees Desert Highs of 113 Offse_t by New Low 34 in East CaHfol'llle • A "'"~ ol m.tlY •Ufln'f S1111rlltr11 CtUl-'t •ti~ ""'" 111 ... 1 tl'ld IMIM'li.. low c'-11 W f9il c.it!l!Wd ftdlY Wllll lr>e!Wfl,.,. ..,._, l fllll ltlf11 ftrn"'tl lUrt die,.... M•tr aun..,.IM .rw.Ued _, Lot. .,,..._ '"" ¥kl111ty, not cwn11ti1e1r """"'""' ...... ., flM CH•tel tot tflf a.vf .. ,..,. 1klflt 4wlftt ,.. -1,. l'levn. The ..-.dlc1-I Mflll lwdeY" ..... U 1"4 """ ·-''""tit "· ._.. lftfhlltll••• f'toCtlvM 8111¥ "'" tullSl'I.,. MW "" rnldmoml11t 11'141 lftOllllftt9 "'"'•etv,.. dlf"l'lbtif nt•r "· n.. _.., """" ...,.119o •!r f'ffdl,..-•lllrl "' ,..,....,.lft ,..,,. fl.ii l!'IOl!fy • I Ul'tl'I¥ tlllet -wlfll '-'8tllrM Ill lfle l>I. The ..,...,, ..,.,.,, ......... fl'lllt' _If__. ~lflt *""r-'-1110, ttr ,,.. __... di,., lrn-'-1 rwl•"t!W 11J. .. IW9hnl rHlllne "' 111t'111tlol'I Tilftdln'. ~ """' n..M'f ll'ld .... f<tlf -·~..,~I i-. kldl Ol4r ... ~ ... """-'* ... "'' ,,.. w,,. 11-M. ......... '7•100. 111:1_...,.. tt.'7. ~ ""11'111 llt•llS, .......... ,,.., .. .,... ,.,,, ""''..,...... n.n. IOllTMI_,. CAU~lflA -f'llr 1!ll'allfl ~ M .,........ IMrwet '" """" ..... _.., ,,.......... ....... ltw dlilas •• ll'ld .,,, ..,...,. Not llWC1I --.iw. ........ LOS ANOA.11 AHD v1cfM1TY - ""'-1111 """' lftll .. ,,, '"°""/"' '°" ltd row c-...n 11oM u.11, etMnrltl f•l' "'"""'" nu,..~. 1.m11 c~ lfl t.fri.,.rllUnl. o....rn!tllf .. Mii" "' 111111'1• 1Mu1 ll. ' PMtflW Of ESSA wtaMll:IUll:(UfOll[Wf TO 7:11.lM. IST t •I •70 -Temperatures tflt~ L-f'tK. .. ....__ .. " ::::.'" .. " " " hbratlt~ .. " lllll'llrtll .. " '"" " " ... ..... " " ""'"' ~ .. ,,,._. .. .. CleWIMll ~ ~ ....... ~ .. ·" Dttroll " .. '""" ~ " '"'""" n " , ... ,,_ " ~ ·-" .. Hou1IOll " n ··~ 1(111u1 City " " u1v.,.1 '" " .... .... " .. .. Ml1"'l ... ell .. " ·" MllWMM " " Ml-•111 • .. N"Orl1111• " " ·" New V1rt; " " o ...... .. .. P111 lll:obltt .. ~ t'~ll1dt,.,.lt " .. ~ P!lhbvrt~ n " t'"'-hr -'" " t'ar11911d " .. 11:911 l luff .. H ·-• .. S1cr1-i't " .. tt, '••Ht .. .. Slit Lllt.t Cl,., .. .. '"""'"' " .. Siii l"rtMfwe .. n Slnt1 l1rbtr1 " ~ Sutti. " H IMlclM "' .. .~ Thtl'l'l'ltl . '" .. W1tl'll11t!WI " .. These days you hardly need an iron. Practical! y all clothing and most household linens are available iq permanent press. But permanent press fabrics only stay wrinkle-free if they're dried properly.And that's where an electric dryer comes in. The new electric dryers with permanent press cycles are pro- grammed to give just the right amountofheatfor the right amount of time. And they gently fluff up the fibers in your permanent press fabrics. Compared with gas dryers, electric dry· ers come out way ahead-because they're flameless and odorless-and cost up to $30.00 less. · If you live in ~ Medallion Home yoll\ already know the ad- vantages of electric living. But if you're not yet drying electrically, why not get an electric drri~r now. All you have to do is plug ~t in. • Let permanent press and an electric dryer do your irbning for you. See your appli- ance dealer today. ....t"I:: Southern Callfomla Edison ::=.- Pennanent press clothes live bet;ter electrically. ' I Wtdntsday, Stpttmbf'r 2, 1970 ' DAILY "LOI IS '~~~\·~sun , Suburbs Big Lures. in U.S. j • Multi-parade Marchers in New Haven, Conn., protes ted against the war. The parade also was in support of Bobby Seale, the Black Panther leader on trial in Conn ecti· cut. ll also opposed racism. , Storms Soak Ma,.iilu ; 14 P erish in Flood 1'.1ANlLA (UPI) -A record <lperations. 'rainfall of more than 22 inches "l am afraid we suffered in 30 hours flooded Manila damages," he said. "Most of Portla11d ''Hippies' Peac eful . the casualties were caused by today and look 14 lives drowning and electrocutions ." PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) - including those of two U.S. The rainy weathtr was The Pe<>ples Army Jamboree's sailors. President Ferdinand expected t.o continue for the Second Antiwar Parade iiuring E. Marcos declared a stale of next two or three days. "calamity and emergency." American Legion Week went The Navy men were killed in without incident T u e s d a y a landslide at Cubi P<lint J d N• night. Naval Station about 90 miles Of 80 IX.es The PAJ, a loosely knit northwest <lf Manila . The names of the victimli"ere not group opposing the 'Yar in released by the NaVy until Iraqi Thi· eat Vietnam , mu st e red an their relatives are n<ltified.. eslimated 1,000 persons for the The bodies <lf the two one and one-half hour long Americans were recovered, To Intervene parade tlv-ough d owntown the Navy said. One Filipino Portland. The f 1 r s t PAJ was reported missing in the landslide. AM~1AN (UPI) -Jordan paradelSunday drew only 100 The Navy sa id an earlier today rejeeted an Iraqi threat more , but louder, marchers. landslide slipped down onto to intervene with its 12,000 The parade Tuesday night the national highway outside Jordanian.based troops if the was •staged in protest of l of Olangapo City near the gate Jordania n Army cracks down racism as well as the war in of Subic Bay Naval Base near Indochina. S p e a k e r s in Cubi Point. further on Arab guerillas. The Portland's Duniway par k One person was reported crisis was heightened by a exhorted lhe paraders not to -dead and three missing in that new assassination attempt confront the police. who were landslide. against King Hussein Tuesday very much in evidence, and to President 1'.1arcos, wh<>Se night .. keep ii cool." the Cenaus Bureau bad millloo, to replace New York lar1e&t cities in tbe '70 lally Just-corqpleted ceruius sketch proiected all 1loni on .. the as the moat populous statt. hid Iott population,. inclu4ing mlnary c:ounta. he thinkl • of America has a familiar basil of the old lt60 figures -American! moved toward Ollcago, D e t r o I l and t70 ceftlUI w)ll prow lo look. lt depicts a nation o( 200-and • u b I e q u e n t sp<>l warm weather. Florida and Baltimore. New York held most accurate. ever. plus fr\illion perSOll$ In search sampllnp . Texas joined California as about even. Big gainers were He said the bureau has I · or warm weather or suburbia. ft shows : sta~ with more than a the warm-wea the r cities of completed rtebecb lnvolvlJ'll The nation 's f u 11 s c a I e -A nationwide total of portrait won 't be unveiled 200,263,721 persona counted so million population Ir o Wt h , Los Angeles, Houston, Dalla!, 6~ mill~ penons and turned WlW the final, official tally is far. and likely to go to along with the co Id er but San Diego, Sa n Antonio and up onl)t 4,IOO misled the flr1t completed and sent t o between 204 and 205 million by already teeming states o(, New Phoenix. time around. He uid he w11 Pr~ident Nl•on by Dec. I. the time such still-uncolmted Yor.k and New .rersey. The -Farm po'pulillion declined sure that would be the cue But the preliminary figures categorlea as o v e .r s e a s 1argeSt pertintage Increases rrom J5 mlllioli to 10 million. Witli tlfe rest of the retheck! announced .. Tuesday by servicemen are added. The were scored by NeVada, with Old ril.lgration p 1 t terns •requested by localities. Commerce Secretary Maurice bureau had projected 204.1 68.9 percent, Florida with 34,7 continued, from the center of Or. George 11. Brown , H. Stans 'provides a good million for last April 1. the and Arizona with 34.6, the naUon to the coasts and director of the census, uid preview. date the cen:i:us was taken. -Suburbanites outnumber frOm South to North. "we have every reuon to • It is s pr pr isi ng.I y· -California grew the most. residents of inner cities for the Stans said despite howls believe'' that the final count ' unsurprising, backing up wh at by nearly 4 million to lt.7 first time. Thirteen <lf the 25 from localities that f e I t will be less than 3 percent oft ~~~~~===~~~==~==============='===1 .. -- TEENS BLACK KRINKLE BLACK PATENT T-STRAP FOR GIRLS The 't!ACK-TO-SCHOOL • shoes shown in this ed ere but• few of the thousands of pairs on open display for your buyin<J pleasure! LlnLE GE·NTS BOOTS . . . ' ILAett:ott•OWN 491 11/J 1G 3 SPORT SHOES •. ~~.... 4 .91 IOY'S 4.79 YOUl H'S 121/J te J 4.68 '·' .. •' • • i l l ' . • J l ' .; ~ : , , ·'. ·, '' ,. ,• ,• " '• ,. " ·: , own Malacanang presidential The. cabinel took the PAJ. leader Kevin Mulligan ~-~;a1a·ce-wa·s""llnderfourfeet"'oirr--;di!iec;crs1siCooilina•tnac--rroouulirco."tttnoilui"rr-<s>.,C..dr, ;;.,iioniieiC-F6iiiro'1ki>ein'iw•;•"n;i;iiwl"ii15Cll------ water at noon l o d a Y • emergency sessiorr in Amman n<lt w 0 r t h one~ dead estimated that the record wti,ich looked like a deserted rev<llutionary." · flood had covered an area city after a night of battling The nearest thing to an ·bigger ihan the state of between Hussein's troops and incident oceurred at th e Florida. the falesline r e t u g e e intersection of Main and "Now. therefore, 1 do guerrillas. The sound <l f Broadway, just a bloCk from hereby declare that a state of machinegun fire c r a c k 1 e d Legion Headquarters Hotel - P u b I l c c a I a m i t Y a n d through the streets today. the Hilton. The parade turned emergency exist in central Iraq, Sy-ria and the Arab the corner, but some of its. -\Luzon, the entire greater guerrilla m<lvements h a v e marchers wanted to head for Manila and so uthern Luion rejected the A m e r i c a n • the hotel. area," he said. instigated cease.fire and have The street leading to the He ordered all govCrqment cril.icized Hussein and EgyP-hotel was blocked and th e agencies into rescue and relief l.ian President Gama! Abdel parade stalled for a few Pope Stoned By Madman • CASTEL GANDOLFO. Italy I UPI) -An Italian described by police as a ~ "madman '' threw two cn'Cs al Pope Paul V ay at th~ end of the pontiffs weekly genera l audience. A Vatican spokesman said the stones struck a wall and the Pope was not aware of the incident al the time. Police said the Pope had.just given his blessing t.o hundreds of tourists and pilgrims when Luigi DoMo, 35, of Corigla D'Otranto, look two stones from a sack he was carrying and hurled them toward lhe pootirr. Nasser for moves against the minutes. gue rrillas. On Tuesday, Iraq It was then tha t members of threatened to intervene with a V<llunteer group called the 12.000 Iraqi t r o op$_ People for Portland finally stationed in Jontan. linked arms and turned the "The Jordani an government marchers south before police regrets such a warning being intervened. direCted against i t and it cannot accept it," the cabinet said in a note deli vered t<l the Iraqi ambassador in Amman. Public transport in Amman was al a standstill and there y,•ere <lnly a few private cars on the st reelS . Business was almost at a complete s'top . The country's newspapers did not appear, schools were closed and few government employes turned up f<lr work . Palestinian guerrillas piled loose stones and automobile tires into barricades guarding their strongholds other s artned y,•ith bazoookas. mortars a n d machineguns took up positions on rooftops. Kuchel Backin g Of Reagan Seen LOS ANGEL~S. (UPI) - Former Sen. Thomas H. Kuche l. a Republican who in 1966 refused lo endorse Ronald Heagan f(lr governor. was expected today to reverse that decision. Kuchel scheduled a morning news conference at G<lv. Re aga n 's ree l ecti on headquarters where It was speculated he would endorse the governoi:. Staff Budget Doubled De1nocrats Hec kle Nixon S pending WASHINGTO~ (UPI) - Senate Democrats gleefu lly ;iccused the \Vhite House <lf helping itself to the federal cookie jar Tuesday, but in the end agreed to doubl e President Nlxoo 's staff budget ju."!t as he asked. Seizing on a line item in an $11.1 blllkln appropria lion bill for the executive offices and the departments of treasury and posl office, military spending critics coold not resW. needling the c o s t • C<lnscious administration for an apparent increase in its own spending. But they did nol attempl 1(1 trim !he executive offices budget approved by the Hoose. and the blH passed 68-0. A • ' $56,35 million dlfference in the totals of the House and Senate versions remtdn«I lo be rec(lnciled. 'The fun began when Sen. Ralph Yarborough ID-Tex .), c hairman o f th e Appropriations Subcommittee !hat h<tndled the budget bill, reported that the $8.55 million recommended for White House sa laries and expenses in lhis fiscal year was more than double the S3.94 ,m i 11 i o n approved las t year. Sen . William Proxm ire (~ Wis.) one of the most vocal critics of ~fcnse spending , quickly rose to protest. "After . all . the president makes a big point o r economy," Proxmire said. "and economy has to start ar home ... the American people must and ithould look to lhe President to set an example.·• Yarborough, fighting back 11 smile, agreed . "\Ve're being called reckless 11pcnders and then they come up here and want us to double ), \ the ir own appropriations, .. 1 Yarh<>rough said. But he explained the White House intends to bring its 548 staff members under one salary lent , rather th a n borr<lw more than 300 of its experts from v a r I o u s ~epartmcnts and let the other agenc ies pay the salaries as is ·now the case. Proxmire also squawked about a $700,000 appropriation earmarked for a similar pooJ. ing of 39 staff per!Oru'lel n- signed to Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, but he was assured lhe employes, covered by civil servlC<!, w<luld not be used to 1'aid the vice president in his \'cry effedive political work.'' tn total, the bfil as passed by the_ · Senate waS $56.35 n1ill!on after than 'approved by the House, but $~7 million under r e v i s e d budget estimates. ,. LITILE GENTS OXFORDS 2~f .. , llli IOYS 3.96 TEENS INSTEP CROSS-STRAP MAIN LU.THiii LACm MOCCASIN-TOI OXFORD 983 Ai. ..... . c ...... Jlcmd ',_._ lb:t::. c... MIN'S IOYS YOUTllS 7.38 6.38 4. 91 FOR "Hlr I PANTYHOSE )96 /'1' .I NEW FAU. AND BACK· TO-SCHOOL HAND ,BAGS ROM 2• FREE CAIDY FOR TIE KIDDIES HUNTINGTON BEACH ' I" , 11 1 ' I \ \' \ 10051 ADAMS at BROOKHURST 962-9178 (Next to S1v.On bru9) • NEW FAU. SHADES SCHOOi." AND FAUWAI- PAii • HUNTINGTON IEACll ' 5898 EDINGER at SPRINGDALE 847°9125 STORE HOURS·· WEEK DAYS 9 TO 9 •• s uNDA YS 10 TO 7 • -' .. '' .~ '' ' " " ,, • ., ' ·: ., ,. ' ., •• ., ! • .. l f I l • • DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PA.GE Meadowlarl{ 's Problem \Vbattver the skies may be like to fly ln, the ground is becoming Jess and tell s friendly to land on. The 80 acres that make up ~leado\vlark .4.lrport have no1v become as controversial as any ~viation terri· tory in the county. The trouble started a month ago witfi the paving Of 300 feet of hard dirt at the ~lcil .<\venue c1\d of the run· way and the installation of night li.e:hts. The extra runv.•ay paving Is intend}!d C>nly for take· ofis and not landings, but homeowners are understand· ably concerned about it. Residents alonR Ifeil A\'enue fear that the addition \\'ill be used for landings, thus bringing the planes on a flatter approach and nearer utility lines. The airport operator a rgues that the paving .and lights n1ake the airstrip safer. He points out that p1 lot.s have long used the airport at night v.•ithout the benei1t C>f lights. He stresses tha t the runway addition is clear· ly marked for takeoffs on\~. This argument. hov.•ever, fails to take into con.!ilder· ation the novice flier \\'ho may not ricogniie the mark· ings and the careless pilot who may ignore them. As r sure as the runway extension is there. so1neone will land on it. Pilots. in fact. are landing on it. Another question is 'vhether the lights and p~vin i: wiU lead to an increase In 3.ctivity at Meadowlark. Resi· dents bought their homes kno\ving the airport \Vas there end therefore cannot complain against the facility Itself. They more properly can object \\'hen the facility is en- lar~ed and lhc use increased. The operator denies that flight activity has stepped up but it is hard lo believe that the addition will not in· crease fli ght movements. The very fact that it Is lighted for night llyin-g surely \\'ill mean more pilots \Yill fly ·al n:~bt. The City of Huntington Beach. \\1hich issued a cease and desist order over the run"•ay extension and lights because \•ariance permits '"ere not obtained. susp~nd· ed the order until Sept. 8 after being told the additions 1nake the airstrip safer. The council .'n1ay u•ell have been misguided. Unle~s strong evidence that the additions reduce hazards is presented. an'd do not open the door to su bstantially in· crease'd flight activity. thf' council should order the ex· tension closed and the lights removed. A Thoue:htf ul Gesture ' Adults are ,DfOne ~o look at cl~ildren aroum:l,,them and wonder, 11<i•Kat \Vtll they do \\'Ith the "·ari d? Fifty younit F'oi1ntain Valley boys gave a oromisin~ ans\ver last week and it looks promising for the world, The boys, aged 9 t.o 12. spent t\vO \\'eeks buildin{l' ''busy boxes" -flat. board-like devices with different objeCts. such as door knobs and spinnin,El reels nailed on them. L:i st \veek the Fountain Valley youths. members of the ''MCA sponsored Gra-Y organization. gave the ''busy boxes" to Hope Haven School !or mentally re- tarded yo ungsters in Santa Ana. The "busy boxes" 'viii help the mentally-retarded children develop their hand muscles for such th ings as opening latches, twisting knobs and pounding pegs. It's a small. but important. step in their education. It 1vas a thoui;thtJul and 1vorth1vhile gesture on the part of the' Fountain ValJey boys. ' H Beach City Traffic .Jauis if .No Freeway Major Probe Of tlie Mcifia Positive Action Is Needed To the Editor: ,. AJHm_,lyman Robert E. Badham tntroduced a bill to stop the Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport Beach but lost lhe fight. It wa s a negative bill with nothing conslruclive in it and it "'as right that the bill did not pass. There were arguments that if the frt.e\\'ay is not built the traffic jam in the future will be enormous in Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach. Laguna Be a ch , Ne~port Beach and other cities. I Mailbox I. Letters from ,,,,_ .. ••t weleofl'lt. Norm111, ""'1"5 1n.,.,.1d unw, f!lllr rncn"u '" )(!0 "'ord1 o-It\.$. Tiit: ri91'11 !ti aww:leiow le!ltrl !ti r.r INCt or i uml- llt!t libel It rtJtrw~. II!! l1!tt•& mutt 111(1.i<l• 19• ntturt '"" mtlll'lt add ••.U. bu! ntml• m1~ IH Wllf\l'ltlo on ft<llllSI If 111tll(ltnt re•:on il tP•~r1nt 1'01tr'I' wm "°' M oubllin.d. such rhetoric. Perhaps the right of BUT IF THE freeway were to be built freedom or speech is more important with the Ne:wport Beach portion omitted, than the right of ~iety to censor those ---the-.·ma~ars----Waveling-lhrou,.gllrt -w"'ho use lherhctor1c of revolution under would pour into streets, makin1 them the gulse: of freedom of speech. impassable· -and the most annoying However, when 1hose that use their tliluation would be in Newport B e a ch, right of freedo m of speech to advocate The city would be nooded with cnrs the overthrow of our g0,·ernment try to traveling at one or two miles per hour. implement their rhetoric with violent spewing e:xhaust fumes while idling in deed~ they must be separated f r o m Jong Jines "·ailing to cross iatersections. society. Do the "freeway fighters" want such a condition'? THE SWGAN, "I el the highv.•av commission find another route." ma ke's me ask what route? Under or over lhe sea? Freeway opponents present no practical. construclive solution. The coutal freeway is a necessity and the most practical and natural route is along or close lo Pacifi c Coast Highv,.ay, "'here the bluff5 alrtady divide lhe eify. Let lhose cars !hat have lo pass through go as fas t a3 possible, v.·ithoul v.·aiting and producing unburned gasoline. ONE SOLUTION would be to carry the freeway overhtad and provide space under it for shops. bazaars and parking, v.'ith sufficicnl cro ssing for cars and pedestrians. 1.f carefully planned, artislicatly li ghted and decorated. such a project could be made a beauty spot aP1d would make walking and shopping a pleasure. THE P~ENT coast highway in Newport 8t¥ch looks unattractive, with houst:'I badly planned or not planned at all and not coordinated . This is not a street that Newport could be. proud of. If the efforts now "''asted in rejection 111d 11egation could be converted into pasltive action like that mentioned . or a better one. such an aim could be achieved lo the satisfaction of present and futu re generations. LENET LESKI Leftist Rhetoric To the Editor : The rhetoric used by n1e111hcrs of the radical left, if taken at face valut, t.'Onstitutes an allempt by a \'ety few 10 overthro\v our form of government. Yet, very little if anything is done to bring to justice lhose that tndulge themseh•es in --~--- Wednesday Sepf. 2, 19i0 T~ «Utoriat paot of tht Daily PUol uckl to inform and .ttlm.. ul4t1 '-"'' by prts•ntlng th iJ ncwpo~I: opu1Mnl• and com- mntotw °" ioplca . oJ 111ttrest a1ld s!plflam<>!. b~.rwoviding a '°""" for the ezprts11io11 o/ ow 'MZdw.t' opfnlorts, and b11 prt•crUP'f ,1Jt1 divtrl" · t:l•tv· poi-H" bf ;lnforTMd ob.scrvt11 'ow.i 1poketm1rr1 011 topi<'t of tlu: d'ljJ. Robert N. Weed. Publisher NOT ONLY should th ose indi\'iduals N! separated from society but they should be kept separated until they have changed their outlook on the use of violence to obtain change. In conclusion, those that resort lo !he use of violence 10 obtain change v.·hile at lhe san1e lime demanding lhat they be allo"•ed to use lhe rhe toric of revolution are pure and slmple parasites. We, the people, must demand that the rights of the creative citizens are much more important than the rights of lhe parasi tes. HARRY B. McDONALD, JR. Tlte Elertoral College To the Editor: During the past year and a half the League of \Vomen Voters has made a. nationwide study of the electoral college and or methods of its reform. From this study v.•as drawn the concensus that the electoral college be abolished. In its place the League of \Vomen V o t e r s recommends dirrcr popular cleclion of the President and Vice President of the United States. The House of Representatives has passed a resolution to that effect and the Senate will begin consideration of one, SJ RES . I. shortly after Labo r Day. We urge those persons who concur In our views to v.·rjte to Sen. George ~turphy and to Sen. Alan Cranston. asking their cooperation in passage or this resolution to establi~h direct election of the President and the Vice President by !hr \'Oling public. Thank you. ~IRS JACK TURK Presidenl . League , or \\'ome:n Voters of Huntington Be11ch Poor Risks .1 Prell!! Comu1ents I Lanc•skr, S. C., News : "A l3ment comes from the . , . minister ~:ho was dispatched some Ume ago to Sweden to ~Ip the American <iesertcr~ "'ho ha\'C rlcd there to AVflid 1ni\ltarv srr\ Ice .... lie rinds that the deserter's arc ha\'lng son..c difficulty In obtRlnin~ job.s. 11 ippeairs to us lh&t S"·edish bwslncssmen ere sho"·lni fllOre sen!le than lhe.ir S o c 1 a I i s t , anti·Amerlcan go,l'nuncnL At lea~t 1he\' St'i! th111 an 1ndi\'1du .• l "''ho lack:i. lhl 'basic deceocv and patriotism to remain Joyal to hi.~ 0\111 country is <i ralher poor rilJ; as a Potential emplo>·e.." 'Barley Toolla' I have learned through experience !hat ll is better if I don't read Tom Barley ,,·hen he writes about music. I react similarly to a 1ooth<1che. It is al\\·ays a strong te1nptatlon to explore I he offtnding tooth 1vilh the lip of the tongue lo see ir lhe pain ls still there . On Wednesday. Aug. 26. however, in a moment of "·eakness. I decided to sec if my ''Barley Tooth'' was s t i 11 offensi\'e, and read "foster Applau ded in BmYI Conccrt"._L\\•oui<Llike to quote the three concluding paragraphs lron1 Mr. Barley's reviev.·: "Pianist Leonard Pennario must take the blame for the fact th at the progrant wasn 't with what could only be described as an accepUtble rc:,ndilion of Rachmaninoff's Rhapsody on a Theme of J>aganini. "HE WASN 'T exactly rhapsodic in his approach to some key passages in this fine work and this critic '-''3S much less lhan that wh en Pennario concluded his program. a la Liberace. v.•ith l\\'o entirely uncalled for encores. "Those encores ,.,,ould not have bet'n forgiven if Pennario had brought Rachmaninoff fl'9m the grave i11 rapture at the beauty of his offering but in the circumstances it wa s an affront to music in gellt'ral and concerl pianists in particular.'' What doe s the first par;,igraph say? In the second paragraph, does ~1r. Barley lmply that encores are only played by Liberace' Does he also iJnply that the encores were Uncalled for ; that the audience did.not respond fnvorably to the Rachmaninoff ? Isn't it possible that ~tr. Barley's function as a music critic should more properly ha\le been to inform his readers ·what the encores "'ere and lo then assess the quality of f h c performance? THE TfnRD paragraph quoted makes no se nse at all , and I am sun that any proofreader would realize this. I have enjoyed ~1r. Barley's reporting on non-musical assignments but when he is given the task of covering a musical event, he lapses into rloweey, archaic expressions. employing the editorial "we:" in a monne'r that is most anl"IOyin~. This technique does not conct:al the fa ct !hat he i! not surficiently competent in the arl of music to be writing on this suh. jcct: ~lrs . Barley's ar1 1slic accomoli~h- 111rnt~ to the contrary, nol\\'il!1standing. You r o1herw isr fine paper owe~ mort: Intelligent music coverage to those readers who are Interested In the art. • ROBERT D. LAGERQUIST Dear Gloomy Gns: Th.c appalling and indefensible: at· tiluites of many profe3sors (such tll'i those. ol. the UCLA racuhy con1- 1nlt 1ce st!ll cnarnorcd of Angela Da vis\ rnake us \\'Ondcr lf 11 uni , \'C rslly education h:i~n't beco1ne another form of pollution -of the mind . the worst kind. -C. P. f Ml ltttut1 rPllt••• •t•••l'l' ~lfllfl. ,.., _,r .. lllP "'9t1 9' tn. ~t\lfl.lll'I<. ltt!I P"1r 11'11 ....... It GIMNIY Ollt. OtllY Piii!, • - ls Plannecl ·! • Jack Anderson \VASHI!\'GTON -The most exhaustive congressional investigation of organized crime in more than a decade has been set Jn motion by Sen. John McClellan. the owlish Arkansas Democrat "·ho origlnally put lhe ~~tlight on !he 1'1afia ducingJ.be 1950s. Since the sensational crime hearings held by the late Sen. Estes Krfauver and by McClellan, less skilled ringmasters have tried rePeatedly to expose the na!ional crime network. All their attempts have failed, l\,ean"'•hilc the Mafia has prospered and diversified its artivities. Older enterprises such as prostitution have been abandoned in favor of more businesslike ventures ranging frotn pornography to banking. IN RECEl\'T Til\l t;S, the cantankerou!! f\lcClellan has been preoccupied \\'ilh undislinguished investigations into lhr poverty program. ghetto riots and student uprisings. For the last three years. the Senator's staff has been exploring the idea of a major probe of the f\fafia. They polled police chiefs across the coun1ry to dete rm ine how f.'lr organized crime had reached into lcgitima1c business. The lentati\'e ne\I' battle plans call for focusing se parately on l\1 afia aclivities in labor racke:ts. loan sh:n·kin/!. narcotics, stolen goods . gambling and pomographv. F.xtortion, hijackin!!. credit card theft. milking of legilin1atc businesses and sl(llen securities will also bl' explored. McCLELLAN \\'lLI. spotlight the !\1afi11 functJonaries in each area, rather 1han la.king the easier and more [atnilier iipproach or giving the genealo~y of the "crhnc families." As a result, there \\'ill be some overlap. For example, the same hoodlums may \Vt':I\ turn up in both th e g9mbling and loa n shark ra ckets. A \\'hole ne\v generation of young ~tafia captains has sprung up since the Kefauver and fo.1cClellan hearings. But fo.1cClcllan bas been taking on youn'g investig11tors to deal with them. The Senator does not expect to get hearings going until some time ncxl year. Then, beneath the TV tights in the: hisloric Senate caucus room. the 74-year· old ~·lcClellan wi ll make "'hat may be his rinal stand against the mob. A SECRET \VAR goes on fn Thailand largely unknown to the rest or the world. The 8.angkok government discourages visits Into hills and forest where guerrilla activity smolders and flames. ' A· recent survey by a Quaker Investigating team disclosed insurgency of one kind or another In 31 of Thailand's 71 provinces. The team 11lc;o discove:red Comrpunist·sty\e civil "'arfare in some localities. The guerrilla acllvlty has been fed by <ti!t'Onlent among Thai mloorities such as the ftieo tribe.Smen, LAotl11ns and htalays. SEN. PlllL llART'S AntilJ'Ult and Monopoly subcon1m1ttec has begun a (u1I· sca'le prol5e or ~ii'ig ·n1uc Cro5.1 and Blue Shield costs, Hart. [)!\1ich., has found that the jiant if\Surcrs arc arllong lhP n1os1 cenerous rf companies. The.v pa)' out about 95 cent~ or every dollar lhty take 1n. Ho1,1·ever. hi~ rarly f111llings indicatr thllt Blue cro~!I an<l lilue Shield have l11ilcd 10 challenge enough hospita l hill!'.. Consequf'ntl)•. !hey h8vc had to boo!:it pren1iums to covel' the excess charges. We Must Have a Sense of H·istory ''Those ,.,,ho cannot remember lhe past ," wrote Santayana , "arc condemned to repeal it." This ls basically \\'hat I meant in a colurnn a few n1onths ago. in "'hich 1 expressed appreciation about "the lack or a sense of hislory·· among modern youth. I DlD NOT !\IEAN -as man y readers _mis.interpreted it - that a s e n s e of history should weigh them down or slow their pace. We need lo go just a5 fast as 1,1•e can lo keep up "'ilh tomorrow. Bu~ going fast is no good unless you know where you want to go. And you cannot know where you \\'ant to go until you know where you have been and 1\'hy you don't \l'ant to go lhcre again . WITHOUT A TRUE and deep Un· derstanding of history, our youth fv.·ith the best o( intentions) can plunge us inlo the middle of a greater mess !han thev arc trying to get us out of. \Vithout the lessons to b~ drr11vn fron1 Hitler and Stalin and the extremist 1nove1nrnts of our century, the idealism of our youth can easily turn into nihilism, into blind rage, into mindless hate. into the justification or "good" ends by evil and destructive means. FOR ONE Of TUE great lessons of history is that violence begets violence, ··~ . ' "i .j Sydney J. Harris · ; ~ . ... ~-. ' .,,11 and that the ends do not justify the means. but corrupt them . \Vhatever is permanently constructive mu st proceed out of love , \\'Orking through reason. Only these l\\'O, harnessed-together, can -bring the human-race-out ofi tslffi)tlil darkness and spiritual decay. The youth are right in almost all !he lhings they are against; but they do not really kno1v "'hat they arc for. Rebellion for its O\\'n sake is a symptom of disfase. not ·a cure: tf teiring do"'" of one system is futile if nother, equally unjust and repressive, to be put in its: place. These matters must be thought out carefully. ANO TllEY CAN be thought out only if we are: lirmly grounded in a sense of history; if we are aware of man's capacities and limitations: if 1ve reject from the past 11·hat is unworthy ... and respect \Vhat is noble. Turn ipg our backs on the past is as ignol'Mil and rigid as \'enerating it. The present and the near future can be handled only by those with the proper intellectual tools. as \\'t':tl as the moral fervor. ~toral fervor alone is not enough; wiU1out a broad framev.·ork o! learning, it soon degenerate.~ into fanaticisn1 , parochialism. sectarianism. and. even- tually. despotisn1 of one sort or another. It "'ould be a tragic irony if '·freedom loving" youngsters inaugura!cd a new era of tyran ny. Tiresome Wifely Words \\'ife\y remarks that husbands get tired of hearing ~ "The refrigerator is wearing out. \Ve need a new one." "!l's getting so thin on top I think you ought to get a wig. Henry. A lot of men arc ,vea ring the1n today." "\\1ell . if I ever get married again. lt tcrl:i lnlv \von'l be for lol'C'. !'l·c tried 1h11t. an'd it's for the bird s." ··certainly , I'm not so narrow-minded that I see anylhlqg "'~Ong y,·ilb a married 1nan !alking to a s1rag gc v.'oman at a cocktail party, but did l'ou ha\'e to spend !he "'hole evening ta lking lo her? You acttd as if she had you hypnotized ." "EVERYTlllNG 'S getting cold . If yo u don 't come to the lab!c this very minute I'm going to throw the 1,1·hole, meal out lhe window." "The vacuum cleaner is broktn. \Ye need n new one." ''The liquor cabinet Is completely em~ ty. Henry. If you want a .narlinl, you'll have to run over to the neighbors and borrow a cup of ain. Maybe you'd ~tter borro'v two cups -and I'll have one wllh you." "I lell you there is a mouse in lhl~ house, and I posltlvl!ly will not Jive in a hou~ with a mouse.'' .. If they do -something good , lhe y'rc ''our kids: Ir they do something bad, ihey'rc mine ·• "I DON'T CARE 1f you hild chi ck,n Kie\ for lunch '"er y d3y this \\'l!tk. You're still having e:hlckcn KiPv for din· nrr tonlghi ." , 'The air conditioner broke rto11·n !his af!ernoon. \Vt need a nc1\' onr .. "i\1yrllc's husband JUSt got another big ' ----> • • H~l '&vl e ' • raise. He doesn't let everyone in his of· fice push him around.'' "I don't see why you mind going to the super1narket "'ilh inc. A tol or husbands enjoy shopping 1vith their 11·i\'es.'' "1\lother says she won 't come and ~pend the !'ummrr with us unless }'OU \\Tile her a lcl\cr flrst and tell her fo r sure that she is "·elcoine.." /1 TIU~K l'LL h3vc my hai r tinicd ash blonde -"'ilh a \vhitc strca k in ii." "The electric dishwasher Is on the blink. \Ve need a neli.· one." "\Ve never go out anymore. \.\'hy don't you simply keep me in a closel like Bluebeard did hls "'l\'eS. and be. done with it?" "The orthodontist I ~ays tha t after we have Junior's upper lttth straightened, we ought to do .something about !host lower teeth of his, too." 1---811 Grnrge ---, Defir c~rge : Jlow c::in you !ell a boy that a gll'I he used to go \\ilh is accusing me of stealing tfr.r guy "'ho now ikes lllC and nc'•er even thinks ·11 l ... oulk> 1nu~h les.<i honks the lorn out front ·• Don 'I you think De~r Hur t Not unle!ts l.Qui:;e doesn'I al- lhough coming up on lhe porch is, or course, as you gay. ; • I Fountain Valley ' VOL 63 , NO. 210, 4 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALlffORNIA WEONESDA Y, SEPTEMBER 2, 01970 Marina Palace He·aring Transfer By RUDI NIEDZlEll!KI Ot ,... 0•11'1 ..... , ll•tl A request to transrer the license hearing for the Marina Palace and Its political implications to Superior Court failed Tuesday as witnesses ror the prosecution continued to d e t a 11 allegations of sexual misconduct and narcotics use among its patrons. 'r "Thj3 should go to Superior Court," demanded Councilman Harold Holden, one of five men who will decide whether oc oot the teenage danCe hall will be ab le to keep !Ls doors open. "This is a farce .'' Although seconded by Councilman Lloyd Gummere, the motion failed and the license hi3ring, which is taking on au aspect:s of a sensational trial, continued before a half-filled McCaugh School auditorium. Lee Case, the city's police chief and prosecutor of the charges, called to the Wilness $land the girl friend of I Long Beach police officer wno testified that lit corner or the dance haU. He was she accompanied the policeman on an fondling the girl. undercover investigation of the Palace -A chalkboard in the woman's July 18. restroom with vu1gar language and lt>ur ''Thi s place disgust! me," Cindy Jetter words. Breitbarth, 20, of Long Beacht said she -A girl who wu "like in a stupor,'' told her boyfriend Albert ' Ge<irge after laughing, crying and m u m b I i n g visiting the pal~e, accordilll to the incoherently. · testimony. -A young man careS!ing and kissing a Specifically she mentioned t h e braless girl in plain view of every~. following: ', Miss Breitbart.h's admWian that an -A couple lying on the Ooor In a dimly earlier lape. recording of what she saw at the Muina Plllace wa played bock for her a day before .her testimony ln lbe police chief's omoe broua:ht a n immediate request from defen1e attorney Ru,,.u Bledsoe for the ~· His client, William "8111" Robertson. 71, former operator of ·a Jea:al poker palace •.ben Seal Beach roared even more than it doe!. now, has Wiled a !Ubpoena of police d~partment records to prove that charge! against h I !I estabtlshment were politically mOUvated. '(oday'• Final - N.Y.s~ TEN CENTS Denied The defense case, which Is not e~ed until late nf'xt Wt'ek, Is expected tq hinge large ly on whether the charges were initiated to stlDe Robert.son:s criticism of potential high ri&e developments in Seal Beach. --Manr, of • those subpoenaed -b y Robertson comprise the city'! political and dvic leaders and already include Chief Cue, City Manager Dennis Courtemarehe, Mn. Morton Baum and !See PALACE; P11e Z) • -Flight Fight Seen .... ... 0 ' , • • MAP DESIGNATES VARIOUS LAND"USES PROPOSED IN HUNTINGTON'S 'TOP OF PIER' PLAN A Time for Decision Is Approaching on Redevelopment of the City's Downtown Sector Parking Showdown .. Nears • Meadowlark Delay_ Jrks Residents A three-hour meeting on f I y i n g activities at P,,feadowlark Airport broke up in mild uproar in Huntington Beach Tuesday night wilh h o m e o w n e r s demaading action lo close a runway addition and remove night lights. The meeting became heated when Robert Dingwall, chairman of a city Council-appointed c o m m i t t e e to investigate the airport situation • announced that the committee would reconvene Sept.· 10 -two <lays after the next city council meeting. "'Why two days after the council meeting?'' eiclalmed homeowner Bud Carter. Another resident. Dan Schwartz. 5352 Caliei;ite Drive. protested, "Aren't you going to have any recommendations to the council?" . ' l)OUGLA.S GETS Dlng.;aU replied that he wOuld make a report to the council but n o recommendation. "U you don't do it, tpe community will be up in arms," Schwartz replied. "We'll be forced to go to a liwsull" Schwartz demanded that the rive members of the committee be polled on whether they agree not to present a recommendation Sept. 8 but Qingwall refused, stating, "We wUl lnv~Ugi:te the situation as rapidly as we ean as a committee.··· Dingwall, a printer and plk>t, ls pnslqent or · the HOME CollflCil-This group was. appointed by the city council Aug. 17 to study the Meadowlark affa.ir following complaints by l}omeoWners that a ~foot1 additl..m to the runway bY Hell Avenue was causing .plW! to' -land 11earer their homes. Residents also c.mplained that the addition of night lights was caus~ more planes to fly at night. No city permits were obtained £or the additions but the city council suspended a cease and desist order after Dingwall told the councilmen that state aeronautics engineers considered the additions made the airport saf~r. The council agreed to hold aCtion against the airpo rt until Sept. 8 pending the presentation of documents from the state board that the airport is safer. A crowd o~ about 80 attended Tuesday night 's hearing in the Community Methodist Church. There were some bitter exchange! betwt'en residents and pilots but generally the meetiog was calm enough .until the end. '-----lJliJl.!..._14 Acres of-A-sphalt-:-Help-Hu1iting·to11;-Beach-?-.F-A--'f-CONTRACX--', _,._ Coµqty Divers Sligh_tly Hurt In Explosion 17 Bv ALAN DIRKJN 0r lllt Cll]" Pl111 111111 t Will 14 acres of asphalt vitalize downtown Huntington Beach? The pros and cons have been weighed. juggled, and weighed again. Now the time for a decision is approaching and city councilmen may make it at their meeting Tuesday evening. The projeet -to level five prime blocks fronting Coast Highway from Sixttt St reet to First Street, add it to a vacant five-acre' parcel east of Lake Stieet and create a 1,878-space parking lot -would be at least a $5.2 million gamble. That's the cost involved. Thal's the extent of the risk if the plan works. But some are not predicting success and see a posible $200,000 loss every year. It's not just a financial question. Ifs also a political issue -big government versus private enterprise. To some, it's part of an overall plan for 11 thriving downtown district by 1990. To others, it's a governmental land grab, a step toward 1984. "Regardless of what decision i.s made, even if we do nothing, there wil l be extreme criticism," points out City Administrator Doy 1 e Miller w h G nevertheless stands firmly behind the project and is urging lhe council to act promplly. "If I had my choice of a catalyst tc. turn around the downto\Yn area. a parking lot would be way down the list." offers William Fosler, general manager c.f the Huntington Beach Company. He said be favors upgrading the downtown area but doubts the feasib.ility of another municipal beach parking lot. "Without beachfront parking, you will have no freeways, no arterials, no city ,'' believes the project's s t! on g.! s,t proponent, Harbors and Beac?les Director Vince Moorhouse, who has guided the city Parking Authority's first 2,100-spact lot to apparent success. "To take the most valuable downtown property for parking seems foolish to me -il'! bad planning economically and t'Slhet\cally," is the opinion of Robert Terry, president of the Downtown Property Owners Association . the group which has been asking the council to give Spiro Has New 'Fill-in' Ball Vice President Spiro T. Agnew says he now has a personaliicd gOU ball, as Presidenl Nixon does, but the Agnew ball is different. The President gives oul balls bearing the presidential seal. lte gave Agnew one 'Tuesday and the v~ president, who has hit a couple of competilorr, accidentally wUh misdirecttd .tennis an"d golf balls this yCar, remarked : "l't'e-gol one that says 'you ha\•e just bten struck by' and then I sign It." This is the first in a &tries of three articles by Dailv Pilot Weit Orange County City Editor Alan Dirki'ri dis· cussing detailed aspects of l/u11tittg·_ 1011 Beach's proposed Top of the Pier Plan. a program calculated to revita- lize the city's downtown area. private enterprise more Ume to develop the area. These are some of the contrary reactions the proposal engenders. What is it all about? • Officially. the project Is termed expansion of the Parking Authority. Tht' Parking Authority is an agency created by the council two years ago to, coordinate the land from F'irst Street to Beach Boulevard and build the present oceanfront parking lot. It was the redevelopment tool the council picked when it started to implement reco mmendations of a $30,000 study made in 1965 by a group of private land deveklpers, the Urban Land lnslitute iULI). The recommendations ha ve been carried along by a citizens steering committee, a body that has done such a good job of keeping the five-year-old report before the public that in Huntington Beach ULf seems as common a set of initials as UCLA. The steering committee appointed a planning consultant -Co.!la P,,1esa's Ted Adsit :..... to study the report. The grand dt'slgn that evolved out· of sessions between Adsit and the citizens group Is called the Top of the P1er Plan. It covers 375 acres and envisages a specialty shopping center, hotels , motels, high-rise offices and a civic auditorium in the area by the year 1990. A respected firm of eco n omic C1'.lnsullants, Economic R e s e a r c h Associates of Los Angeles (ERA ) was commissioned lo see whether the plan will work. • It has given thref' reporlo; on the feasibility. Each time the answer was go ahead. The construction of the ocean front lnt from First Street lo Beach Boulevard was considered the indirect first step in the development. although the Top of the Pier Plan itsel f was not adopted by the council until la ter, last November, The second step is the expansion of the Parking Authority. namely the building of a parking lot on the inland side of the higtrway. Top of the Pier proponents believe this second lot is essential to the avowed purpose of the scheme -lo spark development of the surround ing properlit's by private enterpri!e. But some say it isn't that si mple. Their views will be e:ir.:amlned Thursday. Attorney Admits Property Owners Didn't Fo1·ni Unit Arthur Guy. Newport Be~ch attorney representing owner~ or property ih downtown Huntington Beach, agreed today lhat his clients had not met a city council demand to form a legal entity that would launch d o w n I o w n redevelopment . "There ls no entity." Guy said. "My clients are moving along the lines of consoUdaUng the propertits into a cohesive whole so that there can be a package offered to prlvatt' enterprise to come in and make an analysis." The council had given the Downtown Property Owners Association until Sept . I to form a legal entity, such as a limited partnership, made of owners o f properties committed to r!devel~menl. GfiY"said lhaf he had Informed city ~ttorney Don Bonfa that the city demarrds "were imPQS.'llble." "\Ve have made enormous progress." Guy said. "We ha ve 60 percent of all 01e lo~ under option and many more are anxious to partlclp111". But others are discouraged by th.c attitude of the council which seems to btr headed toward condemnation anyway." The properties in question cover a five. block stretch along Coast Highway from 6th Street to 1st Street. The city council instructed Bonfa to flle condemnation proceedings ''immediately'' it the entity was not formed by Sept. 1. The city is planning a 1.878 ·space parking lot along the 14-at::re area. Guy said that the city attorney's office had asked his client to come up with a complete plan by Feb. t. "That's a date I've never heard of before. They sent us a list of arbltari\y selected people and wanted us to get all their signatures. Many are out of state-it's impossi ble to do \l.!J. Although the.....deadllne was Sept. I Bonfa said that he would not file eondemnation p~ings until receiving additional council instructiorni at the next council meeting, Tuesday, Sept. 8. lie'" said that mayor pro tern. Jerry ~1<i~n~ had po"litponed the action by stating Al a recent mcetin!J of the council th~I a decision should be delayed until Sept. 8. • WASHING10~ (AP) -The Nt- Uooal AeronauUca .aod Spece Admllt- istration has awarded a taO,tJl,000 !Upplemental contract to McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Company, Huntington Beach for work on the Skylab Orbital Workship_ Sen . George Murphy (R-Calif.), said the supplemental results primar- ily from change! in the launch ve- hicle. Mideast Peace Role Becomes Major Problem By RICHARD P . NALL Of 1ht 0.llJ l'llfl lot•ff Jeopardized by Russi a n missle movement, Middle East peace talks hung in the balance today as the Ni:l:on Adminslration pondered Its next move. The President con tinued to meet with top advisers in an all-<lay sesS:ion at San Clemente today after deciding to pass orr a trip to lhe American Legion Convention in troubled Portland. The U.S. peace-kt'eping role became more difficult with introduction of · photographic proof that the cease-fire agreement which began Aug . 7 has ~n violated by movement of SAM mwle , sites closer to the Suei Canal. ·: The U.S. in Initiating the 90-day cea!e fire had guaranteed Israel it would nQt suffer a military disadvantage ' in accepting. Top Mideast advisors met with the President Tuesday to ponder the situation and thi-U.S. response while the Israeli cabinet fretted. Administration prospects over Its Indochina policy were brighter, hoWever, after the Senate voted ss to 39 defeat for an amendment to force withdrawal of U.S. troops from Indochina by Dec . 311 1971. Presidential Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler sakl Nixon was "pleased with the ove~he;lming victory.'' He reiterated the President's statements that it ls a necessity to maintain nexibility In Southeast Asia. Vice President Spiro Agnew Tuesday from the lawn of the Western White House salt! cambodla now has at least a fighting chance for survival. He stressed that Southeast Asian allies will need both military and economic aid for an indefinite perlod after withdrawal of U.S,..troops. Agnew praised acceptance. of the Nixon Doctrine by Southeast Asian all ies. The vice president flew to the LBJ Raneh near Johnson CUy, Tex. to brief former President Lyndon 8 . Johnson on bis five-n11tion Asl11n tour. Both are to attend the '111u~sday !tale dinner •t the Hotel Oel Coron11do for Mexican President Gustavo Ola_z Ordai. ' ' - DAltY-PA.Of"lltfl '"'" . . . WIRES •. HOMES, AND 'PLANES Th• Me•dowl•rk Question AD DRAWS BONUS IN COLD CASH CoJd .cash -$50 more than.ft was •skin&. for ~ was the ~k!nd of offer this refrJgerator ad got for the adver- User whet placed Jt in the DAILY PILOT classified want' ad secUon: AMA.NA 17 2-dr refrlA:-· freezer. Tee maker. Avo- cado • .-Like new_ $250. XXX•XXU', And, of course. the ad 50ld the re- f rlgerator -to a school llachu with five children. She waa one of 'the first • to call. The caller who ortered the $50 bonua was too late; the sale had already been made. Make your sale. Call, a DAILY PILOT ad·vlser at 1142-5!7S. Two Orange County divers were burned slightly when an ex plosion ripped a Huntington Beach commercial l>Q.4t as it docked for fuel in CerTitos Clfiannel Tueoday night. Los Allgelea Harbor authorities &aid Lan:y Parker, 29, La Palma. and Urry Bea1, 22, Tustin, suffered minor blims when they leaped from the 2.S-foot cabin cruiaer as it exploded. Both men wre treated and released at Harbor General Hospital in Torrance. The boat. owned by Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Hartman ·of 16222 Monterey Lane, Huntington Beach, was "pretty well burne'd out," harbor authorities said. Los Angeles Fire Department officials estimated the damage to the boat at more than •t,500. The t'xplosion was apparenUy caused by gu fumes strUdng a hot pipe in the bllge, fire officials said. Harbor officials said the bolt, named "Father's Folley," wa! regis tered for commerCial diving. It was docked for fueling ~t the time of the explosion. . Parker and Beal both leaped into the water ... when they heard the explO!lion, with Parker burned on the left elbow and leg and Beal on both feet. " I , County GI Killed Army Spec. 4 Rex T. Allen, son or Mr. and Mrs. Delbert D. Allen of Anihelm, was killed In the war Jn Southeast Asia last Week, the U.S. Defense Department annouhced Tuesday. ·Coast "'e•Cher The clouds and low fog will roll in harder along the Orange Coast In the evening and morn· Ing hour& Thursday. but s.unny skies will be the order of the daylight perlod with tempera- tures in the 70 to 85 range. INSIDE TODA l' • The fatloritt .perfonntri of the 11ear at the Huntingto11 Beach Playhome are rtcognittd at the theattr'1 annual award.I banquit. S t e Entertainment. Page 21. · -·~ C.11f91'1119 11 c.,.., ''""" 11 Cllkllllt U• 11 Clhtllloll t1"41 '-"' ~ ,,..,.....,. .., 0..1111 lifffkM 11 DIWf'ttl .n •••rial ""' • ."'"'•"'-' 1 .. ,, l'!Mllc• 11<11 ~: ·I .( r I ! • - ' . I DAILY PILOT H . Waitresses Win Batt'le For Dinner ly IOllN VALTEruiA • 01 nit ri.llY '"" Sllft Jl ~' a letter to the leaders of the "''Olllell'I liberation movement to insure a victorJ Jot 50 waitresses at a J>Osb. San Dies• bo~ who wW break While House tr•-,,,...,c1oy Diehl end bcip serve President Nixon and his 600 guests. ' The waitresses, livid at being told by their bosses that men would take over lbtir jobs, Tlwtsday night, look • the spoWcht. IWIY from Cambodia, Oat I -Eut and .... Spiro ... Tuesday II Whit& Ho-.e aldtl made ·an impass.ioced "clarification" of tbe biggest hwilcbe ol the Preoldonl'• curreot w'cirkioc ·-In Sin c:Janenlt, And the IOIDftlmel ecathin( and plaintive clariftcttiM ot the Hotel Del Coronado Hasale dominated Tuesday's p«ss briellng. Connie Stuart, Mrs. Nixon's secretary and head of arrangements foe .state dinnen, ·Wurily ._.,cod a 50.50 solution lo a howling controversy only women could launch. The hotel management, Mrs. Stuart said bnlsquely, was the culprit in the great waitress war. · She said the head! of the historic bot.el "premabftly'' told Us 50 Di&hf...shift waitresses that they woWdD't be needed for the dinner. The women ·were crestfallen. Some had bought new wigs. AH bad proudly herald.ed I h e I r upoomi" aallJlmenl amooc !rlen\11 and family. Aod what's more, they were not a:<Nng lo be paid for Thunlday nl&ht. beaute they weren't 100ll to work. Aziler, clamor that PreWeot N'uon w.u not adberini to the "American Way" l!nd other scathing blasts ~ed. SOme of the •purned ladies start.cl complalnina lo Women's Lib. And lbe halale readUng all lbe way lo the 0Wblle lloule arew. · "I've beeo bugged out of mind about waiters and wallresseJ," Mr1. Stuart said in rbffled tones. She added that Uie aiticilm leveled at tfie Presideat was • • c o m p I e t e l y unwarranted and highly unf1ir." She said she would "clear up the thing once and for all." , At leut 50 male employes -wailers uperie!qd in otrVhlg While lloule atyle from huge trays -are being recrulted through a San Diego waiter's union local, she said, clefalllq (he JOlutinn. LBJ io Attend State Dinner In 'San Diego Lyndon B. Joilllon hu accepled Tuttdly's tnvitaUoo <by hla sucetasot to au ... 1 the hLJle stale dbmer hooorln&' tile outgoing President of Mexico io Saa Diep. The former president a n n o u n c e d acctptance « the invitation Urls morning £rom bis home in Johnson City, Tex.as. Before LBJ leaves for San Diego Thurlday he will receh•e a · briefing of sorts from Vic.e Presideet Spiro A1u1ew. who will stop off In Texas today to diJcUIS h1' trip lo the Far East. After today'1 dllcuasions with JohniOD. >.&oew will fly on for 1 few days of re1t at ocean City, Md. The former president wu reported to be plan.o.in1 to iit in oa diacuuions between President Nilon and retiring Mexicaa Pr'eAdeot Gustavo Diaz Orda.i Thursday ari.mo,n.be!oce the dinller. Hundreds of guests are expected J1t the event, including ·movie stars, political figures and other celebrities. DAILY PILOT OIUMGl~C.0.Ul; PU•t.liHIN<i COMPANY' l•li•rt M. 'W,,111 p, .. 1c1 ... 1 •nd ""°",,,., J t ck k. Cu•lt y l•ltor lha'7'1t• A. #1\urphint MtMtl!tf [t'1Clr AltR Dir~in W•I Oi.,... c:-.11 (dFllll' Alb•rt W. lti•t 17175 ltt~ll loult •t r,.J Mtlliof "4111••,•: P.O. I•~ 790, 92~41 ~Off- l.tflllll ••Kfl: m .,.., .. , "-. C..lt ,._, m WCI l tJ S,..._. ~I .. 1<11: 1211 Wet! ... lllOl lwlt•t..i &tft CllfMl'I .. ; J05 H""IPI II (. ........ 1 .. 1 • Breath of Life Six-year-old John B.rock of Fullerton gets a reassuring smile from LA Rams quarterback Roman Gabriel, a .member of the National Sports Committee for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Current Cystic Fibrosis "Breath of Llfe" campaign for fund1 to combat children's: lung diseasea: runs through Sept. 30. V alleyCouncilmanllm.·per Triggers Fiqance.Dehates Fountain VaJ!ey Councilman John Harper iWUDg a verbal hatchet at city financial reports Tuesday nia:ht, but found himleli ducking the .usaull• of his felknf oouncilmtn. .. lfarper starte~ lhe lively session with a complaint. ''.For . the put tlilee years we've paged halanctd budsets. but we receive money l.ar iri excess of. our b!Jd&et. t want more extensive fiDancial reports to mow-~ it goe1." ''l've,,,.d·r~ unW they're comtnc out of my tan," interjected Mlfor' F.dward Ju.I. "We've acqunu.llted almolt S2 million in three yearw tblt basn't been ICCOl8lted for," JP.rper uid. "Mt. Harper, let's get one thing stral&ht! Every peony we have bu been accounµd for. 'l1lll's a 100le term you're Usina:," Jud JlfplitJ. "l don't think there's aufficient Jcnowffdie around the council on where inond comes from,'' Hatptt countered. u thi dltc:UWon wanned up. Jlllt !bee turned lo fellow COUllCilinen Ron Shenkman and George Scott and asked, "Mr. Shenkman, Mr. Scott, are you satilfied~" Scott replied , "This is whit w have Howard Stephen> (finance director) for. l 'm satisfied." Sbeo.Dnan added 1 few stron1er words. 1'You're tbrowin1 term1 -UllaCCOWlted * * * Radio Slww Quip Not Very Funny, Says Councilman -Muk Fountain Valley u one or hi!lory'1 famous IDll cities with Atlantts and Pompeil. But don't write in int bec.llllt City Cooncilman a-se Scott hopes to amend the ait.uat.ion with a letter to the Loman and Barkley P"'l'&m on radio otatton KFL . Tllelday night SooU uiled City Manager Jim Neal to write en official let!<I' i. KFI giving the localloa of Fountain Valley. "I WU Jilttnlng to their procrlm this morning in my car when they rud a commercial with a . list of cities," Councilman Scott said. "When they got to Fountain Valley . Loman said, 'Where·s thal?'" .. Barkley replied, 'it's under FoWltain Mountain.' " ,. "They got a big kick out or lt," Scott said. with a slight smile. "But I didn't think it was so funny." Suspects Clear In Murder Case . . ' ' Two suspects arrested on murder charges in E&condido when the body of a f\'ewport youth was found jn their car have been released, Escondido police said Tuesday. Theodore Busch. Jr .. 22, and KcMelh Hull, 17, bot.h of Escondkl.o.-werc cleared of complicity in lhe death of WUUam Anderson E,·ans. 17, whose body was found In thclr car. TI1e cause of death UI still under ¥tnve:stigaUun , but San Diego Coroner·s deputies speculated that fhe: teenager died of a dru~ o\·cr<lose. .-: I -around which ought to be tempered. · I'm satisfied." Shenkman then offered to t.ake·Harptr aod Stephens to dinner -"I'll pkk up the tab" -so the councilman cou.ld •sk all lhe questions he wanted. "Anytime you can show me facts and figure£ where ·you-are-COOiused J'!J be &lad to listen," Scott added, to Harper. Shenkman spate aplD, "Jobn, ·there seems to be $500,000 lhere that is showa, but you can 't seem to see il" 1-larper, his feathers • bit rufDed, end~d the disc~ssion w~. "I don't_\fork for my fellow Oquncl.Upan. 'Jtte c~y itaff worts for me and t want mcft information!' ' Supe~rs To Purcha~ Parking Area A big step was taken Tuesday toward the acquisition and development of the heart of the commurtity of Sunset Beach into a county parting lot for beach eo-s. County supervisors signed a 0$958,950 grant agreement with the federal government for acquisition oJ. 6.19 acres, the former Pacific Electric right ol way in the 6easide community. The Federal Bureau of Outdoor Recreation has approved a grant of half that amount tor the "purcbue of the property from the Soulbern Pacific QI., the present owners. Tbe county wW put up the other half. U Soulhern Pacilic ac"'l'll lbe figure COlllWllJDalion of the plll'chase could be achieved within six mootbs, county officials said. But if the railroad company decides to fight the coodemllltioo fi(ure in the courts the acquisition Ume could be extended to two years. Development of the Sunset Beach property intG a 2.(IO(kar J>lrking lot waa urged · almost two years by Jecond District Supervillor David Baker. Baker today estlmated that tf the land acquisition ll 10COmpll1hed in siJ: rhoatbs work coold begin on pavUq: ~ aru sometime after next :July 1. The county's shart ol the aJmoat Sl millio11 purchase price will come from cold department fwlds and .tale 1aa tu allocations which are llready earmuted for that purpote. But, BUtr eq>lained, the Wimaled $80.008 N<'ferary ta pave the parking 1rea it 'not iD the current county budget ud wjJJ hlff to be included in the 11'11·7Z budget if the project is to be carried out. 2 Moon Flights Cut; 4 Remain WASIUNGTON fA1') -The Space Agency conctled out two of its rema.lning Apollo moon missions Wednelday. cutting the Proar&m to four more (light.a. Dr. Thomas O. Paint, out.Roinl administrator of lhe Naliooal Aeronautics and Space Administration. told newsmen the two mlaslon.s, Apollo 15 and 19 are being dropped despite the s t r o n g recommendatklnl: of lwo advlJOI')' boards that the tntire pro1ram be OOwn. The remalninC mlsakn will be rtdeslgnatcd 14-17, ind will be completed in Ume for the iaunchina of lht skyllb space station program in November, 1972, Paine aald. Ficke.r Sure I of • • ' • Win _ Preparednes~ Secret of C~up Victory . ' . 11' A1M011 LOCICAl!Y _,,Ille -Md Oretd D lraalod -u · a -up -· We. ..., ,.., ...._ .... , wt.n big show ltlrU Sept. 16. Bm weren't rea1ly prepared here. n.e boat ~ Ille ric11J to defend the lllou&htrully rubbed llil bronud bald wu Jawiched a montla late, end we had America'• o., 11 ll()IDd .<1rily to actually plt.e. Hi! pale blue t1t1 were confident. decided not to get any oew sails until deetnding the most highly prized kudo in Sald he: world yacbti.o,g. ''I never worry about winninC or lolinc. after the JW>e trials. We wanted to find It has been said that the skipper who All J worrk about b being prepared. If ou1 if some tbi.n,gs we had ~ on the loses the·11g..year old bottomless pitcher v.·e are preapred we will win. If not we boat were feally practical, before we got to a foreign challenger will have his head will lose. Yacht racing is a &&me in committed to things like $25,000 worth of bolted to the pedestal in tbe New York . which lhe crew whiCh makes tbe fewest new sails. We knew that it wouJd hurt our Yacbl Club tropb.y room where the Cup m.istlkes wins.'' perfonnance~in June, but we were willin& oow standl. Ficker and bll p-eJ on Intrepid were to take tbe knocU. Bill Fder, 42·year old Newport Beach • obvk>utly ~ duf'in& tbe long "Fn:m the start we were poiotinl to. architect, stands on the threshold after hot-summer -'from June through August. We set up our campaign to he a! defeating three rivals who were hopefu1 August As a result, Intrepid wOn tbe good as possible in August. We also of defending yachting'-s holy erail. right to defend the cup for the second continued tank testing right through !be Alter the tumultuous celebration 0( comec:utive time. ..-June and JuJy lrids. being ltlected to defend the cup was l asked Ficbr to review the three "Our performance l!igainst Valiant ov«, I talked to Ficker in the Uving room mootbs of triall leading up to tu. defeat wasn't too impreuive in June because of of the beautiful, rambling home ~t of Weatherly , HeriUICt, ind fiollly these things. We were lucky to come as Price's Nee~ whert he and bis young Vlliant -all m&DDe.d by veteraD close to them as we did -I believe it crew blve spent two temiou fi.lJed skippers ud a-ews. was four for Valiant and three for us. months. "We treaitd the Jllllt le:Tiel oa Looi "nliey were obviously better prepattd. I asked him il be had any qualms about Island Sound as we JbouCb1 K allould be (See FICKER, Pa1< Zll Susan Cries Seal Beach Chief Says • Out in Pain In Courtroom Robertson Libeled Him LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Susan Atkins, crying out loud and holding her stomach in apparent severe pain, held up the start of the Tate murder trial for an hour today but finally took her seat in tbe courtroom. The 22-year-0ld Miss Atkins was leaning BeeviJy OD a wom.u bailiff and tears were streaming down htt lace as she eOtUed the coa.r1rooiJi with tbe jury watcbing lier besitut steps. Within a few miooles lhe was takea Into the cham~rs or Superior eoUit Judge Charles H. Older who previously had received the findings of a medical examination to the effect that she was physically able to continue at the trial along with Charles Manson and two other female defendants. · Pol\« QJiel Lee Cue aJlesed 1\Jetday that .it wu "libt1ed and Jlandered" by daoct hall operator Wiiliam Robertson duriiM 1hl current lictnR proceedings agaiijst &Iii Seal Beach Marina Palace. Tbe polict chief, who has been acting as pro&ecutor of milconduct charges apinsl the llall during the City Council bearing, made the dilclOIUl'e as he attempted Lo~ a subpoenl to appear on lbe olaJid l>imsell at the ~ Part of thlt document contai.DI 111 application for a "subpoena duoes Personnel Post Open in Valley Fountain Valley ScbooLDi.strict is looking for a resident to fill an empty slot on 11.8 three-man personnel commiasion. Miss Atkins complained that she wa6 b1 The seat became vacant with the pain but decided to go on with the t~ial resignation of Don Whan, .who has been after the judge told her the alternative on the commission since 1967. was to lie in a bed in an an ti.room and Applicaticris will be accepted at district I. t lo the ed' 1 offices, Nwnber Olle Lighthoulle t.ne, 1s en proce ma:s via oudspeaker. Fountain Valley, through Sept. l4. Deputy Diltrict Attorney Aaron Stovitz The personnel commission establishes indicated that he fel t Miss Atki11s wa's and admtnisters policies for c~ssified overemphasizing her illness which has employes bf the district. The commission brought tilt trial to a virtual Standstill is an e.xeculive arm of the board ol si11ce last Friday· "' t~~alits must Ji ve within the school "She 's puttine on an act worthy of district ~Lllld,ariu ud be registered Sarah Bemhardt,'• Stovilz remarked to voter1. For further informaUoa phoat newsmm. diatcict offices at MJ..6651. The first witness 11 the trial got under way was M. Joseph Granado, a police department blood expert, wno was testifying about the findings at the Tate and LaBianca homes. In a brief sess ion Tuesday with Miu Alkins abieot, Paul Fitzgerald, lawyer for "MalliOn family" member Patricia Kre.nwinkel, argued that the rigbU of the three women defendanU were being handicapped because of the setup for talking 11ith prospective wilnesses at the women's jail. He said the young women were on one side or a soundproof gla!ls screen and they could talk with visitors only by telephone, maki11g it impossible for the attorneys to join in the conversation. Judge Older went to the jail to inspect Lhe procedures for talking with witnesses and det1ied the request to use the attorneys' room. MW At.kins, Manson , Miss Krenwinkel and Leslie Va111 Houten are on trial for the slayings last August of a cl re 1 s Sll81'0fl Tate and four other pertOrul at her home agd the killings ol Leno t.Bilrlca and his wife the followiag night. Israeli Arsonist Escapes, ~ught TEL AVIV (AP) -Dents Michael Rohan, tbe •year.old AuWalian ~ shearer who set fire to the Al Allah Mosque in Jerusalem last year, escaped today from the mental boopttat .. -he is confined. But police cauibt him 30 miles away, The direct.or of the Beer Y aakov Sanitarium said Robin's coo:iitk>n bad deteriorated and "be had become more psychotic." The fire on Aug. 21, 1958 caused ei:t.ensive damage to ooe of LsWn'1 hold places and touched off 1111.i-l.sraeli demonatraliorul Ulrougbout the Arab world. 'fhe mosque, adjacent to the Wailing Wall azred to lbe Jews, ill in the Arab sector of Jerusalem taken by the Israelis in the 1967 war, and the fire refueled Arab demudl for thl return of the old city. tee um'' -a subpoena of reco rds -In which the allegations against the chief were made by Robertson. The subpoena was r.e\eased to several newspapers one day before il was served on Ghief Case . Case termed the allegations as "vicious" and'said, "I've been libeled and 1landered in a press release even before r was wved." He did not. however, uy whether be would file charges. Later, he asked the City Cour1Cil to remove him as prosecutor of the Marina Palace case because he felt himself to be in a conflict of interests. He said the cmflict had its baiis in the fact that he was occasionally arguing wilh the same people he was working for, the Seal Beach City Council. The chief asked the council lo request assistance from the Orange County Counsel for legakid in the heacing. "I have become person.ally involved in a way that is absolutely immalerial to this case and 1 ask for relief,'' Case commented. Both of the chief's pleas were denied by a majority of the City Council. The chief 's demands were supported by Councilmen Lloyd Gum.mere and Harold Holden. Mayor Morton Baum, and Councilmen Thomas Hogard , and Conway Fuhrman, however; were against the idea. _ Said Baum, "The chief ha s done a difficult iot> and he'~, done it weli up .to th is time. t see no reason, at this time, to have additional counsel present the city's cage. "To have another lawyer would only Insure that we would have more of a circus than some people are attempting to have now." From .r.,,e J PALACE ... Councilman Uoyd Gummere. When asked as to how he would prove political influence in the charges against the Marina Palace. Robert.son promi9ed "It will all come out during the hearing." The next session is acheduled for 9 a.m. Tuesday to give the police chief some time to devote to his administrative duties which he.says have been neglected while he was prosecuting the case. following the Tuesday mttting, it iJ e1pect.ed that the hearing would be continued oa a daily basis with the pos1ibility of morning, afternoon and. evening aeasioos to wrap it up. w~•·· lnc•fl•x 81624 •ost Unusual watch. Maries flme on 24 hour system. A riec.,.;ty fot on)'Ofl• wtio trcrfth, tf1e mililftf'Y, or'"" ... ho prli:e tht vnusval. Wotc:h diol 1how1 oll 2A Miii's, in- tteod of fut' 12. R119g1dly 9oo.f tookin9, The lnc:oftt'• bolonc.e wheel i1 9uarontted a9oin1t shoc:k fot thrl lift of tM wolc;h or replaced frff if -.r broke.., <Noronttitd waterproof 01 long O& the crtilof it intoct, ~Wyler parls uad. CONVENIENT TERMS BANKAMERICARO MASTER CHARGE . J. C. fiump/u.ie4 Jeweler4 · _ 1 24 YEARS · IN · SAME LOCATION llll NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA PHONE 541·140 I ' I I I 1 1 • • . ' ~ew·port Bea~h ED ITI ON -> > To4Ay'a Final N.V. Stoek8 YOL1 ~3. NO. 210 , 5 SECTIONS, 68 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, SEP~MBER 2, 1970 TEN CENTS - Ficker's C~ew Psychi~g Up for Cup Defense By A~ON LOCKABEY Ot111 ,lit! klt1111 Elll'9r Wiruiing · the right lie> defend the America's Cup is second Only to actually deefnding the most highly prized kudo in world yachting. It his been said that the sldpper who loses the 1 li-year 9ld bottomless pitcher to a foreign challenger will have his hei.d bolted Co the pedesta1 in tpe New Yo~k Yacht Club trophy room where the <Cup now ata.nds. Bill Ficker. 42-year old Newport Bearb arcltitect, stands on the threshold after defeating ~ rivals who were hopeful of defending yachting's holy grail. After the tumultuous celebration of being selected to defend the cup was over, I talked to Ficker irr the living room of the be.•utiful, rambling home at Price's Neck where_~ and his young crew have spent two tension. filled months. ' l asked hiin if 'ht. had any qualms about meeting the Australians and Crete.I n when the big show starts Sept. 15. Bill thoughtfully rubbed bis bronzed bald pate. His pale blue eyes were confident. Said he: "I never worry about winning or losing. All I worrk about is being prepared. rr we are preapred we wtU win. Jf not we will lose. Yacht racing is a game in which the crew which makes the ftwest mistakes ~-" - Ficker and his· crtw on Intrepid Wert CITY OFFICIALS, CITIZENS PONDER GARBAGE MEIS IN NEWPORT BEACH OH MORNING TOUR. Sctne1 Llkt This M•y Soon Oiuppt•r •• City Studl11 Ntw Collection Rul .. , M1thod1 No~Beturn Cans U.S. Has Proof Of Suez Canal Missile Moves Newport Studies Disposable Pails -By L. PETER KRIEG 01 lh• DtllY l'llel SltH Disposable containers mciy soon reach the ultimate in Newport Bf;ach. City officials said today they are considering the use of throw-away garbage cans. As complaints from residents about the general mess in lhe streets of Ne1~1port mount, reaching a ringing peak on refuse co\Jection days , the city is acting to solve lhe problem. Requiring the use of polyethylene bags Instead of metal or plastic garbage cans is one possible answer, according to Jacob Mynderse, Newport g e n·e r a I services director. Mynderse, along with other city officials, Including Councilman Donald Mcinnis and fire Marshall W. C. Noller this morning toured an area of Balboa Peninsula to view first-hand what all the hollering is about. The tour, taken at the urging of a most unhappy citizen, Dale Wu liner, 219 33rd St., resulted in a number of things. FLA UNT REGULATI ONS First, and foremost. residen ts are no t adhering to current regulations regarding trash pickups. In fact, they are flaunt ing . them. Refuse cans are almost uniformly left urlco1•ered. much refuse isn't even in proper recepticles and. once emptfcd, the cans are left righf there at the curb crealing a real community eyesore. - All on the tour agreed that the problem Iles in the laps of the homeowners. Wunner said it's hard to believe that in fashlonpble Newport. Beiich so many Spiro If as New 'Fill-in' Ball Vice President Spiro T. Agnew says he now has a personalized golf ball , as President Nixon does, but the Agnew ball is different. The President gives out balls be-:rrli'l~h't-l>t'estdential seal. He gave Agnew one TueSday and the vice prcsidt:nt; who ha s hit " couple of competitors accidentally wilh mls<Urected tennis and golf balls this ye1r, remarkt:d : "I've got one that says •you have just been struck by ' and then I si11n it'" \ J . . people don't care about what their homes look like. Mynderse.agreed that the responsibility rests with property owners. those who rent their houses shou ld be required to provide adequate refuse receptacles, he said. He said his department Is now in the process or updating the c u r r e n t ordinances which pertain to garbage collections. He said a number of changes are being, and have been, considered. Prominent among the p o t e n t i a I answers is the use of plastic bags. PLASTIC BAGS HELP Mynderse pointed out that the use of plastic bags instead of the traditional garbage can has distinct advantages. He sajd it would be immensely faster for sanitation crews to collect the refuse and as a result would hold down costs considerably. The bags have their drawbacks. however, he said, noting tha t householders who use them now have a tendency to overload thCm. In addition, there is the possibility of roariling dogs tearing them open. Other methods have been studi,ed too, he said. noting thal several city officials personally used disposable paper cans during. an experiment. He said, however. the plastic bags would be easier to work with. Mynderse said the ultimate solution will have to come from the city coWlCil. He said he could propose simply tightening the present o r d I n a n c e , reqUiring lhat trash cans be stored out or sight except on collection day. •·This. however, would be diflicult for some people," he conceded. STRICT ENFORCEMENT He said that when the new regulations are adopted, ht will also ret>Omrnend that &trict enforcement of the laws be carried out. This doesn't satisfy citizen~rusader Wullncr. ..- •·we should enforce the present regulations Immediately." he said, "and then begin-to revise them where necessary." Wollner suggested that s o m e WA S HI NGTON (UPII Administration sources said today the United States now has evidence of its own that Egypt and Russia have violated the ceasefire agreement in the Middle East. . They said this evidence, as well as the diplomatic C1)mplicatiorui it poses, v•ere discussed in detail at President Nixon 's meeting at the Western White House Tuesday with his top military and diplomatic advisers. The conclusive information that the United States has concerns the forward movement of several batteries SAM·2 antiaircraft missiles in the standslill zone on the west bank of the Suez, as well as continued work on some of the emplacements which were already in the zone. Administration officials said the United States also has C1)ncl uded that Egypt, with the assistance of the Russians , probaQly moved some anti a I rcra ft missile batter.ies into the standstill zone during the night of Aug. 7·8 when the ceasefire began. The State Department declined any immediate comment on the rcix>rts or the violations. which were said to have taken place some days after the ceasefire went Into effect . The 8.dministration ·has been unwilling to discuss the question nf violations publicly on grounds that ll is seeking to work things out through "quiet diplomacy". AD DRAWS BONUS IN COLD CASH Cold cash -SSO more Lhan she was asking for -was the kind of offer this refrigerator ad got for the adver· tiser who placed it in the DAILY PILOT classified want ad section: AMANA 17 2-0r refrig- frecier. Jee maker. Avo. cado. Like new. $250. XX:<·XXXX. enfortement powers be given t o Mynderse·s department. He said someooe should be deput l1.ecf and J::iven the , authority to write tlcketa for v'clators. And, of courte, th>ad sold the re- frigerat or -to a sc hOQl teacher with five children. She was one of the firs~ to call. Tht caller who offered the $50 bonus wa$ too lite; the sale had already been made . Make yoor sale. Cati A DAJLY PILOT ad·vlser at 642-5678. Wu/Iner said he had sought. or rather "demanded" this morning's meetlna ·(See GARBAGE, P11e II ,_. obviously well-prepared during the long hot-summer -from J une through August. As a result, Intrepid won the right to defend the Cup for the second consecutive time. I asked Ficker to review the three months o[ trials leading up~ his defeat of Weatherly, Heritage, and finally Valiant -all manned by veteran skippers and crews. "We treated the June series on Long Island Sound as' we thought it should be treated -as a tune 'up 1erit1. We weren't really prepared here. The boat was launched a month late, .and we 'had decided not to get any new nils until after the June trials. w~ wamed to find out if some things we had done on the boat were really practicaJ, be.tore we &Qt comrnlUecf to things like $25,000 worth· of new sails. We knew th&t it would hurt our perfonnance in June, but we were willing to lake the lmocb. "From lhe start we were polnUn« to August. We set up our campaign to be as good as possible in August. We also continued tank testing right through tbe June a.lid July trials, "Our perfoJ"h'!ance ag1lnst Valiant wasn't loci 'imPf'eaive in June because of the.!C lhlngs. We were lucky to come as close to ·them U we did -I believe it was four for VaJi1nt and three for us. They were obv:lously better prtipared. (See f lCKE\l, Paae 11) Mideast Teeters Nixon Ponders Next Move in Plan By RICHARD P. NALL ot tlM OlllY ,llff 11111 Jeopardized by R u s s i a n missle movement, Middle East peace talks hung in the balance today' as the Nixon Adminstration pondered Its next move. The President continued to meet with top advisers in an a\loday session at San Cle mente today after deciding to pass on a trip lo the American Legion Convention in_i.roubled Portland . The U.S. peace-keeping role became more difficult with introduction of photographic proof that the cease.fire agreement which began Aug. 7 has been violated by movement of SAM missle sites closer to the Su~ Canal. _ The U.S. in iniltifirlg t~ 90-day cease C()ast Brass On Guest ·List Of State Meal- A host of Oranae Coast luminaries representing government, I n d u 11 t r y , entertainment, business and communications will attend Thursday night's state dinner at San Diego's Hotel del Coronado. Most are friends of President Richard M. Nixon and his famlly and have been staunch campargn contributors o' r supporters. Federal Judge Thurmond Clarke and his wife, of Corona del fl.far, will join the 600 guests hosted by the President, who just accepted the judge 's retirement. J\.1rs. Clarke is lhe daughter of the late Orange County land baron James Irvine. Dr. and Mrs. Arnold O. Beckman, also of Corona de\ Mar , will be present. He is a prominent industri31ist and president of Beckman Instruments, Fullerton. Academy Award-winning actor John \\layne, of Newport Beach, and his wife will travel to San Diego for the glittering dinner in honor of Mexican President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz. Greetings will doubtless be extended to the Mexi can chief of state by Ignacio Lozano, and · his wife, who Jive on Newport Beach's Lido Isle. Loza.no is publisher of the influential Spanish language newspaper La Opinion, which is widely circulated in California and the Southwest. Newly-elected State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter (R·Newport Beach)· who is also chainnan of the Ca li fornia Republican Central Committee, and Mrs. Carpenter are also expected to attend. Former Secretary of the Navy and one- time Irvine company president Charles Thomas and his wife, of Corona del Mar, are scheduled to attend the festive evening. The· President's brother, Donald M. (See GUESTS, Pa1e ZI * * * fire had guaran teed . llrael tt would Mt suffer a military disadvllntage In accepting. Top Mideast advisors tnet with the President Tuesday to ponder the situation and the U.S. response while the Israeli cabinet fretted. Admlnistratlon prospects over its Indochina policy were brighter, however, after the Senate voled 5' to 39 defeat for an amendment to force withdrawal of U.S. troops from Indochina by Dec. 31, 197\. Presidential Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said Nixon was "pleased with the overwhelming victory." He reiterated the President's statements that it is a oete_ssity to maintain nexibility in Sou~ast Asia . Vice President Splro Agnew Tuesday rrom the lawn of the Western White House said Cambodia now hu al least a fighting chance ror survival. He stressed lhat Southeast Asian allies will need both military and economic aid for an indefinite period after withdrawal of U.S. troops. Agnew praised acceptance of the Nixon Doctrine by Southeast Asian allies. The vice president flew lo the LBJ Ranch near Johnson City, Tex. to brief former President Lyndon 8. Johnson on bis five-nation Asian tour. Both are to attend the Thursday state dinner at the Hotel Del Coronado for ~texlcan President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz. Fa~lllty Fu .... e OD Line Airport Hearing Date Finally Set On Oct. 13- The disputed date for 1 public hearing on the future or Orange County Airport was finally established Tue.!tday by the Board of Supervisors. Oct. 13, at 2 p.m. was set as a "com- . promise date" after a 40-nllnute discus- sion involving the supervisors and Dan Emory, chiarman of the N'ew20f'1 Antl- Noise Committee. .. Emory contended tha t the 1Upervi90rs had promlaed to hold a public hearing on the rtPort relating 1alely to Oran ge County AlrJ')Ort recently (submitted by Parsons and Company. Supervi90r William Phillips disagreed Mying that "it would be better to hear• the complete Parsons reJ')Ort which Is due Sept. 21 and allow sufficient time there- after lo study il be!ore holdina a pub:ic hearing." The second part of the Parsons repcrt Suspects Clear ' In Murder Case Two suspects arrested on murder charges in Escondido when the body of a Newport youth waa found in their car have been released, Escondido pollce said Tuetday. · Theodore Busch, Jr., 22, and Kenneth Hull, 17, both of Escondido, were cleared of complicity in the death o( William Anderson Eva ns, 17, whose bOOy was found In their car. · The cause of death is still under Investigation, but San Diego Coroner's deputies speculated that the teenager died of a dru& overdose. calls for the designation of a new si~ for a regional jet airport, as well as sites for an airpark 'lind a gene ral aviation (private flier) airJ>Orl. Phillips argued that the Parsons sug. gested site for a new regional airport would obviously affect any study of what to do about Orange County Airport in the future. The resulting action setting the hearin( date on Oct. 13 was a compronllse which i.!t worded th•t "the emphasis of the hear· Ing will be on the future of Orange C.Ounty Airport but the recommendations contained in Parsons final rePort wilt al~o be discussed." Errlory argued that the people af!ected most by jet flights out of Orange County Airport had "waited for four years for some action by your hoard and h::id been told reneatedly that 1nother study must be m..de. "The final Parsons report will contain no new Information rm Oran,ll"e County Airport acC1'.lrding to the way J read the contract· with Parsons," the airPort op- ponent continued. "If yau wait until the second part of the Parsons report Is comnleted and studied by the board and other county o!ficiab it will be months before • hear· inJ! can be held:" Emory added that "after four years or anxiety we deserve the right to "know as 1100n as posible what is goin.it to happen to Orange County Airport. That is the least you can do for us, the victi ms o( air transportation in Orange County." Orange "'eat•er Waitresses Win The clouds ind low fog will roll in harder along the Or1nge Coast \n the evening 1pd ·~orn· Ing hours Thursday, but sunny skies will be the· order of the daylight period with tempera· tures in the 70 to 85 range. ' Letter to Lib Group Does ~t By JOHN VALTERZA Of 1919 o.ltr ,lllt ..... It took a letter to the leaders of the women's liberation movement to 1115Ft a • victory for SO waltresus at a posH _San Diego ho«tl who will break White HO'U.se tradition Thursday night and help serve President Nixon and bis 600 guests. The waii<esses, llyld 11Lbell!g_~14J! their boisea th.at men would take over their jobs Thursday night, took the spotlight away from Cambodia. the Middle East and even Spiro Agnew Tuesday as White House aides made an impass!Oned Hclarif\catlon" of the blpest headache or the Pretldent's current working vacation in San Clemenlf. • And the 1omeUmes acalhlna ud • I plalnUve clarUicaUon of the Hotel Del Coronado Hassle domi.oated TUuday'1 preu br1ding. ' Connie Stuart, Mrs. Nlxon'1 aecrttary and head ofc arrangemtnta for state dinners, wearily arflOUncta a 50 1. SO solution to a howllng contrdvmy only women could launch. nie-hotelm1nqerm:n Mrr.-Stuart'" said brusquely, was the culprit In lbe great y;altres:1 war. • 1ihe said the heads al the hiltiinc holtl "prtmaturely" told its ·so night-shirt wal,,._ that they wouldn't be needed for the dinner. Thf: women were crestfallen. (See 11'AITR£SSES, Paae II ·- INSIDE TODAY Tht favorite performers of the 11ear a.t the Huntinoton Beach Pl4yhoute are recognized at the theater's annual awardl ba1lquet. S e e Entertainment, f?oge 27. • • ' L I ..... • ! • DAIL y PILOT N • I .. ~ -. u,.,, ...... Stringing Alollfl Vivian Redcay of Reading, Pa., admires a 27-inch string bean irown near her home in Berks County. From Page 1 GARBAGE ... because he 1s "fed up" with the growing problem. He says the problem creates both fire and health hazards, on top of everything else. Should the city decide lo require the use of plastic bags as the solution to the problem, Mynderse said that residents \l:ould undoubtedly be required to buy their own bags and the bags would have to meet certain standµds of strength. COST $218,tOO Cost studies showed that with every vne of the 20,000 residences in the city u&ing !our bags a week, the annual cost for the city to provide them would be at least $208.000. The entire Sanitation Division budget last year was less than $450,000, he said. He noted that it might be possible for the city to purchase the bags wholesale. then sell them at cost to-homeowners at various ouUets. Or. he said, they could be required to obtain them through Mrmal retail otitlets. Still.'Mynderst emphulzed, the key la the problem is getting the city's resident& to conform to whatever.regulations are in e1.i'Sfence. · "It's primarily a problem of public education," he said. If n'w regulattor>s· are adopted. a massive publicity Ci'mpafgn would have to be undertaken, he said. In the meantime, he r e m i n d e d residents of the laws that art now in effect. ' QUT OF SEVEN 1 "Refuse should be out by 7 a.m. on Q:>lltttion day. Trash cans should be taken in as soon as possible after they b:tve been emptied. "Trash, garbage, garden trimmings and cuttings are all picked up on the saime scheduled collection day. 1 "Trash cans should be between 30 and SG gallons in size," he said, and although tbey may be of either metal or plastic, they must be equipped with handles and cpvered with a water-tight lid. ·"Oil drums are prohibited," he said. 1 , Contents allowed are limited to wrapped food ~·aste, household items such as cans, papers, bottles and vacuum cieaner sv;eepin&s, and g a r d e n trimmings. Trimmings, hedge cutt.ings an d newspapers and magazines may be placed outside of containers provided they are bundled or tied, he noted. Building materials, such as wand, cement or lumber, as well as explosives, toxic materials, acids, medicines, drugs and animal droppings are prohibited, he said. DAILY PILOT Oii.ANG& COAST l"UaLISHING COMl'ANY lto\.ort N. W1e4 ..... 111 .... 1 • ..., P'vlll"'*' J1c\ It. c ... 1 • ., t:dl .. r Tho..,11 A. M~rpo~i111 M1"'2lntl Edltlf' N•wpeft lffcll Offl,• 221 1 Well lal~e• l o11lew1rlll M1lU111 Atlclre1.11 ,.0 .111 tl 7S, 'l••l Otll« Offlc" Ce1t1 M•l r :QO W•1I l ly Sir .. ! L"wM 9Hd'I: l1t l'or111 A- "'""ltftOllll llltfl! 1111J Ind! l"'lwltd sin ciwn.ni.: as M1111'1 fl Col"'"" .__, ' I Susan Delays Tr-ial Complains of Pain But Fin.allx. Tf}kes Seat LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Susan A\Jwu, cryln1 ollj loud and boldJni her llamach In apparent severe pain, held up the start of the Tate murder trial for an hour today' but finally took her seat in the courtroom. The 22-year-<1ld Miss Atkins was leaning heavily on a woman bailiff and tears were streaming down her face' as she entered the courtroom wllh the jury watching her hesitant steps. Withi n a few minutes she was taken into the chambers of .Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older who previously had received the findings of a medical examination to the effect that she was physically able to continue at the trial along with Charles Maason and two other female defendants. Mlb AW i!OriipUUlllJ tliit ilhe ... I• pain but decided la 10 on with the trial aft.er the judge told her the alternative wu to lie in a bed in an antiroom and listen to the proceedings via loudspeaker. · Deputy District At~orney Aaron Stovitz indicated that he felt Miss Atkins was overeinphasizing her illness which has brought the trial to a virtual standstill siace last Friday. "'She's putting on an' act worthy of Sarah Bernhardt," Stovitz remarked to newsmen. The first witness as the trial got under way was M. Joseph Granado, a police department blood opert, who was testifying about the findings at the Tate and LaBiuca homes. In a brief seas.ion Tuesday with Miss Atkins absent, Paul Fitzgerald, lawyer for "Maa.so~ family" member Palricia Paper Salvage Program Working OK in Newport The trial newspaper salvage program in Newport Beach has met· with early "encouraging response" from residen ts involved, Jacob F. Mynderse, ge~ral services director, said today. The experimental program began Mooday in specific areas of the city. Mynderse said a total of 6,400 pounds or newspapers were collected on the first .d.!iy. The neighborhoods selected for the pilot pickup are Lido Island, Co r o n a Highlands, Centerview and Harbor View Hills, Mfnderse said~ The city is receiving $2 per ton from the Men.cal Corp. of Santa Ana, which is deploying trucks !tlong . the speclfi_ed collection routes Just ahead of city sanitation vehicles. All bundled papers placed at the curb are picked up by Men.Cal employes. Mynderse reminded residents in the participating neighborhoods that they should have their newspapers, in addition to their household refuse, set out at the curbside by 7 a.m. The newspaper pickup takes place only the fipt collection day of each 'week, Mynderse pointed out. For example, In areas where nonnal pickups are Monday and '11lUNJday, the newspapers will be collected only on Monday. The salvage program was approved by the city council last month for a one-- tnontl)Jr\al. Myndene: said if it proves successful , it may be extended to cover the entire cily, thereby providing additional revenues . He aaid the program ma}' have other benefits, tao. There is a possibility, he said , of a cost reduction. of regular refuse l!iervice No Charges Filed Against Mesan ' No criminal charges will be filed against a Costa Mesa woman questioned by police five days ago, on the condition that she and he r husband settle their future differences verbally. Mrs. Susan Page, 26, of 1665 Tustin Ave., admitted picking up a .22 caliber pistol last '111ursclay night to emphasize a point during an argument. Gary W. Page , 27, grabbed the weapon his wife believed to be unloaded and is still under treatment at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital for a wound in the stomach. because of lowered tonnages, "'as well as the ecological benefit of saving trees and extending the life of landfill refuse disposal sites." Mesa Firm Given Nav y Contract For '!'arget Boats • The U.S. Navy bas awarded a $2,398,000 contract to Atlantic Research Corp. of Costa Mesa for the design and manufac-- ture of 48 MK-35 target boats, it was , announced today. A spokesman for Atlantic Resea rch said the contract covers a two and one-halt year period, with the first delivery sched. uled for the spring of .1971. The boats, which will be used prima.rily for radar drills, will be" 57 feet long, with a 14-foot beam and will be capable of speeds in excess oC 30 knots. The Atlantic spokesman said the speed and maneuver. ability of the craft make them especially adapted to target work. · The hull and superstructure of the boats v.·ill be constructed of reinforced fiberglass. The vessels will be powered by four 325 horsepower Mere cruiser engines. The design of the boats will take place In Atlantic's Costa Mesa plant, 3333 Har. boJI Blvd., and oonstnJction will•be done att the Santa Ana laclllty, 1921 Pomona Street. The spokeJma~ said the target boat contract is the third boat contract landed by the finn. The first was for 10 36-foot utility 'll:>ats for the Navy now in fleet service. Presently unde r construction is a 36-foot prototype search and rescue boat for the U.S. Coast Guard which will be launched later this month. Procrastinators Say Martin-Lewis Tops TAMIMENT, Pa. (AP) -The Procrastinators Club of Ame rica is holding its 1969 annual convention in this Pocono Mountain resort in northeastern Pennsylvania. At the awards banquet Tuesday night, the Club Award of 1969 went to the "comedy team of Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis." Krenwlnkel, ar,ued that the rights of the three, women ~fendants were being handicapped because of the setup for talking with prospective witnesses at the women's jail. He said the young women were on one side of a soundproof gla~ screlln and they could tal k with visitors only by telephone, makh1g it impossible for :.he attorneys to join in the conversation. Judge Older went to the jail to inspect the procedures for talking with witnesses and deftied the requ est to use the attorneys' room . . Miss Atkins. Manson, Miss Krenw1nkel and Leslie Van Houten are on trial for the slayings last August of a e .!.! c s s Sharon Tate and four other persons at her home and the killings of Leno LaBianca and his wile the followilg night. From Page 1 WAITRESSES ... Some had bought new wigs. All had , proudly heralded t h e i r upcoming assignment among fr iends and family. And what's more, they were not going to be paid for Thursday night. because they weren't going to work. Anger, clamor that President Ni.I.an was not adhering to the "American Way'' and other scathing blasts ensued. Some of the. spurned ladies started complaining to Women's Lib. And the .haSsie reaching all the way to the White House grew. "I've been bugged out of mind about waiters and waitresses,'' Mr!. Stuart said in ruffled tones. She a9d~ that the criticism leveled at the President was ''co m pJet·eiy unwarranted and hlgbly unfair." She said she would "clear up the thing once and for all." At least 50 male employes -waiters experienced in serving White House style from huge trays -are being recruited through a San Diego waiter's union local, she saJd, det.aillng the solution. The gals, she added, will share equally in the duties and will "help serve the~ meal," Mrs. Stuart said. "If anything, it's called equality,'' she added. , . It's no secret that the huge, plush for· mal dinner her boss ordered during his trip to Mexico turned out to be a colossal job of work for the pretty Mrs. Stuart. And the injection of Women's Lib into the flap makes things even worse. Her feelings about both the dinner aJld the movement came out late last week when the secretary told local Soroptimists that the task of organiiing the diM.er by phone from Mexico and San Clemente was monumental. Pt1.rs. Stuart also said she wasn't particularly interested in Women's Lib. She reiterated half of that platform for reporters 'Tuesday. "It's very difficult to organize a state dinner in II days while you 're on the road.' she said in pleading tones, "and there's a guest list of 600 and billions llf other details. lt's only natural to have a few small flaps. "We still haven't settled all the problems of service," she said, answering queries on how the green staff would be trained in only two days. "As a matter of fa ct, right now it seems like we'll be lucky if all the plates reach the right guests." "What does it cost to run a state dinner on the road'? "Not much extra, except for more grief for people like me," she retorted. The news that the. women of the Hotel Del Coronado night shift had won was greeted with glee among the ranks of wedgie shoes in San Diego. "Whether it was a misund erstanding or a backdown is open to question," one pensive waitress said, "\Vhat counts •s that we'll be there." "There is no suc h thing as a 'normal day' at the White House," Mrs. Stuart told the Soroptimists in San Clemente last week. She proved it Tuesday. Wyl.e• lncaflex 8124 Breath of Life Sll·Yeaf-<>ld John Brock of Fullerton gets a reassuring smile from LA Rams quarterback Roman Gabriel, a member of the National Sports GOmmittee for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Current Cystic FibrosiJ ''Breath of Lif~" campaign for funds to combat children'• lung diseases runs through Sept. 30. · Newport to Set Hearing_ On Volleyball Ordinance The date of a public hearing on an amendment to the city's volleyball ordi· nance will be set for tonight at lhe meet· ing r::I the Newport Beich Parks, Beaches and Recreation CommiS&ioo. The proposed amendment will govern Court Delays Arraignment • For Coast Pair Arraignment for two Orange Coast men charged with robbery has been continued to Sept. 10 in Harbor Judicial District Municipal Court to give them time to meet with a public defender. Loran G. Sinkpiel. 21 of 8501 Lois Circle. Huntington Beach, and Joseph S. Sobowicz. Jr., 22, of 2t1 A, Prospect St., Newport Beach, were arrested by Newport Beach detectives Monday. Their arraignment was orig inally scheduled for Tuesday. Police all ege the pair mugged a Bakersfield man on the beach near the the installation of volleyball courts and the playing of volleyball on bay beachea. Currently, the city ordinance covers vo). leyball activities on ocean beaches. City manager Harvey Hurlburt said the amendment was proposed because of a growing number of complaints about vol. leyball playtng on bayfront beaches. Cal Stewart, director of Parks, Beacl!. es and Recreation, said the existing or- dinance is not precise enough to properly conlrol volleyball playing. "If approved, lhe amended ordinance will allow our d~ partment to closely scrutinize each cOOrt that goes ·in on bay beaches," he said. Stewart said the city has.. installed 33 courts on ocean beaches and will be put,.. ting one in at China Cove, on the bay. "We will have mornlng and evening hours tha t the China Cove Court can be used so that sunbathers and swimmers wil lnot be disturbed," he said. "They will be allowed to police th.em· selves. But as soon as there are too many complaints, we 'll be forced to take it out." Frona Page* 1 GUESTS ... \Vedge and took $85 in cash and some . 1. . credit cards from him. Nixon, and ~1rs. Nixon, will be there, The victim , Jerry Emerson. reported r a.lo~g""with Newport .~~c~.me.rchant aad the incident to police two weeks ago. He c~v1c .leader 0. W. Dick Richard and said he met the men al a party in his wife. Newport Beach and went with them lo Orange Coast DAILY PILOT publisher the Wedge where another party was Robert N. Weed and Mrs. Weed are to supposed to be in progress. attend , along with the industrialist John When he arrived at the scene, Emerson McLeod and his wife who maintain said there was no party and one of the homes on Harbor Island and in Fallbrook. men hit him on the back of the head with Other Orange Coast guests at the st.ate an unknown object. Tbe pair took his dinner will include San Clemente Mayor wallet and fled: Walter F. Evans Jr., and Mrs. Evans. most unusual .. watch. Marks time on 24 hour system. A nece11ity for onyont who travels, 1he military, or men who priie tht unusual. Watch diol 1how1 all 21' houri, i,.. 1teod of iu•t 12. Rvgg edly good looking. Th t lncoflt JI bolonce wheel is guoron!eed against 1hock for th• lift of the woh:h or replaced fret if evtr b~ken. Guorantetd WGterproof os lon51 01 the crystal it inloct, 11enuine wr.~et ports ustd. Scotty's Saltite . CONVENIENt TEkMS· BANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE J. C. .JJumphrieJ J eweferJ 24 YEA RS IN SAME LOCATION Scotty Swift, national poster child for the Muscular Dystrophy As- sociation. flashes a snappy salute at American Legion dele~ates dur· ing the opening bus iness session of their convent.ion in Portland, Ore. At the lelt is Legion Commander J . Milton Patrick. ---------~--- ' 182! NEWPORT AVE, COSTA MESA PHONE 548-HOI - I 1 1 --------------------·---------- ~ -/7 WfCIMsdQ', Septembtr 2. 1970 DAILY PILOT f i;,\Snn, ,,.,,. •, WASHINGTON (AP) -The Suburbs U.S. Big Lures • Ill • \1,1 Tilt_.,... Multi·pnrade Marcher.s in New Haven, Conn., protested against the \var. The parade also "'as in suppor_t of Bobby Seale, the Black Panther leader on trial in Connecti~ cut. IL also opposed racism. . Stor1ns Soak Ma1iila;. Portland 14 Perish in Flood 'Hippies' Peacefu1 MANILA (UPI) -A rerord rainfaJI of mOre than 22 inches in 30 hours flooded Manila today and took 14 lives including those of two U.S. sailors. president Ferdinand E. Marcos declared a state of ··calamity and emergency." The Navy.men were1tilled in a landslide at Cubi Point Naval Station about 90 miles northwest of Ptinila. The names ol the victims were not released by the Navy until their relatives are notified. The bodies of the two Americans v.'c re recovered, the Navy said. One Filip ino was reported n1issing in the landslide. The Navy said an earlier landslide slipped down onto the national highway outside of Olangapo City near the gate ot Subic Bay Naval Base near Cubi Point. One person wa s report ed dead and three missing in that landslide. · President Marcos, whose own Malacanang presidential pala« was under four feel o( ~·ater at noon lo d a 'I • estimated lhat the record flood had covered an area bigger than . the state or Florida. "Now, therefore. r do hereby declare that .a state of public ca l amity and emergency exist in centr.al Luzon , the entire greater Manila and so uthern Luzon Rrea," he said. He ordered all government agencies into rescue and relief Pope Stoned By Madman CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy t UPI ) -An Italian described by police as a "madman" th rew two stones at Pope Paul VI today at the end of the pontiff's weekly g e n e r a 1 audience . A Vatican spokes1nan said lhe stones struck a wall and the Pope was not aware of the incident al the time. Police sa id the Pope had just given his blessing to hundreds of tourists and pilgrims v.•hen Luigi Donno. 35, of Corig!a O'Otranto. took two stones from a sack he was carrying and hurled them toward the pootiff. operations. "l am afraid we suffered damages," he said. ''Most of the casualties were caused by drowning .and electrocutions.'' The rainy weather was expected to l'Ontinue for the ne1t two or three days. Jordan Nixes Iraqi Threat To Intervene PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) - The Peoples Army Jamboree's Second Antiwar Parade during American Legion Week went without incident Tuesday night. The PAJ, a loosely knit group opposing the war in Vietnam·, mustered an estimated l,000 persons for the one a.nd one-half hour long parade through d o w n t o w n Po'rtland. The f i r s t PAJ Ai\ti\·JAN (UPI) -Jordan parade Sunday drew only 100 today rejected an Iraqi threat more, bul louder, marchers. to intervene with its 12,000 The parade Tuesday night Jordanjan-hased troops if the v.·as staged in protest of Jordanian Army cracks down racism as well ·as the war in furlher on Arab guerillas. The Indochina. S p ~ a k er 5 in . . • r Portland's Dun1way pa r k cr1s1s was ~e1g~tened by a exhorted the paraders not to new_ as~ass1naho~ attempt confront the police, who were a~a1nst King Hussein Tuesday very much in evidence, and to night. •·keep it cool." T~~ cabinet took the PAJ leader Kevin Mulligan decision at a...f our-hour said, ''One broken window is tmergency sessipn i irAmman not w o r t h one dead which looked like a deserted revolutionary." city after a night of battling The nearest thing to an between Hu ssein's troops and incident occurred at t h e the Palestine refugee intersection of Main and guerrillas. The sound of Broadway. just a block from machinegun fire c r a c k I e d Legion Headquarters Hotel - through the streets today. the Hilton. The parade ' turned Iraq, Syria and the Ar11b the corner, but some of its guerrilla movements h a v e marchers wanted tq head ror rejected the America n • the hote l. instigated cease-fire and have The street leading to the cri ticized Hussein and Egyp. hotel was blocked and the Lian President Carnal Abdel parade stalled for a few Nasser for moves against the minutes. l guerrillas. On Tuesday, Iraq It was then that members of threatened to intervene with a volunteer group called the 12,000 Iraqi tr o o p s People for Portland finally stationed in Jordan. linked arm!ii ttnd tumed the "The Jordanian government marchers south before police regrets such a v.•aming being-intervened. directed against it and it cannot accept it." the cabinet said in a note delivered to the Iraqi ambassador in Amman. Public transport in Amman was at a standstill and there were only a few private cars on the streets. Business was almost at . a complete stop. The country's newspapers did nol appear, schools were closed and few government employes turned up for work. Palesti nian guerrillas piled loose stones and automobile tires intG barricades guarding their strongholds o t h e r s armed with bazoookas, mortars a n d machioeguns took up positions on rooftops. Kuchel Backing, Of Reagan Seen LOS ANGELES \UPI\ - Former Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel, a Republican who in 1966 refused to endorse Ronald Reagan for governor. was expected today to reverse that decision. Kuchel scheduled a morning news conference al Gov. Reagan 's r ee le cti on headquarters where it wa!J speculated he would endorse the governor. Staff Budget Doubled Democrats Heckle Nixon Spending WASHINGTON (UPI\ Senate Democrats gleefully accused the \\'hite flouse of helping it self to the federal cookie jar Tuesday. but in the end agreed to double President Nixon·s staff budget just as he asked. Seizing on a line item in an Sii.i b.!llion appropriation bl.II for the executive offices and the departments or treasury and post offict. military spending critics could . not resist needling the r: o s l • conscious administration for an apparent increase in its own spending. But they did not attempt to trim the executive offices budget appro\'00 by the House, and the bill passed 68-0. A $56.35 million difference In the totals or the Houst and Senate versions rcmaintd to be reconciled . • The fun began when Sen. their nwn appropriations," Ra lph Yarborough <D·Tcx.), Yarborough 11aid. chairman of the ~l he explained the While Appropriations Subcommittee House intends to. bring its 548 lhal handled the budget bill, staff members under one reported that the $8.55 million salary tent, rather t h a n recommended for White House borrow more than 300 of its salaries and expenses in lhiSt· experts from v a r i o us fiscal yea r was more than departments arxl let the other double the $3.94 mil Ii on agencies pay the salaries as is approved last year, now the case. Sen. William Proxrt}ire (0-Proxmire also squawked \\'is.) one of the most vocal about a $700,000 appropriation critil'S of d2fense spending, earmarked for a similar pool. quickly rose to protest. ing of 39 staff personnel as- "After all. the president signed to Vice President Spiro makes a big point of T. Agnew, but he was assured Cl'Onomy." Proxmire said. the employes. covered by civil "and economy has to start al service, would not be used to home ... the American people "aid the vice president in his must and should look to the very effective political work.'' Preskienl to set an example." In total. the bill as pasS«l Yarborough, fighting back a by the Senate was $56.!i smile. agreed . . _.,,111ion after than approved "\\'c're being called reckless by the House, but $27 million ~pcnder~ and then they come under r e v I s t d budget up ht:re. and want us to doublt estimates. just-completed censui sketch of America has a familiar look. 1't-depicts a nation or 200- plus million persons in search of warm wealher or su!¥'bla. The nation's fullseale portrait \~'Ori't be unVeiled until the final, official tall)' Is completed and sent to President Nixon by Dec. 1. But the preliminary figuies announced T u es d a y by Commerce Secretary Maurice H. Stans provides a good previe1,1•, It is surprisingly unsurprising. backing up what the Census Bureau b a d Jll'OJe<ted ill along on 1hO buls ol the old !MO l\iurts and aubsequenl spot samplings. It shows: -A natlonwlde total of 200.263,721 pefSl\!".s counted so , 1.,-, and likely to go to 'between 204 and 205 million by the time such still·Uncounted categories as o v e r s e a s servicemen are added.· The bureau had projected 204.S mj.)lion for last April 1. tht date the censl<d was taken. -California grtw the most. by nearly 4 million to 19.7 million, to replact New York '' the Jn98l Populous st.I.le. -Americans moved tow&rd warm weather. Florida and TellilS joined California •s states with more than a million population g r o w lb , along with the •Co Id '.r but already teeming states of New York and New Jersey. T Ii e largest Rerce_nlage JllCl'tases were· scored by Nevada, y.'ith 68.9 percent, Florida with 34.7 and Arizonl\,, with 34.6. -Suburbalfites ootnumber residents of inner cities ror the first time; Thirteen or the 25 Jugest cities In the i o Jany 11\cl>led In pmlously rtltl!ld bad lost poplll1Uon, Including pr<limillltY counts. be thlnlll Chicago, Detro\ t and tilt 1910 ..n... will prove It Baltimore. New York held be I.be most accurate ever. about even. Big gainers were _ fie said the ~ ha tDt warm-weather cities of cohipJeted rechecks fnvoh'ln& Loi Angeles, Houston, Dallas. 8~ mWlon .persons ind turned San D\qo, San Antonio and up only 4,200. mWe<t the first Phoenlf· . ti~. uou:nd.1• lfe said he w11 -Farm .population declined sure that wOUSd be the ase from 15 million to 10 million. with the rest ot the rechecks Qld migration p a t t e r n s requested by localtties. continued, from the center or Dr. George K. 8 row n , the nation to the coasts and directo.r of tht censu1, aid from South to North. ''we have every ruaon to Stam said despite howls believe" that the final count from Jocali!ies tbat f e 1 t will be less than 3 percent off. I The 'BACK.TO-SCHOOL" shoes shown In this eel ere but • few of the thousands of pairs on open display for your ~i119 pleasure! . . '. BLACK KRINKLE LlnLE . GENTS aoo1sl .6" BlACK OI BROWN BLACK PATENT T-STRAP FOR GIRLS LITILE GENT$ OXFORDS 2·~fto3 llli IOYS 3.96 .. TEENS INSTEP CROSS·STRAP 491_ av. to 3 GRAIN UATHD LACID MOC:c.uel.TOI OXFORD 983 '°" 7.38 Am .... . .,.,, .... ..... ._._ --a... SPORT SHOES "'"" 4 91 6 1/1 ht 12 • IOT'S l l/i 4 79 .. . . I MIN'S IOn Younts . 7.38 6.38 4. 91 FOl "Hit" I PANTYHOSE ·]96 /'1' .I NlW FAU. AND BACK· TO-SCHOOL HAND BAGS ROM 288 ' FREE CAllDY ~ FOR TH£ KIDDIES t" , II , , , \ \' \ HUNTINGTON BEACH 10051 ADAMS at BROOKHURST 962-9178 INtlCt ta S•v.On Dru'gJ I,. NEW FAU. SHADES SCHOOi." AND FAU WAIDIOllS PAIR HUNTINGTON BEACH 5898 EDINGER at SPRINGDALE 847-9125 STORE HOURS--WEEK DAYS 9 TO 9 •• SUNDA YS 10 TO 1 ' l ! I l ' ' , ' , " ,. • " • • ' ' ·. ,) • • ' " '• ·.• . .. , 1, • •\ ,, :. I i I --i1 :, . ' . " " " •, •, ·I " , I " .. • J, • f I - .. • . . ' \ DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Facing the Hard Facts ' .. Newport Beach Is at a crossr0ads in Its 64-year his· tory that will affect the development and character of the city. and adjacent areas for the balance of this cen· tury. -Not surprisingly, the situation revolves about the Pacific 1Coast Freeway. • • consequences to Nev.:port rt!sidents. • Next week. a group bitterly opposed to Pacific Coast Freeway (and presumably almost as bitterlY opposed to any freeways in Newport Beach), p I #j n s to start circulating a petition. The petition will. in efieet seek to repudiate the .city's previou sly sii;:ned agreement with the state of California on the freeway east of the bay and require that any future !ree1A•ay route touchinJ? the city \\'Ould have to be submitted to referendum vote of the citizens. ft seems to assume· that the many hundred of thous· ands of dollars needed tO seek this alternate solution - and the millions to Jmplement it, if one is found -are no problem to the taxpayers of Newport Beach. And that a delay o! 5 or lQ more years in reaching sol'Utions hs nothin,e: to \VOrry about. " Presumably thC petition carriers want to wipe alt. free\vays out of Ne,vport and •·start all over again." And then -someday -"let the citizens decide." This all seems simple enough. 1 The problem is, starting all over again seems to a:loss over some hard realities and seems to assume some things that never were and never will be true. It seeins to assume that the world will stand still while Newport strugj?les for three to five years or so to come up with an entirely new traffic and, city dev~lop. l:nent plan. It seems to assume that in this place which has been so lavishly physically gifted by nat.ure -\Vith a great big assist from the federal government and the Army Corps of Engineers -can someho\v be suspended in time, or better still, turned back to the· less busy, le ss crowded days of 10 or 15 years ago. All this while still presumably growing to a city of more than 100,000. ' It probably will not be hard to acquire 5,000 signs· lures for a petition based on such an emotion-arousing appeal as "saving the city from freeways.'' But instead of pushing the city in..to a hasty decision based on emotion and without substarl.tiatin£ facts, it \vould seem far better to give the city council time to at least put together some solid. reliable information on what our problems \Viii be ii we do not have the Coast f'reeway -and therefore also knock out the Corona del Mar and Newpart free"'ays. What for example is the cost in Jost land and lost tax base from an eight lane Coast Highway through Mari· ners Mile and Corona del Mar? What is the cost to the city for added major arteriaJ surface streets, both.east· \Vest and north·south if some traffic cannot be handled • on freeways? Can \Ve get a major rebuilding and en· larging of the bay bridge without also greatly enlarging the highway that it carries? A ref.erendum requirement would refider city gov· ernment 1~potent an~ without credentials in any effort to deal with the state. county or neighborini? cities on · matters involving the Coast, Newport or Corona del Mar free,vays. The result is there couJd be no meaningful negotiations since the decision and the word of the coun- cil \vouJd be of no value.. The petition a nd r eferendum proposal is Premature at best. and could very well prove extremely costly in a few years. ' • It seems to assume that-the traffic corridors estab-- lisbed and confirmed for 50 years -.the Pacific Coast corridor and the Newport Boulevard-can somehow be repudiated and that the volumes of traffic that have built up continuously on those corridors for half a century or more, can no\v be held down or be managed on a surface street system without tremendous .cost and There is notflin,e: to be lost -and a real possibility ~f gain -by leaving the new council unfettered in seek- ing new approaches to negotiation or legislation to solve . <:!>••·-~~~ the freeway dilemma. -N ''SEE THE 1>1FFEREN(E 2" • Beach City Traffic lams if No Freeway Major Probe Of the Mafia We Must Have a Positive Action Is Needed Sense of History To the Editor : Assemblyman Robert E. Badham introduced a bill to stop the Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport Beach but lost the fight. It was a negative bill with nothing constructive in it and it was right that the bill c:Ud not pass. There were arguments that if the freeway is not built the traffic jam in the future will be enormous in Costa Mesa, Hu11tington Beach, Laguna B e a c h • Newport Beach aad other cilies. BUT IF THE freeway were to be built with the Newport Beach portion omittecf, !he masses of cars traveling through MailbOx \ ' --- Letters from readf!r1 are welcome. Normally 1Dtiters shoutd convey their message.s in 300 words O'f less. The right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reseroed. A LL Jet· ters must include signature and mail· ing addre.ss, bl.it ncmt"s moy be with- held cm r eqTUst if sufficient reas01l i.s apparent. Poetry will not bt pub-- Ji.shed. -would-pour_jnto-streeti,-making-lhem---~-­ impassable -atid the most annoying si.tuation wou ld be in Newport B ea c h. The city would be flooded with cars traveling al one or two miles per hour, spewing exhaust fumes while idling in long lines waiUPlg to cross interSecUOns. Do the "freeway fighters" want such a tondition? THE SLOGAN, ''le l the highway commission find another route," malres me ask what route? Under or over lhe sea? Freeway opponents present no practical, constructive solution. The coastal freew~y is a necessity and the: most practic!'t and natural route is along or clole to Pacific Coast Highv.•ay. where the blUffs already divide the cit)'. Let those cars that have to pass through go as fast as possible, without waitin1 and prod.Licing unburned gasoline. ONE SOLUTl8N would be to carry the freeway overhead and provide space under it ror shops, bazaars and. parking. with sufricient crossing for cars and pedestrians. If carefully planned, artistica lly lighted ud decorated, such a project could be made a beauty spot and would make walking and shopping a pleasure. THE P~ENT t oast highway in Newport Beach looks unattractive, with houses badly planned or not planned at all and not coordinated. This is not a glrtet that Newport could be proud of. lf the efforts now wasted in rejection ::u1d aegation could be converted into po~itive action like that mentioned . or a better one,, such an aim could be ;ichieved to the satisfaction of present and future generations. LENET LESKI Lett i.s t Rhe toric To the Editor : The rhetoric used by members of the radical left, i! taken at face \•alue, consUtutes an attempt by a very few to averthrow our forrn of government. Yet, very little if anything is d01K' to bri11g to juslice those that indulgt themselves in ----Wednesday, Sept. 2. 1970 The <dltorlol J>OO< of t~t Doily Pilol •ttk& to inform and rtfm. ulate rtadert b11 presenting this ntwipapet'I opinions and com- mtflta1' on topics of ht~rtst and tlgnificance, b11 providing a forum for th.t t~ression of our ftoefnf' opfnfons , and b11 pruantino . the dlvf!rsf'I· 1:it.W-• poinU_ ·of informed observtrs'. · a.ttd spokesmen on. topics of r/lt d<Jy. . R9bert N. Weed, PubU 5her such rhetoric. Perhaps the righ~ or freedom of speech is more important than the right of society to censor those who use the rhetoric of revolulion under the guise of freedom of speech. However, when those that use their right of freedom o( speech lo advocJte the overthrow of our government try to implemen t their rhetoric y:ith violent deeds they must be separated from society. · NOT ONLY should those individuals be separated from society but , they should be lrept separated Ufillil they have changed their outlook ofl the use of violence to obtain change. Jn conclusion, those that resort to the use of violence to ob~in change while at the same time demanding tbJt they be allowed to use the rhetoric of revolution are pure and simple parasites. We, the people, must demand that the rights of the creative citizens are much more impor~t tha A the r!,ghts o( lhe parasites. HARRY B. McDONALD, JR. The E lectoral College To the Editor: During the past year and a half the League of Women Voters has made a nationwide study of the electoral college and of methods or its reform. From this :<tudy 'v.as drawn the consensus that the electoral college be abolished. In its place the League of \\1omen V o t e r • recommends direct popular election of the President and Viet President o( the United States. The House of Representatives has passed a resolution to that effect and the Senate will begin consideration or one, SJ Poor Risks ' Press· Comment&, . ~ t "' ' ' l..aoca1&er, S. c .. News : "A lament cvmes from the .•. ministet who was dispatched some tln1e ago to Sweden lo he)p the Amcric.n deserters \\'ho ' have Otd there to avoid milital'y service .. , .He find s that the deserters are h&\1ing some difficu\\y in obtai11ing jobs. It api)tars to us that SWedil!h businessmen. are showing Jnofe serif! than. their S o c i a 1 i s 1 , anti-American govCl-nment. At least the)' sec that an individual who lacks the basi~ decency and patriotism to rtmttn loyal to his ow11 country Is a rather poor risk as a potcnUal e.mploye. 11 RES. I, shortly after Labor Day. We urge those persons who concur in our viev.•s to ~ite to Sen. George ~turphy and to Sen. Alan Cranl!ton, asking their cooperation in passage (If this resolution to establish direct election of the President and the Vice President by the voting public. Thank you. MRS JACK TURK President, League of \\'omen \1oters of· Huntington Beach ls Planned ~ r .. r I WASHINGTON -The most exhaustive congressional invespgation of organized crime in more Lhan a decade has been set in motion by Sen. John McClellan, the "Those who can111ot remember the past,'' wrote Santayani, "arel:ondemned lo repeat it." This is basically what I meant in a colwnn a few months ago. in which 1 expressed appreciation about "the lack of a sense of history" among modern youth. owlish Arkansas DemoCrat who originally " I DID NOT MEAN -as many readers T raffic. Ticket Trap put the spotlight on the Mafia during the misinterpreted it - 1950s. that a s e n s e (If and that the ends do not ju~tify th• me~ns, but corrupt them. Whatever is permanently constructive must proceed out of love. working through reason. Only these two . harnessed together, can bring the human race out· of its moral darkness and spiritual decay, To-the-Ed:tor:---------Since-the ·scnsauonal crimrtieari•ng~s~->tstory shoulct'weigh- The . '"terseCtion of Newpo<t and th d I "' held by the late Sen. Estes Kefauver and em own or s ow Jiarbor Boulevard is \'Cry confusing and by McCleJlan, Jess skilled ringmasters their pace. We need could be much more clearly marked. have tried repeatedly to expose the to go just as tast as This afternoon my mother driving her national crime ne twork. All their attempts \~1e can to keep up --The -yout~------afe right Ut. almoSt all the things they arc against ; but they do not really know what they are for. Rebellion for its own sake is a symptom car, and I driving mllie. were each given have failed . with tomorrow. traffic tickets when "'e pulled into the Mean;-vhile the r>.fafia has prospered But going fast is Coast Music parking lot. and diversified its activities. Older no good unless you Since I was on my lunch hour I asked t . know where you I J C l"h' . 1 11 en crpnses such as prostitution have want to go. And you the patro man, . . ,T lie. 1f could ca b b d d · I I . I be I een a an one in favor of more cannot know "·here you "'ant to go my emp oyer to exp a1n I v.·ou d ate . b -l'k • • H ed I t ti Id us1ness 1 e ventures ranging from unu·1 you know where you ha"e been e agre re uc an y and to rne to • hurry up about it. pornography 10 banking. and why you don 't wanl to go there Having paid over $3,000 in property IN RECENT TThlES, the cantankerou5 again. taxes in the last lhree years on Costa t.1cClellan bas been preoccupied v.·ith Mesa property. I resent a policeman undistinguished investigations into the begrudging me three minutes of his time poverty program, ghetto riots and while I call my employer b'.ecause I got student uprj.sings. · caught in a ticket trap. For the last three years, the Senator's NANCY M. HALUS staff has been exploring thl! idea of a Quotes • Leigh Steinberg, UC Berkeley student body president -·•Many of the values (If my parents are deeply embedded in me 1and) I have more in common with then1 than with the people working for the revolution." major probe of the Mafia. They polled police chiefs across the country I-Cl determine how far organi1..ed crime had reached into legitimate business. The tentative new battle plans call for focusing separately on Mafia activities in labor rackelS. loan sharking. narcotics, stolen goods, gambling and pornography. Extortion, hijacking. credit card theft. milking of legitimate businesses and sl('llen securities n1ill also be ex-plore~. WITHOUT A TRUE and deep un · derstanding of history. our youth (with the best of intentions) can plunge us into the middle of a greater niess than they are trying to get us out of. \Vithout lhe lessons to be drall-'ti from Hitle r and Stalin and the extremist n1oveme nts of our century. the idea lism (If our youth can easily turn into nihilism, into blind rage. into mindless hate, into the justification of "good" ends by evil and destructive means. · • FOR ONE OF TlfE greet lessons of histo ry is that violence beget~ violence, of disellse, not a cure ; the tearing down of one system is futile lf anothel,", equally unjust and repressive, is to be put in its place. These matters 1nust be thought out careftllly. AND THEY CAN be thought out only if we arc firmly grounded in a sense of history : if we are aware of man 's capacities ancl li1nitations: if \\'e reject from the past \vhat is unworthy. and respect \vhat is noble. Turning our back5 on the past is as ignorant and rigid as vener~ting it. The present and the near future c:an be haJld\ed only by those with the ph,per intellectual tools. as \~·ell as the moral fervor. Moral fervor alone is not enough; without a broad framework of learning, it soon degenerates into fanaticism . parochialism. sectarianism, and, even• tually, despotism of one sort or another. It "''ou ld be a tragic Jro11y if "freedom loving" youngsters inaugurated a "ll'eW era of tyranny . Patrick W. Coil , ROTC 1tudent at College of San Mateo -''If it ill peace the radicals really seek, why do they have a rock or a balloon filled with paint in their hands; and if it js academic freedom then why do they lty to shut down the schools, and deprive me of my right to take military science ?" !\1cCLELLAN WILL spotlight the Mafia functionaries in each area, rather than taking the easier and more familiar approach of giving the genealogy of the "crime families." As a result. there will be some overlap. For example. the same hoodlums may well turn up in both the gambling and Joan shark rackets. Tiresome Wifely Words Yevgeny t. Ruibnlkov. guiding Calif. tour of Russian wMters ·-"\Ve have fowld you can disagree without being disagreeable." Charlie Boss, sociology prof, L.A. City College -''ff I were forced to choose between this '"ar in Asia and our Ameri can form of democracy as· iigainst permanent peace but i nation run by ;i hundfed thousand adolescents. I am afraid -liberal though t am -l would join the side of majority rule." Dear GI00111 y GU!l: If you want a real education, call 1hc Nev.•port Beac1l tralOc engineer • and ask for an explanullon of Traf· fie Ordinance 12.44 llOb (overtime mcler -transitional are.a) \\'hich . carries a $9 fine inslead of the 11ormat $2. ~. K. K. r~11 ltUu•t r•Utt h t•lf ln' y""" Mt n11;n,•nlr IMH .. '"' l\IWt(MHf. $1~• .,,~r "' '"~' tt OIM'"' Ou1, otr" "nu. A v.·hole new generation of young r>.lafia captains has sprung up since the Kefauver and ri..fcClellan hearings. But l\lcClellan has been taking on young investigators to deal 1vith them. The Senator does not expect to get bearings going until somelinte next Year. Then. beneath the TV lights in the historic Senate caucus room . the 74-year- o!d fi.1cC\ellan will make wh:i t 1nay be his final stand against the mob. A SECRET WAR goes on in Thailand large.ly unknown to the rest of the world. The ·Bangkok government discourages visilS into hills and forest where guerrilla activity smolder11 and flames. A recent survey by a Quaker Investigating team. disclosed insurgency of one kind or another in 31 or Thailand's 71 proVinces. The team also discovered Communist·style civJI warfare in some localities. The guerrilla acti\·ity 1,as been red by discontent among Thai.minorities such as the ?ifco tribesmen. Laotians and Malays. SEN. Pllll. llART'S Antitrust 3nd h1011opoly subcon1mlllec has begun 11 ful l· scale probe or soaring Blue Cross and Blue Shield cost.s. Ilart. 0-Mic·b., has ·found !hat the aiant. lnsurers are a1nong the rnosl generouj of companies. They pay out about 95 cents or every dollar they take in . However~ hi$ early findings indicate that Blue Cro.s.1 and Blue Shield h11ve failed lo challenge enough hospital bill11 . ConsequenUy, they have had to boost premiums to l:ovcr the c1Ctss charges. I' \Vifely remarks that husbands get tired ()f hcarin_g: "The refrigerator is "'·earing out. \Vt need a new one." "It's gelling so thin <?n top J think you (lug ht to get a wig. Henr y. A lot of men are y,·earing them today." "Well, Ir I e\•er get married again. it certainly 1\·on·1 be for love. I've tried th11t. and it ·s for the birds." '"'Certainly, 11m not so narrow-minded that I see anything wrof!g with a married man talking to a strange \1•oman at a cocktail party. bul did you have to spend the \\'hole el'enin,g talking to her? You acted as if she had you hypnotized." •·E\'ERYTHING'S getting cold. lf you don't come to the table this very minute J'm going to throw the whole meal out the wincfow." -''The vacuum cleaner is broken. We need a new one.0 "The liquor cabinet is completely emi> ty, Henry. If you want a martini, you'll have to run over to the .ne\ghborS Jnd borrow a cup of gin. ~1'aybe you'd better borrow two cups -and I'll have one with you." "I tell you therr 1s t1 mouse in this house, and I positively will not live In a house with a mouse." "If they do something good. they're your kids; If they do somethina bad. they 're mlne. '' "I DON'T CARE If you had chicken Kiev for lun ch e1·ery day this week . You·re still having chicken Kiev for din· ner tonight" "The air conditioner broke down this afternoon. \Ve need a new one." "~1yrlle's hUsband just got another bi& • • • 11 !' Hal Boyle-" " ~ raise. lie doesn 't let everyone in his of· fice push him around." "{don't see why you mind· going lo tbt ~u pcrmarkct 1vith me. A tot Of husband: en jo} shopping 1vith· their wives.·· •·ri.1other says she won't con1e ano spend the summer l\'ilh 11s unll"s~ vo ...,~rite her a letter flrst and tell her · to sure that she is welcome." "I THINK I'LL have my ,hair tinted a: blonde -1Yith a '"hite streak in it." .. The electric dishwasher is on u· blink. We need a >flew one.'· ''\Ve never go oul anymore. Why dart you simply keep me in a closel Iii Bluebeard did his \Vives, and be dOI ._ with it?'' 1 .. T11e orthodontist says that after 1 .. have Junior's upper teeth straighlenc : we oµght to do something about the lower teeth· of his. too." Bu George - Dear George: How can yod tell a boy thM a girl he used to go with Is accu~i!f J ne or stealing her guy who n~ ikes n1c ;ind ne ver even thin )f I .ouise , much less honks th 1orn out front ? Donl you thin >0? Dear Hurt: Not unless !AUliit' docsn '1 lliough coming up on. the porcb i ot course. <1s you say. I • 7 7 • , . Costa Mesa ' • Today's Final N.Y. Steeb *" -* ' VOL'. 63, \No. 210, 6 sebr10.~s. 96 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBE!t 2, 1970 • TEN~S • - ~anel Ponders Fraud Charge Against Countian • A Superior Court jury retired In Santa Ana today to CONider its verdict in the trial oJ an insurance salesman charged wilh fraudulently issuing a $15,000 policy en the life of a ma·n known to be dying of cancer. , Judge Ronald Crookshank sent the panel 10 the jury room after de(endant f~ul Farowlch, 34, of Tustin· denied that he knew or men's store manager Murray Bronson's condition when he wrote out the Farmers New World policy. It appeared in the trial's final hours that the te.!tlmony of two witneSses will be vital to the jury in its deliberations that of Farowich and the earlier DOVGLA.S GETS FA.T CONTRA.CT WASHINGTON (AP) -The Na- tional Aeronautics and Space Admin· islraUon has awarded a $60,918,000 supplemental contract to McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Company, Huntington Beach for work on the Skylab Orbital Workship. Sen. George Murphy (R..Calif.), said the supplemen tal results primar· ily from changes in the launch ve. hicle. Mesa Firm Given Navy ..Contract F~r Target Boats The U.S. Navy has awarded a $2,311,000 contract to Atlantic Research Corp . of Costa Mesa for the deaign and manufac· ture of 48 MK-35 tar1et boats, il was announced today. A spokesman for Allantic Research said the contract covers a two and one.half year period, with the first delivery scbed. uled for the spring of 1971. The boats, which will be used primarily for radar drills, wilt be 57 feet long. with a l4·foot beam and will be capable of i;peeds in excess of 30 knots. The Atlantic spokesman said the speed and maneuver· .11bility of the craft make them·especially adapted to target work. The hull and superstructure of the boats will be constructed of reinforced fiberglas's . The vessels will be powered by four 325 horsepower Mere cruiser engines. ,.. The design of the boats will take place in Atlantic's Costa Mesa plant. 3333 Har. bor Blvd., and construction will be done at the Santa Ana facility, 1921 Pomona Street. The spokesman said the target boat contract is the th ird boat contract landed by the firm. The first "'as for 10. 36-foot utility boats for the Navy now in Oeet sefvice. Presently under construction is A 36-foot prototype search and rescu e boat for the U.S. Coast Guard which will be launched later this mo_nth. A.D DRA.WS BONUS IN COLD CA.SH Cold cash -$50 more than she was asking for -was the kind of offer this refrigerator ad got for the adver- tiser who placed it In -the DAILY PILOT classified want ad section: AMANA 17 2-<:lr refrig· free7.er . Ice maker. Avo- cado. Like new. $250. XXX·XIXX. ~ And, of course, the ad sold the re- fr igerator -to a s~.~ool teacher ~Ith five children . She was one of the first to call. The caller who offered the $50 bonus was too late : the sale had already been made. Make your sale. Call a DAILY PILOT ad·vlser at M2·5678. Spiro Has New 'Fill-in' Ball 1Vice President Spiro T. Agnew says he now has a personalized golf ball , as President Nixon does, but the Agnew ball Is different . The President gives out ball• be aring the presidential seal. He gave Agnew one Tuesday and . the yicc prt9ldenl, who has hit a couple of competitor~ accidentally wllh misdirected tennis and golr ball~ !his year., remarked: "I've got one that says 'you have Ju st been struck by' and then I sign it..' • statements of Lawrence O d e n 1 Bronson~s employer and the owner of Mic,ilael's Ltd. of Costa Mesa. Odenz and Farowich faced identical counts of attempted grand theft , conspiracy and forgery uatil Monday, the oJ)ening day of the trial. Odenz, 47, or 298.1 Java Road, Costa Mesa, then pleaded guilty to reduced charges of conspiracy and was fined $1,000 and placed on ·probation for one year. Odenz became a prosecution witness and testified that his only aim in impersonating Bronson and taking a physical·· examination (or the dying empl<ife was lo use the $15,000 ind hand it to the Corooa del Mar man's widow after his. death. Farowich de'l1ied any knowledge of Odenz's action in posing as Bronson for the medical examination. He said his first intimation that anything was out of order was wh'en .thf! anguished Bronson telephoned him tO advise him tbat Farmers New World had billed Bronsori for his fjrst prtimlum. It had been intended that all bills would go to Odenz at his business address. Under the terms or the policy, Michael's Ltd. would have received the $15,000 payable on Bronson's death. Farowich testified that his only action Facility Future on Line Airport Hearing Date ' Finally Set On Oct. 13 The disputed date for a public hearing on the future o( Orange County Airport was finally established Tuesday by the Board ol Supervisors. Ckt. 13, at 2 p.m. was set as a "com· promise date" after a fO.minute discus· slon in\'olving the supervisors and Dan Emory. chiarman of the Newport Anti· Noise Committee. Emory contended that the supervisors had promised to hold a public hearing on the repart relating solely to Orange County Airport recently submitted by Parsons and Company. Su~rvisor · Willi•m Phillipe disagreed aaying th•t "it· wOldd be better lo he•r tbe "!lllP~ J>.,_ -.,.hlch Is~' · Sept. 2L ind 1llow sufficient time there- alter to study it-before holding a public btartng." the second part of the Parsorui report ror a regional .Jet airport, 11 well as sites calls for the designation of a new ~ite for an airpark and • 1eneral aviation (private Oier l airport . Phillips argued that the Parsons sug. gested site for a new regional airport would obviously affect any study of what lo do about Orange County Airport in the future. The 'resulting action setting the hiaring date on Oct. 13 was a compromise which is worded that "the emphasis of the hear· Ing will be on the future of Orange County Airport but the recommendations contained in Parsons final report will also be discussed." Emory argued that the people affected most by jet nights out of Orange County Airport ·had "waited for four years for some action by your board and had been told repeatedly that another study must be made. "The final. Pal'10l\5 report will contain no DC¥t' in{ormat"'8 on pran$!'.e County, J,lrporl accordl°""' Ille "'Y I,l'lf'I Ille cootracl with Parsons,'' the airport op- ponent-continued..-- "If you wait 1,111til the second part. of the ParlOhl report is comcil.eted and studied by 'tht board and othtt county nfficlali It will be months before a hear- in2' ctn be held." Emory added that "after four years of anxiety we deserve th e right to know as soon as posible what is goin~ to happen to Orange County Airport. That Is thP. least you can do for us, the victim!'! of air transportation in Orange County." :U.S. f vidence Pointing To Egypt Truce Violation WASHINGTON (UPI) AdministraUon sources said today the United States naw has evidence of its own that Egypt and Russia have violated the cease fire agreement in the Middle East. They said this evidence, as well as the diplomatic complications it poses, were disCW1sed in detail at President Niion's meeting at the Western White House Tuesday with his top military and diplomatic advisers . The conclusive information that the United States has concer11! the forward movement of several batteries SAM·2 antiaircraft missiles in the standstill zone on the west bank of the Suez, as well as continued work on some of ' the emplacements which were already in the zone. Administration officials said the United Statts also has concluded-that Egypt~ with the assistance of the Russians , probably moved some ant la i rcr a ft mfSsile batt~ries into the s~ncbtill zone during the night of Aug. 7.. when the ceasefire began. · The State Department declined any immediate comment on the reports of the violations, which were said to have taken place some days after the ceasefire wenl into effect. The administration has been unwilling to discuss the question of violations publicly on grounds that ii is seeki~g to work things out through "quiet diplomacy ". There was no immediate information as to just what if any ·rction U1e United States might take. The N ix on administration faced a diff icult decision on how to handle the matter o( vio lations hi view of increasing evidence that Israel might be dismayed to the point of actually refusing to continue peace talkl\. Some Israelis have threatened to end the ceasefire, but that was not yet taken seriously in Washington. Administration officials privately have expreMed the view that the Egyptian violations are not as serious as Israel claims and should not be permitted to jeopardize the peace talks between Israel on the one hand and Egypt and Jordan on the olher. These talks have begun at the United (See MIDEAST, Pare ZJ to that point had been to leave application forms wlth Odenz in a bid to help Bronson who faced extensive medical treatment without satisfactory financial coverage. Deputy District Attorney Joe Dickerson used his final argument to brand the scheme as a "dumb stunt" In which, no matter how laudable the motives, an attempt had been made to defraud an Insurance company. "The Jaw has been broken," Dickerson said. "'Jlhat is the plirpose of this trial to determine that fact and to seek retribution for any violation of the state'r code." Mideast Peace Role Becomes Major Problem By RICHARD P. NALL Of "'' oeur 'lltt ,,.,, Jeopardized by Ru s s i an missile movement, Middle East peace talks hung in I.he balance today as the Nixon Adminstration pondered its next move. The President continued lo meet with top advisers in an all-day session at San Clemente today after deciding to pass on a trip to' the American Legion Convention in troubled Portland. The U.S. peace·keeping role became more difricult with introduction of photographic proof that .the cease.fire agreement which began Aug. 7 has been Fuel·less Pit Stop Race team members (from left) Tom Haber and Mark McGtail pause during Boston·lo-Caltech Clean Air Race for pit stop in San Clemente Tuesday. They got battery charge for electric car at Southern Call· fornia Edison Company's San Onofre nuclear power plant. Racing under colo rs of Stevens Institute or TecbnOlo~y . Hoboken, N.J., they lead the field of electric cars .. Vehicles powered by other non~petro­ leum fuels, however, are still ahead of them. violated by movement of SAM missle s Cr • • a c ,;~~~~'. ~ ~::,:gc;~ "'!" . usa. n ,, . · vt,n. e: lll ourt, fire had 1J11rantotd Isra,I ii~ liOt af I~ CJ wUer a military disadvantage in · " RcepUng. TojlMijlissl muon met .n.K-ut: ~But ·Tr~·a1 !\hie to Go On the · President Tuesday to ponder the · 11ituation and the U.S. responae while the Israeli cabinet fretted. .. Administration prospects' over Its . Indochina policy were brighter, however. ..after the Senate voted 55 to 39 defeat for an amendment to force withdrawal of U.S. troops from Indochina by Dec. 31, 1971. Presidential Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said Nixon was "pleased 'lfith the overwhelming victory ." He reiterated the P:resident's statements that It is a necessity to maintain flexibility in Southeast Asia . Vice President Spiro Agnew Tuesday from the lawn of the Western White House said Cambodia now has 1t least • fighting chance for survival. He stressed ·lhat Southeast Asian allies v.•ill need both military and eronomic aid for an indefinite period after withdrawal of U.S. troops. Agnew praised acceptilnce of the Nixon Doctrine by Southeast Asian allies. - The vice president flew to the LBJ Ranch near Johnson City, Tex. to brief former President Lyndon 8. Johnson on bis five.nation Asian tour. Both are to attend the Thursday state dinner al the Hotel Del Coronado for Mexican President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz. Huge Hashish Cache Ailned for East State CONCORD, N.H. (UPI) -A cache of 1,452 pounds of hashish estimated to be worth S5 million ary:I c.aptured in Crete last weekend apparently was headed for New Hampshire , It was revealed Tues· day. U.S. Attorney David A. Brock said federal customs agents uncovered the scheme several months ago. The group, Brock said,' planned to fly the illegal hashish Into Laconia Airport~in central New Hampshire. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Susan At~ns ~rying out loud and holding her stomach' m apparent severe pain , held up the start of the Tate murder trial for an hour today but finally took her aeat Jn lhe courtroom . The 22.yea r-old Miss Atkins was leaning heavily on a woma'• bailiff and tears were streaming down her face as she entered the courtroom with the j14l'y watching her hesitant steps. Within a few minutes she was taken Into the chambers er Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older who previously had received the findings of a medical examination to the effect that she was physically'able to continue at the trial along with Charles Manson and two other female defendants. Miss Atkins complained that she was in pain but decided to go on with the trial after the judge told her the alternative ·was to lie in a bed in an antiroom and listen to the proceedings via loi.idspeaker. Deputy District Attorney Aaron Stovitz Jndicated that he fell Miss Atkins was overemphasizing her Ulness which has brought the lrlal to a virtual standstill since last Friday. "She's putting on an act worthy of Sarah Bernhardt," Stovitz reniarked to newsmen. The first 'witness u the trial pl under way was M. Joseph Granado, a police department blood expert, who was teatlfylng about the findinp at the Tate and LeBianca homes. In a brief aeMion Tuesdaj with Miss Atkins absel),t, Paul Fil.qerald, lawyer for "Manson family" member Patrici• Krenwinkel, argued that the rJghts of the three women defendants were being handicapped because of the setup for talking with prospective witnesses at the women's jail.· He said the young women were on one side of a soutidproof glass screen and ttiey could talk with visitors only by telephone, making lt Impossible for the attorneys lo join Jn the conversation. Judge Older went to the jail to Inspect the procedures for talk.lng with witnesses and denied the request to use the attorneys• room . Miu Atkins, Manson, Miss Krenwlnkel and Leslie Van Houten are on trial for the slaying~ last August of a c t r e s s Sharon Tate and four other perlOns at her home and the killings of Leno LaBianca and his wife the following night. No Charges Filed Against Mesan No criminal charges wlll be flied against a Costa Mesa woman questioned by police five days ago, on the condition that she and her husband settle their future differences verbally. Mrs. Susan Page, 2fi. of IMS Tustin Ave., admitted picking up a .22 caliber pistol last Thursday night to emphasize a point during an argument. Gary W. Page, 27. grabbed the weapon his wife believed to be unloaded and is still •under treatment at Costa Mesa MemoriaJ HosPital for a wound in the stomach\ Orange Coast 1''eacher Ficker's Crew 'Prepared' for Cup Win The clouds and low fog wlll roll in harder along the Orange Coast in the evening and mom· ing -hours Thursday, but sunny skies will be the order of the daylight period with temper•· lures in the 70 lo 85 range. By ALMON LOCKABEY De+lp t'I"' IHtlflt lltllw Winning the right to defend the America's Cup is ~ only to 1dually deefnding the most highly prized kudo In world yachting. It has bttn said th1t the skip/,er who loses the 119-ytar 'old botiomless pitcher to a foreign challenger will have his head bolted to tbe pedestal in the New York Yacht Club Lrophy room where the Cup now st&nds .. BUI Eicker, 42-year old NewPort Beach architect', stands on the thrtshold 1fter dc(eatlng three rivaJ3 who were hopeful or detendtng yachting's holy grail. After lht tumultuous celebration of bein& selected lo defend tht cup was over , t tal ked to Ficker ln the living room of the beautiful, rambling home at Price's Neck where he and his young crew have spent two tension filled months . I .asked him if ht had any qualms about meeting the Australians and Gretel II when the big ·show starts Sept. IS. Bill thoughtfully rubbed his · bronzed bald pate. His pale. blue eyes were confident. Said. he: ' ''I never worry about wlnolng or lo.'iin~. All l worrk about is being prepared. If we are Preapred we will wifl. If not we will lose. Yacht racing is a game In which tht cre w which makes the fewest mi!ltakcs win,,." Ficker and hfs crew on. Intrepid were ' obviously well·prepared durlr\g the long hot-s ummer -from June through August. As a result, Intrepid wun the right to defend the Cup for lhe second consecutive time. · I asked Fidler to review the three month5 of trial! leading up -to his defeat of Weatherly, Heritage, and finally Valiint -11\ manned by veteran sklpper1 and ~ws. "We treated the June series on Long lsland Sound as we thought it should be treated -as a tune up series. We weren 't really prepared here. The boat was launched 1 month late, and we had decided not to get any new $8.il!I until arter the June trials. We wanted to find • out If some things we had done on the boat wer& really pra~Jcal, before we got committed to things Uke 1:16,000 worlh of new sails. We knew that It would hurt our perfoimance In June, but we "ue.willlng to take the knockl. "From the st.art we were p;>lnting to August. We Jet up our campaign to be u good as possible in A_UfU1t. Vie 1lso continued Uink testing rfCht through the June and July ol:rlals. ~/Our performance against Valiant wasn't too lmpmstve lh June because of these: things. We wefe lucky to come as close to them as we did -t •believe it . was (our for Vali,nt •nd three for u.,. They were obvlouslv ~tier prtpartd. (Seo FICKER, Paa• If) • • ,. I INSIDE TODA. Y The favorite performer:s o/ the yrar at t.hc Huntington . Beach Playhouse ore recognized at the thcattr's annual award! banquet. St t Enteriainment. Pagt 27. INlll!t ft C•Dllf!T.i. II Ctrttr C-11 (lltdltrlf u.. ,, c11~1"" n ... C.mlO ft ( ... ~...... .. 0-1'1 Nttkft It" O!wu~ 12 ••1i.r}.1 .... , ' 1"1"9U~fl'tlflf 1 .. 1r •lMflt• 22>11 I H-" J1 """ ....... '" . \ M.illln 6 ""'"i.. ff.Jf Mwlfoll ,..... 11 N1llM!lol H1twt ... 011!1111• (Miity u • ., .. 11 hmr ti 1"'"11 ' O·M. Dr, lltlllcrtflll " 5*11 ~tltl1 .. u Tfla'tllltll . If Tl'IMttn awt WHl!ltf t Wtlllf'fl't NIWI tt"1 werM "''"" .. ; I • , • - DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE • • I ' Facing the Hard Facts Newporj. BeaclLis ~t a c~ssroads in Its S.·ycar b~­ tory that will afiect the development and character of .. the city and adjacent areas for the -balance of this cen· tury. Not surprisingl y. the situation revOlves about the Pacific Coast Freeway. \ Next week, a group bitterly opposed to Paclficpiast· Freeway (and presumably almost· as bitterly opPo~ed to any freeways in Newport Beach). p I.an s to start circulating a petition . The petition will , in_effect seek to repudiate tbe city's previously si~ned agreement with the state of California on the freeway east of the bay and require th at any future free"•ay route touching the city \vould have to be su bm itted to referendum vote of the citizens. · Presumably th e 'petition carriers want to wipe all freeways out of Nev•port and "start all over again.'' And then -someday -"let the citizens decide." This all seems simple enough. The p:oblem is, starting all over again seems to gloss over some hard realities and seems to assume some things that never wer e and never will be true. lt seems to assume that the world wiU stand still while Newport struggles !or three to five. years or so to come up with an entirely ne\v•traf!ic and city' develop-- ment plan. lt seems to assume that in this place which has been so lavishly physical1y gifted by nature -\vith a great big assist from the ·fede,ral government and the Army Corps of Engineers -c?n someho\v be suspended in time. or better still, turned back to the less busy, Jess crowded. days of 10 or 15 years ago. All this while still -- presumabl y gro,ving to a city of more than 100.ooo.~ consequences to Newport residents. It seems to assume· that the many hundred of thous- ands of dollars needed to seek this alternate solution - and the millions to implement it, if one is found -are no problem to the taxpayers of Newport Beach. And that a deJay of 5 or 10 more years in reaching soJutions is nothing to \11orry about. It probably will not be hard to acquire 5,000 signa- tures for a petition based on such an emotion-arousing appeal as •·saving the city from freeways." But instead of pushing the city into a hasty decision based on emotion and without substantiating facts, it \vould seem far better to give the city council time to at least put together some solid, reliable information on \Vhat our problem6 will ·be if we do not have the Coast Freeway -and therefore also knock out the Corona del Mar and Newport freeways. • · \Vhat for example is the cost in lost land and fost tax base from an eight lane Coast High'li.1ay through Mari- ners Mile and Corona del Mar? What is the cOst to the city for added major arterial surface s treets, both east- \vest and north-south if some traffic cannot be handled on freeways? Can \Ve get a major rebuilding and en· larging of the bay bridge without also greatly enlarging the highway that it carries? A referendum requirement would render city gov- ernment i!'1potent and without credentials in any effort to deal with the state. county pr neighboring cities on matlers involving the Coast, NewPort or Corona del Mar· freeways. The result is there could be no meaningful negotiations since the decision and the word of the coun· cil \Vould be of no value. The petition and referendum -propasal is prematu r~ at best. and could very well prove extremely costly in a few years. • It seems to assume that the traffic corridors ''stab- lished and confirmed for 50 years -the Pacific Coast corridor and the Newport Boulevard~an somehow be repudiated a nd that the volumes of t r affic that have built up continuously on those corridors for half a ceptury or more, can no'v be held down or be managed on a surface str~et system without tremendous cost and There is nothing to be lo st -and a real possibility ~f gain -by leaving the new council unfettered in seek· 1ng new approaches to negotiation or legislation to solve the freeway dilemma. N ®'~"-~~~ ''SEE 1l-IE l>!FFEREN(E 2" • Beach City Traffic lanis if No Freeway Positive Action Is Needed Major Probe Of the Mafia ls Planned We Must Have a To the Editor: Assemblyman Robert. E. Badham introduced a bill to stop the Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport &!ach but lost !be fight. It was a negative bill with nothing constructive in it and it was right ( • Mailbox RES. 1, shortly after Labor Day. We urge those persons who concur in our views to' write lo Sen. George Murphy and to Sen. Alan Cranston, asking their cooperation in passage or this resolution to establish direct election of the President and the Vice President by the voling public. Sense of History ' -_, Thank you. (. .. r Jack: • ~ that the bill did not pass. Letters from readers ore welcome. There were arguments that jf the Normally writer1 1hould convey thtir freeway is not built the traffic jam in the messages in 300 words or less. The MRS JACK TURK WASH INGTON_ The most exhaustive future will be enormous in Costa Mesa, right to condtme letters to fit space Hu1tington Beach, Laguna Be a ch' Or eliminate libel is reserved. AU lelr President, c.'Ongressional investigation of organized Newport Beach aad other cilies. ter1 must include ~gnature and moil.-League of Women Voter.!! crime in more than a decade has been set ing addreu. but names may be with-of. Huntington Beach in motion by Sen. John McClellan, the ''Those who caoJtOt remember the past," wrote Santayana , "are condemned lo repeat it." -,.. This is basically v.·hat I meant in a colwnn a few months ago, in · which I expressed appreciation about "the lack of a sense of history" among modern youth. BUT IF THE freeway were to be built held on T"tqutst if lllf/icit'nt reoson 6wlish Arkansas Democrat who originally with the Newport Beach portion omitted, is appaT'tTlt. Poetrv talll nor be 9ul>-1 ••-11. h I DID NOT MEAN -as many readers I. • d. T ffl Tl k-T PU uie spo 1g ton the Mafia during· the d tbe masses of cars traveling through ""' ra C C ~... rap misinterprete it - Id ·to ki h 19505· that a se nse or wou pour 1n stree"'""',.miifa~ng~tiiel;im',;----,--,.--,-,--c:--:---,---~-,-~ro-the--Ed:tor-:.-____ ,5. h h' h Id 1 h I bl " •....-51 a tnce t e sensational Cfime liearings 1story-s ou -we g mpassa e -an .. uic mo nno ng u h helo · P h ••-· " r The 1'n•-··-11'on ol Newport and h d I . ,; Id •· • N rt B h s c r ric. er aps uie rig • ., o Kl""'" held by the late Sen. Estes Kefauver and l e~ own or s ow sttua..,on wou ..,... in ewpo e I c · 1 · Harbor Boulevard is \'Cry confusing and 1•-w ed The city would be flooded with cars reedom or speech is more important could be much more clearly marked . by McClellan, Jess skilled ringmasters 1"':1r ~c,e. 1' nte tr el. 1 1 ·i h than the right of society to censor those hav.e tried. renoatedly 10 ex~·• lhe o. go JUs as as as av 1ng a one or ~·o m1 es per our. This afternoon my mother driving her ,..~ r"' a t k """ · .. a e ha st f h'le ·dr i who use the rhetoric of revolution under national crime network. AU their attempts ~~hcln ° eee up s,..~w1.o0 x u umes w 1 1 in~ n car, and I driving mine, were each given ha ve failed. Wll om?rrow. . long lilles waitirig to cross intersections. the guise of freedom of speech. iraffic Uckets when \.\'e pulled into the But going fast 1s Da th •I 1· ht " h Mean.while .. the "· fafia h. '·'· prospered no ood unless 011 e • r~way 1g ers want sue a However. when those that use their Coast Music parking lot. d g Y condition? right of freedom of speech to advocate Si nce 1 was on my lunch hour I asked !~t rp d~versifiedh its activ.itie~. Older know where you THE SLOGAN, "I et. the highway commiasion find another route," mafts me ask what route ? UDdcr or over lhe sea? Freeway opponerits present no practical. oonstruclive solution. The coastal freeway is a necessity and the. most practical and natura l route is along or cloae to Pacific Coasl Highway, where the blUffs already divide the city. Let those cars that have to pas~ llvough go as fast as possible, without wailin& and prod.I.icing unburned gasoline. ONE SOLlJTJON would be lo carry the freeway overhead and provide space unde.r it for shops. bazaars and parking, with suffici ent crossing for cars and pedeslrians. lhe patrolman, J.C. \Vhite, it J' could call · e nses sue a.s prostitution have want to go. And you the overthrow of our government try to 1 . 1 be 1 bee~ a~andoned 1n favor . of more cannot know where you want to go implement their rhetoric 'ol'ith violenl my employer to exp a1n 1 v.·ou d ate . businesslike \.'entures ranging from until you know where you ha\•e been He agreed reluctantly and told me to h t b ki deeds they miJst be separated fr om hurry up about it. pornograp Y 0 an ·ng. and Why you don 't want to go there society. Having paid over $3,000 ·in property IN RECENT Tlrt1ES, the cantankerous again. NOT ONLY should those individuals be separated from society but they should b~ J.:ept separated until they have changed their outlook 0111 lhe use of violence to obtain change. In conclusion, those that resort to 1he use of violence to obtain change while at the sa me time demanding that thi!y be allowed to use the rhetoric of revolution are pure and simple parasites. We. the people, must demand that the right! of the creative citizens are much more important thaR the rights of the parasites. faxes in lhe last three years on Costa 1'1cCJe!lan has been preoccupied \.\'llh Mesa property. 1 resent a policeman undistinguished investigations ,, into the begrudging me three minutes of his time poverty program, ghetto riots and while I call my employer because I got student uprisings. ~ caught ir. a ticket trap. For the last three years. the Senator's 1'iANCY 1'1. HALUS staff has been exploring lht: idea of • Quotes . Leigh Steinberg, UC Berkeley student body president -"~fany of the values of my parents are dee'ply embedded in me tand,l J have more in c<immon with !hem than wilh lhc people '''orking for the revolution.·· major probe of tl:e Mafia. They polled police chiefs across the country to determine how far organized crime had reached into legitimate business. The tentative new battle plans call for focusing separately on Mafia activities in labor rackets. loan sharking, narcotics, stolen goods, gambling and pornography. Extortion, hijacking, credit card theft. milking of legitimate businesses and sl('Jen securities will also be explored. WITHOUT A TRUE a11d deep un· dcrstanding of history, our youth (with the best of intentions) can plunge us into the middle of a greater mess than they are trying to get us out of. Without lhe lessons to be drawn from Hitler and Stalin and the extremist n1ovcmcnts of our century. the idealism of our youth can easily tur11 into nihilism, into blind rage, into mindless hate, into the justification of "good" ends by evil and destructive means. FOR ONE OF TiiE great lessons of history is that violence begets violence, and that the ends do not ju~tify the meaJJs, but corrupt then1. Whatever is permanenlly constructive must proceed out of love. working through reason. Only these two, harnessed together, can bring the human race out of its moral darkness and___!.e.irltual decay~ The -youth are right in. almost all the things they are against; but they do not really know what they are for. Rebellion for its own sake is a symptom of disease, not a cure; the tearing down of one system is futile if another, equally unjust and repressive, is to be put in its place. These matters must be thought out carefully. AND THEY CAN be thought out only if v.·e are firmly grounded in a sense of history; Jf we are aware of man's capacities and limitations; if we reject from the past \vhat is unworthy. and respect \\'hat is noble. Turning ou r back~ on the past is as ignorant and rigid as venerating ii. The present and the near future can be haMJled 011ly by those with the proper intellectual tools. as v.·ell as the moral fervor. Moral fervor alone is not enough; without a broad framework of learning, it soon degenerates into fanaticism, parochialism. secta rianism , and, even· tually, despotism of one sort or another. II ~-ould be a tragic irol'ly if "freedom loving" youngsters ina ugurated a ne\v era of tyranny. If carefully planned , artislically lighted ud decorated, such a project could be made a beauty spot and would make walking and shopping a pleasure. THE PR&SENT toast highway in Newport Beach looks unatlractive, with tiouses badly planned or not p13itned at all and not coordinated. This is not a street that Newport could be proud or. HARRY B. McDONALD, JR. Tiu! Electoral Colle g e Patrick W. Coil. ROTC 5tudent at College of San Mateo -"Ir it is peace the radicals really seek. v.·hy do they have a rock or a balloon fiUed with pa.int in their hands; and if it is academic freedom then why do they try to shut down the schools , and deprive me of my right to take milit2ry science?" fltcCLELLAN WILL spotlight the Mafia functionaries in each area, rather than taking the easier and more familiar iipproach or giving the genealogy of the "crime families.'' As a result. there will be so me overlap. For ex"ample. the same hoodlums may "'ell turn up in both the ga1nbling and Joan shark rackets. Tiresome Wifely Words· Jr the efforts now wasted in rejection a11d 11egation could be converted into positive action like that mentioned . or a better one, such an aim could be achieved to the satisfaction of present and future geoeratioru. L~NET LESKI Le ftist Rhetoric To the Editor: The rhetoric uStd by members or tht radical left, if taken at face valut, constitutes an attempt b.v • very few lo overthrow our form of government. Yet, very Uttle If anything is done to bring to jusUce those that indulge themselves in ---i-- Wedoesday, Sepl. 2. 1970 The edltorlol J>Oll• of tht DaUy PUoC 1ctk1 to inform ond 1ti~ ulatt rtodtrt bu presenHng this ncwipaper'1 opinions ond com- mt1itclJl on topics of interest and dgnificance, bu provld'htg a fo,...,. f~ the tzpre11ion of our • readnr' 'oPfnion1, (1'11d bl' prtuntiq tM d.tvu.se i:it10o points of fn/o"7ltd observers and spokemi~ on topics of rhe doy. R9berl N. Weed, Publl•htr To the Editor: • During the past year and a half the 1..eague of Women Voters has made a nationwide study of the electoral college and of methods of its rclorm. From this study 'vas drawn the l'Onsensus that the electoral college be e1bolished. In its place the League or y,romen v 0 t e r • recommends direct popular election or the. President and Vice President or the United States. The House of Representati\'es has passed a resolution to lhal effect and the Senate will begin consideration of one, SJ Poor Risks • Preu ,. . Laoc111.tr, S. C., News: "A lament comes from the ..• minister who was dlspatctied some time ago to Swe:Pen to htlp the American acserttrs 1~ have fl«! there to avoid military service .... I-le rtnds lhiit the deserters ere having some difficulty in obtaining Job3. It appears lo U!i that s~·edish bu1ine&1rnen INl showln& more 1enx than the.ir Soc I 1 11 s I , anl~Amerlc1n government. Al leasl they see th.al an individual who lacks the ba5!C dtcCl'I<.')' end patrlolism to rtm11in lo~al to his ow11 coun'try is a rather poor risk a11 1 potential employe." Vevgeny I. Ruzhnikov. 1uiding Calif." tour of Russian writers -"'\Ve have fowid you can disagree Ydthoul being disagreeable." Cbarlie Bos~. xoclology prof, L.A. City College -''If I were fo rced to choose betv.•een this "'3r in Asia and our American fonn or democracy as against permanent peace but a nation ,run by a hundred thousand adolesCents. I am afraid -liberal though I am -1 would join the side of majority rule.'' Dear Gloon1 y Gui!: tf you want a real education, call the Ne\\'port Beach traffic engineer and ask for an cxplanatlon of Trar. fie Ordinance 12.-1~ llOb (overtime m ler -transltlonal area} "'hlch cari•lcs a ~ line instead of the normal n. ~.K.K. ffltl to-1!"r1 r.iJK!t r1111r•' ........ ,.., n1-to• .. •rlly lhllt .. ltto f!OWl~lt'ff, S- JI..,, ... "9¥1 N Cllll111r c~ .. Ot/I, ,l)el. A ~·hole new generation of young J\lafia captains has sprung up since the Kefauver and J\lcClellan hearings. But ?ltcClcllan has been .takjng on young investigator-& to dea'I \\'ith them. The Senator does not expect to get hearings going until sometime next year , Then, beneath the TV lights in the historic Senate caucus room . the 74·year- old ~1cClellan \viii make what may be hi!! final stand againsl the mob. I A S~CRET \VAR goes on in Thailand largely unknown lo the rest or the world. The Bangkok government discourages visits into hills and forest where guerrUla activity smolders and flames. A recent survey by a Quaker investigating learn discloud insurgency of one kind or 3nother in 31 ot Thailand'!! 71 proVinccs. The team also discovered Communist-style civil warfare In some JocaliUes. The guerrilla activity I.as been fed by discontent among Thai minorities 1uch as the f\!eo tribesmen, Laotians and Malays. SEN, PHIL llART'S Antitrust and ftlonopoly subcommittee has b<!gun a full· scale probe of soaring Blue Cross and Blue Shield cosls. Hart, O.Mlch .. has found that the giant insurers arc among lhe most generous of companies. They iaJ' out about ~ tents of every doller they tak( In. Ho"·cvtr, his early findin gs Indicate that Blue Cross and Blue Shleld have failed to challenge enough hospital bills. Consequently. th ey ti.ave had to boosl premiums to cover lb( czcess charges. \VUely remarks that husbands get tired of 'hearing: ''The refrigerator Is v.·earing out. \Ve need a new one." "It 's getting so thin on top I think you ought to get a y,·ig, Henry. A lot of men are v.·earing 1hem today." "\Veil , if I ,ever get married again., II certainly won't be for love . I've tried thal. and lt's for the birds." "Certainly, I'm not so . na rrow·minded that J see anything wrong with a married man talking to a strange \\'Oman at a cocktail party. but did )'OtJ have to spend the v.•hole .evening talking to her ? You acted as if she had you hypnotized ." "EVERYTKING'S gelling cold. If you don't come to the table this very minute T'm going to throw the whole meal out the window." ''The vacuum cleaner i~ broken . \Ve need 1 new one." "The liquor cabinet Is <:ompletely emp- ly. flenry. If you want a martini, you'll have to run over to the neighbors and bor'row a cup or gin. ~1aybe YQU'd better borrow two cups -and I'U have one with you." "I tell you there is a moust in thi~ house, and 1 posilively "'ill not live in a hou~ with a mf.IU&e." "If they ~ something good, thcy·re your kids : rr they do something bad, they're mine." "I DON'T CARE if you had chickt:n Kiev for lunch el·ery day this wee.k. You're sllll having chic ken Kiev for din· ner toolght ." "The air conditioner brokfl down this afl ernooii. Wt netd a new one," "M,Yrllc's husband just got another big .. -··--.~ ' B11l Boyle ... -raise. He doesn·t let eve ryune 1n his of· fice push him around.'' ··1 don 't see why you mind going to the supcnnarkcl \vilh me. A lot of husbands enjoy shopping l\'ith 1hcir 1vivcs." "~1other says she won't come and ~~nd the summer 1\•ith us unless )'ou 11·rll! her a lcllcr first and tell hrr (nr sure that she is welc<ime. '' "I THINK l'LL have my hair linled ash blonde -\vith a u·hitc streak in it" . ··r he electric dishwasher ls on th1 blink. We need a new one.·· "\V, never go out anymore. \Vh y don't you simply keep me in a closet like Bluebeard did his wives, and be done with ii?" "The orthodontis t says that after we have Junior·s upper teeth straightened, we o~ght to do something about those lower teeth of bis. too." 1---By George ---, Dear George: llow can yoa tell a boy that a girl he used lo go with Is accusing 11e o( stealing her guy who now ikcs me and never e\·cn th ink s . if Louise n1uch less honk! the ., ~~n out !ront~ Don't you think ... Dear Hurt : Not unless , Loul!le doesn't ;i.l- lhough coming up on the porch is, ot courst, as you say. • 17 17 • • • ' ·' Cosilf-Mesa • . . .. _, . • " ' • •• T0418y's F.l.aal N.Y. Stoeu vet 63 , NQ 210 j, SECTIOl'IS, 96 PAGES ,. . . .. ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNI \ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBe;_it 2, 1970 I •' . . - Jury Gets Insurance 'Case Panel Ponders Fraud Charge. Against CQuntian A 'superior Court jury retired In Santa Ana today to consider its verdict in the trial of an insurance salesman charged with fraudulently Issuing a $15,000 policy on the life of a man known to be dying of cancer. Judge Ronald Crookshank sent the iflnel lo the jury room after de(endant Paul Farowlch, 34, of Tustin denlc;d that he knew or men's store manager Murray Bronsat1's condition when he wrote out the Farmers New World policy. It appeared in the tria l's final hours that lhe testimciny of two witnesses will be vital to the jury in iU deliberations that of Farowich and the earlier DO UJ;LAS GETS ' FA T CONTP,A,CT WASHINGTON (AP) -Tho Na· Lional Aeronautics and Space Admin- istration has awarded a $60,913,000 supplemental contract to McDonnell Douglas Astronauli~ Company, Huntington Beach for work on the Skylab Orbital Workship. Sen. George Murphy (R-Calif.), said the supplemental results primar- ily from changes in the launch ve- hicle. Mesa Firm Given Navy Contract For Target Boats statements of Lawrence O d e n i Bronson's employer and the OYo'\"ler of · Michael's·Ltd. of Costa Mesa. Odenz and hrowlch faced identical counts of attempted grand t h e f t , conspiracy and forgery uctil Monday, the opening day of the trial. Odenz, 47, of 29&1 Java Road, Costa Mesa, then plea<f.ed ·gullty to red~ed charges of conspiracy and was fiiied $1,000 and placed on probation for one ,year. Odenz became a prosecution witness and testified that his only 'aim in impersonating Bronson and taking a physical·· uamination for the. dying emP.lrife wis lo use the 'lS,OM and hand , it to the Corona del Mar man's widow after his death. . Farowich denied any knowledge of Odenz's action in posing as Bronson for the medical examination. He said his first intimation that anything was out of order was when lhe anguished Bronson telephoned · him to advise him that Farmers New World hid bill'ed Bronson for his fi rst premium. It had been intended that aU bills Would go to Odenz at his business address. Under the lerms of the policy, Michael's Ud. would have received the $15,000 payable on Bronson's death . Farowich testified that his only action Facility Future on L.l.ae Airport Hearing Date,,,. Finally Set On Oct. 13 The disputed dale for a publlc hearing The resulting actio~ setting the hearing on the future of Orange County Airport date on Oct. l3 was a compromise which was finally established Tuesday by the is worded that "the emphasis of the hear-Board of Supervisors. Oct. 13, at 2 p.m. was set as a "com· ing will be on the future of Orange promise date" after a 40-'lninute discus-County Airport but the recommendations sion involving the .supervisors and Dan contained in Parsons final report will Emory. chiarman of the Newport Anti-also be discussed." Noise Committee. Emory argued that the people affected Emory contended that the supervisors most by jet Oights out of Orange County had promised lo hold a public hearing on Airport. had "waited for four years for the report relating solely to Orange some action by your board and had been County Airport recently submitted by told repeatedly that another study must , Parsons and Company. be made. Supervisor Willi1m Phillips disagreed "The final Parsonwepcrt will contain to that ~int had been lo leave applicatiOn ·forms with Odenz in a bid to help Bronson who faced extensive medical treatment without satisfactorf financial coverage. peputy District Attorney Joe Dickerson used his final argument to brand the scheme aS a "dumb stlMt" in which, no matter how laudable the motives, an attempt had been made lo defraud an insurance company. "The la\v has been broken," Dickerson sai d. "That is the purpose of this trial to determine that fact and to seek retribution for any violation of the state's code." Mideast Peace Role Becomes Major Problem Bf RICHARD P. NALL Of ._ DlllJ l'llet Shlff Jeopardized by Russi an missile movement, Middle East peace talks hung in the. balance today as the Nixon Adminstralion pondered its next move. The Pres"ident continued to meet wilh top advisers in an all-day session at S'an Clcmenle today artcr deciding to pass on a trip to th e American Legion Convention in troubled Portland. r The U.S. peace-keeping role bec'ame more difficult with introduction of photographic proof that the cease-fire agreement which began Aug. 7 has been OA1L'I' l'ILOT lltH l'~whl Ftael·less Pit Stop Race team members (from left) Tom Haber and Mark McGrail pause during Boston-to-Caltech Clean Air Race for pit stop in San Clemenle Tuesday. They got battery charge for electric car at Southern Call· fo rnia Edison Compa·ny's Sai\ Onofre nuclear power plant. Racing under colors of Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, N.J., they lead the field of electric cars .. Vehicles Powered by other non~petr<r leum fuels, however, are still ahead of them. l ., violated by movement of S"fd miSsle s enm· e c •i~'~'.;'. ~ ~:~gc;·~..... usan. . .. · ! m o~ flre had IJlllr&nteed br8'1 lt ''""11d lift U Ji -:=~u~id~T~S!?rF=-:.·--B-u_t_·_1-'r_i_a_l __ -'h_l_e __ t_o ___ G_o __ O_n ___ __,l saying that "it would bt betler to heir no new infonnm.fl'on Ora!U!e County TM U.S. Navy h10 1-.pded 112,391,000 the -pi,i,-P.._ ~which ls dllp AJrport acc0nllni:1t Ille '"Y I,...,. Ill, contract to Atlantic.. Research...Corp. oL___Sep.t,_2Land_allow sufficient time t!Ler~ cootracLwiUL.f_arioimt' the amrt op. Costa Mesa for the deiign and manufac· alter to study It before holding a pubhc ponent continued-:-{~...,____ ture of 48 MK..15 taraet boats, it was bearing." "If you wait until the second PJrt of annOunCed today. 'The second pert of the Parsons reP.Ort the Parsons repart is comolet.ed and A spokesman for AtlanUc Research said for a re1ion1l.Jet ~Ir~, aa well as sites studied by 'tht board and other county ...lie contract covers a two and one-half calls for. the deS1gnat100 or a ne~ 5ite ofrich11T1 It will be months before a hear-~~ar period with the fir.st delivery sched-for an airpark and • general aviation in« can be held." uled for th~ spring of 1971. (private flier) airport. Emory added that "after four year~ of The boats which wiit be used primarily Phillips argued that the Parsons sug-anxiety We deserve the right to know as for radar d;ills, will be 57 feet Jong. with gested sit~ for a new regional airport soon as posible what _is goin.R" to happen a !4-foot beam and will be capable or would obviously affect 1ny study of what to Orange County Ai rport. Th~t Is ~he speeds in excess of 30 knots. The Atlantic lo do about Or_ange Co4DlY Airport In the l~ast you can _do !or us. the victim~, of spokesman said the speed and maneuver-future. air transportation in Orange County . ability of the craft make them· especially adapted to target work . The hull and superstructure of the boats will be constr ucted of reinforced fiberglass. The vessels will be powered by four 32i. horsepower Mere cruiser engines. The design of the boals will take place in Atlantic's Costa Mesa plant. 3333 Har-_ bor Blvd .. and construction will be done at the Santa Ana facil ity, 1921 Pomona Street. The spokesman said the target boat cnntract is the third boat contract landed by the firm. The first "'as for 10 36-foot ut{lity bo.ats for the Navy now in_ fle~t i;ervice. Presently under construction is 11. 36·foot prototype search and rescue boat for the U.S. Coast Guard which will be launched later this month. A0D DR AWS BO NUS IN COLD CASH Cold cash -$50 more than she was ask.Ing for -was the kind of offer this refrigerator ad got for the adver- tiser who placed it in the DAILY PILOT classified want ad section : AMANA 17 2-dr refrig- frtezer. Ice maker. Avo- cado. Like new. $250. xxx-xnx. U.S. Evidence Pointing To Egypt Truce Violation WASHINGTON ( U Pl) Administration sources nid today-the United States now has evidence of its own that Egypt and Russia have violated the ceasefire agreement in the Middle East. They said this evidence, as well as lhe diplomatic romp lications it poses, were discussed in detail at President Nii:on's meeting at the Western White House Tuesday with his top military and diplomatic advisers. The conclusive information that the United Slates has concerns the forward movement or several batteries SAM·2 antiaircrart mi ss.lies in the standstill zone on the west bank of the Suez. as well as continued work on some of the emplacements which were already in the zone. 1Administration officials said the Onlted ' States also has concluded that Egypt~ with the assistance of the Russians, probably moved some ant 11 Ir era ft mis,,ile batteries into the · 1ll,ndstill zone during the night of Aug. 7-1 when the ceasefire began. The State Department . declined any immediate comment on the reports of the violations, which were said to have taken place some days after the ceasefire went Into effect. The administration has been unwilling to discuss the question of violations publicly on grounds that It is seekiJ?.i to work things out through "quiet diplomacy". There was no immediate info rmation as to just what if any action U1e United Stales might take. The Nixon administration faced a difficult decision on how to handle the matter of violations h1 view of increasing evidence lhat Israel might be dismayed to the point of actually refusi ng to continue peace talks. Some Israelis have threatened to end the ceaseHre, but that was not yet taken seriously in Washington. Administration officials priva tely have expreued the view that the Eg!'ptian violations are not as serious as Israel claims and should not be permitted to jeopardize the peace talks between Israel on the one hand and Egypt and Jordan on the other. These talks have begun at the United (See MIDEAST, P•re %) situation and the U.S. response while tht _ ., l'l- fsraell cabinet fretted. • Administration prospects over its Indochina policy were brighter, however, after the Senate voted 55 to 39 defeat for an amendment" to force withdrawal of U.S. troops from Indochina by Dec. 31, 1971. . Presidenlial Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said Nixon was "pleased 'fith the overwhelming victory." He reilerated the President's statements that it is a necessity to maintain flexibility in Southeast Asia. Vice President Spiro Agnew Tuesday from the lawn of the Western White House said Cambodia now has at least a lighting chance for survival. He stressed that Southeast Asian allies will need both military and ec<lnomic aid for an indefinite period after withdrawal of U.S. troops. Agnew praised acceptance of the Nixon Doctrine by Southeast Asian allies. The vice prtsident flew to the LBJ Ranc h near Johnson City, Tex. to brief former President Lyndon 8. Johnson on bis five-nation Asian tour. Both are to attend the Thursday state dinner at the Hotel Del Coronado for Mexican President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz. I-luge Hashish Cache Aimed for East State CONCORD, N.H. (UPI) -A cac,he of 1,452 pcunds of hashish estimated to be worth '5 million and c:aptured in C!'flte last weekend apparently was headed for New Hampshire, it was revealed Tues.- day. U.S. Attorney David A. Brock said federal customs agents unetivered the scheme several months ago. The group, Brock said, planned to fly the illegal huhish into Laconia Airport ln central New Hampshire. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Susan Atkins ~rying out loud and holding her stomach tn apparent severe pain, held up the start of the Tate murder trial for an hour today but finally took he r 1eat in the courtroom. The 22-year-old MiSI Alkins was leaning heavily on a womlit bailiff and tears were streaming down her face as she enlered the rourtroom ·With the jury watching her hesitant steps. · . Within a "few minutes 1he was taken Into the chambers cf Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older who previously had received the findings of a medical examination to the effect that she was physically able to continue at .the trial along with Charles Manson and two other female defendants. Miss Atkins complained that she was in pain but decided lo go on with the trial after the judge told her the allernali ve was to lie in a bed in an antiroom and listen to lhe proceedings via loudspeak<?r. Deputy Dlstrict Attorney Aaron Stovitz indicated that he felt Miss Atkins was overemphasizing her illness which has brought the trial to 1 virtual standstill 1ince last Friday. "She's putting on an act worthy of Sarah Bernhardt," Stovita reniarked to newsmen. The first 'witness u the trial eot under way was M. Joseph Granado, a police deparlment blood expert, who was ttsti!ylng about the findin&s at the Tate 1nd LaBianct home1. In a brief session Tuesday with Mju Alkins abse~t. Paul Fitq;erald, lawyer for "Manson family" member Patricia Krenwinkel, argued that the rjghts of the three women defendants were being handicapped beca~se or the .setup for talking with prospective witnesses at ttie women's Jail. He said the young women were on one side or • soundproof glass screen and !hey could talk with visitors only by telephone, making It Impossible for :.he attorneys to join in the conversation. Judge Older went to !he jail to Inspect the prOcedures for talking with witnesses and denied the request to use the attorneys' room. MW Atkins, Manson, Miss Krenwlnkel and Leslie Van Houten are on trial for the slayings last August of a c l r e s 1 Sharon Tate and four other per111n's at her home and the killings of Leno LaBianca and his wife the followirig night. No Charges Filed Against Mesan No criminal charges will be filed against a Costa Mesa woman questioned by police five days ago, on the etinditiOn that 6he and her husband settle their future differences verbally. Mrs. Sµsan Page, 26, of 1665 Tustin Ave .. admitted picking up a .22 caliber pistol last Thursday night to emphasize. a point during an argument. Gary W. Page, 27, grabbed the weapon his wife believed to be unloaded and Is still under treatment at Costa Mesa M,emorial Hospital for a wound In the stomach. Orange · Co•1t Weather And , of course, the 8d sold the re- fr igerator -to a school teac~er with five children. She was one of the first tn call. The caller who offered the. $50 bonug was too late; the sale had .qJready been made. Make your sale. Call a DAILY PILOT ad-viscr at 642.s678. SpiroHas New - 'Fill-in' Ball .Ficker's Crew 'Prepared' for Cup Win The clouds and low fog will roll in harder along the Orange Coast in . the evening and motn~ Ing hours Thursday, but sunny skies will be the order or the daylight period with temper•· lures in the 70 to 85 range. Vice President Spiro T. ~gnew says he now has a personalized golf ball. as President Nixon does, but the Agnew ball is different. The President gives out balls bearing the presidential seal. He glll'e Agnew one Tuesday and -lhe vi ce president, who has hil a couple of compeUtors accidentally with misdirected tennis and golf balls th is year, remarked : "I've got one that says 'you ha ve just been ~truck by' and then I 1ign it.,. ,. ' By ALlllON LOCKABEY ""' r 1i.1 1Mt111 1t1tw Winning tbe right lo dtfend the America's CUp is second only to 1ctually deefnding the most highly prized kudo In world yachting. It has been .said that the skipper who loses the 119-year old bottomless pitcher to a foreign challenger will have his head bolted to the pedestal in the New York Yacht Club trophy room where the CUp now stands, • Sill Ficker, 42·ytar old Newport Beach architect, stands on the threshold 1fter defeating three rivals wh~ were hopeful or defending yachting's holy grail. After the tumultuous eel bratlon of being 1<lecttd lo defend the c:up wu • over , I talked to Ficktr In the living room of the beautiful, rambling home aL Price's Neck where he and his young crew have spent two tension filled months. I asked him If he had any qualms about meeting the Australians and Gretel II when the big show starts Sept. 15. BUI thoughtfully rubbed his bronzed bald pate. l:lis pa]e blue eyes were confident. Said he: •11 never worry about wlnoing or losing. All I w9rrk about Is being prepared. 1r we ire preaprtd we wUI win. If not we wlll Jose. Yacht racina is • game in wt}lch the crew which mikes the fewesL mlstikes wins." Ficker and his crew on Intrepid were ' obviously well-prep1red d0urlng tht long hot·summer -rrom June through August. ~ 1 result, Intrepid won the right to defend the Cup for the second etinsecuUve time. I asked Ficker lo revlew the three months of trials leading up to his defeat of Weatherly, Heritage, and finaP>'" Valiant -all manned by veteran skippers and ~ws. ''We treated the June series on lAng tsland Sound as we thought It should be treated -IS a tune up series. We weren't really prepared hert, The bo1t • was launched a month l11te, and we had decided not lo get any new sails until after the June trials. \fe wanted lo find out If some things we hsd done on the bolt were. really practical, befort we got _.,ltlod lo things UX. 126,000 worth of new sails. We knew thait It woukl hurt our performance in June, but We 'fere·wiWng 1o t.oke the knocks. "From the start we were Pointing to August. We oet up our campalpi lo be u good as poqible In A.,usl We also continued tank testing right through the June and July trl11s. "Our performance agaimt Valiant wasn't too lmp~lve ltl Juhe because of these thlnis. We were Juck.y to come IS cio·se to them 15 we did -l 'belleve it was· fo1.1r for Vlll{lnt ind thrtt for us. They wert obvlousl.v better prepared. !See FICKER, P11< 1411-" INSWE TODA. Y Tht favorite perfonner:1 of the year at the Huntington Beach Playhouse are recogniicd at tht theater's t1nnuol award.I banquet. Set EntertainmtnC; PGge 27. 11111111 26 M•lllle111 • C1~ll II M0¥1tt :IWJ Cir-C-It Mtltot&l ,....... tt Cll«klllt II' IJ N1lllMI '*""' 4-I Clln in.f Ji• ort"t• '"""' 12 eamo .., s.,..... ,.,,., n ,,.t:Wlf'll ... 1"""6 ' ,,.,. O.llr "'"(" 11 Dr. lltf!W..... " Ol"rce • U Sltct M9rt: .. 1 11•2J lf!ioflll l'No I T'lo'l'llloft \ tf •11ftf'tlflllMtll U.11 ~1.'.!M~•tn ... ,, ,,_, 22.1J• _,.,,.., 4 M-n" JI Wtlllf'll'I Mlwt 21.n Allll 1.lllfen M Wtrloll N.w1 M I J • t DAILY PILOT C • Wtdntsday, Stptember 2, 1970 f i Vivian Redcay o! Reading, Pa., admires a 27~inch string bean grown n~ar her home in Berks County. Red, U.S.• Ships Exchange 'Fire' COOS BAY, Ore. (UPI) -Rusalln and American fie.bing boats met off Coos Bay Tueaday DICbt and fireworks ....Wied - maybe more. William. Miller. skipper of the Blue Water out of Coos ·nay, said he found a Russian vesael well inside the U.m.ile limit of U.S. territ.orial witers and "I hope to t.11you8hO was fishing." The Rual"1 ship, be continued, !ired something that .appeared like a "skyrtltket" but Miller said he did .not 1ee if any projectile landed near him. In reply, the· American answered with somethinc '1Tbat looked like a bazooka," a coffee CID filled with powder, Miller added. With that the R0usslan sped off into the fog , be said. and Miller returned his crew . of three and his 86-foot dragger to port. Mesa Pair Lose $800 To Thieves Clothing, i~_. 1' a camera and aisort.ed other personal belongings worth nearly '900 have been stolen from a Costa M... apartment shared by two riten . 1,~ 1 •• Police said someone a p p a r e n t I y remOved a window screen at $30 W. Willon St., during the put week to obtain the asserted loot. 1 Gregory . L. Clark, one victim, told Ipvestia:ators he hesitated to report the lpa until his room.mate, Wayne G. I,.ewtr, returned from two weeks' •. rpilitary reserve duty. • He said he thought Lewer might ~ve !al<eo lbe goods along. Suspects Oear In Murder Case Two suspects arrested on murder chara:es ln Escondido :when the body of a Newport youth was found in their car have been released, Escondido police said Tuesday. , ~ Theodore Bu!ch, Jr .• !%, and Kenneth Jtui1, 17, both of Escondido. were cleared or complicity in the death· of WWlam Anderson Evans, 17, whose body was found in their car. The c1use of dnth · is 1UU under Investigation, but San Diego ~r'S depuUes spe<ulaled that the -ager died of a drug crterdose. DAILY PILOT 01 \HOI COAST ,UILlSHING COM,.AH'I" ltobort N. w.,4 Thomo1 K••vil Edl!Or Tho""'' A. MwrJll!ift• Mtnttl .. 1E.i10I' Cest9 M ... OHkt JJO W11t loy Strief Meili111 AlllJr1n1 ,,0 .101 1160, •2616 OfNf Offl•" ,,...,..., ltoell! '211 Wn1 Ill'"• lou!tYl'11 Lat-, .. , .. , m Forti! it.Ytnut Hw!t~ tu<ll: HUJ •••Clo l )O;lf\ltnl left c;*-1•: aoi NOrlll II C~lno lul - . Waitr.esses. Win :'Bjgb,is'· . ' '' Women Will Serve 600 Guests At Coronado Hotel ' ' By JOHN VAL TERZA or tM 0t1tr rue1 111tf It look a letlA!r to the leaders ol lbe women's liberaUon movement to insure a yictory for $0 waitresses at a posh San Diego hot.el who will break White Rouse tradition Thursday night and help serve President Nixon and his 600 guests. The waitresses, livid at being told by their bosses that men would take over their jobs Thursday night, took the !poUili:ht away from Cambodia, the Middle East and even Spiro Agnew Tuesday as White House aides made an lmpwloned "clarillcaUon" of lbe bfu6'1 headache of the Preoldenl'• C\ll'ftll\ workihl v11>11li9!> ill Sin. Clt\Jllllte. , And -the sometimes acalht.ng and plaintive clarification of the Hotel Del Coronado Hassle dominated Tuesday's pres11 briefing. Connie Stuart, Mrs Nixon's secretary and head of arrangements for state dinners, wearily announced a 50 · 50 solation to a howling controversy only -women could launch. ~ The hotel management, Mrs. said brusquely, was the culprit Stuart in the Grove Chief of Police Headi.Iig for Seattle Post Garden Grove civic officials and senior police officer! seemed resigned· tOday lo the imminent Joss at. their popular police chief. -Rep0rts from Seattle, Wash., indicated that George Tiel!Ch may at any hour be appointed police chief of that city. The Garden Grove man is one of two applicants undergoing a final screening by Seattle's mayor and city officials. "He doesn't say much, but I think he Panthers Remain On $100,006 Bail knows he's got it nailed down,'' one of his police department colleagues commented today. "I know they're. very impressed with him ' and he spent the weekend and Monday up there in discussions." Tielsch, 38, and a 17·year veteran of the Garden Grove force is expected to take over a Seattle pOlice department that was recently wrought with tbe dis~very of a burglary ring among its personnel. City administrators are known to want a new police chief who will in the words of the city's mayor "run a tight ship" and it is known that Tielsch was favored from the early stages of screening in which more than 50 applicar.ts were inte rviewed, Tielsch was not available for comment today. A police department spokesman stated tbe chief was "out of town." great waltrtA waii. -' She said 'the beidl of the historic hotel "prematurely" told tt.s 50 night·shift waJtre!fes' that they wouldn't be needed for the 'dinner. · · · · The women were crestfallen. Some had bought new wigs. All had proudly heralded t ~ ,e i r upcoming assignmenl amang frlendS and family. And what's more, they we:re not going tci be paid for Thursday~night, bec.ause they weren't going to work. Anger, clamor that President Nixon ..,. was not.adhering to the "American Way" and other scathing blasts ensued. Som'e. of the spurned ladies started cumplaining to Women's Llb. And the hassle reaching all~the way to the White House grew. ''I've bee:q bugged out of mind about waiters and waitresses," Mrs. Stuart said in ruffled tones. She added that the criticism leveled at the President was ''co mpletel y unwarranted and highly unfair." She said she would "clear up the thing once and for all." At least 50 male employes -waiters experienced in serving White House style from huge-1rays -are being recruited through a San Diego waiter's union local, she sald, ·detailing the solution. The gals, she added, 'Will share equally in the duties and· will "help serve the meal," Mrs. Stuar:t said. "If anything, it's called.. equality,'' she added . It's no sec ret that the huge, plush for- mal dinner her boss ordered during his trip to Mexico turned out to be a colpssal job of work for the pretty Mrs. Stuart. And the injection of Women's Lib into the flap makes things even worse. Her feelings about both the dinner arid the movement came out late la st week when the secretary told local Soroptimists PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -Fourteen that the task of organizing the dinner 1by Black :Panthers remained in $100,000 bail phone from Mexico anq San Clemente each Tuesday after ther petition for a Di'sputes De·Iay was monurnenta1. writ of Habeas Corpus and a redudion in Mrs. Stuart also said she wasn't bail were denied by Common Pleas Court particularly interested in Women's Lib. Judge Thomas M. Reed. Schoo} Opening She reiterated half of that platform for The 14 were arrested Monday in policl'! r~porters Tuesday. raids marked by gunfire at two Panther "It's very difficult to orga1lize a state hearquarters here. St. LOUIS (AP) -Money problems dinnei: in II days while you 're on the Counsel appealed to a Municipal Court and a teacher di~pute kept thousands of road,' she said in pleading tones, "and judge for the writ but then moved to the pupils out of St. Louis area schools there's a guest list of 600 and billions of Common Pleas Court where Judge Reed Tuesday and threatened to delay school other details. It's only natural to have a _set bail at $500 each and scheduled a few small flaps. openings in other districts. ·11 h •t I d II lh hearing for Tuesday morning. "We sti aven sett e a e The district at{orney's office arranged In one school distruct, KirkwoOO, voters problems of service,'' she said, answering for Judge Leo Weinrott to h 0 1 d cleared the way for classes to begin by queries on how the green staff would be arraignment proceedings Monday night. approving a school levy after rejecting trained in orily two days. Wel.nrolt held the J' m· $100,000 bail each, l · · f' · "As a matter Cl 'fact, right now it , ev1es tn 1ve previous elections. Schools and Set t: ..... t 8 for a hearing. · seems like we'll be lucky if all the plates ...... " were set to open Sept. 6. • Judge Reed dism issed the petition for reach the right guests.' the writ during a brief session Tuesday The start of classes had been postponed What does it cost to run a state dinner morning, and let the bail stand at Tuesday in Kirkwood, Rittenhour, on the road? . $11)9,cil>O. Riverview Gardens and Ferguson in St, "No~ muc~ ex~a;,~cept for more gr!ef He pointed out the question was moot, Louis County and Westville in St. Charles ,-for pe<>ple·1ike n:ie , she retorted. • that-the-ILnO-longer........w.ere_in_police_ _ . . _ . ----1he_n_~s.Jhar the_ J'om~n of ·the HCJ!el bu "· . th •\.-€ounty--pend1ng-add1tlonal attempts-10 Del Coronado night shift had won was custody t rauft:r tn e custody of """' . . . sberilf, and at the same Ume-, said Judge win passa ge of s~J levi~s. greet~ w1thl ,&lee am?ng the ranks of ~e,irirott had the. a,uthority to take over In ~e only other district to v?te on w~g1e shoe~ 1n San D_1ego. . the Prelitninary arraignment Monday school tax es Tuesday, voters in Whe~er it.was a !lllsunderst~nd~ng or night. Hazelwood, alsO in . St. Loois County, a ~ckdow~ 1s ope~ t~. cjllesllo1', .. o~e -defeated a proposed 32-Cent tax increase pensive waitress said, What counts •s From Page 1 MIDEAST ..• Nalions Wider the auspicl'!s of U.N • Mlddle Eaat negotiator Gunnar Jarring. The Wlille House in San Clemente said after Tuesday's meeting that it was "assisting in the surveillance of the ceasefire and we are in touch with both parties." County GI Killed Army Spec. 4 Rex T. Allen, son o( Mr. and Mrs. Delbert D. Allen of Anaheim, was killed In the war in Southeast Asia last Week, the U.S. Defense Department announced Tuesday. for the third time. The measure received lh~t we'll _be there ." . • 10 977 t 8 339 b t ired a two-thirds There is no ~uch thing as a normal • .. 0 • • u requ day' at tt~e White House," Mrs. Stuart maJority. told the Soroptimists i11 San Clemente last week. Long-term Loss Found at Station Cash. and carry was the order of business at a Costa Mesa service station, the owner complained Tuesday. Police said someone took the cash at Kelly's Richfield Service, totaling more than $400, and carried it off,-leaving only credit card receipts. Loss from the station at 1898 Newport Boulevard. ls being investigated by authorities, \\'ho said it apparently occurred over a period of several days. She proved it Tuesday. Anaheim Youth Beaten by Gang Racing ahead of a gang of youths he never saw before, an Anaheim teenager was beaten up Tuesday night after they pursued him right into the Costa f\1esa Police Facility parking lot. Kenneth A. Shaffer, 18, broke free after being pummeled by the four attackers. aged 16 to 18, and ran inside to report the incident to police. He said they began harassing him at a hamburger drive-in at Harbor Boulevard and Wilson Street, then followed when he got into his car and drove off. Shaffer was not injured. Wyler incaflex 81624 Breath of Life '" ,kj .;( t' ':1~1 t t '\'f"'' ~t • ;;;~ .... ,·1 ,, Six-year.old John Brock of Fullerton gets a reassuring smile from LA Rams quarterback Roman Gatrriel. a member of the National Sports Co,mptittee for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Current Cystic Fibrosis '·'Breath of Life" campaign for funds to combat cbildren'1 Jung diseases runs through Sept. 30. ~ LBJ .Accepts Invitation To Coronado State Meal Lyndon B. Johnson has accepted Tuesday 's invi~tion by his successor to attend the huge state dinner honoring the outgoing President of Mexico in San Diego. The former president a n n o u :l c e d acceptaP1ce of the invitation this morning from his home in Johnson City. Texas. Before LBJ leaves for San Diego Thursday he will receive ·a briefing 1Jf sorts -from Vice -rresldefit Spiro A1:new, who will stop off in Texas today to discuss his trip to the Far East. After today's discu ssions with Johnson, Agnew will fly on for a few days of rest at Ocean City, Md. The former p,resident was reported to be planning to si~ in on discussions Czechs Disband Boy Scout Unit VIENNA (UPI) -The Czechoslovak Boy Scout movement will close down Sept. 15 in favor of the (Communist) Pioneer Youth Organization, the Czech Youth Daily Mlada Front.a said today. The decision was taken Tuesday at a Central Council meeting of Junak, the Czechoslovak Boy Scout Movement. after deputy chairman Vaclav Ma rho u I outlined its 60-year history and made a "critical analysis,'' the paper said. The newspaper gave no exP.lanation for the decision beyond statingThat "the party's pioneer organization has now established regional bodies all over the country" thus making other youth movements unnecessary. between President Nixon and retiring Mexican President Gustavo Diaz Ordu Thursday afternoon before the dimier. Hundreds o(guests are expected at the event, including movie stars, political figures a11d other celebrities. Welcome Sign Entries Sought Entries are now being accl'!pted ln Costa Mesa's welcome sign deSign contest, which will lead to adoption o! the winner for use at major entry points to the city. AU citizens are eligible to enter, but the Chamber or Commerce's Front Door Committee specirically invJij!s students of high school and college age level. Design entries must be received at the chamber office, 583 W. 19th St., by 6 p.m. Oct. 31 for judging. First prize will be $50, second will be $25 and third will be $10, according to committee chairman Lucy Pinkley. Estancia Y earhook Ready at Campus Students who attended Estancia High School last year will be able to pick up the third edition of yearbooks in the campus student store Friday morning. A school si»kesman said the copies of the third section of i:l Vuelo will be available from 8 to 10 a.m. Students who are unable to pick up the edition Friday will be able to do so after school opens Sept. 14. •ost . unusual: watch. Marks time on 24 hour system. ' ~11ity for anyone who trqvel1, the military, or men who prize the unu1uol. Watch dial shows oil 24 hO\ltl, in· steod of just 12. Ruggedly good look ing. The lncaflex ba1once wheel is guaranteed ogoinsl thock for !ht life of the wotch or replaced free if ever brok.n, Guorontffd wot1rproof 01 long cu lh1 crystal ii intod, v•nulnt Wyt1r porh UJtd. ' Scotty~s Salute CONVENIENT TERMS BANKAMERICARD MASTER! CHARGE J. {!. ..Jlumphriej Jeweferj H YEARS IN SAME LOCATION I Scotty Swift, national poster child !or the Muscular Dyttrophy As· sociation, ftashes a snappy salute at American Legion delej(ates dpr- ing the opening business session of their convention in Portland, Ore. At the lelt is Legion Commander J, MUton Patric~. '. • llll NEWPORT AVE. . COSTA MESA PHONE 548-140 I ' 'I --- ,I OA!l y PILOT IS k~~~~~~-~~~~~.~ ~!~~~-,~.:~~~.!~--~.:~: just-completed cenSu. Uetcb projected •11 alone on the as the most populous state. had k>lt popuhrtioo, lncludina: prtllm lnary counti. he thlnU , of America has a famlllar bf.1is or the old 1980 fieutta -Americans moved toward Qllcago, Detro l t · and the 1970 us will prove • ~ look. It depicts a natlon of 2do-and~u b 1 e q. u en l spot warm weather. Florida an6 Battlmoie. New York held be Hie mos accurate evtr. 1 V,.ITI~ Multi -par ade l\farchcrs in New Haven, Conn., protested against the war. 'fhe parade also .lVas in support of Bobby Seale, the Black Panther leader on trial in Connecti- cut. It also opposed racism. ' S torms Soak M a1iila.~ 14 P erish in Flood A-1ANILA (UPI) -A record rainfall of more than 22 inches in 30 hours flooded Manila today and took 14 lives including these o! two U.S. sailors. President Ferdinand E. Marcos declared a state of .. calamity and emergency." The Navy men were killed in a landslide at Cubi Point Naval Station about 90 miles northwest of Manila. The names-of the victims were l'l()t released by th e Navy uiitil their relatives are notified. The bodies of the two Americans were recovered, I.he Navy said. One Filipino \\'as reported missing in the landslide. The Navy said an earlier landslide slipped dow n onto the national highway outside of Olangapo City near the gate o( Subic Bay Naval Base near CUbi Point. , One person wai rtporled dead and three missing in that landslide. President tl1arcos, whose own Malacanang presidential palact was under four feet or water at noon ,t o d a y • estimated that the record nood had covered· an· area bigger than the state of Florida. ·'Now, therefore. I do hereby declare that a state or publi c ca la mity and emergency exist in central Luzon, the entire grea~r Manila and southern Luzon area," he said. He ordered all govern·ment 11gencies into rescue and relief Pope Stoned By Madman CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy i UPI) -An Italian described by police as a ··madman·• lhrew two stones at Pope Paul VI today at t~ end of the pontiff's weekly genera ! audience. A Vatican spokesman said lhe stones struck a wall anti I.he Pope was not aware of the incident at the time. Police said the Pope had just given his blessing to hundreds of tourists and pilgrims when Luigi Donno. 35, or Corigla O'Otranto, took two stones from a sack he was i.:arrying 11.nd hurled them toward the pontiff. • operations. "l am afraid we suffer~d damages." he said. .. Most pf the casualties were caused bY drov;ning and electrocutions." The rainy weather was expected to continue for the next two or three days. Jordan Nixes Iraqi Threat To Intervene AMMAN (UPI) -Jordan today rejected. an Iraqi threat to intervene with its 12,000 Jordanian-based troops if the Jordanian Army cracks down further on Arab guerillas. The crisis was heightened by a new assassinalion attempt against King HusSein Tuesday . night. . The cabinet took l h e decision at a four ·hour emergency Session in Amman which looked like a deserted citY after a night <>f battling between Hussein's troops and the Palestine r e fuge e guerrillas. The sound o r machinegun fire c r a c k t e d through the streets today. Iraq. Syria and the Arab guerrilla move1nents h a v e rejected the Ameri can- insligated cease-fire and have criticized Hussein and Egyp.. tian President Gama! Abdel Nasser for moves against the guerrillas. On Tuesday, Iraq threatened to intervene with the 12.000 Iraqi t r o o p s stationed in Jordan. ··Tue Jo~anian government regrets su~ a warning being directed against i t and it cannot accept 11." the cabinet said in a note delivered to the Iraqi ambassador in Amman. Public transport in Amm an was at a standstill and thC!re were only a few private cars on the slreets. Business was al most at a complete stop. The country's newspapers did not appear, schools v.·ere closed and fe\_V gov~nmenl employes turneq ,up for. work. Palestinian guerrillas piled loose stones and automobile tires into barricades guarding their strongholds o t h e r s armed with ba z oookas , mortars. and machinC!guns took up positions on rooftops. Portland 'Hi ppies' PeacefuJ PORTLAND, Ore. lUPil - The Pe<>ples Army Jamboree's Second Antiwar Parade during American Legion Weck went ,_ without incident T u e s d 11 y night'.-~ The P·AJ, a loosely knit group opposing the war in Vietnam, must ere d an estimated 1,000 persons for the one an~ one-half hour long parade through d o w n l o w n Porlland. The fir s t PAJ parade Sunday drew only 100 more, but louder, marchers. The parade Tuesday night was staged in protest of racism .as well as the war in Indochina. S p e a k e r s in Portland's Ouniway P a r .k exhorted the paraders not to confront the police, who were very much in evidence, and to ··keep it cool." PAJ leader Kevin Mulligan said, "One broken window is not worth one dead revoluUonary." The nearest lhing to an incident occurred at the intersection o! Main and Broadway. just a block rrom Legion Headquar~rs Hotel - the Hilton. The parade turned the corner. but some of its marchers wanted to head for the hotel. The street leading to the hotel was blocked and the parade stalled for a few minutes. • It was then that members of a volunteer group caned People for Portland finally linked arms and turned the marchers south before police intervened. Kuchel Backing Of Reagan Seen LOS ANGELt:S I UPI l - Former Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel, a Republican who in 1966 refused to endorse Ronald Reagan for governor, was expected today lo reverse that decision. Kuchel scheduled a morning news conference al Gov. Reag a n't rcel r cti on headquar~rs where it was speculated he would endorse the governor. Staff Budget Doubled Democrats Heckle Nixon Spending WASHINGTON (UPI] Senaf.e Democral' gl~rully. 11ccused the While House of helping itselr to the federal cookie jar Tuesday, but ill the end agreed to doublt President Nixon's staff budget just as he asked. Seizing on a line item in an $11.l billion approprliltlon bill ~ the e.xeeutive offices and the departments or treasury and post office, military spending · critics coold not resist needling the cos l ·. \.'Onseioos administration· for an apparent increase in itli own spending. But they did not attempt to trim the! executive offices budget approved by the HOUS(', and the bill passed. 68-0. A SS6.35 million difft!rcnce In !he totals of the: tlou5' and Scnatt. versions remained lo b I! rt<:Onciled. 1'he tun began when Sen. Ralph Yarborough (0-Tex.), chai rman of the Appropriations Subcommlttce thal handled the budget bill, reported that the $8.55 million recommended for White Bouse salaries and expenses in this fiscal year was more than double the S3.94 m i 11 i o n approved last year. Sen. William Proxmire (D- Wis. J one oC the most vocal crjtics of defense spending, qui~kly rose to protest. "Aller all , the president makes a big point o f economy," Proxmire said. "and ecoll()my has to Sta rt 111 heme ... the American· people must and should look to the President to set an cxamp~." Yarb<>rough. fighting back a srnlle: agreed. , '<.·:wc·re being eilled reckless ,;pcnder5 and then they t'Olnc Up hert and want us to double • their own appropriations," Yarb<>rough said. But he explained the White Mouse intends to bring Its 548 staff members under one sala ry tent, "rather th an borrow more than 300 of its experts from v a r i o u s departments and Jet the other agencies pay the salaries as is now the case. Pr'!xmire also squawked aboul a $700,000 appropriation earmarked for a slm11at" pooJ. ing or 39 staff personnel IS- signcd to Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, but he was assured the employes, covert'd by civil serl'ice, woµld not be used to "aid the vice president in hi!i very effective political work.'"' In tolal. the. bill llS passed by the Senate was $56.35 million after than approved by the flouse, but $27 million under r e v I s e d budget estimates. plue million person& In search aamp lngs. ~. Texas joined California as about even. Big gainers were He said the buruu ha i of. warm weatberlor subUrbla. It 1 ws: \ states wilh more thin a the warm-weather • citles o{ completed hecb involvln& ~ The nation's f u J I ~ c a·I e -A nationwide total of . par1.ralt won't be unv,Ued 200, 721 persona counted so million population grow th , W Angeles, Houston, Dallas, 61n mnUon raons and turned , until ' the final, official tally is far, nd likely to go to aloog with the c o l .de r but San Diego, San Antonio and up on1Y, ~; missed the\ tint completed and ;;ent ~ to between 20f and 205 million by already teeming states of New Phoenix. time around. He uid he was J>midcpt ,N ixon by Dec. 1. the Ume such sUll·uncounted York and ' New Jersey: The -Farm population declined sure that would be the C:IM But the preliminarf figures categat'ies as o v e·r s e a s largest percentage increases lrorp 15: m1111on to· 10 million. with the rest ot the rechecks announced Tu es da y by servicemen are added. The were scored by Nevada, with Old) migration pat ter n s requested by localities. Commerce Secretary J\1aurice bureau had projected 204.1 68.9 percent, Florida wilh 31.7 continued, from the center of Dr. George H. Brown, H. Stans provides a good million ror Jast April 1, the and Arizona with 34.6. the, nation to the coasts and director <>( lbt census,' aaid preview. date the census was taken. -Suburbanites oulnumber from South to North. "we have every ream. lo It is· s u r p r Is t n g J y -California grew the,moot, · residents of inner cities for the Stam said despite howls believe" that the final count,., unsurprising. backing up what by nearly 4(jlillion to 19.7 first lime. Thirteen of the 25 from localiUes that f e It will be less than 3 percent o(f/1 ~~~~==~==~================~=1·· TEENS BLACK KRINKLE , BLACK PATENT T-STRAP FOR GIRLS LITTLE GENTS OXFORDS 2·~f .. J . llG IOY5 3.96 TE ENS INSTEP C ROSS·STRAP The 'BACK-TO-SCHOOL" shoe s shown in this ad are but • few of the thou .. nd s of pairs on open dis pla y for 'f!>ur buyi119' pleasure! . ' LITTLE GE·NTS BOOTS, BLACK OR BROWN 491 11/:a. to 3 SPORT SHOES MIN'S 4.91 ,.,, to 12 YOUTH'S JI/) .. ' ' /ft I I\ , , I\' I ,\ \\ \ / . '-~ // ~~ RUFRE SUEDE COllAIH LIATIB CASUAL LACED llOCC4,Slll n:>I OXFORD OXFORDS lllN'S IOY5 YOUTHS : 9u 7.38 6.38 4. 91 IOY5 7.38 Abo M•'• C.1111&1.De Band ............ llmdc .. Gt'Ma FOi ·11n· .·. PANTY HOSE )96 ;,· NEW FAU. SHADES NEW FAU. AND BACK-TO.SCHOOL FREE GAIDY FOR .TIE llDDIES .I FOi "IACll-T0- 11 ' I q SCHOOL" AND 11 \ FAU WAllmOllS \\\ 9~ PAIR HAND BAGS · FWOll 2• • HUNTINGTON BEACH 10051 ADAMS at BROOKHURST 962-9178 HUNTINGTON BEACH 5898 EDINGER Gt SPRINGDAL E 847-9125 (NeJi:t to $1v.()n Drug) STORE HOURS--WEEK DAYS 9 TO 9--S UNDA YS 10 TO 7 • • ' ' . • ·' '· ,, [• '• ,, l ' ~ " :I >{ ' l ' ' ·l l ~ } , ' • l I " .: . - ! • '• ., ,, • l l I' ' • DA~Y PROT EDITORJAL PAGE F_acing the Hard Facts • ,. NewPort Beach Is at a crossroads In Its 64-year his· tory that will aflect the development and character o! the cfty and adjacent areas for the balance of ·this ctn· tury. Not surprisingly, tl1e situation revolve s about the Pacific Coast F're~\vay. - Next \\leek. a Rl'OUP bitterly opposed to Pacific Coast Freev.•ay I and presumably almost a·s bitterly opposed to any free\\'ays in Ne,vport Beach), p I ans to start circulatinSI? a petit ion. The petition will , in effect seek Lo repudiate the city'!i previously signed agree1nent \\'ith the sta te of California on the freeway east of the bay and reQuire that an:v ruture freeway route touchln!i!; the citv \voul d hnve to be submitted to referendun1 vote of thC cilizens. • Presumablv the petition carriers want to \Viflc all free"•ays oul ol Ne"1port al')d "start flll over a~ain." And then -someday -''let the citizens decide." This all seems simple enou.ith . , The problem is. starting all over again seems to 11tloss over some hard realities and seems to assume some things that never \Vere and never \Viii be true. ( It seems to assume that the world V.'ill stand stil while Newport slrn,l?~les for th ree to five years or s!) to come up \Vilh an entirely neu• traffic and city develop. tnent plan . .It seems to assume that in this place which has been so lavishly physicallv gifted by nature -\\1ith a grer t big assist from the federa l government and the .<\rmy Corps or Engineers -can so1neho'" be _,tus_g:ended in time. or better still. turned back to the less busy, Jei;s crowded days of 10 or 15 years ago. All this \vhile still presumably gro\vin,I! to a city of more than 100.000. It seems to assume that the tr.affic corridors estah· fished and confir111ed for 50 years -the Pacific Coast corridor and the Ne\vport Boulevard-can somehow be repudiated and that thP. volumes of traffic that have built up continuously on those corridors for half·a century or more. can no\v lie held dO\\'n or be mana;?:ed on a surface street system \v ithout tremendous cost and consequences to Ne\vpo.rt residents. It seen1s to assume that .the many hundred of thous· ands of dollars needed to seek this alternate solution - and tbe millions to in1plen1ent it, if oneiis found -are no problenl to the taxpayers of Ne"•port Beach. And that a delay of 5 or. 10 more years in reaching solutions is llOth ln~ to \l'Ofl'Y about. It probably \\'ill not be hard to acquire 5,000 signa- tures for a petition based on such an e111otlon-ar6using appeal as '·savin~ the city from free\1'ays." But in stead of pushing the city into a hasty decision based on c1notion and \\·ithout substantlatinJ? facts. it \rould scctn far better to give the city council til11c to at least put to_gether son1e solid. reliable infor1nation on \\'hat our problems "1jn be if \Ve do not have the Co<1st Freeway -and therefore also knock out the Corona. de! itar and Ne,vport free\rays. \\That for example is the cost in lost land and lost tax base rrom an eight lane Coast Ri,l!h\vay through Mari- ners !vlile and ~Corona del Mar? \Vhal is the cost to the city for added major arterial surface streets. both east- \11est and north-south if some tra!Iic cannot be handled on free1vays? Can ,.i\'e ~et a 1najor rebuildinR and en· largin~ of the bay bridge 1vithout also greatly enlarging the hiJ?h'1'ay that it carries? A ref.erendum reguirement \vould render city gov- ernment 1.1npotent and "'ithout credentials in any effort to deal with the state. county or neighborinR cities on matters involving the Coast. Newport or Corona del l\'lar free1va ys. The result is there Could be no 1neaninJ::ft1! negotiations since the decision and the 11'ord of the coul'l· cil "'ould be or no value. The petition and referendum proposal is premature at best: and~ could very "'ell prove extre1nely costly in a few years. T.here is noth i.ni:: to be lost -and a real possibility ~f gain -by leaving the new council unfettered in seek· 1ng ne1\' approaches to negotiation or le~islation to sol\'c the free1,•ay dilemma. c Beach City Traffic .Ja11is if N o Freeway Major Probe Of 'tlie Mc ifiu. ls Planned Positive Action Is Needed To the Editor : Assemblyman Robert E. ·Badham 'introduced a bill to stop the Pari fic Coast }o~reeway lbrough Newport Beach but lost the fight. It \l'I S a negative bill with nothing constructive 1n ii and it wa s right that 1he bill did not pass. There were argun1ent s that if the rreeway is not built !he traffic jam in the future will be enormous in Costa ~lesa, ~luntington Beach. Laguna B e a c h , Newpor t Beach and other cities. BUT IF THE lrHway ~·ere to be built with the Nev.•porl Beach p'lrfion omitted, lhe masses of cars tT3\'eling through would pour into streets, making them Jmpassable -and the most annoying situation would be in Newport B e a c h. The city would be flooded \l'ith cars tra\•eling at one or two miles per hour, spewing exhaust fumes while idling in long lines waiting to cross intersections. Do the "freeway fighters" Want such ·a condition".' THE SLOGAN. ''l c I th~ high1\•av commission find another route." makes me ask what route ? Under or over the sea? Fr«way opponents present no practical, constructive solution. The coastal freeway is a necessity and the most praclical and natural roule is along or close lo Pacific Coast High"•ay, y,·herc the bluffs already divide the city. Let those cars that have lo pass through go as fast as possible. without \Vaitine and prodlicing unburned gasoline . OSE SOLtmON would be to carry ~e freeway overhead and provide space under it for shops. bazaars and parking, with sufficient crossing for cars .and pedestrians. If carefully planned. ar tist ically lighted a11d decorated, suc]l a project could be made ·3 beauty spol and would make walking and shopping a pleasure. THE PRESE/\'T coast highway in Newport Beach looks unattractive, with houses badly planned or nol planned al all and not coordinated. This is not a street that Newpoi:.t could be proud of. If the-efforts no1• wasted in rcjeclion and 11egation could be con\'erted into positive action like that mt>ntioned , or a better one, such an aim could be .tchieved lo the satisfaction of present .. od future generaUons. LENET LESKI Left.isl R hetoric io the Editor· The rhetoric used by rnembers of the 1·adical left, il taken at face value, constitutes an ;i!lempl h:• a \'Cry few To overthrow nJr form of government. Ye!, very little if anything lll donr to· bri11g to j:ntic:e those ttiat indulge themselves in ----- Wednesda)'. Sept. 2, 19i0 Tht edft<fr141 page of the Daily Pilot •etk• to inform and .stim- ulatt reader• b11 prt.stntfna this ntwfPtJPtr'.s opin(om and com. rntntc:'l' on topics o/ lnltrt.st and sfgnl/ieanct, b11 provldlng 9 forum for the e.rprt.s:sion o/ our rtodtrt' opfniun1. n·nd by •prt.stnti"Q tht d iVtTSI" t:ftw- pofnts of info11'PUd obs,.rVer1 and spokt smen on loplcs o/ l/tt dou. Robert N. Weed. Publl1hcr • f.M. ' •IL-. 8 1UJUX ~ ·I • tellel'll l•om re1dtt'1 i re welcom... Norm•ll• Wfilt" •/\Olllt ()n¥1P tllt lr m•s11~3 111 JOO Mira• or ~~i. Tile rlthl 10 _.at11•• 1>etter1 ro tit 101c1 01 ,limi• 1111e libel Os ••tlWll. 111 hll11n m11~• k\Clud~ ,,,. ,..,.,,, 1N1 m1111,.. U d1eu, out 111m~• ..,,.,, t• w111'\1\e1a "" rtQ<J<JI II 111flklt11! r11ion 1$ •Patrtnl Pa.rt' wHI no! ir. D<lllllofled. 5UCh rhetoric. Perhaps the ri1ht of freedom of speech Is more important than the right of society to censor those who use the rhelorjc of revolution under the guise of freedom of speech. However, when those that use their right qf freedom of speech to ·advoc1te lbe overthrow of our government try lo implement their rhetoric \\'ilh violent deeds they must be separated r r om society. NOT ONLY should thot1e individunls he separated from society but lhey should be kept separated until the~ have changed their outlook 011 the use of vlolen£e to obtain change. Jn conclusion, those that resort to the use of vio1en~ to obtain change ·while 1:1 the same time demanding that they be al\oy,·ed to use the rhetoric of revolution are pure and .simple parasites. We, the people, must""demand that the ri1hts of the creative citizens are much more important than the rights or the parasites. HARRY o. McDON ALD. JR. Traffic Ticket Trap To the Ed itor: The intersec.lion of NewJ)Ort and Harbor Boulevard is very conrusing and could be mu ch more clearly marked . This afternoon my mother driving he r car. and I driving mine, 'ol'ere each given traffic tickets 'vhen "'e pulled into lhc Coast Music parking lot. Since I was on my lunch hour 1 asked the patrolman, J. C. \\'hitc, if I could call my employ~r to expla ln I y,·ould be late. He agreed reluctantly and told me to hurry up about it. Having paid over $3,000 in properly la~es in the last three years on Costa rilesa property. I re.sent a policeman begrudging me three minutes ol his time \\1hile I call my employer because J 1ot caught in a ticket lrap. NANCY M. HALUS Protective Uel.lcoplcr To I.he Editor : Just had ta\ reply to the complaint. about our police helicopter .•. J for one Poor Risks Pr~s Comn1ents ..... Lancaster, S. C., Ne•s: "A lament rumes from the ..• minister v.·ho wa s dispatched son1c Umc ago to Sv.·tdcn to he:lp lht American deserters \\'ho ha''e fled there to 111vold military service .... 11t finds that the deserters arc having some dllficully In obtaining Jobs. It appears to us that Swed!~h bustneumen arc shov.1lng more. sense than !heir Soc I a 11 st,, anli·Ameriel'n ROl'e rnn1ent, At le:ist they !'!CC that an individual \\'ho l~Ck,!: the bA!.ilc deec nl'Y and patriotism to rem8in Joyal to hh1 o"'" couotry Is a rather J>OOr risk as a potential employe." - am very happy to have the police helicopter flying overhead . I find !he sound of It is \'cry reassuring, whether it is in the daylin1~ or at night, to kno"· our f:1it hful poliCC'n1cn arc 1vatching over us, Jets me turn over and to back to sleep, kno\\'ing if there is a prowler, or 'o\'OUld be burglar, in lhe neighborhood. hc"s going to thin).; t11·ice before breaking into a home or bu siness, 11·ith that helicopter overhead! \Ve have ne rer noticrd t~e helicopter interfering with our TV reception . or our sleep. I LIKt; TO 11•atch High"'flY Patrol e\'ery day at 3 p.m. on Channel 5 ... they use the police helicopter a lot and I 111a~ surprisf:d that they can do so much \l'i1h lhem, following a certain suspect car through heavy traffic. keeping the ground force informed as to where the 5Uspect is going ... and sometimes trailing a su!'ipccl on foot. Ult lhe ground forces can head him off. It is very interesling "'Ork. and \l'ilh their spotlights don ·t 11·orry, they can see very well al midnight! I l\'OUld like lo see an arlitlc written by !he helicopter division of our police force. telling us all the ad\'nntages ,or the helicopter, iind maybe by teing better informed on the subject. folks \\'ill y,·elcome the sound of pro c::~n 1n the!'e limP.s 'ol'hen nroteclio n is so \'Cry badlv needed by the very people who \l·ould condemn the source. MRS. EARL FERGUSON Quotes · Leigh Steinberg, UC Berkclry st udent body president -··Many of the values ot my parents arc deeply embedded in me 1and) I ha\·e more in common "'ilh thc1n than with lhc people 1vorking ror lhc revolution .'' Patrick \\'. Coil, ROTC student •t College of San Mateo -;rlf it is peace the radicals .realty seek. \Vhy do they have a rock or a balloon filled with paint in their hands: and if it is academic freccJom then 1\'hy do they try to .shut do11·n lht: schools. and deprive me of my right to take military science?'' ''evgeoy J. Ruzbnlkov, guiding Calif. tour of Ru&sian writer& -"\Ve have foWld you can disagree "'ithout being disagreeable.·• Cbarlle Bos~. sociology prof , L.A. City College -.. H I ,.,,ere forced to choose bel1\·een this \l'ar in Asia and our A~erlcan form of. democrac> as against permanent peace but a nation run by a hundred thousand idolcscents, I Am attald -liberal though I am -1 "'ould jOln lhc si de Of majority rifle." Dear (;IOOlll\" Gus: Are the people or Costa ~tcsa going lo 111low Prince1on Drive in the Col· lrgl'.! Park area to be rezoned etm· mcrclal? \Vhy ruin one of the bcsl rctiidcnU.ial 'areas In Costa illcslll ~ -J.E. f~I\ f••lv'"" tt HHI\ t•tCs•l' 1•1•w1. Ml ... !. ,.. ..~ ·~,. ·~wt• .... )""' y111r 111 trr¥t It 0111111• Out. 0111• 1'1191. \VASIIINGTON -The most exh'austi\'e congressional investigation of organized crime in more than a decade has been set in motion by Sen. John rifcC!ellan. the O\li'lish Arkansas Democrat y,·ho originally put the spotlight on the tifafia during the 1950s. Since the ::>ensational crime hearings held by the late Sen. Estes Kefauver and b.J( fifcClellan. Jess skilled ringmasters have tried repeatedly to expose the national crime network. All their attempts have failed . l\leanwhile lhe i\1~fia h115 prospered and diversified its activities. Older enterprises such a5 prostitution have been abandoned in fa\·or of more businesslike ventures rangini:;: rrom pornography to bankini;;:. rN RECEJ'\T T1i\1ES. tl1e cantankerous 1'1cClellan has been preoccupied \\'ilh undist inguished investigations into the po\'erly program, ·ghello riots and student uprisings . For lhe last. three year!. the Senator's sta(f has been exploring the idea of a major probe of U:e fifafia . They polled police chie(s across the country to detennine ho\v far organized crime had reached into legitimate business. The tentalivc new battle plans call for focusing separately on !\l::fia activities in labor rackets. loan sharking. narcotics, stolen goods, g11mbling and pornography. Extortion, hijarking:. c.-redit card theft. milking or legitimnlc businesses and sl<'len securities will also be explored. i\lcCLELLAN \\lLI, spotlight thc )\!afia runcl.ionarics in each area, rather 1han taking !he easier and more fan1i!iar approach of gfl·ing !he genealogy of ll1e "crime famil ies." As a re sull . there 11·iJ\ be some O\·erlop. 1'~or example, the Sflmc hoodlums 1nay 11·ell turn up i11 both the gambling and loan shark r:icket li. A "'hole ne1v generation of young ~·lafi:l captains has sprung up since the Kerau,•er and ri1cClellan hearings. But 1ilcC\ellan has been taking on young in\1estigators lo de al \\·ith them. TI1e Senator does not expect to gel hearings going until sometime next year. .. Thtn, beneath the TV lights in the liilitoric SC'nate caucui; room . the 7~·\'eiir· old ti1cC1ella n \\·Ill make 'ol"hal ma y be his final stand against the mob. A SECRET 'VAR goes on i11 'J'hat!and lar1ely unkno,1·n to tht rest of the 11•orld. The Bangkok government discourages vlsils into hills and forest 'o\'htrt guerrilla activity smolder!! and fl i:tmes, A recent survey by a Quaker Investigating team disclosed insurgency of one kind or another in 31 of Thailand·~ 7t provinces. The lt1n\ al~n di sco,•errd Communlsl·s tylc civil 'ol'arfarc in some local Illes. The guerrilla acth•ity Ii.ts been fed by discontent among Thal minorities such as lhc "1eo lrtbesmcn, Laotians and ~18lays . SEN. PHIL llART"S A11Ulrust .and tiln1101Xlly subconllnlttce has begun a full· scale probe of soaring Blut Cross 11nd Blue Shlcld costs. Hart. 0.~11ch .. tias round th:ll 1he giant Insurers arc an1ong the most gcnct0\1S lf companies. They par out about 93 ctnt!' Of e\'Cr)' C:oll nr they lake ln. lfo1l'CVf'r . his carl v findirl!~ ind1ca tr !hil l Bfuc Cross nnd Ulue Shield h:t,·e failed lo choillen~c enough ho.spltul bill •. Consequently, they h9,.t!: hnd to boosi premiums to cover the ucess charges. ,. We Must Have a Sense of History '·'fhose who cannot remember the pa st.'' \1·role Santayana ... are condemned to repeat it ." Thi s is basically "'hat I meant in a column a few months ago. in \l'hich I expressed appreciation about .. the lack of a sense of h1s1ory ·• among modern youlh. I DID NOT hlEAN -as many readers misinterpr eted It - that a sense of history should weigh them down or slow their pace. We need to go just as fast as 11•e can to keep up with tomorrow·. But going fast i.~ no good unless you knO\V where you \Vint to go. And YOLI cannot know "'hl're you '"ant to go until yo u kno1\' "·here you ha ve been and "·hy you don 't 11'an1 to so th'ere aciain. \VITllOUT A TRUE and deep Un· derstanding of history, our youth (with the ·best of intentions) can plunge us into lhe middle of a greater mess than they are trying to gel us out of. \\"ithout the lessons lo b:-clral'i'n from Hitler and Stalin and the extremist n1o vcments of our cent ury. the idealism of our youth can easily turn into nihilism. into blind rage , into mindless hate, inio the justHicalion of "good " ends by evil and destructive means. FOR ONE OF THE i:;reat lessons of his tory ls that violence begets violence, and tha t lhe ends do not jusl.ify the means. but corrupt them. \Vhatcver i~ permanently constructive must proceed out of love. 'ol·orking through reason. Only these l\l'o, harnessed together, can bring the human race out of its moral darkness and spiritual decay. The youth arc right in almO!lt all the things they are agalnsl ; but they do not really kno1v y,·hat they arc for. Rebellion for its O\\'n sake is a symplon1 of disease, not a cure : lhe tearing down of one systen1 is fu tile if another. equally unjust and repress ive. is to be put in its place. These matters must be thoughl out carefully. AND THE'' CAN be thou ght oul einly if" 11·e are lir1n\y grounded in a sense of history; if "·e are a'ol·are of man·s capacities and limitations: if \\'C reject from the past 'ol'hat is un.,.,'orthy. and respect •,rhat is oob!e. Turning our batk!I on the past is as ignorant and · rigid as venerating it . The present and lhe near future can be handled only by those with the proprr intellectual tools. as v;ell as lhc moral fe rvor. i\loral fer vor alone is not enough; 11•ithout a broad frame1vork of learning, it soon degenerates into fanaticism , parochialism. sectarianism, and, even - tually, despotism of one sort or another. It woulcl be a tragic irony H ··freedom loving" youngsters lnauguraled a new era or tyranny. D Tir esome Wifely W ords \Vifely remarks that husbands get tired of hearing· .. The refrigerator is \1·caring out. \Ve nerd a nc1v one.'' "ll·s gell ing so thin on top I think you .fughl lo get a l\'ig. Menry. A lot of men are y,•e11ring them today ." "\Vell. if I ever get married again , It rerlainly y,·on·1 be for lo ve. r ve tried that and it's for lhe birds." "Certainly, I'm not so narrow·minded that I see anything wrong with a married man talking to a Strange 1voman at a cockt ail party, but did you h1t1•e lo spend lhe 11·hole tvcning talking to her ? You acted as if she had you hypnotized ." "EVERYTHJNG 'S g~tl ng cold. If ~·ou rio:ft come to the tt1l>le lhis very minute 1'1n going to throw the whole n1cal out thr "'indow." ''The vacuum cleaner is broken. \Ve nerd a nc1v one." "The liquor cabinet is completely em~ ty. Henry. If you "':int a martini, you 'll have lo run over 10 the neighbors and borrow a cup of gin . ·M11ybe you'd better borrow two cups -and I'll ha,•e one wilb you." "I tell ;.oou there ls a mouse in this house. and I pcsltively \\1ill not lh•e 1n a hou!le ~·Ith a mouse.'' "If thty do .something good. they 're you r kids: If they do so1nclhing bad. the y're n1lne:' ' '"I DON·r C.\RE If rou h3d chick!n l\ir\' for h1nch every d11y th is 1reek . ''ou 'rc still havinG chicken Kiev for din· nr.r tonight." ..The air condlt\oncr broke down this afl<'rnoon·, \Vr. need a ne11,o one." ..Myrtle's husband just aot another b11 Hal Boyle ' raise. He doesn·t let everyone in his of· lice push him around ." ··1 dori"t see y,·hy you mind going to the su pcrtnarket "'ith 1ne. A lot of husbands enjoy shopping 11·ith lheir "'il'es .. , "ri.iother says she "·on 'l come And spend the summer 11•ith us unless yon write her a le11er first and lcll her for 5ure t~al she is welcon1e ." .. , TltlNt\ !"LL have n1y hair liritcd ash blonde -with 11 \vhite strea~ in It." "The electric dish"•asher ls on the blink. We need 11 ne\v one." .. \Ve ncvtr go out anymore. \\'h y don't you sin1ply keep me in a closet l!kP. Bluebeard did h i~ ll'ivcs, and be done -V.'lth it?'" "The orthodontist says tha1 nflcr 'ol't have Junior's upper teeth 'stra ightened , we ought to do something about those lo\\·er teeth or his, too .'' 1J11 George ---, D<>ar George· !!ow c11n you ICU 1 boy that a girl he used lo go "'ith is accusing me of stealing her lUY who now ikes 1ne and ne\·er evcn lhinks 1f Louise rnurh le~~ honks 'he 1orn out rron1? Don't you think "' .. LX'nr llurJ: Not unleli:> Louise doesn't lli- lhough coming up on the porch is, or course, as you say. • • . ' • Saddlehaek . . EDIT·I ON * . VOL 63 , NO. 210, 4 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .. . . .. • WEDNESDAY, SErnMl9: 2, I • Ted•Y'a-F'•al TEN CENTS Nixon Weighs·. Mideast. Cri.si·s in Sa~ ·Clemente 8y RICHARD P. NAU. Of rllt ~11'11 ~lltl llt H Jeopardized by R u s s i a n missle movement, Middle East peace talks hung in the balance today a.! the Nixon Adminstration pondered its next move. The President continued t.o meet with top advisers in an .all-day session a{ San Clemente today afler deciding to pass on Public Use Of ,Beach Action Due? Laguna Beach councilmen tonight will consider legal action that w o u I d guarantee future public rigbt to use sandy portions of privately owned beach above the mean high tide line. In a 811.z·page report that spells out local and regional ramifications of a State Supreme Court decision that changed the law, City Attorney Jade J. Rimel estimates that cost to the city in pinning dpwn recreational beach rights could be $50,000 or considerably mon. Accompanying Rimel's report is a letter from the Laguna Beach Civic League urging the dty to take immediaite leeal action to aflinn publlc..rlghts to the beach. The letter from leap President Anthony Demetriades ltatu also that the city llhould not ·permit constructloll bl fences or other structures on any beach and should have existing structures and fences removed. Rimel has already advised the city staff that they should not issue any more permits for improvements or structures on the sandy areas of ocean front property. In reviewing the far·reachlng effect of a State Supreme Court decision in February, Rimel states, '"The rules are now changed, the burden of proof has. in effect been shifted to the owner, and the establishment of public recreational easements along the beaches on the basis of implied dedication has now become a reality." If privately owned land has been Used by the general public for a number of years y.iithout special permission there is, under the decision, implied dedication to public use. Rimel noted, ho'>'-·ever, that each case must be determined individually in accordance with facts presented. Five years public use without the owner making a significant right to stop that use is sufficient to establish the public right. If the council authorizes the court act.ion . Rimel said it vdll be necessary to establish the existence of pub Ii c recrealional ease ments parcel by 'parcel or area by area. ' '"This will require much effort in the gathering of all available evid~nce, including names, addresses and written . statements from members of the public as users of the beach areas and who will be willing and able lo so testify, the examination and gatherh1g of evidence of city maintenance work including beach cleaning, the furnishing of lifeguard service, garbage and trash rectplacles, " police patrolling, etc ... " Rimel advised. He said there would also be considerable 'investigation by t i t I e companies to gather names of all persons who ~·ould be party to such legal actions. Rimel noted that It is possible when evidenct shows clea r dedication the involved owner would not fight the case, (Ste BEACHES, Page 2) Spiro Has New 'Fill-in' Ball Viet President Spiro T. Agnew says he now has a personalized golf ball, as President Nixon does, but the Agnew ball is different. The President gives out balls bearing the presidential seal. He gave Agnew one Tuesd ay and-~ lht vice president, who,·has hit a couple of competitors acclderllally ,with misd irected tennis and 101£ balls this year, remarked: "I've got one that says 'you have just been 1truck by' and then I sign it." a trip to the American Legion Convention in troubled Portland. The U.S. pea~·keeping role became more diffi cult with introduction of photographic proof that the cease.fire aa:reement which began Aug. 7 has been violated by movement of SAM missle sites cklser to the Suez Canal. The U.S. ill initiating the 90-day cease ' UP ITt~ a ... lness Trip Jaqueline Kennedy Onassis, wearing white slacks, a rain- coat and dark sweater, lea ves London's Claridge's. It is re- ported that she and her hus- band are headin_g for Belfast Saturday to visit th.e'lhipyard constructin.1? two tamk ers for Onassis' fleet. Coast Residents To Attend Nixon Coronado Dinner A host of Orange Coast luminaries reprisenting government, I n d u s t r y , entertainmen t, business. and communications will attend tonight's state dinner· at San Diego's Hotel . Del Coronado. Most are friends of. President Richard M. Nixon and his family and have been staunch campaign conlributors o r supporters. Federal Judge Thurmond Clarke and his wife, of Corona de! Mar, will join the liOO guests hosted by the President, who just accepted the judge's retirement. Mrs. Clarke is the daugtiter of the late Orange County land baron James·Jrvlne. Dr. and Mrs. Arnold 0. Beckman, also . of Corona de! Mar, Will be present. He is a prominent industrialist and president of Beckman Instruments, Fullerton . Academy Award·wlnnlng actor John Wayne, of Nev.rpo'1 Beach, and hi1 wife will trav~l to San Diego for the gllUcring dinner In honor of Mexican Prestdent Gustavo Diaz Ordaz. Greeti ngs will doubtless be extended In lhe Mexican chief of i;:late by Ignacio (Set GUf'.STS, P1&• %) I fire had guaranteed Israel it would not suffer a militiry diS01.dvantage in accepting. Top Mideast advisors met with the President Tuesday to ponder the situation and the U.S. response while the Israeli cabinet fretted . Administration prospecLs over its Indochina policy were brighter, however, after the Senate voted ·5J to 39 defeat for an amendment to force withdrawal of U.S. troops from Indochina by Dec. 31, 1971. Presidential Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said Nixon was "pleased with the overwhelming victory," He reiterated the President's statements that it is a ne«ssity to maintain flexibility In Southeast Asia. Vice President Spko Agnew TUesday from the lawn of the Western While House aald Cambodia now has aL least a lighting chance for survival. He stressed that So~t Asi1n allies will need both military and economic aid for an indefinite period. 'afler withdrawal or U.S. troops. Agnew prabed aceepi'.ance ·- of the Nixon Doctrine by Soutqeut Asian a Wes. The vice president flew to the LBJ Ranch near Johnson City, Tex. to brief former President Lyndon B. Johnson on bis five-nation Asian tour. Both are to attend the Thursday 1tat.e dinner at the Hotel Del Coronado for Mexican President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz. oman entence Waitresses Win Battle ' For Diriner By JORN VALTERZA 01 tt11 D1llY' Pl191 Slllf lt took a Jetter lo the leaders of the women's liberation movement to insure a victory for 50 waitresses at a posh San Diego hotel who wµI break White House tradition Thursday night and help serve President Ni:xo n and his 600 guests. The waitresses, livid at being told by their bosses that men would take over their jobs Thursday night, took the spotlight away from Cambodia, the Middle East .and •vi!' Spil"IJ Ap0w Tuesday as White HOuse aides mal:le an impassioned "clarllication" of the biQ~t headache of \Di .... PleiiSent"s i:urrent wor)cjn& vacation in San Clemente. And t.be sometimes scathias and plaintive clarification or the HoUll Del Coronado ·Hassle dominated Tuesday's press brie[ing. Connie Stuart, Mrs. Nixon 's secretary and head of arrangements for state dinners, wearily announced a 50 • 50 · solution to a bowling controversy only woinen could launch. HOTE~ CULPRIT The hotel management, Mrs. Stuart said brusquely, was the culprit in the great waitress war. She said the heads. of the historic hotel "prematurely" told its 50 night·shift waitresses that they wouldn't be needed for the dinner. . • The wom en were crestfallen. Some had bought new wigs. All had proudly heralded the i r upcoming assignment among friends and family. And what's more, they were not going to be paid for Thursday night, because they weren 't going to work. Anger , clamor that President Nixon was not adhering to the "American Way" and othe r scathing blasts ensued . Some of the spurned ladies started complaining to Women's Lib. And the hassle reach ing all th~ way to lhe White House grew. "I've been bugged out of mind about waiters and waitresses," Mrs. Stuart said in ruffled tones. She added that the criticism leveled at the President was ''completely !See WAITRESSES, Page 2) -· I ' .. l 1 · • DA,11.Y'Pll.O l taff ....... Ftrel·le•s Pit Stop . . i ' ~. . ' ' ~ , ' ~ Ra~~ ieam J'Qembers (from Jeft).~pm itaber a~d Mar~-M.cGritilP~~se . dW"1p g Boston~to-Cal(ech Clean Air Race .for pit stop 1n San Clem~~~ Tues(!ay. Tbi!y got battery .charge for e1ectfic car at Southern· Cali- fornia Edisoo Company's San Onofre nuclear power plant. Racing under colors of Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, N.J:.. ·they lead the field of electric cars. Vehicles powered by other non·petro- 1eum fuels , however, are still ahead Of "them. · Cou11ty Taxes Ri se 3 Cents But Rate 20 Cents Lower By JACK BROBACK Of 1111 Calty Pllel l l1fl . Orange County supervisors -hurting for needed funds -Tuesday considered lhe dismal al~natives open to them, then voted to raise the general fund property tax rate by three cents. They received some paradoxical good news in their· afterrioon Session. Agnew Reports Asians Orange County Audltor..COntroller Vic A. Heim announced that e~en with the new three-ci!nt levy~ tbe overall county tax rate will be nearly 20 cents lower this year than last. See Security in U.S. The Nixon Doctrine of Vi etnam wilhdriwal, coupled with the U.S. thrust against communists in Cambodia is giving friendly Asia leaders a sense of security, says Vice President Spir.Q Agi"lew. Briefing the press at the Western White House in San Clemente after his Ilk.lay Asian mission, Agnew emphasized troop withdrawal must be supplanted with heavy economic aid. He made his remarks after reporting to President Nixo11 and the National , Secu rity Council on the 30,000 mile trip ln which he visited five Asian nations. The vice president plans to stop ofl to visit former President Lyndon Johnson in Texas and will then spend a weekend at Ocean City, Md., resting up. Questioned aboui.11er .. t or the End·U... · War bill in Congress Tuesday, be said the vote against' the McGovern·Hatlitld Amendment iS significant. "I lhinll: it will have a salutary effect," he remarked. Agnew said the Cambodian situation • appears to be well In hand, predicting that the government of Premier Lon Nol is now assured of a strong chance to . survive against communist offensives. • He said Lon No l is satisfied with ~is $40 million aid program and is not asking for sophisticated military gear, only some helicopters and patrol boats. Estimates as to the number of communists wipe:d out in ·cambodia differ, but the Wiute House says 14,000 were killed among 35,000 present, adding 8,000 more ha ve infiltrated. The vie&. president warned :igalnst con!iderln1 the war civil in nature, declaring 75 ~nl of the communists came in via NOrth Vlf:tnam. He abo sal.d ,a..teq11e1t by 14 Senator! t6at an immediate eease·fire be proposed In Paris ls nothtng ne"' and that Nixon recommended such a pl•n last year wtthout success. , Still, he remorked, th• Cost of lighting the Vietnam War has beeriteduced from Iii billion IMually lo hall \1111 filW"<· • Decreases In tax assessments for the Harbor District, F1ood Control District, and other taxing requirements imposed in pa st years mak~t possible. Heim said the I 71 rate will be 19. 76 cents less. He broke the arious decreases and (Set TA ES, Page%) AD DRAWS BONUS IN COLD CASH Cold cash -$50 more than she was asking for -was the ll:ind of offer this refrigerator ad got for the adver· tiser who Pi!lced U in the DAILY PILOT c·las-slried want ad setUoo : AMANA 17 2.dr refrig· freezer. lce·rqaktt, Avo- cado. Like new. "$ISO. XXX·llXI, And, af cour1e, the ad !Old the re- frigerator -to 1 sc"9ol tiacher witb, five chlldre,n. Site was one of the first to call. The caller who offered the '50 bonus waa too la~: the sale had alrctdy been m•de. M•lte your sale. Call a DAILY PILOT ad·vl1er at 642-IQa. J - ' " ' Judge ·Gives T,vo Terms In Slaying Bv TOM BARLEY ot ""' Dellr P'llM ll•tt 'two state prison terms of one to five years each were o~dered Tuesday for the woma n member of a gang of drifters accused in the: "devil cult" killing of a Miss.ion Viejo teacher and the hatchet slaying of a young service 1taUon attendant. Superior Court Judge Samuel Dreizen set thole sentences for Melanie Mae Daniels, 31 ; of Santa Ana In the wake of pleas by Dtputy"Distric( A"tt:omey ~art.in . J. "Heileiban Usab" "''i.f there •W11 ner a c . "fir~....-...-thia •• ~ .. 11.~ ' ..... t>reD<n ,.Ul~ ac-' aoll f orderi!d consecutive t.erinl an \he two eoftvictklna ol ~na an acc..,oty to murder. He ordered the tall brunette's tm~ate shipment to the Frontera PrMdn for Women and cancelled the bali:lce of the. probation term she wu serving for a recent l)arcotics conviction. Mra. Daniels was iervlng that time in Or.iDfe County Jail when investigators linkeCI her to the killings of Mrs. Florence Nancy Brown, 31, of El Toro and servlce ataUon attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin, 21 of Santa Ana. .Mrs. Brown's body, minus lta heart, lungs and right arm, was found last June JS in a shallow grave off the Ortega Highway. Three members of the ga!'li of drifters to which MrS. Daniels was .attached were indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury for her murder. Carlin was haclted to death with a hatchet last June 2 In the wash room of his Sant.a Ana servict station in a killing that left the once handsome young man -in the words of an investigator - "absolutely unrerognizab\e and soaked in a pool of his own blood." Heneghan told Judge Dreizen Tues<lay that Mrs. Daniels washed the blood off the hatchet that was used to kHI Carlin and disposed of the $40 to $50 taken from the se rvice station. There is no proof that she was present at the killing of Mrs. Brown, be said. but his office is satisfied that she uried the chopping off of Mrs. Brown's fingers to prevent identification and that she suggested that the dead woman's teeth be kicked in for the same reason. Investigators confirmed Tuesday that they have not been able to "positively lini." ·Mrs. Daniels to the Satanic rites (See DANIELS ,.Paft 1) Oruge 1''eather The clouds and low fog will roll in harder along the Orange Coast in the evening and morn· ing hours Thursday, but sunny skies will be the order of the daylight period with tempera· lures in the 70 to 85 range. INSIDE TODAY The favorite performers of the 111ar at the Huntington Beach Plauhow e are recognized ai the thlater's aniiMOI oward.s OOnQuct. Set Enteriainmtnt, Page 27. • ' -, • -~----~ -----'~ ----= ----'-'' ' ' ~ IWLV. PILOT SC W«1n .. d.,, StPlttnbot i. iwo FreM P .. l'l 1 WAITRE SSES ... ·:_Ficker Sure of Win llllWilTllltod ancl"hJibly unlAJr," She said she ~ •1rle1r up the thing once and ror all." . J At leul II male employeo -wallera uperleoc.t In """ill White lfouM lty!O from huge trays -are being recruited through 1 San Diego w1lt.ei1s union 1oca11 , .&he said, detalliq the solution. 'Ille 11la, she ad~ed, will share equally in the duties an~ wlll ''help serve ~ meal," Mrs. Stuart said. "If anything, it's called equality," she added' It's rp sec.nt that the huge, pluab for- mat dinner her boss ordered durinl; hLI trip to Mex ico turned out to be a eolosu.l job ot work for the pretty Mrs. Stuart. And the injection or Women's lJb into the flap makes things even worse. Her feelings about both the dinner aad the movement came out late last ,Yttt when. the secretary told local Soroptlmlsts that the tislt or organliing the dirulu by phone from Mexico and San Clemente WI!. ~Um9"1l. Mn;: Stulrt. lllo oaid abt •un't partiddllrly 'ttrtercsted1n Women's Ub. She.reiterated halt of that platform for reiiorlers Tuesday, ·:11•i -'(ir; difficult to orgal.ize a state dinne r in i~-days while you're on the road,' ah•:oill4 .In pl .. ding tones1 "and there's a -,.. lilt of 8llO and bllhons Clf oth .. er cSJtailJ..U's only natural to have a few 1111111 °""''· · ''W,~11111'1'bi1ien't aettrad all ·the probWirul,Of il:fmt," 11\e .said, an1werlrig queries .. on·how the ireen 1taU would be trained)iollly two diyll. · "As a,-;m.1tter of fact , ri ght now it &eems un '!l>'ll bt lucky ti all the plat.. reach thi right ll"'"""·" · What dou it _coat to run a state dinner 00 the rOiat :· . "Not much -atr1 except for more Irie! f&r peopJe like me,i. she retorted. 1The ne. tilt the womu of the Hotel Del Cortlliado night shift had 'won Was gfeeted w;itb Jlee among the ranks of i edgie·st¥>es in ~n Diea:o .. "Wbettlet.ii was a misundmtandlaa; or ~ bad:dowa•il open 1o QUtltlm," one pensive wattre&s said, ••Miat counts +s that we'll be there." , "There is no such thine as a 'normal day' at the Whlte Houee," Mrs. Stu art tt>ld the SoropUmists in San Clemente IAst week. She proved It Tueaday. From p .. .., 1 BEACHES ••. lolli'.erin& city coltl. In related actions, Rimel noted : -Huntmaton Beach is engaged in a pending autt oot only to establlah recreational easement to extensive bMth area but kl require property owners to pay the city for beieb lands where apartments, _oil wtlla or o t b t-r improvements have been placed. -The COWlty countel la advertlling for witne-. who UJed IJ'ell In Salt ~k and MOlllll'cb Bay to help utablllb publlc recreation1l ri1hts. • . -County Supervllora have 1 I 1 o J.Uthorized newspaper ads pertainln1 to fe Upper Newport Bay area. - • -'Ibe county board also ardered county ~epartments to invut11ate titles to iumel'OU! parcels of private beach frmt f,etween South Laguna and San Juan t reek to locate public easemeft" · Jroviding acceu to beaches. , Rimel said he had been asked to tomment on whether the city bad tecourse to ncover any or the money._ •bout 13 mllllon -it paid for 1000 feet Of lialn Beach. ; He said. in effect, no slnct the city iitained title to the property not juat jlublic easement and since the negotiated purchue included area upland of the buch. . Sovie t Plane Stoned ; PARIS (AP) -Four youlhs smuhed ihe windows of Aeronot, the Soviet jl.irline, with rocks Tue11day night just before midnight and left behind a poster in Hebrew and French saylnl "Let mt ~pie go. Jntemat1onal Students Day, in aolidarity with J udailm ln the Soviet Union." ·..----------- ' DAILY PILOT ·--...... -c..· ..... " .......... ........ , ..... ...._ l ob1rl N. W .. 4 ""M:l .. 1 IM• Pl>lll~ J1c• I . Cwrl1y Vkt Pr11!1M1nl IM 0....rtl Mlntffr 111•11111 ktt.,il lfl19r Tho11111 A. Mwrphi111 MINltlllt Eflltr l ich t r4 I'. Ntll loolllh Ort ""41 CWnl, E•llll' Offl•" CMlt Nlm1 i» w.:11 ..., llr•fl N..,_.1 aHcfl: 2t11 Wttl at !M• ...,lf'+'IAI L•I-IMdl! nt f t rtsl A~­M..,!l"llOll IMC"fl: 111111 •11Cfl a:wi.v ... iln C~: • Mtr1tl II C-IM 111•1 DAIL'I" .. tLOT, wllll V iti! II c-Mroc• Ills "''-~ .. ,. 11 ...,111111" •1lhr "'"'t $..,,. ''' ill ""''"' tft!llM "" Lii-'"''"· ,..._, kH11. CMI• M-, M""'ll•'f11~ lotHll ""' "-""' \ltll•~. ,,.,.., •1111 '" '"""'' .. ,....... O<".,..e cn.1 l"ullltlllflt """'""' l'f'll!lliot Jlltftl• tt1 t i ttll WM! •.i11tt t 1W,, l'llwpotl atl<fl, ., .. J.JI WtiU ••1 $tr..t, Ctl.11 Mtst. T•I•••• «71 4) 14J04JJI a..tf1M ......,,.", .. 142-1•7• S-C ........ lk,_._..,I , ... ,. ... 4fJ..4420 ~ 1t11, ~ CM1I 1'¥111111"" "C_11,. Ht -,,.,"°'· m .... , ......... cc•1..,i.1 ""'"" ., •""•11-11 11tr11oo ""' M 'i~ MINVt 1...Cl•t .., •• """"" ti _,,..""'' ....,..... <t«tNI C"le" ,...t• r,:r• 11 ,.,.._, IHcll t r.• Coott Mn.1, Ctt ltlf!ft . '""'ccr:.,i"" tf <t-rltr UM -11111'4 ..,. INH tf,a -111ry1 lf\11111" -l1Nllt111, &),It -IM•• • Breath of Life Six-year-old JObn Brock of Fullerton gets a reassuring ·smile trom:: LA Rams quarterback Roman Gabriel, a member of the National SPorts Committee for the Cy!tic Fibrosis Foundation. Cunent Cystic Fibrosis "Brea th of Lile" campaign for fun ds to combat children's lung di:leases runs through Sept. 30. Laguna High's Cafeteria Deficit Rapped by Taylor The $2,500 deficit Incurred by the Laguna Beach Schools cafeteria service for the 1969-70 school year came under fire Tuesday night from Board Pre,,ident Larry Taylor. "If the cafettriaa don't break even by mid tenn this year, I suggest we ralae the prices for me.ab:," Taylor said. "If oar people went downtown they would have to pay tl or more for a hmch,"-he added. lldlllt-IUnChes at the elementary schools COit 85 cents plus tax. At ti., 'hlcil ocbqol, flfloul-i la ~ ;14,.. .. oller.i. ' ' . . ' ' Noting the deficit, which was rOCReG by the diltrict Taylor declared, .. Education dollar! shouldn't feed anybody." The. board gave approval 'to the cafeteria price11 for the 1970-71 school year. Students lunche11 at the elementary schoola will be 45 cents. A new plate lun:!',.wlll be olfered at the high schoo, pr11 .. w ~t' 58 cents. T~schpol district has a policy tha t no one shall go hungry. even if he can't afford to pay {or meals during the school day. If reasonable need can be demonstrated, the schools will pick up the tab for lunches. TrUatees also learned that carton milk will tell for 10 centll this year. Price of milk· last year was six cents. The increase ln price i.s due to losa Of a federal subsidy and a rate jump in milk. Greenbelt Plan Set for Hearing B e fore Council Hopes for a 520-acre Sycamore Hills greenbelt will flower at the Laguna Beach City Council session tonight as proponents seek : -council au th orizati o n of an applJcation to Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for a grant lo help purchase thei>roperty. -A council resolution committing the city to seek neCessary matching tundl. The city portion of the funds are being sought from private donations by The CiUzens Committee for the 4guna Greenbelt. James Dilley, member of the committee. said a publicity campaign to seek funds for the greenbelt will begin this week . The asking price for the triangle of property is $4 million. The owner is Great Lakes Properti es Corporation. T h e greenbelt committee has an immediate target of raising $500.000. The committee visualizes paying for the property over a four-year period witb the federal government furnl!hing $2 million. 'J1Je group feels that the area could be developed as a golf course preserving the heritage syCAmore trees. Funds fr om such a munici pal golf rourse would then go toward helping pay off the city por. tkln or the commitment. The fcdtral grant would be condlUon1l on recrea- tJonaJ development Student Deadline Set The deadline for new-st udent reglitraUon at Marco Forster Junio r High School will be Thursday. Slgnups for the new pupils wlll be processrd from 9 a.m. to ooon and 1 tn 3:30 p.m. In the school administration building. ' Food Services Superviaor Marion Garret said the price could return to six cents if the 1ubsidy ill re-enacted by Congress. Trustee! also learned that lwicbes will be availabl~ to students in all !chool cafeterias on opening day of school, Sept. 14, _Er_ona_ p._..,_1 DANIELS ••... that 1'11't L'ODducted , befcn and alter Mrs. Brown11 death -thole rituals Included the eating of the woman's fieah and the cutting out of her heart and other vital ortana. Mrs. Brown wu pulled rrom her car on Sand Canyon Road and driven to an Jrvlne orange grove where she was murdered . The Daniels woman has insisted that lhe did not see the woman unUJ she saw the blanket-covered body in the b11ck seat of her station waJon. Indicted for the two kilbngs are 1-h!rman Hendrick Taylor, 17, an d Stephen C. Hurd, 20, both tr-auienl!. Hurd faces jury trial Nov. 9 and Taylor will go to court Sept. a for a hearing on a motion to reject that indictment. With him in court on that date will be Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse, 16, of Garden Grove, who is accused of the killing of Carlin. He will ask for dismissal of the murder charge. Orange County investigators in the macabre Brown-Carlin case are seeking the extradition from Oregon o r Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney, 17, of Portland. He is indicted for murder in the Brown killing. ' "I have looked very carefully at the transcripts of this case and listened attentively to the arguments by attorneys for both sldu," Judj;e Dreizen told the calm and apparently unmoved Mrs. Daniels before sentencing. "I can only come to one conclusion," he said. ''Society needs to be protected from people like you." From Page 1 GUESTS ••• Louno, and hi11 wife~ who li ve on Newporl Beach's· Lido Isle. Lozano is publisher qf the inOuential Spanish languaee newspaper La Opinion, which is widely circulated in California a"<! the Southwest. , Newly-elected State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter {ft-Newport · Beach) who is al90 ch.airman of tbe C a I i f o r n i a Republican Central Committee, and Mrs. Carpenter are also expected to attend : Former Secretary of the Navy and one- time Irvine company president Charles Thomas and his wUe, of Corona del Mar, are scheduled tO attend the festive evening. The President's brother. Donald M. l'{ixon, and. ~tr!. Nllon. will bt there. alon1 with Newport Beach merchant and cl\'lc leader O. W. "Dick" Richard and his wife. Orange Coast DAJLY PILOT publisher Robert N. Weed and Mrs. W~ed are to attend , along with the lndu~triallst Jolin ?i,fcLcod and his wife who maintain homes on HarbOr Island and in Fallbrook. Other Orange Coast guests at the suite \finner will Include S\n Clemente·Mayor Wallf F. Evans Jr., and ?t1rs. Evans. ,, .. . :. ~Pr~rr.edne8s is'. Secret of Cup Victory _ ~ 1110,uMoN:Loc!llAerY·· · _, W ,llalkedtoFlckerlillhellvlngroom Flcktr aod hil crew on lntnpld...,. ·~ f!ll!' , .. ,....._ """' _ -or· ufe beautiful rambling home al obyiously well-prepared during the long ,._ Wljmlq Ille rtl!d ,.jp de!end the • , '• ho~summer -from June through Am111ca'• CUp ls-second~nly to actually' . PrJce s Neck wheJl ha and his young Aulust. A3 a result, Intrepid woo the 'deeffldin( ~ mOlt .iu,uy Prlt.ed 'kudo lD crew have spent two len&ion filled right to defend the Cup for the second world ya~fitlng. ' , mentfu. consecutive time. It has been said fhat the Ripper who l asked him if he had any quallm abQut I asked Ficker to review the three loses tPe 119-year old bo\tomless pitcher mffUng the Australians and Gretel It months of trials leading up.to hls defeat to a foreign challenger will have his fl6ld when the big show starts Sept. 15. Bill of Weatherly, Heritage, and finally bolted lo the pedestal in the New York ihOushVully rubbed his bronud bald Valiant -all manned by veteran Yacht Club trophy room where the Cup ·~. HiJ pale blue eyes were confident.. skippers and crews. now stands. Said be : "We treated the June !leries on Long Bill Ficker, ~2-year old Newport Beach ''L'never 'worry about winning or losing. Island Sound as we thought il should be architect, :stands on the threshold after All J. worrk 'lbout Is being prepared. If treated -as a tune up series. We defeating three rivals who weie.bopeful we'are priapred 'we will win. If no.t we weren't really prepared here. The boat of defendi ng yachting 's holy grail. "1 wil.I lose. 'Yicht racing ls a game in was launched a month late, and we had After the tumultuous celebration of which the ~ which makes the fewest decided not to get any new sails until be1n&: selected to defend the cup was mistakes wins." after the June trials. We wanted to find ' out if some thing:s we had done· on the From P .. e 1 TA X RATE DROPS . • • • " ' boat were really practical, before we got committed to things like $25,000 worth of new sails. We knew th"at it would hurt our performance in June, but we were willing ' to take the knocks . also Increases in taxes imposed as follows : -Harbor District down 3.82 cents from last year's rate of 8.65~~~tS. to 4.83 cents; Flood Control· down 10.86 cents rrom 35.91 cents 'to 25.05 cent.s1 school • institution rate up .08 cents. school mod ification aid rate of 8.3 cents eliminated entirely : development cente r rate up .14 cents, county general rate up three cents. Other changes listed by 1-Ieim included an increase in state<ollected in lieu tazes of $366,000, an increase in county fees for Clerk filings of $220,000 due to a new state law, a deCrtase in the reserve set aside for disputed oil royalty taxes of J4.5 million. ' controller's Ufian1mously. recomm e ndat io:is During the morning sesston, board members wrestled for an hour over the dilemma of increasing the tax rate by 8.4 cents or cuUing some $3 million out of the budget they had adopted several weeks ago. COMPROMISE RATE Supervisor David Baker· suggested the "compromise" rate of $1.70, reasoning that some fat could and mu.st be cut from the adopted general tax rale budget of $215 million. • ClareDCt E. White of the Orange County Chamber. of C o m m e r c e governmental affain committee . ureed that the board hold the line on the t•70 general fund rate of $1 .67. ''From the start we were pointing to • August. We set up our campaign to be 3! good as possible in ~ugust. We also continued tank testing right through the June and July trials. 1 "Our performance against Valiant wasn't too impressive in June because of these things. We were lucky to come as close to them as we did - I believe it was four for Valiant aiid three for U!. They were obviously better prepared. (See FICKER, Page 24) Ex-Dana Mci11 Dies in Fi g11t At.Prison The school modification rate which accounts tbr a 8.3-eent reduction is possible because County A s s e s s o r Andrew Hinshaw's percentage of 2.1.8 percent of market value on real property is at or above the statewide average for the first time since 1962. ."You should do what buainm and induatry have found they must dO .llJl these tight financial times," White argued. "If you ellminated some of the A former Dana Poinl Tflan who was couoty employes your department heada th r cb In will fi nd that they can and will get more convicted on grand e t arges productivity per man. That has been Orange County Superior Court has been Flood co ntrol is down IO cents because the special one-year llk:ent levy to repair damages caused by the 1969 floods is now industry's experience." killed in a fracas between inmates at a Supervisor Robert Batun wanted the Department or Corrections facility in eliminated. " entire $3 million deficit cut out of the central California. Orange Courity Medical Center's budget Inmate Roberto Sandoval has been saying , "The center is the cause of all The 19.76 cents tax reduction will mean our trouble. Why penalize other charged with murder in the knife slaying that the owner of a $24,000 home will be departments ror what that Institution of Benjamin Frederick Ramsey, 42, llZ LESS TAXES taxed $12 less this year than last. dida't get from the state." formerly of 3364 El Encanto St., officers This is partially offset in many cases, at Plum Creek Conse rvation Center have however, by a 17.6 percent increase in reported. assessed valuations. Sch } T l Investigators said the killing occurred County Administrative Officer Robert 00 rUS ees Friday ilight and is still being probed. Thomas has the job of eliminating some Ramsey was arrested in January, 1967 $1.9 million more in department budgets Will DiSCUSS in Orange County and charged 'with the within two weeks to meet the reduction theft of $18,000 from the Colony Kitchen from the $1.75 cent rate supervl!ors , . restaurant in San Juan Capistrano where thought they were,__going to have to levy Reorgamz" ·a·~OB he wofked as assistant manag er. and --the-$t10-rate-,he artiUfifil_y _ , · ·n --Ramsey--later-11dmitted-that-he took-the established in the Tuesday ,morning . cash and checks Vver the. Christmu ses.sion. . Trustees of the San J o a q u I n weekend and was sentenced on lhe grand Posslbilitles ror achieving the $~.p Elementary Schobl District will !iscuss theft count by Judge Byron K. McMillan. million reduction ~Jude . f.b• ''~atfon their administrative reorganization plan He was ordb-ed lo repay the money over of a $1 inillion budget item set a~ide' for at tonight's 7 o'clock metUng at Irvine a five year term. bf;!ach acquisition, and the elimination of School. $900,000 from various d e p a r t m e n t The plan, which was prepared by the budgets. fl{m of Davis, MacConnell, Ralston The $1.75 rate was based on no cuts in Division of Westinghouse Le a r n in I department budgets and the absorption of Cor poration at a cost of '3&,000. has been a $3 million loss of state revenues from formally accepted but has not yet been 1.iediCal allotments from the state. adopted. \ If the plan is put Into effect as It was DEUNQUENCY AU.OWANCE written, the district will be hiring this Heim also told tht: supervisors that the year a director of facilities planning and budget included a four p ~r e-e a t a director of construction, maintenance delinquency allowance (estimate of taxes and operaUon who would both :serve levied which will not be paid;); and $16.1 under the assistant superintendent for million lo be held in reserve because of administrative services. the disputed tax rate on lrvine Company At the present the superintendent is in and other properties in the Upper char1e of both coostrucUon and its Newport Bay. supervision. He would then be released tG County Counsel Adrian Kuyper and do more direct work with the schools in Hinshaw do oot agree on the assessment his district. procedures in that area and the issue will The plan also calls for the removal of have to be eventually settled in the the personnel department from under the courts. supervisicrn of the ass Is t an t Heim concluded his recommendations superintendent for educational purposes by saying, "you (the supervisors) shou ld and its placement under the direction of be very proud or your accomplishment in the superintendent. reducing the overall property tax of the The reorganization plan outltnes when county by almost 20 cents." additional adm inislrators should be hired The supervisors heaved a great sigh of as the district grows and provides a time relief and approved all of the au ditor· table for carrying out the plan. Killer Unknown In Kansas Death LAWRENCE, Kan. (UPI) -Harry Nichols Rice, 18. was shot and killed July 20 during a confrontation between police and college aged youths a block from the Kansas University campus. Investigating authorities said they could not determine whether Rice was shot by police or by a sniper. At the time, Rice's father said the bullet wound In his son was too small to have coml!f from a police weapon , but a withe!IS said he saw a policeman fire at Rice. County Coroner Dr. James Reed Instructed a six-man jury to determine when Rice died, how he died, who killed him and if the slaying was committed with criminal intent. T11e·· jury lislened to 22 witnesses csday and then said unanimously it did know who killed the Kansas yersity student. Wyler l,ncaflex 8124 A•ost unusUal .. CONVENIENT TERMS BANKAMERICARO MASTER CHARGE • • ch. Marks time an 24 haur system. A 11ece11iry for anyone who trav1b, lhe militory, or m•n who prize the unvsual. Wotch dlol thow. oll 2-4 hours, ln- itead of ''"' 12 . Ruggedly good looking. The lncofl•11 balance whtel i1 guorantMd aooin1t 1hock fot the /if• of th• watch or rep1oc1d free If •"t:r broktn. Gi.Klr•nteed waterproof a1 Ion; °' lh• crytlol i1 intact, g1nuine Wyler ports ustd. J. C. .JJ.ump hrieJ Jew€fer~ 1821 NEW~ORT AVE. COSTA MESA I ! _._ -•-- 24 YEARS IN SAME LOCATION PHONE 648.J<O I • • ' • t r - • . -· . -• Laguna ) Beaeh Today's Fliiil N.Y. Steeb EDITION • *\ vo~:·63, NO. 210, 4 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ORANGE E:pUNTY-, C>iLIFORNl~ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBEg 2, r97Q 1 •. ' I TEN CENTS ' .,_ ~ Nixon Weighs Mideast C:fiSis in Sa'Q Clemente By .RICHARD P. NALL Of .... 0111~ 1"1111 ll•ff Jeopardiied by Russi an missle movemen!f Middle East peace talks hung in the balance today as the Nixon AdminstraUon pondered its next move. The President continued to meet with lop advisers in an all-day session at San Clemente today after deciding to pass on u ' •• Public Use Of Beacl1 Action Due? Laguna Beach councilmen tonight will consider legal action that w o u I d guarantee future public right to use sandy portions of privately owned beach above the mean high tide line. In a Blh-p~ge report that spells out local and regional ramifications of a State Supreme Court decision that changed the law, City Attorney Jack J. Rimel estimates that cost to the city in pinning down recreational beach rights could be $50,000 or considerably more. Accompanying Rimel's report . i! a Jetter from the Laguna <Beach Civic League urging the city to take immediate legal action to affirm public rights to the The letter from league President Anthony Demelriades states also that l~ city should not permit construction uf fences or other structures on any beach and should have existing structures and fences removed. Rimel has already advised the city staff that they should not issue any more permits for improvements or structures on the sandy areas of ocean front property. ... Jn reviewing the far-reaching effect of A State Supreme Court decision in February, Rimel states, "The rules are now changed, the burden of Proof has, in effect been shjfted to the owner, and the establishment of public rl!:creational easements aloilg the beaches on the basis of implied dedication has now become a reality." · IJ privately owned land has been used by the general public for a number of yea rs without special permiss~n there is, under the decision , implied dedication to public use. Rimel noted. however, that each case must be determined individually in accordance with facts presented. Five years public use wilhout the owner making a significant right to stop that use is sufficient to establish the public right. If the council au thorizes the court action. Rime l said it will be necessary to establish the existence of pub Ii c recreational easements parcel by parcel or area by area . "This will require much effort in the gathering of all available evidence, including names, addresses and written statemepts from members of the public as users of the beach areas and who will be wi!ling and able to so testify, the examination and gathering of evidence of cily maintenance work including beach cleaning, the · furnishing of lifeguard service, garbage and trash rec,.eptacles, police patrolling, etc ... " Rimel advised . -He said there would al&O b e considerable investigation by t l t I e · companies to gather names of all persOns who wolildj>e party to such legal actions. Rimel noted that it is possible when evidence shov•s. clear dedication the involved o\vner v•ould not fight the case, (See BEACf!ES, Page !t Spiro Has Ne ·w ~Fill-in' Ball Vice Preside nt Spiro T. Ag'flew says he now has a personalized golf ball, as President Nixon does. but the Agnew ball is different. The President gives out balls ~aring lhe presidential seal. He gave Agnew one TueSday and the vice president, who has hit a cou ple of competitors accidentally." with :misdiretted tennis and golf balls this.year, remarked: "I've gol one that says 'you have just been struck by' and then I sign it." a trip to the American Legion Convention in troubled Portland. The U.S. peace-keeping role beca'.me more difficult wilh: ihtroduclion '·of photographic proof that the ·cease-fire agreement which began Aug. 7 has ~n violated by movement or SAM missle sites closer to the Suez Canal. • The U.S. in initiating-the 90-day ct¥Se B11slnes1 Trip ' Jaqueline Kennedy Onassis. 'vearing white slacks, a rain· coat and dark sweater, leaves London's Claridge's. lt is re- ported th-.t she and her hus- band are heading !or Belfast Saturday to visit · the shipyard constructing two tankers for Onassis' fleet. Coast Residents To Attend Nixon , Coronado Dinner A host of Orange Coast luminaries representing government, i n d u s t r y , entertainmen t, business and communications will attend tonight's state dinner at San Diego's Hotel Del Coronado. Most are friends o[ President Richard M. Nixon find his family and hav~ been stauncll~ampaign contributors o r supporters. Federal Judge Thurmond Clarke and his wife, of Corona del Mar, will join the 600 guests hosted by the President, who just accepted the judge's retirement. Mrs. Clarke is the daughter of the late Orange County land baron James Irvine. Dr. and Mrs. Arnold O. Beckman, also of Corona de! Mar, will be present. He is a prominent industrialist and president of Beckman lnstrun'lents, Fullerton. Academy Award-winning actor Joho Wayne, of Newport Beach, and hls wife will travel to San Diego for the glittering dinner in honor of Mexican President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz. Greetings will doubtless be extended to the Mexican chief of state by Ignacio • (See GUESTS, Pace JJ .... fire had guaranteed Israel it would not suffer a military disadvantage in accepting. Top Mideast. advisors met with lhe . President Tuesday to ponder the situation and the U.S. response while the Israeli cabinet fretted. ' Administration prospects over its Indochina policy were brighter, hQwever, after the Senate voted ss to 39 dereat for an amendment to force withdrawal of U.S. troops from Indochina by Dec. 31,' 1971. Presidential Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said Nixon was "pleased with the overwhelming victory." He reiterated tile President's statements that it is a necessity to maintain flexibility in Southeast Asia. om an· Waitresses Wi1i Battle For Dinner By JOHN VALTERZA Of !hi DlllY ,1111 Slttf It took a letter to the leaders of the women's liberation movement to insure a victory for 50 waitresses at a posh San Diego hotel who will break White House tradition Thursday night and help serve President Nixon and his 600 guests. I •• -. Vice President Spiro Agnew Tuesday from the lawn of the~ Westen> White _House said Cambodia ~~w hu at least a fighting chance for sur;rlvaJ, He stressed that Sou'tliiut Asian allies will need both military Gd economle aid for an indefinite period..after'withdrawal of U.S. troops. Agnew Praised acceptanct '. of the Nixon Doctrine by Southeast Asian allies .. The vice president flew to the LBJ ~ll near Johnson City, Te.x. to 6rief fotmer President Lyndon B. Johnson on bis· five-nation Aslan tour. Both are to attend the Thursday .~te dinner· at the Hotel .J)e1 Coronado for Mexican President Gustavo Diaz OrdiiZ·. Judge Gives In Slaying Bv TOM BARLEY 01 Ill• "-111 ,Utt Sltll _"""Tw,;;o state prison terms of one to five ~ years each were ordered Tuesday for the woman member of a gang of drifters accused in the "devil cult" killing of a Mission Viejo teacher and ,• .the hatc.het slaying of a young service stallon attendant. Superior Court Judge Samuel Dreiun set those sentences for M~lanie Mae Daniels, 31, of Santa Ana in the wake of pleas by Deputy District Attorney Martin J. Heneghan the,t "lf there was ever a case for consecutive ' sentencing then this bl11 to be it." .• The waitresses, livid at being told by their bosses that men would take over their jobs Thursday night, took the spotlight away from CambQdia, the Middle Eaat and ~ven Spiro Agnew Tuesday as· Whi~ Houa aides made an im assiooed "clarification'' of the biggest ea ac e o res1 en s curren working vac.aUon in San Clemente. Judie Dreizen quickly •(l';eed ~aid ordered coni¥uU~e 'terms, t)il,_ ~ iwo.- ~-<Gi\•~~ ww~~­ murder, And the sometimes scathing and pl~intive clarification of the Hotel Del Coronado Hassle dominated Tuesday's press briefing. Connie Stuart, Mrs. Nixon's secretary and head of arrangements for state dinners, wearily annoonced a 50 • 50 solution to a howling controversy only women could launch. HOTEL CULPRIT The hotel management, Mrs. Stuart ~aid brusquely, was the culprit in the great waitress war. She said the heads of the historic hotel '1prematurely" told its 50 night-shift waitresses that they wouldn"t be needed for the dinner. Facel·less Pjt Stop ' ' •': The women y.·ere crestfallen. Some had bought new wigs. All had proudly heralded t h e i r upcoming assignment among friends and family. Race team member s (from Jeft)'Tom ·Haber and Mark McGrail .PBuse during Bostpn-to-Caltech Clean Air R3ce'!or pit stop in San Clemen.le · Tuesday. They got battery charge fo_r electric car at Southerri Cali· fornia Edison Company''S San Onofre nuclear power plant. Racing under col.ors. of Stevens Institute or .Technology, Hoboken, N.J.,. they lead the field or electric cars. Vehicles powered by other non-petro- leum fuels, however, are still ahead of them. And whafs more, they were not going lo be paid for Thursday night, because they weren't going to work. Anger, clamor that President Nixon was not adhering to the "American Way" and other scathing blasts ensued. Some of the spurned ladies started complaining to Women's Lib. And the hassle reaching all the \l{ay to the White House grew. County Taxes Rtse 3 Cents But Rate 20 Cents Lower "I've been bugged out of mind about \vaiters and waitresses," Mrs. Stuart said in ruffled tones. By .JACK .BROBACK Of Ille 01111 ~li.t Shift She added that the criticism leveled at the President was ''completely lSee WAITRESSF.S, Pase !J Orange County supervisors -hurting for needed funds -Tuesday considered the dismal alte.rnatives open to'. them, Agnew Reports Asians See Security in U.~. The Nixon Doctrine o( ·Vietnam appears to be well i" ·d, predicting withdrawal, coupled with the U.S. thrust that' the government t '.ier Lon Nol against communists in ·cambodia is is now assured of a : chance 1o giving friendly A,.a--leaders a sense of security, says Vice President Spiro survive against commu n ..... offensives. Agnew . .,., He said Lon No l is satisfied with his S40 Briefing the press at the Western White • million aid program and is not asking for House in San Clemente alter his 10-day sophisticated military gear, only some Asian mission , Agoew emphasized troop ' helicopters and patrol boats. withdrawal must be supplanled with Estimates as to the number of heavy economic aid. communists wiped out in Cambodia He made his remarks after report ing to differ, but the White House says 14,000 President Nixon and the National were killed among 35,000 present, adding Security Council on the 30,(l(l(l mile trip in 8,000 more have infiltrated. which he visited five Asian nations. The vice president warned lgainst The vice president plans to stop of{ to considering ~ war civil in nature, visit former President Lyndon Johnson in declar.ing 75· percent of the communists Texas and will .then spend a weekend al ca'rne in via .Noith Vietnam. Ocear1 City,.Md., resl.ii:ig up. ·He also said·r reqaest by 14 Senator~ Qucs,Uoncd about defeat of the End-the-. that an lm~iate. oeue-fire be propostd Wat bill In Congress Tuesday, he said .the in Paris is nothing new and that Nixon 'vote against the McGovern-Hatfield recomiueiided such a plan last' year Amendmertt is significant. wjthout succeys. "I think it will have a salutary effect," Still. he remarked, the cost of fighting he remarked. the Vietnam War hlis been reduced rrom Agnew said the Cambodian situation $28 ~Ulion annually to half that fi;urt. ,.. \ i • then voted to raise the general fund property tax r.ate by three cents. 'They recei:ved some p8rad0xlcal good news in their afternoon sf:ssio'n .. Orange County Auditor-Controller Vic A. Heim announced that even with the- new three-cent levy, the overall Collnty tax rate will be nearly 20 cents lowe.r this ' year than last. Decreases in · tax 388e61mepts for the Harbor District, Flood Control District, and othir taxing requirements imposed in past years make it possible. Heim said the 1970.71 ra te will be 19.76 cents less: He broke the various decreases and (See TAXES, Page !) AD DfUWS BONUS IN COLD CASH Cold cash ·-l50 rpore than she was asking for -. was the kind 'of offer this refrigerator ad got for the adver- tiser ·who placed it in the DAILY PILOT classified want ad section:' AMANA 17 2-dt refrig· freezer. Ice maker,.,A-.:~, cado. Like new. tzSI). XXX•XXXX. And. of course, tbe ad sold the re- frigerator -to a. school 1eacfier with five children. She was ont of the first . to call. The caller who olffred t:he • $$0 bonil1 was 100 late; ttie sale had already been made.· Mike your sale. Call a ·DAIL"( PILOT ao!-vl>er at 642-1678. He ordered the tall brunette's Immediate shipment to the Frontera Prison for Women and cancelled the balance of the probation tenn she was serving for a recent narcotics conviction. Mrs. Daniels was serving that time in Orina:e County Jail when investigators linked her to the killings of Mrs. Florence. Nancy Brown, 31, of El Toro and service station attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin, 21 of Santa Ana . Mrs. Brown ~s body, minus Jls heart, lungs and right arm, was found la.st June 15 in a shall ow grave of( the Ortega Highway. Three members of the gang of driifters to which Mrs. Daniels was attached were indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury for her murder. C3rlin was hacked to death with a hatchet last June 2 in the wasli room of his Santa Ana service station in a killing that left the once handsome young man -in the words of an investigator - "absolutely unrecognizable and soaked in a pool of his own blood." Heneghan told Judge Oreizen Tuesday that Mrs. Daniels washed the blood off the hatchet that was used to kill Carlin and disposed of the $40 to $5(l taken from the service station. There is no proof that she was present at the killing of Mrs. Brown, he said, but his office ls satisfied that she urged the chopping off of Mrs. Brown 's fingers to preYent identification and that she svggested ttwt the dead woman's.teeth be ki cked in for lbe same reason. Investigators contlrmed TUesday that they have not been able lo "positively link'.' Mrs. Daniels· to the Satanic rites (Set DANIELS, Page %) Orange Coast WeaCher The clouds and low fog will roll in harder along the Orange Coast in the evening and morn· ink hours Thursday, but sunny skies will be the order of the daylight period with tempera· tures in the 70 to 85 ranie. INSIDE TODA 'l' The favorite perfonner.~ of tlie year a& the Huntington Beach Playhouse are rtcovnired a' the theater'a annual aword3' banquet. S-e e E-nttrtaihment, Page 27. ao.11,,. .. M1llM• • (1111-•• " Mffln _ ,.,, 't• .. •r ctm•r " Mlltllll Pllllft " Cll«~lflt Ull' " Nllltftll NtM •• , ... '""" " .. Or•l'lt• CM\t'f " Ctmlc1 • " lylvl• """"' " crt.-n1 ff ...... O·M DMIJI. Hltlt .. " Pf, lltllltt'h " .,_ " Si.di Maril .. ,,.., ••IMrlal P• •• i•llYl.itl .. l11ttrt1!11"""' t6'U 11.-lin ... ,, fllfltMI ••• w ..... • :..~=.,.. (" Wtmt11•1 Nttn 8-2' • ..,.,, lll""6 .. ' ' ' j • ._ I '~----- ' l 1 -v-;r. .. ' " DAILY PILOT SC ....... ..... ., J WAITRESSES ... '"""'Tinted and blCl>IY Ulllalr." She llld ati WOOtd "clear op the thing once and for all." Al leaal IO male employu -waltm uperienced Ill aorvtnc Wiilie Houaa ltyte from huge tr1ys -are -bl!:lng recnllted through a San Diego wailer's union local, she said, de~g the solution. The 1111, sh& added, will share equally In the dutkls and will "help aerve the meal," Mrs. Sluart said. "11 anylhtng, It's called equaDty,'' she added:-· ~ It's no eecret that the hua:e, pluah for- mat dinner her boss ordered during bil trip to Melico turned out to be a colossal job of work for lhe pretty Mrs. Stuart. And the injection or Women's Lill into. the flap makes thinp eTen WOl'R •• Her !et.lings about bOth the dlnner ud the movement came out late list •eek when the. secretary told local Soropt.imiits that the task of organlUng the dinller by phone from MexJco and San Clemente was monumental. Mrs.-Stuart alle said she wasn't particularly interested In Women's Lib. She reiterated half of that plaUorm for reporters Tuesday. "lt'1 vtty difficult to orga111.ize a state dinner in 11 days while you 're on the road,' she said in pleading tones, "and there'H :gue.t list of IOO and billions of other aet&ili. It's Only natural to have a few 1m1U flaps. "We sUll haven't settled all the problems of service," she said, answering queries on how the green staff would be trained in Ollly two days. ''As a matter of fact, right now it see~ fiki We'll be lucky il all the plalel reach the right RU<sts." What does It cost lo run a 1tate dinner on the road? "Not inucb extra1 except for more grief for people like me,• she retorted. The ne'lfs that the womea of the Hotel Del Coronado nl&ht ahJft had won was greeted With glee among the ranks of wedgie shoes In San Diego. "Whether it was a misundentanding or a backdown l.!i open to question," one pensive· waitrea said, "What count.I i1 that we 'll be there." "There is no such thing as a 'normal day' at the White Houee," Mrs. Stuart told the Soropt.lmJtf:s la San Clemente 1Jast week. She proved It Tueld1y. FrontP .. eJ BEACHES ... lowering city costs. In reJated acUom, Rimel noted: -Huntington Beach la engqed to a pending suit not only to establish recreational easement to extensive beach area bul to ,.quire proptrly owntn to pay the city for beach Janda where apartments, oil wells or a t h e r ---iioprnvem·enis-t11ve been pltetd. ~ TIJe counly counsel Is advt rtla\111 191' wl-wbo uaed mu to Salt er.ti and Monarch Bay to llolp eoiablllb pubilc recreatloul rlghll. ~ty Supervlaora have 1 J 1 o authorized newspaper ads pertaining to the Ujiper Newport Bay area. -The county board alao miered county departments to investigate titles to numerous parcels of private beach front between South Laguna and San Juan Creek to locate public easements' providing access to beaches. Rimel said be had been a1ked to comment on w1iether the city hJd recoune lo recover any of the money' - about 13 million -It paid for 1000 lett of Main Beach. He said, in effect, no since the city obtained tiUe to the property not just public euement and since the negoUated purchase locluded area upland of the beach. Soviet Plane Stoned PARIS (AP) -Four youths snwhed the windows of Aeroflot, the Soviet a~lin•, with roc:b Tu"day nllht juol before midniaht and left behind a poater in Hebrew and ~ uyina: "Let my people 10. Interlllltollal studull Day, to solidarliY with Jlldalan Ill the soviet Union." DAI LY PILOT ---........ Y.a.y .. ._ ()fl.t.HO!: COAIT PUM.llHIHG CCIM'ANY Jl:•'ltt•t N. 'N1.4 P~11ftftt ..,, l'llMltW J•tk I . C11•l1y Vkt ""1%0fftl '"' ~fl MIMtff lh'tMll ICtt .. il l!ftltf ThoMtt A. M11r,h!ftt M-elllt lfll ... ltich11 lll I'. Ni ll S.Ulft o,.,,,, c.vi.1y liillf C.111 Mn1: 11' w,~, ''' 11r..i H....,.,t 111,ll: ttll WU! ll~t ...,,_N '--f\IM lt.1Cfl1 m ,_, "'- "'""'11"'1911 IHtlll 1'111 l•Hft l~ltytnl 1111 C*-tt; JOJ Htr'lll II ,_.,,. 11: .. 1 CAIL'!' l'lLOT, wllll w~kll II U'Mllltl 1"" Nt•"'""-· II "'61"'*' ltltf nl.-f •-.,, 11'1 .,..rei. <Ill""'' 191' L......,.. •••all, N..,...1 '""'· c .. 11 M"t, """llfttlt~ htdl .,,,. ,_tall'I Vellty, tltftf w!lll 1wt ,.,.,,., lfHIMI. Ot-• c .. ii "'*11•""'9 C-1' ,.. .. 1r"' ,i1~1, ,,. 11 n11 ""' ltlM• l!W .• Nt.._1 lft(J'I, .,A lJI W•I ltJ lffl'tl, CMlt Mitt, , ...... 17141 •4Z·4lJ1 Cl_.,.. A'-"i•hlt ••2 ·5•11 S-Cl1a 1 .. 1 -AH n,,.,,_..,1 , .. .,.... "'1-4410 (;....... lf1', 4' ...... t ~II 'llO!ltll"'t C9IJlllMIJ• Nf -119!'1ft. 11!111!rtt:W." CfJWll) -lf9!' 9' ffWt11l-ll llertlll ,.,., tie r""1'fY(tl •llfltlll ~111 .,.,. 111i..i.n .. ..,...,., """· ........ cl,.. ...... 141 11 Pol•••• IMCll -.r.1 Cott• 1ri1-. ceur .. 1111, .a~r:ti• ..,. Ufli.r U.• '!'f.\!llty1 .,. '"'It 11.M IMfllfllYI '"Ultarr •n1Mot!l9M. H.ot mll'llftlf, I, • \ ,. Bt"eath of Uf e Six-year-old. J ohn Brock of Fullerton gets a reassuring smile from LA Rams quarterback Roman Gabriel, a member of the National Sparta Committee for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Current Cystic Fibrosis 0 Breath of Life" campaign for funds to combat children's lung diseases runs through Sept. 30. Laguna High's Caf ete1·ia Deficit .Rapped by Taylor The '2.500 deficit Incurred · by the Laguna Beach Schoola cafeteria service for the 1969-70 school year came under fire Tuesday ni&ht from Board President Larry Taylor. "If the cafeterias dan't break even by mid t.erm this year, I 1uggest we raite the prices !or me&la,'1 Taylor aaid. "lf our people went downtown they would have to pay Sl or more for a Iunch,~added.. Mult-luncbu...aUht elementary lcboola colt II cenls ~lua tu. At Ille h!ih ac~. Yfrioul I la - iteJDI art offered. I i'iottng the"deflclt, which wu footed by th< !liatrlct Taylor deciared, "EducaUon dollars lhoulda.'t feed anybody." The board cave approval to the caf~!Mla prices for the 1970-71 lcbool year. Students lunches at the elementary ~ will be 4i5 cents. A new plate Jurich will be offered at the high 1ehoo, priced at 50 cents. Tbe ·achool district has a policy that no one shall go hungry, even if he can't afford t.o pay for meals during the school day. If reasonable need can be demonstrated, the schools will pick up the tab for lunches. Trustees also lei.med that wton milk will sell for 10 cents thll year. Price or milk lut :tear was six cent!. The increase in price is due to loss of a federil oubsldy and a rate jump In milk. Greenbelt Plan Set for Hearing Before Council Hopes for a 520.acre Sycamore Hills greenbelt will fiower at the Laguna Beach City Council session tonight 11 proponents seek : -Council authorization of an appUcation to Hou.sing and Urban Development (HUD ) for a grant to help purchase the property. -A council resolution committing the city to seek necessary matching funds. The city portion of the funds are betng sought from private donations by The Citizens Committee for the Laguna Greenbelt. James Dilley, member of the committee. said a publicity campaign to seek funds for Ule greenbelt will begin this week . The asking price for the triangle of property Is $4 million. The owner is Great Lakes Properties Corporation. Tb e greenbelt committee has an 1immediate target of raising $500,000. The committee visualizes paying ror the property over a four-year period v;lth the federal government furnishing $2 million. The group feels that the area could be developed as a·golf ,g>ur1e preserving the heritage sycamore -trees. Funds from such a municipal golf course would then go toward helping pay off the city por. Uon of the commitment . The federal grant would be condlt1ona1 an recrea- tional developmtnt. Student Deadli ne Set Tht deadllne for new-student registration at Marco Forste r Junior High School will be Thursday. S\gnups for the hew pupils will be processed from 9 a,m. to noon and I lo 3:30 p.m. In lhe school admlnlstraUon b\lildina:. ( Food Services Supervlaor Marion GUTet said the price could return to six centa if the subaidy ii re-enacted by Co-. Trustees also learned that lunches will be available to students in all school cafeterias on cpening day of tcbool, Sept. II. DANIELS ••. that were oooducted before and after Mrt. Brown'• death -those rituaJJ tncluded the eating of the woman's fiuh and the cutting out of her heart and other vJtal or1ans. Mrs. Brown wu pulled from her car on Sand Canytin Road and driven to an Irvine orange grove where she was murdered. The Daniels woman has inaisted that she did oot see the woman until she saw the blanket-covered body in the back seat of her station wagon . Indicted for the two killings are Herman Hendricll: Taylor, 17, and Step~ C. Hurd, 20, both transients. Hurd face.a jury trial Nov. 9 and Taylor will go to court Sept. 8 for a hearing on a motion to reject that indictment. With him in court on that date will be Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse, 16, of Garden Grove, who is accused of the killing of Carlin. He will ask for dismissal of the murder charge. Orange ~ty Jnvestigators in the macabre Brown-Carlin case are seeking Ute extradition from Oregon o f Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney. 17, of Portland. He ls indicted for murder in the Brown killing. \ "l have looked very carefully at !he transcripts of this case and listened attentively to the arguments by attorneys for both sides,'' Judge Dreizen told the calm and apparently unmoved Mrs. ·nanlels before sentencing. "I can only come to one conclusion," he said. "Society needs to be protected from people like yOu." From Page I GUESTS ••• Lozano. and his wife, who live on Newport Beach'S Lido Isle . Lozano Is publisher of the inrluential Spanish language newspaper La Opinion, which la widely circulated I in California and the Southw!!st. Newly-elected State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter (R·Newport Beach) who is also chairman of the California Republican Central Committee, arld Mrs. Carpenter are also expceted to attend. Fonner Secretary of lhe Navy and one- time Irvine cOmpany pre$ident Charles Thomu and hi.I wife. of Corona del Mar, are scheduled to attend Uie festive evening. Th e President'• brother, Donald M. Nlxon: an~ 1'trs. Nlxon. will be there, along with Newport Btach merchant and civic leader O. W. "Dick" Richard and his wife. . Orange Coast DAlL Y PILOT publi sher Robert N. \\'eed and P.1rs. Weed ar~ co ;i.ttend , 1long with tht ·1ndustrlal\st Jolin fl.f~Leod and hls Yt'lf~ who mqintaln homes on Harbor lsl~nd and ln F311brook. - Other Orange Coast guest1 at the statt dinner will include San Clemente Mayor Walter F. Evans Jr., and Mrs. Evans. 7 .r • Ficker Sure of Win • ~[eparedn eJ.s is_.5.ecret of Cup V ictory . ' . J 1J ALMON LOCKABEY pettr """' ......., e.ii.r Wlnlllni 'Ille .;,ht to defend the ,_Amfrlca•a eup ts ~nd (!nly to actually detlnlltng the ll\Oll"btghly prized kudo In world yachting. It his been said that the skipper who !loses the 119-year old ixlttomless pitcher to a foreign challenger will have his head bolt~ to the pedestal In the New Yorll: Yacht Club trophy room where the CUp now stand3. Bill Ficke."r:' 42·year old Newport Beach architect, stands on the threshold af~r defeating three rivals who were ho~£ul of defending yachting's holy grail. After the tumultuous celebralion of being selected to defend the cup wu \'wt, I talbd to Ficker Ill the ll•inl room .Flcllar and hi• ere'! on lnlnpld wra of the beautiful .ramhllng home at obviously well-prepared during the long . , ' · . bot...wnmer -from June through ~ce s Neck where ,Jlt , and ti.is young August. As a result, Intrepid won the crew have spent ~wo tenalon filled right to defend the . CUp for the second months. cOnsecutlve lime. I asked him tt he had any qualm! about I uked Ficker to review the three meeting the Australians and Gretel JI months of trials leading up t.o l\14 defeat when the big show starts Sept. 15. Bill of ·Weatherly, Heritage, and finally thoughtfully rubbed his bronted bald Valiant -all manned by veterao pate. His pale blue eye.a were confident.. akippera and crews. Said he: "We treated the June series on Long -"I never warr)' about winning or losing. Island Sound as we thought it should be All J worrk about la being prepared. If treated -as a tune up series. We we are preapred we will win. If not we ·weren't really prepared here. The boat will lose. Yacht racing is a Kame in was launched a month late, and we bad which the crew which makes the fewest decided oot to get any new sails until mlstaku win!." after the June trials. We wanted to find out if some things we bad done on the From Pqe J boat were really practical, before wt got committed to things like $25,000 worth of new sails. We knew that it would hurt our performance in June, but we were •illlnc to take the knocks. TAX RATE .DROPS. • • also increasts in taxes imposed as follo"·s: -Harbor Dist rict do>A'n 3.82 cents from last year's rate of 8.1» cents to 4.83 cen ts: Flood Control do"'" 10,86 cents from 35.91 cenl.S to ~.05 cents: school institution rate up .t.J& cents. school n1odificalion aid rate of 8.3 cents eliminated entirety; de\·elopn'fent center rate up .14 cents. county general rate _up three cents. Other changes listed by Heim included an increase in sta1e<ol!ected in lie u ta-res of $366,000, an increase in county fees for clerk tilings of $220,000 due to a new state law, a decrease in lhe reserve set aside for disputed oil l"O)'alty taxes of $4.S million. The · school modificat ion rate which accounts for a 8.kent reduction is possible J>ecause County A s s e s s o r Andrew Alnshaw's percentage of i:l.8 percent of market value on real property is at or above the statewide average for the first time since 1962. Flood control is down JO cents because the special one-year JO-cent levy to repair damages cawed by the 1969 Hoods is now eliminated. controller's recommendat i o:is unanimously. During the morning session, board members wrestled for an hour over the dilemma of increasing the tax rate by 8.4 cents or cutting some $3 million out of the budget they had adopted several weeks ago. COMPROMISE RATE Supervisor David Baker suggested the "comprom'lse." rate of $1.70, reasoning that some Jat could and must be cut from the adopted general tax rate budget ol '215 million. Clarence E. White of the Oranp County Chamber ol C o m m e r c e governmental affairs committee urged that the board hold lhe llne on the 1969-70 general fund rate of Sl.67. _ "From the start we were pointing to August. We set up our ~ampalgn t.o be as good as possible in August We also continued tank testin;: right throua:h t.b.e June and July tri3ls., "Our performance against Valiant wasn't too impressive in June because of these things. We Weit lucky to come as close t.o them as we did -I believe it was four for Valiant and three for us. They were obviously better prepared. (See FICKER, Page %4) Ex-Dana~~ Dies in Figlit At Prison "You should do what business and industry have found they must do in these tight financial times," White argued. "If you eliminated some of the A former Dana Point man who was county employes your department heads convicted on grand theft charges in will find that they can and will get more productivity per m&11. That bas been Qrange County Superior Court has been industry's experience." killed in a fracas between inmates at a. Supervisor Robert Battin wanted the Department of corrections facility in entire $3 million deficit cut out of the central California. Orange Couaty Medical Center's budget SI% LESS TA.""<.ES saying, "The center is the cause of all Inmate Roberto Sandoval has been The 19.76 cent! tax reduction will mean our trouble. Why penalize other charged with murder in the knife slayin1 that the owner of a $24,000 home will be departments for what that institution of Benjamin Frederick Ramsey, 42, taxed $12 less this year than last. dida'l get ffom the ~te." formerly of 3364 El Encanto St., officers This is partially offset in many cases, at Plum Creek Conservation Center have however, by a 17.6 percent increase iri' _. reported. assessed valuations. Sch } T t Investigators said the killing occurred County Administrative Officer Robert 00 rUS ee8 Friday night and is still being probed. Thoma~ has the job of eliminating some . Ramsey was arrested in January, 19117 $1.9 million more in department budgets Will D. In Orange County and charged wl~ th• with in two weeks t.o meet the reduction I SCUSS theft of $1~,000 from the ~!ony Kitchen from the $1.7~ cent rate supervisors restaurant m San_ Juan Capistrano where thought they were going to have to levy R • ti• he worked as assistant manager. and_the IL70 rale-,lhey-arbitrarily-eorgamza. Oll-Rl!msey.Jateicadmilted.thach .. took tho- established ln the Tuesday morning cash and cheeks over the qtr1sbnas session. 1.. Trustees of the San J o 1 q u I n weekend and was sentenced on the grand Possibili.,t.ies for achieving the $1.9 Elementary School District will discuss theft count by Judge Byron K. McMillan. million reduction include the elimination their administrative reorganization plan He was o_rdered to repay the money over of a $1 million budget item set aside for at tonight's 7 o'clocll: meeting at Irvine a five year term. beach acquisition, and the elimination of School. $900,000 from various d e p a r t m e n t The plan, which was prepared by the budgets. firm of Davis, MacConnell, Ralston --IQIIer Unknown In Kansas Death The $1.75 rate was based on no cuis in Dlvl9lon of Westinghouse Le a r n I n g department budgets and the absorption of Corporation at a cost of $35,000, has been a $J million loss of slate revenues from formally accepted but has not yet been Medical allotments from the state. adopted. DELINQUENCY ALLOWANCE Heim also told the supervisors that the budget inc luded a four p e r c e " t delinquency allowance {estimate of taxes levled which will not be paid ;); and $16.1 milllon to be held in reserve because. of the disputed tax rate on Irvine Company and othe r properties in the Upper Newport Bay. County Counsel Adrian Kuyper and }finshaw do "°t agree on the assessment procedures in that area and the issue will have to be eventually settled in the courts. Heim concluded his recommendations by saying, "Y04-(the supervisors) should be very proud of you r accomplishment in reducing the overall property tax of the county by almost 20 cents." The supervisors heaved a great sigh or relief and appro~d all of the auditor· Wyle~ lncaflex 8124 CONVENIENT TERMS BANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE If the plan 19 put Into eUect as it was written, the district wlll be hiring this year a director of facilities plannina and a director of construction, maintenance alld operation who would both serve under the assistant superintendent for administrative servlces. At the present the superintendent Lil in charge of both con1truction and its supervision. He wnuld then be released t.o do more direct work with the schools in his district. The plan also calls for the removal of the personnel department from under the supervision of the assistant superintendent for educational purposes and It!: placement under the direction of the superintendent. The reorganization plan outltnes when additional admlnlstrators should be hired as the district grows and provides a lime table for carrying oot the plan. LA WRENt:E. KllJl. (UPI) -Harry Nichols Rice, 18, was shot and killed July 20 du,ring a confrontation between police and college aged youths a block from the Kansas University campus. Investigating authorities said they could not determine whether Rice was shot by police or by a sniper. At the Ume, Rice's father said the bullet wound in his son was too small to have come from a police weapon. but a witness said he saw a policeman fire at Rice. County Coroner Dr. James Reed instructed a six.man jury to determine when Rice died, how he died, who killed him and if the 'slaying was committed with criminal intent. The jury listened to 22 witnesses Tuesday and then said unanimously it dld not know who killed the Kansas University student. A•ost unusual· watch. • Marks time on 24 Ii.our system. A nece11ity for anyone who lrovelt, 1he p1Uilory, or "'!" who pri1e thti unu11,1ol. Watch dlal 1howt \In 2' h01Jr1, ln- steod of ju.I 12. Ruggedly good looking. P The lncofl ea balonce wheel is ;uatont~ a;alntf shoclt fOf th1 IJfe of th• watch or replaced fr•• If evtir broken. GUG1 an1eed waterproof as long os the cryttol Is intact, e•nuin• Wyl..-potll Ultd. H YEARS IN SAME LOCATION PHONE 548.J<OI • • I I I I 1 I I ( ' t ' r I 0 ' I 0 l 0 I ! ' ii • b 0 c u • . -~--~-''-------"..c~---=------------.:.---- • Golfer of Year Award1 Vice President Spiro Agne\v, in the San Clemente \Vhite House after a !iVe-nation tour of Asia. ex· amines a gift golf ball the President ~ave him '"ith the suggestion that Agnew relax on the Jinks after his Jong trip. Nixon quipped that Ag?iew should use the ball only for putting practice. referring to a drive by .the vice~president that hit golf pro Doug Saunders in the head recentJY. Fred St~ufer Will Take Music Post Laginia Beach Unifirui §chool Distric t Trustees Tuesday night gave their blessings to the employment of Freder· ick Stoufer, who will now head the music department at"Laguna Beach High Schciol. Stoufer, a teaching intern from Chapman College, wilWill the vacancy Jeftt by the firing of Jack Krefting, who had conducted the music program Si'(1ce 1968. ''Mr Stoufer comes to us with extreme· Jy high recommendations," Superinten- dent William Ullom told the board. Sloufer will conduct the high school music program, along with the chorale marching band, and will work with the choral readers. -stoa1er'"""ll11rl€d rourpopillar church music groups in Orange County, taught al California State College jilt Fullerton and been on the Chapman College "World Laguna Council to Decide On Two Drainage Projects Jn an attempt to lure Orange County Oood control funds for two long-pending Laguna Beach drainage projects, lhe city staff has suggested that area residents might contribute 25 percent o( the cost. The projects on which City Council approval is sought tonight are the Boa\ Canyon Storm Drain and Canyon Acres Drive. The 1969 cost estimate for Boat Canyon improvements was $103,700. The estimate for Canyon Acres was $231,600. If rouncilmen agrooT they would authorize applications seeking to be included in Orange County Flood Control District projects for 1971·72. Milo K. Keith, acting city engineer, suggested that assessment districts could be formed so that local residents would contribute approximately 25 percent of the cost of each project. -1n...mosL..assessme.nL.disU'ic1s....apnroval is needed by 50 percent or more of the residents. However, this is not necessary when health officers state there is a need to protect public health and safety. Orange County Flood Control Dis.lrict would approve funding of the projects but said they may be more apt to if financial assistance from assessment districts is forthcoming. it was not offerea in earlier applicatiions. The last major drainage project of the city, Park Avenue-Sleepy Hollow, caused persistent property owner protests. The county supplied $100,000 toward the project that came to more than $400,000 and supplied survey. inspection and maintenance. Many assessed property owners maintained they received little or no benefit from the assessment levied on their property. That assessment district was launched by means of the County Health Officer declaring it a necessity. Tenmstltampion 1'o Def end Title Busy Night For CQuncil ., In Laguna . Laguna Beach cltY courteilmen tonight will hear of many lhings, of dogs, buses. taxes; litter, _Ind even Main Beach plaMing. 'fhe·coubcil rrequently receives citiz('n communicatkin ctivering a b r o a d spectrum of topics. The \Vednesday meeting ls no exception. C. J. Willhoff of 5.35 High Drive, for Instance, admonishes the cOuncil about high spending and hlgh taxes. "The t.axpayers art fed up with the reckless spending tactics or local school boards and city government," the letter states. "Last year the city incf"eased the tax rate from $L65 to $1 .93 -the highest in the ·county -to satisfy the city manager's quest for ex.pansion and new unnecessary positions. !\tr. Goldberg was apposed to some of these, but the Influence and charm or Mr. Wheaton (then City Manager James Wheaton) triumphed over his better judgment." ·Wlllhoff continues his attack, charging, "The city hall b floundering In its own fat ..• it stands to reason that certain city departments be consolidated. Some of those eliminated may be personal friends or customers of your respective businesses but . . • Another note to the council, signed by J . Hunt (with no address or letterhead) states: "Laguna is fast deteriorating into a sort of honky.tonk town . The streets are cluttered with noisy demonstrators and deplorable characters ... and the beaches are Ol{.errun with dogs. " .•• dogs should certainly be prohibited from our beaches." L Lag11nagrl11s "WELL, WE'VE COME .•. " "Well, We've Come .•• Owners Level Gripe DAILY "LOT lf • ·----.... - Laguna Council facing Petition Over Parking "Skateboards a~ still roaring past my Laguna Beach cily councilman "'iii !he Art Center area on Pacific Coast shop daily. They are dangerous and take up the city's r)arklng shortage in the Highway, asking for additional parkln& extremely noisy. Chanting, drum beating. south end of town at tonight's meeting. meters on streets in the area. cymbal clattering people should be Councilmen have received a letter and Specifically, the letter requesl.S, •'that , prohibited. I have heard many petition signed by 21 property owners at additional parking met~rs be placed . businessmen complain bitterly about this along the north side of Glenneyre Street condition. from Calliope Street to Mountain Rold, Concluding. Hunt &lated, "Is Laguna C • t F ill and along t.1ountain Road from . £or decent people, or indecent, is it for ampSl eS 1 l;lenneyre Sreet to the ocean front along beauty and cleanllness or litter, are the both sides. 'where curbs are established." be11ches for dogs or people?" Fo1· Labor· Day City planner Alvln"'O. Autry, in r memo Municipal buses and th e steep hill to the council. says the request for between Coast Highway and lliUcrest i'ldditional meters should be considettd- Drive is subject of a letter from Mrs. Labor Oily weekend campers without "after thorough evaluation of all criteria :P.farguerite Owings Holter. rese.rvaUons al a state park should take (curb , gutter. sidewalks, ctc .. l ... " "! used the bus for many years, but advantage or private campgrounds, ac-Soon. Coast Hlgflway will lose 50 have found the hill from the Boulevard to cording to State Parkii; Director William parking spaces in the Southern ·area, .as Hillcrtst too steep, so I use a taxi." P. Mott. left turn pockets are put in at Cress "I would recommend that th e For the pa'.'il several yea rs, ~Iott said, Strttt. lbu!!) route be changed so that the north lhe deniand for outdoor . recreation r..1a11y or these parking spaces now bound bus conlinued on Monterey across fa cilities in the slate has been ihcreasing. sorve the Art Cenier, the letter states. Boat Canyon onto Hillcrest to LeDroil, "It was only a matter of time unlil we Parking problems in the southern then south to the Highway," her lette r reached lhe saturation point," he said, section, may also be reJlledied u plan~ iuggest1. "and it loo~s Ilk~ lh\1 Labor Day progress for a p&rkln1 1trUcturt in Iha\. Taking not.e of the fact that Councilman "'eekend will be It. Every slate park area. A parking district Is now being Peter Ostrander and PI an n in g campsite in the slate will probably be OC· formed_,_ and has set sights on a parking- Ccmmlssloner-James~Schmiti "are cupied during that period ." Jot to be built between Mountain and proceeding with studies for develoJP1tn1 ''Unles.s a cani.per has an advance Calliope Streets, ()n the north aide o[ of the Main Stach," the Citizens' Town he added; 0 h1s chllnces of ftndln g a spot GJenney re Street up to the alley. ._ Planning Association recommends an reservation at a state park camp11round, ·• HoweVer, plans are stilJ in the Initial . Campus Afloat." . Stoufer has already started "'Ork on this year's music program. He has sent out applications for students interested in participating in lhe high school program and "is a real hustler y.·hen it comes to mu sic." Or. Ullom told the board. -"The assessment district could be formed by the Health Officer presenting a Oood ha1.ard letter to the council," Keith states in a memo to councilmen. economic feaslbillty study of the beach. at one are pretty slim." stages. Lake Forest children who like to swing lr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. Mikels, Jackson Team Gets Title- Fighting their 'vay to the top, the Laguna learn of Dan Mikels and r..1ike JIC].;son went on to win the top spot. in the 1st Annual Laguna Beach "A'' Volleyball Tournament .., The tourney was played on 1hc jiain Beach volleyball courts during the weekend. Other Art Colony volleyball huffs y.·ent on lo place in the tournament.' Fourth place lrophy went lo Ton1 Lingo and Bob Henderson. Dale Shoslrom and Kenny Kress tied for fifth place with Nick Woodbury and Lynn Watkins. Finish ing seventh were Burr Smith and Dennis Miller. ~le notes that the two projects have previously been subrri.itted-each year for four years-with no action. "If the council agrees with contribution through assessment district proceedings and we can so state in our report, it is anticipated that more f a v o r ab I e: consideration will be given by the committee to these two projects," Keith y,·rote. Joseph Sweany, acting city manager, said the Boat Canyon project would involve drainage facilities from Boat Canyon at Pacific Coast Highway to the ocean at Fisherman's Cove. Boal Ca nyon Shopping Center y,•oul d not be assessed for the improvements. S'"cany said. He said there is an adequate storm drain line under the shopping center and Riddle Field already. It is below coast highway that drainage is inadequate. He said there is an undersized storm drain, a bottleneck, • built on private property without public easement. The canyon Area project would be. from the intercept of natural drainage at Canyon Acres down to the Laguna Channel, Sweany said. He said it is problematic y,·hether the a l"'lniS racquet at" invited to join a tennis round -robin al the Beach and Tennis Club. Games are played every ~1onday on the club's courts. Girls of all ages stage their co11tests at 10 a.m. Boys 10 and under meet their opponents at It a.m. and boys 11 and over play at noon. Sign up In the club office for the weekly play. A tournament will take place later this month. Truck Driver Tells Elephants to Heel ALTON, Ill (AP) -Three elephants 're re chained at the Gulf, Mobile &. Ohio Railroad &talion Tuesday after an accident which gave them a few minutes' freedom. Police just east of St. Louis said a truck driver for the King Bros. Circus drove his vehicle· under a low clearance bridge Monday night, the back door flew open and out went the elephants. The trainer shouted w h a t e v e r command one gives fleeing elephants and their freedom was over. PLATES Figl1ting SMOG You Pay 'Your Money and You Take-Your Choice By PATRJCI\ BOYLE 01 11111 O.llY ,iltt 11•11 l about 200.000 applications. Brow11 noted_. which would amount to about two percent of lhc 10 million motorists in California, guidelines. Our :lraJilion . Dad's style ••• junior's toughness • BUSTER BROWN. ~ - Value and Fit a •• CLASS.TIMI CLASSIC WITH HEAVENLY FIT IN EYHY STV I The Department of Motor Nehiclcs ' todav finds ii.self thrust into th rote or CENSOR by Gov. Reagan's recent signing of the personalized license plate bilL He said motorists in f\1assaehu setts and New York have similar opportunities and his investigations of lhose 'stat.cs sho...,'ed that three percent availed themselves of the option, He said thal one re:qucsl !hat may be rejected is FRESNO, which could be inlerpteted 'lo give the vehicle official sta_tus, The Je gislat.ion. authored by Sen. f\1ilton I .~1arks (R-San Francisco). provides that for an extra S25. a car owner can get a license plate ~·ith almost any combination of IC'tters or numerals on It . The revenue \\'ill be used for s1mg control and other programs to protect the environment. Ho,,·e\•er. the task of censoring objectionable p~atcs has been left up to the nr..1v. But there ha\•e been \'ery few objection.'! so f11r. according to Elmer Brown, deputy registr ar of thl:, O~tV In Sacramento. ' "We have had none to date. that are objectionable," Brown said in a telephone intcrvie"" lie said lh8l of the JOO or sn 11ppllcallons rccri\'ed so far. there have been a few for-l?EACE. one for TRIAi., one for LA\V, a'nd. many number-letter combinations that he did rt0t · C\'Cn understand. The plate program is expected ~o drnw Out of the $25 dollar fee , he said, $20 ~·ill go for anti-pollution while lhL remaining $5 \vill be used to make and se nd out the plates. The plates will continue lo be manufactured by lhc inmates at Folsom Prison and the first ones will not be in . !he mail to the applic1nts until November. One dray,·back of the late delivery, he said, "'as lhat the owAer will have lo pay an additiona1 $10 lo have his registratio11 renewed in Jan uary. making the new J'lales only valid for about two months. Etth year . the applicant will have to pay an additional $10 for renewal of the plate,;, and if he transfers the Plates to another vehicle. he will have to pay a $12 charge. These runds wlll also go lo fighl pollullo11. Aro'''" !laid that Since nn obje<:lionable requests for pla tes have bem rectived, !he dcp~rtment has not i et up any He said that such combination!i as FBI or CHP were out, and that the department would probably nol allow USNAVY or USARMY because they, too, would implv 'ticial status. .... Names \\'OUld probably not be rejected, Dro~·n said, evea if they arc unusua l. "\Ve received a letter from ·a man natiied Donald Fink the other day,'' he ,said, "and we thought he was going to 'have FI NK on his plates. But we read the letler and he wanted DON." Brown said that any d 11 p 1 i ca t e at pplicalions received until Sept. 22 would be filled by lottery. After that date, the plates would be given out 1on a "first. come, firsl·served" basis. "We have received a lot or applications rer PEACE so far," Brown said. "but lht:e will bro more thar1 one · PEACE. Since it is only a flve letter word, it c11 n be preced~d or rollo\\'ed by a number. So lh :-e are 20 po~slt-'-... •,··~'l"nll." \\!Ith all of the poStilble ~·ords to choo~ from, Brovrn·did not think that anyone would choose VANITY. ' FREE Wllh ••ory pair of chlWr .. 's school .IMn, yow •ery ew• COMPLITI PINCIL IOX. OUR FASHION ISLAND STORE OPEN SUN, SEPT. 6TH FROM ll TO 5 30 FASHION ISLAND e NEWPORT BEACH e WESTCLIFF PLAZA . , I ·. 4 OAIL Y PILOT 'Ntdntsday, Stpttmbrr 2, 1970 Authorities are investigating the case of the slair-climb!ng mules in Des Moines, Iowa. A witness said somebody drove four mules and a wagon up and down the steps of the Grimes Slate Office building during the annual Iowa State Fair parade through downtown Aug. 20. Authorities investigated, and con- cluded it did occur -the steps are badly chipped. • TrmJ)frature1 were in the 80'1 and 90'1 oa the little flakes fell, covering tveTJlthing with a thin blanket of white. It wasn't mow. Somebo<(ft· forgot to cover the du.rt coft.trol dtvtce1 . at the Col· gate Palm.olive plant, in Clark$· ville /'nd. A rainshower fell, suds flowed in the streets and "soay> balls" rost: and /ell on Clarks· ville. ' • Senators Urge Viet \ Ceasefire .... WASHINGTON (UBI) -A blpartisBI appeal urging Presldf'.nt Nixon to propose a standstill cease-fire th r o u g h o u t Vietnam is the Senate's latest effort to hasten the pW!oul of U.S. lrooP9 lrom Indochina. 'lbe. appeal, ia the form of a letter to Nixon at the Western White House in 5an Clemente, suggested th~ withdrawal of all foreign military force'! from Vietnam wilhin a specified time '8!1er the cease- fire goes Into ettecl The letter was made public Tuesday only hours alter the Senate dtife1ted, 55 to 39, an effort to set Feb. 29, 197% as a deadline for Ndon to bring home all American troopa from Indochina. Senate Republicaa Leader Hugh Scott and Sen. Henry M. Jackson CD·Wash. ), who orijinated the letter, denied It' was a trial balloon floated on behalf of the Nixon Administration. Asked about the tlmlns of lhe letter, Scott and Jackaoh Wd they waited until the j<End ol the war" amendment was defeated so it would JtOt be interpreted as an attempt to divert votes. Scott, n0tmg the chJef negotiators for both skies are in Paris, said "It was a good time to stir something up." The letter was signed by 14 Senators, including Democratic Leader 1.1 t k e Mansfield. The sponsors covered the entire poliUcal spectrum of the Senate. • • • ' ~· • Tlareat to Seeurit111 -. Israel Considers " I Action 1on Bases !Irle!; •larmed •t wl!Jl 11 ....tden • major threat to Ill oecurtty, Ill wioully COllllderlllC taking •ctlon • I • I n I t Egyptian mlulle buel which It ~ have been1moved clOlel' to the Sues Canal In vlolaUon ol tbe ceaae-Ore, dlplomaUc sources said today in Jeruaale:m. The llOUl'Ce:I said Dt:feDM I Minllter Moohe Day'" feels the United Stata bu failed Ill Ill obllg•tlon u tbe lnstlg•tor and negotiator ol Ille ceue-flre and that i,ree1 must be rr..o to take ""1on to wevent any further vkilationl. Israeli newspapen Aid totjJY Prime Mlnllter Gold• Meir told • meeting of labor memben ol Perllament Tuetday that a situation may arise under which IJrael may be compelled to take action against the SAM 2 buel. The SAM2s ore high a!Utude l\uJslan-bulll mblllu. Newspapers carrying the "1ction" "'Port Included , The Jeruaalem Posl Nebraska Cons Hold Two Guards, Press Demands LINCOLN, Neb. (UPI ) -Thirteen maximum security prisoners held two guard3: bolt.age today and officials at the Nebraska State Penitentiary said the ringleader or the rebellion Is a man serving tw9 terms for murder. Huretz, Davar and Al Hamlsbmar. The: meetlng was teaet and there were no direct qiiotes lrom Mn. Meir. There was no hint u to what any "action" might be put in the put llrael bu bit the m!aile ba!el with Pb'"tom jell and bal uted helloopter·borne wault troops agalnlt ndar iiues. Since then Ru181a seot Ill SAM3 mllsilea which '"' uaed at low a!U-to protect the SAM21. Any llraell action qalnlt the mbllle slte. would end the ~ay ce-'lr• which began cii Aug. 7. In the meantime, there were indications from both Israel and Egypt that the New York peace talb wi>uld be cut oU before they really · begin. In Jeruaalem, an llraell cabloet meeting failed 'l\lesday to decide on wfien to send ambasudor Yooef Tekoah back to New York. And In New York, the Egyptian ambuaador to U.. United NaUons indicated Egypt might not want to continue the peace Wb after the to- day truce ends. Any decision by Israel to take act.ion against the missile 1ltes would r~preaent a victory for Dayaa who was reported threateiB!Jg to resign if peace .talks begin under the threat of Egyptian mlsslles. Diplomatic sources said he had the IUpPorl of Mn. Meir In his tough stand. The cabinet was .said to have agreed unanimously on the gravity of the missiles crisis but that the less hawkish members -Foreigbn Minister Abba Eban and Deputy Premier Yigal Allon - shied at action to counteract the buildup. U.S. Rep. Robert Taft Jr., J!,Obio, has decided to Ignore a mimeogra- phed letter for financial aid. The letter asked the Republican senator- ial nominee to contribute to the campaign of his qpponent, Deml)o crat Howard M. Metzenbaum. • • Fair goers wbisUed and applaud-* * * Cambodia Calls VIETNAMESE TROOPS HOLD EARS AS MORTAR FIRES Fire at Support Bas• O'Re il ly Aimed at Suspected Red Positions Warden Jdaurice Sigler said the prison gates would not be opened to get the guards released . "Wbe.n a man comes to work here," Siller said, "he ls told he may be taken' hostage.· These gates will not be opened Reports that Egypt mi~ht not want to extend the 91).day cease-fire came from the United Nations where Ambassador Hassan El·Zayyat met with U . N . Mediator Gwmar V. Jarring T\Jesday and indicated Egypt might not want to tali: peace when the truce lapses Nov. 5. ~ ed Monday at shai;ely American film "star" Lorr•ine lorrhner as she opened the Frimley fair in Eng- land - But then they came in for a shock. Alter judging the fair queen corD.petition, Lorraine took: oU her bloi:ide wi.it and dark glasses to reveal local hairdresser Trixie Hall. She .agreed to the hoax when lair organizers failed to get a real For Air Support for any hostage -even me." . Youth Held By PollC. e The guanls were identified .. Lt. Vance B. Schrader, 49, and Erwin PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Cambodian Siemens, 53. Sigler said the prisoners called in air strikes and artJllery Tuesday ..._.l were peaceful during the night and Israeli political sourres said .support was growing in the cabinet for the Dayan viewpoint and that ·he would have majority support in Sunday'• regular cabinet meeting. In last Sunday's meeting, the Eban-Allon aide bad majority support, they said. night against a mountainside Buddhist 1 Th 'S p l B las allowed Schrader and Siemens to sleep. pagoda turned Into a gun position by the n ree . t au , ts Sigler said the prisoner who captured Viet Cong, u.. Cambodian command aalcl • Schrader and ·Siemens was identified es Um"ted C1"t1"zens Now today. Charles McClelland, 49, who Is serving star. • Maj. Am Rong, Cambodian IntormaUon two life terms, for murder. The Republican senatorial candi· orficer, said the decision to fire on the ST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI) -Police today said he believed there was a connection The warden said the Pr tr; oner s Legal Party in SC date for Greenwich, CoM. received pagoda was reached as part of efforts held 8 youth who received minor injuries between Tuesday'3 bombings and the one presented seven demands which must be a bipart assist Monday and it was ~~~ .. ~e 3:al:;a~ ~mmmi:i~ a~:~ j n the first of three explosions that came atH~arar~·~e would ~ot go into details ~~ be~:e ":s~:~: 8~e ~~eta!':. H~ pr:=~~Y ;~ tf'~ted-Clt~ri: like pennies from heaven. A large estimated 1,2Cf troops around Srang, is within 38 minutes of one another in until charger; were filed . administration of the maximum Security party became South Carolina's fourth banner plugging Repubffc•n Lowell miles south of Phnom Penh. Downtown St. Paul Tuesday. Two other One wtbless to the ei:plasion at ward, where McClelland · and the others officially recognized political P •rt Y P. Welcktr for the Senate fell from '"lbe more reinforcements they send men were injured. Burlington Northern, Jim Hafiz, a have been confined. Tuesday. The secretary of state certified the ~il end of a p~ane ove~ Long~, the_ 'more we c~ kill and the be1~1way __ Pollce___would_not_aay_ whether__ the _ ~k1!Jg lot mana~~er across ~e street, Sigler said the demands a r e it after determining that its petltlona had [Slana Sound near Greenwtcli on to Ell UiiilfSWttti air aniilrtnlery, Am unidentified youth bad been charged. He saia "!"Knew right away-1t was a unreasonable. ·11We have 1trict rules in the required 10,000 siptwu of Sunday. , . Rong said. told aUthorities he was passing the site of dynamite ei:plos!on. Yo~ coul~ s~ell il" the segregation ward," he uid. "These registered voters. Weicker11 campaign headquarters The U.~. Command. tn Salgon said thi first eiplosion _a warehouse on 2nd But police said the mvest1gat1on was men are usually there only a few day• The other parties In the atate art the received a telephone call Monday today nearly toOO ~erican troops from Street near the st. Paul . Dispatch and still under "'.'~Y "to determine µie ~rigin and we don't want them to like It. That'• Democrat, Republican, and the frol\1 Ted Darasb of stanford. Da~ two infantry outI1ts stationed around Pioneer Press _ when the blast and compQ61tion of the explosions. why rigid handling is necessary." Independent party. rash said he was cruising·in a boat S~ will be withdrawn from South «:curred, slJgbUy injuring rum. 0---..:..c:..:_ __ _:_......: _____ ......:'--=----=-----'------'---'-------- on the sound when he saw the Vietnam by Oct. 16 as part of the Nl%cm Weicker banner floating down Sun. Administration's Phase vt pullout. '!he other two blasts occurr~d 38 day. He hauled in the banner and Informed military sources s a 1 d, minutes later. One ,was at the Burhn~ton said it-was drying on his front lawn. however, the entire complement of the Northern Railways .d~wntowo office, "By the way," Darash told Weick· two unil.s wouJd be withdrawn number1,.,, where two men were mJured. The other --·-• IO 000 men ... was placed beside pipes connecting two er's office, "I'm a Democrat." 4'VIUN • ' · 17,00Q..gallon petroleum storage tanks at a GuU Oil Co. Munlcip•I Jud~ John Charnock The most serious of the blasts was the wears a Spiro A~new watch but be Soviet Cholera 1ailway offices, but authorities said the doesn't want everyone to know bomb at Gulf Oil could have blown up the about il At the conclusion of a busy entire facility. Instead, it went off under day Wednesday in Charleston,. w. Cases Treated an electrical circuit and merely bent Va. Chamock was seen strapping some pipes. the watch on bis wrist. A friend MOSCOW (AP) _ Cholera cues In Donald ~filler, 42, was hospitalized in lnquired why be didn't wear the fair condition and George Peters, 34, wa! watch in oPen court. "I'm afraid if three eouthern Soviet cities are being treated and released after the explosion [ wear it in the courtroom it might treated succtasfully and there ii no sip at the railway offices. or the disease spreading in the Soviet 1 l · t D • prejudice some of my decisions," n an exp os1on a ayton s department lhe judge said. Union, Deputy Health Minister Ignaty B. store Aug. 22 one woman was seriously • Avetik said today. injured. Police recovered an unexploded He said "prev,enUve and antiepidemlc" bomb t o yt • t th t · Seven •olls of co~ wi're turned a a on s a a tune. • .,.,.... measures are still ht force b1 the IOUth St p I II ~· f R" h RP in a Pacific Gas & Electric Co. but 6'tbe situation ls now stabllbed and · au po ce \-iue IC ard Rowan parking lot in Chico, Calif. along the centers of the disease have been with a note from a repentant but localized and, for all pr1ctlcal purposes, eonfused thie'f. 111 am sorry I stole ellmlllated." Tank.er Runs Aground this Wire," the note read. ••1 d~d· He did not say if any of the Soviet td that the best thirill? to do was to cases have died or how many cases have return it which I have proceeded to been recorded. lo." He si~ned tt: 11The Mistake The cities named by AveUk were Maker." PG&E officials said the Odessa. on the Black Sea, Kerch, on the wire was not stolen from them. Crimean Peninsula , and Astrakhan, fbey don't even illia that kind. wbere the outbreak started. TAIPEI (AP) -The 34 ,760-ton Norwegian tanker Kongsvang r a n agrou nd today on rocks near Green Island, 15 miles off eastern Formosa. The ship was empty, on her way to the Persian Gulf, and her owners said none of the 40 crewmen was hurt. Mercury Ranges ~O Degrees Des ert Highs of 113 Offset by New Low 34 in East A 1'"911: ol moallr ~ I011lh••~ (•tll-1• ,,,.,_. •ltll 11111\f .i!d rntmlrW """ Cloudt 11111 fot c1111t111utd '9d1r 1111111 l11Cr.tlftf 0111rutt 11\d 111111 """"'''"'!'ii w ...... Hlrr 1v11tllh11 Prnllllld -Lot AllHI• Ind \llCl~lf'l'1 Ml ~1let1h "'mfftf ,...,,., tM CCMllltl fol 111d clolHll ll""" w n1 llllll•lllill 1111 lftClfnll'lt tioura. TM .....r1c111111 lllfll tOllll., •1• t5 1!1111 ftM l(MI tonltM •J. ! 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" IS S1 ,OJ n " n ., u .. n " !Ill ~ .01 " . ~ " in n 1.• " w " ... ,, n a.02 •s 1s 101 '' .... N 11 ,DI " q n w 11 n .ii " " .... .. ~ " .. n q lOt 11 " .. •• • JI •• " ... .. ,, .... 15 41 ., " ·ti ,,, ., ... ~ " ... 111 ~ " .. Permanent press and electric dryers do your ironing for you. These days you ~::::::==~~~~~~~~~~ hardly need an iron. electric dry- ers come out way ahead-because Practiailly all clothing and most household linens are available in pennanent press. But pennanent pres_s fabrics only stay wiirlkle-free if they're dried properly.And that's where an electric dryer comes in. The new electric dryers with permanent p ress cycles are pro- grammed to give just the right amountofheatforthe right amount of time. And they gently fluff up the fibers in your pennanent press fabrics. Compared with gas dryers, they're flameless and odorless-and cost up to $30.00 less. .If you live in a Medallion Home you already know the ad- vantages of electric living. But if you're no.t yet drying electrically, why not get an electric dryer now. All you have to do is plug it in. Let permanent press and an electric dryer do your ironing for you. See your appli- ance dealer today. · -1"1:: Southern California Edison .::J~ Permanent p~ clothes live better electrically. ( • • I . " in A • to c: f ] j co gu Sa! ab I l0< St• ch RiJ pir "" • lei Le -lei , Aq cl~ · rer: am fen I sta peo on pre l • Fe no> err est eai of • I y .. um I pijl I mu ... yei m• US< rig I 8C' esl re• or " ga in< •I< " be ex cit cl< se• Po I coo coo w~ I ev. in\ • ' .. ' • • San Clemente ~ Today's Flnal Capistrano.· EDITION N.Y. Stoep VOL. 63, NO. 210, 4 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEONESDA Y, SEPTEMBER '2·, '1970 TEN CENTS . Nixo.Q Weigh~ Midea~t C~isis in San· Clemente· By RICHARD P. NALL Of .. n.llt' "'llf '"" Jeopardited by R u s s l a n mlssle movement, Middle East peace talks hupg in the balance today as the Ni1on Adminstratlon pondered Its neJt move. The President continued lo meet with top advisers in an all-day session at;San ... , Clemente today after decidin& to pass !>rt ' Public Use Of Beach Action Due? Laguna Beach councilmen tonighi will consider legal actiOn that w o u J' d gua rantee future public right to use sandy portions of privately owned beach abov:e the mean high tide line. In a 8-h·page report that spells out local and regional ramifications or a State Supreme .. Court decision that changed the law, City Attorney Jack J. Rimel estimates that cost to the city in piMing down recreational beach righb could' be $50,000 or considerably more. Accompanying Rimel's report is a Jetter from the Laguna Beach Civic Leaguf urging the city to take immedl1te • -legal action to aUlrm public righta to the ne ~tter from 1eque Preside:nt Anthony Demetriades slalfl also that the city liiould not ptnnlt emstnlction of · fences i>r other structures on any beach and shoUtd have ezisting structures and fences removed. Rimel has already advised the city staff that they shouJd not issue any more permits for improvements or structures on the sandy areas of ocean front property. · Jn reviewing the far-reaching eflect of a State Supreme Court decision in February. Rimel states, "The rules are now changed, the burden of proof has, in effect been shilted to the owner, and the establishment of public recreational easements along the beaches on the basis of implied dedication has now become a ality." If privately owned land has been used )y the general public for a number of 'years without speeial pennlssion there Is, \mder the decision, implied dedication to public use. Rimel noted. however, that ea ch case must be determined individually in accordance with facts presented. Five years publi c use without the owner making a significant right to stop that a trip to the American Legion Convention in troubled Portland. The U.S. peace-keeping role became more difficult with introductiOh of pliotographic proof that the cease-fire agreemenLwhlch began Aug. 7 has been violated by movement of SAM missle sites closer to the Suez Canal.. - The U.S. in inltlatin& the 9(1..day cease:--.. • Baines• Trip lite had guaranteed Israel it would not suffer a military disadvanlage in accepting. 'fop MideaSt advisors met with lhe President Tuesday to ponder the situation and the U.S. response while the ' Israeli cabinet fretted. ~dmlnistration prospects over its Indochina policy were brighter, however, after the Senate voted 55 to 39 defeat for an amendment to forct withdrawal of U.S. troops from lndochlna by Dec. 31, 1971 ~ Presidential Press Seer~tary Ronald Ziegler said Nixon was "pleased with the overwhelming victory." He reiteraJ.ed ~e President's statements that it Is a nece.sslty . to maintain flexibility in Southeast Asia. Vice Prtsldent Spifti ~gnew Tuesday from the llwn of the Western White House said Cambodia now has ai least a • liihting chance for 1urviVal. He stressed that Southeast Asian allies will need both n;iilltary and economk: aid for an indefinite period after wllhdrawal of U.S. troops. Agne\f_praised acceptance of the Nixon Doctrine by Southeast Asian allies. · The vice president flew to the LBJ Ranch near Johnson City, Tex. to brief former President Lyndon B. Johnson on bis five-nation ·Aslan tour. Both are to attend the Thursday r;tate dinner at the Hotel Del Coronado for Mexican President Gustavo Dia:i: Ordaz. oman Waitresses Win Battle For Dinner By JOHN VALTERZA Of 1111 DllllJ ~lief Stiff It took a letter to the leaders of the women's liberation movement to insure a victory for SO waitresses at a posh San Die go hotel who will break White House tradition Thursday night and help serve Presiden t Nixon and his 600 guests. The waitresses, livid at being told by their bosses that men would take over their jobs Thursday .night, took the spotlight away from Cambodia, lhe Middle East and even Spif1t A.anew Tuelday ~ White House. aide1 fnd aa im ssioned ';clarification." of b est Cl.ache or the President'' cwtent working v•calion in Sari Clemente. And ~ tOrneUmes sathing and plaintive clarification ol 1.the Hotel Del Coronado HauJe domlnaled Tuesdly's press briefing. Connie Stuart, Mrs. Nixon 's secretary and head of arrangements for state dinners, wearily announced a 50 -50 solution to 1 howling controversy only women could launch. HOTEL CWRIT · The hotel management, Mrs. Stuart said brusquely, was the culprit in the great waitress war. She said the heads of the historic hotel "prematurely'' told its 50 night-shift waitresses that they wouldn't be needed for the dinner . The women were crestfallen. Some had bought new wigs. All had proudly heralded th e J r upcoming assignment among friends and family. And whal's more, they were not going lo be paid for Thursday night, because they weren't going to work. Anger, clamor that President Nixon was not adhering to the "American Wa y'' and other scathing blasts ensued.• .. ~ Judge Gives Tlvo Terms In Slaying Bv TOM BARLEY Of lllMI DllllJ Pli.I Sl1ft Two slate prison terms· of one to five years eai;ti were ordered Tuesday for the woman member of a gang. of drifters accused in the "devil cult" killing of a "Mission Viejo teacher and lhe hatchet slaying of a young service staUon attendant. Superior Court Judge Samuel Dreiz.e_n set those sentences for Melanie Mae Daniels, 31, of Santa Ana in the wake of pleas by. Deputy District Attorney Martin J . Heneghan. ttiat .. If there was ever a case for ctinseculive sentencing then thia htis"to be it." ' Judce Di-etiert qulc~tY ·qr~ and ordered consecutive. tenns on Uie two "il--con'vicUonl-of-.belng-an-accwor:y~to~­ m}lrder. Ftrel·le•• Pit St .. Race team.members.(from left Tom Haber and Mark MCG!,ail pfiuse. ·during Boston-to-Caltech Glean ·r R3ce for pit stop in &n Clemente Tuesday. ·They' got 1battery ch ge foe electric car at Southern· Call: fornia ·Edison Company's Sa ·Onofre nuclear power plant. Ricing under colors of Stevens InSti te of T~hnoloiy, Hoboken, N.J ., they lead the field of ·electric ca ·. Vehicl~s powered by other non-petfo... lewn fuels, however, are still ahead of them. County Taxes Rise 3 Cents ·He ordered the tall brunette's bmnediate shipment to the Frontera Pr1lon. tor Women and cancel.led the balance of the probation term she was le/Ying for a recent narcoUcs eonvicUon. MrS. Daniels was serving that time in Oranse County ·Jail when investigators linked her to the killings of Mrs. Florence Nancy Brown, 31, of El Toro and service ataUon attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin, 21 of Santa Ana. Mrs. Brown's body, minus its heart, lunp and righl arm, was found last June 15 in a shallow grave off the Ortega Highway. Three members of the gang of dritlers to which Mrs. Daniels was · attached were indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury for her murder. Carlin was hacked to death with a hatchet last June 2 in the wash room of his Santa Ana service station In a killing that left the once handso me young man -In the words of an investigator· - "ablolutely unrecognizable and soa~ed in a pool of his own blood." .. use is sufficient , to establish the public right. Jaqueline Kennedy Onassis. wearing white s.lacks, a rain· coat and dark sweater, leaves London 's Claridge's. It is re- ported that she and her hus- band are heading fbr Belfast Saturday to visit the shipyard constructing two tankers for Onassis' fleet. Some of the spurned ladies started complaining to Women 's Lib. Heneghan told Judge Oreizen Tuesday that Mrs. Daniels washed the blood off the hatchet that was used to kill Geirlin and disposed of the '40 to $50 taken from the service station. If the 'council authorizes the court action. Rimel said it will be necessary to establish the existence of p u b I i c recrealional easements parcel by parcel or area by area . · ''This will requir' much effort In the gathering of all available evide_ncc, including namea, addresses and written statements from mtmbiers of the public as users of the beach areas and who will be willing · and able to so testify, the examinaUon and gathering of evldence or city maintenance work including beach cleaning, the fumlihing of lifesuard service, larbage and trash receptacles, police patrolling, etc ••. " Rimel advised. He said there would abo b e considerable investqi:ition by t I t I e companies to gather names of all persons who would be party to ~ legal actioM. Rimel noted that it is possible when evidence shows clear dedication the involved owner would not fight the case, IS.. BEACHES, P111t ZI Spiro H(!.s New 'FiU~in' 1lall Vice President ·spiro T. Agnew says he now has a personaliud golf ball , as President Nixon does, but the Agnew ball Is different. The President gi ves out balls bearing the presidential seal . He gave Agnew one Tuesday and the vice presjlenl, who has hit a cou ple of competitors 1ccide1tally wit h mi9direct(;d tennis ~ golf bal ls this year, remarked : .. I've got one that says 'you ha ve just been sti"uclt by' aiid then I .sign It.,. Coast Residents To Attend-Nixon Coronado Dinnt;r A host of Orange Coast luminaries representing government, I n d u s t r y , ente r tainment, busJ.tfess and communicaUons will attend tonight's state dinner at San Diego's Hotel Del Coronado. Most are friends of President Richard M. Nixon and his family and ha ve been siauncb campaign contributors o·r supporters. Federal Judge Thurmond Clarke and his wife, of Corona del Mar, will join the 600 guests hosted by the President, w~ just accepted the judge's retirement. Mrs. ·Clarke is the daughter.or the Jat.e: Orange County land baron James lrvii\e. Dr. and Mrs. Arnold O. Beckman, also of Corona del Mar, will be present. He is a prominent industrialist and president of Beckman Instruments, Fullerton. Academy Award-winning actor John . Wayne, of Newport Beach. and 'his wife will travel to San Diego for the glittering dinner in honor of Mexican PreslOent Gustavo Diaz Ordat. Greetings will doubtless be extended to the Mexican chief ot state by Jgnacio <See GUESTS, P•1e J) And Lhe hassle reaching all the way to the White House grew. But Rate ·:20 Cents Lower "I've been bugged out of mind about wa iters and waitresses," Mrs. Stuart said in ruffled tones. She added that the criticism leveled al the President was ''completely (S.. WAITRESSES, Pac• I) By JACK BROBACK Ol 'tlle DallY Plltt Stiff Orange County supervisors -hurting for needed funds -Tuesday considered tbe dismal altemaUves open to them, Agnew Reports Asians See Security in U.S. The Ni1oil Doctrlnt of Vietnam wllhdrawal, coupled with the U.S. thrust against communists in Cambodia is giving friend ly Asi1 leaders a sense of security, says Vice President-Spiro Agoew. · BrieJing the press at the western White House in San Clemente after his Io-day Asian mission, Agnew emphasized U'oop withdrawal must be supplanted with heavy economic aid. He made hi• remarks after reporting to President Nl1on and the National Security Council on the 3>,000 mile trip in which he visited five Asian naUons. The vice president plans to stop off to · visit former President LyndOn Johnson In Texas and will then spend a weekend at Ocean City, Md., resting up. Questioned about defeat of the End-the- War bill In Congress Tuesday, he said the vote against the McGovern-Hatfield Amendment Is sigiiincant. "I think ·u will have a aalutary effect,'' he remarked. Agnew said the Cambodian siWaUou • • appears to be well In hand, predicting that the government of P_rem.ifto Lon Nol i! now assured of a strong chance lo · survive against communist offensives. · He said Lon NOi is satisfied wlth his $40 million aid program and Is not asking for sophisticated military gear, only some helicopters and patrol OOats. -Estimates • a"s to the number of communists wiped out ln Clmbodia differ, bul •J.he White House say.C14,000 were killed ai:nong 35,000 present, adding 8,CNXI more have Infiltrated. The vlet president warned 3galnst consideri ng the war c:ivil In na.Lure, declarlnf 75 perc:ent of the communists ca me in via North \iietnani. He allO a.id a request by 14 Senators that an immediat.e cease.fire be proposed in Paris i1 nothlng new and that Nixon recommerided such a plan last year without wccess . Still, he remarked. the C!>st of fighting the Vietnam War has been reduced from 121 ~Ulloo llllllua 11¥ to haU \hat J11ure. then voted to raise the general fund property tu rate by ttne·cents. They recely~ sqme p&radOxlcal good news in their aftern90n,ac!1Skm. -• • ' J Orange O:tunty Audttbr~tioUer Vic A. Heim announced· that even. ,with tJ}e · new three-cent ldy, the· overall county tax rate will be ne8rJy 2.1> cent! lower this .. year than last. ' · Decreasea Jn f.u. useamentl for the Harbor District, Flood ControJ Oiltrlct, and other taxing requirements imposed in past years make it PolSible. Heim said the lf'/0-71 rate will be 19.76 cents less: He broke the various decreues and (Ste TAXES0 POP. Zl AD DRAWS BONUS IN COL D CASH . ' .. .·~ Cokl cash -SSO more than she was asking for -was the klod of offer this reEriaerator ad got for the ~ver­ tiser who placed ll Jn the DAILY PILOT claaslfied wanj. ad sectlon : AMANA 17 2-cfr refrig· lreeier. Ice maker. Av~ caClo. Llie hew. ·$250. xxx-xx1:1. And. ol cour,., th< .ci..otd lht f" f{lgerator -to a tehool teacMr w th five children. She was one ol the fir.st to call . The caller who offertd the $50 bonu1 wa1 too Jatt ; -the salfJ had already betn ~i Make your sale, Call a DAILY PILOT ad-vlaer at 642-$71. ·---,_ _____________________ _ There is no proof that she was present at tht killing of Mrs. Brown, he said, but hls office is satisfied that she uraed the chopping off of Mrs. Brown's fingers to prevent identification and that she suggested lhat the dead woman's teeth be kiclled in £or the same reason. Investigators confirmed 'JWsda y that tt)ey bavt: not been able to "~itively link" Mrs. Daniels to the Sat'ifuc rites (Ste DANIE!.'i, Pqt 'I( Coast Weather The clouds ind low fog will roll in harder along the Orange Coast in the evening and morn· Ing hours Thursday, but sunny skies will be the order of the craYlight period with tempera· lure-.. in the 70 to Sfi range. INSIDE TODA. l' . The · jaoorite ~r/ormer& of the 11eor at the lluntington Beach Playhouse arti recognized at the theater's annual awa rd.I banqutt. S t t Enttrtalnmtnt, Poge 27. I , •• , I • • • , • - )I! D.\ILY PILOT SC Wtdntsd•Y, 9'pttmbtr 2, 1970 l'ro• Pqe l WAITRESSES ... UllWllT'llllocJ IDd lqbly unfair." &he slld she -kt "clear up the thing once and for all." ... , At Jeut ~ male emRl\fts -waiters ~1perit\bced 1n serving ~lte House style from huge trays -are being recruited through a San Diego walteri's union b:al, she said, detailiag the solution. The a•"· she added, will share equally in the duties and will "help serve the meal.11 Mis. Stuart s•id. "If anyll)iN:, it's called equality;• she odded. / It's no secret that the huge, plush for· ma! dinner her boss ordered during hls trip to Mexico turned out to be a colossal job of. work for lhe pretty Mrs. Stuart. And the injection of Women's Lib into the flip makes things even worse. Her fe;eUn1s about both the dinner aJtd the movement came out late last week when the secretary told local Soroptiniists that the taat of organizing the dinJer by phone from Mexico and San Clemente was mooumtntal. Ml:& 1 Stuar.:t •lao· said she wasn't part.IOOJ;rlj liitire!ted in Women's Lt'b. She ,reJterated half 1>£ that platform for re~ Tuesday. • "lt 1 vtl-y difficult to orguize a state dinner Jn. 11 days whlle you're on the road,,. She ~&aid Jn .pleading tones, ''and Ulere'1 1 ,u61t list of &00 ahd billions (If other details. It's only natural to have a few snaun.. .. "We -..ltlll~aven't •Wed aU .the problim& of tetvice;'' she said, answering queriel °'!.~"! lhe~ireen staff would be trained )n~.,,.fY two dayll. "As •,.:matter of fact, right now it seems ~we'll .be lucky 1{ all the plates reach. the tlgiht guests." . What does It cost to run a state dinner on tht-'ril9cl? "Not ,iiucb e:r:tra. except for more crief for peopJe like me," she retorted. The nt'WS that the womeJI of the Hottl Del Coronado · night shltt had won was greeted wilh glee among the ranks of wedgie ibou in ·san Diego. "Whitber lt was a misunderstanding or a baCkdOwn ·k opeo to quesUon," one pensiit Walhes ~la, "What counts •s that we'll be there." 1• "There is no such thing as a 'normal day' at the White House," Mrs. Stuart told the SoroptimJ3ts J1 San Clemente last Wfflr:, , She proved It Tuelld1y. FroM Pagel BEACHES ... Jowerinf city cost.!J. In related actions, Rimel noted: -HunUncton Beach is eneaged Jn a pending suJt not only to establish recreational easement to extensive beach area but to require property owners to pay the city for beach lands where apartments, oil wells or o t b e r Brea,th of Life Six-year-old John Brock of Fullerton gets a reessuring smile from LA Rams quarterback Roman Gabriel, a member of t&e National SPorts .. Committee for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Current Cystic Fibrosis "Breath of Life" campai~n for funds to combat children's lung disea ses runs through Sept. 30. Laguna High's Caf ete1·ia Deficit Rapped by Taylor The 12,500 deficit Incurred by lhe Laguna Btach Schools cafeteria servlce for the 19!iJ..70 school year came under fire Tuesday night from Board President LarTy Taylor. "If the cafeterias don't break even by mid term tbls )l!ar, I suggest we raise the prices for me11.s," Taylor said. Food Services Supervisor Marion Garret said the price could return to six cents if the subsidy is re.enacted by Congress. Truslees also learned !hat lunche1 will be available to students in all school cafeterias on opening day of. ecbool, Sepl 14. .,---im'proVementinave bfli!n plaeed ... "ll our people went downtown they would have to• pay $1 or more for a lunch,!!--he-addect-Adult-luncltes-at-the elementary schools cost 8S cents plU.!1 tax. At the hi•h echool, varioua a la carte llO!lll ore o!IH I From Pfllfe l DANIELS ••• -The county counsel is advertising for wit.neuei who uted areu in Salt Creek •nd Monlrcb Boy lo belp allbllsh public recreational right!. -County SupervilJOn have a I 8 o authoriu:d newlJpiper "da pertaining to '1e Upper Newport Bay area. t -The county boerd allJO ardered county fepartments to investigate titles to lumerous parcels of private beach front 'ktween South Laguna and San Juan Creek to locate public easements frovidin& accw to beachell. i Rimel said he had been asked lo "' ;t>mment Ob whether the city jlad ~ to recover any of the money - about $3 millioo -it paid for 1000 feet of 1lain Beach. i He said, in effect, no since the city obtained title to the property not jurt ;ublic easement and since the negotiated purchase included area upland or the !leach. Soviet Plane Stoned : PARIS (AP) -Four youths smashed the windows of Aeroflot, the Soviet · .irHne, with rocks Tuesday night juat ~fore midnight and lelt behind a poller tn Hebrew and French •ylng "Let my people go. IntemaUonal Students Dar, in solidarity with Judaism in the Soviet µnion." • DAILY PILOT ....-'I i..' M•~r-~ Hllltltttf"'.._. l.efltM .. d; ,. ....... ,.,. c.... ..... s.. c._..,. OltMGE (OAST01'UILl5HIHG COM,.AHY ltolitrt N. Wt.4 l'rt"cl~~I 1r.cl 1'UDll1'*' J t tk l , C11rl1y Vl<t l"rt1.01n1 '"' c;_.,t Mtneotr lho"''' ic,,~a Etl~f Tho"''' A. MM,plliftt M ... l tlllf l!tltor lticht•ll P. Noll kMI~ o .. no-e CIWl'!r •dll91' on1, .. Coste Mu11 m Wo t 11, '""' H1-rl a1Kll: 1':111 W111 l11t11u I Dllll\lfll ltt~ftl ltKtl: H'I l'tr"I Al'tnW M.,.tlllflOft IMCll: 11'1S &t1c11 l~l1v1rt 1111 ("""""~! )Al NIM'llo (I Ctlfllno ltNI OAILY fltLOT, •1111 •.•left • ~d !lot: ,.. ....... t""" .. ,wlttlod t11ty t>'<flll ,_ dlf M ..-rile Ulfl ..... tw l ll""I 11;<~. N._I I~ CM1t M-. llvn1i,,.:o~ ... di -,_lllfl Ytlllf. t !t"I .,lllo •-, .. IMtt H it..... Or*"I C1111 ,.,.11'111f't c~ ..,.1n1w., Ill•"" tr. '' n11 ""'" ltlllot 1 1 ...... N.....,..,, llfOI. ..... UD Wfll •• , ...... ,, Cftl• Mttt. 1 ..... _ ... f714J 142-4111 Cs..Jf!H A~l9' .. l4J.Sl71 s. c,.._. .tin ra..,.,,_.n: ,~ ...... ,J-44Jf ~I, lfrt, Or... CHtl fllllll!Mlftt C-.11r. N.1 rw•1 11ti1n. 1"1111r11:erir.. cl119fltl --., 1"dwt•1lt"'1fl'l'llt lltrl/ft _, " ....... 11(.. •1019111 lpec191 ,.,... lfllM"" IJI t•rJtlll --· ~ ci.t4 ,..11,e .. re 11 "'......,. 111c11 ''"' c .... Mflt • .Lt ll .. •ftlt. $ybtUllllM "' <••'• ·u.• _..1111,, 11r ft'\tll u.11 "*'Ill?'< Mlllltl'Y 411$hM1kioll, ii.Of """tlol'f, Noting the defiClt, which wat foOttd by the district Taylor· declared, "Education dotlan shouldn't feed anybody." The -board gave approval to the cafeteria ptjcts for the 1970.71 lJChool year. Students· lunches at the elementary scboola wlll be 45 cents. A new plate Jllll,Cb .will .be offered at the high achoo, piiced at fiO cents. '.The Scbool distrld has a policy that no one shall go hungry , even if he can't afford 19 pay for meals during the school day. If reasonable need can be demonstrated, the schools will pick up the tab for lunches. Trwtees .also learned that carton mUk wll! ~'.for IO centa thi.! year. Price of milk la~ year was six cents. ' The increase in price is due to loss or a federal subsidy and a rate jump in milk. Greenbelt Plan ~ ' Set for Hearing Before Council Jlopes for a 52Q.acre Sycamore Hills greenbelt will nower at the Laguna Beach City Council session tonight as proponents seek: -Council authorization or an application to Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for a grant to help purchase the property. -A council re!Olutlon committing the city to seek necessary matching funds . The city portion of the funds are being sought from private donations by The Citizens Committee for the Laguna Greenbelt. James Dilley, membet: of the committee. said a publicity campaign to seek funds for the greenbelt will begin this week. The asking price for the triangle of property is $4 million. The owner is Great Lakes Properties Corporation. The greenbelt committee has an immediate target of raising $500.000. The committee visualizes paying for the property over a four-year period with the federal government furnishing $2 million. The group feels that the area could be developed as a golf coursi preserving the heritage sycamore trees. Funds from S1Jch a municipal golf course would then go toll"ard helping pay off the city por· lion of the commitment . The feder11I grant °"·ould be conditional on rttrea. tional developmenL Student De~linc Set The deadli ne fo;~W·t ludent tegistration at M•rco Forster Junior ffigh School will be Th:.irsday. Stgnups for the new pupils will be process~ from 9 a,m. to noon and 1 10 3:3tl i).m. In I.he IC'hool administraUon building. ' tha~ were conducted • before and after Mn. Brown's deith -those rituals !Deluded the eating of the. woman's nub and the cutting out of her heart and other vital organs. I Mrs. Brown was pulled from her car on Sand Canyon Road and driven to an Irvine orange grove where she was murdered . The Daniels woman has j'1sted that she did not see the woman ut1tll she saw the blanket-covered body in the back seat of her station wagon. Indicted for the two killings are Herman Hendrick Taylor, 17, and Stepben C. Hurd, 20, both transients. Hurd face' jury trial Nov. 9 and Taylor will go to court Sept. 8 for a hearing on a motion to reject that indictment. With him in court on that date will be Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse, 16, o( Garden Grove, who is accused of the killing of Carlin. He will ask for dismissal or the murder charge. Orange County investigators in the macabre Brown..carl!n case are seeking the extradition from Oregon o f Chrtstopher "Gypsy" Gibboney, 17, of . Portland. He is indicted for murder in the Brown killing. "I have looked very carefu11y at the transcripts of this case and listened attentively to the arguments by attorneys for both sides," Judge Dreiien told the calm and apparently unmoved Mra. D•nlels before .sentencing. ''1 can only come to one conclusion," he said ... Society needs to be protected from people like you." l'rom Page l GUESTS ... LozRno. and his wlfe, who live on Newport Beach's Lido Isle. Lozano Is pubijsh~r "of the influential Spanish JangUage newspaper La Opinion, which is widely circulated In California and the Southwest. Newly-elected State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter (R·Newport Beach) who is. al!IO chainnan of the Ca 11 f orn i a Republican Central Committee, and Mrs. Carpenter are a190 erpecttd to attend. Former Secretary of the Navy and one· time Irvine company president Charles Thomas and his wife, of Corona del Mar, are sche<!ultd to attend the festive evening . The President's brother. Donald M. Nixon. a'hd Mn.' Nixon, will be there, along \Vith Newport Beach merchant and civic leader 0. W. "Dick" Richard and bis wife. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT publisher Robert N. Weed and Mrs. Wetd are to attend , al ong y.rlth 'tht lndustrl•list John McLeod and his wife who mainttln homes on Ha rbor Island and In Fallbrook. Other Orange Coast guests at the Nie rllnrier will include San Clemente M1yor Walter F. Evans Jr., and Mrs. Evans. • Ficker Sure .·of Preparedness is Secret of Cup Victt}ry By ALMON LOCKABEY over, I talked to Ficker in the living room Ficker and hls crew on Intrepid fwe.re °"" "iw ...._ , .. ., of the beautiful rambling home at obviously well·prepared during the long · W1nniug the right lo defend the le;;• ' he d hi hol·summtr -fnim June throuKI> Amert~•'• Cup Is second only to actually Pr s Neck where an s young August., A,lJ a resul~ Intrepid won U\e deefndiol the mOst highly pri1ed PldoJn crew have spent two tension filled right to deferid the Cup for the second world )'&cbtlng. . months. consecutive time. It hu been said that the skipper who I asked him if h:e had any qualmt About 1 asked Ficker to review the three lose! the I IS.year old bottomless ~cher pieeting the Australians and Gretel II months of trials leading up to his defeat to a foreign challenger will have hi.I Jlead ·+when the big show starts Sept. 15. Bill of Weatherly, Heritage, and finally bolted lO the pedestal 'in-the New Yortt tbougbtfUlly nibbed hia bronzed bald Valiant -all manned by veterao Yacht Clul> ttophy room where tbi Cup ~te. 1-Ds pale blue eyes were confident. .ski ppers and crews. oow stands. :_ Said he: "We treated the June series on Long Bill Ficker, 42-year old Newport Btach u1 never WOrT)' about winning or losing. ls land Sound as we thought it should be architect, stands on the threshold after AU I worrk about ls being prepared. If treat~ -as a tune up series. We defeating three rivals who were hopeful we are preapred we will win. lf not we weren't really prepared here. The boat of defending yacihtlng's holy grail. will lose. ·Yacht racing is a game in was launched a month late, and we had After· the tumultuous celebration of which the crew which makes the fewut. decided not to get any new sails until being selected to defend lhe cup wu mistakes wlll.s." after the June trials. We wanted to find ; out if some thina:s we had done-on the From Paie l boat were really practical, before we got committed to things like $25,000 worth of new sails. We knew that it would hurt our performance in June, but we were willing to take the knocks. TAX RATE DROPS . • • also incre,ases in taxes imposed as follows : -Harbor District do~n 3.82 cents from last year's rate of 8.65 cents · to 4.8.l centll ; Flood Control down 10.86 cents f@l 35.91 cents to 25.05 ce,nts; school institution rate up .U8 cents, school modification aid rate of 8.3 cents eliminated entirely ; development center rate Uf> .14 cents, county general rate up three cents. Other changes listed by Heim included an increase in statHollected in lieu taxes of $366,000, an increase in county fees fof clerk filingj of $220,~ due·to a !;)ew state law, a i:lecrease in the reserve set aside for disputed oil royalty taxes of $4.5 million. The school modification rate whiGh account.; for a 8.kent reduction > is possible because County Assess o·r Andrew Hinshaw's percentage of 23.8 percent of market value on real property is at or above the statewide average for the first time since 1962. Flood control is down 10 cents because the specia l one·year Hkent levy to repair damages caured by the 1969 floods is now eliminated. .... $1! LESS ·TKX~ The 19.76 cents "tax reduction will mean . that the owner of a $24,000 home will be taxed $12 less this year than lasl This is partially offset in many cases. however, by a 17.6 percent increase in as3cssed valuations. County :Administrative Officer Robert Thomas has the job of eliminating some $1.9 million more in department budgets within two weeks to meet the reduction from the $1 .75 cent rate supervisors thought they were going to have to levy and the $1.70 rate · they arbitrarily established in the Tuesday .morning session . · ~ · Possibilities for achieving the $1.9 million reducllon include .the elininatJoq of a $1 million budget item Set a.!lde for beach acquisition, and the elimination of $900,000 from various d e pa r t rn e n t budgets. The $1.7S rate was based on no cuti in department budge ts.and the absorption of a $3 million loss of state revenues from Medical all otments from the state. DELINQUENCY ALLOWANCE Heim also told the supervisors that the budget included a four p e r c e 11 t delinquency allowance (estimate of taxes levied which will not be paid ;): and $16. l million to be held in reserve because of the disputed tax rate on lrviJle Company and other properties in the Upper Newport Bay. County Counsel Adrian Kuyper and Hinshaw do 1t0t agree on the assessment procedures in that area and the issue will have to be eventually settled in the courts. Helm concluded his recommendations by saying, "you (the supervisors) should be very proud of you r accomplishment in reducing the overall property tax of the county by almost 20 cents." The supervisors heaved a great sigh or relief and approved all of the auditor· Wyler lncafle><· 8124 controller's re c ommendatio:is una.mously. · :J>tking the morning session, board members wrestled for an hour over the dilemma of increasing the tax rate by 8.4 cent.I or cutting some $3 million out of the budget they had adopted several week s ago. COMPROMISE RATE Supervisor David Baker suggested the ''compromi2" rate of $1.70, reasoning that some fat cou ld and must be cut from the adopted general ta:r. rate budget of $215 million. CJarencC E. White of the oranr• Cou11ty Chamber of C om me r c e governmental affairs committee urged that the board hold the line Oii the 1118&-70 gtneral fund rate of $1.6'1. "You should do what business and industry have foUnd they .nwst do in these light 1lnancial Umes," Whlte atgued. "If you eliminated some of. the county employes your department heads will find that they can and will get more productivity per man. That has been industry 's experience." Superviior Robert Battin wanted the entire $3 million deficit cut out of the Orange County Medical Cent~r·s budget saying, "The center is the cause of all our trouble. Why penalize o t h e r departments for what that Institution dldo'I gel from the state." School Trustees Will Discuss Reorganization Trustee.s of the San J o a q u J n Elementary School District will disc'us8 their administrative reorganization plan at tonight's 7 o'clock meeting at Irvine School. The plan. which was prepared by the firm of Davis, MacConneJI, Ralston Division of WesUnghouse Le a r n in g Corporatlon at a CQlt of $35,000, has been formally accepted but has not yet been adopted . If the plan is put into effect u it was written, the diatrict will be hiring this year a director of faci lities plannln1 and a directo~.J of construction, maintenance and operation who would both serve under the assistant superin tendent for administrative services. At the present the superintendent Is In charge of both construction and its supervision. He would then be released to do more direct work with lhe schools in his district. The plan also calls for the removal of the personnel department from under the supervision of the as s ist a n t superintendefll for educational purposes and its placement under the direction of the superintendent. The reorganization plan outltnes when ' additional administrators should be hired as the district grows and provides a time table for carrying out the plan. ;·From L'le start we were pointing to August. We set up our campaign to be as good 1s possible in August. We also continue.d tank teSting right through the June and July trialsJ "Our · performance against Valiant wasn't too impressive in June because of these things. We were Juc~y to come as close to them as we did -I believe it was four for Valiant and three for us. They were obviously better prepared. (See FICKER, Page 24)" Ex-Dana Man Fig lit Dies in At Prison A (onner Dana Point man who was convicted on grand th eft charges in Orange County Superior Court hall been killed in a fracas between inma~s at a Department of Corrections facility in central California. Inmate Roberto Sandova l has beeft charged with murder in the knife slaying of Benjamin Frederick Ramsey, 42. formerly of ·3364 El Encanto St., ofticers at Plum Cree k Conservation Center have reported. lnmtigators said the killing occurred Friday night and is still being probed. Ramsey was arrested in January, 1967 in Orange County and charged with the theft of $18,000 from the Ccilony Kitchen restaurant in San Juan Capistrano where he worked as assistant manager. Ra;msey later admitted that he took the cash and checks over the Christmas weekend and was sentenced on the grand theft count by Ju,.dge Byron K. McMillan. He was ord~ed ti rep1y the tnone,¥ over a five year term. . Killer Unknown In Kansas Death LAWRENCE, Kan. (UPI) -Harry Nichols Rice, 18. was shot and killed July 20 during a confrontation between police and college aged youths a block from the Kansas University campus. Investigating authorities said they could nol determine whether Rice was shot by·police or by a sniper. At the time, Rice 's father said the bullet wound in his son was too small to have come from a police weapon, but a witness said he saw a policeman fire at Rice. County Coroner Dr. James Reed instructed a six·man jury to detennlne when Rice died, how he died, who killed him and if the slaying was committed with criminal intent. The jury listened to 22 witnesses Tuesday and then said unanimously it did not know who killed the Kan&alJ University student, •ost unusUGI: watch. Marks time on 24 hour system. A ntce11ity for anyone wha trovels, the mlUtory, or !l'len who prize the unusual, Wotch dlol 1llows olf 24 hour•, ln- 11eod of Just 12. lh1ggedly oood looking. Th• lncot'lu bolonc1 wheel it guorol'l!Md ogolntl 1koclt fOf the life af the wotch or replaced frff if evtf broken. Gvoronteed waterproo f os Ion; a• rhe cry1tol It intact, genuine Wyler porb u1ed. CONVENIENT J. C. .J..lump~rie~ Jeweler~ 24 YEARS TERMS IN 8ANKAMERICARO SAME LOCATION MASTER CHARGE 1121 NEWPORT AVE. PHONE COSTA MESA 50.)401 • " ' " I I, J, ... ,, ' DAILY P!UI" Sears Tire and Auto Center Allstate Super Spark Plugs Bu Now At These Fantastic Low Prices!:; Lo .. Priced! 47~ Regular 39' Qt. Heavy Duty Motor Oil Heavy Duty Oil Filter Filtenout •ludge and dirt YourCIM>ice or ~ 6.95xl4 Whitewalls S.60xl5 Bl•ckwall~ 7.7Ssl4 Wl1itcw•ll:1 ALLSTATE Passenger Tire Guarantee Calll'llnlttd Apirwot: All tire f.J.i.lures from normal road hazards or deft'Ctl in material or ~lt­ m1nsbip. J-'or How Lo~: f or the life of the original i::re:id. Carburetor Air Filter ~ "'"" ,;.,,, w;u Ono ln"d"""" for the 1irc. rcplilll:e it t:harging 199 for rhc propon..ion of currmt sdJ.. Cl . " ing price plus Federal ExciscT;;o:; eaner air .or · rb'"""""""' ue.d ""'d.llepoir better _.BIS mileage nail punanres u no cbuge. Go11ranteed Again!f; Tre.d...,.. , EACH ~F " u Lo Th -•--_, 1-------:-----------"'--"ll or o OW ng: e l'tODIUl:T Ol mombs specified. A• Low A• Spark Plug Wire Set 299 What Seart. Will Do: In~ for the Ure, replace it chatgiog rhc current selling price· plw ft.'<ieral Excise 1«n less the fol lowing.Uowancc: .l\1onthly Guann1te Allowance 18 10 24 1or;. 27 [O 39 20';;, oiO 25% t'IT5 JIIOST OF THES& CARS: Compact Bukko, Chevy II, Comel8t CorvainJ. 'Hmtaogs, l~alcom:, P'or~ign Cars YOUR CHOICE OP SIZES: 6.00s.13 Bla(lk•·•ll' b.50slJ Black"'·all~ l'ita ftl06l of Tb~ Can: Amhusiadon., 8-.iclcs. ~ys. Dodges. ford!i, Plymourhs.Ramblers.. ·rempesis.., Scudcbakm, T·Birds., f.g')·s. 6.95sl4 nr..,i.wall 2 9 3 7, 75"15 Blaekwall ::::!.::.: YOUR CHOICE OF SIZES: ~.~.i'Cl-1 Blm!!kw11U" 8.~:i1tl.t8l11ekw11lk 7. 7.5itl~ BIKk,.·1111 6 .. -.QoclJ 'fllii1ew1ll~ fits Moel orTM.w Carow Baicb.c.tillaca,Cbrr.-i.r. Mcm11o Oldtmob.itcw,. Poatixt. Volbwlfll!IM 1 0~~-~~"\-"'~r ... Y-Cb°'"".ISiav 5.-Mr. JG Wbhc .. lh c;;,,:14 w.i,.,.th 7.Ii:l:JS W"ii1twall.8.55x l~Wlti-•ll• fir. HoM ofTheee C."" Bllid~ Oinys, ~ lfardt. Mm... bDblm. Pl)'ll]Dlltbs. foftigaC..S. 14~ Y-cbok .. ors..: s.asa1..aww.-.n.. s.r5:-t1s 'S'li".._.u. 8.15~ I!> Whilewiilb R.&'ix. l:i 'i'l1i1ew1lh 9.tlO:\I:> '«'hi1e .. 1ll1 l~~:~~:~leryl 199 • Lerge, full-length !Uningchamber fo'r beueroound .. ilencing •.22-gaugc oute-r •hell galvanized on both 1ides for longer wear Heavy Duty Mumer Lifetime Goaranlee If muffler fails dut co defects in mat«rials orworkmafloo ship or blowout, rust-Out O't wear-our while origiml purchuer ownJ the~ it will be rei>l.::ed upon ttt\lnti, free of charse 1£ the defecti'fe muffler Wal iosalled bt Sean. •e will irutall the ne:w mufflct •ith oo m.g.. for labor. • 2(>gauge steel oval muffler inner •hell ••• 30% thicker tlutn 1 .. hell mufflen } 1t11 n1any ... .,....,.,. 12 Volt Caro ._....,..,, .---------. }~ree S.ttery llll1tallatio·n S€ars ...... •A• IA 00. .tllo4SJO II. MOH11 • Wf11 CAHOeA PAIKi MO-e661 OUNDAU C'M 5·1004, a. C-4t1J COMPIOM .. ks11,. NI 24711 HOllYWOOD Ho t4t41 l '. l!AI S.I Ol!BUCKANDCO. COYJNA f ..... 11 tNOUWOOD OR 1·2121 Shop Nlghta ~1 through s.turdtly9;30 A.M. to 9;30 P.M., Sundq 12 N-to 5 P.M. to ... llACH M loG121 : POmDNA M Nl•t CN.YMftC & IOfO AM .. J21J PICO WI ....Ultl OUNOI N7·2100 \ IAHTA Alla II 7..,, •AIAHNA •11.1211, is1-011 ,.. .. ,. nu, r ...... , .. _,""._ _,,....,.., r--.. ...... SAHt'A llotnCA: U ._.n, IOU1NCOAlf ....... __ _ tOIUllCI ..S.:1111 ' YllllT fO ....... .._tee FEE ;nNIDlll " .... ,, ' I • .. -~- ... • • • IZ DAILY PILOT !iC NMnewi.it. Stpttmbrf 2 i;.n Your Moneg'1 Worth OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock Li st Update Home Insurance NEW 'rOltl( fAPl·W"""1d9v'' ,_,.._ .. '"" W•I Utth I Mltll Lew C\ftt (ftt J••l!'•"""'IC"'"'=c••'"'"••••1CC::::l0::3'::! ....... , 1,.ew "'"'" $'9Cll l1tcMl110t orli:t1 =I Hi.ti ..... Cle l::, ~IMOf 1 )0 111 24\) !J~ 1.-tr +-·Gt" .. etrtct • 4'<0 o > llo -lo 30 -'• I! ' t-t... 10-. -• 21~. -"- )llo + ' NASO Llstlnga for Tue1day1 Saptamber 1, 1'70 ' M !"t1Mll I -21 "'°"' . ..,,,. .Mo1Jt -.-\,(;e11 Sl1 11'0 U .SO 4f• -- ITF!n 1 IO 1t .ft ,ti, IO + ~, Gan Sit P'I t l Ul1 I• By'llYLVL\ PORTER Ir you hl.d lo replact< 1 house for which you paid St2 500 1n 1950, It would cost you prtclscly double today - 125,000 But d yqu're arnong the majority Or_pwners of Insured homes todaY\. -SS percent - your home tmurance pohcy would pay for only a Jltlle more than hal f your replacement cost And even lf YQU're not that serlou~ly undernm1red )our po I 1 c y probably would pay for only about 71 ptrcent of the cosl of rep bl cement You simply must recognize the Impact of the upsurge 1n building costs on I h e 1dequ1cy of your h om e insurance· JU!l since 1964 a Bank of America survey underlines home cab I n e f. making costs are up 111 percent, electrical w 1 r 1 n g work colts are up 79 percent costs or roofing services and home plUmblng jobs are up 6.1 percent And you also ~amply must i\ot ignore the impact cl. inflation oa the erpense of repl&CUJI the contents of your home -whether you own or ...,,, ASK YOURSEU' H o\¥ long has it been since you've reviewed and updated your home insurance policy' How long l1nce you've viewed your home and tls conlents in tttms of replacement costs" U you have only a fuzzy idea or the worth of your h ouse or apartment and its contents. consider a profess ion a I apprawl A local re&I e state agent ~could refer you lo an appraiser who could do this at The Finest In P1p1s, T obac:c:os And Gifts SOUTH COAST PLAZA .. _ ...... ".., 1lle .. .., c. Phone· 540-8262 rt1son1ble Or the contractor who built your house could estlmate the cost of a total replacement RESOLVI:: TO have your "'1ome reappraised every three yearS As an absolute minimum. ask your ins urance t11gent for his appralsal of your h ous e 1n terms of trends 1n bu1ld1ng and home rePa1r costs 1n your area Or ask ) our msurance agent for a do-II· y ourself appralsa1 kit Some of the~e kits, provided by many 111surance comparues today, give you only a rough idea of cost trends othus detail y;age scales for bulidtng trades materials costs and other items 1n var10us areas Your total homeowner s ' coverage should amount to at least 80 percent of the replacement costs estimated by these or other quahf1ed sources If you do n ot already ha ve an mventory of the contents or your home, make one It should include I act u a I d escriptions of each item ol value, snapshots of each room taken from several angles detailed photographs a n d descr1pt1ons of each item of significant value (pa1nt1ng~. musical 1nstrumentt. etc > Keep a copy of th1:i. m ventory 1n your safe deposit box I F YOUR PER SONAL property 1s worth considerably more than the customary proportion (40-50 percent) of Uie amount of msurance o n your home consider investing m add11ional coverage. This would be vital tf xou have iubs tantial investm~nts in Jewelry fur s antiques PQStage ~tamps professional instruments or tools stereo, etc Know lhe basic facts about coverage To illustrate 1n general a homeowners' policy covers your house and IL, contents your p e r s on a I belongings and extra l1v1ng expenses should your hou!e be d estroyed by fir e, l1ghtn1ng ' 1 OWS OF Oil PAINTINt;S WHOLISALI WAllHOUSI OPIN TO THI PUILIC $5 and up ~ 1419 I IDINO•• SANTA ANA PHONI: IJM* ~ D•ALaas WAHTfD 0 f Don't settle for less. Don't settle for anything less than 111• best Interest rate on 90-day Thrift cert1ftcates.. Invest a minimum of $3 000 00 1n our 90-day Thnft certificates and you II earn a solid 7% per annum. And Avco Thrift pays Jt V,•1••11 yo,11 '" r•cl .i lu.111 rornc to t.~·cl> Tl11lil r,, ;I 11.,, ,_,1.c rt111lq ..,,,. rlo tJ"~' ,., help p•_'<)pl•_· •lof 1111 11,, llH!HJ', (I,,., 111·e<1 lh1r,t1qll \v:·,,· .,r''"''""" h'l1o11t:11•·f \IOI< flf't•r1 1!1'Hlt:'.-' f<•I '''"''" t.11~ In .i. ~'Ji· II du our IH''.;I !0 lil·lp We Bellew In~ 'j FptS 50& S tt\lio """ ttt't -"' Genl/11 "4 10 •O I~'• 10\, windstorm, tornadoe s. AM<~• m l' n• 1t11 12t -\)~)'uSv<2xi 111 " ~ .. 1,_..,,G ,e E11s2 "I•>,,,,. 2n. •,oo,tL..1__11 .. 1,• .. • • li" .,,~ 41 , ... \lo ,., l1W 50 ,,,, 1i IS'11 1•. ~ ,, GTtlEI Pl"I~ • l1h :..•. uplosions, riots etc and Cf' i.... • ., ll"" J9l• _ v. 1v1"v pf r.i » 2t\'t :!t\O "'' + n GT•IF pf1 u 11oa 'I"' is• Pr1or ..... At,,..C:ltve l :tO '. I \~ ll tt -~\ llY Str• 10P ' 1 ••• '"" -""Gtn Tire !ti " ' h 11 . unlnhablt1ble This Is on top or ... ...... ... • .. a.. Ale •<""Mk! "' li ,,~ ,, • •21,.'a -''"eq I ,.g ., lO)I ,, •• lO~· -lt Gen•SCO I 19 ~ 1u. JIV, 2',dmE11 l 2•1 11 1J 'f,. n~. _ i.rk Oii 10 )I ll , ?O'lo 21\\t +-\'I Gt!n1!1r 1'0ll 11 I 1'• the lit11bllily COVerage Jt HEW VO• KIAPJ ;rle Tt-e llll •ti P~ln:;t" u·~ rit·· f tr f"-IO Ad MIU11 20 t 11'1., 1 1,., 11'4 i.vc1r111 10 11 '5~1 lllilr •$ -•~GenulnPI 1' I )l l.o 31 .. P rovld.s -TM tollOW!M bid e (to::o ... llli Pl\ f ,. 'l" •1 '•'"m'I",~, I.. 20t )l:IO. '°,\; :io~ _,ij ie'llU ' 111 ~ ,,,, l3« 3:1i.; +-~. G• Pl( 11111 1SI SU1 j~ ~ .' ... i._,, I'" Ttk ... a '" ' ' ,. -·~ " "' d" 'Ii ~ ... l\;i -Vo loroll JS. ei 11 .. u" 1)"'1 -... G1P•c pll .. :l ,, ,. Hu 'BROAD FOR'I " t -t •·-" ·~· ·~" O:::'t.', ... .,..,el~'I 'lj "! ~ i!' ff \\-iu.••N oO I' I...,. 11\o ll\o -\.I GtPtc r,•..:a 11 11 • 11 • T .... • I• •i..,,~~l ~y ,1,,.",1M1 ''I '"'""' '"" ' "•ll _pl it ,. ' + , ... t.. ' " .. " ...... , \' '°'-s i111J. l ,. I u P'k Pd J "' !"' • I c~ .. " • ~111P P• 1 o u 11 .... 1~'1\ -l. G:~ivO I o61 ..... -• policy iidds to this llSlSUCh •lion IJf tc11r 11a F,1-,, , •Vi "l'*nn •41~ ~ 1mo11 "z'•'t1 ,~Afr./~'1,,t ~l ll~ ~ .ri~+"' AFlnljSO •,~, 1.!,• 1,,'•'• ... _ ,0,, •. "'" '1' 1'0'),• /,~': Detltn, _ Ille •r1 If Oii ' •• P11tlr H"" 11 'l 11111tr ., I' ''" "" >O .... ~· •S •~ NA pl It 10 •v •v ,. 1 " burtls as falling objects, no1 1c .... 1 •••~ F11G •irs I • p,, c;,,11' 1~., T•,•,"..!.'w l..\i ,•J• ~,· '•" pt•J~ , iii~ 121,,_: UI\> +, .. 0.11 s1 1s 1s 1''~ •~ :it + 1~ G •ntPC Mt • •i. •·· II di "Si• 11111 .,.. , .. Fat WF!11 '• l. Pra -,(,., \lo ! 'Ill< ...... ... "' -S2 17 1•~ llllo ~ 1CDI 1.. ... n~ 111\'ii n . ~) Glbr•ll Fin 154 ,,.,, 11•, uildlng co apse, txplo ng It t1ilve lnler Fiie_.,. Iii •1~ P• ''"" 11~ "" lltd91 I !14 ~ ll'ldualrlt1 17 {I, •It II\+\ oc181Cq 31 II •l •1 '21"1 -1 • Glddl.oew ~o ll • • ~ h I I h! I d h I 11 1r1P•lc••1 •1 Pl FOOd FP ' Pu I NH l '' 2•" V COl'l'I ll'i 2',I• 011 110 1 lj~1 11 l' _ ,, 011 P.i 1 36 31•, 31'• JI ' --. G 119!1 I oCI 251 '°"" Jt • o wa er a ers an ea mg : "'o~,i.r:.'~i'lri !lwtll ~::~1"011 11• "ia ~~ts HN~ 1g~ l:u l:=. li""" 11~ ,.11u1 111i.,1 .u 1 ''"" •'41 _"' o•ril P 11tl 1~ i:·~ f11 1: ;; , :t, ~ 16\::''1~~ 1 71 ~ ~ • SY!lem& a nd Pll>C freezing ::ur111'\e cou1 Fos• c.rnt 3 • l "" Put111111 !1• ~ Tt~•1 AS , •• 13i,, ~i=l~ ~ ll ~ l'i! ,U' = :~ ~ltA!klti! 6t n , u1, 11 , + ,, G~11 Aldtn n •li • , The ffiOrC CXpcnSIVe ' all cll::td 1·~~11d! w.;, ,F~om1 Co i1 ~ Pu'Ji? to Ht Tm:rm A "' Akl flAIU 1 :10 166 21'o 'ZIV. l'~ _I.lo ololn"I 60 J( lSl. )11o lSI• -•1 Gl~11AI o!J U l •6 I <&) k '' I ·•to to Ot '"''' '''" E O> , > P ""!J 20" 21 TT I""" Co '>" 1~ 2',ltoSl•nd 1• t ui... Uh SI\_~ oil lnll 1 l6 U, 16•0 16U + .., G!Oblll M1rl" 61 u • tl o I S po Icy Covers you ~ • ~~·1rv I• 1' lltn" in .. )vi:nclr• .lOt" .., 1~ It'• Jt•· + o11 1n 1t1•1s 1 •ti-u•• u, Globe u11 -o 1 10 •~ r S dultr mltktll P11lve• l'' l ~ P Duo Cit • o ••\ Tlt111 (;D Ft Ju 2', IN CD .10. 21 1,0 .... ,i; _\ii 1111 In all 60 6 11 > 111>, 11 "' GD00r;c11 1 11 141 ll ~ 76 , against e very possible threat ~"r~ ll•v th~~ ~:::: :,t" 1 "° 3 .... 0o..,.. 6\\ 1~ ~r" 1c°c? 1!2'~ it'•• JtoLlld 2 ~ JS "'• " ,... as 1 .iob 13t "'' 1i • :it 1 t-41 r.ooove1r 1s '' 111 • 16 1 t I I do nof lnd!Jde&:'' Cll'IO •'•ti.I 1•1 5 '-'f' '\•lf!Trncll ~ 2 A,lltaLud f'1 1 3'tllo "":If('-~ oluG1i 111 161 H•o 17 Jl'•!'•GDtOJtvA 2• , H'o 1,., 0 your proper Y el Ce p r.itll fl'llrkllll 1rtnt! fl\1 17 Ro< ~" J~I> ''• T~~~ ~ ,:;:• ,,~ ,'1"',,,,»w, > l? l't l1'4 ~ 21 ~ + V. oluPkl •Sr "°' 111'. "• 11 '1 ''1 Gou1cunc I •O 26 71'• 71 --0 >vc: 4 <f••~ lie< • ., '' JI \, '"' 211~ + \t o15o0ol 1 16 ll "l'o 21•• W o + U GrectCo I.,. J' lt'• 19 , earthquakes J a n d s Ir de S, :r.·1*' "' '°"'"" G Aird! 2 ,v; RIMI ~ tt' •• , ... , 1~·oc,,,,Pll 4llldMnl .-I ,,.. !I'll l7'--~ Otnt>Ell I :Ill 110 tll. •O •1-> -1 Gt•M'f 1 60 u "Ho•o 26 ~ flood Ud I MA Ent l\.\i 1~ 1(1,..llc 1•,•; 11\J 1,:,::ml 0 ! ,.;? ,Jt'. ,u: A'!fl~lll ~75b 11 1oiiii !O~ ~ + ,: omtSOlv 40 IJtJ ll~ !O!i 21V. -• GreMUn eo si 11\'I ?n o s, a waves sewage Ml c°'£ Jt.t l'oo I JC11.1rc l \O •''. 11.tc.oa .r, " \t~ T':ar.: F-d 1r: 9l"' ::l;~,:"i.!f '!: !1~ lf"' ~~1' = ~ :::!!Eld P: Jg 1! ~ • ~.~ ~'· -1 i, g~:~l~v1ii1 ! i! i,1~ \~.! backups nuclear radiation :r~P.~ ~;"" lt'1. 11.1L'e'.~r w. ,..,, 11 c i'l S:u'"tl"'K~' , 1 tt •11 up 1s.. uo • J\.\ , ,...,..eo pr pf J 101 101» 1N G••n•w 1 loll 11,. ,,,, 11,, I th S lb 11 •tfS 1-4.\o 4\0 toter l 214 •" >" 1 ' '~, j'" 0 •~ • Clltlrn 210 '"" 12'-1• mwE pn a u n» 11 1' 2lll -t '4 Gr1v0.<1 1 :ro l9 ?Ol'I lt ? war, a ew o er po s l I 1es ASG .~... 1 , ,,.111,.n , •lti R lddr 5,u 11"" 2~ u"l l~~' ,. 7Vt AlPl'llPC • 26 ''~o 1no t•l• -t \\ Com• ou 60 •1 1n . 1•>-. ''" _.. c;I •&P 1 30 1,2 ''"' 2"i th'· l tro h i go ASG .-"! j > J~ ~tftll '12~24 A~ t: 1 2• ~ 1 lt\\21 Alco. llO 31 s1 ,. 51 Silo ComPUT Sci 151 t 11• l to -\tGNor lr 1S1i 11 0 n •, In ~ C& aS p e Ca C r y A,VM CD '~ 10\o 1P111 W 211/:i 721/o l:Dblll M 2f .,; :::r Ml tH~ ~mtlSIJ1 1.60 l '12V. 2l 'ZlV. + to io.n1at 101 Oii • lll'• J»; -t ~, G!NoNtk I '° 11 •J •4\o Of -urse the m ore dangers •11eri. •~ •o.. •1.li R11t1 1•,. J 110111on J:li t\. TrkL Jl~,,.. AMBAC ,, 11 io1,. t ilt 10 ""e NIM• ' 2 is,. 1.1 • u >, GtN"'" i>Js1 '° • :11"1 20 .. v ' ... mt El I IU Gokl c l' ' !"" R C•ll 1\'t ,,! Up p..,~ ~ 21 111 lvn, Ei I JO • 11~ 17'1o llllt -~ onnMI~ JOt 9(1 7'> • '11• 27~ -.... GINN otA "' I ltl't It . You Insure agains t. lhe more ..-,f1, 1s11< ~., 1 Goad L 1~ "" "'""' s1 ,,,,,, 1.i u11h st.d -,.,, 1\lo "''" E• l'll.60 lO )I ll'"' :w +• onr1cCP '° 11 n • 111. n • + \lo Gt w,,i F1n1 •~ 11 ,,,. ll B Ar "du' '. ?l-1 lodW'r c 1 ~ l'l .~ .. ~ .u, ,,~um Ind 2J , ..... "'" Hts"!i lY !t1 l61' ll'llo l6 -on Edl1 '·~ 10] 71' ll ?J .. + ' GIWl\Un I tO 1S I•~· ""' your coverage WI cost e Alrbrn " 1~. •~ 1eoh c.. 11,1, • k •nt" E l'\ , v11 LO 1 ~ 1:u """H Pn ~ 141 IO 71'\lto l't\\ + •• anEd11 .,. • 1 t6~1 ii ~ "~ + \\ GWun 011"' • " 11~ •1111• H 2 ... l ••1111 Sc; 1,1" ,","· ~"'°'' In Jiit 4 \/•nc• Sa lJ ~ls~, AA!rfllttr to 17 ., ... '\~ ,, +-~ onEOls pf J ' Jt . jt l jO , -i\ GtW1shln j) , I. -reahst1c Begtn by deciding • 11trh '• • •'•• 1,",,,""• , ,,,, 111 211o v11tr011 7\\ n' '"Alrn" 10 111 'J" 21 Jl'lo -\\ on~ooo 110 JJ 11•1 ll'• J, ~ Gr~n1Gn1 •~ 1 11 , 20•, lo ~ M 15~ 16 • 1 Ind lb , W1ch 1111 lfln 20 Am 81k1r 10 , \fo 11~ ll,,_ -'-onFd "''VI 1 II .. 1111 U ~ + t., Grfff!S~ I JO " Jilt 2•\t what your home and its ~~I caect.ftd J4\• u "'° rntl l:E u 17>. 01 So... 11 11\11 w1d,• ,. ,,,, Ullt A,6r1ncrs t lt .o "t ll'o 31>.:o -~~ ~onFrel•M 1 11 21i , n~o n-. + \io Grey"°""" 1 •S uh 11 Conl.nls ar. truly Worth and •,,•,,,,"'• •,~ '• •,~.,\ >1,t 3'' 4~ 'I~ M 11 lt W1lll Bd 11 ~ 11 \lo "'"''{:' )"' IS5 ftVi 2Jh Ji .. -\ol Oii L~11,1110 J' S • 1 1\o -\lo Groll11 tO • l'Z'• no, E •• I Pl ,, oto A J'lli ' w A.tide v. ' lvn 111 111 •• l l\lo '''-41 ~ -'lo onNa G I l o 6• """ 1' 1• GtymmnCa 1 IS u 1, If\• what are the real 1ire ""rils in "•'•",,,Geo ~~ ltt 2:;trd1n~h 'io • url• 01 1~i 1a•\ wars""" 11o m "'" ff" ~ 102 9\11 1"' f\• + 11:t on• Pow• ' 10• J'I• JI -i n 1. +:... t.1tl1H o If'~ 10 l) 7,1, t"' G :\\ r,• tl1 Cmp 5 4 ~Weit\ NG ltllo 1•1.0 "'c'"'sl" 1 ' ~ .. ,. 26\lo ,.\4 -\.\ (10nPN P" 54 '>&0 60 !ti,\ St...., -' G\111 011 ! SO Yll 1~,: H~• Your area Go Over the Whole Am B~1n •I') 10~ Vtod" lO _ • ~,•,•!~"•• t ''• Wtlll RE t\' l'JI A ry uf I ,.g 4 20\.11 10 20 -'• on!Alr 110 Ill 1n~~ 10 • 1n ~ Gut! RflrC~I SI ' A El Lib 7~1 3~ HlllOV( !I •• ., • , J Wei Tt 4\li 1'4 l?\• JI"' JUo ,, on1 C1n 2 4() '1 II •7 '> 6Ro GJIR JS ort JO S !I lllo l's! wtlh a trusled insurance ~'"m ",',,' '•' "•~ •,•,•,,•,.• '," J'°' 11.1. •~•ft UD •~'• l6>1o W•btl R• • li\O A"' 0 111111 1 1 11>;, 11'111 171/o -v, on c~ .. n~ 111n ' • • • •1, + 1-Gu11s11u1 •• 1• ?l n " " ,, 2 1~ 21 ~tndoll 51'.t si~ Weld1r11 i~ 10 AOtslT fl 30e J ?3~• 2l \'\ 2ll'e -•ti Cori! c., \ 17 3'/ 31 , :n Gu!l'Wlnd •o 11l U l 11 agent ~ MG'.,",,'0 ',',' ~,,,! ~·,J!! c,,o, I•• l' •1r M 1 7'9 WtllM M 1 16\li Am 01111Ve1t U I 7't 1'~ -\\ (.t Cp o•.. ·~ I• J"'' l Uo 3' , Gu !W oil .10 I }&!, S '• " ''"'""' J,,•, 11 I SI s 2 11~w11c11 p 1os.11 AmEIP• 164 l'° 1f~o ]~) 2Slo CtCo pfB1 $1 I ")f 31 JI ->1o Gu11w oll ll } l9 lti,• It~ ~,.,........, ..... , .... " 9"111!ClnMllfl' • """ ...... 111.UO.. .. ,.... .. • 1.,.., ,.,. •• ...._ ~ ... _ .. ...... \~ -~o r.o -It I ' . . '• Jl"'fl -'· }1\o -o " -1 ~I ~ -'I 3' ' -• 11 •• '· Ill• 9~· -• 1•\• ' •• .. ..0\to •I • 21 -t " Jtl• -• .,_ ..... -1 . u ~ .. " . u•• -, ... 0 - "'' -"lllo + • ...... -1, 1'\l -• lll ~ •• ' -' 1•t. ... • '1 ' -• 20. -• "l -. 1» OI -t '• " ~Tiit t _,; lf\1.-" ... \' l'lfo -• " . ?J\o t-'• u 1' + '• n~-. n\lo t : . , ,,., -. Tl'• ~ '• 11 . -~·· -1 ~ "' Then update and buy the Am T•I" ll~o llto HIUhvn Jl llJ\11 r:• w11 1 ~· 14 w11n NA •t~ sv. Am Enkt I• 1n J0'1t 30 30.,.. +-"lo ContMta I.I .1 11>~ lJ•· " .. •·Gu 1ori ind u 1 t Anl\lil1 B '6 MVI Holm EP Jt\ J~t NE Ttl 3' "'l't W1I~ MIP ~ 6\11 Am Ellp Incl •10 12 1014 17 -fl\, cant fl I I 50 11' 2•'• 't ~ "• 11 -H-J- COverage suitable for you •,"",,,",.,'" •,• •,f? H,!!...""',, •• , .. ,, un G• 2• 2•" w''" Pub JVi • AE~1nc1 "'"'' lJ60 loll ~ jl) !or1' 111 1 1 1J11o 2~ 2i "··•••• 1 _ ,, _ _ _ 14 ., -· _,.. o "" w ~(.o II\\ l•VI Wino Wt\ S\i •1Jt. AGelllnl ~ JI lll'e 11,4 tl'' + •~ O!I! T1I IO .I~ tlV. 71 21 , -.+-~. "~ •v ~' "" ' .,. 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Jl ll -1 ouPo11t otJSO : ~':? :i~ U .. -:t ~:~l1 s~r,''J'f0 11 ,._ 7'~ 1, +, vehicle, which the laboratory E;::1 ~~ f \ ~~! ::i.t:chc 1~ 1j • 1~,1 cG Fd 1 M 8 n 0 1 .. 1d ~ '° 'n 81•0 CR ;1 t JI • J1 • 11 , -•• °" ' 10 .. '1 01 1n 16 , ,11 ~ 26 ,.. t .0 1~1 T& T 1 os •1' :ll • 37•, ll • • , 1 d h d I d I th c c ,, 30\~M 11 ·~' C•oam• '\l 111 c; .... rh 7&1 llllll•lc •nc: IO ll ll lJ 11~ 111.-.ouaLI •pt ' 1J:lll 16 · •J~ ''~ >.Ii ITT lll l•JO 2u '°'~ 40•1 "''•-~ area y as eve ope, o e ,i~~~11 ~ , •• 5 M~fRf'e, 2, ,,,c.10111,,v ,,101 Pf s11c '014nr.e•lc "' 1.10 :?D ,,,_,, n ~ ,,.,. .. ,,oa 11Ja1111 t111GOJJ 1 11 ~ 13 ,+1 niT .. T ~,, 4 11 11 n -1 11 di rth Ar I ' ,, 1,'-,c11011 Shr JJO 1 lncom l l• 1to 611!tt Mlf 1 to •I~ t lo -t .0~1n111no 16 10> 10 io 1 "' J7 10 . JO 700 -~ spec a con L ions 0 e c IC Cvo•n c 1. 1. "'"" .. . "'.,,\ Ctnl Shr 'II 10 II S!otk 1 OS 'JD Btl~ Incl ID 11'o II\, 11 ~ Dvn11A,m :o. IJ J ~ s1! t11TT otL J so 1JCI &J ' tl t l r I! • .nvtronmenl 8:~v Lft 111! 1~"' :;,~1J"'t 11,,_ 11 • Ch•"nlna Fund• :-!e• Grc'"t t,~,, • •,, !Pth1",. •011 se_ ' 11 ~ u JJ'O + •• E F 1'• ',","u•,•, ; 11 111 JH~ !olll~ 511,, _ .., r. s N ' 8 " n , 811111 IOll<ll l ll"l"'uw ' " ~ lll~C '"-... " :16•• l5 't J6 • -• -• ''° )J 16 . '~~ 16'• .. Hovercraft studies are the "o:l: ~ 13,Z 1~ N:ic./"11: 1 1 ,· ("o.n st iu 111N"Vw Fd nosuo181wrrL"b lD 12 11 1~, 1t•, .,e1•l,Pri. 1111 1 ',j',' n ~ ,,,,_,,1M u11 .., 5 ,., 11~1 79 1 , 4 Dalf!n p l ?h HCrno Co 1.,1 1t 1 Oroolh •M 1 11N•• Wkl 1111 11 1!111Yull.(.le 50 ! ''• 11, t h E•1c0Ce 10 I ; lt ~ 19;-•l"!U!I ID'll l1 1 11 o 1&) 76 .,. ,. r.sponslblhty of Pro fs Victor 8,., 1 Fd J , N•t Eaut ,l u ' •ntom • 10 1 •1 N~wl011 110 I S7 Btirl••i l t J' JS 3' E1 r •I• LI" 111 11 ~ l! , it , 1n1er0o1c~ 1 • n , 11 • n, _, .. v Mir 11 11 N~I C.&O I ,,. 1~ Soec.I 't] I 16 Nlth Sitt 1 66 1 11 IHI fits I ll 71 "'• 1t'• •• E••t CF 171 lS 1~•1 lt I 11 • -• I" t oc' pf I • II , n 11 ' -i. Ganzer and Jur15 Vagners or o~ca• In Sl1 ,,,, NII l !b is 16 Ch••e Gr lie! Nare111 u tJ u •l Btekmln ~ 6S 16'' '! • is•. -.. i''' U! I l IO l lt • I~ I 16'• l•I 9,,..,, •o • ,,,, 1)1, 11'1 -1\ ll<il\b a. ;& 7 N•ll M'11 11'111 ' C•oll i?~ !J•Oc~PD!I Jf6 Jff 8KlD!c k30 JOoi M .. 31\~ 36\-•1 l<K""e~ I• •?S Mo''•,. -•.lntH•Pw I)• I! I'. le . 16 ._, the Department of °'l"'"1, Jti NllPU 1 0 1'' ~u"d 11s1110mtt• 111 s&1llHCMrUb 16ll••l'•'''•-•a•n11Y•1.o 1s 1t ,,,,. •11!•rs1s1ro0 11•1• 1,,1,,_,, A d A Oeu• (II S? 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EOIUI" 2 J 2 11 6wrt.Shoe I '° l ,, 16\,, '!'• -,,, FtdNMto •• 9&.l 19 • '5 • •1 • +l•· •'6«1 ·~ 11 , •i • F."'l.>rtv II IJ 11~ l"v.11 'ti 7 JS 8runun, I~ 16 1$1~ 15 1 ,_. + _.., FtdPK f lee 1 n t • • I(~ C:F 1 ·~ xl\ 11 , 7 '• '1•o varlety of under ice and over 1 ntorst ~., 1 u11r1 ~ tJ 5"' eucvEr 1 '° 11 11~, 11'• 11~ -1," Pee pf1 '' J 11. l• 1 " , -• KanPNL t 11 1 n•. 11•. n11 , " ~<1ullr • 1)6 , I ,.,"i "'" '!I ••• 1111(1!1 Co n ~s 1'1 I-It I\\ -·~ FtdP•o&d ' 11 11 11 • 11\a IC•IV Incl ' I'• ~ ) ~ ~ -'. fee m 1ss1ons In order to pro-Ai d ~"' 1 t:11t 1 n 1 11 s.1 P"<S 11 111! M euc1o "" _. 60 ' • ' • ""•••I• Inc ' s1.. s>, 51, _ • KAu• ••o 10 u \"• J"o .,,, _ ~ Vtd. lh. new tools n.ed.d. tit' mouncil lc11! Pre l:<ft 311 U1tlt Giro 701 ., 61/doel I" ,. 1• I'~ 111 14 + 11 Ff'CIOtPISlr ' •J ''" 111. l•. t • w:~•ec5 Xlb ' •• I•'• 1••· L 'u n 17Jil7USl!am Fd 1 30 :a:ilvt!Fort l lO JI 31 , :11 . :11~ Ferro Cp 10 1' ll o 11 , l1'•""'•Kav•~•Ro tiO 3(1 ",' 1•• 1'1'•-'• lb I h Evonl l•IOftl tl ~1rAP'3 llUOl)l~IRW60 11'6lt 16 16f. Fltlf"rbr0 70 1'11 1• fl t 71 +•1 Kttl>lcr l)0 ,,'" '1"\o l) , nec essary o ring oget er 1n ~.?,i.f•o ,,.u1~J /deDe•" 11,!1:~ unkR :i~ 1! ,:,0 S.t 2i\r .. ~~l',,',",/~.!•o to"" 71 \, ',':i,•·.·~!l/;~"'°o0~ l~l •, 1.,,. ,, acommoneff1;1rt1nvest1gators T M ikel Hasty has bten""••m llu 119 "am•"ooo• r.u•11nc1 1.:i 101A0~«1 1 ••,.1 Fd""'in ,1~1f : g::1,,·.,,1ee1"v1.)a 1'1,lf ,1 1'·~.~~. from engineering the basic Ff'CI Gr111 11 0,1111 c1011 •11 '"'u'$:°"1 n e "''' 1J•1 11 ~~~F!~1.,;,.a;•60 ?JI ,1.., ,1 ,1, r<.tnc1111 60 ,., ,.,, .,.,+. • promoted tu assi51ant viceFld C•P 1011 11 16 •11vesr ~56 1041 811ur or~» 1c •1• I'~. ,,.,,c,.,12191 111 •tP4 1,1: •ll'• +''l('""mtt •~ J ''''is•, 11 .-t 'cl'nc.'andolherftelds Fld"und1341 1•7l rru11 l llJS6 ur "' 11•~• !'1 lJ •"=t1,.1M1 1.,. ,, .... , tt 71_,,: .. ,,K•nnenH760 ~~~ .. 31 •3'Q.+h , I d I h Fld 'Trncl lt to117J ~mlth 9 11~ qlurro~1 '° 165 10l~'a.llM••lf .+:o • ft'' "" " 61 111 ,,;:~1(FChDt1 10 11 1711t 11'' t7'4-~~ ·It 15 the purpose of the proj pres de nt an manager o t e F1n111(1a1 p,°" 5•)• •nv , 60 1 n su111u11 .. ur 10 n H•i 11 + "";4N,.,,C 1r1 1 ~ ·~ rt1: lJ~ 'Jll _._ • k I h ovn"' 3.YI 1 11 E'~v (,t •ft! '" -C ,.f h~" • '°' s ,1 111 21 ect to develop such a pro-n1ar et1ng departn1ent or t c 1rtdu11 3 n l •• ,, nu 2, ~" ~ ,, •• 1 c _ ,, -_ •• , F ~. F• ii.. 17 11 ID'• 1, lneom JIJ n P•cl•• i ..., " '" ~0 -•• ... o -"' I g rAm ' Santa: Ana ofhce of The Bank v~n1 l ,. t u StFrm Gt ' t !'1 Fin•~• 100 1! • •!'• < • + \' F 1h• sci 11 '" • 1 •1-6 o ••\ • F•tF \IA •U 1oo,o;S11te SI ?IJO )t5C .. n1~n Mn• u I". II "'•mlrlC so i 9\1 ,.~ t \o He said the. program will 111 ol Calti"rnta acc ordtng 10 an r-111n 0 11 b J1 11' ~rt-!lmJ" r urd~i e1npll:L ,•a •J 1J 'o u1, 1!, ~ '"" FUn1~crt 1 SJ u t11 's ~ I I fl ~~ " f~ltroGt~6t•7SS 2',1n nd ~13 •n'"'I$" 10 1•16 1 2•'•1 ·-•~F1e E Co•~I ''°•7Qlo 20 ~-I• vove not ony sta m emV<:rS Fu 1ns1~ 1 :11 t oo Flouc j «t !"Cd" ,..w 1a • 1•• 1it '• ~11 G•• so '° 1"'• 19 1 "'•-o but also .l'ldents and l'ach.rs Bnnouncement by Peter 11 ,,,, Mulll J e1 1 ,, • scie" 11• 00 con P1< 110 ~' Ji" u ... ss.. F1a """" 1 t0 n ~• ". •I•· -• Ft! NI\. ~6 :t 4 ., SI• ~ 'olct FOJ CdP1c l~S 10 10 ll ll JJ f l•PowL I } II ~s • ~··· , ••• from A •wide variety or Ulrich sen1or v1cepres1dcnt F•• ~·••»11 :wt1 1" •1 ••111~c11C'e<1e11 11 • ii•,, ... _"' I• su 1 ° 11 .. u. 11 ~_,_ "'"'(IP .I •! IP Oa ~J 101C•rbrun IJQ I .. .., oi(!. o'C!>t+-'t l\>OtCD l)l! "lJ '"' lJ -+ •• ac.d.mtc ''nil' \v h 0'. P rior 10 this appotnlm.nll t:t•t ~nd 4 11 IOCt 11 2111 ! trlllle olO l 11•0 Jtll lllt FIU'r 1>! II l l •1 •1 '7 "'' Giii .t.n J tJ !Ya t11C.1 J•! 6" C1roPLI 14 Jm1. 2)t 11 0 -1\ !'!¥ !gtr 111 lll II .. 17'• 11 + s -clatltles ~ill be required as Ila sty was manager ol the "ftd oth ',, 4 " ua1ro11 1 lo • • C•r11Teh l •o l" ,, , ,, o "" + " FMC. cp ,,' 1• 11 • 1• • tt ~ - '' i i'~ Founcl•i JOI 7 74 5yll(r Gt 111 JIJC••rlerCll tO "Jl l'< Jl Jn• ..... ,••c,o1n _ 1~ n,1} H o 1'• ~ he projtct devtlops ' • Rialto and lnl-d Center F_,p • ,. ' .. 'M" A,D ... 0 3• CtrtGll '10. ' ,... .~. n .. + .., 000 • r ... 1:..· •,s Tl<t feriowi ... ,, • 1':11'1 fe m'flboir llJM '"' F 11tt111 nC.rou~ Tt1cllrs 1¥, 1u c1r1trw '°"' "II'• It\• 1 _1,Faole C8 ill •I• • The program Is belng !:!NTC ~ ;,(! 7 ti Ttcllncl l ., C•1tltCk olotl l & "" '1\1 , , -I'll l'aot• Mn ' 111• I) • 171, -•• !11 lh• a!O(k m•r11;1'f r-lf,, r•nan-d through lhe Federail Branches 1n the S ;1 n Grwth l " "I Jkt>no10 • 1 • 1t ~•i.rTr 110 •2 ,. JJ1. i,,, +111o ~~~~·, '• 't: t: • ~i: j't +-;11u 11e11ro-1 ,,, vnon"lcl•L "" ~!!I ~l\l y""rt ,~2JIJ26~CCICorp ll •h •l••IO-ll FMcr<.!!!2 1\l1 31, ""-._.,I Advance Re.&earch Projects Bernardino area Hasty Joined "r:':l: l ff J~ r."~ }," .·~ !!l c,~: 11,•.',',', : •,•,.~ •1•,", 1,!", = :• ",!?.L-~,i ... ; 1111 11 : 1!: =.,; .. "'r' er n 1•1t. bo-Anriuel ,.,, /tfarJeet Sy11abob Extwtlve otfloes: 520 s. a c.m1no Real San Mateoi c.trif Moo·• TMft °""'°" "" ... In oper1Hon ..... 1121, Md ,_ ..... filled to P'1 tunda Oft dllrMncl. AWIO Tlwtft II I ...... of """° Colpoi8ticwt • __. In ....,, ftllkll '" ~ 11Mto••dll•"°91-"-0IP8W, •c•' tM;. ... IPO•• Deu1lr; Wiit. ~ Mldklnt Md lpeoe .. __.. AWIO .. --bin 5~000 P90Plll who ... ,...,. to "'* ..... ~ r iow-tot JOU. AVCO. Fd f M t I 61 '~; riv Ea • 04 ! " C " "' _...., 214 1J 1~ ~ 221 • .+\>o et1,11 tlod:, dl'lldtl\o. e-Llbuldll1"' d!..-~ Agency the bank ln 1963 , -',' r u0or s 11 11 ,,. 1 e 1•11neseCp i )fl •1 111• 11to -\11 Fr•n-. s" 4 1 16 " , 1 • '• fffld. .... II __ ,:__.;_ ______________ -'-----------· ~::;c'" ~;~ t 02 GI ,1, ,.1 111<oln1 >!I lol ll ,9 , iO!.. 11 ,.rttr>ISut Ml 1tti1 '''' "' 11 .=,, ~uo:<.llred or 011':11rt 191' 1lu1 1m' 11 .\} 6 i[Tw Inc 1H •01 ll'!Hll(! l •I • 1J 11 'o 2' "'""""'"CO 110 llt >I ''' 11 >-•ot!Odt .rvlatnd e-Plkl 1•'1 1..-Ut ,._ . ...,~.fl 13 7! II 11 u1111 Mui "*""' ~~1l1~L~ I ;o ]: l7f 0 ~11•: r1 • '-11 FUOMI I" 10I .. • I I. 9 • -+ • l'IY•blot .., l lotk durt~ 1111. h ll"'''"' NIWPORT BEACH San Joaquin 2101 I 714 l • Hills Rd. 833-3440 '71101 &I 6~) V1tlld /91 rHc~ro!Le Ell ll 1 • 1 -G-~ I FUll!I 'm 14• • u "" C&11•tt " • 51 Cfn.MPw 1 6 J• IJ•: 11.. l 0 la.c (0 1 !O $61 " ]fl . n • l I (I VI .... on ,,..,i .. 1a,l'ld llO" ,...., tl•!tlll 1!tWY I "' 1 OI u~ , .... Fuan1 Cetol S'N I i'O 4l .. ·i · n·· -. ..,. t O•I> IO t) I"' 'I 'f\t ... ·J''°" Glti.t,. ·-~llftd .. H id IO ,., ~r.e l'I I ll At!f!I /" f"!ij'S..'' 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''"'" 011' ne Bo~ :¥! f 11 ~~;1 .. ~"""' jJ! 6ii lltlot~ ){ n 11, .Co .J'• -l1 ..,Trri arfl(I Jlt ~: t ~ ~.; ! :; ltl'O 1:111m1tto "s11 vellN' on til !lvld,119 !l!'!j!,;'-.11 , •• , ....... ,1.11 "'""''{.'"' s 2r~ l,a:,· ,r·-lt ~B•"c ~ a 110. 1,. 111 -l••• , • ..,1s11111un011 0.1111-$e1,,111""" 'll• "1 ,· Wllh Mu 101' 11,. s::::~ 120': !: 6~ il! fl\ 1 ~ '!!! ~o 1ro 't:· W' 1:•\ ~ t • Cl(t --C•llr'f e11-E1..,lvfdrnc1 •-E•..,!Ylo or '• t W•ttlM!n r.roi-P ~hn V• IAO to ,tt, 1'I 11 1' ~~ t JI He!lg1 t 06 ti Er•I• 11,. It ff Clltl Olllo 1 111 '1h ~'' 'I ' It '" 0 1! 1 : q!! .: J: ef "' •ncl Hitt I" lul~ • dl.,_E1..i1!1tr~ at•lto~ l ~ j t Ivel! 12 il U ~~Mi>f«ltrl--AO ~ , ' •0 tt ~" K 'l(I I I• '• •, _ " 11\ftlen ~•-Ek rltllt •-Wllhotll ,..., M~"" l t 1 • r,or• • t • 111Mn s,.p_ lf ~· '• l' "~ r•P ,,. f • '!~"111 .. 1 t • ~ T~11J{ t!l , 11 fllMll SP iii' 1-) I'• l \, I lo --l '~ di ft0 1 't: ,.i.: IS, • : o-tnlt --Wll!I w•"~nls Wd-Wfl.r'I ! I Giit l.il WI''" 1~il11 NP'llflll l , ·~ ~. ~, .. 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Vll{ FO ~~1 ! <t ("'Omlll .SC J1 11 I~ 1 1J o -'•Qt11ftt•'fl .t0 jl li 1 ?~, 11 -, Com~nltl f-"Ott,,.., I l\l~lkf 1, Nlol.N l Oh'.•1" 211 ll '~r~11tf ..0 lOOl ll'• ti 21 1 -$PvbUI 1•0 I lto If 11 1 , 1tl1t1ttl to\llUl•llen1&11. , I l <l.o "'"" ,.,.(~( Mee ., 111cv /ltd F /Atd M•a!c Meg11-M1llor t.\ln~I M&flPC IJ.~~H tJ.A,PC 1-.\e t i 11\t rc IJ.1rcr;> Mt •Pn M1r.V Mtrlot ll•rle Mi tQ 'l•tr ( ~:;tr. llrVIC "91(0 M•-M1ne Ml"M M1ntl M-vo MIVI MtYll MCI\ ~,. N..c.C•o NcDe• NtD,.. """' /\kGrE Mc(;H A'cGr~ /". clnv ,_ cl(M ..-MCL!IU MtN•1 Mtld .... -MEI o MtlYSI •A!l'I ' M~ma.o Mft(k MP•HJ "'"" , .... ~I> 111~, ~ MGM Ill• ro l~G!C tllrc~G t.1 lcr0< /.\l!IC" Mid So M '" MIO~ M l~l' Mt!8 """"" .... 1 .... p Ms;.~o II "R "' . MP Cr Mo"ul MO!llt( MC~IJ .Vohwl ,.,IOl~b I ol'rb ,.,.,,,,., l\Qno<; Mono~ ~10"'0 r ....,,. ~·Oil•• lie MC "Olll I MW Mc•oe MD"!~ n or N l•o•ou "ltfu~ MISTI llSL ••uro•i• /Au pf; /\Ur"" l~urDI' Murrv '&Ito II~ CQ t.111hu t.l~I A tll\~ll N~ &1 ·~~· c ~&c~~ N"t Cl N~I( NM D "0" 11~ Ft "" c 1i.1Gv NG..-1'! N ~I II N~•l111 NJILe I•! F N~!Sv N~I $! "•!Sii NUS! N11 1 N (Ir Na!Ot"t" t.ltOlu N•~ P" ... NEllCll """ N•WIT' ' f ,,.,. NVHO V~I' t ~o f I IOI. N 8QN 1Je~1o; c•tlr Norr Ir "lllA,.,. I ~"\( l/e•A• NOA."" "Olll't t.IOt•• No•Co Nol I( •ie I~ >Jo NI; tloNG Na~to 'M "' , " "' '" .,, '" 'l' • • " ' " ti 11 l!f 1l LI I"' " II~ 14 Al H O ·o ,., ! ' l' ,., ·1 l • 1. $1 " "' ~-~~~-~~~---~------~--~~~--~-~-----------------------~----- DAILY PI LOT SCWtdnt1day Stpttmbtt 2 1970 Wednesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List • ., .. " " ' l •• l " .,. Stoek • Leaders • " .. " " • ~ " • ,, • "' " ' no " ' ' • ·~ " ~ "' '" 'M .. • Shortly before the close the Oo\v J ones 1ndus trial average of 30 selected blue cbtps was of! 3 02 at 7~ 13 Of the 1 537 issue s on the tape 657 declln ed and 554 gained o\ turnover of around 9 500 000 'llhares was down from 10 440 000 sh$res Tuesday The State Department declined any immediate comment on reports from adm1 nts trat1on sources that the Un1ted States now has evidence that Egypt and Rus sia have violated the ceasefire agreement m the Middle East Prices weakeoed in quiet trading on the Amcr1 can Stoc k Exchan ge " -.S1ti. + "~ 11\.t -'• tt + , )~ ll~l ,,,,., ... " ~~-... '" '' + • " + _,. • Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List "'• to Cll t ~tOSt &1llueCo ... "~ lt24' ' i " " ,., ll ' " • ' " ' " • ' ' ,i .. " ' ' ! " . , " ~ .. " "' • " ... " ·~ •l J~ ~ I 1' I ' Its )} ' ~ 12(1 1$ I . " '" ~ ~l • ' " '" . ' 13 ,, . " . ,, • • HO '6la i 1 J1 I . " ' • 0 ' . 31 11 " ~ " • " ~l " 1 ,} • ,., ~JOlt •• '" " fi:o '!• ' ' ' , .. .. '" '" lU~ ... N.Y. ll'in11ers and Losers • ... I 'o "! • • " . " .... ,,,.~ ,. 1l l ~ x :"~( .. "" U0 'l'l:(l!Nll( u l • owl,.. Com ,:Ill"'" .. '' VP 1 EtnNtnd •o u ) 1 RGY• 11111 tr, ' I > ~w.111 111 .. Uo 10 ' orkl "''"' ~': ft~ 10 1n1 Oii ;!11 OOOtllo o I Notll!r1111 o Oo ~·, •11 Ou! lh-t (I ~ • I (l\lldb n llll I 11 )V11 PoM11 U• • 111 i• ~·, • . " f •1 ~ ~: I c'~ .... ,~. l t~ UI It .>,\~1 Iott Ctt 'u': l !,._l i['a~~" ~r.: ~ I ·~ r•" .t Utt,. ••Inc. "· 'OU ·~'"r' • ' . ., ' U !'I •rObl,!! 1i1• 1 ~on-• NEW vo~w: (,t,~} W•G~~W•Y 1 CC"'~ e. ,o,..,t ct n 5 &ek E~c111n•t • lc•1 -A·B-• ) ' " • 'l 'l • ' l "" ' ' "" 0 • • •• )ll ' . "o , .. .. 11v: .. • •• ' " '• '" '" " " •• . .. " • . ' 11 11 • '" •• ... ,,. " ""• • l~'t •S llt ' ... ' • " ' ... • • ' ' • • ' ' ' • " " • " ... "' ·~· " , •• 161• ' 4!\'I •IV. . "' ~. 4~ . ' . • • '~ 1~. " ' J'to ,., lf • lJl• ' . "• lllo ;f~ " " • ' . • '" "' ! . ... .. • • SI.. NII IMt) Hltll I.•• (llM (Ill "' 'l • ' • • ' "' ' ' " .. • • " • "' '"' ,., " .. • ... P o ". ~' .. ,ft • • ,. l~ ' ' ' ,~ ~ 10 •• l 71i~ ' . • • '" • • .. l • >• ' " ,l ' ' " " ' ... l" " .. . ' . ' .. 1 )l I ' .. l• J1 , l l• • .. • \ ' '" • " • • • • • .. • '" ' . " 0 "' " l' "' 10 ~ • • • " " l '" • 21 • 1l 2/V: 11•1 •• ~i~ Jl 1;. •• JC • '. ' " , ' ?•6 • ' " 3t Ult " . " ' " ''" \Sh 't ~ .. " • • •• '" lif.1 '~ ,k! " . ' ' " " ' " " " '" .. .. ,. " .. . ' '" • Ho .. ~' • • P o " •• •• '" \J\. • " ,~.~ .. " • .. ' •• • ' .. " •• • p .. &7 .... '" :) 17 16 • 5 • 5to ' ., 7 • 1 • ll\o l "'- '''' n. \1 iiw JV, J92! ,, ' ) ' 25 ''" u . l ,,,. 12"> ?It II 69'0 ? I~ \ l J'I I ' I 0 •• 1J ., .. )) 59 51 • I U r.i J\o n 10~ 10\ • • •• 10' ,i~ ,i • l "' 24. I lo J\-~7 '" ., -E-G- 5 S•o ' ' 0 . ' . • 12'1 I f 1 I ' I ' n ' ,, ' . • u .. l~ 1~ • •5 1ft , sr, . " l ,, .. ' ,..,._ . ',., '" '11 ,!~ ••• n " ' .... '" ~ . " '! ro •• ~ 11'!: ''"" !I 'l ..... "' 1~' . .. ,, I))\ •• ' ... '" .. ' . ", • ' . .. • " ' ' . sf 1 ". .. ... • 1 ) " '" " '"' " ... .. " .. " •• '" ... l)"o ... .. "• "' '" "" ... '" ,., •'o ... ,., ,,., " 0 10, v " "" •• ... ir,: " . So M Iii (M1 I N tll L•• Cl111 Cll1 II M Nol 111•• J H 111 L1w C14>1• (111 .. • • •" ' . • ' .. I 0 •• ' ,, "' • 0 ti 11 Ntl 111•1 I MLfll L ... CIM• Cflt •1 • 0 5 11.> I 10 )6 , 35 1 ' • t ~ . ,, ) ' ' • lll• ? l\o I o It. I 16\o 7l • ~ • ~l • • • ... ll • I • ' .. "' ., .... t\o 1 \?\o I? -R·S-• " ., ' ' ' ' ' 'l ' " • • '' " • • " ,' ' . • ' ' " . ' " " " ' . • .. '" . ' ., ' ' .cllo " ' ' • ' . s si, '" s n:i. J 0 ,. ' . ' . .. • •• " ' ' ' ,j " ' . )~ ,. .. ' • ' . .. 'I' " " I 1 I o U 1t I lilt ~ lo IQl/f Jl 2J ,. n' 21~ .~: ~\t l IV. Ill< . ·~ ~· JJO ,, ,, I IOJ\'t 10)"> ' 10 "11 13'4 1) '.i ? ) • ?\o • JO•t JO 1) fl 1111 . " l Slo .5 • '5 • ,11 ,, . . ' . • • ) . " 0 ·~· •• I • V o ~10 01'1 , 5 • 5 'J\,' 'J! .,i • r1· 1oi. 101, "' 11 \ 0 i: 1n: 1n: ' ~,,., lh 1 h• , 1i ~~: k: l~ .. ' • , ~u: Jf 't ~?: :~ lJ 1J1: 1Jt ' . . l •• : 1f • :t~ . .. ' ., Finance Briefs MONTREAL <UPI) M 1 crosystem!! lnlernatloru1J Ltd which is controlled by Bell Telephone Co of CanadM, Tue~day reported IL holds unsecured ootes of Penn Central Transportation Co w h I c h 11 purcha~d last February for $1 500 000 Microsystems said tbtre 11 no current market for the notes and It ls Impossible to determine whot value 1f any, may be placed upon lhem 1n t~ future ~nn. Central Transportallon f It I d for reorganization under the U S. Bankruptcy Act last Junt N"IY YORK !UPI l Berkey Photo lnc has filtd suit ag1unat-Movlelab 1nc for non-payment of an obllgatJoa totatlng $14 9.11 178 p I u 1 lnttrcst 11temmmg r r 0 m Movaelabs purchase ol Berkey s Pa the M o l lo • Picture Proce5.~1ng Division In June: 1969 Mov1elab raid il h11 hltd a suit againsl Btrkey iD f'edtral Court and thal tt W no further ~mment on dUc •<lien I - • • " _!4 DAILY PILOT Quisse tt Takes CYC Race The rugged lf>().milc Pacific Cup race v.'as won Sunday by !hi! 43 root Schooner Quissett skippered by John 1'roeger or King Harbor Yacbt Club. The three day race around San Nicolas Island, sponsored by the California Yachl Club for lwo-mast ketches schooners a n d over 40 feet. has traditionally been dominated by ketches. tn the ketch clasi;, the 4D ' DAILY PILOT P'hoto ~., Almotl LKk•lltT ,. • Canadian W o 1nen 1-~LE=·-=G:=.~-==OT='c=-E --1---LE-0""~•""•:,...-or_ic_~_ CAT• •• • • ''' su,1!•101t COUltT 0" 'THI: • Cl!•T l"t U IH .STAT ll 0" CALl"O••OA ,0. •' f'tCTITIOUS NAME THE COUNTY 01' ORANG!! ~ n., 11-~ CIO Cefllh Ille• 1r1 N•. A .... m COl'odvcllne II -lneH II 112'1 Ol.l•kltt ,,,,,-, Aw~ G•rdtn G.ort, (11lll0<"lt, undfr 11141 l<!OTl(t: Of' M•A•t MG 0" "" lktlllou1 llrm ... ,.,. ol' ST. !.UK£'S DAY l'OR 'ltOU.T I!. 01" Will AMD roit HVlt5ERY IMOM·SECTARIAN) i/lf:I lh•I Ll!TTl!lt5 TEITAMl!NTART ~' ,1111 tlrm 11 ~ GI 1111: fo!towll\9 f.ll11C Of 1"'11\V SAMMY -NvTa. ~ WllCM ... ~ Ill full IJMI .it<ff Of ~CelHd. ,,J ' Losing .Sail Race rttldtnet ~ore 111 f(lllllwt! NOTICE IS HEREtlY GIVEN Tll1I VICTORIA, B.C. (AP) -Hi:..a:::,,!.; =~·c.1r,•,11 JondiJ Or,. ii:i.:.1~2 :..~~ ~1'w1:l1':t111"~1f,.:..: Nutw J, QuP\ti'r, 10111 JOfldly or,, al L1!!1r1 Tnl1~lf.rJ to 1111 Kll!fo~'• I lopes ror the rirst Canadian Nu~lln111on BHCll, C1llf. refer1....:1 lo WlllCh It mtOt tor tulfhtf' winner in the Women's North o.ttd AU9u" ll, 1t10 Ptnicvl•••· •'Ill t1111 1111. HrM •lld IOl•c• Jolln J, Ou!!llt1r ot lle~rl119 tnt '•m• ha• bun iel tor A m Cr \ Can Sa i Ii n g Nvtl• Qu1111lr S~tem't.er 11, 1t1c, •• t:M 1.m .. !ti• IN Championships lad'" Tu-·"•' y STATE OP CALl~OllN!A, <ourtroom OI 0.Pltl ..... nl Nt. l 11 ••!• t:\I o;:w ORANGE (OUNTY: COVtl, 11 100 Civic Cen!~r Drive Wp!,,111 wh~n the crew from the Royal Ori ~1191 IL 1t10, "'°"e ni.e, • No11rv 11>e CllY ol s.n11 An•. c111rornl1. Canad'.•• v.cht c I '' b uf Pullllc 111 11111 !Ot Miii S•att, personellY 0.tlCI Auoust 24, 1910 \ ~ 111 .. ••ed John V. Q</sll1!r t nd Nu ... J. W. E, ST JOHN , , T t I t 't f' I d I 'd Qusllllr known lo me 10 lie 1~1 K•-'S Covnry Clt•k '·' oron 0 OS I s 1rs ay ea ~ nllfTMI Ire iullltrllled to lllt w!ltllfl JAMES I(. NAltUSI! and finishCd the second day's l11ttru.....,1 1nd 1c•1111¥1le<1gtd they , ... u1s wut RH.,.,,. Inch 11wt1. ·'· . Kiiied Ille !lme, G1r•tfla, C1llror!IJI tOHI racing in sixth position. t01fki.1 s..11 T11: 12u1 n1-1tn ,, C · I h Jwn L. Jolld AllWR" tw 'tlll'-t' le anadian entry, w I 1.11111,.,, Public . c1111or~•• Pioo11s""' 0r1n111 c11111 0111v l'tl<it, Daphne Grant as skipper and Pr1....:1"1 0111c1 Jn AU9ull H, 21 ena Sef>1emti.r 2. 1t111~19 Or"'" Coul!IY · Barbara Ovens, and Shannon MJ eomm1111en E•plres LEGAL NOTICE . . H · d had lh M.lrdL 2, 1tlJ owar ·as crew, a . ree-Publl~ 0r1 ,..e c111sr 011iv P11o1,1------~~,...-----'~ point lead arter the first tY.'O Aut1111 1t. H •net ~,,,..,t>11, t, '· '·lmt races in the series ~tonday. 1'10 is.i.i-~ cE•T~r~~fT~~u~F N~'atNfls.:· Bui Tuesday they did not LEGAL NOTICE T~e """1"1.,_ ~ <«1HY M ··a ----===-==----1C-U(!lll9 • lluS!llllU 11 2661 $. G•ll ... finish in Oil(' of the four races, •ve. s.nt• Arni. c11i1or"''· unc1...-,.fk< and l·n the other lhree gao·ned ,.iru4 ''' lic H11ou1 11rm name of OR.APE1t1es C•ltTIFtCATI! 0" IVSIN ' BY MR. JOHN •nd rtwt Mill' •11"" only sixlh place and two "1CTITIOUS MAME is (<>mPose<I ol· Ille IOIJ;OWI ..... r$Oll, S.v.nlhs. lo br'.ng theo·r total was the Bay Shore Yacht Club Tiie und•••lv~ ooe• cerutv M Is wl>Oi,e "'"" '" 11111 •lld olt<c of r1•ldfflc• , cot111uclln11 1 business 11 . 2090 NewPOf'I 1s ts ta!!Ows. ·.-.·~ to 22"• poi·nts. ot New York.· a1\ld., cos11 M111. c11o1ornl1, 11no1r john walsl'i, 1916 w. $t, G't" R It I r . , I lhe llcll!loui firm name ol CARL$ Pl. Sanll Ant C•tll esu s v.·ere u n 0 I c I a TIRE A ROAD SERVICE •tlCI Ill,>! oii11<1 AVllllSI '11. ,,,o . •• •• Uncon firmed results give pending consideration 0 f wld firm '' comPoi.eG 01 the io11o1Yin11 Jon" w,1in ~~~· lhe -cl-day le d I Jerro'e "''°"· wnosa ,.. .... In full .&nd pl1ce STATE OF CALIFORNI A sc .. un a O protests. ol r"ldfflee 11 ••follow': O~ANG.E COUNTY: ; • _ foot Newporter Leprechaun - three time 01erall v.·1nner - fh1ished rirst on corrected time. She beat her sister ship lhe Jabbt'rv.·ock Ill by 77 second! in spite of a spinnaker blown out by 35 knot v.·inds off San Nicolas. The Leprechaun Y:as skippered by Whitney Collins ur the Long Beach Yacht Club. v.·hilc the Jabberwock Ill was sal\ed by Allen Donovan of the Califor. nia Yacht Club. AMERICA'S CUP DEFENDER BILL F ICKER CONGRAT.ULATED BY WIFE Newport Skipper Feels 'Team Well Organized' for Big Race Next Week Clar.k's crew from the Cad Kenneth canon, ro11ct Newport on Au~u" .u.. 1t1o, 1ier-·-iM!'·~ Corinthian Yacht Club or Blvd., Cl3611 Mt,a, Call!, Not•rY P~bllc 111 Ind .,,.. seld SI••• I EGAL NOTICE Dlltd Au;usl 11 , 1970 per1onally 1ppe.&red Jolln Wtli.h ""19Wii Seattle with 4 1~~ points. The ' C1rl Ktnnttn Collon to me to l>t tne Ptr!<ln wt>alt 111me Sc.Ille Crew. W' 'nnerS or the Stitt OI Calllornl1, 0ra"9e Counly: IS S\/llltrlbt<t ta lhe within l"ilf,Y~ P-MUr Qn •uou•I 11, f910, 11etore !l"'· • """ ac~l\OWltdtted ht e•t<ultd !ht Pnit. chan1pionship in 1966, wori two CERT IFICATE OF llJSt NESS Noll<Y Pullllc Jn Ind tor 11ld Stale. {Ortlclal Sea!) . FICTITIOUS NAME 11ttSOnall~ IPOe.o,rird Carl K1"nt11! Collon ' Jc-epll E, 01vl1 '-' or fOUr raCCS and also fook One Tiie ur\dertlOned c1ct!o certify lie 11 knov.n ID me h M tne OltlO~ Wl\Ost Nollry P\/t>llC, Ctllfll'nlt.• • d d th . d I corntu<ll~ 1 bvi•MU 1t fOll Boll.I, name Ir; lul!Krlbtd to Ille within 1"· Prlncl1>1I Olllct 'Jn ,•• secon an one Lr P acc. we11m,11r.ier. c1111o.rnli. unde• 11,1 lie-1trumer>1 11nd 1ckllawledgt<1 lie e•ec~1eo oran11e Counh ••• ;. FICI\:ER 'S STORY ... •·we continued to 1\·ork on the boat. bul "'ere always a little behind. 'fhe aft section wasn't even planked but "·as kinria glued on with foam and fiberglass. First to finish honors in the 15-boat fleel were taken by the 73 foot Schooner Queen 1\iab sailed by La rry Pringle of the California Yacht Club. The Queen Mab with an elapsed time of 48 hours and 05 "\Ve got our ne\\' sails just mi11utes thus maintained her before lhc July !rials. We record of first to finish for the didn 't have much of a chance fifth time in a row. First to to work with them. but finish in the ketch class "'as fortunately they turned out the Chiriqui, 14 m j nu t ts well. I worked with Ted Hood behind the Queen Mab, sailed in an effort to determine the by Jake Wood of the California right shape. the right draft, Yacht Club. etc. Ted produced 110\ only 'The race was niarked by what he thought "'as the best slr_ong winds on the beat up to but 1vhat made us the n1ost Point Dume following the stnrt com for I a b I e. and th;it i'.1 Marina de! Rey al 1:30 p.m. certainly-improves your sail-- Friday. All of the boals 11·ere ing. beyond the Point Dume mark "We did better in the July When the winds C()\lapsed after triaJS than 'WC expected. Of sunset leaving the f I e et course, "'e would have'liked to floundering in light airs for 10 have "'on all the races. Our hours. The winds picked up score at the end of July was around noon an Saturday and nine wins and one Joss. Valianl the fleet sailed around San beat us the last race of the Nicolas under rugged oil-shore July trials. ronditions v.·ith gusts to 35 •·rm sure \\'e surlered a bit knots and 20 foot seas. All of this year i'il not having a trial the boats finished v.·ith gentle horse for practice starting. If breezes Sunday afternoon. I have a strong poinl. it is record. I-le used to sail Star boats -a\ld ·that makes hinl a nice fellow ... Hardy is a forn1er \\•ortd champion in lhe 5-0-5 dinghy tlass. Ficker is a former v.·orld Star cha1npion. "I feel that our team is well organized. In that respect, I am confident that we "·ill "'in. I never speculate on winnJ11g or losing. F'icker said the morale or his crew is still high. "This is pa r ti cu I a r I y H ydt·o -~~c Will Drive In 2 Races Th ood • . · g l•llou• firm name of ALEJCANOER '"" umt MY Commln!on E•Plrn gratifying 10 me becau~ I ere were g rac1n SALES and '"'' 111c1 firm 1, «1mposeo \OFFICIAL sEALI J~ne 11. 1t1• "'as told before lhe campaign conditions with the wind (lever 01 ""' ro11ow1f\ll per<Of>. wnci.e "'"" JOSEPH E 0Av1s Pu111l>M11 o,,,... co.1st o.iflf flll1ot, that I would never get through dropping below five knots and ;:1~: •nd oJace 01 resi<Mnca It •s ~i'1'~1~.':ug:~~,c~~,1otni• ~9u,~ust 11' "· 1' and St!>l•m~r.:O the summer "·ith such a young gusting at times lo 20 knots. ,_;;m A1••1nder· 1°" P~lo Verde. ~v·~:..,';.,"l:,~~ Expires h . 0 1. 10, Lnng Bttch. C1111orn11, JIHM 1\, ltl• LEGAL NOTICE •' cre\Y -l at they jusl v.·ouldn'l The crews are using Cal 2Qs are<tJt,,Vll~~.~~1!10 P~bll.ntd 0,,_, ca.11 0~11y PH01, be emotionally up lo such a aod s1vapping boats after each si,,e or c11itarn;.,, Or•"tte coun1w: Auv..,..1 11. n. ,. 1t111 Sectemller :z.:1-------:c:::c::-----'-'- "ampa· 1. h · h . Ori Auvu•• 11, 1910, llf•«• ""'· 1 ttJO ••1'2·70 '·Jl3'1l .. 1gn. race to equa 1ze l cir c ances. No1an Public in •nd '"' ..,Id st;1le, CEltt•F•CATli OF 1us1Nr:ss. "And lh. h "-I El11ht crews are competing 11er~1i... ·-••ed J!m •1t•ancser krt11¥1n LEGAL NOTICE FICTITIOUS NAMt: • IS as 111:en a 0'11g _ ,, to me to 11e '"" person w-...,m, The undttllgri1<1 do cerllh 111ey .,. series. \Ve have 25 races, And 1n the walers of the Haro " sutoscrilltd 10 tM within 1"s1ru"""" c<HlC!ue1in1 • 11u~1neu 11 u11 N ... ""' lnd kflawledoed ti. led Ille SU,l!ltO• COVltT OF THE lllwd,, Cosla Meu, C1lifornf1, under Ille every day we went out e Strait for the Adams Cup, IOF;l~tAL SEAL) execu Simi. STATE OF CALIFORNIA "o• llctilious firm ntml of MY WAY MM!,..,, knew we had tO "'in. There premier trophy for women in Jffn L. Jobst THI! couNT,,v,.•," ORANGE ,.:,o:,r;" .. ~"c0:~1nofi:1i;e ,',.""",·~,,.,-, . N h Nalar, Pullllc-C1litornl1 "" \\'as never any relaxation on clubs belonging to the orl Prirw:IPal ouice 1n SUMMONS or residence ire as loltows: _ lh r th Th • y hi R • MY Commission E•Plres MACCO REALTY COMPANY, A Jack Ti111!1<1t, 1521 New110rt 11¥11 .. e part O e crew. ey American ac a CI n g Mlrcn 1, 197J C0<Po1'111on. P!•lnllff vs. BETTY E. Cos11 Me ... M11r1ere1 Taul•rw. 15t7 have the killer instinct. I'm Union Oranoe caunlY BAUER. DOE 1 tll•ovgh DOE 11. New1>err 111 .. d .. Co11a Mt11. ' Publk.M<t Or•noe Coa!I O•llY Pllct. t»eelu•lve. Oetend1nt1 Dlltd Auv11•I II, lflO proud of them. The defending champion 1·;111111 i2, 1•. 26 •tlll September ,, Pl!OPLE Of' THli ' STATE o F Jack Tau1&ne I. Ir , '19111 ""·~ CALIFO•HIA kl Ille 1110v1 namttl Dtf.... Mare1rt1 l1ul1ne " ve ird to instill in the Jan O f\1 a J le y ol the <11n10: s111e ct ca111crn11. Ori"'~ Countv: c:rcw to .maMtain an even f\1antolokinn Ya cht Club Ne\\/ LEGAL NOTICE Yau 1re l>erabv directed to nie •writ· On.A".1'~$T 11. 1910. ti.to•• me. 1 Nofll'v e • t<!n pltadl"' In rtiPtlnse to Ille verified Pulllic •n a"d !or Mid 5!11e, KtlOMllY pace. Don't get too high when .J ersey was in second place on comol8ln• o• 111e above named 01~1n1111 •POtare<1 Jack T1u11ne and M•rt•r•• You win-a-race __ '-Or too h b' · f T d 'a , P-J63'1f w11n '"" clerk 01 1ne 1bove enlllled court T1ul~n1 kncwn 10 me re be rne i>erson• I C aSIS 0 U e S Y S CERTIFICATE OF •uSIHl!Sl In Ille allove <!nlllled 1(1~ _llr-llt ~hose n1mn 1.-e $l.lbscrlbe<I lo Ille within discouraged 111hen you Jose unconfirmed results. Her ere\\' Ficiirious NAME ag11n11 vau In t•ia ccurt, w11n1i:i TE N :;s1r~men1 ilrid 1cknow1ea11e<1 lh'Y , __ Th · I 'I '--· T"" unoerslened dces cerlilV th• 11 con-dty1 1Ul'r l!>e urvlce an YOU ol !his sum· II ed !ht !lme. one. ere JUS can uc any had 37 11~ points. dU(tlf\11 1 11uslnes• 11 41 l1t111 NtwOOl"I """'" If served wHhl" 111e above named tOFFICIAL SEALI ups and downs. . . . lle•cll, California, un<ltr 111,' fklllloul covntr, or within TH IRTY d1Y1 if 1.ervtd JOSEPH E.·DAVIS Jn third place With 3fl points tirm Mme of THE CHILDREN'S SHOP •I-here. Notary Public, C•Ufornte "I've also cautioned them was Penny Hare of the •rid 1 ... 1 Yid urm 1, camPDStd of ,._ You ;1re 111re11v no111lf!! 111a1 unless vou Principal O!flct In that being selected to defend tollowi1>1 Ptrscn, wllO!oe ntme In 1un ind 10 Ille • written res.i>Dnl•vt Pleaa1,.., !lid Or1net Covntv Chapoquoit, ~lass., Y a·c ht p11ce o1 reslcierw:e i• a• tolklwi: ol•lnllU will t1ke luaiim•nl fo.r '"' My Commls11on EJ11>lre1 the America's Cup is not . · 28~, Dottt 11 M111no111na 31110 Rf\I., Ave. '-"Y Of" .. ,,,..." dfmjonde<t In ''-Ju,., n, 1'74 , Club, lying rourlh with ·;4 NewPO<t 8 ... cn, c1111.' ' verlfltd comol•inr •• 11risi1>1 I/POI\ cot\-'ublllhed Or1nve COit! Dally ,[Joi, everything -if "'C dan't points was the San Francisco Dated A!flvst 17, 1910. tract, ,,.. will 111PIY 10 tt>e court far ~v Auv""' It, M •nd se .. temller t, '· I actually drfcnd ii. 1re'll 1vish 0o11~ 11 MulhOll•'lll 011>1r relief demancled 111 '"" Yerlti9d 1910 1so.10 'rrip e World record holding Yacht Club and firth with 25 s111e 01 c1111arn1., o'•lllK coun1y : como111n1. . LEGAL NOTICE hydro driver f11ickcy Remund lo hell we had never been on A119• 11, 1910, 11e1ore me, , Nc11•v y.,. ""' :11t11 llH1 ""'' •! 1~ 11torM1 selected." Pullllc In and lor wid State. i>erM>nllllY Oii 1nv mtller citnneclN w•lll lt1t ,.,,._ has announced that he "'iii 11>11tdreG 0ouv 11. Muttioll•nd known to •111n1 or ll>i1 wm .... •o.. suc1t •ll0<11t' ------;;:::cc------drive in at least tY.'O hydro "\Ve know we can't let do11·n p w me to be ti.. person wt>o~ n•me Is Q>ould lie conwtt f<I within the 1im1 Umlt '·JU'J . 11 h kn • • iu~sc•lbt<t ID Ill• w1l~ln 1n$U'"""'n1 11111 illlell In tr.It ,.,..,.....,.1 ttr llHnt a ..,..illet1 CERTIFICATE OF IUSHUU.S classes at Long Beach Sept. 7 -especia Y "' en \\'C ow so (lll" lll 1c~no1weG!led '"" eaeculeG tile wme. ••••dln• te 1111 ctrnelllnt, FICT1T1ous NAME h h l·ottle about our opposo·11·on <0"'''"' SE•·> 0,, ...... ~ ''· ,,... TM undtnitne<t _, cer1111 '" • v.· en t e Southern California • 11.';,;. H. C,ne•n !OFFiCi~i.'.''SEAL> '~ •cnduci!ng • 111111nes1 11 1m1 L<>1 Standings overall v.·ere: aggressiveness in starting. but -----1. -Quissett I Schooner) ~ lhis...ycar--my-star.Linjj;-Was ool John Traeger, King Harbor as strong as J hoped it v.·ould Yacht Club be. The only starting practice Speedboat Club .!!lages its J9lh ''BUI from the looks or that y h N<>!•rY Pulllic . C•momi. W. E, ST JOHN. Cle•-A11a1, Fovnt1in V1lley. C1llf0<nll, Und!t annual Labor Day Regalla,-. --"A"-"u"ss'il,ecCc'~e"'''-'l,deon,,.'~l_.t~h"ln"k"-'w~ec'~d:....-acl1.t-M.a tc . +--~'•'~·~;;;'~;:cl ::::.:c• In ~~~~A. Tl\Om-~~~if:'.:i~.~rn OFNt7 o,~' N :~"·"··,__t ---relish gctlill£ ln a lacking ue Mv commission E•Pire• W•ltw11rtfl, s.11111 & Crin, ._._' .no-TM~lmil s tomi>oWi This v.·ill be <• \\•armup l\'ilh them Thei•'re a hardy ~cPt. 1•, Jfll uu wn1c1i11 Drive. su111 Numlltr,.. ar •11e '°110""1,. "'''°"· whose n11m1 exercise for Sept. 20th y,•hcn CHICAGO (1\P) Tom Pullli11>t<1 Oranoe CC•S1 0.11, Pltor. NtwitOrl IHtfl, Cl. nut ::tlo~~I; Ind Pl•ce of rtskltl\Ce II •• • 2. Nelly Bly !Schooner) -we ha\'e had v.·as when \1'e Richard Duprey, Palos Verdes 11·ere racing for all lhl' Yacht Club marbles. Ant.I that's no lime to 3. LCprtcirnun (Ketch I -practice. \\rhitney Collins. Long Beach "\Ve'vc h;id lo s 1 art Yacht Club aggressively ll'ith the other 4. Jabberwock Il l (Ketch!--boat bul conservatively ~ith Allen Donovan , California lh<' Jin<', so it's been a bit Yacht Club difficult."' 5. August Moon {Ketch) - Bert Friedman, Del Rey Yacht Club 6. Shalimar <Ketch) Richard Sti:?phcnson. Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club Lind errr1au Ca ptures BY C Title J ay Lindrrnian of the Bal· boa Yacht Club captured the Abalone Triangle Race held Saturday at 1hc Voyagers Yacht Club. Other top finisher~ were : 2nd Bonita -r.oldic Jo:i;cph Lido Island 'Yacht Club 3rd Niki II -John Kin kel BCYC 4th Photon \\1\lliamson SSSC !\10RF.SVRf IV. \llinllt'r -Blucfin -Ed Feo ABYC 2nd T"'1s1 l r fl.1ort hlaod -i\llVC . 3rd Black Jack Cannon -SSSC Andy J•y Scaman of Year R a cc Sunday Cosponsorrd by Lido Isle Yacht Club <ind Voyager's Yaci,t Club _,.\V!,nner _.:_ \\'ind Child -Lee Armstroog Voyager's Yacht l-Club 2nd -Niki 11 .John Kinkel BCVC But aggrcssi1•e or not. Ficker made his best mark in the August selection trials v.·inning 10 races and losing only one -that to Valla.1\. And even in the tv.·o races in v.•hich Valiant got the start, Intrepid "''as able to overcome lhc deficit -by tactics and boat speed -and \\'in. "This next \\'eek \\'C arc going lo do a lot of practice starts against George Hinman in hopes or sharpening up in thi~ department. This shou ld he!p us against !he Australians. llin1nan and l\·lcCullough have offered Ficker 1 he services of Valiant as a trlal horse starting next \\'eek. "And \\'e will also look at their sail inventory to see if there is anything \\•e need." ~aid ficker. ' Th<• only sailing Ficker and his Cl'C\1' expect to do the res! of thi~ \\'eek is for tuning both masts . "So if anylhing happens to uur No. I mast our No. 2 mas! will be ready,'' he cxplainrd. He said the boat 1vlll IX' hauled this "'Cekend r 0 r bottom painting. "Next \\'eek we \1·ill resumr crew practice and tuni11g. \\'c "'ill haul again just before the races for a gener;:1l cleanup. Ficker ... 1aid he hlls ha!J no chance lo see c:rctcl II under sail. As to Jhn llnrdy: "I h:ive never sailed against him a11d kno1v very litrle about hfs LIN -SROOk. OPENS F~IO~~ SEPT;-.. ~-r 9 A, M,., M. k bunch ~and that's no pun. p· k d AIJ9u•t 1t, n at111 seo1em1>er 1. t, Ttl: 17141 •42·t"4t K 111 R 1 JC ey will compete in his IC ard of Long Beach an 1910 is.il-7' Allor""' •er ,1.1111tn enne · H ntson, 15t'll Los Al1vs, d LJ • I 0 r S Pu1111sned O••~te C<1<1•I Oallv Pilot ~ouni.ln VJll!"r secon nlimited God Cup r. John Jennings o t. E Auou•t 1,, 11 •net S.Pirmber 1 , oateG Au1us1 11. 1970 h)1dro races ,"I Mo·ss0·00 B,·iv J Petc rsbur• " I .., ii·on L GAL NOTICE; 1,10 1,.J . ...: Ken~11h R. Hln>.son " Lil ' { ( e• r " -' .v Slate 01 Ca1.1or11!1, Or•nge caun!y; San Diego, al the wheel Or • lJOJ•s ~C( !le1nifinal rounds Tuesday in P-111n on Au11101 11, 1910, 11e1ort ~. 11 SCSC boat builder B 0 b the North America Yacht CERTIFICATE OF DISCONTINUANCE LEGAL NOTICE Na!•ry Publk tn 1nd 1or ~•lo $1.tte, By \Vi (I OF USIE ANO/OR AIANOONMl!NT PUIOllallv aPPe8red Kenne1h II.. Hln~IOn Pallel'!!On's J\1iss Van's PX . 11' j i:.1 111 ~ I{ acing L'nion's ma I ch OF FICTITIOUS NAME P·MfOI knt>Wn 10 me 10 be 1h1 Ptrtan wflot• ~lickcy holds kilo and five championships for lhe Prince ce~1~1~ .~:i~E:1~;~~;o A,,~:'I"' 15,11''1~3 ce:11r1FtC&re OF 1us1NEss ;,~~;,~; ,:"'~:~~1!:9.,'.ie111 wi;:~11,:; ·1 I" d . CROSSE POINTE <'ARMS or \V"les Trophv he CtlStd la oa DuslntH Under Ille UNOElt FICTITIOUS NAME lhe same. mi e compc: 1f1on recor s 111 _, r . " -· licti11ov• firm name 01 SANTA ANA Thr 11ndtt1111ne<1 ao h~eb~ <t•llty lhet IDFF1C1AL SEAtl the 850 cc hydro class, se t in i\lich. IAP)-Danny \Yilliams Pickard 1von three strairrht FURNlfURE MART &1 4l6 wett Fourtn '"'Y •re ccnct11cl11>1 • wec ianr vinlclH Jetn L. Jobsr ' • . • . b Stree1. ~an11 Ana, C•ll!ctnl1, wf'llcll tnd •lc lntt comPoneMs buslnt5s 1' • Notary PullllC-Californit 1963 and 1962 respectively in from the Houston Yachl Club races 1n the Lake l\11ch1gan bllsiness w~5 tarmerlv camPo•td of '"' llmlttd Pirtnef$t\IP ~• 16•·111 New!°" PrinclP1I 0111c, 1n H"nry East • p· h I '' the I d fie r· or lhc •at rr Bel I H bo IOll0Wi11g perwn. w~ow n1mt ln lull \I/av, Co1!1 M•••· Calllar,n18, \ll'ldef !Tie O•al!Oe County .. man S 1ran a. n . ea er a r 1ve \\ crs o mon ar r. and pl•ce at residence is 11 ianawi. 11c1111oin. 11rm .,.,,,. cf T,t.~lum R•clne My ccrTimiulon Exolrn the 225 hydroplan<' class ht' eight races in !he Scars Cup defeating Les Vasconseilos of h•-wH' c"""'"'"n'• Llm1te0. anc1 •Mt said ll•m M1rch ,, 1•n loolds lhc 'laro'ne Stado·um r\orlh An1e1·1·can Juno.or Sao·11·no the P ·r· y h I . n g GEORGE FELDMAN, 1615 Lakoskle It ccmPDSed cf 11\e !a11aw1n~ ~rs011• Publi\lltd Or1110e Coast DtJIY Piiot, 1• e ac1 IC a C I Ave"'1~. Or•f\lle, ca111o.r"i•. whasa n11ne• arid cla.ce. al •H•dtl'>Ce are •u•ust 12. 19, '' ltlll secttm~r 7 Competition reeords. 1vhich Championship. Association in a best-of-five cer1+nca1t '"' rr1n-.<1ion of tu\iness •~ toi1o ...... '?"wit: . . 1910 1-m.,o . utlller !he above rlctitious name 11111 Ec11rle ViCk1e Ratont '"'·' Su•te .so.1'1----:-c=::-:-c:---ccc=c=-:.:'.:.'.: \\'ill be up for grabs again on \Villiam. \l'ith 31''• points series. allldavit o• D11Dl!c111ori thereot. ire an 1v1i1ttler S<iud•e, 11215 E11t Penn Street, LEGAL NOTICE I bo 0 R d ·11 I I d J h H r h 0 J . I t lilt In rr.e at1 ice o• '"" County Cl•rk Wnnu ... CJlllO•"il t0602 .a r ay. emun 1v1 a so ca s On arper rom le r. cnn1ngs OS one race 111 oranot ccun•Y uncle• •r.e cro.,.ltlons ErnH• K1n11tr, 2011 Placen li••l---;;;;;;;c;---;;:c-;""::;:=::---- be driving F'ox and \Volfe 's (;roos<' Point Yacht Club who before set1ring three victories 01 SM11oro 2-.s of the Civil Code. .-.venue. cas11 Mesa. c11itornt1 '76'7 su~~~fo'1 '2,,',',"•"•"•'•• . Bl d h ( WITNESS "'' 11,tncr 11111 •lh dlY or WITNESS our ~Inds 1111• 11~• dilW of .. The Going Thing in the live 1 <' d a fl er i\1 on day's over fliarlLn u wort o Augu\• 1910 Au9u11. 1•10. STATE OF C•L•F01tH1A "olt. Liter hydro class in an effort eompc:tit1on and "oes into llouston Tex t,o advance to 'Geori.e Fe1dm1n ECVRIE v1c1<1E RACING 1Nc. THE co~:.',' ~F'"o1tAN011 e . ' '' OONALO KLEIN llY RICflARO A, CAILLOUTTE -to break the new Stadium today's action "'ith ~;~ points. the finals. A11ornt.,. 11 Liw Preside"' E11'1' of LIDA B. WAROtow. OirtMs- d I b 0. k p 11 UI H M1in SI Ste 601 ERNEST KANZLER ed. recor se y IC . 011·e on Sllftll. An• C1tiiorni"• t270I SlA'TE OF CALIFORNIA NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN lo 1~. Labor Day in Aquaholic. ' T4!MH COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES l SS. crett,tori of I"" 1bove ftlmtd dKtdtnl L Publi\ned Oringe Co•il Dilly Pllo! On tnl• 1hl div of Aueu1t, 1'10, betare ::::• •I~ """°"' navlrtt1 clalm5 1111nsr l\1ickcy has held scvura! t s tt All w. A 2 s • ,..., a No!•'Y Pullllc In ~net !er !lie •aid ••. de<:,denr ire required lo Ill• other hydro records in his 12-• CO e 1 l (J'f S 19~uii 12 ' n, ' •t111 ... tem~~ .. ~ ;:::,%\,,~~eGst:':.i :!~~~'.'9 ro!~~~i, d~Z :~m~u~~" e:"e1h;ec:1~~~·r of ~;.he•:w.:: ' d PNred RICHAll.O A. CAllLOUETTE 8nd en!i!ltd ccurl, or ID prestnr lh•m yecir racing carcur. an "·as ~EGAL NOTICE ERNEST !CANZLER. known 10 me 10 11e wlrn !"e n'c~u••v vD1.1Cneri, 10 1~ elected lo the Gulf l\1llrinu u · Ille PilflOl'IS who•~ n1mes •re ~ubscrlbed vflders11ne<1 at Oon1ld E. W1rdlaw clo I S D t 1 C P-lS.Of 10 t~• wl!nln ln11rumen1. 11nd ackn<r¥1lfGg. Pa•ker & St!illY, Attorneys ti 'L•w llal Of FanlC in \!.IG.1. Jn lh ut o ' 0 u c lll''Un ro•t,l ll l CERTIFICATE OF I US INl!SS ed la mrllld! thev e•irct11td tile Jame. BU ~· Main $1rttt. Suite llOt, Sint; SH me year he drOVC fOr " ... FICTITIDUS NAME In WltnlH Whereof, I h1ve htreunta" WI Ana. C1illorn!1, 9)101, which Is .fllt Tn1 vric:terslqntd daei cer!l!V he Is ,~ mv hand tnd _1111•'11 mv ollicla.1 )tal the Pl•ce cf bu1lntJ' cl The vnderslgned Mickey Thompson in lhc Indy duc•ino a t>Usine•s ~•OJ Vlt•t 1t111 s1r111, •llY Ind rear 1n thl1 certlllc1te hril allovr !n au milters Pt'llnlno to !l'tt 111111 500 running ninlh I I S It •Ila f e C010l1 Mesa, C1lifarn!a undrr lllf 11c1111ous wrllle!l. of said dtcN1en1. wlrhin lour monlM • • • · CO · " 0, Orm r !lrm nime of MAC ART COMPANY 1tlCI IOFFICt•L SE•ll Iller !he lirit oubllC1tlan o! IM1 noli,I, But like all lhc cxperl 1·unior ch am Pi 0 .,. from 11111 :said firm Is cami>01t<1 of 111e tel-/1/ SMritJ M. Otbornt Oa1t0 Aueu11 1. 1t111. towing r>er'IOn, wlloH name In lull aric:t Nci.rr Publk. -C.tlllofn1t Don1td E. W1rdlow , drivers of SCSC. Re1nund 's Ne\vport Jfarbor Yacht Club Pll<e cf rei!oenct 11 1, 1a11o¥1s: Prlnc!P•I Olf•(e In Adm!n11t••!o.r cf tne Etiit• r. t d be t I · boat ' Otnnls Mlch1el MclClntter t6'' LO$ Anvt!es Counry of !ti~ lbDve ntmed cfectd,nl 1rs an s ovc ts and no"' sailing for lhe US 've1.arna Dr.ve. HunnnoiGn 'BeKll. My comm111!on E•P;•~1 '•rker & _SKl'f, . r:ici1Jg. and ht' and his · · ca111o.rn!a. J11nt •· 1ti. ... H. M••~ St., 11111t * Com~t 1·1 0·0,, , .. ,·11 be oul 1·n Navy won the nation a) oareG Aue11s• ,s, n10 c1rn1u.1111nd Fl•lcfhHst. s,'",!',,',"1, c1nf., "'" 1•~ ' ' Dennis M . Mcl<•nley AnonttYS 11 Ltw f , I ) 541-.. t force on Labor Da.v. championship in the 18 foot s111e at c11110,";1 SM Wlllnltr seu1re. Atiorn~rs tor Admlnlll••tor Oranve County 1nu IE••! ''"R Strett, P11bhilled 0'1~9e Ca111 Dt•!T "'"IOI Th c in I c rm is s ion Flying Dutchman class in a on 1u9u,i 2s. lt70. cetort me,• No!1rv w~iui.,., Cillflf'nl• "'°1 _ Au1us1 n . 1•, U 1na S1c1 tmber1 ,: Pul:lic Ill •~d !or w!d sr~•· ct•IOMll'Y' Publl!l>td O••nte '"'' 011ly P!!al, 1970 UfO.IC progran1 \\•ill be a display seriC~ or nine raCCS OV~r the 8P1>eariro Dennis Mlclwl•l McK'lnlff -nown Auqu3' 16 ttld Seplember l, t. 11 • .1----;-;:;;c:'.:--7.:C:::C7"-=:..: or trick and b<irefoot skii ng hy to me ra M the "'""" w11ose n•me Is "10 1516·10 LEGAL NOTICE past "'eek. i11bscrll>«t •o '"' wilnin lns1rume11t Ind J------;;~;,;;-'-::.:::_ __ _ lhc i\-tarine Stadium Leech ac~-1irollf<I 11e e•ec111e<t '"• Mmt. LEGAL NOTICE •Alt ,.,, Club. \\11th Ensign Dan Rugg. the coFFtc tAL SEALf su,ER1011 couRT oF TMI! YachL Viclol' PLYMOUTlt England rAP I -Harold Cudmore of Ireland captured the second leg of the \\1orld 505 Class yacht cham· pionship t11ondny from the fli;ct or 80 dinghies from 19 countries. Chris Boome of the Unllcd States was 12th. DUTCHMAN CHAMP Lt. Scott Allan -. Jo1eoh E. 0•¥15 '-U25t SfilTE o" CALIFOllNIA FO ii 1970 Naval Acaden1y varsity Norarv Putllc-C1!/torftl1 CliltTIFICATE OF IUStNESS. THE CDUMTY o" OltANGE h Princlptl O!lltt Ill l'ICTITIOUS NAME Nt. A4'HJ C°3ptain, as CrC\V on l e Or1r111e Counly TM undtr\IOned dO Ctrllt... t"ty con-NOTICE OF Hl!AltlNQ 'l!TITICH MW Comml1•lo11 E~Plres dueling t llu$in1u 11 UU Ad1ms, Mun-CONVET llEA L 'ltO'tltlTT TO trapeze. young Allan <icfeated Jullf n. 191• lln11on aeacn, c11uorn11, under Ille Ile· E1111e 0, EDGAR e. . . . , PubllslleG Or1nof Co11I 01flY Piiot, llllou! firm n1m1 o! $All-MOR BEAUTY Otctastd WITM[lt, 42 boats in the d1f1fcult AUOUJI 16 aric:t Seplemller ,, •. 16, SUPPL.V co .• lnG 11111 wkl firm Is NOTICE 15 HERfBV CillfEN 01 . ,. . ••JO 15"-IO comPOSed o! , ... lallawlnt ...,..,..,, wllor.e HAltlllETTE F WITMElt ,,,. E ,lh~I yn1p1c compe 111011. • n1mn !n 11111 alld Plt<n Cl! r•sl<tence o• lht t!IJI~ JI ·EOGAlt 1• WITMEKulrl~ Thi' series, conducted otf LEGAL NOTI CE •r• •1 tonows: I aec~en1, 111i 111e<1 h•re ln ~ Ptttllon ':.;, "'e Robert L. lon1llu • '10250 Ma9noll1, o•l!t'r 1u!horl1lno lftd dl,.cl!"O ll>t •n BuffA IO. N.Y., round 1111 types • ,.,.llt ---M~ntlntlOn Belch. tr!• Ol 11\fo esllle or !lie ba EK~u-CERTtFICATE OF COltflOltATION ,0. Gtorla "Rt ft" 19,1111111, 10250 Mtttn0118, ttden1 ID •ell lllt PrOP4lr ly •d.;~~~">e<I df'· of 11·eather "'1\h the fln1:1l day TltAHSACTION o" IU51NE IS UNDl!I; Huntlnoian Be•cn to GltACE c ST"'ELE • w1J I below FICTITIOUS NAMI! J&c~ T. Htp!l9, m~· L•nt1ne Or . Pll•nct will; ... !-,,,,,;, r :;-n cam- sa1lcd 111 Cl near gale that lHE UNDERSIGNED COii.POii.AT iON Hununaton ll~acn a11rttme111 10 ••If •net vu~ n wrlU•n does "e•ell'f certlly !hj! u 11 co!lducl!no t FiorenGe P HeMlt. 20~6' L•nltna Dr. ln10 tlY 1ttcMen1 in nl\ lll•l~m~: .:"'"""' allOIYCd only 17 Of !he 42 business JOCl!ed ti 99' Wtll Utlt Strn!, Hu11!lnoron 8ea(~, IS +o In un<:Hvldl'd °"" h•ll lnl, lltl!er I t r .. h N•wr>ad B•ICll (P.O. ao~ 1111(1), Oiied Au1ust 5, lfl'C WllLIA," BllADLEY WITMER e ., . •lld S ar ers to 1n1s . Allan scored ca11rorn11 "1643 vridef the 11c11110u1 !lrm Ro111t1 L. 11n1llu• •o .•n unolvlded one-~.u \ 1 ' 1• 1011 '" Glorl1 p l9natlll\ It> n '''"· •net b'f thret firsts tll'O S('COndS a name ol !1 Fr1"clll1e .An11ua! Ul N•· Florence. p Heont t ourc11.t1er n1<TWd "••el"· 1, llu~M a~~ ti . d ' . • limll Fta11Clli11 Reoarts 11\d "'-' 111ct Jae' T Hii.t lo tM i>elltloft hit llel'l'I 111 10. he•r1~t In 11r and a fourth 1n the best firm 11 camP01ed 01 1111 1011ow1,. cor-.SfilTE OF cilLIFO!INIA 1 s. OtP~r!menJ l of '"" •bovt•tt1!lt1~a Ceu•1 or seven races lor "co ·s1 I OOl"l!;on wnos. Ol'inclp11 .. 11c1 Of Mlntn couNTY OF Ot!ANGE I si on 111e iu" o1~ oi SeP1em11er !fl~ ,1 •~» • ns1 en is a• to11owi· D'clac~ • m. 1oc11" 11 10Q c1v1c: c high average in his blue BURTON ' PUBLISHING CORPORA· ·-~ 1A-u9u•I 5• 1.1'~10• ~fo~k ~e. the D'IY<! W!1I. 5.l!n•~ Ant. Clll~rn!•. tnlt• TION •Ml Woit 11111 SlrHI, l«Wll0!1 '"""',, ' 1 O llrY u " •!'Id Tile rHI P•Optrt!Y la c,,. sol v.·oodcn hulled ' ·Che Is ea aeach. c111uorn1a. --fer tne 11111 Sllte. i>e•Mlnltt, •-•I'd <letcr!bed ,, 1a11ow1: II k ~foming" Sloop WITNESS Jl1 l\lnorl lflll 111J! "0•Y Of Jecl: T. lil'llll9 known ta me to lit Ille Oe<e!len1'1 lnterHI In ll\e i.iltf\old ' . Auousl. lf/V Pinon ""'-llllT!f: Is Wbl<:tlbt(t to Ille Mr.It In 11111 to LOI I of Tiecl No '°' Bob James of Virginia u1e (CorPO<lle SNll within lnslr\lmf'ttl ""° ac~llOWltdttd he II ,now .. on 1. m~ .. •ircord" In mcia-5;· 1968 "S . ' 8Uill:TON PUB LISHING e•KUINI ll>t s1mt. Plllt 50 of M•ltl!l~neov1 Mitt! rec • u A Olympic entry was CDRPORAllON !OFfllCtAL SEALJ ol Or•Mr• COVft!v, Callfvnll' c:...i::' Second . d d r d' I 9 6 9 Je~n Jlll'icll, Ja..-ce L. Od1•1•tf !~II terlllft lHst tflltd Np-'""' ,,' . an c en 1ng . •uitt~n• !.K•tlt•v Noll•v Putillc.<•lllOt'nl• tt)•. ••K11•t0 ey Tl>t 1rv11Cl'(°"' ' USA champion Chris Chatain ~TATE OF CALl~OP:Hla, 0r11noe c-.tY • c"'-'"°"· 11 Ln-1na w;1,,,':,"~· ( C . COUt-tTV OF ORANGE, u M• Cornmluloll E•eirn Wifl.,., fnc:t 1!•111 .. -1 Wh"'9' !Iv:: ' n hicago \\'A!I third. In the On'lflij ,,.,,, ••Y &t Au;11S1. A.O. 1t'O. .a~ru u, ttn 1ncr w111. 11 lc1nt ""•n11, ,; L•~:.~ open series Hans F'ogh of be!«• "" JOlof'Oh E. 01vf1 • NlllltY STATE OF c.-.LtFORMIA I rfl«ltMd Ol'Cem.,.. l. lt5•. I~ loc• . Publlc ln l!'ld 10<' l&ld County Ind Sl1!1. I H nu. Plte "'3$, Otll(Lll ltKOld Denmark was y,•inncr by a rnldint 111ere1n, 1$ulv tomrnlsslcned •lld COUNTY o" LOS ANGELES! Oran" COVt1h, Cahh!rnie. llllr.tf ~ v.°' I I sworn. Pll'..,.llT •-•r.0 Jt•n Jurich On ""aust s. lt7'. llf!Ort 111e. If•• un-"•mt OI Wlltllm BtoHll'y wu,.. • llllrroW WO po MIS OVl!:r the kMWn to ..,. kl ~ TM .t.s1l\111nt 5.crtllfY dll<tllntd, 11 Nollr'f Pu111lc ;,, •.-O tor EOt•r 8rldley Wllm•r 11 tr~lnl •1 USA 1ea1n of Allan and Rugg o1 "'' co.r11e>.-111on ,,.., ••.cutld ,,,. ••kl s1t11. "•1-11r •o.,t1rt0 1to11er1 1,,. common '' 10 "' u1111lvlftd orit~1111'; . · within ltl•l•11mtnt on llehtlf &t Ille eor-l1Nllvt. Glorl• ' lg111tlu1 Flotentt fl '""""' 1~ t.•<h. Thi!! "'BS the !;SA collegiate Por1toon i1>1rt.1n "'med. 11111 Hknowltdt• Htlll!•. known to 'me 10 ~ int ""°"; R':'''"'' l'L ""~de 10 ,.,.. 1MJ1111011.., 111• ch;1nlplon a11 varsity captain ~ 1~1"".,. "';~1 ~~:-=.: ~~~": whot• "'""''•rt •ulllcrlbfa 10 m, w11111n fi6A;E~· ':"!!~ "::'~:.t•••. U · ' !nstrumtr\I tnd IC-"°"'ltfttd !O mt 11111 · • at SC In 1968 and de!CRlcd 11•••1,111ta Nt mt lle'ld '"° •111~t11 '"Y of. 1111:v vi11:uttd lh• 11mr • Oun••· CPoenl•• •M Bunrs • . c 11(181 s.t•I !lie dtY ~ntf v"r in 11111 COfFICIAL ''"' . t!I•: l!lr11t~I J )chft J, ,.rncncan up skipper DJJI (frtlll(lle llral ~b0¥C wrltltn. AtlorMY• tor. • • Fl k I IOl'FIC1AL $E AL1 WITNESS m" h~na Ind Olhcl•l •111. EJ'.«ul•1"·1t"Ulotltr c er n lht' NP. w p I) r 1 J"'rit!1 E. OavlJ F.OWAllO 1!'.A5•1•AN OVllYl.t.. CAll,ENTllt .1"10 1.\1 Congresslonol cu11 rlimina-"10'•'" P~bllc-t1•HV""'' Ho11r, P111111c-c1!11or"1' BY tlt:Nl\T ,, SCHAO, Jlt. N•.s Pfll'>Clll•I Ofltce In -PrlM!~11 ot"'' "' t!» MKArtlt•r l.ultwar-lon~ llS i\ll11n v.•ent Oil ll> -9 Or1n1t Coofjlh LO\ Anltl" Clunlv 1-. o. 1011 ., .. CongreMIOnal Cuii win ~~ My Co,.,m111~ li•o•r.-' MY Cornm111tan l!•olret N"""'°"' 1ur11, c11119r.,11 tlKJ ' ," JllM ,1, i.t• Auo. U, ltJt Te!fflteM UUI Ul•tM well. lie looks like 3 good bcl ,.~ftl•~fllod °'•"" CO.O$• oet•r '11tt, P111111~-°''""' <-°"'' o..11v P1to1, "'""""'' ,.,. •••r~1r1, .• ,11111,.., !or the J97l Olympic$ •vov,1 n 2• •1'<1 seo'""""' ,, '· •u•11•1 12, ''· ~ ana *tem~r 1. P1.11111»itd o, • .,,, tot~r O..il'I' ,. '"' • lflfo tt .... 10 lt1f 14t).711 SHttmller I, t J, !tit , •• " \ • • --~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~------------------------------~ ' Big Hotel Rose From Sru1d Dime Tt.e Hotel de Coronado, site of the state dinner President Richard Nixon Is giving for Mexican President Gustavo Diaz Ordaz, "'as part or a sand dune area Vi'bere tv•o men hunted rabbits in the mid-IBBOs. Elisha S. Babcock, a retired Illinois railroad execUUve. and Jl L. Story, o\\m:r cf a Chicago Piano pany, stood at one or lhe CO\'ts of what then was Jcno,vn as North Island and decided to build a grand hotel. They bought the Island for $110,000, di vided it into plots and held public auctions to raise money . \Vhen they had enough they hired architects with instructions to build a hotel that \\'ould be "the talk of the ·we stem y.·orld." Those plots now make up the city of Coronado and the hotel is the rambling V~ctorian structure kno"'" as the Hotel Del Coronado. 1 ,.-:uc~' books spannin~ lhe hotel's az. year history are · clir<"1irJe of the tim?S. The presidential guest list includes Benjamin Harrison. \\'llliam , Ta f I , \ViU'::n1 tifcKinley, \Voodrow \Vilson and Franklin D. Roose velt Jn 1920, the ZS..year-0Jd r:: '1vard, Prjnce of Wales, danced v>ith Uic daughter of a U.S. Naval officer. Sixteen years later as King Edwarc· VlfI, he abdice~ed. his throne to marry that girl, \Vallis \Varfield Simpson. Ile met he:-in the Croy,·n Room, the same room in which the President y,•ill host President Diaz Ordaz Thursday. The two he:: ·is of state will dine (rom the same gold-rimmed china used for the Prince or \\rales' banquet. Among th ! hptel employes .,..·ere ti-tarch- King John Phillip Souza, v:ho conducted concerts fro1n the beach pavlllion, and Thomas A. Edison, whO supervised the lnstallatio11 of electricity in 1894 to make ~· Hotel Del Coronado the biggest single elec:trified structure outside of New York City. The 399·room hotel ··· modernized several years ago but relains its \"ictorian architecture, includlng its Victorian turret-topped dome. A 1,000- r oom addition is planned . The Crown Room Is shaped like its name. The high center dome is buil t of pegged-togethr-sugar pine panell ing and is unsupported by pillars. It wi ll hold 1,000 persons. • Wtdllt'sda1, Stptembtr 2, 1970 s ,OAILV Pl\OT 3 He Gets Aro1ittd President Not ~ DC .'Prisoner' Golfe1• of Year Award? Vice President Spiro AJ(ne,v. in the San Clemente \Vhite House after a five-nation tour of Asia. ex· amines a ,e:ift gol f ball the PreSident gave him \vlth the su g~estion that Agne\v relax on the links after his long trip. Nixon quipped that.--Agnew should use the ball only for putting practice, referring to a drive by the vice-president that hit golf pro Doug Saunders in !he head recently. Varied Courses Being Offered At Sa£ldleback DA's Approval to Dismiss Narcotics Case Over1~ulcd By EUGENE V. RISHER UPI st•ff •'""• Backstairs at the \Vestem \Vlllte ifouse in San Clementer t Standing tn tbe brilliant Calll0frll11 sunshtnc atop a bluff overlooking 1 the Pacific. President Nixon recently gave some friendly advice to a corresl'l\ndent returning after 14 years in Asia to -take up a new post in the nation's capital. "Well, I v.·ou ld b)' al\ means not spend too long a lime in \\'ashi ngton," Nixon said. "What your tendency will be ls lo come back and sit in )Vashington and be surrounded by your fn~ In the media and, of course, the political world. ThAt \\•ill not gilre you a perspective U1at is broad enough.'' • '!'hat the President takes his own ad,·ice there can be no doubt. In his 19 month:-in office, he has demonslratcd himself to be the most peripatetic President in the nation's history. A recent check of records shov.•ed he has spent only about one night ln three in the \\'bite House since asc:umlng office. It is a rare \\'eekend that he remains in \\'ashinl{ton. Camp Davkl, in the Catoctin Mountairui a haU-hour helicopter rid e rrom the \llhite •louse south )tl\\'n is his fa\•orile v.·eekend re treat. About once a month in the v.•lnter, or nftener, he stretches his weekend and flies to Key Biscayne. Fla., seeking !he balin of sunshine and ocean breezes. But hi~ favorite spot ls San Clemente. Tt i!: hi!'! voting rei;idence. The $300,000 estate he purchased probably will be his retirement home. It and an . adjacrnl complex or one-story builclinJ!S on lhe Camp Pendleton :\larine Base have been Do you y,·ant to learn ho\\' lo tune an J!iven the name Western \Vhite HousP. SA:"J FRANCISCO (AP) -The that a prosecuto r not be rested with Come Labor Day he will have spent about auto engine . sell real estate, te;ich CalHoniia Supreme Court tori a y power to foreclose the exercise of a hair lhP summer here. nursery school, or i1npro\·c YO U r 0,·erturned a state Jaw requiring a judicial power ... '' the court said. '11 thin~ the n1ain advantage of a place photography? rlistrlct attorney's approva l for Alfred Tenorio of San Franc\sro, 1;1r;e thl~ 11nd Camp David and Florida. all These are among the many course dismissing a prior narcolics conviction tnarried and a father of fh·e. had been of y,•hich I use,~·s hat moving from plate orfe rings at Saddleback Community durin.;:: SC'nlencing. convicted after police sai d they found a to place ch::ingc the perspecli"e so that I '-Tl1e coucl's ac11·on upheld tbc trial r:;atchbox of mariJ0UAna in hi~ pocket. He you aren't in a 11, you don't. think ln a College this fall , designed to n I t.~ h " h ·d j d • lho ·1 t trik defendant'~ allegedly had been conv icted of a ·way I at \11 no creative, c sa1 . varied academic yearnings of students. u ge s au ri Y 0 s e a ' · "A be'utlful a-,·. a place to "·ell lo previous narcotics con\iction at the time n1arijuana of(ense some eight years • '"' ·' · " • The courses in auto technology , real or sen tencing, ~·ithoul approval of the earlier, lhe court said. ·<'lcar the mind 11nd lhPrf' need.~ to be a estate, and ea rly childhood education district al\n rney . California low requires that repealing pa11:-c in all the hea vy concentration." bring lo 14 the number of two year The high court said the section orthe oUenders be punished more se1·crely than The Pr esident, of course, works occupational programs offered at the hvo llealth and Safefy 1·ode-enacted in 1959 first offender!!. \\'herevcr he gOl's. A vast retinue of aides Y'," 0 ' co3dldl~g11.•00in ,~01,is1h•elonp~~~oa.m 01. earl.• cb0y0t5h1~~1e1.g0i0s!~tu;!p· ;;~~~~d ~~ PC~l~o!~i~ 1 Because of Tenorio's11ea rJ1ic r coh~viction. ~~~~1~:~~:s ~0:/~;.n;~~· ~:~~:ren1:~11~ e.• t le statutory pena Y or IS new brine: documents ancl more aides for Council and National Security Coundl, th e top fordtns for domestic a.nd forelp policy. On .some days he ktso has • now of callers similar to what he would have in \llru;hington -Congressmen running \·olunteer acti vities, businessmen and !Shor leader/I. Bul here he dresses casually, drivel fron\ re~ldenct to oUice ~ a green-- trim1ned golf cart and gathers o~ frlen<!s for ririnks and dinner beside hlS swimming pool. It's a long 2,000 miles from Washington. I -, J childhood education. the college ~ doctrine. convictio n \\'ould have been two to 20 special meclingll, forming an unibilical schedu ltd a teacher aide class in "That concept detnands that I~ yea111 In state prison. For a first cord \\'Ith official \Vashington . Dig Scope educat ion lo acrommodalr teacher aides branches of goverrunent be coequal and n1arijuana-posse5l!ion conviction, there Is Bur getting away provides a break ii emnloyed al local schools or rersons '!'<> minimu1n sentence and the maximum th(' 14.hour daily rouiine he normally This 67-lon elect ron microscope Labor Da.y Litter · Problems Cited \\"i~hing training in the field. is 10 years. follo"·s In the Whil e !-louse. lhc J;::ir~est o! it s kind in the "Rec rtation'' ~·ill be the: newest major Nix.011 Landsca e In Tenorio's case. Superior Court Judge The work schedu le here is mort \VOrld~ has _!l~m~_alJon_ this ear to the colleg;.!•c,.· ~C~oul"!l"'!"L)W!'Ji!'!ll _ _:_.:.:::=:::..:~_:'.::.:=:::::=.:c::.~1=-=--Joseph.Kaz:e.sh.str.uck..tn..prior-eoovictk>n--formallmf~thln-111camp DavrcrFrldl\ey range of up to 100.000. The IS. prepare sli.KIE:nts In t field o organize y,·ithout the district attorney's approval Biscayne. spots he: uses far relatively foot tall sco pe was recenUy de-- recreation, such as offered by cities and Pa1•t1"11g P1·esenl and placed Tenorio on Probation. The brie f periods or relaxation and reading. velopcd by JJilarchi Ltd in con1mercial enterprises. state appealed. Here he holds meetings oC his Domestic Tokyo. Other high appeal courses. offered ---Litter is going lo be a major problt'm this Labor Day .,..·eekend at state parks and be:ic""c:. :i.ccording to \Villlam ,.foll. director of the State Department of Par!ts and Recreation . "\Ve are going to have record crowd~ "RC.;t y.·eekend," ,.1ott said,. "and we"ll need all the hel p we can get - particularl y in the matter of Utter." He explained that his department's rangers '!''ill be up to the ir Stetsons in c .1pers and picnickers during u-~ · ·:e- day '!''eekend, and if they have to spend p11 their time in 1· · ~ cleanup, there will be little ti1ne left for more impo rtant matters. "If everyone vdl\ clea n up after himself," ,.fott said, "it "'ill free our park rangers for more important functions such as public safety and visitor essislaJlce." the evening are college orchestra, foreign To Nei" !!hboi·liood languages. body building for men and LI · body mechanics for lvomen, and painting: and ceramic classes. Registratio n for da y and extended d•y c!ac:ses is Sept. 14 and 15 from 8 a.n1. to 3:30 p.m. and 6 p.n1. to 9:30 p.m. Appointments may be made for the '"'0 davs. Prospective student.~ ll'ithout a n appointment may register Sept: 16 fron1 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. and ~:30 p.m. lo 8:30 p.m. Day classes beginning Sepl. 21 run rrom 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Evening courses run from S-10 p.m. Classe.~ are tuition frer to persons 11·ithin the dislricl. Only costs are for books and student body cards. All persons Y.'ho have completed high school or "'ho are over 18 are eligible to attend. \Vhen President. Nixon returns to \Vashington, D.C., he will leave a parting gift for his Cypru s Shore neighbors -his newly landscaped front yard. No s1na ll project, the planting covers 671 (ront feet along Calle Arian a and 392 feet between Ariana and the beach. The landscaped area slopes up from the slreel to the white stucco waU !ipanning the Ariana frontage. The Presidetlt had the wall built Y.'hf"n he constructed his private entrance gale and gua rd house a year ago. He also ordered more than 200 feel of landscap- ing along Ariana. University Higl1 Welcome Slated Ernest Garbarino. buildings manager of the J7.acre Nixon estate. said the llf'W l!lndscap ing is in the same theme as the: original -pink and white geraniums - !<on1e larger shrubs for accent; ivy. bougainvillea on the wall. and palm and pine trees. ·orange Coast residenL~ interested in rn:!cli ng the faculty of University High School have been invited to a welcome coffee. Sept. 10 from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Village Ill Clubhouse, University Park . i\frs. J . R. Gooch, chairman of the corree said the social event ls being held to acqua int· the parents. sturien!!'l and rricnds of Unive rsity High School with the faculty and administration. The club house is located al the: inte rsection of tt.lichelson Avenue anti Royce Road. Further information is available through Mrs. Gooch at 833-0155. Palm trees line both sides of Ariana, and 40 year old cypress trees stand in the section between Ariana and the ocean. The President's csl.a\e is an oasis of tall palms, eucalyptus and cypress. Behind his \\'all and entry gate are spacious grass areas and a beautiful rose garden. PLATES Figl1ti11g S~f OG You Pay Your ltfouey and You Take Your Choice By P.ATRICK BOYLE Of 1M DlllJ ·Pli.t Slltff The Department or MolDr Vehicles today finds itself thrust into the role of CENSOR by Gov. Reagan's recent 11ignlng of the personalized license plate bill. The legislation. authored by Sen. Milton tifarks (Ro-San Francisco), pro\•\des that for an extra $25, a car owner' can get a license plate with almost an y combinat.ion of letters or numerals on it. The revenue ~·ill be used for smog control and other )m>irJms to protect the environment. Ho.,..·ever. the task or censoring objectionable plates has been left up to the OMV. But there hare been very few objections so far, according to Elmer Brown, deputy rrgistrar of the OMV in Sacramento. ' -"We have had none to date that are objectionable." Bro"'" ~aid in a telephone: lntervle~·. ab.::tul 200.000 applications. Bro11!'n noted, \\'hi t:h·would amount lo about two pt>rcent of the 10 million motorists ln California. }le said motorists in ,.1assachu setts and New York have 111imil"r opportunities and his inve~llgali(l:ns of th0l'5e states showed lhat three percent availed themselves or the option. Out of the $25 dollar fee, ht said, S20 -....·ill go for anti-pollution ~·hUe the remaining $5 will be used to make and send out the plates. The plates will continue lo he manufacture<! by the inmates at f olsom Prison and the first ones will not be In lhe mail to the applicants until Novembe r. One dra1o1•back of the lalt< deli very . he said. "''as that the o~-ner will have to pay an addition~' $10 lo ha"e his reglslration ie.n.ewed in January. making the new /plates only valid for about two months. E:-ch yea r. the applicant will ha ve to pay an additional $10 for renewal of the plates. and if he transfers the plates to MOther vehicle, he wll\ have-to pay a $12 charge. These funds wl ll also go to light pollutlon. guide lines. lie said lh"ll one request lhat 1nay be rejected is FRESNO. which could be Interpreted lo give the vehicle official status. lie s:ald that such combinatklM as FBI or CHP were out, and that the department wou ld probably not allow USNAVY or USARMY ~ause they, too, would imp'v "'iclal st.ntus. Names .,..·ould probably not be rejected, Brown said, even if they are unusual. "\Ve received a letter from a man named Donald Fink the other day," he said , "and we thought he was going to have FINK on his plates. Bui we read the letter and he v.•anted DON.''. Brown said that any du pl I ca t e Applications received until Sept. 22 would " be ftlled by lottery. After that date. the pla tes ~·oukf be given out on a "first· corne, Ursl·scrved'' bas!~. ""re .Jiaye received a lot or applications for PEACE so far,'' Brown said, "but lh~:-e wi'' 1', more than one PEACE. ~incc it Is only a five Jetter v.·ora, it can be µrt::cdcd or fo!lowcd by a number. So 1: ·e are 20 possi.._' · "~,..~." Our :Jradi.fion . Dad's style •.• junior's toughness • • BUSTER BROWN: " FREE Wllh twory pair of chlldr .. ·s ·school akn, yow Ytry ••• COMrLm rllfCIL IOX. OUR FASHION ISLAND • STORE OPEN .. SUN, SEPT. 6TH FROM 12 TO 5 ' • CLASS· TIME CLASSIC WITH HEAVENLY FIT IN EVERY STEP He said that of the 300 or M> applications received so far . there ha ve bffn a few for PEACE. one for TRIAL, ont" 19" LA\\1• And many numbtr·letttr combinations lhat he did not even underJtand. The plate program is expected to dralf Brown s1tid that since llf'I objec-Uonablr. requests for plates have been receive<!. the depnrtment ha s: not aet up any \\'ith :ill of the possible \\'Ords lo choose from, BroY.'n did not think that anyone would choose VANITY. 30 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH • WESTCLIFF PLAZA __ , . . -• ' . 4 DAILY PILOT '.\ltdntsdl)', Septtmbtr 2, 1970 Senawrs Tltreat t o Securit11? Urge Viet ·1sra.el Consider s Ceasefire Action on Bases C'*-llell 11t' .. 0.llf' l'tlll St8ff) Authorities a~ investigating the case of the stair-climbing mules in Des Moines, Iowa. A witness said somebody drove four mu1es and a wagon up and down the steps of the Grimes State Ofiice building dtirlng the annual Iowa State Fair parade through downtown Aug. 20. Authorities investigated, and con- cluded· it did occur -the steps are badly chipped. • Trmperotun1 were in i he 80'1 a.nd 90'• ar the little flakes fell; covering tvet11thing with a thin btanUt of whttc. It wasn't snow. Somcbodr forgot to cover the duat contTol devices at the Col- gate Palmolive plant, in Clarks· ville l'nd.. A roinsh.ower fell, suds flowed fn the streets and "soap. balll" 'l"Ole and /ell on Clarks· l?Ult. ~ WASHINGTON (UPI) -A blparUR .. appeal urging PresidP.nt Nixon to propose a standstill leease-fire t h r o u g b o u l Vietnam is the Senate's latest effort to hasten the pullout ~f U.S. lroop'.'1 from Indochina. 'lbe appeal, I.a the form of a letter to Nixon at the Western White House ln San Clemente, suggested th'!: withdrawal of all foreign military force• from Vietnam within a specified time after the cease- fire goes into effect. The letter was made public Tuesday ollly hours after the Senate defeated, 55 to 39, an effort to set Feb. 29,.,1912 as .. a deadline for Nixon to bring home all American troops from Indochina. Senate RepublicaJl Leader Hugh Scott and Sen. Henry M. Jackson (0.Wash.), who originated the letter, denied It was a trial balloon floated on behalf of the Nixon AdmlnistraUon. Asked about the timing of the letter, Scott and Jackson said they waited un til the "End of the war" amendment was deteated so it would JtOt be interpreted as an attempt to divert votes. _ _ breel, .ru:~t w/i.t lt conaidera a majO< lllreat lo I l<Cljrlty, is seriously CONlderl!!i •<'flon a g • I n I I Egypliib mluile "'8ei which It says have been moved cloeer to the Suez Canal Jn riolaUca of the Cea.fire, diplomatic .....,.. said today ln Jeruulem. Tbe """"'"" said Del-Minister Moabe Doyan leell the Ulllled Stales baa !ailed ln Ila obllgaUon as the insUgalor ind necotlalor ol the ceue-fire and that brae! lllllll be free lo take acUoo lo prevent any further vtolaUons. · Israeli newapapen 'aakl today Prime Minister Golda Meir told a meeting of labor ~jllbers of Parliament Tuesday that" a situation may arise UJ!der wh1ch Isiael may -be compelled to take action aga!Mt the SAM 2 buea. The SAM2s are 'lllgh a!Utude Russian-built ml!llles. Newspapers carrying the "action" repart included The Jeruaalem Post Nebraska Cons Hold Two Guards, Press Demands e Scott, noting the chief negotiators far • U S It lt-•-rt T ft J R.Ohi both sides are in Paris, said "II was a . ~l,""1 LINCOLN, Neb. (UPI) -Thi irteen . . ep. -• r ., o, ood •••-,. Th ~· maximum security prisoners he d two has decided to ignore a mimeogra-g time to stir somellwig up. e guards hostage today and officials at the phed letter for financial aid. The letter was si gned by 14 Senators, ·• "' -. -Nebraska State Penitentiary said the __ letter asked the Republican senator-including Democratic Leader ?i.1 i k e ..___ ringleader of the rebellion is a man lal nominee to contribute to the Mansfield . The sponsors covered the -serving two terms for murder. campaign of his opponent, Demo-entire political spectrum of the Senate. u,1 ,..._.... Warden Maurice Sigler said the prison crat Howard M. Metzenbaum. ..A.. ..A.. ..A.. gates would not be opened lo get the . • W W H VIETNAMESE TROOPS HOLD EARS AS MORTAR FIR ES guard> releued. Falt goers wbisUed and applaud-C mhodi CalJ Fire at Support B•s• O'Reilly Aimed •t Suspected Red Positions "When a man comes to work here," ed. Monday at sbape]y American 8 8 S Sigler said, "be is told he may be taken film "star" Lorr•IM Lorrimer as hostage . These gates will not be opened h ed th F iml f · · E F Air S for any ho3tage -even me." r.;dopenBut t1en' the~yc:::;einin W; or upport Y outh Held By Polic" e The guards were ldentmed as LL a shock. After Judging the falr Vance B. Schrader, 49, aritl Erwin queen competition, Lorraine took PHNOM PENH (UPI) -C&mbodlan Siemens, s:!. Sigler said the prisoners ---n<ofiff-hlier-blonde-wig-and-dark-glasses-called-in·air-atrlkea:-and-artillery--1\&esday--were peaceful during the night and to reveal local hairdresser Trixie night agairut a mountainsJde Buddhist I Th __ s ____ p _____ l--B--las-------allowed SChrader and Siemens toileep. Hal1. She agreed to the hoax when pa_goda tumed into a gun posltloo by th_e n ree . t a u ts Sigler said the prisoner who cajltured V l "--the Cambodl d d Schrader and Siemens was identified as fair organizers failed to get a real " ~,g, an common HJ • star. today. Charles McClelland, 49, who is serving Maj. Am Rong, Cambodian Information two life terms, for murder. Officer, said the decisjon to fire on the ST.PAUL, Minn. (UPI)-Policetoday said he believed there was a conntttion The warden said the pri soners • • (· \ Jlaaretz, Davar anti Al Hamlshmar. 'The meeting was secret-and there were no direct quotes from Mrs. Meir. There was no hint as to what any ;1actlon" might be put in the past Israel has hit the missile bases wUh Phantom jets and h8.s used helicopter-borne aaaaull troops against radar bases. Since then Russia sent in SAM3 missiles which are used at low altitude to protect the SAM.21. Any Israeli action against the missile sites would end I.be 9Cklay ce .. fir_e which began on Aug. 7. In the meantime, thert were indications lrom both Israel and Egypt that the New York peace talks wOuld be cut off before they really begin. In Jerusalem, an Israeli cabinet meeting failed Tuesday to decide on when to send ambassador Yosef Tekoah back to New York. And in New York. the Egyptian ambassador to the United Nations indicated Egypt might not want to C<>ntinue the peace talks after the 90- day truce ends. Any decision by Israel to take action against the missile sites would represent a victory ror Dayan who was reported threatening to resign if peace talks begin under the threat 0£ Egyptian missile1. Diplomatic sources said he had the support of Mrs. Meir in his tough stand. 'The cabinet was said to have agreed unanimously on the gravity of the missiles crisis but that the less hawkish members -Foreigtm Minister . Abba Eban and Deputy Premier Yigal Allon - shied at action to counteract the buildup. Reports that Egypt mifllht not want to extend the 00-day cease-fire came from the United Nations where Ambassador Hassan El·Zayyat met with . U • N • Mediator Gunnar V. Jarring Tuesday and indicated Egypt might not want to tali: peace when the truce lapses Nov. 5. Israeli political source! said support was growing in the cabinet for the Dayan viewpoint and that he would have majority support in Sunday's regular cabinet meeting. In last Sunday's meeting. the Eban·Allon 1ide had majority support. they said: Now United Citi.Zens Legal Party in SC The Republican senatorial candi· date for Greenwich, COM. received a bipart assist Monday and it was like pennies from heaven. A large banner plugging Republlc•n Lowell P. Weicker for the Senate fell from the tail end of a plane over Long lsland Sound near Greenwich on pagoda was reached as part of efforts held a youth who received minor injuries between Tuesday's bombings and the one presented seven demands which must be "To kill as many Communists at possi· at Dayton's. met before the guards are released. He COLUMBIA, S.C. AP) -The ble." He said the CommunisUI had an in the first of three eiplosions that came He said he would not go into details said the demands r e I a t e d tO predominantly Negro United Cltiunl estimated 1,200 troops around Srang, 2G within 38 minutes of one another in until charges were filed. administration of the maximum Security party became South Carollna'a fourth miles south of Phnom Penh. Dowotown St. Paul Tuesday. Two other One witness to the ei:plOsion at ward, where McClelland and the others ofricially recognized political Part Y "The more reinforcements they send men were injured. Burll'ngton Northern, .Jim Hafiz, a have been confined . Tuesday. The secretary of state certified in, the more we can kill and the best way Police would not say whether the parking Jot manager across the street, Sigler said the demands a r e it after determining that it:i petitions had -~Sunday.-_ ·to kill them is with air and artillery," Am unide!ltified youth had been charged. He said ';I knew right away it was a unreasonable. "We have strict rules in the required 10,000 signatures of Rong said. !9ld authorities he was ing the site of~ dynamltt. explosion. You could smell it." the segregation ward," he said. "These registered voters. Weicker's campaign headquarters received a telephone call Monday !rom Ted Darasb of Stanford. Da· rash said he was cruising in a bOat on the sound when he saw the Weicker banner floating down Sun- day. He hauled in the banner and said it was drying on his front lawn. "By the way.'' Oarash told Weick- er 's office, "I'm ~ Democrat." The U.s~ msa.Jgollsald the exp 08100 _ a wareOOuse on 2nd Burpollce-rald1h'e-tnvesu·gatton--was men-are-usually there--only-a-few--days -~1-'he-othel'-parties in--the state are-the today nearly %,000 American troops from Street near the SL Paul Dispatch and still under way "to determine the origin and we don't want them to like it. That's Democrat, Republican, and the two Wantry ouUits stationed around Pioneer Press _ when the blast and Composition Of the v:plosions." why rigid handling is necessary.'1 Independent party. Saigon will be withdrawn from South occurred, slightly injuring him. • Municip•I Judge J ohn Charnock wears a Spiro Agnew watch but he doesn't want everyone to know about it. At the conclusion of a busy day Wednesday in Charleston, W. Va. Charnock was seen strapping the watch on his wrist. A friend Inquired why be didn't wear the watch in open court. "I'm afraid if r wear it in the courtroom it might pr ejudice some of my decisions," the judge said. • Seven rolls of copper wire turned mp in a Pacific Gas & Electric Co. parking lot in Chico, Calif. along with a note from a r epentant but ~nfused thief. "I am sorry 1 stole Ibis wire." the note read. "I decid- !d that the best thing to do was to return it which I have proceeded to !o." He si~ned it: "The Mistake M"ak er." PG&E officials said the wire was not stolen from them. !'hey don't even use that kind. Vietnam by Oct. 16 as part of the Nixon The other two blasts occurred 38 Administration's Phase VI pullout. Informed military sources s a 1 d , minutes later. One was at the Burlington however, the entire complement of the Northern Railway's downtoWil office, two units would be withdrawn nwnberina: where two men were injured. The othe r around was placed beside pipes connecting two 10,000 men. 17,()()().gallon petroleum storage tanks at a Soviet Cholera Cases Treated MOSCOW (AP) -Cholera cases in three southern Soviet cities are being treated successfully and there Is no lig" of the disease spreading in the Soviet Union, Deputy Health Minl!ter Ignaty B. Avetik said today. ·-.,; He said "prevenU ve and anUepidemlc'' measures are still iA forte in the south but "the situation is now stabilized and the centers of the disease have been localized and, for all practical purposes, elimi1ated." He did not say it any of the Soviet cases have died or how many cases h:tve been recorded. The cities named by Avetik were Odessa, on the Black Sea, Kerch, on the Crimean Peninsula, and Astrakhan ~ where the outbreak started. Gulf Oil'Co. The most serious of the blasts was the railway offices, but ·authorities said the bomb at Gulf Oil could have blown up the entire facility. Instead; it went off under an electrical circuit and merely bent some pipes. Donald Miller, 42, was hospitalized in fair condition and George Peters, 34. was treated and released after the explosion at the railway offices. In an explosion at Dayton's department store Aug. 22 one woman was seriously injured. Police recovered an unexploded bomb at Dayton's at that time. St. Paul police chief Richard Rowan Tanker Runs Aground TAIPEI (AP) -The 34,760-ton Norwegian tanker Kongsvang r a n aground today on rocks near Green Island, 15 miles off eastern Formosa. The ship was empty, on her way to the Persian Gulf, and her owners said none of the 40 cnwmen was hurl Mercury Ranges .80 Degrees Desert Highs of 113 Offset by New Low 34 in East Callfol'llla A ITreek of mo.llr •11>1nr kufllt•n C1rllon,l1 1t11<-• wl!l'I ri1tM •rod !'l'lom!nt1 row ctoo.H11 1JW1 i. c:.111111111.11111 toc11r wl!ll lncrM1ln1 ovtrcttl 1J'ld 11111• l•!'l'IPtreh.ir• ClleMt. HtN llfnllllfttl tN'H!!9d O\ltt l.ot AnH!ft tnd vlclrilty, !IOI e«niil1191Y tiurnlnt •••r !flt CM1t11 '°' •nd clelld lll"fl'" llvltt durlM IM mon1lt1t ,,.,,,... T"' .,.Jcltd 1\111'1 todh W•I U Ind ... ·-ttri!thl 6S. BllCfl "'"""'i.111 rec1l~llll onl~ 11111• -~1.... 1n1r fM !'l'lllllMl'nlnt •rod l'l'IOOt!'"1I• ftm',..r1tvn1 cllmbtd "'" 111. 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MHw..ull:H M1nne1toll1 N-Qmma LOS ANGl!:LES !U'll -TIM Miion• Nl'W Y1rt wldt W..llll'r tl.lmmtry 11 _,1p1rH ()Mil\li "'° lfll U.S. Wutlll'r 8~. ,,II A:oll!H A 1111 """'""'' cold -• CO!l!lllllft ,,,11..,.1~11 -!flt llOrtt'ltllllf'll N rt 4lf !flt COi/i\• fl l"t-b\lrtll Irv lodlY wttll lefl'IPtr•lur" d/Nlfttl Pf'l¥"1~ l!'llt 11\f liOt IJ'ld fin. Porti.J'ld c-orci, N.H .• rtcorotcl I low ttf ,.. A:td l tulf dff,...., 11\f colO...I I Ylf' •or '° •1•1• A:- '" , ..... --· mr1-nlo ,~. Ind llNl'lffl'"~ l!Jtlond• $1, \.ovlt 9d !rem 1119 floc-111 ltt 1M Mlu l11)NI kit Lftt (Tty Vt11"' w\111 loc111v """' r1lnf1H. Me-5111 01_.o ~lttltr, ()11!1., •t«1Yllll '·'' lnclltl kll F1•nclKO 011•lnt • tl••llo\lf "'lod wlllhl Dtll11 ~1111 &erb1r1 mt1tvrtc1' •• s OI 1n Inell In -""''· ..._ 51"111 II wt• blf!ll'll 11\f wtnn In !I'll 111 Soolll1!41 Wiii. CMlll '''"'"1'1!U•ts PflYt llllll /'"••mtl tlOl'lf 11\f lmm1111111tl' COii! . Wttl'l!ntton Hl9" L-,Yft. .. " ., • " n " ., .. " " " ... n " " ., " .. " • ~ .. ·" " il " " H n ... " " " .. " n · .. " "' " .. .. .. " \: .. .. " n .10 " " .. .. .. ~ " " n • "' " .. .. .. • • .. n .. n .. .. .. " .. ... " . n ~ .. H ~ " .N '" ~ " .. Permanent press and electric dryers do your ironing for you. These days you hardly need an iron. Practically all clothing and most household linens are availabfe in permanent press. But pe!!!\,anent press fabrics only stay wrinkle-free if they're dried properly.And that's where an electric dryer comes in. . The new electric dryers with permanent press cycles are pro- grammed to give just the right amountofheatforthe right amount of time. A.nd they gently fluff up the fibers in your permanent press fabrics. Compared with. gas dryers, • • • electric dry- ers come ' out.w~y ahead-because they're fl ameless and odorless-and cost up to $30.00 less. If you live in a Medallion Home you already know the ad- vantages of electric living. But if you're not yet drying electrically, why not get an electric dryer now. All you have to do is plug it in. ., Let permanent press and an electric dryer do your ironing for you. See your appli- ance dealer today. -~ --t"'s:: Southern California Edison ~- Permanent press c'othes live better electrically. .. • ·-~;::--~----::---:-:--:---::-:~----~-------~~-------.. ltlult'i·pnrade Marchers in Ne\v Haven , Conn ., protested against the war. The parade also was in supporl. of Bobby Seale, the Black P...anther leader on trial in Connecti· cut. ll also opposed racisn1. Stornis Soak Ma1iila; 14 Perish in Floo d MANILA (UPI) -A record rainfall or more than 22 inches in 30 hours Uooded ~1anila today and took 14 lives including those of two U.S. sailors. President Ferdinand E. Marcos declared a Stale of "calamity and emergency.·· The Navy men were kil led in a landslide at Cubi Point Naval Station about 90 miles northwest of t.1anila. The names or the victi1ns were not released by the Navy until their relatives are nolified. operations. "I am afraid we suffered damages, .. he said. ·· 1'1osr of the casualties were caused by drowning and electrocutions.'' The rainy weather 'A'as expected lO cootinue for the next 1wo or three days. Jordan Nixes Iraqi 1'hreat The bodies of the t1~·0 -Amedcans WC<e cccovc"d. T 0 Inter ve ne the Navy said. One Filipino was reported n1issing in the landslide. A"I:-.1AN tUPI ) -Jordan The Navy said an earlier today rejected an Iraqi threat landslide slip j>ed dov•n onto to intervene \\•lth its 12.000 the national highway· outside Jordanian-based troops if the of Olangapo City near the gate Jordan.Ian Army cracks down of Subic Bay Naval Base near Cubi Point. further on Arab guerillas. The One person \Vas reported crisis was heightened by a dead and three missing in .that Tlf'"' assassina tion attempt landslide. against King Hussein Tuesday President h-1a rcos. "·hose night. own Malacanang presidential The cabinet took the palace was under (our feet o( decision al a fou r -ho u r wa!-U-at---noon-t o d-a7 -. -emergency session iri Amman estimated lhat the record which looked like a deserted fl~ had covered an area city after a night of battling b1gg~r than the 3t;l!e of between Hussein's troops and Fl~r1da. the Palestine refugee Now. therefore. I do guerrillas. The sound of hereby. declare that . a state of machinegun fire c r a c k I e d publi c cal.a m.i!y and throughthestreetstoday. emergency exist . in Ct?ntral Iraq , Syria and the Arab Luzo.n, the entire greater guerrilla movements ha v e f\.1an1l1~ and . southern Luzon rejected the A m e r i c a 0 - area, he s~ud. instigated cease-fire and have He ?rd~red all ~overnm~nt crilicized Hussein and Egyp. agencies into rescue and relief tian President Ganial ADdel Pope Stoned By Madmari CASTEL GA NDOLFO, Italy i UPI ) -An Italian described by police as a '·madman" threw two stones al Pope Paul VI today at the end of 1 hl' pontiff's weekly g e n e r a I audience. A Vatican spokesrnan 'laid the stones struck a w;ill and the Pope was not a"·are of tlie incident at the time. Police said I he Pope had just given his blessing lo hundred.~ or tourists and pilgrirns when tuigi Donno. 35, of Corigla D'Otranto, took t"·o .stonC's from a sack he was carrying and hurled them toward the pontifL Nasser for moves against the guerrillas. On Tuesday, Iraq threa1ened to intervene "'ith the 12,000 Iraqi troop s stationed in Jorda n. .. The Jordanian government regrets such a warning being directed against i I ilnd it cannot accept it." the cabinet said in a note delivered to the Iraqi ambassador in Amma n. Public transport in An1man wos at a standstill and there were only a fe\V private car!'! on the streets. Business was <1lmost at a complete stop. The country's newspape rs 'did not appear. schools \Vere closed and few government en1ployes turned up for work. Palestinian guerrillas piled loo;."C stones and automobile 1ires into barricades guarding their strongholds o the r s armed with bazoookas , mortars a n d machincguns · took up positions on rooftops. Portla11d 'Hippies' Peaceful PORTLAND, Ore. iU PI) - The Peoples Army J amboree's Second Antiwar Parade during American Legion Week went "'ithool incident T u e s d a y night The PAJ1, a loosely knit group opposing the \var in Vietnam. mu sle r e d an estimated l,000 persons for the one and one-hal( hour long -parade-through·d o-w-n-t-o-w nl J?ortland. The fir s t PAJ parade Sunday drew only· 100 more, but louder, marchers. The parade Tuesday night was staged in• protest &f I racism as well as the war in ( Indochina . S p ea ker s in Portland's Ouniway Park exhorted the paraders not to confront the police, who were very much in evidence, and to "keep it cool.·• PAJ leader Kevin P.1ulligan said, "One broken window is nof w o rl h one dead revolutionary.'' The nearest thing to an incident occurred at t h e intersection or Main and Broadway, just a block from Legion Headqu arters Holel - the Hilton. The parade turned the corner. but some of its marchers wanted to head for the hotel. The street leading to the hotel was blocked and the parade stalled for a few minutes. It was then that members of a volunteer group called People for Portland finally linked arms and tu rned the marchers south before police intervened. K uchel Ba cking Of Reagan Seen LOS ANGELl:S IUPI) - Former Sen. Thomas H.1 Kuchel. a Republican who in 1966 refused lo endorse Honald Reagan for governor. was expected today to reverse that decision. Kuchel scheduled a morning news conference al Gov. Reagan's reeleclion headquarters "'here it was SJ){!Clllated he would endorse the gov,ernor. Staff B1"dget Doubled De1nocra.ts Hec kle N ixon S pending WASHI NGTON (UPI) - Senate Democra!s gl~fully 11ccused the \V hitr House of helping itself to the federal cookie jar Tuesd<iy, but in the end agreed to rioublc President Nixon ·s slaH budget just as he asked . Seizing on a line Jtem in an $1 1.1 billion appropriation bill for the executive offices and the departments of lre8Sl!/Y and post office. military '?!;pending critics could not -resist nttdhng the, c o s I - conscious administration for an apparent Increase '1n its own spending . But they dk1 not attcmpl 10 trim the executive offic.<ts budget approved by lhc !louse. and the bill passed 68--0 l\ $56.35 million diffcren<'C in lhC total11 of the HouS<' and Sen.ate vendons remained 10 b c reconciled. The fun began \~·hen Sen . Ralph Yarborough ID-Tex.), cha irman of the Appropriations Subcommiltec l.hal handled th e budget bill, re1>0rtt.'CI 1hal the $8.55 million recommended for \Vhite House salaries and expenses in this fiscal year v.·as more than double lhe S.1.!H. • m i 11 i o n approved last year. Sen. William Proxmire I 0- \\'i~ 1 one of the most vocal c.titics of d~fense spending, quickly rose to protest. "Arter all . the• president makes a big point o. r economy . Proxmitt sa id. "and economy has to slart at · home ... the Arilerican people 11111.~t :.t1Q should look to the Pre ident to set an example." Yarborough, fighting back a sn11 lr, agreed. · "\\1c're being c11lll'CI reckless ~penricrs and then they come up here and "';flnl us to double their own appropriations ," Yarborough said . · But he explained the While Mouse intends to bring its 548 staff rnembcrs under one salary lent, rAlher th a n borrow more !han 300 of its experts from va riou s departments and let the other agencies pay lhe salaries as is now the case. Proxmire also squawked about a $700,000 appropriation earmArked for a similar pool· ing of 39 slaff personnel n- signed to Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, but he .was assured the employes. covered by civil ser\•ice. would not be used to "aid the vict presidenl in his very effective political work." In total, the bill as paued by the • Senate was $56.35 million after than approved by Jhe House, but $27 million • under r e v i 5 e d budeet estimates. DAILY PILOT 1f Suburbs Lures • I D ·u.s. i Big l WASHINGTON \AP) -The I.be Ctf"IS\li Hureau had just-completed census sketch projected all alOllC on the of America -has a familiar basts of tht old 1960 figures look. It depicts a nation of 200-and s u b s e q u e n t spot million, to replace New York as lhe mOll populoul state. largest cities in lhe '70 laity slighted tD ;..eviously released ' had lost population, includlng prtllmlnary counts. he thinks ' phis miUion persons In search sampli."lgs. ' of warm ttather or suburbia. It shows: ™{)ion's { u rt! ca I e -A nationwldt total of portra' won 't be unveiled 200,26.1,nt persons counled so until final , official tally Is far , and likely to go to completed ,and · sent t o between rot and 20S million by ~MtenLNlxon by Dec._ L the time S\!.~-still-uncounted Bull the prelimin ary figures \ categories as o v er s e a s announced T u e s d a y by servicemen are added, T1)e. Commerce, Stfrelary Maurice -bureau had Projected 2041.8 H. Stans \ provides a good mllliOfl fqr l,ast April I, the preview. date the census was ta ken. It is s u r pr.is Ing I y ~lifornla grew' the most, unsurprising, bac~ing up· what by Qearly 4 mlllion to 19.? TEENS -Americans moved toward warm weather. Florida and Te.ias joined Caltfornia as states with more than a million population g r o w t h , along with the c o I d e r bu t already teeming stales or New York and New Jersey, Th e largest perce-ntage Increases were scored by J'ievad@, with 68.9 perc~nt, Florida with 34. 7 and Arizona with 34.6. -Suburbanites outnumber residents of inner cities for the first time. Thirteen of the 25 Chicago, D e t r o I l and the 1t70 dnsus will prove to Baltimore. New York held be tht mOst'accurate ever. about even. Big gainers were lie said th;e bureau has tho warm-weather cities of completed rec.becks involving Los Angeles, Houston, Dallas. 6\i mil!)on PirtOris and turned San Diego, San Antonio 11nd up only '4;.200 missed the first Phoenix. time around. H,e said he wa!C -Farm population declined sure that-. wouJ(l be the ease: -from 16 million a.o 10 million._wjlb.J.be r~ o( the rechecks Old mlgratk>n p a t t e r n s .requested by locilitTes. <.'Olltinued. from the center of Dr. George H. B r o w n , the nation to the coasts and director of the census, , said from South to North. • ··we have every reason lo Stans said despite howls believe " .lhat the final count from localities that f e I t will be less than 3 percent off. The '11AC1<-TO-SCHOOL" sho es shown in this ad are but a few of the thousands of pairs on .open display for your buying pleasure! BLACK KRINKLE .LlnLE GENTS BOOTS 691 _BLACILP..AIENT T-STRAP FOR GIRLS 2 96 &•h to 3 LITTLE GENTS OXFORDS 2~~.·3 llG IOYS 3.96 TEENS INSTEP CROSS·STRAP BLACK OR BROWN 491 81/t to 3 GRAIN WTHD LACED MOCCASIN-TOE OXFORD 9a3 IOYS 7.38 AllO Mea.'1 CeauilM Haml ............ lkldr: ... Grwa 2'/J .. ' •••. , 4 91 6 '/1 t9 12 ; -- IOY'S 4.79 YOUTH'S 11Vi ,. 2 4.68 RUFRE SUEDE CASUAL OXFORDS MEN'S IOYS YOUTHS 7.38 6.38 4. 91 FOi "HIR" I PANTYHOSE J96 f'r' .I NEW fALL AND BACK-TO.SCHOOL HAND BAGS HOM 2~ FREE CAIDY FOR.THE KIDDIES NEW fALL SHADES t'' ,II 11 \ -~ALL WAltDIOIU \\' 9~ FOi "IACK-TO. SCHOOi." AND PAIR HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH 10051 ADAMS at BROOKHURST 9~·9178 (Next fo S1v.Qn Drug) 5898 EDINGER at SPRINGDALE 847-9125 STORE HOURS--WEEK DAYS 9 TO 9--SUNDA YS 10 TO 7 •· -' .. .. • ' • l ' • • I I l l l r • • •• .. • • . , •. ' '· ' . , • ·I ,. ' l • . ,, ' • • • • .. \ I I I ·- I I ' • DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Now: a Long Bus Ride Wllal.ever the toilll story ls bohind the decision to bus Univeratty Park students to Missi~n Viejo, al-an ei:tra coat of $5,000, it smacks of a dismal lack of ad- vance planning and coo.r;dinatlon . When Tustin Union High SChool D stri~t offi cials made the decision last week. Principe.] Robert ~anko DI Minion Viejo High SCbool wa s teken aback . · He said he had no previous indication from the 1ehool board that hi s school wa s even being considered. Two wnks earlier, District Supt. \Yilli arn B. Zoag had said he expected the lJniversity Park students would attend Tustin High School , which is closer to University Park. The University Pa rk students must ,go somewhere. because. their own school is not complete.. School of· ticials said they thought it would be ready by Se.pttm· ber. Construction officials point out that it wa s not due lo be ready contractually until Dec. 10. Add to this a strike by sheet met.al workers some time. 120. whic.h •bould have alerted school officials. · · - · Now both University Park and Mission Viejo youni· 1W1 face double sessions. Tustin youngsters do not. Agtrleved parents call it a hometown political decision In favor of Tustin. Even a:iving the board the benefit of doubt, it showed bad plannin& and communication. Action Instead of Talk Dldic1ti~n ceremonies are coming up in San Clefnente soon for a public facility with grave import- ance. to coastline dwellers -even though its title doesn't 1ound too thrilling. It's• 1e.w1ge-trealment plant. And, for a change, it will be treatment without po l· luUon. The facility, built with $2.6 million raised in a local bond tlection. will process all of the city's \vaste to a point where the water could be reused for irrigation or safely percolated into undergroufl4 water 1toN4.... ) Most significant Is the fact that the plant'• OtrfPul \viii not now into coastal waters. The processed water will bt piped to settling basins at Camp Pendleton or reservoirs near the municip,al goll course. At Pendleton it will fill underground wells to hold out the sea water. It will also Irrigate the golf cour.se here. Coastal cities and politicaJ subdJvlsions ~·Ith anti- quated treatment plants should take heed. San Clemente has ione beyond the talking stages and dooe 1101T1ethin11 about pollution. Winter Culttu·al Activity Lquna's summer culture cycle has drawn lo a close and soon the visitors will be giving the town back to the locals. . But the end of summer no longer means the end ot cultural activity in the Art Colony. In fact, there's aJ. most as much iiction planned for residents ·and winter visitors as there was for the summer _throniJ. Irvine Bowl and the Laguna Moulton Playhouse will be back in business almost immediately, following the successful runs of the ·pageant of the Misters and "'Oliveri" ~ This Saturday evening the great Edward Villella will honor the Laguna .Beach Civic Ballet with a gUest star appearance at the Bowl. Rehearsals alread,Y are under way for the winter drama series at the Playhouse, beginning Sept. 22. The Chamber Music Society will brinjt four interna- lionally famed quartets to Laguna and plans already are buzzing for an expanded Winter Festival. a 17-<lay fi esta with 50 special events to divert residents and \Yint er vis itors alike. The once-sleepy village by the sea seems well on the way to its apparent destiny as a major all-year resort. s Beacla Cit11 Traffic lams ii No Freewa11 Major Probe Of the M cifia, ls Planned Positive Action Is Needed • • To the Editor: Assemblyman Robert E. B1dham Introduced a bill to atop the Pacific Coast F,..way throulh Newwt Beach but loot tht fi;ht. lt was a M11tiVe bill with nothinz constructive In it and it was tj,ib.t--' that the. bill did not pass. There .... "'""""'" that il the freeway is not bu.ill lhe traffic jam in tht future will be enormous in Costa Mesa. Huattncton Beach, Lltun• B e a c h , Newport Be.ch ud other cities. BUT IP 'l'llE freeway wtre to be built with the Newport Beach portion omilled, tht muses of ear• uavelina throu&h would pour Into 1tree:t.s1 making them lmpasaable -and tht most annoying aitultion "'11d be in Newport B e a c h. The city would be flooded with cars traveltnc at one or two miles per hour, apewiftc exhau!t l umu while idling in Jona Uaes waiti11g to crou intersections. Do the "freeway fi&hters " want 1uch a condition! THE SLOGAN. "l et the hi1hway conuni.Mion find another roul.e," makes mt uk what route? Under or over the aea? Freeway opponents present no practical, constructive solution. The coutal freew1y is a necessity and t.ht mo.t .practical and natural route is along or cklle to Pactnc C.out Highway, where Ille blull1 alruey dlvklt the city, Let thoae can that have lo pw: through IO I S fa1t u possible, without waitin& and producing unburned 1uoline. ONE 80LVTl.ON would be to cury the freeway overhead and provide space under it for shops, buaars and parking, with aufficient crosslna (or Car! and pede!ltrians. If canfully planned, arilstically lighted ud dtc0tat.ed, 1uch a projtct could .be made a beauty spot ud would make walkinl and shopping a pleasure. 1'RE PRESENT coast highway In Newport Beach looks unattractive, With hou.111 badly planned or not planned at aJJ and not coordinated. This ls not a llrelt that Newport could be proud of. J( the efforts now wasted in rejection ud 11tgation could be converted in to ~ve aclion like that mentioned, or i better one. such •n aim could be .chiewd to the uUsfacUon or prtsent ud tuture 1ene.raUons. LENET LESKI 'Dl•trilH• of Promises' To the Editor: Not all (1lry lales begin with "Once upon a time ••. " Some of them start --·--Wodllesday, Sepl. 2, 1970 'I'll• tdllOriol -of th• Dallr Pilot ucb io 'nform and 1tim- 1dlU Nlldnt ~ pre.srnting thil ..._,., opjltlons ond com. nantsry °" topics of interest ...S lf9rilflcan«, 1>11 P"Otliding o f"""'9 for Ute uprc1.sion o/ -nadll'I' opjltlona, and br pnamdng tht divcrte view- po4nu of Informed' ob1ervtr1 and spoU.smcn on toJMct o/ lli.e daj/. llobert N. Wood, Publl1bu • Ldltr.I f,_ ,...,.. ,,. -kaml. Nonn1ll\I write,.. Jl'IWit mrt'll'f tl'lflr _... .. 111 M WOt411 ., !al. T~1 rlloM a _._ ltlt9,. M tit "''" ., ellmio flilM 1111e1 11 ,....,.....,., AH i.n.n m1111 l1K•uee •l•- fliltuN .9'141 ll'lflllfilll -.il••U. ~ 111m-. ""~ be "'llN'lt141 611 P-' It wftlalclll fNHll ~ llHl lnf PHIT'r wlll W M ....,Ml""", with, "Ir I am elected ... " Obvioualy some. or our praent Laguna Beach City Council members were 1pin- nln& some. very tall Wes when they wer• campaitnlDC. They promised to do everything ln their power to improve ~ dilion!I in our city. So far conditions have worsened. It seems to me that we, the people who live he.rt, whether or not we own pr&- pert.y, are the. ones who comprise the "ci- ty!' Therefore we art the onea who Ehould be considtrtd lint, not tourists, visitors, guests, etc. AFTER ALL WE were the ones who listened and believed their diatribe o( promises. Isn't it only fair that when et.r· t.a.in laws or ordinances are propoaed, that our (the. residtnb') needs, de.sires and preference.s'lhould be uppermost in the minds of the. councilmen? lnltead they seem to bt comiderln& aome apeclal inlereata. in . a rtpresentative type of 1overn- ment, such a.s ours, ·,.,•hen the. elected of- ficials act in this manner. they are betraying their oath of office. I think our prt1tnt council has been 1uilty or just thal from the moment they u.t themselves comfortably on their seats in the council Chamber. THE LATEST CASE in point, though not the most importanl, is lhe ordinance recently slithered through. forbid ding do1s on lel!hel in certain parks ind all beaches. Since it is quite obvlous that the majority of lht residents oppose such restrictions, it is incumbenl on the coun- cilmen as true represen,1tlv•1 of the "l)!Ople," lo admit the ir error and, in aplte of their own feelings, repe1I that ordlnance immediately. WILLIAM GALLI Dog and ~Ian To the Editor: With reference to lhe new Laiuna B<laeh ordinance prohlbltil!I dolt on the Poor Risks Lai::ukf, S. C., News : "A lament comes from the •.• mlnlsltr .a·ho was dl.Spatched some lime ago to Sweden lo help the American Gesert.era who have Oed there to avoid military service .... He nnds that the desenrrs are having some difficulty m obtalnln~ jobs. It 1J1petr1 to ua tha\ Swtdlah busineu men are showl111 more 1tnae than their S o c i a 11 1 l , anll·Ame rlcan a:overnmenL At least they llff that 11;11 individual who Jacks the basic decency and patriotism to rem1in loyal to hlJ ow. country is a r•l.bu poor rL~ u • potenUal employe." beach, the viewpoint of those responsible for its enactment might be more toleranl if th_ey were lo rtad a few of the remarks about the nature of dogs in American and English literature . For instance, in Mark Tw1in, "''e read, "If you pick up a.starving dog and make him prosperous, he will not bitt you. That· is the principal difference between a dog and a man." AND SIR WALTER SCO'J7 in "The Talisman'' had the8e almost reverential words to say about dogs: "Recollect that tht almi&bty, who gave the do& to be <:<>mpanion or our pleasures and our tolls, llath invested him with a nature noble 1od incapable of deeeit." The foreroing are only a samp le of the references to dots in literature. A day .11penl in the library of Laguna Beach Y>oold uncover many mott. EDGAR O'GRADY PHELPS '6ro••l11 ~ll.dnfor111ed' To the Editor : You must really be hard up fo r headlines! Last week you publiJhed an arlicle ataUng that the Ullivera.ity Park Parents were against their children bein& bused to Mission Viejo High School. 1 would like to say that you were & r o s s l y misinformed I, for oAt, and many (lthers would certainly rather our children C(lnlinuc to go to the school lhey have been bused to for the past two ye ars, even if it is on double sessions. lncideatally, you failed to print that ii will only be for a maximum of 68 days. Now. unde r Utt circum11lances of our crowded conditiom. J don't 1ee how anyo11e can objeet to an unavoidable situation. IT COULD BE worse, it could be for a full year. U.H.S. will be completed this fa ll and is patterned e.x1cUy 1fter Mi ssion Viejo. Jt is far more lofical aad will precipitate a far easier move \o be going to this school and having cluae!I in idenllcal bulklin1s with identical room numbers. They will move to the new school in a body. teachers alld all. Thi.s sort or condltion is never euy and is -alway1 fML1tratln1 for all concentd <1.nd It seem s to mt that some of "these So- called spokesmen could see a little farther than beyond their noses and ltop causlng a lot or unnecessary troubl•. Their oPinlons are not &he true conaeo11us of most of the parentl of Unive.r1ity Park. MRS. JOANN OPP Dear Gloomy Gus: Laguna's honorable mayor aM city couocllmen can forget their anti· dog ordinance. I l].al£t .Mlved the doggy dilemma_ with my new Dog- IY Dlapos1ble Diaper Service (biO. de1rldable). -D. D. D.S. fMI f .. 111,, tlli«!I t.Wt"' View\. ... """ ... ''" ,,,.,, " "" " •• ,.,.,. •9!!,.• ,., "" ~ ,. ...... , tvt. Otilr ''"'· WASHINGTON -The most exhaustive congressional investigation or organized crime in more than 1 decade has been set in motion by Sen. John :P..tcClellan, the owlish Arkansas Democrat who originally put the. spoUight on the Mafia durin• the lllSOl!. . Since the sensational crime hearings held by tM late Sen. E!tes Kefauver and by McClellan. Jess sk.Uled ringmasters have tried repeatedly lo expose the national crime ne.tlfOfk , All their attempts have fl1leCI. Meanwhile the ~1afia has pl"08pered ind diversified ib activities. Older enterprises such as prostitution have bun abandoned in favor of more busineS!llke ventures rangin& from pornography lo ban.king. JN RECENT m1ES, the cantankerouS" liicClellan has betn preoccupied with undi.stlnguished inv~Ugatlons into the poverty program, ghetto riots and student uprisinis. For the Jut three year1, the Senator's 1t1ff ha! been exploring the idea or a m1jor probe of the Mafia. They polled police chiefs across the country to detennlne how far nrganized crime had reached into legitimate business. The tenfalive new battle plans call for focusing tieparately on Maria activities in labor rackets. loan sharking. narcotics, stolen goods, gambling and pornography. Extortion, hijacking. credit card theft. milking of legitimate busi nesses and Jtolen securities will.also be explored. McCLELLAN WJu. spotlight the Mafi a fun cUonaries in each area , rather than taking the easier and more fami liar approach of giving the genealogy or the ''crime families.'' As a result. there will be some overlap. For example, the same hood lums may well tum up in both the gambling and loa n shark rackeb, A whole new 1e·neration <lf young Mafi a captains has sprung up since the Kefauver and McClellan hearin11. Bul McClellan his been taking on young lnvestigaton to deal with tbem. The Stnator does not expect to get hearings going until aomeUme next year. Then, Mneath the TV lights in the historic Senate c11ucus room, the 7f.year- <lld McClellan will make what may be his final stand against the mob. A SECRET WAR 1oes on in Thailand lar1e1Y unknown to the rut or the world. The Bangkok government discourage."!: vllilll into hills and forest '"'here suerrilla activity smolders and 01mes. A recent survey by a Quaker tnvt$lliatlng team di1elosed insurgency or one kind or another in 31 of Thailand's 71 province.o;. The team also discovtrtd Communiat..style ch•ll warfare h1 some Jocalltles. The guerrilla 1ctivity l1as been fed by discontent amon1 Thal mi norities such as the Meo tribesmen. Llotlw and Malays. SEN. PHIL HART'S Antitrust and lifcmopoly subcommittee bas begun a fll]J. acale probe of soaring Blue Cro.ss and Blue Shield costs. · llart, O.f\fi ch., ha.s found that lhe (lant tnsurtrs are amoni the mollt generous or companies. They PIY out about t5 ctnt.s of every dollar they lake In. • However, his early findings indicate that Blue Cross and Blue Shield f'wvc tailed to challel'lge eoouah ho8pltal bills. Consequently, they have had to boo3t premlttma to ..... tlle -c:blr1es. • • -<!>••·. ~.~"-.:> "''SEE THE 1>1FFEREN(E2" • We Must Have a Sense of History "Those who can1110t remember the past," wrote San tayana, "are condemned to repeat it." This is basically wha t T mean t in a column a rew nlonths ago, in which I eX"pressed appreciation aboul "the lack of a sense or history" among modern youth. I DID NOT ~fEA N -as many readers misi!lterpreted It - that a s en s e of history shQuld weigh them down or slow their .pace. We need to go just as fa st as \l'e can to keep up with tomorrow. But going fast i.~ no good unless you know where you want to go. And you cannot know where yo u want to go until you know where you have been and why you don"t want to 10 there again . WJTJIOUT A TRUE a111d dee p Un· ders tanding of history, our youth (with the b!SI of intentions) can plu nge U!'i into the middle of a greater mess than they are trying to get us out of. 'Vithout the lessons lo be drawn from Hitler and Stalin and the extremist movements or our century. th e idealism of our youth can easily tur11 into nihilillm, into blind rage, into mindless hate, into the justification of "good" ends by evil and des tructi ve means. FOR ONE OF THE great lessons of history is that violence begets violence, r fi,\',~~;~ . ),) '" feit~>e!'-~ : . ~'[?<, ~~· ~~ F,. · • ..i~+~~W' ~ ,,.~ <£Yf'~, ~....-.,,,._ and that tht end s do not justify the mearis, but corrupt them. Whatever is permanently constructive must proceed out of love , working through reason. Only these tYlO, ha rnessed together, can bring the human race out of its moral darkness and spiritual decay. ~ youth are rig'ht in almost all lhe th ings they are apln1t; but they, do not really know what they are (or .. Rebellion for its own sake is a symptom of dise ase, not a cure ; the tearing down of one system is futile if another, equally unjust and repressive, is to be put ln its place. These matters must be thought out carefully. AND THEY CAN be thought out only if we are firmly grounded in a sense of history; if we are aware of ma.n's capacities aJld limitations; if we reject from the past what is unworthy. and respect what is noble. Turning our backs on the past is as ignorant and ri&ill as venerating it. The present and the near future can be"' ha.ad led only by those with the proper intellectual tool s. as v.•ell as the moral fervor. ~1oral fervor alone is not enou1h; without a broad framework of leamingt it soon degenerates into fanaticism, parochialism. sectarianism. and, even. tually, despotism of one sort or another. It Would be a tragic irony if "freedom lovi rig" youngsters inaugurated a new efa Of ty raMy. Tiresome Wifely Words Wifely remarks that husba nds gel tirtd of hearing: "The refrigerator is wearing out. "rll need a new one." "It's gett ing 90 thin on top I think you ought to get a wig, Henry. A lot of men are wearina them today." "Well, If I ever get married again, it certainly v.·on't be for Jove. I've tried that. and it's for the birds." "Certainly, I'm not so narrow-minded that I see anythin& W1'ong _with a married man talki ng to a strange woman at a cocktail party. but did you have to spend tht "''hole evening talking lo her? You acted as if the had you hypnotized." ·•EVER.Y'MllNG'S getting cold. If you don't come to the tab le this very mi nute I'm going to throw the wholt meal out the window." "The vacuum cleaner is broken. \Ve need a new one." ··The liquor cabinet is completely emp. ty, Henry. Jf you want a martini , you'll have to run over to the neighbors and borrow 1 cup of gin. P..1aybe you'd bette r borrow IWO cups -and 1'11 have one with you." "I tell you there Is a mouse in this house, and I positively will not live in 8! hou!e with a mouje." ' "If they do tomethlng 1ood, they·re your kid•; if they do some1hln1 bad, they're mlne.." ·•1 DON'T CARE if you h11d chicken i<ltv for lurl(h every day this wtf:k'. You'ri stiU' havlna chicken Kiev for dln.- ner tonight." "The air conditioner broke do~n lhi~ aJtuno0n. We need R new one,,'' "Myrtle'a burband jull gol anotb<r big • !':"'' • I » I Hal Boyle ' .,,._ raise. He doesn't let everyooe in his ol· fice push him around ." "I don't see why you mind going to the superm arket wilh me. A lot of husbands en joy shopping wilh their wives." "Mother says !he won't come and spend the summer ~·ith u!'i unless you write her a letter first and tell her (or sure that she is welcome." ·•J THINK l'LL have my hair tinted aah blonde -with a white streak in it." "The electric dishwasher Is on the blink, \Ve need a new one." "\Ve never go out anymore. Why don't you simply keep me In a clo5et llke Bluebeard did his 'Wi\'tS, and be dOM with it?!!. "The orthodontist says that after n ha"e Junior's upper tteth straightened, we ought to do somr thinJ about those lower teeth of his, too." 1-~-B11 George ---· Orar Gtorge : How can you tell a boy that a girl he used to go with Is accu1l111g me <lf stealing her guy who now lkes me and never even think& 1f Louise much \eu honks .fhe 1orn out front? Don't you think !()? Otar Hurt : Not unless Louise dOC1n·1 aJ. though coming up on the porch 111 ol course, q you ~- • tJ l'ILOT·AOVERTISER Wed!MSday, Stptembfr 2, 1970 Jlled....U,. S.,llmblf 2, 1970 OAILY l'ILOT 7. Orange Coast Area Men in Service _Around the W ~rid .. ' -D. Ebey, aon of Support Brigade 11,fl Hood. Tramporlotlon Bltlallon. during cerenmlM at the SllrbJ la a !Im .,..iuata ri ri Mr. -Mn. Allqed H. L. combat support •hip USS Christman or 289S Club l!ou.'IO • Mr"": and Mn. Myron Emery, Tex. Marine Colp Recru1t Depot in Newpart !llJ'bor B t 1 h • '"Federico of 1111 Ma1lciy Drive, Detroit for Long Beach. Road, C'mta Mesa, enlisted ln- 2045 Mandarin, Costa Mesa, Spec. • Shorb, a oupply Marina Private C..lg D. San Di<Co. • NewpOrl Beach.· lllmtinglon Buch, II lcll<dul· , to the U.S. Coss! Guard lor has been promoted to airman speclalt:tt ?lith the a 2 at h S~y. of 424 Redlands . He wlll now report to the td to de'PM't the Puget Sound Coast Gu ar r d S@aman four yean of active servic:~J~! '' first class in the U.S. 'Air Transportation Company of Avt,., Newport Beach, was lnfantry Training &giment at Navy Petty OfClcer' Third Naval Shipyard, Bremerton, Recruit· Kevin L. Christman, the Coast Guard Reaulung Force. the b r Jg ad e • 1 teoth graduated from basic training Camp Pendleton. Clasa Jamn C. Ftderlco, ton Wash., Aug. 24 aboard the f8't son of Mr. and Mrs. Kermit G. StaUon in Long Beach. MrmanEmery,anairUa~ ....:.:..:......:.:..:.~:.:...:__...::::::....:::.::.=:.:..:..:..:......;..~~--'-'--~.:...,,~::;-~~~~~~~~~~~~...:.....~~.....:.....::__...;_~~~~~~~~~~~--'-.....:.:..:..:..:.....::...::..:..:..:..:.~- fic coatroller at Vaadenberg AFB, serves with a unit of lhe Air Foree Communications Sei-vice which provides global communications and air lral· fi e control for the USAF. ' Marine Lance Corporal Otn· nls W. Royea, son of Mr. and li-1rs. James E. Runyen of 17272: Wild Rose Lane, Hun- tington Beach, reported for duty with the First Marine Division in Vietnam . " Coast Guard &aman Recruit Crall W. Maurtt, :son of ~1r. and Mrs. Philip R. Maurer of 395 Diamond; Balboa Island, tnli!led into lhe U.S. Coast Guard for four years of active service at the Coast Guard Recroiting StaUon in Long Beach. Air Fon:e Captain Richard W. Dllmty Jr., son of Mrs. Virginia M. SIA?wanl, 4<01 Melbome Ave., lfollywood, hK graduated from the A I r University's Squadron Officer School at Maxwell AFB, AlL Captain D a b n e y was lpedally selecled for !he 14-weet profes1ion:al o f f i c er course in recognition of his potential as a leader in the aerospace force. Captain Dabney's w i f e , Sharon. is the daughter of Mr . ... and Mrs. Lome Hillier, Heme, N. D. His father, Rlc:llanl W. Dabney Sr., resides at 4720 Cortland• Corona del Mar. Army Specialist f o u r Thomas C. Shorb, IOft of Mr. and Mrs. David L. Shorb, 283 Avocado SL, Costa Mesa, recenUy reenlisted f« four years in the Regular Army while aervinl with the 13th Interstate Highway Now Open The final section 0 r Iriterstate 5 in Los Angeles County bu opened 14 traffic, brlnglng le • coaclulkln the largest job ever llldertlkeD by the Calllornla -of Highway~ Construction ol IU mlla ri eight-lane freeway over the rugged and 1 a r g e I y in- accessible terrain began ltV· eral years 1go. 'lbe total cost or the projei:t, including righ~ of-way, •as more than $103 million. Because of. its tremendous economic importance as the vital transportltion artery linking Soutbem CalifQrnia with the San Joaquin Valley, many have called this road the Great Highway of CalifcrniL Jn frontier days, the .. Ridgt Rcute," as it i1 called, was an Indian trail lt soon Wl5 widened to a dir. wagon road, and with the advent of the automobile, the state graded it in 1914, cutting the travel time from Bakersfield to Lo s Angeles from t days to a few hour~ Oldtimers still whisper tales ri the old i.Iano rold which snaked a tortuous path for ta miles up and around and over the spines of some of the meat rugged mountains in California. It made over too complete circles in those 41 rniles. over the years, the road was widened and lmpro~d, and in 1963, ccmstru<:Uon began on widening the route to eight lanes. , ~~ ' And alread y, tne new road is outmodtd. A four-fold increue in traffic demand is projected · for 19llO because of the new residential development. in the San Fernando VaJley. ....... Who Core•? ~e eth•r t1•W1P•P•' h1 "'• world c:•r•t ebeut your c:ert1,..1t• 11itv Iii:• ..,ovr •e"'111 .. 11ity d1ity 110 .... pe,,-r d••'-It'• tho DAILY PILOT. • • I I PIO Bowl Brush • Scrub Brush "ltlKIHn"' ••• l tlilats-itmb! :-?i2il.llJ • ~.c:::x±:: ·~ ---... .. -~'!!'!I libllck 147 willl ! ..... • k""'I l"'ille ""' lo a~mlors ••. --11·~·-:i 1.19 =~ 4Jc Desk~ . .,_, ·~ ....... IO' ... -ltlt••------10469 Wiit blill --*'" • oratoroilols. R!ll-IM • --Chaise Lounge -·36-· .. ~Steel -'""""''* -Yil!llllill ... -. Cobs. 10.88 ., 1'119Cl llATCM"'11UI ""' " ... ~ """' "" -... "" ,.... ta .. --•Pl •• ~ .. ~ ... 2.75 ~-~ ... 2.75 a.still .... a oo· ............. . ~· Saucepaa Set • -' ... "=-~ , __ ... 1 ... :=;-.,::::..-: OllCl.\-YUI SHOAL "Ski1 Balm" ..... _ ... _ --·· llillllft•-··· "' .. 11111 ..... l llot ..,. llolJ lor ""' GI ... ..,... ·-· 1 50 ~':.-11u.S111 • DRUG SJ()RIS OPIN9 A.M. TO IOP.M.,.7DAJSAWlll NIWPOIT llACH ... .. \'INI•.....,,. .... HUNTIHTOH llACM ADAMS MIO IHOIUIVlllT HUNTINGTON RACH IP•HteDALI AND •IHN•U .. Rm Dry-Ski1 Wrflllles lli•1111n~ 6.00 -1.19 .... "'1t 1.691.98 ILEENIX DINNER. Napkins •(rtn lie•• , •. l11wu ••Ir Sett 1Nbli..t. .... tJl 11~ ll. HPllFECTION" UDIES Household Glaves Toae up ••• trim dm Mn & bl! lllJ, lftll1 r .. W.rl or 1111 "Tone-0-Matic" sa1mF1<.W.Y WEIGHTED IRTS ,. ••• ,., ••••• • •• How you Cal l!C8Pture that lean look witholrt lcll& JJoars fl ninolDl'IOllS nercise. Body lll'J'f'emenl$ """" "" -.. ~ -. -1111SCles to ClfTJ the weigflt. =~'5.98~6.98 :ioi14.95 • ' ' • . I 8 OAILV PILOT Cambodia Activity Unclear " . By ROBERT A. DOBKIN WASHINGTON (API Statements by admJnistra- tion officials on Cambodia In recent days have left Presi- dent Nixon with wide latitude for future U.S. activities there. But how deeply he intends to commit the United State re· !NI ins unclear. Administration critics fear the y.s. commitment to Cam- bodia is deepening much as it did in Vietn,an1 in the 1960s. They point to tbe new $4tl million military assistance pa.Ct, jntensified U.S. air strikes and statements from • high officials like Vice Preiii- dent Spiro T. Agnew. who said, "We're going to do everything we can to }lelp the Lon Nol government." Administration officials. however, insist there is no commitment. They say the reason for helpir.g Cambodia is not to keep the present gov- ernment in power but to pr~ tect American forces in South Vietnam and to i.ss'ure the suc- cess of the Vietnamizalion pro- gi-am for turning the fightin'g over to the South Vietnamese S() American troops can come home. Whatever the rationale. the events of r~ent days would appear to indicate the creep- ing commitment tn keep the Lon Ni.ii government in poy,·er and the Communists out of Cambodia. On his first Asian trip, seven months ago. Agnew predicted the policy of non-involvement "in any other combat ac- tivities'' in Southeast Asia unless the President and Congress agree the situati~ was •·very extreme." Sunday, whil~ retw:n!ng for his second Asian v1S1t, the Vice President declared "the v;hol matter of Cambodia is related to the security of our troops in Vietnam." A Communist takeover in Cambodia, he said, "would make it impossible for the Vietnamization program and the disengageme n t of American toops." Secretary of Defense Melvin R. l.a.ird told a news con- ference \\'ednesday he had no trouble reconciling the Pen- tagon position with that of· the Vice President. \Vhen asked about the use of U.S. air power in Cambodia, Laird said, "If we can destroy enemy supplies, d e s t r o y enemy troops in Cambodia with a minimum casualty rate, I'm for it and J will authorize it." This was the broadest use yet suggested for endJng U.S. planes into Cambodia since the Americ·an troops abandon· ed the Cambodian sanctuaries in June. Until this week. Laird and other administration leaders said U.S. airpower would be used only to interdict enemy troops and ' supplies t h a t threatened U.S. forces in- Vietnam. Despite the $40 million in military aid, the stepped-up alr strikes and the rhetoric of government officials, the Nix- on administration claims to , have remained within the boundaries of ils policy of helping Cambodia as outlined by a high \\1hile ilouse official for newsmen June 30. The official said ' ' a reasonable amount of military assistance" would be given Cambodia and the adminis- tration ·-"will do \Vhat we reasonably ·can to support the Asian e-0unl.ries in that area, to protect the integrity and neutrality and sovereignty of Cambodia. "What we v.·ill not do, in- solar as the dividing line can be drawn," the official said. ''is to fight a Cambodian war y,·lth American forces." The administration believes domestic pu,blic sentiment is against a ....,·ider U.S. combat involvement and has com- mitted itself to v.·ithdra'v.·ing from Vietnan1. In lhe view or administration officials, hO\\'ever, U.S. air- power does not represent any further" commitnlent of U.S. forces to another country. "The planes arcn ·1 based in Cambodia.." one official said . "No American lives are being Jost. and th aircraft can be pu!Jed in or out on a moment's notice.'' ADYl!"ltTIJl.MEMT - How To Hold ,:FALSE TEETH · ' . • ' I ' ·- Junior plaid acrylic skirts, plecrNd with contovrW..ist. Si ... 5-13. $6 l.iico-frilled nyloa trici>t petti briefs for li-16 girls in OSIOrted colon. $1 -· ' . ' ' •usual ~prices a si.-1 .. po~•r knit llOCk turtle shells 111 white, nfl'l'f, red. 01i'w, gold. S-M-1.-Xl ·misses' sizes. $3 " , • J Hor Fiist an.• byAilon..,e in Dacnl_n• polyester/nyloa/catton wlth·geolty molded HelencaO nylon ttrekh lace cups. White, 8-10, 12.u. 119 ... ·· ennelfl ··th• faihlon place 't *rylic knit shirt ., • , • '.cr'ew neck, short sleeves. -Some have cable stitch· ing. In men's Ji%es, S-M-1.-Xl ••• assorted stripes. 2so Girt"s acrylic shaker stitch cardigans.. White, fmhion colors. 7-16, $ 5 3-6X, $4 Girl!a ac,Ylic ploid sk irts. Pleat or gore style, 7-U. $5 • I I I Meft'1 llteetwith bro•h•d glG\'9 ,...,.., .,,..,,, Chi no' or Md .... . -I ~.,...,.... $~ T-•otiOeo,7'.9' • . F ~ • y 3 " ., " - CHARGE THESE . VALUES AT VOtJ.R .:LOC.6L PENNEY STOREJ • • I ' . . ~ •. '.· • • :ure the back- I ~ ,. ' Spoot iftitt hos new long l'Oint collar and shortor long sl...,.1, Poly.terfcallon Peftri Preite for no. ' ironi"g. M!tn'11izHS·M.t.·Xl ',in a11C1rted &trip.,, 2so flared slac:b in plaids; 1elid1encl1itripes ••• 11ever·ifet1 Pe_nn r.rest9. You.ng ll'ten's sizes 21· 36waist. 499 " I , I .. I iDCrylic{ .lttl·cablo White and S·M·l. 79c ·-- • . . . . . " ' L .... . . ~ie • .!_ ... ~.· ··~. • •, -.__. . ---. ... ' " ,,. loys' Orlon• acrylic links 1weater. Ivy, ocean·blue, brau. · Sizes a .. 1 a. Met1'1 fllOC toe o•ford. P•ntr~• soln, heels. llock. 8'' .__ '· , ~-school ::Hlues. ' ' . , .. . , . . ". ' ... ,' ' ,,.. ' ....... ' " : ... . ' ' • • " , • Soya' Fortrel• pelyester me1h shirts in auorted sol ids for big 'n little brother. Si1M 6-11, 1'' 2'' · loys' Pel'n Prest'* cord 1 alacks, poJ,,.ster/cotton. 'Gfe:en,. brown, blue in •ires il.6, regular, sli m. Siz•• 3-7, navy, green, "brown. Sizet 3.7. 299 Siie16-l6; 3 99 -----1-~f~'-------1--1-~--'----------j'-­pol,.._., .. _ 2'' loys' acrylic knit pullowr shirts •.• tolid colon or stri~s in sizes S-M-l. . polo sl!im ;,, white, ~18. 3 fer 329 ----------- ' Wome"'' 1trop and buckle c.uul ift a90rtecl colon. 7'' •• , '1 /·• '. .. . . · Boys.;iOrti~I~ polyestt!t/cotton qouble bac.li:· briefs i~ white,-6-18. 3 for 69 . • ' t .. , I loy1' rope rib nylon stretch tocU. Black, . darlr. olive, navy, . white, QYOCQCO, blue. I " '! Siies S-M·l . .. ' . ' . DA)LV PILOT 9 iu Chicag~ 'fants Bid Fbr 1972 CHICAGO (UP\) -Two years ago today Hubert ti. Humphrey was nominated as Democratic candldate f o r president. but the day is better re1ncmbered for an eve11t fi ve miles from the convention site -Lhe "Battle of Chicago." Although the city has .not forgott en, it would like to De the host ror future. political conventions. Th~ c(ash between police and anl.iwar protesters on f\tichigan Avenue betwee"1 the Conrad Hi ltofT Hote l and Grant Park was the worst in a series that wracked convention week. Earlier in the week, police had used tear gas lo clear the demonstrators from Lincoln Park at closing time a11d then had fought with them in nearby old town streets. But on Wednesday, Aug. 28 .. 1968, the trouble mo v e d downtown \\'ith 'a rally at Gra nt Park. Na ti on a I Guardsmen were deployed at brjdges to stop dissidents whn were trying to strea1n out of lhe way. There were fights and tear gas wafted onlo the avenue to the an noyance or shoppers and workers heading home. The battle followed later that evening . The interseetion was filled with demonstrators. newsmen and curious spec· lators . Bull horns war,1ed the crov.·d lo clear the street and minutes later the r i o I • helmeted ' police -"pigs" in the yippie word that caught on that '6'eek -marched in and the batlle began. A . grou~ of people was squeezi;:d against a wa ll of the Hilton rand the cry of ~·mact" \\'as heard as some. sant "America t h e Beautiful." r-.1edics who had accompanied the ~eroonstrators during the week rlushed out the eyes. of those sprayed when th!! police let them disperse . In the . street, police swung ·clubs and heads were bloodied. Son1e demonstratorit ietafiated. A few persons \ve re put into paddy wagons. Tear gas grenades popped through the night. - Later-the \Valker Com. mission , which surveyed the convention violence for the Presidential Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Yiolenc.e,_ac.c_~d..lbe...police_o>'---­ excessive rorce and called the clash a "police riot," con· ceeding: there had been pr~ vocatioo rrom the yippie side. The city still wants more political conventions and says when lhe party committees meet !iioon to pick their 1972 sites, it will be in the bidding. "Thf' leaders of both. parties know lhat the city or Chicago did e.._,eryth ing in its power to preserve order." Col. Jack Reilly, f\.1ayor Richard J . Daley's aide for s pec i a I events, told United Press · Jnter,1ational. "They know !hat if their 1972 conventions a~e held here .• order certainly \\'Ill be preserved." Equitable Life Now In County The new regional head· quarters or the Equitable Life. the world·s ninth largest cor• poration, has been opened in Santa Ana. The insuraoce company's new offices will occupy three rloors of the new Segerstrom Center Building at 1055 N. Main Sl. Thou gh Equitable did not have an agency in the county until 1964, there are now three which serve ·Some- 14'.000 policyholders. One important advantage of lhe new *ration is lhe in· lroduction 'of a c11s hie rs depa rtment. It will provide a multitude of services for the- area previously only available in downtown Los Angeles . : ' •• ' • . ; ' f '· ••. : lke'.1i\tl•.bJ,•·IOok '" ·Tl'tf three agen~ics involved I ~!l!'~lfl . ,In btewn diftk.dowr1 · •11fercb:WoM.n'1 si tes. , '7'' in the consolidation produced $37.3 million of pald life in· suranc~ la~t year, and they project $43.2 million for 1970. IN THE CAPRI MOTIL ARCADE HANKo'ttAtr CHARGE THESE;_.VALUES AT YOU~ LOCAL Pl:_NNEY;'~;$1:0RE ! Be1uty Salon and Men 's Haircutting and . Styling Shop. Open Monday thru S1turd1y 8 • S. Sundays ind 1ve1. by appoint· ment. W1lk·ln1 welcome. 141t·JJ S. c .. t Hltlnr.y, l.ef•H lffcll ·' . ~­• ,, • 494-5054 , r • - ' 's- .· • J. DAll Y PILOT Artistic Hands Get New Ideas Dear Joyce: I am M aDd active, but Uve ..,. u artlflda1 le& moat o( my life. Bee••• 1 ...... Uke '° ••&me•• oar income and be has)-lo •r111Ue llllqs, I llDpe yoa qim su11e1t Items I tot.Id make at bome ud lell tbnagh lift "'°" -MRS. B.w.s .• a.cinaatl, Olti• From Old Me1ico •• tbtough Girl Scout Jeader J u D e McDermott • • • here's a festive idea for artistic hands -creating alld selling pinatas for children's holiday and birthday parties, soulh-Of'-the- border style. Here's how you make. •• POT LUCK. A pillala (pron. pee.nyah·tah) is a candy"8nd toy-stuffed container. It was originally an olla (pron. oh- yah) or clay pot covered With brilliantly colored Jlillper to form t cbarming birds ~net . animals. You can also make clowns, comic strip cherac- t.ers, Otristmas ornaments - designs are eDdless. And you ca11 fashion pinatae from bal- loons and neWSJmper-miche ..• cardboard boxes or large paper bags from the grocery store plus tissue and crepe paper , •• even plastic tomato baskets a n d construction paper. These craft delights are the ••. IDT OF THE PARTY! Guests are blindfolded and each child takes bis turn at trying to break the pioata, suspended on a rope, by whacking it with a gaily decorated stick. When the pinata breaks, the treats shower down and there's a mad scramble as each child tries to get as many 1ifts as ~ possible. · t , ~ Since many potential bUyers may be unfamiliar with fiesta customs, you could research the topic in your Jibrary, then Mlle andmimeograph • slat _ to enclose with each sale. i. 1970 We cut the price · ·of all these paints to 5.99 s.... $3! tt.MKnrffl'il Pne C..t Pf1111s bt•rior HouM ... Hit.. G;,.es o beautiiui fi1ttsh that resists itaining, yellowing, chalki"g oDCI fading. And it'~ guaranteed for 8 years, tool COven any color in Jmt one coot. Available ift W'iiite mtfy. .... L99.NDWS.99ogoJ. s ... 1.SOI P-•a•n-0.. C.... Pl•• Interior a..tex. Su.. ~ oaylic baM ~ lot.• g iYft ... coat CO¥erage °""' °"7 cokw. Dries to a stoift resista ... fi"'" i'h that's ftot onty d.-a. b.t wmhoble, tool 0.00. from 18 read) meet colors. 5 par ..,... -· ... 7-M. -S.99. oaL ............ , ......... .... .-i "-' 0 7 m 1L GMal -MCllWd ..... ta a ..... ·..-.u.. .......... .... BANGLES AND BEADS. While I've never admired purses and birdfeeders made from plastic bleach bottles, I liave seen some incredibly beautiful paper mach~ lor, papier mache, if you prefer) jewelry. Particularly sb.lnning: antique bracelet,, made from newspt1~1 glue, spray paint, antiquing liquid Sale 1499 _,..__._. 91c•f 1'1ua fade c.:I .. I . I ..... ... 6.99, MOW S.99 •go&. S...$11P..,•ctuf .. T•E..._ sioa DtiuewllJ' $eel.,.. Giweol uf!Wf ~ agoiMt •eat a.ct wuee.-d......,p.ttelp9 ........ arad. st.eel and iewels. ITALIAN CHRISTMAS TREE. An unusual and more expensive item you c a n produce at home lJ the ceppo (pron. cheppo), the Italian version of the pyramid tree. 'T'he manger" scene, laid out in the shape of a triangle. is the base. Several triangular tiers of shelves are supported by the frame work, and the whole structure is decorated with colored paper, gilded pine cones. candles, etc. Tb e shelves above the crib scene hold candy, fruit or small present.s. The ceppg can be used as a focal~point Pristmas decoration, or in .some homes, the~ is a ceppo IJJr each child in the family. ..... 11.... •••• ... 16' .... •i..-wl' al a ,..,.,1\ feo.. __ ... _1:!1--. ......... 2<r --........ (17 _ .... .... ~ 2r ... ,.i.,. &oddeor (2r' wam.g hgt.\, ..... 29.99, -~99 Sale 9999 .... 12t.9L P ... crotte c.,.pra .. ""· For fmt GMI ., .. application of poiM. WltMI •essts;d for easy _,_. ....... A.I09Crtic prwute cofdrol. c.~--e.w.ta c....,..l'...t.-.. P....crefte pert.Ill• spra,,er. , R99. 39.99 NOW 29.99 .... ----eas.1, , • • drim lo 0 M• llJidcy. ,.... bbl<f .... •••6..99,NOWS..ffogol . FLUFF UPS. ,What about ----------------~ malting decorator reading.ifl.. bed pillows -those with a back an_d two armrests? Try hnagioativ~ designs: shape yoors like a sphirui:, or a throne with a crown on top. Or, you coold rtazy-quilt the regular squarish shape using pieces of satin and brocade., You might also sell giant-sized sil..upons in a variety of lovely patte~, toss piltows aoo individualized with macrame fri~. Macrame js an ancient art of creating with knot s using twine or long strips of iabrlc. =---.--~~ ~=~"--"'. 111 ~ \ f \ 1 : I ' ' 1 \ 1 , DRDPll.OrH 1[ -----·· -----·- 9"" ..,.... ........... s." ~..,.. ..... ~, ..... . 7¥.1· pol• ICta,... .....••• Ar hCSMlle fvr d:iucwa1 bntsh •••••••••••••• ••c 3 pc., '2"' eds tic z i.a.d~ ............. ... .. war-"'"' 9"" • •• '·" 91121o.doopclolh .. tloo$1 \Save by the yard! Sale $105 ...... _ .. ___ ...,i.. .................... Featw. lripla..-dplaoho-........ Hep rilmed. a:arklpf Iaa pG9Ms. ... pOlt ....... 4 ds II Uliweli!ftl(ls. 2_.,_...,_.. ...... ............ SIWloo --lo< pod. pl1sscd ._....,. E.dwrior o .. :1z1i-V#"W 11/ITJ I ~6'1-L .. .-.xr..-..x.,...,.,,,,... ........ ..... _;_,,_ Closeout $119 (U:llilad QI a MM) .... _ .... Pr1•i .... 5 "' ..... ,. ..... ~ till#. C1utdi ottd throttle wnl1ok located ow ltoncBa. tilUu.g width 26•. Tifting .,,... • to a· witll odis•sllt ,... depth bur. 16995 PHM)'t20-2MP ,,....,..,......, 111eww. Chrtch, bktde and thf'Oftle- <ormoli cosweniently locaMcl •• hoeclla. ' .... -. --· s .... s20 Sale 13999 .... 1$9.99.-............. ..--_ ...... .-... ••••• Poouesfwl 3~ HP,•cyde"B'-1 21• 1;,,-;,,ht a1 ....... decl'With wlodtnool._....., g-..1--lir 11-pcttlln.g. Gr.-_._ .. ....,, ._ .... Sale$129 -1ff.99.--aHP .... ···=· ~ prop111ed -1oao1r-.,,wldtlo. boft btu ... Ml---..._,, dutJcml...,.. ...... with to.git,.._ tt.... Poaesfwl 3 .... qide e.giMi. S....6.11 Sale 53• .... S •• 99 ............. ,... .... ry -••!· Feahlrw:· ...... for efflci1Rt petforaanm •eeod -' -. 211" -.-1oop-C1 lick CIN cossutMiadllty local.d Oii ....... 3HP,•c,do...-, STARTPOINT. For directions on making these products. chttk your library for craft b o o k s aOO magazines. If you would like a sheet with June McDermott's directions !Of' making simple ball~newspaper ma c he pinatas, plus a couple or book references on antique mache ~elets and wood ceppos. tend me a stamped, self. addressed envelope at t lJ i s newspaper before October 1. Write "Pinata'' on your outside envelope. r-. • enney1 at-home decorating -·· .. •-lllSP,.I .... pc; I El .... 011ly One flnal stocb lit Ill tlo:M td'IUons. TMl'I a big dtsrf Jt Is la Or.angit CoulnJ, Tho DA!t.Y l'ILOT Is !ht .,.., dall1 .......,., 11111 dtll•· ...... - I I , ••...n•as ...... ..._ CANOGA PARk DOWNE'1 HUMllNGION ~ -ri:wa ~-Cll'l"CM•'D ---~ -llUIOI ----.s,,,;,., ........... ... .. ' ' • I I • l n ,,, too dii Tr Cl Ot "( ha dr pr· of m' Ct pa id+ To F s 1 Tl th i" ca th it< lh S< J • 25 m se Q• .. Fo th th UI to bt " J1 J1 ., R < I ~ • lo\ltdntsdil)', Stpttmbtr 2.' 1970 DAILY "LOT J J Harv.est Stops QUEENIE -By Phll lntetlandi Other Democr._ts Speak Union s Battling ·Reagan Sabotaged Tax Bill~.Unruh F 01· Jurisdiction SALINAS, C.111. I Al') - The Salinas Valley's largest lettuce grower was shut down , today by an !)rganlzational dis pute between the wa rring Teamsters union aod Cesar Chav ez' United Farm Workers Organizing Commitlee. Pickets with signs ,reading "Citizens Against U n i t e d ' • .halted Teamsters u n ion drivers Tuesday at t w o proceMing and coollil& plants of lnlerharvest Co., the onl y major grower to sign with the Chavez union. said the)' had ..Ji union sanction. Tea~ste~--officials · were una vaila bl e for l.'Omment. By signing an agrf1Cme~1t with the UF\VOC I a s t ,.,. e e k e n d , lnterharvest - producer of 15 percent of the nation's ltttuce -broke ranks \\"ilh 200 lettuce ~wl growerS and ~ippers who have vowed .:,~·~:'; . ,·', . to stick to contracts with the · Teamsters, The UFWOC is ., ;· .j ;.' affiliated y,•ith lhe AFL-CIO, ,i 1 ~ • the Teanisters are not. o SAN ~·RANCISCO I UPI) - Jess Ul1Nh1 De mocrati c gubernatonal can d Ld 1 t e , autrts that Governor Ronald Re1gan ''del l ber1tel y I , Juror Files Big Laws uit In Incident STOCKTON (UPI ) -One of the jurora wounded in the Aug. 7 shootout in San Rafael whlch left four persons dead has filed clai ms a.11:ainst the county and state for $700,000. Teamster drivers refused to pass the pickets, who were identified by observers as Teamsters members, but who I h ~7 ,,,,.7-,.,, nt.er arvest's Sa 11 n a s -:::2"V"l~ (~l K;., r-.. ~ '-· 1,111 .... ..M ,.,.... -...... spokesman. \Villiam Deck.er, '""""''-'".:;:=::;"'-.-..;;;;;c;.;:;;;;.:;;;;;;:;;.;;;;.;..;.;;.;;;,:;.;;;;;;;;:;::;..i Mrs. Maria Elena Graham. 48, San Rafael. was wounded in the right arm during the c:unUre which ended a n abortive attempt by three San Quentin convicts and· a n outside accomplice. They took ~1rs. Graham . the ·judge. 1 prosecutor and l\\'O other jurors host.age. · said the 1,100 UFWOC y,·orkers "1 agree with you-there's nothing quite u annoy· who returned to work Monday ing as people who leave J:Um in ash t.ravs." will be laid off until the -------·----------· ----- cooling plants r·e s u me Prison Death Suspects Ask Trial in SF operations. "\Ye are not harvesting any more. We have thousands of cartons of produce sitting in the fields. We can't get it to the coolers," Decker salcl Reagan Education J\ide Sees Campus Guerrillas Mrs. Graham's attorney, Nat Brown Jr, Q[ Stockton. said Tuesday !he claims contend that county officials railed to provide "adequate or suitable safeguards for the protection of jurors and other persons lawfull y on the premises of the Marin County ~II of Justice." SAN QUENTIN CAP) Three black men charged with the slaying of a Soledad Prison guard last January say they can't gel a fair trial. but tha t they would get a better shake before a San FranciSC1) jury than ei3ewhere in the state'. Chlorine Gas Tank Blast Clears Camp PINEHURST (AP) -About 70 persons \\'ere evacuated from the University of California summer camP here after a 100 g allon chlorine tank exploded, releasing the poisonous fumes. SACRA~1ENTO (AP) GoY. Reagan's s p ecial eduaction advisor expects "at least guerrilla tactics" to disrupt CaliforniA 's pu b Ii c college campuses with lheir 300.000 students th is...lall. Prof. Alex C. Sherriff s says the intensity or campus unrest depends basically on whether a majority or the students who flock back to campuses this month get involved i ll disorders and also on how A lanky psy c hology professor who disapproved or th' conciliatory a p p r o a ch taken by Cl.ark Kerr to resolve militant confrontations during Kerr's presidency of the university, Sherriffs says Gov . R'agan's "obey the rules or get out" brand. of leadership is winning fa culty Support from some who hesitated to speak out earlier. P.1rs .• G raham was hospitalized for several weeks after suf!ering a bullet wound resulting in "incapacity and limitation of motion or fingers ()f the rigtlt hand and cosmetic disfigurement." the claims said . The trio known as the Soledad Brothers -George Jack.son , 28, Fleeta Drumgo, ?5, and John Cluchette, 27 -- made the observations in separate interviey,·s at San Quentin Prisoh . where t h e y await a Sept. ~I trial in Sa·11 Francisco. "I· think San Francisco is the most so phisticated city in the United States, but undoubtedly they will attempt to line me up with my brother's ideas and t h e rev o 1 u ti on air es," said Jackson. whose br o t h e r Jonathan, 17, led a courtroon1 escape attempt Aug. 7 i'.1 San Rafael. Two men, James \Y . Daggett III of El Cerrito and Bruce R. Smith or Larayettc. were treated for severe face and eye irritation at a loca l faculty members encourage POW leadershi p on the part or ad -Identified n1inistrators. hospital. Daggett smelled a leak in Bomb Threat the pool's filtering apparatus. but the tank e xplod ed . Tuesday ,before he could shut For·ces Jet .. down an open valve. Sm1U1 helped pull Daggett from the area. Today i1 the la•l day lo enjoy lhe Sound Gmeratioft al Knolta. Don '1 mia t.bem % FORMERLY GENTRY LTD. To Retw·n LOS ANGELES (U PI) - A Continental Airlines 747 jetlin- er ~arrying 218 persons Tues- .._day-wa1--forced-1o turn bac k to Inte rnationa l Airport here from 200 miles at sea because ot a telephoned bomb threat. A search or the huge jct failed to turn up a bomb and the plane restarted i t s scheduled flight to Honolulu five hours later. The craft had been in the air 30 minute s when a r eservatio n s clerk al Continenta l here received an anonymous telephone c a I I saying there was a bomb on board. LABO~ DAY SPECIAL MIN'S SUITS 1 OO•/e Wool ancl 0ouw a11d WHI VALUIS TO S 135 r SPORT COATS VALUES TO '15 DRESS SLACKS VALUIS TO 132 ·$ $ • $ • 2l00 HAUOR llVD. IN THI HARIOR !HO,,ING CENTER COSTA MESA • 540·1500 - \. Longest-held Capti'Ve Seen, SANTA CLARA tUPI) -overseas. \lo'atched the rilm After six years of waiting. the which "''as supplied by the \Yife of Navy Lt. Everett Nor1h Vie tname se and Alvarez Jr. -the longest-held released to the networks by American prisoner of war in the Pentagon. history -has seen her The film shoy,·ed t h e husband. , A1nerican prisoners attending Tangee Alvarez saw her 32-a Christ1nas church service year-old husband in a group of some\Yhere in North Vietna m. 74 other· American POWS in a Mrs. Alvarei Sr. said she North Vietnamese film sho"'n w a s ' • s o r r y ' ' t h e on nalionwide-television. the_ .lla LI I e..Ld .-M.c C o v e r _n aviator's mother r t port ed amendment to set a deadline Tuesday. for getting out of Vietnam had Mrs. Everett AIVBn!Z Sr. of failed to pass the Senate Santa Clara satd f a m i I y Tuesday. 1nembers saw lhe f i J 1n ~ "ll has been six yea rs since Monday night and recognized we've seen Everett," she said. Everett. who was shot down "The way it looks. we may be over the Gulf or Tonkin and waiting many more years." captured in 1964. Lt. Al ya.rez, the firSt' U.S. "He look~ well ." Alvarez' pilot caPtured by Nor th mother said happily. "We ha d Vietnam. was shot down Aug. heard from him in April . The 5, 19&1. during one of the first governm'!nt notified us the air st rikes ordered by film would be on television bu1 Presidenl John s o n in we didn't know just wh en." retaliation against N orth She sa id 29-year-old Tanger. Vietnamese attacks on U.S. \~ho ma rried Lt . Alvarez only warships ip the Gulf of six months belore he was :;ent Tonkin. Free lfeli&IG d1&cli~ ~ Cenliaala Bmll< now., Newport Bead1. For a limited timt you can brcome a Ch1r ttr Member of Centinel11 811,nk's new rtgiona l office in Newport Be11,ch, :1nd grt a frtt ptTIOna.1 checking. account for your tntitt l~a-t You'll even get ·a free order of ptttonaliztd scenic checks! Charter Business Accouots gd" a £ree order of regular checks and endorsement •lamp. All accou nts insured fo $201000 by the-Federal Otpc>sit Insurance Corporation. Services o£ Cmtinela Bank .a Drive-in TV Teller Bin.king a Bo.at-in Banking at our 6S..foot dock a Dock·to-Dock Bank Customer Pickup and Delivery Strvice a 24.·Hour local Yacht R,are Rt'lult• and Dail y Fishing Reyort• -Call 642-11'40 a Extended lnnl<lng houra: &:lO~Spm Mond11y ~ Thursd.11y, Until 6pm Frid.11y1 a Free Bsnk·by.Mail Service aabota&td his own tax bUI ror political J>llrpos<S. Speaking Tuesday be!or< the AFL-CIO stale labor federaUoo convention, Unruh declared : "Ron1ld Re•gan deliberately sabotaged hb own ta1 bill for political purposes and the wor,klng people or this slate will pay the cost of Reagan 's poJitical ploy." "\Vhat makes It worse is that the cynical exploitation of !he tax reform issue is taking place in the midst of one of the most serious economic dee lines in years." Unruh added. "Californians genuinely need tax relief a~d they need ii nO\Y." ''Only the Governor can place the subject before· the legislature," Unruh said. "If he refuses. he alone must take the blame for yet one more Reagan year without property tax reform." The legislatures refused to adopt the Governor's tax Sale. -reform program and Some law maken complained t he Governor refw:ed to (.'Ompromist differencts wilh them. Unruh suggested a "sbnp1c. direct form of property tax and said that raising a• home owners' exemption to $2.000 would have saved the oy,·ner of II $20,000 house $1 38 this year." Other speakers in S a n Francisco the same day were Rep. John Tunney, Democratic candidate for Scn1tor ; Edmund G. Brown ,J r . , Democratic Candidate r 0 r Secretary of State; and RUSll ft1iller, the party 's candidate for Gth District Congresamari. Bro\\'n. son of the former governor, spoke at 1 private fund raising lun c he o n , afterwards, he reported11aying that "too many Democratic leaders have given t a c i t approval to radl.cal activity by refusing t()ll take-a common sense, hard-line atand a1alnat violence of all kinds." "Many vol.trs b e 1 t e v • Democr1Uc le1ders have a misguided loYe 1ff1ir with radical st udent • and Demoaal.9 v.·ould make It plain this ls not so,'' he continued. Ht also said he favored a "properly trained strike force \\'hich would operate under the governor's command" to maintain peace on c~pu9es. Tunney, speaking at a 111·orkshop for his campalcn v.·or kers, s a i d Republl~ans from President Nixon on down "'ould co me to Californi1 lo campaign for his opponent, Sen. George Murphy. P.1il\er urged a complete withdrawal of U.S. troops rrom Vietnam. flml(Mtl.Y URGC SlOOll • IE ...... '111 19 PICKWICK~ BOOKSHOPS S.UlllC:..t ...... Cfttl ..... S40-l191 114.3 .._,,,,,.-,..=,c-1w•. lloll>"'M4 (213) MO t .tltl Our diamond prices are always good. This week they're 20°/0 less. ·~i ­~ .. -- 1'1 Cit. 11Wqu6ee •.-: '*" rlno, 14K whillli told. Reg. a. ..... 117 .JI X «-.._... d'• uoud, 14K .... gold ~ •t. .... ........ .,. Nol Jttown; 1 t dlll'l!Ond duller Mt, 141( wl'lltt gold, f /10 cf. tot.II WI. Atlg.Ml5 ........ 10 diMlond ...., .. 10: wNWi Vofd, J.'. ct. totel WI. Atig.131.IO. ..... 111 20 dMloftd cocic191 mg, 3/10 .ct. "*I wt.., 14K J91IOW gokl. Reg. '300, .... - s ~ 'IHdding Mg. !: ct '°'81 wt., 14K white gold. Reg:. 137.50, .... 1111 lriWl't 3 dlaMond rtno. ,., cl tot.i ... 1411: ,.now gold. .... -.-- 14K )llllOw go4d cocktMI ring. 3/10 ct. WI WI.. Reg. 1200, .... 11• MM'• 7 cHIMCW'ld Mg, Y. ct tcMI wt., 14K }'91k1W tokt F\elg, 137.50, .... .,,, ~~ ct. cl.....,,.,...., 14K 'llM• gold. ' Aei;. 137 .• , ..._ ,, ... 4 ct•~ oocMtl ,.., 1/7 ct. kJW wt .. 14K wMti1t .............. -- 10 dlamoncl..,.. '°" ... dint ring. 1(K gotd. Ret-•.ao ..... n .• tr.Aln'• 1/10ct. ll•iw• -14« yellow gold bMd. Rtig, 7li.50, ....... °"'9ond ..,,.,..., , ...... .............. _ .... ,,... __ ~1 ct._.. ...... , ...... ......... ., .. __ Why a diamond from Penneys? ,, Penneys l~t a1 .. ffld ~Ill and •pprowt ... I)' tl'9nnt1~ l'Wfo9, -- belortl mounUngand IOI-In•'*•''°_... compll.nc•'*4Mlh6gh.,.i1ty.......,., lat .. •d by ow MercMnd!M T9'11ng c.it.r. Good oab' Mi cl•rtty. ,...cltlon c:ualng and-..... -wit ...ure you Of confldlnc9 In......,.,.._, A _,, ,.,..,.,.. Otalwldc.tlcMI ....... ...,. dllMnand pureMMrl .....__,. ._.. 'O'I Wd Tr9ct.-ln P0Hcy•g1,.. JW h appo:...., ttom • blgfer Ind~ ditMoM. Cll.19• 111,,, >'tlu•• t i !ht1• ,,.,,,,.., 1lert1: CANOWA 'Al\IC CARI.SIAD DOWNEY FUl.l.El\TON HUNTINGTON IEACH LAKEWOOD MONTCl.All\ Nf.W,OltT I EACH 01\ANGE "TME CtTY" VENTUllA Ute '•11111v1 TiP111 'I'"''"'"' '11111 • """I: .. .___ __ ... I DAllV PILOT Fo1· the Death /\''>tll'f'.• ATKINSON o:~,,. ,&tkin•on. 1')1 Ced•• ~I .• IHWPOrl !!~•ch. out ot dt•'"· Auo. ~l. s"rvlv•d by_ bu•b•ll<!· G~•dcn1 tH? d•u~hlors, S•m•ntl\1 "'" A•MeY. S•,.,..lc._6\ were llold t&d1y, Ylt<:1119•dav, l'1c1fk q;.,,,. c~ .... 1, wltl! Dr. 1t1vmond I. ll•lh•m'l oflkht- ;,,9, lnle<.ment, P1cll'c YiltW Mtrnort1! P1rtc. P1cltk v1-... """""••v, DlrKlfl••· •!ttOl.lTTI Jos"'" "· 1ltrol1tll. 731 Al'0(1do, No. C. CO!tl Me~. D•I• ol dtUh, AUD. l l. Survlvtd b't" wllr, M1rv1 •On, .klsl"'lll Jr .. ot MlcM111n; !Ive d1u•lllet1, Mr.. Emmi flui.tl'J', Mrs. Mar~lou Nu1re:, MIU S1r1ll -...01111L 111 ot Cos11 Mt sl ; /,\rs. Annie C1br1I, Sacr1m1n!o; Mr!. Jor.t<>hlnt Mu- !>Ol, 5.,1 !ltrn1rdlno: bro!l>tr. Gl1vo1nnl, ol France; 21 ''•ridclllldr•n: 3 9re1I· ----~•~Mldr"';-tlit:'•"l':-tGnl9M;-Wednn;.­ <UV, 1:30 PM, l~!! l rOldWIV Clw111el. lll•oul .... MIU .. Tllu•5d•Y, ' """· $1, J~chlm'f C•ll1ollc Ch11•cl\. Intl'"""'' Good Sl\eol\erd C~mtie.-.. Belt Bru6' w1V Mortu1rv, Olrec•o.,. '· OU.!5 (.!•tries llllV GltH. lt•~ldtnl ol New•orl 9each; lormtrlV of l'111d1'11f . 01!e ol <101111, !..,.11m~r I. Su•vlvtd ~~ two '°"' fnd lwO '"nd'.lllldft~. Pdualt ln- 1errnent ""'' l\~ld ~1 "•''"' View ~··· rnor!•I Po r~. Pa~l!I~ View Mor1u1.-., Olroclors. ' · MEI.TON ltrt Je1n M!lton. !•U·C W1t11c1 51., Co1r1 Mt ll, 01•• of !1••111, •ut. ?f. Sur¥1ved b¥ p1ren,,, Mr .1nd Mr:. Cllirle:; l"IOwfHI; •on. ltQbtrl Ill. Menon; ~"' ilittr. St rvkes. Frl!IJY. 1 PM, P•ti· 11, vi.w c11101t. 1n1 ... mt<1t, 1"1citlc v;,..., //.em.,,.111 P1r•. Ftmlly 11191••'' t!1c!• wl!hl"9 to "''~' mom!Orll! ccn!rit1u•ion• olt••• con!rObv!t to !ht Cl\Hdr•ns Ho·~ oiT•I of Ortn~e County. Btll l r<iUIWfY Mo"""rv, Oir..ct~··· Tl!llllllV' f\ll"Cllt Terrv. j,Ol Mt i" ~f .. Munlinorc; 11t•tn. S.rvitt t ~e"tlin• t! $..,1!~• Mer· 1u•rv. A RBUCRL"! ' SON 1\'t1tcliH l\lortuary 417 E. lith st.: Costa !\ftSI '45-4181 • BALTZ 1\IORTUAR IES Corona del !\Jar OR 3-945' Costa l\tesa ~tl f.Z4tt • BELL BROA DWA V MORTllARV 111 Broadwav, Cnsta !\ft.SI LI i-1433 • l\lcCOR!\OCK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY li95 La(Una Canyo11 Rd . 49t-9415 • P,\(IFIC VIEW !\1 r:'10RIAL P.~ltfl:: Ctmeterr e l\1ortuary Ch apt I UIO Pacific Vlt• Drive Newptrt 8e1<'lr. California ll4·!1tl • Pfi;EK fA!\fll .Y COl.ONIAL Fl lN~RAL HO~IE · i .. 1 Rnl~a A\'t. Wettmfnlt,r h S-3$%$ • SREfl'ER '.IORTUA RV 1.-pftt lead! 41111.t~J!:\ I Sat Clemente t~lfll •· 1 $~1rT"~' 1\iOR'flllAf\V tr7 Milo SL Hudo .... BeoO - ' c., • ' Record \• Tr·ucker ·Faces Raps Rape, ~idnaping, Robb ery Ch.ar~ed SANTA ANA -A young 1ruck drjvcr was ordered FriUay1o face municipal court arraignment on fn u l t i p I e· counts of i·11pe. kidnaplng, se ¥ per1•ersion anci robbery. +nie, Mpflft, RU.stin.E"dwin · Dan. 22, or Santa Ana, \vaited ·in Orange Coun ty Jail until his col1rt apperira11ce today by virtue of a boil Sl!tting of $100,000. A charge sheel \\'hiCh details three counts of kidnaping,.t1vo counts of rape, two charges of sex perversion and one of robbery helped Judge Eugene La1J.ghauser reach that record se:ting. • the form or his truck'~ colliding \l'ith the rear of their veliicle. into the glr"l's car. inter\licwe her about the ccllision and then forced her ln her cur to a 1 deserted area "'here she was either !'aped or forced to particip.ate in ao act of sex I perversion. Investigators s~1 id o n el victim was raped in B be.m l fiel<t. a second \VCS sexually assau lted in t~c s~Jusion of al cluster of young avocado trees and a third woman was raped and relieved of $3 within sight of the stop sign \\'here she was "rear ended." ''1\"'tf I -Cou~ty .. Chances D:in is charged with sexual assauJts. on Women motorists \Vhose first encounter \Vith the 22·year-0ld truck' driver was in Jn al! ins tances, police said -t\\'O in Santa Ana and one in Orange a s li s pec t d_eliberately rammed his truck All three \vomen ha v er ic!ent'.fied Dan' as t he ir! assailant. Investigators said j there may be further charges 1 filed against the y o u n g defendant prior to . Tuesday 's court appearance. , __ ----- ' -. . For Los Al 71.irport PUBLIC AUCTION ·SALE-* COSTA MESA -Qrange County Aviation 0 ire~ or Robert Bresnahan .-say! that the chances of the county ever acquiring Los Alamitos Naval Air Station for use as a commercial jet airport are very slim. Speaking befort tht Airport Committee of U1e Costa fl1esa Chamber of Com mer ce, Bresnahan said the o n I y solution to the county 's aviation dilemma is · a n alternate airport site. But he said Lo6 Alamitos v.·ould be almost prohibitive because of the Federal la"'s governing the environment and fede ral aid to airports. Report Due 011 HQspital Facilities Firm Starts . Irvine Unit TRVI NE -Con.~truction h11s begun in the lr\'hle Industrial coinplcx of General Digital Corporation's new S2.5 million facility. according to Alvin 8. PhilllP.!S. president or the exotk:~n1poneht Orm. The 35.000.~qu:ire·fnol n!ficc a,1d m11nu facturh1~ plan:. at Red Hiii A venue a11d liakt'r Street in Ne·.~1µort Bench. h scheduled to be ir\ o.per:i tior. by mld-1971 , v. ith S 0 0 "Under tne aid to airports program," Bresnahan said, "if an ·.ex-military base is to be wed, the county would hav'e to prove th:it an airport w9uld not be detrimental to the environmtnt. \Ve would RISo have to prove that the community of Los Alami tos wants the airport." 1 L & J ENTERPRISES DBA/ ARCADE CARPETS ASSIGNED FOR THE BENEFIT OF CREDITORS TONIGHT, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 2nd at 7:00 p.m. 284$ PACIFICT COAST HWY., CORONA DEL MAR Bresnahan noted that in the three cilies surrounding the Naval Air Station, there are "999 ho1neowne rs groups that have banded together to form , CommuniLie3 opposed to Los i Alamitos." I HOME DECORATOR FURNISHINGS* SOFAS-.CHAIRS-TABLES-LAMPS-COMMODES -MIRRO~S-DESKS-BENCHES -WALL, HANGINGS lie sa id it v1ould be almo.st I imposs ible to gain the support of the rommunities for an ' ai rport in their art:a. He also 1 said that it "'"ould be difficult i to prove to the federal 1 governnient that the quality of I 1he environq_lent would be enhanced by ;.the construction ! or a jet airport. ORNAMENTS GLASSWARE -ASH TRAYS PICTURES - 1 OO's YDS. DRAPERY MATERIAL -CARPETS -OFFICE E9UIPMENT -STORE FIXTURES. . PREMISES OPEN FOR INSPECTION, DAY OF SALE, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. TO BE SOLD IN PIECE MEAL LOTS I FOR INFORMATION CONTACT - "\\'e bave not ruled out Los Alam itos." he added. ;.but !t would be diff icult to ust: it ror our needs." ' I OST.RIN & OSTRIN AUCTIONEERS _ O.pen door to Education Begi n now to sav.e for your childJen's best future. ;,_ Open the doo i to their greatest potential by opening an Educati6nal Savings Account NOW at the highest ra tes in our 35 year history. Depending upon the savings option you select, earn 5°/o on passbook accounts or 51/4 °/o -53/4 °/o-6°/o-71/2 °/o per annum on our new specialized certificates-compounded dail y -insured up to $20,000 at Orange Coun ty's La rgest, First and Strongest independent Federal. ' SAN CLEMENTE lltANCH '61 North [I Caininn R•al San Clemtnlt, Cali!. '1671 Ttl1phan1: 492·1195 ,A,NO LOAN ASSOCIATION • HOME orncE 1'0 Ocean Avenue tartfna Beach, Calif. 91651 Ttltphone: 4!14·7541 LACUNA NIGUEL BRANCH l Man~r<h Bay Pl111 South liru"a. C•lil. 91617 Te!cphont : 4%-1101 (213) 749-7295 r NOW LEASING , ,l o(1!1o' ;., Ai, lioolnln9 lr .. int C11mmtrti•l0ll'lo'1111•;•1 C c"'· pl11,' th1 '•1 ti'--l.uilcfin9 h 1 ., ..... mod••" oHict buildi!'lq, nnw ''"';"9 •ff\c.11 friim I •rid 2. 1111om1 ~p to JOOO 1ci . fl. 111ift1. All 1111!11 ••• fully p1rtitio11tcl inti 1outitl ·p1onf. •d, "'••• 1i1 Co'nc:litf11111inf, piptd in ..,u1ic t nd cerp11:119 lh•ou9ho11t. ,t,~plt P''~;n9 ;, .... a .. blt , i ncl i•"llori1I 11r· .;ct1 t nd 111 11ti!itit 1 ••• tncl1>d1d Tht '•Ho l uiltlin9 i1 in Or1n9t Co11"tv'1 pr;..,, loc1tio11, ~tl i&c tnl lo irnhtti1v. b1n~1, llPw •e•t .. u11nt1, Or1nqt Cc11nl-y Airport, tt.1 ,\itpo•lt• Hott!. Tht $111 O;t90 F'•1i • Wt't ;, iu•i Oii• ble<k '"''V· ' ' i:ow Leasir.g THE PAT10 a~tlDING 2172'0uPont Drive, Rm. I Newport B1•ch, Celif. 9l66• Phone : 13l-J223 ANNOUNCES THE GRAND OPENING of our :2 nd . STORE! @)DAVIS ~Rc'\l!N IN THE NEW Laguna. Hills Plaza !Next to Sov·OnJ at the corner of Rockfield & El Toro Rd. ~_DAVIS BROWN To Serve The Entire SADDLE.BACI( Area Vlith Our Famous Brand Name TELEVISION and APPLIANCES ~DAVIS BRO\\ N FRIGIDAIRE e Washer • Dryers • Freexers e Di shwashers ©DAVIS BROWN MAYTAG e Washers • Dryers • Dishwashers ©DAVIS BROWN CALORIC • Gas Ranges CORNING , e Electric Ranges @I DAVIS BROWN COLOR TV e RCA e SYLVANIA e SONY STEREOS· HI-Fl -' e SYLVANIA e RCA e SONY e AMPEX ~ DAVIS ~BRO\VN Featuring Radio Dispatched Service Trucks for Prompt Attention io Your Appl iance. & TV Service Needs @I DAVIS BROWN Laauna Hills Plaza 243•6 IOCkfllLO Call 837 ,3830 fOI 5E~VICE CALL 548·3437 DAILY 10·9, SAT . !-6 COSJ A MESA STORE 411 (,1lth5t, 646-168' DAllY ,.,, s•r ..... J .. cmploy11. I'-------------------------------------i---------1 I , WfdMM:f{t, September 2, 1970 DAil Y PILOT J3 Polygamy Thrives Ac1·oss the Land CHECPKING . u . ByL.M. BOYD LOVE AND WAR -All over the country now are little dens ol polygamous people. ~ man and 'his girls. One girl and her men. Or some several of each. Not all are scavengera. Mostly they work, but change jobs often. Mostly l_ey rent ramshackle houses, prete!Jding to landlords they sublet to one another. But they sleep in nests and take thefr as fast as a &ood racehorse can run, do you? Slr, the femile deer bot-fiy Ls known to reach 1peeds of more than 800 mlles per hour. U you know any racehorse that can outdistance one of thole little devils, please give me its name and lhe nexl running date." A. Come on, mister, don't· tell me you're still swallowing that old 800-mile- pel'-bour claim! It's way out of line. Latest research has proy_e<f no insect can keep up a speed or more than 24 miles per hour. Even the 'best spurt speed is only 36 miles per hour. Lot of good racehorses do better than 40 miles per hour. meals like indoor picnics. • WHAT'S THE M O S T They form and break up, -misspelled' word in English? mixing the matches. Dr. George C. Kyte of the Peculiarly enough, jealousy is -'University of California says not what ~ demolishes them. it's "question ." •••. AM ASKED Monty does that. As soon as :4.GAIN for the whereabouts of some ln such a bunch make the most beautilul g i r J 1 • decent incomes, their oddball , That's e•SY.· Sea!,Us, San devcj,lon.s come unraveled. Francisco and Denver, In that Couples pair off and order ... IT WAS A MERE ts disconsolate loners drift away. 1 years ago that the Wh·l t e Then the young fellow from House cookbook contended the car wash down the street asUuna could be nll1ved by shows up with his sleeping bag placing muskrat fur on the under hia ann and the blonde chest. carhop from across town drops in and for'gets to go home. It is only an enormous personal control that allows me to refrain from moralizing about this matter. Aren't you proud of me? • EkTIMA TORS FIGURE one · gro.wnup in every five has gray hair. . .OR IF YOU DON'T want to refer to a male ' ladybug as a lordbug how 'about a laddiebug?. . .IT'S KNOWN vampire bats k i 11 about a million cattle a year. Sleep on that ... SOMEWHERE in the world in the next hour, there'll be 1,870 , hailstorms, it's s a i d ... TIIREE OUT OF EVERY 10 men in Sweden hold down two jobs. CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q. ' "So you say no insect can fli CONSIDER THIS -All this talk about the national population e :r p I o 1 I on is peculiar. Wait, figure it out. How long do you think It would take for our head count to hit one billion? Quite some time, right? None Of our· children, their children or children 's children will see that. sure enough. Yet even if the census were to show one billion, the population density of the United States would still be less than that of Switzerland today. And who says Switzerland is jampacked? Nobody. Your quesUon1 and com- mer&t.T are welcomed and will be used in Checking Up whentVeT pot.riblt'. Please address 1/Q1'r letter1 to L. M. Boyd, P.(J. Bo:c 1175, Newport Beac:ll. Q2851 We have . rings· for everyone ... • Eosy c'redil le rms •student occounls ovoiloble • up to 12 month1 to poy 8onkAmericord •Moster Chara• Estiablished 43 Yeiars HUNTINGTON CENTlll HAlllOll IHQ;ll'll'I•• CIMTI• l"Cll & Elllnl•r PM """"' ltN. -Ht111tlflflon le•cll CMtl M4'll ttt•lf01 ...... OPEN llllON., THUH. & fl•I . >JIL t P.M. irk__,· - ~ ~--~~_,..~~~~------------------------------.. • girls' jumpers for lively fall looks 5.99to 6.99 • Bright plaid acrylic jumRer& coordlnot~ to nylon crepe blouses. All of the big new fashion looks ·and ~ouches. Com•_ see .our 9req) collection. 4-6l< 5.99; 7-14 6 .99. budget lk>t'es, girls wear 82-4 granny gown~ ~f soft cotton challis 2.99 comparable value 3.99 Llvely young Jocks all caught up in old-time Gronny gowns. Ours from o fomou1 maker. Soh, warm cotton challis In delkale floral prints. S-M-L sizes. EJCtra ·ia;ge sizes 3.99. • budget 1tor•1, t1ngerl1 121 .. .~ '" ' ' ·~ -~ ,, .. ., • • • ' ,, - ...... .. ' •. . ..... . .. .. . ~ , ~ . . " . ' , \ .. t i ' ~1 , ... . . .. . 'I· " • ~ t I i,unior boys' slacks and shirt with tie ' ' 2 fer 4.50 reg. 2.99 e~ch Tie: matches the shirt -and clips neatly on It. The tab.waist boJCer slacks ore a perfect match, have double-knees for mort wear. Permo nfntly pressed polyest~r/c.otton. 3-7. .• 'bl.ldgM 1tortis. chi1dren'1 ..... or 808 \ • save on n.o-1ron night shirts for jrs. 3.99 comp. va~u~ 4 .~~ I .. Soh littli pol yester/coflon ahd btoshed Jc~· l tote nylon shirts that ore outf~ed with . J matching ponties. S1yl~d 'wi!H fies~' tihfe "l · touches. Pretty pastels. In sizes S-M-l. I may co south coast plaza, sen diego fwy et bristol, costa mesa; 546-9321; ' . shop monda)• thru seturday I 0 em to 9: 30 pm; sundey noon 'til 5 pm • ".· . " , , ........ -.. ~. , ' I !l''1;~1 '. • ' ••• • J.' 'J • save on Tarleton pajamas for jr ... ·boys . . 1e99 regularly 2 .49 " liveJy action prints in the most popular little bay colors. Cool style in cotton .broadcloth . ·or Polyester i.cotton p,l\sse :......: permanent pr,ss. Junior bOy:i.' sizes 3"-7 ovalloble. ' . . . buqpt llOf~S. 'chi)dren's wear 808 .. . .. . . . ' . from ·Bt!stform; th~.· Underscene bra ' " 4.;00 ' \ 't. ' ' ,. D~ply plurTged . Looh:·cut sides and' ~ck, .. '~ wear uhdtir your barest minimums. L~ht fi berfilled Cup~ to odd a little bit here , and !here. Sizes 32.J6A, 32-388. 34-3 8C. . . . . ~clget Mr•s. gltd1•1 819 ' I . . ' ' I I ' . MAY .. 'CO BUDGET I. ~ ·_-. STO.RES r / ' I l4 OAILY PILOT Britis1i Gover11111ent Faces Head Start Polarity Hit Economy Action Cla'rnoring· Signature l{ey Ele1ncnt In U.S. Job? • By DICK \\'EST \VASHINGTON <UPI) Ran il'.lo Sam flappable the other day. He's a former col-•·' league of mine "'ho left the se rvice or journalism a few years ago to take a govern- ment job. Asked Sam how he was gclting along. "It has taken me a \\'bile," San1 said. "but l have finally {.'Qgqucred the handicap that ----.-.·as~hinder..ing-ln}'--career-.i.s-a _ federal o{licial. F'ro1n now on I am looking for\vard to rapid advancement.'' Asked Sam what kind ol handicap he had overcome. "My signature was legible." Sam replied. Asked Sam f.or fuller ex- planation. "Once you reach a certain level in governmj!nt. you arc expected to sign your official letters, in{er-0ffice memos and ot her papers with an un· decipherable scrawl. "This stamps you •as im· portant mover·and·shakcr who is too busy making vital deci sions to \vaste precious seconds on discernibl e autographs.'' Asked Sam at \\'hat point ii· legibilit y became a job qualification. "Generally speaking. it's "'hen you get your O\\'ll secretary. If you share a stenographer "'ith another bureaucrat or get help from the stenographiC pool. il's okay to 'vrite your name so that people can read it. Bui once you have a private s ccrctary. incomprehensible chirography becon1cs de rigueur." Asked St1m "·hy Iha! hin· dered him. "I e-0ul dn't get the hang of ii. I v.•ould try scribbling my name real fast 'vith my eyes shu t. \\•hi ch is standard pro- cedure in the style of pen· n1anship kno,vn as the 'ex· ecutive scratch.' But people could still recognize it as my signature. "Consequently , nobody took> my intcrorfice memos seriously. They figured that if my handwriting \Vas legible I couldn't possibly swing any \\'eight. So \\'hen I was due for promotion. I got passed over." ,\sked Sam what he did about the problem. "I v.•ent to see a psychiatrist.., Sam said. "The shrink told me I ''i!as sub. consciously still in love with Miss Pringle. the fifth gl';lde teacher under who1n I learned the Palmer f.fethod o r calli~rap}!y. "When I tried to S\\·itch lo the ·executive scratch.' I "·ould develop a mental block caused by a gu ilt complex slemming from 11 sub- coru5Cious feeling o! disloyally toward Miss Pringle." .. Asked Sam ho"' h e overca me that handicap. "t simply quit signing my name." Sam eXp l ainep . "Anytime my secreta r y brought me a J»lPP.r to sig n. 1 "'Ould "1ark it v.•ith an 'X.' A I mo st im ll)ediately, n1.r superiors pegged me as a man with a brilliant, ruture in lht federal government." ~ . \ ii OPEN DAILY ,_, S~TURDAY 9 'Iii 6 SUNDAY 9 'Iii 5 · Save s31.01 on Popular 1 O'x8' "OASIS'' by Coleman! Th~ comp~f "OASIS" is ln e•cellenl choice for the camping crew of four. This mod el includes $ every new Colem1n feature including the big new d06r with "lie·flat" thresho ld, 3 big windows and m1ny more. ~gularly 599.95 ...... : .. 88 so2•s 12'x9' Family Size "OASIS"·Regularly 5119.95 u SPECIAL "VAGABOND" by Coleman . SAVINGS ON ALL MOUNTAIN TENTS! 12'x9' FAMILY Reg. sa2·· $119.95 1 O'x8' COMPACT Reg. $6811 $99.95 FULL SIZE 1 O'x8' "FAMILY" s49aa Regularly $79.95 SAVE $31.07 . New whitt top bounces off heat,. lels in 1t1ort light, big picture window, lwO·Wf'f Dukh door provides pl111ty of wen1il•licn. Slorm flipped ind nylon ureentd. Outaide fr1me speeds erection, elimin1t11 obstfuttions in(id•'. Doubt. 'linyl-co1ttd nrlon floor. 10x8'. 12'x9' ''FAMILY'' Regularly $89.95 .. , , •...•... $s9aa FAMOUS BRANDS AT BIG SAVINGS! N-O·W at Our LO.WEST PRICES EVER! Double Mantle ~EG. .• $1S.9S Delu•e Double M1ntl s $16.95 Si,ngle ·Mintlt , .... $13,95 ; ~I HEATERS 3,000 1 to REG. 'S,000 BTU Heater .$27.95 'if 1500 :pu Healer .... $21 .95 000 ''" SAL! $11.H $12.H $9.tl SALE $20.88 $11.11 $.IS.II · tooo 1ITU Heater .... S24.9S 81000 Htater Deluxe .$37.95 , $29.11 I STOVIS REG. Oelu•e 3 lurner ... , , .$26.95 Two Burner.Delu•e .. $19.95 Two Burner ......... $1.4 .95 COOLlltS REG. 30 qt, Poly-lift ...•... $9.95 38 qt. Poly-lite ...... S11 .9S 56 qt. E;11tr1 l1rge .... $21.95 «qt. low Boy ..•.•. $11.95 '28 qt. Cooler with ' Hlmper H1ndles ..•... $11.9S ., SAL! $22.18 $15.18 $11.H SAL! $8.U $1.81 $1'6.11 $14.H ' $9.18 • ' Thi• i1 1t1 txccpttonllly w1r"' · 1114 1turdy '1111 ft1turi111 4 lbs, of D1cron• 81 fiNlnt. Soil rcsist1nt co.,er 1nd rich soft ft1nncl li11i111, httdfte' c1rryin1 c1st. Model 712. SAVE MORE N·O·W! REG. $24.95 $1649 Save 5846 .... s1s.•s--....11~s 4-ll. IHSUL 100 . .... ,1,. .• ,_.....,.. ,,i 5132, 3-LB. DACRON 88 ...... •••· S!3.9J-Mo<llo! 622 $1 Mf J.LB. IHSUL 100 .. .. . .. V . • .... s2s.•s--Mooi1.r12s s17n 4-ll. OACRON 88 £ 76 •. .... s11.•s~.r'°s s132t 3..t.B. ACRYFIL . . . . • • • • • 1 .... si•.•s-..i.1120 s231• 4-t.8. INSUL 100 ...... . •• ,. 550._. •• ••1 s34,5 S-lB. DACRON 88 , ...... 8'x6'6" ''TRIO" REG. $59.95 s45as -I - 10'••' c .... ,.. lltf. $89.95 $55 88 ;~~~.~o· .$73 88 le1. $109.95 Colernln "Olympics'' have the 111 new double roof design · ind optional canopy to m1tch. See 111 of the ityles NOW 1t Grant'• liurln9 our gigantic Coleman Diuovnt Sale! w~ Everything for the Outd PISCOUNTEDi liper Duffie Bag . . . . . ••o. - Scout CanJeen IOI "· ~ .. · .. $ 4.98 $ ~~~~ R•oid Aclion Metal p · " · · · · · · · · · $ 1.29 $ Johnnit Shower ump ........ $ 2.98 .88 H•ng.a.Jon """ "" · .. $24.95 $ I.BB Wooden Stool; ................ $24 .95 $19.88 Mini Bo1t ................ $ .98 . $18.88 . Wool Bl•nke;, .. "" ... " .. ". "$10.95 S .78 G · $g round Clot~, S4;'~B4 '~ .. ; ....... $ 6. 95 $ 5.88 Commando Puo Te t ......•.. $ l.29 Official Tube Tent n .. .. .. SIJ.es $ .88 Aluminum C•nleens .. " .... "" .$ 1.98 $ 9.95 Portable Toilet .... """ "$ .98 $ .98 2 Pc. Aluminum i,,;;" " " " .... $ 3.69 : 2.J: Duffie Big, w /Strap " " .. " . $2.So "· $4 Canv11 Dining C1no . " .. " " " . $ 4. 98 .SO pr. A~y Cots, White py . """· .. $ii.BB $ 3·88 ,Army CoJ.s.-Gr "" """ .... S 6.95 $ll.8B All Aluminum~ .............. $ 9.95 $ 4.88 Folding Table 1 """ ........ $ 9.95 S 7.~8 Versi. Table ' ................ $29 95 $ 7.88 "" " " "" " . . $24.88 SAVE ltfORf N .. $19,95 $17.88 ON AU ~OU• :..'!.Ar GRAN'l's . PING NIE0$1 . . USE YOUR CREDIT at GRANT'S I •• • I -------~---~--c-·~-.. ---. . . . ----~~~~----~~.~~·~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-, . . . LIN-llllOOk. cg'/ A.T 9 A,M. .. LIN·BROOK HARDWARE -17200 S. Brookhurst, Faantain Valley OPEN DAILY 9-1 f SATURDAY 9 'Iii 6 SUNDAY 9 'Ill 5· Levi's• quality Sl.:.Prtst" sl1ck1 wlrh the ' , newe1t fl•" styling. Complt,t• 111Ktion et ell of tll• new colOn. Sim U to 31. . . ' . ' *All STYLES! *All COLORS! Back· To-School with ••• . UAIJ"f xx DENIM JEANS . , ' SUPER-TOUGH J~ns .•. World's tovgltttt clenlm, n lnforctd with copper rivtt1 tml 1titchtd to stay. ,A ntW ptlr frH If they rip. MIN'S 51%15 27 TO 50 BOY'S SIZES ~ 0-12 • • NUVO LEVI'S® s9so Grilnt's Has 'Em! Pt: NOLL IO"' St•f'res,. ... Loftl 1111111 Le111 •• , Siln 2• It 31. BELL BOTTOMS s7so Pre-ihrunk XX dtrt- im1 i• size• 21 I• 36. f I : ' " ' " ... Att"-th f'•ndht"' ... ....t• • CJM,lefo llM •f .,....._., f9r .. ,..II , .. tft11• 11"1 ltrictty ,t.r -II, TIM ~r-11y 1oetl looks •f tlie ,1,.c.1 u.ll1n1tl coll ... tht dteftaM CNW Mck ·,ullo••r , , : the nw ,,,.., coll1r shirt ... tali:11 1 ITllll to -1r tht111. Four 1e111r1tlon1 of skill, inti tledlc1tion to •irgln wool qu1llty, 1114 curre11t .iylillf trendt, h1•1 keflf Ptndleton w1r1T1i111 lh1 h11 rfl 1f 111111 fer y11r1 . (0111, Sweaten ind Shirts. "Llll'1tlf Stock in Oran9e County" WOVINTWILllUM·flfl. ,.... s5so lllM, S.114, G...-, Whit•, 27-'•2 .. llA-Hll1'9 IUM·•ns. ··-· M •• ,.. $698 Whit., 0.14, ....... 27-42 , ••••• ITA-Hll,. NUVO PLA•ll snso All •f l.to.t cei.n, .1 ... 21-ll ..... 7 ~:;:. ·::;~,::~: ........... '$ 7 50 ................. " $1oso It•·'""-"'·'""'· Onefl, 2f·l• .. 1.1.DDLJMAN IOOT ••NT• s79a .,, ........ •,ti.., O.ltll, 21 te :)I ,,, ITA-Plll1'9 PlMll llACKS. llw, $900 Griff, Ir-• ,w1,_, 11-27-31 •. ltA~U .. •USM JIANI s900 • .... Off·whtt., ••-21·31 .. , , , , ''WI'•• Got 'E111 r• LIVl'S® JACKETS '9 Tht fameu1 Levi's' denim (1ck1t1, prHhrunk ft 1111. You'll flnd tht 1l1t pv ntd at Gr1nr1. BOY'S SIZES 8-20 ..... $7.00 BLANKET LINED ........ $ l 3 i\'tdntsdQ, Stpttmbtt 2, 1970 DAILY PILOT J .J 17 States to Vote ' Wide Range of Nominees Run for Office WASHINGTON (UPJ ) -jorlty of the vote in fir1t-iwnd Sevent.ffn 1tate1 nom.Lriate prlm1rie1 Aue. 25. to • candlst-te• for Conareaa Jnd When the S.pternbet vouna .ftate Offices In September t1 fin ished, only lhe Hawail from a fltld lncludillj a prlm1ry Oct. 3 remaJna to former vice president, four · comp1tte the cho6ct o f former governors, f I v e nominees for the Nov. 3 Negores, two Jesuit prie!ts general eJeeUom. and a rejected Supreme Court Tbe former vi ce· pre1klent nominee. seeklng a political comebaci 1j Thirleen of the states will be Hubert H. Humphrey, 1968 holding one-shot primaries. D e m o c r t i c presldent\81 Two more, Florida and nominee and a p ote n t i 11 ! Georgia, are voting in first· repeater ln 1972. He is runnblg round primariu which may be in Minnesota for the Senate followed by runoffs before the Seit held by Democrat Eugene end of September. And two J. McCarthy, who ii retiring others, A r k a n s a s and after the shakeup he 1ave the Oklahoma, are holding runoffs party In his quest for the lf68 to nominate ca ndidates in presidential nomln1Uon . races wbefe.mne polled a ma· Humphrey p.1rU11ns fear LEVI'S CORD FLAR tMw celen ef Mhl11ltht Ir•-'8 •114 A11ttle" lrew11. Shn 2• te ... "" YOUI ClfDIT ., u.lr·s MIO l•R MOlf 101111 I * SPECIAl * MIN'S C.P.O. SHfRrs REG. •7•• $1.95 Frne •ool c.,,o IOlf4 C.,Of'I lttd ·.:.~'~ fltfr~f· iiit ltf'igfif l "" Xl. ,..,,,, '" "'" $-At. their rvn may be ambarru1 ..S If l 1ube1011Uol ll>ora of the Sept. JI Yott 1iSea-•19 Sari Cral& Jr., 1 Nesro J>tlCI can- clldale oppoeinf him. Rep. Clark Mc:Graior hat ooly one minor opponem fot U.. state's Republle1n senatori1I nocnlna- tion. ~finnesota bu 1 n o t h e r Negro candidate, E I m t r Children, •ndoroed by the state party organJution, ni.n- ning agalnd four oppmenta for the Democratic nomination for secretary of state. Other black candidate! tn statewide races : Carl Matey, a Spokane at. torney and one of three Democratic challengers fadnc . Sen. Henry M. Jackson (D- Wash.), who is believed almost certlln to w I n renominaUon and re-elecUon. Al HasUnp, a F o r t Lauderdale lawyer, who is expected to draw substantial black support in his bid for Florl d1 '1 Democratic senatorial nontioaUon but is weak olherwlse. C. B. Kint, an Albany at- torney and probable also-ran in the field of nine candidates for Georgla'a DemocraUe g u b e rnatortal nomination, which former Gov. C a r I Sande r1 ls favored Co capture. Other former eovernol'1 In competition this year are Philip H. Hoff of Vermont, Farris Bryant of Florida and Orval Faubua of Arkansas. In ·Vermont Sept. I priinary, Hoff ii f1vortd over former Rep. William H. Meyer and State Sen. Fiore Bove for t h e Democratic Mnatori1I nomination to face incumbent Winaton L. Prouty, unopposed in the Republican primary. Faubus, Arkans:• governor from 195$ to IM7, ran far in front in an el1bt-man contest Aug. 25 for the Democratic nomination for 1overnor but failed to 1et a majority of the vote. Ho must defeat attorney Dale Bumpers In the Sept. a runoff to become the candidate against Republican Gov. Win· throp~ Rockefeller. Br'Yant appear1 to be ahead In the Florida Democratic senatorial primary -also '\ii Sept. 8 -a1alnst four other candidates but may have to survive a runoff Sept. 29. DemocraUc Sen. Spessard L. Holland is reUring. The Democratic nomlnee for 'the Seriate muat face the win· ner of the Republican con-- test between Rep, WfJUam G. Cramer, the (avorlte, and former Federal Judie G. Har- rold Carswell, whose oomln1· lion to the Supreme Court was rejected last spring by the Se nate. One of the Jesuits running for office Is the Rev. Robert J. Orlnan, on leave as dean ot the Boston Colleae L a w school. Drlnan , a peace cand· idate, Is oppotlne Rep. Philip J. Philbin, a IS.term mem ber of the House . i n the M a s iiachuaetts Democratic primary. T .\e other J emit ii the Rev. John J. McLau&hlln, unopp.. osed for the Republican nomination to run against Sen. John 0. Pastore (0.R.l.), who Is a heavy fa vorite to win renomination and rwlection. Two Profs Get Intern Jobs at UCI Two university professors will lltrve 11 administration interns at UC Jrvlne this fall under a program of the Amer i can Council of Education. They are Dr., Roger D. Bauer, profeasor and chairman of the department or ' chemistry at Cal Stlte Lona: Beach, and Dr. .Donlld L. Derider, lllOCiate profUIOr ot ci1'll enal·neering at Woohilll1on Stot< UnlY"11ty at Pullm111. Oiancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr., In announcing th• i r appointment., noted that this ,tall will mate the first time UCI bu hotted two intetns at a time. For each of the past four yon, one intern bas been uslrnod to UCI. The purpo" of the ACE program ii to offer potenUal administrators an opportunity to work with administratort In other inliltutlona and prepare them for po11lble advancanent in tlte1r own unlvmlU.1. CDU..DREN I.IKE UNCLE LEN I l • '' 11 Di'Jl Y PILOT ' i , • , .. TH:E .. R1EAL ESTATERS I I • '"tht clint h4a a noht to h~ow ewruthing concerrtihg tllf: tranaactims lnfore·ht apts .• ," ., ' I ' I lANDALL R. 'MC CARDLE '~•i4e11t ef llrit Reel t1t•fert: • cetf.,. reel ed1l1 i1nlr11•tor '"' leti\lrer: 1ufhor ·ef 'lhit · lteek~"~t•I E1t1t1 Trei M.,. ,;,. C1lifer.n ie Col· 1.,..": • R11I ''''"' celu'"11i1t•f9• Ike P1ily"' ,il1t; 1f1Je Jirecter 1f CAAIT. • ' WE .NEED SALESMEN 30 MO.RE .REASONS WHY ••• THE REAL ESTATERS - 6 \ ARE THE ~ LEADER Peopl•! Peopl·e! People! , . . -. . 30 Carefully Selected·· Well '.l'r~ined Professionai. -The Real Estctten are an· As•ociation of well qualified professionals .. ,o ·serve you lteffer ••• Ask anyone who has done business with them. -These pl'Oltlem•solvers work for you. . \ THEY MAKE · 1·y HAPPEN ··Give a calf.·You'll always he glad you did. . ' . . I , . . YISI "" GIVE PERSONA~IZED R~LTOR SERVICE YOU WIL~ APPRECIATI I I HORS'15I HORIESI A rare find -130 ~ 150 lot zoned for hon1e11 -with ~ bedroom & den home + corral for 4 horses and hay "1'n-_,n .Privatl! road In Santa AD& Hei1hu.-..i25,000. " I l' OEcoit.t.1DR TOUCH SOUTH· Of· ti· HIGH.WAY ln Corona .dl"I ?I-tar. J· delightful 3 bedroom family room home .oil~ 45 foot Jot. Built-In kitchl"n. lar1te seclude(. JllltlO, and plf!nty of parking. -Only $62,500. call 1'13-8550. l • ·' " SOMETHING\To SEE Small hOUSI'! on large lot (66~1. Sepa1·ate dbl. Jt;a'rage and many tr~ ow this R-2 !f!vtl lot. $24,950; with 10',;, do"'I, owner will carry 2nd. T.D. to new loan. C&U!today 646-7171. NEWPO~T HEIGHTS 'l'IXER-UPPER A dandy fixer·uppt!r 2 bedrO'lm l bath plus a ' 1 bedroom &-balh 11(!ar 1!'9pping.-Can't be beat with a liltll" clf!anln' a fixin', $22,MlO- P.hone 646·7171-to see. LOVELY HARBOR · "GHLANDS Spacious <I bedroom and family room-So ele- J:ant in v.·1"11 kept conditlon.-With yard pool 1i~ed. $65.~phone 64~7171. , . Sales Toppers Jn August TlltlT MC CAltlll NerMr & A4-.fflce MOlf ICMlff 1711.....,_effke NIHl.U.IUT c.r_ .... _ £n111U11A'lk, -~•tic I nd lt>ofOUflll. Terry r..1 al· WI YI lletn t lelHler. Ht la l lWt YI fHdY to ltfYI, H~ pi.it numbtr 11 J..._ nu Mort'1 ""Iii! IHl'lll le M "Where 11\ert 'I 1 will tller1·1 t w•Y·" Mo"'inll· MOii •rid nf'lllll, dtdlctt..i 10 l:HI £11111. Mori h 11- ""'YI lfl 11\t "llr!MI Unt" -Clll 111 ... 11 ,..._1111 T"9rw\lll know~p M ""''' P'I••• Of Ille ill••• E1t1t1 bvll ... H 11 Hlt1!'1 IOr"!I, HI~ balllwlck II COrDM dtl M1r,-l'll1 pl>Onr t7)·W0. PRIVATE ESTATE CORONA DEL.MAR 1,; block to Ckean Blvd A rarlly -67 feel frontage on Ordlid Plus a 3 brdroom home \\'ith formal dining room, guest house, cabana 11nd badminton court. With a little remodelin~ this could be on" of Corona del f\1an finest properties. Call 673-8550, FHA TERMS Costa r-.tesa 4 ~m 2 bath In excellent lo- cation ready for a happy family. $27,950.- P.hone 546-1313 SMALL HOME -BIG VIEW NEAR OCEAN WP have-it-A 2 bedroom and family room home only a hop·skip.and-jump to !he ocean in Comna dcl r-.1ar. Ideal for the retlrt'd COU· pit. Only S47,500. Phone 673-8550. MESA VEROE FHA·VA-$28,500 3 lk-droom, 2 Bath, all electric built-in kilch· en. large family room home oo a corner Jot u·ith room fnr Bo3t 1torage. Assume low in· ll"rest loa.n, See Today! 546-2313. HAl'PY HALrCREST Spotleu 4. 8f!droom or 3 and a den-Kiddies' paradise clOSf! to schools &nd a big pa_rk.- Room for dad's boat or trailer-only $26,950. Call 546-2313 NOW. NEWPORT HEIGHTS TRIP.LEX Just listed. A 1pe.rkllng clean priCSe..Ot-o.Wner-11hip triplex with a ne11rlY "uro" vacancy tac· t or. All three have 2 bedrooms, sinkl~ car Jtll· rages and private fenced yan.b-On desirabllP! "Havens Place." The ideal property for an owner occupant in a neighborhood you will "'ant to Jive in! Only $38,MO. Call' 673~ JUST LISTEO -EA~TSIOE 2 Bedrooms + Den + Family Room. Huie Brick fireplace. Rustic with loU of ~ood pf0- ellng. Big comer lot. Room for boat. It's nf!wly lilted at·S32,500. "Come Sec" or Call 546-2313. CORONA DEL MAR SIX· PLlX Six \vtll kept 2 bedroom units on Bayi;idf'l Dr, close lo beach only 10 years new, Built in kitchen~ -private patios, and & tropical 1et- ling. Ideal for the owner occupant. Call 673-MSO, . • INVESTMEN-TS -i . k HAPPY LIVING · l(h on a hill in. beautiful ?i1ESA VERDE !·level, 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath, Separatf'l F.atn ·ily Room, Formal Dining Room + Break fllst atta. Really 11. fi ne homf! that yo should stt without delay. Priced at $44.950 !Phone now 546-2313 for an •PP.Ointment t ·in!lpttl. I RAMBLING RANCH TYPE This lovely near nrw home. 4 1ge bdniis + 1fam. rm, + formal dining. 3-car .1;a.r•11e Yard ~parate from pool atta -beautif 1 2~aled pool -Park It schools Close by, Jus ~9.950 -To inspect phone 646-7171. MANY MANY MORE THE REAL ESTATERS \ ' Serving Newport Beach e Costa Mesa •Corona del Mar·e Huntington Beach ' 4·,Convenie·nt locations Near You NEWPORT IEACH :, COST A MESA 1700 Nowpo;t-llvd, / 2790 Horbor Blvd. ~7 171 540-2313 CORONA DEL MAR 332 M1r9uerite 673·8550 INVESTMENTS 2714 Horb0< llvd., Suite 20 1 Co1ta Me'a 5~2116 EXPERIENCE EL.JMINATES EXPERIMENT • • • Real Estate Investments SALESMAN . NEEOEO i* Our •••I E1t1le lnYnfm~f Dtpf. n1ed1 '•II• i11~1'1im1 t1l11rna11 with ti11e1i-aY ........ • PILOT·AOVERTISEW f ' , • . ·--. -.------------.. • • • Wtdntiday, Srplfm!M, ?, 1970 DAILY ~ILOT J 7 " Angels Send. Wrigl.it Ag~inst, }_l,QJ;ajs 'J;onight ' f ' -' • "' I ' .. f ,t . .. Lombardi , f\i ... 1"'" . ~ -1!: Repo1·tedlY,.1 ~ ' \ .~ ' iv· Near DeatlY: WASHINGTON -Vb1ce l<Jmbar<li, the taskmaster who coaebed the Green Bay Packers to three straight National Football League playoff victories, is reported near death. No condition reports on the 57-year-old Washington Redskins' coach were issued' but other sourre; toda)"" confirmed the gravity ,t his condition. Lombardi underwent surgery June 1:1 for removal of i tumor and a section of cplon. A month later he 'returned to the ~spital for addili0\a1 surgery and was not again released. The diagnosis was widely reported to be cancer, but there were no official announcanents. He was reported to have undetgone cobalt trea~nt. Lombarcli quickly became a legendary figure at Green Bay. He came ,to the Pac kers after they compiled a l·l~l reaird in 1959. ln his first ye~r, Lombardi wound up with a 7-5 season and won NFL titles in 1961, 1962. 1965, 1966 and 1967. After the Packers won the first two Super Bowls--agai&'"t American Football League champions-Lombardi q u i t coeching and became the Packers' general manager. • • • A year later, in February 1969, he came to the Redskins as head coach , general manager, executive vice president and part owner. The Lombardi magic worked again and the Redskins, with a 7-5-2 record had their first winning lieason in 14 years. Brewer Looking for a Seat • !i-l • ,lf . DEL MAR -Now just foimlsiJi tl, equaling the world riding record, Bill Shoemaker was booked to ride three horses at Del Mar today -and five on Thursday. Tommy Harper, third baseman for the Milwaukee Brewers, appears ~~~t er~~· ,i;.ras b~)oini!I fans In the box ·~at ·section Tuesilail' riJl~f,; Httper-eitdM up 11> '\be seats after chm bing on the' ' ' • The setting ThuJS<tay could b e dramatic in that the ~9.year.old Shoemaker has an important engagement that night. Dodgers Win Pair The Shoe is one of the many honored guests invited by President Nixon to llis state dinner for the prf!fsident o( Mexico., Gustavo Diaz. lt is to be held at the picturesque Hotel del COronado, some 30 miles to lhe south near ·san DiegB. Why Can't We !J'!, .. f his 'At Home?.Says .~ton " . .. • DETROIT -The indefinite suspension of Detroit Tigers' pitcher Denny McLain, handed down last Friday arter he drenched two baseball writers \\'itb ice water, wiY be lifted thi s Friday Jim Campbell. Tigers' executive v i c e announced Tuesday. ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -Waller Alstun of the Los Angeles Dodgers wonder:-; "why in the heck do you suppose we can't do this at home?" Alston Cilmmented Tuesday night after ti.lcLain then will tiave served only Dodger Slate about a quarter of whet Campbell said AH G1m11 .,. "'' 16401 could have been adsuspensioben of u.p lo 30 =~:· ! =~ :: =:' days "for con uct un coming a Seot. l OoclPers •t "'111nra professional ballplayer." But for the Sesit. 1 Dodff,. ar Hou•IOll l:f5 .... ,... l p.m , l o.m. J:2S P,lft. financially troubled 26-year-old right· . . . hander, even a week was expensive. }\is Dodgers swept a twn1 .bill .from the f .. · ... · Atlantli ·nra.ei 11'3 and ~!: · 1 • 1 «You know,t' he·conti111ued, 0 wt 1re now llerb Adderly's pro football ~roblems 20 games OV'ef .500 on the road ind four continue to plague hirR at Dallas follow-games under ,500 at home. On tie road, ing his stint with the Green Ba~·rackers. we seem to get good pitching ,.n.i: good Tuesday, the Cowbojs se,.. center ..., ... Malcolm Walker and defensive end hitting -and tonight we got some really Clarence Williams to Green ··Bay for great relief pitching and timely Hitting. Adderley who had refused to rej:lort lo the "If we played this way al ho!We, we'd Packers. be right in the race with Ciacinn&ti." ' I Tire Blisters Concern . ' ;• ' I Some Ontario Drivers :.··:;, f"·~v ~~~ r' ONTARIO (AP) -Tire wear became a rulning JO la~ .. ~ till;"Ju<i.~ new coacem today for some drivers Original projections wert that tlle tire entered in the Sept. S Calif~ :;Qq, . ~d ·ftA~"run ?O laps _ or until the championship race at OntarJt -Motor first scheduled stop for fue). 5~!;cern was among d~crs whl Goodyear' officials now admit that a• are cop'lmitted to use Goodyelf' tirei; in earlier stop may t.a ve to be made for a the s1Mi;ooo i1augura1. Severat or ·them change or Tight side tires, at lhe leasl reported their tires, built es~ially for. A· spokesman fdr Firestone, the only this race, were blistered at hi~ !!peed -other nibber company which supplies bot h ~ earlier practice find o a tires for champiomhip racing, said: carbur~n. rLmS Tue.9day. i. .. Our -problem ~ exactl y the opposite A Goudyear apokesmaa admitted tbaL nature. We're runhing perhaps too cool. bac kup tires are being flown i1fo Ontario But as between a Choice between too r lOI .~ . Alston"• re~ ~ especially apptopr'lale· ta"U. .Braves. The hri• vie~ mark~~-straight for the Docl(.n-iit At~.l!!+Hium. They also wer,e. the Braves' firth _.and sixth consecutive losses. Pitchers Ray Lamb' and Joe Moeller. aided by timely slugging by Willie Davi s and Jim Lefebvre, combined to gain the two Dodger victories. Lamb, a reliever, notched his filth victory without a Joss a1 he hW'led four shutout innings in the first game nnd Moeller aow 7-ti -for the year, tos,,ed a five-hitter in the nightcap. Lefebvre . .cracked a two-CWll homer In the fourth and Davis put the Dodger5 in front to stay with a fi1fh.inning triple in the opener. The home run was Lefebvre's fourth of the year. Davis smashed a two-run '"homer, lti s seventh of the year, lo ice down the ~ger victory in the nightcap. Atlanta's Orlruido Cepeda contributed two home runs to the losing cause. He got his 30th or the year, a toweriltg shot into center field , m the fourth hming o( the opener and his 31st in the .same .inning of " the second game. " SECOMD •AMl l.OS AlfGll.15 ATLANTA , ~rllrtli ollf oll~1 ' JluMll. rl -; ' 0 ... °''"'"""· ct J •••• s;mmore, • 1 1 ·~man, a a • • t 1 .. W.Qol¥1l. d • '1 1 1 1C"'9Clli' Ill .1 I J 1 \t#.flrllff.\IJ 1·1.l 1 'orry.1'1f • •••:tt• ~J,, c ~ O' t llum, rl JI I .... erewcr, p o o Cl I H.A1ron, ,it 1 o • o Lefet>Yrf, JD 4 0 I t J ,Hlll, rf 0 I 0 I Cr1wford. ff • O 2 I Klno, e l I 2 O Graberlr.'111111,u 4 t 2 t "''P'-1•. Jiii I 1 I o Moclltr. p J I O O C,loyco", a I O I I l'l111.,., c ! , I t t I S.J«klOll, n l 1 1 t TMron, ph 1 t t t It""·' 2 001 10111~ .W 3 I I TOl8ls 31 t S I LOL Angeltlo 612 OCIO 000 -' A11an!1 000 110 ooo -2 e -ltu11t1t, MMllff. DP -LK Afl!l•lfl '· LOB -Los "'"'Del• &, Atllntll '· 21 -Sllemore. J8 -Cr•wford, Hiit -W, 'Dl¥1t (1), C9POllH (JI), SB -Mnt1n, S -ll:nd, ... ,,. ...... so Mocllef" (W,7-4) l ·l/J 4 1 I l S Brewlf' l·!IJ I 0 4 I I Reed tLA-7! ' t • I J l 2 o Time -1:0t, At~ndfl'let -12.011. ·-·""'-· ·~ .. .. • ' • •J I. -· I ·,Halos Tumble ' ' . • ·.ff tr4 •/2 ·Back ' 0£ Minnesota .. For Wally Bunker, 11 maoths ~a.Jong time between victories. For t h e i California Angels, 4~ ~ames is a long ' way from first place. 1 , • Bunker won ~ first. game since OCt. !. • 1969, Tuesday night with a '1our-hit shutout that enabled the Kan.sas City Royals to sting the Angels, 4--0 at Anaheim Stadium droppina: l t h • Californlall.'I 4'k games behind the Minnesota Twin~ ~ho swept a doubleheader at Milwaukee. The Angels, looking to revive their sagging spirits, send 11-pmt winner Angel sr.ie An .-• kMH CntJ ):Si '·"'· 1:U J.lft. 1:ll ...... 1;1! "·"" Clyde Wright tot he mouod tonight to face hardthrowing toSJtie Bob. John.son, 6-9, · who has struck out 161 batters in 165 inriings, ranking him fourth in th& American League. " ' uHe just ovet1>9wers-you,"' lauded former Angel catcher Ect, ••spanky" Kirkpatrick. "And l\o'beo he gtts bis curve over," forget it." Kirkpatrick and another erstwhile · "l'\lllJI, third basemari Paul Schaal, colll.borated for five of Kansa s City's ni:·i.s and were wtrumental in the Ro ' five-hit, four.run rally which dee the outcome in · the seventb . iM~. It was Bunker' I fll'lt 'Victory alter: eig losses. nker survit1ed a bases..Iea:ded, none· ~~,¥. • J oUt ituation in the first ioning. A leadoff · '\ , . J ~jn e to Sandy Alomlir and waJks: to • 1 . 1 " Ro r Repoz and Jim Fregosl put him on • "' the spot immediatefy and brought Alex '3:0 · n, the Angels' leading hitter to the ~ ' Ul"t•Ttlll..... 'pl . " knew one more bit and I was gone so • ~··---' ' ' ·I just threw as hard and• straight as t- rolled tarpaulin chasing a foul ball hit by MiMesota Twins center could and things worired out," Bunker 1Jelil~,Jln11Holt,i•'tbe fillh'll)rling«>Mlle fin!, g:a~. M!IJl~M:• ,1, ............ , 41.oUtiferheader' ta J)ulf 4~ games in front'ef -the :4.ngels.· ---~.,.-• I Ii iJllhin-iit into a ·third-to-home-to.first double play and · when Jim Spencer .. ' -grounded out Bunker Was off the book . . . ,. . He dueled loser Tom Murphy, 13-10, on scoreless tenns until the aeventh when Kir~i)atrick led on~ third single of the· evening. One oilt· tater Billy Sorrell singled and-then Sthaal1o. Who was hit .357. • agaJhst''hl~ formej-mats this season, .. drove in the fU"St ~Tlm. Run-scoring singles by Tom Matchick and Cookle Rojas and a fielder's cbolce by Bunker , provided three more runs. '• ICANSAS CITY (ALl,OllNIA •• r ltrtil H r•rM Spr'911i, rt S 0 t 0 Alomlr, 711 ' 0 1 I Ro[•$, 2b ' I 1 1 ll.-1. rl l t I I OllS,cl JOt O,.._...t.H 2tt0 Klrkpolritl<. C 4 I J I A.Joh..-, If ' 0 I I R,011¥.,.., lb 4 0 0 I Sl"flC«, lb ' t t t Sarro, II 4 I 1 0 .M(Mull.,.., lb ' 0 0 I .sc~.1ar, lb J 1 2 1 John110n•, er 4 o o o Mat,MU;, u 4 I 7 t A.rc\lf, c 3 I I I 81m1ter, p J o a t T.MMrpl'I.,, p 7 1 O o tr.:.T1lwn, p 0 I t I Gmu.lltl', lit'! I 0 0 0 TOia!$ J4 t t 4' Toft I' JI 0 • I Karua1 Cit'( D • 400 -• C1t1~rnl1 OOD OOt CICIO -o_ , E -Klrkio-lrkt!, Aoi.1, l llnk1r. DP -K""" Cllr 1, C.!l!ornlJ J, LOI -· Ktl11M1 City •• CIH• 10r11ll 7, $1 -Alom.tr, • Price .ls High, • ~ams Get"Eye)' In Bear Trade LONG BEACH (·AP) -The price was admittedly hlglt but thll Los Angeles Rams were willing to pay the fare to strengthen their bid for the National Football League title. Wide receiver Jir,n· Seymour, a No. l draft choice o[ the Rams in 1969, and defensive back Ron Smith, a proven veteran but expendable. are Chicago Bears today and seven-year pro defensive tackle Dick Evey is a Los Angeles Ram. The Rams also received an undisclosed draft cboice from the Bears m".tlte deal announced last Tuesday afternoon. Evey, 29, 6 feet 4. 245, was the Bears' first draft choice from Tenne&sef.I when Ram coach George Allen was dtrector of Clticago personnel. "He started eVery Yell' In Chicago and played bolh inside and outside, alUlough h&'ll be Ulled stric;tly, at tackle fdr us." Liberation Move Fails ' . Allelf' !'With· ROger Brown ntiring · ·; ., .~ ; ~and ~ sh breaktQg his forearm, we Carol Ml)Dll pu\ts during a head-to-head match with Doug Sanden.,"' · ;1 ...... '. ~ ~=-Jlefe~J-. a new course in Grossinger, N.Y. Sanders took care of the womftrw , ~.,.. vey 13 , ............ IUf· liberation movement all by himself by overwhelming Miss Mann in'~.,.~~~ . ~ up gU'f)Jl Talbert and an 18-'hole match f-Or a purse of $2,500. Sanders shot a 37~73 over-, --0• lo, .--thlilg __. the par 71 course te bis opponent's 43-42-85. • .... ) ' -. ve . give ~r some · avuu -~-------~---~----------_..,..,. , .to get methi.ng good, .said AUtn. 1. ,• • • "l a break, for Seymour stnce_,it wnt for r ·;sible use in the r•ce, e~pected t.o aJld too hot. ... ~·11 \;ike the cool.'' be the •t.stest ever run. • . Tires running it. temperatures below "The-'tastest we had pne mtmg 2;.!l90 J.lOrmal miihl hav~ a.JI adhesion problem. miles d tire testing at ·Ontario-Ws tine' ftQi~ 11 drWers took advantage o1 lap at J74 miles ptr hour," the Tut?sd'ay's firstoftwodaysorcarburetidn Laver Favored in , him a chan<e lo play reguiaJ:Jy. The U S 0 ' • ars are looking for reoelven. Roo Pen Smith did an eicelleat job for us as a kick: returner and also played two • • positions. We'll miss him." ipokesman said. 0~n ()Ur drive rs got runs over the 2.5-mile track. Among here and started turn~ Laps at 177 and U10se out was Donohue. who reported his 178 m.p.h.; making It a whole new ball tires worked wen 'Under a ruU fuel load. eame . 'l& ~l ~nohue barely got up to rKing Four tars had troubles with l h ei r ~· , • ~ , , rubber,wer the weekend, including Costa ~oe · Leonard, wttose .Pamelfi Jones. t-resa's Da• Gurney who qualified his.. IWntd C.Olt-For:d will slart o•ithe outSide EagJe-()ffy in tbe middle o( the first row of~ ae«lfld ,:Ow, ~med (our.laps in the fl( 3.1 starters. Gurney'! average speed 173~m.p.h, rangt--best of the day -aJtd i>r four laps was 176.401 m,p.h. it appeared most drivers believed that Others-were Roger McCluskey, ~fBrk the pace of the race would be at or nohuc and LeRoy Yarbrough, the around that speed. lier in the Jack Brabham turbo Another round or carburetion tests is arged Offy that is be.lie\•ed to have the scheduled Thursday. lest chassis for tires in the race. After that, the machines will remain in Ponohue blistered the right front tire the impound area until Sunday'• 11 a.m. ltis Roger Penske-owned O!fy after start. \ FOREST HfLI..5. N. Y. (AP) -Corona <;lel Malr resideot,.,Rod "4ver,iafmin& to · m8"e _ for his. ~g upse.L al1 Wimbl , and Margaret 6mlth. Coart, seeking ~ compleie a gud slam oUbe werld's 'four major tounwnentl, are owfavon.d t6 brini Australia another singles sweep In the U.S. Open Tenn it championships. 1 , °'W-imbledon has the most prestige bUf the American open, startlni today and ending Sept. 13, at the West Side Tennis Club, has more money 1t stake. The male winner will collect $20,000 and the women'• champloo $71500 of the fl7~0JIQ pur,., • '.LaVer and ~rs. Codri an , U., de~log champiom. • . ll 1,aver -··i capjure:tbe·big pat•,' .-Au•lrtllan fi1ure1 'to caah the fint.ploce cl!eck. 1-r ii ool sclleduled' tO play today. The lalented stars from Down Under have won the men's cro n II times in the last 14 year11 and three lim es in the last four. The first five of the 20 seeded players in the tournament 1 r e Australians. Seeded behind Laver 1 who wrapped up hi.I HCODd tr•nd alam ol tile Ausltallan, • Seymour, 23.' missed his rookie year because of military tervice and hiit: P'l'<nch. Wlmbledoo~ 11.S. C\lllf!Plonr ~ this aummet .wu llampered by ships 'last ye~, -are Jotin Newcom~ •~baQ'll·trtng muscle pull. He had broken ·rel;tn~c .Wt6i .than1ptc)n; Kc all Notte . Dame pa~atchina: ~rds. ~1;111o. ten Wlmb~ llnau!t; l:,!0~ ~Ramo -nd·~ •• · T001. ~. lloy !:menon,;~ 1""-The Rams' icciullltlon ol Kerma ler tl1e win (-1iere' la 19&1 and 19'1. Alesancler jrojn S.. Fraocllco and tho Then t.'Omestil Spain's Andres Glmeno: rtlW'n of Eadie Meador lrom relirement 7. Arthur Ashe. the Davis Cup ace from ', gav,. the Rams enougH In the secondary Richmond, Va.; 8. RoE:t r Taylor. lo· lose Smith~ 21. a slx·)'elr pro. . England'tt conqueror of L a v e r at Smith began his career with the Bear11, Wimbledon; 9. Tom Okker or Th& who signed him as a lree qtl'lt out 01 Netherlands, and 10. Cliff Richey, the WiscoMin. He went to Atlanta In the UR rising DlvlB Cup star from San Angelo, ellipanslon draft and wu traded t.o tht Tei. _Rams two )'ears aao. ~ ' D --------------------·-----------------------~--- !_II DAILY PILOT Wtdnt.sd.tJ, Stpttmbtr 2, 1970 . J opnson Era Begin-sat New-port Har hor By ROGER CARLSON Of -O•U~ J>llel S!lfl The. ullra-sucttssful Ernie Johnson v.·as casually dressed in slacks and sportsbirl, 5pcndin£ a few quiet moments in the teachers louoge before an afternoon practice stint with his Ne.,.'por1 Harbor High varsity gridders. His roster totaled 4~ na1nes on il for the varsity and junior varsity squads. .. You bet your life thal"s not too n1anv,'' $aid Johnson. "Bui we'll be bettfr nexl year -and the year after that." he quickly added. · .Johnson, who's used to-turnouts in the neighborhood of 100 to 125 year in and year out, wasn't t speclally happy with his tota l -but of v.·hat he does ha.ve . be was impressed with. "I'm extremely pleased with the boys that we do have," he says. but in the same breath Johnson tells or tbc pitfalls a team can fall into with .the lack· of depth. "The kind of competition v>'e're raced vdth week in and week out, depth will be most important," says Jo.hnson. Johnson's philosophy towards the game somewhat resembles the role of a benevolent patriarch over his brood . ''There are four or five things we try to teach. lt includes self respect, self Tritons 3rd in Poll Orange, Tustin Tabbed By Crestview Coaches Coaches . arc almost as bad a, . sports writers: when it comes to picking football winners, but (or what its worth. Orange and Tustin were. selected by Crestview Leagu e coac:h¢li as the big . guns in the cit<.'uiL . Vince DeVeney's Orange team, led by diminutive ' qu a rte r b a 'c k Mike Churchwaril, was selected u the No. I , team with ri;iur first place and four :-:ccond place \'O•es. Tustin. a team that is expected to field \'eterans at every position including to~·el -----• ROGER CARLSO N ·= ------ OOy. wa s seco nd with three firsts, four seconds and a third place nod . Tustin fielded 38 underclassmen last year. Third in th" informal poll wa s San l.""lemente. the onl y other team to pick up a first place vote. San Clemente, among olher th ings, has a 6-5, 270-pound senior transfer in camp. Beefing up the Triton line will be llanny Russell from Sylmai'. Coach Tom Eads reports thal his huge transfer has 1·~ce!lent coordination and is not clumsy -a trail of most preppers that size. The T~iton coaching staff has plans for Russell, however, iflthe 2.50-pountl range. * * * Perhaps an afninous note lies in the ract,Katel!a High did not reCeive a single vote ' for fi rst, second or third in the ' _l .:.. r.Oiu1p' selections. The ' Knights. under Jack Ler. 1nove Into 'the Crest view League for lhe first lllhc alter dOminating tl'l<isl of Lhe tea ms ln ~t~:prange ~a~ue., * * * VJtla' Par1c, the team picked to Win it litst yea r by the coaches, has not beaten Orange Distr ict riva ls El Modena ()r Orange in ·~ix years of cOmbat in varsity lootbaµ: * * * The 1970 campaign will mark the 36th ~cason [or, Laguna Beach High School. bu t the Artists will mee t six foes this ~·car that they have never met in their grid history. Now in the Ora nge League. coach }!al Akins ' crew will meet for the first time llQfl·league foes Colton, Nef! and Los Amigos along with loop adversaries El Dor:ado, Sonora 'and Saddleback. )he Brea series, which has been unir.terrupted since inception in 1935, SC Lin ebacker . To Miss Opener LOS ANGELES (AP} -The Un iversity nr Southern Calirornja T:-· 1s .have two or lht ir top de fenders sidelined y,·ith injuries and one of them, Greg Slough. likely will miss the seairon opener Sept. 12 against Alabanla. The 6-foot-3, 230-pound S lo u g h • rlescribed by coach Jotvi McKay as "the nation's premier linebacke:r,·• underwent i;urge ry last spriflg after damagiog knee cartilage. The knee h:asll't responded and i\lcKay said ;rucsday thl:!re is ''very, very litt le l'hance'' Slough v.11 pJay agains~ Alabama. Tackle Joh11 Vella. 6-4 . 243, is expected lo pl<Jy againsl Alabama but he has hccn sidelined by a pinched nefve in his upper back. continues. Brea leads, 19 wins. 15 losses and a pair of ties. ~ Akins, incidentally, welcomed {?) a turnout of • 46 bodies at physical' examination Ume for varsity and sopho... more team s. Most coaches are se riously concemed with a turnout of that size for varsity only. His deep concern over the situation prompted him to hint that football might . even be dropped as a sport at Laguna Beach should things get worse. * * * You could hard ly consider Loara High a nomadic team thjs year. The Saxons. who enter Sunset League play for the first time, will play eight of their nine football games in Anaheim -six at La Palma Stadiwn, once in the Big A and once at Western High. The only venture outside of Anaheim city limits is a date al \Vestminster. Opening Day Typical Says Gaucho Coach It was a typical first day of drills. according to Saddle.back football coach George,Hartma1.- The Gauchos spent the early going getting used to shoulder pads and working on fundamenta ls and basics, in the double session Tuesday. ''We have a long way to go fundame ntaJJy, and becau!:e of that, thal early scrimmage Saturday (at Santa Ana College) scares us to death . "Basically we worked a little .offense and also worked OR teaching our linemen basic blocking techniques the way we like to do it and also finding out who wanls to hit and who doesn't." The Saddleback coach praised the passing of quarterbacks Chris Hector and Bob Bosanko. "\Ve were very impressed with Hector," said Hartman. "He is a tremendous leader .'' Hecto r, the No. 2 quarterback behind Rod Graves last season, was also an all· Desert Conference first team defc:-·· ;e back. Bosanko played football at Warren High last season and just recently moved into the area. Hartman also added that he was encouraged with the large number of freshmen amo11g the 72 candidates reporting Tuesday and their eagerness to hit. "\Ve have real good spirit," said the third year Gaucho coach, adding, "right now our problem is pulti~ople in the right position." Hartman µcJded that he as impressed "'ilh five former Mission Viejo High candidates seeking berths o the team . "This is the first time we've had any kid s from Mission Viejo out and they were very imP,rcssive and showed that they really \\•ant to hit." ~ Saddle.back will continue double drills at 8: 15 a.m. and 3:30 through the rest of the \\'eek with the Saturday .5Crlmmage scheduled at 10 a.m. Tu·ice-a-day drills will also be held next week with a second scrimmage planned Saturday. Sept. 12 at Ml. SaJll Antonio College at 7 p.m. Hartman added that the Gauchos ~·ill 1,roba bly taper off to one-a-day drills. beginning Sept 14 with the possibility of working out in shorts during the mornin g o[ that \\'CCk. ~ ' Classes will bc~in al Saddleback Sept. 21. t1vo days aflrr the Gauchos have played 1heir season opener \vilh ~Jira Costa Gollcgc. •• disc ipline. good maMcrs, good grooming and promptnc!ls. "Someone U1at looks good , sounds goad and is orl lime. That's the mark of any successful person you can rind . "I've never considered foo tball an extracurricular activitf. L t h I n k competition make:s a s i g n i f i c .a n I contribution towards the educahonal system. "It's aJ\\·ays been 1ny contention thal "'e use sports lo help the you ng men that participate. You don 't use them to make winning coaches. - "I tell parents. 'give me your son and I'll give you back a better boy'," states the grid mentor that led El Rancho High School to 10 CIF football playoffs and a pair of ClF titles. Johnson elaborated further on his football principles: ''We stress that they do their best and lo have the caP.acity lo gel up, come bac.k and do it again. "This is an important thing in life. '·Yes, sir. no , sir, may I. please and thank you. These things are important. I want these boys to be leaders. ''You · can't be a donkey from 8 a.m. and on through the day and then suddenl y become a champ at 3 p.m.," says Johnson. Time was runn ing short by this llme and Johnson was on the practice fie ld moments later. The many sides of Ernie Johnson became cleprer as the day wore on. "Good pa ss, Al vin. That was pass Interference on the defense ,., h e encouraged. ··· Anather sight featured J o h n s o n , hatless, scratching the top of his head , wondering what next. And later. Johnson was running down· field, yelling of his intentions to purchase a horseWhip? The Johnson era has begun at Newport Harbor High. TALKING. THINGS . OVER . -Newport Harbor High's varsity coach, Ernie Johnson. is seen giv- ing advice·· fO ofie of his El Rancho Hi gh gridders along the championship trail. Johnson takes over the Harbor reins after coachin)! E l Rancho to 10 straight CIF playoff a ppearances. eight league titles. t\vo CIF cro\vns outright and a portion of another. Arkan_sas Tough on Defense Razorbacks' Front Four Should B e Demoralizing FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (AP) -The University of Arkan sas' defensive players have learned their lesson \\'ell under coach Charley Coffey. Coffey. however, fears the Razorbacks' opponents are ir.:so catching on . Last year, the Razorbacks led the nation in defense against scoring, per1nitting only 7.6 points a game, ~·hilc rolling up a 9·1 record. Iii. th is day of high-octane offenses, the Razorbacks shut oul three of their opponents and did nol permit more than two touchdowns in any regular season game. "II doesn't matter hO\V slrong you were one year. you have to prove yourself all over again," Coffey said. "\Vhat ~·e did last year is like \vaving a red flag in front of the people "'e pjlay. They'll be harping on that lo their players. And, I'll tell you so mething else. This is our third yea r in this defense. It's been pretty v•eU" exposed. \\le can expect teams to do a better job of attacking it." Coffey was hired away from Tennessee to rc\·amp Arkansas' defense and. in lh£ spri :-,6 of 1968. he began teaching a niultiplt defense that iricludcd a front Four similnr to the alignment the pros use. Oncc again . Arkansas· Front Four shou ld be demorali zing. lkfcnsivc. ends Bruce James and Rick Ker sey. a pair of l\\'O-ycar star1i;_rs \Vho 1 are 1veJl-ve rsed in Coffey's system , have recovered fron1 knee su rgery. The olher lwo interior linemen will ~be Dick Bumpas, a two-year starter, and Roger Harnish. ~·ho moved into the starting hneup last fall . [fl 1969. Ja1ncs. <1 2 2 5 ·pou nd r r , -.smothered the passer 14 tlnics, reco\'ercd fi ve run1bles and blocked two passes. l\e.rsey, the smallest of the Front Four al ;...1 1 and 200. is a textbook player. "Everything Kersey does is perfect," Coffey said. "He"s got the advantage or being righl down on the ground and he follO\\'S through with perfect form .. , Coffey says Bumpas is the "mosl underrated player" on the team and believes he is "going to open some eyes this fall.'' Coffey admils hr \~as leery of Harnish until the 216-pound junior got into a ga1nc. .. His performance in the Texas game i!I indelible in my mind.'' Coffey said. "He whipped his man almost every lime. reacted, defended his area: he was ahnosl letter pe rfe ct.'' The remain0cLoi-1he. defense is not as set. Guy Parker. ineligible in 1969. is expected to step in for Cliff Powell a! middle linebacker and Mike BoscheU.i is an experienced hand at slrongside linebacker. On the other side. gra duation clain1ed Lynn Garner, a three-year starter. ,Jerry l\1oore. back ror his third year, 11'ill start al defensive halfback but the other posillons Jn the secondary arc doubt. Offensively, quar te rba c k Bil! l\1ontgomery, lallback Bil l Burnett and split end Chuck Dicus return as exciting, e.1;perienced seniors. Major League Sta,-idings NAT IONAi. LEAGUE Pittsburgh -:\few York Chicago St. LouL« Philadciµl1ia \1ontreal :::inclnnAti Dodg-er;~ 5an Francisco '.\tlanta llouston :-ian Diego Eas t Divlsioo IV L 71 63 fi9 64 69 6~ 64 70 63 iO 57 'i6 West Oh1ision 86 50 74 58 70 6J 65 69 62 ii 51 82 T1tHC1•~'\ ll:tlUlli Pel. .530 .5 19 .515 .478 .448 .429 .6..12 .561 .526 .485 ' .466 .:183 N''" 'l'<1•k •. 51 l<>Ul' J, 1) !nnlnQ• t Pll•l•OtlOlli'" 3. Cl\lc•go ), !l oon•n@) 'P l!'Jbu<Oll I. M"'1!r~I J OOOl"••n t..l, .l!l•ni. J.~ San OJtOO 1, Hou1100 I, JD lnnl"SI> S.1n l'•~n<IHO J. (inclnn•ll l GB 1 1.~ 2 7 7 1:1'.: 10 14 1: 20 22 1: 331 l '\>'IERICAN LEAGUE East Division Baltimore. ~ew York Detroit Boston 8le,·eland ~Vashlngton ~iinnesota Angels Oakland Kansas City :\1ihvaukee ::hicago \V L Pct. 116 48 .642 75 59 .560 iO 63 .526 68 64 .515 65 69 .485 63 70 .47.( \\·est 01\'ision i8 54 i4 5!1 i i 62 j2 tll so a1 49 87 .591 .556 .53< .391 .370 .360 Tw•>d•y•1 Rnutll ""'" '!'or~ " ll•l!imo•t.' Cle•el•M ~' W81fli11gron I [}ftrol! 10, 8011011 t O.O~l&nd e, c111ca90 I l(~n111 Ci1Y " .l.11gtll 0 /GB 11 1s1:i 17 21 22' i 41: 71': 261 ~ 29 ia JI ' M lnrit1ota •·1. M!lwe11~~' 9•1, 1Md o•m• II (n11111;~ Thirst Quen_ched by · Bucs ~TOdly'• G1mt~ Pl t11burgn !Moou •·•> 1• MontrN I (Mt<:;onn 1.11, n;g)\I Pllll~drlJ>ll!• (G )~tk!o(ln •Ill ~f (nic"DO l f'~P· Doll\ 11).41 ~~ Ntw 'l'or~ ~S•••f• 11°101 •I $!, lOl.lil !Rtvu ).$), nlol!! 00ft10 !Sulton IJ•!Ol tt .l!l1M1 (Nt>h l).JI, n1g.111 TOC11y•1 Gl rfll'I Cfllc•90 !Joflnson 1·ll 11 O&k!.fM 1Hun!<1• U·UI, n!Qfll / "'""' c n1 11011nson ~,, 11 .1.,..111 rw rionr 4 11,f l, lliQM Mln!1fl<>•a tleP!) !.Jl .fl Mllw11/1141t (P.i!ifl 10.111, n!ol'I / Cle•el.tnd 1P1ul l·Sl 11 W<1V>!rt0!011 r&o,m•~ !When a t'Ootba!l team drinks 30 gal\01 s tJf Gatorad~ follo \\·ing Its OJ)ening day of double drills.· ii has to be a pretty good M:i rkout. · .. . Th3~ wa11 the situoiUon at Orange Coast Colleg<' Tuesday as th<' Pirates CO'lcluded. the first day of drills ~·tth pads. "'\Ve \\'Orked on everything today," s11ld Pirate coach ..Dic k Tucker , adding, ••we got a pretty good part of our orrense and defense put' irl and also spent a good lc.n&:h of time on the pa~lng game. both offense and defense. ' T "\Ve hope to get ihe offense and" delense completely in by the rest of the week. We don 't plan to fool 1vith the klckt::g game this \reek . \\'c \1'ant to get a good . loolt at the personntl and at the same tjme delermlne v.•ho "'ill hf' in !here." said Tucker. Oouble 'drills are pl3nocd tor tod&y, Thursd11y and Fridny at JO a.nl. A. double_ session is tentatively planned ror TuCsdey with the Bucs rcverllng to sin(.llC drllls v.·hcn classes begin \\~cdnesday (St'pL 9). OCC. -also ha~ a scflmmagc planned • Saturday, Sept. 12 against \\1hitlier College on the Pirate campus. Tucker :1lso reported that split end candid.alt Darci Bllod ha s decided 10 i;:iVC up football .ind will ronccntr'atc on lr~ck Instead, Blood is l'I !1.8 sprinter rro111 Nc1v('Ort Harbor. F'rcshman runnht,i:. b IJ t k Ken Eppclhc1mer \vas not present for ' the opening da y of drills. due to a pcrsonnl rniltter . F.ppelhei mer 11tlcr.dcd Lil Quinta !Ilg~ last )'Car. ll•n l'<ln(IKO (M•rlch1I t .t ) ti Cll>C'lnn1!1 INo-- l•n !l-11, 11101>1 s~n o~ ~Coom11$ 1.101 A• .,°"'""' 1ei.11n 11•"'f 1·11, lllOM JA.t ), nlQ'fit , 8ammo•t tMcNtlly '1·11 '" Ntw Yerk fl(..._lt~ •·l) 0.!rilil (Ctln ltd Ind ltftd 1.0l •I &o.~ (Pel1rt !l•10 11\11 KOO"<e '·l l, '· d<1y.11 iO~! .._ DE~-N ) -LEWIS 1966 HARBOR ILVD., COSTA MESA /. 646°9303 S•rvlc•, Parts., A Body Shop Now OJMn Unt il a p.m. MOft!Ja·f N ight~ I I ()range County's largest and ~1ost l\1odern Toyota and'Vot.-o Dealer , ALVIN WHITE Sailors' White Johnson·tyfle Quarterl>ack ' Bill Nelsen of the Cleveland Bro~·ns football team ; ·rom Egan of the California Angels: Rick Pope, Randy Drake and h1arshall Adair, another tfio of All..CIF' quarterbacks. That's a preUy fair group -and they all hail from El Rancho High School "'here th ey toiled under coach Emie Johnson, the new taskin aster at Newport Harbor High. All had the ingredients most ne cessary to play quarterback in John s on' s sprintout system -all-round ability, leadership and good size. Johnson's latest candidate for gridiron glory is Alvin White. a 6;2, 200-pound senior. The .new system isn 't entirely foreign, however. to \Vhitc. "Under coach Wade \Valls We used the straigh t drop back system but I used to play the opposing quarterback most of the time in practice. sprinting out." says \Vhite. Johnson's happiest with \V hi I e's running ability and compares him lo Ega n in style of perforipance . \Vhite ·~ currently usi ng 4.7 seco nds per 40-yard "'indsprinl. The versatile White is also expected lo be usecl on the kicking I.earns. as a PAT kicker, field goat kicker. punter and kickoff man . His three main targets in practi~e have been receivers Taras Young, Griff Amies and Bill \Vhitford . And although he's seen action at defens ive safet y, the main concentration ofliiS etJorts is expected lo be whITe-- Newport Harbor has possession of lhe ball. Ne\\·port Harbor High footlrall has produced one league championship in 40 years of trying. The only title came 28 years ago \vhen the Sailors romped through nine foes and the Sunset League title before stumbliiig to Bonita in the playoffs. Included in the Tars· string of victories \l'as a decision over Fullerton High, an eleven that included a young man by the name of Emie Johnson. It remains to be seen whethir Alvi n \Vhite, so me small ru nning backs and a solid front line coached by the same Ernie Johnson can put the Bluejackets back into the glory that has cludOO them for over a quarter of a century. Short Bo,vs Out CHICAGO -"Someoody has to takr the rap." With that explana tion, Ed Short bowed out Tuesday as the Chicago \Vhite Sox' vice president in charge of player personnel. Short. 1\'ho has been "'ith the \Vhitc Sox since 1950 and has served as public relations director, traveling secretary and general n1anager , \\'ill be replaced by Stu Holcomb. . . DEAN LEWIS AUGUST SPECIALS SPECIAL 1970 TOYOTA WAGON ~:~-:. $1817 All Ottl9f MHeh I• St..:li M•rlc 11-Hll•r Pid•p- Lcmd Cr11iwft-Cort1"9 VOLVO / DEMO SAVE $466 •SU8782 r • ------~ . .,. . ., .,. --....-___......,. _______ T~~--.--~ ~-.------......--~---;;--· ----------,---------·-----·- By PlllL ROSS 01 tM O•H• ,lllt $11tf Winning is perhaps the biggest reward reaped from partlci~tion in foo tball, But winnl!J& comes through a gradual process. That's the way S a n Clemente High 's Tom Eads feels about his situation as Triton grid chief. ' Eads enters his third year as Triton head man wilh a less than impressive 4-13-J overall slate. However, he feels ii lakes a few }'ears to build up a winning tradition under a certain system and also that the injury situalion has nol been favorable to his charges. He says. "I coached under Ernie Johnson (cu rrent Newport .Harbor head coach) ar El Rancho for 12 years and I know it took him about five years . to get a real winning tradition developed fully. "Once you're on the "'inning trail it's easy lo get going and keep it up." Eads adds, "a tough kid is a tough kid anywhere he lives. The main thing is the program and whether it's a good ooe or not." Since everytiody likes to be a part or a winning prog ram, San Clemente included, Eads and his staff have put Triton • TOM EADS gridiron hopefuls through an exteTisive off-season weight program which is starting to pay dividends already. Some of the younger, less-- experienced offensive linemen have virtually turned baby fat into usefur muscle power via the Triton weight menu, which is supervised by Eads' line , assistant Dave Neidhardt. Eads subscribes to the philosophy th at slrength plays a big part in development of a • • I ll{ednr5da)', Stpttrnber t, 1970 DAILY PILOT _:, \Vllh three or Us top six men tl1g!ble because of moving Don ~lellor emerged returning, Orange Co 11 t from out of •late. Priest ··The stronger a boy 11, the play'r to concentrate on victorious in the adYanced CoUege's cross country team N0on11n he! the No. 5 spot. enrolled al Orange Coul 11t more conridence he'U have on sharpening up hiS blades for a group ot acUon In the rectnt began workouts l\fonday . Both arc from Costa f\~csa. mid·year last season and r•n the field,'' he says. • 1 coaching future. Back for coach J I m 0 "Our league is going to be El Camino Tennis Club round ~1clllwaln 's team are letter· wens. No. 6 last season, Is a track. tougher and beUer balanced Eads' only two coaching robin tennis tourney, ousling men Ra I p h, Dean, llarry Ne..,'port llarbor graduate. f\tclllwain figures lhat the this season 50 we have to be assignments have been at El Rob Ursem in a playoff. Noonan and Tim Owens. Othl'r ~ophomores on the 1970 OCC squad will be the Prepared." Rancho and at San Clement~ h h d team Include Jin1 ~toore and "smalles t (in number1) J've where he succeeded George Bot a won 15 matches U~ o~~G~,(!A!T 5~J::0~:(11 }!011'ard Priest. f.1oore was at ever had. We won't have a lot , The techniques Eads utilizes Hartman, currently~ld boss apiece in the mixed singles tn~1••11ona1 OC:C at San Clemente are similar to t11.,!:.'f.u""S:1.,., u.-. Moor c • r ~1;;;;;;;;;';;;;Ja;s;1 ~yi;e;a;r;, ;b;';11;;;;";';;';";0;.t;;;;;o;f;di;e~p;;Uii;;;a;t;1;,l;,).;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o the ones he adopted ln his long atT:~~o~~~dle~: ~~l~g5e; piny. i:1'.·; ~\: 2~~u~~j0;~:;,_1 stay at El Rancho, where he 1 . Tim Dunham, Gary Hamro T~ .• ou. •~errn•• 1 ~0-1 . present p ans are a winning J h S h . d F•t .• 0c1. ,~, kflT• An.· tutored Bee and junior varsity !Season, 8 shol at Lhe Crestviciv and o n tep ens lie wlth 12 Fri .• OCT. 23-•t s.n Oleto M•wi· gridders. League title and a CIF playoff victories each ..,•hile ?o.1ellssa Anio!t:.'·· Oc:r 1'-•1 Mt. Si n "These techniques h a v e berth. Cai n led the distarl side with 1,,~111.;;lll"t°!I· ll-•t Ml. Sin ""'""1• developed Into winning ways As he notes ... This year's 10 wins. ii:r. .. ~::: 3~f1~1Tn~l/=11 ,, at El Rancho," he · notes, squad has put in a lot of eJ:lra Others in the advanced win SIFn,1~1'mv, 1J-sou111 co.st '""' •t addiag , "and I feel we'll be hours and it could pPY off well -''"" ,,,.., over the hump here once we if \\·e can stay away from the column were Jeff Greenough r M~~.~ov. »-Soulhe•n c11 "'"' •• d " · · · and J1'm F'raz1·er (6) d e b s11.. Nov. H--5t•'• m.ti 11 get on the wirming roa . 1njur1es and hav.e a little an o Moo<wr~ •• r h luck." • D1"ckey (21. "'""°I" Sou111 CCNIH Conllf"""I Grocery Clerk-Quality Market P11m1n1nl POltl:on in ~~•litv l \l l~i<• t\1p•r '"1rk1!. No l•I• ~Oun. Unio n 1c1l1 l b•n•fih . Gtowlh potonti1I, RICHARD'S LIDO MARKET l4JJ VIA LIDO -NEWPORT IUCH 673·6360 Despite u1e a.ct e was•1,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~·~·;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;~~ never a big star as a player.1 Eads has always had hb SALE SPECIALS FOR TODAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY! s. habla Elpanol :~ah~. set on becoming a WESTMINSTER I SANTA ANA FULLERTON He graduated from South 15221IUCI11111.• PlllE 119U544 120 [. f1IST ST. AT CYPl£SS, PllOR[ 547-74n 1530 S. llAHSOll 11.VD.• PIGll 17N111. Gale High (also the alma MONDAY lHRU ~y •• 9:00A.M.·!tP.M. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY., l :OOA.M.·9 P.M. MONOAY THRU FRIDAY •• l :OOA.M.·9 ....... mater of new Mi53ion Viejo SATURDAY •••••••••••• 1:30 A.M •• 6 P.M. SATURMY •••••••••••• a:oo A.M •• ' P.M. SATURDAY •••••••••••• l:OO A.M •• ' f'.M. menlor Bob Hivner) and then 5'.INOAY •••••••••••••• ,..OOA.M.•2 P.M. SUHOAY •••••••••••••• t:OO AJil.-4 P.M. SUNOAY •••·•••••••••• 9:00 A.M.-2P.M. played a year of service ,. •• football i~,Germany. After his release from Uncle Sam, Ead s enrolled a t Compton College where he played mostly ofrt:nsive guard on the Tartars' juo.ior varsity. Eads left Compton to geJ. a bachelor's degree in Physical Education from USC. There he ·4™ _TIRE. .- Los Alamitos Racing Entries K EITH GIBSON Trito11 Ac e Learn e<I Hard Way When you're a quarterback cm a high sl·hool football team and you break a shoulder in a game and end up in a hospita l for a we~k. you gel a good lesson in humility. Keith Gibson of Capistrano Beach. No. I quarterback prospect in the San Clemente Tritons gridir on camp says he can offer proof to the above after he sufrercd the bone· breaking injufy in the Tritons' 1969 opener against Neff. ''I JearnC'd quite a lot from that injury", says Gibson . ''I mean. I saw a lol of people in that hospital "'ho "'ere hurting much worse than I was and H kind of made me feel fortunate that my injury \\'asn't permanent." Gibson , \\'ho has ' f u 11 y recovered fr om his '6 9 mishap, is looking forward to leading San Clemente tn its best-ever grid ca m pa i g 11 , al~hough he still admits lo being a little gun-shy after the injury . Gibson sayR. ''The weight program we have has really been beneficial and I got a chance to ride n1y bike back and forth b<'tween home and school ~a distance of about four miles over r o 11 in g terrain• while 11·orking with the weights this summer ." \Vith another Tri I n n LOS ALAMITOS IENTRIEJ FOii: TNURSOAY. SEPT. J, lt1f Jhl DAY CLU.R & FAST Fll5T POST 1:0 P.111. 11 ,,1,h11r Doullll .,,, 1s1 & lflll It•<•• U EXICll on "" & ITll R•c'5 ... UUT RACE, l500 Y•rOs. M1loen 1 Ye•r olds. Clllmlno. P11r.c il.00. c111m1"ll price "500. W1!ch C11rt Go U.i~•"'/ « (aJ1111n's COWl>Ol' Oilrd ngl 120 Wilch Shlflto (Crosby) 111 Flight Plan (Kanis) 11' Fh• Roy1I tWtllll 111 Mud In Yolir Cyl CBri•t 120 Four 1nd MoYtn tPernrr> 111 OIU Homutaed !Smllll 110 ~11e~.S:7'A~~:ri.,.•r 1 :n Alw Elllltle Mocre Ch1nt IAPOd1cal 111 MIH Ntl ~ CPnrierl 111 iECONO RA.Cl:. DI Y1rd1. 3 vur old• 1nd up. Ct1lmh19. f'ut'M i llOll, Clllmi119 orlct 11600. Go!O lrtfOI CPernerJ \l'O Bobble BIYOU CH1roinol IU Gold llnhiv !Drenrl 11' L!nte Rfd Arr-tw~l1J 111 Moon Cl1bber 1c..-1 116 lo•ella L1rt {!on\1111) l!J Bir Door (K1nl•I 111 Olo V1n !Adlllrl •• Ounlll'l_,4Whon) 111 RodtY E"""""" (Harn 11) AIW Elltl~lt-~A B.eb IStr11Hsl 11' s.iia-.. s...<tw-Clknl<~ -llJ Oruk To W"' CS""!~) 111 Vt llr,o Bltf!oon IB-1) 111 '" "' '" "' ,. •• m "' '" "' "' "' l'"OUllTH RACE. 810 Vt•d~. l Vt~r cld• 1n<I u1>. Cl•lming, PurM fitOO. Clalmin!I orice '7<100. lnclntr1!or (Hardln<1} 1'0 P1r!lclo.ior fl(1nl1J,... 111 Trig Oob \W;IM!nl 111 A:u•t11! ll ch•m) no Cnl~f Sam B.1'1 !Cro•l!Yl l U w~•cn Me Tra~I Ulank•l 1'(1 ~II~ Or> lltnil \P~rn~l 116 llunny'I Wtrrl~r (Dr~•" 111 Also Ell•lblt Thr~ Call1 fM111ud1) II• Forward B•llerv CW•ll011f l?l'I Don l(""r (Wfll•} 111 Secret Glntter IDrno••I 110 '" "' ... "' "' "' '" "' "' "' SIXTH RA.CE. •no Ylrd<. l ve1r ~·~· lnil uo. CJ1lmino, Pune l ll'DQ. r 111m1no "'''' ~-MachMIO Bl• !Wrlal\tl 111 f'obbv DI! Lu•• (Pttn"1'l lU P•ol" M~rla 'lloll1m) 111 To<n Lydon f(rinbvl 11& Tin• Follv (Morr;..,n1 1•14 Sll•nl Ground IHard!nol P!I Full Qt Berl !S!r1u11l 117 Mr. Mrr! rweh""~ !H Mr. Pele !!er !Aood~t1\ 1"1 Tnicklt Roe !Wf.llJ) 111 Alsco Eti.lble Gold 0111 {Ad•lrl lXI SEVENTM •A~ VMd!. ] •~~r <!1"1 •ncl uo, AlktW•n<tt. Pur,,_ 12000 L-llt~u:" (haoter O W11bl'1. Do.IJle• II•• llov rsm lllll l'IO N1ll••n Detroll (Harl) l?l'I l111Cle Peler CBa,.~1l 111 Leti Go ~'"' fCrOJbWl l'.>11 Ron S!tkle (Per.,..\ 1111 F~llen •no~t IY1~1l HO Comt On Oottk (Str1111~I 110 EtOHTH RACI!'. •all v1rd1. ] ve1r 11k11. Cl•!mlno Pur'le illOO C••lmlno Drlce l5GOO. G1rden Gravt K1w1n11 Ck.b, ~ P1voff !Bt nl"l 111 Ll!!le LldV 1'1.111r !C•osbvl 111 Bllkl Chick {H•rdl""J 11t Brown Ca ptures Handball Title quarterback hopeful , Scott Johannes, having been lost for the season during spring diills, the bulk of San Clemente's signal-calling duties faU into the hand::. of the 5'-10. 165-Bill Brown, physical direetor pound Gibson. y,•ho was the at I.he Orange Coast Y~ICA. starter last seasan \\•hen the swept to the cQamplonship of fates befell him. the ina ugural masters singles Gibson'.!i coach Tom Eads handball tournarr,ent Saturday says or him, "He's one of the hardest working and mosl wilh an 18·21. 21·16. 21 ·3 dedicated kids we h a v e decision over Don Whetstine of around : I couldn't ask for Costa Mesa . Llll!e Perun! 15m!t~\ l1191y O-Sll j Pff'lll'•I Ir B1r H Bob Ad•I• J Aunll LlllU (0••••rl si.rro LUI\/ IOrtYl!'I") FUeM 109 (W11son1 &ab·s Bir End (llch•m) Racing Results.---!~ LOS AL.1.MITOI Rl!5ULTS Tltftd1r. s .. t. \, Hl'I ctu r 111<1 fin ! l'lllST •ACI!. Miiden 2 WH' bred I" C1lll, Clllmlt111, l'Ur'll ll'lllO. Bellt'I Bid IStrluH I .... !.60 ?.40 ce~I•! 1-losf ID•ey"I ).OCI 1.70 I R~re!s IW1!M1~l 11.00 limo: .204110. Time: .70 .. /10. Scr~lcl!fd -FIHI Win, Cl1111t • Sim, 01v1v J1~1, Trltf!'t ll1rr.r. 51iCONO RACE. HO r1rd1. :I Vttr olO•. Cl•lm!no. f'u,.1 12000. H1il Sm1r1 ~AOllrl J.60 l ,70 ?Al Fin l To Co (Lio~•ml l.«I ?.'II Otdk tted {WtllOl'l J.70 Tlmt; .11·?)10, Scr1t~~-.;1 -V1nl1•• Polftl, FIFTH ltACI. 5-'tv•rcll. J ve•ro1dl and UI'. AllnwAnc11, 1'11,.• l!flXI. Ol1JF•1I IPl,fl 5.20 J.00 ?.60 SOdA ~•m ll1r (Ad1!rl J.411 1.40 8on111oe Bolo !Morrltonl 5.00 l lrM: .ll llA!. No Krllch11. llkTH RACE. 3§0 v1rdJ. J Ytl r oldl. C•aiml"o. Puroe IXIOO. C .. UY R!!CWtl fP1•tl L1<1t1'J Ol•I jW11oonl L• lDO!lt 1Y1nul T;,,,,; .ll.J/10. Touc~. Trul v Miry, Lo111!on1. StUC'f' Nt Jtr•tcllK. Sl!VENTH RA(I!. 110 v•roh. J retr old1 •'Id uo. Cl•lmln•~ PU•ff $7;o(I, lO!I E1ol1 11-l•ri'IMl J.CI J.!IO t.60 Oc:llO Ptbbltl {l lpl't1ml J.00 7.llD Thrallll 8Kt (PIHi l.iO Al<o r1n -c .. 111n Somoln•, ••rt· "•ltd. S.Crltchfd -Mel•"'· IJ l:XACTA, ci.11r Rll<ktl & Liit•'• 0 111, ,_Id U4.51. EIGHTH RACE. l v""r 11d1 Ind VP. .Allow1nce•. Purtt 17100. Danit 81 GoOd 1cro111YI Mr. Go Otvll (APOd1uol M-ic. ... 1c1 ISmilft) Timi: .l'O-•llC. • •.«I l .IO t,XI 3.0ll l.60 .. ~ AIM! r1n -H!o H11t1••'· Kl•IY01 S1oe, On. Of Thrff, K1w .. ~ Eou1 II•~· M•. ll•rntll, ,.111hY "lnl1h. l+e Krl!Chel. NINTH RACE. JjO Y••dl. 3v11rold1 8nil 110, Cl1lmlnQ, l'urM 1000, Peeler !loll CSmllhl 1.IO •.ao l .tll :Z!ooY ~k fMlllUdll 5.00 l.00 Ouldt Moolall !Wt llll l.:IO Tl""': .!t.t/10. Aho .... -GH: Jt!tt. Mull Miiii•, Gooclt'1 Twi., l'lllY ltn 11, ltodlll Mu1lc, R1old Nibbs. kr1lcb-.;I -Wloll Luck.. Hv 1t"u11t, Un1lltcfiecl, .nylhlng more ' ·n a boy." The tourney is for players I and $J EXACTA, I • f'ffkr ... a 4 • T0e 17-year-old native Of 40-years 0 d OVt.r. Zllt'Y ff1nll, ~ 1111..Jt. l<an!laS finds being a team ri•iiiiii!iiijiiiiiiiiijiiiiijlijjlij~Pii'9iiiiiiiiiili~·11 leader for San Clemente a \\'Orthwh\le ta5k, • ''I don 't find the rnh! too dlfficult if my teammates are behind me like they are here." Gib!on. \\'ho regards sports In general as his hobby. al!o flli!ys outfield and pitche:s In ba!ieball. ~larsha\1 Adair. the llthool·5 head basehall coach and backrictd mentor dt'lrlng the pig~kln ~ason, agrees with E11ds that Glbs<>n Is a pr\ze plu1n. lie ~ays. "t\e:lth is very easy lo work with and learns•very fMt." -¥ 141 L 1hll n.,. ~A--..._ ... ....,~..,_ .. ., ---- INDO R TV AERIAL AffACHfl fAlllT JO tV llTS '-· S-11on 1•1•· •<opl~o •tu,.,l•v"' ''""'· lluw..,G '-""-on 1;,,.,roof bn9. ~.;-: .... s ...... s- 11-c ~" f ltESH NEW STOCK FLASHLIGHT BATTERIES 1-' 91'1"01"11 out<> '1'119 l<•<td ,.,.. ... 1. •• .ldlnt1, ...... ~ ... ·-· H al.JS 11• Msl.7S I• :.~~-139 u.1~ ''" llWll.lO t•UCJC REFLEOOR Y:.IW. ..,., 1000 '•''· kr•w• .... e•n ily I 1 < ocl<lt<I ...,1.1~1 .... , •• ....... 27' llflLT TV TROUBLE STOPPER CHAHCf If YOUWtlll AHO IAYl MOTOR OIL o..tllly&ll ... .. i..u _ .... leot:· ........ , ... ,..,. wilo,ci-.:. "'"'"'' ""'~" -"f¥. 2 GAL. CAN 149 WHEN YOU IUY 3 'coRNRL TillS AT OUR LOW SINGLE TIRE PRICE OFFER APPLIES TD ARISTDCRIT, FUTURl ANG XWT TIRES OILY FREE 54.98 WHEEL ALIGNMENT Wm! '"' HllOl4$! OI' TWO Ot -r..u ..... C~' !JIU ("'°"I AMlllCAH CAll<t -HIGH PERFORMANCE., .4 PLY NYLON CORD EXTRA WIDE Sltl •UY l Al· oua """oll 11•1 '1tc1 0 70.1.S 3853 ~::.;; IA 7,tO•lJ ' ,.., r..1 ...... u .J1 .. n.ts -lito.i.-li,.,,-M .. TREAD TU""UI W.CilWAU.I NEARLY?" WIDER TKAM ctMfft•l•AL Tm 311 MONTH GUARANTU* 4th 1-ll·RE-· FREE when you buy 3 tW.. at our singl• tire price CORNELL ARISTOCRAT 4 PLY NYLON CORD TIRES Sill •. 10.11 ,_,,,,, ?.10.IS 1.1'.rJ •.10•!3 1,1J.1J •UY l Al OUI StMGlt t l•E 'llCI 15~!. 16?~ 18!!. 19!! 27 MONTH fiUARANTEE * 4th TIRE FREE wh•n you buy 3 tires at our single tire price ROAD HAZARD GUARANTEE* ••• ..... o-...i lit• .. wi .,. topl ...... -"'....,.., ........ ri:_:;-,:;!~'!..1•1: PEP BOYS SMASH TIRE If •~•-ot .,,., .. .._,, N ...,.i... .. 111.t .... -WHIUWA<LS PRICES DURING THIS IUGMTLY HIOHI• GREAT SALEE JN .... c. l\lllSU•JfCI 10 uoc~ ........... lhn1 !HU .rnil~lt ••1111 tk11 1t1ru 11111d i.1dlru1 H1. TRUCK TIRES FOR PICK-UPS PANELS & CAMPllS .. ·v'i'.~i Cornell Futura CORD TUBELESS WHITEWALLS GUARANTEED 36 MONTHS• 4™ TIRE WHEN YOU BUY 3 TIRES AT OUR LOW SllQE Tll£ -- SJZI.'- I T1•£l AT Sll"l! fl.H CH ~th TIRE 7.00 • II 1,HoU •JD/'.tl 1.1111 •I< ...... t.U olf 24~~ 25~ 26°! 33'! 33~ FREE FREE FREE FIE FIE ... J:io.TJ .t.#J...... J.INM IV1.llfMI ,1f I olt 99~ 1295 1395 1395 1495 I . · .. ti IWLJ PILOT Wtdntsd.Q, Septembtr 2, 1970 Off the Greens Championship Play in Vogue Men's club championship .PlaY is in vogue at several irea golf courses jncluding *anta Ana Country Club and Jo.feadowlark Country Club ln J!untinglon Be:ich. Santa Ana will stage two weekends o f competition begiMing Saturday a n d $Joclay and concluding the :P>Jlowtng· week.end. It is a 72· ;5ole medal play affair by 'lilgbls. • f\.teadowlark ls currently fiolding qualifying rounds for pairings in tiUe. competition ,.,,ith conclusion of this phase ()f the action acbed ul e d Sept. 13. . Cost• Me•a Ell Cabrera flred a one-over- par 72 to win low gross honors in the men's sweepstakes over the weekend at Costa Mesa Coif and Country Club. Gary Horton was low net ~r: with a 83 followed by 'Gordon VOii (67), Fred ·~redensburg (68), B e nny ,~enedict (89) and Pat Kalama ~). .:: Jn a ladies~ even holes. lournament, Mary E v e I y n 'lfnler won the -A flight iompeUtion with -a 4 1 'ii . Merilee Dungan was second at ~'h followed by Sybil Foster (.43). In B night, Elise Stipes was the winner with a 40 followed by Maxine Assmus (44\.2) and Tiudy Orton ( 15). In a most pars tournament, Gerry Watson was the A flight ~'inner with IS followed by Hazel Webster with 14. elecled to serve as a member of Ute board of directors at El Niguel Hall, an attorney with offices in San Clemente and Los Aweles, is chainnan of the m~·s golf association at El Niguel. Paul Scodeller, head profess1onal, will stage a prcr apiateur tournament at El Niguel Wednesday. ;ilopt.16. Rancho SJ Bob Mamfield came in with a low net score of 66 to win a men's club sweepstakes tournament at RanchO San Joaquin over the weekend. John KeUy was second at f1 and a three-way-tie for third took place between Harm Schreur, Lou Mele and Al Eichelberg at 68. llfe•a Ver de Mesa Verde Country Club staged a best ball jack, best ball Jill tournament over the weekend and the team of DotUe and Wolle Morris, Gerald and Doro thy Sauvageau came in with a 128 for top honors. Second place y,.·ent to Terry and Betty Stevens teamed with Gecrgia and Fr a n k: Farmer at 13.1. Tied for third place at 134 were one team composed of Rex and Alice Derby with John and Shirley O'Brien - the other composed o f Julienne and John Adams with Donald and Ann Qouglas. 9 RETAIN KNEE FUX DURING SWING If you want to 11!' all tho distance possible, you mu st be certain th at your legs never stiffen until the ball .is well on its way Always maintain 1n element\>f flex in your knees. Be particularly careful that your right knee isn't stiff on the backswlng. Keep some bend In your leg (illustration #1).Maln· tajning this flex during your backswing is importanL It will help prevent your Wl!lght from shifting onto the outside of your right foot. This shifting causes 1 loss of balance. The bent right leg also reduceUhe· hip turn as you make a t"Ull shou l· der turn. Consequently, the back and leg muscles :11re not uti lized. During the downswing, you must not allow your left leg ta stiffen. This, however, will OC• ·Cur eventually with most 1olf· ers after the ball is struck, Should this leg stiffen during your downswing, your hips will start to swivel or spin to the 7i left. This forc:es 'yo·ur shoulders to start turning on a too-level • plane. This level tu rn will throw · your clubhead outside the tar· get line, causing You to pull or slice your shots. &C 1m...n.~·- PRACTICE· PUTS POWER INTO YOUR GOlf GAMEJ lelm Pt01* prtctice technique from Arnold P1lmff"a book11f. "PrlCtlc:e." To 11t your copy, Hnd 10& end• stlmped, retum 9l'IYtklpe With ~ur rec11uat to Arnold P1lm1r, efo tliis MWapllper, Deep Sea Fish Report oc•ANllDE-241 1n1le~1 •5 ....... eudl, "6 bonl!o, ll b•u. 11 v1llow• ltll. 5 htllblJI. ' Drag Racing Attracting Key Games Set for TV More .Layman Followers Three of the Angell' laK four games at Minftesota will be televised in southern CaWomla, it was announced today jointly by Doug Flnley, vice-president and general manager of KTLA (5), and Dick Walsh, vice-president ind general .manager of t h e ~y PljlL ROSS or t11t o.11r Plitt tttff It seems every sport has some kind (If commWloner or chief overseer these days. One of the few that doesn't is drag racing, one or the fastest growing 1ports in the nation. Twenty-elght..ye~ld Paul Culley of Tustin wculd like to become drag racing's lint grand mogul. CµrrenUy the Las Vegas naUve occupies most of his time putting out the weekly program (Race Week) for Orange C.Ounty International Raceway ln addltlcn to doubling as the raceway's announcer. Culley says of his more ad m inistraUve aspiratioris, "drag racing ii actually in ita infant stage now with things just beginnimg to.happen. "That's why r would like to get involved better in driver relations." The bespectacled C u 11 e y sees an eventual separation of the amateur and professional elements in drag racing as mevitable. "An underlying movement ls already trying to accomplllh .something like this," he says. "In the Jong run, such a proposal would provide for better spectator intem:l and enlertainment in the sport." Culley recalls the situation about five or six years ago when he was getting his start it an~g at the new Lu Vegas International Raceway. "It used to be then that most people at the drags (both competitors and apettiitors) had a 1enulne knowledge ol the sport. "Now drag racing has grown so much that 1peclator appeal bas increased a~ everybody silting In the stands im'l an e1.pert. but just somebody wanting to enjoy a type of.mtertainm~t." In fact Culley'• mode of announcing bas been af(ected by the influx ct virtual laymen into the •port. He notes, "I try to announce more for the ·spectators than the drivers since it really helps people to let them know e1.acUy whal'sh a pp e nln g down1here. . Angels Recall Three Players The California A n g e 1 s Tue.day announced the recall ol outfielder Mickey Rivers and pitchers Terry Cox and Uoyd Allen from El Paso of the Texas League. In ·another move to make room for the newly-purchased Tony Gom.alez, the Angels optioned veteran shortstop Ray Oyler to Hawaii of the Pacific Cout Leaeue. Yes. "Sprnetlmes l find myself as more of a percusslonilt by tryln1 to announce over engine noiaes," he adds. Culley got the job • u the f lr1t announcer.public reAaUons man at ocm when the track wu opened in 1966. He admita to being hired as aort of a risk by the OCIR management Re.llUng back to that lime, Culley r«allll, "l hid met Bill White (president ol OCIRJ and Mike Jones (OCIR general Dllnlg!r) at a NHRA track operators rules rpeet1ng in Las Vegas and they took a gamble on me." Evidently the gamble has turned into a big jackpot with Culley's sight! 11et on making drag racing a htlusehold word. lJterally speakinl that is. Angels. , Night games of Monday, Sept. 14, and Tue!day, Sept. 15 were added to the schedule be1cause of the hlgh interf:st in the American League West race. The g a me of Sept. 16 already was part of the original TV sclledule. '111e first three games ol the vital series al Minnesota will be shown at f p.m. preceded by an Angels Warmup each evening at 5:30. "Five of the Angels' last 10 road games will be screened by KTLA, four ln a 11pace of five days. VW BRAKE SPECIAL Relln• 4 wtt.el• Machine 4 Drum• Overhaul 4 Wheel Cyllntlen U"Mt MIR UMMdlllt!YI G111rl~IM (HOT P'ltO-llAt•Ol S3M5 VW SHOCKS ....... 2 ....... $7.'5 lostalM 100,000 mile guanu1tttd (not pro-rated). WE DO¥JJ, FOREIGN_ CARS. ·• 011e 1Ua SPICIAUST • ~ CO$TA MESA STOii ONLT - Jlll .,....,.... . S4t-WU w Mt.mt ' " Trudy Orton won B flight with 10 and Marian Voss tied with Elise Stipes for .c filght honors with 12. Roy Katnig cf San Pedro scored a hole-in-one on the par 4, 260-yard third hole or the Mesa Unda rune using a flriver this week. 19th Bole James GarDer, Dea n Martin, Don Dry sdale, Lindsey C r o s by , Donald O'Connor, Ray Bolger and twt>time U.S. women's open champion Donna Caponi head a list of ou t sta nd ing Hollywood and sports celebrities entered in the first annual califomia 500 Celebrity golf tournament at Ontario National golf course Saturday. P'ORT HUENEME-69 1n1ler11 31 1lblcor1, · 311 (tllco b111, llool bonllo, 1 hlllbul. SANTA MONICA -Ill 1nvleru 115 Nrr1cU<11, Jl2 1>11s. 705 bonlTo. l htll- •tlul. 81re..._.1 1nvlt•11 '1!1 bcmllo, 150 macktre!, ll blH. I N llbuJ, 1 veil-. fin 1Unt. SAN DIEGO IM•nkl11I P'ltrl -Ml 1nv1er11 67S 11b9((1<'t. us ~t1lowt11!, 22 Vellowfln !UM, q bOnl!O. A fiber glass belted whitewall tire for only s1a. El Niguel .: '.· ;.: Roger Conant and John 4dcNamara fired a 63 for top ~nors in a partner's ~st ball -'?o:urnament at~I Niguel ~try Club recently with ~rwin Kee and Louis Evans in iecond place at 66. In a two best balls of foursome competition, a tie resulted at 128. On one team were Mr. and Mrs. James Perkins with Mr. and Mrs. Newton Ruston. Mr. and Mrs. \Villard McCoy teamed with 1'1r. and Mrs. William Lynn on the other squad. Third place went to Mr. and Mrs. Willard Holak.Ind and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Parker at 1%9. Richard M. Hall has be.n .The tournament is being -si.aged1HCOnjID1Ctiorrwilh-the Ontario ~ automobile race Sunday and according to tournament chairman Rodger Ward, a few openings are still available. The entry fee includes a free pair or golf shoe~ with proceeds going to the Ontario Retarded Children 's Center and the USAC drivers benevolent fund. A shotgun start with release of 500 pigeons will get the event under way at 12:30. For further information on entering the tournament, call Ward at the Speedway's Los Angeles office, (213) 386-4783. _: Comprehensive LONG I EACN ta.lmOlll P'lerl -57 111111r1; Jn b1111. JS b<Wolto, Jl 1111lbul. Slt-.37 11111len1 • b1rr1cud1, 6 bin. 11 bonito. (P'l'""°'nl Ltl'dln•l-lM ,,.. tl ... 11 1 veli-i1H. S4 b~rr1c11111 ... c1lk;o blH. 4'I bonllo, Jl h1libu!, )t rode cod. tP'Kltlc S-1fl1111n11 -M 1111111rst n 11111cor1, l Ytl-'t!I. S7 btrrtcudl, 1IM. t•lko bin. •Jl bonito. 71 totk cod. N.-WP'OlfT !Art's l andlntl-9' ,,.. 11trl; 11' bOnAo. t1 ii.so. ~ ~·t1101NT11t, lJ rOCll. Cod, U meck1r1!. !Otv..,'t LKll«l-220 11111!1n1 10 vellowllll, I t ltllcort , 615 bG!lllo, 711 b9fTICIHll , 2DI bin. IS t'Otk cod, I Nimon~ Sl•L ••ACH-121 1nol1r11 '" bin. J1i bonllo, fU rock cod, ll1 b1rr1cudt, 1 ht!lbut. B1•e-IJC 1n1ll!'t11 7' ~ no. n bl!lrr1C\lllt. IMP'l!lllAL 81.1.CH -'9 1n1l1r11 lJ rr11ow1111. 75 bl!lrr1cu111, 611 bonito. t1.•DOND0-2» tnt1lt'f1: '' t lDaCOl't, 2 whl!1 111 tM.11, 5 y1llO"'lltll. :tt blr. rtcuct&, JS1 blu, lt4 oar.l!o. l htllbul. ll1r1-1&1 tnOlt•lr l1J bOnllo. 2J t'Ot~ cod. 12 m1c1t~1. SAN CLEMl!NTll-ltJ 1ntl1r11 521 bonito. :IOI b111, • h1 llbut. 2 b1rr1c1Jd1, M YlllOWltll. 5.1.N f'EOllO INonn'1 ltndlfttl-75 1noler1: 61 1tblicore. CHiid ii. Ltndln11 -3' 1ntl1r1/ I wh11t ltl !NH, 5' Cll· lco ""'"' J6ll bonito. MALllU-!' 1ntlff1t .is ctllco bin, )17 bonllo, 4J btNtC\ldt, 1 htlitJul, SANTA 1.1.lflAlf-'-ll>lllt": 1tS cttko tN111. 50 bOol!o, to tlblcort. evening programs toward Bachelor of Science and Master of Science degrees • J ~: ,. i Foa-t• T1gN Bllwlll2 fiber -gi..-orn2plJ.,ton-body. --whllewol deolgn. •1 Ii plus led. tax ond old lite. ---· Size 7~13 Fed. tax 1.90 Size 695·14 Fed. lu: t.11 \4/hbewall tubefeaa ~2 Size 735--14 Fed. tM 1.M .., C. Sirl:ens-14 Fed.tu:1.97 ,M1w.1ee Sizens-1s Fed.tax2.04 -'Old'" -lube!... $26 Size 825-1' Fed. tu 2.17 Silt 855-14 Fed. tai: 2.45 Size81S-15 Fed.tax2.03 p1ust11c1.i.1 Size845-15 Fed.tax2.39 -'old"- » lllC& GUAIWfTEE WITH I llOI. 1w.4 AllOWANCI: ..__. ,.,.._ .............. '¥-F.-Iii-I P"*Ctioll ow-- -_. Ill Fo•-pa-..r U..1 I•~ our IPKllll ~K.lliool ..,__.. "'*"' ...--i ~ .. ,...,. ht.r.wd 0< oe11c1 ,.,_ .," -prolte19d "" 11t1 ....,,. l>tlltod .-.nw ol 0~11M1111. II )OW l>r• flits dw14lg !tie 9'fl•Wllll -iod. ,....,.. j,I kl Ml 1nd Wt will, llt OVf 09" 1;., ........ ,.,.... 11'11, ,.. t1111W • Mlo"'l...C. lt1Md on the oriot-1 .,..,. r:-llflr:1 t JICludl"'J .cipllcllbll Fldrflil [ICllM T1~ l<l'lwd 1t11 purell-flll • -1;,1. W1 wHI lllo• I~ ef ..... 0119-pure ..... pric:1, 1XClu6o fnt 9PP1lceb11 •f1de1al ElCIM T1•. dvrlft9 1111 10Q• ... eilowSM1 peril(!, Tll-"9t, ,... '"11 lllow 50"-or 25't'• ol 1111 o•iti/111 pi,1rc!l•!tl price. e •Cludi119 9Clelli<:lbl1 fld1<ll EJICIM T1•, ICWlld lhl P<llChtll of I .,.. lil'a. IS.. chan btl""I· F1d"ll E:oclM T1• ..iJustm..,t 1now1M1 .OU bl _. o.n 1111 ltffi1111111 Pll'Clll'I II Ille ori11inll 1111d 1--., fOtilEMOIT l'lt01f.CTIOM GUAlllAlfTf.f. cttAlllr, Hllill!'I HOW YCIUI GUMAMTf.l WOlllllS: 11"""9 ......... ,. .............................. ' ......... .... "t ....... _, ......................................... 1 .. _ ... """' .... _ ,.,loHI ................................ 10-11 _... 21~..._. ...................................... 1 ... ....... T .... LAI l'fMK1'-W1 W 1d ""'° ..,,. Fonimoat ,, .... ,, l•IC!ilM ltldlclktl .. Thty MGNf """' l'O'llt 11 .. "''*Id ltt 11~l1ced. II your tltw ~ °"' l••celM klr i!>e~t 111vn.nw.11 •• ... m "''k• ., 111o-1 bllltd 01 u.. oriolnlll Pllf(;t1111 price, 1.ctudi"Cll 1ppUct011. Fltdlnil EmciM T-. towwd .... ,..CllMI •' ..... llrt. w. Will lllaw y, dvriftrt Ill• ,;,.. a..11 w V. clurtn1 Ille ..C:ond 1111111 ol '"'" 1ltT1d -!ht al .--, Fedlrll -Eslte T•• H"*-t allo,.._ trill 11it ..i..,. -....... 1M .,._.,.. flll IM erl9lnll l••ld ,,,,..1n~ Titi• ........ 11 "O' 11'-'-"'t. " It ..... , tit ,..., .. ,......... ... -~ ..... ......... ,. 1..I .... l"'J 11.._._. .. "1 ·=. 0 ... 0 14!!.(fti ... Systematic, dynamic Instruction is given by an ou tstanding faculty of practicing scientists and' engineeri holding advanc:ed degrees ·•· from top universities throughout the nation. :".' More than·12',ooo technicians. engineers, and administrators-both men and women-have continued full·time employment whlle ~ working toward their digrees at West Coast University. -· --3. ~--::: ' I J B.S. degrM• In engineering, computer ecl1nc1, applied math1maUc1, and applied phy1lc1. M.S. degr1ta In •Y•t•m• tnglnMrfng 1nd management acJtnct with eight option• for opec:lallutlon. New term 1tartlng: Undergraduate courses begin OcL 26 at Los Angeles center and Nov. 23 at Orange County Center. Graduate courses begin Oct 26 al Los Angeles Center. Send coupon below or phone for Information. W.E!~!~.Q!.~L~n!.'!.!!'Sity &SO So. Moln St.. Ononge, Calif. 92668 Eot Angelel phone: Orange County phone: (213) 382·1372. EJrt.20 (n•) S<7·Sn2, Ext.20 ,,,._ und lnform1tJon on: 0 Undergr1du111 program D Graduate program NAM"-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ADDRESS-------------------~ CITY STATE ZIP ____ _ L F.OF.IEMOSili \\\\\\\\\\\\\l\\\l\lll\\lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll/11 ~\ HI C H V DLT 1795 Foremost• High Volt 12 wit ctr baittarf. Packs plenty of year 'round starting power. Recommended for ln termediata and fl.Ill size cars wit h accessories. ' 8. 88 1 ..... 21~ Engtne-..·.t-MWplolgo, pointa. rotor, condenNt an4 <flltribu-- tor cap: adJUltment of cant-dwell, timlng Ind carburetor. • Most American ca... ~---... •-•> ~!!.~· Sale 199 """ 2AO. ..... -· .,..., --ol.-m ""peck.,,,, oJJ.wellhor- oll (20 ... 30 wt.) tho! helpo fight CCMiiAiOn and UC r I .,, engine-. ......... , ..... ' ,., I I -• ,,,.. c•M•a•o CH'"' visr• ,,,,,,,_. Yn, Y" ca" shop 12 to .S Sundoyt, too, ot any of th .. PefiMyA•to C-.ni IUENA l'A~ -CANOG" -"' ""w " "''""' " ....,, ,_, fUllElTON HUNTINGTON BEACH "'°NTCUJR HEWPOlT &EACH OU.MOE. -YHe CITr VENlUlA u.. Pennep , ... pcri.enl ...... ' .. • I • ' - ' CAll.Y PILOT Tire and Auto Center Allstate Super Spark Plugs Bu Now At These Fantastic Low Pri'ces! .. Low Priced! 47~ f •\. SAJIE18'fo! Qt. Ca ns Regular 39" Qt. Heavy Doty Motor Oil Heavy Duty Oil Filter Filtenout •lodge and dirt -199 EACH Carburetor Air Filter }'ilfl i\(mt ofThet;e Canu Cht"J!il~f. J>lflllOUlhJ l1oJi;rs Pr:11111"' \ J'ort'ian ' .• rs Volk\lfl'llSt'n' . OIJsrnobilt~ ALLSTATE Pa...,nger Tire Guarantee ~11tantffd .Agaioi.t: An rire &ilurcs from. normal mad ~s Of Meets io material or work- manship. •'or Bow l...ont:: For she' lffe cL What Se11~ Will Do: lnexcbaoge . (~ rhe tire. replace it charging Cleanerajrfor bette r gas milea~r ~ the original treiW. iog price plus Federal Excise Tax 1hat represenrs rread used. Repair nail punc1urcs at nochar3e. Goarainteed Again!!!.: Tread wear-199 fot"theproportionofcnne1:1tsrll.o EACH °"" 1-------------------11 io'or )low Lon,: The number o( As ·Low As Spark Plug Wire Set mooths zpecified. What Sears Will Do: Joncbange ror c:he tire. replai.:e, it .chatgjog the curttn[ sdling1 price· plus Federal Exci~ Tn Jess the: following allowance: · f\looll1ly Gu11rantee Allowuce 1s ro 24 1or;. 27 m 39 20'.n 110 2S% fl.TS MOST OP' TIIBSE CARSt Compact Blricb, Cbeoy II, Colneta. Con-airs. Hmlatq;5, 1caroo1~ Foreign Cars Malfed. ~Ts• .... YourOIJr- YOUR CHOICE OF 5JifS, f'i.OOsll BbeknlM b.SOr.IJ Ulack .. ·au .. fit1 Most of 'l'lteM" C..nn Amlns'odots. lluicb, ~ Do<lit<s. Fords. Plymouths., Ramblers. 'fc-mpcs1s., S1udebakcn..1"·liirds, f·S'.fs. 6.95d4BJ .. k-ll 2 93 7,7$xt5 Bla<kwall :::~~ YOUR CHOICE OF SIZES, '\ ·:,;,;--~-.1·1 Bl11ckw~lk &~jx l.I BllK'k.w11lk 7.15id·l lllackw11 lh1 li.~.uit l:J Whitew11ll~ }'i111 J\Joi;;I of1'fu-se Can.; Buid: .. (:.Jjlla;s. <:hryders. Mtteurya,Oldsmnhiles, Punriacs, VC11bWll.,l(C"ll~ 19,~~ .. .l...r\ ..... 1ier1 .... 'l'olft'Ch~i,,..of~;~ .... :;.1.11~1r;'ll liiir .... n. u:;,.14 •hit-an• ':'. :.;,. 1 c; " 11;1 ..... u. s.;,.;., r ' " 1,;,".,.11, Firs JtOll oCTbcae Cars: Buick!, C.hevyl;. Dodll:N. ford-. ~; K:Wb~. Plymoaibst me;,.c.n. 14?! Y at1•Cboioe ots;..,. 8.8'41-' Wbilnr•I'N 'l.IZJ.l!'i''lri .... 011 1!, l:ix l5 Whl1 ....... 11 •• ~.6~.i< lil Whit_.111• 9.00x l:'> Whittw1ll:t •Large, fuJl.Jength to r\ingchamber for beuersound·sil•ncing Heavy Duly Muffier Lifetime Guarantee Jf muffler fails due to derecrs in ml.teria1$..0r•orkmin.. ship Of blowour, rust.out or wear-out -while original purchaser owns the tar, it will be replaced upOn rerurn. free of charge. If the defective muffier wu installed by S..rs. Wfl will in•tall thc ne1" muffler with PO char_p for labor. • • 22-gauge outer.bell plvanized on both sides f9r longer wear • 26-gauge •tee! oval muffler inn er shell •• ; 30% thicker than loehe!Lmuffion I Sears ...,, PAU TA • ......_ 521-413 ,11.'MONTI Of Wt11 CM08A PAH ,-.Wt ..... DAll or 5·1004, a •• ,, LON8 llACN "' 1.:0121 l'OMOtl4 NA ... s1•1 OLTMPtC & SOTO AN l·J211 PM:O WI ._.262 COMPION ..... 2114 NI W761 ( HOUTWOOD HO 94 ... 1 61.AU,AOUUCKANDCO. COYJMA ...... 11 _.,,,! f INtUW009 OI IJ121 Ol.ANCll 6a7"2100 SAN1'4 AMA Kl 74'11 ~A .. 1.2111, ist-•211 MNTAn lllAIM ..... ,, Shop Nlahta Mondor ttv ..... ...., NO .u&. ta 9&» P.&, -•1 t'I Naoll ID IP& -factlool ............ ·-·-·-- ______ _,, IANTA' 11tON1CA a-Uni SOUTH COAi' KAIA IW IM {OllJANCI ....... YAUl'f .0 a..eMI, tM I a WIUU " .. ,,,, ' ' .. J' ' 1'' ,• t!J !-. ' ' • , • I, • et •. < .. " • C Z t s; a; 0 r 0 • ti DAILV PILOT s wectnrM!lt, StPltmllff 2. im Yoa,. Monet1'• Wm-th OVER TIIE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock Li st Update Hon1e .Insw~ance NEW YOltlC IA!tl • Tlltdtv'f COl!IOW! SI"' 1'11 '''" ., .. tlldl..) Hlf' L9w Ct.M ~' IBE: .. :ll:ll•== .. ..,, ........................ 1NtW Ywk Siotlt (1chN1N or1ct1, 1..,.,) tllfll Lal C .... Qif .... , ....... ~. ,..... "'°r. ' • U ~, ; U \• .Sf! 'lr"t• .. ho ~? t !o t~. • t'o NASO l istings. for Tu.ld11y, S.ptembtr 1, 1'70 IMI. .,_ ' lilG 111~ 1~ ~~, ,. ", !h; -+ 1•, G.,. Fett •t 60 19 71\'I 7S 7'\t -'" In I p1 ~ ...-,.. -t. 011t1 Ho11 n •'• l 'o.. •'• ..-• I II)' &YLVIA ;fTER lf you hid lo eplace ,. house for which ou pai~ $1%,500 in 1950, 1t '.1'ould cost )lau precisely double today - $25,000 But Ir you're amorig lhe majority of ownera of insured homes today -SS percen1 - yaur home Insurance policy would pay for only a hltlt more than half y o u r replacement cost And even If you're not that seriously underinsured. your p o I 1 c y probably v.ould pay for only :ibout 71 percent of the cost or replacement Yoi/ simply must recognize the Impact of the 11psurgc in buildll'lg costs on t h r. adequacy of your h <1 m e insurance: just since J964, a Bank of America survey underhnes, home cab i n e I· makl'Og costs are up l 12 percent ; electrical w 1 r I n g v.•ork costs are up 79 percent , costs of roofing services and ho me plumbing jobs are up 63 percent And you al50 $1mp!y mus t not ignore i.he impact or lnflat1on on the expense or replacing the contents of your home -whether you own or renl. ASK YOURSEU": How long has Jt been 11n~ you've reviewed and updated your home Insurance pohcy? How long since you've viewed your home and 1ls contents 10 terms ()f replacement costs' lf you have only a fuzzy idea ~r the worlh of your house or apartment and its contents. consider a profes s 1ona I appraisal. A local real estate agent could r efer you to an appraiser who could do this at The Finest In Pipes, Tobaccos And Gilts SOUTH COAST PLAZA ............ H.., n.. M.., c •. P hone: 540-8262 • n1~ble cost. Or t h e contra~tor who budt your house could estimate the cost or 11 total rtplacemenl R&c;OLV~ TO have your home reappraised every three y ears. As an 1bso l ute minimum, ask your insurance egent for h \5 appraisal ()f your house in t.e:nns of trends 1n building and home repair costs Jn yoor area. Or ask your msurance agent for a do-1t· yourself appraisai kit Some of these k its, provided by many insurance CQmi;rues today, give you only a rough idea of cost trends: others detail wage scales ror building trades. materials costs and other items in various a r eas Yoor total h omeow n ers' coverage should amount to at least 80 percent or the replacement costs estimated by these or oilier qualified sources. If you do not already have an inventory of the contents of your home, make one. It s hould include: fact u a I descriptions of each item ()f value, snapshots of each room taken from several angles: detailed photographs a n d descriptions of each item o( s 1gn1f1cant value (paintings, musical lns trumenl3, etc.). Keep a copy of this mventory tn your safe deposit box: IF YOUR PER SO NA!. property ts worth considerably more than the customary proportion (4().50 percent ) of the amount of insurance on your home, consider invesllng in add1t1onal coverage. This would be vital i! you have substantial investments in Jewelry, 'furs, anti q ues, post.age stamps, professional ins truments or tools, stereo, etc. Know the basic facts abou t coverage. T D llh~trate. ln general a homeowner s ' -policy covers your house and ilo; contents. your person a 1 belongings and extra bvmg expcn!les should your house be destroyed by fire, lightning, 1,000'$ OP OIL PAINTING$ WHOLOALI WA.UHOUSE OPIN TO THI PUILIC $5 a nd up 14ll I IDlltOlll, SANTA llNA JOMOMI IJI ..... DIALl llS Wit.MTID 0 Don't settle for less. Donl settle for anything less than the besl interest rate on 90-day Thrift certlhcates. Invest a minimum of S3,000.00 In our 90-day Thrift cert1f1cates. and you11 earn a solkl 7% per annum. And Avco Thrift pays it Wt1en VOll need ~1 IOilll corn•· I·• AV<"•l T!1r·t1 lir:.t TIH• 11n., th111q wt' r!i:1 tH_~:.t 1:, l••·ip p•·npl1· <1bta1n ltli' 111111q<, 111ey 111·1~.! t1ir,,.1qt1 w1 ·.1_• llc·ffO\v1rHJ Wl1at~vcr 'fOl1 11C't"ll 111,_)1-,t·~· T1ir ,_-,Jr'"' talk. 1u u:. W •: !I tlo our be!> I to livlp We Behove la 12:!: ~·-520s. EJ cam1no -.s.n -eor4. Awoo'I nwtft otvtakln ,_ bMrls ~ GPMillloft 11no11m, end ha .,..,.. fllhd '° pey funds c.-......... Awoo Tlwtft ... dMdorn ot A'fOO Colpontion-11 lledlr ~ _,,. Wds .. ..._ 1lontolll•dll..mc.-Mi---.•a1i t'l.,Mel~ DlrullapnMot. Sdenort, M«f~lne Ind Spece ,. ........ A\ICO ti IWOl'9 tt.I 65,000 people who ........... • tdd I ..... IOaurw tor pou. AVCA ' NEWPORT BEAC H 2101 Son Jooqu in Hill • Rd. 833-3440 --~ Mii I «I _..., Gtn unt JOI ~, l' • !Ot ..... r. • Inds ( d •• ,,_.....,. ........... ..tel ... fll _ ...... 191\>'f ......... .....,., #l~I Atl ff lj\• ~ 11~ ~Ill l iiill •1 1 -'t G,n1 1t1l1 ,11 I 171, :IJl.o '2111 " " lorm, 0 r n I 0 e I • ,,.. .. -..... ,.. ... ..,.... ...... .. AbDIL•b I 10 ' ~. ~ ... It N Y< , 20 .!l! i · '""' -lo Gtn Mllll ..... IO l' ,.... t •l'i -I -. ACI' I• Jll'\-s \Ir II'( Inv .Ml .... i. I~'• -'• G•nMOI 1.~ ,,s )11 ,,.. nt. _., explosions, riots. etc. a nd 1.. • P,.., ,,_ "-UMC'i:v11'f , 1• ~~ • 1 + t; 1~•£&,'" j! ·~ 2'1 ":-2'~ -tt g ~ ~ 71 : If~ ~:.? .n"' ~ ' uninhabitable. This is on top of ... ....... ... IM Aalll ~ ~~~-:,,!: n ff. lS\l 31 = n l•,.f'll 1...0 ~ m: ~t: jg'i -"'gtt11"c ..... '° ~1 ,. ?lh fl ~ • the llablhty coverage l t H!.w vo11: KC"-'' l!:rl• ,.te •lfo ~ Pttront If" I! ~ fr ·~lo~ ~ ... d ~~i.1 !! 1~ 104 ~~ ~l~ + 4. ~~!tug 11:: 19 Ul't ~· HI;+ t ~D~~1~~ n, 1r,i.''• 1 •f :~ 7" 1 Id Ths ollOl4'! bid 1'8 C 1~ Iii Jllh•'l I t • tr I al ll ''11 .-I ~<Jo o l ' -~1111 2 II 11, 3"" '-\lo + 4t 0.n SI• I'° tO M !Aft.,. • prov es. 11'111 11._M ':ic.1 •• i•b 'I:: !U Phlf uC I"> l \li •• v ,.. !:;".:(11 I • 1 Ml .i"' • i.. _.. t? .ne., •1,• >1!" • 1j,, ~ <• G"~'"<'~I , ,~, .~~ !,.'o l1f.', U~ : ~ •ruE "BROAD FO R M'' 11-, •. ,,~0 11•11 bw •I!/,'1! :> i P1101on ,,,. ••.s 1" .S\AI • "-<iulr.• co 'I u: ,'"' j ',l,:~ 1 p1•""1 1 1~ ~ ·~ • g.;,,, ..,JO -1 _.... ,., 36"'-,1 po hey adds to !his list such 1~1«1 N o11ori•lec:~~ Fl::,,,; , 1 1 v. Pie Pd .,~ ''j T~~ti:. "11 11"'1 :11i "11,';';,,J n< ' :Sliro ~2 -, ·~ •• ~ F1/r '° ., 1~1l 1 ~ + \'I GlflF ..1>1115 1100 1t" n. n;, 1 *. OHl•ro '"', •r• Fit 01 J J IAI ~::i:1'ioc 11 ti Te'""r i1t I!"'"' r PG 111~ 120~ 1 ""1201.'i ••• "' 11 #ll.111 11 '°'" i o • ~T•I 11161 » 100 1 h 1•11 1111 • '• i::;riJS 85 fa lling ObJeclS nDI 'tlYtil lrt1ntec: l'1IGW•,1• ! t Pro Goll jli 'I T1~• 1"" 1 'I #l~lttd to. 1j4 17 I ft t•h -~ 0111 $1 Citl J! ll\o .. 4 -" en f ir• lb ?1 I ~I Uo 11...,. lldlng 'ollapse' exploding' ,'"•11:'M,,,",' ·~'"lo',!!°, 'f'•i', • .,, 11 I• ]\' P•oa "'"' \lo l TIY W VI ' lt16u1lrle1 1 '\ • -~Col 1.. /1 11''" I I~ ~i + '• Tift pf ~ 110,, >,•,,, "•'il, ",, •• "~, •, h t h h I ... ''",', ~· •• •c .... r. •,:~ '•" ',',"1 ··~Ill 2l~ '" !' ' ,. l" A ··r:.i "' J l S\9 1S.... IS~ -Cou8Ht l J1 2J ·~\~ .,... •l.W -\1 .,,.'>CO I 10 -.. ot wa er c a le rs and eat ng t11111ro•lrn• .. v ' Fout1 o I 1!" 11•, Pub N 11111 it 1-11t 17\11 11111 A .21 IJ 27\!t 22 -"'co111111 #llll. 1 '-' 1~1, 211, ,. , -\, Gtn1hnP1 .1~ 1J p•. 31 ''', -"' "' -•b 25~ ~ ., #l~ lllfO't 1•~ I•--ft . Colt Ptl 1 >Cl Jf ll'o lll• ll'-Gen!"' l1le 7 I ''• 1-• t d f e M~ •I wMch t!>eM l'wm1• jl-'I Pub S N ~ 10" T.,.tldvtl 11 11\AI A rt~ .>t )! filO); l•",!~ !r." _-~-'"••",",',',, ''• ~ '•' ,•j:• ,",~, ~1,',• --,',• g'••~!c,1~1 !', "l '>'• ' >1>,',,• '•' ' '. , ' sys ems, ~n pipe reez1nc 1tcur11l4!1 t~ld F0t• vr111 J01,' 1• 11u1111hr !.,. ""'T•••• 11s 21 n' a c•Mlu 1.20 ,. ,.. w .. • ~ .... ... 7 The ' " II lllvl llfffl 1111• ~olom 1'• '"' Pur-11 "",.,..rm "-•i 3 #l oSllllCI _,. It ~ • -Oii lllO I .u 11 16\llo 11\l -'• 1P6C: ~II ,iO S U Sl .SJ • more expensive a cl\1~ ll""I CW"Frn111 Co s1., •Yo ~•'"""' '°"'21 Tllfrnl co t ,,..."'l""r' .»< !1 lt11 l?:r 1~-'ll as 011 3 11 11 11 +•,G¥tr-er 110 B JI 36 ~ ,.._._ • risks" policy ('overs yoo :'1,1r lb ), m1:~:r, ~:r:~~ E ·,~ ·,~ ~o:!,"' c~ 1:\4, 1:,i t1r.;,~ J; m'I: 11~ :1 111~ }~ .; "m:"· !Ji~ ,;~ ::. .. gi~ ~1:'t~ 1~ ~I', M~: ~1: -lo g:::~0 01'1 ~ 'l n~: u:: n:~: : !ura1nsl every possible threat ~~. "' ",'-, .. !: ,••111•,• U: ,-'U" §rl:' •" 1 11.\ !,•!!,,'~ 1, ,,•,. ~I~'"' l"ll' 1 39"-,, c:~ 1AG11 .,s "'• tt ,. -..., G•'"'"C 60ll ' ••• •t. 9" -• •-e ..UI llw "-~· I (M U llVi ' ,.,. •" Pw xtf !i~ _,. ll +_1• ~P'•I .... Jiii 10•, 10 10lO _ h !j:!l>ttll Ffn ,", ' .. ' ",',', ",',,'-;-:•, to your property except '!:11~ not ..l.~~ gG•r'tJr" It~ 1: •:t'p;'n ~~ :~ f:~ ,iu'• ffi ~~~~I II' 11 ia·· ff'-ff _-.. oiSD& r;, 1s 2lt. 2s<. 2s\. Glcld111 .. ~-. ,_..'°° '" lt'• .,, JM•: • th k d fl ... '.' • ·1a· I~ ,, 11 '' '.. j '' " .. t .. _.,, •. -''' ,,,, •I",,,, •. ear qua e', I . n • d. '' ~·.,'I II Of com-••.1 • 11 Mt tOIC -Ml I ._ " .,. """' """ .. G\mt!el Br 1 J ll\i 11 .. Ulo -'I ,., IOI\, "~ 1 It b 11141 I Tr llllr ~ :Jtll 11 1ltl0 PG .. «t ~ S\'I Jlii \'I Coml.SDlv ,.cl ~12 1211 21'" 21 -\\ (l .tt Jl\o 'I'll :JOI\ - floods, udal waves, sewage :;:r ~· il'I 1it ~r=:lfc 1u 2 .!~h 10 n 1r0llluo ntti. ""'"' 1ti0s1r 1.0 ,, ,,._ 2~ 20. -v. ~om•Ed 210 .st ll'o n •-. 111. +'•Gr~,.,~';, 61 •' 1 .,. ~ backups nuclear radiatJon "'""'"' ! ,,~ ,i 11.crw,• ~: ,.~tt' :=. : 1~, ::n i~n:: !Id l~ ·,~ ~l11is..~ "'u: ~~ ·~ 4m •i\.'I :!:.1% c~=~d :i !'4 ~ 1~ 1~:~ 1~rfl = t: g~~~ pr; i. r ;l .• ;: ... ~·It_, . ' "lo Irie IJ 1~ Ill El 1~ !" '"" l :n .... Un 111UfTI , 2 "'"I Cl!lllll l46 1•"" l~ 1• +\lo'°"'"" OU '° 110 llh 11.,1· 11'\lo -""Glow• Mlfln 111 1111 u~. l;)\o ~ '• war a few other poS.stblhtles A TS 1111: '~ 11,!. ti01,r iv. It ddr Pu ~ 1:.•.11 u11 M,Gn jl'I 1.1coe 110 n• 51"'-51 5l'A ... Com11<11 :sci n n th ' -.., Glou un '!) •! ,,,,. 9•• 114• ..... ' '!t Ind 'YI Jtt 8Uftll .,tl'I 1'~~ %~ ~~ It n ei 8kz:\ Vi AMl~C ~ .Sot lj~ 91'1 I~ -\'o lom!llt 106 3'!1 l9 "J9 -1 Goodrich 1 n H' 2111 Mto 211• ,,_ t. 1n this catastrophe category. :v Pc'i ~~. 'illt GI:~~~' w ih\ i" ... 1. • ,•1. ,,•,,. "~I 'I:·~~:,; .. !Jll"",, ~· n L,-·",•'··.· ,~.. ,,', Lu. !? .. !n!' '" -,1. onnMit ~ 1 T.H. 1n, 211• -\\ GOC>CIYt•r •,s 1•1 '1)'• 16~ 26'1 -"' ""' " .,.. ,. v-~· "1' II ltl IOI? 1t ~\lo Con Edl1 I Ill 111 2J'o ''"° 23\o Gouldl~t 1 .ct :10 ?f a +< :M\~ -\0 Of C·"rse, the more dangers ."''' , •• ~ 01~ ,'"' 1,. .. •-·i-! " " ..... .. f. --~ ,. -• C0<'\1"1cc, '° u 11.,, 12 n -1, <>o•dJ1~• • 11 .,, ••·· """ You '"'Ure .ga--•t, • mo-·r: ''" .... oed LS, ,• ~ ••• ·-',. ,,,.,., .. ,.. •• 114 ~.. I 1 • ' ~ u~ Ok -· ... .... "'"' '""'" " l~ -..... v" ~ WllAl•lln IO 1 '' , -.. ••I•-> , '''~ 01~ •••~+'•&r•nbv 1.0 121''1 21•1 , "• . th At m• El I \" ~ ~t lllov I''' .,,. ..... o 'ln "' .. AlrFlltr G ff ff" ~· + • ~E<I• -0 , '' ''', '' + • c ,,,-, 1 J.o u 7t' • ll•• l!,· " A, tr.out 2t' 1•.l 1tv1n Ht "1l.a •21to um Incl 'j '"'' ·-a.o• >o m: "' • .... ' ~· ., .,. " • • your coverage will cost Be #l1brn F 11·~ 1o>.. rlDll ~'.' ,•~,, S<.1111" E lVJ • 1111 LO •1 •i.:i A'i'ril'llli ,10 111 "ll"' 1to-'4 onF,oacr 110 •J Joi ll1• ll"·-"ci',,':'w'"•9'"" 10s .... , l'l.1.1 v.,,11~1, Akol~ 4:L.. • r"" lo\t lJ .. I~\ lh !" ' -· '" l'~' :lO ""' ' O '''' >•" ...... Dl\Ht1IG l 16 l ll 7tlo 71 "' -\.. GT it.&P I )0 I• 11lo 711• 21111 ~ II/ rcahst1c. Begin bydec 1d1ngAt1tr11" '• lt#lMIA "··t•Vt ICplf >\211oV1liran 1\-~10:11,~ •• ,'~'° 1i''4\lo 4l .... ·A~T •"' Lt•llllt 11 Sh~ Sl1-\.Grtnl01 J75 Jl00'''""'' ., II> ' ·1'" " '' l ''1111 "" n... I""' '" !' • "•-• '' ''' '"'' ,-<• <· _, + "-on r11eh1 l u 21~ "'' ii'• -·• what your home and 1ts,.,11co-L111111''l1•\lorn11111E 1111\lt ., 1 11 .. 11\Al w;dtwP •l\-15VJ ~~~~ n i:w. .... i'<+"'eoru"'°"'r 2 l6JJt..21<1.i 11•~ G1N!!t1tlJ~ 1 11 .11 0111,.,. t ls lrul orth d Allo ...... 2\t l rO'ltl Pr :w. 4'111 r -11 lt Wt1lll 8d 10 .... 11\llo "'C~ftll I 60 , 1.W llttt 2~ -"'~anPw PU,, rtoo ~ 5N j1:o,a -,, OH~oNe~ 1 6t 11 'I .. , ...... conen are yw an "-tllt11EA "'' rw1~1n • '"' rotoA 2~• WR•ade :tl'l • 1icw.i.o ''°""'° 20~+11o enPw P1•»zm11 1'"''° +1•,G1t.1t.1ptB11>11 120 1t~.70 What .re the real·life perols i'n ~!!~".., •,•, ~~ ,"'1,"1,<0• •,i! ,••,, ,·•,.!! 1~ 1•"' w1rN1w l'4 ~ "'c;ry~.., 1 :rs "' ~ """ lt~ °"""" Pl• 1' 1100 ~ 5.1 .s• + l\\o G•t.iN 111• .o 1 11 • 12'l n·~ -1. ,...,,~ ,., ~·· .. I ,,_ JI~ •'II W11h N(l 1•V. 1•~ ::::c Oltllll I ' 1n . 11~ 17'1 + ~ (lllllAlr .uo 111 101\ lrwt lOVt -I"> GT Wnt Finl ?IS ,0 y '° 20. -• "Our area Go over the whole "-m 11n11 '"' 10\0 Y•Dd11 s • ,.1 • n"'" • 9" W••ll 111< '"' '" 01111411 Jee " ,_. n 23~ +.-.Celli c111 2 i0 20 .. ,4 11:i. '"' _ lo 31wnunn 9G ., ••'· 1•11o n>, ', .J #l l!il Ltb 2~o ~ H111DVr 11 we Gro •(~ 5 W1t Tr '~ 11.4 "-O ' 2, TI'i 1"4 1i. +" CICln Pl•,2S llO fl 51 51 -lh WUn oil M I ll'o 11~~ 1111 '• )1s t with a trusted insurance Am E•or '' •sv. H•v'",. Ip ~!ri ,'," ~'" uo •l:o.i. ~•Wt~ •• ' ,~ "'"' w1v,.1 • 1i II'• ,, + ,.. Cori• CoP 2'• u '" ti~ '" -r, tw11hln Sil ,•, ,•,,-, ,•,'• ,',',I,·.·:·, .. .., F'u•" j 6 .... HtlM .,, 4-> I lldoll Sltl lli Wtdlrll ~ l 1 111 141 ,~ -·· ,, •• ··i~ .. 1-· (pl 1•• :nVI llV, lt -1, (it""'G"r 96 agent A Orttl YI ... _,,. H ... 11 Co 2" l'-'" m"' M 1 1'' WI lnll M I I \0 mflP• 1 u ,-, ~ .... -•• ~.·. . 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Checks Weather In Arctic a,~~~ ,111o J"" \~I ;1 Dt u u v.i Am l'•r pl ' .. 1 l•i I~ 1·· + v. c.--col t 01! 1)1 1'1• 11•1 17 i ~ H1ndt111n d iss ,,.. 16', '6"' 1. • JI I I I •16 I #lT& wt J2S l'h l l,lo It+ \~ Cr~w~ Cpr• 10• Ii 144-1' >J.-'• HAna H1r /1 71 I''" !t•o lt\.' !~ By ELDON BARRE'il' ::~~\hr HI ,~,; 21•: 1~1~, 12 IJ AM T&T 2 to S&2 4'>~ .. ,..; -\\ CrwnltU l 60 101 17 3101 J? ... ••Hine~ Cp ~o Jl 11~1 12'• ll\• to 80<>ut El 7'• l It SoUlll 26'4 161.!o #lmWWkl 5' I 91'4 9\'I 9\tj +\' G•n l pl(?O J:or! ~\~ ~1, Y.'\ .._~ M1nn1M 110 l5 11 11 1~ 41\1 1, SEATTLE, Wash.-(UPI ) -Boll 81r ,,. •~ J.cobo F •\~ ·~ ... w •.1ol 1 (I l200 llvt 17\ol 17'"., CTS Coro •O ~l 1J l•VT u·~ -,._ H1rcourt 1 s J•'• lJ '3\fi Boal~• c 10 .. 11•, J1euln c ·~~ ll• "''" Zinc s 11. ,_. l 'N ,. Cull1hv .,., n 10" •~'• 1~ ... -·~ H•rrh 1~1 1 5! •S..,. •! •l -.J BOI Ctp I 11.:o J1mt1 ~ 7fV, )0 -Tht folloWlno CIUO-In¥ Guld 1 .. I "-MF Irie t0 311 U'oli 7.i, 1•11 -h C'.um,..tn 111" ~· :PO•'o 7~'. 1~·, -t H1fl5Mrx Ill S 7J 11.,.. 2) , '• The d1SCOV"M1 ()[ oil on BOG.I AH 1!'-16-. J•m wer ,,. •Y. l ttfMllltr 1 Ill\' CeA 11 ,. 17~ .......... Ml ll 11'!1. l 11 -lit Culll•'~ 711 1•0 "', tl~• 11•, ,, f<lrl<G (O ' I " 1 16'• "'• Ala•••' th sJ h 1r1.,q ln '1 .... l l" J•ITl1b1 t ''o '" llflonl :woplled bY lllV '""le J1' S. Amtltllr. 601 U 11~ Jll• Hiio -~· CU!"nOr1111 •I '" ''• ''• t'· Hlrv •1I1'0 lJ 111, 11 11 i>Jl.<IS nor ope as rko Sc.ti ll'•lt14;Jltfv Fds l\.'o • !No Mtll-1 Anof.f.ln~ lol10 JJll, #lml•t 10 XI ll \lo 31\lo-W. Cu•!IUWrt 1 l i ,,,, n ~ n " H~w .. E! 111 St U'o 16'; 11•, 0 b h d !.,..., Jl<r l )'J t•~ Jhn111 PG 10 20'.0, etlooo DI S.Curllleo lllY'-ll'llr• Gr°"" AM' lrw; ..9 H ~ ~ "" -\\~ rurl Wr A 1 1 l•'• '"' ?I\, H•Y'S AID l 10 tll, i., l'>t o1 roug l ramatic: attention l o •Ullt 81 111• 111'4 IC•!,..,. s1 "5Vt .. v. Ot•lrrt, Int •r• 10s l'Cll l Jl l ll ,.,mou corp 1Gt i•1i iilo 1.w + '• r u11er H 1 °'° ,5 ...,._. 1''• :ii"'• -• H•••ll•n. 1• I'• , 1 Buck1v I)"' 1(11,s1 Df u u , ... 11(1(.tlf. .,~ ...... ldt fllul 1·1 9JJAll\lllfl 140 II ll)!,'o lO lO -'• C~CIOll• 190 • H!J. )! 151· ~·~HCA Ind lOD I ••• ~. •!,o • the Arctic regions of the con· Bu"" ce ·~ J\, ii:11v1r ,,., 1•v• ~$' i«urltlfl Pre11 .!1 J u 111111 .n 10 71\ ,,.,. 1 Cvpru•M 110 1• .ff ~"'" st -+ Vi Htcl1M" 11r ·• .,. • 111 1 ?ti\ * '• I UfnllO S 2~ 1m ~_,, Vr" J\lo ti• coi;IG ll1ve t11eft $111(-1 7, 1' It AnKOnd 1 to ltM.S 23~ 22(1 13 P'\ Hron1 HJ '1 -Sii JS , li JS l1nent. ParticuJar attention, er !C!f ~et: ~~,;a ~~:mr m ~~t ~i~ir11~.:s~hl ~1r~ :~ :~,_. ,.,::..,i:.oe 11 1~' f! ?i~: rm=~ &:""lv r 1So ~.,._,',\lo ,,.. 7lo'o -l~ ~::r~.n~uri, .l J 1 ,~i! ,:"' be d th '""'o 1 1•,,lYh Ktl~I! l 311 a id A*l"v Flf.Jll o il')• #lll(I Cli~ 11'0 ! l? j1~• ~ +T 'nl Co 115 .. 7'1.o 11 "4 •4Htl""Pll1 l 6 '''•!Ht< 1, .. course, JS 1ng pal e Anon M 11 S: l(t11wct 1•'4 '°"' Abtlt"dn 1 71 1 to ti.tel 16 IO u #lPKh~• 2} u 1111 p , 13'< + v. 'r1 1n<1 ltlto in :JOii ,,., '°" .,.,,, He1"'r~P ~o •~ 11 , 11 11•, • Weather ()f the frozen Wastes, c:~~ B l~~ J\\ ~:~~! f-iti 1~~ l~r! Allmf.r~;:!V ~U~S SI ~yyHn<:od: ~ ~~ ~ n ~;cLg()l'..k 311 l: 'fj't'> ~:~: l:.1: = .:: 8:;~ l~~:I~ l~J ift; ~ ~~ -:.~• ~::::l:~ (I~ l~ :;• :, 11 ';,: (tp MtO<! u~ 16\'I ICev• cu.. 11') ' n<O'OI 3 ... J 17 JD!lllJI~ 11 &I 1711 #llllA ~Vt IN 51 """ 9l'!a 9)\.'o --3\; 01ycOC:o 1 , , • 11 1S•1 1!'1 -·~ H•~ 1~, l>e lll JI .. JS',; );.~.:. • To provide expan d ed C•o5ow, 7 Jo K~vllPC ''•I ln•u• 1M19tk~v.+orl•Funoc art1t1N ,10e H 1111t1• 11"'1"~vtn clfJS ,ioo&a s• 51 _, H~rs~~ll1 10 ll'I 15 1! C•o ln!A '''" 3\to IClno IM J'" J'• Adl/llfl ••S •II it.DOiio Ill 157 AfCll Otn 1 1' 11~. ,, .. 7111 114 ~lnHud 10 lJ 75. u •, 15' ... , .. Hruhl~'" ao 11 )'I, ll'• :II • .., Capablllty rorArct'c weathcr !.D lc~ 1 7"1K!nqs EI. ''•,1,11111.id '!1 7 1• (Yt l l 111i1 11!1 ,1,,11PS•c!GI w 1•~· 1~1a1, \'I Yl~PLlto d7llo 'll l 71'• H~w P~tk 7Q ''n'•7•~2•'• 11.<o •tr Dev I .... !lrl< Co l'• ltl.,1,fu!rt 5al 5 1 Cut nt 179'\JtStarle"iOS :io J.11 I'" llo 1~0 -1\0PL Pfit.3 15 iro '''~ ''" "'' .._,~Hlo~ Vnl!ont .. t o t\t I'-< 1,. research. lhe federal govern· ••1r Gp 11\o n v. re!_i.ir 1lt. lll a 11i.1e • 01 t 10 c u1 ll' •• 111 Armco 1112 10 ,. ,,.. 11 11•, + .,.. 1mu 11 1 '' 13 11 , 11 •-. ,"," ... "" ~~ •• '.',!,'o_ ,., , arl• 81 7'/? l n~o Vol 2J'n 1•1'1 "-I'"-"' F SI ll Cui 8• 711IO#lrmcoS!1 60 1'3 ?Ot1 10'r• ?O i -'h ~•e Cn? 116 :io•1 Jilt,,, lll'•-">HlltonH01~1 1 ,,J iJ,',• ,'/'' ',1,'', '• ~It HG ''" t'l'iLMC 011 I'll. Alo~' FG ... tto Cui K2 •11 4 '5#lrmour J IO 5 3t~1 J9.l'I J9'l1 JM11lelto 65 'l•I• 1• ·~ ....... ,. •v !! T.f', 2!1•1 1'01, •, ment has established a special 1!!1,,cll' 1~ z, .. ~:nc.e 11~ ~i:-1 2j\1 "-""t1<1 s DI s u CY• s1 lS ~· 11 06 Armr pt • 1s 1 s•\o s. s." -·~ 111 ,.,1, '° 150 JO' n 1\ ,.1, _ , , Kon E ''1:"" • ,,, n . ,,, '• m II 1, .. , ~ Wd ," ' #lm B1u ' .. 3 II Cut Sl '•s 'JI #lrm,l(t IO "'' 11 16"' u•-. -~. ~llec '"' " H~ 6 f 'I HOl•d•'""' " IJ 11 ~ 11•. ,, ... '' Program at the Un1vers'1t• of tn 11115 '" L,11t ,,,_,,)am °"1" •U '" ~u·.~~ 1n, t5•rm111ub lMI • ·r• 7ti.. 1~ MMlo i.o '' 11..., 11'• 11•,-11 Hnt1Y~\JO 1•a n 1•'• "" 1•·~-'• , !h1•nll 7 I l'• l:!lfO'I ... Amer E!UH'tU \.U -2.1 • #lfO CerP "' l •. ,. 1'. !•. +.... nnYllll °" 161 1 ... , ... 11, + '• H<1mr•1•~ ta ,,. 1~. 2~1. , ...... \o Washington ln Seattle and bas M:"1 L~• r· ::; Lt~: ~ l~ 1i'1 f!,0,!!, .,,t ~~ K:i~~·~ ! ~ 1 ! :;;:~d17"1 \, .: ll~ ~l~ l~:Z +:" ~; ~:t8~Y 1111J ': n;~ n~ ~I~:: 1: ~=YB'\ t~ "~ J~;: ti,, '~ -1 I Ml tllCI JV. J>... Lth Coll l~U. 1Jit lmttl II I SO ~flick GI 't1 71.l #lnd Brew U ll• 1i1 I -•1 ~KO DI A I 36'. J6'• J6;. _ '• 1-l~I fnll l6 ' ,..... '91, 19 1 -'• p lunked dov.n $229,439 toc11e,.,',,"l ',j1ttll"'~r.::11•u1,'•~ ;T Sotcl 11, L'l(Gftrt tM1Sta i.110G 11t 1li3Sl 1 ~S\o ... \1 f«OPIB •l6·36 l6 -·~HOlldlodll) SQ,10•1 10·.1~•1 Chi ~·.. lJ~•U'A .. ,. JStl:IOLe•llKl"ll116 1jt!"-:i.d5ptllO S11 .. 2PoJll1 -11 5otolncAO J11•, "" 11••-"''0udlll 115 11 71 21 • lladttl •'~ 1V1 Le!I Cdv 1 M •m r"' 5 U 5 It Lil• II! 'SI •" #llhlone Ind 11 1•'4 1.io 1••• i '' Dot Ed Pl! )II 16 11 >, /II, I Ho I 1, HOll'~~F 1 t 1!1 lllo )I\, ll\o finance 1lsf1rsl yearofopera-1~~\~: !1 1;; 1~ t~ • .!""111 1,• f:i;."''" otv •o. •u L11oer1t s oi •,.,ur1r.., os11 1 '"" 1 0 m tl!'dl• 1.ci 11<1 11 Ul, ,,.,_ •• Ho110M111 111 n is•, n •. 11••-, lion. ltltM'11110~11'•LDtElr~ 10\?lj '-""''"'"¥ J U•UL1•e ~y ~'·t)ll1111C1vEllJ.I 111 'IO••'l<l•·-~~·,sieel 111•.u1~u~-~HoutFPU.fO JSl16 115 115 _, 111 IJ#l l r.l ,'""LYllCh C j~t":ll~~~NMG'l..1~ l:tb: N•I \~ 1it!\\C'i\Jl~ll1 I 7''• ,,, .. ,.~, .~;:M~·«I ~ l~:; :~~ 1~~1 7;:~=~ g~~ !~ ll ' ll'' ~:·= ! Dr. Stanley r.1urphy d1rec-\~nuM~ ,:,'l~V:~:cil ii~: J.\\ ~"'"',"",,,~on 716 L~:.,s.~~~:i.::l•"-11111"' ,0 ,} 1/lJ !: ~~·~ ~: ;: i:;:::•,n~~..:.11/ J,,' '.,~.· ,1,,,, ',,,'·-··~o,~,lhP, 112. :,' !'," '•',• '•"•',:.,· torof lhe D1vis1onol M ar1ne!",,,_Mr ':t ttl~:::1.,, '1\oo 1 ~ ~ •• 111 t111oos ivu oo~ •o••URJchPll 12 100\'J ,,,..,.,,,_,~g/•S11ro1 ;0 10 ,,,, ,~.; •• ~~~~H~G;'p~1;; 1 •• 1. ,~••lo p , [ •. M '' l'' ln(mtl 10611" Miii 12Jl)2l1•HlllC11Df1IO llO OM.:.. •SI."'-~\ (!lpl"opn II u 10•. 10 , ,.,_k HOW Jnl!n •• ;111 ~. !6 ,. '• Resources, ha s been named "' "'..,. •.,. ''~ Min•n 6.; i Fd In• 1 5.i •"Luth 1,0 1~" 11 u "'"'' ,,...., I 11 2• 2l't 21>, 81'"°"' ..ah 10 !61• so s. .. Howme1 10 ,. 1 ' ' " Cn•onQ ,",','•'•'"•'-.f ''' '''' V'"' ll!'1«l'6M,g111 ln Jtl 1711AUti C«o 7'I 2'~ 7'• 7>. I Glo•olo oo ?S 1210 11'• ti'•'' Hubb•d 1-,.~ 11 ;~1; ~1 ,Z " ... ~.~ . C "' Ce • ~ • 11 o •·' '" •-••j '' ,.0,011 ••--~oo 0 >! ''' •>o •-•• >l 11* Jlo />o ~ "'G•o ',. ' ,... " oo I o < -" >o< 'i' ' Pr1ncjn11) investigator for thC ~otU' 0 4 ~ Marm Gr .,. " ~w >a" > ""''"' "' ·~ -"' "I D -,_, lt~ 1"1' f 1>1 ,-.u 1~ -' -,• O > .' 0• ,•, h h 'ii · I d 1 l Jiit M 1 LP t i, 10\/o Astron •.. * .. l ' i• M•ll Gt~ ti Ii 10 >i Auklmt11 Incl '-' ,..,_ I 5' 1 -\' Uno pl A 1 I ~'4 26 Ht~ + ~. l-lun1C""' 11 11 17 lit• 17 • •, program w IC WI inc u e :.~::: IOV. 11 M:~r 0 Ill,, It "'-'.-':l"?''°'l .. ' ''Mill Tr 12.U 11 Ill #lVOO CJI Ila. ,. 11\o 11\'I 11~ -(\ !loll Co u • ISV. Is 15 ld11"opPw • 00 IJ "'" lt~ """ ,__ '• Y'-' oa•r 'i' SO SJ M 8tow• 71 11 #lnoc• l•M111 F'd •~tOliAurDtl Prod • 1 •to •'• .. ~Ulnci~m "° 51 11111 11•1 H to -'• HuOl\!011 ., d I to! d !Oft !.tr 2111>2• .... McOIJY 7l 2• ,•-··, ·.·,·, ,,,M.111, Jll lll#lVteplll'O '° J? l1'1 Jllo ---Ult¥ lOb 11•107\li lO)~lOS"o ... l 1oea1 1,, ... Sl ,,,,. ll'o 12 -· eve opmen u n m 1 n n e comcet ni. tv. Med ic H •'-" ,,, u:1 M1111sr1 • u ':ll "'v"" Pd H i i ,. "" 2th + ,,.. 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I> ,, .. , ,,, S • re u..:agrow1ng El Mooul • "•P•ulev P •• ~ 0ec1t 1on1111 1nv ... 1 tJ 14t80tEd1111• 13 :M..., !J'4 l•1'-~• ~ce110 tts 11 '°"' 1CI 701., ,, ··., ""• • need for an lmpr ove d l mPS011 l J•~lJh l'••,ll! ll•o it''> Qelw, 11 ,1 ,•1• Vl!ll l 'l751Aeurn•ln< ~10')10'•10lo -') a~rvt .00 161)\11! I! -"l>Jana~Fd , ?1 10'•10'1 llt,CIY C ~~ 26\1 Pt•rl Ml t • .... Deno S 9S '~O V0¥19 5 67 6 11 Br1nll#llr !Cl 91 l\lt I'~ l \t _ ·~ Ficror#l ~b ,7 l~ J JSlo l ,._ J•~Fd t" Oiioo 11 10' 1 IO technology Jn SUpporl 0 f Enero P1 1t' l\i Pl)'l'rlf"I f ,7 :1 1 OrP•fl 11S91) S• lllt~frt I" ~SI llrl99SI J .ell! 6 •I •611 "'61o -·~ ~t,,thC J.C1 39) 1J1, 11 2J'" I '• j•l!n~',';;I ~ a rr• ri h Enni, 9 "" ''t" P1 Eno,J; 11;.; 1:,1 o ... v1 Fd 1n 11 11 u lil lnl•et 11 It n IJ lrlll M~ 1 XI l,•,,• ,•,·• "••"· "',,', --~. •,•,',',.!'.!!.', .,•• •,,• •'•" ,,•',•, •'•" -' ,'•, ,,;,,:<,~, ',.", ,•, "','• '•'' • 11 r c••arc oxploratorv opera 1n1w1i1 tl~ 1 Pa G ,, , • .:. 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"-S 1nu 161 3" 1 , •'• 1 "' • • • '• H l l f1rt1 1C •s 11 SI Srcurl!Y Funcll ucv r 1 20 1,1 U\lt 11\• u •, _ \i F-t1 IO 111 1'1, 79, 1 7t , Ji>"I G<i•" , on in ~ , «l• weathercond1tionsforaw1dc as y OS f.M•\l k un•w1.1 ~Ul1' 15 t.u Ulllf(O to I"'"" l\•t \llFtd~r,l IXI 71 71'l n•. 11 :=1 ;J,o>"oL,'" .·.~ ~ !O .. ,~. ti:~c•O'f 11lS11-2S l"vtll 'ti 1 SJ U~Oo ,•, et~ z ' • \'! FfdoY.og 1 llO Ii 72 71> '" \ ~o•or '" I Jn• 10 var1etyorunder-1ceandover-1"1ot1t ~n unr• S•J Jtj n -10 t 1~ ll\-~'FtdNM•e 96 "1'6; u' .. ·-•Jo11,no111 1nn1.,•;" !i<WllY 106 ttl ~I« #lm !71 1•6 ~ :-i I is lt 32'!1> ~ ''-n~ -'lo FtlOPtit E~c •.,.: ·~: 11: _ '~ JOV MIO l IO •I 10 • J9" ice missions In order to ~ro· A d ~~~\ i~ 1111.1~ r.!.1~~ 'J~~ ,ln -~~~lt111:rr.10 i 1,,. m I'•=~ ~.J'p•; l~' u J I•'• l''• l''• I-• ~:1':''11:11• i. 1,• ;: ' io I v lde the new tools needed, 1l 1s lIDOlIBCe ~~~~' ,., \o~l l, ij ~t:: ~~ ,:6f10fi!J t:~T~;: ,','? 1i. !ti~ !o~~ ~~ =:: ~J's~inf11 ;J 11~ Mii ri:! ~!~ -:· ~~1~~1~~" ~~ ,; ~~·· ';~.: nccessarytobr1ngtogelher1n ~.o Cto u"1vs Ot•n 111111 u • ;: '~ 2~~ 1IJ~!+'•'"f-ll•ro11 1~c 1• 6 5,, 1,,:,:1(~1,c ""'~ • ·~ '' 'fort • F1lrld 7"11Jjd~ 112 toDUflNorDIU S lll,(, 11 • l \'. FeltOr~tS!r l j&O ;µ11 Jl•• Jj IC••( o!l~I 11 101, l<r acommone 1nves t1gator" ·r. J\1\kel Hastv has been "••m au 11• 1 -.f ltm• F1111Ct• 1uinc1v 1c _,., 1 • F~ 01v co 1 ,,, 111 ,,, "K~nC P•L•' J 31" ·1 1•' • l " ' 10'--.. " 'I'• 51 I '1 " "''' . ll . -• .M'' • ... . . . 1, • '• Ill ~ •• ~ In ' -, ?n• • ~ • ,r, -~··· -1•'· !'1. ; ,, . ~ ., 1+ '• _.j. , '' u· J1 -•, from engineer ing, the baSJC J ~Hid ~::' ?Jff li a ~~.::! :u 11 ~ urrDh$ -'Ii ~~ l~Vi IH"" -J\lo ~l~r;:br~P 1 -!o0 11 ~~ ... ~\~! ~~\o ~ ~ ~l PPLL ~: i: :::,. :• :'• ••oe-s and other fields promoted lo assistant vice ., d Fulld 11 11 1•,, ,.nr•t 10 ! ~ i'tj .. ,. , ,, .. ,., _ F kfttM 40 J 11 16,, 2, + i.. kc $ouinc1 1 1p, 3, ,,..,. ,,.... ' Fld Trlld It t0 71 IS Srnltll l!i 7.. It ti f lfi:n1' 110 ,ii: ll I • "'"' F llrQI I «I •' n IJ• /7\ot -O.. KC Soll Pf I "It Is the purpose or the proj-president and manager of lhe Fl"•tK•11 Prot s.,, 1nw • 60 • ~ 1 llln Mne 1 1l~ 11 • • Fl11 F1H11r11n i•"' J._ ''• + ~/C.:.-"''-'---'------~t to d evelop such a pr<>-marketing department !or the F*E i 3 } !i IE~~~! ·i ~{ 1} U :~rt tf£ ~ ~?J ~!t: ~; ~~ ~:i~T~ 11,'i tt ~ iffi ~~ =1: gram " S9rlta Ana office of The Blink vr111 1 rt • 15 j lFrm Gt • lfl •.JI ll11 111c 1" ,' JJ\'I »µ 151 1 F1tNc11! t ot1 Ill •"• li):' .. 1. _ :io l'1tF v~ 9 1!1~111 ••t• St '31)G l'f.S0 dP•c !llJJO l'"' ,... ... ~·~. FJl!-l~t" ~ • ll'• ,. JJ'• lie said the progrRm w1ll 1n-cf California, a ccordlni to an F111ft 91! 1s1 113 ~•t1<1m111 tund1 ~ • .,.,111d , 10 1 •·· u 1• ,,~ ... • i=1K111oe1"< t3 • 111 ~ 11 ... -,,, /ffa r•·et volve not only 11taff m en1bers ;;• :~s:1': ~~ :~ ~;:;~"" t~ ~~ "t:~ .. ~w·~ ~ n~ ~\ 1~1" ~·~ ~~~,~~1 ·'t: ~ '~~ 10,·: 1:.; :: "' b t I t d nt d t h S announcement b y Peter H F•t Mu ll 1~1 113 S<len 111 loo "'•lt "•« in Ot' II ,,1,,t Flemln• 511 , ,,, 'o ••• U I SOS U e S an eaC er Fii N•I 6 ?I 6 If S~ln ~°"' FdJ Af-run I ~ IQ '6\0 .. 1 't + " Fllnr~olt I •i 1) 1••• !1 -•1 from R "v.ide variety or Ulr1ch,sen\orv1ce pres1dent. F•I sr ... 2Jl1»t) Bit 16'6U,* t1rll1l~ to ', ••• '"• ''" Finl f>!A•.511 t 2Jct ~I 41'1 "' ... _,. l'l~I Ct10 'U 1 • C1e Op 1>11 1 11tiec• Mfb tJ 1:J~ ll 7J fti. "Int ll'IBJ ?j l J)\l JJ~, ::iJI~ 8 Cfldemlc units w h 0 ! e Prior to this appo1ntmentl ~::1 i!1! : ll s u s~~~~GI 1' ,~ 'l i, :i:'fr' 1·~ ~j 1: u ~J~: = t: ~1: ~.s'0~ 1? n1: n·; ~~ ..: '• •peclaH!les wlll be required a s lta sty was manager of the """ Gtl\ 1·•1 ',, subt11s1 o •• ••old1 1 '° '° 2• "'• ,1.t.. 111 Pow i to , "'~ " •• ~ 1 '• FOUncl'I Oii 1" SYll~r GI 1' 1 ll Cl CO!"o 10 "1 tiio •I•:;_•., Fi.PowLI 1 l" 11 .. 6•'1o 6• .. the J1ro1ect develops., Rialto a nd lnland Cenler ~~i~1" 0J~ ''~ ~~dlr~0 ;~ ·ar1 !f~:l11·'! 11i 11~; !~1' !~ .:!:. ;.; ~::.o;c'.~', ~1 .~ ~;; \~'· ~~.: ~ 1.; Th• 1&o6W1,.." • _,..,. te """''"'"' The program IS bein~ 'Jt.IT( r ~ I 6 Ttchll(I l n l 1 fllR ll'IA•.so ' I "'' " FluOf DI B ) I •) 17 ., In Th' ,1cit1t m'fktl ""-"· n -• th h th F d 1 Branche..~ in thr. San G•"""' s :io I" Tt<l>t!DI • I •I• 111(-'"' )0 ,. Ju ,.,, "11 :.1h 1<1..-11 .... 111 ~ 1,,, 111o 11', ~ :S•l•l '·•~r~ •r• llllOHl(l•L 1nan ... '"~ roug e eera u111 5•1 ut,tm•Gt7J 1 2•0.0,ft H1/dl .. 1 1 11 ... 11.,_1,FMC~u 1,1,,,1,,,. •• Advance Research P roiecis Bernardino a rea llasfy joined F•t!!..o; i H J°"',, 1:-:: t~~ t!l :ll c.ti~ 1,"',"-•'•" JO '"~ n•o 1111 ... " FMt pl1.:a "• n 1n , lJ ~ 1-Aho ,,1.,.,, t1Xt••s. II-A""'"' ro•o ~ " , E >< ll ,., tlOO -51 !'11 JI i 2 FococtF1!r tG !I lJ'• I\ 1.; -11 OJ1u1 1t1K11: G1vlHllll. ~Lhoukt•H~ "" Agenf'v, the bank in 1963 Fd ftMuf .. ., I t.I r•v ' ' in ttt111P$ 120 I) II'• ,, ... 11•1 + :i., Foott Cl 60 Jl I ,, I "~ lul'ICI Inc fl•f' Tllder Fd llfll l 01 Ct'f!llt f l , ID 21'', 11 Footf Miii ' It'> "'• u .. -'o dtlld, d-Otc;itred II( Hkl '",,,,. •• , f;';~ : ii : :? i~ ~ l '~ ? n 1-· ,.• >1 .," ,1,• ',"' ~U:t 11'1 i 'I Fooll 1111 lO f 111.o ll\J 1n. + '• ltodr d""ldtftd -P1kt 1 41 1 t Y~ll' o , '"" r~ 1~1/f '"IV111f Mui "'1"111 ~I '-•_ • I ., i C-.FDl'llMor 7IO S$4 .... 4 •I -1' '' ' .. "".·-,',', '1'1· ~".1"··•1• ,',"•' •'"1 ~ .......... -... 1·,&; .. -7S ,,.,] .... 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SI, 1,..1 •• , V•::JJI"' d. 1~••1trNY 1 '" .. • • ~e1 " !,'1! -:· Fu-.11~ :tr .. ''• ••• t ... r.,, 11fvldtl'lb In ..... .,.. 11-New lli>o• "~'d "' ~ 10 '"" "' Liii l,, s II hlWMll I '° I•• ... • :::,,' -., -~ ,,... ....,._ old '"" ..... Glvlctl'l'l'I llfl'lll!tfl. t' rl~ ·~d 1' \f !•ll I l'll 1..ICI lllS.-.Afll Tr ,. • ,. "" -V-Gry""n ,A If j1 t1 )Ill $It '1t1 • 60 CheO~r Mot 7! 71•.. 1114 11 0 -'' o ~c Ca 1 JO .,i 1!\i 10" n ~ '• ttr'""'I II.( 1111 11cllct1 l•-•n •· 1111 lltvldft(" Cut•dn 1i .. I .. Vl'U~ 1111 ,.! I .. Chtllli!t )• II 1•1 1.. • G•e C• O! I ' :10 1'0 I 70 mert!r19 r-0«11~ .. Ntd"' ""' •IJ1 H.,...lllon llnG•bt ' ll • P. (hfflll>lfe<'l I I~ 1•'• ?)•o :• -'> G•F (or~ lO •O lO't 10 10 -1; l"-k di•....,...,!_ t-•t oG '" •lot-dllr1-. .. Fl l tl • lt \111'19d l ~ lli""N'( 211) ~ f!O~, t(I: • 60'' f)IF pf\ 10 11 it•~ 11') !•It ,. '• ""' "" Gtfl 6 01 t SI V1r IMll' .i If • 1 lltrn...., XII> S'o ~'< J.', m $1tt1 I JO u ~·'• ,, 1• _ 11 1110. tlllmtl ... 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DAILV PIL~ Tuesday's Closing Prices <:ompleteNe;york Stock Exchange List • ..... ... -------------· U...JMlllllMC-.c:at. <:omplete Oosing Prices -American Stock Exchange List • Briefs NEW YORK (UPI) -Clll .. Service Co. b1a b e g u a construction ot ""' ftclUt.ies to produce fuel olll and cob II •aid will meet lht ~· s t r i n c en t environmental standards now foreseen. The facilities, which wiQ cosl $7,500,000, are btln1 added to lht company's Lake Charles, La. refinery, One Is' 25,000 barrels per day fuel oO duullurlztr, while the other will be an t1:panslon ot •• exiiling unit that m11kes low. sulfur met1llur1lcal coal. CHERRY HILL, N. J. (UPIJ.._ -RCA COrp. annouocff receipt ol an order from the Re1lonal Crime JnformaUow Center ot Cincinnati for twt Spectra 7NO computers. 1" computera, scheduled I o t delivery In U,. loortb quarter1 will be used for upamlon oc law enfortement effilrtJ la the arta. HASTINGS, Neb. (UPI) - Kanus-Nebr1sk1 N1tural C.1 Co. has 11ked the Jl'eder1l Powtr Commission fa« permtssion to boollt ill l"ltfl on natural 1as aalts tit wholeS1!1 burers on I t 1 intentlte p p e J I a • fl Nebr~ K1n1 11 and Colorado. The lncrwo -boost the COf'DPlllY't rt;w by 13.100,000 I Y>or. Tbe - -aid It ...... lflo· ........ "'* to ol!oel hJtller "'* tl ..... _ -· ldar ... 1u . .. ---~ . .,_. !4 DAILY PILOT Quisse tt Takes CYC Race ·The rugged JSO.mlle Pacific Cup race was won Sunday by the 4:J foot "Schooner Quissett Skippered by John Troeger or King Harbor Yacht Club. The 1hree day race around San Nicolas Island. sponsored by the California Yacht Club for jy.·o·masl schooners a n d ketches over 40 feet. has traditionally been dominated by ketches. Jn the ketch class. the 40 toot Newporter Leprechaun - three time o·Jerall \\'inner - f;11ished first on corrected Lime. &,he beaJ her sister ship the J abberwock Ill by 77 seconds in spite of"a sptnnaker blown oui by 35 knot v.•inds orr San Nicol as. 'l'he Leprechaun was skippered by Whitney Collins o{ the Long Beach Yac ht Club, v.'hile the J abbcrwoc k Ill was sailed by Allen Donovan of the CalJfor. nia Yacht Club. First to finish honors in lhe 15-boat fleet were taken by the 73 foot Schooner Queen Mab sailed by Larry Pringle of the California Yacht :Club. The Queen Mab wil.h an elapsed time ol 48 hours and 05 mil.1ules th us maintained her record ol first to tinish for the fifth time in a row. First to finish in the ketch class was the Cliiriqui, 14 m i nu t es behind the Queen Mab. sailed by Jake Wood of the California Yacht Club. The race was marked · by strong winds on the beat up to Point Dume following the start T,1 Marina de! Rey at 1:30 p.m. Friday. All of the boats were beyond the Point Dume mark when the winds collapsed after sunset leaving the f I e e t floundering in light airs for 10 hours. The winds pic ked up around noon CJl1 Saturday and the fleet sailed arourid San Nicolas under·rugged off.shore c.'<>nditions with gusts to 35 knots and 20 foot seas. All of the boats finished with gentle breezes Sunday afternoon. Slandings overall were: I. Quissett (Schooner) John Troeger, King Harbor Yacht Club 2. Nelly Bly (Schooner) - Richard Duprey, Palos Verdes Yacht Club 3. Leprechaun (Kelch) - \Vhitney Collins. Long Beach Yacht Club 4. Jabberwock III I Ketch)- Allen Donova n. California Yacht Club 5. August ~1oon Bert Friedman, Yacht Club (Ketch\ - Del Rey 6. Shalimar (Ketch) Richard Stephenson, Cabril\O Beach Yacht Club Lindernu1n Captw·es BYC Title -·-------------. . . . Wtclntsday, Stptrmbtr 2, 1970 OAILY l'ILO'T PllOll bt Almorl Ltc:klbt'f AMERICA'S CUP DEFENDER Bill FICKER CONGRATULATED BY WIFE Newport Skipper Fnls ·t ·eam Well Organized' for Big Rae• Next W•ek FICKER 'S STORY ... "~Ve continued to \\'Ork on the boat. but were always •a Jitlle behind. The aft section wasn't even planked but was kinda gfued on with foam and fibe rglass. "We got our new sails: just before the July trials. \Ve didn't have much of a chance to work with them . but fortunately they turned out well . I "'·orked with Ted Hood in an e((ort lo determine the · right shape, the right draft, etc. Ted produced 1101 only what he thought was the best but what made us the most comfortable , and that certainly improves your sail- irJg. "\Ve did better in the Ju ly trials than we expected. Of course. we would have liked to have won all the races. Our score at the end o( July was nine wins and one loss. Valiant beat us the last race or the July trials. "I'm sure we suffered a hit this year i'n nol having a trial horse ror practice starting. -u I have a strong point. it is aggressiveness in starting. but lhis year 1ny starting \Vas not as strong as I hoped it would be. The only starting practice we have had was when \•le were racin g for all the marbles. And thal's no ti1ne lo practice. "We've had lo s tart aggres:;ive!y with the other boat but tonse rvattvely with the line. so it's been a bit difficult .'' But aggressive or not. Fic ker made his best mark in the August seleclion trials winning 10 races and losing only one -thal lo Valia)1t. And even in the l\\'O races in which Valiant got the start. Intrepid was able to overcome the defici t -by tactics and boat speed -and win . record. He used to sail Star boa ls -a'od that· makes hhn a nice rellow." Harpy is a former world champion in the 5·0-5 'dinghy class. Ficker is a former world Star champion. "f feel that our team is well organized. In that respect, I am confident Iha! we will win . I neve r speculate on \Vinning or losing. Ficker said the ·morale of his crew is sti!Vhigh. "This is pa r t i cu I a r I y 'H ydro Ace Will Drive In 2 Races Triple \Vorld record holding hydro driver Mickey Remund has announced !hat I\~ will drive in at least two hydro classes at Long Beach Sept. 7 when the Southern California Speedboat Club stages its 19th annual Labor Day llegatta. . This v;il1 be a warmup exercise for SepL 20t h when Mi ckey will c:oropete in his second Uri.limited Gold Cu p hydro race~ al Mi ssion Bay San Diego. at the \vheel of SCSC boat builder B o b Patterson's Miss Van's PX. gratifying lo me because I was told before the campaign that I "'ould never get through the summer with such a young crew -thal they just wouldn't be emotionally up to such a campaign. "And_this has been a Jcmg series. We have 25 races. And every day "''e went out we knc\\' \\'e had lo win . There was never any relaxa tion on the part of the crew. They have th e killer instinct. I'm proud of them. "I've tried to instill in the crew to maintain an even pace. Don't get too high when you win a race -or loo discouraged \.11hen you lose one. There just can't be any ups and downs. "I've also cautioned them 1hal being selected to derend the America's Cup is not everything -if \Ve doCl 't actually defend it. we'll wish to hell \\'C had never been selected." "We kno"' we can·t let down -especially when we know so \illle about our opposition. "But rrom the looks of that Aussie crew t don't think o,1•e'd rcUsh getting in a lacking du el with them . They're a hardy buneh -and that's no pun. .Juniors Lc1I By Williu111 s GltOSSE POINTE FARl\1S. ~lich. (AP) -Danny Williams from the Houston Yacht Club is the leader after five ot ~he eight races in the Sears Cup North American .Junior Sailing Championship. \Villiam. with 311/4 points leads John Harper from the Groosc Poinl Yacht Club who led a fter Mo nda y 's co1npetition and goes into today 's action with 293/~ points. Canadian w omen1 __ L'.:'.:E:'.:GAL:::~N,:::0'11:.:::C::.E __ 1---=LE_G-;-:;~~;-;;,,:;--on_CE_~r· l"·:lntt SUl"llilUOll caullT 01" 'THll ( Losing Sail Race ClllTll'ICATI 0, •USlfrtfSS $TATE OF CALIFORNIA FOil PICTITIOUI NAM! ·THE COUNTY OF ORANGlj Tiit \llldersklnfd dQ «11 lfv limo •r• "'· A""'n ~ conduCllMI • DUslntU II 1)261 DUllklH NOTICE OF Hl!ARINO Of "' ON Avt,~•rdtn (;uWL C1111orn11. \In.Hr lh• FOR l'ltOeATE OF WH.L AND Oil llctllkion llfl'l'I .... me vf $'T, LUKE'!> OAY E •MONTAllV' NUllSERY (NDN·$ECTAJllAN) •nO 1h•I ~lTTlllSf '•ss:Mu SAMMY NITTA. lAl~ l!fm 15 c~m-.il of '"-1Q!lowl111 OI 11'1!.i o M..-i.. Wl!Ole ......... , 111 tUli •nd PllC.. ot :~~~cE 1$ HEReev GIVEN2i"'' retlclenct ., ••• lotlow1: YERllCO NITTA. II"" lllf'CI hUltln • p .. ICTORIA. B.c . (AP)\_ , HJ.Oii" Y. 'Ovt./'lllf, 101\l Jono:ll'f Or., !llloll ror Proti.lt ol wm •ncl \!If i.111 ~ u;~·.:~. ~=lr~·:i:t\J JOllNW Of,. Cl L8'1CJ$ lf11.,Mf\lerV to ~:l~tl~Mr, HoPtll for the first Canadian Hll!'lllnflCll' B••'h. c1n1 re1tru1ce 10 w111c11 11 m•Ge r u ""' W,•11-'r In the Women's North o.1t11Au11ist 11, 1t10 • 1>1r11,vi.t1. ·~ 111•1 1he lll'l'lt '"" P111'' '"' JOlln J Qulllllr ot Mftr1nt •N wire h•~ bftn ft far A I S a 111 n g Nuh• Q...i111lr $t111tmocr It, 1970, ~t 9::IO •.m., 111 Ille m Cr Can STATE ()F CALIFOANIA.. cov•troom 01 oe~•r1m"nl No. l ,r wld Championships raded Tuesday ORANGE COUNTY: tourt, •I X10 (!vie Ctn1er ~rlvt. W•t, I" "'''"~n the o.ew Jrom the Royal On Auvu51 11. 1t10, bolore ~· • Nott r.,. tlll' Ci!.,. of S1nli1 Ana, c1111orn11. r; 1r.; ..... Pvtillf: In •nd !or wld Sllte. Pt•tonillV C.ttd A1111u1t 14. UICI Canadian Yacht CI u.b of •-M Jllfl" v. ou1111;, .m NutY J. w. Ii. ST JOHN d QuWtr• k"°""11 to '"' to bf !ht HrlO,,. COllnl'f Cterk .o;-• Toronto lost its first day Jea wheite "''"~ 1r1 suMC:rlbfd 10 Ille wl!t1111 IAMl!S K, NARUSE •• f'. • and fin'°hed the seCond day's 1Mtru"""'1 ano -11c:knowleotted IMY c•· uu W••I 11ff0flo. euc~ •tvlf. . .., .-.:uted 11\e lllmt. G1nltn1, c1111or~I• MJU, .... racing in sixth position. cot11t111 s.111 Tel: uu1 321 .. n1 , Jittll L. Jobst AllOtlWI' for Ptllllof\tr ~· The Canadian entry, W j f 'h NOl•rv Publlc . C1l ifornl1 Publl•hld Or•ntt Coo1t 01llv "l!l'lt, nd Prlf\CINI OlllCI In AuVu•1 26, 27 1r.d St11!emti.r 2. 197f UM·10 Daphne Grant as skipper a 0ni111111! cou"'" Barbara Ovens, and Shannon Mv comm~iron E•PI••• M41!rch 2, ltn LEGAL NOTICE Howard as crew, had a three-l"ublbhed O••nve co.t1 oa11y "''°'·1------cc=cc----'--. l J d fl the J" I t A1111uil 1f, 26 •rid Stl'1emt>e< l, f, P·ll1J2 · ., po1n ea a er 1rs WO 1f10 1547·10 CE•TIFlCATE OF •USINESS . races in the series Monday. T~ ur.d::~1!~!:iouc1soe~":~r;i.,. ,.· 11 But Tuesday they did not LEGAL NOTICE cofldue11no 1 DY1ine.• or 26611 s .. Gr11nd fin ish in one of the four races, Ave. sa1111 An•. ca111or~•· undtr '"' fl·llll~ ficll!ioos firm Mme or ORA~f,(UE5 and in the other three gained CEllTtFICATt: OF 9USINEt.S, 8Y MR. JOH ~ at>d !Ml sold' 'lrm FICT ITIOUS NAME Is coms>0sed o! !ht IGllOW!nt ~"4"• only sixth place and ,J.wo was the Bay Shore Yacht Club The ~t>ders!t~ d"• cer111Y M Is wnose name .r. 1u11 1od pl•ce 01 ''*llleiK• ti t b · Jh · t t J coftdui;11ng • bu•u•tss ol 2080 NewPGrt rs os follows: , •• .· seven JS, O ring Cir 0 a of New York. Blvd.. C<Ht• Meu, c0Hr0t11i1, Yllder 'tlnn -wa1s11, 1'16 w. st. Gtrtrv<i• to 221/4 points . lh• llcll!IOll'I ll•m f\Omt ot CAllLS Pt, Sanla Ana, c1m. . Results were u n 0 ff I e i a 1 TIRE .. ROAO SERVICE •lld Jhal Oare'd AU9U" II. lflO Unconfirmed results give d" 'd t· f $1ld 11rm Is comPOSed of '"' 1011ow1nii Jotin Wi115h :.~. pen Ing COnSI era IOn 0 per!IClfl, whcst 111me Jn lull 111d Place STATE OF CALIFORNIA • !• the second-da y lead to J errie protests o1 rtslde1><:e ;, ,, 1011ows: ORANGE couNTY: .,. ~ Clark's crew (rom l h (' . . Carl Ktnnelh Colton, 7~ _NewPGtt On A119111t 11. 1'10, tllfOrt .., .:i Blvd., Cotti Mese, Calif. Noi,r.,. Puo11, In •lld tor w•d.tl'" Corinthian Yacht Club o( LEGAL NOTICE Oiied A11u11•1·11, 1910 1>1r~111y aP1>1ore<1 Jahn walJll.,, .. ., S Ill 'th 41 " · I Th Cari K1H1n•111 Cc110n le me. 10 l)f lh• 11ers0f\ who~~ me ea e WI .,, poin S.. Cl -----~--------1S11te or C1lllornl1, 0t1n11e Counf'f: 15 subscribed to !he wllhlrl ll'IS!Nme11t Seattle crew, winners of the 11•11261 on A1111us1 n, 1910, t>etore mt. • or.a il<knowled&td he ellKuted lh• umL CEltTIFICATE OF l!IUSINESS Nolar'f Public in illld !or l'lld Slole, \Offlclal t.eal) champiOnsft.ip in J006. WOn tWO FICTITIOUS NAME Pt'nOfll'llY all9tored C&rl Kenneth Collon Jo..,pll E. D•v ls • of four races and also took one The undersigtled doe cert11.,. hi 11 know11 ta me I> t>e "" nersc!' ·w11e.e Noter'( Public, C1111orn11·~ . eom1u<!ln!I 1 DU•hltsi it 90ll Bol1.1, n.am• 11 subscrl~ lo Ille wi!hln In· Prlr>eiPll Ol!l(t 1,.. second and one third place. we1rm1ns rer, C•lltor11ia. uncrer 1111 fie· strumen1 •nd •c1<.now1teaea he executed Otill\lle cooul'r ood · 111icus tlrm name of ALEXANDER 1111 -.me. M~ Commission E•Plru 1 There were g racin g SALES 1'10 th•I s•ld lirm ll cempo1ecl IOFFICIAL SEALI Ju~ 11. 191, • condit.ions with ~e wind never f.: ;~ ~°.::iow!'::ct oe;;,~·.,.i~e':~ ii:"~ ~~~a~.~HPuEbii~.Ai'~~10rni• A:9u,:;1:~~. ~;.an~: ;:11 $1~~!%J'ilo;: dropping below five knots and 1011ows: 11rinc11>•l 0111,, in 1910 14t1.10 · l 1· I 20 kn t Jim AltW•nde<" 1025 P1lo Vert• Or1nge CwnlY gusting a unes 0 0 S. Apt. 10. Lt>rit Beil~h. Calllorn!a, ' M'f Co'"mlulOf\ E~pir~ LEGAL NOTICE Th · C J 20 D•!td Auvusr n 1910 June 21, 191' e crews, are using a s Jim Altx.:..ier Publ!lhl'<I 0••"11• coast 011ilv Pllof,:J ---------------and swapping boats after each s1111 or c111t.>rn11, oral'lllf couri1v: Aull"'' u, 19. 16 •ncl 5epi&mt>er .1' l'-»l•l . · h · ch On Auvu11 II. ltlo. tiefo11 mt, ;a 1910 1'9'110 race lo equahze t e1r ances. No111ry Publk 1n •lld tor uid s1111, CE1tT1;1~:1~Fouos" N:~s~Nls"'' Eight crews are CQmpeting P4!rsot11ll'f llPPN•M Jim Alexandeo" known LEGAL NOTICE The ,unde"!llr>e<i do cer!Uv '"''• ,,, la me to IHI the per5<>n who~ n.amt in the waters of the Haro n subscribed 10 !he withl11 1nstrume111:l--------------J'onductlng • busin1ss •I is21 NowPGrt lld -" -" ~ SUflElllOll COUllT OF THE Blvd .. CoS!• Met~. Californl•. u"((tr lt)f St ·1 f the Adams Cup I o(know1 ..... o.,.. he execut<!CI 1 .. e wm.e. •o 1;ct11lous firm ""''"e of MY w•v •--•••• raJ Qr ' !OFFICIAL SEAL] $TATE OF CALI FORNIA It ~aid ll•m I• ,,.-,-of ,;;, •• ·-, ..... ,_ ' h f . Jt L J b~I TH£ COUNTY OF OllANGE ~ "" " .. . premier trop Y or women Ln No~: • .,. P:bllc<lllllo•nl• ussos "'"•ans wl\G•t name• Jn lull 1nd P1ac• clubs belonging to the North PrlnciP&I 011'.ct 1n . SUMMONS ol re>lder>ee are as follows: · M C I son E•Pres MACCO REALTY COMPANY, A J1ck Taulane, 1521 News>0rt etvd .. American Yacht R ac in g M:,,:t.":t1; I CGtPOratlon. Plllnllfl V1. BETTV E. COS!d Mrs.a. M•r11arel Ti1Ul•l'lf·' 1121 Union Oraoee Coun1v BAU EA. OOE l tl'lrGIJllll DOE v. NeWPOrl, Blvd,, Co•!a MIS•. • ' -l'ut>llf.-D••n11e c .... st 0111.,. Pilot, lnclus!vt, Otlef\llants Oil~ AUllu~t 11. 1910 Th e defending champion ~\IPUSI 12. 19. 16 •nd SePtem~r ,, 11eo11La OF THE STATE o F t.~,',',.',',",1~n0•,,,_, 0 11 I th 1 1919 U91-10 CALl ,OllNIA 10 IM lllOVI "'mt4 Dlfen· ,., ' " Jan ' M a e y O e °""''( State of C•lllornla, Ora11ge Cou111v: · y h Club N You lft hertbV trlrtcte<I to Ille 1 wrl!· On Au9us1 11, 1910, beiert m•, 1 N'iltarv Mantolok1ng ac l , e\Y LEGA L NOTI<;E •en PINdlr111 in ress>0nw 10 111e "'!filled Public in •nd 1or u•d s1are. Pt!r~n.,. J ersey was in second place on cam11111nt of Ille •bClve na'"ed 0111111111 appeared J•ck T1u11~e .•nd Mar11r1t ' . , with lt'lt cll!!'k of Ille above ""Tillad courl Teu11ne lcnown lo '"' lo be the l>ft'IOllJ the basis of T u e S d a Y s P~l* 111 the 1bove ,,.,u~ 1e11on llrwtht wl>o~ "•'"n are 1ubscdM<1 ta the ~11k1n CE•TIFICATE OF IUSINl!S$ I ., " U-onftrmed results Her crew FICTITIOUS NAME •;•11111 vou In )lid covrt, w!Thii:' TEN na1rument •nd .•cknowtedeec1 the'/ tx• '"" · dayi 1fler lllt ~rvlct an you of ll\1s sum· tcUtf<I !he s.trr\11', had 37 1/4 points. 11u:~1':.o\11:'!<~:1=:.d:s ~"i~~neN~:;; mO<ll. II _.ved wl!hln !he lbPV~ Nlmed (DFFICl ... L 5EAL) . . • · Buch, Call!Ofni•. uncrer 1111 licllllOU• COlllll'f, Of wl1h!n THlllTY din 11 serveo JOSEPH E. DAVI~ In third place Wtlh 3:i points lltm lllmt of THE CHILDREN 'S SHOP elsewhere. . Noli"! PuDll(, C11tlor11I• I he · · VOii "' hertb'f notll1ed that u111en 'IOU Prl"l:fJflt O!flct In was Penny Hare 0 t :O':°iov!fn·~ ::~!in'lrmn~ ~~.::"iv~: ~:;: w me • wr1111H1 re•P011slve Plt•diltg. s.id oran11e Caun•v Chapoquoit Ma ss., Y a c h t pl1c1 ol rts1c1en.'.:ewis a• tol!owo: 011\nlilf will take iud11ment IOI' 111v M~ Co'"mfuiCll' E1<0lru , • ' · li: Dollv 8 Mult1Clllantr 3110 11!¥ft Ave mcxit'f or <1am19es demanded In 1he . June 21. 1914 • • Club. lying fourth with 28 ,.1 NewPOrl Be.ten Calif' " ver illtcl :uvnplolnt as 1rl1in9 UPOI\ con-PuD1•Sl'led Or1npe Cea~! 01ily •f>llol. po·nts the San Francisco oa1e11 Auir usl 11, 1t1fi. 1rac1. er wrn ePP1'f 10 1ht c011•I 1or •.nv f9u.,?ust 19. 26 '"" swrember .,, 9. I was . . Ooil'f 8 . MulhGllaMI olher reUfl de.Nif\Clt<I 111 lhe verll•C'd •v ~70 Yacht Club and hfth with 25 S1e!e of California, Oronte Cou111v: C0'"0lillnl, LEGAL NOTICE Pair Win Y acl1t Matcl1 on Aut. 11, 1~10. l)ft ore me, 1 NotafY Yov m1y Hiii iiia 1dYlc1 OI 111 11to!'M'I Public ;11 1t>d fer s.eld 5111e. per'iQnall'f 11<1 int 1111111r CGf\Mdltd wllll 11\41 ttm·l-----~-------­IP11tere'd Oa!!v B. Mulhc!l1nd known to •l•lllt 1r ltlll aummons. Suell •llorne'f "" 10 be thf "''IO" whc$1 ,.,m• It •llovld bl CGf\IUUtcl wllllln lh• lime Umll l'·#Ml • · SU!»(rl~ to !tie w!lhif\ •nS!t\lmtnt ind sl1led ift 11111 ""mmeris !Of flllnt 1 wrlllt<I CEltTlt"ICATE OF 9US1NESS. , acknc!we<IOed Slit t Je<UleCI !he SI,,,., Ple~lnt If IN (-pt1lnl. FICTITIOUS NAME ..• 'o"''''' 'EA'< The undersltnea dllff ctr!lh' .... II ... ~ ... Oat<!CI JU<lt u. lf10 CCr>dYCllllt ' buslntls •• 15~·"Les lleba H. C1ne1tl {OFFICIAL SEAL) Alles, FOllntaln Valley, Collfor1111, •\inder Notar'( Public · Ci1lilcrnl1 W. E. 5T JOHN, Cler• rh 11 t 11 tl Prlnc1NI O!llce Ln &v AnlllOf\y A. Tflomp:s.ol\ e c ' OIJS rm 111me of_, R~ro · Oranirt Counh GUARO ALARM OF F 0 UN T Ii, I,.. Mv Ccmmlsslan E~o"tt Wtbwo~;~d';:e~k Crin, VALLE Y at>d !hat 'Miki !ifm is i:o('!r>OSt<I se-o1. I•. 1tn un WnlcUll oriv,, Swill N11mbtf tot Cl tllt follewl"ll "'''°"· Wl!O•e 'qame CHICAGO (AP) _""Tom Published or•noe Coett Dllll'f PllCll, N1wPOn lltic11,-c1. tiue i:110 1.;:!', •NI Plitt el reslO~t It'•• P, k d J Lo n. h ••d •,,".!usl 19. 26 1nd s.tlllitmbff 2, t, TOI; \n4) u 2.-Ken"*!~ R. Hln~$0!1, 1mi Lor 'Alie,, 1c ·ar o ng 0<:aC ..,, •v 1s..1.19 All_..,• 1w P111t111tt F , .. Pub•l•heo o'''""' c<111.i oaliv Pilot Ollnta " ••llm' • Dr. John Jennings of SI. Au;uit u, 16 •nd Sfl>rember 2 9 Datld A1111uJ1 11. 1910 -· P l b FI LEGAL NOT ICE 1•-1~·10. Ktnllt!h t . Hlf\•Min e ers urg, a ., \VOn •v s1~re or co111or11ia, a,.,1111., coorr1y,.,~ seznifinal rounds Tuesday in 11.1m1 o., A11pus1 11. 1t10, bttore ~. , the North Arn.rl"ca v'acht CERTIFICATE OF OISCONTINUANCI!' LEGAL NOTICE Nela•v Puhl ic in '"" tor S<lld''4111e. OF USE ANOIOR A&ANOONMENT Pf!'Sonallv ao1>eertd Kenneth 11:. l':tlnk•c>n R :l c i n g Union's mat c h OF FICTITIOUS NAME fl-l64M ~~en l~o s':::,,~jk.be' :,"'.~.tt~.-,:.:llOH,_, . h . TME UNOERStGNEO 0"5 hereb'( "" " ~ m 1: ., ch;imp1onsh1ps (or t e Prince cer!ll'f th•I, elfKllvC' APfl l lS. 1'70 CERTIFICATE OF IUSINESS slru'"en! •"" ICknoWIC<l9ed he ·ellli(uted r \V I Tr h he celSfd 1o do bUS•lle!< under Ille UNOIEll FI CTITIOUS NAME lhe sa'"~· ,· ~, 0 a es op y. fltlltlOUt firm 111m' Of SANTA ANA T~ Uf\llers+o""! II<> hereby ct<"Utv ,111a1 (OFFICIAL SE At l . Pickard won three slraight FURNITURE MAl!T 11 ~'6 we.r Fourth 1':!J ••1 1 con<tuchnll ', •P::•.11v Vel1 •c!~ J~an L. Jobst ·'·•:• . , . S!rlHlt, San11 Ana. C11ltor11!1, which 8 rac 1111 comPGntn ' !l•ntS!. 11 a Notarv Pubf1c·C1!ilatnia . , , races 1n the Lake M1ch1gan bu•l"'5s we1 '""""''.,. coml>Cl!td 01 111e 11m1tea P•fl11trsn11> a• 76~·'11 Newlan Prlnc<t>al 0111c1 In J ff I H bo IOllOwlng pt<'SOn. whose name In lull W1v •. Coste MtS<I, C1hlorn1a, u11de• 1i.e Orlnpe CGUnl'f • ~, 1 •• waters 0 Be mont ar r, Intl PIOc't of reiidellce !• •• !Ollow•, llctlhClll'.. firm ~/'l'lt GI Tllan!um .~ac:ln9 • M'f (Om'"llSIOI\ E~pirfl.S •.., , d { r L v nse llos f lo-wit: ' ComPOnents Llm•IC'd, 1111(1 Iha! said l•rm Mar(I\ 2. lt1J • ' ' e ea ing . 76 aS('O . O GEORGE FELOMAN, 7615 Lake51di Is (OmPOSed el Ille followlng petiSCf15 Pubtished Ota11oe Coasl 01'~«f>llol, the Pacific Y a C h t I n g Avenue, Orllnoe. C•ll!ornla. wno•e n.amts and Pl~ of rtsldenc• ire Au9ust ii 1~. 16 •'Id St111etnller ?. Association in a best.of-five Certllicale tor 1ra1111cHen ct tutlfltSt 11 IOllDwi. ~wn :, , , 5 '' 1t10 .. 1M.10 under the at>ove fi(Ul!ous name Ind Ecu•le v.c~le ICM no:., u e 5oa•1----:-o:ccc7"'-C-C=~=~.,..-series. ~Uldivil ol 1>11bll<lll1on thert<>f, ire on W11!1ller S<1uare, 13115 E1s1 Pen11 Street, LEGA L NOTICE ·.1 • D J · 1 l Ille in !ht olt lce <11 the C<111nlv Clerk Wh1111er, Calllor11la 90M2 ~" r. enn1ngs OS One race et Otan9e Count'(, under !!If provision! Ernt!ll K•1nzler, 11111 . PI I t f n 1 !10J ---"";;;c;,--;:c-;c;;:;::;:~C---''-before sco ring three victories vt sec11on 7•66 er tlle Civ!I coc1e. Avenue, cos11 Mesa. c111irarn11 '76n su~~T~::OE1t T~0~:;o~~o~s.•.:..•'• . WITNESS rry Mild 11111 •th dt'f OI WITNESS Ollr l'llMIS tn!a 71•1 diY GI ~· over Martin Bludworth of Auiru•I 1910 AllllU$t. 1f10. STATE OF CALIFOlll:NIA FOill ... ' ' ECURIE V1Cl(IE RA CING INC, THE COUNTY OF OllAN GI! Hous.ton. Tex .• to advance to OONAL~~·~:1:cldm•11 8~ RICo1 ... RO A. CAILLOUTTE Ne. A'"" . 11 • the £1 Is Preside11! E•!•te 01 LIOA 8. WAROLOW. -·· na . Al!Ornt'f •• Law ERNEt.T KANZLER C'd. . &It N, Mlif\ St., Sit. Ml STATE OF CAldFOllN IA NOTICE IS HEllEBY GIVEN .~'lhe Sinll Ana. C1lltornla 'r.1101 COUNTY OF LOS ANGE LE S I SS crl!d1l<1rs Of 1111' ib<>v~ 11 .. med ct.J-'enl T-6!14• °" tnls 11s1 dav ot Augu•t, 1970, llt!ore thll all Pt!•SGn• ~avr1111 clatinS, •14>1111 "This next \\'eek \.\'C are going to do a lot o( practice starts against George Hinman in hopes of sharpening up in this department. This should help us a g a i n st the Mickey hold s kilo and fivt mile competition records in lhc 850 cc hydro class. set in .1963 and 1962 respectively in Henry Eastman's Piranha. In the 225 hjidropl ane class: he holds the r<.1arine Stadium Competition records, \Vhich \\'ill be up for grabs again on Labor Day. Remuryd will also be driving Fox and \Voire's The Going Thing in the rive Liler hydro class in an effort 10 break the new Stadium record set by Dick Powell on Labor Day in Aquaholic. Lt. Scott Alle11 Wi11s Pull!isnf<I Dr•n11e Co1sl D4llv Pll<!1, me. 1 Nollr'f Public •n and tor lht Mid the Sird dec~nt ar1 rlfQul(ed •Mnl!lo AUPU•I 11. 19, l6 and Septem~1 . .Jo County afl<I Stille'. re~idif\9 tl\l'rei11, dul'f tlll'm, wrlh !he necns1rr vouch•rs. ill lt10 commlnianea and ~worn, per..,Nlll'f ao-111• Office ct ll'lf clerk of Ille .a.tiove LEGAL NCYnCE Pta•N lll CMAAO A, CAILLOUETTE 111d en!l!lfll court, or ro orest'lf"jlht'"• ~ ERNEST KANZLER. ~-n 1(1 me lo be With 11\e 11e<:e•sary VGUChefs; •tc the Jay Linderman of the Bal-Aus.tralians. boa Yach! Club captured the ~an and .t.1:cullough Abalone Triangle Race held ha\e offered . Ficker t ~ e Saturday at the Voyagers services or. Valiant as a trial l\ilickey has held sever;il other hydro records in his 12- yea r racing career, and was elected to the Gulf Marine Hall of Fame in 1963. In I.hat same year he drove for f\1ickey Thompson in the 1ndy 500. running ninth. 1--------------1 th• pe rll>l\S wno~ name1 a•e •uDS<rlbed untret1i9ned Al Don.aid E, W1nll&w' .. loe /o U S D h C fl·3140t lo Ille w!!hln l11•l•U'"tnt. and 1c-now1ea1-Par~er & ~ttlv. Attorne» 11 Liw, • • Ute ,nan ro"' 'vn CEllTll'ICATE OF l!IUSINES$ td to me lhi1 1htv •~tc1Ued 1he Sil'"C· 981 N. M~ln Street. Suite !'\!• S1nl1 (, FICTITIOUS NAME In W!!fltSs WhfrfGf, I have htrt!1111to Sfl An1, C1lifornl1. 92101, whit~ •lo. tM T~e 1tnderolt <ltd dots c~rtllv he Is Cl)ll. '"V heno eno .•Ul~eC mv _oft!(.lal ll1•1 !he ~lace cl Duiinen ol fllt Ullderfl,.,~d Yacht Club. h~~se starling .next \\'eek . Other top finishers were ; .And .w~ will also look ~I 2 d B .1 Gold" J h thei r sail mventory to see 1( n on1 a -1e osep 1 · th' d " Lido Ist'.111.d Yacht Club . ~;~~e y\~k:~.y ing we nee · 3rd N1k1 II -John Kin kel The only sailing Ficker and BCYC his crew expect to do the rest 4th Photon \V. S · of lhis week is for tuning both Williamson SSSC masts. l\tORF-SYRF "So if anything happens to Winner -Bluelin -~d our No. I mast ou1· No. 2 mast Feo ABYC. Ydl\ be ready ," he explninr.d. 2nd Twist 11 -Andy He said the boat will be 1.forthland -NHVC hauled th is weekend for 3rd Black Jack Jny bottom palntmg. Cannon -SSSC "Nexl week we 11'ill rcsun1c Seaman ol Year ll a cc ('rew practice and tuning. \Ve Sunday COsponsored by Lido will haul again just befj)re th e tsle Yacht Club and Voyager's races for a general cle11nu p. Yathl Club Ficker said he has had no \\rinner -\\'ind Child -L.ee chance to see Gretel II under Armstrong Voyager's Yacht sail. Club -~ As lo Jim l!ardy: ''I have 2nd -Niki II John Kinkel never sailed against him and BCYC know very little about his Bul like all the expert drivers of SCSC. Remund's firsl and best love. is boal rncing. and he and his compelition \viii be out ln force on Labor Day. The in t er mi ssio n program will be a dis play of trick aod bare(ool skiing by the Marine Stadium Leech Club. - Yacht Viclor PLYMOUTH, England (AP) -Harold Cudmorl' of Ireland c:rpturcd the iieoond leg of the World 505 Class yacht cham- pionship ?-.1onday from the fleet of 80 dinghies from 19 countries, Chris Boome of the United Stales was 12th. DUTCHMAN CHAMP Lt. Scott Allan · ... IN FrXINTNN VAU£Y .•• 11~1tES •SURf'RtSES ~B~~ GM.Oil! WArc.ff ff'dlt Ollit B I G-~f)OPIN//'Kr AP .' CIH:ling a buiine,1 al Ol WtM 19th S!tttt, d•'f and Year'" this ctr!lf1c1tt llrst •bo~t in 1!1 matters oer1fnlnq 1(1 tn. ••!•It LI Scott Allan, former CM!,. Mn ... C1li!orni1 Yt>dtr In. t1c11licvs wril!en. ot •aill dtctden!, wl!l'li11 10\H' ;"-1111, · firm 111me ol MAC .lollT COMP.I.NY 1ncr (OFFICIA.!. SEALl 11tt• 1he first PUbliCl!lon of this ()OVCJ. J·unior c h a m pi 0 n from 11111 s11<1 firm Is (omPOSed or It>& IOI· ''' Sl'llrle'f . M. o~wn~ oated .-.u11u11 1, 1t10. • lowlnt l>frscn. whose 01..,. lo full llld i~'"''f Put>lo<: · Cal1farn11 Oona ld E". W1rdlow 1 .•,. Newport Jlarbor Yacht Club Pl1ce o1 rtsld...,ce 1, •• 10llGW1: Pr111C11>11 Otlice in Aom1~111rer.,,. et 111, Es\8tt . ' Oerin!s Mlcnael Mcl(l~ney, '642 Les Af>ltl!IH ~~ll"!Y o! !II• above Mmed dfatfe~f• and nOW Sailing for the LJ S Vel6r<IO D•ive, Hunlif1!11on Beach. Mv Com'"1ssron E•1>1te1 l'•rk•r • ~eetv, ' ;J~. ' • Ci11iforllill. Jyllf 4, 197' IU N. M11n $1:, S11i1t tot , NO"y won the n 3 t i 0 n a I 0.1.., Ay.gusl )S n10 c:11111ut1111 111d Fl•ld!IOU•" S1nt1 An1, c1111 .. n101 •l)O • ' Denni• M, 'Mc K•n!ev A~Mll'."l II Llw Ttl : (114 ) S•7·tSO! . j _ championshi p in the 18 loot state el calilorn11 i.o. w1111111r S<11111fe. Attorn1'f1 lot Admlnlll••lo~ · , O••llP~ Count'( lHU !111 11..,11 ~!r"'t, Publl~hea Ora11~e Cc~st O.iJV.' Pllct, Flying Dutch man class in a on AuQu'1 25, iwo. 11eie•~ '"e. • Netarv Whittle!'. C•llfof111a '°'°2 . Au11us1 u, 10. 26 1nd senrtmbtr ;, Publf( In a~d for 'oli<I St•I~. «roQ11111y PubHslltd Or1not Co1~• OilllV Pilot, 1t10 ... 70 series of nine races over the 01>r>t"••C'd Dtn11li Mic11ae1 McKinley --Auousr 26 •t>d Sl"lltem1>er i. 9, t6, , ,i: to m~ ta be the perl(>n whCIStl nam• 1, 1910 1™'10 LEGAL NOTICE -past week. JUbSCtllled •a '"' witnln lnstrumel\! Ind LEGAL NOTICE . -. or. ackt'lllwledged he e•«.uled tl\e s.eme. BAii 1•t2 \Vith Ensig n Dan Rugg, the lDFFIC IAL SEAL) SUPERIOR: COUll:T OF THIE Joseph E. Oovls P·Jl'UJ srATE OF 1970 Naval Academy varsity Nolarv Publlc·CalllGtf\1• CEltTIFICAT E OF BUSINESS, THE ,, .. ,':,LIFORNIA FO~ .• .''"'' .. I O<<<<o <o " , OF ORAltG5 ''• t I th ~ FICTITIOU$ NAME No. A-46SS7 . • cap an, as crew on e 0r11~9e counw Tne \llldtr1111ne11 do tertl!y lhe'( CCII· NOTICE OF HEARING l'ETiTi0·1t'•To II f Mv Comrnl'lllOf\ E~Olffl ducting I b\BlfltSI 11 MlS A<l•ms, Hun• CONVEY REAL l'llOPEltTT '• , trapeze. young A an de cate<I Ju<11 11, 1~1~ 11n11ton s11c11, C•llfor11<1. ut>der 1111 lie· E•t•te 01 EOGAR · Publl~ o·~~llt C0&11 01i\'f P1lol, l<llou5 llrm name GI SAV·MOR .8EAUTY Otcc~Std B. WIT.ME R. 42 boats in the dififcult AUllU!ll ,~ and Seole'"~r l. t, 16. SUPPLY co .• and !ha• S•IO firm Is NOTICE: IS MERE8Y GtV!:fi """' OJ m . 1.1. 1910 ls&.1·10 com1>c"ed ol thl lollow!110 Pt!!'SClllS, whose HAA:RIETT E F WI TMER Ille E ' y p1c compe 11011. names In lu!I ind P!ICfl GI relldl1!c:t ol '"' t•IJ~ ~I .EOGAA: e' WITM~~lrl>: The · C td I d II LEGAL NOTICE 111 '' loLIQWll . dtce~~11!, 1'11\ filed 11ere111 ii ot11!'••·•"".~ series, 01 UC e o ~ ,~Clbert L. l911111us. 7tt2SG M011no1t1, o•<lfot 1u1nor11l11J1 al'ld dlrtcling t~e·E"ec:~: Buffalo, N.Y .• round all t)·pes fl.Ja33't ----HUlll<f\g!On B•och. ,,,~ ot lhe estlllf O! thr ot<> .. 11im:ed -Ct:llTIFICATE OF COlll'Oll AT IOM FOil G.lorll "Rtn" IOf\lllu~. Xl:150 Mtooolle, Cedtn1 IC sell !111! Qr<>Perl'( d~crlbtcL bthlw of v.·eafher with the fin al day TllANSACTION OF llU$1Nf:S$ UNDt:I: ~,lf\oton 8eicf\. to (;RACE c. ST~ELE,. widow, I~ toftl-. FICTITIOUS NAME Jtck T. HfPt+9. 11126' Lant1111 Or .. Pliarn:t wnn lllt ltr'"1 OI Ille Wf'Jlltn sailed in a near gale that THE UNOERS!GNEO CORPORATION Hunnno•en Beach. a9reement ta 1e11 '"" ourt~•.e e"""ed doe• h&rffl'f cerllf'f lllel u I• concructlnt 1 Fk>•tl\Ct P, He~Ho. :xtlM L•11llflt Dr .. Info bl' ~ti"ilenl 1,. 111, ll!etlme, 11!Q iier allowed only 17 of the 42 Mines.a tocat..i al 1n West 16th S1tllt!, Mu11t1n111Cll' Be.ch. at !~ on u11<1!vlc1et1 -·half 1 .. r.,.et1 .,,... la t t f. , h II New"°rl .&Heh (P.O. eo~ U'l(IJ, Oiied Au9usl S, 1910 WILLIAM BRllOLEY WITMER,.," lier s r ers O 1n1s . A an score<! c11i1orni1 9166) ullde< lhr flctl!IOus 11rm ~r!':~' ~· 11:::/~ '" ~n ulldivlded on.-na11 1n1ere1t • .J: bt three firSIS. (\\"O seconds a ~ame GI (I Fr111Clll1e Annual 11) N~· Florence ' P. Hftllig tlie ll\lfCh .. wr n1..,.d htrtlt>, 15 bu'f.,., •t>d I , d , ' l•onaf Fr1nch!Jt Reiioorll ilno !hel said J•Ck T H~ll• tf\e pellllen ~II• been 1,11 '!" ""'rlni 111 t nr and a fourth 1n the best llr<•• 11 (OMPCllffl o! !he IQll11Wln11 CG•· STATE OF cAt.IFORNIA 1 ,. O~•rlment l GI ·~ tD<!VC·ent llltd Court of seven races for a con ·"isteot PO•a•lon wl'IO$e 1>t111Clt>111 111•ce ot busl11tss COUNTY OF ORANGE 1 u e~ 111, 111n tt•v ot !>tlliemlll!r 1970 •t •:JO . S ls il1 tollows: G CIO<k om .• !0<.ittd ~I 7f10 Civic ce"l~f h1gh average in hi!) blue llURTO ~ PUl!.LI SHLN(; CO RPORA· On IA_U,U!ll 5• NHt'fl, ~IO~,k ~e, !~ Ortva Wt~!, 5i1n!I An1, C~llforl\ll , ' TION, "' Wr.n 16111 Sltll'tl, t.'eWllOfl wnde<~ • 8 Cl .,.,. y I n Ind The •till Pr-r!y to "' !.Ollt 1, \Vooden hulled •• c h e I s ea BellCl'I, C111.tornl1. fl)r !tie 111!d Slate, 1>1rs-ll~ •llPeared descrlbl'd •• lollow•; ' . ~1orning" sloop WITNESS 1t1 h•nd 11111 !l!h div 01 J.cl<. T, HePll1 known 10""' 10 Ile 1l'le . Oof!ce<1e111·s inttre" tn 1111 tr1.zield . . ' Au•u5t, lt10 11erS0<1 wllo&e n.'lm.$ 11 SUDSC•!l>e<I IO !lie estate In •Ml IO LOI I ol T"t(:t'N~·2ou. Bob James of Virginia the (CorPOrale se,.11 w11t1111 l111trume,.1 •lld K-nowttdoeo P'le '' l"°"'n"" d mao rtcordea 111 s_.. s1. l=o USA OJ . . ' BUllTON PU"Ll~MIN(> lllt<:vled lf\t u'"'· Paoe 50 ot MIS<"l•-.ii MIPI .-cl• iJUO ympic entry \l/aS CORPORAT ION (OFFICIAL SEAL) ol Otante.CGUntv, C~ll•or11I•' cfNted b'f s"""nd and defend" g I 9 6 9 JNn Jurk~. JO'fCI L. Odgurd lhll cerlo1n Le.se da!td NGvtrf\bef 11, ~ .. ., ' · in As•lllonl Sec•t!•r.,. Nolin< Publk.C8lt!orn1• 1•s•, execu!ed by Tiie 1rv1roe c~11'f USA champion Chris Chatain STATE OF CALIFORNIA. Or•nve C011nlv • • _co•.-•tk>l'I. aJ Lcuo• ~lld wn1r."' s'. f Cl . . COUNTY Of' OR.-.NGE, "· Mv Comm!ulon Exolfn W+lm~t •lld E't!\er B Wilm11r h11>boond 0 ucago was third. In the on 11111 111~ di v at Awus•. A.O. 1•10. -'Prll 14, 1913 •no w11,, as 1o1n1 1ef..n11, o11i-1.;~,. open series l·lans Fogh of be!ore me JoMPh E. DaYll , No•••v $TATE OF CAL IFORNIA l •ecor"'"<! o.ce'"bl'' 3. ns.., 111 , f llQlo. Pulll<( In Ind lor u.i<I Cwnlv 11\d Stiote, I 1s MU. Pt1e 'OJ. ot!l~111 R.Coris' ol Dcn1nark \\'(IS winner by a rttldh'll 11\efelf\. durt comml\Jlol\fll '"" COVNTY OF LOS AWGf!l:ESJ Dr~"'" Counly, C•ll10tn111, hfld 1,. It'll I • ls he twor11, -JOMllY •-•I'd Je111 Ju•lch On A111Nll $. lf~. before ,,,.. t!lt' un. ~'"I ol WJlll11m IHIC!lt'f Wllrntt' lt>d TillrfOW WO p()1n tlVer t known lo mt lo lie 1111 A1•l"111t SiCrOll,., 0...&11i111td, 1 Notarv Public 1,. •nod tor EdQlt er..-rle'f Wllmtr •t l&l'Ml~b !11 USA team of Allan and Ru gg ot ,,,. e<:irr>Cllll~ 111•1 ••e<Ultt Ille Mid Sll!e, """""811'( lllPtired RObeft L <ornmon •• IG an Ul'tdfvll'ltd dl'lalf Th, h . · wllllln klltru'"!Hlt Oft O*h•!! Cl! Ille CO<'• 1t11ell111, Glofll I', l9,.,.!1t!1. Flo•tn« ~· l~•fT'-11 I~ e~cf\, , IS wa s l O USA collegiate OOt"•tlOfl IJ'ltr•111 111meo. '"" ec:knowiw. Mt11tfll, know~ to .,.. IO 11e 111t P,,.011• 11:~.ttr~e 11 ""•<Se to 111t Hli!lon 1111 1111 champion as varsity captain eel to m• Illa! •uch (Of'llCl"•Uo11 •~tevttd ...,,_ nAmts ••• MK•llled to lhe .. 1n.1 lle•t•11 '°' tur111e, Pari1cu11•1. • . , • • lht llrnl In Wftllb1 W'!lfrtol, I P'llVI )l\ill'lli'nof'll ll'td ack"°""lldted lo ""e 111ai OA TfD: AutUll U. ltTO at USC 1n 1968 and defeated ""'~'Q "'' "'' 11•t111 illd •lll>:td my ot• 111t1 e>:ec ttc1 ,,,. -0v ....... c-nte• e!'ld e1rrrn . !ICl•1 1e1! 11\t d-AY Ind fftr l11 this u · ' 8'f· Er111: 1 J SCll J American Clip skipper BUI clfllllc:lll 11'11 •boYe wr!t!tti, !OFFICIAL SEALl A110tfll' ''1or. .,, 1• Ficker In the New p~ r t <OFF1cj~e11t'~~101 .. 11 w1TN~~~:;o"~~s:::'iA~1K1,1 w•1. ou1v1;~~~~;l;E'°:;~~~~No • '•Ml• tongresslnn11l Cu i) elimina-NoMr'f Pvblk-Call!lll'llll • No.~·· P11Dhc.C1ll!or1111 •v E.llNfST J. S(HAO, JR " • Prlll(INI Otlltl tn PtillClt:lll 0111« In •lJS M•cArtlluf Beul v rf • lions aJ Allan went on to a °''"" c"""'' • Loi An111i11 <:°"'"'" ~. o. eox 11.. ' • Congrtssional Cup \Vin as Mv COlll'"lri~ro~ e~•·rn M'f eon:m1111on lx111tt N"'"'' •••t11. c•Htorn11 ""' II I . J-21, IWA A1><1. IT1 1t10 Ttlt"'91'1t 1111) JJ7 "'°' we . He looks ike a good bet f'Wl lilled Or11111t1 Co.•~ 0en, 1111o1. Pubnlhttr Or•"" cw~r t11t1, 1111ot, An.,.,...,, fol' l•ec~r•·flt!ltlen•~ for the 19'12 Olympics A119u•1 ''· ,. •"'° S.11!11!1Def 2· '· A~1 IL 1t, ·2' etr0 · *'tmlie• 1, Put111l111111 Orin•• Cotil o.ur 1111111• • 1'10 IJ.16.1' IP10 lltJ.lQ $e11ttl'f\1111' l, t T, 19'° W»-11 . ·-·. b • al d ll • .: Jo OI : e: • • u ol d! e1 IT dj pl pi ., e: si tr " p. IT Ji· ir I> SI OI ir le tt Jr. di nt .;1 Jr. OI ls tt .ct N ~ ~ c 0 ii • y • ~ ,, ? • .~ • d ' u s c -1 r I r ' ' ( ' l t 1 ' t t l ·, I ., " ········~·· ..... ,, , .. ------.,...--·-.--------------. -------·--- J!. PILOT-AOV!.'RTISER ·Diabetes ::..Comes in .Two Kinds lly Dr. Peter Stebier®.a Dear Dr: SW!iDcrob: I've bttn told I bave dlabe&.ts. I asked my doctor for a diet 1hetL Not oaly am I not OD a d~t, but I don't even bave lo take insulin. · "lm't &bat peculiar? l\.ty only 1ym p te m 1 are that I'm ei:ttemely tb.lraty ud pass a lot , ot artne. I fed fine olJlenrlle. He's so busy J baven1t boibertd to ask ll1m--to : e:splala. qe preacr1be4 IOJ't of ~ a powder tbat .I'm 1opposed to DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE tnlff,a few tlm~ a day. It's a 1Iand medicine, but be says It bas nothing to do wltb the sugar in my blood. Could you ~lease explala? -Mrs. F. COMMENT: I'm guessing that you have the "other kind" of diabetes. This is called diabetes insipidus ; it is · entirely different from the ' more common type we call diabetes mellltus. In each kind p[ diabetes there may be predominant symptoms such as excessive thirst a n d exce~iVe urination. But the similarity usually stops there. In diabetes mellitus, the trouble is in the insulin· secreting apparatus in. the pancreas, or in the suga r mobilization function of the liver, or some other difficulty in keeping the blood from becoming overloaded w i th sa_gar. Such p'atients need to be put on special diets and often 'need insulin or some other medicine to N!gutate the blood sugar so that 'it stays within normal limits. With good care, such 'diatieuc patients can live i!Onpal lives. "But in the less common kind Or· ·diabetes (di a be te s insipidus) the trouble doesn't originate in the pancreas. but is due to some inefficiency in tbe pituitary gland. No special . diet is necessary . · :ifhe medicine you a r e srititlng is probably an extract Of ·posterior pituitary gland material. This can also be taken by hypode r mic injection. It :won controls excessive thirst and urination. :~ether he's busy or not, Mrs. F., I think your doctor will be glad to take a minute Q.r two to explain ur coodftion. Patients often nd over too far backwards · try- ing' t.0 save the doctor' itme, and go on for mo hs and years .not really kno g \vhat ·a~ them. Just ask hi "\Vhat J(~ ~f diabetes have got?" ' ']dEDICALETTF.S (Replies to"Reader1) ' ·. Dear Dr. Stelncrohn: t am '1 1 years old. I have a lot or Ps and bloaUng after mea ls. 'En\i when I am on a bland diet, I fill up after a rew swhllirw:t. \Vhen the gas builds qp I get pain between my shoulder blades aud in my chest. I feel fine otherwise. · What kind of doctor would ~u suggest that J see? I havt:D't had an examination in mJUIY.'years. -Mrs. O. COMMENT: tr you have a ''°"Uy doctor, see him. 11 nol, mfke an appoiniment with sOrTie internist. With your 'S}inptoms It is likely that examination will include a study of your gall bladder and h eart (with electrocardio- grams). Ir'ihese are negative, prttbably you will have J rays ol your stomach and intestines. too. · Bloating and gas are ,trick is to discover their qrigln. . ' .. For Mrs. _A.: As your • hUsband is not incapacitated by his emphysl!ma and dreads lhe fong drive by car, ask his ·doCtor if a plane trip wouldn't be preferable:- Commercial planes a r e pressurized for breathin g • comfort. They , also carry reserve supplies or oxygen if ·neOded. With few exceptions t've ·always believed that plane travel is better suited to heart etnd lupg patients than long, enervaUng auto trips. ll you have a , ~eight problem, send for D r . Steincrohn's n1ost informative booklet1 "\Vatch Your Diet Because Fat Cnn Kill You:'' EnClose a stamped se.lf·a<l· dreased envelope and 25 cents to cover cost of handlin&, in · ca11 of th1t newspeper. I .• Wtdl'tfsday, Septembff Z, 1970 • • HAVE YOU VISITED OUR NEW STORE AT: 5881 WARNER AT SPRINGnALE 'IN HUNTING TON BEACH Alu111lnu111 Patio Ch.air · .DISCOUNT· NICI Li oh< b"' "~dy, $3 2 8 poli1htd hi•1tr•n-o ath •lU11inuJ1 tlbirc ' fr-with 5114114 colorful webbinc.• full •ile, folds c~t ly. Fie1ta •b O.i1e $5.99: 774 Charcoal Briquets 10 Lb. Bag SBC ''Aloha'' Pack of 4 884 Eveready Batteries · 1D' Cell 68c $]3" s-1b. 1cry11c Sleeping Bag 0 ffJ99 Comfort p I u 1· In a 36x80" b o g wi th o 100" MPQtot· Ing :z lpp•r. Cotton flonntl _lining. Mutlcolor Print Beach Towels Multicolors on white. s1 s1 34x62" super rough ply. Regular 98' Men's Straw Hat Sale Styl11 for .veryons, 77• Including Ploritotion. Cool, lightw1lght. Happe 'Wet Look' Vinyl Pfmic lag Insulated bogs In col· $1 ff orlul vinyl prints. Zip- per closure.· l n1tomo tlc 1 COmeta, Kodo- c h rom• film, • botterla , corry c a 1 •. lnttruc:- tlon book. Save $22.53. Canada Dry Soft Drinks 11...0Z. CANS 12i~1°9 ='=:J Super 8 Imm Film '474 Yaluel • ..!:.i"":; s2•1 f12" South lend Spin Outfit ••• blllllr ....... ... . ........ , .... "" ........ , ... l #T•t ..... $999 Rod hos n- i mp r o v•d rHI Mat. ~Double l(lantle Coleman ·Lantem So.-!• I 00' ,;~I• s 13•• of light. Montie' lost -4 times o' long . Deluxe 2-lumer Coleman Stove Hold• • b;g pan•. s 17•• Hinged ste•I rod · grot•, lid hinge. 12112.1n. Big Boy Portable 1-1-Q H•ovy gouge stHI $344 bowl, chrome plated ' adJustobls grill, $1 St C I F I Gallon 874 Y1lael 0 eman Ue Can ........ 274 Snap Swivels ~~1.n .. . . ..124 85 4 ( rf . Tanning lutt•r-664 Y1lutl Oppe One Ill Ounce ..... $1 ~:1• Solarcaine Lotion : •• ~~~'.~ .884 89' Peanut 63 4 Spanish Brittle Peanuts By Cameo l l'z Pounds 6ftc Salted 4• 7 Pound Bag . 7 Thrlfty's Own Hark off Vodka Quart $349 You co n't·buy a fint! vodka ot tJny pric,. IN telll1'19'1 In the to1tir'IQI. Try It todoy! Golden Grai11 12 Pak leer 12 o .. $149 No R•turn lottl• King Edwiard Imperial Cigars loxofSO $269 Amer ica's most popular 7c cJoorl 19' Lifelike Flowers •IMI FollG90 G 10 d s, roses, carnations, clol51es, m ums, marigolds, ond more ouotted fotiogtli that will Io st Indefinitely, -stoy frtsh looking. In beau. tilul colorful plastic, s1•• Decorator . .. Sofa Pillows ·"""~• Acetates with a ''Silk Look" • Cotton Cordana Kapok fllled, multl· color stripes, pr!nis : ood solk:l1 •.. ploi11 or with woolen tas- sels. 1Ax14'' fin- ished. Durable, long w•or- ing. /Vv:Jny designs! Mods tn ttw U.S.A. by o famous moktr. s100 ea. 1411 V1luel 81 ID!! 9 Plctu:!!!~'! 'd.f~~ COmlngw1r1 R1v1nn1 1111111 &laUWlrt '. • $244 • Lov•ly giftwor• In blue, omb e r or gfff!'I. Cholc9 of pitch1r, decont•rt. .. $2H •. ~ Stt Closs lea I Sparilih. !aucepori ond cover. 2 ip Sporiish Boroque, Se1 consists of 11qt.*12" 11 11 4 ••• SJ.99· petite 22 ounce pons, , ...... $4.44 Aut.,.ritlcolly dt· tolled . , • ntw os• tor1rri1nt of 1970 modll1, 'I 4• 8 Ff, Llnol111m Roll 9-7" wide, 6 fHt long , 99' Cholu of pott•m,. • 1300 Value Rope l!l•I Ph1Upp!M rope mot .•. $269 thick, rugged ond Mlle diamond Wt(I~, 1 Rustic pr i n t s on m irro r tn gold-tone fl ome. Nedn,sday, S'pt@mbtt 2, 1970 DAIL V PILOT Z$ _$4'1 Permanent Press ft.,Striped Shirts CollfOm la foshioried l?ng IAYl 'IHYe .ahlrta of l'IO·lrori 50C)b tit polV91st1 r & 50% rayon. l ong 3 _p::ilnt or conv1rtlble collar, 3. $ 99 b...tton barrel cuffs. light or 1 dork multlcolor stripes, Si11s • . J2.J8. Women 's llrlon Shells s2•1 Classic l"•I or crew l"IKk 'ty 1. . Short Sleeve Women 's Fleeced Shirts $1fl Solo ..... Hi;h crew NCk. Loni SIHYI Wo1111n's Polrnttr J ops $2'' Te)(tur9d or Skinny Rib stitch. Women's Polyester Twill Panh $5•1 "' INO Ol<>gol"IOls twill• with 8 dortt for flt. S t t•ln waistband. $248 & f2" Boys' ,Westem Jeans e s199 I Pe Would Soll for $5.951 I Support Panty Hose e Slight Jrregs, of o famous brand. Shier, long wtorlr\q, llghtw1ight · •{ in Short. Medium, Long fr btro \ lOl"IQ , _. latest fashion "shades. '2'7 "Wet Laok" ca Jinder & Tott • Both $199 fer · H•ov y duty • ''"Y'""'" flora de1lgn. 54' & 694 Pack of 200 Fiiier PaDer J;H ... Liile L-' . ----ww • ., c.r ........ ... Tyit1111 ,.,... . · ci:~!e. 43c Full sli.e, 8 !l.t x 11 ". 984 Theme Book s•u•" """ ··774 Falhlonabl ...... ClipMate Binder ~::;:: ....... 51 '' 29' Tuck Cello Ta e ::~1!:~.194 3-Ring Vinyl Binder ~~~:~: .. 984 89' Pack of 21 Pencils :~,1 .. 594 .Desk Lamps Hl·lnt1tu6ty Foldup A rm styles. s3•• Economical to u s • • . •. ton •v•n be hurig ori wo11: Norelco Shaver Trip.I• H•4 ffeturet 3 lhov· ing heods with 18 cuttlrig eel- 98i Val111I H1zel Blsllop • Ylt1 ll1H I 34' -Fto1t1d 1hode1, clea r tr noturol. Ht !pS 11op spliiting, chipping of nolls. 12il Min Cl1lrol Sll1mPff Formul1 G s1•• Clotrol't ho lr coloring ahem~ formula ot big sovinos In SPIClol off91. Personal Radio SolW- Windsor instont $744 sound AM radio, Powerful 1p1ok1r. f411 Travel Alarm ... ,. . .., .. Rourod or s quor•I Browri, Block, Red, others! Covered with $39' viriyl, hard plastic cloth. I o 1z41 V1lutl F1ufflt1i Tr1wll sr rt.11 Tiii 99' l lT Cotty co .. fM trovtl. I at QUO- Uty. Sov1 more than vw PoY. T • ' ' 1 ' -...,-~~----~-~~·,,.,......,,--.,--------~--------------r~. -~--------------·-~-·--' • DAILY PILOT Wtdnt~. Sfptembtr 2, l 970 TV DAILY LOG '~~~.:o~~~" ~:~k:~~?~~-~o: v~~e~,J everybody scrambling for the lensive periods of work. how Clrs are constructed. l . • NEW VOil!< iUPIJ -Glenn dwindling s t o c k P 11 e of At the same time the Vlce Presi~ent Bill Leon rd Ford makes his television ac-i{ollywood product is buslly photography is carefully plan-says the unusual Jength iS a et's Ptt " £ddit Is t~aseit by hii t ing debut i n ' 'Th e filming its own. ' ned to give the illusion that tribute of· sorts to com- W ED N E SDAY tl•Nma!ts bectuse his fathtr Is Brotherhood of 4 Uie BCIJ," a This is being done by a what is on the screen is lush merclals which have over the d1!in1 1111 te1cf\er. Ann Prantf» d hi h ~· s d I ped t hn' suuts. suspense rama w c ¥1".:n subs idiary, Cinema Center JOO. and expensive. Adler thinks years, eve o a ec 1que the liixth season o{ the Thurs· Arter a recent preview of "The Brotherhood of the Bell" of transmitUng ideas in very. SEPTEMBER 2 mn. MM< (CJ < 30 > day night movies on CBS-TV, ''The Brotherhood of the Bell" .. is a good example of what he short periods of Ume. Young illll Crilde lien co.di <JO) Sept. 17. Gerald L. Adler. vice presi· means. To make allowances people brought up on com- 1·05 (ID It• lntlflltioul lt7D (60) The networks always launch dent of the production com-for the small screen· as many mercials can more quickly ' P•lltltito Gomez vs. F11n•i• Amano. !hi · t · J lh rilnl series with good, solid, pany, spoke or the ·nking scenes as are possible are shot grasp a pie or1a message an 1:00 1J lie Nm (CJ (60) Jtrry Dunphy. 1:30 IJ 9 (!) IMrif ttillbBliu (C) proven Hollywood product so .behind the program. with the' actors in closeup. adults -so he says, • (30) (RJ Shifty Sh1fer return' to h . f f t T f · · b · I t Bevedy Hiiis to lleece tht Clim· the c 01ce 0 a new ea Ure C ev1s1on O VIOUS r canno "This sort of production, a O ll:NBC lftww,.ict (C) (60) Tom Sn~er. 0 CIR Tou l09 This? (C) (30) Monty Hall, Soupy Silts •nd Marer Amslerdam, auesl. 0 Si1 O'Cllld Movie: (CJ "Sin· Oe11" (drama) '64-Richaid Todd. Marianne Koch. Vivi Bich. Alber! Litven. Pollet lnspec!or Sanders es· corts 1 a:lamorous woman dodo1 froro 1n African port to her new djties at 1 re"!olt medical outpost. Q Abbot 1tld c.tello (CJ (JOJ ID Tiit flintstones (CJ IJOJ ID Sbu Trtk (C) (60) @ (jJ ABC Ennln1 News (CJ (30) ED What'1 Ntw (JOJ pens. f'tlil Silven cinsts. movie made specifically lor spend the m.oney a !tlm tom-cross between film making 1J tlll•pian$hip Witstlin& (C) television for th at distinction pany could m th~ clays when and lclevisjon programnling, l90J Ftituied art The Gr1h1m is something <Jf a first. Hollyw~ dominated t h e is coming into its own this Brother,, Dr. J11ry 1nd am,, fred· Like its respected corn-v.·orld film market, so Adler year" Adler said die: 8!1ssie, eow, ~0Jim 8y1rs •nd petitors, CBS is placing great said the CBS product has to be Th• 't be. t any Soul M•n Roe 1,., nson. reliance on films in the new meticulously prepared, to fit ~ ooder~ can f r"ch·1mldren 0 @ (I) CB Roo111 Z2Z (CJ (30) r:-. · • ht f k hoot' g programs o (R) "I Love You, Ch1rlle, I Love season -Thursday and 1' ri-into a llg ·. ive-wee s. i~g and CBS-TV has an idea for You, Abbie." Pete 01.lon and Liz :::d:•:Y::''::'::tl:1e=m:o:v:ie=n=ig:h:IS=,o:n=sc=h:ed:u:f:e:u:s:1n:g=e:xpe::.:n:s:":'=b:igr Saturday morning that may Mcintyre ire Invited to be best alleviate some of the cri ticism min ind m1id of honor for IWO" tlopln1 students. Biad 01vid ind --that it is too ofte given over Klthleen Llnyd iuest. !{WJ]!@L I D O ~ AT THI INTlANCf to trivia by the net ks. Five (D Dwid rrm Sllow (C) (90) TO FAIULOUS limes every Saturda m RNI TIHl'I k1nntdy (C) (60) I ing, starting Sept. 12, Joe Simon. Abbie Dalton, Jtc~le MEWPO llT 8EAClf • OR.l·IJ3~[) LI DO ISLE broadcast two and Curtis 1utst minute "mini-documentaries" fD Enn in1 11 P09s (CJ (60) The E X C L U S I V E called "Jn the Know." Romeros.. lour 1uitiri5ts from Spain, 1 Jn the first weeks viewe rs '" featured. will see what keeps gliders in m fish« f1mily (30) the air' watch a 'glass blower 'Bell, Book' Ca st Listed The Weslminster Communily Theater will open its new seaSOYJ with John Van Drulen·s "Bell, Book and Candle," a comedy o l contemporary witchery. Director Glen Eckenroth has stepped into the leading role of the show, turning the directorial duties over to Judith Car r. Lindy Orlow lakes the feminine lead or a young girl with occult powers. ~ (]) cas Nelfl'I {CJ (JOJ €I:JOWHth/Musiu 1e (CJ (30) 0> DEIUT lnt1i11 (JO) Oram1. ED W1nderlust (C) (30) m '"'" dt last Estr•ll•s (30) a) liatlop!n1 Gourmtt (C) (JO) Grilllm Ke11. EE Sonri111 (Cl (30) al \vork, go pearl diving in I 1torr"'a joa" l>o1• •JO• co··''." . ~R h k. f th ':00 11 ,o;;,,'a'Medical tenter (C) Japan .sef;!tewor1ngso e ~~ ~log~lfi.tie • ritl,;oho••M • J"'""-~d"• ~ (60) (R) A wt1lthr publisher fences I · · ) OtherS in the We stininster cast are Alice Reich, Ralph Orlow and John Phillips. 6:20 rlJ@ Wtllb_tr 'CJ Mara:e Stiles. 6:30 0 Vlra:inia Crtliam SlllW (CJ (60) .lo Anne Worley. Ruth Hana:en, Ce· ur Romero, Gloria l orine ind Louis Niler euest. Or. Joe Gannon lo face I medical I ·technicolor®rrom warner bros. '\· ,,. .. ·.-_eff···_-~,,~.,-·~,. board for vlol1tin1 the hosplt1/ ii"4 a>d1. C1rl Betz euttls. Mori. tllru Frl. sllowri ot 6:30-9:45 O ID@ m11:rattMusKtt1H(C) 1 , tS630 9 45 {60) British musH: hill star Des 1 Sat.-7 and 10:30 S•-: • : • : O Candid Cl111f1 (30) O'Connor weltomes auest~ Dani lii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I Valery. '.'11 Doonic1n and Roy Castle • lfaye Ballard 1bo auests. 0 @@ riD Tbt £•1fl1 l1otllen iC) (60) Rick Nelson, Tht Carter family, MtrrilN Rush ind Cl1i1 & McMahon auest. t\1e-rne:sa m Qj (j) MJ f1woritt M1/tiH (30) lflJ (})Perry Muoft (60) QJ @ NIC Ni1htlJ Mews (C) (30) ED Law for tilt '10s (CJ (30) €I:J '•tt111 lo.-Livln1 (30) iil Notici•e 34 (C) (60) fE Tho Desert Report (C) (30) Kim M1rriner. CI!) Santa Roll de l11Ra (30) CB A World AjHrt (C) (30) 7:00 8 CIS Ennin1 Htws (C) (30) Walter C..Onkitt . €I:JOwtrudi/filt11 {C) (30) • El) Box Oe Mtlico (60) a!) N111d11 (60) 9:30 0 Q) Ntn (CJ (JO) I ED Thirteen A11inst filt (60) ''The Son.~ When 1 17·yeu-otd boy seb out to !ind what drove his father lo suicide. he urn:~en some un· pleasant l•ch about his fam ily. I Si) M111icale/P1stor'1 Dtsk (CJ (30) . 10:00 S 9 00 H1wali rJ¥t-O (C) {60) 0 .ID ~IC Nra:trttJ News (CJ (30) {RJ ~ Chin~• Maoist student is Da't'ld Brmkley, frank McGee, .lohn found dead just as McG1rret h1s Ch1ncel!or. obltined evidence of his connoction O Whit'• My lint? (C) (30) Hot! wllh 1 Communist intell igence 1in1. \'/ally Sruntr and Allene Fr1n~i1 O ~@ @n lhln Caiat lronlOtl welcome Hen1r Mo1a:1n. Mt1edrlh (C) (Go) (R) "What's an Ark Wilh· M1cR1e i nd Gene Rayburn. out Centauu?" Anjanette Comer 1 GJ I l•f(1iLI Midt11111111er llloc:k and Mor11an Woodward l!Ulst in I fntiv1I (Cl (90) rearured also on dr1m1 of !ht con!lid between e KMEl ·FM radio (94,7) ire three wealthy min and his beautiful lop r1Xk 1roup1, Traffic. Mouritain dau1hler. i nd Gralld funk R1iho1d, plus 1w m PUTNAM JS BACK & The Sloops ind Alic.e Cooper. in T --, -r • u---. • ' . . n ,_ ' N r_ .,., r-_ R 1 :.. ·.: h • ~ ~ · R 1 ~-.i r ,::is T ,\ ,'-/I ~ , :. COLOR BY MOYIEl.Afl::ft;. li'il-:. I .: l!!I -· •. Al\o -l lCHA lllD HA l llllS 1 steieo rock COl'lcert recorded * Monday thru Fri day 11':;::=:=:=:=:=~================i1 earlier Jhis summtr in Cincinnali'1 Ii= Crosley f'ield. Show fePt•!J S.lur· 0 OJ llllWI (Cl (60) ~· d11at10:30 PM. O ri1J00 '9 S1110tht11 lrottit11 f COMEDY RATED "R" "A MAN CALLED HORSE" CONTINUOUS DAILY FlllOM J P.M. ID a..1 """"' iCI 1301 !Cl 1601 '"''" '"''· '""' '111••"' -Qj (I] Hip tnc1 Wild (C) (30) Harum, and Jenntte1 IUt!t M1son . T.Nf.l!TSI No One Under 17 ED Interlace (CJ (30) ''T~e Rotary W111f1ms will bt In the Potl'I Combustion E.n1it1e." Corner. j ~: 671-6260 Unle11 With P1 rent IS(!) Trvdl o.-Cee1111ut11U1 <Cl 0 C.H'el th1 W1Jt (C) (30) 2905 Easf Coast Hwy. €ID Christ tllt U..i111 lllOfd (C) (JO) m l 1nie'1 LIW (60) Corol'll del M•r Q.l) Simph:Mnte M1ril (55) @m Trt1 Vid11 l>ittintas (30) a) rut liiirl (C) (30) Q.l) Ttlt·Ci11t11i [Jp1nol (2 hr) 7:30 I)~(]) Wbtrt's Huddles IC) (30) Anim1ted cartoon. Bubb a Mc· 10:30 0 Tw!llrht Zot1t (60) Coy is told he will be<:ome • f1i) Tiit lfenlcal M~ (C) (JO) mother. 0 Q)@ '1J The Vitcinian (C) gJ Mi Matlbe (30) (90) (RJ '1he lon1 Way Home." ll:OO l)rij(J)i?il /lltws (CJ Pe1nell Roberts 1uest1 as 1 w11· Wiid cowboy who rdOHll5 in '" 0 ID@ m Ntwi (C ) attempt to win b1ck his l1mil1. 1J 1t11111 ActlOtl (C) o I 1•1C1a.l i am, Cr1ham'1 New 0 Nm (CJ York Cruudt (C) (60) "Nert Time • 1 the Fire." Paul Crance, linebacker O Thuht 9: (CJ "Untamed" ~ha· / for the New Yor~ Je!s, ind Norma ma) '55 -SuYn Hl)'ll'l!d, Tyrone Zimmer a:uest. Power. Richard E11an. 0 (ii) Cil (l) CornedJ Pre¥itw (CJ m Movie: "Crash of Silence" (dr1· I {JO) ''Tne Murdotk.1 and the Mc· ma) 'Sl -P!!ylli! Cal~ert. Jtck Cl1ys." Trouble arises between two Hawk ins. feudina: limihes of the Vira:inia I h1lrs when lhe youn1 Murdock boy ID ToPPtr and lhe pretty MtCl1y d1 ughter lal! @@Sia Hunt j ln lo~. No1h Bee,., Jr.. Judy I C1nc~1 and Dub Taylor 1ue1t. I ED Bica• .lournal (C) (60) {R) Q Million $ Mowll: "Y-ou ltlon1 (D l"'s M1kt t Dul (C) to Me" ((comedy) ·•1 -Bt1ba11 11 :30 I) S ({) M-trr c;mtin (CJ 1 St.•~W'ft~. Hen~ fonda. A youn21 0 ~ (j) fE Johnny C.rwn (C) m1lhon.111e . m1t11es • w~1n doc· -0 Movie: "The Suipecl" (mystery) I 1or 1nd finds himself Jealous ol ·•s-cnarles Lauihton, [II• Raines. hei m.ile pahent!. (jj) rTl (rt · Cavett CJ I m ,,,,., M•'°n t60> o I.JU iou 011:• 1 60 IE Movie: "Double Jeopard(' (ad· I ED Thi fo11J1e Saia I I (II) venture) 'SS-Rod Cameron, Jack I EE) Selected Film (CJ (30) Kelly, Allisoll Ha)'es. tli) M11 Fuerte qu. tu Amor (30) l:OO 6 Mowit: "Mis.sill Monstt11" (sci· 7:55 CB Cuestion dt Sepndos ti) '53---Wal!er Reed, Lois Collier. Watch the landlord get his. u•c11.111t • 111-4011 WlSTIFlllll lhlrt L•JKl111r e DUii Mlrflll "AlltPOJlT''• (G) COIK Pk11 Dan 1ton1r · Willy Cl~ ''THE CDCKfYEO COWI DY1 01" CALICO COUNTY" IGI Color PllEM1£RE ENGAGEMIHTI JHn W1ynt IS "CHISUM" e (GI ~111'1 I A\lelrty Htfll'llm "WAIT UNTIL DAiii(" I (GP'J ••••••••••••••••••••• l i rllr• Streiwnf "ON A CLEAR DAY YOU CAN SEE FOREVER" CO) Col9r 'Iv$ 511VI •McOUHll ''THE THOMAS CROWN AFFA IR" EJKlu$lYI Dfl¥1'ln 5hOW1nt Cllnl E•1twoocl "ttELL Y'S HEROES" • IG 'l Coler plUl Alan Aldi • Ilk~ .... Wklrn1rt; ''THE MOON SHINE WAii" (GP) • E~ctvsivt Drive-In Showlnt CUn1 E11twvocr "KELLY'S HEROES" • (GP) Coler ,11r1 Al•n Aktl • ltich1rd Wlllmuit ''THE MOONSHINE WAR" (CiPJ 0 Ulld•r 17 Must It With P•rtn1 "U' IH THE CELLI.It" 1111 Color ptu• • Rk:h1nl H•rrii "A MAN CALLED HORSE" e !GP) o,,;,,;,=:~ • Color E•clu•lve Drl...-ln 5-fflg Vntler 11 Mull 11 Wtlll Pl rtfll ''THE LANOLDllO" I !RI plu• • Chlrlton He•«>n ''THE HAWAIIAN$" • IGPI All Color Shtw ········••••O••••••o••••············ PER CARLOAD ---· ......... a•r-3SS1 CUnl E~•lwood -Den ltkklU · "11'.011,·1 Horot1" · Plu• "l 'IJ2-Tlle Moo111hh10 Wor" will! 1ticll1nl Wktm••~ Cont, Sunt11y a. MOndo'f, I p.rn. All Color F1rnlly Entert•lnflllflt AH Sl1r Ca•! ~How THE WEST WAS 'l"ON" • !GI p~ e Tiit Btlllot "LET IT IE" • !1:0) AU COior Show Cllnl E1t1wood "TWO MULES l'OR SISTI• SAAA" IGP) plu1 Jerry Ltw+1 "WHICH WAY TO THE l'RONT" ~ 1:00 B ~ (j) Gome. Pyle (C) (JO) (RJ 0 0 Htw1 (C) 1 1 A motherly woman ct1mts •trou 1 ID Movie: "Spits 11 t!lt Air" (mys· Who Care•? No other now1p1p1r in +h1 world e•r11 1boul vour eommu· nity like your community deily new-•p•p•r do••· 11'1 the DAILY PILOT. ! Comer silt1n1 on 1 bench, tel!1 himl 1ery) '•6-B11ry ll Barnes. he's too skinny and insists that he l:l5 '-" CalllMDnily· Bulletin Boud (C) Id her lix him a Utlle 1uoch 11 ai ht1 apartment Moly Picon 1uests 0 @ 00 m Tiit Courtshifi el Eddie's F1t~ei (C) {JO) (R) '1etth· THUR SDAY DAYTIME MOVIES m "Tiit Ii& lllll:f" (dr1m1) '57- Mar1hl ViUtrs, Robert Hutton. 1:00 n "hrilou• HolidlJ'' (a3"nturt) "•6-P11 O'Brien. Ruth W~nkk. m "Ultboal" (dram•) ,..__Tal\u. l1h B1nkhead. William Bendix. Z:OO 0 (C) "WWd River" (dr1m1) '60 -Montaomery Clift, Jot Yan ne,t l :JO O "Wltdc It Slllor' (comtdy) ·61 tee Ret!'ld . -John M1illon, Vera 01y. C11hamf m "l(ill '' Bt .. ~ltd" (m1s!el}) I St11k. I 'SO-L1wrenc1 Herne1. Caorp Cou· I t :OO O "Gunl itht.rs" (wts!tfnl '47-loyr1s. Randolph ~I. 811b1ra B11tton. 4:)0 6 (C) "Sines of l1bylon" (dr•· l :JO f) "lloftdit~• Mn" (comedy) ~OI m•J. ·.sl -Rlch11d Contt, Lindi -Ptn"f Sinfltlon, #thur l1kt. C~nslilft. "'MAS·H ' IS THE BEST AMERICAN WAR COMEDY SINCE SOUND CAME have ever seen." -Jud!ltl Crltl, NlC·TV "'M*A*S*H' is what the new freedom of the screen is all about" Rated ''GP'' All Ages Admitted- Parent1I Discretion Suggested ----! ·, j '";--!~~---. . ' JICll- SllllYlml• ··-lllllY· 111 ' " • lllll*UWEI . • * HOLIDAY MATINEES * Saturday -Sunday -Monday "A Big Musical Hit- In The Winner's Corn er!" -AllCHfll W•NSrON. "'" ¥0 .. '•" ' "Hilarious An d Entert ain ing. In The Streall>Of 'Sound Of Music '!" -101C{ H ... lr•. lH ........ , ''"''' S70'""''• "A Big Bawdy Rip-Roaring Musical! Howlingly Funny! See It!" -WANOA HALL H•w lo"' liowo Rated "GP" ALL AGES AOMITIEO PAREliTAL OISCllETIOH SUGGlSTIO fi' .... .... _ ll:Lnt• "Tilt epic American war movie that Hollywood has alwlys - want!d to ma~e. but never hacf the rut. to do before~ .. ... ~-·- "A COCKEYED MASTERPIECE!" * HOLIDAY MATINEES * Saturday -Sunclay -Monday 7th RECORD WEEK · FOR ADVERTISING IN THE. WE EKEN DER PHONE 642-4321 ··.'--------:-------. ' Holiday Matinees-Sat, • Sun, • Mon, ~A M•t!1rp11Ct! T~t WM'11 atri!1+t~I -Vlt I ft•~· -""' !ft VNtt, 11 IN.fl ,.._ i.~11 11~1 I IU~J!lc. 'MIA•S H' tlttn '!!.I ••J '" Wi!J Uol-..... ftfl "'°' lllin• 111tu1 Iii• It! rll• llrtur" 11 h 1~,_..•11 1ctW, •1uv1n111 wrllltfl, ildfl,.i • .,.. •• .,."""4, "" -ftSWSOAY _, ........ MOl'Olflllff'llo HllWIWl"tt '· •' ·, " '• '. ' . • .. • -. -. ----. -..... ----·~--·--~---- . .::. Playhouse ·Present s Trophies By TOM TITUS Of tllf CMl!J f'llel 11111 "Walti of the Toreudors" came on as the Huntington Beach Playhouse's top production of the season, bul "The Impossible Ye a r s·' ' ...,~~--_...., garnered the most trophies at ·:lhe playhouse's annual award:> .;biinquet Sunday n!ght. ··:·The French comedy "'\\'altz " was acclaimed ror bes t direction, best set design and produced the best actress of the season. while "Impossible Years" picked up accolades in ~. four acting departments as the ::~llunlington Beach g r o u p ~!:~:.Climaxed a four-play season . Two spe c ial horiors Two Lawyer By CYNTHIA LOWRY HOLLYWOOD !API -~ on Spel. 16, will drop a new series lnto Its channe l s, "Storefront Lawyers." This shoutd not be coof used - although it almost certainly wil l be -with .. The Young Lawyers," a new series \vhich ABC will launch less than a week later. ABC spun il s 8Cries off a two-hour made-.for-TV feature, and will wrap the plots around some young law studenlS working out or a neighborhood btw office, ~'ho provide free assistance lo the poor and get cour1room experience. The series is more or I e s s restricted to ~lassachusetts since it it one of a few stales which permit student-lawyers· to funclion before passiqg bar examinations. ·scripts have been based on real cases handled b y organizations including public defenders' orfices and private- ly runded legal aid organiza- tions. • Wednesday, Se ptembe r 2, lq7o DAILY PILOT l 1 Shows Debut citing' mix which: will include social themes," Gas l said. "We'll explore the matter ot Integration in labo r unions, black militancy, pgllce raids, the problem s of ~1ezlcan· Americans. And !here will be a murder trial, the story of a woman with an Insane hus- band, and another about a swindle." Ca s t In s is ts that ''Storefront .. is not a legal switch on IM popular "~iod Squad'' format -the coming season's mosl popular basic recipe for new dramatic series. .. \\l e don't have an older fat her-figure around,·· Gast ' . said. ·~nie regu lars are just three young people: two boys and a girl." "The Young LaY;')'ers'' will function in approximately the same milieu -narcotics, abortion, racial unrest, etc., but will also h&\.°t: Lee J. Cob b sus)ervising the youn g bar- risters, two in ctntral roles. '' L 1 u gtl-In." "Storefront" must L'Ontend with the faced· IUted "Vlrglnlan" ' ·T he Court.ship of Edd;e 's Father' ... and the new Danny Thomas situation comedy. "David, Lisa' Tryouts Set By Theater Open readings for "Da vid and Lisa,", the November productlon of th e Westmirister Community Theater, will be held Sund ay, Sept. 13, and ~1onday, Sept. 14, it was announced today. The tryouts will be held at 5 p.m. Sunday and 7:30 p.m . ~1onday in the-PTA building on Hoover Street just south of \Yestminster Avenue. '· highlighted ttle evening at 11 u !J tin gt on Ha rbour's \\'histling Oyster. H e I e n Susman. a cofounder of the group who is retiring from the board of directors. w a s presented a desk set. v;hile llon Langseth received the !president's award for his :backstage services during the BARN'S BE~.T -\Vinncr.s of the l~unt ington Beach Playhouse's actin.1? techni- cal and special a\vards .for 196~70 d is play their trophies. Seated (fr~m left) arc Sall)'. Cro~vley, l~o n r11p ll~r.ric.s. 1~at l\1 ullins. llelen Susrnan and Lillyann ~ayne ... Stand1ng are C'olln Gu1ver. Hill J\loreland . .Joy Lo.bdell Ron Lang5eth Stan Bell and Dan Kaiser. · ' · CBS' J>rOject has three young full-fledged but fledg- ling lawyers, providing free legal help the needy in ll Los Angeles slum setting. Both have real-11fe counterparts. Harold Gast , produee r of ··storefron t," said s ome .. We like the format because it permit.s us to hanJlle civil cases as weU as cri,.-al." ex - plained the produ c er something or a specialist si nce he was a writer for the old "Defenders"' and mo st recently product!d •·Jud for the Defense." .. The idc~ is to gel an ex- Both series have tough Com- potltion, bu t the ABC series appears to be in the most dif- ficu lt spot -op p o s i t e '"Gunsmoke," Red Skelton and The large cast in the tender love story of two disturbed young people calls tor five boys and four girls In their early teens and fi ve men and five \vomen or early middle age. There also is a part for a young Latin man who can play the guitar. 'past season. : Ruth Dorwa rd, ~·ho staged :"Waltz of the Toreadors." was 1\'0ted best direc tor of the four· -play season. Her s e I :designers. Bill ?o.!oreland and Joy Lobdell. shared in the ;J:'.lory. taking lop llQnors in •their category. ' Sally Crowley was narned :best actress of the year for :her role as the long suffering wife in "Waltz.' 'while Stan Bell took best actor honors for :his par( as the psychiatrist .father in "Impossible Years." Bell arri ved late to pick up his :trophy since he was playing the S<Hne rt'Jle in the sa1ne pl;1y ott Long Beach. f\1ajor Sl1ppurling hunur:-i were shared by Ted Grandke for '"Invitat ion to a :\lurd_l•r"' and Lilyann Payne for '"Pool~ Parad ise.·· \Vinners in 1he 111inot supporti",1g ca1l'gory \.\'ere Co lin Guiver for '"Pool" Parudise" and Pat :\1ul hns fur "The l1npo,;sib!e Years ' '"The" linpossible Years·• pic ked up !l\'O n1ore a\1•ards as Dan Kai ser was nam('d best cameo perforn1er of the season and Bonnie Harnes .· Syufy l uKury Tueatres -· DeluKe Drive-Ins ·- EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT MO•. TlltV Ft l .... a.10 ,.M. SAT. l :JO.l:4G-S:SO-I & 10 P,M. SUN.1-l :10.S:20·1:J0-9:40 ,.M. received · thi• Juvenile a1vanl. Hest lechnicoit tlircclor \\'as :\lex Osorio, who hcadc1I lhc backstage 1,:rew for t"'O plays. '"Pools Pa r a d is r · ' and '·lnvita lion to a ~1urder." Thi' awards pr esentation \.\'as emcl-ed by Ron Albertsen, ehai nnan nf the playhousc·s 19li9-70 awards eomini!lcr. (:11cst s~aker of the evenin" was Ral1:i11 Jl inrnan Jr., drain~ critie for th(' Long Beach Independent-Press Telegran1. ""ho urged <1n1aleur thespians. to carry on the traditions and 20 ~1111\SllW' ~lt.l.IUll.I illlijl;,lli'U\o • JI ~ ... ,~~I U.llj\I• Ulil'~~i"! l\'•l\1~b.I! Fl.J~~llU w 1l\ !I'll~ mlltiln ORSON Wtll! s 1; "11•1 sm1vi111•tw 11 ..,, ,..111•,r-um•' ~M'"'WiiN'I ~C'IH1'111!\._,.I .... -'· "'" 1 , · , ,.,, -, '" '"' ..,~,.,...._ NO RESERVEO SEATS· FREE PARKING l"l 21 FXC~LUS I \'F CJH 1\NC;E <:Ol JN"J 'I' ENCiAG Fi\1 EN'I" NEW "OOLL Y" SHOWT!MESI! MONDAY TH RU FRIDAY 7:00 I 10:00 SAT. & SUN . 1:00 4:00 7:00 & 10:00 SPECIAL NEW POPULAR PRICE S'! C H!LOREN ONLY .S 1.00 all tirne~ JUNIORS ONl Y S2.SO all i ime~ tro1by, 1l•ll1 & 001h 1•m• htndro\ • 1onrm10 • JOhn 1ebo1tu:in PLUS!! A l ir,.-~ !ff',f:t11rn11t M:'l"-·.'&~S·lf •~:h·~ll~~., lR -r.,, • l1l . Plus "I love Vov Aloce 8. Toklos" -9t,.Pfi.N 71~ 1r; i.OLOR {Qfl -PLUS 'YA·I -ION °' Dear1 Morti11in "SCAR DSTUD' Open At 7:00 P.M. Show at Dusk John Wayne in His Greatest Role ... ci1scfp]r,1e of lhc lhCatcr in the lace of a mounling avatl\c garde muvemcnl, Mi ss Scala Win:S Split •Royal Hunt of Sun• Opener Cast at Laguna "David and Lisa'" will be directed by Louise v a n Vianen, a former professional ac tress and director who ha!I conducted an acting workshop in Costa Mesa . IOllMt eo.uT MllllMAY • Int ft". An unusually large cast has dramalizalions of Sp a i n ' s Tec.hnical director J I m been announced for "The conquistadors and t h e I r Stewart will design the sets, j Royal llunt or the Sun." Peter subjug ation of the Incas. while William Barbe i s LOS AN("ELES (UPI 1 which opens Tuesday, Se pl. 22. · ' Shafler·s sweeping historical costume designer. D a n c e for a fo ur-wee k run. •••11111111 u"&IUI CIY.DIOID" The I I-yea r marriage of ac-drama which will ina ugurate Other princi pals in the cast movements will be staged by. tress Gia Scala and Donald J. the 1970-7 1 season at the are Thomas Bfadac . Joe Lisa Braeloff and Elizabeth Burnell was dissolved Tues-Laguna Moulton Playhouse. \Yilson, John Ruggles. ~1arvin Hamilton , with J . Stephen Fox Cay with alimony totaling Michael Owens and Darrel Torrez and J im Spiers. servtng as stage manager. $103,800 payable over a JO-Wilson will portray I he Completing lhe f ea I u r e d "Th e Royal Hunt of the ~·ear period a"'arded to the ac-antagonists of the play. the roles will be Jam cs Sun'" will play Tu esdays tress.. epf!1bittered Spanish I e a d e r Mayer. William Earl, Helen th rough Satu rdays through 1zarro and the proud god-Kearney, Jean Gallo. Leslie Oct t7 at the playh••se 606 The cou ple , 1narrietl here k · -• Steve McQueen "The Reivers" ing of the Incas. Atahuallpa. Branman, Loretta Panzuric. Lagu na Canyon Road, Laguna Aug. 21 . 1959. sttpa ratcd l''eb. Mat Reitz, a for mer actor Dave Ambrose. O ar I e n e Beach. Advance reservations A C•flrn1~Ctt11" f~1 f'rtwr11..i..,.1 21 . 1969 "'hen J\1iss Scala , 35, and director with South Coast Hansen, Sharlene Miller, Kim may be acqu ired by calling A Ni1'°"~~•1IPic1Uft1 !itrlc:1"'" fl l('d suit . Repertory1 is directing the Bates and J ulie Haas. the box off ice al 494--0743. Sia She v.·as granted 1heir homelfimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;ii;;;;;;::;..iiiiiiiiii~"-'iiiii.i.iiiii;~~iiiiiiiiii-..iiii;,~~~~~~~iiiii..i""""ii;;;iiii:i""""""~~~ in .. division or ('Onlnl!Jnit y property. ----~-11 NOW-INDS TUISDAT ........ ~--· \Im inr lnnrin ~lill lll<JU llf.ll'lilllilll 1'3Cfllll H0\\1lr ~-00!00 imn ·.; ~ tf-'•-o.Oll" rt::'l ·-·-··· ..... \2.1, IN COLOR-GI" -ALSO- "A$ FUNNY ANO CIWIMING IS NT COMEOT IN THI NATALIE WOOD "BOB &CAROL &TEO &ALICE" N.1.TIOM.l.L Cl!NIJl.l.L'i FOiij[a~ S°" 00.Ct rr_,-•I l rlllol • ~46-~71 I HELD OVER l•d BIG WEEK CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM 12:10 l".M. PANAV1SION8 l lCHNJCOl0R y ~K:=~iai - ALSO tXCITING CO•HIT BACK TO THE BOOKS $2,500 IN .PRIZES • 15 sets of S 149. 90 Britannica Junior Encycl11paedias • 3 sets of 3-volume $69 .50 Webster's International Dictionary • 3 sets of Britannica's Deluxe $35 Wortd Atlas 21 Places to Win TheM merchants invite you to enter the DAILY Pl LOT'S big BACK TO THE BOOKS BONANZA 1t their 1tores anytime from now until closing time on S1turd1y, Sept. 5. Nothing to buy; winner need not be present to win. Use coupon below, entry blink 1v1il1ble 1t stores or a reasonable facsimile of e ither. Drop them in entry boxes at these locations. A•tl,..'t FiH ShNt D0Ylt·ltew11 Appll11~r1 H•11111 of Teny J. c. ,.,. ... , c •. 245 Forftl An. 411 I .17th St. South c-t l"l•r• FahiH 1.ie11<111 L .. 1111• httch Coit• Mes• H•rt..r C_,., he• D11hl H1111thlttell IHllrl lotr J-•l•n Fothlo11 Ciell•rt Wfttcllff 1'$no """" ...... Nowpott S-11 Wettclltf "n• ' 6t O N. c ... , H~hw•y a.i...,.r, Dettt-, .. ,. N•wp•tt to.ch L .. 1111• Inell L.cllle't J111tl.n 1116 Ne_,.rt I~. c .. t. M ... 1641 I . Cent Hltl!w.., llcrlw•ll't W. T. Ci11111t Co. CoreH Ml Mor ...... J4t7 Ylo Lierle l t•Ollh11n1 & Acrl•rn1 Mo111n1orl kh••I• w .. tcutt ,._ N1wport IHch H1111ti11tt•11 lftch 1670 S.•t. ... "'"· N_,.rt IMcJi c .. 1. ,. ... W•tcltff S ..... Tlte loot.ff Gt•crli11'1 Wntcllff ,,_ Newport ,,.., • ., 22S I. 17fll St. South C.11111 l'lno 2611 NowpOft 11•<111. N•wport Joecll CHI• Meto Cott• M.,. Nowpwt '"411 Wet ~- 270 I . I 7fll St. Chllcrlrot1'1 look Shop Hoytltor1t11'1 '""''"' sai-C"te Mno 3707 I. C..t Hltflwoy 111 .... ,.,. Dot ,.., 2221 Hor!Nt llw<lll. So1oh Co•t Pio .. Coro11e 4e1 Mot S.1t Clotne11t1 Costtr Mno c .... 111 ... ' ENTER NOW FREE! • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• : BACK TO THE BOOKS BONANZA ENTRY BLANK : • I Drop I• h t At ,.,,, ,_..,_.. s,..._•, 1 ..... 1 a • • • N,,ME ···-····-···--··--········-·-·······-··-·--·---························· • . ~ . • STREET ADDRESS -·--···· .. ··-··-········-·---···-·••H•••••••••••••H•• .. ··-----• • • • CITY ······-·····-·······-······ S!AT E I ZI P-.... -.......................... --··-···· • • • • PHON • ............................ WHERE ENTRY·-·--··----······-·-····~··· • • DROPPED • : 'No e l'l'lpfoy11 or m11nb1r• of hit l1n1n1crll1t• ftl'l'lt1y .f The DAILY 'ILOT. l:11iy1.fep1t~li• • l rlt11111lc1, Inc .• •r p1rticip1t1f'>t 1dv1rtiter1 1hell ~. ollt 1blt fe r prl111. No 111try ll/111k1 • • Cl ll bt lf.tl pftd frtl'l'I c:hUdrtll llfHl1r 1'4 Yllltt of t f l 11111111 t f.COl'l'lr t lllt d bv 111 tdtotlt •• • E11t1r •• l'l'ltlly tlrn11 11 yo11 Ii••· ~Wi11111rs will bi noflflod by l'l'lt i or ,ho111 1114 ''" a pie .. up pri111 P!!_or fo th1 1t1rt of 1chool. Pr!111 will lto lhnltod .. 0111 r.•' f1111lly. All • ontfy cOUfHllU m111f01 lll1po11t1d'"fri't"'p1111ot1' pl1iiS of b~111t11f by e 01ii9 lim1 O~ 8 • S1t111d1y, S1pt11'1'1b1r i 1h, l f70. • ··~····················~\····· I .. ___ ,,_._ ~-------------------------- . . 28 DAil Y P1lOT • Oriwer ond passengir seots, (5) 8)(2Sxl 5 8 ply. tires, dual Western Mirrors, rear LOW door glass, etc. E24AHJ57991 AS. B..lfAND NEW 1970 MUSTANG 2 DOOR HARDTOP SAVE HUNDREDS 6000MILE 191omr10R $ OVER FACTORY INVOICE All Models To Choose Fram · Most C•rs FULL;r EQUIPPED. BRAND NEW 1970 LT.O. Country Squire ·4 DOOR $ plus tax & license , 390 C.LD .. V-81 cruise-o-motic, air conditioning, heavy duty suspension, visibility group, power sleering, linted gloss, A.M. Rodia, white wall tires. SeriolNo.01764168704 . $249 9 250 C.1.0. engine, fuel evoporoted emission control system. whitewall t;res. (OFO 1 l I 3512n • T-Bird·s •Tori••• o M••t••11· · hloxiH • Fonl LTD's OVER FORD TRUCK & CAMPER $ • USED CAR BUYER I h. uboo••• M"fl'I (6}. 2 tuner itowt. water tank. 50 lb, ice box. SC'991\ door, full inMotion, qu•tn s.i11 bed. Truck hai heavy duty sprif'9S & tirt's., guoges.. lorgt mimM'S. (52969) plus tax & license ON DUTT TOP DOLLAR PAID 4 door Sedon, VB. ouromohc ,._ons., powtr s!,ering, rodlO, heal!!'". JMM'293: '65 T-BIRD $ V-8, oulornotic lroo!.mission, Tociofy oW condilioning, power sieer- ing, power wmdo~. rod10, Ylllyl roof. NCA043 '64 FALCON WAGON V8, autOIJIQ'tic Ir om.mission, oir condi1ioning, ~odio, heater. (PWHS07) ' 1 66 DATSU N . , I I! (oun1ry Sq\.iire Stolion Wagon. V-8, ou!oma!te 1ronsnuss100, foe:-~ tory oir tondi!ioning, power stemng, power disc. brakes. rod10, heoler, 1in1ed gloss. wheel co ... ers. luggoge corrier. (YPT971) '66 DODGE Dart Wgn. 6 cyt ovlomolic fnlMmis siOfl. rodio, heoil!!', ll:. suu 300. '66 MUSTANG (pe., 6 cyl., Stick 'hilt. rod1e, Mater, s.KM7J7 . 99 99 ;,~~~2.~~ "IO~l;O ,,..,.,;._ ... , p-N >1$ •• , <Od;O, $119 s heater, whitewoll lires. (U~H537) ' I WE DON'T CARE . WHERE YOU'VE iEEN OR WHAT YOU'VE BEEN OFFERED -YOU'RE SURE TO GO FOR OUR OFFER! DON'T SIGN ANY ORDER WITH ANY DEALER ON ANY NEW CAR- TRUCK OR USED CAR UNTIL YOU HAVE BEEN QUOTED DUNTON FORD PRICES • '67 MUSTANG Coupe 6 cyl slick, rodio heottr,(LGF662l '67 IMPA LA 2 dr .. V-8, outo. trOl'IL. power stMrillg. nxlio. htof. er, whittwoU tif'ts. Lie, TYC 606. :~.~'~'~'~~~•<,~,.,;,.,pow~"-'"· "d;o, $16 99 heottr, whitewoll tires. Uc. SIN'l 46, ., ·:~.~.~!~.~.~~I~~~;·;~;~~-, .. ~;,,. $188 7 rodio, heGter, whitewoll tires, wheel covers. (VVG951) • USED TRUCKS· . '67 FORD F-250 V-8, oololoolic trpnsmission, power ""okes, radio. 88909E ~;69 FORD F-100 • V-8, slj.ck ihift, rod io and heotK, Serial No. 126030. ; '70 FORD FlOO . . (pt, V-8, ll!JIO, 1rons., factory o+r c0Pd it1011ing, powtt srttn ng, • rodio. whilewoll tires, vinyl roof, wheel covffs. tic, TSH 78 I, ·'69 CUSTOl\1 SEl:A • V-8, outo. ffons .. powef Jteering, !Wio, lltoter. l~. Y(U 049, '68 FAIRLA 'E Coupe, v~s. oUlomolic 1rqnsmis~io11, nidio, low mileage. O.S . '69 FORD L D V-8.outomolic transmission, foclory 01r .. ~r steer-illJ, mdio, heoltf', Yinyl roof'. ZlU 782. (• '61 MUSTANG ,~~ Coupe. V-8,wtomofic tronsmissien, powet s!eer1ng. rndio, healet". - (IJQH537) • '70 BUICK OPEL GT 4 speed. radio, heater, rodial·tires low !Nits. (749-BHS) '67 MU STA NG "coupe. Six cylinder, Aulomafic lr'tlM!nissiOI\ oir ·condilioning, power steering. radio, hcal'!r, {TWL213). · • I ' l ---------·-,___..--------=---------------~-------------~--~-..... ?"illll :,..... • • COALS FIRED UP FOR FlN Laboring Eriminated Labor Day signals the last fllng of summer. Just "because the season's activities draw to a close, e.xciilng outdoor parties are by no means over, especial tr in, Southern California . There's still time for a (inal grillsi~ party by the sea, lake or mountain stream -wherever the action breaks. Often busy with Labor Day weekend guest.!, the wise hostess will select a menu that's easy so she also can enjoy the conviviality of othen. If you've grilled all of the usual meats and fowl several times' this pa st summer, you might try a change.of-pace Charcoal·. broiled Short Ribs with an unusually tangy basting sauce. Easy, yet different, are beer-marinated Steak 'n Lobster Kebabs. In early morning the steak can be cubed, the lobster tails transferred rrom freezer to refrigei:ator to thaw slowly and the hi:rb- beer marinade whisked together for later use. Of course, if yo'U're spe nding , the weekend at some mountaiR stream and you have a lucky catch or trout, they too are 11 delight to taste when cooked over the coals. Trout Over the Coals are a gourmet's di:eam when basted with a zesty mixture. PineapplHrange juice gives a tart-sweet taste ; chili sauce adds zip, and a touch of soy sauce, intrigue. This sauce is unusual and one that will make your trout a · stand-Out in the flavor sweepstakes. CHARCOAL-BROILED SHORT RIBS 4 pounds short ribs of beef ~4 cup vinegar v~ teaspoon black pepper 1 teaspoon salt I cup tomato juice ~2 tablespoon sugar Mix ingredients together and pour pver meat in bowl. Marinate for 24 hours before grilling. When ready to gr:lll, drain liquid from bowl and place meat on grill. Cook slowly, turning meat every 15 minutes. Should lake from 30 to 60 minutes, depending on desired doneness. Serves 6. TANGY BASTING SAUCE 5 ounce bottle steak sauce I r,4 cups (about 10 ounces) catsup 6 ounce can frozen"concenlrated orange juice ~1ix aD ingredients; simmer S mi11utes. Bal!lte short ribs (requenjjy.._while coo.king. Pt1ake9 Zif. cups. (Also excellent an • chic8n, pork, F(.eak, h a m b u r g e r s , frantfurters, spareribs). STEAK 'N LOBSTER KEBABS 2 pounds sirloin 6 large or 12 small frozen lobster tails, thawed 1h cup beer ~J cup salad oil l tablespoon lemon juice: 1 tablespoon· honey ~-- 2 tablespoans snipped fresh chives or 2 teaspoollll drted chives l 1S teaspoons "snipped fresh parsley or 112 teaspoon dried parsley I teaspoon snipped fresh basil or 1~ teaspoon dried basil Freshly ground black pepper Leman wedges Cut sirloin in I 1h inch cubes. If lobster tails are large, cut croMwise In thirds, DON'T SPARE RIBS FOR CHANGE-OF-PACE ENTREE leaving shell an; i( small , leave whale. Combine beer, oil. lemon juice, honey, chives, parsley, basil and pepper. Marinate beef and lobster in marinade for I to 2 hours. Thread meat and lobster alternately on skewers. Grill the kebabs, turning and basting with marinade, over hot cOa\s for IS minutes or until lobster flakes when lesled with a fork and beef is done as desired. Serve ho~ wilh lemon wedges. Makes 6 servings. TROUT OVER THE COALS 12 pan-dressed rainbo\\' trool (8 each or other pan-dressed' fish, fresh or froze n ' I can (6 ooncesl frozen pincapplc- orange juice concentrate, thawed l 'l cup chili sau ce 3 tablespoons salad oi l 3 tablespoons soy sauce •,~ teaspoon salt Lemon and orange slices Thaw frazen fish. Clean, wash and dry A TALE OF GOOD EATING-STEAK AND LOBSTER --• fish. Combine remaining ingredients except lemon and orange slices. Brush fish inside and out with sauce. Place fish in a single layer in well-greased, hingrd \Vire grills. Cook about 4 inches from moderately hot coals for 8 to 10 minutes . Baste with sauce. Turn and cook for 7 to 10 minutes longer nr until fish flake easily when les!ed with aJork. Serve with lemon and orange slices. Makes 12 servings. • ' , Home News Pickle Puzzle Perused By DOROTil,Y' WENCi(° Ot11199 Cewtr """' un-r Once lone ago I visited a great uncle who had a pickle farrfi. I decided then that pickle picking was a p~tty tough jab. It sUIJ is a tough job, except farms where the picking has been mechanized. For the consumer, pickle picking in the supennarket is a difficult task too -not IO fatiguing as it is in the field, but certainly more confusing. The average market may have more than SO different pickle it~m·s with a confusing variety or styles af pick1ts, . types ar packs, brands and kinds. To begin with, pickles can be classified, as dill , sour, and swett. They are processed by two main methods -frtsb- pack or cured (fermented). · Fresh-pack pickles are made from uncured, unferrnented cucumbers., TIM cucumbers are packed in a vinegar-salt solution with other navoring ingredienlJI to make them sweet, sour, or dill. The jars are sealed and the pickles proces.sed by heat to assure preservation. The bulk of the pickles you buy today are the fresh-pack type. You can make I.his type of "quick pickle" at home too. The fresh-pack pickles take less time to prepare and process and therefore cost less than the cured type. Cur'ed pickles are the "old-fashioned" kind which are fermented in salt brine Cflntaining dill or other flavorings . .OUrlnK fermentation bacteria produce lactic add wh ich fla vo rs and preserves Lhe pickle•. The la~ic acid is milder in flavor than the vinegar used in fresh-pack pickle~. and some people prefer this mare mUd- fiavared pickle. After the pickles have fennented the required time, lhey may be packed and sealed in jars and processed to preserve them. Sometimes the cured pick.Jes are sold out of a crock or barrel without if you know how to inlerpret it. sealed individually in plastic bags. How do yau know whether you are getling fresh-pack "or cured dill pickles? The label will give you lhis Information U' you kown how to interpret it. If the label )ust says "dill pickles'' ar "Kosher style dill", these are probably the fresh-pack . However. if it says "genuine dill" or ·"cured", this meam: natural fennentation has been used. "Kosher style" merely meam1 thal garlic has been added as a seasoning during processing. The pickles could be fresh-packed or cured. "Polish lilylt .. pickles are highly spiced. Labels on sour ptlles indicate whether they are hot sour pickles, mixed sour pickles, chow-chow, or just plain 50\lr pickles. From readlng the labels of sweet pickles you know whether they are whole pickles, chips, candied chips, sweet dills, sweet relish, hat dog relish, India relish, etc., etc. Each has its own char1cterisUc flavor. Brands will vary loo in flavor, 11!'1 · different companies use their own flavoring and st\icing formula!!. So you may need to sample several brands to find the one you like the best. QUESTIO~S WE ARE ASKED Q. Some dill pickles 1 hive had for gome time have developed a cloudine11s in the brine and same white sediment. Does this mean they art spoiled? A. Cloudiness and white sedinlent Is caused by lactic acid bacteria in ~ pickles and is harmless. The pickles will not be spoiled. However, It pickles develop a white scum on the top or become sort or slippery, do not use them as these art signs of the growth of spoilage organisms . ..,Q. I've had some watennelon rind pickles open in the refrigeratar for aboul three ye ars. They look perfectly 1ood, but are they safe to eat? A, Yes, these walennelon rind pickles wauld be safe. They have been praerved by the acid and sugar content af ll\e syrup and by the cqld temperature ln lhe reffiieritor.---- Q. Our p3lio Is SUMY and hot in the 11fternoon so we orten barbecue meaU In the garage. Some visitors told us that this is hazardous because af the smoke. la this true? A. Burning charcoal indoors -whether In the house ar in an enclosed space such as a trailer or garage-<:an be extremtls hazardous. The reason Is not the smoke, per se, but the carbon monoxide which charcoal gives off a.s it burns. Breathing only a litUe carbon manoxidt can be fatal, and some deaths have betn reparted from burning ch 11 r c o a I brique_tte_s indoors. To be safe, bum charcoal outdoors only. " ' • ' • • 30 DAILY PILOT \Yednesday, S@ptembtr 2, 1970 Lack of Dreams Becomes a Ni g~tm.are for Wori·ied Teen~ -mixed up I am . Th is letter Is being writ· ten at 2:SO a.m. Can yo u help me "! - NIGHT OWL. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I enclose a letter from a reader in Bridgeton, N.J . I hope this helps solve another reader's ••flea problem. -;J. M:--Me•Mo-. ------ Phlladelpb.ia lr.quirer DEAR EXECUTIVE E D IT 0 R : ANN LANDERS p!ane fare to Indianapolis. We wiU thent • go together to Las Vegas and on to tt>.7 gaming tables at fl.1onte Carlo. I am riot . -----ki'iding,-Ann:--lf"You.help..me.Jocal.8 her l<--~1J­ will cut you ln. -R. R. J. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I'm an 18- year-old girl with a problem that has been bugglna: m for mon._lhs. l can't 1\tep. It Sttms 1 put off t;oing to bed by dolna: 111 sorts of crazy lhlngs late at nlaht -!Ike cleaning closets. polishlng 1hoe1, sewing buttOAs. I busy myself with chores because I know I won't be able 10 slern arKI I hate the tossing and turning . • Tbe main reason I can't sleep is because I worry about what v.·111 happen to me if I don't get enough resl. 1 worry about getting sick. looking haggard, fain· tintt from exhaustion and th ings like that. . DEAR OWL: A1ost pcofj:le Ernfflfe· slttp than they reallte -and 11 much as llleir bodies require -urtlw, of e<1urse, there is an unusual amount of emoUonal strtss. IMGmnlacs would have leu trouble sleeping If they went to btd at ap- proximately the same 1'ple every nlgbt and planned on ju·1t "re1tln1." People wbO bu1y thtm1tlves clea.nln1 closets and wrlU11g Jetten unti l the w~ boors of the morntn1 will not sleep better wben th ey do go lo bed. Afosl ln Mimniacs 5afftr more from worrying about fbelr Insomnia than f11lm lhe damace done by lack or sleep. Ordinarily I would just read /lnn Landers column and say, "There but for the grace ·Of God f!O I" -but the woman \\'ho has been scratching herself for months while the doctors can ilnd nothing wrong might have a~ ba'd case or synthetic Uber draperles. launde ring them (dip and hang -no ironing) .\he may have rubbed some of the minute particles under her skin. I would be obliged il you would pass this lnformaUon along to Ann Landtra. - of the KcWDg •kin aid eu m.lne It under a mlc~. Tk Cr')'ltalUae 1tracture of &be l)'lldtedc pardcle1 would be apparent. DEAR R. R. J.: Nu deal, Dad. U the l3tly bad these extraordinary powtrs sbe I _ could go to La! Veg1s and Monie Car~~ wlt.bott you -and wllbout ME, too. I'~ not interested. -.o,f Some mornings I'm certain I didn 't sleep at all . ls this possible? Later in the day I remember bits and pieces of dreams. If a person dreams it meafts they slept, doesn't it? You can see how . • ' •• .., Don't laugh. 1 tell you true. The woman inay have picked up the affliction In some· on~ else's home. but it i.! more than likely that she has syntheti c fiber draperies In her 011.·n home and while J.P. J DEAR J. P.: It II true lb.It contact witb syntbe~c f!ben -In draperiet, fumlturt coven aM cloWn, can produce severe llcb11g. Bat 1 good dtrmatelogl1t would it0t flnd dll1 1ucb a my1tf:riell1 af- fliction. He wecald '-ke.111lmple seripla1 ~" . . DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please wire collect the name and addre&s of the woma.n In North Carolina who is sure she has ESP. she claims 1he knows what is golng to happen in advance and stated several instances where she was correct -but no one wou1d listen. I will not only listen, I will pay her Too many coup les go from matrimonf to acrimony. Don't let your marriage floP' before it gets started. Send for Anll, Landers' booklet, "Ma rriage -What to' Expect." Send your request to Ann Landers in care of the Dally Pilot enclO!G,. h'!,"! .SO cents in coin and a long, starn~ self.addressed envelope. Author 'Tells It Like It Is' !JP'I Tlln>IMlttt Jacqueline Briskln is, like moat women, a wire, a mother and a housekeeper. But, unlike most Women, she is the auth:ir of a 576-page wo rk of fic tion that will tell the oldCr generation much about the way teenagers and _people in their young 20s think and live. The book. "California ~neration," also will open up younger people's eyes to the way older people see and feel about them. Mrs. Briskin estimates she spent a minimum of 4,000 hours in the actual wriling. but even more hours were spent in research . To understand the young, Jacqueline's quest took her to ~unset Strip sidewalk cafes where she sp:>ke to young people. Of such talks, the author said, "Generally the youn1 leveled with me. they spoke openly." Not all resear_ch was done in libraries. P.1any hours were spent with the young at the "California Generation" playgrou nd -the be.::Jch. Her husband gave her more than understanding and encouragement -he ,llave her a cover that allowed her listen to the yOung people talk. He owns a chain of service stations and Jacqueline worked· the pumps while catching unguarded comments from the yaunger drivers. -1 .. ' I. I JACQUELINE IRIS.K1N DEV()TES 4,000 HOURS TO WRITING -I}' ' ' -.... ' If,.., • -..._ . --..... ' l Tl/ I •' • ' \j. ' SHERYL KEANE TALKS OPENLY WITH AUTHOR r \ • ' \ • • QUEST TAKES AUTHOR TO SUNSET STRIP SIDEWALK CAFE • JACQUELINE'S COVER : PUMPING GAS AT HER HUSBAND'S STATION ·-• PT-unit Calendars Crowded ll•li.r'I Ntltl A "'" dt¥tltd !t •wml11 Y1ll1¥, Muntln,ren l11c11. OQ911 vi.w. s .. 1 ''"" and Wnl- 111l11tltr l clMICll D111r1c-1 '''"''"''''"'' _11 .... ,..,.. '#Ui ........ In 1111 DAILY P'ILOT Mell •""· lnkrrTMUt~ m u11 ... rwuil¥M ll'T "'"" G!lbtrt Tu1'1111ull, ,.,.,._ __ , Orllrl, Hun!l11llt4! '"'" '" 1 •·""· TllurMltJ t.r ~Mlctll.,. . .........,.., Bushard PTO rttrs." Gianni. Ge-ntilll President COMlNG UP : Howdy Pardntir wJll be theme of a PTO w e I come · back·to-schoo l bar be cue sch tduled TtNrtday, Sept. 10, in the home of lJfs. W i 11 1 a m Oap&kl. Gue•t.s or honor v.·1 11 be W.ff members and T. L. Towry, principal.- \ FY PTSA i\1rs. Rudolph I.a D1"nc President C0~11r\G UP: Fountain Valley lligh School teachers and the principal. Dr. Paul Bcrrcr. "-'ill Qe honorc>d at a luncheon at 11 :30 n m. on Friday, Sept. I I. ChAirman is ~1rs. Kenneth De.Julio . First board n1ecting v.·ill take place at 7 ,30 p.1n. Tucsdav . Sept , 15. in the board • r09fl1. S t f1 d e n l representat\'CS Y.111 he in \'ill'd. Fulto n PTO i'ltr!§. Hobert '\'el('h President -------- COMING UP: Luncheon for the school staff will b~ preseated by PTO at noon \Yedneiday. Sept.. 9. in the multimedia room. according to Mrs. Roy Cunningham, hospitality ch airman. Executive board members wll l s er\'e as ho:ritesses ... PTO mem bers \\'ill provide transportation and babylsitting for voters on election day Tuesday, Sept. 15. Further informal ion may be obtained by rontactlng ' Mrs. Rohe r I \Velch at 8~7-0890 .. ,,Vlnll'r txiw!!n~ league "'I ll mr-et 11t 9 a.m, Thursday . 5-Jpt. 24, in Kona Lanei;, Costa Mesa. League officer• \\'ill be elect e d an d teams organized. New bowlers are invited to attend. . .Plans are under way to orpnize ne"' Scout lroops and dens. acrording to ~lrs. lvan Ubaldini. youth activities chairman. REPORTS : Cha irmen ratified al a recent ex!!:cutive board meeting are the Mmes. De an ~1cNair, 11.·ays and ml.' Ans; Lloyd Long, ice crram sales ; Cunningham, ~ssisted by James Miller and Darrell Vernier, hosp1ta!ity: Henry Ltngf; aided by Reid McLeod ind Floyd \\'arr, room mothers ; Herbert Vomogida and Ole J..acobsen, new!:etle; John -------- With Back-to-school Sullivan, li:?a!th and y,·elfare; Gerald Hix, parlian1enlari- an; Don bucas •and Lonir. publicity; Ubaldini, youth activities; Davkl Vasquei., ~·olunteer workers: Greg Burke. telephone: Robert We!lner, music boosters; \Vi\Uam ~1i tchetl , teacher aid.es ; Jerry Carver, parent education : Edwin Lewis. library aicles, and Ted Ber gestrom, community resources. Greg Gann will ~rve as audi tor. McDow ell PTO ~trs. James Ackley President CO,.ilNG UP : Parents of new stu,dents will be welcomed during a PTO coffee at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 9, in the music room. Roland Gilmore, prlncipaJ, w i 11 explain school and learning center policies and philosophies, and f.;f r s . 'James AckJev will discuss the role or the PTO unit. Refreshments will be. served by f.;1rs . Gary Illingworth and Mrs. Lee Greiner, hospltality co-chairmen, and their committee. Further information may be obtained by telephoning Mrs. At'kley at su.2399 or the principal Bl 842-2559 ... Ttachers will be hon"red at a luncheon at 11 :30 a.m. Thursday, Sept. 10. PTO board members will serve as hostesses . , . Kindergarten round-up will be presented Er.ida.)'.- Sept. II. ,.tothers of kindergarteners will tnee\ teachers and the principal. \\"ho . \fill explain the kindergarten program. Meadowview PT A ~lrs. Marion Harris President COMING UP : Kindergarten tea will be presented at 2 p.m. Frlday....Sepl. 11. in the klndergartetf rooms. Hostlng V>'ill · be Mrs . W i 11 i a m Quinton. hos p i t a 11 t y chairman , and her Events committer. Parents and children y,•ill meet George Willims. principal, and kindergarten t e a-e-ll-e-r !-;- Refreshments w i 11 be • served ... Hamburger sales wili begin in school Monday, Sept. 21. accord ing to Mrs. Don Elster. chairman , •• ~tothcrs interested in joJning the PTA bQy,•ling league may Cl)ntact h1rs. Carl Thornie at 846-5838. REPORTS : Executive board appro\'ed the ye a r • s program at a r e c e n1·i m!!etlng ... Plans are under 1 wav for Installation of a new I PT A·flnanced sound system._ fo r the cafetorium. ._, t _, ' I I I I ~ r I I ( I I I r • • ....... FRIENDS INDEED -Foµr-year-old Pat Parry of Anaheim has a bevy of willing volunteers to h~lp him and other young students at the Demonstrat1on 1-fome and Nursery School in Costa f\1esa, a branch of the John Tracy Cl inic. Girls from the Ticktockers, National Charity League, '"ho have se rved as sum- mer helpers are 15-year-olds (left to right) Marsha Hooten, Shelley Samue ls and ri1elanie Salata. r --·r'l" " Your Horoscope Tomorrow ---. • . . OAILV PILOT :JJ 1-Sagiltari.u_s.:_B_e_ Tr ualo--e If • THURSDAY · SEPTEMBER 3 By SYDNEY .OMAR!\ The Leo man 11 capable or becoming taer lrlc ably Involved. Notblog. It appean, Is glmDle where Leo 11 conce rnCd. The male Leo Is attractive lo the opposite se1 and easlly falls prey lo nattery. On the poslllve side, Leo Is a showman wbo helps bring some drama a n d cnle11alnment lo the world. ARIES tl\1arch 21·April 19): Sudden changes oceur: you could be subject of m u ch p..iblicity. l\1ake your position cle.ar. Accent on marriage and partnership. A void a c t i o n s which could lead to notoriety. TAURUS (April 20--May 201 : Decisions made by others affect your job, could result iri change of locale. \Vhat occurs may not be permanent . Be ready with alternate plans. GEJ\11NI (May 21-June 20): Aflalrs or h e a r t are emphasized. Nothing remains the same ; you make discoveries which cause you to alter opinions. l\fember or opPoSite sex announces plans to travel. • CANCER (June 21-July 221 : Conditions at home are not stable. Money question can be • setlled. But you must consult family member. Strive for greater harmony. Agree to intelligent changes. LEO (July 2.l-Aug. 22): You may be sh a ken by armouncement from mate, business associate. Confusion exists. Best to discard rumors. \\'ait for additional facts. Hold off on final)cial commitment. VIRGO (Aug. 23--Sept. 22 ): l\1oney situation apt to be erratic. Some Y.'ho a r e supposed to perrorm b a s i c tasks seem unstable. Be ·sure ·you .know what is being done in your home. Insist on hard news. Peering · Around THt: JOHN WA YNES and C\en1ent llii-schs will b e members or lhe Honorary Ball Committee ror the Oak Tree Ball to take place on Sept. 25 in the Alexandria Hotel. Los Angeles. Proceeds from the event will benefit the Bishop Gooden Home in Pasadena. Recently restored a n d redecorated, the 64·year-old Alexandria Hotel was a landmark in the early 1900s. Preschool Sessions Special carriages are being obtained to tarry committee members and guests to the: hotel entrance at the begin- ning qf the ball , which ""'ill feature dancing to the music of Bernie Richards. Aa.10NG 250 students rrom the weste rn states participat. ing in the 11th annual Summer Music Clinic at the University of Redlands were five Orange Coast residents. Three Laguna Niguel par. ticipants were Andreu Boman, pianist: Nancy Pier ce , clarinetist. and Rick Talcott. trumpeter. LIURA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22 ): You succeed via unorthodo1 n1elhods. You have to release past t'Oncepts. Fulfill creative urges. Make changes. deal serious ly with ideas presented by young persons. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-ND'. 21 ): Difflcult to keep secrets. What y,•as suppreSsed surfaces to forefront. Exercise Independence of l h o u g h-t , action. Team up with Libra individual. Aid one ~·ho is incapacitated. SAGlnA.RJUS <Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): So1ne of your requests may appear ludicrous to others. Stick to principles. It is not your duty to please e·Jeryone. But it is important lo be true to yourselL Act accordingly . CAPRICOR N (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Accent on willingness to meet challenges. Invest in your own ideas, la l ents. Others simpl y ma y not be in tu11e. You should set the pace. Be a versatile self·starter. AQUA.RIOS (Jan. 21>-Feb. 18): Be posllive about directions. Tendency is to move for mere sake of motion. Answer request.s in forthright 1nanner. Realize th~t you cannot ru n away f r o m yourself. PISCES (Feb. 19-a.1arch 20): Some mysteries are solved. Affects ~sessions of mate, partner. Act on knowledge. Don't permit fears or th~ats to deter you. You will be an ullimate winner. , IF • TODAY JS YOUR BlRnlDAY you possess sparkling sense or humor . You are restless. fond of travel: you have been brooding about \vhat might have been. But. in short time, you will be too busy with "'hat is to worry about pasl. Keep the faith. To find Olli w!lo't 111C11Y i<)r YO\I I" mo,,.,,. •nd low, fll'd•r SY!ll\l'Y O'l\1rr•, boOkle!. "Secret Hlnll tor Mtn I nd wom1n." $end blf1h01t1 1no !ii t~~'' lo Om~rr A1troloov Stc!tll, 1111 O.,IL v PILOT, &11• .12C, G••nd ('"Ira! Sli!ll!fl, New Yo••• N,V. 10011. Father Performs Rites Linking Son and Bride The Rev. Clarence Killion of the First Nazarene Church of Dinuba performed the ceremony linking hi."I son, Jonathan Graham Killion of Pasadena and Lynn l\1ichele ~lege"•ald of Balboa in mar- riage. Attending the afternoon .rites in the First Church of the Nazarene of Pasadena were the bride's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Larry Hegewald of Balboa and Mrs. Killion. 'Escorted to the altar by he r rather, the bride asked Miss Karen Jorgensen lo be maid of honor . Bridesmaids were the Misses Leslie and Lee Ann Hegewald, the bride's sisters, and Kathy Bachelor. Ticktockers' Concern Expanding Ann Landsberg , violinist. and her sister Shelly, cellist., or Fountain Valley al so at- tended in the two-week camp. The clinic was led by James Jorgenson, band director at the university . Serving his brother as best Th Cem .. HIVM ,_ man was Busler Killion. e MRS. J . G. KILLION guests were seated by Larry Recites Vow • Cooper. Darre\1 \\1iseman and .. Afternoon sessions will be Fred Ri ch. graduated from Dinuba High Fills Summer Hours offered at Sunshine Com· VlETNAt.I V E T E RA N muni tu Nursery School, Costa visiting his mother, tl1Ni. C. G. 1 Ritchie of Costa h1esa. is Air ~lesa, this month . Force U. Col. John Ritchie. A cooperative nu rs er y A graduate or Newport School and is a s c n i or Harbor liigh School. the bride psychology major al the col· attended Orange Coasl College Jege. and j5 a sophomore majoring Following a honeyn1oon in in education at Pasadena Carmel. they will reside in Star Streamer ·Serving on board T\V1\'s Star Stream flights from Kansas City is ti-1ichclle Randall. daughter of J\l r. and 1\1rs. Garfield Randall of La g u n a Beach. J\.ili ss Randall \vas graduated from La- J?Una Beach Iligh School and attended Arizona State University. Summertime has been shar- ing llme for members o{ the Ticktockers, National Charily Le~gue. The young women from the Newport chapter, who range . from seventh to tWelfU1 graders, have been dividing their time, talents and en- thusiasm between the needs <Jf small children, l h e han· dlcapped and the hospitalized. The girls' activities are coordinated by Jl.frs. Guy Austin Smith, while president of the Ne"1>0rt Chapter of the National Charity League. a mother-d aughter organization dedicated ta community service. is Jl.frs. Herbert John ~1 eany . At Hoag Jl.1emorial Hospital, r r es byterian , Tickt.ockers served as Candy Stripers and at Orange County Medical Blanton-Van Dalfsen Rites Center as Teen Angels. with teachers al !he league':it Assis.lance to the most own branch of the J ohn Tracy cruelly handicapped -the ~:~ and 1~~rs~~n~~1;;1ti~ small child -was given by Costa 11.tesa -aiding deaf ~veral girls who worked at preschool . children learn to the Rehabilitation Center for talk . Crippled Children and Adult..,; They also spent time man- or Orange County . E a c h ning the Ticktocker Thrill volunteer undertook to help a Shop in Costa fl.1esa. 'A'hert child renew Jost skills through proceeds gained go to support the therapy of swimming and the John Tracy Clinic. exercise. Still others assisted Some volunteers worked in at the center's summer da y Santa Ana assembling packets camp. for fund drives. in answer to a Some girls complet~ a call from the Vo I u n I e e r College. Her h u s ban dlOiiiPiiasiiaiidiieiinii•·----...;;;;.-.; school program. the school has He plans to attend a birthday provided in1erestcd parents party in his mother 's honor and their children an op-and to travel to Scottsdale, nnrtunitu lo participate in lhc Ariz., and Sebastopol, Calif., ,~. J 10 visit his sisters, l\1rs. TH lNK-Oi1,ount p,;,., preschool experience for the Emblem Club I II Donald Overton and Mrs. The Elks Lodne is the set· TH INK-Re1dy-M1de Fr1m11 pas years. S 'th • Under t.he guidance of Mrs. Floyd m1 . ting for meetings of the THINK-Tltink1• Fr1m• S~op Lee VanderHeiden, the school Following h i s California Emblem Club 201 or Laguna provides draznatlcs. ar t s, ~~y,h~t. fCol:I RilclhiFe wlill, ~~-,e,.,•,•,cha.ndMetmh1'bcr~r~Tugeasdthaeyrs lhaet • .!~~ ~~!!~~;· ,c.=. ':: crafts, music and science pro-,ii~J~OJ~n~~JS~a~m~i~y~a~~·~·~~~.~~~~~~~·~::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Prince George, Va. 8 p.m. grams. Parents wilh children age 31 vcars. 9 months through 5 }·ears may gain additional in· formation by calling Mrs. Allen Chirby al 546-9363, Sela training course and worked as Bureau. Others assisted lhr B'nai B'rith teacher' s a s s i st an l s Philharmonic Association 'A'ith r,gmafe! throughout the summer period paper work. aided Spanish. Orang e Coast Chapter or 11l the Children's Cre ative Day speaking children Ill prepare B'nai B'rith Women gather the Care Center in Santa Ana, for school. and knitted a large first Trursdays al 8 p.m. in where small children are tend· volume of layette iten1<: and l\1ercury Savings Bank , Hun· cd while their mothers work lap robe s for needy familie s. lington Beach. or train for jobs. ,---------------------- Ticktockers also w o r k e d The most versatile wig ever! Pashion 'Tress Jntroduc~s the New Born Playmate ... Easily re-styled in a wide veriety of flattering hairdos/ Pair Wed • Pasadena • Finest quality Fashion Tress 100% f\llODACRYUC FI BRE S! •EASY TO COM B FROM STRAIGHT TO CURLY, WASH AND WEAR, NA.TURALLY PARTED, SUPERB STRETCH CONSTRUCTION FOR MAXIMUM COMFORT! •AVAILABLE IN 21 BEAUTIFULLY NATURAL SHADES! Tomilynn Van Dnlr.~en r>f Laguna N i g u e I exchanged \"O"'S "'ilh Dennis Lee Blanton Cl! San Clemente in an evening "·cdding ceremony in Lake Avenu e C on gregationat r.:t.urch. Pasadena. orncialing for lhc double ri ng ceremony \1·crc the Rev. Dr. James llenry Hutchins and the Rev. John Carlson. Parents of the ne\\'\yweds nrc t.1r. and fitrs. J. Thoma~ Van Dal rsen of Lagunn Niguel and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Blan- ton of Caldwell, Idaho. Given in marriage by her lather, the bride chose her ~ister. l\lrs. Tim o th ) Dickinson as matron uf honnr. Bridesmaids fncludl'd I ii<' Misses Jeanelle Steinharl of .t.aurel . Afont .. Lois Johnl!On or Nampa, Idaho and Patty ~noD, :is well 8S the fi.1mes David Turner of Portland, Ore .. Gary Long and Hic k! Bravine:. Rocht>llr Blantnn. I h 1· h rl d r g ro o 1n 's ro11sl n oi Ooi!c v.•ti.~ flo "er girl ant: 11.AUTIFUL CLOTH($ •.. Onl~ Sl!ofl!IY U1°"' l'I' O~I· wflo (A~'I bPr lo be I .... !WI« I~ I"' »mt Cl••u . . l n•lr Lou -Vour G•!~ -THrsrcOND TIM! AllOUND uo Ii. 111~ 51., c.,,. MtW Ollt~ 11 ft J -IO·Hll 1"1ichael Dickinson. the bridc"s nephew. v.•as ring bearer. The bridegroom ':; brother, Chuck Blanton of Nampa. served as best man. Ushers included Dean Nafziger of Las Cruces. N.M., L a r r y ~1cl\1illin o( Ontario, Ore .. llcnry Dale Van Hooser of Na mpa. Jim Harrison, Tim Dickinson , end Jim Va n D::i lf.~f'n. \ • I .Junior ushers 'vere the bride's nephews, Peter and Paul Dickinson. The new Mrs. Blanton at- tended Pasadena City College. \Yestmont College in Santa Barbara and Northwest Na:iarene College Jn Nampa. Her husband atended NNC and Boise Stale College. The couple will live io San Clemente. I See by Today's Want Ads • '6j V\V Bug. Student !!II l{Oing back to school and mu1t sell . • Yott'll e.nJoy living-"" ""' °Pf'ninAula polnr • J 1;r. \\'/,w erpl11. drp~. 11tovr, rtfrii;. $16.). • Pl~"~ hclp. lhc frr.e to you kill crt.rJ llnd t1 home. TI1r.rr Art All ki nds, colof"'!I and •Sizes_ Two ring s for two· lover s . botn rings $88.00 Fl""' iitu"Dllty d!•m•fltl h114K1old -IM11dod 011d retliteretf! Eosy 'redit terms • student accounh ovolloble • up fo 11 monlh1 to poy BonkAmericord • Most•r Charge "THE STOHES CONFlDE NCE BUILT" 1(irk © tu:tft~ .. ___ ,,, Esttblished 43 Yeir•! MUNf1NGTOH Cl!NTER INl~ & litklttr HIHlll..,re~ &N'~ •'1·»01 H~llOI SHO,,ING CIMTll 2>M H1rillr ··~·· Ce1l1 M•t• l4J·t4U Of'EN MON .. THUllS. & FRI. 'TIL ' f'.M. One wig can be s1yled like •ll lhese and more•• Shown here are only live of over fifty dillerent styles the PLAYMATE can be brushed into- s\yle rt ehher with lhe part or without 11. Style #690 New8orn- Ad11ertised 1n VOGUE •nd SEVENTEEN. _, r YIYl~NI WOODARD COSMn1cs -i - ONLY $35 .00 r' ,. 1 \c- I ~\ :,_ ma!Aej WIG & BEAUTY SALON 250 E. 17th STREET COSTA MESA DAILY TILL 5:30 548-3446 THURS. & FRI. TILL 1:00 . ' J ' --. DAILY PILOT Wtdntsdl)', !epternbtr 2, !"'9 Details Take Shape in Summer Sun Enjo~& ihe pleasant vis ta on the veranda of the new Santa Ana CountrY Clubhouse and planning details of a Member Guest Tea to take place Wednesday, Sept. 9, are (left to right) the Mm~s. ·Charles Holli!i,ter, Ralph Phelps and Frank Markel. Future social events will include cocktails, dinner and bridge on Sept. 18 and a members luncheon and bridge on Sept. 24. Other social chairmen are the Mmes. John Graham, Laurence Ruoff, Thomas Pekin, Thomas Crosson and Bruce Detsch. I t ., - • .. ' -UPI T•lsPrtei. Sleek Lines Old New Orleans Flavor Pageantry Sets Mood Based on the traditional pomp and pageantry of old New Orleans custom, the Mystick Krewe of Komus will present its annual royal ball at 9 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 12. Hosti ng the party will be Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Krn fl of Anaheim and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Phillips of Fullerton, HJghlight of the evening will be the presentalion of the traditional flag to the .reigning queen, Mrs. Thomas Sullivan, and the royal sash to the king, Richard Luther. Attired in elaborate Mardi Gras costumes will be the royal maids of the new court. and past kings and queens have prepared -a fast·paced show to entertain partygoers. A display of previous court costumes will be provided, and dance music will be offered by a !~piece band. The queen's flag, bearing the crest of the krewe, was hand-sewn by the previous queen, Mrs. Michael Trujillo, Mesa Families Host Teachers From Africa Four teachers from A(rica havt! been the guests of Costa Mesa residents during the last few weeks of summer. The four have ·arrived in the Harbor Area following com· pletion of their sum me r studies on American universi- ty campuses under th e sponsorship of the American AssociationofU n i ve r s i l y Workshop Announced Women and the U.S. Depart- ment of State. ?-.1rs. Justine d'Almeida and Miss Rita Mensah of Togo, Africa, have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Norman J. Egli and Mr. and Mrs. Ronald K. Arnold. Mrs. Outlwile Thato Matome or Botswana. Africa, and Mrs. Tutula Lekalake of Gaborone. Africa, have been entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Dean. The special summer course of study is sponsored by the AAU\V in addition to its regular fellowships program in an attempt to alleviate the shorlage or teachers in Africa . Since 1963, 37 teachers from 15 African nations h a v e participated in the program. ~·hich is supported by . AAUW fellowship funds. v.1ho will present it to the new queen . Truj illo, krewe president, will be assisted i n ar· rangements by Rich a rd Shugert and K r a f t in ceremonial arrangements. Custom dictates tha t the king's ribbon of honor be of the same fabric as the queen's Mardi Gras dress which will be fashioned of gold and and royal blue. Preceding the ball the krewe's members and guests will be entertained at a cocktail party hosted by the King 's Klub in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Nick Paolisso. Plans to attend the party ma y be confirmed by con- tacting Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mehrmann, whQ are accepting reservations. Salvation ArmvHosts , Londoner A Salvation Army traveler from London will be speaking in Long Beach on Saturday, Sept. 5. 1'he v.·orld president of the Salvation Army Nurses ' Fellowship, M r s , Com- missioner Arnold Brown. is to 'speak at a 5 p.m. dinner in the Lafayette Hotel. The Nurses' Fel\owsip Din· ner is part of the Salvation Army 's week Jong evangelistic effort called Contact '70 - . ' ; ... . A Tense Question Will Lib Prove Costly?' By PATRICIA McCORMACK NEW YORK (UPI) -Wilen the women's revolution obtains equal -rights kl< all . females, will men 1 t a r t ouilivinl women -or at least living as Joni as women? An average girl born in the United States today c 1 n e:rpect to live until age 7t - seven more years than the male baby's life expectation. The question is raised by the Institute of. Life Insurance. The high tel'lfiion We 'of males la somehow linked to the faCt that they don't live as long as -. women. , "Will the gap shrink as women get caught op by ttie pressures of their new-won gains as lady JOC:keys, lady blackjack dealers, lady bod carriers, lady ad agency presidents ml lady revolutulonaires?" the institute asked men a n d women in the lci.encts and Jl'Ofesstona. Some felt a narrowing of the gap 'between male and female life span was not imminent. Others said the repercussions of recefll changes In women's atatus abd c®Jce of jobs were apt to baYe""an effect. Dr. Katherine R,, Boucot, profeasor of clinical medicine at Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania, said the female hormone, estrogen, tends to lower the fat content of the blood, making women much Jess susc.epll61e to arteriosclerosis and he a r t allmenls. "We have far too many widows in this country, spending the rest of their life akme," she said. To make it possible foe men and women to live happier ml· longer lives together, Dr. Boucot suggested women m 1 r r y younger men than themselves. She even advised h e r daughter to marry a man years younger to heighten th.e prospect of more y e a r 1 together. Bozigion-Schniepp Rites Betty Friedan, leader of the women's revolution and coordinator of the National Strike . foi-Equality, predicts that the boy of today will live longer than the man U yesterday. . ~ Her line of reasoning: as men and women take up equal roles, the obsolete m.uculine mystique will liberate-men to live longer. Pledges Exchanged Mrs. Friedan believes that the mate "provider" image with its "killer and hunter" aspects is on its way out. "It just put too great a strain oo many men," she added. Wedding pledges were ex- changed in Salem Lutheran Church, Orange Park Acres, by Ann Louis Schniepp of Nf!wport Beach and Kenneth Earl Bozigian of San Diego. The t;vening rites were solemnized by the Rev. Myron Hartwig for the daughter and son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Schniepp of Villa Park and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Bozigian ol Fremont. Miss June Roth attended the bride as maid of honor, and bridesmaids were Mrs. Gary Schniepp, sister-in-law of the bride, Miss Jeanette Bozigian, sister of the bridegroom, and Miss Gail Blackburn. Schniepp served as best man and guests were seated by Dennis McWilliams, cousin of the brideg r oom, Dave Altshuler and Michael Foster. _ The new Mrs. Bozigian is a graduate of Orange High School and California Western University. Her husband is an alumnus of Irvington High School, Fremont and attended Silent Bidders However the strw factor b not relevant, aceording to Dr. Ruth Pick, a pathologist at Michael Reese Hospital in Chicago. "Women," she said, "art subject to the same extent of stress as men." Many tensions occur at home, as women raise children and tend house. A psychologist, Harold B. Pepinsky of Ohio S t at e University, has a q u i t e different view of what might cause a narrowing of the life gap between the sexes. "Ecological ills such as o v e rcrowding, accentuated MRS. K. E. BOZIGIAN noise and societal tension over Sen Diego Home present world conditions," he says, "are likely to shorten the lives, regardless ol sei:. California State College at "That's the evidence we Hayward before serving in the presently are getting from our Navy. ecological studies." Following a honeymoon ~··-;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, Hawaii, the newlyweds will I• reside in San Diego. Auction Joins Cards The next to last gathering in the summer luncheon-card party series sponsored by the Woman's Club of Laguna Alternative In Of{ing Mostly, the look was the long hemline in the Paris col- leclions. But couture designers also are offering alternaUves. The suits of Gabrielle Chanel, for l n s t a n c e, just cover the knees as they have for years. Pierre Balmain and Hubert de Givenchy pegged daytime clothes at two to three inches below the knee, depending on the height of the model. Christian Dior, Jeanne Lan- vin and Jean Patou elected for the mid-calf length. LITTLE GUYS 'N DOLLS Beach will begin at noon on Friday, Sept. 4, in the Woman's Clubhouse. Reservations are r1ecessary and may be made with the Mmes. Clifford Loucks, 494-5006; 0. W. Price, 494-1927, or Oliver Taylor, 494-0653. A $1.50 ticket entitles guests to enjoy luncheon a n d participate in draw ings for door prizes. Paintings by Laguna artist Ruth Wilkinson also will be awarded during a sile'llt auction. The ways and means com- mittee under chairmanship of Mrs. J , W. Lansdell will host the party with assistance from the crafts commlltee. Those interested In doing so may play cards following lunch. The first meeting or fali will be conducted by Miss Faye Bentson, president on Friday, Oct. 2. The program will be arranged by Mrs. L o u i s Underwood who will present a television personality. CHILDREN'S HAIR STYLING Prottuienll Sciuar Styl1119 POlt APPOINTMENT Deity ' ff s -Cl111d .MGMl1)"l '4Z·l61t 130 E. 17th St. ~!:.,~-:'1¥11~1 Costa Me.sa CREPELON' Is the word for 'SMOOTH' Vd •SMOOTH' takes on a whole new meani ng with tills rabu· lous under·stated two-piece bias cup bra of Crepelon• nylon. Cups are contoured with laminated fiberfill, Styl• 1905. Fashion colors. ~.32-~ 36; 8,C J2·3B. DTEP.Y Skirting the calf mid \\'3.Y is a bro\v n suede suit desi_gned by Yves St . Laurent for the up- comin~ ~·inter season. 1'hc sleek lines of the costun1e are compli- n1cn!ed by steel rivet tri111n1 in_g at the collar, cuffs and jacket edge. Board members and chairmen of the Orange Dis- trict, California Federation of Womens' Clubs Junior Mem- bership, are planning to attend a "Preworkshop W<lrkshop" in the Garden Grove home of Mrs. Robert Calderwood to- night .' Outreach i n Evangelism. l~iiiiiiii which will be under way throughout the Southland, con· SKOtTFOlt WOMIN .& CHILDREN m ll. U!h SI. ,IACK TO SCHOOL! ~~~~~~.1 •' I BIDWELL OF NEWPORT • Cl'lo~t•ll • HOQp £•rrlt19• G11or,1 • Clio 0~1 • Connnvo111 PttrCfl'! • ~~ul•• :::JJ...e, P!trcM BIDTIQUE '71-4Slt Mrs. Calderwood. first vice- president of the district, will ca ll the meeting to order at Wine Red Popular The most popular shade in ?:~iscussed will be new ideas the Paris fash ion collections on w 0 r ks hop prCSentalion, for fall was a wine red, department projects and sta~c son1climcs teamed with pink. and district procedure. in Dior went heavily to black, advance of the first genera l brown and other !•quiet" colors, meeting of the year scheduled while Feraud and Courreges for Wednesday. Sept. 16. emphasized white. l'IRGlf\'IA'S SNIP 'N' STITCH SHOPPE 3334 East Coast Hwy. • Coron• del Mar Phone 473.soso IT'S BACK TO SCHOOL IN TWO WEEKS ! G•t ih• "1m•ll fry" r••dv i11 •11y to c1r1 for ~titl1elolh dr11111. Youn9 f11hOon1bl11 love v11I ind 1kirt 1tj:)lr1!11 of w1 1h. Ab!1 wool pl1i<h 111d pl1in coorcl!ntttt -Jiffy ptlttrn S!111p!ic;1y :9997 i1 quick i nd 111y, you'll h1v1 tim1 to m1~1 11v111l milf end match outfih . Jumptr ptlttrn '18998 1111 1ty!t ind i1 I jiffy lo mt~• -l}•••t in coulcroy or quilt11d t.otton. F1vo rit1 to ell. ii polyt1!1r k,.;1, it'1 fu11 lo w11r 1nd 1uit· 1bl1 for •nv p1!11r11, dr11111, 1~i rh , p1nh ind j11m p1r1, Ponch.o'1 111 • '"u1! for c;oo! mornin91 -Girl1 lo"• th1 ptl1n• ¥it1y!i or wool1 with long frin91 timplt lo m1k1 p1tt1rn Simpll<.itv •1944. H11r1y !11, w1'll tlelp vo11 pltn yo11r <.hildr1n1' w•rd1oi>1. S11 Yow Soon! JACKIE Us• y..,-lctnkAintrfcord or MastH Chcirtt eluding Sept. 6. Student and retired nurses, as well as other women in the organization are invited to at· tend the diruier. Waist Watchers TOPS Waist Watcher s assemble every Thursday at 7 p.m. in Circle View School, Huntington Beach. CRYSTAL & ACCENTS SHOP llt2 HARIOR ILVD .. COSTA MI SA '42·5053 W1ddin9 l Anni~1r.1ry To11tin9 Gl.u11 N•m11 & 0111 GRAND OPENING SEPT. 3 T1mp1rtd Hand Decorated &: Monogrammed Crystal Unique Home Accents & Gifts Flower Arrangements OIFT W•Al>l'ING DltDElt NOW FOii CHRISTMAS TUES.·SAT. 1 ... 1. PA•JUHO-IACK l!NTltANCll lllDLll l llA5 2717 E. Co11t Hwy. Corona del Mtr-Ph, 671·1950 e 81n~Am1r;e1rd e M11l1r Ch1r91 22 Y11r1 in S1m1 loc1tio11 • ••• II</ Fl:XIN1"AIN VAUSy ••• 11~1~S •SURVRISES ~S~MS~~! WArc.H FOR. 0£.C •1($> -~,;l(ANt> OP£N/NG At>.' j ' • l I i i : • • ? • • • • . • I • • l ' I I I I l I I l ' • ' •• ,. ~ .. •• • ~· " ,• '• .. ~· • '*•>•••r• , .. 9 PILOT-ADVERTISER N Wl'dntsday, Stpltnlbtr 2, 1970 • \.l/t:!ntsdq. Stptember 2, 1970 DAI LY PILOT 33 R c C · ea OL' VIRGINIA OVAl CAN •••• 5 ~~~HAMS ROMAINE 9~ " ........ "... s~ . . MELONS ................. . YELLOW MEAT FREESTONE GAY TIME I-lb, Pk9. MARSHMALLOWS 2sc PEA c HES 19~ '"o'"'· Muse~~:::. ~hoice 25~ GRAPES .............. . ALL GRINDS -MOUNTAIN GROWN PATIO CHEF -CHARCOAL OSCWiRENERSBEEF FOLGERS BRIQUETS WESTWOOD CATER ING ICE CREAM HA~TN~AL. HOMADE GENUINE 6~ c 0 FF EE KOSHER j!;" ii<~: I c . ~~-~~-~;;·.;;·~-~!: ·------·············· :;-~·-, 1 ·LB. TIN • 55c &ELL a_RAND -Reg . 7lc 49c POTA'.1'0 CHIPS .. ~~;:~ l DISCOVNT PERSONAL NEEDS COMP All JANE ANDE•fON • JALAPENO or P MIENTO 1·01. Cop CHEESE 49' SPREAD ........ •• c l l i11imenl , HEET .......................... . I l -01. Ti11 Reg., H.T .H . I • 984 $150 DISCOUNT PllCI IRIS POP BLUE SEAL HAMBURGER; or WEBER HOT DOG' I • ' i I ' . . : l • I • • • • ! I I ! l l ADORN HAIR SPRAY .... W/E9g R19. Shempoo FLOWER GIRL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99 4 4-Ct. C1rd1d SQUEEZY KEYS . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 4 Protect holeted Phon11 TELEPHONE LOCK . . . . . . . . . S 155 ¥. "11110" NON·SKID TAPE ........... 98 4 $122 784 12 12.oz. 99c CANS Finv. Meats ior the llfJliday "TENDER-LEE " FINE QUALITY FULLY COOKED SHANK HALF WILSON'S c lb. :::~E ............... 55~ • BUTT 55' : HAM $119 ~ORTION . . . " : SLICES .... lb. OSCAR MAYER -EASTERN POR K TENDER MADE HORMEL'S CURE "81 " LUER'S MINI GOURMET FULLY COOKED SPARERIBS HALF HAMS Wrapped 3.5 lbs. •1·~~ f"ROZEN f'OOD.~ c lb t.lri. fricl1y'1 I 'fr.lb. '2" : lal'ADlD SHalMP' , . · • • · • · .pk9. BUNS a.ct. Pk9. 29c FRESH EASTERN PORK ROAST Butt MIN . SIZE 21/1 lb1. Cut 55 ~ FRESH 75c PORK STEAKS . . . . 1b BREAKFAST S PECIALS HOFFMAN 'S BETIERMAID , , SLICED vAc. 79c: BACON ................ P~c~.. lbl • • LUER'S OUALIT'( -PURE POR K 2ac: LINK SAUSAGE .............. ';;; Mr1. Ftid1y'1 10.01. 49c ~ $Kl.IMP PUP:,S •••• , • ·, •••• p~9 ._. TYSON'S PRIDE ROCK CORNISH G RADE 'A' 1'Mr1. Frid1 y\ 7·01. 51 Of ' 1,9,,, SHalMP .. · • • • • • •• :. P~9· • Rup••I 12·01. 69C •• FISH N' CHEESE STICKS • ', pk9 . ' Rupert 1.lb. 79c flSH N' CHIPS . ·.,. • • • • "· pk9. :~ Rup•1I 2·1b. S 1 " ·' FiSH N' CHIPS , . • •• • •• • · ·P·9· Cern•lion 1./b. S 1" • FISH STEAKS . • • • · • • • · • • • • • pk9. ~ ,• C•rn •lion I.l b. S 1" :-. SOLi' ,ILLETS •. • • • • • • • • · • .pk9 . • -. Top 009 79c CORN DO~S ..••. • • • ••••• •• lb. Sh11r•· T ond• 51 " Hlf fllTill5 ....••.••.•... lb. Ho11•y Suckle lon1l1u 2°l b. l ·ot. S31' • TUllllY lOAST "MIJl'D" • ... pk9. . si·,u ·oo" SPECIALS NORTHERN WHITE FROZEN HALIBUT STEAKS 98~. • Fr11h Filt1h Per S 1 It DOVEi SOLi .......... lb. Fr11h 6·01. 89' COOKED Sl'tllMP ..•• Tr•1 GAME HENS MIN. WT. I -LB. 4-0Z. IUY A CASE OF I! $809 GAME HENS ..................... . Prices Effective Thursday thru Monday, Sept. 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 . . 5·LB. BAG .c MOTT'S -25-oz. Glass APPLE SAUCE 33c • BIRDSEYE -FROZEN •. VEGETABLES CUT . CORN-10-oz. GREEN BEANS-9-oz. CHOPPED SPINACH-10-oz. $ 00 PKGS. 1101,IDAY LIQllOR SPECIALS KARASOV VODKA '2~?. 2701 HAR.OR BLVD., COSTA MESA e 13922 BROOKHURST, GARDEN .GROVE e 1308 W. EDINGER, SANTA ANA ' 5858-WARNER, HUNTltfGTOfir-aEACH e 23811 EL TORO, EL TORO · : . -• • • . . ' ·- -~~ .. · -------~---~.··-....,,.-~=-~-...,,----------...... ., .. --,... ..... ~---..-.... -.,---,,--,-, -o•--~-,-,--.,,--.--......... -,, U DAILY PILOT "r--. . iSpice Colors of ·Life Cooking • Dual PurpQse SJ a z nu u . By JOHNA BLINN food linages. Ir you're going to something that's not done too YNEW 'YORK --"Liit lS des<:ritie sometlling a1fDrown;-l"rten~" • \l:luallydescrlbedbywritersin it's .mo~e interesrmg ~o ••To be able to do that and !Jlhtr bro'l\'n or black. but I've describe 11 as nutm eg or c1n· describe real people In a .tried to use color images and namon brown. If il's black, journalistic context as a color Sil)' black as the. deadl y night, flower or a food, fascinates shade .or chiffon ~I a ck,·' n1e. Angela Lansbury, for in· Plentiful ·foods ... SEPTEMBER WHEAT PRODUCTS FRESH PLUMS WATERMELONS SUMMER VE GETABLES PEANUTS AND PEANUT PRODUCTS Ahoy There v.•riter~rilicact.or Rex Reed stance. alw ays :OOks like she 's said in the den of his con1· just discovered the formula fortable apar~ent at the for bottling daisies and has Dakota, Manhattan's olde:1t been allowed to swallow the luxury apartment house (in key! She's like a great big West 72nd Street. sunflowtr or daisy blossoming "Then to provide the ea!Wl and blooming all the time ." with the re11t of the colors. is Rex thinks one of the most something you don 't find loo interesting subjects of non · often. I like imagery in show biz fam~ is Lest.er ('.lad· writing," he said. dox , governor' of Georgia . "Once you described Albert "He's all food associations - Finney as having white skin he's strictly chicken gravy and with freckles floating in a pork chops!" bowl of milk>" I remarked. He's seldom surprised by "Well have you ever seen the eating habjts of !)Cople. crul!,hed cornflakes all floating "fo.lelina Meco.uri ta,ughl me lo around in milk?" Rex asked eat snails. The very thought oC shyly (he was seated on a them made me sick until s!ic lime.green sofa in the colorful taught me how to eat thein. room dominated by marine No'" I love them ~" blues. emeralds, white and "f\1y grandfather used to tel! silron) ... , like lo think in stories about being rocked on terms of things, objects. Jesse Jan1es' knee . And the Language is not exercised Dalton gang were second enough by writers. J grew up coUsins." This may explain an very influenced by Southern impossible ambition lo in· writers and poets (people like lcrvle\v such figures as Hitler. Truman Capote and Carson Jack the Ri1lper. Robespierre McCullers). And to apply a!I or Lizzie Borden. ''I've always these things to journalism, is been fascjnated by criminals Sea Treasure Abounds Ahoy there! SearcWng for tnasure? Treasure from the sea no longer means pirate's gold - the far more valuable treasures from the sea are the boulltiful supplies of fish and shellfish nurtured in the cold ocean •depths and along the stiores and estuaries. Among the choice s t treasures to be found are members of the crab famil y. Regardless of whet!M!r your preference is for Oungeness crab from the rold waters of the Pacific. blue crab from . Atlantic and Gulf Coasts. or \ting crab from Alaska's rug- ged , icy waters -a 11 crabmeat i.s great eating and an excellenl source of easily digested protein and vitamins !eftpecially thiamine, niacin, and riboflavin), but low in fat.'! and calories. Vers3ti!e crabmeat adapt s easily to dozens of preparation methods and is delicious in canapes, dips, cocktail s. salads, sandwiches, aspics, cakes, souffles, or casseroles. Crabmeat lifts a casserole out of the ordinary and up ln!o the extraordinarily-good class. Company Crab 'n' Rice is a tasly, compact way to serve and ext~nd the crabmeat. is easily served and may be' prepared a day ahead and ref r igerate d for the homemaker's convenience. Cooked green peas, parsley, butter or margarine, pimiento and onion add food value and flavor accents. Topped \Yith cheese and Jul· ter or margarine. thL<r flavor· fu l dish needs only about 30 minutes in a moderate oven TRUE TREASURE FROM THE DEEP Taste Treat OLDTL\1.E A-1ACARON I AND CHEESE 3 large tggs 1 teaspoon \Vorccster!!hire ~ sauce J ~ teaspoon salt 2 cups milk. scalded cheese (2 cups slightly packed·) t ounces elbo.,..· m11c11roni. cooked and Ura luc d at- c;ordin& to package dl rec· UOlll hi In ungrcascd 2-(Juart round glass casserolc-18': by 2~-tnchcs) or ·$imUar-uterrsi1 beat the eggs until yolks and \ wbite art tombincdi add \\lorctslershlre and salt. In a 11.z-quart saucepan heal the milk until bubbl es appear around the edge; off heat or over very lnw heal stir in the l'heese until rnelted. Stirring consta·l\tly , gradually add milk mixture to i:ggs; stir 1n nuicaroni . Place casf<ierole in a square cake pan 19 by 9 by J:\4 fn. ches): fl ll p11n with very hot v.•ater so w3ter comes up as high as possible. Bake Jn a preheated 35(}.dcgree oven un· tll ;,i silver knife insrrtcd in ccntcr come~ nut cleorr-- ab<>ul J hour. Ser\·e :it (l'11l'C, fl·l11kes 6 scr .... lngs. and lrs ready to serve. Try Con1pany Crab 'n' Rice for Sunday night supper or when· ever time is ·short and appc. tiles are big. COMP AN\' CRAB 'N' RICE . pound crabmeat, f r e s h frozen or pasteurized or 3 cans (614 ounces each) crabmeat :l cu ps cooked rice I cup cooked p:?as • ~ cup chopped parsley J/3 cup bulter or margarine. diced 114 cup chopped pimiento J tables poons grated onion 1 ~ teaspoon salt 1 1 teas poon while pepper J tablespoons g r a I c d Parmesan cheese 2 taOlespoo ns butter or margarine Thaw frozen c r a b m ca 1 . Dra in crabmeat. Remove any remaining shell or carlilag:-. Combine all ingredients except Parmesan cheese and 2 tablespoons butler. Place in a well-greased 2-quart casserole. Sprinkle with cheese and dot with butter. Bake in a moderate oven. 350 degrees F., for 25 to 30 minutes or un- til lightly brO\\'ned. Makes 6 servings. Note: This casserole may br prepared a day ahead and refrigerated. I ·Milk Chocolate Co ke 2-loyer~ !Reg. $ l . .4 5l Buttercreom Coffee Cokes Pkg. of 6 !Reg . 63<1 ar.d fainoos murders. l can devQur the tabloids Jaster Ulan J can rf:ad a novel !" Although Rex was born iJll Fort \Yor\h, Texas , and spent much of his life in Baton Rougc:Louisiana , he attended 13 different schools before high school graduation. "My father worked for the Humble •'•'•·~ Oil Company as an oil field supervisor, which meant \re lrave·led constantly. "In f\1ississi ppi. v.•c lived in an old plantation house. There were stables and a Jot of prir perty. It. was an o Id aristocratic house the owners could no longer._afford to keep up. so they rented it out. My . father always said, 'They're loo poor lo paint and too proud to white wash ! Rex is reed-slender and has never had a weightP roblem but currently was under the care of his physician for a l.1w blood sugar condition. ··~1:lybe that's because I have Gumbo ; and Dr. Pepper running t~ through my veins instead of ·i· good red blood!" be grinned. r One for school, one for pa.flies -both happy-go-lucky versions will Oelight yor little girl. Trim with purchased braid and stars or dainty ruf· Hing. He likes to prepare gumbo for his friends. "My favorite v"ay to entertain is just 1.o have people in that I know - close friends -not people I'm trying to impress, but r.on1· fortable with. I would riever ask people to come in black tie to my house or to a sit-down formal dinner. It's alwa ys fried chicken and S'i\'eet potato ~ouffle or I'll make an enormous pot of .gumbo 1vhich is rea!\y my specialty. ?l·Jy idea of having a great evening GUMBO'S FINE POINTS DELIVERED Writer Rex Reed Printed Pattern 9348 : NEW Child 's Sizes 2. 4. ·6, 8. Size 6 Uower) Ji8 yds. JS.in., 3/8 contr. is having lemon box pie for deSse rt, .iced tea and having a big shrimp gumbo." Rex invited me on a Cook's tour of the apartment "I love .. my home," he said warmly. "I want it to reflect things from 1ny travels and my life," he said, passing through the foyer sunny with citron walls <111d dark wood, to the kitchen. • Recipes for Rex's fa re, for two great Southern favorite s foll ow: REX REED'S SHRIMP GUMBO 3 tablespoons vegetttle oil 3 lab!espoons flour 3 cups sliced, stemmed fresh okra 2 chopped sc3Jlions (•vi1ite part only) I cup chopped onion 1 clove garlic, minced 1 cup chopped celery 2 heaping tablespoons mine· ed parsley 111;1 teaspoons salt freshly groUnd pepper to tasle I cup chicken stock \Vorcestershire sauce 8-10 drops Tabasco (or cayenne lo taste ) ,~cup fresh lemon juice large pinch thyme 2 large bay leaves 3 tablespoons chopped ham, optional 2 pounds grctn ( r a "". ) shrimp, peeled and de· veined 2 pounds fresh king crab legs (or 1 pound raw crab n1eal ) gumbo file powder ' tfeilt oil and flour in 4-quilrl pressure sauce pan. Cook over n1edium heat , sti rring mixture (roull.) until olmost black . Add okra, scallions, onion, garlic, celery, parsley, salt and prp- pcr. Cook, stirring often ur.til vegetables soften slightly. Add chicken stock, Worcestershire sauce, Tabasco, lemon juice, thyme. bay leaves. ha1n, 11eat to si mmer. Add shrimp and king cr::ih n1cat (cut leg with scissors to rc1nove meat , discard shell ur use large chunks of fresh ra w crab meat). Mix well. Clo.;e Cl ose cover Securely. Cook 4 minutes. Cool cooker at once. llemove cover, stir. Taste 10 l.'Orrect seasonings. Serve at once over fluffy cooked rice rlavored with snipped parsley. Sprinkle file µowder ovtr gumbo at the table. Serve wi th hot garlic French bread , gre~·u salad and tall glasses of iCl'd tea. Serves 4-6. AFTERTHOUGHTS: flC',.·~ shrimp \ gumbo will \'J i n paeans! For late summer cooking, pressure c o o k 1? r saucepan reduces lime and heat in the kitchen. If prefer- red, use a deep iron skillet, in· crease liquid to about 2 quarts. cook vegetable-stock n1ixture until thickened (about 45 minutes) before ad~ing seafood. Add seafood, cook un· Iii shrim p begihs to turn cor- al. Adjust9 seasonings, in· creasingly slightly to taste . SEVENTY -FIVE CENTS FOR EACH PA 1"fERN -add 25 cents for each pattern ·for Air Mail and Special Hand!· ing : otherwise third~lass delivery will take three ""·eeks or more. Send to f\1arian ~fartin, the Daily Pilot, 442 Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York, N.Y. 10011. Print NAME, ADDR ESS with ZIP. SIZE and STYLE NUM· BER. Rex adv ises, "First you must make the roux : that's the first thing n1y m~lher taught me ! ·rhen. yo u lc;irn everytlung-else about Souli1t>l'n cooking! Never add tomalOcs -----------J to !he gumbo. File po•,11der 1dricd sassafras leaves used to rlavor and thicken stot'k. is available at gourmet se<:tion nf supermarkets or !ood specialty shops) may be ad /led at the end of the cooking time, hut file should never be cooked into the gu mbo or it gets ropey in appearance ."·Gumbo 1nade without file. can be refri gerated or frozen and reheated to serve. LE:'IION ICE BOX PIF: 20 vanilla wafers, crusheri and crumbled 11 ~ tab lespoons suga r 113 cup 1nelted butter Con1binc crun1bs and $Ugar in mixing 001~'1. Stir in mel!etl butler. mix well. Press firmly into boltom and sides of an S.inch pie plate. Bake in pre- heated 3511 degrees F. oven 7 minutes. Cool. For the filling: I can condensed milk 1 ~ cup fres h lemon jui.:e finely grated rind of one and one-half lemons 2 eggs separated 1/1 cup sugar dash salt Blend condensed 1n i l k , lemon juice and 2/3 of the lemon rind . Add egg yolks, mix well: pour into cooled pie shell. Beal egg whites and salt un- til almost stiff. Gradually add sugar beating until mixtu re iS stiff and fluffy. Pile meringue lightly ovrr filled pie shell. Sprinkle top with remaining lemon rind. Bake in preheated 325 F. oven until top begins to tum brown . Serves 6. CMc•w Trll•1111•·New Ytrll NIWI S~nOIUI• Van de Kam p's. Labor Day Specials Special Prices -Thurs. -Mon., Sept. 3-7 1-loyer !Reg. 79'-) W iener or Son cl wich Buns Pkg . of 8 !Reg. 4 1 <I • I Ice Cream CarniHl -All Flavors 'r C.gl (~o;i.Sl.l~) ................. . r ,~1 1~"11· AJcl ....... ,,,, ••..• , ,,. Sherbet -All Flavors r .. irt.9 . .:iJ,\ .••.•. -.........• Ice Cream O'Month-Bavarian Toffee '/1 Gol !l1g.$1.JS) ...••... ,,.,, .... P.n1 It•~· AJt) ,,, •••••••••••••••••••••• ,. Crumb , Su1ar or Assorted Ounkettes Pl9.ol 12 IReg. 45fl, ............. , •.•..... Chocolate Chip Cookies 31, . .,, IRe51,4VfJ ......... ,,, .....•.....• lem on or Butterscotch Chip Cookiis r.,. IR~g .J9fl . . .•.... ,.,,,,,,,,,, Peanut Brittle Candy ................ .. Candy O'Month -Fruit Juleps .. ,, . .,, '' .. ' .............. '. '. Cake O'Month -BIYarian Toffee 710~"'. ···•·••••••• ,,, .. ,. s12s 39c 29c s12s 39c 39c 39c 33c 45c 69c Sl 45 Van de Kamps . SA~ERIES • tolYl!<l"· C'f .;.! .. t•-1 "'°~' C:Olr ' WITH SALLI E AIN'T SHE S\VEET OR SOUR, OR DILL r~- !low many pickles havt you eaten this summer? According to the official pickle counters throughout the U.S., you should have consumed 42, hall or the national yearly average ol 84. Pickles and people and picnics are natural lovers and they've been making woo for years. Cleopatra ale ·em for beauty . Caesar toted 'em along for energy. Amerigo Vi:!spucci, Io r whon1 our gre at Americas were named, was a pickle dealer in Seville. If you·r~ puckering, deli is the plact fo real, honest-to-goodnesi barrel dill pickles. Of course you ha ve ~ fight your way throug.lr buckets of pulsating pickle4· bee~s. tangy green beaq salad all made gay witb' dobbles of bright r e ij pimiento, and a crisp batcit of cucumbers k e e p i n~· summer light company wit sliced tomatoes a · Crt_Jnchy rihgs of purpler onions. All perfect eatinC good companions f o ;· luscious slices of rare roa~'" beef and Danish barbequ . ham, barbequed chicken · ribs. You can eat your Wat all through summer in th~· deli. and on and on throug~ spring. The mood . the ail'f tbe feel , is alwaJs one big happy summer and looking f~~rd ~ somethinC exc111ng time. . '"int e Jt never comes, and i t ' S always Christmas. Nl1"fY GRl1"f1ES MADE EASY ., " ; Think fast before y~ settle for a Grandma'4 buttermilk donut and iceG tea siesta in the coffee shit!. Have you moved lately? ·u so, you need to re-rei;istd°(, so you can vote for youi' favo rite p e op I e nex:i November. The deadline ra September 10, which is 01 week from tomotrow. T nice lady to do your r ' gestering thing sits r igh't outside the coffee shop everyday from I to 5, bl! nol on Sunday. Please don!l forget. Why not come dowp and re·registcr right no\(, today. Then dive into the !t BIG HO\VL BEFORE LABOR DAY ' ,. Consider a Champagne lentil from France. A lentil is about as anc ient as a foal!: ca.n git. \Vas a time, tO make them eata ble, Uie routine \\'as overni gh t soaking and the big boil proced ure for 4 hours. No more. These new green cir gold beauties come tender delicious in 40 minutes. Add what fun things you can dO with them casserole-wise P.i place of potatoes. rice W noodles. \\'hy not a lentil aQd bean salad 11'llh any oil aall vinegar dressing. After thio}r are cooked. drain, get ouf a frying pan and go wild with sa~sages, pieces of bacof, onions. tomatoes, I j m 1 beans. They especially Ji~ thyme, bay leaves, and evlil ~urry. Try throwing a r• in any soup, ste w, or (t vorite concoction whe' you 11'ould use pasla. .; \VE WILL BE: CLOSED MONDAY LABOR DAY •• END ON THE ROAD ~ ln a dream . . . wand£. around . . . perhaps · 1 lus('ious chicken all stuffect and foil pan ready '" roasting right down to tti Dalmation sage, .•• Fresh fruit stalls to entrance yob with t1vo fisted nectarinea . trays of fresh white arit purple figs, bunche,, of jui* concord grapes, the b~·· brown. ugly, with a sw~ surprise inside Elephairt hea rt plums ... The first - the pickins of Go Ide l' Delicio us apples. Waller ht the deli's ready·mad"'e salads ... luscious egg a~ potato. so popular, it CORMf in a big 4 pound picnic silt .. ever lovin' coleslaw .} Blackberry whip .• Pea.qi Delight .. Hawaiian Tre¥ .. Kidney Bean and a do~ more .,, ; Richard's, the Pe op~' Stol't", the one whtre onlJ -lhe.-good lhings-{'Ome fro"' Ne"·port Beach. t I • ' . . ~- DAii. 't 'ILOT 35: PHONE 1>73-6360 FOR HOME DELIVERY IN OUR DELIVERY. AREA _ ..... . . # ...... \ ' ' I I : .... , I .. . ~ .... PRICES EFFECTIVE SEPT. 3, ~. 5 BELIEITEllEH • -· IF YOU'RE PLANNING_AJ'JCNIC. WE'VE A-GREAT _ARMY OF . SAUSAGES. CHEESES ANO SALADS FOR IMAGINATIVE PICNIC FARE ! NANCY'S COCKTAIL SNACKS Snack Mix or Toastettes PINTS ·49¢ . OTS. 89¢ FOR HORS O'OEUVRES OR FRUIT 0 DESSERT IMPORTED FROM HOLLAND DEKHUYZEN & DE MOOR -. Gouda Cheese 10 ¥· ••· 98¢ FANCIFOOD OF PARIS BRAND STRASBOURG Pate de Foie 2% ••· 3 '0 R $1 Or9•n Siren•d• For Your Pl11iur• by S.rnico Fay . LIDO MARKET CENTER JUST .THE THING WITH A HAMBURGER FOR YOUR FAVORITE DIPS AND DUNKS NEWP-ORT-BbVO..Al-T.ffE-ENlRANCE-T-O-blOO-lSb0---t----:H~O'-'-M'i'A=D_,,,E~G;;iE:iN=--'U~l'-'-N::E:___--..;~-iKN~U~DS~EN~HA;jiM'.':.:PS~H~IR~E -----.......-~ Kosher Dills· 22·• ••• • 43¢ Sour Cream PINT GltDEEltY ARDEN AA 'BUTTER 1 LB. IMPERIAL REGULAR MARGARINE, u. NABISCO CHIPPERS , oz. NABI SCO WHEAT THINS IOOZ. NABISCO SOCIABLES i 01. 83¢ 37c 39c 39c 39c • ' ' • PRODUCE NEW CROP, CRISP. CRUNCHY, CALIFORNIA DELICIOUS APPLES . 5 LIS. $1 SWEET, RED; RIPE, TASTY, (WHOLE ONLY! Watermelon FROM HAWAII PLANTATION RIPE, SWEET FRESH . PINEAPPLE FINE FOR SUMMER SALADS, PLUMP, CHERRY •. TOMATOES BASKET '25¢' MAXIM, FREEZE 'CRIED COFFEE 1.69 POMPEIAN OLIVE OIL KRAFT BARBECUE SAUCE 8 oz. ooz. 11 oz. 49c 39c CROSSE & BLACKWELL 10'/• •'- Hamburger Relish 4 FOR $1 CROSSE & 'BLACKWELL HOT DOG RELISH 101/1 oz. 4 hr 11 GENERAL MILLS BIG G SNACKS lllG. SIII CAMPFIRE I LB. Marshmallows 2 FOR PLANTERS I l o" Dry Roosted Peanuts SARAN WRAP 110 "'· CHIFF CHAR CHARCOAL BRIQUETS 10 LB. BAKERY LEMON-FILLED TROLLEY 1BUNS GREAT FOR BREAKFAST TOAST I 00 "/. WHOLE WHEAT BREAD BUTTERY-TENDER AND FLAVORFUL 39c 39¢ 69c 49c 89¢ 47¢ Butter-Flake Rolls 6 ~ 31¢ DELIGHTFUL WITH FRUIT ANO WHIPPED CREAM POUND CAKE 99¢ WE WILL RE CLOSED ' MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 LABOR · DAY I / / ..:.... ___ UP.COMING A l DAY WEEKEND, AND GOOD FOOD IS PART OF THE FUN! WHETHER YOU'RE HAVING FRIENDS OVER FOR A BARBECUE, OR COCKTAILS AROUND THE POOL .:__ST ART THE FUN OFF WITH A TRIP TO RICHARD'S! HEIT FLAVOR WITH ROSEMARY OR TARRAGON ANO BARBECUE ZACKY FARMS FRESH SPLIT BROILERS ZACKY FARMS Fresh Hen Turkeys BARBECUE WOULD YOU LI KE RECIPES FOR DUCK7 JU ST ASK Long Island Ducklings SERVE COLD WITH DIJON MUSTA RD OR HOT WITH A ·SPICY GLAZE, BONELESS , FULLY COOKED AND SMOKED BAR·M Tavern Ham WHOLE 1.39 LB. BROADBILL Swordfish STEAKS SERVE WITH RICHARD'S TA RTER SAUCE Northern HALIBUT MAHI MAHI FROM HAWAII . SMOKED ALBACORE ln1to11t Hon D'o1u"'" ASTORIA SHRIMP c ........ ,.,,,. THINLY SLICED, NOT TOO SALTY, MOIST AND FLAVORfUL OLD FASHIONED DRIED BEEF . 1.49LB 98¢LB. , 98¢LB. 98¢LB . 2,29 LI 2,98 LI. 2.49 ... P&BllH PBBDI KERNS HALVES Strawberries 16 01 . 3 FOR $1 4 FLAVORS POPSICLES 6 PAK 4 FOR $) MINUTE MAl·I LEMONADE 6 o>. 8 FOR $1 CHUN KING ALL FLAVORS EGG ROLLS 6 OL 59¢ Spaghetti , Meat 5 FOR $1 MORTON 8 o" ' MORTON 8 o" Macaroni, Cheese 5 FOR $1 BIROS EYE, Spanish, Bev•ri•n, Japanese, Mexican , Danish INTERNATIONAL ' VEGETA~S 10 ••. 3f > JOIN RICHARD'S IN DISPLAYING THE FLAG PROUDLY OVER THIS HOLIDAY WEEKEND PLBIElt IHBP VIVID FLAG RED JACKIE ROSES FOR A STUNNING BOUQUET 25 RED ROSES lo90 TAKE A BUNCH HOME TODAY! sUUsF ¢EA 7JJ!a&•sn 5 &EUU&F EJII&TLJEl&PSS&UU2UeA FF&! n r 7 -. F, n a-' a a 7 7 -z a a£. s aw _ z, a x s rs ausna a 7 7 I • ,I . HOME & GIFT SHOP LIDO YACHT SHOP ANTHONY'S SHOE REPAIR FLOWER SHOP CLEANERS - s a -~MARKET OPEN DAILY 9°7, SUN. 9-6 OPEN DAILY 9-6 OPEN DAILY, 9,6, SUN. I 0-l .~-,-'--" 5'-'.!...' -."" DAILY 9-5:l0, SA • 9. E~DAILY~-6 DAILY t :lO-f. SAT. l :ll),> • • --~---·---- , 38 .DAIL V PILOT ·-· New Dish e's Nutritious Stir Beans - • 9yle • ------Have you 1ried sph111eh'""1tnd salad..-nelttnl) draln~ and r~11scd I white kidney beans (can· nellini ) in a rich., bee( soup? Or New England.. style oven baked beans whirlrul into a S'A'ett ancj spicy dlp? Or the new n1ixed bean salad that comes in a jar a.id blends so \l'Cll willl any aretns? It's time to exercise that creative (lair and stir up a fe "'' surprises. for your (amil~'. and for the good of your spirit. Another nice thing about all three of these new dishes is their high nut ritional value. \'ou'JI be filling your family \\•ilh good protein, a heallhy smattering of mhierals and a da sh of vitamins, no matter wpich of the three you I 2: ounce can anchovies with in cold water. capers Sall and pepper to taste 6 lhin slices of It a I i'a n '-tell butter in two quart salami. cut in strips saucepan and sautc garlic and Tear romaine and butter let-onion until golden brown. Add tuce into bite sized pieces and bouillon, water, bay leaf and put into salad bowl. Pour spinach. Let simrner until Ix-ans and liquid over Jeltucc. spinach is cooked. Pour beans Add oil from anchovies and into soup and continue to sin1· toss lightly, taking care not to mer until beans are heated break the beans. Sprinkle through. Serves 6. anchovies and salami strips DUNK ·N 0 11' over .all. Serves 6. l-1 pound can (ap· -WONDERFUL SOUP proximately 2 cups\ New 2 tablespoons butter England style oven baked l garlic clove, finely chop-bea-.1s / ped 2 tablespoons tomato \atsu11 1 small oniO'l'I. finely chopped or chili sauce · I 101h Ounce can beef 2 lablespoons sherry bouillon ~ sweet midget pickles, fine· ------o,repar.e P-W'""'-----~ly-<.oi>oppedl----- 1 bay leaf Salt. to taste ·. SALAD \\'ONDER I head romaine lettuce l head butter lettuce l·l pound jar mixed bean 1? box frozen leaf spinach Cocktail hot (.logs. cocktail I 15 ounce can I ap--meat balls, link sausage proximately I~• c UP s) r-.1ash beans lhrough sieve. while kidney beans (Can. potato ricer or in blcndci'. Stir ---------------------in remaining ingredients tlnd pour into serving bo'A•I. Grill rnca\ 0,1 hibachi or broil until lightly broy,•ned. Dip 'n dunk . ~lakes I quart ~. 'BEAN ' MISSING SOMETHING SPECIAL? TR.Y THESE FRESHNESS MAKES! APPLE CLOUD : LIGHT, AIRY DESSERT Angelic Apples Cool Dessert For 1 cool and 8iry-Jight dessert w i1 h nicll-in-your- mouth smoothnes~. treat your family a n d guests to Apple Cloud. lt's more than a little reminiscent or old-fashioned Apple Snow, a traditional fruit ""hip dessert. Our modern--approach recipe uses convenient tangy canned apple sauce and apple juice as the main ingre dient s. Furthermore, this m o d e r n version of a fru it puree holds New Cake Luncheon Delight Light and airy, Oraugc Banana Spongeca ke is the perfect tea or luncheon treat. ORANGE· • BANANA SPONG ECAKE up nicely, since a little gelatin is added to give stability lo the fruit and juices whipped up in the egg white meringue. The recipe is easy as can be. Gelatin is softened al'ld then dissolved in, apple juice. It goes into a mixing bowl along "'ith the apple sauce, lemon juice for exlta zest, lemon rind for its pungent yet subtle lift of flavor. a dusting of con· feciioner 's sugar and !'gg wh iles. A few flicks of the 'A'fist with a hand rotary beater ur a flip of the switch of an electric rnixer and soon there's a bowl full of luscious. tempting, cloud-light fruit whip. Serve ii in1mediately or chill and set for later. Nicesl note of all. 11\is is trul y a Jighl-on-the·purse and !inght-on·lhe-calories dessert for enjoyment. APPLE CLOUD I envelope unfla v ored ge latin ' , cup apple juict> 7 large eggs, separated 2 cups canned apple sauce I cup sugar ~, cup confectioner's sugar 14 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon lemon juice l tablespoon grated or<1n1;e ': teaspoon grated lemon rind rind I cup mashed ripe banana 1~ teaspoon salt l lablespoon frozen orange. 1: teaspoon almond extract juice concentrate 2 egg "'hites ~ 4 cup sifted com starch Sprinkle gelatin over apple In a large mixing bowl beat juice in small saucepan. Let egg yolks until thickened and stand to soak. Heal slowly tn le1non color: gradually beat in dissolve gelatin. Remove frorn sugar -mixture should be heal. Cool slighlly. Pour in1o very thick and ivory color. large bowl of eleetric 1nixer. A"dd salt and orange rind. s:~r Add apple sauce and re- in banana , undiluted Qran_K!· mainder of ingredients. Bea t juice concentrate and corn. at high speed until the mixture starch. In another large mix· "'ill hold a peak . Spoon into in- ing bo'A'I, 'A'ilh clean beater. dividual dessert dishes or beat egg v.'hiles until stilf: dessert bowl. Chill about I fold into banana mixture. ~urn hour. li1akes 8 to 10 servings. into an ungreased l~tnch _ ----- angelfood cake pan. Bake in a preheated 3~egree oven un - til cakt: pulls away from side of pan and springs back v.·hen JighUy touched -50 ·to 60 minutes. Invert pan on v.'irc rack until cold : remove cake from pan. Cover v.·ith orange frosting , Stort: In refrigerator. STARS Svdn1y O'"•'r i• 0110 of tht worlill't 9ro1t •1trolo9•"· H;t t•lu'"fl i• •"• of tho CAIL"f 'fLors-1r11t f11tw•••· • • I l PUT CASH IN YOUR POCKB ~ll unv.'Bnl~ itl'1'15 "'ilh a DAILY PILOT Cllwiflei:I Ad. PHONE 642-5678 WHOLE BO'DY 2·2 Y2 LB . AVERAGE WEIGHT Cut-up Frying Chickens DAYS fRESHEll: •. > SALADS 91) 33c u .• , (o,.o•. '······ W.oco•••'· Col••'•"'· \,.!Polo'>, Col.,lo•, 11 !~·••. ltcl . ~-,, All MEAT • 1 LB. PKG. (All BEEF • 1·LB. Sandwich BOLOGNA ='''·"59c o• P"lolo ""~ P o~•"'" Looi ·-· • 65c) E-Z LITE lO·lB. CHARCOA~ BAG BRIQUETS LIMIT 1 lOU . BAG PER CUSTOM!R. VALID SEPTEMBER 3.9, 1970 • COLORTEX PAPER NAPKINS LIMIT 1 6().COUNf PACKAGE PER CUSTOMER-VAl1D SEPTEM!i'ER 3.9, 1970 60 Ct, Pk gs. ~~WATERMELONS , .. , ·. , RED RIPE WHOLE MELONS ONIONS s~:~w~LD 7~. ORANG.ES ~:i~~T@79· 0 • . VALENCIAS NOW ON SALE ... iSl'ICfA.ll Y l'Ull/SHID 10• CMDr SCHOOl CH1U>MN Co1nple te ly new and up-to-date • .. 16 magn.ificent volu11ies ••• illustrated in g loriou ulL olor! • ,, Nd.fllltcl ""'-- -it.i 1IOO MfMtt. • °""'9otlmn, , .......... , -.. ,,_ eoco co1or ·-k • Mofl "'*' 240 ..,.~." """" "'°' """' ,... -111 •• "h !Odey. I Moft !hot! .500,000 -41 .. _..., ........ .,.,. ....... chllcl ... ~ke. • ... • . ( • . ~ ! .. • • •. ' .. .. • •• . . 7 PILOT ·ADVERTISER Widr1'sday, Septembtr t , 1Q70 • All-yea r Menu Refresher • • . . Veg .etable Platter Pleases --·--_. -~ . A chilled vegetable salad refrigerate them in separate caullflowerets frozen chopped chives and ~ platter is an all-year menu covered con t a i n.e rs for 1 package (t ounces) frozen cup gnttd peeled cucumber. refresher, but it is an thorough chllllng btj'ore terV• artichoke heart.a cbi..11. Makes about 1% cups. ~ especially pteasin8 addltioO to lng. Assorted crisp salad greens LEMON HERB DRESSING, ~ summer buffet party menus. For the accompanying salad Cook vegetables aeparately Combine Ill cup frozen lemon -.... · Serve it smorgubord-style so greens, select a combtnaUon according to package direc· juice, 2/3 cup salad oll, 2 :: that . guests can be 1 p of three or more to give the Uons. Drain immediately, then tablespoons water, 1h teaspoon .. chill in separate covered coo-dry mustard, -l2 teaspoon salt, ' themselves and assemble their salad sLill more contrast irt tainers. If• teaspoon crushed dried "' own' salad combinations. flavor, color and texture. To serve. Jine a large basil, lh teaspoon sugar ~d '" Set it up as follows: arrange Choose from such favorites shallow platter with salad a dash or lack pepper, Stir " the chilled cooked vegetables as crisp iceberg I e t t u c e, greens, Arrange asparagus or shake in covered jar until CMlnchy dark green romat'ne spears on "e plaiter 1'n -•pa well bleni!ed. Chill. When in orderly triangles or rows • .., e-w-. crinkled delicate leaf lettuce, like the spokes or a wheel ready to serve, let warm to on a large shallow platter, tender pale green Boston let-leaving five triangular spaces room temperature, Uten stir Usemble a tempting assort. tuce, curly pungent chicory between them. Fill-each space or shake again. Makes about ment of crisp broken salad and m e 11 0 w '6pear-shaped with one of the 'l'emainlng l % cups. greens in one large or several Belgian· endi~. vegetables smaller bowls and offer a ' ROQUEFORT DRESSING. choice of salad dressings. ~ VEGETABLE SALAD. ~ccompany with ·assorted Combine 'f.r: cup tarragon ~--With-ronven.ienl,-Jead-y-t•o--8MORGASBORD-ST¥LE er~~ salad gree~ g.roup!.z!g__vinepr.-1-eup-salad-<1il;- k I t bf .1. eadl fype toge_ther in one te•-n saJ• I mi·--· clov·e coo rozen vege a es, 1 s 2 packages (10 ounces each) 1 bowl -i""' .. ,,..Ul a simple matter to · prepare frozen asparagus spears arge or usmg a separate of garlic, 1 tablespoon frozen rttn t I .tables sm_ aller bowl f_or each. Serve ,....._._ """fey and "• cup an asso en ° veg t package (lO ounces) frozen ..&. "·-I "-salad dr • ...,.,.,... ~-'' whi. 'ch off 'et · h pe Whu "~ ouvwmg . .,.. c•·-bled Roquefort chee••. er vari Y in 5 a • whole baby carrots in M k tt 10 '..... ;x; color, texture and flavor. Cook gs. a es 0 servings. SUr or shake in a 'covered the vegetables separately to 1 package (IO ounces) frozen CREAMY CU CUM BER -jar until well blended. Chill. retain individual flavors and whole kernel corn DRESSING.· Mix together lf.i. When ready to serve, let cook them only url.til tender· l package (10 ounces) frozen cup sour crea·m, l/i cup wann to room temperature, • Wednesday, Septernbtr 2, 197G DAILY PILOT 37 • • crisp. Drain th e m im-· lima beans mayonnaise, 2 tablespoons tar-thtn stir or shake again. ~m_ed_i_a1_e_ly_a_1_~_r_coo~k-in_g_._lli_e_n ~-l~pac~ka_g_e~(I_O_o_u_n~c-e _s_)~ra~g~on~v-ine_;;g_ar~,-l~ta-b_fespoo...:.~"~M-a_kes~a-bou~t-l_%~cu_ps_.~~~~~~~~~~~~C=H:..:..::fL~L~E~D::...:F~R~D=Z==E~N~V.:..:E=G=E~TABLES BRJGHTE~ BUFFET BONELESS SIRLOIN TIP GREAT $119 • • TO BAR·B-a Rotisserie Roast.................. LI BEEF J(IDllEYS WltClf(ll....,. .................. 351 BONEIESS COOKED $139 HAMS =1:.~ LI 60Z. CANS ' TASTE THE DIFFERENCE ONE DAY . i,ir,~-·~.,'.;~..-.-...... ---...~ BRW s ... ~ ....... u.aa: -LEGS, THIGHS 59c1· lllOS ............... 11. 39 DRUMSTICKS • BACKS • IECKS .II. 12' or • K&BUNS VANCAMP'S 160Z. CANS,, .' • • . ""'""W' $ 1 Im t u iLZC CAW .,_..,...,_ .t•""'.i ~AU. FIA'IORS 12 OZ. CANS lOOSE-lOc EA. SOFT DRINKS CHILI CON CARNE ALL STAR ASST. FLAVORS A6 OZ. CANS FRUIT DRINKS TOMATO CATSUP PITTED RIPE OLIVES ~~c~~ 35' APPLE JUICE !ii'~ 49' ORANGE JUICE BLEND :~~ . 59' PINEAPPLE BLEND ~..r~@ &O' • GEBIWIDl'S 3• ~oz.~ .,,- VODUorGIN SDDU YODU or s3ss . LlllS!llRE Gii r;;1\ FULi,. QUART ~ Bourbon -:itif ..... •319 LUNCH KITS wrr1Eos •1 9.9 . BINDERS VAtU~~$1.49 •1 99 Colllfll1l1 111Hll11 of fnorll1 1(Jl11 I l11lp1 of llild1n. Paler 1111 Z•l11, Wet LHt I llOlll Dial Antiperspirant ~~ 99c White King ''D" ~~ 58c B t 20MWTUM s14SI ora eem "8.=-IOX Fabric Softener £.~L 45r. CatFood mH~~~%~?. 17c ,1 Exotic Cuisine of Indio Adaptable . . Rock Cornish Game Hens adapt well in exotic cuisine of India. Thaw 4 hens ; remove giblets and set aside for other uses. Sprinkle caviiies lightly with salt and pepper. Jn a blender mix ~ cup soft· ened bu tter, 1 large onion, sliced, 1h cup toas ted almonds, ~ teaspoon ground ginger, 'i4 teaspoon g round cumin and 1A teasj:>oon p:round cinnamon. • Spread paste over hens and roast in a 350 degree F. oven for about one hour. Serves 4. Saber Sausage For Barbecuing Barbecuing is America 's favorite ouWoor pastime in summer. And we'd like to Uiink we invented it. But the urge to coo k in the open air is as old as fire itself, and. is en- joyed in one form or another throughout the world. In Poland and the Baltic states of Russia, w he r e everyone loves a picnic, they use characoal fires to cook steak s, sausages and a variety of local specialties. Inspired by the Polish is tliis Sausage on a Saber featuring Poli!'Jl Smoked sausage or Kielbasa. Pieces or the sausage are alternated on skewers With pieces 0 r com-on-the-cob, green pepper and small .whit e onions: it is spread with a beer-mustard-margarin e mix- ture which bastes and flavors as it melts. Every Polish woman has been taught the art ·of manag- ing a household in the most economical way. With .today's soaring food prices, a n d- homemakers looking for ways to cut costs, Polish dishes are good examples of economical eating. · , Margarine can be one of the biggest money-savers an your marketing list. Used regularly in place of other spreads, it of. fers obvious savings. nutritionally balanced menu. If an addilional item is desired, make it a riiixed green salad. SAUSAGE ON A SABER 18 whole small white onions, ')>eeJed Boiling water 18 pieces (about 11/i inch square) green, pepper 6 tablespoons Blue Bonnet Margarine I teaspoon caraway seed 11.i teaspoon p r e pa.;...&, mustard y, cup beer 2 pounds Polish-style smok- ed sausage, ctit into 18 equal pieces 12 pie<:es (about ,lh inches long) precooked fresh or defrosted frozen com~n­ lhe-cob 6 skewers Cover oniOM with boiling water; boll 5 minutes. Remove with a slotted spoon : set aside. Place green pepper in same water: boil 2 minute s. Remove; set aside. Cream margarine. caraway seed and ~ mustard until light. Gradually beat in beer; set aside. ) Sausage on a Saber need s only Jh~ addition o( dark bread. wi lh fr uit and cheese lot , dessert, to cwnplclc the Thread sausage, c o r a pieces. onions and green pep- per. onto skewers. Spread with about half of the margirlne mi xture. Gr·ill over hot coals, turning occaslofl!llY-a n·d brushing·wtth''f em a In in g margarine mixture,_u.n..t.lJ~"' "'---" SHusa}te and cum are lightly browned . l\takcs 6 servings • •=t•w•• •••• , ........... ,., ..... ,..,."' .,,.,,._. ,.._.,., ............. ~ .. _ -''"""'" W , ~ '.F •••• -•·t . I 'I +a~. IUW<>¥• ;s;:;; cz_; q ; '4 . 4 I '" '.., ; i I I • t --~--.-----• • . . • ' • • 3a D~ll V PILOT • • Wtdnttdiy, Stpttmbtr 2, 1970 MAYFRESH ' PRIMETEND£R GRADE A SELF 'BASTING YOUNG T .UR~~~!nl WI H.t.YI A~~ ~STE iACH TUIKIY lYlNl Y TO A WHtCH IUI_.. ......-STS COOKING INSTRUCTIONS =~ij~i~j}~~=~~~~f~l CONFtDINT .f.t~,w~: TU~~l~~'r,. WE All OFFlRING ~ EA TING Of S SPKIAL LOW lNTROOUCTORY PRICE. YOUR -:~Sf~l-:J.. IS GUA.l.t.NTUD OR WI WILL GIVE YOU D01J1U YOUR MONEY BACK. , FRESH FRYER PARTS CALIFORNIA GROWN FROM FOSTER FARMS ~~~·-···· 59fb £~!:.~"""" 69fb U.S.D.A. CHOIU Ol IUTFAll BLUE RIBBON STEER BEEF BONRESS ROUltD ROAST '"'"'"'"""------'" '1.19 BONELESS IOUltD STEAK """"'------" '1 .19 SIRLOIN TIP STEAK "'"'""---------· "' 1.411 BONELESS ROUltD STEAK """'"'"°"·-u.'1.29 CUBE STEAKS ·~.w"""''--·· _n.'l.49 WATERMELON RUMP ROAST ---"· '1.19 BONELESS BEEF STEW ""'""' ____ .. ___ ,, _________ " 98• . ' 'BEEF SHORT RIBS U.S.D,A, CHOICE OR 49c· MAYFAIR BLUE RIBBON STEER BEEF EXTRA LEAN , · lb, BONELESS ROAST U.S.D.A.CHOICEOR 98 c MA YfAIR STEER BEEF CENTER CUT CHUCK OR SH'LDER CLOD lb. FRUIT COCKTAlL DELMONTE NO. Jj)l CAN s for · PAPER 'CHARCOAL -· BRIQUETS PLA ns so.er. PKG. QUIK SERV & BONDWARE ........ -...... -..... -........ .. - WILSON'S CERTIFIED l1J·. ,, 1Ntda~ (~ ·.:i-: BONELESS READY. TO-EAT WHOLE OR HALF . Read,y-to-Ec;1t SNACKS AU VARIETIES PKG. s for PORK& l BEANS VAN CAMP'S NO. l 'I• CAN s for PICNIC NEEDS GR OUN CHUCK FRESH EXTRA LEAN FINEST IN GROUND MEAT COTTAGE CHEESE .UO!N ORM,lVfl!SllQT,}9t ...... ·---·•""""" SOUR CREAM .. ~DIN l'INI ----······· •.• --, ARDEN FUDGESICLES Oll ~IClE~6-l'IC. ···-·········--··-··--··----'~ PAPER . NAPKINS . ZEE TROPIC TONE ~l;~· 2~25' PIG.-... ~ _ .. , ... ; ... ~ c 1 ~1.i r . . ::! ••• I ;;_:. •• I !(.· ::: x -""'~ - .. " .. .-.: .. ~ i -~ .,. ".,!t'· MAYFAIR BRAND !,~"P).!!E,!!~L~!ES _ ]9< !~ .. ~~~.~.~-~~~~~--···-·----· 25< fo~Jl~-~~~~~TARD ·-17< ~~~!~,~n~'~,J!~, -----· 29< HAIR SPRAY ALBERTO CULVER IEG. HAID or SUP El :ic1 l!KI MOI ,..18,! \ • ·-. -----------.m~fair frui~ & Vtgctah&s · . · CANT ALO.UPI .. ORANGES ) '~ LARGE SWEET VINE RIPENED $ for • LARGE SWEET SU"fKIST VALENCIA 11-oz.ca1 $169 WITIFlll . · MZ.UI-... -.• .r--IUNCH CiREEN SALE- M1x 'EM OR MATCH "EM RED LEAF or BUTIER LITTUCE • RADISHES • BEETS GR. ONIOllS • CARROTS SPtlfACH • TURlllPS • SWISS . CHARD• MUSTARD• COLLARDS • :,·j:1· 'CUT• • .. , :> ... ••• . . . ••• ,•, TOP SIRLOIN ~:: .•. ~~~~~MAYFA~ 179 BLUE RIBBON STEER BEEF lb BONELESS WASTE FREE • DUCKLINGS ~~s~l~~~FIED 59c U.S.D.A.GRADEA. lb. ~ll' .. 53' JEL L-0 GEL A TIN ~~Jgii5bs1 4b$1 _,. ___ , . 6-0 Z. R PKG. ~: '8 DIWt!I Sptclats !---... -~ .-. .... ~ ';APPLE OiERRY • OR .• ~RAPE ~ .. ~ -.~-- JUICE DRINKS NICP FROZEN ' ' j •. • \ l . OPE~~ 24 HOURS ~; I LABO D*-Y· -· 171 I. 17th IT., COITA M• A LEAN :~/j~' . MEATY ~l·. -. PORK. · SPARERIBS FROM Tfil1,INllT • EASTERN CQRN.,,ID PORKERS . ' ~if.~ll:3'i~~T~:'l~8 ~~;;u;~,~~ -------'' ~~ -AlllAIT .. ICIALI LINK SAUSAGE HOffM...,.. SKINlfSS ······-·----·-·-·----l·OLft:G. 33' CRISPRITl SLICED BACON w'""" .•• "69 . RATH SLICED BACON """~' ~ "" .... ····-" 19' llAFOOD DICIALI FILLET OF SOLE '""-·----......... -" '1.09 ClllTER CUT SWORDFISH ..... •• 91' FILLET OF CIEEllLAllD TURBOT. u.59' ~fair D~~stn "FRANKS · RATHA~LMEATOR 49c · OL' VIRGINIA TENDER AND JUICY 12-0Z. PKG ....... ADVERTISED PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 FULL DAYS THURSDAY, SEPT. 3 THRU WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 9 CHE ERIOS CEREAL 10 OL ...... -......... 29¢ Apple, Che rry, Ap ricot, Peach 49¢ CHEF BOY-AR-DEE ~1i~ FR~:~~ ....... 49¢ ,_··----· mi!!jfair L~uor·----....... II:::~."'~' . · GOLDEN BREW . ! . 11-0Z. CANS e VORINOFF VODKA CHARCO>lflmR!D '6 99 60.P~OOf ., •• , ......... , ••• , •• 1-!ALf GAl, • BIR~CK'S GIN ~:~':O:,~~'.~ ................... : .... , .... Q\J • .,'3.~9 IMPORTED SCO TCH :~~~~.-~~~-~'. ................ """'3.79 .A MIA RUM GOlO!NOlll1' •3 99 A .,.,.~ ............................. -... QUAil • 'OYl.OLDBOUll,N \':.;'.g~·;o'"' ,HA~OA~····· ' HAMl'AGNI a·~~~1';."2~~:~t~1 ........... -........ ,,,'"' I .79 • '• ; £' - -• • •\.. . . ' . Nednesda)', September 2, 1970 DAILY PD.OT 38 , ' \ • I • I I· -· -·--- " • DAILY PILOT Wt<lnesday, Septe.nbff ·2, 1970 ------------'-'--'----'--- Ultra Easy 9278 SIZES 121>-26!> ~ 1lf ,...i~" 1lf ... 1' ... Princtss lines make this youthful jumper so slimming, and so SIMPLE to sew! Team it with smart, collared blo~. Printed Pattern 9278: Half Sizes 121h, 141.i, ISY.z, 181h. 20 1h, 22 Y.i, 241/1, 261h. Size 16 jumper 2~ yds. 4>in.; blouse 2 t/8 yards 39-inch, SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS ·ror each pattern -add 25 cents for each pattern for Air Mail and Special H a ndlin g; otherwise third.class delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Marian Martin, the Daily Pilot, 442 Pattern Dept., 2.12 West 18th St., New York, N. Y. 10011. Print NAME, ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUM BER. NEW Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog. 114 dynamic designs. Free Pattern Coupon. 5(1 cents. INST ANT FASHION BOOK - sew today, wear tomorrow. $1. lNSTANT SEWING BOOK Wha t -to.wear answers, accessory, figure tips! Only $1. Breakfast Concoction Delicious Summer fresh blueberries make a delicious breakfast treat. BLUEBERRY GEMS 1 cup unsifted flour, stir to aerate before measuring 1 teaspoon baking powder 1 ~ teasi>oon salt •t; cu·p (I quarter.pound stick) butter 1-:.i cup sugar Grated rind ol 1 lemon (I teaspoon) 2 large eggs 34 cup large cultivated blueberries Topping , see below Put paper baking cups in a muffin pan that has 12 on'!- .hird cup capacity cups. On v.·ax paper thoroughly stir to- gether the flour , baking pow· der and salt. In a medium nixing bowl cream the butter, sugar '\ind lemon rind: thor- oughly be at in eggs. one at a time, scraping bowl several Limes. Gently beat in no.ur mixtur!· l'.a at a time, unhl batter 1S smooth, Fold in blueberries. , Fill prepare muffin-pan cu ps about 2/3 full . Sprink)e Top. ping o~r batter, I teaspoon for each cup. Bake in a preheated 350-<legree oven un- til cake tesler inserted in center Comes out clean - about 25 minutes. S e r v e warm, reheated or cold. Topping : Sli r together 2 tablespoons"sugar, 2 table- spoons finely chop ped walnuts and V• teaspoon cinnamon. Appetites Zooming Appetites ~·ill zoom when you prepare salad at the table in sig ht of all. Place salad bowl, mixing tools, salad and dressing ·lngredienl-' on an at- Lractlve tray and bring to lbe table. l!1ix dressing in the saJad bowl first. Then add prepared ingred ienl-'. Toss gcnlly and serve. Hcre '1 your ch<ince to delegat e the mixing" to Dad or someone Clse while you sit back and rel ax. Salad in· gredienl.S s))ould bt chilled befor e mixing. Chilled salad platn make • big hit. too. ' • • ' CHECK THESE EVERYDAY LOW DISCOUNT PRICES! SUNKIST VALENCIAS 6.~ 1" BEU PEPPERS PAPAYAS 3il" CABBAGE GRUJf ANO R£0 WHOLE PINEAPPLE '49!: EGG PLANT LEl!\ON,5' i. LIMB s:. VALENCIA ORANGES 10-LB. MG ALPHA lliTA · LUNOI IOX RAISINS '~.;~ 10 i3C)C BROWN ONIONS 1-lL"" BUNCH GOODS •etm • IC£ CAAAOT5 10:. MUSHROOMS m:u-sm: 1,.i-LB, • T'-"HtPS •SPINACH CUaJMBERS 10:. CARROTS l·L&. MCKAGE THESE PRODUCE PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS. through WED., SEPT. 3.9 ~----1QTA! Ql\LQll N I~ FVIRf DAY SOME Alil'HAl[TA STOllES OISCOOJllT CllARCE l'lllt[ TOTAL DISCOUNT S [VlRT OAT S0M£ Ai.I'll.I. lrTA • STORES OISCOUNT CHMGI'. f!llCE J ""'" "" --• ·~- ' ,. JIEGUL>JI Oft MENTHOL 61f,-O'l. AnlOSOL RISE HOT JM9~ •-OUNCE JAR • P&nlOLtUM n:u:r 36' VASELINE A5t' 4-0Z. fAil • CARBOUTtD VAStLlNE pa( $X ii°EiPiu iiL'us "'"'"£Gr' 971 ~· 7-0UNCt PLASTIC IOTIU DRY, NORMAL.OR OILY FORMULAS SHAMPOO 6' CONDITIONER TWICE AS NICE SOME STORES CHARGE J....H 129 ~ • UAYEL WITH AL'NI llTI • • TKE.'IALAIT WAY •••. /.'._.,;,..;,, • Lo-•• , '"' .... • ''"""'SO. llROOICHURST ~ ·~· P.hoN· • FULl.lll:TON, CAllfOflNIA ·!.<.:.•~.:.!·'. (7!41 . 870..015 1 • CLASSIC POl YNISIAN ADVENTURE • • 16 DAYS IN TAHITI, MOOR£A, JIAIATEA. TAH ... A ANO • • llOflA BORA, ROUND TRIP JET AIR FAR[, O(LUXf "'NO FIRST CLASS HOTELS VCCUASIONS ON EACH ISLAND • • "'CTIVIT!(S ANO WA.TU. SPOA.T EOUIPMfNT, TllANYEllS'. • MAXIMUM TIM[ SPENT ON OUfER-ISLANOS FOR THE • ULTIMATE '"' RELAXATION ANO S£CLUSIDN. All fllOM A 5791. • -..., ·····~··············· I T£MPO • ~I COUNT • 7-0Z, FOAM CUPS .5Sc' 491 llA'Piil001il.'Ar£s"'" .88c' 69 1 aili.iouit'rli'E!r""'T .55( 61 c IDl'itolii 'Poii"fiiis"Jk . 91 ~ou'NIA'iisH'i!IMi»w 551 ~ ~1/i·OZ. CAif • CLEANED • SM.AU 69c. ~ @M'irlcid"c'Li'Ms"".lk 291 ©sk'lppJ ci~g''F:ci w 131 vlT's CD'oif'Fo"ciri' CJll=~ 91 DECORATOR SRELYING al lanlaslic savings Get a F.REE DecO rator ShelVing Guide . Follow the shelving guide for decorating any room in your home. ITEM 1"124" l"rlli• l''MI• ID"rJ&'' SllElf Sllllf Sllflf lll(lf SDNE j.1M" ~ $jJI' $,1.W' I TOIEI tll•l:IE All'llA lfTA IJ ,89 12.84 I 13.79 13.32 DISCOUNT "'ICE Look for our in.store shel f displays. Standards ond brackets also available. 10:. ·7:. 19:. 971 481 3C)C 10:. , r • . . . . ~ • COME '!'Ct Ai:PHA BET A-FOR AU. .'i" YOIJR:!!A9<·'JG.SCHOOLll!f~DS!, .... ~ .... ~. ··"""-....... ...., -....... _ '·' .... . • : ' ' . ' .. 101AL Ul~COU N IS [V[RY OAT RlPhR Stl" QUALITY BAKERY AT EVERYO.iY Ol~COUNT PRICE!>• liOSTf.SS• 12-PACK 72' ORANGE DING DONGS ]JC lllPHll BETA •I .PACK • :l6o; VALUE l~~1'fil' ~u'lhT""" 29' Save on the double loolr. for Alph1 Bet1'1 Double Dieto•"• -they •re ex lr• 1•Yin1~ ov'r and abo,·• rep.l•t diltnunt prire1, made po•1iblc hy 1peci1I lr111r111rary pun:ha~e allow-•~e1 from our 1upplier. with 1he 1d- dition1l 11•inp immedi11ely ~11ed on IO ~OU. . ' • • •• •• . r ~ . . . ~ DllalUNfON 7°''0I .. DtK'OUNT-TllArs .. DOlilll-• ---' . - I l ! i I I r •'- I .. ( ~ .. - ( • • -·-·-·----------~-~~~-·~!.-~.~------·-"~"·:.. •. ,·~~~~~~~--~-----~~------------~-~ --------------~----- -------.--~~--------~---.-------·-· , ..... ~.. . ... ; ·----,-.--...,--· .... ____ .. __________ ·-------· -·-. ' • • . ' WILSON'S • .5-Lll. CORN KING CANNID HAM 449 R 'llSSERIE l·LB. PKG. ROAST IONELfSS · w,~~r~~ti~,rr 0• ~IOWA MAID BONELESS ~C::.~1!~~0 I~~ 1BA'COI 64'·: RIB STEAK 109 I , . , A ·. --.,; ousuouE•"GREATON THCGR1LL" ·ouaUQtl(~t~LB. \ '~. {-ROUND I& -: POLISH SAUSAGE 69• i:::C: Jllff~· . 09C . f Ull CUT 89~ QUICK MIAL FAVOR1ns P~•XTRALONGWIEN<RS~p-a,J.. ' ·. 7· ac STEAK DODG£R JIOGS 68 • I UCON I-Lt. !ARMOu~. BONELESS FAMILY STUK 98• I ,·.A·~ ~=. 69' CHUCK STEAK llADE CUT 57• NEW ; DEllCIOUS -.., •Taco ooas · 73. 1 · "'"'"°'"" co.0 . ""''<""" BONELESS CLOD snAK 11! ~·~.~~!t.~'.~ILPANS. ~ == . ••• BEEF SHORT RIBS 69• . .. '•" ,..,...,... ~. z \, THESE MEAT PRICES EFFECTIVE TH URSDAY thmugh WEDNESDAY, SEPT. J.9 rorAt DISCOU NTS l't'fRY DAY SOM{ ALPHA BETA STORES DISCOUNT CHARGE HllCE 1r.f&Tiiil li:'E'M1LK ~' 391 ~ lO.OZ. CONTA1N£R • FROZl:N 491 · · ~ REDDl·WIP J3C" ~ 36.COVITT • rROZtN 541 ~ V1n1lla Bon-Ions )9C" 6-0UtiCE: CAN • rllOZEN RtOUl.AJI OR PINK RllllAlfTA LEMONADE [",· VAL'J<. l'Z-C%. CAN RtGUUJI • ~ VAL\JL "' AlPHA l fTA• IJ.Oz. Pl:11. • Chopped or ~ 151 FROZEN SPINACH "' VAL. @ il°.~"ri~i"'• 'c'ii9~~8' 1h GAU.Oii • r11u1T PUNCH • L£MONAO£ it'AP'Pr0 iii'Y.D'Rliil s 251 14 PINT C0!1'l'AINEI' • 29c: VALUI: 27c llPlll llETll Sour Cream PINT CONTAINER.• Mc VJ.LUC 4k 1-L!. CAllTON M.l.RGAllllll DIET IMPERIAL .45C 43 1 l TOTAL DISCOUNTS EVlRY DAY SOME All'llA ICTA STOllES OllCOUNr CHAllG£ f'lllCC Al PHR B[TR •II.OZ; BAO CORN CHIPS ""YALU< 391 JO.LR BAG 69I AIJllAIETA BRIQUETS ,,,v•= 20·!.B, llAG l.t9 VALi.iE I.» lO·l.8. BAG COLLIER BRIQUETS :u!-LB. BAO #9t 751 !.-" 1.31 r r,tlt0iti£. 32-0UNCt: CAN' CHARCOAL LIGHTER 35(331 7.S.OUNCE G ... RUC•FRE'N'CK ON!ON•Ct.AM -~l:E~_CKEESE 3 -llETll DIPS ""YALU[ 3 c 4-0'Z. PACO.Ots •SLICED Bt:Er OI' HAM 631 Dinola Sandwich MN!,.68c' U.1-0WCE Tue.&• PIWIUJIT" • • llE:FJUODU.TEI> CINNAMON ROLLS Ak 43' c~~k'i:i.W 53c I OM( MltiA •l[TA STOllfS DISCOUNT CHARGE /'RICE ~ :t8l· CORNED BEtF Oft '!!::::l' uii'di~;;d Spl'lads .sac-4 7c ~ 8-0Z. [Afl •SPICY BROWN \!!:::::I Gula111'1 Mustard ( 24-0Z. JAR I LINDSAY OLIVES • ~300 CAN 'Y'° MEDIUM RIPE ©sitl cr'" GREEN ' @ ii'E'oluil'P1TTED ·@ c'iioPPED @ lii'NcE'o D.....; 21/~·0'Z. CAN ...._SLICED @6~id'Med1I Flour 2S·LB. BAG .3.Jti-OUNCE SHAlIJl iAR )le' 29' \, ' j3( 381 9('331 ,JM131 Ji( 131 ~131 SCHILLING GARLIC SALT ;i.tt 281 ~2'2-0UNCE GLASS TAR )S'c 351 ~BIM Baked Beans ~1&-0UNCE C'" d ... 31' ~BIM Bron It'll ,,.. ~2><lUNCE)AR , 331 ~Mott's Apple Sauce .f-1 c 11-0Z. JAR • PLAJN 01\ WESTCllH STYU: {8MOREHOUSE 16, 'iOii(' MUSTARD ltc" m 281 2-UI. PACKAGE • GllANUU T[;O SPRECKELS SUGAR l•LB. PACKA.Qt • BROWNULATrD I REGULA.fl. OR!P . n i-n: ELECTRA-MATIC YUBAN COFFEE • 1.1 ""' _&Tc 91 1 3-ll. CAN • flOOULAll Oil ~-MA.TIC ;Jif 1.N 1'Hfai f''yu1AN JJ9" 1 Ot " Nednttday, Stpttmbtr 2, 1970 IUflJUl'I ti/a: RECIPE OF THE WEEK HICl('Ofl.y '"R•rcuro ROTISS£Rt£ RO,\ Sf I il " ' 1 (Jl ,\L nrsCOUHTS [~[RY !J AY SOMC ALPHA 8£1.l STOR[$ DISCOUNT CHAAGC Piil CE ~ HE!N'Z • RCG • tt!CKORY • ~•BQSA U CE'Z. BCTTLE~ 391 --... ~~ BCiTY CRCCKOI • 18-0'Z. BOX .:.= cA:if'liix(0s'"" )8( 35c ~ BETTY CROCKER • ll-O'Z. BOX ~FROSTING MIXES 43€ 391 @ii'c'clili "00;'"')5t 75 1 . ' ' • -· DAILY PILOT 4 I P;iquan t Varie ty Offered Dressings tor salads ot :'Ill seasons are offered. A delicious fruil salad dress. ing, a spicy curry one and a li vely' French' choice l.o com- plement any table. SWEET 'N TART F'RUIT · SALAD DRESS ING Juce ot 3 Sunkist lemons 2 eggs, beaten 1,~ cup honey 1 teaspoon freshly granted lemon peel 1 tablespoon poppy seeds l cup dairy sour cream Combine lemon juice, eggs and honey in top of double boiler; blend thoroughly. Cook over simmering water until mixture is thick. SUr in grated peel and poppy seeds. Cool. Stir in sour cream. Serve chilled. Stores well in covered container in refrigerator: ORIENTAL CURRY SALAD DRESSING 2 cups mayonnaise (not salad dressing) 2 teaspoons curry powder 1,z teaspoon dry muslard ~2 teaspoon freshly grated lemon peel l tablespoon freshly squeez· ed lemon juice Thoroughly combine all in· gredienls: serve chilled. Yield : Z cups. LIVELY LE~ION FRENCU DRESSING I teaspoon unfl avore d gela tine . I tablespoon cold waler 1 1 cup boiling waler -2 to 3 tablespoons sugar 112 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon Creshly grated le1non peel . 1,z cup freshly squeezed leinon juice ,., teaspoon garlic salt Dash or pepper 1 ~ teaspoon dry mustard 1,, teaspoo.1 Worcestershire sauce Soften gelatine ·in cold water ; add boiling wa ter, stir· ring until thor o u ghly dissolved. St ir in sugar and sail until di ssolved. Combine mixture with remaining in- gredients in a container with a light fitti ... ,g lid; sbalte well. ti.fay be covered and stored in refrigerator un til needed. JC refrigerated before serving, place container of dressing in pan of hot \lfater for S minutes to reliquery the gelatine. Serve rool. but not chilled over crisp salad greens. I tables poon-10 calori cs. Yield : l cup. 'Undated' • Cake Waits Tastefully This cake carries "·ell ·and slays moist. - SOUR CREA~I DATE CAKE 2 cups sifted flour 11'? teaspoon baking p6wder ·1 teaspoon baking soda • 1h teaspoon salt 1;l cup finely sni pped dates I cup rinely chopped walnuts ~?. cup (I quurter • pound stick) butter 11,'l cu ps sugar Grated rind of I mcdiutn orange (I tablespoon) 2 large eggs I container (8 ounces) com· mcrcia l sour cream Topping, see below Grease and flour a 9·inch ange\food cake pan with a removable bottom . On wax paper sift together the nour, baking powder, bak· ing soda and salt: add dates and wa lnuts, separating dilte pieces. In large mi'Xing bowl cream butter, sugar and grated rind; thoroughly beat in eggs, one at a lime. Stir in flour mixture, alteroalely with sour .crean1. in 4 additions just until batter is smooth each time. . Tum into prepared p3n . Bake in u preheated 35ll~ degree oven until a cake tester inserted in center comes out clean -about I h0ur and 15 minutes. Slowly spoon Top- ping over cake, let.ting cak e absorb il before adding nex:t amount. Let cake stand on wire racls_ (or 5 minutes: with a small spatuJa loosen tube and edges ; turn ou t on rack; with a'nothcr rack, turn right side up. Cool completely. Wrap in transparent plaslic wrap and store in tightly cl>v~rcd till box. Top pt.1g . Stir together the strained juice or I medlun\ orange { y, to 1/3 cupJ and 1/4 cup sugar until sugar dissolves., • • @ .CAlLV PILOT •• • ' Wtdntsdat1.,Stptrmber '!, l.,..,, • ·-~ I , , ' ,,,, . 21 -lb. .... ·-·-c'ilicl~ •••••..-. • '11 STEAKS I Choice Top 11!1'1'1 .:::. '11! . ......,,.._ = ··~ ! ......, . , C1io1ce 1111.i. n,. -:::: •I~ J~SOA '""°"45·1· · DiOICE """' • 10llO ~ ~ .... _, . ,,, ____ .......... -~.i ' 11 llTI 0. lrf Ulll With Thi, '"""" -'' ---. . U.S ~A. I Fresh Ground Chuck~.::._ 77: · 11op Sirloin Steaks I Center Cut Chuck ~'!tl: 19! . c.hoice Porterllouse For flying off to work. For meeting friends for lunch. For looking fresh, bright, brisker than a breeze. Sew this trim princes11 right now in a blend. Printed· Pattern 9193: NE\\' Misies' Sizes 8, 10, 12, 14, 16. Size 12 (bust 34) lakes 214 yards 45-inch fabric. SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS for each pattem -add 25 cents for each pattern for Air Mall .and Special Handling ; otherwise third-class delivery will take three weeks or mott. Send to Marian Martin, the Daily Pilot, 442 Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th si .. New York. N.Y. 10011. Print N.\ME, ADDRESS with ZIP, SlZE and STYLE NUMBER. NEW Fall-Winter ·Pattern Catalog. 114 dynamic designs. Free Pattern Coupon. 50 cent!. INSTANT SEWING BOOK sew todny, wear tomorrow. $1. -INSTANT FASHION BOOK -What.to-wear an swe rs . accessory; figure tips! Only $1. Delectable Dessert's Airy-light Light and frothy, an Orange Soufne offers a delicious end· ing to a perfect meal. Egg whites, oranges and othe r rich in1Tedien1s com· bine. -ORANGE SOUFFLE ~. cu p (I/• tub ) dlel-1ype im· itation margarine 1,4 cup flour ~~ teaspoon salt • '14 cup skim milk 3 egg yolks 1/3 cup sugar ~• cup orange juice 1\2 teaspoons grated orange rind 5 egg whites, at room temperature ''• teaspoon cream or tartar In a small saucepan over low h~at melt margarine. . Blend in flour and salt;. cook, !.1irring, until bubbly. 1\emo\'e from heat and graduall y stir in milk, keeping smooth. Bring to a boil, stirring constantly. Remove from heat and set aside. Beat egg yolks unlit thick and lemon color : gradually beat in sugar: blend in orange juice and-orange rind ; gradually blend in milk mlI· ture. With clean beater beat ·ea whites aind cream of tartar until gUff but not dry. Carefully fold In egg-yolk mix· tUR. Pour into greased t 'h- quart sou:f.ne dish. Bake in preheated 350-degree oven un· til a silver knife inserted In cent.tr comes out clt?an -45 • ' ·HEINZ KETCHUP=:·~ !Helni Pickle Relllh 'l#' if I . f4!JIIJiJ •1gr.rlot ot Dip ••• JERSEY MAID SHERBET 01 WISIWOOD Kl CllAM Autd. Flo•11r1 , • , Ma,\f Cool, R1/,.1fli11g Ga,\101 . .. ~ ...... .__ ........ . m:.~· •I once. Makes aboUl 10111 Adams Ave .. at Brookhurst, Huntington Beach ~~~!r.~:."1 150 "'· 34081 Doheny Park Drive, Capistrano Beach T .. ; ' • • , '• JUICY VALENCIA Special ~!!'\APPLES ~'-=~ ~=':L:~4 .1t. 59c ~/J\\~ JONATHANS ..... --- JUICY,swm FIERY-RID . Vine-Ripened 18./b. Avg. W • WllOl.I MILON Honeydews Persians Cranshaws White Paper Plates ~~: 100 ~.79' c LL I Vons Facial Tissue ·2~ 200,~.23' I Hickory BBQ Sauce ,~~sz~:r· 29' I Aiix Dete gent ~~·~ .. ":~ 69' I EH LABOR DAY SPECIALS! UTH or WILSON All-.' Meat 12-0Z. PKG. Sot• 12c • VONS Gt.IACAMOU HOT OI ttGW.I Avocado Dips ~.;-49' VONS ZISTY HOT Cl KOUIM: Barbecue Sauce ·:~'29' ~a... IMill OMI DMO,GOl. -•• ,.: 11111 I !Wft,.,... .. Mlrodl m.o 0...-. --!Pc I Chow M1M .._... OIUM ac,J.OL...'. •. ~ ........ S7c: Kroft Mlrtlltt WW,, ... • •.•• ,, .......... ,,. ..... ... SoJ hum a.I ... M.0L NI ......... , ...... , .. .'9l KtWfl WhWM ......,McllilM I& M o " • ~ ! ........ ,_._.. .......... ........... --·-· ....... : ................ . MRw.IHollleCoffM ''ai.tu1-™"t1.n.1<&11.Mc Howllon PllMll •1t.-M1,. ... wi ., •• ,.,.,. • ~mrof'J HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS ALKA·SELTZER -... Frnl Re/i.(, •. 25-ct. Ill. 53c •iPt Glad Aatiponpirant ,:;,!"'_ 61' Close Up Tootllpaste . )(II. ~\llf.OH1\lll .... Jtr1115Lotioll :k:.~'u 79' Castilian HAND DfCOR.l.tt:o SAUCER ~fjJf'Jf!J LIQUORS FEATURES e fi~sBEER ..... ,, s291 Ri.llfl lulf Co"' 24 12-0L 0 CANS CASI MILLBROOK VODKA l(Jl!Jillfil FRllZIN rouo BUYS! OrafiJtkt· tMIAlll.U.at.CMt4ll."°"" 2/4$« Macanol & CliMu -.-. ~ .... : 43' Oh Boy Garlit 111G11 •-~ ....... : ... 35' Ola Boy Potatoes .,../Olml OI Clll'tlL lMm. • 35' MCP Drinks -P\A'IOll, &OZ. u.i. .... • .. 1 O' Coll 1' Cnmay htldi1g 11.o.r.. no. ····-· A3' VONS MEAT PIES 23' C"ICrlPI, Mn 00 T\llQI', I OL n~ ,.... .. 'llick11 •r IHI 1--. rm. . • ... S'c MilNfSl:f.i\ii;tlj!,\il!i!J• '""'""'""" COOL MINI CAKES iSr 89' VONs ftOWl>E•ED OR OUM1 CRESCENT DONUTS,,,... 39- CHt••Y -NUT llOffT $1.lMM!R OEMUT VON$ CUP CAKES • .._. 49' 5922 Edinger Ave., at Springdale, Huntington Beach 21082 Beach . Blvd., Huntingtcn Beach 17950 Magnolia, Fountain ValleJ . Laguna Hills Plaza, El Toro • ---~--·4~--------------------------- • ·~.--.----~-----------------• .• ·' 5 PJLOT-AOQ:RTISER s Wtilff<llr, Septembef' 2, 1970 /' • U.S.D.A. OIOIQOR STATER llROS. CERTIFIED llEEF 79! INSTANT POTATOES ~~c'k'.'.'.'. .... oz. 59' NESTEA INSTANT TEA ........ 2oz. 89' FOLGER'S COFFEE G<OUNO ---·· 1-l8. 87' HUNrS PEACHES ~~~:~'-~_.,,oz. 21' HUNrS PEACH SLICES -· 2soz. 31' HUNT'S KETCHUP .......... 2601 39' RALSTON DINNER i~~i'.';'.'~f~ d 49' , ' jCHARCOAL STARTER rNi'. ___ 'G':i~ 69' , · jDOG GISCUITS ~t,'ti.\~, ... -,.oz. 39' :BRUCE WAX sm '°"'"'"' ..... -21-oz. 89' WAX REMOVER 1'.)',~~" ....... "oz. 98' BRUCE DEEP CLEANER _ 21oz. 89' BRUCE CLEAN N' WAX --· voz. 98' CHECKEN SPREAD ~i~,~---··" oz. 51' CORNED BEEF ~~~t:ri"~~--'"-o' 51' CHILI SALSA gm2• ________ , oz. 25' TRASH CAN LINER """ •. L .. • PAK 49' LAWN CLEAN UP :.\~'s' ____ ,.S·PAK 79' WINDOW SPRAY ''"°'" ... noz. 69' LIQUID WOOLITE "·"-'' "'-·•oL 69' U.S.D.A. GRADE A WHOLE BODY CHUCK ·STEAK U.S.D.A. OIOla OR STATER llOS. . CERTIFIED llHF . SLICED BACON TAaEBRAND DELICIOUS Fl.A VOR 1-POUND PACKAGE 49!. U.S.D.A.51!2SOISTAf.1eos:atT•1Hi1m ' 4 ··5' C Clftla ROAST _ ..................... i.a. ii•ifrAft'::.~~~".":. . La. 89' -JIDM •LIAN •GllCMMDHOUltl Y 5 5c GROutm~-... . ... LI. 'JP.!!•Jl1H,.!W!.•IU.YOIM . 97c "RUURU ROUND _ ........... -... i.a. U.$.D.A.i:tmOISTATalios.cu•IAIDllP • '"I 3 7 I-BONI STEAKS .................... i.a. . U.S.D.A.CMOICIOISTaTallOS.CllffllDlllF • SI'' PORTERHOUSE STEAK .i.a. UJ .D.A.CMODOISTATlllltOS.tiiil'llOll9 • 1 •1 TOP SIRLOIN STEAK ........ Li. ..... ~coutmtYST't'LI 39c . p KSAUSAGEIUl.K ....... LI. ' MOlllU YOIKSHlll. 1.L1. llG. OI: 1-LI, THICX 67C SUCED BACON _ ......... -... = LI. OSCAIMAYB•ALLMU.T•SUCIO 49c BOLOGNA 12-0l.PKG .. 7Sc-1-0L MOllllU'I,._ 49c I ALL MEAT WIENERS ..... 12.01. ioiiiimROAii 11mfUS1. LI. 89« ~ . . U.S.D.A.otOJCl~o:clli.CllTIFIED•Ef . sftc BEEF K Aal:SID -· .LI. ., I D.A.Ii--.-.-TllnoS.CimFl!O•EF llRLOINTIP ' CLUB OR CUBE .•.•. . ,_._•1••' lAS1:•1IN·Rl>r.UTASTY 6ftc " Pu K aTEAKS._._. ____ i.a. .,- W PRICJ::,S PLUS BLUE CHIP STAMPS * LOW-LOW PRICES PLUS BLUE CH t SUN GLO: CORN.• 11.11.Q. •PLAIN• ONION/GARLIC• TACO · . . 3 9 C SNACK CHIPS _ ......... 41~\?zE · EARLY CALIFORNIA Pit IED, MEDIUM SIZE . 3 s .. RIPE OLIVES .. ~..... • . l:~~:. 1 ' LAURA·SCUDDER'S 5 3 C • MAYONNAISE-.. QUART GOLDENGRAINMB>IUMOIWIDE • ·2 7c , EGG NOODLES ............ 1li<i1: - 1Ula1 ... 1wrul"'--' IMO FOOD KIUDSEll SWISS JUBILEE . '"' c•···~· ... ., ........ G.,.. PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS. thru WED .. SEPT. 3·9 • COFRE IOUSl . CHEESE . . 8521 w.1tmu1Sftt Bl•d .• Wt1lmW11ter ""· 91• -. · 87' . DRESSING . SALADS CHEESE SPREAD 707 W. N;,.t,.olhS'-. Cool• M... 260! W.S""""" S1 . .s .. 1o A"' 117' '''" ''"''· Coot• Mm 1.u '1.11 '-'-' 39 79' STAI 39' 99' 1:1862 Edi119tr A1v,.Jiltinti119to11 Bt 1eh 1-4171 Rtd Hiii Avt11ut, Tu1ti11 1'4212 .Mi11tt Avtnu1, WhHtitr • 1 . .,..'2.63 1.u s2.s t 1 '16-0L C VAlllY 1-ll. 34JO Wt1t L~ Av111ut, A111h1i111 1800 En! C0Uir11 A"'""''· 0 11119• 26JO Edin9•r ;..,,,11u•, S•nt• An• )2.0L . S·OL lOAF lt lO E. McFtdd1n ;. .... , .• S.111, An• 2180 N•wPort Bl.,d., Cost• M••• 2564 W. Bro•dw•y, An•h•im • • -J, --• • --• -·-···' ' • . ~~ ~ .._~~--.. _.,.,..,,. . ~ ------............ . . • I • " f • -~ -----.....---------------------·..----------·--------------------.-,---.. ..-• Wtdl!Hday, Septtmbtt 2, ~970 • 1l If~ DAILY PILOT Fail If Cook's Too Heavy-Handed~ WH!ntsday, Stpttmbtr 2, }q70 N PILOT-ADVERTISER G . Muffins F!op, Biscuits , ' I ! • . DEU NAN: MP)' thanb DEAR NAN: How do you .softened, you must use it rlght time consuming. , edds the browned ai~at1 com·· irease? JOYCE FRANS. needed a 'little to keep meat Jee Cream" which you ma1 rw )'Oar redpe fw Frucll ketp brown 1ligar rnm tum-away or it rehardens. ~ plet_e wilb lots of grease,right WORTll, ST, PAUL, MINN. from sticking. have by sending 25 cents a'(ld a ~ MlOll rinp! Jt wu cn•t toa bard i.n the box? And If it Nexr best thing is to try to DEAR NAN: 1 Just can't to the otbtr ingredients. Sbe _ In the winter I may use When I use )µlmburger for long, stamped, sell-addressed &6 llt ibe. ~ of my doe&, bow caa you get lt ·1oft break it up enough to fit 1t01nd It any longer! I rtler to thinks tbll's wbat lives the some to make seed cakes for anything at all, I put it In a envelope with your reCJ!eS t for ywBOttn tblit now mother ap.11! MRS. T. LEONARDt clumps in that jar, top it with the fat tbal cooks out or barn· good flavor so there are the bjrds. Otherwise, tt gets cOld pan ov,er very low heat, it to Nan Wiley In care of the C..W-make tlltm "even brt&er ROMULlJ~ MICH. . a pjece of fresh bread Or· two burger. Wby in the world don't absolute pools of gre81e when tossed out. We are non-grease cook slowly, pour off grease as D.AU.. Y PiJLOT. • u.. u.e ODii •t drtve-ID1." An ounce of prevention and quarters of an unpeeled apple. people drain it off? the dlsb 11 ready. I love the folks here, too. I am always I go so it won't saturate. That JEAN B. mNDER,. n . all that! As soon as I open a In a couple of days you'll be This mofniqg I actually saw thing but I am 11 sick as you-surprised at the many people sp~ghet~t dlsh would be just as Nan Wiley regrets that she "'f :~Ys ~j, seasoned nour ~~ 0!1~:tq~a8rf i!r~~~e~i~~ f!t~0 ti~g ~~i'a;1~ t~!~r!d~ :0::!~11100~~ c~e' ~:e 1\" :a~~ ~:gw~t /•~.';: !8J.~1 ~; ;~o ;:~o~~~f81t~~:i~~-~ ~~;~ul~=!~~~~~ngr:r~~.,If ~~~~~s p~o;~du~ ~~nsg 0 q~:~ on my shelf. I flU a quart jar or it goes rocky every time. · a replacement of bread or BJ> Everyone seems to leaye tbe recipe saying upour o ( ( places never do -jUst use 'a do with ?ved-up grease li tlons. but questions of general about · three-fourths full of Once .hard, you can usually pie till the whole thing is grease lo burger aod proceed gre,aae." Please be a friend seasoned grill. or course that that, I'll bt happy to hear. intere!t will be answered in flour, mr ln 3 teaspoons of resoflen (t pretty well by pul-workable. In moments of to make a dish from tber.f, and come tq my Mscue before TV· chef may have been using her column, Address you!'" paprika, 2 tea.spoom salt and ting it in a very slow oven but desperation I have. even I have a friend wbo makes a " I get greased to death! What very lean ground beef in Nan Wiley has wi'ltten a que!Uons to Nan ,Wile)!, in cart pepper, 2 teaspoons miled you have to watch Jt a!td, once grated it but that is messy and dellcious spaghetti dislt. She de you -do w1tb your excess which case he might have booklet "Heavenly Homemade ol the DAILY PILOT. herb seasoning. It really•---'-----------------------:-----------------~--.:....-------=-------------­ makes a difference in chicken aoci' gravy, for one thing an d maybe in your onion rings. I intend to try that next time. JEAN B. HINDERER, FT. WAYNE, IND. . DEAR NAN: Can you ttll me how to make good baking . powder blaculta and muffins? For maffln1, I 11ft the dry In-- gredientl, bell the egg; add milk and melted shortening, add the dry ingredients to thlt. Result: beavy muffins fall Of tllnnels. How mucb sllollld tbe egg be be1tea.1 11iptly or \'ery well? MISS A. KRAUSE, THIEF R I V E R FAW, MINN. Belt the egg just slightly, LETS ASK THE COOK by Nan Wiley using a fork, not a mixer. Otherwise y o u r 'procedure sounds perfectly correct. It is a cookboo_k axiom that muffins full.of "tunnels" are the result of an overmixed batter. What may be "very little" to you may still be too much, The balter should be Jumpy, c Quart BatUes . (Pill! Deposit) Hot Dog Potato Buns Chips · Or Hamburger Buns--Sk~arl< Baled Party P1ide-l!egula1 ~· fOI Dips • c • . 1ov .. ounc1 Package Package o1 a There could be another trou- ble spot, your oven tem- perature. If you are unsuc- , . cesslul with a temperature of 40l;t up it to 425. Too low heat makes for heavy rnuffiM with only a slight peak in the center, not the puff-up they should have. Too, your oven thennost.at may not be ac- curate. I know I harp on that but it does make a difference in baking results, especially wjth muffins. -USDA Grade 'A' Whole Full Shank Portion Farmer John Or Luer' s Fully Cooked Hams. (Bull Portion lb. 59;) Manor Houst--USDA Grade 'A' Qualiij Hen Turkeys 49 Biscuits really are not dif- ficult if you sleer clear of the over-dos. Not too much of this or that, not too much handling of the dough. Wben you have your sifted dry ingredfenls and sho~ning blended till it looks }ike meal, stir iQ almost all of the milk called for. Just almost. Flours differ i n absorption. You may not need all liquid your recipe calls for. If the , dough doesn't seem pliable enough at that stage then add the rest of the liquid·. YoU should have a soft puffy dough that is easy to roll out. Not enough milk makes d r y biscuits that hard en quickly on semicooling. Too mu~h makes a sticky dough. Round· ui:i the dough on a Jightly floured cloth-covered board. If you use too much flour, the bottom of your biscuits wlll be hard. Fold the dough over and press llghtly with the heel of the hand about slx times. This little bit of kneading improves m o s t biscuits but don't overdo. Lightly roll out dough to 1/4- inch truck for thin crusty biscuits, ';',-inch thick for thick soft biscuits. Pie Blends Flavor Duo InteresUng f J a v o r com- bination ! .., FRANI'S COFFEE BlJTrERSCOTCH PIE 1 envelope u nf la vo re d gelatin 2 tablespoons cold water 2 eggs, separated 1 teaspoon instant powder coffee dissolved in 1h cup water 1 cup milk 1,~ teaspoon salt 213 cup firmly packed dark brywn sugar 2 tablespoons butter 3 table15POOns gran~f.leci sugar ""~ -1 teaspoon vanilla 9-inch baked pie shell with high-standing rim Sprinkle gelatin over cold water to.. soften. In top of ilooble boiler beat egg yolks 51.ighUy; mix in coffee, milk, salt and brown sugar. Cook over hot (not boiling ) water-, st-irring Constantly, un- ... Ul slightly Ulickened : remove , from heat; add butter and IOftened gelatin : sUr until but· , ter melts aDd gelatin dislolves. (:bµI until mixture btatna .to thicken. Beat egg whites unW stiff; graduaUy ~t in &ranulated sugar; fold Into plaUn mixhu"t with vanilla. Pllt Into pie sht!L Chlll 111111! firm -ebout 3 h'lurs. If desired, top with whipped cream. Plump And Meaty Cut-Up 35c Fryers lb. · lb. LIQUOR SHOP BUYS! l'l'ices Ufectiw At Licensed S•fnray Discounb Old Calhoun Bourbon .:!r ~ '9" St t ' G" D;s!Hlod 80 Proof v,. s711 an On $ lft For "Pedecl fl,.or" r•k laylana Vodka 8DProoI-For v.. 17ea A Grtat Drink! r•L Old Calhoun Bourbon p::1 , ... s499 Cold Brook Whiskey :~::_ s399 •••rt Stanton's Gi"n o;,une• so·•'!"' fl)r Great Mart1ms! •••rt s391 lavlana Vodka :o:.:::1o;f:;, •••rt s399 • FRESHMADE Lucerne Salads Choice Of Many Fruit 01 Vegelable Style Varieties. pint ·3ac carton DISCOUNT CANNED FRUITS ' Peaches Hlf"''Y Ytllow Clin~In 21•• 261 1sty Htlve1 Ot Shces ••• Town House Pears .i~:;, .;~: .. 421 Crushed Pineapple ·a~~ '!;~·· 391 Highway Applesauce ,~~.·:~· 15' 1 • Manor Hcuse,Grade A -PremiLlm Quality I .. LOW DISCOUNT PRICES! Sliced Bacon D"b"'"' Min Iowa • Wilson 1.1~ 68' 11 n p/tlltd tf 1«111t 11.lll.L 11111 IT COUPONS . Sterling Franks "J~ • ~~ 591 All·Me1t Franks !~I:~~=!~~ &ac Oscar Marer Wieners :•:: 181 Sliced Bologn~ s~1r.:1 ~:: 79¢ Fresh Llnr Sausage •. · 591 Rath'• Wler,rs -.11·:.-: 1t;:'.· 49- McCaJ's Bfff Llnkles ;::: 211 McCor's Sausage l'.',7 :I:: Al• DISCOUNT BABY FOOD Similac Ready-to-Feed '!;:• 55' Beech-Nut Strained ~~~;:: .... 8¢ CANNED & DRY MILK Lucerne Canned Milk tall 16; ... Carnation Canned Milk 1111 18; ... • Lucerne Powered Milk 20· 1203 ll••rt E I B ~ M"lk Borden's ag e ran I Coodensed ll•OL 35; ... • GRADE "AA" Large Eggs C~eam O' the Crop Medium Size doz. 43c Ulla L11ge doz_ SBC ....... 51 c carton COOKIES AND CRACKERS S k C k BaktdBy nae rac ers Nabisco Choe. Chip Cookies :;:, , ••. 46¢ ,. ••. 39; ,,,, Corn Kint • Luer's !own Farms ''"' Fr,er LI" Thlfhl " Olwfft\il<h •3• D'"' Gridt A Clll,l.t•I •• U ~ Fryer Breasts 0tt!.7:r ... 11~ Fryir Wings hw. l;""'' i., 29- Yeel Parmigiana ,~~~ •. 981 Sw"ift Sausage srown 'N s ... "Th• •-•• 69' 3 Minute Sausa11:e" ,t,. Rath H, o· ·rmel ~;ced"Baeon~Also -1·1~ 79' OF Farmer Jahn or Royal Buffet ''" Perch Fillets cl..."::i~1~~~1:~ ... 781 Cooked Sole Fillet ft:,~. .. 891 Rainbow Trout o.'0,::•:1,., ,., s 121 Veal Pattie Steaks ~:~:~d •. &le Or Cheese Smokies Oscar Mayer Brand Smokie Links Center Ham Slices fully Cooked !2·•• 79' , ... I>. $J2t DISCOUNT PRICES MEAN EXTRA SAVINGS! Tortilla Chips Tomato Juice Party PrJjo Tops For Outdoor Pie· nics Or Barbecues! Saoram1nt1 Tangy, Zesty Fla· vor. Chill And Serve! 1·0L ... pk1 • .l.'7. ,_ 39c PHk Or Creme Rinse Sh1mp10 Truly Fine Qual ity-Safeway ·Fully Guaranteed To Please. Hand Lotion Enchilada Dinners · v·:,~:&:mp 12 .... 49c pk(• T .. wn Hoau So Many Ways To Seive. low Discount Price. Chopped Olives Facial Tissues Chillon Q1111ty So Soft And Absorbent. Stock Up And Save! 4\.\·•r. )Qc ... pk,. 25c ot 200 Su-Purb Def ergent :~;~1~.~:.t' 4:t:'.· 49c Fresh Bread DISCOUNT DAIRY -DELI. Co·u'a11e c· heese 1"""' OuaUiy ;I. 331 It Asst V1rieties ''"· Corn Toittillas ik.:'.'.T~~::~Iy ';t~~ 1a- Shady Lane Butter ch~:;~~ :;·~ 79' Lucerne Fruit Drinks A..t ~';'.'-29' Roquefort Dressing ~.::,::; •;:1~ 55' Sott Twist Lui MIS. W1ight's-Choico 01 Sandwich Or Regu l" n .... 25c lo1t DISCOUNT FROZEN FOODS Cool & Creamy Puddings 11:.·;:"39' Orlnge Ju.Ice Bel-•i< coocenlO•I• •·•• 21' • With fresh Fruit Taste! 111 Whl"p Toppi"ng Luc,emo-P"~ •-•• 48, Pride Oua!Jry 1111 Bel al·r Peas wi1h f"'!' c."".n'"' "·•• 16' • Premium Ouahty ••1o French Fr.les e.1.,;, Rogo,1., 0r •·•• l6' Crinkle Cut Potatots ,.,. 0 t I Cook·-'"'1 ,,,., a mea 1es F<t•h ,,,,, ,. .... 391 ,.,. Sugar Cook.les Busy Baker Br1nd 14·11. 39; "Party Timt Cookies"''" · Lucerne Yogurt As~.~·11~~ .. ~;:'.· 201 Longhorn Cheese ~~~-::r 1~. 93; M.C.P. Juice Drinks As•l ·~::-10' Swanson n Dinners ·v:::::;·• 1;;~'.52; 'Cllick1n, Turkey, Chopped Sltlcin Or Mexlun I C .. -.~-.__:_' •• <;" • • • • f, PIL01 . • y g )' • h I I I ' i ~ ' ! : I ' ' i r ' : ' ' ' ~ ' \ rT•I To Sp Nt Fil Cut To" Gari libl fl ~ [f" ----------. f. PILOT-ADVERTISER N Wtdnrsday, Septel'lbff Z, 1970 WfdMsd..,., Seplfmbfr 2, 1970 DAILY PILOT 4$ I Closing Vacation Home Cal.ls for Checklist •• [ Gelling ready to cl'* your summer home for another year? If so, the -following sug- gestions on bow to prepare your applianees for the long winter ahead n1ay prove helpful to you. For the most part, there lsn't too much to do other than to clean them thoroughly to prevent odors from developing and bugs from ·invading. LJght -_ B'eer BrOW!I 0.rby-Stocll Up on This Ont! ·fi '. F r e f z I n g temperatures: However, if your appliances will be exposed lo freezing temperatures, it is absolutely es.senUal that you follow pro.- cedures re<.'Ommeoded by the manufacturer to avoid poten- tial damage. This is especially critical for appliances that use water ... like dishwashers, c 1 o the s washers a n d reri'igeralors \with ice makers. _Water, which n0r"1~11.l_remains m hOS:es..a,nd olhtli' ope~allng parts of these appliances between uses, e:x· pancb when frozen .•. which _gn cause pipes and hoses to burst. You can avoid this · tragedy by having all water drained out oC the appli~nces and shutting off the water coming into the house. !l's wise lo have this done by fl t r a 1 n e d technician whenever possible. But it can ' . be done by the man or the house if he has the necessary instrucUons. To get these con· suit .Your owners manual. or write the manufacturer. You'll find his name a\1<t addres_s on the product serial number plate along with the model number (which should also be sen t along). ,• • Regardless of te1nperature conditions, here are some im· portant procedures to follow Charcoal lriquets Fro1en Lemonade Ozark Hardwood Briquets Bilm longer. Scotch Treat-llefreshinf Taste! c ,. c t c on appliances when &hut ting down your summer home : • Turnivlg orf fuel and power supplies: It's ·a good Idea to turn off th e rue\ and power supplies to your ajlpliances when leaving· them untended for any extended period . But be careful! Oas and electr icity sh!)uld be treated \yith the. ui.. most respect. Whenever possi· ble, have this done by somebody from the supplyin.g utility or a qualirie<I appliance serviceman. Don't do it yourself unless absolutely necessary, and be sure you k--now how. Check. the instructions ! _Dishwasher: Run through a coruplete cyc le to clean the dish,vasher and remove all visible f®d particles. If you have a portable, disconnect both the power and water sup- plies. Food waste disposer ~ Place the stt>pper In the clo.sed poSi- tion and fill the sink with two to three inches of cold water. Then start the disposer, remove the sto~ and allow water to drain while the disposer Is running. This flushes out food was~e and eliminates potential odor build up. Finally, have the power supply disconi\ected. • Ranges : Have the fuel and ' Eskimo Twin Pop Paper Napkins frozen Treats in Popular Flavors · Colortex-Assorted, Colois a c . , t ' '. I-Pack U-u. cins 10., •• lag 8-0unce C111 •• I 6 .•. , Pick P1ck1ge of to '! ' ' Boneless Cuts USDA. Choice Beef Boneless Steak IJSiOA Choict-fun 991 Center Round. I•. ,f.Bone Steaks Or Beef Club Stalks USOA Choice Gttde Beef /Ji1to11nl Pncet USDA Choice Beef Flavorful Blade Cuts. Ideal To Pot Roast, Delicious Eating. Beef Cross Ribs Great For Barbeeul USDA Choice Bttf 11. 591 .r -. Dubuque Royal Buffet Hl!ms. Boneless, All lean! 4-lb. can 89 Gourmet Ham •farmuJ.,n Tavem Bnnd $119 • Sigman'! Hickory Smoked 1•, Top S01rlo01n Steaks .usoA c";" eeer $I 1' 0 Bone Roast "'"'"'Shoulder cul• . . Bi>neless Cuts I•. • USDA Choice G~1de Beef Spencer Steaks Jw~1cl:orc~ ~:1 11. $I" Boneless Roast 's~i~ ~~fu: ~~':'i~ New York Steaks i;~~,;~ ·11. s23 ' Sirloin Tip Roast u~~~~C::ua~.r 11. 691 Hormel Cure 8 l: ~;~::u:·;:;:r::tt::m• s1 •• • Luer's • Oscar Mayer r•. Fillet Mignon Steaks C:! 11. $2" Oven Roasts CANNED VEGETABLES DISCOUNT BAKERY BUYS Cut Green Beans Hiahway Brand 1 •·•L 19~ Tops In flavor ••• Skylark Rye Bread """ 331 Ital · Town House Peas1"~·r~:::i•r 1!;~··21 1 Angel . Food Ring ~;~ .. w~!~~· .... 391 Gardenside Tomatoes II-or, 1g; Cinnamon Rolls M:~:v~r· ,.,. 33' ... ... Niblels Corn Green Giant-"'"• 231 Raisin Nut Snails Fre~h 33' V1euum Pack Golden "' Baked ,.,. ~Binder Ensembles. ~, :ue "The All Star'' "Going Group" . ~ !I 1·1 il : i Slicker Binder tt ?-i" li11g • 6 Colon. 89c Vol111 i1 Notebook Paper "Look what you ret in this bargainr• or "Girl Talk" "Wot l""'" ~nil Bindu, $2 $ 9' Zipper Pouch, Assitnment $3,19 49 rabfic Designe.d S2.91 1 Book, Themt Book. l~u,, Ylflt Binder.! Theme Yalt l Filler Paper, & Dictionary. Book & Notebook. 59c · · lie Pen Special .n 45' tacit On• A9t Pen and Two 19c Pen• for •::· 49' ' 211 lie Clic Offer I j liyton1 • 200 Shelta. 89c. Valv• ~· .... ..,. ............. """ .............................................. ,., ....................... ~.~-~ MAYONNAISE & DRESSINGS DISCOUNT PAPER GOODS luMade Mayo11aise M. cle Wh" SOid °"''"' lfl Ip By Kroll Sandwich Spread • ' ' ' ' '· Nu Mldt Haadi-Wrap Ker ="s.r~r"' 1:-.ft· 28' Toilet Tissue r;:::;: 4 ;:i: 49~ . T raly Fine Towels 1.ssor1o1 ·~~ 281 t ricM lll11tl•• l•1n. 1•" WM., a.11.1tlra1111. 11 1111 . . , .. 891 Canned Ham ;.,~1:~u:;:~1~~:: ~;:·$4'' , .. 991 Swift or luer's Ham 0r.;::~· ~:~$4'' , Boneless Round Or Rum11 USDA Choice Grade Beef II. 991 Family Size Hams Juicy Sunkist 8 8 a· Swett Valencias -lh. C Thin.Skinned-Rich in flav~. Perteet for Juic1 &ag Fancy Quality-Firm And Golden Ripe Ideal for Slicing Over Breakfa~t Cerea!s or Into Gelatin Salads P• I large Sin Hawaiian lneapp es RipeAndRtadyTo£atAnytlme Delicious & RefreShinr (Halves ea. 29c) Fresh ·Papayas ~~::~.~:~~ !~~, . l Ol)S To Serve lt All Mode Cuc. umbers' . lfot House Seedless low In t.llorits. So Perky And Crisp. Blends Wtll lft Salads L P., ,. Casselman Variety ''fiesll Qi frtsh Preferred Product Item" Dubuque Or luer's 1·11. $6'' ... Whole 49c each . each 39c r&.19c lb.2Sc arge Um l..!1ge Sire-lll.llTIP & Ternler Milm Pl•nts ,.r,:; ~,':;.. , .. 1191 Honeydews 1 °'= ~::., .. 39- Yellow Onions :., t:-291 Bunch Beets . r::i:, 2 ., 251} Bell Peppers .~ .. 'l:i';.."."'o!i:. "· 71 Cabbage r~ :~:::-;::;: .. 71 Avocados .~ .... ~~. ... 391 Carrots '\ .. ~· J;;~~f'' 3 ,':-.. 291 Tomatoes i::.~: 5 •• 11 Raisins .. ::::.":'::., 10 ·~:." 39' power supplies turntd off ind clean thoroughly: Jn Ule case ol gas ranges, be sure all burners and. pUol lights are turned off too. Automatic washer: Discon-- nect the power eupply and turn off the faucets that sup- ply water to the washer. Disconnect the hoses and drain the water from them. Dryer: Clean the lint screen and have the power supply turned off. Ir It's a gas dryer, have lhe gas supply shut orf, too. It's a good idea to stuff a towel or rag into the outside vent to keep out breezes and various woodland creatures. Refrigerator and freezer : Remove all stored items and ice trays, disconnect the power supply, and clean thoroughly with a solution of water and baking soda. ~ave the door propped slightly ajar to prevent the growth of odor- e:ausing mildew and bacteria. Turn off the water supply to - the ice maker if you have one. Room air· condiUoner : Disconnect the power supply and cover the outside portion o£ the unit with plastic or with a standard air conditioner cover (which can be purchas- ed at mbSl appliance stores) to protect it from winter' weather. You may also want . to remove the grill and place a sheet of cellophane or plastic behind it to further insulate against cold drafts and to pre- vent dust and dirt £rum beln1 blown into the house. Dehumilifier: Disconnect the poWer supply and empty the drain pan (if it has ant.). lf you want to-protect your appliances from dust and dirt, use a sheet or some other type! of fabrjc . Avoid using plastic which can keep molslurt from 'evaPorating and Jead to rust- ing. If you'd -like more in-- formation about buying, uslnc or caring for any of your ap- pliances, then write Leslie Paige, Whirpoot Corp., Benton ~rbor, Mich. 49022. Tropical Flavoring Intrigues Even in Hawaii, where er. otic good thinp for the IP'ill abound, steak often i.!1 fe1tur. ed at a family luau or cook· out. Here it often Is served wi_Lh a special s4uce. HAWADAN STEAK SAUCE 3 tablespoons butter or margarine 2 tablespoons onion o r shallots finely chopped 1 tablespoon powdered mustard 1 cup Hawaiian rum I tablespoon lemon juice 1 cup canned beef ivavy or brown aauce Salt and pepper to taste Water Place the mustard in a dish and add water to make a thin paste. Allow the paste to stand for about 10 minutes to develop full navor. Cook the onfons (or llhallobl) in two tablespoons of the but· ter for about one minute, stir· ring constantly. Add the Hawaiian rum and cook to teduce liquid by half. Add the brown sauce or gravy and salt and pepper and 1lrn· mer for about 15. minutes. Add lemon juice and remove steak sauce from t.he heat.• ~­ Stir in mustard and twirl in remaining butter. Do not cook after mustard ls added . Makes about I cup served hot. Cucumbers Combined In Relish PHYWS CUCUMBERS WITH SWEET ONION 1 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons sugar 2 tablespoons white vinta:at 1 teaspoon cold water 1 medium cucumber. pared and llolnly slle<d (l \0 cups) 1 cup thin strips sweet Spanl!b-or Bermuda-typo onion In a shallow bowl with a fork, beat loieth<r lhe 1111. sugar, vinegar and water. Mix in the c:ucwnber and onion ; cover and chill ror 30 to eo minutes. Serve ·wlth a slotted spoon: or drain before servlng, aavlnc liquid In which to rtln1mte any cucumber IUld onion tell over. • • . ' ' • • f New True Taste Ice Crea ·m ~ s the Raspberries Carrot.Celery Combo Simple Flavoris· Blend • ' Food markets h19e lots of Churn about 20 mlnutt:s, ad-ver" soft. To ripen and firm ict! crea1n cubes over top. Cove r lop \vith y,·ad or plastic wrap : place In 2 1-,bles~"'' butler 1 CAHROTS ANO C£LEJ'lY u """'"' vors ct ice cream, but ding ice and salt as ne~ed ; If hot frozen en out: h, in ice.cream freezer, 1 cover a folded heavy turkl.!ih towel ho1ne fr ee:r.er to ripen .. Or onr we hlven't found ch«k drain hole ocewooally, recoverand conti~e to freeze ~an and plug hole in cover or other heavy material. Let transfer ice cream to suitable 2 cups th.inly sliced pared Into a l \':.quart saucepan . Raspberry! .10 make certain it is clear, another 3 to 5 nunduteshe. \YM 00 n with a cork or a wad of plaslic ripen for two hours. • contaioen. cover tightly and carrots turn the carrots, celery, onion, And that's the ice cream we allow brine lo drain. UnlaLch • froien, r~e as r a wrap. Tilt freezer and pour off To ripen and firm ice cream pl~ in home freezer to ripen. , 2 cups thinly sliced celery water and salt Bring to :a ,.-ilde at our house recently, and remove crank ing mechan-scra.pe off ice cream adhering . water in tub through hole in in home freezer: instead of Serve within 4 hours: left I small onion. peeled and lxlil and cover: boit' gently pl~ readUy available frozen i~m: wipe top and around top to 1t. Wllh a . long-bandl~ · side or freezer. Repack · the repacking ice cream in Ice· looger in home freezer, ice cut in th in strips 11/3 cup until tender-8 lo 10 minutes. r!_btnies in syrup. of can. Revome top and check wooden spoon sUr k"t cream, fretzer tub with more ice and cream freezer, JUt lce.crtam cream will lose its distinctive generous) Drain off any liquid. Stir in t Great •~! lf you try to see if ice cream is frOzen; blending firm and soft por~ salt using I cup salt tor each can out of tub; cover and plug soft texture and harden too 14 C\JP bolling waler butter. ~1akes 4 ses:vings. Slis recipe _ an easy one -l~it~s~bou~l'.'.'.d~h~o\d~its~sha~pe~bu~\~~~t::l•:::••::;_:pac=k..:d::•w:::n_:in::_c::an:.~-.'.q!'.'.ua'.'.r~tof::..::cr::•:::ck::::ed:_l::::ce::_ . .:_P::•<::_k_::lc:::_e_..::h•=l•:_i:::n,fco:.:'.:•r::.wi:.:·::_:tha~ll".:r::k..:•r::.•:__:::::muc:::h.:_ _______ ,::.'.::.'•:::"::JlOO=".::."::.lt:_ __________ _ Ire think you'll applaud it as tnuch u our tasters dkl. This Ice cream has the true taste of hspberries ind long after it is pne, 1ta perfection Is likely to Jlnger in your memory. 11\ASPBEllRY ICE CREAM ~ 2 pac;kages (eacl;!. 10 ounces) ; frozen , raspberries i n : tyrup, thawed I cup ""8" l 3 cup1 (llh pints) heavy r cream .5 cups milk 1 tablespoon Yanilla \I teaspooo red food col- orin1 Cracked ice Rock salt, available at hardware stores Etnto a large finHnesb abler tet over a 1a111e mix- bcrwl, turn the raspbtnies their syrup. · M syrup through. force ~gh berries to eliminate seeds puree; discard seed ~due · f To the raspberry syrup and flJW'et: add sugar, cream '. tanilla and red food col- a 4-quart freeur can in- ..--_the ice<:ream freezer tub ; ~rt dasher. Pour rupberry !nixture into can. Cover can llnd attach cranking mechan-!lsm; latch sectJrely. tPack tub with cracked ice d rock salt and freeze and pen according. to manufac-- turer's d-fo< hand- ~ked qr electric ice-cream ~reezer. (I! you have an elec- !lric freezer you may want to aollow the General Directions ~low, coordinating them with jl)t!; manut»cturer's directions • ljor your part.icuiar freezer.) i Mak,. 3 to 31\ quarts. Note: 1£ you have a 2-quart t."l?-eream freezer, cut the in. ·enis in half. Gener•I directions for elec- tric Ice-a-tam frener: Pilt t quart cracked ict into ub. Sprinkle 1k. C\JP rock salt ~venly over ice. Continue '~ckinf tub with ~acked ice ':ind rock salt in above pro- portions. Fill the tub almosr to Jop of the freezer can. ~Plug in freezer. As churning )tarts, level of ice wlll drop. \Add more ice and saJt in :.hove proportions to keep 9eve1 almost to top ol can. ' )Twin Comfort ) • ' • • ) I \ l • I • ~ 'l; ,, ' " t! " :; • I , Cut a cape from twin circles f fabric to top a curvy rincess when balmy days urn blowy-The total look is splendid In solids plus plaids. Printed Pattem 9383: NEW f.1iS&eS' Sizes I. 10, 12, 14, 16. 'Size t2 (bllst 34) dr<SS 211 ydJ. 39-ln.; cape~% yds. 54-in. SEVENTY • FIVE CENTS for each pattern -add 25 cents lor each patt~ for Atr itail and Special Jfandling: otherwise third-class delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Marian . Martin, the Daily Pilot, 442 Pattuo Dept., 232 We.st 11th SL, New York, N.Y. 10\ltl. Print N.u!ES, ADDRESS with ZIP, SlZE and STYLE NIJMJIER. · • NEW F1ll·Winttr Pattern ;Catalog. 114 dynamic designs. f"rtt Pattern Coupon. 50 cents. INSTANT SEWING BOOK sew today, ww tomorrow. St. -- YOU11 DISCOYll AT ntE ci!ICXST AND WHY AlBERTSOWS FRESH GROUND .BEEF ao•uss =:HAM ·1~ . GAME HENS ~s 69~ HAM ·~~ .. 43~ , I CHOICE I.BONE ' - C:HOICE ROUND 5DAK SDAK ·1~~ND 88L: STEAK °""" "'""' 7s1 l OCN ·---· l!. STEAK ~~:'.'.'.".~ .... 719 ------"'· Top Sirloin Steak ~~-.... s1" Ham Butt Portion ~:".tto ....... ss Beef Steaks ~~.:;:~·=.'.._12.,75 1 Porterhouse Steak ~-... s 145 Sirloin Tip Steak °"""'.;.. ...... s F' ' SAVES YOU MOREi Ham Slices c-c"--·--··.._s 119 Sliced Bacon w.1--.c~,..., __ .... 691 fryer Legs "'-"'"·"'"""'--a..39• Fresh Swordfish c.,,~,,.., __ ... s1 19 Rump Roast =..s::.. ........ tb.89 • PRlaS GOOD SEPT. 2nd thrv Ith Fish Sticks ~.:'.".' ________ .. 391 FRYERS 25i~ 'FRESH WHOLE BODY JUMBO · 12oz. BEU .BRAND · Hl·C VIVA TOWB.S POTATO CHIPS FRUIT INKS Kingsford Briq~ts ~::;:; 101o.i..,,.. 69~ Canned Pop c-1ao.,-.r_ ....... 12/1. Paper Plates,-.... .. ..,,_ .. __ , ...... -58 1 Pitted Olives.-......... ,,..,.. __ 3/1. LARGE ASSORTED Danish Sweet Rolls ' Spam Lunch Mi:eat~ .. :::F.=:::::S;(i' lish -HooDogw Sweet Re .......... r ....... _____ 12 ... 3/1. Tom Scott Mixed Nuts =.--1JoL S8 1 Real Cream Topping .................. ,,,., 39 1 JOHNSTON frozefl GERMAN BREAD --1oo1 291 HEALTH & BEAUT Y AIDS SlicW "° ...... & EXTI!A LARGE lU8E Chocolote Coke BAKED IN&'~ FOIL PAN Hot Dug Buns .... 4• ULTRA.-BRITE TOOTHPASTE 89c SCHILLING '"" 53• PEPPER <I oa. --COOKIES Li t • lolOVTtt 77 s er1ne WASH 14o:.. I U.S.D.L FOOD STAMP NABISCO I COUPONS ~ 47: ... -Gladly Accepted Corona del Mar-3049 Coast Hwy. Fountain Valley-16042 Magnolia Laguna INch -100· So. Coast Hwy. I I CORN -Seedless GRAPES c GOLDEN- WELL FILLED ROASTING EARS LARGE SUNK 151 ORANGES _ 7 lbs s 1 tdNG Sl.ICJNG CUCUMBERS ..... S' JEWEL BRIGHT TOMATOES 2 ro.2t 'CANTALOUPE JUMBO VI NE RIPE Peak of Seaso n Huntington Beach -15511 So. Edwards Huntington Beoch-8911 Adams • , .. I F F ( G \'I ( -Lil L ,IN 1Z DI E I ' . ~ "··~-----------7-~---~~~~-----_.,.........,,,-------------------------:-::--. ' CLOSED MONDAY, SEPT. 7 LABOR DAY ilAR M WESTERN STYLE BONELESS HICKORY SMOKED • I FRESH ~RESSED FRYING · CHLCKEN GRADE "A" WHOLE BODIED LB. LEGS & THIGHS ............ 59c "· MEATY ·BREAST .............. 69c.,. l·LEGGED FRYERS ...... ., ... 39c ... GROUND BEEF f ,RESH LEAN OSCAR MAYER PORK SPARERIBS SMALL SIZE FULLY COOKED TAVERN IA.l M-IULI STYLI WIENERS J11lcy T ..... UR M-IU .... STYU BACQN Hick_,,. Sl!MlM IA.l M-IULk STYLI BOLOGNA 29 · LB. 59'u. 89~ •. YOUNG·N·TENDER Sllcff er CM1111! 59',1. BEEF LIVER FRESH SLICED U.TH'S BAC.ON TOP 9UAUTY 79' ... OSCAI MA.Yll All M'AT 01 . ~ wiENERS 69~ .. ' JINNll·O·llA.ND DllP IA.STIO ~:~ !~rkey 49c,L IAI M co no SALAMI lllADIO VIAL STEAKS 79'. •. LiMA BEANS 5 ~ $1 :~~=:~~'! ,IN IUTIER SAUCE R FRENCH e ILUE CHEESE 12 oz. CANS 1 0 oz. IOmEs 3 ~ $1 ~~1~~· ·C~LA . R IOTILES DR ROSS FOREMOST DOG FOOD 8 ~ $1 ORANGE •1 TALL CANS .) , ' R JUICE 48 oz. IOTILE 5 9C CREST Economy s;,. -6. 9 r~h~!~~~~t?!Rog. $1.05 Val~ ( r-:-Ii il fj: I :J ;t·J ·l 'I31-.,, WATERMELON RED ~~. RIPE· 4cLB. . POTATOES U.S. NO. I RUSSET 10c:r~0 49c APPLES NEW CROP DELICIOUS 5 ~ $1 DIXIE <? 19 BATHROOM CUP · C DISPENSER Rog. 19c Value . KLEENEX ~ PAPER jS TOWELS -:::- llG ROLLS .JJfl F 0 R KLEENEX FACIAL TISSUE IOX OF 200"1 F 0 r. F 0 R NtdntSdlY, S1pttmbtr 2, 1970 •DAILY PILOT 47 . ·•'DOUBLE DISC~UNT PLUS'' . ' . ' THI. 'OLLOWING.ITIMS AH 'l'YPICAL 00F IVERY·DAT LOW SHllJI PRICIS ON WH!!=H TOU AS:TUA'f,:' SAVI 3 WATJ. . \. __, FIRST_, ... OAIN IASKIT UOULAR LOW IHILf ,.,,. IAVll YOU MONl'I'. SECOND-MANUPACTUOHI' ••OMOTIONAL ' ALL~W-ANCIS All PASS !Q ON TO YOU TO llDUCI OUI SHIL' PllCI IVIN PUATHIR. . PLUSll uu1 CHIP ITAMPI -NO NllD TO DO WITHOUT"' ILUI CHIP ITAMPI WHIN YOU IAVI AT IAlltGAI~ IA.SKIT. •IG. .. BARGAIN CHAllll CALLIO BASKET STOa l IPISCOUHT STOltl '••c• PltlCI PRICE ~RAFT 39¢ ARAMELS 49¢ 45¢ 14 oz. ..... I . 29¢ NOITHllN PAPER . 35¢ 33¢ lOWELS l(ERN'S .. 147¢ 40¢ 37¢ GRAPE JELLY 20 OZ. JAi . JOHNNY CAT '159 '119 99¢ CAT LITTER JI U. IA• . - GLAD 1171 ·c. ... 1 59¢ 51¢ 49¢. U.NDWICH IA•S SACRAMENTO . . ~/$1 TOMATO JUICE 29¢ 25¢ 4', OZ. CANS • . SPllN6FllLD 31'1 DILL 01 11'.0IHll DILL . 39¢ 35¢ PICKLES JI OZ. JAi · . 2 FOR LIBBY'S CHOPPED OLIVES 17¢ 15¢ 25¢· 4V1 OZ. CAN HIW BROS. $.119 INSTANT COffEE '139 '129 ID OZ. JA~ -.YUBAN ,139 \· ,13S I $1 19 INSTANT COFFEE I OZ. .IA.l : a>~ : ••. BANQUET 2 LB. • ... "·" FRIED CHICKEN s.i49 --'--------~---ROSARITA DINNERS Your 'Choice Of Varieties MT. IAKIR • PEAS • CORN . • CUT GREEN BEANS • MIXED VEGETABLES 11<0 1'/• LI. IAGS ' 39' LIQUOR DEPT. MILLIR'S HI LIN BEER CASIOF 12·12 OZ. CANS IUSCH IAVARIAN B E E R 11<0 1' OZ. CANS RIGULAR $1.49 ANCllNT AIH KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON ~!G~~~" · ! ,.. . LIGHT·AlllT SCOTCH 6/51 2 ' 510'8 . FIPTH $3'' PllCIS IFRCTIYI THUHDAT, NllDAT, SATURDAY I SUNDAT Sept. 3, 4, 5, 6 n1c1• IULllCT TO ITOCK ON HAND WE ACCEPT U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS . I -11 ~ -I :l BUCKEYE ,..,.. \ BEER l 12 or. Pop-Top Cans • ., COFFEE 3 L•. Can '2: -1 1 L•. Can 85C DOUBL.E BLUE CHIP STA~PS ' WlT~ THIS COUPON ONE ~PRO FR I oNL v -ANY AMOUNT • YOU ;CHOOSE TO IUY VOID lFTER ~SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 6 , NO MINI MUM _PUACt-fASE -NO MAXI MUM PURCHASE . ' Ak91'10t;c; I •att, ~rtill M IMI lfttl C1t1rtllh E1ellol!ttll j I F ·o R ... I c .... 2•111 oz. 52 99 . "" ,,, """' . . . . . . . r Jello Gelatins I s1 6 OZ. IOX 'OLGIU INSTANT COFFEE • ~~ $1J9 6 OZ.· 99C f I WI GIVI ILUI CHIP STAMPS COSTA MESA PLACOOIA ---------·----~-----~~~---. _..,_ -------------------------· WI GIVI ILUE CHIP 'STAMPS· 19th 1nd PIK1lll1 710 w. Chipinl1 I _ti ' • . ff ·DAtl Y PILOT , Snappy Look \. 9381 SIZES 8-18 CELEBRATE the happy ne'ws ._ the shirtdress is snapped Up for fall by a scarf, a new cut of collar and Oirty side pleats. Hurry, send now! Printed Pattern 9381: NEW Misses' Sizes 8, 10; 12, 14. 16, 18. Size 12 (bust 34) requires 3% yds. 35-in.; scarf V. yd. 39. SEVENTY .• FIVE CENTS for each pattern '-add 25 cents for each pattern for Air Mail and Special Handling; otherwise third· class delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Marian Martin, the Daily Pilot, 442 Pattern Dept., 232 West isth St., New York, N.Y. 1001 1. Print NAME, ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE and sTYLE NUMBER. NEW Fall-Winter Patterri Catalog. 114 dynamic designs. Free Pattern Coupon. 50 cents. INSTANT .SEWING BOOK sew today, wear tomorrow. $1. INSTANT FASHION BOOK -What-to-wear answer s, accessory, figure tips! Only $1. ' Barbecue Tasteful As the heat of the summer (lay subsides, treat your fami- ly to a barbecue dinner of spareribs. Tastefully and e a s i 1 y prepared. with condensed soup and other condiments. BARBECUED SPARERIBS 1 can (101.lz ounces) con· densed beef broth, un· diluted 1 can (IO:Y• ounces) con· densed tomato soup, un- diluted ','4 cup chopped onion 2 tablespoons light or dark molasses i;, cup firmly packed dark brown sugar '.'.1 cup cider vine gar I teaspoon chill powder 1 teaspoon dry mustard 1 teaspoon cru shed thyme '2 cloves garlic . crushed Dash of celery salt 2 racks fresh pork spareribs, al:!()ut 6 pounds In a saucepan mix togeth er all the ingrSlients except· the spareribs and simmer 10 minutes. Roast ribs on a rack in a sha11ow pan in a preheated 350-0egree oven for 1 hour. Drain excess fat. Brush sauce over partially cooked ribs. C-Ontinue roasting ribs for 30 to 40 minu tes brushing with sauce every 10 minutes. If barb ecui n g, partially cook ribs as directed 3bove; place ribs 6 inches above gray coals; brush with sauce and grill for 20 minutes on each side. brushin~ with sauce frequ ently. Makes 6 servings. Buy Beef Boneless IR buylng beef, allow 1.'1 pound per serving of boneless cuts such as round ste ak, ground beef,. stew me1:1t and rolled roasts : 1/3 to in pound per sttving for beef with an average amount of bone, such as bone-i n roasts and stt1ks, and '~ to 1 poc1nd per eer·vlng for outs l'ith more bone, such as short * I PRICES IFFICTIVI THURSDAY thru SUNDAY SIPTIMBIR 3, 4, 5, 6, I 970 U.S.O.A, GRADE A-3·lBS. & UP GIANT FRYERS ' WHOLILEGS OR THIGHS LONDON BROIL BO~~~ESS 5'1119 CHOIC< BEEF ~ I .... ' . •• BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS ,,~1 500 SHEETS \ ".::-:.... ;' FILLER "1' ~PER (OllEGE 79c O~ WIOE RUlEO REG. 99c ANVAS BINDER. lsAvi1 3 ·7· 9c ,\l!:l '!!~~ ~ ' ·--~--------r---~-~· ----- FRESH EASTERN I PACK 12·01. BTLS. PLUS ••• POTATO CHIPS BEL~2'o~~ND 49c PlllOW PACK .~ N~~~L $369 ~~ SPIRITS -QUART . - KENNA WAY'S PROTEIN '21' SHAMPOO ·.o~;~~,~~y ~3a:O~~ 5'1115 7.oz. s1zE --. I PACQUIN CLEARASIL SKIN CREAM CRIAM c'isii4°M,EL0Ns 5~. &iiEiroiyioisS~. SCOTCH WHISKY 'i!! S.7·~Z. 79C JAR lARGE89C TU BE• RED, RIPE WHOLE 5c GARDEN FRESH SNAPPY 5c WATERMELON ••· RADISHES i~~~~ • ~;!~ t:~~lg 1000 ISLAND 0KESSING.8-oL ............................................... .43c ROSARITA R1EF:I~~~:~~~ ~RiSS!NG, S·oz. .................................................. S.lt DELAWARE p ( • o. 303 Con ..................................................... !l~c KNUDSEN F UN H. l 2·0z. Cons, 6'Pock ...................................................... 79c KNUOS RESH ORANGE JUICE. Ouort ....................................................... 59c PARKA~~~1~i~g~R~~J~~CE,~81ot ........................................................ 79c f, I lb ......••.... ,\ ••••......•.......•. , .•.•••••••••..•......... ~5C ·· INSTANT:CilFFEE FOLGER'S ' IO·OZ. JAR $159 PUSS 'N BOOT.S FISltCAT FOOD. No.•I Co~ .................................. '-l_.2 for 39c: SARA N WRAP, SO.Ft. Roll. •••••.••••••••••••••••••••.•••••••. : ..•..•.••...•..•..••.•••... 3'/c DOW BATHROOM CLEANER, 20-oz. .... ~ •...••••••••.•••••••••••••••••.•.•••..•........ 89c DOW OVEN CLEANER. Bonus Pock. 1 l·oz .............................................. 85c COLUER CHARCOAL BRJQUETS. S·lb ...•••....•••••••••••.••••.•••.••..••.•••........•. 5 7c COLLIER CHARCOAL BRIOUETS, 1 D·lb ...••...•••••••••.•••••••••.•..•••••...•....•...•. 89c COLUER CHARCOAL SRIQUETS, 20·1b ............................................... $1 .69 COfFfE -All GRINDS 1 -f'AAXWHL HOUSE I ·LB. CAN ... .. .. . . B9c 2·LB. CAN .•..•..... $1.77 3·lB. CAN .••....•.• $2.59 2300 Barbor Blvd. at lVilson St., HarbOr Shopping .. • ,l ' • Center, ~osta \ Mesa \ .1 ,. M WH <JUI Jl ~ W~A.· INTO PA~) FOi Pl " AC J Cli s 001 ''· 9 c,r "' !4 Flo "' l'lf( J 5 Bot lb Dor 17 The 18 Kin 'flu 20 Gar 21 Tri 1~~ 2Z B'' wit 23 Col '" 2) Fae "' 27 B!c p,. 29 Ca "" 30 Rt '. 34 Pre 3& Pl< "' 36 Eg '" 39 Da .. 42 La .,, 43 Br · '" 44 .•• 45 Str '" .. 4b Be p, " " 2J " " ,, " .. " JUDGE PARKER WH"T "~E YOU PULUN6 I WMff TO UN- INTO THl5 HOSPIT~L L0-"7 Tl-115 U.11 ! Pi\li:KING LOT IT'LL SE 1' WE"EK FO!i!, WILLIE? ' SEFOri:E ANYONE ~EPOIITS IT! PLAIN JANE I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I A CROSS 47 Rhythm l Cliff 49 Abou~ds 51 A S Down w Ith: ptrformin9 Fr. art 9 Central 54 Clot11in9 theme •te'TI 14 Floor sa ... of war coverinr 60 l11age lnforma 61 Real estate l5 Bounder agent's 1& Domicile c llent: 17 Thoughl 2 words 18 Kind of 63 Wearing 'flu sneakers 20 Garment b4 Thal is: 21 Trio, 2 words lrss one 65 River of 2l Bear Siber ia witc~ss to ob Far: Prefi x 23 Co lorado b1 Easily pane annoyed 25 Facial 68 Art1slic. expression in a way 27 Blood: b9 H arern Prefix rooms 29 Calendar abbrev 1at1011 DOWll 30 Replete 34 Pronoun 1 British 36 Pl aus 1ble 5\atesman excuse in India 38 Egyptian 2 CJrnlval peninsu lil cootrivar.ces 39 Daydreams: 3 Loss of 4 wortfs ''"n"r 42 Large bay 4 F ac.1a v1 ind ow ~dornmenl 43 Bril1'.J1 S Having very composer I 1 lllf> 44 ••• la la rain fall 45 SlftP" b Sotntthi ng ra1sprj by txtra a WfllJl 7 Htnry Ford, 4~ BP.fort: tor ont: Prefix 2 words I 2 l • !i 6 7 IA I~ 17 18 n II 23 '1• p l? 2f ~ 29 .. 3• 3~ )6 17 39 40 '"I 4) ,_s 46 ~· ·-. H ~' ~) :A .,, 51 61 01 11• 6~ ~ " l _ Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: rr A IS H A ,a T S ~,. II! [ 11 /\ L T 0 It IE [ K A l 10 H [ !I I K £ P I T ii A S T I< C II I 0 t " " T U a E S 0 t N I 1:1s -r 0 G E 0 N 111 u . . ' I lol PO RIT A N [ < I NO " l 0 N s-8 u ,_s c [ NE P ~ N -" " T \!RIC A 0 [ s ~ T T I T A 11 • ll tlO l l I 0 A 1..a e1u l T 0 H 0 ., E II • l II E 8 A II [. l • 8 " l ( 0 y C I O A ~ II [ ~ [ s T ( 8 Obstrve • 9 Be ing wi:11· out luster 10 Death notice 11 Accent. 12 Miss Lupino, et al 13 Senstd lC! ·-·· watrr • 24 Wet 26 Calce adorn:re . 28 Spanish victory cry 30 Exe lamatio.1 J l Separate 32 Resting place 33 Monetary 1.n1t of Europe 34 1(1nd of boat 35 Rabbit 37 River of France a ,~ .. 9 ~i.:.~ ~ 16 19 22 .. 10 ( R A L II I G S N 0 C T A T G G 0 ( N S q 2 10 38 Cul into sma II pieces 40 ·•· Aviv 41 Accoun t ~& Man 's nickname -48 Best: Comb . form .C9 Having much flavor 50 Power of smelling 52 Money; Sla119 53 Western Hemisphere mountain range 54 Child S5 HJrassed ptfs1stently 5& ~-tor Leo11 --51 End::iw as w 1th powers 59 B us~O)'s nee ess1ty bl Guido's no te 11 ·2 13 26 8' ~t·:~ ,.. ~ ~..: 31 n ll • JI ~ 41 . :t u I I~ ~ .. -.cc ··; I . -!IQ -~ 51 52 " w 60 6J [ 66 ,, 49 ' • I WM.IT TO TRV 10 SEE MY SON AWD WIFE! WILLIE, I DON'T WMff TO 6ET l ~YOLVED AJJY FUR™ER ... PERKINS MISS PEACH ! A J ! • STEVE ROPER PEANUTS By To~ K. Ryan By Frank laCJinski --HOWOO you t<NOW WHIC.H A ftE THE STAL.AGMITIS ANO WHICH Aff.e ,.HG 5TAL.AC..TlTj!5 "f GORDO ANIMAL CRACKERS ly Gus Arriola ly Ferd Johnson ______ .. ··'SPECIALLY WHsN M.lMIE iORNS avefl. IN BED· ly Roter lolen HI THERE 1 8fE ! W~f'CHA Da~G '? .. CONDOC'rlfJS 1'46N&WCJ~k PMILMA2MONIC/ • ct 0 8Vt0 0SL..Y, POBl.IC taA1iOOS IS ve~q LOW OJ.J ~E \41VE'~ "-1SiOF ~l~tne:s. By John Miles By Mell IM STILL. NOT SURe. if.if By Saunders and OverCJard I·· THOU6"4T fD By Charles M. Schull .. • ' ft THl Sl•ANGf WOtlD OI ~ 0 •. 'JF 1 MR~A Gflll.~E.NO.lMr«Jr~mMEAUP! SH~ GCt1tA ~ 10 ~ tN tl~ ! • . •. l • •• 1 -. • . • I This is your big weekend of fun ••• f ~d El anifho has a holiday eating! ' SELECT SMALL END! ' PrlmBRlb . U.S.D.A. Choice Beef . I " re ••• aged to perfection ••• naturally ••• and ~·ou get the choicest part of the rib at this yery special price! /IL Bp11ncBr86Bak So lean ••. so much value because it's closer trimmed ••• more flavor because it's naturally aged •• , just for you. U.S.D.A. choice beef, of course! .. U.S.D.A CH61CE FOR QUALITY R·anchero Steak ..... ~~·~·f:~~~~ ..... ~1 2/91& Here' a proof, •• you can have El Rancho quality ••• value ••• tlavor ·, •• at a price that's budget l ise l Fresh Turkeys .. !L. ~~~c.~.5:::.~R~~~ ~·~·: .. 4 ~ .finy time is turkey time ••• espc~ially 'vhen you get broad breasted beauties such as these! Ground Round ........................ 89~ Boneless Ham ..................... $1.59 1~. · Lean ••• fresh ! Bulk or patties at this price! Bar-M ••• lean, fully cooked and so tender! . Braising Ribs .......................... 49~ The hearty goodness or beef on lean ribs! Sigman's Bacon ... HICKORY sMouo ... 79~ Real smoky flavor •.• lean slices! · Halibut Steak ...... c~~~ .. c.~: ..... 98~ English Sole ... ~.~~~.~'.~~~ ... $1.l9La. Delicious baked over coals, or in the o,·en ! Sweet light meat .•• flaky and tender! 1 .. Cooked Shrimp ... ~~:.s'.'.~ ... '2.98 Lc. Crab Meat ...... A~~.~~~ ...... '2.~ l6. Freshly cooked just for El Rancho ••• and )"OU'. For a delicious cocktail or a casserole! . \ At tlfe delicatessen! , . . ROY L ,HOST " IDB flrBam ' • • • I • I Potato · • 1ps ....... ~A~~~ .s~~~D.E~~ ••••.• 49' Big 12 oz. ~ag •• and choose regular or dip chips .• a brand you kno\\' stands for quality to be trusted! Burger or Hoi Dog Buns ..... 29' Fire up the coals; •. and as the clan gathers round, let them fix their o'''n .. package of eight fresh buns! Mayonnaise ............................. 53¢ Best Foods ••• quart of pure goodness ! · Pickle Relfsh .... : ...................... 19' C&B •.. sflet, Burger,. Hot Dog! 10 oz. Ripe hves ............................... 39¢ S&W , . Pitted, extra large .•. No. 300 . Rolls .... : .............................. 69¢ ors d'oeuvres ••• Chun Kb;1g .•• Reg. 79c kinds. · ruit Drinks ......................... 4 '" $1 Cal Fame • ., • 46 oz. cans .•• delicious flavors! Salad Macaroni ....................... 19' Or shells ... :for delicious salad ! 16 oz. pkg. Super Liquor Specials! ' BUSCH BAV!Rl!K · ·: Beer ..... 6 1" $1.29 Fqr more pleasure , •. 16 oz. cans. Whiskey ...... r1rrH ...... '3.99 El Rancho's Blended .•. Quart, $4.99 Wolfschmidt Vodka ... H!LFGA~ .. ,.99 E ighty proof' ••• be a graCious, but thrifty, host! Barbecue Sau.ce ...................... 39¢ Heinz .•• choic~ .. !>r·three kinds! 16 oz. bottle. Heinz Ketchup ......................... 19' Thick and saucily spiced ! 14 oz. bottle. ·Stuffed Olives ......................... 39¢ Star manzanillas , .. five ounce jar. Sara lee Rolls ......................... 49' You r choice of all Po.pular varieties! Froze n. Marshmallows ......................... 23¢ · Kraft .•. toast 'em over the hot coals ! 16 oz. Yuban Coffee ......................... 87~ Two lb. can ••• $1.73 Three lb. can ••• $2.45 Cook-out Specials! KINGSFORtl CH!RCO!l Briquets 10 lbs. long burning 7 9c hard,\·ood briqucls ! 20 lb. Ba1 ..... $!.II Place Mats ........... 29' Scott's ... pkg, ol 2·1 .•• pretty prints! : · 11 t T' t' 's ElRanchowillbeclosedLalxJrDay Prices tn. e: ec 1~1ir. nrougn. 1ttt. C1nn1dH1m 5 LB. tlJ• SIZE a· I Sopt. 3, 4, 5, 6. No sale.to dealers. Oipen Sunday September 6 t Opcndaily 9lo9 ••• Sunday9:30to6:30 ••• 1 }'or a picnic ... patio party ... nt the dinner table ••• count 011 \ 1-loffman's lean, fully cooked boneless ham to offer more salis- \ faction and m·orc servings \'e:r pound! ~ . . .Jfi~ ~· ·~ ' "' ~·~ .. .. Luscious golden kernel!, bursting '"ith s'\veet goodness! You'll be glad El Rancho o{fers .1 1 , the best! \ Serving corn?.,. you'll be sure to want D . . I B "AA' QUALITY 791 amgo d fresh utter .................... : .. .. .. . .. . . .. . • > HUNTINGTON HARBOUR! Warner Ave. & .Algonquin St. NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 Newport Blvd . • 2555 Ea~luff Dr. (Eastbluff ~illage Center) Also co,nveniently located stores in Arcadia, Pasadena and South Pasadena • • • t • -"""-----------------------------------.--------~~~--------7-~-------,...~~ --------·-... --·---.------,....,~ .... . ! ' \ I PILOT ·ADVERTISER., WrdrlfSda}, S~pltmbrr 2, 1'170 " • ' • . ' ) • • Dr.monstratpr. Vinyl top. leather interlol', fu ll pcl\\"er, factory air, slcrro Ai'Yf-Fi\I n1ultipll'x, tilt·lele. \\'heel, po'>''er trunk opener &. dnor locks. l\~:ilight' i;C'ntinel. f0920 l. Low mileagc. SALE PRICE , Sedan DeVillc. Vinyl top, cloth &. leather Interior, full J'Xl\·\'er, factory air conditioninA", dual comfort seats, stereo multiplex, JlO"'er door locks, Ult-telescopic wheel, l\\'iliibt sentinel, power trunk opcnc1:. C065AGCJ SALE PRICE Hardtop Cou pe. Vinyl top. vinyl bucket aeat.5, 440 VS engine, automa Uc, radio a nd heater, power steerln&:, p:1wer brakes, fac-tory air conditioning, mag wheels, wide track tires, (325AGE J SALE PRICE Sedan DPVi lle. Vinyl top, cloth A: leather Interior, full po"·er, factol'y air, stereo A ~"l -Fi\1 multiplex, tilt-telescopic wheel, IJO\\'er door locks. rVGR2441 SALE PRICE Coupe DeVille. Full po\11er, factory a ir, full lea ther interior, cruise control, tilt ,,·heel, a utomatic dimn1er. fI\VL673J SALE PRICE Continental. ~bassy roof, leit\her interior, ful power, factory a ir conditi onirfu. stcrro tape, Ii ereo radio, tilt ·heel, all ~si­ blc options. 1YC~l31!til SALE PRICE I • CAD /j' L -, c JL.J .L \ NJ,./~ r rii f.(LT'( N. T ~E'.!.I. LI .• L\ c: r1' o / Fl' hlT"';\.l IJ 1*.. .! tf ;_ _, l 'If · I!_ • . Cl1oose Y ou1·s Today ~-I ' WHILE OUR SELECTION IS GREAT ALL MODELS .EQUIPMENT COLOR CHOICE .... , .. . "',..., .......... ~.~· ( '\ 1.•.l ...... ~1 ... '-;' ,; OF '1 J{E \'10l1 S!~; 0 -, :\l:iJ l:AD ILL CS .\NL CTilt:r~ t<'l1 -E • r-l;'r• r. •" '.!... " ...... -~,JS .... :•, r., • • ,., ~ ~ ..... t.... .. t 2 DOOR HARDTOP This imm aculate automobile bas all the luxury features including full po\ver and factory air condi tioning. You 'll have a hard time J inding another one that is this clean. .........._ SALE PRICE 2600 II~r}J:or Blvd., Costa Mesa .. SALES DEP ARTl\fENT OPEN • , Nednrsdily, StPttm~ 2, 1~70 OAl\..X PILOT 5! • • , \ Jn11lnla C11s lon1 Coupr. Vinyl top and 0tr in1, V-8, hydt·An1a ti•·, rric lury air condilionln:,:. pu\vcr lll('f'ring, rn(lio & heater, l\'abcrs sC'rvic<' lnttnrr. jVTP3571 SALE PRICE S!'da n IX'Villc. Vin~·I top, cl,,1h le leather intl'rior. full [lO\\'f'f ,' factory air condi tionini::, Ar-.t-F~1 rRdio, tilt-telescopic Whef"I, J>O"'cr door locks. lY,.iJight 11cntinel, power trunk opener. i·rcJ308 1 SALE PRICE Coupl" J:k'Villr. Vinyl lop, leather Interior, full powf'r, factory Air qinditionini:;, sl.rrco, Al-1-Fl\-1 radio, till steering wheel, power door Jocks. ( UKP2•10 I S<'dan DcVillc. ~arly trade-in. Cloth & 'lea ther Interior. full l)OV.'M" f8ctory alr conditioning. stereo An1-FJl.1 mul tiplex. IJO\\•C'r door Jocks, Tll t-trll'~copic \\'heel. l"J1ight sentinel. etc. Lncal. J O\\'nrr cnr. t50JAFVI . SALE PRICE . (R111111fill.!.AC . Coupr Dc\'ille. Vinyl t op,•eloth &: !rather Interior, full f>O\\'flr fa('tory alr, St('rco Ai\1-f'M niulliJJ!('.X, lil t telescopic "'hNil, p•111·f'r door luck~. t1vilight scnlin<'I, l"'"·cr trunk O/Jf"ncr. I VUTO:J:l 1 SALE PRICE .I I SUMMER !LEASE SPECIALS 1970 ll. .. A @ •TOCK # S.509 ONLY 1i99 MO • A2L4s:it~.Ul':i4u~VT:r Olj A':!Y CAR IN STOCK LM .. .,.... ,.,i,.. ~lmllw I. IUt OH A"llllOl/EO CRIOtT ... ' 8:30. AM to 9:00 PM Mon. thru Fri. • 9:00 AM to 6:00 PM Sat. an .Sun. Service O.p11rtment Optn Mon.-Fri. 7:34-6:00 ' I . ALL CARS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE. ALL SA(E PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH TUESDAY, SEPTE . ' . • i i ! I I ' ____ )2 _} _____ ~--~~~ ' ' • ' • ' I .. .. " • .· .. ~~.\~H~.,-·~--~d~"lf o >~fi~"~--r--~~~~~-' .. . . .. . .· --~--)-.-.,...------.-... ' . .. -·-- ' I Four-Plex ritodern :? story 1Yith f•I) large, ~ bedroom unit~. Presenl · lncomf' $600 a monlh. / Excellcn1 terms a1•ailablr .. ~4~:000 Newport f at , ,_airview .. 6'16-8111 Canyti~) CHEAPIE TEEPEE Don't live ln a wig111am. Thi1i 3 bc>droom howc ha!I prenty of charrn, 2 full balhs, tre- mendous c..'Overed p a I i n, .Jars:e shade trees. Dohble garage. full, Price S23.5oo. r. ·No 00\VN VETS. 546-8660 1i1pp1w 2 Houses-One Lot (l;f'a,r 16th z, Tustin Front home. 2 bt.'<irn1i1, :;hake rool, Both hGmei1 have ch.•c ra.nge!ild isJ>OMls. firt'place!i le patios. S30,500 "''ith $3000 dov.·n. Cost• Mes• Investment 548-7711 Swimming Pool 4 Bedroom. 2 bath. wood fioor. Jo"P. 2 yel!rs Old. Cps. tom built. $34,500. Wells-McCardle, Rltrs 1810 Ncv.'port Bh•d., C.t\I. 548-7729 Eves: 6l4-0684 BACK BAY · * ImmacuA,:te-homf'· • Just ~coratrd • :i Bed mil', 2 balhfi • Largl' amily playroon1 • Extra garage for boat, camper or shop • Quiet View stn!el * S'\.l.000 * Better hurry! . ' howan~ lowson Jf2. $1000 DOWN 71;,•/o LOAN 11colto11 :l~lG. Via Lido Cute 3 bedrm w I 1 h sMdy ti7j...1~2 back yard. all bltins. co11- ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I crete play area. Location ls J S close to school~ & 11hopping. U5f fepS Realtor _ O"'n<'r \\•ill take To Ocean s1000 down and paymen1s \\lhere else can you find a including everything \\'ould ~·er home w/2 BR., conv. be $250 a month. Call r.1esa LIDO WATERFRONT den, 2 Ba .. beamed <'eilings, 1 ~V~m;'l~e~R;"•~•~lt~y ~546-~5990~~~ I APTS.-320 LIDO NORD bltns. shag cll11>4?ts, cozY1 -• , NOW REDUCED TO pati<> :_for nly $27,950? Spacious -Private $150,000--Xlnt Terms "Please call r our picture \VOODED 100' X \2j" LOT. 6 Beautiful units. 6 car brochure of c rent li!11ings" ROOl\f FOR T\\'O ADDI-garages & utility room v.'ith TIONAL UNITS. V('ry con1-80 ft. frontinc on exceUent fortable lhree bdrn1., 2 Balh S\\'in1mil1c hf'rirh. Units arr Home with dining rn1 ., built-newly furinshcd. •>="*'~:.:..~ ... =::-;• 833-0700 644-2430 in kitchen "'ilh brcaktast Bill Grundy, Realtor at"l'a. Covered patio and 83J Dover Dr .. N.B. 642--4620 ~~~~~~~~~~I double garagr. Priced to seU 1 ~~~~~~~~~~ 4 Bedroom, 2 bath at only $'7,SOO. -No fin. t· PENINSULA POINT ance problen1s! ! ! Col~C',;:e Pflrk Dirty ~1e~.11 M. M . LaBordt, Rltr. $39,950 Sl18.00 per month, 6,o , 1'1x 616-0:1:).) E\·rs: ~S-l2G.·1 2 Bdrnl!i, 1 1'111, finpl, Ubl it up anri make somr mol'l('y. ~~====--==-garage, pr1v patio. Near Bay ChvtK'r anxious. Try $2,IXXI BAYFRONT APTS. .t: Ocean. down. Built·ins, double gar-VISTA DEL LIDO Cail: 6i3-Jli6J: 67:h.tl68 e,·r.~. age, forced air he::it. big loL Pier & Slip Available See it toclfly. 54G-8660 $32,;iOO ANO UP George Williamson REALTOR 673-43SO 645-IS64 ..... associated BROKER5-REALTORS 2015 W Bolboo 671·)66) O\\'NER: Lovely spac. 4 BR + bonus mi. Huge play rm and :\la!iter BR. Pool, wlk to bch. l)('sireable \\'estclill area. Prinpls only. 6-lG-2095. BLUFFS CondG -4 Br, 3 Ba. lkst area. 8C'low mrkt. By ov.·ncr. Afl 5 & v.·knds. 644-1869 .lJ Fl fly 10 JI 1nobUC' home $3500 with roon1 & patio 61~2-186 aft. 6 P~I. --------BROADMOOR BEAUTY l\lid-\\'cs1 owner in.~truc1ed u~ to sell a:i; soor/ as possi- ble! 4 BR. 3 Ba. ViC\'>' home: comp. cptd., drpd., alt bit- ins. Profess. lndscpd. fi~~ ':C ~mablc Joan. Reduced to S&l,500 ~EAL"l'O" CoptBIN-MARTINjl 175·1112 :J OLE' The cha.rm of "Old L\lcjico." Quan;-tile Ooors, brick fire- place set the n1ood for this almost new cuslom 3 Bdrm & fam. rm. home n!'ar beach. ~laster !!te. ,v/ocean view & secludr d sundcck. Wesley N. Ta'/lor C'tl. REALTORS fiJ.1-4910 HOUSES FOR SALE CorOna del Mar 12.jO LIDO'S BEST BUY 4 Bedrms, 3 baths, newly df'COrated, modern kitchen, 50' lol. \Veil landscaped, . J:ltge southC'1·n patio. As- sumable 6%. loan. Jean Smith, Realtor 646-325S LARGE HOME 5 Bedrm, family rn1., xlT)t street to street 45 ft. lot. B~· app't only. $97.000 Owlll'r may trade down for 3 Bdm:: :.Orne in Terraces, Cdr..1, \\'ilh ocean viev.·. LIDO REALTY INC. 337 Via Lido 673-7300 EXPANDABLE cozy com- pact. 3 Br, on lg. sunny lot. $52,500. {h\'nr. 6T:>-2643. Past \\TOUght kon gate entry lnto enclosed brick pillared courtyard to gorgeous ''OLD \VORLD charm... 3 lg. B<lnns. + massi\·p livi ng rnl. v.·ith cozy brick fire- plac('. 12· breakfast rm. Sliding gl11.ss to private ('n. closed patio. Few blocks lo beach. Mu.~t sell~ Value packed a1 low $28,~ with FHA-VA te1ms. Call (714) 962·558..i. FOREST l OLSON Inc. Realtors 191 31 Brookhurs~ Ave. Hunt ington Beach 2\8.jl Ocean Vie1v l:n-By Q\\·ner. Not yet 2 yrs old. r.tust sre 10 enjoy this 100% Spanish home in xlnt cond. Spanish v.TOught iron gate that leads inlo your ov.'n pvt courtyard. Lots of inlaid Spanish tilr. step down liv ing rm, din'g rm. lge kitchen & fan1 rm \V/frplc, 4 br. 3 full bas, 2 paliO!'I, 3-car gar, ne\v drps, lots of hltns, crp1s. Air cond. \Valk to beach & ~hools. GIANT That's the Y.'Ord for this 2 sto1}'. :i bednn t-.1eredith Garden home . almost 3000 ~· tt .. 3 balhs. 3 years ne1\", 3 car gar .. rormaJ e\·erything r-.lassive frplc, owner lrans- Icrnd • ''RCjUll • move in beforC" school starts. I' 1llage Real [state '62-4471 ( ::::.) 546'1103 General JOOOGeneral 1000General IOOOGeneral IOOOGeneral IOOOGentral 1000 General 1000 ''ZZ!l I! :• #4 ;; EE =t ¥4 NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE 646·7711 2043 W11tcliff Dr. at Irvine Open Evenings WOW! TENNIS FANS! llG, ELEGANT. HAUTIFUL! !'i bech'O(lfn!!, 2 baths, 28' rAi\ttLY HOOi\l, b)-.Jil.t-in.food r<'ntt•r. L.ARGE LOT "\th Tennis CourL Valur plus al $37,250 with ex1st1np; .l"' annual pcl'centai;e ratr \A Loen payallll' $174/mo. TOTAL! • MOUNTAIN-LAKE RESORT J4 .i;harp Unlti; lv."ilh kitch!J.!li<1'ru•,tled in TA LL PINE:S. U.r;::r CUSTC•i\I (•11·n"r' unit overlooks BIC PO!' r.d l undeck. \Valk to stores and LAl\E for flshiu·.:. boating, 51"-lmming. A \\· EK 'II $1<10.!XXH CLEAR, u" ner \\·ill finnn~.,. nn1I TRA:DE for bench area ,. HURRY! _ TWO MASTIR SUITES 2 HUC& mRsV·r l>f'dronrna, EACll \\'Ith \VA l~K-iN clrn.:rt~ Arid Pr.IVATF: bAth, 4 bedrOOnu In nil \\•llh 3'11 bll.lhs. FOHM AL DrNING l"O'Jl'll, ll~lllU'At(' F'llll'lllr l10<~m. built-Ins. n1arble FlREPl...ACE. Yoo've nevcr JJef'n a beeu11ful. mud!•rn horn" hkr Lhia tor $36.500! SEE rT TODAY! IA YCREST CUSTOM POOL HOME 4 brdroom, 3 bath. J1UGE POOL..., Ith brids:e rntry. nl!a.r ncw ctlrpr llni:. Sacrirlce ptiL'C-$57 .500. :s5-i-<2: J NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY _COSTA ME.SA OFFICE-545-9491-545-0465 HUNTINGTON BEACH OFFICE-842-4455 2790 HA•IOR ILVD. OPft lv•htts •tn t P.M. 7'82 Edln9~ "uNTi::;~''c. .. NTE• 540 5140 / Open Evenings • COSA MESA NORTH SIDE THI SOUND. OF MUSIC ! Gor~ro11~ 2 i;t0ry Northg11e \\'ith fini~hrd Bonus Room. 3 or 4 bedrooms to choo~e from, Cul-dr-s11r slrt'el, l)('rp pilr t•tirprl 11\lh matching drapM. "Gf• ~o Dov.·n- a!so rHA 1rrm5. l.tfs Trade: 1 4 IEDROOMS-$32,tsO FllA and\',\ Trrm~. llra,·r sl111k" ruof, beautiful entry v.·ay and ~nltr hall11. 2 ~01'1:"<'V11' bflth~. l/UGf. kitchc•n, huilt-lns a\Ro Dillh\\'aShf'r. "Family Room." LoL• uf carpet~ and draprs. IJnvt by 3108 Roanoke l...llne Salurday 2·6 rr.1 or call · GLfN MAR TWO STORY i'\011·'t1 th(' tlmt' to u~r your Gi Lo!n and lradr in that 11n1a\I house. 5 t)('drooms v.·i1h en tht" trlmmln~. Carpets. drRJX?S, "fanuly Room.'' Crtat back yard. Lats c'lf trl't's. NOW IS THE TIME TO IUYll ;. • 'In evt'ry custu1n drcorated room with AJ\11FJ\I intercom. EXPENS IVE cuslof1\ drarws OV<'r sh<'en, unbelievably plush CArprts, modern a11 tomorro"· kitchen And plcturr i;:erden 111.ndscaplng. 3 bedrooms in all and you can 11.ssum(' subject t<> lo'v 5\.4 G.l. Loan, !130 per month. SIX! No"· that \\'<' have your atlention YQU v.·on·t v.·ant tn mls11 this bargain buy 5% GI ResRI<' \1·hcrt $150 J)C'r month PAYS ALL. FINISHED GARAGE converted to mastf'r·slzerl bonus room. "squtaky" clean and v.-aiting for you. $26,500 ruu. PRICE. NUDIS!I AU f'nllon ttller And 10 111 U1ls beRch beauty "'llh Intimate c:ardt"n J>ftfit). P11ntlf'd 12x20 srpa.ratt' fll'mlly room \\1th \\'et bar and \\'lne racks. Secluded master suite. $19,8SOI WOW! 4 llD! WOW! FU,L}-PRICE for lhi! barf!'.aln hunter!t brauly \\•It h ii1iaet·ll;:?r kltchrn, dh;hl\'El.~hrr. ANKLE-DEEP c1u·pf'ts And drapr1 throu~out. Submit your dov>'n payments and pay lC'SJ than S200 per month. cu LI '" ~ "' " ,, 84: I Bi b b • ( 3 u r E ' L D c ' A' • I ' I 11 I R ' I • ------..-111111'1.-------.... -----~--------~~----·-----· ·• ' • I J S PlLOT·ADVERTIS£R Wt<l"'ldll', SfpUmbtf 2, 1970 Wt<l,.!day, S.pltmbtt 2. 1970 DArL V PILOT Sil HOUSES FOR SALE H SES P SALE RENTALS -RENTALS • RENTALS R f!NTALS RENTALS K~NTALS KENT A L> :::L°":.::":::no::..:.N::l~1:::;:.l _..:l;:.701::;:. HouoH F um I shod Hou-Uni urnlshod I -'H-'ou=s•:::•:..U=""':.::;'":::l:::sl-;:lod::.., 1_.:Apt=o.::.;F..:•;:.rn::l:;;sh:::od:.::.. __ ;:.Apto.=::...:.f.:•:::••:::l::sh;:od.::_ __ 1 ___;!!:...." urnl1hod Apts. Furn I shod . Hunti"tlon Btod! 14UO CUSTOM TOWNHOUSE LOW LOW $17,900 5'1ALL Orumlrlc 1 BR l-a Buch 2705 Gtntral -Newport Btach J200 Newport !luc h 42UO Nowporl Beach 44UO Huntlnt!on Bta dl - B~~~~cl\;."::.Oiiss l BR. 2 BA. ws mo .• •""' *Pack Your Bags BAY VIEW-8Lurrs N•w • Jeue. Quitl, no ttaUtr, AND r.tOVE lN TODAY• br, 2~1 bl l~nhse. Jo'tm rm. 1711 ocean ~. 2 blocks from Cl 2 · trplc, crpt a. drps, pool. M. ·.;.l.;.ss;;;lon.°"'_Vla"-'-"lo'---.:.·.;.;.;;.; tie.ch. -t!M--742.._ un Br. Ftuced yard. Lease sai ~ Wow! llcllOI' & enjoy <'&re--ln the BEACH att:a! S12S. . . free livine. No upkttp 11.'0r· SAVEi BY OWNER, 4 bt, 3 Rent Of' liie option 2 BR. 1.1,1 Hom•Finders 64~2951 S8BR., turn, 9 moc lie. S250 3 rie1;, Juit kttp up lhe low, be, lam. nn. profe••· BA. spadous, view, 11.dull.$.J;::=;=:=;;:==: ~·· yt'arly. S26S. <4 BR. I lod••pd ,prlnklen 1---• ~ -,-·-. Costa ~-sa 31UO c anne front. yrly lse SS375. ow mo. payment.II. Cozy Uv. ~ • • .,,...,..,.,., ~· :r.1"'1\.14..l. m.-------Cay\\wd Realty 548-1290 In& rm. Slep.savrr gourmet playhouse. ele. etc. Acrws kif . 1 "· 1 from. park, 1 b1k achl. 2 BR dbl gar + ,,. .... ,__ • • 3 BR. Fam rm, bltnll, . lnc . ~·a8 • ..,r & (J~r. 2 137.~ .••• ,.,~. Summer Rentals 2910 I ......... -2~1 e• I __ ,.~ kin" ilze BR'll. Oer;ira.ble """ Nlr "" boat 6 trlr. ri.1M/wife. sm ~., c .... .._..., ,.,..,. Lease ·~ ·"lld •150 $275 per/mo. 546-4421 l·stocy. Clubhouse. pool. 1740 t.'u , no pelll,., mo. lst =='=======! Terms 10 meet any buelget. Da n11 Point. B11yfront-8al. Penin. &: last mo + dcp, 6464913 U \Von't l~t! Take advantage. o"'ECO="'RA=ro=R"'S'""b<>-me-.-... -an-ILOVELY 5 BR, 4 BA. a.rt J pm. . niver1fty Park Call (7141 962-5."185. view, model-like 3 BR: 2 Pier/tlol.t. Avail Sept l.'lL "s"'H'"A~R~P,--,h-o-u-,-,--,-o-, ;;;;;;;.;;;,,;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;.;;;.;;:;,J FORE~T l OLSON BA, lndscpd, cuatom f.ixture Alao avail for winter •en· lease/East t .1\1, 4 br/ram/ Jo'or RentaJ-in Univel"$ity . 'f & drapes. bltins. lil&nl' tab. • 673-20J9. din'~. clOS(' to school!t &. Park & Ttittle Rock, Call: xtras. !\fake oUer. Bkr. RENf ALS "· shopping. S300. &U-1228 Inc. Realtorii: 19131 Brookhunt Ave, Hunt ington Beach 49G-46&4 HoU,es Unfurnished 3 BR., 2 BA, cm•ered patio. RENTALS New crptg. College Park Hou••• Furni1hed General 3000 area. Avail now at $ per G.I. _.....;. __ ;..;...;.;;__ n10. 838-8771 a.rt S prn e s. $500 Cash Geni r a l 20QO ---------E-SIDE c.~I. lge 1 t, .\loves you inL 2 Story, 4 PEE-\VEE tiny 2 • $125 8kr L&e/option 3 BR, 2 ba, bednn, 2 ha, sep, lan1Uy ~~ .. ~orb wN/UTbc,.$1.10. $9'2 BBkrkr ~'b::Clir.~.~127~5;.. 646-8120:::.;:::::·:_~ rm. elec kit, approx. 2000 "" --:- ''I 11111 I \·l ld. ---1 i1•1ill11 r '1st Western Bank Bid£:. Unh'E'rsity Parle D•v • 133-lllOl Nights sq. fl. Dose to schools & RENTAL FINDERS HUG th.ls hse tight 3 bd $175. * 3 BR, 2 ba. crpt, drpt;. ho Fr" To l.ndl.rds View ot sea. mer. College Park. $265, 2 Bd ood· ... a ne.w ay to live in Ne ......... ort Beach THE HIGHLANDER 11Scottish Treat" 16161 P 11rk1id• Ln. Mgr. 142-1969 San Diego rnvy to Beach Blvd, 4. bl ks So. to liolt. W. on Holt 1 \l.Uc. LA QUINTA HERMOSA "Atodern Spanish" 1621 1 Parksld• Ln. -Mgr. 147-5441 F URNISHED MODELS NOW OPEN Lush landscaping, cabana, covered court· · yards, sunken swim'g pools, BBQ's & foun- tains . "THE ULTIMATE I N APTS" I BR's=From $150 2 BR's-From All util. incl.-F6rn & Unfurn. $175 ~ Pf>I:. HOUSEBOAT! not really but f>i!}.2534 nns. 1-balh S280 7-8507; Eves: (n41 -4ll ·3769 645-0111 be~2 &: 11un P. $145 Bier 2 ST.QRY 4 Br. Exec. Home. i ~";sba2:p~mc :i'~ m l !t1i)• · 4JJW,1fltl.CMte M .. A K, :'!Orta. $75 Bier Avail. Sept. 5th. $200/mo 3 Br tnhouse Eastblurr S·IOO Jt's fun, 6ne eighbors and prestige living, Ne wport Bea~ 4200. Huntington Beadt 4400 . '}!;1; II=~·· """"' ------------R G WATER OUTSIDE * 541).6539 * • RED J-lfLL REALTY all in one I xurious pack.age. That's Oak-l BR--.2~2 BA Condo: .,urn or • '........ Mn ~.:;i(ll ~:t'rfvE~eyN•·;5~~2~ri' 2AdBuIRr·,· ~P'I';....~.TSl.1"•1"mo". Univ. Parle Center, Irvine \vood Gar en Apartments i"n Newport unfurn. $300 uni. Pvt/ ON BEACHI, ,..-,..., .,...,. v.i Call Anytim~ 833-0820 Beach, jus minutes from Balboa's Bay and patio, puol. 407 Flll&ship Rd. REDUCED! Completely furnished; down f LANDLORDS Plus 1ee. dpt. 642-5.3M beaches. NB. 213/682.-3000 OPEN • Sing!~ aph; !rom $16.-'i Big &. clean 2 story. to.1ove in to pots & pans. 2 BR. l min , ~e·~~ gpt t''; ~Ple e 4 BR, 2 ha lsmily jhomf!. B•ck B•y • 3240 There's a /, million dollar Clubhouse with SUN! e 2 BR Furn. From $285 before sclKK>l starts. 3 BR & to beach! Bring your 101.s &. ou ve KO ie ~ a~ Near scbool.s. Clear\. $240. ----'"-----bil" OC"' .. Nl'"RONT • ~1ux• ,• e 2 BR uolucn S260 I ~~ -• CALL NOW• s•:tl> we·u do the senCling Back Bay Vr'tw & Pool parly roo , · Jards room, indoor golf driv-...,,, '""' .... " am rm., near W.'lO!l Hi. GI ,,... s. · ........ · 54~. f BR, 2 BA Jo'rplc. Ava il C8r""ts-dra~ ~ishwasher or IBA terms. Only $32:::,00. Home-Finders 645-2951 You'll do no spending 4 Bcdrm, den, fonnal dining, ing rtng men's and women"1-healtb clubs, .~..... EARL ~ ~- cau .. 1 ""'l. CALL EVELYN "Sb-2200 DUPLEX -&parate lhse, 2 . 'd 10/1 . ......, mo. Y Y! heated pool·sauna..tennia _ • b '-sm family area. cov patio & saunas, enn1s courts, r~s1 ent tennis pro 67J..70~ -... _....,_ ~"n ,,.· ws R I 1 Sh 2005 r, encl. gar & pe.t10. $135. I I •· 1 75 d h d 01 .... • .................... ~ enta s O are * BY The Seel * Will check refa. 5i&--4445. P<>O • Ava I ...,pt st, $3 an pro s op, 80 ymp1i.; s~e pool. All BEAUX! 2 BR, wnlr on patios-ample parkirc. Charming,. 2 br. home a"'a.Y $165 2~ + den, fml, patio, ="'="""=· ,;,· =B="'=·="=,...=="==" I this, and. much more, just steps'fll?m your O('('anlrnt, frpk·. total furn Security guards. REAL ESTATE MART S HARE ~1y elegant 1o1·aterfront home w/ dock. ~Ian, 30-60 yrs. il.50 mo. from .,....,. amog. Stove, re-bltns, conv Joe. Child & -r. C d M 3250 .Professionally decorated apartment. each xcept linens. $300 molutil FURN. also Avail. ~ "" oron11, el ar h b I I pd 61' ••· trigl &r yard. Little ones Blue Beacon* 645-0111 __, -wit private a cony patios. Air r.ondition-· -.xo-1!1. HUNTINGTON JOG TO BEACHl- 3 to 7 Bednns, 2 lo 4 battui, up to 3000 5<1. II ., shake roofs. all bltns & caJ1)t'ling. E·Z financing from $261990. welJQm~. $210. IMMEDlATE . ..,..,. CllARl\tlNG ·beam ceil.i11gs. iqg/fireplacc1 optional. IDEAL FOR SllARJNG-3 br. PACIFIC Hom• o-Flndars '"2951 ' possesinon "~'" ~ B l d 2 2 I " k 11ALE in 30·5 will sh.are 2 bl' -;i-<4 BR. north C.M. area. .• r. lame + en. baths. ia upper. sun" e c , 675-4:131. home w/same. Roofdeck, ~-',L-A~N=D"'L"O~R~D=s--Agent 546-4.141 Patio. 2 car gar. Fenct'd. No Oakwood G1rde• Apartment• dshwhr, avail lse 9/1, l br :1ll OCEAN AVE .• H.B. Patio, 4 blks to beach. So. pets. $325 mo. Lease. Ask On 16th Street between Irvine and Dover Or. ;ivail 9/12. 5-14-33-15 (n4l ~1481 , . ru· 4~ •307 Vacancy P r oblem• Townhouse· r..tonticeUo for Bell"' 645-0303 or 673-4171 (714) 642-8170 Ole. o-n lD a-• pm~"·· .-guna. a mo. "~ End~ 2 BR 2 BA dW garage S195 ~ . I & 2 BR. furn apt&. Pool. No ,~ .,....., ~ \VO~G Girl wishes to Multiple listings rental net. ' Adi ts, no pel11 495-0870 VERY Ni~redec, 3 Bdrm. 2 Sp1dou1 .nidJo, ' I: 2 Bedroom tuites. rarnl1hff or children. no pet!I. 2-WS'r.t 16th ~tanaged by Rancho La Cuesta Brookhurst & AUanta !168-2929 * 11 A!\f to 8 PM share Bal Isle ho me work available t~ serve all $175-SHARP 2 Br.1~ Ba. stu. Bath. Sunroo01, fr p I c . uafut•it .. ..O. l ttltolJtO. t.mmediat1 Occup1ncy SI, NB. 646-4664. 1 ..,'.,VIL"""L!!IM~<"'W"A"L!!~!!E"RS~CO~·,.I w/same, 67J.238l anytime. Adults, no pets. Refs . Mordllla daU WINTER F 2 Br w I' property owners, house or dio. Patio. Frpl. Child nk. 675-4497 °~ J ltualolpm -urn-· ' BACHELOR. Ulil. Paid. LOW /LOW DOWN --apartment, Vacancieri filled Blue Beacon* 645-0111 . Ne~1>0rt adulls no studcnrs, * NEAR OCEAN! * _N_•_w.:.po_rt_B_e_adl ___ ~_-_ at no charge to you, For 3 BR. 2 Ba., cpts, drp11.; trpl. l=:::!=======:-;-:====:::====J Refer. $185. ino. 612-9176. Ll'NDBORG CO. 536-2579 Lgt 4 BR + F a m Rm Draped • Clll'peted ~ Fencecl C3n'1 beat I his on dn paymnt. l(AFFDAL REALTY WATERFRONT fast, elficient lll!:rvice call, Mt•• Verde 3110 ~t~~P~lk2;,5 OJI lease. General .00 Cost11 Mesa 4100 $25(1 Mo furn modern 2 br. DELUXE 1 Br. furn. Frplc'. PIER & FLOAT Tele-Trend Systems, Inc. ~~~:;;;;~:::===\-"-=::--='-:--=--= ---gar. Pets/Children OK. 216 Clost' 10 beach! Sl60lmo. 3 Bedrm., :J. """· form,ol d;n. """""· 3 BR, ,.. ba. R""'""'' Lido hit 3351 Just For * SUNNY * c:.'°'cchC,S:;,'t:... ----~ cC;•l=I =,,,..=· ="="=· ====I '"• rm. faepl•,,,,/ w/w * How About This . * ACRES ·* LARGE I Bdrm. NF.AR ~ nd fu . hed required. S225/mo. Avail 4 Bdrm, 3 Balh, acrosr; from s· I Ad It Ocean. $150 mo-YEARL\'.' Laguna Beach 4705 ci:pts, a mus. .. , com. Attractive 3 BR. home v.·/ Sept. 15. 1718 Iowa St. I . l d Ing e u s * M t I A ts * Studenfll ok 67'°~8 c..:C!.:..::...::.:..:c;;;. __ ...c; I plele.Dble.,r.Le-"-0"'1 • ._ enn1sc11.p aygroun, O e• p . . · · ·~ · --r-'"J' stov~, crp. ts, drps, fenced 83&-8619. BLU<-" El I AITENTION. Lgt' spacious, S500 per mo. Realtor _ _, il ==""~~~~-~ clubhou~ / &: bea c h-I . Studio & I Bedroom• ** 3 &. 4 BR'li, Frplc. c. ..... goon: egant y 842-4405 4 Br, 3 ha. \Valk to heh. 642-435.l. )'isno, an<l garage. 0 Ava ·to. MESA Ve.rde 3 br, 1%. ba, S650/P6' mo. 67'.J.-7489 or South Bay Club is 11. \\'hole L n.u RAT ES YEARLY. 1 blk to Beach! turn. 2 BR. 2 BA fl.pt , charm. Priced under market, l\1usl ""'-;;.=....,--....,-~-......., day. $175. CALL N W! <lining Tm. Immaculate! 642-6500. new \\'BY of life des.iil:ned "'" Clean~ Call 673.-2455 inlit atmosphere.:? pools. ten- .I .,.3 000, No b k rs BY Ocean&. shop'g ~· ler, 3 Hom .. Finders 645-2951 $245 mo. Owner 545-3554 just lor sing!• """· pie .. 11•11 Day, Week or: Monlh 0 ;,.. ..·,,·0• pc;v01, beach. 5t' ._... ' · ro e BR. 1 \.S ba. encl bl k wall '" e Color TV Air Cond. • \\'INTER ltENT ALS e please, by owner 962-40:13 yard, lited fum patio, CM-4 Br & FIR, 2 ba, lncd 4 BR, 2.ba home 800l'l avail Huntington Beach 3400 fun JivinR with warm, dy. •Pool &. Phone Scrv Incl Rent NOW for Sept.! bcau1, ocf'an view. Adult~ $1000. Below FHA. 4 bt'. cond. b-b-q. gardener. 9 mo Jse, y<i, b!~. dshwhr, frpl, pets Ba~k yani pa1io. Nr sdiool&. 4 LSE•. Nu 4 br/2 ba. namic rl<'ighho~. lt's a • J\taid Service avail ABBEY REALTY 6'12-3SJO only no pels. 499-3266 or Pool •_. t blr r ·~ I '" ,A_ •-chilrn ok. Tele-Trend. ~e $325 mo. 5'16-2574. S150.00l Clubhouse with <199-i:!oo. · , .... ee. ns, re, owe """"" tnc waler. &-..mt, ""' tam/rm. All l!lee/bltins. 1 h 1 Signal So. ol 0 .C, ~'n'R. 2 Br. util paid nr. heh. 2nd'., assm. S1.4% FHA. $S50 clean dep. 830-1574. $15. 832-lDL, Q;tm drps & Avco/crpts. hca 1 club, saunas, '\.\'im-Fairgrounds store5, $145. 300 3.tth St. NB. 2 BR, 2 BA. Choice lac. ' 49l-3418 Newpor t Beach 3200 Cio 1 · •-ming pool, pany room, biJ. 2376 Newport Blvd. Se~ by 9-5 noon. Year.round, U!il pd. $185. ARTISTIC Home-2 br, frplc, 3 BR l " B• •• ~ •d garg rn/ ot-pat:iO unt/bck. liards, ;·•-r goll drivlog . N .. -Isl •. ,.. . Ul\.."\I ~ ' 'l iiii;'!ii'iii;~-~--t Nr. strs & heh. Avail 9/15. ,_..... 54g.97a,5 DELUXE 2 Br , .. 1ct·rr I 1c.""c, .. =-~·~·,,,·=' .,'.:.•=m~·-=-~ H patioon e .. t"'"'. eacrou b\tns, dMiv.•hJ'. dispsl. trplc, rangt", tcnn~ courts, pro -.-~~'-'-'----1 ' · ·ves 1 oc. untington from park ti water drps, pet.'l & childm ok. Lrg Si ,00/mo unfurn.4350/mo !!hop and resident leM i!f pro. Acapul co Apt!I, attractive, Pool &: bltns. Adults $210 no FURNISHED 1 BR. ClOM! lo Harbour 1405 w/mooring. 3 blk.s to beach. fn.m rm. Tele-Trend. Fee M U T -'~um_._..,_.2341! ______ 1 Single. 1 &. 2 Bedroom ll»C· PQol, Utll paid. Garden lse. 642-6274. \ beach. &. l'lhoppmg, Resp. •---------Adull.'l. 9 mo lse, t"'· 7800 ave. p 0 TOWNHSE-3 b l •' b living. Adul1!1, no pets. LGE I B p Adult. 4!»-7079 " ••~7>-;1236:!;'!~·!.""~39t~h~S~r',. -4-.,_.1 .s~1~5.:'83'f:2-;:ij'Oj;-E;;.:;-r, •11 a, no ury apartments with. all lhe •. · R.; enin. Pl . ~41 REOEC & Lndsc pd :: I E pets. Applia.nct"s avail. $180 modern conven!rnce:i; avail· 1 Bft..$150. 2 BM17:) Blk. to ocean. Winter S\60; ·h Waterfront 3 BR 6. dock for NE\V 3 Br, 2 Ba. AU /bltrw, * Uvin' s asy THE BLUFFS mo. Brookhurvl &; Adams. abll'. J<"urnishcd 1tnd unfurn. ll!OO \Vlillacc Avr, C.M. yf'arly $17i 1\21 . 67:-.-1642 ~pi.ffrano Be•c 4730 ~e4221lse, or Jse option. d!h1•"'·,.,~as BBQ. On ndthe1 wbrn the pO()L & ya.rd1 ~ Several choice brand new J 1,;.962-4'=°'"':::..· ------1 ished, rl NASSAU PALr-.JS • 1 " 2 t br furn •Pl for sublet Sept. • .... NEW Duplex 2 BR. 1 1~ • ~·a t"r. . .. inter or yr rou · kept by someone else, :l ..... ,. Bdrm 21': bRth towne home!f. 1 SI'OR\'.' home • 2 hr, l ba.. ~P. Apts. Fur:i f~ Uni. Pool. 1 thru May ]5. 112 block BA. $22.'t monthly. 49&-6243 714: 682-4292 or 7 l '4 : BR, 2 BA, stove, crpts, drps, Cpt/drp, priv. patio, pools, Villa Pacific. Pool, tennis, MODEL.>; OPEN DAILY P1~r.-pong, BBQ, shad Y from beach. $145. 675-8299 ..:•:,,',::81:.:IJ.-04,:.:.24:.:_ _____ 1 Fountain Valley 1410 684·7203 Bring tot.~ & pets. $165, alk hool • · sauna Jaieuu.i $22 5 1 PM !aw ns. 177 E. Z?nd St.I-"=...:.=:::....=::...== w to sc s""' ghopp1ng • · · O /\.M. • i · • 612 .... ~., DELUXE 2 BR ocf'anrronl, RENTALS 1---------2 BR. Beach Cottage •. MOVE TODAY! -Vscant, SPfll'kling and lmmed. occupancy. 642-3737 -,jQ't .& .. f U fu ithecll 4 BR Ir: fam. rm, 2 ba, new Furnished. Year round ren-Home-Finders 645-2951 •ready. $350 mo. $11().JOG to bch. 1 Br. Crpts. RENTS FROM Furn Bachelor It 1 BR. Av~! 911t~g4225-mo. ,..,. •· n m crpts, Xlnt cond . $3600 do"-n taL $225 mo. 1st&: lM"t mo'a FOR -rent:• We represent drps, R/0. Sngls ok. $150 to $350 ExCt'ptionally niCt'~ Gene~I 5000 to as.une FllA loan. Full required. Call 675-1084.. 18,000 rentals thn>Ughout 3 Bdrm 2 balh rurnishcd tri. Blue Be•con * 645-0lll BelolY rontaJ vall.tr! 2 BR Bay view opt, n1.1 cp1s. price S27.650. By owner. \WINTER Rental: Be a ch Orange County. Houses. level "doll house" al S375 2 Br H 'deal f tired NEWPORT BEACH 2110 Newport Blvd, Ci\f. drps, $200 m., 9 mo lsc, $250 =======;;;.;;;.;! 17821 Ash St. 968-6038: Cottage, 3 br. 2 car/garage. Apar:tmenls. furnished, un-mo. couP1e o;;;e'a~u.115 :ru~ Call 880 Irvine Ave. °"'CHEfPR Apl, trplc. I yrty. 6J5.S6.\'J YENDOME _.,. $210, 6T:.-5909 Btw. 5':»--7 fum~hed, all prices. Save 8-47-3833. · \\'Oric'g 'adult. no pers. $90 BACH Apt. S"·im pool. Garg. L11guna 8e11ch 1705 pm. Time & Money. Licensed, Premium home -.. Linda"' Irvine & lb th mo/util ~· 274 E. 19th St l blk lrom OCt'an. Sl l"t + 1---------L ''=mo=~sAN=D~S~.~Pool~'"pn~-.,~·1'" .• ~2 bonded&. gUarantf!ed, Tele-cpla~ on major greenbelt. Fountain Valley 3410 (714) 645-0550 CM . uUL 210 Cedar. 548-1131 THE OLD blks from Ocean. l Br. 2 Trend Systems Inc., 832-7800. hoice one level 3 Bdnn 2 CLEAN 2 Br, l 'h Ba Studios. N 4210 GRAY MARE e.. $275 .,r mo. Wint<r UICK HURRY' bath •t S385 mo. 3 BR. """ & ram rm, "1>k, SOUTH BAY CLUB >'urn avo il. Cp~. d.,,,. pool owport Hgts. •·:::"~'':;..· ..:*:..:6';:.2-ml~c::;.· ~,-,-,·I* Q • • blt.ns. S250 mo. yr lse. Call \Vrk'.i: cpl pref. $145 Ii up. \Vinlcr r ta! " BR apl .. SHE AIN'T \VHAT SH_E US. 2 BR + den 2 ba. 2 firpl. This Sf\ARP 2 BR. home has Ttlf' Big .. E .. Plan -l'nd before 6, 213/~1929 or all &'6---0491i en • ~ . ED TO • ' •• ~ "-~ and '' read" unit wilh sweeping green-6 213/0Lt>-0>18 APARTMENlS · · tir<'place, patio. Sl!XI. BE" and neither is gar. laundry nn. 10 mo. 1"-=-J....... J • • Fur 1 BR & 7'"4 to move l·n1o•. Tot ok. suo. belt view. 2200 sq. ft. or !we:-=========I • • • n. · Adults, no pets. &'16-,,,. • this sprawling contempor. $230 mo. 409~' 38lh. St. NB II BACHELOR ary home. Dbl. door entr)' THlS WON'T LAST! ury ving -2 or 3 Bdrm and Laguna N iguel 3707 CLEAN l or 2 BR. Adult s. no ,v 1 6 It. TERRAZO TYPE 3 BR. Bayfront Hom~. Hom•Finders 645-2951 ·fam rm. $475 mo. _....;;;.::1 L iYt where the ¥ isl 2110 Newport Blvd, CM pets. Lrg kit. $l35-Sl50. 2421 ENTRY lfALL, SUNKEN $365 mo. For lease or 4 br, 2 ha, frplc, crpts, drps, I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; J * \VKLY·Lovely apt. Bach E. !6th St. NB 6''6-1801. LIV. Rr-.f. \V / WADS OF for sale.* 536-374.'J * Stay in Shape Executive Bay View -4 bitn1s, pv.t 1h<1 ach. c1~hse &11 or l~pl. Fum. Kitch. $35 wk _ GLASS, UNIQUE ~fODERN. 2:i~ :; :~~d~n~~ ~~:·;:. by S\V1'~11NG daily, NEAT ~:~*& ~::g:: ':~~?; :_54:iri;r ~722~., mo. PALM MESA APTS. & up. 54&-{H!il Corona d el Mar 4250 ISTIC FIREPLACE, Crom 3 BR 2 BA. Stove, refrig, mo. ---QUIET Adult couple only. 2 PENIN. Delux duplex. Sum- fioor 10 ceiling. Elevaled NB. crpis,' drp!I + POOL. Kid· Mission Viejo 3708 1 BR F'URN. S\49.50 BR. No pet!!, Drps. crp\!11. mer $150 wk "'int er $175 --OINING Rto.1., wHh a SCEN. dies wercome. $185. HURRY. ' -. h Bachelon Furnished dsh"'hr, heall'rl pool $1 45 2 BR . 2 C Ba y shortl 2225 !!URRY• L.t1Y1s Jy appointed -spae· ...,,,5 P .1• , • C mo. ca, 11 ypress. IC VJE\V Of TI IE OCEAN -----. ... .. ~2951 101.111 3 Bdrm 2% bath split 2BR & den, 2BA, curtains & from tlli. mo. "'~" ll('I IC l\Ve, M. 213/69!\.-S012. &. CATALINA ISLAND. ·-·crrvE ' BR ' b& Home-Finders -;r. drapes llU'UOUt, w I w cplg. I OL" !">o18-6878 or 642-4429. .::.:=c..:=-----1 , fV1 , , level -out.llanclino Ba" and mo. mo, n. -' 2 Br up tar·r >'rpl IMMACULATE API'S! ADULT and J.'AMILY Section Clos• to s hopping, l'&rk • Spacious 3 BR's. 2 ba * ~wim pool, pu_r/green * F'rp\, Indiv/lndry fac'la 1845 Anaheim Ave. : COSTA ;,IF.SA 642-2824 1 2 BR. I ha . $130 mo. Bltn..,, dsh"•hr, crp<a, d r p 11 , air~tKl. displ, Pf!liu, garg. J Tele-Trend, fo'ee $1 S . ' 832-7800 ' 2 Br, Dis~!. ·crpts. d~. $140 n10. Child t>k. Tele-Trend. · f't'C Sl5. 832.-7800. S . 4 BDR" , ... , ·-2 526 0 DS ·~ , re·-·""~. cl~ to··"-'• • I B .. ' s s. C, pac1ous l>l, & "-''· Winier lse, ........... * LANDL R nii;:ht light view -for 1he , ... ..,,,J .... u ......... .,..,.....,, POOL ** r. Furn. No children k $110 N be Rr-.1. FLOOR PLAN, has W/ Crestv\e_w. 543-5476. particular family at $500 mo. & sOOpping, <lishwas!K-r. • SAUN A or Pf'ls. $110 mo. Call "c~I ',,..,._ ~'"'mo. r. ach. NEW 1-2-3 BR 's. All bl1ns, , \VCARPETING & DRAPES !========== Free i;ervicc It> you. Savt. oven, ra~e. disposal. Avail e JACUZZI 64~18-·18. 1 ..;;:ru:;,,::°'~~::.::,'c.· =-~~-1 cpl.!!. drps, gar. Nr. S. Coasr ntRU ·..\f?l.t"T. ?.tstr. bdrm. Corona del Mar 2250 Advertising ~Is, ,we ~av? Olhel'l'i Available al: Sept 1 $250 8.10-2722. 1561 r-.1esa Dr. Cosf11 f.1esa l Br. NclY bc.llut. Iurn. e 1 BR FURN APT Pll\2a. 54G-1973, 545-2321. hu PRIVATE DRESSING tenants waiting n unt.. RENTALS Phone 546-9860 J\.lo-Mo. AduUs only, 2220 w/garage, Sl7S. 675-5553 RM. &. BATl-J, with marble $200 i\fo-2 hr hse pertly turn. CALL A k F • •·• Eld 64' ~s Cost 11 Mei • type puUmans &. ultra mod· Ulil incl. Nr. market &: Hom•F inders 645-2951 p,.. urn••~ en. ,,........,,, eves. Balbo11 4300 orn klloh<n ha• hu;11. ;, """"'"""Adu!~ only, no OK HERE'* C'-~ Goneral 4000 RENT FURNITURE 1 BR $125. hicld'g u ti l. ---------1 SlUO RANGE &: OVEN, DISH· pc1s. Avail 9/l. 673-8936. * LO • ~ Adult1. oo pc!s. Nr s~ \VINTER rentllls, Sept to Like Living In Your \VSHR.. GLAZED CERA-l BR cpt/drp, trpl, )'Ut!, Ideal for family tlving. Extra t . * DIRECT TO TENANT ping. Call 540-0S:l3 June, 1 BR, fum SllO & $120 OWN HOME •• l I 'UC COUNTER TOPS. Slid· """'n beams. 1250 mo. Lie sharp 4 BR, 2 ba home. 1 BR. $32 "'le or $12.i mo. 24-lf.r. Delive..., * * 2 BR DELUXE * * mo incl ulil. Nr 15th &: \Vh y IMY $1 75 lor an apt 1 · " ~~ d Child Stove I retrig. All u t 11 pd. " BaJboo 67" J S~ 1 I Ing ''''"· v.·indO\.\'S for pass req, Sept ls.Jline 15. Stove, crpl.'f. & rps. · lOO'iO Pureha!lf! Optlon Cathedral ceiling. Po o J , · a-'" w icn "·c can ren you one ·• $235C"LL itl4 Vi11taDelOro Tele -t r en d .r ce SlI>. dll ' <SM02BR Id thru service lo palio bar, JASMINE l'l!n welcome. ·. ·~ Newport Beach 644-ll33 832-7800 Complete 1 BR Apt as A u ts. i;,;,. 6·12-750S f"URN 2 Br "'/garg. Yearly or . • new Y cc, WITII A VIE\V OF TIIE BEFORE tT•s GONE! J.ow as $22/mo. $120 & UP. Vrry nict I 8: 2 ISE" $21? n:n. All util pnid. crpt/drp, enrl patios, !p&e OCEAN. 2300 Home-Finders 64S.2951 4 Br. 2 Bs, 2 1i>l.Y hse. $225 JO.Day Minimum nJt mobile homes. 133 w. Call67 ,_>-_7_6'c_3_. ----~d~: 2 ~~ls:\'Adu~ls(~ly. This truly dramatic lK>me is N. TU51'rN. Rent or Buy 3 Sm.s'l'EPS to heh. l Br. dplx. mo. Fned vd, pal~, garg. * WIDE VA RIE'N' \Vilson C;l.t j.18-9577. BALBOA Ptninsula Beach oun ain ay • ar- c ' O URNITURE ~ 3 bor, 1urn \V. nn \Vilson>. VACA NT. Bclong11 to OUT OfAJU. G 4 Bdr or 3 Bdr. BR, 2 ba, $220 mo lse, Resp pill, RI O, refr, gar, Sngts bltn!I, frplc. crpt11. dfl>S, CUST M' F ** NICE 2 Br. DuplclC. :cavul; Br. 2 ~a. Winter OF STATE 0\VNER & has & den Bal pen. avail Sepl· cpl. no amoke, ref 0 1, ok. 11win1 pool. Tele-Trend, r ee RENTAL Crpt'd, S\3.'i mo. Rental. ph: 494-4534. NEW 2 Br. 1% Ba w/ gar. bee n rentCTI tor M>veral Ju~.! bdr upstain, turn. _,646-5'9==":=':='======:.l-'B;;lu;•;Bt~a=:c;on"='*:;:"':=S.O=ll~llS;"~'·:::;:";:;'";';;""':=· ====:F"~7_:W~.';il';i9t~h~S~t~.,~CM:iii',~"8-.::..:34::;-81 Call 549-0S.1.1 3 BR. 2 h!l, tJr;hwio;hr. disposal, Sl rii, Adults. Crpl 8 • drpr;, yeaf'3 , NEEDS PAINTING PlO T!!_· fi75.197J. .... RE~tARKABLY LARGE clean I Br. 11.wking lrplc. Avail Scpl 15. $250 bltns. fne<I yrd iv/ paHo. &: YARD \VORK. Despera1el l,C10"-u"'s-f..collal..:CC,p",...:cm_-,-,,-.. -tr. General 3000General 3000Gen.ral :JOOO UNBELIEVABLY couple over 35. Pool, Util mo. 67>-2825 or 64~ 667 E. Victoria (El. 2619-L owner says :K"ll it' "AS JS", Santa Ana Ave. fi.16.4.120. nea.r bay &-ocean $175. mo. EXTRAORDINARILY pe.l<l. Sl:!l. 548-2-107 BACHELOR apt · lum. 'i'rly, regardless of loss:, for 6 . l2 or (713) 446-1.110. BEAUTIFUL FOR Baehr.Ion\ Only! l SI~ mo Incl util. 67:>-2825 or • 2 BR . Unrum. Crpls, $33,9so FULL PRICE tacular Ocean Vfew Val D'lnreGa rdenApt1 Bdrm apt. All uil. pd. Cai.11.6'=>-066=;'======•1 drps, blt.n.'1. POOL! No OF'FER YOUR ON. PY!\IT. Pen Pt. 4 hr, 2 ba bch ,e~'0~~-/1''Cf}S9· Pultir!i: creen. waterfall ~ 546-7!172 1• children, no pets, Sla5. ~25-J MISSION REAL TY I • A u 911 5 67"""' J;' p • ~ 801•·· Is land ••ss E. l7rh Pl.. CM. "8-2138 a., va . ...._. 11!n&m, owen ew • ., ...... re, e WEEKLY Deluxe 2 Br -- 985So.Coo.r H•y .,i,ogun• r1 p I .,,, tl B '/ti c1 1/ .•. I blUI-~-. ----MONT ICELLO com· PHONE (714 ) 494-0731 l ne un e WJ ne UI • n nUCJ;, & .., poo' rec. room, ... -uo, apl. ~urn·a~I ulil pd. S4S/wk. WATERFRONT. Boat <lock. i)lex--<leluxf' 2 br, 2 ba, autn. L do Isle 2U1 BBQ's, Sauna, fUm.-unfum, Call 54&41.il, 1 Be. 0, Gnr""· c a,, I. Little WOOD'S COVE 0 honof9t ..,,ers of tti. .......... 1 It 2 ar. also s1-1e1 from I========= I garnge 0pener. clubhouse &. Der I If 1 3 Bedroom 2~ . four xrorl'llii.d wan:b be-$135 See It' -x#;,..,, Panona Bal Isl. fo'um nr unf. Yrly pool. Adults, No pets. $22). ig 1 u • ' * * FURN or Unfurn l BR. low to form four t11119I• words. • ' . Newport Be•ch 4200 only. No children or pets. 642-238S balh home "'ilh two fircplac. 3 BA home. \Vinler nr Rd., 642-8670. Betwttn Hat· - I · h rd -~ · I p E p SO O I ~r&Nowpo-.2BlkN.•~• ·---------1 ""...., n10 incl utit. Eves. rs & R cam1ng a ""JVU yearly tea.lit. call 67l-3M8 .,., '' ""'"' floors. Exlt'rllll' 1~ exquisite. or 837_..,,~.. \VATERFRONT w/pier ,&1 _6~ __ 20_1 _____ _ ~-~~1 , ., I I , • , fi I I I ""' 2 BR NE ly landscaped wllh tlood· 38R 3 Ba. ofl-wal4:r hoJM· .,.From $38 50 Wk oo or j['" t. . 1 ARLY NE\V 3 Br. 2 Ba, I . hi · 1 t •. 11 vert.d · • • . ~ ' • b11., turn or unturn. Lge drck all elee I kit , frplc, patit>, tg 11 in ron "" en rum .• $450 l'oionlh From f!GS/mo. LulCUry Shi. "'/view. Yrly or winter. BBQ. Al ao 4 Br, J Ba. tsc hrlck p11tln In I.he hack car-Bill Crundy, Jtll:JI. "42--4620 l-·B~O,..;;R~T-0_-11 j~ , gle APtl. Complete ma~ JQ'.11 Finley. Appl only. ·Sept.Junt' 6JS..8.170. 539-8831. den, $'16.500. Ba lboa Island , 2••5 • I I 11 I I scrvl~, hou11cw1trtt, linens, Adult\. no pe11. 714: 67:1--3249 YEARLY RENTAi Lg 1 -I VILLAGE INN r. open am. u e oor. $170 3 Dr., 1 1 ~ Ba, p11til'.J, bJt.Jns, crpls, drp11. Mk about our diSC.'OUnl J'tan, · 88o Center St., &12-8340. $16.\.QUlJo:f! l...a1<ge deluxe 2 BR. l~~ RA. GE kitcht'!n. 4 t'!tr gn.r. Adull11.· no pebl:. 24D E . 16th Pl. S-18-&1~ • ~ l::::~~~~'.!,~~ all ulll, heated pool, 6-14-1929 ' b be d'r"h d' O i-an w1NTER Ren1ai. WorkinR dsh~'!il\r. hltflll. Ct111 nnina:. REAL ESTA':TE 1010 SO. BAYF'RONT I F E G D U I =~· , La.guna Beach 494.9436 ~rl~. maximum 3 -3 B{t, t )'OU'll love it? 6T;,-2916. "' 4 Br. 3~~ ba. wattrfl"ont • BALBOA INN bfl, garagl' t.'WO mo incl BAYronONT ,,, S100.-l BR. 01d<i r pref. Av;ii\ ll"" Cle:Mt'""e Sr. home &.11_.Br. l Ba• fat', apt. ~-.. , .,,,~,.-.,,--.,--i Comment about a foHur~: ~lboa 615-t740 11til. No pet~ Avail 9/8. Ser '"'"' \V/Pitr. l Br/; 9/1. 12'2 Magnolia, Cr.-1. "" J' Dock for 2 hoAtl •-'-· _,._..._ ..... _ _, "I coll him 'Arch' ~use he "·knd~ or ;r,fi 6pm 116 "A" &. Upper llpt. S<!pl-Jull(", 4!}ol-469l or 548-21TL l»-!1473 549-00l6 Bill Crundy, Rltr 642-4621) .... -------~blwcrys noeds -... HOLIDAY PLAZA 34th SI, NB ~~~:: . 6 7 J-l 9 O 9 or "2"""B"R-. -,p°'r"s.-d'°r-.. -."'b"ltn..--c~lsd . . • ONE OJo' A l\lND• WINTER. compt 3 BR 3 b!i n.:?, DELUXE SP'!oc~s I Bdrm. MESA MOTE gar + park·g. Adib only. Tin)' hou~ with 1pcc111cular feinlly hOme on lg lot. Lou ~ Furn apt. SlJ.i. PIUJ util. L --22.1~ ''B" llu!gers Dr, ocean vil'w. <".s,n ~·500,o . Bn-ch1el. 11g1. 673-6~. i-....,...;;..,.;..~~---i 0 ~;f~/~; ~h~h!"!i~~o ~:dd· JleatOO pool . Ample imrk· * U).\V WF.EKLY RATES * Huntington Beech 4400 6'11Hi919. 8"thke Rr.alty -+ ~ ...... .L...-iop from step No. 3 b.lcr.v. Ing. No children -no petJ. Kitchen , Tv·, maid M!~iC;''. 2-B--R. p-:~;---. • d -u ,·t-, . I '"=~""'°"°''°"=.,..,~ ·-~-·-· Po "'I ... <IUl .. 1 nn $150. 2 BR $165. Pool. * $34,950 * Laguna Be1ch 2705 A s s .uio;.i TflOl13, '-" • l1tated Pool Jktiiut/Qulr1~ Uul I net Eh!C\ & ~11' pd. Adlts. no 850' 10 OOh. V!ev.'. >dnt rond. I -------"---I V ~~l~~~~~~~~E~l 1 Coiti Mesi 4100 6'16-96m saxlln.o. 17676 Cameron. pcl~. Me5ll. ;I.la.nor. iu PLACE REAi.TV 4fl.$..!)7M TIHl.EF; AROI BAY * S71S BEACH f'RONT • Yearly or ;"::.Ul:..::::"::.·------Wll!On Ave. ~1 5'8-7405. •LAGUNA HIDEAWAY 2 e~. ~l!rpt. frpl, dbl pr, Q ~$Cl!~~~t~ l~TtERS TO • wln!rr i<'asr. 2 BR. furn. AT &-uch • \Vlntrr R.ll!cs. Exqubllf", prdrflf;, polk>tl. I poi.Uu, Wk to beach, ocun l OR 2 DR. Lri;: t;!Me\J. pool, TVIF"~I. vJ a~ h I It ry r r . I A 2 Bdpns .. pc:>ol; furn. or ·br, '""rm 118.lOO. <!ll-1329 ''""· Ad11I". ,.....,.,._ SCIAM-~m ANSWER IN. CLASSIACATION 9000 •dull""'"'"· UtD pd.183< B"0'· ""'· ~100 '"""'" untum. AdUl1$. 219 l>th SI. c:.:.= Monrovt11 !'>IS--Ol36. Dr. NB. M$-1i;;& k. 2'JI) 12th ~r • I \ \ ~IOOEfu'l 2 Br. Crp1.t;, dtps ci:: klteh; f!Qllo, encl jpl': Nr. b111. $14~. Actull!. 120 E. 2()th -~' • _J _·-------~~~~~~·----~--~--~~·-!--~-~-~-~--~~~~~~~.-....~~~-...~ ...... ...i..... ............. ~ ....... ------~~~....:..~-1 ....,sdq, Srptt1nbtr 1, 1970 PILOT-ADVERTISER J8 ·-54 O.ULY PILOT Wtdnt~iY. Srpt.tmbff 2, 1'910 '\ENTl'i:S lt~NTALS RENTALS " REAL ESTATE _~IL Unfuml1hod _ Apll. Unfurnl1hod _A_,pt_s._._Un....._lu_._rn_IJ.~..i"--I ~•!!rol ANNOUNCEMENTS and NOTICES ANNOUNCEMl~T.S _ ond NOTICES. ------------. £-'• ~ 5100 !"~n•. ~~ ~31 ~lngton Beac~ ~~s_s Pro~rty 60S0.1 A;;;nnou~~n~c~•miiJieniihiiiiiiii'4iioilOiiAnnounciiiiiiiiiiii.,iimii*'iiiihiiiiiiii'4iiiiltiii HAllOR GREENS MORA KAJ t 4: 3 BR. 2 BA. 110 FT frontqc zone Cl ll Phollft Are Open 8:00 a.m. • S:30 p.m . NOW LEASING! Patiq. Pool. 81Sl C"lleld, v;,1a Mkl c\, w 19th s1 ~~fi. ~ 0~D~:~. N!lll, fumil,y and adilltJ units ~i blk E, oI BeaCJ1 Blvd. fotf 4 ~rm 2 ba •tuooo. ~Me ""lb total n:crtaJlQJI club Carfi!ld}, 962-8994 w/optlon to buy In ~ )T ~llr9otl Wa::J, C.M. and pre-«hool. l, 2, " 3 TO\YNl:ISE For ~ br, $2fi,51X).$8,!IOO dn $195 n\O bdrnu lro1n $150. Nr. ishop. 2'~~ ba. frplc, cr,itli, al'P5. 8~1i'. Rtmodtl Jor but VILLA MESA APTS. phll:, golf, schOOI~. Just v.·11hr/dryr: ref. pool, tennis, now or n:illkc SlO,~ lat<'r 2 BR. Prlv patio. Htd pool. f'Ollth or San Dieeo iV.'Y on f'tc. $200. 5.'£.311S. • ss lot. 1• v.'Orth Saa/XIO. 2 car tncl.'d Pl. ChUt.lren rvlne ' • A mce bon1tl! aa-u. "oeleome. no prts pl!o.se~ CUl\'er Dr., I . &13-3733. *LOVILY-..EW APTS LYTLE REALTY PARK WEST Near Ocean ,, park. 1 l 2 aBJ \\' 19th CM 548-$193 fl~ mo. n9 ,V, Wilaon. APARTMENTS BR't, 425 Utb St. 841-3957 ----~l. Owned a\ld 1-to.naged by 1 BR: Bltins~ crpt/drps, Business Rental 6060 OUIETI ALL NEWI Th! lrv)n• ~n1pa~ lrplc, patto. gsraa:c &. ·----CJ:>t1, c:irpS, blt·lns.. :l BR. sm/ytd. Call Mi-S.300 6(1(1..1200 SQ. rr. ottlct also WANTED OVERWEl.GHT LADIES For weight reducing program to establish statistics for rapid permanent wel~ht loss, cond'ucted by qualified physical culturists. fl<Iust be a mi nimum of 20 pounds over· weight , have transportation and not cur· rently under doctorfs care. All inquiries com· AdultJ, no pct1;. Nr l.W~m------WALK to t>neh. 1 br s1Ji: 2 600c.•1 ... ~!·...,s~re. $90 &: f.150. A Ado.ms. Garniellvailable East Bluff 5242 .. ..............w _ * 540.3997 • e NEW. DELUXE e b~al~~~I~~ ~:13~ ··1-~s..-,-,h-,_..,,--,-,-. c~,-,~H-wy-ASK FOR MISS POWELL -537.5414 pletely confidential. $170, 2 BR, bsth & 11 studio, J BR, 2 BA Apt for kase. ?-IOVE IN NO\V ,t: 2nt.I. 700 Sq. Ft. $160 mo. il!!!!!!!!!!!!li!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!IJ!!!'!!!!i!!IJ!!!'!- drps, cpa. patio. Avail 9/1. tncl spac, master 11uite, din brand new 2 BR spl3 i\li..-Cue, 8k_'· • &12-T/'99 REAL ESTATE -~ 714: 548-8301 or 21 3 : rm & dbl range, autd door * from 1135 • G I Lost 6401 592-Sm opencr av.ail. Pool "-Rec, Offlc:-. Rental 6070 •!;!era -• I BR, NE\VJ Fireplace.. · ------I DOG, reddish brown rni:tc, * DELUXE 1 & 1 2 BR area. Near Ocean. Patio. Adults, SUPER-DELUXE QUALITY R .E. Exchange . 6230 fem, med. size, ,...,.nl mo•• Carden Apts. Bil-ins. priv. e FROM $265 e CO '"79 J 2 3 3 -. "" patJO, u~ll "'' poo, c. 11<JJ m1gos ay, •~u ft tt t I e<I " 9 to Noon · Saturd1y -Closed Sunday DIAL DIRECT ••• 642-5678 ' ' I .-, . . WESTMINSTER & NORTl-t .COUNry DIAL ~REE 540-1220 Huntlng!Gn &Nth: 54C).1220 Loguno Beoch: 494-9466 S.n Clemenh: 492-4410 Hours-ReguletiQns-DeedUnes IRRORS: Mvertlltn theuW ch.ck tM&r ..,, Nlly .... .....,,. lnuMlll•hfy ..,,.,. ., mltcf*llaitlenl. THI DAILY PILOT....,_ llalilllty ,_ ...,.,.. enty te the •lttnt -' ,.iilllshlftl the MlvertiMmllftt urnc:tly .... time. DIAtiLINI . POI COPY AND KILLS: l:SI P.M. thrt 4•y IMferti pulillutl-, ••c• fwMINMlay lelltlM wMn dMdllne 11 Satur4ay, 12 """° . YOU MUST HAYI KILL NUMllll When kflllnt •• M NcaVM .t 11ukk ....uttl. llie auN f'9 mak• a rec~ ef the kill '"'"'* 11Yen "" lly yeur Ml taker .. verlfkatlen ., .,_.. calt. ,. Ivery effort I• MH• ta klll er cwr.ct • new 911 tMt hu ....., eNtNll, IMrt wt c•• Mt tuatantM te 4• • untll the IMI hu ,,,..rM In the ,.,.,.. · •-1·" I trpl ••o A · \V ~ LINDBORG · 536-.W • • 1:'°°m,. up 1°' .IXXI sq. ORIGINAL o"·ncrs 1~·il1 ex· er, ~Laguna, Aug 22. Ans- Adults. i1G mo. S.16-5163 l\lanagcd by 3 BR, 2 BA. Crpts, drps, · 0 ice sui et. mm · oc.. change 5 BR custom home "·era Josie. Children's \\IU..UA'fl1 WALTERS co. blt·ins. SUndeck. 1 block 10 c~pancy. Orange C n t Y · in SunnyhiUs Estatl'i'I Fu!. d="':;:_· ;R~'-"='•='"=·-'~94-c..:l="='--I DIMl·A·LINI Ads •r. strlctly cuh In Hvanc• ily fMll., •t any ..,. .t ..,, .Mu.. 2 BR: New Pifnl & crpts. BEACH! $175. 842-4085. A1rporl Irvine Co1nmerc. lerton for similar hoine in CHtLO , GRIEVING! LOST HO ,hon. onil•,., Sl60/mo. S57-91t6 or In· ! J!~~.?~~~l~~-ted, e NEW 2 br, crpts, Jrps, eomrex, lldJ. AiJ1lOrter Laguna, or Corona del Pilar. Blk & \Vht Toy Poodle. 8127 The DAILY PILOT,...,... tht rlfht ta cl•lllfy, •It, cenNP er"""" ~ny ~ qUir! al 134.3 &,r, Apt 8·• .... garage, patio. $165 trio. ~,?1e0 .& R~~laN~1 "1,· banks, G.E. i1elf-cle11.ning oven, Ire· Noon. Vic. Fairgrounds, tlNnMftt, aM te chl"I• th,.,_ •IM .... l•tt.nl wlthevt .,..., netk .. CM. drapecl. blt.\ns. di$hwshr. 5.16-602 .,..n 1ego "' p . "'YS. ed kit he 1 NE\V :l BDR.i\1. Be a rn Upstainc, $2.iO hlonth. !\tin. l. UNCROY.'DED PARKING nien ous c n, 5 ora~e, C.M. 548-8587 M•li AddN111: lei 1175, ....,.,. leach, C•llfernla il'-ood ti All I yr.fir lenPr . LO\VEST RATES very 18:rge hobby-se~iceG "~R-E~E~N~~Sc-h_w_l_nn--S-li-n~-y ~ ce .. ,.a, \\' pane ng_ Sant• An• 5620 o,,,,,,,,,,,, .. 2172 D"Po••t Dr., "'°.nl With 8Cparo.t c 81!\\'lng, o•M •. rec fi!atUttS, S165, Adults, u 11 1 -·' d 1 bike stolen Ad:in1s & OOJ)!ls.Callnow~3 •' ,75-6050· 0 -·· .Rm. 8, Newport Beach, 0 ice area, 0';:--" .r .•. am J\fa gnolia •. HB S# CL>ISIPIED COUNTlll 1f.t IKatM •• foll._.: --o.,., .,....,., ,,.._ rl 1 B k nn, pool. \\111 .cons ider FFn'.....," n~ ...,0 ,91 * 387 \\'. Bay Stmt. * W 'l'W¥'1 a..a VILLA MARSEILLES ,,.,,...,,., .. -> ""u ~y 0 ro tl'!I propet·ties to s120.ooo. Prit~ ...,..,.,.,.,. n.o:"'· ..,,.,.... <I ' X-Lrg -s BR.~ l BA. New BRAND NEW MEDICAL. OENTAL cipals only. 525.2011 LOST: Pr. i\1en's glasset, COSTA MESA NEWPORT BEACH crpts, ne1v drps. 2 child. ok. SPACIOUS S•'ite1i avaiJ. Best location. BUSINESS and gold r ims. Vic 10th St. 330 W . BAY 2211 W. BALllOA n6j mo+ $60 dep. 557-97j2. Corona d•I Mar 5250 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apt&. ?':Jnt parki~. l\fodern. facll· FINANCIAL Newport Beach. Rewanl! HUNTINGTON BEACH LAGUNA BEACH ./ LRG 2 & 3 BR, 2 Baths. Adult Llvint 1t1r1. Immechately available. _"1_7-_5_136 ________ 1 17875 BEACH BLVD. 222 FOREST AVE. Frplc. blt-in·s, crpts. drp~. 1 ~ • Furn. & Unfurn. BAYSHORE CENTER Business 5 LB l\1ALE dog, beig!, brwn encl gar, pat)O. 546-lO:W ~ DWtwuhcr. colo1· coordlnal· ~I Dov<'r Dr . N'pt Beach 6300 & blk, \Vite bair, Lge b1"''" SAN CLEMENTE -305 N. EL CAMINO REAL ~ -• appl'---Pi"•h •h•& Opportunities eyes. Iona tail. Answ'ii: to LRG 2 Br, 1~11 8;1, families .. •r'f• :;-.,..... .~c·ho~i,..: of .... ! color •, 475-4050 0 ··Tiki." 67'3-7&10 Rewanl? only, 2 child. ok. No pets. ...-....... ..~ , -. $150. 726 Joann SI, Ci\f. ON TEN ACRES ICbeme! • 2 baths · slall w ••••nm a .,a. Affil. LO.&r -all black female cat 1 A: 2 .BR. Furn • Untum sboweni • mirrored ward· WANTED! I \\'/ige ~n eyel'i 8/26. $17:> lITIL. pd. 2 Br, 11 2 ba. ..·--Pvt patio. See mgr 339 Fireplace. /. prlv. patlc!l I robe doors • indirect light.. PROFESSIONAL Reliable penon Jor I.his area 557-1:>85; eves 962-2595 Cabrillo. Ph. 846-3648 Pooh.~. Contnrl Didst, ing in kitch!~ • breakfas1 10 colloct and l'efill candy IRJSH Setler, male, approx Deily Pilot Classified CLASSIFIED INDEX 900 ~a Lant, OBI 644-2b11 bar • huge private fenced MAN n1achines installed in Ct'lm-1c· L. N HOUSES FOR SALE RENTALS • 2 BR, I Ba upstre. Nr. occ. . 7l' yrs, JC o. 7834, {1.~acArtlm!' Dr 'O>lst Hwyt patio • plus h l'\lklseapmg · WANTED mercial and lactory Joca· answ!n to Red. Rt"'ard! OINIUL 1.. Aph. Fumlshtd Cp~. drpR blln!!. Fresh. b · k Ba B Q' 1·-... t IV nc r--s ...... 5e .... a· lions by our company, r 968-38311. COSTA MISA · n• OIN911A-. ... pointed, $139 mo. 5.'>7-6151 705 & 707V2 ORCHID ed pools & lanai. Quiet , 1vell aPopinred oHlce arc a no.11onw1de co. raled l FLIPPER N ~88, 12) MllA OIL MAI nes ~°.~":,.",,':. ::: LRG 3 BR. Crpts, drp11, pool. 2 Bdrms .• ?. bnlhs, \\>ith sun. 3101 So. Bristol St. on busy, beautHul Forcsl in Dun & Bradslr<'<'I. Ex· Sh d 1 bi ~v· ~ ·1 il MllA "110• 1111 "'"'°"' e1.t.CN ._ Fam.Uy Ii 2 child, 2214 deck, $250. ALSO; 3 Bdrms., ('n Ml. N. oJ So, Coa.1 Plaza) Avr in _l..aguna &arh. 1200 1..-ellent i1nn1Nf1al1• cash in· A a es OIO due, 11 U sa ' ~~~L:oG:T ',":~N :: Nl!!!!T " ... 11eMT1 411' ~-ll<g• A °'° -l •-hs ~ 1-' d ~ S I A 1· h kl pprox. ays ago. ••w'°'' "''''" '''' ,., .... _T • as fttl ...., Vl'. U't'7"VU£' uni •....... rpe: ~. ra.,...... an a na sq, 1. Cl)me for 4 to 8 rs "'et y I • 67f>.3S_9 • IALIOA CO'lll ltll RITCLI'' ..,,. LRG 2 Br. CJ'pts. drps, bltn!I, bit-ins. Cov. sarage. $325 PHONE: 557-8200 Bil! Shi('ld11 •19"1·3028 11-ork ldo.,y!I or eves I. You hViD£ tdd' ~ nd 1 NIWl"OIT SNOlll& tm :::~::~Y l"Allll :: J,..2 children ok. Nr. fChls &: hlo.: min. 1 yeo.r leas!. I::;::;::;::;::;:::;:;:::"'~ HlllGREN SQUARE may expand 10 "full" lime 1• h Sw Nmg •Bch°'18 03n :::~:::~1 ~= llAIT ILU,, CMt ~; Lanuna Beach 5705 .1n • N per'('nct Re"'ard, 962-3151 WllTCLIFF 11• •AL•OA 4* 3 BR. 2 Btt. Apl. Bllns. • Avail, for immed. lc3.S(' in you w::sire. , 0 ~x 1 SAY llLAMOS '"»I CAll"IMTallN• MW CIMIN1. ~"' UM CNILO CAii, U-.... Ult CONTIACT'OllS ... ~ ............ .,~....... .." CAlll"IT LA'flNO A llll"All -OJI Al'lillE) ta1 o•MOLITtOM ... O•IO:TIN CI lllVl(I fd1 DltYWALI. ,._ l:LICT&IW\L .... 'OUll"MINT l•NTAl.I .... i-aNCIN• ,... ,LOOltl ... l'UlllNACI lll"AllllS, lie, Mlf l'VINITUCI! telTOl:INll A lal'INllN*• ... shop'g. 962-1545 '75-4050 0 -1900 sq fl Di!luxl! OUice!I Jah:or '''ith our financing if ->\ 1·• ivpl • I 1 DOVlill SHOlllES 1121 co110NA o•L tiu.a ate -'"' •• .... ----~-'" ol cit•·,, •• ,,-,.,, •'-p necessary , \\(' \\llll train. FEMALE Siamese, vi c: MAllOll HIGNL.lNot Im LIDO ISLI .,., Crpts, drps. $175 mo. 2515 OCEAN VIEW L . . " llU • • UNIVlfllSITY PAllX 1111 UL~ ISLAND ... .. Orange Ave, C;\f. 673-00.)3 ~ hel 1 &: 2 BR ~g . ping cent<'rs \Viii divide. $J7j() TOTAL F'ernlt'af & 2nd, AnS\\'s to ~A~1:a1,.,. ::: MUNTtNeToN ••ACN ... 2 BR . ! r • COROLIDO AP'I'S. 2 Br. 1 ac or. ap . Air-cond. m~sit', paneling, CASH REQUIRED "Java" 67~1821 •AJTILUFI" 1141 FOUNTAIN 'IALLIT .. 11 OAltllNING ... GINllAL 1111'11(11 Mn GIAOIN .. DllCIN• ... trip ex, b In!!. cpl/drp, & l~!i BA., frpk. dbl car-Furn or unfurn. Crpts, drps, ........ Is drp' s l\lax "'"'k'g & For prrsono.l intt'rvicw in DOG lost in BluUs.. Be>g. e IEI T.... 1244 JIA" eaACH 4'11 giuage. pelio. $135. MS-1867. ool bltns patios w a I kl n .e: ... ,, • . • ...... d ll'llNli TllllAC• 114' LOH• llACH .. port & large P · Sl85 & up. cU~ta~ 10 !~'\'fl.. 100 Cliff main!. 270 E. 17th St., C.l\f. your area. send name .• a · Samoyed puppy. If found COllONA Dl!L MAI 12,. :.-:::: ~~~~" !!: 67J..l178 ·or., Lag ... Bch. 19-1-s.t~ !\fr Bram 213: 65t.2i00 collect dress ~nd ~IKl,ne no. 10· call 644-0.."i62 Re1vard TUITLI llOCK ............... 12w WllrTMtNST•• -.u LGE new 2 HR. 2 ba. ·-1c. I ~=:..:::c:='7=~'--. FOf' I EA s E . rrans.\\esterll tALIOA PININIUUl u• MIDW•Y CITY 4611 .... •• \VOOD'S COVE .. .. " • • L1g Disll'ihu1in .. Co., BLK spuyed fcnl. cat. 7 toed l l!•t ON IAY Ull U.NTA AMA .. . all bllns, C'pt~. drps, beamed k 2 O\O<lr r" ·"-•" >•Ir" DI • f•cl o •• , loll h·•p y ·, '·I LINDA llLI! '* "'''' '"' Nl>ON•I .. . Beach 1,1 bloc , rK>w l &_ Br. . • ""'" ". . n'. • "DISTRIBUTOR DIVJ SION ~· · ·""'" · 1 : «S 1,1y llLANOI l»t TUST>N -ceil'g, P\'I p:1t, So. (lf H'M"'. I I ,. t bl I & D hr· Cd'l ,,,_,,,-PA.RK NE\VPORT . CBl'f' , Cold l\1cdRllion ap!g, Each IC'e$--! .io11s. .;>Ill fl -('-pro . •23" P .0 Bo.-1139. . n ltl, l\ . .,.-----. '.., LIDO ISLI 1Jtl ,,. -$250-$27.i 5'18-7983. b 19!19 .. r -·~ &ALIOA ISLAND l:IM COAi 6. ··- [fl!<' lj\•g ovrlkg tl'I<' watrr'. 7 ha1·c l~~ BA. Pool. $200 up. or U~Lnl'S.S. s. \...Ull5l c .' ~l'f 91722 BLACK & tan Germ Shep, HUNTINGTON ••ACM 1• LA•UNA ''"'" 4* pools, 7 tennis els, ST:i0.000 LRG Upper 2 Br. cpta, drps, Uase 211:1· s.' Coast l h1·y. Hwy Lagu/11'1 Reh. 4!U-9-l71. O\'lna, l. choke chain/flea collar, no KUNTlfllOTON HA.llOU• 1ttl LAGUNA NIGUl!L 4"' CILAll 6fN GlalM TIIUMI ut1 •UN INOI" •'1f H•ALTN CLUll Utt MAULi... t11t HOUllCLIANINe 11111 lllTallOll tlECOIATrN• tm INCOMI TAX ,,. !ION, OfM ........ II&. •?~ llONIN• •1'8 INlbLATINe '7611 INSUIANCI! .,,. INVISTIGATINe. .,.,.... ,,. Newport Beach 5200 JANITOllAL UM Spa. From $175 to $450. reJr/nige, gar. Mal. Adlts. 497-1630 or 499-3929. DESK SPACE TIRED O&f lay obf~t.? Ar_;~~~ tags "Nero." 968-1710 ::~_:T,Ai:c~.t.t.LaY ~: s':~·~Mv~=~i: ::: ~ Bach. I or 2 Br. Al!!O 2 sty $180/mo Ille. 704 NarciS.'IUll. honest an1 l !DUS . SUNSET IEACH l'55 SA M JUAN CAl"ISTl:ANO 4JH REAL ESTATE 105 No. El Camino Reel can 0\\'11 a fully1 equiped LOST i\llC~kapoo pup. GAIDIEN GIOVI 1411 CAl"ISTllANO •••CH 4nt llfWELIY 11.l'l"Ala. ate. ... LANIJSCAl"IN• tflt ~ Townhouses. Elec. kit. pri • 2 BR. 2 ba, dshwshr, lrplc, Ge e I S Cl b · Nev.•port Pier Rew 8 rd 1 LONG 11acN ,,.. DANA l"OlfllT •7• " pat. or bal Subtrn prkg, opt sunderk. _,!! ~-on ement1 l..aguna Bt"ach us1ness. &124028 s.ro.in ( I 23 u.1t11wooo ,,.. T1t11"-.•X. •c. .... N . •1'3971 "192-4120. Estahlishcd j yrs. \Viii train • 0 ex ) • 011.ANGI , ••• ,, u• CONDOMINIUM ... LOCKSMITH ... MAIO Sl!:IVICI .. , •.. -...... MU M•10NllT. llt1Ck "9 MOVINIJ a STOIAGI .... mai1I ser, cpts, drps. Just -="=<="='"='=·=====~== Rentals Wanted 5990 -~~-~"'-----1 & sell l<flru~t worlhy pnrty. _ _ ouT 011 coUNTT t'tl MOTILS ........ -.. -----· '"" • N. of Fashion Isl st Jam. ----·-DESK SPACE o p I ouT ol' STAT• t&M RENTALS BalbOa 5300 \VANTED: Balboa Pcnin (or Tiny doii·n. w n "r : ersona s 6405 STANTON 1,n A 1 U I • h·' bo~ & San Joaquin Hills l 222 F I A 833-2718 4!ll-S500 w•s1M1Nsn1 1•11 p •· n urn1s 9U l"AINTING, l"••t......... ... l"AINTING. .... ·~·· .. l"ATIOI .... . , Rd. 64+1900 for let.sing in· ----------~nywhcre ~n N.B. :z BR. ores venue · · · · MIQ.WAY cin -'"' 0•1111aL SIM ro. P8ENR !Nd. Pt.-01vne1 ,1·s up1pc,,2 yard fyd, not ncc-U ii ocean-Lag una Beach COIN L1Au~DRSY c. ",'°',t FREE I ,..,"","ANA .. ,. ,,,. c.°",,,•,•,•,•0•1 ::: l"NOT041Al"NT ... l"l.ASTll•N .. l".tdl. 11 ... lr ... • 1n rm, rp, ,,. 1v, g fronn, } urn or nfurn, "P .. nautlh1 1n . a 1 • • SAN A AltA lot ~ 0 NIWl"OIT llH:N ntl Near Ocean 2 Br. $19:'1 yrty. back yd. Util inc. $2ftl lse. 10 $150. Couple v.·i1h 1 chiW. 4M·9-1G6 Localert at Baket at ~~:r".N • ::: NIWl"OIT M11•HTS 1111 . New 'cpts le di,>s. r ef & Avail 971. 1500 Mh'a.mar. Ho.ve . ref's. Ple:is! call LUXURY New oUicrs 111ime Jo'airvlt''A', C.ht Estahlishcd NOITM TUSTlll ,... NIWl"OIT IKOlll '"' ""'! Fireplace & ""r: 675·2591 (21Jl 6!J3.5388. "'"II~ k I D ' -a•IC. Terms avail. to HUNTINGTON BEACH ANAHEIM tdl WllTCLll"" !'t# .. ~ '""'" ""• a 11, or a"'n. Brnch Blvd . air. f'pls, u POWER SQUADRON'S SILVlllAOO CANTOft ,.,.. UNIVl•l lTT '"'"' 9tn avail now 309 36lh St. ...,. llSE A I I 2 , 2. 6 qualified buyer. Sce·lht'n NAVASU I.AKI '"' llVINI . Jtlt lido Isle " or P un ur, .. rapes, f'IC. _, or m l. BASIC BOATING LAGUNA HILU 1ne ••cK •AT SM 1,&l&-1626=-~' _A_d~"-'·-----I -------~-5_3_5_1 1 Bdnn, gar. Npt llstl s or suHcs. (213) J.IU-001~• 1:aU call, 644-ll07 COURSE LAGUNA ."l'ACM .,.. IAST ILU,11' tt4' VJE\V: 2' bdrms, fireplace, Costa h1esa. To s 1 :I 0 . C'fllll'l'1 LETIER Shop, mlmeog. All LAGUNA NltlUfL 11'1 COllOMA Dll MA• ,,,. LRC BAY VlEW-2 BR., b . Huntington Beach MISSION VllJO tnl liALIOA Ull l"LUMllM• ... l"IT HOOMIN• .... POOL lllll'llCI! #11 l"OWll , ••• ,... ... PVMI" ll!•v1c1 .... llOOf'tN• .... IAOIO. 11.,.ln. mtc. fnl llMOOILING & Jlll"Allt tt4' 1aMOOll1M•. klTtMaMI .... ---.... JIWING ffll llWlfllO MACHIN• t•PAllll ... : Sll"TIC T.lHU. ,_.... II&. tH! gara&:!. split level. Adult11 Study, crp~. ·drps, l~,i ba., ?.1ature couple. ;~1{1-1793 APPROX 700 !Q fl at IG."'2 "~ tTo P!llart ohwn "',1ncs5. H•'gh School SA"' r1 EMl!NTI! '"' IA00v ",,",•"°' ~ only. Noon until 4pm. 2001 '-le .... h '-. Avail •-pl. • N"'PI Bl. CM, . New erpl, 11~_ .. ca.s . or erms. SAN JUAN CAl"ltTIANO 1111 LI 1 K R d 250 .. ., ~" ......... """ R f R 5995 675-6968 1 ss !or Rooms 121 & 122 CAl"ISTUNO llACH • 11>1 NUNTINGTON 11.t.CH s... ,ngs 0 a • $ nio. 5. $350 lse. 67J..7502. ooms or ant, drp~. Sl50/n10. 612-'.!821, rave me . OANA•l"OINT 1141 ,.O\INTAIN VALLIY 1411 TAILOllNG t'1'1 fl!ll MITIE CONT•Ol #11 TILL C-lc -:1.18-397·1. -"="'="======= ---·-· · ,. Q :J ~· ~ -&12_3100. hlary. Agt Starting Sept. 14 and oc1ANS1D• 1,,. 1.u.ao• IJLAND nss TILi, L""'""' Ill M.,_ "11 ~-"-FURN. RITJ . Em 11 1 o ye d UNIQUE 0 _ t •-p· 131 each Monday th 0 h SAN 01100 1m SEAL 11AcH ,.... · 2 Br. unfurn. CTpts, t.lrps, Huntington BeaCh ~ woman kilchen & laundry UP 10 3600 sq h .-Deluxe, air . 1x::11111u Y s,•• · ec, r ug 111ve-11i'110E COUNTY 1• LOMO ••ACM "" '-patio, pool, bllns. SlliO. ------~----· I d I Station!\. nes.'i or Nav•mber NOLlllES T~ ., MO'IED ,,. OIANCll COUNTT Mii priv. Closed garage. lfB ... """· crp s. rp!I. n com-5$--9527 3-8 P~f COMDOM.INIUM 1'51 GAICllN GIOYS 1611 Tiii SlllVICI .... T•LIVISIOl<t .. ltHlflt ltr. •ttt Ul"NOUTll:Y .... 'Seacliff Manor Apt5, Ui2:> o~ EA NF R 0N1'. ;View $)7/wkJy Call b!fore 2 pm. pu1c? center bldg. 6'16.7•12.I Sale. ' . . Single . "'idowed • Qivorced C>.VP\.l!X•s '0• SALi "" WllTMINITll '"" WELOING ..., WINDOW (LIANINe - -"'1 Placentia. 5'18-2682 ask ii:undeck. heh. 'NeY.'er. spec 84, -. or S.16-m~ hlEAT f\IARK.ET & DELI. LIFE Al"AITMl'Nn ·HI: MLI "91 MIOWAY cm "1' ' bo-d. ~·~ * SANTA ANA "" , 'a ut our 1scount. <fix 2 Br. bltns, cpls. drps, ::..::._:.:.:::_ ____ -.,.-l-~o=~c~E~c-c-:--:---.,.-1 Nr. Huntington ll11.rbour. s•NTA ANA Ne1eKT1 M• e BAYFRONT • reriig, lndry. Nr shops & BEAtrr. hon1e ,,., pool has F't'J ~ Rl'nt;il.~. Lagunf1 3200 sq. rt. 213/592·2444. . . RENTAL~ ' TUSTIN "* JOBS & EMPLOYMENT - ' P'·.,. $17o·. Adult•, •-by ok. extra BR for rmploy~ fkh. i11:0 n10. Coa!ll H1\•y. i! rxcllin" i[ shsrcd iv/J"-· H F • L • .1 COASTAL Snt .. .... ) F. 0 91 \VIG SHOP B I b II . . . .. '"' . OUSH urn11,_ LAGUNA ••ACM 17tl LUXURYApts. Startin5 536-2131 . lady. Prvil. SHIO nio . Rea H~lalr .K 4 •9127· * · a 0 rlght one. Slop \\'asling Gt,.lll•L ,... LAGUNA N1Gu11. sm ·•t .$375 •• 642-2202 2 BR Crpt d !tge Mfi..6740. Island. SACRIFICE~ Call yours . \\'(' have a smart IENTAU TO SHA•• ,., MISSION "'''° f1l9 Closed ga;· ~~~dr~~ & PVT Rm & balh, Crl:0.1. Commetcial 6085 \\'rd th~-~.'.:_~5. 673-7262. "'11.v, :l·l7·tl667. 2·fhr. rt'<'ord . co11A MISA , tlH ~~ ~t:~~~~~sn•No :: 2 BR. f'rpl('; matut't' adult~. f . httl kl . --------MISA OIL MAii tlll CA,.llTIANO·llllACM stxr 5151' Clubhouse Ave. $175 small pet ok. Sl~O. 842-R365. umis • coo ng pr iv. • 5 ~"TORES, $110,000. 686-Money to LOln 6320 *MASSAGE & SAUNA MIESAv11101 • tu• 09 .. "'-"M•er ('fC Girl only ~Ill\ COLLIOI PAIK 1111 OANA IJOINT . •• mo lea~. Call Anaheim, Ill 2 BEDRi\l apl., 21,· bloc'-· ~'"' • · ' .,.,,, 698 W. 19th St, Bethel Lovely girls/ EXPEH.T MAS. REAL ESTATE ""' mo 673-0931 ,•,•ww,'oo!!, •'•'•'•"· ',"',,, • 77-l-224j. lrom. beach. •\Oj 8th St., · · To11·en corTl<'r. 5'18-17G8 a:ll. SAGE. Ask about our Las "' ""'-I 1 t TD L N•Wl"OJIT SKOi it :Int vwner• 3 BR, 2 BA. Unlurn. Crpts. H.B. $165 n10. 968-3132. G~NTLEMAN-Be!ch, s~~ It ENT AL : Ne J( I to s oan Vega.s varalions. 10 Al\f lo •AYSH01·1s 1n1 TllPLfX, ltc. SM dt'pR, blk to ocean. Y,C'arly 25 2 8 c pmg, pool, !ennui;, Refrig. Huntington HRtbour. 3200 &1 . 2 A;\[, ? DAYS. 293{1 \V, OOVEI Sl'OlllS m1 CONDOMINIUM . '"' SI a, R. pis, Drps, Vic/bch Coast Jlwy C 1, ·~ ,10 .,,,,,0 wisTCLtl'I'· \ '"' llllNTALIWANTSD "" sm. 673-8088. . Bltns, Garage. • • fl. 213/592-2+1-I 8~ INTEREST oa,1 .. wy, ·~u. ~ o>-.>UUO, Vl<llVE JISITT flACIC Htf llOOMI 1'011 IE.NT 5"1 OCE V EV • Aft 4 pn1, 1147-3117 • fl36.-SjJS . -2nd TD Loan * FULL" LICENSED • tl'llNI! • ml IOOM • ·IOAIO ... * AN I .\ • SLEEPI G . d • 1 R 1 ._ aACIC .aAY "" MOTl!LS, T•••Lll cov•n _,.., {2) 2 Bdr. 1 ba. duple.'< ""I" $130 2 BR c N room, private In ustr1a enta Reno11'TW"d Hindu Spiritualist GUEST HOMES '"' "'" · • pis, Drps, ,._ · ,.,.., ~ IE ... , TT.!,LU·'' ,• ~·.t MISC, lfNTALt "" or rno. ~2-3639 Bhn~. Relrig. Garage: 1iume. n1c! area. v•v-JUUV, -·· -·-d 1 Allvice on all molters. ..... ... • * 1 BR. BALBOA BAY •Aft 4 pm 347.3727 • S48-0J!Xl • FOR l~rh· :~«JO sq. f~'lp/rin\r 64T2ttm217'1 base on =~t06y,11 Love, hlar:iage. Business ~~~1;:AT::~A~~1 ;};! ~Nu;~~:ss"::::::;.. = · · . '"are sc :<pftct'·ru par1. • -'l"_ • "n~adings given 7 days a TIA.IL•• Pa111:1 ..st ~~7:n. $450 ~· Call 54oo Pr1v. sgl rm. 1n lnl'Jte C.~f. Jrv!nc 100. ~ir. Bullard Servin~ Harbor a1'.f ·2l. yrs. • "'f'C'k, 9 A:'il • 9 P~t ::~•rs~NDI ::· 1u11N111 ••NTAL ..., Huntir.9ton 8each ~l.ho1~,e ::r;~~g Jam .. lg 546-80jl Sattl•r Mort'goage Co. 312 N. El Camlno Real, ~~L~~!L~SUHO , :~ r:::J.~ .. ILNT:~Of'llTT = 2 BR. 1 blk to beach! $16.i ---------a Y pr · · • ;).). NE\V bldg, 1368 lo 2300 fl. 336 E , 17th Strt"Cl San Oementr. HUNTINGTON al!.l(M , ... f::u~~=f~~"'••NTAL = mo yearly. 1st & last + \\'ALK l blks to beach. •. $15 J>ER :\Vttk·u11 w/ Nr. Baker & -Fairview, 1 ANNOUNCEMENTS ~92.9136: 9-12-<XliG FOUNTAIN VALLIY t-11• LOTJ ,,. <'lean. fee. 673-1.281. Almost nc1v lg 3 BR apt. «itchen. 130 per \\'ttk • up )'r lcaSl'. Sullivan 5'18-7176 d NOTICES t:!~ :~~~~ =: 11.ANCHll •u• $250-\' I 3 BR 2 ba f I Dbl gar, ':Pl. "'/IV crpts. Apt.s J\IOTEL 543-97'~ •n :\IF.N ! ! Everyollf' of OUJ' OllAl'IOE COUMTY ,,.. CITIUI GIOVIS •lfS r y, • • l'P r. drp.s, dstwshr, 2 ba. $22."! • ' • · * OFTICE-\\larehouse.fcnced d haircuti is a Crf'a lion. \\'e, •-11TA ANA 1'11 ACll.tAGI '* cpts. fncd yr!. ;\I a I u re e Room for rent • pri\'atc yard s pace :11·11il !or rcnr, Found ( Frff A ,s) 6400 w1:sTMTNSTl1 Hn LNC• 1L11No•• ''" adults. No pets. 536-9G8:>. 1no. No sr;l11/pa!s, •childn .. _ B kh & Ad Call r.~r 01'01' ~U~lln, l.11n<l:i a nd i\lary MIOWA'r CITY "'' llESOIT l"llOP'lllT'f' ...}__ "" ok. ;i.16-17J1 uume-, roo urst anis 11 .B. • . .... >"1'.>U<>Y._ -!llril'C for ITI1lgnificenCt". See SANTA AMA KllONT1 U)I OllANO• co. l"IOl"llTT '"' 4 BR . 21!i ba, l blk oU oct>an, -i11·ea. 968-3051 Sn1nll hlaC'lr and \\'hitr do". \.'oui'!lelr a! ~ir \\'al1cr's 20·,2 COASTAL '"' OUT .OI" STATS '10'· '* I ~.tM I NEAR Huntinglon Harbour ""="'=-======= Loi• 6100 .. ·~ LAGUNA llACN tnt MOUNTjl,IM • DISllT •111 A\•a1I l 11, ~ nlO yr y Nt"1\' Triplr'Ce~. Quiet :irea. -Nnmf' on I~ I~ '•Sparkl~". t\e"'J*>"' Rh'tl, C1\1 LAOUNA N!Oltl}. t71T 1u101Vlt10N LAND ;; '"' lse. &12-6<»4. Mat.ls, Trailer -F nd rk 1 1 · MISstoN v11Jo 2111 11t:AL tSTATI' t11'11C• ''1' Did you ever think or swa~ ~~,~~; Dis~~~sher·i11~j Courts • 5997 ~RO~A 2 del!;ol\!11.r :f C()Hmer & O\~vc~:a~.ri, 6;~20~'': ~A~sM& ~~~!~d~nSgs ::: J~!:'Ec~~~snA..o ~ ::•i.1.!~:¢:g• = lno that White Elephant in "" ' -· .. · 0 \II)'. 6-12-5815. CAl"llTIANO ••ACM ,,,. BUSINEs• ond ~.., 592-• ..,23 or 1711) 846-3;)59 Ol\'llf'r'. 67S-47j(). llclp ill All l\lnllers DANA l"OINT ,,.. .,, the attic for something you AT Beach. \\'inter Rates * * \VEEKLY Rates. SP.A R-'I LOT C;i.! Can build 40 KEYS Found on beach vie. 10 Ahl-10 P?-1. 7 days 11v111101 COU NTY ,.. FINANCIAL ~~~ co~mn ~n =-~ l le 2 Bdrm1., pool : furn. or LARK l\IOTEL. 2: 0 l units. Phil ·Sullivan, rutr. Island & Balboa. Inqull'l' 213 • 597.9272 La }f.:ibra ~:~~~:::,,~~NTALS = ~~~;:.::":.::...,.,,... = unfurn. Adults. 215 15th Sl. Ne"'JIOI'' !31vd, Cosla l\l<'Sl\, .)ls..6i61 at trcnt rounter, Dally FULLY LICENSED OUl"LIX•S ,Vl:N. .,. IUSINISI Of'l"OITUMITlll ... ly Pilot Wa.nt Ads. & 23) 12th St. Pilot, 22ll 'Ba'boa. N.8 . $\\'INGERS! New Orange =:~M:o"to~NTID = Gu1st HomH 5998 ~. 6200 Young \Vh!tC' fcm11lr cnl. 1 Co. Guide. Fnr free inf!:'. RENTALS l"llSONAL LOANS •JH -blue t>Yr . 1 ;;rC<'ll rye. Vic • \Vdtr S.C.S.G. P .O. Box Houses Unfurnished ~=~~~•"•~L':,NI !: l\lullipl~ 10rlf'd arre~ lRr h & P()1norm, c .r.t. 646-,2lll, Anaheim, 9280 1 ••AL ltTAT• L9ANI '"' 5410Fount•in Valley Fount•in V1lley 5410 JOI WANTID, M9ll ,.. JO• WANTl!O, ..... ... JO• W.lHTIO, Mllll A WOMIN ,_ SCMOOU A INSTIUCTIOfll 7 .. JOI l"llll"AllCATION 1* TMIA'ftt(AL 1NI MERCHANDISE FOR SALE AND TRADE l"UINITUllll -01",ICI FUINIT\lll .. I 01",ICI IOUll"MINT lfll STOii.i IOU11"MINT •n CA,f, llSTAUl.ll'IT _,4 IAll IGUll"Ml:NT 11'11 HOUtlHOLD GOODS ... GAllAGI SALi "" FUINITUll.I AUCTION W2S Al"PLIANCll 11• AMTIGVl.I n11 SIWINIJ MACHINIS 11• MUSICAL INSTJIUMINT n• l"IANOI & OllMNI IUt llAOIO -Tll•VlllOM -+U-,1 • ITlfllO •n , ...... lllCOIOllS .. CAMll.U Ill EOU11"MINt 1111 KOllY IUP,.-.IEI .. 11"011.TINCI eooos -llNOCUU.11. ICOl"eJ ... MllCILL.ANll01JI -t.tlSC. WAMTlltl .... MACNINllY, II& ant LUM•ll 11'11 ITOIAGI Im IU1LDIN• M•Tlllf.U r11 IWA,. .,. PETS ind LIVESTOCK l"ITto •IMllA\ .. CATI .. 0001 -HOISll 1111 \l'lllTOCIC - CALIFORNIA LIVING NUISlllll SWIMMIN• rG0U l"ATIOI AWNINeS V.a.tATIOfll ''" -"" .... .. -P\'t roont In licensed RUl'S1 IMJmt" for lfnbulatol)' St"nior Oran~e Co1111t)' "."!•I. a1N1u1. -MOflT••••s. T""' ~ •'41 TRANSPORTATION ·"" P!rinyrlch Bra.a: -Swim1\-ear COSTA MIEIA ,,. MOfllY WANftD ... IOATI • VACNTS - P al I. . b MISA DIL MAI ,,.. NTS "'' cillzcn. Lovely yard & pa1i0 11.attfa lttalfy TAN pooOle-m i niature good food. AvaU now, C.i\I, 642-6560 greyhound mixlure, 6 nio-1 l ~'~"';;:::'·,,::;""'~-""~'======l~f.Q.;e.:;;;;;;;;;1&;;d-:i>°;;:;;-I yr. Vic: S.A Ht11 11.M!a . --• -· ('.overnment l&ixt·Si» aCT'f' :;.i()..()2~1 5999 \\'ri1c-Land Packagt, 118.5 :.;::..:cc,._~~~-~~~ :Jounlairu Al tdittrranea11 St)ie luxury I t ~ B<drooms -% Balbi Adult U•iog Furnished ~ VDlumt.b«I . , ... • m.A..•lr~ e Sii• Ca'IH'" • ,1,;.u '"'r"' • o.-l c.,..,.J ........ c..ililp 1565 Slater .\\'tOlle '"1 •::.-i...e =.\ .. m. . ...,.., milt "' """"""'!'" 988 66'5 ·-·'i ---~------------'-\ Arrowhead. San Bndo 92410 BICYCLF. in ;\lesa. Vf!~r ,:;:::;::;::--;:;:.-'=::-:'.:-"::::I~~~~:;;:;:;:,::==;;~ I nrea : Call and 1dcnt1fy , \VA~TED: Dbl garai:e fM' R p t 6205 :'110-318.'l. Misc. Rentals .-n11t1UI' car ~.. P r r n.' . ._ •sort ropsr y 1£~.,~.=F.~G~l.~,~.,~5.~ .• p;~,-.,-,-""-,~ .. ~do stor;ige, by n10 or ~r, !V ~ll BEAUT 1-i k" Amll\'hl'l'.l.d lot. on Brny in C~1 . ~a.y Up to SJO 1110, 5'16..J930 A 51f'fll a1 SI~ or bf'SI 5 1G 2rn • * GARAGES for Rent: offrr. 2 mi lrom lake. Bl UE 8 . . 1 ,,.."' -~ ... """! S2S per n1"1. 962-!1824 , AC)C e ~:i'"'" ..,,. Call 612-6391 FOUND· black ki!len ,\'1C. ol ===='====== Mountain &. Desert 62 f0 Len11lXlri Dr .. C:\t. &~5923 Income PrGfMrfy 6000 Th S F'OUND 8-28. lemale poodl!. e earch ''· Ovtr 51~1i;tll 9/3 --• J found lhi~ ou1dnor paradi~ • 21 ~ ltetum & spcncU.blt . 3 In N. Calif., !IO cftn )'OU' l\lll. ll~I" 11('ulcrro ~at 11.rca ot Of'an. ~led hou111•s .f: onr lionc; of 1nll lrt"ts. /Pint" ~=~r~'i-~'d & 22nd aft 1 •PRMm~nt, nror Beach CC<lllrl, hugr lak<', r iven , •• ~, . , Hlvd ., llunttn~to11 BrtH·h. C· !iln>nmll • "ttw l1thlng & 1,F., S tn lr alhcr c:e.11r , Nl'ar 41.onc. $10,000 Do\\·n. SJJ.000 huni in~ l~ J:'l't'AI". Roads. ~·!11r~ n n d Adam-. Chol. Tocal. J.:lrc \\'a1cr Incl, Ifft.al !or _;,_l_&-_l_--"------- ReAlonorni cs Corp rt'ILf<'nicnr, \t1C11llon, invri;I. GR1\Y 1111!1 black s1ril><'d Commrrcb1I Bkr. fi'l':l.STOO mt!nr motillf' homtt k camp. fen1alr ki!lt'!'I ¥.'ilh fl<'a S Bid.is. r.1.1 on ~~ 111\ Pl;. ('f'!I ol~. Till' 1lf'n1nn<I !9' iz;rcnl, rol111r. :i.llJ..127'.'l ttnria.. Ct\1. $1j,())1 !c1·111~. l1ul I.hr s11pply of propt'rty IS LIITJ.F. gray roxll" found 61.Mi9QI leave n1t"8 lor Jimllt'tl, St-io 11 rl'flf" • phonf \1r Jt1mU1on St. C.\f. Hs• M•I')', Aft, m~ today t i 17141 8-li·2608. 1agw. 5-J3..Si17 ' J l em>n 1ttu1:t! Y appt MESA v1101 111t ANNOUNCEME SAIL110An :::on ,.,.,... '""9029 l"OWlll Cl\.1111111 9111 .... """"'~.., or .,.,..,.. coLLIOI l"AllC 1111 and NOTICES 1,1ao-s1C1 •o•n ,.,. ::::::; =:~.M ::: ,OOND (l"PM A .. > .... t OAT 'HAILlll ... NIWll'O•T IHO•IS tm LOST ""1 IO.lT MAINTINAMCI tlll IATSNOIEI ml 1"111.t.ONAl.l ""' IOAT LAUNCNtNe NM DOVlll lltOllt nu ANMOUNCIMIN n MU =4N:L.~~'::;o."'. :: WllTCLll'' n• l llTMI '611 UNIYllSITY PAii• 2f31 •vNllALS 14U eoa,T Sl:IVKlf -ll'llNI nae l"AIO fflTUAll:T MU IOAT IJN1•L.I - •ACIC IAY ,,.. ,VMr•a-. Olllll!CTOlll !!1,,4 :~s~N~"::z~: = ... ' .Lu'' »41 l"LO•llT'f .,.. 1:1 T-:n44 CAIO 0' TMANICI MU IOAT MOVIN• .... llYINlll Tl ltl.lCl na ... MIMOllAlll ''" IOAT ITOl:AO• .... CO.OMA oar. MAii S7Sf CIMITllY LOTS .. ,. 10.-TS WANTIO ... IA-.IOA s;• CIMl1'1111Y11c11tYl"TI IM .. lt :.l~~::F~ISSOHI ~ IAY ltUNOS UM Cl:IMATOI ·t ... LIOO llLI JIJI MIMOlllAL •.UKI fnl Mt.!111.I Hl'IMllS "" tALIOA llUl'IO as AUCTIONS 14• MOTOI HOMES nu NliWl"OIT WIST '= ~=~~T.~N sl•YICI :: :t'e'c~"'.~~ tall = ' THROUGH A t''t°'TINGTON .1EACH , .. All TlANIHlltfa,T!Otl "*"' MINI lllCQ •··---"" NU"!~~!~A~~::Olllt Ml• AUTO TIMfll"OtnATIOM t441 ~~-::~:~~:IS = llAL llACH )4Jt Lift.Al NOTICU tfM AUTO lll'ltCIS t l"Aln "9 ~:::• ... E:c1tt°"1 r~· WR~~~e DIRECTOR~ ,A.u.:.~.~~~:A~.tQUIP. = DAILY PILOT OIMMil COUlllTY Ull AttOUNTtN• .... Tll.AILli lS. UlilitJ 5. IANTA AMA MM AfllldllNe UIYtCI i* fll.ICKS Wl:STMTNITlft MU A,.,..LtAl'll"I llPAllS. .... ''" •WaPS MIDWAY CITY Mii APf'llAtt•• -CAMl"l!l t tnt SA HT A ftNA NllONTf 1'H AIPMAL T, Olt •Ut CAMl"ll ft l lfTAU tsn COAITAL JM Al(HITeCTVll•l 1111:'11CI UH OUN• IUGGlll ft:ll LAGUNA l lAC• 11'1 AU IO •IPAllt -!Ml"Ol11LI .... Tot ... LAGUllll l<llGUll Ml AUTO. het ..... T-. ate. ..._ 1..0.T CAii .... MISS'°" 'lllJO '19' '"~r•ITflNO .,,,. AN71GU•S, CLAISICI "'" 1AN (l.IMl'OIT• tf'ft 10.lT MAlll(TIN•IKI dN JIA(.I CAii, IODI .... IAN JUAN CA,IS,llA,1111) 1121 lllCIC, MAS0N llT, lfC. tWf AUTO 1.VIN11 Mii NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH WANT AD .A, 11111:,HO ••N-lo UM tUSINlllll lllVICSS fNi AUTOS WANTle '* DA NA l"OINT 11• IU ILDlll "11 lllW CAii ,_ 'ONOOMINIUM •st CATlllll• ,.,. .... ., ....... _ •m AUTO LIASIQ"' ... • •UPLIXIS UNllU,.. 1'1SCAl lNIT#,Ak1N• -VleO CAii ____ __J -"---:-. --:_:--_____ .;;.__ ________ _ 642-5678 • ' ' ' • . --------------------------------..------~----------·----• · WfdM1llOJ, Stptem"' 7, lflO. • SERVICE D IRECTORY JDIS & I MPLOYM ENT JOIS & IMPLOYMINT JOIS & IMPLOYMO:NT JOIS• M c Ml'l.OYMENl ---·· ---- P o parhontlnt 6l50 }7 PllOT·ADVERTJSER Wtdnrstby, Stptembtr 2, 1~70 :t,.P--·.--·.--·.iiiiiliiiil*iiiiiiiiiii:'JtiiJs~ERVl.~E DIRECTORY_ 1 ' Fonclnt '660 • Q~I LY 'JLOT 5$ J-• & IMP liiiT """' ~ w ..... 7100 ' ~ \VOOO Fcrictis, ~IO.' & repair, pal\o OOVCN & deda, cU&torn ~'OOdwork. Jay, 64~.2343. P olnllnt. i l;J;obl;:;;-;;;·;;w;om.~;;;;7;100; Jobo -. Wom. 7100 Jobi Moo., w ..... 71GG Jobo Moo., w-. PIGG -BROASTER.-O>un\f:r a ir!, FIVE neat ap~artng men NEED mature woman lo •It METICULOUS PAINT. ""' A Better Position ex.per in pre pa r l n1 for llattt clty dellYlfl')'. Mu11t with mother 6:30 to 4:30 'ltt JJll SALES BLUE CHlP STAMS. INS. T W Wldwicbes I: ll.!Ad1. Bal have own car' know atta. alter holiday, llitn 710 4:30. AJICnlion anyone w'ith a ttal <:rcw col. students, lnl~xt 1-,.-J Beach Broutcr SlS £. Apply M, 7Tl W, 19th St, $l.2:i hr. No houllh'Ofk. Call e5tlfe llct.nae who wants ex. houSIP$. Exp. Docks. 6T:>S!ll2 Balboa Blvd. Suite H, CAI. att 6 p.m .. 548--1185. ptrt trtlnllll' 1 a fWl time HOUSES. "°'"'· boai., nag-.J: ~ CARRIER GIRL To help tn M•"' .r .. ,,. ,...,.._,.,...,...,..,.... JOO • WE NEED H£LP _ poles. anything • everylhh'g an fl.UNDlfll . ,__..., .,.,._ BOYS Inc SatW'da)'s IE ~ * * ORDER DESK mol't" ctlf.nt1 than we can Floors CARPET VINYL TILE I IJC CONTR. FREE EST. rc!UIOOll.bly pelnted, }~or I.roe 4J# c-."" • ""',_ ,_., 548-2Ul • • Fee Rilmburaed • ha.ndlt, Call no"' 14r intor. ~"'~t~in~ia~re~6'6.~97S~2~· ~~:1:·~-==~';~,;,!;;-;""';;;c-;11;f~":::i11,..=: 1 WANTED .. GENERAL HELP., 1'YPf' ~:.. ICftl'a.J .)'1"11.' exper. matkln aa to \vhen our tr.in. PHONE !he rei;t • then pbooo $4.U .,. heur on Onn:l' deek or JIUl'C.~ i~ c.luse~ start. Ootir \Vhil· ... ·• -:.~ .. • i -Fumiture Restoring lhe best: Jordan &: Son --for the tr. expand. chain, tt~w pt Ina:. 1-'ine co. beMtl1.1. Beac~ lne-5-&6'5440. * ~7262 .. • ·~ -'· -_A Roflnlshlnt 6675 Pai"linR· Ll"""'· bond«!, ' DAILY PILOT Hme help I« sale• uot. Age *"''· $400. Al80 lee jnbs. I "!"~~"""~~...,..,.I Whaddya Wont? Whaddya Got? •, ~'o~'"'~""..,.'-' _:.t°"IJ.032>~"'----abilfties 19-3.>, g mo'• ,.o1cy mfd. UNKEL AGENCIES SALES w/Slim ·O>m. you SPECIAL CLASSIFICAT ION FOR 0 ~:~i:E Strlpplr!i 1 • McAdams Painting Serv. tullimite() Dana Point, San Juan can ?.fr. Nelson 956-2!'13 1421 N. Broadway SA 542-1102 can earn wluLt y ou' re NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS •&U-9575* Inter. le Exter. St>eeiaJ rate:s caplatrano and ·* HAIR STYLIST* Call Joon l farlln · ;t~;G~ ~:.7mLou Good, ' Speci•I Rate -on ap~. &16-JS.tS OfJ erJCN Ca.Jmtra.no Beach. l\fUST BE TOP CAL B Orthod le Au{ S Line5 -S t im es -S bucks Gardenint, ___ ..:1::;68::0 METICULOUS PAINT. TRISH HOPKINS Contact J\.fr.,Seay •t · Jo'OR BEST CLI~~· ei<perie.: ~: .. ~ SA l ESWO~f AN Ex· l.IJLl!"I _ AO MUST •~CLIJOll -· -BL''E QI ST DAILY PILOT._ __." Perle need • -t u 11 tlmt. 1-Wh•I yt11 111vt .,. irMt. ~Wl'l•t ...._ w•lll 1n t•M•. AL'S CAJtDENJNG './ lP A.MPS. INS. 22 OUTST@DING CO~fM1S. l~-~~962~-140iiii;i;;;,iiiiiiiii lnUmate appan.>l 1hop. Call )-You1. 11MM 111C11or • .,.,,,._ ~J llntt fll Wvtrtltiflt, crew col. 1tUdenl!1. Inl.-ext 488 E, 17th, Su.ih.• 4 C.M. San CJonlentt: oUit.-e SIONS, BEAUTtFUL SALON, 6.f4--0l70 fo a ! 1 J-lllOTMINO ll'Ot IALE -Tlt.t.011 OHi.Ti for Gardening & sma4 Jand.. houses. Exp, Doe.ks, 61>5.Sl2 642~1470 , • 305 N, El Camino Reil.I "HIGGI" 33.l..'.i VIA 000 ** PBX Rec:ept. $500' =-=-=='='="°,,..'-"~"~"~'~·- To P l•ce Your Tra de r 's P a ra d ise Ad scaping services call $40.5198: 492-442q NE\VPORT BEACll. ' • Fee Rei"1bur1100 • • ~ SALES.r..fEN, wholesale PHONE 642-5671 . Serving Newport, CdM, Cos. * PAPE.RHANGE.R * Accountant-To $IOO COASTAL AGENCY * 613-6890: .. Cord board eicper All ct accounti for poslcr oo C·I LOT 89'xll5' T\110 bU1wing~. ' ta Mesa, Dover Shotts, Pr1 Recognized AUlhor1ty E.O.P. (')(perie.n1t, Good lal for attract. 'sttua~~n: CREATJYE DIST. 5'3-6868. SacriUcc 2·1 ft cabin cruiser \Vestclill. or Instructor 6'*2449 background. Call Loraine, A me:mber of HARD\VARE St0tt .Stock Great frin-•·-fo't• "·ach Sne.Uing & Snelliiig:'inc. "I H \" \'" ht ,,.._ ,...., .. ~ .,..,'""' u.: "'--t u•s.••-185 hp. Perfect shape. In -I LAWN SERVICE: J\1ow· 1'"'0R Fast Courtt'OIJs Service, &15-2770, Wei;tclilf ~rsonncl Id "an. · .... -, .. n; .....,, ......., area. Also f-jo•-. ~r• •ty .,.... .,,_ , s.lS.000. Equity. 20 B C · T he Wor 's L•rgest 0 --ho•t•r c •t •• ~ c t •· -2 y \\'ater now, Redul.-ed price \np: • Edging • Clean-up & yrs ay expe:r. all Bob, Agency, 2043 \Vcslclift Dr. """" • ·1' • UNKEL AGENCIES us omer .,.,f'Vlci\ rs ex· S-T "-1 .... __ d 646-6~-16 N Professional ~ per. Type 60, SH 6()..80, •~ \V11l ei<Change for honle or duplex, 6&139j '"""'· ra~ie or •l\l\IM!' own etc. R EAS 0 N A BL E ! .B. E I S I HIGH school &irll u·anted for 1421 N. Broadl\'l!IY SA 542-1102 . ., paymf'nt. Call after 7:30 pm 9624167. . YOU SUPPLY TllE PAINT n:~:ti~~~t o.:~ \f'lephone recepllonist &; Call Joan 1'1o.rtin phone \\'Ork. 1966 Dodge Convertible P{). Iara. Trade tor horse, horse trailer ar· small foreign o'""~-=~·--.-.,---,..,.--1AL'S landscaping. Tr ee F'..:;oE~.r Average R~7~ APPLICANTS Harbor Bl~: At Adams contact v•ork. No ei<p. New~rt 8 U/'llts, good rental area. removal. Yard remodeling. nece:ssa.ry. Short hN!. Good PRIVATE School, needs man 1P3ersonne Agen cy s:r::.ooo e<1ulty; Income Trafih haul ing, Jot cleanup. PROFE96IONAL, 30 ·y r s SERVICE CENTER COCO'S . REUBEN'S \vages. Apply 9-4 Pll, 7TI ror generaJ maintenance l:. 3 Dover Dr .. N.B. car, $13,500. ,For house, com· .Repair sprnkler-s. 673-1166. e:-:p. paperhanging t: pain-Employment Age ncy -COMPLEX -\V, 19th, Suite H, Ci\t cleanup. Apply 16 8!5 '42-3170 merelal or horse ranch. LAWN & Garden Care. ting, f:rom England. SGS--7461 * • • llO:\tE\\rQRh.'ERS \VANTED Brookhunl Si. Fountain j::::= ;=:::-::-~=I 4 BR H0l\1E, FULLERTON Assumable lo inlerest loan, $13.000 eq FOR heh hse or duplex. O\VNER 675.6259 beautification, u·eeding I: R & L painting i/lterior -Skillt'd Coutl.'lciing -4647 ?.lacArW\'.ur Blvd. (Envelope Addre~n;), _V~al_<_•Y~·~962'7---.J3--'=l~'~=---I ** Secretary $550 I b U • Clerical Ne Port Be h "'C IR IE COi\tl\IERClAL Income pro. c eanup Y co ege students. elfter1or, \l.~e are reasonable. 11' ac Rush stamped, s e If.ad· e rHr n ea stet• e Ftt Reimbursed e perty, frtt &. clear, next to Reas. 543-7~. Calina Bros. 6'1~2j()5, :>-18-0823. Professional d re 11 ed e n ve: Io pe . Ope:ninp for young men "'ill. Al!r11.c1. "''''">ality . ...,, ski!'· , · Placenu~nts tNTl-:RVtE\Vl'N<; i\tQN.fRI G 0 I t k ... · uu QI, Scars. Val: $65,000. For GARDENING SERVICE INT. & Ext. Painting. Local 1.AN D N WORLD ~ o \\.'OI'. ~hu "'llnlang to Adve.rt. bckgrnd helpful for 714/529-44.35 units, house or beach prop. ExPE"rience.d J apanese l't'f's. lic'd, in;~·· frce est. Helen !)chalfrr &14-4!)Rl 2 TO S Pi\! TRADERS, P.O. Bo.-. ll27· make 1 m1n1mum of $1000 posit. wfbeach area co. Also O\VNER 67f>.62.59 ~8-0228 Ca.JI Chuck, 64:>-0809. j()() Nc\i·poi1 Ct'nll"r Dr. NB • COOK e A21, Red0ndo Beach, Calif. per m?nth. NEED NOT BE ftt-jobs. 24' Cabin cruiser 18.l HP. Perfect shape •. Trade ror small ranch dn payment in San Juan Ca pistrano. 3, "· ll'hal 40 HP EXP J G-~ COLLEGE Std .. J m7S LICENSED lo.apply.Special UNKEL AGENCIES l ouston er, • apaneSl':' ..., .. ener. · u e.n.,,, )TS 11'"rce & Fl!f' Posiliorui} NO E.XPERIENCF. NECF..S-I bl f Johnson Seahorse w/trlr. Gen. cleanup. Hauling trees. exper. No drinking. Bill or 1'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!'!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!' I SAR,\', r ULL TIME, P.•RT 110:\·IE\VORKEP..S Needed .~~~ avai a e or the 1·121 N. Broad1\'fty SA 542·1102 al . s~·oo '! . t •-M ... ~19 SI• • '.C OO •:.+9 I' ' r . ~ I 1cen ........ ExceUenl training Calt J-n .,.,,.,. Like new. \' uat1on """ ••run , ¥ .... " ............,.. " , .,..,,.....,.,.,.. ARE YOU Tll\lE, DAYS ~R NIGHTS. or 1n1n1 ..... open n gs, program, can e:11.rn \\"hile !?:::~~~-~~"~!'l'l!'!'!""' 493-3996 aft 7:30 P r.f :.as Vegas Townhouse, 2 sty, ? BR, all clec . ..2 car gar, K>OI, tennis cou1·t, no mainl., SiOOD eq tor bch arell in- :ome units. 702/737-3580 • 1-~0R truck or'!'?? 673-9131 JAPANESE Gardenin g *PAPERHANGING Expcr. not rerfd, own · BEAUTIFUL?? COCKT L STEA•"'o E d t bt I you learn. Call 54o-89« and SERVICE STATION ask for !\Ir. Smith. Service. Ne:at \\'Ork. Clea,up & PAINTING, * 968.2425 • AI & n.o• US transp. es rn t', personil. •. to "" IVAITRESSES t·" A I' t Call "" I""' ai;,; r the J\.tanager, -MANAGER -Have 11mall commercial yd. main!. 968-r3. It's al! in the eye of the be-. u·an"" gt. re ll a mus , ........ ....,.. ·• · -• Pl t ' p t h hokier, ~-k the TV --21·25. ExperiE'nced. Apj,Jy 10 -'~'OIYc::...o~r-'~'~'~.'~-----Bldg, S.A. Re.nt .... to )CVl«t· Comple te Yard Car el as er 1ng, a c , ... ,...... ......... 2 · •1 .... . . Wa \k ar &.l•••,,_.;;o· 1 ry & luggage. stores. Will Ji~. 540-4837 Repair 6llO ml. ynu y,•alch and U )'OU to 1 Al\!, 1' on-. .,..t., Villngt> llousel;c•cP1'1··l..1ve 111, soine: I ~' Perfect Bay Boat, 16' Glspr, 5C HP o/b, trlr, fuU equip, $1500 vale FOR any yr or m~ Car, P.U., or Camper. Jim 642-4312, 645-0466. COSTA MESA C·l COR 90 i< l17 • 2 bldgs $68.000 equity $42,00D for high desert. f h _ _;,;::_c_;._ ____ ..:.::;;. '"'' yoii're as P"'tty as Inn, 696 S. Coast lh\<y, icocldng. P\"t nn. \\"orki1~ ltnde u_p or ocean \'\I m G-~,,u· 00, ... La"' cl•••up•, "·guno Belt "" '"'00 be' 67, ~,, "-'" IU ., * PATCH PLASTERING son1e ol tbol:e people, call us. .... ' .............. t11 m. "·1, SJl€.ilkini: ok. or 1 1ncon1e. .,....., •p•nkl• Sy•. roto-ccmc·t I q • • " Al types. Fn.>e estimates CALIF. CASTING CO. * COOKS \VANTED. Apply 96.~·b".!l:i. 1936 l't1GTA ... 1st o! T series. work. C.D. Yancey, 646-58GO Call 54()..6825 · ~IESA ' '"ES -----------,,======"'===!is :oonlinuing itii: search for in person, ' · l.J'IJ'I. • HSKPRS Emplyr pays ke Runs good. Very rare. t1900 R~TILUNG, new Jay,ns .. ··--·'•• peopl• ••ho ha•-l?OC Superit)r, Cotilla 1-leu.. ·1y •-d f ~-1 or •"'¥"..., .. ,.. George Alh.•n Byland A~n-eqw , u .. e or ....,.. trees & shrobs l"Pmoved. Plumbing 6890 a desire to u'Ork ot1 TV or 646-3993. " •-F "8-=z• --==~~~---cy 100.B E .. 161h. .,,A. · • .....,as. rtt est. ;,., ~ "'· modelin" jobs, $75 to $125 coo•-· (Do'n•••) 547.()~"~. 494.3632 PLUJ\.1BINC-AU. TYPES . .., n. ..... ~ Cut & F.dge Lawn 24 llr. Scirvitt (K'r day. No fee t-you ever. $30 Shift to slll'"I ---------\~"ill trade 19' sloop. sips 2, i\1aintenance, Lic'd, Jn5ured ST * FOR ON CAMERA BLUE BEET 61~990-1 llOUSEKE~Pl-:ll . .i\lust.. lo\'c 17 I l h I t k 6 FREF. E. l.!\1ATES chlldren 121 Lh't i n, t"lvC' ga res \\·a er an . 548-1808 aft 4. \Valer hcater1 $60 install. AUDITION * HP !\!ere, 2 sails & anchor CALL (71<> -~ -* COOK-HOUSEKEEPER * dayt $40 a we e k • CLEAN Up Sp""JAllST Garba ..... dispow S'3 •'••tall. ~ }'OR V\V or Station u·agon. ~ ALL RATES REASON';BLE 10 Al\{ to 6 Pr.-J General lite duties. U.7 pm. Refererns, Neu'JIOM. Beach 7R£AiE:.,.,.ATE OPEN· ING 'F'OR QUA Li FlEO SALES:\l~\N. Exl"el l ent commission schrdule pl\IS many bonus hl!neflt~ • A~k 101· !\JI•. Sn.}·der or l\.Tt·s. Joy ASSOC!ATI:O RHOl,ERS SEHVJCE, 2fl2:i \\' Ralboa Blvd., N.R. flt' call 67l-3G63: eves 642-2?...jJ !>'40-11.20 540-ll23 New fence & l"t'pa1r. odd ·--====7'C":C"",,.._,..,-Good Salary. l\l~t hA~ area. 846-4839 · · jobs. Ren11. 54~955 Call Jin1 Glenn, 71:i Oweru; ATTENDANT Parking ·cu. 644-1318. HSEKEEPER }~or l:ple . RESTAURANT "·ork 10:30. * * -. . St., H.B. :'36-6008. Se [ v l cf' For Lo ca I Live-In or out. Watertroot. 2:30, 4 or 5 da,ys ·a week, O\VNER &t6-Sj58 General Services 6682 HOJ\.f ' REPAIRS Res1aurant hllll i mm c d • COCO'S REUBEN'S '225frno. 67J.-1352. ldeol for h o u II e w i I e l'!!\!!!!!J!\!!!!!J!!'!!!'l!!!!!!!!'!l!!!!l!!!!!!J!!!'!!!!'!!!!''!!!!!!!J!!!!!!'-!!!'J Plumbing-e.leclrK:a.I. $7.50 Hr. openings incl. r u n n" r s • -COM PL EX -.;_-="'""c=====~~. \\•/chil<lrrn. No e."<pcriern * * * !!ANNOUNCEMENTS SERVICE DIRECTORY APT CLEANING .-Painti~g 642-2755 or 642-0506 doormen. I: o Pr r al i on e HOUSEKEEPER ncCC'.~sary, Hun! Reh an•a. -~ug ~hampoo1ng & Lite ~~===~=~~-I superviso r. C11ll 642.-122-1, -46~7 ?l'lacArthur Blvd. All girl family 961-92-l:l ·:·-d=N_O::T:·l_C_E_s __ -;;;;;15!.!:!-~!!'!!~~1!:!! __ 6590 Rep a I r s. _RE 1\1 AR c PLUi\rBING REP Am da;.-or f'Vt'. Neu-port Beach • CaU 536--0493 • ·-r-_ SERVICES, 84 1~. No job" 1oo 'small APPLY NOW FOR RE~AliRAl\'T-No1\· h1kln:; l;P:...:e~rs~on:.:.:;o~l~•-___ 640S CARPENTRY Ed's Cleaning Service ---!c;,--ie~·~.,~·2-~l~i~2'~~""0---I AF TER LABOR DAY INTERVJE\VING J\ION:fRI H:.~;;:.~f~err!:1~ tii~1~~~~E~~: 1~! ti~1~ ALCOHOLICS Anon"""""'" MINOR REPAIRS. No ·Job Carpets -Upholscery -Win· 2-1 HR PLU?>.1BING St d t t' · b 2 TO :i, P~t thru Fri. $2/hr. l\.1uet have , .... _ T-Small. ~b'-t ,_ -~ ~.-Floo• •--. :•" n•.,.. & RE~-tODELLING ea y p•r • ime 10 1 under 18 need a p p I y . Pho~ s.42-7217 or write to ..... ...... ....,. w •-""'""" • ....... ,. .... .........,, Over l years car I: ttlerences. 646--0936. COLONY KITCHEN, 3211 P.O. x 1233 Costa Mesa. ~154 : t h• r cabinet&. Remodeling, fence: bldg., -===="'=·7=-96'4=====-lr111ercsling 11urvcy.type work e BUSBOYS HOSPlTALlTY HO s TES Sl;iH~";,:;;"°'::...B~l~vd-=--. C:::.:-'~"=~- -.,..,..,,.. • bO anawtt leave painting & gen'I repairs. -from homl'. NO SELLING. e DISHWASHERS SERVICE, has openings for Relief Cemetery Lot5 6411 msg: at 646-2l72. It O. Rea.~. Xlnt. ref's. 642-5'171. Remodeling & Good telephone J)('l"SOnality. mature v.'O men looking ror Housektt~~·B.;~~ co! Andenion Rep•ir 6940 Gua,..•t··" •-orly ··"'"'· COUNTER GIRL, n"rt time. \ · ti k J FOR sa1 t ho" 1 """'' '"'' • " ,... n1ere1111ng, part me: "'Or , "a egcent Hoep. 20a:; Thurin, ,_1 t d~sco~nt ic~e:r,m~':. Qua! Constr. carpentry, roo. Hauling 6730 ----------\Vri1l' can.l or Jrtter to Box: Prw0ef~ •".'""E" ,• 's'T's'L"u',?,~ 1velcom\ng: nt'\\·comef'll to l~C=·'~'~· ~"~'~'="'~'~'-----""a 1 •• •• ,l ing, all home imprvmnts. ---------GE:t"IJ'L remodeling & maint . J\120Zl, Daily Pilo1, 2211 \V. • your area. Sales f'Xp . oleum. Pacifie View i1emor-No ,iOb too sm. Free est. TNT La s No job too !-ma 11, BalbQll.·N.B. 1 include tele· CLEANERS &1+-0932 desirablf'. Mu~I have car. Resiaurant ial Park. 492-4510 ~1059 · · · wn er v 1 ~ e. Llc'd/insurcd. 67~183. · Garage clean-ups, hauhng phone number. COUNTER Girl for driv~in CALL: ~7-3(19.'> SERVICE DIRECTORY CARPENTER: Remo de I, &: light movinr. 548-5863, APT. Cleaners Needed tor cleaner'll, Full time. ll-7, ~ COCO'S Fashion Island Appliance Re~irs Ports 6510 e Washc.r & Dryer Repairs• Free Estimates. Work Guaranteed. Call 536-3159 patio work. cement work 531-3729 Sewing 6960 lmmed. openings. Exptt not days wk. Mr, Best O eanen1, le pain~. No job too YARD /Gar. Cleanup.----------req'd. Own tra1ns p . mmeror INICoutHwy, small. Free est., 536-194.f Remove tnes, Ivy, tr.uh. I can help you Keep your desirable, pe:nonal refs • Cd.\I, Grade, backhcM!, 962-8745 wardrobt> sharp &. up to must. 642-1224, day or eve. DEL IVER Yl\fAN·Yaung, Cement. Concrete-'600 HAULING $10 A LOAD dale, F'ormcr designer "°"' * ASS'T HELPER * neat appearing for job with CONCRETE. All types, Free Clean up. Tree Serv. Gen. located in lhis beautiful growing corp. ~lust have est. Sa.wing, breaking, haul· Pruning 646-2528, 543-81).13 coast area. 548·1443 Eves FULL OR PART Tl.l\fE good driving record. Apply ing & skiploading. Service TRASH & Garage clean-up, 7 Leaves. Age 19-31, 6 months resdcy. 2221 Fairvie:w, C.M. 6550 k quality. 548-8668 Bob days. $10 a load: Free est. Qt.J4LITY You've alway,; req'd, $3.85 per hr. DENTAL ASS'T MORE Concrete pat.io for .Allytimr, ~l. \\1lllt('fi. Dressmaking -Chainide, F.xp. pttt .. 2 days Babvslttlng , a wk. 645-1121 EXPERIENCED !\Iother will less money. Artistic setting. HAULING· & cleanup trtts alteratiOnfi, Kry Say. 1763 Ph; J im Thomp!K>n, 9~4-287J babysit toddler thru 4 yrs. Lie .. call l\1ax a! 644--0687. & shrubs removed.' Reas. Ornngc ~ve., C.M. 64~1292. A SLJ:\f GYM Olstr-help * DISH,VASHER * ~' u 11 C '! CEJ\.1ENT Work of all !<Inds. Jo"rtt ·eStim. 548-5924 Alter•t1ons -642·5145 demo-•-ate ,·-rid'• ·.'o. 1 timC'. Apply 9 to 10 A.\1 only. Vic Orange &. 22nd, ·1' • '""" •v • Alley West, 2106 W , Fenced yard, hot lunches. Free est. Pl10VING, Garage cleaJMJp & Nl!Bt, aCCtJrnte, 20 year .. exp. exerciser It lotrodu~ ex· ,_ ,,. """o< 'Ll ' GY' Oceanuvnt, N.B. toys. Re.ferences. MS-9513. WQ-\1,) lite hauling. Reasonable, • Dressmaking-Alterations ciH ng, oe'v :S ,,1 ••I JET BOARD Your child for DECORATIVE CONCRETE Free: estima1es. 645-1602. Designed 10 suit you. BATII. No cxper. Nee. * DRlVER~Clais one. wknds. Co1npetenl mother I DRIVES.\VALKS-PATIO H.A ULJNG k cleanup, lrt'es Call Jo .. 646-6446 Shirley Grahan1 897-1986 or licellSC required, Diesel I daughter combinalion. A"es CALL DON, 642-8514 &: shrubs renlOwcl. Reas. · -· &lf,...18T1. semi expe:r.' !'lo ctiler nee:d .. apply. :i-16-TI72. 5 & over. i\1esa Verde a1-en. * CONCP..ETE \\"Ork: patios, Free estim. 548-5924 T ile, Ceramic 6974 AUTO MECHANICS §ID 1 ad i e. i ;,.1~. di\>\\·ayi:. etc. L icense: d , • ,,. Temporaryo r2 io 4 IO.·ks.) $3.49 °2:n~~. ~. ~ e.xper. ne.c. EXP'D moTher \\"ill can.> for Phillips Ceincnt. 548-6380 Housecleaning 6735 * Verne. The Tile.J\1an .. per h~. ne yr .. gellt'ral au. child or inlant, my lgc, Cusl \\'Ork. Install & repairs. lom.otlve . exper.ienct-, valid Apply k\f. .!\fR DONUTS. cheery home. ,,, k d Y s. • CONCRETE, brick & !;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; No job too :sml. Pla~1er Ca.hf. dnven hcenR, good 135 E. l?l h St., C.l\f. 64fr5537 stone "'ork. 1-'re-e estimate. HOMEOWNERS patio. Leaking 1 h 0 w e r physicaJ conct. Day and night * DRIVE.RS * BABY-SITI'ING, my home 9 -====·=,..__=:::::=·=:::::= F1oors stripped & waxed, Cpls repair. "shift available. N E • ~ cleaned, \Vindows wash4!d & 847-1957/846--0206 Apply Personl'lt'l. CITY OF 0 Xperlence a.m. -5 p.m., l\fonday to Friday, call 968-3327 2 p.m. Child C•re, general house • cleaning Ceramic tile Installed or no-NEWPORT BEACl-f, 3300 Necessary! to ·6 p.m. l icensed 6610 J"IO\V available by an expand. paired. Remodeling my Ne\\'porf Rlvd.;....,, ... ~eu'JIOrt J\fust have clean Calirornia Ing professional janitorial S""cialtv .. \Voi·k guttr. Reas. Beach. Calif. "~ 1714l dn"•o'ng ---I. Apply QUALIFIED i\lalurr \\'Oman · F f ced "" ,-.. =~~ • '"'"v" .. 'IY Ho"''· hot Ju-lo, re~-.. serv1c..:. or astgoarant priced. r·rcc cs1. Call 5.16-, __ .,_ .. ~····~··=~==,,..---YELLOW CAB CO. wishes lo babysit \vkly, in " .... '"'""" se:rvice caU 642-25.17. """' i· AVON GIFTS my hon1e. l\.lesa Verde Area. yd. supervised play. Ages l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' ""~" 186 E. 16rh SL 5.f&..2062. 2-5. Call 646--03}2. Se . F'OR CHR!ST,\IAS ARE: Costa Mesa DUTCH r-.lnint. rvice. co.r· Tr n S.rvice 69IO A joy to give, 11 joy to rt· VERY Rel ia ble. molher or 2 Contr•cfors 6620 pet cleaning, Ooor 1o11axing. ·---------ceivc, 1111 cvt-n greater joy El..F..C'l'RONICS SUP PLY :~~dorl~~-t~~=:~~~~n~ ----------' ~~"!~: c:i~~~~~. 537·1.~ if BOB'S TRE~ SURGERY to sell }'or full inlonnatio11 ~ O\~ ~:ig~tRc!.~~~~~: M5--G223 i\1Y \V\Y J'l J is bac~ offering I~ same call: t Bl d C J\I 1_.;:;;,~:.,.::-,,-:::-:;:-::::---:ill•l 1 • ' • qua.1.Y JOme BAY & Beach Janitorial 1''ine "aulily Tree Service, 54()...7041 ~~S..141 por v" · · WILL Babysit teachers child repair. \Val~s.bl.'f:iling, floors Carpels, \1-indows, llooni, ""* ~3798 '* BABYSITTER In my homf'. E xecutive Secretary in my hom C". Baker & etc. No JO too small. etc. Res &: Comm c •I, Cali Lo · \V t l'ff Pc Fairvie\v al'CJ. a40-Q040. 543-14!j.1 ..... ..,,1.,,1. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT LH.e Hsekpng, CaU After rault', es c , r. ·~ ~ _:;:_;;...;;;.;:..:.;;...;::..:.;;..:.;;=.:.:.1 ~ 673-4260 snnnel A.itency, 2043 \Vt'st· TEAOIERS Ch.ldl"n. Child Add ition!! * Re.model!ng WINDO\VS & '"'alls \\'ashed. Job Wanted, a pm. · cliff Dr. N.B. G45.2770 Catt to 4 pm. l\1y home Freel JI. GenVlck. Lie. Firs, strip""'d, scalt'd & BABYSITTER. ~ hni, 2-J da!I/ EXPER'D, M t I warner & Jl1agnol.ia. Area. 673--6041 * $49-2170 \\'tlXed . .-re""c. est. 897_7831 Women 7020 \\'k 21,~ yr child my home. ' . " a ure •. ema.le ----------,94·9303 bef 2 ' It 7.30 lo 11.ss1st fron t medical of· l~84::2-:;:7~g7~4=,----=::---i:':-:::: ADDITIONS, L.T, Construe· day or nighL 673-3000. ., · or a · · flct'. Ph: 646-4461. e LDVTNG Care in my I.ion. single nr 2 st°'!· plana, JOE'S CLEAN SERV. ATIRACTIVE Cal In 30'11 BABYSITrER wa nted . Jl(11'EL DESK CLER K, male-, w/hMvy expe:rience DEL WEBB'S NEWPORTER. JNN, 1107 Jamboree Rd, NB. Gt4-1700. Now J11tc1viewing: 1'~or: e Kllchen Helpe:rs • CUrb llosleMCl! e COonler Glrl11 EXPER. NOT NECESS. Con1plete on.the-job 11'9.ining * INTERVIE\VING ~ BUSBOYS DISHWASHERS APPLY IN PERSON #78 Fuhion Island, N.8 . w/full pay, I.ref' medical l Reitaurant hospitalization, free life in!., Re be E Le meals, paid vacalion. 5 Day f U n • e u·ork v.ttk. Day "-e\'e. 11hiff1: Apply in pe:NOn 2-4 Now Interviewing Pf\1or7.9 P~1. A1'W Restau. rant, 285.\ Harbor Blvd., CM. * HOSTESS.ES * INSURANCB Ofc. I{ e. Ip , Typing l: clerical. to $2.:io hr, p/time. Saflta Ana area. Call ~l-4369 10Ai'\1-2PM. APPLr 1J1 t:. Coast tlY.'Y •• N.B. •RN OR +LVN Rel~. ma.inly weekends, 11· 7;30 AM shift. Ph: 646--1624. JANITOR, l ~~ hrs per nlte, Kentucky 1'Ti~d Chicken, 693 S. Coast Hwy, Lag:una, App. after lpm, RN for Dr's Office Janitor nee.ded • Edv.·a.ri:is Top 3al8J)• &1~3903 Cinema the•te<, """°' " **SALESMAN Adams, C.f>.f. M:i-9909. 6 pm. * KITCHEN HELP ;\- 54~3061 J . W. ROBINSON e NE\VPORT BEACH e l lii~ a.n opening tor EXPERIENCED COSMETIC SALES Apply in pe:rMin 10..:i pm r.tonday lhru Friday Personnel Dept. • 2 }'&l!hion Island, N.B. Equal opportunity e.mploye.r Rubber Moldin9 ond Bondln9 Progressive manufacturing eompany, located in Orange County, has requh'ilme:nt for 11alesmen, cxperiencP.d in rubber technology, to 11Hmu. late gro\\•fh nf il'11 rubber ta.c ility, Applieant sh<>uld have know. ledge ol rubber cMmi11try, rubber • to metal bonding, and precision molding, • SAN CLEMENTE Xlnl 11alary. Days. No prcv. iou.11: experience req'd but It \\'Ould be helpful. \Ve train. Older n1en OK. No lube or litt repair. J\fu11t be neat and depe:ndable. Pai<!' be.""fits. \\'rl'te tor application, Box P.f-10!~3 The Daily Pilot, N.8, ~ERV ICE S!a S.<tll'~man, full ril111•. Apply al Bill P..ash S1:1ndaM S!ntion 2IO!ll El Tol'o Rd ., Laguna Hills. SERVICE Sta Attenda.nt 3 lo 12 P~1. Local exp. ~1aturt'. Top pay. SHEU. STATION !!Ith & Placenlia, C.;-..1. SERVTCE Sta. Pump lsl. al· tend11nt . Exp'd prercl. Over 20. :!801 E.' Coai;t I h~'Y At Gn!d1•nrod. Corona dcl ~lar. li"IS..0.1.ll, SERVICE Sta. Auendant. I * TOP \VAGES * Apply in pe.raon during morning hours, Bayshon-_,. Rlchrielcl, 2:00 \\I. eoe.$1 Hwy. Ne\l'PL Bch. SERVICE S~tion Atle.nd11.nt, 1111.·ing shift. Lorin's Arto, l201 Harbor Blvd, Harbor & San Diego Fl'wy, C.M .. lnlcl'Views Mon. l-7PM Sel'\' Station Mechanic-Sa.Jn. man, top pay, 1495 Superior, a Placentia, N.B. SJ IARP Girl 1'>40, no eo&- rume, slraight beer bar. "The Place," 2000 w. Balboa. N.8. "The Loc'aJ " 219 s. Bristol, S.A. 67>:>1TI or BL-2382. snJOENTS, 11 Yl'I & up lo 11cll candy In your own area litake good monry ins~ lime and help needy school No cash requlf.ed. ca1i 642-0803. 9 AM to j, P~I. J * S UN D A YS-Only-;\taJ.e. s a I a t i c·d . Tran.,portation re11'd, Call 963.8195 after G. * TELEPHONE * \Vomcn for t'Ve. \\'Ol'k, ~9 Pi\!, our oftiet' on Balboa lslml. J\lature speaking voice, Approx, $2.i. \vk. Pll: 675-4!'>73 betwn. 3 &. 6 PM. Telephone oork. Mature. \~ man nttded now, pleasant part lime-permanent. No 11elling, e:asy hour!!, good pay, 546'5438 for full lnlor· matlon. 1-4 pm , T 'EL EPHONE 0pet'tl.IOl'S. \\'ttkend shift 1:30AM to 3: 30 Pi\f. 228 Forest, Lii.a. Beh. e TRANSCRIBER Da.y hours. full lime. Kno\v· ledgr or X·ray trnninology 11.nd accurate typing. Exper. lrnce necessary, Huntington lntercommunlty Hosp. Apply 177'72 Beach Blvd .. llunt. Reh. or call 1nu1 "'"""· I home-hot lunchc~. fenced t'!lt ,\. lfl)'Olll!I". 847-l:ill. We: do Everything-Rell &: desires part or lull t\m€' Paularino schl. di!ltrict. Ph: yard. Call 646-5131. ADO ITIONS·REMODELTNG Coinm. Free Est. 642•75.51. rmptoyment wlrh nice bo!lll 5-10-4i992 aft 6 PM. NITE S-GENTI..E CARJ.: Free E!L Call $48-2575 • . or bosses. TYJ?f!. 50• SH 80, BABYSITTER: For l child, e Experienced retail groc. man & an ei<pe:rienced ~· !ail produce man 615-5766 Experienced Chalnlde Den. ta! assillanl. Contact Box p,.· 1077. Daily Pilot i1AIDS, Jmme.d lale opening, Scope or r.xperlence ehould TYPISJS Top WRJCE'S, Meals provided, include sale of rubber pro--* I ".OR YOUR CHILD. Call l-'"ENTON CONSTR. CO. r-.tesa C!ean1ng Service l"scel In meeting people-& Nights & aom~ days cn•n " --========== Carpc~. windows, fl oors, elc. p h o n t' \Vo r k . So m e. · &4'*3289-(arpat Cleenlng 6625 Rn & Commc'I. ~8-4111 boOkkeepi~. ~lul!t be Iran~. 6~2-2420. RESPONSIBLt; high school Gen'! cleaning, Homes busy·bu11.v·busy! NB • C~T Banking girl "'Ill baby sit. Newport & apts, Nltc or Day area only. Call Ann * COMMERCIAL Heights urea. 642--002'.! 57•· 54S--6&U. TELLER .::,c-n.t) Q *546-.. :i .. BABYStTTlNG In my hnmc. t;.~ ~ -R.N. seeks interesting pert F,;\:p'd, Apply In pef!K'ln • Fenced yard & referc~s. "< • Ironing '755 or full time position. Days, Newpor t Nationel 0.1 al'"l'a. &12-QJIM CARPET !\ton-Fri. TP.n yea.rs ex. B•nk WO~tAN w/2 young chiklren STEAM CLEANED ., lltONING • perif.nce:. Box Pl079, Dall)' Superior & Pl11.ce:ntia, N.B. \\ishcs 10 care lor child. REASONABLE RATES ~ty Honit>, $1 Hr. Pilot BA.RMAlD · Nlg~s. ~ d11.ya a 2~~. 54&-:>271. Alt!O c64'6s' 917n1~ta.Uation Pick Up k De!iv. ~764 1 JtE1''lNED l..ady d cs 1 r r ·11 w{'('k. No bikini. no d11nclnR', position w/cldcrly \11.dy, $2.2:"> lo :<!art. No i:i<perlenct" -:o==~~--,---1* lRONING. $1.50 hr. bring L' hoo k · L' • \ \ Brick, M asonry. m BRtCK * BLOCK * STONE By tlie hour, after 5:30 ~ &U-1948 * &4~7fi8 Carpentering 6590 QUALrTY \Voodcrafl, sml g;en'I COfl!'tr. & carpcntcry. .Free consults.tlon & quo!c. can Ken M;;.oo.\4, 54$-423J. REPAIRS* ALTERATIONS tt> CABINETS. Any ,1ze jOb 25 yn1 e:-:per. !'J.18-6i13 GEN. ReJM1\r, add, cab. Formica, JMU1Clln: mlrlltc. Anythinc! Dick, 6tl..a"59 OIA)IOND CUJ>('I Cleaning hangel'!I. 459 E. FloWtt SI, lie lie eeping. JV-<n, nt'CCllSal'Y. App Y n penon Back to School Speclal Cosl& i\fesa. U>cal Ref'• ""changed. C.11 bet\\.ttn ll am . 2 pm. Utile JOO' $15. Free Estl:=::::=;::::=:::;:::;::::::::= 6"6--9769. John's Inn, DIT2 N .. Santa R · r tall JAPANESE Gardener, AnaAve,Santa AiitHgts. epalr· m . 645-1317, J a nltori•I '790 REMARC SelviceA, 3 rooms"---------monthly rah~. Gen. cleanup, * BE AUTY -so ' R•....,.blr. l'ree "t. OPERATORS * •''· · Fully guaranteed. SPARKLE Janltoria1 & Win. 64.2-2239 Cttdlt cards OK. 847-6688 dow ('le11.nlng Serv. \Vin· Hair tt)'lbit with cUenttle ~ KIND And rentle nurse. G.5~ comm, pd. vac. or STEAM "'t CU'Pflt cleanlng. do\\·1, resi<I .. camel. cons1. dcilre• privalc du13' nom11 booth space IOI' rent Al80 By Ch~rf\J,re, nation-w\de cleanup. Fret' Pt!. 962-0672 or holplt&l. Niiht or day room for 1 new llct.iw>-no Mlrvlcc. Free: est. &1Z40.i5 NITE i1i\1E CLEANING !ihlrt. Exp. Ref11, 549.-1463 foll. req'd, APJ'IY in per&On D'reft lng Service '637 Commercial & Re~ldenUal LET me addrts!I Y 0 u r H&ll' West. 330:; Newpon • MZ--2:869 • envelopes, c~a.n. rte 1n1::":;'"";;:· ~N:;.B:,:·-.=7'.="= my home. 642.-t9tl aft .f p,\t TIRED or that old furniture? t.IECHANICAL Engiooer, l a ndsc aping 6810 FUU. Cha-e Bookkee""'r It's really not that bani Calif. reJtls. Hvy rTif'Chl~I')'. -· ·----·-· .,. .... 10 _,,lace Ju.st watch the )')!ping, marine des!""' It NE\V !..AWNS. re«cdlnR, Experienced, RA'.ofercnces. ·~.. · " £64027 l'umltun! It mltetllane.ou1 ~I <'!ltln1. Oral tins; or \J. roto-lilling:, r e n ova 11 n,; " ---,,,--,.,;=,:..=,.,.,:-::---column• In tJ111 Cassttled lu.strt.1lon11 from y o u r d11an-up. 19 T -2 4 1 7 or Daywork wAntcd. Set.lion. crltcr1s. 675-.lGTI.. ~-.;;..;;;;;;;.· -·-----Reiercnct.s 6J&.230R -------------------- MlL~t apply in JK'lt'90n, Register ror du els lo both aerospace &: • l•m-3pm. ,Jamaica Inn • IC'mporary Job commercial markets. Hole.I, Cd~f. lodlQ' l\.tAN Needed a.l! re.lief clerk Exctllenr iround floor oppnT. Tnlervws. !1·11 at sport fishing landing, tun!tles in fast growing com. Western Girl Inc. If you are, we prohably can't Varied houn, N.B. re11i~nt pany; , 4667 i\facArthur Blvd . FAT & UGLY??? use you. preferred. Perm j o tt, Newport Beach CALIF. CASTING CO. -gr-""~'~'"~-~--~~-I M11oll ruume of qualifica.1 ____ .,_~_0.125 ____ 1 b continutnr Its ~arch fn T I ! Oon11 and cx-rle:nce to Soi< · Orange Co. far a var1e.ty ot MAN o us st m&r o local ""'~ ii p 1 N.B types, tor work in mu. mo. appliance 1lore. N<!at ap.. ?ot·lW"" Da y I ot, . deling, TV CCJ!llml's, & Ind, pearanct. 496-2383 ?tlr, film s, Great ~. [ll time. Wr~hl 9-10 am only. Equal opportunity employer We are client paid, no tee. Not a ICbool. F REE MECHANICAL Expcrit'J'ICf'.'d '1\111h fland le pu11.>er toolf, Capable of accura.t11 work. 5f9.1177 TOPATRON, INC. See Betb' Bni~ •l TV SCREE N TEST PH: (nl) 835-8282 JOAMto6PM Aaency for Can!ft' Girl.I F•maJ PBX •-.......... . ~iODEJalL T)'pe Girls tor fl O W. Cout Hwy., N.B. e • ..,, ....... r1111 hospi lty .erviee, Xln'I By appoint. 646-3939 "1· ~~ T\\'O• "',_'""' aP..u.M· I .!""'~·..:s.~rc,·•!',·c:=~-~·~1·_;._ __ j.,;,..,...,""'""'"=="""'"""""' I ._..rm • e MOTEL MAID • S ALE SL AD Y • SolrMl 64&-800> Reliable Stead_y worker cx))ttiencr for pa.rt time Fiie Cl•·Clolm• 494-7557 leadil\lt to rull I Im e .. $lll.ll No""" Xln't oppor. w/l'(I co. Pretty e ~'UPERVISOR cmpklymtnt. l\t\l!lt be. able to work nlctill A: Sundays in ctuillmu perind, Se.e ~tr.. Ilalle)', 16W llubor Blvd, office:11, friendly at~. RN or LVN, 3 to 11 :30 P~r. top bene.fl111, Somo lite typ. ing. Call Mio Betty. 557-6122, Abl1all Abbol PeM10nnel Agl'ncyJ230 w. Warner, Suitt 211, Santa AN..' e SUPERVISOR ,;F,..V;;·:,,_,====,-,,= RN or LVN, ll to 7:30 AM. pAILY PILOT WANT ADS! Park LI d o Convale.aetnl Dial &t2--6678 fOI R.ESULTS <inre.r, Ph: 64)..,Cl(M.t. PUOt Wa.nt Ads. &I~ • i • WAl'mESS • • t~perlf'nctd • Full Timi" • Permanent Apply in pcnion only THE RIGGER No. 1& F11oshion l~and Newport Beach **WAITRESSE S URGENTLY NEEDED , FUU. TIME Pltue APJl\y e SURF le SI1lLOIN e 50lO '" O>Mt a,.,. Newport ~ch l • • . . ·-'. • , ... • • • • • •• DAILY PllOf Wtlf11tida7, Stpltmbttr 2, 1~70 ~~i!;:~i"&JiJ!~iiLoD'yiiilili'ir:MiiiiiE 1tiic"iHi.Arii.oiiisii1'1F~o>iRF-iiViEfiiRCHAN DI SI FOR Joh Mon, W-7iOQ SALi, AND TltADE, SALE AND TltADE MERCHANDISE 'DR SALE AND TRADE MERCHANDISE FOR SALE AND TltADE ----... - MERCHANDISI FOR SALE AND TRADE WAITRESSEg--21 · -Furnltur• IOOO 1 or 0\'1!r, -.. ---- l1ane!t A: dlnntt, e:icptr. pret. 17 PC • .CING SIZE but not ...,, Apply bd 3 t BEDROOM S p.m. Mon.&1.. VWa,ee Larae 9 dra14"er dttuttr, mlJ'. JM,. 695 S Cout Hwy, La. ror. 2 bed&lde atands, Kin& runa Beach, 494-2710 l aim btadbo&rd, trame, quilt. WAITRESS. Exptr. for ed mattttu, sheets, bliJlk.. lunchH only, ll_4. Apply In ets, eic. ptt10n, Old Tl r u 11 • e l 1 Choice or Spo.nl<U\ Ruta.urant, IXlT So Cout Ot' Modem St)•k> lllfh"·ay, LllKUna Bettch. All FOR $249 ~AITRESS \VAN TED Nod°""' pmta, ·only $9 mo. Apply '" ""°"· MESA W&LK'S WAREHOUSE LANES. 1103 Superior, 600.\V. jth SI., Santa Ana Cotta l\~a. 6*-3993. Daily 9-9 Sit 9-6,Si.m ll-6 WAITRESSES-Full .. part MUST SELL =~.A~cttz~~;,~ -.OVER ~TOCKED Hwy, N.B. •• • T\vms $49.9.1, FullJ $59.SJ, WANTED exp/dWl\\'Uhers. Queen~ $89.95, Kings $119.~, , I Twin S~ Headbo.u-ds $7,gj, Ptnn poe:ltton avail. p ease , Tnlnd'-Sets 189 95 R ll • contact Manqu. Beach 1t: •• • • o ~ House Inn 49'1·1188 \\'&y beds, $29.95, Studto ' Couches S89.9S, Bunk beds W.yrrED: Exper Service $89.95, Sm aal•"""' = l4T6 SIESTA SLEEP SHOP Palisade• Rd .• C.M. 1927 Harbor Blvd., CM WAREHOUSEMEN Needed 6-l).2760 ~ Cst. H1vy, Dana Pt. 49&-4552 20 PC. "MADl<ID" 3 ROOM GROUP FROril MOOD. tl.Ol.IES Includes: Quilted sola ' 1100 REWARD One refrliel'ator to the fil'St p!.'l"f'U \\l\th $2j, VIM!'d, but 1tlll 1t.1>ini;: 11trona. Duy now, pick up 911 1. a4S-5993 aft 6 NORGE Auto washer, ltne nN>del $~. Norgt> ell!<' dr}·1•r Musical ln1truments 1125 GOOD Ulil'd ll a n cl~ In· ,c1·u1n('n1J;: 2 flulc~ $.ill ca. I tru1npet $GS, J E--lltll 11110 1101·11 $7j, I f ~ r i: I 5 sousaphooo $90. 893-1486 a!lk for "Ctrt~r F~ngle". SELLlNG Uvlnz rm,· dlnlng $40. Both >..1nt con d . I J SALE 11 rm. den le pallo fumil\lrt:. 847-8\J:}, 546-8612. Bis: Pi•no .t-Organ SaJ~ P l1nos & Org•n• 1130 "ONE ONLY" SALE Ne1v & UAf!d PJANOS Ott-orator Spine, •••••• S399 Nf'w Klt.IBALL CollllOlt $899 KlMBAlJ.. Crand ...... $71L'i ORGANS 'fll01\IAS Organ ...... $119 HAMf\10ND Chord "A·l" $299 HJ\1\L,10ND B3 ••• , • • ~ ~immons !ru~dle .• f\IAYTAta Service Man, ~oingonRICll'fNO\Va f Exercyl~. btlt \1bralor, \liARO'S BALD\VIN STUDIO iricludc.!" bench, de)!ve:ry & h All I I has \\'&shers, drye1·s & mat.-\\'DJTanty-•.• , i\lany olher muc more. ()p cone . 11 8 t G t 1819 Nc\\•porl, C.l-1. 642-848.t 645-2j()8 (' 1 ng sets. s . uaran ec. Bargains. , . ~==~-----~! !l..11-8637. l.IUST BE SEEN! ANTIQUE CU3lom n1 ad c • . ' Pl. "0 '' . IV td• • LSD dln'g/rm 5,.1 in (f\fahogaQy) NE\\ /Used apphan<:t!s & ,... · usu• · e< 1ng A e . • '1'Vs All gu a ran tef'd . J'l"ceplions, Dinnrr parties, YA?-.1A1-IA e Kii\1BALL \\'/3 ~x1ens10n1. ,.ia~s 'I & 6 !>unlap's, ISIS Ne\i'JlOrt, C~t Pianu lessonll', H.B. ·213/ e THO;>.IAS matching chi's. $ • 50 · 548-7788 430-~182 KOHLER & CAJ\:1PBELL 64;...2849 alt 6 Pl'it 9 DBLE f\f 1 be 1 KEmlORE \V a.'iher f4j, r.E e LIKF NE\\! e COAST MUSIC ap e canopy < elec dryer $35. Both XJnt e C0;>.1PLETE DRUi\1 SETe NE\VPOfT & Ii.ARBOR \\'/spread, r 1 n ° PY I cond 847-811:':1 54&-ai72. Aft 6pm, 642-8326 Costa 1\'lesa * 642-2851 drapes. Call after 6 pn1, ::::=.' :c..~=·~.C..:"-'~-1 968-2366 e Kenn)Of't' 3-li!pf'f'd· \\'a11hcr. GOLD Bundy Saxophone· Aug, 111'11 Only 1~ i\1-Sal BEAUT. Ornate CUR 1 0 Cood rondition. 32:i. all.i. Excell. (:ondition. $150. llA~I~10ND 01·gan 'V/JM!['(', CABINET. :\lirror back, 4 e 962-0392 • 8-17--01:'>1. \\'IH'ranty $288. New piano TO S f' 0 5 made in USA. wal .. all ex· shelves. 62lj27. SAC! $.)50. HEi''RIGERA RS acri ice • r um ets. tras, J:t yr "'lllTaniy s.i99. 64.}-2644. S3.) -$4:':1 • $:;:. l Yamaha, 1 Trixon. Xlnt GOULD l\IUS IC CO. FiJRNlnJRt: fOR Ol.IL-_Ex~""~'-''-"-'~"'~""-"~~~"-"~~-1820_ cond. l\lakc offer. 968·6351 Since 191 1 OREN. 2 set!il bunk beds; !..ATE 1\Iodel relrig &. auto. FENDER Jaguar. }lust Sell~ 20-1;; No. ~lain, S.A. Desks: Activity 1bl. 673-1015. wa11her. Best ofter.-Call SljQ 01· best orfer. Zi3&-3053 ,_ 547-0681 • LITE 9' sofa for sale. Good 1=b='"='"='='~,10::;:•::'::· ='46-6208===' == Ask for John ~lyt"r. STEIN\\' A Y Grand mahog- conditkln. $35 or bst ofr. SPECIAL l\lad<' banjo \\'/bench gd cond. value 644-5308. Antiquet 1110 madolin. 'E."<c. cond. Also 52j00, yours $WOO 673-3842. Martin guitar. Call 673-3.~~2. cllair, 2 end t&bl~s Ii-cotftt IOIO QUALITY ite1n~! 7 c.'Olored table, 2 lamps, dreuer, mir-Offlct Furniture JitllOS ot Amer. 19th cent. Permanent Radio 1200 Full r1ne ror, headboard, quilted box Rdin'd 34>.:60 ,\'OOd desks, y11.rhts by Jo~red S. C111.7.ens. s prings 41: mt.ttttu, 5 pc $69.SO • Retin'd v.'OOd arm signed &· d a 1 e d : 6 dinin&: room; ~ ' • hi-rotary chairs, $29.50 • We Meerschaum pipes; 75 pc's back chain. ha\'e the largest liClection Japanese carved ivory's: aJMPARE AT $749.95 Lt>ls of Chlne~e porcelains: of used office furn In this . , $m :•rea. l,•ory ship n1odel H~1 Sloop Unlimited oppor. for ad· No dO\\<n Pmts. Only $16 mo r Naut.ilus: Terr11 Cot t a ~fc J\1ahan Desk vancement In a nat'l co. do-WELK'$ WAREHOUSE teapots: 40X231 ~" Coro 1800 Newport Blvd. al J ;"" bus. cout to COUL 600 \V. "th S'. Santa Ana Ma.ndel \\' I pc: apanese -... ., .. &12-3450 MUsr Stoll houi;eful 0 f ==========-I folding screen: Old Chinese beau 11 t U I f\lediterTaoea" Offl E , 1011 ca!''t'JI fum: r.tahog piano ce qu1pment de1<k : Old onk sta.ndini; Pi•nos. & Organs· 81 30 SAVE NOW DURING SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE \\'l" have trade-i ns. 1't!pos, 1-ent returns &: fioor 111odc)s ol every model llammond Organ. Buy now & receive extra discount. HAri,1MOND PORTABLE radio direction finder L\VIAll/S\\', Zenith Royal 790 navlgalor. $j(I. 64.J--0688 8205 21" Colo1' Packard Bell S\1·edish modem console, A-I cond, $1 75 or best oiler. ~1~3.i77. ------. . •· ·~=;::;:=;:-:;·,;----~-.-.------ Ntdnt$dl1, Septt:mbtr 2, 1970 'ILOT·AOVERTISER 18 MERCHANDISI ,o-r-M"11riR"'ci>H'i:ANi;i;Di.1TisEi'iFo,.;R.-=F=R"'E=E=T=O=Y=o=u~ SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE Mitcell•neou1 l600 Mltctll•neout 8600 *AUCTION* FRIDAY, 7,30 P.M. SEPT 4th Like n ~ ,.,. ltTedlterranea7 cu&tm s\ereo, Colorro TV's, Ddrn1 sets. Bunk beds, DeJks. China cabinets, Com. modes, Divans, Chest.I. Din- ettes, Mallreues 2 elec or- gant. Piano. Rel~lg''s, Sto\'- cs, \\'ai1hl.!rs, Dryers&. much HAND·KNIT sweater Qf &.<t1JI'' Blm Bani. Too bli fo,r knll· ler, size ZS. ProfeulOll&lly finished. \YUi sell for my eo&I only $40. Pendle1on v.'001 fabrk: for 1klrt $8. ::.4S..7218 GAS stove:-nearly new, DWna/game table & 4 uphol1tered chah... Lawn n10\\·e1-. Pair uphol1tert!d 1\\·ivellrockin:,:: chairs. All excellent. 649 D a r r e l 1 , 6·16-3101 WINDY'S AUCTION HUJ\I AN Hair 11·!g, never \\'01'11 $20. Steam-Set instant CO~IE BRO\VSE AROUND hair seller, nev~r used $20. 2075~; Ne\\'port Bl\•d . London Fog r a Inc oat, Behind Tony's Bldg l\lat'lg •M)..long, like ne1v S 2 5. Costa l\lesa • 646-8686 Pendleton ma.ns balhrohe, OPEN DAU. y 9 to A JW!\·er \\'Orn, Ja;e aize $20. 8'.l()..-Oj66. You Think YOU 'VE 'Got Problems? 2 SETS or t\\'in matttt8ll<'S & hox springs, S2.) a 11et, 1 ~:1::.ll~~~~~att~~ ;:1.•c:e:: rocking chair, $j, 968.-~97. JO t\10. Old fcmal~ puppy, lon11: xll ky ha ir. Nrts good ho n1 e, Oldel' rhlldren or adults pref. 3 wkt or free doa: load comes w/her. 1980 \V1.llace. C.M. Clrontl. 9/2 - 4 EXTRA long fu.lred le 1 1hort haired kitten pt. Pel'llan. l'oolid orange, ellvtr 11.•!Ute, aolid \\'ht, Rus11i1.n blUt". 897-MSO. 836-14.93 913 LOVABLE yng Si lvf!r Coekapoo & Adr. beige• pup \\'OOld like home together. t.'lotller Hsbrk. gd. \\'Ith chlldren and eats, needs fenced yard. l: .::.~2503. 836-4493 913 3 \\'H T, 1 tiger, I gray &: wht kltlrns. \Veaned & bo:t trained iltesa Verde area. 546-1;,16 913 2 Darline k i t te ns l n1armalade male and l call<..-o female bo)( trained 6'6-2739 9/1 you too can have rock-110lid NEWPORT Beach Tennis Cl b fa il •·-·hi NEED tempor ary or ice cream. But It \\'Oi"ks ok-u m1 Y mem......,;> p, I.,. u•u·s -rn1anent home for a \l'hada>"a"·Snt for •25'! J a . .......-;, · .-,. pregnant cat. Probably wiU 548-5993 after 6 500,000 ft fiberglass r:loth, l" have mitten toed kiftel'l6. 356 A Porsche bumper, Pur· \vide rolls, Best otter, must \VIII help place I ate r. isr Delight! Never be~ ding. sell. 54~9443 892-8881 before 6 911 ed $75. Kenmore 2 zp, ,,vash-SURFBOARD 7' 10" !tlini-1 PURE ~!k• m itten toed, l er, $15, as is. 548-3404 alt model $40. calico mitten loed mediwn 6 Pt.1. ==o-~64&6~~"-;--,~-I hair. 897:..s480, 83&-4493 9/3 1\fOVING, ~1ust 11ell: 2 VW JAKE'S Con1i11uous Sll'ap snow tires $10 ea, V\V rack f\.1eet Bargains. Buy.Sell • GORGEOUS amber, Ion:· SIO, Kl~-sz bed, ) yr $90. Trade 117 E. 18th, C~I hail'ed , male kit1en, fi mo. I ~"'°.,,,-=~-;---,-:=== Also adorable loving short· Old chest of dra\\.·crs $1D. AIR TANK & accessories. Davenport n:>. 673-8458. XJnt cond. &11 o t t e r . haln, 3 It 4 mo. 'MWJt be G7Nl6l kept :&trictly inside. All N.B. Tenniic Club charter 1 c=c:,,~,:,,.,-~~-~~ \\'/siiots. 54~1846 9/3 membership, $485 +NEWPORT Tennis Club transfer 1~. 6 4 2-2 4 13, Members.hip. $.<J8a + initial FREE-Beaut. pu~ black 56-054&. Fee. 496-3600 kittens. Also Mme black & \\'hl1e, 1 \\'ks old. 673-64M DREXEL 3-pc mahogany aft 3 pm. 9/4 din'g set \\'/buffet, Dunean Misc. Wented 1610 POODL.E & terrier mixed Phyfe, \'a1Uf' $2000, sell $450. W•nted: Wint Prtss p11pp\e1, 6 wks o I d , e Group ln\Ul"Anet • XJn't Earnln&;5 • Paid Vacation rurn-2 kln1 size brm 5ets, 8' mirror: German s I e ins, \'elvei 30fa & Joveseat. e IBM Std E1ec typewriter Caraniel $lat: berry se-t, 35.K ga.me !el, 8' Naugahyde sofa ~100<'1 lJC. $Z2:J 67:>--0120, opal pin & ring 10 lllatch. 2 &: klvese:at. I-II-back, velvet ='="="~l'~·~C=d=>=t.=====I quality ni<'n's gold \\'&tches, decon1.1or chairs, Spanish -· --Et(:. Ko. J \\'estcliff Villa. In CORONA DEL. l\IAI\ 28r>4 E. COMlt llwy. 67~-8930 * • 531·3956 • * 6~ "~ 9/3 8210 !----------& Stemmer 111 546.~ ,_..._..,., 2 \VHL util trailer, 5' x 6' 1----------,\JALE Beagle, 2 yr old. All Hi-Fi & Stereo e Sick Leave Bene!itJO colltt & end commodes, G•r•1• Sale ____ ID2_2_ I UJ>!ilairs apt on \Vestcliff e Beginning Pay S ubject lo Piclttttii, lamps etc. All less hl\\·n Dover & Buflinghatn, than -4 mos old . Pvt ply. APT. Sale due. to dealh. aptitude I. experience. Desperate. Please caJl 1. AntiQ. bed, chesl & mirror. '"'N=,B=,======== e 40 Hr. Buie WO"k \Vk. Open l\fon I: 1-"ri ,.vcs. STEINWAY & SONS GRAND. Pre-,\·ar. hand n111.de, solid m11hogany. Superb lnstrumr.nl in br.11.ut (_'OfKI. Call btwn fi &. 9 pm. 642-4512 82G-7fi69. RefTig., $75, Ludwig linare I' , Wt ~e the fa_stest ~v.:lna;IFU--R-N-JT\J--R~E-,.-1-"P"d--fn>-m-I druni, cyrnbal ~111.nds S45, S.w1ng M-chlnes 8120 STEINWAY-Beautiful Ebony turruture co. 1n th~ nation. display. studies, model horn.. linen~. kll.. ulen., ·mens 1970 Singt'r touch-o-matic, uprii:;ht, 80 yrs "'/an!iq. eir, decorators cancellation. clo1h1!1g. 111.·1n Dr.els, chf'srs, zig-zag. beaut. \\'aJnut con-stool. $j()Q. :1 ,18 -52 ·IO, Apply in person Sp&nish & Jl,f~lterrarrean dressing lbl. 9A1'11-9 Pl\f. solr, makes button holes, 7""'=~7-1716=·=~--,---- 100 \\'A'IT Stereo '70 am/fm radio. Garrard lable, 12 air suspcndC'd 11pcake~. New for S47:':1. Sacrifi ce $2j(). &1&-llll62 Cameras & Equipment 1300 NE\V ritansfield Skyl 11 rk auromatic 35 mm C!_mera. $ZO. 644--0688 box, gd tires, tows well $30. shots, loves children. 649 22 Winchester auto., like FREE TO YOU Derr'Cll. 646-3401 aft 6:30 new $40. 64~n eM 913 UPR!GflT SI 'r m 2 SOLID \\'ht Si a me s ~ ng vaeuu 8 PUPPIES • same litter, but cleaner, In Good condition. kiuens, blue gr-eyeic 1 \vies. all sizes 6 colon. Small S2.i * 54()..5&13. 2 gray & whl 11 \\'ks. mixed breeds, 642--0176 or 20--,1""~~,-,p-p~i;~,~,;~,,~,~,..~$6~.~50' I 543--0813, 8J6....4493 9/4 642-375.J 9/3 JI.ion. thru Fri, R 0 FURNfTURE 29<H D. Pcpptrtree Ln '. Cl\1. ovcrca!lA seams, b J ind WURLITZER ni<1pLc.-spinnrt M 549-1266. hems, designs &: etc. Guar. xlnl cond, Sill. See arr 6 pn1 ll44 N•wport Bl., C. • El.EC MotOf' & b ench $44 cash or small pyn1ls. or \\'knds 116 "A" 34th, NB. every nite •1;1 9 t'.11.ch, Ior Fri 9/4 at the \VEli\fARANER. 1 Pa yed OLDER Toy Poodle gd. forum. !HZ-9879 fem, Reg., app 5 yrs old. companion lo gd, home, ll' Sectional, $6:>; Oaveno Pt-efet•s adults. 495-4462 or 673-4042 914 $25; Alum clothesline S20; 494-0479. ND Gd home tor 3 darling ==========I guitar pickup $10. 644--0t98. S:\1. Tiger kitten 7 mo old killens 1 male 2 female box Sporting Goods &500 .. * REDUCING salon maJe 842-7379 H.8 , alt 1 9/3 trained, "1.Taned 646.1403 9/4 9 AM·4 PM \\'ed., Sal. & sun. 'tl} 6 .itrint:lcr, b11.1ketbell stand, 545-8238. e PRACTICE PIANO -I TV repairman ~ase, 50 ll<'\\' --*~R=E~P"A"l°"R"S'-*-,---1 XLNT COND. POOL TABLE tre8tmen1s. f\1ovlng. Must PART Siamese kitten gray HELP-Lucky needs new ,1 x 8 Regulation. sell at 1acrifice! 54~2656 male needs love 645--0137 home 3 yrs. Spade • shots • LEVITZ FURNITURE CORP. •410,.Y~~ -mus:t ~=~I! Bea1ut~ tubell. AnJ;:etr.11.~J'ench Prov. Clean, oil & adjust your $WO. * i1t 637·5488 r11u game ""..: e w ., breakfront, SS:l. A.~sortn1en! h. . 00· Co1nplete "''ith all • BRITANNICA • 9/3 Iema!e. Outside cat. 548-7870 arm chrt. Glu~ top patio tools, iurnitun.-niise itf'nl!;:. ~1ac . inc~ in your . me, CONSOL1': Piano-Ivers & table 36x62". \Vin& chalrs. Cape llunlingion Condo'w. Special $ ... 95, all \\'Ork guar. Pond, xln1 t.'Olxl & tonr. acL'<'SSOrics. Xlnt rond. ENCYCLOPEDIAS 3 :\to. old German Sht'pherd 9/4 $200 * * 548-6643 I I . I'°'===,_..,,._,~- Octag0nal table. Chest&. 28'276 Lanlana H.B. 968-~ an1eed. 545-8238 Sjj(I. OOS-7016 $3.-iO. 6·~3629 I"'""=~---~=~ m x o v 1 n g personality, BEAUTIFUL 1; Siamese 1-,AMILY man \\'OUld like lo shots, 962-6j()l 9/3 tiger stripped black & grey 7441 l!cllngtr Avt. ---cc=-==--Encyl. Britannica \Vebel' CLOSE-OUT Craft Floral ADLER sewing machinr, 1 1 ~ e UPRIGHT PIANO 1,.,B~BQ=-~•~7;.s.,,,-m"'"'_-,----I Supply shop. Spray paints, yrr; old, $50. $175 6Ta-6j,119 Huntington Bt•ch l\tAPLE Tripi~ d re & se r finishes, unfinished i1ems. ·1 • • 497-l:z::il * • NO matter \\•hat it is, you w/mirror, dbl bed!: malt. Ch r l11 tma11 decoration!, Natural born SWAPPER~ can sell it with a DAILY ,.. $125. Jl,faple twin bed &: artilkial flowers. Lo1~ of Try "Trader's Pa"dise'' DAILY Pllfil WANT AD. w Q?;f EN wan 1e d Io r matt.. S~. Xln't 'Cond. Good ies! 104 P~1 Thurs-Fri-Daily Pilot Owilled Call &12-.Xi78 & charJte it telephone reci!ptionist lr S·I0-57-42. Sat. 212 Chicago si. HB T~ANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 1c an tac t work.. No e:<p.ro=w=m=G~IW""'~s~:.i~.-.~.~,~bod'"""IREF"RIGERATOR-1 yr old, necessary. Short hn. Good compl s.KJ. Danish chr S6. 3' coopertolll'. Fros1 r re' 9IOO New Cars wares. Apply t -4, '171 ProV. cot. tbl p:i, marblfo w/\tt maker. Like nE'\\', W.19th. Suite H, CM top tbl $20, pr lamps-cost asking $1/:,, Other ~Id WOMAN For full time clerk. $75, now $16. Mille. 64&-400. items. 19851 Iverneu ll.8., Apply in penon. No phone 1528 Cotn\\·all. NB. nr Brookhurs1 & Adams. calls. • BEDROOM ~I : Bed $50. 2 e GARAGE SALE!! 9 x 8 * VIKINGS FOUR * chests of drawers $20. Deli.k 11urfboard. 9 x 12 P.ug. 55 Fashion lllland .. N.B. .$10.'3 chairs $30 or ~I $100. \Vcdding 11t't. Play P<'n. WOMAN 25 to ~. willlng: to ~7.) Kensington Lane. HB l Clock radio. U11«1 heel. WOl't!:. Good pot;ition I: coos!. 8' SOFA. quilted Doral. newr 'Coleman slO\'t'-& '.\llSC. hrs. Apply in pen;on only, uAed, acotchlua.rded $l2:':1; 7841 Slater Ave, Apl Ko. 3 betv.'Jl 9 lr U AM, Matching I o v e 1 e a t $73, 1 .,-H_."B~, ==~=""~,,.-- Dtlaney'1 ~a Shanty 530-83.17 • ~toVING t'ROJ\1 Pedigree SUl!~'BOARD S · 7'x'Z', Plasuc. ... Fantrustic & Chuck 0c~111. Both Xln! rond. * 616-1705 * GUNS: K-2'2, n11nt: 32 I. J .; 38 H.P..: 38 S.\Y. snob. 6-lj..(}jJ4 after <I pin. I rRANSPORTATION buy refrigerator. Reason· GE RMAN S h ep h ~rd kitten, 7 wks old, Free to gd able, 646-7820. puppy-nets ad hom e. home. 548-2.538. 9/4 IT'S Beach house time. Big-1 "536-=""=~l =='"""---='-'" 4 Solid blk 3 solid gray a-est selection ever! See thr INTELLIGENT Super kitten killens beautiful ra.ces, DAil..Y PILOT Classified S wks old blk & wht female acti ve, i wks old sedion no\v! 4!'.M-3089 9/-4 557-633:':1 914 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 9IOONeW Cart 9IOON•w Cars ,630 Lido Park Dr., NB. KING-SZ BED: Firm. still English Baby 'Buggy to Roof WQ).fAN To Cl.rt' for 3 ' 6 yr packaged lrame. $ 1 2 5 , T o P X i\I A S s l a r , old in home durlnc day. \\'orth USO. Usually home! TIIURS-TILL?? 10 an1-<>n. Variable hrs &: ow n 842-6.'i.1G. 2706 \\'aveerest Dt, Cdl\t . ~tion. ~2608 alt D~l~N~IN~G~ .. -, ~so,;~-~.~-~· ~1=2:>, &1~2928. * JOHN CONNILL "NO GIVEAWAYS NO GIMMICKS" THIS WEEK ~.30. bedroom ~~ S:?5, ..,.;.,.i GARAGE Sate-Sal & Sun, 15""" small decorntiv<' \\·ooden l·---------,1 cond. \VED. 8196 \\lild\\'ood, bureaus \\'Omen 's n e iv ScheolHn1truction 7600 H.B. clothing & shoe~,.drift\\·ood --1c'~A~N~O~P~Yo--cn-,.b~,--.~,b-il~,-. & ·mii;c 629-1827. Ditcov1r • Gre•f New complete. Chintz curtains, C With Th SAT & ·SUN -all day. •rHr • rod~. rin&s. complete. Reu:. · b b I I Ful"l\ltul'f'. a y c 01 ies, AIRLINES ~96S-3=='="~~--~--· I ehildren·s clothes. misc. ~!ODERN 8' sofa $60; 2 6' x 1519 \Vestminsler A1-t. Cl\1. 9' rugs; Pt'fl\t'O &qUarium. GARAGE Sale! 914 & 9f,i. A natural to: young peaple 1..,00~m~~=-"~'-· ~t;l6-83=""'n-=--419 \Vestminster, N.B. Furn- who want eXC.iteme.nt plus! 9' Sof• ·-Make Offtr Clothing & ODDS & ENDS. Ticket agent! Air. freight? * . &16-4945 * ~'48-4035. Station a I e n t ! Re11erva-=========::.:'-========== tions ! Ramp or trawl Furniture 8000 Furniture 8000 _,.nt! \\'e11 train you forj,;;;;;;==========::;;;;;;;;;;;;;==;;;;;;;; the9l' and mol"*, day or nit~. We include placement as- &i&tanct. Est. 21 yrs. Approvf'd tor Veterans. Eligible instltuUon under the federally insured student Joan proeram. Airlint Schools P•ciflc 610 E. 17th, Santa Ana 54U59' C. 1:.:1. $U, 172 . $13.50, 182- $22.~. Bonz.$22.00, wet , lnsl.-$6. 892-2286 PIANO Lessons in your home. Experienced teaclv.!r. :>m.-:1194 alt.er ~ P~i. 7IOD OVER SEAS JOBS HI PAY- TAX BIENEflTS \f~ may be ablf! to help )1'1U! FREE INFORMATION 213/277-8730 MERCHAHDISI fOlt SALE AND TltADE Fumlture IOOO ----·--NEW SeUI Prtbl/.ewll'l!t macb. MO. :\fllkrlus ' hr'uJ CobliaJ floor lamp $40. Italian Prov Inc I a I ettttt lbl s:io. f.2) N0ttt: * * LABOR DAY SPECIAL SALE * * W• •re • s•le1 outl•t for the nation's larg· ••f furnltyr,1 rtntal corp. 3 Room s of furniture. compl. Was $600 ... , .. ,, , . ,, ,, ....... NOW $189 1 mod. grn/gold vel ve t sofa. Wa s $189 .. ,, ,, ,, .... , ..... ,, NOW $ 59 1 mod. ru st/gol d velvet sofa . Was $189 .......... ,, . ,, ... , . NOW $ 59 1 mod. grn velvet hi back sofa. Was $297 ,, ,, , . . ,, . , . ,, ,, ... NOW $ 79 1 Span. gold fl or a l love seat. Was $159 .. ,, ,, ........... ,, NOW $ 55 1 gm Doral love seat. \Vas $159 NOW S SS 1 blk vinyl 8' sofa . Was S300 ... NOW $ 18 \Ve have over "50 overstuffed chairs. $2' & up l\1attress & box springs sets. sanitized & sterilized. Wa s $69,95 . , ... , NOW $2S I. up Massive Span. Bdrm se·t, Was $650 ,, ,, .... , . ,. . ,, .. . ,, NOW S239 Chest-of drawers .. $25, $29, $39, $0 I. $Cf Other Bdrm sets ....... , , .. , . from .$69 up 2 metal bunk bed•. Were $159 .. NOW $ 39 Blk & wht console TV sets. Were $289 ..... ,, .... , . , .. NOW S 69 ... 1 wht 12' Refrigerator. \Vestinghouse. Was $209 .,, ,, .... ,, .. ,, ... NOW S 90 1 .e:rn vinvl recJiner rocker. \Va• $179 .... ,, .... ,,., ...... NOW S 69 Headboards. • Your chOice while !hey last .... S4 e ach Lamps ......... , . . . non e o ve r Si t ••ch Lamp shades . . . . . . . . . . ... 10c '''h 3 beaut. ~old velvet high back chrs. Were $149 . • NOW s Sf ••• Dinette sets. a new shipmen!. f rom $29 a set up Brin' (his ad in and get S~C. di scount on any SlOO purcha se or more. =!di ..... !20 ••· THE USED FURNITURE FACTORY D~l~AL"""tftr-t<~~~~=·~. ciw.,.~-ll .111.1 HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MESA ,_,, ..S, then lit back ud 0,.. WHl._,. f ·l iJO, let1'"1t f •I. "-'., h -rt,.r Cl_. S. ..... J , .• Ju1t 12 Y•1r1 of Hon11t D1tlin9, S1Uin9 Ch1vrol•h. HAND NEW 1970 MONTE C:ARLO (V'\! di•. ~111.. 1iftt, Ql•n. ,..,..,,... <IOW1·$1fffll\ll, 5!rf10 bll(~ef II'>, •1n~I •ool. con.ale, lOll HP !urtio. '"' w~"''· rallv wnll .. WSW, l<.M ••· O•O. ··~· 1pea~er. ST-. (ti•) (1Jol1J FULL PRICE $3761 IUND NEW 1'70 11 .. TON P"<,~l/P. H .. vy d ll!Y ffOn1 .. •t•• •Ptll'IQ., 11•...acs, nt11t1. ltk. (11111 (t•n FULL PRICE '2495 lllAND NEW 1970 El C:AMINO · (1111. d i•. M l!1, 1;n1 9l1u. 000' m t 9ra1" vlnrl roo! .• ., <~no .. powor dltC b,.kcs. JOO ho,, POw~r 0!tH!119, ~l!td W$W llr11, ,\A\ fl· tUo, r1lly ..t>Hll, Slit, 11071) IJ.66JI Lii t Pric• ........ $4401 .27 Dfscounr ...... ' 787.00 ::,'~. ".... $3614.27 ' ' ON ALL NEW '70 CHEVROLETS IRAND NEW 1970 C:HEYELLE HT. 'rln1"" 01t11, lllrbt h)'dr•"'"'"· ev,,p, "'"Hion control, wwtr 1lt••· '""· AM r-dio, vlnvl lnlorlor. ''~· 001') (].ot) FULL PRICE $3063 BRAND NEW 1.970 C:AMA~O T!nteoj 11111~ tY•O. ..,,,\11~ COi>• lrOI, "M p.41111\<llOI\ r•Olo, U$ 6 • 11. •nv•nt, ST•. ClOS•l !02011 FULL PRICE 52659 IRAND NEW 1'70 FULL SIZE WAGON l urbo llydr•....,t!c lr~n1ml11lon, 1v10. •n'llUlo" CDrtl'CI, powtr itH rl"9. """ t•dlO. $t•. ("1) C9'11) FULL PRICE 53298 IUND NEW 1970 KINGSWOOD ESTATE w1oon. t 11en .• d••. b111 .. ''"'· gl•1~. P·Wll\!IDWJ·"t••il>O. •I• cond., ......... m lrrcr, JOO n11 ...,.., turbo n)11r1"'8- llc, tl!t wl\HI, l1111g•91 rtt-, redlo. etc. Srk. !Hll (M:1$) List Price ........ $5259.JS Dlscouat ······-··-$ 1'2.25 ::,c: •...... $4397.10 IUN) NEW 1970 IMPALA C:PE. c,.,, bt11., t!fll, gl111, vlnYI 1001. 1ir C'On(I,, :HS l\p "'1!1 .. 1vrboho;d,•· matlc, DOWlf llltfl"9, WSW, clock. ~ rl(llo, r111v wtlul1, vinyl '""'· 51~. f~l (1UOI List Prlc• ........ $4652.35 Dl1conr ........ _ $ 760.24 ::1':1 . . .. .. $3892.11 IRAND NEW 1'70 IMPALA C:USTOM C.Pt'. Dill, bill., tint Ol11s, h1tDO .. .,. dr1m1llc, ..... ,,,,.1 .. 0. WSW, IYll ~hl'll ,,,,.,,, AM tir.1110, vinyl '"''"' lor. Slk. ( .. 11 fl'"I List Pric• ........ $3997.75 Di1eount ... ~ .... $ 606.61 ::~ •...... $3391 .14 lllAND NEW 1'70 C:AMARO Tin1..r gl1n, cfllttr '""'"'-· tlll'ti. hydl!!911flc, t v111. "fllHiool con1ro1, POWtr t 1H rl"9, btlled WSW, w!IHI (OVUJ, l<.M r1Glo. $tk, (JOJO) 0 1n1 List Price ........ $3555.10 Dlscovot ····--··-· $ 451.10 ~:.c: •...... $3097.00 lllAND NEW 1'70 NOYA C:OUPE VI 1n91M, dtJu~• btlll, llnll!d t l1u, power 1lnrlr19, AM rlCllcl, WSW, ...,HI covtrt. S!k. (:MOT ) UU4) FULL PRICE s2473 IUND NEW 9'1'70 MONTE C:ARLD Tln!ICI g1111, turbo llydrt..,.llc tr1n .. mlHlOll, tn'llHICl'I <OftlrOI, pcwtr tlftfl"111 .. b"tti, WSW, r1dlo, 11C. ,Ill, CINl ~...UJ FULL PR.ICE 53299 NEW CARS ••• USED CARS ••• -CUTE llflll<e onJy. MALM pUP I• \\·k.s t J i\lOll. terrie 675-00 SMAu 6-16-TE CifIT set-N• Sl'al!i. BEAU' kiTt~n alt. 6 vffi P/Sia home. PEDIC to "" 2Pajf tree-I Bl.AC! G42-9f • . ;.; J_9 .. PILOT-~DVERTISER Wtdllfsd•J. Stpttmbtr r. 1'1\t • , l'ltdM~J. !•pltmber 2:, 1'7tl DAD.Y PU.OT If· ':='.,.;F=R:E:E =T=o=v"'o=u=-o=F=R=E=E"'T'"o=y=o=uO:.~pETS end LIVESTOCK PETS •nd LIVISTOCK ~S~TION ITRANSl'ORTATION ~~RTATIDN Ti!'AliSPO~}'t!ION TRANSPORTATION Cot1 • a20 .Dog1 ll1S p_.r CrulNro . -Motorcycle1 '300 Compor1 f520 •· • 'od AutOI 9600 lmporlod Aulas CUTE .I: heallhy gul.nen pi11:s. ~!ALE ~i St. &mant 1; w • ---- Mak• xlot "'"' '°' chUd"" ""'"'" 6 "'°'· x't,, 2 Bl"k & 2 .. ,,,~ II CIM':!l"AIAIUKCA, ·-$l!Ol. 35' emus Crall""'"'" Slpo - - - --METRO VAN . DATSUN JA"'-U 'R only. 64{Hl749 9/3 w/chUdrtn. Needs lots ot Siamete kittens, ahots. Sl cue . , make otrer. 6, cmplty nnn1ed, blCld 2 I ... - - -• l.953 %, T bulltln camper. • " -··----MA.L.\1UTE ShepllPrd mix room ~7-3380 913 e1t<:h to eood home, 548-0021 Crandfalhtt C b am Pt an, ne)oV V-8 kro Marll'lfl l."ng. THltl St.Jve, sink, ice boic, car-0 •61 Jquu MK ff U wire ••p female -khite Wis.hots • coc POO alt 6. owned by Emperor of aul.o/pllot, dlrectkm finder, 110·........ ... peting, pan.lllnc, bed, new e ~·-.... -.. ,.... KA l~i yrs. Xnlt Japan. WW ,trade allo for ship to shcn phoor, depth ;,a,~~ paint xtnt condiUon. MU I ...... ..._ "'ks &~198 9/3 w/children t.Q &ood horM Doi• 112.5 ·what ha~, )'Ol,l o( .valuer finder, batteries, bait pump, • * 547'245 * ... U -·tµUn, &i,OOO act. milta. J J\IQS. old fe male X:old n1i.xed only. 646-1787 913 I--'-------5-16-3634 etc, Jnt. cabin like new. lll'DRN lUll~ new valYt job. '94-429'1. ~!,[ti!~,•. Lab. Jlou~rok9o1n.i 3 LOVING Dully male • AFGHAN PUPPIES SILKY TttrierPuP9ln. AKC Once in a Jlfe time barp1n. "'~P\ D·-. R·-lo' 1 -..ir ''Lm.dertnn. CeadtOdtf" • 198Q·Jaa-,r ledt.n ".,..._.. J 11uppii!s. ~ after 3:3> Atoe .. 11:11. """"'" 1589 registered. Stlvtr blue, tan For Inf. Call nt1831)..3966 ... ~ ftfrt,., -==-=-·.=c•=-....:";;.:;;U Good eood. Prbd llO ltU. SMALL Tiger kill rn, abt 7 P~f -!1/3 An * ......., * '""" points, 6 to 10 poun:h1, Btw, 5 & 6 ~t 537-61124 e 893-7566 XLNT START FOR ZIMMERMAN Call 51;1514 alli!r "4:• mo'• old, """'good "°""'· LOVABLE calko &nd oraog• Alilhon' Pup&' AKC Rog tovablo, ••ntlmul .w Ith 11' CABIN em;.., 15 hp NiW-USEIJ.SERV. DUNE BUGGY 2M5 HARBOR BLVD, 1 1=,=R:::M:::t:,;:;,N=N=G=H·=,=al 6-16-7803. 914 ispayed + yr old cats. QUALITY. * 962-99119 childrt>n. $U> • $'15 0. John!IOfl. Fish or ~Id. xlnt - - - - -'Gf V\V pan, includes front. ----=-"'-1~0___ ,. ,. ,.. C HILDR EN S S w i ng ~s.-0813 914 BEAUT. Jrish Setter Pup, 962-70Sl cond.Trlrorilip.~ "•:,,,_ -~-= -=-,::::: -~= ..-J'-!I end, front bnke.s. pedals A: 1969 DATSUN 2m M>ft.top, --- 1'e!-Needs paint & new KIITENS • hou.ff:broken & male-, 10 wks old, shota le BEAUTIFUL female-silky· 1969 Yamaha 30.i CC-Street. cabJl!I, <AU usembl~) xlnt cond, Priced low for '66 GHIA srats. 96&-641'.t 9/4 heajthy 5.l7-n41 9/4 ):>apera. $110. 499-4198 ambtt in color & Amber is Speed-Ski Bo.ti 9030 3,000 "lL Xlnt mnd, $495. e Must Sell e quick sale, $1750. 833-1092 BEAlrI11•1JL Long hair i:rey PETS •nd LIVESTOCK TbY PoodJ,, AKC, 9 wks, her name. See at 3S3 E. 11th 17' Sid Boe inboud Shift Eves $.7'824. 64S4ti65 or ~7302 ' J :i:_thca= ~ = kitten 7 '"'ks old. S.18-4;;37 sil ver. Bouiht for noo. will St 646-0142 I, • '68 BULTACO, 250 tt. Cd. l\1EYERS Manx, eold ~tal ENGUSH FORD .... q. a.ft. 6 pm. 9/4 Pets, General llOO sell lor $75. 642--43671. ~BERMAN PINSCHER ~~: Chevy 2&.3 ens. for street or dirt. Exb'U. flake. Top A side curtains, :~::':--U~~SQ~ ~ VERY pre-Uy k i I 1 f' n • --------BLACK Labradol' pdp malt', AKC Male. :I yrs, Xlnt $595. MO-.S198 Cat's GT tirtlf, Mien ALL NEW .DiGUSH $1099 tuu price, WlD nnanor P!Siame!!e sieks loving Six pr Quail $S pr. watdMiog. Call Aft 7 pm. e l 4' SKI BOAT · '61 Honda CL~ Scrambler, sprint mags. $2195 or best FORDS NOW IN STOCK pvt. pfY, dlr. Olli Maury aft hom'· 67"1~. 914 ·i:o00 liflt's.;,.,!25..;....., * ~JS..52a; • !? .... tl.P, ME .. *RC* & ~2--xlo't -nd. Lo nu"L Call otter. 548-1685 . ..-. u.7 2121 Astl!r Pl., C!\1 aft 4 P !\f -~-....::.-~·=.==-,::::::-_,.,, .,.., vn• .. v DRASnCAU.Y 10 am stO-!llll or 494-2503. PEDIGREED Boxf'r 5 ynt. to gd. homt'. fi7l-4042 9/-t Cats 1120 Doberman Shepherd pups. ADORABLE Cock • a • poo · 6421257. 1969 "Mark Tl'' Dune Bu&: REDUCED ,63 GHIA No papen. $5. pups, Black, 2 temalcs-3 Marine Equip. toSS '69 Honda Trail !JO. Xlnl T-Bucket Top, curtains, TO CLEAR ....,, == ma.Jes, flO each 546-9921. cond, Jo mi's, $ 28 s , rugs, tov.'-blilr, CO\.-er, etc. LARGE SEL!X:"nmf 2 PaJm trtts 1 11n1. peppe' ---------ENGINE W .................... HP Bull I tree 6-li-25<1! 91A DACHSHUNDS AKC: 9 wks, . ,... • .....,. _......., • * 548-5372. 837-4104 , * I or custom. MS-0508 'IO CHOOSE FROM RattiGi, Hstu, Runs Grat! ~ Purebred Sealpoint Sia• n.....__an female. 3 yr. T •·• Brn shOrt Bhatt 1960 or newer NI ~---~-. .......,..,.... Blk & an ~/ $40 ' ' e BSA 65()..new cJ,t·" & GRASSHOPPER Z1 T-Buckt't Th90dore rna: ,.,_. w.-BLACK short halr 1r-,,,·... mo10 kittens $2S. C1ll ....... &itt. Needs kids 897 7297 ' 846-3184 before 3 Ai\f '-~' "'"""'.....,.. Will ··~ · &f2-98.>2 ;;3 646-6314 after 10 •m. ""' 968-6595 -• ' . rings, new tires. Good cond. w/molded top, Individual ROBINS FORD \~ .... ,,,, ..._car m 1-=========~~~~~~~=::::.!.:::========:::"' I German Short-Hair Pointer, 3S HP EVINRUDE $475. ~1125. braid~ on rtar whJs, buck. Trade or finance. Privatl! Used C•rs 9900 8 mo's ~kl. 5hots-papen.1=="11:=45'=:*'=::64Ul584:===== • '61 BUIJfACO 1'tatador sts. CaJl 548-4193 aft 4:30. Costa~ Harbot Bl~ Pal'b' ~er ....aJ.1 Xln't hunting dog. 567-7540. f dirt bi~. New eng. $400. Fiberglass Repair '68 Karmann Chia, aJr.eaad, ONLY AT· CONNELL CHEVROLET '69 CHEV. ~-TON PICKUP YB WITH 11 11 FT. SELF CONTAINED CAMPER H••"Y ~vty thrv·ovt with •ir '•"•'•' r••r 1hoc:_•1, p~•r 1f•1ri119, •ir C:Q11d., ~vtolft~tic fr•11i, C•MP'f' compl1te with fur11•c•, 1l1ctr1c r1fr19efelor, both AC 1n4 DC, 11Je &-cb, bul•n• ,,..,.end lighh, 1how1r, (11474El '69 ~67 '67 s3999 FORD 'h TON VAN Automat.ic, radio, nice. (18268) FORD 'I• TON VAN H~avy duty, Stick shift. Will paint to suit buyer. CQ74696) CHEVIOLn 'I• TON Sport van. Automatic, V~ radio, sidt' windows, atrong vehicle. (110700) Radio. &tick. (T:50951) '66 CHEVROLO '" TON r.u. '68 CHIVROLIT "' TON r.u. 6 cylinder, alick. C22331C} Auto., P.S., P.B., air cond., low '68 MUSTANli VI rru1cs. Nice car. (WQ}{204) VS. power st.P.ering. N'maining iuarantee. '69 CAMARO Lo.v miles. <YWS232> '69 IMPALA CUSTOM Cpe. VS, vinyl roof, P.S., auto .. R&H. Low miles, 100% gUaranltt. (ZVL180) Radio. heater. automatic, power slttrlng, '68 CAMARO VS. nice. CVTM283J '68 CORVmE CONVERTllLE Nice. 427. 4 speed. vinyl while roof, abo soft t.op. B<'autUul blue car )'OU wiU JikC. IXOW088l '67 '67 CHEVROLET IEL AIR 4 Dr. sedan. VS. auto., P.S., air. radJo. Real nice car, Low, low price. (UWZ085} CHEVROLET WAliON VI Bel Ai• wagon. 6 pas.11., .f'.S.. auto., alr. Low, low price. (TLH933) '64 CHEVIOLO CONVERTllLE Auto .. P.S., R&H. Belonged lo a mechanic. Strong car. (KAB5.16J '65 CORVAIR SPIDER Coupe. Radio. <PIG176l '65 MUSTANG VS, automatic, radio, 5tt'reo. \VIII pRint to suit beyt'r. IJK'R867) '67 -PONTIAC Ii TO Cou~. Radio, heattt. automatic. J'IOWU steering. Low, low price. (WCA940) '68 V.W. SEDAN ''Bu;:." ~,000 mUa (ZSF845) '66 IUICK SKYLARK 2 Dr. coupe. Automati(, P.S,. radio. Low, low prlct. (SKD939) ~699 V/99 ~199 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-1203 • •-GREAT DANE PUPS, Boo Slip Moorlnt 9036 c0all=.,;6'1S-83Tlii~C'"':;;'';;;'.:;',,--+===*=="':=:;.:=1:"'=*== FERRARI ndlW, """"' .,.._ lo B1ack, AKC, 5 wks $100 e SLIPS ,33'..38', AlllO Diy -'69 Honda CB 350 mi's. $1100. 613-2312. * (1) ~ * sk>~leholstlaunchJng, Jmt ~built, excellent Imported Autos HOO ---'------1=========1 T_RA_NS_P_O_R_TA_T_l_ON __ , * 67"'606 * rontlllion $550. 64Z.14S4 ALFA ROMEO N ....... '=' Lill. °"' ___ M_m __ o ___ , e '65 YAMAHA ,...., up !o< ··---.C...:.C...:.C...:-use C«mtr'1 '""1 ..-METRO VAN Bo1t1 & Y acht1 -Boot Chortor dirt J!i~·67s.am 1rter 6 • '63 lfiOO ALFA Veloce-xlnt tzed ....... 195.1 1'. T buildn mn1SJ8'. EXECUTIVE Ma rll n -_:;;========! contl6_ ~New eng, tram. SALZ,S.SatOO WER,!~IS-HPAR'l'S Stove, sink, let bm, carpet. Fishing. 6 pass. Tackle in-A So I '='~======== • ~ WI• tng, panel!'-"-' n e" FREE! eluded. $133 + fuel. 646-ocnl ufo rv ce -Newport S..cb .... 1 ... Xlnt ~ .. 1,:::- 1. Port• -ALPINE IC-IM05 MO-l7" ~-~Q -· Al ft -;--;;;;;-::::-::=-::;::""I-_!~~~-·-........ """' I ==*= .... =7245=*==1 HUNTINGTON BEACH "" 9IOO e VW P"""· """" """ 1• & hodypam '67 ALPINE POWER SQUADRON'S % INTEREST io lu1\Y 1,,. e 642-0443 ,j W/whttJ., oood<Ond.OC.2Ilf BASIC BOATING strumt'nt equipped 1964 ;;;:-=~.;::~;.;~-.--I .,;:;:==:;;,::;;:;=::;:: 1--------- FIAT MERCEDES BENZ COURSE Mooney Mari< 21. 300 houn '52 FORD ........ VI mo!nr, aumN H"' 'LEY '69 Fl 124 c Hunt.lngton Be1ch SMOH. Financial statement 4 spd. tnu. w/dutch. "48 " ~ at pe High School ftqUired. 7 7 6-g g s o er 1-ferc. all or part 968-6595 Exolle red with black vinyl Rooms 1211. 122 644--0889. '60 CORVAIR MOTOR AUSTIN AMERICA buckot .. ats. t.o..mu." hu Starting Sept, 14 •nd 1.=:=:=::;====== I $50, * 968-6.595 S&ln, Senrtce, Putl had exoell ent care, Sa.en. uch Monday through Moblle Hom•• 9200 Immediate DellTerr fice! (XL Y23S) Take older November _Traller, Travel M25 All U:ocldl car In trade. Will finance =~=-':,,:CCCC~~--1 --·------private ~ U'ty. Call Pat cllr. SCRAM-LETS.......... TRAILER aft 10 '·' 494-7503, -,=====;= Sleeps 3, large cl011er, NEW FIAT ANSWERS p1!0.:'~r ~r~-"' ~~~:.S::-con-AD19~0!5°105=~ in the talned, alttpt 5, Xlnt oond. 1111) w. a..t H1')' .. NA $233S + Tall & Lie. ..... Oppose -Robot -F\zdgt - Pewter -SUPPORT Comment about a failurr.: MEADOWS $1100 548-4454 ta.NII 540-11" All models to choo!!e. '68 NIMROD. Delox<. SIP' 6. Au!horbad MG "'"1er Colllornlo Sport Con MG "I call him •Arch' because he I, always needs SUPPORT." • • • going fostl Stow, lcobox, din'r !>bl•. '59 HEALEY 001 E. 1't, S.A. S<~ Luxurious New $595. 548-4156. SACRIFICE. 1969 F i a t .......... FOR SALE -LEASE Ad It P k 31' Sllwratruk, 19fB, Xlnt 100• 6 cyl. Witt whttla, 4 llPd. Spyder 850, Xlnt cond, u er con d • t 2 50 o , p b: w/overdrtve, 2 tops. $150 or $1500/bel';t off~r. 8:1)..J677. ~THINK OR CHARTER $4-$5,000 Down, 5 yrs: balance, 4C' Flybriclge Wbttler Cnds- er. Sleepg &. Completely reconditioned throughout, ''1970". 1'lINT C 0 ND. Sm•ll pets allowed ~~ otter. Must Still! !92-29TD.. m"t!" S.A. Fwy at Jeffrey Rd. * '56 HEALEY-IM * FIAT I4851 Jetttty Rd, Trvck1 9500 TOP COND. $700 11418J2..8585 call collect -------'-'.:.: BTW &..8PM. 64z.6229 s.n.-. ""mi 1970 GMC "FRIEDLANDER"' NEW MIDGET $19fS CORTINA ~.THINK ~ .=! ,'.:!~ :11:. ·=·;,:·=•c=•=•:.;•=•:.:;•?e.I,, I •nds ..,..~ RIVER SPECIALS 1500 PICKUP WITH CAMPER 1966 2 DOOR CortirB GT, J'lll1S good -good nibber - bei>w low book. 545-6817 ............... · ·mr 1115' l lAtM OIWY. It) 893-7566 • 537-6824 NEW-USED-SERV. 25, Pa aker al 1 1967 New 12' wide homes, a)ightly ~m .. g as dam~. Perfect for the do. ~1sht'r comp le t' I y It-. rself Original ll• eqwpped. Must sell this you . er. se "'ttlrend, $7500. 20?ii down 1ng pnce $600l-$7000. Reduc. with approved credit Or ed. for clearance $4CXX>45000. trade small acreare. BAY HARBOR 673-138.i or 6"-1733. 1425 Baker St., Costa Mesa e CHARACTER TUG BOAT J~ 5rii~ ~ ~(7~j or work boal :IO' LOA. Eng 540-M?O & trans, new 1969. Hull TeTl'l.,:,,="'-'="~~~-,,~­filOUl1d. Doc:k avail. .VERY ADLT Part<, Lido Village, arrE! $2,000 Mob. home h35, plus 2 nns * 54S-0440 •. JOX35 A 10Xl8. Air rond, BOSI'ON W ha J e I' l3', FWl4Z bath. Nu cpts . A: £vinrude electnMJltft 40 drps. Nu utl lhed, $7500, bii mot Its, lllQl'-coYl!'I\-Belt ofter or cash le ~er. Xtnt eond. 17$.1311 • med T.D. '7S-8719 14' BOSTON Whalt'r, 25 hp Mbl Home Buyers Sarv. Johnson '69 elt'c start ~ 8uJml a mobile home ? Save 112 w. Cout Hwy NB flfl'.IO's. Let our rnoney·sa~· 6CS-S001 ' Ing experts reprewnt you 111 OW! purchase ot your mobile 41' CHRIS DCFB, '59, 2.5 KW homf' 114/494-4446 ONAN, auto pilot. 1l>W • , , radio RDF Falhometer PARAMOUNT 10 x 5.5 :I br, sho~r, 2 heads. elec p llt'y; 8' x 32" patio, wshr/dryr $21,000. 644-42Zl. hook up, farn. pk. SA.. 83&-1136. 9010 ADULT ?>1obile Park. Kit Trojan 20' x SS' Double .. '"FIBLAHDER" "" englno, heat.r, deluxe DATSUN IJTH llACH '""'· ltl cab, tibergbw tiftl with 1------..C.....:..-__ 893-7566 • S37-G824 1 loot cab over ¥•-ot NEW-USED-SERV, Road Camper, Sto,;;,-~g. '69 DATSUH WAGON en.tor, 20 pl. watt"r tank, 1.1'1.ftn.11.1 natural wood wilb 10t.1 of Big 4 door, Excellent CXJndJ.. room. tion thru out. (XTG566) Take mom& $3295 small dowo or trado, Will ~ fin~ pvt. pty. dtr. CaD s.rial SB7<4 Maury alt JD am 494.7503 or -to •port fU1 UNIVERSITY S<O-Jioo. louthartzed Sates • .....,.. OLDSMOBILE '66 1600 llOAllSJER 1'11r111 Now &nd Uoed 28511 Hubr Blvd, Sain Open SuntSay ca.ta Mesa 540-!IS«t alwr flnlab w/bladi: .tnyl 131.7177 Call Collect. Interior• SJ)l!ed. Dir .. mucj~~!!!!!~-~~ '53 CHEVY YAN 151> will ,..,. ............ ance (ll'fvate puV call 1% Ton c:nclosed freight bar ~-..,.;,,~..:°'::...:.-:..:,;Q!J=ll.=--JAGUAR ~ J~t'lllj!Lll I .11I11 ~I Ll I I c• &IOO w. OU lh7, I<.& -wo-1• . Authartlld MG Dealar '6l MGB • ..-. -whods, ndlo. $983. HAMOR A\fERICAN 1969~81W. .-.'&f6.0261 Bl.ACK 1966 MG Mklpt Convertible, Good mndition (C863&91) dlr. wm take""' '70 DATSUN .......... ____ _ In trade or finance private party. S4S-t05l or ~t. 4Pr:.:~ ~v~ :Jr~~ JAGUAR $WI. 67:1-1166 .... by appointment only, 1960 ?ord % ton-V8, H.D. •-k trad fi suspension, ~ply tires 1 .., e e or nance prt. tarp. $575. 540-36ro aft 6 vate p&rty, Call 546-4052 or ""'· <""11. HEAD!?UARTERSM -~G.~1.a-,.-... ~M~ .. -.. -~--~· The on)y authoirlzed JAGUAR whJs, fm, 5000 mi's, Um deJler in the ent!n Harbor (7141 645-0545 or 675-2216. ....._ Olm-196' MGB GT. """°· lltlOO DOT DATSUN SALES ml, ....,,,, AM/FM, - OPEN DAILY SERVICE w .... U..Bill,49<'i58!!alt 4:30 ..::.:;;.:_~----- HOBIE CATS .-. U'.""'"· 64>--0607 '60 Fora Pk k Up w/cam"" 11hell. 1st $200 takes, Call ALL COLORS Motor Homn t2l5 "646-"61""'""-''·~~~~~- FREE DEMOS '65 Ford Pick-Up f Spd CAP1N EDS N~~ ~::e~~1tn v:n; C-::: :U~~~~ SU~YS PARTS TIME FOR 18835 "'"" Blvd. BBAUUERICK 9UICK CASH Hunt!naton ..... THROUGH A F:. ·~:: ~. '66 :.';~~ -:..."':.: 1600, COSTA MESA DAILY PILOT 116'tl 646-26911 Nu "'"'· N""• pain' :234 E. 17th s-. waNT AD D'.lO W, Cst. Hwy, NB 645-2244 horn«, I9' fully lelf~ . tained. Yolll' inspection in. STURDY J>" wooden aux. vited Soott'a. 914 N. Harber, aloop, slpe 2. galley .\ Mad. Santa Ana. Nu daC'.l'Ol'I .sails, M is n8ll.J:i::""====== ~3971/8am-5pm, 548-3918 ~clea "°° 1 TON Dodee. Excellent'\-.-='=-=1 ':· ;&1:;2-8=:;'"'====!..::==~541-~ms;::;===-.!:::========I mecbanlcal OONI. 961 w. I 17th, Unit N, $595 ~rted Avto1 HOO Imported Autos "'"'· -26' SOLING '69 Olympic d . -------- Abbott North sa.ll11, Lota of xtras $3.950. Courtesy to broken. 112 W. Cout Hwy, N.B. 548-sa51 9' LAPSTRAKE Sailboat frbgb: a: teak wood, full &all Jig, rlnt. cond. 675-2398 COLUMBIA '6, '10, many xtras w/slip. $2500 down. kswne loan. ll2--0561 21' FEATHER Sloop, frbg1a olwd. Gd cond, must sell. $1695. 67S-1393 or 531-5.163 • 20" Sloop-'MXld ke@l boat, sleeps 2. $1100. T SAlLING DINGHY COMPLETE. ·$90. ""======= * 5f6...4l28 + HONDA SL-150 '701 Jo ml. e 3J' Sloop e Xlnt. cond. Xtn.s. Sell at Wood keel boat. Sleei-%. Ott Whitson'• OM:!vron. 2801 M&ke ofter. !m-7009 ~~~~~~· CM Asking Lehm•n 12 '67 Honda 305 Sc:ra.mbler, 1964 Ford F-100 pickup, VS. 4-spd, 35.000 mi. X 1 n t NM~ cond. $975. 540-5661. "68 GMC Handy Van, radmls. Jaw mi's, :dn't cond. $1500 or olr, 548-1235. ':16 FORD % ton pickup w/56 Mere e111. Nttd11 work. make offer! 545-8781 J-_,....;•._ __ 9510 1961 Scout 4·whecl drive, S1950 or best oUer. Good Cond. Call...._ Rocroat'n Vohlcln 9515 1970 CUSTOri.t made Motor Home. SlreJJll 6. Eal)' pg.ricing. Only 16'. long, Bulll·hu1, e om p 1 sc:lf containt'<I. J\.fust stt! Only $4000. 1813 Viola Pl, CM, 642-3240 + XJnt. cond. 673-1463 * E:1etra Ure, ~t A: misc. !!HI' LJCHTNINC, x Int Vt"ry good cond, $40 0, Campers t520 cond., wllge wheeled trlr, ~.,c:;._.~711:_4:.. ~-~~~-i ·-------- mony ·-$WI. '92-818'! • 1969 Su•uki X-6 APOUO SACRIFICE .... °''"· Call mn!M 22' FRBG~ SLOOP P.WST Sell 68 BSA 441 548-.1J64 OR 675-4795 Victor. XJnt cond. Want to buy Wild Oiopper 675-4683. P-~ CrulNro to20 125 CC WHITE. N-"""'- Make OFFER or TRADE! SAOUnCE • 24 fl cabin 157 2l11t St. C.M. crultt:r 185 h.p, bia: Chryalcr •66 BSA 650cc. Good cond. MarlM, Just. pa In t e d Partially diSUl!etnblt'd $350. thruoul P!'l'ftct shape all 157 21~1 St 01 around. Jn w"ter · naw.1-='""""""'""-' .;;;.:.~-~~ Raiuced price $23JO. Call '70 Suiukl 120 Stn!et/dlrt. 6 aft 7:30 p.m. 493-3:996 gt"an;, 400 ml, like ntW, SACRJTJCE 24 ft Cabin Sacrilice $350. ~1-487!) aft Cruiser. Perfect lhapc. Jn 1-~·~~==~=-- .,...,. now. $21111. -'69 HONDA 450 aft 7:30 * 615-m& • 1'fOTOR HOM!3 * All Slcel Construction * AD-Tibl!Ta!Us P::xterior . MILLIGAN$ Trailer Sales 13951 llarbor Blvd, Carden Grove * S37-2952 N-'70 Datsun 16DO OHC, Pickup "1th camp. tt. Sale pr1ce $209!! dlr. <• 11198) WW Wle cu tn tnde. WID finance tmvate party. Cati 54M052 or fMlll. l • 1600'• • 2002 • 2500 WE HAVE THE BEST SELECTION OF BMW's IN ORANGE COUNTY • 2900 • 2IOO cs We have • fln1nclng plan to flt your budget. Como In end t1lk with one of our e xperienced counMlort. e ALL COLORS t" e ALL MODELS e IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '67 vw P'•11bKff flWl .... 1. ,._ v.w. color • .-.11 bl•di:· lntwlor. A-I SMrpl ll:td wflft ... iltw '69 vw BUS $AVE fQOf. See • lllr""" ltlll •vtJ • 1pe1AC!et9. '""'" '68 vw lladlo, ""'''· cwtom 11Hf"'"9 ""'"I, •xcellfllt mttlr, <'Onlll!1011. lled wlltt blfclt tnt .. ior. IWT~·l"51 '64 vw R.ellllo, " .. ..,., OOOlll 11,..... -pjltftl, ••<t ll9nl '"~"k1I COlllll!loll. '6S PORSCHE '67 FIAT $9 <~..................... 49 "'" •ffl'I blKll budlll Htl1, !Tlll:Y4'1 Rtbvl!t '11tlrtt, rellllo, JIHlff, •ft 11141 ftlrl .. ,.., 11k• <•r. '68 FIAT I PLUS A LAllil SIUCTION Ofl -YW IUSIS, All COLORS loe Berlottl'• T&M MOTORS IOll GARDEN GROVE BLVD. IAtn OPIN SUNDAY PAan. IDVle,1 TUIS. THUn. TILL l ilt IJ4.Ul4 f'h •·I. flf .._ltl 1'2·101 ......... -·- " • " . ·- 'I • ' . ' . . . ' . .. I l . . • We~n!Sda), Stptrmbrr 2, 1970 PILOT·ADVERTJSER 20 q DAILY PILOT f~ANSPOR T ATIOi; .. ,,.1.,l"OI< 1AflON TRANSPO{i.TATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION . TRANSN?~!_~Tl_O~ _. ~. IVtdllfSday, Stptembtt 2. .1970 TRANSPORTATION fRANSPORTAflUN TRANSPORTATION -·---··-------I ml"."'.'!" Aum ffoo Imported Autos 9600 l_T.port_!d_ Auto_~ 9600 1'8ported Autos .960Q lmpo~ Autoa 9600 Imported Autos 9600 ~----· Imported Autos 9600 imported Autos 9600 mporttd Autos '600 -·~--~-----~------·-----. MGI '65 MGB ROADSTER Excellent condition, wire \\'heels. CVNE 099>. Owned ~ l.llUe old IChoQl tnichet. Take tr.de or f mall down. Will l1n. pvt. pty, Dir. Ca11 Pat alt 10 arn SfO'lloO or 4!H·7503. MORGAN e 1960 MORGAN + (4) Seater. SI950. ,. * 96&-4004 .. OPEL '69 SPORT RALLEY, ne1v tires, 15.000 miles. Good condiUon. SHD'.I. 492-5460. For ·Fast resu1ts .. Call "The Hot Une" Daily Pilot ClaMl.tied PORSCHE PORSCHE ~----~--~-~--~-~ '63 SUPER 90 '61 PORSCHE CABRldLET PORSCHE ~ Pora<:he Spec!Cister, heft.I. thy l!fll.riOO, lltrafght body. lllllO. 40f-OS98 .• SUNBEAM A11 C\('11.n Al Bratf' New, lit rdtop glcamillg inetalllc Ai\1/i'~I. CJZY 5251 dlr. \VIII ailwr '..~·lth brand nc1v In. lake car in Trade or Finance tcrior' chrome "'heel! ra· Priva;, Party. ~ or dial i.UTs A?t'/t~l'll r8dio, l --------.-- 4M-6811. We. \'l\'\V 215. '65 Sunbeam acda'I\, '4-spd, 25 1961 PORSCHE HiOO. Cri. cond. Must se U! $2200 or bst orr. 536--1320, '536-4 911 Randy. 52199 ml P''Kal. Ru>a good, $295. >16-4385. • '64-C Porsche, A.l\t I Fl\f radlo, . chrome rims. ski rack. $2250. &tS-2271 e'-e1. CHICK IVERSON vw • 519-3031 ..;i.:1. 66 or 91 COSTA l\I&~ 1970 HARBOR BLVD. '61 PORSOU: CABRIOLET ·r.o pan.,_.;:cHE Cabriolet, 1600 ·J.lu1t sell for best oiler super, with han::I top. New ---*--"-61_;._1323 __ * ___ 1 engill(', new t•lutch, nc1v Por.1Chl' lh'l'S, ne1Y pain!, Ai\1/F~t Au1hoMzM Dealer Sales • Service • Parts Sonct Coupes In Slock Ortinge Co11nty'11 Newest Dir. COAST IMPORTS SAAB -·------/ AuthorJzed Dir, SaJc11 • Service • Parts I LL MODELS, TO CHOOSE FRO'! • 2&xl Cpes ln stock • lmmediaie Delivery Se.rvltt ?t10nday 'till 7:00 Pi\1 Sat 'Ull Noon COAST IMPORTS Of Orange C,ounly Inc, 1200 \V. Pacifice Coast Hwy (ACl'OSS front Balboa Bay Club) &12-0406 • 5·1&4529 TOYOTA 66 912 Cpe. $Zij(I just like ne\v, can be seen 673-37j6; :l.W-5.SSG at 2089 llarbor mvd ., or '69 TOYOTA Coro'na, alr cond. am/Jm rad. ?-.lai,: \\'his. "Int cond. Owner. of Orange County Inc. 642-75..'>3 Turn lho5c \\'hite Elephants into cash thni a Daily Pilot Dime-a-line ad!! phooe·64S.1982, 9am to 6pm SatUrday • DP..(£..A-UNES! 1200 \V. Paciflc Coast l-l\\'f, N''E"E'°'D"°HE=L"P"'?-,Loo=k,.-,to",-o:ll • Acros.~ from Balboa Bay Club 642-0-106 • 5'1&4529 in Pilot Cla.ssUied. Phone IHZ-5678 9800 New Cars 9800New Can . TOYOTA TOYOTA TRIUMPH VOLKSWAGEN ------~,--1 ---------" '62 TRA '58 VW ITIOff(QITlAJ BJ[J.. MAXE I • XI:'• ~\',:j ~SOO Odglnal bloc!. !inl•h wllh •1 7Mo· ~· [IQIYIOITIAJ =====-'-=== ~~~~~'.!~ 1'ed tnterk>r. Lie 70 w~doN "'"'' n•t IEACH'ILYD. VOUCSYt;AGEN $38 Down $1817 H nt Bi.ch M7.a5SS $3~ do1111, .,; $29.78 for 24 1~N.0 otO>Mt:Hwy.011Bcf1 ,65 ·VW months. APR is 1.t.5% total ··ss TOYOTA hrdtp. Am/fm, ln11.-~s1. $143. Total ca.sh Check our deals 4 l!JKt, xln'l 'concl. lo mi's. BUG · priC(: $7::18. 8 OTli ER DEl\10S Orig. Ownr, $1450 673-5655. American •nags, wide ti.res, CHICK IVERSON AT BIG SAVINGS custom ntetallic paint ,.,, h VW DEAN LEWIS TRIUMPH boautilw la"'• "'"k. YPU. 51!1-3031 D<t. 66 ., " 1966 Harbor, C.i\J. &16-9:l;l3 I---------'90J. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. • 6 7 Trium.J. TR6 Se\'eral other custoinized COST A ?iIESA 70 TOYOTA 'S P.'9' V\V 10 choose fttirn ' '"""' "10"'""'" wtie CHICK IVERSON In stock. 1n1mediatc deHvery. wheels, A~ll"M di;, lo\v . n.1lle~. Runs like a fille VW lri lltf\UiS ~ lll.t•n. Laguna Beach 900 So. Cst. Highway 494-7503 * 540-3100 \\1atch. (UOvS46) Will take 51!J:3031 E1'1. 66 or.67 car in trade or finance pl'i· 1910 HARBOR BLVD. vnte party, 546-40:12 or COSI'A •i\1ESA 4!M-6811. THE QUlelU.'R YOU CALL. e '68. V\V-Beige, ~/h. ;1280 THE QUICKER. YOU SELL l\fus, iiell, leaving f or Europc. 616-1370. 9800 '66 V\\', Sunroof, Good Buv, $87.:>. Son gone 10 Europe. 613--0152. '63 V\V Lo11 n1iles 001 rebuilt engine, new · clutch, ne1v bt11ikes, radio, perfect condition. Can be seen at m Harbor Blvd, or phone 643-1982, 9am lo 6P,n1 '69 YW SQUAREBACK DUE TO POPULAR REQUEST,· WE ARE REPEATING '63 I~I'.\1'.AC inside &: out. Ne1v sunroo(, radio, xlht cond. Pvt ply $650. ~l'i29. Like nt'11'! Radio. heater, dlr, 1YDX849J \~·u1 take trade or llnance private party. Call 494·7'l44 . NEW VW BUG $55.89 pr. montll THE MOST DRAMATIC CLEAN UP SALE IN OUR 18 YEAR HISTORY! ' ' ·'· ••• . •• THAT'S RIGHT. $70* OVER FACTORY INVOICE ON ALL BRAND NEW 1970 COUGARS, AND COUGAR XR7's. GOOD SELECTION!! SAVE UP TO ON LINCOLN CONTINENTAL $70* OVER FACTORY INVOICE ON ALL MONTEGOS, STATION WAGONS, 4 DR. SEDANS, 4 DR. HARDTOPS, 2 DR. HARDTOPS, Drive Them Away For Only S70 Over Factory Invoice *PLEASE ADD 2°/o FOR HANDLING '69 CONTINENTAL • $4333 Couf)f!. V-8, fal·lory l\ir rond\. tlonini:;. full flO\\·er. radio. hr11.lc1·, Landau Roof. Al\ Continrnlal lu'l:U ry fealurt'~. 1YPT8.'I01 I '67 FORD LTD $1555 2 Dr. Hard top Coupr . :J90 rn- .Jtlne, auto. trans .. 111dio. hf'a lrr, fa c. air. landau. roor. jUES68.51 I j65 MERCURY Parklnn<". Auto. trflns .. radio &: heatl'r, P.S., P.8., etc. (1''CA320J $1111 I 69 MARK I.II Elt'gancc riersoniricd! Thi~ rnbulous car r.qulpped \1·ith t'Vt"l'Y possible IUXUL')' fca1Ul'i! including full IXlll'CI'. O( cou1'l!e, a uton1attc speed control, 110\\·er door locks, l il t stC<"rini;, A~1/F1'1 slt'I'f'o., Individually adjustable li-11·ay po"·er i;cats;L.andau roof. <X.DC9501 MERCURY COMET $1777 SPOHT COUPE. Full fartory N"[Uipmrn.t inc;!udi ~~ radio, heal· r r, l'lc. L1r. :l62A \ G '69 '67 -~~~.~!~,. R&H. P S . $1999 f 1\CTOHY AJR CONDITIONING, \\'hit<' \v1lll l ire.~. ere. Lie. TXU190 '66 MERCURY Caliente Coupe. Auto. trans .• pol\'C'r i;t('('ri n~, rad.lo, hra\('r. sn~17i1 Now ls The Best Ti111e 111 Ten Years To B11y A Li11col1t•Merc11ry Prodtict - . 1ohnSOD+SOn ~0~©®~118 ©®118'ii'lll/8~1m'ii'£~ • l/A\lm~ 1IJI[ I ~~lm©U!llfilW. ©®U!l@/A\!m 540-5630 COSTA MESA 2626 Harbor Blvd. 642-0981 TllREt; 6ENEHATIOJ\IS I N TllE AVTOJ110BILE BVS I NESS OLDEST ESTAILISHE~ "FACTORY DIRECT" LINCOLN·llERCURY DEALU IN ORANGE COUNTY J " .-- '64 V\V Convl. Co o d transportation car, n1oving, l'ilake ofte1". 5·16-5:i99 e '66 V\V CantpC"r. needs \\·ork, $1300 or best oiler. Call aft 3 pm, 6-l:l-21.54. e '64 V\V BUS GD. COND. $1000 1. 642-0036 • '66 V\V Sedan, xlnt rond. Orig. O\\")l('r. $950. Call ~1248 aft 6. t967 Volks\\'ag('n $1200 or best offer. Call 968-SW '69 VW Bug, R&J-f. $1550 * 675-6915 • • '67 VW Blk/\vht. • int. X1nt Conri . Nu trs. $1150. Pr./pty, 546-1379 '63 VW lug :MECHANIC SPECIAL Lie. OKCfil2 $299 CHICK IVERSON vw 5t9-303l Dt 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA tifESA --o-'63 vw $600 • Nu paint, rblt ens:. &lfi.6j()j '68 Bug. r:>eige, R/H. XLNT $147.71 down Includes t1x & Lie. Open Encl VW lEASlhG AT CHICK IVERSON vw 19'70 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA LARGE SELECTION of VW . CAMPERS Harbour V .W. AUTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE 187U BEAOI BL., 842-4t35 HUNTI NGTON BEACH Large Selection Of VW Campers, Vans, Kombis, Buses, New & Used Immediate Delivery CHICK IVERSON V\'V ~3031 Ext, 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD • COSTA MESA "'""· MUST "'"· s12•""''' --,=6~4 ~vw==e=uG~­offer. 6·16-43i0 WANTED I'll pay top dolla .. ~or your VOLKS\VAGEN today. CaU and a<Jk for Ron Pinchot. 549-3C•:l E>.:t. 66-67. 673·0900. '66 V\V FASTBACK, xlnt cond. 39.000 mi. $995 or best oUer. 494·7581 e '69 RED V\\': \Vide Radia1 tires. \Vootlcn s l e e r i n s: ,,·heel. $1593. .. * 837-1276 '6S V\V Camper, reblt eng!nt, 8 track stereo. Al\1-F'.\1 radio, stove. ice bo" S1650 or Best Oller 642·2299 aft 5 '66 V\V Bug. blk sunroof, radio. $1000. • • a45-700l art 5 pm • '67 V\V Convertible. Beige, New brake~. cxcellcnt cond. $129:>. &l&-Sl).!9 1969 Reri V\\' convt-xlnt cone!, Asking $1800. 1970 Tan V\\' Sedan-;Pirelli lil"E'S & chnn r i1ns $2000. s.18-4231.. '66 CH1A, Ai\1/F~f. S.\\'., nu radials, Cll'an, $1177 .. 548-1793 • e '68, RED. blk 1ntt'r. Sharp! Priced to ~II $1.295. * Pl!t Ply 543-8836 • '6S \'W BUG going bck to school • $800. 673-9j9j * e '68 V\V Bug-Xlnt cond, n1any t'Xlrai;:. 1'1ust sell. Pl!t pty. 646--0132. . '69 V\'/ Sqbk-stick shift. xlnl cond. \\'an1111ty. 13,::.00 mi. $1930. 3-t8-53:j7. 167 V\V $79:-i tape deck plus tapes xln! n1ech. cond. 67:>-2161. Radio, lf('ater. fTAZ ~) Small Do\\1\ \\'ilJ finance Privat(' Parcy .. C811 ~ or 49-l-0811 1963 VOLKSWAGEN E.xoellent Corx:lition! Good tires, good rec1· palnt. $1000 firm. ?rfUST SEE! 673-6434 aft 5 pm. 1970 VW. $1850. Only 6000 orig. n1 iles, still on warran. ty, dk green. blk int. Ar.I/ Fl\-f. Very clean. 494-0429 VOLVO U"Ll'llUU THINI 'VOlVO: Ill "FRIEDLANDER" 2 dr. Demo. 'k $27Sll * IJ'SG B•ACH IHWY. Jtl 893-7::.66 • 537-6824 NEW·USEO-SERV. ~ VOLVO '70 Den1,.0. •gj'S2 SAVE $466 Check our deals 1800 F Cpe for de livery. Ovcr!!Cas del Specialist. DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor, C.~f. 646-9303 Imported C1rs 96001mporttd Autos 9600 ·~.w COSTA MESA HONDA s:. e Allt COCH.ID ,llOMT IN01NB • •110MT WMllL o•uva e l"OWl ll AllllTIO SIL'· AOJUSTIMO flllOHf O!SC $13 9 5 llt.llfll e M-'XIMUNI l'"rlO 71 NIP';! e U .. TO .. Mii.ii Piil OALLON ... ,. .............. . SllOAN '"llrt 11• Ntw Cl, • ....,..,.,..,, I.tell Tr••· T111 • lie- UNIVERSITY OLDIMOllLI 2150 HOIOR llVD. COSTA MISA 541).9640 • I I 'f I " I! ., I c • ' ' ----·---.......... -·-------------·-------··---- :1 fJ PILOT·AOVERTJSER Wodnesdo)o, Stpttmbtt 2, 1970, , . ;.._·f:t:'ll~l.N!l!!:S~P~O~R.:,:TA'.!.T~IO~N~_!;TR~A~N~St!:~~O~R,!:TA~T!,!l~ON~-T!,!R~A~N~S,'.'.:PO~R~T!.!A~T~IO~N:!.__!TRANSPORTATION DAILY PILOT D TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ) -e,:::° CORONET 500 WAG. CORONET 1 R/T e,:::0 '70 DODGE CHARGER e:::0 '70 DODGE CHALLENGER 9 PASSENGER. .No. 235405 N .. 101410 No. 1 )5494 $813 . DISCOUNT ... ij<1. I IQt ll $7.08 DISCOUNT 5857 DISCOUNT $797 DISCOUNT · flOM fACTOl'f STICKEi PllCI flOM fACTOIT STIClll PllCI NDM fACTOIY STICltll PllC..1 flOM fACTOIY STICUI PllCI 5,000 BLUE CHIP I w1nt to th1nlc all of you folks who h1v1 bought cars et Worthin9ton Dodge •ncf.tl'went to thank you for referri n9 your friends end relatives to Wort'h ing· ion Dodge. You end your friends hev9 made this one of the largest Dodge Dealers hips in the world. If I c•n help you in •ny w•y, pleese drop in. NOii.CE! "Ju1t 1•• me first •nd vo11'll ,,,,;., 5,000 llu1 Chip St•mpt lf you 011y front 1111 or 1ny otli1r d11l1r." 'STAMPS ' I Sincenly, Cal W orlhinglon If you •re short of money for the ·down payment 1nd nffd extended terms 1nd very IOw monthly p.iyments, bring your good credit r•ferences ind come to Wor,th· ington Dodge ind sH for vourself how easy it is to get th• fiR11ncing you nMCL "JUST SEE ME Fl1tsr· '66 CHEV. BEL AIR 4 Or. Autom•tic, redio, heeler, WSW, t inted gl1ss. IRSB960 ) '69 PLYMOUTH FURY Automatic, r1dio, heater, P.S., WSW, tint. glass. IXTF9.84) '67 DODGE DART 2 Or. H.T. Autometic.,redio, heater, WSW, t int. glasi. ITBYl68l '66 PLYMOUTH FURY Automatic, radio, heater, P.S., WSW, t inted glass. I SAX2011 '68 CHEV. CAMARO Redio, heater, white side wells, t inted 1 9less. IORI06l) '66 CHEV. WAGON Automatic, radio, heater, tinted glass. ISLE78ll '66 OLDS. 88 . ' ' 4 Or, H.T. Autom•fic, r";tdio, heater, P.S,. f•ctory air, WSW, tint, gl•ss. IRDW9601 OFFEI EX,lllS WED., SEPTIMIU 2ND '68CHEVELLE2 Dr: H.T. Autometic, r•dio, he1t•r, P.S., WSW, tint- ed 9less, IWXK6251 '69 CHEV. % TON PickJp. Autom1tic, r1dio, heetei', long bod. 15l816CI '67 FORD GALAXIE 500 2 Or. H.T. Autp., R&H, P.S., WSW, tinted gl•ss, fee. •ir, ¥inyl fop. IVAE5461 '67 MERC. COUGAR Autom1tic, radio, heater; PS., WSW, t int, 9less, vinyl top •. 17J91I10012871 $1995 ' 9900 Used Con 9900 Used C•rs 970f Autos W•nled 9700 Used Cors lmpwted Autos 9600 Autos Wanted l"'-"'-'----'-'----9900 Used Cors 9900 Used Cars 9900 OLDSMOBILE VOLVO '59 VOLVO • $450 or bst tirr. Reblt eng & carb!I. Ne1v tires Ir. bait. 642-0-136 Antiques, Classics 9615 ---·----.,.-\VANTEO; Classic or hn- tique car enthusiasts 10 :oihare nice shop & slornJ:C' faciliUes. N.B, Ei75·7•198, 548-8171. 1940 PACKARD Conv, New 1T1<>tor. Fair body. \Viii trade. 546-3634 Race Cars, Rods 9620 '64 CH EVY Van Camrrr v.ith EXTRAS! $700. Call 675-7817 9 am lo 1 pm. Autos Wanted 9700 WE PAY TOP CASH for used cars & trucks just call us for free cslimale. GROTH CHEVROLET Ask for Sales Manager 18211 &ach Blvd. lluntington Beach 817-6087 KI 9-3331 TRANSPORTATION CARS Our Specialty AS LOW AS $99 ----WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR ----BUICK CHEVROLET V 1958 BUICK Excell•"' traru;portatU>n car, '64 MALIBU CHEVROLET FORD -, __ _ '66 CAPRICE TOP DOLLAR new radialor • new hoses. . ' full pov.:er plu!I air cond., CONNEU Good tires. $150. ?tfUST ItaJ1.an red exterior • plWih vinyl fop, dlr. Extra sharp. for . SEE' 673-6434 alt S pm v.·hue bucket seals. caru. (\VBJ586J \VIll take trade or CLEAN USED CARS CHEVROLET · ' 0511 $899 fu1J price. Take finance privale party. Call &-e Andy Brov.'n MERCURY '69 Mere Marquis 44 9edan air cond, AM/FM radio, cruise mntrol. $ 2 9 O O. 6#-2832. MUSTANG 2828 Harbor Blvd, e '67 BUICK sky I ark small down! Will fina nce 494-7744. THEODORE Costa l\fesa w~uoo Co n v rt. A1\f/FM-air-tilt pvt. ply, dlr. Call Maury aft ROBINS FORD • '66 Mustang 2+2 Fatbk . Ji-~1rr.,.1111••1 .~·""";_;:~l.~V~·~ry~c~I~··~·~· SM~u.~t~"':ll 10 AM 540-3100 or 4!M-7503. CHRYSLER 2060 Harbor'"IDvd. 289<.'U. In, 4-spd WE .Buy al a 1"'5! $1450. 6'>-4537, '66 ~-C I '"-N . ak "''""vy apr ce ......_..-Co!lta Mesa. cw lire & Br es , CARS ! '65 Buick WLDC.: 2 Dr. 1 hrdtp, landau roar, V8, auto '69 Chrysler New Yorker. 4 642-0010 CLEAN!! e 'li6 OLD'S CUTLASS. XLNT COND. ASKING $1450 644-4377** '69 Cln'LASS Supreme-l'J~I 1-lrdtp, air, auto, Xlnl cmd. Best ofter. 673-8118. e '61 OLDS: BEA UT. COND, SACRIFICE $-100. * 675-576.1 * '64 JETSTAR I, 1 O\Vncr, all orig. paint & int. Xlnt ~· $.525. 64&-2698 Owne.r-X cond. AH Xtras trans, p,s, p.b, p w r Dr. Vin. top, air, full po\\<er, ,66 S . W See at 1825 W. Ba:lboa Blvd, Call ?tfanager See Appreciate. $749. windows tilt \\'hi cruise new tires. Xln't Ccnd. Call quire GCJOft Newport Beach 540-8308. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!6~15-04!!i!~66!!!!!'!!!!!!!!! 1 ·===*="'=-0055==*===1 ~~~· ~~~ d~:g ;1i'~i =84&-=""==' ====== f FaU:ll\ne, with woud RTain ex-'69 DOSS 302, 1 OF A KIND! PL YMbUTH l 11 tenor, dlr, 390 V8, power englc hooke r, weber, JMPOR'fS WANTED CADILLAC .,.,.,,.. comp nan. CONTINENTAL •loerlni:, air '°""· Stcr'oo lak•'"""'· ln>r•t & more. Orange C.ountlea 1°"54">-"'77"'4"3.=,....,=.-;==-I tall!!', auto. tran1. <TAY279) sooo mi'.15, Never '68 Satellite TOP $ BUYER '57' CHEV. STA WAG '66 CONTI NEN TA L, Will lake trade or finance raced-Must sec. $2100 r.1ay SPORT WAGON Bll.L ?ttAXEY TOYOTA '65 CDV. looks "-runs lik~ nu 4 dr, re bit 283 1:ng. &: auto LOADED! New ti r f' z . prlVRle ' i>arty. Call 5464052 trade. 83&-6426 an Spm. Full J'IOwer + air cond. dlt. 18881 Beach Blvd. from vinyl top to poly tires. trarui. new tittl!: air cond. Sharp-Clean rond! $li00, or 494-f>811. ·==-,-c...~~~~-·I (#G257726J \Vil! ta~ trade It Beach. Ph. 1147-3551:> AU extras. A "must.see." 2 o~rs. Sacrifice t,.,5, 968-2283. ---• ~~~--'67 i\fustang 1-lrdlp: 289 eng. \\. -==========-! c.a.11 ft 12 49&-3446 ..,, ~=~~~~~..,...,,... '66 Fa1·r1ane Aulo I tran!I., P/S -R/H, or finance pri\lllte part;y. L ca rry our O\\"n contracts a · 646.5396 e 1967 Continental 4-door · -"' Call 5464052 or 494.QJ I, Credit is no problem Used C.rs 9900 _...,. LO OED -.500 hnf,_..,.. glass, console, 30,COJ , __ _;.;;,;..;._____ CAMARO * '58 CHEVY * ...,.,an. A ! .. ~J. Convert ible. AulomaUc, V8, mi Aqua. Xlnt eond, ,,...0 B d v .. Blue Chip Auto Sales • · .,.,., · A A!ter 6, 67' 161< ,. •-di Ex II t ••• •124 Ila '--"' a rr 8 c u 8 • BUICK ...,.. cu. 1n. uto traTill' ;r ra Kl, 1..:aler, r, ce en '1'tO-"I • YI· air-rond, tinted J::la.u, radio, 214:1 Harbor Blvd., C.?.l •---------I XLNT TRANSPORTATION l!l67 LINCOLN, 2 Or. Xlnt cond. (ZZV 0741 . Will take l ;,;o67,.,,=,.,,--'.-,..-=-.,... t 642 9700 * ••• •m ·-Mustang, "°"'• V8, auto, uggage rack. Still sme.lls WE PAY TOP DOtl.AR • _... ---------e CAMARO '69 228 e $250orBestOffer condilion! $2450. Air &: tradeor financr.privatepar. nu tin!s-, Very good oond. new. 67>2177, FOR TOP USED CARS IT'S--W-ONOERJ1JL the • '67 RIV r E R A: Air 14,000 mi, $2550, 536-8291 * 645-5105 aft 6 * power. Ei75-3332. ty, Call 54640.'i2 or 4!M-6811. Must sell soon, $ 11O0, =========I ll your car i. extn cl•an. boc/s'8;' 96~ ';'ND. '68 CHEV. Sta. Wago" 396 '6~ FORD RANCHERO ="~""~56_L9·-----PONTIAC mi us first many buys in applian(es CHMOLET eng . Heavy shock,;. Air CORYA~R '65 M.uslang GT-Full pwr, all BAUER BtnCK ""'' n~ ,., ••-Cl-•s'"'-... '60 BUICK 4· DR. oond. Approx 34,000 mi. i I A ti (l dr "'l •x•-· 1-.. -· Jmmac PONTIAC '70 LeMAn...i -,1¥M nu un:: ""' ~ cy utoma c, • .._. .... , ---vn•~• • -·..-::i .,....., 23' E. 17th St. fr Air, WIS/W, PIS, P/B. $2'l25. 548-8825 • '61 c.orvair e Will take car In trade or clean, Must sell, leaving air, fm slereo, aJI pwr, i:°";;:'.;•,:M;';,'"===="==7765=!.o:'='='·=Ch=ock=t=hc,.,m=no=w=!==!.1::200=. ======""""==530 l'67 11\tPALA 2 dr V:S Rill-1963 Q)ev SS. 1 owner. am. Sttck shift. Xlnt rond. finance Pr 1v 8 te party. country. $900. 494-28'1. loaded. Steal $.1..'Q). (114) 1• ~IS Auto. Lo mi, New PIS. Re d w / red int. $240 644-1370 5464052 or 494.Qll. 1966="'•"<.;.U.=sr=AN:,;c;G~ro,;,",;,"':.·:.;•_cy_l,°J"•,.•"'5l...-75:-o,-r_675_,.."'°22"16"'."'"',.- --· I ti~s. Whlte w/blue int. Perfect con d ! BEST -~~--c=T~--15tandard, new paint &: top. '68 Lel\fans: Rad.lal limi, Priv. Pty. 213: 69!M35Ei OFl'"ER. 64&-3)79. CORYmE '67 Fairlanc A, p,s.. $lOSO. fi7S..0636 aft 6. air . Many Xl:raa! $400 A '61 • DR ~, ... , w•-n Auto p.b., alr cond, Lo mi'11, I k I 6 ~yls-. ;'200~ _ ... · · 1962 Chevy Bise:-1yne. 28.'l Make offer. 642-964 3 '65 Mus-tang Conv, Stick a e over P ' '¥men • • 6~5935 eng, p/s, good tires. Good Fiberglass Rep1il" 1 . .,96=,:.co~U~N"T°'R~Y'-"sE=D=AN"-..C,5~ &hift, p/s. Xln't cond. ~"'='--ms=,.· =~----• '.l" :i;hape $350. 6 4 6 -0 9 4 &· * &$0468 * tion Wagon, Air added, ta-$1000. 846-4201, 4 PM-9 PM. 1?70 GTOll 400: 4 Spd,4cu90 ..,m '64 IMPALA V·S Convt. .air anytime_, ========= * ~ * ,, ,68 Landau V.S autom, pwr int Fu warranty, ,...1343 c<>nd., 1 owner, xlnt cond. 1-~~=-....,.-.,.--DODGE e\ie!J & wkends. Aak b' 56,<m mi's. $700. 673-5433 'EiO Oicvy lmJ)llla '64 Falcon Sta Wagon. 6 cyl. slrg, radin, 25.000 mi_ mint Steve. '62 Chev 9--pass Wagon , Runs 1'100 Good . :a~~ Auto trans. Lug , rack. I ~'°~""~·-1_1895_._.,,~·-""--= "'69~T"',-m-pe-,-,-,-.,-,,.-. ~Smoo-"tb"', I good, Needs body YIOrk. UXJ 'li6 DODGE Dart GT Convt, =· Good shape! $675. '67 Mustang l-dr Yin.YI HT, thrifty, OHC 6 cyl. Air. flflll. 54&-4385. J,,66~"'c=H"E=v.,...."'i\1;-a1"1b"o-,...,au=to, VS, aulo trans, p.s.. RI .. ·--~--~-,--V.S auto., rl h, cltan I rea· Very clean. 642-5990. ·61 CHEV Van. Clean, good R/H, fae 11ir, $1000 ot belt H, Immaculate throl.tghout, '68 Ford Country Squire 10 80nable. Call 968-4262, """·"&;"TEMP=,=E=sr="w~A"'GO=N.-1 cond. u5 mo be. $l2SO. 157 oUer, Must sell, betns ltfmrt Stt to believer Can pa.CUI. wag. Loaded, air, lo e 1961 MUSTANG • 6 eyl, Air XI 1 Cond $925. ' ~-t St. CM shipped overseas, 675-3813 ~ $f!xl% f Ina n mi's $2600 545-0754 u· k .IL .-.1nn 119 Kmx · n ' •-'""' payments Under $55 m0 ' ' 1 c • ri "· .. ~. • 5'1&-257•l • • 1!163 ~v Jmpala, 4-<Jr "65 1\TALIBU SS, lite blu blk w/$100 dvm. 5'15-7443. JA YELIN Pl, C.M. 548-9600 atr cond., l--0v.'1'1Cr, $150'. inter, Wpd, nu ti~, Good I ~;-:~-~c.,,;,--"=_c 1967 Mustang Convt. R/H. T·BIRD ~160.1 after 5 pm. cond, $1000, 675-0077. 'fi6 ~ndSportman Van-6, Alr. Low mil es-. DESI' Good co , Spare + 2 snow OFFER. Call 67:J..1895, * '64 t.IALJ BU S.S. '67 Cl lEVY Impala Suptr tlrP:, $1560. 545--37i4 '69 Javclin, Beaut cond. 343 Xlnt Cond. Org. Owntt Sport. $11.50. e ,67 CHARGER e V-8, all options, Inc alr, new erst OUer. SJG..1663 Call 5.16-1700 aft 5. tires, $1995. &f6-4455 days; Sharp! Must 11ell_ 842-7105 ~7040 eves. 1964 Chevy lmpala, p/1, '64 CHEV Sta Wagon 2 dr am/tm ,.,,~ $500. Pvt J'tun.11: ~II. $750. p h , o,wner, ~"•· 646-6688 FORD ~~~-----'&t Chtlvy Impala, '63• IMPALA SS 377. Full • ~ ~•, .. -k '69 LTD S!ation Wa <on Air, .............. ..,.., nva pl)\~'t'r, new tran!I. &: tlrtt. ==="""'"'"''"";;,...~=-I Good rond $?OO. S.l~l Lug I tack, Nu• tires, 19.000 '6:'i CHFJVY II. Rtbuilt 283 +I=~~-~~-~= 1,,.m,..I,,. t~'=·'°"=-· ,,962-_2~159,-· -=-4 apecd tranll. Low mileage:. '62 Chevy Impala SS 327 'Ei2 1'--0RD Sia, \Vagon. New Jr.unaeulate eond.ltlo n , auto., new Interior, Good ttrea, battuy. Gd transp. MS-2008 cond. $6.10. M7-7849. $22'5. !11(~2.>11 \ -------. ,._ ·------ MAVERICK ~70 MAVERICK Auh1matlc, radio, aharp! Fae. tot)' warro;nt)', dlr. Take small down, wtll finance. f7§7AFU) Csll 494-'174.f, OLDSMOBILE '62 OLDS FIS $200 * 549-0081 alt 7 pm * '65 T·BIRD. air, hill JIOW'ft', 30,300 ml'1. Best In Orange County! MUl.t M'e to appreciate. 494-74 31 o r 6#-'18> ls )IOU ad In the classllltd '65 T-Blrd, compl f\111 pawer incl tac air cond, Ivy aold In1maculii.le!. .$1400, $100 • SECTION? \~eon< Is d'Wn, wlll a.1Tange compl [it'l(1n, 515--7443. watching for' It, Ofal 1 ~~~~-~---­'Ei9 T·Bl6,D; 2 dr. Landau. • 't l'Wly equipped, alr. etc. -· * .... 646-028-1 ........... • . '. ' I . . "' -::c l> ~­.,, m "' ..... .,, rn z .n ·- -'Z ..... :c m ·-·- -- • O·RE . -ROSI.NS TE'LLS . ANY NEW 1970 MUSTANG IN OUR BIG~. BIG, ·sTOCK ·$. OVER · ACTUAL FACTOR·Y INVOICE e FASTIACKS e MACH l's. e BOSS'S. · ·' ·' e NO EXCEPTIONS! IF IT'S HERE, I.T'S ,JUST· $99 OVER Oil,R COST! POSIY l\fEL Y NO ADDED DEA LER CHARGES! . OFFER EFFECTIVE THRO SE,mMBER 6. ST·Af F CAR SALE Big Selection of Executive Can and Demonstrators Now Slashed to Final VFRl?. Et<aD . C:~liAllANCE PWeCES . EVERY . NEW.1970 'TRUCK-<JNl!'SfOCK l')IOW. AT . TOP DISCOUNT SHOP· WHILE SELECTIONS ' AH LAICH! .LIKE ··11 ·IS •••••• The brand new 1970 madel can Usted below wm be sold at the actual Ford Motor • Co. Invoice plus $99.00 tO eover our serVlcliMJ & selliiHJ expense. There are no gimmick$ -or added dealer chal'fJ•S of any tdMI. You c;a11 pay c11sh -finance thru your own banJc or cnldlt union or thru our ,fllianclnt outlets. The price is the same w!th or without -a _trade-In. Offer effective · tin September 6. Bring this ad with you! • ' ~ NEW1970 . .. . . . TORINOS ~-. $99 OVER COST l Dr. Hdtop_1., •'1 434, 2074, 2564, 26.17. GT •'• 2294, 2323. .. , .. , NEW 1970 MAVERICKS $99 OVER COST 2 Dr. s.d•ns, •'• 457, 45&, 586, . 2331, 2314, 2556. NEW l970 FORDS $99 OVER COST Cnty. Sed. Wagon 6 Pass • 936 Cnty. Seel. Wi19on 10 P.ass. • 965. Cnty; Squire Wagon 6 P•ss. • 2502. GaJaxle 500 2 Dr. Hdtps., •'s 949, 2512, . 2655, 2743 • NEW 1970 FALCONS $·99 OVER COST 2 Dr. ·Sedan • 214 2 Dr. Futura Sedan'• 660 Futur• 4 Dr. Sedans •'• 523, 615. CAMPERS $99 OVER COST . . ORDER YOUR 1971 TODAY FOR EARLIEST DELIVERY 2 Dr. Landaus #'• 596, 915. 2 Dr. Hdtops., #'1 420, 456, 2205. 4 Qr. Land•u • 2254. Four Winds '# 2767 El Dorado '#'s I 61.6, I 692, 858, 859 , 2388 ; 2799, 2850, 552. ROBINS RELIACLE MUST ANG SALE ls to choose from. '65 thru 70 models. Coupes, h1rdtops, con- vertible •ml 2 + 2 F11tHclu. Some with 4 speed's, also 1lr con· ditioning 8nd 1uto.,,1tlc models. EXAMPLES: 1967 MUSTANG HARDTOP Vt, RIH. <IYZ26J) OUR PRICE '$1399 " • 66 ~'~:~~~,~~ HARDTOP '$1195 __ _,__ -·· -' '69 ~~.~!~.~~,~~RDTOP $1'995. f•clory '"'"rr•nty •'+'•ii. (XXS ll71 -_, ~~~~~~~~ I 65 ~l~f"~~,~~.~o air cond. !WIL455l $1895 ~~d~~T B~~,~~!~~of,~S~ $29·9. ·5 P.B., P-window1, Air, P-door loelo, AM-FM. Blue Boo\ pric1 $3225 . ! 5-tOASHI I 65 ~~'~,!~,~~" ,!!;,!,• IPSVO?b) ----·-~~--~----' 67 ~~~~.~I .. ~ ,!lus 2 $219. 5 __ pienl, 1icc1ll1nt cond_, <_U E~S_,._l ------- ' 63 ~~.~~~,.~~.~!RA $495 IARK929) . . A THEODORE ROBINS EXCLUSIVE ~ LOOK FOR THE DIAGNOSTIC CENTER SEAL ON THE WINDSHIELD_! 100"' PARTS AND LABOR . WARRANTY 4000 MILES OR 90 DAYS . C....-"ell -.d•lc. .. ,.,.. ......... ..,.r-. Ii llf1H •rt.. .... ,.. Md, PLUS • .,,...._ IMltMfl ........ .,..._ All ,...., _.,. ..... -... ..me..•·· ...... ALL OFFERS CONSIDERED ' TRADES ACCEPTED ' PAID FOR .OR NOT • f 68 SCOTSMAN CAMPR $ -- 8 fl: cab over sleeps 6, 795 equipped. (68C5406l. --· . I 69 ~~!~~:H.':."sR~~.~~~o~~s.,,, \Varranty available. Blue book price $3940. (XWG562) s3 29s· I 6 7 CHEVROLET MALIBU $1 495) 2 door ll.T. y.s, auto., R&.H, power steering. (TY\V914) .. I 69 OLDS 98 H.T. $3595 Full P<l'''C'r, fAct.air, ~u top, AM-Fl\! St("f('O radio, t.il heel. . I O\vncr. <ZSP617 1 I 6 7 CHEVROLET CAMARO ·s1995 VS, automatic, power steering, .• rally sport, vinyl roo[, CVIS259) . I OYER 2 ACRES Of FINE 1RADE INS TO CHOOSE FROM . '69 FORD F250 w /11 Yi FT. CAB OYER SELF C.ONTAINEO CAMPER Air conditio~in9, Vt, autOr,netic, power steering, power breltt1, ~mpar spe~iel, custom seats, custom grill, eXplor1r pk9., radio. Appx. ll,000 original mil11. IF25YRE7'4086l. Off1r1 Consid1r1d. .... $AVE • '64 ~~~ .. ~~ .. ~~~~XIE 500 $895 full pow•r. !NCDQ.i2 ) • 67 ~.~~ .. ,~ !.~, ... '·'·· .... $1 Lon •inyl roof. ITAN tO ll U77 -~~~-·~--~~~~~~~~~-'.67 ~~~ .. ~~~~ ... ~~.~ ... : ... ,, ....... '$14.8 5- •ir. 390 •"9· IU0Ll09) ,,7 ---'65 ~~~.~, .. ~~!~~NE Sfr.l,ft~ pow1r 1f••rin<J. !PBHD40 ) 7 ·~ ';;J '69 !o~~·~~ .. ~·!:,... $18°5· 1ulom1lic, l'.S., (611A0W) 7 ~-·-~~--~- '65 ~~~~'10~,!~odio ·'"'" P.S , $11 28 1: •ir co11..cl. IPOD!l•l I 7 <VJ '68 v.w. '--$14-95. Fully •quipp•cl, r•dio, h••l•r. low mil••t•· IWWY927l PARTS-SE.RVICE - HOURS 7 AM To 9 PM MON . , .PARTS DEPT. ONLY .. 8 AM to 6 PM $ATURD.6,YS 7 AM To 6 PM TUE·FRI ' I , '