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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-09-09 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa17 • . -~ •. .. • • .... ... , Cou11t Man ~s Sea Ordea-· ,O~r: S~~ Still Missing·.- WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 9, 1970 • _ace ' . ., Long Way Down VOL. A.MO. 11" 4 l•CTIOlfS." PAe l l • lllC are Sirhan's MOther Renews· Pleas; •• If • " Hijacked i ··13 Persons ' mJonJ~n ,:, ' 8' 1'!IE AAOCIA TED PIU!lil Pale1tlnl1 n l!U<rrtJiaa , lllJldled 1 Britisi jetliner with 113 per1m1 aaaGard lod11y and forced it to land ne1r two other captive airliners on which nearly zoo persona. were beiq held bostaa;e ill the Jonlanian desert, Ille Brltiah For.ign Office 1nnounced. A spokesman said word had reached London that the plane, after circling' the Midd.le East for hours, landep at the same euerrilla-held base where the two other planes were under guard. As in the case of the four hijacking plots e1rlier this week, the Manist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine assumed respo11sibility. A spokesmaR said the PFLP seized the British Overseas Airways Corp. VCIO, after lts lake off from Bahrein in tfle Pers1an Gulf, lo reinforce its demand for the release of a woman hijacker held in London. "Let's see what British Prime Minister Edward Heath does now," a guerrilla spokesrq1n said. U.S. Halts Flight ' I ·t;oaehes _Win-.. . Sm~s.Jfaiiilng Chaft.ges to Be _Aired· ' lltedl!'I Ille E cr1 •• of Oral!&" County'& NP coaches, Willi1m Fildlen1' 1~ pollU coolrol officer bu qreed ·Jo iNue· bWlet.iU It 4 p.tn. on dlya whe.o tbe daapr point of or.one content hU been~ previoulJy. Llat week Fitehen issued lhe first smog alert and sent hi&h school football coaches Jn to a tizzy. "Haw can we compele against schools In non-smog districts when they c.an practice and we cannot," they cried. Previous to Fitchen's annowcetnent of 4 p.m. status broadcasts, hil department had been Issuing smoa aJert warnings the day previous and not further apvising schools If th e situation had improved enough to allow foOtball practice and other strenuous exercises. A school smog warning is issued by the air pollution control district whenever the Mone level exceeds .35 parts per million (ppm) in either one of two monitoring JOneS in the county 7 inlaitd and coastil. Wben 'such 1 wamtnc ii blael( all ~.,. suppooed to be...-r-stnmlaus incloOr IN' OUldoor .Ctlwtli.I. 1'le 4: p.n'I. announcement b Joirie to be made, P'itchen said, to aid In the sclieduling of athletic events. He, ldded that in mO!t instances the ·ozone concentration will have already fell below .35 ppm. Fitchen has made a further concession lo the eo1ches . On days when rlDlOf warnings hive been Issued in ilie morning, statements on the ozont· leVet wlJI be issued every hour on tht-hour through the coonty Communicationa Department to the school dlstrictt, beginning at 4 p.m. and unUl the ozone concentration falls below .35. The smog control chief also noted that during 1961 the .35 reading was exceeded only si1 times ind In 1969 only three times. Man Rescued in Chann~l After Paddling 18 HolJlts ' Plans to ;Go • • • . ) .'" To Jurdan Thwarted I . I . ·' ' ' NEW ·YORK (AP) -N inolher of Sirllio B. Sirbah, convicted killer or Sen. Robert · F. Kennedy, renewed her pltl Wednesday that the Palestinian guerrillas spare the 178 hijack hostages in Jordan. "Don't forget you are an Arab i nd forgive. 'Mlls Ls In our heritage -to forgive and to release," Mary Sirhan told the guerrillu through a news conference at K~ruiedy' Airport. Slate Deputment officials h a d thwarted her plans lo fiy Tuesday with two lawyers lo Amman to press personally for release of the hostages. The lawyers, Luke McKissack , and Michael McOow1n, appeared with Mrs. Sirhan and sald they 10IJ3bt a national television audience to explain ther mission. McKissack said be had been unable to relay Mrs . Sirhan'• plea through priv1t.e contacts in the Middle East. A St.ate Department spokesman Nld Tuesday that Mn. Sir~an bad been detained and t.be llwyen' passpor\I revoked. ... llOn Boyles, 32, picked an un- UsuaJ way to observe Labor Day. He parachuted Monday from the world's highest sus- pension bridge· -th e Royal ·Gorge Bridge near Canon City, jColo,-....:. to the Arkansas River i;fli6' fee t below. A fr iend drove tilm IP ti\e bridge aqd picked . uj> afler the jump .. Boyles, TUlsa, Okla., made tile 1ump out fa nfare and it took 1 thorities two days to iden· A BOAC spokesman in LondOI) said 32 ' •;l · e·nwns, tt•e·ahn!inis, 3'AmeHcan!·nd2· • -A Cirllbld catamaran · ·11·nor who 'c:harlea Piety, 47, was listed In fair Indians joined ~ other pas5eJlieri paddled 11 boun tn the Catalina Channel condition at Avalon Community J:loailUJ, . aboard the plane in Bahrein. It carried 10 Is hospltaHr.ed todly •t Avalori 1nd where he is undezl treatment 'for lhock crewmen. search Is under w11 for his IOn· who ii and exposure. Luke ~Kiaact, Mrs. Sirban's lawyerJ aaid a man ldentlf1inl himself a Douglu Forrell of Ibo. U.S. lmn\Igratlori and Nahftli&aUon Service, demanded,bil passport and thlt of Miiie McCowon.: od CS. llllRAN, Pip II ~tsZ ~~e ; !11Y~t~~i~~s pa(~~~~t: 1 Aer()space Cuts f ~lt in County's Welfare Rolls • t·•~ ... ·.-:.~.'\; Countian Dies in W'ar Army PFC Theodore F. Bcdra , son of Mrs. ?dichallne B. Bed:ra, 804 1 San Luis Circle, Buena Park, has been tilled ln action in the war in Southeast Asia, the U.S. Defense Department announced Tuesday. .! • ' '\. •• The pJane was on a flight from Bombay millin1 apd presumed dfowned. · A spokesman for the U.S. Cout,Guard ,_ • to Lol)don. Search and Rescue office In Long BelCh At the United Nations in New York, sild a helicopter was dilpatc~ kld1y to Britain and the United States asked (or a Valley Man Faces hunt foe any trace of 22-year-old Phillip meeti11g of the U.N. Security Council Piety. later today to lake up the wave or Hope was admittedly di'!!· \ hijackings. Trial in lleath Piety told crew members abi>lrd the Meanwhile, the hostages taken earlier yicht Feeling Groovy _ wt)o haUled htm sweltered through a lh.lrd day aboard the aboard at mid-morning 'Tue·sda""\ -th.at two Plane' a Swl's.lr DC8 and Tr A Fountain Valley man who was 11 • a aM he and his son were rorced to ibandon World Airlines Boeing 707, at the El booked on manal1ught.e.r charges aft.er their 24-foot catamaran Mallhinl.! Khana airstrip 25 miles northeast of t.he traffic de1th of a 7-month-okl boy has '.!be exhausted vlcti{n 1".>ld Coast Guard ~=a~h& ransom, the· iuetrillas"were .. been .. o~ ~ face trial Nov. II in Investigators a storm came up, ~t they de~ina: the release of three Ar b Supenor Court. • said they were unaware of anything but ' i!rratloll' liefiI · ln Weit {!emiony, h Jucl&o Samuel Dreben oet.dlat dote Cor rouUne ocean breezes and owe lb filonclaY others jailed in Switm'land· and Miu DQnovan A. Van Over 104:74 Egret St. V1p a(temo6n. ; Lella Khlled, 25 held in Lowdon (of tht Over Is free on ball after pleading He aaid he and his son buckled.ion life aborted hl)ockin& of an Iaroell El Al Innocent to ftlony Cblfltl 0 f · Jacketo and boorded tj>elr arnoll :dlnlhY plant Sallday. -maD1loughter oi\d hit ,.rid run. · · and lelt>_llle·~~ bilt the,bo&tfl"¥~ ' The PP'LP, like other guerrilla l1'009I It b allqed lfllt Von Over was ' took on '8~ Ill/.~,,~~-, ~"' ; Is qalnlt any Middle Eest aetllemtnt reponsJble for a. two-car crash last July · 'lbe ~ PlilY Nkl'Jllf' told De • that does not restore Arabs to former 13 at Newhope and McFadden when his waa to8. tired·~~ ~ hQmes in Palestine, the land that is now vehicle ran into a car driven by Mrs. water ih t\f~·pte ~ff.~'..~l lif.Jp(~'bl• . Israel. AU have refused to -abide by Lucille Sm1rt of Santa Ana . Mrs. Smart br9U1hl from ,f:he fslarld bOrti 1 . · · , ce1se-nre agreements on Israeli borders and her · 7·month--old '°" Thomas were Peop(e aboird 1nother passln1 y1cbt ' Ind tht PFLP has made a speciality oi inj ured and taken to Orange County round ,a lifejacket stencUJed' Malihlnl airline hijatkings. Medical Center for treatment but the Tuesd1y after and rec:Ovpect it, tllmin1 It After lhe BOAC plane left Bahreln tht baby died that 11me cbiy. over to Avalo'n aulhorttlti. hijackera forced it to land at Beirul ror Police aald Vin Over left his damqed Piety said the Mlllhlnl only carried two refueli"C. and Lebanese T r a n 1 po rt car and ran from the scene immediatelr fife Jackets and hil IOn was 'tlftarln1 the ~r Pierre Gemayet appe,aled to. the after the collision at the Slnta Ana ... second orie \he last time ~ llW him (See HIJACK, P•ie 2)1 ' • • ' • 1nttnectlon. ' -' Monda7 afternoon. 1 I • ' , • ' ' The eveoJn1 I nd morning fog takes a Ughter grip on the Or• ange Cout: T.huraday, While at1 teri;ioon1 will be spotted wt~ hazy sunshine. Look for temeer· atures in the 70 to 89-degree INSW E TODAY , • • l jl! OAll V Pll Ol SC Wtdnesday, September'>, ~970 ,,....P .. eJ HIJACK~ .. ·auorrura. to let .,.... and chlldrtn ,. . .. No," rtpliM U.. perrlUa. ••w1 are leavmc with evll')'body or II' are blowinl up the plane with everybody." Gemayel then nld he was going to an emergency Cabjnet meeting to introduce a measure "closin& Beirut airport 'rrom now cm to 111 h!jacktrt who want to land her..•• Lebanon intalds, , ht added. "lo maint&in Belrut ~rport as a cJvU airport tn every 11nse of th1 word." TN lnternaliont1 Red Cl'ON already had l)J>ened negoUaUons with PFLP llMtrs in Amman for the reltaH of lht tll'ller hotlag ... Tiit Popular l'ront ~ad Mid II woulll blow ,up the two planes at 7 p.m. PDT Wednesday unless the British releaSed Miss Khaled and the Swiss and West Gormaa aoverameni. fn:ed tile ~· Arabi In ltlalr ... tody. . • -~-~~-'-" • l. -· . . . . . ---. Power Bala9'ee U.S .. Senas M1ore • Planes to \ Is~ael • ·' w~roN (UPI) -'I11e Unllod l\.!le~ haa -.,eed to 1111 II to II additional -rsoolc '' !'llanlom lrpter·bom...,1 to fltlll, d e f e n a e 1ources aal4 todll)'. A~m\lllstr""" ...,.., said \ht salea would be made under previously stated U.S. policy of preventing any significant 1 llti!I in ~ f!ll<Wlc ii;NI l'Oliti ~]ij\~e targets. The number of lou11 hu not • been made pubUc, but baa bHn estimated at more than half a doaen, Sixteen to 18 more Phantom• would presumably be about double tha numbir Lost. Laird has said th1 United Statu ·has continued to deliver arms and equipment to Israel since the cease-fire went Into effect ahnost five weeks ago. The Soviet · UA!illl aljo hal ~·· 141 al\iJI WNlll'!' to Egypt. 1-----!'--'ll<UlmaJl._1fiL-1\tudll)' lllL-~~ ~ers would be removed to I suarrl\lla. camp before t1'e tJPIOliona, against Israel. ~ · 1't!e Washington Post, in first reporting the new agreement, said d.Uverlta would btain later thll month. Customs Officers Hold Meeting 11 Whi t the Bonn and Berq &ovarnmenta 81111DU11.,..i tllfy would comply ~ilh tho ...._ de,...r, j.ondon bldglll!. ~fLP. IPOlt"""" Ill Anmtan 111\l aH J'l'l!I hid to:11rlv1 lolltllw oa i ~ plaao. Cl tloo 1•1¢ alrUne ~1 1 -rill• •ROllll-uld; "Tl\11 11111c1< ii on -lo l!lllln'• lltll-• !land in reNsloJ lo lot Liiia Xhalfd .. ,,... wllll• allowing the Israeli murder lo leave." His reference wu to 4'11 Jarnll MCUrity asent who shot and killed MiN Kltalad'1 porlner In the El Al hijack plot. Before the BOAC hijacking, the British government appeared to be preparblg to release Miss Khaled. Political tources &aid she would have beet! shipped out a1 soon as the PFLP released the two pllneloac!s of hoolages. L<>ndon inrormants 11id no British c~ar1ea had bffn flied · q:ainat tha w<¥naa, but AmbuN<I« Michael Comay delivered a re'quest from Israel for her "provisional arrest" pending preparation Of an extradition petition. , Red Cron representatives asked the guerrillas for an extension or Wednesday night's deadline, and a front tpokesman in Amman said the request was under consider a lion. Britain at first refused to consider rel11Jinl Jllias Khalid, bu< Ille Cabinet mlt In emerpney •nian Tu.esday l&lld 1av1 the matter more •tudf· Fro111 PGfle 1 SIRHAN ••• inve{!Utat!ve aide, u the two made arr.....,..r. to fly lo Amm111, then at.amped "revoked" on ll. He said the action wu "without legal foundation." A State Department s p o k e s m a n conllm!od tbo A\'OCl\!qll ~nd Hid Mrlr Sirhan. .. alien nol •"'l'l'IRI 1 JOi'111lrlln passport, also w15 detained under passport reitJJations. "The departm1nt has Q>ntrol over traYel Ollllldt tbo 1111111111'1 of l'lfldl!lt fr, aliena """" lr1vel ilnold -"' conalderod prejudicial to lfle\Uftlteil Slitis and lt is the jUdgement of tbe Qc:i-ttary that her tr1vel at this tinie woWd bl prejudicial,'' the •PDkumtJl fald. · He added Ibo acilon wu twn~· The trip "was being done at a timt when the most serious negotiatio~ were loin& on," the 1poQam111 flid. ''Our ~tral aone1rn ii Ult 11fe\y and !'IWB of all tbo !*Pit aboord Ibo pllntJ." Six Days Remain For Tax Appeals Only sir day• remain to fOe appeals a1tlnst 1~'11 property ll!ll: a111S1mtnll, Orange County A1&e5'°r Andrew J. Hinshaw rtminded property owners today. The dudllne I• Tuuday. Sept. 15. Prop1rty owner• willhinc to appeal may either ttllphone tht llllllOI''• office , aw. 2717, for fllin1 inklnnatlon or appear In pertOn at NON. BroadwlY. lanta Ana. A...,m•nt notlct• wtre mailed to 1U cqunty propefty owners in June. Tht awr111 -. ... mtnt lncreue counb'·wide Wll 17.1 pel'Clnt, ~ut thl ~s v1tl1d widely hrn .,.. to •rt•. OAllY PllOI "•..,..h• " .............. . "-"" ...... " ...... ...., c.-. .... s..c ..... ,. l)l'IANGE COAST l"UILISHIHG COM,ANY ...... rt ""'· w ••• 'r•1idt<1I •"" P11Ml1W Jee\ I, C:11•f•v Viet l"rt 1:oll'll IN 'tflll'•I MtM.l'tr lh•11111 •••• 11 ••111, Tho1r111 /.. Mi r,lll•• le\tNtlllflitillf' Rlch•1i '· N•ll 19111~ OftMt tarlltf "'"' °""" en .. Mnt1 Ml .. 'f!'!.JI ••w ,..,_. Nt..,.,.t ,,;,~! Mii _.; .... , ltltllrwlf ' ... ~h;J: =~i ,a:,. :::'~i:wtf 11 'Ch11tlfllMI "' -~ Cl ... , Ufll ""'""' Sidesteps to the West Russi an ballet star Alexan~re Filipov, 24, eJl'.p.lains to ~ewsme!l why he vanished Crom the touring ~v1et Moiseyev Ballet Company in Guadala· Jara Sept. 3. The dancer said in Mexico City he de<:ide<I IQ d•l•~I btcoijH ll• WH ;itraid ll• WQl!ld never be pennitted to leav·e the Soviet Union once the troupe returned home. Seated with him is his fri end, Luria Tristao, 20, Brazil. • 13 Crimes Charged to Man In Laguna l\.idnaping Case An Azusa man has been charged with 11 criawS in connection with the Juna 3 kJdnataMg a n d n)Q)estatjon of two teena11 Laguna Buch 1isten and their .f.year..old brother. · Tornell said Beard is accused of three counts of kidnaplng, one count · of ~idnaping wilh 1nllnt to commit rape, one county of asaault with inWnt to commit a felony, three counts of moleiiting chUdi:en under 18, Tbt public . defender is te represent Beard. SA Council OKs Salazar Parade Through City Acting without comment, the Santa Ana City Council has approved plal\I for a memorial parade and rally Saturday in Ppetnory of a 1lain rN!warnan who eharnploned the cause of Mexican-- Amertcan1. Some· Pent.ason offlcl1ls · 1nd ftltmbers of Congress made It clear on numerous occasions in recent weeks that Israel would be provided there were any strategic alterations in the Arab-Israeli military balance. The Israelis lost a number of Phantoms durlo1 aqnooi . dlUY attacill on Arab :Viet Vet Ejects From Toro Plane Near Big Bear A Vietnam veteran is back on duty today al El Toro Marine Corps >.ir Stat1011, aft.er bailing out of his crippled jet before it crashed into a mountain ravine 20 miles north of Big Bear. Capt. Patrick G. Carroll, 27, of El Toro, ua1pt4 injury willn ha !iac\oll frO!ll Ill• A4 Skyhawk that caused a tt).acre brush fire when it smashed into the groun d. He was ·picked up by a rescue ~Ucoptar frorn Geor11 Air Force Base, oheoked over at ll1 hoapltal and then ntumed to the Orange County trainlng faoility. In San Oeniente . CU1toma iolpecl9J1 and administratln from the U.S., Mexlco and Canada beg.,.. a three·day conference tod8y in Presidel)t Nixon's ofQce, ~!1\p!ex Petr th, W~.., White Hou.se in San Clemente. The meeting -one of many by government groups at the Pre1idential compound this year -will cover items including cargo and baggage inspecUQnl. iiroplification of customs procedures, narcotics smu&1llng 1nd a e n e r a I o chanie of information. The conference is the first three-way conferenet between cuttoms offiials of the border countries, U.S. spokesmen Ajd. The obvious prime issue at the thrq. day talks will be methods o( cracJdni down on narcotif.S contraband. · Spok11men said lhil mornin1 that thay would begin issuin1 oomm11nique1 on the progress of the conference beginnill& Thur~y. Laauna Beach Deta<:tive Gent Brook• identified the suspect . as Nicholas G. Beard, 'J:l, a mechani c at a bowling alley. Beard was arrested In Temple City .Sunday by Los Angelei County liiheriff'a deputies on the ·atrensth of a warrant held by Lt«una police Bro0kJ retW"ned him to Jaij in J,agvna. Airport Boa1·d Meets Planners On Irvine City Ruben Salazar, 42, who Jived at 3118 S. Rita Way, Santa Ana, wu killed Aug. 29 whe1;1 struck in the head .by a deputy sheriff 's teargas missile while covering barrio rioting in EaSt Los An1eln. Pioneer Mesa Newswoman The crillles of which Beard ii accused occurred when a man picked up the three hitcb.iking yoongsters and promised to drive them home. Instead1 police reported, the suspect drove the: girls, aged 15 and 15, and their little brother to a desolate dirt road beyond El Toro Road. By menacin& boy and slrls with a knife, police ..id, hi fol'Ctd Ute gjrl1 to disrobe. The younger girl was taken to • n6"J'bY bushes wh~re, police said, tht auiilool 1»1on to unilre5'. ·hU ••Id the child's ICNatr\11 or •. sounds 'tri-ghtened the man. He told the girl• and their brother to "take your ciothU and set out/' police iaid at tM, time. Edward Tornell, deputy d i s t r I c i at\om1y, Hid bail for Beard haa been iOt a\ f25,000. The date of a preliminary hearlnl it to be set in munlc:lp1l court Friday. 1 From Pllfe l U.NEMPLOYED. grt•t Increase in the number of uneniployed aero1pace workers comtn1 to u1 for help?" Peope1 s1id it wa1 a tot.ally new experience in hl111departm1nt to find 10 ml'rly 1kllled englneerJ. technician• and executlvea joinln& the food stam p program rolu. \4Norma1ly we de1l larg!ly with unskilled persons and tbe indiient." He \,1uessed that the a e r o s p a c e enginiers had used up there 1ix months of unlmtiloym ent checks and have nowhere ei,se to turn. "If thl's treM doesn't level off in the near futu/oe we .are going to have a real probleltl staying within our budget, which is alrtlldy 1ubstantlally gruter than t11t yea r," Peoples added. In a determined attempt lo remedy the s~\lled · 1'1em~loymen.t s j t u a t i on • Su~rvl101' !)avld Baker and Williama Ph1lliJ>11\1\'e been named to a committee to· huddle, with state and feder1l lea;islators representing the county to heoptulty 11ln new a~roapace contracts. Jn I.he la1t 11 month• 10,700 workers 'have blen •laid off by the county's atr01pace ind electronic indu1trle1 because of the present recession •l'ld cutbac~ i/! Ui~ftder1l budaet.. Some npl_p for the ind ustry may coma fl'Qn'\ \he ( dtsianatlon hast week of the cowty ps an area of "substantial unemp1o¥rnent." Thts me1n1 that firms here will recejve preference In bidding on certain federal lluytnc contracta and public . works proJeell~ • l SF J}1nploy1nent Rises Say~ State Agency s~ Fl\ANCISCO !UPIJ -There ~er• 1,W ,4a0 Jieriono employed ~urin1 Au1Ust 1n r1v1 6-1! Franolscc Bay Area counties, an increasf of 5,200 ovtr a year a10, the SI.alt Department of Human Resource• u id Tue1day. The Auiu1t 1970 employment fiaure was 9,SOO gre1ter than In the precedlna month, while tho AufU't 19 7 0 une1nploym1nt fiaure 11 decrease of 3,100 from the month before. Counties cove.red ire San Francisco, Alameda Contra Costa, Marin and San Mateo. ' The Orange County A I r p o r t Commission aareed Tuesday to meet with the Orange County Pl.Ming Commllllon on Slpt. 29 for a joint sess ion to discms aviation plans of the pro~cny of Irvine. 'n10 -tjnJ will be held Ill' dlf btlore the Ralph M. ParSQns Cornptny present! the Oranae County Board of Sppervisors wlth Phase II of the company'• report en the future Ot Oranac County aviaUon1 which Ja due Sept. 10. The Air part Comm!lsion decided to meet with the Planninc C.Ommiuto11 prior to the presentation of Pha11e II to team "what the Planning Commission says about airports on the Irvine Ranch.'' Commission Chairman Howard H. Lathrop noted that the Irvine Compariy'1 proposed city provides no provision for aviation, The Parsons Company, workln1 undtr a $140,000 contract with the county, preiented an interim Phase II report to the Board of Supervisors on July 21. The first part of Phasa II of the aviation study concerned Qnly Oranu:e: County Airport. The second part of Phaae II will determine if the county ha1 another feaalblc sl&ht on which an alrport could be built, Tin.y Topless Tripper Tagged A petite blOllde -only four feet , 10 inchea tall and a dainty 88 pounds -was arrested at Costa Mesa's Firehouse bar Thursday. Nllde Sheila · J. McClelland, ii, or Walnut, w11 hu1tled out of the nis:ht 1pat at 177 E. 171.h St., and bookltd into Or1nae County Jail on ch1raes of indecent exposure .. She was immediately released on $625 bail, as have been most naked Firehouse d1.1ncers arreated on ch1ra:es of either indecent expoautt or lewd CQn~uct. The ci~y vows to continue enforcing the Jaw, )llh1le ownera af taverns featqrin1 such show• are dedicated to aettlnc ttit statutes overturned as unconstitutional. Cook Arrested On Pot Charges . A c:ooi wiJ<> aUe~edlY became involved pro(esslOJialiY Wilh the wrong ~Ind of Pill has been arrested after a Costa Men detective purchaltd what appeared to bl six ounces of marijuana. Terrenca K. Calderwood , 2t, ol Ill J!). 16lh St .. was booked on charaes of salt of marijuana, a felony , and the aeparatt pack11e1 conf11cated as evidence. Narcotics Detective Bob Lennert sai d the suspected contraband -lncludk\1 three addlllonat one ounce b11s -woUld be turned over to the State Bureau of Narcotlca Enforcement for analyats. The tran1actlo" o c cu r r e d a\ Calderwood'11 tra iler home Monday, investigators alleged. ·A Los 4nitlt!s County Coroner's lnquqt epen.' 'lllursday to determine whetht( 8aluar'1 dlath wu accidental 11e&ligible or due to criminal causes. " Gertrude Edick, 80, Dies Mrs. Sally Salazar has sued for $1 million, claiming wrongful death at the hands of lawmen. The Santa Ana council, meanwhile. vo~d f\lesday to authorize the Ruben Salazar M11mol'ial C.Ommittee of Brtt. led by Ralph Echave, to uae rnlll!iclpal property. Echave predicts up1 to S,000 Chicanos ap~ their SYillPJf.Pizert will participate in (he 10 a.m. march, wlllch he1lne In i1 Salvador Par~. 11115 Civic Ctnler-Drive Wtlt. The process.ion will continue on from there to Santa Ana Municipal Stadium at Civic Center Driv1 and Flower Street, for a one-hour tulOlf to laluar. Donation• will IM accepted durinr·tha event for the Ruben Salazar journalism scholarship which will annually be awarded to a Chicano youi.p planning to enter th1t field. hlanr dl•ttnaullhed himeelf 11 • war corrapondtnt ror tl\e lDS .A.n&elu Time• and had won award• for reportln& or sociological and athor 11pecll of the Qhlo1no community. Wauon Appeal Denied NEW ORLEANS (UPll -The llh U.I. Circuit Court or Appeal• deftitd a rahearin&: Tuesday on lhe extradition appeal of Charle1 O. Wat10n, the Tex11 youth implicated along with other "Manson F•mlly" membtr1 in tha Tile· La Blanca murders in Loi An11l11. The ·court ordered Watson bt turned over ID CaUforni1 1uthorities by Friday. P"'-C<llll MtN l'llldonl Mrw. Gortru4I 1!111lmln Edick -whole -•paper """' .,._ four dacadea ..:. dlld Tullday, ptObably la1vin1 11 many friindl u anyone tn town. &ho ,.., Ill l"ll'I old. Mn. ,!llllc,k, pf l!TI Monrovia ~ve., moved to C<>tll )iaoa In 11111 wltll har hlllbllld, 1naur .... 1511111 Edwin !dick, who dlld II )'tlll 150. Sit• wu th• flrtl oirculaUon manasor of Iha old C<llll M111 Globe-Herald, forltlll1lltt' or Iha DAILY PILOT, and W?Qte a 111<i1ty notu column for many Ylll'I. "Sha probably !mew more paoplt than anyone tin tn town," remarked her dauihler, Mn. Marjorie Halnu, aloo of Colla MNI. Funeral Hrvlcea lor Mrt. Edick will be Saturday al IO:IO a.m. In Iha Fint United Melhodlat Church, whert 1hl wa1 an aetlvt member for .o yt1r1. She Wit a tntmber of the choir for 3' yeal'I, and lha famUy • u 1 1 e 1 t 1 conlrlbutlw to Iha Memorial Fund of lh1 church. Th• Rev. Richard Dunlap will offlclall at tht Saturct.ay rita and interment will follow at Westminster Memorial Park, with Bell Broadway Mortuary in charge. Survlvora include 1 ton, t;dwln Eastman Edick, of Onion: d1u1ht1r1 Mr•. Marjorie Hatnu. Ol eo.i. M111; W•'vt t&JraD the~ off C1V finellt watoh 10 J011o OD .. tht "Ullidt'' pnoll!OD ftorJ J. \ft "'1 .. \ jodp a W hr ~ ... • 1 •at• b7 It• .,,.... .. ~ Oalr w\11 ,.. lttlt IN:JmE qa JHi tPP~ Ila• ....... ..,.n. ..-ilr•f 0sPqt woibulh._ Tlrl"IJtarMcl" -i. 11,..i.l ...U __ _ '" dte 91i"""'ki1Uat1\ bitll tf ..., "" ... IM·lailol .. • P•~lf· ...... ~ row ~ wb1d• &ht S..flM.lltr wldlt fW..., l• ~ .. u ,...,. ... _i.,11,.....,,. -xltitJb1ck.• will lltlp JOI ,,.,,..,, •'1 ,.. troUAl1ft'OlaDl•lf0.tll• COfllC la .. a frJiie W1111Nliaa., Sttml•i.'• ,_,...._ • 182l NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVINllNT ll!MS IA'NKA MiltlCAll~ASTill CHA~&E 24 YEA•S lH SAME LOCATION tHONE S41·l401 tAU.'f' '!LOT'"",_ DIAD AT 10 Oortrud1 ldlok Mrs . Florence G. Wilkinson, of Santa Ana Heights : Mrs. Jeanne Tuttle, of Long Beach; 1 broth er Herbert C. Ea1tman, of Mode1to and 11 arandchildren. t•I( ltfUll••· tul01T11\lc caltn4• t.1tur1. 111$1 C~Qltc 91' "'ll""° b1c•" or •11•11'1ti.i •1t1'1rtof• ..._ VISIBLE IACK White th1 "Mlttrbfc•" St., 11111tir II dul1n•• t• •ttl.ir cl1mon1t11tt Omt(t cr1fb111p l h!D ll fl'll' ~I •etll I! .. lft, OU'ltr 0111111. M1•ti 1 ....... ln1 tl1Wl111llM •!tl• '''""~ .......... ... tr,:ntl c111/ f>t•• u •tl• i.,.11 I \ I I • \I -- Q~ntington Beaeh EDIIION ' VOL. 63, NO. 216, 4 SECTIONS, 66 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1970 Council Lauds Center Plan, Winces By TERRY COVILLE Of flit Oelty rlltt 11111 \ Architect Kwrt ~Ieyer unveiled the model of a $9.9 million civic center-for Huntington Beach Tuesday night. It brought pra~ and exclamations from the city council. It also brought quick counter propoals from city o!ftcfals to <;ut the costs. While everyone agreed M e y e r • s conception of the civic center was beautiful, they reminded him the cily has ra only $11 .5 million with which to build not only the civic center but a new library and rorporation y~rd!.. Councilmen rfferred the architect's proposals to city staff for joint meetings to follow up se·ve.ral ..uggeslioi:i! made by City Manager Doyle Miller. - "Our staff estimates 'the tot.al cost of this civic center shown here at $9.9 million,'' Miller told ,councilmen. ''That wl)\lld only leave $1.6 milllon for lh• s library, estimates for which have already run over $3.5 million." Miller presented five basic alternatives to reduce the civic center costs. -Instruct the architect to reduce construction costs to a maximum of $8 million -perhaps by phasing part of the project. -Proceed with the project as planned, but consider briJJging the library and civic center under one contract and perhaps moving the library to the civic center site . -Delay -a partlon of the capitol improvements program such as the library, the civic center of the corporation yards. -P.1ake a major cut in the library project by reducing space or moving it to the civic center. -Build the civic center in phases and no reduce the space of some areas, auch 1s the jail. Meyer and Miller agreed they ahould talk over the proposals to find the best method for accomplishing the task. Meyer's plans for the fl.acre civic center site at Main and Mansion Strttts IOcluded: -A five-story adminlstraton building, housing most city departm"eots. -A one-story connectlng wing for operational departmenta. er Tax Measures Pass: Issues Okay~d Amid Confusion The man who said the only sure things In life are death and taxes never stopped ir. Huntington Beach. II he passed by the city council Tuesday night he would have found cxiuncllmen quite unsure about taxes. They played a sfow version of 20 questions with a five percent utility tax, a 50 perceJ1t increase in business licenses, a ~per-unit apartment tax, and elimina- tion of the trash cxilleelion fee for home· owners. All four measures finally passed, but only after much confusion. More Drug, Sex Stories From Marina Palace Told More allegations of narcotics use and 1exual intimacies at Saturday night Marina Palace dances were disclosed Tuesday as Seal Beach Police Chief Lee Case presented testimony of two guards during the dance hall license hearing. Patrick MacManus, of Long Beach, and Scott Childress of Seal Beach both testified that they had seen the use or marijuana and pills in the quonset-styled building located on Pacific Coast Hi ghway. The operator. William L. "Bill" &bertson, 71. of Seal Beach, could lose his business license if the charges are found to be true by the . City Council which is sitting as a quasi-judiciary body in the hearing. Childress to ld the council that he twice tried to inform Robertson a b o u t misconduct -including narcotics use - but was waved off by 1 gesture "of don't bother me." "After that, I didn't try any more because I figured he didn't want to be bothered by what I had to say," Childress, a criminology major at Long Beach Slate College, told the council. The p~tion's case is expected to conlinue for t1le remainder 't>f the week with about lO:witnesses still remaining, according to POiice Lt. Al Chafe who is assisting the chief with the case. After that, it will be the prosecution's turn .with Attorney Russell Bledsoe seeking to prove that the charges against the dance hall were politically motivated. Robertson has named several city officials in a conspiracy to divert attention from a "land grab" in Seal Beach by preS!ing charges against the 1.farina Palace. Hard Lattdittg on the Beach Here's how the taxes went : A:s expected, the five percent utility tax, up for a routine second reading of the ordinance, was staunchly opposed by th:! Huntingtoa . Bealil Chamber of Commerce. "With this utility tax we, the business cximmunity, ·are picking up most of the capital improvements (civic ~ter, library) voted on by the cttiz~," complained Allan ~r. manaaer of U:e Broadway Department Store. Speakers f9r the chamber 11ked Uult a gross receipts business license fee be substituted in place of the uUlity Jax. Councilman Jack Green, remiJM:led chamber officials that, when a gross receipts tax was first proposed, the chamber supported it, then denounced it, causing its death. "But the business community Is supporting all the cosls of these aew laxes," chamber officials complained. "That's right," replied Green. "There's no question that the council wants to shift the burden of taxes off the homeowner." Councilmal\ George McCracken took exception to that point as he called for reduction of the proposed utility lax from five percent to three percent. He gained momentary support from Councilwoman Norma Gibbs w h o suggested rei11stating an oil tax to pick i=p revenue. Mrs. Gibbs changed her mind on lowering the utility tax alter Finance Director Ben Arguello explai1ed how much money it meant to the city ,and (Ste TAXF.S, Page Z) • < ••• --• DAILY l'ILOT ....... '1111.-. NIM!Mlllll Rescuers prepare to lift Patricia A. Meredith, 19, Buena Park, from smashed car which came to rest on the beach after tumbling over ls.root en· bankment in Huntington Beach about 8 o'clock this morning. Witnesses said the car failed to make atop at 22nd Street, continued across Pacific Coast Highway and bounced down to the beach. Miss Meredith, the car's only occupant, was injured. • • TODD TICKNER TAKES THE WHEEL OF HIS GO:CART Who Says • Sm11 rt Kid Can't Have Fun Too? Genius At Age 7 V alwy Boy Pint-sized Eins.tein By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 ltlt Cell' l"ti.t Ii.ff Every mother thinks her child Is a genius. 1'1rs. Jack Tickner of Fountain Valley is no exception. But in her case it just happens to be true. Everyone m. ·the family expects little Todd, aged 7, to do great things. His encyclopedic knowledge astounds most everyone and his skill in mathematics makes ·rum a pint-siiid verslolf of Albert Einstein. · · "When he was 18 rnonlhs old We began to think he was kind of special," his mother said with a 5mlle. "He knew how to count to 100, could print his name and memorize the plots of children's books." Jn later years -between the ages o( 2 and 4 -he began to further amaze his parents by learning how to read, construct his own games and puules and by making calenders for the nest six years to come . Todd's interest in reading h11:s continued through the years, progressing to more intellectual volumes. Last summer, for instance, he polished off "Atlas Shrug· ged," which is pretty weighty material even for college graduates. He Is also capable of reciting all the U.S. preakienta, capitols of each 1tate, .counties, carnivorous and plant-eating ditlosaurs. and other bits and piece• high school students often have trouble remembering. "I just look at something for one day and then I can remember it forever," Todd explained matter of factly. Don Hendricks, principal at Fountain Valley's Nieblas School is equally Impressed with the youngster's .performance and says he Is enrolled in a 1pecial "ll)entally gifted m I n ¥ r s ' • J>rogram where 1tud~nts study advanced fields such ai oceanography &ad the IOJar aystem, · HiS interests also carry •Over to non- intellectual pursuits, among them driving his own go-cart and playing Pop Warner football. . "He's be good for some kind of 1tatisUcian'1 job because he has a photogr1phic memory and remem.bera everything,'' said his mother who es:pecta him to pursue a scientific career. - Bu~ while his parerits wait with bated breath for what he will ultimately do, Todd flr'lnly insist!, "I want to be a fireman." Driving one of the big red engines is apparently evert ch1ld's dl'tam -evrtl if he Is a genius. Surf Coniest Judge Picked Wave and style expert Bill Swarts of Los Angeles will replace his father A. E, ''Hoppy" Swarts this year as chief judge during HuntlngtOn Beach'• IMUal U.S. Surfboard Championshi~. He 'will lead a 10.member team of Judges in deciding who the winners will be in the competition scheduled for July 19-20 off the munld pal pier: Other judges for lhe event which Is now In Ill Utb runnin& Include Del C.nnoo of • San Clementt: Don Hod..,, South Lquna; Ron Roc~ey, J0glewood ; Paul Heu1tan1tam, W hi t t I e r ; Marp McClelland, Laguna Beach, and Byron Williamson , Houston, Tex. The judging team will be rounded out by ye t unnamed representaUves ot the Eastern Surfing Association, Hawaiian Surfing Aasoclation and Western SUrfin& Association. . .r Tod•y'a Flnal N.Y. Stoeks fEN CENTS at Cost -A two-level council chamber with seating for 125 people. -A three-story police station. Total area space would be 220,95$ square feet. "It stands to reason that all the space In thia model need not be used rigbl away," Meyer tol4 the council . He aatd by leaving the top noor of the administration building unfinished inside (See MoDEL, Pqe I) ane 113 Aboard Latest Jet Captured By THE .IBSOCIATED PRESS Palestinian guerrillas hijacked a British jetliner with 113 persons aboard today and forced It to land near two other capl!.ve airliners on which nearly 200 persons were beiag held hostage bl the Jordanian desert, the British Foreign Office announced. A spokesman said ward bad re.ached LondOll that the plane, aft.tr circling thei Middle Ea§.t. for hours, landed at the same ,.,rilla·bdd base where the two othef pllnea were under auanf. As in the cue of the four hijacking plots earlier tbiJ .,.k, the Marmt Popidor Frant -the J.ll><ration. of PaktlUne assumed responsibility. A rpokesmaft said the PFLP teized the BriUJb OVeneas Airways COrp. VCIO, after if& take of( from Bahrein in lhe Persian Gulf, to reinforce itl demand for the release of 1 woman hijacker held in London. "Let's see what British Prime Minister Edward Heath does now," a guemtla spokesman said. A BOAC spokesman in London said 32 Britons, 12 Bahreinis, 3 Americans ·a.nd 2 Jndiana joined 54 other passengers aboard the plane In Bahrein. It carried 10 crewmen. The plane was on a flight from Bombay to London. At the United Nations in New York, !See HUACK, Page Z) PILOT AD NETS QUICK RESULTS Fast. That's the word that describes lhe kind of action DAILY PILOT classified want ads get. Here's the ad : e I II I Balck lipe<lal $100 cash m -nxs: Here's the result. The advertiser said she "had a call within minutes after my paper waa delivered ••• first man who saw (the car) bought It." Want fast action? Call 6C-5678, the direct line to a DAILY PILOT ad-visor, and get ready to tell something. We•dter The evenlng and morning fog takes 1 tighter grip on the Qr. ange Cout Thursday, while af· ternoona will be spotted with hazy sunshine. Look for te111per· aturea in the 70 to 89-degree INSIDE TODi\Y Th.e new 1ea.son o/ living theater get.s under wau on thl Orange Coai& Fridou with three local plaJlhOUftl opening thtir firai productioM. See Entertatnment. PIJ{I< 25. _., ~ Cfll'""'1• ,. C:•r.w C:.rww 4 Clltdllllt Up ' C._.IM ., ... c-iu '' c,........ ,, D9IWI ....._ 1, -" •Mttltl ..... • allfWtt"'-1 • '"'-• ... . -... . A111111l.....,. •. Mtll II ... kl II ' I J 1W1. Y PILOT H Residents, Pilots Clash • On Airport Pilots •nd homt!owners clashed again in city council chambers Tuesday night over the P..1eadowlark Airport. Huntlngton Beach Mayor Do n a I d Shipley allowed both sides to talk for nearly two ours even though the tte.m wu not listed on the council agenda u a pu blic bearing. DAILY l'ILOT Shoff ....... Itla11 Stu!eeed Self Green Seeks 2nd City League Term COuoc!lman Jae~ Grten of HunUnglOn Beach, bas been renominated to succeed himself as president of the Orange County Leagut of Cities. • Mesa holds that post now for •· ~W,1>)'tar term ending in 1971. The executive committee will bear a prelimirut.ry report Tbursday on UMl- subject of direct election of mayors In Orange County cities. nie conuriittee is headed by Mayor Ed llirth of Newport Beach. ' Jn the end nothing was solved. Councilmen r e f u s e d to stop ~teadowlark's use of a controversial 300- foot extension on Its runway until further MODEL INCLUDES FIVE-STORY ADMIN BUILDING (LEFT), THREE-STORY POLICE BUILDING A One-ttory ConMCtint Wing •nd • Two-story Councll Ch11mber Are Designed With Service in Mind EJ~ion of president and vice president for the cconlng year will be held 'lbur&day at a meeUn1 of the executive committee of the league at 7 p.m. in Friedemann HaU, 134 GlasseU St., Orange. Councllmt11 Jlalpb Clark ol Anall~m. • cand idate {or auperviaor in the l'"fourth distrld, has been nominated for another term as vlce ptesldent. Al this time no county city hu a full· time elected mayor with a sa1ary, It has been suggested by_ some le.~ members that the job of mayor has become IG burdensome that a plan to elect the post separately from councilmen and with a. salary commensurate with the Ume involved should be siudied. study is made by Rober{ Oingwall's committet. Dingwall presented evidence from tilt! California Aeronautics Board staling the extension added to the aafety of the 1 Sirhan's Mother Pleads airport, in contradiction to homeowners' 1tatement.s. "I would ask you not to close the runw•y ei tonJlon. We an seeking Improvements out there and it is safer now," Dtngwalt, ·a pilot and president of For Release of Hostages the HOME Council, said. NEW YORK (AP) -The mothe r of Homeowners have asked the council to Sirhan B. Sirhan, convicted killer of Sen. stop Meadowlark pilots from µslnl the Robert F. Kennedy, renewed her plea 30().foot extension and !he new night lfghts. Wednesday that the Palestinian guerrillu They say both items make Meadowlark sp~ the 178 hijack hostages in Jordan. Wliafe because of nearby irtlllty lines. "Don't forget you are an Arab and A apokaman for 1he California forgive. This is in our heritage -to .Aeroo&uUc:a Board did say the night fora:tve and to release," Mary Sirhan told flying from Meadowlark wu hazardous the guerrillas through a news conference and that night operations would not be at Kennedy Airport. approved until lights were placed on the State Department officials h a d utility poles &o warn pilots of the wires. thwarted her plans to fly Tuesday with The CAB man supported Dingwall's two lawyers to Amman to press eootentiOn that the runway extension made , Dying sa.ler, "because pilots are personally for release of the hostages. alrbome quicker on takeoffs." The lawyers, Luke McKiuack and Ken Haulk, a leading ttitic of the Michael McGowan. appeared with Mra. airport extension, told councilman thal Sirhan and aald they 90t1ght a national CAB director Joseph Crotti h a d televiaion audience to explain ther suggested Wldergrounding utility wires, mission. McKlssack u.ld he had been closing Roosevelt Street at the end of the unable to relay Mn. Slrhan'1 plea runway and educating pilots . throuP private cont.act.a iQ the Middle "Ctotti made those suggestions as th e East. maximum to improve conditions at A ·Sta&\ Department tp0kelm1n aald Meadowlark," Dingwall countered. Tuesday· that Mra. Sirhan had been "We are talking to Edison Company detained and 'the lawyers' pusporta about the wires. The road at the end or revoked. the runway ia not Ukely to be closed for Luke At:Klsuck, Mn:. Sirhan'• lawyer, someUme, it j~t can't. be done.. The aald a man identifying hlmlelf ,_. education of pllot.s is already under way," Douglu Farrell of the U.S .. Immigration.., Dlnpall aald. and NaturaliuUon Service, demanded his 11\e crux of the complaint ls the 3QO. pulport and that of Mike McCowan, an foot extension, wilch bu now been invuti1aUvt aide, as the two made marked with white Unea to prevent pilots arrancemeota to Oy to Amman, then from landing on it. The ea::tensloo is to be stamped ''n{vok.e<l'' on It. used for takeoffs only. Re aa1d &bl action WU "wltbout Jea:al But homeowners say r,nots are in fact ~ using the extension for andlngs whether 1 1 legal or not. ''~ • •. '/>'f/;l-. ~·~, I "There are some legitimate comphdnts." Olniwall concluded. "And we are workJng on them." Dinpall's committee, of which Haulk Is a member, will meet .,ain Tbu.rlday night. , The city council oet Sept. 21 a1 the date for some type ol action on the Meadowlark iuue. Valley Man Faces Trial in Death A Fountain Valley man who was booked on manslaughter ch1rges after tht tr•Uic d'eath or a 7·month~ld boy bas been ordered to f1ce trial Nov. 18 in Superior Court. Judge Samuel Dreizen .set that date for Donovan A. Van Over 10474 E1ret St. Van Over is free on bail alter pleading innocent to -felony charges o t manslaughter and hit and run. It is alleged that Van Over was reponaible for a two-car crash last July 13 at Newhope and McFadden when his vehicle ran into a car driven by Mrs. Lucille Smart of Santa Ana. Mrs. Smart and her 7-monUi-old son Thomas were injured and taken to Oran&,e County Medical Center for treatment but the baby died that same day. Police aald Van over left his damaged car and ran from the scene immediately after the colllalon at the Santa Ana intersection. DAILY PILOT O;tANCi:!: COMT l'Ulll•~llNO (QMl'.liHY lob1rl N. W10'1 l'rt ilflnt •r.6 l'UO.•I,,... J1t~ l . Cvr41v Vitt l'rnl<Mnt .. w .....,_.,.1 M~l\lttf" Ea;IDf l lio"'•' A. Mwrplii110 M111-el11t l:ooror W•t 011"" Cllvlltv £tllof .Alh11t w .•••• , Auoe!1i. lf•l..,r MvRlhttNI IHcll OHie• 17171i looGh lowl1•1•d M1il111, Ailclr111 1 P.O. l o• 7to, t26~t Ottier OfflcK l••UM •••clli 111 1-n1r A ...... 111. C.11t Mnt: SJ0 wt.ii Si t $11tt1 "'-·· .. ICl'I! 22H w'MI 11"91 aw1t •• .. S.n C"""'"'91 .aN 11111'111 I I (arnl"° ltMI DAil.'!' "'LOT, w<lll "'""'-" • GNT>f!llH !fie N...,,.llfHI, ii .... lilNO M ilt IAttfll ....... •1r 11! MPf''"' 1•11111M .... L1.-IMCll, Nt"""°'I .. JCll, Cotll MMI, Hwflllflt11~ l ffdl '"' "-11111 v1n.v. •19111 •1111 1 .. .-AtiONI •ttl&M, 0-0llOI Conl l'vtt:hlll .... c-~., IM'irlflll9 .. ~,, ••• u n 11 WMI •11M1 •iwt. HI.._, IMCft, 1M Ja Wftl llY 11,...i, (M.IO "'·""· ,...,.. .. (1141 ''l-4J21 ,,._ w ... &.ttt C .. I l•t·lltt O..lf ... .wmtftltt 641·1671 Copyr4ftt. 1tlL Or11111 .:.u t l'vt1!'11'11f ~Y· Kl 111W1 tl0•1", 111...,l,..liOM. ullllflll -IJ..-... ICl•tf'llM!Nfllt ftt lt lft ""' .. ,..,...... ,.,"""" tOttlll ,.... Miu .. et ~""' ......,, ~ ~ .... 111110 11 HI-' ltfdl au °'"' ~ C.llflM'nl•. •1111te.•!fllllfl •r arrllf" u,lt __ .,.,,, .., 111fl1 U.JI -n.lyi llll!lll•t l•!INI""'-CACI -l~ly. ,.,....r ... 1 HIJACK .•• I'' Britain and the United Stat.a ulltd for a ~ of the U.N. Security C.....cll laltt toda1 to take up the wave of bU•cldnf•. Me1nwhlle, lhe hosta1es taken earlier sweltered through a thlrd day aboard the two planes, a Swilsalr DCa aid a Trana: World Airllnt1 Boeing 707, at the El Khln• alntrip :is mllOI norihout of Amman. For thelr r1MOm, the guerrlllu wn demandln& the releue of three Arab tirrorlat& held In West Gtnnany, three others jailed in Switzerland and Ml11 Leila Khaled, 25 held In Loldon for the aborted hijacking of an Israeli El Al plane Sunday. The PFLP, llkl!: other guerrilla groups is against any Mldd1e Eesl settlement that does not restore Arabs to former homes in Palestine, the land that is now Israel. All have refused to abide by cease-fire agreements on Israeli borders, and the PFLP ha.s made a apeciallty of airline hijackings. After the BOAC plane left Bahrein, the hijackers forced It to land at Beirut for refueli11g, and Leba nese T r a n s p o r t Millister Pierre Gemayel appealed to the guerri llas to let women and children 10. "No," replied the guerrillas. "We are leaving with every body or we are blowing up the plane with everybody." Gemayel then said he was going to ·an emergency Cabinet meeting to introduce a measure "closing Beirut airport from now on fo all hijackers who want to land here." Lebanon intends, he added, "to maintain Beirut airport as a c::ivil airport in every sense of the word.. .. 'I1W' International Red Cross already had opened negotiaUons with PFLP leaders fn Amman for the release of the earlier hosta&es. The P.opular Front had said it woul"d blow up the 'two planes at 7 p.m. PDT .Wednesday unless the Br1Ush released Miss Khaled and the Swiss and West .Germa11 governments freed the six Arabs In their custody. A spokesman said Tuesday the passengers would be removed to a guerrilla camp be.fore the exploslons. Whlle the Bonn and Bern governments announced they would comply with the ransom demand, London hedgtd. PFLP spokesmen In Amman said all S(lven had to arrive together 011 a chartered plane. O! the latest airline $elZW't., a iue.rrllla spokesman said: .. This hijack is an answer to Britain's Inhuman stand Jn rtfusing lo let Leila Kh1led go free while allowing the Israeli m\U'de'r to leave." !Us reference was to ..n Israeli security agent who shot and killed ~flu Khaled's partner In the El Al hijack plot. Before the BOAC hijacking, the ~rlU:s.b govrmment appeared to be preparina to rtlcase Miss Khal ed. Political IOUrcts said shr woukl have been $hipped out as soon as the Pf'LP released the. two planeloads of hostages. London Informants said no British charge1 had been filed against the woman, but Amba,sador Michael Comay delivered a request from Israel for her "provisional 11rre!t" pending prepar1tlon ol an extradition peUlfon. foundation." A State Department s p o k e s m a n confirmed the revocation and said Mrs. Sirhan, an alien not carrying a Jordanian passport, also was detained under passport re gulationa. "The department has control over travel out.side the country of resident aliens whose travel abroad may be considered prejudicial to the trnited States and it is the judgement of the secretary that her travel at this time would be prejudicial," the spokesman said. He added the action was temporary . The. trip "was being done at a time when the moat serious ne1oti1tions were going on," the spokesman said. "Our central co~m ii the safety and return of Ill tbe people lllol?d tbe planes." Central Park Plans Blooming- Only on Paper A cmtral park ls growina J.n Huntinston Beach -f~aUvely at leut. Tom Severns; city developme nt coordinator, pined pennlaslon from tile CUJ Coandl Taelday Dl.&hl to·Hek more federal fun<ll to buy pert laftd !or pill,.. • hlo Ill!-of ~!;1$'il pork,.f, . j'We hive'. iiearly tt.! million tn federal fund& er anted already for park land,,, Sevenu aald. 1'This money wu not filured In our orlllnal budiet." A year qo Huntington Beach voters approved a .. mlWon bond issue to buy , tbt central •k land over a six-year ptriod. 11M: ease with which the city has pine& federal open space fund.I has moved the land acqutalUon up almost five year1, according to city ofilclals. "By July 1971 we should have 205 acrts of land ready for primary development," Severns said. That would cover the first two phana of the park near Huntington and Talbert Jakes. The councU also approved the start supplemental tchematic drawlnp for phase Ill, the tmal 210 acres of the park. In all the city's central park will cover 415 acres stretchlna on both aides of Golden West Street, above and below Talbert Avenue. Mrs. Westbrook, Wife of Pastor, Succumbs at 39 Services will be held Thursday at Christ Church of Westminster, 4:30 p.m .. for Mrs. Alha Westbrook, ·wlfe of the pastor of the church. Mrs. WeStbrook died MOnday at the age of 39 after a ·lengthy illness. Her husband bas served the Westminster church for 14 years. Mrs. Westbrook served in the church's Christian Day School and the . church cbo~. IDd taught In the church'• Surutay 1chool. She ta survived by ber h .. band, Floyd E. Weatbrooi; tW1) daughters, Mn. Karen Moderow and Sharon Westbrook. and · a son, Edwin Westbrook. all or Westm.inater. Als..t surviving are her parenta, Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Choate: a sister, t.111. Marte Gilbert, and a brother, Kem Choate, all of Wichita Fall.I, Tex:. The family has sua1u~ contributions to the Atha Westbrook Memorial Mlsslon Fu nd, in care of Chrilt Church or Westminstei:_. The funds wiU 10 to aid an orphanage known 11s the House of Happin~s in Quito, E~dor. Elks Conduct Mr. Towle Rites Membert of \he Newport Harbor Elks Club conducted funeral services today at Palcllc View Mortuary for John W, Towle ol Costa Mesa who ditd Thursday. Mr. Towle. who was SS years old. had lived in Orange C'.ounty for nearly 36 years. A carpenter for 22 years, he was a member of the Hwitlngton Beach chapter of the Carpenters Union. He leaves his wife Vlrginl.a, of lM family home, 11&0 PaularJno Ave.; two daughtm, Carolyne and Barbara, both of Costa Mesa: a mother, Mrs. Gencvlevc Towle, of Long Beach; two brothers, Ttd 111nd Eflttson Towle, and a sister, Virginia Lantow, all of Long Beach. .l'rom Poge J MODEL •.. for hutance would save about $100,000. Nomlnaticim may be orfertd from the floor 'nlurfday according to Winston OpdegraH, eiecuUve ltCl'ttary of ~ league. The only other elective post of the crganl:r.atlon Is that of state legislaUve director. Mayor Robert WU.On ol Colta • Huntington Beaeh voters will ballol. Nov. 3 on a separate mayor'i Poat wllh a salary or 117,000 a year. He 'will•be an eighth member of the city. council with power to vote only in case. ol. Uea. . . " Councilwoman Norma Gibbs suuested askln&. civic club.s to donate furnishings for each r,f the rooms in all buildings. 1 The cost of furniture was estimattd 6y city staff at about $250,000. Meyer explained that the civic center as shown was designed to handle the business for a city of 270,000, the predicted maximum popul&Uon o f Huntington Beach. Trustees OK .Tax Bal'lot "It v.·as built on the philoaophy of service to the citizens rather than as a monument to government," M e y e r added. Argument lor Education He pointed to the ground floor operations of departments where citizens \.\o·ould normally conduct their business at city hail. "Management areas would be on the higher levels of the administrative building," he said. "The police facility,'' Meyer explained, "was developed for the dual purpase of maximum security yet tbtaJ freedom for the public." Public business would be conducted at the end of the police station facing the other buildings while security zones ·would be on the end of the building farthes t away. Public safety functions would be centered in the police building, while the administrative office )fOUld h o u s e admlnistraUon, guilding and safety, attorney, clerk, COWlCil offices, treasurer, civil defense , finance, fltt+ harbors and beaches, oil field departmtnt, parks and reau.\ion, personnel, planning, public works, public .inlormaUon. purchasing department&, meeting rooms and a · c&ltteria. , Meyer said 90 percent of the public's contact with city hall would take place on the main level or the five-story building . The center would bou.se more than 870 employ ea:. Afttr·the elty ataff pointed out that money limilltions Meyer commented. "Now that we know we can only flt five a:allons of water into a five-gallon can we'll be happy to work with your staff to alter it." The arch itectural model is currently on display at city hall. Radar Patrols Eying Speeders Watch out for the radar patrols! For the next few weeks poolice will be working along Bolsa Chica Road and Goldeo West Streets in Huntington Beach , banding out citations to any motorists foolish enough to speed a1ong them . The warnlng came from Lt. Paul Darden, traffic commander of the Huntington Beach Police Department, who says his men will do his best to stop trafric accidenll along both roads. "We're not interested in giving citations that much but it's the result we're after," the lieutenant explained. The units will be in operation both day ind ni&ht until speed-caused accidents have been rtduced, U. Darden said. Ballot arguments for a 6kent tax hike In I.he Huntington Beach Union High School Ol!trict have just been approved by trustees who are prepa r ing From Page J TAXES .•• what it would cost users. The five percent utility tax became law c a 4-2 vote with Councilmen McCracken and Ted Barlett opposing it. The business license increase -50 percent in nearly all cases -passed unanimously and without much comment. Then councilmen discussed a $6-per. unit apartment tax. McCracken proposed an amendment to the suuested ordinance which would have eliminated the $6-per-unit charge on apartmentl. However, he propoted ll early in the discussion, then everyone started talking a.bout the utility tax, oil tu, trash fees and other items• McCr.cten'1 rnoUon f'lt'U forgotten until Clt)t Clerk Plui Jones reminded councilmen there was a motion on the lloor. ,.,_ The vote was takt1), ?tfCl.Tacken won s-- 11': ·~ j ~~,1 ~ · "'W•1* 1 .~ute,9' llM. Councilman Green, the lone dissenter. "We just dropped the apartment tax." "What art we voting on?" Counclhnan Jerry Matney asked. Jones called for another vote -and the lights on the tabulation board flashed on and off. One se ries of button pushing ended In a slandoff at 3--3. Then it was 4-:3 when Jones looked up, saw Coen's lfght lit and told ~ council It wasn 't right - Coen hadn't been present all night, tomebody had pushed his button by mistake, The final tally was 5--1 aga lnst McCracken, this time he was the lone dinenter, and the apartment taa:: stayed. The last item was the trash fee. "As 1 homeowner I don 't object to pa ying It. Why don't we leave it in," suggested Mrs. Gibbs. As she continued, Mayor Dooald Shipley tried to shorten debate. The councilwoman turned on him and in a kind, but stem voice said, "Mayor Shipley, you were flying high an hour and a half on Meadowlark (an earlier controversy). We can talk a while on this." And she did, but failed to convince other councilmen, who approved the trash lee elimination for homeowners. We've Wm the·blclc off oar flnelt watch IO JOll Olm ... the "lnllde"' PnoSllcm 111mJ J. 0 OMEGA e1~ •"1Ullltad''c.-........... ~ Yoa,,....,,..... ..... .,.. --•• .... ., ... .,,.. ..... °* ... ,.. .. INSIDE tllfl ,_ Qp1edit.1k --6q ....,S. ---~ --'"".,.,,.,..... fp f ... ....,w .............. .... ,. ...... M'last ...... ..., .... ...... , ..... pa•., ...... ;:a• I •. w-IWWisiktM! r ,. .... ,...,... It. Etll1IJ1":'ttsol:a1' ~111\60' ~· .m w. ,.. .,,. 11' 7 "" ... ll"*b" •• a • • 0-.... C-ta C. a.,. dmo , f19tfS ·,.n ..... C. J}u":phrieJ J8'1eler:J '1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVlHllNT naMS IANUMERICAlD-MA$T£l CHA~Gf 2' Yl.AlS IN SAMI LOCATION m<lNE 141·l •OI themselves for the Nov. 3 election. The arguments . which will be furnished along with the sample ballot, paint a bleak picture for education If the override should fa il. District financia.1 experts forecaat a $4 million or 25 percent budget deficit nexl year ii the measure falls to pass. Consequently, the argument state!, the district would find itself in an economic squeeze that would mandate t he elimination of bussing, h a I f • d a y instruction, bigger classes, f e w e r counseling services, less instructional materials, elimination of special prorams and the end of inter-sch ool alhletics. Even if all the cuts were adopted, district officials claim they would still fall $2 million short of correcting the deficit, The financial situation for the dlstrlct's five full-time high schools is espe<:ially crucial since the current Sl.39 tax rate will revert to 85 cents by July, 1971 . The district feels it needs a $2.08 rate to maintain Us current level of eduqUonal services. ' ' ShouJd the measure be adopted by voters in the 52·square mile district, it would alleviate "Its financial difficulties for a period of three years ... Trustees, at th!ir Tuesday meeting, also voted to draft an official policy with the aid of the County Counsel's office to permit the use of undercover officers at the schools. Last spring. the disclosure 0 r undercover narcotics agents who were enrolled at several campuses cauled a furor among some residents who contended that such practices were illegal. Deputy County COU!l!<!l lryne C. Black told the trustees that the use or asents was legal as Jon g as police investlg1Uon1 were conducted with the consent of the board of trustees. The new policy, according to Trua:tee Chairman Matthew Weyuker, would serve to establish definite ru1es for such investigations and to clear up legal confusion. Watson Appeal Denied . NEW ORLEANS (U PI) -The 5lb U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals denied a rehearing Tuesday on the extradition appeal of Charles D. Watson, the Texas youth implicated along with other "Manson Family" members in the Tate- La Bianca murders in Loa Angeles. YISllU: UCIC WJult !flt "lflltfMt"" S.. 11.nll'I' It ... , •• It ... 1.., tt!llOlltltflt °"'''' Cf,,. .. l~l, It 11111 ff ."Ofll l!lt _, 0!~11 0...111. MIMt • _..., 1n1 Ul\ftl"Mtlol fllca. •r,,.,,,_,"''""•-~.i-..1-. ... .,.,_,_ . I ' I 'I ' 11 I 11 I: ( I •I I I j ' > Don Boyles, 32, ·picked an un· usual \vay to obse rve Labor Day. He parachuted Monday from the world's highes t sus- pension bridge -the Royal Gorge Bridge near Canon City, Colo. -to the Arkansas River 1,055 feet below. A fri end drove him to the bridge and picked him up after the jump. Boyles, . of Tulsa , Okla ., made the jump without fanfare and it took authorities two days to iden- tify the my sterious parachut- ist. SA Council OKs Salazar Parade 'Through City Acting without comment, the Santa Ana City Council has approved plans for · a memorial parade and ra11y Saturday in memory of a slain newsman who ·championed the cause of Mexican- Americans. Ruben Sa lazar, 42, who lived at 3118 S. Rita \Vay. Santa Ana, was killed Aug. 29 v.·hen struck in the head by a deputy sheriff's teargas missile 'vhile covering barrio rioting in East Los Angeles. A Los 'Angeles County Coroner's inquest opens Thur~ay to determine whether Salazar's death was accidental, negligible or due to crimin al causes. ri.1rs. Sall y Salazar has sued for $1 milli"On, claiming wrongfu1 death at I.he hands of lawmen. The Santa Ana council, meanwhile, voted Tuesday to authorize the Ruben Salazar Memorial Committee of Brea. Jed by Ralph Echave, to use municipal property. Echave predicts up to 5,000 Chicanos and their sympathizers will participate in the lit a.m. march, which begins in El Salvador Park, 1825 Civic Center Drive West The procession will continue on from there to Santa Ana Municipal Stadium at Civic Center Drive and Flower Street, for ·a one-hour eulogy to Salazar. Donations \Viii be accepted during lhe event for the Ruben Salazar journalism scholarship '''hich v.•ill annually be awarded to a Chicano youth planning to enter that field. Salazar distinguished himself as a war correspondent for the Los Angeles Times and had y;on awards for reporling or sociological and other aspects of the Chicano community. Lightning Bolt Kills Two Y outl1s On Football Field BEACHWOOD, Ohio (UPI) -A lightning bolt struck and killed tY.·o members of the Beachwood High School freshman fool.ball team Tuesday during practice at the school's football field. The victims \\'ere Robert Jacob!, 14. and Ar ny D. Finkle, 14, both of Beachwood. Stev•art Berger, freshman coach, and four olher youtm were knocke d to the ground by the bolt but were not injured. In St. Petersburg, Fla .. Monday, two varsity players at Gibbs High School 'vete killed by lightning and 18 persons were injured. Joel Scheer. 14. one of the boys knockt"d down, said rain had been falling about five minutes when the Beachwood coaches decided l9 'move the practice seS!ion Indoors. Scheer said he heard Berger yell ••sprint ii. sprint it." just before e big thunderclap. "My head was like compressed and 1 was knocked dO'i\'fl," Scheer said. ".When I looked up I saw Jacob$ 1moklng and his helri1et was way out In front of hir11 split in l\alf.., Police said Berger and other coaches tried to revive the two boys by moulh·to- mouth resuscitation and heart massage. Space Layoffs Boost County Welfare Load ·By JACK BROBACK , Of tftt 0.111 l'ilt t Sltff Skyroc keting unemployment among Orange County aerospace workers has hit the county Welfare Department hard. Granville Peoples, director. <lf the department, said today that a three-week backlog exists in the federally subsidized food stamp program. "We have been hit in the straight 'velfare cases, too,'' Peoples said. "We added l ,2:>!1 new cases in July, JO times the number of ne'v cases adde~ two years ago." The v.·elfare direct<lr said hi s department was hard pressed to keep up \\;ith the rising number of applicants. "In the last two months we have fo~nd a great increase in the number of unemployed aerospace workers coming to us for help?" Peopcs said it Was a totally new experience in his department to find so many skilled engineers, technicians and executives joining the food stamp program roles. "Normally we deal largely with unskilled persons and the indigent.'' He guessed that the aeros pa ce engineers had used up there six months of unemployment checks and have nowhere el se to turn. "If this trend doesn't level ()ff in the near future we are going to have a real problem stayi ng within ()Ur budget. which is already substantially greater than last year," Peoples added. In a determined attempt to remedy the skilled unempl<lymenl s it u a ! i on , SuperviS<1rs Da.vld Baker and Williams Phillips have been named to a committee to huddle wlth slate and federal legislators representing the county to heopfully gain new aerospace contracts. In the last 12 months 10,100 worken have been laid ()ff by the county's a.erospace and eltclrontc industries because of the present recession and cutback! in the federal budget. Some help for the Industry may come from the designation last week or the county ' as an area of "substantial unemployment." This means that firms here will receive prcferooce in bidding on certain federal bu ying cootracta and public works projects. Dad Saved From Sea;. Son Missing A Carlsbad catamaran sailor who paddled 18 hours in the Catalina Channel Is hospitalized today at Avalon and search is under way for his son who is missing and presumed drowned. Charles Piety, 47, was listed in fair condition at Avalon Qimmunity Hospital, where he is under treatment. for shock and exposure. A spokesman f<lr the U.S. Coast Guard Search and RescUe of!ice in Long Beaclt said a helicopter was dispatched today to hunt for any trace of 22-year-old Phillip Piety. Hope was admittedly dim. Piety told crew members. aboard-the yacht Feeling Groovy -who haule~fhim aOOard at mid-morning Tuesday -that he and his SCln were f<lrced to abandon their 24-!oot catamaran Malihinl. The exhausted victim told Coast Guard investigators a storm came up, but they said they were unaware of anything but routine ocean breezes and swells Monday afternoon. He said he and his son buckled on life jackets and OOarded thei r small dinghy and left the Malihini, but the boat quickly took on water and swamped. The elder Piety said his S<ln told him he was too tired to proceed and would tread water in his lite jacket until help could be brought from the island port. People aboard another passing yacht found a lifejacket stencilled Malihini Tu esday after and recovered it, turning it <lver Id Avalon authorities. We call ii Veqn. • H DAil Y PILOT 1J Power Balance Smog Alert U ~s. Send.s More Changes ·Planes to 1 Israel To be Aired .. WASHINGTON rUP I) -The United States has agfeed to sell 16 to ta additi<>iial suspersonic F4 Phantom fighter-bombers to Israel, de f en se Sources said today. House 'Stolen' After Flooding MANILA tUPI ) -Mrs. Aurora Cipriano reported to police her two- story house in nearby Pasay City was stolen at the height of last week's floods. ~trs. Cipria no, 4!t, a junk dealer. told police she last saw the wood rrame house Aug. 27 shortly after her tena nts moved out. She said the building 's windows were barred and all the doors locked on both floors. Police fmmd <lnly a cement foUndat ion and the iron grill which had covered one window when they investigated Sunday. Investigators said they believed the "house-napers" started by dismantling the galvanized iron roofing and worked their way d<lwn during the storm which brought more tha·n 34 inches of rain to ~1anila in five days . The house, built two months ago, was valued at $500. Administration sources sald the. sales would be made under previouslji ~~led U.S. policy of P,revenlin$ any sighlf:icilnt 11hift in the ?ttiddle East power balance against Israel. ' The Wasltington Po.st, in first reporting the new agreement, said deliveries would begin later th is month. Sdme Pentagon officials and members of Congress made it clear on numerous <lccasions in recent weeks th at Israel would be provided there were any strategic alleralions in the Arab-Israeli military balance. · Th e Israelis lost a nwnber of Phantoms <luring almost daily attacks on Arab targets. The number of losses has not been made public, but has been estimated at more than half a dozen. Si xteen to 18 more Phantoms would presumably be about double the nwnbe r . Lost . Laird has · said the United States has continued to deliver arms and equipment to Israel since the cease-fire went into effect almost five weeks ago. The Soviet Union also bas continued to ship weapons to Egypt. Heeding the angulshed cries of Orange County's high school coaches, William Fitchen, air pollution control officer has agreed tO issue bulletins al 4 p.m. on days when the danger point of aione content has been broadcast previously. Last ~eek Fitchen issued the first smog alert and sent high school football coaches into a tizzy. "How can we compete against scltoOls in non-smog districts when they can practice and we cannot,'~ they cried. Previous to Fitchen's announcement of 4 p.m. status broadcasts, hls department had been issuing smog alert warnings the day previous and· not further advising schools i(. the situation bad improved enough to allow foolball practice and other strenuous e1ercises. A school smog warning is issued by the air pollution c<lntrol distri ct whenever the <lZOne level exceeds .35 parts per million (ppm) in either one of two monitoring zones in the county -inland and coastal. When such a warning is issued all students are supposed to be excused from strenuous indoor or outdoor activities. The 4 p.m. ann<luncement is going to be C • n· , W ! made, Fitchen said, to aid in th8 OlUl(Jan tes Ill TT ar scheduli ng of athletic events. He added that in most instances tht:' ozone Army PFC. Theodore F. Bedra , son Jr ;~~centration will have already fell below; Mrs. Michatine B. Bedra. 8041 San Lui~ ppm . : Circle, Buena Park, has been killed in "The smog control chief al so noted that action in the war in Southeast Asia, the during 1968 the .35 reading was exceeded U.S. Defense Department aMo\ll1Ced <lnly six times and in 1968 only three Tuesday. times. Seating capacity: 4 adults. We also call ii "the little car that Disc brakes are standard In the front. ,So are bucket seats, except on the truck. It a,11 ndc!a up lo a lot of little car, ,..._. -.oncl a !rude. doe1 everythinq well." BecnGM ii does. hwythingf hwything. Vega moves well, 1top11 well, lteer1 well, ride1 well, handles well, responds well, pa1aes well, travels well, parks well, wears well, and ii priced well under what you'd eirpect to pay for such a talented little car. In our highway tests, Veqn has been getting gas mileage in the neighborhood of the little imports, which im'I a bad neighborhood. Yet unlike your averaqe little car, our1 1teps right out when you step on the gas. The engine is a specially designed overhead cam four with a lightweight aluminum alloy block. It turns slowly and quietly at tumpilce speeds, with power to spare. II How we doing so far? Num'*l...,icloudw"-ww'lll. The wheelbase is 97 Inches. Total length is just under 170 inches, or nearly four feet shorter than a full.size Chevrolet. Height of the coupe is just 50 inches, nine inches lower than the lending import. Width: a nice stable 5 Y, feet. Weight: 2,190 lbs. for the sedan. Engine displacement: 140 cubic inches. Fuel economy: about 25 mpg, with the standard enqine and transmission, in our highway tests. ·Horsepower: 90. You can order 110. (80 and 93 hp, SAE Net.) Ved.~ turned out 1a well that we couldn'fturn out just one. So we're turninq out four: the sporty little hatchback coupe shown open and closep in the foreground below; the sedan, on the right; the Kammback wagon, on the left; and the little panel truck, in the rear. Oh, and a special GT version of the coupe and wagon which we'll 1how you later on. SepteinlMrlOth is Opening Ila)< All 6,300 Chevrolet dealers nr• handling Vega, so, you 'shollldn't have to qo very f~r to 188 and drive one. Chevy's new little car ts open for business. Look into it. - l I • • ' I~ 'Y 1k Dtlly l"llltt It_,.) The referee stopped a soccer matoh between Glampt<>n and nearby Stoke Gabriel, England, when all 22 players on the field were involved in fist fights with each other. • The judges at the Brougb, Eng- • ~~-... -... . ·~--... --·---~------~~-~·"""-~---....,-! --- 'Couldn't Stop Tlaem' Red Troops Flee Cambodian Push PHNOM PENH (UPI) - A 600-man fw<t ol Communist . troop. report.dly tripped by the Cambodian lll'Ill¥ south of l'lmom Penh baa eocaped Into the !raount.ains and avoided potent la J annlh111uon, fn.illllry oUlcen said today. '!be Nortb Vie-and Viet Cong troopl were surrounded In a mountainous area near Srang, 26 mlle1 south of the capltal, and Cambodian m 1 l I t a r y Commanden Aid last Slturday it would be lmposalbJe for them to escape. 'I1te commandtn said today, however, that the entire force of Communills had slipped out of the trap by moving through mountain paw. ••we .saw Uiern moving,'' said one commander at Srang. "We 1tmply could not get any alt strikes to stop them." 'lbe Cambodian commanit tarll•r today reported Viet Cong and N o rt h Vietnamese troops d I s g u I 1 e d a1 Cambodian paratroopers aUacked the town of Siem Reap near the ruins of Angkor Wat iD northern Cambodia . Jn Vietnam, an American helicopter accidentally dropped fuel dNmS on a city on the northern coast and the explosion killed three civilians. T 4,000.man cambodian force pushing toward the encircled city of Kompong 1bom 80 miles north of Phnom Penh, was ;eported halfway to its objective after two days of Communist harassment attacks along highway 6. land pigeon show competition con· gratlllated nine-year-old Stuart Wiikerson on the fine condition of the bird be bad entered and award- ed him first prize. Then Stuart re- vealed that instead of being an exhibition bred bird, his pigeon was a wild one be had caught the night before. "I wanted to go in for the 1bow but I hadn't got a bird," said Stuart. '1So-I caught one." • Leaded Gas Tax Pushed The cambodian command said the Communists who attacked Siem . Reap Tuesday wore camouflage uniforms and red scarves like those of Cambod.lan paratroops. Thirteen of the defenders, themselves airborne troopt, were killed and 20 wounded. The Viet Cong and North Vietnamese left 13 bodies behind when they withdrew. SECTION OF FUSELAGE NOW GAUNT RUIN AFTER DC-I JET CRASH Pollet, Firemen l111poct Cr•lh Sitt; Fire Bland Alter T•ktoff Cr•th •I JPK Airport • Amtricat11 au tiaht billion Spani!h areen olive1 -89,000 ton.r -... Wt rear, accordtng to the Spanish Green Olive Com· ·mQskm. If et}tfJI one of the eight billion 0Uve1 had gone into a Martini. it would have tcken 750 million quart! of gin and 250 "'Ulf<m qvom oJ ..,.,,...!~ , to make tight billion Martin.ti, the commission 1aid recenU~. By Treasur)'· WASHINGTON (UP I) Administration spokesmen told Congress today that a tax: on the lead ln gasoline was urgently needed to help speed the fight acainst air pollution. "Tbe need for this tu ia immediate ," Treuury Secretary Davkl M_ Kennedy told the House Way1io and Means C6mmittee. ''The presence or these compound,, in the environment is dangerous both for the present as well as f.ensus Gripes To Get Airing In House Panel Plane Crashes, Burns; 11· Crewmen Aboard Die Passenger Jet Makes Landing, Cracks Apart • Professor Malcom Brown of Dur· ham England wanted something that 'resembled moo'n rock in den· sity and oth~r properties ~or an experiment. The nearest thing he could find, he said recently, was English cheddar cheese. And be insisted he wa1 serfous. • Gov. Roneld R1•gan says be ·and fellow ex-actor and now Sen. George Murphy have to stay in politics considering the nature of today's' stage and film shows. Rea· gaa told a meeting of industrial leaders that neither of tbem could "g0 back to show business -we're too old to take our clothes off.'' • AbOMt 15 ptri om in Benton, Wil. hove f'tporttd ieting a 1· foot.tall ape·like CYeatliTe wto• ing JOO pounds with white fur ,nd pink cyc1. -Starch par tits of 50 personi combed tM area after the "Benton Monster"' was rtported shamb ling around this southwestern Wtscomin com- muni~. • Railway personnel bad I<> be call· ed to control crowds at the scene of a derailed freight train in Iha Netherlands. No one was hurt but crowds gaUtered when it was dis- covered most of Ute scrap waste paper dwnped in the accident were se:r and nudist magazines. • A boy drawing lucky numbers pulled out 155 winners at a station- ery store's grand opening-includ- ing the five numbers he had en- tered in Charlotte, N.C. A spokes- man for the store said the boy, 12- year-old Jay Nagle, looked the other way during each drawing and pulled the ticket. from the bottom . of the box. An engineer for a Char-- Iota corporation figured the odds against a person drawing his own five numbers in 155 tries were l ,SS0,837 w I. for the future ." WASHINGTON (AP) -Com pa lints of 'lbe adminiatr1tlon wants a tax on several hundred cities that the 1970 leaded gasoline amounting to about 1 lk census cowit I.a short -particularly in cents a gallon. Estimates oC the amDWlt the sllttM -will get an extensive of revenue it would raile this fiscal year congressional hearing next week. range from Sl.1 bllllon to $1.6 billion. Lead off witnesses are New York Kenhedy told the tax-w r It Ing Mayor John V. Lindsay, who says a sixth commlttee: "This tal' will impose an of the New Yorkers spot checked were not economic penalty on the use of addiUves counted, and Census Director George H. which will permit unleaded gasolln;e to be wil prove to be the most accurate in U.S. j>rodu~ and marketed at a. price bistorY. ~ competitive with leaded gasoline of Chairman Charles H. Wilson (D-Calif.} similar octane _ . • -. announced Tuesday his House census "Jmpending future needs require ~t·-subcommiUee hearing on the naUonwide at Ull.s time we create an effective count t-.t April 15 will begin Tuesday. incentive to industry to convert to the WJ!sOO bas asked the Census Bureau to prodw:Uon of guoUne with Utile Jead and be ready to answer complaints of New in time DO lead. Unluded gaollne must York, Chicago, CI eve I and and be generally available in large quan~ity Bl.nnlngham that their inner cities were bf mJd.summer ol 1974 If tbe emllsion undftount.d and to complablb of ~ Control standards program la to succeed." several hundred smaller ciUes that thelr Another witness, undersecretary Jotm tallies were shorL G. Verieman of Health, Education and Some officials of the major ciUes Wf:Uare said 'that while studies on the attribute the alleged slum undercount to ftbject are incomplete "It is clear that people hiding from census takers because human exposure to lead is hazardoua to ttiey Wft"f!·violating housing Qf'dinancts or bea.lt.b. " . AJ~gh congressional reaction to ·the welfare Jaws or ~vad1ng the ~aft. lal' proposal has been cool 80 far, the Some small cities stated theu-evidence dm'•'-tr •• believes chancea of its indicates a larger population. Others a 111.W ai.aon. contended blocks of citizens were passage have improved. credited to the surrounding county rather Pageant Beauties Stroll Boardwalk ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) -Fifty smiling Miss America c o n t e s t a n t !I greeted a large crowd Tuesday night in the traditional Atlantic City boardwalk parade. A slight chill blew in from the Atalntlc Ocean and several of the beauty queens wore fur wraps as thty waved amid flashbuJbs and generally s c a t t e r e d applause. Miss America of 1924, Ruth Malcomson Schaubel, and emcee Bert Parks served as grand mar&hallil, travelling in a maroon 1921 Oldsmobile. ·'J'he current Miu America, Pamela Eldred, appeared on a float made of fJ091'ered American fla11. She wore a belte, lace gown. Thirteen former Miss Amerlcu rode by the bot dog stands and l!IOUVenir shops in wheeled wicker chairs that· wwe typical boardwalk vehicle• or many yean ago. than to the city. But Census Director Brown told newsmen la.st week that Jn all cues in 'Which 1 city bas conducted 11.s own count Jt found even fewer residents Ulan the census takers. Sausalito Ferry Has Bg Turnout SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -'The Golden Gate Bridge District 's new ferryboat averaged more than 3.900 passengen a day during its first 18 days of operation. Bridge District Manager Dale W. Luehring, announcing that Tuesday, said the patronage of the MGM Golden gate was "vtry encouraging." Donald White, the district'• transit manager, bas estimated the service between Sausalito and San Francisco could cost "something over fl1000 per day" to keep n operaUon. During the 18 days, the vessel carried 'm,409 passengers, 16,134 of them over the three-day labor day weekeod. Storms Mar Sunny Nation Good Weatehr Predominates But Lightning Takes Toll C'alltor11&. ··-......... NEW YORK (AP) -A charter JlC.3 jeUiner only hours away from picking up 250 youthful transatlantic passengers era.shed and burned during takeoff Tuesday from Kennedy Airport. All 11 crewmen, including seven stewardesses, were killed. Frank Puglisi, a spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration, said the Trana InttrnaUonal Airlines p l a n e appeared to scrape its tail on takeoff. No passengers were aboard the flight to Washington, where it was to pick up Its transaUantic fares at Dulles International airport. Other eyewitnessei said the plane Sen. Scott Backs Direct Election For President WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen ate Republican Leader Hugh Scott of Perwylvania said today that he regards the direct, popular election of the President as preftrable to the present electoral College system. But he told newsmen that his first choice i1 1 plan Wlder which each state would choose two presidential electors at large and the rtsl by di stric ts corresponding to Congressional districts. Scott said he will vote for the district plan if ht gets a chance but if it is rejected by the Senate will support the direct elecUon proposal provided for in a Constitutional amendment approved by the House a year ago. Senate debate on the p r o p o s e d amendmtnt began Tuesday with some opponent& vc,.wing to wage a long, all.out fight against it. The overhanging threat of a filibuster is of concern to Senate leaders trying to complete action on a legislative backlog before the November elections. DemocraUc and Republican senat-Ors are to meet in party caucuses Thursday to discusa the outlook and try to work out a schedule of ,priorities for handling measurt1 before a probable recess around Oct. JS. The posaible removal of one stumbling block was word from Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (P.Mass.), that he may not try to hook on the proposal aQother Constitutional amendment to give the Di.strict of Columbia the s a m e representation in Congress as a stale. KeMedy told reporters that as of now be sWl plans to oUer the District representation amendment as a. rider, but he said he will not do so if he becomes convinced that the effect would be to kill electoral reform. The far.reaching proposal, already approved by the House and endorsed by President Nixon, came under heavy attack ln the opening debate Tuesday from Nebruka Republicans Carl T. Curtis and Roman L. Hruska. Tiit -'•tdl' •ltt " """" -'-"'"'1111m Ind Ill' *"' ~ '°"''"'°'" C..1llol'l\le ctntl!uld lllllHI .. todlY I ncl 11!9 tl'llriMfi Ill• ll'ICllllll •111"'9r. All1nl1 lillff111ild 1!11111rdt " .. .. .. u 71 Curtls said he presumed the issue Nlt hl t NI .. rly ITIOl'l'l!N low tlOWl tfllll lot prtvl lled tloM 1111 cottttl "'" I~• 111 i.o. A"""9 11\C vlc!nltv, tlloutll 1111 tl'W N llM fWIY lw 11'110. 1Mfft'"9. ltlvlN Plll'I' IWl\sfl!M, ~rNlcltd hllfl IOdrt WH U, ttlne Htr-..,.r Tllll&ty, '•llllc1111 low '-111111 11 f,I. ... di -..i-·""' """lllM "' ""' -tffl . ....-..dlhlt 10 .. ,._ W(fh •k"°' fM 111 IN IM!"l111 IM Mrr --.1.-h' Mi111 ill """ ,,..... WllW ~1111r1-'6. ~1111 ,_,. -111111 -•fllll 'Ml'lft Wllll 1111111 In -... "' ,,. ..... Cit..,, Ylllln t ........ 1lline _.,. te '°' wllll CIM' ftllft. Tiit Loi MMltt l1•lrl llH tl"" te ........... .,.. lrrlt•tlell fl'Ofll -...,., .. flnult W the Air L9ollvo f'-C0111..i Dhitr1cl. ~1111tr -trtt..,._ If ..... f'lpOtti4I If! tM Sin 0.bri.I Vlttt"I' 9'ICI l'tmOlll rftltn. 'fJlt 11111111'• hotH•OI T""'4l1,. WH ...,.,.,,.,, ..,.,. • ~" If lOI ... tlCOl'dlll. °"'*'· llltht T\lt\dl'I' I NI ~I N X"-nt !Mil' lflelvftd: "-.... ctt Jt•, 1ama Mo111<.1 n -11, 1i.1rDt11t: ... •• Ml. Wll..,, ... J. P11mUi. "'100, ~IOt ti.ft, h4M 141f'lflfS !OJ.lot. a.itwetltltl 100-1oe, kfl oi.. 1s.1s. ""'' .. ,.,.. u..e. '°"' u. """" ... 'TlM'llllY to. l'OINT COfllClllTtOM TO MEXICAN •o rtOl!ll-Lltf'lt nrlti.19 wlfldt nltlll l l\lf ~ ......... ....,"" """''°' .. u kl\O" In •fl-ttlrMh TJWrsclly, LA1W tlouel tftill ... Mrlr Wfllflfldly 1...i •lonl _,.,. coett Wtdnttdlr nlthl 11\d Mliy Tllllndn, olhttWlte moult> Wfltl¥ lll'n. W1nn1:r dal'I Mlrlll ""'"°"' COAiTAL AND INTE!lM£Ot•TE VALLEYS -F11r tllr011tll Tll11<1dAY. Wfrmtr dtYt. O'ltrni,111 lowJ ""'· H!I~ Uoft, Tl'!Uocr1r O.IOL v.s. s .... ...,, ""'"' -"*" ~ t'rlWll "' tlle MllOrl "'91' wllll -tttltertd "'°"""' • .., ~torrnt. elHCMlllV f1-..... Ohlt Veit., 19 11'11 Otll 111'- Mlf Ill """ d "" ....... Altllo\lt~ •-ltt wrr• ,_.,n., tltlt -rnlldl ti 1119 tOIJ"lrY, .c:11tt1td 1~~·~·' oeevr•M '""'" New Vor-Te Kr11fllr-y •NI 111 FIOrlclt. Morr """ '" lf\Cll or r1l11 r111 1t i11111Vllitr. Olilo. d~rlll• • th1~ Nllll """ 'Odl,. Or:t••loMI uld r1r11 11111 • 1 .... '"" '""" Cftlceto Clnc.lnn1ll ci.v.tlM o.ww Olll"Dlf £11~k• l"orl Wortfl ...... ··--· ....... KIMM(lty UtYIMt L•AllMI• M ......... M-M Ml.-.llOIJ. N ... Orlelttt N""VOl'tl °"""' ''t0 Rollll'I PllUICll!Nll• ''""""'" ·-· l'orti.no Rtd Bl11ff ·-Sttr•meftteo SI, l.11<11• 100 '° would be before the Senate "for weeks 1s .s.s and months." Democratic Leader Mike !: :! ·11 Mansfield of Montane aald he hoped for a n '° .o. vote ln two weeks. : !: ~ Sen. Bircb Bayh (!).Ind.}, chief Senate " 14 sponsor of the direct eletcion plan, does "' ,. not now dalm to two-thirds majority : : necessary for paasap. But be prtdicted "•• • tbt nectlllr'J' wtM will be obtained . .. .u " ,. ,lJ .... .... I~ H .. .. .. " .... u " .. '' .u n " " .. ·~ " .... u l t }If .. " 11 u .. .. .. " M H tJ .. '·°' Attendance Decrease Seen in Bus Dispute CflARLO'M'E, N.C. (AP) -Classes began peacefully today in the Charlotte-- Mec klenburg County school system. but attendanci in the system -threatened by • boycott of parents opposed to busing to achieve dettgngatfon -appeared below normal. IOllTHlll:H CALl~Dll:Nlo\ -Motl1V telr ll'lroufl'I TMr....., 1M low clOl.ln inf fot t loN C.-""" Wiil~. WI"'*' Mn. LOI ANGflAI ANO VICUOT'1'1- Molttv fl!, !!Ir ..... Tl'llMolNr M irOw tlolllft ltld IOI Mlt eottl H rl'I' Wtc1MMt1, Wit-.. .,.. 0¥1r11!tht MOV ... Tl\IN Alte.i.s -F1lr lflfOlltll ThllrMIY. Winni' ~~-. 0¥1rT1lllll lowl •MO. l-llt111 n.u, Th1111111t•• 11..,,. INTl'lt!Olt ANO Ot!IElll llfOIONS -f'tlt throutll TP111r1111r. W1r"'4'1' cjm, ~rnltl!t !owl 111 .sot 0wtn1 VII .. .,, tlJ ,. to o~r Mt"-' 'lf!lt••· XI te • io-r 111U1r1. Hltlll "''°J llltlltt '""°"'' l~IU IOwtr v1llen. Th11rM11 100.llS. S..tl Llkl (llT tlluNlt~• occurrfd from MOflllM Sen Offfo t n.f W~omlnt 11 1111 Dlkolll. 1l1,ld Sin llr1nt ltc:o City, 1. o .. P11ll wind 111111 lllP"''6""U t1r.t1 ltrlll•• mil•• an '*'' wl1r. a tt111....,1•tlON11 lt1lll1 Ttll'IHrallirtt •1r1,. '°"'' ''"'I'd -!.,.(1{11>;•11t1 '""" )f 1t Ol!!Oll, Monl.,'IO t0 It '"'"'" N..Olts. C111t. W11hlflfJOll IS It .... M .. ,, tl .. .. .. ~ lo:J ,. u .. No officia l attendance figures were available shorUy after lhe opening bells rang, but some ICboOl busei; arrived .01 empty and others rolled onto the sc hool grounds with only 1 few pupils. ' bolted st.eply Into the air alter damaging its tail. They uJd one or more of its four engines bunt into flames, and that it tilted on Its aide and crashed to earth from a height of about 200 feel "Boy, did it hit!" said Paaquale Toppi, a construction worker at the airport. The era.sh occurred at 4:20 p.m. and a huge cloud of billowing black smoke arose from the main body of the wreckage. Parts of the aircraft were strewn over an area of several hwtdred feet. The plane was a Douglas DC-8 super 61, capable of carrying 2S9 passengers. Trans Jnternational Is a c h a r t e r nonscheduled carrier and a spokesman said it was the line's first accident in 22 yean of operations. It was the first major a-ash in the Kennedf area since Feb. 8, 1965, when 84 persons wen killed aboard an Eastern Air Lines pusengtr plane that plunged into the Ailantic near the airport. For about an hour after the Trans International crash, Kennedy was closed to all air traftlc. Julie Starting At New College, Wants to Teach WASHINGTON (AP) Ju Ii e Eisenhower, daughter of President Nixon, will st.art classes at Catholic University here Monday to prepare for a teaching career. Jiili&is a graduate of SiTiifh College but gained her degree in history. Her year's study at Catholic will include both undergraduate and graduate I e v e I courses in education. "l thought about It a lot this summer," she said at a briefing Tuesday. "l knew I wanted some kind of profession and I think teaching ... well, it wW always be interesting.'' The President's younger daughter said she hoped to get a teaching certificate at the end of the second semester In May. Included in the training will be two eight- week practice teaching sessions in District of Columbia schools. JuJie said she would livt in the White House during the school year. Her husband, David, starts 0 f f i c e rs ' Candidate School at the Newport Naval base in Rhode Island on Oct. 24. The President and Mrs. Nixon both are delighted at the decision, Julie said, because ••they think it's a great career for a woman." Mrs. Nixon once WIJ a teacher. Julie said she hoped to teach in the second th1rd or fourth grades. She: said she wlif take enough courses to qualify her to teach In public schools in any Jtate where her huaballd mi&ht be stationed. Mrs. Eisenhowtr appeared in a sleeveless lime-colored drts.a with a hemline just above the knee. But she quickly assured Rporters that she had not opted In favor of the midi style . "'nlls is a drtss that I never got around to hemming up," she laughed. "I'm not going to wear the midi. David dOesn't like it. 1 don·t like it." LOUISVILLE, Ky. CAP ) - A Delta Airlines DC9 with 94 ~rsons abo:ard cracked open on landing· at Standiford Field Tueaday night, but the mos! ..no111 injury reported was a badly cut thumb. After the 89 passengers and five crewmen were evacuated, tbe plane, en route. from Chicago to Atlanta, wu coated with foam by firemen. Tbtre wu no fire or explosion. Most passengers contacted after The mishap said the craft's tires blew out on landing. then the plane bounced nto the air and cracked just behind the wlna: when it hit the runway again .. However, a Delta spokesman uid, "When I landed it simply cracked open." The $oktsman said 15 panengen were taken to a LouisvWe hospital for treatment of minor Mjuries. Airport authoriUes said the pilot gave no indication of trouble before laadlJJI. U.S. Pressing For Settlement Of Rail Dispute WASIUNGTON (AP) -The · N!Ion administration pressed today for an lltb hour wage settlement to avert • scheduled nationwide strike of aom1 S00,000 railroad workers one minute aft.tr midnight tonight. 'l\Ve could have a strike," 111d ~ssistant Secretary of Labor W. J. U1try of the·dispute between the natloo'a rail industry and four AFJ.,CIO mtlona. ..But they've each said they eould ~pone it if there is some meaningful progress," Usery said of the union negotiators . He declined to say whether President Nixon would invoke his power under federal labor law to delay any •trite for 60 days. Usery conceded there was no protreu In four houra of 1overnment apomond talks Tuesday, but added "that meeting was very worthwhile. I think it cleared the air." He called both 1ldes back Into negotiatione: today. But Harold Crotty, pre•ldent of .the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes, said after Tuesday's fruiUets talks "We're further apart than when we started." Retort.d dllet lnduotry ntgotlator Jobo P. Hiltz: "No, we couldn't be." Hiltz aald the unions' demudl for three-year wage hitea of 40 percent or more would bankrupt the industry, 'The workers now averqe about p ,50 ·per hour. "I'd be putting my name to tbe liquidation of the railroad industry" by signing such wage agreements, Hilts snapped. He declined to say whether the railroads had made a counter offer, but union official.I saJd there had been no lnduStry wage olfer. Ra~e for Life • Dying Tot Rejected by Hospital? SAN ANTONIO, Ttz. (UPI) -'The mother of a 14-month.old boy u ld Tuesday a bospllll noftlled to tdmit !he child three d171 belore he died of polio. "The first thing they as~ed for wu money," said Mr1. Jan Mares, 20. "It's a shame they call themselvs Catholics because they don't have 1ny fetllng for poor people." Officials al Santa Rosa Medical Center denied Mrs. Mares' story. The child, Juan Mares Jr., died Sunday of what doctors dla~ 11 polio. She said she took tbe child to Stnto Rosa tan Thursday and the boopltll -to admit him unlu1 Iba paid a $t00 depooil Sht said she did not have the money. 'The mother said she took tbe boy back to the hospital Friday and Saturday, then took him to Bexar C.Ounty Hospital, which takes care of charity patients. The boy was admitted there Saturday and died the next day. · Jack Finger, chief of community relations ror S.nta Rosa, dtnled tht child was aeen In the hospital'& tmtf'ltDCJ room prior to Saturday, \' " 1· l I I ,I ~I .. • I. • ~yone .in the family. ' "' ·-' " I -=· ' ' /' i .I ( ,, It 11 I ~ I . -. • Save34c on every pair. They're fashioned in Cantrece • 11 Arest&- run nylon ••• Greaf on the legs ••• long wearing, too! Lots of fashion colors in short, average, long and ~xtra long lengths. Reg. $2, Now, 166 Men's full fashioned acrylic knit shirts in assorted colors. Sizes S-M-1.-XL • 'le'l~a~lfl Boy's· cotton flannel pajamas in assorted colors. Notch collar. Sizes6-16. 3~~6 2~-~4 Girls' acrylic cardigan sweaters in white, navy, gold or red. 4ss Men's cotton cord Western jeans in sand, brown or loden, Sizes . 29-38 waist. CHARGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY s ·i-oRE! DAILY PILOT Has Bea11 Four beans to the pod will help Missouri tanner Bernard Wilmes produce a larger yield of soybeans this year. The beans usually have onJy three beans to the pod. The new variety was developed by Dr. Arnold Matson of the Soybean Research Foundation. Middle America-Views Move B~th Left, Right WASHINGTON (UPI) - Richard M. Scammon , discoverer of the "unyoung, unpoor and unblack" voter, now announces that middle America's political sentiments are moving both ·to the left and to the right. Scammon, former direclor of Lhe u .s. Census, is one or the nation's best -known practitioners of Psephology (see..fo\'41-gee), which is the study or elections and voting behavior. Jn a new book called "The Real ?t1ajority", he and a fonner White House speec;h writer, Ben J, Wattenberg, Wldertake to explain the 1968 Presldentlal and 1969 state and local elections in terms that are intended to point the way to candidates in the 1970s. • Scammon i1 the man who told politicians in 1968 that however insistent might seem society's squeaking wheels - the mllitant poor, lhe angry minorities. t ·h e di ssenting college students -the votes needed to wln public office are elsewhere. No one, Scammon said then and repeats now, is going to get elected if he alienates the great mass of middle class, middle.aged, white citizens. But Scammon and h i s collaborator have some news about the middle American that may come as a .shock to He 'Handled' His Clients Too Well NEW YORK (UPI) - A 47· year-0ld man was arrested recently on charges of posing as an attorney in criminal court in order to gel female drug defendants released in his custody and then engaging lhem in seii:ual relations. The Brooklyn Disrlct Attorney's office said Rudy Strauss, oC Yonkers, N.Y~. married and the father of three, appeared at a night. se55k>n of Brooklyn criminal court in August posing as an attorney for Odyssey House, a drug rehabilitation center in Manhattan. He convinced the court on at least four occasion,, to release female defendants in his custody, ostensibly to take them to Odyssey House for treabnent, .authorities said. But instead, he took them to area motels for the nlghl and had sex with them, the district attorney's offiet said. The next morning, Strauss took the women to Odyssey Hou,,e and, saying he was a U!gal Aid Society Lawyer, turned them over to officials at the miter. Strauss was arraigned on ch311es or o~tructing justice. crtmlna l imper90l'lalion and practicing l1w without a Uctnse be(ort Criminal Court Judge Gerard M. Weisberg. 8811 was set at S2,500 pending politiciam who equate "plain folks" with the fixed stars of 19th centwy poliUcal thinking. Scammon and Wattenberg say recent elections and polls make it clear that the vital center of the American electora te has gone conservative on wtiat they call "the social issue" disruption caused by crime, changing morals, alienated youngsters and drugs. But they say the voters also are decidedly liberal -al least as that label was used in the 1960s -on economic issues such as health care, pollution control, school aid, slum cl earance and antipoverty programs. The many issues directly affecting race, they say, are muddled, falling in some cases on the conservative and in others on the liberal side. What does all this m~n? The authors say it means that the political battles of the 1970s will be fought on the two battlefJelds of the social issue • and economics. "The party and the candidate that can best occupy the center ground of the two battle!Jelds will win the presidency.'' And how should it be done? Scammon and Wattenberg offer free advice t-0 everyone in the arena. They advise Democrats to divorce their social programs from the image of being "soft" on crime and permiMiveness by pledging to crack down on Jawbreakers while helping the poor and the disadvantaged. They t e 11 Republicans -who need no coaching on the social issue - to move toward the liberal side on bread and butter issues and project the Image or "an activist. problem· solving government." The advice to both &ides reflects their basic thesis that "the center is the only position of political power." Speaking of the George Wallace movement and the radical left, they say "their power and inOuence depends on whether they can s't.ay within hailing dista~ of Ule center or whether they march off the side of the cliff, in lockstep, Minutemen an d Weathermen, hand in hand, smiling as they plummet, saying 'oitly lam pure.'" ANIMAlogk .,_ "' a Sept. 1~ hearing -==========; Authorities said Strauss is in ,. the import-export buslneu . An lnvestl&ation WIL5 begun when some of Strauss' "client&" complained to oftlclnls at Odyssey HouM, authorities said. Who C.res? No othtr 111•wtpeptr !ft tht world c.•rt• ebout your toll'IMU• nltv likt vo11, ''"""11nlty deity n1w,,,1p1r doee. lt't th• DAILY PILOT. \ ) ,.~~~-...., ....... _._. ' -• DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • A Pit for Bike Riders? Huntington Beach city ollicials and b*• riders who tor the past few Wffks have been looking for a )llay out of the bole created by the recent anti-cycle ordiilances. htve at Jast found a possible solution. The answer lies in "The Big Hole," the huge Bruce Bros. gravel pit near Gothard Street and Talbert Av .. nue which has lain dormant since digging operations ceased sometime ago. By sheer coincidence it possesses characteristics which would seem to cut off some arguments by loca l residents against noise created by cycle riders. High walls of the pit could efiectlvely deflect the noise and the dust could have plenty of room to setUe before threatening anyone's laundry. Whatever noise woul d emanate from the pit should not offend anyone's ears since it is located in an indus· trial area, removed from major residential settlements. The city's responsiblllt.v to provide recreation1d areas for au residents of the city includes the cycle riders. If the property. can be purchased at a reasonable price, it could be a worthw&Ue venture. Valley's School Tax On Sept. 15 the Fountain VaJley School District will ask voters to approve continuation of the district's $2.99 tax rate. The DAILY PILOT support s the di srict re- quest. This election is not to increase taxes, but continue the same rate (or as long as the district needs it. If the election failed , which i~n·t likely, the effect \11ould be \videspread. The tax rate would drop back to $1.35, cut- ling out more than half .the money needed to run the schools. Fountain Valley school officials have earned the r ight to ask their supporters for money. Few elemen~ tary school districts have achlevid greater recognition or captured a larger share of fed ral m oney to be used on projects setting the pace of ed cation for the nation. And very few school districts ~ave organized so ef- ficiently as lo ha f aJJ policies, al\ philosophies writlen out and available ,o the public. The efficiency and high-quality achieved by the Fountain Valley School District has been due in large part to the.c'->operatlon of the community in all aspects. The citizens have never failed the district before and we are sure they \von'l no\v. Community Center's Home Jluntington Beach has a Community Center once again, and the Community Cente r has a dov;ntown home. This time there should be no controversy such a s the one that followed the first attempt of the Com- . munity Center to settle downtown . !\1erchants '>"'ere upset the lirst •time because of the proposed liJ.lking of Help Line and a free clinic for drug abusers and other medical problems inside the same building with the Community Center. This time the center is carrying the baJJ alone, and few people should \vo rry about its location at 309 5th St. JoJm Holiday. deputy director Of the Community Ac· lion Council in Santa Ana , has emphasized that the cen- ter would not be a hango ut or recreation hall for teen· agers. Its purpose is to serve the poo r by offering help ranging from sewin~ classes to transportation to com- munity counseling. People "'ith problems a re welcome anytime, Holiday says. It "'ill serve everyone from sen- ior citizens to young children. but in a quiet manner. Even thouPb the 5th Street address is only a tempor- ary locaiton. it's j?ood to see the to,vn with a community center. It fills a need in the life of Huntington Beach. H Lacked Majority Public SuJlport Bufano .Had Tlie · Spark of True Genius Senate Doves Scored Zero WASHINGTON -For a couple or years the media have been saturated 1!."· w)th horror stories about the military· industrial complex. pacifistic senators have called for "new priorities," the young have demonstrat@d at t h e Pentagon, idealistic grou~ have deplored the bomb. It has all come to naught. Exactly zero in.!ofar as major Pentagon projects have bee:n curbed or eliminated. After month.! of considera· ,. tion. the $19.2 bJUion { miUtary aupply biJJ "'hich was to have been made" the ve· hicle for expreiising war dissent and'Pen- tagon distrust has been adopted by the Senate the way the Nixon administration and Armed Services • Chairman John Stennis (Dem ., Miss.) wanted it. The measure comes complete v.'ilh ABM expansion and provision for huge cost O\'erruns for the C-5A aircraft. THE SENATE REFUSED to hold President Nixon to a timetable for ending the Vietnam' war. It refused to prohibit use of chemicals for defoliation and crop destruction in Vietnam. It refused to prohl bit the use of draftees in Indochina combat. It refused to stop expansion of the ABM . It refused to vote the beginning of a voluntee r Army ahead of Nixon's post-Vietnam scheduh!. It refused to ·adopt an across·the·board cut i n ; Pentagon spending. The Senate refused to do all this in the • Miller in Iowa ; McGovern and I\-tundt in Soufh Dakota.) HOWEVER, IT SHOULD not be Richard Wilson . • -• ~ assumed that because the peace t'len1t'n ls lost all the battles, they will stop trying to win their kind of war. St'na tor I\-lcGovem btlieves that much progress has been made and he is justified in that belief when one-third of the ·sens.le voles to cut oU funds, at a certain date. for conducting a war which may concfivably have to be fought for some years more ind with interludes like Cambodia. face of a vigorous editorial campaign in the newspaper a .senators see every. day, and under such emotiona l pressure as tht outburst of Sen. George McGovtm !Dem., S.D.l that the Senate chamber "ree ks of blood ." The peace and pacifism wiators clearly lost the &&f!Je. ln every quarter, becauae they lack majority support· from a public which Is not as sanguine as they that risks can be taken with 'the national .Becurit;;~ NOR lS THE PUBLIC ready to turn over war pow ers of the presidency to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Certain senators havf thus gotten themselves trapped in general postures "'hich &re not approved in the stales of their origin. This Is quite possibly true in such states as South Dakota, Iowa, Indiana, Oklahoma, Oregon. California. It rnay be true in many other stal~s away from the Eastern seaboard. Part of the peace and pacifism move1nent is transparently political with Democrats and Republicans fo\lowin& a pro-Nixon or anti-Nixol'l line. But another part of it runs deep in conviction . crosses party li nes and reflects an opposite reading by two senators from the same state on prevailing opinion in the stale (Packwood and Hatfield in Oregon: Hughes and The conclusion will have to be dra'il'n in the Nixon administration that the day may conceivably come when t h e President will no longer be grantee! the flexi bility he desires in wlUldrawing from Vietnam. In a senae his nexibility has already btcome circumscrl~ betause the A-fcGovern·Hatfield Amendment, although defeated by a 5}39 vote, does in fa ct gener11Jy represent the goals he has set for himself in bringing the war to an end. It was perhaps for this re ason alone that the McGoveftl-'Hatfield Amendment did not get more votes. The majority of the Senate believed that Nixon was C(lming near enough to the goals of the MeGovern·HaUield Amendment to leave room only for quibbling. THE ARGUMENT IN the future wi ll come over the size of the residual for ce kl be left in V~tnam after mid-1972-- 20,000, 50,000 ar 200,000. It is then, in the presidential election year. when Nixon will feel the full force of pressure which the present debate has aenerated. Ill Wind From the South Along about mid-August. farmers in the gt.ates of Illinois, Indiana and Iowa ~ discovered grayish tan spots on the ~ leaves of corn &talks. Helplessly, they "'atched as the fungus destroyed the leaves. then the stalks and fin ally the cobs. Borne along by moist, warm winds from the Gulf of Mexico, the southern corn leaf blight had attacked the heart of tht nation's corn_ belt. • , Yields may be cut an ywhere from 20 to M Percent . Shortages of feed grains could result tn su bstan ti al ly higher ~upermarket prices for meat, egg.~ and poultry. The Nixon administration 's hope of stemming inflation might be dealt a sharp setback. And the effect! v.·ould be wiclespre&d because corn is used in bread, breakfast foods. whiskey and even textile finishing. · ••THE DtPACT IS endless," say~ Henry Wilson . president of lhe Chicago -. Soard of Trade. scene of hectic trading si nce the blight gtruck. The threat of shortages and higher feed pric~ spurred I ----~lliliiiiliml-- Wednesday, Septen\ber 9,)970 Th• <dltoriOI ~· ot 1114 Doll~ Pilot neks t.o inform ond ati,,.. ulot4 reocftrs by presenting thU ntl.PIPG:Pfr'• opin ion.J and com.- rMttto~ Oft; • topiet of interest dnd rifnilkonc" b¥ pro111dlng • forum for till ezpres,ion of OijT readers' oplnfom. and by prcitntfno thf dlvtr11 t."itw- point.s of fnform.td oflstr-vtra o:nd 1poktnntn on toriiri rif I/i t oow .. Robert N. Weed. Publisher ' . Editorial 'Research ' some farmers to rush cattle and hogs lo the market. This should lead to a temporary easing of meat prices. But if the bli!hl is as serious as some experts say. the tong·term trend is upwa rd. Com first became known to Europeans on Nov. 5, 1492, when a Spanish scouting party in the interior of Cuba reported find ing a grain called mahiz tha t co\Jld be baked. dried and made into flour. Since then. corn has become the \l'orld 's third mo.!t important ctreal -ranking arter wheat and rice. In the Unitc-d States, where the harvest this year had been t.stlmated at 4. 7 billion bushel-;. 85 percent of lt is used to feed livestock. OVER. TllE YEARS. new methods of cullivatlon and hybrldizalion ha v e changed the .corn known to the Indians into a modem, high -yielcl crop. Although hybrids were grown as early as Ule 1870s, the most productive typ<:s did not come Into use until the 19205. Don Paarlbcrg. an agricultural economist. has noted that the t1\'eria:e yield per acrt, \•1hlch during 1~1939 was 2S bushels, has in re«nt years reached $7 bushels. Although com Is subject to m11ny dlseascs. it was relativ ely free from serious virus attacks Until I.bout 1963 when heavy IMsts were reported. l..o~s ha11e bten so heavy In some areas -such as the Yazoo Delta of western Mississipp~ -I.hat com has been almost completrly replaced by o!her crops. Blight damage to earn In some souther n 11tates this year is said to have reached emergency levels. CONSIDERABLE debate rages about lhe deartt of damaae in the c:orn belt. Governmcnl. econo1nists ha\'e adopted a wait-and-see al.lltude before forecasting what part of lhe ha rvest will not be brough! in. The first specific projection or da1nage is expected Sept. I l. when the government crop report is released. Says one grain tra der : "The plain fac t is we v>on'l know the total effecl of the blight until harves t lim e ln October and November." Weather i:ii the big imponderable in dealing with the blight -ofricialJy known as heln1inthQsporium n1aydis. A new variant attaclting the cnrn belt thrives on hot and humid weather. Cold and dry conditions retard it. Many farmers. however, have given up tryin110 fight the blight. They say the cost of 1praying is too high and sa tisfa ctory rtsuilts are not certain. Sotne farmer s and economists a re already worrying about next year's crop. The only certain means of con1.rolling blight is by planting hybrids that are resistant to the fungus. 8\J! these may be in short supply. Stepped·UP research is needed to develop an effective way of dealing with lhe' blight. Dear Gloowv • Gus: Bless the ht'\icopters and the men who Oy !hem over Huntington Beach. \\1hen 1 he11r their "'hirr I knO"'' someone up thert cares -C. D.S. f hlt k itu,.. n11rttt ,...,, • .,. ·~-"ti ""C"'""'t"• l~.n.. fl lht •tWlfl.""' ~··· r""'r ..-t '""'' "' ''"""'' G~'' 0.11'! l"llo', I ~ 1 'ii' Royce ~ ' ' True geniuses -not the Holl)'.Wood director brand -have always been extremely rare. The true genius ill some domain creates a new world mankind hu nevet seen before. This world ts only vaguely comprehended by many who see it, and n1ost of tbf people do not comprehend it at all. In this tighl the ~an F'rancisco scutp. !or, Benjamin Bufa- no. who died in his :;tudio, had the spark of true genius. His world did not per- haps ha vf the im- me11se scope of Michela nego or Shakespeare . bu t it 11·as a \110rld never tncountered elsewhere. Cu riously. for a city bohtmian, Bufano's new world dealt often with fam.itiar animals, or with formailzed human figures, ofte n those expressing an abslract idea. like "Peace." Nobody ever saw a live cat like his stone cats, and his seals ancl bears were often abstr1ctions :>ymbolizing grace and power. His "Sun Vat Sfn" does not look like a man , but its priestly posture eminently fit.! the 1nessianic characte r of the ireat Chinese leader . BUFANO WAS a mercurial little man, and as yo u talked to him you perceived his though ts were often disconnected and illogical in the mundane officialdom in which he was con1pelled by his art to move, he was un iversally considered odd, or put down as a nuisance because of the_ bulldog "·ay he pushed his \\'Ork-in· progress. Bu t even lhe 1nundane, \\'ho in half- affectlon. hall.e.xasperation, called him "Benny.'' saw he had something. They didn 't know what it was. but lt didn 't go away. Bufano could \\'ork with equal facilily In s:.one. metal or \l'ood -he didn't much care, so long as in the ma~ria l he could express his obsession of the moment about his fellow men and fellow creature. MOST GENIUSES in the arts -John Keats may be an exception -do not emerge in a few year!!. Their dedication to a goal runi; O\'er most of their adult ll\'t!. , ~ So It wa.~ with Bufano. !!is rigure-style didn 't change 111uch over the decades . Jt co uldn't. coming as it dld from his inner, congenital being. But ii w a s lncompara bly pe rsistent. It piled up. n<'w figurts were always appearing. Md by she<'r "·eight of numbers became impressive and Inesca pable. During most of his life Bufano was flat broke. He might have sold his p)eces to lhe rich, generating a fad. Bui he knew nothing about n1oncy ror living. and cared less. }le could quibble for yean over \\'here his work was exhibited. but he wouldn't have it In the formal garden of some estate. All hr wanted ol inoney was to buy materlals for the coming work, 11nd some or his most amuslnc altercatlons in volved that desperate quest. The ~trene:lh of Burano's work lieS in its implication. not its explication; 11 suggests a subject but docs nol portray 1t 10 the eye, Bufano h11d a dlfferl'.nt eye, "s do all geniuse~. It is ~ gue~ l'lf!re his i::ta!ves wUI endure. 11nd engage the interest ()f pos~rity, 3S the statues of Civll War acll(!rals on hors-es n~v~r have. Same the World Over: Militarism Tbou1ilts at Larg:t: Militarism ls the sa me the world over; the minute a man puts on a uniform he begins to resem ble his enemy far more than either ol them resembles his countrymen in civilia~ dress. • • • There is a vast dlUerence between "looking up to great- ness" and "hero- wor.!hip" -looking up to greatness means finding ~ mo- del we can shlpe our actions upon, whereas hero. wor. ship means expect. ing someone else lo act out our frustra- tions, hopes, angers and dreams of power. • • • ~~ •• ~( Using "huma n nature" as a limiting factor in what mankind can achieve in the way of a better society ignores Thoreau's far-sighted observation th at ..Man's capacities have never been measured: nor are we to judge of what he can do by any precedents, so little has been tried .'' • • • When people who insist they "want the truth" begin to love it more than they fear it, only then will it be vouchsaf· ed to them. • • • If we cannot understand that the statements "Everybody l! equal" and "Everybody is unequal" are not con- traries, but art both true and must stand together, we cannot begin to discuss politics intellt1enlly. • • • Why don't the beauty and gla1nor maga:dnes tell their feminine readers that no amount' of flattering makeup, fasc inating hairdo, or fashionable clothel can make a woman appear attraetiv• if her mouth is tight and bitter. her iyes are hard and calculating, and her 'il:hole demeanor ii tense and anxious -as so ofte n is the case with impeccably turned-out women? • • • It must have been a prospective home· buyer who penned the anonymous i nd cynically true line : "The man who writes 1he bank 's ad vertisi ng is not the man who makes the Joan." • • • A sequel is almost never as good as the original book . for the source or inspiration has become sfcond-ltand : even the genius of "Alice in Wonderland" v1as dulled into mere talent in "11u'ou gh the Looking·Glass." • • • What the "realist" sees is that without l::>gic there-can be no reagonabltJ-action, and he is right: what he does not see is tha t the applica tion of logic alone Ito Situations,that call for feelings) can lead tp madness. • • • A pelltiCian is a man who can rise to an occasion far faster than h! can ail down to one. • • • Far more single than marr ied persons ccwnmit suicide; this is because in a marriage you always have someone else to blame when Y,Ou feel you aren't living up to your capacities: the single person has no such source of consolit11 illusion. Change Obscenity Laws? Atty. Gen. John ~1itchell has taken issue with the President's Commission on Pornography whic h re co mm e nded liberalizing obscenity laws in lhe United States. "If we want 1 society in which the noble side of men is encouraged and mankind itself is el•vated, then I submit that pornography is surely harmful ," Mitchell said . 0 Both as individuals and a~ a n&tion we are •s worthy as the quality of our thouihla and interests." THERE IS SOMETHING to be sald for th11t point of view. The queslion is whether restrictions on the Viewing of pornography help or hinder t h e attainment of that desirable end. Bec1ust the .open and explicit depiction of sexual 1cts his been taboo in this country until 'rectnt times. we have witnessed an 11lmost incredible rtsponse to movies and plays which feature nudity and simulated aexual activity. PEOPLE WANT TO see that which is forbidden . They stand in line for fiours to set such trash as "I Am Q.irtoua (Yellow)" or Its equally lnAne successors. each promising to outdo the other In the exposure of flesh and the portrayal of bedroom .acrobatics. If ll were true that llftif'lg re~rictions on the viewing or pornogtaphy would cause adu lts, who presumably "'Otild be tht only ones prlvlleged to see I.he forbidden, to !ipend 111 thtlr time lecrinR al unclothed Actors or flipping through the pai!es of nudist magazines, lhen thtre might be a reason to be apprehensive, BUT IT'S EXTREMJ!L Y doubtfUI that reasonably intellilent lndividuil.! w0u"1 be spending their time on such 'frivolous and unrewarding voyeurism. Man y critics com_plain ,that tht· sCKalled .,iiin nicks" ar~ so crudely done they &re utterly boring to the average viewer. rt seems reasonable to speculate that relaxing the obscenity laws, as applied to adu lts . might have the desirable effect Of satisfying public curiosity sooner and hast~n the day when people get back to reading good books and seeing pll;s in which the actors keep their clothes on. Tiie Dally C.IUon.111 El Catt• 1---B11 George ---. Dear ~rgt: What does it mean when they "scratch" a race h&rse? Dear T.Y.: T.Y. It means tht>y've iOt an ilchy race hor.~. and, look. rm .trying to run a Jovelom column here! l-lo1v can I writt blut material like tht olher lovelorn columnists if my readers· problems are Itchy horses? Whatever happe.ned to in- fideli ty? I I I , .1 I I I ,, I . ' ' Fo1111 ·iain ·v ·aJley PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNI>< WJQNESOAY, S~PTEMI~ 9, '1970 ' • f Council Lauds Center Plari, Winces By TERRY COVILLE Of tlll 0.11'1' 'lltt lllff Arclrltect Kurt Meyer unyeiled the model of a $9.9 million civic center for Huntington Beach Tuesday night. It brought praise and exclamations from the city council. It also br.ought quick counter propoals from city officials to cut the cosls. While everyone agreed M e y e r ' s conception o! the civic center was beautiful, they reminded him the city has ra only $11.S million with which to build not only the civic center but a new library and corporation yards. • Councilmen referred the architect's proposals to city staff for joint meetings to follow up several suggestions made by City Manager Doyle Miller. • •·our staff estimales the total cost ot this civic center shOwn here at $9.9 million," Mtller told councilmen. "That would only leave $1.6 million for the s library. estimates for which have already run over $3.S million." hfiller presented five basic alternative,, to reduce the civic center costs . -Instruct the architect to reduce construction costs to a maximt.nn of $8 million -perhaps by phasing part of the project. -Proceed with the project as planned, but consider bringing the library and civic center under one contract and Tax Measures Pass Issues Okayed Amid Confusion The man who said the only sure things Jn liie are death and taxes never stopped in Huntington Beach. lf he passed by the city council Tuesday night he would have found councilmen quite unsure about taxes. They played a slow ve rsion of 20 questions with a fi ve percent utility tax , a SO percent increase in business licenses, a $6-per-unit apartment tax, and elimina- tion of the trash collection fee for home- owners. All four measures finally passed, but only after much confusion. Mo~e Drug, Sex Stories From Marina f alace Told More allegations of narcotics use and sexual intimacies at Saturday night Marina Palace dances were disclosed Tuesday as Seal Beach Police Chief Lee Case presented testimony cf two guards during the dance hall license hearing. Patrick MacManus, of Long Beach, and Scott Childress of Seal Beach both testified that they had seen the use of marijuana and pills in the quonset-styled building located on Pacific Coast Highway. The cpcralor. William L. ''Bill" Robertson, 71 , of Seal Beach, could lose his business license· if the charges are found to be true by the City Council which is sitting as a quasi-judiciary body in the hearing. Childress told the council that he twice tried to inform Robertson a b o u t misconduct -including narcotics use - • but was waved off by a gesture 0 of don·t bother me." .. After that. 1 didn't try any more because I figured he didn't want to be bothered by what I had to say." Childress, a criminology major at Long Beach State College, told the council. The prosecution's case is expected to continue for the remainder or the week with about 10 witnesses still remaining, according lo Police Lt. Al Chafe who is assisting the chief.. with the case. After that, it will be the prosecution's turn with Attorney Russell Bledsoe seeking to prove that the charges against the dance hall were politically motivated. Robertson has named several city officials in a conspiracy to divert attention from a "land grab" in Sett! Beach by pressing charges against the Marina Palace. Bard Landing on the Beach Here's how the taxes went: As expected, the five percent utility tax, up for a routine second reading cf the ordinance, was staunchly opposed by th::: Huntingto11 Beach Chamber of Commerce. "With this utility tax we, the business community, are picking up most of the capital improvements (civic center, library) voted 011 by the citizenry," complained Allan Hanner, manager of tl:e Broadway Department Store. Speakers for the cbt111~ Jske4 that a· gross receipts businei8 license fee be substituted in place of the utility tax. Councilman Jack. Green, remiftded chamber officials that, when a gross receipU tax was first proposed, the chamber supported ii, then denounced it, causing lts death. "But the business community is supporting all the costs of these 11ew taxes," chamber officials complained. ''That's right," replied Green. "There's no question that the council wants to shift the burden of lazes of! the homeowner." Councilma11 George McCracken took exception to that point as he called for reduction of the proposed utility tax from five percent to three percent. He gained momentary support from Councilwoman Nonna Gibbs w h o suggested reh1stating an oil taz to pick r p revenue. Mrs. Gibbs changed her mind on lowering the utility tax after Finance Director Ben Arguello explaiJted how much money It meant to the city and (See TAXES, Page !I • • ·~ " . D41L Y l'ILOT l'~tlf n .... 0Hl .. tltlllll R escuers prepare to lift Patricia A. l\feredith ; 19, Buena Park, from smashed car which came to rest on the beac h after tumbling over tr..foot en- bankment in Huntington Beach about 8 o'clock th is morning. Witnesses sald tht car failed to make stop at 22nd Street, continued across Pacific Coast Highway and bounced down to the beach. Miss Meredith, the car's only occupant, was injured. • perhaps moving the library to Ult civic center site. -Delay a portion al lhe capitol improvements program such as the library, the civic center of the coi:poration yards. -Make a major cul. in the library project by reducing ~pace or moving it to the civic center. -Build the. civic center in phases and no reduce the space of some areas, such as the jail. Meyer and Miller agreed they should talk over the proposals to find the best method for accomplishing the task. Meyer's plans for the IS.acre civic center site at Main aod Mansion Streets included: -A· !ive-story administraton building, housing most city departments. -A one-story connecting wing for cperatlonal departments. er TODD 'TICKNER TAKES ·THE WHEEL OF HIS GO.CART Who S1y1 • Sm1rt Kid C1n't H1v1 Fun Too? Genius At Age 7 Valley Boy Pint-sized Einstein By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of llMI D1Jty l'U1t lllK Every mother thinks her child Is a genius. . Mrs. Jack Tickner of Fountain Valley is no: exception. But In her case it ju.st happens to be true: Everyone in. the family expects little Todd, aged 7. to .do great things. His encyc!Opedic knowledge astounds most everyone and hi! skill in mathe'matic! makes him a pint-sized version of Albert Einstein. "When he was 11 months old we began to think he was kind of speciil," ·his mother said with.a smile. "He knew· how to count to 100, could print. ti is name and memorize the plots of children's books." In later years -between the ages of 2 and 4 -he began to further amaze his parents by learning how to read, ainstruct his own gam~s and puzzles and by inaking calenders for the next six years to come. Todd's Interest in read.Ing has continued through the' years, progressiitg to more intellectuaf voTUrnes . La.!!t summer. for instance, he polished off "Atlas Shrug· ged," which is pretty weighty material even for college graduates. He is also capable of reciting all the U.S. president.s, capitols of each 1tate, counties, carnivorous and plant-ealing dinosaur, and other bits and pieces high school students often have troUble remembering . "I just loOk at something for one day and then I can remember it forever," Todd explained· matter of factly. Don Hendricks, principal at Fountain Valley's Nieblas School is equally impressed with the youngster's performance and says he is enrolled in a special · "mentally gifted m i n o r s • • program ·where students 1tuCly advanced fields such as oceanography and_ the solar system. ' His· interests also carry over: lo· non- lntell~tual pursuils, among lhem'drivin'g his own go-cart and playing Pop Warner football. "He's be good for some kind . of statistician's job because he has a photographic m$lory and remembers everythjng ," said his mother who ex peels him .to pursue a scientific career. But while bis parents wail with baled breath for what he will ultimately do, Todd firmly irwists, .. l want to be a fireman.'' • Driving one of the big red engines ls apparenUy every child's dream -even if he ls a genius. Surf Contest Judge Picked Wave and style expert Bill Swarts Gf Los Angeles will replace his father A. E. "Hoppy". ~warl& this ·year as chief ju<tge ' during Huntington Beach's aMual U.S. Surfboard Championships. He will lead· a IO.member team of judges in deciding who the winner.!! wtfl be In the competition 1ehtdultd for ~uly lt-20 off the municipal pltr. Other judges for the event Which is ftO" In 111 12th' runalnc lnclude Del ca"""" of San Clemente: Don HGdges. Sooth Laguna: Ron Rockey, Inglewood; Paul Heustamtam, W h I t t I e r ; , Marge McClelland, LajU111 . Beach, and Byron Williamson. Houston, ttx. · · 11ie judging' team will be rounded out by ,.et unnamed ttpre.sentativ~ of the Eallttn Surfing A&soci1Uon,. Hawaiian Surfing Association '1'.ld Western' Surfing A!JoclaUon • - Today's Fina) N.Y. Stocks I TEN CENTS at Cost -A two-level council chamber with 1eating for 125 people. -A three-story police station. Total area space would be 220,9$5 square feet. "It stand! to reason that all the space in this model need not be used .right away," Meyer told the council. He said by leaving the top floor of the administration building unfinished inside IS.. MODEL, Page I) ~ane 113 Aboard Latest Jet Captured By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Palestinian guerrillas hijacked a British jetliner with 113 persons aboard today and forced it to land near two other capt!ve airliners on which nearly 200 persons were being held hostage in the Jordanian desert, the British Foreign Office announced. · · A Spokesman said word had reached Loodon that the plane, after circUng the Middle East for hours, landed at the ume iuefrilla·held base where the two othti' planes were under guard. As in the case of the four hijacking plots eulier this week, lhe Marxiat Po~ Front for the Liberation of Pllestihe assumed responsibility. A apokesman said the PFLP seized the Britisb · Overseas Airway11 Corp. VCIO, after. Jt.a take off from Bahrein in the Persian Gulf, to reinforce its demand for the release of a woman hijacker held in Loodon. "Let's see what British Prime Minister Edward Heath does now," a iUerrWa spokesman said. A BOAC spoke.!man in London said 32 Britons, 12 Bahreinis, 3 Americans aPICI 2 Indians joined 54 other passengers aboard the plane in Bahrein. It carried 10 crewmen. The plane was on a flight from Bombay to London. At the United Nations in New York, (See HIJACK, Page Z) PILOT AD NETS QUICK RESULTS Fast. That's the word that describes the kind of action DAILY PILOT classHied want ads get. Here's the ad: e 1 I 5 I Buick Special $100 cash :UX·xux Here's the result. The advertiser said she "had a·catl within minutes after my paper wa11 delivered •.. first man who 11aw (the car ) bought it." Want fast action? Call 642-5678, the direct line to a DAILY PILOT ad-viJor, and get rudy to aell something. Oraalfe <:out Weatlter The evenjng and morning fog takes a t ighter grip on the Or- ange Coast Thursday, while al· ternoons will be spotted wit h hazy sunshine. Look for temper· aturea in the 70 tG 89-degree INSIDE TODAY Tile: new season of living theater get.t under wa11 on ihe Orange Coast Fridat1 with thret local playhouses opening their firs' productions. See Entert.ai'nment, PaQ< 25. I I \ ' Residents, Pilots Clash. On 1 An·port i Pilots and homeowners clashed again In city council chambers Tuesday night over the Meado'A'iark Airport. Huntington Beach Mayor D o n a l d Shipley allowed both sides to talk for nearly two our• even though the item was not lilted on the council agenda u a public hearing. In the end nothing was solved. Councilmen r e f u s e d to stop Meadowlark'• Ute of a controversial JOO. foot extension on Ila runway until further study is made by Robert Dinpall's committee. Dingwall presented evidence from the California Aeronautla Board statillg the extenalon added to the safety of the airport, In contradicUon to homeowners' 1latementa. "J would ask you !lOt to close the runway extemlon. We are eeeklng improvements out there and it is safer now,·• Dingwall , a pilot and president of the HOME Council, said. Homeowners have asked the rouncil to stop Meadowlark pilots from U!ln& the 300-foot extension and the new night lights. They aay both 1temlll make Meadowlark unule btcaUle of nearby utility llnu. A apokaman for the ~allfornia Aeronautie1 Board did 1ay the night flying from Meadowlark was hazardous and that night cperations would not be approved until lights were placed on the utility poles to wam pilots of the wires. The CAB man supported Dinpall's eontenlion th.It the runway e1tenaion made fiylng lifer, "becauae pllols are airborne quicker on takeoffs." · Ken Haulk, a leading critic of ·the airport extension, told councilman that CAB d.lrector Joseph Crotti h a d suggested underiroundlng utility wirts, closing Roosevelt Street at the end of the runway and educating pilots, "Crotti made those suggestions as the maximum lo improve conditions al Meadowlark,'' Dingwall countered. "We are talking to Edison Company about the wires. The road at the end <lf the runway ia not likely to be closed for sometime. it juat can't be done. The education of pllatl II already under way," Dingwall uld. The Cl'Ul of the complaint Is the 3()0.. foot e1ten.!lon1 wllch hu now betn marked with white lines to prtvent pilots from landing on lt. The extension Is to be used for takeoffs ooJy. But homeownen uy pllot.s are In fa ct using lhe e1ten1ion for landings whether J,al or not. 'There are tome legitim1te compl1lnll," Dinfwall concluded. "And we are "WOrkin& on them." Dinpall'1 committee, or which Haulk 11 a member, will ineet a11in Thuraday night. The city council .et Sept. 21 u I.he dste for sorne type of actl<ln on the Meadowlark luue. Valley Man Faces Trial in Death • A Fountain Valley man who was booked on manslaughter charges afttr the traffic death or a 7-mon~ld boy hu been ordered to face trial Nov, 18 In Superior Court. Judge Samuel Drtizen Set that date for Donovan A. Van Over 10474 Egret St. Van Over Is lree <ln bail after pleading innocent to felony charges o f manslaughter and hit and run. ll is alleged that Van Over was reponslble for a two-car crash last July 13 Bt Newhope and McFadden when hia vehicle ran into a car driven by Mrs. Lucille Smart of Santa Ana. Mrs. Smart Bnd her 7-month-0ld son Thomas were injured and taken to Orange County Medical Center for treatment but the baby died that same day, Police said· Van Over left hit damaged car and ran from Lhe scene immediately after the. collision at the Sant.a Ana intersection. DAILY PILOT 0114NGE COAIT l"U&L l•HtNG COMl",fr,NY R.oiitrt N. w,,4 l"rni<llent v4 ~llP•"""' J•ck R.. Cvrlt y Vit t l"rr1l41t11! •fl<I vt.·~"•I lil~ntttr Thotr11i K•t¥il 10;11>1" l~am1• A. Mur~ Mfl\fflntl lt~ Al1n Dlrkln • WM! 0.•l'llt Ctlrnly l~llor Al~1rt W, It!•, AU«ll!t l!OolO!' Httltfl .. t•• ..... OHl&t I 7f7S lt•cli low\1v114 M1lli~t A44 rou1 P.O. 111 7t0, tli41 OtlM'r Offl• .. Ltt-•ttctll n:t ~., .. , ,,_, C•lf• Mtu~ llO Wu! tty ll•UI H•-1 l•1c.t1.Jt11 ,.,.,, &tl~l l :!YltVI .. St~ Cltnltnst: :ICJ NOoflft II CMIN Atl! DAILY PILOT 1 .. ff ..... ~-·. --- 1'1•11 Stieceed Self Green Seeks 2nd I . I City League Term Councilman J1ck Grten of Hunttngton Beach has been renominated to succeed himself as president of the Orange C<>unty League of Cities. Mesa holds that post now for a tw~ye1r term ending in 1971. ' MODEL INCLUDES FIVE-STORY ADMIN BUILDING (LEFT>, THREE-STORY POLICE BUILDING A One-1tory ConrMcting Wing and a Two-story Council Chamber Are Design.cl With Servlca In Mind .ElecUOn ol president and vice president tot the ()(lmlng year will be held "nlursday at a mttllna of the executive committee of the league at 7 p.m. in Frledemann Hall, 134 Glassell St., Oran1e. Councilman Ralph Clark of Anahtim, a candidate for lllpervilor In the fourth dlstrlct, has been nornlnatecl for another term 11 vice pre•ldtnt. The execut ive rommlttee will .hear a prellminary report 1'hursd1y on the su bject of dlrtct election or mayors In Orange County cities . The committee Is headed by Mayor Ed Hirth or Newport Beach. At this lime no county city has a full· time elected mayor wilh a salary. It has been suggeated by some leaaue members that tht job of mayor has become ro burdenl()rfle lhlt a plan to elect the post separately from councilmen and with a salary commensurate with the Ume in vo lved should be studied. Sirhan's Mother Pleads For Release of Hostages NEW YORK (AP) -The molher of Sirhan B. Sirhan, ronvicted killer of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, renewed her plea Wednesday that the Palestinian guerrillas spart the 178 hijack hostages in Jordan. "Don't forget you are an Arab and forgive . This is Jn our heritage -to forgJve and to release," Mary Sirhan told the guerrillas tl\.rough a news conference at Kfnnedy Airport. State Department officials h a d th'>''arted her plans to ny Tuesday with two lawyers to Amman to press personally for release of the hostages. The lawyers, Luke McKlsaack ~nd Mlchael McGowao. appeared with Mrs. Sirhan and said they aought a national televlslon audience to explain ther million. McKl.ssack sald he had been unable to relay Mrs. Slrhan's plea throuab pr1vata eontacta in the Middle East. A State Department spokesman said Tuesday that Mrs. Sirhan had been detained and the lawyers' pwports revoked. Luke ~llsack, Mn. Slrhan's lawyer, aald a man ldentUylng hlmulf u Douglu Farrell of the U.S. Immlrratlon and NaturaU.zaUon Strvlc:e, demanded his paoport and that of Mlke McCowan, an inveatlgaUve 11111, u the two made arranaementa to ny to Amman, then 5tamped "nvoked" on Jt. He aatd the action wu .. without le1al From PGfe l HIJACK ... :Brit.aln and the United States aU:ed for a me•U.I of the U.N. l!ecurlty eouncn later today to t1ke up the wave of bijacldng1. • Meanwhile, the hosta1e1 taken earlier sweltered through a third day aboard the two plan••. a Swl1salr oca and • Trans World Airlines Boeing 707, at the El Khana altatrlp 26 miles northeast of Amman. For their ransom, the tuerrlll11 were demandln& the release of three. Arab terrorisla held in West Germany, three olhtrs jailed In Swllzerland and Mias Lella Khaled, 25 held !n L<>ndon for the aborted hijacking or an l!!'aeli El Al plane Sunday. The PFLP, like other guerrilla sroups is against any Middle Eest settlement that does not restore Arabs to former homes in Palestine, the land that is now Israel . All ha ve refu sed to abide by cease.fire agreement.I on Israeli borders, and the PFLP has made a speciality of airline hijackings. After the BOAC plane left Bahreln, the hijackers forced It to land at Belrnt (or refueling, and Lebanese Trans po rt Minister Pierre Gemayel appealed kl lhe auerrlltas to let women and children go. "No," replied the guerrillas. "We ire leaving with everybody or we are blowlna up the plane with everybody." Gemayel then said he was aolnr to an emergency Cabinet meellnr to Introduce a measure "closing Beirut airport from ntw on to all hijackers who want to land here." Lebanon Intend s, he added, "lo maintain Beirut airport as a civil airport in e\lery aen.se of the word.'' The lntemaUonal Red Cross already had opened neiotlaUons with PFLP leaders ln Amman for the release of the esrlier hostages. The Popular Front hsd sald lt wouliJ blow up the two plants 1t 7 p.m. POT Wednesday unless the Brltlth reletstd hfiss Khaled and the Swis.s ind West Gerinan (!overamcnts !reed the six Arabs 1n their Clistody. A spokesman said Tuesday the pal8tni•rs would be removed to a auerrilla camp before the explosions. While the Bonn and Btm governmenls announced they would comply with the ran1am demand. London hedged. PFLP spokesmen In Amman said all Seven hid to arrive together o" t chartered pllRe. Of the latest airline aeb:ure, a ruerr1Jla spakesman sa id : "This hijack Is an. answer to Britain's Inhuman stand in refusing to let Leila Khaled go rree while allowing th! lsraell murder to leave." Hla reference was to ..n Jsraell aecurity 1gtnt who shot and killed Mill Khaled's partner in the El Al hijack plot. Before the BOAC hlJackin1. the British aovernment 1ppeared 10 be preparl111 to release Miss Khaled. Political sources said she would have bceR shipped out as soon a!I the PFLJ> released the two pla.neloads of hosueea. London informants said no Brltl!lh charges had been flied 111tn~t I.he woman, but Ambtssador Michael Comay dell\lered a request from J1r1el for her iiprovislonal arrest" pend.ins preparaUoo of an extradition petition. ' foundation." A State Department s p o k e s m a n confi rmed the revocation and said Mrs. Sirhan, an alien not carrying a Jordanian pauport, also wu detained under paasport regulations. "The department has control over travel oullide the country of resident aliens whose travel abroad may be considered prejudicial to the United States and it is the judgement of the sec retarY that her travel at this time would ~ preJudlclal." the spokesman said. He added the action was temporary. The tnp "wu belna: done at a time when the moat aerlow Mgotiatlon1 were 101ni on," the apokesm1n said. "Our central concern II the safety and return of Ill the pooplo aboard the pi.nu." I Cen'tral Park Plans Bloorning- Only on Paper A central perk 11 arowtn11n HunUnKton Buch -flaurallvely 1t least. Tom Sevrms, city development coordinator, aained pennlulcn from the City Councll Tueld1y nipt to teek more federal funds lo buy J>Ofk land for phlaes two and three of the ctntral pvk. "We have nearly '1.S million 1n federal funds sranted already for park land," Severns said. "Thia money w11 not fi!IW"ed In our orlalnal bud1e1." A year a10 HunUnaton Beach voters approved a $e million bond luue to buy the central park land over a alx-year plrtod. nae tase with which the city his aalntd federal open spact fund1 has moved lhe land 1cqulaltlon up almo•t five years, 1ccordln1 to city officials. 11By July 1971 We ahouJd have 205 lcrtS of land r•ady for prlmary development,'' Severns uld. That would cover the first two phana of the park near Huntlnaton Ind Talbert hikes. The council allO approved the start supplemental schematic drawlnas for phase III, the final 210 acrn of the park. In all the city's central perk wUI cover 41S aeres stretching on both sldea of G<>lden West Street, above and below Talbert Avenue. Mrs. Westbrook, Wife of Pastor, Succumbs at 39 Services will be held Thursday at Christ Church of Weatmlnater. 4:30 p.m .• ror Mrs. Atha Westbrook, wife <lf the palltor of the church. Mr1. We&tbrook died Monday at the age of 39 after a lengthy lllneu. Her husband hes served lhe We•tminater church for lit yeti'$. Mrs. Westbrook served In the church's Chr11U1n Day School and the cllurch cho~. and tau1ht In the church'• Sunday school. She 11 survived by her lnub1nd, Floyd E. Westbrook ; two daughters, Mrs. Karen Moderow and Sharon Westbrook, and a ton, Edwin We1tbrook, all of Westminster. Als...o 1urvlvlnc are her par.nil. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Choate: a sister, Mrs. Marte Gilbert, snd a brother, Kem Choate, 111 of Wichita Follt, T ... The f1mllY has suggested contributions to the Atha Weetbrook Memorial Mission Fund, tn care of Chri.!Jt Church of Westmlmter. The funds will &o to lid 1n orphanage known as lhe House of Happineu tn Quito, Ecuador. Elks Conduct Mr. Towle Rites Members or the Newport Harbor ElU Club conducted funeral 1trvlc:ea today at P1lcflc View Mortuary for John W. ToWle of Costa Mesa who died Thursday. f.ir. Towle, who was 55 years old, had llvtd In Oran1e C.ounty for nearly 36 ye1rs. A carpenter for 22 ye1n:, he was a -member of the Huntington Beach c!tapter of I.fie Carpenters Union. He leavea hil wife Virginia, of the family home, 1160 Paululno Avt.: two daU(hters, Carolyne and Barbara, both of Costa Mesa; a mother, Mn. Genevieve Towle, of Long Beach; two brothers, Ted and Efferaon Towle, ind a sister, Virginia Lantow, all or Long Beach. From Pcge l MODEL ••. for instance would save about $1001000. Councilwoman Norma Gibbs au11ested a11tin1 civic clubs to donate fuml1hln111 for each Of Lhe room1J in all buildings. Nomination• may bi offered from Lhe floor Thllriday •ccordilll lo Wlnslon Upd•l!l'•ff, uecutlve aocrelary of Ille lea1Ue. The only other tlecUve pest or the or1anlu.tlon is thst of 1tate leglslaUve d~eclor. Moyor Robert Wilson ol COiia Huntington Be1ch , voters will ballot Nov. 3 on a separlte may'or's po1t with a salary of $17,000 a year. He will be an eighth member of the city council with power to vote only in cue of tlet. The cost of furniture was estimated by city staff at about $250,000. Meyer explained that the civic center as shown was designed to handle the business for a city <lf 270,000, the predi cted maximum population o t Huntington Beach. Trustees 01( Tax Balwt "It wu built on the philoaophy of tervict to the cltl!ens rather than as a monument to government ," Meyer added . Argument for Education He pointed to the ground floor <lperation1 or departments where citizen.!! would normally conduct their business at city hall. . "Management area• would be on the higher levels or the admini:strative building," he nid. "The police facility," Meyer explained, ••wu developed for the dual purpo.e or maximum security yet total freedom for the public." _ Public business would be conducted at the end of the police station facing the other buildings while security zones would be on the end or the building farthest away. Public safety functions would be centered in the polict building, while the sdmlnlstratlve <lfflce would h o u .!I e admlnlstr1tlon, guild Ing and safety, attorney, clerk, council offices, treasurer, civil defen!e, finance, flre, harbors and beaches, oll field department, parks and recreation, perl()Me!, planning, public works, public informaUon, purchasing department!, meeting rooms and 1 cafeteria. Meyer said 90 percent of the public's contact with city hall would take plsce on the main level of the flve-lltOry building. The ctnter would house more than 870 employer. After the city ataff pointed out that money IJmit.ationt Meyer commented, "Now lhat wt know we can on1y fit five gaJk>n1 of water into 1 five-aallon can we'll be happy to work with your staff to alter it." The •rchltectural model Is currently on dlspl1y at city hall. Radar Patrols Eying Speeders Watch out for the radar patrols! For the next few weeks poolice wW be working along Bols:a Chica Road flnd Golden West Streets in Huntington Beach, handing out citations to any motorist.a foolish enouah to speed along them. The warning came from Lt. Paul Darden, traffic commander <lf the Huntington Beach Police Department, who says his men will do his best to stop traffic accidents along both roads. "We're not lntert1ted in givln1 cltaUons that much but It's the re•ult we're after," the lieutenant explained. The unlt1 will be Jn operation both day and nlaht until speed-caused accidents have bffn 1'9duotd, Lt. Darden 1aid. Ballot arguments for a 69-cent tax hike in the Huntinaton Beach Union High School District have just been approved by trustees who are prepaiing From Pere l TAXES .•. what it would cost users. ~'f.ha.Li.ve percent utility tax became law c a 4-2 vote with C<iunc!lmen McCracken and Ted Barlett opposing it. The business llcen11e Increase -SO percent in nearly all cases -passed un·animous\y and without much comment. Then councilmen discussed a $&-per. unit apartment tax. McCracken proposed sn amendment to the suggested ordinance which would have .eliminated tht $6-per.unlt char1e on apartments. However, he proposed tt early tn the discussion, then everyone started talking about the utility tax, oil tax, trash lees and other items. McCracken'• motion was forgotten until City Clerk Paul Jones reminded councihnen there was a motion <ln the floor. The vote was taken, McCracken won S- 1. "Wait a minute," said Councilman Gree.n, the Jone dissenter. "We just dropped the apartment tax." "What are we voting oo?" CoWJcilman Jerry Matney a.!lked. Jones called for another vote -and the lights <ln the tabulation board naahed on and oft. On~ :1erles of button pushing ended In a standoff at 3-3. Then it was 4·•3 when Jonea looked up, saw Coen's light lit and told tloe council It wasn't riaht - Coen hadn't been present •ll night. aomebody had pushed his button by mistake. The final t1lly was $-1 against McCracken, thll lime he was the lone dinenter, and the apartment tax atayed. The last Item wat the tr11h fee. "As a homeowner I don't object to paying it. Why don't we lea ve It in," au1ge1ted Mrs. GJbbt. As she continued, Mayor Dona.Id Shipley tried to shorten debate. The: rouncilwoman turned <ln him and In a kind, but stern voice said, "Mayor Shipley, you were flylni high an hour and a half on Meadowlark (an earlier controver1yl. We can talk a while on this." And she did, but failed to convince C'lther councilmen, who approved the trash ree elimination for homeowners. We've ann Uae ·'*>k arr oar :llnH1; 'lrlotoh IO 1011 OU .. t.h.e "'n"d•" prl!d"cm ~ .0 OMEGA •'"Kllll'll[*"'C8tlla'f', ......... '\e. ..w.,,,..... ..... ., .. --•• ..... "' .... ,,..,.!'& o.JJ ... ,..,.. INSIDE OU,.. .... 1i'I ......... .-1- oedtf .r 0.. .... ..,. ,,. "'Dftlcl-.• .. ..... .,..i ............ .... ,.. .. ........_ .... ,,_,,... .. tM ....-. .,.....,,. .... ••'I ... nnrWt1119da .. ! 'S.wlt,..w IL Em. SI ,,,.'9110t ••-'-llf.W... .... ~Ntt• will ~, ,_ &pff I• ..,. w pn1dlr 1Ko1•11ul Omtp. eo.. .. fc 1 .,_ ~ tl ......... AM.-. J. C .J./.umphriei Jewefer6 '1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVfNtlNT TfR.MS IANKAMER.ICAlD-MAST'~ CHAR.II! 24 YlAlS IN SAM( LOCATION ~ONI 141·J401 themselves for the No v. 3 election. The afgumenl.!, which will be furnished along with the sample ballot, paint a bleak picture for education if the override should (ail. District financial experts forecast a $4 million or 25 percent budget deficit next yesr if the measure .falls: 10 pass. C<lnsequently, the argument states, the district would find itself in an economic .squeeze th at would mandate the elimination of buasing, ha I r· day instruction, bigger classes, f e w e r counseling services, less instructional materials, elimination of special prorams and the end of inter·achool athletln. Even if all the cuts were adopted, clistrict officials claim they would still fall $2 million &hort of correctln& the deficit. The financial situation (or the di1tr1ct'1 five full·Ume high schools Is especially crucial since the current $1.39 tax rate will revert to 85 cents by July, 1971. The district feels it nttds a $2.08 rate to maintain its current level of educatkmal services. Should the measure be adopted by voters in the 52-square mile dislrict, it would alleviate its fin ancial difficulties for a periOd of three years. Trustees, at their Tuesday meeting, also voted to draft an official policy with I the aid of Lhe County C<iunsel's office to permit the use of undercover officers at j the ochools. ~ I Last spring, the disclosu re o f l underoover narrotlcs agents who were \ enrolled at 11everal campuses caused a furor among some residents who j contended that · such practices were I ' illegal. Deputy County C<lunael lryne C. Blick: I . told the trustees that the use of 11ents was legal as long as police lnvest11at1en1 were conducted with lhe consent of the board of lrustees. The new pollcy, according to Trustee Chairman Matthew Weyuker, would serve to establish definite rules for such / investigations and lo clear up legal confusion. Watson Appeal Denied NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -The 5th U.S. Circuit C<iurt of Appeals denied 1 rehearing Tue1day on the extradition appeal of Chsrles D. Watson, the Texas youth Implicated slon1 with other "Manson Family" members in the Tate· t La Bianca murders In Los An1ele1. YISIBLC 9ACll: Wll!lt tht '1tii,lltiKl'" ltto fnMltr h "lllM• It 9'.la!J de111ft1hlt, Oft\111 mtb"'•• 1~i, II 1111r -· ... ,~ Uh -., 1t~t1 Oni111. M1h1 t 1.1 .. i. l~I tOft'ltfNlltfl Jittll, • I I ~- •• r f . . . -- Newport lleaeh EDITION * * I VOL. 63, NO. ,1 6, 5 SECTIONS, 74 PAGES ! ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA - I WEDNESDAY, SEPT-EMBER 9, Today's Final N.V. Steeb TEN CENTS I Merchant Says NeWport BusinesS Tax Unfair By L. PETER KRIEG 04 tM Dallr Piiot! Ili ff A charge that the proposed revision or the Newport Beach business tax is unfair to food stores was leveled today by the manager of one of the city's major groceries. Hugh L. Mynatt,• general manager of Richard's Lido Center, in a letter to the City Council, contends that because of lower profit margins. food stores will be paying tw ice that charg64 t.o o t h e r ra Renews Pleas retailers. Relail stores lal11uftder "Classification J" of the proposed buSiness tax structure, which calls for a $40 fee on the first $40,000 in gross receipts, a 20-cent per thousand tax on the next $960,000 and 10 cents· per $1.000 on receipts over $1 million. The tax, Mynatt said, "does not lake into consideration that businesses within certain categories are grossly different. •• 1'In effect." be said, "it will charge food stores twice what other retailers will be-paying. Food stores, as is widely known, sell a very low profit margins'." Mynatt cited statistics prepared by the Super Mar~t Institute which state that typical groceries had gross profits or 18.1 percent in 1969, down from 18.3 in 1968. Typical net operating profit, before taxes, declined from 1.7 percent In 1968 to 1.5 percent in 1969, ~ insUtute said. s 1 ac • These figures are Jess than half of what other types of retail 1tore1 aross and net. according to Myna t .. "Therefore," be said, "to bt laxed on the same basis of retail sales at one-hair the gross margin. we would be paying 100 percent .more or our profit than ·they would be paying.'' Mynatt •also charged that Newport Beach Is creatin1 a "competitive disadvanta1e" with nei&hborin& cities, no saying that Costa Mesa and Laauna Beach have $200 maximums a n d Huntington Beach has a sun ma'limum. Mynatt said that under the new formula, "our tax will be $743 based on 1961 sales.'' Computations show this would be for the en Ure Richard's Lido Center, which curre.nUy pays $150 aMually for it! sir stores. All hminesses in Newport now pay a flat $25 annual fee. er Sirhan's Mother Denied Air Trip NEW YORK (AP) -The mother of Sirhan B. Sirhan, convicted killer of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, renewed her plea Wednesday that the Palestlll!an guerrillas Officials Deny Sew.age Dump Cuiims In answer to the claims/Of Harbor Di.!I· trict officials, Harbor patrolmen and local merchants. Newport Beich officials to. day said £here is no sewage line dump- jng pollutants into Newport Bay It the Lido Peninsula. The denial came after Harbor Dislrict officials complained to the city about the unusual amount of flotsam in the water and the bad smell in the area known as the Rhine Channel. The Harbor patrol recorded the firsl complaint of the condition Saturday morn- ing. Since that time, five harbor patrol- men have noted in their logs tht: obnox- lous odor and murky water conditions In the channel which ends at the old Western Cannery and the Sea Shanty restaurant. Joseph Devlin, director of public works and Tom Phillips, utilities superintendent for the city, both said sewer lines in I.he area have been checked for breakage. "We have come to the conclusion that there is no sewage going into the b3y and the County Health Department has con- curred," Phillip! sa ict. "The smell is probably coming from the abandoned can- nerv . No information was available from lhe Health Department today because county employes are taking the Admiss ion Day holiday off. The waters in the channel today hart only a faint, odd odor, but remained murky. The water is a strange green coJcr and visibility is quite limited. ,.. There are odd thlnp noating in il - white flaky material that resembles soa p nakes lhat haven't dissolved and brown stringy material. Phil Tozier, owner or Davey's Locker. which docks some boat.s in the channel explained that the water at that point oft en collects garbage. "Because we 're up against the penin· sula th is way.'' he said. "the circulation here is very bad. Anything that dies in the bay winds up here and it doesn·t leave unless we scoop it out." In mute demonstralion nf Toz.ier's ex· p\anation, beer cans, slicks, and about 100 dead bait fl!h noated against the bulkhead·nn 31st Street. PILOT A.D NETS QUICK RESULTS Fast. That's the WQfd that describes the kind of action DAILY PILOT classified want ads gel Here's the ad: e 1111 Bald Sped1l $100 cash xxx-xxxx Here 's lhe result. The advertiser uid she "h11:d a call within minutes after my paper was delivered ... firSt man who saw (the earl bought iL" Want fast action? CAii 642·5671. the direct line to a DAILY PILOT ad-visnr, and get ready to aell something. spare the 178 hijack hostages in Jordan. "Don't forget you are an Arab and forgive. This is in our heritage -to forgive and to release," Mary Sirhan told the guerrillu through a news conference at Kennedy Airport. State ,Department officials h a d thwarted her plans to fly Tuesday with tWo ltwyera to Amman to prua personally for release of the hostages. The lawytn, lA1ke McKiaack and Michael McGowan, 1pPtared with Mrs. Sirhan and uid they touaht a national television audience to explain ther mission. McKis.uck llid he had been unable to relay Mrs. Sirhan'• plea through private contacts in the Middle East. A Stale Department spokesman said Tuesday that Mn. ""Sirhan had been detained and the lawyers' passports revoked. Luke ~Kissack, Mrs. Sirhan's lawyer. aaid a man identifying himself as Douglas Farrell of the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, demanded his passport and that of Mike ·McCowan, an Investigative aide, u the two made arrangements to fly to Amman, then 5tamped "revoked'' on It. He said the action was "without legal foundation." 2 Boats Collide Off Lido Isle A sailboat collision near the east end or Lido Isle in NewPort Bay resulted in minor Injuries to the respective skippers Monday afternoon. Clayton Parkhill, II, of 1750 Skylark Lane, Newport Beach, who was skipper- ing the "Katherine," a 30-foot Shields when it collided with a 14-foot rental boat nperated by Glen Fisher, 43, Upland. Parkhill received laceration! over his left eye while Fisher sustained abrasions on his back. There were five other persons on tach boat. No one else was injured . The mast of the rented sailboat was broken. Damage was estimated at $150. Parking tlae Campaign / •• p>' Bob Citron and Joe Greene are deputy tax collec, tors for Orange County, Both ai:e seeking their boss's job. Their boss. Don S. Mozley is retiring and the two men are battling in an election ca.m- p8Jgn lhaf will end Nov. 3. But, they Jnsist. when they go1o work e.ach day, they leave their politic&! campaigns in the county parking lot at Broadway and Sixth -Street in SaQta Ana. Airport Board Meets Pljlnners ( On lrviiie Cit y The Orange County A i r p o r t Commj.ssion agreed Tuesday to meet with the Orange County Planning Commis.sion on Sept. 29 for a joint session to discuss aviation plans of the proposed city of Irvine. The meeting will be held th; day before the Ralph fl.t. Parsons Company presents the Orange County Board of Supervisors with.Phase II of the company's report on the future of Orange County aviation, which ls due Sept. 30. The Airport Cnmnrlssion decided to meet with the Planning Commission prior to the presentation of Phase ll to learn "what the Planning Commission says about airports on the§f:rvine Ranch." Com mission Chainnan Howard H. Lathrop noted that the Irvine Company·s proposed city provides no provL'sioo for aviation. Hirth Seeks Solution To City Traffic Needs Mayor Ed Hinh has 1et out to find out if there is a solution lo the future traffic needs of Newport Beach. And he is asking a lot of people for help . Thursday he is lraVeling to Los Angeles for a meeting with Haig Ayanian, chief district engineer for th e State Division nf Highways. Tuesday morning he had breakfast with the key members of the new Freeway Fighters. All to talk about the same thing, all those cars that will soon inundate Newport. Hirth Insists the answer may or may not be a freeway. On his meeting with Ayanian, the mayor said, "I am not going to talk about freew8ys or freeway roUtes, r am going to get his suggestions as to solutions lo our future transportat\on problems." He said his breakfast wi't.b the Citizen Coordinating Committee was O'tl the same Identica l topic. He said Ibey didn't have any solutions at hand , but· did prOmise to consider the problem amd make suggestions in the fatUre. ' "Right now , they are interested in their two petitions," Hirth said. The CCC is currently preparing to circulate a pair of initiative petitions that would force the city to rescind it.s present agreement on the Pacific Coast Freeway route through ·eastern Newport and would require a referendum before the city could adopt any new fieeway route, ever. "The cmly ~ay to find .solutions, 'is to mei!t with everybody concerned," Hirth 1ald, "and this is wh8t I am doing." Hoag Policy Under Fire The mayor was directed by the City Council last month to personally look into the overall problem . and m 1 k e recommendations on how the: city should proceed in meeting the 1 o o m i n I transportation crisis. ln effect, the mayor was told to "study what sholild be studied" about traffic, Mesa CofC to Air Complaints Over Payment Practices An admissions policy 1t H o a g Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach that requires patients who do not have group lisurance to pay cash prinr to release has come under fire by the Co!ta Mesa Chamber of Commerce and will be aired at 8 meeting between Chamber and hospital officials next Wednelday. Hoag Administrator Wllllam R. HuMon said the new policy has been In trrect since January. He indicated it has met with it.s problems. Although declining to say specifically what will be. discussed at the upcoming meeting, Hudson did say t h a t "alternatives" will be considered. He 11aid the hospital. It.self. ha s been continually reviewing the policy since it.s Inception. He said the new policy was adopted because of problems the hospital had been facing in collecling from persons with private insurance policies. Jnsurarlce eompanies make payments directly to holders o( private policies, rather than direcUy to the hospit.al, and Hoag had not been gelling amounts owed. A similar policy on private insurance has been ln effect at South Coast Community Hospital in South Laguna for more than one year. There patient with private insurance is required to pay a cash deposit upon admission. At Huntington Beach Intercommunity Hospital. private insurance plans are accepted at the time of admission. However, 11 hospital spokesman said th8t the hospital ·verifies the coverage nf tht poltcy 8S soon as possible. Should the policy not provide a<fe<lu• coverage, the hospital contacts a clc:. I relative to ln$ure that f I n a n c i a 1 arrangements are made prior t o discharge. Hudson did not say how much of a loss the tmpltal was experlenclni through this type of non-payment. Ht declined to uy what percentage of patients the new policy affected, but said it la "less than 50 percent." He laid that in addition to coTiecUon problems, lnsurence companies refusM to disclose the bmefltl ol )Wivate policies and some would 'nol ruar1ntee payment. He said that problem1 like """ will be dltcl.ISIO<I II !ht \VOdnflday ...,ion. N'kk Ztentr. e1ecutive manager of the Chamber, said the members of the s.pcclal insurance Committee who will meet with Hudson have not yet been dtterllilned. Originally, he was scheduled to make his report next Monday. He uld, however, that he may not be read1 to present anything to the council ulitll Its meeting Sept. 28. - He said it's taking time, because It's . like starting from the beginning. And this Is wha't he may be trying to get the state to do. He pointed out that there nevtr have been any surveys of transportation needs throughout Newport lieach. S o m e 11edk>n3 have been studied, he said, and the variou1 freeway routes have been atudled. Della Reese Hurt HOl.LYWOOD (AP) -Singer Dell• Reese walked through a plate glass door · at her hnme. today and underwent several hours of surgery for severe l1cer1tlons1 ber manager uld. Mynatt asked the city to keep Its licensing framtwork as a "policing'' technique, "as it was inteoded," ch'arging what Ls needed to cover costs on a flat rate basi.s. lie indicated the increased tat would be pa3led on to customers. ''Rai.ee money "Where the people can see it," biJ letter says, "Not in hidden taxes. It becomes confusing to Mr. and Mrs. tS<e BUS!Nm, P ... Z) ane 113 Aboard Latest Jet Captured By THE ASSOCIATED PRF.!15 Palestinian guerrillas hijacked a British jetliner with 113 per10ns aboard today and forced it to land near two other captive airliners on · which nearly 200 persons were belllg lleld hostage ia the Jordanian desert,' the BriUsh Foreign Office announced. A apokes!J'l{n said word had reached London thsi1 the plane, aft.er circling the Mi~_rEas.t for hours, landed at the aaroe'~1Uerr11la-held base where the two __ et!iU plailes were under guard. As in the case of the four hijack.in& , plotl earlier this week, the Marxist Popular Front for the Li&eralioa of Pa¥ne a""med r"JIOO'lblllty. A ipokesma11 said the PFLP le1aed rhl BrtUah Overseas Airways Corp. VCIO, after its take o(f from Bahrein in lbrl Persian Gulf, to reinforce its demand for the release of a woman hijacker held in London. "Let's see what BrlUsh Prime Mini!f.er Edward Heath does now," a guerrilla spokesman said. A BOAC spokesman in London said 3J Britons, 12 Bahreinis, 3 Americans and Z Indlaiis joined 54 other passengers aboard the plane in Bahrein. It carried 10 crewmen. The plane was on a flight from Bombay to London. At the United Nations in New York, Britain and the United States asked for a meetifti of the U.N. Security Council la ter today to take up the wave of hijackings. Meanwhile, the hostages taken earlier sweltered through a third day aboard the two planes, a Swissair DCB and a Trans World Airlines Boeing 7ffT. at the El Khana airstrip 25 miles northeast of Amman . For their ransom, the guerrillas were demanding the release of three Arab terrorists held in West Gennany, three others jailed in Switzerland and Miss Leila Khaled, 25 held in Lo11don for the aborted hijacking of an Israeli El Al plane SuRday. The PFLP, like other guerrilla groups is against any Middle Eest settlement that does not restore Arabs to former homes in Palestine, the land that, Is now Israel. All have• re.fused to abide by, cease-fire agreement.s on Israeli borders, (See IUJACK, P>ge ZI Orange Weather The evening and morning fog takes a tighter grip on the Or- ange Coast Thursday, while af· ternoons will be spotted with hazy sunshine. Look for temper· a'tures in the 70 to 89-d.eifee INSIDE TODAY The new sell,!on of livi11g theater geU under wa11 on the Orange CO<Ut /r'rida11 with three local pla11howe.s opening their flr.st production.s. See Enteriatnment, Poge 2S. M"tlflp 11 Mn!" '4-JS Mufll.ll '"'* J4 H1tieHI """ 41 or.,... c-ry-11 ""''-,..,,., J4 s.m •11 Dr ........... 17 St.di Mlrtltl ...,. ,. ... mi. 14 'Tllte"" ,.." WHl!ltr 4 Wfllte ..... It .__.. "-J7.J6 ..... ,._ .. Z DAJLY PILOT H SA Teacl1ers Walk Out During Meet 'l'bree-fowths of the Santa Ana Unified Dbtrict's 1,150 teachers walked out ,Q( a mandatory orientation meeting Tue~~y night when school board President Rodolfo rdontejano began to speak. The walk out was staged, John A. Smith. executive director of the Santa Ana Educators Association said, as a token protest to demonstrate t h e teachers' unity in opposition to a two percent merit pay plan offered them by the board. Smith called the merit plan offer "an insult to teachers." In a closed door meeting later more than 700 teachers voted to turn over to the joint teachers association the total salary merit pay the board has promised th~ who do an adequate teaching job th.ls year. Sidesteps to the West "/ Aid to Parents Phone Schools For Busi~g Info Parents of stpdenll attending Orange Coast schools 'ho a~ confused about busing their children are advised to cal.I the school their child will attend. All dlstrlcts.contacted by the DAILY PILOT said the individual school will have bus schedules for the 1970.71 school year which begins Monday, and can answer parents' questions. Students attending Tustin a n d Huntington Beach Union High Schools were malled bua assignments, officials aa.ld. The Huntington Beach system employs data processing which automatically sorts out students 1Jving more than two -miles from a school and prints bus· stop locatlon and ,time on the students' fcJass schedule cards, according to H. R. Martin, business a.uistant. assignments to special e d u c 1 t I o I students," he noted. Principals of schools in the Newpor• Mesa Unified School Dl!rtrlct · a r f responsible for informing p a r e n t s , according to William Cunning b ~ m, district superintendent. Other area distr,lct.s reque~ting ParenH with busing schedules to call the tchod students will at.,tend include San Jua1 Capislraoo Unified, Laguna B e a c I Unified, Westminster Elementary ant San Joaquin Elementary. · F..Om Pqe 1 BUSINESS ••• Consumer when product prices are out Cl proportion to product values." The money is to be used to hire a cnnsultant to evaluate the merit pay plan ; hire another consultant to report on the Santa Ana schools administrative structure; to hire legal assistance to determine how lo elect school bGard members on a ward basis rather than from the school district as a whole , and hire architects and engineers t o <ietennlne the best way to correct aged " school buildings which are allegedly hazardous to students. Russian ballet s tar Alexandre Filipov, 24, explains to newsmen why he vanished from the touring Soviet Moiseyev Ballet Company in Guadala· jara Sept. 3. The dancer said in Mexico City he decided to defect because he was afraid he would never be permitted to leave the Soviet Union once the troupe returned home. Seated with him is his friend, Luria Tristao, 20, Brazil. For cost reasons, Fountain Valley Elementary district abandoned i t s mailing of bqs .schedqles and sent them home with students during the la.st week of school last year, Michael Brick, district superintendent said. As with most othtr districts along the Oranae Coast, children .Ill.'! tg Jhe Fountain Valley diltrict were given their bus schedule when they were enrolled, Brick noted. Mynatt said if a formula must be used that food stores be placed in a separal.4 category taxed at one-half the ralf proposed. He said the ci es o I Sacramento and Bakersfield,. amonf others, do it this way. , James DeChaine, as.!istan.t c It l -manager, said this-morning thai it woul~ be virtually )mpossible to • s s e s ! supermarket gross profits on 1 comparative ratio with others becaus1 today they sell so many non-grocer1 items. The possibility of further action, even including a strike, is not ruled out by Smith. He said a meeting, if necessary wiU be called for 7:30 a.m. Monday, the day school opens. Names of those who remained in the orientation meeting were taken by school administrators, supposedly with the idea that those who walked out might be penalized a day's pay. The board has adop~ a 1.S percent teachers salary increase plus the two percent merit for those deemed to deserve il The raise is about $300 to $400 annually less than those given to teachers in other school di1tricts throughout the county. Viel<. Vet Ejects From Toro Plane Near Big Bear A Vietnam veteran Is back on duty today 1t El Tµn> Marine ~ Air Station, altu bailing out of hi.I ~i'!Pf>led jet before it crashed into a ~ ravine 20 miles north of Big Bear. Capt. Patrick G. Carroll, 27, of El Toro, escaped injury when he ejected from the A4 Skyhawk: that cauled a IO.acre brush fire when it smashed into the growlcf.1 He was picked ·up 'by a re9CUe helicopter from George Air Force Base. checked over at ill hospital and then returned to the Orange County training facility. Marine Corps spokesmen said only that the Skyhawk developed a malfunction during a routine navigational training flight over the San Bernardino Mountains. Capt. Carroll is a member of Marine Attack Squadron 214, a unit of the Third Marine Aircraft Wing which i s headquartered at El Toro Marine Corps Air St.aUon. Stowaway Discovered In Jet's Wheel Well LONDON (UPI ) - A young man crashec.: the newly strengthened security net at Heathrow Airport today and stowed away in the wheel hold of a Pan America n World Airways Boeing 707. Tht! man , whose identity was withheld by police. was found in the bay into whl<!h a r~ari wheel would have retracted after takeoff and probably killed him. He was found by an engineer during a routin,e check. DAILY PILOT 01;ANCil COA$T f'UILISHINCi COMf'AHY ~•b•rt N, W,,4 ftrulcltftl ,,.. f'llOl!llw J1ck A. Curlty Vice f'Ttt:..nt ..... co.r..r.1 M1,..,... Tllo111•• 11:,,,a ldlkw 1'~D"'lf A. Murpkift• M-llnt Ed!lor N_,_,':rt heclli Offlc• 2211 W11t lilt••• l ou1t••r4 M1Jlrft, Add,111: P.O. It• 117S, '166J OHier Offk" C.0.19 Mtw: DD Wnl lty SltMt u.-Bffdl: m l"orn1 "-M111111.,.1 ... lffCft: 11111 t11cto l'Vlll~l•tl '" Clrfftl"'9: as Horlll El C....lne .... CAfl.V f'll.OT. wl!h W.lich 11 ctmBll'lftl Ille ...... ,.,..,, •• It ~lltllcd llllf ·-~ ·-•• , Ill NPt<tlC l.Cllt~ IOt 1.19-lNtll. NI"'""' 8ttdl, C..!1 Mtt.1, HUllll"t;... et:<A frAI "-""' VII .. ,, t l""I wttft -rfOteNI lif!l.eM.. Orlftfe Ctlut f'"'!ltl'llftt ~JIY f"llMlnl ... ~!t •rt It fJI\ W•I e11C1it' ·~~ NIWflll"T ••M.11, 11'111 UI Will llJ •ittt:. C.t1 Mot. ,...,.. .. t114) &42 ... l ll CleMHW An.rfftl11t &42-1671 ~I, I~,.. Ufll!fe (IJll l>•tllf~int C-"f, ,.. -,,...i.., n1v1111111M. ffH•ltl INtlv " tllwtrtff-11 """°' _, .. ~ wit""" ~ltl ,,.,. M!Mi..t fl ~I _,, ~ ti.. "''"' 11")1 I I N...,..,, .. tctl 11'4 Glfit• ..,._ C.1iftl'l'lt1. 'ut.<r.,.i.i. 01 1tr,,., U.• tr1011llllr1 or rr11jl U.Jill -lflly1 r1111111ry 4nlllvt-.. .... -U!lf . Councilman Renominated To Head League of Cities CCllncilman Jack Green of Huntington Beach has been renominated to succeed himseH as president of the Orange County League of Cities. Election of president and vice president for the coming year will be held Thursday at a meeting of the executive committee of tbe league at 7 p.m. in Friedem1nn Hall, 134 Glassell St., Orange. Councilman Ralph Clark of Anaheim, a candidate for supervisor in the fourth district, has been nominated for another tfrm as vice president. ::-Nominations may be offered from the fU>or .ftunda)" eccordJnc to Winston· Updegraff, executive secretary of the leque. Mesa Residents File Candidacy For Board Post Two more Costa 1-fesa residents have filed their candidacies for the special election· to fill the vacancy on the Newport.Mesa Unified School district Board of Education. Latest candidates are Calvin C. Buck, of 2.835 Portola Drive and Beverly K. Langston, 901 Sonora Road. Buck lists his occupaton as an engineer and Mrs. Langston is a housewife. Th ey join Joseph M. Duffy, of 2425 Bowdoin Place, in the race for the seat previously held by Mrs. Elizabeth Lilly. Mr!. Ully resigned in June. Filings for the election will close Sept. 10 at 5 p.m. at the office of tbe registrar of voters. The election will be held in conjunctio°'-. with the general election Nov. 3. .., . Candidates m~ reside In Trustee Area 2 which is boUnde<I !zy Harbor Boulevard from the lntenecthm with Newport Boulevard. The line ruiiY along Harbor to Baker, east to Falnrjew and north on Fairview to the cit)! limits. The eastern boundary runs along Newport to the city limits. Elks C.Onduct Mr. Towle Rites · Members 0£ the Newport Harbor Elles Club conducted funeral services today at Paicflc View Mortuary for John W. Tovde of ~ta l\fesa who died Thursday. 1-lr. Towle, who was 55 years old, had lived in Orange County for nearly 36 years. ... A carpenter for 22 years, he was a member of the Huntington Beach chapter of the Carpenters Union. }le leaves his wife Virginia, of the family home, 1150 Paularlno Ave.; two daughters, Carolyne and Barbara, both of Costa Mesa ; a mother, Mrs. Genevieve Towle. of Long Beach; two brothers, Ted and Errerson Towle, and a sister- Virginia Lantow, aU of Long Beach. 'Homeless Child' Showing Slated The Orange Coast Clvlta.n Club will spewer tht showing of a film. "Homeless Chlld," tonight at 6:30 o'clock at 1he Colony Kitchen. llarbor Boulevard a1 the San Diego Free"'ay tn Costa .P.1esa. The 25 minute fllm will be followed by a presentation of a program concemlng the foste r child care needs in Orange County. Persons lnttrcstl\d in attending the meeting or obtaining more informaUon may call Ha nk Jarboe at S48-39$2. The on1y other elecUve post or the organization is that or state legislative director. Mayor Robert Wtl.son of Costa Mesa holds that post now for a two-year term ending In 1971. The execuUve committee will hear a preliminary report Thursday on the !ubject of direct election of mayors ln Orange County cities. The committee ls headed by Mayor F.d Hirth of Newport Beach. At lhis time no county city has a full- time elected mayor with a Wary. It hu been suggested by some league members that the job of mayor has become JO burdensome that a plan to elect the post separately from councilmen and with a salary commensurate with the time involved should be studied. Huntington Beach voters will ballot Nov, 3 on a separate mayor's post witli a salary of $17,000 a year. He will be an elgbtb ~r of the city council with ~wer to vote only in case of ties. Customs Officers Hold Meeting In San Clemente Customs inspectors and administrators from the U.S., Mexico and Canada began a three.day conference today in President Nixon's oflice complex near the Western White House in San Clemente. The meeting -one of many by government groups at the Presidential ~mpo_und this year -will cover items i~clu~1~g ~argo and baggage inspections, :s1mpl1~1cat1on of customs procedures, narcotics. smuggling and g e n e r a I exchange of information. The conference is the first three-way conference between customs offiials of the border countries, U.S. spokesmen said. The obvious prime issue at the three- day talks will be methods of cracking down on narcotics contraband. ~pokesmen. sai~ this morning that they would.begin issuing commt.miques on the progress of the confe1·ence beg!Ming Thursday. From Page 1 HIJACK~ .. and the PFLP has made a speciality of airline hijackings. After the BOAC plane left Bahrein the hijackers forced it to land at Beirut for refueling, and Lebanese Transport Minister Pierre Gemayel appealed to lhe guerri!las to let women and children go, ''No," replied the guerrillas. "We are tea\'ing with everybody or we are blowing up the plane with everybody." Gemayel then said he was going to an emergency CabiQet. meeting to introduce a measure ·iclosing Beirut airport from now on lo all hijackers who want to land here." Lebanon lnttftds, he added, "to maintain Beirut airport as .a civil airport In every sense of the word." , The International Red Cross already had opened negotiations with PFLP leaders in Amman for the release of the earlier hostages. -The Popular Front had said it woull:f blow up the two planes at 7 p.m. PDT Wednesday unless the British released Miss Khaled and the. Swiss and West German governments freed the six Ar1bs in their custody. A spoktsman said 'l\iesday . the pas.<iengers would be removed to a guerrilla cam p before the ei-ploslons. While the Bonn and Btm governments announced they would comply With !he ranso m demand, London hedged. PFLP spokesmen in Amman said all sevtn had to arrive together on a chartered pla1e . • Turtle Rock's Pupils Sharing School Facility More than 500 Turtle Rock Elementary school students will be sharing lhe University Park elementary building through December, requiring scheduled changes for both schools. A spokesman for Huntington Beach Elementary district said bus assignments for kindergarten students were malled last week and that stops for students in grade 1 to 8 "would be the same as they were in the past.'' Parents having ·any questions about busing may call the district 's tra,nsportation office at 536-4942: or the school, for information. Oaan View elementary schools have posted bus schedules and parents should call or go to the school, John Rajcic, assistant superintendent. business, said. "We wually mail or phone. bus The proposed new business taJ structure will be submitted to the Cit3 Council for initial study Sept. 28. It hai been prepared, at council directive, bJ the city sta ff over the past year. The staff has met with both tru Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerd and the Newport Harbor--C.oota Me~ Board of Realtors in developing the neli formula. As it sThnds now, the tax will doubl! current revenues, from $225,000 to $450,000. . Bus schedules for pupils from the Col· ony and Culverdale tracts. the Marine Corps Helicopter facility (LTA), from UC Irvine married students' housing and all residents of Turtle Rock Broadmoor Hills will be posted 4 p.m. Friday at University Part School. Pioneer Mesa Newswoman "Copies also will be posted at tht recreation areas and sales office of the housing developments," principal David Prince said. Gertrude Edick, 80, Dies The sharing of the University Park building means there will be no bot lunch program, although milk will be available at 10 cents per carton, Prince noled. Parents of ~ergarten puppils must bring their dillih'tin to school on Monday. Prtnce said, Buses will operate for au other children In the district, however. Class schedules for students of both Turtle · Rock and University Park elementary schools are as follows: Grades I and 2, 9:15 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.: grade three, 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and grades .f, S, and 6, 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Aldine Hopwood Funeral Slated Graveside services will be held Saturday for Aldine S. Hopwood, father of John A. lfopwood, prominent Newport Beach attorney. Mr. Hopwood died Sunday at !he age of 79. He had lived in the Harbor area for 10 years. The younger J\.1r. Hopwood, who maintains a private practice in Newport, is a fonner member of. the city's Library Board of Trustees. ?lir. Hopwood is survived by his son, a daughter, Mrs. Frank Lynch and four grandchildren, all of Corona de! Mar. Pioneer Costa Mesa resident Mrs. Gertrude Eastman Edick -whose f• newsp1per career1pjimed:-four decades -died Tuesday, probably leaving as many friends as anyone in tcrwn. She wu 80 ~s old. 't Mrt: 1Eti.~'111 im. Monrovia Ave., moved to Costa Mesa in 1929 with her husbandr. insurance agent Edwin Edick, who died 32 years ago. She was the first circulation manager of the old Costa Mesa Globe-Herald, forerunner of the DAILY PILOT, and wrote a society notes column for many years. "She probably knew more people than anyone else in town," remarked her daughter, Mrs. Marjorie Haines, al.so of Costa Mesa. Funeral services for Mrs. Edick will be Saturday at 10:30 a.m. in the First United Methodiat Church , where she was an active member for 40 years. She was a member of the choir for 34 years, and the family suggests contributions to the Memorial Fund o( the church. The Rev. Richard Dunlap will officiate at the Saturday rites and interment will follow at Westminster Memorial Park, with Bell Broadway Mortuary in charge. Survivors include a son, Edwin Eastman Edick, of Oregon; daughters Mrs. Marjorie Haines, of Costa Mesa ; We've taken the back off oar beet watch IO 1011 Cl&1l ... the •1n11de" pNC!llcm ltar7 0 OMEGA er~ '\011 1mllidnl fllllge • boot: lrf .... « • Yafdt h)' iu appan.ace, OnlJ ,.a Jot! Joo1t L'\SID[ cu yoa 1ppreci1te tK --...inc ,.pm,. erifJ of ~It workmuahip. The "Xleerbad.• SS..... •• ~ model det.i.peil .. ....,. 709 !be' mkroNrilliaal fiallh or eTS'J' pert ... ... --....-I ... ol-· """"'" lhlt wiadt tbe Semllttt wldlt '" ... ft. t-ma if toa're aac mechan~ ... "Kletrbatl• will lldp JOI. 1ppnei1t11 ftr ,,. l'f'Cllld'IF l~lttid O!nece. Cm. ie ff)I a tr. dwutr.tLloa of 5-mi•a"• fcst11ra - J. C. fiumphried Jeweferd ·1 e23 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONYENllNT TE•MS IANJCAMl•ICA•O.-MASTEA CMA•CPE 1~ ru.•s IN SAME LOCATION PHONC 14a.J401 DAILY f'ILOT Stitt f'"'\9 DEAD AT BO Gertrude Edick Mrs. Florence G. Wilkinson, of Santa Ana Heights; Mrs. Jeanne Tuttle, of Long Beach; a brother Herbert C. Eastman, of Modesto and 11 grandchildren. VISIBLE BACK Wft\lt 1111 "-l•erll1el'" 11• "'flttr ll ~~111"1a la ,i,"1' O."'OllShlt• Clmtll trtth1n11to l M' It 111~ '' ll'Of~ Iii.• tfl1 fll~~f C1111,t ...... -fl I \~ W-1 comttwu .. •I.e.. •r.,..,,..," ,.,., #! t#lto tr .... , .. , ............. ,.,_ I I \ l ' ; • . . , •• .: ., ' \ I I \ I. yone in the family. Save34c on every pair. They're fashioned in Cantrece • 11 Aresta- run nylon ••• Great en the legs •.• long wearing, too! Lots of fash ion colors in short, average, long and extra long,lengths. Reg. $2, Now, 166 Men's tun fashioned acrylic knit shirts in assorted colors. Sizes S-M·L·XL 199 Boy's· cotton flannel pajamas in assorted colors. Notch co llar. Sizes6-1 6. 3;~6 2;~4 Girls' acrylic ca rd igan sweaters in white, navy, gold or red. 498 Men's cotton cord Western jeans in sand , brown or loden , Sizes 29-38 waist. CHARGE THESE VAL U ES AT YOU R L OCAL PENNEY s ·roRE ! T • WtdnHdl)', Stpt1mbtf 9, 1970 DAILY PILDT 7 Has Beata Four beans to the pod will help Missouri farmer Bernard \Vilmes produce a larger yield of soybeans this year. The beans usualJy have only three beans to the pod. The new variety was developed by Dr. Arnold l\latson of the Soybean Resea rch Foundation. Middle America Vi ews Move Both Left, Ri~ht \.. WASHINGTON !UPI) - Richard f\f. Scammon , discoverer of the "unyoong, unpoor and unblack" voter, now announces that~ America's pollticaJ sentimentS( are moving both to the left and to the right. Scammon, fonner dire<:tor of the U.S. Census, is one of the nation's be st-kn own practitioners of Psephology (see-fol'-oh-gee), which is the •study of elections and vothig behavior. ln a new book called "The R.eaJ Majority". he and a former White House speech writer, Ben J_ Wattenberg, undertake to explain the. 1968 Presidential and 1969 state and local elections in lemlS \hat are intended to point the way to candidates in the 1970s. Scammon is the man v.·ho told politicians in 1968 that however in:;ist~nt might seem society's squealcing wheels - the militant poor, the angry minorities, t h e dissenting college students -the votes needed to win public office are elsewhere. No one, Scammon said then and repeats now, is going to get elected iI he alienates the great mass of middle class, middle-aged, white citizens. But Scammcn and h I s collaborator have !IOme news about the middle American that may comf: as a shock.to He 'Handled' His Cl ie nts Too Well NEW YORK (UPI) -A 47· year.old man was arrested reC1:!ntly on charges of posing as an attorney in criminal court in order to get female drug defendants released in his custody and then engaging them in sexual relations. The Brooklyn D i s r i c t Attorney 's offi ce said Rudy Strauss, of Yonkers, N.Y., manied and the father of three, appeared at a night session cf Brooklyn criminal court in August posing as an attorney for Odyssey Hoose, a drug rehabilitation center in l'o1anhattan. He convinced the court on at least fcur occasions to release female defendants in his custody, ostensibly to take them to Odyssey House for treabnent. authorities said. But instead, he took them to area motels for the night and had sex with them, the district attorney's office said. The next morning, Strauss took the women to Odyssey House and, saying be was a Legal Aid Society Lawyer. turned them over to officials at the ctnler. SttaU5.5 was arraigned en charges of c~trucUng justice, criminal lmperaon.10on and practicing law without a llcense before Criminal Court Judge Gerard 1-1. Weisberg. Bail was set at $2,SOO pending poliUcians who equate 0 plain folks" with the fixed stars·of 19th centun: political thinking. Scammon and Wattenberg say recent elections and polls make it clear that the vital center of Uie AmerJca n electorate has gone conservative on what they call "the social issue" disruption caused by crime, changing morals, alienated youngs~rs and drugs. But they say the voters also are decidedly liberal -at least as that label was USt'd in the 1960s -on economic issues such as he.allh care, pollution control, school aid. slum clea rance and antipoverty programs. The many issues dirtctly affecting race, they say, are muddled, falling in some cases on the conservative and in others on the liberal side. What does all this mean? The authors say it means that the politicaJ battles of the 1970s will be fough t on the two battlefields of the social iS!lul!I and erooomics. "The party and the candidate that can best occupy the center ground of the two battlefields will win the presidency." And how should it be' done? · Scammon and Wattenberg offer free advlce to everyone in the arena. They advise Democrats le divorce their sociaJ programs from the image of being ''soft'' on crime and permissiveness by pledging to crack down on lawbreakers while helping the poor and the disadvantaged. They t e 11 Republicans -who need no coaching on the sociaJ issue - to move toward the liberal side on bread and butter issues and project the image of "an activist, problem· solving government." The advice to both sides reflects their basic thesis that "Jhe center is the only pol!litlon or political power ... Speaking of the George Wallace movement and the radical left. they say . "their power and Influence depends on whether they can stay within hailing distance of the center or whether they march off the side of the cliff, in lockstep. Minutemen an d Weathermen, hand in hand, smiling as they plummet, saying 'only t am pure.' " ANIMllogk .,_ a Sept. 15 hearing ;:==========; Authorities said Strauss Is ln tM import-export business. An investigation was begun when some of Strauss' "clients" complained to officials at Odyuey Houst, authorities said. Who C.res 7 No olhtr ntwiptp•r 111 tht wotld ''''' tbo111t v•ur ,."'"'"'" nitv u~. your (Olftl!llil'lltv 11.11., 11•w1p•ptr cfo11. It's tht DAILY PILOT. '-· - • DAILY :J»U..OT EDITORIAL PA.G E • closely over the next few months . as Ne"J>Ort Beach total back d. wn to the orlgl al $450, _ r1~ure ... moves to enact its completely revised business tax. The bu siness tax and fee proiram <since it 1s both. The restructured levy on commercial enterprise, de-despite the word-mincing) has gone through a lot of signed to aid the plaiued property owner and at the examination and refinement. It obviously nee~s and .same time provide a more equitable fee for businesses. "'ill get much more before i t is ready for adoption. ~·ill go before the city council, probably Sept. 28, for an Initial hearing. A decision may not be final before year-end, city sources claim . Tbe tax package has already gone through the wringer of both the Newport Harbor Chamber of Com· merce and the Newport Harbor·Costa Mesa Board of Realtors. Neither group really liked it, although neither con· demned it. Both succeeded, apparently, in getting the citr st.a!£ to agree to eas..e it somewhat. 'The new schedule ordered by the city council more than a year ago. initially Y.'a! expected to double the revenues now produced by the $25 flat fee . At present, approximately $225,00Q is collected an· nuall.y . However, equal fees are paid by all business, large and small. Rather than simply doubling the fee, a complicated r;eries of "classifications'' was developed Jointly by the litaff and the chamber. Carefully avoiding any reference lo a gross receipts tax (although certain businesses will be taxed that way under the new plan), the two forces came up \vith a proposal that would raise even more money. $25,000 more. than at first was hoped. \Vhen the new plan was released last month. the chamber officials insisted lhey still didn't like it and urged the city to adopt it only after considering a num- ber of other allernati ve.~. But the alternatjves Y.1ou fd ha\'e produced less money. Next. the city took it to the Board of Reatlor~. '''hich didn 't like "Cl a~sificat ion Ill" (their classifica· tionl and recommended revision s that \\'Ould have le.~s· ened the tax on "professional'' people, and as a result High Rise in New port Tall buildings. or at least proposals for them. have caused considerable controversy in NeY.'por1 Beach over the years. Two high.rise buidings are currently being s tudied by authorities at city haJI. One application calls for an Jl-sto ry apartment con1plex. rising 95 feet into the sky· Jine. on a &ite formerly occupied by Balboa's famed Rendezvou·s Ballroom. Balboa Bay Club offic ials a re al so looking for some taJJ construction Y.'hich n1ay take the form of two 85-foot apartment towers. J\.1ost residents find the notion of having Lall struc- tures on the Newport skyline distasteful Some sad lessons ha ve been learned. however, from buildings that have gone up only a few stories yet created a "Chinese \Vall" effect. bl ocking off view. light . air and circulation. A.t the same time, tall towers Somehow seem ominous. Yet. carefully located and limited, high rise does offer a chance to preserve some open space around the ba,y. No one should Y.1a nt to see Newport's \vaterfront land go the route of Miami Beach. N_eiher shouJd it all go to restaurants or to a residential preserve for the very affluent. Newport has reached the point \\'here the long.range Impact of each decision on "'aterfront property must be carefully weighed-and hopefully fitted into a total concept-into a total plan stiU non-existent anrl at least a decade overdue. N Lacked Majority Public Support Bufano Had Tlie Spark of True Genius Senate Doves Scored Zero I WASHINGTON -For a couple or i i: years the media ha ve been sa tu raled with horror stories about lhe' mililary- lndustrial complex, pacifistic senators have called for "new priori ties,'' the young ha ve demonstrated at t h e Pentagon, idealistic gf9\IPS ha ve depl ored the bomb. It has all come to naught. Exactly zero insofar as major Pentagon projects have been curbed or eliminated. After • months of coosidera-t tlon. the $19.2 billion military supply bill ~·hich ~·as lo have been made the ve- hicle for expressing war dissent and Pen- tagon dislrust has ~,_,. ,..,... -·-I ~ • ,1 . /"""' ~ ... . ~· ' ,. been adopted by the Sertate !he way the Nixon administration and Arrned Services Chairman John Stennis (Dem .. Miss.) wanted it. The mea sure comes complete ·with ABM expansion and provision for huge cost overruns for the c.5A aircraft. THE SENATE REFUSED tn hold President. Nixon to a timetable for ending the Vi!tnam war . It refused to prohibit use of chmiicals for defoliation and crop destruction in Vietnam. It refused lo prohibit the use of draftees in Indochina combat. It refused to stop expansion or the ABM. It refused to vote the beginning • of a volunteer Army ahrad of Nixon's post.Vietnam schedule. It refused lo adopt an across -the-board cut in Pentagon spending. The Sena te refused to do all this in tht Richard Wilson. P.1iller in Iowa ; McGQ~·ern and ~tundt in South Dakota.) HO\\'EV ER. IT SHOULD not be ' ' fa ce of a vigorous ~itorial campaign in the newspapers senators see every day, and under such emotional pressure as the outburst of Sen. George J\1cGovem !Dem ., S.D.) that the Senale chamber •·reeks of blood." The peace and pacifism senaton clearly lo&t the g4me in every quarter, because lhey lack mlj&rily support from a publi;. which is not as sanguine as they that risks can be taken with the national security. assumed that because the peace elements f:/ lost an the battle.a, they will stop trying to win thtir k:lod or :war. Senator J\tcGovern believe! that much progress has been made and he is justified in that b!lief when one·lhird or the Senate votes to cul off funds, at a certain date, for (.'()nducting a war which may conceivably have lo be fought ror some years more and with interludes like Cambodia. NOR IS THE PUBLIC ready to turn ovtr war powers of the presidency to tht Senate Foreign Re/atJons Committet. Certain senators have thus gotttn themsel ves trapped Jn general postures ~·hich are not approved in the gtates ot their origin . TIUs is quite possibly trut In su~h stales as South Dakota, Iowa, India na, Oklahoma. Oregon . California. Tl may be lrue in many other states away from the Eastern seaboard . Part of l~e peace. and pacifism movemenl is transparently political with Democrats and Republicans fol\oWlng a pro-Nixon or anti-Nixon line. But anothe r part of it runs deep in conviction. crosses party lines and reflects an opposite reading by ~·o senators from the same !\late on prevailing opinion in the state (Packwood and HaUield in Ore&on; Hua:hes and The conclusion will have to be drawn in the Nixon administration 'that !he day may conceivably come wben t'h e President will no long~ be gr,a11ted the flexibility he desires in withdrawing from Vietnam. Jn a sense his OexibiUty has already b!come circumscribed because t h e McGovern.Hatfield Amendment, although defeated by a 55--39 vote, doe! in fact generally rt!present the 11oals he has set for hirme1£ in bringing the> war to an end. It WI! ptrhaps for this reason alone that the McGove.rn·Hatfield Amendment did not get more votes. The rn.ajority or the Senate believ~ that Ni_xon was coming near enou1h to the goals of the McGovern-iJ'!tfield Amendment to leave room only for quibbling. THE ARG UPttENT IN the ruture \\'ill (.'()me over the size of the re!idual forei! to be left in Vietnam after mid-1972 - 20,000, 501000 er 200,000. It is then, in !he pre!idential election year. when Nixon "''ill feel the full force of pre!sure which the present deb&te has ae:nerated. i: Ill Wind From the South 2 Along about mid-August, farmers in the !tales of Illinois. Indiana and Iowa discovered grayish tan spots on the leaves of corn sta lks. lie lplessly. lhe;-.r 'ratched as the rungus dcstroytrl th' leaves. the n the stal ks and finally the cob~. Borne along by moil1t. "'"arm "'inds from the Gulf of h1exico. lhe southern CQrn Jeafrblight had attacked the he11rt of thl' nation·s corn belt . Yield! may be cut anywhere from 20 lo 50 percent. Shortages of fred grains could result in substant i ally higher suptnnarket prices for meat. egg~ and poultry . The Nixon administration 's hope ' of stemrning inflation mighl be de11lt a sharp selback. And the effects 'l''ould be \\'idespr ead because corn Is used in brtad. breakfast foods , ~'hiskey and even 1 tertile fini.shin11. "TR! ~tPACT IS endl-says Henry \\1ilson . pre1id!!n1 of th'· \, ucago Bo11rd of Trade. scene ol hectic tradln it r;ince the blight struck. The threat of shortages and l'lightr fccd prices spurred ----- Wednesday, September 9. 1970 Thi tdltorfal page oJ tht Dc1ll11 Pilot 1efka to injorm and stim.. ulou re'C4111 b11 prt{t nting thi• net01paper'1 opinlcru and com.. mmtdrfl Oft; topic• o/ inttrt't and lfgnificoni!t, b11 providing a forum for tht «Z,Wt 1al011 o/ our rea4er1' opiniom. and by presenting t.ltl divers,. t:'t'tn- points of informcrl o""""rr1! end 1poMrmtn on rop1r.s ,,, '', day. Robut N. W•ed, Pu bll&lltr Editorial Research some tanners to rush callle and hogs to the: market. This should lead lo a lemporary easing of meat prices. But if the blight is a~ serioui; ai; so1ne exptrls li3~'. lhe long-term trend is upward. Corn first became kno"'n to Europeans on Nov . 5. 1492, when a Spanish scouting party in the interior or Cuba reparted rinding a ~rain called mahii tha t could be baked . dried and made into flour. Since then , corn has become the "·orld 's third most important cereal -ranking aft er "'heat and rice. In the: Unittd st3te1, where the ttarl'est this )'ear had been estimated at 4.7 bllllon bushtls, 35 percent of il ls used to feed livestock. OVEA. THE YEARS. new method~ of culti vation and hybridiiation ha v t changed the corn knO\\'n to !he India ns Into a modern, high-yield crop. Although hybrids wert gro~'n as early a!J the 1870s. the most producti ve types did not tome Iota 1"" Ullll l the 1920s. Don Paarlberg, llT1 agricultural economist, has noted lh al the ayerigt yield per acre, which during t93}.t939 was 26 bushels, has In reeent ytars rea ched 57 bu1hel1. Although corn 4 .subjtct to man y di~asts, It was re:lit(\·ely free from serious \'lrus attacQ ontll abou1 1963 when hea vy losses were report«!. I.ossP:i;: ha\'t bttn so he.Avy In .5Qme artaii -~uch as 1he. Yaioo Delt• or western 1\11.~is~ippi -th~l:t com has betn almost completely re.plared by .other crops, Blight damage t-:i corn In some south'rn states thi11 ~·ear is said to ha\·e reached emergtncy levels. CONSIDER.ABLE df!bale ragPs aboot the.· degree or damaae. in the corn be.IL Govrrnment economists h<1 \'e adopted a "'ail·and·!'tt al tilude before forecasting "'hat part of the hArve:i;:t "·iU not be brought in. The first specifi c projection of damagt is expected Sept. 11. when the gov ernment crop report is rele.!lsed. Says one grain trader : "The plain fact la we won't know the total effect or the bllaht until harvest time in October .and No\·ember." Weather ls the big hnponderable In dealing with t~e blight -officially known as helminthosporium ma ydis. A new varian t attacking the com be.It thrive.1 on hot · and ,humid weather. Cold and dry rondil!ons retard it. J\-1 any farmers, however . ha ve given up try ing to fight the btighL They say the cost of spraying is 100 high and saHsfactory results are not rerlain. Some farmf'rs and e:c0nomiJI! are already "·orrying about next year's crop. The only certain means or controlllng blight is by planll ng hybrids that are resistanl to lhe fungus. But these may be in short suppl,v. Step ped ·up research i!I ne«led to ri r\·elop an effecti ve way of dealing with the blig ht. Dear G-100111" -Gus: Do t de ter:I a t!i5t11rblrig aroma - mlngled "'Ith lht unpleasant odor of dem3goguery in the Newport Be11ch City Council se~~lons thi! summer? Nn5e Into that, why donl you7 -The Green Phantom '~" .... ,~.. ttollt ih ,, .... ,. "''""' ... , fl.C"''~1Y '"""~ .. tll• ~~ .... ~.... ·-'""" "" -" " •*"'' ."" Cltil'lo P'lll1. --- ( Rovce , ' True geniuses -nol the Hollywood di rector brand -have always bee1 extremely rare. The !rue genius ill so.me domain creates 3 new world mankind has never seen before. This world is only vaguely oon1prehended by many who see it. and most or tht people do riot comprehend it at all. In this light the San Francisco scu lp.. tor, BenjRmin Bufa- no. who died in his studio, had 1he spark of true genius. Hi:o. world did not per- haps ha ve the im- mense sc ope of J\.fichelanego o r Shakespeare. bul it ~·as a ~·orld never Pncounlered elsewhere. Curio~sly. lor a city bohemian, BufanQ s J1ew ·world dealt often with familiar anhnals. or with formalited human figures. often those expressing an abstract idea, like "Peace." Nobody ever saw a live cat like his stooe cat.s, and his seals and bears were often abstractions symboliz.ing grace and power. His "Sun Ya t Sen" does l'IOl look like a man , but it& priestly posture eminently fits the n1essianic character of the great Chinese leader. BUFANO WAS 3 me.rcuria l little man, and as you talked to him you peroeived his though ts were often disconnected and iH01ical in the mundane officialdom in which he was con1pelled by his art to move, be was uni versally (.'()nsidered odd. or put do"'" as a nuisance because or the bulldog \\'RY he pushed his work-in- progress . . , But even the mundane. ~·ho in half· affection, hal f-ex asperatio11, called hi m "Benny.'' saw he had something. They didn 't know wha t it was, but il didn't go away. Burano could ~·ork with equal fa ciliiy In stone , me:lal or wood -he didn't much care, so long as in !he material he could express hi11 obsession of the moment about his fello1v men and fellow creature. f\IOST GEN IUSES In the arts -John Keal! may be an exception -do not emerge in a few years. Their dedicslion to a goal runs over most of their adult Ji\'eS. So it was "'ith Bufano. His figu re-stylt didn't change much Ovt!r the decades. It couldn't., eoniing as It did from his inner, congenital being. But it Y.' a s incomparably pe:rsistent. It piled up. ntw figurt!s ~·ere al~·ays appearing, and by :i;:heer \\'eight or numbers became in1!)1'essh·e and Inescapable. During-most of his life Bufano "'·as (l;it broke. He might have sold his pieces to lh e rich. generaHng a fad. Bui he. knew no thing about money for living. and cared less. He C!ould· qu1bble for years over \.\'here hi!! work was txhlbited, but he v.·ouldn't have it In the formal garden o( f.Ome estate. All he wanted of monty was to buy materials for the enm1n1 \\'Ort, And some of his most am us Ing 11l1ercatlons Involved that desperate quesl. The strength of Bufano'8 work lies In Its Imp lication, not its explication : ii suggests a subject but dOes not portray 1t lo the eye, Bufann had a diUerent eye. as . do 111\ gen iuses. JI is J guess hert hls statue11: will l'ndu rt., And enga ge the inlt resl or postf'rily, 3S the ~111tue.s or Civil \\'ar generals on horses ntver h1,·e. §1"1 •., ~L..~~: ''LET'S PROL.lf~RATE." Same the World Over: Militarism Tboa1bt1 at Large: Millt&rism i1 the samt the world over : the minute a man puts oh a uniform he begins to resemble his enemy far more than either of them resembles his countrymen in civilian dress. • • • There Is a vast 'diiference betVt'een "Jookin1 up to great· nes.s" and "hero- worship" -looking up to greatness means finding a mo- del we can shape our action~ upon, "'here.a, hero · wor. ship means expect- ing: someone else I<> act out our !rustra. Uons, hopes, angers and dreams of power. • • • Using "humari nalure" as a limiting factor in what mankind can achieve in the way or a better society ignores Thoreau's far-sighted observation that ''Man ·s capacities have never been measured; nor are we to judge or what he can do by any precedent!, so little has been tried." • • • When people who in sisl they "want the truth" becln to love it more than they fear it, only then will it be vouchsaf· ed to them. • • • If \\'e caMot understand that the statem~ts "Everybody is equ41'' and "Everybody i1 unequal" are not con· traries, but are both true and must stand together, we cannot begin to discuss politics Intelligently. • • • \\lly don't th! beau ty and glamor magazines tell their fe1ninine readers that no amou nt of nattering makeup, fa scinating hairdo, or fashionable clothes can make a woman appear ·altraelive if her mouth is t.ight aOd !titter, he r eyes are hard and calculat1n1, and her ~·hole demeanor is ten8e and anxious -as so often i.'5 the case with impeccably turned-out women? • • • ft must have been a prospective home- buyer who penned the anonymous ind cynically true llne : "The man who writ.es the bank's advertising is not. lhe man ~·ho makes the loan." • • • A sequel i!; alm ost never as good "'" the original book. for the source of inspirat ion ha s become second-hand: eve n the genius of "Alice in Wonderland" \vas dulled into mere talent in "Through the Looking-Glass." • • • \Vha t the "realist" see~ is that with out logic there can be no reasonable action, and he is right: what he does not 6ee is that the application of lo1ic alone. Ito situations that call for feelings) can lead to madntJJ. • • • A politician is a man who can rise to an occasion far faster than he can Jit dewh to ohe. • • • Far more '<ingle than married J)t!rsons comm it suicide : th is is becaus.e. in a marriage you always have someone else to bla me "'hen you feel you aren't livinc up to your capacities: the !!ingle person has no such source of consoling illusion. Change Obscenity Laws? Atty. Gtn. John Mitchell ha.'5 taken issue with the President 's Commission on Pornography which r e c o m m e n d e d liberalizing cbtcenity laws in the United States. "lf we want a societ y In V!'hich the "oble .'5ide of men is encouraged and mankind it5'1f ls elevated, then I submit that pomogrsphy i1 surely harmful," Mitct'lell salt!. "Both as indi viduals and as 111 nation ,, .. e art 11:s wt'lrthy ar; the qualily of our thoughts and interests.'• TKEl\E ts SOMmONCi lo be said for thal point of view. The q11e~lion l:o. whetht.r restrictions t1n the viewing of pornography help nr hinder th e attainment of lhat d'sirable end. Because the open and explicit depiction ar sexual acta ha.s been taboo in this country until recen l lim e!'i, "'e ha\·e y,•ilnessed an almost inc red ible response to mo\'ies and pliiys which fea ture nudit y and simulated se:ru•I acti vity. PEOPLE WANT TO :see that which Is fo r bi dd en . They stand In lint for hotm to Jet such trash at "I Am Curious (VeUow)" or it_. equally lna~e 1t1cce:s!M'I, tach promising to outd<> the other In the exposure of flesh and lhe portrayal of bedroom acroba tics. tr it were true thal lifting restrictions on lht vle"'in& or pornoi:rraphy would caust Adults, who pre.suma.bly ~·ould be the only ones prh·ileaed tn stt the forbidden, lo spend all their time leering at unclothed actors or fl ipping through the p:t~t!.'5 or nudl!t m~gazinCA, then lhtre might be a reason to bt. apprtbmslve.. .. BUT IT"S EXTREMELY doubtful th•t reasonabl y intellige.nt individuals would be spendi ng their time °" such frivolous I and unrewnrding \'Oyeurism. M a n y crllic.~. cpmplain that the so-called "skin Oicks are so crudely done they are ullerl y boring to the average viewer. ll seem:-; reasonable lo specu late that relaxing the obscenit y lawg, ll.'5 applied to ;:idulls, might ha,·e the riesirable effect or satisf}•lng public cu ri~ty sooner and has!~n !he day whe n people gel b11ck In re~d 1ni: goocl books and seeing plays in V.'htch the aclors keep their clothes on. l'be Da ily Calllomien 1 El Caj(NJ l .---By Geo"fle Dear George : "flrlat does it me1n when they "scratch" ' rare hor~e? Dear T.'i'.: T.Y. It mean~ they\·t 3ot an itthy race horse . and, loo~. 1'1'(1 trying ro run 11 lo,·elom column here! Mow can I ~'rite blue nl11 lerial ~I ke !he olher love.lorn ctluninists ir m.v readcr.'5' problems ar~ 1rchy horS<'8' "'ha te,·er ha ppened In in· fldelity? ... I I ,, I I I I • Costa · Mesa Your Hometown Dally Paper • VOL 63, NO. 216, 5 SECTIONS, 74 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, '1970 TEN CENTS Mesa Council Condemns Health Organization By AJ\TeUR R. VINSEL 01 1M DllllW l'li.t Still Costa Mesa city councilmen Tuesday bitterly condemned a state-created county health organi1.a.tion that had asked for their 11upport ln its attempl to secure federal financial aid. Heated discussion concerning the Comprehensive Health P 1 a n n I n g J.ssociation 0( Orange County (CHPA) came following a report from Councilman Jack Hammett. ra Renews Pleas He had beeo ubd by tbe council to check into the CHPA's request for support In obtaining '6.1 ,100 for the first year of a live-year planning period. Hammett, administnilor af Bristol Park Medical Center, referred to a series of articles in a central county paper allegedly u~ing the organizati-0n. Hammett noted he had no proof cf allegations in the articles. However. be added: "ll any portion of s Sirhan's Mother Denied Air Trip NEW YORK (AP) -The mother of Sirhan B. Sirhan, convicted killer of Sen. Robert F'. Kennedy, renewed her plea Wednesday that the Palestinian guerrillas DAIL Y l'ILOT 11111 l'ht" DEAD AT 80 Gertrude Edick Pioneer Mesan Gertrude Edick Services Slated Pioneer Costa P..1esa resident Mrs. Gertrude Eastman Edick -whose newspaper career spanned four decades - died Tuesday, probably leaving as many friends as anyone in town. She W!lS 80 years old. spare the 173 hijack hostages in Jordan. "Don't forget you are an Arab and forg ive. This is in our heritage. -to forgive and to release," J..1ary Sirhan told the guerrillas through a news conferenc.e at Kennedy Airport. Stale Department Officials h a d thwarted her plans tti fly Tuesday with two lawyera • to Amman to preu personally for release of the hostages. The lawyers, Luke McKi.ssack and Michael McGowan, appeared with Mrs. Sirhan and said they aoucht a national television audience to explain ther mis.1:ion. McKissack: aaid he bad betn unable to relay Mn. Sirhan's plea thrt>ugh private. contacts In the Middle East. A Slate. Department spokesman said Tuesday that Mrs. Sirhan had been detained and the lawyers' passports revoked. Luke M:::Kissack, Mrs. Sirhan's lawyer, aaid a man identifying himsell as Douglas Farrell of the. U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, demanded his passport and that of Mike McCowan, an investigative aide, as the two made arrangements to fly to Amman, then stamped "revoked" on it. He said the action was "without legal foundation." Cook Arrested On Pot Charges A cook who allegedly became involved professionally with the wrong kind of pot has been arrested aft.er a Costa Mesa detective purchased what appeared to be iix ounces of marijuana. Terrence K. Calderwood, 21 , of 133 E. 16th SL, was booked on charges of sale of marijuana, a felony, and the separate packages confiscated as evidence. Narcotics Detective Bob Lennert laid lhe suspected contraband -including three addiUonal one ounce bags -would be turned over tti the Slate Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement for analysis. The transaction o cc urred al Calderwood 's triller home Monday, investigators allesed. thjJ is true, I would reeommtnd agalmt the council supporting the organization.'' Hammett said he had no basis for Vt?rifying the newspaper 1tories, but said the CHP A would Seem through Its membership to be a vested interest in the n1edical field. Councilmen roundly criticized the organization, then unanimously denied a ge!l:ure of support and urged that the CHPA be disbanded by tbe slate. No spokesmen for the CHPA were heard from during the council session. Physicians are among members of the governing council and the CHPA is empowered through st.ate law to endorse any new medical facilities and re-check them every six months. "This is the mo:st flamboyant denial of free enterprise I have ever seen," remarked Council man William L. St. Clair, who claimed the CHPA. ltalled no. plans ror Coat.a Mesa Memorial Hospital. John H. Traband, executive director of the organization, said today St. Clair was referring to a prior holpilal planning group wtUch CHPA replaced, by federal and state legislation. "I can't speak for that association," he . said, adding that he deeply wished councilmen had consulted the CHPA for . clarification about its role in the communJty. er Parking the Campaign Bob Citron and Joe Greene are deputy tax collec- tors for Orange County. Both are seeking their boss's job. Their boss. Don S. Mozley is retiring and the two men are battling in an election cam- palgn that will end Nov. 3. But, they insist. when they go to work each da.y, they leave their political campaigns In the county pafking lot at Broadway and Sixth Street in Santa Ana. Airport Board Meets Planners On Irvine City The Orange County A i r po r t Commission agreed Tuesday to meet with the Orange County Planning Commission on Sept. 29 for a joint session to discuss aviation plans of the proposed city of Irvine. The meeting will be held the day before the Ralph M. Parsons Company presents the Orange County Board of Supervisors with Phase II of the company's report on the future of Orange County aviation, which is due Sept. 30. The Airport Commission decided tc meet with the Planliing Commission prior to the presentation of Phase If to learn "what the Planning Commission says about airports on the Irvine Ranch." Commission Cl11irman Howard H. Lathrop noted that the Irvine Company's proposed city provides no proviskm for aviation. Hearing Set for Mesa's / Third Utility Districy ' / A public hearing on creation· of .a third .existing plan. , underground utility district that will cost "It is anticipated that there w}ll be no an estimated $100,000 and take 13 months cost lo any property owners," he to complete has been set by the Costa explains , "because all properties are Mesa City Coi.mcil. served undergroU'lld already, or from Property owners may offer their pole& on the side or the back of property comments Sept. 21 during a council ~Ing the proposed district." meeting. ,, Much of the area is a Ire ad y The area involved covers Harbor underground, thus formation of the Boulevard from 19th Street to Adams district simply w9uld ·assure that no new Avenue, Including the Harbor Shopping overhead lines could be established. Center and 1 508-unit apartment complex under construction adjacent to IL. Public Works Director George Madsen said. all developed \Ind between Orange Coast College and Harbor Boulevard between the College Park 1distrk:t IYld Adams Avenue would be included. So would Adams Avenue from Harbor Boulevard to Fairview Road, un4er the Tiny Topless .Tripper Tagged A petite blonde -only four teit, 10 lnche.s tall and a dainty 88 pounds -was arrested at Costa Mesa's Firehouw bar Mrs. Edick. of 1771 Monrovia Ave., moved lo Costa Mesa Jn 1929 with her husband, insurance agent Edwin Edick, who died 32 years ago. She was the first circuJalion manager of the old Costa fl.1esa Globe-Herald. forerunner or the DAILY PILOT, end wrote a society notes column for many )'ears. Hoag Policy Under Fire Thursday. · Nude Sheila J. McCle'lland, 22, or Walnut, was hustled out or the night. spot at 177 E. 17th St, and booked Into Orange County Jail on charges of indecent exposure. "She probably knew more people than anyone e.lse in town,'' remarked her daughter, Mrs. Marjorie Haines, also of Costa Mesa. FuneraJ services for Mrs. Edick will be Saturday at 10:30 a.m. Jn the First United Methodis t Church, where she was an active member for 40 years. She was a member or the choir for 34 years, and the family s u g g e 1 t s contributions to the Memorial Fund or the church. The Rev . Richard Dunlap will officiate at the Saturday riles and interment will follow et Westminster Memorial Park, wit h Bell Broadway Mortuary in charge. Survivors include a son, F.dw\n Eastman Edick. of Oregon; daughtera Mrs. Marjorie Haines, of Costa Meu; Mrs. Florence G. Wilkin.wn, of Santa Ana Heights: Mrs. Jeanne Tuttle, of Long Beach; a brother Herbert C. Eastman, of Modulo and 11 grandchildren. Mesa CofC to Air Complaints Over Payment Practices An admissions policy at H o I S ~1emorial Hospital in Newport Beach that requires patients who do not have group insurance to pay ca.sh prior to release has come under fire by the Costa Mesa Chamber o( Commerce and will be aired al 1t meeting between Chamber and hospital officials next Wednesday. Hoag Administrator William R. Hudson said the new policy has been in effect since January. He lndle.1ted ll has met with its problems. Although declining tti say specifically what will be discussed ai the upcoming meeting, Hudson did say l h • t "alternatives" wlU be considered. He said the hospital, lt!eU, has been continually reviewina lhe policy since lts inception. He 1aid lhe new policy: wu adopted because of problems the hospital had been facing In collecting from,rsonr with private insurance policies. Insurance companies make pa ents directly to holders of private po lcles, rather than directly to the hospital, and Hoag had not been getting amounts owed. A similar policy on private insurance has been In effect at South Coast Community Hospital in South Laguna for more than one year. There patient with private insurance is rcqdired to pey a cash deposit upon admlulon. At Huntington Beach InteraJmmunily Hospital, private imurance plan,, are accepted at the time of admission. However, a hospital 1pc>kuman said th•t tbe hospital verifies the coverage of the policy as soon es pos5lblt. Should the policy not provide adequa te coverage, tQe hospital contact& a close rtlaUve to imurt Uta~ f J n a n c I 1 I arrangements are· ma)te prior to discharge. Hudson did not say how much of a Joss ihe hospital wu e1periencing through this type. of non-payment. He declined to say what percentage o( patients the new policy affected, but said it is "lw than 50 percenl" He said that in addltk>n to collection prob!ems, insurance companies refused to disclose. the benefits of private pollcles and some w.ould not suarantet payment. He said that problema like these will be discuSJed at the Wednesd1y session. Nick Zlener, exeeutfve manager of the Chamber. uld the members of the 1pec18' Insurance Committee who will meet with Hudson have not yet bten detennlntd. " She was immediately released on '625 bail. as have been most naked Firehouse dancers arrested on Charges of either indecent exposute or lewd conduct.· The city vows to continue enforcing the law, while owners of taverns featuring such shows are dedicated' to getting the statutes overturned as unconstitutional. Panama Ship Sinks Near Formosa Port TAIPEl (AP). - A freighter . sank Wednesday morning near the south Formosa port of Kaohsiung and 1$ crt!wmen were missing in heavy acas, Kaohsiung harbor authorllie's uld. They lcl<ntilled the ship as the 3,71f.ton Rewlrd, registered In Panama and owned by the &ward Shipping ComJ>anY of Hong Kong. It wen~ down suddenly and m ~ for belp were received, they llid. He also denied other charges voiced by St. Clair, Mayor Robert M. Wilson and Hammett, citing specific points of federal and slate law. "TM role of CHPA Is the involvement of couumers in the field of health," aakl Tr a band . "The organization has g u i d e l J n e s approved in Sacramento. In those guidelines are limitations of anyone in (See ATTACK, P11e I) 113 Ahoru·d Latest Jet • Captured By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS . Palestinian guerrillas hijacked a British jeUiner with 113 persons aboard today and forced it to land near two other capt!ve airliners on which nearly 200 persons were being held hostage iJI the Jordanian desert, the British Foreign otfice announced. A spo~sman said word had reach!d - U>ndon;that the plane, lifter circling the Middle East for hours, landed at the aame guei:rilla•ht:ld base where the two other planes were under guard. As In the case or the four hijacking plots earlier this week, the Man.isl Popular Front for the Liberation ol. PaJeSUne assumed responsibility. A ·1pOtesman said lhe PFLP seiztd the Britllb Overseas Airways Corp. VCIO, after Its take off from Babrein in the Persian Gulf, to reinforce tt! demand for the release of a woman hijacker held in London. "Let's see what British Prime Minister Edward Hea tp does now," a guerrilla 1pokesman aid. A BOAC spokesman In London said :n BritonJ~ 12 Bahrelnis, 3 Americans a Rd 2 Ind.ians joined 54 other passengers a.board the plane in Bahrein. It carried 10 crewmen. The plane was on a flight from Bombay to London . At tht United Nations in New York, Britain and the United States asked for a meeting of the U.N. Security Counci l later today to take up the wave of hijackings. Meanwhile, the hostages taken earlier sweltered through a third day aboard the two planes, a Swissalr DC8 ud a Trans World Airlines Boeing 707, at Vle El Khana airstrip 2S miles northeast of Amman. For ·their ransom, the guerrillas were demanding the release of three Arab terror® held ip West Germany, three others jailed in Switzerland and Mis.! Leila· Khaled, 25 held in London for the aborted hijacking of an Israeli El Al plane Sunday. The PFLP, like other guerrilla groups ls against any Middle Eest settlement that does not restore Arabs to former homea'ln Palestine, the land that is now Israel. All have refused lo abide by cease-fire agreements on Israeli borders, (llee mJACK, Pa,. 2) Ora•lfe Cout l\'eatller The evening and morning fog · takes a tighter grip on the Or· ange Coast Thursday, while af· ternoons will be spotted with hazy sunshine. Look for temper- atures in the 70 to 89-degree INSWE TODAY The new .ftason of livtng theater get.I under tool/ on tht Orange COO$t Friday with thrtt local playhowes opening their jirse productions. See Entert.ainmtnt, P~gt 25. l••flolt H C1llttntlr II C•rMr CM!ff ' Ci.dl;fftt u, t Cl .. ,fl.. JJ-H c.trtilu u C*IWHW lf 0..111 llttkn '' -" •• 1 .. ,...1 ,... ' l•ltt1rlll-1 H ·-..... .. _ . AM L...,. JI Miii M JtNICil ll MMlll!tt 12 """''" , .. u "'"'"' ,.... J4 NalllMI NtWI 4-J or-.. c~ lt sw1w1e 1"911•' ~ JJ19rt1 •21 Or. Ii.Mc,_ 1' StKti M1rtl:lb •Jt T.....-tW.. l4 ,,,..,.,.. , .. ,. Wt1tMr 4 •w. W••ll M w__.. ... _ 11-'4 W.l'lllN"" W • • • Z DAllV PILOT • SA Teacl1ers Walk Out During Mee t Thrff.tourths of tht Santa Ana Unified Di&trlcl's 1,150 teacticrs walked out of ~ mandatory orientation meeting Tuesday night when school ~rd P!esident Rodolfo Montejano began to speak. The walk out was staged. John A. Smith, e.1ecutive dlttctor ot the Santa Ana Educators Association said. as a token protest to demonstrate t h e teachers ' unity in op]X)Sition to a two percent merit pa y plan offered them by the board. Smith called the merit plan offer "an insult to teachers." Jn a closed door meeting later more than 700 teachers voted to turn over to the joint teachers association the total salary merit pay the boa.rd has promised those who do an adequate teachin& job this year. The money is to be used to hire • consultant to eYalultte the merit pay plan ; hire another cooaultant to report on the Santa Ana schools administrative structure: to hire legal assistance to determiTie how to elect school boa rd members on a ward basis rather than from the school district as a whole, and hlre architeCts and en1ineert t o cletermlne the beat way to cor~t aged v.hool buildings which are 1U.pily ha11rdous to student!. The possi bility of further action, even Including a strike, is not ruled out by Smith. He said a meeling, if necessary will be called for 7:30 a.m. Monday, the dly school opens. Names of those wlio remained in the orientation meeting were taken by school administrators, supposedly with the idea that those who wal ked out might be penalized a day's pay . The board h•s adopted a t.5 perct:nt teachers salary iricrea!I! plus the two perctnl merit for those deemed to deserve it. The raise is about '300 to $400 annually less than t.hoae give• to teachers in <>tber school districts throughout the county. Viet Vet Ejects From Toro Plane Near Big Bear A Vietnam veteran ls back <>n duty today at El Toni Marine Corp1 Air Stati<>n, after bailin1 out of ht1 crl~led jet befor.e lt cruhed into a mountain ravine 20 miles ru;irth of Big Bear. Capt. Patrick G. Carroll . 27, of El Toro, escaped injury when he ejected from tht: A4 Skyhawk that caused a 10.acrt rbrutb fire wbtn it 1m1shed into the arouncl! He w11 picked up by 1 1reacue helicoptu frq,n George Air Foree B&ae, checked over at ill hospital and the returned' to the 'Oran re County trainitla facility~ · Marine Corps spokesmen said only that the Skyhawk developed 1 maUunction during a rouUne navigational trainlnt flight over the San B erna r d i no Mountain•. Six Days Remain For Tax Appeals Only six days remain lo file appeals agai nst 1970.71 property tax a1seasments, Orange County Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw reminded property owners today. The deadline is Tuesday, Sept. 15. Pro pvty owners wl1h1ng to appeal may either telephone the asaeSIOr's ofHCe, '34- 2727, for filing information of appear In person at 830 N. Bro1dw1y, Santa Ana. Assessment notices w~re mal~ to an county property owners In June. The average a.sseument lncrea• county.wide was 17.6 percent, but the chanp1 varied widely from area lo area. DAILY PILOT ' ORANGE C04$l l'Ul l.llt!ING (0Ml'ANY l•D•tf N. w .... l'ruldtnt •1111 l'u~11111•r '[tlllH' lh•tnlf A. MYr1'l<.i"1 MtMtlnl l lflt<w c ......... OHk• llO Wt tt l •v l tr1tl M1lli11t A .. clr111: P.O. I•• 1560. 92~2' OtW Offlt " NtWfJl•I lffdl< nu Wftl l1!R1 111111v1•• I.I,..,.. IHCll! 1n l'ttt1I Aw- MllPll~ 111~11: OIU l 11cll 111111¥1,_ It• c....._11; ., Polol'ftl I I "91111111 R"I OAllY I'll.OT, wlll't nkl'I h t.,"~"'· "-t tl•wt•l'ttn. 11 1t11•li.r>U tltllY u t 191 lllfl- "' Ill _ .... Millllrlt !Ir L .. -ltll~. fj .... pOl'I l ttdl, Cll!t M"t, M""!IJltll~ IHdl lft!I 11-11111 V1ll1y. •!Mt wll~ !"" ...,1on11 fjlll1llnl, 0.1.,.. Ctn• '"':11~1"1 • '-"' ,..1M1"' ... ~,, ••• " nu wt11 ..... 11 ... ,, NtWPO'I attCll, 11'141 J• Wh! .. , '""" C..11 ""'"'· , ........ 171 41 ••l-4Jll a..itW 4'"'9111 ... 641·1671 Qoll,,....., 1'7', 0•..... (Hit l'Wllt~ .... ~f, Hof IW"'f 111<''"-Wi111+•1t . ..,1, "'*ltl .,..11... .. lfvtrtlt-11 ~ ... ltt fNf .. ........""'' •l!M\11 ..-i.1 ,.,. "'JM .... If """'""' _.,, ~ fll ..... lilft ,.If II Iii....,, l tlf'll 1M C .. 11 M-, (1H,,.,flll. l~•ljtlltfl ff ""'"' 11• 1Mfllll'O It ,....u fl·• ,,_1~tw1 "'m"" •11111111itt. A.llt -1~tv. Aid to Parents Phone Schools For Busing Info ' Sidesteps to the West . Parents of students attendfns Oran1e C'.oast schools wbo are contused 'about busing tbelr children are advlsed to call the school their child will attend. All dislriCU conllcted by the DAILY P!Wl' said the individ"'I llChool will have bus achedules for the lt70.7l achool j'ear wttich bcainl Monday, and can answer parents' questions. Students attending Tustin a n d Hunlington Beach Union High Schools were mailed bui 'uaicrunents, officials u id. The HwiUneton Beach syatem employs data procesatni which automatically sorts out students llvina more thin two mllea from a achoo! and print.I bus atop location and Jime on the 1tudentl' class 1chedule cardJ, accOrding to H. R. Martin, bu1lnes.s a11illtant. For COit rtasons, Jrountaln Valley .Elementary district abandoned I t s malling of bus schedules and aent them home with students during the last week of school last year, Michael Brick, district superintendent said. Russian ballet star Alexandre Filipov, 24, explains to news men why he vanished from the touring Soviet . Moiseyev Ballet Company in Guadala· jara Sept. 3. The dancer said in Mexico City he decided to defect because he was afraid he would never be permitted to leave the Soviet Unlon once the troupe returned home. Seated with him is his friend, Luria Tristao, 20, Brazil. As with most o~r districts along the Oran11e Coast, children new to the Fountaln Valley district were a:lve.n their bus achedule when they were enrolled, Brick noted. A 1pokeaman for Hun tington Beach Councilman Renominated To Head League of Cities Cowlcllman Jack Green of Huntfuston ' Beach bu been renominated to aUCCffd himtelf as pruldent of the orange County Leaaue of Cities. Election of preaident and vice pre.tdent for the coming year will be held Thurlday at a meeUng of the e1ecuUve commltiae of the leaaue at 7 p.m. ln Friedem1nn Hall, 131 Glasaell St., Or1n1e. Councilman Ralph Cl1rk of AnJheim, a candidate for supervisor In the fourth d14trk:t, ha1 been nominated for another term II Viet prelJdent. Nomln.aUon1 m1y be offered from the floor Thursday accordln1 to Wln1ton 't;pdegralf, e1ecuUve JeCtela.ry of the Jeaiue. The only other elective post of the organization Is that of state le1l!Jatlve director. Mayor Robert WU10n of Costa Men hold1 that post now for a tw~year l<!lft odln( In tl!I. .. 11te execuUve committee will hear a prtJlmlnary report Thursday on the w&Jeet of direct election of mayors In Orange Coun ty cities. The committee Is headed by Mayor F..d Hirth <>f Newport Beach.· At this time no county ci ty has a full· time elected mayor with a salary. It has been suggested by some league members that the job of mayor has become so From Page I AITACK ... whom a vested inte re st could be suspected," he continued. Law requires that a majority of the decision-making council of the CHPA must consist <>f CQnsumers of medical care instead or prov1clers. Traband said. "The principal rq,le o( the organization .now ia: the gathering of ~onnation ·so that v,alid decision& can be~ade bated on knowledge rather than emotion;• he added. burdensome that a plan to elect the post aeparate1y from councilmen and with a 1alary comme111urate with the lime Involved lhould be studied. Huntington Beach voters will ballot Nov, 3 on a 1eparate mayor'1 poet with a 1al1ry of f 17,000 1 year. He will be an el(hth member of the city council with power to vote only in eue of tle1. Traffic Needs Answer Sought B.y Mayor Hirth Mayor Ed Hirth b11 set out to find ' out If there ii a 111luUon to the future lraffic needs of Newport Buda. And he ii aakina: a lot of people for h,ip. Thurld1 y he 11 travellnc to Loi An1elu for 1 meetlnc with Half Ayanlan, chief district e'tlgineer for the State Dlvi~on of Highways. Tuesday morning he had breakfast with the key membera of the new Freeway Fighters. All to talk about the 11me thin1. 111 those cars that will soon inundate Newport. !firth insists the answer may or may not be a freeway. On his meeting with Ayanii'n, the ma yor said, "f am not going to talk about free ways or freeway routes, I am going to get his suggestions as to solutions to our future transportation problems." He said his breakfast with the Citize n Coordinating Comqtittee was on the same identical topic. ' He said they didn't have any solutions at hand, but did promise to consider the problem amd make suage1tlons in the future. "Right now, they are interested in their two petltlans," Hirth said. Officials Deny Sewage Dump Cltiin1s From PGfle l HIJACK ... and the PFLP has made a speciality or airline hijacki ngs. Afler the BOAC plane left Bahrein, !he hijackers forced It to land at Beirut for refueling, and Lebanese T r a n s po r t Minister Pierre Gemayel appea led to 1he In answer to the cla,lm1 of Harbor Dis· guerrillas lo let women and children go. trict offlcial1, Harbor patrolmen and local "No," replied the guerrillas. "We are merchants, Newport Beach officials to-leaving with everybody or we are blowing up the plane with everybody." day said there 11 no sewage line dump. Gemayel then said he waa going to an Ing pollutants into Newport Bay at the emergency Cabinet meeting to introduce Udo Penlnaula. a measure "closing Beirut airport from The denial came after Harbor District now on to all hijackers who wan t lo land officials complained to the city about the here." Lebanon intends, he added, "to unu.!IUal amount of flotsam In the water maintain Beirut airport as a civil airport and the bad 1mell in the area known as in every ~nae of the word." The International Red Cross already the RhJne Channel. liad opened negotiations with PFLP The Harbor patrol recorded the first leaders in Amman for the release of the complaint of the condition Saturday morn· earlier h06lages. ing. Since that time, five harbor patrol-The Popular Front had fiaid it wouli:I !'"en have noted In their logs the o~nox-blow up the two planes at 1 p.m. PDT ~ous odor i nd murky water conditions Wednesday unless the British released Jn the channel which ends at lhe <>Id Miss Khaled and the Swiss and West Western Cannery and Lhe Sea Shanty ~ ''Germaa goverarOents freed the Six Arabs restaurant. in thelr custody. · Joseph Devlin, director of public works and Tom Phllli p1, uUlilie1 superintendent A •pokesman said :fuesday the I o... I bo\h 'd 1i.... · h passengers woulil be rmoved to a or ... c ty, Ill sewer uuG.!I 10 t e .. ,errllla camp before 'the eTnioaions. arta bava been checked for breaka1e. .~ -,.. "We have come to the conclusion that While the Bonn and Bern governments there Is no aewage golnl lnto the bay and announced they would comply with the the County Health Department h11s con-ransom demand, London hedged. PFLP curred," Phillips said. "The smell is spokesmen in Amman gald all seve n had probably comlnt from the abandoned can-to arrive together 011 a chartered pla11e. nery. or the latest airline seizure, a guerrilla No information was avai11ble from the spokesman said ; "This hi jack is an Health Department today because county answer lo Britain's inhuman stand In employes are taking the Admission Day refusing to let Leila Khaled co free while holiday off. _ ...11\owing the Israeli murder to leave." The wat!rs In the chaMel today .hart His reference was to .JI Israeli security only a f;unt, odd ~or, but remained agent who shot and killed Miss Khaltd's murky. The water 1s a strange green partner in the El Al hijack plot. color and visibility is quite limited. Before the BOAC hljacking the British 1:here are odd ~hlngs floating in it -government appeared to be Preparing to white flaky mater~al I.hat resembles soap release Miss Khaled. Political BOurces fla~es that h~ven t dissolved and brown said she would have bee• shi pped out as stringy material. h I Phil Tozier owner of Dav y' Lock r soon as t e PFLP re eased the two which docks 'some boats in eth: chan~ei planeloads .or hostages. . .. explained lhat the water at that point London tnformants said no Br1t1sh often collects garbage. charges had been filed . against the "Because we're up against the penin· wo~an, but Ambassador Michael Comay su\a this way," he said. "the circu lation ~eltve~e:ct a reques~. from. Israel for ~er here is very bad. Anything that dies in prov1s1onal arrest pending preparation the bay winds up here and it doesn't of an extradition petition. leave unless we scoop it out." Red. Cross representati ves asked the In mute demonstration of Tozier's et· guerrillas for a1 extension of \Vednesday planation, beer cans , i;ticks, and about night's deadline, and a front spokesman .100 dead bait fi!h floated agaiMt the In Amman said the request was under bulkhead on 31st Street. ct1naiderallon. Elementary dlstrict said bUI aul&Dments for kindergarten student• were malled last week and that stops for 1tudentl in grade I to 8 "would be the same as they were in the past." Parents having any quet:tions about busina: may oall the district 's transportation office at ~ at the school, for information. Ocean View elementary schools have posted bus schedules and parents should call or go to the 1chool, John Rajcic, assistant superintendent~ busineu; uid. "We U1ually mall or phone bua assignments to speclll e d u c a t l o n students," he noted. Principals of schools in the Newport· Mesa Unified School 0,L,trict a r e responsible for informlna p a r e n t 1 , ~arding to William Cun n j n&ham , district superintendent. Other area districts requestin1 parent& with busing schedules to cal! the school students will attend include San Juan Capistrano Unified, Laguna B ea c h Unified, \Vestminster Elementary and San Joaquin Elementary. Seal Beac h elementary oper1tes only two buses and parents already have been lnfonned of the schedcle, superintendent Marx Dressler said. Mesa R esidents File Candidacy I For Board Post Two more Costa Mesa residents have filed their candidacies for the 1pecial election to fill the vacancy on the Newport·Mesa Unified School district Board of Education. ; Latest candidates are Calvin C. Buck, of 2835 Portola Drive and Beverly K. Langston. 901 Sonora Road. Buck lists his occupaton as an engineer and Mrs. Langston is a housewife. They join Joseph M. Duffy, of 2425 Bowdoin Place, in the race for the seat previously held by f.1rs. Elizabeth Lilly. Mrs. Lilly resigned in June. Filings for the election will close Sept. IO at 5 p.m. at the office of the registrar of voters. The election will be held in conjunction with the a:eneral election Nov. 3. Candidatesmust reside In Truatee Area 2 which is bounded by Harbor Boulevard from the Intersection with Newport Boulevard. The line runs along Harbor to Baker, east to Fairview and north on Fairview to the city limits. The eaatern boundary runs along Ne"'P!)rt to the clty limit!. - TV Burglars Get a Break The warning buzzer went on In Costa Mesa's newest luxury motel Tuesday, slgn11ing the staff that the color tele vision sets in rooms 129 and 130 had be e n simult.aneously unplugged. Judy A. Rutherford reached the scene within 60 second1, aceord.inl to Police who arrived at the new Rodeway lnn, 1400 Palisades Road. No trace could be found of the sets valued at $730, aceording to in vestigators. who said the same thing occ urred about a month ago. The cords are long enough to reach the doors before comin& unpluiged , giving burg lar$ a break in their getaway. I One point made during c o u n c i J cr1tlcism of the CHPA Tuesday nicht was that no ienial has appeared in the press about the wiu wlUch purpofte;d to e.tp<R the agency. , The CCC i.!I currently preparing to circulate a pair of initiative peUUon.!I that would ro_rce the city to re1clnd itl present liJ'tement on the Pacific COilst Freeway route through eastern Newport and would require a referendum before the city co,~ld adopt any new freeway route, ever. ~~~~~~~::===~·-- Tr a band aald the CHP A ham't replied to the various allegations beeause it would seem futile. based on clashing philosophies. • Councilman St. Clair chara'cteri.t ttie CHPA Tuesday as an organi1ation incapable of doing any 9ood. '.l'raband said today the IJ'OUp, with Dr. Wall1ce A. Gerrie o( Newport Beach as chief, is planning a countywide drive for funds to supplement the $83,100 reque.ted . of the government. . He said its early work has included a study of· an out.re1ch medical clinic iil the ba rrio district of South Santi Ana that wa& hailed by federal authoritiet u a unique concept. The Orange County B91rd o f Supervisors has atso reacted favorably to the concept, Traband observed. PILOT AD NETS QUICK RESULTS fast. That's the word that describe• the kind of action DAILY PILOT cl11sslfled wJnt ads get. Here's the ad: e 11 $I Buick Specl1I $100 cash XXX•XUI Here'1 the result. The adve.rtlter lJlld she ''had a call within rrunute1 afttr m y paper was delivered ... first man who saw (the car) boufh:t It." Want fist action! Call 84U87t, the direct line to a DAILY PILOT ad-visor, and cet ready to .!lell aomething. ' The on~ way to nnd aolutions 11 to meet with eveey,t>ody ccncerned " Hirth said, "and this ii what l 1m doln'1." 1 The mayor wa1 directed by the City Council last fnonlh to personally look Into the overall problem and m a It e recomJnendatlona on how the city 1hould proceed ' in meettn1 the I o om I n c tran1portaUon crisis. In effect, lhe mayor was told lo "study what should~ studied" about iraffic . Originally, be was scheduled to make his report next Monda y. He said, however, that he may not bt ready to present anything to the council until its meeting Sept. 28. He said it's taking time, because it's Jlke starting from the beginning. And this i~ what he maj' be trying to aet the state to do. He pointed out tha t there never ha ve bee n anr surveys of tran.!lporiltion needs throu1h0ut Newport Beach. · S fl m e sections have bttn studied, he said, and the various freeway rout.es have been lludltd. War Games Slated WASHINGTON (UPI) -The 0.fonse Department plans to alrllf\ two brigades of the 1st Infantry Division -11 ,000 011 -to Germany 1tartln1 Oct. 6 for war same.!I with u. s. forcu 1t1Uoned in Germany and with a German tank brl11de. The exercise ts the second In an annual series designed to train North Atlantic Treaty Or1anl11Ucm forces. Th e Pr:nta1on said the airlift wUI take about one week. We've t&ke.11 tJle·blck off OR flneir& watch 10 you oau ... the "intfde" prlOlalon ltGr)" 0 OMEGA 0~ '\Ou wroUll.1 1'dP • '-t: ., • ....,. or a •aul L1 iii .,,_....., OaJ, -.. ,.. .,. INSIDE cu,_ •Jltnti ... tbe ....... ..,,.._ eri17 of Omec• WMba .. hip. The "'X.1_.i.u.• ~ •• fP9CiU mod'd Miplll ...... ,.. tlCe 11irror-Williat hid of _.«7 wt • '" in,.Mu. plrilJ·~ -~ l'oMr lht wild1 the *-"• wMI.,.. _.., It. [TU if JOlll'n Mt 1Mtl .. l~alied, dir 11()..,rbt.ck" will lidp ~· 1ppnd.&11 ""' -pmifll.t nc:-..d ~1. Cllnle ill far a N ........ ti S..•'Mst'1 feot\V.. • J . C. .JJ.umphried J eweferd 'I 823 N!Wl'ORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVINlfNT flJtMS IANICAMlJtfCAJtD-MASTil CMAltlif 14 YIAlS IN SAMI LOCATION PHONI: 141·1 ~11 \'ISIBlL MC1C Wllll• tflt "IClfflWdl'" .... lllHllf Is •1l1111d It 111111' ...... ~•ll•tt '""'' .,_,._. 1~1' 11 111y h .. ,. lllo f/11!1 t lhtr 0.111. ''"" • ~ l•I CMMINllM lltu. .,.,.,,,..," ,,., ..... .. .., ... , .,., ,. ......... /•""' ' ' ,., " ' .. • -- - .... ·-------·---------------------------------------------------------------- 1 I \ r "' • . -, . ;;, I 11 • I I I I I .vone in the family. Save34c on every pair. They're fashioned in Cantrece • 11 Aresta- run nylon ... Great on the legs ••• long wearing, tool Lots of fashion colors in short. average, long and extra long lengths. Reg.. $2, Now, 166 Men's full fashioned acrylic knit shirts in assorted colors. Sizes S-M-L-XL I I ~ 199 Boy's· cotton flannel paiarnas in asso~ed colors. Notch collar. Sizes6-16. 3!~6 2;~4 Girls' acrylic cardigan sweaters in white, navy, gold or red . 49s Men's cotton cord Western jeans in sand, brown or lpden, Sizes 2~38 waist. CHARGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY S"i"ORE ! \ WtdntSdU, Stpttmbtt '9, 1970 DAIL V PILOT 7 Has Bea11 Four beans to the pod \\•ill help J\1issouri farn1er Bernard Wilmes produce a larger yield of soybeans this year. The beans usuaJJy have only three beans to the pod. The new variety was developed by Or. Arnold Matson of the Soybean Research Foundation. Middle America Views Move Both Lef~ Ri~ht ~- WASIUNGTON (UPI) - Richard M. Scammon , discoi.ierer of lhe "unyoung, WJpoor and unblack" voter. now announces that middle America's political sentiments are moving both to the left and to the right. Scammon, fonner director of lhe U.S. Census, is one or the nation's best -known practitioners of Psephology (see-fol'~·gee). which is the study of eleciions and voting behavior. In a new book called "The Real ti.1ajority", he and a former White House speech writer, Ben J. Wattenberg, undertake to explain the 1968 Presidential and 1969 state and local elections in terms that are intended to point the wa y to candidates in Lhe 1970s. Scammon is the man v.·ho told politician!i in 1968 that howev er in.,istent mi ght seem i;ociety·s squeaking v.·heels - the militant poor, . the angry minorities, t h e dissenting college students -the votes neWed to win public office are elsewhere. No one. Scammon said then and repeats now , is going to get elected if he alienates the great mass of mirktJe class, middle-aged, white citizens. But Scammon and h i s collaborator have some news about the middle American lhat may come as a shock to He 'Handled ' His Clients Too Well NEW YORK !UPI) - A 47· year.old man was arrested recently on charges of posing as an attorney in criminal court In order to get female drug defendants released in his custody and then engaging them in sexual relalions. The Brooklyn Di s ri ct Attorney's office said Rudy Straus:s, of Yonkers, N.Y .• rr.arrled and the falher of three, appeared at a night session of Brooklyn criminal court In August posing as an attorney for Odyssey House. a drug rehabilitation center in Manhattan . He convinced the court on at leallt four occasions to release female defendants in his custody. ostensibly to lake them to Odyssey House for treatment, authorities said. But Instead, he took them to are.a motels for the night and had ttex wilh them, \he district al.torne:y's office said. The next moming, Strauss took the women to OdyMey !louse and, saying he was a Legal Aid Society Lawyer, turned them over to officials at the center. strauss was arraigned on charges o! obstructJng justice. politicians who equate "plain folks" with the fixed stars or 19th century political thinking. Scammon and Wattenberg say recent elections and polls make it clear that the vital center of the American - electorate has gone conservative on what they call "the social issue" disruption caused by crime, changing morals, alienated youngsters and drugs. But they say the voters also are decidedly liberal -at least as that label was used in the 1960s -on economic issues such as health care, pollution control, school aid, slum clea ran ce and antipoverty programs. 1'he many ~sues dirtttly affecting race. lhey say, are muddled , falling in oome cases on the conservative and in others on the liberal side. What does all this mean? The authors say it means that the political battles of the 1970s will be fought on the two battlefields of !be social issue and economics. "The party and the ca ndidate that can best occupy the center ground or the two battlefields will win the presidency." And how should ii be done? Scammon and Wattenberg offer free advice to everyone in the arena. They advise Democrats to divorce their social programs from Ule image or being "soft" on crim~ and penr.issiveness by pledging to crack down on lav.·breaker.s while helping the poor and the disadvantaged . They t e 11 Republicans -who need no coac hing on the social issu"- to move toward the liberal side on bread and butter issues and project the image of· "an activist. problem· solving government." The advice to boUt sidet1 reflects their basic thesis that "the ce nter is the only position of political power." Speaking or the George Wallace movement and the radical left, they say "'their power and Influence depends on whether they can stay within hailing distance of the center or whether they march off the side of the cllff, in lockstep, Minutemen an d Weathermen, hand In hand, smiling as they plummet, saying 'only I am pure.' " ANIMAloglc .,...,. crbninal lmpert0nation and ~ practicing law Without a ~-¥l .. :~-;;,~~~~::-::-) license before Criminal Court ~ocJ\lti GOT A OF' FLIHNY ,fudge G<ranl M. Weisbtrg. ),,jNoS-BUT1"••Y·•• AJ-4. II( Ball w .. r.t at $2,500 pending YOUR FJ.Ce. - a Sept. 15 hearing -=========:::;; A.ut.horltle3 1iilld Slrauss Is in I" the import-export bwlncu. An Investigation was begun whtn ~e of Straus s ' "clients" complained to officials at Odyssey House, lulboritles .. id. Who C•res? No oth•t 11owtpoper 111 1111 world c•r•• obout vour co'"m11· 11ity li\:o yt\!r co'"'"""rtv doily 11ew1popor do••· 11'1 tho DAILY PILOT. -.• DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE " The Police Helicopters Now more Ulat1 two months ln operation. the Costa 1'1esa "Police helicopter patrol seems to be fulfilling pro- ponents' hopes and predictions. Statistics have not been compiled about its diverse services, but no one can denY Eagle ·one ~nd Eagle 1'\vo have performed In \vorthwhile fa shion. Some sunbathers may not be convinced that you can'l see much skin "''bile doing 65 miles per hour at 700 feet. Some slumberers won't be convi nced it isn't a plct 1olely designed lo wake them up from an interesting dream. But the fact of the matter is that crewmen seem to be exercising great care to avoid night descents in the line of duty except when it is unavoidable. So far. those duties have I ncluded such task~ a~ s upervising the capture of armed criminals and flying a small boy to a ho spital for critical medical care. when a delay could have been fatal. He might have made it after all. if taken in a patrol car. He might ha ve. and that's lhe \\•hole point. At this point, "'hen you add up the complaints and the praise. the helicopter patrols are coming out on the plus side •• Do\\ntolvn Redevclop111eut Ambitious is the \Vord for Costa l\·tesa's recent!.¥ unveiled concepts for redevelopment of the downtown arta. a long-dela yed necessity. The question is : which \\'ay do "'ego from here~ Critical matters such as ways lo fin ance the plan to solve traffic problems resulting from eventual con· struction of the Ne\vport Free\\'8Y must be anS\\1ered first. l\1ayor Robert l\I. \\'ilson has mentioned several, one being use oI private capitaJ by'lhe property owners and n1erchants who stand to benefit the most. "Governmental revenue·sharin_g is an ideal method too." says Mayor \Vilson, noting reluctantly that leg is· Jation on that conc:,ept is presently -stalled in cotrunitlee study. 1 r\ ba ~fc plan outhned by \Vil scy & l·lani. consultants lo the city, pron1ises to lransfo rn1 lhe old do"•nto\vn area. long held back by lf'ck of a frccv.1ay cOn!<itruction sched ul e. into a showplace of esthetics an d co1nmerce. Parks, a central plar:a and prosperity are envis· ioned. Time Is extremely important in putting the package together, ho\vever, and it seems likely to be infl uenced nlore by the human aspect than by the source of the financing. No one \viii deny that th orough consideratjon \Yill be required in months ahead by the DowntO\Yn Redeve-- lopment Committee. \Yhile the city council must listen hard lvhen Costa ~Jesa 1985 hea rings open. No dates have been set and it \\•ill be some time yel. Definite change -one 1Nay or the other -is com~ ing ·to downto\v n Costa f\•lesa. d ue to the freeway con~ struction schedule and the resulting heavier traffic on crosi;town and north-south streets. The ba sic plan un veiled by \.\1ilst>y & Ham, in the "·ords of f\1a yor \Vilson. \\'ould solv e these problen1s as \\'ell as modernizing the do"'nto,~·n business community. :\ tren1e ndou s volume of wo rds an d thoughts has been expended to date on the con1p/icated topic. And it still is by no means a closed su bjecl. Any undue delay in th e interim, not to mention po- tential dissension in the bu sin ess community itself. could spell an unhappy ending after so many years of waiting and wondering. Here is a situation requiring the clnsest cooperation and trust between city hall and private interests. And plenty of pressure to insure the program doesn't fall down a crack. c Lacl,ed ~Jajority Paiblic Stcpport Bufano Had • Senate Doves Scored Zero WASHINGTON -for a cwplt of yeari the media have been saturated Miller In Iowa ; ~1cGovern and Mundt in South Dakota.) . Tlie Spark of True Genius l \ "-'ith horror storie11 about the mil itary- industrial complex. pacifistic senators have called for "~14· priorities," the young have demonstrated at the Pentagon. idealistic groups ha ve deplored tht bomb. Richard Wil son f • r __ -· face of a vigorous editorial campaign in lhe newspape.rs M"nators sre t~·•ry day, and under &uch emotional pressure as the ou1bursl of Sen. (;eorse 1\1c:Govern <Dem., S.D.) that the Senate chamber "reeks or blood." HO\\o'EVER. IT SHOULO nnt bf> assumed lhat because the peace elt>1nen1.~ IMl all the battles, they wi ll liiop lr,\'111:? to win their ki~ of \\'ar. Sen;ittir ~tcGove rn be.lieves that much nro~rr.i-s has been made and he is justifif'd in that btller when one-third or the Srn:1:r vo;r.~ lo cul off funds, at a ce rta in da1 e, for conducting a war which mav conceivablv ha ve In be fought for somi yr11rs mor"e and with interludes like Canibodi;i. r I 7~.--.,. Royce • IJt'.ier-• ' ' .~ .. 2 It has all come lo naught. Exactly zero Insofar as m a j o r Pen1agon projtr.ls havt bten curbtd or ~ e.liminated. After months of considera. tion, the $19.2 billion military supply bill which was to have been made the ve- hicle for e1pressin1 '4'ar dissent and Pen- tagon distrust has been adopted by lht Sena1e the way the Nixon .admini~tration and Armed Services Chairman John SteMis (Dem .• Miss.) wanted it. The mea!Ure comes complete trith AB~f expansion and pro,1!11ion for huge co~t overruns for the C-6A aircra ft. THE SENATE REFUSED lo hold Pmident Ni xon to a timetabte for ending 1he Vietnam war. It refused to prohibit use of chemicals fbr defolialion and crop destruction in Vietnam. It refused to prohibit the use or draftees in Indochina comba t. It refused to stop expansion of the ABM. IL refused to \'Ole the begiMing of a volunteer Anny ahead of Nixon's po&t-Vietnam schedule. It refused tn adopt an across-the -boa rd cut in Pentagon 5pend ing. The Senate refused to do all this in the 1be peace and pacifi sm ,;enators clearly Jost the gamt In e\'ery f!Uarttr, becall.51!: they lack majority support from a public which is not as 11anguine as they that risks can bf taken wlth the nalion1J JSecurlty. NOR 15 THE PUBLIC rea<ly to turn over war powe.rs Of the presidency to the Senate t"ortign RelaUons Committee.. Certain senators ha ve thus 101ten themselves trapped in gcncr.11/ po11ture.( v.ti ich are not approved in the 11tates nf their origin. Th.is is quite possibly tru! in such !late~ 15 South Dakota. Jov.•1, Indiana, Oklahoma . Oregon. C;ilifornla. It may be tnie in man~· othe r states away from !he Eastern seaboard. Part of lht peace and pacifiltm mo\·emtnt la transparently polit ical with Democrats and Republ ir.11ns following 1 pro.-Nixcm or anti -Nixon Hne. But another part of ii runs deep in conviction . crosse~ part.'· lilll'S and rt.fleets an oppo:"ile reading by IY.'O senators from th! sarr:e: stete on prev1 ~lin1 opinion in the ir;tate \Packv.·ood and Hatfield in Oregon ; Hughes and The corielusion will have to be rlrav.•p in the Nixon administration that the day may oonceivably come 14-•hen th e President will no longer be granted the flexibility he desirea in wlthdrav.·ing frorn Vietnam. In a sense his fle xibility has already b!come circumscri bl!:d because I h e J1,fcGovern-H1lfieJd Amendment, although defealec1 by 1 55-39 votP, docs in fa ct generally represenl the goal,; he has set for himself in bringing the war to an end . It was perhaps for lhis reason alone that the l\tcGovern--Hatfitld Amendment c11d nol get more votes. The majority or the Senate believed that Nixon was roming near enough to the goals of the 1'.fcGovern-Hatfield Am end ment lo lea \"e room only for quibbling. THE ARGUTtlENT IN the future "'1 11 mme over the size of the residual forcP lo be left in Vietnam .afltr mid-1972 - 20.000. 50.000 or 200,000. It is tl"ltn. in thl> presk1ential t lection year, when Nixl'ln "'ill fet\ the full force of pre.~~ure which the pr~nt debate ha!! generated. Ill Wind From the South Along about mid-Augu st, farmers in the ~tales o( Illinois. Indiana 11nd Iowa ~ , discovered grayish tan ~pots on the leave! of corn stalks. He lples.c;ly, thay "':atched a~ the fung us dtstroyed the leaves. then the sta lks and finall y the cobs. Bome along by moist, wann winds from the Gulf of Mexico, the southern corn leaf blight had atlacked the heart or the nation'1 corn belt. Yields may be cut anywhere rrom 20 lo ~percent. Shortages of feed grains could result in s ub s tantiall y high er ,;upermarket prices for meat. tggs and pou ltry. The Ni Ju.;n administration 's hope nf stemming inflation might be dealt a sh.11rp setback. And the effects would be v.•ldespread because corn Is used in .. hread. breakfast food$.. whiskey and even • lextilt finishing. r !' "THE IMPACT ts endles!!." Sl~S Henry \Vllson. president of the Chicago Board of Trad e, scene of hectic trading since the blight struck. The threat t1r t;hort1ges 11nd higher fetd prices spurred I --W- IV ed n .. day; September 9, 1971) TM tcUtorial page oJ th• Daflll PUoe steks to h\JorM and 1ti m. tdotf noder1 b11 prei•~&Wlg thil newrpo,,.r'1 tPltdOM and com.- memory Oft toj)fct Of fnlerttt and lionlfk:.l'lt.C1. bt1 provtd ina a }arum for th1 trprtt:iioti o/ our Ttad.1r11 opinioq. and bu pre11nC"b1g th• d.iutrit t.'ie~ pofnts of lnfor7Md ob1erucrt •nil 1polu....,. on top/a of U.. 4ov. Robert N. Wood, PubllJber Editorial R~arch ~ome fanners to rush cartle and hogs lo the market. This should lesd to a temporary easing of meat pr ice s. But tr the blight is as serious as some experts say, the lon1-term trend is upw;ird. Com fir~! ~ame known to Europe11 ns on No''· ~. l-t92, "'hen a Spanish scouling par1.v in the interior of CubA reported rinding A grain called mahi1. that could be baked. dried and made into flour. Sinre then. com ha.'! become the \\'orld's third most important «:real -ranking after \\heat and ri«:. In the Uni ted St~te.~. \\'here the harvest this year had bet.n esti mated at 4.7 bill ion lmshels. 8~ percent of it is used to feed li\·estock. O\'ER THE YEARS. nr11· 1ntthods of ruttivatlon and hybridl7.Rlinn h a \' & chanAed the corn known to the Indian~ into a modem. high-yield crop. AllhouJl:h hybrids wert grown as early 11~ the 1870s, the m031 producti\'t lyprs did not corne into use unlil the 1920s. Oon Pnnrl b<'rg, an agricultural economist , hits noltc1 that the avtraat yield per acre. Which during 193$-1939 wa~ M bushel11, has ln rrcent ytars reeched 57 bushels. Allhou&h com i5 subJtcl In n1any diM'ti.~s. it was relath·el y free from serious virus attack! until about 196.1 when hr.i vy losses were reported. Losse~ h1vt betn 80 heavy in ~mt ar.cas -such a~ the Yazoo Delta of v.•estern Mississippi -that com has been almost ro mpletely replaced by ot~r crops. Blight damage In cnrn in some southern s1111rs this year is S'id lo have reached emergency Je vtls. CONSIDERABLE debate raJ(t.~ sibol.1~ 1ht deiree of dami1e in the corn btlt.. 1:11vern1ncnt Pconornii>1!i ha1e adopted a wail-and -~ee attitude hrlore forecasting \\'hat part or the h:1r1·~~1 \\·ill not be brought in. Tht: fir~I specific projection of fl11 n1age il' e:<pected S('pl. II . \\·hen the government crop repon is re l('ased. Says one gra in trader: "The plain fact is we \1•on't ..l{now lhe lolril Plfect nr the blight until harvest lime In Ociober and Noven1ber." Weather is !ht hi_c i1llpondcra ble in c1ealing \Yilh the blight -nlriri111ly known a~ heln1inthosporium m<t_1·di.t. A ne1v ''11riant aUackin& thr corn b~lt thrives on hot 11nd humid wesithe r. Cnld and clry conditions retard It. ~'1.~ny farmer!', holl'e \•er. ha ve gi\'tn up l r~·in~ to fight the blight. They .s<\.\' the cost of sprayin,11 is too hi~h and ~atisfac tory resul ts are not certain. Some farmers 11nd economists arf' alrt:ady worrying ab(lul next year's crop. 1'he only certain nte~ns of controllin" bli izht 11 by planlini:l hybrids tha t ar: resistant to the fungu.~. Rut these mav bP In short supply. Stepped-up research is nttc1cd In dPvelop an tUectivr. way of dealing "-'ilh the blighl. Dear (;(00111 v G n ~: Costa ~1esa pnUcemen "'ho are 11~­ !lgn~ 10 '4'3tch the d"ncin; girls 111 th e firehouse and also ha \'e \\ i\'t& who h.t v" qualified R~ f'X- pert "'ith the rolling pin 1hauld get haurdou:s duty pay. 11. 8. MrD. fM\ lUhl ..... lt<lt ttl•trt' ~llWt, .,., lllloe~ • •!!v "'nr~ ff Ill• ~·w1' ..,, \~~• ''"' •tt ,..¥, "' Orte111r 011., 011tr 1"11111, True grniusr$ not the Hollywoocf 1lirector brand -have always been extre1nely rare. The trut genius in JOme domain creates a new world mankind has ne\·er seen before . This v.·orld is only "aguely comprehended by many who see it, and mosL of the people do 1ot comprehend il at all. 111 ·thi s light the San Francisco sr.ulp. lnr, Brnjamin Bufa. no \l'ho dird in his stt idio. had lhe spark of I rue ~cnius. His \Yorld did not per· ha ps ha ve the im- mr11M> sc ope of J\1icht'lancgo o r Sh<1kespeare. bul it 'ol'a,1; .11 \1'orld never rnroun!ered elsewhere. Curiously. for a city bohemia111, Bufano's new v.·orld dealt oflen with la1niliar aninlii1ls. or wilh formalized lnnnan figures. often those expressing an abs1ract idea, like "Peace." Nobody ever saw a li\'e cat like his stone cats. and his i;eal!! and hears 14-·ere often abstractions sy1nboliztng grace and po-1,·er. His "Sun Y::it Sen" does no! look like a man, but il.!l 11riei;tly posh1rt. eminently fits the nici;sian ic character of the grea t Chinese Jearlrr BUFA NO 'VAS a mercurial Ji llie man, 1u1d as you talked lo him you perceived his thoughts 1\·ere often disconnected alld illogical in the mundane offici aldom in v.·hlch he "-"RS compelled by his art to movt., he 11·as univeri;al\y considered odd, or.put do1,1•n as a nuisance because or the bulldog v.·ay he pu~hed his "-'Ork·in- progress. But even the mundaM, who in half· affection. half-exasperation. called him "Benny," SB\'' he had something. They didn't knov.• what it was. but ll didn't go away. Bufano coulc1 work with equal facility in stone. rne1::11 or v.·ood-he didn 't much <'are . !'O long as in lhe nu1terial he could expres~ hi~ nb!'ession or the moment abot!t his fellO\\' men and fellow creature. ~IOST GENIUSF..S in the arts -John Keats may be ;in esceptlon -tlo not emerge in a fe11• yeRrs. The ir rledication to a goal runs O\'e r most of their adult lives. So it \\'35 wit h Bufano. llis figure-:ritvlt didn 't change n1uch O\'er the dec11des .' rt couldn't. con1ing as it did from his inner, congenital being. But ii. w a 3 inco1np11rahly per~lstent. It piled up. new lif:l11re5 \\'ere always appe1rin1, and by :<hrf'r ,1·eight or numbers became unprel'sive and inescapable. l)uring most of his life Bufano was flat brokr. He might ha\·e 50ld his pieces lo the rich. gtncraling ;:i fad . But tie kne'v nothi ng abou! monty for lil'ing. and c11rtd less . He could quibble fnr years oVr.r 14-·here his work v.·a5 exhibited, but he v.·ouldnl ha1·e ii in the. formal gardtn or sotne estate. All he wanted of money wag 10 buy m.11terials for the coming wort. and snme of his most amusin& al!trcations lnvoh·ed 1hat desperatt que~L The ~lrenfth of 811f1rw·~ "ll'Ork lits In It" implication. not Its ~xpllcatlon : It f'llSl;PSIS R subject but does not porttay IL to tht eye. Bufano harl a dlfftrenl e:vt. a~ rio a 11 geniuses. It It a aueM h!re ht!!i ~tatur:.~ '\\·Ill endure, and engage lhc inlere$l of posttrity. a~ the g:atues tif Ci\'il \\"ar 1cncrals 01, horses nt!ver h.wve. Same the World Over: Militarism Totugbts at Large: Militarism is the same the world o\·er: the minute a man puts on a unifor1n he begins to resemble his enemy far more than either or them resemblCs his countrymen in civilian dress. There is a \'&st difference betv.·een ''lookin1 up to creat· neas" and ··hero. worship" -looking up to greatness mean1 finding a mG. del we can shape our actions upon, whereas hero. wor. &ltip mean.~ t xpect. ing someone else la aet out ou r frustra. tiona, hopes, angers and dre ams of power. • • • Using "human nature·• as a li1nit1ng factor in v.-hiu mankind can achieve in the way of a betler society ignores Thoreau's far.sighted obse rvation tha t ''Man's capacities have never bee n measured; nor are we to judge of wh.11t he can do by 1ny precedents, so little has been tried." • • • Whtn people w 1 isl they "want the truth" · to I •e it more than they re , only the "''ill it be \'Ouci· edto m. · • • tr we: cannot underst that tht statements "Everybody is ~!" 1 "Everybody is unequal" are nOt---• traries, but are both true and must stand to1ether, 1&'e cannot begin to discuss politica intelligently. • • • \\'hy don't thr beauty and glamor magazines tell their feniinine readers lhal no amount ol nattering makeup, fascinating hairdo. or faahia&able clothes can make a 14·oman appear Attractive if her mouth is tighl and bltter, her eyes are hard and calculatJna, and her \\'hole demeanor is ten.st and anxious -as .!IO often is lhe cast with impeccably turned-out wo1nen ? • • • 1( must hav e. been a pfospectl ve home- buyer who penned the anonymous and cynically true line: "The man who writes the. bank's advertising is not the mart who makes the loan.·• • • • A Sl':qu el i.~ almost never a1 1ood as the original book. ror the sourc• of in.~piralion has become second-h.and ; e\'en the genius of "Alice in Wonderlan~" "·as dulled into mere talent in "Through the Looking-Glass.·· • • • \\'hat the '·realist" sees i~ 'th:1t without logic there can be no reasonable action, ind he is right ; what he does not see is lhat the application of logic alone Ito situations that call for reeling$) can lead to madness. • • • A politician is a man 1&'ho can rise '" an occasion far fa ster than he can sit down to one. • • • Far more single than married persons commit suicidr:: this is because in a marriage you al\\'ays ha\'e :riomeone else lo blame when you feel you aren ·1 Ji,•ina: up lo your capacities: the single person has no suc h source of consolinc illtmion. Cha1ige Obsce1iity Laws? At ty . Gf!n .• John ~litchell Illas taken lssut with the President's Comn1lssion on Pornography '4'hich re com mend t c1 liberalir.in.g obscenity lav.·s in the United States. "If ·we w1nt 1 societv in \\'hi ch the noble 11ide of men is ~ncouraged and mankind il11tlf is elevated, then I submit t,hit pornorraph y is surely harmful." Mitchell said. "Both as individuals and as a nation \\'e are as \\'Orthy as the qua li ty of our thouchts ind intercs~." THERE IS SO~fETHTNG to be said fnr that point of view. The qu estion i~ wkethtr restrictions on lht viewing of pornoanphy l'lelp or hinder t h e aUalnment or that de!'lr11.ble tnd. Because °'* open and r.xpUcl! dcpicllnn of 1exual acta: has betn laboo In thi~ eoonlry until rtttnl times. we have witness~ an a\mosl incred ible responsP. to movie~ and pl1ya which ft.!'ture nudity and simulated 3e1ual acti vity. PEOPLE WANT TO gee th.111 "·hich 1.5 forb i dden . Thty stand in line for houri te see such trash as "I Am C\lrious (Ytllow )" or Its e<iually Inane iucces.sors. each prom ising to outdo the ()th«!r in the exposure or rl esh and the porlrayal or bedroom .11crobatlcs. If it "''" trv!""'tft1t lifting restrictions on the viewlng or pornocraphy would cau5e adults. who presumably \\'OUld be the only ones privileged to see the fnrbidden, to spend all their timt lcer\nJt at unclothed actors or fllppinJf. th rourh the pajl'es of n••dl~t m8!r87.inel'. then there might ~ a reason to be 11pprehenslvt , f ' \ ·- ··-.. ' •. •X • BUT ITS EXTREMELY doobtfal lh•I r<!•~onably intelligent individuals would be spending their time on such fri volous aAd unre\v11rrling voyeurism . Many critics complain that the so-called "1ki" nicks" are so crudely done they art utterly boring lo the a\'erage vitwer. Tl seems reason11ble to speculate thal relaxlng the obscenity laws, as applied to adults. might have the desirablt effect cf satisfying public curiosity sooner •nd ha.sten the flsy when peoplt c~t back to readirig good books and seeing ptaya in \\'hkh the actors keep _their rlothe.s on. TW o.u, eaui.,.i.. f:! C1Jei .--B11 Geo,..e --. Dear George : Whal c1oell it mean when they "scratch" a race horse~ T.Y. Dear T.Y.~ It mea ns tl1ey've got an itchy rt1ce horse. and. look. I'm ''l'lng to rua a lovelorn column here! H~, can I write blue material like the other lo\'florn columnists if my readers' problems 11re itchy horses~ "rtlate \"er h11 ppcned ta in- fidelity ~ ( I I f I ~ I I I I I ' -. i oL. 63, NO . 21 6, 4 SECTIONS, 66 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, ·1970 •• ra s 1 ac no er Power Balance U.S. Sends More Planes to Israel WASHINGTON (UPll -The United Slates has agreed to sell 16 to 18 additional suspersonic F4 Phantom fighter-bombers to Israel, defen se 50urces said today. Administration sources said the sales would be made under previously stated U.S. policy of preventing any significant shift in the Middle East power balance against lsrael. The Washington Posl. in first reporting the new agreement, said deliveries would begin later this month. Some Pentagon officials and members of C.Ongress made it clear on numerous occasions in recent weeks that Israel would be provided therl!: were a ny 1trategic alterations in the Arab-Israeli military balance . The Israelis lost a number of Phantoms during almost daily attacks on Arab Suspect Charged With 13 Crimes In Laguna Area An Azusa man has Leen charged with 13 crimes in connection with lhe June 3 ltidnaplng a n d molestation of two teenage Laguna &ach sisters and their 4-year-old brother. Laguna Beach Detective Gene Brooks Identified ~ suspect as Nicholas G. Beard, 27, a mechanic at a bowling alley. Beard was arrested in Temple City Sunday by Los Angeles County sheriffs deputies on the strength or a warrant held by Laguna police Brooks returned him to jail in Laguna. The crimes of which Beard is accused occurred when a man picked up the three hitchiking youngsters and promi.!ed to drive them home. Instead, police reported, the suspect drove the girls, aged 13 and 15, and their little brother to a desolate dirt road beyond El Toro Road. By menacing boy and girls v.:ith a knUe1 police said, he forced the girls to disrobe. The younger girl was taken to nearby bushes where, police said, the suspect began to undress. Books said the child's screams or other sounds frightened the man. He told the girls and their brother to "take your clothes and get out," polic£ said at the time. Edward Tomei!, deputy d i s t r I c t attorney, said bail for Beard has ~n set at $25 ,000. The date of a prel!m1nary hearing is to be set in municipal court Friday. Tornell said Beard is accused of three counls of kidnaping, one count of kidnaping with Intent to commit rape, one county of assauh with intent to commit a felony, three counts ?f molesting children under 18. The public defender is to represent Beard. targets. The number of losses has not been made public, but has been estimated at more than hall a dozen. Sixteen to 18 more Phantoms would presumably be about double the number Lost. Laird has said the United Stales has continued to deliver arms and equipment to Israel since the cease-fire went into effect almost five weeks ago. The Soviet Union also has continued to ship weapons to Egypt. Space Layoffs Boost County Welfare Load By JACK BROBACK Of IM Oallr P'llM Stiff Skyrocketing unemployment among Orange County aerospace workers has bit the county Welfare Department hard. Granville Peoples, director of the department, said today that a three·week baCklog ext.its in the federally subsidized food stamp prolhm. "We have been hit in the 1traight weUare cues, too," Peoples 1aid. "We added 1,250 new casts in July, 10 Limes the number of new cases ad~ed two years ag o." The welfare director said h i s department was hard pressed to keep up with the rising number of. applicants. "In the last two months we have found a great increase in the nu mber of unemployed aerospa~ workers coming to us for help?" Peopes said It was a totally new experience in his department to find so many skilled engineers, technicians and execuUves joining the food stamp program roles. "Nonnally we deal largely with unskilled persons and the indigent." He guessed that the aerospa c e engineers had used up there six months of unemployment checks and have nowhere else to turn. "If this Lrt:nd doesn't level off in the near future we are going to have a real problem staying within our budget, which is already substantially greater than last year," Peoples added. In a determined attempt to remedy the skilled unemployment situation, Supervisors David Baker and Williams Phillips have been named to a committee to huddle with state and federal legisl ators representing the county to heopfully gain new aerospace contracts. Jn the last 12 months 10,700 workers have been laid off by the county's aerospace and electronic industries because of the present recession and cutbacks in the federal budget. Some help for the industry may come from the designation last week of the county as an area of "substantial unemployment." , This means that firms here will receive preference in bidding on certain federal buying cont.racb and public works projects. DAILY P'ILOT PMM '¥" .ltd! &rlMdr Parking the Campaign Bob Citron and Joe Greene are deputy tax collec· tors for Orange County. Both are seeking their boss's job. Their boss, Don S. Mozley is retiring and the two men are battiing in an election cam- palgn that will end Nov. 3. But. lhey insist, when they go to work each day, they leave their poUtical campaigns in the county parking lot at Broadway and Sixth Street in Santa Ana. Laguna. DQg LoYcer~ Try For Law Referendum Laguna Beach dog owners Thursday will take up the possibility of petitioning for a referendum. that could force the City Couhcil to either rescind its aintroversial dog ordinance or put the question to the voters. A public meeting has been scheduled at 8 p.m. in the cafeteria of Laguna Beach High School. Laguna Officers Turn Co·wboys, Corral Horse Laguna Beach police are used to runaways but this one was a horse of a different color. After a hot pursuit Tuesday morning, officers corralled a fri sky runaway horse. The horse, a big brown model, was first reported at Bluebird Park. Officers Arthur DeLuca and Al McGraw arrived IJ find out that he had moved on to the parking lot of Denney's Restaurant. They arrived there, said DeLuca, and a passerby said, "he went that way." The chase began in earnest along Gienneyre Street. OeLuca and McGraw headed the beast off cornering him behind a parmked car. They tied him at the nearby Agate Street Fire Station a nd turned the invesUgation over the the SPCA. ':'he SPCA ·came for the horse but not before the animal left trampled evidence of his visit to the fire station. Ait SPCA official said the OWRer, Warren Hopkins, 1035 Bluebird Canyon Drive, picked up hia horse lh1s rooming. The referendum is a new twist in the fight against ·the dog law thal is scheduled to take effect Sept. 19. The ordinance bans dogs from all city beaches between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. and bans them totally from Bluebird Park, Riddle Field and Top o( the World Park. Dogs would be permitted leashed in Heisler Park at times set by COWJCil decree. Dog owners who think the ordinance harsh or ill.considered have been circulating petitions to show opposition to the ordinance asking councilmen to reconsider. These petitions, however, have no legal weight. Referendum petitions would, explain spokesmen for the dog liberation movement. If signatures: or 10 percent of the registered vottrs are filed with Qle city clerk in petitions opposing the ordinance, the law Is suspended until: -Councilmen rescind it. -Or councilmen set the matter for election. A special election would probably cost several thousand dollars. Backe rs of the referendum approach suggest it could give the council a chara to · work out a aimpromise ordinance acceptable to both sides. The ordinance, fathered by Councilman Ed'ward LoTr, passed by a 3 to 2 vote split Aug. 19 with Councilmen Roy Holm and Charlton Boyd diMenting. ' Della Reese Hurt HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Singer Della Reese walked through a plate glass door at her home today and underwenl several hours of surgery for severe laceratiom, her manager said. Fmh~t R~sf~ Off Cataliria; Soll Missing A Carlsbad catamaran sallOr who paddled 18 hours in the Catalina Channel ls hospitalized today at Avalon and search is under way for his son who is missing, and presumed drowned. Charles Piety, 47, was listed in fair crindition at Avalon Community Hospital, where he is under trealment for shock and ex posure. A spokesman for the U.S. Coast Guard Search and Rescue office in Long Beach said a helicopter was dispatched today to hunt ·ror any trace of 22-year-old Phillip Piety. Hope was admittedly dim. Piety told crew members aboard the yacht Feeling Groovy -who hauled him aboard at mid·morning Tuesday -that he and his son were forced to abandon their Z+foot catamaran Malihini. · The exhausted victim told Coast Guard Investigators a storm came up, but they said they were unaware of anything but routine ocean breezes and .swells 'Monday afternoon. · He said he and his so.n bLickled on life jackets and boarded their small dinghy and left the Malihlnl, but the boat quickly took on water and swamped. The elder Piety said his son told him he was too tired to proceed arid would tread water in ~is life jacket until help could be brought from the Island port. People aboard another passing yacht found a lifejackct stencilled Malihini Tuesday after and recovered il, turning it ever to Avalon authorities. Piety said the Miillhini only carried two 1ife jac~ets a'nd his son. waa wearlng the second one the last lfme he saw him ~ondaY afternoon. Countian Dies in War Viet Vet Ejects From Toro Plane Near Big Bear A Vietnam veteran is back on duty toda y at El Toro Marine Corps Air station after bailing out of his crippled jet before it cr1shed in~ a mountain ravine 20 miles north of Big Bear. Clementeans Dial 911 Army PFC Theodore F. Bedra,1aon of Mrs. Michaline B. Bedra. SO.l San. Luis Circle, Buena Park, has been killed In action Jn the war In SoutheaS\ Asia, the U.S. Defense Oepartme.nt 1 unounced Tuesday. Ca pt. Patrick G. Carroll, 27, of El Toro, escaped injuTy when he ejected from the A4 Skyhawk that taused a IO.acre brush fire when It $1ll3Shed into the ground. He 'e picked up by a rescue hclicop~from George Air Force Base, chtcked over at its hospltal and then returned to t~ Orange County training facility. Monkeys Doomed KNOXVILLE. Tenn. (AP) -All IS monke:yt at Knoxville's city ioo are to b$ killed because of 11n attack o f tubemllosls among some of them. City Gets Emergency 'Streamlined' Phone Number San Clemente Friday will become the first Southern California city to have the new emergency dialing number of 911 which will slrt:amline calls for help during an emergericy. The new dlal system means that San Clemente telephone subscribers who have the 492 prefix to their ph<lne number can dial the three numbers for police, fire, lifeguard or ambulance asst.stance durtng an emergency. The system, which involved 18 months of designi ng ind installation, will go Into 1ervicc at 12 :11 a.m. Friday. About 101000 telephone subscribers wlll be able to use the number, Instead of looking up a seven-diait number durln1 period! of excitement and stress. Because of technk:al factors, about 400 San Clemente residents with the 495 prefix will not be able to use the ne" service, Pacific Telephone k>ca l manager Bob Gannon explained . Friday's cutover in San Clemente will brlna to 100 the total of American cities with the new emergency system. In California, San Clemente Is only the ll11rd to havo II. Recent lnstanauon were completed in the cities of Gustine and Alameda hi Northern C.llfornia. City Manager Ken Carr, enthusiastic aboul he new system, 1aid that San Clemente'• hl.storlc instal11Uon came • about because of an Immediate request in 1968 when the emeraency system was first announced . "We "ere first because we asekd for It first," he laid. The service should make emergency ca lling by citizens much more simple, dfrncL and time saving. During mott emercencles, p o I I c e administrators have said, a ltvtrwflgit number com.milted to memory can ea&lly be forgotten by persons wbo need emergency assistance. "T1ll1 is a great step forward In the protection or life and prope:rty for S.n Clemente rcsldcnta." Carr atld. • • ' ' PILOT A.D NETS QUICK RESULTS Fut. That'a the word that desa-lbes ll1e kind of actloo DAILY PIWf classified want adt cet. Kere 'a the ad: e 1 H I Balck Special $100 cash UX·XlXI Here's the result. The18dvertiaer 1aid sbe .ihad a ca ll withln minutes l ft e·r m y paper was delivered ••. first man who saw (ll1e car) iJou8hl IL " Wanl lut acllon? CIJI 6IM611, lhe direcl line lo a DAILY PILOf td·Yilor, ond 1el ready to tell IOl!lethiOI· .) • Today's Flnel N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS ane 113 Ahoru·d Latest Jet Captured By 11fE A!SOCJA TED PRF.88 Palestinian guerrillas hijacked a British jetliner with 113 persona aboard today and forted it to land near twO other capt:ve airliners on Which nearly ZOO persons were being held hostage iJI the J ordanian desert, the British Forelp Office announced. A spokesman said word had reachtd London that the plane, after circling the Middle East for hours, landed at the same guerrilla-held base where the two other planes were under guard. As in the case of the four hijacking plots earlier this week, the Marxist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine assumed responsibility. A spokesman said the PFLP seized the British Overseas Airways Corp. VClO, after its take off from Bahrein in the Persian Gulf, to reinforce it,, demand for the release of a woman hijacker held in London. "Let's see what British Prime Minister Edward Heath does now," a guerrilla spokesman said. A BOAC spokesman in Lendon said 32 Britons, 12 Bahrelnis, 3 Americana and 2 Indians joined S4 other passengers aboard the plane In Bahrein. 1t carried 10 crewmen, The pl•ne waa on a flight from Bombay to l..4ndon. At ,the United Nations in New York, Britain and the United States asked for a meetina: of. the U.N. Security Q:lunciJ later today to take up the wave of hlja<kln1s. Metnwhlle, the hostages taken earlier aweltered through a third day aboer~ the twG planes, a Swi3sair DC8 and a Trans World Airlines Boeing 707, at the El Khana alrslrlp 25 miles northeast of Amman. · For their ransom , the guerrillas were dem8nding the release of three Arab terrorists held in West Germany, th!M cthen jailed In Switzerland and Miss Leila Khaled, 25 held in London for the aborted hijacking of an Israeli El Al plane Su11day. The PFLP, like other guerrilla groups Js against any Middle Eest'7settlement that does not restore Arabs to former homes In Palestine, the land that is now Israel. All have refused to abide by ~ase·fire agreements on Isra eli borders, and the PFLP has made a speciality of airline hijackings. After the BOAC plane left Bahrein , the hJjackers forced it to land at Beirut ror refueli rig, and. Lebanese T r a n s po r t Minister Pierre Gemayel appealed to the guerrillas to let women and children gG. "No," replied the guerrillas. "We ar.e Jeaving with everybody or we are blowina up the plane with everybody." Gemayel then said he was going to an emergency Cabinet meeting to introduce a measu re "closing Beirut airport fror,1 now on to all hijae'kers who want to land here." Lebanon intends, he added, ''to maintain Beirut airport as a civil airport in every sense of the word." The International Red Cross already had opened negotiations with PFLP leaders Jn Amman for the release or the (lite' HUACK, Pal' 2) Orange Ceut Weather The evening and mornin g fog takes a lighter grip on the Or· ange Coast Thursday, while af· ternoons will be spotted with hazy sunshine. Look for temper· atures Jn the 70 to 89--degree INSIDE TODAY The new seoson oj livi'ng theater get! 11.nder wau on the Orange COOlt Frido.11 with three loca' pla:uhousea optning the ir first productfOm. See Entertatnm.ni, Pog• 2$. • • \ • I ------~ ---------~= 2 r' ILY PILOT s • I WI<-•.~ t, ~'111 .. Swim Pool Eyed ,.. In iSan Clemente San Clemente may hive a new swimming pool next summer. A proposal for a community swimming pool to be built jointly by the city of San Clemente and the Capistrano Unified School District will be submitted ,to the San Clemente City Council by the district at its next meeting. Members of the Board of Trustees voted unanimously Tuesday for the proposal which would locate the pool at San Clemente High School. Estimated cost of construction is $150,000, according to Superintendent Trumll\'l Benedict After con!lruction the pool would be operated and maintained by the school district at no cost to the city. San Clemente City Manager Ken Carr said he had no idea what the council's reaction to the proposal would bt. "We would want to be sure the financial arrangement is equitable to the city's taxpayers," said Carr. He admitted Uiat the present city pool Is cracked ans suffering rrom old age but he said he knew of no plans to tear lt down. The school district plan calls for the formation of a joint powers agreement fCJr the construction; the stipulation, that the pool will receive community and school use; after construction lt would become the property of the school district which would maintain it ; and the design would be prepared by the architect for San Clemente High School. "If agreeable we would like to have it completed by next summer," said Benedict. He pointed out that although the city is spendtna ~bout $17 ,000 a year to maintain the old city pool, the new one would cost about $2$,000 to maintain. "'Ibat's ,because ours would have more contlJl\aol.ll, use," siid Benedict. "It would tie uaed for team 19 swim programs, physlcll education and competitive ~.'' Removal of Utility Poles Moves Near for Laguna Removal of Ul\lightly utility poles may bt a notch closer to reality in at least three portions of the city, Laguna Beach planning commisaloners learned Monday night. Commiaaioner Robert J. Hastines. who New Capistrano Teachers Tour 'White House' New teachers for the Capi1trano Unified School District -55 ol them - Tuesday toured the streets close to the Western White House, then s1w the schools where they will work in the first d1y of their orientaUon week. And on '11lursday the teachers will attend official orientation day acUVities at San Clemente High Schoo~ Part of that event will be a talk by Chief Los Angeles Deputy Difrlct Attorney Joseph Busch. Frank 0. Mcintyre, the chief spokesman for the California Teacher's Msociati~, also will ad~w ~.lfOUP Thursday m Triton Cent.,-. J - After tbe week of preparatory activities -including s:ettln& their cla1srooms ready for students -the teacihen will have a weekend ol rtst before the 1tudents flock to class Monday morning. Some of the week's activit.iea have Included a breakfast sponsored by PTA groups and a luncheon sponsored by the local teacher's association. Elliot H. Gray Succumbs at 83 Elliot R. Gray of 783 Via Los Altos, Laguna, Hills, died Saturd•y at the age of 83 in S6uth Laguna. Private services for Mr. -Gray were held Tuesday at McCormlck Mortuary Chapel. Burial followed at Melrose Abbey. Mr. Gray is survived by his wife, Virginia, of the family home. A native of New Jersey, Mr. Gray bad lived in California for the paat 49 years. He was a retired supervisor for the Lockheed Corporation. Mr. Gray serv~ as a communicant for St. George'• Episcopal Church in Laguna HUis. DAILY PILOT "..,... ''"' H..m.tt-.... . L .. ,,. ... ,. ....... 1' .... , C:•U. .... . s. c1""'""' lte9111 N . W114 P'lt~"'I •~O Pwllll•fltf' J.c~ It. c~1l1v Vi<I rre1~I 11\0 Gone11I MM\tt ... Th111111 11;,, .. ;1 I.flier lhoM•t A. M111r,hi111 M11110~ IOlllr lle~1r4 P. Nill ro.,1h 0..eflllot CouMr f tltar C1tM Mt M ; l» W11I a1y Sir•! Htwf'•I •1«111 nil WUI lllM, •eultw" .. .,_ a-11: m ,.,,.,, •·- 1-111t11111t"" lfl<IH 1111'• a.o<.lo 1Wle"41't $M ~ M Nttla Ill C1Mlftt llMI waa delegated undergroundin& uUlitles as hll sphere of influence, llhorUy after he wu appointed, said that he is obtaining a finanlcal plan for the work from the utility companies. Work II !Cheduled to begin in mid October for undergrounding of util!Ues along Cliff Drive from Coa1t Hl1hway to Myrtle Street The poles a.re considered a bli1ht on the view of. Heialer Park and the ocean beyond. BJds for contracts in two other areaa will be out In 30 day1. In !be north end of town, the poJea will come down on LeDroit Street Up into the Emerald Terrace section of the city, Hastings said. Undergroundinl will also take place from the intenection of Blumont Street aod Park Avenue, up through the Mystic Hills to Skyline Drive. Upper Si<yline Drive, a recenl development. already bu underground utilities. Hastings said this morning that any work wouJd need approval of residents. since the cost of the undergrounding wi!I be asaessed to them. ·In Emerald Bay, where undergrounding now is taking place, the- cost per lot was more than $1200. Hastings Is hopeful that work elsewhere in town could be done at lower cost. IHe noted that Ill'~ ·~!f!,.m per<:ent of the grou revenue of the utility comPAAies goes toward undergrounding. Last year, it amounted to $24,000. "That's enough for about sit poles," Hastina:s noted. Turtle Rock's Pupils Sharing School Facility More than 500 Turtle Rock Elementary school students will be "haring the Univer.\i;! Park elementary building through December, requiring scheduled changes for both schools. Bus schedules for pupils from the Col- ony and OJlverdale tracti the Marln'e Corps Helicopter facility (LtA), from UC Irvine married stUdents' housing and all residents of Turtle Rock BroacimoOr HUis will be posted 4 p.m. Friday at Univeralty Park School. "Copies also will be posted at the recreation areas and sales office of the housing development!," principal David Prince said. The sharing of the University Park building means there will be no hot lunch program, although milk will be available at 10 cents per carton, P.rince noted. Parents of kindergarten puppll11 must bring their children to school on Monday, Prince said, Buses will operate for all other children in the district, however . Class schedules for students o1 both Turtle Rock and University Park elementary schools are a.!I follows: Grades I and 2, 9:15 a.m, to 2:30 p.m.: grade three , 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and grade• 4, 6, and 6,8:30 •. m. to 3 p.m. Customs Officers Hold Meeting Cualoma Uupector1 and administrators from the U.S., Mt1lco and c.anada began a tJ\ree.clay conference today in President Nixon's office complex near tbt Westtrn .White HOUie in San Clemente. The meeUng -one of many by government groups at the PrtsldenUal compound this year -wlll cover items lncludlna carco and bag gage Uupec:tions, slmpllflc:etion of customs procedures, narcotics amuggllng and g a n e r a 1 exchange of Information. The conference ti the first three-w1y conferenct betw~ customs offl\als or the bordtr countrles, U.S. spokesmen said. The obvious prime iasue at the thret- day talks will be method.!! of cracking down on narcotics contraband. Spokesmen said this morning that they would begin ls1utng communiques on the progres5 of the conferen ce be£1Mlng Thur$day. AJd to Par~t• -.. Phone Schools For· Busing lnifo Don Boyles, 32, picked an un· usual way to observe Labor Day. He parachuted Monday from the world's highest sus· pension bridge -the Royal Gorge Bridge near Canon City, Colo. -to the Arkansas River 1,055 feet below. A friend drove him to the bridge and picked him up after the jump. Boyles, of Tulsa, Ok.la., made the jump without fanfare and it took authorities two days to iden· lily the mysterious parachut- ist. Lifeguard Suit Settled; City Shells Out $650 An out.of-court setUement Tuesday for $650 ended the one-year-old' fight bf a fired San Clemente lifeguard lieutenant for overtime he seid the city owed him. Parents of students attending Orange Coast schools who are confused about busing their children are advised to call the school their ~ttj.ld will attend. All ,district• «>11tacted by the DAILY PILOT said the individual school will 'have bus schedules for the 1970-71 school year which begins Monday, ~d can answer parents' questions. Stud~nta attending Tustin a n d Huntington Beach Union High Schools were mailed bus assignments, officials sald. The Huntington Beach system employs data processing which automatically sorts out students living more than two miles from a school and prints. bus stop location and time on the students' class schedule cards, according to H. R. Martln, business assi.stant. For cost reasons, Fountain Valley Elementary district abandoned i t s rriailing of bus schedules and sent them home with students during the last week of school last year, Michael Brick, district superintendent said. As with most other districts along the Orange Coast, children new to the Fountain Valley district were given their bu~ schedule when they were enrolled, Brick noted. A spokesman for Huntington Beach Elementary district said bus assignments for kindergarten students were mailed last week and that stops for students in grade 1 to 8 "would be the same as they were in the past." Parents having any questions about busing may call the district 's transportation office at 536-4942 or the school, for infonnation. Ocfan View elementary schools have posted bus schedules and parents should ca!l or go to the school, John Rajcic, assistant superintendent, business, said. ''We usually mail or phone bus assignments to special e d u c a t I o n students," he noted. Prlncipals of schools in lhe Newport- Planners Grant Parking l..-Ot On Glenneyre Laguna Beach planning commissioners Monday night approved a-request from the South Coast Highway Parking District Committee to establish a parking lot on Glenneyre Street abOve the ''Art Center,. Former Lifeguard Lt. Steve Chorak - 1fho 1t1 one time led 30 lifeguards in a threatened strike -settled for slighUy more than one-third of initial claim or $1,600 against the city for asserted unpaid overtime. The case had been scheduled for civil court in South Orange Conuty Municipal Court Tuesday afternoon. Chorak had served as a lifeguard ln San Clemente for 10 years before he was fired. · Trial · Scheduled On Bad Check Rap in Clemente The request will now go to the City Council. The council will be asked to approve funds to begln appraisal of the land and appraisal of improvements for the property. The land earmarked for the parking Jot is on the east side of Glenneyre Street, between Mountain Road and Calliope Street There are several owners. Before granting the reque.!t, chairman William Lambourne noted that "We're now to the point where were asking the City Council for money to begin appraisal." The issue raged locally for several weeks last summer. At one point in the controversy the lifeguards, led by Cborak campaigned for r~ognltion as a bargaining ,croup. The city re(used. Since the summer incidents, the city has altered its structuring of lifeguard employment to shorten the work week for each guard. The guards also have joined a public safety employes' association wbtch is the representative group or police, fire and lifeguard personnel. The group recenUy won ofiicial recognition by the city with the understanding that the recognition didn't grant the association the right to call 1trikes or walkouts. One issue remained unclear in the Chorak case toay , however -whether or not the ousted lieutenant will continue his fight for reinstatement to the department which fired him. Chorak's lawyer, Chest.er Brisco of Santa Ana . could not be rtached for commenl thtl morning. Polle~ to Check Festival Alarm Sound System Laguna Beach's Festival of Arts will seek police expertise in selecting a sophisticated new system to improve the burglar proofing. Alarmed by . burglaries of . soond equipment from both the Laguna Moulton Playhouse and high school, Don , Williamson, producer of the Pigeant of the Masten, told festival dliectors Tuesda~ he has bids from two top companies. Williamson said the American District T~legraph Company will install a system for $2,174 with a '110 monthly charge for operation. He said Wells Fargo Company would Instill a system for $1,724 with a conUnulng monthly cost of SJ3S. The sy11tems would provide electronic surveillance and other detection devices to protect the festival stage, shop, forum theater, box ofUce and buslneu office. The boa rd agreed that Board President William O. fl.1artin ind directors Davld- Youna 1nd Stuart Durkee will choose a system after conferring with tpolice and companies using the systems. A man accused of writing $37 ,000 in checks on the San Clemente branch of the Bank of America has been ordered to face trial Sept. 2.1 in Superior ourt. Darrell Graf Hafen, 42, who describes himself as an overseas investor, has pleaded not guilty to charges of d e llberately maintaining insufficient fU'nds. He is free on $30,000 bail. Judge Samuel Dreizen set the trial da te for Hafen after Judge William Murray refused to dismiss the Orange County ,Grand Jury's indictment of the Salt Lake ~ity, .Utah, businessman. Judge Dreizen also granted Hafen's request that he be allowed to have Iawbooks in his county cell. Deputy City Attorney George Logan said that there were two ways to go. The city can foot the bill, or the property owners can be asked to bear the preliminary cosLs. Alvin 0. Autry City Planner said he felt the city should handle the rosts. which would later be returned from revenue collected in the lot. Lambourne said that any agreements with the property owners should be contingent on their receiving a 75 percent rebate of all revenue collected from the meters in the lot. This will help ease the increased :!fJ.ssments for the cost of the lot, he We've Wren the back off OU flDellt wat.oh so JOU aau eee the "Inside" preclslon iltcit1 0 OMEGA e1~ "'* wooldn"l j'adfe • llool 111 "" am:r « • ""*" bJ 11a 1ppe11uoa. a.tr •bea '" i..c INSIDE ea 70u 1pprod.11e ahe UIDq mperi. e1rir7 ol Omt.t:• workmanship. Thi "'Kleerhlclt• &amntcr it.a Apecial model dt*igned to lhow ,,,. the alrror-brilliuit fi.Allh of "SJ' put ~ the !.n;niooJ, cmilf'JOftftd ptndolmii·lib aoter tllat wind• the &.mntu while too: well' It. E"t!I i( joo:'ni not mechaaially-alllded. ti.. "'KINfhKl• will help JOU •ppredau: •hJ .. siroadly tt«111U11end Omtp. Ctme In for a tr. demollilull.io11 of Se.uutter •• f•tw11o . J. C. J/-umphri etJ JewefertJ '1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVENIENT TfltMS -IANlAMl llCARO-MASTEl CHAl&l 24 YiA ls IN SAME LOCATION 'f+ONI 14i.J401 Mesa Unified School District a re responsible for infonning p a r en t 1 , according to William C unn i ng b am, district superintendent. Other area districts requesting parents with busing schedules to call the school students will attend include San Juan Capistrano Unified, Lagun1 B e a c h Unified, Westminster Elementary and San Joaquin Elementary, Seal Beach elementary operates only two buses and parents already have been informed of the schedcle, Superintendent Marx Dressler said. From Pagel HIJACK ... earlier hostages. The Popular Front had said It woulCI blow up the two planes at 7 p.m. PDT Wednesday unless the British released Miss Khaleel and the Swiss and West German governments £reed the siJ Arabs in their custody. A spokesman said Tuesday the passengers would be removed to a guerrilla camp before the explosions. While the Bonn and Bern governments announced they would comply with the ransom demand, London hedged. PFLP spokesmen in Amman said all seven had to arrive together 011. a chartered pine. Of the latest airline seizurt, a guerrilla spokesman said ; "This hijack is an answer to Britain's inhuman stand in refusing to let Leila Khaled go free while allowing the Israeli murder to leave." His reference was to ..ri Israeli ~urity agent who shot and killed Miss Khaled'1 partner in the El Al hijack plot. Before the BOAC hijacking, the British government appeared to be prepariflg to release Mi.ss Khaleel. Political sources said she would haye bf;!en shipped out as soon as the PFLP released the two planeloads of hostages. London infonnants said no British charges had bet.n filed against the woman, but Ambassador Michael Comay delivered a request from Israel for her "provisional arrest" pending preparation of an extradition petition. Red Cross representatives asked the guerrillas for an extension of Wedflesday night1s deadline, and a front spokesman in Amman said the _request was under consideration. Britain at first refused to consider releasing Miss Khaled, but the Cabinet met in emergency session Tuesday and gave the ma tter more study. Elizabeth Goudy Services Held Private services were held Tutsday at McCormick Mortuary Chapel for Elizabeth Ann Goudy, 31521 Monterey St., South Laguna who died Saturday at tht age of 92. Burial foJlowed at Cpress Lawn Cemetery at Colma, Calif. Mrs . Goudy is survived by a son, Clyde. of South Laguna ; a daughter, Mrs. Ethel Grundel of Oakland ; a grandchild, three great-grandchildren. one great-great grandchild, and two brothers. A native of Wales, Mrs. Goudy hid lived in California for the past M years. Watson Appeal Denied NEW ORLEANS (UPI ) -The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeal! denied a rehearing Tuesday on the extradition appeal of Charles D. Watson, the Texas youth implicated along with other "Manson Family" members in the Tate- La Bianca murders in Los Angeles. VJStll! IAal: W)olt• t~1 .,Kl .. rb1e•• S1 .. "'"!tr 1t du11~•d 1a "'''"' dll'l\Dftltllll On1111 1;11tllrNll-t~i~ It 1'11)' M Wef~ 11-1 trrr qi/Hit Ornt ... M1•11 1 ta• 11\l COll'llUltlOft •lit.I. •r.,,.,,,.., ,, ,..,,., ~· .. m '>tl •~' .._ l•MoJ• IJ>- , I I 'I I r " 1 11 .•, :. --- Lagoo~ Beaeb VOL. 63, NO. 216, 4 SECTIONS, 66 PAGES ra s Power Balatice U.S. Sends More Planes to Israel WASHINGTON (UPI) -The United States has agreed to sell 16 to 18 additional suspersonic F4 PhanlDm fighter-bombers to Israel, defense sources said today. Administration sources said the sales would be made under previously stated U.S. policy of preventing any significant shill in the Middle East (X)wer balance against Israel. The Washington Post, in first reporting the new agreement, said delive_ries would be~in later this month. Some Pentagon officials and members of Congress made it clear on numerous occasions in recent weeks that Israel would be provided there were any strategic alterations in the Arab-Israeli military balance. The Israelis lost a number of Phantoms during almost daily attacks on Arab Suspect Charged With 13 Crimes In Laguna Area An Azusa man has Leen charged with 13 crimes in connection with the June 3 kidnaping a n d molestation of two teenage Laguna Beach sisters and their 4-year-old brother. Laguna Beach Detective Gene Brooks Identified the suspect as Nicholas G. Beard, 27, a mechanic at a bowling alley. Beard was arrested in Temple City Sunday by Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies on the strength of a warrant held by Laguna police Brooks returned him to jail in Laguna. The crimes of which Beard is accused occurred when a man picked up the three hitchiking youngsters and promised to drive them home. Instead, police reported. the suspect drove the girls, aged 13 and 15, and their Jitlle brother to a desolate dirt road beyond El Toro Road. By menacing boy and girls ~ilh a knife, police said, he forced the girls to disrobe. The younger girl was taken to nurby bushes where, police said, the guspect began to undress. Books said the child's screams or other sounds Crightened the man. He told the girls and their brother to "take your clothes and get out," police said at the time. Edward Tornell, deputy d i s t r i c t attorney, said ball for Beard has~-" set at $25 000. The date of a preliminary hearin@: is to be set in municipal court Friday. Tornell said Beard is accused of three counts of kidnaping, one count of kldnaping with intent to ~mmit rape, one county or assault with intent lo commit a felony , three tounts ~f molesting children under 18. The pubbc defender is to represent Beard. targets. The number or losse1 has not been made public, but has been estimated at more than hall a dozen. Sixteen to 18 more Phantoms would presumably be about double the number Lost. , Laird has said I.be United St.ates has continued to deliver arms and equipment to Israel since the cease.fire went into effect ahnost five week s ago. The Soviet Union also has continued to ship weapons to Egypt. Space Layoffs Boost County Welfare Load By JACK BROBACK OI lllt Dellr l"llM Slaff Skyrocketing unemployment amon1 Orange County aerO!pact workers hu hit the county Welfare Department bard. Granville Peoples, director of the department, a.aid today that a three-week: backlog ex.isf.s in the federa1ly subsidized food stamp progrtm. ';We have been hit in the straight welfare cases. too," Peoples aaid. "We added J,250 new cases in July. 10 times the number of new cases added two years ago." The welfare director said h i s department was hard pressed to keep up "'.ith the rising number of applicants. "In the last two months we have found a great increase in the number of unemployed aero.5pace workers coming to us for help?" Peopes said it was a totally new experience in his department to find 10 many skilled engineers, technicians and executives , joining the food stamp program rol~. "Normally we deal largely with unskilled persons .and the indigent.'' He guessed that the aerospac e engineers had used up there six months of unemployment checks and have nowhere else to turn. ''If this trend doesn't level olf in the near future we are going lo have a real problem staying within our budget, which is already su bstantially greater than last year," Peoples added. In a determined attempt to remedy the skilled unemployment s i t u a t i on . Supervisors David Baker and Williams Phillips have been named to a commitlee to huddle with state and federal legislators representing lbe county to heopfully ga in new aerospace contracts. In the last 12 months 10,700 workers have been laid off by the county's aerospace and electronic induatries because of the present recession and cutbacks in the federal budget. Some help for the industry ma y come from the designation last week of the colMty as an area of "substantial unemployment." This means that firms here will receive preference in bidding on certain federal buying contracts and public works projects. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, '1970 no er Parking the Campaign Bob Citron and Joe Greene are deputy tax collec· tors for Orange County. Both are seeking their boss's job. Their boss, Don S. Mozley is retiring and the two men are batUing in an election cam· paign that will end Nov. 3. But, they insist, when they go to work each day, they leave their political campaigns in the county parking lot at Broadway and Sixth Street in Santa Ana. Laguna Dog ~vers Try . -. For Law Referendum Laguna Beach dog owners Thursday will take up the possibility of petitioni ng for a referendum that could force the City Council to either rescind its controversial dog ordinance or pu t the question to the voters. A public meeting has been scheduled at I p.m. in the cafeteria of Llguna Beach High School. Laguna Officers Turn Co wboys, Corral Hor se Laguna Beach police are used to ru 11aways but this 011e was a horse of a different color. Alter a hot pursuit Tuesday morning, officers corralled a frisky runaway horse. The horse , a big brown model, was first reported at Bluebird Park. Officera Arthur DeLuca and Al McGraw arrived !J find out that he had mo ved on to the parking lot of Denney's Restaurant. They arrived there, said DeLuca, and a passerby said, "he went that way." The chase began in earnest along Gienn-.yre. Street. De.Luca and McGrnw headed the beast. off ~nering him behind a parmked car. They tied him at the nearby Ag;te Street Fire Station a nd turned the investigation over the the SPCA. ':'he SPCA came for the horse but not before the animal left trampled evidence of his· visit to the fire station. An SPCA official said the owner, Warren Hopkins, 1035 Bluebird Canyon Drive, picked up hia horse t.hi! morning. The r'eferendwit Is a new tw ist In the fight aiainst the dog law that is scheduled to take effect Sept. 19. The ordinance ham dogs from all city beaches between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. and bans them tot.ally from Bluebird Park, Riddle Field and Top of the World Park. Dogs would be permitted leashed in Heisler Park at limes set by council decree. Dog owners who th ink the ordinance harsh or ill-considered have been circuiating petitions to show opposition to. the ordinance aski ng councilmen to reconsider. These petitions, hOwever, have no legal w£ight. Referendum petitions would, explain spokesmen for the dog liberation movement. If signatures of 10 percent of the registered voltra are filed with the city clerk in petitions opposing the ordinance, the law i.s suspended until: -Councilmen rescind IL -Ur councilmen set the matter for election. A s~cial election would probably cost several thousand dollars. Backers or the referendum approach suggest it could give the council a charw::e to work out a compromise ordinance acceptable to both sides. The ordinance, flthered by Councilman Edward Lorr, passed by a 3 to 2 vote split Aug. 19 with COOncllmen Roy Hohn and Charlton BOyd dissenting. Della Reese Hurt HOLLYWOOD (APJ -Singer Della Reese walked through a plate glua door at her home today and underwent several hours of surgery for severe lacerations, her manager said. Father . Resciied' Off Catalina; Son Missing A Carlsbad catamaran sailor who paddled 18 hours in the Catalina Channel is hospitalized today at Avalon and search is under way for hi.s son who is missing and presumed drowned. Oiarles Piety, 47, was listed in fatr condition at Avalon CommunitY Hospital, where he Js under treatment for shock and exposure. A spokesman for the U.S. Coa1t Guard Search and Rescue office in Long Beach said a hellct1pter waa dispatched today to hunt for any trace of 22.year-old Phillip Piety. ' Hope was admittedly dim. Piety told crew members aboard the ya cht Feeling Groovy -who hauled him aboard at mid-morn ing Tuesday -that he and his son were forced to abandon thelr 24-foot catamaran Malihini. The es:hausted victim told Coast Guard Investigators a stonn came up, but they said they were unaware or anything but routine ocean breezes and swell1 Monday afternoon. He said he and his son buckled on life jackets and boarded their small dinghy and left the Mallhini, but the boat quickly took on water and swamped. ' The elder Piety said his son told him he was too tired to proceed and would tread water in his life jacket until help cOuld be brought from the island port. Pepple aboard another passln1 yacht found a lifejacket stencilled Malihinl Tuesday after and recovered'i~ turning-it over to Avalon.authorities. , Piety said the M1'lihll}l o~ly carried two Jlfe jac~ets and his son was welting the second one the last time be bw bim ~onday alternoon . .., Countian Dies in War Viet Vet Ej ects From Toro Plane Near Big Bear A Vietnam veteran is back on duty today at El Toro Marine Corps A1r Station, after bailina: out of his crippled jet before ~t crashed int~ a mountain ravine 20 miles north o! Big Bear. Clementeans Dial 911 Army PFC ·Theodore F. Dedra, son of Mrs. Michaline B. Bedra, «Mt San Luis Circle, Buena Park, has been killed in action in the war in Southeaat Asia, the U.S. Defense Department unounced Tue3day. capt. Patrick G. Carroll, 27, of El Toro. escaped injury when he ejected from the A,4 Skyhawk lhat caused a 10-acre brush fire when It smashed Into the ground. He was picked up by a rescue helicopter from George Air Force Base, checked over at Us hospital and then returned to I.ht Orange County Lral.nln8 facility. Monkeys Doomed KNOXVILLE, TeM . (APJ -All ti monkeys at Knoxville's city zoo are to be killed beeause of an at1'1ck o f tube:rrul~is among some of them. City Gets Emergency 'Streamlined' Phone Number San Clemente Friday wlll become the first Southern California city to have the new emergency dialing number of 911 wh ich will streamline calls for help during an emergency. The new dial system means that San Clemente telephone subscribers who have the 492 prefix to their phone number can dial the three numbers for police, fire, lifeguard or ambulance assistance during an emergency. The system, which Involved JI months of de!Jgning and lnstallaUon, Will go Into service at 12:01 a.m. Friday. About 10,000 telephont subscri bers will be able to use the number, Instead of lookl.na up • seveo-di&lt number durinl periods of excitement and stress. Because ol technical !actors, about 400 San Clemente residents with the 49' prefix will not be able to use the new service. Pacific Telephone IOcal m8Ylager Bob Gannon e:a:plaJned. Friday's cutover in San Clemente will bring to 100 the total of ~merlcan clUea with the new emer1enc1 1ygttm. In. C.IUomla, SJn Clemente II only the th ird to havt tt. Rettnl ln1t.all1lioii were completed In the citiet of Gu.Une and Alameda In Northern Calilornia. City M1nage r Ken Carr, enthusiastic -about he new !Ytlem. aald that San Clemente'• historic J.nst.allaUoo camt about because or an immedlalt request In 1968 when the emer1ency system was first announced. "\Ve were first because we asekd for it .firslt" be said. The serviee ahould make emera!fle1 calling by citizens much more •lmpltJ dlrecf and Ume saving. During most emer1encies1 po 11 c e 1dminJstr1tor1 have said, a seven-digit num'oer committed to memory can easily be forgotlt n by persona who need emergency aulstance. "Th is Is a great sttp rorw1rd In the pro tect.Ion of life ind property for San Clen1ente reaideotl,'' Carr uld. PILOT AD NETS QUICK RESU LTS Fast. That's the word that deaaibts the kind of action DAILY Pll.<Yr classified want adl get. Here's lhe ad: e I fl i Boldt Spectal •too cash UJ·un: Here's the rt!sult. The advtrliler said she "had a' call within min~ att er my paper was delivered ••• Urst man who nw (the earl bought It." W•nt rut action? Call 642-5678, the direct line to a DAILY PILOT 111-viaor, ll1d get ready to sell something. ---- Today's Final N.Y. Steeb TEN CENTS ane 113 Aboard Latest Jet Captured By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PalesUnian guerrillas hijacked a British jeUiner with 113 persons aboard today andJorced it to land near two other capt!ve airliners on which nearly 200 persons were being held hostage iJl the Jordanian desert, the British Foreign Office announced . A spokesman said word had reached London that the plane, alter circling the Middle East for hours, landed at the same guerrilla-held base where the two other planes Wl!re under guard. As in the case of the four hijacking plots earlier this week, the Marxist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine assumed responsibility. A spokesman said the PFLP seized the British Overseas Airways Corp. VCIO, after its ·take off from Bahrein In the Persian Gulf, to reinforce its demand for the release of a woman hijacker held in London. "Let's see what British Prime Minister Edward Heath does now,'' a guerrilla spokesman said. A BOAC spokesman in London said 32 Britons, 12 Bahrelnls, 3 Americans and 2 lnd.ians joined 54 other passengers aboard the plane In Bahrein, lt carried 10 crewmen. The plane wu on a llight from Bombay to London. At the United Nations In New Y~. Britain and the United States asked forla meetiaa of the U.N. Security Council later today to take up lhe wave of hijackings. Me1nwhlle, the hostages taken earlier sweltered through a third day aboard the two planes, a Swlssair DC8 and a Trans World Airlines Boeing 7ffl, at the El Khana airstrip 25 miles northeast or Amman. For their ransom, the guerrillas ~ demanding the release of three Arab terrorists held in West Germany, three others jalled tn Switt.erland and Miss Leila Khaleel , 25 held in London for the aborted hijai:king of an Israeli El Al plane Sunday. The PFLP. like other guerrilla groups is against any Middle Eest settlement that does not restore Arabs to former homes in Palestine, the land that is now Israel. AU have refused to abide by cease-fire agreements on Israeli borders, and the PFLP has made a speciality of airline hijackings. After the BOAC plane left Bahrein, the hijackers forced it to land at 'Beirut for refuell1tg, and Lebanese T r a n s po r t Mi!Uster Pierre Gemayel appea led to the guerrillas to Jet women and children 10. "No," replied the guerrillas. "We are leaving with everybody or we are blowing up the plane with everybody." Gemayel then said he was going to an emergency Cabinet meeting to introdu~e a measure -'jcloslng Beirut airport from now on to' all hij.Ckers who want to land here." Lebanon intends, he added, "lo maintain Beifut alrpcrt as a civil airport in every Rue of the word." The Intemallonal Red Cross already had opened negotiations with PFLP leaders in Amman for the releaae of the (See lllJACK, Pip Ii -.) Ora•1e Coast, 'Weather The evening and morning (og takes a ttgbter grip on the Or· ange Co&at Thursday, while If· ternoons will ·be spotted with hazy 1unshine. Look for temper. atures in· the 70 to 89-degree INSIDE TODAY The new &eoson oJ living th eater getJ under too" on tlle Orange COCL!t Frida11 with three local playho1&.ses opening the ir first productions. See Entertai'nment, Page 25. • •Htlllf 24 C•HIWlll~ II "'"' c-• C/lftllllll u, t CltHlllllll Jl-M C•mlin I' c,......... 1• O.fll "'"'-,, D1'1'trCu 17 afn.rMll ,..,. I •ftttrtflJl"'911 if .. .,,_, Mo-• "'l'WC9!M • • Al!lll ~ • M9ll Ill '-'" 11 I .t r'lLV PlLOT s ' Wrd.....,, Stpt-9, 1970 flt1•scltool Plan Swim Pool Eyed In San Clemente San Clemente may have a new twimmlng pool next summer. A proposal for a rommunlty swimming pool to be built jointly by tbe city of San Clemente and the Capistrano Unified School District will be submitted to the San Clemente City Council by lhe district at Its next meeUng. He admitted that the present city pool Is cracked an! suffering from old age but \ he said he knew of no plans to tear it down. Members of the Board of Trustees voted unanimously Tuesday for the proposal which would locate Lhe pool at San Clemente High School. · Estimated cost of construction is SIS0,000, according to Superintendent Truman Benedict. After construction the pool would be operated and maintained by the school district at no co.st to the city. San Clemente City ~1anager Ken Carr said he bad no idea what the council's reaction to the proposal would be. "We would want to be sure the fina'J'lclal arrangement is equilable to the city's taxpayers," said Carr. The school district plan call! for the formation of a joint powers agreement for the construction ; the stJ.pulaUon that the pool will receive community and school use : after construction It would beeQme the property of the school district which would maintain it: and the design would be prepared by the architect for San Clemente High School. "If agreeable we would like to have It completed by next summer," said Benedict. · He pointed out that alQiough the city is spendlnc about $17,000 a year to maintain the old city pool, the new one would cost about $25,IXlll to maintain. "That's because ours would have more conlinuotu use," siid Benedict. "It would be used for team to swim programs, physical education and competitive IWimming." Removal of U iility Poles Moves Near for Laguna Removal of unsightly utillty poles may be a notch closer to reality Jn at least three portions of the city, Laguna Beach planning cornmiS!ioners learned Monday night. Commiuioner Robert J. Hastings. who ·New Capistrano Teachers Tour 'White House' New teachers for the Capistrano Unified School District -55 of them - Tuesday toured the street.\ close to the Western White House, then saw the schools where they will work in the first day of their orientation week. And on Thur.~ay the teachers will attend official orfentaUon day actlvtUes al San Clemente Hl&h School. Part of that event will be a talk by Chief Los An1eles Deputy Dia:rict Attorney Joseph \ Busch. Frank O. Mclnlyre, lhe chief 1 spokesman for the California Teacber'1 A.uociatim, also will addr!ss the lfOUP Thursday In Triton Center. ' · After the week ol. preparatory aeUviUes -includinf getUn1 their classrooms ready for students -the teachers will have a weekend of rest before the sludent.s flock to class Monday morning. Some of the week's activities have lncluded a breakfast sponsored by PTA eroups and a luncheon sponsored by the local teacher's association. Elliot H. Gray Succumbs at 83 Elliot R. Gray of 783 Via Los Altos. Laguna Hills, died Salurday at the age of 83 in South Laguna. Private services for ri.1r. Gray were held Tuesday at McCormick Mortuary Chapel. Burial follov.·ed at Melrose Abbey. Mr. Gray is survived by hls wife, Virginia, of the family home. A native of New Jersey, Mr. Gray had lived ln California for the put 49 years. He was a retired supervisor for the Lockheed Corporation. Mr. Gray served a.s a communicant for St. George's Episcopal Church in Laguna Hills. DAILY PILOT "_,"" ... .. Leit ...... .. C•1hl Mn. HPtl .. t•• .. 11eli ,. .. , ...... ,.., s.. ci...r.11t• R•t•rt N, w,,, P•uifflll •"41 ~I.,,... J.~~ l . Curl•Y Vkt l'te>~ ...:I ~Mt•I Ml ....., lh•M•' ~tt•il '""*' Tht"''' A. M1r11hi•1 M-tlftt f.tlr., l lchtttl r. Nill ~Ill Oflflfll CO\lnlf f.~ilW """" CHl9 Mnt: lJlli Woll • .., Strwl N~l ••..-:II: 1211 Wt1! ••IMI •ewic~.,_ u """' ... '"' m ,.,.,, ~-~Ill''""*' ... tlll 11'111 l •K• •N Lf¥ttt St<\ C~ .. ; Jiit Ntt1• IU , __ 1 .. 1 was delegated undergrounding utilities as his sphere of inDuenct, lhorUy after he was appointed, said that he is obtaining a finanical plan for the work from the utility companies. Wort is scbeduled to begin in mid October for underirounding of utilities along Cliff Drive from Cout Hi1hway to MyrUe Street. The poles are considered a bllght on the view of Heisler Park and the ocean beyond. Bids for contracts in two other areu will be out in 30 days. In the north end of town, the poles will come down on LeDroit Street ap into the Emerald Terrace section of the city, Hastings~ Undergrounding will al.so take place from the intersection of Blu mont Street and Park Avenue, up through the MyaUc Hills to Skylin~ Drive. Upper Skyline Drive, a recent development, already baa ~YD_dergroypd..Jl.tllitles. Histings said this morning that any work would need approval of residents, ~ce the cost of the undergrounding wCI ~ alfsessed to them.' 1 I n Emerald Bay, wher e undergrounding now is taking place, the cost per lot was more than $1200. Hastings is hopeful that work elsewhere In l'!wn could be done, at lql"' "'5t. 'I• noltd lhat In Lagijia Beldl two perCent ol the lfOSS revenue of the utllily companies goes toward undergroundlng. Last Yffl', it amounted to $24,000. "That's enough for about si% poles," Hastings noted. Turtle Rock's Pupils Sharing School Facility More than 500 Turtle RAxk Elementary school students will be sharing the University Park elementary building through December, requiring scheduled changes for both schools. Bus schedules for pupils from the Col· ony and Culverdale tracts the Marine Corps Helicopter fa cility (LtA), from UC Irvine married students ' housing aad all residents of Turtle Rock Broadmoor Hllls will be posted 4 p.m. Friday at University Park School. "Coples also will be posted at the recreation areas and sales office of the housiilg developments," principal David Prince said. The sharing of the University Park buUdiac means there will be no hot lunch program, although milk will be available al 10 cents per carton, Prince noted. Parents of kindergarten puppils must bring their children to school OD Monday, Prince said, Buses will operate for aq other children in the district, however. Class schedules for students of both Turtle Rock and University Park elementary schools are as follows: Grades 1 and 2, 9:15 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.: grade three, 8:30 a.m. lo 2:30 p.m. and .srades 4, 5, and 6, 8:30 a.m. lo 3 p.m. Customs Officers Hold Meeting Customs inspectors and admini!trators from the U.S., Mexico and Canada bea:an a lhr~ay conference today in Prtsident Nixon's office complex near the Western White House in San Clemente . The meeting -one of many by government groups at the Presidential compound this year -will cover items .Including cargo and baggage inspecUons, simpllficatJon of customs procedures, narcotics smuggling and g e n e r a I exchange or information. The conference fa the first three-way conference betw~n eustoms ofrtials of the border countries, U.S. spokesmen A id. The obviowi pr\me Wue al the three. d1y talks will be methods of cracking down on narcotics contraband. Spokesmen said this morning that they would begin lssuing communJques on the progress or the conference beginning Thund>y, Don Boyles, 32, picked an un· usual way to observe Labor Day. He parachuted Monday from the world's highest sus· pension bridge -the Royal Gorge Bridge near Canon City, Colo. -to the Arkansas River 1,055 feet below. A friend drove him to the bridge and picked him up after the jump. Boyles, of Tulsa, Okla., made th e jump without fanfare and it took authorities two days to iden· lily the mysterious parachut- ist. Lifeguard Suit Settled; City Sl1ells Ont $650 An out-ot'-ctiurt setUement Tuesday ror $650 ended the one-year-old fight of a fired San Clemente lifeguard lieutenant for overtime he seld the city owed him. Fo~r t.µeguard Lt. Steve Chorak - who at one time led 30 lifeguard.! in a threatened strike -settled for slighUy more than one-third of initial claim of $1,600 again.st the city for asserted unpaid overtime. The case had been scheduled for civil eourl in South Orange Conuty Municipal Courl Tuesday afternoon. Cborak had served as a lifeguard in San Clemente for IO years before he was fired . The issue raged locally for several weeks last summer. At one point in the controversy the Jifeguard.s, Jed by Chorak campaigned for recognition as a bargaining group, The city refused. Since the summer incidents, the city has altered its structuring of lifeguard employment to shorten the work v.·eek for each g,uard. The guards also have joined a public safety employes' association •Which ls the representative group ot police, fire and lifeguard personnel. The group recenUy won official recognition by the city with the understanding that the recognition didn't grant the association the right to call strikes or walkouts. One issue remained unclear in the Chorak cue toay, however - whether or not the ousted lieutenant will continue his flgh.t for reinstatement to tbe department which fired him. Chorak's lawyer, Chester Brisco of Santa Ana~ could not be reached for ,comment this morning. Police to Check Festival Alarm Sound System Laguna Beach's Festival of Arts wilt seek police expertise in selecting a sophisticated new system to improve lhe burglar proofing. Alarmed . by bura:larles of . sound ~ulpment from both the t.a(una Moulton Playhouse and high school, Do n Williamson, producer of the Pageant of the Masters, told ftsUval directors Tuesday he has bids from two top companies. Williamson said the American District Telegraph Company will in.stall a system ror $2,174 with a $110 monthly charge for operation. He said Wtlls Fargo Company would tnst.all a system for SJ,724 with a continuing monthly cost of $136. The systems would provide electronic surveillance and other detection devices to protect the festival staae, shop, forum theater, box offlce 1nd bus\ne1s ofllce. Tht board agreed that Board Presldent William D. Y...1artin and directors David Young and Stuart Durkee wlll choose a 1y1tem after conlerrina wlth pcUce and companies using the syrtems. Aid to Pareats , Phone Schools For Bu~i,ng Info Parents or students attending Orange Me~a Unified School District a r • \ Coa.st sc~ls ~ho are confuaed about responsible for informing p a r en t s • busing their ~hilW:en a:e advised to call according to William C u n n i n g h a m , the school !hell' child will attend. district superintendent. All districta: contac.~ by the DAI~ Y Other area districts requesting parents PILOT saJd the indivklual school will with busing schedules to call the school have bus schedules for the 1970-71 school students will attend include San Juan year which beginl Monday, and can Capistrano .Unified Laguna Be a c h answer parents' questions. Unified, Westmins~r Elementary Jnd Student! attending Tu!tln· and San Joaquin Elementary. Huntington Beach Union High Schools Seat Beach elementary operates only w~re mailed bus assignments, officials two buses and parents already ~ve been said. , informed of the schedcle, Superintendent The Huntington Beach system employs Man: Dressler said. data processing which automatically Trial Scheduled On Bad Chrek Rap in Oemente A man accused of writing $37 ,000 in checks on the San Cleniente branch of the Bank of Ame rica has been ordered to face trial Sept. 23 in Superior ourt. Darrell Graf Hafen, 42, who describes himself as an overseas investor, has pleaded not guilty to charges or de liberalely maintaining insufficient funds . He is free on $30,000 bail. Judge Samuel Dreizen set the trial date for Hafen after Judge Will iam Y..furray refused to dismiss the Orange County Grand Jury's indictment of the Salt Lake City, Utah , businessman. Judge Dreizen also granted Hafen's request that he be allowed to have lawbooks in his counly cell. sorts out students living more than two miles from a school and prints bu.s stop location and time on the students' class schedule cards, according to H. R. Martin, business assistant. · For cost reasons, Fountain Valley Elementary district abandoned i t !I mailing of bus schedules and sent them home with students during the last week of school last _yea r, Michael Brick, dist ric t superintendent said. As with most other districts along the Orange Coast, children new to the Fountain Valley district were given their bus schedule when they were enrolled, Brick noted . A spokesman for Huntington Beach Elementary dls~rict said bwi assignments for kindergarten student.I were mailed last week and that stops fOr students in grade 1 to 8 "would be the same as they were in the past." ParenUI having any questions •about busing may call the di s trict 's transportation office at 536-4942 or the school, for information. Ocean View elementary schools have posted bus schedules and parents should call or go to the school , John Rajcic, assistant superintendent, business, said. "We usually mail or phone bus assignments to special e d u c a t i o n students," he noted. Principals of schools in the Newport- Planners Grant Parking Lot On Glenneyre ~guna Beach planning cOmmissioners Monday night approved a request from the South Coast Highway Parking District C.Ommittee ta establlih a parking lot on Glenneyre Street above the Art J Center. The request ·will now go to the City Council. The council will be asked ta approve funds to begin appraisal of the land and appraisal of improvements for the proPerty. , The land earmarked for the parking lot is on the east side of Glenneyre Street, between Mountain Road and Calliope Street. There are several owners. Before granting the requt!t, chairman William Lambourne noted that "We're now to the point where were asking the City Council for money to begin appraisal." Deputy City Attorney George Logan said that there were two ways to a:o. The city can foot the bill, or the property owners can be asked to bear the preliminary costs. Alvin O. Autry City Planner said he felt the city should handle the costs, which would later be returned from revenue collected in the lot. Lambourne said that any agreements with the property owners should be contingent on their receiving a 75 percent rebate of all revenue collected from the meters In the lot. This wilt help ease the increased assessments for the cost of the lot, he said. We've taken the Mok air au finest watch IO you oau ... the "lnmde" p1'8Cll81on story .0 OMEGA et~ '\Oil YOaldn'l JI.die S 1'oo'l DJ ftl ~ tllt • wattl!. by i1' ap~ (h}y 1tht:ll JO" loR lr;SJDt tta JOI: •ppndite the arouiq..,.,... CJrity of Omea:a 'll'orkm111ihip. The "'XleefMclt• Seit.mast• la a spe:ci.t modr:I &.iped ._ ..._ ,,,. the mltroT-brillitet bill el c-J pst .... th. S.a:cnio11s, gmi11-powertd )lendalmil-lilm roltt lbat 'll'i11d1 lhe Scamuttt •hU• JM WNr IL [ytft il fllo"tt not mechlllktJJ:re!Mtd. .... -x:toerbtc:l:• will _1, JO• ~ ...tiJ ,,. ,.,,udlr rtalmllH'lld Oetep. c.:. .... t. fc 1 tr,. ~ ol S-iMft ltatwoe. J. C. .lJumpl..rie& Jeweler& '1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CON'\IEN IENT TEltMS IANKAMlltlCARD-MJ,SlER CHAlt$E 24 YUllS IN SAME LOCATION ,HONE 141-1401 ' 'I Front POfle 1 HIJACK ... earlier h06tages. The Popular Front had said It wouKI blow up the two planes at 7 p.m. PDT Wednesday unless the British released Miss Khaleel and the Swiss and West GerrnaR governments fr!ed the siJ: Arabs in their custody. •A sp<1kesman said Tuesday the passengers would be removed to a guerrilla camp before the explosions. While the Bonn and Bern governments announced they would comply with the ransom demand, London hedged. PFLP spokesmen in Amman said all seven had to arrive together on a chartered plaae. Of the latest airline seizure, a guerrilla spokesman said; "This hijack is an answer to Britain's Inhuman stand in refusing ta let Leila Khaled go fret while allowing the Israeli murder to leave." His reference was to ..n lsr&eli security agent who sh<>t and killed Ml.s.s Khaled'1 partner in the El Al hijack plot. Before the BOAC hijacking, the British government appeared to be preparl'ng to release Miss Khaled . Political sourcea said she would have been shipped out as soon as the PFLP released the two planeloads of hostages. London infonnants said no British charges had been filed agaimt the woman, but Ambassador Michael Comay delivered a request from Israel for her "provisional arrest" pendin& preparation of an extradition petition. Red Cross representatives asked the gue rrillas for an extension of Wedllesday night's deadline, and a front spokesman in Amman said the request was under consideration. Britain at first refused to consider releasing Miss Khaled, but the Cabinet met in emergency session Tuesday Ml1d gave the matter more study. Elizabeth Goudy Services Held Private services were held Tuesday at McCormick Mortuary Chapel f or Elizabeth Ann Goudy, 31521 Monterey St., South Laguna who died Saturday a.t the age of 92. Burial followed at Cpress Lawn Cemetery at Colma, Calif. Mrs. Goudy is survived by a son, Clyde. of South Laguna; a daughter. Mrs. :£thel Grundel of Oakland; a grandchild, three great-grandchildren, one great-great grandchild, and two brothers. A native or Wales, Mrs. Goudy had lived in Californla for the past 86 years. W atsou Appeal Denied NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -The Slh U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals denied a rehe aring Tuesday on the extradition appeal of Charles D. Watson, the Texu youth implicated along with other "Manson Family" members in the Tate- La Bianca murders in Los Angeles. , .......... tlltllllrllc &Iii* flature.1. .f IS' _,,_ Mt"• 111•..W • ..,,,..,.w... VISllLE Melt Wtu!r Ille "klr'1blel" 11 .. 111t1ttr h dnl1~•d '' wli••tt Mm0Mlr111 Om111 trtftlllltJ>o •hip It 11\ay ff -· 11,t ., ellttr Om••·· .... ,,. laiul-lar CC!Witwllo!I •ltn. ... ,,,..,. .. ,,. ,.., ,.. ··~ n)'Olol-..._ ... ""' ,., ... . , I I 'I . I 1. . . . Wed1ttsday, Sep"mbtr 9, 1970 L DAILY PI LOT :; Festival SS:ys 'Maybe' to Bus Cost Share Plan • • By RICHARD P. NALL 01 IM o.u, ,lltt $1aff Asked to shoulder baU the $25,000 mulliclpal share of a program to acquire new city buses and equipment. Laguna Beach Festival of Arts directors took 50mething of a maybe position Tuesday. City officials sought a fest iv a I CQmmitment to pay $12,500 in the event the city is granted $50,000 from the fede ral government to improve the bus line the city acquired this year. The city would pay the other $12,SOO. The Festival has for several years subsidized local tram servlei!! during the festival to carry the thousands of visitors Shop on to it.s gates. 'I1>e trim H rvice 1'15 discontinued this summer after 1 clUzen persistently polnttd out that the colorful vebiclea did not have n e c e.1 1 a r y equipment to operate legally on public streets. The city previously had acquired the financially floundering bus line to prevent loss of local bus transportation. Two or the three buses were somew~at the worse for miles. , City Planner Al Autry told lhe festival board that hte $75,<XXI package would buy two aG.passengtt bu9's, three mini-buses that would carry 15 to II passengers, a Sunday? Doivntoivn Merclia1tts Mull Plan 1'-ferchants in .downtown Laguna Beach are going to have ·lo be flexible and perhaps open on Sunday afternoons during the Christmas season this year, it was agreed Tuesday. ';We've got lo compete with these large chain stores that are open on Sunday." Bill Marriner, president of the Downtown Businessmen's Association. told fellow members at a meeting in Hotel Laguna. Despite words from some merchants that the business isn't good on Sunday, Mike Kibbey, a local restaurant owner. said, "The stores just aren't open y,·hen the people are around." flfarriner said that merchants will have "to be flexible and be able to meet the needs of the people with the money." It was generally agreed that if one shop opens on Sunday or even Friday nights. that all others should open as well. "If one is open and the rest are closed, people are disappointed,'' Kibbey noted. The store hours discussion came during William Axline 's report on the Christmas program for the downtown area. The OBA has opened a drive to help decorate the doWntown area. The OBA is trying to raise $300 to $400 for the purchase of garlands and to put in new circuits for Christmas lights in tlie dov.1ntown area. Last year, many circuits shorted out because of too many lights. The businessmen's organization is also planning to purchase another 20 telephone pole decorations:. which will be added to the 20 purchased last year. "As always, we will encourage indlvjd. ua l storefront decora tion," Axline said. Businessmen also learned that the three stained glass panels, which last year stood at the various entrances to the city, will all be at the foot of Broadway, along with a 40-foot Christmas tree. "\Ve made the change to put more emphasis on the downtown area," AJ:line said. More Jtla1apowr Asked Laguna's Planning Staff Swamped by Ove1·load? A hint that the city planning staff may be buckling under its present work load fell on Laguna Beach p I an n in g commissioners Monday night. Under the staff reports section of the meeting. cily planner Alvin 0 . Aut ry asked the commission to authorize additional work time for a planning draftsman. "With all the studies on par.king · Ioli;, parking structures, parking meters, land use in the city, and maps. the amount budgeted in not sufficient,'' Aut ry said. "\Ve can't complete our work on time." This year, the planning draftsman was hired on a part time basis, v.ith $1,000 allocated for the position. Autry said that if the plaMing commission were to approve bis request, \1•hich would go lo the city council for " final aproval, funds would be available tor the extra lime. Autry said he had talked to acting city manager Joseph R. Sweany about the:1 ~ matter and had been as1t1red money was available for the extra hou rs for the draftsman. Chainnan Wiiiiam Lambourne asked Autry to prepare a report on the e:ract needs. and present it to the plaMing omission fo r consideration. Wilson Riles Cites Need For Ed1tcation Priority By RI CHARD P, NALL 01 tti• oeur J'lltt '"" "If you want a politician, you have a good polilican now, but you don't have a person with a commillment to children." \Vilson Riles was speaking in Laguna Beach of his opponent i\lax Raffert y, state superintendent of public instruction. Rile s was hosted in a get-acquainted session at !he home of Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Tomehak. It u·as attended by about 150 persons. Accompanying Riles Saturday were 1wo or hls backers. Dorman Commons. former member of the State Board of Education, and television actor l.eonard Nemoy. Riles, who has been 1n education 2S years, said. "Never has there been a time y,·hen v.·e wer.e to close to losing lhe Institutions of public education in this country." , He spo ke of teacher strike&, disunity in education, lack of support, lack of resources and increasing class sizes. Frank lnterlandi Recuperating From Seizm·e - Fi-ank Tnterlandi, artist and pofitic:i l cartoonist. is recuperating at his L.agu na. Beach home today after suffering a mild heart attac.k last week. lnterlandl, 46, returned home Monday after spending three days In the intensive care unit at South Coast Community •k>spltal. He was taken to the ho!lpital Wed111e5day after suffering shoulder pains that worsened into chest pains whlle working at hill r~udio. The condil.lon was termed angina pectoris which lnter\8ndi. a long·tihie I.aguna resident. said did not da.mage the henrt. In addition to his syndicated pcliUcal cartoons carried h1 lhe t...o,, Angelt1. Timt's. lnlerlandi Is an exhibitor at-the Festival of Aris. •Us twin brother, Phil. 311;0 Is a carloonlst who does 1..aguMgrlns nnd the syndicated cartoon ''Queenie' 'in the DAILY ..PILOT and Is frequently publishM in Playboy Maga:r.ine. • ' !le charged that one or Rafferty'.!! men employed to deal with federal aid actually spent most of his time trying to stir up local confrontations over sex education. Riles. a fonner deputy superintendent or public instra:tion, said he left Rafferty's office and sought election because he could not stand what was going on. He also said he felt the post he seeks should be an appointive o[fice, not an elective ofnce.. The candidate said property taxation is no longer a viable way to fund education. He said bond issues keep being voted down because It is the only opportunity for the voter to veto higher taxes. Riles called for top priority on cducalion in the state and suggested that schools now are called on to do too much. lie mentioned the possibility o f contracting out school food service and driver education. Riles called for new money at the primary education level and development of a master plan for early education. It is cheaper than the social problem of dropouts, he said. The candidate said 50 percent of a child's mental potential is developed by lhe llme he Is five and IO percent is developed by the time the child Is eight. Riles suggested that the most effective teachers should be working at the primary level. he called for mort men in primary education, "men brave enough to teach fi rst, socond and third grades." He also suggested that there should be more women teaching al I.he college 1ev""'1:- Ri1es. a Negro, said be had betn accused by one Raf ferty employe of trying to pass for white. "That would bt quite a trick," he quipped u the crowd laughed. Riles also said with a ii:mile that a friend in educaUon had told him, "Wil.!On, you are the great white hope." Commons. who said he is devoting 85 much o( his time and resourcta 11 po!iSible to electing Riles, alao said that Rafferty must be rep\1ced. He called for campaign donations. Comm o n& said th1 t Riles administration of a SJOO million education program whUe a deputy 1uperirittndenl of public instruction, was IO capably handled that It later became a model tor other states. lie called Rllts 1 gnat man." heavy duty hoist for servicin'& the buses aod other needed maintenance eqlllpm<ot. David Young, a festival director, aaked Sweany U using the mlni·buses only· during the ftt:tlvat would not be a poor investment. Sweany said he thought lL would be cheaper than the trams and would relieve traffic during the corigested summer per.iod.. Sweany pointed out that l pplying for the grant does not commit the city to acttpb:nce if some hitch deYelops. "All we need to know now Is where the money is coming from," ht a.id. , Director ffelen Keeley said she could egrtt with the festival making an lniUal investment but not with It being Involved ~n hiring driven, I management or 'maintenance. Sweany had said-details or these functions C®ld be worked out. Mayor Richard Goldberg said in his opinion the Festival y,·ould not be involved if!. operation. maintenance , driver hiring or route scheduling. He said the festival was being asked to invest in a community transportation system to help f\11 the void left by the removal of the trams. Director Stuart Durkee suggested the festival give a tentative okay pending more details and a firm decision. 1'-1rs. Kee ley said she would w11nt to see guarantees that the Festival would receive the transportation service it needs. Young offered a motion that the Festival cooperate subject to reaching an equitable agreement tater with the city. Dr. Harold Burton said In the past rive years the Festival has put out more Chan $50,000 for transportation and said he thought the Festival did not have any additional responsibility. Mrs. Keeley said many groups would benefit and suggesl<d ii might be equitable to ask others to participate. Young said If tlley alarlefl talking aboot getting everyone in town involved, "I se. ii getting shot down before It alarb." Ho pointed out. that hb moUon did not carry a deUnlte commitment. It.passed with Burton voting no. The board also agrted at Sweany'• request to leave the tram benches on the streets until the board's October meeting. Sweany is to check on maintenance, insurance and penn.ission or the State Division of Highways to leave the benches on the streets all year. Laguna Parki·ng Plan Gets Suf:lport By FRED~RICK SCROEMEHL 0t Ille DallY J'llM Stlft L a gu n a Be ac h 's Dow n town Businessmen's Association ha s decided to back the parking and traffic proposal presented a month ago to the plaMing commission by Commissioner Robert Hastings. The plan outlines traff ic patterns to relieve congestion in the downtown area and calls for four parking structures in the downtown bas in. The concept details the construction or a route from the Festival of Arats to the southern end of the city. Traffic would move from the mouth of the canyon, behind city hall, go through· a tunnel under 'Ibird Street and Park Avenue and eventuall y join Glenneyre Street near Cleo Street. Traffic from the canyon would move north on an improved Cliff Drive. The four parking structures would be located on the existing Glenneyre lot near the intersettion with LagWla Avenue, on l\1ermaid Street, at the mouth of the canyon adjacent to the intersection or Forest Avenue and Broady,•ay and lastly at the intersection of Cliff Drive and Broadway. William Axline, shoestore owner. said one of the most serious parking situations is the Ofle at the Festival of Arts. "I can't understand why th~ city allowed the playhouse out there, loo, with no parking for ll. The way things are out there, it's a miracle no one has been killed." The parking structure in that area would Oold between. 200 and 400 cars, depending on the magnitude of need. It would provide pa rking for the festival, the playhouse and the city employes. One of the ty,·o stories "·nuld 'be above the ground. lhe ofher bel A three level str\:t on the existing Glenneyre lot and , structure on l\1ermaid Street will be the subject of a report to the planning commission from the city staff at the commissions study session, Sept. 14. The fourth structure, on Broadway may be the last one on the priority list. It was the general opi nion that the other three would cover Laguna's immediale parklng needs. The Hastings·aulhored pla n includes several points corollary to the proposal. Among lhe points: Parking must be aVailable In 12 to 24 months, Leguna 's vi llage atmosphere must be maintained, lhe structures must be built at reasonable cost, businesses must riot lose cus tomers, the str1K.1ures must be able to expa~d as demands increase, and parking structures should not be a burden on the laxpaye(S. 1 Axline said that Hastings' plan would develop a quiet shopping area in Laguna, stabilize traffic, would be the least expensive, and would free land now for 11mall paarking lots for commercial use. thus expanding the downtown businesses. In a related matter, the OBA passed a resolution directed to the planning commission and the city council stating the portion of lower Park Avenue between S. Coast Highway and the alley must be used for parking and not as a mall . Bill l\1arrincr said the mall Mlea "has been talked about, played up in the pres,,, and is now on the drawing boards" in the r.lanning for the library and Chamber o! Commerce complex. W• oPll ii Veqa. W'e also call ii "the little car that does everyth.inq well." · Disc brakes are 1land<1rd in the front. So are bucket seals, except on the truck. •Sill.ling capacity : 4 adults. It all adds up to a lot of little c<1r. 1hrM ems and a lnlck. • .. • Beca .... ii does. ... """"' Ewtythinf. ' V eqa mov• well, 1top1 well, steert well, ride1 well, handles well, respond.a well, pa118es well, travels well. parks well, wears well, and ia priced well under what you'd expect to pay for ouch a talented little car. In our highway les!a, Veqa has been qettinq 9a1 mileaoe in the neiohborhood of the little imports, which lsn'I a bad neighborhood. Yet unlike your average little car, ours stepa riqht out when you step on the gas. The •ngine is a specially designed overhead cam four with a lightweight aluminum alloy block. ii lurm slowly and quietly al turnpike opeeds, With power to spare. How we doing So far? NumlMnlfMGk louclerfhaii words. The wheelbase ls 97 incheo. Total length is just under 170 inches, or neatly four feet shorter than a full.size Chevrolet. Height of the coupe is just 50 inches, nine inches lower than the leading import. Width: " nice stable SV2 feet. Weight: 2, 190 lbs. for the sedan. Engine displ<lC<!ment: 140 cubic inches. Fuel economy: about 25 mpg, with the standard enqine and tra.nsmission, in our highway tests. Horsepower: 90. You can order 110. (80 <1nd 93 hp, SAE Net.) Veoa turned oul ao well that we coulcln'I turn out just one . So we're turning-out four: the sporty little hatchback coupe shown open and closed in the foreqround below; the aedan, on the right; the Kammback wagon, on the left; and the little pa.nel truck, in the rear, Oh, and a special GT version of the coupe and wagon which we'll show yoµ later on. ~mber IOlh is Opening Ila)< All 6,300 Chevrolet dealers are handling Vega, ao you shouldn't have to go very far to see and drive one. Chevy's new little car ia open for business. Look into it. ' c~ .., .. MllY ,...., ltlftl Tb• referee stopped a aoccer match between Glampton and nearby Stoke Gabriel, England. wben all 22 players on the field we re involved in fist fights with e1cb other. • The judges at the Brougll, Eng- Red Troops Fl~e Cambodian Phsh PHNOM PENH (UPI) -A !00-man force of Communlrt. troo1>3 reportedly trapped by the C1mbodlan army south of Phnom Penh hu Heaped into the tnOUn\llm and IVOlded p 0 t e n t I a I annlhll1tion, milituy officers oald today. '!be North ·vtetoameae and Viet Cong troops were surrounded in a mountainous area near Srang, 26 miles south of the capital, and Cambodian m i 11 t a r y commanders said last Saturday it woUld be impo&sible for them to <.1Cllpe . 'lbe commandera sakl today, however, that the entire force of Communists had slipped out of the trap by moving through mow:itain puss. "We aiw them movJnc," uid one commander 1t Stang. "We slmply could not ret any air strikes to stop them." The Cambodian command earUtr today report<d Viet Coo& and N or t h Vietnamese troops d I 11ul1 e d as Cambodian paratroopers attacked the town of .Siem Reap near the ruins of Angkor Wat in northern Cambodia. In Vietnam. an American helicopter accidentally dropped fuel drums on a city on the northern COIS! and the esplooloo killed three civiliana. T 4,000-man Cambodian force pmhlng toward the encircled city of Kompong 'Thom 80 miles north of Phnom Penh, Was ttpcrted halfway to Its objective after two days of Communilt harassment attact.s along highway 8. · land pigeon show competition con- gratulated nine-year..Qld Stu1rt Wiikerson on the fine condition of the bird he had entered and award· ed him first prize. Then Stuart re- v·ealed that instead of being-an exhibition bred bird, his pigeon was a wUd one he had caught the night before. "I wanted to go in for the show· but I hadn't got a bird," said Stuart. · .. so I caught one." • Leaded Gas Tax Pushed By Treasur)· The Cambodian command uld the Commmlist.s who attacked Siem Reap Tuesday-wore camouflage uniform1 and red scarves like thole of C&mbodlan paratroop!. Thirteen of the defendera, themselves airborne troopt, were killed and >l wounded. Tbe Viet Cong' and North Vietnamese left 13 bodies beh1nd when they withdrew. SECTION OF FUSELAGE NOW GAUNT RUIN AFTER DC..! JET CRASH Police, F iremen Inspect Crtlh Site; Fire Blazed After T•kMff Cr•lh at JFK Airport Americon.i ate eiohV1illlion SpmUh green oliMI'....:.. 39~000 tom -la.st ~ear. occordtno to the Spanish Green Olive Com- m.iufon. If eveTJI one of the "t'ioht billion olive& had gone tnto a Martini, it would have takni 750 mill ion quarts of gin and 250 miUion quarts of vermouth to make eight billion Martinir, the commi.!sion said recently. WA SHINGTON (U PI) AdministraUon spokesmen told Congress today tblt a tu on the lead in gaaoline was · ID'genUy needed to help speed lhe fight against air pollution. Plane Crashes, Burns; Passenger Jet Makes Landing, Cracks Apart ''The need for this tax is immediate,'' TttuUry Secretary David M. Kennedy told the House Waya. and MeaM Committee. ''The presence or these compounds" in the environment is dangerous both !or the present as well as fCl' Uae future." Census Gripes To Get Airing In House Panel 11 Crewmen Aboard Die • Profe ssor Malcom Brown of Dur- ham England wanted something fhat 'resembled moon rock in den- 11ity and ·other propert..ies ~or an experiment. The nearest thing he could find he said recently. was English cheddar cheese. And he insisted he was serious. ' • Gav. Ronald R••1•n says he and felJow ex-actor and now Sen. George Murphy have to stay in politics, considering the nature of today's stage and .film shows. Rea- gan told a meeting of industrial leaders that neither of them could "go back to show business -we're too old to take our clothes off." • About 15 persons in Btnton, Wil. have rtporttct stting a 7- fF'ot-t.all ape·Uke creature wejoh-- itto !00 poUnds with whitt fur and pink 1'1tl. Starch partit1 of SO per1om combed the arta iJfttr tht "Benton Monsttr'' war reported shambling around thil 1ou£hwtstern Wilcomin com- munit.,. • Railway personnel had to be call- ed to control crowds at the scene of a derailed freight train in the Netherlands. No one was hurt but crowds gathered when it was dil:- covered most of the scrap waste paper dumped in the accident were sex and nudist magazines. • A boy drawing lucky numbers pulled out 155 winners at a station- ery store's grand opening-includ- ing the five num bers he had en- tered in Charlotte, N.C. A spokes- man for the store said the boy, 12- year·old Jay Nagle, looked the other way during each drawing and pulled the tickets from the bottom of the box. An engineer for a Char· lote corporation fi gured the odds against a person drawing his own five numbers in 155 tries were 1,550,837 to !. 1b9 adminl.stratlon wants a tax on leaded gaaolloe amoanUnr to about 1~ cents a gallon. Esilmltes of the 1mount of revenue ft would nlae Ulll flscal year range,in>m $1.1 bWlon to •u bWlon., Kennedy told Ule ·t a 1 -w r It t n g C¥1mmfttee; "This tu will impose an economic penalty on the use of additives whlch will permit unleaded gasoline to be produced and marketed at a price competi.Uve with leaded gasoline of. :lim.llar octane ... "Impending future oeedl require th.at at this time we aeate an effective incentive to indutry to convert to the prodlldioo of guollne with Utile lead and in._tlme no lad. Unleaded guotine mutt be generally avaUable ID large quantity by mickwnmer of 1974 U the emission ctntrol standards program is to succeed." 'Another witness. undenetTetary John G. Veneman of Health, Educatkm and WeHare said that whlle studies on the subject are.incomplete "it is clear that human exposure to lead is hazardous to hN}th." Although congressional ruction to the tax proposal bas been cool so far , the admlniatration believes chances of it.I passaae have lmproved. Pa g~nt Beauties Stroll Boardwalk ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) -Filty smiling Miss America conte s t a nt 1 greeted a large croWd Tuesday night in the traditional Atlantk: Clty boardwalk parade. A slight chill blew In from the At alntic Ocean and several of the beauty queens wore fur wraps as they waved amid flashbulbs and generally 1 c a t t e r e d applause. Miss Americ1 of 1924, Ruth M1lcom!01t Schaubel, and emcee Bert Parks served 1s grand marshalls, travelling in a maroon 1921 Oldsmobile. 'nle current Miss America, Pamela Eldred, appeared on a float made of flowered American flags. She wore a beige, lace gown. 1blrteen former Miss Amtrlcu rode by the hot dog stands and souvenir shops in wheeled wicker chairs that were typical boardwalk vehicles of many yean: ago. WASHING TON (AP) -Compal in ts of several · mindred cities tblt the lf7'0 census couiit is short -particularly in the slums ·-will get an u.tenlive con~onal hear~g next week. Leid off wilnesses are Ne,r York Mayor John V. Lindsay, who safi 1 11ixth of the New Yorkers spot checked were not counted, and Census Director George H. wil prove to be the most accurate in U.S. bJstory. Chairman Charles H. Wilson (!>.call!.) announced Tuesday his Hoiile census subCommittee bearing on the n.tionwide count .i.st April t5 will begin Tueoday. Wilson bu asked the CenlUlll Bureau to be ready to answer complaints ol Ne.w York, Chicago, Cleveland and Blnillngb.un that their Inner cities were undercoanted and lo complalnts of aeveral hundred smaller ciUes that their tallies were shorl Some offkials of the major cities attribute the alleged slum undercount to people hidlng·from census takers because. they were violating housing ordinances or welfare laws or evading the drafl Some small cities stated their evidence Indicates a larger population. Others contended blocks of cltizem were credited to the aurrounding county r1ther than to the city. But Census Director Brown told newsmen last week that In all cues in whlch a city has conducted ita OWn count it found even fewer residents than the censua taters. Sausalito Ferry Has Bg Turnout SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -'!'be Golden Gate Bridge District's new ferryboat averaged more than 3,900 pusengers a da y during its first 18 days of operation. Bridge District Manager Dale W. Luehring, announcing tha t Tuesday, aid the patronage of the MGM Golden 11te wu "very encouraging." Donald White, the district's tranait manager, has estimated the aervk:e between Sausalito and San Franc!ICO could COit "something over $1,000 per day" to keep n operation. During the 18 d1y1, the vessel carried 'ro,409 puaengers, 18,134 of them over the thr~ay labor cloy weekend. Storms Mar Sunny Nation Good W eate hr Predominates But Lightning Takes Toll Ca ll fora&. Tht 1IM1tf' dltt fll "'lkl - l9ft'INl'•l11r11 '"" ftlr lklft TtlnlVtllolll $0UTMl'll (A!llornle COfllll'IUld llntb•ltd ,.,...., •"'II ,,.,. thw"*Mltr lllCllM 11r1111r, PltYIEW OtDSAWElTHEJI MIAl.llOlt:CASTTO 1:01 •.It IST •t-t •1' r-~•re• Al""-"'""" " • -• .. Att•nl1 u " ...... lltl4 "' " atM11rot " .. NEW YORK !AP) - A charter IJC.8 jetliner only hours away Crom picking up 250 youthful transatlantic ·passengers craahed and burned during takeoff Tuesday from Kennedy Airport. All It crewmen, inclllding seven stewardesses, were t!lled. Frank PugU.I, a ipokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration, said the Trans IntemaUonal Airlines p I a n e appeared to acripe its tall on takeoff. No passen1en were aboard the flight to Washington, where it was to pick up its transatlantic !ares at Dulles International alrporl Other eyewitnesses said the pl ane Sen . Scott Backs Direct Election For President WASHINGTON (AP ) -Sen ate Republican Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania aald today that he regards the direct, popular election of the President as preferable to the present electoral colle1e system. But he toki newsmen that his first choice is a plan under which each state would choose two presidential electors at large and the rest by dist ricts corresponding to Congressional districts. Scott aald he will vote for the district plan if be gets a chance but if It is rejected by the Senate will su pport the direct election proposal provided for in a Constitutional amendment approved by the HoUJe a year ago. Senate debate on the pr o p o s e d amenWntnt began Tuesday with some opponenta vowing to wage a long, all-out fight against It. The overhanging threat of a filibuster ls of concern to Senate leaders trying to complete 1cUon on a legislative backlog before the November elections. Democratic and Republican senators are to meet In party caucuses Thursday to discuss the outlook and try to work out a schedule of priorlUes for handling meaaures before a probable recess around Oct. 15. The possible removal o! one stumbling block was word from Sen. Edward M. Kennedy CO.Mass.), that he may not try to hook on the proposal another Constitutional amendment to give the District of Columbia the s a m e representaUon in Congress as a state. Kennedy told reporters that u o_f ru_>W tie sUll plan.! to offer the . District representation amendment as a rider, but he said he will not do so if he becomes convinced that the effect would be to kill electoral reform . The far-reaching proposal, already approved by tht House and endorsed by President' Nllon, came under heavy attack lo Iba opening debate Tuesday from Ntbrub RepublicaM Carl T. CUrlll ud llomln L. Hruska. OJrUa 11kl he presumed the issue would be before the Senate "for weeks and months." Democratic Leader Mike N!1M •lld Nl'IY -mr111 tow c!wo• ~ 1w Pff\llllMI t lOllll tllt tte•l•I MC• tlof\1 Ill LAI M9tl" •lid vldnllt', thoulll lllt ,,.., ...ilt<I ,.,,., "" mldo momi,.., tetvl11t l\tJY 1ullll'llnt. Pl'Mk'*I llltl'i ltdty "''' u, lllr• ... , .. -, ....... .,. PrHll:IW low ,.,10/11 .. u. .. IM ...... Chic•" .. .. 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Tflllrtde; bl.It low (IOl/(lt ''"' fl)t '""' c.ont """' Yt'""*ltd''' We"'*' .. rt. LOS AHGl"L.lll AND VICINITY -Mttn, lt!r ltirlll)ffl TllilrM•t IM,ll IOw tloudl •M fDt l!ftt co.ti! 1ert¥ We!!nt:ader. W•r_,. di)'.. Q'lllrn!thl '°"" ............ ,,.,.,,.... to, PO INT CONClPTIOfll TO MIXICAH e OllOEA -Ll1lll "'"*-"""'* nlllll l llO ft'IOl'l\I"' Ml.II'• ~'"' Mtltrll' 1.u ~nett !ft •It._. 111rowll l"utlOIY, l tw (llPIJcll ll'Wt fol .. ,.., ~deY .rid I I-111111'1 C'Ollll w.....:r,., nit/II •Ml "'"' Tllu•MI••· ll'llffWJW IO!OtllT lllM.Y d•rt. Wel'TT!ff dtl'I 1181'1'11 "'11'1>. COA$l"l ANO INTEltMEOtA'll! VAl.LE'l'5 -F1!r tllrou1ll Tllurtdll', W•r"'~ dt\11. Ovtm"9M lowt SJ.U. Hitlll """· Tllur1d1Y U·102. MOUNTAIN AIU!il.S -f1lr lllf ..... 11 "T~•td*•. WI"'"'' dtv,, 0Yer"lflll '°'" ,HO, Hl•lll 1'4', TllU,,.,I• 1)·'1. INTElt lOll ANO OE"SEllT Rl!OIONS -Felr Tll•Olll!I Tll11n.d•v. W1rrntr cltl'I Over11t1ht kiwi 111 Jilt 0....,. V•ft••· Ml to n o•lltr 111,,,., Ylll•Y•, l't lo• IOWlf ¥111 .... , Hlflls tS·l~S llltMr v1nw1, lOl•IU lower Yl!1tr1, fhJrtc11r lot-Ill. . v.s. su .. ...,,, SI.IN!¥ ""tttw _.,. ft'!\1(1\ fll tht M l'IM tocl•r wllll -K •ll•rMI ......... •lld ffll.lrlll1r1torm1, .. H(ll lll' """' 1111 °"" v.u.., "' , ... a.it ''''" I nd In 1er11 fl lllot -II. Althewll lokltl ""er' lfMretl' elf1r ovtr 11111(11 Of tht CWf!tTy, Kelltl'MI lhundff"'°""n occvrrM lroni NfW Yor-Ill IC•Muckl' tnO In Flclrld1. MOr1 ftlf11 111 IMll 11 r1111 ten " t1lll'twlll• O!llo. chlrll'lf I 1IJ•llollr NleA ffft'I' -·· OU1tl1n1I cold rt ln •M 1 ''"' lllliNltrll\oowtr, OCCllrtMI lrMI MClll!I~ tno W-..Ol'l'llnt te tht O.ko!tl. A111d City. I . 0., "'4 w/M t Ulll Iii ~ '1 ml!t1 '" f\Oillr wflll • lh11nffr•lorm. T•rnH•llurn tlrl• '-'•Y ••lllf'll 'rorn ,. 11 Oillon. Mtnl., Ill to tt HMCllll~ C.llf. ClnclllNtl Cll'ltlMCI ..,_ ...... IE11r.U ,,.._,, ·-··--·· _ ... k-•Clt't ... , ... _. U.AllMI" Ml<lml~ MllWwir.N MIMt8"11s "'" °''""' NN YOl'tl ,.,, ... ,., ... ltObtft Phl1"'11'11L1 Pllhbl.t~ PllMll1• POttltrld ltH llulf ••M $e(remente SI. Loi/I• S.lt L1k• C!tv 5'11 D1HO S•n l"rerttl1°" ''"'' .. , .... $MIUI Sl>CWl.1rie Th•rmtl WMlllNIM .. " .. u " .. .. " .. .. .. " .. .. " ., .. " " " " .. ·~ .. .. .. .. " " ., .. u .. " n " " .. .. " • .. " " .. " " " ~ .. .. " ff .. " .. .. ~ " .. .. .. " " .. .. .. .. '" .. u • :: Sen. Birch Bayb (0.Ind.), chlef Senate lpolll01' of the direct eletcion plan. does not now c!llm l.o t-.thlrds majority neces.ury for pusqe. But he predicted m the Dtctuary votes will hf obtained . ... Attendance Decrease • ,,. Seen in Bus Dispute CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -Cl"'" began peacefully today in the Charlotte-·°' Mecklenburg County scllool :system. but attendance ln the 1711.tm -threatened by 8: boyeott or parenb oppostd to busing to achieve de1tsrea1llon -appeared '·°' below normal. No official attendance figures wt.re av11Uable shortly' after the opening bells rang, but aome school buses arrived .•1 empty and others rolltd onto the school grounds with only 1 few pupil!. bolted steeply Into the air after damaging its tail. They uid one or more o! its four engines burst into flames, and that it tilted on Jts side and crashed to earth from a height of about 200 feet. "Boy, did it hit!" said Pasquale Toppi, a construction worker at tht airport. The crash occurred at 4:20 p.m. and a huge cloud of billowing black smoke arose from the main body of the wreckage. Parts of the aircraft were strewn over an area of l!tVeral hundred feet. The plane was a Douglas DC-8 super 61, capable of carrying 259 passengers. Trans International is a c h a r t e r nonscheduled carrier and a spokes man said it w:u the line's first accident in 22 years of operations. It was the first major crash in the Kennedy area since Feb. e, 1965, when 84 persons were killed aboard an Eastern Air Lines passenger plane that plunged into the ·AUantic near the airport. For about an hour after the Trans International crash, Kennedy was closed to all air traffic. Julie Starting At New College, Wants to Teach WASHINGTON (AP) Julie Eisenhower, daughter of President Nixon, will start classes at Catholic University here Monday lo prepare for a teaching career. Julie is a graduate of Smith College but gained ber degree in hlstory. Her year's study at Catholic will Include both undergraduate and graduate 1 e v e I courses in education. "I thought about it a lot this summer," silt said at a briefing Tuesday. "I knew I wanted some kind of profession and I think teaching ... weil, it will always be interesting." The President's younger daughter said she hoped to get a tea ching certifi cate at the end of the second semester in lt1ay. Included in the training wUl be two eight. week practice teaching sessions in District of Columbia schools. Julie said she would live In the White House during the school year. Her husband, David, starts 0 f f I c e r s ' Candld1te School at the Newport Naval base In Rhode Island on Oct. 24. The Pruident and Mrs. Nixon both are delighted at the decision, Julie said, bee8U9e "they think It's a great career for a woman." Mn. Nli:on once was a teacher. Julie said she hoped to teach in the second third or fourth grades. She said she will take enough courses to qualify Iler to teach In public achooll in any state where her husband mlcht be stationed. Mrs. Eisenhower 1ppeartd In a sleeveless lime.colored dress with a hemline just above the knee. But she quickly auured rtporten that •he had not opted Jn f1vor of the midi style. "This la a dress that l never got around to hemming up," she laughed. "I'm not going to wear the midi. David doesn't like it. I don't Wee it." LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - A Delta Airlines OC'9 with 94 persons aboard cracked open on landing 1t Standiford Field Tuesday ni&ht, but the mott 1eriOU1 injury reported was a badly cut thumb. After the 89 passengers and five crewmen were evacuated, the plane, en route from Chkago to AUantl., wu coated with foam by firemen . There was no fire or explosion. Most passengers contacted after the mishap said the craft's tires blew out on landing, then the plane bounced nto the air and cracked just behind the wine when It hit the runway again. However, a Delta spokesman said, "When I landed it aimply cracked open." The spokesman said 15 passengers were taken to a Louisv ille hospital for treatment of minor nnjuries. Airport authorities said the pilot 11ve no indication of trouble before la.ndinj. U.S. Pr essing For Settlement Of Rail Dispute · WASHINGTON (AP) -The Nizon administration pressed today for an 11th hour wage settlement to avert • scheduled nationwide strike of some 500,000 railroad workers one minute after midnight tonight. "\Ve could have a strike," said Assistant Secretary of Labor W. J. Usery of the dispute between the nation's rail industry and four AFL-CIO unions. "But they've each said they could postpone it if there is some meaningruJ progress," Usery said of 1he union negotiators. He declined to say whether Pruldent Nixon would invoke his power under federal labor law to delay any strike-for 60 days. Usery conceded there was no progreaa in four hours of government sponsored. talks Tuesday, but added "that meeting was very worthwhile. I think it cleared the air." He called both aides back Into negotiations today. But Harold Crotty, president of the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Elnployes; said after Tueaday'a fruitlels talks "We're further apart than when we started." • Retort..i chief industry negotiator John P. Hiltz: "No, we couldn't be." Hilt: said the unions' demaods for ... three-year wage hikes of 40 percent or more would bankrupt the industry. The workers oow 1verage about $3.60 per hour. "I'd be putting my name to the Uquidation of the railroad Industry" by signing such wage agreementl, HilU: snapped. He declined to say whether the railroads bad made a counter offer, but union officials said there hid been no industry wage offer. Rat!e f 0 1· Lile Dying Tot Rejected by Ho spital? . SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI) -The mother of 1 14-lnontb-<lld boy said Tuesday 1 holpllll refU!ed to admit the chlld three ~ before be died of polio . "The flrrt thlnl they uked for wu money," said Mrs. Jan Marts, 20. "It's a shame they call themselvs Catholics bccaute they don't hive In)' feeling for poor people." Officials at Santa Rosa Medkll Center denied Mrs. Mares' story. The chUd, Juan M1re1 Jr., died Sund1y of what doctort dl1gnosed 11 polio. She aaid she look the child to S1nta no.. iasL I Thursday and the hoapll1l r<flllod to admit him wtleu she paid 1 ltOO depot!~ She said she did not have the money. The mother said she look the boy ba<k to the hospital Friday and Saturday, then took him to Bexar County Hospital, which takes cart of ch•rity patients. The boy was admitted there Saturday ind d.itd the next day. J11ck Finger, chier of community relations for Santa Rosa, dtnltd the child wu seen in the hospital's eme:rgenc7 room prior to Saturdl,Y. I I I ( ( -.. , -. --.,.-~~--~---• • • •• ' JO _. : -.-~-~' .• --..... " •• San Clemente . .. Capistrano ED I T'~ON I VOL. 63 , NO. 21 6, 4 SECTIONS, 66 'PAGES ra s Power Balance U.S. Sends More Planes to Israel WASHING'}'ON (UPI) -The United States bas agreed to sell · 16 to , 18 additional suspersonic F4 Phantom fighter-bombers to Israel, defen se sources said today. Administration sources said the sales would be made under previously stated U.S. policy of preventing any significant shift in the Middle East power balance against Israel. The Wasbington Post, in first reporting the new agreeinent, said deliveries would begin later this month. Some Pentagon officials and members of Congress made it clear on numerouS' occasions in recent weeks that Israel would be provided there were any strategic alterations in the Arab-Israel i military balance. The Israelis lost a number of Phantoms during almost daily attacks on Arab Suspect Charged With l3 Crimes ' ' In Laguna Area An Azusa man has Leen charged with 13 crimes in connection with the June 3 Jddnapiftr a o d molestation of two teenage -'bguna Beach sisters and their <f·year~ld brother. Laguna Beach Detective Gene Brooks Identified the suspect as Nicholas G. Beard, 27, a mechanic at'a bowling alley. Beard was arrested in Temple City Sunday by Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies on the strength of a warrant held by Laguna police Brooks returned hiin to jail in Laguna. The crimes of which Beard is accused occurred when a man picked up the three hitchlking youngsters and promised to drive them home. Instead, police reported , the suspect drove the girls, aged 13 and 15, and their little brother to a desola~ dirt road beyond El Toro Road. By menacing boy and girls "'.ilh a knife, police said, he forced the girls to disrobe. The younger girl was taken to nearby bushes where , police said, the suspect began to undress. Books said the child's screams or other sounds frightened the man. He told the glrls and their brother to "take you r clothes and get out ," police said at the time . Edward Torne\l, deputy d i s t r i c t attorney, said ball for Beard has ?ee.n set at $25 000. The date of a preliminary hearing is to be set in municipal court Friday. Tornell said Beard is accused of three counts of kidnaping, one count of kidnaping with intent to commit rape, one county of assault with intent to c0mmit a felony, three counts ?f molesting children under 18. The pubhc defender is to represent Beard. targets. The number of losse! hh not been made public, but hai been estimated at more than half a doz.en. Sixteen to 18 more Phintoms would presumably be about double the number Lost. Laird has said the United States has continued to deliver arms and equipment to Israel since the cease-fire went into effect ahnost five weeks ago. The Soviet Union also has continued to ship weapons lo Egypt. . Space Layoffs Boost County Welfare Load By JACK BROBACK 01 Ill• D11ty !'Ii.I Sllff Skyrocketing unemployment among Ora'l'lge County aerospace workers has hit the county Welfare Department hard. Granville Peaplei, director or the department, said today that a three-week backlog exists in the federally subsidized food stamp program. "We have been hit Jo the straight welfare cases, too," Peoples 1aid. "We added 1,250 new cases in July, 10 times the number of new cases added two years ago." The weUare director said h i 1 department was hard pressed to keep up with the rising number of applicants. "In the last two months we have round a great increase in the number of unemployed aerospace workers coming to us for help?" Peopes said it was a totally new experience in his department to find so many skilled engineers, technicians and executives joining the food stamp program roles.. "Normally we deal largely with unskilled persons and the indigent." He guessed that the aerospa c e engineers had used up there six months or unemployment checks and have nowhere else to turn. "If this trend doesn't level off in the near fut ure we are going to have a real problem staying within our budget , which is already substantially greater than last year," Peoples added. Jn a determined atlempt lo remedy the skilled uneinployment si tu a ti on • Supervisors David Baker and Williams Phillips have been named to a committee to huddle with state and federal legislators representing the county to heopfully gain new aerospace contracts. In the last 12 maoths 10,700 workers ha ve been laid off by the county's ae rospace and electronic industries because of the present receS.!lion and cutbacks in the ·federal budget. Some help for the industry may come from the designation la st week of the cot.mty as an area of "substantial unemployment." This means that firms here will receive preference in bidding on certain federal buyi ng contracts and public works projecl.S. ' ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, '1970 .no er Parking tlae Campaign Bob Citron and Joe Greene are deputy tax c o11ec- tors for Orange County. Both are seeking their boss's job. Their boss. Don S. Mozley is retiring and the two men are battling in an election cam- paign that wilJ end Nov . 3. But, they insist, when they go to work each day, they leave their political ca·mpaigns in the county parking lot at Broadway and Sixth Street in Santa Ana. Laguna Dog Lovets ':l;P~ . ' •• For Law Referen dum LaguU ---.Sch "dog owners Thursd8y will take up the possibility of petitioning for a n!ferendum that could force the City Council to either rescind its controversial dog ordinance or put the question to the voters. A public meeting has been scheduled at I p.m. in the cafeteria of Laguna Beach High School. Laguna Officers Turn Co·wboys, Cor ral Horse Laguna Beach police are used to ru11aways bu t this one was a horse of a ditferent color. After a hot pursuit Tuesday morning, officers corralled a [risky runaway horse. The horse, a big brown model, was first reported at Bluebird Park. Officers Arthur DeLuca and Al McGraw arrived la find ou t that he had moved on to the parking lol of Denney 's Restaurant. They arrived there, said DeLuca, and a passerby said. "he went that way." The chase began in earnest along Glenneyre Street. DeLuca and McGraw headed the beast off cornering him behind a parmked car. They tied him at the nearby Agate Street Fire Station a nd turned the investlgaUon over the the SPCA. ':'he SPCA came ror the horse but not before the animal left trampled evidence of his visit to the fire station. AR SPCA official said the ow11er, Warren Hopkins, 1035 Bluebird Canyon Drive, picked up bis horse this morning. The ·referendum fs a new twist in the fight against the dog Jaw that is scheduled to take effect Sept. 19. The ordinance bans dogs from all city beaches between 9 a.rn. and ' p.rn. and bans them totally from Bluebird Park, Riddle Field and Top of the World Park. Dogs would be permitted leashed in Heisler Park at times set by council decree. Dog owners who think the ordinance harsh or tu-considered have been circulating Petit.ions to show opposition to. the ordinance asking councilmen to recof'sider. These petitions, however, have no legal weight. Referendum petitions would, explain spokesme n for the dog liberation movement. If signatures of 10 percent of the registered vottrs are filed with the city clerk in petitions opposing the ordinance, the law is suspehded until: -Councilmen rescind it. -Or councilmen set the matter for eleclion. A special election would probably cost several thousand dollars. Backers of the referendum approach suggest it could give the council a chaoce to work out a compromlse ordinance acceptable to both sides. The ordinance, fathered by Councilman Edward Lorr, passed by a 3 to 2 vote split Aug. 19 with Councilmen Roy Holm and Charlton Boyd dissenting. Della Reese Hurt HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Singer Dell• Reese walked through a plate glass door at her home today and underwent several hours of surgery for severe lacerations, her manager said. F q.ther Res<;µ;~d I , , Off Catalinm Son Mis sing • A Carlsbad catarnar.an _ sailor-who paddled 18 hours in the C8talina1~anriel Is hospitalized today at Avlion and search ls under way for. his son who is missi ng and presumed drowned. Charles Piety, 47, was listed in fair condition at Avalon Commu..nity Hospital, .Ji.'here he Is under treatment f0r shock and exposure. A spokesman for the U.S. Coast Guard Search and Rescue office in Lona Beach said a helicopter was dispatched today to hunt for any trace of 22-year-old Phillip Piety. 1-fope was admittedly dim;.! Piety told crew members aboard the yacht Feeling Groovy -who hap.led him aboard at mid-morning Tuesday -that he and his son were forced to · ab8ndon their 24-foot catamaran Malihini. The exhausted victim' told Coast Guard Jnvestigators a storm came up, but they said they were unaware of anything but routine ocean breezes and swells Monday afternoon. He said he and his son buckled on life jackets and boarded their small dinghy and lctt the Malihini, but the boat quickly took on water and swamped. The elder Piety said his son told him he was too tired to proceed and would tread water In his life jacket until help coUld be brought from the is18nd port. PeQple aboard another passing ya cht found a lifejacket stencilled Malihini Tuesday after and recovered it, turning it over to Avalon authorities. Piety said the Malihini only carried two life jackets and his. son was wearing the second one the "last time he saw him Monday a!temoon. Countian Dies in War Viet Vet Ejects From Toro Plane Near Big Bear A Vietnam vetttan ls back on duty toclay at El Toro Marine ~orp~ Air Station after bailing out of his crippled jet before it crashed in~ a molllltain ravine 2G miles north of Big Bear. Clementeans Dial 911 Army PFC Theodore F. Bedra, son of Mrs. MichaJine B. Bedra, a<Ml San Luis Circle, Buena· Park, has · been killed in action in the war in South.east Asia, the U.S. Defense Department announced Tuesday. Capt. Pltrick G. Carroll, 27. of El Toro. escaped tn}ury when he ejected from the A4 Skybiwk that caused a 10-acre brush fire when ii imashed into the ground. He wa8 picked up by a rescue helicopter from George Air Force 'Base, checked over at its hospita l and .then returned to the Orange Cou nty traininl facility. Monkeys DooUled KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -All 15 monkeys 11t Knoxville's city zoo are to be killed because or an attack o £ lUbercu1osis among aorne of them. Cit y Gets Emergen cy 'St reamlined' Phone Number San Clemente Friday will become the first Southern California city to have the new emergency dialing number of 911 which will streamline calls ror help during an emergency. The new dial system means that San Clemente telephone subscribers who have the 492 prefix to their phone number can dial the three numben for police, fire, lifeguard or ambulance assistance durtna an emergency , 'file system, which involved JI months of designing and installaUon, will ao lnlo service at 12:01 a.m. Friday. About 10,000 telephone 1ubscriber1 will •be able to use the number, instead of looking up 1 seven-dlait number durlnf periods of excitement and stress. about because of an immediate request in Because of technical factors, about 400 1968 when the emergency system was' San . Cle~ente resident.! with the 49& ;. first announced: prefix will not be able to use the new .. . service Pacific Telephorie local ml'nager We were first because. we asekd for It Bob Ga'nnon explained. flrst," he said. Frida~'s cutover in San Clemente will The service should make emergency. bring to JOO ·the tote.I of AmtrjCJn citiet1 • ~mrJg by c1U¥M'~ch more simple,. with Lhe new emergency sy&t~hL , .~._1hd Ume'.i&Y'ibi , In California, San' Clemente ·ts-9111y t~. ·~ ,' ~ ~motjenciea, p o 11 c e third to hltve it. adni!isis&i.k>ti;.ffi:ve .1ald, a seven-digit, .Rect.nt installaUon were completed In tiumbe r cQruiftiUed tO memory.can easily the cities of Gustine Rd-Alameda in be forgolte n by per~ .who need Northern California, emergency u slata:nce. • City M1n11iger Ken Carr, tnthuslasttc i•ThJs is a ~t 1tep fonrard in the about he new system, said that San protection of ure aOd property for San Clemente's historic ln!tallation came Clemente residents:" Carr 1&1d. f ,. • ' I, PILOT A.D NETS .QUICK R ESULT~ rast. "' Tllat's the 'woi:d !hit deoa'lbel the kind or action DAILY 'PILOT classified want ads ,iet. Htte11 the'' ad: ·· · '"-' e It $1 Buick 5~lal $100 cash xxx-xxxx Here's the retalt. 'The HterliRT sa,id she "had'a call with;n ~ aft·e~ m y _ p~per , wa i dellvortd ••• lint man who ·~w (the car) bought il" Want 1.,1 action? call 642./il'IB, the dirt<t llrte to a• DAILY PlUYr ad-vflor, aDd get ready to sell Somethlng,J • • Tottay'• .,._. N.\t. Stocks TEN CENTS ane 113 Aboru·d Latest Jet Captured By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Palestinian guerrillas hijacked a British jetliner with 113 persons aboard today and fo~ it to land near two other capt:ve airlliiers on which nearly 200 persons were beh1g held hostage h1 the Jordanian desert, the British Foreip Office announced. A spokesman said word had reached London that ihe plane, after circling the Middle East for hours, landed at tbe same guerrilla-held base where the two other plailes were under guard. As in the case of the four hijacking plots earlier this week, the Marxist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine assumed responsibility. A spokesman ~id the PFLP seized the British Overseas Airways Corp. VCIO , after its take off from Bahrein In the Persian Gulf, to reinforce its demand for the release of a woman hijacker held in London. "Let's see what British Prime Minister Edward Heath does now,'' a guerrilla spokesman said. A BOAC spokesman in London said 32 Britons, 12 Bahreinis, 3 Americans and 2 Indians joined S4 other passengers aboard the plane in Bahrein. It carried 10 crewmen. The plane was on a flight from Bombay to London . At the United Nations in New York, Britain and the United States aaked ror a meeting of the U.N. &!curity Council lf,ter today to take up the wav~ of hijaclWlgs. Meanwhile, the hostages taken earlier rweJtered through·-a third day aboa.r.d the two planes, a Swissair DCB and a Trans World Airlines Boeing 707, at the El Khana. airstrip 25 miles northeast of Amman. For their ransom, the guerrillas were demanding lhe release of lhree Arab terrorists held in West Gennany, three others jailed in Switzerland and Miss Leila Khaled, 25 held in London for the aborted hijacking of an Israeli El Al plane Su nday. The PFLP, like other guerrilla groups is against any Middle Eest settlement that does not restore Arabs to former homes in Palestine. the land that is now Israel. All have ,refused to ab ide by cease-fire agreements on Israeli borders, and the PFLP has made a speciality of airline hijackings. After the BOAC plane left Bahr.ein, the hijackers forced it to land at Beirut for refueling, and Lebanese T r a n s po r t Minister Pierre Gemayel appealed to the guerrillas to Jet women and children go. "No," replied the guerrillas. "We are leaving with everybody or we are blowing up the plane with everybody." Gemayel then said he was going to an emergency Cabinet meeting to introduce a measure "closing Beirut airport from now on to all hijackers who want to land here." Lebanon iritends, he added, "lo maintain Beirut airport as a civil airport in every sense of the word." The International Red Cross already had opened negotiations with PFLP leaders in Amman for the release of the (See HUA.CK, Page Z) Orange <:out Weather The evening and morning fog takes a t'ight er grip on the Or- inge coast Thursday, while af· ternoons wilJ be spotted with ha zy suns"hine. Look for temper- atures in the 70 to 89-degree INSIDE TODAY Tht ntw .stwion o/ tivi'na theater get.s unde r wau on the Orange Coa8t Friday with three local pla11houses opening their first productions. See Eutertci'nrnent, Page Z5. ltflll!I U Mtttl,,;. It carlltmla It Mevlft 1f.U ca, .. , C.l'M• ' Mu11111 flllflft u CMUlftll U• , Jfatltftal MltWI 4·J Cllulllrttl 11-M Off"'9 c-ry It C.1111« ,, l~1¥1t -""'" " Cmtwt111 1•. J',.m. ,.,, 0..111 Nttk • 1t Or. lftlM,.,. 11 DIWWUt tt lf'Kt Marbb Jt.af a•t .. flal I'• f T ... YlllM H htt1111i'1_. n T"""'°' t+-2' l'lt'l...C• ..... ...... • Mttett... )I '#flit. WMll ti AM L.,....,. • WOfMll'I ""'" 1'•N Miii !fl kmrt 11 W.rtll NM ... • ' • ' Cit1••" ... Plan . ' Swim Pool Eyed In San Clemente San Clemente ml)! have a new swimming pool next summer. A proposal for a community swimming pool to be built jointly by the city of San Clemente and the Capistrano UnUled School District will be submitted to the San Clemente City Council by the di.strict at ita next meetinr. Members of the Board of Trustees voted unanimously Tuesday for the proposal which would locate the pool at San Clemente High School. Estimated cost of construction is $1~.ooo. according to Superintendent Truman Benedict. After construction the pool would be operated and maintained by the school district at no cost to the city. San Clemente City Manager Ken Carr said he had no idea what the council's reaction to the -proposal would be. "We would want to be sure the financial arrangement is tquitable to the city's taxpayers," s~d Carr. He admitted that the present city pool ls cracked ans suffering from old age but he said he knew of no plans to tear it down. Tbe school district plan calls for the formation of a joint powers agreement for the construction; the sl.ipulaUon that the pool will receive community and school use; after construction it would become the property of the school district which would maintain it; and the design would be prepared by the architect for San Clemente High School. "If agreeable we would like to have it completed by next summer," said Benedict. He pointed out that although the ,city is spendJnl about $17,000 a year to maintain the old city pool, the new one would cost about •ooo to maintain. "That'• because ours would have more continuous uae," slid Benedict. "It would be used for leam to swim programa, physical education and competIUve 1wlmmin1." Removal of Utility Poles Moves Near for Laguna Removal of unsightly utility poles may be a notch closer to re&Uty In at least three portions of the city, La(Una Beach planning comml!aiootn learned Monday night. Commisaioner Robert J. Hastln&s, who New Capistrano Teachers Tour 'White House' New teachers for the Capi1trano Unified School District -5S of them - Tuesday toured the 11.reeta close to the Western White Houte, then saw the ICbools where they will work in the firat day of their crientation week. And an Thursday the teachers will attend official ortent.aUon day 1cU"ltlea at San Clemente H1&h School. Part of that event will be a taJk by Chief Los Ana:elea Deputy Dilrlct Attorney Joaeph Busch. Frank 0 . Mcintyre, the chief spokesman for the California Teacher's AaoclaUon, alto wlll lddf1A ~ l!'WP' 1'tutlday in Triton center, Alter the weolr ol prepeilllory ..Uvtll~ -lncludloc cet.tloi their clllfl'OOIM ready for 1tudenta -tbt teachen will hsve a weekend ot relt before the 1tudenls flock to class Monday molnlni. Some of the week's acUvltles have Included a breakfast tpOnJOted by PT A IJ'OUps and a luncheon spc:mored by the local teacher's asaoclaUon. Elliot H. Gray Succumbs at 83 Elliot R. Gray of 111 Via Los Altos, Laguna Hills, died Satunay at the qe ol 83 in South Laguna. Private services for Mr. Gray were held Tuesday at McConnJck Mortuary Ch1pel. Burial followed at Melrose Abbey. Mr. Gray is survived by hJa wife, Virginia, of the family home. A native of New Jersey, Mr. Gray had Jived in California for the put 49 yurs'. He was ,i retired 1upervilor for the Lockheed Corporation. Mr. Gray served as a communicant for St. George'• Episcopal Church In Laguna Hills. DAllY PILOT "...,....a .. .. l ......... .. C:Mff Mn11 N1atl..._ a1ec• .. .... ,.,,.., .......... t)IANGI C04ST "IJILllHtNO C0M"ANY lto\trl N, We.4 ""'""'' .... P'lltlltllw J.c ••. c • .i.l Vkt P'ru.<>tlll -0111t•• •MMef"' 1~.1'111 "••·ii lllflllr 1\11t1t1 A. M111,hiftt M ..... 1111 lllf!lat lll<h1'4 '· Nell lwllo Ot.,.. C-ty E•ltat .,.._ C.lit M-\ ilt Wt-I lty SINtl H....,I lffCJIU #11 W..1 .... , l tvlfql'll L.MurM l#cll: m ,.,..,, A-111 "'""'""'*' loldl1 INN l••t" IM11t\11 ... 6N ci.n-tt: »S ...,, .. II C-IM .... IHllLY .. ILOT. Wlftl Wl'ldl 1lt """"""' ffW Ht*"·'•-· It ...... !~ dlll't' t•UIH lufto .. ., I~ ..,.r•IO tlfl!lllM "" U.-lt~dl. HfWI*'/ h tcll, (.ellt MtM, H\lfll .... 1111 ... Cl'I lflll l'tu!INlll Vlllft, lltfll wHll I .. r .. ltNI llflt ....... or ..... C..1t ""'41'1'111'11 C-nt "'"""" IPlllnta ,,_ 11 1211 W•I ....... • .... ~ Ht""*! ll!KI\, VA ,. W"I .. ., $1,...., c. .. Mae. T ........ 17141 441-'311 Cs-NIM "'""""" '41·••tl S-CIC UIC Al fko,...l_ftl ,...,.....,1 .... 1• c..,or19M, 1111. er.,.. c-1 Mii•""" """"9..,. Ho -11trll\, /lllllttrt lltnt. d J11ti.1 --., n¥trtlM'll'IMtt Ml'I"' .... ., .. """"""'"" ."....,, """... ,.,. mlnltfl ti ..,.,., -, ...... a. '!l'i"JMi "'!' ti ....,_, IMCll tt4 Cft ........ t•tl~M. Mkrlf!ltfl 1Y ctr• '1.• -ftlly1 -ct UM _111..,1 1'111111" IRllNtlMf.. .. -11111• L wu deleJated undergroundlna: utilities u h1I sphere cf influence, lhortly after he wu appcinted, aald that be ii obtaln!ng a finanlcal plan for the work from the utility companl ... Wm't. Is adiedulld lo begin In mid Octotl!ec' far undergrounding of utilltie• aloni CUff Drive from Cout Highway to Myrtle Street. The poles are conaldered a bU,ht on the vlew Of Heisler Park and the ocean beyond. Bids for contracts In two ether areu will be out In 30 days. Izi the north end of town, the pola will came down on LeDroit Street up inta the Emerald Terrace atction of the city, Hastings said. Undtrgrounding will also take place from the Intersection cf Blumont Street and Part Avenue, up through the Mystic Hilla to Skyline Drlve. Upper Skyline Drive. a recent development, alrtady bu underground utilities. HalUngs aaid this morning that any work would need approval of residents, since the cost of the underground.in& wi.1l be ISlelled to them. Jn Emerald Bay , where undergroundin& now ii taking place, the coot per lot was more than $1200. Hastings is hopeful that work elsewhere in town could be done at lower C06t. fl• "'tld that ID ~ lleadl lwo percent of the 1rou revenue of ~e utility companlea goea toward unclergrQundloc. Last )'tll', I' amounted to '24,000. ''That'• enoup for about m pole•," liullnil not.d. Turtle Rock's Pupils. Sharing School Facility Afore than 500 Turtle Rock Elementary school students will be 1haring the Univer1lty Park elementary building throuab Docanber, requiring acheduled changes for both acboals. Bus schedules· for pupils from the Col· any and CuJverdaJe trads the Marine Corps Helicopter facillty (LtAl, trom UC Irvine manied•ltudents•· housing and all residents of TUrtle Kock Broadmoor Hill! will be posted 4 p.m. Friday at Unlveralty Park SchcioL "Coples also will be posted at the recreatian areas and 1aJea cfflce of the housing developments," principal David Prince ·aaid. 1be •haring of the Unlvenity Park building mean• there will be no hot lunch program, although milk will bf available it 10 centa: per carton, Prince noted. Parents of klndergartan puppds mulf brin1 their children to school on Monday.' Prince said. Bu1es will oPtrate for all other children in the district, however. Class tchedules for 1tudent1 of both Turtle Rock and University Park elementary schools are as follows: Grades 1and2, 9:15 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.: grade ~ee1 8:30 a.m. lo 2:30 p.m. and IJ'ades 4, 6, ands, 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. . Customs Officers Hold Meeting Customs Inspectors and administrators from lhe U.S., Muico and Canada btgan a three-day conference today in Pruident Nixon's office compleit near the Western White House In San Clemente. The meeting -one al many by govemmcnl group!! at the Prealdtntial compound this yur -will cover Items lncludlna carao and baggage inspections, tlmptlficauon er cuatoms procedures, narcotics smuggling and g e n e r a I exchance of lnfmnaUon. The conf1ronce b the !Int three-WlY conference betwetn cuatoma ollllals of the border countrlea, U.S. 1pokesmen said. 11l.e obvloua prime luue at the thrtt- day talks will be method& of crackina: down on narcotics contraband. Spokesmen 11ld thb morning that they would begin IJsuing commun iques on the progress of the confe1·ence begl.nnlng Thuroclay. Don Boyles, 32, picked an un· usual way to observe Labor Day. He parachuted Monday from Ute world's highest sus- pension bridge -the Royal Gorge Bridge near Canon City, Colo. -to the Arkansas River 1,055 feet below. A friend drove him to the bridge and picked him up after the jump. Boyles, of Tulsa, Okla., made the jump without fanfare and it took authorities two days to tden· tify the mysterious parachut. !st. . Lifeguard Suit Settled; City Shells Out $650 An out-of-court settlement Tuesday for '650 endtd tbt one-year-old fight er a fired San Clemente lifeguard \ieut.enant for overtime he seid the city owed him. Former Lifeguard Ll Steve Chorak - who 'at one Ume led 30 lifeguards in a threatened strike -settled for slightly more than one-third of inltlsl claim or •1.600 agalnlt the city for asserted unpaid overtime. The CMe had been scheduled for civil court In South Orange Conuty Municipal Court Tuesday afternoon. Chorak had served as a lifeguard in San Clemente for 10 years before he was fired . The issue raged locally for several weeks last summer. At one paint in the controversy t.lle lifeguards, led by Chorak campaigned for recognition as a bargaining group, The city refused. Since the summer incidents, the city has altered its structuring of lifeguard employment to shorten the work week for each guard. The guards also have joined a public safety employes' associaUon which is the representative group cf pollce, fire and lifeguard personnel. The group recently won official recogn ition by the city with the understanding that the recognition didn 't grant the association the right to call strikes or walkouts. One tssue remained unclear in the Chorak case toay. however -whether or not the ousted lieutenant will continue his fight for reinstatement ta the department which fired him. ChoraK·~ lawyer, Chester Brisco of Santa Ana, could not be· reached for comment thla marning. Police to Check Festival Alarm Sound System Laguna Beach's Festival of Arts will seek police expertise in selecting a sophisticated new system to improve the burglar proofing. Alarmed 'by burglaries cf sound equipment from both the Laguna Moulton Playhouse and high i;cbool, · 0 o n Williamson, producer of the Pageant of the Masttrs, !old festival directors Tuesday he bas bids from two t.op companies. Wllllamson said the American District Telearaph Company will Install a system for '2.174 with a $110 monthly charae for operaUon. He said Wells Fargo Company would install a system for Sl,724 with a eontlnulng monthly cost of SlS&. The systems would provide electronic aurvelllanc1 and other de tection devices to protect th1 festival stage, shop, forum theater, box office and business office. The board agreed that Board President \VUl!tlm D. A1artln ind directors Da vid Young and Stuart Durkee w\IJ choose a 11ystem after conferring with police and companies using the systems. AW ·te Parents . ' Phone Schools For. Bqsing Info Trial Scheduled On Bad Check Rap in Oemente A man accused of writing $37,000 In checks an the San Clemente branch of the Bank of America has been ordered to face trial Sept. 23 in Superior ourt. Darrell Graf Hafen, 4.2. who describes himself as an cvcrseas investor, has pleaded not guilty le charges of d e liberately maintaining insufficient funds. He is free on $30.000 bail. Judge Samuel Orelzen set the trial date for Hafen after Judge William ?i.lurray refused to dismiis the Orange County Grand Jury's indictment of the Salt Lake City. Utah, busine ssman. Judge Dreizen also granted Hafen's request that he be allowed lQ have Jawbook.! in his county cell. ·• Parents o{ students -~tendln& O.r:ange Coa!lt schools who are confused about busing their children are advised to caU the school tbeir·child will attend. AU districts cootacted by th~ DAILY PQ..OT said the lnd.ividuaJ school will bave bus scbeduJta for the 1971).71 school yelJ! which begins Monday, and can anawer parents' questions. · Studenta attending Tuttin a n d Huntington Beach Union High Schools were mailed bus assignments, officials said. !J1le Huntington Beach syst.em employs data processing which autamaUcally sorta out students living more than two milea from a school and prints bus stop location and time on the student.!' cla~ schedule cards, according ta H. R. Martin, business assistant. For cost reasons, Fountain Valley Elemef!tary district abandoned i t s malling of bus schedules and sent. them home with students during the last wetk cf school last year, Michael Brick, district superintendent said. As with m0&t other districb along the Orange Coaat, cbildren new to the Fountain Valley district we.re given their b~ schedule when they were enroll ed, Brick not.ed. A spokesman for Huntington Beach Elementary district said bus assignments for kindergarten students were mailed last week and that stops for students in grade I to 8 "would be the same as they were in the past." Parents having any questions about busing may call the distri ct 's transportation office at 536-494.2 er the tchool, for infonnation. Ocean View elementary schools have posted bus schedules and parents should call or go to the school, John Rajcic, assistant superintendent, business, said. "We usually mail or phone bus assignments to !lpecial e d u c a t i o n students," he noted. Principals of schools in the Newport- Planne1·s Grant Parking l.-Ot On Glenneyre Laguna Beach planning commissioners Monday night approved a request from ~ .South Coast Highway Parking Diatnct Committee to establish a parking lot en Glenneyre Street above the Art Center. The request will now go to the City Council. The council will be asked ta approve fund1 to begin appraisal of the land and appraisal of improvements for the property. The land earmarked for the parking lot is en the east side of Glenneyre Street. between Mountain Road and Calliope Street. There are several owners. Bt.fore granting the request, chairman William Lambourne not.ed that "We're now to the point where were asking the City Council for money lo begin ipprai!al." Deputy City Attorney George Logan 11aid that there were two ways to go. The city can foot the bill, or the property owners can be asked ta bear the preliminary costs. Alvin 0. Autry City Planner said he felt !he city should handle the costs, which would later be returned from revenue collected in the Jot. Lambourne said that any agreements with the property owners should be contingent on their recei ving a 7$ percent rebate of ali revenue collected irom the meters in the lot. This will help ease the increased assessments for the cost of the lot, he said. We've tanu the baclr off om tlneBt watch IO 1011 mm • the "inside" pren!s!cm tdorJ 0 OMEGA et~ \o. woaldli-C Jldp • 1loot ,,, ........ . Yalth bJ Jte 1ppuruoe. 0Dl1 ... ,.. ,_ INSIDE W 10a 111preci1t11 th11 11D.Uc llS*lo _,rilJ of Oniq• •orlmuship. Tlttt "'Klenbuk• Selmtlt• " • Jpteial modd dttipcd .. .Lo• JM thit 11irror-brlW111t hill!. of e'f"Y pmt ml th1t !nstnio11!1. (t'ftilf"~ ptodoJmS-10.. niter lhtt wi11d1 tbo Soam.11.tr •hlle you wur IL £,mil rou'rt: not 10ttbankallr111loded, dlr "'Kl~bacJr,;.• will !tdp 7011 1Pl'fUlate •'r " Jl?Oudlr n eofllatend On:tq:a. CorD9 ht for a~ ~ ol g.,..-.... u.1 .... J. C. .JJumphrie3 Jewefer3 "ISll NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVENIENT TE•MS - IANKAM E1t1c..:1tO-MASTElt CHAR•E 24 YEAkS IN SAM! LOCATION ,HONE 14f.J401 1 Me.sa Unified School District I re responsible for informing p a r en t 1 , according to William C u n n i n g b a m , district superintendent. Other area districts reque.sUna: parents with buting schedules to call the school studenll will attend include San Juan Capistrano Unified, Laguna B e a c h Unified, WeslminJter Elementary and San Joaquin Elementary. Seal Beach elementary cperates only two buses and parents already have been informed of the schedcle, Superintendent. Man: Dressler said. HIJACK •.. earlier· hostages. The Popular Front had said It wouUI blow up the two planes at 7 p.m. PDT Wednesday unle ss the British released Miss Khaled and the Swiss arid West German gove rnments freed tbe sii Arabs in their custody. A spokesman said Tue9day the passengers would be removed to a guerrilla camp before the explosions. While the Bonn and Bern iovemments announced they would C9ffiply wJth the ransom demand , London hed1ed. PFLP spokesmen in Amman said all seven had to arrive together on a chartered pine. Of the latest !iirllne seizure, a guerrilla spokesman said; "This hijack is an answer to Britain's inhuman fland in refusing to let Leila Khaled go l'ree while allowing the Israeli murder to leave." His reference was ta ..Jl Israeli ,ecurity agent who shot and killed MINI Jtbaled'1 partner in the El Al hijack plot. Before the BOAC hijacking, the BriUsh government appeared to be preparb!.1 to release Miss Khaled. PollUcal IOW'Ces said she would have been shipped Out as soon as the PFLP released the two planeloads of hostages. London informants said no British charges had been filed against the woman, but Ambassador Michael Comay delivered a request from Israel for her "provisio nal arrest" pending preparation of an extradition petition. Red Cross representatives asked the guerrillas for an extension of \Vedaesday night's deadline, and a front spokesman in Amman said the request was under consideration. Britain at ftrst refused to misidtr releasing Miss Khaled, but the Cabinet met in emergency xuion Tueaday and gave the matter more 1tudy. Elizabeth Goudy Services Held Private services were held Tuesday 1t McCormick Mortuary Chapel far Elizabeth Ann Goudy, JIS21 Monterey St., South Laguna who died Saturday at the age of 92. Burial followed at Cpress Lawn Cemetery at Colma, Calif. Mrs. Goudy is survived by a son, Clyde, of South Laguna ; a daughter, Mrs. Ethel Grundel of Oakland ; a grandchild, three great-grandchildren, o n e great·iJ'Ut grandchild, and two brcthers. A native of Wales, Mrs. Goudy hid lived in California for the past ec years. Watson Appeal Denied NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -The Sib U.S. Circuit Courl of Appeals denied a rehearing Tuesday on the eittraditlcn appeal of Charles D. Watson, the Texu youlh implicated along with i;rther "'Manson Family" members in the Tate- La Bianca murders in Los Angeles. Wt1111 tllt "l(lttBfd... .. .. 1111\ltl' ;, 4'1!(11td ft "'"" dlfrleolll11t1 °"'''' "*',..·~ 1~1, 11 lllfJ ••.Wini l<U ""I tl~tf i)lrlf U . ~1~t1 1 I~ 1111 (llllWllH\IOll •'llu. •r,,.,.,,,.,., ,,.,, •• r,..,_ Ut•lol .. , ·-~"•ti~ 11/HI I I ' • • • • . I • • I • . • I I j I I \, ii I I . . • • . . l • . . l i • SOUTH COAST PLAZA SPECIAL SECTION DAILY PILOT Sien ....... Tall Tomatoes Victor Mcintire of Newport Beach grows his toma· toes tall in the backyard of his home at 726lf.I Tustin Ave. Plants are about five feet in height and bear fruitfully. Dinosaurs Forgot How to Make Love By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) Quick now, what do the' 1970 Census Report and the Current list of best-selling books have in common? Give up? Good? 1£ you knew the answer, I would _be deprived ¢ this opportunity to contribl,\le to your enlightenment. Preliminary census figures released this week show that the U.S. popuJation increased only 11.7 perri!nt during the last 10 years, as compared to an 18.5 jump during the previous decade. In searching for the reason demand for .information that should be intuitive? In searching for the reason for that, v.•e need look no further than the aforemen· tioned ·census report. When the population ·rate decline and the best-seller list are viewed together, the inescapable conclusion is that thousands of Americans have Jost lhe knack of precreation and are frantically laking refresher courses to help them remember what they are supposed to do. "~ for the slowdown, we need Jook no further than the best- seller list. There we will find that three of the top 10 non· fiction leaders are "Everythlng You Al v· a y s Wanted to Know About Sex," the "Sensuous \Voman" and "Human Sexual Inadequacy.'' Considering that we have been in the midst of a population explosion for a number of years, the situation is not at this point alarming and may even be salubrious as a short-term development. But when we recall what happened to the dinosaur, the long-term implications are ominous. r11e dinosaur v.·as th e mightiest creature ever to appear on the face of the earth. Yet it became extinct. Why? • All three of these volumes are. in erfect, instruction manuals for what is essentially an instinctive aclivity. And why, all of a sudden, is lhere such a heavy For Unusual Rings So~th C11e1I Pl•i• l rillol •'the Sell Diego fwy. C111t• Mei• 540-,0•6 GOOD VISION MAKES THE DIFFERENCE ! e Better Gr1de1 Plus Your Best Appearance Although paleontologists may argue the one point, a good guess is that dinosaurs simply forgot how to reproduce themselves. And since no books on the subject \vere available in those days, it was curtains for the entire species. The human race, or at least a portion thereof. appears to be taking a similar course. The trappings, rituals and ground rules associa ted with human procreation have grown so complex that many people become confused and hazy about the fundamentals. Eventually, perhaps, it will all come back to us . 11eanwhile, It's probably a good idea to keep one of those best.sellers under your pillow. OUR SERVICES INCLUDE e Contact L•n ses e low Vi1ion Aids e Eyas Examin•d e G1•s1•1 Fitt•d e Fa st l•boratory S•rYic• e Prescription Sunglass•s ASK AIOUT OUl CONTACT LENS TRIAL WU.RIM• PLAN IJ1e l'o•r /lfag Co. Charge , DR. BERNARD SIMON h•• CMtaMMa/N~ 540-1171 OPTOMETRIST f,..111 SH CltfMflte MAY CO. 496-1283 ,,."' i.o'l•l'I• SOUTH COAST PLAZA ZE 7-1038 LOWIR LEYIL ------- ' the peasanty print creates a soft mood Fluid. Feminine. Falli ng softly to lhe floor. The gentle fitted top dr ifts inlo gathers at your waist. With 1he sheerest puff of sleeve. Choose from a ho sl of pretty peas- ant prints. For the fun times in your life. When you 're fee ling all girl. Amel• triacelate. 5·13. 24.00 may co campus shop 43 .. ·, I "· \· \ \ \ I J , may co south coast plaza, san Cliego fwy at bristol , co.ta mesa, 546-932 r shop mon"day thru saturdey 10 em to 9:30 pm. sunday noon 'Iii "5 pm \ DAILY PILOT :Jjl the all-girl dresses, halter dresses, short and long for girls who love feminine things Young, fun , soft and comfortable. That's the halter dresses. High on the neck, skinny across the shoulders. Showing off a pretly back. Beautiful in soft-spun knits. Colored in shades of navy, chocolate, rose, It. blue, and beige. Now at May C.o. a. long acrylic knit, sizes 5-M-l 28.00 b. short acrylic knit, sizes S-M·l 19.00 . campuuhop 4J ' ' MA.VCO I l ( .... -.~-·--~ • • 3 4 DAILY PILOT SC Wtdnesday Septtmbt r t 1"70 LEGAL NOTICE LEGA~ NOTICE .,, n fl3'!0f C:lltTll'ICATI 01' CORflORlliTION ,_Olt ClRT P-ICATt: Of IUSINISI TltAMl,.C'TION 0 11' IUS1Nl1$ UHDllt l'ICTIT OUI N.t.Mr l'ICTITIOUS NAME TM unders tntcl OOt!ll ten \.' llfl 1 <Ol'I THE UNDERSIGNED CORPOR.AT ON 011<; nt •DUI nfll • ~ll Wt>I • 11 $ .. 4-r.t'"r Uri Iv '"'' • cOl'ldU l\il • CoU• Ma• C• torn. ufld• n. I ( DU• M.,.... Iota 1111 ti 140 Ovt Road Stll t I m "mt ol M.1.C .. RT COMl'ANY 1..a AN C1llO n1 ul'lllt'r tti• It ou• I m h• ''o Im •(Om~ c 111 fc n1mt Of C01<$1L NE PROV I ON (0 IOw llO Pt lOfl WllOMI ntON n U I l llCI t lld llltl M 11 I m 1 Ul<T1b0 "' OI II~ II ICf-o ti Oen t I '' Ill IOw1 fol owl"' co lloCN"• ;on wtiflt p nc P& U...n • Mlcna1 MCI( ,..,., p K« OI bl.ls M\l , ., 111 OWi ..... do Cl Vt Munl "" on (ot~ 1.,. P OVIOll (O OI Ct o nt Ct Oflll 14 Dvtr A:o-ct S1n 1 Ana Ct fo n • 01 fd •utu'1 1~ '~ WTNESS •111111:1 11snnoo1vo Juv Otnn•M Mtl(nn 1iro. s t e Of Ct 0tn • Ge•ll n~ P o~ l"°'11 Co O 1n11t1 Co11n v 0 ,. otn• OnA~VI 2.5 tG.M/C! ..... 1Not•Y 8 F •nt 1 J f~I'(! Pvtl! c n 11>11 lo aio d $1Mle. IM! ton• 1 fl •1 ll•n •DHll'N 0..."11 Mkll•~ McK n I V k.-n l!Y J111n I S E•• o. o mt 11 l)f ltlf! penon wllo11 nemt 11 S•t t • • JUOK tied 0 1111" "' " r" nl ument I M St ... Tf 01' CAL !'ORN... 1c~nowlc011td ho ·~ec11 ed"'TllC' UmtP COUNTY OF LOS .6.NGE\.£1.. If (OFFIC .6.1. ~EAL) On Ill 1 1'!1d di• ct Ju v AD ltlll J91fPll E Otv 1 boloit m~ I No & v Pub < In 11)1) O Not y PUbl t Ct foln I .J.•ld" Coun • 11111 s • t ,., Mllll • n IOt Pl 01 et 1n 100•1 •II F 1nt J J £~• o 1nll Jutn • S O ontt Covn y E•t c l(Nlwn lo mt o be tit! P tl cit"' MY Comm 11 on E•I> tl 1nd SI'(: ti• f'll~t ~•• o "'" Junt 2 •• (OfOO • '°" II~ • KU e<I lht ... In n Puo '""' 0 1ntt Co.• o. Iv ,. lo! n1 um•n on flfll• OI "" CO PO • "" AutiJ ,, t.r.d St P tmbl 2 t 6 t~t, n ntmf'll Ind It~"""" tllttd !e> mt tXI .,_. '~ 1111 1uth ("fl>O o on ~•tu tll lie um .. 1---------------------l •n M MtMU fl Nol"' P11b c MY Ce>mm •I Ofl EJ:e> ti Mlf ' 9/1 TMOMAi •EYJIOLD5 JlOMY • LI"" 40ll w ,~ t •ovl••••• LOI ARil ft Cl I 'Ol»J ,-,. UY Put) ,11.ci o ant1e Coa\ ~"" emoe • ~ ?l 30 '1'11 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE .... Cl!ltT F CATE OF tUS NESS FICTIT OUS NAME Tht 1111<11 1l11ne<I dOff Ctr ,, 'Ill" s t~ dlX 1\11 I bus n1n I U. """ NtwP<> 8N(h Cl lorn. ulldt hi e IOUS I m f\lme ol THE CH LORENS SHOP and II.I I.Id I m 11 comPOlCO of he o ow n11 lie wn whll>I nl,.,. n II •Moll p l(t cl e\!dln(t 1 11 fe> ow• ---------~~--,,~--! 00 Y 8 Mu ho tn~ JllO R Ylf Aft HOT CE OF PUii.iC MEAIUHG N•wPort Be•ch Co f NOT CE S HEREBY G VEN 1111 01 e<l AU'llllSI 17 1970 pull c f\t.t ""w bf hell II• l>e Cty Oe> • B Muho ind cwnt o 11~ c y cl CC' o Melt of\ S I e o Ca le> n • 0 ln9• COii" v SIP Hnbe 1 ltXI •I ht """ "' 7 30 On """ I 1910 o.tlo • me • No ' v ""' o 11 $OOll ~,.... e a1,. ac1cabJe P110 t "olld IOI' ukl S ot lie $0"1 • In tho Counc Chambe Of he C fV HI IPPff ed Co V II Mu he> • ...., kr.GW'I 0 11 f l D VP CO!• Mesi Co lorn a on me e> be ht ~ tOil wl\Mf namt • 1n1 le> ow flD pe "" for chant t n ione s11blc IOed O Ill" w fl n 111 rumtn •nd Rf'IOM Pe on R s-69 be "II he atknolwt'dOe<l iM a•ecu fO lie samt M I on Cl! PfOPf n•e • m f n l OFF C Al SEAL CMPO 1 e>n 771 w sn ' llov ••• d Reb11 H Cane llevev H sC11 lona cr cern uoon Noa vPubc Ca on 1 lo •PlOnf p oe>erlf I om R an<l •nll It P nc pa Ott c1 n 0 R• CP Ind "'" R llt..C ~o ... 0 .,.,. Coun "" POr on 0 Loi I II ock 0 lie v T ICY MY (.O)l'l'lm nlOn E•D a a:)O P111 a 11{1 •~nue as ""own on • Seo U 91J p an CW\ I t In tllo 01 C• cil In• C. ty Pub sfltd 0 1nQt CO•• 0• f P '° c ~ k •utu t 26 ono Seotmbl' ' o NOTICE S FVRTHER G VfN hit I 91b ;.! 19 II•~ me 11fld cac• 1bclvf ""'"tonl'd 1nr'.1''--------------''---f and a I uerwn1 " t es ed m11v u•P•• "'"" bl' rwa d bv ~ C tv Cwnt I al flt LEGAL NOTICE c tv o Cos 11 Me11 on u d Rt10nt'l-------~~~------I Pell on 111 5 69 PllUJ £111!fl ,. Ph nnev CERTIF ICATE OF •us NESS creek FCTIT OUS NAME Pub sr.ell O •l'lllt Cc.et 0• P 0 Tnt llr.dt., 1111e<1 clo ctr v th•• a ~ ;':':":':m:~:::_:':_':":'c_ ______ •:'-'-~"con11uc t111 a bu1 ne1i • S21 N,,...PO LEGAL NOTICE 11 ~cl Co• a Mn• Ca orn a undo he f c I 0\15 I m n•me 0 MY WAY •nd '"" 11 d I m 1 cempastd O M lo ow no ---------------· lcio son• whose names " tu '"" P~<t IAR 11 I of f'l <len<e 1 e a1 o ,,..., tUPEllOR COURT OF THE Jatk Tau ane S21 New..o 8 vd STATE OF CAI. l'OllN • FOR Ccs. MtSI Ml •• e T1u~ne »T THE COUNTY OF ORANGf N~POrl B Yd Cos 1 Meli Ho A-USS1 Ca ""' Autu• ' •XI f'(OTICE OF Hl!Alt lHG ON ~ET TON Jl(t Ttu 1,., l'Olt PaOIATE OF Will AND FOii M• Ill e Tall i n• 1.ETTEltS TESTAMENTARY S, e ., Ci to n 1 0 t "9t Coun y f s .t e o LULU R •C HEl O"A~us I t10 befo<'•mto af<lOIY 11-tOEMAl(fli! 0e ta•f'l1 P11b ( n anll lor uld S I• Pt $Olll Y NOT Cf S kEREBY G VEN !fl4 ·-· ..:i Jack Ti ii uw 1nd Ma 111 • 1"1.6.TT E HOGVE nas I ell flt tn a T1111nt known 10 me e> ~ he~ JOllS ~ OI' lo Prob•~ C W Intl c wriow 111me:s 1t 1111>1< -fl:i MW hn •uarn::t of Lt e. TIS I"'"" •CV fl> "' ume.> Ind aclll!QWltdllfd •Mv t)'. .,.. oone e f' e...c:e o Wh Cf• • m1dt to KU t'd 1111 1.1,,.,. 111'1"' pa'1 cu • 1 • ...., fltl hf Im• tnd OFF c AL SEALI p ICf' cf fltl o tllt WIM h10 bftn se JOSfPH E DAV~ le SN ..... ""-' ?S ltlO I • )II • m n NO ..... !'11!1 le Cl ll:N'n . ~~ (O\I '""' o 0""'1 m•n NO l al p nc:.,. Off ct n i.od cou 1 1('0 C ¥C Cen t °'"' O l~Counv W•1 n .,,. C v o .!i.t~ ~ An. Ct o-n 1 M Ce>mm Hlolt E•• tt Ct IC .!iffl etn!W 4 110 unt l 114 W E 1T JOHH PUC> 1ne<1 0 ann Cc•• Ot y P cf 'ool(S ii""~J,,;:~~MER COLIEMAN •w"'I ~ 16 Incl l'ifD ernoer l • M HYARO tfld MOWARD f10 11.-Z..IO "' TO*" & C..,MtY ll1td 0 ........ CIMforlllt f'lUf ,. .. M7JI Jronci ""' or •• tlont P'1CI 1ne11 0 1n11-. Cc.e DI Y 11 ~ ~"""" f 6 ~l lO lfO 61910 LEGAL NOTICE IA• ~1 l NOTICE OF TRUSTEES IALlr ts Ht 34~1' On Cc ell• 2 910 1 0G /A..M COVEii EOU T!IES INC-. f co PO I Cl" •• OU y ICl/)C .. ed l "''"" unde Ind 1111 ~11•n ci Off<! ol Tru' 111 eo Jllfl• • 968 ~•o<v Kl bv ROY C GVSTAF~CH 4 GENEVERA C GVSTAFSON h1nb•1'Pll 111a w le u•d reco !lei:! Ju"" 20. ?'9 •• Ins flle ll '' n book 1611 "°'' ao cl Oii ( 1 Roen "' n "" elf C• ol me County 111"(:1) oto nl O 1nte Covn • Cl lo n I W LL Sfll AT PV8LIC. AUCT o"' -ro H GHEST 8 ODER 1'01 CASH PfY&O e a I me of .... n ...... u "'Qf'lfY ct II~ VII t'd Slol• I h• Solllh "'" ""ance o he Coun Y c,,.. lhOU'" '00 8 ocl<, W~ Sin • Ano l!i vO Sino An• Calfonf a eh l e """ nle tt conveve<I 11> •I'd ..ow h~dtv "'" .a dO~o Tu~ n"" P<"QDI tv • u1 ed n SI d Counlv ol\d $11 e Otst te<l 11 A h& ce ..... POllllYI Ule<I n l!>f t y C NfWPO 8f~Cll (OUn V Of o 1nq• 1 11' 01 Ci lo n 1 ll~•c bed •• A~•n WI dO lit H911t v ,_p !lent Pub ·-NtWPO Ht b<'l Ntw\ p "" C!llntl "rd "" h DI y P 0 NtwPO 1'!~1cl> C• I 3•P ~mbtf f 4 7l. tl'll LEGAL NOT ICE \ LEGAL NOTICE CEltTll' CATE OF I US NIESS FIC'T TIOUS MAMIE Ti.. undt ~ gned ~ tr Iv •"• I co~c~t ng a b111,.._1 • n e eo1onu 11 l'oun 1 n V• er Ct IC> n • une't Ill• I l ovl I m MIM of LENORE LTD llA:l CENTER ant:I In• U II firm t tC>mP0$•11 e> flt lo low M "" lCl'I whO~f n1mt n u and pate of rM (ltnte I• •• . ~· Leno • H 8"U 1111 •ll.6 B ur tt Or • Hun ~~ "" BeRdl Ca 0. td i•P emO. • 1910 L1....,e H Bon1111 SlAT'E OF C-Al FOltfll A Olt""'GE COV"IT'Y o,., ~f"'">n.o-,_ t~ bf.ft: ~ "'~ a l\l(Jlt,... "'llt>lt: !• 1"6 fol" W d $It ,......,,.. ...,_""° ..._,.. H ae .. 119 V10W!1 , "'' lt> l)t -.... 11n wlv.!M ,..._ J.J~ill!I! Oto ..... "'h" imt..........,, nc _,,,,,...,.f'Cllllld s II t eo.«v~ ..., ... -Olf;(l1 Se• 1 E-""' t o.~ N::oil•CV P o/IL (1 WI'! I P n.,tlf>tl Of! t'I' n O lt>OC t.eun ~ Mv Ce>m"' IJOOfl toe> "'' Junt lJ If) Pub sh..i 0 &"'le Cc.es Oa Y P II SIP em~ 9 6 13 JO ,ro ____ "-'-'-', I LEGAL NOTICE IAR 1)10 NOTICIE TO CRECITOlllS SUPEll:IOilt CO URT OF THI! ST.I.TE OF CAL IFORHl.6. FOlt THIE COUNT'!' OF OIAHGE NO A"'57 E It cl EDGAR 11 W TMEll. 11\a £DGA~ llllllOL£Y W "fME R <>kl E II w TMEll •k• E w TMER Cece111'd NOT CE $ HERE8Y GIVEN lo he c IOd 0 , o ~ 1boYe nomed deceden ma 1 Pf \Cnt htv flt c ~ ms aQI ns he 1• d oecP<lenl a e t<IU IOd o I • hem .., h 11~ neceu~ v V011che • " 11~ e I ce ct !ht c • k ol ht aboV• en ed <ov o hem w I> lie flftes•&rv 5PP embt l 19111 Ha el eF Wtme E•OCU ... ol hew (If hf tbOYr nl"""' doc!'dtn OUltYEA CAlt,ENT Elt & IARNIES I Y ROllERT S IAllNfS OJS MICA hu II d POl'lo•IM Newpc l'lttCll Cl I '1Ul T1 SSI '900 A 1 nev• lor E•tc~ • Pub ~II 0 1nqe Coo OJ ~ Sep ,mbe • I 1J :io 910 LEGAL NOTICE • • • Jobless OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock Li st NEW YOJIK IAPl·Wodnnc:l•v'1-"'' l••••"'•"'"'===••:or::c::::"''""'"'::>"'"''""'."'"''"''"il HtW Yor~ 5 oc:I!, E ~c"-"" p , .. Toll Hit s Inflation 1ncre11ses \\alter Hrlltr the chi et tconom1c 11dv1ser bolh to the late President Ktnnedy and then to President Johnson "arns that If the economy s NASO Llstlngt for W~nesd•y, Septemb•r 9, 1970 llN -•llYO Ill ........ _,., ........ .._. -~' t '" '"'m "CAJ D. Prkff • Mt l11t..,. "''" ., .,..,..,., '"',...... ., wmml..i. Glass Firm Ncnv In Mesa MUTUAL Ft= l'O I .Iv ~und nc Cm, fmo•c 1~11 1 d " FUNDS • " " '" " " , " ,. , ' "' ' • ) , ,. , •• ,, . • " 0 ~ ' ., , "' ' • " ' ,,. "' " ,.• ., ' ••• ' ir • .. " "" " .. ' '" " ,.. ' ., " '" ., •• " •• " • • • ,, ) • "' • "' • • ., " • • .. • ,. " ' .. .. " '"' " • • ' • .. • " . ,, . • .. .. . " ... .. • ... ~ •• " ' " " ' . " ' . n • " "' • • '" • • ' " . " " " • )J[I J7 " N .. " ,,. l• n ' ' " 5 p ~ Al 67 ' • .. "' , ' . • ' c " " '" ' . n ' " .. • ' " .. ' n , " " • • • .. ' " . " ''" ~ " " . •• ., '" ... " " " ' • • ·ll "' '" ~. '" .. ll" •• • " ,,. •• .. , l! .. ~ '" • • .. ' " " • • • " " • , ' " • ' ' . • u • f.1 ' • • 11' , ' "' ., " . "" j,\~ ' " " , ... ' ,. " , . •• " ,., ,,,, • ,. " ,. '" " . "' .. "' "" .. • " " . • •• ' '" ' '" ' " "" ' , .. m " ' "' ' ' ' ' ' ... ~ .. >oo " " ,. • • ·~ ' "' • ' " " ~ " , , .. ' ,,, w • •• '" ' •M " ~ .. " " ,, " .. " ~ "' " " " ' '" • " • J<421 • " ' " • " ' '" •• " • " " '" .. " "' " ' u " " " ,, ,., ' " ,. ' ,,. " ' ' .... • " "' , • " "' ,~ " " • "' "" lri' , • • '"' ' .. " "' ' '" , .. •• " .. " ' ,, . , .,. 271~ " " . ' " + Market. Symbols T'l'lf fl)! IHI llf II f t:w fll tymbol• ... n '-.. ' od( mtrtrt ~"· St fl f tum ttt llnoH c t L t-AlllO vi t or nlr11 b-11.mtVll ,.,, .iu1 11ock d v ~ o-Lklu"MI"' 'r" CltM d-l>tt lr.d 0' •t d n 1t" 'i't 1to0t ,rv e.rwi o-Pa d • • • t tta t- F'&Y•~lt n •wt du• nt 1'70. ft! mt 1'111 t•'" vt ~• on ~'It v dtll'f o• '~"ltlJlt !)ii I en ea!,L t-Dtcll ..i el' ••Id .. ''' 11115 Y!• 11-0llCl•.-.rt fJf t i d on•r I Oltll cl vldt!nd GI' ..,1 I 1111 t-Dec trM • I Wtdnesday Stpltmbtr q 1970 SC DAIL.V PIL.DT ~ ... .... Wednesday's Closing Prices-Complete Ne\¥ York Stocli Exchange List Saltf H~f-------------lltd1 ) Mltfl L9w C•N Cltl '" ' ; ; ~8 )~ '4 I ~~ o ' " ~; '!... . '" &I & • ' '' ,! 111, I l'i! IU '~ ~ . JI 31 ' " " . l 6lt 7l 1l ~ .. ' 110 ttl. 13~ fl ... • n!h ,,. IJ • • • u 2•~ It S-. llO , ~ 6 2ll1o n '• 196 i1 26 . ~ ~ . IOI 1l 22 \1 r.1 n., n lll'J2l o 12 o I C.0 • 61 & JI I I ll ••• • )J Sii S.lt ) :i. • • •• 9 ) "' S'3 6!1 • 2) ... "!>II .\;1 )j • 2 )l o > o • • • ' .. . .. 6• i I ,o 1l 21•• -M-" ' " . " . ~I J h " ' ... Si II o lU ll ' . ' " ' ' " ' ' " ' ' . " ' .. .. ' • • • " • " " • ' ' "' " • " • " " • " '" " " .. Stock Leaders MOST SHAR&'I • " " "' ,., ... ·~ • • • ' " • " " ' ' .. " • ' " . " SM 1 l4 ,, 111i;, 1•0 69 .. "" 316 1 \I'll J ~\., I 0 St., v,; {1~ " ! . ' " . Sl •1 " ' . ,•, ,\ . " " Sii ··~ ' .. .. . ,, 176 ,, ., 1l 16\ '' nn I I 11 11 llo 11 11 • ll I , Z'/D I .I ' ,. •I I~ " ' ... ' m 01i. ?1 27 6t u ' . ' :ie, Jl. t IP'• ~· ' ' 10 l 1•~ :, 1. ' . " " 1 10 1n ~ ·~ . Jl'OO SI + 01 ,,,,. ' ,, I.I 1 "" eM '1 ., " . ' . ·-~ . l:ro "' .. . .. " ' " • "' " n ?1'l •• ., J~ ~ '"' SI ~ I 0 57 '" . 3'0 JI ' IM S• ., 1• l ... "' , ... ,. ,, ' ' "~ ' " 51) ~~ SSS '/! i 1'7 1l • I ' ' 1 ,., ' " •SS I~ ' ' , .. ' ' ' 1~40 ~· CJ l9 ~ ' ' ' ' ' ,, ,. '' . " '" .. " •• ' ' " " "" " • ' • ' "' ' " ' " l • .. • " " .. ... ' ,. ' "' " " ' " .. ' ! ' • m " ' " . ' • • '" " • '" " " .. .. • ' " • ". '" " '" • • ' " l " ' "' •• . ~\. " " " I" 1 .. " ' ' . " " ' '• ' ,ti· t~ "" j,• '" " 'l" 1fv, • '" "' "' '" " . Uh ' "' " ' n , '" " , ... ' '" " • . ' ~ " '" • .. ' ' ,. no .. ,,, 'lS•o ... •• ' •• " " " ' " • ~·· • '" " • " '" ' , '"' " ,,, "' r.-.. '" ,, 1'1.v. l 1'inne1·s nn•l Losers "' UI N~I . . ' I ' . • • r.~ 1 \.: ' " Uo Uo uo uo " " 'J, uo • l' " • Uo f , UD . ' • .. '! • ,t i • " " uo • uo • uo I.: ~: 1 I~ ~= t uo • ~; "' uo '"'' ._ Uo Uo "' .. . " DOWNl ~··· 11•1 i". .. '" '" 1\~ • ,1 ' •• \I, ... I' ,\ .. • .... ' • ()I -' 8 -I• I ., =··· 8~1 -1 ; 2il, -11"1 ~i -,' 8i! -811 :: \,' oi -··: w: . ~: • '. 811 -"' 01 Marl{et Holds Still As Rally Fizzles NEW YORK (U PI) -The stock market closed 1rregulnrly lower \\ ednesday after a brief rally arou nd 2 pm faded Tu rn over \I a:s henvy Shortly before the h 1al bell the Dow Jone s In dustr1al Average of 30 se lected blue chips JAas of1 6 75 at 766 43 But of the 1 ~97 1 ~sues on !he tape adva nces nipped declines 674 to 643 TurnO\ er of around I::i•A n11lhon sha 1 cs con1 pared with 17 110 000 sha1es traded 011 Tuesday At the close trading "as oft U S Steel closed at 31 7/8 off J/4 DuPont 123 3/4 off 2 518 IBM 273 off 2 Southern Pac1f1c 30 off 1/2 and C.eneral f\1o- tors 7J. 1/4 off 114 f• ad "' The late demand fol lo\\ ed a repo1 t that !louse l:1c~1~,J 0 Banking Committee C'ha1 n11an \\/right 1>atman t:.J:, 'E'1 8~ urged Chase ~l anhatt an Bank to reduce it s prime ~:::nt00f'P40 lending rate fr o111 eight percen t ~~~:on ~p The market acts as though 1t wants to go up ~~e<1~· ~ and I guess you can hang some of th e recovery on ~::'vC-or~ 1 Patman s remark one analyst said l~D ~'", 11 Earlier the market attracted profit taking rol I:~~ ~1~'° lo\v1ng three weeks of sharply advancing prices l:!~!.~ : Among the day s most active issues \Vere Occ 1 ~::8L.r1: dental Petroleum Un1vers1ty Con1put1ng Telex l::~f a~~~ Corp Natomas and Computer Sc iences T•• u 1111 P ed b --· rices \Vere mix 1n risk trading on the Arn rewtrn Pnot S kE h T•slr,.pt«I ertcan toe xc ange rn1o1tp '° l """'""'""'r."'"'"'"'"'"'"""'"'"'"""~"':-".-""'~"'""'"',.."'l•IT~aer 11M ' • "' .. 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'l ~ 1111 II .. + ~~t :.: :~ ! . t' 'J1l11'·'-· 10 1 .... ,1~.1 ' l lo i'• 111 -XI I 11 'I I~~, ta t • ' o It.... 11 'o ~ f!'J""S 110 Jl> '>' • 311, I 2 J ~ ] J.;:; ,: J.S o 2$10 l!•-• I/ ,.., '"' •·-' ' ' 11r:JJ ~ .,., .. ,,_ J • • \ •• -:r ,::~1:+ • l f ) 'l ,, ':~;1: • ] , • l '''''l' ~ l JI~ ~ t ~ ,~"! ,~·1 . 'f ~. ,1"' l:l: -: I l l )' o ~••l•I •-· ,g ~ ~ ' " ' • ilr I .. " ' ,/ '" ' • • ,. '" • • " .. ! " '" ' ' • • ... .. " ... " • ' '" .. . 1~ .. .. . -l .. ' -I -J.lt , ... -. 11. -• IJ 1.._I 14 . , . ! " 'l Briefs I ' CHICAGO iUPT) ~1cDooHld s Corp has agrted to buy 10 of Its franeh1sed hpmburger rcslaurants 1 n lh1wa1J from a licensee for stock A Haw111lan subsidiary 11111 he rorn1cd to opcrut,. the group I I I • • - ---------------- :t41 DAILY PILOT . . . ~ '• . . . . • Wtdn•sd.Q, September 11, 1970 . . . Casual Schooltime Partners •.• Boys' Jeans or Sport Shirts SAVE 24o/c! 2 $6 YOUR t:HOICE for S3.99 "Circle S" .leans of cotron-DuPont 420 nylon. Vul- canized double knees. Regular, slim. 6to12. Boys' :Stri1>ell J<'lart~ Jeans, fashion-back Ivy sryle jn Perma- Presr® polyester-cotr<>n. Regular.slim . 6 to 12. S3.9'J Boys' <.:o ntrasl Sti1cl1 ~l1irl:s jn bright colors. Tapered and tails, Jong point collar. SiJ:es 6 to 12. Sl1 Sruden1s' Ty,•ill 1:1arc jeans, 25J10 32 wais c~h 4.97 Were 11.29-12.4.9 Boys'-Students' Knit·Shirts Easy<are shore sletvc shirts. Mock turtleneck. Colors. 6 to 20. 4ro'6 Were •.5 Students' Satin Stripe Shirts • l_.ong i;lccvcs, rloul>le l.)U llo11cd cuffs • f_,ong JlOint collar, ~lllCf,Cd and tails, l'erma-l'rest~. Sizes 13·15. cf~. .. /'-~of~~ !.J~; 'J /. W <;re 3 for '2.19 Undenrear Reduced Price • BQ ·~~ and l'!htdentli' t.'Olton knit T· io hi rlJI or brief' • !'Sitr." 6 to 20 .•. 3 uf ~anu~ garment in 1H1.ckage ". . ~ ~ . . .. Big Girls' Orlon® Knit Dresses· • Orlon" acrylie bonded to acetate • Machine washable ••• for~asy care • Cla;-s ic, tail01·ed ••• all girl looks. Fall colors. Sizes 7 lo 14 LiuJe Girls' Jumper Sets •Colorful wqven acrylic plaids bonded to nylon ••• high styled jumper •With coordinating color blouse • Sizes 3to6X Litt.le Girls' Dresses • Perm a-Prest® dresses in n1a11y ~utc, fa shionable styles •Solids, plaids, checks. 3 to 6X .~ '4·.99 Girls' Swe ater Vest SAJIE $11 397 • }'ashionahle hand crochet acrylic l'IWeater ve,;l • l'erff)(l for 11luck11 11nd 11kirt~ • ~·l achine \'1'&$h, White. S-1\J.L ------ ---- SOUTH COAST PLAZA SPECIAL SECTION I • Perma·Preot® matched gingham plaid 1hort sleeve shirts. Sizes 3 to 6X Regular $1.99 SAJIE16%! • Perma-Prest• mock turtleneck knit IOI"· Solid colors. Sizes S-M-L •• Little Boys' Perma-Prest Jeans • Rugged denim blend of collon, Du. Pont '420' nylon Regular $3.St SAJIE16%! •Vulcanized double knees for longer wear. Elasti c side inserts for sure f il •Sizes 2 to 6X~ regu lar, slim U•e Sears Revoh-in!' Charge Boys' Sailor Knot Hosiery SAVE 27%! Regular 69c 2 pn.'$} • Our longe~t wearing• eli-t teh 11oc;ks for dress or ca:'itial •In ns~orted !oli d rolor!I. ~izes ~1 (7 to 8Y2) or L (9 lo 11) nylon Sears IUf NA PAIK TA a • ..._, 521-4.$34) tl MOtflt .. ~t1 I lONO llACN HI S-012t '°1M>NA NA '·5161 SANJA. MONICA 11: 4°6711 SOUTH COAIT ..UlA .S40..iJlJ TOllANCf S42·1S11 CANOGA PAIK 340-fN&I GUNDAl.l CM S·1004, Ct 4o4t11 COMPTON NI t..25110 NI 1·S141 HOLLYWOOD MO ,•·SM1 &IAa~JIOEllU'CK "NO<;O. COVIN• ftt-0.11 INGltWOOD OI ... 2S21 Shop Ni8ht1 Monday through Salurdoy 9:~0 A.M. to 9:30 P.M., Sunday 12 Noon to S P.M. OlYM,.C & soro AM 1-$211 PICO wt .... tu O•ANOI tlT-2100 SANTA ANA kl 74371 ,ASADINA tll-3211, lJ.1-4211 SANTA R 1Nl,.01 t44•101 I 1'Scatisfactlon Gut1ranteed or four Monar llldt" VAUIY l"O 3 -1461 , 914·1120 VllMONT PL t-1tl1 • f t ., Tampa Mom Abandon s Tl11·ee Sons ' A Tampa, Fla., housewire brought her • , ... ree young so1lS ·to San Clemente for the Labor Day weekend, gave them a new bicycle than abandoned them to live off the land for three days, police charged today. "She took us to a house, gave u" a brand new bicycle and th e n disappeared," one of the three sons of Mrs. Rose Marie Campbell told police after the waifs were found by a highway patrolman. The boys -Bruce, iO; George, 12. and Daniel, 13 -had been sleeping out in the open for three days Mar the San DiegD Freeway and e.xisti.ni: on b re a d , mayonnaise and peanul butter, they told investigators, The three were found. Saturday by a passing patrolman near a hamburger ;stand on South El Camino Real. After being brought tor local police headquarters, the boys said their mother had driven them out from Tampa. Her first stop in Orange County was in a northern town In the county. The family left the city -the boys said they didn't know the name -and arrived in San Clemente last Wednesday. The mother then took them to a house V+'here the boys \Vere given the. new cycle. She then left them outdoors, the boys said. , The three were on their own until 8:30 p.m. Saturday night when the patrolmen found them wandering near 2345 S. El Gamino Real. ' • • Lazy Dana Day Fishern1an \vatche s catamaran scoot ac ross \\'aters of Dana llarbor as he tends his lines on a warm su1nmer afternoon. \Vith Labor Day 1970 a memory, school starting next Monday and political campaign· ;ng under way, is definitely on the wane. Lazy days soon will give \ray to the faster pace of autumn along the Orange Coast. Sad, but tn1e. -- I DAil y PILOT A s Cook Gets Hearth urn Cle1nente Chef Fills Presidential Dinner Order . . . By PAl\1ELA HAI.LAN Of Ille ,.11, l'llel Sl•tl Sa;1 Clemente cher Johnny i1oore sent out an urgent appeal for a bean crusher and a sl•ck o( sauces-all to be sent post haste to the back door of the We slern White House. And a few hours later. Johnny f\1 oore's enchiladas became savored delicacies aboard Air force One as it roared castwa;...i. F'or the Capistrano Beach resident, the lnvltatio'tl to serve as chef for a day for the President and his party came as a shock. The restaurant owner admitted today he· almost fainted al the order of 30 1'1exica n dintlfrs to ii:o after realizing thAt President Nixon would be amGng the diners. The job can1e about, he saki. when Secret Service agents -r e g u I a r customers ai Morre's Don Ju an Restaurant-arrived Sunday . and made the offer for 'the banquet al 20,000 feel. '"One o( the heads or the Secret Service came in and asked me how· I'd like to talk to lhe President's military liason man and figure-out a menu for the President and 30 guests to eat aboard Air Force One" said fl.1oore . '·By then I "'as almost fainting," he said. l<1ughing. On Sunday, at about 9 a.n1., a cAr and driver picked up Johnny, his wife, Sa rah, her sister Gina Olivares, and Jimm y Rive ra . They ·were escorted to the mess hall al the ,Coast Guard Loran Station near tt:e President's home. "We had told then1 eve rything we'd need." said l\1oore. But he ~ori discovered he"d have to make a few trips back to his O\vn kitchen . "They didn't ha ve a bean crusher," said the cook. ""There wasn"t any tomato sauce and they had bought the wrong brand or rice," ~e added. \Vorklng under the halldicaps of bei In a strange kitchen and haviqc lots ( observers, who frequently\"sampled " tHe various s.immering goodies, the group managed to have everything ready by 3:30 p.m. "The 1nenu included ch I ck en enchiladas, chile rellenos, chile verde, bea\1s. rice, guacamole dip a n d homemade icrtlllas," said Moore ''We made ii the regular way, we di<tn •t try lo make it bland." The food was 1hen put in si}eclal conlainers for the flight and transported to ttie pl11ne, with P.1oore giving instructions an how and when the various dishes should be served. During a short tour of the Western White House grounds, l\loore and his "'ire saw several f~mlliar faces. "There was a group from the \\'hlte House staff in for dinner Saturday night nnd l remembe r one general saying "I sure would like to have some of lhi~ Mexican food aboard my p.l a n e tomorrO\.\'," Moore related. Johnny and Sarah have Ioli'! of memories or their trek to the \Yeslern Rhode Island Police Station }'ireho111.hed NARRAGANSETT'. R.I. (AP) -Two fire bombs were thrown al the police station early today. knocking out communications for a short period and dam'aging a motorcyr.le and a clothes' locker. Police said a youlh seen running from the scene was arrested after two oUicers fired shots at him . White House, including some Inside knowledge about the President's utlnt hubils. I "We were very surprised to hear that he doesn't like to eat soup or salad with. his meals and only does at officlat meals,'' said Moore. The Moores haven·t heard If their dh1ner was a success. But the President's m!Uta·ry lla!On, who arranged the menu, promised to call them from Washington and tell them . The obvious pressure on the chief t xecutive has caused ooe single worry in f\1oore "s mind today. "I hope he didn 't get heartburn/' ?Yloore quipped. Marine General Set for Speech_ General Leona rd F. Ch a pm 1 n , commandant of the U.S. fl.larine Corps, v.ill address the \Yorld Affairs Council of Orange County tonight at 7:30 at the Air.porter Inn . "rfational Defense in the 70s and the Marine Corps" \Viii be the subject of his talk. He will also discuss forthcoming U.S. defense programs in line with the '·Nixon Doctrine" that calls on other free nations to bear a greater responsibilltY. for their own defense. General Chapman, twice a winner of the distinguished service medal, and the legion of merit, has also ean1ed the bronze star. Prior to appointment to his current J>OSI, he senied as ~i.&tant commandant '\nd as chief or ataff, headquarters Marine Corps. .. Clemente Cou11cil to Heru· Mobile Home Pla1is Agai11 Lincoln Savings and Loan-armed v.ilh a new plan showing sweeping change.s- will try for the seco nd time to win city approval Thursday for a mobile home park near Sa n Clemente's Shorecliffs Country Club. The loan (irm. which lost its first bid lo build the park between the 13th and 14th ·fa irways of the links, originally had ...asked for a public hearing at the last ~eeting or lhe city planning commission, :then later asked for a postponement. The ~<>.11ring will go on as scheduled Thursday 11\ 7'30 p.m. ; Planning commilslaners-holding tl'leir ,!lheelµig a day later Ula.ii usual because or ~e lfoUday weekend-will receive plans ~llowing wider, deeper coach spaces, new '.layouts of cul de sac streets and a :C:enerally upgraded plan. L Lincoln originally had won approval or ~;the pe rm i t ror the first plans, ~commissioners okayed the permit but "'added a long list or tight conditions. t But those hearings were punc tuated by ~· loud uproar by Harbor Estates and :shoreelif(s residents . who later took their ~test to the City Council. .. Councilmen voted unanimously to deny :!the 3.ll"tady approved permit alter a long ;public hearing. • Lincoln aides then promised to return '.:with amended plans. t Besides the mobile home i s s u e . 'Thursday night, the commission will "consider another use permit which ·Caused some furor "'hen granted three months ago. The Seabreeze 1.1olorcycte Park, "'hich has operated all summer on land east of the San Diego Freeway, will return for rene"·al of its short-term permit. Dozens of foes fought the initial permit. bul hundreds of motorcycle enthusiasts won out. Now Seabreeze will return before the commission for a hearing on renewa l of the permit for six months . City Plan ner Gene Schulte said il the commission gives its second approval Thursday night he \Vill suggest that the City Council review the action and possibly hold its own hearings. The commissio n granled approval the rirst lime around. City councilmen chose to tiold hearings of their own on the plan after pelitions bearing hundreds of names came in on both sides o( the issue. Since lhe park opened, fe1,1• official objections by the original foes of lhc plan have been recorded. City Manager Ken Carr has said he hasn 't received one protest. Police ba\'e heard no noise complaints. But at a recent city councll meeting, Cott.1cilman Thomas O'Keefe indicated he might relate some squawks soon. In olher action Thursday, commission- ers will: -Conducl a public hearing on an appl ication by El Camino Broadcasting to erect a to"•er and transmitter bu ilding a11 land on the Visbeek property. The transmitter would serve San Clemente's first and only radio sl<JtiOn. A recommendation will also come fron1 Police Chief Clifford f\furray (serving as city commtmications engineer) on the compatibility of the proposed station's frequen cy with those which already exist "·ilhin the city. -Consider the preliminary dra\l·in!!:S ror the ne1v San Clemente Community Clubhouse. The review will b e "homework" of sorts for commissioners. "'ho will meet in ; joint study sesc:ion f\1 ai1day nigh t "'ith councilmm. The clubhouse plan.~ will be the top item on that meeting'.$ agenda. Consider an application for va riance !and a public hearing) allowing a music studio on commercial land at 219 S. El Camino Real. Laura Shelor asks for the varia'nce lo teach organ music and sell lhe instru1nents at the business location. . ·Wilson Riles Cites Need ·For Education Priority By RICHARD P. NALL Of t!tt Qe{IY l'llet Sti ff "If you want i politician. you have a good polilican now. but you don 't have a person with a commlttment lo cl\ildren." Wilson Riles was speaking in Laguna Beach of his opponent fl.1ax ~fferty, state superintendent of public insthiclion. Riles was hosted in a get-acqbin ted session at the home of Dr. arJ fl.1rs. Joseph Tomehak. It was attended by about 150 persoru;. Accompanying Riles Saturday wJe two or h.is backers, Dorman Commons. fonner member of the State Board of Education, and television actor Leonard Nemoj. Riles, who haii been Jn educatiOn 26 )'earS, said. "Never has there been a time when we were so close to loslng the institutions or public education in th\1 country." He spoke of tea cher st rikes. di sunity in education, Jack or sup(Xlrt, lack or resources and Increasing class size3. He charged that one of Rafferty 's men employed to deal with fedt!ral aid 11ctually spent most of his time trying to !llir up local eonfmnlatiofl! over sell' edut:alion. Rlle.'!., a forn1cr deputy i'IUJ>erlntcndent of public instruction, 5aid he left ft.8Ucrty 's oil lce and &ought election because he could not stand what was going on. He also said he felt the post he seeks should be an appointive office, not an elective office. The candidate said property laxation is no longer a viable way to fund education. He said bond issues keep being voled dO\Vn because it is the only opportunity for the voter to veto higher taxes. Riles called for top priority on education in the slate and suggested thAt ~chools now are called on to do too much. Ile meJ1tioned the possibility o f contracllng out !!chool food service and driver edu cation. Riles called fo'r new money at the primary education level and development or a master plan for early education. It is cheaper lhan the social problem of dropouts, he said. The candidate said 50 percent of a child's mental potential is developed by • the time he is five and 80 percent Is developed by the time the child is eight. Riles suggested that the most effective teachers should be working at the primary level. he called for more men in primary education, "znen brave enough to teach first. so::ond lnd third grades." Jle ll)so suggested that there should be more women teaching at lhe collece level. We call ii Veqa. We alao ·clQll it '.'the li!Ue car that does everything well.'' · Because it does. lwrylhing? ~thing. V ec;ta movea well, 1tope well, ateer1 well, ride1 well, handles well, r~1ponds well, passe1 well, tra vela well, parks well, wears well, and is priced well under what you'd expect to pay for such a .talented little car. In our highway tests, Vega has been qettinq g9S mileage iJJ. the neiqhborhood of the little imports, which isn't a bad neiqhborhood. Yet unlike your average little car, ours steps right out when you step on the gas. The engine Ui a specially clcsigned overhead cam four with a lightweight aluminum alloy block. It turn• slowly and quieUy at turnpike speeds, with powv to spare. • ~ brcaes are 1tand1ird in the front. So are bucket seats, except on the truck. How we doing 110 far? ........., ...... louder..__..... The wheelbaae iJ 97 inches. Total Jenqth is just under 170 inches, or nearly four feet shorter than a full.size Chevrolet. Heiqh't of the coupe is just 50 inches, nine inches lower than the leading iniport. Width: a nice stable SV. feet. Weight: 2,190 lbs. for the sedan. Engine displacement: 140 curie inches. Fuel econom,y: about 25 mpg, with the standard engine and transmission, in our highway tests. Horsep6wer: 90. You can order 110. (80 and 93 hp, SAE Net.) ~tipg capacity: 4 adulll. It all adds up to a lot of litUe car. 1hrM can and a truck. Yogi. tumed out ID well that we couldn't turn out jbiit one. So we're· tur~ing Out four: the sporty litUe hatchback coupe shown open and closed in the foreground below; the sedan, on the right; the Kammback waqon, on the left; and the little panel truck:, in the rear. Oh, and a special GT ver1ion of the coupe and wagon which we'll show you later on. Sepiember 10th is Openi,. Der)' All 6,300 Chevrolet dealers are handling Vega, so you shouldn't have to gQ very far to aee and drive one. 'Chevy'• new little car iJ open for business. Look into it. j ' I - - IC_,.... !If fM O•llY Plltt li.ttl The referee stopped a aoccer rn:1tch between Glampton and nearby Stoke Gabriel , England, wl\en au 22 players on the field were involved in fist fights with each other. • The judges at the Brough, Eng- 'Couldn't Stop Tlaem' Red Troops Flee ' Cambodian Push PHNOM PENH (UPI) -A !00-man lorct of Communllt troops reportedly trapped by the ~ army south of Phnom Penh bas escaped ink! the moun tains and avoided pot en t i a l aMihilation, military officers said today. The North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops were surroWlded in a moW1tainous , area near Srang, 26 mUes south or the capital, and Cambodian m 11 it a r Y commanders said last Saturday it would be impossible for them to escape. The commanders said today, however, that the entire force of C.ommunists had sll pptd out of the trap by moving through mountain pa~. Leaded Gas •;we saw \them moving," Nid one commander at Srang. "We simply could not get any air strikes to stop them." The CambodJlifl command earner today reported Viet eon, and N o r t h Vietnamese troops d I s g u I s e d as Cambodian paratroopers attacked the town of Siem Reap near the ruins of Angkor Wat in nortberri Cambodia. Jn Vietnam, an American hc11copter accidentally dropped tuel' druma on a city on the northern ·coast and the ezploalon killed three clvillfll'· T 4,000.man Cainbodian Ion:< puablng toward the encircled city of Kompong Thom, 80 miles north of Phnom Penh, was reported halfway to Its objective after two daya of Comm.unlit harusment Jttackl along hl1hway 6. land pigeon show competition con- gratulated nine.year-old Stu1rt Wilkerson on the fine condition of the bird ·he had entered and award- ' Od li!m first prize. Then Stuart re- vealed that-instead of being an exhibltlon bred bird, his pigeon was a wild one he had caught the night before. "I wanted to go in for the show but I hadn't got a bird," said Stuart. "So I caught one." • • T ax Pus hed Ti>• Cambodian COllU!llnd uld tile Communists who attacked ~Siem Reap Tueaday wore camouflage uniforms and red scarves like those of Cambodian paratroops. 111irteen of the defenden, themselves airborne troops, were killed and 2ll wounded. The Viet Cone and North Vietnamese left 1.3 bodies btblnd when they withdrew. SECTION OF FUSI LAGI NOW GAUNT RUIN AFTER cc.a JET C~ASH Pelle•, Firemen ln1pool Crosh Site; Fi re Blued Aller Takooff Crash al JFK Airport AmtricaN ate eight billion Spanish. green oltve1 -S9,000 ions -last 11ear. according to 1 -(la.e ·SPani.sh GreJn Olive Com· misrion. lf everv one of thf eight billion olives had gOM into 11 Martj?d, it would have ta.lctn fat). mUUon quartl of gin and <ISO million quarts of verm~u~H' to make eight billion Martams, the com.mission said recently. By Trea..~ur)· WASHINGTON (UPI) Adminlstration apokesmen told Congress today that a tax on the lead in gasoline waa urgently needed to help speed the fight against air pollution. Plane Crashes, Burns; P assenger J et Makes Landing, Cracks Apa rt ''The need for this tax is immediate.'' Treasury Secretary David M. Kennedy told the House Way!. and Means Committee. "The presence of these compounds in the environment is dangerous both for the pre.sent as well as for the future ." Census Gripes To Get Airing In House Panel 11 Crewmen Aboard Di e • Professor Malcom Brown of Dur- ham England wanted something that 'resembled moon rock in den- sit}} and other properties ~or an experiment. The nearest thmg he could find , he said recently, wa• English cheddar cheese. And . he insisted he was .serious. • Gov. Ronald R•191 n says l}e and fellow ex-actor and now Sen. George Murphy have to stay in politics, considerin~ the nature of today's stage and film shows. Rea· gan told a meeting of industrial leaders that neither of them cou1d ugo back to show business -we're too old to take our clothes off ." • About 15 persom in Benton, Wi.J, Mve reporttd seeing a 1• foot-ta u ape·likt creature weigh- ing 300 pouW with white fur 1nd pink e11e1. Search parties of 50 per.sons combed the artB after the "Benton Monster" WCI reported .shambling around th.ti southwestern Wiacon.sin com- munity. • Railway personnel bad to )le call· ed to control crowds at the aceoe of a derailed freight train in the Netherlands. No one was hurt but crowds gathered when it was dis- covered most of the scrap waste p~er dwnped in the accident were sex and nudist magazines. • A boy drawing lucky numbers pulled out 155 winners at a station- ery store's grand opening-includ~ ing the five numbers he had en· tered in Charlotte, N. C. A 1pokes· man for the store said the boy, 12- year·old J ay Nagl•, looked the other 'vay during each drawing and pulled the tickets from the bottom of the box. An engineer for a Char· lote corporation figured the odds against a person drawing his own five numbers in 155 tries were 1,550,837 to I. n.e adm.lniatratlon wants a tax on leaded gasoline amowitinl to about 1 IA cents 1 gallon. Eatimllt.ea of the amount of revenue It would ral.le tbll fllcal year ran ge from $1.1 billion to $1.6 bUUon. Kennedy told the t ax-writing CDmm.lttee : "Thls tax wW impoee an economic penalty on the uee of additlvu which will permit unleadld gasoline to be produced and marketed! at a price competlUve with leaded gasoline of limillr octane . . . . "Impending future noedl require that at thiJ time we crtaf.e an effecUve incentive to indUltry to convert to the prodiictton of guollne with little lead and in ~e no lead. Unleaded ga10llne must be 1enerally available tn large q~n~ity by mid-summer of 1974 U the emission contzol standards program is lo succeed." Another witness, undersecretary John G. Veneman of Health, Education and WeUare said that while studies on the subject are incomplete "it is clear that human exposure to lead 1' hazardous to health." Although C(lngresslonel reaction to the tax proposal has been 'cool so far, the admlnistraUon believes chances of Its passage have improved. Pageant Beauties Stroll Boardwalk ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) -Filty smilinJ Miss America c o n t e s tan t s ereeted a large crowd Tuesday night In the trjdltlonal Atlantic City boardwalk parade, A slight chill blew in from the Ata1ntlc Ocean and several of the beauty queens wore fur wraps as they waved amld flashbulbs and generally s c a t t e r e d applause. Miss America of 1914, Ruth Malcomson Schaubel, and emcee Bert Parks served as grand marshalls, travelling in • maroon 1921 Oldsmobile. · n.e current Miss America, Pamela Eldrtd, appeared on a float made of Dowered American nags. She wore • beige, lice gown. 'nllrteen former Miss 'Ainettcas rode by the hot dog stands and souvenir shops in wheeled wicker chairs that were typical boardwali vehicles of many years ago. W ASH!N'GTON (AP) -Compalinls of aevefal-hundred cities &bit the 1970 census count la short -paritcularly in the 1lum1 - will eet an ext.enalve consre11ional hearing next week. LeM off witnesses •re New York Ma79r JMn V. Lindsay, who says a sixth of the New Yorkers spot checked, were not counted, and Census Director George H. wll prove to be the most accurate in U.S. history. Olltrman Oiarles H. Wilaon (P<:a!U.) announced Tuead1y hit HOUH ctnllls subcommittee hearing on the nationwide count last April IS will begin Tueaday. Wilson bu asked the Cenr111 Bureau to be ready to anawer compl1lnts' of New York, Chicago, C 1 e v e I and and Blnn!ngham thet their Inner C!Ues were undercounted and to complaliits of sev.ral hundred smaller cities that their talll• were lhorL Some officials of the major cities attri~te the •Ueged slum undercount to people hldJng from census takers because tbQ w•• vlolating housing ordinances or: weIIare laws or evading the draft. ' Some small cities stated their evidence indicates a larger populaUon. Others contended blocks of citllem were credited to the surrounding county rather than lo the city. But Census Director Brown I.old newsmen last week that In all cases in which a city hae conducted its own count it fou'nd even fewer realdenta thin the censJS takers. Sausalito Ferry Has Bg Turnout SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) -Tile Golden Gate Bridge District's new ferryboat averaged more than 3,900 passengers a day during its first 18 days of operation. Bridae District Manager Dale W. Luehring, announcing that Tuesday, 11ld the patronage of the MGM Golden gate wu "very encouraging." Donald White, the diatrlct'1 tran sit manager, has estimated Qlf service between Sausalito and San Francisco could cost "something aver $1,000 per day'' to keep n operation. Durlna: the 18 days, the veuel carried 70,409 Plllenlers, 18,134 of them over the lbr~ay labor day weekend. Storms Mar Sunny Nation Good We ate hr Predominates But Lightnin g Take s To ll Calffartdc TM 1tet1dY dltl ot ml~ 111mm., f9'TIHr•tu,,_5 Ir.II l•lr illlft tfl~I $ol/tl\ern C.lllor11l1 nnt!n.,,.. UMIMli.- todt'f •nd tht lll•rmomtltr 1""'911 T et11pert1C11res Atbllllu~ " .. AllChertH • .. ,1tit11nt1 u " hllt rllltld '" " 1 1....arcJo; " .. NEW YORK (AP) -A charter OC.8 jeUiner only hours away from picking up 250 youthful lrJfl58.tlantic passengers crashed and burned during takeoff TueldJy from Kennedy Airport. All 11 crewmen, including seven stewardesses, wera killed. Frank .Puglia!, 1 1pokesman for the Federal AviaUon Adminlstration, said the Trans lnternaUonal Airlines p 1 a n e appeared to scr•pe its tan on take0ff. No pauengen were aboard the flight to Washington, where It was to pick up its transaUanUc fares at Dulles International airport. Other eyew1tnesaes aald the plane Sen. Scott · Backs Direct Election For President WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen at e Republican Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania said todly that he regards the direct, popqlar· election of the President aa preferable to the present electoral college !)'stem. But he told newsmen that his first choice is a plan under which each state would chooae two presidentia l electors at large and the rest by d is trict s' corresponding to Conll'f:sslonal districts . Scott said he will vote for the district plan If be gets a chance but U it is rejected by the Senate will support the direct election proposal provided for in a Constitutional amendment approved by the House a year ago. Senate debate on the p r o po s e d amendment began Tuesday with some opponents vowing to wage a long, all-out fight against it. .. The overhanging threat of a f1hbuster is of concern to Senate leaders trying to complete •ction on a legislative backlog before the November elections. Democratic and Re publican senators i re to meet In party caucuses Thursday to discuss the outlook and try to work out a tehedule of prloriUes for handling measures before a probable recess around Oct. 15. The possible removal of one stumbling block was word from Sen. Edward ?\-1. Kennedy (D-Mass.), that he may not b'y to hook on the proposal another C.Onatitutional amendment to give the District of Columbia the s a m e representation in Congress as a state. Kennedy told reporters that as of now he still plans to offer the District representation amendment as a rider, but he said he will not do so if he becomes convinced that the effect would be to kill electoral reform. The far-reaching proposal, already 1pproved by the Hou.se and endorsed by President Nixon, came under heavy attack 1n the opening debate Tuesday from NebrasU Republicans Carl T. Curtb and Roman L. Hruska. Curlis said he pruumed the issue would be before the Senate "for weeks and months." 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Htfvltf COft«flo tr1tlon1 0( 01-rt1111r1td In tlw Sii\ Otbrlet V1Utt •M ~I '"Ion' TM 111r10t1'1 l'oatt!IOf 1'llnelev wfl l"IPlf'lel, "'"-'' 1 lirm.,.r1Nro llf IOI W•t l1'COl'•MCI. , otlltr l'lllhl 1'11t101r Ind lor1c1tl ""•"""""'' !Odt'I IMIUdtdl LOl'IO e .. cll ,,.., S.J'lll MOl\IQ 71·11, lllll'tllflk N- A I/II, WllMn .n, 1'11¥!• "'""· 1uv.,Jde t1.n. l'tlm &1rl111t IOJ>IOI, ia.wst!tld 100.1C11, a1n Oltlt rs-u. .. I'll., ltttl>lf'I ., •• $Wf~lllH C.-,L!,011.NIA -MOttl'I f1{f' IM\llltll fNll'lllt'f ~l,lf IOW Cl!Wdl 1fld fOf" .... -' •r~ Wtdftnclfy, W••mtr .. .,., LOS ANGii.i& AMO VICINITY - MCKtl'f '"' fflfO\lfl'I llollttdtv fl\11 low (lOU•U '1\CI ll)f 1111r CM" Mr!.,- Wednet41r. Wtrmer 4fr1. overnlel'll ., HOT \D -.....u~~,, .•• 11'·. trlWI AfM(I POTOCASl® lowt 6f. H1ollil U. TINnflr ftl. POINT c;OHCll'flON lO MIJllCAH llOllOEll -Lltll! '"11letl!f wll'ICll nltM •lld mornlne l'lour1 blcomlfll -ltrtv •·II kl'IOll In 111-• ll'l•ou•h T1otor..i1y. LOW eto.ictt .,,. '" NII, Wtd~'f I M lltflt tout/I eolll WtdM.Ur nl,ht I ncl t&•lr 'th11"41t , olll9rwllt IMillW "'""' O•rt. w1rmer 011<'5 110rlll POfl!on. COASTAL ,ltiNO !NT!rtMIEOIATE VA~l.EYS -f1lr lhroutl'I ThllrMMlt. W•r~ O•Y•· Ovtrn!•hl ll:!WI """· HJ'"' •s-tl. Tltur$111y u.101. MOUN TAIN AREAS -F1lr lh•Olltll Th11•ta•v. W1rmtr Cl•r1. Owtrnroht I0'1111 41-60. Hftllt ""*· Tllunoa, 9'•t1. INTE IUOlt AHO DESERT REGIONS -ll•lr lfl•OllOl'I T1turtd1y, W~rmer o•••· 0""111leM low1 '" so. Ow1111 Vlllfw, 60 to XI o!!'lt• M•Ml' '"1t1tr1. 10 fo IO IO"'tr vtl""'· HIOhl tS·IG! hither w111.,.,, 1G2·11J IO•rr v1llr y1, T1111rso1r IOl>lU, v.s. S11m•arv $\IM'f WNll\er CIYll'ed "'llCll cf t~e N ll(ll'I lodl'f W!tll 'lllmt '(llltrtd t"-n Incl lt\llnd.,116tm1. HMCl•lly from tilt Ohio V1llt'f to tht Golf 1111e1 •rid In p1r11 of lht ... SI. Al!l!o1111'1 1kltt "'''' 11fltr111.,-tlt1r O~lt 11111tll cf !!It (!1111\try, tulttrl'd t~11nftr1~owto,.. oceurrH ffOl'!I New York ro k.tntuckr 1nc1 Jn Fktrl<11, More fllen 111 Inell or r1111 ltll 11 Ztl'ltl'llll• O!\lo, Outlnt • 11>1-l'lour t111n e1rlr todlY. 0Cc11IOl'lfl COid r1111 •nd I ''"' !llul!Otrlhowtrt octurrtd from M.,..11111 1nc1 Wfomln1 to '"' 0.~0111, lt1110 City, s. O .. iua wind 111111 1111 IO ~ fl'lllft •n llour "'''" 1 tllOJllderllorft', 1ff?ll>ttflllrft e1rJ.,-todl'f tlf'ted from )a •t Clll1111, Mont., lo N ti Httclltt. Ct tll. (lfw!tl!O Do~w Dl!l"llll e11 ... i.1 llort Worltt ,,_ Htl- H~111V ._ ... ktl'IMI Cit\! l•1 v"'' LotAn .. ln Ml1ml l!IH~ll M!!w&utM M!MelP<lll& MN Orlffnt Ntw Yort Omt111 P110 Robin f'!lll.0.111111 Pflllburlll "'-1• Portl-nd "-td !Ill/ff .. ~ S1crlffttlll0 S•. l.111111 S1" L11t1 CllY' Sen Dltoo Sen Fr1ntl1co S•n!1 l1rtletf St11!1t S•okll'lt l~•""'•l W•IJllMIM .. .. .. .. .. .. ., .. .. .. '" n .. " " .. • ., '" .. " .. " .. .. " " .. " " .. " " ·~ u " .. .. ~ n • .. .. " " .. .. .. " " .. " .. .. " " " " " H " " " K .. H " .. • •• M ::; Sen. Blrdt Bayh (0.lnd.), chief Senate 1polllOI' of the direct eletcion plan, does not now claim to two-thirds majority necessary for passage. But he predicted th• necessary volel wtll be obtained. . u "' Attendance Decrease ... Seen in Bus Dispute CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -Classes began peacefully today in the Charlotte- .Of Mecklenburg County school system, but attendance in the system -threatened by a boycott ot parents opposed to busing to achieve desecreeaUon -appeared 1,0t below normal. No officilll attend ance flgures were available. shortly after the opening bells rang, but some school buses arrived .01 em pty and others rolled onto the school &rounda with only a few pupils. bolted steeply into the air after damaging its tail. They said one or more of its four engines burst into names, and that it tilted on its side and crashed to earth from a height of about 200 feet. "Boy, did Jt hit!" said Pasquale Toppi, a construction worker at the airport. The crash occurred at 4:20 p.m. and a huge cloud of billoWing black smoke arose from the main body of the wreckage. Parts of the aircraft were strewn over an area of several hundred feet. The plane was a Douglas DC-8 super 61, capable of carrying 259 paseengers. Trans International 11 a c h a r t e r nonscheduled carrier and a spokesman said it was the line's first accident in 22 years of operations. It was the first major cra•h In the Kennedy area since Feb. 8, 1965, when 84 persona were killed aboard an Eastern Air Linea passenger plane that plunged into the AUantlc near the airport. For about an hour after the Trans tntematlonaJ crash, Kennedy was closed to all air traffic. Julie Starting At New College, Wants to Teach WASHINGTON (AP) J u I i e Eisenhower, daughter cf Pres ident Nixon, will start classes at Catholic University here Monday to prepare for a teaching career. Julie is• graduate of Smith College but gained her degree in history. Her year's study at Catholic will include both undergraduate and graduate 1 e v e I courses in educatiori. "I thought about it • lot this summer," she said at a briefing Tuesday. "I Ju.iew I wanted some kind of profession and I think t.eachina: ... well, it will always be interesting.'' The President's younger daughter said she hoped to get a teaching certificate at the end of the second semester in May. Inclllded in the training will be two eight. week practice teaching sessions in District of Columbia schools. Julie said she would live in the White House during I.be school year. Her husband, David, starts 0 f f i c e r s • Candidate School at the Newport Naval base in Rhode laland on Oct. 24. The President and Mra. Nixon both are delighted at the declaion, Julie · said, · because "they think it 's a great career 'tor a woman." Mrs. Nixon once was a teache r. Julie said 1he hoped to teach in the second third or fourth rradea. She 1ald she wlit take enough courses to qualify her to teach in public schools in any state · where her huaband might be stationed. Mrs. Eisenhower appeared .in a e:leeveless lime-colored drta with a hemline just above the knee. But she quickl)o assured reporters that she had not opted In favor of the midi style. "This la 1 dress that I never eot mund to hemmtna up," ahe. lau~ed. "l'i;n !'°t going to wear the midi. David doesn l like It. I don 't !lite It." LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -A Delta Airlines DC9 with 94 persons aboard cracked open on landing at Standiford FieJd Tuesday night, but the moat 1erioU1 injury reported was a badly cut thumb. Alter the 89 passengers and five crewmen were evacuated, the plane, en route from Chicago to AUanta, was coated with foam by firemen. There wu no fire or explosion. Most passengers contacted after the mishap said the craft's tires blew out on landing, then the plane bounced nto tht air and cracked just behind the wine when it hit the runway again. However, a Delta spokesman 11id, 11Wheri J landed it .simply cracked open.•: The spokesman said 1~ passengers wete taken to a Louisville hospital for treatmen t of minor nnjuriea. Airport authorities said the pilot gave no indication of trouble before lancUn&. U.S . Pressing For Se ttlement Of Rail Dispute WASHINGTON (AP) -'!'ht Niimi administrat;on pressed today for .an lltb hour wage setUement to avert a: scheduled nationwide strike of -;>me 500,000 railroad workers one minute after midnight tonight. "We could have a 1trlke,'' 1aid Assl!tant Secretary of Labor W. J. Uaery: of the dispute between the nation'• rail industry and four AFL-CIO unions. "But they've each said they could postpone it if there is some meanlnlf\al progress," Usery said of the unJOD negotiators. He declined to sa,y whether President Nixon would invoke his power under federal labor law to delay any strlke for • 60 days. Usery conceded there was no progrea in four hours of government aponaored talks Tuesday, but added "that meeunc was very worthwhile. I think it cleared the air." He called both .sides back Into negotiations today. But Harold Crotty, president of the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes, said after Tuesday's fruiUesa talks "We're further apart than when we started." Retorted chief industry negoU.to, Jollu P. Hiltz: "No, we couldn't be." Hiltz said the unions' demands for three-year wage hikes of 40 percent or more wauld bankrupt the industry. The workers now tverage about '3.50 per hour. •(J'd be putUn1 my name to the liquidation of tlle railroad industry11 by signing such wage agreements, Hlltl snapped. He declined to say whether the railroads had made • counter offer, but union officials said there had been no ind~try wage offer. Ra~e f o1· Life ~ying To t Rejected by Hospital? SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI) -The mother of ~ 14·month-old boy said Tuesday a hoiplW ..tuJod to admit lhe child three days befano he died of polio. "Ti>e first tblni they uked !or was money." Nld Mrs. Jan Marts, 20. "lt'1 1 ahamt they call themse.lva Catholics because they don't have any feeling for poor people." Olflclals at Saota Rota Medical Center denied Mrs. Mares• 1tory. The child, Juan Ma~• Jr., died Sunday or what doctor• diagnosed as polio. She 1Bld site took the child to Santa Rosa last I ThUNday and the bo>pltal "'""'d to adl'hlt him unless 1he paid a $100 dt~ She said she dld not have the money • The mother &aid she took the boy back to the ilosplW Friday and Saturdoy; then took him lo Bexar County Hospital, whlclt takes care of charity patients. The boy was admitted tllere Saturday and $d the next day. Jack Finger, chief of comm\Jnlty nlaUons for Santa Rosa, denied the child was seen in the hospital's emercenct room prior to Saturday. • l ... • • : t ' I. '• '. .. I I .. . ••• " • ., . ,. • ,\• , r (.I ' ,, \ ll : t ·. ! 1 ---~ --------------------·---------------- - --- - --- -- --------- - Wtdnt1day, Stpttmber tt, 1970 DAILY PILOT $ •• • Truce Collap~s Gov. Fau}Jus Bumped in A~ka~sa.s Guerrillas, Troops By Unlletl Prets lntenattoaal when they vote in lheir Next door in Vermont. Battle in Jordan "We've beaten the old pro," primary,· Lester Maddox is former governor Philip H. a weary campaign workl!r forbidden by law to succeed Hoff and current Governor sbouted tn Little Rock. Ark .. himself, so h~-· seeking the Deane C. Davis we re today after more votes were lieutenant gov r:'s post. ~le toted tor Dale Bumpers than has opposiUon. Republicans suc<issful in lhcir primary for former six-term Gov, fielded two c didates for blds -Hoff winning the Qrval E. Faubus, trying for governor in the state\' first Democratic: nominalion for the By The AsiOclated Prt.ss Paleslinian guerrillas and . I ' . ' .Jordanian soldierf battled for the second "3Y in northern Jordan today! follow ing the collapse· of a brief cease-Hre 1 concluded 'fuesday bet11.·een l_ the guerrillas and the Amman 2"' government. -----------LEGAL ~OTICE •-m4f\ . <E1tTtFtc•1e o,-\t.u su1sss ~ICTITIOUS !CAM• The 11ndenltnec1~ do c•rtttv lf\ev ire (MdUGllfll I buSfrltiS U \ 13261 0..nkltt Avt., Oera~ Grove, C11Uor11la, 111'1<11r !he littiliot1s Urm Oflml ol ST.' LU)(E'S D.t.Y ''f<IUR SERV INON·SECTARIAN __ 1na tha! 4'' ~•/!'I •Ir,,,,. '9 c1;1m1>osed of tni followln9 "..sons, WhO:ie n•mei In tull Ind 1>l1ce1 ol rll\\llllence •re a$ follOWl ; John Y. 011$hllt, 10112 )ond11 Or., Huntint11;1t1 eeech, Calif. Nuhl J. Qu~1 .. w. lltl1t Jonil1v Or,, H11nlln11!1>11 8t1ch, Cell!. 01ted Au11ust II. lf10 Johll J. Q;ishalr Nuti1 Qu5h1lr ~-TATE OF (o\LIFOR.Nr;t., ORANGE COUNTY:. On o\11111111 11. nto, btfon m1, 1 Not1tv r IPubllc '" Ind tor UIO s1111, i\'tl"5.0fl.t!1' •P11eer-1 J~ Y. Q1nMlr 1nd.,1Nl.ltll J. Qusl\1lr knOwn to mt to be 1'M prrlOllS W1'0Mi llflll'IU .,, wbscrlbed 111 !hf" within fns!rum"11 1nd 1ck110Wll<l9ed flley ex- ecutf(I rtie umt. (Officl1I SHU Jeln L. Jobs! Nol1ry P11btlc • C1lllornl1 Prlncl1>al Diiler in Ot1n111 C<111n1V My Convnlulon ExplrM MlfCll 2, \ffl Pu~liM\e!I I Or111te CD;nt DlllV Pile!, Au11ust 19, 2' I nd S~I' 7. t, 1910 15"11·10 LEGAL NOTICE p.:wn U•TIFICo\T'E OF (O~OltATION FO• TRANSACT ION OF S SINESS UND£1l FICTITIOUS 1.M• . THE UNDERSIGNED CORPORATION lie.es llrrebv cerlllv !hi! II Is conduclln1 • ;(' blltlness 1oc.11ec1 11 m Wes! 16111 Strid. ' , ' New<>erl llead\ {P.O. 8CJC 11~1. :''. C11llornl1 9'16'J undtr Ille lkHliOUS flfii 1.-"'rnr el n Fr1ncM~ Ann1111 12) N• •' 11on11 Fr1ndllse llePOr~ Ind 11111 said t • tlrm is comPOSecl ol lt11 foHowlnv Cor• 1>1;1r1tion wl'KIM! pfl11CIP1I PllCI of bllslness Is •• fallow,; :0 · .BURTON PUBLISHING COllPOllA· T ION, 891 Wes! 16111 Slrtel, Nf'WPOr! "~ 8tt<':h, C111!orni1. 't WITNESS ht hind this 11!11 d•v Of t Aut OJSI, !t10 ~ (CotPOrtle sun BURTON P Ul\Ll~HING CORPORATION •• Jean Jurlcll, Asslst1n1 Secre!arv f",\' STA"TE OF Co\LIFORNl,t.., ~COUNTY OF ORo\rtGE, st, ;... On !Ills 17111 dlV ol A11gust. A.O. 1t7G. .: • tielore rnr Joseph E. O&vi• • Not1rv _., Public In and 10<' salll Count• Ind S1tte, tes+dln11 thertfn, d11IY commlss;oned Ind • swo<n, i>ers<1<11llV apo..,rl!'d Jeln Jurich " known lo m• lo be Ille A"ls11nl Se<:re,,rv ' or ttw. co•PO••ti11n 1h11r e~ec:ured tl'le ... w!lll!n ln11tumcnl on bri\11! al 11\e co<· " 011r1t111n therein n11ml!'d, and ackno-MO!'do· ",. ~11 to ""' !hi! SllCll CGfPor•tlon ext<;UIO!'d • lh1 s1me. In Wllne.1 Wlll:reof. I have here11n!o set my Mnd anll 1fl!xecl my Qt. , l!c!al seal the d1v 1nd ve1r ln 1hls ccr tlllcate l!r11 abovt wrllll!fl. !OFFICIAL SEAL) J~eion e. Oavls Notarv Publlc-C1Hfl:ll'nl1 Prlncl1><11 Ott!ct In Or~n11c Cot1nlv Mv CommiHlon EMi>lres J11ne ?1, 197• Pllblished Ori"" -to•sl Oa11v "llol, AUIVSI \,, 16 ind SMrltmbor 1, 9, ''19 ls.6-10 ; LEGAL N011CE ,. ..... Cl!llTIFIC.t.TE OF aUSIJolESS UJolOEll FICTIT10U5 lllAMI! Thi vndir••v~ do tiereb1 cer!llV !ha! thev 1r1 C1;1t1ductln9 1 si>ecltlty vehlcl~ • •nd r1cln11 comPOnt11ls b!J•lnr.;s 11 • r limlt'11 Pl r!lllrshlp .ti 7'9-111 Newton 'I W1v, Cini• ~. C1ll!1;1rni1, under the ·' · lict!llo..,.. firm IWlmt ot Tlt1nium A:1cln9 ;. Comr:ionen11 Llml!ed. Ind th-II •t la firm I~ coml>l)Sed cf rne following ""rH1ni •r. wncio1 names and Placn or rll$kk!1>C1 ire • es follows, to-wit: :'... Ecur11 V<ckit Rac!nv lt1e., suue $06 Whittier Sa111re, 11'15 East Pl!fln Street, Whil!ler, Calilo<nia 90602 E<ne1I K11nzle<, 2011 Pla c e n t l1 i;, Avtnue, Co5!1 Mo:ol, C11i!orni1 9'1617 WIT NESS ouf h1nch llli• list diV of \ Alltll$I, J~~ii:1e VICKIE R4C!NC. IN(. \l. fl' RIC ~~Ai:tO A. Co\ILLOUTTE Pre,idcJ\I ERNEST KANZLE.ll !.T.lllE. OF C4LIF0RNIA i COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES ) SS. • , On mis ?ht dav 01 o\u1111•1, 1t10, belore \0 'mt, 11 N1;1lar¥ Pvbllc in and 10<' Ille Mid County tnd S!atf. re$ldlng therein. dulv <;>" rcimmi1slon'"" end sworn. per!(l.,..llV IP• 1>r1red RICHAA:O 4 . C41LL0UETTE I nd ERNEST KANZLER. known !o m• IQ be •• tM 1erson1 whoM! names lrt subscribed •·'to !ht within lnslrumeM, ind acknowledg. t<f 10 mt that !hev execlued !lie um!. ! l In wHness Whereof, I h&v• her!unto se1 ~· "'' ll1od Ind af!lxl!'d mv o!llcl1! seat 11\r •;) l'llV and 'l'ffr In 1hi1 ,ertlllc1t1 !lrst 1bove .. wrtnen. tOFF1(14L SEAL) !~I ~hlrlfV M . O~bcrne NoltrY P11oht . CalllOfnla Prlnc11111 Office '" Lin Aotetes cwntv • ,.., Commission fxpir~• " June •· 191~ (:: CIH-tlt IM Fl11411fute, Atllrnll'• 11 t.1w lit w11m1er S•u•rt, U)lS IE11I l"tnn Sltffl, <' \lfMlt~. C1Hlernla ~ P11b ll1hed Orante Co~<! 011lv P1!1!t, .1111,us! 26 1od Se1>tembrr l, t , 1~. 1910 1SU·IO '!: '. LEGAL NOTICE t~ -;u,.ERIOlt cou•T OF l Hf: JTATI 01' CAllFORHIA !'OR. ! THI COUJolTY 01' ORANGE 11UOJ SUMMONS ~: M..Cco REALTY COMP.t.NY, A Cor-lllon. Pl1lnll!f VS. llETTY t . fl.&.UER, OOE I !hrDllth DOE V. "' lnt!illlvt. Deffnd1nt1 f'IOl"ll! 0 1' THI STAT'E 0 F •, <AlolFOltHIA II Ille 1lo0¥t 111""4 Dlftft· !-.. .i1nlJ< • You ••• llf•etlV dlttCIO!'d lo 1.1. I wrll· •.~~n ,j1Jf;l!lln1 in rt$<>0n1t to ll>e Vttl!lfll comPlllnt of !he IMIVt n1med Pllinlllf with the clrr~ or th• 1Mlvt "11111ed court ,r•ln lht abovt tnlilled •cll1;1t1 _brouen1 .atalnSI VOii in S8id COllrl, within TEN ·: dlVS 11trr I~~ HfYlct Oii YOU of 11111 , ....... ·•mans, If 1•rV9d within t~ t boVI n1mP11 \ G!"""IY. or wilhln THIRTY 11111 u H(Vr:(I \ ... ci, ...... r •. 'I YOll •re he<tbV notlll~ tllll unless YOU • ,., flll 1 written respOnt•vt pl~ttln1, sf ld ,,;~11Ji'lflff wlll !Ike lva;~nt for 1 nv ..,0nev or d~m11e1 llomlndtd In Tiit "erlfied comPl•lnl IS 1rhln1 UPOn con· !rl(I, ar will f1>1>IV lo !ht (O\jrf !or •nv ol!!er re!lel d1m1nded In lllt ver!llfd (Ofl1Pl1lnl, Yw m•• $tell , ... •••k• ., .,, lllOfM'I' 1111 In• "'"'"' (OllflttlM. Wlll'I, lllt <tm· 1l1lnt If 1111' Mml!llM. 1•<11 lllor ... 1 sl'lellt• 11o1 c111wlfed wu11111 Ille llfftl llmlt stai.d ln lllh ''"'"'""' let 1111111 I wrllftn llltlfllll M fllt '"""lt!nl, Oiled JuM ,., 1t10 (OFFICIAL SEALI W. E. ST JOHN. Cle•~ II• AnthOnv 4. Tl>Om•~n Dfllvtv C1trk W•lsw.rl~, Stlftl I Crin. 16U \lftsl<lill Drift, Sufi• Num .. r 2" ' Pl.w,al'I l 11ch. Ct. f1Ht T"'' tno to-....-· ' #ilf""''' tor f'l1111ti!I Publllll"" Ottn!lt Cot•l 1)111, 1'11111 A11111H It, M 1nd -SePllMDer ?. t, .< ltl't 15•l·7G r: \ Who Cores? Ne ol~"' """''P•P•• in •~• ... odd e1r11 •bo11t vovr <ommu· 11lfy 1l~1 your <Oll'lm11nity d1ity 11~"'1p1p1r Go11. 11'1 l~• DAILY PILOT. The Central Committee ot tile Palesline Guerrillas OrganizaUons repudiated the cease-fire early to d a y , charging that after it v.•as Sllpposed to have laken effect. Jordanian troops a t t a e k e d L'tlmmando outposts n e a r lrbid. killed 40 guerrillas and wounded many more. In retaliation, sources in Amman said, the guerrillas laid siege to the Jordanian army garrison at lrbid. Heavy fighting raged through the night and continued l h i s morning, the informants said. Tanks.and heavy artillery of the Jon:l"1ian army's 40th· Brigade intervened at dav.•n to relieve the besieged garrison. Headquarters of four guerrilla groups in lrbid were put under heavy bombardment, the sources Teported. The guerrillas' c e n t r a I committee claimed Jordanian troops mutilated the OOdies of commandos killed in the fighting. Sources in Amman said the guerrillas paraded the bodies through the streets of Irbid, sparking wild public demonstrations. One grou p of demonstrators reportedly stormed into the city's po~ice headquarters and killed the police chief. Scattered shooting also was heard in downtown Amman and in the area of the Jordan lnlercontioental Hotel. the temporary home of the 12;) women and children released by the guerrillas holding two hijacked airliners and 178 host ages at a desert airstrip northeast of the capital. . The women and children scurried to the basement of the hotef. where they had taken refuge Monday night V.'hen the building was hit by mortar fire. Guerrillas set up scores or street barricades in Amman. Shops and go vernment offices closed. and by midmorning ha lf of the city \Vas shut down. Schools, shops and offices that had reopened two days ago closed again . f p War1rin g With Pills his seventh. tv.·crparty primary. Senate and Davis beating his Faubus' first s I a l e w id e T\\•o septuagenarians, each political protel"!e for the def8at he retired as with more than 20 years ~ governor in 1967 -was the service in the U.S. House of R e Pub litan gubcrnatoriaJ only big surprise Tuesday as Representa tives. sought slill nomination . eight states held p1·imary another term from Colorado Other primary battles were elections. Tuesday, One made it easily. held in Arizona. Utah and Judge G. ~larrold Cars well but the other fought for his Wisconsin . 1vas turned back in an attempt polilical life, Jn Ari zona, busi ncssn1an tO become a peer of the men Rep. \Vayne N. Aspinall , 74, Sam Grossman over ca 1n e who rejected him five months first elected in 1948 from the c h-a r g e s he \\'as a ago as a nominee to the U.S. state's huge. rural and carpetbagger to win I he Reqltlred Supreme Court. Eight-term mountainous 4th district. won Democratic nomination .for the Rep. \Villiam C. Cramer. \Vho easily over the fir s t se n at c w h ii e forme r campaigned for law and order, Dcmoci-atic primary opponent ambassador Raul Castro won WASHINGTON ~UPI ) - As won F 10 rid a' s Republican hr has faced since then. the Democratic nomination for NEWCOMER WINS' Dale Bumpers of .Ark•n1a1 UPI T•llMllM DENVER UPSE:r Peace Candidate Barnes of today, birth control pills -nominalion for the Senate by But Rep. Byron G. Rogers, governor. Gov. Jack Williams used by 8.5 million \\loinen -nearly a Z.1 margin over 70, seeking his 11th term as a and Sen. Paul Fannin. both come with a l50·word insert CarsWell. Dcn1ocrat from urban Denver. Republicans. were unopposed In an obvious reference to faced opposition~ stiff rrom ·for renomination. v.·)lether. he "would he 1 p>1;;;===========. warning of side er I e c 1 s · his 'rejection earlier by the peace candidate Craig Barnes. Wisconsin's Lt. Gov. Jack Bumpers try to unseat GO~ despite a court c}la llengc Senate, Carswell said: "'l'his 34, that the nomination was Olson \Yon the Republican Gov. Winthrop Rockefeller, contending the insert is too lime the people have . still undecided early today. nomination and former American Party candidiite shorl. decided." Final tallies sho\ved Barnes lieutenant governor Patrick J. Waller L. Carruth. and. Besides the insert. doctors Also in l'~lorida. fiery Gov. 105 votes ahead, but a recount Lucey the Democrati c one. to Rockefeller 1verc unopposed in Cla ude Kirk was forCfd into a is automatic: v.•ith such a face each other in th c their respective primaries. ~low have been provided _,.vith runoff with Jack Eckerd. a narrow margin.. governor's race in Novctnber. Arter his. defeat was copies of an 800-wor'd drugstore magnate, in his bid Gov. Walter Peterso n won a Lucey beat Olson in the obvious, Faubus said he didn't brochure, written by the for another term as n a r row v i ct o r y o v e r lieutenant governor's race in think . Bumpers ··can defeat American Medical Association Republican governor. conservative ch a Ile n g er 1964. The 6 O -ye a r -o Id Rockefeller as easily as he Democratic v o I er s in ~1eldrim Thompson in New r~aubus, accused by bumpers defeated me." Faubus beat (AMA), whicl} lists the pill 's Georgia had 10 candidate~ for Hampshire's Rep u b Ii can of "injecting racism" into the--Rocke f e 11 e r in the pOssible side effects in detail. -~so~v~c:rn~o~r~t~o~c=h~oo~tt~f~r~om~t~O<l~a~y~~p~r~im~ar~y~t~o~c~h~ooso~~a~g~o~ve~r~n~o~r.:._~c~a~m~p~a~ig~n:_, _'.r_::ef~us~e~d'_~lo'_~':'.''Y~~R.'.'.ep~u~b~l~ic~a~n·~s~f~ir~st~b~i~d~i~n~1!96~4':_· ~=========="=' It is up lo thr physician!· For \Veekender Adve1·tising Pb one 6424321. whether his patients get a copy. Both nlcssage::; \\' c r e required by the f'ood and Drug Administration (EDA ) in a June 11 order effective today. William W. Goodrich, FDA genera l counsel, said the pamphlets already are il1 the hands of doctors and drug manufacturers have slarted ~sing the inserts. U.S. District Court Judge Gerhard A. Gesell cleared the ~'ay for insert ion of the \Vai-ning in the package when he refused Tuesday lo order package insertion of I he pamphlet. The order was sought by James S. Turn er, an associate of consu mer advocate Ralph Nader. StiU pending is a: suit by Turner seeking to rule out the ISO-word warning and substitute one eve11 stronger than the AMA brochure. Did you f o rget your an n i versa ry? ' ' ALL STORES OPEN a DAYS A WEEK TYPEWRITER Filler Paper 500 SHEm '~·-76c or Oftioe. o.ty BIG· BIG SCHOOL DISCOUNTS Binder ripper Poaet wm "' tUMAMI ttltHMr. , LAI .. -.... 1,., -············ SMALL - l ... 2fc ............. . 27c 17c NOTE BOOK DIVIDER SET REG. 29c 17' Artist Ma"'1ils Sets ComjHete 1rt •fa for all kl 11da of &l"t-rk. ldeat for all ''"Vff ., art il'l~re•t- Pickett Slides !Imes llddle Tote Big ~Ktlcal •• ~ •tV•oth•. Urge c,llr'f tl1rt81es, l'Ubo berlr.ed cottOlll m•t6rlal. .... FASHION BOOK COVERS ••· 4fc VINYL SLICKER BINDER ·~ ... 67' When you give each other o wotch , you give o lasting gift .. , ond a last- ing expression of .yo!J1' devotioo. Illus· trotion~ not octuol size. ~ti Mi<ICtion ., ... types prloed to fh )' • IJ f" :::"' 1.00 •• 28.00 Draftilg Sets SHEET PROllCTORS flRST lADY "r Beautiful, UftU$l.POI dc~ign, 17 ~web, ,,,otching bf"O(Cle1, S65.00. Whefl yov gi~ o '"'Sulovo Watck" it b.:- to~o )peuol .,...,._ SEA KtNG --O Y" S turdy, good look s, 17 jewel5. Colendor. Wotef" re~to"'. SSS .00 l(rt Charge !'tort • ~tuder>t octounh c voaoble • vp to 12 montl>s to poy Sor>kAmericord •Moster Chorgt E1f11iliih1G 4l Y11rs NUJolTINCiTOH CIJolTllt NAll:IOlt SHO,.,.tJolO CENTER •11<1! & Edl119er 2M H•rMr SI .. , Nu"ltfttletl 911,~ C1,11 MIU 1'2·U01 ~S·UIJ OPIN lllON., THURS. & f.ll. 'TIL t P.M. RrPORT FOLDER RECi. 19c VAL 13' ALL·IN·ONE BINDER Wff LOOI INSIMILI C1111"lt!1 1!1rf11 1~Hlt fo r It.ck lo IC~e1), .... 2" J.47 PETER MAX SET Blll£R °"" ' 1. TOYS F • r tdtoOI w proleuloul 1111g. Many typa to •+.ooM f~ , .ep.ar11te1y or i.. ..... 2.95 .. 25.00 .. Drafliwg T ttnplates ill!d ••• e . Lettering Guides _. ••••••• c-..1et1 teltt.tJon ................ 100 4.00 ,,...,,.,,,,;,.....,_ ,,.,,.,. , le ' I ' I School Binder Special! , .. IH. wn LOOll:~ ... 2.01 BINDER ,.-:_ ,?;:; 611L TALI -1.,. J,,I ENS EM BU o. '"'' 1.57 1.97 J.WIN• wn-LOOK-1 ... 1.11 1 27 BINDER .:..":. ~:. • l-llN• wn.tOOK-ltt. 1.41 BINDER ~~. 1.17 HOBBIES 50 Fashion Island • Newport Center opposite Broadway-644-0981 WISTCHISTlli: lthlnd lll•lph'1 Market 6259 W. 17th St. 011 0-11SI LOS ANGELES I" lro1dw1y..(r1n1h•w Shopplnt Cent•r U14 W. S1nt1 .. rNra • AX. 2·2155 CANOGA PARK '•llbrook s11u1r• •741 '•llffook Av•. l41·JS12 CANVAS BINDER Slu•dy h11v., J ri1111' (l~Vtl, ONLY ... , ... .,. ... , NT~""'! 11c ,.._ OMl.T ALL STORES OPEN 0 DAYS A WEEK , - - --=---------------- - , • DAILY ~ILOT Wtdnesd•J. Stpttmarr '· 1970 QUllNIE By Phil lnterlandi ., "! thought I wu wallil!r for ¥r. Twilly, hut n"" I think I .... waltlar for YOU !" Astronomy Limited But Only in Size By JOYCE LAIN It seems there are few obstrvatories and r a d i o telescopes. Does this indicate that the · opportunities i n astronomy are limited? \Vould you tell me about the careers in astroflopiy? -W, L., Irwin, Pa. ThiJ is a small profession (about 1400) and the number of annual job openings is only about 100. While numben are limited, opportunities f o r invesUgating some of the most fascinating and fundamental problems of all science abound. For instance : How did the stars and , plax.les evolve? \Vhere does our universe end? Ho\v do our pfty1icaJ law!'I operate on a cosmic scalt? \Vhat is the origin of Ufe in the universe? AST~OICE. Teaching andlor research at t h e university level (this covers about 75 percent of Observational rttt1rch at an observatory .•. Astronomical education at a planetarium or museum .•• Technical design and execution in electronics, optics; mechanical engineering and space technology. A.strOnomers are employed by colleges and universities, observatories, govemment , planetariums and industry . Some JS percent of attonotners are women. SKYLINE SPECIALTIES. ·Astrophysics: the application of physics to the atmospheres and. interior of s t a r s • Celeslrial mechanics: in part, the analysis of the motion or objects in the solar sy stem (important i n calculatlna orblU of spacecraft, artiljeiaJ earth sate.111tes and paths Of ballistic missile.OJ ). Radio astronomy uses radio telescopes to study radio waves emanting from celestrial sources. Astrometry maps the sky -positions and movements of heavenly bodies. Photometry mouures the inttnllty of light from stars. Spectro1copy analyzes "'ave lengths of a s t r a I radiation . Statistical astronomy studies I a r g e numbera of ~lestial objects to determine average prnperties. PRE-SCANNING PLAN· NlNG. It is difficult to find a high-level pniressional Position without a Ph.D. Well· quatlried bachelor's and master's degree holders work primarily as research and technicil assistants. While in hi&h school, your college prep course should include al&ebra, geometry, trig, p h ya i ca , chemistry, and Gt rm an , French or 1\ussian .. TELESCOPE JOBSCOPI. A&tronomes work w i th telescopes and other mechanical , optical a n d electronic apparatus. Beginners (with a Ph.D.) can earn $10,000 and up yearly ; e x p e r ienced utronomers &eintillate in the $20-$30,000 range. FOR MORE INFORMA· 110N. \\1rlle for one free copy of "A Career in Astronomy." Addrtss your request to Amer· ican Astronomical Society, 111 FittRandolph Road, Prlneeton, N.J. 08MO. What bugs you about your job? I'd like to know. {If I print your letter. I won't use your name.) Send your gripes to Joyce Lein In care of the Editor of this newspaper. Soviet Naval Power Growth Reported By PHIL NEWSO~f IJ,I 1'9"11• Mewl A111ty91 '\Vhen President John f'. Kennedy forced S o v i e t Premier Nikita Khrushchev ·into retreat during the 1962 Cuban naval crisis, it 'vas the Soviet Navy that suffered the &rtaltst humiliation and led Soviet Deputy F o r c i g n t.linister Vasily Kuinetsov Lo vow, "never again." The following year marked the beginning of a vast Soviet naval expansion prog ram 'l\'hich today has produced the most modern fleet of fighting lhips in the \\'Orld. · ·The ju&t-issued 1 9 7 O • 7 I edition or the authoritative Jane's Fighting Ships says that as Soviet expansion eJtends to all seven seas. U.S. naval power faces a growing problem of obsolescence. The book sets U • S . submarine strength at 88 .nuclear-powered submarine& and 67 diese l·powe red tubmarlnu. Sovtet at.rtngtb is put at 75 huclear-powercd submerine~. 13 fewer than the United Sta Les but with 320 con v en l i onalty po\\'ered submarines. 1).S. Admtr1T ff y man , Rickover b:ts noted that v.'hile no SOvlet submnrlne ii more than 16 years old, the Qme could be aald of only lullf lh• Aml!!rlcan fleet., a third or lrhleh date back w \\lorld \\'ar II. lnclica.tion.s lhat the Soviet.\ art placing heavy emphasia on hunter·killer submarine• lends strtngth to speculation first voiced in 1968 that one Soviet objective "'as the ability to destroy the U.S. second nuclear strike capability. A large proportion of this capability has rested upon the superiorily of U.S. Polaris subs. Even as the Soviets talk peace in Vienna, Geneva and the t.1iddle East, there i& other evidence of their relentless drive lo expand their naval po1~;er to all areas of the globe. and to increase both the quantity and quality of other annaments. The increase in Soviet naval power in the P.!editerranean already is \\'ell known. In recent weeks lhtrt have been a hair dotcn reports or Soviet naval vessels prowltng the Caribbean and the sulf of 1t1e.xico. Such report& ha\'e come from Nlcarag\la, Guatemala and Honduras. Washington has bet n reported concerned over tlte recent Soviet moves. including the vlsil last ~fay of a Soviet. flotilla t.o Cienfuegos, UO miles west of the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo.. The respected B r i t t s h weekly, the Economist, bas estimated that wllhln U1ree years the So,·lct& v"11/ be the only ones capable of mounting a major force in !he lndlan Oct11n bet"·een Singapart and Africat I .. JI \ . . . . . . ... Fall speci,Sls for -"-' - 399 Women's stretch knit nylon tops. Two styles· in fashion solids: white, navy, brown, loden or purple; the third in bold striplngs. Sizes 32-38. ·, 4se Wamen's.llCTYlic 7-gauge sllpover sweater. White or pastels. S-M-L. Women's 100% polymer knit·pants in 1black, brown. navy, blue or red.Sizes S.18. 233 :i.ex SPl!Ciall Girls' ankle pants of acryllc bonded to acetate tricot. Group includes flare legs in assorted colors. ess Boy's strap and buckle brown oxford. Sizes 3-1/2-6. 799 Women's buckle strap dress casuaf in black crinkle patenlite. Sizes 5-10. Boy's 100% acrylic full fashioned crew neck shirts in as8orted colors. gss Men's strap and · buckle oxford in black. Sizes 6-1/2-12. 4ss Girls' jackets. Button end zip front styles in cot· ton, cotton blends. nylons ... some light lined , some un- lined •.. colors and patterns. Sizes 7 -14. SizesS-M·L .. • . Special! Boy's long sleeve body line shirts. Never- iron polyester/cotton in assorted colors. Sizes 6-16. The perfect mate ... Flare leg jeans. Never-iron Penn Prest ·• polyester I cotton in assorted colors. Sizes 6-18 reg ., 6-16 slim. 1·~ 1, 22 f ·~ Girl's11hort sleeve interlock knit tops in assorted col- ors for coordinating. . . CHARGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE! I t ' ! f i!' I ! ! • ' .. r : ; ' .. ! It ... , l :: ' ~ ~ .. . : ' . . . ' I ' • . I ' ' -1, " " " ,. ' " . '.• . ' : ti . ~1 I ., .. '1 • ' I ,, .. r r • - - f t • JYOAe -in ~he family. ' I ' ' ' I. " ' ' . I I I ' ' .. r : ! ' I ' I ' I I I • '. !·r ' ' ' . l ! -,, ' ' " I' ' " . . : 11 r ; • !I • .. -·- SIY834Con .. R .. Jl"'°J pair. They're fashloiied In Cantrece • 11 Aresta- run nylon ••• Great on the legs ••• Jong wearing, too! Lots of fa$hion colors in short, average, long and extra long lengths. Reg. $2;.Now, 166 Men's full fashioned acrylic knit shirts in assorted colors. Sizes S-M-L·XL " ~.~D.!'I• 199 Boy's· cotton flannel pajamas in assorted colors. Notch collar. Sizes&-16 . 3;~6 ... 2~~4 Girls' acrylic cardigan sweaters in white, navy, gold or red. 498 Men's cotton cord Western Jeans in sand, brown or loden, Sizes 29-38 waist. CHARGE THESE VALUES AT YdUR LOCAL PENNEY s ·1-0RE ! DAILY PILOT U,I le191MN Has Beata Four beans to the pod will help Missouri !armer Bernard \Vilmes produce a larger yield of soybeans this year. The beans usually have only three beans to the pod. The new variety was developed by Dr. Arnold Matson of the Soybean Research Foundation. Middle America Views Move Both Left, Right WAS~f!NGTON (UPI) -politicians who equate "plain Ri cha rd l\1. Scammon, folks'~ with the fixed ~tani ol' discoverer of lhe "unyoung, 19th century poliUcal thinking. unpoor and unblack" voter, Scammon and Wattenberg now announces that middle say recent elections and polls America's politicaJ sentiments make it clear that the \lltal are moving both to the left center of the Amer j c a n and lo I.he right. e I e c to r a t e has gone Scammon, fonner director conservative on what they call of the U.S. Census, Is one of "the social issue" the nation's best· known disruption caused by crime, practitioners · of Psephology changing morals, alienated Csee-fol'-oh-gee), which is the youngsters and drugs. study of elections and voting But they say the voters also behavior. are decidedly liberal -al In a new book called "The · least as illal label was used ln Real Majority", he and a the 1960s -on ecooomlc former White llouse speech issues such as health care, writer, Ben J. Wattenberg, pollution control, school aid. undertake kl explaln the 1968 slum c I ear an c e and Presidential and 1969 state antipoverty programs. and local elections in terms The many issue11 directly that are intended to point the affecting race, they say, are way lo candidates In the 19705. muddled, falling in some cues Scammon js the man who on the conservative and in told poli ticians . in 1968 that Others on the liberal aide. however insistent might seem What dees aJI th1! mein'!' society's squeaking wheels -The authors say it means that the militant poor, the angry the political battles ol the minorities, the dissenting 1970s Will be fought on the two college students _ the votes baUlefields of the social Issue needed to win public office are and economics. "The party elsewhere. No one, Scaminon and the candidate that can .said then and repeats now, is best occupy the center ground going to get elected if he of the two baUlefields will win the presidency." aJienales the great mass of mlddle class, mkldJe.aged, And how should it be done! white citizens. Scammon and Wattenberg But Scammon and 111 s offer free advice to everyone collaborator have some news in !he arena. about the middle America n They advise Dtmocrata to that may come 38 a shock to divorce their social programs from the image of being "soft'' on crime and He 'Handled' His Clients Too Well NEW YORK (UPI) - A 47· year-old man was arrested rectntly on charges of posing as an attorney in criminal court in order to get female drug defendants · released in hls custody and then engaging them In sexual relations. The Brooklyn 0 i s r 1 ·c l Attorney's office said Rudy Strauss, of Yonkers. N.Y., married and the father of three, appeared at a night session of Brooklyn criminal oourt in August posing as an attorney for Odyssey House, a drug rehabilitation center in ~1anhattan. pennisslveness by pledging to crack down on lawbreekers "''hile helping the poor and the disadvantaged. They t e 11 Republicans -who need no coaching on the social issue - to move f()ward the liberal side on bread aod buUer issues and project the image of "an activist, problem- solving government." The advice to both sides reflects their basic lhetls that "lhe center ill the onJy postUon ol political power." Speaking or the George Wallace movement aod the radical left, they say "their power and..Jn(luence depends on wh!lher Oley can stay within hailing dJstance of the center or whether they march off the side of the cliff, in hxkst.ep. Minutemen an d Weathermen, hand in hand, smiling as they plummet, saying 'only 1 am pure.' " He convinced the courl on at least lour occasions to release ANIMAlogk i,- Jemale defendants in his custody. ostensibly to take them to Odyssey House for treatment., authorities said . But instead, he took them to area motels for the night and had sex with them, the district attorney's office said. Tbe next morning, SlraUS.! took the women to Odytsey House and , saying he was a Legal Aid Society Lawyer, turned them over to o!Hdals at the center. Strauss was arraigned on charges of obmucting justice, criminal impenonatlon and practicing Jaw without a Ucemc before Criminal Court -"{oOVEGofA OFRJlrU.IY Judge Gerard M. Weisberg. ~Ji1£,-BLtf1"£'t'"lrf.AU. n( Ball waa set at $2,500 pending YOUR fACf.. • a Sept. 15 hearing ;:.=========. AuthoriUea said Strauss Is in the import~xpor1. business. An lnvetligatlon WR.$ bfgun •'hen some of Strauss' "clients" complained to officials at Ody&&ey HOU!C, auttiorities said. Who C.res7 No othet 110wtpep01 111 ftto Wofl4 C•ft• eb•11f Y011f COll'IM•· 11ity li•t yo11r COlllJl'lllflify 4t]ly 111w1peper 4ott. lt't tho DAILY r1LOT. • -~,=~=,--==-------;-----------,,.-----------------------... -. . . . ..... • • -· . .. .. ---• DAD,'Y PILOT EDITORI,.q, PAGE City's Beach Option-s • When oppllod In o Ll!cuno leoch cenlext, thi Stlto Supreme Coljrt decision , lncro11tn1 pul>Uc rt1hta to pri· vat.a bt11Ch set ott vl~ratlons d11tlnld lo 1row to i rum- ble ... Tho bl&h court's February decision w11 o koy one. It chan&od the entlrt concept of beach ownenhip and publlc ·recAOtion fllbta • . But the real lmpoct come locally when the city . i;ouncll ·anned Itself wltb, on •lii·POI• l•&al opl!lion on loco! ramiJic1Uoo1 and opUon1. One option ts court acllan to ettablish recreational easements for tht public on the sandy strand. (beach a_bovo _mean hl&h tide). This could secure the P,Ublic ngbt lo keep uslna tllot privo tely owned beach. Another option, of Course, is for lh• city 'to do nbth· lnJ -not rock tho boat. The high c:::ourt decillon aetms to underline two very ·Important lssu11 .... .-.11t o nuni~or of substantial corollary points. One , of cour1e, la the crowin1 need for beach to provide recreation for a arewlng population. The secOnd concerns property rights. Should a beach land owner be deprived of certain of his property rights because he has, as one owner put it. not mounted 1uard or placed barbed wii'e around his ·property in the . past but has let the public use it? .. 1'hi1 is i stronc eltment in the decision -past pub- Jlc ';Ii• of private praperty.-thu1, the court held. estab-U.bin~ a right to ~llnue u1tn1 It. · Other iuuea wOlild. include Uit effect of a recrea· tiOllal overlay on the property owner's sandy strantf. T!'e valut of the ,Property is diminished to some extent &o of ct)urse the·assessed v1luation should diminish. The cumulative etftct of Jowerinc a11et1"1 value· Uon of .valu~l>!e ocean lronta1e needs to be assesse4 How much tax base is at stakt? ' In searching for some Solomon decision in this deli- cate balance between private property rights and pubUc need, the council would do well to look into possible ir).. come tax benefits a property owner miiht derive from donating his sandy straM to the city, 'A'hich weuld also remove that portion ti his property from the tax roli1. Artist's Rendering Needed Dozens of San Clemente citizens who work on fresh plans for a rt:pl1cement to the burned-out com· munity clubhouse will be ~nd~r • disadvanta1e "'hich could have .been easlly ~medied. Although designers procfuced an adequate and gene- rally pleasing 1Jlan for .the, new city facility, they ap-- parently overlooked one component et the plans whitja . laymen appreciate: an .artist's renderinc. Except for one · blueprin.t·style ti.raw.inc of the front of the building:, ·there ts nothing more in the plans te give the vieWer 1 true impression Of the J:tui14lnl'• out· aide appearance. Routine renderings could have &really ~ssiated rep-- resent.atlves of the active clubs in San Clamente who ~ill review plans for their own sii1'gestions in tht coi,t· Jn.I two weeks. With" a Sept. 16 deadline looming for the formal critiqµ~ from the many clubs, time ia an Jmportlint element in the city~s. request for citizen comment. Qu~stions Or doubt about the e.xteriir Qf the build· Jn1 could take up much or that time. Esthetics are important in San Clemente. . San Clemente'• clubhouse plans should renect th-t '"'"t. . ' . I Lacked 1'faj0rit11 Publfe Support Bufano H(ld The Spark of True Geni~ ' -Senate ·Doves Scored Zero W~sHINGTON -For a· C...pil .r yean 'the media have been Uturated , with twirror ·stories at>out tbt m..llit'ary· tndurtrtal complex, piclfiltle "lenaton ha Ye called for "new prku1Ues," the )"Oi.lnl have demonstnltecf at t h e Pen .. ~. ide1llltk Cl'IUPI have deplored tl>e bOmb. It l\.ai.. JU come to n1U&ht. E•actly 1ero insofar 11 n1ajor . Pentqon project.s ... , have llttn curbed or '11-;;; elimtutea. After !~ monlili ol. cons~a-~~; -~ $1U billi•n , !_~ · ,. ml . . "'* bill ~ whlql w11 to have \.,.. ~.J betn made the ve- hicl• for t1ptt1JJDf war diuent and Pen- 11100 distrust bas beoo adopt<d by the S.note Ille way Ille Nixon ldministr1Uon Ind Armed lei'vkt1 Chairman John Stennis (Oim., M15'.) .,.ant.d it. 1bt meuure comes compltte wltll . ABM expansion and provlilon for hu,. COit ovemw for tht C6A aircraft. T!Q; SltNAtt llEFtJlil!ll t• hold f>l'llident NiJ:on to a tlmet1blt fOr enctinc Ute Vietnam war. Jt refuM!d to prohibit usi of cbemlcals for defoU•tion ond c:rop destruction in Vittnam. It rtfultd to prohibit the use of draftees in .Inilodlina c:0m1'ot. It rtlused to stop exponsi'" el the ABM. Jt reflJSed to vote the beglMinl d. a volun1-r Army ahead of t\i1on's po1~V1"Qiom ochodule. It rtlused to I ~ an 1Cr011-tbe-'-<1 cul In l Pm.IO" spepdlnf. ,,,. Se!\4le mu,..j to <lo .n this in the face of a vi1oroU1 editorial campaJp in tilt ilf:w .. pera aenalors see every day; and under such tmetional pressutt as the outburst of Stn. George McCovem (Dem., S.0.) that thl Stnate ·chapi~r "retks or blood." The peace and paclfi sm aenatcn cltarly loet the 1anw in every quarter, because ~Y lack majority auj)pOrt rre6i a pubHc •hlch ii not .. l&nlUinf la they tltat rl1ks c1n be tlltft with tht naUonal llClll'Jly. , NOil U THE PllBUC ready , lo tUril over war powtr1 of the presidency to the Stna\t Fortitn Rel1Uon1 Committtt. : Ctrtaln 1tnator1 · have thus totttn themstlvea trapped In 1eneral potturts which tre not apJnv'cl in the states .r thtlr or1,rn. nus is quite possibly ttut in audt 1tates 11 South Dakot.t, Ina, Iodlana, Oklahoma, Oregon. Callfomla. It may 'be true in many othu" stlltea 1way from the Eastern aeaboard. Part of the peace and pacifism movement ii transparently politicaJ wtth Democrats and Republicans followini a ~Ison or anti-Nixon line. But another part or it TUM deep in conviction, crosseR party lint• Anet reflects an opposite reading by two 1tnaton frem the same rt.ate en prevailirll opiflion ln the stite (PackWoecl and HaUield in Ore son : ttueha aM Miller in tow1; McGovern and Mundt Ut Stutll D.tbto.) BOWEVZJI. IT SHOULD mt be assumed \bit becauae the peace elements loet all the blUJes, they will stop tfying to win the1r k1nd of 11·ar. Senator MeGevern belitvu thlt. much progress lw been mode and ho u j1lstlfied in tllat belief whtn one-third of the Senate votes to cut off funds, at a ctrtain date, for conductin1 a war which may conceivably have to be fou,tit for tome years more and with inWludtt like CIJnllodia. The conclUlie11 will· havt to be drawn ih the Nixon .idministration that' the day may eont'Jttvably ca,rie · whea th e Prelklenl -~ "' Joncer ~ cr•nt.ed the flulbllily be dffirt1 Ill wl~win1 from Viet.1\1111\.. ~ In a ..... hll flexlbilltJ .... alrtody become clrcumlcriMd bei:.a~ t h e McGovem-HallloW Alll-1 • .ni,..p del••te<I by a ~ vott. doet ln foci .... rai11 .... -tho ... 1. be lw l<t for hJrnseU In brtqint the war to .1n eOd. It WU pallapl for this rtllOft olonf thot tlle r,tcGovmt-Hal/teld Amendment did ntt iet mOre -.. Tho majority of the Senate belined that Nllon WU comln( nesr <11>11(11 to tho ,..11 of tho McGov~~eld A~t tt ltavt room only for q~. THE AaGUMENT IN-the futurt will e<me llYer lhi sist of tho mldu~ fcrce to be le~ Ill Vlelll•m lllter mid-Im - 20,0IO, 50,I08 or . .,0,008. It 11 thin, in the JlrtlkSent1&l tlecUln year, whtft Nit.on will feel the Ml fertt ef pri:!ure wtlich Ill' ~ 4•~ hu.ienera ed. t . Ill Wind From the South Alona about mld·Auru1t , farmers in the c-statU of Dllfiols, IMiana and Iow1 111 dilctv-I'~, tin 1pota on l!>e \.... 1 .. vu of ·com 1talks. Helplessly , 0.Y . .. watched &.s the funcus destroyed the Jtiivts, then the stilks and finally the cobl. Borne alon1 by moist, warm winds u.nt the Gull of Mexico, the southern corn leaf bUPt hi• ,.ttackM the heart el some fannert to ruah cattle and ·bog.s to tht natlen'a.eont belt. the market This ahould lt:a4 to a Yleldl m11· be ,cu.t 1nywhtTt (rem·· to temporary 11sin1 of meat p~i~. But if so pe:rcenl Shortaan of feM l'•lrls ceuld : the bll&ht la as St:rl9UI ~· some e1pe.rts rtsult ID · s u. hat ant l·'i 11 y: hl&Jler , Sly, the lon1·tenn trend ts upward. 1upermarktt prkea for rritat, eil• and Corn first became known lo Europeans pilltry. 'MM Nlxen admlnistration'1 hope on Nov . J, 1412, when a Spantsh sc6utinc or stemmln& inflation mi&ht bl dealt A pany In tM interior of Cuba reported lharP aetblck. And the effect• Wftllld ht nnitinr a rrain calltd mahiz that cOOkt bt f wldiapreal' becauR corn Is used· tn bak!d, drittf and made into flour. Since brei.4. llr'elldaat ftoda, whiskey Md •vta theft, com has brlceme the worl4'1 third ,~ tftti1t ftallh1nJ:. most important cert•! -rankln1 alter whe•t aM riet. In tht United States, ~ ''TRE lMPAtn' JS tndleu," says whm the harvest thi1 year hid been 1 Henry Wilsen pre1kttnt of the Ctilea10 estimated at 4.T billtbl\ bu$hels, fi Beard of Trade, 1Ctne of hecttc tradina p1reent of It ls uttd to feed live:stock. ahlct the Wilbt alrock. Thi t.hriat flf s11orti111 ind hillhtt r...i pr-Jcu -'" ..,, •. -~ \ OYER TllE YEARS, new methods of culUvatiori and hybridltition h • v e d'l1n1ed 'the com kntwn to lh.t lndi•n11 i•ti • -m. hlg!l-yield crop. Afthoup .,, ....... fifre srown Ii ~arly as UM: 1870s. Ill< IMil ,proeuclJw ll'i>ts did ROI <?"' inte UM until tht 1'20I. Don P1arlbtr1, 'on a(rietillliral -·~ 11<1 nol«f that tht averift ylekl Pf" tcrt, which during 1.-.ltlf\"was • bulhtls, his if\ ~ent yt1r1 rtached iT bushels. Althow&h corn, ts •ubjeet to many dile4'". I\ wa1 relatively rte. from w ·1ou1 vlrul attacks unti l 1bbul 1"3 1''htn helV)' ltan: Wttt rf:ported. ~I have betn ao he1vy II' IOmt ireis -such ••LIM: Y11ot Delta of western Mlsslsslp()i -lh1t ce'71 haa bttn almost completely ..,1"""4 bf etber crop<. Blight damop to cern ¥t IOmt IOUthtm s11te.s this year ii said to h1te reechM tmer1tncy levtls. CONSIDE'"'1X 4eMt.e ragt1 about the deer• ol 41m.,; Ill tll• com btlL J Government economists have adopttd a wait-and-see at!ibKle befort forecuUnc what pa.rt of the harve.!it l\'ill not M brought in . The fi rst specific projection of damage is expected Sept. 11, when tht government crop report is released. Says one grain trader : "The plain fact 11 we ~'on 't know the total effect of the bU1ht until harvest time in October aM Nevembe:r." Weather is the blg imponderable in rlealln1 with the bll&ht -olticially known 1s helmintholpotjum ma ydis. A nt9: \'trlint atl.tick,bij the cOrn belt thrivu on hot antt lurmtd wtather. Cold an4 dry eonditJon1 r~ IL ~fany f1nners, however. have livtl't up trjin1 te fi ght the blight. They· uy the CQsl ef spraying i! too hl&h and silisfactory rt1ults are not certain. Somea. tannfrp and K"9ntlmistl are already worrytn1 about next year's erop. The nnly ct:rtain means of centrolllng blight Is by plantinl hybrkja that are :esi3lanl to the fungus. lklt -these may ht m short supply. Stt"pptd.u' research is needed to develop an effective w1 v C1f dtalln1 wilh Ill< bl~ht. · Dear Gloomy Gu~: Local control ?Mans Tustin tru .. lets spendin1 an ei:tra '5.000 to SaVI: T\lllJft ffl&h fro,tt floq~lt .... 1lon1 white l"flictln~ tht.m on Uni· verslty Pirk anti Ml$10n Viejo. -H. D. B. T~lt '"'-Mlldt , .... ,.. ....... _. """ .. '""" ~ ., .... f:t_,,._, ,...,. ,..., "' ...... " ..... , .... Deltr •11•t. True geniusts -not tht JYUywlOd dirtctor brand -have always ' btea extre.rftely rare. The trot: a:eni41 la •me dont~ -creates a -new worW mankllld hu ntver: ilff'n ~fore. ThiJ_ world 11 ,only Vlftlffy COIJ!Pfthended by l'nlJ.Y whQ 1H I~ onl moat .of tho JIOOPle 8 , 11"1 ctmpnhtnd it at all · rn· this 'li,iht the San Francilco '9CUl1>- lor9 •enjamln Bui• M. who tied in hJs a~o, had the spark "' true aenlus. ffjs world did not per- haps have the Im· mlf\le· 1ctpe ~r MJchelfne10 o r Shakerpeart, but it was a ti.'Ofld never ei\c.untered elaewhtrt. · · Cut:10u1Jy, ior a tity bohelftll• Bufano's 11ew world dealt often wJth famHJar animals, or with ~ human figures. ofLen &hose er~ u abatract idea, like "Peace." N~ ever · saw a live cat lik• his itont cats;·afti··his seals and beirs were often a~ symboli~ 1face and power. ~ ''Bun Y~t Sen" dOe.s aot look UH a ,.B,-W tta priestly posture emint:ntly flt.a the mculanic th¥acltr o( the p,&.(.llWlue leader. BIJFANO WAS o !llUC1jrl4J Uttll "ll!I• and u )"'! talked to him you ""'1>1<1 hi' thturhts wtre Often tlilconnedeci .,d illoaicll in the munda1t' officialdom iii wi;lch ht was compelled by hi1 art to meve. he "'as universally considtrtd ·~d. or put down as a nuisance bleau• of U. bulJOor Wl.Y he pushed Ilia .Work·Jn. Pf'Oll'eSl!I. But even lhe mU11dane, 1''ho in hair. affeetJon, hall-exasptratlol., called him "Be!U)y," 1iW. ht ha• IOmethlng. They didn't bow what ii wat, but it liidn't c• away. Surano could \\·ork with equal facility in stene, metal or v.·ood -h• fllidn't much care. so long as in the material he, ceuld elpress his obst!liM ff "'• 1Mmer1t ~O.,t his fellow men a.nd fellow ~ilth. MOST G~IUSES In .tJJt arts -Johft Keat.I may be an e:tce!Mimt -tlo not tmertt in • few year1. Their dedication t6 a pal runi o\•e:r moat of their lduJt Uve1. · So It ti.•as \l.'ith llufat90. Hi! fif'ltt-style didn't change much over ttw i:lecades. It couhfn:'t. comlnj IS It iHt fro"m hla lruier conpnltal hein1. Jut it w a. ~ incemparably Petsisten~ Jt j,Ue:d up, new fiium ••ert always APPflr'inl, and by sheer weight of nurnt.lra . iecanie im"pressivt and lntscapebJt. -Durirtr most ef•hla I~ hfuo ••• tlat broke. Ht mJ1ht have •Id ·his jlifce.I to the rich, &entrat1n1 a ·rad. But he klN nolhlnt •bout money for Uvli'lg. and Cared less. He coultl quil*)t Ht y.att 6ver where: hi3 work 1''&1 exhl~lted, . .._,t he wouldn't nave It ln &1)t fcltmal.alnltn ef IOme estate, All he wanted al~11'1S to buy materials ror tbe iom1JW -k. and IOITlt of his 'molt I m 1 a I a I AlLercatlons in\10l\'td that df!pni\I quest. 1 The strenath ti l11f11t0'1 work lltt 1n tta lmplicatio", not Its n;uc.q.,.; it sual!st.s a subject bul doll not porttay 1t to the e)'e, Bui.no hid a dlftertnl eye 11 do all &enluH&. It .. a tueaa here 'his statues will endure, and en111e the ltltertst of poa:t.erlty, 11 the 111tue1 of Civil War pnerall 1111 horst1 never have. Sarue .the 'World . ' .. O,ver:· Militarism ' --·Ur••' Mllftaril:ril .. tht same UM: w~kl oYtr : the mlntitt a man p.1t1· 411 ·a anllorm he MP. to:• nsembt. h1a tntrriy far more thin ,lthtr ot them resembles his countrymen lr't dvlllan d:resa. • • • • There 'ts · i vast 4'iff~ betften "l°'*"'I up to irt•t· MU" and "hlz'o. 1''6rih1p" -JOoklni up • to sre.atnus -fUldln1 i Ill" •1 we can : ahipe our . actJont aJ¥, wherua ht!ro ·Wit· ahlp· means! a;.cti. ins aomeonii ..iM • ict evt.our' ~ .. u,>s, hope' .... .. Ud ilrtam.I" ...... . J. . • • • Ustnc "haman Mturi!'' as a Jimillna fadtr .iti that •Jftlakind can Mh.ieve jn lbl way1 of.· a a.uer. society i1no~ ~u·a JV-liabtld observ•lion that "Maa'I capadtitl t14ve never been . meuurtd; nor .,t·we \o jud1e of what ht can .40 bf any ~ldents, ao little bu llittn tried." • that no amount Or natterin1 makeup, fascinilin& hairdo, or fuhiona~li clothes cin make .• woman appear attractivi if her mot.itb is . Ught a~ })tttu, her eyes are. hard and iealcUlatin1, ai'ld-her whole dkneanor is tense and lnt.:ious -as so often is the cue with iin~1bly turned-out women! • • • Tl mun haVe been a pro1pective: hOIM- buyu who Pennell .i\ht aOonymous and cynlc~y true lint: 0 TM man who writes the blnk'• advertlsirtf is not ·the man who m'-kea tbt IO&n." • • • A dqttel is almost never as 10oct as the original book, for the llJUJ'Cfl of. lnsplr.tion has become seconii-baftd; even the gen jus of. "Alice in Wonderland" was duUtd into mere tal~nl in '"Through the Lookinl·Glass." • • • What the "realiat" sees is that without loJie there can be no reasonable: action, · • ~ • . and )le is right; what he does Ht Whta people who Wist · thtJ' "Want ~ sff is that the application of Jolie alone the· tru\h" bQta to love It mcn·tti:an 1 (to sltuatiol"ts that call for feelin1sl can , ,tlley re~ lt,' .. O!'it)IWll will It be ""!Clliof· tei4:to madness. · ... to .U>enJ.. • . • • · • • • · A pollUclln 11 a man v.·ho can rise If we C&J'ln(ll ~erJland that Utt ·;t· 1n oct'8km tar !aster lhaa he can auotementa "!veryl*ly ' Is ·equal" aOd sit down to ant. "Everybody 1}J. li:nequal1' ·art net COi\-"' • • Uarlea:, bUt are both true ind must stand t.cll!ter, we cannot belin '~ 4ileuN piljllta lntolllpnlly. ' .. . .. . Why .,.,,.t the "beauty : .,,.., 11- rnacizlne:s ltll their femlh.lne rtaders r~ more single than married ~rsons "ttwnmlt 1Wcide: thi1 Is because: in a ~e: you always ha ve someone tlM to bltmt when you fetl you aren't Jivinf up to your capacities; the sin1Je· person ltas "° ai.Jch iOW'f;i or ~solina iUuJjoo. Laguna's Unleashed Dogs To Ill< Editor' A Jone time ·rtsidtnt •f Laruna Bea~h llvp on lht ·ocean' front between Brooks Stltt1 arid the main beach. She has a 1JW'n tn· rropt cl. 11tr· home arid fi>r' many yeara aht -5 •htr family Jiiavt been t lell\lnc , u; q llttar and hA'e not compi.b!M. • . Now thlt •ftDie ~ ii un1ble to do her yard wort and nclntly, a 'ntfahbor •'ilh shcwol.llld -.. cJW!td ap 11 pll .. br do& r-"-the lady's ya~ ll I• no! .wiuml to ONn1 from . eijht to )% unltuhod .q. Oii tlll beoch lnd in tht ~ra \!I~ tril at w-. TRJI M&lla 1'R~T 2S or more dlffettpt -.S-o"*" during -'day. 'llliy riot oolT flUl'tM l&lld """rocliJ,Mit ti" U. ~ Oll·tbe slo.,es W anyone wlt11 o small>);.n lo_Qpt•lllit•lovbfed. 1-. know •bereof"-1 IPl•k t.tc•uie. for 3' y;4,., t ·JiAl' h4d 1,11fltll l1"" on lllt ocean fr'o&". .... bavt eowitfd the dots many Um-.. rr ll>e ~ ......... ~·d oboervtd lhe n~OJI ~ J4w ii Ii unliktly tllal the P'*"I _.,.. W011lt be storl!il them In tlil .,_ TRI lllll'llNSlllLE dot crwnen toke pr9pel' tttUlpmiftt "·Mn they wait their &>as and clean uP a(ta them . They do not folttlw tht tli'nl~e of Ult doe lover who. after Ill• l•Ptt doc ho! ten • bll mess lo the ptidd)t of die sidtwalk in a busine!.1 ll•trlct sii•, 'IGood ho)'. that's a iood boy." TlMy ~ eontinutd on their way. The present dog owntrs are fvldently or1anilin1. They can ~ muth to poUct • '' their own. Some enterprising member "'lght develop a standard containtr and JCOOp that ¥.'O.,ld be the trademark ~ tht responsible tl6g_ 0¥.'ner. As it stands itow, it will probab?J~ take some tax nwntJ from .all of as 1o enforce some doklit manners oo·the,2;.lirti&Ponsible oWDltl. Jl •ould be muCJI bttttr for tbt dot lovm t:O retW'te:iHemselves rithtr than tG fiibt lht ordinance. Y.., ~ fami1J-ownl •do(. ,. ·' llARRY M. ALTU .---•• Geerre ---., I?tsr Gt)>rg" What' ~ it mtan when they ''scratch" .a race horlel' T'.v.· Dear T.Y.: . It mians they've aot an Itchy ract horM, and. look, I'm try"'& to ru11 a lovelorn celun\n htrtl How ctfl I '.!"rite blue material likt the Olher lovelorn colu.mnl1ta If my reader1' problems are Itchy horsH! Whatever happened to ln- fideUty! " I ' I ' : t~1:;·: ·::i~ECKtNG~-~ ~~~Offers AUl ·~· ';t. :. !";UP • .. · .~ l·f o~andicapped , . ·~ . . ,, ..... '"'.4' ~f. ' ' ,~,-~ ~· • ... ). "! «:· ,/ ·.. 1', •• , .. Going~ away to college," which is a wish for many, a f '!~ .. ''am'.~.' .. :'Qual1"t1"es' . -~:1.\eii for. IJ'anted by most reality, Jor le)\',:'. he 11111. ;YQung, pe0p le will become a "This grant\ Y.'lll make possibility for 30 seve~· ely alternatives 1 like goin1 away I handicap~ persons as a to school - a r.·ealily." · -. M' \}&· 1 • • Hp D • I result of ';$39.000 grant to c "Going away ~ro~ hOme to ' . . 'e ' 1p om at Riverside. college ·iS not an etsy thing for .• ', .. ,. ,,:,. • ... 1 ; The grant from the U.S. a• handicapped '~student to • Oepartme.1l of H e a I t h , ...,.. • 1~·'..t'" ,, . Education and ·We 1f 8 re arrange. Thert a e loo many af 11;'M',.ovo ,way ba.clcwards As fGrWards, provides tll!)ds ' for project things to take care ot, like TffAr MqNti," \VHEN lht. believe I forgot to mention HOPr; -Handicapped Oppor-locating .an attendant. or a -Eve Ava Anna Ada' Bab t~lly Prl'.l~a.m ,f~i' Educa-reader if•YoU 'i'e·l:iliii'd, or fat fe~st couples get married is · . ' . ' • ' '-l tion, at. yc,_~1vf.rs1de. transportation or s pec i a I ~i(ch .... : '7~ !lll\1SELF Asa, Gig, Sis and Hjlnnah. _ HQPE will h~l1-bandicapped medical·attention," he noted. :-has .ordai~~'hat the young SHORT STORY -1 "Four J ~tudlnts to meet admission The program augmen.t s ~biluld .. ·be sfaP,id/'~ wrote that out of fi ve· interns are ! requirements, arrange for UCR 's history _ of easing • married. °''OU say .. But ho\v their campus needs, and after movement about campus for seer of the ~vjetS; Mr. Lenin 7 enrollment, provide tutoring, handicapped persons. In the. ... THE' LONGlfST WORD in 1'98IJY get' di vorced? I was the counseling and· •'other mid-60 .. s, Uqt liegan a !,his sentence is }'ritten on one wue Of .a .medical student. In specialized services to help campus--Wide program to DAILY PILOT 9 . ' I t.-=-SU~lr:TS~S:.:L::...:A.:::CKpS:f1 o~S;..,..P_O_R T:....:i co.ATS<\: Fortuerly Gentry Ltd. row.'Only of the typewriter . · • ~-t!Us.band 's medical scllOOj .. them succeed in school and remov'e ·a 11 arcliltectural "AREN'T !\110tR£ hMEN tha1ri 'Claas Or .100 men. 75 _Wert m ax i mi z e their ·indepen-. ba rriers to students in wol:!).en ap o ave cu r y . dence:'' wheel c b airs . Ramped . hair?" inquires a client. No,'.• married. Shortly a ft er Joel Bryan. an assistant entrances to bu i Id in gs , The Store with the l lnique Merchandising Operation that brings you Top f'ashion Men 's Dresswear Priced Low ''s.lr, it's a toSs-up .... THE graduation. 20 ,,were divorced. , dean of -studentt and director elevators. widened restroon1 FIRST ~llREE _DIGITS of A. womilll may s' a c r if Ic e "of UCR 's office of speeial stall s, reserved nearb y your social secur.1ty number ~ lherhood h Ith h 11 services. heads tht HOPE parking spaces, sloped street ., "'~esignate the state wherein mo ' ea ' yout · a • project. curbing and e ven a wheel 1• J be number was issued. 10 help her husband th~ough B i' ya n . who is a chai r repair service .\\'ete .' • " LOVE, AND WAR -That it schoc:i~. o~Jy 10 have some. qUadrap!egic arid a 1964, grad among solutions . .1 "•·is Ole-·woman rather 'than the C?nniving lmmoralinur.;e tak~ of UCR, descr1'bes the Pro1·ect HOPE adds • · · . : .. . · him away from her. My 1 ' ', . ..,_l!J.4n :wh?. generally epg1nee~s former husband and his nurse program ~s "an excellent counseling, Jutoring, cle rical " ,· the' matr1mti.\oial proposal is .1 ti . . 'th opportunity to help ~, student assi·stance !ape -rde-and \ ·.' VldilY .~-p,ut ho\f many "'1 e Ve· in 8• mansio~ wi ,,;, . without fostering de~ndence. a media 'cente;.~,;tth 't'aped ''11 cif4 .thes(·~ ..act~VY say hea~ pool and dnve 1"'0 . "We waY1t to help the versions of textbooks to serve the words, .. Will you marry enorm~us new . cars. 1 ~eave students become independent, handicapped students. me?" No many. nol mariy. my ch1~dren.. ,w1~h babysitterS:,i.--------------------• .l.Only. three-.ot1r·of JOO, in fact. so I ,.can ".ork to support Or so the studies shoy;•, tt;e1n . -Signed, Someone· CONSIDER TJJIS--Do you '\\ho-Know~. regard yourself as a diplon1at? Yo11r questions and com · Neither am 1. But here's a ntent.s are welcomed and '''ay to check yourself out on will be used in CHECKING ' this matter. A diplofuat ought UP whe~iever pos si ble. not ·state. any~~ bu t. Please address "OJ4T ·letters diploqt81ic remaiks, true? to L. J;I. Boyd, · care, of ' And a diplomatic remark DAILY PILOT, 80.r 1875, needs three qu aliti es: I l Newport Beach, C a l j /. should be pleasant. nec;essary. 92660 . . and truthiuL Or if not alt" fthrrec. at least ·twO. But nevet one. It's not enough ju~t to be' pleasant. Not enough merely to say \\'hafs necessary. Not enough only to be truthful. That's what a fore ign service told me once. Go thou now and Society Gets Members negotiate . Orange County dir ectors of CUSTO,'\IER SERVICE -Q. the Children's Home Society of . "Ho\\' many Quakers are California will welcome seven there?" A. Maybe 196.000. 'new board members at the There are more people in say. Sept 14 meeting. Jacksonville, Fla., than there The new members are , are Quakers in the wo rld . . . Kenneth .Y/. ~arlson, Dr. Q. "\Vhat do the Siberians Roberl H: Schuller and Robert . usually eat for breakfast?" A. L. Larsqn 'oJ .Sant.a Ana ; ~lrs. Toast, tea and fried eggs John KiUetC+'• Of Corona del , sunny side up. Incidentally, Mar. Mr1; Kemteth Brow• cf , .they call those • eggs the Hu~t' .. !it:Be"B • 1 A d r i a n . _, 1 .Russian. w.ord fo.r ~·eyes". .Ku · ~ _ meach and .. ·. WIDCH CALLS' to mind, the George_ "' '· '"' .of Tu stin. ·- . -" , following c on v e r s a ti on , Joseph~fi:. J)aniger of Santa reportedly occurred in a Ana. bo'ard chairman of the restaurant at breakfasl time local district of the statew ide between a Swedish lumberjack. pregnancy counseling service and a Norweigian wait ress : . and . adopti-0• age.cy, will ' ' F U N E i\1 : ' ' "SVFJ\l" preside at.. the noon luncheon ''FU NE X '! ' ' "SVFX.'' meeting at the district office, "OKl\lNX." .. -.AS .. TO THOSE 300 S:· Sycamore St., Santa NAl\lFS that spell the same 1 Ana. ·· ·For under $50 you'll get ... a zig ;ag sewing machine, and eiectric scissors. , ' r~ ..... ,: •• ' ' .. .. · . ' P•MClUI zig zag sewing mKhine. This versatile manual machine lets you sew almost like a pro: features adjustable drop feed. slitCh length.regulator and widfh regulator. Mends, dSrns, appliquu or zig . zags. Save time.and trouble With etfiC1en1, banery operated e leclric scissors. 49.11 · l\nnet11 Use Penneys time payment plan ot any of these 1tore" CANOGA PARK CARLSBAO OOWNET fULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH LAKEWOOI> LONG BEACH MONTCLAIR NEWPO~T BEACH • ORANGE "THE CITY"' VEN TU RA Shop Sunday too, 12to~P.M.I Sale. Our diamond prices are always good. This week they're 20°/oless. X ct. m1irquiM ~ ring. 14K white ooia • R-a. $209, Now 1t1.IO l{ ct. chmond IDl'itah, 14K· whHe gold. Reg . 137.50, ... $111 "1'1 ct. dle.nioncl :::l whl•gold. • " Aeg.315. ... \ ct. dillmotMI IOIH.i19o 141C whit. gold. l Reg.11295, .... ~ 141C Y•llow ·gold coCktail ring, 3/10 ct~ wt. I Reg. $200, Now 111 S diamond •edding ring, ~ ct. tot•I wt. 14K white gokf. Reg. 137.50, Mew tf1t •• Mttn'I 3 diamond. ring.}) et. lotal wt. 14K yellow OOld. Reg. $300, Now $241 y, et ....... clilmolMf, 141( whif9 Q0'4:I bridal •t. ...... """ .... Nol lhoWn:· 10 dMmond brtdel Ml, 141( WM9 gold.· M ct. total wt. Aitg. 131.51). """'$111 . I 20 dlliMOnd cocktail rifto. 3/10 ct. 1CM4 wt 14K J'91'o• gold. 10d;im0ndwoddlng ..... ~ ct. 10llll ""-14K '•itto ..... Reg. 219.50, ,._ 211.M M.n'• 1110 cl. d;amond ring_.14K Y•lfow OOld bM'ld. Reg. 79-llow UM 12diamond helrt pendant, ~ cl. total wt. 14K Whitt gold. Aeg.191.95. Y. ct. dl1mond pendant, 14K ""111, gold. ~137.95. Now1ttS l)lltnOftd ear• ring .. 141( .... gold.1ct.-..... ... ..... 9:o.._ Yt ct. 14K wftlle -.111.H ..... ":ro.'l.':i Why a diamond from P8nneya? p_,neys ln~ldenl diemotld COMU1t9ftt eqmi"'9 and •PP~evetY Ptinney Diamond 1111/ca, once befor9 mounling and l!PNl •fief • to •nu rt compfttnce with ~lgh qU.flty ' atandardl estat>Kehed bY our MllrehlnOIM T estlng C9ntef. Good oolof tnd dlrftY, Pf9CliMon cutting wid .ocom. cafll weifll:lt .....,. you otc:onflc:tenoe .,, ..,,..,dlaiW ... Penneyt Dialft0f¥! CertHloe• II givtll to .WfJ dl1mond Pt!~ Penneys Uti.nll 'Oiamoqd Tradt;h• l'o\~r vi-...... -."'.,_ a blooer and tiettar diilftOnct. l\nn~• fine jewelry 'ct\lrge theH \lahM It then Plinney atofll: CANOGA PA.AK CARLSBAD DOWNEY FUUERTON 'HUN'TINGlOll 8EAQI LAKEWOOD 'MOf<ITCl.AIA NliWPORTIEACff ORANGE "THECITY" 0\IENTUAA BuyttonPanne(tfime~plM. as Half what you'll find < elsewhere DRESS SLACKS A $30 Value ' 513 By speci"Hzin9 in just Suits,, Slacks and Sportc6ats we're able ·to inGk,e belter buys and pass the savinCJS alonCJ to you. For example we've concluded a deal with a manufacturer of exclusive private label suits. These same suits are sold in men's stores everywhere for double ti!. price at which we offer. them. Hu9e stock CJives you the best~ selection \:'' ~· '\ At any given time you'll find we have 2000 lo 3000 suits on hand. All in 'the late•t styles and colors. Wide range of sizes assures perfect fit RtCJulars . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 to 50 Lon9s .................. , 37 to·SO Shorts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 to 46 Extra Longs ............... 40 to 50 GRAND OPENl .NG S PE C I A'L P R I C ES SUITS A $125 Value SPOl,IJ COATS '29 A $65 Val11e HARBOR CINTER O~ THE MALL 23.00 . HARBOR BL., Costa Mesa Phone 540· 1500 Open DallN 9:30 to, 8 -·illon., Thur., Fri. Till 9 pwi I . I It DAl1. y l'!LOT Big Tlaeatrlrs Unruh's Campaign Seeks Excitement SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Jess U n r u h ' a 1pectacul1r campaign theatrlcl are part of a broad 1trategy to excite voters In an olberwi5e dull gubernatorial race. a I d e s disclosed today. •·Ronald Reagan want& to run a low key campaign. We're trying to open It up. create some interest and establish the fact J e s s ' s candidacy is for real." said media director Lucian Haas in explaining the Democratic nominee's behavior since Labor Day. Unruh so far on t he :.ampaign trail has o u l • entertained his ex -a c l or opponent. Monday, Unruh led a two- bus caravan to the seculuded Bel Air men.slon of millionaire litnry Salvatori, a member of Jlaaan'1 W10Uiclol "kitchen Anti-Chavez Group Holds Field Picket SALINAS (UPI) A committee opposing Cesar Chavei' striking farm workera union picketed Tuesday - both against a grower firm w h I c h has signed a labor contract with him and against one which has exprtsaed a willingness to negotiate with him. cabinet." and accuted him of "manipulating" the governor end benefitting from state ta" loopholes. Salvatori c a 11 e d Unruh an "ass" and a "liar." Tuesday, Unn.ih tried to forct a "high noon" debate with Reagan at the San Joae Airport . The near· confrontation turned t b e pa~nger terminal into a madhouse of cheers, boos, campaign aides, s i g n s • television c a m e r a s and disbelieving bystanders. "Why doesn't he come out man-to-man, toe·l~toe in the old tradition of the west and have it out at high noon /' Unruh shouted into a bullhorn from the airport lobby, packed with friend and foe. Reagan was 50 yard.-; away holding a press conference - charging that Unruh'a visit to 5ilvat.ori's estate was "very unseemly'' and insisting "I have no intention of debating." Unruh temporarily settled for an un expected confrontation with Reagan campaign chairman T o m Reed, who had •rayed lrom the Republican camp and was &potted by the Democratic Mminee wanderlng near his group. "Hi, Tom. When am 1 going lo meet the governor?" Unruh began, hurrying toward the Reagan strategist. "You're welcome lo follow us around wherever we go." replied Reed, smiling but trying to mO\le away. "There's too much following already," said Vnnlh. "What the state needs is leadership." Reed then cited Unruh's high absenteeism . from the Assembly during thls election year and the fact Unruh didn't vote for a one-time 10 percent Income tax reduction last year. -. • Police Seek 3 Suspects In 2 Deaths SANTA BARBARA (UPI) - Authorities today sought three suspect.I described ln wanttd bulletins in connection with the July 4 slayings of two Young men and the wounding of a third as they slept on a beach here. Detectives at the UCSB police department s a l d Tuesday a composite drawing of the principal suspect had been released. lt was of an oriental man, about 20, 5-foot· 8, ISO pounds with short black hair. His nrst name was believed to be Carl. The othe r two suspects were described as young men, one white and one black. The two victim•, Homer C. Shadwick, 19, Sturgts, M1ch ., and Thomas Dolan, 1 7 , Manhattan Beach, w er e hacked to death in their sleeping bags with a long knife and an ax . Authorities said the main suspect gave the three a ride, finally taking them to the UCSB campus beach where he sugges ted they could spend the nighl. Hours later, the suspect allegedly returned with two accomplices. Thomas Ha yes, 19 , Manhattan B e a c h , was critically injured and remains hospitalized. Inter Harvest, Inc,, "'hich has a contrad with Chavez• AFUIO United F a r m Workers Organt :r:Jng CommUtee, did not move Jtl trucks to collect leUuce from nearby fields . although police cleared a path through picket.. Rafferty, Riles Meet • Also picketed was Freshplct Food.!, Inc ., which said it was willinl to talk with Qiavez. Menterey County Shtrifr1 deputiel arrested St o f Chavez' followers for an investigation Into whether they violated a court order against recurittng activities at another farm. Jn dlapute is whether the UFWOC or the Independent T ea m sters Union will represent lleld hands. Except for Inter Harvest, growers have stood by labor contracts they signed wltll lhe teamsters while C\avez was completing the organization or vineyard workers. Backing the growe1 s ts the Citizens CommiUee f o r Agrtc:ultw., .w. ~I~~ . has furniahed anti-Chavez pickets. Because of the sirike, lettuce shipmenta from the Salinas Valley haw been reduted·and· the wholesale price or a head of lettuce in San Francisco reached 23 cenll, double the prestrike figure. Reunion Picnic Slated Sunday Former re1ldent1 of Red Lake County, Minn., are invited to attend a picnic Sunday fro m 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Bixby Park in Long Beach. Further information may be obtained from R a y m o n d Kitzrow at SJ$.M62. Highlighted by Charges SAN MATEO (UPI) -Mn Rafferty and Wilson Riles, bidding for Cel i f ornia 's number one school j o b • matched campaign rhetoric Tuesday night in a face-to-face duel. Their debate, firsl in this year's political campaign by any major office seekers, was highlighted by charges that Rafferty was spreading pamphl ets linking Riles wUh bl ack militants and Communists at Long Beach State College. Riles, seeking to replace Rafferty as State Superintendent of P u b I t c Insb:uctioa, den I e d the charges. He added1 "I told the students ·to 'cool IL' " Ralferly told a l , 5 o o ~ ·Capacity crOwd ln th e auditorium at su b u r b a n Hillsdale High School he had not circulated the literature. Riles pledged that if elected he would "boosl the state's share of school costs to where it belongs." He said that eight yem ago when Rafferty took office the state's share was 41 percent and today "it is down to only 36 percent." As a result, Riles said, "the children suffer._ .the teachers rebel. •. the taxpayers revolt." Riles used a report by legislative analyst A . Allan Post who said "Rafferty was g u i I t y of administrative . aloppln .... " In a rebuttal statement, Rafferty aald the two men who made the report ere now on Riles' campaign lllff. "1 stopped beUeving in coin- cidence when 1 was six years old," Rafferty said. Rafferty made his biggest pitch when he nl4 reading srores in catllornla have gone up since be took office. Crosby Kids Hurt in Car REDDING (UPI) -Bing Crosby's three young e 1 t children were reported in satisfactory condition at a local hospital today v.·here they were taken with minor cuts and bruises sustained in a two-car crash east of this Northern California town. Their maternal grand· mother, Mrs. Olive Granstaff, 68, was in fair condition with fractured ribs and a collar bone. Crosby's wife, Kathy. flew here from her South ern California home T u e s d a y Afternoon to be by the side of Harry Jr .. 12, Mary Frances, 10, Nathaniel, 8, as well as her mother. Crosby was reported to be ln Vermont working on a film. us us .. Ilia I PSA llango around,.,_,.. five. - • A 160 nights 1 day end lowut olr ,.,... .. ,... we're within easy reach. Md PSA Vatcar ~ ., ••llD pick$ up Where we ltive on. WMr'I you .1111~~ rent 1 V1le1r yOC.1taw30% over Htrtz · ._11111111 and A'(ls rates, based on aver1ge mlfo. PSA -lu Ell 1ge. Air you rse lf out. Call your ""'el I"'!! Y'l'I .. .... ogllll "' P6A. 2nd liq« tOlll ... 1111. • lift • . . .. ... . -. Lanaenis Welfare Abortion• R~agan Sees More Campus Trouble· NAPA (UPI)-Gov. Ronald Reaaan headed his re-election campaign inlo the fertile Call!omla wine country today, forecasting renewed campus dlaruptlon and I a m e n t in g welfare financed abortions. day of a 1tatewide campaicn tour, lhe Republican chief executlve denounced welfare "abu$e1" in a 1peech prepared for a lu eon of civic clubs in Napa . she i! automatically eligible for aid to famlllts witll dependent and that makes her eligible for Medi.Cal, the 1tate health care program for the needy. The r u n d * r a I s e r ~·as!====::::::::::=:=== o r g a n I i e d for Ernest •ov1•T1St:M1NT "It is discouraging for most working Californians to see "'eifare recipients re c e I v e more benerits for t h i e r families than they can provide for their families by the sweat of their brow." he said. For the third consecutive At a $25-per·peraon fund· r1111er In RosS on Tuesday nl1ht, Reagan told a crowd of about 200 that the law dOes not require the parenb of a minor unwed mother to support her. fte said when an unmarried young lady become• preenant. "And it ls estimated tn the coming year that the state of California -the taxpayer - wilt pa)' for $5,000 abortions in this state. This Is what we 're trying to clean up. Thia is the biggest lJsue confronlina: us today." Kcttenhofcn, R e p 1.1b I i c a n candldafe for a '2$,000.a-year post on the SU1.te Board of Equalization. ll was held on the spacious lawn Of the home o( [)onl® Gabrielson, a real estate loan broker. The home formerly was owned by flamboyant San Francisco attorney Vincent Hallinan, an outspoken radical. Even at 109 yards our low prices look great. . ......... ...,....... -1·· Paper, field' ioad, 12 gouge #I oho!. Wesi.rw shetshells. Paper, field &oad, 12'gauge #8 oho!. bo• 2 11 12 1•• .. #6 shat • boA 2•• Sale 6399 ....... ff. Foremost sfide action Jtotgu .. 12 & 20 gouge. 211"' barrel with modified choke. Sale 12999 • ••. 149.99. Foremost semi automatic shotgun. 12 & 20 gauge. 28" barrel with modified choice. Chambered for all 2l..4" or 3" magnum shells... Sale 8499 .... 94.ff Double barrel ahotg•"- 12 & 20 gauge. Hand checkered European walM+ stoelc.. Sale 6499 Re9.69.ff. forent01t bold odion rifle. 222 Of' 30/30 caliber. Clip fed. HarcJ. wood stO(k, che<lr.ered pistol grip. Sale 3999 Reg.44.ff. Foremost semi-automatic .22 caliber riflt. Tubular 1nagaz:ine holds 19 fo..g rifle rounds. lncl11d es Foremost -'x.5 scope. Use Penneys tln>e payment ploa of atty of th.se 1tore~.CANOGA ,ARK CARLSBAD DOWNEY LAKEWOOD MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE "THE CITI" VENTU"-\ FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH Shop Sunday. too. 12 to:! P.M.f • \ • ,- ' ' ' ' I! I ' " • • • I. ' I ·: ' ,, ' • ' ' ' I " ) T - ' 'l -·-· ' w ..... ..,. S.Pf,tfntitr '· 1970 DAILY "LOT JI British Ace Looks at Both Sides End Delinquency Plan Sent to U.S. BREAKS SILENCE ON 'ROMANCE OF SD'•' Peter townsend Leafs Through Copy of New Book l'leg a )fe1no1·y T o·wnsend Breaks Silence LONDON (UPI) -Peter Townsend today broke his long silence about his romance \\'ilh Princess Margaret. lie said she is now only a meinory. "No, J never see Princess Margaret, just like I think a lot of people never see their old girl [r iends, you know ," said the Battle of Britain RA" .hero whose love the Queen's sister rejected h1 the 1950s. of England frowns on divor~e. Until now, Townsend has shied from public comme nt on wha t was hailed by many as "The romance of the 1950s. '' The last time the two met 11·as in 1958. He said they had a "friendly" 2 1r~ hour talk at Clarence House , P r inc e s s Margaret's residence before -t1vo years later -she married photographer Antony married photographer Antony Armstrong Jones, now the Earl of Sno\vdon. 'LONDON (UPI) -SL Me.lions Golf Club amended its rules.. when the Battle of Britain reached London 30 years ago this week. "A ball moved by enemy a~ion may be replaced. A ball lying in a crater may be dropped. A player whose stroke is affected by the simultaneous explosion of a bomb or by machine gun fire may play another ball penalty one stroke," said the amendment. The club's a nt en d men l form s a footnote in a book, "Duel of Eagles" (\Veidenfe!d and Nicolsa.1 -$6.60l. written about the air battle by one of the British aces, Group Capt. . Peter Townsend . Nol a word of the book deals with his postwar rom ance with Princess Margaret. But the volume, published Thursday, is fascinating stuff. Townsend d~ed the first ~ German plane lo fall on British soil in World \\'ar ti. For the book he interviewed the Germa n survivors of that plane and thousands of other ai rmen of both nationalities who look part in what he calls a duet of eagles. Townsend 's n a r rat i v e follows the German airmen into battle and does the same for his fellow Britons. He tries in dozens of stories to tell ho\v it was on both sides. Mar l l\.lissy, a gunner aboard that first pla ne dov.•ned Gabon Extends -UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -The West African nation of Gabon notified the United Nations it had extended the limits of its territorial \\'alers rrom 12 miles to 25 miles. by Townsend, recalled his thought. 1 hope not. .. " wrote feelings at that moment · Townsend, who now lives in i. ·"Ttre Heinke! was done for France wtth his Belgian wlfe ;·{; and everylhing now depended and !lve children. on <Pllot Hermann} Wllms Townsend's two years of A statewide comprehensive Juvenile De 1 in q u enc 'I getting It down safely. research produced s u c b plan for the prevenUon and prevention and Control Act. "When he left Scleswig, glimpses of the A u g u s t • control of juvenile delinquency The Department ~f HeaJt~, Missy had never drt.amed that September 1940 battle, which h 1.--d fed 1 1 1 , three hours later it would all the RA'F won: &s ~B tcp:ar ed to era education and . \V e fare, end like this," Townsend _ Asked by He r mann officials in Washington, D.C., charged with administering wrote. "If he survived. and Goering, the Nazi war chief, by the California Council on the act, has created • new tha t v.•as by no means certain, what he needed to win, Criminal Justice. (CCCJ). agency to spearhead a multi· he would be taken prisoner. German Ace and General Approval of the document million-dollar assault on tht Suddenly this \l'Otried him . Adolf Galland blurted out, "I H Id th tr t hi , H should li'ke an outfit of will make California eligible to nation's juvenile delinqutncy ow wou ey ea m · e · · · receive funds under th e bl ~o:1~ t~~t ~g~i~e.th~~g~~e:, ~fri,t~~~~~·ingo;:r~~gw:~.~ped .. :-.. ·.i .... ~~ :·:: .... ~~~i ..... ..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,;;;;;;iP;;;;"'..,';;;;m;;;;';;'..,..,..,..,;;;;;;;;;; the Nazis," -At the battle's climax,---------- Townsend later went to the Prime Minister W i n s t o n wounded German's bedside Churchill watched the sctne at v.•ith a box of SO cigarettes. fighter headquarters a n d SUI! later Townsend himself asked Air Vice Marshal Keith was !hot down ; after the war Park how many reserve he met Werner Borner. the squadrons he had for the Ge rman Messerschmitt ME109 Gtrman planes still coming. pil ot who downed him. ''There are none," said Parle Borner told Townsend : "It -Hitler. realizing Goering's felt great when I shot you leadership failed, quietly tells doWn. but it's better still to Galland, "The English are a see you here today." hundred years ahead of us." Barnett Heads Cha111he1· Execs • Jack B a r n ett , executive manager of the Newport Harbor Cham ber of Commerce, has been installed as president of the Orang County Cha mber Executives Writes Townsend, "Could I -When the Nazi leadersh ip bear any grudge ag ain st began cryi ng victory but their ~1issy. Borner and the i r air losses mounted as RAF comrades? On our side , v.·e losses fell, one of the few cool orga niaztion. felt we i,1·ere fightlng for a just heads In the Luftwaffe Brass, He succeeds \Va r r e n cause. And they? Gen . Theo Osterkamp said,"{ M 1 "I did not ask Karl or then realized that we a HARBOR REFORM TEMPLE Rtll9iou1 School Regi1tr1tlon ,. "llel4 at HARBOR REFORM TEMPLE OFFICE 3416 Via lido, Suite H, Newport Beach Saturday, Sept. 12, 9:30 AM • 2:30 PM For l..t.rlMtio• C•ll 671·72JD or 644·0141 h d organ, o r m er executive[ \Ver,1er what they we re finully lost the battle of manager of the Lal\llla Beach fighting for: probably they did __ e~r~il~a~o1:_'.·"=---=-...:....:.:_---_:c~ha~m~b<~r~o~f~C~om".".'.'m::;er':c:e· __ ~==================~ not give the question much ' Cairns Gets Purd.ne Degree A Corona del ?\tar resident, David R. Cairns Jr.. \'.'as among 987 "students to receive degrees recently at Purdue University. Cairns, 405\2 Fernleaf Ave .. recei ved his master of science degree in industria l administration . . . .. '" ~ . f* .,,._ I . ' 1., \ I • I .. ' ' • , . .,.,: , I • ' \ ~· • ' • ' \\'ould it be embarrassing to meet her now? .. No1 I'd jusL say hello, like anybOdy el~e. \Vhat would you d o ? ' ' Townsend told United Press International in an interview. Had he glimpsed her since?,-,,=-: •·No. No. For me, th is is no l Now mn rricd lo a Belgai n tobacco heiress a·11d the father of five, the 55 -yea r-old Tov.·nsend ·had come from his Paris home for publication of his personalized history or the batlle of Britain, "Duel of Eagles." He spoke candidly about f\1argarct who in l 9 S 6 announced from Buckingha m Palace she \\'ould not marry the RAF group captai n who had beei1 an aide to her father, !he late King George VI . She did not say so, but it was because Townsend was a divor ced man and the Church longer a news item. It happened a lo;1g time ago," he said. Townsend on Feb. 3. 19~0. shot down the first German boinber to crash on British soil during \Vorld \Var II . In 1944. King George VI made Townsend his equerry. Princess f\1argaret was a chubby 13-year-old, Tov.'Y!send was Margaret"s steady escort in the early 1950s. In 1953. when marriage ru mors were rife, he was sent to Brussels as air attache. Three years lat.er he returned to London to settle the marriage issue once and for all. 87 Popular Demand. ROY CLARK, he»t or n ·. llet: u •• pn:tfr•m • retwrnin1 lo K.aon·• Benr Fann. lie will si~ •.d play ftw 7_, ~ ~;o,....e.1 -Satmda;o-. Sep1nnher 11. C-e - ,, ~t and join the f011! . l•ou ru1''11on•'S '· ~ Electric dryers and permanent press are made for each other. __ [!) ~ ... ~ Perm anent press fab ric s just don't staywri n kle- free if you dr y them on a clot hesli ne or in up to $30.00 less than gas dryers. If you live in a Medallion a dryer that is not de- signed for them. What they need is th e tend er lovi ng D • Home you al- ready know the advantages of electric living. care of one of the new electric dryers with a perma- nc n t press cycle. They are progra m- med to give just the right amou nt of heat for the right am ount of time. And you r fab ri cs will be gently rum- bled to fluff up the fiber s.Wrinkles just don't have a chance. Electric dryers arc flameless and odorless, too, of course.And they cos t But if you're not yet dry- ing electrically, why not get an electric dryer now. All you have to do is plu g it in .. Visit your appl iance dealer to- day. See the new electric dryers that are just right for permanent press. Southern California Edison sC.E Permanent press clothes live better electrically. ·~ ' ' I ... " l ' •' . , Super shag carpet. Super low price. Chateau s~~d. Completely installed over 41 oz. sponge rubber cushion The woll·to·woll beauty of deep, toe·tickling pile at an unbelieveobly . affordable price! 'Choteau'! Now you con carpet everywhere in fo1hi onable shag. Eo sy·care continuou1 filament nylon 9ive1 deptn to color, stands up to long wear. Choose from o wide selection of slub tweeds in decorator colors: bronze/olive, flame tweed, burnished gold tweed, tawny gold tweed, green pepper tweed and peacock tweed 849 Compl•t•ly ln 1t•ll•cl •Y•r 41 ••· 1pon1• rubber cu1hlon 'lll·7'· "Sha1-o-rama" .• , 100% contin11out lil1:1· m•nf, heot set, co tionic dyed, nylon pile •hc;ig co,peti11g. Avo llobl• it1 9 decorotor colors. • 899 c .... ,1.tely ln1ta11•4 •••r41 ••· 1p•n1• rublt•r cu1hl•n 'lll· ,,,, "lfttri1u•" , • , 100% polyetlf!r pile shag. Avo!loble in 9 lOlid and tweed colors. The ultl1'111:1te in lu.-ury. Bring in your own measurements for a no-obligation estimate. for corpet e1timote coll todoy' CANOGA PARK (183·3660) CARLSBAD (729·7991) DOWNEY (869·4541) FULLERTON (871 .4343) HUNTINGTON BEACH (892·7771) LAK!WOOD(634-7000) MONTCLAIR(621 ·3811) NEWPORT BEACH (6'4·2313) ORANGE "THE CITY" (~9·5091) TORRANCE (772·5893) VENTURA(642.759<) Use Pe rrney1 time payment plan. ----" -------- • . DAILY PILDT \\ltdnesda}', Stpltmbtt 1, 1970 VD Education Urged Doctor Sc or es La ck of Knotv ledge \ Consumer Course Set IRVINE -A lecture series entitled "The Co n s u m e r Revolt" wlll be offered at UC Irvine during the fa11 quarter. The course \viii examine the consumer movement and its relationship to social change. Re 'pre sen tative s or regulatory agencies at the state and federal levels \l'ill explain the activities of these agencies in consumer protection. The lectures will de11I with the control and development or b u y i n g behavior. and the common rools the consumer revolt shares with the environmental revolt, women's liberation and other social movements. The series, which is offered for lhree units of college credit, will meet 12 Thursdays from 7 p.m. to 9:45 p.m. beginning Sept. 24. Further informallon may be oblained from the UCI Extension Office at 833-5414. --,-,,.,----,c---f)ealh l\'otlres By PATRICK BOYLE think evtrythlng Is all right.'' SAJ'rA' .rn'A '~' ~~norrhea "Or the boy ei:pecLs the girl and syphilis are diseases to also have painful symptoms people don't like to talk about. or lhe disease," he says. They are disea ses that don't "HO\l'e\'er, in females. there is concern many people because hardly a n y s y m p t o m of "it can't happen to me." They gonor~ea." are diseases that effect mostly "So e girls think that young people. They a r e gonorr ea infection will sho\v sometimes incurable a n d up if they have a Pap test. but someUines deadly. il "'on't. And a normal blood .. The Jack of genera I test "'ill only reveal syphilis, knowledge about v en ere a I not gonorrhea." disease is colossal," says Dr. He says that the youngsters Thomas J. Albert. director of are often afraid to report the the venereal disease clinic Rt di sease and havl! it treated for the Orange County }!ealth fear their parents will find out Department. about it. ··vet, v.·ith the exception of "They often go to the family strep throat. there are more doctor complaining of a sore cases or gonorrhea in the throat, knowing he will give rounty than all other them a shot of penicillin," he communicable d is ea s es says. combined," he adds. .. And even some doctors are Albert is a tall. middle-aged, afraid to report the case to the sort-spoken physician, and hi! county," Dr. Albert says. is probably one of the busiest "They don't understand the men on the county·s payroll. procedure at the county His patients are mostly in Jevel."' their teens, and they have The prOC1!dure is discretion. contracted a disease that ttiey All of the VD reco r ds had never really worried entrusted to Dr. Albert's care about. Their ·worries were are confidential. The patients about unwanted pregnancies. are treated without parental not venereal disease. No\\', consent or kno\\1ledge, and Dr. they fear that their parents Albert sa~·s th at e~·en the "'ill find out about their sexual courts could not obtain the activities. records. Of the more than 3,000 cases \Vhen a._{o}lngster eomes to of gonorrhea treated i n the county Clinic for the free Orange County in 1969. most treatment. he is sometimes or the patients were under 25 asked about his recent sexual years or age, ~nd 70 percent o[ contacts, but even that is them were treated by Dr. discreet. Albert's office. "We don't even have to ask "The number of cases has some of our patients," he Eoic1e spiraled upward in the last says. •·once they understand G••'•""-£~•h•>1n Edi~~ . .a.11d to, 111 few years," Dr. Albert says .. the nature of the disease and 1711 MGn<'OYI•. c.,,.,, M'''· 011• o1 ~"~· '·But I think that more sex is the treatment process, they !ioptrmber f . !iu...,lvod bv JOI!, £!!Win t:1t1m•"· o1 o • ._., '~•tt dau•~•••$, an oversimplification for I.he reali:ZI!! that lheir sex cnntacts Mr1. MarJori. H1ln1i. c.,,.1, Mt11: reason." should be examined and Mrt. l'IO•l"Ct G. WllklnM>n. !i1nl1 Ant H1l1M11 Mri. Jt1nnt Tu1111, Lon• S••c~' f-Je attributes the rise to treated." !lr11thflr. Htrberr c. l!1,1m1n, Modtoc: many factors. one being that Dr Alber) say• that J'-po• l r gr1mkMlt1•111. Sttvlce1. S1•11•d~•. • • 1~ .,.. la:'° AM. "1'" u1111ed Mt1hDG11 c~ .. •ch, there are simply more people sibily·infected boy or g i r I co111 Me11, with Flt•. lflc~••d Ou"'•• than there used to be. Another friend is often waiting outside etflcJ1!Jn<r. lnle•m1nt. We1tml"''"' Mt-"'"'ill Park. a111 Broad· ... 11 Mer1111r1, reason is that gonorrhea is a in the car and the patient Dfr ocron. highly conlagious disease with brinris them in immediately. I! GOUO'I' o F llt•Mt~ An11 Gou<1v . ..,,, "' •uid~~• a short incugalion period. It they arl! not available for .. , S.OUlh L•9U .... 0•te 01 ourh. St11-can only be contracted i1nmediate treatment, Dr. t•mbe• '· !iu,..iv1d i.v -'Cl". C1vO.. e1 So. L•""''· 11111vMt•. M•i. E•~.i through sexual relations. Albert gives the patient a card Gl"Vfldt1 , o.~1•n0r -'''""•"11<1' th••~ H llh d rt t h I · t th .bl . lected ,,.11_,,8mkhlldrt"t ""' ore1t-9ro1t-ea epa men S ave 0 give 0 e poSSl Y·ln •••ndc.~11tt: 11\d ~ bl"ct"e''· P•lv11t t r a d itionally concentrated person, and they can come in ••••kH with 1n11•"'1~1 '1 cv .. rt•i L•wn th · t I d t · al tt,•'r own COn"c•>•·ence. CtmtlffY. calmt. C•ll1<1rnl1. McCo•mKll e1r con ro an preven Jon • L1w,.. ec1ch M~•"·••r, 01re<1ar1. efforts on syphilis rather than " ou can't play morals or f'mor H. Griv . .a.Ga~..,~-lf1•1M111 ol l~· gonorrhea because syphilis is vice squad with these kids," •un• Hiii~ o.te o1 "'~'"· St01· '· S~T· a more dangerous disease. he says. "Nobody likes to be viv...:r by wilt, v;.•iftl• L. Grtv. Sor•ic•• h · •rlv•t•. McConnkll: L1111.1•11 eetch Mor· Dr. Albe.rt says t at the asked JM!rsonal q u e st 1 on s "''"'' Dl••cro.-.. syphilis problem in the U.S. is about their sex life, and MOP'WOOD h .atttlnt s. M_.. 10 FIO'W@• s•·~i. minimal compared to that of nobody likel! to ask sue cos11 Mn1. °''' ot M•"'· !i"''· 1. Su•· gonorrhea. And ~ attributes questions. \Ve are on I y v!ved bV "°"' Jorlfl .a . ..,.,.,-...ood: d1u,h-f · ,~,. Ml'I. F••'* Lv11C111 ,..., 1nc1-the rising number o interested in treating everyone cMttt"'"· ,,. ., c°'"' ... d•• M••· G .... gonorrhea cases primarily t~ that may have come in "1~ urvlcf1, !•lu•d•v, 1 l'M. Bfl on! , Me....,..1111 P1rk. F••-· with •w. J ~· one factor wide-spread cont3.Cl with the ~isease.' e111., ofl!tl•!lnt. 111111 Coil• Me•• Mor-ignorance about the disease. Dr. Albert estimates that 111 '"'' o!rectoriSToVALL "l have found many young each case of gonorrhea costs Jemt• Junie• srov•11• ""' ~. "' ,jQ(t boys who think that a girl's the county about $20 in Me,,lrntc Wtv, Catt~ Mt.a. Ollt af r1e11h. S<!Pt. !. su"'"-'" b., wilt. M'I. menstrual period cleans out I r e. a t m e n l , with most Ma•!!yn w. s1ov1111 tour soni. J•'"'1 the gonorrhea nerm," Dr. gonorrhea cases being fowid Jo,,.v. Tl>on'tl M~ Jt'T'OI M. 1nd Jtnn b $tov111, "'"'"''· wn111m 51.,..,u, •nd Albert relates. "So if their girl in patients 20 to 24 years old. fiv• 11•1noc1111tt••t1. G••v•1111• ••rvlct• friend has her per iod, they The second most common !DCl.ttl" Welfrltldtv, lO:JC AM, £1 Toro • «:cmmunll"I" Ce.,.1tery, w!!l'I lftv. J~"''' '"""'"""'"='"""'"""'"""'"""'"'"""""'°"'"""""~ C•llY aflld1lln9. Bell B•otdWIV Morlu· ~f '!?TD~ -~-"'V'~ ••1• Olrttlors. [' • STfYl!l'll ""Y!llt LavtrM Sttv1n1. A•e 6~ .of 1141 ;:r~'.'9s>-;;:· ~un~~~r:tdB·:~h-~:n~~ For the Record O•~· ~ .... .,_ •. """' '"""'"· I .• Owen Allin 1nd L"l'nn AU1n $11!"1'1nt: ~ b•Oll'llri, Ltl•nd J0st11~ 1nc1 Gtor11 Al· Li L 11n· ""1!I litll'l'I. Ethel C,10dlt, I'"" Iii 11.,,'.. Hin...,. fN1 Mtlbe 51tndln91 tnd D" l t• Snn\OUf. Alkt F. tnd 8uch1n1n &. lour ••tl"ldc~110rtll. Vl1lll!lon, TP1Urld1v, JSSO U IOJIS g~~/:~i.!~~I: t..,1':...iRrJ.10. Jr. lo 10 PM, Smlll'!s (1'111111. S.rvktt Enqllth. LI Vtrnt R. Incl T'ltl' W. Jr. will 111 l'leld Frkl9¥, ' PM, Church ol Httl, Stll"I" Lou 1nct H1rvev &rue• J....n Chl'"IH of Litle, Dllv $1lnts, ~..,.,. Of M e Srtr>lltn10!'. J~ P, •net II~! VI '".,_ o-~h. Smlll'll Morlu1r,, l>irK· arr•age !_o•!'1 Robo!•I Frtdrlcl<. Incl M•rl• l ~ ~· ~ • UOOGr~. (tlvfn (. Jr. incl L•ur• L tOt"S. Wl!lltrn1, Htltn Jll!lot1h!nt 1nd 51vf111 Wl!ST9aOOIC Lftltl A•h• O~t1 Westbrwl\. Ate lt, o! '1051 l'llod !ifl!ltmber 1 MOO'lhlln. (lfol Je1n 1nd Ch1•l•1 Chtstnul Slrtti, westmlnilt•. 0111 ol W~~m~~rt• E1<.1trom ind ltlcht•d ~Dc:mm•nHc1vnlhJt ",,:.,'J:r..,°"Ed'1 vd dffl~, Stpt . 1. S11rvlved bV hU~blncl, Crllle, LIHlln AllrOl"t Ind R1vmond l(~!oer:"P ... l ~~ i-+:.1ri. wtr Fkrld E We1tbroolt1 .,_utht1r1, IClttn TOllutlnl T1vlor, Cttlllt Jtln Incl WIHi1m (Pell '• w ,,,,.,.. ·-E<wln· Mel••··•, llaberl G. , ... C1ro1vn ,, Mod<trow, ~~••on 1 '~·· ·' R~;:'°f=r1t1ei1<1 L. ~~ lstK !ilocti1, Detlolll 1nd Geor<11 F. p1rtn11. Mr. 11>C! Mn. A. H. Chot!I; l•I· Etrer,ton, Jo'lce 1rid BoYd Rtctlnci, M1r11r1Pl J11r11 •nd Jame.. ,,,.. Mlflt Gl!11tn : brother, l<trn Chol1'. lhva, Vlc•lt K1v Incl John T11cmt1 v1;1111!Gfl I'll! viewing, W111mln1rer Mt-Slncitt. Shannon and t,ohn . ~r:~'!iu~~;;~:1~Jc~.~·i'~nTW:~~: ..,0,111 P•rk c~11,11, Noon to t IOdt~. Br~~i•dAncit+ M1r • ind w,111t"' G J 0 8 1 Wldnesllll•. incl ti tht ~hurcn IQ• two Crowoer, Jtm.-; £d wln •rid LIJO"~ M•e H~~~i;,t'c, tOr<lf J, r. tn f'ltr Y t.ours prior 10 Jlrvl<•· Se rvlces will be H..,,,....,.. Su.an Sc1t11!I• Ind Wllli1m sm.,11 C~t•lr, EUii ind Jtnr J~n• ht Id ti Cllrl'! Cllurtll ot W1~tmln1tor, Fr1d1tlck 81c1." Pt•r!c I Ann• ind Anlo"I' G. !'°'6! Chttltl<Jt, Wt•lmin11tr. lPIU•sdtV. Wint~. Judllll M. and l!OQer H. Crluev, Gwtlldclvn F. Ind H1rrv L. , w ''"'ln1Te• Mt Munc~. l(aihltrn lf'd J_,fl'fl Pt•rlc~ Kne!ll, 011111 E. lf'd Tl\om11 E. ~~JO PM. fntrtmtn' 1 • Brow", YU~ Jetn Ind Rlthlrd Wero C1111w1v, Pl!rltll Ol1nf Ind JIY l'\Orl1I Pt•k. F1mll1 IU''"" c..,!r!bll· EtuHI~. O.•I• °"' Ind J1mt1 E. WllllMV ''°"' lo A!ht Wtllb•oot< Memorial M!J· O'l'leal, John 1nd J1111I Rt1 v. Lydlt £. 11\d Cl1rtnct W. .... F~nd, Cl~ ol Cllrl,1 Chll•,ch, Wt!I· Curll~, Glor ia Jetn Ind "ollfrl llO"d Fllll>llrltk, "ll"CY LH 1nd lfta Outnt ' 1 M me '' Pirk 81r1N, Mlkf John"'" Suz111ne K1thrvn l(lrk. C•tol L. •nd Cl~dt J. "'lnl!ff. Wtt"" nl tr t " Fllld S.plemHr J St!bV, ROd!WV J tfld Shl•lev M, MorlUlr"I'. Ol•tCIOl"I. Sllverm111, Sll>ln C. 111d St~Ytn G. Morin, J1me1 i( tl\d Fukl~o . ARBUCllLE 6 SON \\'estcUH P.!ortuary Ui E. 11\h St.. Costa !'lfesa " ...... S~oll, Ooneld E. '"" Ev1 H. 1Cow1ltllul!, 0rv111t R. Ind V!rQlntt L, Stv.oTe, Sandri L. tnd "l""'d C. Jr. Strt!I. Evt •llll Ablin BQClt'flnCI!!, Euoe11le M. '"" Htnnlnci Miiler. Mt,,llfot Incl ''"''' !· V11'1Cferlotd. Mtrv A"" 11\d Jimmv "'"" Kr ly Mtrv E. Ind Pt!rlck . For11. P1.,.el1 AM I nd Al!tn £rne1I McA.\ttrtw. Gltdvt Mlrlt 111<1 &ruct S<>r1r, Chlrl~ I<. llld S11,1n C. Cr1w1otd Chlllmi>e•, Miiton G, 1nd E•the• !i. Cu•i•I•, Clllrt.,; A. 1..0 Et1rb.lr1 L. _.olfotr. C•rol Ltt llld Wlllit F. G<IQOWlne. A<>ntl M. tf'd Oii• E. age group contactln& gonorrhea is the 15 to 19-year· olds. He say$ that some high schools lnclude v e n e r e a I disease education in their currirulums. but that many schools rely on the colIDJy Health Departmenlf's occasional trip to th I! i r campus with a short film and a talk by a ptiysician . Of the 13 high schools in the Orange Coast area. only l\\'O have an extensive V D education program in their curriculum. But all ol the schools have VD education incorpo rated into o t h e r courses. such as homemaking. physical education or the Ille sciences. Or. Albert thinks that the "Schmitz bill" requiring parental consent for ·sex education classes has hurt the VD education program and caused an inconvenience lo the schools. The bill was authored by Congressman John Schmitz (R-Tustin) in 1969 v.·hen he v:as a state senator from the 34th District. The bill states that ''if human reproductive organs are discussed in any manner," parental ronsent is required to teach the course. The material to be taught must first be made available to the parents. and if they object. their child must be taken out of the class . But the schools have found !hat the bill has not hampertd their programs a great deal. ''\\fe have a tv"o \veek unit on VD education in the required sophomore safety education class." says Charles Godshall , principal or Newport Harbor High SchooJ. "Because of the Schmitz bill, v.•e haye to send a Jetter to the parents about the class, and there was practically no n egat i ve response to the letters last year. "\Ve did have one student's parents come down to see the film. but they thought it v.·as okay and that it should be taught." The five high schools in the Huntington Beach Union High School District all have VD education incorporated into many classes, according to John \V. Hart. director of curriculum for the district. "Information about VD is taught along \\'ilb o t h e r communicable disease," Harl says. Response to the programs by parents in his district has been far from negative , acetirding to San Clemente High School Principal Darrel Taylor. "We had a program in the state required sophomore safety course last yea r." said Taylor. "but v.'e removed it bttause of the sex education hassle. "We now have a wee.k-long program for sophomores in VD education. \Ve send a Jetter homl! to the parents. and if they object to the class. thev can ha\'e their child lak'en out of the course .·• "Last vear V.'e had an over"·helffiing' response i n fa vor of the class,·· Ta ylor adds. "Very fe1v responses \\'ere received against it." Dr. Albert "·ants far more anti-VD education. "Nobody \vants to get "'ith il and help stop thi s disease," he laments. •·There are organizations to sol\'e hrart disease. arthritis and man y others. but no one v.•ants to slop the biggest disease of them all ." • Wollt,.., .... AleJr IC ...... M•••h~ p M•cOonlld, Rl!Ottl WH1i1m Ind G1orl1 r::"!:i. Chritll!W llt'lerlv ..,., Jt.c~ ckr,~'."" Cl'l1•lu Rlchtrd tnd And!N Mf~l:'.1, M•rr .a.net •nd O..rlt-s r;~::ri'.tt. ll:obt•t I,. tncl Lvclllt M. EUt, Martin Frll'IC•I 1M Aontl Irene Yff!'T11n. v"' El1!ne tnd C!ltrlt1 f1~=~r~1 A. l>fMI Jllcfll<d C. NEW CAREE R BALTZ MORTUARIES Ceron del Al1r OR 3-MSI Colla Maa Ml um • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa ~tep LI 1-3133 • McCOR~DCK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 118$ Laguli• Canyon ltd. 4S.5'15 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e Mortdry Ch1pol ssot Paclfk View Drtve. Newport Be1th, Califon.la II..,. • PEEK FA"1LY CO!.ONTAI, FUNERAL ROME 7191 Bol11 Ave. Westmlolkr 1IS4525 • guRE"'f"t"'E"R ~fORTUARV 1.1111111 -· "4-1135 511 Cit..... llz.tllt • SM!Tm' MORTUARY t17 Milo SI. RaUo .... Bue• - Ii c-r. Etrvce E. 1nct Jotn E. G•tv, Gilt Ann Incl RoctneY l. Sl~t1, J°'@Oll A. 11\0 Ftonnc1 L. 1.llltt Pllrklt A. 1rid HtnClltl M. HorMr. Ptl[kl• tl'ld C1rron F. Otoll. Vlro111 I Mlrlf llld OKlr Miii••· lhcf•'I' L. •rid .,,Proov 2.· ·-~ M~•t L•rltn Adtl1 ''"' ~.,.,n 11111 tmlt1t OovH, Stndrt EllHn ind Jlmmlt L" 01v11. N•Mr "· '"" Robt•• .a.. Fblt•· C••o Eve 1nd J~mn ll:Obfrt Cowrtl, 0111rw A. 11•d Sher•! Johm"". M1rv Ann 11'1d l::uatne RJ~h-•d•lOCVTO•Y OlCRl!lS Nl lf.llt.1"111 '"'""'""'" J Shln~le. Ooneld Gtnt Incl M~···"· Ill• Nunn Mwlrt Yk1or!• tM M1urkt llld.t•d Ltrner, kit-. A11n 11'1!1 ltoblrt I', Ml..,,., J. E . .nd RCNICI I. .. 1m1111 Jlf!lel 11:1nut1 1nct J111 , l.Ulttn\(11, C1111t•IM Ltu!M • n EllWtrd ~tr ~~ ~~,ti,~.J.'~~-:d Girt tcott, Oline M1rie •llCI Jl!!'••ll Ce1 .. r turolll, Jlft\tt Dt~ llld ~~J5ot £~11~· ... rm~~1e11 :::, '""'w ',"", · '· Muth t:VI 1.0UIM ...0 rtd WI tr weMO...o, Stnctr• ...o ,,., KJrthfNnn, LYIWt R" Incl ~IKI T1:1V1rott 0. ffllll ICllhlf't'I Lwllt (1•Dint1< Hfnrv C. Md l'.lhrl Jflll Swl.i.r. Gi1!f't1 G, 11'1!1 H""'" J. P111r.Mlf\. R~' EOWM• t flf N111Cf .!~~ """ti l . 11'1111 "'""~ " f1.,t1,dl1'l, IN•Wli J.,. tflll llkhtrtfl ,_., D &r1noo<1. W....i1t P, r1 ,_..... • /i.y~f.~.EiJ"t~'f:r L.i., o. l_-,~-ta!..~~,,; J~-" CNoflltl " ""P1ftlL DE~ltllt '"'*1 S.9ftlllllltr 2 O'H .. n, Glori. , •M W.....,. 9. MGfll1n, S"'ll• . llld Jldl Jut~ KCl!'I~. $1111tt., Aflll 1no Rtlllh U•o• MtdMlt. Ll'lf R•IDh • .,.. Norf!l .. I J~•n Hm~"' .__,, '1dMV Ind c:n ... '-"":~, ~ &1.,.rty Ann •flf ll:to!nllO . ·~uoot•I ~"°'""Jdtt, OonM !i '""*.''vvn It. ••n ..... r11110 f '"'§; . •Ill J, ~~la. Lvlt I(, Ind v d f, Gtrtflt, 0t0cr111 1flll ttrotk >- "' 0 0 ... ..J "' ::; 0 z "' Q. ..J u OPPORTUNITY! LllAllN JNCOM• TAX l'tt• .. ARATION TIMluM:ndl .......... toM ......,. Ill IM 1ut11owlt• Wi °' prolmklul Income ......... The wort h ln.-MMtlnl llftd ...W,lng. AM the demend tor tr1l...C cONUllantl ta ttic....ine •tell , .... . Now, H A R ltock-ArMrlca'e ...... t fMome T•• l etv-ic.-wlll Mch JOU ,....,. ndlill• MlfthM el ,,.put,.. lncoiM ... ,...... .... .,... 12 ... talUon ........ lupentlleft by ~ lkJck MtNctotL eour-CO'Nf't CWf9l'lt •• ....., IMory, end .,,aketlon " snctlcM Iii H a R llOck omo-._ com to conL , ... "199 tndude: • ••• t-hour _.. (2,... ... k) • °"*" CJf.,. -et.. ...... • Dlpklfn.l ••..s.d upon .......... • ~,..._1 fMI or,_. tllat) '°'~_.....,.,...... CIASS!S START SIPTlllBH 14 ENROLL NOW! :.'"-c:-;=-t .. () r ,, z 0 :;: l> r -; 0 0 l> < ----··~~--­H•ltt ......... lt-I I c"'• M..-He•'•" "-11 '-"tel• v.itey 1171 Hert-llft, II '91m SH,,r .. Cntarl • I 1 l llJ Mel. St. MJ4t41 147•1907 • • Pl1-M ••nd m• ttM 111tormetlon ebol.tt &he 1971 H&R • Block lncomt T•• Cou~. Thil is a ,.qunt tor lnlor.,... • tlon onty end placn IM undtr "° oblioatlon to enrolL • DP f .t 1 : I ' CITY • <41"i1'--------,,.......Z"COD<<--.-.~ CLIP AND MAIL T ODAY . ·-• ONLY A FEW MORE DAYS TO IUY FOR SCHOOL OPENlllG! Select and buy those schoal shaes now fram our display of thousands of pairs in a style and colars to mat ch or accent your schoal wardrobe. OUR FAMOUS KRINKLE PATENT SPECTACULAR 5~ 2-STRAP FANCY SHE"U WANT FOR "IACK-TO.SCHOOL" 513 ILACK-ILUE HD OR IROWN WOMEN'S S COLORS ,; TO CHOOSf fl OM S· T ·R·E· T -C.H BOOTS ""'"" ""''" '"""" ""''" '"''"" """" ........ 4 ........ ...... .,4 "'"'" ....... u SIUS 583 S TO ID 491 MISSIS SIUS ~lta TO J MEN'S 41~ IOYS" 2Vi 6't. TO 12 TO 6 -----------........ ~96 419 MEN'S FULL 9-INCH BOOTS '""""' ........ M"'"'I '""'" ""'"'' .,.,,., .. '"""" '"'"" ......... "'"'" """''' '"'"" """"! ,',',',',',',',\ """" ........ 1 ""!'" '""'"I "U"" "'"'"4 """" ~"""' '""'" '"'""' "'"'" '""'"' '"'"" "'""'' """" """"' '""'" """"' ',',',',','.','1 ,,,.;,-,'{;;,-;,~.+·;;;:..·,·,-:;;:;,.,·;,';;;;,·;:;;;;;;;,-,·:,·;;;,':t:.7'i.'i1Wi.', ,,,·,',',',·: ... ·:.w.v:.•;~;·:!·.·.·::::.·:::.·"·':,<::::.•,.,.,., .. ',',','.',o:,·.·:.·.·.·.i:.·::,.,•,•,.,.,., •• ~.·~::: ............. ,. ......................................................... __ l .. ~ ... w::,',"-""'~·;...-------------­........... j. .......... ......... '"'"'" ......... ....... , .. , ..... ........ '"'"" '"'"" '"'"" '"""' """" ......... ''""" ........ '""'" """'I '"""' """" "''"" """" ""'"' """' '""'" """" """" '"'"" . ....... '"'"' ""'"' ........ '"""' "'"'' ........ ""''" l•l!l'U '""" . ....... "'"" '""'" ""'" ¥.',',',','.'. ........ '"""' '"""' "'""" "'""' """' '"""' "'''" '"'"" "'"" ""''" """' ..... ; .. ""'" '"'"" ....... ""i•n "'"'' ""'"' ~'"'" ' • .'.'!.':: ........ '"'"' ''""" '""" '""'" """' ''""" ·111111, ........ ........ """" . ....... ""'"' "'"'" ........ '""'" '"""I U1TlE GENTS STRAP IOY5' SIZES Jl/J: to ' BOOTS 3'6 1v. to J 4.91 MISSES PERFORATED INSTEP STRAPS 1111 TO l SHOES 2'6 ALSO IN INFANTS SIDS S TO I ·,·::.v.•,•, !---------';.. _______ _ ........ ....... 1 l'"'" 1nt!t """ "'""' """" ....... t ........ '"""' "'""' '""''! '"""' ''""" ........ -H••I "'"'" '"""' """" IUl"•I """'' "'""' """'' "'""I ''""" '""'" """' '"'"" """" ........ , ....... '""" """" LITTLE GENT STRAP SLIP-ON l 'li to 3 491 IOYS' SIDS 31/i TO 6 PANTYHOSE FOR "'IACK0TO. SCHOOL" AND FALL WARDROIES 99c PAIR NEW FALL SHADES "' z 0 Ill "' """" """"1 '""'" """'" "'"'" '"""" """" "''""' ""'"' "'""" ''""" """"' """" "'"'"' "'"'" '"""" '"""' """"' """" '""'"' ""'"' '"'""' '"'"" f"""" """" '"'"''! '"'"" ""'"'! '""'" ''"""' """" f"""u ,'.',',',\',',~ """" """"' H•"dsome bl•ck smooth l•afh•r. Buckle instep "'"'" '"""" "'"'" '""'"' "'"'" ''"""' '""'" '""'" """" ""'"' """" '"""' ""'"' """'" '"'"'' "'""'' '"""' """'' '"""' NEW FAU AND BACK-TO-SCHOOL '"""" """" ''"""' ........ '"'""' ""'"' ......... ''""" """"' ""'"' \',',',',',','! """"' '"""' " ....... I ''"'"' ""''"' !.'.'.'.'.'.'.'. 1tr•p. Full inside tipper. Pointed toe 1tyle. HAND BAGS 1091 \'f,'A'.','.' '"""' ""'"' ""''"' '""'" HUNTINGTON BEACH 10051 ADAMS at BROOKHURST 962-9178 flOM HUNTINGTON BEACH 5898 EDINGER at SPRINGDALE 847-9125 STORE HOURS--WEEK DAYS 9 TO 9--SUNOA YS 10 TO 7 \ \ ; 1J PILOT ·AOVERTISEl! Wtdt1tsd1y, Srpirmbt, 9, 1970 W~ay, Stptrmber 9, 1970 DAILY PILOT J:J Orange Coast rea Men in Service Around the World Navy Pelly O!llctt 'l'blrd Class David M. McCJore, son or Mr. and Mrs. Andrew A. McClure of 9082 1Kapaa Drive, lluntlagton •ae1ch , partJClpa\'d In a s!J-day !rip lo Honc Kong, ~ldng the hall-way polni Iii hiJ shlp'1, tne 1 lirtraft carrlu \1SS Oriskany, 11th crulSe lo lhe Westem, P1clflc. I Navy Beaman Gtae P. MtOoveni, aon of Mr. and Mn. Eua;ene P. McGovern of 1111 5anta Ana Ave., Co1ta Me11, perticlpated in a 11x- day trip to Hong Kong, mark.In~ the half-way point tn h1a ship t, the aircraft carrier USS Ortakany, 11th cruise to the Western Pacific. Airman l\.llcbae1 0. Hatch, Mn of .Mr. and Mrs. Dene B. llatch of 2985 Teywood Pl., cmt.i 1'fesa, ha! • completed basic training at Lackland AFB, Tex. He has been a,.,signeci to Lowry AFB, Colo., communications -electronics systemJ. Airman Hatch, a 1966 graduate of Costa Mesa High Sd!ool. Warrant Officer Candidate !Jami 0, Bndwtll, son of Mr. an4 Mrs. Joseph E. Bradwtll, NI Knowell Place, Costa Mesa, recently compteted a helicopter pilot course at the Army P r I m a r y Helicopter Schoo!, Ft. Wolters, Tex. During the 20-week coW'!e, he learned to fly Army helicopters and learned to use them in tactical maneuvers. His wife, Helen, lives at 859 Oak St., Costa Mesa. lit Lt. James W. ltGach ITI received h!s wings from tilt Naval Air Station, (Marlnl Corps), Ellyson F ie Id , Pensacola, Florida on August 14, 1970. Lt. Roach is the 60n of Mrs. Wanda Roach of Huntington Beach and James Roach of Long Beach. Navy Ensign John E. Maak, husband of the former Miss Diane M, Skelly or 6310 Siive rwood Drive, ftuntlngton Beac h, re e ej ve d his commission In the Naval Reserve upan completion of 1 phase of his tralnlng at the Naval Aviation Schoo 11 Command at Naval A 1 r Station, Pensacola, Fla. Chief Warrant Off j c er Lawrence S. Harper, son or 11-lrs. Lola Harper ol 2829 Lemon St. in Costa Mesa, has been assigne d to an experiment designed tb tert attack helicopter survivability now being conducted by the U .S . Ar my Combat Developments C o m m a n d E!Cpe rimentation Command fCDC EC), headquartered at Ft. Ord. He is an loan to CDCEC from his home base at Yuma Proving Grounds in Arizona. Navy Lieutenant (Junior grade) Stephen J. Y.'alker. husband of I.be form er Milis Kathleen G. McElhany of 547 Emerald Bay, Laguna Beach, completed basic jet fl ight instruction with Training Squadron Nine, Naval Air Station, ~1eridlan, Miss. lie received 4 8 hours or flight experience in t h e "Buckeye" jet t r al n in g aircraft and mastered the techr\iques of jet acrotabics, night and formation flying. • Don Tbom11 Perron, son of ?ifr. and Mrs. Don J, Perron~ Westminster. recf!Tllly enlisted In the United States Army for three years. According to Sergeant First Class James Long, U.S. Army Recruiter in Costa r-.tesa, Don Jiaf been guaranteed training as a Seaman (Marine Operations). After eight weeks ol basic training he wUI r eceive apeclalty traJning in Marine Operations at Fort Eustis, Virginia. ·-~1lcbael Joseph Stiebe r. ton ot Mrs . Patricia C. Belcher o( H\lnlingtnn Beach. recently enlisted in the United Stales Army. According to Sergeant First Class James A. Long, U.S. Army Recruiter in CMta Mesa , Michael has b een guaranteed training a, a Paratrooper (Airborne). Anet elgbj weeks of ba:slc ~ tralillng at Fort Ord, be will receive three weeks Jump Trainlns at Fort Benning, Ga. SecoDd Lieutenant Pew E. Greaves, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Jolm Greaves, 2029 Federal Ave., Costa Mesa, rccenUy completed an Army J.1edical Departmtnt offlc~r basic course at Brooke Army Medical Center, Ft. Sam liouston, Tu. Navy Seaman ~1ich111el G. l\fcMahon, son of ~fr.1 . r.tar!e N. Penlco of 1741 Tustin, and husband of lhe former Mias Dlue M. Ma\Uet or 2413 None Ava. all o1 Colla Meaa, returned to San Diego aboard the guided missile destroyer USS Parsons after completing 11 Six month deloyment to the Western Pacific. lnlng with Trainin g adron Four at Naval Air Ion, Pensacola, Fl1. Colo., for training tn the munitions and w e a po n s maintenance field. AJrman Pariah, a 1968 graduate oC Marina Hlgh School, attended Golden West College. Mesa, has returned to hit homeport, San Diego, after Iii montM in the Western PacUic aboard the submarine USS Sculpin. Two, N0:val Alr S t a t I o n Whlllng Field, Milton, Fla., for tralning u a 1tudent naval aviator in the T·28 "Trojan" tralntr aircraft who hove enltred the U.S. Alr Foret Academy class of lf14. Cadet Bernard ii a 1970 graduatc ;of Corona del Mar llil:h So I, NeWJ>Ort Beocb. have entered the U.S. Air Force Academy class of 1974. Marine Private Ken.etlli D. Ma~ ) I r 1 r Lleut<nant ~ L Sulof! Jr., husba.~ of the former Mias Karen J. Morrison of Newport .Beaoh, <ompleted bulc fllibt ,.-··-Jolm D. Park•, IOl't o Mr. and Mrs. John D. P '!h of 7021 Valentine ve, Huntington Beach, has pleted bQk training at kla~ AFB , Tex. He has usJgned lo Lowry Ai'B, Navy Seaman Robert C. Lariviere, husband of the fonner 1.1.iss Celeste J. Vecthio of 2040 Paloma Drive, C.osta Navy Ensign Pettr M. Lance, son of Mt. and Mn. Gtrald G. Lance of 219 Geneva St.,' Huntincton Beach, report..t lo Training Sqyadron Bret Bernard, m of U.S. Navy COmmandtr and Mr1. Robe.rt B. Bernard of 330 Amethyst Ave., Balbol lsland, is one of ttlO freshman cadets Robert • Dorta, IOI\ of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony V. Doria of 50&2 Taaman Drive, Huntington Beach, is one of 1410 freshman cadetl who Crlffltll, IOO of Mr. and Mr._ Donald c. Griffith of 1101 H.archrick Cl.rcle, Huntington Beacb, wu graduated from buJc tr11Dtns at the Marine Corpo JlecrUlt Depot, San Diego. "Mini" Portabl~Radio I IJ CUllTONE Tr1•1ilt1r ~ ••• With batter!es • spea~er I 111d cmyina casa. l ·~us ~.88 a ca 1111 r1c11 a nail Bike Acces ories FOR IACK-TO CHOOL Light R~:!~~~~t 1 29 itti tracket. lq.1.41 • l Air Hom llirror P11cision en2in· ~ flttl1ng1far. emd.Safetytat-2 tl!flectors. ed. ltf. t11 leg. lie · 99c 79c Elasta-Strap Holds down any laid searely. Rllgged mttslsl.lctioll. Plastic 49c coiled ft hooks at enik. le1. l9c 2's • ~~~~~:~: 1 49 14x9x8". 1 n ~.~!~w~~.i~~ 9~ ec \J :~. ~;,~.~·,:~;jl HAii ClaSps & Barrette 1 Clasps Jambt clasp. •~" lone. W/doublt·wire 2' loc~ foam ~ponge I';~ be• Barnltl Mirror llnlll PicU Ip tii11-, ~o• re!lec-33c 'lions. II.. , Bmtlt . .MMf1111 Styla llld')fk Colcf1. tJ;J- Bmtte g \ . Plaids, Prinb & Sol·4 C id Fabric styles. Bmlll ~ As.~ed 1tylts ol C tortoise. &.reties · Two NC~ al five 1sscrtH '3 llld colols. fOt lvtfJ 6 tf1t llld mood. hnn Oat Sbl11. Penn l1 lrl1llt11u. lei. lie Cl"t Sl11 SHAVI CREAM 1\4 1i. .. , ... ,63c ::~ .. Sweatshirts l'llllovtr, medium weigh~ w/short sltem. Au't tlllors. Men's 111d bays' Sil~ in small, medium, large&utn1arge. lfl.l.11 1.69 ~/~ •11u· Panties .. htl-l l11" •.• 1r"ll•1rl11• - Solt and absorbent lor !realer com-- fort. M~hine W1Sh1b e. As:sorttd colors ind pl~ts. Sim 2-14. Soft & Dri cE!2> M1•·• Socks Basket wea ve patte rn. •·Brawny Knir' stretch socks 79c ·in asserted colors. Sires 10-13. leg. lie Pair Ml•'S Socks Scope llOUTIIWASM & IAISU "Ftrst n 111 11 n1 111tr1111 & T•• '"'~ f11ls fr11lllf fir ..... " .... 1.41 24 ti. 97c Style HAIR SPRAY lttpl1r, S•Jer H•l• 1111 Uuc11t1•. ltc. S9c 13 oz. • !'llllOllllUHll0'6ll&lllllllDlllUllllllKl1LllllltllllDll§ a ~ =' 1nn1•1 ~-; Candy Bars .~ •1 ~ .. od. Milk tml1\e ~,, ~en.ch. iH l ~i.';!~ gnc • ; 5chn \II . (!m, e 1DUumnn1ant1111•1a11111••110111111111111on111; m111111a11m111n1ao1111111nma1t11111PD11111111111SD1U1lll CORNING ~:< WARE" i Cooking Set ~ i 2Yt Quart Saucepan 111d 4 ·~ = each 22 ountt Petite Pills ~ g Cottoosolids, longsletfe knits with or witho ut col· lars. As1"t p!lin tolors or stripes ••. all ~ r.ew Fall colors. Sizes s1111ll, medi11111, t1rae. ........ YowCll\n 211 .OD .;~eo .... 12.88 c=P._ I lhe lun & usual sock for work or play. ~ 3 ~i~~10-~:0oesize 2~1 00 """"'"'"'""" 1111111t1U01IU1lflnllm1-.mM1101111nn1nti 11&-lk P1ir • • ... "" Panties ,, •• ,.. Socks "'Eld1rl11" elastic ~g style. 59c . "'lraw•r lilt" tomfor\ahle g!Je\cll ~mbed 'otton. While only. socks. Asso1ted tolori. 69 Sizes 5·8. 1111. ik Pair Siin 6·8~ and g.11. C ••1.1.k P11r .. ~~ .. 98 ~· Slacks ~ flale or sti1i1ht legs. Nl,.,.0r1lyles &I,._ • B'k' • A kl Is rics. '. su;,.., ,,;~ .LADlll' I IOIS ~ .MISSfl' n e cuffs,. assorted plaids, • Altrxtivt and gltm01ov& . 111e M1t look & Ille cord lac• bimmed panties. 59c Tnple roR ~It cat· ~ look in solids. fall COi· Dtlectable tOIOft. Sitts ton. Ny~n In heel & 3 '1 oo· ors to mi1ormatc•willl 58. toe. S11es 7-11. f "11W··· .ri3·16·\a"'g~·a•P• s;,., ~ • lADlll' Bikini Panties l•l l/21.ll, 1' "oo ·Bold Prints, Zebr1 f'rlnts arid lier Wet look. Various : • colors. Sizes S-8. ••r-5k Pair • · a.AIROl Hair Care "Angel Skin" LOTION by POND'S ANNUAL 1/2 PRICE SALE "Desert Flower" HANO l IOOY LOTION Skin-1oot•iM& and _ molst11rlling ••. witll tht Vtrf "heal'!" Df l1noli" 1n lh1s t'N· ~lac l1agriMll:e. 111. I.DD 1 00 I IL • 111.•.ft l 75 11 ''· • DRUGSTORES OPEii 9 A.M. TO 10 P.M. -1 DAYS A WEEK NI W,OIT llACH 1121 11.VINI Ill W.-!'lfff 'l'i.u HUNTINGTON llACH • ADAMS AND •ltOOICMUltST HUNTINGTON llACH $,.ltlNIOALI AND 1.DINGllt Wit~ 32% more $Ofleners. (asy dispensing. Plastic package. Medi111 Sill ~ APRIL SHOWERS PAIKI DAVIS Skin Balm ... -=:. ~ .. __ _ . __ ... \ .... :.:-...:=--· Fir 1111111 111 All 0•1r S'I• Care. Iii• l.Jaa ll11. Use on sU11 rooghened by exposure or didlwnhlnr. Ooct 1 yw value on tbe big l1mi~ sile bottle. fer A ll111lt1ll TIM ~q. 2.51 17 It. "Myadec" _ _ _ ltldl P1lt1CJ Ylt111l'1 ~ , •• Wll• Ml11rals ---=. • ror activ! people. Wit• le1. 1.49 . ' 1 JOFR{[, 4 98 ' '"'• . lUCTlltTODTMIRUSll ••• ~;;3:&8 tfTlll lllSMES pt; tf 2 lk ,,_ BIG Bonus for BABY ~~.Ps8!..F~-g ~ 11ass illsiilattd, Dou-3 88 ble hinge sprin1 lop. Hiah colors. • Diaper Pail SlnilMy, rustproof. e1sr to clea11. 'l!it• 1 39 6etaclrab!e deodonm in hd. 20 QI. • Training Seat Dtrrable plastic w/adjus! · Ible llardware & y1n~t ggc salelf belts. fits a!I W.r~ seats. ~.i!!~!.,~!!~s~~ ... n. ~r' clean!Sl way to changt 59c · tliapers, helps prevelll t1iape1 r~h. 100'1 MUSICAL Toothbrush Fir t•••11rs , .• When 66C leeth are brushed properly dllmes rinr. Ass't colors. Baby Bath "J1•1-1e" -FM!I sile 130-Qt.)- Ribbed IOIP dish JI 1 77 one end. Pastel col· ors and wllite. • FASHIONAIU Neck Collars n1 f1111 ll1t! W••On-Wlll'Tn! Velvet w~h Pearls, Mesh Chain wilh S!ones !or the "Old Worl4'' Look Or a Co~n Collar wi!h D~ Discs tor •.. e MO'Jer11 Lool ~ ~ seem 2.50 I I .. ~ ... .JA_DAllT "1.0T • -' ~-• • . .. • • OPEN DAILY 9 A .M . TO 9 P.M. -SAT ~.SUN. 9 A .M . TO 6 P.M. . , , LIN·lliOOK NOW ••• OPEN A llN.UOOI( CHARGE ACCOUNT! HARD·WARE • ma&ler charge .......... , ... • WINI Miii! 2 RAIL 811C.U , .. -"-..,...,. •WINI ftlll 10"x7' URDIN IMID 1i. -......., ._.,, • WINI Fiii! IOOM Of PANILIHG 11oo-l ...... De,1). • WINI FRiil 2 aaQ WAGONS Pn • .., 1.,.t.ct o."'.J • WINI FRDI 2 IXTUIOR PAINT Joas 1111 .............. "·' • WINI FalEI 2 INTUIOR PAINT JOBS l..,_,..,,.0.,,.1 Aillustaltlo SHOE TREES • K_, tM Me,. 111 yeur 1h-• with t1teM ri.a1"'i. a1td •.tlvs!e.i• -t•lllc 1M• -· • L'tt1 •" weme11'1 MM sl.,... •••· 29c 4'x7' WALL PANEL "lnlf•nf ,_.,,._ haler , ...... ,..lnrln•I'" .... ,.. .... 4 ft •• 7 "· ,.,..,, .. ..,II ir.1ckty •"4 -11,. . • y-dtel• af ..... ,.., ........ ... ~." •169 ........ 19~. MOTOR OIL 17~. HAVOUHf-T-C ... lce 20 •r 30 wel9hl. 33~. "NN101L-llne1I Ovellty 20 er 30 w•l•ht· 37~. ) _J_ Short·H•""IH DANDELION WEEDER -.... • Yeu IOJ' ~ O.lttNN k bel111 ln¥•H4 .,,.. 4a1ulello1t11' • ..,. ..... .,. out w llh thl1 ..._.,. 'i.t.4. hard .. ootl hondletl .... , .. , • A Grand o,.nl119 su,.r s,.cron ••t· .J•c 101 .. 4'x8' HARDBOARD • ,,,. .... , •c•1te1t1lcol ,.,,.,, ... ••cell•llt for 100'1 •I Mme •tHI ...,,, ..... .......... DOORS! DOORS! ................... ..,.. waf'k ..... ,., tll........_ .... , ........ _ tlo•""' ' Up t• tf" .,, •. • "•"' chelc• •f nnltt..M. •••• $1.49 AlfAllllM ~·-OUR .... •ouNrAJ• Y•&1n srou ·~OUR;•· ,. '· .. I • • ' THESE PRICES . ARE ·EIFECTIVE AT BOTH STORES Lin-Brook, Fountain Valley • Over 66,000 Square Feet of Grand Opening Specials. Jain the Celebration. 1117Y•" Salo Prlcff -- thro• Saturday, S.pt1mbwr 12. • \';le reJh·e lhe right to limit quanlities. POWER SAW • I •"'P "'6te.........co111t11l9'• with Ill .. , "'""° •• ••*'tty 111, clutch. M 1ioort1 ...... r1, ,.,, • U.L eppro• ·-·"'-· .... $24.ff '1799 Ilg 32°0s. FORMULA409 • ·~ -... ,.,,. .. 1"9'J' ....... ,..... _ .., ....... , .... • T;V. • "°" .n IWfMM IM,-ctlon """"' ....... 661 .......... ut . I· IAR·l·Q WAGON • lf;I .... ····---.... ...................... ,. .. ........ _y __ ,. .... • n,. ,. ......... t• I tt.Jthtt. • 34" wl• • 211/1.".., • )1 .. h!p ....... ..... i.. .... St.ti '6!! .... Big 90-lb. Bag REDl·MIX CONCRETE 14''x48'' "J115I Add Woler oruf Ml:ii:I" • ldaal for l1nce po111, •alk .. ay1, po!ia1, etc. • C•v•rJ I 1q, ft. appro><. one lnth Thick . 69~ .. DOOR MIRROR • lvr• t• 1 ... ,... .... yovr imago- 14"•41" da•r m.irror-leh ya• 1et ''"' full plclure, • Haritw-d froma. • ••. $3.49 • Compl•T• wl!h odjtHtellt. fl"' pan, twi~ 9rld1 fOf •a1y d•anlng, tll'lolir•• hood wllh fuU window, •Swin g out 1p!I rod, 2 1h•lv11, U.L. •ppr .. eil fnO!or. • Um1 frost with GTO g,....,. door . l1t9. S'.l-4.tS G I I I \ " W!dnesday, Septtmbtr fl , 1970 DAILY PILOT IS • OVER AN ACRE OF HARDWARE AT EACH LIN-BROOK' • QA&OR£ Plutlc Ring LAWN SPRINKLER •I"&,,....,.,._....,. tlvty 1pl'lnklff, .,...,.. • "" 1nl11. • hh•I f•r fleW ... .... '"'''· '''· .. , .... 59' Opening Special! CEMENT BRICK • Stantlanl 111• 1'11"•2'/•"••Vi" conc,.t• brick• ••• ,.rl•d tor many pr•l•rt1. •The hl•a1 mat1rlal for walkways, patios, barb1cu11, woll1, '''- • 4 color1-ot11rol, rod, "'" a"d charcoal. J.1;. 7c 5~ .. Genuine G.E. MERCURY QUIET SWITCH • v.1 .. 11 Tolf<:h, 1ll1nt, lint 10111119 1wltch1,. • (11r te lnllall-U.L ll'fl'l•1tl, 1 Meffmlae ,. .. , h•-taMy, •.•. ''·'' 79' JU1ertecl FIRE SCREEN SALE! ' • 11"(191 ,....,........ __ .. $2f.9S. • T,.._.,.., • .,. Nhcri•ll of ,,,. .. , .,., 11 .. 1 ..... ,. chMM fr•"'· • first ... ,..,. ''"""' 5-•M M11..., •1...._ .... t. $2f.fS •12~0 t ' .. w ... u.....o1c: •AS rwo · I OIAJll' 10CAflOllfS JO SIRYI YO•I LIN-BROOK: letef 6 MUG SO -c_,,...w,,. W"'911 W•H ••ct"' • • ,_ ........... _ -..111 ........... ,, ... _, 1.1.,.. • I 2" wl• -'-" ft11I ....... ., N.._ .... $2.lt ·1~', ........ .... .,.n, BAR STOOLS • hr ,.._,, ., """ .. .,.,.,., ...... •-'Mr-49' l'hlll,..i,.. -M1•11y ., .. , .. • JO" hlt~I)' t9 • ... ...i .. All Alu111l•u111 DELUXE SCREEN DOOR • l•ll·,.,_.. "'-wltft ...,. .. ,.... ........ 10'11"' kick ....... • Chfftf _,. ,...,,,_. tftlto, • , .... ,, ..... )0" _........_ _.._... .... rwh'-ci-. • C_,a.t. wlttt •II ...... .,. ..... _ ''9!~,, ... . I ' • ,.,. ..-•!tr .... ,..... ... , .......... ...,. ........ ' • , ...... flf ..._.... ..utty _., ,_.... .k"'"" ..... ,,, 10~ HARDWARE • •k• ,...,. ,. .... with thl1 1tllnly, -y -""' • .... ,.,11,,. • Flt• ell 1t1ntf1r4 •••4 ,.nrll-•••nil lfll1tr• 1tr11ht ....... .... $1.lf 99' Oalte,. CARPO TILE • W1ll1 1•ftly •11 t''af" c_,.t 1u .. 111 to i...wtw.1--"i• .11k ... ythl11!(' ,., .... • l rf1111 .... ,,.,.th •114 c•t•r I• •11)' r•O'"• Plutlc LAUNDRY BASKET ··r • ....s11 11--i.,.. c•,.dty. • T..,.tt ,-l)'et"'1*M I• "'*· yellto• •• '"'"'"'"· 39' le11l•e-nt VACUUM CLEANER BAGS •S.•-'H,.,... ........ 2tc ....... O'IC .... & Merritt' GARBAGE DISPOS·O·MATIC "t•f,. '-•rf•I '"" 1/, Jl•ne,,.wHI" • Ch,.,,,,. pl•'•' tu,,,. ...... P•l11S.•1 11001 1rlHln1 rl111 • • tO' 1wlvol'l"',-ll•n •• efh'llllMIM I•':""''"' -llfell-lu .. rfcet•d. • E••t ,...u .. 1 • •... '"'·" •2999 I l 11xl 511 SHAG CARPET TILE • 1J"a1J" Mlf •~rl111 '"°' cw,.. '"•· • S.v•11 lw cN•M 1 'Kwlk•Kever'' ADHESIVE PLASTIC • 11" win , Mlf ... ,, •• c•ltl'"' ~,., ., •• ····"·"' ,,, ••••rf"t ••111, fvmitw1, t ie. • ......... , .. 1octl•11 •I ~tt9r111 • .. , •••• ,.. .... n. ..... I ... Jfc 25~ ... . I 1h•H1 I• th .. •• ...m. •••. $1.2t 79!T1i.' I .(f DAILY PILOT DICK TRACY TUMILIWEEDS FOR Me?I HO\V s-wi:er!! MUn AND JEFF ----- JUDGE PARKER LOVE IS TA.KING JASON'S ESCAPE FROM PR'.150M !IJ'LV! HE O.Ni gel1EVE Tl-IAT MIS FATHER: WOULD SE INVOlVEP IN VIOLENCE ! ,.._, _ _, 1. CA.Mi BELIEVE IT EITHER! ly Cliester Gould • fRICJM TH! C.AAOL..e. TO THI. GRAVI!, ANGEAPRINTS Nl!VeR 04AMGI.-. ....... INFANT ADUl..T 0, l'M ~~I C'Nfrll)S!l'Sl.V ACCEPT ITW/IJ IM POIN9 MYNAILS.Alf I COME 1\lE'l'RE NOT SEEVER QO~: t>AUGHTER! By Tom K. Ryan --I By Al Smith LIKE SO/ -me M.AN HE &ROk:E our WITH MAS " LOWG CRIMINAL l.Ec.C>fl:D FOR VICIOUS U:l ll'IE~ HE, NOT J,t.50N, WAS IPEtmAED ..S T1"1E P'Ef{SOM WHO PISTOl·WMIPPEP TME c.LOTHING STORE PROPRIETOR! • PERKINS By Harold Le Doux !li4. CERT,\IN IT WAS JASON WHO PMOtlED ™E CASE WORKER AT JllVEWILE CDUrrr PRE- T91~NG 10 IE YOllll: lrol'HER:,JOANNA! WHICJ.4 MEANS TH.t.T ME NOW ~ows ¥OI ,\NP ALEX. ARE MERE! I KEEP HOPING l'!'!'!~~W.e'LL HEAii: Fli:.OM. HI M.~ Ll'L ABNER SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MUWNS ANIMAL CRACKERS _llOO MW! SOMC ~ OJR AllaS'fORS wwrw ~ By John Miles I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by ~ .. POWER I ua,n.~ J .., .... '7 -r.-•~-. ' . 1'CROSS l Man's namt 5 Hormone · m'dicirie 'Manager 14 Wall part 15 Hint lb"-·'lllith Mr" 17 A lilllt JB Auto accessory l 'I Tout lt --· Evt1yont • 20 Alter··-21 Glycosr, r .g.: 2 words 23 Dtcrer befo1ehand 25 Parliclt 2b Crone 27 Cut or mtilL Z1l Wheel l)illl 3l F1 111hten 35 Common co ntra ction 3& Climbing plan! 37 Movr lhrough wate1 · JB Lrga1 ordrrs J'f ··· ti! a ..,,lulr 40 Declare 41I Kind of s andwich 41 l Power ' l " " 20 2J '::"' . •; J2 lJ • JI ~ " -43 Readily man euver· 1ble: Var. 44 E1eeJlent 45 Inten- tional ly so written 41J Fastener 48 Mo1t prec lpitou'i 52He met .& ple·mJn 2 wo1ds Sb Tool 57 ''E1c'll'nt!'; 58 t-r ag1anc' 59 lnsrcts t.D Rece1 vtr ot S\O ltrl vroprrty .61 The us e of memory liZ Prrsian fairy t.l Ed ibl t root: Dial. b4 Extorted IT'on'y from tis Dash OOWN l E•tra .z 81g J Word of larewtl\ .t Head 5 Lorne (jr etnt's lorte b Average Wtl\htr of a place: • . " ':t 11 J1 ll " • 11 ·-' ll }' " 7 Trrat with tur ptnt1nr: Slang 8 Un1:ir1ncipll.'d man: Slang 9 Man of gr eat strength lO App ro11· mall.'ly )1 Stay mg around 12 Norse epic 13 Prophe t 21 Gull of th' South China Seil 22 Gives on 24 Toss'd 27 French riv"r 28 Prtposit•o11 30 Move slow I( 31 Sc hedul e o . \lack t Vf'nt s J Z ' B'gone'" 33 Liquid roc k ' . " 1·. 1 • . \i' 19 ,, u " " r. . " 1. l b. " ~ ~.; \' .. " " .. " " " . .. ' ., w " ' Cl/Cl/70 34 A.ct or btauli ry ing 35 Bird Jb Giv' utt,rance to 38 Dur ing !ht t ime that 42 Bearing ~4 M1teri al add• to increas' bulk 45 Put In lhf' Wll'thouse 417 Quickly 418 Hit hMd 49 Door sectlOtW 50 N'wsp1p'r 'di lion 51 Amber Of copal 52 Scre'n 53 R'sut t or lhlnkillg 54 Wild appl e 55 Her o 59 Anthrop6id . . n •• ,, ~ " " JO " ' ,. " " MISS PEACH STEVE ROPER "!'HIS le> A ROTTEN LUNCH! 'Y'SEE, l'M THE FfLl A . WHO WAS GOl'llA LIVE ~EOE WITH lolSS O'HARS •·AFTER SHE EIKAME:::::;-e MRS. NOMAP, THAT 15:' PEANUTS --..1 I KNEW ~~ "1lll'D ASK Cf """'-? ME THAT! ', HOW DARE '11:>1.1!! WE WOULDN'T SERVE "l!lU Mt'THINGI "THAT' W//8 NOT FR~SH! By Mell By Saunders and Overgard 50 TI<M6S ARE PRETIY MUCH 'THE SAME WAY SHE WALKED OUT ANO LEFT THEM T-Y I ... ly Al Capp ' ~.MR.FLEASPECK. SUH!! ~&IE'S DON'T 9TAV 1MTMIS CORN·DISHUN·- (ll . 605H ! .• ~Al wa::e.1Hei.> LIKE., t>>D ? THE STIAHGI WOllD MR.MUM ij II I By Gus Arriola , AOO ANOTJ/l'R :250 P~SOS 10 TJ/E COST OF 'THE IJAT//ROOM1 AMIGOS/ By Ferd Johnson By Roger BoUen 1-\tJ 6Ue'SS VJO\)l-D Be', 61.0PPI/. •• 0 DENNIS THE MENACE - ' • .. I [' • .. 'I ' ,I ·1 ., ' I 1 ' I ( ' I ( \ ' I I 1 Suicide Feelings Not SiJJ,, 17 Dr. Peter Stdnerolln I Dear Dr. Stei.ncrobn: I hate 'life. I wait for death. You 'don't seem to realize how ~really lltUe it means when a 'human being dies. And how many (too many) are born to replace each death; breathing air, eating food, taking up room and space , sleeping in a v.•arm comrortable bed. suf- fering, being disappointed. hurt, dragged down-spiritually. emotionally, mentally. The whole cyc l e is meaningless. The efforts spent DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE In living. the energies, the enthusiasms spent, the high ideals trampled just to scrat.c:h out an existence; the "good intentions, all past no\\'. All for nothing. The sum total af one life: Nothing. Of course. this i s n ' I necessarily the same sum total for all human life. Some Jives mean something. They contribute, even though only self-Jove, self~are. I t ' s something. These h u man s \\'iiilnt to live. : Your life, Dr. Steincrohn, Is dedicated to helping those who Want life and to live it as comfortably as possible. But if human beiilgs discover all roads lead to a blank wall, such persons should have the respect and dignity from ohers to choose to end that life, an y way they select. I want to be left alone! I am so sick of being expected lo say and be and do according to son1e script. To have a certain attitude, be in certain moods. feel certa in feelings-so that t may be rated "acceptable" and •• adequale. '' I go to my clergyman ~~ he says, "Don't you know tl s a sin to contemplate S'!lf· destruction? For your penance 5ay "You sinner. You un S peakab l e , wretched ~nner." ' J can just see yOur word s in print: "This Woman Needs A Psychiatrist." Jn your blissful Jnnocence do you think you can help? It's too late. J went to a social worker. nol being able lo afford the transportation to a doctor . He \\'as a good listener. Until he heard "suicide." He g ot frightened. He got me into a hospital where l stayed a month. It solved nothing. I came home to the same Situation I left behind. Everythipg that put you into lhis condition remains. l\1ost of all you are still you. ~ly how . you ha ve astronomical inedical and hospital fees. I have a job. Soon I will have it all paid for. (One way or i.nother~) Professionals panic at the word "suicide." They don 'l want the responsibility of a patient who bre.athes that word. Clergymen speak it as if it's a dirty word. Doctors ~hy away from it. People-including fami ly-have contempt f o r those who speak it. ~1 y parents call it "being si,Uy" and say "don't you know all the trouble you make for everyone'?" . But I am infinitely patient. (Twenty years with a man who is a vegetable proves that.) I will plan v er}' carefull v. Planning for the YoungeSt of my six ch!ldre~, planning for me. I will die alone. Nobody at me. N~y showing a very bad script ul'lder my nose to say. "React this way . Speak thes~ words. Act only this way." (Signed: A Nobody) COMl\1E NT : No signature. No address. (The postmark ~·as Hackensack. N.J.) No "''BY of getting in touch with her family to warn that she Jsn't being "silly" -and that her predlcUon is correct. t agree. this woman needs a psychiatrisL Right now ! Her depression is deep a n d dangerous. r.1any can be saved from suicide if their threats or actions are not written off by the family as "being silly.'' l\fEDJCALE'T'TF.S (~plies to Readers): For M. K.: YaW1i ls a tropical infection caused by a genn rtseinbling the germ of ayphill!. It is not., however, a 1imilar venereal disease. Dr. Stelncrohn offer s practical advice in his booklet. h\Yhat to Do for Chronic Anxiety.,. For a copy. send 25 c~t.s in coin to cover handling and a STAMPED. SELF- ADDRESSED ENVELOPE lo him, In cart ol t hi s --· ' - •• - -.1 Your Choice STRETCH NYLON BERMUDA lllEE HI' s F1J 1ulo11s for Ion~ v.·ear, Just ing ~lretrh, µood looL~! Popular r..able palli-rn. (".'n!. ors ; rhil<lrcn '.;:; liizes 0.71h, ';~.9. '\\;omeu·s.~izes 9-l l. GIRLS' STURDY KNEE Hi's ()rlon~ arr\•Jic/strrl rh n~lon sol'ks in lnp fall 1·nl. ors to niat1.:h all her faJ.I ra~hion !'. ~izes b-:-!h; -;~. 9. ' ~ IND~AN PANT .BOOT $ 84 Sale Complete the new look in soft ~uede le11the r boots wi th a floppy fringe t.rim. Smoke signal :11hades of !'and, loden or golden brown; 41;2-10. Grant1-own Orio•' ocrylir Crew-socks iR crow ,.cit, wl~r•I ·~ol' colors WI SALi • 46'PR. 96'n. Orlon " .a cr ylir/ 5old in J ,r, Pkg. et ret.rh nylon crew ~oc k s ... ~reat (or top .. .'hot• colors to sporting hoy~! Col· brighten'. S.10 ~'2. Ora; 71h_.J1 . BROOKHURST AT ADAMS, .. -- Permanent Press Sport Shirts sa1eSl36 Ea~y.care sport shi rl5 for . ra sual an1l leis ure "'"ar. \lade nf 78' 1• •:011011 ':!:!:; rol~·c~lcr. I.onjl.' point rollar, :! po<-kt'I $. Plaitls or !<o[iJ~: S-M-L-\1.. Pennanent Press Dress Jeans SaleS]96 \e\'t'r nee.I irou in~ hrr11t1•e thf'v are 1nade of Fortrcl"' pol~·esler 'eolton ~abanlin,.. :\ smart J<lvle :suitable fnr dre:.¥ \\ea r. Po.pular 1·olors. :N-36. LITILE 'IRLS' CRINKLE SHINERS ~iJc l11u·llf', hidd en gore fo r 2 !'nug fi 1; \\!rt look ~hin y criri~l c pal('11 t irl bro\1 n 11r lda .. k. :-ii;.:c:; 81/2 to '.). (~r··a t \"a l ue~ JUllOR MISS PAITY HOSE sa1e76' • :'ran11 .... , f11.•hiv11 :o-l1;ufr•. I t1u:i11.~7.14, HUNTINGl'ON BEACH ' Wrdntsday, Sfpte1nber "· 1970 Tumble dry knits in Fall fresh colors SaleS 196 l )ciligTI~ in ft<'rylic -,.•ith illri~ rn'11' net\: anti rnal chinJ:: striped r:uff~. :\vailable in a \aricl'' of rir h tone colors. !;i.~1.L.. Fancy striped flares no-iron wrinkle free wear Sale .S]46 E.\pPrll y lailnml in a modern hlcnd or rnl- tnn JIO!ye~trr. lh,•iii.ned ~·ith 2 dfrp fron t p{1rkct i', bell loop aud ht'1111ue<l cuffle~s hot· 10nl'<', !°\iZC!i6to J'.l. .., ....... 14 to 20 ............... Sole 54.46 MAXI STYLED BLOCK HEEL CASUAL .\ rral l)' g-rl"at :-;hoc -a11y\r hcre: cl:-c ;·ou "d pa~· at lrasl Sl Jnorc! ~111all pcrf~.f'.X lC'11:-in r1 ~nlf',] lf.1." hlo1·k heel. 'l'an. lilark :--rnnolh. 'l'/i.JO. DAILY PILOT J7 F ...,;;" -·. . \-"i COMBED COTION SUIFERTOPS Sale ~~'ill not ~hrinlc out of fit~ :Saur.1· ~I npes .•• colors .-,1a1· Lr ight; 7-1:!. !'ihop 'v to•l1:11·. "' Permanent Press Denim Pants Compare l~nf!nn 'n' l11n kcrps it • rri-1., 11r:;r !-hare 11 i1h .. 11t iro11111!::'. :'idr. i'ipprr, l111t- lo11 lah. Full 1·ut fo r 1.:01n- f11r1. :.JI. LITILE BOYS' SHIRTS & SLACKS 'RAITS FACIAL TISSUES 3-;~ .. 37· • !'ofl yct abitorl.ir11t. l:!.>2-fl7 l•• boJ". Sale 3•or$5 '•.11••nt Pr ... ahirU uf cotton f'llJl.11cs1er in zr~l y pla ids anrl solids. Popula.r ln111nn .1lo1•11 roHar . \l a. chine Yo' ash 'n dry.1to7. Pwt11••M ,,._. .W-1 in 11.ogg:-J-l'\carini; uo-irn n polyr.ster/ootl on. fly.[ront zipper, roomy front pock. et.s.4to7. e HOURS: DAILY 9:30 TO 9:30, SUN. 10 TO 6 1 . -·· -- J8 ' DAILY PI LOT Wtdntsday, St:pttmbtr 4J, llJ70 '6 PILOT-ADVERTISER Pl - HAVE YOU VISITED OUR NEW STORE AT: 5881 WARNER AT SPRINGDALE IN HUNTINGTON BEACH $398 Value! Dacrons Bed Pillow~ 2:$511 F.rtra pl11111p with l111lln1C ·~ril i~tle-)' -t illed .. ·ltb. Dupunt D acron llberflll, ,.Ol'tc,...d .,..IUi wh.lt• cot- IOll llcldtll:'. Bfft bun, 1.l t he prl~ &v• .S2.08 $995 Value! Carv-Wood $298 Value! Quiltfoam ~.,,,_,~. Satin Bed Pillow Cannon~~ Jacquard Towels Wall Decor . Plaques & Mirrors 1ate AA.tin.: Ur kinl:". Pi'k ., Bl"• ---$198 Viblt" lac'! patttrn •.• JOO~;. K•POk fill tor huoyan.:y. Non• allerJ:"enk • .20136 ... 24x44" First Qaat11y Angelette Celanese Polyester Fill Bed Pillows $1.98 Value! $149 $1 . 99 V aluel fTu it of lho Loom .Feather Foam Bed Pillows &Y• No ... Su~ftftl~ """' .... '•"~ ..• 2 . $388 ltO'Jt flaked roun fill o !Mlherproof p & • t I! 1 I. printed cotton tlck'ln l{ • .20:1.x ... Sa•e •lmOl!'t ~~ $2.50 Value Glamour Shade L'Oreal lipsticks ~?i~::h:i~: &&-Jn glamour 11Md.ts. ~ o me 'll'llb ~Id •h"""· atll.el'a crmm1! Dl11e. ,.kg. $198 Value! Disney Stuffed Dolls MICklY MOUSl, PLUTO e and DONAlD DUCK Lo1'•bl~ '""'" ""' 9 9 ¢ '" rn~""Y· ca l1nrt ~h1.r- acttr11 Auto Coolant Recovery Kits ""'' "" .. ,. $399 rondltlob•<l •·,.rt, lf1!n. \II.Ill• ()OOlln t at JlrGl)fr ]•\'~I, PTl!l'~llt• "'~r~11.tl n1 di.I• to cool1nt lo•~. Jo4 17 to J11.t1tL Giant Ice Cream Sandwiches IOX OF 12~98' ' $5.00 Value Hurricane JIYle Glass lamps ~~.~~ .. Jr$)49 Whit& t11us •t lllo DtlleOtmi p r i e e. :For any r o o In. U.L. apprO\·td 1.49 Val. Crystal Plastic Cake Safe 99- 88.c Value Cry1t1I Plastic Wastebaskets • Jftautlfut e11l 43" cry1tal luo•k J1f . iPl••Uc. UUch <i:OIOl'lll ':::d 59- N~. 1 11u1l11y 'P"•nult w 1lh 'l'lllllla wf)lim "~n· ter. rich mil k cJ10Ml~• icmtlnJ. In t lu1ttr form,. • AOflCOt • llutberry • Pl• MOl\em '• hoal1' f\a.o,... "d lwll"ll with t r naer .,.,. fer jacll•I. trul\ f llltnr. o ,en·fre-h ! t. I $"f11 Value! 4-Shelf Metal Bookcase St~am1111 .. d mod- ern de1i.r11. booll:- ".a.99 of r u I" I" ,. d n1e!1l w llb •lurdr .. tw end11 Jtnlth"4 111 r oldtone. 1$'' wt4a A: 9~ d8f!I). For dom1. #Utdr, office. $577 • $12.18 6-Sholf Style ....$10.11 7x4Y2" Old Master Wall Plaques Set $1 77 of 4 ~tor 111-. QUf'& lo ha!\A" Oii "W•ll aluld with """· """""" tnna. I a-rted .et• ot eolorful ••old ~"I 1.J,.. f or -ro•r • ". ploture.. 98c Value! Plastic 1 Ol" Tum Table 47- <'mlftnl~nre at 7'0Qt' tlnft't'ttDll ••• _.. lnir1110<1 !~ ........ &~ROr­ac e Ylth ball beufn&" actkla, • $1.fl V1!11a 2·Tler Tvm-T1ble ---··-- Bradley's 'Deluxe Blended Whiskey flltio Gou. $211 •• •WW!dhS 11 .... 1•111 •t ow ....,...,. lo• Prk• cC fL1t -"°"" JOl&N .. .... ~ •.,fQp for• llrn1lt4 tin~. Your Choice D«orw.te With a. n 1Tr? l1'nune4 n1trr a r • prloi.. ft cures a 11. Ci P I & q au -rWl•llc C'"-Wood n produc- t!Ollll with the rich and <i!lepnt Io o k oC anUq,ue, bind cal"'l'e<l •ood at •'1111fa o c oW'f)r .SS.O<t. Re1dr to • .. •nl' in .bom.e, <1flice. ve $!1.SI. $1.69 & $1.79 Value! Enameled Cookware Samsonite ridge Chairs $9.45 Valutl $744 -----='"....:.~ .... -.. .... ,.t, •t • ThrlflJ' Dia _,,,, ... • $12.tl V-........ Tliolo $9.ts Distillers Reserve Bourbon f;flh $399 Go I loft N 11root XniluckJ' .,14 •171• ~ _.b "Wf\S*ey .. eel U 1ev1 tor fall f~aTOI'. $1.00 REFUND ...... Y" Ml.It .• •. --- iJ arcia Y Vega Spont.h Tip ~igan s-• :.. 2a-~ Try 1 pllllk# a11d m&ll t:llOP!lft to mMW'&~ tnrer l\•lla1H1 -.C. Tob&c:!co Qlu.nt.r for ,1,0I) r.r11n4. $5" Value polyest'r ~ Beacon Blankets · I Fleece or 'Thermal Types Save $1.961 I :Made for-l!arll olhtt -rnon: ... •r mth w ithout V • I ra we.l11 ht wbm u1ed t~ ,;ether. \Vhlll!, l>\nk. Gold. .Avoc1do . .Blue wftb '5" n y• Jou tilndtn.r. '12it90''. "'""" O'hln& w •11h1hle, d,,.U.le,,1 ::I~ poLyeoiter ~~ 11d1ool l ••·tirUu : ·-~· bbtU l '1LOT-AOVERTISER 7 Wednesday, September f.J, 1~70 HAVE YOU VISITED OUR NEW STORE AT: 5881 WARNER AT SPRINGDALE IN HUNTINGTON BEACH • Women's Short Sleeve Orlon~ Ribbed Pullovers ~"''"!,'!.,~~.~'. $)98 It '::t~:ll ;:~e..~~ to 4Q. llave 0111. in. b n•lo:. $2.98 Value! i:;;,..>;;-~ \ Nylon Paiamas 2i$5 .lmQ 111\ol'I trlcot. with e.Mtn..~t C'. elaaUo -'8U-.nd, rl<'lkh. i'ull cut. Pl~ Blue, llalae. ':$4.9a Value! Men's Sport Shirts ~-$)98 Ottt·~lu ~ tl••t 0:..11 •ti. wnro -with tettnl111 •'-"" fol' lo111ncl11JI Brtrht 'llonrl • 39; Value! Stuart Hall School Supplies Your Choice Fits Under Airline Seat! ~ steno 1 · --·-..::· .. 22' $J2SJ Value! Mens' Vinyl Flite Bag Save 17c Jatbf'r • look: vlnyt with. :l 'ipJICr pockf'r• on l 11ldg, 1 bn;e i:lo--ner l)OCket 011 othtr. ('.onlinrnl!ll 11 t :1 t,. hantU<'. lui::gai;o;i t AK aud p1\dl0!;k., $777 J!uy one -buy~ 11!~ l'f'11cll. lf'l:al d rawh•t: 1111:.l· 1,1. tlllcr paper, 1lt'llO or 1licn1tt book • .All .t~t flUll!· I)'. all full counl •UH1 1 ~11;· lllfl tlOll ml:&!'. 8Lor-k 111>. New Rigel Indian Fringe Orlon® Vests $2.49 Value! ladies' Acrylic ''Fur'' Cover-ups 9$199 CIUUOW'•look Cake fntl Cut• J>o m• P om ••l t tie•. •PtJO ra.J'on fulric. IJl'f'at fOI' 1*:k•tO-O MbooJJ Sale of Men's 1%'' Mod Belts $149 llall6nnt ~ft11• ln lMaek or '8row.1t W1th -. .. ,. o!ouble buckle-IO lO JI'' lnt,-11'1. .. -·· ltod Della -ft.29 $1.98 Val. Boys' &Girls' Cott°" flonn.I Sleepwear y..,, Choic.e 2i$3 r.tr!a' 2 pe. 11r111 • ealott• ~ ~ t"Ollt (It 11UllCl'9" ••.vi• llf'• •• cM• )'Jttnt~. ,.,.lors. Wu1>ra1t,. 1hr111lr. ,... 11t1•nl, Z·'- Child's Blanket Sleeper """ ••• , "'"$3 33 c1v1frt ,,, ••ltr.. • A-M•J...XL. $2.87 Value $2.47 Value! Metal Floral Binder lunch Kits 9 with 2 n..m. looks With ~ Pint V1cvum Botti• I rtoc-aMOlt:r blDder All Fot 49~ .... Papermate "Flair" Hot liner S.vo 96c 4~$100 on 4' a. X ew hl1th0li.i:bfh1.<:' lN'O. ;n Yt:Uow. Pink t r.HA-> pa~nt Jnlc f(> emgb~· •I •• ~St.I. Ii~ . .,...,._ 79c Value Plas.tic Sheet Jh':8.Y,. d\ltJ' fUl<l.all!, rlrt &., Uft Ttp01'111, p.,,_. -tatlons. l~ix U". SS.II Value! All Star All-ht-On• Binders $248 Y.f'f1177thl11t; f r(llll l \i .. 'fhl)•l blndrr lO d\&. Uot11l1TI ,,Uw Jl'l'O(I', t 11 4 • JI: 'dlttden.' Peppertree Book Covers 69- 39c Value! Pack of 8 1 e Lead 271; ) .. f'MU• J:'rnpl~ lll.Lllll,. l~ltdl• with. No. J le.ad. Jllld t:i-.aera tlJ!' Sale of School Supplies ('holt"t o.r wide nr CtllltJI mlt ,57; '·Ml• pa p ar. ilt"'Cll \ID f Ot Ole J"•rl aJ • tic V•lv•l PNtkttnts' Pencil h'lf • 19c Valual Carter'1 :I-Color ... • 79c Vas-I Melli Spirtl Thom. look • p 1dl •• 1 :l Pl9ltk lfi•tt -.. • 7k V1 ... I Pldc ef SOO :a.Hot. Filler Paper • U int1 Poly l incMr • 79c Vat1o11I L.,11 sr..1 ,...., f•lt• Your 57c Choice Wtdntsday, September •. 1970 ,.OUNTAIN VALLIY-lnM M.._IM It ~• 1'11Mrt POt.INfAIN VALL•Y-11U1 H1rt.r l lft. I hltlltt' •L TOaf)-111 1'-11 IWltltM ..... MUNTHUJTO .. l•A<•-llU1 IMCtl 11¥11, 11 Att.tllll U.NTA AH A-I ... •• ...... ., .... ll"ltfM If, WllTMINITllll:-6111 W•lflllfllt-tr ., .,__ w ... COITA MllA~-Ntrtw 11 ..... •I Wli.M St. COITA. MllA-1» I . Utll JI. Nl,INTIN•TON ll•C.._...I AMIN al l '*Nrtf DAIL V PILOT JfJ . Originally Made to Sell for $4. 981 Famous Lab·el Stereo Albums • Rhythlft and Blu•• • Cou11lrY • Pap11!;1r • Ft;1nk Sin11r.1 • 0.1n M;irtln • Monktta • J allnll'f C.11h • Flolllnf Stonis • Elvia Prt11e)' • Many M11r1! &n:iatloaal ~n>llO oC top •rli11l1 .lfld '"V hit• on t.anwus L~l albuin11 -"11.pflol. nC'A. London, 18&B1' oth--at. terrlr•c N.rlni:-1. $197 11'• M"t Spectewl•r SfilNo T•P9 Offer I••• -et Ona "'Nff•r lafe,... Thrtfty Law, Low Priwl Famous Artists! 4Trtck Continuous P11y Stereo Tapes $5 95 Value! High Intensity lamp $25!~ ••• Portable Radio-Phonograph $388 u-Flashlight lo-iell Precfaloa ba11t ~.:..:=~ :.'; $2177 yo 1l,. faftll1te ,,_,,. In 33!-!i er 45 .RPV. Pow e •f' t n l en0ll8'h to "1'1nl:' fft ni. 0. t .tA· ""'" Panasonic Tape Recorder Standard Size Classic Guitar Savo $1995 Big! Gre•l tone at a TJ:itlf· >Y f rlce. Nfkla •nd. .l!tell •trill~ 1a Sret tl11Cet'board. Slimline Electric Guitar 2 ph:k·up allmllno. $49 95 T.--10. l l IN ...,._ . Solid Stat. Ampli!i.r ! ..... !'.:::· -=~ $19 95 , .. llPlltlltr. • Clairol Kindness ''20'' Hair Setter $1788 l O mlntem ~ ~ 11p to tlna, bllunoy tlW'ia. c-with :!O 1'Cllleni. $)95 Value! Folding Wastebasket 57¢ $29.99 Value! Oak Finis~ Student Desk $22 9 ' • ' I r • \· l ' . ' ·~ i • • ( ' • . ' ' CAILV PILOT WtdMSdiiy, Septtmber 9, 1970 -California Wonder Jloy l(Os Laver • Ill FOREST HILLS, N.Y. (AP) -Dennis Ralston, California's onetime • •b oy wonder" of tennig, found his long-awaited moment of glorY on the center cOurt Tuesday •s he upset de£ending champion Rod Le.ver of C o r o n • del Mar in a 21h-hour, fow1h-round thriller of the U.S. open championships. · '.'It was the best win Of my career," said the 23-year.old former firebrand from B•kersfield, after posting a 7-&, 7-5, >7. U, 6-3 victory that sent him into the quarter-finaJs. "Denny played great -I never saw him ae:rve or voUy better," acknowledged a disappointed Laver. Ralston, • protege of Pancho Gonzalez, has been rated the American player most likely to succeed ever since he and Rafael Osuna of Mexico were a teenage, ragamuffin pair who won the men's doubles at Wimbledon in 1960. contract pro -but he has yet to win a major championship. Critics 1lway1 have <.'Ontended that the fault lay in hil trigger temper. Ralston resents this, although he has been known to blow his st.ck on ocelslon and once drew 1 suspension for flareups in Australia. "I guess I have settled down quite a bit," Ralston said after beating Laver. "You havt to use your head as much as your feet In tllls game." Ralston remains perfectly poised, and never was tensed up or panicked -as he twice came back when it appeared that l.aver mi&ht run him right out of the stadiwn. Down 1·5 in the opening set, Ralston fought back and sent the set into a sudaen-Oeath playoU, a new ·scoring system in which the. players, alternating service, plly the best.five-of-nine points for the set. 5 Sets errors to clinch It $-3. "Winning that lle·break was very important," Ralston said. "It gave me• lot of confidence. But ln' the ~Hh set it was just a matter of lucky po~" He won IS points la a. row , 'brealting Laver's service at Jove in his stron1 finish in the first set. He reeled off seven straight points with another servi::e break al love LO take the second set. Tberl Laver, whoae backhand bad been crumbling . WJder Ralsloa 's incessant attack, raised his game. '.l'he Jeft..h.nder ciinched Uli \hird 11et with a clean service ace and ' ~ook the fourth by b!Uktng Ralston in tbe ninth game. FIERY DENNIS RALSTON OF BAKERSFIELD DETHRONES Tl'IE KING . Denny played on seven U.S. Davis Cup teams, won national ranking in 1964·65-66 and established him~f as a successsful , Ralstoa ntver Jost a service point in the tie-break Ud forced Laver into voJleying In the fifth set, Ralston got off to a 3-1 lead with a break in the second, then Laver, pulled even. Ralston i;efused to crack. He rifled his backhand rtturns to get Laver down 1540. Then Laver double-faulted at game Po) n t •nd Ralston held for the mal.Ch. Sports iii Brief LSU Quarte1·back Dies; Twin s, A's Open l\.e y Set BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) -Herman ''Butch" Duhe, 21. a promising Louisiana State University quarterback who was kept rrom sum mer workouts b y headaches. is dead of a b r a i n hernorrhage. Duhe, a junior, died at the LSU Infirmary Tuesday. A report by Balon Rouge Coroner Chester Williams fixed the cause or death, and added that it was nol associated with any injury. • ~11NNEAPOLIS -ST. PA UL -\\'ith the end of the season dra'>'·ing near . the Oakland Athletics are looking anxiously at the standings as they open a crucial three-game series today against the ?.finnesota Twins. The A's riding the crest or an eight- game . winning streak, are 51,1 games behind the Twins in the American League Western Division pennant race. Wilh just 22 games remaining, they'll send Jim "Catfish" Hunter. 16·12, to the mound in the opening game of a twi-night doubleheader. The Twins have picked ace Jim Perry, 21 ·1 l, to y,.·ork the rirst gan1e. Oakland will use Paul Lindblad , 6·2. in the nightcap, and ~linnesota has tabbed J im Kaai. ll·HJ. • DEL l\1AR -Bill Shoemaker, who broke the world rkiing record l\1onday, piloted three more winners Tuesdav at Del !\far Thoroughbred Club, boosting his mark to 6,036 life.ti me victories. The 39-year-<1ld Shoemaker, who had nnly four mounts for the day. scored his first time up in the fift h race aboard fa\·ored Princess Gaylord S3 to win by 3 1 ~ lengths. • SAN DI EGO - Former Cal Stale (Long Beach) end Billy Parks is lea\•ing professional football at 21 because "he isrnt in terested," the San Diego Chargers said Tuesdav. Sid Gi\lm3 n, general manager, made the announcement at \Vooster. Ohio, ·where the Chargers are training ·for a prcseason ga me Saturday nighl against the New Orleans Saints. • BIR~1 Ji\G11Ai\I, Ala . -Southeas1ern Conference Com missioner A. ~l "Tonto" Coleman said Tuesday the league has hired a special investigator in connection McKay Fears 'Ba111a Pride LOS ANGELES I AP > -Coach John 1'.1cKay of the University of Southern California says hill Trojans face an Alabama teain \Vhich believes it's carrying lhe pride of the Southeast on Its 1>hou lders. y,.·ith alleged violations of recruiting rules by several member schools. Coleman said he and his assistant, Cliff Harper, have been engaged in preliminary inquiries for several days. The SEC has hired Waller Holloway of Holloway and Associates of Dallas . Tex., Coleman said . Holloway is a former FBI agent. "This retention or a professional Investigator is an urgent attempt to obtain evidence to clarify the ma lier." Coleman said. Downtrodde11 Angels Face Chisox in Pair C!,IICAGO (AP) -The. Con1eback ?tlachine is backfiring. struggling along \\'ith five straight defeats that have pushed the California Angels into third place in lhe American League West. The Angels. routed by the Kansas City Royals, 12-0. Tuesda y niftht, moved on to Chicago for a twi -night doubleheader Angel Slnl.e All 11m•t H kM'C ClltJ St~t. t Ar.tttlt .i Clllca110 1?1 SKI. 11 Anuel1 WI Mllwl\lltll'f S~•. 1' ~ri.t.bi w1 Mllwevllet Sell!. ll Allfflt WI MIJWIUkH J:J~ p.m. 1:n •. m. 1:55 P.m. 1:Jl •.m. today. Tom J\1urphy. 13·11, and Clyde \\'right. 19-10, were sched uled to pitch against Chicago's Jerry Janeski. 9-15. and Billy \\lynne, 0.2. Jim Rooker. 9-15. hell:! the Ange ls to three hits \l'hile shutling out the ane1nic California hitters. The Angels have scored only nine runs in their last eight games. Just three games out of First place a week ago, California find s itself 71,i back of J\1innesota and two behind second-place Oakland . !\tanager Lefty Phillips ls upset 11'ilh more than one member of his tean1. He locked clubhouse doors afler Sunday's loss to l\1innesota in Anaheim and said: "There "'as no fight. You seemed indifferent. I can 't believe you·re ready to give up on the season." CALIFORNIA •llrnrlll KANSjl,S CITY •II r II r•I J 1 1 , 1 0 0 0 • I I 0 I G 0 0 ••o,,_." 111 l!Uil, }!) J T'1um, cf ~·"°""'!, ., Alltn, p Jo~nSIDM. ct A.JOl'l"50tl, tr Garrell, p Cowtn. lb McMulltn, Jll 11.•vnok!'· rt •>ein, ( Eoan, c It.INiy, p k,,1.y. p Oyter, ., Tol1I• l 0 0 0 P.ke\ly, rt l o 1 O Spriggs. tt • 0 I 0 ltojlt. 1b 1 t O o Mllcftk~. 1t1 o otG O!ls,ct 1 O t R.Ollvtr. lb J O O Plnlet!t. II o o o 5cll111, Jb J o O E Rodrlo;tue1, c l • 0 Sevt•\Orl, .. J O 1 Rooktr, p ' . ' ' .. • • • ' .. • , • 0 ' . ' ~ I ; ) • I ) l • 1 ) I ' .. . ' ' ' . . n ' ' TOl•ls -IO 11 11 11 Calllor"lt K1ni11 City 000 ow 000 -0 010 '°° 01--11 '' H • l!tt Ill 50 It Mly Cl. ... UI 1 6 l 6 1 0 K~~!f'f 1 6 5511 All 'n l 00 1 1 G~tt!ll 1 11 71 Roo~•• iw.,.u, • J o e • 7 WP -jl,l!M 1. T -1:11 ... -i ,JU. . ' I . . .. -'t . • ':':'-.;. ' •• ,,,;;l '"""-f·,.,.. • ' ~ 'IQl';JIJOll!lt'.'I"'-. "' . ROD LAVER, DEJECTED AFll'ER U.S. OPEN LOSS. Dodge1·s Take ori Ciricy After Bowing· to Braves LOS ANGELES (AP) -"I'd like to know \\'hat they feed Orlando Cepeda \\"hen he· s playing against us," Los Angeles manager Waller Alston said Tuesday after Atlanta 's baby bull Jed the Braves to a 3·2 v:ctory over the Dodgers. Tonight Los An geles en t e rt a i n s Cincinnati i11 the opener of a brief two- game st t. Rookie Milt Wilcox. 1-0, \viii start for the Reds, against the Dod gers' \cfthander, Claude Osteen, 14·12. Atlanta U.S. Ope11 Scores plays · a twi-night doubleheader this evening in San Diego. It's the last tbe Dodgers will see of Cepeda which is fine v.·ith Alston. Cepeda has only 15 hits against Los Angles in the ~8 games between the two clubs bul eight of them were home runs. Orlando cracked his 34th home:r Tuesday night, a three-run blow·, and il was all lefthandcr George Stol\e needed lo clip the Dodgers and eam his tlth win in 20 decisions . The Dodgers, however, won the season series \\'ilh Atlanta by a 12-6 margin. ATLANTA LOI ANGELES M1!11n. ~ lo.JICk\fl'll, H Lum, ct H.Ur..,. rt Cl!Ptd1. 111 c~rty, 11 O.INlwn, H C.IGyt r, Jb G~rTldo, '' Didi ... , ( G.5IOl'lt, • 111 r II ..-i Hr llrtol l 1 7 1 Wll1.,,s1 ~0 21 J OO OMllfl,11 O ii so2e sudolk ll,c aot I 1 0 W,Parller,Jb • 0 I. l l l kosco,rf 1 0 11 •O IO Sl•~mort.~ 1 111 0 0 t 0 lh1>Ull, cf 4 t I 0 • e 1 o Grawrk'w!tr,lb ? I 1 1 JO tl V"nct .P 1110 l O I OLtlt bvrt,Jloll 1100 1 t t t R.L&tntl, p t t 0 t Tortx>rt , c I G 0 0 Ml~-tlSllft, • 0 t t I TDl11> :U ) 11 J T11~!1 Jl 2 1 1 All~nl1 lOIJ GOG 000 -l LDt A"9f"!6 OliO 110 100 -1 DP -Ananu I, L~ 1<1191~1 I. LOI -Allan•• 11, Lot AnMlt'I J. JI -MIU1n, Cepeda, H. Al•D"· Sllt mDrR. Wiii•. HA -C~Pld1 C~), Gr•Wrlle.,.hl O•J. S -G1 rrl!M 2. G, ilOl'lt . G.Slllflt !W,11·') v~nct !L.J.7) R.Lltna Ml~ktl~Rn HIP -t~R lJ.ttl. IP H R l!R. 00 SO t 1J!IJ 15 J ]Jt , ) . . . ' 2 ' • • l 0 Ll"'D lOlcli•d . T -2:32. A- Left11 Looks Ahead Angels Draw Big C1·owds Tl1en Can't Seem to Wi11 Harold "Le!ty" Phillips, field manager ()f the withering California Angels, tells lhe world his Ha.loll will be better in 1971. That's nice. Harold "Lefty" Phillips is basing that opinion on his belief the 1970 Cherubs have not reached their playing peak. That's nice. too. "Jim Spencer, Jay Johnstone. Sandy Alomar, Ken McMullen, Ken Tatum and Tom Murphy should all have better seasons in 1971," Phillips says. "Clyde Wrighl, Jim Fregosi and Alex Johnson are playing about as good as can be expected." adds the Angels skipper . What Ph illips didn 't touch on is. who ll'il! be out at Anaheim Stadium to \\1atch his team perform? The Angels were in the thick of the divisional title race until last weekend, yet ha ve barely drawn a million fans. The Dodgers have ne ver been ill Cubs Upend Pirates, 10-3; Trail by One PITTSBURG H (AP) -The Chicago Cubs, behiAd the eight-hit pitching of Bill Hands and a 15-hit attack, roared by Pittsburgh, IQ.J, Tuesday and moved \\'ithin a game of the National League East leading Pirates. Randy Hundley drove in three CubS runs with three singles, Ron Santo had three singles and t"·o RBis and Joe Pepitone cracked a two-run triple to lead th e Cub bombardment. Hand! ga ve up three of the Pitlsbu rgh hits in the four th inning when the Pirates scored two runs. putting them back in the game at 4-2. But the Cubs moved away Y.'ith a ru11 in the seventh and five in the eighlh, keyed by Pepitone's two-run triple and the inadequacy of Pirate relief pitching. of IB walks. The Cubs scored two in the second and two in the third off Steve Blass, 9-11. Ge()l'ge Brunet replaced Blass after the Cubs scored two more in the third and pitched 4 1·3 innings of strorig relief. Bul the Pirate v.·all then began to tumble as four other relief pitchers went to the well. CHICAGO Pl"StUltGH 1er~rM t•r~rtol kt Ul..,.t, II fl«~ttl, 1b 11 .Wll!lol"", H HkklNln, Ill C.Jt""'I, Cl Pepltont, ct San10. lb C1lll'\On, rf H-ley, c Hinch, • I 1 I J M.A.IOu, Cf ; 0 1 0 Jll10H.ontr,3b 41 1 0 • 1 1 1 A.onv.r. '' • 1 l 1 lllt .Sll~Lll •10 0 I I 0 t l .lilobtrMn,lb I 0 I I ' 1 1 Sangulllen. c I I I • J )JA1tty,11 J OO l 1 I 0 M11trotk~ lb I I I 0 Ol l llltit,, 1000 lll O fl ru,,.I,• 1 000 J.l.1mll,P 0001 K11p1ct,pl't 100 0 Gl!:>b0t1, p o o o t DllC•"lon, , O 0 0 0 J.CDllt , P 0 0 f 0 M.May, p11 I G 0 0 Tot1l1 lf ID U 1t T011l1 U l I l c111c100 011 oao 150 -1t Pltllllurlll1 oc;.:) 200 DOI -3 E -ll.,;ktrt. OP -Phlsbu•ql1 l, LOii - (111CtOO U , Pll'1tlll•t11 I, 211 -A. Ollvt r. II. ROlto 1r11on. Jll -Ptpllfl'l!t, Sa'1tUlll1n. Hit -I . W!I• 1!1rn1 ~JU. S -PtplfD'!I, Becker!, SF -Al!ty. Pl -S1n9um111 z. T -2:J7. A -•.111. i;ontenlion yet they've altra.cted 1 1.~ million aficiandos to lheir bailiwick, which is only a sailor 's moustache away fr~~l"~~p~ig :~e reason for l h ~ comparatively disappoir1(inii':\cM.wds at Ahaheim has to do wilh., tne fict the Angels seem lo be at their W()ift when the house gets something more .than a token throng. -. 1 Checking out their 1.6 lar~est cr'owd.s of the season, we discover that Phillips' •LINH WMITI -------WH ITE WASH -------- forces have been 10sers ·on tt 1()f those occasions. And what can do more to discourage \\'ould-be fans lhan to come ·out and watch the hometo"'n bunch take a bath? Tony Ralphs, former Newport Harbor Hi gh aquatics whiz and kayak performer on the 196.f U.S. Olympic team, has left ·retirement and recently competed· in &lie ll'orld championships at Copenhagen. Randy Howall and George Zebot of Ne\\'J>O[l Beach recently won the ,second annu al Bear Valley v o 11 e y b a 11 tournament, dumpini; a duo from Santa Cruz in the fina ls. Dan Cunningham , former Huntingto11 Beach High and Golden West Colks• player, is listed at slartlng right tackle offensively for lbe Uniwersily • f \\'asblngton football team. Twenty members or the ,\Ve ber State (Utah) foot ball team are married . Todd Hess , ex-basketball, ba seball, footbaU type at Newport Harbor Hlgb, is coachin: lightweight football al 9ran1e High. · Greg Bell 1956 Olympic long jump eh:impion, is now a dentist al &Late hospi tal in Logansport, Ind. Mets Defeat Expos, 10-5 ro-'EW YORK (AP ) -Tug ~1cGra\v hurled fi ve innings ot effective relief altd Cleon Jones got New York started with a first.inni ng triple as the !\tels defeated lhe l\ionlreal Expos, 10.5. TutSday and further tig htened the already ta11gled National League East. Coupled with Chicago's 10-3 i'out or Pittsburgh, the second·place Mets trail the Pirates by one-~alf game wHh U.. Cubs one game out of first place and one. half game behind the Mets. The Trojanl! travel to Birmingham to test the Crimson Tide Saturday in their 1970 football opener. Alabama will try to prove that Southeastern Conferentt footban is better than the \\'est Coast variety and worthy or a national championship, said l\tc.Kay Tuesday. Another Blow to LA Running Ganie The l\1ets iced il \\'ilh six runs against Clau de Raymond in the eighth. \\lilh one ou t, GarreLl singled and Jws got his second double •hen·PhilHps and Staub let his fly ball'drop. Sha msky was purposely passen and Clendenon popped out but Ken Bos\\·ell dropped a bases-clearing double Ois.ide the left field line. Before the inning \\'as ove r, ~tcGraw's long single drove in three more runs. "They've always beard. 'Well. they won but they ,tayed In THAT league.' he saKt. ••J'U tell you this. , .seldom have I ever seeo a poor terun come oul or the Southeastern Conference. "'We'Ve bee.n told they "'ant to win ttlls a:ame more than any other." McKay said he fears AJabama 's passer. Scott Hunter, 11nd linemen who "are p.as1 masten: at dropping back to protect him." Nothing that Alabama rolled up 672 )latcls against a good Colorado team. the Trojan coach said , "They ca n make yardage agaln!t everybody and I guess that lncJudea us." ' LONG BEACH (AP) -Le ste r Josephson Is a durable running back once he gets into 11 gan1e. hut geuins hin1 there in one piece .~·eighs heavily nn the Los Angeles Rams' cha mpionship hopes In the National Football League. Josephson ran out of lhe backfield on a pass pat!ern in Tuesday's praclice at Blair , Field ind safety Ed flfeaOOr "'as covering him closely . Meador's shoulder pad clipped JmiepNon's j~w . As a result. the 28-yee.r-old Josie i~ in a hospital for i;urgery to repair the. broken Jaw 11.nd the Los Angele-s Ram!:, "'·ho "'on lhe Coastal Division a year ago, have complicated their biggest weakness - running. · It "'as the second freak accident in the six.year Career of Josephson, a 6·1, 2~ poWlder. After gaining 800 yards as the Coastal Division's leading rusher in 1967. Josit suffered a torn Achilles tendon in the 1968 preseason \'.'hen he tripped "''hlle running through the tunnel to the field before a game a.t Memorial Coliseum. Josephson mi~ed the 1968 cam paign b'ut he ca1ne back last year to gain 461 yards on 124 carries and catch 32 passes for 295. Now he's out for an Indefinite period and coach George Allen isn't sllre \\'ho "'ill replace him in 1he backfield alongside tarry Snlilh, now aidcllned by ,. hamstring muscle pull but expected lo be ready for the regular season opener Sept. 18, against St. Louis. "It hurls us where "°''ve been hurt the most." lamented Allen, who was unable to name hi.s starting running backs for this Saturday night's preseason finale against San Francisco. With Smllh missing most or lht preseason, Josephson has been the workhorse in the undefeated Rams' five ''lctorles. He has rushed 69 times. more th11n '"'ice l.!l many carrie s as any other R~m. ror a net or 228 yards. J osie also has been his team's le:i.dlng receiver by cat ching passes food for 1&7 yard~. The Rams· healthy running backs are to.year veteran Tommy Pilason. whom Allen would rather use in spots. and rookies Pat Curran and Jeff Jordan. Curran Is 1 converted linebacker .and Jordan has l four-year history or leg problems. Willie Ellison has 1 sore hamstring muscle but may be able to play against the 49ers. Another back, Mike Dennis, has 1 knee problem . Allen v.·as so concerned wilh his team's n1nnlng game that he instrted the 1- fonnatlon this summer, hoping to create a more variable ground game. Now he·s p;ol to find tht men to carry the football from any alignment. 'i\OHTttE"°L NlW VO•k Ill r •rto1 ••r~rt+ /\<.Jone., tr 1 o ' o Ao~. cl 6 o e o HtfWI. ~ 1 1 1 1 Guren, J11 J ! 1 1 D;y,c• !O IOC."ts.11 J ll l Pl'llltl1>1. cf J 1 I I Wm!k., rl I I I O Staub. rt • I I I Gllfl.ff", rt I 1 I I B~!l•y, Jll ~ I I l C'-"'l•ron.. I~ ) I t I GMQl'r, lt I I t I J&r;tn111n, lb O I t 1 flocc1bll~. IO 1 • ' • BOIWl!H, "' J I 2 J e~1ern.,., c j r 1 • Grt>re c • 1 t 1 Slbellle, 10 l I I t H~"t't..on. 11 I I I I 5u"1ed~ncr. 111 J • 1 o u .. i,~. P l o t • Yl!n•, 1$ I O t 0 Mc<'••w. e ) O I J Renlco, p I 0 • 0 l'Ur~I, • • ••• Flirty, p~ I 0 I 1 Sit"Dllfl'lflyer, o o o o O W11'1Cn, pn I 0 0 0 W-11u , o t O O O l~tllly,c~ IOOt tt~y~.ord, o O O 0 O M.ltHd. o o O o .I to1111 ::. J 10 s MDoltrtl! N~w Ytr~ Te1~11 ...... m ,. .!J IOlllt ICJ -j Oil -" \ ' ·- ' . ,, I ' ' . . .. .. .. .. '1 ., '" ' . s c • e ,. r• v t le II • ~ A h 0 k Ii ,. s ' c l• c ;, s n u n • ' J F 1 • t. L ,, ,, p • •! 0 .. -··-------------- ' LAGUNA BEACH'S JUNIOR QUARTERBACK GARY FISETTE Sun~et League Loaded With Coaching· Talent "' The 1970 Sun!'.el Lea gue football ra ce shapes up as rnost interesting this year. Considering the caliber of competition aOO. the credentials carried by rival C<1aches, one wonders just bow much Anaheim has made the CIF large schools playoffs nine ou t of the ·Jast 10 years under coach 'Clare :vanHOOrebeke and 15 times since 1950. The Colony won it in '68, rapping Santa Ana , 27-6. 128-lb. Soph Quarterbacl\: Leads Artists ·.• room is available at the top. The Fox repo!'ls th1' will be ' a down year for ·the ·colonists l... his annual prcseason message . It take~ a lot of guts for a 128-pound sophomore quarterback to make entry in- to a high school footblU conlesl. get bliU. ed and smo thered bi. opposi ng linemen and then get up amfwalk nonchalantly back to the huddle to call the next play. , " • Here's a brie f n1ndown on the very '" recent pail of the inv olved coaches: t.1arina's Leon Wheeler takes O\'er the Viking heln1 aftrr leading !i.1orningside High lf'I the CIF AAA finals before falling to South Pasadena. 2.8-13, in 1966. .. TI1at .was the same year, lncide~tally, that Ken li1oats led hi:s Huntington Beach _ ___.._ __ ROGER CARLSON ------- High gridders lo the second round of the AAA playoffs as Irvine League titlisls before tripping to the title-bound Tigers of South Pasadena. ,.{any observers opined the better team Jost in that 17-7 South Pasadena victory. Loa ra, behind the leadership of Herb Hill , won tbe AAA title in ·68 with a 3+7 rout of San Marino 111nd the Saxol'ls enter Sunset warfare \\'ilhou t ever having suffered a Joss in Jr vine League comi)etition. Coach Tom Bllld witl's 19ti7 Santa Ana juggernaut swept to the Sunset ~ague champion ship before falling to Anaheim in the CIF AAAA finals at Anaheim Stadium. Westminste r. behind Bill Boswell. has nc\'er fi nished lo\\·er than third place in the Sunset League and has a solid nucleus back from• last year's you th ful second-place fi nishers. The Lio1\s reached the CIF AAAA semifinals in 'M before fall ing to Ernie Johnson's El Ranch-0 ele ve n. Earlier, El Rancho had h>st to Westminster, t4-2S. That leaves Western High and coacb J im Everelt, a former, Ernie Johnson aide. Everett doesn't ha ve I.h e impressive credentials -but he does have 21 returning lettermen from a team that posted a 4-.s record last year and dealt Newport Harbor a stunning 8-0 loss. * * * And 1peaklllg of We1ler1, es-football coaeh Nick llgleslch I• aow an assistant co1cb at Lot Allgele& Harbor College. · The Harbor Colle1e prt:11 releate lnlorms 01 In part, "in 1165 Ugleilcb went tt Western High ln Anaheim wbere for four yean be wallowed In 1 posillon mere of u org111lur .tb11 coach. Ht had lZ 1ssl1tants l• contend with." * * * When Huntlngton Beach High meets Angelus League po\\·er St. Paul in the second \\'eek of the grid campaign, it will mark th1: r I r s I time an Pller varsity eleven has met a Parochial foe in 2• years. Cap Shcue and Al Reboi11's outfit knocked off SI. An thony, t•·t2. iJI 194&. * * * How'1 this 1or guts? Newport HarOOr lllgb ha s a varsity footbaU candidate running around v.·bo measures five-fool e\·en and weigh5 100 pounds, according to grldder Randy Coon , a junior. He appears e\'CD 1mallcr thaa th at. Coach Ernie Johnson prais« lhe youngste r for the effort he's maktng. "If 1ome or these bigger \:Ids at Newport had some of the cuts '11i1 kJd ha:; th~y1d be a d1n1 slpt Hiter 1tff. 1'1111 boy's going lo make II 19 Ufe," 11y1 Jolulton. Well, Laguna .Beach's beefed up (140 pounds) junior slgnal-caUer Gary Fisette performed such a feat in a Crestview League encounter against San Clemente last season. Fiselte was promoted f r o tn tht Artists' Cees wllh two games left in the sea son and took over the reins as a varsity starter when the now-<leparted Brian Ottmer was-Jost for the campaii11• leaving only ta ilback Denny Sdnnitz"With any quarter'backin11 experience . Despite his skelelOn·type frame Gary has already ca ptured the heart of his coach. Hal Akins. "Gary has the big hands and good wrist ·action which cou nteract his lack of siu:,'' Akins points out. "He'll have to wor k Ion!! enough until he has enough confidence to stay in the re all the time." Akins says that Steve Wiezbowski ('68 grad) was probably the best play-calling qua rterback to ever play for him at Laguna because he sensed exactly wha\ Akins was thinkin g about on the bench. "I'm hoping t'lsette will e\•eptually get lo the point where he can do lhe same thhlg," says Akins. "However, I'll probably be calling all the plays rrom the beni;h this season." There is no Pop \Varner program in Laguna but Fisette has been p I e n t y active participating in ba sketball and baseball for the Artists while findi ng e.1ough tin1e to be the La I u n a quarterback 11nd to maintain a straight·A classroom average in today 's tough college prep curricul um. "Hi! has· the type of frame on his body lo accommoda le more weigh t 1nd he's only 16 years old ." "He 's gonna be dangerou1 without gaining weight because he's so durable ,'' Akins concludes. • Foothal-, Contest to ~pe11 Daily Pilot Pickeroo Begins Next Week It's Pilot Plckeroo time for fun and prnCil! (or prophel.5/, \11hichever way you s,ell it. The DAILY PILOT and A~1 r Voit, Joe., today agreed to join forces 11ain th.ii Year to give DAILY PILCYI' readers !he chance to win cash and Voit rootballJ for picking winners in local and naUonal foot.ball contests. The fir.st lilll of 20 aarncs v.·ill be published next week ln an entry blank which ••Ill appear in the DAILY PIWf &Porta RCtion. • The fan to pick tl'MI mo~t '»inners lor come closest to iucssing the total number or points SCQred in all 20 prizes, in case of a lie) will win STO \JI cash and a Voit collegiale: football worth $9.9S. Duplicate Voit footbllls will be awarded to the next best pickers In ~nd lhrou&h 10th places iJI the wet>:kly contest. The 1970 edition or P 11 o t Pi.gstln Pickeroo wlll continue for JO consecutive \\'eck3. In case of a lie in first place. atl winners will receive duplicate merctui n- dlse priu& and v.·llJ equ1lly !hare in the $10 ca!h prlu . Winners who make lhe lop 10 more lhan once and opt for a difletenl prize n1ay, arter the li rst win, choose a Volt product equ1I jn value to the popular foo lball being offered. The Co\legla te Is an offlcl1l size and weight roothBll made of k>ng·wearing, waterproof materials. II ii ~rown with while stripes around lhe ends and 11lmulated lacing. The ball Rationally is the n1osl Popular seller ror 1lt'lme use, accordln ' lo A~fF r oi ~~" 1.c f:; < 1. Because of lies, 102 of lhtm were IV.'trOed by the DAlLY PILOT altd Vol\ IASt year in lhc 1969 tdltlon of tht Plckero.>. f:Nehed (] .s. Team_ Newland Reviews Trek To Em·opean Countries By llOWAllD I. RAND.Y .... ...,, , ......... Ed Newland la an outdooraman rrom tis, word 10 and M im'l exactly a1ainet modern day convenlenct• such Is televtslon, moving picture theatres , and other niceties of life in these llnlttd States. On the olher hand, he doesn't exactly irubscribt to tht Yuaoslavi1n way o! doing thhigs, either. "Tbe avera1e locom~ over thert is about '800 a year. With no t1Jevlslon or moving picture the1lres·to speak ol, they get their entert.llnmeRt•iroll\ w1lkln1 or participating In sportl 1c1.ivitle1. "We played Jn 1 sm1ll town and thert wue 3,000 peoplt walchb\c lht 1ame. As !lOOI\ IS it tnded, however, hordes of lhtm l'A'1rmed into thl pool. "Tbtre Is 1¥ mOr1 participation over UCI Loaded 111 Water Polo. Says Ne,vla11d How does a coach go aboul bUUdin& a championship water polo lean\ "·hen hi: only has five of seven starters returning from a third pl&« NCAA squad of tht previous sea10J1 ! lf you are coac h Ed Newland at UC Irvine, yQU brln1 up two J)lay1r1 fftlm the JIM team that finished with a U.:l record amt hope for the be!t with some oul!ilanding freshman candidates. New land says a sixth starter from l;tSt year's outfit , Richard Eason. will red• shirt this fa ll and be elialble lo·play on the 1971 lr\'ine squad. Eason is an enginee ring :ttudent and has asked lo....1it out this campaign to C-On::entrate on studies. "As long as he is going to come back next year lo play , I don't mind at all," Newllp)d relates. "He will be t2 at the tin1t and his leadershi p wi ll ~ a tremendous ad vantagf to us. He wlll be a stabilizing influence." Turning to tlfis year's team, he wa1ed enthusiastic. "This is the first time 1 havt ever had t...O really good goali~s on onf: team . Don Ronaldson is back from last year ind we also have Ter'ry Klein. They ire equal in ability and make us exceptione.lly strong.· This is a very important po1ition In water polo," he explains. Klein is a transfer frbm Fullerton Junior CoUeae where ht was a flrat team All·Amtrlcan. He has played four years for Newl1nd In AAU competition. Fm:ly Mu aimino, last yiar's UCI atudent body president, ind 1t1aaon Philpot, a left-hander from Corona del Mir Hlfh School,' are the lwo returnees from It&a. Starters returning from la st season, in atldltlon to pile Ronaldson, ~ndude Jim Bradburn. Diie Hahn.. Mike ·M1rUn and Jim Mc'C>onald. •Only r..tcDonald is a question mari al 1iw. present time. Bradburn was 1 freshman starter la& season and was first team AU-American at Coron• del htar in high school. Dickman is a big boy with good speed known affectionately to his coach and teammates as "big Dude ." Hahn .and Martin w~re members of a U.S. team that played in Europe this liummer alon1 with Massimino. Other1 who will att considerable action Include Tim Harrison. a senior from Huntington Beach and Bob J\.1cC1ellan, a two year letterman. Top freshmen inc lude Bruce Black or Corona tie! Mar , CIF player of the year last season and Bob Searls or Newport Harbor. then than Just btln1 1 apectattt. And UMy sptnd a \ol mora moniy ,_. f1cllities. Thty have fir more ~meter pools In Yu1Ul1vl• ttian we have la UUs COU'11lry.'' Newland co1ehe4 the American water Polo team that pl,yed in Spain, Yuao- slavla and Jiun.11ary UUa 11.Pttm1r. "I felt th•' "'e learned a let from the trip, but ll was really Urina. We hid to dO '° much nyln1 ind bus ridinc that we were tirtd most of the Ume. "One time we traveled 24 hours, including an 11 ~:a hour bus trip to 1 small to\\·n In YuaO.lavia . We had feur houri! to alttp aftd then h•d a game. It ·took tbrtt: d1y1 to recuperate aftd iJI the n\tantirnt we had played two additional games." The taam. Newland took to Europe had flve player1 trom the AAU championship OtAnia squad, lour from Phillips and lour from hil own team, CINA, with the final member from Downey. Thrte of the four member• from CINA (Corona del P..1ar, Irvine, Newport Beacb Aqualics) include three with e!l1ibility this season with the Anteaters. The y include Feriy Mauimino, l\fike 1ilarlln and Dale Hahn. The fourth member from CINA, Bill t.,:ach , has used up his eligibility. CINA will bttome in1ctive unti l ntll 1prin1 followlni lh! swi rnmln& sf:ason. "We will have abo.ut t~ monlha to prepir1 for the AAµ championShlps and participation in the Pan-American Game1 next summer," Ne\\•land pof11ts out. "This m1kt1 it real tough on kids going 19 sc hool because the semester hasn 't ended. For th ose out of ~hool. it might even be tou1her for th em lo gel lime off to compete end lhen l.o 10 lo training camp for the Games." Newland fttls v.·ater polo is getting 1 strong toehold an American youth, e1peci11ly in Californi1. "Rl1ht now \\'e have more hiah school kids playing the game than they do in Europe. This is the big reason we are improving so rapidly in a sport lhe Europeans have dominated for so lon g. "We art gettlna more depth, a lot mor e competitia.l and the complex.Ion or the game is changing. There are more and more big kids pleylng now and this also makts a bl1 difference. · "~1y boy is 13 and he has already played in two age group tournamen~. This e1perlence is invaluable and is movlna this country to the foreground in the sport.'' Newland fetls. While water polo m1y bt 1 year·long sport to Newland. he alJO enjoys getting away from it all llncludlfll the tel,phone) by camping in Muico with hi! family each summer. "We 10 1bout 75 miles south nt Enstnada and it isn't crowded. We hate to come back ii is so peaceful down there." He was 1sked how long ii took him to aet ready for the Me1Jc1n vacation i!tl!r re turn from Europe. "About four hours." he sa ys. "\Vhen J arrived home it was pa1t mldnit:ht and the stores wert closed. J had t.o wait until Ibey opened to 1~t some fe)Gd to take 1vilh me, otherwise. I wouldn't have waited here at all." Tomb of Honor GRAZ, Austria ! AP ) -Jechen Rindt Austrian race car driver killed lasi S1turday iR a trial run for tl\t Grand Prix of Ita ly at Monza , will be buried in 1 tomb ot hbnor in the city of Graz next Friday. Details of the burial cer1mo11y at the Central Cemetery \\'ert not yet kno~'ll. Rlndt was Wn In M1inz, Gtrm1ny, in 1942 but was raised by his irandparents in Styria Province after hls parents were killed in an Air raid. Major Le«gue Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division ~I Dlvlll• w L Pct. GB w L Pct. GI Baltimore "' 51 .1131 Pittsbur1h 7$ • . IX New York 81 60 .5!4 t New Yol'k 14 Ill ·Ill •,a Detro ii 71 67 .Ql " Otlcago 71 67 .525 I Boston 73 63 .511 17 St. Louis 67 75 .472 I\~ Cleveland '1 'ii) .471 . U l> Ph!ladelphi1 ii II .411 10 WashJ ngton 65 75 .4'1 341,~ Montr1al IO IO .411 lt\!o 'tVest Division W11L DlvbMtt J\flnnesota &1 56 .597 Cinci nnati 91 53 .m Oakland 73 62 .357 513 Doc11er1 77 13 .550 12 A1ce11 76 64 .543 ,.,, San Franci1ce 73 .. .511 . "" Kansas City 54 !6 _386 291 ; Atlanta 70 72 .413 20 Hous ton A 73 .432 21 \~ fl.fllwauktt 53 " .379 3(Jlr~ San Diego 53 II .:I'll 311,i Chicago 19 12 .343 35 ., ..... •1'• ••111 T...U.y'I ltllllll Cftlctgo lG, l"IU1bur9h J a.iumor• •· .. ir,11 J Ntw Yer!< 10, Mlll'ltr .. I S 1"1IOll •. Clnelll'ld J St. L.evlt '· l"lolladtlllhll J ""' 'f•rt< 1, w11ritnoto~ J "1-ltfl I, S.l( ,01• 1 IC•n"'.' cav 11, ~" t Alltnll 1, ~ 1 MH•Ut" l, MlflnlMll J Clntlrvo1ti S. ltn l'rtlklt<• ' Onl'J' ttrnn Kl'l«lul-"', , ... ,,.. ··-'llllM!tlllfll• CLtttcft "' er.a G, Jttk~en •111 T•ty•1 e1mt1 •I Ntw Yo/'t. !lll:Jt n .. 10 tnd StdKkl 7·•1, t, IWI• Mllwt >Aff IM1rr11 f.!) fl K•n111 Cil¥ fl'IO· 1110111 rnerr11 1·Sl, 1111111 Mtntt .. I IS'-n J.HI tt Clll(•tt "tllllNll 0.llJtlld l"llfll•r 11·1' •r: lmillllt~ 1·~1 •I 1•11) MlllM5Cll• jl"lfl' 11·11 Ind K ti 11•10), ,, IWl.fllOlll St. lO¥it (lttlt lnto .. U I t i-ltbtlwtll Ct rr!Mi.I A-..n fMll<phJ 1).11 11111 Wrlwlrl Tt-ltl 11 Cl'lf.. 1·11, lllOt\I Cl" (Jl111$~1 f·ll ,,,. ~ .. ,., J. IWl.•!tl'lt ,c111c1niw~sirr,r ,., w awn•" "" ,, ... IOI! \::''T •II 11 Delttll JCt lfl 11 ... 1, nltnt ~,. 10. 11. !l, nlf~ W•llllnt IMllMll IJ.IOJ ti CllVllt!lld !Htnl 1111" !Nlfk,. 11·11 t McCh1etn •ll 11 Stn ~101, 1119111 D'-(~'ii~ Wlll Afllll M ), 2 twl-nftllt Nt w Yori: fl(llllt '·l) ti ••ll!mll"' fC11tllt r Hf111 II I .,. 1a:111 II Stn ~r111d1n ll rJ• tl1TI, nlolo! '"' J..t) -· DEAN LIWIS 1966 HARIOR ILYD., COSTA MUA 646"9JOJ s.r.lce, ,.,,., & .... ~ Now Opon Until I p.m. Morol1y Niehl• I I Orange Cou'nty's Lar(eot and !dost Modern Toyota and Vol•o Dealer '1 ' HAL AKINS , Akins Slan1s Town's Support And Cop-outs By PHIL ROSS CM 1tM INllW ,lllfl S.,H Football at Laguna Beach High hit a hl1h ebb In 1968 when the Artists went 1~ I, captured the Crestview Leaiiue title 1nd stormed into the CJF AAA quarterfin1l1 be£ore being bumped of£ by Rolling Hills. However. in 1969 the Artists' gridiron showing took a sudden downswin& to 1-8. the worst in the nine-year reign of Laguna grid chief Hal Akins. And, Akins lamenls, "when we were wi M~.111, the whole town was behind us. · "But once we bad a losing season like last year the support suddenly dwindled.'" Akins regards apathy on the part of Laguoa townspeople and some nf the potential grid prospects wa lking around lhe school as the principa l deterrent in the recent state. of Artist foot ball. "Don't get me wrong. The kids (a tota l of only 70 hopeluls in four classificallon11 ) who are currently in our program are areal. "But lately some of the parents in this to\1•11 haven't encouraged their kids lD ·come out for football ." Akins adds, "a lot of these kirls are hypocritical and are using football as a cop-out because they consider themselves nori.violcnt. "Imagine some of them thinking , 'I'm non·violent, so I can go bur,1 down a bank in Isla Vista. But football is loo violent for me: 11 jusl doesn 'l make much sense lo me.'' Size is another r'elative factor in Artist lootba\I . "The biggest kids in school aren 't out for football because they're too luy," Akins says. The decline of gridiron enthusiasm at La,una haa also affected Aki n s ' performance As an artist in the truer :sense. He notes. "I teach art classes during the day snd painting is my biaest field Df interest away from football. "You know. thi s is !he worst summ er f've had with my paintipgs at the Festiva l ot Aris." Desp ite 1969's dismal record. Akins• warriors ha ve still manaaed to negotiate 1 5.3-:JG-i mari over the past decade . Akinll aot the Laguna he.ad coaching jo b after mo ving to !he small beach city from the steel mill community of Fontana, where he served as an assis tant grid mentor and all an assistant to th~ di rector or instructional materials fo r tha Fonta na school district A former Fontana school official gol the job of superintendent at· Laguna and immediately hired Ak ins as pigskin hea d man 11rhen the Arti st grid job opened up. Akins. a World War II paratrooper and 1raduate of Washington State Univl!rsity, ca1nt to California from his native Washingtan slate, where he coached on both the prep end junior college levels. "I'm llO mewhat of an innovator sG you'll see us running· out of formations li ke the triple-) and multiple 1ets th is season," Akins says. "Last year was ~ust a mess and now the only way to go 1s up." he concludes. DIAN LEWIS AU.UST SPICIALS SPECIAL 1970 TOYOTA ~!'. $1694 All Other MMMI I• S.... M•rt: II-Niia "cl•P-L.-11 C4 ...... c., ... DIMO $2950 •1536 TOYOTA CORONA 19'7 i Stft1', ... _ """'' ~·le ,...,.., (Vl'f' S.111 $1095 ~ • T ' • I It Didta't Get Away .Jay Elder of San Clemente caught a 2.f.pound \\'hite sea bass recently that is almost as big as he is \vhile fishing aboard the boat Clemente out of San Clemente Sportfishing. G11agi Puts 011 Brakes To Stop Placentia, 4-1 Rick Gnagi, ace pitcher for the Costa i\iesa Comets semi· pro baseball team. gave up a single in the first inning Sunday then seUled do\.vn to Ticket Sale Under Way Public sale or tickets !or the Los Angeles Lakers annual p re · season doubleheader. Tue,sday nigi1t, Sept. 29 is un- der ~·ay. The San Diego Rockets. led by Elvin Hayes and rookies R.udy Tomjanovich of Michigan and Call'in Murphy of Niagara take on the San Franci!lco Warriors featuring Nate Thurmond, Jeff ~1ullins and Jerry Luca s in the first g;,i me at 7 p.m. Jn the nightcap big Lew Alcindor and Oscar Robertson of the ~filvt'aukee Bucks test 1he LaJcers' super trip of Jerry West, Elgin Baylor and Wilt Chamberlain. hold Placentia without another safety for nine innings as the Comets 1~·on a +.I summer league victory. Gnagi. a student a l Pasadena C-Ollege, had IZ strikeouts and didn't ll'alk a batter in pitching his gem. The lone Placentia r u n scored after the base hit with the aid of a Comet error. Costa ~tesa tied the count in the fourth and added three runs for victory in the seventh. The Comets entertain one of the top semipro teams in the Southland Sunday when the Paramount Angels come in for a 1:30 game at TeWinkle Park. COSTA Ml!JA COMITS Cl) Mcl"I°"". rf l 0 I 0 Plle<r!rt, rl 0 0 0 0 evtn.,cf ?111 Gn111l,1> l Oll Hllddtd, u • 0 1 1 Giimore. Jb • t 1 t Wllt!on,lb 1 100 Rercl,?b !f OO Ftrrtll. 11> 1 I I I Sllfford. 11 ? f t 0 C\lfl~l"9h1m, If ? I 0 o Clm1>beU. c l t 1 ! Totllo 3D 4 I I ktn '' lllfllllt• . " . 100 om 000-1 I o 0&0 100 Xl:ll-.11 I I Comprehensive Monarch OutlO()k Explored Not to be outdone by any football team, CIF. N<;:AA, NFL or whatever, the Mater Dei Monarchs embark Sept. 17 on a journey through the apocalypse. Coach Bob Woods' ~fonarch griddtrs face their toughest· ever schedule Vt'ith the pre- league opener against Santa Ana at the Santa Ana Bowl initiating the chamber of horrors. In successive encounters following the t r a d i t i o n a I opener with the Saints Mater Dei clashes with Del Rey League toughie Loyola and Moore loop pow e rh ous es Lakewood (a CIF AAAA semifinalist in 1969) and Long Beach Wilson before embarking on the usual man- ealing Angelus League high wire act. Fourteen lettermen from last year's 6-3 squad return to help Woods add to his already shiny ~11·2 mark as a head coach. The offensive backfield will be built around veteran quarterback Bobby Haupert fl70) and 190-lb. fullback Don Roy. Junior Rocky Simpson (1601 and senior Dennis (\Voody) Wojtkiewicz (pronounced WHY.CAB-ISH Will be trying to fill the gaps left at tailback and slotback 'l.IY the graduation of Mark Dunn and Stan Jackson. Haupert, a more than ample passer, picked up 624 ya rds on the ground last season "'hile Roy and Wojtkiewicz (170) ~·ere varsity reserves and Simpson performed for the sophomore team. When Haupert throws, most or his passes will be headed for Dale Bugbee (175) and the Nanry brothers -junior tight end Dave (175) and his older brother. Jim, at split end. The latter checks in at 6-4 and 185. The interior line, b o t h offensively and defensively, will be shored up by relumees Mario Mele (170 ), Pat Heffernan ( 1 8 5 ) . Nick DiStefano (175), Steve Kemper (205) and t<.tark Catlin (195 ). Harry Kay (175) and Ted Hatfield ( 185) will be holding down the flank positions on the Monarchs' defensive front wall while Bob DeLancellotti (170) is the be:Sl of the seasoned linebackers. Jim Johnson, at fi..10 and 154l, \\•ill be the leader of the Mater Dei secondary \\'ilh possible help from junior N i c k Fistonich (170 ). If the Monarchs can make it alive and victorious through "·eek after week of their grueling schedule l h e n perhaps sainthood should be bestowed upon them. evening programs toward Bachelor of Science and Master of Science ' degrees Sys1ema1ic, dynamic ins1ruction is given by an outstanding faculty of prac1icing scientists and engineers holding advanced degrees from top universities throughout the nation. More than 12.000 technicians, engineers, and administrators-both men and women -have continued full-time employment while working loward their degrees at West Coast University. e.s. degrees In engineering, computer 1Cl1nce, 1pplled m1them1tic1, ind 1pplled physics. M.S. degreea In 1y1tem1 engineering 1nd m1n191ment science wtth eight options for 1pecl1llz:1tlon. New term 1t1rtlng: Undergraduate courses begin Oct. 26 at Los Angeles Center .and Nov. 23 at Orange County Center. Graduate courses begin Ocl. 26 at Los Angeles Center. Send coupon belo* or phone for information. 550 So. Main St, Orange, Calif. 92668 LOI Angeles pl'tone: °''"9' County phone: 1213) 38~-1372. Ext.20 (714) 547-5712, bt20 Please send intorm11ion on: 0 Undergraduate program p Graduate program NAME-----------------------AOOAESSi ____________________ ~ CITV _________ $TATE ______ zJp ____ _ I ( Twigg Really a Vital Lirnb In Huntington Grid Plans Preps Await Seri.nun ages Oran1e Coast area footbaft teams, in tbelr final tuneup "'eek before school startt., flnish o{f the week with scrimm•ges trith o u t 1 i de competition S.turday. Deep Sea Fish Report IM,l!•IAL ll!ACN~ tMIHr1 IS ttllowi.11, U b.lrr•ciH11, 100 bo!lllo. OCIAHllDl!-3&1 11111lers1 71 T hfrr1cUC11, 1n bonito, 193 b.llll, 214 tellowt11J, t htllbvt. t bt1ck 111 b1u . IAHTA MOHICA-41 11'191trt; t4 bof>!lo, 11 b1u. I blrr1cue11, 5 htllbvl. l11r1t-4 t"9ltr11 110 bMlto, t bl••• $.I mtcktrtl, MA•INA Ell!L •t:Y-11 11'\tllJl'll 41 bonito. t bHt, 14! rock (Od, ,A.AEllll! COVl--lot 111911"; Siii bin. ti bclnlto, l'O to.rrecud•, s h1Ub111. $AN CLl:Ml!MT&--2" t"9ltr.1 1,113 boni to, .at bliH, n b1rr1cUC11. It Jrllowl1ll, 1 blu.fln lunt . NEW,D•T (Art's L 1 11 41 111 I -t S •l'ltltr1; tt btrr1cVd1, 531 llonllv, '' btH, 17 Ylll-1111, lt lntt-ttll. 101~tr'1 Lacktrl-77 11111tr11 302 t 1Uow11n. SANTA IA••A•A-Jt t11tlert; 110 c•lfco b155, 30 bonllo. SEAL l•ACH-1JJ tntllru 111 borlllo, IJ btrr1cud1. 111 his•. l trt._., 1111ltr11 111 belnllo, 13 b1rr1cud1. MD••O IAY l ,wt -Nl-11 .... 1.n; JD 1lbtcor1, Ul roU CCIII. I 11,. COCf. IVlrt'1 IAlllllllll-!A 1n,ltri; 16 111111 COCf, 3611 rock ced. ($11 Slm-1-101 ,,.,,,,.: n lln11 cOCf, 1,732 rock cod. L011t• llACN l '•cll lc SHl111shl"91-7J '"'''"; l r~tlowlair. 11 b1rr1cuda, I 1111111ut, 2C6 t>t11, :127 oonllo. ('Mlf1111nt Lt•• I ft• I -1 l a antler1; 15 bl•••~dl, 1'7 btH. 510 bonllo, I bltck HI bt11, I t •llowl1i1, 9'l: tock COd, I l\tllbul, ll"""Mtl 'lffl-!t a<19ler1; 155 blrrtcUda. 1 blH, 261 bonlt11, I llt!lbul, Bt rt.......O 1n1ler11 4 bonito, 16 m1ckrel, SAN Dl•OO (MYftlcl,tl "ltt)-11' 1nvlef1; \,HO t lblcor-. 100 y1l1-11!1, ll bonito. f bl,,•<1111•. B~ PHIL R~S Of fllt O•llr 1"11et lletf Shy, reserved Blll Twigg admits there's nothing unusual about himselr. Twigg says, with a touch or modesty, "I just go out and do \\1hat I'm supposed to do on the football field a n d sometimes mess up when I'm not supposed to." His coach, Ken Moats, head gridiron mentor at Huntington Beach High. has different ideas about hi.s star offensive tackle though. "Twigg, G a r t h Wise (quarterback. tailback), Tony Ciarelli (tight el],d) and Arnold Ruiz (Flanker~lli be the key players in our plans this season,'' Moats confides. Hit hard by graduation after a 7·2 nlark In 1969 in the rugged Sunset Le a g u e , Huntington will hd\re to rely much more heavily on the strength of an experienced interior lineman like the 5-11, 190-pound Twigg. A starter at offensive tackle in '69, Twigg will be operating out or the same spot again and again he will be trying to open up lhe floodgates for the jel- quick thrusts of Wlse and Co. An employe of a beachtront concession stand during the summer, Twigg feels he's learned mo~e about h i s position from assistant coach Benny Rapp than anyone else. "l just learn what coach Rapp tries to teach me and tnen go out and pracuce tt." BILL TWIGG don't plan anything eithu. I just go out and wresUe and try to do the job." Born in Long Beach but reared in the OU CJty, the Huntington aenlor got started on the gridiron trail in hb freshman year as an offensive tackle. He's conUnued in such a capacity in his last two seasons for the jun.ior varsity and Vlirsity contingents. Tv.•igg would like to matriculate at the University of Idaho or some school where he can study forestry, a possible career for the futu~. But he will most Ilkely be spending one more ye;u-as an Oiler before he t h i n k s Hen's the rundoY.'fl on eaclt of the 14 area teams : Estancia vs Lagwia Beach at Newport Harbor 5 p.m. Fountain Valley at Santa Ana (Bowl) I a.m. 5avaMa at San Clemente 9:30 a.m. La Serna at Costa Mesa 9 a.m. Foothill at Huntington Beach f p.m. Jtfater Dei at Nev;port Harbor 10 a.m. Servbt at Westminster 11> a.m. JtfarJn1 at Kennedy 1:30 a.m. Twigg also performs in the seriously about being a 194-lb. (light heavyweight) fore s ter, which "'OUld class for coach Bob Rice's certalnly be suitable for a guy Edison at 'I\lstin I a.m. Mission Viejo at Corona dtl Jtfar 9 a.m. Oiler varsity ~·restling unit named Twigg. during the winter months. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;. Twigg notes, "in wrestling Ill University at Beach JV 10 a.m. 980-pound T1maCaught NORTH LAKE. P.E.I. (AP) -A 980-pound bluefin tuna, believed to be a "'orld record catch. "''as landed in waters orr here Tuesday by Lee Coftin. fishing from the vessel Aquarius. Mr. Coffin. who is also mate of the Aquarius. fishing out of here, took in the tuna after a 60-nUnute battle in rough seas. COMPLm TUNE·UP! "'""" '"" .SHOCltS e DISC llAll IPICIALllT e COSTA MESA STORI ONLY ,,,, ".,..., ...... 14t-4t2Z tH 14t·22Sf Rugged nylon cord tires at easy prices 24 llONTHI GU.MANTEE WITH I llONTHS 100% ALLOWANCE ,._,,,,......_o...t.e.Y- Fort rno1t 111• proMelloll 1uow.,ll• C-fl 111 "-"'°" pl-no-r 11r .. (11c1pl our tfl'M:ltl 1pplklllon !Ir") •11-'rl•I •II IMd ll•r•rd or dl!Kt fliluru.. Vw lfe prollct.d lor ltl• •11Hrs •Ultd lllOllll'lt or OU"-"'-· H )OW' llr. l•il• du•lOO in. 9U•r· t nltt poirlocl, 111\1111 It lo 111 llld ..,. will, It -opllot1, •esi•!r 10ur•tirs. •r 111tkt mn 11to.wano;:1 btMd Oii 1119 •1iglntl ~ l"lcl, ••ctadlng •,ipllc.Ole ftdl<al Ell(.llt 11._ lo- WIJl'd 1111 parch111 of • NW l!r•. W1 wiU allow 100~0 or Illa •rillnll p1,1"!illt.1 pilct, ,~Ju.ting tpp1lc-1blt F-.ft rll E•clat T11. dur. lng 1111 10D~• 1Uowa.nc. 111riod. Tllt<t•ller. WI wlll allow $11'% or 2S~i. ol ll'lt 01lginal purchtM prica. ••~luding ""pllcablt Ft-.11 Ell<:i .. Ttr, low•d 1t11 purch-ol t MW l•ll. IS• chlll't bel-). ~ti Er-ciM T•• tdju.t..,..nt .CloWll'ICt will II• mtdl on 1111 b1sl1 or u.. ptrc.rlt •I """ oriolntl t...-4 ''""tl!ing, f'OMlltOaT ...oTl!CTIO• GUAflA"'1'1!1! CHA•T Hlflf.'S HOW VOUfl •UAMHTlill WOlllK$' lfrtW• ........... 114, ,. _... , .......... _ ..... 114, 1-1 _.... WA 11,__c, ........ 7•1J-""' 2r.'o ..__ ""''"' W.M,........ T-4 U. "'9Metlln. Wt bUild Ill· lo .....,. for-I ll<t Nf9 traction lndlcllfOFI. n.e, aignllf whMt l"'llt llrt motrld bt repl11tad. II )'Ul.ll' II,. v11rs o.: {uctpl for inl:Ofl9Ct 111..,. flNnl) • •111 .,...,, an alJOWllnc• btlltd on ti. 0Jigln1l PlllCll- pric._ 1 1cludiQt...Jlppltcllllt Ftdtfal E11e!11 Tu, taw•d !he pun.btM •I • 111w 1\01. Wt wm au.ow,"' durlr>o 1111 l!rs!111" or~:, clurl119 tht HCol1d "•II of lht ltlltd "<lnlhl af 9111r- •nt ... F1o:i.r1I E•Qlll Tu -'itn!-..,,~\ llllOW8nt;I Will bt _.,. on •rt ., .. ,. ol tht pt1CMI of tlle orfgkl., !•..cl ••!Mliftllig. 1'111• ........ """ tr--11111. tt•-er·~~~ er ...._..-.a. 4995 A F /X compelilion .(.speed sliifter with 'T' handle, A f/X boot and plate. 4 .95 4295 A F/X competition -3-speed shifter with 'T' handle. • A FfX3·speed shifter. 19.95 F019most• Mlleagemaker n BllCkwdl~IU 666-13 fpluo 1.78 fed. tax) •... 15.95 695-14fplus1.94 fed. tax) •••• 17.SS 735-14 (J>'us 2.04 fed. tax), ••• 1LIS 775-14 (plus 2.17 led. to:J .••• 11.15 82>14 (pk.ls 2.33 fed. lax) •••• 21.15 560-15 fplus 1.75 fed. tax) .... 17.15 735-15 (plus 2.oa fed. tu) •••• 1us ns-1s (plus 2-19 led. tax) •••• 11.H Whitew"1s only $3 llN>re! 'M8lout ftde.WT, ltdd S2 pet • ·~nne111 auto-r YM.. Yo• CO'I\ Jhop I 2 to l s.n.doys, too, at J,,,.,. of th•te. ren-ney Auto Cet1t••': fUUEltTON HUNTINGTON lfACti MONTCLAllt NEWPORT &fACH •o..,.. ..... ~ a l V11li.p V ... (a..4 ~,...,.. IUENA ,A•K' CANOGA PAIK CA•LSIAD CHUI.A VISTA DOWNf'r OUHGE "THE Ctn-Vl!HTUIA U'• P•nMys time p°"'""' plo"° \ -. ' ' ' !, t • • ' : •' ' .. ~ ' I f«J~lfM/d Pa/Ma !:g_ "'.1.ntLETt or pu: DIC~ sPLASH;-DON'T ILAsr-· .lt\.. \ FROM SAND , , \ '\ I think that~the ltrni ''bl ast" ii · ao unforl.u l\ale choice of words to deScribt the average s1nd shot. •When the ball is 1 buried , ObVfOlJsly )'OU n\USt "bla5t." But• when lhe lie is normal,.ttfe P.:roper sand shot is more of a • splash.'' Too often those who try to blast from sand · will cu,t too deeply and leave th~ bill shorL ::~ ~·~:. ' Racing Entries "' '" •• "' "' '" "' "' "' ,. Wtd!lfsdu, SepttmMP 9. 1970 DAILY PILOT !3 Marina Tries-to Undo Snaky Past Bv ROGER CA RLSON 01 1111 GIH1 1'111! SltU Fourteen let t ertnen , the offing al Marina , however. Also Tim Jennings (~. 180 llo~8ver, he was used Bass (S-0, 170) is t 1 b b t d for undrr new coach L eon sr.) Ill right guard and Steve spa.r~ly after Ulat a n d bi gger and betttr lhlnrs Wheeler . Abbott (li--0, 111.5 sr.) at \right finis the seuon wllh a 1300-before he's Uni.shed hl.s tour anchored by a .rugged interlor Added lO the list n f tackle. The latter l)(!rforined yard ut~t on 78 carrfes for a under Wheeler. I I r h d I 3.9 a ,eraJc. veteran line, plus a hard etter1nen "re a par o ar • at guard ast year. K' Steve uemandez appears to charging runner and an all-runn i ng backs from Jeffl.o.$neris penciled infu r . l..asl yt ar's starting spli l h a ve t h e wing.b a ck round quarterback. Hawlhollle, Ron and Dan starting duties at split end. end and i top 'defensiv e b<ick. position presently. He's a 5-7, That, In a nut.shell, is the Birds.all, plus t ra n s fer He's a 6-1, 1115-pound senior. Steve Monahan, dlspl:iys 3 176-pound seniof.who was also forte of Marina High's 1970 linebacker Q.on Fairfax from The backfield appears stab!r dcc_eiving ·Si ll, JS~· Poun d instrumenta l In last )'ear'3 varsit)' football team -a Edgewood . wlth Ute hard running of Joe lrllme, tlefensive backfield. squad that wU I be lryiug to · Fqirfax is one of the leading Ventimiglia at r u 11 ba c k He appears bigger arld i~ the The best figh t for a startinl\ undo a shaky past. candidates al left guard and perhaps the strongest poin t of Vikes' alJ;round 'Player -position has been at halfbacr The Vikings have never won checks in at >II , 170. the Viking attack. capable of playing several wher e a pair of juniors have n1ore than they lost in a F'ive returning starters ere Ventimig lia has b t' en positions besides quarterback. been :terepping. s•cONo 11•C1. uo w.,~ .. l ~.,, season dating back lo the also reatured In the veteran switehed from his tailback Baeking him up in the Bob Merritt is a stro nger ~'t~mT111r1<. ilu.r111•· '""'' .. l llOO. initial 196.1 era w hen line. It includes ·Bob Witt l6·2. position of a yrar ago. Lasl quarlerPa.ck role are Dave runner from his >9, 17~pound ~~,creT.1, <,1:,t~~., l~ Huntington Beach and l\1arina 185 sr.) at felt end: Dave year the 1a5-pounder slashed Campbell and Ro.n Bass. frame. but Gene Taylor ha.-· Before splask ing, be sure that your sand wedge is laid back .and opened slig htl y so that it looks a. bit to the right of ta rg et (illustration #1). If you set the blade squarely be· hind the ball .. and facing down the target line (illustration #2), it will !end to cut too deeply . ~~t~~·lf'l~r!~'1""'> l~f students combined on the Jackson (6-2, 208 sr.) at left for 149 yards in 30 carries in CaQlpbell (5-9, 1&5 sr.) was a displayed more speed. ~....;: •• ~'fb'::~~••I \\~ latter's campus. Lac kie and Dave Rilling {5-10. the Vikings' opt"ner with La def~nslve backfield starter The latter i~ a $.7, I~· Soc1s1v ~( cSrr111111 111 A brighter vista appe ars in 155 jr.) at cent.er. Puente (a 15-15 tie). last year v.·t\ile sophomore Ron pounder. BllllOie 81~0U (HIP~•l\I) IU r·-.;;;;~~;:;;::;;:;;:~~~:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;~;:::;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;::;:;::;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-81.red t ot> (w11..,..I 'I' LllfY L1n1tn1 CIC1n s\ I l Also, pos ition· your feel in the sand so' that a line across your toes will point lo the left of tar- get: This is the so.called ''open'' stance. This placem.ent will cau s.e you r ·cJubhead to slice , acro$S \he t~rget lin.e, from out· ·side tp ·i,,side (illustration #3), as you swing. The result of'all th is i:; that the clubhead makes a relatively shallow cut under. the ball. The bal l peps .up high an d sort of floats to the green w.h ere it settles Quickly. ·~.e ""'"""'·-·.,..._. Off the Greens Irwin Takes Lead lnSACC Tourney Dr. Bob Irwin fired a second winner wil h an 81 . ,. round 67 to go wlth a lltst A men's club high · Io w round 78 to lead the firs t haH tournament will gel under \Yay of th e Santa Ana Country Club on Sept. 19 and rU'O ror five m e n 's c h a m pi o n s h i p consecutive S a l u r d a y s. lOurnament over the weekend. Pairinks will be made Sept 12 Irwin's sensational sac0nd v.1th sign-~ps now in the pro round score vaulted hiiT\ into a shop. three.stroke lead over seccnd Rancho SJ members and place Billy Sa lman 7 fl · friends '''ere saddened to hear 73-148). In thiru place is Dan of the death of Mrs. Stormy Cullen (74·77-151 ). Van Brunt. wife of the popular Defending champion Jack starter and pro shop assistant Van Rosero started badly and at the club. She had been sick had a 161 for i,he fir.st ,tv.•o with ~a ncer and died over the rounds of play. • past ~kend. co m pet ition will be :~1~~esa Verde con1pleted this c om I n· g weekend with 18 holes on In a best ball of foursoine Saturda y· 3-f!d anolher 18 oil tournament at Mesa Verde T"ll O •ACI!. «Ill Yl rcls. wc•r Oldf. P11rot 'lt(IO. R~y WI-. lWll'G'll lllvlldtr 81Y ~1110 0111•v J1ne C 1...., • ..,, Moorp Ch•ftl ( H t \ RKI 8e1 J~ tH1rll Ollr Cevtr Girl CP1n11r) fll9hl lid \Ad1lr) M'lcl•n 7 •• "' •• "' •• "' ,. "' •• "I " " "' 'I' " "' "' Mllt'TH RACI!, 40C ¥1rd1. 1 Y!lr eld1. IC•l"llllf. Pur..r '7000. Clllml111 ·tttlc1 """· Tru1 1C1ll1 ll lnlltl 111 Or•w 1"11y C$miflll 111 Lighl..Cnt 81d ft>rlyerl l n Old Homltlfld ll'llfOil\I) 111 Dr. Dull CrOlbrl 111 'K''l '' ~-fl"t rntrJ Ill Mr. /\1dr Ad1lrJ no AllUIUllllH' Wll-\ 111 8roker'l Gl'lol<t iW't H1) 111 Oii OHll¥ (Lll'lllm) 111 Racing Results Sunday. Non.qualifiers ror the Country Cl ub. a t ea m Los ALAMITOS 1t1sut.rs championship .will' compe te in coinposed of Don and Ann r111H•w. s .. 1. •· 1,11 Ch11r llMI ''" the masters flight. Douglas with Paul arid Lou ise 111tsT 1t•c•. «111 ,.,di. M•lcl..i 1 RObinsOn, fired a 56 to win by '"' 01c1s. c1,1'"1n1. l"ur1t '1toe. C I l''e." T~1!1•IDI! !Acl1lrl IJ.00 I .Git 'l'Q 01 fl three strokes. H11t11w Ch1'91 cwuoonl i1 . .o 1.111 A th r It d { r Te~ Rockll Gtl (IC•nl>) u.oo Costa~ i\1esa Golf a nd ree-way ie resu e o T1'"'' .ti 11,,, ~-untry Club v.•111 be the scene second at 59 .. Ope team V.'35 scr•rchlcl -Gotn11r Ho11. G••nt HH•. ~ d I 8 nd M y lt,.....eck, Oeml W.rch. of the annual Costa Mesa city compose 0 amey a 1 a 11c0Mo 1tAc•. 350 ¥••d•. s w,., I h' to r m nt Hansen with Pug and Bob °''' 1nc1 111. c111m1,,.. 1111 .. e i11100. g-olf champ on.s 1p u na ~ Littleton .· John and Helen s111n 11'1••• (.l•od•c•I s.20 t.M 1.to Oct. i.4-'2~ ·with entry ·blanks Tombtr Tonio ,,.,.,..,1 •.e ~.60 now avai!Shle at the pro shop. Berger teamed with Joe a;1d F~~~~~!.i~~-;11h1 l . ..o The ·cil·y title compeliLion Billie Sparago on another ; and S<rllch.ci -Rocky E""'"""'· ""•'d y,•ill be played over the h1·o Bob and l\1arsha Buckenhizer ~:''~.~:..,;win, ~·· Pti. .... t.1n11 course.sat co5ta Mes~ CC and teamed wtlh Bob and Verda u M1nHTL'I' oou1t.1, 1.--r,,.,.,"" entry l.e 1$201 ror lwo rounds Shirley. & 1·!11111111,,,, ••"' ,,., ... G Id Do h d 31 THl•!:I llACI". «Ill ¥ord1, M1ld•n ! or p\11 9 Include s green tees. Dr. era an a a on ¥"' olds, c111m1.,.. 11.,,.tt t 1toe . • ward' .. "' priies and ho rs the front side and put a 38 on w.u w .. tCro1bv1 •.K 1,611 '·'° the card on the back nine to Tl'll c1,.,. o1r1 !Wois!W'll n .• 11.10 d'oeuvres. I l u~tf IMnrr1,.,"1 !.40 Compet,·1,·00 , .. ,·11 be,., flights tic \\•ilh Kevin Wheele for low 1 1,,.,,, .11 .1110 ' -• I b Sc•1tc1'•d -C• Ot V•"" 01r1. Ct1>· for est&bi ished hart d ica ri gross honors in a men s.c u i·1~·· C~bO,. Tok•n'1.c111c1<. P•uum Play'r'. The C'amp>'onshi p tournament Sund~y . s"'· :JI l'OURTM •.ICE . J50 ¥•rdl. l v•1r fl ight is for O·li handicapperll.: ·.:-v" ltl .lll! Squ'~re ~rd1 ·~ 11~. c111m1n,. 11uru riooo. d II. h .. t.01~ Pio! IA."o'rl 1.00 1 tlO 1,6/'l First fligh t (7-9): secon ig l E~•·~v Min cw.1son1 7.20 •·""' fl0-12)· third flii;iht (13-151: 1'.:nlries fnr the me n's clu b v1~G11u ism11h1 3,111' ' ) f'f h Time: 11·1110 fourth flight (1~18 : It championship are now being Ne !£•1tc"••· fljnht (19 and nver l. taken at Founta in Valley· Mile l'll'TH ttACE. ljl\ •••••· " d .r ' •e•• oldl. PUf\I 11900. All prizes will br a war eu Square golf cou rse. o..~·1 LOOI< B•c~ .., gross scores in the various The tourney is 72 holes and c~11ua1 1 Nl\l Not1 !Smllhl flil[hts. will be held on successi ve v• Got T•G11bl• cL1 .. ~1m1 Competition is open lo all weekends. Oct. 10·11 and 17-18. 11me: .11.1110. I ~'••ICl'ltd -111u~dtr B o~. Ou• c.,.,. iz:olfers in the area re gard ess •• GI••. Moo•• c111~•. r To eo. of club affiliation. Jller1doavlarl~ 11 x--r11 •Ace. i'3 ••"'~ 1 ve•r etd1. k c111m1..,. Pur11 t1H». In a men's sweepsta cs ~ ... ,_se tL1•h•ml tournament at Costa J\1esa. QuaEfyi ng is under wa y ror T•u• c;rn f"''"'r1 th •1 do lark Country Cluh Ll•M•I•• e1c1 1o•evt •! 11.60 J,IO l,.0 J 60 1 60 ··~ Roy Stoddard was low gross e "ea \V rimt· 11 "'' ... ,·nner \\ilh a 7!. JOhn men's championship w i I h scr11c11~0 GH~. OUlt'llt Ch••••· " d di' day Sept IS P•0Yt•11111 Ouatl, Ge Ml1ty JM. Abraham won low·net witti 66 ea inc · · n 1xAcTA, ,, ... "",_," a s. followed by Vic SilllO'l'lellt \~). El Niguel ''::v:~~·H ';':c~·::O ¥••••· , vr•r Fred Fredensl;!urg. .168), ~aek o1d1 111(1 11• . .1 11ow•ftC11. 11 ..... 11100 Valasek (,89) and Dick P.llller .John Cote teamed with A.I :~~~%,;~~:·';D';'~ •• r1 15"'° ::: ~;: and Pal Kalama (70 ). \_· Pelligrini to win a partner's 1r11c~!in M•,. is"'u~, '·'° Costa Mesa is starting best ball tournament at El ~~"';!;,.·:~'.'· several ~5sions nr group · Niguel Country Club \vith a 1:10HTH 1tAc1:. 1111 v••~1. , ¥,., )••sons. A i·unior golf series .. ,;ore of 62 then paired with e!d! """ 1111• -.uowintH. Puri• $l000, ..., ~ Te. !!~flt IHt•dlnl l t.20 &.00 J,«I brgins Friday. Sept. HI al 3 brother Joe for second ph1ce F11•¥ N••~c 1t.1•h•m1 1 . .io 2.1111 o'clock and runs for six weeks. at 64. Moll"• rw1 1111 1.00 Tl/Ile ; ,&).,110. Cost is $7.50. In a mixed best ball 5t,.1c1>1d -ic, ... ,,~ E•u• •••· A. mixed class will start 1.our namenl, ri1r. aqd Mrs. '•;;;TiunitAClfi. no v••di. J v11,~101 Sept. 19 at 2 and a ladies clas!I Roger Conan d came In with a •nd uo. c111m1n1. P~•oc ,i.oo . th M•choDO ••• IWrlthO n .to 1,6(1 1 • .0 Sept. 16 ;1\ 9:30 in c 62 for .Urst place and a li e 51.,11 T•ID!•• 1.1.a11•1 n . ..o '·" morninn. , Classes will be resulted (or secOnd betv.·cen Mh• 011mond flu~ 1cro111~1 t . .o • F JJ T\mt· .ll ·S/10, rcrnducted by pros Dean U er Mr. arid Mrs. Eugene Parker scr11c11M _ Glor, ••· T••t 1-M!t. and Jack Saenz. 11nd Irwin Kee and Marge s1·•-r1. srr11c11 1111,.r, lJ l ll.l(fA, J ·Mir'-' .. , n.U.cho SJ l l HiiowiieJJi· ,. ljijiiijijiiijiiiiiijiiij,,_iijii~·~"'ij"ii'ii· .... ,·,'"•'~··· iiiiiiii Jim DoUey and Al fsaaCiOn fired a 101" net sco re of SI to \\'In a twO:min select p&rtner bcsl ball tournament a t Rancho San Joaquin over the • weekend. Second plact went to Boib Marlin and Norm Pallekl tlcd with Frank Smith and J im Hltebman 11 81. In 1 woman's low net tqum1y.· Mlll'ion Keeler and (;.,.,·en ,Holle tied for A fll£hl honors at 74. "Dorothy \Vrlgtit was the n rlight win ner with a 66 wilh Betty \Valthall the C winnr.r with a 77 and Lou Wlll!y lhc D 14' L lM 8'., COlf.I-.., •iZii -• ..., ........................ -:.:::.."' .... . I ------<'• -----=--------- I SALE SPECIALS FOR TODAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY! s. habla Eapanol WESTMINSTER SANTA ANA FULLERTON 15221 IEACll llJD •• PllOll 193-1544 120 E. FllST ST. AT CYPlfSS • PllOll£ 547-7417 1530 s. llUIOR IUD. • PIOll£ 17M711 MONDAY THRU FRIDAY •• 9:00 A.M. • 9 P.M. SATURDAY • , , .. , ••• , , • 8:30 A.M. • l f'.M. SUNDAY ,., •• , •••••••• !t:OOA.M.·2P.M. fO~ NOMI 01 JMI' 1'5 FOG CLOTH Rf,LACE YOUR OlD AUTO AERIAL W ""'"' ck•o""' plor ..... J ••• ,;..,,_ •••• ...i. •• 4l 1 ..... '"· ...... 1~ ... b1 •. YOLKSWAGtN ! MOST J 69 1 fl Onif' CAltS Conn•d 1lort1cl <or'• b .. tt••Y It 1>n11!l11r bolt.fl' I• 1•0•!, ONUm 79 01 l c I IT. CAILl 5 20 INCH "STURDEE" HI-RISE BIKES V11.;ti, ol l!e"'b•,•ftl ""1 ... with ,..,._ ,;.,.,, rvi · u1d hoo•1 d1>ly '''''"· Oli""' "'"""""" ,..,. l nollby thu . I" 1rfgl"1tl ""!on. MODflS FOii IOYS I GIRlS :;~~;~ 2711 16 INCH StZE COBRA HI-RISE BIKES CONVERTS FOR BOYS OR GIRLS °""" ..... h I-•• .... , ... <>t<1t• lerr . 1.1 ..... old ........... 88' ........... bl•. IAIY fO Cl(AN HOOD LATCH KIT ~ •OH r100f' ''"' 1 i.tl)NOAY THllU FRIDAY , • 1:00 A.M.~ 9 P.M. SATURDAY •••• , • , •••• , 1:00 A.M. •t P.M. SUNDAY , ••••••••••••• t:OOA.M.•.4P.M. MONDAY TltltU FRIDAY ., 1;00 A.M. ·t P.M. SATUM>AY ••••••••• i .. e:GOA.M.•IP.M. SUNDAY , , • , , , .. ,_, "',,, 9:00.A.M. • 2 P.M. REPtACE W(,ORN TIRES DUl{ING OUR .SUPERTIRE -~ CORNELL ARISTOCRAT TUBELESS WHITEWALLS 4 PLY NYLON CORD 7.3Sx14 7.7Sx1S 8.SSxlS 9.00xlS EACH JIUI 'UUfC1' 10 lolOCl BRAND NEW! FIRST QUALITY! Cornell Futura TUBELESS WHITEWALLS GUARANTEED 36 MONTHS* 4rH ·TIRE . WHlll YOU llUY 3 Til(S AT OUR LOW SINCLE TIRE PRICE SIZE GET 4th TIRE !f.IOll » ... 7.U •If l .J0,/'1.11 1, • 14 ... /l.!I . " I.Of o IJ ,,.,, n 24!~ 25!! 26~ 33!~ 33 !~ 33~: FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE ""'• f•4, .. , , •le • f II•• Inf°" ol1• • ThH 1110 •Uil .. lt •• .,. i. llltl1 ,,_ 111111• ....... H lltL 96 O.OO ll 1J '1"' SJ.Ml ~•ti. t ... : .. Tu -· .. h~ .. 4 PLY NYLON CORD TUBELESS !LACKWALL TS MONTH GUARANTrr• ..-. POITTlllS 11111 rw, 0Arsu11, rororA A#D MAllY Ol'llft IOlflGll CAI <W~Y NYLOtol COID NMl.He IU!;ICWAW .J.Ool'/ j ,»J.I0".00111 FREE $4.98 WHEEL ~!::!.~~~.~.~! 1295 1395 !MIST .tllltlt.I~ C~ISl BUY ON CREDIT um• , ... , 19~ 17 95 '"'"''" ,, ........ ·~'-"~---~-----~ '- • I , I Wf'.dntsday, Srptrrnl>tr 4J, 1970 -Regatta Draws 19 ~ l:ll8 11tCll --(C) (30) (I} P'!lj SJl\ltn IUIP M COR Liglit Breeze Slows Labor1 ~~y Race st'TlMIE .. t I • · 1:00 8111 N ... (C) (60) Jtny DilnphJ, CJ DllC lf81111ttrWict IC> (IO) D n.. SlM •• .,.. ft) "°' TtnlttM 1u1~1 111 Clift Robertson. D1n1h Sllort, Dom Drt lUitil, .lot 1 Peottone, P11111!1 MtlOll, (1111ly Coltm.1n, El Ciiano. D sa O'CIKt llhWii: 1M A•JllllC JH&h:,. (~1..rlli) '50 -Sletlinl Ht~dtll. JllMS WllillllOl't, Muil)'n M6nfot, Louis C.lhern, Sim .llfft. 0 Allllltt 1111 C...W. (C) (30) CD TM fliltMlll <ti 130J Q) Sat Tr• (C) {60J ''"' Shittf SIWw, •lie «-WI wile ill 1 IHact NlllM11 t• ,... • )tis "S,_llbh• llllctllw 111• Mf~ Ult Hillbil1its. D (flJ[lJ m .... m ICI (,., (It) ''fllflflJ ..,,R ........ _(C) lliO! fD """' " .... IC) (Ol) Clll lilt Bhl:OI lallte Cotri,1ny }Wi1 ltl• '°''°" Pops Ofefltllfl t• '"ft fofl'll l'roldif'l't "Ptltr Ill' Vi. Wolf.~ ID,..., Fi.My (30) Ill KIUT ..,....., (C) (tOJ I I.el Gordnl11 I ..0, MOfl!trt \It. l .. MtcliC11S dt Mua . ' . i. The Balboa Yacht Club's traditional Labor Day Re1atta Saturda.Y and Sunday drew 191 sailboat.a in 16 classes, but failed to produce the coveted westerly breezes in · ~hich sailoft lay.so milch 1tore. The bree ze was predominately soUtherly both days, contributing to a slight haze. J The Labor Day Regatta tradiUonally winds up the sununer regatta sea.son at Newport Beacll. Largest ·c1an to Show up on the Starting line outside tht harbor was the Pacirfi c Handicap Racing Fleet with 29 entries. Largest inside class was the Lido-ltB with 21. Followinf: are the trophy winners in each class: PC en -••~urlul, Lsrrr Pl11Clllr1t. VY(. PMltl'-t:lt) -111 AIOl\1 II, G!tnR 11:"4. SSSC 1 12) LIK.k' (111"'4, JOhn lromi.¥, IYC1 f'll P1trtci.11, Olvt Piii.~''" NMYC; (~) Nowl!'I. Owl, Lr l!OSl, NHY.Ci 15) T'*•· Jlin O'Hern, (Y(, LIQO.l~A (161 -fll M"/c, Dive Ullmtn, 8YC1 (2) L_., lt11m1R, Rolly lo/lm-911, IYC1 C3) P~r., Mtrlln GIYml .... AIVC1 10 HNd'lt-U .. Hofiey, 01rK Smllh, llYCI ISi w1111i.w1slll1. 8111 lltSlllU&Mft, VYC. L100.148 1211 -Jul!t II. Fred T-1. VYC1 ttl litll Mi ii, W11!1ro M~llme11, WYC1 f3l Lore!,!, ltobttt Hubbs, VYC1 It) Sw1JIOW, Ht11rY W11rotr, NMYC1 UI P•1111, Mt ri/1111 Grim, PVSA. METCALF 111 -01 -11 ..... Jor.n T-. IYC. KITE A 01 -Cl) $11,,_l!.llYeft, C. E. w11111,.... •cYC1 12) Pllllll,. ... H1>10 scnmldt. LIYC. KllE8 CUJ -0) _,, MtllM G!knr1,r, llYC; Phll1P,1r ...... Rocio IHk. ltGYCi 131 Ho. 151, k.,r ltllftelMml!ll. LIYCi (•) N1, Ut.~M•1t Mlloll\tw, LtYC, V.IOt A !ti -en Ht. •i!i2, Miii.i H11'11 .... ICYC1 (2) A:tt1lltllCW1. Mlk• Tll«Mr IYC. SAIOT • II) -Ill No. m•. S<ott 0111, IYC1 12l (IJ.ftrr •om~. c;,,., Zl1 ... llf, IYC. • 5AIOT C llU -CIJ Ho. Mll} Kerrr l.sllt, CYC; en How Atll<it T"-f. Miki ,Fllmun, IYC1 Ill Go Getum, 'Murri.,· Wll1'M IYCi 141 11111 ltllt: It. Colts-ll1r, L/YCI Ul H-SO. llobll'I ......_ IYC, . , ~ IHTEA:NATIONAL.i.· (11) -(1) Go1ct Nut'9!1, 11.o9., W1lsh, HHYC1 121 "UllRt llutTttttv. · CJ'llls -.ie111c1, N M CYCJ Ill S•~•te. Tim "'ur•, YYC; . 1· 11111•1 SC; (l) Pltdl • .kll\ll Sl•"rtio. ewpo t an ISi l 111ll\H, Mlkt Alle11, IYC. THISTLE (10) -lll Go1,41 It, Pit Alltll, NHYC; UI Shell•"le•••· liloberl Loses Le' a· d V1n T'•let, SSSC: 131 Arlt l, llob 1t1t111r. sssc. (11.8 (JI -Ill L1 o .... "•· AlleR V Arclrtw1, IYC. LUDEltS -(I) kildff, ··~ I s l R MnKftlOlo.1, t. YC; U l Liff It lulu ... lt n n ai" • . ace Ll...rny, VYC: Ill Slllbul. am LClffl, VYC. $HEIL"O$ UI -111 Pl~flCt. JO/In M01Mt11, NHYt. NEW •ffAVEN: Coon. (AP) -ftRbble Doyle of Harvard. l!ll) Mitri.._ (JO) Im DlllnlCt/Mnicllt rtl {JO) 11)1 ..... (J~ cgw ....... (C)(l0) C1) Ttttrt M In L11:1flll• (30) uoeaCll -.. """1ci CliO! (R) ftolb1ll stw 0. J. Sl11p90ll 11.1t1ts i• tllt rolt ol I poten61I MtiS/1'1111 T1ophy rttipiel'll Md -ii PIO drift choict •ho is •la1Utcl .,. • m1lll«io11s tilll'ltfll Guut Ciclly l)'tOI ,._,. Simp,D11'1 wife. 0 CAROL CHANNING * lnYilH Frwd -Murr•y. Art tamey to Mons~o's Mod Enclilh TH l'Mty m111i.,i111 •••••t 1c1 cJo> o aoo m11ecw;1 ......... Coast Boats Sweep Races In Chicago Seventh Sabot .Sail Slated for Saturda)· · curr~nt U.S. Intercollegiate 11iotle·handed c h a m p I o n , swePt 'inlo' the lead on light .,_,inds and a IO$l pair or . " glasses Tuesday in the Ndrt.h · A me r i C a.)i Single-Handed Sailing Championship. ~ZD @ (6) W11tlllf (Cl M1r11 Slile:a. ~ Ctrtl t .. .i.c (C) (~ St•r Clfo( Cllt11lli11c we!c,_..,,.,~ f:JD 0 I IHC!A' I Illy l taU• fftw ~ ,.,, ClllSIOt (C) (60) 1u1sts Ftld M11:M11tr1J, Art C.tn.,; I Sir Joh• Git11ud tncl Sir R1 lph • ID 8 (]) MJ fl'llritl Mtrtiu ()O) Rich1<dsan who joili lltr ii apooti•f @ ()) hnJ M-(60) 1•1 t11d tictioMI ,.,IOM!ititL iD (~ lttC Jlipdr R• (C) (30) 8 Tiii ,.....,. (Cl (60) ''nit liift m Llw fw tllt '70a (C) (30) From litttt Cmt." o.id _,,,_ The Pacific Yacht and Balloon Club's seventh annual West Coast skippers and Sail of the Sabots will be held crews made a clean sweep Saturday, at art in g and J,..uders-16 world championship finlshing off the Sea Seoul regalla at Chicago last month. Base. Winner was Ler oy Warning signal will be at IS r.u.. ttr LliMr (JOJ 111rs. .,.....,., "I'> Ii"' D li'/Jl1l m"'..., ........ (ti (60) Gu•IJ 1<1 Mlit Di1moM, @tin. lewrt le,.t (C) (JO) Tiit St1tttr l 1o!Mrt, El'il Sllllk Cl) SI• ... M liMI (JO) 1rit frtd SIMOI. m • w.w •Ptrt <C> 1301 a...,....,,.. (CJ tJo) SECURE AT ENSENADA -Laissez Faire, the only Ne\vport Beach entry in !be Midget Ocean Racl'l\g Association race from San Francisco to Ensenada was one of the first finishers in the ~mile race Tuesday night. Sutherland of Newport Harbor noon with the starf scheduled Yacht Club. and runner-up at 12: 10 p.m. was Ben Hromadka, nying the From the start the Sabot! colors of the Lahaina, Hawaii will sail up Lido N o r d Yacht Club. Channel. rqund Mark Z lo lt was the first West Coast port, back down the same win in · th e international chaMel to Mark 0, leaving it regatta since 1949 and means to port and ftnishing back at that the regatta w:lll be sailed the Sea Scout Base. Sixteen in Newport next year. perpetual trophies will be at J:tl 8 CIS lllllll( .._ (C) (30) CB lllldll (601 om ... -._ '" 1JOJ ,,,.0 .,_ fCI ,,., m I lM LICJ (30) m Diltlel ...... ,. Ito> ''lllt m .. t tllt Che' (C) (30) Munlet-.".tt frank Finlar 1tlrL i:iJ 00 Hie~ •H WiW (C) (JO) Im Mllllicalt/r..,..1 hit: fC} (30! fIJhtltrfHt IC}.(JO) "Df111 Dtei· lt:OtfJOOQ"t fj)MNH ....... (Q ,i s1on." An 1e1osp1tt 1i11111l1tion ap·I (60) (RJ A tourist (WI• llaMoltlt) DIOlch is 1ppliM1 lo ffUI 1b11S1. 9 (Jj T1lfltl • c.-.-••m (C) fD thrill tM Lirilll W•d ft) (30) a!) 1.,._.~te M•ia (55) 1!11 I flicbl Oil tf11 IOWll 111111 Iliff, u11 1 JifltiN ef lrollbl1. omni.. c... ..... tc1 (60) fl } '1111 Jliiwtf·llliM Milt Cil· d l.R .,_ joiM fcNCft wittt II 11derty lrwtltr lf'O .. M.w Yon. am-1<> c.., D li'IJ@ m-•- (t) (60) Gtlesls lft DoMmn, Tht CommittN, Jelllllil• W1r1111,· OIOll 11111 Geortt H.mto11 (cem• IDie). 'Magic' First Across Finish at Ensenadf1, Winds for the regatta on stake when the colorfu1 eight· Lake Michigan varied from foot pram• get under way. moderate to a gusty 48 knots. They include the 0. \V. Sutherland 's consisted or (Dick) Richard Tr<>phy for the Greg Wood and the ~ Bill first girl to finish; Reuben E. Fundenberg of NHYC, and Lee Trophy for the first boy to Hromadka's crew were his finish; Audrey Div v ens brother, Don Hromadka a·nd . Memorial for the y9ungest girl George n.om·as Jr. to finis h; Herman. 'IT ate ENSENADA, Mexico (UP I) A Mexican N a v y &) THt Ciit (C) (30) J:JO II Wlltf1'1 H111ldlll lC) (30) (R) Tht loolbtll lltrots lor111 • rGCk' sin11n1 11oup. j Q m Tl11 YklilliH (C) (90) (R) "lht Evil Tlllt Mt11 Do." !lriay Guth tills ill lovt with 111 tmbit·\ l11td 111ole1, pl1ytd b'J' Robtrt l Redford. l1J THE ALCOA HOUR * DUEL IN THE WIND minesweeper fired its guns in sa lute Tuesday as the 30-foot sloop .. 1Magic" sailed across the finish line or the 500-mile Sa n Francisco-to-Ensenada race sponsored by the t.1idgel Ocean Ra cin g Associal"ion !MORA). The sloop, with Bill Lee of San la Cruz at the tiller. ··ghosted in under very. very light winds," re.ported William ' 0 lf'fl'I {t) (30) '1ht Scrttmlflt Wom1n.~ D THE UNSEE~ WORLD * 1 f1scinatinc look at woncftr1 we can not s'H with fht naked eye a Iii oo 1 mew,.... • .. W"lltl (t) fft(l) SIClfy, lilmllll - 110116. d lb,. l.tt11llll •ippelf CMtPtlillf .. ffltlMll 1111 AnMrica'• Cup. J111rr.ttd bJ Willy 1:111. 111 a.M's Law (60) (!)TH hlliDf I• (Cl 130) Marks Takes 505 Yaclit Race Cro1vn a flll (}) m I IHCW I '"""' m 1,. ·-........ (30) WM• (Cl (60) (R) Ecldit Alber! 1U1rr1!11 pracr•m ot th1 -ld1 of' Qi) r•c· ••• f...i (2 lit) Utt inhllit1sim1I. /ld ID Iii ......,. (30) DlllilllM $ Mtvit: "fiw 111iit1 11 ll:tlf,llft(i)llt._ CCI _tTWw)l!lr" IJ!)'ltlfJ) '63 -So~11i D QJ CIJ Cl W... fCI Lo1tn, Anlhony Ptrllins, Gi1 Yo11"1. 1 --• ......__ w.. PLYMOUTH, England (AP) Je1n-Pilr11 Au111ont. Americ1n, bt --, .. , hevecl klUtd itt Kdcttnl. toices hft D ._ (CJ -De{ending champion Larry •ttt•111e~ wilt to toJl1ct insuflnct.I on.n .. ..,,." .. L•llilM 1\1arks of Britain sailed in lhr m11scw;1 · .•. ' kllltiflll ''""""") '' ....... ,., sixth and final event of the 11" (2!h ht} A hislOQ' of bllCk :" -' 111u1ic pest 111d Pftsent. lr1tluded itll m M-'1llll LH .... k!rll«Yt \YO r Id SOS Yacht champion· th• JllOW ,,. "'' arthiH films 111 '•4--tl•lt OM,...'-"~ .ships but it was strictly aca-sudl lt1tndary ,ettormeu 11 kuit Snuth. l illf Hollid11. leldbelly, m '""' demic. Ki111 0IMr 111dJellyllalllllotto". I lm(f)ltl M9t ~larks had built up such " Q) 'wrr M ... (60) 1 fD JKT ...... (R) tommanding lead in the firs! ~oo s,.;.i ..,_,. " 1-. QJL11'1 .... 1 ltll tel !iv~ races thal he wa s ) (:fD) \11 :•BBOO ..., .,.., fq declaffil ttils year's winner. m:n. '""" s.,. 1'°1 ii) D IDOO •,._, c... fCl Some 80 craft from 19 QJ (J) liMJ ,,.._ c...-. tt> o ...._: "'Ii.ct. 'Nf• ~ countries took part in the E SlkcW fMll {C) (30! ·~Joltl kllH4. _, w.Mt•. sailoff, determined by the best IE)M .. fllll'te11•t•.._(.l0) D ~(f)SM ~ (C) five results. with Britons l :U C1) c.-.. * ~ ,_,11 ~ Dlfid kttkitod, finished 1-2:·3 in lhe points <H08 '-l'ylt ft) 1~ (R) Ctrtl K•t• Millett, .loaf! C1rrty. standings. ~1arks gathered .. 8Ul'Mtl l\ltlh is • 11cty Mann• lllM•ilc. .. .,,,.1•1 • Wh 31.1 points, lollowed by Gordon ..no cl tshts wit~ SlttMnt C.rter a_..{""*"') ,..__.,illiM Hlf'I· \Vilson. 66 .i , and Der e k wlle11 silt 11t1mpJs lo r1trllft f>olnet .. 11. Mert INtty. Farrant, 70. 7. tw a c1mp show sh• ii.!. lll.11i111. l l:OOllMeNe (C) ""-• ..... • .. li"o;;o;;;,;oo;;o;;o;;o;;o;;o;;o;;"w. 0 Y'iraitNI ,,..._ .._ ~q (60)1 ,,__.. ,_........, '5&-DM ,.,. ·~ • ,,,, T1~t1tMIJ &Mdultd IMlts 111 1 lw, ldliltdt Cit!IMMi. AbbJ l.Mcoltl. flltiw [IMIJ l1111. GD-- Lil1 TOMiin ... Obtrl111. -ac .............. ._.tea ......... 9'lk fCt ....... . f ...................... .,.. llld tca ...... , ... ..,, .. ~@ "" ............ "' "" • Tiie .._ fC) f30) Ill-!Cl I~ . .a.• ma. 1-""'""'" tt.o1 ..... ~ ...... .... (drtnt•) 'Sl-lilli ,llMI, I '. , . I T~IUP\CIA' MYTIME MOVIES m "llJI Ill tllt .._. lff11111) 'SI I -E•lltOll' O'triln, l ritft hllltwy, I , ......... If ... ...,. tt-· My) ··~11'1 tlot""Y(~. frM lllte:Mw,... It (C) ....,. .... 11'-l " Pi rt liar it ....... 41a." '66 - MlfllM "•• Oof111. » D IC) "'ClrtiM .._,... .. (clr111M) ·•01 !:• D tc> .,_ "'"".._ '-'" -MMry JIMt, lillldt Otr111ll, OM·· 11111'1"1) 'flO -IC11W1ll Mort, thy l•fllOlll'· TtiM £11 . .... a .. _.. " tltt c.. .. M (dr•~•l Ill..,,.... ,, .. ...,.. (-tiail) '32: -Cl•11dl"• Colbert. frtdnc ·s~tttllt Tuclitl ... 1r1trtt WM· Ml~. I ,,. :JI Cl ~ "SiMb fl n...t(° (Id 4:JI ... .,,. Mii(" (6111111) "$3 "flhtrt) 'll-llol•11• Cmy, ~llt ltMM, °"9t!IJ M1lt111. e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS Que lity Pr inting '"" Oependeble Service lor more then • qutrftt of • century. PILOT PRIN TING ,, ... IJll WUT IALIOA R.ft., NIWHJIT HACH -64-Jo4Jll HELD OVER ''The Landlord'' WITH BEAU BRIDGES and LEE GRANT COMEDY RATED ''R'' NO ONE UNDER 17 UNLESS WITH PARENT ALSO 11THE NIGHT THEY RAIDED MINSKY'S" STARRING JASON ROBARDS & BRITT EKLAND Clute, Mora Commodore. However, Clute s a i d , ;'Magk" may not be the official elapsed time winner because of a protest ll"d against her as the result of a collision at the start of tilt race in San Francisco Bay last Friday. Al last report lah: Tuesday , Clute said. two other planing· hull JO.foot sloops were "right next to each other. just south of San Diego. They wen '·Starbuck," last year's win- ner s ailed by San Fran- cisco s a i Im a k er Donald Goring, and George Olson's "Grendel" from b~• h a i n a , Hawii. One lo lY:o hours behind "Starbt.1.ci"' and .. 'Grendel'' \\.'ere a pair of Newport·JO's still in contentiori for the corrected time victory. 'They were Bob Hunter's "Torosha" from Sausalito and Ji m Cooper's "Pastime" from San Francisco. Lehman-12 Series Set NMl---PMl'f " The first of a series of rail regattas for the Lehman·l2 Class will get under way at Newport Harbor Yacht Club next Sunday v.•hen the Dodie Beek Gabbon is up for grabs . The first race starts at 12:30 "·m. in the turning basin oH PREPPING FOR MAZATLAN -'Nalu ·II. Lhe =new N~Yh~·r fall tven1s listtd for 46-lool sloop built by Car Chapman & Associ,ates, the Lehman-12s are the Costa Mesa, will sail in the Los Angeles to Mazat· Kenneth Da vis Series. Oct. 3- 4: Schock 'Trophy Series , Oct. Ian race starting Nov. 7. The yacht will be sailed 17-18: Cicero Trophy Series. by Andres Gerard of .l\'lexico City. Oct. 31 and Nov. I. and the annual championship regatta ;=:====================:;:::=:;! for lht Barney Le h m a n Trophy Nov. 28-29 . Aonual meeting of the class will be held at NHYC at 10 :30 a.m. Nov. 29. . . ' . L1ML111 :: J Diuey rkt•r9 0.IR J-. "THE LOVE BUG" • "JUNGLE BOOK " c.,,''-• o.11y 1 ,,,,., ' AT THI INTlANC.i· TO PAIULOUI LIDO ·Ill.I EXCLUSIVE atlnifttjlefl.,_1 •.i-c.Uw _.,fi>I .. i..,it.n. • .;d.i.~l'll . "'""-""';.. ~ technicolor® from worner bros. "'"· tllftl Pri. , ....... 6:J0--9:45 Se1.-1 •ntl ll:Jt S•~:ll·l:Jt-9:41 Today's Stocks Today SPECIAL ADULTS ANO . j uNIOU .• h~-. • UNTIL .$ ,.M. ' .. ml1E •S·LEE CONTINUOUS DA LY 'FROM 2 ,..M. ' I ---.. ~ophy for the youngest boy to finish ; Ed Hayes Sportsµtan A\"ard; Lt. Jerry Shomaker Menlorial Tropliy and the PliYC ·'Trophy for the first boat to finish; 1 PBYC Trophy for .the sltipper-navigator on ·the first boat; Also. t h e International Naples Sabot Trophy. for the first. associatkln member-' to finidi ; Sea Scout Trophy for the first Sea Scout or Boy Scout to finish: George Strom · Memorial for the first to finish from a local yacht club; Lou BeMy Trophy for the first non-yacht club skipper to finish ; \V. D. Schock Trophy for'·Che first to finish from a southern yacht club; Henry Erbe Trophy for the fir!t to finish from Wnland yacht club: the Pat Royce Trophy- for the fi'rst unaffiliated yacht to finish. Doyle won the first and third races and came in second In the. olher. bringing his two.day total ol points to 21.4. • He took the lead from Argylle Camp be 1·1. who finished second, fourth and ~ighth in· the day's three races. bringing his· t a t a 1 number or paints to 30.7. Campbell, a sailor from the Balboa Yacht Club of Newport Beach, who took the lead ln the event's rirst day Monday. said he couktn 't see as well on Tuesday -he'd misplaced his glasses. ' -• • The second race 't\'as won by R<ibl:lie's brclher Rictiie Doyle, who graduated recently from Notre Dame. \Vith a two-day total of 55.0 points, Richie •a~ fifth in competition al the end of Tuesday's racing. NaJu ·Gets Set Neiv Sloop Vies • Race Ut The recently launched 48- foot ocean racing sloop, Nalu IV, can be .seen working out in Jocal waters prior to her entry in the upeoming ~ Angeles to P.1azatlan race. Designed by locar naval architect Bill Lapwoth. Nalu IV was built in Costa Mesa by. Chapman & Associates, a new firm specializing in custo m yacht construction, head by Carl Chapman. Peter Grant, Widely kno,vn ocean racing skipper from Newport Harbor Yacht Club is also a member of the firm . Nalu IV will compete in the MazaUan race under charter to Andres Gerard of Mexico Cify aOO ChameJ.a Bay. The boat is hand crafted or laminated v.'OOd to incorporate maximum strength w i t h minimum \veighl and ha$, an epoxy finish. Lavish uge of teak for trim · both above and below decks c o nY·b i n e s elegance with utnity and deluxe accommodatiohs for nine people. Basic dimensions or Nalu JV 11re 47-feet nine inches overall, 39 feel nine inches waterline : 13 feet. beam, and seven feet draft . She displaces 25.000 pounds and carries 1, 160 square feet of sail in a high· aspect plan on an anodized aluminum mast extending 61 feet above deck. Auxiliary power is S.!lQPli~ by a P~rkins 4-107 SO horsepower diesel engine with t.,_·o aUernators. • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -·· ... HlR10R BLVD ~, Q • V f I ~.j .All Ct .. P llMw , Under 1r Mull It Wlfll io:1rMtt "l:L CDHDOlt" e (11t) Plut ll1'i 'lfl-• JHff'l1'*' l l1MI "T"!l .CllAISH0.,..111" •.(It) •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• , ... ' ..... BROAD~AY '" ~I • r-, ....................................... ' .... l l '• • ll'tdMl4u. "'"-9, 1970 DAILY PILOT 15 • Thdder Notes ,., . .. '' I ·Tnr~e Playhouses Launch .New Season By TOM TITUS Of .. Dlllr ........... canv.luence between a bat9n- an1pplna: conductor &nd hil v1inlyTProtestin1 wUt. Carr, a veteran of thrH years 11 1n entertainment director in the Women '• Army Corp!. TODAY IS HAROLD'S BIRTHDAY • .. THIS IS HIS PRESENT- Orange County Premier• "THE BOYSIN THE IAND" w.i. ,. ••t ,,,, . · .fiiuth Coast Rc1 11 ·rtoI)' Another openln1, another ahow,. and another season of JMlll theold -probably the btueat yet -1ets under way this weUend on Oran1e Coast •tac•. Playing the principal roles are Ron Albertaen 11 the conductor and Carol Fau11tlck as his short-term spouse, with Martin Fuchs enacting the agent who arrana:ts t h e Also starring ls the ,. 1127 =-._ - glamorous witch who casts •oR ESIR ~·ON-""'s · "'13" rom1nUc 1pel~ 11 L I n d y 1~~~~·~~R~~=A=T=I~=·=-="""'~· ~="'~~~~ Orlow whose husband , Ralph, l; DAIL 't PILOT Staff .. ._.. Sbariq the 1polll&ht as the advance 1uard for w h a t pl'OD\lles lo be the moat active MUOn yet recorded by local predudq: groups are South Cout Repertory , the HW1lingtoa Beach Playhouse and the We1 tm ln1te r Community Theater -all makes his directorial debut at 11W1Cbina: their new 1ta.son1 South Coat Repertory with Frlday evenlne. "The Boys in the Band." For SCR, whlch h a s Feriacca is now a drama mmµlte4 51 productlona in Its teacher at Orange Cout first 5\.ii years in the Costa College. Mesa-Newport Beach area, the M~king an I n f r e q u e n t 1e-.son will bectn 't"lth "The omtage 1ppearanct in the key Bp:n io tbe Ban'd," Mart rolJ of Harold wW be Dlvld doW!ey's clust.ic ind comic EmmU, executive director of ilaace Into the world of SCR. The other "boy•" will be homoouuallty. Thia wt1! be played by Michael Douglass, Oraq1 County'• nm. look at Bill Miller, James dePrlest, this much-d.llcuued play, Jim Baxes, Richard Goron, 'I1MI Huntlniton B e a c h Ron Chrlltte, Art KouaUk and Playhoule, meanwhile, ·will llft Cameron Young. elaborate plot. CompleUnr I.ht HW\tington Beach cut are Bill Wllliarrui, W1lter Allen, BUI Moreland, Arvld Malnaa and Ron FUian. Tom Tttus ls directing the comedy, with Ann Ftllan aervlng es ll.alt manager, Al<1 Osorio tedlnlcal director and Randy Kffllf: in charge of production. "Once More, With Feeling'' will be staged for five weekends, F r i d a y 1 and Saturdays through Oct. 10. at the Barn, 2110 Maln St.. Huntington Beach . Reservations art being ~en &tl3Mllll. * Al Westminster, GI en Eckenroth has llepped Into the leading ro!e of ''Bell, Book and Candle," turning the directing dulte1 over to Judith protraya her brother Jn t h e comedy. Alice Reich and John Phl!llpa round out t h e Westmln!ter ca1t. The comedy will play for three weekends at Finley School on Edwards Avenue at Trask In Westminster, with performances on Friday and Saturday evenings . Reservations may be acquired by calling 897-8315 or 897·1164. * Closing out its six·weekend engagement at the Long Beach Community Playhouse is "The Jmposslble Years" under the direct ion or J ames Brittain. Stanley Bell and Mlrl.am Kaiser repeat their earlier Huntington Beach PJ1,yhouse roles in the generation eap "' comedy at the playhouse, 6021 E. Anaheim St. For raervatlo111 call (2U) 431- 0536. UP IN ARt.\S -Ron Albertsen literally sweeps Carol Faul stick off her feet in this scene from "Once More, With Feeling·," opening a five-week· end run Friday at the Huntlncton Beacb Playhouse . the curtain on ltl ll'ft.71 "This is the kJnd o f schedu1e with a m or e controversial play we Uke to "conventional" comedy, Harry do," Emme 1 commented. Kumlti' "Once More, With -"1be subject matter may be F.eeUng." 'lbe b a c II: st 1 g e questionable to aome, but we romantic lbennantcans at a feel it'• in the best of laste. I big town concert hall provide suppose it'll be up to the ~ subject matter for this audlence1 to decide." ~~~~~~~~~ •oolly~ Champ Erases 'Fq,ir Lady' Mark Br JACK GAVER Cab Calloway. This kept the box office NEW YORK (UPI) -Thi! healthy until Christmas, Itel, offtrtae. "The Boys ln the Bind" will -PLUS- J WALT DISNIY •llAT1 10.ITHll POI THI 111 TIMI ·----11 the week.. when Pearl and company went The day is Wldnaday, Sept:· on tour and Pbyllil Diller and WJtcheraft and the comic play five ajghts a week, pracUce of aame la the Wednesdays tbrougb Sundays, premlle around w h I c h for five weeta at the Third Wa:lminster'a "Bell, Book i nd Step Theat.er, 1827 Newport Candle" evolves. 1be show is Blvd., Costa Mesa. Tickets drarna.slst·actor who baaed his may be ordered by caUlng the VlftDruten's better known box office at ~13&1. SWING INTO A SAFARI OF LAUGHS! I. · a whlte cast relieved at the St. The. time is 2 p.m James. Miss Merman toot · ·The place 11 St. James charge on Marth 21, 1970. . ·Theater. Thia replacement polley is ccmedles. * * Huntington Beach's "Once John Ferucca; who served More, With Feellq'' focuaes: the put ieuon u the first tta comedic scope on the "artlaUc director 1t the new symphony mu.sic "bullntas" "Lapna Moulton Playhou.5e, and the reconcWaUon of llMl'-JUbgiQBook -. ••-1 nothing new in the Case of 11ie event Is u.c crowning o long-long-run lhon. "My Falr a n1w long-run mu sica l d •· champion as "Hello, Dolly!" Lady" u:perlenct • num""'r of changea In the top roles; ao rings up Its 2,718th Broadway did the prevtoua ~ musical • S performanc~ edging "MY champion,' .. ~.-a!" ., ~·Two Join C F Fair Lady," the old champion. did .. ~ulh Pafilu:," and the , ~· • With Ethel Merman belting tleho d • Lif S } out the songs in the title role, no.n-musical !! I "· ' • Arts choo ••·lhe has been doing for five With .. Father. , -,,,. montbl, there la no telling how 'l1le lhow ha! made lortuneo • ft mldent eonductor of 1 d for Merrick, songwnter Jerry ~ r -· B&lcb 8_,._ much longer thl~ Dav_ Hennan, librettist Michael -. ,-.. J......,. .. y .• _ M.errick produc:uon w i 11 . Stewart and dirtet.or Gowtr oratatra. ud an art1lt J'ho ·. upand the ..... nJ. ""·-""'• And for I Dll1I who pul>llobel' weell)y.-per Another 507 performances ........... AtHY"'· ...... ~1.... do ~ aa ut and pollUc:t WW ' 1nd "Dolly" would become the had obaolutely ~-to be -ben·al tbe'C&I Stile . . all·rowid champ, ourpuslng with the mu.sical, -that Nllrtoa f&cull)' lhls.mon~· J ••· . I prestigious pla~Jllt ·-·...C. , !?' reco1q of u11111 ~mwnca Thornton Wilder-. tu~w Bold and Howard · LUe With.Father, which had For "Hello Dolly!" 11 an A. Waroer wW join the CSCF . 3,224 1how1ngs. But that iJ not ada taUon of Wlldet'a lt6S 8cbool of the Arts a mtly to happen . a.,~ 1 d w a y hit.. "The conductor of the c o 11 e g e It seems ironic that Mias Matchmaker." Obvloualy, he 1)111pbony orch'!tra and Merman, who may be the last bu been getting 1 bea1thy cut · c o e r d I n a t o r of ~ring of the Broadway Dollys, could of the muaieal'• tlke for euemblea, and 1 1 1 o c 1 a t e have been the flnt lmtead of almost seven yean _ and he Pl'Of!"°" of art, r!!spectJvelr, carol Ch~g. She was lhe dotln'& have to share it wllh accirdlng to Dr. J. Justin No. 1 chotce for the rolt. John Oxenford or JohlM <it11, dean. But Ml.a Merman, veteran Nestroy Of many a Jong.run· mualcal Oxenf~rd wa1 an EnaUah and, at the ~. just getting playwri&ht who wrote "A Day free of the marathon called Well Spent~· cir<:& 1 I 3 I 11Gypsy," did not want another Neitroy na an Alli~ such involmnent, which she of J h .. .......i .. d "Hi!Do D 0 1 i y 1 , , a revtval ·of one o . n ~.,......... ' "Einen Ju,, Will Es S1ch -wOuld be. , ew Machen" of 1842 on Olenforcl'1 so, tt<e.~bow opene<j m N play •. _. · ~ York on Jin. 16, 1914 with • • Mi,t Chnnlllg 1n th6 uu .... 1 .. Nlnetten months. later, Mias Channing started a nationwide ~ to\11' in tht musical. and .. Glneer :Rolen took over the New York job for 18 month!. · She wu followed by Martha Raye, 'Wbo wu succeeded in ' June, 1967, by Betty Groble for five months. Merrick· then brought off 1 masterpiece of showmanship 1 by tui'ninl the show into an • a 11 • N e I r o entertainment headed by Pearl Bailey Ind HELD OVIR 4th 810 WIEKf . CONTlkUOUI DAILY HOM 11:JI P.M. Hope Special Bob Hope'• first special for tbe rr fill on NBC will be teleout Oct. 15 at I p.m. He WUl .ha"t IS top comediennes f!l l!ie lhow. SIPT. 15th STARTS WEDNESDAY 5te:;r I "* * •. *-Hlghtlt Rating!" -'t.'f. o./l't,,,..,,. ---A .... W.lllldl -":'...-..:::; Blltn St11l11nd "* Moiillnd . ,~ Ac1tNJr/Jll"""•,.,, ..._._,.9".._..,..0.AOlilr~-CIWlllt,.,...._ ;;-_, .... ......, __ , __ .... __ .... ............................. ,.. .. y.. ......... ~ilw-o..0w., ........ ,..,,.. 'ii"* ,_,.....,OiliiMW.,Hlfloll ""-t p....-f T«flloltlr'A'--""'*'""0'-1111~,..-.,o.........,_ f . . . "'M~S·H' IS THE BEST AMERICAN WAR COMEDY SINCE SOUND CAME INt"-··-· ... --,.., .. , 5th RECORD IREAKIN~ WEEK ~. "Without a doubt· the funniest service comedy I have ever seen." -J11 .. t11 Crhl, HIC·TV "'M*A*S*ff' is what the new freedom of the screen is all about." "A COCKEYED MASTERPIECE!" -J ... ~""'· ,, ........ NOW AT BOTH THEA TRI$ POPULAR PRICES! Rated 11GP'1 All A'" Mmlttod- Parent1I Dl1eretlon $~0d u-.ca...w ... •1-.._....., ........ ... ...._ .. ~trwvt4 "" ..... ,,,,,.. • Coll 192-4493 \ C1ll 639-7160 . fXClUl'lf ORANGE a>UllTY · ENGAGEMEllT .... ftlnm.W.llPJL U,.1 ........ 1 ...... &llP& MMl.1-.kl .. Sta.71lt.tt4l P& ~fATCH·22 IS.QUITE SIMPLY, :t:: THE BEST AMERICAN FILM ,,i.. l'VE SEEN THIS YEAR!" :·~·~:;;:·· ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT NEW "DOLLY" SHOWTIMES!! MOiiiii'Y ·THRU FRIDAY 7:00 I< 10:00 SAT; a SUN. I :00 4 :00 7:00 Ii 10:00 SPECIAL P!J>ULAR CHILDREN ONLY $1.tlO o/ltimn ·i OlfS ONLY $2.SO •II ti"* ' '/_,,,. : Of'. 'AC~Y EXCLUSIVE D.I. SHCIMNGI 2'0llt~ .. '"' ........ AWAllOSI 1•1l'l"l'f)N ~ ......_._, ""..,-Plus "S CAID STUD" . john 117 ay11 e Jn His Greatest Role ·~·~~7ohnWayne 1s "Chisum" , fOOest U:ker·Christqfu Groge . Oem Oxbett· PatOC KroMes Iida Dcly· Ben )ohnson·BnK:e Giliot Ar1drew Prine· Richard )aeckel Ard~ Cro'fit>y Deuel & Pamela MGV\ye' Written and Produced by Andrewlfenady ~~IGJ==·I Execu1M! Producer Michael Wayr>e · Direcled by Andrew V. Mctaglen . ·-~~· . , ... Plus Co·Hil. Both il1 Color Henry Fonda · Jam11 Stewart • CHEYENNE SOCIAL CLUB t I. •I b. , . . • -:#6 DAILV ~ILOi UC Irvine Annollllces Classes and Speakers ••• Here Is the line up classes and speaken whlch wlJI be of- fered this loll tltrouib UC Jnine Ertenslon: SATURDAY, September It "California ReaJ Properly Law,'' A one-<iay seminar, Paul F. ~tarx, LL.8.. 3tw Lorney. Rutan and Tucker and guest speakers. 9 a.rn. • 4 p.m .• Patio Room, Alrporler Inn, 18700 ~1acArthur Bll'd., Newport Beach. Fet: $25. (inclu de11 lunch). SUNDAY, September to ••n.c Skin of Our Teeth," first in series of color films made by British Broadcasting Corporation featuring com- mentary by Sir Knenneth Clark and lectures by Henry Cord Meyer, professor or History, UC Irvine. First of a UC Irvine E:rtension lect ure series, "\Vestem Traditions in Art and Society," Sunday evenings, 7 • 10 p.m .. Science Lecture Hall, UC Irvine cam- pus. Fee : all lectures and rilms without credit, $40; with credit, $55. ~IONDAV, September Z1 ''\\'bat's Happening? A look at the scene. Robert L. Peters, Ph.D., Professor, Department of English, UC lr\1ine; Keith and Rusty .!\fcNeil. Folk Music Consultants. First of a UC Irvine Extension I e cl u r e series, "Rock: Social Poe try for the Seventies," 7 • 10 p.m., Cafete ria. Corona de! Mar High School. Eastbluff at Mar Vista, Nev.')>Ol1. Beach .. Fee: all lectures with or without CREDIT, $45. WEDNESDAY. September Z3 "The Effective Volunleer : •·small Business Manage. menl and Survival In the Seventies," A one-day con- fere°"F, Louis A. Selogle, 1\1.S ... I consultant. Louis A. Selogitj and Associates and guest ~eclurers, 8:45 a.m. • 4:30 p,m .. Skylinder, Airporter Inn, 18700 !\iacArlhur Bl vd., Ne\\'JXlrl Beach. f'ee; $25, (includes lunchJ. "'EDNESDAY, September 39 ''Stages of !\1~nlal De v e 1 o p me nt.'' Donald Schafer, l\tD., associa t e clinical p r o r esso r of Psychiarty, department of Psychiatry and H u m a n Behavior, UC Irvine. Part of a UC Irvine Extension lecture series, .. Psychiatry for the Layman : The psychodynamic of Llving," 7:30 • 10 p.m., OPEN DAILY 9-9 SATURDAY 9 'tll 6 SUNDAY 9 'tll 5 Science Lecture Hall, UC Irvine campus. Fee : all lee· lures without credit, S40 with credit, $45. Single admission $3.75, UCI stud~nts and .staff $1.25. THURSDAY, OclOber I "Polynesian Taboos a n d Rituals," Ngapare K. Hopa, Diploma in Anthropology. Bachelor of Letters. Ox.ford turer, Anthropology, Californ ia Stale College at Fullerton. Part of a UC Irvine Extension lecture series, "Totems and Taboos." 7 • 9!30 p.m., Roon1 104, Physical Sciences Bldg., UC Irvine campus. Fee: all lectures without credit, $.fO; with credit. $4.5. Single ad~ mission $3.75. UCI students and Stall lt.25. ''Who Is on the Side of The Consumer;," Raymond Reid. chief, di vision of Consumer AClairs, SLa~ of Californ ia. Part <lf a U Irvine Extension lecture series, ''The Consumer Revott," 7 • 9:4S. p.m.1, Room 101. Physical Sciences Bldg .. UC Irvine campus. Fee : all lectures without ci:edit, $40 ; with credit, $45. Single ad- mission $4 .50. UC J studen~ and statr $1 .25. "Hispania and lhe !\lexic an Americans: Indian a n d Spanish Roots:• Miriam Cox. M.S., associate professor of English, California S t a l e College at Fullerton and Keith and Rusty P.icNeil, Folk Music Consultants. Part of a UC Irvine Extension I e ct u re series, "Americana, Black, Red, Yellow, White. in Tale and So ng," 7 • JO p.m., l\.1ultipurpose R o o m 37, Savanna High School, 301 N. Gilbert St., Ana.helm. fo'ee: all lectures without credit $40 ; with credit, $45. S i n g I e admission $4.50, UCI students and stair, $1.25. FRIDAY, Oclobtr !, SATURDAY, October S "Doing Business Wit h Cermay,'' A two-day seminar, Robert L. Speik, 8 .A., Senior l\1ortgage Underwriter, James V.l. Rouse and Co., Inc., and John D. Spear, B.A .• director, Development and A I u m n i Affairs, UC Irvine. Friday, 9:30 • 4:30 p.m.; Saturday, 3:00 . 9:30 p.m .. Royal Coach Motel. 1015 \V. Ball Rd .• Anaheim. Fee: $5S, (includes lunches). SATURDAY, October J ''Profit Sharing and Pension Pia~ for the Small and Medlum-Sized Corporation," A on~y seminar, Sapford L. Brickner, U....B., atlorney, 9 a.m. -3:30 p.m., Gold Room, Mesa Commons. UC Irvine campus. Fee: $25, (Includes lunch and parking). l\IONDA Y, October 5 "The Closed System : Up from Pollution?," W·e11ley Marx, Author. Firs~ of a UC Irvine Extension I e c t u r e s e r I e s , · · Environmental Pollution : Alt e rnat ive Soluti ons." 9 a.m. • 2 p.m .• Room 182. Physical Science Blvd., UC Irvine campus. Fee: $45, with or without credit. TUESDAY, October I "Growth of W or Id Population." ~tichael E. Soule, Ph.D., associate professor of Biology, UC San Diego. First of a UC lrvb.1e Exte.n.slon lecture series, "Population : The Vital Revolution ; 7 • 10 p.m.. Room 104, Physical Sc!Cnses Bldg ., UC lrvlne ·campus. Fee; all lectures v•ithout credit, $40; with credit, f45. Single admission $4.50, UCI students and staff $1.25. "Recommitment," Maurice A. Riscling, Ph.D., seniOr as!Oclate, affiliated T u s t l n Psychological Grou~. First of a UC Irvine Extens ion lecture series, "Developing a Second Career'," 6 • 9:30 p.m., Patio Room, Aiiporter Inn. 18700 P.facArthur Blvd., Newport Beach. Fee: ~without dinner; $90 includes 1 J 0 dinners a n d lnstructloaal materials and psychological tests. WEDNESDAY, October 7 ''Treatment l\1ethods i B Jlifental Illness,·~ Do 'll a I d Schafer, M.D., a ss ociate clinical pr o f ess o r <ll Psychiatry, departmen t ol Psychiatry and H u m a n Behavior, UC Irvine. Part or a UC Irvine Extension lecturt series, "Psychiatry for the Psychodynamics ol Living," 7:30. 10 p.m., Science Lecture lfall, UC Irvi ne campus. Fee: all lectures without credit. $40: with credit $45. Stnglt admWion $3. 75, UCI student!: and staff $1.25. THURSDAY, October I •·Academic Taboos; Beliefs (Coit1n11ed on Page !'7) PLENTY OF FREE PARKING "DURANGO" WESTERN aoors fMMn "Dvra...," W1mrw '"h hi tile l1te1t style. "hu1h-ouf" laafhtr ,., rutted ... ,. Si!H 6 t. 12.. • . fllOM $1488 COMPUTI SWCTOll Of Wfrrflfl Wl:M THESE ARE JUST A ftW Training for Careers in O:>m· munity Service," Luci I I e Kuehn, Jlif.A., director of pro- gram development for Student Affairs. UC Irvine. First of a UC Irvine Extension lecture series. 9:30 · 11 :30 a.m., Lounge, University Interfaith Foundation, Irvine Town Center Bldg., near UC Irvine campus. Fee : $35. Single ad- missions $3.'15. UCI st udents and staff $1.25. SAVE NOW IOR BACK-TO-SCHOOL! Of THE MORE THAN 30-STYLES TO SELECT FROM AT GRANT'S! "Anxiety," Donald Schafer, !\f.D .. associate clinical pro- fessor ()f Psychiatry , d'.:!part- ment of Psydtlatry a n d Human Behavior. UC Irvine. First of a UC Irvine Extensio11 lecture series, "Psychiatry for the La y man : The Psycbodynamics of Living," 7:30. 10 p.m., Science Lecture Hall, UC Jn-We campus. Fee : all lectures without credit, $40 : with credit, $45. Single admission $3. 75, UCJ students and staff $1.25. · THURSDAV, 8eptember !4 "The Meaning and Defini- tion of Taboo," Joseph Tomehak, Ph.D .. professor of Anthropology, Orange Coast College. First of a UC Irvine Extension lecture s e r i e s . "Totems and Taboos," 7 • 9:30 p.m., Room 104. Physical Science Bldg., UC Irvine cam- pus. Fee: all lectures without credit, $40: with t:redit, $45. Sing~ admission $3.75, UCI students and staff $1.25. "North Amerindlans: The First Americans," Miriam Cox. M.S., associate professor of English, Califomia State College at Fullerton and Keith ;ind Rusty P.1cNeil, Folk Music Consultants. First of a UC Irvine Extension I e ct u re series, "Americana. Black. Brown , Red, Yellow, White, in Tale and Song," 7 • ID p.m .. 1itultipurpose Room 37, Savan· na High School, 301 N. Gilbert SL. Anaheim. Fee: all lectures without credit $40 ; with credit. S45. Single admission $4.50, UCI students and staff, $1 .25. "Erikson's Theory of P t rsonality Development ," Robert S. Davidson. Ph.D .. Clinica l Psychologist, a n d \\!orkshop Leaders. First of a UC lrvine Extension lecture series, "\\!oman's Identity and The Life Cycle." 9 • 12 noon. ~taymount College. Roo1ns 3 and 4, 830 So. Batavia St.. Orange. Fee:: all lectures "'ilhout credit. S25: an lee· lures and workshops ·without credit, $50 ; with credit, $55. "The Te c hnolog y or Behavior Control." Perry Lon· don. Ph.D., profes so r , Psychology and Psychiatry . UCLA. Firn. of a UC Irvine Extensk>n lcc.:turr series. "The Consumer Re\'Olt." 7 • 9:45 p.m., Room 101. Physical Sciences Bldg., UC Irvine campus. Fee : all lectures without credit, $40: with credl17'" $45. Single admission S4.50. UCI litudents and staff 11.25. SAT1JROAV, Septtmber %5 "BuslntM Aspects of the Art&-f« Writtr, '' A one-day symposium. Arnold JI a n o , B.A., writer. ind guest Jee· lums, 9:30 t .m. • 4:30 p.m., Patio Room, Alrportt:r lnn. 18700 MtcArlhur Bl'lld .• ll'""POrl Beach. f ee , Ill. flnclud.., lunch). I =··-···· • * srotr S#11rs * r#DffWfM, etc. • Hundreds of New Styles in Stock! BODY SHIRTS by Kennington from THE LATEST STYLES of those most popul., Kenn ington Body Shirts ... PJ.ids, Stripes, wilcl p1yct.edelic desiP,s, ZIHli•c prints, etc. Complete ran11 of 1i1es, tool Nationally Famous CPO SHIRTS s7aa for Guys .and G.tls -fiM woof ao sty led j1ekets in bright solicl co5on ind botd pl.aids in siin S-M..t. XL $1.11. USE YOUR CREDIT AND SAVE MORE at GRANT'S NOW! FAMOUS BRANDS AT BIG SAVINGS! •• = ~ lamous Brand NYLON JACKETS s4aa lithtwtithl 100% all·lt'ff'• for all·'f"•r wear! lrighl NW colors it1 ltlf, Blue, Yttlow, Grttft, l lack, OrallfC ind Wtlitt. Sir11 '9r all S·M·l·Xl. TllE LAIGEST SlllmOll YOU'VE ma SEEll ••• The most f•mou1 shirt of 111 is "Golden Fttl" in 1:11 of the new- est solid colors. All sizes! ALL SIZES BOYS' StUS I • FAMOUS MAKER SAFARI JACKETS s15aa REG. $11 LIGHTWEIGHT • • . •nd rugged lush J.ck1h for tttt true sport•· manl Yellow, P'owder Blue, Gold, Navy and White, Sizes 36 to 46. New Shipment _ ' lust ~'. Arriredf -=- l === " I ~ACIPIC .i;!\ "WINDKING"' ~.!.....• by Pacific Tran TH£ ltUGGED "WM4 Ki111" ""II"'• lack.et h: a11 all·finte fnorife. Super SilicoM M1lllo wattr NP91l1111 fi11lsh. Flip.u, collar. All 1f tho MW '°*-•a•-'11 woar, If teul'HI Sia•• J6 ..... $JO NOW "CHARGER" by P1eific Troil! '22so 100% WATlllNOOf ..,... 1fteft wltti water· ,, .. , c::r· Acri1111 tcrylic .., ,.. ,., ••tTa w . ~ trM.. cellar 1,.j ~ ..... Sta ... , q1tw wittll ~ Ml 1i,,.,.. S-M-L-XL Gr1111t's Has 'lntf PE~D!,_Ef0.'1 c < ', 'A,.;, >'. '• .. '"' u, PENDtEtON WOOL SHIRTS n $f4so ro J $19.&o I ISi YOUI CllDIT .. NAllT'SI I I ' -·-----------~----..---------.:----------------- Wtd~lf. St,ttmbtr t, ltlO DAILY "1.0T 17 ••• I Offered This Fall Through UCI Extension • IFrtaJ Pq1 Ill without credit, '40: with credit, $41. Sinai• adm~alon IUO, UC! •luden~ and Slaff 11.21. of th& Academic Community," Ke"ntth Appl•&ate, Ph.D., profenor of lllltory, chairman o f 'department, Ca liforn ia TllURSDAY, October I State 'Col1'1e at LIHll Beach. '' P olynesians1• Oceania's Patt or I UC lrvlne Extension W'd ,. s t II .• 1 tu e 1erlt1 '6Totems and I en Ill tream. ?i-11r1am .;!~, '' 1 -t1 :"1 p.m .. Room · Cc?11 M.S .. a3socialt professor 104, Phy1ic1l Sciences Bldg., of Elnglish, Cali{orl\ia State UC lrvme eampu1. Fee: all Oolleae at F14Jlerton and Keith lecture• without credit. $40; and R~ttY Mcf'l ell, J'ol k f.1u sic with credit, f45 . S i n g I e Com~llinta. fart of a UC 1dml11lon ta.71, UCI students Jrvin1 E:ii;tension I e ct u re and. 1tafl 11.SI. serlet, "Americana, Blac k, 1'Th1 Conaumer Game," Red, Yellow, White, in Tale Treesa Drury, Con 1 um e r anJ Soni.'' 7 -JO p.m., Affairs Editor, Rad io Station Multipurpose Room 37, KFWB. Part of a UC Irvine Savanna High School , 301 N. E1tenalon· lecture aeries, ''The Gilbert St.. Anaheim. Fee : all Conaumer Revolt," 7 -9:45 lectures without credit, $40 ; p.m.. Room 101, Physica l with credit. $45. Si n g I e Science• Bld1., UC Irvine admission $4.50, UCI students c1mp.11. Fee: all lectures and •~ff, •l.li. I I OPEN DAILY 9·~9 Sl"'DAY 9 'Iii 6 'SUNDAY 9 'Iii 5 UTIJRDAY, Oclel>t! II "Career Plann i na' ln fnformatlon a n d ~mputer Science,'' A ane-day 1emln1r, · Yr1nk COl&nan. B.S., Sy&tems Software Specialist, Burroughs Corporation and g u e s t lecturer, 9 • 4 p.m., Gold Room, Mesa CommO'lls, UC Irvine campus. Fee: $18, (include! lunch and pa rking) TUESDAY, October 13 i•P ho to1y nthesi1 and Nutrition," J01eph Ardilli, Ph.D., a11istint professor o( Biological Sciences, UC Irvine. Part of a UCI Extension lecture series, "Population: The Vital Revolution ," 7 -JO p.m., Room 104, Physical Sciences Bldg., UC Irvine campus. Fee: all lectures without credit1 '40 : wi th credit1 $45. •tri ale tdqtiasion t:~: UCI 1luden~ a~d Staff WEDNEllDA Y, Octa'9r II 1 1 Early St11es of Development correlated With the Individual at an Older Age. Results of Cl in i ca I Research," Justin Call, M.D .. professor, Child Psychiatry, UC Irvine. Part of a UC Irvine Extension lecture s e r i e s , "Psychiatry tor the Layman: The P1ychodyn1mlc1 o f Uvtn1," 7:SO • 10 p.m., Science Lecture H•IJ, UC Irv ine campus. Fee : a 11 lectures without credit1 $40; with · ero~u. Ill, s I n 1 I t a~mllsioo $S.75, UC! student• and 1tarr at.u. THURSDAY, Octobtr 15 ''Western Hang-ups i n Jud Im tp tal Processes," Alfred Painter, Ph .D., prote11or of Philo• ophy, Qrana1 Cout Colltte. Part of 1 UC Irvine Exten1lon lecture series, "Tcitem.!I and Taboos." 7 • 9:30 p.m., Room HM. Physical Scie~$ Bldg., UC lrvine c1mpu1. Ftt i 1 l l lecture• wllbout credit, '40 : wit h credit, $45. S I n g I e admission $3. 75, UCI stud en ls and Slaff, $1.25. "Erin and tbe I r Is h Americana: Wm and Wall: .. and Worlds of Faerle,'1 Mlriam Cox, M.S., anoclate professor of English , C•llfornia State Collea• 11t , Fullerton arid Keitt\ and ltuaty McNeil, f~lk Mual c Consultant& .• Part of a UC Irvine Extension 1 e ct u re series. "Americana, Black, Red, Yellow, White, In Tale •nd Sona." T .. 10 p.m., Multlpurpoae Room Sf, S.vaMa Hlllh 8';1\oOI 301 N. Gilbert St., Anaheim. F1t: all lectures without credit UO: with credit. $45. S i n g I e admission f4.50, UCJ 1tudents 111d aiaf l, II.II. FRIDAY, October 11. SATURDAY, Octobtr 17 "The New Family," A two- day conference, Ray Fowler, B.D., CONullant in Family Lile Education and Marrla1e, Child Coun1elor. Friday. 8:30. 9:30 p.m., Saturday, 9 p I p.m., Antiqua and Martinique llQoml, lhertton Beach Inn, 2ll1S Octan Ave., Huntin1ton Beath. Fee: to attend all sessions, Including dinner on Friday and lunch on Saturday, without credit, $30; to attend all -Iona for crtdlt, pl,. dlnnar and lunch, 111. THUlllD4Y,Oc~lltr!J 1•ne Power ol. t ll • Organized Con1umer ,'' Howard Frazier, fft3ident, Consumer 1tdtra.U-o f· A-Ice. Part II a UC Irvine Extension lecture se r I e s , "The Consumer Revolt," 7 - 9:45 p.m., Room 101, Physical Sclenct1 Bide'., UC Irvine Clrnpul, Fft: Iii )edurts wllhout end!~ '40; wilh credit, Ml. Slnclt admission 14.llO, UCI lludtnll and slall 11.21. SATUl\D4Y, ~r 17 "C.11l 11 an AaHt -Il! Uoe, Nurtw< and Yle\d," .\ onM1y temlnar1 Lester L. ,Welch, M.B.A. C . P .A. Al11ander Gr1nt and Co., and PLENTY OF FREE PARKING OVER 30,000 PAIR LEVI'S ® IN STOCK at GRANTS! . llUVO LEVI'S® Tiit trelf lt.!'1• ... If l f.,.11 I lltW til111t111lot1 \11 I ltt 1tyli111 thtt fl1rt1 I .,It i11 1tri4t. hl4 ,l1lti ift I h111dMll'lf M,.uck t1brk-St1.frt1t1 M II, ,...,.r 111ttl1 irMlfflt. 1 s9so lll•t looturtr1 , I • 4:111 p.m .• Patio Room, Alrporter Jnn, 11!00 MacArthur 11 I v d . , Nowport loach. Ftt: 1111. (lncludll luncb tnd pviing). TUEID4Y,Octllltrzt "Fundam1ntill of Ecology," Pblllp W. llundtl, Ph.D., •ctllll 111lllanl prol-r ol Bloloelcal Sci-. UC Irvine. Part of a U'CI • &!tension leetun atria, "Population : Tht Vila) lltvolutlon," 7 -10 p.m.1 l\oom lOt, Physica l Sc!-llldf., UC Irvine campu1. 1M: all lectu res without cr.dit, '40: with credit, NI. Sinai• admission 14.IO, UCI lludtnll 111d staff It.IS. WIDNllDAY,Oclbberll ''Th• Dru1 Scene : Dynarnictlly, Whal It ls," Jebn Kramer, M.D., autstant clinical prol.w. Pll'chl•lry, UC Jrvlnt. Part ol. 1 UC Irvine Exttna1on lecture 1 e r i e 1 • "P1ychl1try for the Layman: Tht P1ychodynamia c f Llvln1," 7:!0 • 10 p.m .• Sc""" Lecture Hall, UC Irvln1 campus. Fee : a 11 lecturu wllhout credit, MO: wiU. c:rtdlt, Ml. S i n g I e •dmllllon f3.71, UCI rtudents and staff 11.21. THURSDAY, October Z1 "'lbt Consumer and His Environment,'' Ellen Stern repreaent1Uve, Loi Angeles Rqlontl Water Quality Cont.rot lolrd, Council ror PlaMlnl and Conservation. Part of a UC lrvlnl Extension 1 e c tu rt 1wle1, "The Comwner Revolt, 7 -9:45 p.m., Room 101, Physical ltnCtt Blq., UC Irvine c1mpU1. Fff: all lectures without crtdlt, f40 ; with credit, NI. Sln&lt admission 14.llO, UC! 1llldenll and stall 11.u. '\ BACK· TO-SCHOOL IN STYLEI "Entllah ol!d Scols: A Herlt111 of Balladry," Miriam Cox, M.8., UIQC:iate professor of Enallah, California State Colli&t at Fullerton and Keith and J\uaty McNeil, Folk Music ConlQUantl. Part of a UC lrvlM !1t.tn1W>n I e c l u r e 11Mu, "Americana, Black, Red, Ytl'°'1', White, in Tale ind Sons," 7 -10 p.m .• M1.11Upwpoae Room 37, Savanna Hllh &:hool, 301 N. Gilbert lt.1 Anahtim. Fee: ~IJ lectur11 without credit, UO ; with crtdl~ !41. S i n & I e adniliiJon ... JO, UCI studenll aod 1tatt, ft.25. I . ' ' , LEVI'S® Corduroy Bell Bottoms LEVI'S ® OF ALL KINDS at GRANT'S! $ 8 50 Tho look Is w14o '"' wll4 lo m)j. wile cotton corduroy. All tht n1w . colors in all sizes. lisic je1ns (On- struction. * All Sty/es * All Co/ors * All Sizes WOVEN fWJU SUM·flTI , ..... l !H , S-, Gf""' Wloil9, fJ-4), ,, , ,, , ,, , •, • • • • • •' •• UYl'S' ST•l,I ft.Alll • REGULAR LEVI'S' CORDS, Sizes 26-38 ........... $6.lO ,..,,, '" 5,.;,.,, ...... " ' ... ' .. ' .... ' ... '.' .•.. '' ... 15.50 17.50 :~~;,.~.~~ G~~.·: ... ,, ..... ' ..... ' ....... ' ' ..... ' s I 0.50 LEVI'S' BOYS CORDS, Rag. & Slims, 4-11 ........ $4.91 LEVI'S® DRESS FLARES :~ ... ~~1':,A1~.~~J. :t~:.• .. • · · · · · · · · · ·•• • • · •, • · • ·,, • • s7 t 91 $11 to $14 Lt•i'i' ci111lity St1·1'r11t' 1l1c•1 with th1 newett fl•rt 1tyling. Coll'lplett 1tltclio11 of tll 11 tht new colon . Slrts 21 to 31. ~~;:!~,!,~~.~. ~~~~~ ............ ' .. ' .. '.'' .. '.'. it .00 ~LEVI'S® ...,for Gals GALS' ILUE JEAN fLAltES .. S,OD All 1i111 !roll'! 6 lo 16 ... , .. ,,,. SOf·ITlllPl fLA11£S . $1 AllO lilt'tY, C1rtll'ltl, Cl1rtl, 6·16 ..... V~ GltANADA $Tltll'E COltOS $1100 Ntw 1,.n1d1·ctl1r1, 111111·14 .,, ~•Cll ITl,,l F~lll '1000 100% uttt11, 1i1" I fl 11 .. , , . llUINID CORDI $1..00 All tf tllt ntw colon, 111 sl1t1 .. , 6.- LEVl'S' CORD STltAIGHTS $ 1100 In Ion•, Gr11n, lrown, ,n 1i111 .. GAL'S "STOVl·l'll'ES" $1 00 "'"i ... ''"'· llMit••.. • • • . • . . . 4 . "'1 , ••• ·~"' 11" '11 ''""" "'""· lrttll, a.1,.. . v-. ,Ultll.SUADI fl.All$ Sl)OO 1oo•k cotton, 1ll ii111 .... ,,,,,,. Gr1nt'1 ~1 the 9re1tt1t 11ltctlon of Levi'• ftr Gilt th1I 'ftu'v1 1v1r 1ten. All of the styt.1 .•• 111 of the colors! NEW! "MR. LEVI'S®" for lh• Matvro Mani ' •a to '14 ''Mr. l•.!'1" trt for 111y1 wllt "dt11't llkt" tht 1U1t1·frlll'I Mk ••• !or the 1Nf\l rt 111111. Coll'lfort1lllt, Stl·l'rtlt M11th1r doth i11 ~Id., llwe, lrtwll 1114 'rM11. Shl1 24 to 42. Tr1dltle111i 1trll ltll Nit...,,, GRANT'S HAS TljJ GREATEST SELECTION •• SUPE~!H PEN IMS 1••1h11t d111;111 11".' • • • World'o <Opper . ' rtlnforctd W/th st1y. A ~::s •.nd1 stitched to rip. p11r ree if they MIN'S l/ZfS 21ro 50 IOY'S SIZES 0-12 HUN01t1os ro · CHOOSE FROM , '6"0 •5so *-ffllf SIZll ' *"''' CO&Oll *EVEIY -~ STYUI USI ,. CllllT II tUllT'SI _.__ " ~ ' ';T1bool of the Ghetto." Paul Hoolui, M.A., assistant proftMOr of A"thropology, UC Rivtr1ldt. Part of a UC Irvine Extlnth>n Jecture s e r i e s , "Tolanll and Taboos," 7-9:30 p.m., Room lOf, Physical Scitnea Blq., UC Irv!°" capu1. FM : aU lectures wlthou\ credit, 840, w I t h credit, HI. Bingle admission IJ.71, UC! 1tud.,ls and 1lall 11.11. FJUDAY, OdMer 13 "Condomlniuma -Planning. Development and Financing," A one-day contwence. Sanford R. Goodkin, B.A., president, Sanford R. Goodkin Research Corp. and sueat •turers, • 1.m .• 4 p.m., lk)'Uner Rooms, Airport1r IM, 18'100 Mae4rlhur Blvd., Newport Buch P'M : '311 (includes lunch). SATIJllDAY, October 11 "DlaloSU• Between Yout~ and J:mploytn," A one-day conftrtnee, Judith W, Lou bet, Ph .D ., m1n111m e nt CONUltant, Lcubtt Wingert Loubet, and peat lecturers, 9 • 4:30 p.m., P1tlo ROom, Alr por ter IM, 18700 MacArttlur Blvd., Newport Beach. P'11 : tu. (includes hmch and ptrklnll· TUllDAY, Oclobtr 17 "Pollution and Over. e~\oit1Uon • • , Film ''Slow Gulllotln1,'1 Peter S. Dixon, Ph.D., cbalnnaa of the departmanl II P and E BioJoc:y and prof•aor. ol Biolotical Sclenm, UC Irvine. Part ot a UCt bttnSion lecture Mritl, "Population: Tut Vitti Ktvelutlon," 7 -10 p.m., R.oom 104, Physical Science Bld1., UC Irvine carn pu1. Fee: all lectures wijh)ul crtdll. '40: with credK, 145. Sln1lt admlgsion IUll. llCI 11114tnla and 1l1ff 11.25. WIDNllDAY, Odolltr !I "Youtll and !ht Colle1e Sc«t1," Ktrtm J, MOMOUr, M.D., d~ector, Tht Counteling Ctnier Cltnmonl Coll11es. Part Oi a UC Irvine Ellwlon llCluH Mriff, "Pl)'Chlatry for the Layman : The Poydledyn&m!CI ol Llvln1.'' 7:IO • 10 p.m .. Scltnct Lecture Hall, UC Irvine campus. Fee·· all lectur" without credit, MO; wlth crtdil, 141. Single fdmlsslon $3.75, UCI students and llaff 11.21. I ... "'. ~ - , 18 OllLY PlLOf ' l I I . . .. • • • W~llfiU1, Stpltmbtr ,,. 1970 . . .. ·rae: REAL ESTATERS • , ''The·.clfenC'ha:i a riQht to kt1 0Kl''.euerything'c01tctrnlnQ ... tht. transaction before· he acts ••• " ' RANDALL R. MC C"'ROLE Pr11id111t of The R11I E1t111,t; • coll191 r11I 11t1t1 inlirucler end l1clur1t: 1uth1r of tl.1 boolt "R11I E.t1l1 Tr1inin9 in C1liforni1 Col• 11911"; 1 R11I E1t1!1 colu,.,,11i1I for tl.1 D1ilt Pilot; il1t1 dir1ctor 1f CARET. WE ·7tEED SALESMEN ' LEAIN MOU Profft.llolwl-,..,.1'11Wllnll Tr11!1llllJ U.ltN MOii G-rws $9111-up 111 ~ SEll:YE llJTll I Mor• H•!p, i... C011l111lon FOi INTllYllW C•ll RANDY McCARDLE 546-~!6 30 MORE R·EASONS WHY ••• THE REAL ESTATERS . . .· ARE THE LEADERS People! People.!1 People! 30 Carefully Selected·;. WeU Trained P..Otessimulb -The Real Estaters .are an Association of well qualified erotesslonals._to serv, you lteffer •• •· Ask anyorie who has done business-with them •. ' -These problem-solvers work for you. THEY MAKE IT HAPPEN ··Give a calf.· You'll alwq11s b e tffead 11ou did. . . . . ·' •• 1 YES! WE GIVE PERSONALIZED REALTOR SERVICE YOU WILL APPRICIAll HORSES! HORSES! A ran• find -130 x 150 lot zont'd for horses -Y:ith 2 bedroom Ir dl'n home + corral for 4 horses and hay barn.-cn private road In Sant.a Ana Heah~.ooo. DECORATOR TDU.CH SOUTH· OF · THE· HIGHWAY Jn Cnrona •el ~tar. A .delightful 3 bedroom f11mtly room home on 8 45 foot Joi. Built-In kitchen, large ~eluded . patio, and plenl.y o! parking. OJtly.$62,500. Call 673-8550. SOMETHING TO SEE Sm11.ll house on large let 166x30.51 , Sf:'parAte dbl. 1.:arage and many lrtts on lhis R-2 levl'I lot. 3\24.950: with 10% down, owner will carry 2nd. T.D. to new loan. Call today 646· 71 n. NEWPORT HEIGHTS FIX!R·UPPER A dandy fixer-upper 2 bedroom It bath plus a l OCdronm & bath near s.hoppini.:.--Can'I be ht-al \l·Hh B little cleanln' &: fixin'. $22,500- Phone 646·7171-to see. LOVELY HARBO~ ·HIGHLANDS SpRcinus 4 bedroom and !11.mily roon1-So ele- ~anl in \\It'll 'l<ept tflndltion.-With yard pool sized. $65,000-phone 646-7171. DROPPED WITH A THUD!! TO A NEW LOW PRICE Ll\'e ll"l' & sunny -the moe1 for )'Ollr monty - 2 brdroom and den in desirable Irvine Terrace. Now only $39,!0>. Call 673-1554. VIEW-VIEW. VIEW Contemporary rle1ign prevail& in !his lt>\lely VIEW hnme. A gr11ciou5 Hvin.s: r oom "'Ith VIEW, family room 11.nd tilnefle with VIEW anti large bedroom11 with VIEW.-il VIEW is your interest call sn.&550 SPANISH-MEDITERRANEAN Beautiful home' \Vilh red tile ronf -Roman ba th "'i!h picture .,.,·ifldow garden view -5'f'J) do¥i'n fo family-living a~ mastrr hed~m -larhe cover- f'l:I patio -cul <le sac st. 3 Yf'&rl ne\\', Only $33.000 better hurry. Phone ~TI'71 PRIVATE ESTATE CORONA DEL MAR V. block to Ocean Blvd. A rarity -67 fet't fronlAJ:t' on Orchid. Plus a 3 b('droom horn!'! "'ith formal dining room, gue!<t house, cAMna and badminton court. With A little remodellnJ: l hi~ rou l~ be one ~f Corona de! Marg finest properties. Call 673·8550. FHA TERMS Costa ].1tsA 4' ~droom 2 bath In excellent lo· cation ready for a. happy family. $27.9.'0.- Phone 546·2313 COLLEGE PARK BEAUTY Vei-y unique 3 bdrm. completely remodel~ with new ki!chen -lqe rovered patio -•hake roof -beautiful cul ,de sac st. for kiddi~ -Chmer wUI help finance or :may RI.I. ntA VA -DIS. TRESS·S!TUATION -13L~ hurey. "6-T171, ANXIOUS SELLER TRANSFERRED TO WASH INGTON Mu111 sell his spacious 4 bedroom. family room, formal dininl' room home w!lh dramatic coUrt- yard entry. Priced SJ0,000 under emit in glamor. ous HunUngton Harbor. HUl'l)' en this .one. Phont 673-8550. Only $59,900 •. NEWPORT BEACH-FHA-VA A lucky G.I. can buy I.his SPl\<:iou1 Newport BMch beauty for only $33.900. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths and large family room on a roomy 100 foot wide Jot. Cali quick 673-8550, SMALL HOME -BIG VIEW NEAR OCEAN We have ii-A 2 bedroom and family room home only A hop-skip-and-j111mp to the ocean in CoronA d~l MAr. Ideal for the retired cou· ple. Only $47,500. Phone 673-8550. MESA VERDE FHA-VA-$21,SOO 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath. ail electric built-in kitrh• en. h1rge fAmlly room home on a corner Jot with · room for Boat storAge, Assume .Jow in· terest loan, Stt Today ! 546-2313. • ' ., HAPPY HAL!CR~SJ' SPotles1 4 Bedroom or 3 and a ·den:-.Kiddies' paradise close to 1chool1 ·and a 'big park.- Room for dad'1 boat -0r trailer+-OnJy..$26,950. C&ll 546-2313 NOW. · · ·. -. ENJOY THE-CAR•'FREE . LIFE , Im&&inf: having a•pool, u.Una·a.nd ,duh~ ju11t around the corner au )'Ol.ft'to ~oY.:Plu.-an V.:· Cf'Ul!nt location near \VestclJtf, N2.btdioom town. house amazingly low 1n prlee af .:.. .. 1 .. t'll,900. c.au 673-8550. ..-~ .,. , " JUST LISTED·-&;ul'SIDE 2 Bedrooms + Den +· Family RoOm. flUge Brick Fireplace. Rustle wltl'r.Jots of wood pan. eling .. Blg corner lot. Room fbr;boat. It's newly Usted at SJl.MO, "Come Stt" or CAii 546-2313. LOVELY HARBOR·HIGH L!ANDS Sp.acious 4 bedroom 11nd fllmily rooqt -. So ele. sent in well kept conditkln. ,.... W~.yard ,pool 1lud. $56,CQ'.I -Phone M6-TI'1. S.P·A·N-1.S.H .. Sp.lit-le'lel design In Elegant 1!(e~ "Vmle~A 'afld. roomL 3 Baths, 3-Car Garage, Vaulted exposed beam ceilings in Living Room~ & Fomla! Diriing Room. Extra 111rge Family Room with exposed beam ceilings. Kitchen has built in hi-low electric range. double ovens, slidlnr window "'pass lhru'" lo paUo serving bar, luminous ceiling,> breakfut nook. Extra large Master suite with Private tlreulng room and !here:• mllcb., moch more. It's a fanlaslic home to~ And enj(ly, CaU·NOW tor a 1howinr ••• 546-2313, Price. $4.7,900, SPANISH RANCH TYPE Thia lovely near new hofOe. 4 lge bdrm1 + tam. rm. + formal dining, 3-car pfagt'. Ya.rd sepa.r. att' from pool area -beautiful hell.fed pool - Parle le 1chool1 close by •• Just $69,S!'A) -To in. apect phone 646-n 71. THE R ·EAL ESTATERS Serving Newport Beach e Costa Mesa •Corona del Mar• Huntington Beach ' 4 Convenient Locations Near You NEWPORT BEACH 1700 Newport Blvd. 646-7171 COSTA MESA 2190 Harbor Blvd. 5~6-231 l CORONA DEL MAR 332 M1rguerit• 673-8550 INVESTMENTS 271~ H"b°' Blvd., Suitt 201 Coil• Mt1• 5-46-2116 EXPERIENCE ELIMINATES EXPERIMENT I • ----• -~ . ' Real Est~e Investments SALESMAN NE &·DID * Our leel t.t;t, f11wt1fwltt1 Dept. "''d' 1111e if1,,e1hrte" t1letlfl111 with 1i11cedty l , ... .,. * ~er i11ttr¥iew c1U le"'v Mc Ctrdlt, 146-1116. 27t0 H1• Hr l lwd,., Suite 201. ' PJLOT·ADVERTISF~ 4 ' . , • • ,.~ • • ' '"!'.(• • • • ·-· Not only.· 'at South Coast Plaza, but everywhere. Temperatures Will soon start to drop and footballs· will fill' the air. At the "Grandest ;Mall of All" we rtally warm up to this time Qf year. It's our kind of season. No wonder, because our 86 stores are inside and i the temperature is always a comfortable 72 " -' ·' ... \ . ' ... .: ' , .. , •• degrees. Since we're Orange County's largest fashion center, you'll also appreciate the grand and exciting selection of fall merchandise that we have to show you. Come see. This Friday at 7 p.m. in our Carousel Court the American Leather Miss Teen Queen will be chosen. You might want to see that too. , .. w.~. S.,tembtr 9, 1970 DAILY PILOT 29 ' I . &oatlt1(ailt ?tua • NllTOl.AT SAN:1'iloo PU!YAY,C05TA Ma.A OYll •·flll STOllS Ull AIYICa..~ 11 ~1ri • AllMrt'11l•ll1rY • llreo'•'• Ano SHlot• & LH••llfflo'• Toll Foal .. •• hrw•'!-'• lolly Non •C.N. lokor • l•.•k of A•erlc~.• lorrlclol c ...... •lotter,., .. " e: C•ki-1 OIWN11'1 ..... e C.... Aten e C....,,1 • a..,,111 S,.rt1 C•ttr • Cll11h1'1 • Chef Y •'Chic Acc1111rlt1 • Chris' F11httRI • CllR1'1 St1tl111ry • Crec•1r'Clt11 .. hta..11 ...... • Crew•l•t Gtery S.I• • Dec-or lloo • F9t Jec .. i Cof!M ~ e.Pl,.C .. 1 -• ""':• fonlH -1.oo o flnt w'11torw look e fox Sootlo Cffll Plooo T~Hlro o T~o hll-·51111 & Cntllo1 e hM01 • loetry!l4. OH ... Morny o hldH ""'flt • IN4111"1 • G1tl1 .... nMtt Sltffl • N1ll•1rk StwtlHen • 11 .. 11 & Frti•k • N.F.C. • MarYt1t ·H1111 C1ftt1rl1 •Hickory F1r1n1 • Ho11t of Fa•rics • M111t af 11111•111111 ef T1lltrl11•111111f ftrry • 11•'9-• • l1M1 AM1 • Jtwel1 'r ....., •• .....,.. •Pi•• Jtyct AM Tnte,Wy'1'•W.I•• Michels o,temttri1tel1,111'1 D1llc1tt111• & l11t1ur1111t•hit Wit• lowtns JtwtJtr1.'el1a1 lry1at • le Pttlt •Lt S•••c•• lt1t11r11t •ltt4'1 S ..... 1 Ulllo1'1 o llod ..... -111 • Morloot r.1or1,11 •Moy Co. • Miu Hewell • Oo no Gt T,.vtl • Peto Setter• Ptclfle Snlo11 & Liao • Pickwick l11k1hp • no Prep Shp e ••I tf to•I• e •of loltrootluol • •l•lera l11t1•r••t• l11trf ltt•ty Wtrltl t l11te1'1 l'•11111 • Stllri•t eS11r1 • Sh111reS .. th Co11t D,,,11 •S.nstt No•st •Tho .. McA1t •Tit Itek •Thttler hr:• Tty Warf4 e U•tffs ..... r ..... 11ltl1t11 e U.S. 1..s ... 1 .... 1 Welllck01 Motl< City 1 Wolafl.W'1 lowolon • Tiit Wot S..l e Wi11too~'1C....1 Wllmo'1-'1 lh111 f.W . w .. 1wort.• 1YHll11111.oralty o Z1ll1'1 Ylll"llNMPol / • - ----------~--------.........--~------------ -------. WMIMSCl.ly, S~ttmbtr 9, 1970 ___ __:fCIU_=T'-'H"-COAST PlAp SPECIAL SECTION • -At-thb-J2.laza:~~ball,~_·Fashio~n=--s --=o_f o-=-=r_F-=--a=ll~Bfl~O~Ks:._- --~-------------,~~~-1 BOOKS ' 'SHORT CUT' TO SEWING EASE S..r1 Offers New E&ectrk: Scl110r1 Pick Your Favorite Footballer Oranae C.ounty area hi&h schools will pkk their own "Player ol \be Month" tach month of this football season. VotJng starts after the first football game is p I a y e d . Ballots will be cast in the Carousel Court ol South Coast Plaza. huended to 1timulate additional student intemt in school activities and to give greater recognition to the various are.a high schools. the South Coat Pllla .. pomored progam will last through 1'wWgiving Day. Student.I and faculty fnun the 11 acboob which have been invited to participte again this year .in tbe program which was initiated by the Plaza last year will select a Player of the Month for September, October Beach Officers Finish Course Two Hunllnglon B e a c h police officers have completed a weaponless defense course at Cal State Los Angeles. Detective Fred .B. Loya and officer Curtis J. Cope attended the course, designed to train instructors in u n a r m e d weapcnless defense tech- niques. .· .. . ~· -.. ·,\~ t . '·-...~~ -.:;,/;:; ol • •• < '"'. '1' For Fine Diamonds South Co11t Pl•1• l rittol •t th• s,,. Di•go fw'I'. Co1t1 Met• 540.,066 COMPCETE LINE OF • BOOKS BOOKS "JEROME ALEXANDER COLLECTION" Wlt;S, FALLS ANO ACCESSORIES STYLEO FREE WITH PURCHASE What 's B ttzzin', C ottsin Is Neu; Sears Scissor s and November. • Laree 30 by 40-inch action MAY 00 photos of the wiMers wi ll be ' • · di!pl1y<d and identified. The .' ' . ' ,. .• • KANEKALON NOW!! w I Gs IE!;. $23.00 TO $30.00 ········-·········· $15°0 blowups will be ~nted to ~ik the winners at a sptcial 11 you ire one o1 the " This is o1 !pt<:ial lnterHt Io banquet '' lhe encl o! the Fashions Seen million •-··i ho the born dr season. Each winner also will nuK<I can women w e wmaker in a be gl . t Today's fashions mix will be graphically presented •-'•• hinbl ••••-lhalseeslea••··look venanappropriae .fh" b tobetad bFd own a ... " .. ,. mac e, u ~.. Wit'•· certificate. 1n as 100 s ows s ge eac ri ay from 8 arenotoneofththomesewtrs bonded vinyl, heavy fake-fur Tht 'alb llo box r to 8:30 p.m. on Carousel Court at South Coast fabrics, and double knits v-V SptCJ 8 t or Pl P l · qed 17 and up who already ... ,, voting where each school is aza. aza's major fashion stores will participate. SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MESA owns 1 pair of electric much part of the faahloo identified by name and school Here, May Co . models Whitney Terry (left) and sceThnee. w-·· who has lried 10 color, will be put out in the Robin Grower show oU midi coat and "maxi" com· ~ ~ ~ k100~;1t. Co~ar;~ cut th~ih .... doubie thicknesses. Carousel Court on ~fonday, _ _::ro::rt:_::in:..;Pc:•:::n::;ts:,:u::il:_s .:•:::nd:,.:ac~c=•rss:~•!ri~es~.~·!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!"!sr!o!L !•!T !SA!N!!Dl!EG!O!!FR!E!EW!A!Y~~~~~~' determined to sell you one! of these bulky fabrics with Sept. l4. ,. -- Tbe &lant retailer feel5 that tradiUonaJ shears, his got lo Schools participating in the [(' Ula MM:h an c I e n t occupational welcome something that will program include: Corona de! Polar Researcl1 '/}~ hazards of the seamstress. as make the exacting task of. Afar, Cost.a Me.sa, Edison, , .... ?; met• carp o • p ha Iangeal cutting out a garment e•sier. Estancia, Fountain Valley, M I o o EL s BR o u G H, callOURS and blisters, should And, according to Sue Wilson, Huntington Beach, Laguna be a thing of. tht put. fashion counselor to the Beach, Marina, Mater Dei, England (AP) -A 45-ton noUons and art needlework Newport Harbor, Villa Park, AntarUc s u r v e y ship will Saddleb-k San Cle-te carry a crew of nln< -1·enUsts depa.rtmtnt, Sears ia ready .... • ""'" • ..... with the answer. · Santa Ana, Santa Ana Valley, on research expeditions to the Westminster, and M i a 1 l o n sou them polar region, officials Although electric scissors Viejo. anROunced. have been around for somef -:::::=':=================.I TRADITIONAL AMERICAN FOODS SERVED WITH A FRENCH FLAIR MOMI O• THI "EIFFEL TOWER" IURGER South Coast Plaza CAIOUlll. COUIT LOWll UftL time, Sears ls releasing a mwlr one this season which It clairm Is "customer built". With lhe flrm's usu a I thoro u g hn ess, it ha~ researched the field in depth, and included in the new electric Scissors the featum best liked and most wanted by previous purchaatr1 of other Sears electric scissors, u well as by numerous h o m e economic teachers in school systema aJI over the country. 'Ille new scissors has a rechar1eable b a t t e r y to permit cordless operation. Since it does not have to contain heavy batteries, the sclssora can be much lighter and smaller than fonner product.I of. its kind. Another past complaint, was that for noise and vibrations, you might a1 well have been sitting in a dentist's chair. The new product is said to be both quiet and vlbration·free, and as Miu Wilson put it, "We feel no vlbratloru are good vibrations as far as customer acceptanct goo." SPECIAL! 6.99 WIDE STRAP 3DAYS 5so ONLYI Fmh younc .•Lr•P ahape! A broadJ t\ared~ut :iittap llips tbrouab a bir cirtlt buckle for a rrtat idea in bri&ht manmade crinkle. Save now on 1. fa \·orit.E'! South Coast.Plaza COSTA MESA • , 1/3QFF Elegant Tableware by Reed fr Barton From fllOW up to Octott.r 3rd you c:an M\19 a tun 33•,ii~ on afl ac:ttv. t90ul11 AMd &. B•r1on pt.I· tarns in both aup.r81Jver (allvarplate guar11ntMd lor 100 )'tlr&) end IMlr famoua atalnlnl atMl. tf • an exc:~lonal opportunity ,,....., belm o"'1'9d by ttMt wcwld-fMlOWMd 8'MtwllN •rm. 61FTS-CHINA-CRYSTAL-SILVER-IRIOAL .................. , .. w ....... South Coast Plaza l rhtel •I Tk• S111 Oitge F1wy., Cetlt Mitt PhN: ..... ,,,, avings • • • • • • • AND LOAN ASSOCIAT ION FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX for maintaining a $ 50022 balance in any of our high rate accounts -take your choice. ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN.YEARS 179% 7.50°1o $100,000@ ONE 6.18°1o 6.00°lo 5,00~0ru! TWO 5.92°1o 5.75°1o 1,000@ ONE 5.39°1o 5.25°1o 500@ Xth 5.13°1o 5.00°lo ". lru! ONE DAY ANIMPORTANTEXTRA Your money earns interest from the day you deposit. till the day you withdraw even if it's just one day. ASK HOW YOU CAN RECEIVE, SERVICE CHARGE I FREE Y~'-''~ ~II I ~ 1. Traveler's Checks 3. Tickets to Sports and !! ~ \,~.-2. Collection of Notes Theatre Attractions (Ticketron) ·~;;.,t IY 4. Many other FREE Services OPEN NIGHTand DAY Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. SOUTH 'COAST PLAZA 3333 BRISTOL STREET • COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA • PHONE 540.4066 Or•n9e Branch oponi ng Sept. 10, 1970 at 22b7 N. Tustin A¥enue, Or•nCJ e llAfN OFFICE: s.1 WHfTl1lR BOUUVMD, LOI ANGEUS, CALIFORNIA . - SC I I· ( ( ' • ( I 1 I •. • •. · ;r--:..~ .. , J ' '!' i J : r : 't'_;:'"T""'~r~-.·I~ c= 1.-• • • • ,.,...~,,,., .. ,,~•~c .. ••e~o.-o .. , __ ,...., ... ~,-· ... .,..., ~• •••· .. -~~--------. SOUTH COAST PLAZA SPECIAL SECTION Valley Man J!'inishes Air Pmlution-€lass·- Gary S. Resnick of f'ountain lligb School in L.a Habra. Val!ty has completed a \\.'eek-The purpose of the course, Jong air poUut.ion course at. acoording-IO Dr .-Harold Cota, California Stale Polytechnic its director, was to provide the College in San Luis Obispo. teachers with an•oPPortunity to There were 9 high school explore and discuss a Ir and college science a n d p01lution with uperts. e n g i n e e r i n g I e achers The course was financed by completing the co u r s c. a grant from the National Air Resnick, of 17382 Santa Isabel Po 11 u ti on Cont r o I St, teaches biology at Lowell Administration. BRING IN YOUR OLD "DOG AND RECEIVE PIPE" s200 ON A FINE NEW BRIAR PIPE The Finest In Pipes, Tobaccos And Gifts !MINIMUM SIOI Thf' TINDER BOX'S ~le~ own Tobacco 811.'nds lun·~gh·l'n smokinit 11lt"lisUrl.' to pipt> lo\. l'rs slncf" 1928. J/11.nd-blendcd from flnest quality lobac· '----:;;;;;-<S .... cos. SOUTH COAST PLAZA low•r t .... 1 Ne•• Tile M•v Co. PHONE: 540-8262 BACK TO SCHOOL South Coast fdE PILOT·Pla:a Presentation Mrs. Eleanor AJlen of Costa Mesa (left) receives first of 24 volumes of Encycl~ paedia Britannica she was given by DAILY P ILOT and South Coast Plaza Merchants Association. The set was presented by Peggy Scott. merchants' as- sociation recording secretary (right). on be ha 1 f of both sponsors. The set of books valued at nearly $600 was given away during Plaza's "back to school" season. American Cattle Ranchers Barely Make Ends 'Meat' MA 0 IS ONVlLLE, Tex. produce a 400-pound caU. or a total of $157.55. That (AP) -For decades he has "On the average. I sell that leaves me an average 93 cents been loved by c h i I d r e n . calf for $34.23 per 100 pound!! profit," he said. lionized by historians andr-----'--=~~;;;;~~~=-----'---exploited by Hollywood. But the American cowboy today finds himself misunderstood by, or all people, the American housewife. The showdown these two face won 't be in the muddled streets of a Coffeyville, Laredo or Cheyenne but in supermarket aisles all over America. The housewire will be the loner in this battle -facing the cowpoke, his boss, the computerized feed lots, the packer and the grocer. Thou gh beef prices have climbed dramatically in the 20 years since the Korean \Vjr, ranchers say their prohU actually have dwindled. All the olhers in the meat industry say, too. that they are not ge tting rich. The Agriculture Department confirms that in 1951 the average paid for live beef was just over $35 per 100 pounds. Last December it was $30. Bobby Samuel, 38, is head of the Samuel and Samuel Land and Cattle Co. -an operation which sprawls over f ive southeast Texas counliel'i of loamy grassland and pine stands. The Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raiser's Association describes Samuel's ranch as a mirror or the industry found most anywhere in the country today. "The three biggest expenses in beef-raising." he explains, .. are interest, labor and feed . The three biggest headaches are management, the market and the weather. \Ve're always at the mercy of wealher." at the mercy of weather." He add~. "everything around here is mort gaged," he said. •· L plow c\'erything 1 eam back into the ranch." Samuel maintains an office downtown. According to his bookkeeping, it cosls him on the average of $156.62 to Udof"f-"s custom made draperies our specialty ..• ~-~~ SAVE l/3 ON • Sw1g1 • Llmbr1ffvln1 • Au1trl1n1 • Athvlo Polt1 • Y1f1nc11 • loucl11 J • :._i •ShHn • C11tmtnts e S.tlM DECORATOR FABRICS R•9ufarfrom 2.30 ro 6.30 yd. 1.50 to 3.99 YO. ?Iaza E BOOKS Se your own decorator and uvt doll1n -D1cron & Antron Sheers -Decoralive Antique Sa!in1 in Ill quelilies & colors -Optn Weave & Clos1d Weave 8outl11 -He1vywe igh1 Cottons & Durable lin1n1 -Tweedy Castlnfllts or St!f lined F1brics -All 1t low Sa!e Prlce1- Mak1 your own dr1perl11 or h1v1 our fint custom workm1nship 11 low Sala Pricesl CUSTOM MADE DRAPERIES Bristol 1t the S•n Diego Frwy., Cost• Me11 AJli; A""'11 l.•~.,\We'f\-I~ l)a""' HOich Y-Pvn:hait 11 WOOLWORTH'S -No C.1rrr1"9 C"'r;" IEYfrl SHOP EVERY EVENING MoMrt tllr• f Mday U11til t :JD 1'.M.05etvttloy 'Tll t l'.M. SUNDAY· NOON TO S P.M. -Toda y's Stocks Toda y BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS lmDlnY tNICit md • ......... 11 PICKWICK~· BOOKSHOPS ...,,, C..tPIM. ~t. ..... '°*Ull ,,,, lltl~Wf. __. '21» 110 1.flN •A.NY OF OUR FABRICS • ANY WIDTH OR LENGTlt •TA SLED TO EXACT LENGTH •PLEATED TO EXACT 'NlDTH • WEIGHTED & HOOKED • BRING YOUR OWN MEASUREMENTS Now Only Deloff 's -~~~- SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3333 BRISTOL COSTA MESA (714) S46-6812 COMPLETE SELECTION OF CURTAINS AND DRAPERIES DAIL V PILOT :U on campus the look of the 70's the • IS INDIVIDUAL LOOK 0 South feast 'Ptua L.OWER LEVEL Open Sun., Sept. 13 12 to 5 At Gentry Ltd. you'll find the veriety you need to express your indi viduali ty, You 'll appreciate the quality that marks your good taste. And you 'll get the now styling th•t keeps you in . step with' the changing times, . ' LEVl'S i Cords, JeaMo Flares, Denims, In Every· Conceivable Style And Pattern FLARES body shirts by Kennington & L1nc1r BY THESE FAMOUS NAMES AND OTHERS vest suits CACTUS CASUALS BROOMSTICK LANCER knit tops Wallace Beery HARRIS A I Shirt• tank shirts Topsider shoes IPlllllY e CLARK'S e DISllltT IOOTI COM,LITI llllCTION 0, PlllMA PlllSI WASH 'N WIAllt PANTS Gentry Ltd. SOUTH 'coAST PLAZA • SAN DIEGO FWY. & BRISTOi: PHONE 540· 1502 Opell »ail11 JO to 8:30 Sat. 10 to 6 p.u1. • --------------------------------~--~---. ·---......--....-.....--.,, ~·~--.... -. ................... -.......... ~~-..... t -JJ OAICY PILOT· WtdntsdQ', St11tembff •. 1970 IOUTH COAST PLAZA SPECIAL SECTION Nixon Talks Economy Into Health . -.. WASHINGTON (UPI) - nte Nixon Administration is aceentuaUng the positive and virtually ignoring lhe negative in efforts to tum a nilxed bag of buatness statistics into evidence of ec o nom le improvetnent. One purpose of the official optimism is to talk the ,. •• /SCHOOL Y S_UPPLIES economy back to health : If businessmen and consumers th ink things are getting better, they can be expected to make buying and selling decisions that will help things get better. Of course, Republican candidates Jn the Congressional elections W<iu1d also benefil if the public became convinced that the administration was solving problems of inflation , unemployment an an overall business slump. White HoU5e in San Clemente was a 8.1 percent increase 1n July increase 1n new orders that the reports demonstrated new orders for d u r a b I e for military goods. Tb e the wisdom or administration manufactured goods. Reviled Pentagon disclaims any major economic pollcies. figw:es show that increase wu new purchase. U tbt report is ., . ' I For Fine Watches Harold C. Passer, assistant -really only 3.3 percent_ a stat.isUcal aberration, u commerce secretary f 0 r Pasaer said, in answer to 8 now-appears possible;-itwould South-C.1tt ''••• Ecooomic Alf·'-, hat.led lite question, that the ch11nae cut back even more the l thtol 1t tho S•n Dl•t• Fwy. o.u11 ..... her tn....t u•• · r th Co•t• M••• 540.to•• J,6 percent increase in the probably would drag down the ~~·~-~'i~r~w~mg~::.·::...~~·~~~~~~~~~~111 index of leading indicators for total for the composite index1_ economiC barometer. July as "solid sUpJ)Ort for the although he said there may be expectation that b u s i n e s s some parUaUy o f f s e t t i n g activity is resuming t t s i n c r e a s e s when other advance." segments of the index are He said the index began a rev~ed .• He insisted ~ b e decline last October that revlSed index would continue signaled the e c o n 0 m i c to point to economic recovery slump-coupled \\'ilh rising althoug~ ~ssibly not as robust u n e m p I o y m e n t -v.·hich as earlier m~lcated. . followed in the winter and The July mcrease m new spring. He hinted strongly that orders for durable goods he felt the July advance was \\'Ould. have bee"; a Im o st SHOULD HEMS BE LONG or short? HOW DO YOU Come In:-., .let Us Show You How You Can Toke The Mid· die Road. South Coast·?Jua ,-1-A~P-l1 A N'S Restaurant, Delle ates sen & Bakery "A Sandwich or a Full Meal" e BREAKFAST e LUNCH e DINNER BAN9UET FACILITIES ANY OCCASION-SERVING UP TO 150 ~/OFFICE Y SUPPLIES The government a few days ago issued vdlh much fanfare two reports that indicated dramatic improvement. One se t of figures showed whole.. sale prices dropped in August for the first time in two years. The other shov.·ed the biggest rise in almost a year in the index of ''lead in g indicators," a statistic billed as a barometer of future economic activity. the tipoff for a brisk fall nonex1Stent were Jt not for a Pa11iSuittK11ittedWithTheaidofa recovery. big increase in orders for Brorher·ueyo1Ubmbct. PARTY PLATIERS military d THE 011r Y•r•1 Art How·cver, the ·Commerce •. aerospace 8 n M11J1 To u.11. • • IUfflT STYLE Department issued ne w commurucatlons equipment. Colorf11l,IV•1JJ.IJI,, MEAT PLATTERS -$1 .85 per per1on figures later indicating the The commerce Department KNIT WIT FISH PLATTERS -$2.45 per person advance was not as strong as also announ~ that def~ earlier reJ)Orted. No statement relat~ spending was declinmg 0'EN t ...... 10 p.-. Paul \V. ~1cC r acken, chairman of President Nixon's Council of Economic Advisers, told newsmen at U1e \Vestern explaining the change was steadily and the ecooomy was SOU1H COAST PLAZA Phone 540-9022 published and the revision changing from. a wartune to a ~::..:.:' -... ............. """ 3J33 IRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FWY •• -COSTA MESA went all but unnoticed. peacetime basis. . ,._ 1414111 Lower LooNI -Opposlt. M•r Co. r _ _:;G~o~v~e£rn~m~en~t~eeono~~m~u~~~.:::::::~::~~:::~::~~::~'.::::~:::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In an interview, when asked were at a Joss to explain the to explain the significance of A cool, tart 'n sweet ret. d'oeuvres. Not ho1 or ish. Perfect with und· spicy, Kids love 'em, 100! dinners. As .i g.irnisli 7'I' wiches or full.cot.use 1REA6Eo~zH.6j~ SSC for entrees. In hors DmRGOOD VISIT THE FRIENDLY FOLKS AT ff (tl<df1 t4!~f South Coast 'Plaza Bristol at the Son Diego frwy., Costa Meso 1 Phone 540-6991 • JW:UIJ:l'S Wil!NG !:BEESE STOllES the change, passer conceded lhat there had been a "Downward revision." But he insisted that the revised report still showed increasing economic strength. · Both the wholesale price index and the index of leading indicators were clearly labeled as preliminary reports , sub- ject to change on the basis of more complete information. Revised wholesale price fig. ures are scheduled for re· lease shortly .Despite the aJ>- parent improvement in \\'hole- s.ale prices, retail prices are continuing to rise. The leading ndic ators index is a composite of 12 statistics which, taken together, usuall y point the way to future changes in the economy. One of the s tro ngest advances in the Jul y index Coasf Students Get Top Honors Two Orange Coast residents have been named to the Dean's List for academic achievement during the spring quarter at Cal State Los Angeles. They are Katherine Adair , 1586 Caraway Drive, Costa Mesa and Barbara Bodkin, 2732 Via Calleton, San Juan Capistrano. DOUBLE ivith a spectacular ''SHOOT & SHOW'' OUTFIT *by KODAK • -• • • • • -• • • Complete Outfit To *by AIRE9UIPT SHOOT-N'-SHOW INCLUDES:- LIFE SIZE COLOR PICTURES • Kod• lint-tic 4-14 llecffic 1,. Com• ..,o wlttl c ... fllra. fl9'hcabe o•d lot• ...... e Al~1lpt 500 W9't ....i ... to"' .. lc pr .. !«'9• • 40" I 41" kl'Mll 4 BAND PORTABLE RADIO --[ij fl ' Free ~ PICTURE 1 • ~ CUBE ' MA6.~1ETIC , ~" Pt:tOTO ALBUM e FRIE ,ICTURE CUIE ~et holds 5·414 •r •-ll•r 1Hp1 01 dnk or tobl•. • For otl 1lt1 pllotot. e '"•tit.I fttu11 poddN Reg . $4.96 $199 COffr, W/I''" CllM SOUTH COAST PLAZA Lower Level -Costo ~esa • 546-0051 with the big sewing machine features Just Set The Dial For All These Features: • Zig-Zag stitching • Forward and Reverse • Straight stitching • Sews in buttons • Makes buttonholes Has These Other Additional Feahrts: o Built·inlight • Automaticdarningrelease '• Center needle position o Concealed motor • Top mounted bobbin winder Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans $ Sears Weigbsa Skinny 16-lbs . ' Just in time \ for Back-to- Scbool! -sears -·· ,_,, -........ --....... 11 -·•••it--· __ .., Cll I •-ti ..-II -IOI Mitt.• MHI --........ , ,._...,_llUCll" .... W.. OlO"'" --II -~Mitt IMp ..................... .....,N!~ .. NIP ........ tJ.._ ... Nl ~1odcl 1030 -•oc• • ... ,,, -· "' •·11&1 --• -... l<lltl -II .... ••flll ....... ........ . ....... ''"" -.. 1~111, Ht .. Jll """"" -_..,, .. , ........... ~ .. ,-........ - ,,,.,,. ' . r>f .' ~'f . : . I . . ; . ...... --·-•1 _ftl ....... 111 ........ --..., .... , . """'" ....... " ..... ......... ,. .. ... ! I I I - SOUTH COAST PLAZA SPECIAL SECTION OAI L Y l"ILOT S!tft l"IMfit Tall Tomatoes Victor M~Intire of Newport Beach grows his toma· toes tall m the backyard of his home at 726lh: Tustin Ave. Plants are about five feet in height and bear fruitfully. Dinosaurs For got How to Make Love By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) Quick now, what do the 1970 Census Report and the current list or best-selling books have in common? Give up? Good ? If you knew the answe r, I would be deprived of this opportunity to contribute to your enlightenment. Prelimirlary census figures released this ,\·eek show that the U.S. population increased only 11.7 percent during the last 10 years, as compared to an 18.S jump during the previous decade. In searching for the reason for the slowdown, we need look no further than the best- seller list. There \Ve will find that three of the top IO non- f i c t ion l eaders are "Everything You A I Y." a y s Wanted to Know About Sex," the ''Sensuous Woman" and "Human Sexual Inadequacy.'' All three of these volumes are, in effect, instruction manuals for w h a t is essentially an instinctive activity. And why. all of a sudden, is there such a heavy .J'..aG (~~i~} 1ew1~ls by 1oseph Foe Unusual Ri ngs Soulh Co11t Pl11• l rittol •I th1 San Di190 fwy, Co•t• M111 540-9066 GOOD VISION MAKES THE DIFFERENCE ! e Bt ttt r Gradts Plus Your Best Appear a net demand for information that should be intuitive? 1n searching for the reason for that, we need look no further than the aforemen- tioned census report. Wh en the population rate decline and the best-seller list are viewed together, the inescapable conclusion is that thousands of Americans have lost the knack or precreation and are frantically taking refresher courses to help them remember what they are supposed to do. Considering that we have been in the midst of a population explosion for a number of years, the situation is not at this point alarming and may even be salubrious as a short-term development. But when we recall what happened to tile dinosaur, the long-term implications are ominous. The dinosaur was t b e mightiest creature ever to appear on the face of the earth. Yet it became extinct. \Vhy? Although paleontologists may argue the one point, a good guess is that dinosaurs simply forgot how t o reproduce themselves. And since no books on the subject were available in those days, it was curtains for the entire species. The human race, or at least a portion thereof, appears to be taking a similar course. The trappings, rituals and ground rules associat ed with human procreation have grown so complex that many people become confused and hazy about the fundamentals. Eventually, perhaps, it will all come back to u s . Meanwhile, it's probably a good idea to keep one of those best-sellers under your pillow. OUR SERVICES INCLUD& e Contact l enses e Low Vision Aids e Eyes Examined e Glasses Fitted e f ast laboratory Service e Pretc.:ription Sungla sses ASK AIOUT OUl CONTACT LENS TllAL WI AIUNG-PLAN Vse Yo11r Jtlag Co. Charge f1•m DR. BERNARD SIMON CMttl M ... /H..,.,.rt 540-1171 OPTOMETRIST fr•• S-Cl•INl'lte MAY CO. 496-1283 tr.111 Lot1111• SOUTH COAST PLAZA ZE7·1038 LOWll Lnn --' ---..... ,... I ' the peasanty print creates a soft mood Fluid. feminine. falling softly to 1he floor. The gentle fitted top drills inlo gathers at yo ur waist. Wi lh the sheere>t puff of sleeve. Choose from a host of pretty peas- ant prints. For th e fun times in yo ur life. When yo u're feeling all girl. Amel~ lriacetale. 5-13. 24.00 m<1y co campus ~hop 43 ' I \ I \ t ) , may co soutli coa st pla1a , ran Cli190 fwy et bristol, cosla mesa , 546·932 I' shop mondey thru saturday .10 em to 9:30 pm. sun dey noo n 'Iii 5 pm ~.'~aDtsda¥, Sfpttmbcr 9, 19r0 DAILY PILOT 33 the all-girl dresses haller dresses, short and long for girh who low feminine thinp Young, fun, soft and comfortable. That's lhe halter dresses. High on the neck, skinny across the shoulders. Sh<iwing off a pretty back. Beaulifu l in soft"51>Un knits. Colored in shade> of navy, chocolate, rose, It. blue, and beige. Now al May Co. a. long acrylic knit, sites S-M-L 28.00 b. short acrylic knit, sizes S-M-L 19.llO MAVCO • I • 3.f Dlll Y PILOT s Wtdllfld.u Stpttmbn 9 1970 LEOA.L 1\0TICE LEG Ai. NIJl'ICE """ "'*" Cl l T f C.t.TI 01'" COll•OllAt 0 .. ,01 ClllTl•IC&T• O' I US NISS Tlt•Mtflt1t0N Oft lllSI NllS IJHDllt l'ICTITI0 1r,1$ MAMll •ltTltlOUS N .. MIE Tllf' u->leMO cl-tftl '" 1141 h c ..... 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Id AU9""' 1S It,. \'I TN£U rs.,,,... l!'I • :t2ft0 .. , oi Jutr DeM I M ~l(ltl~ lTni. $11otCtlon• Coa I nt I' OY lHln (6 0 '"" Coull Y ,,., ·- ~ Cl orn t Ofl 4ufull 1S t1G, btfO t ,... t tfoll"' l•ft"d J E~lt "Ulll C lll/111fofM0$1'1t Pff-1¥ P~l Offl ·-td Den111 Mlclllt MCIC "'" lulowll I • J11111 • \ EH • o me 0 be IM H Noll WllOS• ftllflt It 5"C • M"I' IUtKr * 0 Ille ... "" 1111 umt•ll •!IOI ('1'11£ o~ CAL FO•N /& •<"'""""' .... ed M l •«u tel'"' ...... COUNt'r OF LOS /&NG£l £1 u {OFI' ( "L SEAL o" ", Jtnq q,. o1 Ju I' "0 nto ~owo11 E 01v/1 11f 0 • m• • No 1 I' l'11bl c 111 11111 lo Ho trv Pue! c.C• lwn • •• d Cou,.1v ,no s • t "' IO<'I 1 " "'< •• Otllc1 11 •·-· od F 1nc, J E" e t 11d Ju•ll II 5 0 •lltt (l)llft ¥ EttO U\OWlllO "'' o Dt II• PtllH"' M1 (ommBOll £~•ti •0\11 ~rt t I' OllK'I Vt I' crf "'' JUnt ) 0/< CO c-o t .. II M l•tcU ~ llt W 11111 Pub! 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G VE~ 1111 Ot 11<1 A""""I 1 t1'0 •utile l'lffrll9 w I lie held bV lie C v Oo 1BMul'>O11111 (CUii( 0 ""' c IV "' Cos I Mtll on $ •• o+ Ct lornlto °''""' co .... ¥ .!.H """" ' "o 1 "' "°" ol 'lO On AUi 11 1t'IO t>tlor• mt • No• v fl m Ot ll lOOI'"" •••• Pfl( C~llt PltlO lc n '""lo• Hd ,,, •t !Olll v In ll'lt (OUJK cn1mk 1)11 l'>t c ti' M• I ·-· ed Do v B Mu !IOI Ind •-n 0 fll"t D "l Ca,1"n. Ct lont on mr o ~ ll'lt P'tWlll w-llll"lt I tllt lo ow 1!11 •• Ilion o c~tllllt n """' >VOit btd to llt w II n "' rumen tnd "• Ont "' • .... •-l" lie "~ "'' •cknc Wll<lltd '"' tAK\I 11<1 l'>t l t mt .,. on cl,, ....... lnvt l m t n l OFFC-'LSEAL CorPll I on 7H w Ill t Bou '"' d lhOI H (IN Brv~ yH h C• IDlll "''""'"!(>" No tf'1 Pubk (• orn• I~ U ont • OPtrlV I °"' II ..... Incl II p II(... O! (t In o II• CP tnll 1na • "'"" ~d '' 0 •"9t C:ounlv -o 1"" ol Loi I B oc:lt O Bt rv t ~v Mv comm sslol! 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"""'"' ll'lt le IOU• I rm J'Mll'MOI M'I' WAY•llll 1111 wd Im I c-ol llt lolown; ------:.,-:-::;:------H S0111 wtw.e ,....,., n NII •"" Plttt IAI '"' ot nkll"'' 1 t t• lo low'S s<rP!llOll COUIT OF Tlfl Jtck T.IUlflll Ul7 Ntw-'"d STITE DP CI LIFOIN II FOii Cott Mesi Ml ea ti t au lnl S21 THE COUNTY 01' OllllNGE N1wPOtl B vd Cot f fMw ,.. ·~,,, °'"" A111111l ,, ''° NOT CE OF H!AlllNll ON P ET TON J1c• Ttullt'W FOi Pll0111E OF WILL 11"10 FOi Ma 1a ti Tall tllt LEttlll' TESTAM!Ntllll'I' SI tot (• latnla 0 lfltlt Coun y •s t ID LULU ••CMl!L On A.,,\11 't10btlort "'••NO!I N l><OE ,oA1tEP ~tNSe<I Pub C II •!IOI tor 11tld Sll1t Pt 00111 y N01 CE IS HEllEBY G VEN 11111 ·-ell Jack T111 I ... I nd ......... Wol.1t E l<OGUE nu I td ht t" t TtY 1119 known to mt 19 be 11W ot Nolll "' IV! lo p QM f of w ' Ind .... "'"°'' llll!'IH •• IUbK ~ lo Ille wl Ilk! h u1ntr o Lt11r I 1u 11N1nl1 V lo In> umt nl 11111 tdulow tdtH llltY ox ., trer>1 r 1 1M t o wn c~ b mao r le ecv ed '"°' llmt ~ ne N (U. I •nd Mi i ~·I mt .Ind OFF IC ... \. SEAL) "IU 0 hll "!I Int ll"'' ~·· bffn •• JOSEPH E OAV I t~ Stotmbt 13 1'111 • tlO '"' In No try Pu!llc Ct to n t n• tou oom o 0101 lmt n No l crl P nc 01t Oii ct In .,.d cou • 100 eve Ctne D r OtnveC:fWnv w·~• n nrc yo 5tn•""' C1 ont Mv comm"on E•• n Oatl!d St P embt I llQ June 1 1'11 W E S1 JOHN Pltll lhtd 0 '"'' C:0.11 0 1 y P of Coun v Ct k A\/01111 lt ~• t l!Oll Seo t mt>o:r 1 • COOKSE'I' SMUM.llC:M f lt COLIM.llN "10 15A210 M NYAllO tPMI MOWlllD 1 I ttw~ & Counlry IP~lf o ""'' c11 "'"'' nu• Ttl ~'S II ,,_ t lllYI ler Pit I01111r Pub lhN 0 ·~~ CN DI 1 o 0 l';eio emt>t f 1• 2l • •Ill lll'l 10 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAi. NOTICE (lll TIFICATE 01' t USINISI ,ICTITIOUI N&MI! Tht undll • onrcl ..,., Cf IY •h• h conaoct nt 1 bu1 nen a 1 n 1 lfooilh~ 11 Fcvn t n V• "'" (.1 torn t Ull<lt In~ hctll~ 1 "' M<'l't ot LENO•£ l10 ARl CENTl!ll a"" "'' wit! ti m l t....._.,, 01 !'lie lo ow !'4 l>t/IOll "'1'1cl•• n11111 " 1\11 •l'ld P tct crl ••ltltn<r I Al ··-L-• M Bo:'I"' Dr .,. Hun! "9 "" Bt•cll DI ed S.... ff!lbt 4 tlO LIMOl'e M llOUtOI STAl£ OF C:Al FO•N A OllAHGE (D\INTY On Sfflt1Tl~r 4 1'111 ""'°"' m• I Nol1N Pllbllc In t l'ld for 1•1<1 J I t Pt "°"' y IPPtl ed Ltnort H t os1 Ill tMwn to mt lo bir Ill• "' i.on w11a11 f\fmt I MIMC bid '-lhfo W I~ n lMl•-111 i nd •cllnowitdttol I II I t~Kulf'd thf Umt (Off c ti St• I E""'"" L Al !!'fl Notarv Pull c C•I torn I p llCPI O!l u In 0 tn•t CounP\f Mv Comm ulon •~•lrn J~fll $ 1'11 Pub Siied Ort n.. C0t1t Dt Y I' bl $tp ff!lbe f 6 2l JOf 1,111 1UI )0 --~ -----LEGAL NOTICE "'••er'• Wortla Jobless OVER THE COUNTER Toll Hits Inflation NEW '1'01111( 1••1 Ft Ctu -frwi lollo',o1l11t1 llold Fib T1• INI All.HI ....,,, Ft r tOI Dy SYLVIA PORTER ~.i:fiU.~v ~1::; ~v t.IVTH That I er l 0 u I ~ •• i.rs• '"'I :: ~!1G1W'l' lnflat1on can i..a curl....: In the 1141 K 1V•I '"'"c "fl wF n ..... U<'.U \oN ~I t rt •ff-F C~ll, US society as It exists today 0':1'~111,,~•cer, :1 'o1 ~=:, o~ without a sharp rise In :3~·~;n:,:i:11 1111,~ "~r'~ " unemployment 1«11 lit• (00/lcf Folom ntv• bevo PU< F MJ Co PERPETRATOR Richard <11•asect 1,i;~~.a1., •°' ~u"!.~ E M Noxon who wh en f.,e ma 'e l FQu1 1>.¥ clltnllt lh o eh Fqu1 IOw campaigning for President in t ~?·~ ::.:~:: 2:1,n'"'" the fall of 1968 re~atedly ''' "'' •uP G11 fvc .,... mt •down at com-9 "re• pledged to erld the Democrat :'A~~.. it:. 2 G ~,":.,< caused 1nflat1on w I t ho u t ~AP~or" 1~ ~ ~·1 g::, E1 forcing the nation through a !ifs '1.c ~~ ~ , g ~~~ Renubhcan 1nsp1red de(]at1on •sc.,0 1n:1 J ~ '" G ••111 w J'Y A pf I 5~GIOtl llub T)p1c11I Nixon statement Oct •vM • ,,,., 10 . GOd c .. c Abtr t n S::o t1t Good L~ 1968 I st rongly disagree with !~ .e ,... '' ~wv c; those ""ho sav the onlv way to AJ """ ' • l"' G !!:: ~ _l Abrn ~lDIG stop inflation JS to I e t Albee ~ 2u ,._ § ~ • .,Mi!!1 "lberl1 t f.l4 •E u n e m ployment increase • <ottc fl• .i.. r;v. Pr T IN k AcaLNI 'u,,.Grwn I ypica 1xons p o es ma n11~ &n> ,, 3 ~u•dC~ reply y,hen asked y,hat would !""'.a c.~ t, 1!: G~~oci .. "' be a maximum allowable ~~usn ~ , 1f~ =:":~' s JOhfess ratt ~ ptrcent range !mE1Ei:' .,, • ,J E'~1~ ~ WHAT S'.\1'.ASHED T H E !"'G"~,n ¥.• ,!.,.., M~n ~1 • MIHICP II II I t.1VTH The business reces-A"' Te u u. s ~ ::t,..,E" r r d AMet!S 8Mi~&7 son o 1969-70 o course an Ank.111 " 11 , ~ cove R the resulting sharp rise Jn un-~~~~ ~ i ~ H~1 a G~ I Adtnltln:ioHowm n emp oy ment "'"' MoP 11 13y, ttvck Mt Do not for an instant ~ d~'* H ':.,.. 2:"' ~~: ~~' do \ ngrade the good news that !~foe ~ot 1:"* ~~~ ~~.1 t" the pace of 1nflat1on 1s at last Bl• d At l!Jo 11. ~~~~ ln~ .~, 1>V. 14 slowing The annuaJ rate of •I •• 111 ·~ ~ I~"•' " lhrwc~ • t \'t •-•• rise 1n our cost of llv1ng is 1,11111 ,. J 3\4 ~xc:11c0 tumn 7\0 ""' ?a0s7~a~~01~ u8J::~ ~::nr~::J i~.~ f~~ ti: ;~;,~::~ 8tlm IM S S\i "' 1l s he:ad1ng lowe r 11 -Me " q 1n1 Mu '" Bell L•b .0 ... Inf s.~ But why 1s 1nnat1on starting s uo1 w ·~ •>A 1n1e:v Pl' to subside' IA'dll"Sctl 31,.~ ak 1~1cs B tc:k HI 27\\ 21~ It SoUl I Because unemployment ts BMtll! e1 1'4 ~\. ~-· l climbing and s p r e a d I n g l:::...:1'C 1~ .. 1~ J:.u 'Wit marginal wo rkers are being I: c".~ 1~~ 1;~ 1:~~." ehm1nated and those with jobs :,;~·s~ n ... ~~ 1n~n F:~ •--ff I llrwn Ar 1 ' Ktlot S are ~vm1ng more e 1c1en 1""" 1, 11o,;. 11 1C11ss1 "' I productive) Because an :~~co ~! 1U ~:l:1 G n 1ncreas1ng number of plants !111tnut."t•~ 'l!! 'f'• ~:ri"", are idle our economy 1s • w sv n1:. :n• ~: ~ •mco 11\{o U\/o~ 0 , .sluggish and It s tougher to c:::'M ~ ft !I ~e F b ra1.se prices Ctn Ml ? , l • 1v1 c11~ Ct1> M Ot l' • 16,,_ ~91'Jl PC In our society as 1l exists~:: ~ ,,! ~I,? "/:::• 1f 1 today we do not h a v e the c11>t c11 2~. 2'14 K'"' ~l' )tr ON I 1'1; 11110•0 answers lo relatively stable ~:'I' ~~ JVt ,i~ ~tlc1 D• prices plus fu ll employment 1a..: NG , ,_ ,., L1nc1 n 15 Cti> I> I o f ,!rid Rt\ In the fairly crude pr1m1t1ve en n 15'1• 1&v. t:ne Wd econom ic system 1n which we ~~ nv:s 1~~ ~ ~·..= M Cl!~ D 6 v, .. eadv Ld I ve \l.C do not kn o w bow !11m L"• 7' ;:;, t"' '°t to mesh fulT production full h'; u"d1 1;v. 1;~ L;;:11[ &F employment and ste a d y c~ .. t \1 1~~ ~f'1 ~.,ic,,:' -d C11 , ostl 1 I() LO!t Cay prices 111ere are suggeste c •<kl ,..., ,..., LO'I E n I t nd I II I '"" CI l Ml• l!ll.i 1 14 Lvcnl! c so u ions a ana yze "'~m c11 r u A 2l' l• ~ M•t o• I S But ••-y Cir U B ~ 11 Mt 11 IY 1n coming co umn u~ (""In Ml 1s~ '' , ...... k arc not soluhons nu r !~1~"" Ml 1l~ 1:l 'o ~::'~ ~ pohcymaken are apparen\ty ~ M• • ' • ~ Manor c "Oii 0 I 1 ~ M 1 ready to accept c ow co Ill ••':<O M.tr"' Gr Cot.,.. D ~ • Brow F 1ther our economy runs at Cot•• <• s1 • M•u LP Colfln E J 311 yet D full i>peect and everybody who Cot "' '" uv. 11v. Meow Col«I Sr 14 l w.1e1c H y,anls lo v.ork can choose ,c°"''~ 1n~, '11'> .1ed M, __ , J om Sr ;a Jt Medlrft among JOb.5 -.. "4 pnce r ses lom T" nir. '"" Ml'd n acceleralt c::::: H•,.. ,l '! M a1<1 '• Com Psy ,,.. t z:g;·GT Or our economy slows down ?,:• A ~ 4>o 110 1 G•• profits and jobs b e come c~: ',,'!', ~! :~~e"•~~ nd C:m• Tee: l 1 ~Mod 5.t scarcer -a price increases c°"' ~.$ 2 • 217 M°"""' 11 d-•-rale con Rock '; .. ,, M&n' c~ """'"""' l°" Id i I Mon"' P• That s the way ll 1s For the l:!t •n L 1!~ 15 ~~ ~= : : Prl!sident or any one else to """ s 3;, ·~ M 1 t • osm Yr I ~M o1 w pretend otherwise may make c'": ,,.,,, 1i ~ 1; ir,c11, ~ Il l b t lt (•1Mh eu po 1 1ca sense u s C•ou co ,. ; :io ~ ~~.· , Cum • ' 5 ) ... 11! t economic nonsense cv"''' c 1 7"' ~C~ 1:J The progress a g a 1 n s t O•n~ Lt>• 1> • 1~. ,., r10 c R_~nl\' M t 111Na BNI 1nfl at1on very slight but t h e D. : g:~ ,;'? 2! • NA c1 11 overall unemploy ment rate JS &:Y's" F~ ~) !\O ~;m~.~0 al re ady up to 5 percent 01 .. M1 11 11 ~: ~~0 ka Oecar " S1' 6\~ Nt Mod Among youngsters tuc rate Otll " "' 21 n , "'• ,.,. h 5 ~~ Int 7' l4't N1 ~~tr ranges from 9 to more t an I 0t u• c11 ~' " Na ~~- b I k Ot CanT lofl\ I o N• S " percent Among a c o.t 11 iti.i. 1t l ni;,, c:~ I•-I Otv •m 1 \•l ti NJNi r. 1eenagers •n:: ra e JS a °"""'" !'. s s,, n ~'" "' h bl 30 2 I O•m C• 11 IS\lo N•' A orr1 e percen o ..: 11e 3 • •v. N ,1, 1 Tc. •-f 0.,e CM l~ l<N• 11• 1JC num ..... r o m a Jo r Doc111t F • .v, Nra Nr. metropolitan area!I w 1t h &;~.,,~~ 2~ • ,f' ~:,r G<?, unemployment ranging from 6 go;: s~ 1~. 'flo ~:z ~·~~ lo 8 9 ~rcenl JS up to 31 and Dunk ft O 1 " ' Nuc Ilse ~ iY OflU 6~1p A ' •-re are cl-" to 600 smalle r z Ptln1 •~ 1ou ()fl o w11 lot.: V"'-•"( "'1 ) • 3\1 Oo Srtn areas v;1th Jobless rates al this~~~ i~ti 1~: 1!"' &'!""' .. ,, level and higher Educ sv, l t 1 • nvt N• I! •••E ,,~. 11 n.vc1 Job 'acancies a mo n g Eb• sl'' • 1 •v. oi;c Eide t 7 '"'"•bi p. manufacturing planls E "'• • ,11'> l • •8c J.u" E ut 1 'o P1c Fo~ down 48 ""rcent from a year ElcitO'I 1 2 " "•~to co I'~ E crn I S o.,.w:o ago an index of demand for E,1 c svs " ' "• -o Oeo "9 ~S l>~kwN eng1neers and sc1enl!sts IS E1 Mod' 0 • t •,, P•~ ~v " d l!mo ll/ol1P1ve e down so percent the deman E,~ .,,c 16 ,, .. ,. M I ~•• e Vt2 o,_11 1 ror eXl!'CU!JVeS parllCUlrtr V In En~! B 4 \ 4\li •A Fn• n Entw 7 '> I P• G.\W f lnanct a d vert1s1ng EIVIC:aro "'•1 •..,11 P•c d I h Ellu 0 I 10 't I~ "'"' Wo marketi ng an personne as E ,. TK 114 1 . Pe & 1 vu'tua!ly collapsed The unemployment rate~ e v e n s o may be undereshmates becaust: many "Ollld be workers have simply stoppe<l lookinit for Jobs \\'ha1 s more 1l s on 1 y realistic to eqiect the. u n e mp I oy m f: n l rate lo <.'Onllnue to chmb 1n the montl\.s chre<>tly :ihcad Labor Secretary Hodgso n suggesls Uie rate amy rl~e 10 !i 6 percen1 btfore '1\lrllng to decline Universi ty of Chicago ecnnom 1cs profe"sor ~11llon Friedman thi nks 1t might reach 6 percent Ravn1ond J S:iuln1er the lalt President Elsenho .... er ~ chief economic adviser puL" t bh1n\ly Urifortunotclv overcoming 1nfh1tlon 1ne\1lablv 1nvol\eS a 11uff\c1ent slowdowo of the tconomy lo stiffen l h e resistance of cn1p!O) crs to 1nl1atloiwiry I a b or cost increases \Yalter llellcr the ch1tf (!CC)nomlc 1:u:h \se r both to tht late President Kennedy and lhtn lo rrta:ldent Johnson warm thsl If the rconomy s I L economic iiv.arded Glass Firm Now In Mesa Complete-New York Stock List • I Market Sg1nbols I l ~ ' ' ' / Stplembtr 1110 Tuesda y's Oosing Prices-C.Omplete New York Stock Exchange List •• ~·... .... ,--------------, ,..._, Hllill .... CIMI Clll, .1\1.Y. Wi11ners a1ad Losers Midea st Sl1akes Up Stock Mai·ket NEW YORK I UPI) -The stock market closed higher Monday after shaking oU early profit taki ng and -new uncerlalntles 1n the Middle East Turn over was heavy Shortly before lhc close the Oo\v Jones 1ndus-- tr1al average of 30 selected blue chips "as up 2 26 at 773 41 Of the l Sfl3 iss ues on the tape 765 advanced and 575 declined Turnover of around 17 000 000 shares con1pa red 'Ytlh 14 110 000 shares Jo"r1day Some of th e 1111t1al declines was the result of Israel s \\ 1thdra\~ al from the ,.11ddle East peace talks in protest against reported v1olat1ons of the month old truce by th e United Arab Republic Occ1dcnal Pet1oleum and Natomas \Vh1ch scor- ed tmpftss1ve gn 1ns last week continued to attract demand Occ1dental Petroleum and !~~19.mas "h1ch scor Libya under v. h1ch its tax payments will increase and its oll production wi11 be permitted to rise Na tom as has been 1n ronvard j:!ear since a subs1d1ary announced an Indonesian oil discovery early last "eek Prices gained 1n moderately the American Stock E:<change .r: R:t #~ ·~ ll~ u lJ: ~h !I"' 1~ g,,: 1w.. 4f II I Ill • ~. It I \ I ~ l t ll t1o , ,,,,. u· ' Q • "' 211• I . . .. •1 Ul-1\, M 2111 2 active trading on " • • " It i .. ~ • u Co1nplete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List OAll Y ,ILOT I ' 3 DAILY PILOT Wednrsd.17, Stpttmber ~. 1970 SOUTH CO,llST PLAZA SPECIAL SECTION I ' t Casual Schooltime Partners ..• Boys' Jea11s or Sport Shirts .SA.VE 2 to/~! 2 $6 YOUR CHOICE for S3.~ "Cin:]c s~' J r a11s of corr?n-DuPont 420 nylon.. Vul- can1zed doubJe knees. Regular, slim . 6to12. Boys' !"-)triJ)Cd Flurc J eans, fashion·back Ivy style in Perma- Prest® pol yesrer<orton. Regu Jar, slim. 6 to ] 2. S:{.99 'lloys' Co nlr:i:-il Sti tch Sl1ir1 s in brighl colors. Tapered and tail s, long poin1 co llar. Sizes 6 10 12. S6 Studcnis' Twill flare Jeans, ~5 10 32 waisoc· -----~:orh4.97 Were $1.29-02.49 Boys'-Studeuls' Knit Shirts Easy-care short sleeve shirts. ~t ock 4 $6 turtleneck. Color~ 6 ro 20. for Were •5 Students' Satin Stripe Shirts •Long bleeves, dttul,1le l.1ulto11cd c uffs •Long: p11i11t ('oll :ir, lu1lercd .a nd tuil:s, Perma-l>re!!t•. Size:; J:J.J:i. (r~ ~· ·~ "II......__ /t ~.,1 .. ~ Were 3 for '2.19 Underwear R•duced I''"' 3 forl88 . Pri<"e 11r • 80~3" and i;1ut.lc11lb' t::ollon knit T- llliirtii or IJrief1 '• S.i.r.tS 6 to 20 .•• 3 ()f ... ame garn•ent in (J1tckair;e •Orlon® acrylic hontlcd to acetate • J\'lacl1 i ne was hable ••• for easy care • Classic, tailored .•. aU girl looks. Fall colo rs. Sizes 7 to 14 4!?. Lillie Girls' Jumper Sets •Colorful woven acrylic plaids bonded to 11y J0 11 ••• l1igh slyled jumper • Wi1h coordinaling co lor blou~e •Sizes 3 to 6X Little Girls' Dresses • P enna-Pre&t® dresses in many cute, fashionable styles •Solids, plaids, checks. 3 to 6X 497 set *4.99 Girls' Sweater Veool SAYE Ill 397 •Fashionable h•nd crochet 100% Mery lie inveater VMl • Perfect for 11acb ind ekitte •Machine wash. White.S.M-L IUINA PAIK TA 1·4400, S21-4Sl0 fl MONtf Gt ~-ltll LONO MACH HI Mt2t I JlegularSl.99 • Perma-PresL"' matched gingham plaid SA. VE 16%! &hort sleeve shirts. Sizes 3 to 6X .... -Perma-Prest9 mock turaJ eneck knit 3 $5 Lops. Solid colors. Sizes S-M-L for Little Boys' Perma-Prest Jeans • Rugged \lenim blend of cou on, Du- Pont '420' nylon •Vulcanized double knees for longer wear. Elastic side inserts for sure fit •Sizes 2 to 6X, regular, slim Regular $3.59 SAVE16%! Use Sears Revolving Cliarge Boyo' Sailor Knot Ho•iery .~Al'E27%! Ret1W•r69c 2 pn.$} •Our longest wearing !itretch nylMI t>ocks fordttSS or casual • Jn•uorted'.lffilid coJors. Size1 M (7 to 81/2) or L(9 to 11) CANOGA PAllC 340·0661 GllNOAU' CH S•1004, Ct 4 ... 611 COM"ON Ht 6 ·2511, Nt 2·$761 HOlLTWOOD MO •4,.1 Ol"YIV'K " soro AN ,_,,,, PICO WI .... ,., SANTA MONICA IX 4 ... 711 SOUTH coAJr 'lAU. s•~u TOllANCf S4t-1St t IL\IS,.tOUlJCK.-\1''DCQ. COVINA 966·0611 INOLtWOOD Ol 1·1.121 Sltop Nftht• Monday through Saturday 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M., SundGY 12 Noon to S P.M. _,.. OlAMOI &37·2100 IAJnA ANA 1(1 74371 PASAOINA 111·3211, ~Sl-4211 IAKTA rl IH.tHGI t .... 1011 1'$atlftctlon QuwwdMd or y..., MeM~ lack)' VA.WT l"O 3·1411, 914-2210 Vf~ fl\ f ·1fl1 ---------_ l _ ---------------------- I . mor-ADVERTISE• J 3 N Wtdnt$day, Stpttrnbtr 9, 1970 Wednesday, September 9, 1970 DAILY PILOT 37 Sma 11 Kite hen Does Big Bus in • e ,SS Home G0eking -Please s-P-atrons I • , w......,..,., S~l""lllr t, ltN ""' » .. By JO OLSON 01 IM DllJY 'llel Sl•tl In a tiny kitchen equipped with only a two-burner hotplate, two grills, a couple of deep fat frye rs and a steam table, Mrs. Wayne PitlS whips up meals for her "family" of more than 4500. Mrs. Pitts, snack bar supervisor at ''' Golden West College, presides over the , school's only eating facility and has turned out meals with a home-cooked touch since the school's opening four years ago. With the help of nine full and part·time 1ssistanls, Mrs. Pilt.s also plans and serves a faculty buffet twice a week a'nd banquets for 300 several times a month, adding only the help of two small ovens in lhe faculty house kitchen. Two hot dishes are served in the snack bar each day in addition to a large variety of homemad~ sandwiches which are prepared fresh daily. Included with the hot dish are salads, vegetables, ootatoes and rice, all for a charge of 55 to 70 cents. Roast beef, fried chicken, meat loaf, shrimp and Spanish food are on the menu and sandwiches include ham, roast beef, pastrami, boloJina, tuna, egg salad, chicken salad, lurkey and peanut butter and jelly as well as a gigantic "poor boy." Breakfast also is, served in the snack bar for a bargain price and includes bacon, eggs, hotcakes, french toast and toast. The faculty buffet includes a hot dish, salads, meat and cheese platters and an assortment of breads. The most popular food served in the snack bar is cheesebilrgers, with chili t size running a close second. The students ------like to have the same entrces served on .._ the same days of the week, so the menu delicacies offe red at the Golden West College Snock.Bar. Mrs. W1yn1 Pitts, head "chef.'' scoops chili with the cheerfulness characteristic of the snock bo r staff. has bee n standardized to some degree. 'ii . Students are able to request new dishes t'" and when enough demand fo r something new , ls presented, the snack bar crew goes to work to create it, often usi ng ; recipes are from the ki tchens of the staff members. ' Mrs. Pitts will oversee the opening or a new snack bar t.his month. She was a senior food service worker al Orange Coast College for seven years and has worked in small restaurants in her na- tive Kansas. Though the kitchen is small and the family Is large, Golden West students and faculty members can expect ·a friendly smile with lheir home cooked meals when Mrs. Pitts and her .staff are on the job. Here are several of Mrs. Pitts' recipes from the snack bar, cut down for famHy use: MEAT WAF l pound hamburger 2 eggs 1 onion, diced l t~aspoon sage Home News and Views What's Your Vegetable IQ? By DOROTHY WENCK Ortn .. COUl!IY ....... Advl- With the wonderful year-around variety of fresh ~egetables in our markelS, we woulCin 't ever need to use processed ones. Yel canned anq, frozen vegetables are popular because they are fasl, convenient, and onen less e1pensive than the fresh. Do you koow how to make wise choices amo11g the myriad supplies of canned and frozen vegetables available in your market? Here are a few questions to test your VQ (vegetable quotient). I. Vegetables that are canned and frozen are: (a) leftover fresh vegtables (b) grown especially for ca11ning or freeii.ng (c) growA in hothouses. 2. The least expensive styles of \·egetable.o. are: (a) French style or julienne (b) whole (C) dices, short cuts, or pieces. " 3. You can tell a canned or frozen vegetable is of high quality by Its: (a) laste (b) appearanei! (c) price (d) all of these. t The term "U.S. Fancy'' on a can indicates : (a) the style of the vegetable (b) its quality (c) the sauce it is packed in (d) the food value. 5. Bulgh1g or swelling of a can indicates: fa) spoilage (bl the caa was dropped (c) overpacking. 6. The \J .S. Department of Agriculture inspects all canned and froz en vegetables for wholesomeness: (a) lrue (b) false. 7 Labels oo canned and rroun veiel.a.bles are requlred by Federal law to show: (8) the number of 1ervtngs (b) the grade and quality of the vegetable (c) the style o( the vegetable. 8. The conte111ts listed on a can or frozen package or vegetables show : (a) the weight or the vegetable, including any liquid in the can or package (b) the weight of the vegetable, not including any liquid (c) lhe volume of lhe cooked vegetable. 9. Most canned and frozen vegetables are packed aOO priced according lo their quality: (a) true (b) false. ANSWERS I. (b) Grown especially for caning or freet.ing. Be ca u 1 e vegetables should be caMed or frozen. a! soon as possible after harvest to retain their nutritional value and quality, canners and freezers usually conlract to buy vegetables before they are planted. The vegetables are delivered to the processing plant as soon as they are harvested. Hothouse vegetables are usually sold as fresh vegetables. 2. (c) Dices , short cuts, or pieces are the least expensive. Whole vegetables usua lly cost more tha• cut styles because it is hard to keep them whole duri11g processing. French style or julieMe vegetables, which are sliced lengthwise, are most cosUy to process. 3. (di All ol these. The top quality vegetables are the most tender, flavorful, uniform in color and size, and usually cost more than lower qualities. 4. (b) Its quality. U.S. Fancy Is anqther name for U.S. Grade A. The two other USDA Grades for processed vegetables are "8" (Extra Standard) and • ' C ' ' (Standard). Wh eA the U.S. grade name is shown on the label lt means the vegetables have been officially graded by USDA. The lower grade vegetables are likely to be just as nutritious as the top grade. 5. (a) Spoilage. Don't buy or use cans that are bulged or swelling. 6. !bl False. Inspection or canned and frozen vegetables by the USDA is optional. not mandatory. USDA does inspect these products upon the request of the proces.wrs, who P.'!Y for this service. T h e s e h1specled products carry the USDA shield with the words, "Packed under continuous inspection of the U.S. Dept. of. Agriculture" 7. (c) The style o( the vegetable. The grade and quality and number or servings are not required to be shown on labels. However, if the label does list the number of servh1gs, it must show the size of the serving -for example, four half.cup servings. 8. (a) The weight of the vegetab le, including a11y liquid in the can or package. Contents are shown as net weight, not vplume. 9. (a) True. Most processors have quality control programs, whether or not they use USDA 's grading service, and pack vegetables in at least two grades. The h.igher grade commands the better price. Some processors use a grade flame such as "Fancy" with the "U.S." in front of it. Vegetables so labeled must meet the quality requiremen ts ot the U.S. grade. How did you score? Two or less wrong is e1cellent; three or four wrong, good. More lhan four wroog, you need help!_ MRS. VINCENT SARDELLA MAKES FRESH SANDWICHES v~ cup chopped bell pepper Salt and pepper J cup oatmeal 1 can tomalo sauce 1 can tomato juice. Mix all ingredients together and bake for 45 minutes at 375 degrees. BAKED BEANS J No. 211.i can pork and beans J sma.IJ onion, diced • ~ cup bell pepper, chopped J,.i cup brown sugar ~., cup catsup Salt and pepper to taste Mit and put in · caMerole ind place &trips of bacon on top. Bake at a.so degrees until done, or bacon is crisp. FRIED CHICKEN Boll chitken unlil done. Dip in prt!pared pancake batter. Deep fat fry. MRS . KATHY SALSBURY AND ROBERT MOFFETT BREAK FOR REFRESHMENTS ..-----~---------.. --.-----·~-~~·---~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~-~----......... -------... ----------------------------WtdMMllY, S1pttmbtr 9, lt70 i c:: . . Noble Phrase Rings False Ju~tifying Second Time Around DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am a foreign-born woman with more than ooe colllp: de1ree. I am alao beautjful. A1y mania1e was going poorly after Ofle year --sot consulted psychlalrist!:. clergymen and two doctors. They all said, "Divorce him." After five years of sickness, frustration and two beautiful children, I took their advice. Jt didn 't work . My hulband wu determined to uae the , children to hurt me. t could not 1tand to ' ANN LANDERS intellectually. ~1{, husband ls 1rowing too -faller, u1I er, and more alcoholic. When we go out together socially I feel as if I am dr~lng a buffalo. rotten life? -NO EXIT ANN, BABY : Rocks you've got in your head. What kind of · advice did you give the kid who 1ot meued up with his homosexual uncle? That "unc~" rouUne 11 an old one. Certainly you remember Ule vaudevlll~ joke from the 30s that goea like thl1: "Do yoo have a fairy 1odmother!" Reply -"No, but I've eot ,an uncle we're not sure of." buzz off. -L.A. DEAR L.A.: Falrty 1t11dard? Aceordl.q to wlaom f I Ud ie1 u clea ud Otere wua't 1 fuuy ... la tlM bu1elll. Ordliii'tly I w..r.I IOI ..... lldvbed 1111 l!'OOm 1e m1U ncill a CNfeul•. bit 11 thl1 caae, W.1 dae famU1 ftall oat about the "dlvenloury epl .... " ucle took the hem.lock aM "U.. ma(k" wa1 lbe talk Of u.e towa. to be the sole judge. If a man i.s walk.Ing down the street with his wife and his mother and he meeta • 1uy he works wlUI who lhould be Introduced lint - the wlte'Or lhe moeher? -BA'ITLE WEARY I DEAi\ BAT, Tiie motilor 1bould be Introduced flr1t -uDlul die wife Is older. : lff them 1uJfer IO the fallowint year we !>rem1rried. Please don't ask n1e, "Why does your husband drink so much'.''' The question carries the unspoken Implication lhal I am to blame for his alcoholism. I wish to make it clear he was drinking like a fi sh when J m•rried him. I realb.e nobody can help me. I am trapped· unlit he dies. But can you tell me why an intellig~nt. beautiful woman should have ,uch a DEAR NO : I cannot teU you why your life iii so "roUen" but I can raise 50me que11ions that mla:hl provide you with ln1igh1. Why would a woman marry a man wbo "drinks like a f111b;" and after havtnc freed henelf from whal 10und1 like a \lvinc hell, why did 1he return for more of the 1ame? "I did It for lbe children " ls one of lhe moi l overworked excuses in the world. The phrase h11 • noble rin& to it, even heroic, but more often lhan oot, iC'& uulrue. Your 1dvlce to the groom -to Jay all the cards on the table BEFORE the wedding was ridlculou1. Why? What for? ,. Funny urr:les hive been around since the world began. ·Remember the Romans and the Greeks ? If the kid is getting married he'a no queer so why rake up all that muck by confessing to a I i t t I e "diversionary episode " which la fairly 1tandard in most famllie1 ? Get with it or To have aa1umed Use brlde aad ber lamUy would aever bear abo1t II would have been totally 111re11l1ttc. iot tllub for your letter. T'4ere11 aom1lhla1 to be 1ald for the 1tyle, even without 1ub1tance. Give In or lo1t him . . . when 1 guy a:ivea you thl1 line, look ouU For tips on how to handle the auper aex aaleaman. check AM Landera. Read her booklet, "NeckJne and Pettlna -Whft Ar• The Llrnlta?" Send your requ~at to Ann Lander1 In care of lhe DAILY PILOT, encloalna 50 centa in coin and a long , •lamped, aelf·addreSMd envelope, ·:· I do not con1tder him a hu1band. I view : hlm ln1te1d u • b1d nelahbor. I no ' . Jona:er 1tt.empt to communicate. I have ; many friends to fill my lif• and I never ~n them with my problems. I am 1tudyln& music , •rt and philosophy, 1rowlna: every d•y , 1pirlt.ually and DEAR ANN LANDERS : There'• • $10 bet ridinc on your anawer. You are 1oinc Antidote for Life's 11 ls: A Good Massage . . .., __ _ • l INGA RUTH'S SKILLED HANDS BEGIN MASSAGE "' She rubs and kneads , pounds and chops, and when she'• through you feel like a million dollars floating on soft, lazy clouds -that is, lr you 're awake. Inga Ruth, masseuse at the Orange Coast YMCA, givea such a good massage that one easily could become addicted to having one a day. FolJow her massage with a long steambath or whirlpool session. and there isn't a nerve or tense muscle left in the body. An attractive. y o u n g , Swedish blonde who lives in Costa ~tesa , Inga learned her rather unique trade in Sweden and began practicing it in the United States several yeara ago afler emigrating ''for excitement." She studied to become a cosmetologisl in Copenhagen and worked in the Hotel t Dangleterre there as a consultant in m11keup and skin care, but found she couldn't be a cosmetologist in the United States because her certificate did not include hairdressing. After wor king a 1 a •• manicurist in Los Angeles, she moved to San Diego and there met her husband, John , an engineer, who occupied the ;.. beach house near hers. They went to Sweden to be married and lived there a year. he working as an engineer and she studying to become a masseuse. BACK TO SWEDEN Each yea r Inga , whose full name is Inga/ill , takes her two daughters, Monica, 5lh. and Annika , 3, and travels lo Sweden via charter plane for a several week sta y in order that her children might learn to appreciate their heritage. John accompanies t h e m when possible, and the fam ily has included camping in Europe as part of their vacation several times. Tnga, one of the few mas· seuses in the county, works five mornings and one evening a week at the Y and has a few private appointments besid es. Many of her cuatomers are regulars , some co ming daily and so me several limes a week for half-hour sessions. t.1ost come of their own volition and Inga stresses that if they have any pain they should check with their doctor before coming be ca u s e massage is forbidden when skin disease, pregnancy, malignant tumors. f eve r , varicose veins and other conditions arc prese nt. More people arc coming for massages because people are becoming more h e a 1 t h · conscious, she finds. ONE BOD\' "We have been living in ou r cars for too long. \Ve forget we only have one body that is going to carry us the rest of our lives." According to Inga. a racial is better than an aspirin for - ' relieving tensions. ~1uscles also are toned up as tensions 1 are eased during the massage, but the sessions should be kept up. She knov.•s the complete physiology of the b o d y including muscle. nerve and bone st ructure. and knows just how to stroke, knead. rub, boat. chop. tap, pound and FIRST , A FACIAL !LEFT), THEN DOWN TO TOES shape for maximum results. Polio patients have been smoking." life. she believes . She is very markedly improved WJder her Inga also believes in walking pleased th.11l her curl y-headed hands. a~d ~any 0 th er and bicycling. One of her blonde daughte rs already sec problems including mild bone • . . . fracture. headaches. slime ln favorite forms o{ relaxation 1s the beauty of flowers and lungs and r he u ma tic just going ou t to nature . bring her bouquet s. complaints can benc~il from Camping. walking on the How does her husband like massage. beach and silting in the having a masseuse around the NOT PANACEA backyard listening to the birds house. rea dy to give him a. Massage, ho\.\'ever, is not a are her own remedies for ma ssage at the drop of a hat '.' pana cea for man·s illnesses. tensions. .-.....!.'..You·ve heard of t he "You need to eat well-People also rnus t try to loo shoemaker v.·hosc family has balanced me11ls. txercise 11nd al the good side o{ things and no shoes? And the tailor whose avold sweets. And s top have a better attitude toward family wore rags~" Your Horoscope Libra: Create Success THURSDAY SEPTEMBER I 0th By SYDNEY OMARI\ ARIES (March 21 -April 19): Unusual legal s it u a t ion appeilrs to exist. Get expert advice before si111Jng any Flight 19 To Mark 17th Year Merribers of Uni ted States Air Force Mothers. Flight 19, 'A'ill re view their 11.year-old hi story, t he i r achievements <ind aims. lon1orrow evening v.·hcn they gather in Hyde Park Mobile E:s tate1 recrealion hall. Santa Ana. Awards for oulltandlng 'A'Ork during the past year 1lso will be presented at the meeting , which is scheduled t.o begin at 7:30 p.m. documents. Your talents are worth more l;1an some would ha ve you believe. Respond accordin11ly. .. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Surprise assignment c o u Id cause po st pon ement of journey . Don 't be in too much of a hurry . Letter or call will contain Information you seek. Be willing to laugh al your own foibl es. GEMINI ("'1ay 21-June 20): Recognir.e need or budget review. Trim waste. Key is to adopt• more ve rsati le approach. Emotional ups and down11 are featured. You rio eventually rea ch desirable level. CANCER (June 21-July 221: Not wise to commit yourself to Jong-range programs. Review your 1bility to make necessary payments. You get nothing for noth ing. Realistic approach is necessary. create aur.11 of sucC1!ss. rifakc illusions work for you in advertising, publiciiing your lheories. But guard against beeaming a vict im of illusions . SCORPIO !Oct . 23-Nov. 211: Someone may De trying to pull wool over your eyes. Insist on facts. Get prom ises in writing. Capricorn individual a i d s. Don 'l be afra id lo a:sk for favor. SAGl'M'ARJUS .!Nov. 22- Det. 21 ): Friendship and hisiness will mix . Import.ant contact is made through friend . Finish what )'OU sl1r1. Enlarge horiwns. Don't be limited by what you believe to be a handicap. CAPRJCOlt N I Dec. 22-Jan . 191: Helping a ScGrpio indi- vidual will prove beneficial. Cycle continues high. Unusual proced ures work to you r ad- van111ge. Stress oriiinality and independence. ~1embers also wtll tum In ' 11moonts saved from Nickel • Day Aprons, an idea for accumulatina funds to 1s1i!l men and women In military serviCt'. LEO fJuly 23-Aug. 12): You gain moat by being wi lling to accept aid. f\.l eans some of your great pride may be misdirected. Remember it is e1sier to be a good host than an excellent guest AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18J: Some dilemmas may be for your own good. f\.1e1ns avoid trying lo force iuuts. One who appear1 indifferent Is very much concerned. Know this and do some personal in vestigating . Coast" Homemakers Cook Up Futu re Plans _ A committee will be elected lo name !he Unilcd Stales Air Foret ~1other-ol'·the-year, and plans \.\'ill be compleled for an annual Dime a Dip Dinner, according . to 1\1r!. James Tucker, president of t h e VIRGO {Aug. a&pt. 221' 'Flnancial windfall is very poSllble. But you mus1 p1 ve the way. tnC'ludes improving rel11Uons with associates and relatives. Use heavy dosea of diplomacy , charm . PISCES IFtb. 19-March 201 : \\'ha! you need may lie elusi\'e. But a determined approach could brin1 you ch>* to aoal. Avoid tl')'ln1 to do t0o much at once. Key is to outline de1ire1 -then yoi.1 rece ive necessary aid . New ol!lcero of Cout Homemaken Club (Jett to rig ht) the Mmos. Peter T1tum, -iirat vice pre1ident, ~Jarry Hubbel, president , and Lorry Fredericks, secretary, seem hesitant to demohsh th{'ir C'rea- iively decorated cake 11 they plan the year ahead. All \\'Omen In- terested in joining the homemakers' group are invited to attend lhe first meeting oft.he club year on Friday. Sept. 11 from 9 a .m. to I p.m. in the Youth Center, Corona del 1'.1ar. . ,1 . ----~------------{__ __________ _ --------- LIBRA fSept . 23-0c!. 21): group. Your ideas bear fruit. You I ' I . .~- W.•n11dlt. Slpttmbtr 9, 1q70 -DAILY '!LOT /18 Rodg erses Enjoy West Coast Vacation State Aff a·irs Take Back Seat for a Day HONORED GUEST -l\1rs. \Viltiam P. Rogers {cen· ter), wife of Secretary of State, greeted founding committee women and \\'ives of the board of trustees of the \Vorld Affairs Council ol Orange County dur· ing a tea hosted by rvtrs. J. Simon Fluor (right). Getting acquainted \vith Mrs. Rogers is ri1rs. Frank Booth of Laguna Beach . By JO OLSON 01 4IM 0.lh: l!iltl .S!tl:l The tables v.·cre turnttl on Adele llogers during a recent tea given by the World Affllir!I Council of Orange County, for she was the guest of honor in stead of the hostess. As wife of the Secretary of Stale, l'IIrs. \Villiam P. Rogers is a freque11t partygiver, entertaining dlplpmats. heads ol nations and y.•1ves of world leaders. The Rogerses were spending the Labor Day weekend in San Clemente and turned their stay into a mini-vacation. enjoying sailing, golfing and relaxil)g. \Yearing a sl~vc.less print dress in pink. aqua and soft green sh~des that showed orf her East Coast tan, fl1rs. Rogers mingled easily with tea guests ill the Santa Ana home of 1'11rs. J . Simon Flour. describing for them her duties as lhe wife of the Seeret:iry of State. "\Ve'vc traveled I 8 0 , O O O mile s to 33 countries," she related. "It's a g r ea t pril'ilege." She added that though yc.J miss some things traveling in such a capacity, you meet many fascinating people. Mrs. Rogers. a slender, vivacious law school graduate v.·ho ha s never practiced la"" earned her bachelors degree at Cor~ell, "''here she v.·as a Tri Dell and member of l\1ortar Board, and completrd two years of law school al Stanford University. She finished law school at Cornell, where she met her husband, who also was a s:tudent lhere, and "got very busy being a wife and mother." The Rodgere s, \\"ho now make their home in Bethesda, f\1d., have four children ant. are expecting lhelr fourth grandchild thi! month. Thomas, Donald K. Washburn and Kenneth Nor · , Corona del 1'11ar. Also attending v.· re the f\1mes. John La1f , Clifford flakes, John u Odall, R. fl LITTLE GUYS 'N DOLLS Wincklt'r and Warren JI. Crowell. Newport B ea c h ; Dorothy Jergins, 8 a Ibo a : Shirlee McMullen. Cost a h1ega, and MW Dio1nne Jergins, Balboa. CHILDREN'S HAIR STYLING l'ref .. llMll Sd ... r 5trlilll •01t Al'f'OINTMIMT o.r,,. ' .. J -CIPM Mt!Mhy1 '4Z·J61t 130 E. 17th St. ~~:.~·~:n~, Costa Maw Newport llarbor. "Sailing was I~~~~~~ ·~~~~~~~ delightful," l\1rs. Rogers said,!~--;:: Outing their Orange Const stay they golfed In San Clemente and sailed i n "and we were aslounded at the number cf boats ." The lea table was centered y,•ith pink rosebuds and baby's breath, and h1rs. Fluor chose a shocking pink h o s t e s s ensemble to e-0mplement the pink lheme. Among guests at Lhe tea, ·v.·hich wa s given for founding committeewomen and wives of lhe board or tru stees, were the f.1mes. Victor Andrev.•s and Frank Booth, Lagu'11a Beach, and Arnold, Beckman, Chester E. Brabyn, John Killefcr, O. \V. Richard , lvlartin Scott, Charles S. Pa rents Club Orange Coasl Chopter, Parents \Vithout Pa rt n er s sponsors a pancake breakfast the last Sunday of each month in Costa Mesa City Park from 9 a.m, to 12:30 p.m. \Vally Richards. chairman . 1v 111 ansv.·er questions regarding the public "rain or shine" event at 542-8700 or 542-9665 . A loo~ of 1l111•n<e •11J w•rmth i1 C•plured in lhi1 lon9 llowi119 btu1h•d nylon 9ow11, F••• fur trim m •~•t the 9•r"'enf com- pl•t1ly w•the bl1. Gow" com11 i11 Fli<k Y • 11 ow, P•n~ l•dy o• Sn•PPl 11111. $12 " Couple Chooses Delegates Describe Convention League of Women Voter s Coffee Relaxes Grind NOT SHOWN: Alt f•\e fur "'1td1i119 robe. A11 •b- 1oh1t1 d.li9ht fro"' ih 1011 totl•r lo 1111 111 of ih curving 1l11v11. ALSO -P•i•m• end ltby Doll Slipp1r1, f· i'. Santa Ana Home !· ' •' ' ' Fellow graduates of Orange Coast College who exchanged vows in St. Andrew 's Presbyterian Church, Ne\\.·port Beach, were Barbara Louise Hill and Richard G I e n Kimball. The Rev. Dr. Charles H. Dierenfield performed t h c afternoon ceremony for the ,. daughter and son of h-1r. and Mri;. Edgar Kimball Hill af Granada HUis, formerly of ~ C.Osta A1esa, and Air. and A1rs. · Richard Calvin Kimball of Corona de! f\.1ar. Attending the bride as maid of honor was t.1iss Beverly Bonnin g. Serving as bridesmaids were Miss Laurie fl ill and filrs. 0\ven Kreza. sisters of the bride, Miss Carol Kimball. sister of t h e bridegroom. and Miss Pamela Pt1cCullough. Kathy Molden was rlower girl and Adam Ross, cousin of the bridegroom, carried the rings for the double ri'ng ceremony. Standing as best man \vas James Beyer Buman 111. Ushers ir.cluded J a m e s Richard Oliver. Scott 0. r.tarsha\l, Kenneth Rober 1 Wilson and Harold Karaka . MRS. R. G. KIMBALL Afternoon Rites Ana . The new ~1rs. 1\imball is a graduate of Estancia High School. Her husband y,·as graduated from Tuslin High School and plans lo attend California State College at Long Beach. A report on the 50th annual convention in Seattle will be given for members of the Wo- men"s Overseas Service Lea- gue of Orange County at their first fall meeting on Saturday, Sept. 12. al 1:30 p.m. in Bel- n1ont Savings and Loan build- ing, Laguna Hills. Highlights will be presented by delegates the 1'11mes. Inez Randall and Jennie Goss. both of Laguna Hills: l\targaret Higgins, Laguna Beach, :ind Miss Ruth Win ler, ~lisslon Viejo. New officers of the league inc lude the Mmes. Bettina Boardn1an, president, Costa f\tesa: Charles Gav lock, vice president, Laglllla B e a c h ; John Fedor. sec retar y, Anaheim. and f.liss Ruth \Vinter, treasurer. Mi ss ion Viejo. The Orange Coast chapter of the National League of Women Voters is schcduli11g in formative coffee hours over a three day period, Sept. 15, 16 and 17, for all area women interested in learning more about the organization. The league's purpose not only is to encourage citiz''lS lo take part in their government but to help them hecon1e informed about natio11.al, s1 ate and local issues, according lo fl1r s. J ohn Keating, membership chairman. Although the league Lakes action in support of or in opposition to governn1enl~I issues, it does not supfl()rt c.r oppose candidates or political -Feminists Planning Weekend \\'omen pilots. check your flight plans. f\lembcrs of Orange Counly Chapter, Southwest Section of Ninety N i n es the International Organization of parties. A volunteer, nonprofit organization, the league invites all women citizens 18 and over to join the member s hip. Approximately one third or its income is derived fr 0 in membership dues and the remainder from contributions. Organization or the league parallels the representative system of govcrnn1ent, with interdependenl l'!alional , stale and local levels. For f u rt h c r information about the coffee gatherings, which will encompass the Islands Lure Area Seniors Hi.!wa iian music will ifll the Senior Citizens Hccreation Center at 7 p.m. on Saturday. Sept. 12. when senior citizer· ;ind lhcir guests a r e entertained with an lsland- slyle party. Entertainment. door prizes. refreshments and a white elephant sale v.•ill be on the party agenda, and the public is inviteO. Scnigrs will dep<1rl for a frw days at Lake Tahoe on Tuesday, ~pt. 29. areas of Costa McsJ, Newport Beach, Irvine, Laguna and Laguna Hll\s, residents may 1 call Mrs. Keating at 644-2524 1 or ,.1rs. Thomas Grasmchr at 549-1724. 'Our Gang' Child Star • • l•11kA111eri<•1• • M•Utt Ch•rt • Reminisces IF=================~ I Found America Through Our Gang Comedies will be the subject of a talk by Jackie Lynn Taylor for a meeting on Friday, Sept. 11, of RESCU. Research a n d Educational Society of CaUfornia Unmar- rieds. l'lfembers of the group will gather for a potluck supper at 7:30 p.m. in the Izaak \Vallon Clubhouse, Santa Ana with the program to begin at 8:30. ,.fiss Taylor. who starred in Our Gang comedies at the age of five and v.•ho was featureO in 75 motion pictures by the age of 15, has appeared in \'ariety shnws. documentaries and news broadcasts o n television. Following a v.·edding trip to northern California. the newlyweds v.•ill live in Santa Special guests at I he 1veddi·ng \1•erc the bride's grandparents. f\1r. antt f\1rs. Erigar Rice Hill of Newport Beach. The organization is composed of women who have serveO with the armed force s outside the United Slates in combat areas. Orange Count y v.·omen intere s ted in membership are invited to call 1'11rs. Atma Ak e ro yd , membership chairman, 532- 4~28. \V omen Pilots -will joinl----------------------11 Harbor Chorale others from five st.ates for a Fall Secllonat meeting on Sept. II, 12 and 13. Mesa Auxiliary f\1 em b c r s and their husbands as well as guests Singing Mothers Needed American Legion Hall in \vlll gather in Santi:! Mcnica Costa Mesa is the setting for for the Sky and Sea Weekend the meclings of the Auxiliary gathering, with hotel accorno- Lo Bar racks 1249. Veterans of <lat.ions provide{! by the Surr \Vith children going hack lo inf6rmation m<1y phone lhe \Vorld War I. Tiic fir s I Rider. School. mo/hers may have h h 1 . , 0 4 and the third Tuesday for a Facilities arc being donated r urc ofLcc. 545-13 . b · · t 7 30 / Fl w· s time to sing. us1ness sessio n a : p.m. iy eel 1ngs at anta \Vith this in mind. Harbor Babysitting is pravided al a and the third TUESDAY FOR f\1onica Airport for fly-in \Vomen's Chorale is inviting jiniomiiih1ialilich•air•i"_ci'.iiiillillll•oii'°"iiiiiiatiainidi poiiitliuickiiiiait i6ilP•.~•'·· ••d•.!c•g•aitcisii. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij mothers "''ho like to sing to join the group-on Tuesday, Sf'pl. 15, from 9:30 lo 11 :30 a.m. in the Presbyterian Church of the Covenant, Cost.a ~fesa. The chorale Is a 1hrce-part chorus comprised of women from the Harb<lr Arca under the direction or f\frs. William Kuhn. f\1embcrshlp is open to "'·omen of alt ages. Those inte r ested in Blue Stor Moms Huntington Beach Blue Star Pt1others. Chapter 2 stage meetings every ~fonday HI J:30 p.m. in Lake Park Clubhouse. DTERY .BACK TO SCHOOL! NOW IN CORONA DEL MAR 2515 FORD ~EAUTY SALON E. COAST HWY. Presents An Wait By Yovr Phon• •.• YOU May Be-Called Offer Is Llmlfecl OUR PLl DGF. friendly and courteous at· tcn!lon -to please and sailsfy your pcrsooa l feeling in all phases of beauty ~t re11sonablo prices -expertly done. Exciting Introductory Offer To A Limited Number of Ladies In The Costa. Meso Area . Over $65.00 Worth of Beauty Services S1v1 On Your l11u'y NHd1 for One Full Y11r l \\'alt By Your Phone, Yoo May St Called, Ir So Our Represenlati\•e Will Explain In Full "Quality And Personali1in9 Is Our Theme" Jndlvlduallied llalrcntllng and Styllna: Personllllttd Jltrmancnl Wavi1:11: Two ring s for two· lovers . . . both rings $88.00 fi11fft ~ .. llty 4/ntend '" 141C t•ld -k114" .,., t .. lttertdl Eo~y credit lerms • student occount1 ovoi loble,• up to 12 months to pay 8onkAm1ricard •Master Cl'lorge ''THE STORES CONFIDENCE BUILT" Established 43 Yeo1rsl MUHTlfolOTOM CINTlll ·ff(~ A Efl~•t• Mllllll~M I .. <~ tt'l·JJ01 MAlllOlt SHOl'l'INO CINTl:ll Ult H•rWr 11¥1, (Ill• MtH Ml-t411 OPIN MOH., THURS. & Fiil, 1 1L f ,,M. ( Slyle #690 N11w 8orn- Adverti:sed in VOGUE ind SEVENTEEN. The most versatile wig ever! "Fashion 'Tress Introduces the New Born Playmate ... Easily re·styled in a wide variety of flattering hairdos! •EASY TO COMB FROM STRAIGHT TO CURLY! •CAN BE STYLED WITH OR WITHOUT THE NATURAL PART! • WASH AND WEAR ! malAej 250 E. 17th St. 0NLY$35.00 • WIG and BEAUTY SALON Costa Mesa IN HILLGlllN S9UAll P'h•11t 541·344' Doltr 'ril l:JO, Thtlts., •rt. 'tH t IAHICAMIRICARD MASTll CHAl•I I ' ... ,. .. WOMEN UNITED -Members of the Newport-Costa Mesa Branch of the Amer- ican Association of University \Vomen will have one goaJ in mind when they host the annual Friend ship Tea for prospective members Saturday, Sept. 12: to gain a united front to Read . Reflect and React. Demonstrating for the ca use are {left to ri ght) the Mmes. \Villiam Pickens , David Hill and Rudy Fernandez. AAUW Friendship Tea Three Rs Renewed .) P-T Units Begin Activities Schoo·I Year Takes Shape (E•llor'I tMtt; ,. .... dtYllltd llt CMlif MMt, ,.......,. kKtl. '-9911111 l•aell ~ M!uloll Vitia P9'tnl·ltlld'IH .,,..."1u 11o111 win """''·Ill !fit O'AIL.., f'!ll,,O"T U(~ w..ic, 1nfO•mtlitll tnulf be r~tl"«'d 11v "'-womtft't 1Ktlon or "'ft, Gtr• Sl!ll!ll. 176' C ... '-119 l"IK I• N-"°" •H<ll b'I' J t·""· .)lluflodif'f tor ,Wllctti.. WMIMMllY.) Canyon PTA Mn. Jobn SU.Wla1 President COMING UP: PTA board will host a luncheon for teachers and staff 1t noon, Friday, Sept. 11, in the muJtipurpose room ... Board meeting at 9:151.m. Tuesday, Sept, 22, in the home of Mn. John Sihllling, president Plans for t.he co ming year will be rormuJated. College Pk. PTA Mn. Carlto• Ruuell Preside at COMING UP : Teachers and staff luncheon at 11 :30 a.m. Friday, Sept. 11, in the mu1tipurpose room . Mrs. Bernard Faubel, M r s . Howard Slinkard and Mrs. John Molloy are chairmen. REPORTS: Chairmen ratified at the board meeting last week are the Mmes. Paul Renbarger and John Molloy, co-art ; R ic hard De Fransica, he a Ith and welfare; Robert Stettler. honorary life; Bern a rd Faubal, hospitality ; Ray Garrett, Jn s pi rat I on; Burl eig h Bur s hem , legislation; Donald Bruneau, library-study center : Walter Stevens, magazine; Bruce Hedrick , mimeograph; William Yelich, newsette: James Schafer, parent education; Carl Nauman, record book, safety and child protection; R o b e r t Marold, recreation; Manuel Jiminez, room represents· tive ; Howard Flinkard, so- cial, and Weston Crocker, telepho ne, along with Carl· ton Russell who will serve as men's participation chair· man. CdM High PTA tochen IDd -I staff at l :!O a.m. Friday. sep<. II, In tho caftlarill. Mrt . Lo...U Smith, pr<sldent ond Mrs. John Durkee, vice president will wtlcome new teachen and acquaint them with the memberahlpt aim! IDd objectlvQ. Killybrooke PT A ' Mn. Roborl lllU• Prtildent OOMJNG UP: Potluck luncheon for board members, teachers and staff at noon, Friday, Sept. 11, in the muJUpurpoae room. Al Zetdman, newly appoin ted principal will be gue.st o{ honor .•• Cont 1 n en ta I bre:akfut to we I corn e parents will be served at 8:30 a.m. MOnday, Sept. It, in the mulUpurpose room. REPORTS: ExecuUve board meeting took place in the home of Mrs. Robert Riggs. Plans for the coming year were discussed and members were introduced to the new principal. Lindbergh PTA Mn. Jack Davidson President COMING UP: Get-acquainted coffee for parents will take place from 8:30 to 9:30 a.m. Monday, Sept. 14, in the multipurpose room ... Board meeting at 9 a . m • \l'ednesday, Sept. \6, in the multipurpose room . • hospltaUty; Herben Clark p4Jbllcitt; Del N•vllle, 1tq19r liaison; Wade ThomplOn, junk>r Jlal s on ; Don Wllkenaon, IOphomore and Robert Britt.., f r e 1 h m e n liaison. Monte Viste PTA Mr1. Fred Be .. President COMING UP: Welcome tea chers is the theme of the luncheon that will take place at 11 :30 1.m. Friday, Sept. 11 , in the multipurpose room. Mrs. Burton Orloff is chainnan .•. Back·to-school ooffee for parents from I to 10:30 a.m. Monday, Sept. 14, in the multi~ NIOm. Guests will be. welcomed by Mrs. Fred Betts and Mrs. Tom Herndon. Aulstlna In the regiStralion of new students are the Mmes. D1vld GoodR:ll, G e r a I d Horton, James Moor and John Turner. REPORTS: Officers and chalnnen ratified at the August board meeting are Scott Paulsen, parllamenlar· ian, and the Mmes. George Hylkema, corresponding leC· retary and library ; Peter Tatum , treasurer; James Moffett, .art and posters; Burton Orloff, element1ry e ducation ; And'rew Lakatosh, inspirational and ci tizenship ; Joy ce Hennessey, newsette and fl yer ; ~1ark Morris, radio, TV and movie ; David Goodsell and John Turne r, co -room representative ; Norton Krinsky, telephone, and Roy Mickey, child care. Programs and budget for MV High PTO lhe year were approved. It was announced that a major Jesse Norle1a safety project for the President previous PT A board has COMING UP: Board members been completed; the signa l OcMn Vltw, SMI hMh •ft • W•ll'lll1111tt" $Ctwl Ol1tf"lct N l'flll• teMMr _.MAii.i ...... WI~ ·~r 111 Ille' DAILY PIL:OT Mtll w.tlr;, l,,,.,_llon nwll bl r-.ll'tll b'f Mn. Gllbtrt Turnbull, S.Jt M.11,...,_ e r I w • , H1111t1,,_IOl'l I~ &y $ JJl'I, T(WrMl•Y tw ""llUtl!ltn W•llllRY.I Fulton PTO Mrt. Robert Welc• President COMING UP: Jee cream will be sold daily at noon In school be1inn.lng Monday, Sept. 21, aceordina to Mrs. Lloyd Long, chairman •• , Budget committee wlll meet at 10 a.m. Monday, Sept. 21 Annu·a1 PTO membershlp drive will bl lalD'Xi\ed Monday, Sept. 28, under the direction of Mrs. John Hinton, membership chainn811, and Mrs. Edwin Seymour. REPORTS: Trophy wiMers In recent PTO summer bowling 1 we epstakes competition were the Mmes. Donald Williams, Douglas Meyers Jtnd R. 0 . Kerehenfaut, flrst place te am; Jame y Jacobson, high s er I es; Gaspor Corrao, high .series, and Allen Powell, most improved bowler. Robinwood PFO M". Albert Aiello President COMING UP: Kindergarten tea will be presented tomorrow from 1 to 3 p.m. Mn. Roger Edward s , chairman, will be as,,isted by Mr.I. Karl Schoop and Mrs. Raymond S m I t h . Stanton Burrill. principal, and Mrs. Douglas Bowles and Mrs. Fred Patzold . kindergarten teachers, will preview the kindergarten program. Parents may vi sit classrooms. Refreshments will be served. Wardlow PTO will host a welcome back to light at Tustin a n d school luncheon tomorrow, University Avenues is now Mr1. Je11 Carruu for the faculty ind staff. in oper ation. President Mrs. Jesse Nor iega, hospi. COMING UP : Info r rn a I tallty chairman ls in charge. teachers' luncheon will be REPORTS : Officers to serve Presidi o PT A presented tomorrow at noon , are N o r i e g a , president; according to Mrs. Carl als f..lrs. Streeter Kine Her Ledbetter and Bruce p .d Bode, chainnan. res1 ent Glenn, vic e presidents ; COMING UP : Ann u a I REPORTS: At re c ent Olarles Kneale, ways and welcome luncheon 1 0 r e.1ecutlve board meeting, Mr1. Lowell Smidt means, .and John Woodward, members voted to support. Preside.nt treasurer. Othen are the teachers and staff will take Ille ta.1 continuation election COP.UNG UP: Members will Mmes. Charles Bo1d et , place Friday, Sept. 11 · for Fountain VaJley School host a Continental breakfast membentup; Robert Platt, District scheduled Tuesday, Harbor Area women who are college or university graduates will be urged to Read, Reflec t and React when they attend the a n n u a I Friendship Tea of I he Newport-Costa li.1esa Branch cf the American Association of Uni versity Women. Representatives from each of the study and special interesl groups of the branch \\'ill have displays and be present to accept signups and anS\\'e r questions. fEdltor'1 Note: JI. Pitt d"'ot., te A daytime study group will for th e administrative staff, 1 e c re tar y ; Noriega, Foun1e111 111111r, tt11nllntlo~ •••th, Sept. 15. be ofrered to which mothers -----------'--------'-'----''-----·---------'-------- . ~frs. John Udall will Opt"fl her Newport Beach home for the 2 to ~ p.m. tea on Saturday, Sept. 12. IN THE CAPRI MOTEL ARCADE HANKa'HAtr Beauty Salon and Men's Haircutting ind Styling Shop. Open Mond1y thru Saturday 8 • 5. Sundays and eves. by appoint· ment. Walk·in1 welcome. 1419·21 S. c-t Hltlt•llJ, ........... It 494-5054 IT'S A PERFECT MATCH Now that you've met your match, meet ours. Bride and groom sets in 18 karat gold. His- Hers- Ole"" Att-1\ hwlffd """''"." !•~•I'll .. l'lk4rrltrlul'll • Mt11t• C:"-•Vt , lot SLAVICK'S It FASHION ISLAND Nf.WPORT IEACH -M4·111G f..fajor study areas for the coming year will include the Academi c Community, American Foreign P o I i c y . Human Use of Urban Space and This Beleaguered Earth. Alumnae Planning Potluck Past presidents \\'iii be honored after dinner is served potluck style for members of the Stephens College Alumnae of Orange County at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday , Sept. 15. The group will gather in lhe ammunity room of the State 1'1utual of T\$in Bank. All area alumnae who would like to attend the dinner mee4iing may call ~irs. Carl W. Hansen. 526--3544, f o r further infonnation. can bring small children, and a new self-Oevelopment group for both husbands and wives . has been added to the roster. Special Interest groups also will continue, including book discussion, bridge, gourmet, investments, painting a n d vagabonds. Membership In A AU W enables women c o 11 e g e graduates to have fun while rontinuing· t h e i r academic studies, participating in social reforms and initiating new friendships. The goals of the Newport· Costa Mesa Branch are to suppo rt diversity and e1p\ore the variou s viewpoints of its membership with an aim toward more r ea Ii st ic evaluation of current i"11s titutions. Membership in AAUW Is open to woman graduates of AAUW·approved colleges and universities. Anyone wishing information may contact Mrs. Jack Benton, membership chairman. at ~184. !l.1rs. William Pickens ts chairman of the tea, and assisting are the M m e s . Benton. Robert McCarthy, social chairman, and Robert Lindsey. hospitality chairman. ~JkL}MAtll COIFFURES BACK TO ·SCHOOL SPECIAL Permanenf Waue Jnclude1: Pt rmanent , llalr Cut. 1-talr Cond!llonlng, Plu• Shampoo and Stylr. mo.lher ... "." " .......... "". $25.00 'j)aughler ................... $ 1.00 IOTH POO •. . ........... ..... .. .. .. .... $26,00 Bolh A1,pnntrn,nta ~!uat ,Br. For The Samr Tim' toll EDINGER FOUNT AIN VALLEY 842-8010 ::::::.: &40-aGl1 o,.. 1 hys -1.,..1 ... M...i., flln friMy M1itt•rcharg1 ~lf.ll)t~,m:W'l'.A.LL FAN:TSturs Jtml?SUifS'tc! c.ll i'n.~Tta.'kf(?),dou.b!~ krtit-eoltjC.GLet"' 'REG. ~.30 ~2299 pt>ni ""'~ ·1a1a.e,~ld, r1!f, srwt, lol<!Ck. JU11pllll-b IJl.Cll.,re4 &roum- ne~ "111.Ul.!f O!lltt'$l!jlni>ohoos&iiorit :it 'l!StuftlR colora in.tuaing purplt. W00.1. COA.'I\1 t-1?4.l~'ft/.50 ~ 25 • '1Wle 6Wh/.d,y .J,w.~- ~cl;i~tw knit-DRE5t:55 . 1'\ls~3oni$60 i]99.9..,t2999- ----------------------\...._.:....:....:. ---·------- I WITH SALLIE BIG ENTERTAINMENT IN THE COFFEE SHOP Star perfonner: J q h n Kerr. Time 9:30 Saturda1 morings. Come in, have a cup of cofree and watch lot a dime. You all know John. Wor~d here after school school and Saturdays all las.t year while he wu a JW'llor at Harbor High. You'll remember him as M.C. of the Stars and Tars variety show lut April. He's }been with us ail 1Wl1· mer. The show routine all started with Doug from the Deli telling John he felt rotten while they were having a CU;P of coffee together. John, "If Jhls were a musical, I would be getting up on the tables and singing to you, and pretty soon everybody in here would be dancing and t.h4J'd all dan c.e right out into the street." Doug, "That'll be lhe day." John, "Come in tomorrow and I'll sbow you." Next day, which 'fas a Thursday, promptly ~ at 9:30, John put on his record player, leapt out into the middle of the coffee shop with straw hat and rtd, white. and blue ribbons and began the old 30's favorite, "Go look for the gold m1ne that comes with t h e sun.shine, a diamond rtnmg up on each ray" .•• and wound up with a wavin1 of flags, "'Climb out of the corner. Stop being ,. a mourner. Sm i I e \he American Way. Good times are here to stay." The audience gulped llteir scrambled eggs stopped half way down, d,i d something with their coUee cups stranded in mid air and broke out in cheers and applause. Result : John's been doing his thing for 7 week!, and now that he's going back to Harbor HJgh has been invited f o r Saturday mornings at 9i30. Last week..•he thought ~we were r e 1 J y for Shile- speare, so c omplete with white sheet and black sweatshirt. he joggled our morning doldrums w It h Julius Caesar, and Mac . Beth. IF YOU THINK WE 'RE KOOKY, WE ARE . . • to the tune of chocol ate chip, r a i s In , marble, sugar, peanu t butter. molasses, datenut, ... all beautifully freshly baked and cookie jar ready for the rnunche.rs after school. Handy way to keep the assorted crop of s\\·eet tooths happy is tlJ! 4 dozen assorted bagful •• , Yum, those Belgium Wafers, crisp and brown sugary with slithered almonds or nlelt in your mouth Swedish dreams with chunks of \\·alnut. The extra faocy ones you hide to dress up a cu p of ooffee for the gals, .. Bonbons with the bopp\6 of chocolate butter cream in the middle or divinity to run a fast second to a box ,of cand y. Horne made cookies take time and tenderness, which the bakery has, a:nd you don't somet imes. Hello Dollies, chocolate buttfr. scotch, coconut and 12 ot?ler things delicious. alwiys wind up with people scrattb- ling for the crumbs. NEWS STOP ..• BETWEEN THE · CHERI.SUISSE •.• and Okolahad, rilht next' to the House of Lords and Richard's Employees Annual Perpetual g o I f trophy, won in 1969 by Gilbert Yoshioka, t b e greatest celery trimmer on the \\'est coast. The la~ls are decorator red, whl:te, and blue. There is a good looking whlte life preser'(tr that sez Captain's ~e going round and round. 'Ibis new line ol deliquescent animation is a family aff!llr really. ~1argarel Starks, &ir a dvtr l lslng manapr designed labe l, and we ran a conte!t among o • r employe~ to come up wtt.h a name, I was the winDer · but the bo1o1•s shotiJd 10 to my husband. Hey. look. It over. That half aill9" would make a great Jaidp, Richa rd's, the p e op I e store, for everybody wbo likes fun, 1 h•PP1 ny of life, and good food. PRODUCE ' LARGE.SIZE, THICK MEAl tu, klH PHONE 673-6360 FOR HOME l)ELIVERY IN OUR DELIVERY AREA _ ... .. , .... ·. \ • • • PRICES EFFECTIVE SEPT. I 0 -11 -12 f:. CANTALOUPES : ... ' . • ~ "· ; . . -' •: ' . ., . -· ' " 1-. . ' . .. " ' ' ' ' ·" !• ' " " ' " ., ' . ' " ; ' FINE FOR JUICE, SWEET. GALIFORNIA VALENCIA ORANGES GARDEN-FRESH MILD. LONG GREEN 8 LBS . CUCUMBERS FINE FOR STUFFING FANCY, CRISP, TASTY BELL · PEPPERS 3 FOR 2s~ Or9en 5erenade For Your Pleasure by ~·n ...... ~ .P. ·~"-- -· ~· • e~ IAND WE DON'T INTEND TO CHANGEll WE APPRECIATE EACH IN DIVIDUAL CUSTOMER AND HIS INDIVIDUAL TASTES. THAT'S WHY WE CARRY MANY DIFFE RENT BRANDS ANO PRODUCTS, IN A VAR IETY OF SIZES! YOU 'LL FIND OUR CHECKERS SMI LING AND COURTEOUS-ANO ENOUGH OF THEM TO MAKE CHECKOUTS SPEEDY! AND BOXBOYS-WE TRY TO HAVE ON E FOR EVERY CHECKSTANO-ANO WE TRA IN THEM TO PUT PEACHES ON THE TOP, AND NOT UND ER A 10 POUND SACK OF POTATOES! RICHARD'S TOP OF THE GRA DE U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF THIS IS A MARVELOUS POT ROAST RUMP ROAST BONE JN TENDER AND DELICIOUS BARBECUED ON A WEBER RUMP ROAST BONELESS BRAISE IN BEER WITH LOTS OF ONIONS ROUND STEAK BONELESS HOW ABOUT A STEAK SAN DWICH) SWISS STEAK BONELESS THE FINEST , HICKORY SMOKED BAR-M BA.CON REG. OR THIC K SLICED SUCCULENT ROUND STEAK WITH A PARS LEY DRESSING Stuffed Round Steak DELIGHTFUL WITH WI LD RICE GENUINE EASTERN CAPONS WI TH A DHICATEl Y SEASONED ALMOND DRESSING Stuffed 1/2 Cornish Hens OUR OWN LIGHTLY SEASONED Oven Ready Meat Loaf U.S.D.A. PRIME BEEF WE ARE NOW TAKING ORDERS FOR HOME FREEZERS -~ ·- 1.29 LI. 9ku. 59eu. 79( LI. LIDO MARKET CENTER NEWPORT BLVO. AT THE ENTRANCE TO LI DO ISLE . DELICJlTE!!EI KR.AFT 12 01 . AMERICAN OR SWISS SINGLES 69~ AR DE N 8 01 • Low Fat Yogurt 4 FOR 89~ BUDDIGS SMOKED SLICED LUNCH MEATS 3 oz. 35~ REESE EXTRA LARGE All WHITE Asparagus Spears ~~.1.49 FROZEN FOOD! SUNKIST b 01. Orange juice SUN KIST ORANGE JUICE 12 oz. 39e BIROS EYE 35 01. Cool 'n Creamy PUDDINGS 69e OOWNYFLAKE 12 oz. Home Made Size Waffles 3 ,,. '1 GREEN GIANT IN BUTTER SAUCE Niblets Corn lO oz. 4 FOR $1 GR EEN GIANT I 0 DI. LEAF SPINACH IN IUTTER SAUCE 4 '" '1 GREEN GIANT KITCHEN SLICED 9 o" GREEN BEANS IN I UTTU SA UCf 4 ... '1 GREEN GIANT CREAM STYLE CORN 10 oz. 4 '" '1 HONEYSUCKLE WHITE & DARK Turkey Roast 1'" LB S. 2o69 HONEYSUCKLE All Wh ite Turk ey Roa st 21 oz. FLOWERIHOP Silk and Fabric Flowers I" •very hue, from vi11id to del icate pasteh. CLEARANCE 1/3 OFF TREAT YOURSELF TO A BOUQUET OF FRAGRANT, FRESH CUT FLOWERS. SEE tjOW IT PERKS UP THE HOOSE, ANO YJUR SPIRITS. 2.69 GROCERY ' l LB. I ' COFFEE i u. 21 oz. BETTY CROCKER ,, CAK E MIXES . _._.,... .. ,..,O!lt ,,..., • • k~RN 'S STRAWBERRY OR 'CHnRY PRESERVES: .... . ' 20 oz. KERN 'S ' . GRAPE JELLY 20 oz. GELATIN DES SERT MIX JELL-0 AISt rtecl floYt rs 6 OZ. Minute RICE 14 oz . ZEE BATHROOM TISSUE 4 ,,, PluM und to: Computer Meal Planning C.nter P.O. Box 1368, Dayton, Ohio 45401 59e 3 '" '1 49~ 29e 5 '" '1 3,.. 'I I'd lo•• 10 gt!• Wllole mon1~'1 Me11u11>11n11ed tor 111y f11"llJ. I ullde1111ftd 11'1 '"• 1114 I """ 111 1M Mlp I con tol. T~•n-'fO• tor ~•IJl111 -.,.,_, ii, MY Wf:fKLY FOOD IUDGfl IS: MY FAMILY AGE GAOUl'SAll[~ (Pl.EASE CHECK ONE. tPUl NUMBEA IN f.ACH txcLUDE LIDUOA, APPLICAILE OFIOUPI CIClARETIES, TOILETRIES.) ._NUllllEll 01' ADULTS _UNOEFI 120.DO WEEK -UO.DO TO 1)0.00 WEE If -1:!0.0!l TO 140.00 WEE 'I ~NUllllEll OF CH!LDllEN 2·S YEAl\S OLD -~NUllllE!ll OF CHILDREN ... YEA!llS D~O _NUllllEll OF CHILDREN 11).14 -1•0.DO TO l!0.00 W(Elf _OYEFI l!I0,00 WEEK YEAllS OLD _NUMIEllOFCH1LOMH 111-11 YEAASOLO C0Yfll. 11 I~ CONSIDf:llf.D AOULT) NAiii[: ____________ _ .-.ooRESS: ___________ _ GllOCfll'SNAM( ___ --------~ (Pion• •II~• ....... lo• d•h ... 111 L•..,11 OM, .. ,.,.,;1, HUNT 'S TOMATO PASTE ' oz. HUNT'S TOMATO SAUCE IS OZ. WESSON OIL 4B oz. HUNT'S TOMATO JUIC E 4, oz. 4 ,., 'I HUNT'S TOMATO KETCHUP lO OZ. 27e HUNT'S STEWED TOMATOES 141/, oz. 5 ,., '1 HUNT'S WHOLE PEELED TOMATOE S 5 ... '1 HUNT'S PORK AND BEANS ''oz. 7 '" '1 HUNT'S CHILI BEANS 151/J oz. 7 ••. '1 HUNT'S SMALL RED BEANS 15 1/i 01. 7,,. 'I BAKERY DEllGHTFUll STREUSEL Coffee Cake THE CHILDREN LOVE TH IS RAISIN BREAD JUST SWEET ENOUGH! Danish Tea Cake TOPPED WITH POPPY OR SESAME SEEDS. SEEDED DINNER ROLLS 6 FOR 31~ °'£MJ..,....C-MARK ET HOME & GIFT SHOP LIDO YACHT SHOP AN T HONY '~ SHOE REPAIR .FLOW ER SHOP CLEANERS 01EN DAil Y 9-7. SUN . 9.6 OPEN DAILY 9-6 OPEN DAILY, •-6 DAILY 9.5,30, SAl. q,5 OPEN DAil Y q.6 DAILY a,30.6, SAT. 1,30.5 ' I " I \ _, DAIL"\' "LOT Alpha Beta's 11111111 says: ., '' F11s6 Fr•it ••rl V1g1t•"" •t DISCOUNT PRICES! SW!H • f\J.VORFUL CASABAl8 MUONS ·~ NEW CROP CALIFORNIA SWUT • T~ • ITAIJAN PRUNE PLUMS 10 .... •AG 2 ias. • • SUNKIST VALENOAS WHOL~ PINEAPP,LE LEMONS & LIMES 6ISJH 49!. WATERMELONS WHOC( SWEET HONEYDEWS !BEETS & TURNIPS "''"" LARGE CUCUMBERS BELL PEP~ERS s:. S• 39!. 10:. 10:. 10:. 10:. FRESH CABBAGE "'W'o 0 ' 7• RADISHES & ONIONS ~:Z. 101 SALAD or COLE SLAW ~~J.10!.. BROWN ONIONS H~ ... 481 VALENCIA ORANGES •g•'<I 971 A LPHA 8ETA•l •h .OZ. BOX LUNCH BOX RAISINS 1 0 i 391 GOLD LABEl•Llf.i.OZ.l!AG 1-Ul.llAG ••. Jh INSTANT POTATOES 6i'1" TUT.A L O!SCOtHC~ fVlRY OAr II*( ...,. Ill Tl :StDllfS Dl$COUfH t H4Mil l'tlC[ BACK-TO-SCHOOL DISCOUNTS . l::llOBBY TIRES•POLO StAT•SAr tTY BRAKI: GJRLS' 6 ROYS~:!O-JNCK M0tl£ts 291f ROYCE UNION BICYCLES _...,. • l • OUNCI:1Al:ROSOT. • AITTl-Pl:RSPmANT • ll!:GV~.P!l_UNSCEHTW I" ARRIO UllA ORT .lM" . ~1Ltcll· ~I R-OlJtlct 80MU:•RE:G.,DJlY,OILY I" U-· .. BORN FREE SllAMPOO J.ar 7 COUt."i IN!CCTOfl BLAPts SCHIC~ PLAllNUM·P\US .l.W 1 n • ALPHA BETA n ........ ShlYl•c ~t 11 FREE ~tor SMlving Guide. ITEM 1"11•~ , .... ~ 1"141~ ll''J:H .. Slll lf SMllf SMtlf "'" $Oli'C STOllEl Sl.45 $515 Sl.ll IUS i:llllCl ~A B!!~ DISCOUJllT 1.89 2.84 3.79 3.32 Look tor our i~i!Ore .Mlf di~loys. : •••...... '"·~·..'K~···tci, ·• . . . ...-.: • TUYIL WllK ALPHA llU TMl lllAI Y WAT , , , .~ • 1060 SO. llllOO~~UIST : . ~--. f'tlone: • • 1\A.LlRTON, C ... 1.1,0ll:NIA :,• • t71i l •70-03)1 • MEDITERRANEAN FLY -CRUISE • ~·DA.'+'$ • llOUNO Till~ CAl.(O(INJA AJiWA'n 101 JET • •' 16HT • ON !OAllO 0.1111\ANJA• TWIN NltTH CA.lllN}. • IV.A.Tl ll-'fl1~. All Ml AU. TotiR ISCD'lTS "StGHTSoll"· • llC • TIAN!>lflS • LONDON " ITAl,."r • Gllfta: • CYH.\,1$ • " ISltlll(L • MALTA • MAJOl:(A, • All. f llOfw\ $64S.C:0 •••••••••••••••••••• IAtSll CUI • tOIOllflJl 99~ GLADS '"'"" TOTAL OISC(ll:NTS (VlRr liAY @ i LE'E'liii"'iis's"uf::29cm23 1 @ X:l!:£Nf.X BOUTIQUE:• 2·1'10U. PACK PAJSLt:Y OR COLOP 27' Bathroom TISSUE.3lt @1:~;ri:i"lialiitt1s~ 231 @F'aM1'LYliaP1111s~ 101 @ 100-COUNl' • GlAITT • DtCOMTtO 0 11 ASSOftttD GALA TOWELS .35t 271 ~._PAC.:• DtCOftATED 011 ASS011Tt0341 ~Zee Toilet Tissue ..Mt @z£i 1111i·i1'lls0 "NT -3-tC 211 RlfHll 8£1A • Jlfi-LB. 331 '--:-/ Split Top Bread ,.'i\j, l~~~s~:e, Braid 321 ALPHA BE IA • 6-PACl Bran Mullins vt;_;" Ill PH A Bl TR • 1-LA YtR • 7<1~ VAL. Choe. Fudge Cake llfml l [Tll • 6-PACJ.: • 36c VAL f.11gllsh Mullins 391 681 291 STO~I HOUlS Meft. tllru Prl.f'l t AM N t PM Set. aM S.. IOAM .. 7 PM YOOlll AtPHA BUA NEIGHDHOOD BUTCHER f'llt MM kt 111e Red °'lfOlll PROUDtY' OFFUS BUTClll'S PRIDE MEATS MIA TS YOU'LL IE PROUD TO SERVE l)t!COUfff P'IUC{D . QUALlfl & Solllsrt.tlt~ Gw.t!AIOUD . tl.S, G<IYUllM(lr(f »fSPlCllD ~ ,, USDA GRADE A USDA INSPECTED FRESH FROZEN fllE HlCllrl . Ml Rtcipe-of the Week FRESH FRYERS NEW ZEAL-"ND • GENUINE SPRIN G _lEG 'O LAMB OVEN fRliD CHICKEN WHOLE BODY CORNED BEEF BRISKET BLARNEY BRAN() FINE FOR ""NDWICHES 88~ CRISPRITE BACON W ltSON'S I -LB. PACKAGE ,66c FRESH GROUllD BEEF EOON:>PACK J.LBS. OR 01/ER GROUND 89' ROUND 1~ T:JJ ~, f1)rGt "l 1~ (,fF<T l,~T ss~ =,... .... .,.. ·-"'" I REGULAR . "'".""". £1.EC'T11!C.P£Jlr • 1-U. ci'..H ' ~~s ..11; 81i 3-1.B. CAN' • N:GUUJI OR tu:CTlllC·PERI:. ~ t .11 @ 11).0UNCE !Al\ rouw 111 MSTAlfl COITTE }.4! 4.otn1Ct_lAR·• l!llTANT corrtl: 112 FllEZE·DllED lllXlll JM-t1.out1ci: J.lll .lM" 1.111 © flj~".Wc'Aiolii"" IOX .-1k 12• ~RALSTON • \&-O'Z BOX .,... ~llA1$111 lllAM CHU Ml ff' • 7.0Z, BOX SUGAR CKtr ..a: .i3c KER6HI:Y • 111.1i.oz. PACXAGt lllll CNOCDLATE 441 , .CHIPS .lit © m't!i"~ilNr"" JAJI .-31; 9·UI . lWZ. BOX ·• LOW'$UDS ALPHA BETA 111 DETU8EIT l.Jt YAUit WAGNER'S " ~-OvtlCt 80'TTl.t OR.I.MOE PUNCH Oil GllAPEFlllllT .... LOW CAL DRMKS ..m 'IV ~32.0UNCt JAR •~VAWt &Oi ~RLPHR BETA M111"11M ~ALPHA BEHi • n.oz. JAi •11., ~SALAD DRESSINCi :!i3c w.Lut -.U USCCO • 4-0UNCE JAJI. SllRIMP COCKTAIL HEllRtW NATIONAL • l%·0UNCC PJ:G 111 MIDIU SALIMI .l.tS' t'fltC!OUS " 1-0UNCt Tut •ICOTTA CN!Ul J.U. TU:a .Mt Ar J.OUNCt PKG. sucro. NATl.M'L 52• DAFT SWISS CHEESE .HE I .OUNCE TUBE • COUNTr.Y ST't'Lt OR B~ • Rt rRIGl:M.ttD ftii PIUSIUllY ll$CUITS .ltt .- lllP"A BlTA • 'fa_GAUON 37# IWTATIDM Mill "' v .... Mt'# :zEN.»10 GEJllllll£ SPRllll LAIB RIB CHOPS 78• HORII EL IW:K UBlL BACON 1a:. I Alltll IUA IVTCBU'I PlllE.IUF AT LOW DISCOUNT· PRICES I ALASKA SALMON RED SOCKffi 98' fl«:SK FROZEN • HAtf Oft WHOlE T11 Tf • '11~r,('Jl\I~ l1!Qf lJAl Wllttl'S CRAPE JELLY 31-0Z. JAR ... , '"'" 53' c11t.1tr.t ' '" ROU·ND BONE 89c STEAK IN a.. BONELESS FAMILY STEAK 98• CHUCK STEAK BUDE CUT 59• BONELESS CLOD STEAK BONELESS RUMP ROAST l:Jl~L 01 '.LOll"'T'i fl'(AT OAT ~ !<!o?UHCE •OTTU: 21f ~DlL MONTE CATSUP .2fc 'DEL MONTE • 'llh CAN ~HALVES OR sucrn 21• ~ TELLOW CLING PEACNIS.J!ii 4.$.0Z. CA.NS • ( VARIETitS• '· l'ACK DEL MONTE a. PUDDING CUPS .l5C lig c D·tt· iifm mi SAU10M .kif' 111 ~ 11-0Z. PKG .• r11o?tN ·• NOftTON' 21 ' ~Macaroni l Cheesta @~·OUNCE BO'n'Lt PANCAtt & WAF rLE @iilR'osE'YEAwAlE.39C 31 1 6·0Z. CAN WAwt 20' 16-0't. CAif 6k 41• V.t.Ult. wmlrlcf:c'Riu 631 i:~0clg;r~l;$}p~p~kles m 29< CHI SYRUP ..4it 41' ~ J:Z.OUNC! JAftS ~tt'lli Wit~'' IAG'.tc 311 ©Prmt PAN'• 18-0%. TA!Ui 6MOOTH OR CRUNCHY lllilM . l'WIUT BUmR .. -- ~-tJtllfiffA'°°™ OR CfttJJlCHY PEAIUT IUTJtl :5lc VALUE 41' ~S.t.a. BAG lilii ~i'ILLSIUrt nouw .t1e @ U.J.OU!llCE BOX• 4 VJJUZ:T!ES i'ILLSIUllY IHSTIH MIX ,ca;.; IV.-0<. IOX 11 j JIFFY CORN llUFflN MIX .llf ~llllOGANClFF o C::!ftOOAJITON • C 1 N ll tC::t SUPM:M't' 11' LIPTON DINNERS .]JC ~·•OUN~•ox ~47' ~MINUTl •ICE .-' @ lmT CROCKTII 21-0Ulfct PACKAGt POTATO IUDS REDEEM FOOD STAMPS IN ANY -I.OS ANGEL ES, ORANGE COUNTY OR RIVERSIDE ALPHA BETA i.t.,tenlorl ...,llrtt""' Ill' Y-MolW't Ill•~• '811& T.-.: CollllttM O!o 111111'a..-•-• W• I.•-,,.,. Ill.,. Ta Ill•"-S."" To "--"•el C..Oll'O> COSTA MISA-l41 l. 17tll St. HUHTINeTON IL\CK-ft41 A4- HUNTINOTON llACH-11611 N .Meli St. ) . ---._ .. _~ -~-·~~-~-·-·~-~~ --·--·---I ---·-~ -----~----~ ------~-· FOUNTAIN IALUT-ttJt W.,._ SOVTH U.•UNA-IM21 I. C.. Nlw., LAGUNA Hllls-Jl S41 Cef1e ft le LAllM IRYINl-l lCMO c:,href, Ull""lty PM WtdntsdaJ, Srptr1nbtr '· 1CJ70 DAILY PILOT 43 Spanish, Italian Spices Enliven Menu for Lunch Box Set NEW YORK tUPI) -Some new ideas for tht school lynch box set take advantage of children's fondness {or pizza, 1paghetti with tomato sauce 1nd chill con· carne.' The following suggestions ~nd recipes are from test kitchens of the American Spice Trade Assn.. The Quaker Oats Co .• and Uie Tuna Research Foundation, representing Ameri can tuna canners. -Add a pinch of Italian sea soning and a dash of onion powder to egg salad for sandwiches. -Add :i4 teaspoon of Ita lian seasoning and a dash of either onion powder or garlic pov.·der to I can of condensed green pea soup; dilute with I soup can of milk for extra protein. and heat lo s er ~·ing temperature before pouring Into a vacuum b ottle preheated with'hot water, -Stir 1,~ teaspoon of chili powder into I can of f'Ondensed vegetable soup: add I soup can of either v.'ater or rnilk before healing it. - Make I can of conden sed cream of tomat o sou p into pizza soup : add I soup can of V.'8ler, I ~ teaspoon 0 f crumbled basil leaves and a dash of black pepp er. Meat and pack in a vacuum bottle. Tuck a packet or grated parmesan or cheddar cheese in the lunch box or bag to sprlnklc on the soup at mea 1 li nu•. -J\lake cheese.filled meat rolls in the morning and refrigerate them. covered, to serve as· an after school sna ck. Beal sor1ened cream cheese unt il fluffy with frccze·dried chives m1d powdered mustard. Spread on bologna or ham slices and roll lightly. Another high -protein snack consists of hard-cooked eggs, halved and spread w i t h n1ayonnaise spiced lo tasle with Ita lian season ing and onion or garlic powder. -Give chicken s a J a d sand1\•ich fi lling the flavor of baked. stuffed chicken - blend in ~~ teaspoon of poultry seasoning and onion or garlic pov.•der lo taste. -J\lake a cold version of a grilled cheese and bacon sand1vich. J\1 ix I cup or grated American cheese with enough cream to make it spread easily. Blend in v~ teaspoon of ginger, a dash of black pepper and crumbled cris p bac0',1 bits or imitation bacon bits sold in Teen Tri o 9005 l TEEN 10-16 -~ 1lf,..;..., 11fw.-r'-' Make your move to the midi with thi:; dazzling, all-star trio! Sf'1v slec1·cll'ss coat, runic or micro-mini dress. panls in nev.·sy, textured knits -one or 2-color combo. Printed Pa\lcrn 9005: NE\\' Teen Size& 10. 12. 14, 16. Sec pattern for yardages. SEVENTY·FI VE CENTS for each pattern -add 25 cents for each pattern for Air J\1ail and Special Hand Ii n g : otherwise third-class delive ry will take three weeks or more. Send to ~1arian 1'1artin, the DAIL V PILOT, 442 Pattern Dept., 232 \\'est 18!h St.. Ne>A· York. N.V. 10011. Pr i .1 1 NArtlE, ADDRESS with ZIP. SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. NEW fall • Winter Pattern Catalog. 114 dynamic designs. Free Pattern Coupon, 50 cents. INSTANT ·SEWING BOOK tew iodsy. wear tomorrow. $1. INSTANT f ASHION BOOK -Whal-to->A'car a n ll "' c r " . 1tcctssory , figure lips! Only II. spice departn1ent. -Bake blueberry oal,meal 1nufllns for breakfast and after-school snacb. S I f t togethar I cup of silted all- purpose flour, U3 cup or sugar, I tablespoon of baking powder and ~ teaspoon e11ch .of sail and cimtamon. Stir in I cup of oats quick or old- fas hioned uncooked. Add I beaten egg, I cup of 1nilk and 3 tablespoons of vegetable oll. Stir jus.t until dry ingredients are moistened. Fold in 1 ~ cup of blueberries, fre sh, frozen or ran n e d, drained. Fill greased muffin cups 2/3 full : sprinkle tops with sugar. Bake about 2Q minutes in preheated 425- degree oven. ~fakes 12. DID YOU KNOW ALIDITSON'S snL ONL·Y USDA CHOla OR ALBERTSON'S SUPREME QUALITY BEEf In ltte lood bll1!nes1. H 111 tt.tt wi1h -•I b..caii1• lfllt'• the way ro11 pl111 rour "'1 1 I 1. Fre1hM11 ··~' lk1•tt'l\ln•• the qual· lly of pori: 91141 ,OUHI)'. llul gr1de .,d .,lfll •· lemtirltl the' ••Hy o l onlr lhe "Ill -'" buy. -For a sWeet treat after butter and 3 cups of miniature cookie sheet. F'lll with scoops Add 1 (IOY. ounce) can or by,..·inch loar pan. Bake In school, serve lee cream in marshmallows. Pour over of ice crean1. Alakes l2 cones. condensed cre1un tJ( vegetable pt'Che:ited 350--degree oven '4(1.. cones made with peanut puffed rice, stirring until -Tuna loaf was designed soup, I teaspoon of onion 46 minutes, or until loaf i9 butter, puffed rice a n d evenly coated. With greased as a hot main dish lo be powder, I tablespoon of dried firm In center. Let stand fi ve marshmallows. hands press mixture onto served with tomato or tomato-parsley flukes, ~ teaspoon ofltinutea: ~ftetilre v· loaf Heats cups of puffed rice in bottom and sides or 12 greased cheese saucl'. Co ld leftovers salt, IJ teaspoon o~Y mm· sides preheated 350-degree o v e n custard cups. Chill. Using make a good sandwi ch filllng, mustard and l cup of fi '·~ t . . h . fe t and about 10 mh1ute1. Pour into spatula, gently remove cones accompanied ~y p I c k I e s , bread crumbs. Blend well . act • up (IA greased large bov.•I. P.felt from cups. The cones Cl'll be pickle relish. omato v.·edges Add 3 (IV.-o r-7 ounce) cans platter. Makes M main-dish together 113 l'ltp of butter or prepared a few hours ahead of Of cherry lo at oes. Beat ! of t1.tna in vege table oil. finelY. serYings or about 3'4 quarter· margarine. 'i cup ol peanut Ume and stored in rreeier on ef&S in a large mixi ng bowl. flaked. Spoon into a greased 8 inch slices if cut when cqld. iiiiiiiipiiiiiii~fiiii"P~~~,..,.F-ain-ii ARMOUR MIRA-CURE CH OICE-BLADE CHUCK SU CED CHOICE BONE IN CHOICE -BLADE BEEF POT ROUND SRAK BACON SRAK ROAST 49~. 65~ 85~ 45~. Choice lo11ele~s FAMILY STEAKS "';" a .. r ...... lb. 98i Choi<e lontle'' SWISS STEAK ,,, Thkk,,. ............ .lb. as i ...,,,., Cvt Cho•ce CHUCK ROAST .................. ,..73i Choice Bonel.u l SIRLOIN TIP ROAST ................ rb.1 9 Choice 6onelen Cr011 Rib CHUCK ROAST ................... 1b.98i Choke s...N-lonelfts ' RUMP ROAST of BEEF ... -....... .lb 89i Choice 8.oMlen Cub•n LEAN BEEF STEW ............... ,,. 89i foot l on; Plllfl!p Juicy HOT DOGS ....... __ ........ ,_ ........ 1b. 69i Ground Chuck f •. Icy Gree,,!ond FILLET of TURBOT .. . .. .. ... 1b. 56 i f resh Pon Reody SANDABS Nic1w11,,~,,1eo1 ,. .......... 1b. ]OS Holtman 8o1. Packa ge LINK SAUSAGE s.;,,,,., .... M11. fridoys 91eoded Jumbo 1 S• SHRIMP Go"•m., ..................... _,,lb BANANAS CHIQUITA GOLDE N RIPE BREAKFAST l 2oz. KING SIZE Strawberry Preserves LB . INSTANT 6 Pack COCA Ladies Choice 21b.Jar VEGETABLES ......... """' 6/1. COTTAGE CHEESE ... -_ ... _,JS< MARGARINE '"'""'"'"""' JO• TOMATO SAUCE .......... JO< PEANUT BUTTER ....... ,, •• 89< NESTLES QUIK -· . ·"'"' 79< TOWELS _ .. ,_ .................... 25' CRACKERS ................. ,.,,, 31< IM 0 .................. -......... JS< CUCUMBERS or PEPPERS ••• Ea. s~ POTATOES NO. l NEW CROP RUSSETS 10 LB. BAG 49~ RA0 l 1S1i'NS I 0 I 39~ APPLES 4 LBBAG REO 0 1 GOIDEN DELICIOUS ''49~ OR JONATHAN·NEW CROP / 1 "'"'''"1"~ BANQUET I BEER & LIQUOR 11 DELICATESSEN I COOK-IN BAG ITEMS ,1-------------.11•-------------'- CARMEL PECAN EA. Sweet 2/29~ Rolls ASSORTED ~cJ~ Cakes BOXED 6/39 COOKIES 3 oz 8 9 1 i FRENCH BREAD L1~:F 4I1 . CHEER nDE WITH GRAVY 4 50Z.100 BAGS ICE CREAM ;:::=, .. ·-.................... 59< POPSICLES :;.::;, ... ,,_,........... 4/1. STRAWBERRIES •··",,.,""• ............ 4/1. PUDDING ... .,,r,. '""' ,,,,.,, ....... , ............. 110 •• 39< POTATOES ~:.~-::·::"c~;.,il, J1o r ................ 39 < DINNERS ••-'••••·••· ........................ 45< HEALTH & BEAUTY MOS GROOM & CLEAN MEN'S HAIR DRESSING REG. 1.79 aa~ Jergen's lotion 78i U. S. D. A. FOOD STAMP GT. 821 GT. 82i COUPONS Gladly Accepted Corona del Mar -3049 Coast Hwy. La9una Beach-700 So. Coast Hwy. BEER '""""" 6/'I " •,b~o 1201 ,.,.,., ••••••••••• WIENERS .......... 48 All Mo1>! 1201 •. • .. "., ,,, , ••, C WINE ... ,... 'l " i oo w.,,. "'"" C~·~• 1/2 Col.,, ••• ,,, SHAKES '°''""''"'"' •• -............ 19< BEER '.>o•t 10.o•lu"h SJ!t 6 \6o1 c ........................ . CHEESE SPREAD ;::.:.~:,:;;;.,. 49< COLD DUCK , ........ ~ ........... 'I " BISCUITS ,.,~.,, •• ,. 9c '~'"''Moil a.. ................ . SCOTCH ~~"'.::. ............... 'S" BOLOGNA .......... _, 45 < ~.., .................. .. MARGARITA ........ _ .. , '2" (h,H o..d~, .. ~,h ••••• CHEESE '""''•"'-·•'•" 'l " 5.1>.W Am••,,nn,,,, .... ,, •• , ••• lb. VODKA .... ,,........ '10'' ti.if Go Na~,., ••• , .... ,,,,., CHEESE "•"M"d• l••I 93< ,.,..,d,,, .... ' ................ lb. LIGHT RUM w......... '3" Ce.id Coo-.• ~th , •• , ..... , DANISH SWIRLS'·'""''"""~-· 49 ' '"'"""''· O•a~'lo l 101 CHUN KING White King White King G.~~~I 59~ I f AN SPROUTS • 2 li lOl .IS fARGAIN DAY •• ~AT . PRICES GOOD SEPT. 9 THRU SEPT. 15 HuntlnCJtOn Beach -15511 So. Edwards Huntin9ton Beach-8911 Adams ,,:'-:'• ... ":: .. •." .,/ .::"1 .• , ! ("'!!~1 !1 ·'!"f,.'!~7'"!""'1T1J1 7 11 J""J~ ... •7 '-'J ~ :, ' ,~~~ .,.-~°!'?T:f t ·:J "!i ~ J '~., ~ ":' 1 ' "'! 1 J ,. j j CC 4 °¥ 4 24 I i ·I '\ ,o, ( 4 If I I 4 ( St I 4 I: ;gs cu 4 4$ 4 ? b I O e -· . . l DAILY PILOT Wtd11tf4M, Stpttmbtt 9, 1970 ' •• • . ) USDA Grade 'A' Whole Plump And Meaty Cup-up 35c Fryers lb. lb. }~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;: ______ .;:;._, ~F h F Th.ghs · """' "~ 63' ~ res ryer 1 . ·~... .. . Rib End Cut-Fro111 Tender And Meaty Eastern Grain-Fed Young Porkers Large Pork Chops .!:~~ i:'.\ Center Pork Chops "\-:::;'.!'" '" 79' .. 98' USDA CHOICE USDA CHOICE USDA CMlct htf Apl am T rillllllld To Pllk Perhctltn. Or CIH Steaks- '"'f"~" ·~.. ~ ... .. , ..... ~'t"".,, ¥"~ "'' ... f· ... WtdntMfay, Srpttmbtr '· 1 ~70 N PILOT ·ADVERTlSER J J USDA Choice htf Flavorful Blade Cuts. Ideal To Pot Roast, Dtliclous Eating. lb. ............................ ....---~! !"fresh Fryer Breast '"·:~~·,~·" ... 69' l: ~Fresh Fryer Wings ... :.~\:. •k ... 29' Fresh Pork Roast :.:~;~;;:-:. .. 49' {Veal Shoulder Chops 'i'l:o~ .. 79' Fresh Pork Spareribs ';: , .. 79' :·veal Sirloin Steak :.c::· • 99' Fresh Pork Steaks '!'.:";.": •. 79' Round Steaks , '":.="~ , .. Boneless Steaks \r...."~:::.:-= ... Sirloin nr. Steak ,:,-~~~ •... Top Slrlo n Steaks "1:1:" , Fillet Mignon .~~ ~=· .. 89' 1 ·Bone Roasts ,c:.;::· i::.."i'::. ... 69' 99' Beef Rump Roast ~Sh~ "t:.:: .. 89' '1" O·Bone Roasts F1:'ce:~e~u' 1•. 69' s1" Boneless Roasts .~::~:.;~ .•. 89' '2" Boneless Roasts •.:: ~""'..'.1 .. 99' Tomato Soup t lo,,;n Hou1t-J 11St Heilt & Strvt :. IDl~·Ol. r CID .. c : ~/).~ilt_O_l/_110· />rite! ;~;;;;;;=i:......-_;;;;;,,.._, ::-------~Medium 'AA' , . Fresh Eggs t Cream O' The CrO!I ~ Ont Dozei . . : lA~f 52' • Sin ;11. . , I-lllSl 57' • Sill •u.. . .__ _ __. c DISCOUNT NON-FOODS •rylcreem 1·~·· G:t111nr-,(>I' 1.... 94• p Hl!ltr lhot CtCHlm i: l•h llilacleans Toothpaste :,"~ :;:; 65' ~our after Hour .;:;::, :::: 11" u It H " "" '1" n1ur a er our ~!"• , : 12. an Jaseline'Hair Tonic '.:;:· 89' Pond's Cold Cream · : . • '!;:· 59' Stri·Dn Pads r .. ' Glade Air Freshener FANCY CALIFORNIA R!D OUICIOUS • Beech-Nut Baby Food Strained Fruth, Vt1d1bles Or Juicts • Oi1to11nl Pritt! Safeway Coffee c SAFEWAY LIQUOR BUYS! Bowling Green Bourbon ";:::·••411 Cold Brook Blead :':~~; '"" '3" Canadian Hill Whisky ";;.;:·• '4" Tartan Royal Scotch "·:,,:;" '4" SI I ' G" ,,.,,,.,,_., ·~· '3" II on s IR ·1~1 Pt!lr~l l!l~QI'~ '111~ Kavlana Vodka ~Proo/-for $32' A Cir.ii Orir>• flll11 U.S. NO. 1 QUALITY RUSSETS Grade ''AA'' Butter Chic-I Cat Food .f.ssorltd Viri!lies-So Nourishinf • 1%·0I. CH OittOllRI Pritt! c SAFEWAY SUPER SAVERS Gla4 Sandwich Bags :.':• 291 Bel-air Pizzas ,~:::::.M •:;;:· 891 Peanal Butter-crt~~~,D~'Cr:,~1 ·~::·· 59' Stewed Tomalm •:::.~~" •:;:" 2111 Mott's Apple Sauce ·~:: 311 DISCOUNT DELICATESSEN Coldbrook Margarine g:,,-;: ~;'~ 19' Cottage Cheese ·~~~:~: 1 ~:;:. 33' Lucerne Fruit Drinks ~;;; 45' Lucerne Orange Juice ... 49' .,, Cream Toppl.n• '""~-'"" '"'" 791 b lQ Tep Of11ert~! .iu L D . "'" •" 63' ucerne ressing '""" .... Empress Margarine i.::~ :;·:: 31' DISCOUNT BABY FOOD Similac Ready·to-Feed •:;:" 55' Ge be " St . d '"·~""' 9' r r s-ra1ne ''ti"!"'•°'._ ... - FLOUR AND OIL Harvest Blossom Flo1r •;:~ 39' Bisquick ~~·~~. •:;:--49' -lb. bag -lb. bag C 1 Wesson Salad Oil ,,~,, •:;:." 911 1 NuMlde Salad Oil •• ~ ·~~·· 451 . L T tce,s v; .. """'' s· L $1 · arge om.a , .. , .. ,, .. ,.,,... 1•1• .j ~ h11, rot~~ ~<t:ll' : J • o ~lftC1 V1lt nci11 8 ·lb, 98' : , u1ce rang es ... .,.:c.;;,,;:,.':.:·l bl' . c Hon eydews , -.~ :, .... 49 ' . P• I , .. ,, " ...... ~ -~··· 49' 1neapp e h1.n •u~ _:,.. •n • 'j p '"' '"' . 39' .. apayas l·n ."" ~·~· .... G ' '"I f' 29' rapes >tt +11-'UI [~1,• t•. P i••·•~l'ulplflt!1o • 19' runes .. "' "C'llto•nl G-Olfl'i' t•. • • Onions 11 ~.~~ 1 3 ;1 ,•; 29' Carrots ,,::~1 D~~.~ !~:::;: 10' Cucumbers ~~t,;~!' ·~· 19' P US fllo I lbr! 29 ' ears 1t11-'''' c-1, "· Sunfl1wer "'"""""'' .. 39' r...,..,~~I Bea:.ihl & colorfuil PLANT SALE! -. •C.ltn•C.C~ 39 • 1'1111 Wllkln 4-lllcll c . y,., (Hitt-hit POml lllS J~\~~.''!',.t"::w. :! 11'' llRDll IOSI .-:.:=,·:::,~: ... • 11" LIQlllt FUTIWH ~.:::;-.:::· = .. WIED I RID':.=:=t:'::i~ = ... 15n --______ l ____________ -I -------------- Tomato Juice Town Houst-full Rich flilW<. • 41-tL ~.~~.,ieners 1:;49c ~~~-~~ ... Bacon :: 93c HI Oi1to11nl) />ritl! ·'' ,. ' Longhorn Cheese Brown. Derby Beer Chtcldar-fl)I' Sntcks, Ci~PtS. or S./ldl'flcllts! • I~ ( ~FA;;::P::;::;:::{_) ~~- c ~~~ Or11ge Juice t:!nr:.~t ·~:!· 18• French Fries 1!'~irei~~~, ~-::.-22• B I ·r Cori .,.,, 1'"'" ...... 151 e ·II ""'" '""'" ''" Meat P•llS Mo~ .. ~. ~•I. Ch<I· •·n . 19' ff, Tutl.ty Or 1~,._ ,11 Fri .It p•llS kt-1ir-AJI V111tl1t1 •,·~~· 341 [ttep\ 81\lt b!Uf ,. Chocolate Cake ...... 99' ... Bel-air Waffles ::: ;~~.::, '•:: 141 Cake Mixes Busy Baker Crackers DISCOUNT BAKERY BUYS! Skylark Diel Bread .;r,:, ·~,-331 Fresh Frail Tarts ~i:: .... 331 P d C k "" "''•""' 331 018 I es &wttd-freUI , ... Fresh Bread ·;:;.~·r,;• ·~:.·· 25' B 'N Se"'e B ... •d "'" '"""' 3"' rowa • • ·~ ,.,.ti I ;rr PUDDINGS & GELATINS Jell-0 Gelatins ,,:,\':',!:: .. Jell·Well Gelatins ,:;:;:, Jell-0 Puddinrs w:::,~ Jell-0 1-2-3 A ~n~~~~1! DISCOUNT HOUSEHOLD Tide-XK Detergent i-: •:;~' 121 Su-Parb Detergent '~~":: •:;;~ 49' Cascade Detergent [~.\".'. •:;;~ 811 Brocade Liquid ,'!'~.~;~ •:;" 431 lln. Wrl&hl'' L1r1r Choice ot Assorted Va11tt1es--for L11ht, luscious T!nder Cake~! fl·IL 29c pt1. Mini " A11ul1r Crest Toothpaste Pool Chlorine ::~i '2' ~;·:1~· ""'·72' .... 2 Ill• 98' Gil, Orange Juice Apple Juice Ice Cream Lucerne Milk Trenwttl lr111d Rich in V1l.wr.1n C Ii Other M1Mrlls Or Clt11r-T1w11 H11st fre~h Squee1rd lrlllll s~te\ T1tt·Ril>ened App!ts. Ti~les Gru! P1rlr Prtdt l •1lllJ 9 "1sorlfd F!Jvor$. Cre1111Y· Smoot!! In Te1h11e & l.JS1e. Et1,.r1IM0 E1ritltttl 6 ..... 5•. 1111 7 •'· 34' ~ti. '""' 1• &111. 7- ldtil fOf Your Ba~. f« Coo~mg. ''" 16' Or CcHee. V1!am1n D Added. ... a s1 es DOUBLE BLUE CHIP ITAMPS EtUJteni ·~·ai11-Fed Pot•k -.i~Y •UaCllAA EXCEPT ON fLUID DAIRY PRODUCTS,, ALCOHOUC BEVERAGES lo TOIACCu COUPON GOOD SEPT. 10 thrv 13 ASK FOR YOUR FREE WEEKLY SAVER BOOK SIXmWEEK SAVER COUPONS -~ . 25c OFF ONOMl!"'rlNDl .. U!e-mullAN H co••••a•••o•••• 1 A0\1£HT\.ltOU9 DAYS-Ii ri:cmNG NIGHTS Jn lMDI OM AIR CANADA "° ".llCNAlf WCASMl'I' •M llt 1 .... _ll\Nl411r ... l•11 ... M• star at a lulluriou5 hotel Jl(Gl51l• TflO&YI ' CrT c:tml'lnt Dl.1.t.11.t AT AJf'I THlllJTIMAJIT WIN A • NO ftOIT FREEZER FULL Of FOOD!. 20 TO II etVDI AWAY llr•illl~r f'I"_.., NOTHING JO IUY, MMNCM Will •E MOlftfl. ADULTS OMI.,. .411y Tliri/ri_, IHl.l .... I W&L I( Al.IC.. a $lR. I, IW'T. 11 AMO OCT. 7 OR FAMILY PAK $AV!; 9S WAFER CHOPS r:~i.,, lb. LOIN IND 7 PORK CHOPS...... 91b. I PSORKUSAUSAGE .491b. CENTER CUT RIB END SAVE 34c 18, c LB. LOIN or RIB CHOPS ••••••.........•. 85~ . U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH FROZEN HEW ZEALAND LEG 0' LAMB I I I I I I I I WHOLE LEG SHANK REMOVED 4.5 LBS. POPP'( BRAND GRADE 'A' TURKEY ROLL PRE-SEASONED IONELESS I I I I I 98~a. ~~ ! I I c I I La. I COUNTRY STYLE SPARERIBS LEAH MIAT'f 69:.. :~ LOIN END PORK ROAST c 3·LBS. AVG. WT. I BllEA.Kt'AST Sl'ECIAUi I lUIR QU~llTY I I SLICED VAC PACK I 6~. I I BACON I I Foods I Delicatessen Treua --Frozet1 Savitig Sale--, SEA FOOD SPECIALS JACK SUCED c KRA" MONTEREY 9 CHEESE •••• !"!\ •••• 4 , 6-0Z. JANE ANDERSON DRESSINGS· 5, BUU CHEESE 16-0z. .c 1000 ISLAND ••••• !'!; •· •• • JANE ANOft SON Ot fSSING •OQUIPORT • • •. • • • 1~ 89c CAKES & COFFEE CAKES SARA LEE 9'1.z TO 1'-0Z. PKGS. (EXCEPT CHEESE CAKE) I flfSH flOll!H l.OAOltlL PEI 98• I IWOlDrllM ITIAIC.l.-·-___;...,.,.,,.,_,,,,_ LI. I 'NISH JtLl!TS OP tfl 'I" I DOVll IOLI.---.. -·····--Lt. C ! ::~~'~;::':_ ...... --·-·-··· .. ··--····---~~as• 1 t 'ROZEN MEAT SPECIALS I MIS. PllDA'l"S l·ll. •1 n I OOUlMn IMllMP ....................................... , PICG. I ~s. FllDAY'S i-0z. 98• IA. I OOURMIT IMllMP ............................ -......... PKG. I CAINATION PllCH Ol 1·1.1. 69• 1 coo ru.1n1 ........ ,_._.... .. ........ _.. h;G." OH BOY-ENCHILADA, BEEF TACO or BEEF TACO ·ENTREES I OOOTDM• "'°"79• FARMER JOHN-UVER & IACON ot 29 LIVER CHUBS •••• ~~· · .~. MEXICAN DINNERS 3 10.1••11· =~~".:~: ---·-·-......... -.:;. 5' 9• . . oz. . I ..... flLUTL---.... ----···-·-.......... PKG. l I UrtlT JllfD .. 01. 98< IASCCCi> HJI, JAR OH lat-IAUSAOI, "'"llOHt, CHIUI I Cll.U CMHKll CUT, tATll 10TS -SAY!~ I MAUIUT JILUTI-... --... ---PKG. BAG·O·P· 1• ... A ...... ,. •~·.a_ · 89c 1 GOLDIN PRIU. •6<>L 28c GO«TOM• ,..,, -'" 1111• .. G. ...I IULLOPClll----·--·-"o:98• llC!SWnT ... V ... ma-SAVI>• I l0U>'1$T 8 1"= ·9a• SNACK BIT HlnlNG Y G S -. 39c1 ·• JiTIAltS I DABLI ......... AC< -1 U.S.D.A. GRADE 'A' MOUNTAtHAIRf BRAND OOWITAMm<AH-SVAllf!KS-S>.VEI< I PRllH FROZEN 90IABTA-1f.Oi. PlO.-IAYllc BllP TACOS ............ 47c FISHEi, 6-0Z. PKG. ·39c PARTY SLICES CHIEIE •.... . SHRIMP ,~z. DINNIRS .......... '":.'~47!: ROASTING 4~ SWANSON'S All VAl1£Tl!S-SAVf 7t 12 t• 17-01.Pll:OS. OH IOT IAKID-WITH CHffSE OR CHM$ 12·0 L 35 c I CHICKEN A·6 LBS. . 3·COURSI DINNIR ••• 72!. POTATOES SAVE2< .... .... WRAPPED .... IMmNGLY 3 •1 COCKTAIL ••••• •.. • . JARs Oil.ANDO 39 llltDS !YE P'llDDINOS-s.AVI 4c JOHNSTON COCONUT, UMOM-SAVI 12c i QUAIL-2 1 I TIN I OC COOL 'N CRIAMY~-::t' 75! ICLAIR PIES ..... :;::,: 77! PINEAPPLE JUICE.. . ARTICHOKE 6-oz. C HIARTSo••••••••••G~•• · llolllATION IC! MIUC FUNFORALL JANI ANDERSON ll!GULAI or SANDWICH I SLICED 'BREAD l ~ M.J.B. COFFEE 1-lB. HALF GAL CTN. 37c I I I I I I I I I I LOAF WHITE or WHEAT 25c 1-;~~;;~;-1 I a.&eS ·1 I oo 19C I I •• I 1 ~:'rt 79c ...• -'Liquor Dept. Specials WOlfSCHMIDT ANCIENT AGE VODKA BOURBON 80 PROOF HALF ··10'' GALLON HALF '8'' GALLON •vA11mu-toz.CAH 99• CLUa COCKTAILS-".. oa. A BEER FOR EVERY TASTE I EEt 4-PACK fl29 ll!Et '-'ACK fll9 aUICN UVUlAH ··-··-•·••• .. ••-••· '6-:0L CANS HAMMI DIAFT'----lS-OL CANS IEEI 6-PACll: fl11 IEEI _,, ... OLrACICN.11.1. flOS P.Ulf -· 12-0Z. CANS FAUTAIF---- :~s lrG.---·---t~~A~ flM :::,.. ______ 12!ii'cc:m '229 Finest Freslwst Garden Foods---1 . LB. BAG DlSCOlJNT SCHOOL NEEDS SUNl1!TVAl!NCIA FILLWERC 0PAPER DICTiONARY OR4 NGES •••••• 15C I THICK MEAT BANANA • C La.! SQUASH•••••••• IL•. Compare · 300CT. PKG. OTHfaS !:ltAIOC 1 y..41. PUSnt" ILMIR'S eLUI ""--.2t• ltO.. ltT.H •• lU"l -17·0l. YOI HAIR S•RAY """'2" ·c iiEiWAllAN PINEAPPLES •••• 49.:. . . c IEG.i).25 llG. 9gc Compare OTHllS DISCOUN'I' CHAIGE n lCE lfO.,...,,CMY-"t«. $123 ..... 1.211• ···"···· 4.).0l, AflOIOl 79 c ARRID IX •Y-....... •1 00 JUICYlUSCIOUS 25c I TANGYSPICYFIAVOI I 5c BOSC PEARS.. u.! LIMES........... IA. WASHINGTON STATE-GOLDEN DELICIOUS pp c 5 ...... . Prices Effective Thursday lhru Monday, Sepl. 10, 11, 12 , 13 2701 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA e 13922 BROOKHURST, GARDEN GROVE e 1308 W. EDINGER, SANTA ANA 5858 WARNER, HUNTINGTON BEACH e 23811 EL TORO, EL TORO I I ' ' I (f DAILY l'i.OT '\ ~. · " ~ "' ·! ~·~ Z 1r 1'. ~---:~ ~. ft ~ l -!l 1t"'(1 { . .'f ~:~ ' ~(~TT~r:~n~n~r'!'lr'l'l""Tt":T·1"T1Tf·Tt 'rl ~'.1'"1r7!"11""'\~t~=.-rt-r;"T1"1'"j T1 Tt ""4 1 ..... !"":"":UP'lj'"''""'l..,'·""i ""'' "'"f'""'l· 'l"i' .. ' _, """!"'! 4-•·-~z:..,4 ""\-,!"'"•-• ""'""' ""'""PI-S"'"::- -Wftll'lf'Sd17, Stpltlllbff '· 1C>70 . PICNIC STYU SHOULDER PORK ROAST FRUH ~TON CORN·FID PORK . . . ~-c\ lb. BREAKFAST SPECIALS r r ( SUCED IACOI CEDAR FARMS -........................................ _ .. , ta. 69 CllSPllTE IACOI WllSOH ................ ········· .................... ta. 69 POii L•l.SAUSAriE HOffMAH PO<K 8-01. PKG ..................... 33' BACK TO SCHOOL VALUES---~ FILLER PAPER COLLEGE RULE OR WIDE , & TYPING f JOO.CT. PKG. ALL-111-0IE l•DERS S 199 VARSITY ··-······················· .. ··-·································· .. EACH LllCI 101 llTS 'If $239 WITH THERMOS -···-······-........................................ EACH --tD Doiity Sptciafs! --...,. -ICE CREAM ..,. /. ~·: "~ ARDEN HI QUALITY . ~··-··' \ RATURING ~,\ ~ •• NfWCOUNTRYCOUSINFLAVOR .......... ~ \~;-t:, ...... ~ 1 i -:~. 2 BUTTER ARDEN OR MA YFRESH FIRST QUAUTY 79c GRADE AA l ·L!I. PKG. i .... . . ROASTS : ~I ROASTS U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR MAYFAIR BLUE RIBBON STEER BEEF BONELESS SHOULDER CLOD LEAN .PORK ~ STEAKS FROM EASTON CORN-FED PORK LEAN& TENDER 75~ 'l • J U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR~ Yl'AIR i BLUE RIBBON STEU BEEF ~ NO BONES-ALL CENTER CUTS "' , .. LEAN BEEF t SHORT RIBS U.S.D.A. OIOIQOR MAYJAJI ILUI llllON EXCELLENT 4 7c BAR~UING Ii. PILLSBURY FLOUR All PURPOSES-LB. 8AG ........ -•• M ................ .. QUAKER OATS REG. ORQUICK 42-0Z. PKG.-···-·-.. ·----··· FESTIVAL · PRESERVES BREAD 1-LB. LOAF .. ~· YOURCHOICE 2-LB.JAR 59c PINEAPflll~ANtC01', . APllCOT STaAWIBIY' AND PEACH • ~1~u~ 63' ,--.-IOYAUPAPfl ---.._ PIODUCT V llUES TOILET TISSUE 2·1t0l~ PICG. FACIAL TISSUE "!~: DlllER IAPKllS ~f. i ~~rcE 25c JUMBO TOWELS 29' PRINT ROLL ........................ _ ' TOP SIRLO STEAKS ··:::701MSFA,IRI~ '· nNDn .~ WASTE Fifi _, CORN CHIPS . ~~i:g 6 9"" LUNCH ' PK. ·~· ... PANCAKE MIX ~i PIUS IURY 5 5 _::, HUNGRY JACK ~! ll-OZ. PKG. ; -----mIDJlair fruit5 & Vcgctab&s--------. -----..... DELICIOUS CASABA . APPLES MELONS GOLDEN EXTRA FANCY WASHINGTON STATE lbs. SWEET AND JUICY VINE RIPENED lb. LONGGRUN I 0 CUCUMBERS C FRESH CRISP -·-·-.. •••••••••··············•··· EACH ~;!!.~.~~O• U m m lb.7 c : ;r;~~~... .3~2sc ~-,,-' --~-""'.' ... "".., • •l~ --~;.-;;"~""r,, .... "l .... ,.o ... -•.o:--...::c!'•.i~"""""'"'°'""'""'='·"""'·""""',...",...· ""'· •~"''"'""·""·~·-·""'· """ '""'· n:"\..~ ... -rw:•=--<, -.., """""""'• """"•""'•"""""''l"P'7:> • .,,., "'· """"-.-~· .. ~ Wld""41Y, Stptrmbtf 9, 1970 DAILY PILO T 47 I 'GROUND~ ·CHUCK L FRESH, TASTY EXTRA LEAN FINEST IN GROUND MEAT STEWING BEEF U.5.D.A. CHOICE OR MAYFAIR ILUE RIBBON ALL LEAN BEEF CUBES NO WASTE 89~ . 7~5 1 APPLE JUICE ilADEAA MA YFRESH QT. SIZE 29c PANTY HOSE BREVONI 69C STRETCH EACH m!rnfair Froz:cn. Food..--- 1 ORANGE JUICE " \ TREESWEET i 1\ FROZEN 5 $ ,,}J U;?:~ .. 39< 4& 6-0Z. CAN for ~l'.!!Jna~~AF!~~s . .. .. 39' ~~-.~~!~-~~~--------------·-79' ·EAKS U.S.D.A. OIOICE OR LEA~UE RllBON STEE~:fflR . •TENDER, WEU TRIMMED U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR MAYFAIR ILUE llllOI sna IElf ... ROASTS LEAN, TENDER ........................................... __ 18 .... BOlllLESS CHUCK STEAKS CENTER CUT _ ........... LI .. .. BOlllLESS FAMILY STEAKS LEAN, TASTY ............ LI. 91' BOlllLESS ROUND STEAK FULL cuT ....................... La.' I" SIRLOIN nP STEAK &ONElfSS ....... _ .......... "--... -...... La .• , •• BOlllLUS ROUND STEAKS rOP OR sonOM __ La. •1 11 WATERMELON RUMP ROAST __ , .................... La.11" BOlllLESS ROUND ROAST TOPOR sonOM ........ u . •1 1• mIDJlliir Dtfieat«scn .i....--..LUNCHEON MEATS t~ MA YFRESH 6-0Z. PKG . ~ AUMEAT BOLOGNA . TASTY PICICLE, AND OLIVE LOAF e SMOKED !!~!~~CAN ......................... 5269 PILLSBURY BISCUITS =~i.~~TTERM"" ................... 6149' SWISS CHEESE :~~;~~~~ .. G. ......... .• 79' PILLSBURY SWIRLS ~'.:;':;,~~::'2i!w .......... 59' DEL MONTE CATSUP 14 •1-....... 6/$1.00 CHEF BOY-AR-DEE FROZEN PIZZA 14 ... 49¢ MAXIM FREEZE DRIED COFFEE •••• $1.29 ' 175 E. 17th ST., COST A MESA .. L t---mIDJfair Liquor-----... ZAROFSKY VODKA 10-PROOF . s3 2 FIFTH e IMPORTED SCOTCH =~'.~ ...... '"" 14.49 WHISKEY ::.~~;~~~----· .. -· '"'" 13.79 ROYAL OCCASION GIN ~~~ ............. 00 ... 14.39 CALIF. BRANDY =~c""~·-·-·--·"''""'"'oum 14.S9 VELVET CLOW BEER :J~i~:·• """c"' 13.39 ~ VAWABLE COUPON " . , " ' ' ! WITH THtS COIJPOH llMIT l COUl'ON ( PeR ADULT CUSTOMElt GOOOSEPT. IO.SEPT.16 CHAMP 7-PK. CTN. ~ VAWABLI COUPON WmtnttSCOWON UMff 1 COUPON l'O: ADULT CUSTOM.Ell: • GOOQ SEPT. 10.SEPT. 16 'L - ~ VAWABlE COUPON MAYFRESH 24-0Z. BOTTLE I I ~ ~ , ~ ' ~ --' ~ ~ • I .. ·-' • \ I " 1 • • ' I -: '' ••• "'If" "'1('""(""'1"1 ]-''i1~1~ .... ,'!.4'i'l j 1 t~•.44J c:;;:qq sict •-t4¥114 -$5@$4))6. ZQ .Q .i • IWSL -~ :tr .;.-?,>t <i (" •·'-'<1: ••• ., ........... ,-( , ••••.• , •••. ,.4 , Perfect Lasagna Dishes Lul,pa ii still a favorite with many, ao \\'hy not plar. your nut dinner party around it? The tasty entree can be prepared ahead, and a salad is really all the last minute preparation you need do. And lasapa is the perfect choice for large groups. To limptHy preparation and serving, dish~ . r have been introduced lh4t:ll!'! ~ . Jasagn1. They come In two sizes, have removable chrome handl• to facilltale oven-to- lable use, and are available in vibrant blue, orange or avo- cado green. Here's a 5Ul't-fire lasagna recipe: LASAGNA 2 cans Italian-style peeled tomatoes (No. 21h) 4 cane tomato sauce a oi. u .) 2 teaspoons salt 3 teaspoons dried or<gano 2 teallpoons onion salt 2 cups minced Qnk>IW 2 minced cloves garlic J/J cup OUve oil~ 2 II>. ground beef 2 teaspoons monosodlum C gJutamate · 2 lwJlOO'l' s;k.:~ . _; .. ~4 pound lasagni ftOodles : 2 r.blesJ>004~ 9jl .. ~ pounds Rlcotta· cheeSe 1/J PoUnds thinly sliced or crumbled Mozi are Ila cheese Ii pound grated Pannesan cheese In a large saucepan combine the tomatoes, sauce, salt, oregano and onion salt. Saute minced onions and garlic uncovered in the olive oil WJtil golden. Add to the simmering mixture lhe ground beef, monoeod.ium glutamate and • ·, , salt. and cook just until the , '1 meat turns plnk. Add the meat :~,. mixture to the tomato sa*f.i and simmer another 2lf.t hl?~S. Cook the lasagna n®illN according to pact••'te · diredloos: add 2 tabl~ " cooking oil to the wtl<f1. l'tJr , occaslonaily, d r al·a,. .and , &eparate noodles. P;•fl•i:t • oven lo 350 dt=~ ff;j;, .~ ,· ;: Now, using U. ~lrlt!, 16 x 1014 x 2~ • .,. or two of lhe mn::.tt ~ ''l!f, x214 dishe!, put41 , ~er,of sauce .in the ' ~ ' 1·ttien' a cri=niala~~~-Jo~ noodlea and t ·!il:Pi!' .. dleese. Repeat thi> · ' · '. twice. · The final · ' '.oo.Jd " • be <ove ·""""' • ,,.,... ,. ' ~f"T"..:, ' ·!' ?.'7f -..;. sauce ,. :~t " , , <;. Pann~ ~.t: / Bake f, r~fi9 min\ltes. Let I ·!Mid '°' 10 or IS minuta; '. _ .. ' j:U~ "\{ ...... l-' ' . ' ~ ., .. ' '~h ~~¢te '\.)<... yt , •• ·~· j. • "I !' l , .. _r.w·; ·:~g':a~ r· : ' .. , ' • f r · .~, .. . . .. ~r~·~ .... ;-1~.~.. . Nut ritious For a dellgh ;l(~l refreshment serve Chocoll&e. Nut Bars along with orange- ade on your patio tonight. · Otherwise , save the delicious taste treats for the children's post lunch nutrition. CHOCOLATE NUT BARS 1 cup (2 one~uarter pound sticks ) butler I cup firmly packed light brown sugar l te~spoon vanilla I large or extra-large egg 2 cups flow-, stir to aerate before measuring 1 package (6 ounces or 1 c up ) se mi-sweet chocolate pieces ~~ cup chopped (medium- coarse) walnuts Butter a !3 by 9 by 2 inch baking pan. In a large mixing bowl cream the butler, brown sugar and vanilla: thoroughly beat In eq . Gradually stir in flour until combined. With a small metal 1patula spread in a prepared pan. Bake in a pl'eheated 350-degree oven for 2S minutel. Remove from oven: at once sprinkle with the chocolate; allow to melt -this takes about J mfnutea; spread evenly; sprinkle with w&lnuts, JlghUy in-Jiii them down. Cool at room temperature until cbocolate sets or chill to harden ebocolate. cut int.o ban and ...,... with a amall metal spatula. Slore, UghUy covered, in a cool place or tn relrJcerator. l -..... S.01111111Jr 9, 1llQ WW"'if'•,s,eumbtr 9, 19/0 Ill . Pfl~T:AJ>VEATISp! .J() r P•ICIS lfflCTIYI lHURS. thlV SUN., SIPT.10, II, 12, 1i, 1970 I COUPON DOUBLE BLUI CHIP •TAMPS Wl'hll AllY POOD PURCHASI bcludll\I fluid Miik, Tobacco. llquot ONE COUPON PU CUSTOMER VAllD SEPT. 10 thrU 13, 1970 ONELESS CHUC CORNED BEEF HAM SLICES :": -ROAST . u.s.D.A. · CHOICl·Bllf 89.:. McCOY'S POINT CUT FLAT CUT tar. 89.:. CENTER CUT 98~.- DELICATESSEN POOD GIANT SUCID .BOLOGNA ~~~::J9c f000 GIANT SLICED AMERICAN PA$TEURtzED PROCESS CHEESE Ol' VIRGINIA CHIPPED MEATS ~~49c 3 ~.:$1 IEEf-HAM-COIHED IEEF-WHITE1U1Kff 5·LB. BAG WITH COUPON BACK-TO-SCHOOL SALE LIQUOR SPECIALS VINYL LUNCH KIT TH:=.,_ s119 EARLY TIMES .... BOTILE JERGENS LOTION · STRAIGHT KINTUCKT •OURBON WHISKY -~ PK&. n,_"'"'~ OFS INCL MFG. 59c CENTS OFF Ercedrin 9.5-0ZS. 7 5 C SAVI 15c MICRIN '~ ,( ANTISEPTIC . -~ MOUTHWASH BROWN l tENOER GARDEN FRESH. BOTILE OF 100 M',C;;;N . 12-0Z. SIZE : CRISP CELERY ":~~AY s 119 -~-~~l 99c ONIONS ! HAWAIIAN NECTAR SWEET -.1 JUO \'jl•M• •1•• OIPUI~ . . . fa'9•10' ,,a11c, ea. ,, .. 49c si1• ea. ·.RICEAN IOllOlL .• 20cRE K u.s. NO. I 5 ! PINEAPPLE ALL c t LARGE BROWN STEAK 39 ARANDAS E5XT4uv1~':r.":7RA"9' N·;~!~"o~r,9°0 4c PURPOSE 111.! '9\USHROOMS v.-ib. c Margarita Cocktail ~!!!~20c~-:.!~~l__S~A~YILl2~k~!!::!__:~~~ ~~~~~~~!!!!!!!~~~.:...~~~~~~~~~~ I SANKA COFFEE 1-lb. ton ...... $1.0S 2-lb. ton .... ., $2.09 , FRffl!. ORllD INSTANT 8-oz. jar ....... $2.07 Heinz Plain or Hickory BBQ Sauce, 18-oz. Bottle •••.•.•...••.•... 45c Nu Soft Fabric Rinse , 1h Gollon .................................. ~.$1 .59 Kroft Miracle Whipped Margarine. 1-lb. •• : ...................... ~7c Kleenex Towels, Decoroted, Jumbo ..•. :-.......................... 37c Wagn er Fruil Drinks, Gropefrvit or Orange, 54 -oz. ............ 47c Hormel Chili con Corne, No Beons, 151h-oz. : .................... 61~ CHALLENGE DRY MILK 12·QI, 75 qt. $]09 $215 Hormel Chili con Come, With Beons, 15Y2"oZ. ...................... 45c Howoiion Punch, Red, Lemon Pink or Apple Red. 46·oz. •••.••.••.. 39c MJB flavored Rice Mixes, Chicken Flavor or Beef Flavor, 7-oz .•. 39c Finish Dishwasher Detergent, 33-oz. ................................. 67c Pillsbury Hungry Jock Butter Tostin' Cinnamon Rolls, 11 Y2·0L 49c Non Dairy Coffee Creamer PREAM. 20·oz. .......................... 77c PILLSBURY. LAYER CAKE MIXES A~U4\KI • Yl!lOW (ll11fQ1Al1 llli'l!A. reQ. \lMllll • l'>"llt pk;_ ~"'1AllA ~l•llD.V 39 W'l~ t ~!kY. ~M!lr C OOVllU OUIC~ Ot~1I~ ltli')l'I 2aoo Harbor Blvd. at Wilson St.. Harbor Shopping (;enter, C:osta Mesa ---·----·-----~~.~·~.'--rt"'--_-, .. --,.. . ,,.~ ....... -,..,---..-~.~ ..... ~1·-:---:.-7~ .. -.i -:-·-~~.:-;;.. ... . . ,....,.._.,..,,~i'-"7!>-;c-,...,,·-,, r-i.~~ ".'~'-'*'.'i"';c:;-', '· ••. ..-.•, '"!~~:~""'!'. -;; • ""y:ii-~~7'7•"li<f'~;,,-µ-.. ;q;o'!'ii";"~~ r .. ' -~Lor:~DVE'"1S!1t N WtdntSdiy: Stpt.,..;,~,# 1'7G ~ .. , ~ ... ~ ••. 1~'.' :Mr.\tb • • USD-0 • • . . • ·•·· \ , You 'll find it pays to 're.member us. ·we're FAD. The Foocl At Discount m_arket. And the nice thing.abo1;1t· FAO•is,. we ., • • r . . ,. "' ~ ', I ' .. , . , . : " . ' . . . . , .. discount prices/not quality. So you get all your favorite, brand-name foods .•• but at the lowest pric.es.yo.u1li!ind~ What'.s the gimmick? That's just it. Th~re isn't any. No gimmicks, no stamps, no games, Noth,ing but honest·t~~oodness discounts. And the kind of courteous service you won't forget. Because you save on every item you buy .... what you save at FAD is anything-but peanuts. ... . . WCTA AllA-2120,SO.·•l&.r·W- COSTA MISA-22101HAllOR II.YD.• ..... • /f I t ,, • • • • ·'· • ' ' .. , ' J . .. .. • • "~ ..,~,.....,....-"'t",,,, ',' . . . , ~ . . . . . . . . . . ' ~ 'e • •• " \'i ~'i\(P , .< "S' ·' '·'' '~' a +;.ems e,: s (! 1 c I I ,s .. DAILY >!Lor w~. Stptembtr 9, 1970 Rule of Thum_b for Refreezing Based on Common Sense DEAR NAN: l\tany of our lhe peetin, the whole thing is a tha:t tong after I have gone to land in heaven or I h c and. while I an1 at ii, sorne nearly every day since lben. nlmonds, 12 chopped dritd \VICKRE, ST. PAUL, t.lJNN. frleads and 1 havt ruo into tbt lot shorter, ea!ler and more "live with the angels" (a othl'r place but , whicheve.r, corn cob syrup for the Spread 4 cups or uu~ked apricot halves, l c up What a mar v e Io us problem of what not to foolproof. One nice th ine about phrose \.\'e use in our family) l'l! bet someone will be at the pancakes. That will niake quick-type rolled oats 00 1 confectioners sugar and 1 concoction! It would make refreeze when our frteit:rl corncob jelly is tbat it can be someone. somewhere, w 11 l g11:le to greet me Y!'ith ''Nan heaven or any old location , baking sheet. .Bake SO mlnute1 tablespoon grated orange peel just as fin e 3 supper dish have 1one off and most of the made just about any time ot turn up a yellowed clipping of Wile'y'! Fine, wt'!'ve been at Z5CI degrtti. Cool. foptional). Mix well. seal in 'A'he n you don't care for a product~ bave l ha" e d the year you f<l.O find the cobs, one of my columns and waiting for you! Now here is DEAfl .NAN: Abeul a yeaf ln a large bowl mix the glass jars and refrigerate. heavier meal and I~ would be completely. bu! many people feel that tbe wonder where it orlginatctl. something we've a I w a Y s ago l •tarted making an toasted oat.&. l).i cup each of Serve just like packaged so handy for thr Jive-aloners \\le know meats can be sooner in t.he season you gel just as 1 wonder abo ut th9se r wanted to know -. '' ltigh t Amerleaniitd ver~lioa of a plain wheat ger1n an 9 cereal, pouring on milk or who are so often inclined te> rooked and refrozen bul what them the better. The Ila vor find tucked between thf pa ges away quic1c l will find mys'elf Swiss "muesli." My husband sweetened wheat germ , lf.z cup cream. For extra flavor and skimp on nutrition because about lhings like green "'ill be more full. of very old books. Of oourse I on K.P. I "'ill promptly make likes il so much be bas eaten light or dark raisins, ''1 to ~~ nutrition add your favorite they feel it is tpo much troub!!! peppers and other vegetables. l-....::"c..'::':::m::•:::li::.m:::•.:.s .::°':='::":::":...::10:...::'".::'c__:::•m:::....::"'::t...:;su::.r.:.e _w.ch.ce:::th.::•.;.r_tc__~c..'il_t _u_,_p_a _b_a_tc_h_or_c_or_n_co_b~je_ll_,_Y __ u_r_or_b_re_a_kl_•_•I--"( a_o_d-'s'-na:::c::k::•.;.I --'':::"!:.P_,,_gr:.:oo:::::nd:.._-'peC.::::c::an:::sc___:'.:.'-'::·l::ic::cd::_:l::re:::s::.h _.:f,::r•::i::.l. ..:M:::::A::R::IL::;Y:.:N.:...__.:I::.• ::'":::::k.:lo::r..!j!::us::!:.: '':::'":::· __ _ frui ts, pastas. coffee cakes ;l\1d other cakes, etc? \Ve all have cookbook s and freezer LETS ASK THE COOK by Nan Wil•y books but nowhere is this told . Any help you could give "'ould br greatly appreciated. No name. please. ARLINGTON HEIGHTS. ILL. You just don't have the right book. One l li ke very much is the "Far m Journal Freezing and Canning Cookbook," It is about as explicit as anything I have foll'n d but of course even they can't guarantee an absolute ru!e of thumb on everything. No one can. You have to use your common. ' sense as "'ell. Since book costs change so rapidly today I do not like to quote price but the publi!iher is Doubleday and Co .. Inc .. Gardeu City, N.Y. Your library doubtless has a copy. To quote. "Defrosted foods should not be eaten or refrozen after they ha\•e slowly reached a temperature of 50 degrees in the freezer. Packa ges that still contain ice crysta ls may be refroze:i "'ithout risk." A recent gove r nm ent dispatch prefe rs that the temperature not go abo\'e 40 degree s. Generally spea king, meats a·,1d poultry are in good condition if their lemperature!' have nol reached above 45 degrees, but thawed meats do lose juices. The start of spoilage is signaled by a change in color and odor . :~ ~~:~th8!\:.nslg~o~il~n~!' take a chance on refreezing shelUish. They spoil easily anyway and there is no way to tell when they arc on the downgrade. It ma y surprise you lo know that it is harder to judge vegetables than it is meat. You can't tell by the odor. They also spoil more qu ickly than fruits; they a Imo st invariably l o u I h e n on refreezing so it It but not to chance it. Don't refreeze cooked dishes (tuch as soups, stews, casserole• and pies ) If they contain meat or poultry. Plain cakes and coffee cakes are generally sate to refreer.e even v"hen they have thawed completely unless they have cream filltngs or frosti ngs. Those can go bad very quickly. Same thing goes for cream plet. They are very, suspect. Never r e f r e e z e melted Ice cream. DEAR NAN: In one of Jour columns yoa mentioned you often wo11dered what dtsptrate or adventureaome 11oul tried mutng corncob jelly the ftnt time. My f1tber, lhe late Jeptbl D. Pickett wa1 that sowl wbo ••• sure tbere must be 1ometbln1 1ood and tasty left In the cob1 after tbe kernels v.·ere removed. He often mentioned the po11lblllty v.·hiie watching the cows as they chewed. After mother pa5sed away !n 1925 he had to do most of lhe cooking with 1he help of a pre-tern sister . IL 1vas then he decided to provr his idea. He '\'flS ve ry proud of his first hatch or corncob jelly and hr shared his di scoverv with lriends and relatives. 'u 11·e nt real well with the corn bread and biscuits !hey baked errry day. There was no grocer\ store right around the cornc'r because lh<'y lived in lhr country north\';est of llr is1nw. Okla. Sis, 1vho was there 11'hC'11 corncob jelly ~ca111c a reality , is now fl1rs. ~f. E. Beach of Fair Oaks. Calif. Dad was the fa ther of 11 children, six of them still living. Nan . I was prompted to \\Tile you this Jetter because of your interest in the origin of Dad 's jelly. tr he was here now he would be real proud that it is printed in vou r booklet ''Old Time Pic kles, Preserves and Such." fl1 R. N. L. PICKETI'. TVLSA. OKLA. And I am just as proud that It is! What a priceless bit of Ameri ca na ! Your dad probably made it by lhe old Jong-boil method. NOIA', with ON THE TUBE ... '> ( 'ICOMl'tftf YOUl CASlllll.N LtJf Gli DtNNUWAtf SIT NOW! .>'U .. 7. BEE ~MEAT DEPAITMENT EXTIA VAIUES! RIB ALISUN Boneless Chuck Shoulder Clod ·-· 89; ••• 98 ·• ,.,.~ .. •oo.r CRAB LEGS ~~~~s COFFEE I~ ~ 11111 IACOll ~ ... r ..... ~984 ---79' w...._,,.._ ,..,e:r "°"· -· f•l'o \lo!vt:I CORNED BfEF :~~·;. · '·79' Cl'•rf Int ~1•~f1 ~:: 0 "" ''~ I~ 1-L;in ,;,k itoast ·;:~ :.:·:;:: ss~ I Loin End Pork Roast ":.~~~." 59~ Cente~ Cut Chutk Steak -:;• 59; Boneless Round Steak ..::.. 'I!: Premium Qualify ALL GRINDS With Coupon , , , 1-lb. Can BACK-TO-SCHOOL . SPECIALS Plus ... BLUE CHIP STAMPS!! JACK & BEANSTALK CORN Fancy Whole Kernelr;o30ii\ ...._.,,:;:;oi" or Cream Slyfe ~ TOILET TISSUE NORTHIRN W"• •• 4 IOU ~·~~Jori PKG. • OWDRIFT WHIPPED SHORTENING Pure ~1 Vegetable~ CREST TOO'm,ASTE. REOULAR OR MINT. EXTRA LARGE, , , • Carrot Sticks Bell Peppers Russet Potatoes Brown Onions REFRESHING 12-0Z. CAN .,. u. 6:89' Delaware Punch Bold Detergent .. ~:fil'1."° Pancake Mix ":~~~"~:c. GIANT PKO. 69' lod. 10. Oii' 2-l!. PKG. 49c Glo-Coat Floor Polish $J39 DEL/CA TESSEN 1·DA Y WEEK· END IUYS! ,:;to;.. YOGURT JllSIYMAID 20 JO fu~l"f ~. ( Pt-.$11ttff I-OZ, •S..... lrfl- c lb. Sl, __ J p str • '""". '4 ' "" 49' tua a am1 (OJMIO IW 1~ Vons Sallllwlch SpnH ~~ 29' .. Lttlen DtCHltfWlt , i.or • .,,. 74' fl'flAU•~ ..... .... -~:UllC 6r ... Incle 11.oll tlltn_. ll'GWA, U-Ol. 66' ~••D•CllOOUI~~ Wt f MllCOO MortorllW UliUV.t, 1-U. C!M. '"' """'"•• 39f; Morolo 011 "'°' '"· .. . ... .. ........... 79( ~ 'r•·T"n All Purpoi.e Gt-lot•~ lit• "~· ........... 99c ,_,. Glod logl IOl<lll Pf.t:f, lll<l, HG, .......... ,. .... .5k ' Gebllorlll'• J11mbo TolllOle• N UH ............ •9c 0;01 Soop m;uw ...... 2/33• IATH .......... 2/45• WISHIONE • $tl.,f Ott""" I 01. • Oelw•• '"'"'h t!L. ::::: 41' .............. ""'°"' .. .okfolt ,.._ ~ltl, J"4.<lt. ' ........... .59< Cremora cor111CtUJo11101,14' .................. 49< T1" Top App!1 Jlllu .. 01. <~,. ................ •9<: lo Ito.a •lvolt!ti •88 ot.oz, ro.o. .............. J.k la ROM Thin Spoelwtti ''· • u. ~ ............. J3c l'urt Ora"9f' JuJc. nnrw1n, ..or. (NI •re. , .. 6Sc: Gropi Orlnk 111uw1n .or. t•ot ... -. ...... • '!'\.. 59t MJB llice Ml~tt (IOICUl(O. tUJ 101 .. 0. ,,,,, 37c Krgfl Thoviond lilor.d Dre11ing IOl. •11. '. .......... 41~ K11Jfl Rcko Oi11li!'lf t-OI'. •n. ....................... .t9c Pllfllwty 2.\.oytt Co•• Mi••I •UTD 11-01. "11 .... 39t lutionM Coff .. M•. <-•i. .. , .............. ~< N.od111n1 Joorh Po1tt u~.1Mt1.1.o" ........... 69t Solod Tio loO> .. ,, "'4 IMt~ 1• oor .............. 59t Hf-Ho Cri:ic~tn -11t1HC >..01. HO., ............. 49t PUltoll<l ....... llCIUID Wisk 79' HIU.S lllOS. Instant Coffee 1M>I. l&O Jl.l'I .. , ........ ... 95' ~f.!JITJ[;!j LIQUORS FEATURES ~~':~ DRY GIN ~-~;".': .s3s9 lll:D. o .. an s4.J9 EARi'Y"tiMis-·J m. ::.~:.;:-r;;;;-i s11c• , HJ/ 61/lon~ "'=~;# ... -.. .._ ...,.,,......-- Crystal BEER ~~ Colorado ,Jim •''"..i ;,co1o~do $339 c-24 12••· of Co11• ty/o/M/SliJ·iiJl+t.r.1.1 :1119 "~ VIGETULIS ''''L. Pooo,CotC":'"• 1101,2)' c,,,,,,..., s,.....,~ ,.,.. """'"9n, Dolli>", Jcip<1n01.•, Moxico•, Sp.o""" 1'0.o~. 43< D•W11)'1!tilc• ltllit Siu Wof!lo• ll·Cl. .. G ........... , ...... , J9c j,\-14-r "'"' •·OI ... 0 .. •--........................ 7'1c -o· 3-Covn. o; ........ l!O. llDI ... ~ '""'""'""" 6Sc ll0<~befry Col>lilor 011 '°"'•· UI ... G ........ ., ........... '9c• Oft..., kt·O' rlUI ot,.,_ Cl U<."•GO )-Cl.'"""' ....... 89c o~ loy tot O' Piu o c"nu. 1.cu '""· ..................... 89c Chick.., Wltitt& .....,,,, 1aroa •u r. , .. er ... o .............. 1.AV Ct»<~ .. fllitl. &. o..,.,..;n, ,_>£ff, l•-01. PJO ......... l.4'P lircll II" Cool Whip 11. tlH .......... , "" ................... JX SAIA Lii COPPll llNGS ,,......, -...,., a..o..., f ... olo. 10-0.o, 59' c.-~ ... '"""'"Cool f~i.t. ... ,,. ,. ...................... 61'<: c ...... 10• Solo.,~ rm .. , "·°'· ,.G, ............. 1.09 Mrt. fridoy f...,.fff !l>ri!oip ''°'Lt, oco.. .................... 2.AV M,., f<ldoy 11olod S'-'iMp 1.er, HO. ...................... , l .D'P M.>1. fridoy $"'""" "'4+. ll·OI-,.a, ..... , ................. .s9c 4.fi ........ 111 floli $Mcb 1'-0IL 11.\,..14-0ll. ""-'·''" ..... 49c 4~1'Wi""-1<4L ,.., .......................... 79e S.....s..kV.or~ ..................................... u.9!<: ~ SPAGHITTI ''"' IOTAa ... 79 DINNERS =::: .• •:,i~ c Nisrii.iciTiA &:79c CHEF !OY-AR·DEE SPAGHffil SAUCES /IU'.t.TlfSS S.lVCl 50 SA1.1Cf Wl1l1 MU$1ftOOMS I l•-OI. I • 5AVCf WITH GROUND tUJ 0 " R• D' t~l("N I ... Ul"ooc.i 98 ice inners °' ""ie"'" ...... .., 11·,.ot o.. ' F.r tN llttf twfdt to wh1!'1 h•pr.ttlftf 111 TV, tttd TV WE K -l i1trlb11ftd willt .... 10111 Ad A t B kh ''''"" "''"" .r ,,, DAILY ams ve., a roo urst, Huntington Beach 5922 Edinger Ave., at Spring~~le, Huntington Beach Laguna Hills Pl aza, El Toro 21082 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach 17950 Magnolia, Fountain Valley ·="=LO=r. ====··34081 Doheny Park Drive, Capistrano ~each I ¥ swe l.! PILOT·AOVERTISER $ Wtdntsday, Stpttmbtr 9, 1970 P•IMll XIMH 5IJCIO COOKID 49c HAM .. S.OL l'llW'lfT'S HOWH-N.UIYE PORK1.oz.&9c IAUIAGIV SLICED BACON TAlll•AND I ·POUND PACKAGE 4 ftc · · , ''7Le. · U".rnY'D "59' Wtdntsday, Srpttmbtr t, 1970 -DAILY PILOT ISJ CHUCK · ROAST . ,. u.s~o.A. CHOICE OR USDACHOICIOllSTATU WIE•R5 ST ATER BROS. 11os. cuT1F1ED llEF M0111U·s PllOI ALL MEAT CERTIFIED BEEF 43~. 491~oz. BOlllLUI ROUNDITIAK ( RUMP HAM LB. BONE IN 89~ ul.A. I HJl~IS ' llOS. CllTIFIED TASTY SMOKED 79! 43~. IASnlNGIAIN-FIO•TEHDll•TASTY 69 PORK STEAKS ... LI. c ..... lllAOYCOOllD ••OIDQ.a:91""° 79c Pure PORK •tl5H,UAN,GIOUND~Y 53' GROUND BEEF ............... LI. GROUNDROUND ... LI. 79' iiiiiii.ioiii-:0 .. , Ll.591 iiLii'iiOiii::::~:::Ll.89 1 , USDACHOICIOllTAT•HOs.atTIJllDlfff • 137 T-BONE STEAKS ..... L1 USOACMOICIOISTATMUOl.CllTlfllO_, .,. ' ' RIB STEAKS ........................ LI. c ' BEEF PA nlES ................. LI. OICAIMATa1°Ll.JACIAGI 6ftc WIENERS AU MEAT ........... LI. .,, SAUSAGE Motltb.t'I YOllSHIU lfcout.AI 01 TMIOC 6 7 SUCED BACON .......... LI. c iiiiii°NSCIMEIGER29' 'BULK' OUR OWN COUNTRY STYLE 39~. USDACHOKIOISTATllUOS.CllT•llDlllF s 1 • 1 PORTERHOUSE1TEAK LI. '·'''HIV'·™"''···Ll.•7• l·TH 1 791 RIB ROAST 7·THRIB .......... LI. UIOACHOICIOISTATllUOl.CllTlf•DIRf • 161 TOP SIRLOIN ITIAK .. LI. QWITIAI •• ,Ll.11.ot 99c STEAKS ll1'81\~ ................ LI. ~t4t '7~ '70.d ~"'14--.!.l>UJ 'P'liatlt! CNIClltlOAIO fUMS AU WllTI MIA T TURKEY ROAST _ . •2•• ..... A""• '1&04 • UMON • "*'"" .. • M1NC1 JOHNSTON PIES _ "" 74c CREAMED PW . ,,,33' ni'tEDPEACHES -,,,,-33' 111105 fl( Wl!H (lll,til,i l"UC( 33' lAll.l l fl •tUlll•ll'I' g11c PEAS & POTATOES , " CHEESE CAKE · "" ~ .. l llttl5 lll 33' ITlllUS U • ()l'IAOIGl • CHOC: 79' PEAS & CELERY ...... "·" SARA LEE CAKES " Molill•ANl ll!D 4111c .ltlt<OISTON ' 39' llASl'BERRIES .. _ ... "·" ~-!·INCH PIE SHELLS .... OffOllM Of TMt MA 1-0L .•• 17c BREADED SHRIMP ...,.-1°SALSAG1"'1A 1t.01 .... ''• CHEESE PIZZA L LBS. ... s1•• NEW CROP IARSOAP REGULAR IAR DlAL PACKAGE CASABAS ,----. .. LARGESWEfTVINERIPE ( .• c . . LB. fAEEZE OA!EO COFFEE FRISKIES MIX& CUIES Cil.EEM II TOOTHPASR B-OZ. s I 90 5 Ill. 69< ' ~z~Gl 4ftc 2·llS... 10 llS.1Jt 7 - PllS1'1111 llOIOlllT ....... 98' ... "" c •• , •• , ....... & .. 4., &.... PRICES EFFEC. THURS. thru WED., SEPT. IOth-lllli ' IS22 W1tlfl'lin1t1r l lvd., W1,tml11tt1r 707 W. N1111t11nlh St .. Co1l1 M111 7601 W. S1 v111t11nth St., 5111!1 A111 It 75 l1lt1r Sft11t, Co1ta M111 6162 Edllu~11 Atv., Hu111i119ton ll11&h 14171 lt1d Hill Av1111!1, T111tl11 14212 Minta A¥111111, Whittler J4JO Wi ll Un,oltt Av1nu1. A111htl111 1100 E11f Co111111 Av1111,1t, Or11191 2•JO Edi11t1r A•1w11u1, S1nt1 A111 12 JO (. Mc.F1tltl111 A,1., S111!1 A111 2110 N1w19ort l lwtl., Co1t1 M111 21•4 W. l r11tlw1y. AR1h1!1t1 \ r .I , • -.. ---.-.:-:;i.--;i 7 ~ T :--:F ~ :r 7 \-·: t ;r :r-" • !'" :-: ~".•I" -T T .. • :> ?"' :" ~ •-r"/t~7r••---------..... --...... -------... --............ -..,_ ... -_, ... --... -..... ---------- II DllLV PILOT Wedllfsd~ •. Stptcmbtt 9, 1970 Wtdnesday, StPltmbtr 9, 1970 PILOT·AOVERTISER G Borderline Aficionado Perspires Over Chili 8)' JOllNA BU/\'N HOU \'\\rooo -· · I ' v e always rancied myself a chili maker and I've made l!Ome that's pretty good." Ralph Bellamy said. He's a long-time chili aficionada. •·J like seasoning in food. Chili's often thought to be a•Mexlcan dish. Actual!~. it's a Texas border dish.\ Ralph's not keen on using the fiery chili powder lo CXC('SS. "''ou should perspire a little, but I don't think you should have to go around blowing your tongue for a hair hour afterwards!" He's c Qu a I ! y adept at making an off • beat stew. "l'\•e got a crazy recipe that defies every rule in the kitchen. II has .no water. only v.·ine. I just in\'ented it one time and it's pretty good. Anyway, lhere·s never anything lert. Actually. it dorsn"t take very much \\'inc. Take all the watery ''egctables even the heads of the celery, and as they begin to steam off, add a little wine." To complete the stew. he broils some pork chops. dices them into the stew and simmers Jt to a turn. Typically. the actor attacks c\'ery project "'ith the sa1nc tour de force. \Vhen he prepares for a role. il's a certbral process aimed to stir and provoke the audience. One of his most memorable performances was his superb port rayal of FDR in "Sunri se at campobe.llo." "Playing FDR "'as almost like playing a man sti ll alive : he "'as so vivid in everyone's mind. Everyone has a kind of mental image of him from ne"·sreels and TV. and if nothing else, rrmembcr his \'Olcc from the f Ires id e and chops are really better About 2'.i cupa dry red wine broccoli, zucchini . s quash , adding the packet of masa speeches. I felt the challenge fried In a skillet. They lake a (or cranberry ju.ice) green peaa, Brus.sel sprouts. flour (in chili mix package). was not so much to do an little cooking too, because it's J pound cleaned spin;i.ch (or watercress and \\'ater Add plntiento, corn. k!dney imitation of him which would pretty solid meat. First JO.Ounce package frozen chestnuts. and pinto beans to vegetable- have been at best a good nighl marinate ii In wine, a little Jear spinach) SUPER CH!U meat rnillutt, rni.J: well. club trick, but to call on the sea30lling, onion and pepper. Trim off as much lat as c _, 1 1 1 · I th t h I'm droo11·ng" he s a,. d 2 pounds coa-·.g-·nd beef over, ~mmer s ow Y or image. was sure a eac • """"ible from pork chon•. '""' '..... bou 1-1 h · d. ·d I t 1he d. -had laugh1'ng ~ ~ (or diced beel chop~ \ ~ 1 1 • 00.rs (or until. meat 1n 1v1 ua n au te.-.. · Broil on both sides. Cool. .,.... 1 t nd ) Sti ft ki ff an image and I had to rouse Before leaving the set I ran . size of sugar cubes) s e er · r 0 en; 8 m 0 and stir it. So the audience did into Bellamy's d ire c t or• Db r~tln off excess fat from I teaspoon fat grease that floats on the sur- the FDR part Or ' ·t as much, ,·r G Sch rr k. ro1 er pan, reserve pan 1 large yellow on ,. on face. eorge • ae er pac ing a d · I n p • Mi:< masa nour with enough not more lhan I dl.d. r R 1 h' h.1. . . r1pp ngs to avor stew. ut chop~d copy o a p s c 11 recipe 1n I · , "~ . \\'arm water to form thick ··1t was a good piny. The-hi b · r 1 ·1h th ce ery, onion, potato. carrot. cloves garl ic p-s··d • ~ . s r1e case a ong w1 e r M • '" "" paste. Stir into mixture to 1ras no surprise, no suspense script for his n i g ht I y gar 1~' par rs\el y, ndsagc, thyme. 1, green pepper~ chopped "tighten" and flavor chili. Let for everyone knew t h e homework ! ay ea ' sa t a peppe r in ~ cup black olives, chopped simmer uncovered IS mJnutes story when they came to the Recipes from the chili large sa~cepan(. Add abobcut 2 ,1 a-ounce ca n tomato sauce longer. Taste to c or rec t thealer. It was the story of the aficlonada follow : cups wine or cran rry w cans water , , , seasonings. Serve at once with indestructibility of the human juice). Bring to boil; cover, I package .~1ck ~owler s 2-crackers beer and cold raw spirit. It gave people hope. PORK VEGh'TA BLE STEW simmer 4s minutes. Alarm Ch1J1• ap le ' rm sure FDR thought he 2\~ pounds pork chops Dice pork add to saucepan 1 chn~·opu~cde can pimientos, ~ H 0 U G HTS . . 8 y could tick his paralysis arid J stalks celery with leaves, \\'ith bones and pan drippings "~ actually did a lot before he got chopped from-broiler. Add more wine Z 12-ounce cans ,.,lexican-BELLAMY: Every chill lover through. There's a picture of 4 small onions. chopped lor cranberry juice) as styled corn or .chili maker. has his . o:-m him on the battk'ship at the 4 pota~s. peeled, cut in needed. Cove r, simmer ~5 1 pound can kidney beans rec1I?C and there are a milhon Yalta Conference with Stalin large pieces minutes longer. Uncover; add !washed in strainer) vers10~~· But as long as Y~ and Churchill in which his legs ti medium-sized ca r r 0 1 s. spinach, cook until barely I pound can pinto beans get ch1h powder, some cumin 1 d d 1 r 1· ·d · . . .and masa flour (com flour "'ere crossed. 'Mlis was a peeled cut in large pieces en er an mos 0 iqui IS ~k beef 1n rat m larg~ available at Spanish and / or Irick. \\'hen he did that, he 1 clove garlic. pressed absorbed. CorTect seasonings. skillet (o.r saucepan) until t.texican food specialty shops couldn't do ii without the use 2 sprigs parsley Serve with tossed well-ch illed meat ~gms t~ turn brown. or through mail order houses). of his hands. He would lift one •.] teaspoon ground sage green salad, your favorite A~d onion, ga rlic, pepi;er a~d you have a good chi 1 i foot and thro\v it over the large pinch dried thyme libation {wine, cold beer, etc.). ohves. Cook slowly u n t 1 I . depending on your tastes. other. And this \Vas show ing 1 bay leaf Serves 4-{i, Vegetables are limp. •wick Fowler's :Z..Alarm chili off a little bit along "'ith the I !'2 teaspoons salt AFIERTHOUGHTS: Othe r Add tomato sauce and is available by mail through cape and the hat!" freshly ground pepper to vegetables to use in the stew water: then follow c hi Ji Caliente Chili Co. Box 1444 , CH I LI AFIC IONAOO The se nsitiv e actor taste includ.e: to m a to es, corn. instructions on package exetpt Austin, Tex. concluded the i n t e r v i e "'1 -------------~------'----'---'--":.:.::::..:_::..::.:.::::'.'.::...:::.:.:!:.:........:.:=::::::_.:.::::_ _____________ _:R:•:l:!'.p:'.h_:B:•:l:::la~m.'.'.!y ______ _ explaining \Vhy he gave up hunting. ·•t got a deer, a beautiful eight-point buck up the t\1iddle Fork by the Salmon River in Idaho. I even had my picture taken with hirn and brought back the nleat. Then I saw the picture and something happened. I've never been able to point a gun at anything again so I gave my guns away." I asked if he'd c v e r prepared game. "Oh yes, \"enison I s delicious. There are roasts. chops and steaks. but it's dry rneat so you 've got to use a little butter with it. The steaks RALPHS MEAT MASTER MEAT IS THE BEST YOU CAN BUY! UNLIKE SOf'IE SUPERHARJ:ET COMPANI ES, RALPHS OPERATES ITS OWN MEAT DISTRIBUTION CENTER Wint VOLUNTARY FED- ERAL HEAT INSPECTION SO THAT t ALL RALPHS' HEATS CAH BE £..,,, CAREFULLY IHSPECTED ANO ··~ , RIGID QUALITY CONTROL MAIN· i ., . ( T AINED. RALPHS BEEF IS ,~1~, SPECIALLY SELECTED ANO AGED .,...,if' ll'ITH RALPHS OWN EXQ.USIVE MEAT MASTER PROCESS. THIS ASSURES KEATS THAT ARE HORE TE HDER. HORE FLAVORFUL. JUIOER AND BETTER TRIMMED. RALPHS MEATS ARE NATURALL T AGED -WITH NO LIGHTS, NO CHEMICALS AND llO PRESERVA· TIVES. FIND OUT FOR YOURSELF '«HY RALPHS A.RE HEAT PEOPLE . TEllRY >llELSEM ;, MEAT fllAMA~Efl ·1· AT . StMfSET ILVD. S"TOIE '""" as~. ROASTS ·--'· -· 7'\lo•ffl i OTlSSElllE 90'0!<US $)!? ROASTS $<<1\00N 1P~ c:;.f>l lO ...... .Q SLAB BACON ""IOI( ..... " 65~ (-(<I '"'....,-.. Beef Kidleys .. -;:;, 39 ~. I ; / • BRAISING 89~ STRIPS 10 .. 1- II~ BONELESS • ROUNO 89~ STEAKS ''""' '" SAUSAGE LINKS SWl"'1 o llOW>f ... :KIV! 65' "!..,,., .. 11r 1&11$.0Gf • t 0 1 ,..G Pacific Rockfish::::.:89~. MEXICAN-I NSPIRED DI SH HIGHLIGHTS BRUNCH ,·ruu-ig· ··~". ;J~~,, ,.,,.~ nu ,,14t.1a111r~.,.,......"'.I'" • --' ...... ·*-. lr~i\~~~~~.).w '1~~~ .. , .. 0 • 11~--. -:~"''•')<!!' i, ,, . ; ... ·M ""'· .-(, ll',-,,. ' " \ *' .. . " . ' .. ;:: '-~-. UNOPRIJCE : ~=: , .. ~.:.1 ORANGE JUICE Spicy ·Brunch Pleases Amigos "Bueno dias. amigos," you'll probably say when you gr{•Ct your guests for th is colorful party lhat has all l h c spontanicty of a t\Icxican fiesta. It is especially ap\lropria1e for b r un ch soon as \\lednesda y. Sept. 16. i s tilexican Independence Da~·. comparable to our Fourth of July. And eastil~ Jlrep arcd for alt its imaginativily. Your brilliant main m11rsc. Hue\'OS Rancheros Amcricano. is a boWlcy-bright vari:it1on or t\fexico·s most famous es!\ dish. The I itle means Ranch Eggs. American Stvle -:ind the dish is simply i?ggs b<1kcd in a "ell-seasoned tomato sauce. ' Sul. as the expre!'ision goes. "la sauce c'csl tout " -the sauce mrans everything ;ind is crucial to the succc.~s or this inl'iling egg dish. Therefore, reply on dependable. pe1iectly seasoned condensed tomat<) soup for the just-right blend or spices and velve ly·sn1ooth consistency . Heat il along wHh some onion, green pc riper. ga r I l e.c hi Ii po'.l•drr . ''Tabasco" sauce. and ripe olives for a few niinutcs. Then spoon the sauct into 1ndi\•idu111 baking dishes, top "'ith an egg. and bake just till thr eggs art done to your liking. Serve the eggs with a sprinkling or s h r e d d e d Cheddar rhrcse and some crunchy "105!.adas. '' In ~1exico these would bt deep-fried tortillas; your \"crsion are flaky refrigerator h i s c u t t ~ rolled thin as can be in golden corn meal, th en baked 1111 crisp and puffy. Tortillas also are available in lhe !'ipecial foods section O( ,YOUf market. Be sure lo have some rruit on hand -perhaps a compote of bananas and \\'hole apricots bathed in orange JUJCC -and. or wurse. lots or freshly brewed wrfce. Your guests 11·ilJ go away feeling . "Barriga llena corazon conlcnto" -a full y 1umn1y n1akcs a h a pry heart! ll UE \'OS RA1\CHEROS A~l E RICANO 1 pac kage 18 to 91 ~ ounccst refrigerated tlaky biscuil s Corn meal ' , cup chopped onion 2 tablespoons chopped green pepper 1 l;irge clove garlic. minced 1 teaspoon chili po\\·der 2 t:iblcspoons butter or margarine I can (10"·• l)un r .-s) condensed tomato soup I 3 cup water 1, cup sliced rip<' o\1vei; Generou~ dash hot pepper sauce !i egg~ Snit and pepper Shredded Cheddar cl1r('SI! \\'ith a rolling r>in nr ringertips. s1rctC'h and nattcn biscuirs to 4-inch rounds in corn meal roating both sid es. Place on greased cookir. ~h('cl. In sauL'epan. cook onion . green pepper. garlic. and chili in butter until vegetables :ire lender. Stir in soup, 11attr. olives, and hot pepper stiul'l". l-leat : sHr now and lhrn. Pour 1 1 cup soup mixture into each or 6 individual shallo"' baking dlshe.!: break an egg in tnch. Salt and pepper to ta!'ile. ll.ikt• eggs at 350 degree.~ F. for I'.! to ts minutes or until ~t. Bake biscuits with cg gs Sprinkle chcC5C Ol'Cr rgg~ and servt: \\'ith blscuil .!i t.l11ke:s 16 scr1•in(;s. APPLESAUCE ~ lMACARONI & CHEESE ' I· APPLETIME 16 OZ. CAN f ,,,.~ . ~ . .... 4-... ,.. ':,;. • ;. / I FRESH PACT • GAAOE A BABY OR FOROHOOK • 10 OZ. LIMA BEANS FRUIT COBBLERS otE' SOUTH ASST. 2 u. 22c ggc $)79 FRIED CHICKEN .... , "' "'°'" u.HQUET, wwotf, 2 ll. "'G. ~ATERING ICE CREAM ~-· G~ttciN V A.Nn.U.,. .!ofll:A. WllRl1', VANU.lA WITH CXANG( SH~T. CAMMU $lWtEME PINTS :.;:-::~-19• . .. ' .... ...... ·-FRESH DEIJCAT . ·- LONGHORN CHEESE LEO'S SLICED MEATS I Y·Tli'E ·P.lfCE 89 ~ -·'""--.'~ . " 33; GllEAT FOii SNACKING Rfl',.,..B •V f-ll'f. ""· ~ .... •• c"'°"" ... \MPQfllEO ~··,_, COO<a 55; "'llMllft • ~_.. otNoOt ., U l.IJ<tt 49 ; HAM AICIO ., ....... o t OL ~ DAllSH SWIRLS ..... . ., MEAT MASTER OUR OWN QUALITY MEATS BAKERY --· ~. OLD SOUTH f.ROZEN 6 OZ. CANS ll"SWEE t(Nt(> o• .!.WEflENE' A.OOEO fllOM H.QlllOA INSTANT BREAKFAST GRAHAM CRACKERS ~-a> PKG. OF 6 ASS T. FtAVORS SUNSHINE 16 oz. TOMATO JUICE I COCOA PUFFS MOTT'S APPLESAUCE ~.~L 39' STEWED TOMATOES "'::;;'.' 23' CHOCOLATE SYRUP ~.:>;,~· 25 ' llBBY'S '6 OZ. CAN GENE'IAl MILLS CEREAL 12 OZ. PKG . KOOL AID CORN OIL OLIVE OIL SUG.t." SWf.ET •'$f. •ti(. n G. ~.,..' 01 11 ' 71' 55' ..... ... ........, ~ ~ .. , ... • < · HIAlTH• llAUTY AIQS . ' . ~~~!f~s11' JDCHNS LOTION "'"CU .,,.... 88' ,.., Ol . .oml I nK DILUXI TOOTMaRUIK ..... ~ 19' .... '~~· ~),'!.'!,!.!!'~~ ,!~t_DOIANT . 89' ~!!_121.1.. S~I .... <.~~.~.E~ .. ,,. $1 " LIQUOR DEPARTMENT .~,l!~.~1 •. ~~·~~NT SCOTCH ..... 4 7' l~~,~~l~~·11~1V~~2~H ~~~~~'.1 2' 1 ITEM 1 tCW rrlCE UN1PR1CE 7-DAY ADVEJTISED SPEC ALS STAMPS OR DISCOUNT ' \ J f I I I t I I • Q PILOT-APVERTISER Wtant!.OIY, Septtmbtr 9, 1970 Holi day Cuisine's Orient Inspired One of the most romantic Oriental holidays, the ~1oon Festival, ls being celebrated thiS year on Tuesday, Sept. IS, in Chinese communities all over the world. Second in importance only to the Chinese N-ew Y e a r , according to tradition , the feast honors the harvest moon, and combines thanks for the harvest with feasts celebrating the moon. The Chineses believe the moon Is at its fullest and brightest d u r I n g Moon Fe1ltv~_Ume, and, as in the Welt, ~ glories of the moon inspire the Orientals to thouglJU of love and romance. As with most Chine se holidays, food plays a n important part in M o o n Festival celebrations. Chinese feasts consist of a variety of dishes. Unlike A m e r J c a n dinners, there ts no "main course" w i t h surr()Unding accompaniments. R a th e r , each d)Jh ls a unit in itself, and several are offered. French, cuisine ... one oJ the tedmlque. In it, s ma I t 'I• cup butler or margarine 2 tablespoons cooking oil greatest in the world. amounts ol minced or bite-\.) cup sliced acalllons 1 clove aarllc, mlftCtd One of the pleasures of sized fobd ani cooked quickly I cup cooked peas 1 large rtd onion, cut Into oriental cuisine is that it can while being constantly and I can (6 ounces) sliced rings adapt availab~ foods for use briskly stirred in 1ma11 mushrooms, drained 1 cup l·lnch cubes smoked within the tradiUooal style of amount!I of very hot oil , The I can (13'4 ounces) chicken ham cooking. ttchniq ue seals In the juices of , broth !,Ii teaspoon salt For example, Full ~ioon Lo vegetab16i, meats, ind fish, 1 package (I ounces) 1 divider-pak can (43 ~1ein c 0 m bin e 5 convenient while allowinl the food .to veqrucelli or spaghetti. oun.ces) chicken c hf w frozen chicken, beef, 0 r retain its n1tural cri1p or roo_I\ed and hot mem shrimp chow mein in a tender succuJence. 'Ibis reclpti 2 tabteapoons soy sauce Fresh radishes, option11 \ cooking pouah, wit ti vermicelli starts with a dividerpak ~an of C o m b i n e cu c u mbcr, In a large skillet, place er spaghetU.\We u~ally think chicken chow mein, so yoor hcrseradish, garlic. and salad eggplant in hot oil; add garlic. of vermicelli \as being Italian; preparation time is cut to a dressing; chill for I houi. Saute until eggplant becomes actually the Jtalians probably minimum . Prepare chow mein accord ing soft and translucent. Add ~·J>..: learned about it from the Round out the menu with to package directions. In a onion rln&s, ham cubes and Chinese. some crispy, hot bite.sized large skillet, aautee scallicns salt. Fry while stlrrl.ns, about frozen egg rolls ... available until golden. Add P e as . 3 to 4 minutes. Open divlder-Acccrding to one story, a 'th hrl ch. k 1_ ... ,a mlllhrooms, chicken broth, · k of I Chinese maiden introduced w1 s mp, tc en. ~...,r pa can vqetab es. Dr1in her Italian aailor beau to an meat, or meat and shrimp and bot chow meln. Stir in vegetables and rlr.:e well with .,;;;-.. ~ spaghetti, and he was 50 filllngs and with a salad and venn!cell or spaghe ttti. Add cold water; add vegetables to delighted with 1·1 that he look hote tea. soy sauce, coover, and keep ham mixture. SUr to blend. hot. Drain c ucumber s. some back to Italy when he FULL MOON LO MEIN Arranee Jo mein 00 1 platter Open sauce can in divlder-pak returned. Marco Polo is also 1 -led cucum•-, cut lnln . 1 1 and our sauce Into slnllet. r-~ ..-or 1n a arge cassero e. credited with introducing *·inch thick slices Garnish with "full moon" Continue cooking until mixture spaghetti to Italy. Thu s, 1 tablespoon horseradish cucumber slices. begins to bubble. Serve spaghetti has for m a Tl y 1 clove garlic, mashed Makes about 6 servings. garnished with a fan of thin centuries been a basic part of 114 cup prepared cil and slices of radish. To make fan, the cttlnese diet. vinegar salad dressing STIR FRIED EGGPLANT carefully slice radish almosl stir-Fried Eggplant and 2 packages (1 5 0 u n c e s AND RAM through In thin sec:Uons ·¢ad Ham is another savory main each) chicken, beef er l medium-sized eggplant, slices gently, beln' careful not DAILY PILOT Many gounnets b e l i e v e Chinese culalne is. , .with the course dish. Stir.frying 111 a shrimp chow mein in unpeeled and cut into "7· to tear rldlsh. basic Chinese co oki ng cooking pouch Inch cubes Make.s aboul ! servings. MOON FESTIVAL SETS THEME FOR DELIGHTP!JL MEAL ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- FINEST QUALITY CINTD CUTS OUTSTANDING VALUEI LB OIHU•I ROCK CORNISH • GAME.;., HENS FROZEN 200L .... WT. g9fl'M> .FRESH BREAD 1' 0:. CE.lO LOAVU BREAD -..::-· 25~ 49~ CIA.NISH 1"£TITt • PICO. Of S COFFEE CAKE WHITE, WHEAT, SANDWICH or SPLIT TOP 1 Y, LB. LOAVIOS SAVE6c .. ___________ ..,..,,..,..,,_.,,.,,.,,..-..,. .... .,.,.,.,.. ..... c EA PUREX BLEACH PAPER TOWELS FACIAL TISSUE COMET CLEANSER 5 QUART PLASTIC JUG GALA ASST. GIANT ROLL SCOTTIES ASST. 200 CT. Pl(G. INCLUDES 2c OFF 14 OZ. CAN 59c 33c 27c 15c Dog Food ,.,,., "' "'u.' l~ll l.Jl4 OL CAM Bold Detergent . 300 er, Flllllt PAPEll WM lM Oii COWOI 59' ML-n,,.G.OfMt RING FINRlllE nNS CIGOU ~ •Ill. .._ 19' Ct -...er-•. l't ... Snowy Bleach Dial Soap N Ol. "" --- LU.NCH KITS 751 21' WITH VACUUM BTL $ GENUINE TH.-0 WNO. CHOOSE 1'' flIDM AN ASSOITMENT OF YOU R fAVOllfTt CAITOON CHARACTERS. lllOUW METAL OR VINYL LUNCH IOTS. G71 3-RING llNDW ;.... .. ~-59' .,. ... ...,,ua 120 cf. CRAYONS 77' FllllD IDIDDS '1" NnON HOSIDY utetAtol MMe, a. 99' '°'°"'. lolllt. .... '"'. COFFEE© MAXWELL HOUSE LIMIT 1, 1 LI. ON PER COUPON. LIMIT 1 COUPON PER CUSTOMER VAUDSEPTEMaER 10-16. ~~ UMIT 1, 21-S: l !. eox PEil COUPON. UMIT 1 COUPON PER CUSTOMER VALID SEPTEMBER J0-16. . ' " • PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS.-WED .. SEPTEMBER 10-16, 1970 ADO TAX TO TAXAILES 1'I! JIUl!llVE Titt: ltlOtl'T TO LMT llJAHnfli;:S -., SM.rs TO Df.lil,.N ~::llJllMl:-nr.:. . . ., .·~, ,"~ THOMPSON SEEDLESS SWEET FLAVORRJL BUNCHES CiiRois12: 7: GREEN CABBAGE iiis11s39' LB VOI UME I 2fc Apple H_armony Pie Appealing There is no betler lime to try an unusual flavor in your homemade apple pie than. now. If you are) looking for a really di.!linctive variation of the always popular pie -one that has exciling taste appeal -let American blue cheese to lhe rescue. Ycu'IJ fttid the subtle sharpness of the delicately- marbled blue cheese ii in complete harmony w 1th sweetened, lighUy splctd sour cream. In combination they ac- ce ntuate the goodness er sliced apples to make a surprisingly fine pie filling with the cheese providing an elegant note. This is Lhe ki.nd cf al· tractive, open-faced pie to serve for Sunday dinner and for parties. BLUE CHEESE APPLE PIE Pastry for sin&le 1-lnch pie :iJell • 14 s large baking apples, pared and cond 213 cup sugar ~' teaspoon each cinnamon and nutmeg 2 tablespoons flour 1,~ cup dairy sour cream 1/r cup American blue· cheese (about 3 ou.nces crumbled) Slice apples thin and ar- range pastry In lined pie plate. Mix remaining i'ngredienta together. Pour mixture evenly over the apples. Bake at 375 degrees for 45 to 50 minutes. Roll out any remaining pastry and cut designs with cooky cutter. Bake them on a cooky sheet In bet cVen for 10. minutes. Place cutouts on lop of baked pie. Serve pie slightly wann. A CASSEROLI! TO FIX TODAY. BAKE TOMORROW 'Manana' Pie Pleases Cook That qua int Mexican custom of "doing it tomorrow" makes sense in the kitchen. Manana js good eoough for career girls and busy mothers whc prefer preparing part of a meal today • . • but cOoking it manana. Manana Cornbrtad Pie hints of the flavor or Old Meidco, but the spices are gentler to suit tastebuds north of the bordtr. The meat a n d veeetable portion of the pie can be prep1red hours -or days -ahead of time; only the cornbrtad topping (a quick mix version) need be added before bakine. MANANA CORNBREAD PIE J v, pound groond me•t t small onion, chopped 1 small green pe"pper. choppe<l l c1n whole kernel corn, drained I can tomato soup, plua 1 can wa(er 1 tablespoon chill powder Salt and freshly grcund pep- per to taste l package prepared cornbread mix Brown met lightly I n greased iklllet, then mix in onion and green pepper. Saute five minutes. Add a 11 remaining ingredients except cornbread mix and simmer for 15 minutes. Pour mixture into casserole dish. At dinnertime, mix the cornbread according to the directions on the package and, a spoonful al a Ume, cover the top of the meat mixture with the batter. Bake uncovered at 425 degrees for 21 minutes, or until the corn bread ls eoldcn brown. Serves 4. Serve wl.lh a tossed 1reen salad. --~-.r -,,,--.-,,,,. .--~---...-.,-----·--r...--~~~-..--rn~·---~-.~.....-~•~------------------------. • El Rancho knows meals are planned around meats That's .why we specialize in super-meats in our butcher shops. But we knQw that grocery items are a must, too That's why we're staging this weeks big sale! \ SPRINGFIRD 5 LB. BAG •••••••••••••••••••• Jlittering crystals of nature's sweetener ••• for energy, for pure roodness, enjo1 the real thing •• , sugar! CREAM OF MUSHROOM ••••••••••••••••• Campbell's ••• use it u a soup ••• as a cooking aid ••• and en joytheflavor u well uthevalue ! 10% oz. SARA LEE CHOCOLATE •••••••••••••••••••••••• Velvety teature ••• smooth i~ ••• frozen IOQdness waitinz to be enjoyed •• • limply thaw and serve! C k M• BEITT CROCKER 29' .. ·a e 1xes ........................ . Chooae your family favorites from any of the regular 39c varieties ••• and aave lOc per packJge ! Green Giant Vegetable.s 5 i $1 Creen Beans, Cut or ·French style in 303 cans ••• 12 oz. cans Niblets, Mexicorn or White Whole Kernel! 0 J • CAL-FAME 6 ~ $1 range u1ce . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . It The Al! American blend ••• the best of Florida and California, blended then frozen in 6 ounce cans! Birdseye Puddings ................ 39c Baby Food . ... .. .. .. ........... 12 ,. '1 Cool 'n Creamy' •.• choice of flavon ••• 17~ oz. Gerber'• ••• atrained ••• chooae baby'a favorites! Swanson Entrees ................. 39c Del Monte Peaches .............. 29c Frozen ••. your choice or reg. 49c varieties! Yellow clinp:· ••• sliced or halves ••• No. 2~. C&W Vegetables .............. 3 ... '1 Betty Crocker Sauces ...... 3 far '1 J!roccolettes, Broccoli Spears, Italian Vegetableo Serving aauoea make meals become sourmet do- or Brussel Sprouts ••• all priced for aavinp! lights. Your choice in 8% oz. cans. El Rancho Super-Meat Special Roundft1ak FULL CfNTtR CUT! Compare the quality •. the trim, the value ••• and see the difference at El Rancho. rp Swiss Steak ............................ BSf. Rump Roast ............................ 89f. Omaha Roast ...................... '1.09 lb. U.S.D.A. Choice Beef ••• trimmed for value! Thick, juicy, tender ••• for a great pot roast! Ground Round ........................ 89t. lean! Fresh l Bulk or patties at one price? Chopped Sirloin Steak .......... 99f. Precision cut for a delicious main course! Pork .. Tenderloin ...... ~.~~'....... $1~?. So lean ••• so dehc1ous ••• so varsatiJe! Serve oven baked in a mushroom soup -'D l' I 1 o• .. vy. e IC ous. ~plit Broilers .......... ~~: .......... 39& Klnr aized Cahlorn1a raised chickens ••• expertly aplit into halves ••• perfect serving portions! Fill~t of Halibut ...... : ........................................................ 79r. Flaky li&ht meat .•• so delicious, so tender ••• for a treat the family will enjoy! Red ~napper, ...... FMSH rrum ....... 89f. Swordfish Steaks .................. 98f. Tq ft oven tried ••• with Shake '11' Bake! Serve it broiled, and enjoy !Iner aca!oodf -' ) • TO!LET TISSUE • ••••••••••••••• Two roll packs ••• priced to offer real savings! Buy several .•• tQ be sure to have a spare or two on hand? FACIAL TISSUE • •••••••••••• Big-200 count package takes care of so many sneezes! Choose white or colors ••• and save on your choice! GIANT PACKAGE DETERGENT •••••••••••••••••••••••••• Try Bold ••• restore whiteness to your whites ••• and brirhtness to your colored washables ••• and ave! Snack Pack ........... ~u.~: ........... 59' Delicious puddings ••• delightful fruits ••• in a 4-pack cart.on •.• easy open cans .•. easy to enjoy flavor ! Hawaiian Punch ...... ~........ 3 i $1 Big 46 ounce cans brimful of refreshing goodness! Take home your favorite varieties, chill and enjoy l Calo Pet Food ..... ~~·.1• ~~~... • .. 8 : $1 Your choice ••• either Dog or Cat Food.,. and either one vtill be a nutritious treat for your pet! Italian Dinner .. ... .. ... ...... ... .. . 19c Bathroom Cleaner .................. 59c Macaroni treat from Kraft ••• 7¥1, oz. package! Fanfastic ... 22 oz. aerosol can! Folger' s Coffee as:. Two lb. can ...... 1.69 Three lb. can ...... 2.43 Sandwich Bags .... .'.... ..... . ... . . 29c Glad ••• ~onus pack s .•• 10 extra bags in regular 3Sc package .•. pack of 170 for 49c. Thrill Liquid ............................ 43c ' Detergent in 22 ounce bottle! Calgonite ............................... 69c Save 30c on the huge 50 ounce package! Diah- \Vasher detergent that lvorks so well! El Rancho Produce Special White Rose Potatoes 5: 35' U.S. No. 1 Quality! Serve with Pen & Quill Imitation Sour Cream .•• 12 oz. ctn .••• 19c. Spanish Onions .............. 3 lb~ 19c Italian Prunes ........................ 15fr. Robust flavor ••• yet not over powering? Serve fresh ste\\·ed prunes tomorrow! Delicatessen Special Liquor Special Sliced Smoked Meats ............ 35c Fresca ............ ~~~~-~-~.1x ............ 59c Buddig's ••• six kinds to choose from! 3 oz. pkg. So refreshing! Ten ounce bottles, plus depoait. B• •t PILLSBURY o< B.IUARll'S 3 25c ISCUI S ........................... far Ready to bake! 8 ounce tubes. Smirnoff Vodka ...... ~:~ ..... '10-Lea\'eS you breathless ..• and saving 1.18. I Prices in effect Thu r. through Sun. Sept.10.11, 1~, 13. No salea to dealers. Open daily 9 to 9 .•• Sunda.v 9:30 to 6:SO . Ask the manager about our convan/11nt Charge Account Servfca HUNTINGTON HARBOUR: Warn er Ave. & Al gon quin St NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 Newport Blvd. • 255 5 Eastbluff Dr. (Eastbluff Village Center) Also conveniently located stores In Arcadia, Pasadena and Sout~ Pasadena '\ I ' I • 1. I OICAI M.lYll ALL HI• OI ALL MUT WIENERS IAI M WltTllN STYLI IULl STYLI SLICED BOLOGNA UI M WUTUN ITYLI SLAB BACON ITI THI PINllT IAI M WISTllN STYLE PLUS TRADING~STAMPS 69~1. 59~1. •• I •••• : •••• .. .... . .. ... . , !·····. ····=·· •••• ··!··:· !:::::, 75c ,•::-:: ·!··:· LI. ,o,:o,: PORK SPARE RIBS ·!··:· •••• \. -..... ·:·:·::··:::·:·.· . ... . . ·:-.......... . ... .... ... ......... . .. . ......... •, .. ·····. '•'• ... .. . •:.•.·:····:··· .... ·····. '• .. '• ... .. . "· ~ ·~·:·::::·:· .. EASRllN ASTlllN ···:::/!/::. RAIN FED '•:::::,:: •• ••••• ••• FAllMIR STYLE CENTlll CUT 1111 PORK LB. CHOPS ··::::::'::, . ~ ..... ·~·!•!1!. SLICED BACON :~~ 79' ~!!~;r f/NllT LI.'•!••: -----------------------:•.:•. ·!··!· IAITllN Gl.t.IN •ID '•'••'' ~t~~~~:l~HI:~ OR IOAST 79' ~.:~::~~ GRADE A FRESH DRESSED EASTERN GRAIN FED PORK ROAST LI. :::::; ------------':·:~ FRYING CHICKEN LARGE LOIN PORK CHOPS llllSH PIOll!N lllLIT ROCK COD U.ITllN •aAIN lllD CINTll cut LOIN 49~1. PORK CHOPS 98~. T·OMATOES VINE ·RIPENED 10~ BANANAS GOLDEN RIPE 9~ BELL PEPPERS 19~ GRAPES 19~ EXTRA PANCY SEEDLESS CANTALOUPE NORTHERN ~ SWEET 5 F $1 GROWN OSCAR MAYER PURE PORK 69 LINK c I SAUSAGE With th l1 coupen, 110 l"illil'rlum purth•1• 11quir11d. l imit I lb. per t:oup•n -O n1 (OUptn per (U1lem11r. \'eid 1ft1r ~u11dey, Seplemb1r I l. ~oo=o'"'D...,ON""L""•"'T °'U"'••"•'"1N"'1•"'S1'"1T ·!~ CUT JOI YOUll: JllUll WHOLE BODIED GRADE "A" ENKASHE!R STRrTCH·N·FIT PANTI HOSE 79' .. ... •••• .. . . . ~ ..... • • • • ... • .· •· ~ \ ... ••• ... ... Let1 & Thlths 59C LI. Meaty lrHst 69C LI. 3. Lett•d Fryer1 39C LI • ::: AURORA SOFT0 PRINT .. .. ... .. .. ... .. ... . .. .. .. .. ... TOILET TISSUE •• .. •• .. .. .. •• ... •• .. ... ... .. ... ... ... ... ... ... ... llOLLS F 0 R .. ~.·.... . .. , ~ ... . . . . . . ... , .. ·::.. • •• e. •••••• •••••• ····i•••··········· ................ ........... ... .. .. ,pol CANS e PEAS ' ' e GOLD•N i)f CRIAM CORN e WHOLE KERNEL CORN e APPLESAUC• Wtdnt5dlY, !tpttmbt, t , 1 t70 DAILV mor ''DOUILI DISCOUNT PLUS'' THI '°LLOWINe ITIMI Ali TYrlCAL OP IVUY·DAY LOW IHU PllCU ON WHICN YOU ACTUAL!.'.' IAYI I WAYI. PlllT-uooAIN IAIKIT 11euLAR Low IHILP PllCI IAVll YOU MONIY, llCOND-MANU•ACTUllU' •lOMOTIONAL ALLOW· ANCll All , •••• D ON TO YOU TO •IOUCI ou• IHILP I, 'llCI IVIN 'U•THll. PLUlll ILUI CH .. ITAM .. -NO NllD TO DO WITHOUT ILUI CH ... ITAM ... WHIN YOU IAVI AT \AlOAIN ~A.KIT. •••· to ilROAIN CHAIH .~:t~8tr IASKIT .,... ,,,., l'llCI PlllC PllllCI DIAMOND. "' I GR0EEN1 iEANS 25¢ 23~ ~/$1 PAMPll5 I $, 69 $147 DAYTIME IOX s1 s9 DIAPERS OP " PAM,lltS I 79¢ DAYTIME ~~· / 89¢ 83¢ DIAPERS IS ·--PAMPllS 79¢ OVERNIGHT 1:: 89~ 83¢ DIAPERS 11 - 1comES I CALYPSO PACI.AL 33~ TISSUE IOI OP JOO 29¢ 27¢ AJAX GIANT $tll / as¢ / s2¢ 69¢ LAUNDRY DETERGENT ll•O L .. UID 23¢ Dl~T 10 oz. 29¢ 26¢ FOOD CAN - GORDON'S L .. .,139¢ BREAD L':~~~ 35¢ ~/$1 llTIT U.111 \39¢ CAT 11 LI. 59¢ 49¢ LITTER ... I -flltlSIDI \ 45¢ 39¢ SWEETIE 14 Ol. 49¢ PIES 101 MAll•AttlNI IN CUii$ - 1 LI. CTN. ' '27« BLUE BONNET .................. .. l.5 OZ. PLASTIC IO"LI vo.1 OILY HAii POltMULA 1& Super Lather Shampoo ...... 6.7- ~,:_-------~--~~ cooa'.!l'·cooiilEs .· ........... 43' •IANT $111 fl ... IJ•I 6ftr DASH DETERGENT ............ 7- BAN(j)UET _., •• ~, '" COOKING BAGS SPRINGFIELD ORANGE JUICE :.~~ 4/51 6/51 GREEN GIANT e NllLlTS COIN IN IUTil!t SAUCI e CRIAM STYLI! COIN e MIOIUM ,IAS IN 1un11 IAUCI e KITCHIN SLICID G-lllN II.A.NI e SPINACH e IUTTll SAUCI 4/51 GALA PAPER TOWELS DEL MONTE . PUDDING CUPS GALA PAPER NAPKINS PRICES EFNCTIYE THUHDAY, PRIDAY, SATURDAY• SUNDAY Sept. 10, 11, 12, 13 PRICES SUIJICT TO ITOCK ON HAND WE ACCEPT U.5.D,A. llOOD COUPONS BIG ROLL Wilk tki1 (OUpon, no "'in!,.,um purch111 11q11ir1J . limit I roll per coupon -One 'oupon per 'II"•"'''· Void •fter S11nd 1y, September I). PILLSBURY CAKE 4F$1 MIX : , •• , .... 1 .. t1 .... ,,, • .,..,.. With thl1 '•ulJtn, ne mtnlm11111 p~11h111 r1q11!••4· Limit 4 -··•• per 11upen -One &•wll•ft 11•• &w•l•M 1r. \'•hil •f+er Su~lll1y, $epl1M~t• IJ, PKG-. O,_ 4 CANS 59c 160 NAPKIN PACK F 0 R AXION PRE-SOAK llEG. 79c GIANT SIZ! 59~ - W• GIVli ILUE CHIP ITM\'5 COSTA MUA PLACOOIA W• GIVI ILUI CHIP STAMPS 19th and Pl1ctnll1 71 O w. Clllpn\ln [\ • 1 •M-·-·----......... _, ... , ....... ~--·-·-·--·-·-· .. ·-· ·~·-·-·-·-·-·---·-·-·~·~·~·~· ~~~~~----------...-------~ ... ~-· ·-----·--------; .. ----. -.,,--..,,-0------' I T ..... • • I • t f ' ! • . i . . . . { r ! I I ' l· : . . . .. r • • '· r • ' ' ~ • . • • . • . • . . • • • • • . • . . . • . . . . ' • • • ' • • ' • • • 1 FRI DAY, SATURDAY & SUNDAY IT'S A FACT ••• We don't core where you've been or what you've been offered - You're sure to 90 for our offer! Don't si9n any order with ony dealer on any new car, truck or used car until ycu have been quot· . ed Dunten Ford prices. ., '·. '' ~ .. ,. ; . ' J. l ' ;\ALL LEFT QYER 1970'1' ~1., ti"~~ I . r j , . , , ,.. , 10 IE SOLD AT I ; f ' , , l NEW -DEMO.-EXECUTIVE -USED .CARS! \VE MUST 1 MAKE ROOM FOR THE NEW MODELS COMING IN! · · ' I ~ ~11. t41 TOD.CWOOSE FROM e · . . . . '*llAN NEW 1970 SUPE R VAN E-200 Driver and passenger seals, {5) 8x25x 15 8 ply tires, dual Western Mirrors, rear door glass, etc. E24AHJ5799 I AS LOW AS 52792 8 ft. cab-over, sleeps {b),' 2 burner stove , water tank, 50 lb. ice box, screen door, full insu lation, queen size bed. Truck has heavy duty springs & tires. gauges, large mirrors. { 52969). • '67LTD . .. . $1999 · Cp1, V-8, outo. trons .. factory 01r cond111onmg. power sreenng. · radio, wtiittwall tins, rirryl roof, whffl covm. Lie. TSH 781. • .,, . ···' !\ '65 T Ill"' . ' .. . . '' '" " $1499 V-8, outomot ic lr~smis.sion, foc lory ~ir c~ditia~ing, po~er ~lee~­ ing, power windows, rodio, vinyl roof. NCA043 ''64 FALCON WAGON VB, automatic tromrnis.sion. oir conditiuling, radio, hec1er. (PWH507) $899 '67 IMPAlA 2 dr., V·8. outo. tron.s., power stwing, rodio, hlaf. er, whitewall 1ir1s. lic. TYC 606. J67 VOLKSWAGEN Coupe. 4 speed transmission. rad'io. As is .. special." lit. UOK827 $899 · .'69 CUSl,OJ4,SJQ~b,; i -A ;$2299 1/8, au!omotic transmission, factory 01r, pe1wer steering, r~tio, · · heater. (XXE467) . '69 MUSTANG V-8, outo. trons.. power st erring, rodio, heater. Lie. YCU ~49. ~~1 .r.;~;~~~~:i~:\1·,~;.'~,:'; ~;~;~;~ $1999 :6~" ~~'~'°,"~~J.!~.~od""''"' ,, ... """~ $1887 :~!. f ~!,!~~~,s.~ l•,. I· ·~ covers. Lie. WTF213 radio, heater, whilewo11 fires, wheel covers. {VVG951) i, radio, low mileoge, O.S. ""!":"'=""=:-=::~~~~~-~~~~~-~--1 '· ~~~~~~~--~~-----.,.--------- '69 FORD '62 CHEVROLET $499 . Country Squire Stalion Wagon. V-8, outomotic transmission.. foe. s3499 . . • ' "al" . '°'Y air conditioni.,,, power slHri.,,, ""'"'!f di!.C brakts. rodio, (CH"Voir Wagon. 4 ipeed transmission and heater. "As 1s .spec1 • L11;. .~ , ....... PMG642 • .. • heoter, linled gloss, whHI covers, luggage carritr. ('fPT971 ) · · • USED TRUCKS· '66 DODGE ~art Wgn. 6 cyl .. outomati< tronimi,sion, rodio, htoter, lie. '""300. ~66MUSTANG (pe~ 6 ryl., Stiel! shift. rod'io, lleo!'lf, SKM737 '67 FORD F-250 V-8, outomo1k transmission, power ·'brakes. rodio.,.88909E 99,, -.. . $ , ''69'FORD f• lOo '. ·· "·8, stick shift, rnd io and h!O!er. Serial No. 126030. '67FORD -~·· ~· ·. , $1195 fairlone Coupe. 1/08, oulOll'lol~·tr~~fs1on. power steeril'lg, rodio, Moler, whitewall tires. (UlH537) 70FORD FlOO • • • ' $1999 ~?.~~!!~~;,;on, powor """"'· "4"· h~1'< $14 9 5 (00N537) • , .. ~~·~ , ,, . . ' . . $a')ft9" !. '1 • UICK OPEL GT z. -/J., · ~ ' 41Jlttit, rodi&rheoter, rodiol tirts low miles. (749-BHS) , , .... • . ' " • . . . ' ' . • • . • ,. 't -. --; -.......-. -, . -.. ---··---.. . --....... .,. -. -....,........- I '1!> PJLOT .ADVERTISER 1~-"':''--"'==----.-Wtdnt)(!ay, Stpttmbfr '· 1970 . , .. " ., Wednesda1. Sfpttmbtr '· 1970 DAILY PILOT 1 • • ,. ' . " , • .. " ' ( ' ' t ~ . I ' ' .. ''. \' ' r-• • •, ,. .. ' ,, .. • ' •' I \ ' • 1970 IL DOUDO Demons trator. Vinyl t.tip, 1€!8.ther 'lnterlor, rtin''paWer, factory air, stereo · AM-FM rilultipli:x,' tilt~tele, wheei, power trunk opener & door· locks,. twilight sentinel. (0920). Low mileage. S'ALE . l,l~~. ' ~''" ' --!:... • '., ~ . --; ' ' ' . 1:969 CADILLAC . Sed!tn DeVillC.'•"{iJ'i)'I tOp,_ clj)t h;"'&11Cather infyr>ior, ful,l P?'\'er, factory ai r conditioning; dual contfort .8f:!ats,. sjef;eo mulUplex, j:io\\-·er door Jotks, ttlt-telt'Sc¢pie \V~I. fWUig ht sentinel, ~wer trunk1 o~iier. (Q65AGCJ . . ,: • . SACE . $ ,, PklCE 477.7. 1967 PONTIAC C8t.alina Sta,tion wagon. 9 p&!j:sengei::. Vinyl· interior, VS, auto- matic transi;:nissien,;po\"er steering;.pow'i?r brakes, re.dio, healPr, Power tail gate ·windo\v, V:·hite wall tires, tilt wheeL factory air conditioning.'. <TSA,2.7'Jf .::~--·$2111 ' ' . . 1917 CADILLAC Convert. DeVH~. FUJi powf'.r, fil~tOTY ajr, Jeatber interlor, tilt "'h~l. AJ,-I.Fl).1', _powlet"door JoRs, twil,ight sentine!. power ven t windows, !)QWer'·, tru~K opene~-. (TPZ161 ! ,,,_.,. ·SALE · PRICE 1964 CADILLAC Coupe DeVillc. Full power .. factory air, full Jeathcr interior, cruise control,' tilt whcel, a i:ilomatic dimn1er. flWL673J SALE PRICE I.Ht MARK Ill Co'nlinental. Embassy roof, lea.tti.er Interior. full po"·er, fa ctory air conditioning, stereo t8pt'~ stereo radio, tilt wheel, al l possi· blc option~.:(YCM386) SALE PRICE " • CADILLAC NINETEEN SEVENTY :• Choose Yours 'Todav WHILE OUR SELECTION IS GREAT AU MODELS EQUIPMENT COLOR CHOICE ORANGE COUNTY'S FINEST SELECTlON • • '! it)F PREVIOUSLY OWNED ' · ctDILLACS AND OTHER FINE AUTOMOBILES. • 1969 MERCEDES BENZ 180 SEL ONLY 17,995 MILES ' This stunning blue automobile has leather interior~· automatic transmission, power steering, power disc brakes, powe r windows, factory air conditi~n­ ing, Blauplunkt AM-FM radio, electric antenna,.r"adial tires, etc., etc. This one is just immaculate. Must see and drive. (XSK527) SALE PRICED NABE-RS ' - 26.00 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. 540-9100 SALES DEPARl'l\IENT OPEN 1970 RIVllRA Gran Sport, Vinyl r0ot, full powt'r, factory air conditioning, AM-FM stereo radio. tilt wheel, chrome sport wheels, atrato scats \.\'ilh console, power door locks. (046A0Hl SALE PRICE'. -, ' ; ·. 196i.· CADILLA(,. ,'·. Sedan DeVlllA Jo"ull ~r, faCtiil')"ialr•cc\ndition'ing,.tllt .,.httl~ ~.' ,.ignal· 11e@king radio, ,auto. dimmer, cloth and Jealher' interior.,-, etc. tCJ A814.) SALE PRICE '1965 CADILLAC Sedan DcVillc. Vinyl top, leather interior, full power and fac· tory air conditioning, AA1·FM radio, heater, etc. {RPW434! SALE PRICE 1965 CHEYROLIT ~I Air 9 pa~M!nier \vagon. V-8, automatic transmlstdon, power 1tcering, factory air conditioning, radio, heater, etc. (REC800) SALE PRICE . 1970 CADILLAC .... Sedat. DeVille. Early trade-In. Cloth & leather Interior. full J>O\ver. ·factory alr conditioning, stereo AM·FM multiplex, power door Jockfl, tilt-telc11coplc wheel, twil ight sentinel, etc. Local. l owner ear. 1501AFV) SALE PRICE 1968 CADILLAC Coupe DcVillc. Vinyl top, cloth &: leather Interior, full powt'r factory air. stereo AM·FM multiplex, tilt telescopic wheel. power door locks, twilight sentinel, power trunk opener. !VUTOJ2) • , SALE $3555 PRICE SUMMER LIAll'snc1Ats · "· ' 1970 IL DORADO ITOCIC # s-•, L .... ....,. _..,,_ ,...,._.., 1J, lt1t ON•Al"l'ltOVEO,Cltl!OIT 8:30 AM to 9:00 PM Mon. thru Fri. e 9:00 AM to 6:00 PM SaL and Sun. . ' ~ ..,.. . ':: .. " • " S•rvlc• Department Open Mon ... Fri. 7:30-6:00 ALL CARS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE. ALL SALE· PRICES EFFECTIVE TrlROUGH TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 15, "70 . -........ --· --~--~ ----~--------------·-----~ -----'----- -.• f~ ...---------,"'=~ HOUSES FOR SALE • • v. Qlll 14' It. .... ~.t ...... ~~-..ww.w HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE ~SES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE 7 .. ,,.,... 1000 Gener.11 1000 Gener.11 IOOOGeneral 1000 ~!!_ 1000 O.net1I tOOO 6-ner.11 \ 1000 ~lngton Be.1ch 1400Hu~ting~on a._ach 1400 J ~ LOTS OF LOTS DANA HARBOR I ;:;;;;s;;;w;;;lm;;;m!:i;;;ne;;;P;;;oo;;;I= LAST DAY }"\ Re<Jister to vote 10 AM 'to 10 PM lat our office) , / I INCOME l;fOMES 4 ""'''°'""· 2 bath, wood tnda :1 e * Ot.<eanfront 3DUPLEXES.,Slf,95()..$C4,950 noor, l"P, 2 years old, CUA. PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOME S "'w comm"""' with 2 TR!PLEXES.163,,,,._$66,500 Jorn b'ilt. $3~500. roe simple 2 FOURPLEXES. Well1-McC•rdle, i ltr1 oceanfront lots · 161 ~~ ~ 500 181 N . ' ' REAL ESlATE MART For All Your Real Estate NHds . ' , 77 Linda Isle Drive New 5 Br., 5 bath home on lagoon. Marble entry, wet bar, AM/FM Intercom , Huge mstr Br. lu!s beam ceil. & own frplc. Large liv. & • • ,,..,.,._.,, 0 ewport BJvd., .1\-1. f1·om S.l.1,000 {3) 3 BEDROOM HOMES. 54g..n29 Evt>1; 644-0684 847-8531 * If you heve movMI * If you ch.1n9e your name * If you are a fJrst time vot.r Do not fail to r99i1tar or ,.._register We will stay open tonite until 10 PM Offi;:e Open Saturd•ys & Sundays lam. rms. w/frplcs. w/deck ....... $185,000 For information on all lots & homes CALL: BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR 833 Dovet Dr.,· Suite 3, N.B. 642-4420 '* Bayfronl commercial Newport Beach $195,000 * China Cove Bay view 101 s~.soo • Subdivision land San Diego Counly •••• SJ0,950 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""!!!""!!!""!!!""!! I Brand new. under construe-:;: lion. l..uye buildings: w/de-Costa Meu 1100 luxe ownen unit!:, ocean ---------- vf•..,, "'"' looaUcm•. Tak• 4 BR. + DIN. AREA advantage of good rental ~ com, + ""'"''"' va1 ... ;.,, + POOL WOW'. creases due to the new Dana .. PETE BARRETI REALTY Point Yacht Harbor. Phone Bollder 642-fSOS or $28 950 ASSUMABLE l 'V• LOAN: Large 3 BR, F/R, near Golden West College -repainted in & out last year -a good buy at $28,500. KINDA DIRTY & RUN DOWN: but the owner only wants $2,000 dn . & \Viii carry the !st TD at 8'h%. Payable $150 P/M 'til paid On this 2 BR bungalo\v 4 blocks from ocean. BIG, CLEAN & VACANT: GI/FHA buyers, now 's your chance - 3 BR, 2 story w/cov . patio cff garden kitchen & an~ther patio off family rm. Bltn intercom & fire alar1n sys- tem. Large reverse corner lot -near Edison Hi -only $32,500. .~ 1605 Westcliff Dr., N.B. Gener1I 1000 General 1---·----"" •I 33192 Cop,,., Lanlom ' 642-5200 General 1000 General 1-------*TAYLOR CAN BE CHILD'S PARADISE 5 BEDROOM School, playground. J1br11ry, OR ••• PARTY HOUSE Evl'ryday Is parly time In REPOSSESSION Realtors "Our 25th Year In the Harbot Are•" 673-4400 Original builder now resell· ing !hi~ VACANT 3 bedrm home \l'itlf fireplace, bltins etc. For only $27,950. Locat. ed near South Coasl Plaza and is SllARP & CLEAN!!l~~~~~~~~~~1 Only $1400 down to anYQne. / ~ Dana Point JUST LISTED and unbclic\'· "":::::::::=:::::;::::::;::I able. Beach area. n·ee lin- iilii t'd st. Sep. entry hall. Pa~ elect living rm. w/stone II.re- place. Wife-saver kit. He8.vy shag carpets. 14' master auite. \Vall of glass to pool area. Sep. yd with floor of brick. Covered BBQ area. FHA-VA term!!. Better hut· ey! cau 17141 962-5585 IF YOU EVER WANTED: A !Gxl6 family rm plus 3 BR. 2 BA & assume 5~ ?'o loan w/payments or $155. P /M. Call now to in- spect this lovely ho1ne -it won't last at $3-0.000. HUNDREDS MORE to tell you about. Mem· her Huntington Beach/Fountain Valley mul· tiple testing service. ~ heated pool at you1• child's fingertips. J bdtn1. dining rm, pool home in \\'rs!C'lllf. t.fust lM.'t'! $15,850 He who hesitates is lost! I ~ ....... 1000 this J\fesa Verde Rancher \\"ith a fantaslically llUGE l .'i x 40 Fan1ily Room plumb- ed for \\'f!t bar and many, n1any extras clOSe 10 the golf cou1'Se. You'll fl ip your goggles over the beautiful nylon shag carpets and drap. H now is the mos1 beautiful es TIO. Everyone qualifled • COATS QUALITY BUILT big panelled game rm you 10 assume this 51A annual &. 1750 Sq. It. 4 bedroom, 2 c\'er saw. The home is a percentage rate gwernmtnt WALLACE bath Costa Meu ho1ne. d!'COra1or·s rlrca1n, custom Joan payable al. $146.00/mo. REALTORS Heavy shake roof, oversized FORCE SALE Owner bas been transferred &. husband Is already gone. ?-JUST SELL IT NOW! Sac- rificing this lovely 2 years new. 4 Bedrm. seParate den, format dining rm home for $45, 700. Absolutely top con. dltlon. Ali bltns in lge kitch- en w/eating area. $29,oo:>, 6~• o;1 Insurance Joan can be assumed al Sl91 per mo., prlnc & int. We've told it all -now you must see iti FOREST E. OLSON Inc. Realtors 19131 Brookhurst Ave. 2 MO•t SAUSMIN NI ED· ID -•INl•OUS COM. • SPLIT. CALL '47·1Sll. LIN LICHTE•, l•OKE• The REAL ESTATE MART 17420 Beach Blvd ... Huntington Beach "' DOVER SHORES Dellghtfully diJlerent! Brand ne1v 4 bdrm, den ' garden rm w/~·l!l bar. Dramatic 2.. sty liv ing rm w/baloony. OPEN DAILY S108,000 410 l\lorning Star Lane 1100 drPs. lush crpts. frplc, a n 's easy. CALL NO\\'! 546 4141-kitchen with elec bll.ns. room rare pride or 01\'lll'rship w lk & l (O~n Evenings) for boat or trailer. Located New Tri-Plexes home. As a tast aaJe is de-a ef ee on quiet 111reet 2 blocks to PAOL-WBl'ii $57 ,_ 11ittd owner will se.11 :ntA I ~~~~~~~~~~I park & all schools. Owner .-or vA at only $2.),900, This On Brookhurst One Man's Loss-east_ must sell!! Assume Cillf.Allil (undt'r constr-avaU Sept 10) posilively is the best value Nt>xt lo Gemco Another Man's Gain!! high ex.isling 5%% loan, tS&LTT Co. Large, bcautuut "homes with Cost1 Mesi on the-market today. Call 9GS-3371 • l"ountain Valley Nearly new 4 Bdrm home payments only SI~ a mo. 1093 Baker, C.M. 546.5440 an ~ocated i~l--------~- Huntington Beach now and prvve it to )'OW'· r·11tr OVER with upgraded crpts/drps/ incl. taxes & insurance. Call ~~~~~~~~~ ~::. Featuring ~~38~ ON TH! FAIRWAY ''Our' 25th 'Year" self. f A"'-lighting lixlures. Pro!. land-540·1l5l. $7.50 MOVES YOU IN 2 BA "owners unit'" + (2) Custom built, 4 bedrm, I.am. WESLEY N. Nichols Real Esta e i;cpg & sprinklers, YOU ................. ----...., 3 BEDROOM 2 BR rental unlts. Stt at Uy room, 2 big fireplaces. 51l % VA LOAN 0 \VN THE LAND Owner SHeritage NEWPORT HEIGHTS 2035 Tustin Ave., cor V.'ood-nus beautiful home over· TAYLOR CO. 546-tsll 16 lransrerred East.· Priced •t.~L?O•I That's seven dollars and rirty land Pl. or call 642-4905 looks the 17th fairway of Realtors or obtain neiv FHA-VA lin. St'V<'ral 1housand below cost cents .• Seller pays all costs (Also new income units for ?vina Verde Golf Course. NE\\'PORT CE.'1TER at $4G 500 for Vets. Thls custom built sale in Dana Point). 6%. assumable loan. By own .. 847-8531 Newport Heights 1210 ·BLUE OCEAN VIEW NE\V LISTING. Come gee this beautiful home wilh a splendid view. 3 BR, 2 Ba \l'ilh n1any line features & tastl'[ully decorntrd. Gar sundeck also has vie\V. A bargain at $37,500. 2111 .:, ,.,,,.,, H•'ll• J<oad anc:ing if you preler. Sharp oPEN EVENINGS home in Newport Heights is 1 er. 3036 Java Rd. 540-4095. -·,.. •910 · Newport West home one 'MME '-··J Hwy TV SALES •-out;f"I ranch ,1y1 with • • • • • • • • • $63,500. 'i -mil• lrom ·~ oc-ao. 3' B·". . .... ..,, · ~ a "" e 2 BR H Cu t bl! 'l-=---'--~-~-1·~~~~~~~~~1 .. u.., ... "'"' Opposite f.tacArthur Blvd. floo t ceiling brick I.ire-· ome. $Om : I-========= _ F1"ve on the floor rm, 2 bath, outside shower r ?.n ·r .. 1. f hanll'.'ood firs: exceptionally WANTED fixl'r upper small house wanted by young. hard \\·orking couple with cash. CALL (!) '46·1414 -JUST USTED & SERVICE place, ....,.aull uJ snaxe roo' well-kept; JiJctl new w/w it. Yes -Five Jartc bcdroonw, • • I: boat storage, Occupancy 2 ~ueen sized baths, ~ x 10 crpt, drapes; covtl"M patiO . . f' $155.00 Per monlh pa.y11 all, and "j"USt ••"'11KJ'' can be arTBnged beiore brick patio & tree. s Like a J\IANY Extras! , .... fen-" --------- N ... rt Beach 1200 • ..-• ~1 ,...,. ""'"'""' Excellent going business, "' f o k '" 500 .. , •~ N rt 8 h ff jus! assume !he low 514 per-Neer HARBOR HIGH on a ,_,....., ' ......,.;,...,. tablisherl 8 yean . Have Zen. orest. wner as ing .,...., yard, on extra lrg lot. Good ewpo eac ome •~~:iii~:. ~o:u~i ~~·J~.?'. f;~;:. ~.~;!..Om',,'""i -~ -:_s 1 hP',,"Fo"'AM'. • COATS ith franchise. Net income -r.1ake Offer! S.16-8660 F.astside Joe. 0.1. Ideal 1or 91~ Nt•r Ntl"pOr1 Po1I Offlt• .......,..., ,. .,.. & prr year af1cr alt expense11 retired couple. S48-l&l2• just a sho rt block ily roon1, Paradi~e in lnnd. ILY room, T\VO "·ood-burn.. WALLACE POOL s1:,,CXX>. f'~ull prier SI0.000 • • • • • • • • • I scaping, doublf' garnl!e. Sac-ing FIREPLACES ( + gu REAL TORS cash. No "blue sky" here. e OPEN DAILY 1-5 e from Cliff Dr. Bayshores rifi~ at $26.9JO. fllA ""' VA s . 3 bedroo 2 I --------- terms available. This won't log110· ), NEI W carpetilti~g· PIA-Open Evenings Lush deep pile carpeting, Newport -~C"O"L"L"E"'G=E°"P"A"R"Ko--I 'Tilloa. ,"', 111d~o Ap",~.,•0.6!~ .. ~~. ~8~1;:-:.s bedroomm adbaJO. :~i..., CHARl\1ING. opclgo , """""" l"I. •.•e ...,." Tl , of -street par ng or e "2-4454 e massive dble fireplace. fully G 1 ..., • n.aic .. u• • ..., u· 2 b• -~~ BOAT o• CAMPER •· easy:l•!!!!~~~~~~:'l'!!!!! I blt•·n kico•·o, 2 ,pa,.kling Located near rammar, ~ 3 B W/W Ille bath with built ins, plus ce ing, '· · vg ...... • « '"' • •t J•nn•d,·•t-, "''gh &hool • r. cpls, drl>s. Im-'"''' $36 0llO ,~ "12 1905 W••• 1 aU L....-' " '" " rut baJh \\i lh buill m· ,., l•'v·1.:o=·,:,o::·o==~=-=·=·==I up-keep yard. A&..o.B o ftlUltV DUPLEX hnths & l oversizt'd ....:u· med. possession! Only S..?2,. ad\OOl& &: !lbllpJ:tr111> Btst cl llN'IU I rooms pl1t.'I family room. F.iirview OCC. Spacious three bdrm., 950. 19&1 Federal Ave. inr. room wilh fireplace •din. DOVER SHORES ~~:e;s~n-·;~.m~tzN :w~ ONLY $2S,500 ~a17:.ti~a~ only 4'6-8811 !.~,..:~.kl· ;~~iba. ~-i:~;.~~:; ':11 :Biiitr~c:v~~~R !!~= ·~: :vr:!J:gp~:~l ;U;n;iv;e;•;;,s;;ity;;;;P;a;•;k==l2;3;7I "li'·-.quick .. POSS~ON! (anytime) ..., • ~6 2lll E c t Cd'! ~3211 secluded lanai: \\.'OOd carpet-• 11 ~ Joi , fenced in yard, room for · · oas · : "'"" 1225 • ~c:nebt~i~ v::. ~~~11;1~~~ SJ.l9.i0. FURNISllED DUPLE.'\ 2 boat or trailer storage. As-Assume 5V4'/• GI loan! ~7fcheanndwit~m:J;.m:~~~~ ~ fL of living <1J'{'lt. •I Bro1·n1s, Colesworthy bednns. each side. Garages. MESA VERDE sume s21.:m -61a G.l. loan. Spacious 4 BR. No. C.M., % age oU alley Y.i th electric 3~, BA, pant'Ued ram rm w/ Live in one let other pay Roomy live bdrin .. lhree bath Submit SS.000 down and let blk to elementary sch!. $204 eye opener, room for boat or fi1>1e & wet bar. llli:h heam· expeTllCS. Assume lo inter. home with formal din. rm., us work the ttsl. mo, incl laxes! Consider 2nd camPf'r. BeaulifUI landscap. A Haven for Children • , With paths to walk or cycle, Near school, ttnnis. pool & shopping. S Bdrm, 2~2 baths. coinpletely rctlccorat· ed. \Vith assumable lo int rate Joan. tl9,500. -~ eel ceiling living rrn., '"C0\111--est toan. Call 645-0303 breaklast rm., large sunken M . M . LA BORDE, Rltr. T.D. for part equily. Owner, eel cornei· lot. iry" kit \Vlbrkfst arr1l. & Co. FOREST [ OLSON rumpus nn. with wet bar. 64&-05.55 Eves: 646-4579 ---~~'-"~' -"~~~3650~;-· __ Dri,·e by 328 Aliso then call Enclosed lronr court yard, Sparkling S\l•imming PQOI. REAµ'OR Painter'1 Challenge . ow.~r for appointment to _ _, n--• .. , Be·~ Offi " I C & fe.nccd rear yard with Doesn't Nnd Much ..;j, ""~-64" '"32' $108,900. Roy J . Wa1u, '""'"'-, ·,~ewp<n .......,, ~ l'ne Realtors 2299 l·Iarbor ..... ea ly ompany roon1 for pool. Three car $19,000 5\~ % loan. :; oarm tee. ~ .. .AN. .....,., • , l:r'"'~· ~6'6--;l550;.~o~po~n;:d~,;;1'ri'·r1.ijiij'i°'jiiij''B~•~>"iidieiDMijiii'vjii,i!ijijll--''~--ol~'~K=·nc1~-BUILDER'S HOME • Only pa lnt inside & out, hOuse. Xlnt Cl\t "Ioc. $26,950. * DPE.N DAILY* 675-4930 L•st its 1 garage plus olhcr storage landscapi ng in rear. sonie -• 64" ~., A magazine cover farmhouse areas. Th!' ""rfect ans\\·er 645-1070 Re .... tor, -.u * TOP VALUE * LIDO WATERFRONT $17,500 Ml price in Costa ,~ broke n glass -a real fL"'\er- APTS .• J20 LIDO NORD ,~1Jtc9·· 1 Mesa, No Down Vets. Per. on qu iet, ~-lined stre~t. for. a large family at ff price upper. 5 Bedrms though, aP-FAJ\ollLY hOme, 4 BR, 2 ba, Artistic & charming 3 br 0 Red Hjll Realty Univ. Park Center. Irvine Call Anylime 833-0820 Easlbluff 1242 NOW REDUCED TO ,.--·-,111 feet starter home. 2 Big 4 Bdrn.is. dtnuig1. & fa~ You can afford. Only $~7.950 prox Sl9,200 VA loan at 5~1:% Cp!s & drps, Bl!ns, Lge home near 1'.farincrs School. ~ d' . rm. Bu 11! of the 1nest \\ \\'ilh excellent term~. E .1 1 coo Jndscpd yard. '29.500. 256 Newly carpeted Jiving rm HARBOR VIEW HILLS $150,00G-Xlnt Term1 oearooms, ining r 0 0 m. w/high beam reilings & used M . M. LA BORDE, Rltr. lake over. qui Y no Camellia Ln. 642-9501 overlooks Jge covered patio 6 Beautiful unit11. 6 ca r Bring your Paint brush. FHA brick lhruout. Huge lot eAi:: """"" .Ev-,·. ", l'J'~,, latgC'. 2 BEDR hou b -& J•><h g-~, •• R•mod•J-" 3 br, 2 ba, .am. Xlnt cond. $1000 DOWN t ·1 bl 5'16-8&10 .,...,....,......., " .ro-~"·' t0 Evenings) · se, Y ow .. cr, ..., <Uu ''-'· ... .. ...... beaut view, prof Jndscpd. ""'~"'es & utility room with erms avai 8 e. ,,_1ust see. $69,500. pen I < ~P;". 0 n d b•lhnn• & k'•lo'-n Appl•' 8J~~ fronting on e.xl't'llcnt Assume 7~!!% Joan. Cu~:_ k3 675-3210 642-8235 $28,990 WITH ~ S41·SllO ~~I. ~9~'48 ~'6 ances included. Q~y· $32.500~ Pri!!!.,nly $52,900. \Vrile Box •"'mnu·og ~a•h. u0,·1, .,~D be<hm wilh shady uue 6"•"• LOAN ..,_, ~! ~u.<.> Daily Pilot N.B "' ,,,, .. ..... .,., 11 {11111"cir*'9 11_u., Buy direct & save S's. itustl===='==''='==''=J lle\\'IY furnished. ynrd, alt bltins. cnncrete ---.. ---Criss . cross picture 'vindO\\•s, OLLEGE REALTY •EAST SlDE-3 br, 3 garage. see! •1512 PriScilla Lni Bill Grundy, Realtor play area, Location ii close Fairway Custom pretty shutters. Heavy shake •l!a!AdllnllttwW;rJI. $24,000. Easy~ terms .. By . 846-1355 {owner). 133 -·· -NB "'A"A...,,. to schools & shOpping. Jim NOT JUST A VIEW Lovely 3000 sq. ft. low, ramb. roof. King sized bedrooms, owner. 646-2985. uuvcr u~.. . . ~ \Vood ill•-•·-tinnn ·owner\\' ~......,..But panoply of sea. sails, is-ling one story Cal modem fuU dining room, large fam. ll UNITS HOUSE & Gue~t house on R--7\7 .. ~ llf:-1!88[ TOGETHERNESS down and payments 1nclud· tan& and all A lovely cus.. \\'ith family, dining &: game ily room. Decorator's dream 2 lot $22,500. 2308 Santa Ana w· h p · OCEAN BREEZE ing everything \\"OU\d be $250 tom :\ beclnn tlen & dining rms. Extra spacious kitch-come true! 540..l'ra'.l Room for more. All 2 B<lnns, Ave. 492-4288 Likf. new Baycrest beauty. it nvacy a month. room hOme. Excellent \•alue f'n. l\1ost attraclive & terms TARBELL 2955 Harbor frpl. beautiful landscpg. _Be =========! Owner sacrifice? Near xlnt T"·o 2 DR homes joined by a Priced al S30,000 • 1\e\\ un. the first to see this new llst-Mesa Verde lllO schools & stores. Family r m, dbl J:arage. Room 10 add. d-mo•k-1 3 °-1,,,, 1 ~ at $62.:ro to suii. Unde r s7o,,OllO. BEACH HOUSE •c;=-'-""-'"'----'-"-' F 11 Po '" ... · n•~ . • · ing. -ee 1 t e, game rm. s.ses. lfd\\'d floors, shakl! & shing. ba. family rm w/ui;ed bnck PETE BARRETT Rl TY (Open Evenings) 2 Bedrm home in \Vest Ne\\'. PY HAMID EXCIIANGORS CUSTO'.\t 110~1E Golf sion in 4 days. ·548-8281 I<'. Below hi\\•ay. Only $46,0XI frp!c, crpts, c!111s. lurlwd ,g Ml·Sllt port. Yi block to beach, good --=~67=;:;.5-;:8800=.=.--·I Cou rse. Truly magnificent University Realty fin:. shake rool. rlblr i::11r, 642-5200 fnnreiMN thlltlll parking. $38,950 OCEANFRONT \\·ith 3000 sq. ft. ot living 3 BR. _ $2'4,500 673-6510 alley aeces1, roon1 !or bo11t --:;-:::;;;:~;:~-1 .. !!'l!'!'!!';;:;~~~ LLEGE REALTY LOT area. Formal d ini n g, WALK TO BEACH 001 E c H M new home . last l'XC1'Cl11'! Balboa Peninsula ove!'llizcd game mi & ... 1,J., 2 Ba., bltns, cp a, drps. SHORECLIFFS ------- Corona def Mar 1250 or camper. 01\·nprs hou:.:h!' -EAmWFP CO\JNTRY~LIVING-1 ,..,..~""',..-,..'!"ll""""" .. ".Clf.'""I n1nssive stone fireplace. -.. ' I 3 . cast i1·y .• Cd T'.'''·c,·ona1 1-~· •. ,·th lo ... On a tun ac"" with r·•noh <y-$4S 000 Xlnt co nd l\lusJ ••U' La h Rlty · '''"~ ' ... ... '" A • , country size kitchen. 4 • · '"" · ?>lorning Canyon Dr, CdM " C enmyer eve• view. 3 °•--. 3 bau.;, J BR hon1e con1pletely re. ttent1on G W 'll' CAYWOOD REALTY DUJU'll eorge 1 1amson Large bedroom~ & 3 ~fost desira ble fl't' land 11 64&.19'l8. Eves; 642-0185 ln~e fa r.iily r1n w/11-et bar. painled , new dshwshr/dis. VETERANS REAL TOR l sparkling bath~. One of 8 6306 \V. Coast Hwy., NB homes. Priced at $6.l,000. ___ Coulrt t'OJSUy I.le co11ve11('(! to posal. L.Rt' <k-tchd cov. Ila· , * HEY LOOK * 673-4lSO 645-1564 Eves. kind for $69,500 • owner Sta-1290 Exclusive with, . 4. BEDRM $25,0001. 5 Hdm1x, Low n1a int, yard tio, outdoor brick rrpl c ,'-.1 No i!oii·n 1)nyment. 3 SUJX't" • -,,,.0, 3 •·Jnn horn• In N"I'.'-. dla 1 t I ' t I b I ....., · "' ~· .. requests 1mmt' le sa e. BACK Bay • 4 Br. fam ily + with aiurtyatd, S:-11,500 BBQ. l\lar1y sh:1de ll"M'~. )l>(l'OOlllS.T .111 at_ is. hu~c port ·HPights. AJleyenlrancc. Sell or Exchange Call :>4~2.i South Coast Pool! Custom built on cul. 1'TAl.."l'C" Sweepinv Ocean Viewl "PleaSf' call for our picture Owner "'ill fill(; al s ~: hu~(' In!. his rusti(' shn <' HOLnn for boot ,r,, trailer. 4 UNITS Real tors d-•o. •·11 o• t••d• 10 CoRenJ-MARTTNjJJ 1 Almosl nothing do"·n G.I. • 1 h · nl(lf ho111{' offered UI a Low ........ .,.. ' • .. b!TJ(•hu1-e of C\.Jr1•rnt listings" $10.000 dn. ·lurry t is \\"{Ill I 123 9., 11 ,10 -·•o f..asy 1rrn1i; or f'H A-GI. 3 BR 2~1 bnlh 01\'nr1"5 unit. Save your car _ it's 1101 Units. S48.9JO. Eqf)' $18,950. :;:;:::~l'.'11~-·~·~z;:::::;::::::!}. ;o~ ~o;;·.:.:';\.::~.~;:; [l!il!h'1@1Jt!W~ P_'""e-~_~_0_1~_1<_•_·000_· _64_1_-1_7_71 '. ,,., -Un)'. ;J' ... ~ • 6=~AN RE~~I.Z.s9 :a~~~ ~~~ps, 642-5000 farho! J ust i:,ach for your ~-,....,.~"~"~'"~'.,'·~~~--2 Ul\ITS-Lrg 2 BR home, + IJ'tt lined atrPct ·cul-de-sac. ~J ,.db"'W•••d P ne & C1Ul Daily PUot 35 Ft by 10 ft mobile home huge brand new 2 Br & den 540.172{1. ES DAILY PTLOT WANT AD. TIIE QUICKER YOU CAIL Classified 642-5678 Olari"e SJ.JOO ~·Uh roon1 & patio apr. Good lor. Good line. By ~i,,T~, ~A~R~B~E~L;L~2~9~Sl~H~·~·~bo~·:o.. .. '~3~~0~7~oo ......... !!!!644-!!!!~14~3-~.,;"'=ru=n!="'=-=D=Th=IE-==A=·L=!N==':l.:::o=:o=:o==::o===:!~n~;~~~'42-~;~=''~·~·,,.,,,~~·~i~<::::c!..;TIIE=:;:;,:Q=Ul=CKER;;:;:;:::;=Y=O=U=SE=LL,.. :"°"':,;==··=-==loda=:iy;'::o::o=:.!-64:==~='"';;.;':"·='="='='=·:===~0=•='=~=··='=''"'==""==0='="""==7983='==· IOOOGener•I 1000 Gener.11 1000 General General IDOi General . .ii ,. •• r ·~ .. k IDOOGonoral 1000 Gener.11 IOOOGeneral 1000 Gener1I lDOO .l'Z/!1~:i3 ;;DJ #4 #4 NQW IS THE TIME TO BUY NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE 646·7711 •C-O-S-TA.-.M-ES_A_O_F_F_IC_E ___ 54_5-.9-49-1.-54-5-046--Sr-HU_N_T_IN_G_T_O_N_B_E-ACH OFF.ICE,-842-4455 2043 WHtcllff Dr. 11 l..,.ine Open Even;ngs 2 'tll' PM 7612 Edlottl" .,..,,,. 540•5140 790 HARBOR ILVD. Opea lh111htts • • "UNTINOTON CINTE.11' DON'T WASTE THE IMPORTANT YEARS Open Evonings 2 blocks to ocean. House alld lot 50 x 117 fi., mulUple unit zoning. $19,500. You "COSTA MESA SPECIALS" · h NEAR-THE BEACH LESS THAN RENT 3 Quecn·Slze Bedrooms. large garage, deep lot with Jots of trees. "l\.1om", 1! as need a quick pen for thft one! a HUGE kitchen. Carpets, drapes _ NO WOHK NEEDED _ J UST f\.fOVE IN. 3 roomy bedrooms, step saving modern kitchen, intima!e garden patio and LARGE T RADE , TRADE. TRADE! G.I. and FHA terms. Payments less th::i.n rent. CALL! 12 x 20 separate Family Room with wet bar, stereo. and wine racks. Only S\72 Fantastic value. 3 sharp townbOt.ASCs for what have you . 0\\'ne r '"a good guy'' COSTA MESA EASTSIDE per month for ALL! will consider ;ill offers! This doesn't h•ppen often ! Dial 646·?'1!1. $21 ,700 FULL PRICE r0r 4 bedroon\ borne with VA Loan with payments of Sl41.00. BEACH LOVERS DELIGHT! \\'here else but al \VALKER & LEE could you get such a BUY? Call us for ap. Charming 4 bedroom. 2 blth home 2 ~TO THE OCEAN. lla s $\~·. annual pointment. rate FHA loan p3 yable $1%5 per month OR seller will pay ror your new VA or "G.I. REPO" FHA loan! $24,500! $1.200 TOTAL 00\\IN on this rrcshly painted J bedroom beauty. ~fOVE IN CON· HAPPINESS IS DITION! Carpets. drapes, modern gas range. HUGE KITCHEN. Lots ct walnut loads of setlusion, panoramic OCEAN VTEW -unimproved road 3 bedroom paneling. No discrimination. CALL! st .. 1 11 129.950. MESA VERDE SPECIAL WORDS WORDS WORDS Only at WALKER & LEE. Gorgeous 3 bedroom Harbor Estates home near lbe Cinderella cannot express her !ttllng of elegance as she enters this M5 ,<MKI 4 bed· lj:Olr courR, Freshly painted. New carpclJ In living room. HUGE, sexy 1'.t:ASTER room wlth 1'""'0RMAL dining room, ankle deep carpets, ma5'ive homt. Only SS,000 BEDROOPif with private b&lh. Large kitchen with eltctrlc built-ins. tntercom tot.a.I down paymenL Call today! TIO. GI and FHA Terms. REGAROLES.5, you'll qualify. CALL!I NOW IS THE TIME TO BUYll I ' ' $19,850-4.BEDROOM Full prict for this bargain hunter's beauty with space-age kitchen, DISHWASHER, ankl~eep carpets and drapes throughouL Submit your down and pay Jesa Ulan $180 per month for everything! NUDES II AUention getter and so is this beach beauty •ith intimate garden patio. Paneled 12 x 20 separate fa mily room with wet bar and wine r&eks. Secluded master 5uitc. SEX I Now that we hive your attention you won't want to mi~ this bargain buy 5V.. GJ Resale where $150 per month PAVS ALL. FINISHED GARACE converted to rnas.- tc:r-sized bonus room, "aqucaky" clean and waiUng for you. $2&,500 FULL PRICE. , l = .. " .. " " " " •• " " " " ~l ~ .. [l " • .. .. " DI " •• " RI " " . , " " " •1 "' .. .. " .. .. " .. •• " " co " ~ .. '" co ..... ..... Ml .. "' " •• ,. ,. •• RI ti •• == ~~ •• .. ~~ '" ... .. "" "' ... •O• " •• •• ... .. ... ,., '°' ... t:I '" r~I co • • ,q • • ' . I PILOT-ADVERTISEJI: Wtd11tsday, Stpttmbtt q, iq10 HOUSES FOR SAL& RENTALS RENTALS -·-·-Hou1•1 Furnished Hou••• Unfurnlshtd 1.c;;.o:.:•.::o.;;n;:•..;d:.:•:.:l.::M=•'-'--1.:25:.0:i LL!•!G~un~•!_!B!!•~a~c~h~-1~105~1 ~==::',;;;:::;:'"'~;;;;; .. Newport 8Nc:h 2200 General 3000 * SURPRISE * WEED IT 1 :.:.:=c..;...:=::.....~:.:: ---"------- You'll bo '"~'"""' ol I"" low 2 BR + d<O 2 ba. 2· fi.,.i. * HEY KIDS * prlc\t on this c:ba1·n1h~ 2 AND REAP car. laundry rn1. ID mo. Bdrm hotnl'!. no11h Of Hwy. "THAT'S ntE THEf.tE" for $2!JO n10. 409~ 3Sth ~t NR R-2 lot, Take R look. lhlic it:f'ln\\\01ing contemporary 3 BR. Bayf)'Ont llomf.. MORGAN REAL TY $tylcd homt'. DetaUed ex-$.~mo. For tea~ nr 673-6&42 675-6459 terior \\'/low swcepina roof. for sale. * 531)..t74.1 Jh)('s. \\'Ol.)(i, stucco & Pt.lois \VINTER--Lg. 3 bdr. 11nn1C' 1151 Verlks Slone \\'cll dc1difl· tit\ beach S300 month '1201 -S--l --L-.d----1 NI l BDR~t. & DF.N CEN· SMJhoro Or. ~T937. pac OUI I 0 ~omt TRAL llALL FLOOR PLAN. - Pr1mr 3 Br, 2 h11 i;.ing\t> Dbl. door entey hall opens Y ARLY · 5200I MO. Lido 111. story. 3 S11nnJ pal O!!I. On TO LARGE \Lrv. nr.f., 2:l Br. 111 18th St. str:;t to • street cornl·r lol F'T. LONG, \\f.JTH CENTER 2 BR. Flp'n. AU bltns, fenced & '1•. $89.j()()~ FIREPLACE or \\'HITE yd~ 50 mo. 1 Child OK. Primo Lido Nord BRICK. Sliding glass open.s 1_,,"~'="=:86\l:·:·""=:=· ===== 5 Br. 4~: b.'l. nr. rww \\"t1tor 10 rear grounds, h1str, !xlrm. I - front hon1e. Be;1ut. dc~'Or suite w/l\11RRORER \VARO. Ntl!Wport Shorts 2220 Peck. pil!t Sr rloat . For al)-ROBE !X>ORS & PRIVA1'E -------- p't. CaJh BA11-f \V/l\lAP.BLE TYPE 4 BR 212 ba!hs. 9 mos ll!osc, Bill Grundy, Rea ltor PULL?.1AN. S:'IOO f)('I' n10. S.1.1 Dover Dr .. N.H, 612-463'.l Complctc.ly modern kitchen \Vinton Rea.I Est11.1e 67S-33.1I LARGE HOME--11·/.&.t1. brklst. area, has ALL 1(-;: 224S :; Bedrm, fa mily rlll., "Int 811.T-IN It.ANGE &. OVEN, rv ne err•ce street 10 i;rrccl 45 ft, lot. DISH\VSHR., GARB. DISP. 4 BR. 3 Bn, Bay k Qct'an B~· app't only. .E.."TC. This ~ltr:r bil l home Vie\I'. tn 1~·ine Terr. sroo S97,!m locatt'<I In finer residential mo. Owner may tradc down fur 3 scC'1ion has bet-n leased oot. Blll Grundy, Rltr. 642-1620 Bdrrr.. :Wme in T1!1Tact's, N~:EDS \'ARD \\.'ORK & A CdM, \\ith OC't'nn ''ll'W. FE\V ~UNOR REPAIRS, of-Coron• d•I Mar 2250 LIDO REAL TY INC f1•rro as is, for 1he lo\v price 337 Via Lido 673-7Joo of 3 BR cplldrp, _trp.I, yard, I"'====-~--'-= $31 950 FULL PRICE 1open be~ms. S250 n10. Ue EXPANDABU: cozy com-' O K req. Sep! JS.June l:i. pacl. 3 Br. on lg. sunny lot. LOW ON . PYMT. • · 606 JA&'1INE $52.500. Ownr. GT:'""l-2643. or owner \\'ii.I t'OnsWcr lcRsc/1~----'=0:.:=:C.=---npt. on hbt'ral purchase $200 uio-2 BR hse partly H • B h 0 terms Jurn. Util Incl. Nr. market unt1ngt_on eac 140 1'iissJON REALTY & restaun1111. Couple only, PICTURESQUE SETTING '"° So_ Coo'1 Hwy., Lai:u•>< "" """ '7H936 PJIONE 1ni11 49-1-D731 --b-2300 W000'5 COVE Bal o• PRIVATE & SECLUDED ; STY 3 "'· , B•. ''"'· ,Custom Home crpts. Or 2 BR mod. apt. ~asf wrought iron gatl.' t>nlry Rerli\nod f'X1('rior. \Vood in-f'lec kit. nr buy. \Vntr n>nt. into enclOSt'd brick p1Hared tenor \1 /npc'n btam C('l!-No sludl.'nts. 871-946 7, Look al I.his 4 BR, 2 bath, rcl'll..'«I Y•rd. patio, erpls, dl'Pl!, etc. S2'l:i. l\lOVE B~· FORE SCHOOL! Hom.Finders 6'.S.2951 * FIESTA TIME * 3 BR. 2 Bath Towntiouse. Stove, retrig + POOL! Bring tots k pe15i, $170 nlO. Hom•Finder1 6'.S.2951 This Won't Lost I BR Furnished Duplex, Sto\Pe, rcfrlg, palio. $120. PICI\ UP THE PHONE! Home·Finders 645-2951 *READ & RUN* HURRY 1-"'0R 11115! 2 BR. f-·cnc:ed yard. Kiddies ok. $115. CAI.L NO\\I! Hom•Find•rs 645-2951 * Move Today * l..rg 2 BR Ttipltx. Sto\'f', l"l'- rrlg, fenred patio, ~mall pcl & Int nk. Sll.l. Home-Finders 64S·29S1 Costa M•1a 3100 -.;_ __ _ f BR. I BA. w/GAR New paint. Crpts. Drps. Bltns. Fncd yard. Child/pcl OK . Clos.-to park, schoOls, shop- pg, N"'P' Hghts area. Avail 10-1-70 $175. 5-10-8638 evl's. 2 BR. gar, patio, crpl.S, drps. i;tovc I rc!r, Quiet IJ.~pical setting for arluJti; only. 1 blk shops. $160. 544--M52 or 6·t6-4430 $135 or $14;i furn. 2 Br, Jt. _w....:.;~_,..;.~..;·~~~S~··~'~·m~~~·-9~,_1_97..;0 ___ ~~~o~·~IL~V"'-M~LO~r_,ra~ RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS -RENTALS RENTALS Hou~·-~~-1 __ A_,_pt_•_· _F_u_.,,_1_1h_~ ____ A_,_pt_1_. _F_u_m_l.;.•h.;.tcl;.._ __ ~ptt. Furn1•htd Apts. Furnished Huntington Bt•c:h 4400Huntlngton IH•c:lt 4400 Coron• dtl Mar 3250 Newpart IH•ch 4200 N•wport Be•ch 4200 3 BR. 2 Ba., cpt1, dl'})I.; rrpl. Dix. duplf':c, S~ OD lease. Rt:allor 67l-lti62. SEPARATE 1 br, nice yarrl, frpl<", S-B.-Q, For l or 2. SISS. 50'J'-1: J1u1mlnc Lido tile 3351 ------of Rdnu, 3 Bath, a('J'Otl.i> fron1 tennl! crt. p la)'& round , clubhouse .~ b ~a 1: h ! $650/1>e.r n10. 6-n.7+189 or 642-6l00. ·-----Huntington Be•ch 3400 2 S'l'OR'i': Nr bcl1. 3 BR/211 Ba. Fam/rn1, lrplc. A1•ail ~pt 1:.1h. $230/n10. 83G--0880 or 968--i472. AVAILABLE &-pt. 15, ~ bdr r<'ar beach, c!rapcs, !('need C011K'I" )'O.l"d $210, 536-()346 • I.GE 4 br. lan1 rn1 , bltns, incl. dshwshr, crp!s & drps, nit'(' yard, covrrt'd f){llio. 3.i m1 10 be<1ch. S32J/mo. !l62-762j $175 . 111· bch. 2 Br. Yrd. chlldrrn S.· f)l't s \\'t"'il'Omt"'. Blue Beacon * 645-0111 Laguna Beach 3705 •OCEAN \"1e11• drcan1 ho1nc. Elegant, ~parious, ~ BR, 3 BA, 11'f'I ha.r, fonnal flin rni, mac-niliN'nt rirepluC'f'. i;tcrco, bhinic. ch'Nlt'll!CW rims. cpl!!, hobby <Jl'f'<l, rloi; l'Un, gardf'ner. Adul1 s only. $4;.() on lease. Rcli; reqd. ~97-1349 Oakwood ... a new way to live in Newport Beach It's fun, fine ceighbors and prestige living, all in one luxurious package. That's Oak· \Voo d Garden Apartments in Ne ,vport Deacb, just minutes from Balboa 's Bay and beaches. There's as;, million dollar Clubhouse \vith party room, billiards room, indoor golf driv- ing range, men's and \\/Omen's heallh clubs. saunas, ten nis courts, resi dent tennis pro Rnd pro shop. and Olympic size pool. All Ibis. and much more, just steps from your p rofessionally decorated apartm ent, each \Vilh private balcony/patios. Air condition· ing/fi.rcplaces optional. THE HIGHLANDER "Scottish Treat" 16161 P•rk1ld• Ln. Mgr. 142-1969 Snn Diego Fn'l'Y 10 Beach Blvd, 4 blks So. to 11olt, \V. on Ilolt 1 blk-. LA QUINTA HERMOSA "l\1odern Spani sh'' 16211 P•rk1id e Ln. Mgr. 147.5441 FURNISHED MODELS NOW OPEN Lush landscaping, cabana, covered court· ya_rds, sunken swim'g pools, BBQ's & foun· tams. "THE UL Tl MATE IN APTS " I BR's-From $150 2 BR's-Fro m $17S All util. incl. Furn & Unfurn. Newport Beach 4200 Balboa 4300 \'EARLY. Ot'eanfmnt 3 Br. 2 Ba, bHns. indoor Bar-B-Q. ~arage. $'195 1no. Sept. 1:), 1:!08 \\'. Oceanfronl. 71~; ii29-.l91 I OCf:°ANF"RONT T il J unr. 4 Bit, 2 ha upper duplex. V\('\\' furn. )o(ar, JNl!, dshwiir. S240. Se~shorf' Dr/:-:.Olh. 6-16-IC26. BEAU'J" 2 Br, 1vnlr· Ol..'<'11n(rtn, rrplt-, lurn-excpt l111f'n.~. $300 010 utl pd. 6-16-:':&19 BALBOA Bayfront. \Vin ler Rental. A\·1111. Oct. ht Very nil"t'. l Br. Qulet re&J)Qt\Slblc adulls only, All utll. Car part. $150. 67l-l983 BAQ-IELOR APT : Ut\I prl. $&\ & $!12/mo. 310 E. Balboa Bl. Balboa. 2 BR. Bcachlront. Crpts. rlrps, 1·es11. adults only, no chl1l1·n, no pcrs. 644--0153. BALBOA Peninsula Bt:ach Front; 3 Br. 2· ba. \Vlnlt'I' nental. ph; 4!H-4:'il-\. rourryard lo f:Qrgrou~ "OLD ings. ·1 Bdrms. 4 bath + :>-IS-9J74 \rORLD CllAR:'IL" J largr i;auna, Dining rtn, lan1\ly -.-CH=A~R:~'1=IN~G~.1~8~n~0-, ~,~B~R bdr1ns. + n1ass1\"{' lh·ing rni, rl<'n, 2 fireplac:rs, Jt~vf'I & dt>n. Bal Pen A\'&ll SC'pl- MOm \l'l1h l'OZ)' b11ck fire-1'31111 off k11chcn, \\"()rkshop. Junr. 2 BR U!>"lairs, lurn, place. 12' breakfast roon1 . 10· high doublf' garage for S300. 67>-1971 NE\V 3 Bil hon1r, S.300 1110. plex, bltns, pat, s~l!ii ok. Pl R 1 ,91_9.,01 Blue Beacon * 64S-Ol I 1 I '-_~'~"'----~'_2"~1·=.'-=----~-'~~.,.c. Oakwood Garden Apartments Ou !Gth Street bP.t\vcen Irv ine and Do ver Dr. (714) 642-8170 Dt::LUXI-: I Br. Apt. Steps lo Hu• 01:e11n. Sl::ll pt'!' nw ,\clults. \Vinlrr r c. n I a l . ti73-2tii7 Balbo• Island 43SS Sliding glass lo privatl', en-camper & boot. llome \'a· 2 BR. ]Ii ba hse. Sept-June closed patio, l'C'\I' blocks lo canl, 01>o'Tier lf'fl area. $79.~ $l60 mo. Fenced '-'ard, 1, •• bench. 1-lu.11t sell! Va lue ~ packed at $211.600 1.1·/}·llA-~L blk from ocean. fr.3-4197 VA termi:;. can 111 11 002-~ ..,./T'O/an Lido 1,1• 2351 FOREST E. OLSON REAL ESTATE 3-B-;;-;-;.,-, -.rr-.w.-l.,-ho-m-<: Inc. Rt"'altors J[l13l B1'00khurst A\"c, l·lunrin11;1011 fl.f'HC'h NEED ROOM TO BREATHE? Near llun1lr1g:1nn S!n!c Beach 3000 SQ. FT. 1190 Giennt'yre SL furn., S450 i\tonth. •l!\1-9173 5-1!)..().116 Bill Grundy_ Rltr. 642-1620 :': BR 2 ba, $300/9 mo~ \SC'. MONARCH BAY Bryan1 \V!est, Rltr. 6T.).Z723 Save $4,700 33.J.l Via Lido, N.B. I hnvc rcdured the pril!f' ol - n1y home $4.700 so that i1 Balboa Island 2355 \VOuld sell in the next 3 wks -------- Ix-lore school starts. 4 br, 3 1010 So. Bayfronl: 4 Bil 31 ~ ba. living rrn & dining rm ba wa!erfrnt home & 2 Br. I 1\•1 opcn beam criling. Den, ~a. gar. npt. Dock. 3 BR, Fam rm w/rplc, Bllns. Cartlener & \\"a!f'r Incl . No pet.s, $280 n'IO. lst & last mo + depoi;1t. ~IS-9.'iO!I $175 . Clean 2 Br, stove, cpts, gar. lm::rl for kids!• pels. Blue Beacon * 645-0111 EASTSIDE J Br, 2 Ba, crpt;;. drps, bllns, on quiet stret>t $243 lsc. 837-6417 or~ 3 BDR., 2 bath $195 lease option 3057 Royct! Ln. ;fl;i-~JQl • COJ\tPLETE PRIVACY L.rg 2 Br. patio. gar, $140. * !'i17-ssAA. 4 BR, 2 ba, Chil<lrcn &. pcls ok. $200/nin + cleaning drpo~it. 6.tf'>.-2937 3 Bedroon1, 2 hath~. faniily Roon1 \\"ith fircpli:it:f', lorn1al dinin,g area. hUCt"' Jivir1g room 25xSO' RUMPUS ROOM 2 patios, .::000 sq ft family Bill Grundy, Rl!r. &12-4620 bl'ach hon1c. l yr old, pvt 3 . BR. 21~ ha: all clcc College Park J115 beach &. 1cnnis courts. o .... ·n-k1lchc11, Lge patio. 1------"------ er. principl~ only please. * All 6. 67a...l23!1 * LEASE. Unrurn house. J Ea!iii!y ronv<'r!cd in10 4 add'\. $69.ROO Phone 4~3142. Bn. 2 h.'l, Dbl garas,:(', bedrnon1s & 2 001hs -I oii!i!!!!!i!!!i!i!!!!!!l"!~'l.1:L!a!g~u~n!a~B~o!a:ch!!.__,227~0~5 Op11on In buy. ~5--4611. ONLY $36,400 I~ *ONE OF A KIND• OC 1=========== Immediate Occupancy T" ho sc wilh specta('Ular EAN front 3 BR. 2 BA, !'fop Newport Beach 3200 VA-F11A & Cnnvr11tional ::an ~lt'W. $27,j()() I:. -Jun 15, $325 incl. 'A'a1<'r. RANCHO LA CUESTA Be1hke Really * 49-1-2858 ganlencr, frpl, Mthhollsc.!t. 4!}.$-5.i..11 or 494-1 495 AY RES I lon1r~ Since LOOS * $34,950 * OR . b MODEL.'\ AT !lei(}' 10 heh Vi('\\' xlnt cond. F rent di" option to .uy, BROOKJ1URST & ATLANTA PLACE niALTY, 494.9704 f~IJy furn h.se, bcaut1rul 968.2929 • 968-1338, . vie\\·, 7 blks lrom bch Ir. 11 8 S~IALL Cha1·m1ng 'l BR dO\vnlown Laguna. 49-1-300-1. a.m.-p.ni. house near beach $29.::.00. $24,750 BETHKI'.: RLTY * 494.2858 Summ.r Rent•lt 2910 PDOL ll & 1-·. : hcrlrm, 1'% RENTALS · td Bayfront-Bal. Penin. ha. Clm;e ro srhooll\ $: ocran. Houses Furnish LOVELY 5 BR, 4 BA. 1nc;i, Down 01vncr will car--2000 Pier/float. Avail &pt 1st. ry 10•,r,, 2nd. Submit all of!-~·~~-I------· I Also avail for winter :cn- lals. e 673-2039. RENTAL FINDERS Free To Landlords 64S-01 II ,.-4.15 W. ltrii, CMto MHO Duplexes Furn. 2975 :l BR-21: BA Condo: Furn or Unfurn. $28:> uni. Pvt/palio, pool. 4()7 Flagship Rd. NB. 213: 6n-3000. Open Sun! 3 BR., furn, 9 mos !SI'. $2.'"iO . 4 BR channel tront, yrly lse S37J Cay\\-ood Jtral1y $200 -3 Br. rluplrx. S!ovr. rcfrig. gar. kids ok. Blue Beacon * 645·0111 YEARLY-$200! n1Q. 2 Br. new carpel, 109 and 1.13 18lh SI. N.B. 2 BR, 2 ba. S22:i or lse:/opl. Sl 7j. 01'.•ner 67j...8200 Eves 644-&lllS BAY Vll-:W-BLUITS New 4 br 2 \~ ha l\\'nhsr. Fan1 area · [rplc, rrpt'~. rlrpi;. pool. Le115C $.'195. &~J.-5.2611. Newport Heights 3210 3237 For Rentals in University Park & Turtle Rock, Call : ... r l11 li"1 \.11i 1. ---,-1 l.rul!or lat \Vc~tcrn Bank Bldg . Univcr.;ity Park Day 833-0101 Nights Mission Viejo 3708 2BR & tll'n, 2BA, curllUM & dra~ lhruoul, \V I w cptg. fenc.oed yarrl, 1·lose to schools k shopping, riishwas~r, ovrn. r;1n:;cr, rli!~'ll. A~·ail St"'pt 1 $Z-:i0 s:ID-27'/l. Capistrano Beach 3730 4 BLKS ft-0111 Or.can \\'/ View! NE\V J Br. run1 rn1, rt:n r n1, 1·pt~. drps. bltns. s:no l~f'. 77:,!-;'1671 nr i74-74ti:J Duplex.es Unfurn. 3975 J:\1:\1AC. 2 B1·. crp., drp~ .• 11!1-ins. lg, p1v. rov. patio lovely frnc'C'd ,1:nls, ~!Ir. and boat prkg. $160 married adults. JI .B. 842-3276 RENTALS Apts. Furnished Gener•f 4000 Spaciou11ludio, t • :Z Bodroom 1ulte1. fumishN or unfuraitlied. S1'5 to SJ10. lmmodi.ole Occupency Modob opu dailr JO am to I p.m General 4000 Costa Mes• ---------4100 \\'INTI-:R rentals -4 hses lrom Ocean . .I Br.. I Ba. Sl:ti. 2 Br. 2 Ba. $l~j 1110. 00.2-$83 keep trying. OCt::ANFRONT -Deluxe 3 Bl{. 2 BA Frplc. A\/ail 10/1. 1'tj(I n!O. YE.t\RLY! 613-7053 NEARLY NE\Y 3 Br, 2 Ba , all elcc I kit, frplc. patio, BBQ. Also 4 Br, 3 Ba. la Sept-Jun!"' 638-8470. 53!).-8831. 2 BR iv/boat dock, furn or unfurn, New, Yriy rental, 673--(i640, 205 Grand Canal. YEARLY 3 Rm1 ull1 paid $150 mo. \\'ork'i:; Cpl prf. 119 Fernando 673--~. RENT FURNITURE BOP.:\! Adlts-No p<'l!I. 2 APTS <1v11il on year round $11Ki/ni'1. Ol)('n ror inspt'c. lease, Balboa Penin. Ulll. &.!. \0-12 pnl. 2;17;; Santa paid. 1 hr SJgj, bachelor 1 BR, 1 h11 Studio type * DIRF:CT TO TENANT An1t Ave, Ap! D. C.i\1. ror $140. 6Ta-r111G. "''/no kitchen. •p\ 2·1-Hr. Delivery 11dd info: Call 6'12~742 S:\IALL 2 Rr. apL Across 1 ==·='="='=·='='~=1="'==*== 100 ~ Purchase Option bl>forc R <1n1 or 11fl 6 pm or Jron1 Bay/81':.ch. Sl75 n10. Complere I BR Apl a!i 213: 469-&\)9 \Vintrr IM'. 675--0736. Low as $22/mo. DELUXF. TOl'.'llhOUlif', J Bl'. 2 I & 2 Bit. rurn .11pts. Pool. No 10-0ay ~1 inimum 2'"' Ha, <lrllfll'~. w/w rrpti;, ehildl"f'n, no rw1~. •nk12' 16th + \\llDF. VARIET Y .1<1, 1: ·"'" CUSTOM FURNITURE <l~hwhr. fH1!io. s-.. ... 11n10. St, NB. &1.;......,;.,.1. furn. Nr all !'-Clllft: frl•'nl lhru 2 br IX.'t'Hnfront avail. 9/1:? RENTAL OCC1. 3 Pools. 833-3691 wr h.~aSe s21:; n1n. :il7 \V. 19th St., Ci\I, 548-34.Sl Acapulco Ap!JI, at!r1u·11vc1 I ~=~~2"428-4'-"92~8-~~- RE~tARKABLY Pool , Utll rmid, Carden $2~.Q !\lo furn modern 2 br. UNBELIEVABLY llvl ni:. Arlul\s, 110 pcr.o:, "ar. Pets/Children OK. 216 EXTRAORDINARILY 1 BR-l1:.0, 2 RR-$17~1' ,.. J ~ W I i• 201h ~t. BEAUTIFUL ~ al :ice Ave, ~.:\I. Val D'iser• G•rden Apts -0 L/\RGF. 1 Bdrm. NEAR BA -I Ne\v beaut , furn. $110 O...<t•11.n. $150 mo-YEARLY Huntington Be•ch 4400 ON BEACH! • Sln~le apts from $16.'; • 2 BR furn. f"'rom ~ • 2 BR unturn $260 Carpcts<lrapc~ll\hwashcr heated pool-sauna-tennis rec room-ocean views pat)os.ample parl<lf!E. Security guards. FURN. also Avail. Putting green, waterfall le Util pd. Lst'. C>\lfor ~:-•. No Sturlentt1 ok. 673-4!0SS • Just For ~·ream, nowen everywhere. pf'tll. 219.1 M1flf'1' No. 2 ••·pool bill'-~ • 09 -. \\"INTER RENTALS • ;, , rec. room, wuus, .~1!1-1 8. BBQ's, Sauna. lum .• unfurn, Rent NOW for Sept.! HUNTINGTON PACIRC S"1ngle Adults 1.' B•. abo s;ogl" from *NEW BAYFRONT ABBEY REALTY 61>3800 f'l ~:O ., __ It ......... p 2 BR's. 2 ea·~. 21l l9th St , • ..,,, . ...,., ! ..,.,., arsons Lo"·cr Dupll'X. $2.j() ii•rnter LRG L BR. A~·a.il Sept_ 7. South Bay Club Is a whole Rd., 6U-3670. Between Har-rt'lll1ll. $.\.10 )'rly, 6~2.1G, Arlul1 s, no pet~. Yearly. 7ll OCEAN AVE., H,9, cn4) 536-1487 nc-1v \\'llY nl Iii<" d~!gnrd bor&Newport-lBlkN.l 91h 67>-R.192 or &1~7. just for singl• ~Pit'. It's BACl'ELOR $1" All e NAs.5AU P<1 lms l & 2 Br 1 b f I b 0 • Ofe. open 1D am~ pm D&ily r.1'<1nagecl by \VIl..LIAJ\I \VALTERS ('(), , 1n u ~ ..,,/n10. apt. t"urn .i:. Uni. Pool. pin..:-r urn aJll or su let ""'pt. fun living with \\"arm, rly-util pd. Color TV , stove. pon~. BBQ. shnrly !nii·n!I. 1 thru ~lay 15, V2 block namie nr ii;:hbo~. It's a crpls, drps, I blk fron1 in f:. 22nd St fil2-Y,.l:i fron1 liench. $14:1. 675-8299 'l BR. Pool. Adu 11 i . $750,000 CluhhOUS(I "' i I h beach. 1--------'--- • • • I BH . furn . $145 Avnil (:k•t 5. :! Ufl Bny V)('\\' apl, nu c·prs, Bcau1/Quirt~ Util I nc l hraJrh <'lub. s11un1111. S\\'ln1-lrp• $200 mo 9 l1lQ lse 12'" $200/nio. 17676 cameron, 1T1ing pool, p1111y room, hil· 1 RR . $1•10 mo. Patio, 1•rpls. Al.'IO 2 BR unlu1·11, $1·1~1. 1 • : • Ha rds. indoor &Olf drivins: dl"ll!I, bl1ns, t: h 11 d r (' n A\•ail S<>pr IS. !'-ire i\fgr, Apl I "'c,'~1·'~·-G-l._>_8683_~~~~~1 ~"~'=-'=1~2~1·""'"~---,--,.-,'"",; 1,1 ••• I-"'''· Frf' 11 ~1 -bu•"' }"Ou II. 1'1~ Pl11<-enl111. LGE. Jikr lll'W ;l br. 2 bl:I. bch F'llEE UliL furrt I & 2 BR r11ngl'. lenn1s c"Ourls, pro ~ ,_.. 3 ~ shop and resident jrnnis JlrO, 50 !lf'W Jistinj,;s daily \\'/ 11( _ J-·urn Hurhclor & I HR. du11Jc~. !)undeck. g a r , 11pts. Pool. \Valk to be11ch . Single, J & 2 Bedroom llL"<-offic.-s. TELE-TR EN 0 Excc>plionalJy nlt"'e! St'opl--.lunc S250 6·12-1 ().15. SlJO up. 536-3777 or 536-7282 ury apartmcn1!1 1vilh all thl' l •S~y~"~'•m•'~· •"•'•-""' ........ ., BclQ1v l'<'ntal valuf'I ./ OCEANf-ftONT I, 2. 3, & -·~·~· ~536--"71~3611~·~· ~-~--= n1odern C'Oll\"l'niellCf's avail· 2110 Newport Blvri, C1\f. -1 Brt's. \\'INTER RENT-FREE Util . Furn J & 2 BR 11.b!t>. f-'urn1.shcd nnd unfurn-.,.From $38.50 Wk. • $14.-, nt(l. QUlf-:T 2 BR. ALS. 673-8088. 11.pts. Pool. ""alk. to beach • isherl, From $165/mo, Luxury Sln.. Jlt:ar1•rl pool. Crprs, clrps, • * 3 & 4 HR's. t'rplc. 1130 up. ;,.16-J771 or 5J6.7282 MODELS OPF:N OAJLY 10 A.l\1. -~ P.i\1. RENTS FROM $150 to $350 NEWPORT BEACH 880 Irvine Ave. lrv ine & 16th ( 714) 645-0550 SOUTH BAY CLUB APARTMENTS -. . Live where the fun is l j,;le Apts. Complele ma.id d~h\1•hr. Arlull only. no Jl('lft:, YEARLY . J blk 10 Bea<:h? or 5.'lfrl366. scr\llte, hou~l'.'ares, linens, 229.J Pacific Ave, Ci\1 CleRn! Call 67:~245,;. AT Bench -\Vin!C'r Rate!!. all util, hcatM pool. !>18-Gl!7!1 or &12442!1 OCEANFRONT 2 br, 2 hll., 1 & 2 Bdrn1s .• pool : fum. nr VILLAGE INN ~·v Ba unlurn. Adults. 219 lJth St. * \\ni.. -Lovely apt. ch frplc. SZl:i/n1n. &pt -J une. Lai:un<1. Beac·h 494-9436 or cpl. Furn. Kitch. $3J wk Agenl 67~. & Z20 12th SL BALBOA INN & up. ~-15---01~11 AT Bcach-\\'inler Rates. OCEANt"RONT 1 br, lrplc, Balboa 675-8740 ""U"" I "~ 1100 1 .... 2 Bdrms .. pool: furn. (Ir r "·'' '"'"''rm. 1.er crpts. drp!I. No ehildI?n or unrurn. Adults. 220 12tb St & Costa Mesa 4100 * SUNNY * * ACRES * * Motel-Apts. * Studio & l Bedroom• LOW RATES Doy, \\l!'ek or ?.lonlh • Color TV Air Com) . • Pool & Phone Scrv Incl • l\taid Service avail 1 Signal So. or O.C. 1-"airgrounds 2376 Ne\\'port Bh:d. 548-975.'> mo. Uhl lnrl. Older lenanUi no1s. SI1J A"cnr £7~!-8!!00. ,~ " 219 l:ith SI. l)fllY. 642-6:Jf.O * * S120 -VERY nil'f' 2 Br. SPACIOUS 2 Br. 2 Ba. furn I Br. Nl'w beaul. !urn. Mobill' hOml'. Adult s only, $1 85. unr $15.:;. 5.16-3107 2320 J\·lo-~lo. Adult.c: only. 2220 no pc1s . 642-l2GJ Florida Ap1. 1_ Elden. &1&-!12711 rves. 3 BR, 'l ha, Cpts tl\roughout, BACHELOR. U!il. Paid. * * NICE 2 Br. Duplex. f('1v st('pll from bch A1llfs * NEAR OCEAN! * Crpt'd. $1 J:i rno. only, $22:-i mo. yrly. 642-~12 LINDBORG CO. JJ&-?J7!t CRll 519-fll!.~J 2 Br 2 Ba $200 010 . I Bit. Pool. Lr~ closcl ~. :l(Xl()l 7 Neptune Avr: N.B. Arlulls, no pr>l.q. Ur1I pd. ISM * OCEANrnONT • winter c'c1"2"c'°~'~';c"_*c..:"c·~'~2'36::::_~-· I Jea ~r. 2 or J hr family units. $:"...) \VI\. ~101cJ Hungalow11, ·1807 Sl'a~horr Dr. iilps 6. APTS $.10 wk/11p. 2.176 NPwporl Blvd. 548-975.:; $12.".-2 HR Trailer. No kids nr JW!ll. Ut1I included. MZ-3375 rlA)'!'i DUPLEX I Br. Furn. Qu irl, NQ Dogs. '.~1S-t1'l0 Furn 1 Br & Bachelor 2110 Newport Blvd, CM 2 BR, Furn. CrplH, drps, Pool. Kids ok. 199R l\faple Apt \. M&-2808. 1t DELUXE LC I BR * Quit'I. gar, 11.11ftic. 2-\:12 Eldrn, 6•16-276A NewPort Hgh. 4210 CLEAN 1 or 2 BR. Adult~. no pelH. Lrg kit. $13~$150. 2421 E. 16th SI. NB 6t6-1801. Coron• del Mar 4250 OCEAN 1i11le h\vy, 2 811 \v/w, frp lc, 'A'lk to shnpg, elc. AclulL-. rJO pets, $200 yrly ISl:l. 540-386~ 4705 NE\Y ocean front, elegant 4 BR, 3 BA, 2 fir!'!, frplii, bltin h11rhq . .$650. ALSO I or 2 Bil. s21:1. 491.100 t'URNISll.ED l BR. Clos<! 11l beach & shoppln~. Reap. Adul t. -19-1-7079 RENTALS ~pt•. Unfurnlshtcl Gentr•I 5000 VENDOME · L'tl\tACULATE APisr : ADULT and " FAt.tlLY Section Clot• to shopping, Park O Reorrono• leners of lhe four Krombled words be- low to form four limple words Newport B•ach 4200 I.DEAi~ for !!Choo! teachcrs winter rental in China Cove on bench. Avail. Sept . 8 $250. 6~20'X> or 548-61IDS LRG Baell. Prv ent, So. ol lhvy. Ix-am c.lni:s. rerr. no kit. S12a incl u1il, 67J.-t,'9fl.1 • Spacious 3 BR'.!1, 2 bR " • i::wlm Jl()Cll, pUl/green • * 1-'rpl, lndlv/lndry fac·r,; 1845 Anaheim Av't.': Fount•in V•lley • WINTEl1. Rental, ·,\'Qtk1ru: I BOR . !IOUlh or hwy. ul!Htics i:-irls. 1naxlmun1 3 -3 BH., I included $"12i b11, i:arnge, .$300 mo Incl 67?,.{>olO!l. utll. No pt'l.!l. Avail 9/8. Se!' I====='=="='=== "·knd..~ or 11rt 6pm 116 "A" 31th sr. NB Balboa 4.300 WATEru·~.R-O_NT __ w_/_p_fo_•_l YEARLY. lower duplex, 2 floa1 ror lge boAt, 2 BR. 1 Udrrn. 2 Ba. carport, nrar lw. furn or unfurn. ~deck ne.iv. $ZIO, \l.'attor paid . Fem, v.·/v!ew. Yrly or winter. pl't'f. 673-4384 n i a: h 1 s • 3601 1-·1nley, appr only. "''~·ktndii. Arlult~. no pets. 714 ; G7J...82-49, I~,.;,.,==~.,....,...~.,...= 641-21J29 BA YFRONT Apt, 2 BR . MoSA MOTEL f-'ully fnrn i!iiherl. Ulll p;iid • -t; Gl\r, Priv, bf"&th. Boat s.li p • LO\V\VEEKLYR.ATEl' 11 1'1V11ll. Yl"11rly lt11 sc Kitchen, TV'~ mllid service. 1.::""';;=;~/m=•~·~"'~'~';..i;,::..:m~,~· .,...,,.- He .. trd Pool 2 BEDR. Plnipltu~t. Bar. fi.M).~1 Buill•trl~. I house fron1 l non. yl'JJ.r 11m11nd 120•. ocean. Adults only, no 401h Sr. $2-Ml 67}.-3249 o1· i ---'-""~1~'·..;:.:s1crn;/~m~o-. _67_~~;.;·~· ~ Gi!t--2778 2 BR. ApL s:r.o monthly, 31:1 Silturdi\'f -Dr~IE-A-LINES! F.. Btiy. BnJboa. Ill(( at Apt C. 673-1521 or ~ 7771. COSTA ;.;ESA 61Z.2';2-f 2 BR. $\j,l/111(), Ba.I~, bl!n~. ~hag crptt, drp11, air- cond , BBQ. h\Ulard roont ••• I Br. $12i rcnced yrd. bltm crptis. d~. pet & child \\"t"'leome. t"ee $.l:i -buya ~ SO ntw llstin,n d1t1y W/ J.S ()ffic.'t'•. TELE-TRENID Sy•lf"m.,, 832·7~ * l/2 BLOCK * FR0~1111E OCEAN. 2 Br, 2 Bath , Suncll'<'k w/vlew! Si'm. Hom .. Flndert 64~2t51 NE\Y 1-W BR's. All blln5., l'pt•. 11rrr1. nr. Nr. S. Caul Pl1'z:t. 5'10..1973, M~W1. rrs Br:Jch hoUR time. Btc· a:tst Milectlon ever! See the. llfCtlOn now! • ' • , ·' ' ' • . ' .. ,. .. '.• ..--'" . --· • • " ,,,..-~--.. ·..,---.·-.,,· --.~·.-.i-..... --..... -. -r-T":'""1' .... ~"--o:,•r:.>'T.,•·~.-~.:..-:..,-.• -.~.~.~.• ....... -.•.-...,,..-.-,·.-.-.~,,.-.-.. -----.-.~.-.~.--.~.-..,. ..... ...,.~-~---~~~ Wtdn6d11y, Sfptttnbtr "· 1970 lll'J(i:i;-'---~Rillil~TlOr"'--'---li<K~~NTALS tNtdntsday, StPltmbtr 9, iq70· PILOT·AOVERTIS£R J8 REAL ESTATE G•ner1I * ANNOUNCEME S UN NTS 5 ICE D REC RY *ind NOTIC.ES:_ __ .:;•::.:•d:...:.N:..:O.:;T.:.;IC:..:E:..:S ____ 1 ,,., -Floors ~ l::];;s;:::...====-'"'.I Apt!:.. Unfvmlthed A!>to. Unfumiohed MeH 5100 Nowport Buch 5200 Hunlingten Bwch 5400 Income Propor1y 6000 * * * Announc1m1nt1 '410Announe1ment1 6410 --·---- I ii~~~~~-~iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~i I CARP>:!' VINYL m.E 11 IJC CONTR. FREE EST • * $40.72162. * J1Uo ••us AP-JS-28.:"7 blk " heh! 11.S ~ v;o.~21i"R2 CUSTOM 4-PLEXES .1i ;_UllUAft • mo/yriy. lit I last + dt'p. b•. ll'pl, SliS &: 1 DR. Sl.2S. SPllCloul S bedrm owners apt WANTED ADULTS ONLY No chldrn or ~ta. 6'1.J..4281 BUlnt. Adult.I. 536-673), + (3) 2 bed.on. 2 batb rent • l~s BR. Avail. Prt\l\te pa. * * l BR \VATERFRONT· e l DR. NEW! Flttpllce. l.h In excluah·e area ol Nfw. Furniture Rettorlnt ·~;pool -tndiv, Jawiliy lac. BALBOA BAY CLUB APT. Near e>c.an. Patio. Adults. port Beach. Xlnt oWner-oo--~ Reflnllhl"I "7S u!f.On.nc<Co.Air>Ort: ""-1"'1 mo. Call 048-ZllJ IJNDSORG co. 53&-%5?9 cuplod • ""lhtlltt prop. OVERWEIGHT LADIES dQ at 17th St; nr, \Vtstcllll), 4 BR. 2,i bo., 1 ~~oft octan, • Nt."W 1 brlo, ""1 11 •65• Jrps, c,;,;;,. ~:."',!,~mon'th.5 buOn!Ud~ ~ Sbipplrc 11 •f:1' Avail 11/l. $'NU mo yrly g~. pal , mo. .... ..... •OQ ,, *"" ••-• ·~ -2 "''" S.loct '°""' todl• For weight reducing program to establish ~ .. 07tl Tuitln, Co&t.i ~lesa 1.,,1"=· ~· -==='·===== .....,...,.,..,, · "' M-.. _ ,. ___ .,.., .... 1 ee ~-1 2 Br A 1 s1s.oco Down. S75,000. statistics tor rapid permanent weight loss. G de 1 "'° !.#,,_-·• ....... ~ ......... V'MO "' Irvin-,-a ..... ~ ... n · P PERR, ON 642-1771 conducted by qualified pbyslcal culturists. ar ""I 5231 2 81ks from Ocean, ll.B. ~ 968-3132 21 % Return le spendable. 3 Whacldy• Want? Whaddye Got? ?llust be a minimum of 20 Pounds over-AL'S GARDENING Lfvln:s In Your ========== Clean,\nnttd houses lt Ol'.le SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR weight, have transportation and not cur· for Cardenlna: 'amall lancJ. ,., N HOME •• I I NOW LEASING! Sant• An• 5620 ape.rtfi\ent, near Beach rently under docto r's care. All inquiries com-acaplng RIVice1 call 540-!19ll ,. pay $175 for an Apt! ·New, family <ind ndt1Hs units Blvd., Huntington Beach. C-NATURA~J~~NR!:APPERS pletely confldentlaJ. Serving Newport, CdM, Cos. ~ ~·e c11.n rent you fine with total rt'CR&tiQn club S 4 Zone. Sl0,000 Down . 5 LI I b la Mesa, Dover Share .. ~..$140, 2 BR., newly dee, and pre«hool. 1, 2, & 3 VILLA MARSEILLE $35,IXX> Total. =~.;:_s.: :;9J ;1..~D•uck1 ASK FOR MISS POWELL -527-5414 Westcllrt. r~ldrp. u cl patios, •l~C bdrm. frorn $150. Nr. shop. BRAND NEW Jtea!i>nomlcs Corp 1-wti.i ,.., llllv•" ,......_ ......,..., .., .,..., 1,. '"*· l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!ll!l!ll![COMPLETE Lawn Ai Yard • 2 Pools! Adults only. pi""' ...... If schools Just SPACIOUS Commercial Bkr. 6'5-6700 ~"f'oua ,.,.... .,.,., ..,,..." ...... lf11n " Hvert~ c. . <• ,, ..• __ "'bl ev' • & Bd Apt $-NOTtUtr1•111oaa.L.1 -TllADIS O.LYI -"""rvice by hi-school • • Founraln Way r., uu · !<Outn of San Diego Fwy. on 1 2 rm. I . t2) ~1-tJ\ Jots, Production Pl, 6405 SERVICE DIRECTORY .!It ud e 0 t . Exp. Nn.t. .Oot. turn \\I, on \Y\1500). Cuh•er Dr:, lrvir~. 83J.37JJ. Adult Living Ne"·port Bch. To Pla ce Your Tr11d1r'1 P1radlse-Adp ,~•-r~•on.c.:.•~'~• ____ .;.:;;;1 \Vkly-monthly rates. Reas. ~~UOR GREENS li,~~~:'E"Jfs onh~~'i:~~.,!""'..:;1 .... 1=="'="="'=0or="=>-='°'='= PHONE 642-5671 FREE I !!'bx11tting ~ Brian 69&-0022. G<z.m;. GARDEN " sruoto APl'S pl 1 h •••• Off' R I 6070 \Vant JlOY..'t'r or housebollt Commercia.! & income prop. FANTASTIC Ir exp'd mother JAPANESE Gar dener, Bich.1, 2, 3 BR's. from SUD. ~1::i'10:b~~-by ~;:t ~·=~ :fus2 ;;,,";; ice intll to 40' or Mobile home. Trade downtown Laguna, older. • offers babysitting servi<'!e. monthly rate, Gtn. cleanup, '211» ~lel'IOn W13. C.?it. ..-.,, 1ebemes • 2 baths _ stall SUPER-DELUXE QUALITY lo 40,0CK> eqiy in 20 AC R-3 Trn.(kt for San Francisco or Fenced yard, JU', schools. Reasonabl~. Free e 1 I . 5l&4nO .!lhowers • mirrored ward· 1-2-3 room. up to 3,000 sq. heart of town or 5 view Jots N. Calli, recreational acre-HUNTINGTON ~EACH l ~N.;;•;;w;;po,;:rt:;>;71g1,;•;:.· ;:"'=2-4Z11c::::.;.._ 612-2239 \ALLA MESA APTS. East Bluff 5242 robe doort. lDdlred ll:hl· It. olfice suites. lmmed. oc-O.C. Pat TI4! 8JO.OMO. age, O""ner 494-1652 POWER SQUADRON'S BABYSITI'ING In my home AL 'S Landscaping. Tree " 1 •-·•·•·· pa n<y Ora .... e c n t H 1 di 1 · -·· t ·. BASIC BOATING by the week. On Placentia, removal. Yard remodeli""'· J elt, Prlv JW!tlO. Hid poo . Ing !.o kitcl>en • .....,&JU.ul c~ · . .... Y • ave a es opa ring • • '"-.c use o my l\vm eng COURSE ·• ~cu enel'd car Children e NEW DELUXE e bar • huge pr1vate fenced AU'pOrl Jr\'1ne Commerc. valued at $185 10 tradf' power ersr for USe of your nr \VUson, CM. ~7303. ~ hauling. Jot cleanup . • lp)Jne no pefs pleue! 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lease. patio • plush 111.nuscapln& , Complex, adj. Air'porter for antique .llY..'Ords, runs camper/motor home, 3 wks, Huntington BNch • \VIU. Babyait-my home Repair sprnklers. 671-1166. Iii ~. n9 w. \Vllson. Incl spac. muter suite, din brick Bar-B-Q'a . J.arrt beat· Hotel & ~staurant, banks, or ! '!'!'! Sept/Oct, Write Box M-iDS&. High School behind Pomona school LAWN a: Garden Catt, •1251. rm & dbl garage, auto door ~ PoOls ' tan.al. San Diego & N'pt. Fwys. 673-0802 Daily Pilot, 2Zl1 w Balboa Rooms 12.1 I 122 646-5894 beautification, \ve!ding ii: . $l70 opener avail. Pool & Rec. 3101 So. Brlsto1 St. UNCROWDED PARKING 1966 Dodge Convertible Po-Newport BeaC'h St•rting Sept. 14 •nd BABYSIT my home C.M. cleanup by college 1tudents. .B )" Ba ti bit '--arra. (IA Ml. N. of So, Coe.."1 Plata) LOWEST, RATES Iara. Trade for ho--. hOrse 8 Unill!I, --..1 rental area. each Mond11y through Prefer infant or 3-4 yr old. Reas. 543-7363. Callna Bros, r., " , pa o, ·u..,, e FR0'-1 • .,..,, e Sonto Ano Owner/mgr .• 172 DuPont Dr., ·-•~ N <-~-,_ •·• bo I _,., trailer or small fOl't'ign $38.000 equity' i nc 0 me OY•m-r CAii anytime. 64S..18S3 GARDENING SERVICE ..,.t< .. , ... _ ~ • u our 865 Amigos \Vay, NB PHONE. 557-12.00 Rn1, 8, Newport Beach, Experi need J · 4fcount plan. 88() CenlCr r.1anagf'd by • 833-3223 Courtesy to Broker!I car. SlJ,500. For hOuse. cOtn-* FULLY UCENSED * BABYSITTING, i\ly home, e apanese ~. 642-8340. \\IJLLIM.t \VALTERS CO. ~.157·9359 mercial or horse ranch. Renowned IIlnclLt•Spirltualist fenced yard. Whittier School l ~=:-7"----...,,-:-- --HILLGREN SQUARE d OWNER 675..6259 • Advice on all matters. District. 548-3657. E.."XP. J apanese Gardener. ~ BR. unf $155, l br. u;il. 2 BR, 2 ba, dishwasher, ~~~-Beach 5705 1900 i;q It Deluxe 01Hees Dune Buggy, 1600 ual carb COi\tMERCIAL Jn-CO Love .. M~age, Busines.!IB ~~R~OO:;;;IO!:;,U~R~sr='~&:,...·~A~llA:-o-,.·.1 Cen. cleanup. Hauling b'eet. SUO. Crpts, drps, bltrui. dispo11al, avail afl S.13, $210 OCEAN VIE\V Lrg Avall, for immed. lease in eng., lop, hitch for BO!jfon me pro. Readings given 7 days a htaint yard 646--0619 ~Ll No chilcn-eo. no pets. mo. 644-5870, Whaler or ? or truck, 2TI7 perty, free & clear, next to week, 9 Al\{ • 9 Pltt Fcrad yard, friends, toys, I •::-:="F."";.;::-=;;;.-,..1 ·~ E. 11th Pl. Cl\1:1 ~========= Bachelor. 1 &: 2 BR apts. one or cities busiest shop. Bristol. C.M. Se~rs. Val. $65,000. For 312 N. El Camino Real, lu:lehes. Refs. 968.-6819 Compl1t1 Yard Carll ~2138. Corona del M•r 5250 Furn or utlfum. Crpts, drps, PAiing "•nlers, .\Vill div11idc. 546-2598 days units, house or beach prop. San Cl t e LOVING Cat'W! in my JU.: 540-4837 j TH E SEVlLLE bltns, patios, w & I k I n g ~nd.. m~ic, pa~· n~ OWNER 675-6259 492•9136.~~~6 home-hot lunches, fenced Gardening: Land cleanups, '~a-w/gar sm. Adult•. • COROLIDO APTS. 2 Br, 1 distance lo town. 100 Cliff crp"'• rps, ax. par g Exchange equity In '69 24X 10 20 I b. -~ Call "'"51'1 rnkl •---....., • ~ B h 494-5498 main! 270 E 17th St C l\I 60 ~1obil Hom ·o H B. or acres c ose to ig Sin I W'd eel DI orced l ~y=u~"·~:...:.~-~~':...:.· -,.....-Sp r sys, ro..........,ment ts, drps, bltns. Fncd yrd & t~!i BA .. frplc, dbl car· Dr .. ""=•-· -'-·-----l?itr Bf~m 2l3: ·651•2700 ~oll~cl For iOC:nie p~rty · c;~ lake .t river. Fishing, hunt. ge • 1 lowlf·E v \VILL babysit infant to 4 yrs. work. C.D. Yancey, 646-5860 ~ patio. 2619 "I'' Sanhl. port&. large Pool. $185 & up. * * \VOOD'S COVE • * ing & camping. ~lwn hwy * • l\1on thru Fri. $20/y,.•k. 570 Cut&. Edge Lawn i\fta Ave. 636-4120. 673-3378 Bcaeh,.~i1 .. blocM'.~.,new1_ 1 &12 DESK SPACE ~~7~ft. 5 pm, Owner: 40 &· 50, nr. W1nemucca, i .;:B:;'°°=;:"'o:·~La~gona;;,::.Bc:::;h;:,·,.....~ Maintenance, Lic'd, 11l3Ur'ed QUIET ADULT LMNG Br. ......., " o.·u l(ln ap s. JOS N El C • R I ~t>v. Trade for car, camper. i.!I exciting If shared wi the 548-4808 &ft 4. F.ach havr Jl f: BA, Pool. o. amino e• ., 1-.3 YRS. Wkly Ul. 1\1y l It ·2 BR. Shag crpll. bltns, .., 5200 up. Lease. 217~1 S. Coast s.,n C lement• Tradr my '&!.Olds 4 dr Sia, horse rall<!h or · ! S-W.2333 right or~. Slop wasting home. Fenced yard, hot CLEAN UP SPECIALIST P,O<!l. beaut. lndac:pc:I. flSD Ir ~--Y Hwv, 491_1630 er 4~3929. 49ZM20 \Vag. for your equity In lele Whal cio you b&ve to trade! yoors. \\le have a smart lunches. 642-5639. New rtnce & repa.lr. odd Sl.10 mo. incl all ulll. 241 Q.. " ESK SP model Lo mileage car. Call Lilt It here _ in Orangt way. 547-6U7. 24 hr, record.\::=:=::=:==:==== A\·ocado St. 646--0979. ...,. • ADULTS ONLY D ACE MS.5797 betv•een 7 P~i It Cow'Jty'1 JarR'tst read traiJ. *MASSAGE & SAUNA Boat Maintenance 6555 jobs. Reas. ~ siS:QUIET! Larae deluxe 2 ON TEN AOtES Quiet plea!lant unfurn. 222 Forest Ave nu~ 10 P~1. tne pott-air.l make a deaL Lovely girb/ EXPERT MAS. LAWN & Yard Service Wt; l~i BA. GE kitchen. 2 1 6 2 BR. Furn " Untun Apt . $175.00 U!il. incl. O.C.C. Student .!!eeking boat Exper, Ntat, Reaaonable Car pr. Adults, no peta. 240 Flrtplaces ; prlv. paticl I Furn. Studio w/kiteh. Laguna .Beach * * * * * * ~GE, Ask,.aboutlOourAMLaa to live on in Newport area * 646-985.5 * t . 16th Pl 548-G432 $135.00 Util. incl. 494-9466 egas YBC'!a Kll1S. to in exchange for tna.inlen- 1 'n• $150 .. 2 BR Sl&i. Pool. ~:e:::~:t'~:~ PP~h_!'°:''":'·~D~W>~"''.''_2~1'.!,3,~43~1;.Qt)l~lfiLUUfl'"Q"UJiRi'Y/NN;;W".o1if1·i;;;:--;;;;;;;; !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!"'!Jl!!!!!!!!!!!l 'c '-",'·H 1 DNABYS;.o'193fJ3608 W, 1tncc of same, (213) 287·2400 General Servic11 '612 .;J;. &: wtr pd. Adlts, no lMacArthur nr. CM.st HwyJ Oee~nfront-beaut 2 br, _2 ba, Jk~ch Bl:~.~ 1~~:: P~;: REAL ESTATE ANNOUNCEMENTS oas "''Y. • --· •Jlfllfi· i\1esa 1\1anor. 241 . spht level, ne"•ly pa1n1~. drapes, f'lr. 2-4 or 6 rm. General and NOTICES PALM READINGS Brick, Masonry, LO~~~~;~~~? • • WJlson Ave, Ci\f 548-7405. l ~DR. garage apt., quiet, draped & ~arpe1ed. Cho1Cf' suite~. {2131 39~15 call ---• Cards & Sand Readings etc 6560 2 ba h & 1, d' privacy, lg. sundeck, stove location. l car round $?15 ...... IJcct. Mountain & Desert 6210 Found (Frn Ads) 6400 lielp in All !\falters Need n!pair& or minor alter-"70, BR. 1 1 .!!IV JO, refrig carpet drapes $185 Call :-iJS.2095 •v ----· -10 Al'l-10 Pl\1. 7 days BLOCh.'WALLS -Planters -ations! e.g. garage, shel\•. drpf, cpts, pa.tio. Avail 9/1. 548-4957 or ~ • · APPROX 700 sq rt al 1652 Tha Search Is Over 9-~1. 5-6 mo Ce r~ an 213 ~ 697-9272 La li:i.hra Patio11 Driveways lng, or cabinel.!I, doors cut '/J..(: 548-$301 or 21 3 : ' N 1 Bl C'I N t I todnd • "i• ooldoor por•di•ft Shepherd ty""' dog, 40 lbs FULLY LICENSED Sidewalks. 642-9852 morn or oU, loaky fa ucet. I-low'• 1•· l!iio2-5227 L RG ne-w a pts on R1nt11l1 Wanted 5990 11'P • 1 • ew crp · "' "" ,... . , .... .,. · M .t S f H -· drp~. $150/mo. 642-2821. in N. Calif., 5(1 can you! l\1il. w·/2 c.-ollars &. ~S ropr, vie: SW NGERS' c';;'~'·.,..,...==,,...,....,=='I u•ater heater? Many others. I t:iiiiO Duplex. Crpts, drp.s, arguen e, · c ~· 1-IOUSE or Apt unrur, 21_&1_2_-s_11_!6. _______ lions vt tall trees, (Plne-19th & Placentia, CM. 1 . · New Orange BRrCK *BLOCK * Sl'ONE Call lfito'h. furn. Fenced patio. Bllns, cpt:s, drps. $250. Bd N t II 1 UP =~ I Co·•ar1. l•og•• Ink•, r lvo-, Please call 642-7887 CCI. Guido. For free info, B •• ~. afl 5 30 MORTGAGE & PROPERTY 540 .....,~ nn, i;:&r. p ·gs or to .:NON ~" t.-Deluxe, air " ~ '" ' \Vr•"t• S C S G p O 0 --Y uie 11vur, er : yard. $14:> mo. 646-2826. 2421:-~~°'"•=,..,.--.,,.~~~-Costa ri.1e83• To $ l 3 o. cond, crpts-:-' drp~. Jn com-strcan1s • "the fishing & \V H 1 ·r E Long-hai red 2111 Anal~i~ 9211,();j ' DUA 642·19'18 * 645-0158 Controls. ?.1on-Fri, power St, Cti-f. 3 B~, 2 ba, so of Hwy. Frplc:, l\1ature coup],.. 540-1793 putrr Ct'nter bldg, &16-7•125 hunting iJJ i,'i'l'al". Roods. frmale-1 bl. eye 1 green, ' ' Holll'S 9to3, 545-4!">44 t.i;E; deluxe 2 br in 4-plex. patio, gar. $310, yrly. Ad uJI • 4 BR unfum hR. for or 5-16-6080 Elec. \Vater incl. Idral for ·Unusual collar. 0 w n er ALCOHOLICS Anonymous Carpentering 6590 APT OWNERS.WE CAN >"1+ .. r•n"e & dshwshr. !hag only. 673-6198 · I W 1·11 l=-==------1 Te1iremen1 . vacation, invest. id r n Ii f Y. found vic Phnne a-tZ..T.!l? or \vrlte to SAVE YOU MON~ .. ,,.'<t' -... :1choo year. estc J area. NJ::\\'PORT offices crpt &· po Bo 1233 Cot !\f .c.1. ~U. drpll, gar, $175. 2 BR. North ot Hwy. F'l'E'shly (4lJl 28-l-9306 rollt cl drps, ocean viei\·, rrom 57;;. 111cnt, mobilt' home&. camp.. f oremost Li(fuor. 540-Ei029. · x 8 a esa. CARPENTRY \\1th preventative maintcn· ~5-23'21 or 50--1973 painted. Avail 9/1.i S225. \Vorkinl':' mother, 1 tor nt'fil C:i.JJ o~'ner ari ti, 675--16'\•l. t'rs ok. Tilt-demand 15 gN!at, FOUND lo Sao Juan A MINOR REPAIRS. No Job M<'e & minor repairs. Call ,,...., 1 .. 2 BR triplox, Pvl 1 ,:"="""'==· ======= but the !!upply or property is Cap is Ir an o Salurday,' -""°--u~n~c:.o_m;.co_nl_• __ 64_lcO T0<t Small. Cabinet 1n IV'-lt10RTGAGE & PROPERTY .. ,...... 1-2 br unf. :\1nt ref.~. \Vill pa.y AIR rond vftice. S60 per mo, •· -.. ~tio. diq; cpu &: drps, B 1... 5300 1130 ., ... ,,736 243."" E C 1 11 Cd limitt'd, St>" i1 fn•e . phone 1\f irror~Lightly travt'I FREE &gel I other cabinets, Controls. n1on-Frt, JijU. range, encl gar, $175.1_•----------'-' · .,.,;,..;, 67:2000 oas wy, :\I. m" tod ay al (7141 M7·2608. case, Identify conten t s , 545-1175. ll no a.oner leavt }lours S.3. 544-4544 -4....U around lD/l. s.ts..75i7 PENIN Pt .-Ov.'Mr's upper 2 Rooms for Rent 5995 600--ID:l Sq , ft. Office. also R.E. BrokPr. -493-3996. ~ 646-:Un. H. Q. RAIN gutters 1 n st a I Jed . * DELUXE 1 Ii: 2 BR BR. din rm, frpl, w/w, lg ---""'-:;-ba liOO sq, fl. store. S90 & $l:.0. 6240 Si.\lAU. Black sbaggy malr Rainy season here IOOll. Garden Apts. Blt·lm, prtv. ~ck yd. Util inc. S250 lse. QUIET AUrac-. l hr. ,..,,if Cl\I 646-2130. R. E. Wanted dog wht on chest on corner Basic boating course Qua! Constr, carpel'ltry, roo-Free e.!lt. R@u! 968-2208 paljo, heated pool, frplc. Avail 9/1. 1500 l'i1iramar. f'nt. Linens. Noll-Smokerl-'-""',C,.~~----· luNDEVELOPED Land in of Palisades & Newport offered to the public ting, all homt irnprvmnts, Ed' Cl ning •4Wts. $145 mo. SfG.5163 675-2591 (213> 693-5388. prt>r. Rrferences, $911/mo. * N~~;;:;_RTAi~:C~ * potential recreational areas 1 ,,""'==·~·'='-· _54~8-_295_"77.'---by the Balboa Power No job loo sm. Free es!. Carpe~ _ ~~holste~~~Vln· NE\V 2 BDJL\I. Bt:am CD.~1 673-S.12l . Ervin * 6'f.">..lli0l desired by pu b l ie KEYS Found on beach vie. Squadron. Sai l as 536-lOS9. do1YS Floor Care. S:iS-tJ.187 billings, y,."QOd paneling. All Lido J1J1 5351 BEAUT. home w/pool has de velopm~l corporation. Island & Balboa. Inquire ""'·ell as power boat-QUAUTY Woodcraft, sml Remodeling, fence bldg .• -*c: features. $165. Adults, I--------...:..-"' exr.ra B~ . for employed Commercial 608S 1901 Avenue ol the Stars, at front rounter, Daily t ing taught. Sta rting gen'l constr, & carpentery. painting & gen'! repairs. _.,pets. Ca.II now 6'16-0073 LRG BAY VIE\~ 2 Br, study, lady. Privil. $100 mo ·I----------SI.lite 142·1, Lrut Angeles, ·Pilot, 2211 Ba1boa, N.B. 7 p~f: M S t 21 Free consullation & quote . l~*:,;.,:"=,,,'7'~V.7'B~•~Y~S~1~"-'-'·~*-·1 Ac~',',· ~?,',· 's.·' Lt>;i~ '1~~-· 546--6740 C-2 s. l\IAJN S.A. 4 bldgs, Calli. }"OUND lfoney co Io r ed every Moo~dayep n. it ~ Call l(en &tS-0044, 548-4235. Reas. Xln!. ref's. 642-&an. .... ~ "'" .,.,., " FJ C NEED HELP? Look us up at l\WDERN 2 Br. Crpts, drps, 67a-8592 or 642--0807 2 Rms \v/pvt ba, sep. enl., 1 . .,5 ac•rf'!I t(I RR track. BUSINESS •nd Cock-A-Poo puppy. female, .for 13 weeks. At New-ne ustom \Voodwork Newport Services! 642-1.224 GE kllch. p11.lio, encl gar. __ · i;inglt' parly only s7:; nio. Near f1vy/a1nplr pa1'1dnh. FINANCIAL Vic. Heil & Edwards H.B. port Harbor ya Ch t Marine, Residential, Comm') day or eve. Nr. bus. S14J, Adults. 120 E. Blllboa Island 5355 H39-2185. Below n1kt value, 011iner ....;:...:.;.;o::.:.:::.:;:::...___ 846-1667. • Club, 720 West Bay Dave &15-0044, 548-4235 Zill SL ".-1~175~p=o=R-.,W"°e-,k-:-op-,-,11 "°5=2:"•;;221=2====== Busines1 FOUND \V:itch at CdM Avenue, Newpo rt REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS Hlluling 6730 EA.Sf side • 2 br, 1a ba, LITTLE BAL. ISL kitchen. $.3() per \\'eek _ upl· • -Opportunities 6300 beach. Call lo identify B h B · t * CABINETS. Any size job -------- Orpts, drps, bltns, ref{ on Grand Canal, Waterfront. Apt.s. MOTEL 54g.975.\. ~ndu1tr1al Re~~I 6090 MA 673-4899. bo~~ ~ p e ~1~1 t"clr~ 2) Y" exper. 54~TI.3 T.N.T. La\vn Service . ..,.iLRG. No2po&"3· .,....;BR, '110 .. ~..,,dock, A·v,'1'"1' OcBR1.' 1'.~~~:I· SLEEPING room. pvt ba, in ~1·1 INDUSTRIAL space, CANDY SUPPL y YNG IJ!k female cat, Vic: nite. Any questions * REPAIRS, remodeling & Garage cleall-ups, hauling & ~ '" -2= ROUTE l9!h & Pomona. \\I/Ilea patioll. No job too small light moving, 548-5863 , .._1 bl 1 •• d nlO. yrly. No children or ne"' Gold ~ferlaUion home. I Ju sq ft \\'/Office & driw-rollar. 64Z...ai2G. call 673-1855. 673-5.llt. 531_3ng ·-ir C, t-ns, erp..,, &M;-20-12 aft 5 Pl\f in cloor in roar. ns..; mo, (NO SELLING INVOLVED} 1-:.::::::..:..:.::..:=:... ___ CHURCH Cho' . r:========= I ~=-='~------ehcl gar, patio. $1&-1034 pets. 673-0207 1240 "C'" 1..ngan St, Cl\1. Pl 191~ Sl\fALL Blk Shaggy ring, ll' singe r s Y A RD/Gar. Cleanup, NEWLY dee. Furn rm, CM. an Ont' ........ , a.00 needed Opportunity for C t ( t ,._ LRG 3 BR Crp~ drps pool H _, 1 S .. , 1 1 6-~1 Pl 1 1162• 00 SC>me v .. ht. Vic. S.A. Counlry . · . ·-em1n • oncr1 e ~ Remove trees, Ivy, !Tash. . · ' . ' · untington B111ch 5400 Fem .... e vny. tvuen pre ·1~=~-~-----an l\'O •••••••• a. Club. :>.18-2957. solo1st. 644-42a.l Grade, baekhoe, 962-874j family i, 2 child. 2214 --------S60 n10. 64 2-3520 FOR lse . ~sq, ft. prime Plan th~ ...... $J250.00 OONCREl'E. All types. FI'tt College. Ave. G4ft.-OG17 0 CE AN FR ONT. Vie\\• SLEEPING room, private \va r eh s e .space-all/pa.rt. Cash Requirrtl. ExcellC'nt in· BOY'S Blue charger bike, SERVICE DIRECTORY est. Sawing, brtaking. haul· JIAULING SlO A LOAD 2 BR. epts, drps. bltn!f, clsd i:;undeck. be:h. Ney,.·er, spae homl', nice area. Irvine lnrl. 1\lr. Bullard eo111c for a ft>I\' hours \\"CC'k. area of C~I ing & skiploading. Service Clean up, Tree Serv, Gen. gar + prkg, Adib only 2214. dlx 2 Br. bltns, cpts, drp~. 642_5000 or r~S--0.190 5-\6-80.J, ly \1·ork. (Days & E\•e.nini;:!l. 646-5244 Appliance Repairs & quality, 548-8668 Bob Pruning 64fr2528, 543-8)43 B Rutge.n Dr. 646-6919 rerfig, lndry. Nr shops & -Refilling and rollecting Parts 6510 ~fORE Ccncrete patio for TRASH &: Garage clean-up, 7 2 Br. apt-bltn!!, crpts, drps. pier. $175. Adults, baby ok. Motels, Trailer Acreage 6200 mo1wy lron1 1.:oi n operatctl Lost e Wuher & Dryer Repairs• 'lesg money. Artistic setting. day1, SlO a load. Free est. Clean, Inquire 1 55 2-Al,-536-_213...,..I~·==---~-Courts 5997 d ispensers in Costa ~ttsa 6401 J'ree Estlmnle!. Work Lie., call Max al 644--0687. Anytime, 548-5031. Coriander, 546-5268. 1 or 2 BDRM. <'rpls. drps, and sutTOundlng area. \\'C' Guarantf'ed. Call 536-3159 CE~fENT \York of all !tlnds. MOVL'iG, Garage dean-up&: 2 BR apt. Clo~ to shopping range &: pool. l Block to S6 NIGHT up. $30 wk/up. PR establish routr . Olandll's BLK l\fale Cocker-Poodle, Free est. lite hauling. Reasonable. I: rk 1 ch.Id k Sl20/ beac h . A dults onl y. SUNNY ACRES "fl1ote l, 2379 EPARE!! 11an1r brand randy and silver toe polish. Ans to Babvsitting 6550 636--0374 Free estiinaies. 64~Hi02. -~B9i 1 0 · mo Tradewinds Realty 8'17-8511 Ne,,·port Bl\'d, C~1. !'nacks.l For pel'90nal in1 er. "George", Last Sl'l'o I'll .::.:o:.;:.:.c;;.:;e:!. ___ .;;;.:.: HAULING&C E AT Be h \V' t Ra 54~97i'i. For yo11r 2nd hon1e "in ad. \'le111 in Cosla l\lesa :u·ca, Snn!a Ana Ave & Pal isade~. BOARD )'{!\II' child for \vknds. DECORATIVE CONCRETE L ANUP 2 BR. uni. crpti;, drps. Pools. ac • in er tes ., B 1 S<'nd 11ame. address and Ci\1. Sept 2nd, 6 pm. 1:.0 Com""lt>nt. mo1her/dn11ohter DRJVES-\YALKS-PATIO SJO a load * 548-1092 Kids ok. 1998 1\laple, Apt l. l & 2 Bdrms., pool~ turn. or ** \VEEKLY Rates. SEA vnnce; • uy ynur :1nrl in 11honr number 10 fl1ULTI-,~ ..., CALL DON, 642-&,4 ~:ZSOS , unturn. Adulls. 21a 15th SI. LARK MOTEL. 2:: 0 l SfiJQG.J. REE SILVER VAL-:rewan:I for return. 54~1841 C'Ombo. i\gl'!' 5 & over. Mes& -.C::C:::O..,:"°':.:....:=..=:.:.._ Hou11cleaninn 6135 · & :no .l2lh St. Ne\\•porl !Jlvd, Co.~ra i\tesa. LEY • only 18 n1i. ease of ~TAT f.: DlSTitlBUTING, days, 642--0648 eves. Venle <1.rt'n. 5'1.">-0.S94. * CONCRETE 'vork: patios, .. 2·Br. wl carport. Sil!!, \\'3. TTR 2 B s1·· I II --··-Rar.,tQ1vandappro.'<2~hrs INC. 161!1 \Vest Broad1vuy, LOST-l\1ixed maJe sheepdogBABYSITI'ING -~1y hon1e. drv1vays,efe.Li ce nsed . CARPEl k f urnitu r e \er pd. Nr i;ch1~. 2192 A · •. r "'1· Poo · A Misc. Rentals 5999 froni lhr Orange Coast Cuc· Anr1hein1. Coii f, 9280~ 1714) 4 yrs. Black w/whtte chest \Veekly, Brookhurst ,v, Phillips Cement. S4&.6380 eleaning spccial-3 rooms for ''A" Placen1ie. 636-4120. extras. Kids ,f: pets ok. 1..'0rrling IQ lhe mtc you drive, 778·5060. .t reel. Gray he.'ld &· hind Adams atta. Rl.'ferenet>s $20. \Vindows & w a 11 s • l7401·A K e e Ison Ln. o! <"'or•"I , -,..CC"-'~===-1 • ,. lb "T • Child Care ~'"ftd · · · 1 ;; BR, 2 ha, encl gar, pvl. &17-7446. IVANTED· Dbl garage for " "'" DISTJl.IBUTOHSlllP \\'1111· e.i;s. opprox "'' s. roy ·. 968-30j\. ' \\'a"'"' , pai nting interior & , ~rd Adult s Sl75 E 18th 1~-~~-,.....,.....---1. · & · Plan to have your land bought OUT INVESTMENT: Delux~1 _R_•_•_•·an_I_. 6_7_.1-5<!:_'_.I_. ---R -~E-L-IAB....,L_E ___ m-0-1-._-,-0-1-2-,-,ill Lic1nQCf 6610 exterior, Jloors striped & · ·· ' ·NEW LUX 2 & l br by anique car p er m_. & iraid for bcforft 11, 1lm" '"'" waxed. l\l:iid 11ervice • 3716 or 540-4431 , · ' storage, by mo or yr. \Vtll ~ f' ,. candy !.: drug spceialtil'11 10 BLK 1''!1Jff)' poodle \\·~aring babysit 1 child, &gr 3 to 5, JOYLAND Kindergarten & ,,1 "u""-=,=V7.1-~rd=.====5:1:1=0:1 .. be~~h&i2-~~s .• ~l.bHnR, ~ay up 10 $30 mo. S<IG-5!);)0 cb•11~1esbo1001rb.ulld1 .. ~~ bu,.,y, .. a ~~,." la\'t'rns, T't'Slnuran1.~. stores, red rollnr .tr bell~. Ans"''S 10 my honie. 52J / "'k, !\1esa Pre-School, 1797 i\fonrovla , &vailablf'. Grove Janitorial m-' '1"" " '" C'lr. Direct factory ronncc· "Bo Jnp~s"', vie-: 19th & Verde attn. &l&-81\R C.1\1. Full & ~~day cart. Ser\' ice. Since 1952. ''i'=-' C"'----'--12 BR. Crpts, drps, ra:1ge. • * STORAGE Garagf's for d1't~nm ot the lovely man. lion earnillg high clnily c.nsh A n A h~ 1 m, C.i\f. R"•d• . 548-8373 or 642-0072 ~9343. 24 hour service. $\\' Dec. De\ux 2 lge hr, Closed gar. Children & Rent: S25 per mo. niarle lake stocked \Vith fish C..'QmLnis.~ions. E\'11rylhing fi.12-4!113 · EX!''D niot~r WJ.ll care for k "'"-ii::":'::.-C7;;;:::,....,,-....., \VJNDO\VS & 1\'8.lls \\'Bllhed. l\.9 ba, bltns, encl patio & small pel ok. $1411. M2~i Call 642-6391 Willer skiing. "boat n:riving.': ctuld or infant, tny lge, ?.1Y Honie, hct luneh, fenced Fir'!!. slTip~. ,.alod , furnished. bu! must hf. bond. LOST Pup. 1\l. J•~ mos old. cht't'ry home. 111 k d y s , yd, 11upcrvised play. Ages .,...., "' pr· No Jlt'l'I. $165 644--0962 Slll, 2 BR. Cpts, Orps, You 1lon'1 need a gun ro s1vimming . for you r f11tuno ;ihlr handling our merehan-Rf'S('mblt's Doberman . 646-5.)37 2 • Call 646-0Jjl \\'8.Xed, Free fff 897·7834 -----Bllns, Garagt>. Ora\\' f as! \\'hen you place lflDEAWAY, dise &· cru;h, Pa11 or full Rf'll'&ni $13 lost al 88.kt!r &I.,;=:::::;'=:====== I==....,=·=====·=== day or nigh!. 673.3ooo. Newport Beach 5200 !=*=Nl==='~'=m=·='=H=·'="='==*=~'="=='d;,;;i":='"'=:::D=A=IL=Y=P=u.crr===l\Vhy not get )'Our ful ure plan.'! lime. \\'rite: CJIEXCO, 2910 Grant. ")1rans a Lot" Personals 6405 Contractors 6620 DUTCH 1\1aint. Se.rvic~. car-._,,_________ fonnahzed NO\V ,(,_BE PR& N. 16th sr., Phila., Pa. 19132 546-4077, 3012 G:trlleld, 0.1.1 ;:::=::;:=;::;====:::; pet ele&ning, Ooor wiuing, ~ f ARK NE\\1PORT -care Fountain Valley 5410Fountain Valley 5410 PARED · olhers are doing CUSl'O~i lailor &hop, f'St. K GER:\IAN SIK'fipuppy, niitle.'' ATTENTION! Boat Bldrs & window washing. 537-15<1 U 1 tree livg ovrlkg the wall'r. 7 if -I here arr 200+ man-yrs. Going busineSll . nets crippled rear !t·~. l'l('('ds Hong Kong small contracton. New no ans call aft 3. pools, 1 lennia eta, Si;i0,000 1nade lukr~ in 1111.' area and rdl · v ' hoi.sl, gasoline nnu•ercd, :C7."'"'"-~-'~--~ 11000 moll tb ' '"'· "-··1K'r m cation. l(' .1ag-11'a & T 'I ~·· BAY & "-•ch Jon•"lon'al Spa. From Sl75 to $4j(). n1orr nr(' being built evt'ry V" Ad H B 962 "91_...., al or 2000 lb. ar.parity. Retail.!! DC "" b 1 2 B Al ' 2JJ~ Jeavi"" area. $.2500 -try S:iOO ams, . . . ~. J P.e"., IN Tow~• ill •-.0 Carpets, "'indows, floors, c , or r. BO zty duy~: Check your map for . .., ,.. $600, w· .,..en ce $400, or ToY.'nhou&es. Elec. kt. pri location, !let> for yourll(':lf, down, hurry!! Ca.II George, LOST: St. Ri!rnan:I Pup. S•pt•mMr I & t make cash otter. 642-4591. ete. Res & C o mmc 'I , J>lll. or bal Subtrn prka, p0t 12 the <1N.'<1 T dcsci·i~ • 11 iA .:..:A~gl=·~54~5-8:.c:.•='~'----~ Brn/\\•h1 spo1.\. Rt>\\'8rd~ Lar~e l!l tock ror immc· • TIIE RE?.IODELERS * 646-1461. m ... "r <pl• d~• Jo•1 I I 1 1 1 Irv . UNIQUE Bc"t•IY •l-p·. t31 Vic: Park L1rlo A i-r 11, dint" _purchase -I'll : JOE'S CLEAN SERV • ...u • • .,... ~ 1 g l r l'SCl'I, c can, 1 • 1ur. .. .., ~148-1784 HOTEL LAGUNA Free eats -lOO <;ii financing • N. of Fashion Isl 111 i.M':iutiful desert country. Be. Stations. fllnes~ For ct: s · · Kitchens, g 8 rages \\'e do Everythlng-Rt:a Ii. ; Jambor?e k Sftn Joaquln ~ 11\'t'Cll 2 niajor rrooways. Sale. 546-9:>27 3-8 P:\t. BLK Labrador. :O.lnlr. no L~;~~~ ~=:~h ca rp 0 r I~ c 0 mp I e I e Con1ni. Frce Es!. 642-7551. i ll illt Rd. 644-1900 f 0 r t • C:ill n1e 11nJ l w\11 tell you rollar, vie,: ~~·ivporl &h. Call Mr. l llwa,. Tien Remodeling. 1\fcsa Cleaning Strvict ~ leasing Info, oun atnd Ph1irie rl'IG-5710 an)'• Money to LOlln 6320 Nf'Ms n1{'(li<•i n('. RE'l\'l\rd! for lnf«m•tion-Quality Contractors 642-3660 Carpets, \\/tndo\\'B, Doora, etc. I l Br unrum C"'-!Ji d...,~ 67:>-7721. 4M-1151 Res & Commc"I. 54• '111 . • ·r • ...... ~1 d s , 1st TD 'Loan '"=~~-~~--11 ••• LAD•ts ••• :.1Y \VAY. quality home ...... , pa.Uo. pool, bltll$. $160. ' e i'4lrranecrn tyre Lu:cury ti.1J\LE 4 mo. olrl Si:unr se Rl'llutlf\.JI a-pc double repair. Walls, ceiling, floori t'OR Any or Your Hom Seacllff ?ilanor Apll, 1.52!> grey \\'/drk g~y markings. 1 . 1 1•• '''· No ~b too •mall. ~-N~,. A 0 • 1 h 1 n P, ___ ,,_ ,. .• o ...,,,.. k CABIN ... full 5 ae, .,Ultl, " {ll1l woo SU ...... many I" "'"" .,...,, .r ._.,.,.un.. -.. IJ(W a • 1 ...... _._ ........ _ "" +>-NV st.:. INTER.EST • 54,,_;531 • styl,., & rolor rombi· 543-1"9-l · N •-rvJ •bol.lt our discount. & • .D'-'U.fVUnl\ -• DAua Small dmvn ,ft S30 per mo. ,. . 1 8 22 ~.:cc~--~-~~-anytime twport .:x: ces. dul U ..a. Real cholCf' land. A terrific 2 d TD l RED Pekingese rlog. '1 rar1 ~ natl(l'!S. E "1~ be .... • Addltiorui 1t Remodeli111 6-12-1224 day or eYI" • IAYFRONT • Furnis:td ~ u;;~btd huy! Frfl' m:tp!l. \Vrilt n oan neo. collar, Vie: 21s1 & !<,.10~m5l':.q~~=lerti8'1; Fred ll Gerwick, Lie. \VOUlD YOU BELTEVE LVXURY Apt1. Starting Rol)('rts. Box 431 \'uCCA Tmn~ bUt'd on rqulty, 1"'int', ~2091-bAgs, d11ubll" knit y,.•ool 6'13-6(Ml * S4S..2110 I'll Clean 'iour Home for llf $375. e '42·2202 • roo1 Vallry: or local • call "2·2171 54$-0611 FE~fALE Slamtsr, "i e : 1.nn1~ suit~ .. ••• Perfect ADDITIONS. L.T. Conttruc-Blue Chip Stamp!l. e l>i'"-•"ff &12-1262 21 Ftmlel\f & 2nd, Ans11o·!I to \\·llrkm8.tl.!lhip•••. High-tion, single or 2 story, plans, $UUU t NEARLY new 3 br, 2 b.'l. •St.•• C.r-.r1 '. Servin;: Jlarbor atta yn. "J:tvft" 67:>-1321 est quality. ••I & •··-·•. "'1·1511. ltplc, crptJ. drps. No pet•. e l'ri,..,. ,;;,.,, : COMMERCIAL Sattler Mort9aga Co. 1 ~.c...=°"-""----••• MEN ••• .....,.,...., '" 2 \\'omtn, efflck'n!. $115/mo, JOl l2nd s; t . 4 1/3 A"res, 2 blocks from 336 E. 171h Slrtel ALASKAN malemu11•, I )T Tt1ilor m3de suit~. fit lla"e tn.nsportalioo • .5l3-021l •• °'""'a-~-.. ~~~1".·P l\ll!C!!1on s .J .C, $30.000 per MENTS old, an..y & 11hite, nan1e 11:uanr.nte«1•0 •. Custom Ca!l"'t Cl111nint '62.S • 5-18-1227 * ----R I ""71 ANNOUNCE lh.•&\1.'n, RE\\'ARD. ·194·3191 Jnftdt' !1Ui1:$•••Eu1"t>~n 0ER'S Squarr 1780 l!Q. acre. ra 1°" 01'00" 11 •nd NOTICES fnbrl~··•1000 '"mples n. SUS mo, 2 BR 2 ba 956.5 Slattt Avenue Co\'enimrnt land.ti acre :;.:;:;;_ ___ REWARD · Lost Thur!!, .'?ft"l!n lo choose fTom•••Jlle\v cpl/drp. blUna, pool. n.'e !: ... Dl ••• ,,_,, .. \\'rl1r-l.1tnd r:i ck~e. 11 ;; Found (Fr11Ads) 6400 Parakeet,Sklppy,C!v1r Cent. Sl\l(lml'nl luJ:t arrl\•ed ,..~~NII!,. ooltl\wnt "'"""""· ''IOl-.... ~ er. Pl-·. 5, coll ,~ •·,·,o fmm llong Kong•••l,o\v ;t.c. v•1o1"\I...... ,r.,':, 'tr~i~ 1~1·:.~C: An'Owht'nv. ~o Bt>dn 92410 '"" ;1..-v Honi.? Kon~ prtctt••• f BR, 2 BA. Unturn, O'p1•. 163-6M!j Is that .!'part room bulJ:lng! JNJURED Klllrn. blk/bm LOST vie Emt•rnlri llil}'..l:11;:r Exl'<'{llionl\I \1llUt'S. ll'lllo blk to ocean. YNl'l.r·~-~~~~~!!~~~~~~~~~~~~ \ .S.:-11 lna1 \\~th CI11.u.iflcd llirl'r ,lripr, at 3 nl()jl. Vic. i:rs.Y mnlc J\lANX Ctll. .RE·1 .1\1UST Sf~ TO Jmi. C'i~. Ad$. D!al &.12-:.Gi& toda)I. Pi!calrn Lo, H.B. 962-~98. \\'ARD, 4!M.J979 1\PPRF.C AT'li '----------' j ) ' . .. , DIA.\fOND C~t Cleaning lronl-6755 Back lo School Special 1---··.:..• ____ ...:.;.;;.:I 300' SIS, Frt-e Esl * IRONING * Rcpo.!r-l~tall. 64~1317. J\ty llom,., SI Hr. STEA~! Jtt carpet clea.nlng. Piek Up A Dellv. M~'l&C1 By ClarKa~. nation • Wide For thAI hf'm under Si;O try 5t'l°Vk'f!. F'rtt ~SI, 6'2-tOM. our PENNY PINCHER.. I . -·--~------~----~--.. • fj PILOT·AOVERTISER Wtd~. Stplrmbfr 9, llf7D Wtdntsday, $tpt.embtr 9, 1970 OAlLY PILOT, Ii"" __________ ..___ SIKv1CI DIRECTORY SEii.ViCi DllllCTORY JOBS .. IMPLOYMINT JOBS .. EMPLOYMENT JOBS .. EMPLOY ... ~ ~ .. CMP' ....;..;! JO•s" EMPLOY DAILY PILOT Jinttorlal '790 S.Wlnt1 6HO Jobi Men, Wem. 7100 Jobe Men, Wom.. 7100 J'ot.1 Mtn, Wom. 7\00 Jobi !Mn, Wom. 7100 Jobi Men, Wom. 21 ----------, ' CLASSIFIED INDEX SPARKLE Janitorial le W~ QUAUTY You've alWIYt BABYSITI'ER needed, ('AM * FRY COOK-Part time MEDICAL Asala:tant, ba<:k Prr or }~rr Eve•. Al.to 'netd STUDENTS. 11 yrs le. tQ> \ dow deanlne Serv. Win. wanted. Dttumakina: -3-6 PM lofon. thru 1)-ldliy'. * 01SJl\VASHER.-Pvt time oftlee, Expuienttd. Must rtllte aite nlan. S h t 11 sell candy In YoUr own'trea. dows. re.sld., comcl. C'Olllt. alien.Hom. Key Say, lTa Call M0-6373. Or aft 5:30, COCKTAIL WA IT RESS· know X·Rl.y, Inject lo n, Statioo, 2800 \t. Coast Jlwy Make a:ood money Jn spare DIAL DIRECT 64.Z-587& cle!nuP. ,_ "'· 962<612 era.,.. Avo., C.M. 645-U92. 61>-5564 Pvt time Aak tor Wayne. EKO. Sala.., open. Mluion N.B tlm• a...i bolp """'';~· F« Put Ji;•rvlte and l'.a:pert Aa61at...a NTfE'TIME CLEANING Alt•r•tlon1-ili2:siii BABYSITTER netdfd in Rancho San Joaquin Viejo are.. ?.fUJt be P'°rr=-rn=11ce-~H~el_p_W<l\_t~od°". No auh requi.rod. ' I~ ,,.__ _ _.._,_, .._ "'-sldential N' .. lO ~..... ,.,.,......_ n..-t. GolfCourae wru.tlleandene r cetlc . Mom oro AJ1unoor11. Call 642-.0803.9AMI0 5 PM.-IHOU:i~:. ru" ~~I: MbC, ltENTALI .,, ...,.,...un: .... ~ ~ nc ca-. accun. • )'f&r.i exp. cv « _.... • .., ~...... 18021 CUiwr Road 837-7520 1-~=--,.-,~~-,,.-""11 •• .. ••AL ..................... 1• REAL ESTATE, 1-===;:•;:;W-31169;:;;=•=== 1• Dre~ Alltradotll area. M2-t685 aft 6:30 Newport Beaeh 75 M Mila Kay~ 546--.186' Telephone Sollcltori i~. ::_::r.r--_..·::::::::::::::n: Gtn1r1I Detla'Ded 10 atdt you. BABYSlTl'Elt wanted by Irvine Bn.nch en• PENSIONER To he.Ip wilh Charity a,ppeal, Pa.id wet~ MIEP "'aDE ... -.......... 1111 1Nt.oM1 l'•Dl'l!•TY-1 ,. .......... Landscaplftl 6110 Call Jo* 6t&4ft6 kacber Wffkdl.)'I 2 to 5. Neer UCl 833-0U2 prden,~ctay, per wk. Ph Apply: 32S N. Broadwq\ I eot.LIGI PlolUC ........... ,.,1111 aUSINE U PROPEa1T • M:ll WN-·S, ---.>~ l l<oh .,_,..,, ... ..&.. -""'T an 6 J6 Rm. 410, o .... ..,_ ··~ I NIWiJO•T ll!ACH ............ uoe IRAILEa PA11..:.s •• NEW LA ·~"•• ---·t ....... _. .......... ..,~ rou. er PART TIME w ' · ~· rua. "!! IUiWf'ORT HlllOHTI .......... 1111 IUSIJlll!SS alEl'ITAL .............. roto ... 11--, renova<l-, Tl'-Ceramic m• a··y~ Att omen PERSONNEL CLERK TIRED Of ...... -··-IAl.IOA covEs ............ 1J11 0""1c1 al!"lllTAL .......... ,,..,. w..<.M,.. .... .., :-. ~ ............ enioons Earn u.p to SS. per hr ... 111w'°•T iMOaes ........... 1m ll'IDUSTllAL PIOP••TY ,....... clean-up. 891 .. 2 411 or ,..,,0 •""O tHe ~.~•i~ _ ootyPM·' 61W<my home1S. • Call aft 6 F1..ILLER BRUSH 5t&-$'TO needed lmmediitely, Full or Knowledge Insurance. C"ll Pension not quite enotl&b.~11 •AYCllST .................... IHI COMMlllCIAL ' ... _........... 846-09.12. ....i:.n.IWTU' .... _cu -. • --· ..... ., """'· "fe1tcllfl ....... are betwn S5 a:-. ~ ' IAYSt1oa11 .................. ,1m 1NDusr11Al. •••T.t.L ........ ..., • GENT pt time Lg 11 .i..u1"1U • ....,.., •u • " ,,~ '" DOVE• sMOll!S ............... 1n1 1.0Ts ......................... 11• repatred. Remodelil'll my LE~ to care tor • • ' eXpal'll na Pt.r.onnel Agtncy .21M3 health, active, enjoy le , wrsrcLIPF ................ nH ••NCMIS ....... , .............. •1• MAID SERVICE 6125 speei&lty. Work cuar. BABYSl'ITER f?" elderly he.ppy bo.by &: home, Irvine. chain, Now taking &pPLica· W · cliff Dr NB • &; pleaAllJlt day ,work o4Alfl0R HIGHLANDS ........ 1u1 CITaus GIO\llS ............. ,,,. Ree .• ~~. C'o--est. couple, part time, CdM 3 da)'I wk, M pm OC' bra to UOJ'lll. Must be neat It de-l'lt ., ' . -U ut1iveas1TY PAIK ........... 1u1 t.CllEAoa ....................... .,.._""' •• ..., &l'N Ph· ........... 1 . ,.,. -~ ... R...1-bl •· •• , REAL _ATE OPEN would Like to earn the u""+ 1av1N• ....................... lUI I.AK• ELSll'loa• ................. JIAIOI Avail. Immed Xln ~24S · · "'.-;J suit )'OU. $1 . ..., hr. OJ,.;!"V\171 pe ...... e. ~'6e ....,.35, ,.. .i;..;J' • aJIOwedl by Soc. Sec. rep. ·' a.CK aAY ..................... 1t1e al!soaT PIOP••TY ............ f' .Call Ne ;.o rt -Babyaittec--Reliable \11oman GENERAL o"'-wor" -M $3.75 PER HR ING FOR QUA L) Fl ED l&tions. A• pl Y Sun. ·••· o!MTILUfll ................ , •. tUI OIANGI CO. PltO~llTY .,,.,Gii ft. 1. W,, u.i"" 11.t _., SALESMAN E 11 t • "- 1!1 Ttra 1144 ouT o" STATI ••oP. _ ...... .-Smncn. &a-1224 day or Tree Service 6MO wanted to eu-e ror 2 yr old time gd. with tl.gure1, ••1.ns1 "'I·-. xce en Wed. Ew1 art 7 PM a1 ti 11.Vtl'll Tl!ltlt.f.CI! ............ IMS 'l!OU"TAIN & DESllT ........ llllt s A ... -a .. ol. ....... ~"·9 ........................ -·d .... '" .,. ••I>' commlulon tchedu.io plus Paulo Ort·~ '"· 3 0 5 coaol'IA DEL MA• ........... 1lSf SUIDIVISIO" U.l'ID .......... An ·~-.....,.. .. .... .,,.,,..,..,.. ................ VII --.. ~ many bona bene!lts -Ask ... aALIOA PEMIHSULA ......... ,"..," 't'i"ix'c" ... "'••1Eav1c1 ..... lll_U BOB'S TREE SURGERY BKKPR A/P ~--~-•·-h• w·k ......_ ~ ~""" ..__ ,,._ Sn·~ Mn J Ne"""'M Blvd, C.M, Aak., ._ ll!ACOM •AY ............ _, •· • · .............. -• .........,.,.""UIKI • • .-.... , ... v•~ MORNING ~-....... ,\KCr or • O'i •. ,.... _.:_~ U.Y llLANM ................. 1ue '·I. WAN'rl!O .............. AMI P•lntlnt, ii bade oUtring the same exper, desired. All replle1 lrERE'S JOHNNY'S BREAKFAST COOK AS.SOCIATED BROKERS the managtr, No ~ ~~J:L~1LAt10 ·::::::;::::::::::: BUFSllNNAENSSCl:~d PaperhMtlnt '*50 Fine Qaullty Tree Sc!r'ril't. ronfldential. Send resume I: Taking application5 for * SERVICE, 2025 W. Balboa calla; please-', ~ =~=~::g~g: ~~i~ua ·::::::: 1uiit11Ess o....01tTUfUTlll .. .-------* 50-3798 * aa1ary history to Box M·l08T • BUS BOY BUSBOY Blvd., N.B. or call 67:s-3663; * TOP SALARY *. Lll'IDA llLI! '* 1us1t1Es1 WANTID .............. t"iMYifTIMAfEWiLI JOBS .. EMPLOYMINT D&Hy Pilot, 22U \V, Ba.lboe. e BROILER OVER ll eve-s 642-2253 For CXJ>er, Cook-HOU9t'~· 11out1TA1N vALl.IT .......... 14u 1N11t.STMl!:l'IT Opfertwll ..... iU11 81\ld Newport Beach er w/gd f' M t be" sEAL aE•CM ................. 100 INVESTMl!l'IT WANTED ...... aau PLEASE YOU'' '' • TRAY GIRL-HOSTESS REG. Nu.rse . Apply in re •. WI !o u,1t1s•T •ll!ACH ............... 1..u MONIT TO LOAN ............... GladweJI Paint Co. Job W1nr.d, ' BOB'S e DISHWASHER pe.rson, Country C 1 u b able of cheerfully cuing • GAIDlll'I 01.ovt! .............. 10s l'l!IOl'IUL 1.0ANS ............ em W 7020 F"ll p T1 APPLY IN PERSON hoUS(' & younastcn: Live-LONO •BACH ........ -........ uoe JliWBLIY LOANS ............. llllf *** 494-9816 ***' 0"'9ft ·u or art Lme 3 TO 5 PM ONLY ConvaleBCent llomt. 10362 ... ' ~~~:'::0c~UNTY';;:;;::;::::;:::: ii~'t~~~:~1Le:::,·~::::::::=: --~~~-~~-~-~~-~-~~-~-~-~~-~-~~-=l ·----------1 ''HOME OF THE BIG BOY" Excellent Opportunity Santa Ana Ave., Santa Ana. 675-0487. J. ' '" o• co•"" •············ "" Mono•GU. ""' -........ METICULOUS PAINT. DO YOU NEED ME? TRAINE"COOK I°' Ho""lwivos REUBEN'S * TYPISTS * ~:'.:N~~NIT~T~.::::::::::::::::~m MAON"'N'o "u'N"c'E'M··E"N···T··s""-BLUE OIIP SI'AMPS. INS. VIBRANT RE~·~ LADY 5"' Call in Penon c Restaurant ne~ater for • 111:STMIHST£1t ................ 11n crew col. 5tudents Int-ext • ~ ... ~.....,. , Neat appearing, good char. 9:00 Ml. 5:00 PM CO O'S IS' - MIDWAY CITY ................. '"' ind NOTICES .. _ ... _. ~ ....__,_ • ....., n>14 ADMlNISTRATrvE ASST. NO EXP""-·'CE NC-Or -= ......... _ c M Reuben l Lee a temporary job IANTA ANA ................. 11H .......:.., .._I" L1V1,:A:t 111 -...... ~~ """'-,..., D<UUl::r, · . ,~... " , SANTA AMA MGTS. ............ llllt ,OUl'ID ,,,.. A•I _......... .... • • movin& to Laguna, 2) yra. Many fringe benerit.. ~ oRAl'IGB ...................... 11u LOST ............................ , No \Vastillg ou•--mgt ··-+ L.• Int . •• D il HEY GALS 15:':i5 W. ADA?i!S lntervws. 9-12 ·,. • ~ ruSTIN .. . .................. 1 ... l'ERIOl'IALI ...................... • WALLPAPER *. ~ ..... ,.... "" et"VleW8 -a y COSTA MEsA W NoaTl'I TUSTIN ............... IMS .,NNOUNC£MENTS ............ 1M11 * Chamber of Commerce. 154 E, l7lh, c.P.t \Ve need 10 aharp gals, 1ulli------~---••tern G irl Inc. " : .... AHa1M ................... iil41 •iRTHs ................ -······"'11 "'hen you can "A!ac" "'•al'"A .. " ........ i..,., .. , .--•-·. tlm •· '"30 N •1 1 t M H ba d • Now 1·n .... -1·ewi'ng """"'1 MacArthu• Blvd. ,' llL"IRAo0 CANYON ......... 1us FUNER.,LS ................... '411 ..,.... urcu -..... ....._. uuut:.1 Equal oppty employer or part a. ~e...,.. • o "o e a~rs· us n •••,.. ~ • " LAOUl'IA HILLS ................ 1roa PAID 0••Tu••Y .............. iMll 548-1444 646-lnt M with peopl~. Excellent CAN YOU QUALIFY? exp. nee. wife. Jnclustriou..s, repair II· Newport lkacb ·~ ;.~ LAGUNA IEACH .............. 1705 FUNEllAL DllECTOll ....... '414 . ""°0-03'5 u.GuMA NIGUEL ........ -.• 11111 l'LOR1sTs ...•••.. -..... ··"'" PHONE The rest -then relWTle available, \Vrite Box . $3 1 O per hr bihty. 646-4107 NIGHT .,, -· : MISSION VIEJO .... _ ...... 170I CARD o~ THANICS ............... 11 phone the beat: Jordan & l, Laguna Beach Ol' phone Need s0meone to aASl!rt n'e • --.. \VAITRESS I:'.. 'd •" • U.N CLEMl!NTE ....... 1110 IH MEMORIAM ................ '411 1nmybuslness.2Hrs.aday, Call fl.tr. Jen11en 95&2871 j/J_ DISHWASHERS . • c.AP on rt • S,t.H JUAN CAPFSTllt.HO 17U Cl!:METIRY LOTS · ......... ,,.lotll Son Painting, L J C en I e d, L.A. 213: 931-6681, S '••-··'· •~ k F newport 2: Shifts open, Cottqe Ct#. CAPISTl.ANO IEACM 1730 CEMETll!IY CltY"n ......... '41' bonded insured 968-9126 ......,.,aw11.-..pel'\\'. 01' HOLIDAY TIME-• t Sho 562 W 19 r ..... .: ~ DANA POINT 17411 CEMETEIY CIYPTS _ ....... '411 ' • • EXP. Social Stt'y/Cmnp., intervw call 77f.-0380 betwn . . t round the el ee p, • lb,......_ ' ocic•N~•De: ................... ','n"• ~·E~.~~~·~~ .. ·u·::::::::::::= * PAPERHANGER * driver. Typing, SH. Loe. a: 1 " 3 P~t is Jus __ ~ _ ~mer • .Personn * APPLY * P.!esa. : SAl'I Oll!GO ,................... '''''''' ... •-•~ Authority hn "" " I •--p ,,.,... . you'"""' exua. rno,~y now-151 E. co•~ H\VY. ll'ivE1.StDI! couNTY llOt ···· ............. • ........ ""......... • ... xibe, ..,...... . ...,,.. . ,,..,. WAITRESS • -~ HOUSES TO SE MO"l!D '::::::,,.. t.VIATION ll!:l"IC• .......... .m ...... 0 ...... .M.... ........... Pilot CARRIER earn $U In your spare time agenrv NEl'~RT BEACH -expene......... • cOl'IOOMll'llUM .......... 1ut TaAVl!L · ........................ r•• • ..,.,, .:w. .,_......., Dally selling AVON products, Call .. , Yrv lunehes only. Apply in pel"ldb ' ouPLl!JCES FOi. SAl.£ ........ ini AIR TaANSPCIT,t.TION ........... McAd·--Pai--Serv. TYPING And ... ~~: .... ln BOYS -w lo" ...1-·-~•, Prolo110°-ol S.-o·co Del ... y1 Sea Shanty, -' Al'AITMENTI fOl U.LI .... lMI 11.UTO T•ANSPOITATION ,,. .. '"5 ,...,.., • ......, ......,.,.~.....,, ,.., • ""'...,. '"' '"' Ill.JU RENTALS ~~~~:~T~~:oliN(f '":: .. := Inter. I: Exter. Special rates Home -Live in Fountain 54G-7041 546-5341 for the employer RESfAURANT-Now taking Lido Park Dr. N.B, -,E!'!:~~" .. ~~~".i.~~~. *' ~c~~u~~;~ Dl~E.~.!~.~!. YOU ;;;~~ ~AINr J::~=:::~ girl WANTED HO~~~~?~~dtt!e~ .;;~~=:~~~:c~~~. , ~='.!°~E:. ~1! t:n! '!~~~~ndEx;er~OO~ e ~ IENTALI 'rO SHJ.ltl! ......... :IOCS ANSWERING Sl!•Vtelr ....... Ulll SJO Prr Avo-•e Room will lo··.,. ;., Mother'I •-J-r lor the 642•3170 under 18 need a pp I Y . n-.. .. .1 bi ...1 .. 1 .. 1. "( cosTA MES• ................ J100 AP,.L1ANCE 1.EPA11s. .. .,,.. uu ..... •" "" uo:..-• Rush stamped, sell-ad· COLONY KITCHEN, 3211 ..,..l"'", ... s e, non Ul~~ MllA DEi. w• ............. "" ASl'MALT, 0111 ................. 41)1 Free Est. 5S7·8638 548-5182 DAILY PILOT dress ed envelope. Nu~.,·n., Ph: 67H530. ', MESA VERDE , ••• -•• ~ .. --ina AUTO lfl!l'AIRS ... ·· ....•. Ult _ G ON VORL ,. llarbor Bl\ld. C.M. • COLLIGE PARM .............. 211s AUTO, SNt ••lh. T.,.., ltc. u. PROFESSIONAL. 30 yrs Dana Point, San J uan LAN D \ D EXPER:. AIDE 3-11 :30 WOMEN WANTED :~ N•wl'OllT 11r•CH ............ noe •A•YSITTING ............ ISM exp paperhanging &: pa.In. Job1bt>-NMolen, Wom. 7100 Capo·,~-and TRADERS, P.O. Boie ll.21-~h·f A 1 P k Lido Co RESfAUR.ANT, Male, 1B or FOR PHONE SURVE"'o NEWl'ORT NGIS ............... 2:111 •O•T MAll"TEMll.NCE ........ uu . .......... A21 ... _ .. __ .. _ ..... ~" ............. 1 t. pp y ar n-ewer A-ly an 2 PM 2966 .. NEWPO•T sHoaEs .......... nn IRICK, M,t.,-ONRY, •le. ....... 4141 ting, fmm Englard. 968-7461 c 1 Be h neuv>IUU ...,._..,, ......... • l'1" ' WORK WORK IN t IAYSHOaES ................ ms aUSINl!SS SEall'ICIS ........ 6SiUI ,,;=""'=c=="-''-'-"-,--" A,,,_ ap Strano BC • 9027s valescent Center, 466 F1ag. Bristol , C.M. • DOVl!a sHoal!s ............... mJ au11.01as ................... "7t R Ir L painting interior -...,uer Contact Mr. Seay at ship Rd NB 642..fl044 I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I YOUR OWN HOME S ~=1sJi~~~f., PARK':::::;:;::·:~ 8":~~~,:AKiN'G'"".7.:::::::-... :: exterior. We are reasonable. Temporary Position DAILY PILOT I!UOUM~EO°iTYPi'Vi;;t~STT~w;;;,;,;,;,;;dl ;N~U~RSE~~-~·AlD~~~~TRA;'.~lN~· lN='G'° I' See Betty Bruce &1 EARN COMM. ~116f: 111v1NI! ........................ tne CAIPE l'ITE1t1l'IG .............. .,,. 645-2505, 548-0823. w/IB~f Se1ttlric, _abt 2·3 2 wk. -·-. omplo-nent MISS KAY tACK IAY .................... 2:141 CEMENT, CMU... ................ TYPISTS San Clemente office .. v ... ,.,.; ~· 6 l!•ST ILUF" .................. Tl4l CHILD CAIE. UCw.f .... -.. 6'11 INT. le Ext. Painting. Local ..,..:: N. El Camioo Roal hrs twice a v.•k. Wnte: P.O. ottered. Personnel Dept., m El Tlrl 2244 CONllfACTOlfl ... .............. I' ,. 'd l -... ,_, Box ?112 Costa ~lesa 92626 • ll"INI! TEl.U.CE ........... :1145 CARPET Cl.IANIMG .... , .. uu re s, IC • ns., L<~ .. 4924420 . • Hoag Hospital, N.B. &Jj Xl!C CORONA Dll!l MAI. ........... nso CAl~ET LAYING .. •£PAil "11 Call Chuclr:, 645--0809. Interim Hoah!S!lel Wanted for •ALaoA ....................... 11ot DRA~E•1E1 .................. 6'JI 1 1 CHILD catt-<:00k·1t hskpng vai ki c-•i lTOO ISLI! ..................... !Ul DEMOLITION .................. ..u COLLEGE Student$, 3 yrs Pertonne S.rv C• ' et pe.r ng, Ill •AT !SU.NOi ................. 2151 ORAl'TINO SERVICE .......... 611' e"""'r. No drinkin&. Bill er ''' E 11 h St. CM 9:30-6:30, f.5 dys, pref M.r. Davis. M0-7632, IALIOA ISL.ANO ........ ,. .. lUS El.ECTlflCAL ....................... nl"" • t o mature \\'OMan, 546-5833 NURSES: * RN or * LVN Relief, melnly wk ends, all sWfl• aW1.U 646-1624. Agency for Career Girls 410 \V. Coast Hwy., N.B. By appoint. 646-3939 \V01'1AN to ~'Ot'k in donbj, 111xlp early morning, P~ time. No phone calls pleuti: \VINCHELL's Donut Hou.Mij 2947 Harbor Blvd, CM. " • HUNTINGTON OEACM ......... !40I EOUIPMf:NT lll!NTALS ....... IWI Steve, 548-45'19. 642-7523 btwn 8 • 10 am HOUSEKEEPER. Must love l'OUNTAll'I VALLliY .......... 2•11 l'El'ICINO ...................... 6"1 ... 11 (21 Ll . . IE.AL IEACH ............ -••. 2~so ,Looas ........................ "'5 * PAPERHANGING A Better -.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-lch dren ve in. Five OUice Temporary WOMAN For full time ~ . LONCI IEACIC ................. 1JOO l'UINACI! llf:PAll.S, l!tc. ..... wt le PAINTING. * 968-2425 -. Cl k Tr . • C hJ' days $40 1 Wl'!e k . oaAHGE COUNTY ............. HOI FUaNITUll!" IE.STOlllNO Temporary Position er • ainee as er R•l•re-·. Ne-rt Beach SANTA ANA ................. 2411 & IEPll'llSKING Uri , ... "~ ~..-WORK WHEN & WHERE YOU WANT SALES· Career· Unlimited Apply ln penon. No ~ opporlunlty S 8 5 O mo. calls. l' Wl!SIM1NSTElf ................ 2•12 GARDENING .......... "911 Pl I p I h • Keypunch ()pr, area, 644-4188 M1DWA'f' c1TY ................ ,,11 GENERAL sE•v•cEs ......... '6a ester ftl, a c , LABORERS Independent Personnel guaranlec. no experience • VIKINGS FOUR *' '• nee. We full y train you. 56 Fashion Island, NB.·-: SAl'ITA ANA HEIGHTS ........ 2•211 GlfAOtNO. DIKll'IG ............. Ren.air '8IO COASTAL ................. 21: GLASS . .. ............... ""I--'~'--------Agency 1.AOUl'IA •EACH ......... ., ... II Gllllll'I THUMI ............... 4111 }716 Orange, Suite C. CM HSKPRS Emplyr pa.ya fee George Allen Byland Agen- cy 10!>-B E. 16th, OJ.A. ~1-0393. next training class 1tarts WO:\lAN to clean house; " Sept. 28, call ~1r. Wetton el'Cperienced . Good part·wU 962-2480 or &39-MOO positio n, 2...f hn/da ~ -SA_L_E-_Ea_rn-~C-h-,-,-,-,-m-.-11 ' da.s/wk $2.25/hr. 4~7432: money part time. Sarah WORK WIITLE CHILD Covcntcy hirinJ: now. No ARE IN SCHOOL . Wo invest, no del. f'r e e wanted for counter ~ training. .I" or info PH: in air conditioned, carpe~· IW7-Q88. Dry Cleaning Agency in U.. · SALES Large!lt OUice Supply guna Niguel, Will train ~ house In lhe Harbor area; COWller sales. Quality alt ·~ requires personnel. W i 11 ation experience 1 ' !rain right person, Call Paid holidays & benefilff: LACUNA NIGUEL ............ 11117 GUN Sl'IOI' ................. •n• * PATCH PLASTERING Interim MISllOl'I VIEJO .,,. ___ , ... 170I HEALTH Cl.UIS .............. •1111 All h...-, Free estimates Por•-nel Service 642.@26 or 545-0979 OAN CLIMENTE .... ,,. .. .,.!110 HAULING ............... , .. ltJI V I""~ '"""' On 1emporary as.signmcnts SAl'I JUAN CA"llTIANO ...... 2m MOUSECl.l!ANING ............. IJU Call ~ 445 E 17lh St CM CAPISTRANO IEACH ... -.... JUii INTl!'lf IOI DECOl.AYINO ,,,.,,U7 · ., !>ANA ~DINT ,,..,.,,. .. !141 INCOME TAX ............ ,,.,,!.. 642-7523 lllVEISIOll COUNTY ........ 2111 IRON, Oratn141~l•I. EiC. ......... JM Plumbing "'° 'IACATIOl'I aENTALS ......... ttOll IRONING ..................... 11ss ----"------SUMMER aENTALS ,. ....... HH INSULATING .................. llH CONDOMINIUM ................ IUt INSURANCE .................... n l PLUMBING-ALL TYPES DUPL"ll.!S FUllN. ,,.,.,. ..... 2t1J INVESTIGATING, Dtttci!Yt ,,.1111 24 Jir. $c!rvice RENTALS • h d ~~~~~=~Aie'PA1'i;'srC:·::::::: FREE ES'I'IW.TES Houses Unfurn1s e LANoscAPING ................ ult Water heaters $60 install. OINIUL .................... MOii ~1~5':~"'.."v1CE"""'-'"'""'= Garbage disposal $45 Install. COSTA MESA .................. Si• MASONaY, ••1c1f:-::::::::::·..... ALL RATES REASON··LE MEIA DEL MAt ,.., ....... , •• Sl~ MOVING & STORAGI' . .,.,,..,6MI ......,. MESA VEllDE .... _ .......... Sl • PAINTING "'""'"-' .. CalJ J im Glenn, 7lS Owens COLLEGE PAaK ............. 2111 '''''ING•..... .. ...... .... l'IEWPOl.T •EACH ............ n• • .... ... ........ St II B 5J6.fi608 Nlw .. o•T HGHTS ............. nu PATIOS .................. _.,.... .• . . . ~ A Better Position MEWl"DRT SHOIE5 nH ~HoTooaA'MY · ........... Mn HOM! REPAIRS 6AYSHOIES ....... ::::::::::sm f'U.STElllNG, ,,tell, ...... ...... ''"""''!!'"""'""'~~~-'""' DOVE• IHOltES ............... m1 ~~~:~~IN·-············· .. -"" Plumbing.electrical. $1.511 Hr.1 · "NESTCLll'F ............. mt P 0 642-2T':i5 or 642-0506 Accountant/Jr. Ul'llVEaSITY PAii( ........... Jflf D I. SERVICE .... -....... .,,,. Xln't ,.. b opoor w/-'iable IVIN£ :H:ll POWEi. SWEEPING ............ Ht PLU•ffi[NG REPAlR •~ IACK aAV ":.':::::::::::::::::·224t PUMP Sl!aVICE ............... 1'211 " co. Recfa 3 yrs gen'l acctng '"'T aLUF" n4J ROOPING ..................... ,.,.. No job too small '"'"" 21 T•N .................. 21_. ••D10, ••P•ltt. Etc ........... IHI • Mz..3128 • el'Cper, Thru trial bal. .......,, IRVINE TEll•ACE ............ 2145 =~:gg~t:~g ~.;~;:~~ = Call }Jelen, Serviee Center CORONA DEL MAI ........... J'l$1 SCISSORS , ..... ·.,El'I ..... -.::::,.,. DRAINS Plugged'! Draining Emp. ·-~. 644--500 6ALIOA · .................. SHI! SEWING ffolO ' rt! I -~ $9 ~····• ,_, 6AY ISLANDS ............ -... lUO SEWING MAC:MiN"E' iti"tl.\ii:S ,,., slow? Expe y c ellJJl;;U . Newport Center Dr., Suite ~~~J!L~sLAt1D''.'.'.:·::::::::. WI s,',',,',"•••'•ANICL ...._ llk. .. IHJ _24_hr-;;;-"~rv;;;-.~"°"=~""=·"",---I 3», N.B, NEWPORT WEST :un ............. lfl'f 24 HR PLUMBING -',:!.,,====~~°"'-HUNTINGTON IEAcii''':::::::>4oo fEllMITE COl'ITIOL ........... ,,, A-1 TELEPHONE SolidfuW HUNTINGTOl'I NAl60UI. _,,,)405 TILE, c-.mle ............ _.,.,,74 le RE?tt'ODELLING FOUNTAll'I VALLEY .......... J.1111 TILE. 1.llMlltlllll .. MtrMI ...... I'll cc7_..,,_.. -F\ill timt', no exper, nee. .'.' .'.c" •H TRRE SERVICE " ......... 4fff ,,,, ""'" I mmedo"at• •mplo-"t G,t,ROE H G1ove:·:::::::::::::::Mu TELEVISION, •• ,."' Etc. •.. •Nsl ========== ,.._ LOl'IG •E•CH .............. lSOI ~~~i~~iE•Y ........... ""·:= R:1modellng & 1869 Newport Blvd, Suite F 01.,t.NGE COUNTY ............. ~ WINDOW CLEANll'IG:::::::::::m1 Costa Ml'sa 548-5501. ~~i~,~~~E····:::::::::::::::::~: JOBS & EMPLOYMENT -RepAlr •MO • Ancient Mariner MIDWAY crT,•,.,0 .• , .. ,., ........... J.11,,~ Joe w•NTED, Mtll ............ nee GEN'L -mod•llng •_ m·•n• IANTA AMA .,....... J08 WANTED Wlm• '"' ... · "" "" 1.. ~:i1.AAL arAcH ·::::::::::::::~;: Jo a WANT Eo: ........ No job too s m a 11. LAGUNA NIGU EL ............. nfJ MEN & WOMEN ....... 7111 Llc'd/insu~. 675-8183. MISSION VIEJO .............. 370I SCHOOLS • INSTRUCTION ,.,.16" l----------SAN CLEMENIE ....... nu JOI l'REPARATION ........... 71N IAN JUAl'I (,t.PISTlll.NO 172' tHE .. TlllCAL . . ..... 7'M CAPISTJIANO •EACH ......... 21)11 MERCHANDISE FOR Ot.NA POINT ................ JHO SALE AND TRADE COHOOMll'llUM ........... :ttH OUPLEXl!S UNFUIN, ,.,. ..... J'l lS FURNITURE ............ Ml IUMMEI 1.l!NTAU .......... Jm OFl'ICE FUllNITUl.E ........ NU RENTAL. OFl'ICI l!Qlfl .. MEMT ......... 11!11 STORI EOUl~MENT ,, ........ MU Apts. Furnished CAFE, aesTAUfl:ANT ......... •1• '"' 6AI EQUIPMENT .,.-....... IOU Gl!Nl!RAI. ................ .,. HOUSEHOLD GOODS .......... 11121 ~o:;: v~~s:E ··::::::::::::::::::: OA:AGE SALE ... . ...... , .. 11622 NEWPO•T aEACH ............ 42Cll l'U NITUIE AUCTION ...... .,IOU Nl!WPOllt HEIGHTS .......... 4111 ::;~JtN~ES ................ 110I NEWl'ORTr SHOllES ,.,.,.,,,..42'lt E •••• ..... ,.,,_,,,l llt ,, ... SEWING MACHINE .... ., ... l"O WESTCLIFF ........... · ""' '-IUSICAL INSTRUMENT •••... lllJ UH l"llSITY PAIK ........... 4lll ~IANOS . O•G••• oo-8ACM IA Y .. , .............. 4'46 ""'"'"" ft UST 6LUFll ............ 4142 RADIO ...... ., ............ 1111 CORON .. DEL MAit ,,.,,.,, ... 4150 fELEVISION .................. DJ IALaOA ... ,.,,,.,,.,,,. .. 1)90 Hl·l'I & STEREO .......... .,,.11111 IAY ISLA l'IDS .. ,,.,,,,,,, .. ,,.4151 ~:~~11.A~c~a:::t~Miiif':· •• ::: LIDO ISLE ·••'"""""' IJSI H061Y SUPPLIES . . .. ,..,.Mot IALIOA ISLAND ........... 4JSJ SPORTING Goeos Q. ....... ... NUNllNOTON 6EACN ......... 440f 61NOCULAJl.S, SCOl'ES .... -.. tUI l'OUNTAIN VALLEY ,. ........ U H MISCELLANEOUS .......... ,,.MM SEAL IEACH ...... ,,.,,, .. ,.,.44Sll MISC. WANTEO ............... N lt LONG IEACM · ,.,,. ......... ISOI MACHINERY, El'-""""" •. 11 .. 'llAN4E COUNTY ""'''''''' .4'60 LUM6EI. , , . , ., ., .. ., ........ 17$1 OAll:OEl'I GIOVE ••• , .......... 4'11 STOIAGll ................ 1111 IVE ITMINSTEa ................ "n 8Utl.OING MATERIALS ....... 17" 'ollDWAY CITY ................ •111 SWll.FI . 11'1 SANT• ANA ................... 4120 PETS and LIVESTOCK \ANTA ANA -HEIGHTS ,..,,..,,.4,:111 TUSTIN ........................... . COASTAL . . ............ ,..IJOll LAGUNA IEACH , .. """"" .•1115 LAGUNA l'llGUEL .............. 101 MISSION "IEJO _,,,.,,_., 11• SAN CLEMEN TE '""" 011 ~l!TS ,GENEIAL .............. -CATS .................... -..... let DOGS .......................... NU NOllES ...................... . Ll\IESIOCM .. .. Q4t CALIFORNIA LIVING 5AN JUAl'I CAPISTl.ANO 41U CA~ISTaANO aEACH 41JO NUIH!l.tES .............. "11 OANt. '°INT ,,,..,. ... , ... ,. .. '16' SWIMMINQ POOLS ,.,,,,.,.,,."91 Tlll'LlfX, II<. """"'""' .. ~ l'ATIOS ......... -,,.,,_,,, .. "11 r.ONDOMll'llUM ,,. ............ lt'tMI t.WNINGI ............ ,.,.,.,,,.Int HOTIU ........ -.. ----·" "11J VACATIONS .... . ..... RENTALS TRANSPORTATION Apl •• Unfurn'•lhed 80ATJ & YACHTS ............. ... SAILIO,t.TS "'"""'"'Hll ltlNRR•L ..................... SOCll POWEi ClUISEaS ............ "2t COSTA MISA .................. 5110 l~EEO-SMI IOAT ........... .... MllA VEROE ................ 1111 80•T TJl.AILEl.S ............. tin NIWf'OaT I EACM ............ sm 60AT MAINf,NANCI _ ...... Mal NRWl'Olf Ml!IOMTl .......... ltll IOAI U.Ul'ICH1NG .......... JR4 NllWl'ORT SHORES ........... 3111 MARIN li EQUIP. .. ....... ft» "l!STCLlllF ............. S»I aOAf SLl~. Mooa1t1• ........ ,.,. Ul'llVl!:l.SITY p,t,f:K ......... ,.1111 IOloT Sl!l'f'ICES ,0,0 ,.,.,,,.,,tl:JI IACklAT ,., ........ ., ....... Sl4t aOAT IEl'ITAl.S ............... .... EAST ILUl'F ........... 1141 •OAT (HARTEi. ....... , ....... ftlf COllOltA DEL MAI ........... 1111 FISHll'IG IOATS ............ J .. tMf IALIOA ....••.• , .• , ..... ,.S>ll IOAT MOVING ................ tMI IAT nLANOS ................... aOAT STOUGI' .............. ... LIDO ISLE ............... Im IOATS WANTIO .............. Mdl 1,t.LIOA ISLAllO ............ WI .. llCIAFT .. ,..,. ... ,. .... nft HUNTIN4'r01'1 ll!ACM ......... S411 'LYING Lt!llOl'll ............. '1M l'OUNTAll'I VALLlY -··•·•••·Mlf MOllLE NOME' ,. ............. tHI SIA\. lt!ACM ................. $4$1 MOTOa HOMQ .... -......... n11 LONct IEACH . ,., ........... Jstl llCYCLIS ................ tnt OR .. NO& COUNTY .......... ,.,UOI RLllJCTl lC CAii .............. ft51 GAIDIN GI OVE .............. 1111 MIMI ••KIES ............... nn wasTMINl'rlill ······-·-· .... 1411 MOfDll 'l'CLEI .............. ,.. M!OW .. T Clf'Y , • ., ............. Ml• MOTOISC001111S , .,. .. tJM SANTA AllA .................. Mn AUTO ll>llVICU a ,AJ:TS .... ... J,AMTA All• HEIOMT1 ......... U)ll AUTO TOOLS I EO!lt .. , ....... t41t JUSTIM ............... ,,.,.. ff{AILla. TaAYBL ........... MU COAS'rAL "' ........... ,, •. 11" TIAILEaS. Ulllltf ............ ,JUI LAGUNA •l!ACM .............. $,. CAMl'l!IU , ..................... HM U.GUllA lll tGUIL ,,,,,,,, ..•. 11t' TIUCKI .... '''"·-·•••••••·,_ &AM CLl!MEllT E ........ 1711 JEIPI ... ,,_ ......... tslt U.l'I JUAN CAPISTl,Al'IO ...... 1!15 CA'olPIR lllfTll.U tstt CA,1$TU.MO •EACH .,. DUl'll auoo11s ., DAMA '°INT ................. 11 .. IM~OITllD AUfOI ............ ... ll~IPLI!),. ti<. ,. • ., ... ,. .. ttll Sl"OIT (All ..... ,..,,,Nl l CONDOMINIUM ............. ltM 11.NTIOUl!I, CUISllCI ......... NII !fll'ITAl.S WANTED ,, ........ PM It.Cl (AllS, •ODS ........... NM itOOMI FOi lt!l'IT ........... lttl .. UTO RVI Nfi ,,.,,.,. ........ Ha l'l:OOM & IOAID .. .. ffM t.UTOI WANTED .............. t• M(lflLI TRAILtlt COURTS ""' JllW CAllll ..... _,.,..,., .. ,.. GU£1T J1oMES Jtft t.UT~ U!Al1 NO ................ It • • - Tbe DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace Now tnking applications tor day shift only, full time e Busboys • Kitchen Men e Asst. Broiler men Apply in per!IOl1 2607 W. Coast H\\')' .. N.B, APT Cleaning: 1st Class ?.1/\IDS only for Newports fine~! apts. Highest eamir1g5 guaranteed. CaU Newport Services, 642-1224 . Ass islant * • * LOOK AT THIS * • * 1" job opening~. full & part time, nexible hours. No exp. nee. Age 19-35, \Ve train. Start tod11;y. $3.50 per hr. Cali ~2870 Mr. Grant ASSISTANT, front olllce. Some Orthodontic e:\peri· ('flee' nettl88ry. 962-241». \V ANTED: Mature kwlfll woman to babysit ! girls. 4~1 &: 1 )T, in my home weekdl\)'s. Refs. Ca 11 536-4854. BAB\'SITl'ER \V1.nted for 20 monlh old gtrl Irom approx. 5 pm to ll a.m. Call ONLY l>etv.wn noon It. 2 pm. --8 AB Y SITTER-Mature. 4 boys (2 l(hool l Infant). S days, I a.m -5: 30 pm, $\.60 mo. Mn. Perkins S49-J009 or &fl 6 pm 645-1453. 8A8YSITI'ER wanted, days your tiome or mint. Rf':f net.r NB sell. !601 W. Balboa No. A BABYSfITER (Mature ... -omtnl for Teacher, my home. Bo1sa O.lca • F.dtnrer arta. ~3434. BABYSMTER. 4 dllld~n. ~1on/Fri, My home, T r a nsportation provkfed. 548-4215 COCO'S -REUBEN'S -COMPLEX- 4641 1'-facArthur Blvd, ~e\vpoM Beach HOUSEKEEPER tor teacher 1·5 M·F $2.00 hr. 3 school child. rel, all' 642-2751 HOSPITALITY H 0 STE SS SERVICE, has openings for mature women looking for INTERVlE\VJNG '?.tON-FRI interesting, part time work. 2 TO 5 Pl\f "~!coming .newcomen to your area. Sales e x p . e COOK e deti.rabl~. ?a!u11t have car. NO EXPERIENCE NECES-CAU..: 547-.109S e FILE CLERKS e ACCOUNT CLERKS e TYPISTS e DEMONSTRA· TORS e TRAINEE ASSEMBLERS BerTY \Vest, .:; 4 9-3 3 I 7. lfours can be atTanged, ~ NEWPORT STATIONERS. R;\ymar Cleane~ 496-~. SARY. FULL TIME, PART INVENTORY TlME. DAYS OR NIGHTS. CONTROL ANALYST t'OCKTAIL &: STEAIOfOUSE Calculator or addin& machine WAITRESSES wanted Age e:q>erl<'rtet!. ?ifu11t be famll· 21-25. Experienced. Apply 10 iar wllh inventory & pro- to l2 AM, Mon-Sat .. Village duetion eonlroJ proceduret. Holiday & Vecation Plan APPLY NO\V VOLT Inn, 6'6 ._ Cout Hwy, Ability to re•d 8"" work INSTANT PERSONNEL Lquna Bch 494-7700 wi~ data processing re. * COOK-HOUSEKEEPER * ports. Phyzical inYen!On' General lite duties. S days. eluded. Contact Personnel Hrs. 12.1 pm. Good Salary. required, heavy Otting ~ Must have car. 644-1318 Office, COCO'S REUBeN'S -COMPLEX- NEWPORT BEACH 3848 Campus Dr, Suite 106 546-4741 Equal opportunity employer S ALE SJ\TA N, aggressiw, WORKING mother ~ exper, for security alarm child ca~ for 2 & S )T ok sys. w/young Co. w/great Mon thnt !'ri, Must haw ' potential. Ref req'd, Write l.ransp. to take 5 YT' tD Box 369, HB !12646 kindergarten ll-3. c; d M, · SECRETA.RY For westam 67J...5109 .. • div, merchandising manager 4 YOUNG ~1EN 20-30 Evn'. • who i1n't afraid of responsi-SIOO. v.·k &c Up. Car nettli; bility. Located in Irvine Call Tues & \Ved lOMif·· Pnrk In Santa Ana near the 6PM. 544-8136 • airpon. Experience ln the I =========iff : retail purchasing area would ScbOOl•lnstruction 7-~\ be he1pflll. ~ L. M. Cox Mfg. Ca. Call ?itr. Kini: 1S05 E. Warner, S.A. OFFICE Glrl-exp'd. 1-girl 1 ___ c_n_<_l _54_1l-_1_!WI __ _ 4647 MacArthur Blvd, 546-2551 off ice. Typing, bookkeeping SECRETARY required. II lo 5. a days, Discover • Great New CarHr With The • NewpoM Beath Equal oiiportunity employer good salary. Call Jor Call Loraine. 64f>.7170, West-AIRLINES l'ii~~iiiii~~':'::~~!'!"'l~i~nt~r~rv~ie~w~&l;'2~-~9""~-=== cliff PeM10nne1 Agency, 2043 INTERVlE\VING 1'10N·FRI ljRVINE PERSONNEL OFFICE MGR. BOOKKEEP. Westcllfl Dr., N.B. /:. ~ 2 TO 5 Pl>f SERVICES & AGENCY ER. Asst. to pres, near O.C. SECR==E:r"°AR=y~. °"Yu'"'l"'°I "11m-,-."'1~1 I A natural ro.-young peoplt ~ Over 17 years Airport. Salary based on am to 7 pm. ~led. term., Who want excitement plu,t • BUSBOYS R pt. • 1 Call 546-0038 typing. Pe~nnel Depl, Ticket a&ent! Air lrelghtj • ece 1on1s exper. Hoag Hospital, N.B. Statiori agent'! ~rvi· -e DISHWASHERS Mature atUtude, ~tgoinl: per. Onier desk-exp'd &: pleasant SECRETARY Part-time, tlcma? Ramp or traV\I COASTAL AGENCY 1Dnallty. Call Director. taking phone orders, Typing travel business. Must be agent? We'll !rain you 1oJ', A member ot &: gen, ofnce, Under 45, 270 xlnt typist. 642--4045. these and mor~. day or nite. Snelling le Snelling Inc. Secretery Briggs Ave, (cor Redhill \Ve include placement al-l Girl Ofc-. In Anaheim, Sii, C.M. SERVICE STATTON : alst.ance. The World's Largest "Full t. 1 d Professional dictaphone, t,,vp~ng: Busy .sal-LP~A~R~T,..-"T.,.;m-~"""F~ul~l"""li~m~,-.-;;Jf ~esm:~~ e; p;~e n ~i~e Employment Servic• es ofc, for nar 1 firm. you're look inf: for 1. n experie nced 1 a I e s men : 279" Jlarbor Bl. CM S4Q.60S5 C 1 unusual job, & are 1-tull time '"""Ve"ard. ~'lu11t 488 E 17th at Irvine, ~ ·-~ .. A • •· -, Harbor Blvd. at Adams lnteres~ in .,.,auty be neat k willi...,. to work, Suile 22t 642.-1470 • C·" VI . ·~ Est. 21 yr111, Approved for Veter11.ns. Eligible institution under the federally Insured student loan program. .. ' ~~~fi':~~~~[§\iiiiiiieii:i=:==::::=~=\ eecrets tw Yltn Apply to Jerry, 2590 COUNTERGIRl.,over71., U . -Woodard Co1metic1. Newport Blvd. C.1'.t'. to 9 PM 5 .:ia .. 1 YES. ONE 842-2664 Airline Schools PacfA6. • ' ' ""'Y , • • • SERVICE Follow-up, ••M HOUR CLEANERS. ,__ -• n-.,_, '10 E 171h Santa•--· PT' 1 une ~1 .... e ,...,staurant time. 3 days per wk alter ' ' -- 963-3428 H.B. he.Ip, College students O.K training, '"""$2. per hr. Pref 54U596 '· DENTAL Assistant, full y '-•-.Q 111E PEDDLER. 1024 Bay. mature woman. Contact C-~50-$8.50, 112-$13.Sq exper'd, des.k only. p&.rl • ·• side Dr., N.B. OU.ice Mgr 842-443.3. .182--$22.50, Bonz-$22.00, ~ time. aflemoons or e~. ":"l 1 d ln th 1 ili d y Sal 1 lnst-$6, No Dues. 892..22116.~I IrniurallC'e exp des'd. 1-lunt. 11 you a e c ass e SER ICE Sta esmnn, u\I Bc:h sl'l!a. Call bet 8 &m·9 • SECTION? Someone l 1 llme. Apply at BUI Raith Tutoring math, Genn., Spe.Jtj ~ pm, 846-3540. IRVINE PERSONNEL watching for It. Dia I Standard Station 24081 El Ru11s .• Eng,. His:t., M,~ 64l-5678 today! Toro Rd., (.qui\& Hills. in Ed. All ai('s, ~. * DlSH\VASllER * Full SERVICES .. AGENCY!===='====~========;;...;===;:;;;;:='=:;;;:;:;=:,:: lime. Apply 9 to 10 AM only, +as E. l7lh at Irvine, CM ·~c1 Alley \Vest, 2106 W. 6-12-l\170 ~ 1 Oc.,nlnmt, N.B. , 'J. STAR GA'ZE~.l<i'., l Di.shwMher • Mornings, full* KITCHEN HELP * 1 -a.\YJ. .,.,. • Ume. Apply In ....... 2: 30 FEMALE At w •-l>olfr-...,. . w· I to 4:30 daily. Snack Shop •l 549-3061 -:.A MA~ 11 "'V" Accorcllrtf ,,.. tli• ltcrrs. 'V" Sii!'· u rh j 2305 E, Coast Hwy, CdM MANAGER for ocean.front ( ..,.~,, "To dfwlop'ritllSODI for Thursdoy~ ou,nQ».Gi\ I park I. read words O)rNSpOndlrtg to,......,. ~&1a·~· ~:'; EXPEDITOR: apa.nments, Q.511.11 ·of.,..._ .. Zodlocblrthsign. F-1· 3· , MWJI, read blueprtnll, Call • * Chnlmen Apts. • * ~TAUlUS 1~ SCORPIO Ann. \Vestcliff Penonnel 304 Cl\fI Dr., Laguna Bch .i...; ~= ·~~ ~~~ ~~ . ocr·''~~ I AJf!f!CY. 3>43 Wutclttf Dr., l\fANAGER Apts.. Retired ~1"1i:;s. ~~ llt'on.n ~;;:.... NOY.11 _ 1 1 N.8 . 6-15-2770. cou ple willing to ~'Ork, SA JSFw '60> ""'.:t I EXPERIENCED Counte r BaJOO. beach ap~ + Alary. WM ~~I ~¢_,..., :f~!.. a SAllJTAIM girl asaembler. Clown 61>1740 Mr. Colluw;. l~WATlf e,.... 31'" 61S. Hat; u.J.,• Cleantra. Bayside ~ler, MAN To usiat mar of )or.al f!'l(•• ,:~ ~~ ;:f:-.i21 ~l NB appliance 1iore. Neat Al> II), .... ~.... I~~ ~~--~::.... ~fijlj $500 M.tna-ment pearance. 496-2383 lifr. -1J~• 4~ ,,....,.. ~I •-Wright g...10 am only. CAHCll ,,,,.,_. ,,yoi(,. ,,._.. CANICOIM Trelnee ~IUHtn 1 5~ "'ltw:"-' 1sn.. orc.11 4" Cood ~'Otk f'Jtl>. ~Jan1ed, Call M.EN over 25 wapted for • 16Sttlo. "6Uttlli 76 Ai. , Ann, 645-2710 \Vc11tcl\U Pf'r· early Ai"\t •ul'o route. ?i1u-'t .JUl1.)J · 11r-,,,T,, 71Sc-JAJI.rt JOnnel AgtnCy, 3)43 Weal· r.tlde Wt st of Jlarbor. l\J·~ ~:+': !t~ ~~r ~~""f cliff Dr., N.B. l -"-'~-8919=====,..,.--I ~ ~t ~~ fi'~il J AOUMM Fiio Clerk.Claims MECHANICAL Ail ""'fb ii:::::.. lj:::::,..-fi=:"' j '~·" to $361.U Experienced with hand Ir B..Mlt>» 24 0r :i,o1c., &tcM' nLtr Xl.n"t oppor w/gd co Prttl)I P..,'tt tools. ((apablf' ot. 1\2-!l.!!-Z 25...,,., ~Sift l!t'-"" f1·"'~~ ottn~ ~ndly at~pbctt accurate -.'Qflt. 541-tln • ~sn ~~ ~=-:=:, F raca top beneflta. Some lite ~ TOPATRON, INC. ~" ~~ == == ft IB. tt l!:l.... In&. CaU MJss Betty, SSF-3122, DAll.Y PILOT WANT AD. .,;; JJ MC...W fill•,._. to.so---~ .Aat:ncy, 230 W. Warner, can .ell it wUh a DAILY \21'--'81-'-'~ .. ' J· ' ' • ' Abtpll Abbot Pmonnel NO mi.Utt what 1t la, )'OIJ '1~. ,.()\_..,__,Al\~,,__ ~ ..... ~~. ~,.. · Sulte 211, Slnta Ant. PILOT WANT ADI ~71 . ~~~~~-·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~ .. ----~-----· ' • --~ I , . -. ... . ------.......,,......~~-~- . ' ... 3 LINES 2 TIMES 2 DOLLARS (Any Item Priced $50 Or Less) Pin~h You1·s eli A Pile Of Pennies (01· Eve11 Dolla1·~) Penny Pinch-ers Dial Direct for Details 642-5678 Pile Up Profits North County, 540-1220, Toll Free DAILY PILOT PENNY PINCHER WANT ADS ( ' -' DAILY "LOT 83 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTArr<>f< ·-· Sallboot1 9010 MolorcyclH 930CI C•mpors 9520 lmpomd Autoo HOo FREE TO YOU Furniture * PRE • FIRE SALE!! * HO.llE CATS n::n.n.ru-. New '70 Datsun __ .F_IA_T __ ''ON~c~~;;~SALE ALL COLORS , THINIC 1~ 0s'!~ ~ ~ ~i B&, KJTTEN.!rS black ac white, 1 ~ray le whltt, ?.tou~r 11 registl!red Siamese. Morns .. •~1. 6'J5...3..5Sll; btv.'n 10-6, &J4..Sett 9/11 *AUCTION* The b011 ••Y• If we don't movt •II theH Items we wlll get fired I Either the furniture goes or wt dol So we'vt priced It 50 It'• 90t to go! Yw-haul, You-Save, Self-Service. PIANOS '2~== FRl!I! DEMOS \HONDA ,. ~WW tako cu In r.:I .. A °"""'..,.Spine, ...... $399 Aucllon> Friday 1'30 pm 2 ADORABLE mal• "'" CAP'N EDS 111 !ride, U flnal'<e prlva1' .. ,,,.~ New KIMBALL Coniole $699 Wi d , . B bl"ffd mixed pup1, g 'A'ks, PJrty. Call 5fS.4C52 or IUI 8' Gold sofa & chair. NEW retail $300 KL.'1BA1J.. Grand •••••• sm 1n y 1 Auction a rn br short hair, 1 rorly blk. 2200 w, Cit. Hwy. NB 6'5-2244 ''fRl£DLANDfR'' 49+6811. ••to a port 1 ORGANS 2075~ Newport. CM, 646-86S6 Mothe.r am·Yorkle m I". CAL-25 '$6, 250 lDll 1~ flfWY, ., VW 1970 Carnpmobile like Authorbcd Salt1 • Service THOMAS Ori:tn ···••• $179 Bthind Toey'1 Bldg. Ml,l'l. M0-8417 !l/11 5.\7-6824. e 893-7566 MW, comp. equipped to Partl New and Ultd Pr•Flre sale price $59 80" Orange velvet sofa & chair new retail $290 .........••..... Pr•Flre s•i• prlc• $75. 3 blk & wht 23" console TV's, $350 .. SIS u. 5 pc Dinette sets, antique white & walnut. HAMMOND Chord "A·l " S299 5 BEAUTI•"UL k It ten a. 2 l'ull Race! 4 D A C Sall•! NEW-USED-SE RV. camp, bc•t of!tr. All!IO '69 Salc1 Open Sunda.Y llAMAIOND Bl •••••• Sl005 * AUCTION * tabby, l klrtolM ehell, 1 S/S Rad'°! Dinette! 9HP .... - - -Yamaha Enduro l2S cc. 137.7777 ca.11 Collecl fo.10ST UNIQUE black, 1 black & white. Very &nide! Choice Slip $50 • - -..-..---i -t~n 9625 Garden Grove BIVd. Jncludes bench, delivery & U~etmed p1~-c1, UI\. ""'qu• 968-9'"7 9111 JOHN CR.ANATH 673--3510 I-== -• 1 1N6 l,UU • .Jll HELP! Muat setl '40 Chevy 114+w1 .......... W&lT8J'Jiy • • • lolany other ndeemed 11torage hems, AKC ~It Hound. fl'male, 19' WIND\VARD SI o o P . wooden camper truck, 11lpa 5 Bargaln1, •. Antique". Imports. trl-colored, 4 yn: old, 1~,. cfl bin, fresh waleJ', Xlnt cond. New ens. $4~. l\JUST BE SEEN! COAST AUCTION HOUS£ fenctd )'t..n:I, tovlnK tamlly. Outboord auxiliary. Best Ask for Mike aft S, 642-3053. New retail $89 ... ., ....... , .... , . Now $3' ttt. Overstuffed chairs. Values to $100. ~ ........ , •. , ...... Pr•Flre S•le prlc• $25 e•· Nice 5 pc Walnut Bdrm set consists of: dress· er w/mirror. dbl headboard, 2 nite stands. Values to $200. Pre·F ire sale prlc• $69. set. Box springs & mattress sets, sanitized & sterilized. Values lo $125. Pr•Flre sale price $21. 1et. 7' sofa & chair, avocado green, new retail $250 .. , , . , ......... Pre-Flrt sale price $59. Bunk bed sets, comp! 'v/mattress, new $125. , . , ..•. , .. , ..... P re.Fire ••le price $29. set. 4 80" Spanish sofas. top cond, new retail S250 ...... , ... , P r•F irt sal• pric• $71. •a. 2 portable bars, walnut finish . new retail $65 •............ Pre-Fire ••le price $29. e•. 4 bar stools, new retail $20 .... Now $9. ••ch 6 draw~r dressers w/mlrrors, new retail $90. , ... , .•......... Pr•Flre sale price $45. ••· THE USED FURNITURE FACTORY 1885 HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MESA OPff WHld•p 9·1;JO, S.t11rdaya 9.5, / CleMCI l••dop • ALSO • \\'ednesda,y, 7:30 P,l\1. Call eves: M0-.!1638 !l/11 offer over $700. Call ~1120 YA?ttMlA • KI?.1BALL I I 'lii;::ill=;::!!~~~:;:i:::;:=r:' I ~iiS;i<~;;;;;~~;;;;~ S.11)..1123. e '11-IOMAS I~ NED Cd home for 2 darllng l .:0:..'~,T,r.,..,,...,.-- KOHLER A CA~tPBELL This coupon ..-.wth kittens l male, 1 female. e HOBBIE CAT COAST MUSIC $25 Box irt.lned & \Vt!Sflt'd . SAIL • 3311 NEWPOr.T I: HARBOR 'A'ith purhcue o! 646-1403 9/11 l l\to/old. Savt $200. Leavinj: Co&ta Mesa * 642·2851 CARPETING \VE have 4. darling faced tor sch. Ph: st(.()776, A\lf, Hrs Only l!Mi lol.Se.t Sept. only (40 )'da min) pu1'e' bl'1!(1 muns. 1 just 27• FEA'rnER Sloop, trbgla C.A. Page MZ.2070 perled for your family, 3 o/y.;d, Gd rond, must sell. SAVE NOW ~ 646-2739 9/11 St693. 675-1393 or 531·5363 DURING SUMMER YARDAGE r~E to quali!ied home, 3 & e p CAT No . 431-6 moa: old, CLEARANCE SALE All new Cotton krJta-Wool 4 mo old klttena.y,•lthihots. Jully equipped . ca.ti We haVI' tnde.ln.1, n:poa, Jersey-Bondeds 2 yds $3. Litter box' tmd, 549·1846 9/Jt y.,·eektl&~'I 11·2 pm. 61.,..()5.95 ~nt return11 4 floor models Tbura-Sept 10-Sat-Sept 12 of evtry model Hammond lOA.\t-4P~f 10.Uf~PAf CUTE Kitte"5-eOIT'le fiufl;y, • 20' Sloo~'A'OOd keel l'Jo&t, Organ, Buy now Ir. ttcelw ~,,"3~11;;•,,v;;'o:",:B::;";:":..":,·.,;"";;;;....,,. \Yill be good moullt'r11. sleeps 2. ;; 548-4615 9/11 SllOO. rxtra discount. HAl\lh!OND Ora:e.n: ?a1DL C· :.:;::::..-:-===~'-"-11AMMOND 102 Cherrywood con110le. FREE to gd. home · Bl. e al' Sloop e In CORONA DEL MAR W~ ne1v, 2 crpts-gm/gld. Cockapoo, nice tor children. U'ood k~I bot.t. Sleeps 2. 2854 E. Coast H'IY)'. 673..8930 & Misc. Ge.rage aale type 5,;7-6614 9/11 Make oUer. 837-7039 Open 1-lon &: Fri eves, ilen1s. See at 432 Carnation, 4 BABY &. 2 adult rabbitg, COLUMBIA 26, '70, mat)Y CdM. or 67fMil02 grey or white. 646-0040 9/11 xlru w/allp, $2500 down. TELEFUNKEN lli • Fi PETS and LIVESTOCi( A1sume loan. M2-0:;.:.:56;;> __ am/Jm I sw/phono, l ight 1~1al11ut cabinet, sn. 1-faple Cata U20 Power Crulur1 11 SALE II 9020 Dune Bunl11 9525 --... ._._ XLNT START FOR DUNE BUGGY '&t VW pan, includes front. rnd, front brakes, pedall I cab.lei. !At asaembled) 8 Mulf Soll e 646-4665 or 646-TJ02 • hf~T" ''FRIEDLANDER" 1J71G IUCH (Hwy, JtJ 893-'IJ66 • 537-6824 NEW·USED-SEl!.V. U'U'U'U'l.I l\IEYERS ?.fanx, blue mete.I NEW FIAT flake, bra.nd new 1600 vw 1970 850 SPYDER en,g, Po1'8Che clutch, 2 !Ope:, AU eolor1 to choose Crom. chnn whls, Gales tires. $2.135 + Tax &: Lie. 1~969~"'su~z~u"'K"'J=. =;1't0~. ~s.",,.""',~e l Vr.ry clean, $149.). 548--0-!40. All rnodel.5 to choose. Xlnt. cond, 1200 miles ssoo .. MEYERS 1otanx: gold metal California Sport C•rt or bt'st ofcr. Call att. 6 P?t1. flake. Top &: side curtains, 901 E. 1st, S.A. 542-8801 M;.-0271 Gal" GT lltt•, "'"'" '69 F' 124 C • 11prlnt mags. $2195 or best lat pe '68. BULTACO, 250 CC. Gd. offer. 5'1&-16". EJ;ol!c red with black vl11YI for slreet or dirt. Extns. t I Lo 'le ti. $;.9,';, 510-5198 Flb.r9la11 Rep•lr bucke seas. w m1 s, • * &t541.i8 * had excellent care. Sacrl· e '67 1'riumph, Cherry, Lots ---"--'"--'"----1 f.ice! (XLY2.15) Take o.tder Schools-ln1tructlon 7600 Big Piano & Organ Sale gt1lng on RIGHT NOW at WARD'S BALD\VTN STUDIO 1819 Newport, C.l\t, 642-MM double bed $40. Zenith 1V """'-------' $35. 646-8065 after s. Purebred Se•lpolnt Sla- E-J ivhef:l .chair, ex. cond m•1e kittens $25. Call or chromr. Must 5aci·iflce., car In trarle. \Viii finance 11' Cabin Cruiser, 75 HP Sell or trade. 646--5983. lmpo".!_~ _C;;.•;;.•;.:•--'9600 private • ut,y. Call Pal dlr, JohnMn. Fish or akt, xlnt ""'-:=======I afl 10 : .l 494·7503, $40.3100. ---LUGGAGE trailer $Zi0, 3 S50, Quii.lltone hearing aid, 646-6384 after TO am. *SPECIAL* diamond rings, New S50. HAMl\tOND Orian w/perc, ex. cond . S339 ntw, make cond. Tri•, ,i;p. m:i-56ss. s 1 ALFA ROMEO Auto erv ce 20' CABL'f Cruiser • Gius, & Parts .. hl \11arranty $288. New piano D ••25 rlttp V, 85 Johnt0n, trlr. Multl .. ngln• ratlnt1 each, ''l\finutl' Rose c na. offer. MeCall's Desert Air ~· GO • 5 pc 15etli11'"' for 1 2 m11.de in USA, wal., all ex· 1 p .," •~3513 $550 .. ~ tras, 15.,... warra1>ly 1499. am ..,..,. ,,...,.. · AFGHAN PUPPIES $50. Stephe n sen oil .,. in a Cessna 310 painllngs S...?00. pecan GOULD ?t1USIC CO. 356 A Porsche bumper, Pur· Exotic colon * 962-9989 Speed-Ski Boat1 9030 S2AOO or best offer. 962-2159 e V\V pal)ir. 1nn1 axles FA,\ &: 'VA approved rattan. 6 pc BR set Sl75. Si~ l!lll is1 Delight! Never been din&. SUN.COUNTRY KENNELS Aireraft Flying: Service 2178 Canyon Or. C~·I 2Gl5 No. l\!ain, S.A. ed S7S. Kenmore 2 11p, wasD. 8 MOS . Irish Seller, male, 18' Raysoncraft, Ford 406 IC: bodyparlll. • 64Ul413 • VW Engine, Good Cond. • &iU);l43 • Payments To High 1 l<O<lt· "'""" <ll ------- JAGUAR -------JAGUAR HEAD9UARTERS 19531 Campus Dr GAR AGE Sale-decorative * 541-0081 * er, SIS, u is, 543-8404 afl AKC atra friendly, lovable, ~~n:.lw~ ~~~ s ~ Oran;:e Co. Airport BALDWIN AKROSONIC 6 Pl\f. Muat sell! 5i~2988'. 540.9656 ~·ooden barrels, \\'Omen's Like ·new .,eM engint. X1nt cond. $(500. Trailer1 Travel clothing (~16). decoratiw ....,., AM·l"J\1 radio for tape MALE POODLE 2U/698--0464. PIANO & Voice Lessons, dri(twood Men's used v.'W'k 673-78St after 1 cartrklp system. Plug Lo ChU~ !20 LIVE OR CAi\lP IN THIS Poppy's Tbl-only aulhorlr.ed JAGUAR dealtt ta the enllre Hartis ........ Compleh.i SALES I b09 I~ Ho•f.<" 01 I 7th \I '.onhl Ano -\JI 11410 Pro., t:redentia.I teacher. clothes. 'much more. WURLITZER maple 5J1lnnet system Into tape deck and vca u .. :n, ENJOY The Sun & Salt Sea TRAILER 16' '68 field It F're Jes.son every 3rd mo """1821 1 t nd S550 Stt aft 6 pm llstl'n to AM·Of music Ex 636-%398 Air. Deluxe Runabout. Call i;trcam sl"". 7 complly ·--------~757 . -~~-=~·=~-~--~rn ... ~s.U6 .:A" 34th, NB. cond. $35. 545-2572 • . SILKY Terrier pups. 2 mo1::,....::::::'°::'::· ====::=:: equip. s!nl: ~4 or AUSTIN HEALEY SERVICE PARTS BAUER SE FOR FANTASTIC Bargains on .. ,~ •• ~ 140 •• ,;. MW old, AKC. J\lale &. Jemale. 646-2170 MERCHANOI Suede & lealhe.l'· items. *SPIN ET \1·11\nul Cran d •• '-"-V .............. n " E"l ~03 or >31-~-I 90'6 ;o~""=-;;=,,.-=:-;-1 SALE ANO TRADE Some like nl'\\', 9/Jl.9113 piano Co. 2 yrs. x nt · · COuu. J. a ...,... I · l-7C'~====-;-:c-'68 Nll'l'IROD. De uxc. ps 6. AUSTIN AM I I cond Gd ., ,9-Sor •·• d ~ ~• '~' Boat Slip Moor ng • ·' 1 SI ER CA BUICK SAT-SUN 1-4 pm. 2627 $421 968-5448. cotid. W Call 642-7614, aft. ** Schnau:tcr Pups •• • SLIPS 32.-38 •• Also Dry S1ovc, icebox, din'g: tab!e. Blackthom SI, NB. 644-0935 1,.:,::;."==~---~ .5~";;:'=,,·,...,==-;;=:;: I l\lalc at ~tud & grooming . $595 S43-4tS6 Sales, Service, ParU WURLITZER 11pin1>t pie.no, :; 846--0839 storage 4 holat launch ing, · • • lmmeCiate Delivery Furniture IOOO IN COSTA MESA MUST SELL all 6 pm ex~llent condition, 2 yrs old NEWPORT Beach Tennill I-~==''='===-* 673-6606 * All Modell RUMMAGE SALE ssoo. 494.JSIJ5 Club family member&hlp, e ffilsrl SE'J"J'ER PUPS 234 E. 17th Street 548-7765 OV!R STOCKED Twins $49.95, FW.l.J $59.95, Queens S89.95, Kings $U9.95, Twin Size Headboartls S7.9J, Trundle Sets $89.95, Rolla· \\·ay beds, $29.95, Studio Couches $89.95. Bunk beds $89.95, Thurs-Sat 9/10-9/12 $575. 644-U36. AKC e . * 892-5788 ... COME! SEE! BUY! MDV. Sac. S New Snack Be.ck o( Warren's ?tiagnavox T_•_l!vl1i0•:.:"----"'8205 Vending i\lachlnes on loc. LliASA Apso. female, >\KC, •t 1714 Nl'wport Blvd, Ci\1 , Orange Cnty. 8.'ll-1172 8 11·k11. J\fust M"c to • 23" i\1o1Drola color TV. -'='="-""':..:...=..:.:.:"---appreciate. ~1260. SAT & SUN -all day. SNl':,.w. picture tube. "~7 •292 AFGHAN PUPPIES Furniture, baby clothes. oN oN -. M isc. Wanted 1610 children's clothl'!!, misc. Zl" COLOR 1V $1 2:5. 11" -...1--------AKC Sl50. M6.758!J 1519 \\'estmlnster Aw. Cr.f. portable $25. 23" TV $30. LARGE family would like to !'>48-6529 buy a re!rlgerator. SIESTA SLEEP SHOP 1927 Harbor Blvd., CM ""'2'160 34155 Cat. Hwy, Dana Pt. 496-4552 I :o======== I 64,...,1 Appli•nce_1 ____ 1_1oo_ Hi·Fi & Stereo 8210 8 YR Palomino Qtr hone. KEN~IORE Y..'l.SMT'!I & I --F-R_E_E_T_O __ Y_O_U__ JI.la.re, Sp!rltM, All lack, 18:10 Hor••• do;·ers, Coldspot relrig's; r.1UNTZ Stereo, 4 .i 8 track S400 540-2935, 20101 home unit &: 2 speakers (all Cypi-eas, SA H\1. Freight damaged, New• · bl 11 + 50 KI'I'TENS • he is white full• -·•ranteed. reductions in one ca ne ~pprox.,. , QUA LI 1-· IE D H 0 RS E BEAUTI FUL pecan 7 pc ., .,¥ .. -, I'~ guuu coi w/ora""c. she ~ blaek .i lo 180. Pho"' """ 77!1 Sears ,.,.. ' ....... ' ''e TRAINER avail. E-rt In bedroom king size Simmons """"" •'"15~.,. white. Mother was calico -..- , •-buck Co, ·~--al 1-------==~-b-·"··, jumpln<. ,drHs-satin bed, linens, 11pread. ~ .nu ... ,.,. 0 IC 5.55 T lonchalr. Ra i sed by •"'.uu.'6 Pair twin beds, headboards, Magnolia, HB STERE PHON ape aflectionate children. l mo i..:ag::::;";.c'°""'•:;;· ,;':;;"::.· , .... -;;;.2988o:c;;--aJmost new. l\Jahogany -.~C~A-R-W~A~SH=-H~ELP~~.-ICQNCORD Stereophonic 555 old, house broken. e HORSE TACK • Victorian dressrr, m irror, Many opcnings, full & part Tape Recordt'r &. Accessor-642-1159 9/11 Used bridles, blankets & Lene end table!'., desk, 1.lme io· bs. 3 locatiorui. ,;~"~"°~·:..6!"1~34~386""'.~-~~ I' m)i;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;; "'"'"· * 833-2848 * -ND temporary home for ve:ry ,:,~;:;,=~,.;..===-velvl'I bl'nch, I am P s • Orange County. METRO P O RG E· WARNER CAR lovable friendly wht cat blk TRANSPORTATION pictuncos, old <'hina. .l\lust CAR \VASH 2950 Harbor STEREO 8 lrack * 145 trim & 4 kittens will place dispose. 847-5066 Blvd, C.M. * 673-4386 * ntolher &. kittens when SALE: GE dryl'I', lan1ps, NORGE dryer $25 Norge J\1orae stereo.dark wood cal> 1\•eaned. 548-0813, 542-7096 desk &· chair, 11I11g1 r. drye r, 5 cycles S45. inet w/record storage. Xlnt 9/ll bed·compl, formi. kitch. sci Kenmore washer, 8 cycles cond. $150. 6~6.2663 LOVABLE sm. breed mixed w/6 chrs & 2 c.xt'11. 9ll:l2 rug, S45. Hot Polnl washer $45. pups male all blk. ""avy night i;tand, recliner & 544--0930 or 524-8021 hair, poodle type female, more. Eves aft 6:15 Ph: NEW/Used appliance' & Camera5 & blk and br. mother pure 494-3857. TVs All gua ran teed. Equipment 8300 bre'fd doxie. 542-7096 bet. 9 FURNITURE returned lrom Dunlap's, 1815 Newport, C\I e USED ROLLEJ-FLEX. p.m. 548--0813 9/11 display studies, model horn. 5'13-7788 Xlnt cond. Sllll. 4 DARLING kittens w/lots es decorators eancellation. KELVINATOR Automatic • 842-2664 * of personality, 3 Jluffy & 1 sPanish & l\ledi\Pl'J'llnt!ln \\'&Sher y,•ith \\"l &h & \\'Car ---------short hair, 2 gray. 2 StriJ>{'d, R D FURNITURE ('ycle $50. Call atter 5, S I Good IJOO 8 wks.. paper trained. 1144 Newport Bl., C.M. 54S-3709. port "I ··--'---548--0~ 9nt every nite '•ii 9 LEAVING Tov;n! 11· GE BROWNING FR.EE lo good home· Wed., Sat. & Sun, 'Iii 6 refrig w/top lree zer. LIGHTNING Spring1>r gpaniel female, CA'N'i)'Py Bed y.,•/spread k Frosffree. Used 3 moa S2SO 20 ga. over & under, mod. & liver & v.'hite. spa,vcd. AKC. canopy, n1a1 K· box. drt!SS<'r 642-6332. full. Exet"llent condllion. 5 ye!ll'9 old, 548-37!H 9111 w/mirror. desk & chair ~l;\Y Co. auto "'asher, 2 yrs Bro"•ning gun casr included 5 ADQR,\BLF: ki!tC'nJli, 4 v.·ht, $100. 4 canc-back occas1onal old. Likc ne\v, S 7 5 . $3.'lO f irm. 531-8387 1 Hgt>r. 1 glrl, 4 boys. Very chairs \v/gret>n velve t DC'li\·C'red &. guaranteed. POOL TABLE playful & need good home, uphol. $60. 6'16-6922. 847..Stlj, S.16-8671. 4 x 8 RcgUlalion. 646-1&13. KING bed, firn1 matl/~rg , WESTINGHOUSE 01'yer $Jj, Complete with aU SM. breed blk & wh!. l<ix S75; hand pn!rl crib/ma!!, Old Kenmore washer, v.:orks accessories. Xlnt cond. terrier & tan chihuahua, 6 $35. St a u f f c r !able, $5. 546--4431. $350. 646-3629 mo, good w I chi I d re n . Bo.tt1 & Yachts 9000 FREE Basic boating cour~e offered to the public by the Balboa Power Squadron. Sa i I as well as power boat· ting taught. Starting 7 PM Mon .. Sept. 21, e"·ery Monday n i t e for 13 weeks. At New- port Harbor Yac h t Club, 720 West Bay Avenue, Newport Be a c h. Bring note- book & pe n cil first nitc. Any questions call 673·1855. FREE! $100/hcst. All xlnt. &12-5917 'o"R'"v"ER'°'"."'--w-0-,~,-,-.-°"l'o=" b Adorable 540--0111 9/1 1 " " SPAULDING Golf c I u s, or "'" 5931 Refrig1>rator. lrost tree, $85 Elite Reg, Pro SS irons, 2 3 GU INEA pigs, l mouse. 1 HUNTINGTON BEACH l\tAPLE Tv.-in beds, box & 612-9917 or 962-5931 thru 9; PW SW Exec woods hampster. All to gd home$', POWER SQUADRON'S inner !"pring mllll .. ni1c --~R=E=r"ru"G"~".RA=T"o'"RS"'"°-11 thru 4 & bag, Make offer. make good pets please call BASIC BOATING stand. X.lnt 6 x 9 b~1rer1 '3S • S45 • Sj5 548-4945 eves. 548-2957 9/11 COURSE n.ig, All R c 8 5 0 n a c. Excellent condition 646-7820 * SURFBOARD 10'3" * AUSTRALlAN I Ge rman Huntlnnton Beach 642-6437. Harbour * SJO Shepherd pupg free to good H19'h School Boat Charter 903' •••••••••• THE MEADOWS tin' the lrvlO. orang• grovt1) Now renting spaces ?.fulti·Mlllion Dollar 1-lohile Horne Community • 52~ acres of tun living • $300,000 recreational, ~ elal & cultural center, full lime, in park service cen. ll'r. • 1")11.ily 11mog . f~e ocean bmzcs, surrounded by or. 11ngc gmvl's .i, mountains e " n1in fron1 world '11 largt'at 1hopping centt'r (Faahlon Jslandi e Championship lawn bowl. Ing green e Small Jl('!s: aJlowtd Enjoy the above at $81 .50 per mo. CALI~ COLLECT 7141531-8105, 714/53().2930 714 /8.12-85.§, 213/860-5210 •••••••••• RIVER SPECIALS New 12' wide homes, ali&btly damaged. Perfect for the d~ it-yourselfl'r, Original 11ell· ing price S6CXXl-S7000, Reduc. cd for clearance S4l'(l(l.$5(0), BAY HARBOR 1425 Baker St., Costa Mesa Juat So. of Jlarbor Blvd. & S11n Diego F r w y, (714) 540-9470, e MOBILE Homt', 8ll:40', alr cond. S1800 or best ofJer. Ca.II %8-1189 Yell "FORE & SURFS UPI" 21x5.j, 3 br, 2 ba . Adult park. Euy terms. 536--0321 1970 DELUXF: 24x52, 2 Br, 2 Ba. dre:c>1lr12: rm, lndry, 1wnings. petio. ~158 S' SOFA, quilted floral, ntvrr * 673-4386 homes. Diane Weed .tter 7 Rooms 121 & l22 used, sco!ch,guarded s12:1: Antique• 1110 ----''-----1 p.m. ~71119 9/11 h. 1 1 175 St•rtln• S.pt. 14 •nd Mate 1ng ovcsea ::i. BEAGLE, 1 yr. Good • h B US 53G-8J.17 AUTIIENJC antiq. 19th Cent. MlictllaMOUI 1600 w I child~n. Male. Oua:tide each Monday throug 35· GREYllOUNO . : RA~AN Headboard for f11·in marble top drtuer. 0'Ja1 ........ "" -·s 9/11 ,...,.,-::;;N,;;•;,vo;;;m;:c;bo~r==;;.""I Conver.1ion. Sips 6-8. 3,CXXI Motor Homes 921! • • m I r r o '• oa'alnut $150. LEAVING State will dilcount ""Ii '"_,.;u w II po r pl•nl 0= Gal bed. Xlnl cond. $15. 1825 W. SCRAM LETS a we · -&lbM Blvd. (upslalrs), 83J.-!Xm, membenhlp in Coto de TICER kltten.s 6 wks male • wrrllanks. !'& g;i.I holding Cau. outdr. tam. rec. dub. "'~aned il box traine(I, tank. Color 'l'V·AM/FM NB. all day. ll20 Save $500. 968-6013 • 5fS..lS70 9/ll ANSWERS Stereo !\lulH·plt>x. Tape KING-sz BED: Firm, still Stwlng Machlnea 1,".=ro:..ru;;:>;:,l:,:ICA~:.,BarO"':.. . .:,k~lt"'cho~n Black dog, med. 11ize, needs deck &: record player. Full packaged lro.mc. S 125 · 1970 Siriger touch+malic, set (formtc.. top), Fertlllttr child love. Doesn't bark ha.th w/tuh. Ovr S12,500 \Vorth $2ti0. Usually heme! zlg-zag. bcaut. walnut co~ 11preackr, vacuum, chr. & 546.9642 9/9 Cookie -Rulr.r -'Tempo -Invested. B.111. ofr. or will 84~· D sole. makes button hole1, other l\lisc. $8-2118 Behead -BREAKETII trade. 826-945.'l I d be. 2 %..Slamt"Se kittem:, hlk Detroit. kno"'n fls !he dy-,c:;""'""=,,...-.,-== • 80 VOS sllght Y use 1 1it' oven:asl11 seams. b 11 n d 11.•APLE ''""'· eo~ne w/•·hi '°'' •. •·h•'•k·-.. 1970 CUST01\1 made Motor lo 17. G '" Yr-•"' "" "'" nsmic ci!y, makc1 h whlle lh(' ny n carpets :i. hen1s, designs & etc. ua r. f-J.frte; bottof\ freezer , ... 1338 911 1 Home. Slc1>p11 6. Easy .. 1618 • •"" ~ citizens ol •he world BREl\.K. lo * 54 $44 cash or small pyn1ts. r e(rlg. Blk & wh 11" portbl f)llrklng. Only 16' ng. 'J1rtuµor1 · 31111µ01'1 s JAGUAR Mark X, Every posa!ble extra, Perteet specimen $3500. 494--1702. '"" w. eo..i K..,., N.a. KARMANN GHIA MUa 54IJ.l7M1-------- Aulhom.d MG O.alu '66 GHIA 1 oy.,•ne r, canary yellow exttr----------1 tor with black vinyl inte.r· Authorized Dir. lor, tonneau cover. Hu had Sale!! • St'rvice • Parts excellent care, CSQX 122) .ALL J\10DEL.S TO $1099 full price. \Viii finance CHOOSE FROM pvt. pty. dlr. Cat: J\1aury aft • 2800 Cpea in stock 10 am 540-3100 or 4!»·2503. • Immediate Delivery e '68-Likc new 30 000 ml Servi~ ?tfonday 'till 7:00 Pat tires • ' ' BMW Sat 'till Noon S~;; ' ~;.a906 COAST IMPORTS ·e '62 K•rmonn Ghio m engine healer de1wre Ol Orange County Inc. Rblt eng, must sell, &U-29'19 cab, t1beigW1 tlfes with ~ W. Paclfice Coast Hwy I==='""=====' I 8 foot cab over King of {ACI'O/'i11 from Balboa 1970 GMC 1500 PICKUP WITH CAMPER Roetd Camper. Stov1>, retrlg. 81\y Club) METRO eratnr, 20 gal, \l'ater lank, 004106 • 546-4521> METRO VAN naturaJ voood with 1otl o1 -1953 % T bulltin c11mper. roo1n. CORTINA Stove, sink, lee box, cazpet. $3295 1966 2 DOOR Cortina GT, Ing, """'111"<. bod, n • w Serh:I 58744 UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE paint. Xlnt condition. run1 iood ~ aood rubber -* 545-?24S * below low book. 545-68171 ========='! afternoons. J· e SACRIFICE SALE e 1969 CORTINA GT • 846-1260 • DATSUN -·· --·----'70 DATSUN 4 Dl:'ior Sedan, used n100 lull price. (601A VA) dlr, \VUJ take fT11.de or finance pr!. MERCEDES BENZ Or .l n')e C ovn•y·~ L.uq.:~! 51•l('Ll1on N"w R. U·.<·rl Me•("d"" 0.-111 Jim Siemens Imp•. W .n ne• & MJiri 51 SJnl,1 An.1 546·4 I 14 vale party, Call 546-4052 or • 'SS A-tercedea • 494.UU. Run5 &:ood Best otter DOT DATSUN • fl'IS-4952 • 1956 100 SL Rdst:r-rcd \V/blk OPEN DAILY lnt. Xlnt running. new AND radials, $1600. 646-7506. SUNDAYS "'" XI nd Long Bro, VS. in11on1atir. '69 M.B, '""lU • nl t.'O • !\lust atll! dlr. (111l0Al v.1111 1~ Beall! Blvd. 4 apd, AM/F'M /SW radio. Huntlnston Bear.b Pvl Pl $3900 941 ~~ take trade or finftnce. au.nn OJ' So!G-0442 y. · ·•;J;AJ ~94· 77« I -...:=.:=..::."-',.:,.--1959 BLUE Men:edea zm $. drlv~. '6S 327 Chevy cng. _. MllUN -w/n'dr1.ve. Gates lire5. Call xlnt. cond. $1300. Call 675-3385 * '62 rorn t"·lOO. 4-whJ $ PhU ~111nuel tor comp!. info MG 67.')..3331. ''Leader In The lAat!f'I Cities" --·---'" a~., v.,, wh11, w1 ZIMMERMAN 1u-ey Interior, clenn van, 2145 HARBOR BLVD ju" tuned 115"). 492-JU7 .14M4IO • '67 FORD Super ·,---· - v.,,..ulomotic. '""' cond. 6 66 1600 ROADSTER cyl. lo m.ileap. 673-5655. SllVtt ftnlah w/blaclc vinyl lnte.rlor 4 speed, Dir,, (RU1 · 8$1) will take trade tit fin. ance relvale part)' call 546-4052 or 494"68ll. N"W"U"lrrftl ~THINK ... ~ .. ''FRIEDLANDER" NEW MIDGET $1991 U1H llACM ~MW'I', Jfl 89:J.~ • SJ7.fM4 NEW-USED-Sl!RV. M~238. TV. 536--t;;()G afl 6 SJ\.11\LI .• black terrier found E'n I. Built-in~. c 0 m fl I eell vie, ~nta Ana Ave. btwn. FOR SALE -LEASE contained. ~lu~t i;('e! Only *REPAIRS* POOL TABLE +STICKS, 201h" 21" SL 64&-2315 9111 OR CHARTl!R l4950. 1813 Viola Pl, CM. ALL NEW ENGLISH Refln'd 34x60 "'Ood de1ks. C tan, oil 4 adjust your BALLS & RACK, S40 % SIAMESE cats 1·7 mo11, •• "11: ooo Do !I bal 64Z..3240 $69.50 • Rcfin'd wood arm machine in your home, * ~ * f•m•I• l·ll --. maJ•. ~· wn,' YT'll ,!~~I · ~~;:;;;::==;:===;;;;j ~~~~~~~~ FORDS NOW IN STOCK ENGLISH FORD ~ Offlc• 'Furniture 1010 · n 95 JI k •• -=--====="""'""'"""' " "-v"' 4f'Jo'lybrklgeWhttle:r .... us---DR'-.CALLY rotary chairs, $29.50 e We Special ...,. · a ""'Or gu.... e TREEHOUSE: SLIDE-SJG..2024 9/ll er. Sleepi g, Complelely llED~uUCED have the largest sel1cUon can;•ttd:::·::..,_=:.'=::==== ~VING ENSEMBLE, GD. ~orcy~~· JHps 9510 01 .... , olli·-turn In thls ;; COND . .,...,,, • 546 .. 0053 * 1 YR. old Samoyed reconditioned throughout, 'IS Y"""HA 2SOc: --TO CLEAR ~ ...., .,.,.., ttg1stered wlll'I p aper". "1970". MINT COND. """"' c DESERT OR SAFARI '69 LARGE SELECTION' area. Muslc:•I 1125 l\iOVING J\.fu.,I Sell : Dbl bed. S45.-fi817 9111 XTRAS PLUS! Ala.kt otter! $300. 84S-l815 TOYola land cndaer aoft top TO CHOOSE FROM i'ofc l\11'hnn De~~ _..;l;..n.;.•t .. r_u_m_•_n_ts____ Scar's FrosUt'l\11 R e I rf i , ADORABLE •II nu'nlatu-~ 539-8918 Evel I: wk-l962165G-B!\A Cblppe:r. 4 v.1i dr. movi ..... lll!'Cltlce Th-~-,. 1800 Nr",,arl Blvu. w/l~m11kf'r. Etc, 357..3397 ~ \lt1' ,,. "• - J1rluporr . Jli11µor1s MU4.i0 MUS T So 11 ! ! GI b •on _,, ,,..;.,.., to a llW!ng •nd• l:l>MO:>. !800.00 1""1l. >18-00!! ROBINS FORD 31DO W. Couc H"1, N.Z. ===='=='======:::: llummlnlblrd wfcue & PR Of Chevy l 4" !\la.fl, S30. lamlly 675-6319 9111 14' Boiton Whaler $1'50. I .,.=-.::i•.:543-5<61'°"~::·-::::;;;::-1B66 FORD Bronee 4 11Jh1 dr. .2060 Harbor Blvd. IG-f4a5 ~17M Office EquJptnent I011 =~:Ion 11~.~:im~i ~il .. ~.~~h).f~·c~'. 5:30• 6 trllk;y lonahalrttl kltte.ns Evlnru~ eleciro shift 40 •'70 Triumph Bonneville Sand tirr.1. Xlnt a>od. Cotta Mesa IQ.OOlO Aulhart&ied MG Duler 7 wb old, To aood home C&U H.P., nav. It•., •llOJ' covtr, Like ne~'. 4000 ml. S129S j.,:83;1:,:;..;54;:8;;,·======I' '63 MGB e \VANTED: Fender SUpcr Rever "Amp BIKE: Schwinn l 1pd, Blue S4M371 919 trailer. X1nt eond. 675-4798. !Inn. 56-2154. --4 IJ'ftd, wif'l!I wbetls, 'DRY PllOTOCOPIER .&ttotlk"' ..... szo """"'"· "'"' cond. 1«. BEAUT "' s~,,,.-~-..:;;1•"'s;,,•'=B"'s"'A~soo=""sl""-""1r-.-1 _c1mpo"·-FERRARI m . E &42-2626 648-4277 aft 6 PM 67~7 (2l 3 MO. old female kltttns ·-. ...... ,.. ' ... REASONARL * fluffy While with blk strtpes, tti:w, $12,500-$2500 down. Ont $l!i0. Alt 6 pm 548-4927 METRO VAN HARBOR A\tER.ICAN Rl!l\Ir.tAG& SAL[?! r r Id a)l~pl . t1·9A~l·lP:'ot C.?tl. Jr. \Vnml!n's Club. Clothlna·loya·fllmlture & much morr. 18th A Anaheim ror an ad lo 11~11 around ... dock. dial 6'...rl11.. Jo'ENDER blu 4 Fender CHESTS Of dr&'ill't'l'I JJG-$40. need Id. home. 540-4845Blll must &a.erlflce! 613-2807. Yamaha DT·l Enduro 1933 "' 1 buUtln cam))M'. PERRARI 1969 Harbor Blvd. ba.sllman. $300. Type14Tl 1er SIS 1 aw heel ........ I I ----.,.,.... *'-"'*""*'~ S 1 k 1 ~ ·-I -· Lid Or 646-0261 7"591 • tniiler S21. 117 r.. 1Sfh 0.1 u1an:oa.I m n. pood ~. mlle. S lb 90TO ...,., cc <MCM11"" t~ 11 n , ce '""'· cn.r· , ...... _ • m-... • '* • • 83 ,• ""1 500.000 ft llbe,..lasi cloth, 1.• 4 yrs ohl Older children or _!!__0._•_••--50CC SUZUKI Dirt Bike J)f'lir~. panellln.i:r, bed, new anp ComltJ'• cmb• author ~IG, l11tc '68 Mldirot, wen Yen6rr bt$eman or -' 11 e ·• adulta plcua MS-0511 9/9 * Hobie Cat l f * Good cond. Good btginnen paint. Xln1 condition. lttd dealer. whlll, fm, 5000 mi's, $1600. e Brllrwl ne~· S2M • widl! rolls, Besl otfcr, must ' '* 54~1245 * SALES·SERVlCE-PARTS 1714) fU~5 or 675--nJ.S. Ct1)rge Roberts, 833-.t~~ sell. M0-9443 4 ~10. old •ma.It Shepherd· S&ll !'Jo. ~-Xlnt oonc:f. bike. S!r.I. 962-(356 3!00 w. Cotst ltW)'. 1-. --------· 1 F C STER NEWPOftT BEACH Tf!nnl1 I.Ab 64Z..Si71 9/11 ..,....,,...:CaJ;:::,:1 :i6'il<,c-6;;;133T-;=-l -65() Triumph Chopper 10 Fi CAB-OVER Camper, Newport 9"ch Falt ttlulll are: jUttt a phont f'ENDE:im~f~e~ A Club membcnhip, $250 + rREE to aood home kluens. Balbo• 20' fixed tnl Rebuilt.J:.~3~et! ~ !~;:i!·nd~~ ~·&C~ etc 't~=zed FerruiS:~. :!!:~~l ln )'OUI" U !K&-9337 or ~56.10 transfer fff.. 644--0661. 1622 BAA:er St, C.M. 546-4788 545·0532 -------~-~--~. \ DAILY PJLOT Wfdlltsdiy, Stpttrnbfr 9, l ._/O PILOT·AOVERnSEI 22 1 KAN,PUR rATI OH T R AT N T NSPORTATION TRAN SPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPO RTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION -TRANSPORTATION -·-------Imported Autos 9600 lmporled Autao HOO lmporttd Autao 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autot 9600 Imported Autos 9600 !moorted Autot 9600 Antiques, Clas1ic1 9615 MG MORGAN PORSCHE PORSCHE TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN -___ v_o_L_v_o ___ I WANTED: O=lc "' .,,. lique car enttwaluls to •hare nice 1hop & storage raclllties. N.B. 61>14~, 5'18-8171. e 1960 MORGAN + Seater. U 950. ........... (() ------ '61 PORSCHE CABRIOLET OPEL Ht nltop, gleamlnc me!alllo ------~----1 11lver, With brand tleW In- 1964 OPEL WAGON $500. Pvt pt)'' 494-3660 terior, chrome wheels, ta· ~ ~·.:/FM radio, $2199 '10 TOYOTA'S 11' 6IOC'k. lmmcdh1.te de.livery. 11'!11l •r,1is Umtt•rs Laguna Beach 900 So. Cst. H igh way 494-7503 * 540-3100 Larqe Selection Of VW Compers, Vans, Kombls, Buses, New & Used Immediate Delivery CHICK IVERSON vw '58 vw Octgloal hlac\. tin~.( with contrasting red interior, Lie GBV710. $38 Down ~ down. .: $29.18 for 24 months. APR i$ 21.5% total interesl, fl48. Total cash prlee $738. L.rV'U'VV ~ ~ THINI 'VOi.YO' .. "FRIEDIANDER" 2 dr. Demo. * $2750 * 1939 Olds, good running cond. Body &. uphol good. New tlrn. Auto trans. Sacrifice $345 quick W e! ~ 9700 CHICK IVERSON i~~=~- VW '63 SUPER 90 PORSCHE TRIUMPH 549-3031 Eitt. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. CHICK IVERSON vw 1'7M ••ACM IMW'I', ., 893-7566 • 537.Q:U NEW-USEO.SERV. IMPORTS WANTED Orange C.OU11Hel TOP $ BUYER BILL MAXEY TOYOJ'A 1'881 Beach mvd. MGB I '65 MGB ROADSTER '61 PORSCHJ!: CABRIOLET Must sell for best offer * ~1323 * THANKS FO.R AUGUST e AGAIN CONNELL CHEVROLET SOLD MORE USED CARS AT RETAIL THAN ANY OTHER MONTH IN THE HISTORY OF THIS DEALERSHIP. NICE CARS! that's why. 100°/o 30 DAY GUARANTEE! that's why. HONEST DEALING! that's why Need we mention Big Selection and Low Prices? Why don't you tell your friends you got a good deal and ofter sale attention at Connell Chevrolet? A lot of oltler people did! Even Sale Priced Cars corry our full guarantee. 1969 CHEVROLET ~ TON PICKUP WITH SELF CONTAINm 11 ~ Fl CAMPER Heavy d uty thru-out, 1how er, toilet, furna ce, a ir cond itioning, •ufo. m•tic tr•nsmission, power ste ering, r•dio, air level•r r••r shock1, one own•r. 128474Rl 20 Vans--Pickups. Good Selection '69 ~~d~o~~~!.r~f~~.~ufom•tic, •ir co~d .. · ~inyl roof, 111 th• 9oodi1t, IYIZilll '69 ~~~o~:ou~•-Stick 1hifl , 6 tylind•r, r•dio, · h11t1" !YWTIS9) '66 BUICK SKYLARK 2 Door h1rdtop. R•dio, h11l•r, p1w1r 1h1rin9, 1ufom1fit, IRUJ J6S) CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-1203 ' ' SAAB AulllOrlzed Dealer Sales • Servicl' • Parts Sonet Coupes in Stock Orange County's Nc\\·est Dir, COAST IMPORTS of Orange County Inc. 1200 \V, Pacific Coa:st 1-lwy. Across froin Balboa Boy Cluh VOLKSWAGEN '63 VW Bug ?.IECHANIC SPF.clAL Lie. OKC.fil.2 $199 CHICK IVERSON vw !J.19-3031 Ext. 66 O!' 61 1970 HAIJ,BOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '64 VW BUG COSTA MESA LARGE SELECTION of VW CAMPERS Harbour V.W. AUTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE l87ll BEACH BL., M2-4435 HUNTINGTON BEACH NEW VW BUG $55.89 pr. month $147.78 down Includes tax & Lie. Open End ' VW LEASING AT CHICK IVERSON vw 1910 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA . ., vw 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 61 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '6 6 8 VW Fastback . Radio/heater. Original o"1.·ner, CLEAN $1050. 673·6720 • 60 vw, sunroof • Good amd $375 Best Ofler * 642-5105 * * '64 VW, SUNROOF * GOOD COND * iB00 * 842-3148 ~ VOLVO '70 Demo. • 1536 $2950 Check our deals 1300 F Cpe for delivery, Overseas del Specialist DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor, C.M. Gf!j.9303 mE QUICKER YOU CALL, THE QUICKER YOU SELL R. Beach. Pb. M7-355!> TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD Im ported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos WE HAYE THE BEST SELECTION OF BMW's BAVARIAH MOTOR WORKS Low miles on rebuilt e · new clutch, new brak , radio, perfect condition. Can be i;een at 2089 Harbor Blvd, or phone ~1982, 9am to 6pm -==="'='.0='="=•=54="-'='"'== I Radio, llcater, tTAZ JOO) -Small Do\\11 \Ii.II finance WANTED e ALL COLORS e ALL MODELS e IMMEDIATE LrYEllY His pl•n• h•d a BMW engine. You can h•v• one too; end a c•r to go with it. See us for the free bookle t, "33 Ra•10ns Why BMW Is Be tter .' .. Or ask for the key ••• you'll g et the message. TOYOTA !T!OJYIQITIAI DEMO 'TO Corolla • 3824 $1694 Pri\'atc Party. Call ~ I'll pay top dolJa~ for your or 494-6811 VO~AGEN today, cau '63 VW. rebuilt engine, good and ask for Ron PinchoL condition, new tires. Best 549-3031 Ext. 66-67. 673-0900. ~•-fl•-'·~'-94-~98=13----'66 V\V SUNROOF R/H, ---t BMW SER ICE 1---,----t SPEC IA 4,000 Mil• Serv ice ....••..• , , • US ED CAR SPECIALS e '68, RED, blk inter. $875. Pvt ply. l ,OOO Mile $3000 Sharp! Priced lo sell $1 295. * 673--0152 * * Pvt Pty 5'13--8836 * ,64 V\V. Be.sl offer, l'tia,y be Se rvice. All 4 Cyl •..•• '67 vw $995 f•1tb1ck IZWL-19tl' '63 BUS.new cng & tires good seen at 309 Mesa Dr, C.i\I. $2000 body xlnt. cond. $950 or olr. Ask for Dan. F t B k --:-====--c--ron ra es •....... 546-56l9. * '6j V\V BUG * 5 IL.A.DI D PANS Cp•. r•dio, h••f•rMGood e '61 V\V sunroof. Blaupunkt Go ing back lo school AND INSTALLATION fir11. Rid with bl.ck '67 FIAT N•w V.W. color. All bl•ck i"f•rior. '795 Check our deals 8 OTHER DEMOS AT BIG SAVINGS DEAN LEWIS 64&9303 an1/!1n. I ownor, Jmmac. * $800 673-9595 * buck1t •••h-ITRY.0161 -· "=• '6s vw s12 '64 vw s '69 V\V Bug, J{&l-l. BUG R•dio, he•f1r, good tirt1, 595 $1550 I ALL PRICES PLUS PARTS)' ntw p•inf. ••c•ll•nt co!'ldifion. FMM.997. BILL l\fAXEY 1 ==~·~·~·~~1_5 ~·-~ American mags_ wide tires, 1--.-,.-,,-,,-...,-:---------'---'---'-"-'--'-"'====::.;__ 'j6 VW. Needs major engine custom metallic paint w 'h Sain & S.rvic• Joe Berlottf's l!JQJYIQI T@ ~~3~12;. 21)7 30th St .. NB. ~~utifw taco work. YPU. ''"' T&M MOTORS 11881 BEACH BLVD. 1968 VW with Sunroof Several other customized $119.'i. 6-.;: .,...,n V\V to choose fron1 Hunt. Beach 147..asss ,,,.,,,...., CHICK IVERSON S mtl<.ofO..~Hwy.onBdo 0 '67 VW w/Sunroof '68 Toyota hrdtp, An1/Fm, SU50. 61~~36 VW 4 spd. xlnt N>nd. Lo mi 's. TRADER'S PARADISE 5 5'19-3031 Ex1. 66 or 67 Orig 0"1.'nrr $1400. 613li6~~l linr~:i lin1es·:i bucks 1970 JIARBOR BLVD. 8081 GARDEN GROVE BLVO. SALIS OPIN SUNDAY PARTS, SElllYICE TUIS,. THUlS., Till 1:00 534.2214 f l/1 Ilk. r. •• .._., 1t2.sss1 YOU 'RE INVITED TO CONNELL CHEVROLET'S * SNEAK P-REVIEW "THE LITILE CAR THAT DOES EVERYT·HING WELL" 197 -·-WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9t h REGISTER FOR FREE ORA WING. DOOR· PRIZES TOO!!!! * NEW CARS ••• USED CARS • , , ' . ' :· ·' :· •. . ' . . • .. I' : I I • I ·' I --·-.. --~-----------· ---------- 23 PILOT-ADVERTISER TRANSPORTA:TION WtdMsdnY, Stpttmber 9, 1970 Wedno!d.,, StpUmbtr 9, 197ll OAILY PILOT 65 T~~SPORTATION rRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ---TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION Autos Wanttcf 9700 Used Cars 1-------;..: 9900 Used Ca rs 9900 Used Cars 9900 Used Cari 9900 UMd C1r1 9900 UsM Co1r1 9900 Used Cars , 9900 Used Cars 9900 WE PAY TOP CASH Ask for Sales ?i1anager 18211 Beach Blvd. llwitington Beach 847-6087 1\1 9-3331 WE PAY CASH FDR YOUR CAR CONNELL CHEVROLET i l All Makes-All Models t Aulomobile~ -Trucks i "\Vher(' Service • l\1akc11 the Difference" ~· Orange Co. -Ne\11port 13cach ~ <1570 campll!I Dr. 71oi-5-10.3825 ~--j Used Cars 9900 :{ WE BUY -~ CARS f.~ ~ ~ ·~ 2100 Harbor Bh·d. ~!=============:== ~ BUICK ~·'67 BUICK S k y l a rk , Convr t. Al\l /fl\1-alr-lilt ;.: ""·heel. Very clean. ,\fust sell ·, at a loss! $1450. 6ij....4~7. : '65 Skylark. Bkts scats, lilt '; whl. :;harp! fi)OO. Orig O\l'ner . 536-2754 CADILLAC • '67 CAD Sed d(' Vlll€', air, ! slereo, la.nda u, wsw, all P\\'T, • trunk/dr locks. $ 2 4 0 0 . 6-l-l-J062. ~ : *'67 CAD QJV, immat . · Loaded! Prv, pirty. $300). Call aft 6, (\) 714-2097. ' CAMARO CHEVROLET '59 Chevy sedan, running condition, $100 Arter 6 6'12-T:illO '6.l l\tAl.IBU SS, lite blu, blk in!cr, 4-spd, nu tires, Good cond, $1000. 675-0077. 1969 Chrysler Imper ia l LaBaron completely loaded 12.000 mi, New car con1ing. 642-'1100 CONTINENTAL '66 LJNCOLN-Xlnt cond . Leather. air, vlnyl top. $1875. 644-2859 aft 7. • 1967 €ontincntal 4-<ioor sedan. LOADED! $2500. Arter 6, 67:>-1614 CORVAIR ,.1970 CAi\lARO. H u g ger-'66 CQRVAIR 500. 2 Or; 3 Orange_ Low m 11 e .11. spd, iJO eng. R/H, 1st $400 ·.ESTATE SALE. 8c<' al , -"ta"k'°<.•=· '°Sl'°2-=7=5'1=3==== Bay.shore R ichfield, 200 \Y. I' Coast J.Jwy, N~wporf Beach. 1t1ake ofler in \\Tilin~ to CORVETIE Security Pacific Nal ional '.)7 CORVETTE t't'ar C'rxl ~ Bank, P.O. Box 1 7 6 O, S1 20 Pas. !r i-:pot disc : Newport Beach, 92663; or brakes. 57 Ranchero, 352 • call 644--011 3 c11t. 211 for enl!' Sl75 62 Corvail' Van details. Bids close Sept. $275. 548-9-197. -l-14_l_h.o.lo.2•noo-=o°'. ==--196.) YELLOW ~b;µ:k ~ '69 &AMARO ""''""· Radio. cct •• ft\ V8. 4 speed, air cofle!itionini.-:. · (Wi'B· .. 942) dlr. Wi!I take · e&r in trad,e or finance pri. -va le party. S46»I052 or 49.f.6811 . '68 &AMARO . . • Automatic, power stccrint:. low mileage ~\VQ03'1l l dlr. Sn1all do"·n will finance pri. , valt> parly. &16-405:l or ' 49-1-6811. ·-~--~ e '68 SS 396-auto., A.\l/F~I. mags, vinyl, con~le. $1995 213/5!!2-2·118 '69 CA.'fARO Z/28·Red w/blac~ int. Many <'..;1!'as. Xlnt cond. Pvt pty. 8·17-?.'IB8 CHEVROLET ' * '56 CHEVY • $75 * . 548-3511 S WONDERFUL I he many buys In appliances }'QI.I find in the Onssllied Ads. Check them now! OWner. 675-128.l Fiberglass Repair .. 645-0468 . * FORD '65 COUNTRY SQUIRE 10 Passeni;:(>l" \Vagon. Full pn11"C•r + air c.;ond. IPl'~L405l dlr. o\1 ust sell . "'iU finance p1·1vll lc party. Call 494-7i44. lmpat1od Cars 9600 Imported Autos ·~.· COSTA MESA HONDA s::. UNIVERSITY OLDIMOllU 2150 HARIOI ILYt. • FORD FORD _FO_l _D__ MUSTAJil&• " OLDSMOBILE PONnAC STUDEDAKER '64· FAIRJ...AHE Sports Coupe, pwr •trs, radk>, heater, air, radial tires, 1 owner. $675, 494-9522 '54 Oldt RUNS GRiATI $185 or Best Oller • S4S-1444 • • CLEAN, dependable -SS Commander-INN\ overhaul. MOO. 64&-4931 '67 FORD Falcon. 1 ownl!r. 35.000 mt. Ex. cond. Best Oller. 646-ml4. 1957 Ford 2-dr w•gon 17>. ""6358 'H CUTLASS, air cond, p.1, p.b. Moving eut o.I tov,.n, ~1ust sell $750. 847-ll9I PLYMOUTH DUE TO POPULAR REQUEST, WE ARE REPEATING THE MOST DRAMATIC CLEAN UP SALE IN OUR 18 YEAR HISTORY! ' ' * •• THATS 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 FAC'J'.ORY INVOICE ON ALL MONTEGOS , • STATION WAGONS, 4 DR. SEDANS, • 4 DR. HARDTOPS, 2 DR. HARDTOPS, Drive Them Away For Only $70 Over Factory Invoice *PLEASE ADD 2'/• FOR HANDLING '69 CONTINENTAL s4333 Cou ·. V-8, factory alr condi- tlonrnA:. full f.°."'er, radio, hea ter, Landau Roo . All Continental luxury fC"a lure11 . CYP'T830) I '67 FORD LTD 51555 2 Dr, Hardtop Couf)f". 390 en- J.;i nc, auto. !rans., radi o, hcalC"r, fac. Alr, landnu roof. <UES685) I '65 MERCURY s1111 Pa.rklane. Auto. trans., radio & hcalcl', P.S,, P.B., etc. CNCA320) '69 MARK Ill Elegance penonlfied ! This fabulous car equipped v.·ith every possible luxury feature Including full power, o! cour&e, power door locks, tilt steering, AMiFM stereo, Individually adjustable 6-way power seata, Landau roof. (XDC9501 •5777 '69 '67 '70 MERCURY COMET s1777 S PORT COUPE. Full facto equipment including mdio,i eat- er, etc. Lie. 362AYG · I COU~AR 51999 Auto, b'ant., R&H, P.S., FACTORY AIR CONDI'J'IONJNG, Whl te wall tires, etc. Lie. TXU190 I MONTl~O MX $2888 Hardtop Coupe, Auto, R/lf, ~er steering, factory 11Jr, ndau root, Lie. AGP24!J Now ls The Best Ti1tte In Ten Years To Buy A Lincoln•ltlercury Product .Johnson~ son 540·5630 COSTA MESA 2626 Harltor Blvd. 642-0981 THREE GENERATIONS IN THE AVTOlllOBILE BVSINESS THI OLDIST ISTAILISHlll "PACTORY DIREC1" LINCOLN.MERCURY DIALIR IN ORAN&I COUNTY • . .. I , • I I . .J Ul :c • l> ~ .,, m "' ... -a rn z n - - •ICll ... . . . ' SNEAK PREVIEW ••• "\ ' ,• (TOMORROW, THURSDAY, EVENING) .. _, ·· : ) ·~"~· ~{· • I , • I • t I • • "lo @II' . . . . s75• ·AU NIW ' 1970 MUSTA"GS IN STOCK OVER ACTUAL FACTORY INVOICE . ' ·POSITIYEL Y NQ OTHER DlALER CH~RGES ~EW 1970 -ltlVl-ICK SA.VE 1'400 1 FROM WINDOW· STICKER FROM WINDOW S~CKER EVERY NEW 1970 TRUCK AND CAMPER IN STOCK • NOW AT TOP DISCOUNT ; SHOI' WHILE SELECTIONS AH LARGE! . ·u· N·IW. . · : . : , .•. :tll.e~:_st talktd a~~ new 1;~r bf the y'Dr ... win:~\~~l· ·· .. ptl~Cly fOI the first · time tomorrow, Friday, Septemberf tltl\ifl ., .. . 1970 . . • BUT . r . ' , '•· TOltlNOS. • • • · · · . . • · ; . , '" IN STOCK .· • ,You're invited tone. it TONIGHT .a~ our special s""I' ~if· s7500 OVER ACTUAL THfoENr H,•~r Areo ~;1dents. . . . :.~ .' I,, _ ~ACT~Y INVOICE • • \' ~ · : : ~Ji~ ·:~ O~jt ,week from · !!nl~~· thui'·d~Y·~ Sep~mber 17!ft. ,Y~!'i. 'I~ POSITIVELY NO OTHER .~.lrt4' hi, a second ;cexcltilPJ• pre:view ,showing -th11 ,t1""41'0f;·lfji DEALER CHARGES entire -J!jte of aU ,new Fords for 1971 ! '.. -~ _..1 . .:i; ·'· DON'T MISS EITHER: OF THESE , . ~-.. ;.: ~ · ' El(CmNG. SNEAK SHOWING~! · · • · .··• ., \' t Nr.Y; 1970 , FALCON ' ' ' -IOKIQT .1766bll "'~ 2·DOOR CLUB COUPE ' • > .• ' ' ' A.ILL PRICE ! ! .. .. ' .... \ . ' ;.,,'J ·;.i ~EADY .i • .r·' ·'FOR I 1Ml\fifljAfE ::•~--•tft.f! 1YkAR INP, c'Qj.. ~· PRICll . l j • >I 1 ' ~ t 1 M t ' · •. · .'rl i . t. ·,>, "" " ' 1: '6\. r ' ,. •' . ' . ~ .· ··~..,. .. ··~ """!. ,·. ~. ',!f! "' . . ··'.l··"t ·~· ·. .. •.. 2f;i·~·. """ •. . . , ... ,. ' · . .,;: · ... ,~ ',~~ ,.,), ';'.'°' ·•f' L , ~ ' "••!•:,..:! ~· 1'V ~~~============ . . . . -· -----'67 ~.~.~~~.~~ .. ~~RDTOP S..495 •ir eond. ITXSJ7"1 I - I 69 ~d~~! ~H~~' ''°"'''· eir conditioning. IXWY005) 52295 \ . ----------------~~ '179&'. I 65 . ~1~'~',~!~,, J~~~ · ( PBV0161 ' . ' '69 '67 ' ,(• ~.~~!,~~~ .. ~!LIBU $2395 including air -!Id;. 1ZXV l 321 -~·------.......,,--,,... __ ~. SHELBY 2 plus 2 '4-1pt1d, radio, he1t1r. ntw p•inl, e•cell1nl cond, I UENS 1-41 ' f) • - 52195 '$1995 . ~ . LOOK " R tltE DIACllOSTi A. ~E~E ROBINS EXCL.USIVE CEHTEI Oii 111E WllDSlllLD! 100"• PARTS AND LAllOll WARRANTY 4000 MILES OR 90 DAYS COfffl .U 111ec.Hlllul ,.,,. ............. "I l IMJN .... R-. ,.., eMI, PLUS .......... htMrl _, ...._. .,.._, Al ,.,.., .... ... 11 .., ... iemce .... ,...,. . ' . All o;r1•s ~~SIDEIED TRADES ACC!PTiD ·' -PAID FOR OR NOT l; · 8 ~caTdiiN iAlilm ' s795 6 8 fl. """ ... , ''"'"' ..... equipped. · (68C5406). W1Sl:LF CONT. 'CA?.tPER. 11 ~ f t. "69 FORD 'I• TON ', camper. Air cond., VB, auto, PS, PB. . approx. 13,000 miles. tF25YRE74M6) SAVE) I 6 7 CHEVROLET MALllU S.tm 2 door H.T. Y-8, auto., Rld·I, powl'r i;teenng. 11YW914.) ~, VS, automatic, J>()\\'er steering, ,f 68 FORD WAtiON ' radio, heater (YPS451 J ~695 . I 6 7 CHEVROLET CAMARO VS. automatic, power steer!~, rally sport, vinyl roof, (VIS 9) ~795 UCK·VAN~AMPll sw1·;·'i ·: I • ' '' 1 10 -to·choose from -'64 thru '70 mod.els -Vi' tttris 'Ji:*.~,.,.· standard, 1utom•tic, 4 speed transmissions. Some >With··k C#'I-: ditioning, campers and camper shells. ·, '· · EXAMPLE:·',~ ... ·,·;.q ,,_ .. -.,, '·. ~ .... :(· -~' . ; .11.~ t."' I '· . . 1964. GMC Pl~KU . · ··;, . "64 '67 -~67. VO tn9ine, llt ndtrd triln1n1il1ion, lon9 l:i'1d. '{"-4557}·~ · . . . ..,. Pa1c1.-~•,.• .. ....:·~;. ,J. : : , r-~ . r ~.~~-~,..~~ ... ~t~.~X1E Soo.~ •11• full powtr, !NCD0-421 · ~ • FORD LTD 2 Or. v.1, f•ctory tir,.au to., P.5., P.I ., 'f'inyl roof. !TAN'fO I) GALAXIE 500 O ] O ,• r • • 7 AM To 9 PM MON · I PARTS DEPT. ONLY I. 8 -AM ·to 6 ·PM SATURDAYS 1' 7 AM To 6 PM TUE~RI • _, • • ... • Ji ·, ., • .. " . . " ' • . r • . ' . . I • . . ., .. ' I . • .'