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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-09-10 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• " ' : • • .. :! ·: • ' . . ' - • • 4 i l . 22 :g_a . . ~J ... ... 1,.·1,.i.. . . .. ~ ._..,., ---. • ess · on esses, ' 00 e -Jlija~k Hostages . Given Reprieve By Arab Bandits Labor Coun~il San~tions Disney Theater Strikers ' • • Death Row Tantrum . ·" - THURSDAY AFTERNOON , SEPTEMBER 10, 1970 VOL. 6J. NO, 211, l SICTIONS, 41 PAGEi ,.Gipp Runs Again ~ \, .. Ii .,, ' I •. > ,,. • \ ~Gipper' Catchs One "Ronald Reagan, who once portrayed the legendary Notre Dame football star George Gipp in a film, shows he can still catch a pass. Jleagan, on a campaign sw ing through North m California Wed- nesday, played some touch football with the youngsters during a stop at the Hanna Boys Center in Sonoma. For more on µte guberna- 1torial campaign, see page 13. For more about footbaJl, see sports. 'ess Unrul1 Admits 'Goof'. In Political Payoff Rap . SANT A BARBARA (UPI) -Free· 11winging Jess Unruh admitted today he "goofed" and promised to personally apologize to the son oC a dead man. Unruh accused Gov. Ronald Reagan Wednesday of awarding a "political payoff" to a man he contended helped the governor run for president in 1968. Actually the man die.d in 1960. (Related Story Page 13.) ~The alleged "payoff," according lo Unruh's orig\nal 'Statement, was Ute t IFE SIZE GIFT FOR BIRTHDAY GREAT FALLS. Mont. tUeI) Beverly Cimpson retcivcd a very peraonal 18th birthday . pres en l Wednesday from her boyfriend. '. A large crate was deli vered tn her house and w~cn she OP.ened it she found David Snyder in!lde. ·o3vid, who also turned 18 Wednesday, !aid he paid $15 to have himself crated a'lld delivered. ) appointmenl of the man~s 28-year-old aon, Earl W. Brian, Jr., as state medical director, a $30,000 per year job. ''I had bad staff information, but that doesn't excuse me,•· Unruh told newsmen, holding up a small poeketbook with the govUnor's face on it entiUtd, •·t Goofed -the wi!e and curlowi saying! or Ronald Reagan ." "Hopefully," continued the tolei:nn faced Democ:ratlc gubernatorial can.didate, "that's not my Bsy Of Pif!." Unruh noi<ll when he kicked . ml. his campaign on Monday, he promil;ed to, "Tell it like it i!, tell who is flehind·who, name dates, places. •11 said I also was a q\an, tor real. in flesh and blood and obviously 1 ~ke mistakes. I made one ye1terd8y. t apoliglze for that, 11 guess t now' have become a member of the club.", l Referring to Brian, • Unruh taia. "I think I owe him a personal apology.:• But Unruh said his major campaign goof .. still doesn't change the basic facts that Medi.Cal' is mismanaged." And Utullh asked "Why was he appointed? Where did a 28-yeal'-Old youngster get the etpertise to run a billion ®liar a year program?" I Hostages Given Reprieve • .frab Captors Will Spare Lives of 300 for 72 Hours From Wire Suvicn AMMAN. Jordan - A 72-hour mercy reprieve on the Jives of nearly 300 persons held aboard three: hijacked jeUinfrs at DawSon's Field, 45 riiiles from here, was announced today. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PLFP) declared the gesture was in response to pleas by the International Red Cross. ~ Terrorists bargaining for release of imprisoned Arab guerrillas in other nations set JO p.m. (EDT ) Saturday as the deadline for the lives of the pawns in Coun,cil Action Has No. Effect On Operations The Central Labor Q>uncil of Orange County has sanctioned a strike by Disneyland 's 48 members of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employes (IATSE). Peter Remmel, ex~tive secretary or the council, said other union employes of the park are now authorized to honor picket lines at the amusement park. Of Disneyland's 6,000 employes, 4,600 are represented by labor unions. How· ever, (I spokesman of the park said the council's action has had no effect on the park's operation. "All personnel reported for work on lime lhis morning," the spokesman said. The tATSE members, whose labor contract with the park expired Sunday, are asking a $1.17 an hour raise over a three-year period. ~ The !triking wor.'lu~_rs operate 2nd repair the projection and sound systems for lhe park attractions such as the Haunted Mansion, the Abraham Lincoln program and the Pirates or the Caribbean. Supervisory personnel at the park have been handling the equipment since the strtke. The park reports that there are currently 77 employes on strike -48 JATSE members and 29 members of the Amertcal Guild of Variety Artists. The 29 AGVA members, who walked off their jobs on Aug. 8, were fired by lhe park on Aug. 11 for . violation of their contract. However, a DI s n t y I and spokesman 93Jd the 29 AGVA members are still considered employes of the park. an international intrigue I i l e r a 11 y developing by the hour. They say they will blow up the Swissair, TWA. an.d BO.AP j!!~Wer:i_al)d .. evi:ryPQc!y in them if their demands are not met, while worldwide appea ls and UN Security Council pleas continued. New developments today included the announcement in Jerusalem that police have arrested two Israelis who plotted to . hijack a jetliner from El Loci Interna- tional Airport. ' Several Israelis were solicited by the would·be air pirates -who had a machinegun and a quantity o f propaganda leaflets destined to be dumped over Europe -but refused to assist them. A tip led polict. to raid their homes Tuesday and they have been held in CUJtody since, awaiting federal charges. The International Red C r o s s , meanwhile !aid the plight of the travelers held al the remote field built by the Br itish in 1947 is deteriorating. Emergency supplies of sanitation equipment, food, medicine and cociking equipment were se nt in , but guerrillas leaders said they are t a k I n g humanitarian care of the nearly 300 hostages. Conditions nearing civil war in Jordan, however. hampered the delivery. The PLFP originally allowed 116 Arab men, plus women and children of various nationalities to be taken to t h e Intercontinental Hotel in Amman. SA Firm Tells Payroll Boost A ray of sunshine cul through the gloomy Orange County a e r o s p a c e electronics unemployment picture today with the announcement that 1,200 new jobs and a $5 million payroll will be added to the manufacturing community here within the next six months. , I'IT.Cannon Electric in Santa Ana plans to increase its payroll from aoo to 2;000 employes through the closing of a 1 ~mploye plant in East Los Angeles. 'Carl Peacock, administrative vice president said the East Los Angel&& operation has been unprofitable. "We lost $I.million in that area la!t year." he SB id. •The firm's local faclllty at 866 E. Dyer Road in South Santa Ana bas plenty of room for -expansion, Peacock said. " The rcm~inder of the hostages waited Jn or under the shadow-casting wings or the three gleaming jetliners today, while 22 more were re leased, identified as "BahreiniS "alid ·the E"ngliSli ·nance or one. Triumphant Arabs, meanwhile, rejoice at the successful air piracies -three jetliners captured with a fourth failure Sunday and another Wednesday -and said it unites divisions within their ranks at a crucial time. No hiOt was given of the mastermind behind the multiple skyjackings, but informed sources said it was most likely Dr. Waldie Haddad, a mild·mannered physician. The 47-year-old doctor --0bjcct of a hit- and·run rocket attack genera 11 y alributed to Israeli agents a few weeks ago -was out of Beirut and unavailable for com ment. The planners knew not only could Dawson's Field airstrip in Jordan take a modern jetliner. but that it could take several and at night, too. The TWA captain sa id later the runway was three times as Jong as he needed for his Boeing 707 and hard as concrete. The airstrip was alraady manned with emergency flares and silt trenches had been dug round the parking area. The guerrillas even p r o v i d e d passengers with pink cards, exact copies of the international disembarkation documents, to furnish personal details, and a rubber-stamped "Emergency Visa." There were reports in political quarters In Beirut that the· Pan American jumbo ' hijack was a mistake and the men responsible had been Instructed to fly a regular jetliner to Dawson's Field, too. The story was they missed their original connection and decided to wait for the next American jct. They were horrified to find it was a 747 and from then on all was improvisation. It was on direct instructions from Amman, the local reports said, lhat the hijackeni, after seeking advice at Beirut, flew to Cairo and exploded the plane as a gesture of palitical defiance on President Gamal Abdel Nasser's front doorstep. Clearly the guerrillas have secured an excellent lever for the release of valued men in prison. But additionally the operation has gone a long way 'toWards scuttling peace talks. to which Calro and Amman agreed, by changing th e atmosphere of defeatl!m which the guerrillB movement was charged in the face of an embryonic Arab backlash and Nasser's decision. " I RFK's Killer Hustled Off To Solitary SAN QUENTIN !AP) -S~han B. Sirhan, convicted of assassinating Sen. Robert B. Kennedy, was given a mild tear gassing by guards after throwing a "temper tantruni;, in his cell al San Quentin Prison's Death Row, Warden Louis S. Nelson said today. Later he was given a sedative and placld in an isolation cell, the warden said. Nelson said Sirhan, who had relused· to give up his meal tray and thrown food at a guard. did not resist and came out of the cell on his own after guards used "a very little tear gas." Nelson said the incident occurred Wednesday afternoon after· th e Palest inian Arab demanded to speak to Associate Warden James W. Park. Nelson said he did not know if Sirhan•s demand had anylhing to do with the Arab guerrilla hijackings, At one point, lhe hijackers reportedly rlemanded Sirhan's freedom a! ransom for some 300 hostages on two hijacked planes. Noting Wednesday was a state holiday -Admission Day, marking California'• admission into the union -the warden said : "lt was a holiday and lhere wls (See SIRHAN, Page %) Orange <:out lt'eather Tl 'II be 20 degree,, hotter in Ana· heim than it will be in Newport Beach Friday, 90 to 70 to be exact. Look for night and morning low clouds along the coast. INSIDE TODAY T11e "forgo.tten men" of the Vietnam war'~ the American POWs -hold dim hope1 for freedom. Some have been in. custody more than ,;. 11ears. Page 23. ••atfftt n C.llf•"'" n (llt(l;lllf Ut , Cl11tlllN U.d Co111k1 U ,,..,,, .. .,. )J c,.111 Nttle" 14 ,•.i1tt1..i ••g• • •lll'111lfl-I fl•H l ln•nct ~I H ..... k... II Allft Unftl"I I, M•11 /11 S•"ko 1J Mllttlntt 14 Mo111ff 2l Mllttll ,..... _,.' N.ile111I Ntwt; .. J O~ln .. CtUflf\I 11 Svlril hrler » S1trtt JtoJ1 S19Ck Mlrbtt ·~1 T.i.111.itn 21 T .... ters 11 '#Nlllff I ""'"""''' """ 11•tt WorW "twt W -- I ( f DAILY PILOT s Thursday, September 10, 1970 Fighting Erupts In Jordan Capital By Uni~ Pre•1 ln&tmaUonaJ New fighting broke out today in the Jordanian capital of Amman bttweefl PalestlnJan guerrillas and Jordanian army troops. Combat was heavy during lite night around the Jnter-ConUnenl.al Hotel where lH hijack bMtages were hold. As Jordan veered toward fullscale civil war, l~raeli Premier f\.1rs. Golda Meir prtpared for a trip to Washingkln next week, 1 and dlplomaUc source• I n Jerusalem said she would p r e s s Presjdent Nixon for U.S. action against an alle&ed EiYptia.n miliilc bWldup in the Suet Canal-Zone. The Jerusalem Post said it has learned 25 Americans Lost Li ves At Hiroshima WASHINGTON (UPI) -The United States arehJves will soon re I e a s t docwnenta that at ltast 23 AmertcansJ being held as prisoners of war died in lh• atom.Jc blast that destroyed Hiroshima, it was teamed Wednesday. Archive sources 1ald record• that may be made public as !!lOOn as next week would identify American prisoners of war killed when the first atomic bomb was dropped on Aug. 6, 1945. The sources declined to say how many Americans were kUled, but a member of the former Japanese secrtt police aald Jast July he wu ii\ charge of 23 American prlsonera including at least one woman. Former Japanese Warrant Officer Hiroshi Yanagida said the Amerlcans died along with teru: of ·thousands of Japanese when the bomb wu dropped on Hiroshima. He said U.S. A r my· intelligence officers questioned him four times in 1946 and that he told them the prisoners' dog tags were kept in a safe and survived the blast. Archives officlala uld documents listing the names and other pertinent information about the wearers of the tags have been turned over to the Defense Department, which is expected to declU1lfy them next week. There w&a no e.xplanaUon of why confirmation of the Americ"' deaths had been kept secret. Archives officials said they began a search of World War II documents after Yanagida's comments were made public in July. Voter Signup Deadline Today Today is your final chance to register for voting in the Nov. 3 General Election, officials reminded in cities up and down the Orange Coast. Registration is being c on d u c t e d throughout business hours at all city clerks' offices and that of the Orange County Registrar of Voters. from reliable sources that about one-third of the 15,000·man force of Iraqi troops in Jordan have been assigned to the 1Uerrlllu in bases near Amman and ln northern Jordan borderln1 1.Srael. Dlspatcties from UPI corre1pondent David Zenian in Amman on the 10th consecutive day of fighling there ,said Jordanian army forces renewed tho conflict at • a.m. today In a briet firefight near the lllter-ConUnental Hotel where a battl._raged W_.ednesday night. An. hour later, army troops reoccupied a building under construction opposite the hote l. J'lrl.ng Jn varlou1 aectlona of Amman with rifles, machineguns and mortars resumed at 7 a.m. today, lhen subsided again by midmOming. Guests at the Jnter-C:Ontinental Hotel, lncludfng many American hostages from two hijacked planes In guerrilla hand s, huddled in a nightclub which was conve~ into • makeshift bom b shelter. Others bedded down in hallways, away from windows. The hotel took at least 12 hits in the fighting , and bullets splattered plate glass windows In the downstairs area. A mortar shell exploded near the hotel 1wimming pool. BuUeta struck several cars in the hotel parking Jot. One slug pwictured the hotel's water supply system, flooding the downstalra lobby and offices. Power was cut for a time; Amman Airport was cloaed. Guerrillas maMed barricades in Amman: army troops established their own checkpoints on the outskirts. The heaviest fighting Wednesday night was in the building opposite the Inter· Contenental. Some guests watched from balconies as guerrillas and army troops fought at close quarters, moving from floor to floor and using hand grenades, small arms and mortars. In London, authoritative diplomatic sourct:s quoted official reports from Amman as saying the British chancellery in the city was hit during shooting Wednesday, but that there were no casualties, The sources said Britain has made contingency plans for evacuating British citizens from Jordan. Prom Page l SIRHAN •.• nobody around 10 he got.Jnto a snit about it -l guess a little temper tantrum.'' Nelaon 18.id Sirhan had access to newspapers and radio and probably was foUowing the hijacking story closely from his Death Row cell. In the Isolation cell, however, Nelson said, Sirhan wiJl not have access to radio, television, newspapers or other personal jtems. He sald the prison's disciplinary committee will decide Friday how long Sirhan should be kept in isolation. The maximum is 30 days. Nelson said the tear gas was necessary because o! possible danger from the metal tray, fork and spoon that Sirhan refused to give up. Sirhan is under death sentence for the June 1968 assassination. He has been at San Quentin since May 23, 1969, while his case undergoes automatic review by the state Supreme Court. 6 o lde 11 Gi rl Karin Kascher of liayward is representing California in the annual Miss America Pageant in Atlantic City, N.J. There's More on the Pageant on Page ~ ' Tate Witness Says He Saw Murder Gun LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A former "Manson Family'_' member who contends he saw Charles Manson carrying a gun later wed in the Tate·LaBia nca slaylngs was expected to testify today in the murder trial .. The lrlal resumed alter a five-day holiday for Labor Day and California Admlaslon Day Wednesday. Michael Hendricks, 18, has betn ruled competent to testify although he la presently undergoing p s y c h i a t r i c evaluation at a state mental hospital, where he was sent by the California Youth Authority. At a hearing out of the presence of_ the jury last Friday, Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older overruled defense argument.. that Hendricks was incapable of testifying. • Hendricks claims he saw Manson, 35, accused mastennlnd of the seven Tate- LaBianca killings in Augutt, 1969, carrying a long·barrelled .22 caUber revolver at tbe Spahn Ranch. 'The gun has been identified by state witness and former cult member Linda Kasablan as one used at the Tate residence. Police experts testifjed that bullets which wounded Jay Sebring were fired from the same gun, and that bullets which wounded Voityck Frykowskl and Stephen Parent may have been fired from the revolver. Jn other developments, attorneys for Charles "Tex" Watson, indicted for the killings last year, asked Supreme Court Justice Hugo L. Black to stay his extradition from Texas to California. Other appeals by Watson have failed. The attorneys asked Black to stay the extradition order so they could petition the high court for a hearing on whether a person can challenge an extradition order. Deputy registrars organ\ied by the Orange Coast League of Women Voters are also on hand at desk,, In the lobbies of most city balls and elsewhere. 10 Times Bigger China Congress Set TOKYO (AP) -Communist China has ordered preparations for its long-delayed fourth National People's Congress, which is expected to elect a new president to replace the ousted President Liu Shao. chi. No date for the congress was a11nounced, but it Is expected to be held fairly soon, perhaps before the end of the year. • DAILY PILOT N-p•rt l eeclri L ..... '"'II ""''illff•• .... ......... y .. ~ C•• .. M .. e S.. Cl...,.1._ 011 ... NOE CO ... ST ,UILISl•U"G COMl">.NY l;o'll•rt !II. w,., Putocltnl t MI ,Ulllltlltr J•e~ l . Cwoltv Vi<f ~rb:1>eru "'" G4:11ert1 Mt,...., lho••1t• lt•••ll Editor TI.11"''' A. 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"'""*' "' ..,.,,., -· ..... 0... ....... ,.1111 ti ,..,..,,.... htdl -c.,. ....,_ C.111""'11. klbt(rl11tlofl ., c:•rflfr ll ... 'lN'fllll,.,I ~ 11'1111 ll.• -l!ll'yl mlllt1..., fftliM I ..... , U.llO f!IPfll!lly, I Huntington Fastest Gro we r in U.S. Far and away, the growth of Huntington Beach outdistanced any other major American city during the past decade. U.S. Census Bureau figures released to J ay made it orrlcial. Huntington's population has grown tenfold since 1960, from a mere 11.492 ten years ago to an astonding 115,557 in 1970. It is the 122nd largest city In the United States. Although not quite so spectacularly, any number of Orange Collftty cities showed substantial population gains during the decade. Anaheim, the largest city in the county, Jumped from 104,184 to 154,913, making it the 8lst largest city in the country. It had been the 123rd largest in 1960. Santa Ana grew in site from 100,350 to 154,840, while Garden Grove jumped from 84,138 to 121,504. They are ranked 87lh and IlSth, respectively. HW1tington Beach's amaiing clumb was actually surpassed, ptrcent.agewtsc, by Jts little sister city to the north. FoUJltaln Valley, according to lht ofrlcial census figures, grew from only 2;,068 in 1980 to 31,618 in 1970. Costa Mesa's official population has been placed at 72,412, an increase of nearly 50 percent Crom 1960 when it was 37,!SO. . Newport Beach grew more slowly, offlclally gaining from 26 ,564 to 48,805. Laguna Beach increased from 9,288 to 14 ,208. SM Clemente'& population ls now t6,4f2, twice Its 8,527 count in 19&0. Westminster more tha• doubled. up from 25,750 to 59,619. San Juan Capistrano, uncounted ln 1960, now has 3, 708. Leonard Isley, rtglonal dlrttctor or the Bureau of the Census In Los Angeles, said thlt mornln1 that the areas known as Jrvi9'e and P.fls~on Viejo are being computed •nd fiJUres will be aMounced 10metime in lhe fut ure. Of lhe five largest cities in the country, Los Angeles is the only one that gained in population during the 1960s, increasing In size from 2,479,015 2,782,400. It retained its rank of third behind New York City, which dropped by 10,000 to 7,771,730, and Chicago, which fell 225,000 to 3,325,263. The cities of Philadelphia, down 80,000 to 1.926,529, and Detroit.. down 180,000 to 1,492,914, round out the five largest U.S. cities. The ooly other city in the U.S. with more than 1 million population i!I Houston, Tex., which grew from 938,219 lo 1.213,064. Other California cit ies with populations n"f 100,000 or more, with their comparable 1960 statistics : San Francisco. 704 ,209, down from 740,316. ranked 13th in the country. Sftn Oiego, 675, 788, up from $73,224, r11nked"14th. San Jose. 436.757. up from 204,196, ranked 31st. Oakland. 358,198, down from 367.~8. ranked 38th. Long Beach, 347,072. up from 344 ,168, ranke d 40th. Sar.ramentl), 2~,124, up from 191 ,&67, ranked 54th. Fresno, 162,316, up from 133,929, ranked 82nd. R.iverside, 139,217, up from 84,332, ranked 97th. Torrooee, 136,029 up from 100,991, ranked 102'tld. Glendale, 131,723, up from 119,442, ranked lOSth. Btrktley, 113,165, up from 111,268, r11:nked J2.5th. Pasadena. 111,826, down from 116,•07, ranked J27th. San BemardiDo, 106,0t•, up from 91,922, ran ked l•tst. Stocktont 102,657, up from 86,321. ranked 144th. Frtmonl, 100,377, up from 43,7901 ranked l$0th. , . World Eyes · Mideast U.S. Intervention !nto Hijacking Do ubtful From Wire Services Leaders throughout the world reacted today to the dram• tmlol<lln( Jn the Middle East, as cornplle1tlon1 of lbe jet hijackings spread throughout. dlplom1Ue, commercial and humanitarian circles. AdministratlOn s p 0 Jc e s m t n in Washington said it is highly doubtful President Nlxon will order direcl military ll'lterventton to free American ho1llge1 aboard thrae jeUinm. No potential method of rescue has been ruled out. A pair of Air J+,orce C!lrgo planes potent!a\Jy assigned to rescue American hostages were took off from Adana, Turkey, for undisclosed locations. Three more waited at lncirllk Air Force Bast, 90 minutes fllght time from An\man, Jordan. * * * * * * The United Nations Security Council appealed for mercy In trea tment of the nearly 2SO hostages and called for their 1 freedom . Captive U.S. Rabbi 's Son Armed guards have reportedl y bee~ assigned to all El Al airliners by lsraeh authorities, while demand s have been made to guard all international fllghts. Wanted Hijack Feeling The president of the International ~lr Transport Assoc iation (lATA) 1 n Honolulu said \Vednesday he had been informed that the insurance m3rket around the world has canceled insurance contracts with 90 percent of the a!rlinea as the result of the recent hijackings in lhe 1'41ddlo East. From Wire Strvkt1 DAWSON'S FIELD, Jordan-A Chicago boy was evidently left behind on a hijacked TWA jetliner here, when Palestinian guerrillas huslled 116 panengers to a luxury hotel for safety. Yoaef Thachtman, 10, is the son of an Orthodox jtwish rabbi. He spent the summer in Israel and spoke before he left of his ambition to see the historic wailing wall of Jerusslem and maybe even experience a hijacking. He wrole a paper for school - lronlcaUy -describing the air plracy. "Well, be'1 experienced both," said Rabbi Thachtman Wednesday in Chlcaeo, characterizing Yosef at the type of boy who will get no mercy from the fan1Uc revolutionaries. "How could they know he is not J ewisb? He ls not the type to hide the fact that he Is •.• that he believes in God •.. that he loves his people," said the rabbi. "I don't know deflriitely whether he is on the plane." "We are prayln& •.• we pray for all the passen1ers. '* Rabbi Tbachtman, who Is Dlrector of Education at Hamashid Institute In Chicago and teaches at UnJon Theological Seminary ln nearby Skokie, is peuiml1tlc today. He doubtl the U.S. State Department - which had not contacted the Thacthmao family by Wedne1day -is concerned about the fate of the threatened passengers. "These are people. These are human beings. How can you dare treat people in this manner? If our State Department is -unconcerned, why 1houlc! the Araba be concerned?" Meanwhile, Yosef and others aboard the three planes await their fate, which is now set by the Popular Liberation Front Maddox, Carter ' Lead in Race For State Posts ATLANTA (UPI) -Gov. Lester Maddox banked on straggling returns tod1y to give him 1 no-runoff victory for Lieutenant Governor in G o e r g i a ' s Democratic primary and wealthy peanut farme r Jimmy Carter held similar hopes in the race for governor. With about 40 percent of the state's 2,049 precincts still to be counted, Maddox and Carter both were just short of the 50.1 percent of the vote necessary to eliminate a run off with their nearest challengers. Maddox, barred by slate Jaw from succeeding himself and aeeking to retain a power base as lieutenant governor, and Carter both drew heavily from rural areas which comprised the built of the uncounted vote. for 7 p.m. (PDT) Saturday. Yosef was tentatively scheduled to bea:ln 11v1nth 1rad1 at. Hiilei Torah Ellmtnlary School th!1·week. "He't a gem," said hla father. "He's not Ju1t bright. He ha1 1 true sense of responatbllity and a sense for the nteds of others." Not fir aw1y , in Amman, Jordan, the baaement of the Intercontinental Hotel - which u1ed to be 1 nl1htclub -now lookl likt a bomb shelter. Machine IUD fire and the thud ol mortan c1n be heard clmly by 119 Arab men, plu1 m1ny women and children. They are out of the frying pan and into the fire . "We thought we were safe once we got here," said Mrs. Cecile Slmmen, of Utica, N.Y .. 11but now lt'j starting all over again." "Maybe It's safer there than it is here,'' remarked Mrs •• Llta Ungar, of Scarsdale, N.Y., whose husband is sUll held captive aboard a Swissalr liner. Once, a mortar shell smashed directly into an annex being constructed onto the hotel and a reporter trapped with the rest asked a scared little girl if she knew what was happening. "Unfortunately, yes." she replied. * * * Hijack 'Suspect' Wears Metal Bra, Girdle From Wlre Services The gravity ·of circumsta n ces surrounding the threatened slaughter of nearly 300 hostages held aboard hijacked jetliners in Jordan notwit.ha:landlng, a note of humor crept in today. Typical Britiah mtraint was contained In an announce ment at Toronto Airport that passengers and luggage headed for BOAC planes and European dest.inltions would be aearched. "Ladles and genUemen, as you may know, there's a spot of trouble in the Mideast. .. " said the steward delivering the news. Acrpu the Atlantic, meanwhile, a rather overweight American woman tourist was detained at Zaventem National Airfield jn Brutsels, Bel&lum, as a potential skyjacker. The woman passed a magnetic met.al detector as she went through a tightly controlled gate to board her flight and the warning light blinked, indicating she was carrying metallic material. Searched for guns or other weapons, ch<tgrlned airport authorities discovered the portly matron wore a special bra and girdle. "With considerable metal reinforce- ment," said one source, who charitably declined to identify the somewhat indig· nant woman. Or. Oerrltt Van Der Wal, apeaklng to UM opening seaalon of lATA'• traffic conference here, stunned the delcaate with the remark as he departed from his prepared text. The Pent1gon said today it had itopped u1ln1 commercial international airlinu1 for carryln1 or mallln,g of cl111IUed mater\1!1 becau.e of the upsurae In. hijacklna1. Somo cla111fied North Allantic Treaty Or&anl:r.atlon (NATO) document• were aboard a Pan American jet hijacked and later blt>wn up by Palestin ian guerrillas. Frledheim said the classified material, moving by registered mail, was the only secret information he knows about that had been affected by the recent rash ot hijackings. Najeeb E. Halaby. president of Pall American World Airways, says he belleves airplane hijacking is a problem for "government to solve, not airlines." Halaby said Wednesday that the fates~ wave of hijackings amount to "aerial warfare." He said he favors the use of armed security guards, provided by the 1ederal government, to prevent further hijackings. Halaby, former administrator of the Federal Aviation Agency, said other airlines and governments would have to cooperate. The Pan Am president said, "The mere availability of the sky marshals acts as a deterrent." He said such guards were used between 1961 and 1964 and tha numbe r of hijackings d e c r e a s e d , resulting in withdrawal of the armed men. "We're facing a situation brought about by fanatics who have obviously no concern for the welfare of innocent people,'' State Department press officer Robert J. McCJoskey told newsmen . Israeli Premier Golda Meir said today in Tel Aviv Isriiel opposed releasing imprisoned Arab guerrillas in exchange for the passengers. She did not say flatly Israel would refuse to release guerrillas if such an exchange · was part of an international package deal. "Now the whole world is confronted with a horror the like of which it has never known before," Mrs. Meir said. ''The only thing it can do ls pay a bribe. And what sort of a brlbe? To free criminals and murderers. We know who the people are who are sitting in our jails, They are terrorists who attacked and murdered iMocent people." Calls for boycotts of airline service to and from any nations which fail to punish or welcome skyjackers have been made on the editorial pages of several American newspape rs. Several papers called for a n International boycott -some said the United States should lead the way with a unilateral boycott -and o t h e r newspapers encouraged international associations to proceed with such boy· cotts. luxurious spring down sofas Thi1 h1nd1om • Sof• w•s desi 9n•d to 9iva you th• ultim•t• in '••ting comfort with d1cron •nd down li•ck pillows, d••P •prin9 down s11f cushions •nv•lop•d in clown •nd f11thers •nd in two foam-fill•d arm pil· low1. Choo•• from I wi d• •election of fin• fa brics. 8' length reg . $599 NOW 399. j You favorite fnttrfor desfgntr wiU be ltappJI to castst uou • · •• H.J.GARRETf fURNITURE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS -TRY OUR U VOLVIHQ CHAlQI.- Optft Mott., Th•ra. & "'· l wn. , 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF • 646·027' \ 'I •/ t I t ' ' ( t I . I ' h s l h t F r t ( I ' l • • l 2 \ ( ' ' ( . c '/ I ' J ! . .. •, . ·' Huntington Beaeh Today's Final N.Y. Steeb ED III ON voe. 63, NO. 217, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • THURSDAY, SEPTEt;.fBER 10, '1970 TEN CENTS Huntington City Growth Fastest • Ill Country ·Far and away, the gr0wth or Huntington Beach ouldistanced any other major American city during the past decade. U.S. Census Bureau figures released t o .!ay made it official. Huntington's populati on has grown tenfold since 1960, from a mere 11,492 ten years ago to an aslonding 115,557 in"l970. I.tis the !22nd largest city·in the United States: Although not quite so spectacularly, any number . of Orange Cou11ty cities sh5)Wed substa11tial population gains during the decade. Anaheim, the largest city in the county, jumped r~m 104,184 to 164,913, making it the 8lst largest-city in the country. lt had been the !23rd largest in 1960. Santa Ana grew in sire from 100.350 to 154,649, while Garden Grove jumped from 84,238 to 121,504. They are ranked 87th · aild 116th, respectively. • Hu11tingtOn .Beach 's amazing clumb was actually surpassed, percentagewise, by its ·little sister city to the north. Fou1tain Valley, acC<Jrding to the official censµs figures, grew from only 2,068 in 1960 to 31,618 in 1970. Cosla Mesa's official population has been placed at 72,412, an increase of nearly 50 percent fr.om 1960 when it was DAILY l"ILOT !tiff l"M .. NOEL BELL FINDS PARKING IS SOMETIMES A TIGHT SQUEEZE David, 6, Helps Dad Demonstrate Problem Handicapped Often Face Valley Council1nan Seeks Aids for City's Disabled By TERRY COVILLE or !hi OlllY !"llOI S!l!f For a long time handicapped citizens have had to struggle with parking lots. sidewalks, drinking fountains and other things made for people w i t h o u t handicaps. Now. two men in Fountain Valley are trying to change all that in the local , and perhaps C<Junty wide area. The first man .is Noel Bell, a paraplegic resident or the city, who is well aware of the. handicapped plight. The second is Councilman George Scott, who listened to Bell's proposals and is now spreading his suggestions around the county. "Our biggest problem is 'Conventional Huntington Tabs 2,000 Oil Dri11ing Places for City The city council has designated about 2,000 locations in Huntington Beach where people can drill for oil. Tuesday night cooocilmen approved the creation of that number of oil zones - spots where companies may drill for' on. The new law is designed to clean up some of the oil blight councilmen claim exists in Huntington Beach. It does this by limiting new drilling i;ites to small, compact locatlons. Under the old system, the city. ello"·ed drilling In huge areas which allowed any number of wells to be built In a1most any &:ection or town. Now coinpanies 11re expected to explore a large area with wells from one small site. City officials hope this will reltase some or the tradi tlonsl oil field prope rty lor oth!!r types or development. Tighter restrictions for new drilling sites will also be imposed on compan!es. parking spaces. Sometimes cars are too close and a handicapped individual can't get his wheel chair in or out," Bell explains. ''\Ve also need ramps to enter public buildings and shopping centers,'' Bell adds. ·Through the efforts of Scott, one city shopping center has already installed two wide parking spaces for handicapped parking only. And a ramp \\'as built at the side entrance of city hall. "We still have a problem entering city hall, though," Bell pointed out. "The curb is too high to get up to the ramp." Such minor problems become major blocks to the handicapped. "When we get four or five more shopping centers to put in handicapped faciliUes, we may go to the League of Cities with suggestions for a countywide effort,'' Scott added . The city has already introduced an ordinance to allow plaMing commissioners to require special parking and ramps for any new facilities in Fountain Valley. Some other improvements in public and commercial buildings suggested by Bell are: -Elevators to higher floors. -Telephone . booths and d r I n k I n g fountains at low levels for those in wheel chairs. -Larger toilet stalls to accommodate handicapped r.eeds. "When you talk about helping the handicapped , you are benefiting seven percent of the population for less than a one percent increase in building costs," Bell said.. . 0 Apart from the moral benefit, you can al so help make handicapped peri;ons less dependent on welfare and on help from others,'' he added. "We're asking other cities to consider similar measures as ours," Scott said. "They seem·1nterested." Both men were optimistic that help is Oii Ille wu lor Ille llandlcapped. 37,SSO. Newport Beach Jl'.'ew more slowly, officially gaining from 26,564 to 48,805. Laguna Beach increased from 9,288 to 14,208. San C1emente's population is now 16,462, twice its . 8,527 C<Junt Jn 1960. Westminster more thu doubled, up from 25,750 to 59,619. San Juan Capistrano, uncounted in 1960, now bas 3,'108. Leonard Isley, regional direcctor of the Bureau of the Census in Los Angeles, said this morning that the areas known as Irv~ and Mission Viejo are being computed aJKI figures will be announced aometime in the future, Of the five largest cities ln the country, Las Angeles ls Lhe only one that gained in population during the 1960s, increasing in size from 2,479,0IS 2,782,400. Jt retained its rank of third behind New York City, which dropped by 10,000 to 7,771 ,730, and Chicago, which fell 2'25,000 to 3,325,263. The cities of Philadelphia, down 80,000 to 1.926,529, and Detroit, down 180,000 to' l,492,914, round out the" five largest U.S. cities. The only other city in the U.S. with more than 1 million population is Houston, Tex., which grew from 938,219 to 1.213,064. Other California cities with populations of 100,000 or more, with their comparable 19SO statistics: San Francisco. 704,209, down from 740,316, rank~ 13th in the country. San Diego, 675,788, up from 573,224, ranked 14th. San Jose, 436,757, up from 204,196, ranked 31st. Oakland,. 358,198, down from 367,5481 • ranked 38th. " Long Be'ach, 347,072, up from 344,168, ranked 40th. Sacramento, 256,124, up from 191 ,867, ranked S4th. Fresno, 162,326, up from 133,929, ranked 82nd. Rivenlde, 139.217, up from M,332, ranked 97th. Torrance, 136,029 up from 100,991, ranked 102nd. Glendale, 131,723, up from 119,442, ranked 105th . Berkeley, 113,165, up from 111,268, ranked 125th, Pasadena, 111,826, down from 11&.40'7; ranked !27th . San Bernardino, 106,014, up from 91,922, ranked 14tst. Stocklon, 102,657, up from 88,32!, ranked 144th . Fremont, 100,3.17,· up from 43,790, ranked lSOth. Hostages Get Reprieve Arab Guerrillas Give Captives :72-hour Stay From Wire Services AMMAN, Jordan -A 72·hour mercy reprieve on the lives of nearly 300 persons held aboard three hijacked jetliners at Dawson 's Field. 45 miles from here, was announced today. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palesti.ne (PLFP) decJitirEtd the gesture was in response to pleas by the International Red Cross. Terrorists bargaining for release of imprisoned Arab guerrillas in other Commission OKs City Cycle Trail Motorcyclists seeking a public riding areil ln Huntington Beach putted home with encouragement Wednesday after the Parks and Recreation Co m m J s s I o n approved recommendations to acquire the Bruce Brothtrs gravel pit for riding trails. Although negotiations between the city and the owners or the pit on Gothard Street and Talbert Avenue are not complete. Recreation and Parks Director Norm Worthy said, "This may be the spot." Further weight to the proposed riding area was given in the commission's recommendations themselves which authorize the stall to seek legal advice for contractual and economic agreements and ror negotiation of the contract with subsequent approval by the City C.Ouncil. Worthy, however, pointed out that the city's insurance carrier is somewhat apprehensive about underwriting the cycle trails and wants to look at the site to determine the degree of liability. If an agreement is re ached, C<Jmmissioners said the deep quarry will probably be restricted to minibikes and would be in existence for about five years. After that, the cycle trails would have to yield to development of the Huntington c:entral Park. Since a city ordinance effectively banning off.road riding was passed by the city council recenUy, Worthy and his staff have looked at several locations before settling on the quarry. The deep pit, it is felt by proponents or the sport, would be an ideal location for a riding area since its high walls would aid in containing exhaust noise and dust. Commissioners also approved a resolution urging Orange Co u n t y Supervisors "to expedite the development or regional motor parks at Los Coyotes, Santa Ana River, Ortega, <>r other suit.able park areas on an emergency basis if'need be." Top Marine Says nations set 10 p.m. (EDT) Saturday as the deadline for the lives of the pawns in an international intrigue I i t er a 11 y developing by the hour. They say they will blow up the Sw'issair, TWA and BOAC jetliners and everybody in them if their demands are not met, while worldwide appeals and UN Security Council pleas continued. New developments today included the announcement in Jerusalem that police have arrested two Israelis who plotttd to UPI TtlfP~O"' Golden Girl Karin Kascher of Hayward is representing California in the annual Miss America Pageant in Atlantic City, N.J . There's more on the Pageant on Page 5. Sixty-Two Arrested TACOMA, Wash. (UPI) -Police maintained an around.the-clock vigil at a deserted Indian encampment on the banks of the Puyallup River today following a skirmish over fishing rights which involved gunfire. S i x t y • t w o persons, including five juveniles, were arrested Wednesday when police charged the arrtied encampment and subdued its defenders with tear 1as. hijack a jetliner from El Lod Interna· tional Airport. Several Israelis were solicited by the would·be air pirates -who had a machinegun and a quantity o £• propaganda leaflets destined to be dumped over Europe -but refused to assist them. A tip led police to raid their homes Tuesday and they have been held ln custody since , awaiting federal charges. The International Red C r o s s , Plan Delayed meanwhile said the plight of the travelen held at the remote field built by tbe British in 1947 is deteriorating. Emergency supplies of sanitation equipment, food, medicine and cookinl equipment were sent in, but guerrillas leaders said they are t a k J n g humanitarian care of the nearly 300 hostages. Conditions nearing civil war in Jordan, !See BUACK, Pace 2) Top ·o.f the Pier Project On Bottom of City's Li-St The Top of the Pier plan was at the bottom of the list by the time Huntington Beach City Councilmen worked through their agenda Tuesday night -so it never came up. After eight hours of listening, talking and voting on a muUitude of Jtems, C<Juncilmen decided to postpone action on the plan until next Monday night. Their move probably delayed the start of condemnation prOcedures for a five block area downtown for a large parking lot. City Attorney Don Bonfa is 8sking the council for a decision on t h e condemnation in light or downtown property owners' failure to present a development package to the council. City councilmen will he faced Monday with a choice between starting to condemn downtown property or extending the time needed for property owners to develop their own plan. SA Firm Tells Payroll Boost A ray of sunshine cut tltrough the gloomy Orange County a e r o s pa c e electronics unemployment picture today with the announcement that 1,200 new jobs and a $5 million payroll will be added to the manu facturing community here within the next six months. ITI ~annon Electric in Santa Ana plans to increase its payroll from 800 to 2,000 employes through the closing of a 1,500-employe plant in East Los Angeles. Carl Peacock, administrative vice president said the East Los Angeles operation has been unprofitable. "We lost $1 million in that area last year," he said. Altorney Arthur D. Guy or Newport Beach, representing downtown property owners, admitted his group was unable to meet the city council 's request, but in a Jetter to Bonfa sharply criticized the cltY; for "asking the impossible." "It surely must have been with tongue- Jn-cheek that you would presume to expect the execution of the propOsed stipulations in time for your next council meeting, much less by Sept. 1," Guy wrote. "Some of the people you have listed for signatures are deceased and others reside outside the State of California ." He continued, "You are therefore advised that we have not embarked on an exericse in futility by way of attempting to obta in the execution of documents as you have proposed." The city council on Aug. S set fourth !our stipulations for downtown property owners to meet or face c i t y condemnation action. They were: ,.. -A limited partnership agreement signed by all five or six members of the associatipn committee. -A signed stipluation to be prepared by the city attorney w a i v i n g abandonment costs. -Written evidence that title to the properties within the project area over which the Association (of downtown businessmen) has control, including the committee members' own property, is conveyed to said partnership. -A list or properties by name of owner, brief legal description and expiration date of option. over whictJ control has been obtained to date by the members ·of the association by means of irrevocable options. Oruge · Weather Draft End 'Disastrous'· It'll be 20 degrees hotter in AnR· heim than it will be in Newport Beach Friday, 90 to 70 to be e);act. Look for night and mornlng low clouds along the coasL By L. PETER l<REIG ot Tiie o.llY '"" '''" An apologetic country wllh a volunteer armed force cou ld not long survive the Communist threat today. the nation's number one Marine told a Newporl Beach audience Wednesday night. Gen. Leonard F. Chapman Jr .• commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps, warned that apologists are deteriorating the strength or the United States and are seeking to end 11 draft that would result in i;erious erosion or our military capability. Speaking to some 130 members of the World Affairs Council ol Orlln&e €ounty at the A!rporter lrin, Gen. Chapman uld \ U.S. strength depends on a maintained "will of the American people." He singled out the gravest dangl!r to that will , and to the American ·defen5e establfshment, as those who would apologize for America's streilgth. H" said those who Condemn present U.S. war policies "are really less or a threat to national '!iecurity than the apologists.'' He said by virtue o~ its geography ·America has always been safe. He said the lraditional U.S. dominance in i;ea Power has kept It safe. But he said' today geography will not help. And he said Ru ssia hu gained In ua power almosl lo parlly. He called this . I , country's &ea power today Its weakest military· arm. "As small as our world has grown," he suggested, ':the seas are still basic to our security -and sustenance. We must still depend on them. ''But for our oceans to serve us, we must serve our oceans. Sirenglh it sea Is still part of the framework on which American defense Is structured. He said the U.S. has become complacent about that fact. Ru5."la recognizes the value of the seas, he said, and "ifter centuries of frustrating efforts, sbe is now well (Set MARINE, Pae< J) • ' INSWE TODAY The "forootten men" of iht Vietnam war -the Americcn POWs -hold dim hopes for /rtedom. Some h4ve been in custod11 mort than six 11ear1. Page 23. a..11111 n Cttlftnlla lJ CilteklOW Ut 1 CllHlltH I>* Cemk• u c.......... JJ Offllt l'IOlleH lt ldltfritl ,... • &n1tf11ln"""1 fl·t• 'iMll(I IN! "~ 11 A.1111 Ullft" .11 Miii In s.r<llCI • 1S -~-· .. • -. % WI. Y 1'11.0T " Thundoy, S.Pttmbor 10, lt70 ,....,,,. p .. ,, J MARINE ... establl.sbed on the h1gh seas. "To date," be reported, "the new naval · lttenith of the Sovlel Union bas not been omploytd d1reclly In the cont<lt of world politics. But its pre.sen~ ls felt." He also said the struggle today is be~ween lotalltarian communism and open democracy. But, he indicated, "The struggle is engaged stricUy by one..&ided rules. ''The hlles are simple. The Commun ist countries are off limits, strictly out of bounds. The rest of the .world ls a !rte-- for-all." He said we face grave internal prob- lem s in this COWltry -social economic and environmental problems. But, he warned, aiming at the liberal mov~ment, "destruction of our defense• in this modem world will not hasten i;olutions to our inner problems. "It is,'' Gen. Chapman said, "ridiculous to consider a hope for security within unJess we are first secure from without.'' He said to provide that security we must remain strong. But he said strength requires more t han the "equ.ipage of war." He said, "above all its requires a moral fibre to bind the hardware of defense into meaningful and intelligent applications," He spoke of 4edicated men in the service and again of a dedicated American will at home. He made himself crystal clear. He likened Russia in 1970 to Japan in 194.1 -both watching as this country debated the same subject, the possible end of the draft. He recounted the months preceding December, 1941. "A few months before Pearl Harbor the extension of the 1940 one-year aelective service act was debated long and hard in the halls of-Congress, and all across the land. "The whole country listened closely, and watched carefully, as the extension finally passed In the House of Representatives by a margin of one vote, 203 to 2il2. "There were others also watching that lively American interchange in 1941 - the Japanese Imperlal staff," he said. "The arguments of that crucial summer encouraged Japanese war planners to think the American will to defend this country was weak. "It took almost four years of bitter war, and hundreds of thousands of American and Japanese casualties to prove that theory wrong. "This same test i! about to reoccur.'' Gen. Chapman said. '''Jbe draft law will expire nut JuDe. In the next several months the extension of the draft will again be debated and voted on. "And again," he said, "others will be watching.'' G<Ji. Chapman said there would be little problem in getting volunteers into the armed services -volunteers 'for one hitch to learn a akill or a trade. "But what about men to Carry a ri.f1e, tramp through the mud, and close with the enemy in mortal combat?" he asked. "All of the dynamic applications of 11tellectual power, imaginative planning and positive management will be totally meaningless without •· force capable of ~ghting," • He sald it's all up to the will of the American people. He got a standing ovation when his •peech ended. Votf'.r Signup Deadline TOday Today is your final chance to register for voting in the NoV. 3 General Election, officials reminded ill cities up and down the Orange Coast. Registration is being conducted throughout business hours at all city clerks' offices and that of the Orange County Registrar of Voters. Deputy registrars organized by the Orange Coast League of Women Voters are also on hind at desks in the lobbies of most city halls and elsewhere. DAILY PILOT Ou.NG~ COAlT PU•LbHIMG c'.OMl' ... HT loli•rt N. 'W•.-1 PtnidMt •flll ..,,......., J ack It. Curt1y \tk.1 Pm!DMt •IMI ver.~•1 Mw"r E1il9'" lho..,11 A. Mutphi"1 M1Mtill9 ElllfOt A l•" Di r~l11 W•t o. '"'' CIDll"IY Edl1or . A1li•rt W. l1t11 N 1od 11t i::aUot' H11111tl•tto1 llHcll Office 17175 l 11ch lloul1~1•d Mailin 9 AOclr•n: r.o. le• 790, 92,41 Otller Offlc" l•1lll!f •••ch' m F-f A-, (otl• Mh.I: D WU! •tr lfl'fff """°'' ••Kii: 2211 Wnl ••Ibo• •ou~ "' cim-110 ais 1t1er111 I.I ,.min. ••• CAI\. Y PILOT, W.111 -IUI • c""'llrMd 'Pli' H_,.,.reu, " 111••llJ11cd d•llY n c..i $- Ill•• In • ..,.r11C' ldl1~ f9I'" l•I-IMCll, I N<.-1 •txti. (Mi. MtM, H""'llf!t'I , a udl lt>ll ,_11111 v111er. 111.., •h11 !•.> r ....... d lllem. °"'"" C1:11 """~""'lne I c.,...n, ,.-1n1ino e11 n1o .,, 11 1211 w1u !11111111 81111., N-119"' ltlcll, tr.~ UI V.-tll ••r lit•fft, en11 M .. •. Tel ...... 171 4) 642•4Jl1 ""' w ........... C.11 140.1 221 ci .. 11tei1 ,, ... ,.,..., 641·1"671 (°""'P"llt, ltlt. Of"I"" ..,OHi ,Ylltlellf"I C-1'11'•• Ml MWI• e1orltl. llluelrt lltM, ffllOflll _,..,. " ._......,1,_1t lltr•l" ~ "''' w ",,_11«111 •m1ot11 •PKlfil ,.,. ! 1nllotlM 11 eopyrflP!t rrr~tt. I 1«f1111f c1111 ......... M id 11 N.....,. atrf\11 ••·• C.11 Mftl, CtH'-lt , Si*Kr1'1llHI W ~,,,._ r..• ""',1111,1 w mel1 U • ft'lllllltlllfl fl'lolli.ry •11N1-... UM "'9ftllllf. OAll Y PILOT Iliff Pl'lli. Col"fe11,es Open First School Day Busy, Crowd·ed By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 Ille O.llr Plltt Sl•ll Other than the usual confusion as new students find their way around campus, the first day of classes at Golden West and Orange Coast Community Colleges were normal. At Golden West the most nnusual first day happening was the "unusually long line at the only sna ck: bar on campus," a college spokesman said. Otherwise the 8,000 day and evening students sli pped Into the new school year routine uneventally. A new cafeteria is under construction at Golden West, but won 't be ready until next June. Registration contlnues, tomorrow and Monday at Golden West and through Sept. 18 at Orange Coast, To date Orange Coast has registered 8,250 day students and ex:pects a total of 8,500. Evening student registrations are approaching 9,000, a $'J)Okesman said. Golden West has~ enrolled 3,594 day Golden West plans an international • dinner at S:30 p.m: Friday in the student center to be prepared by Martin Yan." formerly of Hong Kong alld now of HUntington Beach. Tbe program will be followed by a~ Japanese film "Yojimbo'' at 8 p.m. in the. Forum. Japanese classical and klbukL dancer Rokuka Hanayagi will per form for ~iiners. Adding to the confusion for new and returning students at Golden \Veit is the · more than $8 million of construction on · the campus. Four new buildings are under construction and addiHons arc . being made to five others. Completions are due beginning in October and continuing throughout the school year. Two new courses added to · the Golden · West curriculum this yea r ire cosmetology training and studies for 40 . deaf and hearing impaired students. within·the regular program. Interpreters and note takers accompany the hard ol. hearing to classes. ACTIVIST SMEDLEY LEADS BAT TLE AGAINST CENTRAL AVENUE BUS ROUTE IN SEAL BEACH From Whe re He Sita. 29-year-old Graduate Student Figures His Neighborhood Can Do Without RTD students and expects 1,000 more b~ Monday.· About 4,400 evening ,students have signed up, but that figure is expected to grow as reg ist ration continues next Monday to Thursday and Sept. 21 and 22. Orange Coasts American s tu d i e s , program wiU include a unit on American Indian heritage. The Indian program was , sought by students. . Homeowners Fight Buses Orange Coast has added 22 new faculty members this year tor a total of 250, and Golden West't.8 for a total of 170. Parking seemed lo be the biggest hassle for students at Orange Coast with the two lots off Fairview Road being most popular. Former .Teacher Phyllis Steven s Services Slated ' Seal Beach Residents Start Campaign Against RTD "Spaces are available at other locations if students are willing to hunt for them," a spokesman said, noting that a new lot is open on the west side o( the campus behind the Technology building. By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 Ult DlllY P119t Sl1ff Some angry Seal Beach residents along a nine-block stretch or Central Aven11e are complaining about all the "extra cars" running around 1n front of their houses. And they've embarked on a campaign against Rapid Transit Dlstrtct buses which they contend shake the windows in their houses, put cracks in th e walls and deposit diesel soot on their furniture. Bus drivers who have recently been driving through the city's s I e e p y downtown area have been greeted with icy stars from homeowners and signs placed on 16 of the 74 houses on the route giving them the feeling that they are definitely not welcome. "A bunch of us just got fed up at Lhe same time," explained Jon Smedley, 29. a 1raduate student, who ha.s rallied the protesters behimd him. ''Th is area used to be all marshland up to about 5th Street which was filled with sand and dirt," he said. "The buses come through here too fast for the condition of the street and it shakes the houses and causes the plaster to crack. I 've even heard cases of pictures coming off the wall." Smedley and his followe rs contend that the buses could be moved to an alternate route along Marina Drive and Electric ·Avenue where the roads are wider and houses fewer. But so far, the reaction from the bus company has been negative, he says. C. J. Holzer, associate transportation engineer for the RTD. has indicated that such rerouting would simply provide more inconvenience to bus patrons, that it could result in dangerous operation and that it Would simply transfer 1he Captive U.S. Rabbi's Son Wanted Hijack Feeling From Wire Services DAWSON 'S FIELD, Jordan-A Chicago boy was evidently left behind on a hijacked TWA jetliner here, when Palestinian guerrillas hustled 116 passengers to a luxury hotel for safety. '{osef Thachtman, 10, is the son of an Ortbodo:s: Jewish rabbi. From Page 1 HIJACK ... however, hampered the delivery. The PLFP originally allowed 116 Arab men. plus women and children of various nationalities to be taken to t h e Intercontinental Hotel in Amman. The remainder o( the hostages waited in or under the shadow-casting wings of the thr.ee gleaming jetliners today, while 22 mttre were released, identi!ied as B&hreinl! and the English flance of one. ·Triumphant Arabs, meanwhile, rejoice at the successful air piracies -three jetliners captured with a fourth failure Sunday and another Wednesday -and said it unites divisions within their raoka. at a crucial time. No hint was given of the mas~rmlnd behind the multiple skyjackings,· but informed sources said it wa1 most likely Dr. Waldie Haddad, a mlld-maMertd physician. The 47·year~ld doctor -object of a hit- and·run rocket attack genera I l y atribu ted to lsraeli agents a rew weeks ago -\\1as out of Beirut and unavailable for comment. The planners knew not only could Dawson's Field airstrip in Jordan take a modern jetliner, but that it could take several and at night, k>o. The TWA captain said later the runway was three times as long as he needed for his Boeing 707 and hard as concrete. The airstrip was alraady manned with tmergency flares and s.lit trenches had been dug round the park.ing area. The guerrillas even p r o v i d e d passengers with pink cards, exact copies or the international disembarkation documents. to furn ish personal details, and a rubber~lamped "Emergency Visa." There were reports in political quarters In Beirut that the Pan American jumbo hijack was a mistake and the men responsible had been instructed to fly a regular jetliner to Dawson's Field, too. The story was they missed their original connection and decided to wai t for the next American jet. They were horrified 10 find it was a ?•7 and trom then on all was improvisalion. ( He spent tne summer in Israel and spoke before he left of his ambilion to see the historic wailing wall of Jerusalem and maybe even experience a hijacking. He wrote a paper for school - ironically -describing the air piracy. "Well, he's experienced both," said Rabbi Thachtman Wednesday in Chicago, characterizing Yosef as the type of boy who will get no mercy from the fanatic revolutionaries. "How could they know he is not Jewish? He is not the type to hide the fact that he is •.. that he believes in God • . . that he loves his people," said the r abbi. "I don't know definitely whether he is on the plane." ''We are praying .•• we pray for all the passengers." Rabbi Thachlman. who is Director of E duc ation at Hamashid Institute in Chicago and teaches at Union Theological Seminary in nearby Skokie, is pessimistic today. He doubts the U.S. State Department - which had not contacted the Thacthman family by Wednesday -is concerned about the fate of , the threatened passengers. '"These. are people. These are human beiflis. How can you dare treat people in t,his 1?}3.nner? If our Stale Department is Unconcerned, why should the Arabs be conctrned?'' · Meanwhile, Yosef and others aboard the three planes await their fate, which is now set by the Popular Liberation Froot for 7 p.m. (PDT) Saturday. Yoser was tentatively scheduled fG begin seventh grade at Hillel Torah Elementary School this week. ;,}!e's a gem," said his father. "He's not ju st bright. He has a true sense of responsibility and a sense for the needs of otlie~s."' Nol far away, in Amman. J ordan. the basement of the Intercontinenta l Hotel - which used to be a nightclub -now looks like a bomb shelter. Machine gun fire and the thud or morlars can be heard clearly by 116 Arab men. plus many women and children. Th ey are out of the frying pan and into the fire. "We though! we were safe once we got here." said Mrs. Ceclle Simmen, of Utlc:a. N.Y .. ''but no~· It'.:; starting 11/ over again." "tl-faybe it's safer there than ll is here." remarked P.frs. Lita Ungar, of Scarsdale, N. Y., ""'hose husband is still held captive aboard a S\.\'issair llner. Oi1ce. a mortar shell smashed directly Into an annex being constructed onto the hotel and 11 reporter tra pped with the rest asked a scared little girl if she knew what was happe.n!niJ. ''Unfortunately, )?es.11 ahc repll<!d. ··;: problems to another area. Smedley, however, insists the buses, which he claims run from morning to midnight at a frequency of 100 per day, must go. "We don't want them to move compJelely out o( Seal Beach because we don't wan to inconvenience other people. eW just wish they would adopt our route. which we feel is a good alternative," he says. Although some houses bear slogans such as "Ban the Bus' Power to the P eople." "Buses Unsafe at Any Speed" and "Plaster Cracking Buses ~1ust Go." there are some residents ""'ho don't feel that wa y. ··1 think we would really miss them," said f.1rs . Lucille Friday. "The noise doesn't bother us too much and the soot -well, you get that anywhere. You ought to hear the noise the souped up cars and trucks make though." Said Ml'l!I. Gertrude Pettingill, "I like to have the buses, I have no way of getting anywhere otherwise. A Jot of others are in the &ame boat. The noise doesn't bother me enough to have them removed." Smedley admits that since the signs have gone up, the vehicles have reduced speed through the area. But that isn't enough. "The noise when they're accelerating is terrible. You can hardly hear yourself talk in here," he said. And wiping his hand across a bookshelf. he raised his sooty fingers and declared, "and that's a direct result of the bus too." lf the buses don 't move to a different route soon, he says he will call a meeting to see what steps can be taken. One of these he said might be a form of passive resistance by stationing people in crosswalks along the route and having them cross the road when the bosses are coming through. "Another thing we might do is to let a bus get in the middle of an intersection while we continue to walk around the crosswalks in a square," he said. Orange Coast's new environmental technology program has proved popular with students and is filled, according to college officials. Extracurricular activities at both colleges already are under way. 'Plague' Fleas Found FORT COU..INS, Colo. (UPI) -Fleas carrying the bubonic plague have been discovered in two abandoned prairie dog colonies in extreme eastern Colorado, U.S. Public Health Service officials said Wednesday. Dr. J\.1artin Baum of the Colorado He alth Department said the discovery was not "surprising" and said there waa no public health danger involved. Funeral serv"s will be held Frldaj for Phyllis Laverne Steven, former teacher with the We.stmiruiter School Dist"rict. -- Mrs. Stevens died Monday at the age of 65. A resident of Huntington BeaclJ for 10 years, Mrs. Stevens taught in the Westminster elementary schools for 18 years before her recent retirement. She was an active member of the Church of J~us Christ of the Latter-day Saints in Huntington Beach and the' California Teachers Assoication. She leaves her husbandl. Owen: her- mother Agnes M. Allan;. _. children, Owen Allan and Lynn A.llm ltevens; two brothers, Leland and G~ Allan: threO sisters, Ethel Criddle. Imogene Hanson. and J\.1elba Standing; and four; grandchildren. Services will be held at 2 p.m. at the LOS Church iJ! Huntington Beach. Beach Chamber ·011 ers . .. Businessman Seminars A monthly school for businessmen will be opened this month by the Huntington Beach Chambe.r of Commerce. The school consists of once-a-month seminars from now through May 25 covering variOus aspects of "WhY a Bus iness Fails." There is no cost to Chamber members and the price for the entire series of seminars is $1 for non-members. Prevention of burglaries, shoplifting, robberies, bad checks and fires will be discussed by Sgt. J ames Mahan of the lluntington Beach Police Department at the fir sl seminar Sept. 29. Each seminar session will meet from 7:30.9 p.m. in the conference room of the chamber, 18582 Beach Boulevard, room:. 224. Chamber t.1anager Ralph Kiser said· much of the information would be. based on statistics developed by the National Chamber of Commerce and the Bank of· America which listed the follow ing· reasons for business failu res. -Inexperience and incompetence. -Inadequate sales. -Competitive weakness. -Accounts receivable. -Heavy operating expenses. -Investory difficulties . Separate seminars will be held on each subject. For fu rther information call the chamber at 962-6661. I luxurious • down sof as Thi1 handiorn• Sof• was Cle1'9ned to 9ive yoa the o~imat• in 1•1tin9 comfort with d•cron •nd down 6ack ptlows, d••P: s.prinq dow n s .. t cushioni ..,..,.10,,.d in down end fNth." i nd in two fo.am.fiu.d •n:n P,il- lowl.. Choos• ftom ••• s.~M:io °' fin.a f.bf.ici. 0 8' length reg. $599 NOW 39 ~ l You fcnxtri tc interior dcsigntr toil! be: haPPlf to o.ssist i.iou ••• H.J.GAf\l\ETI fURNl-pJRE PROFESSIONAC INTERIOR DESIG NEl.S .· -TnT OUR H VOl.YIN$ CHAR$1- 0,.0 .. _ .,..... • Fri. ..... l ' 2215 HARBOR 8l VD. COSTA MESA, CAUF. 646-027( ' ' I 11 E ' t • \' h ' k d " l d J f h ti p a Ii " h n ~ .. y ir 1 j j lh '" JO m IV Al \Vi nl •• lh ol lh '" '" :'<'O ·~ an l 1 ' II< "" W1 ho ill '"' ha I i'! I 'I Jess Admits He Goofed On Chru·ge SANTA BARBARA IUPI ) -Free- •wlna:ing JeS3 Unruh admitted today h• ''goofed" and promised to personally apologize to the son of 1 dead-man. Unruh accused Gov. Ronald Reagan Wednesday of awarding a "political payoff" to a man ~ contended helped the governor run for president in 1968. Actually the man died In 1960. (Related Story Page 13.J The alleged "piyoff," according to Unruh's original statement. was the appointment of the man's U.year-old ~. Earl W. Brian, Jr., as state medical director, a $30,000 per year job. "I had bad staff information, but tha t doesn't excuse me ," Unruh to I d newsmen, holding up a small pocketbook with the governor's face on it entitled, "f Goofed -the wise and curious sayings of RonaJd Reagan." "Hopeflllly," conUnued the solemn faced Democratic gube r natorial candidate, •11hat'111ot my Bay o( Pigs." Uuruh noted when he kicked off hi!! campaign on Monday, he promised lo "Tell it like it is, tell who is behind who, name dates, places. "1 said I also was a man , for real . in flesh and blood and obviously I make mistakes. I made one yesterday. 1 apoligize for that, I guess I now hav-. become a member of the club.'' Referring to Briar.. Unruh said. ''I think I owe him a personal apology." But Unruh said his rr.ajor campaign goof "still doesn 't change the basic facts that Medi..ca.J i.t mismanaged.'' 25 Americans Lost Lives At Hiroshima WASHINGTON !UPJ) -The United States archives will soon re I ea 1 e documents that at least 23 Americans being held as prisoners of war died in the .11tomic blast that destroyed Hiroshima, it \\•as learned Wednesday. Archive sources said records that may be made public as soon as nert week would identify American prisoners of war killed when the first atomic bomb was dropped on Aug. 6, l!H:>. The sources declined to say how many Americans wen: killed. but a member of the fonner Japanese secret police said last July he waa in charge of 23 American pri.sonen including at least one woman. Former Japanest Warrant Officer Hiroshi Yanagida said the Americans died along with tens of thousands of Japanese when the bomb was dropped on lJiroshima. He said U.S. Arm y 1ntelligence office rs questioned him four times in 1946 and that he told them the prisoners' dog tags were kepl in a safe and survived the blast. Archives officials said doc ument!! listing the names and other pertinent infonna_tion about the wearers or the tags have been turned over to the Defense Department , which is expected to decla ssify them next week. There \\'I S no explanation of why confirmation of the Ameri can death! had been kept secret. Archives officials said they began 11 ~earch of World War II docum@nt! after Yanagida's comments y.·ere ma de public in July. W onien' s Lib Prote sts Midis In Salt Lake SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -Fighting the fashion establishment is the latest \Yomen's liberation i53ue here, and about 10 young ladies made their point with 1 mini·protest against the n~w midi-skirts. Taking to the sidewalks about noon t\'ednesday in froot or the five-story Auerbach's Department Store, whose \Yindows feature displays of the midi . the distaff defenders paraded with signs 11aying ''Liberate Ladies' Legs.·· "Shorten the f.fidi.'' ""1idis are f.1asculine,'' and other expressions of outrage. The fashion-moguls in the high-priced ~mporium may have ignored the mini- ti kirled marchers, but the men of the sidewalks didn't miss a step. According to Lynn F'owler, 24. wM lives and works in Salt Lake, the girls are unhappy with having to ca ter to the stores which sell their goods. "The mid is cost from S30 and up, lhcn ~·o uhave to spend S4S for boots to go with tbtm. And they m•ke· a girl look old anyway." LIF E SIZE GIFT FOR BIRTHDAY CiREAT FALLS, ~lont. 1UPI ) Beverly Cimpson received a ver1 person11I 18th birthday p r e sent \Vr.dnesday fro m her boyfrlend.\ A large crate "'IS delivered to her house and "'hen she opened it she found 011vid Snvdcr in,,lde. David. who ~l~o !Urned 18 \Vednesd;i,y. said he paid $1 5 to have himself cr11ted ..nd delivered. • 0Gippe1·' Catches 01ae Ronald Reagan. who once portrayed the legendary Notre Dame football star George Gipp in a film , shows he can still catch a pass. Reagan, on a campaign swing through Northern California \Ved- nesday, played some touch football with the youngsters du ring a stop at the Hanna Boys Center in Sonoma. For more on the guberna- torial campaign, see page 13. For more about football, see sports. Central Labor Council Sanctions Dis11ey Strike The Central Labor Council of Orange County has sanctioned a strike by Disneyland's 43 me m be rs of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employes CIATSE ). Peter Remmel. executive secretary or tht council. said other union employes of the park are now authorized to honor picket lines at the amusement park. Of Disneyland's 6,000 employes, 4.600 are represented by labor unions. How- ever, a spokesman of the park· said the council's action has had no effect on the park's operation. ••All personnel reported for work on time this morning," the spokesman said. 'The IA TSE members , whose labor contracl with the park expired Sunda y, are asking a $1.17 an hour raise over a three.year period. The striking workers operate and repair the projection and sound systems for the park attractions such as the Haunted Mansion. the Abraham Lincoln program and lhe Pirates of the Caribbean. Supervisory personnel at the park have been handling the equipment since the strike. The park reports tha t there are currently 77 employes on stMk.e -4& iATSE members and 29 members of the Amer~al Guild of Variety Artisl.1. The :!9 AGVA members, who walked orr their jobs on Aug. 8, were fired by the park on Aug. 11 for violation or their contract. However. a D is ney I and spokesman said the 29 AGVA members are still considered employes of the park. World Leade1·s Watch Middle East Situation fro111 Wir~ Services Leaders throughout the world rea cted todav to the drama unfolding in the f.fiddie East . as complications or the jet hijackings spread throughout diplomatic, commercial and humanitarian circles. Administration s p o k e s nl e n in Washington said it is highly doubtful President Nixon will order direct mililary intervention to free American hostages ab::iard three jetliners. No potential method of rescue has been ruled out. A pair of Air Force ca rgo planes potentially assigned to rescue Ameri can hostages were took off from Adana. Turkey, for undisclosed locations. Tiiree more waited at lncirlik Air Force Base, 90 minutes flight time from Amman, Jordan. The United Nations Security Council appealed for mercy in treatment of the nearly 250 hostages and called for their freedom. Armed guards ha ve reportedly been assigned to all El Al airliners by Israeli authorities. while dl!'lnands ha ve been,,, made to guard all international flights. The president of tile International Air Transport Association !IATA) in Honolulu said Wednesday he had been inrormed that the insurance market Around the world has canceled insuranct. contracts with 90 percent of the airline~ ;is the resull of the recent hijackings in lhe Middle East. Agnew to Ai d GOP Candidates WASHINGTON (AP) -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew embarks today on the first leg of a 20-state tour to whip up support for Republican congressional candidates in the Nov. 3 election. His assignment as the administration's seeker of Republican votes and dollar!I look on added significance w h e n Presidenl Nixon apparently decided against any ope n political missions. The vict prtsldenfs assistance will go primarily to Ad1nlnls1ralion loyalisL~. Agnew 's week·long opening swing will cover $ix ~l11tes at a somewhat leisurely pace. Two 1i1ppe11r11nces a d11y Is tho heaviest announced ~hcdule for lht vice presidenl. Or. Gcrritt Van Der \Val. spea king lo lhe openi ng session of IATA's traffic conference here. stunned the delegate with the remark as he departed from his prepared text. The Pentagon said today it had slopped using commercial international airliners for carrying or mailing of classified malerials bef\ause of the upsurg e in hijackings. Some classified North Atlantic Treaty Organization <N ATO) documents were aboard a Pan American jet hijacked and later blown up by Palestinian guerrillas. Friedheim said the classified material, 1novi ng by registered mail, wa s the only secre t information he knows about that had been affected by the recent rash of hijackings . Maddox, Carter Lead in Race For State Posts ATLANTA (U PI) -Gov. Lester "1addox banked on straggling reLurns today to give him a n0:runoff victory for Lieutenant Governor in G o e r g I a ' s De1nocratic primary and wealthy peanul f.:irmer Jimmy Carter held similar hopes In the race for governor. \Vith about 40 percent or the state's 2.049 prec incts still lo be counted. !\faddox and Carter both were jusl short of the ~.I percent or the vo te necessary to eliminate a run off with the ir nea rest challengers. I Maddox, barred by state Jaw from succeeding himself and seeking to retain a power base as lieutenant governor, and Carter both drew heavily from rural 01reas v.•hich comprised tht bulk of the uncounted vote. Boll of L ig htning Ki ll s 4 iu Manil a ~1A Ntl.A (UPI)-Lightning killed four high school students playlng ba!lcball 1n Sonta Crui. Bbout 40 miles soolheast of r-.1anila. lhe Philippine constabulary The constahula ry said scver8l others v.'cre injured when lightning struck durlna tight rain Wednesday, --~---- • • Tl!Utscll:f, Stpttmbff 10, llf70 H DAILY PILOT 3 Sirhan ThrQws 'Snit' RFK Slayer Tear Gassed, Put • i n Solitary SAN QUENTIN (AP) -Sirhan 8. Sirhan, convicted or assa~inating Sen. Robert 8. Kenne~y. was given a rnlld tear gassing by guards after tllrow lng a ''temper tantrum" in his cell at San Quentin Prison's Death no"" Warden Louis S. Nelson said todty. Latrr he was given a sedat ive and placed in an Isolation cell. the warden said. Nelson said Sirhan, who bad refused to &ive up his me•l lr•Y and thrown food at a guard, did not resist and came out of the cell on his own after euards used "a very little tear gas." Nelson aaid the Incident occurred Wednesday afternoon after the Palestinian Arab demanded lo 1peak to Associate Warden James W. Park. Nelson said he did not know i! Slrhan's demand had anything to do with the Arab guerrilla hijackings. Al one point, the hijackers reportedly demanded Sirhan's treedom ,s ransom tor some 300 hostages on two hijacked ·planes. Noting Wednesday was a state holiday -Admission Day, marking California's admission into the. union -the warden said: "II was a holiday ind there was nobody around so he got into a snit about it -I gueS! a litUe temper tantrum." Nelson said Sirhan had accesa to newspapers and radiq and probably was followtng the hljarltint story cl0&ely from his Death Row cell. In the isolation cell, however, Nelson said, Sirhan will not have access to radio, television, newspapers or other personal lltms. lie said the prison's disciplinary committee will decide Friday how Jong Sirhan should be kept in isolation. The maximum is 30 days. Nelson said the tea r gas was nete!!ary because of possible danger from the metal tray, fork and spoon that Sirhan refused to give up. Sirhan is under death senlence for the June 1968 assa.c;.sination. He has been at San Quentin since ~iay 23, 1969, while his case undergoes automatic review by the state Supreme Court. Big Destroyer Can't Move; Wheel Lost Hostage Hotel Hit SAN DIEGO IAP I -The destroyer John R. Craig didn't work Wednesday , nor all day Tuesday, and jusl sat there in San Diego Harbor while sailors searched for her steering wheel. More Battling Flares The emba rrassment became acule at da\vn the first day and , by late \\'ednesday. the search tor the 30-pound steering "'heel made of solid brass was going at a hectic pace. In Jordanian Capital Three Navy divers joined i n, rummaging about the harbor floor off the naval station where the destroyer is berthed. The 175 crewmen were restricted to ship until Wednesday. questio ned by Navy intelligence agents and regular offict!rs of the World War II-vintage destroyer. No one shed any light. "It took no mechanical knowledge to unscrew the one nut that held it in plact!," said L.t. Hal Segal, spokesman for the Pacific Fleet cruiser-destroyer force. "I'll bet my lieutenant's bars that this was a practical joke," he said. The gleaming brass wheel, rimmed in Y.'ood, is 24 feet in diameter. Another was finally borrowed from the Navy's mothball fleet standing nearby as a lemporary addition to the sh i p' 1 emergency power steering. But, said Segal before the replace~ent came : "If she had to gel under way 1n a hurry, she'd be in trouble,'' ,Joke or no, the Navy was mad . . Luckily, lhe Craig j5 in port until October. 7 Iran ians . .<\rrested NE\V YORK (UPI) -Seven Iranian stude nts were arraigned Wednesday ·on charges ranging Irom felonious assault and resisting arrest to disorderly conduct as 1 result of whit started as a protest demonstration in front of the Iranian Consulate Tuesday. By United Presa: International New fighting broke out today in the .Jordanian capital of Amman belween Palestinian guerrillas and Jordanian army troops. Combat was heavy during the night around the Inter-Continental Hotel where 154 hijack hostages were held. As Jordan veered toward fullscale civil war. Israeli Premier ~1rs. Golda Meir prepared for a trip to Washington next week. and diplomatic sources i n Jerusalem said she would p r e s s Presi dent Nixon for U.S. action against an alleged Egyptian missile buildup in the Suez Canal 1.one. The Jerusalem Post said it has learned from reliable sources !bat about one-third of the 15,000..man force of Iraqi troops in Jordan ha ve been assigned to the guerrillas in bases near Amman and in northern Jordan bordering Israel. Dispatches from UPI correspondent David Zcnian in Amman on the 10th consecutive day or fighting lhere said .Jordanian army forces renewed the conflict at 4 a.m. today in a brief firefight near lhe Inter-Continenta l Hotel \ where a battle raged Wednesday night. An hour later. army troops reoccupied a building under construction opposite the hotel. Firing in vari0\15 sections or Amman with rifles, machineguns and mortars resumed 1t 7 a.m. today, then subsided again by midmorning. Guest.. at the Inter-Continental Hotel. Our :lraJilion ... BUSTER BROWN. ~ • • Including many Ame rican hostages from tw'o hijacked planes in guerriila hands, huddled in a nightclub which. was converted into a makeshift bomb shelter. Others bedded down in hallways, away from windov.•s. 'The hotel took at least 12 hits in the Cighling. and bullets splattered plate glass windows in the downstairs area. A mortar shell exploded nea r the hotel swimming pool. Bullets struck several cars in the hotel park ing lol. One slug punctured the hotel"s water supply system, flooding the do\vnstairs lobby and offices. Power wa.!I cut for a time ; Amman Airport was closed. • Guerrillas manned barricades I n Amman ; army troops established their O\vn checkpoints on the outskirts. The heaviest fighting Wednesday nighl was in the building opposite the Inter· Contenental. Some guests watched from balconies as guerrilias and army troop! fought at close quarters, moving from floor to floor and using hand grenades, small arms and mortars. In London, authoritative diplomatic sources quoted official reports from Amman as saying the British chancellery in the city was hit during shooting \\fednesday, bul thal there ~·ere no casualties. The sources said Britain has made: conting~ncy plans for evacuating British citizens from Jordan. Grown-up ·style for can't-sit-still boys It's a schoolgirl's world OUR FASHION ISLAND STORE OPEN SUN., SEPT. 13th FROM 12 TO 5 30 FASHION ISLAND t NEWPO RT BEACH • WESTCLIFF PLAZA I • DAIL V PILOT Thlll'sd•J. Stptembtr 10, 1~70 Gunboat Fle~t Lifts Camh~dia Seige .~ ~ural 1nnil box \\'est of Linds· borg, Kansas appears to be just as puzzlin,i? to the birds as it is to passing motorists. A couple of 1nonths a,i?o, Bill Johnston, a fa~­ tner built a stan<l in front of his hous'e to hold mail boxes for his family and that of a neighbor. Johnston then built a third box out of metal and shaped like an ordinary mail box . On each side he lettered "Air l\1ail," put it at the end of a pipe 20 feet above the road and hoped birds \vould JTiovc in. "\Ve've ,i?Ot birds Jiv in,g in our house chimney, but so fa r none has taken up residence in the air mail box." Mrs . .Johnston said. • - A five·year·old boy appeared iii a Gttilford, England J11 vcni/e I Court flfo11doy an cl1aracs uf · shoplifting shampoo. batteries, ·• f4 photoQrapltic equ ipment. tub-fi ber balls, a pot plant, cosn1etics f and a toy car. The boy sat in 1 court holding his parents hands. \Velfare officials 1cere ordered t to chtck a1~ the child for three 1 years. ~~ 1 ••111iflt"C'~ !-...._I ~ ... ~. • Mlch•el Holl ing1, 9. son o{ Stn- Ernest F. Holling1 , (D-S.C.), has drawn praise for his part in a citi· zens' arrest. Ottective C•pt. Harry T. Sn ipe1o said Monda.Y that Holl· ings and a friend, Harry Lindler, heard Gwendolyn Benton scream· ing as a man knocked her down and took ber purse as she walked to her job at Columbia Hospital early S3turday. They chased the man and 'vrestled him to the ~round. Prof. Htnry Lu mpki n o{ the University of South Carolina. '"ho lives nearby, held a shotgun on the ma n until police ai)peared. Snipes said William R. Frtdtricks, 22, was charged with robbery and assault and battery. • Gary Shelton, 11 . of San Pedro is allergic to fur so he can't have a dog or cat for a pet. l le tried rep tiles. but you can't \Valk a .snake. turtles are too slow, and you a fe'" months aE:o Gar.v ~ead about '"hat seemed like the id eal pet for him. lie saved the $25 purchase price by 'vashinJ! cars. mowing tau1ns and cleanin):! S\vimmini:! _pools. No\v he's the o\vncr of an armadillo, imported from Te~as. Says be of the small, armored c reature. Hit's fun . and it's fas!." But he has a problem. The beast is nocturnal. Gary has to stay up nif'!bls to play \\'ith his pc!. • • ~ Chicago n1inis ter is out of city can't fond I c a fish. Th c n jail. in Ouray. Colo. released two days early for ·igood behavior." But the Rev. E. Paul Co nine said he is still irritated at the five-d cv iain sentence in1poscd for a speed· in" vi o I at ion . The 111inister \\'~S cited for speeding 40 n1iles an b o ur in a 25 m.p.h z on c last Thursday by Police Chief Harold Boyd . Th e Re,·. l\1r. co n i n e , 56. charged before his t rial Sunday that this southv.1estern Colorado mountain community \\·as becominJ?: a "tourist trap." and h.c v.•onld fiJ!:hl the ticket because "1t "'as a matter of principle." PHNOM PENH !UPI) -A mile-long troop.laden gunbOat con\'OY s"·cpt up lhe flood-swollen Stung Sen River in a surprise attack that broke the fi0.d11y Communist siege of Kompong Thom, the Cambodian command said today. /\Jllltary spokesmen said the river rorce 06e1aeral Guilty' ' . 5truck \\'ednesday night while Vitt Cong and Norlh Vietnamese attention was focused on the 4.000·man Cambodian task force pushing slowly lO\\'ard Kompong 1'hom from the south. \ The spokesmen said t left Kompong Thon1 "wide open" for a "lighlning" My Lai Suspect Bla1nes Deaths 011 We stmoreland FT. McPHERSON, Ga . (UPI) -A young soldier charged Y.'ith murder in the alleged f.1y La; massacre says Army Chief of Stafl \Villlam G. Westmoreland should shoulder the blame for whatever happened in the Vietnamese village. Sgt. Esequlel Torres, 22, o f Brownsv ille, Tex .. charged Westmoreland wit h dereliction of duty in the purported South African ,4r1ns Sal es flit During Meeting LUS AKA, Zambia (UPl)-lndian Prime n1inister Indira Ghandi said today Britain's reported intention to sell arms to South Africa was a "dangerous and retrograde step" "'hich might encourage South African militarism and threaten the entire continent. Addressing lhe third world nonaligned summit conference. Mrs. Ghandi also den1anded the withdrawal of ;'foreign'' troops from Indochina and sided with the Arabs in the Jl.1iddle East conflict. She Cli'pressed disapproval of I s r a e I i ''intransigence.'' On the British-South African arms deal. the Indian prime minister told the leaders of ~ nations attending the !hird and final session cf the summit that the move was a "dangerous and retrograde step (\\·hlchl "'ill threaten the neighbo rs of South Africa and also the Indian Ocean area." Any increase in South Africa's militry capacily might encourage il lo annex other territories, she said. Prime f.1inister Lee Kuan Yew or Singapore said a "'arid power struggle \.\'as shaping up in Southern Africa u nations opposed to Communist · China realized its political and ccono1nic intere3ts \vere growing in the area . Canadian Murder Suspect Char gecl In Eight Deaths CRESTON. B.C. (UPI \ -Accused n1ass murderer Dale l\lerlc Kelson \1·as charged \1 ilh seven 1nore s\a yings \\'ednesday in connection \\'ith lhe killings of \\\'O Britsh Columbia families over the \1·eekend. Nelson. a 3\·year-old forn1cr n1ent;il patient, \Vas charged Tuesday \1•ilh the killing or an eighth person. ~1rs. Shirley \l'asyk, 30, and remaindned for a 30-day psychiatric exan1inatlon . \\'ednesday·s court action sa1v hi n1 accused of the murders of Ha.v Phipps. 42: Phipps' 2G-year-old 1vife, Isabelle. and !he couple's children : Paul, JO. Cathy, 8. Bryan. 71 and Kennel h. 18 months. Hf' 11'as also charged ·with the murder of 7- yea r-old Tracey \Vasyk. The victims \\'ere all shot to death In their homes in the smlllt British Columbia to"·n near the U.S. border. Incident. The surprising move was made Wednesday during a preliminary hearing at Ft. Jl.1cPherson. His attorney, Cha.rles Wellner, said he would ask that any action against all defendants in the f.1y Lai case be de layed until the queslicn of u 1 t I m a t e responsibility is settled. Twelve officers and enlisted men are charged in the alletged 1968 slaughter of Vietnamese civilians . '!'he hearing resumes today. It was recessed \\'ednesday after four hours of arguments. Several earlier defense 1notions, including one to move the trial 10 anothe r site. prefe rably Vietnam. and anolher to subpoen,a. Defense Secretary f.lelvin Laird and \\'estmoreland, \Vere dismissed. Torres is charged with the machinegun murder of at Jeasl three S o u t h Vietnamese civilians, lhe hanging of another and the assault with intent to kill three olbers. In hi s charges against \Vestmoreland, Torres said: '·Based upon my understanding of the findings or lhe Peers,McCrate inquiry, I believe that Gen. Westmoreland is responsible for "'hatever casualties that 1re!'e inflicted on Vietnamese civilians at ~tv Lai 4 hamlet on March 16.11968." The Peers inquiry 1vas an investigali)n into the alleged incident by the Army. Denmark Vess e] Reported Lost Si g hted at Sea COPENHAGEN t UPI ) -A Danish sub1narine v:ith 21 crewmen aboard y,·as sighted early today after it was reported •·missing for eight hours. Ule Danish naval command said. A broken radio antenna caused the scare. The submarine, the I44·foot d i e s C' I po"·ered Narhva\en, was spotted by the Danish depot ship Henrik Gerner in the North Sea southwest of Stavanger on the 1vest coast of Nor.,.,•ay. the command said. The broken antenna preven ted the submarine from reporting it had surfaced follo,v ing a 60-hour dive. It \va s instructed to signal e\'ery 24 hours and the command said the sub's co1nmander did not realize the antenna 11•as broken untfl it surfaced. Scores of Britsh. Dutch. Norwegian and Danish ships, including the Royal Danish i";icht. \rere enroute to the windswept area in the biggest search in Danish naval history. lhe co1nmand said. "ll's a happy ending as far as ~ellare concerned,'' a command spokesman said. ··\\"e are now back lo routine." Li .~. Death Figures Rea ch 10.week SA IGON IU PI ) -The U.S. command said today 87 Americans \\·ere listed as killed in Vielnan1 last \.\'eek. The total included 22 1nen killed in a helicopter crash !he previous y,·cek and resulted in the highest toll in 10 v.·eeks. The U.S. \roundcd totaled 323 -the IO\\'est since ~larch 5, 1966. It brought lo 41,568 the total Americans killed ill Vietnam since Jan. 1, 1961. \Vounded total 238.124 and 1,431 are missing. captured or interned. Showers Plague Midwest Thunderstor1ns Knock Out Power in Wis consin, Iowa California T en1perat11rr! Alt1v11~1•11~1 •t M ,\~(110•1~• ~ "' thrust from the west-south'i\·est by the iunboats. ''The task force, which made up the biggest operation of the Cambodian campaign, wa s still 36 miles south o( Kompong Thom on Highway 6 when the river units attacked. !\1llllary s-pokcsme-11 declined to gay how many Cambodlan troops were involved In breaking the l o ng encirclement of Kompong Thom but said the gunboata "stretched for more than a mile" on the Stung Sen. "The flood helped us ?11 this operation," the spokesman said. "Jn the dry :season, no boal!I of this size could navigate that ri\'er. But now the river runs fa st and deep because or the monsoon." Kompong Thom is a city of 10,000 persons 80 miles north of Phnom Pe.1h and not only is a provincial capital but an important transportation and communications center. Viet Cong and North Vitnamese units ha ve shelled the city almost daily for Jwo months. Cambodian spokesme r. said the floti lla began its trip to Kompong Thom two days ago from a point 40 miles southwest of the beleaguered city. The eunboats crossed 'ronle Sap, Cambodia's huge lake, then entered the Stun1 Sen river, encountering only llaht Viet Cong resl.stance along the way and losing one man killed. The •,000.m•n ta:ik force edgh1g northward towikd Kompong Thom has 'Chicago 3' Refused Algiers POW Tri p CHICAGO {UPI) -Three defendants in the ''Chicago Seven" flot conspiracy trial have been refused permlssion to travel lo Algiers lo seek the possible release of American prisoners of war. Two federal judges Wednesday refused to let Tom Hayden, Bennie Davis and John Froines go to Algiers. Hayden and Davis v;ere convicted of crossing state lines to incite rioting during the 1961 Democratic National Convrntlon. while Froines was cited for cqntempt of court during the trial. Hayden and Davis also were cited for contempt. :overt d nine miles in three days, the 5pokes1nan said. The troops and supply vehicles have been held back by communisl obstacles blocking the narrow asphall rond\\·ay and blown-up bridges. 1'here has bee'.1 almost on contact with the communists. "Deep Inside. I honestly believe lhc Viet Cong and the Norlh Vie tnamese are doing everything th ey can to avoid n1eeling the Cambodian army on the battlefield," lhe spokesman said. Premier Lcrn Nol 'i\'e'llt 011 nationwide radia Wednesday nigh t and said, "after six months of fighting , one thing is clear: the Viet Cong cannot wiJi in Cambodia . "In the comh1g "·eek. "'e will capture a~ m:iny North Vietnan1ese as poss ible. and this will force the North Vietnamese governmen t to bargain for the prisoners and our pri~ '!\'ill be war indemnities." Communiques from Saigon s a Id communist ground fire shot down two U.S. helicopters \Vednesday, wounding three Americans. One AHi Cobra gunshi p "'as downed 360 miles north-northeast oC Sa igon and another was hit near Quang the capita l. SUPER SAVINGS • FOR ALL YOUR PLUMBING NEEDS WATER HEATERS REPUBLIC "GEMINI" 20 Gal ••. $47.99 30 Gal ••• $49.99 40 Gal ••. $59.99 SO Gal ••• 574.99 1'1t•1 q1U1lily 9u1r1n111111 11111 hntcl w11er helltr i1 •quipped wl!lt sa!tll' l•fllp. •1 ft<IUlre'll lly lllw. Wo hi"I 1•1111 d•y ln11111l110tn 1v11i.1111. 11 yeu with, ,\II 110•11111 ln1t1!111._,. p1rl1 lnclucttcl. (Ill 11,. MOn-ln•l~U lh•I 011. 41:-11r,.r11ncy in1111111i.n IYl1l1blt. 411 """' HM by nl.llltr llUflltltfl. INSTALLATION AVAILABLE GARBAGE DISPOSALS ' IN-SINK-ERA TOR Modol s lll $3388 let. 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' A r. hav• aide thin han. N• try ii pert TI resi• ll>e Coui &II 1ug~ "( H 2, Pl Th 2,000 whet Tu. creat lpol.<! Tho IOm• exisL by u comi 1.Jn drUli numl sect.it erpe< wells Ci~ O-Omt for o re11 t.r; Ii< In 7 T ·F~-.in1ain Valley Today's Fln•I voe. 63, NO. 217, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFQRNIA'.' THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER '10, 1970 TEN CENTS Huntington City Growth Fastest Country Far and away. lhe growth of Huntington Beach ootdistan~ any ol.he[ major American city during Lhe past decade. U.S.· Census Bureau figurCs released to.!ay made i~ official. Huntington's population has grown tenfold sin<;t 1960, rrom a mere 11.492 Len year! ago 00 an astonding 115,557 in 1970. It is the !22nd largest city in the Unit!'d Stal«:s. Allhough not quite so spectacularly, any number of Orange Cou nly cities showed subsJa11tial population gains during the decade. :.Anaheim, the largest city in lhe county, jumped from 104.184 to 164,913. making it the 81st largest city in the country. It had been the J23rd largest in 1960. Sanla Ana grew in size from 100.350 to 154 ,640, while Garden Grove jumped from 84 ,238 to 121,504. They are ranked · 87th and ! 16th, respectively. 1-luRlin~lon Beach's amazing c\umb was actually surpassed, percentagewise, by its little siste r city to the notth . Fountain Valley, according to the official. census figures, grew from only 2,068 in 1960 to 31 .61! in 1970. Costa Mesa·s official population has been placed at 72.412, an increase of nearly SO percent from 1960 when it was DAILY l'ILOT lltff l'llalt NOEL BELL 'FINDS PA:RKING IS SOMCTIMES A TIGHT SQUEEZE D1vid, 6, Help1 Dad Demon1tr1te PrOblem H1ndicepped Often F1ce Valley Councilman Seeks Aids £01· City's Disabled By TERRY covn.LE 01 l~t Otl!Y l'lle! S!ffl For a long lime handicapped citizens have had to struggle with parking lots, sii;lewalks. drinking fountains and olher things rnadc for . people w i I h o u t handicaps. No..-'. two men in Founta in V11Jlcy i:ire trying to change 1111 that in the local , and perhaps county wide area. The first man is Noel Bell, 11 paraplegic resident of the city. who is well aware of t.he handicapped plight. The second is Councilman George Scott. who listened to Bell 's proposals and Is now spreading his auggeslions around the counl y. •·Our biggest problem is conventional Huntington Tabs 2,000 Oil DriHiug Places for City The cit.y council hall designated about 2,000 locations in Huntington Beach where people can drill for oil. Tuesday ni ghl councilmen approved the creation or that number or oil wnes - 1poL<1 where companies may drill for oil. Th e new law is designed to clean up 11ome of the oil blight councilmen claim eXlsU in Huntington Beach. It doell this by limiting new drllllng sites lo $mall, compacl location1. 1.Jnder the old system, the cil)' .allowed drilling in huge areas which. allowed any numblr of wells to be buill in almost any section of town. Now companies are expected to explore a large area with wells lrom one small sile . City officials hope Ulis will rtlense "ome of the tradit.ionel nU Ueld property for other types of development. Tighter restriction/I for ne.w drilling sites will also be imposed on compani,s. parking :>paces. Sometimes cars are ton clnse and a handicapped individual can't gel his wheel chair in or out,·• Bell explains. '"\Ve also need ramps lo enter public buildings and shopping centers,'' Bell adds. Through the efforts of Scott. one city sh6pping center has already installed two "'ide parking spaces for handicapped parking only. And a ramp was built al the side entrance of city hall. '"\Ve still have a problem entering city hall. though,'' Bell pointed oul. "The curb is too high to get up to the ramp." ·Such minor problems become major blocks lo the handicapped. "\Yhen we gel four or five more 11hopping centers to put Jn handicapped facilities. we may go to the League o( Cities with suggestions for a counlywlde effort," Scott added. The city has already introduced an o r d i n a n c e tn allow planning commissioners to require special parki ng and ramp!!! for any new facilities in Fountain Valley. Some other improvements in publi c and commerc ial buildings sugge!ted by Bell are: -Elevators to higher floors. -Telephone bootM and d r·1 n king fountains al low levels for those in wheel chairs. -Larger toilet stalls to accommodale handicapped 1.eeds. "When you talk about helping the handicapped, you are benefltlng seven percent of the population for less than 11 onP. percent increase in building costs," Bell said. "Apart Crom the moral benefit. you can 11lso help make handicapped persons leu dcpcndont on weUare and on help from others." he added. ''"re·re 11sklng· other cities to consider similar mellS\IJ'CS as ours," Scott saJd. .. They seem interested." Both, men were optlmlstlc that help is an the wa)' for the handicapped. -------- 37 ,!l.IO. Newport Beach grew more slaw))\ officially gaining fro m 28,564 to 48.805. Laguna Beach inCreased fron\ 9,288 to 14 .208. San Clemente's populaUon is now 16,462, twice its 8,527 count in 1960. Westminster more thb doubled, up from 25,750 to 59,519. San Juan Capistrano, ur1C9unted in 1960, now has 3,708. Leoriar~ Isley, regional direcctor of the. Bureau or the Census In Los Angeles, l!ai d this morning that the areas known as Irvine and Mission Viejo are being computed Md figures will be 8rmounced sometime in the future. Of the fi ve lar1tst cities ln lhe country, Los Angeles is the only orie that gained in populatlon·durlng the 1960s, increasing In si.r.e 1 from 2,479,015 2,782.400. It retained its rank of third behlnd New York City, which dropped by 10,000 to 7,77 1,730, and • Chicago. which reu 225,000 to 3,325,263. The ciUes or Philadelphla, down 80.000 to l,926,529, and Detroit, down ll0,000 to l .492.914, round out the live largest U.S. -cities, The only other city Jn the U.S. with more tban l million population is Houston. Tex., which grew tram 938,219 lo 1.213.064. Othe r California cities with populations ol 100.000 or more, with the.it compar.able 1960 statistics: San Francisco, 704,209, down from 740,316, ranked 13th In the country . San Diego, 675,788, up from 673,224, ranked 14th .. Saa Jose, 436,757, up Crom 204,tN, ranked 31 st. Oakland, 358,191, down from 367,648, ranked 38th. Long Buell, 347,072, up from 344,IU, ranked 40th. Saeramenle, 25$,124, uP from 191,667, ranked 54th. Fttuo, 162,326, up from 133,m , ranked B2nd, Riven._, 139i217, up f{Om 84,332, ranked 97th . Torrance, 136,029 up from 100,991, ranked l02nd. Glendale, 131,723, up from 119,«%, ranked l05th. Berkeley, 113,155, up from 111.268, ranked t25lb . Pasadena . 111,826, down from 115,407, ran ked !27th. San Bernardino, 106,014, up from 11 ,922, ranked 141st. Stockton,' 102,657, up Crom 18,321, ranked 144th. Fremont. l00,3n, up lrom 43, 790, ranked 150lh. Hostages Get Reprieve Arab Guerrillas Give Captives 72-hour Stay From Wire Servlcu AMMAN. Jordan -A 72·hour mercy reprieve on the lives of nearly 300 persons held aboard three hijacked jetlinerll at Dawson's Field, 4~ miles from here, wa s announced today. The Popular Front for the Liberation or Palestine (PLFP) declared the gesture was in response to pleas by the Jnternational Red Cross. Terrorists: bargainirig for release of imprisoned Arab guerrillas in olher Co1nmission OKs City Cycle Trail Motorcyclistll seeking a public riding area in Huntington Beach putted home with encouragement Wednesday after the Parks and Recreation C o m m I s s I o n approved recommendations to acquire the Bruce Brothers gravel pi t for riding trails. Although negotiations belween the city :ind the owners of the pit on Gothard Street and Talbert Avenue are not complete. Recreation and Park! Director Norm Worthy said, "This may be I.he spol." Further weight to the proposed rid ing nrea was given in the commisllion 's recommendations themselves which avt horize the staff to seek legal advice for contractual and economic agree menU and for negotialion of the contract with 5ubsequent approval by the City Council. Worthy, however, pointed out that t~e city·s insurance carrier is somewhat apprehensive about underwriting the cycle trails and wants to look at the site to determine the degree of liability. If an agreement is r e a ched, commissioners said the deep quarry will probably be restricted to minibikes and would be in existence for about five years. After that. the cyc le trails would have to yield to development of the Huntington Central Park. Since a city ordinan ce effectively banning off-road riding was passed by the city counci l recently. Wort hy and his staff have looked at several locations berore se ttling on the quarry . The deep pit. it is felt by proponents of the sport, would be an ideal location for a riding area since its high wa)\s would aid in conlaining exhaust noise and dust. Commissioners also approved a resolulion urging Orange C o u n t y Supervisors "to expedite the development cf regional motor parkJ at Los Coyotes, Santa Ana River. Ortega, or other suitable pa rk areas on an emergency basis if need be." Top Marine Says nations set 10 p.m. fEDT ) Saturday as the deadline for the lives of the pawns in an international intrigue Ii t er a 11 y developing by 'he hour. They say they will bl ow up the Swissatr, TWA and BOAC jetliners and everybody in them if their demands are not met , while worldwide appeals and UN Security Council pleas continued. New deveJopments tod ay included the announcement in Jerusalem tha,t police have arrested two Israelis who plotted to Goldet1 Girl K'arin Kase.her of Hayward is representing California in the a·nnual Miss America Pageant in Atlantic. City. N.J. There's more on the Pageant on Page 5. Sixty-Two Arrested TACOMA, Wash. (UPI) -Police maintained an around -the-clock vigil at a deserted Indian encampment on the banks of the Puyallup River today following a skirmish over fishing rights which involved gunfire. S i x t y • t w o persons. including five juveniles, were arrested Wedaesday when police charged the armed encampment and subdued its defenders with tear gas. ·-• hijack a jetliner from El Loci lnterna· tional Airport. Sever.al Israelis were solicited by the would-be air pirates -who had a machinegun and a quantity o l propaganda leaflets deslined to be dumped over Europe -but refused to assist them. A tip led police to raid their homes Tuesday and they have been held in custody since, awaiting federal charge!li. The International Red C r o s 1 • Plan Delayed meanwhile said the plight of the travelers held at the remote field built by the British in 1947 is deteriorating. Emergency su pplies of sanitation equip"ment, food, med.icine: and cooking equipment were sent in, but guerrillas leaders said they are t a k I n g humanitarian care of the nearly 300 OOstages. Conditions nearing civil war in Jordan, (See HIJACK, Pase I) •' Top of the Pier Project • On Bottom o:f City's List The Top or the Pier plan was st the boltom of the list by the time Huntington Beach City Gouncihnen worked through their agenda Tuesday night -so it never came up. After eight hours of listening, lalklng and voting on a mutlitude of Jtems. council men decided to postpone action .on· the plan until next Monda): night. Their Move.probably delayed the start or condemnation proceclutes for a five block area downtown tor a Jarge parking lot. City Attorney Don Bonfa is asking the council for a decision on t h e condemnation in light o! downtown property owners' failure to present a development package to the co~ncil. City councilmen will be faced Monday with a choice between starting to condemn downtown property or extending the time needed for property owners to develop their own plan. SA Firm Tells Payroll Boost A ray of sunshine cul through lhe gloomy Orange County aero 1 pa ce electronics unemployment picture today with the announce ment that 1,200 new jobs and a $5 million pa yroll will be added to the manufacturing com munity here within the next six months. · 111' ..Cannon Electric in Santa Ana. plans to increase its payroll from aoo to 2.000 employes through the closing of a 1,500-employe plant in East Los Angele!. Carl Peacock, administrative vice pre1ident said the East Los Angeles npel"atlon has been unprofita ble. "We lost 11 million in that area last year," he said. Attorney Arthur D. Guy of Newport Beach, representing downtown property owners, admitted his group was unable to meet the city council's request, but Jn a letter to Bonfa sharply crlticiz.ed the city for "ulting the impossible." "It surely must ha ve been with tongue.- in-cheek that you would presume: to expect the execution of the proposed stipulations in time for your ne1t council meeting. much Jess by Sept. I," Guy wrote. "Some of the people you have listed for signatures are deceased and othera reside outside the Slate of California." He continued, "You are therefore acl\.'ised that we have not embarked on an exericse in futility by way of attempting to obtain the execution of documents: as: you have proposed." The city council on Aug. 5 set fourth four stipulations for downtown property owners lo meet or fece c I t y condemnation action. They were: -A limited partnership agreement signed by all five or six membera of the association committee. -A signed stipluation to be prepared by the city attorney w a i v i n g abandonment cost!. -Written evidence thal title to the properties within the project area over which the Association (of downtown businessmen) has control, Including the comm ittee members' own property, Ls conveyed ta said partnership. -A list of properties by name of owner, brief lega l descripticn and expiration date of option, nver wtllcb control has been obtained to date by the members of th e association by meant of Irrevocable options. Coan Weatller Draft End 'Disastrous'· It'll be 20 degrees OOtter In Ana· heim than it will be in Newport Beach Friday, 90 to 70 to be exact. Look for night and morning low clouds along the coast. By L. PETER KREIG Of tllt OtllY ,li.t lltff An apologetic country with a volunteer ftrmed force could not long survive the Commun ist th reat today, the naUon·!I number one Marine told a Newport Beach audience Wednesday night. Gen. Leonard F. Chapman Jr .• commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps, warned that apologists are deteriorating the strength of lhc United States ind are seeklng to end a draft that would result in scrjous erosion of our military capability. Speaking lo iiome 130 members of th~ \Vorld Affairs Coonclt of Orange County at the A_lrportcr IM, Gen. Chapman !aid I U.S. strength depend s on a ma intained "will of the American people." He llingled out the gravest danger to that will. and to the America n defense establishment. as those who would apologize for America's strengUl. He said those who condemn present U.S. war policies "ai:e really lella of 11· threat ' to national" security than the. apologis(5:" . He · said by virtue of lls geography· America hits always been safe. I-le said· fhe tratiitianal ·U.S. dOminance 1n sea power has kept it safe. , But he said today geoerapby wilt not help . And he •aid Russ.la has glintd In sea PQwer alrn0$l to parity. He caltdd tllls country's sea power today ll! weakest military arm. "As small as our world has grown," he suggested, "lhe seas are still basic to our security -and sustenance. We must still depend on them. "But for aur oceans to serve u"s, we must serVe our oceans. strength at sea ls, itill pan of the framework on which American defen.se .is stnu;tli(ed. He said the U.S .. has beconie complacent about that fact. ' · Russia recognizes the ~alue of tht ~as.' be siid, and '"after cen turies of' !rustraltng effcin.s, she Is now well (Ste MARINE, Pose I) ., INSWE TODAY The "forgotten men" of the Vietnam war -the American POWs -hold dim 1,opes for freedom. Some have been in cwtody more lhan iix 11ear1. Page 23. - . ' 2 DAllV PILOT " l're• P-.e I MARINE ... established oo the high se1s. "To date," ht reported, ''the new naval •tnocti ol ~ !io•ltl un1 .. his 001 been ~ dlr'eclly In the conltxt of world poDUcs. Bu.t Its p sence ls felt." He also uid the struggle today is between lOtllltarian communism and open democracy. But, he Indicated, "The slruia:le ls engaeed stfictly by one-sided rules. "The rules are simple. The Communist countries are off limits, strictly out o! bounda:. The rest of the world is a free- lor·all." He said we race gra ve Internal prob- lems in this country -social economic and eovironmental problems. But, he warned. aiming at the liberal movement, "destruction of our defenses in this modern world will not hasten solutions lo our inner problems. •·tt is," Gen. Chapman said, "ridiculous to consider a hope for security within unless we are first secure from wilhout. '' He said to provide that security we must remain strong. But he said strength requires more than the "equ!page or war." He s1id, "above a!! its requires a moral fibre to bind the hardWare o( defense into meaningful and intelligent applicalions," He spoke of dedicated men in the service and again of a dedicated American will at home. He made himself crystal clear. He likened Russia in 1970 to Japan in 1941 -both watching as this country debated the same subject, the pos.1ible end of the draft. He recounted the months preceding Deeember, 1941. ''A few months before Pearl Harbor the extension of the 1940 one-year selective service act was debated Jong and hard in the halls of Congress, and all across the land. "The whole country listened closely, and watched carefully, as the eiteruion finally passed in the House o f Representatives by a margin of one vote, 203 lo 2112. "There were others also watching that lively American Interchange in 1941 - the Japanese Imperial staff." he said. "The arguments of that crucial summer encouraged Japanese war planners to trunk the American will to defend this country was weak. "It took almost four years of bitter war. and hundreds of thousands of Americah and Japanese casualties to · prove that theory wrong. "This same test is about to reoccur:• Gen. Chapman aaid. "The drift law will expire next June. In the next several months the e1t.ension of the draft will again be debated and voted on. "And again," he said, "others will be v.·atching." Gen. Chapman said there would be little problem in gelling volunteer! into the armed services -volunteers for one hitch to learn a skill or a trade. ''But what about men to ca.rrr a rifle, tramp through the mud, and close with the enemy in mortal combat?" he asked. "All of the dynamic application! of intellectual power. imaginative planning and positive management will be totally meaningless without a force capable of fighting.,, He said It's all up to the will or the American people. He got a standing ovation when his speech ended. Voter Signup Deadline Today Today is your final chance to register for voting in the Nov. 3 General Election, officials reminded in cities up and down the Orange Coast. Registration is being c o n d u c l e d throughout business hours at all city clerks' offices and that of the Orange County Registrar of Voters. Deputy registrars organized by th e Orange Coast League of Women Voters are also on hand at desb in the lobbies of most city halls and eJsewhere. DAILY PILOT OitAHCiS COAST ~UILbltlHG COM~AH't loltt rt N. Wee.J Prnldtnt •n<il ""°"'""" J tck l . c~rlty Vka ,,.,....,, ..,., w ,1,,..t1 Mt.,.,ff l~t••ot1 A. Mw•phi"t MIMl l"!I EoofW Al•n Dir~i11 w~r O·•"llt CDll•"Y Ed•IGr . ....lb1rt W. I•••• Auocl11t .Edltor H1111tl .. to• IHcll Offic• 17115 l 1t ch l oul1 .. trd M1ili"9 Add••o: P.O. 101 790, t26~1 Ot~r Offk n "''",.. ,,,.,.. m ~ ..... 1 ....... w. '4>alt Mt1•~ J» WU! 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"""" s:.oo 1M1tnt'1'1 tr melt ''·• INfllnlr t mUll•rr 41111Mtlln., 12.00 m.n1n1y, ' ·--I f" ' ' l \ ~· OAllY PILOT Stiff ~MIO ~ Colleges Open First School D.ay Busy, Crowaed I By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 ..... 0111~ ,1111 Slltf Ot.her than the usual confusion as new student., find their way around campus, the nrst day of cla~s at Golden West and Orange Coast Community Colleges were normal. At Golden West the most unusual first day happening was the "unusually loot lint! at the only snack bar on campus," a college spokesman said. otherwise the 8.000 day and evening students slipped lnto the new !Chool year routine uneventally. A ntw cafetttla is under construction at Golden West, but \lo'on 't be ready until next June .. Registration continues, tomorrow and Afonday at Golden West and through Sepl. 18 at Orange Coast. To date Orange Coast bas registered 8.250 day students and expects a total of 8,500. Evening student registrations are approaching 9,000, a spokesman said. Golden West has enrolled 3,~9-4 day Golden West plans an international dinner at 5:30 p.m. Friday in the student center to be prepared by Martin Yan. formerly of Hong Kong and now of Huntington Beach. The program will be followed by a Japanese film "Yojimbo" at 8 p.m. in the Forum. Japanese classical and kibukl dancer Rokuka Hanayagi will per form for diners. Adding to the confusion for new and returning students at Golden West is the more than $8 million of construction on the campus. Four new buildings are undl!r construction and addition s are being made to five others. Completions ·. are due beginning in October and · c.ontinuing throughout the school ye ar. Two new courses added to the Golden West curriculum this year are cosmetology training and studies for 40 deaf and hearing impaired students within the regular program. Interpreter!! and note takers accompany the hard of hearing to classes. ACTIVIST SMEDLEY LEADS BATTLE AGAINST CENTRAL AVENUE BUS ROUTE IN SEAL BEACH From Whtrt Ht Sits. 29-year.-old Graduate Student Figures His Neighborhood Can Do Without RTD students and expects 1,000 more by Monday. About 4,400 evening students have signed up, but that figure is expected to grow as registration continues next Monday to Thursday and Sept. 21 and 22. Orange CoaStS American s tu d i e 1 program will include a unit on Ameri can India n heritage. The Indian program was sought by students. Homeowners Fight Buses Orange Coast has added 22 new faculty members this year for 1 total or 250, and Go lden West 28 for a tot.I of 170. Parking seemed to be the biggest hassle for students at Orange Coast with the two lots off Fairview Road being most popular. Former .Teacher Phyllis Stevens Services Slated Seal Beach Residents Start Campaign Against RTD "Spaces are available at other locations if students are willing to hunt for them," a spokesman said, noting that a new lot is open on the west side of the campus behind the Technology building. By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 !ht Dtlly ,lltl 51111 Some angry Seal Beach residents along a nine·block strelch of Central Avenue are complaining about all the "extra cars" running around in front of the ir houses. And they've embarked on a campaign against Rapid Transit District buses which they eontf!ld shake the windows in their houses, put cracb in the walls and depooit diesel soot on their furniture. Bus dri vers who have recently been driving through the city's s I e e p y downtown area have been greeted wilh icy stars from homeowners and signs placed on 16 of the 74 houses on the route giving them the feeling that they are definitely not welcome. "A bunch of us just got fed up al the same time," explaioed Jon Smedley, 29. a graduate studeot, who has rallied the protesters behimd him . "This area used to be all marshland up 1o about 5th Street which was filled wi th sand and dirt." he said. "The buses come through here loo fast for the condition or the street and it shakes the houses 81'.ld causes the plaster to crack. 1·ve even heard cases of pictures coming off the wall." Smedley and his followers contend that the buses could be moved to an alternate route along Marina Drive and Electric Avenue where the roads are wider and hou ses fewer. But so far, the reaction from the bus company has been negative. he says. C. J. Holzer, associate transportation engineer for the RTD. has indicated that i;uch rerouting would simply provide more inconvenience to bus patron.!, that it could result in dangerous operatioa and that it would simply transfer the Captive U.S. Rabbi's Son Wanted Hijack Feeling From Wire Services DAWSON'S FIELD, Jordan-A Chicago boy was evidently left behind on a hijacked TWA jetliner here, when Palestinian guerrillas hustled 116 passengers to a luxury hot.el for safety. Yosef Thachlman, 10, is the son of an Orthodox Jewish rabbi. From Page 1 HIJACK ..• ho\lo·ever, hampered the deli very. The PLFP originally allowed 116 Arab men, plus women and children o( various nationalities to be taken to t h e Intercontinental Hotel in Amman. The remainder of the hostages waited in or under the shadow-casling wings of the three gleaming jeUiners today. v•hile 22 more were released, identified as Bahreinis and the English fiance of one. Triumphant' Arabs, meanwhile, rejoice at the wCcesslul air piracies -three jetliners captured with a fourth failure Sunday and \nother Wednesday -and said it unites divisions within lheir ranks at a crucial time. No hint was given of the mastermind behind the multiple skyjackings: but informed source! said it wa!!I most likely Dr. Waldie Haddad, a mild-mannered physician. The -47-year~ld doctor --Object of a hit- and·run rocket attack g e n e r a I l y atributed to Israeli agents a few weeks ago -was out of Beirut and unavailable for comment. The planners knew not only could Dawson's Field airstrip in Jordan take a modern jetliner. but that it could take several and at night, too. The TWA captain said later the runway was three times as long as he needed for his Boeing 7ff1 and hard as concrete. The airstrip was alraady manned with emergency flares and slit trenches had been dug round the parkJng area. The guerrillas even p r o v j d e d passengers with pink cards, exact copies of the international disembarkation documenl"i. to furnish person1tl details. and a rubber·st.amped "Emergency Visa.·• There v.·ere reports in political quarters In Beirut that the Pan American jumbo hijack was a mistake and the men responsible bad been instructed to fly & regular jetliner to Dawson's Field, too. The story was they missed their orlglnal connection and decid ed to Y.'ait for the next American jet They v.·ere horrified to find It was 1 747 and lrom then on all wu lmprovls&llon. • / ' ( He spent the summer in Israel and spoke before he left of his ambition to see the historic wailing wall of Jerusalem and maybe even experience a hijacking. He wrote a paper for school - ironically -describing the air piracy. "Well, he's experienced both." said Rabbi Thachtman Wednesday in Chicago. characterizing Yosef as the type of boy who will get no mercy from the fanatlc revolutionaries. "How could they know he is not Jewish? He is not the type to hide the fact that he is .•. that he believes in God . . . that he loves his prople, .. said the rabbi. "I don·t know definitely v.·hether he is on lhe ph1ne." "We are praying •• , we pray for all the passengers." Rabbi Thachtman, who is Director of Education at Hamashid Institute in Chicago and teaches at Union Theologica l Seminary in nearby Skokie, is pessimistic today . He doubts the U.S. State Department- ·which had not contacted the Thacthman family by Wednesda y -is concerned about the fate of the threatened passengers. "These are people. These are human beings. How can you dare treat prople in this manner? If our State Department i.5 unconcerned, why should the Arabs be concerned?" P.feanwhile, Yosef and others aboard the three planes await their fate , which is now set by the Popular Liberation Front for 7 p.m. (PDT) Saturday. Yosef v.·as tentatively scheduled lo begin seventh grade at Hillel Torah Elementary School this week. •·ue·s a gem."' said his father ... He's not just bright. lie has a true sense of responsibility and a sense for the needs or others." Nol far away, in Amman, Jordan, the b11scment of the Intercontinental Hotel - which used to be a nightclub -now loob like a bomb shelter. 11achine gun fire and the thud of mortars can be heard clearly by 116 Arab men, plus many women and children. They are out of the frying pan and Into lhe fire . "We thought we were safe once we got here:• said 11rs. Ce~ilc Simmen. of l.ilica, N.Y .• ''but now ir.o: starting all over again ." "l\.taybe It's safer there than it is hl!re," remarked 11rs. Lila Un.gar, of Scarsdale, N.Y., whose husband is still held captive aboard a Swiss.air liner. Oi1cc, a mortar shell smashed directly Into an anr.cx being constructed onto the hotel and R reporter trapped with the rest asked a scared little girl U she knew "'hat was happening. "Unfortu.oattzy, yes." she replled. :,· • problems lo another area. Smedley, however. insists the buses, which he claims run from morning to midnight at a frequency of 100 per day, must go. "We don 't want them lo move complelely out of Seal Beach because we rlon't wan to inconvenience other people. eW just wish they would adopt our route which we feel js a good alternative," he says. Although some houses bear slogans such as "Ban the Bus' Power to the People."' "Buses Unsafe at Any Speed·' and •·Plaster Cracking Buses Must Ci0.'' there are some residents who don't feel that way. •· r think we would really miss them," said Mrs. Lucille Friday. "The noise 'doesn't bother us too much and the soot -well. you get that anywhere. You ought lo hear the noise the souped up cars and trucks make though.'' Said Mrs. Gertrude Pettingill, "I like to have the buses. I have no way of getting anywhere olherwise. A lot of others are in the same boat. The noise doesn·t bother me enough lo have the m removed." Smedley admits that since the signs have gone up. the vehicles have reduced speed through the area. But that isn't enough. "The noise when they're accelerating is terrible. You can hardly hear yourself talk in here," he said. And wiping hii hand across a bookshelf, he raised his sooty fingers and declared, "and th at's a direct result of the bus too . ., lf the buses don't move to a different route soon, he says he will call a meeting to see what steps can be taken . One o( these he said might be a form of passive resistance by stationing people in crosswalks along the route and having them cross the road when the busses are coming through. "Anoth er thing we might do is to let a bus get in the middle of 11n intersection while we continue to walk around the crosswalks in a square." he said. Orange Coast's new environmental technology program has proved popular with students and is filled, according to college officials. Extracurricular activities at both colleges already are under way. 'Plague' Fleas Found FORT COLLINS, Colo. (UPI) -Fleas carrying the bubonic plague have been discovered in two abandoned prairie dog colonies in extreme eastern Colorado. U.S. Public Hl!alth Service officials said Wednesday. Dr. Martin Baum of the Colorado Health Departml!nt said the discovery was not 0 surprising" and said there was no p.ibllc health danger involved. Funeral services will be held Frida;;~ for Phyllis Laverne Steven. former teacher with the Westminster School .. District. ~ . Mrs. Stevens died Monday at the age of' 65. A resident of Huntington Beach for 10 years, Mrs. Stevens taught in the Westminster elementary schools for 18 years before her recent retirement. She was an active member or the Church or Jesus Christ of the Latter~ay . Saints in Huntington Beach and the'•: Californi a Teachers Assoication. She leaves her husband. Q\lo·en: her · mother Agnes M. Allan; her children. Owen Allan and Lynn Allan Stevens; twD brothers, Leland and George Allan: three sisters, Ethel Criddle, Imogene Han.son. and Melba Standing; and four • grandchildren. Services will be held at 2 p.m. at the LOS Church in Huntington Bead!. Beach Chamber Offers , Businessman Seminars A monthly school for businessmen will be opened this month by the Huntington Beach Chamber or Commerce. The school consists of once·a-month seminars from now through May 25 covering various aspects of "Why a Business Fails.'' There is no cosl to Chamber member~ and the price for the entire series of seminars is $1 for non·membe rs. Prevention of burglaries, shoplifting, robberies, bad checks and fires \lo'ili be discussed by Sgt. James ,.1ahan of the Huntington Beach Police Department at the first seminar Sept. 29. Each seminar session will meet from 7 :31).9 p.m. in the conference room of the chamber, 18532 Beach Boulevard, room .. 224. Chamber Manager Ralph Kiser said much of the information would be based on statistics developed by the Nationa l Chamber of Commerce and the Bank ot America which li sted the following reasons for business failures . -Inexperience and incompetence. -Inadequate sales. -Competitive weak'i1ess. -Accounts receivable. -Heavy operating expenses. -ln vestory difficulties . Separate seminars will be held on each subject. For further information call the chamber at 962·6661. ' -~ r luxurious spring down sofas . \ Th i1 h•ed1orne Sof• we1 ·d.si9~ to giY• you th1 Dltim•te i,, 11ating comfort with dacron and down Eac~ pillows, d••P: 1ptin9 dowft rMt cu1Ji.ion1 9ft"ll'eloped in down and fNtMn end in two foem-filled arm pil- k>wl. Choose from • wide 1el.c.tioo ol i.na f.bric1. 0 NOW 8' length reg. $599 399. y OU facoritt interior MrigMt IOin be Mm to <Uri.ft VoU •.•• H.J.G~RRETT fURNl"fURE PROFESS IONAl INTERIOR DESIGNERS -TllT OUI H'YOLVIN~ CH.t.llH.- 0,-Moo. n.on. ' FTI. 1-. • 221 S HARBOR It VD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 6'46.027r ·. ' ' ,, 1117 • ri Beaeh 'l'otlay's Final N.Y. Stoelu voe 63, NO. 217, 3 SECTIONS.~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNIK THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, ·1970 TEN CENTS 'Volunteer Army' Disastrous' Says Top Marine By t. PETER KREIG Of .. Dlll'I' f'lllt ..... An apologelic country with a volunteer armed foree could not long survive the Communist threat today, the naUop'1 number one Marine told a Newport Beach audience Wednesday night. Gen. Leonard F. Chapman Jr., commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps, warned that apologist.s are deteriOraUng the strength ql the United Stites and are aeeJdng. to end a draft that would result OC Airport Head Gives Noise Plan A recommendation that a l r 1 i n t passengers be made to pay the cost of abating jet noise today wu endorsed by Robert Bresnahan, dirtctor of the Orange . County Airport. A plan to charge every airline passenger St per flight was proposed Wedensday by Clifton A. Moore, gentral manager of the Los Angeles Division of <\irports. Moore cited the $1 billion cost of a NASA retrofit (noise abatement through eogine modification) program he is backing. ·He said at a National League of Cities meeting that, if !ormaUy launcMd in 1972, it could solve the noise problem by 1975. Bresnahan, although dubiouJ that 1maller jet tnginel u lhty are now built lidd .. ...ro.t tm!tber, ·uid thll the cbst of any program •ould have to he borne by the users. · 1 H1 noted the continuing debate over who should pa,y, and pointed ~t that the airlines are losing money and simply can't afford it. Bresahan said 1 sliding scale of charges to pusengen should b e developed; however, rather than 1 fiat •1 levy. . "Pel'30ns Dying 2,000 miles are in effect responsible for more noise than persons flylne fOO mil ea," he said. He al.so said he thou&ht the •1 billion price tag put on any noi.!e abatement program may be too. low. He pointed out that Jn addition to the retrofit program. or any similar program developed by studies now being carried out jointly by NASA, McDonnell Doug!as and the Boeing Company, expensive monitoring systems are alM going to be mandatory at moat airports. Bresnahan sa id the government team that put men on the moon should have been held together to help solve this and other problems. . Moore in his address. stressed the growing 'problem of noise pollution. "First let's understand the problem." he said. "Aircraft operations will increase from S5.9 million in 1969 to 8t.6 million in 1975. "This means more exposure to noise at all the nation's airports .•. it isn't going away ." He said the number of jet aircraft in the service of U.S. carriers will Increase from 1,781 to 1969 to 2,671 In 1975 ind 3,502 in )9(K). "And while many of these will be new wid~bodied jels, certificated by the FAA for noise standards, tht.re will be. a substantial number of tbe current Jtl family in service," he said. National certlficatlon sUlndards set by the FAA for all new aircraft prescribe an · aeei!ptable noise level at 108 effective perceived noise decibles. Moore maintained that a retrofit program could produce substantial noise improvemenUi tioth in takeoff and approach. He said with 1 20 percent r@duction. noise in takeoffs would be cllt 50 percent and more than 50 percent reduction could be designed for landlnis. Worker Crushed By Two Vehicles A Santa Ana conat.ructlon worker wu reported In fair condlt!otl today 1t co.ta Mesa Memorl1I Hospital after being crushed betwee.n two vehk:lts Wednesday at a Newport Beach construction $Ile. Police uid Edw1rd Amezey1, II, of 204.2 w. 12th St., w11s riding on the bumper of a pickup truek It the Park Newport Apartment , project jll!l off Jamboree Road. The truck, dr!vtn by Wiiiiam Courtney, :n, Anaheim eollided with tM: rtar of a car driven by Walter 9'tinner, 41. WestmiMte.r. The drlver1 were not Injured. In 1erious erosion of our military capabillty. . Speaking to some 130 members of the WorlctAifairs CounclJ or Orange c.otinty at the Alrporter Inn, Gen. Chapman 1ald u.s: strength depends on a maintained. "will of the American people. ti He singled out tbe 1ravest danger to that will, and to the American defense eat:abllshment, as those who would apologize for America's strength. He said lbose who condemn present UPIT.....,. 'Le•rn to Walk' Transportation Secretary John Volpe, testifying before a U.S. Senate subcommittee on the Federal Highway Act, said Wednesday. the; nation faces •·a tot.aJ transportation crisis," adding ••the American people have forgotten that ·the Dear Lord gave us a pair of legs." Newport Beach Registration Predictions Up Voter registration in Newport Beach is expected to climb to more than 38,000 by 5 p.m. today. Persons who have not registered by that hour wUI not be able to vote in the November General Election . The estimate or eligible voters was made by City Clerk Laura Lagios who said the figure could be as high aa 28,!iOO, a jump of more than 2.000 over the 26,436 total eligible for the June primary. The Orange County registrar's office said the latest compiled figure was filed Sept. 3. and totalled '¥1,345. County official• said of that total , 1!1,Kf were registered with the Republican party and 6,252 with the Democr1tic party. Tht Democrats l'lhowed the largel'lt gain, percentagewise, climbing from S,976 in April. The April total Of Repub- lican!! wu 11,435. Of the September total, 1ceording lo county oCfi~ials, 919 pel'10ns were Un· affiliated with any party. There were 100 persons regis~red with the American Independent Party, 17 with lhe Peace and Freedom Party and three with mis- cellaneous unnamed political parties. Mrs. Lagios pointed out that the esti- maled current total, those eligible to vote in November which will be formally compiled by I.he county In appro1im1tely two weeks, ~epresent.s more than 50 per· cent o fthe total Newport Beach popula- Uon of 411805. • Selaool Opens U.S. war policies "are really les.s of 1 threat to DlUonal security than the apolo£i!ts." He~ said by virtue of its pography America bu always been safe. He aald t!1e traillllonol U.S. dominonce ... t<a power has kept It safe. - But he .. Id today ieographj. will not http. And he said Russia has gatned ln sea power almost to parity. He called this country's sea power today its weakest military arm. "As small 11 tMJr world bas grown," be sugested, "the aeu are still basic to our HCUrity -and auatenance. We must still dtpe."ld on them. usut for our oceans to serve us, we must xrve our oceans. Strength at .sea is still Part of the fr@.mework on which Amerlc:u defense Is structured. He said the U.S. has become complacent about that fact.· • RlllSia recognizes the v1lue Of the seas, be Aid, and "after centuries of frustrating efforts, sie ls now well established on the high aeas. "To date," he reported, "the new naval strength of the Soviet Union hH not been employed directly in the contest of world poliUcs. But Its presence la felt." He also 11id t.bt strugle today ls between totalitarian communism and open democracy, ' But, he indicated, "The struggle Is engaged slricUy by one-sided rules. "The rulea are !!lmple. The Communist countries are off limits, atrk:Uy out of bounds. The rtst of the world is 1 free- for·all." He said wt face grave Internal prob- lems in thi!I country -social economic and environmental problems. But, he warned, aiming at the liberal mo~ement, "destruction or our defenses in this modern world will not h1!1ten solutions lo our inner problem!!. "It is,." Gen. Chapman hid, "ridicWoUJ (See MARINE, Pip I) U.S. to Guard Flights _Jordan Hostages Get 27-hour Mercy Reprieve WASHINGTON (UPIJ-Tlu UnHed States will announce shortlu that armed troops and &ecuritv guards will ride shotgun on U.S. ove.rsea.s commt'rcial t1irLine flights to prottct them from hijackers, it was learned today. ' Airline industry sources said the. "'hite House likely would make the announcement Fri.day. although it could be delayed until hostages aboard thrt.e airliners commandeer- 'Sweetheart' Suit Needs SQme Editiug A Newport Beach · rilovie1oet ,,_.. shocked -reaction to the ~pda scrttnln& Of ''The Private Ga~ of Stanley Sweetheart" led to tl\e filibl of a S2.5 million lawsuit WI!! told today throueh his attorney that his acUon is 1oing to need a lot of editing. Superior Court Judp Harmon G. Sco- ville gave attorney Donald Smallwood 20 da"ys to amend the compla int fiJed by the Sheriff's Deputy David Skaugstadt after agreeing with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer at- torney Terry Christensen that there were "many areas of uncertainty" in the com- plaint. Skaug!ltadt alleged in _his action that the Edwards Cinema in Newport Beach screened "Sta nley Sweetheart" with the regularly scheduled "Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice" last April 25 without noti- fying any patron of iUi intentions. The offended officer further charged that the spicy movie was not rated and should not have been shown to any audi· ence without such action being taken by its distributors. He rondemned the sneak preview as an X-rated film which depicted "sexual acu between men and women, group 11e1 ... a sex sce ne between two nude adults with a small child present and various acts of lewd and lascivious conduct." Skaugstadt claimed that the l'lcreen.ing amounted to fraud by the defendant! and that the viewing of the erotic "Stanley Sweetheart" caused him "extreme em~ tional distress. ti Christensen pointed out today to Judge Scoville that "no one is locked in and no one is chained to his chair. "If you don't like it !)'OU leave,'.' Chris- tensen said. Anet the Beverly Hill!! attor- ney dismissed Skaugstadt's claim that he wa!I really representing the interest of many other patrons is "absolutely a~ surd." Christensen sucessfully argued that MGM coold not possibly predict the re- action of any moviegoer attending a !I neat preview. He asked for dismissal by Judge Scoville of 'What he described as "an extremely confused complaint.'' Bus Crash in Chile SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -Four persons were killed and 37 injured Wednesday when a bus ran off a highway and Into Lake Llanqulhue, about 600 milts aoulb of Santiago. e.d to Jordan by Arab guerrillas art. rtlea.!ed. TM Defe.n.se Departmt.nt confirm- ed today that we of military guards on tntern.ational flight:; was undtr serious consideration. From Wire Servtcn AMMAN, Jordan -A 72-hour mercy reprieve ·on the live!! of nearly 300 persons held aboard three hijacked UPJTt~ 6oldeN Girl Karin Kascher of Hayward is representing California in the annual Miss America Pageant in Atlantic City, N.J . There's more on the Pageant on Page 5. SA Firm Tells Payroll Boost A ray of sunshine cut through the gloomy Orange County a e r o s p a c e electronics unemployment picture today with the announcement that 1,200 new jobs and a $5 million payroll will be added to the manufacturing community here within the next six months. ITT .Cannon Electric in Santa Ana plans to increase its payroll from 800 to 2,000 employes through the closing of a J,500-employe plant in Ea!l t Los Angeles. Carl Peacock. actministrative vice president said the East Los Angeles operation has been unprofitable. "We lost $1 million ln that area last year," he said. jetliners at Dawson's Field, 45 miles from here, was announced todly. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PLFP) declared the gesture was • in re1ponse to pleas by the International Red Cross. Terrorists bargaining for release of lmpMsoned Arab guerrillas in othe r nations set JO p.m. (EDT) Saturday as the deadline for the lives or the pawns In an International intrigue 11 t e r a 11 y developing by !he hour. They say they will blow up the Swillalr, TWA and BOAC jetliners and everybodY. in them ·if thelr demands are not met. while worldwide appeals and UN Security, Council pleas continued. New deve!Opmenta today included tM announcement in Jerusalem that police have arrested two laraelil!I who plotted to hijack a jetliner from El Loci Jnterna· tional Airport. Several Israelis were solicited br the (See BJJACK, Pa1e I ) * * * * * * Captive U.S. Rabbi's Son , Wanted Hijack Feeling Frtm. Wirt SenSctl DAWSON"S"F!ELD/J_ l!lll_ boy was evidenUy l~ft / behind ·on a hijacked TWA jetliner here, when Palestinian guerrillas huatled 116 pasaeniers to a luxury hotel IQr safety. Yosef Thachtman, JO, is the son of an Orthodox Jewish rabbi. He spent the summer in Israel and spoke before he left of his ambition to see the historic wailing wall of Jerusalem and maybe even experience a hijacking. He wrote a paper for school - Ironically -describing the air piracy. "Well, he'!! e.xperlenced both ," said Rabbi Thachtman Wednesday In Chicago, characterizing Yosef as the type of boy who will get no mercy from the fana tic revolutionaries. "How could they know he is not Jewish? He is not the type to hide the fact that he is ... that he believes in God •.. that he loves his people," said the rabbi. "I don't know definitely whether he is on the. plane." "We are praying ... we pray for all the passengers." Rabbi Thachtman , who is Dlrector of Education at Hamashid Institute in Chicago and tea ches at Union Theological Seminary in nearby Skokie, Is pessimistic today. He doubts the U.S. Stale Department - whic h had not contacted the Tha cthrnan family by Wednesday -Is concerned about the fate of the threatened passengers . "These are people. These are-human beings. How caTJ you dare treat people in this manner? If our State Department is unconcerned, why should the Arabs be concerned?" Meanwhile , Yosef and others aboard Three Coast Men Facing Court On Robber y Rap Three men are scheduled to face llrraignmenf today in the Harbor Judicial Dil'ltrict Municipal Court on charges o( armed robbery. John Johnston Jr .. rr . of 2312 Newport Boulevard and Roy James Hannah, 23, of 298 JoaM St., Costa Mesa, were arrested at their homes by Newport Beach detectives Tuesday night. the three plane1 1walt their fate, which 11 now aet by the Popular Liberation Front for 7 p.m. (PDT> SaturdaJ. Yosef was tentatively scheduled to begin seventh grade at Hillel Torah Elementary School this week. "He's a gem," said his father. ''He'1 not just bright. He has a true aense of responsibili~y and a sense for the needs of others." Not far away, In Amman, Jordan, the basement of the Intercontinental Ho tel - which used to be a nightclub -now lootl like a bomb shelter. Machine gun fire and the thud of mortars can be heard clearly by 115 Arab men, plus many women and children. They are out or the frying pan and Into the fire. "We thought we were safe once we 1ot he.re." said Mrs. Cecile Simmen, of Utica, N.Y .• "but now it'J starting all over 'again." "Maybe it's safer. there than It Is here,'' remarked Mrs. Lila Ungar, of Scarsdale, N.Y., whose husband is •till held captive aboard 3 Swissalr liner. ·Once, a morta r shell amashed directly into an annex being con!ltructei:f onto the hotel and a reporter trapped with the rest asked a scared little girl U she knew what was happening. ''Unfortunately, yes." she replied. Newport Firm Gives Lowes t Repair Bid Orange County harbor commluioners Tuesday recommended to Supervisors the bid of a Newport Beach firm be accepted for bulkhead repair work which ls to be d1111e at Harbor District beadquarter1 In Newport Beach. The bid of •1e,187 by Penhall Marine, Inc. was the lowest of four bids for the work wh ich will shore up weeke~d portions of the bay wall. Weather Jt'll be 20 degrees hotter in Ana· heim than it will be in Newport Beach Friday, tlO to 70 to be exact. Look tor nig ht and mornJne k>w clouds along the coast. Colleges Crowded, Busy '11le third suspect, Michael D. Collins, 24, of 510 Bolsa Ave. surrendered himself Wednesday at the Newport polict 1tatlon. The three are su_,pect.s in the altempfed armed robbery of Wolter Douglas, 20, of 1.12 Via Lido Nord. INSIDE TODA. 'l' Th1 "forgotten men" of th r Vietnam war -th.1 American POW1 -hold dim hope1 for /raedom. Somt have been in custody more than 11.i "t.ar1 . Pagt 23. By Gl'JORGE LEIDAL .. ..... ei"' ""' ..... Other than the usual confusion 11 new 1tudenls find their way around campus. the rtrst day of cl1ues al Golden Weit and Orange Coast Community Colleges were normal. Al Golden West the most unusual first day happenlna wu tht ·:uousu11ly long line 1t the only 11nack ~r on campus," 1 eollege apokesman aaid. OtberwUe the 8,000 day Ind evtninl ,\ atudenta •lipped Into the new Khool year roullne. uneventally. A new cafeteria ls under construction •• Golden West, 1>1• won't be ready until nex\ June. Registration continues, tomorrow aftd Monday at Golden West and through Sept. II at Orange Coast. To date Orange Coast bas registered 1,250 day students and, expects a total of l.!iOO. Evening !ltudent registrations art approaching t,000, a 1pokesnan aald. Golden West bas tnrolled 31&$4 de.t, students and expects I ,OOfl more by Monday. About 4,400 evening -students have signed up ... but that figure Is expected tn grow" r"eglstration eonUnues next Monday to 'lbursday 1od Sept. 21 and 22. orange Coast has added 22 new r,culty members thl! year for a total· of 250, and Golden Wert 28 for a total of 170. Paf,lng teemed ' to bt the b.iu:est has&le fo~ students •\..Orange Coast 'filh <S<t cou.EOl!:S, PIP tJ. . • Detective Sam Amburgey a.aid· Hannah and, Collins reportedly went to Dough1s' hou,,e late Monday, night to collect StOO t&e victim allegedly owed the'm. Johmton rtportt.dly drove the palr to CM homt. bu t stayed in lhe car. Ambursey said a shot Wi!I fired qver the vicllm"11 he11d. The bu1lel went out a windPw and lodged in 1 neighbor's house. Ambllr¥•Y .. 1d lliey •r~i:ed the ll'll~peci.3 througb their c11r fbkh wu •Potbod·drlvln1 away from !he ~crie. I •t1•lflt n Ctl~lt • 1J ('"°'~Int Ill' 1 C1•Hffltlll iMt C•mlu n c ..... ..,.. u Deflfl NtlM:" H lllltor .. I ... ,. 6 •11t1rttllll'lltlll U <H l'lll•nc:• •·n "''"'"'" 11 Alllll Llltldtn U Mt11 111 l.,.,lctl U • ' 2 D.\11.V PILOT N fh ursd•Y, Stpttm.btf 10, 1970 Pr!• P .. e I HUACK ... """1d-bt air plrala . -wl>o had I IDlcblnepn ' and I RIUlltitY o I Pl'OPll•nda JeaOets destined to be "••WI -Europe -but ref1MOd "' I ..... ~. -. A Up 'led pollce lo raid their homes TUesday and they have been held in CUltody since, awaiting federal charges. 1be International Red c r 0 I I • meanwhllt aaid the plight of the travelers held at the remote [leld built by the British in l!M7 is deteriorating. E~y supplies of sanitation equlpmoot, food, medicln< and cooking equippnt were sent in, but guerrillas leade'fs said they are t a k i n g humanitarian care of lhe nearly 300 hostages. Condlllorrs nearing civil war in Jordan. however; hampered the delivery. 'Ibe PLFP originally allowed 116 Arab men , plus women and children of various naUonalities to be taken to the Intercontinental Hotel in Amman. The remainder of the hostq;es waited In or under the shadow<asting win&s of the three gleaming jetliners today, while 22 more were released. Identified as Bahreinis and thl: English fiance of one. Triumphanf Arabs, meanwhile, rejoice at the successful air piracies -three jetliners captured with a fourth failure Sunday and anot.ber Wedn~ay -and said it wtites divisions within their ranks at a crucial time. No hint was given of the mastennind behind \he .muJtiple skyjackings. but informed sources said it was most likely Dr. Waldie Haddad, a mild-mannered physician. The 47·year-o1d doctor -object of a hit.. and·run rocket attack g e n e r a 11 y atributed to lsradi agents a few weeks ago -was out of Beirut and unavailable for comment. The plannm knew not only could Dawson's Field airstrip ln Jordan take a modern jetliner, but that It could take several and at night. too. The .TWA captain aa.Jd later the nmway was three times u long as he needed for his Boelng 'lf11 and bard u coocrete. The airstrip was alraady manned with emergency flares and slit trencbu: bad been dug round the parking area. The guerrillas even p r o v i d e d passengers with pink cards, exact copies of "lhe international disembarkation documents, to furnish personal details, and a rubber·stamped "Emergency: Visa." ' There were reports in political quarters 1n Beirut that the Pan American jumbo hijack was a mistake and the men responsible ~d been jnstrueted to Oy a regular jetliner to OaW90n's Field, too. The s&illrJ was they ,m111ec1 thf:ir o~ connei:!IOh and decided "' w'ai1 for the next American jet. They were horrified to find it was a 747 and from then on all was improvisation. * * * Hijack 'Suspect' Wears Metal Bra, Girdle From Wire Servlttt The gravity or clrcunislances surroundi~g>the threatened aiaughter of nearly 300 tiostages heJd aboard hijacked jetliners in Jordan notwlthltanding, a Dote of humor crept in today. Typical British restraint was contained In an . announcement at Toronto Airport that passengers and luggage headed for BOAC planes and European destinations would be searched. .. Ladies and gentlemen, as you may know, there's a spot of trouble ln the Mideast. •. " said the steward delivering the news. Across the Atlantic, meanwhile, a rather overweight ·American woman tourist was detained at Zaventem National AJrHeld in Brussels, Belgium. as a potential skyjicker. The wonlan passed a magnetic metal detector as she went through a ti&hU y controlled gal~ to board .her flight and the warning light blinked, indicating ahe was carrying metallic rpateriaL DAILY PILOT Oll:ANGE COAST l"U•LISMIMG COlll~ANY llo••tl N, W•H PruldWll ..... '°'*'...,.,_ J.,l R.. c,,,,. Tllo11111 1e,,.,;1 Th•ll'I•• A. M11q11.i~• NI...., ..... Efil..- N..,.rt .._. Ofrlu 2211 Wolf 111110111 10~1,.,,111 M1ll!1111 Addroue P.O. lo~ 117$, tJl') °'"" Olfl-Cotll M.tMI llt W•I itr llr-' ........,.. aMdl; m ,._, "- ~·~ lh9nl1 INS &ttell ....,.__ -I•• °"""'*'" &I N91"llil •1 c.amlN .. DAll..'I" "11..0T, willil wl>idl k ~ .,.. "''""'"'"'· k _...,... ••llr nc.,i ~ ... ., Ill ..... k Ulll-for L.IW>I I.cl\, !'It-' .. 1(11, Galt MIN, l'Wfllllle:ll'I •1:c<1 91"4 _,_l11r! \l!llCJ, 1"'"9 wl!ll l- f'91Mll tdlf:-. Orlllfe Ctn! "'*11111""' C-nr lll"lnllnf !lltn!' ti'? •I nil Wnl •"""' •: .... ,. N,....,.. ... 1<11, 1M »t W-1 •• , ,,, .. 1, '°'" Mu.I. f...,.... C714f 642 ... 321 Cl llW A..,,..,_, 642·1611 Coprf-19ftt, h,.. urttott CtUI hllfhll ... ~. Not ' -....... '"""''" .... ,...,,.,,.. -tt• .. • ....... ,"'-" """"' "''' ....... ~ "'""""' ..-11o1 ,,.,.. 11111tlofl ,,, Cllf't"Wrl """'""· ._.... dltil ........ ~ .. ,.._, ··""' ' W CMll ,._., tell""'lt. kbM:r,,,.... ~ • • ctm.t UAll """""''• "' "''11 u .• -1111y1 O'!!lltl•l"I ... 1 ... -. ....... fllOl'llll!J. ,, Cruising Dow'n the Channel Party boat Pavilion· Queen churns sedately dov,rn entrance to Newport Harbor during recent outing. The tour boat, the only vessel for hire in Newport Harbor that ls outfitted for parties, has drawn verb· al broadsides from some bayfront property owners who claim its cocktail sipping passengers are noisy and invade their privacy. Other Newport residents who have traveled on the Queen say its great. Ci ty council will decide fate of craft at license hearing later this year. From Page I COLLEGE.S •.• the two lots off Falrview Road belng most popular. "Spaces are avallable at other locations lf stUdents are willing to hunt for lhem ," a spokesman said, noting that a new lot is open on the west side of the campus behind the Technology building. Orange Coast's new eovironmental technology program has proved popular with students and is filled, according to college officials. Extracurricular .activilies at both colle1es already are under way. Golden West plans an international dinner 'al 5:» p.m. Friday in tbe rtudent ~nter to be prepared by Martin Yan. formerly of Hong K«ig arm now of Huntington Beach. The progra'rn will be followed by a Japanese film "Yojirnbo" at a p.m. ln the Forum. Japanese ··clas.sical and kibukl dancer Botuia H1111y~ will per form for diners. Adding lo the confusion for new and returning students •t Golden west Is the more than $8 million of construcllon on the campus. Four new buildings are under construction and additions are being made to five others. Completions are due beginning in October and continuing throughout the school year. Two new courses .added to the Golden West curriCulum this year a r e cosmetology' training and studies for 40 deaf and "hearing impaired students within the rtgular program. Interpreters and note takers accompany the hard of hearing to classes. Orange CoastS American stud i e 1 program will include a unit on American Indian heritage. The Indian program was sought by students. Marines ~egotiating Sale Of Part of Pendleton .Base . The U.S. Marines do not need all the beaches of Camp Pendleton any more and are negotiating for &ale of part of it tG the State of California. But General Leonard F. Chapman J r., commandant of the Marine Corps, From Page I MARINE •••. to consider a hope for security within unless we are first secure from without." .-He said to provide that security we must remain strong. But he said strength requires more than the "equipage of war." He said, "above all its requires a moral fibre to bind the hardware of defense into meaningful and inte!Ugent applications," He spoke or dedicated men in the service and again of a dedicated American will at home. He made himself crystal clear. He likened Russia in 1970 to Japan in l!Kl -both watching as thls country debated the same subject, the possible end of the draft. He recounted the months preceding December, l!Kl. "A few months before Pearl Harbor the exlenslon or the 1940 one-year selective service act was debated long and hard in the halls of Congress, and all across the land. Wednesday declined to say how close those talks are to actuaJ consummation of a deal. The top man of the 1'larine Corps discusAed Camp Pendleton and a variety of other topics with newsmen following his talk before the World Affairs Council of Orange Co unty at the Airpartcr Inn. He talked about drugs and the military. He sa id in some parts of the country, 50 percent of the eligible young men are declared unacceptable for the servic~ because they have a history or taking drugs. ' He said narcotics are a problem at some U.S. military i.nstallaUbns. He said they are not a Problem on·the front lineit in Vietnam. He also said the coverage of the Vietnam war has become by the nation's mass media, especially lhe major television networks, "has become impressively objective'' in the last yeac. He declined comment when asked if he thGugh Vice ?resident Spiro T. Agne~'s criticisms of the networks had anythmg to do with the abrupt change. On Camp Pendleton. he said it will always be needed as a training fa cility as long as there is a Marine Corps. He said the Corps does not need a1 much now, because of changes in military equipment and strategy. "We can now take advantage of rough terrain when attacking fore ign territory," he said. 'I'he explained that current tactics, with the use of helicopters, would allow an attacking force to land behind the beaches and attack back at them. He said the negotiations for the sale of the South Coast traini ng facility ha ve been going on for so me time. Census Sais Beach Growth F astesf -in -u .S. ' " ' Far and away, the growth of Huntington Beach outdi!lan~ any other major American city during the past decade. U.S. Cezis~ Bureau figures released to .:ay mzde It offlclal. Huntington's popul•tlon has grown tenfold since IMO; from a mere 11 ,492 ten years ago to an astonding 115,557 in 1970. lt is the 122nd largest city in the United States. Although not quite so spectacuJarly, any number of Orange County cities showed substantial population gains during the decade. Anaheim, the .largest city in the_ county, jumped from 104,184 to 164,913, making it ' the Blst largest city in the country. It bad been the 12.1rd largest in 11160. • Santa Ana grew in Size from 100,350 to IM ,640. while Garden Grove jumped from 84,238 to 121,504.. They are ranked lt7th and 116th, respectively. lluntington Beach's ama?.ing clumb was actually surpassed, percentagewise, by its lltUe liater city to the north . FoW1tain Valley, according to the official census figures, grew from only 2,068 in 1960 to 31,618 in 1970. Costa Mesa's official population has been placed at 72,412, an increase of Hit, Run Suspect Arraignmenr Set for Today A Laguna Hills resident. will face arraignment today on cbar&es of f_elony hit.. and nm after he allegedly struck a motorcycle rider Wednesday night in Newport Beach. Police sai~ the suspect, Daniel Vovee, 70, of 334 A Sevilla, was driving his pickup truck on Jamboree Road norih of Ford Road when be hit the rear of a motorcycle riden by Gale Leroy Bergey, 51. of 712 Bison Ave., Newport Beach. Bergey suffe red cuts and brulies in the crash. He was treated and released from Hoag Memorial Hospital. Jitvestigators allege Vovee left the scene of the accident before officers arrived and without identifying himself. A description of the truck wa11 supplied arriv ing officers a few moments later by witnesses to the accident. The description of Vovee's vehicle was broadcast to local law enforcement agencies, and the truck was spotted southbound on the San Diego freeway by the Costa 1'-1esa police helicopter. The helicopter followed the r;uspect down the freeway to El Toro Road where he stopped and surrendered himself to pursuing California Highway Patrolmen .. Vovee was booked in Newport city jail and will be arraigned in the Harbor Judici&I DisU'ict Municipal Court. Bikini Thief Strikes Again in Newport Newport Beach's bikini bandit struck again Wednesday, Laking two bikinis off a clothesline at 115 23rd St. Pauline Blackburn, owner of the two bathing suits valued at $24, told police the thief left undisturbed a pair of levis and three beach to ... ,.els hanging on the same line. nearly 50 percent from 1960 wtien tt was 37.5:!0. Newport Beach grew more slowly, offlclally gaining from 26,564 to 48,805. Laguna Beach increased from 9,Jll to 11;208. . San Clemente's population ls now 16,462, twi ce: its 8,5%7 count in 1960. Westminster more than doubled, up from 25,750 to 59,619. San Juan Capistrano, uncounted in 1960, now has 3,708. Leonard Isley, regional direcctor of the Bureau of the Census in Los Angeles, said this morning that the areas known as Irvine and Mission Viejo are being computed aad figures will be announced sometime in the future. oi the five lar,gest cities In the counlry, Los Angeles is the only one that gained in population during the 1960!, Increasing In size from 2,479,015 2,782,400. It retained , its rank of third behind New York City, which dropped by 10,000 to 7,771 ,730, and Chicago, which fell 225,000 to 3,325,263. The cities of Philadelphia, down 80,000 to l,926,529, and Detroit, down 180,000 to I.492,914 , round out the·five largest U.S. cities. The only other city in lhe U.S. with more than 1 million population ls Houston, Tex., which grew from 938,21!J to 1,213,064. Other California cities with populations of 100,000 or more, with their comparable 1960 statistics: San Francisco, 704.209, down from 740,316, ranked 13th in the country. San Diego, 675,788, up from 573,224, ranked 14th. San Jose, 436,757, up from 204,196, ranked 31st. , Oakland, 358,198, down from 367,548,. ranked 38lh. ': Long Beach, 347 ,072, up from 344,181,· ranked 40th. Sacramento, 256,124, up from 191,667, ra1lked 54th. • Fresno, 162,326, up from 133,9'l9, ranked 82nd. Q Riverside, 139,217, up from M,332, ranked 97th. Torrance, 136,029 up from 100,991, ranked 102nd. Glendale, 131,723, up from 119,442, ranked 105th. Berkeley, 113,165, up from 111,268, ranked !25th. Pa11dena, 111,826, down from 116,4-07, ranked !27th. San Bernardino, 106,014, up from 91,9221 ranked 14lst. Stockton , 102,657, up from 86,32t, ranked ·14-41.h. Fremont, 100,377, up from 41,790, ranked lSOth. Services Friday For Mrs. Forbes Funeral services will be held Friday, ~· 10:30 a.m. at St. James Episcopal Church · in Newport Beach for Mrs. Caudrey P., , Forbes, a Jong-time resident of Newport. Beach who died Tuesday at the age of 83. Mrs. Forbes was an active member of St. James Church, serving in the Sunday school and prayer guild. She leaves two sons, Richard T. Forbes , of Glendale. the vice president of Security Pacific Bank, and Robert P. Forbes of Newport Beach, owner of 1 Costa Mesa general contracting firm. Also surv iving' are eigh t grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. Volleyall Law Facing Newport City . Councilmen "The whole country listened closely, and watched carefully, as the extension fin ally passed in the House o f Representatives by a marg in of one vote, 203 to 202. "There were others also watchin g that lively American interchange in 1941 - the Japanese lmperial staU," he said. luxurious spring down sofas ... ' . A proposed ordinance which would controJ·volleybal.I playing on bay beaches wUL come before Newport Beach city councllmtn Monday night. rt1' ~asure was approved by the Parks, Beaches and R e c r e a t i on Coinmiaston last week. At that tinle, it was the consensus of commissioners that a public bearing conducted by them was not necessary since the controls needed on bay beach volleyball courts are well known. The proposed ordinance would. govern the installation of courts and the playing of volleyball on baf beaches. The city's 3J ocean beach courts are currently controUed by a. similar ordinanct. With City Council approval of the ordinance, the department of Parks, Beaches and Recreation will regulate the Installation of courts and the hours of use. Cal Stewart. PB&R director. said the controls were requested after a number of complaints were received. "The existing ordinance only covers ~n geacbes. This will amend the cu;.Tent one to include bay beaches as well u ocean beaches," be said. YMCA Executive Club Holds Lunch Meeting The Executive Club of the Orange Coast YMCA will hold Its first luncheon meetin& of the 1970.71 season SepL 15 at noon. Darrel Undu, an executJve with lhe Equitable Title Insurance Company, will speak on the '1Tough Executive Task or Thinking." The meeting will be held at the YMCA Chlpel, 2300 University Drive, Newport Beach. ' '"The arguments of lhal cruC'ial summer encouraged Japanese w a r planners to think the American will to defend this country was weak. "It took almost four years of bitter wat, and hundreds of thousands of American and Japanese casualties to prove that the.ory wrong. "11Us same test is about to reoccur." Gen. Chapman said. ''The draft law will expire hext June. Jn the next several months the extension· of the draft will again be debated and voted on. "And again," he said, "others will be watching." Gen. Chapman said there would be little problem in getting volunteers 'into the armed suvices -volunteers for one hitch to learn a skill or a trade. Youth Employers Set Ne,v Hours Autu mn hours will go into effect beginning next Monday at the Harbor Area Youth Employment Service, as most of its labor force goes back to class. The schedule will be 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays and 9 a.m. lo noon on Saturdays, due to the tremendous rate of requelits for lawn-mowing specialisL, and baby-sitters. Anyone with • job that requires as.slstance may call 6U-0474 and a. willing young worker will be assigned at reasonable ratel'I. Jim Wood, YES president, 1190 notes he Is avlilab!.e to speak to clubs and service organlu.tions about the function of the agency which puts teenagers to work. He can be contaclld at the same YES number. I . ~il h'..NdsoJn• Sof• w•s Cl.si9'1.d to 9ive you the altimet• in se•tin9 comforf with deeron e11d doW11 6ec~ pillows, deep. spt'i n9 dow11 sNt cushions ..,.,..loped in dow11 end f .. tfien. erw:I in two foam.fill.cf ann pil. low1. Ckoose from • ~ sele_"tion of lin• febries. NOW 8' length reg. $599 399. 0 Yo u fat:IOrite interior Msiantr t0t'll bt hoppy to assU& vou ••• H.J.GARRETf .fURNITtJRE PROFtSSIONAr INTERIOR DESIGNERS • ' ' -nT OUI UYOl.VIN41 CHA141E- Opeo ............ l l'ri. ..... 2215 HARIOR BLVD. COSTA MESA. CALIF. "'46-027r " : I 17 17 "" . ' Costa Mesa Today's Fl••I N.Y. St.ocks YO~. 63 , NO. 217, J SECTIONS, 40 PAGES . ~ ORANGE COUNTY, 'cAUFORNl.4: JHURSDAY, SEPTEli!IER 10, '1970 TEN C~NTS , 'Volunteer Army Disastrous' Says Top Marine By L. PETF.R KREIG tf .. Nff'I' Pl ... Slaff An 1polog!tic l"OWllry with a volunteer armed force could not long survive the c;:ommunist threat today, the nation's namber one Marine told a Newport Beach llldienct Wedhelday night. Gen. Leonard F. Chapman Jr., c:ommandant of the U.S. Marine Cgrps, warned ~lhat apologi st& are dtte:rioraling the strenJth or Qle UnJted Stat.es ind are ,..ilnr to end a draft that ...Wd re!Ult OC Airport Head Gives Noise Plan A recommendation tbit a i r I i n e passengers be made to pay the cost of abating jet noise today was endorsed by Robert Bresnahan, director of the Orange County Airport. A plan to charge every airline pusenger SI per night was proposed Wedtnsday by Clifton A. Moore, general manager of the Los Angeles Division of Airports. Moore cited the $1 billion cost of a N~SA retrofit (noise abatement through engint modification) program he is backing . He said at a National League of Cities meeting that, If formally launched in 19721• it could solve the noise problem by Jll?S. .Bresnahan, although · dubious that 1111alllr jet· tneinel 11 they are now built Ciiwd bO mulllett further, llid that the '*" of any program wauld have to be borne . by the uaert. He noted the · continllin1 debate over who ·1hoiiJd pay, and pointed out that the airlines are loalng money and 1imply can't afford it. .Bresahan 1aid a 11iding 11cale of charges to passengers sho.uld b e developed, however, ralher than a Oat $1 levy. "Persons nying 2,000 miles are in effect responsible for more noise than persona flying 400 miles," he said. He also said he thought the $1 billion price tag put on any noise abatement program may be too low. He pointed out that in addition to the rttrofit program , or any similar program developed by studies now being carried out jointly by NASA, McDonnell Douglu and the Boeing Company, expensive monitoring systems are also going to bt mandatory at most airports. Bresnahan 1aid the governme nt team that put men on the moon should have been held together to help solve this and other problems. Moore in his address. slressed the growing 1probierTI of noise pollution. "First Jet 's understand the problem." he said. "Aircraft operations will 'increase from 55.9 million in 1969 to 89.li million in 1975. ' "This means more exposure to noise at all the nation 's airports, ... It Isn't going away." He said 'the number or jet aircraft in the service of U.S. carriers will increase ·,ram 1.111 · to 1969 to 2,171 m i91s and 1,502 1n 1980. "And while many of lhest will be new wide-bodied jets. certificated by the FAA tor noise standards, there will be a· substantial number of the CllTTent jet family in service," he said. National certUicttion standards set by the FAA for all new aircraft prescribe an acceptable noise level at 108 eUective perceived noise decibles. Moore maintained that a retrorit' program could produce. substantial noise improvement.s both m ta keoff and approach. He said with a 20 percent reduction, noise in takeoffs would be cut SO percent .and more than 50 percent redus:lion could be designed for landlnas. .• Mesa Must Reply: In Damage Suit Costa Mesa city officials must reply ln lhe next few day1 to a PS0.000 damqe "suite filed by a woman who allegedly broke her leg al a street widenlng project. · The or I g I n a I quarter,million-dollar claim by Mrs. Mae Prescott, 35J Victoria St .. alleging municipal liabil ity for the Jaa. 3. 1970, accident was denied by the city councl\, and she ha s now filed wit. Mrs. Prescott chargts,the city, K·M1rl Shopping Center owntr Willham O. Gray and the R. J. Noble Construction C<lmptny are at fault for the accident on West WU.son SU'eet. \ In serious troslon of our military capability. Speaking to some 130 members of the World Affairs c:OOncl1 of Orange County at the Airporter Inn, Gen . Ch~man said U.S. strength .depends on a maintained "will of the American people." He singled oot the gravest danger to that will, and to the American defense establishment. as those who would apologiu for America's.strength. He said those who condemn present 'Learn lo Walk' Transportation Secretary John Volpe, testifying before a U.S. Senate subcommittee on the Federal Highway Act, said Wednesday the nation faces ••a total transportation crisis," adding ••the American people ha:ve t~rgotten that the Dear Lord gave us 1 pair of Jegt." Sroll l 1nposed On Victoria Street Parking A 30-day Stall has been imposed on a proposal to ban parking along part of Costa Mesa 's Victoria Street, while dty officials determine just wbat property owners were promised before. The cily Traffic Co mmission remmmends red curbs from Newport Boulevard to 200 feet west of Charle Drive at the conclusion of a widening job scheduled to wind up in 30 days. Councilmen preparing to act on the proposal Tuesday night. however, were confronted by one man who said he was promised parking would be allowed If he gave up land for street widening. Joe Miller, who owns property al 395 VicttJrfa St., charged one city o!ficlal aaid a circular driveway would be installed for him if be cooperated. He did not identify him , but aaid councilmen knew who he meant. Mrs. Eleanor Klose, of 389 Victoria St., had earlier contacted councilmen to say she was promised parldng and sidewalks would be installed for her apartments if she deeded land to the city. Victoria Street is beinr widened to 64 feet. Public Works Director George Madsen auggested a »day delay to allow examination or written agreements bet.,.,·een the landowners and the city to settle the question, Red Ships Visit Cuba MIAMI (AP ) .:_ A .even l!lhip Soviet fleet pulled into the Port of Cienfugos in Cuba's Las Vlllu Province, Havana Radio reported Wednesday. The broadcast.said lt was the third Russian "Wk force'' to vlalt Cuba recently. School Opens U.S. WU pOlicies "are really 1eu of a Uuut • to na.tiODll aecurity tbu the apologlru." He said by virtue of Its geocraphy America hu always been safe. He said the tradJUonal U.S. clominanoe in sea power has kept it safe. But he sild today -apl!y will no~ help. And he aald RUfSia Jw: gained in sea power almost to parity, He called lhis country's sea power today its weakest military arm. .. AJ small as our world hu grown," he suguted, "tbe aeu are tUll basic to our security-and 1t11tenance. We mu.st still depend on them . "But ror our oceans to serve us, we mu&\ serve our oceans. Strength at aea is still part of the framework on which Americ~·delense Is structured. He said the U.S. bas become complacent about that fact. Ruu.ia recognlzes the value of the seas, he sald1 and "after ctnturies of trustrattng effort!, she 11 DOW well established on the high~· ,#" "To date," he repcrled,."&b! MW naval strength of the Sovlet UDion 'bU oot been employed dlrecUy In \he conte.t of world politics. But tt.s presence ii fell" He also aald the struale today Is between totalitarian communJsm and open democracy. But, he Indicated," "The stn.tule Is encagtd strictly by one-skied rules. ''Tbe:rules are simple. The Communist coontries are off limits, strictly out of bounds. The rest or the world is a free- for·all ... He said we face grave internal prob.. lems in this country -social economic and environmental problenu. But, he warned, aiming at the liberal movement, "destruction of our defense• in this modern world will not haste n: solutions to our inner problems. "It is," Gen. Chapman said, "rldlculous !S.. MARINE, P11e I) U.S. to Guard Flights ' Jordan Hostages Get 72-hour Mercy Reprieve WASHINGTON (UP/J-Th• Unlt•d States wilJ a11110unce shortt11 that armed troops and 1ecurit11 guards will Tidt 3hotgun on U.S. oversta.s commercial aif'line flights to p,..ottct them from hijackef's. it was learn~d today .. Airline industrv sourcel taUi the White House likely would make the an·nouncement Ff'id.ay , although i t could be dt:layed until h<Mtages aboa,..d thret: airliners commandetf'· Tate Defense Trys to Stop ' Gun Eviden~e L06 ANGEi.ES (AP) -'l'tle delm In the Sh"on TalA Jjlurder trial todal'., 11\od to stop the state from .irltroch.~iftl"il evidence IUD abeU culnea which the pro1teu1Jon 11>1 were found at the Spahn Ranch, one-time headquarters f or Charles M. ManSon aild his hippie-style clan. ln a hearing outside the presence: of the jury, defense attorneys claimed the &hell casings were Illegally seized without a search warrant. .Superior Court Judge Charles Older deni~ the first suppression of evidence motion by Daye Shinn, attorney for det'endant Susan Atkins. However, he allowed attorneys for the: other three defendant.s -Manson, Leslie Van Houten and Patricia Krenwinkel - lo continue argument.s and questioning on their similar motions to suppress the evidence. Manson and his three followers are charged with murder-c<1nspiracy in the death of Miss Tate and six others early in August 1969. A homicide detective, Sgt. Robert Calkins, testified that he went to lhe suburban ranch Nov. 19, 1969, along with six police officers and a m~ -of the district attorney's staff. He said they obtained verbal permis· sion from owner George Spahn to 11earch the ranch-and even had Spahn repeat the pennission into a tape recorder. But, Calkins added that now be can't find Ii>< lApt!. Manson's attorney, Irving Kanarek, asked. "Are you telling UJ that the Los Angeles Police Department, in this case, which it has termed so fantastic In importance ... that they lost this tape~" The pret5ecution objected to this as "argumentative and absurd" and the judge sustained the objection. catkins said be woukl search further for the tape, saying: "It has not disappeared. I just can't locate it at this time." The atale has said the shell casings round at the ranch match empty casing!l found in 1 gun which it says is the murder weapon used in three of the 1layinp at the Tate m&Mion. td to Jordan by Arab gue,..rillas art re lensed. The Defenst· Departmt:nt confirm· tel today £hat ust of military guard$ on i"ntt:rnational flighU was undef' seriou.s considtf'ation. From Wire Servtces AMMAN , Jordan - A 72-hour mercy repri~ve on the Jives of nearly 300 persons held aboard three hijacked 1.1''1 Tt"""9 Golden Girl Karin Kascher ol Hayward is representing California in the annuaJ Miss America Pageant in Atlantic City, N.J . There's more on the Pageant on Page 5. Two Thieves Rob Service Srotion A pair of young men who uid they needed cash to bail 1 buddy out or jail risked joining him early today, in the $$7 armed robbery of a Costa Mesa service station. Bill Duca , on duty al Arlan Pfohl Chevrbn Service. 3190 Harbor Blvd., uid the pair approached al 3: 15 a.m., asked for cigarette change and then demanded all the money. He told police he banded over $40 from the cash box and $17 of his o)"n, as the bandit who did all the talking warned him his. partner bad a aun. which was never • displayed. jetliners al Dawson's Field. 45 miles from here, was announced today. The Popular Front for the LiberaUon of Palestine CPLFP) declared the gesture was in response to p\eu by the Jntemational Red Cross. Terrorists bargaining for release of imprisoned Arab guerrillas in other nations set 10 p.m. (EDT) Saturday as the deadline for the lives of the pawrui In an international intrigue 11 t e r a 11 y developing by the hour. They say they will blow up the. Swlssalr, TWA and BOAC jeUiners and everybodY, in them if their demands: are not met. while worldwide appeal' and UN Sec:urtt1, Council pleas continued. New developments today included the announcement in Jerusalem.' that police have arrested two Israelis wtu> plotted to hijack a jetliner from El Lod Intern•· tional Airport. Several Israelis were solicited by the lSee HUACK, Paae Z) Offle~r Said Raelst • ' Salazar Death I riquest . Disrupted ·by Chicaoos UlS ANGELES !UPI) -A coroner'• inquest into the death of newsman Ruben Silazar wa1 disrupted today When a young Chicano in the audience ltood up and demanded to be a witness. (Earlier Story Page 12). Following the outburst of B o b Fernandez, 29, a third year law student. a number of persons in a irpeclal committee selected from the Mexican- American community to ob!erve the proceedings walked out or the inquest. Another young Chicano condemned hearing officer Nonnan Plltluck for hi.I "racist attitude." "Y'ou are being biased In the whole thing," he shouted at Pittluck. A middle·aged Mexican-American jumped to his feet and shouted, "Either go by the Constitution or down you go," and left the courtroom. ·The man who' started the disturbance was ordered taken outside the courtroom by Pitlluck. who said his name should be taken as 1 witness. Pittluck also said to the persons -apparently upset by the testimony of Capt. Tom W. Pinkston, who was in charge of the deputy sheriff's· operations on the day of the riots -that they could also be witnesses if \ they wanted to tum their names into the inquest officers. Pinkston testified about the time of the disturb1nces and their general nattire. He said that the disturbance began with the Mesa Schools To Open Monday; Caution Advised School opens on schedule Monday ht Costa Mesa, without waiting for striking heavy equipment operators, a mixup in shipment of concrete pipe or any other such acts of God or man. Consequently, 1 Placentia Avenue widening project has been •delayed beyond orlgiJ1a l estimates for completion before school ope11s, uhtll about Oct. 1, creating aome traffic hazards. looting of a liquor store wesl of Laguna Park and proceeded east on Whittler Boulevord. He also said that the county engineer estimated the structural loss durina the riot at '334.750. The start of the hearing was delayed nearly two hours when a new panel or prospective jurors had to be seated because r,eporters interviewed several panel members before they were seated. · ~r Storage Lot Owner Get Zone Exception OK A Co!lla Mesa vehicle storage lot ownet has won a minor sltinnisb over city: wning regulations, after being told to get a new permit for business conducted for 35 years. Harry L. Hilliard didn't want to build a large concrete trash station enclosure for his lot at 129 Rochester St., among other things. "My little office wastebasket doesn't even get filled up before they pick up the trash on Tuesdays," he told the city council in appealing the condition Tuesday. He was subsequently granted a zone exception pennit replacing his original variance for the lot on commercial property. where trailers, campers and boats will be lem~rarily parked. The longtime garage owner convinced councilmen that a concrete block- enclosed trash storage area would be: useless for the type of work he does. Orange Weather lt'll be 20 degrees hotter In Ana· heim Ulan it will be in Newport Beach Friday, 90 to 70 to be eii:act. Look for night and mominl low clouds along the coasL Colleges Crowded, Busy Ass istant City Engineer N o r m Spielman reminds motorista that a new traffic light on West WIJ90n Street at Placentia Avenue, near Wilson School, won't be In operation. Everyone ii urged to u11e extreme eauUon at all times eve111 though uniformed Police officers wilT ·direct traffic at peak mornhlg and aftvnoon INSIDE TODAY The "forgott1n mtn" of the Vietnam war -the American POWa -hold dim ho!)f;1 for fr1edom. Some have been in CUJ!fody mort thari sU:: 11eors. Page 23. 81 GEORGE LEIDAL .. .,.. °"'" ......... Othtr than the usual conhalon N new studtnlJ ~ their way around c1mpus, the first dlr of classes at Golden Wut and Orange Coast Community Colle,e• wt.re normal . At Golden Weal the mo~l unusual first day happming was the "unusually Ions line at the only snack l>Jr on campus," a college spokeman 511id. otherwise the 1,000 day and evonll!I ' studenls 1Upped Into the new ochool-jtar routine uneventally. A new cafeteria it under construction at Golden West, but won't be ready until next J~ Regjjtration continues. tomorrow tlMll Monday at Golden West and through Sept. 18 at Orange Coast. To dale Orange Coast has registered 8,150 day sludcnt.s and ex~, • •lotal .of 8.500. Evening 11tudent regl'ttraUOM lrt approaching 1,000. a apokesnilin Slid~ " Golden West has earolled 3,594 day •' students and upects 1,000 more by ~ond.ly. About 4,400 evenln& 1tudtnt1 have signed up, but that tlgurt Js , e:rpected to grow as regi1tratlo n continues next Monday to Thursday and Sept. 21 and 22. Orange Coast has added 22 new faculty members this year for a total of 250, and CoK!eft Weit 28 for 1 total of 170. ~{king aeemed to be the bigge•t e for students al Orange Coast with , _.._ (Ste .COLLEG&'l, P111 I ) hours. . SUch pel'IOnal control will b e discontinued 1s soon as the construction job Is completed. Bus Crash in Chile SANTIAGO, Chile !API -f'our persons were killed and 37 injured · Wednesday when a bu11 ran off a highway and Into Laki Llanquihue, about 600 miles toUth of SanUago. ... t1... :a t.llW."'i. u ,,.__j ... U• 1 Cl•1Uflt!I J>-tl CMlkt » "'""'" u 0..ltl Httletl l' •411Jff'l•I "'"' ' •ftltl'l•lmroMt 11·14 l'l!lllM• »JI "'""'"'" 1• .I.All Ulldt!'9 1' Mtti ti! Str¥1" U .. t ··DAll.V 'ILOT c . l'roM Page 1 HUACK. • • -who hact A ' fp, led police to raid their homes Tutlday and they have been held In custody since, awaiting federal charges. The International Red c r 0 I ' • meanwhile said the plight of the travelers heid .at lht remote field built by the British in 1947 is deterioratlng. Emergency supplies of sanitation equipment, food, medicine •nd cooking equipment w~e sent In, but guerrillas leaders said they are I 1 k I n g humanitarian care of the nearly 300 hostages. Conditions nearing civil war In Jordan, however , hampered the delivery. The PLFP originally allowed llS Arab men, plus women and children or various nationalities to be taken to t h e Intercontinental Hotel in Amman. The remainder of the hostages waited ln or under the shadow-casting wings of the three gleaming jetliners today, while 22 more were released, identified as Bahreinis aru:t the.English fiance of one. Triumphant Arabs, meanwhile, rejoice at the suc~ssful air piracies -three jetliners captured with a fourth failure Sunday and another Wednesday -and said it unites divisions wiOtin their ranks at a crucial time. No hint was given of the mastermind behind the multiple skyjackings, but inConneil sources said it was most likely Dr. Waldie Haddad, a mild·maMered physi cian. The 47·year-old doctor -object of a hit· and·run rocket attack g e n e r a 11 y alributed to Israeli agents a few weeks ago ~ was out of Beirut and unavailable for comment. The planners k,new not only couJd Dawson's Field airstrip in Jordan take a modern jeUiner, but that it could take ieVeral and at night, too. The TWA·captain said later the runway was three times as long as he needed for his Boeing 7111 and hard as concrete. The airstrip was a1raady manned with emergency flares and slit trenches had been dug round the parking area. The guerrillas even p r o v i d e d passengers with pink cards. exact copies of the international disembarkation documents, to furnish personal details, and a rubber·starnped "Emergency Visa." Hit, Run Suspect Arraignment · Set for Today A Laguna Hills resident will face arraignment today on "charges of felony hit and run after he allegedly struck a motorcycle rider WedneMay night in Newport Beach. Police said the suspect, Daniel Vovee. 70, of 334 A Sevilla, was driving his pickup truck on Jamboree Road north of Ford Road when he hit the rear of a motorcycle riden by Gale Leroy Bergey, 51, of 7U Bison Ave., Newport Beach. Bergey suffered cuts and bruises in the crash. He was treated and released from Hoag Memorial Hospital. Investigators allege Vovee left the l<:i!ne of the accident before aUlcer1 arrived and without identifying himself. A description of the truck waa supplied arriving officers a few momenis later by witnesses to the accident. The description of Vovee 's vehicle was broadcast to local law enforcement agencies. and the truck was spotted southbound on the San Diego freeway by the c.osta Mesa police helicopter. The ~eliC(lpter followed the suspect down The freeway to El Toro Road where he stopped and surrendered himself to pursuing California Highway Patrolmen . Vovee was booked in Newport city jail and will be arraigned in the Harbor Judicial District Municipa l Court. DAILY PILOT 01.AHCif COA.IT ,UILl$HING COMPANY lh1b1rt N. W1H "•ttld"'I •nC M U- J,c\. R. Cv1l1y Th'"''' K11vll TJ.o"''' /I.. Murphi11,1 MINll "" ltilor Ct tM MIM Offict )JO W1at l1y Sh•tl M1:li~1 Alll1lr1u: ,,O, l 1t11160, t1616 Ott.H OHie" Htwperl lttcll~ 2'11 Wtll ltlboS leu•t vt rf Lllll"I lffc!Ol 222 F .... 1 .. _ ...... 11 ....... •••Cll• ,,.,, •·.ui ._., ........ '6ft ( ........ It: aJ NOl1fl (I (MlollM IHI OAI LY P it.OT, •lftl .;,.ldl 11 ~l'IU l~t N, ..... P .... u , It ""411! ... ff 111111)' tlCtftl "-"• lll't' !ti .... ,t it td!l!Onl for l-M ltfl~. Jj'""°'' llll ll, COllTI NAM. H""llnf'.l:t •••t~ 11'11 """"'''" \l t ltt y. '""" _,,_ !-' •ttlMolt fd11""'•· Or~ C61•1 l'\ltl!ot1i.. C-Y ... llll!fot tl4oftl1 l rt 11 '111 Wt11 at"'"" ........ N1._i a11(!0, t ll'll U0 Wftl ilY $!• .. :. Ctl!t Mut. T-4..,._ 11141 l4J.4JJI <.1-1n..f .Aii"rtitl"' •• , ••• ,. CttlJf'Jtlll, 1'11. Orli"tt (Ult l'Vbl l1•""- Cf ..... 11J, N1 -llttlti, IUutl•tl,-. M HWltl ,,_It., ., IG...,tt•-11 ,,...tl" -· ... ........."""' ""'''*"' .,.111 ,.,. ,,. ..... " """""t ·-· a.e.... (ltll ""'-fllC 11 N........, l lt(fl W Qlllll ...__, CtU"'1!111. lWlfr1'1)1i11 W Ct"ltr U• -ll•IW/ 11 "MOii U ,llt """01IJI m!llll'l' MIJMIJllll. U.00 -llllf. • Cruising Down the Channel Party boat Pavilion Queen churns sedately down entrance to Newport~ Harbor during recent outing. The tour boat, the only vessel for hire in Newport Harbor that is outfitted for parties, has drawn verb-- al broadsides from some bayfront property owners who claim its cocktail sipping passengers are noisy and invade their privacy. Other Ne\vport residents who have traveled on the Queen say its great. City council will decide fate of craft at license hearing 1ater this year, 'Sweetheart' Suit Needs Some Editing . A Newport Beach moviegoer whose shocked reaction to the impromptu screening ol ''The Private Garden o( Stanley Sweetheart" Jed to the filing of a a.s million lawruit was told today through. his attorney that his action is going to need a lot of editing. Superior Court Judge Harmon G. ~ ville gave attorney Donald Smallwood 20 days to am end the complaint filed by the She,riff'I Deputy David SkauptAdt after agreeing with Metro-Goldwyn.Mayer a(... torney Terry Christensen that there were "many areas or unctrtainty'' ln the com- plllnt. Skaupladt 1llepd in hJs 1<:UM that the Edwards Cinema In Newpcrt Beach screened 'iStanley Sweetheart'' with the regularly scheduled "Bob and Cal'()! and Ted and Alice" last April ZS without noti· lying any patron of its intentions. The offended officer further charged that tbe spicy movie was not rated and should not have been shown to any audi· ence withou.t . such action being taken by its distributqrs1 He c0ll4emoed the sneak preview as an x.rat~ rum· which depicted "sexual acts between m,en and women. group se1 •.• a se1 scene between two nude adults with a sma ll child present and various acts or lewd and lascivious conduct." Skaugstadt claimed that the screening amounted to rraud by the defendants and that the viewing of the erotic "Slanley Sweetheart" caused him "extreme emo- tional distress." Ch~islensen pointed .out today to Judge Scoville that "no one is locked in and no one is chained to his chair. Marines Negotiating Sale Of Part of Pendleton Base The U.S. Marines do not need 'all the beaches or Camp Pendleton any more and are negotiating for sale of part of it to the State of California. But General Leonard F. Chapman Jr., commandant of the Marine Corps, From Page I MARINE •.• .to consider a hope for aecur1ty Within unleu li'e are llnL secure from withoul" He said to provide that 11ecurity we must remain strong. But he said strength requires more than the "equipage af war." . He u id, "above a11 its requires a moral fibre to bind the hardware of defense into meaningful and intelligent applications," He spoke of dedicated men in the service and again of a dedicated American will at home. He made himsell crystal cltar. He likened Russia in 1970 to Japan in 1941 -both watching as this country debated the same subject, the possible end of the draft. He recounted the months preceding December, 194.l . "A few months: before Pearl Harbor the extension of the 1940 one-year selective service act was debated long and hard in the halls of Congress, and all across the land, Wednesday declined to say how close those talks are to actual consummation of a deal. The top man of the 1.1arine Corps discussed Camp Pendleton and a variety of other topics with newsmen following his talk before the World Affairs Council of Orange County at the Airporter Inn . lie ta lked about drugs and the military. He said in some parts of the coontry, 5Ct percent of the eligible you ng men are declared un acceptable for the service because they have a history of taking drugs. • Re said narcotics are a problem at some U.S. military Installations. He said they are not a problem on the front lines in Vietnam. He also said the coverage cf the Vietnam war has become by the nation's mass media, especially the major television networks, "has become impressively objective" in the last year. He declined comment when asked if he though Vice President Spiro T. Agnew's criticisms of the networks had anything to do with the abrupt change. On Camp Pendleton. he said it will always be needed as a training facility as Jong as there is a Marine Corps. He said the Corps does not need as much now, because of changes in military equipment and strategy. "We can now take advantage of rough terrain when attacking foreign territory ," he said. The e1plained that current tactics. with the use of helicopters, would allow an attacking force to land behind the beaches and attack· back at them. He said the negotiations for the sale of the Soutl'l Coast training facility have been going on for some tim.,t.~· Census Sa11s Beach Growth -as est Far and away, the crowlh ol Huntington Beaeh outdistanced any other major Americ¥tfilY during the past decade. U.S. Census Bureau figures released t c...'.ay m 1 de It offl~ial. Huntington's population has grown tenfold since 1960, from a mere 11 ,492 ten years ago to an astonding 115,557 in 1970, It is the 122nd larg est city in the United States. Although not quite so spectacularly, any number or Orange Cou11ty cities showed substa11tial papulalion gaios during the decade. Anaheim, the largest city in the county, jumped from 104,184 to 164,913, making it the 8lst largest city in the country. It bad Three Coast Men Facing Court On Robbery Rap Three men are scheduled to face arraignment today in the Harbor Judicial District Municipa l Court on charges of armed -robbery, John Johnston Jr., 'n, of 2312 Newport Boulevard and Roy James Hannah, 23, of 298 Joann St., Costa Mesa. were arrested at their homes by Newport Beach detectives Tuesday night. The third suspect, M;.chael D. Collins, 24, of 510 Bolsa Ave. surrendered himself Wednesday at the Newport police station. The three are suspects in the attempted armed robbery of Walter Douglas. 20, of 932 Via Lido Nord. Detective Sam Amburgey said Hannah and Collins reportedly went to Douglas' house late Monday night to collect $100 the victim allegedly owed them. Johnston reportedly drove the pair to the home, but stayed in the car. Amburgey said a shot was fired over the victim's head. The bullet went out a window and lod ged in a neighbpr's house. Amburgey said they traced the suspects through their ca r which was spotted driving away from the scene. Traf fie I.imits At Three Sites Imposed in Mesa Speed, stop sign and vehicular weight limitations have been imposed at three locations by the Costa Mesa City Council. which held a fourth for further Traffic Commission study. A 30 mile·per·hour speed limit will be set on Del Mar Avenue, between Newport Boulevard and Santa Ana Avenue. A two-way stop will be installed on Columbia Drive at Wake Forest Avenue. Vehicles traveling on Wake Forest Avenue will be limited to 6,000 pounds and under, thus preventing commercial trucks from taking a shortcut to the •I arbor Shopping Center. Two-way stops will also be established on Coronado Avenue at Presidio Drive and on Junipero Drive at Coronado Avenue. Another proposal to set a 35 miles.per· hour speed litnit on Prcsideion Drive from Newport Boulevard to Co ronaldo Avenue was referred back lo the Costa l\1esa Traffic Commission. Ill ITS. ·-• been the 12.1rd lar:gest in 1960. Santa Ana grew In size from 100,350 to 154,MO, while Garden Grove jumped from 84,238 to 121 ,504. They are ranked 87tb and ll6th, respectively. Huflllngton Beach's amazing clumb was actually surpassed, percentagewise, by its little sister city to the nortl'l. Fountain Valley, according to the official census figures, grew from only 2,068 in 1960 to 31,618 in 1970. Costa Mesa's official population has been placed at 72,412, an increase of nearly 50 percent from 1960 when it was 37,550. Newport Beach grew more slowly, officially gaining from 2fi,564 to 48,805. Laguna Beach increased from 9,~ to 14,208. San Clemente's population is now 16,462, twice its 8,527 colUll in 1960. Westminster more thu doubled, up from 25,750 to 59,619. San Juan Capistrano, uncounted in 1960, now has 3,708. Leonard Isley, regional direcctor of the Bureau of the Census in Los Angeles, said this morning th.at the areas known as Irvine and Mission Viejo are being computed and ligures will be announced sometime in the future. or the five largest cities in the country. Los Angeles is the'ooly one that gained in · population during the 1960s, increasing in size from 2,479.015 2,782,400. It retained its rank of third be~ind New York City. "which dropped by J0,000 to 7,771,730, and Chicago, which fell 225,000 to 3,325,263. The cities of Philadelphia. down 80,000 to J,926,529, and Det roit, down 180,000 to 1,492,914, round out the five largest U.S.' cities. -~ From Page I COLLEGES • • • the tW'o Jo!S off Fairview Road being most popular, "Spaces are available at other loc atioos if students are willing to hunt for them," • . a spokesman said, noting that a new lot • is open on the west side of the campus 1 behind the Technology building. ' ·' Orange Coost's new environmental technology program has proved popular with students and is filled, according to college officials. Extracurricular activities at both colleges already are under way, ~ Golden West plans an international ·. dinner at S:30 p.m. Friday in the student , center to be prepared by Martin Yan. fot'mcrly of Hong Kong and now of i- Huntington Beach. '111e program will be followed by a Japanese film "Yojimbo" at 8 p.m. in the Forum. Japanese classical and kibuki dancer Rokuka Hanayagi will per form for diners. Adding to the confusion for new and returnif'!g students at Golden West is the more than $8 million of construction on the campus. Four i;iew buildings are under construction and additions are being made to ri ve others. Completions are due beginning in Oct-Ober and continuing throughout the school year. · Two new courses added to the Golden We st curriculum this year are · cosmetology training and studies for 40 deaf and hearing impaired students within the regular program. lnterprelets and note takers accompany the hard of hearing to classes. Orange Coast's American s l u d I es program will include a unit on American Indian heritage. The Indian program was sought by students. "If you don't like it you leave." Oris· tensen said. And the Beverly Hills auor· ney dismiMed Skaugstadt's claim that he was really Tepresenting the interest of many ·other patrons is "absolutely air surd." Christensen sucessfully argued that MGM tould not possibly prl'dict the re- actioi:i of any nloviegoer attending a sneak preview. He asked for dismissal by Judge Scoville of what he described as "an utremely confused complaint." "The whole country listened closely, and watched carefully, as the' extension finally passed in the House of Representatives by a margin of one vote, 203 to 202. luxuiious spring down sofas Youth Employers Set New Hours Autumn hours will go Into effect beginning next Monday at the HarbOr Area Youth Employment Service, as most of its labor rorce goes back to class. The schedule will be 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. \veekdays and 9 a.m. to noon on Saturdays, due to the tremendous rate of requests for lawn-mowing specialists and baby·sitters. Anyone with 11 job that requires assistance may call 642-0474' and a willing young worker will be ass!Jned at reasonable rates. Jim Wood, YES president. 1150 notes he is available to speak to clubs •nd service crganization~ about the function of the agency which puts teenagers to work. He can be contacted at the aame YES number. Bikini Thief Strikes Again in Ne wport Newport Beach's bikini bandit struck again Wednesd&y, taking two bl)cjnis off· a clothesline at 115 23rd SI. Pauline Blackburn, OM'ler of the two bathing sulbi valued at $24, told police the thief left. undisturbed a pair af levls and three beach towels banging on the same line. • "There were others also watching that lively American interchange in 1941 - the Japanese 1mperia1 staff." he said. "The arguments of that crucial summer encouraged Japanese w a r planners to 'thint the American will to defend this eountry was weak. "It took almost four years of bitter war, and hundreds of thousands of American and Japanese casualties to prove that theory wrong. "This same test is about to reoccur," Gen. Chapman said. ''The draft la w will expire nexl June. In the next several months the extension of the draft will again be debated and voled on. "And again," he said, "Others will be "'etching." Gen. Chapman said there would be little problem In getting volunteer! int() the armed services -volunteers for one hitch to !tarn a skill or a trade. Voter Signup Deadline Today Today Is )'OUr lino! chance to reglslet for voling Jn lh.e Nov, 3 General Election, arOciats reminded In cities up and down the Orange Coast. Registration Is being c o n d u c t e d throughout business holll'I at all city clerks' offlcea: and that of the Orange County Rtgl!trar of Yotm. Deputy regl!trars organlted by the Orange Colst League of Women Voters art al10 on hand at dcsk.s In the lobbies of mO<t city balll and elaewberL 1'1'i1 lt.,;cfsCWM Sof• w•s ·d.s~ to 9iv• yot1 the aftimwt• in •••fin9 Comrort with d•eron and down 6ack pil+ows, dMP, spring down ... t cesfiions .....iop.d in down nd fHth•rs •nd in two foam.filled arm pil. ~ ,Choose froa\ a ..-. ...-aioa ol f.ae f•brics. 8' length reg . $599 - NOW 399. Y 01I fmxrritl Interior dnigntt PU bt hopw to a.ssist JIOll ••• H.J.GAI\I\EJT fURNITLJRE PROFESSIONA~ INTERIOR DESIGNERS ' -'lllT OUl HYOlYIHG CHAlliE- 0,... --'l1Mn. I. Jlri. - 22t5 HAR BOR BLVD. COSTA MESA , CALIF. 6'46.021.r ( " 7 7 J Saddlehaek EDITION • Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL 63, NO. 217, 3 SECTIONS , 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAllFORNIA THURSDAY, SEPTE"4BER 10, 1970 TEN CENTS ' • 'Volunteer Army Disastrous' Says Top Marine By L. PETER KREIG Of rl!t 011ly ,11111 11•11 An apologetic count ry with a volunteer arll'!ed force cou ld nol Jong survive the CommU\1isl th reat today, the nation's number one Marine told a Newport Beach audience Wednesday night. Gen. Leonard f'. Chapman Jr., commandant of the U.S. ait arine Corps, warned that apologists are dele rioraling the strength of the United Stales and are 1eeking to end a draft that woul d result Hospital Campaign Pushed By JOHN VAL TERZA OI th1 O.Hy "1161 iU1tf The war to wrest officia l endorsement for a San Clemente hospital from a Van f\'uys developer gathered steam this week v.'ith confirmation that Chapman General Hospital has officially filed documents requesting a switch in endorsement by t.he Orange County Health Planning Asso- cialion. But a date ror a hearing on the newcomer Chapman General's plans to build a private hospita l on land east of the San Diego Freeway has not yet been '"· The date "Will be arranged sometime after Sepl IS -the deadline for the C. T. DeCinces Copmany or Van Nuys to prove it& financ ial ca pabilities in building its San Clement Medical Center -delayed for the past six years. The DeCinces group, which holds the official sanction for the medical center from tfte C.ounty Regional Heal th PlaMing Association, haa 30 days left to file its detailed report on immediate future plans, financinr and corporate structure. The developers were given 90 days to dratt the reports afte r the planning association postponed action on a DeCinces bid for renewal or the association's endorsement. An aide at the association offices said tbis morning that ''absolutely no communications'' have come from the OeCinces group since the association imposed the 90-day period last July. In the meantime, disgruntled San Clemente physicians, community leaders and laymen have thrown their hats with Chapman General Hospital from Orange. The Chapman group, which already is running several successful hospitals, has filed il.s own request for association endorsement, but that bid will have to wait UTJlil the Sept. IS date arrives. The health planning aide said the Chapman application must wait until the planning association board ac ts on the De Cinces report. In the meantime, loca l support for the Chapman plan has grown and escrow ls proceeding on land east of the Sa n Diego Freeway which is being purchased !or $1.I million. Chapman spokesmen have said other funds committed also include several hundred thousand dollar s from a group of investors from Loma Linda who would (Set HOSPITAL, P11e ZI Lunch 50 Cents At Laguna High School Cafeteria ' Despite Inflation. Laguna Beach High School st udents will be able to lunch on beef and cheese tacos, lettuce and tomatoes, corn, Apple Betty and a buttered roll for just SO ccnL,, That's the menu next Thursday for the new complete hot lunch to be oUered in t.he high school cafeterh1. l t a 11 a n !paghetti. green salad with tomatoes, apple sauce, and French bread will await high school students on the flrst day of 1chool. Monday. The hot lunch will supplement the a la carte and ltlack bar items that were offered last year. There wUI be no vr:ndlng machine 11ervlce at the high gchool. Though the prlre of lunches m11 y be down. milk Is up. A half pint of milk will cost JO cenll this year, up four ctnU over las !year.' No Thais to Ca1nhodia BANGKOK (A P ) -The Thi• government has dtclded against sending any troops nr volunteers l-0 C11imbodi1t unless Th111111nd is directly lhrcatened, Foreign Minister Than.at Khoman said tOOay. Th1tn11t Cflmmtntcd 11s he left for New York vh1 Japa11 to lc~d s flve·m1tn TbAI delegation Al the U.N. Gerteral Assembly neil wetk. • ln serious erosion or our military capability. Speaking to aome 130 members of the \Vorld Affairs Council of Orange County at the Airporter Inn, Gen. Chapman said U.S. strength depends on a maintained ''will of the American people." He singled out the gravest danger !() that will, and to the American defense establishment, as those who would apologize for AmeriCa's strength. He said those who condemn present .. ' ' 1 Ul'I Tt lfflMt. Golden Girl Karin Kascher o! Hayward is representing California in the annual · Miss America Pageant in· Atlantic City, N.J. There's more on the Pageant on Page 5. Festival Plans To Assist Other Cultural Fields Laguna's Festival of Arts, long a financial supporter of art students, is broadening its scholarship horiwns to include aid for addJtioaal cultural fields. At the suggestion of Festival Directors Helen Keeley and Paul Griem Tuesday, the board earmarked an additional S,000 for students of dance, music, writing and drama. both production and acting. Student scholarship applica nts will be judged by committees that will be s!t. up sometime after the Nov. 9 ann ual membership meeting. Lasl fi scal yea r the Fesllval gave. or set aside $27,275 for cultural aclivities. These included $7 ,000 in a r t scholarships of which UC! receives $1 ,000 and Saddleback College $.150. The L.Yric Opera received $.1,000 for Its repertory scholarship program. The Laguna Beach Civic Ballet was given $2,000 and $2,500 went to the Laguna Beach School of Art & Design. The Laguna Beach Art Association was given $4,000 including $1,200 for purchase · prizes in the All California Show. The other $2,800 was for restoration of the perm~nent art collection. The Festival Chorale received $3,650 anrl the Festival ga ve $2,000 to send the high school choral readers to San Franc isco to perform. Even Top o{ the World PT A scored when the board voted that group $50. U.S. war policies "are really less of a threat to national security than the apologists." He said bf virtue of its geography America has always been safe. He said the traditional U.S. dominance in sea power has kept it safe. But he said today geography will not help. And he said Russia has gained in sea power almost lo parity. He called this country's sea power todiy its weakest military arm. "As small as our world has grown," he suggested, "the seas are sUll basic to our security -and sustenance. We. must still depend on them. "But for ·our oceans to serve us, we must serve our oceans. Strength at sea is still part of the framework on which American defense Is structured. He said the U.S. ·has become complacent about that fact. Russia recognlus the value of the seas, he said, acd "after centuries of • frustrating efforts, she ls now well established on the high seas. "TO date," he reported. "the new naval strength of the Soviet Union ha~ not been employed directly in the context of world politics. But its presence Is felt ." He also said the struggle today is between totalitarian communism and open democracy. But. he Indicated, "The struggle Is engage d st rictly t>y one·sided rules. "The rule$, are simple. The Communlst countries art. ott limits, strictly out of bounds. The rest or the world is a fcee- for-all." He said we fa ce grave internal prob- lems in this country -social economic and environmental problems. But, he warned, aiming at the liberal movement, "destruction of our defense1 in this modem world will not hasten solutions to our inner problems. ..It ls," Gen. Chapman said, "ridiculous (See MARINE, Page I ) Sirhan Throws Tantrum, uieted With Tear Gas 300 Hijacking Victims Given 3-day Reprieve f:rom Wirt Suvlcts AMMAN, Jordan - A 72-hour mercy reprieve on the lives or nearly 300 persons held aboard three hijacked jeUiners at Dawson's Field, 4-S miles from here, was announced today. The Popular Front iqr the LtberaUon or Palestine (PLFP) declared the gesture was in re!ponse to pleas by the International Red Cross. Terrorists bargaining for rele.a~ of Imprisoned Arab guerrillas in other nations set 10 p.m. (EDT) Saturday as the deadline for the lives of the. pawns in an international intrigue l i 1 er a 11 y developing by the hour. They say !hey will blow up the Swissair, TWA and BOAC jetliners and everybody Jn them if their demands are not met, while worldwide appeals and UN Security Council pleas continued. New developments today included the announcement in Jerusalem that police have arrested two Israelis who plotted to hijack a jeUiner from El Lod lnte.rna· tionaJ· Airport. Several Israelis were solicited by the would-be air pirates -who had a machinegun and a. quantity of propaganda leaflets destined to be dumped over Europe -but refused to assist them. A tip led police to raid their homes Tuesday and they have been held in custody since, awaiting federal charges. The International Red Cross. meanwhile said the plight of the travelers held at the remote field built by the British in 1947 is deteriorating. Emergency supplies or sanitation ~quipment, food, medicine and cooking equipment were sent in, but guerrillas leaders said they are ta king humanitarian care of tbe nearly 300 hostages . Conditions nearing civil war in Jordan, how.ever, hampered the delivery. The PLFP origin~lly allowed 116 Arab men, plus women and children of various nationalities to be taken to t h e Intercontinental Hotel in Amman. The remainder of the hostages waited in or under the shadow-casting wings or the three gleaming jeUiners today, while 22 more were released, identified as Bahreinis and the English fiance of one. Triumphant Arabs, meanwhile, rejoice at the successrul air piracies -three. jetllners captured with a fourth failure Sunday and ttnother Wednesday -and said it unites divisions within their ranks at a crucial time. N8 hint was given of tbe. mastermind behind the multiple. skyjacll:ings, but !See HIJACK, Page I) 3 Month Project Incident Health Team Sets Vp Brings Him Shop Over Laguna Store Isolation The Orange County Mental Health Survey team move d into itl5 new home at 249 Forest Ave., above Laguna Beach Hardware, this morning, and is busily 1etU11i up .M)op for another U'lrce months . or commwtlty sctteninl! for health needs. The team, he.aatd by WaShington D.C. psychiatrist Wlll\am RouU, l& studyin1 Art Colony health needs, after a r;esolution was approved by the City Council calling for decentralized county health services In Laguna. 'The team will study community wants and needs, transmit them to the cily ·council, and then to the Orange County Board of Supervisors. ft superv isors greet a request for services In Laguna favorably, a branch of Hit, Run Suspect Arraignment ·Set for Today A Laguna Hills resident will face arraignment today on charges of felony hit and run after he allegedly struck a motorcycle rider Wednesday night in Newport Beach. Police said the suspect. Daniel Vovee, 70, of 334 A Sevilla, was driving his pickup truck on Jamboree Road north or Ford Road when he hit the rear of a motorcycle r iden by Gale LerOy Bergey, 51 , of 712 Bison Ave., Newport Beach. Bergey suffered cuts and bruises in the crash. He was treated and released from Hoag Memorial Hospital. Investigators allege Vovee left the scene of lhe accident before officers c.rrlved and without Identifying himself. A description of the truck was supplied arriving a!ficers a few moment.. later by witneSbCs to the accident. The description of Vovee's vehicle was broadcast to local Jaw enforcement agencies, and the truck was spotted southbound on the San Diego freeway by the Costa Me!a police helicopter. The helicopter followed the suspect down the freeway to El Toro Road where he stopped and surrendered himself to. pursuing California Highway Patrolmen. Vovce was booked In Newport city jail and will bt arraigned In the Harbor Judicial District Municipal Court. the Orange County Health Department w\11 be opened In or near the Art Colony. The. learn had fonn er\y been housed at Laguna Beach High School, but hid to leave before the opening o( aohool - Monda y. Five large rooms make up the new home for the group, but most sit empty awaiting office supplies fro m the county, accord.Jng to Routt. Five desks are on order •long with a request for other equipment 11uch as a mimeograph machine and dictaphone. Rent for the office space ls $300 per month, some $50 Jess tha n the $350 dollars approved last week by the City Coun~il for· rent for space for the group. With the extra $50, Routt said, telephone equ ipment wlll be paid for. The team will cootlnue to interview Laguna residents and organize for a se.r· ies of tqwn meetings in October, designed to discover community health needs arid wan ts. Thirteen people, mos t of them working full time, are heading the Laguna study. The Forest Avenue location will join the Laguna Canyon home of the volunteer wing or the county team. The 775 Laguna Canyon Road locatit'lll houses the volunteer project. designed ta recruit Laguna residents to he.I p with the county study. "We need a cou ple of local resident.!! out the re who could ramrod the volu nteer efforl. We'd lik e to get as many people from within the community out there as possible," Routt stressed. The canyon center will ft e d information into the Forest Avenue location, where it will be analyzed and put together in report form. to be released in December of this year. City Councilman Charlton P. Boyd, who serves as liason between the City Council a nd the county team said, "we're very pleased to find such a location for this important effort. We are also very pleased the cily could !Ind funds to pay for the rent or the building. Arizona Youth Gets Drng Rap A Phoenix youth was arrested in Laguna-&ach Wednesda'y by police who Bald he had two small packets of heroin, $700, narcotics paraphernalia and needle- marked arms. SAN QUENTIN (AP) -Sirhan B. Sirhan, convicted of assassinating Sen. Robert B. Kennedy, was given a mild tear gassing by guards afler throwing a "temper tanlrum" in his cell at San Quentin Prison's Death Row, Warden Louis S. Nelson said today. Later he wal5 given a sedative. and placed in an isolation cell, the wardeo said. Nelson said Sirhan, who had refused lo give up his meal tray and thrown food at a guard, did not resist and came out of the cell oo his own after guards used "a very litlle tear gas." Nelson said the Incident occurred Wednesday afternoon after l h e Palestinlan Arab demB'l'.lded to speak to Associate·Warden James W. Park. Nelson said he did not know if Slrhan 's demand had anything to do with lhe Arab guerrilla hijackings. At one point, the hijackers reportedly demanded Sirhan's freedom as ransom for some 300 hostages on two hijacked planes. Noting Wednesday was a state holiday -Admission Day, marking CaWornia'I admission into the union -the warden said: "It was a holiday and lhere wa1 nobody around so he got into a snit abou.t il -I guess a little temper tantrum." · Nelson said Sirhan had access to newspapers and radio and probably was following the hijacking story clasely from his Death Row cell. In the isolation cell, however, Nelson said. Sirhan will nnt have access to radio, television, newspapers or other personal items. He said the prison's disciplinary committee will decide Friday how long Sirhan should be kept in isolation. The maximum is 30 da ys. Nelson said the tear gas was necessary because of possible danger from the metal tray, fork and spoon that Sirhan refused to give up. Sirhan is 1.mder death sentence. for lhe June 1968 assassination. He has been at San Quentin since May 23, 1969. while his case undergoes automatic re.view by the state Supreme Court. Oruge Coast Wea tiler Unruh Admits Big Goof Police said they would seek a complaint today agai nst BenJamJn Goin Jr .• 18. OffiCers said he.' WM 1topped initially . because he was walking in the· middle of St. Ann's Drive In lhe' 100 bloc!k. instead of using the sidewlk. ' · lt'll be 20 degrees hotter In Ana· heim than It will be in NewPort Beach Friday, 90 to 70 to be exact. Look for nlghf and morning low clouds along the co1st. Go ver1wr's 'Payoff Man' Dead for -Ten Years SANTA BARBARA (UPI) -Frtt- gwlnglng Jess Unruh admitted t.odJiy he "goofed " and proml.std to persooally . 11polojti1,e to the san of 1 dead man . Unruh accused Gov. Ronald Reagan Wednesday of awarding a "political payoff'' lo a man he conttnde.d helped the governor run for pr~ident In 1968. Actually the man died in 1960. (Rclattd Story Page 13.) The aUegcd •·payoff," accordl!'lg to Unruh's original gtatemt.nt, was tha appointmtnt of the man's 28-yeaMild aon, Earl W. Brian, Jr., 11 state medical director. a $:13,000 per year job. "I said I also was a man, for rul .. -in "I had bad staff inlormation. but that flesh and blood and obviously J make doesn't excuse me,'' Unruh to Id mistakes. I made one yesterday, I newsmen, holding up a small pocketbook apollglze for that,: r guess t now have with the governor's face °" ll entitled, become a member of the club." ''I Goofed-the wise and curiou.s sayings • ,Re!errl11& to Briar •• Un:nlt> said, "I ol Ronald Reagan." • 1 think f owe him a perlOrlal apology.'' "Hopefu.lly," contlnued tbt solemn. ,1Bat .lJtnh aa;d 'tu. ma.jor campaign faced Democratic g u b e r n 1 tor I a 1 1'9P(•"lt.Ut' doleo't c:hange'tht basic facts candidate. "that's .101 m.y B111ot·Pqia."' ffiilr "Mec11-Cal ts mismanaged." Unruh noted whtn he kicked off hi.11 And Unruh asked "Why was he campaign on Monday, he promised to appointed? Where did a 28-year~ld "TeJI it like it is. tell who Ls behlnd who. youngster get the expertise to run 1 name dates, placea. billion dollar a year program?" Goin w3s booked· on suspicion of' lleroin passession and usplclon or possessing· narcotics 'paraphernAlla'. Sixty-Two Ac rested · TACOMA. WHh. (Ul'J) -·Police malntalncd ,an around-the-clock vigll,a\ a dtscrted Indian encampment on the banks of the PuyallUp River today following a skirm ish over fishing rights which Involved a:U:nflre. S f x t y • l w o persons, lncludlna: five juveniles. were arrested Wednt.Sday when police charaed the armed encampment and subd"ued Us defenders wllh tear aas. INSmE TODAY The "'foruotttn mtn'' of tht Vietnam war -tht A.merlcan J:IOWs -hol.d dim hopt.s for freedom . Some ho.Vt been in custody more than ti.x 11tar1. Page 23. j • 2 1!~L Y PILOT flestges in ltlifJdle Fighting Erupts • In Jordan Capital By Uai&ecl Pre11 lotuuational New fighting broke out today in the Jor<bmian capital or Amman between Palestinian guerrilh1.s and Jordanian army troops. Combat was heavy during the n1gbt around the lnter-ConUnental Hotel .where 15' hijack hostages were held. As Jordan veered toward fullscale civil war, Israeli Premier J.1rs. Golda Meir prepared for 1 trip to Washington nerl week, and diplomatic sources i n Jerusalem said she would p re 1 s President Nlxon for U.S. action against an' alleged Egyptian missile buildup in the Suez Canal Zone. The Jerusalem Post said it has learned from reliable sources that about one-third of the 15,000-man force of Iraqi troops in Jordan have been assigned to th! guerrillu in bases near Amman and in norlhern Jordan bordering Israel. Dispatches from UPI correspondent David Zcnian In Amman on the 10th consecutive day of fighting there said Jordanian army forces renewed the conflict at 4 a.m. today in a brief firefight ne.ar the Jnttr-Olntlnental Hotel where a batUe raged Wednesday nigtlt. Au hour later, army troops reoccupied a building under construction opposite the hotel. Firing in various sections of f'rom P .. e l 'HOSPITAL. • • provide cash for equipment. The announcement of the Chapman General campaign to unseat DeCince1 was met with promises by DeCinces affiliates ltlat construction on San Clemente Medical Center would 1Slart within lhree months. That promise came early last August. Since then no construction has begun on the graded hospital site near the San Clemente Civic Center. The local opposition to the DeCinces project was spawned -in part, opponents say -by the r e p ea t e d promises followed by long delays. Clemente Sprayer Ends Up in Jail A 16-year-<>ld yooth living in San Clemente on his own found new quarters in juvenile ball Wednesday after police arrested him for dousing passing cars with a fire e1tinguisher near the city pier. The youth, who said he lived alone in town, reportedly sprayed several pcslng cars with the extinguisher, sparking several complaints to police. A responding patrolman found the youth -erlinguisher still in hand - walking along the 600 block of Avenida Victoria. The youth will be returned to bis parent.s who live out of &late. Pot Buy Attempt Becomes Holdup Amman with rifles, machinegun1 and mortars resumed at 7 a.m. tode.y, theri subsided again by midmorning. Guests at the Jnter-Omtinental Hotel, including many American hostages from two hijacked planes in guerrilla hands, huddled in a nightclub which was converted into a makes hilt bomb shelter. Others bedded down in hallways, away from windows. The hotel took at least 12 hits in the fighUng, and bullets splaUeffii p\ale glass windows in the downstairs area. A mortar shell exploded near the hotel swimming pool. Bullets struck several cars in the hotel parking Joi. One slug punctured the hotel's water supply system, flooding the downstairs lobby and offi~. Power was cut for a time; Amman Airport was closed. Guerrillas manned banicades i n Amman; army troops established their own checkpoints on the outskirts. The heaviest fighting Wednesday night was in the building opposite the Inter· Contenental. Some guests watched from balconies as guerrillas and army troops fought at close quarters, moving from floor to floor and using hand grenades, small arms and mortars. In London, authoritative diplomatic sources quoted official report! from Amman as saying the British chancellery in the city was hit during shooting Wednesday, but lbat there were no casualties. '!be sources said Brilain has made contingency plans for evacuating British citizens from Jordan. SA Council Puts New Legislation On Sex 'J'averns A pair of so-called morality laws designed to keep taverns from featuring nude perfonners...and thei sel'y, adults· only bookstores have been adopted by'the Santa Ana City Council. They go into effect in 30 days. One would prohibit any new bar from locating closer than 300 feet to property zoned for residential or farming use. The permJt 'would be subject to a $100 conditional use permit fee and public hearings with a sUpulalion for approval that no topless and bottom l e11 entertainment would be offered. A second statute allows tht racy adult book stores -that some people charge cater to an outright thirst for pornogra· phy -anywhere in Santa Ana. eicept in any residential area. The pair of Jaws would be aimed at preventing any new ·sin and aex district such as tl'lat which has liprung up along Harbor Boulevard, with its taudry tlj.verns and lhabby book shops. Garden Grove resident Anthony Nieto, a rontinuing foe of such activities, criticized the laws approved Tuesday night as wW and asked for one barring nudity outright. "The. coUrts have continually held that nudity is. not obscenity." countered City Attorney William Mock, one of many municipal lawyers on the losing end of such leglSlation in the pasL UPI T•....,. 'Learn to Walk' Transportation Secretary John Volpe, testifying before a U.S. Senate subcommittee on the Federal Highway Act, said Wednesday the nation faces "a total transportation crisis," adding l•tbe American people have forgotten that the Dear Lord gave us a pair of legs." Pageant Boss Seeks .~orld Art Works From the Prado in t.1adrid to the Louvre in Paris, Lagunan D o n Williamson will prowl the great art collections of Europe to gather material for next year's Pageant of the Masters. "If I don't come back with a great program, I'll be very unhappy with myself because certainly the material is there," the pageant producer told directors of the Festival of Arts Tuesday. The board authorized $500 f o r Williamson tD purchase prints of art works or books for the festival library if he finds choice ones. Then they pondered the suggestion of director Helen Keeley that Williamson llave an entertainment budget in the event he firnh it advantageous to wine and dine the uecutives of the European art world. "It's good publicity for the Festival of Arts," said Mrs. Keeley. Direetor David Young said, "What's in it for the Festival of Arts, we all have to ask ourselves." Mrs. Keeley said It is .a common practice iri business to entertain. Young said, "It's one that's often overdone tn business." W i 11 i am s o n , however, won't be apt tG go overboard with the entertainment budget eventually allowed. The board authorized $250 for "selected entertainment when and if it benefits the Festival af Arts." Director Harold Burton sugg6ted the art executives might entertain Williamson if he advised them in advance of his arrival. · His six-week Itinerary includes London, Paris, Amsterdam, t.1ilan, \Vest Germany, Venice, Rome, Florence, Madrid, Portugal and Southern France. His wife will accomp8Tly him. A 20-year-old Laguna Beach man told JX)lice Wednesday that his effort to purchase two kilograms· of marijuana ended in bis being robbed of f400 at ,gunpoint. IO Times Bigger The would-be buyer uJd h e World Eye·s Mideast U.S. lnt,ervention lnlo Hijacking Doubtful From Wire Service• Leaders throuchout the world rtacted today to the dr1ma unfolding in the MJddle Elf. as compllcalioll! af the jet hljacklngs spread throughout diplomatic, conunercial and humanitarian circles. AdnUnistraUon spokesmen ln . Washington said It is highly doubtlul President Nixon will order direct military inlerventioa to free American bosta&es I aboard three jetliners. No potential method of rescue has been ruled out. A pair of Air Force cargo planes polentially aiisigned lo rescue Americiln hostages were took off from Adana, Turkey, for undisclost'd Jocallons. Three more waited at lncirlik Air Force Base, 90 minutes light time from Amman, J ordan. Marines Negotiating Sale Of Part of Pendleton Base The U.S. Marines do not need all the • be.aches af Camp Pendleton any more and are negotiating for sale of part of it to the State of California. But General Leonard F. Chapman Jr., commandant of the Marine Corps, Wednesday declined to say how close those talks are to actual consummation of a deal. The top man of the Marine. Carps discussed Camp Pendleton and a variety of other topics with newsmen following his Lalk before the World Affairs Council of Orange County at the Airporte.r Inn. He talked about drugs and the military. He said in some pM'Ls of the coimtry. SO percent of the eligible young men are declared unacceptable for lhe service because they have a history of taking drugs. He said narcotics are a problem ar some U.S. military installations. He said they are not a problem an the front lines in Vietnam. He also said the coverage ar the Vietnam war has become by the nation 's mass media, especially the major television networks, "ha! become impressively objective" in the last year. He declined comment when asked if he though Vice President Spiro T. Agne~'s criticisms af the networks had anything to do with the abrupt change. On Camp Pendleton. he said It will always be needed as a training facility ~s long as there is .a Marine Corps. He said the Corps does not need as much now. because. or changes in military equipment and strategy. "We can now take advantage or rough terrain when attacking foreign territory," he said. The explained that current tactics, with the use of tiellropters, would allow an altacl!.lng force to land behind the Girl Hitchhiker Kidnaped, Raped A San Clemente girl hitchiking before dawn today told police a man picked her up, drove her to a dirt road ~hind the new courthouse in Laguna Niguel and raped her. The young woman, whG had been seeking a ride on El Camino Real. returned to San Clemente and hailed a passing patrolman at about 3 a.m. to report the incident. Her assailant, she said, was driving an older, dark auto with Ohio license plates. After she accepted a ride, the man told the young woman he had to stop by his brother's home in Laguna Niguel, then be drove her to the dirt road where the assault took place. beaches and attack back at them. He said the negotiations for the sale or the South Coast training facility have been going on for some time. * * * From Page l MARINE ... to consider a hope for security within unless we are first secure from without.·• He said to provide that security we must remain strong. But he said strength requires more than the "equipage of war," He said. "above all its requires a moral fibre to bind the hardware of defense into meaningful and intelligent applications," He spoke of dedicated men in the service and again of a dedicated American will at home. He made himseU crystal clear. He likened Russia in 1970 to Japan in 1941 -both watching as th.is country debated the same subject, the JXlS!ible end of the draft. He recounted the months preceding December. 1941. "A few months before Pearl Harbor the extension of the 1940 one-year selective service act was debated long and hard in the halls of Congress, and all across the land. "The whole country listened closely, and watched carefully, as the extension finaUy passed in the House o f Representatives by a margin of one vote, 203 to 2112. "There were others also watching that lively American inte rchange In 1941 - the Japanese Imperial staff," he said. "The arguments of that crucial summer encouraged Japanese war planners to think the American will to defend this country was weak. "It took almost rour years of bitter war, and hundreds oI thousands of American and Japanese casualties to prove that theory wrong. .,.This same test is about la reoccur.'' Gen. Cha pman said. ''The draft Jaw will expire next June. In the next several months the. extension of the draft will again be debated and voted on. .. And again," he said, •"others will be watching." Gen. Chapman said there v.·ould be little problem in getting volunteers into the armed services -volunteers for one hitch to learn a skill or a trade. "But what about men to carry a rine, tramp through the mud, and close with the enemy in mortal combat?" he asked, "Alt of the dynamic applications of intellectual power. imaginative planning and positive management will be totally meaningless without a force capable or fighting.·• He said it's all up lo the will of the American people. He got a standing ovation when his speech ended. The United Nations Security Council appealed for mercy in treatment of the nearly 250 hostages and called for their freedom. Armed guards have report~ly l:ieen assigned to all El Al airliners by Israeli authorities. wHile demands have been made to guard au international fligh ts. The president or the lntemalional Air Transport Association (IATA) In Honolulu said Wednesday he had been informed that the insurance market around the warld has canceled insurance contracts with 90 percent ol the airlines as the result of the recent hijackings in the Middle East. Dr. Gerritt Van Der Wal, speaking to lhe opening session of IATA 's traffic conference here, stunned the de.legate with the remark as he departed Crom his prepared text. The Pentagon said today it had stopped using commercial intem'ational airliners for carrying or mailing of classified materials because of the upsurge in hijackings. Some classified North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) documents were aboard a Pan American jet hijacked and later blown up by Palestinian guerrillas. Friedheim said the classified material, moving by registered mail. was the only secret information he knows abclut that had been affected by the recent rash of hijackings. Najeeb E. Halaby. president of Pan American World Airways, says he believes airplane hijacking is a problem for "government to solve., not airlines." * * * From Page l HIJACK ... informed sources said it was' most likely Dr. Waldie Haddad, a mild-mannered physician. The 47-year-old doctor -object of a hit· and·run rocket attack g e n e r a 11 y atributed to Israeli agents a few weeks ago -was out of Beirut and unavailable for comment. The planners knew not only could Dawson's Field airstrip in Jordan take a modern jetliner, but that it could take several and at night, too. The TWA captain said later the runway was three times as long as he needed for his Boeing 7(fl and hard as concrete.. The airstrip was alraady manned with emergency flares and slit trenches had been dug round the parking area. The guerrillas even p r o v i d e d passengers with pink cards. exact copies of the international disembarkation documents, to furnish personal det.ails, and a rubber-st.amped .. Emergency Visa." There were reports in political quarters in Beirut that the Pan American jumbD hijack was a mistake and the men responsible had been instructed to fly a regular jetliner to Dawson's Field, too. The stary was they missed their original connection and decided to wait for the next America n jet. They were horrified to find it was a 747 and from then on all v.·as improvisation. It was on direct instructions from Amman. the local reixirts said, that the hijackers, after seeking advice at Beirut. new to Cairo and eiploded the plane as a gestur{! of political defiance on President Gama! Abdel Nasser's front doorstep. Clearly the guerrillas have secured an excellent lever for the release of valued men in prison. But additionally the operation has gon~ a long way towards scuttling peace talks, to which Cairo and Amman agreed, by changing t h e atmosphere of defeatism which the guerrilla movement was charged in the face of an embryonic Arab backlash and Nasser's decision. accompanied the bogus weed vender in a car to the 1200 block of Bluebird canyon Drive. A nickel-plated revolver entered the lict!ne as the buyer was counting out the cash and he was told: "Hand it over and get out." He said the money for the marijuana had been supplied by a friend. Huntington FtUrest Grower i1t V .S. luxurious spring 'down sofas Police are looking for a suspect in his mid 20s. DAILY PILOT N...,.,, I••• Hi..,._ ..... l.epN '"" ........ ,...., C.... M,.. S.. CJ1 '" OAANCilE COAS1' l"UtLISHtN!; (,QMpAlllY ••D.rt N. W • .J .... 111111111 .... 1"111>1"- J ttl. It. C11Mev Vlu l"rti:-rt t flll CO-tt .v..,..., Thot11•• K••-il ldll<N' 1110..,1 1 A. Murpht~• M-.lnl Eel!ot Ric~tri P. Nill So\r!ll Ort ... C-!, l!l!IW °""" Co\11 M ..... : »o Wi:JI t n Sir_. H1-" 8tlcll: 1711 WHt l1IM• 90\llt'Wltf L.•o""' t•Kll: m "'"'"' A¥-"'1.1111f'1111111 lle(fl: .,,,, k•dl ~ .. S.~ CIM!lnl9: J0a Hwt11 E CllTI""-1 .. 1 OAll'Y' l"lt.Or. trflft w:11t11 .. c~• nw Nt•i-Pr""-.. ,Wlltlltd '''"' rot., 1-111 "" _.,,,. ''"ie... .., LAI-te.:d't. N.--1 .. K ii, CMtt MtH. H""'llnf1111 a..c11 u<lt l'-MIR v11111. 1.._.,. wlltt i. ......... Mltlwli. Or-. C.HI l"...iltllhf ~ .,..,,,,,,. .,i.1111, •re '' nn Wnt lf!Mt 1:.-.., Hewporr ltl(ll, 1r .. :m W-.J lff '"""• ~I• Mf1,o, T...,._ .. 17141 '42 ... J21 c,..,-............... 1.1., 64.l ·J671 S• C..__ ,t.P .,,,.•l'twlMft-1 (.,,.,,.t, .,,.,, °'.... C..1! ..... ,ltllll\t Ct..._,. ff• -• 11w1t1. l!hnlr1t..,~ tf11oti.1 """'., ., ,,...,.,r-11 11tr1ifl ,..., 11.e ,..,,...,.." wltr.tvl -i.r ...,.. "'!Hiio! II _,.rllf'lt --. kc0111 llltl ,..!tot ,.1. 11 H-' ... di ._.,. C:.111 M .... ~lllol'lll1. $tltoKrll'lll•• 1W u,.,..., u.• _,,,..Yi ., "''" u• -"'"'' .,.,1111.., 111n 11,.•llfM, ''·• ''*""''' Far and away. the growth of Huntington Beach outdistanced any other major American city during the past decade. U.S. Census Bureau rigures released -ro d a.y tnade it official. Bwrttngton's papulation has grown tenfold Since 1960, from a mere 11,492 ten )'ears itgo to 'an a1tonding 115,557 in 1970. It ii the 122nd largest city in the United States. Althoogh not quite so spectacularly, any number af Orange Cou11ty ctties showed substa11tial populatian gains during the decade. • . Anaheim, tbe largest city in the county, Jumped from 11>4,184 to 164,913, making It the 8Jst largest city in the C1)Unt:ry. It !)ad been the Wrd largest in 1960. Santa Ana grew in size from l00,350 to 1$4 ,640, while Garden Crove jumped from 84,238 to 121,504. They are ranked 87th and 116th, respectively. Hwitington Beach's amazing clumb was actually surpassed. percent.agewise, by its litUe sister city to the north. Fouatain Valley, according to the official census figures, grew from only 2,0&a in 1960 to 31.118 in 1970. Costa Mesa's official population has been pl.aced at 72,412, an increase of nearly 50 percent !tom 1960 when it was 37,SSO. Newpart Beach grew more slowly, offic1ally gaining from 26,564 to 48,805. Laguna Btacb increased from 9,288 to 14,208. San Clemente's population ls now 16,462. twice its 8,527 count ln 1960. Westminster more tha• doubled, up from 25,7$0 to S9,619. San Juan C1pistrano, uncounted in 1960, now has 3,708. Leonard Isley, rtglonal dlreccklr of the Bureau of the Census tn Los Angeles, sa.ld this morning that the areas known as Irvine and Mission Viejo .are being computed 1.nd figures will be announced 50meUme in the future. Of the live. largest cities in the country, Los Angeles is lhe only one that gained in population during the 1960s. increasing in ~ize from 2,479,015 2,782,400. lt re tained its rank af third behind New York City, which dropped by 10.000 to 7,nl,730. and Chicago. which fell ZZS,000 to 3,325,263. The cities of Philadelphia, down 80,000 to 1,926,529. and Detroit. down 180,000 to l,492,914, round out the five largest U.S. cities. The only other city in the U.S. with more than 1 million population is l:louston. Tei ., which grew from 938,219 . fo l.21!,064. Otber California cities with populations of 100.000 or more, with their comparable fP&O statistics: San Francisco, 704.2tl9, down from 740,316, ranked 13th in the country. San Diego, 675,788, up from S73,224, ranked J4th. San Jose, 436,757. up from 204 .196, ranked 31st. Oakland. 358,198, down from 367,548, ranked 38th. I.Ang Beach, 347,072, up from 3-14,168, ranked 40th. Sacramento, 256,U4, up from 191,687, ranked 54th. Frtsno, 162,326. up from 133.929. ranked 82nd. Ri,·rrsldc. 139,217, up from 84,332, ranked 97th. Torr1n<'t, 136.029 up from 100,991, ranked !02nd. Cle.nd1le. 131,723, up from 119,442, ranked lOSth. Berkeley, 113.165. up from 111,268, ranked !25th. Pasadena. 111,826, down from 118,407, ranked !27th. San Bernardino. 106,014, up from 91,922, ranked 141st. Stockton, 102,657, up Jrom 86,321, ranked 144th. Fremont1 100,377, up from 43,790, rank@d JSOth. Tliis li..;f1ome Sof• w•1 Hs;gn.d to 9;.,.. Yfllll tlie .. inwte in teetinq eomlori wifll d~end down '6ac:~ ,;lowt., d..p. ~ Go.. ... t C'lf'lh ioni enw.d in doWft e-nd f...,.;en e nd in two fo.m.filled Mm FWl- ~ Choose frOCD • wiOe ~ioa of f.-febric1. PROFESSIONA~ INTWOR DESIGNERS • 8' length reg. $599 NOW -TWY OUI llYOLVING CHAIGl.- 0,-....... ,......,. & "'· ,., ... 399. 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 6-t6.027r I I ' , ari Co nu? Be ( COi wa lb< ... I ( ] , !or Nu Wit Ho rec the cia ! n" bul the ••• , .n. De its SAJ !or , offi fro Pit fU< fut 1lr , drt as~ De ... J thi: CO< De im I Cl< . .. Ch, 1 rur !il£ enc wa , Ch, pla Cir I Ch P" Fr f l. ( fur .hu Im I Sc he' 101 bu C3 oil .. I C do "' It; • Lagu11·a Beaeh Today's Final N.Y. S~b voe. '63, NO. 217, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER ·10, '1970 TEN CENTS 'Volunteer Army Disastrous' Says T"Op Marine By L. PETER KREIG Of tilt Oen~ ,1111 St•lf An apologetic country wilh a volunteer armed force could not long survive the Communist threat today. the nation's number one Marine told a Newport Beach audience Wednesday night. Gen. Leonard F. Chapman Jr., commandant of the U.S. Marine CorpS, warned that apologists are deteriorating the strength of the Uniled Slates and are aeekina: to end a draft that would result Hospital Campaign Pushed By JOHN VALTERZA Of Ille DaHr l'llat STiii The war to wrest official endorsement for a San Clemente hospital from a Van. Nuys developer gathered steam this week with confirmation that Chapman General Hospital has officially filed documents requesting a switch in endorsement by the Orange County Health Planning Assir ciation. But a date for a bearing on the newcomer Chapman General's plans to build a private hospital on land east of _ the San Diego Freeway has not yet been 1et. The date will be arranged somelime after Sept. 15 -the deadline for the C. T, DeCinces C:Opmany or Van Nuys-to prove its financial capabilities in building its SB.n Clement Medical Center -delayed for the past alx years. The Deeinces group, which holds the official sanction for the medical center f.rom the ~uoty Regional Health Planning Association, has 30 days Jeft to file its detailed report on immediate future plans, financing and corporate rtructure. The developers were given 90 days to draft the reports art.er the planning association postponed action on a DeCinces bid for renewal of the association-'s endorsement. An aide at the association offices said this morning that "absolutely no communications" have come from the DeCinces group s'ince the association imposed the 90-day period last July. In the meantime, disgruntled San Clemente physicians, community leaders and laymen have thrown their hats with Chapman General Hospital from Orange. The Chapman group, which already is running several successful hospitals, has filed its own request for association endorsement, but that bid will have to wait UTitil the Sept. 15 date arrives. Th! health planning aide said the Chapman application must wait until the planning a-ssociation board acts on the De Cinces report. In the meantime, local support for the Chapman plan has grown and escrow is proceeding on land east of the San Diego Freeway \vhich is being purcha sed for SI.I million. Chapman spokesmen have said other funds committed also include severa l . hundred thousand dollars from a group of Investors from Loma Linda v:ho would (Set HOSPITAL, Page%) Lunch 50 Cents At Lag una High School Cafeteria Despite inflation. Laguna Beach High School students will be able to lunch on beef and cheese laC()S, lettuce and tomaloes, corn. Apple Betty and a buttered roll for just 50 cents. That's the menu next Thursday for the new cumplele hot lunch to be offered jn the high school cafeteria. l ta I i a n spaghetti. green salad with tomatoes, apple sau ce, and French bread will await high school students on the first day of school, Monday, The hot lunch will supplement the a la carte and snack bar items that were offered last year. There will be no vending machine service at the blgb school. Though the price of lunches may he down, milk is up. A half pint of milk will cost JO cents this year. up four cents over las tyear. No Tha is to Ca1nhodia BANGKOK (AP ) -Th• Thi A government has decided against sending 3ny troops or voluntee rs lo Cambodia unl es!I Thal\and is directly thrci:a lened, Foreign Minister ThRnilt Khoman said today. Th anat commented as he left ror New York via Japa11 to lead a flve•man Thai delci:gotlon at the U.N. GeReral &.emblY. llCll week. In serious erosion of our military capability. Speaking to some 130 members of the World' Affair! Council of Orange County at the Airporter Jn11, Gen. Chapman said U.S. strength depends on a maintained "will of the Ameri can people." He singled out the gravest danger to that will, and to the· AmerJcan defense establishment, as thoSe who would apologize for America 's strength. He said ~e who C{)ndemn present Golden Girl Karin Kascher of Hayward ts representing California in the annual Miss America Pageant in Atlantic City, N.J. There's more on the Pageant. on Page 5. Festival Plans To Assist Other Cultural Fields Laguna's Festival of Arts, long a financial supporter of art students, is broadening its scholarship horizons to include aid for additional cultural fields. At the suggestion of Festival Directors Helen Keeley and Paul Griem Tuesday, the board earmarked an additional 5,000 for students or dance, musi c, writing and drama, both production and acting. Student scholarship applicants will be judged by committees that will be set up someti me after the Nov. 9 annual membership meeting. Last fiscal year the Ftstival .gave or set aside $27,275 for cultural activities. These included $7 ,000 in a r t scholarships of which UCI receives $1,000 arid Sadd!eback College $350. The Lyric Opera received $3,000 ror its repertory scholarship program. 'The Laguna Beach Civic Ballet was given $2,000 and $2,500 went to the Laguna Beach School of Art & Design. The Laguna Beach Art Association was given $4,000 including $1,200 for purchase prizes in the All California Show. The other $2,800 was for restoration of the / permanent art collection. The Festi val Chorale received $3,650 an<.I the Festival gave $2,000 to send the high school choral ceadcrs lo San Francisco to perfonn. Even Top of the World PT A scored when the board voted that group $00. U.S. war policies "are really less or a threat • to national security than the apologislj!." He sai(I by virtue of its geography America bas always been safe. He said the traditional U.S. dominance in sea power has kept it safe. But he said today geog raphy will not help. And he said Russia has gained in sea power almost to parity. He called this country's sea power today its weakest military arm. "As small as our world bas grown," he suggested, "the seas are still basic to our security -and sustenance. We must still depend on them . "But for our oceans to serve us, we must serve our oceans. Strength at sea Is still part of the framework on whjch American defense is structured. He said the U.S. has become complacent about that fact. Russia recognizes the value or the seas, he said, and "after centuries or frustrating e[lorts, she ls now well established on the high seas. "To date," he reported, "the new naval strength of the Soviet Union has not been employed directly in tbe context of world politics. But its presence is felt." He also said the struggle today is between totalitarian communism and open democracy. But, he indicated, "The struggle is engaged strictly by one-sided rules.· "The rules are simple. The Commwiilt countries are off limits. strictly out o! bounds. The rest of the world Is a tree-- for-all." , He said we face grave internal prob-. lems in this countr.y -social economic and environmental problems. But, he warned, aiming at the liberal movement. "destruction of our defense! in ·this modern world will not hastea solutions to oUr inner problems. "lt is," Gen. Chapman said, "ridiculous (See MARINE, Page I) Sirhan Throws Tantrum, uieted With Tear Gas 300 Hijacking Victims Given 3-day Reprieve From Wire Services AMMAN, Jordan -A 72-hour mercy reprieve on the lives or nearly 300 persons held aboard three hijacked jetliners at Dawson's Field, 45 miles from here, was announced today. The POpular Front·for the LiberJtion of Pale.stine (PLFP) declared the 1esture was in response to pleas by the lnternational Red Cr~ss. Terrorist.s bargaining for release of imprisoned Arab guerrillas in othe r nations set 10 p.m. (EDT) Saturday as Q1e deadline for the lives of the pawns in an international intrigue 1 i t e r a 11 y developing by the hour. They say they will blow up the Swissair. TWA and BOAC jetliners and everybody in them if their demands are not met. while worldwide appeals and UN Security Council pleas continued. New developments today included the announcement in J erusalem that police have arrested two Israelis: who plotted to hijack a jetliner from El Lod lnteroa· tional Airport. Several Israelis were solicited by the. would-be air pirates -who had a machinegun and a quantity o f propaganda leaflets destined to be dumped over Europe - but refused to assist them. A tip led police to raid their ho mes Tuesday and they have been held in custody since, awaiting federal charges. The International Red Cr o s s , meanwhile said the plight of the travelers held at the remote field built by the British in 1947 is deteriorating. Emergency supplies of sanitation equipment, food, medicine and cooking equipment were sent in, but guerrillas leaders said they are ta king humanitarian care of the nearly 300 hostages. Conditions nearing civil war in Jordan, however, hampered the delivery. The PLFP originally allowed 116 Arab men, plus women and children of various nationalities to be taken to t h e Intercontinental Hotel in Amman. The remainder of the hostages waited Jn or under the shadow-casting wings· of the three gleaming jeUiners today, while 22 more were released, identified as Bahreinis and the English fiance of one. Triumphant.Arabs, meanwhile, rejoice at the successful air piracies -three jetliners captured with a fourth failure Sunday and another Wednesday -and said it unites divisions within their ranks at a crucial time. No hlnt was given of the mastermind behind the multiple skyjackings, but (See HIJACK, Page %) 3 Month Projeet Incident Health Team Sets Vp Brings Him Shop Over Laguna Store. Isolation The Orange County Mental Health Survey team moved into its new home at 249 Forest Ave., above Laguna Beach Hardware, this rooming, and i! busily settipg1up shop Jar another three months of community screening for health needs. The team, headed by Washington D.C. psychiatrist William Routt, is studying Art Colony hejllth needs, after a resolution was approved by the City Council calling for decentralized county health services in Laguna. The team will study community wants and needs, transmit them to the city council, and tben to the Orange County Board of Supervisors. If supervisors greet a request for services in Laguna favorably, a branch of Hit, Run Suspect Arraigilment Set for Today A Laguna Hills resident will face arraignment today on charges of felony hit and run after he allegedly struck a motorcycle rider Wednesday night in Newport Beach. Police said the suspect, Daniel Vovee, 70, of 334 A Sevilla, was driving his pickup truck on Jamboree Road north or Ford Road when he hit the rear of a motorcycle riden by Gale Leroy Bergey, 51, of 712 Bison Ave., Newport Beach. Bergey suffered cuts and bruises in the crash. He was treated and released from Hoag Memorial Hospital. Investigators allege Vovee left the scene of the accident before officers arrived and without identifying himself. A description of the truck was supplied arriving officers a few moments later by witnesses to the accident. The description of Vovee's vehicle wa" broadcast to local law enforcement agencies, and the tru ck was spotted southbound on the San Diego freeway by the C:Osta Mesa police helicopter. The helicopte r followed the suspect down the freeway to El Toro Road where he stopped and surrendered himself to pursuing California ,ffighway Patrolmen. Vovee was booked in Newport city jail and will be 3rraigned tn the Harbor Judicial District Municipal Court. the Orange County Health Department will be opened in or near the. Art Colony. The team had formerly been housed al Laguna Beach Hlgb School. but bad to liave before the opening of school Monday. Five large. rooms make up lbe new home for the croup, but most sit empty awaitini office supplies from the county, according to Routt. Five desks are on order along with a request for other equipment such 11 a mimeograph machine and dictaphone. Rent for the office 11pace Is $300 per month, some $50 Jess than the $350 dollars approved last week by the City Council for re nt for space for the group, With the ext ra $50, Routt said, telephone equipment will be paid for. The team will continue to interview Laguna residents· and organize for a ser· ies of town meetings in October, designed to discover community hea lth needs and wants. Thirteen people, most of them working full time, are heading the Laguna study. The Forest Avenue locallon will join the Laguna Canyon home of the volunteer wing of the county team. The 775 Laguna Canyon Road location houses the volunteer project, designed tQ recruit Laguna residents to help with· the county study. "We need a couple of local residents out there who could ramrod the volunteer eUort. We'CI like to get as many people from within the community out there as possible," Routt stressed. The canyon center wlll f e e d information into the Forest Avenue location, where it will be analyzed and put together in report form, to be released in December of th is year. City Councilman Charlton P. Boyd, who serves as liason between the City Council and the county team said, "we're very pleased to find 11uch a location· for this important effort. We are also very pleased the city could find funds to pay for the rent of the building. Arizona Youth Gets Drug Rap A Phoenix youth was arrested In Laguna Beach Wednesday by police who said he had two small packets of heroin, $700, narcotics paraphernalia and needle. marked arms. SAN QUENTIN I AP) -Sirhan B. Sirhan, convicted of assassinating Sen. Robert B. Kennedy, was given a mild tear gassing by guards aftertlhrowing a "temper tantrum" in hls cell at San Quentin Prison·s Death Row, Warden Louis S. Nelson said·today. Later he was given a sedative and placed in an isolation cell, the wardea said. 1 Nelson said Sirhan, who had refused to give up hiS meal tray and thrown food 1t a guard, did not resist and came out of the cell on his own after guards used "a very little tear gas." Nelson said the jncident occurred Wednesday a!ternoon after t h e Palestinian Arab demanded to speak to Associate Warden James W. Park. Nelson said he did not know if Sirhan's demand had anything to do with the Arab guerrilla hijackings. At one point, the hijackers reportedly demanded Sirhan's freedom as ransom for some 300 hostages on two hijacked planes. Noting Wednesday was a state holiday -Admission Day, marking California'• admission into the union -the warden said: "It was a holiday and there was nobody around so he got into a snit about it -I guess a little temper tantrum." Nelson !iaid Sirhan had access to newspapers and radio and probably was following the hijacking story closely from his Death Row cell. In the isolation cell, however, Nel!On µid, Sirhan will not have acctss to radiG, television, newspapers"or other personal items. He said the prison's disciplinary committee will decide Friday how long Sirhan should be kept In isolation, The maximum js 30 days. Nelson said the tear gas was necessary because of possible danger from the metal tray, fork and 1poon that Sirhan refused to give 1,1p. Sirhan is under death sentence for the June 1968 assassina tion. He has been at San Quentin since May 23, 1969, while his case undergoes automatic review by the state Supreme Court. Orange Weac•er Unruh Admits Big Goof Police said' they w o u I d seek a complaint today against Benjamin Goin Jr., ta. Officers said he was stopped lnitlaUy because he was walki(lg In the middle of Sc Ann's Drive in ll>e 100 block in.;teqd .of us in3 the sid~wlk, It'll be 20 degrees holtu In Ana· heim Utan It will be In Newport Beach Friday, 90 to 70 to be. exact. Look for night and morning low clouds along the coast. Governor's 'Pay off Man' Dead f-0r 'i'e.n . Years · • SAN'J;A BARBARA IUPI) -Free· swinging Jess Unruh admitted today he "goofed '' and promised to personally IJXlloglze to the son of a dead man, Unruh accused Gov. Ronald Reagan Wedn<'sday of awarding a "political payoff" to a man ne contended helped Uie governor run for president In 1968. Actually the mo.n died in 1960. (Related Story Page 13.) The alleged "payoff," according to Unruh's original statement, w11s the appointment of the man'128-year-('lld son, Earl W, Brian, Jr., as state medical director, a $30,000 per year job. "I had bad 11taff 1nformatton. but that doesn·~ excuse me," Unruh to Id newsmen, holding up a !lmall p<>cketbook with the governor'$ face on it entitled, ''l Goofed -the wise a.nd curious sayings of Ronald Reagan." "liopefully,'• contlnued . the solemn faced DtmocraUc gubernatorial candidate, "that's .lot my say orPigi." I Unnih noted when he kicked off his campaign on Monday, he promised to ''T•U it llke It II. teU who II btblnd ,.ho, name dates, places. "I s~id I also was a lJl~n; for real, in flesh ind blood and obvioU$.lY I ma~e mista.kes. t made one ytstcrday .. l apoligir.e for thot, r 11\le!IS· I ·now hive become a member pf the c;:h~b:" ·Referring~ to Brlar1, Unruh said, "l think I owe ,hlm ~.~rsonal epology." • But Unruh Said bis· major campaign goq( "sUll ~<>;sn'l cha pg• }he· baiio facta tbat M'edilCat ls m1s111:anag9d. '·' And Unruh ;asked "'WhY was l\e. appointed? Whtre did a 23-year-old youngster get the e:a:perttse to run a bWlon dollar a Y.•ar J'.l'O&r&m!'' Goin was booked on suspicion ot ~oin ~ssion i nd · uspicion of Poaaesslng narcotics paraphernalia. Sixty-TwQ Arrested TACOMA, W3Sh. (UPI) -Police malnt.alned an around·the<lock vigil 1t a deserted . Indian encampment on the banks of the Puyallup River today following a skirmiAh over fishing rights whtch involved .gunfire. s·11.t y . t w 0 persons~ including1 five juveniles; .were arrested Wedne$day. wh@n !police charged · the armed encampment and $bbdued Its CS.foodotl with !tar au. INSWE TODAY The "forgotten men" of the Vietnam war -tlie American POW.t -hold dim hopt& for freedom. Some· have .been i_p. custody more than si.t )'tars. Paoe 23. MMtlftt• ,. ~m n M11i.•I l'l!M1 • N•l1'11•1 N-.. , ON .... C•ly It Srl'M "9rHot • S,..-ta IWI Sl9Ctt Mmrtfl ,._,, Ttlt\lltlell t1 TMatc"' ti W•lllff 4 -~·· ""' l?·~ WwlllN-4ol • 2 DAILV PILOT '1ostages it• Middle Fighting · Erupts In Jor dan Capital lly United Pre11 Jnternatiooal New fightlq broke out today in the Jordanian capital or Amman between Palestinian guerrillas and Jordanian army. troops. Combat was heavy 'during the. night around the Inter-Continental Hotel where 154 hijack bOBtages were held. · As Jordan veered toward fullscale civil war. Israeli Prt:mier Mrs. Golda Meir prepared ror a trip to Washington next well. .. and diplomatic sources i n JeruUlem said she would pr es s Presidebt Nixon for U.S. action against an alleged Egyptian missile buildup in the Suez Canal .zone. The Jerusalem Post said it has learned from reliable sources that about one-third of the lS.000-man force of Iraqi troops in Jordan have been assigned to the guerrillas in bases near Amman and in northern Jordan bordering Israel. Dispatches from UPI correspondent David Zenian in Amman on tbe 10th consecutive day of fighting the[e said Jordanian army forces renew'ed the conflict at 4 a.m. today iD a brief firefight near the lnler-O>ntinenta1 Hotel where a battle raged Wednesday night. An 'hour later, anny troops reoccupied a bhilding under construction opposite the hole!. Firing in various sections of l't'om Pqe 1 HOSPITAL . • • provide cash !or equipment. 'nl.e announcement of the Olapman General campiign to unseat DeCinces was met with promises by DeCinces affiliates that construction en San Clemente Medical Center would &tart within three months. That promise came early Ltst August. Since thezi no coll!tructlc11 has begun on the graded hospital aite near the San Clemente Civic Center. The local apposition to the DeCinees project was spawned -in part. opponents say -by the r e p ea t e d promises followed by Jong delays. Clemente Sprayer Ends Up ·in J ail A Jg.year.old youtb living in San Clemente on his owp found new quarters in j\fvenile hall Wednesday after police arrested him for dousing passing cars wilh a fire ertinguisher near the city pier. The youth, who said he lived alone in town, reportedly spr8yed severa1 passing cars with the extinguisher, sparking several complaints to police. A responding patrolman found tht youth -extinguisher still in hand - walking along the 600 block cf Avenida Victoria. The youth will be returned to his parents who live out at state. Pot Buy Attempt Becomes Holdup Amman with rifles, machlneguns and mortars resumed at 7 a.m. today, then subsided aga!n by midmorning. Guests at the lnter.COntinental Hotel. Including many f!.merlcan hostages from two hijacked planes in guerrilla hands, hu'ddled in a nightclub which was converted into a makeshift bomb shelter. Others bedded down in hallways, away from windows. The ho~! took at least 12 hits in the fighting, and bullets splallered plate glass windows in the downstairs area. A mortar shell exploded near the hotel swimming pool. Bullets struck several cars in the hotel parking lot. One slug punctured the hotel 's water supply system, flooding the downstairs lobby and offices. Power was cut for a lime; Amman Airport was closed. Guerrillas manned barricades i n Amman: army troops established their own checkpoints on the outskirts. The heaviest fighting Wednesday night was in the building apposite the Int.er· Contenental. Some guests watched from balconies as guerrillas and army troops fought at close quarters. moving from floor to floor and using hand grenades, small arms and mortars. In London. authoritative diplomatic sources quoted official reports from Amman as saying lbe British chancellery in the city was hit during 'shooting · Wednesday, but that there were no casualties. 'Die sources said Britain has made contingency plans for evacuating British citizens from Jord&f!.. SA Council Puts New Legislation On Sex Taverns A pair or so-called morality Jaws designed to keep taverns from featuring nude performers and lhe sexy, adults· cnly bookstores have been adopted by the Santa Ana City Council, They go into effect in 30 days. One would prohibit any new bar from locating closer than 300 feel to property zoned for residential or farming use. The permit would be subject to a $100 conditional use permit fee and public hearings with a stipulation for approval that no topless and bo ttomless entutairunent would be offered. A second statute allows tbe racy adult book stores -that some people charge cater to an outright thirst for pornogra. phy -anywhere In Santa Ana, except tn any residential area. · The pair of laws would be aimed at preventing any new sin and sex district such as that which has sprung up along Harbor Boulevard, with its taudry taverns and shabby book shops. Garden Grove resident Anthony Nieto, a continuing foe cf such activities, criticized t~ laws approved Tuesday night as weak and asked for one barring nudity outright. ''The Courts have continually held that nudity is not obscenity," countered City Attorney William Y..1ock, cne of many municipal lawyers on the losing end of &Uch legislation in the past. 'Learn to Walk' Transportation Secretary John Vol pe, testifying before a U.S. Senate subcommittee on the Federal Highv.1ay Act, .said Wednesday the nation faces "a total transportation crisis," adding .. the American pcoQle have forgotten that the Dear Lord gave us a pair of legs." Pageant Boss Seeks ,JJ{orld A rt W orks From the Prado in Madrid to the Louvre in Paris, Lagunan D on Wiiiiamson will prowl the great art collections er F.;urope to gather material for next year's Pageant of the Masters. "It J don·t come back with a great program, l 'Jl be very unhappy with myself because certainly the material ls lhere," the pageant producer told directors ot the Festival of Arts 1'uesday. The board authorized $500 f o r Williamson to purchase prints or art works or books for the festival library if he rinds choice ones. Then they pondered the suggestion cf director Helen Keeley that Williamson have an ente rtainment budget in the event he finds It advantageous to wine and dine I.he executives of the European art world. "It's good publicit y for the Festival er Arts,'' said Mrs. Keeley. Director David Young .said, "What's In tt for the Fe!tlva1 of Arts, we all have to ask oorse lves." Mrs. Keeley said it is a common practice in business to entertain. Young said, "Jt's one that's often overdone in business." W I I 11 a m .s an , however, won 't be apt to go cverboard with the entertainment budget eventually allowed. The board authorized $250 for "Selected entertainment when and if it benefits the Festival of Arts." Director Harold Burton suggested the art . execuUves might entertain Williamson If he advised them in advance cf his arrival. His six·v.'eek ltilierary includes London, Paris, Amsterdam, Milan, We st Germany. Venice, Rome, Florence, t1adrid, Portugal and SoUthern France. His wife will accompany him. ' A 20-year..old Laguna Beach man told police Wednesday that his effort to purchase two kilograms of marijuana ended in hiJ" being robbed of $400 at cunpoint. IO Ti111es Bigger The would·be buyer said h e accompanied the bogus weed vender in a car to the 1200 block of Bluebird Canyon Drive. A nickel·plated revolve r entered the scene as the buyer was counting cut the cash and he was told: "Hand it over and get ·Out." He said the money for the marijuana had been supplied by a friend . Huntington Fastest Grower in V .S. Police are looking for a suspect in his mid 20s •. DAILY PILOT "••ILtW ... -·-.__ OiltAJIGa COAST ~LlSMING CIOMl'AHi' ~e'itttf M. Wt M '""'""'' ..... hlllllMr J1ck '-Curl.., Viet l'rt~:..,,1 •1111 ~ti M..,.... Tho"''' ICttvll EdllOr 11iolfttl •A• M11rphint M•Mtl"I Ed!lw Rith1rt1 '· N.11 S-th Or...,. ·c-1, Efll.,. Offl<• Co1t1 Mti1: ,\)0 WtJI •• , irr .. I Ht"'"r1 ••Kii: nu w.1 ••IN• 1ot111,.,,,.. L .. \11\f ltKll: :122 l"&rftl ... ¥ ... lie ~ ..... tl•'191Dl'I IN(tl: 1111J ltHll &>ulnr1 ... ,.,, (.!Mien)f; JDS Hem €1 c ........... DAIL'!' il"IL.OT, w"" w;,1ctto 111 ~ ,,,. N1.-.. Pr..,1. II pUlbll\htoll 111n, nc.,t 1...,. • ..., "' ......... " ..... ~ tor " ....... ··~<II. H ...... 1 lffcll, Cl&ll "'"'· Hl#tlln9Mo~ .. ell _. F_,..., V1t1ir,, 1te:" wllll t• , ........ ffll.,,., °'~ Cltll '""111111,.. Cot!loll"' ,,inn,.. ,,., .. 1, ••• 11 nu Wnt ltt!Wt l !vd,, NCW1111<'1 &tKll, ••·• .ut Wtil •• , '""''· C-•• ......... ,...,.... .. (7141 ,42-4321 e1-1fie4 ........ 1.1 .. 64f.S,71 S-Cl.-... All P-t:t•"-llh : ,~ ...... 4t1·••t• ~r!IM. lt1f. °''""' tout 1"1.11111"'1"' (itmH~1'. Hf M•I t!6tle1., lll11J1••l .... 1. H l..,>el -IW el 1.""-'1~tt llwtlft ,,.., lie "'"""'"' wl"-1 w«lfll ...... ........... ~--S.Ctnll (WM .......... Ill It N....,..., lt«fl .,.Al C..t• M-. C.!fflfrtl'-. ""*•;,flWI IW u•ri.r ltlO -'lllrt lrY fNll u.-...-1111r1 ,., ..... ., 4_.,.,., ..... if• -"'"'· \ Far and away, the growth of Huntington Beach outdistanced any other major American city during the past decade. U.S. Census Bureau figures released toi;ay made it official. Hllntihgton'a population has grown tenfold.since 1960, from a mere 11,492 ten years ago to-an astonding 115,557 in 1970 .. lt is the l.22nd largest city in the United· States. Although not quite so spectacularly. any number cf Orange Cou11.ty cities showed substa11tial population gah}l during the decade. ' Anaheim, tbe largest city in the count'y, jumped from 104.184 to 164,91 3, inakiftg it the Slst largest city in the country. It had been the 123rd largest in 1960. Santa Ana grew in size from 100,350 to 154,640, while .Garden Grove jumped from 84 ,238 to 12(.504. They are ranked 87th and 116lh, resptttive\y. Hu11tington Beach's amazing clumb was actually surpassed. percentagewise, by Its litUe sister city to the north. Fou.1tain Valley, according to the official census figures, grew Crom only 2,068 in 19!!0 to 31 ,618 in 1970. Costa Mesa's official population has been placed at 72,412. an Increase or nearly SO percent from 1960 when It' was 37,550. Newport Beach gre" more slowly, oftlclally gaining from 26,564 to 48,8!'.>5 . J...aguna .Beach increased from 9,288 to 14.208. San Clemente's population is now 16,462, t~·ice Its 8.527 count In 1960. Westminster more tha11 doubled, up from ~.750 to $9,619. Sa n Juan Capistrano, uncounted in 1960; now has 3,708. • Leonard Isley, ~gional direcctor of the Bureau of tht Census in Los Angeles, sajd this mamlng that the are.s known as IrvlM and Mission Viejo are being computed aid figures will be announced IOl!lellme In the IUIUrt. Of the five largest cities in the country, Los Angeles is the only one that gained in population during the 1960s, increasing in size from 2.479,015 2,782,400. It retained its rank of th ird behin d New York Cily, which dropped b)' ID,000 to 7,771,730, and Chicago; which fel l .225,0QO to 3,325,263. . The cities or Philadelphia, down 80,000 tO 1;926,529, and Detroit, down 180,000 to l ,492,914, .round out the five largest U.S. titles. ·nie ()Tl}y Other city in the U.S. with more. then 1 million population is Houston, Tex., which grew from 938,219 lo l,!13,1164. . Other California cities wilh populations of 100.000 or more, with !heir comparable 1960 statistics: San Francisco. 704.209, clown from 740.316, ranked 13lh in the country. San Diego, 675,788, up from 573,224, ranked 14.th. San Jose, .\36,757, up from 204,196, ranked 31st. Oakland, 358,198. down from 367,548, ranked 38th. Long Beach, 347,0i2, up from 344,168, ranked 4-0th. Sacra mento, 256,124, up from l91 ,667, r~nked 54th. Fresno, 162,326, up from 133,929, ranked 82nd. Rh·ersldt:, 139,217, up from 14,332, ranked 97th. Torrance, 136,029 ~p from 100,991, ranked l02nd . Glendale, 131 ,723. up from 119,442, ranked 10$th. Btrkeley. 113,165. up from · 111,268, ranked !25th. Pasadena. 11 1,826, down from 116,407, r11nk~ l27lh. San Bernardlllo. 106,014, up from 91 ,922, ranked t4Ist. Stockton, 102,657, up from 16.321, ranked 144tb. Fremoot. 100,377, up from 43,790, ranked 1$0th. World Ey es Midea st· U.S. Intervention Into Hijacking Doubtful l'rom Mra ktvicta Leiden ttnulhoul the world reacted today to the drama unfolding in the ~11ddle East, as.compllcatlons of the jet hlJa<!Jdngs1.spread throughout diplomatic, commercial .Bnd hwnanitarlan circles. Admlfllstration Ii p o k e s m e n in Washington said it is highly doubUul President Nixon will order direct.military intervention to free American hostages aboard three jetliners. No potenlial method ol rescue his been rbled out A palr cf Air Force cargo planes poten\lally assigned to rescue American hostages were took ofr fro'm Adana, Turkey, for und isclosed location!. Three more waited at lnclrlik Air Force Base, 90 minutes flight .tlme from Amman, J ordan. Marines Negotia1ing' Sale Of Part of Pendleton Base The U.S. f\.larines do not need all the beaches of Camp Pendleton any more and are negotiating for sale cf part of it to the State cf California. But General Leonard F. Chapman Jr., commandant of the Marine Corps, Wednesday declined to say how close those talks are to actual consummation of a deal. The top man of the Marine Corps discussed Camp Pendleton and a, variety or other topics with newsmen following bis talk before the World Affairs Council of Orange County at the Airporter Inn. He talked about drugs and the military. He said in some parts of the country, SO percent of the eligible young men are declared unacceptable for the service because they ha ve a history o! ta.king drugs. He said narcotics are a problem at some U.S. mililary installations. He said they are not a problem on the front lines , In Vietnam. He also said the coverage cf the Vietnam war bas become by the nation's mass media. especially the major television networks. "has b e c o m e impressively objective" in the last Yt;ar. He declined comment when asked if he though Vice President Spiro T. Agne~"s criticisms of the networks had anythmg to do with the abrupt change. On Camp Pendleton, he said lt will always be needed as a training facility as Jong as there is a Marine Corps. He said the Corps: does not need as much now, because of changes in military equipment and strategy. "We can now take ad vantage of rough terrain when attacking foreign territory," he said. The explained that current tactics, with the use of helicopters. would allow an attackin& force to land behind tht Gh·l Hitchhiker Kidnaped, Raped A San Clemenle girl hitchiking before dawn today told police a man picked her up, drove her to a dirt road behind the new courthouse In Laguna Niguel and raped her. The young woman. who had been seeking a ride on El Camino Real, returned to San Clemente and hailed a pa ssing patrolman at about 3 a.m. to report the incident. Her assailant, she said, was driving an older, dark auto with Ohio license plates. After she acti!pled a ride, the man told the young woman he had to stop by his brother's home in Laguna Niguel, then he drove her to the dirt road where the assault took place. beaches and attack back at them. He said the negotiations for the sale or the South Coast training facility hive been going on for some time. * * * Fr om Page 1 MARINE •.• to consider a hope for security within unless we are first secure from lfithout." He said to provide that security we must remain strong. But he said strength requires more than the "equipage of war." He said, ..above all Ji ts requires a moral fibre to bind the , hardware of defense into meaningful and intelligent applications," He spoke of dedicated men in the service and again of a dedicated American will at home. He made himself crystal clear. He likened Russia in 1970 to Japan in 1941 -both watching as this country debated the .same subject, the possible end of the draft. He recounted the months preceding December, 1941. "A few months before Pearl Harbor the extension of the 1940 one.year selective service act was debated long and hard in the: halls of Congress, and all across the land. "The whole country listened closely, and watched carefully, as the eittension finally passed Jn the House o f Representatives by a margin or cne vote, 203 to 202. "There were others also watching that lively American interchange in 1941 - lhe Japanese Imperial staff." he said. "The arguments of that crucial summer encouraged Japanese war planners to think the American will to defend this country was weak.. "Jt took almost four years of bitter war, and hundreds of thousands o( American and Japanese casualties tO prove that theory wrong. "This same test is about to reoccur," - Gen. Chapman said, ''The draft law will expire next June. In the next several months the extension of the draft will again be debated and vcted on. "And again," be said, "others will be watching." Gen. Chapman said there would be litUe problem in getting volunteers inlo th e armed services -volunteers for one hitch to learn a skill or a trade. "But what about men to carry a rifle, tramp through the mud, and close with the enemy in mortal combat?'' he asked. "All of the dynamic applications of intellectual power, imaginative planning and positive management will be totally meaningless without a force capable of lighting." He said it's all up to the will of the American people. He got a standing cvation when his speec h ended. The United Nations Security CouocU appealed for mercy in treatment of the nearly 250 hostages Md cllled for their freedom. Armed guards have reportedly been assigned to aU El Al airliners ·by lilraeli authorities, while demands have been made to guard all international flights. The president of the International Air Traiisporl ,.\s.sociation (IATA) i n Honolulu said Wednesday he had been In formed that the insurance market around the world has canceled insura nce contracts with 90 percent of the airlines as the result of the recent hijackings in the Middle East. Dr. Gerritt Van Der Wal, speaking to the cpening session cf IATA'a traffic conference here, stunned the delegate with the remark as he departed from his prepared text. The Pentagcn said today it had stopped using commercial international airliners fo r cairying or mailing cf classified materials because of the upsurge in hijackings. Some classified North Atlantic Treaty Organi:r.ation (NATO) documents were alxiard a Pan America n jet hijacked and la.ter blown up by Palestinian guerrillas. Friedheim said the classified material, moving by registered mail, was the only secret information he knows about that had been affected by the recent rash of hijackings. Najeeb E. Halaby, president cf Pan American World Airways, says he bel ieves airplane hijacking is a problem !or "government to solve, not airlines.'' * * * From Page 1 HIJACK ... informed sources said it was most likely Dr. Waldie Haddad, a mild-mannered physician. The 47·year-old doctor -object of a hit-·. and-run rocket attack g e n e r a 11 y atributed to Israeli agents a few weeks ago -was out of Beirut and unavallabl• '' for comment. ·' The planners knew not only could Dawson's Field airstrip in Jordan take a modern jet.liner, but that it could lake several and at night, loo. The 1WA captain said later the runv.•ay was three times as long as he needed for his Boeing 707 and hard as concrete. The airstrip was alraady manned with emergency flares and slit trenches had been dug round the parking area. The guerrillas even prov J de d pas.!engers with pink cards, exact copies <>f the international disembarkation documenls. lo furnish personal details, and a rubber·st.amped "EmergencY. Visa." There were reports in political quarters tn Beirut that the Pan American jumbo hijack was a mistake and the men r esponsible bad been instructed to fly a regular jetliner to Dawson's Field. too. The story was they missed their original connection and decided to wait for the next American jet. They were horrified to find it was a 747 and from then on all was improvisation. It was on direct instructions from Amman, the local reports said, that the hijackers, after seeking advice at Beirut, flew to Cairo and exploded the plane as a gesture of poUtical defiance on President Gama! Abdel Nasse r's front doorstep. Clearly the guerrillas have secured an excellent lever for the release of valued men in prison. But additionally lbe cperation has .gone a long way towards scuttling peace talks., to which Cairo and Amman agreed, by changing the atmosphere of defeatism which the guerrilla movement was charged in the face of an embryonic Arab backlash.and Nasser's decision. luxurious spring 'down sofas TI.ii h'.nckome Sof1 w1s (J~ to gi•• yoe th1 vftim.f• ir1 seating comfort with clec:rol'I er1cl clown 6ecl:' pirlows, d~ spring dowai .. + enhions enveloped in down •fld fNth•n ind in t'wo fo1m.filled •rm pil- lows.. Cftoose from • ~ atl~tioa of Uot Mibhcs. ' \ 8' length reg. $599 NOW J9 9. Y .. /aoorile !nterlor derignc wm I>< ham to ..mi ~·· ... H.J.G~f\RElT fURNfllJRE -Tn OUI UYotYIHG CHAIGl- 0,. -1llon. .. Fri. .... 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646·027" • ' • 1 \ ~ 1 ' • 1 ' ( r r f r J, g 0 t • r ) B> al Ct M Sc Li f'i A! th th• Ci 0 pa I I (~ re~ Or •I I 'Vii \\'I Lu Hu ' ••t !lo E\' IV' DAILY P ILOT $11H PM19 REPRESENTATIVE S OF LAGUNA'S SCHOOL S GET TOGETHER AT WELCOME LUNCHEON St. C1therint'1 Sister Stephani• Herdy, Laguna Supt. ~llliam Ullom, Tei cher Shirley Munson Laguna Teachers Greeted 'They Get Y ounger, W e Get Older,' Say s Goldberg They were all in their places with gunshiny faces -businessmen and educators alike. It was the annual welcome teachers "luncheon Wednesday al the Hotel Laguna. "Get acquainted. make a lol or noise and enjoy yourselves,'' Mayor Richard Goldberg advised the group. And although the noise level remained modest. civic leaders made much of the fact that the new teachers were mostly female and pretty. District Superintendent \Villiam Ullom mentioned a 3&-2~-36 figures "along with other requirements mandated by state law ." Goldberg thought the teachers \\'ere getting younger and younger "as we get older and older." Larry Taylor, school board president. thought them '·younger ,;ind prettier as "'C get older and uglier .. " Goldberg invited them all to city cou'1cil meetings which are frequently HELP ING ALMA MATE R Laguna's Mrs . G regory I Mrs. Gregory In Scripps P ost. J\lrs. Elizabelh S. Gregory of Laguna Beach has been appointed assistant riirector of development of Scripps College, <1ccording to Scripps President J\fark H. Curtis. ~'frs. Gregory, a 1939 graduate or Scripps College. is a pas! president of the Laguna Beach Chapter of the American Field Service and has served as District Assistant for the AFS in Orange County. She has long been active on behalf or th e college, once serving as chairman of !he Orange Coast area Scri pps Capital Campaign Cammitlce and Nalional Chairman of the Scripps Capital Cam- paign. Last Rites Held For Lucile Bolz Funeral services were held ·Wednesday for South Lagunan Lucile Alice Bolz, a resident of California for 52 years and Orange County 20 years. \\'ho died Sundny 11 t the age of 74. Final rites were ct1nduc:led at Pacific View fl.1emorial Chapel, CorOT\a de l ~far. \vith the Rev. Walter Gerken of First Lu theran Church of Pasadena offic iating. Burial followed ;it Pacific View. A native of Boulder, Colo .. Mrs. Bolz i~ ~ur\'ivcd by her husb<1nd. Cleveland L. Bob:. or lhc f;imily home : ,, daughter. 1':\·elyn Carter of Pasadena : and a grandson, Terry J. c .. rter. packed but cautioned that they would need reservations. "It's a show well worth watching," he laughed. "We're opening in New Haven next season." Taylor invited the group lo the school boa rd sessions also but conceded there are usually plenty of scats without reservations. Despite the fact that education is lak ing a Lremendous beating up and down the slate. said Taylor, he is proud to head the board or a school system often honored for its achievements. He credited Dr. Ullom, his staff and leachers and said, "you have reason lo be proud of your schools." South Lagu11a Youths Clea11 Beach Areas A group of South LagWla youngsters, di sgusted with the trash left by visitors an their favorite: beach, decided to do something about it Tuesday. Armed with brooms and shovels, the group headed to West Street Beach and scoured the strand for glass, papers, cans, cigarette butts, and debris washed in by the tide. Leader of the cleanup v.•as Kevin Pike. 12, of 31442 Holly SI., South Laguna . "I was down here 011 Labor Day and I couldn't believe all the trash. So, I got some of my friends together and v.·e: came down and c\ea11ed it up.'' Joining the yoWlg Pike was hi s brother Joel, Heidi and Philip Burkhardt. and Julie and J\fark Ritchie. All li ve in the vicinity Of West Street Beach. ··ff the !ourists can't clean up rhe beach. why should they come here. \\'e don't mind them coming as long as they kee p the beaches clean,·• said one of the girls. Beginning at 9 a.rn .. the beach clea111ers started at the southerly end of the beach and moved toward the norlh. Along lhe way, they \vould stop, take a swim. or frolic on the sand, and then return to work. F'ollowing lunch, they cleaned things up near the foot of the 200 step stairway that 'leads to the beach. The youngsters stayed near the stairway and asked beachgoers to keep the beach clean. They also ta cked onto the end of a sign the words : "This is our beach. Keep it clean!" Fes tival Boa rd Selects Vedder Glenn Vedder. former Laguna Beach mayor, has been selected unanimously to serve on the Festlval of Arts board to fill tht vacancy left by the death last month of Verner Beck. Beck's three yt!.ar term on the nine- niember board has two years to run. Three directors are elected to thee-year terms each year by the me1nbership. Vedder served as an cx-<ifficio member of the Festival board whlle he served as mayor. Vedder was nominated by Director Paul Griem Tuesday. Board Presjdent William D. ?\-1artin also named Vedder to fill the commiltec posts on the board that Beck had held. Bolt of Lightning Kill s 4 in Ma nil a MA.l~ILA (UPll -Lightning killed four high school students playing b11seball in Santa Cruz. about 40 miles sou lhtast of 11ian ila . the Philippine constabulary reported today. Tht constaOOlary said scver;il othtr:<1 \\ere inju red "'hen lightning struck durin & light rain Wednesday. The luncheon hosted by the Laguna Beach Chamber or C.Ommerce and its women's division, the Merma ids included gifts for lhe new teachers a n d introduction of each. The loncheon is held for both Laguna Beach Unified School District and St. Catherine's (Catholic) School which has 2:>4 students in grades one through eight. Sister Stephanie Hardy. principal of St. Catherine's. told of a departmental program of social studies, math and · science and language arts as well .as electives in cooking and sewing. New teachers at SI. Catherine 's are i<.1rs. Barbara Cupaivolo. ~lrs. Jantt Urdag, Carole Englun d and Ron Mombe\lo. Al El Morro Elementary School. lhe new recruits are Mrs. Bellany Beaumont, ~1 rs. Barbara Carson, Mrs . Maxine Nicely and ti-fiss Carolyn Parker. Thurston Intermediate School has as new teachers Mrs. Carol Brahams and l\1 rs. Christina McClelland. Al the high school they are Victoria Furst. Mrs. Susan November. Mrs. Mary Rees ke, J\frs. Allison f\1eyer, Frederick Stoufer (music) and Mrs. f\fary Carey. New Top of the World Elementary School tea chers are Mrs. Shirley June a.tunson, Suzanne Clapp and Kathleen J\1 cNeil. Aliso Elementary School 's new teaches are Mrs. Katherine Crumley, Mrs. Suzanne Powell and Eileen Berry. The district staff additions are Mrs. Rosemary Thibodo, psychometrist; Mark Jones. director of the Capistrano-Laguna Occupational program: and Dr. Charles A. Hess, assis tant superintendanl of business. A 1nbulance Mun Ge ts 'Runaround' In Laguna Beach Ronald Kaufman of Laguna Beach ma y feel the need of an ombudsman . Kaufman, v.•ho is establishing an ambulance service in Laguna. was recently awarded his business license by lhe city council. "But they suggested I go to the police chief to see about off street parking requirements for ambulances. The chief told me to go to the city manager. He told me lo see city planner Al Autry. He told me to come to the planning commission. So here Tam ," a bewildered Kaufman explained -Tuesday. Kaufman said he \.\·ould like some type of "guidance" on where an ambulanct service can be placed . Autry said that some city standards should be developed for ambulance concerns. &fore deciding v.·here the service should be. commissioners agreed to have the cily staff look at other communities and see \.\'hat they do. ''Now !he! you have passed your confusion on to us. we'll take it from here." chairman William Lambourne commented. Agne'v to Aid GOP Candidates WASHINGTON (AP) -VIC< Prtsldent Spiro T. Agnew embarks today on the· first leg of a 20·State tour to whip up su pport for Republican congressional candidates in the Nov. 3 election. His assignment as the administratk;ln's seeker of Republican wtes and dollars took on added signincance w h e n President Nixon apparently decided against any open polit lcal missions. The vice president's assistance will go primarily to administration loyalists. Agne\v's \\'eek·long opening swing will cover six states Ill J somewhat leiwrely paet. T1vo appearances a day is the htavlesl announced s:hedule for the vi~ president. AFS Youtlls Welcon1ed To Lagu11a By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL 01 "" DMtr l"lltl ltlH Laguna Beach High School's two ror eign exchange students -Bea Mann from Switzerland and Chico Senna from Brar.ii -a.re getting settled in the Art Colony this week before school starts lilonday. Bea is living with the Theodore Taylor ra1nlly, 1920 Ocean Way for the school year, while Chico is staying with the Robert Balck family, 371 El Camino del li1ar. Both were brought to Laguna Beach on tl:e American Field Service program . Since arriving three weeks ago, Bea h:.is been to the Festival af Arts, Pageant of !he Masters and the Sawdust Festival. "I cert1inly like it here. especially the beach," she con\mentcd. As a senior lhis year, she will take Humanities, U.S. History. History of lhe Far East, Leadership, Moderil 08nce, and Concert Choir. After her year in America, Bea will r('turn to Switzerland pick up l\\'O more years of school and then become a primary teacher. Among her interests are music, skiing and literature. ·.he 18-ycar-<ild Chico. who came from Salvador, Brar.ii, plans to be active in the high school athletic department this year. "l'\·e already beeen invited to join the football team," he noted. "I don 't knO\V ... I've been used to playiag Brazilian football and not American football." In Brazil, Chico has already had one semester of college cducatio11, with emphasis in the field of architecture. At lhe high school, he will 1 tu j y Architect.ural D r a f ti n g , College lntroductary Analysis, U.S. History and Phys ical Education. Chico, too, has been out to S«-the art festival and the PaKeant of the Masters. He has also been over to one ot America's number one attractions - Disneyland. Bea was planning a trip to the Magic Kh1gdom today . Ne,vcomer Up Against Wahl Laguna Beach's Art Wahl will defend his title as Men 's "A" tennis champ this Saturda y against Har¥ey Klyce. a newcomer to this year's 13th Annual Laguna Beach Tennis Tournament. Wahl and Klyce moved into the semi finals following preliminary competition over the Labor Day Weekend on the Irvine Bowl tennis courts. The semi finals match will be held beginn ing at 10 a.m. Grand.stands seating is availeble to the general public. Thursday, Stpltmbtr 10, 1970 L DAILY PILOI 3 Lag1111agr hu By Phil lnlorl•ndl "Well, go 1head, If you muit -it's. tuit that I don't think there'll _ be 1ny d1m1nd for 1 'Citf Council wrist w1tchl'" Regular Laguna Visitor Warns Against Dog La:w A Jl)..year visitor to Laguna Beach. In a letter lo city councilmen, has warned that the recently approved dog ordinance will cause the city to lose much revenue from taurists who visit the Art Colony. Adolph Levy of Los Angeles stated in a letter dated Sept. 3: "I cannot even begin to understand the foll y of this action. It v.·ill not only deprive hundreds, if not thousands of regular vjsitors of their much·looked·forward·to enjoyinent, .but it at the same time deprives you of the revenue these families have been bringing to Laguna." The ordinanct, which will prohibit dogs from all the city beaches between the hours of 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. and ban them from three of the city parks completely, will go into eCfect Sept. 19. "f'or more than 30 years. my family and 1 have enjoyed vi siting Laguna Beach regularly. often on the nite weekends durfng the nonsummer months. 1 know I have left a good many thousand dollars there in renl. meals. art. festivals and festivities ." Levy wrote. Levy stated that due to the new ordinance and the fa ct that his family has a dog "you are now making it impossible for us to further enjoy Laguna Beach. "Your present leash law. properly enforced, wou ld permit the law·abiding people to continue coming to Laguna Beach v.·hile stopping those who do not respect the law or the rights of their neighbors. Your new ordinance stops the good people in its shotgun appraach, but isn't such a policy 1he opposile of the American system .•• " t Levy said si nce he and his family have reservations for the weekend of Sept. 18. he would like a quick reply. "If v.·e cannot bring the canine member of our family . who is always on leash at the: beach, I. .. (want ) ... to secure the return of my deposit upon cancellation of the reservation. In a pastscript to the letter, Levy stated: 1 trust each of your organizations will have the time and the courtesy to make all of your prospective ,visitors from all parts of the country aware or your new limitation of thei r conduct so that many of them will not be in the embarassing -and costly -positio·n of arriving with their dogs. as usual, to Und they are no longer welcome .. ," 7 I1·anians Arrested NE\V YORK (UPI ) -Seven Iranian stude nts were arraigned Wednesday on charges ranging from felonious assault and resisting arrest t.o disorderly cond~ as a result of what started as a protest demonstration in front of the Iranian Consulate Tuesday. Our :lraJilion ... BUSTER BROWN. ~ ~ Grown-up style for · can't-sit-still boys It's a schoolgirl's world OUR· FASHION ISLAND STORE OPEN SUN ., SEPT. 13th FROM 12 TO 5 JO FASHION ISLAND e NEW PORT BEACH • WESTCLIFF PLAZA ' I I • Tllursd11, Stpttmbfr 10, 1970 j Gunboat Fleet Lifts Cambodia Seige A rural mail box \\'est of Linds· borg, Kansas appears to be just as puzzling to t.he birds as it is to passing motorists. .A. couple of months ago, Bill Johnston, a fa~­ mer buil1 a stand in front of his houSe to hold mail boxes for his family and that of a neighbor. Johnston then built a thi rd box out of metal and shaped like an ordinary mail box. On each side he lettered "Air 1'-1ail." put it at the end of a pipe 20 feet above the road and hoped birds ¥.'Ould inove in. "\Ve've p:ot birds living in our house chi1nney. but so far none has taken up residence in the air mail box," Mrs. Johnston said. • ...... ~ :J: -~·a::--~ A five·year·old boy oppea rtd in a Guilford, England Juvenile I Courl r.tonday a11 cllorges of t shopli fting sham poo. batteries, photograpliic equipmenr. rub- ber balls, a pot plant, cosrn e!ics and a tou car. The boy sat iii court holdi ng his parents l1onds. \Vtlfart officials were ordtrtd ~ to check an the child fo., !hree ' uears. • Mich•el Hollings, 19. son of Sen. Ernost F. Hollings, (D·S.C.), has drawn praise for his part in a citi· zens' arrest. Detective Capt. Harry T. Snipes said Monday that Holl· ings and a friend, Harry Lindler, heard Gwendolyn Benton scream· ing as a man knocked her do'll.'n and took her purse as she "'alked to her job at Columbia Hospital early Saturday. They chased the man and 'vrestled him to the ,£round. Prof. Henry Lumpkin of the University of South Carolina. \vho lives nearby, held a shotgun o n the man until police appeared. Snipes said William R. Fr.clericks, 22, was charj!;ed with robbery and assault and battery. • Gary Shelton, 11. of San Pedro is allergic to fur so he can't have a dog or cat for a pet. He tried rep tiles, but you can't walk a snake. turtles are too slow, and you a fe\v months ago "'Gary read about what seemed like the ideal pet for him. lfe saved the $25 purchase price by ,,·ashin~ cars. mowing l&\\'ns and cleaning s\vimming pools. No\v he's the owner of a n armadillo, imported from Texas. Says he of the small, annored creature. "It's fun. and it's fast." But he has a problem. The beast is nocturnal. Gary bas to stay up nights to play \\•ith his pet. • • ~ Chi cago m ini ster is out of city can't fond I e a fi sh. Then jail, in Ouray. Colo. released t\VO days ea rly for ''good behavior." Bu"t the Rev. E. Paul Conine said be is still irritated at the five-dav jain sentence imposed for a speed- ·ing v i o 1 a t i o n . The minister was cited for :;peeding 40 miles an h our in a 25 1n.p.h z on c last · Thursday by Police Chief Harold Boyd. The Rev. l\1r. C o n i n c , 56. charged before his trial Sunday that this southwestern Colorado mountain community \\•as becomin( a "tourist trap." and he would fight the ticket because "it was a matter of principle." PHNOM PENH IUPll -A mile-Ions ttoo~ladtn gunboat convoy awept up the nooc:1.awollen Stung Sen River in a surprile attack that broke the oo.day commi.mist siege or K.ompong Thom, the Cambodian command said today . ~UUtary spokesmen said lhc rh•er fores 'Ge1ieral 611ilty' struck \Vt:dnesday night \l'hile Viet Cong and North Vietname~ attention was focust:d on the 4,000.man Cambodian task force pushing slowly toward Kompoiig Thom rrom !he south. The spokesmen said it left KompO(l8 1·hom "wide ope'n'' for a "lightning'' My I~ai Suspect Blames Deatl1s on W estmorelancl FT. McPHERSON, Ga. (UPI) -A young soldier charged \\'ilh murder in the alleged tt1y Lai massacre says Army Chief of Slaff \Villiam G. \Vestmorel and should shoUlder the blame for \\'hatcvcr happened in Lhe Vietnamese village . Sgt. Esequiel Torres. 22. o ( Bro"'nsville. Tex .. charged Westmoreland \vith dereliction of duiy in the purported South Africcut .4rrns Sales Hit During Meeting LUSAKA, Zambia (UPIJ-Indian Prime l\1inister Indira Ghandi said today Britain's reported inlenLion to sell arm s to South Africa "'as a "dangerous and retrograde step" "'hich might encourage South African militarism and threaten Lhe entire continent. Addressing the third "'Orld nonaligned summit conference, J\.frs. Ghandi also demanded the "'ithdra"'al of "foreign'' troops from Indochina and sided ll'ilh the Arabs in the ~fiddle East conflict . She cxpre.ssed disapproval of I s r a e Ii •·intransigence.·• On lhe British-South African arms dea f, the Indian prime minister told the leaders of 55 nalions altending the th ird and final session of lhe summit th at the move was a "dangerous and retrograde step t "'hich) will threaten the neighbors of South Africa and also the Indian Ocean area .'' Any increase in South Africa's mili1ry capacity might encourage it to annex other territories, she said. Prime t.linister Lee Kuan Yew of Singapore said a world power struggle ~'as shaping up in Southern Africa as nations opposed to Communist China realized its political and economic interests "'ere growing in the area. · Canadian Murder Suspect Charged In Eight Deaths CRESTON. B.C. (UPI \ -Accused mass n1urderer Dale ~lerle Ne lson 1vas charged \Vith seven 1norc slayings \\'ed.nesday in con nection "'1th the killings of two Britsh Columbia families ove r the ll'eekend. Nelson, a 3l·year-0ld for mer 111cnta l patient, \\'as cha rged Tuesday with the kill ing of an eighth person. t.1rs. Shirley \Vasvk, 30, and remalndned for a 30-day psyChiatric examination. \\lednesday's court action sa\v him accused of the murders of Ray Phipps, 42; Phipps' 26-year-0ld ~·ife, Isabelle, and the couple's children: Paul, IO, Cathy, 8. Bryan, 7, and Kenneth . 18 months. He '"'as also charged "'ith the murder of 7- year-0ld Tracey \Vasyk. The victims "'ere all shot to death in their homes in !he small British Columbia town near !he U.S. border. incident. The surprising move was made \Vednesday during a preliminary hearing at Ft. tt1cPherson. His attorney. Charles Weltner, said he v>"ould ask that any action against all defer1danls in the My Lai case be delayed until the question of u I t I m a t e responsibility is settled. Twelve orficers and enlisted n1en are charged in the alletged 1968 slaughter of Vietnamese cl vllians . The hearin g resumes today. It was recessed \Vednesday after four hours of argu1ncnts. Several earlier defense 1notions , including one to move the trial lo another site. preferably Vietnam. and another to .subpoena Defense Secrclary t.lelvi n Laird and \\'estmoreland , "·ere dismissed. Torres is charged \\•ith the machinegun n1urdcr or at least three s 0 u t h Vietnamese civilians. the hanging of another and the assault with intent to kill three others. In his charges against \Vesunorela nd, Torres said : ··eased upon my understanding of the findi ngs of the Pcers-~1cCrate inquiry, I believe that Gen. Westmoreland is responsible for ll'hatever casualties that \Vere inflicted on Vietnamese civilians al l\ly Lai 4 hamlet on March 16. 1968." The Peers inquiry was an inver;llgati 1n into the alleged incident by the Army. De11mark Vessel Reported Lost Sigl1ted at Sea COPENHAGEN IUPI) - A Danish submarine "'ith 21 crewmen aboard was sighted early loday after it was reported •·n1issing for eight hours, the Danish naval command said. It broken radio .antenna caused the scare. The submarine, the 144-foot di es e I powered Narhvalen. was spotted by the Danish depot ship Henrik Gerner in the North Sea southwest of Stavanger on the \\'est coast of Norway, the command said. 1'he broken anteMa prevented the ~ubmarine from reporting it had surfaced folJo\ving a 60·hour dive. Jl v.•as instructed to signal every 24 hours and the command said the sub 's commander did :-.ot reali ze the antenna \\'as broken unti l it surfaced. Scores of Britsh, Dutch. Norv;egian and Danish ships, including the Royal Danish ''acht. wC're enroute to the windswept area in the biggest search in Danish naval hi story. thC' command said. "It's a happy ending as far as \\'C\l iire conce rned." a commend spokesman said. "\\"e are now back to routine." U.S. Death Figures Heach 10-,vcck Hio-h 0 SAIGON (UPI ) -Th'! U.S. command said today 87 America ns ,,·ere listed as killed in Vietna1n las t \\'tek. The lotal included 22 men killed in a helicoriter crash the previous v.·eck and resulted ~n the highest toll in 10 \veeks. The U.S. "'ounded totaled 32.1 -the lowest since ~1arch 5, 1966. It brought lo 41,5&1 the total Americans killed in Vietnam since Jan. 1. 1961. \Vounded total 288.124 and 1.431 are missing, captured or interned. Showers Plag-µ~ Midwest Thunderstornts Knock Out Poive r in Wisconsin, lotva California T"""peralurr~ Albll<!Utr<llft t1 5' thrust from the wea:t-southwesl by the gunboats. "The task force, which made up the biggest operation of the Cambodian campaign, was sllll 36 miles south or Kompong Thom on Highway 6 when the ri ver units attacked. Aiilitary spokesme-11 declined to say hO'l'I' many Cambod ian troops were in1·0J\'ed In breaking the long encirclement of Kompong Thom· but said the gunboats "stretched for more than a mlle'' on the Slung Sen. .. ··The flood helped us r(I this operation," !he spokesman said. ''In Lhe dry season, no boats of this si1e could nav igate that river. But now the river run!. fast and deep because of the monsoon." Kompong Thom is a city of 10,000 persons 80 miles north of Phnom PC'llh and not only is a provincial cap ita! but an important tran s po r la ti on and communications center. Viel Cong and North Vitnamese units have shelled the city almost daily for two months. Cambodian spokesmer. said the flotilla began it.s trip to Kompong Thom two days ago from a point 40 miles southwest of the beleaiuered city. The gunboats crcued Tonie Sap, Cambod1a'! huge lake, then entered the Stllng Sen river, encounte.ring only Ugh~ Viet Cong resistance along the way and losing one man killed. The ·4,000.man task force edging northward toward Kompong Thom has 'Chicago 3' Refused Algier s POW Tdp CHICAGO (UPll -Three defendants in the "Chicago Seven'' riot conspiracy trial have been refused permission to travel lo Algiers to seek the possible release or American prisoners of war. Two federal judges Wednesday refused to let Tom Hayden, Bennie Davis and John Froines go to Algiers. Hayden and Davis were convicted of crossing state lines to incite rioting-during the 1968 Democratic National ConvenUoo, while Froines was cited for ci>ntempt' of court during the trial. Hayden and Davis also were cited for contempt:• :::overed nine miles In three d11ys, the .spokesmfn said. The troops 11nd 1upply vehicles 1 have been held back by commw1Jst obstaclt:s blocking the narrow uphalt -roadway and blown-up bridges. There has bee.1 almost on contact with the communists. "Deep Inside. 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NOW 1595 NOW '695 CABINET CANISTER CANISTER SET ....... ..... , . llOW 1695 NOW 1395 NOW 19\!Q 7 I i ( I ( I ( ( I I I ! I I I ' • I 7 San Clemente Capistrano. vo r. 63, NO. 217, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CAllFORNIA Today's Final N.Y. Steeb TH URSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, T970 :rEN CENTS 'Volunteer Army Disastrous' Says Top Marine By L. PET>:~ KREIG Of tlie DtU;'l'~1111 11111 An apologetic country wilh a volunteer armed force couJd not long survive the Communist threat today. the nation 's number one Marine told a Newport Beach audience Wednesday night. Gen. Leonard F. Chapman Jr., commandant of the U.S. P.farine ~orps, warned that apologists are deteriorating the s!J'e'1gth of the United States and are · aeeking to end a draft that would result Hospital Campaign Pushed By JOHN VAL TERZA OI lite D1flr P'llM S!lff The war to wrest official endorsement for a San Clemente hospital from a Van Nuys developer gathered steam this week with confinnatlon that Chapman General Hospital has officially filed documents requesting a sw itch in endorsement by the Orange County Health Planning Asso- ciation. But a dale for a hearing on the newcomer Chapman General 's plans to build a private hospital on land east of the San Diego Freeway has not yet been ret. The date will be arranged sometime after Sept. 15 -the deadline for the C. T. DeCinces Copmany of Van Nuys to prove its financial capabililies in building ils San Clement Medical Center -delayed for the ·past six years. 'The DeCinces group. which holds the official sanction for the medical center from the County Re1ional Health Planning Association, has 30 days left to file it.s detailed report on immediate future plans, financing and corporate 1lructure. The developers were given 90 days to draft the reports after the planning association postponed action on a DeCinces bid for renewal of the association's endorsement. An aide at the associalion offices said this morning that "absolutely no communications" have come from the DeCinces group since the association imposed the !Kktay period last July. In the meantime, disgruntled San Clemente physicians, community leaders and laymen have thrown their hats with Chapman General Hospital from Orange. The Chapman group, which already is running several successful hospitals, has filed its own request for association endorsement, but that bid will have to wait unti l the Sept. 15 date arrives. i'he health planning aide said the Chapman application must wait until the planning association board acts on the De Cinces report. In lhe meantime, local support for the Chapman plan has grown and escrow is proceeding on land east of the San Diego Freeway which is being purchased for •1.1 million. Chapman spokesmen have said other funds committed also include several hundrect thousand dollars from a group of investors from Loma Linda who would (Set HOSPITAL, Page %) Luncl1 50 Cents At La g una High School Cafeteria Despite innation, LagunR Beach High School students will be able to lunch on beef and cheese tacos, lettuce and tomatoes. corn, Apple Betty and a bullered roll for just 50 cents. That's the menu next Thursday for the new complete hot lunch to be olfered in the high school cafeteria. It a 1 i an r;paghetti. grC?cn salad with tomatoes. apple sauce, and French bread will await high school students on the first day of school. Monday. The bot lunch will supplement the ll la carte and snack bar Items that were offered lallt year. There. will be no vending machine service al the high 1chool. Though the priet or lunches may be down. milk Is up. A half pint of milk will cost to cents this year, up four cents over las tyear. No T hais to Camhodin BANGKOK (AP l -The Th I• government ha!! decided against titndlng any troops or volunleers to Cambodia unle.ss Thailand Is directly thre:att:ntd. Foreign Minister Thanat Khoman 58.ld today. Thant1t comment~ as he left for New York via Jap&fl to lead a fi ve.man Thal delegation at the U.N. Gt11cral Assembly ne1t week.. in seriow erosion of our military capability. Speaking to some 130 members of the World Affairs Council of Orange County at the Airporter Inn, Gen. Chapman said U.S. slrength depends OTl a maintained "will of the Ameri can people." He singled out the gravest danger to that will, and to the American defense 'establishment, as those who would apologize for America's strength. He said those who condemn present ' • Ir, , o~ ~ I ,,. Gofde n Girl Karin Kascher of Hayward is r epresenting California in the annuaJ Miss America Pageant .in Atlantic City, N.J, There's more on the Pageant on Page 5. Festival Plans To Assist Other Cultural Fields Laguna's Festival of Arts, long a financial supporter of art students, Is broadening its' scholarship horizons lo include aid for addittonal cultural fields. Al the suggestion of Festival Directors Helen Keeley and Paul Griem Tuesday, !he board earmarked an additional S,000 for students of dance, music, writing and drama. both production and acting. Student scholarship applicants will be judged by commitlees that will be set up sometime after the Nov. 9 annual membership meeting. Last fiscal year the Festival gave or set aside $27.275 for cultural activities. These included $7 ,000 in a r t scholarships of which UC I receives $1,000 and Saddleback College $350. The Lyric Opera received $3,000 for 'its repertory scholarship program. The Laguna Beach Civic Ballet was given $2.000 an~ $2,500 went to ~e Laguna Beach School of Art & Design. The Laguna Beach Art Association was given $4.000 including $1,200 for purchase prizes in the All California Show. The other $2,800 was for restoration of the permanent art collection. The Festival Chorale received $3,650 and the Festival gave $2,000 lo send the higtt school choral readers to San Francisco to perform. Even Top of the World PT A scored when the board voted that grou_p $50. Unruh U.S. war policies "are reaUy less of a threat to national security than the apologists." He said by virtue of its geography America has always been safe. He said the traditional U.S. dominance in sea power has kept it safe. But he said today geography will not help. And he said Russia his gained in sea power almost to parity. He called this country's sea power today it.s weak6t military arm. "As small as our world has grown," he suggested, "the seas are still basic to our security -and sustenance. We must stUI depend on them. "But for our oceaJU to serve us, we must serve our oceans. Strength at sea is still part of the framework on which American defen.se Is structured. He said the U.S. has bec<>me c<>mplacent about that fact. RuSllla recognizes the value of the seas, he said, and "after centuries of frustrating efforts, she ls now well established on the high seas. "To date," he reported, "the new naval strength of the Soviet Union has not been employed directly in the context of world politics. But its presence is felt." He also said the struggle today Is between totalilarian communism and open democracy. But, he indicated, "The struggle is engaged strictly by one-sided rules. •·The rules are simple. The Communist countries are off limits, strictly out of bounds. Tbe rest of the world Ls a free- for·all.'' He said we face grave internal prob- lems in !his country -social economic and environmental problems. But, he wamed, aiming at the liberal movement, "destruction of our defenses in this modern world will not hasten solutions to our inner problems. "lt is," Gen. Chapman said, "rldJculou.s (See MARINE, Pace 2) Sirhan Throws Tantrum, uieted With Tear Gas 300 Hijacking Victims Given . - 3-day Reprieve F.rom Wire Services AMMAN, Jordan -A 72-hour mercy reprieve on the lives of nearly 300 persons held aboard three hijacked jeUiners at Dawson 's Field, 45 miles from here, was announced today. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PLFP) declared the gestu r1 was 1n respense to pleu by the Jnlernational Red Cross. Terrorists bargainirlg for release of lmpriliOlled Arab guerrillas in other nalioJU set 10 p.m. (EDT) Saturday as the deadline for the lives of the pawns in an international intrigue l i t e r a I J y developing by the hour. They !lay they will blow up the Swissair, TWA and BOAC jeUiners and everybody. in them if their demands are not met. while worldwide appeals and UN Security Council pleas continued. New developments today included the announ c:ement in Jerusalem that police have arrested two fsraelis who plotted to hijack a jetliner from El Loci lnterna· tlonal Airport. Several Israelis were solicited by the wou ld·be air pirates -who had a m.acltinegun and a quantity o f propaganda leaflets destined to be dumped over Europe -but refused to assist them. A ti p led police to raid their homes Tuesday and lh~y have been held in custody since, awaiting federal charges. 'Jfie lnternational Red C r o s s , meanwhile sald the plight of the travelers held at the remote field built by the Brilish in 1947 is deteriorating. Emergency supplies of sanitation equipment, food, medicine and cooking . equipment were sent in. but guerrillas leaders said they are ta king humanitarian care of the nearly 300 hostages. Conditions nearing civil war in Jordan, however, hampered the delivery. The PLFP originally allowed 116 Arab men, plus women and children of varJous nationalities to be taken to t h e Intercontinental Hotel in Amman. The remainder of the hostage$ waited In or under the shadoW-tasting wiJt.gs of the three gleaming jeWners today, while 22 more: were . released, identified as Bahreinis and the ·English fiance of one. Triumphant Arabs, meanwhile, rejoice at the successful air piracies -three jetliners captured with a fourth failure Sunday and another Wednesday -and said it unite:s divisions within their ranks at a crucial time. No hint was given of the mastermind behind the multiple .skyjackings, but (8ee HU ACK, Page %) ' . 3 Month Projeet Health Team Sets Vp Shop Over Laguna Store The Orange County ~1ental Health Survey team moved Into its new homt at 249 Forest Ave., above Laguna Beach Hardware, thi.s morning, and is busily 1etling up shop for another three months of community screening for health needs. The team, headed by Washington D.C. psychiatrist William RooU, it ·studying Art Co:lony health nC?eds, after a resoluUon was approved by tht City Council calling for decentralized county health services in Laguna. The team will study community want.s and needs, transmit them to the cily council. and then to the Orange County Board of Supervisors. If supervisors greet a request for aervlces in Laguna favorably, a branch of Hit, Run Suspect Arraig nment Set f or Today A Laguna Hills resident will face arraignment today on charges of felony hit and run after he allegedly struck a motorcycle rider Wednesday night in Newport Beach. Police said the suspect, Danie l Vovee, 70, of 334 A Sevilla . was driving his pickup truck on Jamboree Road north of Ford Road when he hit the rear of a motorcycle riden by Gale Leroy Bergey, 51 , of 712 Bison Ave., Newport Beach. Bergey suffered cuts and bruises in the crash. He was treated and released lrom Hoag Memorial Hospital. Investigators allege Vovee Jeft the scene or the accident before officers arrived and without Identifying himself. A dC3crlption of the truck was supplied arriving officers a few moments later by wllnesses to the accident. The description of Vovee's vehicle was broadcast to local law enforcement agencies, and the truck was spotted southbound on Ille San Diego freeway by the Costa Mesa police helicopter. The helicopter followed the suspect down tht freeway 10 El Toro Road where he stopped and surrendered himself . to pursuing California Highway Patrolmen. Vovee was booked in Newport city jail and will be arraigned in the Harbor Judicial District Munici pal Court. the Orange County Health Department will be opened in or near the Art Colony. The t~m had formerly betn housed at Laguna Beach High School, but had to leave before the opening of 1chool Monday. Five large rooms m!ke up the new home for the group, but most sit empty awaiting office supplies from the county, according to Routt. Five desks are on order along with a request for other equipment such as a mimeograph machine and dictaphone. Rent for the office space ls $300 per month, .some $50 Tess than the •350 dollars approved la st week by the City Council for rent for space for the group. With the e:xtra $50, Routt said, telephone equipment will be paid for. i'he team will continue to interview Laguna residents and organize for a ser· ies of town meetings in October, designed to discover community health needs and wants. Thirteen people. most of them working full time, are heading the Laguna study. The Forest Avenue location will join the Laguna Canyon home of the volunteer wing of the county team. The 775 Laguna Canyon Road localion houses the volunteer project, deslgned to recruit Laguna residents to help with the county study. "We need a couple or local residents oul there who could ramrod the volunteer effort. We'd like to get as many people from wilhln the community out there as possible," Routt stressed. The canyon center will f e e d information into the Forest Avenue location, where It will be analyzed and put together in report form, to be released in December of this year. CHy Councilman Charlton P. Boyd, who serves as liason betw~n the City Cotmcll and the county team said, "we're very pleased to find such a location for this important effort. We are also very pleased the city could find fund s to pay for the rent of the building. Arizona Youth Gets Dr ug Rap A Phoenix youth was arrested In Laguna Beach Wednesday by police who 11atd he had· two small packets o{ heroin. $700, narcoUc.s paraphernalia and needle· " marked arms. dmits Big Goof 'Police said they wou l d sttk a complaint today against Benjamin Goin Jr .• 18.. Offic:ers sa id he was stopped lnit.ially because he was walkJng h1 the mlddle of SL Ann's Drive In the JOO block . jnstead of using the sldewlk. Incident Brings Him Isolation SAN QUENTIN IAP) -Sirhan B. Sirhan. convicted of assassinating Sen. Robert 8 . Kennedy, was given a mild tear gassing by guards alter throwing a "temper tantrum" in his cell at Sam Quentin Prison's Death Row, Warden Louis S. "Nel5on said today. Later he was given a sedative and placed in an isolation cell, the warden said. Nelson said Sirhan, who had refused to give up his meal tray and thrown fOOd at a guard, did not resis t .and ca me out of lhe cell on his own after guard.s used "a very little tea·r gas." Nelson said the lncldent occurred Wednesday afternoon after the Palestinian Arab demanded to speak ro Associate Warden James W. Park. Nelson said he did not know if Sirban's demand had anything to do with the Arab guerrilla hijackings. At one point, the hijackers reportedly demanded Sirhan's freedom as ransom for some 300 hostages on two hijacked planes. Noting Wednesday was a state holiday -Admission Day, marking C&liforn.ia 'a admission into the union -the warden said : "It was a holiday and there was nobody around so he got into a snit about It-1 guess a little temper tantrum." Nelson said Sirhan had aciess to newspapers and radio and probably was following the hijacking story closely from his Death Row cell. In the isolation cell. however, Nel!On said, Sirhan will not have access to radio, television, newspapers or other personal items. He said the prison's disciplinary committee will decide Friday how Jong Sirhan should be kept In JsolaUon. The maximum is 30 days, Ne lson said the tear gas was necessary because of pos.sible danger from the metal tray. fork and spoon that Sirhan refused to give up: Sirhan is tmder death sentence for the June 1968 assassination. He has been at San Quentin since May 23, 1969. while his case undergoes automaUc review by the state Supreme Court. Orange Cout Weat•er WU be 20 degrees hotter ln Ano· heim than it will be In Newport Beach Friday. 90 to 70 to be exact. Look for night and morning low clouds along °" coast Gove rnor's 'Pay off Man' Dead for T en Years Goin was hooke:d on !IU1plclon of heroin pcmession and usplciop or pos~sing narcotics paraphernalia. INSJ,DE TODA 'Y The "forgotten men" of the VfflMm war -tht A.mtrican POW& -hold dim hoptt for frtedam. $ome hat1t bttn in custody more than siz uears. Page 23. SANTA BARBARA (UPI) -Fr ... swinging Jess Unruh adm!lted today he "goofed" ~nd promised to personally apol ogize to the i;on of a dead min. Unruh actllStd Gov. Ronald Reagan Wednesday of awarding a "political payoff'' to a man he contended helped the governor run for president In 1968. Actually the man died In 1960. (Related Story Page l~.J The alleged "payo(f," according lo Unrub's original statement, wa11 the appointment of the man's ZS.year-old aon! Earl W. Brlan, Jr., as stale mcdica1 director, a $30,000 per year job. "I said I also was a man, for real. In "l had bad staff informaUon. but that flesh and blood and ol>vlously 1 m.ice dorsn't ucuse me," Unruh to Id mhltaket. 1 made one yesterday. l newsmen, holding up a small pocketbook .,.IClae for that. I pss I now have with the governor's fa ce on it entitled, .., btcome a member or the club." "I Goofed -the wise and curiOUJ sayings Referring to Brian, Unruh 11aid, "I or Ronald Reagan." think J owe him a personal apology." "Hopefully," continued the 50lemn But Unruh said his major campaign fa ced Democratic:: g u be r n a lo r I al goof "still doesn't change the hasic fa cts candid3te. "that's not my·~y of P\gs." that Medl..f;lll ts mismanaged.'' Unruh noted when ht kicked oft hjs And Unruh asked "Why was he campaign on Monday~ be promistd to appolnted? Where did a 28-year-old ''Tell Jt like it is, tell who.ii behind who, youngster get the eq>ertlse to run. a name dates, pieces. billion doU1r a ye.ar pri;i&ram?" , Sixty-Two Arrested TACOMA, Wa:ih. (UPI) -Police maintained 11n around·the-c::lock vigil at a deserted Indian encampment on the bank.oi: of tbe Puyallup River today following a skirmish over fishing rights which involved gunfire. SI x I y ·t wo persons. Including five juveniles. were arrested Wednesday when Police charged the armed encampment and 1ubdued Its defender& with 'tear a:as. ... ,lflt )I C•,lfWlll.I 11 Clttcfllf!w 1,1, 1 Cll1tlli. U.• C.rnkt ll c........... » Dlol111 Nttk.. U l•lMrl1i , .. , ' •~ttf'l1lfl111t11I ll·U l'l11t11<t a.JI -" AM 1.""'9 17 ~-·~ ·-'" ,. ' ' ,N " I •), ' • :t D.IJLV P!LOT SC rhunci.J, Sfl>""'bw 10, 1970 Bestf!ges in Middle Fighting Erupts In Jordan Capital I By Ualted Press Jateraatlonal New 'figbtile broke out today In the Jordanian capital of Amman between Palestlnlan guerrillas and Jordanian army troops. Combat was heavy during~ the-ol&ht around the lnter.COi1trnental Hofel llfbere 1~ hijack hostages we.re held. As Jordan veered toward fullscale civil war, Israeli Premier Mrs. Golda Meir prepared for a trip to Washington next week, and diplomatic sources i n Jerusalem said. she would pres 1 President Nixon for U.S. action against an alleged Egyptian missile buildup in the Suez Canal 1.one. The Jerusalem Post said it has learned from relialile sources that about one-third of the lS,000-man force of Iraqi troops in Jordan have been assigned to the guerrillas in bases near Amman and in northern Jordan bordering Israel. Dispatches from UP[ correspondent David Zenian in Amman on the 10th consecutive day ()f fighting there said Jordanian army forces renewed the conflict at 4 1.m. today in a brief firefight near the Inter-Continental Hotel where • battle raged Wednesday nig ht. An hour later, army troops reoccupied a building under construction opposite the hotel. Firing in various sections of Prem Paffe l HOSPITAL. •• provide cash for equipmmt. The announcement of the Chapman General camp&lgn to unseat DeCtnces was met wilh promises by DeCjnces affiliates that construction on San Clemente Medical Center would &tar t within three months. That promise came early la.st August. Since then no construction has begun on the gra!fed hospital site near the San Clemente Civic Center. The local opposition to the OeCinces project was spawned -in part. opponents say -by the r e p e a t e d promises followed by long delays. Clemente Spra yer Ends Up in Jail A JS-year-old youth living in San Clemente on his own found ~ quarter• in ju_venlle ·tiaU Wednesday after police arrested rum for dousing passing cars with a (j.re extinguisher near the city pier. The youth, who said he lived alone in town, reportedly sprayed several passing cars with the extinguisher, spark.in& uvei'al complaints to police. A responding patrolman found the youth -erlingWsher still in hand - walking along the fiOO block of Avenlda Victoria. The youth will be returned to bis parents who live out of state. Pot Buy Attempt Becomes Holdup Amman wHh rifles, machlneguns and mortars resumed at 7 a.m. today, then sub.sided again by midmorning. Guests at the Inter-Continental Hotel. including many American hostages from two hijaCked planes In guerriUa 'hands, huddled ln a nightclub which was converted into a makeshift bomb shelter. Others bedded down in hallways, away from 'windows. The hotel took at least 12 hits in the fighting, and bullets splattered plate glass windows in the downstairs area. A mortar shell exploded near the hotel swimming pool. Bullets struck several cars in the hotel parking lot. One slug punctured the hotel's water supply system. flooding the downstairs lobby and offices. Power was cut for a time; Amman Alrport was closed. Guerrillas manned barricades i n Amman; army troops established their oin•n checkpoints on the outskirts. The heaviest lighting Wednesday night was in the building opposite the Inter· Contenental. Some guests watched from balconies as guerrillas and army troops fought et close quarters, moving from floor to floor and using hand grenades, small arms and mortars. Jn London, authoritative diplomatic sources quoled official reports from Amman as saying the British chancellery in the city was hlt during shooting Wednesday, but that there were no casualties. 'lbe sources said Britain has made contingency plans for evacuating British citizens from Jordan. SA Council Puts New Legislation On Sex Taverns A pair of so-called moralily lain•s designed to keep taverns from featuruig nude performe~ and the sex y, adull.s· only bookstores have been adopted by the Santa Ana City Council. They go into effect in 30 days. One would prohibit any new bar from locating closer than 300 feet lo property zoned for residential or farming use.· The pem.lt would be subject to a $100 conditional use permit fee and public hearings with a sUpulation for approval that no topless and bQttom l e11 entertainment would be offered. A atc0nd •tatute aUows the raey adult book stores -that some people cba.rge cater to an outright thirst for pornogra· phy -anywhere in Santa Ana. ucept in any residential area. 1 The pair of laws would be aimed at preventing any new sin and sex district such as that which bas sprung up along Harbor Boulevard, with it.s taudry taverns and shabby book shops. Garden Grove resldent Anthony Nieto, a continuing foe of such activities, criticized the laws approved Tuesday night as weak and asked for one barring nudity outright. "The c:oUrts have continually held that nudity is, not obscenity." countered City Attorney William Mock, one ()f many municipal lawyers on the losing end of such legislation in the past. V .. I Ttl1p1Mtt 'Learn to Walk' Transportation Se<:retar.Y John Volpe, testifyi~g before a U.S. Senate subcommittee on the Federal Highway Act, said Wednesday the nation faces "a total transportation crisis." adding "the American people have forgotten that tbe Dear Lord gave us a pair of legs." Pageant Boss Seeks .Trorld Art Works From the Prado in ~1adrid to the Louvre in Paris, Lagunan Don Williamson will prowl the great art collections of Europe to gather material for next year's Pageant of the Masters. ''If I don't con1e back with a great program, I'll be very unhappy with myself because certainly the material is there," the pageant producer told directors of the Festival of Arts Tuesday. The board authorized $500 f o r Williamson to purchase prints ()( art wor ks ()r boo~ for the festival library i! he finds choice ones. Then they pondered the suggestion of director Helen Keeley that Williamson have an ·eoterl.alnment budget in tbe event he finds It idvantageous to wine and dine the executives of the European art world. "1t's good publicity for the Festival of Arts," said Mrs. Keeley. Director David Young said, "What's in it for tht Festival of Arts, we all have to ask ourselves." Mrs. Keeley said it is a common praclice in business to entertain. Young said, "It's one that's often overdone in business." W i 111 ams on. however, won 't be apt to go overboard with the entertainment budget eventually allowed. The board authorized $250 ror "selected entertainment when and if it benefits the F'estival of Arts." Director Harold Burton suggested the art executives might entertain \Vi/liamson if he advised them in advance of his arrival. His six-wetk itinerary includes Umdon, Paris, Amsterdam, ~filan, W e s t Germany, Venice, Rome, Florence, Madrid, Portugal and Southern France. His wire will accompany him. · A 2(1...year'i>ld Laguna Beach man told Police Wednesday that his effort to purchase two kilograms of marijuana ended In his being robbed of $400 at gunpoint. IO Times Bigger The would-be buyer uid h e accompanied the bogus weed vender in a car to the 1200 block of Bluebird Canyon - Drive. A nickel·plated revolver entered the scene as the buyer was counting out the cash and he was told: "Hand it over and get' out." He said the money for the marijuana bad been supplied by a friend. Huntington Fastest Grower in U.S. Police are looking for a suspect in his mld.2ls. DAILY PILOT N..,...I ... M11111.,. .. .... let•M ... ~.. .. ...... ,..., c........ s..cr...e. (]ltA.liGE COAST' l"tll'-ISH!Nt; COM1"ANV 11.e'Ml't N. w,.d ,.,.,.,.,,, •nf "lllllr.ti.r J •tk 11.. c.,r,v \'l(f ,Al:Vtnt •l'ld "-rtl Mt ........ 11.o"''' ke1vil Edi..,.,. T~e"''' A. Murp~ine M•~•~lnD Edller Ri,li1r4 P. Nell Sevlll Orlflll' <-lJ E"tff' Off'<• COllt M-: ~-Wu! 1..,. $!rftl-. Nt"""'rl ll•:d" 1211 WH! llllloO• llovll'll~ L•,.,..,. 1111<'1: tn ,.,. ... , Av111111t .,.....,,i...i... IHdl: 11111 &eldl l wltwr4 &IA C:IMl...,19; JU HW'lll 11:1 CMl'li... l•I l)A1\.V f'ILOT, •"" w11<tri It. c-..... ~lltJI n,. "'"'""""'· Iii ...,eoiitl'lcd a111v 1acl'Jf $-"' "' .....,.ie , .. ,-.. tor ............ :.11. Jil"-1 ~ (Olli Ml'lt. H""U"ftfft 9-dl ""' F""'ttlfl Vtlk1, 119"' •!!JI IM ......... , llllllltrlt. 0r"'9(' Ctn! P~~lk~l"f c...n.onv iVlfl•lno planb ''' '' '211 W•U a11-.t alwf .. "IWllO(I 1.-dl, ef.d UI Wtol t1r $'"91, Co.le MUI. r-... .. 111 41 ''J-4ll1 Cl.ulfl.C Ad"'1i611t 64J,S671 !• Cl......,. All 0c-,.,,_.h : T•..,...._ 4fJ-44it c~ tt1l. 0r.,,.. c ... 1 ,....~ '--"'· Ne _. tl4'!111, m1n1t•r"-c•...,111 lllllltl ., l cl,.trU-.n!t Mrfl" ~ IC' ,,_...... wl!""'I .,..... ~ MIMilll ti nnFlflll -· S.C. C .... ""'"' Pll<f II fl,.,., lelO ... _. c:o.11 ...., t.1non11t. "*'<,...,..., .., CMrW UM _.!\II .,--ti U ... -"1\11 .... ,,.,.., d•tlnt!""'-IJ.00 ~··" ' Far and away. the growth of Huntington Beach outdistanced any other major American city during the past decade. U.S. <:e11Sus Bureau figures released t oJay made it official. Huntirigton's population has grown tenfold since 1960, from a mere 11,492 ten yean ago to 'an astonding 115,557 in 1970. It is the' 12Znd largest city in the United Stale~ Alihough not quite so l!lpectacularly. any number of Orange Courity cities showed substaatial population gains during the decade. ., , Anaheim, the largest city in the county, jumped from 104,184 to 164,913, makll1g it the 8Jst largest cily in the c9~try. It h;ad been the !23rd largest in 1960. Santa Ana grew in size from 100.350 to 154,640. while Garden Grove jumped from 84,2.38 to 121,504. They are ranked 87th and !16th, respectively. Huntington Beach's amazing clumb was actually surpassed, percentagewise, by Its little sister city to the north. Fouataln Valley, according to the official census figure s, grew from only 2,068 in 1960 to 31,618 in 1970. Costa Mesa·s official popu1aUon bas been placed at 72,412, an Increase of nearly so percent from 1960 when it was 37,SSO. Newport Beach grew more slowlr, officially gaining from 26.564 to 48.805. Laguna Beach increased from 9,288 lo 14,21)8. S11n Clemente's population Is now 16,462, twice. ils 8.~27 count in 1960. Westminster more th11ft doubled, up from 25,750 to 59,819. San Juan Capistrano, uncounted in 1960, now ha3 3,708. Leonard Isley, regional direcctor of the Bureau of the Cl!nsus in Los Angeles, said this morning that the areas known as lrvl11e and ~tigslon Viejo are being r;:()mputed ud figures will be announced 10metlme In the future. \~ Of the five largest cities in the country, Los Angeles is the only one that gained in population during the 1960s, increasing in size from 2,479,015 2,782,400. It retained its rank of third behind New York City, which dropped by 10,000 lo 7.771.730. and Chicago. which fell %'25,000 to 3,325,263. The cities of Philadelphia, down 80,000 to t.926.529, and Detroit, down 180,000 to 1;492,914, round out the five largest U.S. ciUes. The only CJthcr cltr in the U.S. with more than · 1 million population is Houston. Te:ii:., which grew from 938,219 Ill • I .213,064. Other California cities with populations or 100,000 or more. with their comparable 1960 statistics: San Francisco, 704.209. down from 740.316, ranked 13th In the country. San Diego, 675,788, up from 573,224, ranked 14th. San Jose, •36.757, up from 2{)4,196, ranked 31st,, ' Oakland, 358,198, doin'fl from 367,548, ranked 38th . Lang Beach, 347,072, up £rom 3441168, ranked 40th. Sacramento, 256,124, up from t91,M7, ranked 54th. Fresno, 162,326, up from 133,929, ranked 82nd. Rlvenldt, 139,217, up from 84 ,332, r11nked 97lh. Torrance, 136,029 up from 100,991, ranked IO?nd . Glendall!, 131,723. up from 119,442, ranked 105th. Berkeley, 113,165. up fr()m 111,268, ra nked !25th. Pas11dena . 111,826, down Crom IIS.407, rankect 127th. San Brmnrdln(), I06,Ql4, up from 91 ,922, ranke.d 14lsl. Stockton. 102.M7, up from 88,321, ranked 14--tth. Fremont, 100.377, up from 43,790, ranked uoth. World Eyes Mideast U.S. Intervention Into Ifijacking Doubtful Fnm lf\fe Servlcta Leaden throughout the world reacted today to the drama unfolding in I.he t-1iddl~ East, as complications of the jet hijackings spread throughout dipkimaUc, commercial and humanitarian circles. Administrati()n s p o k e s m e n in Washington said It ~ highly doobUul Pre3ident Nixon will order dlttict military intervention to. free American host.ales aboard three jetliners. No potenUal method of rescue has been ruled out. A pa1r of Air Force cargo planes potentially assigned to rescuJ American hostages were l®k off from Adana, Turkey, ror undisclosed locations. Three more waited at lncirlik Air Force Base, 90 minutes flight Ume from Ammllfl, J ordan. The United Nations Security Council appealed for mercy ln treatment of the nearly 200 hosta.ges and called for their freedom. Armed guards have reportedly been assigned to all El Al airliners by Israeli aulhoriUes, while demands have been made to guard all international flights. Marines Negotiating Sale Of Part of Pendleton Base The president of the International Air Transport Association (IATA) in Honolulu said Wednesday be bad been inlonned that the insurance market around the world has canceled insurance contracts with 90 percent of the airlines as the result of the recent hljackings in the Middle East. Dr. Gerritl Van Der Wal. speaking to the opening session of lATA'a-traffjc conference here., stunned the delegate with the remark as he departed from bis prepared text. The U.S. Marines do not need all the beaches ()f <;amp Pendleton any more and are negotiating for sale of part of It to the State or California. But General Leonard F. Chapman Jr., rommanclant of the. ~iarine. Corps, Wednesday declined to say how close those talks are to adual consummaUon of a deal. The top man of the Marine Corps discussed Camp Pendlet()fl and • variety ()f other topics with newsmen following his talk before the World Affairs Council ()f Orange County at the Alrporter Inn. He talked about drugs and the mil itary. He said in some parts or the country, 50 percent CJ! the eligible young men are declared unacceptable for the service because they have a history of taking drugs. He said narcotics are a problem at some U.S. military installations. He said they 11re not a problem on the fro nt lines in Vietnam. He also said the coverage of the Vietnam war has become by the nation's mass media, especially the major television networks. "has b ecome impressively objective" in the last y~ar. He declined comment when asked tf he Lhough Vice President Spiro T. Agne~·s criticisms of the networks had anything to do with the abrupt change. On Camp Pendleton. he said It will always be needed as a training facility as Jong as there is a Marine Corps. He sa id the Corps does not need as much now, because of changes in military equipment and strategy. "We can now take advantage of rough terrain when attacking foreign territory," he said. The e~lained that currenl Laetics, with the use ol. helicopters. would allow an allacklng fore< to land behind the Girl Hitchhiker Kidnaped, Raped A San Clemente· girl hitchiking before dawn today told police a man picked her up, drove her to a dirt road behind the new courthouse in Laguna Niguel and raped her. The young woman. who had been seeking a ride on El Camino Real, returned to San Clemente and hailed a passing patrolman at about 3 a.m. to report the incident. Her assailant. she said, was driving an older. dark auto with Ohio Jicens!: plates. After she accepted a ride, the man told the young woman he had to stop by his brother's home in Laguna Niguel. then he drove her to the dirt road where the assault took place. beaches and attack back at them. Jie said the negotiations for the sale cf th!: Sooth Coast training facility have been going on for some time. * * * From Pagel MARINE ... to consider a hope for security within unless we are first secure from without." He said to provide that security we must remain strong. But he said strength requires more than the "equipage of war." He said, "above all its requires a moral fibre to bind the hardware of defense into meaningful and intelligent applications," He spoke of dedicated men in the service and again of a dedicated American will at home . He made himself crystal clear. He likened Russia in 1970 to Japan ln 1941 -both watching as this country debated the same subject, the possible end of the draft. He recounted the months preceding December, 1941. ''A few months before Pearl Harbor the extension of the 1940 one-year selective service act was debated Jong and hard in the halls of Congress, and all across the land. "The whole country listened closely, and watched carefully, as the extension finally pa5,$ed in the House o f Representatives by a margin of one vote, 203 to 202. "There were others also watching that lively American interchange in 1941 - the Japanese Imperial staff," he said. "The arguments of that crucial summer encouraged Japanese w a r planners to think the American will to defend this ~untry was weak. •·1t took almost four years of biller war. and hundreds of thousands of American and Japanese casualties to prove that theory wrong. •·This same test is about to reoccur," Gen. Chapman said. "The draft law will expire next June. In the next several months the extension of the draft will again be debated and voted on. "And again," he said, ''others will b!: watching." Gen. Chapman said there would be little problem in getting volunteers into the armed services -volunteers for one hitch to learn a skill or a trade. "But what abvut men to carry a rifle, tramp through the mud, and close with the enemy in mortal combat?"' he asked. "All of the dynamic applications of intellectual power, imaginative planning and positive management will be totally meaningle.ss without a force capable of fighting ." He said it"s all up to the will of the Amer ican pe<>ple. He got a standing ovation when his speech ended. The Pentagon said today it had stopped · using commercial international airliners for carrying <>r mailing of classified materials because of the upsurge ia hijackings. Some classified North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) documents were aboard a Pan Amer ican jet hijaclred and later blown up by Palestinian gumillas. Friedbeim said the classified material, moving by registered mail, was the only secret information he knows about that had been affected by the recent rash of hijackings. Najeeb E. Halaby, president of Pan. American World Airways. says he believes airplane hijacking is a problem for "government to solve, oot airlines." * * * From Page l HIJACK ••. informed sources said it was most likely Dr. Waldie Haddad, a mild·mannered physician. The 47-year-old doctor -object of a hit· and-run rocket attack g e n e r a t 1 y at.ributed to Israeli agents a few weeks ago -was out of Beirut and unavailable for comment. The planners knew not only could Dawson 's Field airstrip in Jordan take a modern jetliner, but that it could take several and at night. too. The TWA captain said later the runway was three times as long as he need!:d for his Boeing 707 and hard as concrete. The airstrip was alraady manned with emergency flares and slit trenches had been dug round the parking area . The guerrillas even p r o v j d e d passengers with pink cards, exact copies of the. international disembarkation documents, to furnish personal details, and a rubber-stamped "EmergencY, Visa." There were reports in political quarters in Beirut that the Pan American jumbo hijack was a mistake and the me n responsible had been instructed to fly a regular jetliner to Dawson's Field. too. The story was they missed their original connection and decided to wait for the next American jet. They were horrified to find it was a 747 and from then on all was improvisation. It was on direct instructions fro m Amman, the local reports said, that the hijackers, after seeking advice at Beirut, flew to Cairo and exploded the plane as a gesture of political defiance on President Gama! Abdel Nasser's front doorstep. Clearly the guerrillas have secured an excellent lever for the release of val ued men in prison. But additionally the operation has gone a long way towards scuttling peace talks, to which Cairo and Amman agreed, by changing the atmosphere of defeatism which the guerrilla movement was charged in the face of an embryonic Arab backlash and Nasser's decision. luxurious spring 'down sofas T\i• h'nelsonM Sofa ••s Cl•7grit9d fo gfy• you th• •fttm..t• in s•ati'"J comfort with 'dacro4'1 and down 6ec~ pi~. dMP, spri1t9 dOWft .... cwshions •l'l'l'1loped in down and f..tiien and in two foem.filled arm pi~ lowi.. Chool• frot111 • -~ 11'n;;tion of ''"' £ebric-s. 8' length reg. $599 NOW 399. I Y .. faooril< Inferior ct.signer 1l1ill be happy to "'"'' uou ••• H.J.GAl\l\tfT fURNITtJRE -TJT OV11 IEYOlYINCJ CHAICK- 0,.. .. _ n.n. • ,,._ - 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA. CALIF. 646-027' • . --··-·------- White Seabass Catch DaJe Carter of Huntin~on Beach displays a nice catch of white seabass taken aboard the Channel Isle out o! Art's Landing recently. The nine fi sh ran~ed lrom 25 to 38 pounds on skipper Jim Thompson's boat and were part of a catch of 56 big whites taken the same day. Racing Results LOS ALAMITOS RESULTS WMJMllCl1y, Stpl f, UMI CIH r 1n4 F111 Pl•ST •AC.E. 350 v•rdl. M1kle" , \ltl• old1 bred in Cellf. Clelmlng, PurM l ltoCI, T'*l!fl'I Chlcll; (Adair) Wtl(h Curt Got (Lipl'l1ml Genl1t H111t 4 Drtvtr) Tl,,,e; ,IJ.S/10. 6.20 3.60 2.10 ).00 '·'° '·" Scr1td'led -Fwr And Mo111n, Trhll'1 ll1rrftl, Ot!nl W11c11. P1num Siii, Sur1ln' MISI. Sl!CONO JIACE. *'.IQ e llll and up. Cl1lmln1. T lnv T""cll !Crt1byJ GrHwln (Pll tl llruk Tp Win {SmitM T!mt: .20·1110. J'l•d\. '•t•r Pu .. e SlllOO. 11.QO '·'° •. ,., I.OD J.90 ·~ Also r1n -SPrlnt\n Min. Str1wd0<"1. ltepld Nibs, Sundl90, Strttcl'I Piner, c~ O•ct. v1uw Buffoon. ScrtlCMd -Double H&stv. Pt• T Girl. Chu Chu Bob, Hi9Mw1Y 1111'1. S! NIGHTLY OOUILE, J 0 Tolt1t1'1 CMd & 1 ·f ifty Touc~, Plid l~l.j,O, TH IJID ltACE. a YArds. l J'••r oldl 4nd uP. Ct1lm!n11. Po•if! snoo. M1•1nl)ll1 E19!1 !Llpt,am l 6.40 3-'" 1.60 Jripr!I Dial (Ad1\tl J.10 1 .0 .-.D~che P1u um (W1tson) l IO ' Time: .iG-,/10. Racing Entries "' '" '" '" "' '" "' '" '" SEVENTH •ACE. 4(113 Ylrdt. 3. yt 1r Pldt lr>CI UD Allowtncu . P11r1e 11500 Count Citrin ISml!hl m Admlr1I Red· K1nl1 1'2 LIOY 80'1(!Vf'll /Ada rl l lt MIH Parr Bar Pe•nt r) 119 Solid Roc•e! (L Dhe ml ))~ Pl\lnqer !Wtll•l llt Bonnlr Bam !Crosby} 119 ftarlea APCket (81nlu ) 11' Rocttl Mich tOr"eri 127 .-.110 ran -FA!I Eddit. Midw•Y FOUltTH 1t.i.CE. <00 ve•dl. I ve~r Mltlle, Mic~·· Moon. oldr. CIA•mino. Pu•s1 12:100 tialml!'IQ No 1cr~tcM1. orJ(e J}QOO P'OURTH ltACE. 100 ¥erd•. lveA• ~~'ii,;'"e\:11\j~IU"l n: Nit.TH ltACE. 400 y1rd\, l J'el• Oldl &los i nd UP. c111.,,1n11. Pu .. e 11900 w~ woo !Cro-bvl 11 1nd uD. c1a;m1noi. Pune SlllOll. Oukt MOollh (W111on) •.llO l «I 1 iO c.u,dt On (Smi!fll llS Clalmlno •·oce Sl.00. Fl11r RPYll 1Kanl1l l.l'tl 3 '° Truly "' Gtll\.fo lLiPhlml 111 ~~'.',·.·.·.v~!'?.', ','.~ •• ~." G ·• <H ~·-1 ? IO IN. Dandv ZH (Adeir\ 111 "" ~""' .\ Jll~I '°""" aoui.,,. Mr. Ou.or!: Hiii IW11$on) lU llav &Ir M-Y IWflSOIOI Tlrl'lf: .2ft..6110. I'm larlo CLll>lulm/ AIM ••ft -aobllY 0. Lu••· llud Eye, Gold Lifll!l<I 1sm11t1 A!imltot B1r, lllt D1111f. "ll'TH ltACE. 110 v1rd1. 3 Ytlr Oldl Bir Crull.fr Wll'ICHI) .' ' H I I nd uD. Clalm!...., PurM US00 Mr. Mtr• Clltnkll 5(ratcl>td -Trite t °''' u 1 Cl ! I k S50IJl3 Reciueued Tom tS!r111n! H1tti.. M:l::"ht noi1 ..C~11:1 · 11• Sun o1 Ntr1( co .. yen Tt•ll Tr1c1t IW•l~nl ll? Str1wdor1 1HardlnQ) Pl"M JIACE. 170 J'lrd•. 3 ve1r oldt Sfll';O Track (L Df\lm) 11! Aho flllllll" ll!ld UP. Clt lml .... PUr$t $1100. :\iii"ii'"ii'ii'-iiiiwii'"ii'ii';i'ii'Mii'ii'iiiiiiiiiii'ii'i;;;;;';;~;;;i"ii';;';;'ii"ii";;';;';;";;M;;';;'iiiiiiiiiiiil ltockt! J11tU1r IL!plllm) S.«I 3.90, «I Stent! Gln1tr !Dr•Ytl') '·DD l .IO C1sh llrow11 !Ad1lrl ?.IO Time: All·1/1G. •1i.o r1n -S\Jrot On 8tft, Cl'lt•Qktt Codv, Hot PtaHr ,.od, Forw1rd 1111· ''"'' M_., Ao1ln. !>c:r••cfltd -11re11 Lind. Wllcl'I i.lt Tr1¥t l. Trvdd!n Gal. SIXTH llACE. HO V81'd~. 1 •te• oh'll. Atlow1ncn. Punt l?lOO. Mr.D1nd'tlH (Aclair) 360 Jiii)?~ Trulv f"1,,_, !Ptrnerl 1000 6911 Trlpla C. Tru"' CS!r1u11l •IO Time: .11 !let. Alie r1n -Ooublt ,l.g1ln, l:oYll"!I ll•owft. Jl1>11ol!t, Sirod, Lauri• ~t. l~Y ltolo. SMMCY T111<y. Scrarch.d -CO$mlc. is IE>tACTA. '.Mr. D1ndv IH • 4 . Tt11IY l'llT-t. 11111 1119.M. SE118 NTH llAC!. •«I \fir~. 3 vrar eld~ Uld \JP. A•low•nc". Pu~t t?llGO. TklYGo IL! ..... ml • .,. !.llO •00 Men:lirt!I IHlril l.IO J.'° C~•'" 11:oy1t 1W1honl 1.«1 Tlmt : .12·5110. AllO r1n -K1we1~ E11111 lie" Mr, 91men, Drlll, KIPIJ"5 Sl9~ (ll'lllf In .... Ne Krll(MS. t:IOHTH ll•CI , 3!10 \11'1tt. 3 "'' eldl ll'f 1111. AllOWIMtt. Pur1e UOOO. HPbl"I" ILlt>html f.20 ?.IO l ,70 ltlct 'S Gold (CntlbY) J,o0 1,1(1 Comprehensive evening programs toward Bachelor of Science and Master of Science degrees JllMllM9!>1ct !Ptrntrl l .CI ·------------------------fif'ntp: .11-1110. Ahe r1n -OU• Decl1lon. Kll!lr'l C1 bQo!1. K1n111 Jt!, ll rfG Lt n. Ho scretchtl. HIHTM JIACE . .00 Yl rtlt. J YHr oldl. C.l11ffilfl9. P11n1 U100. A Go111' Miii t ll1N.1I Thi C-1 IWt liOlll l ob'1 ll1r Eflll fL'Pheml Tlmt: .20-J/ID. • . .O IJO I.Oii . ., .. •• AIM ren -(l1uy •oc:~tl, SlltlY C>!111V1l1, 111111 11-. Silflftl $(.l'M, Fl• 0.111, Llllt Lid'<' lta.r. 5h(k ~ltk. 1cr1tcl\9ll -kol1 M1c L1111, llold Cfrtltk. tJ l:>tloCTA, I ·• Gelll' Mfll • 1 • Tilt Ctllnl, 11lt ....... ""''---------"''"------""'--- -~--_.._,_.__ 3 OCC Vacancies At least three positions are up for grabs on Orange COast College 's football t e 1 m , according to coach D i c k Tuckef. "We're still undecided al quarterback, split end and flanker," says Tucker. - Freshman quarterbacks Bill Shedd and Gary Valbuena \\'ere impressive in I a !I l Saturday's scrimmage with t.1ira Costa . Shedd, from Newport Harbor. completed four of eight passes for 49-yards and engineered an eighl·play, 6().. yard drive for a touchdown in the scrimmage. Valbuena, a Fountain Valley High product, hit on five of 13 passes for 112 ya rds. One was a ~yarder lo flanker Gary Cummings that went for a TO. Cuml!'lings, along w i t'h lettennan Tony Ventimiglia and freshman Joe Stubbins. are waging a fierce battle for the starting flanker spot. Cummings, 24. attended l\filtikan High in Long Beach and after a stint in !he service, sat out last season. This is his final year or eligibility. Playing with a Wiled groin Saturday, Cummings (5-10, 175) still showed fine speed. Ventimiglia (5-10, I 7 5 l prepped.. at Marina a n d Stubbins (s.-0. 150) is a former Huntington Beach star. Doug Young, Geor ge Barnett and Toni Malone are all battling ror the starling split end spot. Young, a $-9, 100.pouncter, attended Corona del l'tlar last season. Barnett (6-0, 160) is a letterman who prepPe<t at Estancia and tt1alone (5-10, 175) attended F.ounlain Valley. All will see action Saturday morning (10) when the Pirates fact> Whittier C.Ollege in a scrimmage. Tucker also revealed that rreshman linebacker Pa u I P.1oro !Hunt ington Beaclil ii still sidelined with a slight shoulder ~epar3rlon. ""'e think he·11 be ready to go in a week or so," says lhe OCC coach. Th11tsda1. Stpttmbtr. 10, 1970 A111~1l_l,._ ·-,.l r1r-Jn .. J:M 1644 W. Ll11<9lll '''°"'· •t• St111'9ll ...... C1111 Mu ......... •\"' c 1.i11r111e I Mc ........... t•1211 11U N1_,.11 11"4, :11"9 Deflll!J P'irll 1t•. l'uller--..Jt-ttlf c.-11-UUI n l ·MH Ill Siii!~ EKl;d tlU 1t1-r1111 II Ll'f- ~T IRES pJ! .. BUY IN PAIRS ANrl -SAVE 2 for $25 C'71-14/6.tS-14 E7f..14t7.JS.14 178-15/7.JS-15 6.50.1! 7.00..13 ,,,5.15 2 1~ 538 lllMl'l\• F1a.1s11.1s.1s H78·14tl .55·14 G7f.14tl .25·14 G7S.l511.25-15 M78·1S/l.55·1S 2 ... 544 EA<Ji S24 95 .,._ ........... ;.,, ... -..-';..,d-ef b .. _ ... T_ .. _ _,..........,..,_.d VW's 560-15 650x1J 700113 735114 73S11S 2 7751T4 for $28 lll::: NS114 ns11s ... ,_.. !loo _ ......... 11,., .. __ .._ .. _,__ . Jn.1411.15.14 J71·15/l.IS.15 9.00.15 ~ '"· f •. T •• "'-$1.l1 • S1.17 -- EACH $16 95 EACH $19 95 Pin fed, Er. Tu $2..17 lo 2.23 per '" dtpftdi"' on sin UMlltOYAl COAST TO COi.if Llf'nlME W AlllANTY • " ,. " Ir -y U•i••••I -I -·-,;,·.-, . ..... _ .. __ ....,._ ., "HO AOJ" WNio ... °"1•-•oc•-' ............ "'-_ .. EACH $22 95 Pki1 F1d. fw. Tix $2.47 to 2.IO per 1i111 tf1pendi1t9 Oft lilD rach SJO 95 nt-14/7.75-14 G7S-14/&.25-14 f71.15/7.J5.15 G19-15/&.2'-15 .. .. F.4. Es. Ttni ,.... ,.. $2"5 .. $117 ll•pt~di .. ... ,; .. -... a1 ...,.,.11.--.. '"'_ -JM -· •"-.... ·-·m. ---......... . .,., .. -............. _ ~ ... '"°" °"''"' u.;... ...... 1 .... 1n1 .. -.. .. ,,; .. ,_,.,.,i.., .... _ ;...-, ........... _ -.i--..... 1 .. i.-..1 ,., fall •••ii•, -, • ..,. ,_..,,_ c..tlll- <•le, eJth S32 95 1171-14/1.55-14 H71-15tl.55-1S na.1s11.1s.1s ..... ,.,.,&. l • P9 .... $1.tl te $J .014 ............ .. ,;,, WHITEWALL ONLY $2.95 MORE Most si1a in lklck. •Slldll t~nc:· ~-­whld. In no w•1 •n.et ~ E-, '"-..,..., Oiil••M -.. __ ly 20,000 *iii HAIWITIE BRAKE RELINE TRAILER ThiL. ___ ,..,s ·FOREIGN CAR TIRES • WIDE TIRES • WIDE UVllIS ·STEEL REINFORCED • 78 SERIES· 70SERIES ... Seaaitp Tire Stores 'Where tlz.ere is more than meets the eft. SANTA ANA I KAllOI: AT IOUA .,.~,.. [(~J UNIROYAL ANAHEIM 1961 l lOO«MUIST (AT LINCOl.N) '35-1170 I CORONA I U6 W'. 6th ST. 73UOIO GARDEN GROVE I HAWAIIAN GARDEllS 1601 WISTMINSTlt 11t7S CAlSOfl ST. • ll.OCICS UiST Of IU.Clfl llET'MEll 'IOHtl• • lfOtWALIQ •n~sts w-0221 SANTA ANA 1211 W. WAINll AYl CWA.ltt!I •t lllSTOU $40.I ... I TUmN 131 1. 11t sn:rn (hi ANO •o" $1.J 544-9431 WESTMINSTER WISTMINSTll AT ClDAI Q: N.OCll f . Of GOl.lill.ll wtUl l9S..U21 I COSTA MESA- lftWPORT BEACH J22 IAST 17111 ST. '42-41Sl USl TC>ua MAJOll CllDIT CARD I OPEN 8-8:30 DAIL y I 8-5 SAT. I HUNTlNGTOll Wtil • 19411 IUCH llVD. M MILE MOl.TII Of AOolM!I 5J6.7Sn I SAN CUMOOI •21 N. n CAllltO - 492·SMI ~. - M DAILY PILOT SC Thurstf.1r, Stptrmbfr 10, 1970 Vear wartlt OVER IBE COUNTER (:omplete-New York Stock List NASO Ll1tin91 tor Wednesd•y, s.ptember t, 1910 Convenience Foods Costly NIW 't'OltK IA~!· TllwM1tr'1 c:-i.i. ..... .. ,.... ftlf Ntw Ytrtr; $tod1. f.1telM11t19 lwicn: IMt.J Mlltl UW a. Qs. ~.J -'--' aMt Qt. =) Mlrlti ..._ ,._ c: '.W:ll •.' .. " 'I> '!'-"'• "'• --u G"' Clll 1.JI 61 11$ a"° Ill\ -llll __.,_ ~:.,~ 2 , 1 fi:I ~ n.~ :t ~Ti.c"flo ~n 2i. is: :-;l: BJ SYLVIA PORTER Even mum.Inc U1t rate o[ rlH in food prices continues to moderate -an assumption being shaken by the com bl141" and U.. bhghl's lhr<al to the pnces or meat. poultry and eg.s -our own food bills will rmlltn In 11 relentless uptrend to ever higlter peaks. 'J1le l'eason our e v • t • ~x~ncbng d e rn a n d for relatively upcns1ve ready to- ea1: ready.to-heal JUSl ::idd· wafer roods whk:h save Un1e in the kitchen and g1\e us a fon:u of bwJt-m maid service AnCI there's absolutely !'IO sign al 111 er bfsi& lor ex~ng this trend to slow, muth less reverse The tanner's share of our foo4' dollar 1s still going down, to ap average or ~ ce.nts now out.: ol every food dollar, ag ain.st 50 ctnts in t.he late 1940I:, for many food items, the fanner gets as llltle as 6 cents or 9 cents At the same time, th!! porJioti of our food dnllar ~olcfg for bu!lt-1n conven11!!Jl<:e i!\ ~ll soaring Of th!! $1,226 the, typtcal household will spend this year farm -or1- ~1nQted foods, a whopping $742 will go to lhl!! nuddlemcn who pac~ge. process, distribute and • sell the: food J ust consider how we are spending our food dollar: T'odly, a full 10 percent of the 'tiCP we consume are pre- emptted and pre-processed, and by the t!!nd or this decadl!!, 1;ays the Agriculture Dept., the proportion JJI. eggs we eat in forms ranging from cake m1:r:ff to "instant'• scrambled eggS ·will soar to 33 percent Today, our consumption of fro;.en food! JS up lo $8 bill ion anquall y, and with the number of .forzen food Hems on the market due to double by 1975. froun food sales are pro1eced at $12 billion. Today. 45 percent of all ~u perm1rk et s have a d e·J i c ates sen department. csttmates t b e Super Market lnsµtute. and virtually every new supermarket has such a department. Many of them al59 have their own kitchens and stock QI to 100 different items -most o( them higher priced convenience foods. Smee 1960 alone, our total bill for food marketing has soared 43 percent to $63 t billion. Here's how thl!! bill breaks down and how £asl each component of lhe bill has been increasing: """ Labor Transportation Profits before % Rise 1961 over BllUou 1951 129 J u ta:r:es :19 86 Debreciation 2 2 S7 Builness taus 2 3 92 AdvertiSing 2 O 67 Rent ( net) 1 7 54 Tntcrest (net) 5 150 Repairs, bad debts I 2 71 Other (residual) 15 3 22 A big hidden factor 1n that "other" column 1s $7 b1lhon WE HAVE OUR OWN TOP FIFTY ~; ' ' ' ~ " TDIT •UNT, I." Although "e ha\/e literal- ly thousands or diffettnt dru~ products available and 11re.scribed for, th c r c u.re only approXJmately fifty thllt acrounl (or O\/er 011<'· •h!rd or n.11 preacr1guons. Ano\hl'r nnr hundrr &.nd rift}' aCC<lunt for &nolh1•r llllrd. Jn our preitrlptlon depart- m1•nt 11'1• kCC'J.l thrse fa.sl· tnuvin& med1c1nes 1n n1orr 1he.n ample suppb and rn 11. Jtl al.."'f" whf'r" the\/ can br fllllckly ~ch«! This sa\•M 11 jffe8t deal of timc In f1ll- 1nc y nu r . 11rri;cr1pt1on• '\'hen a nf'W di uc ls intro· duct!d It Rot'!( fl rsl lo our ·new drul!" !IC.'Ct.on unl!I 11 hfl..c brt-n df'trrmlnl'd thAt 11 1<hoµJCI be or should nol ~ Jn the fa.ct moving Sl'CUon. Y.OU OR YOUR DOCTOR CA N' PJtONE US "hen )'OU n<.'Cd a delivery. \Ye "111 dc-llvt:r promptly without (lx- trll ch3rt::e. /\ EJ'l!!At many ~pie ttly on us for their hf'al.lh needs We welcome reqursts for deUvery 1ervice 111nd cbar&e accounts.. PAU UDO PHAIMACT lSl ....,....._. N..,M IMdi MJ·lllt -- CALl,OINIA SAIUNO ACAHM'f for p ackaglng-labthnc- containerl.iatlon As anolhtt reve,a l i n& measure Of the exfent to which we have embraced convtruence foods, the NaU . Assn. of Food Ch1 l n1 l!!iUmates that 1f we were consuming the same food5 in the same ways as a 1eneration ago, our food bill would come to only 11 percent of our after- ta:r: spending In contrast to the 17 perecnt we are actu ally al\ocatlng to rood in our rcal- l1fe budgets today. As shll another me:1sure, In the years before the big surge to convenience foods, lhe Grocery Manufacturers or America calculates: that the typical housewife and mother of two spent 5~ hours 1 day •-;:::::,"'==et~.=!~:...::=.:• ~~D-1'10 ff lJVt ; :v. ::~ ~~1 ;rs J l!" ~ J¥l ~ o;i;;:: (:l: 1Ji 11tl 1~~· Tl ::.;~ prepar1na meals. Now, With ..,. ,,... Ac::.J.':V: f 11 n Im I .... ,,.= YI ~·§·" -r. a 2J.l'l. 111mit. 'l.\ •_] : ~'11 >Gt l'i 1~ if. ~Vt f ~ •"-"-Ip or I ab or ., av Io" •• "4kM 111 ai. AlllN ... !5~. Mn'•' •• !! .n qi\ .. 111 +" e 1.so ~ l~~ ,. -.. 1111;:,,0' vu 11 , un::""" • ,_.,M ......, .. : I tt, .. l ... I ~.-=.:: ,.J°u"',1~ '''°.,.• llil., »! ;; ::::: l!i,"!ir.i''ll ,..'., !."' 2~"'· ·.~.· _i-~ kitchen devices as ~·eU as N!w v~K ''\"' , ~ 1v. ,~ 1111r1r HI( n •m ::=ii 'I ~.,.. ,"lo ~ "11J ir .• 1t ~"" .-o ,..a; ~ n 11 "" convenience f 0 0 d s I the ;,,lnt,::ied ~~ "~~''"' ~~ ;t p~ ~~ jt!o >'" ~.~ •• "d lr. :~ ::~~ii IA 10: Av. .. m l'A +\lo ~ ~ ~ A :m tt .~ ;·~ = l 1S 1 ~ j \\ ~ +\ .. preparation tlrpt has been 11:"N11'"'~1~ ~ I=~~~ ir 11 " •ud ~l<f fftt a"' ~e 1g~ 1fJ~ i":; lja '!£\lo 'k i .. ~ ;1:v .fi.J,, ': ll" f\ u~ °!'." f'JiC:.~'("1~ 1?~ ~i! fttt ~ = •• Slashed tO I mere }i,t hours a ~:.,.~~~': !'1•'~111 ~J~ ~ e~JHH~ 10\\ l :rN,•1~ j 't,,.. "'!I'd .i~'Jr ,.t I~ 1r,-1t'1m =_1tt Z'Jl.w' ..'!f' 1)6 !IJ'4~11"°' -i.4 S errr.n 1l n' ~ ~..: = ~ day "°' ~111.. '''"'.o. 11.,wF' I! ~ ~~ P111111tir ~ l' ... jli 7 11 R.Vrtt 11\l; 1 JI: \'l • 1 "A ri ~ 2ll'lf. "' +1· .SI llf 4 I f' if + n · llMt flul ,,, rtO• ng_ .\ 10 11 P<Ktllll • tll~ tllMnl 1 'llo 111'1 11 1114111lr H ·r. ~ ~ -\.i 11 IM ..... mi .. \\ + .. tltl'ld j! " * !\!: 11 .... • ·• •-• no•• wt'rt moving to ''""1111v• '"''' *, >:!,1 ~ l~ B111n•t t111o ,,.,~" 'I 111'1 ,,,, GU 1 o , 11 15 1s 1111 J .1• .w ~.. ••,~ ~' 1'" !'""-i.r. ruJU " Otlltr NkHJ 11 ot 00 "' J'I;. ll l.ft P1/l'Jro, !I U 1 •ill AS ' ,. .. ,~_!nl!tl jt 1~i 1.,.:.:.•1\ Oil 7S. 'HI') ~ ™'-l,j, !el ;r.110 •I.lo m-· th en! Or '"· ··•bole •-"1l•i...., 1 ormlll ~ ~ ~ow co •l'I •1' ""'m "' "" ,,, _,...,. _ u,, ",.~ '•~ ""' _ .. ,, """''" " • I' ]t'9 1.-+" e1 91.JO u~ 16\1. JAi ! -~ e conv ence WI> ... OJll . II wllldl 1111'$1 "°'* Grnt J I •• , •• "'' lfll'll' ~g ' •VI AlDHJ: d .. .. .. kletlft ., I I ... 'ft; 1 .... + ~ " T Ii\ 19 ult l'"" + ~ take-home meal -the carton ~.111•1--.,•, ~~!111' c1 i:: !VI 11:r 'src1'i' :~ ~n jll!'ii" G: :;: !~ ~~1 ..... ~ ~ lltt f!~ 1,.1~~ ..... =~ ".!;'j\~ 1\ flj = J&t: W :-1•• ~ r: 2~ h~ ~:: -\I ~ ~l11 f'4 10 Id I '\It C 2'lo 11 i..,11 .,.,. ,. •• ~ .... ~it SI 11 U a ll It -1"'-n"IJ1i: S 30~ llMo tt"' ~VO or c.b1cktn or flsh-and-dups or :i•d'"' 1tJ3r."/111: F~*-""' tl't 1h11 (:" 1o'"' 1011i ~=111 ~ i1~• 1 ~ ~u .. "t~ ra;, 1:2 '°r •r-~ 1y. ~ 11: G• .1• ' "'u. 11i 4 1.1o + (Q • K lfOt 120 31lli Si~ 1 ~ = .. '! \\'hatevtr bought al the fast .ieeler m•rk~lt FoW~ •.,_lw 1\11 l 1111b 1 11\'t 11"' 1mc111 o '•• m "l"Lw 2.0 n, tt, .. 21tt 21-.-11< oc.c:o1 l ., • ., 12 n 11 + \.\ ".:, i •• 1 l 11 .... • tti111g, 111roo.ot1-Ille • •VI Rovch o f' IJ rlMob H 4~! "I MLlld Pl I i-'!"i ».l'f. M!!l'~ ._,, ~,•,••,1 ll? ,', ~., "" .... ~,..) --~ erivo,_ ,,,:. J ~.~ !!\\, r-:_ ~. food Lhnited menu store -""' .,.. OIY Pr''" ,,", •• •, 0 •It S\~ I Yll'I Co )'lo 3f• T,J~o Pd 301/t 211'1 ,,, lff PW I u .... ..... ...... ... .. ~ " JO l 11"" ti~ • • d(I l'IGI tnc:Jvde ,,. 11~• 12 ~ !!:KOii £q 21l• n~ 1rkl~lr l!1 4 AllNt<ICh 1 JO lfl n~ ~~ ~ 0 -V. C~~iri.: f2 ~ Im i:~ ~lu ~ ... -\It lllll"C ,... t N "1 Mio !:. tt and lhat certamly costs more ~~~"°w" ;·••;::;· •5,,,1~:fi 1f'' 1r~ 11:~.''~ ~\! 1•v. T~:nc•Fd 'l~ s:.~ ~\\=.' 7f: 12 ,,\'i 221r 2,.. +illi on11t1• '°° .,, 1)"' u ''" _ ,,. ldd~ lo. 11J 10N 1:i"" ~ t lo than lbt made-from-scratch T,",'"",, ~~~ .~ s"" 11:~ ~'!' t. ... ~~1) 8~1Tf1.,,,., ,~ .J"' Anled Pd " 111 11"' 1n1o 16\e "+-'" 111111 1.60 in u :uu. s~ -..., 111111, 1 "" ii. ~ ...,i: °'°':;; ~ ;:,,,t Coro ~~= ~ti •• Ell I ••• ROINrt ~ ;r n u .. MfOll !!Vi 6\? AUIPCI ot J ,1 ?:1~ ~"' ~" :.m ~::: l~lld .,.1" !I~ ll~ !. .... ~\It t ~ :=-ii~ I tt ~v.. ~ JO~ = ·-version "'""'P• s IJ''> n ltl jl~ 1'+ 11:ine1o-n 5\o !l'o us fl•llOt 1•, •~• !l\l:r.,~ 111;! Ill Jl~ .~, 11. + "'co11111 on llO l 11 11u 11 +141 '" ,,.111111 ff "".;... •. 1.,,. '!" * ~ ot courst you can save "''o •11c 1J-. n'<'l 1,1,r.,,, '• •'1 Ro1 C•u 7\.\ ''• u~ Eriwt 111' '1 Ami Ch11m •n ui., 111. 'l~~ + '-cal 1 «iD-su :nv. lnt '"' -1" 1enAI ,., ts 1 sr · , •, "1 • 1 ... ' AFTS Ille Jlo ~1~ f 21 2•'. ll111 sit' "'111·, ul \11<1•• .O\~ d jl,lph1PC Xie l U\~ UI+ 1 v. -"'!a Of I 1 20 lt\~ 1+1.l -1141 ''"" d 'Oi' 2 •11'1 n •1\.\ 31'1 money by going back to the :~8 ~':° f.: ;;: .. ,~t''l..% 211~ "~: ~::t:.. 0 ·~:,, •!1.1 ~ ... ~~ ~~ 1f\.\ ~~':,,,,' "• n ss11o ss1. "I')! v. 0111 oe1 1 u ., ~ .... J1~ ,, = 1>11 21 , 2,\. 16"" ,._ ""' Pr-venl-"e ways • r A\/M ct •.• '''~ ',..'" ',•,t '• ·~· Sce11t11 E ,,,. • tll~~ SLCI 711, J1.(, ·-·· •• ' -.. 10'1 IG\~ 1~ .., oluPld .. ~ l7t lM 1J\lt I~~ . obll M1r!11 •J l J\o l.n. I'" ~ .. .,..,., "''"' ,. J• .. ' ''"''' ,, ,, ,.. ''' 1-,, •• 'I -.. --,JJ. .t?i,) in. I Jh ~• ~OISoOI! 1 1• " n 'H\t ,,~~ -v. Un • 6 10\4! 10 ... ~ Abtrll 11 •!\ i.I; C ., • .. ,_ ., Am Hin 21r "" .,.,,. ~ )6\IO -~ (omtoE11 1.lO :11" ~ .UV. 44l't ::t Ito rkll I Jt n 7nr. H~ 2J" • . • cooking and serving But how !ft""1rsE1 7 ~ ••=~ ,m,m \ f£. ~~ ~~r~,~ ,m,~ ~"t,'~ \~ fl,._ !~I') ~~~_:-,_c::tl:'p1~ 1~ f~ ~: ?m-': ,:I.1: u, f~ p""' f~=~ do you value your TIME? :l~:Wr! 1~: 1l~ \c'~~Mkl 11\li " _ H ~ ~..,, vf~:-.s• ~ ... " lrti "'" "fl "lit ort111 HMll't' c-ed , :1e 115 JNo )I :M _.., nc: 1.-52 » m. 10 + ~ AllbM H ''• l~ fl'fell Mt 1~ 16'4 rl~ -' ~i .V. !N1cll Rll lt;\ ~ AAlrFl"r .to .U 101, 41\< d " -1~ t:mwEd ,,,,·rA 11 lON 1111\li 1~ .• ••~1 I Y ..i 21tii l1\I! '!ii+ o Best Security is , Fixed Dollar Investments Alblr11 ' .. 1rr11t1 RE 1~ ,,,,, ~rll ., 11'\lo 111,!i WldlW p 14V. lJ\') All'\ AlrJln ID llfl lf:i. 11" 11~ -a r:wE °''·" .. 211111 21\lio Jll\ ,. .60 111 2149 ,. 2 t -~ ··-·· ,,_ ,., • ..,., •It Cmo Ptli; •14 W•'" 1111 ""' u "'Br1~s , 10 " ,." J'l\lo ,,,,, -Oll'IW 011 ... .. ,,~ ,, 111• -\!, r•nd II IO 2J il\l ,. 2114 -"" "''""'l •'• 5 ,,rwill In '"" 1 trn t\i tllt w i:teldt • •lh A11'1 81lo;tr t n~• l\'-12~ + omSIUf s,1 l l'l! 1~ u~ im +"I ••nlltC Sli 11 \\It Ill~ tot\ -~ 'l1GO nd 14 141~ GllOJd Ch 3'~ ~llo ~c Gro S'4 wi,.hw ll• l\l AC1n Pl 1~ 2 U 2 h 2J • ,_, ''' "" .. ..,._ _... r11111e~llt I I SV. ISi.io U \'t + 14 :1l°fH"~o '•" '•'• ull 1111 i "' ~Ull E"ll HG lfl.4~ Am Ctm JJ I~ 114 f« -iii: c-Mllh 1 10 lSV. jµ. ffi1 _ti ri~;..1~ 2• .OV. 4"' 4\4 -'lo ' Pl'I Gro 'Vi ' vrodn t 111! RE ll111 t A CheJq I S 7no lSU. 25\4 -i.4 t:OllllM!d Jes •S %1 ~ 2'Nl _ \i fl ,U.fJ l I :M 16 1IMI :I0'4 :Ml -~~ !i,• ')\,\ •:;r 1: l ~Vt 'r4 m~11,,1 ~\It ~ ~TR. {(? ' ~~ l:# 1ri ~ '°1 ~ '°!\ . COlll'ICCO "' ' 12t~ llV. l H~ +Vi 1Norlr 1 J'! '; n~ ~ m:. +:: llSll • Oiii Mid " 2, ~ ..... '"• w,·~ 'l~ t~ WtW,1•11 10 1G'lll A0!1ITef • " Jm ! .... ~l~ + U' COtl Edi• 1.. 121 1lltt m. %1\lt + Vi fNoHR; I"" '' ., ... '"' ., + "*' A El L•b > >'t erlt ,_ , ., 0 ,_ M '''" 16., All'\ ........ ,,, I• ''" im Cot1Edls "'' t "" "'4 1'14 IHN "'' to ) 70\\ '°"' JOI.lo "' "'"' E~... •1~ "~ Mlcloc ~ l m Soun GI 7~ ""14 w11Cii p l~ nit All'IEIP:'~,.. l20 tN 2$14 ~ ~ COtlEdll •I s • 5'1.'a !llVt Sl\.'I.:.. ... G w JI Finl 101 21 Vio Vt = ~ Am f Ulll 1 "" MlllhY'l 4?i ,.. G c 1•'" •I') w11n NA "' s "'"" EM• I• H l'" l'\,\ 11 -COllFood I 10 261 l5'1r ,.I') lSV. +I GIWnenu to SI 22\/o ii.-~Ii-. -,.. ,,, Grfft ""'~soc. HOim E.P' ,.. ,. : efsv~ 14'4 IS Wllll M!CI •fo 7\lo Am Exo Ind 1~ 2h ' ljfo + Cot1Fd DU Sii ' " ., .. -"lu" trfl.. ' 11'111 I~ II~ -~ "' N.l'dl(O 1~ 1S"' olobm ,,. "" oec.erv ·~ SY, W1ln Pub ""' l'i• "'glllnd "'"'' 1to 5611, .5J J --i C1111FrelgM t u 2•~111 '''lo ,,,~ IW=f11 so 1 I\,\ 1ii ••• + ~· .. ~elv 1•"'1 Ht"o oovt1 l•:U. 3Stft 11ncrvn 7'",,. Ina w~ sv, Sl'o A e111111 JO JOI tl'4 ,l\'o 13\lo -v. con Lt11l110 11 S'6 sv. ~'A + v. r nt ff U• 21 .. 1«• 71Vt -\Ill NEW YORK (AP) -Among tht!! ill-lated assumphons of the past decade )OU may number these. -No admlnistrallon will act strongly agaJnst r n f I a l 1 o n because to do so is poht1cal!y unwise and will cause all sort! of social disruptions, The idea was prevalent 1 couple of years ago when the speculative fever was stil l running hot To take firm action against inflation, it was reasoned, might inflame the depressed urban a re a s , already starved for funds. "A LmLE INFLATION Is a good thing " said adherents of this ouUQOk The best that an v adrrunlslrat1on can do thev s~ud. ts to try to talk do1\·npr1ces But lum lhe screws on lhe entire economy the country won't stand for 1t ' ' o<oo' ,•, ' ... "' 'j14 u~. Oo1 t 9"6 tel Ill ta ls "4 2fl 1<;; PL lt\IO It~ A nln pfl ,llO U 7Hi j lV. JP.:. -Vt ConN1tG 1 '' 2J 2'\li llll/o 1t•4 -'-I ree11 I 2fl ii 751/o 2tt:. U.\\ -Y. nvn• G 7"" I 11n Hl'd """""" rd1w E m :i.. AmHnltt 7t 11 10\ll 0'10 111111 -14 Con• Pewr 2 U l~ »:I.lo :r.T'"o + \lo •tYhoull Ill it 14\/o 14 '""' Americans applied it to the ~~,, 1~ ~"'• "'• "~,,,••''• '~ U'9 lfflll S•r t\'t IO~ rfGhl w "°'"° 21v. "'• ,._ •,~, 102 ,.v, !t\\ Jt\lo -~con,.... P1' '° !360 5'\.\ ,.v, !fV. -1141 roner .!fl 1 ' 21"-nl't 2n11 -«. ' .. _ liii '"' 7 l•IW Cl » " rdnv E 41,1, .f\lo H11r111 0 1 '91.!i "' "'• ... 114 °"""Jr 2$0 II 10\\ ti. 10 -\\ •umm...... fl ll"t; 1•~ 1Ni -u, economy. The:, business cycle .. ~_... .. _"t "•"•"i·•~u~ P0•,, •,•,~•,,~ ~-'~"' ?~ •• 13\\ :n.,. ll\1 ~con1c1ft 1.a • 66v. ~v." -'It. H~m_1c1 «1e .u 2•~• 2•t~ , • .,._,. ...., ..-.. n... ., ., ., ... _,,,, 21 IG 1?1 Ill + Cont Cop _n. 2~ IP\ ,.._, IU\ + ll llmuo 2 IOI I SJ~ U\\ JHi -:i;, IS lic ked they said There ~rrow H ,,,,. 21\~ uti! P 1 1'14 ----= AMttCI• 1..0 u :nv. 21fo Jj!~ -Cont CP 2 m 11!:\ 31v. :11•. +I.!! If 011 I~ nJ ,,,. 21\lt 2N I ' ' · 't"" •'h t v•tt '" 191, lfU Am Molon IU '~ '"' V. -• r.1 c .. Pl-" so 12 l~l-0 3"i\ ~-Vii ,~ Gulf Rtsrces l• I0\1 t ;• 1~ \• v"on 't be any more sharp ups :1 c .~~· 'HVI 21¥o Hv•n 1n1 sv. 51. AN11G15 210 27• .io lt\11 :itv. -v. COt1tMto ,, ,1 1, ,,., lA -.~ Gll i:tes PH JO • 19 11~ n •.r. ulo xi •lo s Hvd~ A!ll l"-l~, Am Phoro n 11 tro 9\'I t t. r.int 0 11 1 5<I 15~ ,.,~ 21u! '"~ -.. GllR" .Pll 30 ' 1f 11\la It ·~ and downs 1n the economy -~:~:, Al ,l~l· 1pii 1,~e11t ,•,• ,•,•,•, •"•'• MUTUAL '•mR•i°",,,,,'~, 1u 51 ss•1o jl1• -1\ti r 11111011 Pl 1 1 •\lli ••l.lo ··~ .,,, Gu11s1•u• '' ,. "~' 2u. tt" ~ I BI .. 11 ' "" G Se J 1• n~~ '~ -\<I rOtlt ~u I A ,, ,, ,, -G111f5U 01'40 110 !5 5S on y u_ps. I • .. • •t; Ind Nucl 'i lW. Am ,J!ilo .0 2 1114 llt<i 1_ru -... Coro! Tel ID 1'"1 '}7 71-" ,. .. ·~ G!.llfSU ~IA,,, !11 52\11 "t: s Vt : That behef might be called ii~er~" ,}:,: ~.~IF,~~,,~.· ,'~.· '.·~ ~~ •. ~.,·:,, ': ~;: ~ ~lll + ~ ~rri~?' .~ .. ~ ~~ ~ !.~ ~~ +1~ Gg:~~1":o n .. , ~t~ :t~ !t~ = ~ J II .1. e. In .,. -· ~.... • • .n 11 11 t'.0<>wood ''° 2 3..,,. )'"' •··~· uh'W Ifs JS 1 SJ .u " . 1 the Jack and I 1.11eory, B!:ct.,:. ~i'" i~I\ .~~·~,.Ji';, nt ;t FUNDS :~s~d iJ. JS lf 1M1v~ ~ ~ =tl: f'oolo Unit YI ,, 71 ,,.,,.. ,,,,, lloll lnd ,.u,•to ,..., l l'J -14 because 1t came tumbling ',",ie 111e 11 u~ 1"t Mulllf nv. :n~ ,,,.., s11.11 ,... 7• Ith 11111 11V1 _ i r:-rtr 'Ml "" " 3••1 ~'"• + v. -n-- f m Ind ~ .i\.i Inf Srt 211 21 ,,, Su11•• 1 tO " 291 1 ,..,, :19l.lt -.; r_, TR 1 I MVo 1~·· '~'4 Hl{l(W1I 210 2 111' 31111 JI\~ + 4l. down. and so dtd business No a,ffk Ht 41 •3 1111 SY ., u,,L I~ ASUJI •IA7 6S IU •l .,... 4l + ·~ t:~l•nd 1 '<I .,,, ,, 11'4 ''"' -•I Httllbvrl I 0$ IOI lll 31111 •Vt i,,, ell LID •1 4' lnlelll ,. 1.. Am~llO Pl .. l ·~· 1>1, 1!111 + ~ COPPRCle Sf'b IT/I 3<1' l•"• ~~·~ • V. HtmWit :Ur I ffi S\.'i sv.-= Ir, matter how hard Americans ,',","'•"~ ',' • .',', ·'"• '~, is~,,,, ,'it'• !Jiii• s s•"Q&.= :&!lt> w A,•.n,,•• 1 ... 31' t'll at. , + v. r-1~11 i 'O 20 '·~ 1•v. 1 '~1i + ,. Mtmm P•p 1 10 "° .,~. '"• _ b Si\ -... .... ., ----------r. ... 5" .,, ./\ .. •1'4-'ilor:or111111B ,,. J '' ,, '' -Yo 1•mmt111 7t 11 fl4 , .... Mio -... believed, the business cycle a,1,.1c11, Jl~ • •COiis " sv. AmWWk' 56 s "'• t\9 ,.. _...,co.ow t$11lo '' '" 1.w14 171'1'4 .,.""" ., 16, .... ''" 1 tdr HI 211/i 21'1o 1quln C 6\lo 1\lo "'W ~If 1ll 12211 1~ I• 14 t:~I~ 22 J< ,,,,, 13 2.1 -,V. tnd Htr n ,. 1m + COnhnue<f to ell!!ll. ~. t F.I 2to fh 1m ~ ~ 5 .. ltrnlltr f HTGN 7 1' 7 fl Arn z inc: ' t I V. l'Alo 11/0 _ ·~ C-lfo.s Cem f '!l'o lt.I ""' -\It lllel CO 'so 1 If lit. I • l olt ht 7~1 -.0 llTlll•·i " 32··,_. NEW YOll:I( CAP) Inv CDA 11...012'6 AmKon '° I 17'4 11 11\io r"l!Bckrt M 31 11'1. 1~"'1 17'4+ ... ~oMOM I '"' 261 IS-. l~ IS -\lo Jr on I ca 11 y. whereas lloolllf._ c 12 12\'I !'l:"/ tl'J lo -TIMI 1011ow1110 11Z nv Guiel 1 u 71$ Atnllfll 6o. xs1 1jl4 13 13V. · r:pc I"" I to n ~ ,..,. ""°' -,.. trc:ouri 1"" 00 GV. •TV. •P• -1 '" >••• ''" ' -'' 1·-0 •••'·-· "'" Inv tlldlc o ~ • •• •MF ' -OIOJ ' ,~ ••I•_ .. 1~~1,,.t .. ,,, 0 •, '""•••• '·~· •• ••• -•• ''''' ''' , t? ~'1. loAl. ~ .. • optimism was considered a 8os CtP I~ m J 'Mn I'll , ii: 71~ !tit ""N11~U:. AIMX. lnvts 60I lll'M 11 i4 AmfK ~"' ' JJl'I n\; l1\ll -v: ,...., ,. ... i.,,. -ti HlrKQ (p 1 ~ P,.'1 """, .. •,•,,,. -~ Brl11lo 111 l'!•. '3V. '/'!' SI •V. ..t'lt tlOll "' Securllltt lnv~IOrs Grol.IO AMP Inc SI to ,n 4 .n -Ill rompl(11 m 4 14 1• 14 --. Hir1SMrx IO ,.. ,.. •• -'" few years ago to be the fuel 11n:1 s-. 1;v. 11:w. • ' 1 Df 11 11 .,,,, inc:, .,., 10 11111 '" 1 oo Am11e• corp 1n 1"" 11 11111 _ 14 c,,~·,•,", '", .~ ,J "",,,J. ~,,., ",~ -~ H••v ,,,1 120 1~ ~~ iJ:1 f!,"!' --+~' In flrwq At I f •1v11 11 11~ ~r!CH 11 wtllth MUI ''' t 72: Amlled lA 2 ~ :»1fll ~ t "' v• 'T •'V ' ~. ,.., Iii H wUEI J' ' " '" " that would cont ue l 0 1•11111 8• )J\ .. It • t Grfl 314 •V. ,,,... IKU•llltt Pr11<1 , so 3 •• Amlft :n J 1\o\ 7"" ,,,., "'C:•-C Pll '° ' 1••4 1•u. "'~ = .. H:, •• Alb I ~ "~ 2S'i -'"' ' •I. lldi.., '"' , .. IYlm J lY,tO\lld h•V• """ Slock 1616 11 56 ,,,~Ito ™ '"' '°"" ~ ~l':row+o Corio; ,,, 1<.14.J,\ 1~14+1.(oH•lllth.. 10 l•lh I~ I~ energtt.e u1e e c o n o m Y , 11111111 c11 "~ Slit 11r T • ~ JOkl (b•dl or boucrlr1 s.i1u ~ ~~ : li "'nch Hoek 1 SO'l 2~ :u11o """ _ ""' r""'"''11 1 ti! •n "~ " ~ -•• HCA 11111 100 • tV. m '"" · +\.,, pe$Slln1Sm now 1S COnS1de red 2Jtrnr.,/: 7;tr 14,t: ~=11= 21 21~ {ttlltdJ W1~' .. ik J"~'lt11"ri 4..04 • 12 AncorpHSv 1 4 lfl't lSl'o 1m -\It ~~~'6'1.0 1~~ l:-i~ ~:"° +1~ HtclaMn Ur 3f :H~ 21t! ~~ :.n,. I h r ht f C•I w v »• '"' ~l!Jfl E t \.'I 1• -' ,, I •• llfl u Jj, ,l '° APltlMCP H .~. !.Sf! !.""',. ., ... ,.,_ -~ t:unra1111 ,. H 1,0~ l"'io 1''" -<L ..... ,,.m .... , ., Jl ~ ;uv, m.. + .. an essent1a 1n t e 1g or a C•ll'l<o l"4 1~ eve Fib 11'1 1 u. .-...:.r;811'r ,..,,..,1 ..., , " " "'r.c0u 1 311 1 .... •• .. -.. r.11m,.,111 ...,. 11 ,..... ,.~ ,. "" ... ~ -w1 u '"" t '""-~ Ju lo · Jublt ClllClll Ill 6i 61 IYI CUi f\}10'4 o-o I <> IOJ J H11eod; tn 13'"' (._Corr •'o ,1' UV. lS"+l'or11n•Df1•a ~f ' .... ••~ ••~+" Heller l"I .0 110 ltVI 1914, 19'4 rem economic s 11 y. c1n11M 1t ,, 61 1v11 Pc 111, I'"' ,~ 355 319 Johnu" 11 u11n "'~l.. pt C °' 1 1•\\ 1sw is"'-~ruri1 .. wrt 1 "1••· , • ..., 1,.'! .. H11ma Pd1 1 , 14~ i•v. l•Vi-b C1nrlHI :!~~l" /nG lnt :µ,~ 1111.., 66•J '8 CutBlll•l161A L pf Z50 l 12 12 +'4r":v>tW•A' ''"~''i?114 _v.,HtlmrhP:IO •:!It 11'\ll~~-... AS ARGUS Research puts it, f•• 11.i;, 16\, 16'· ncis El ''• s Adv11., , 60 5 03 cvt Bl 11 01 1 n "Iii"' Svc 1 06 311 llll '19\lr 100\~ -i.r. '"vt••r H 1 "O J• 1••4 1•Vi ,. _ ,4 Html11lh C1o s Jli 3:w, J"i _ \"' •• ( ao ~11# 1'~ 7\~ Kirk Co 1~ ' jl,JllUitd '6' I 10 (111 84 7.11 1.4' Af(tl•N 10. 2j 21 111\.':i ~ -Iii rvek>ct• 1 tft J '''~ ?< '"~ t 06 ~re Ille 1$1 I« ~ lol'-' 3'1'11 _ ~ The prevalence o pessim tSm •P 1nrA 7'14 11~ K111r, 'Jar 2s v, 2'1.'.1 .,n.1r1 , 11 • n c115 1(1 10i 111 Arch 0111 1 • 1Ui "Vi """ -'1 CV•ni•M t '° J .,.,i. s•~ st\~_" Heri.tiF11 1,10 11 2sv. 75 1s k I bl r •t. CtPTch 1'!-. ''· I(" 51• 2i~ 2lo II Am " 60 " CUI IC? • 71 • " Arf1PSvc I Of n 11\lo " II -0-:-Heubttltl IO '' J~ l7V. l~ ma es I poss1 e or .. 1e t:err o~v , t!'.o LMC o.t I•\ 1:i> jl,llt1i1e , 11 , 9f r.111 s1 1s" 11 30 Atl•nt DS 20 171 •~· ru 11'1 -~ -Hew P•ck -,o Ht 2~ 2""' 21 a d m I n ' .tratl.n and '"e C:1r11 RI ·1' J L•nce Ill 201. 25 !phi Fd '3' 10.fl Cus 57 ' ,, 'fJ ArrncoSI 1 60 10 ~ ~\} 20l4 +\Ii "111"~1 .. , .... lb "• , • ., ,,., -I~ Hloh Votl19e II "" It!. ••• ~ •• UI ,.,.., Go '0'4 11 Lind RH J<lo Jllo .. mu.. 5 11 j" CUI SJ 6 3' 'JS Arrnoc: on 10 I 26llo u 1, ~ "~"· c~ ' ,, " .,.,., """· .,.. ~ + '4 HlllonHoltl I 50 ... ,, ''" Federal Rese-·• lo follow C11c llG ''• ••· Luw Wd , • ., th "'m Bu' , 1• 111 C111 S• l 6• l 91 Armno. 111 111 2111. ''"" 1ra + "' "~" '"" ,,.., "!> '"l•• ,,.,, ~1 1.1o _ ·~ Hoblr1 l ?G .., -~i -~ '" C1511 Cao 1'~ n, L1rt011 'IZ 1 ,._.., D\11" t 7J 10 DI Pol~r 3 02 J ll Armi:t11b I 60 J 'lt\1 29'h :19Vo + \to l'J1rt It'd llf 1 •t •• •l •4 '' ... •.<. Hoe<11Wtl to J1 36''< a.\~ :U1' -\1 more expansive pohc1es with f:~''e,,5 ~~~~!Ji t:~ ~ l~-1 lt:; "'C:~1E•Dre,•;, 115 ~~~~br.i '1 ~ 1 ?~ ~~111C°tn"d ~ ~ Jf,, lf ~: _ ·~ ~=~~J~or,e;~ ,,~ i::~ ~~· .. \~;~ +:;; ~:i1.iv~:,,crr~2 ,,•,:u J~,• i4 !~ +~, Jess fear of rev1v1ng the c111rn111 ''• '" ~·h, c~0• n. 1~. 1ncm~ 1 21 , o• t.ex G1r11 1 " 't4 "•hid 011 110 u1 2•11• 231~ :i• -v, l'l•v1nP• 1 ·~ " ,1,, ''4~ '''-_ ~. Ho1IGA 1 10b '"" 21 nh -t9 Clllrl 0 •',(, ''' "'' lllt 1S~ 1''1> lllVf~t 1 t:J ••1 LIM lhch lJ 11 l• A1 AshOU pr2 o10 l Al'fi AIYi 4 \i ,,PL plB l JS ro" 11 41 11 Holly$ug l 2fl l~ ~ •• ! '-1 "2 \'J • SpeC\llatiVI!! boom " Cl!m Lt~ 1~1 l'o Lewl1 Il l" ll'r. 141/o S"'cl 1 '2 Llbtrtv j 07 $SA And Brew J llo I 11'1 ,,e.,.e r. 1 ·~ ,,,~ 1'V, ,,,~ _ It HofllloUlct 40 -.. 16\to 16~ -\it Cl!e1 l"(I '" 4\0 Inc Mtia ~~ '"" Sl!)ck 7 U t 57 Ljft $11< 4 61 l:fl Aull PG J 20 ,. JI.... 3'... 31\':i + ... ntlm~rP 1 t' ~ 11•~ 11"<!. 1 ~ _ ,~ H~I I :JD Al 1~1• l• 2• -'1 lri"r a~1_1f u~ lJ:Z Lotlll~CIV 2 2\'t : t~:Z ~ ~ ~1~ t1':c ~7t : n t J :~~~a~ ~~ ! 29''• lfl, 19\~ -I/, ~I M~te I 1~ ' ,,,. ,...~ ?"'41 -~\ HooY Ill 110 ~~ ;;i:. ~ U"4 -._ The truth 1s that the countrv has stood for 1t. Jnllabon persists, but 1f,, the reasoning of econom1st.s is correct, a lol or steam has escaped from beneath prices, the result of a restr1ctJve economic policy out •••••ill•••-C"•i1t s '·' 11t LO. El•11 10\11 11 .... Ill l11v • " • u L•llCI l IJ J a A1111-Ind ~~ ,~· 1~~· \~~ -~· ~::~ "'·.-, 50 1··, 71''• ,..,, t''I -·~ HOU Ill" J6 12 ll~ ll'\ ~ •• +t ~1'11 Pl ts 100 vnch c 11-. ln'o .\111, Mjl! '" I ,. Loami• Sivln "'llC"'El 114 '1051 21~ • -• M: ~ I ··~ ... •'I ... \lo HOUd Ind IO • 10''1 lQ•.11 10'4 -.ai tlldtl t''> JV. H CEI lf\lt llV. jl,mN Glh 74' 2•9 C1n1d 3)64336• AllCEI PUii I 7 1j ?II.lo -\\ 'l~lle~ 1"1 1" "'I "'l ••lo Hau;Mllt IO 65 IAlo 11 l ~lo + loe llr JAi• IGllo """ ·1,.ll1tv "' 6 An<;ltor GrO!Jo• C••ll t lt ,. All Rlclltkl 7 11J ~tit ~. ~i . ",,.ft .. ~··· "" ,. ,. lJ\lo ,.,,. -1 HO\toehF 110 I J 3th 11\lo 311\ ... ~T of Washington. -A l ow rate or unemployme.nl is p o s s i b I e \\Jthout generating inflation. Perhaps a few people held to this behef very strongly, but some pol1t 1c 1ans and economlSLs were w1lhng to e:r:pe.runent. A b o o m i n g economy would be able to employ even ineffective workers Job 1ra1n1 ng programs would raise the skills of the marginal l y productive That was the belief FOR A WHILE 1l looked possible Tbe economy boomed and unemployment fell But then 1nflalion began rising at almost lhe same rale as Joblessness fell Output per man hour dropped, logically, an d prices ros e, understandagly. Now, most economists will settle for 3 8 per c ent Joblessness constituting "full employment " -Fixed-dollar investments -such as 1n savings accounts. insurance and bonds -are your best security. Tms NOTION was under attack for years. but it was still firmly believed in during lhe past decade. 1,s shll believed 1n by so1ne. and may once agam become believed 1n by many. Equity investments. 1t was argued. mi ght provide you a bigger return but they also entailed greater risks. Savings accounts and insurance guaranleed t h e safety of your pnncipal eveu during a depression. The undennining of that reasoning can be attributed to 1nflat1on . So what 1f you got back $5 for every SS invested. It really \vasn 't the same $S after all inrialLon had reduced 1t cons1dc.rably-maybe even cut 11 Jn half The Chamber of Commerce or the United States concluded recently· ' If you are one or !he thousands of Americans lnvesl1ng in eilher a savings account or life Insurance, you were also one of thost: "'ho surtered losses tot:ihng $&1 billion last year 1n tht \la lut!! of these t\~l> 1n,·estmtnts " -"EVERY DAY 1n every wny, I'm getUng bctttr and getttr ,. Thl~ was the Emile Coue formula for sell-cure through faith, but millions of l ,000'1 OP OIL PAINTtNClS WHOLUALI WARIHOUU onN TO THI PUILIC 1'" L ~MO~ :rNTA AH" ""°"'' ....... CEAL.ElllS WANT EO LEARN TO SAIL Finance Briefs NE W YORK !UPI) Cllll UA T.AI.'''"' rl 16\~6aV. C11>ll •U7S• Mui 1JSll'1.Sl1111!1:ch o!l 1J; llSO ....... -.,...,.Ylhf o• 11'1 . ·~ -~.+ ... H01t1FpU•o 1 11~11+\o.ll~.+I Clll! U O 21\'. '''' omt Ai 1-. 1~ G•wth ! •J 10 l"I Lulll Bro 10 66 11 fS All Rlcll.fl J 1 fl': ff'4 tt•a :.3,4 "'"ltPt'l'I~• I • ,, '""' .,..,, ->.<. Hao;sF Jlf1 50 S 4' 46 08 'Iii C!tvl" Ml lJ~o 16" M1nlft M :M9 l\\ Inc/II<!' Jt J 11 IOnl 111 I Ol I JI AU Reh l i.<I 31 4'\o ·-"-o " ""KO Pl l!I ~ 3'"' ~IY, '"'4 of •.i. H111;1F pfl )7 11 51 •> •> Cl•rll Mf 1tv. It'" '"°' c 6~ ·~ Fd llW '6) • 31 M•nllln • n '72 Alltl Chem 1 1U n•. ;;,; n·~ -" 'l~Wftjll(: •o • lU\ " 1•v. -Vo HOltllLF' I :IO I -IV. :::11v1ori Ht , ...... Mt• 11V. llW \ttnt ,, JS ..,,, all I'd '11 ID.ll "'''-1 Corp '19 l~ 21~ 21; ;_"' "'-'F~,, I ... ,,. 1 "'~ '"• 11 . HouslNGI IO .fl ~ :v. ~ + ~ CU11t #fr •'h ,y, l tlfl Gr fl'o ,._ Aoalto Fd J 1) 7 to M111 ~Ill 10 20 \I.ls ATO lr.c ota 11)11 IV• 1 111 -v. 'lot F'I l!fJ 50 < 1"1, 71 n -,,.. HOUGs pf1 .SO 11 4& '1V. Clio ++ii; Cloto 0 ·~• 5Vo ,w Mitt 71"h Hldt 1,U 1 :16 ¥1111 r ll lt 1•,,tt A .... e Pro1 11 ~ t1lo &•• -'' '1el 511e1 ,, l~l;t 1' 1''' + •~Haw Jolin l' .O 15 .... l1' lJ _'.'I C!!!," ',i',,l~ .. •~••O t'-lGVo Aot,..., 1t7•:M •In. '"J"Au'fOllltq lnd 6a S\o s•. J'•-\\,,..,,,., 74 1i 11 1"\'A''-'~Howrnu ,111 11l1Stlolj''+l~-I, C,,... 0 ....., Q ,,~ ~ te HOllQl!to.. '""" t 10 f JO Avco Co .60t ~ 11~, 11\• 11-. -lo "'~IF1""" 1n l l 11 l"'o lM• -•• Hubbrcl I '1t 10 21h n it, 22'11 + I.;, C~r Ce "' ~r' H ~ V. Flllld A A 10 s 22 Met kl Fd 11.IJ If tl Avco 1>ll l0 91 n JI~ 31'• -..., ,,1~m1 .. •1 1 10 .,.. ~"~ ..,, ~ .. , + '" 111/dBav 1 10 J 10>; 20,,1. lQ•r, _ .,,, C E 21il.3~ 911 c ,~'Ao "" Fr.lllCI Bl1'1ll)MldAM u •it llAve,-.,Pd)O 2011'o 1J1o21!1 +~"1•,.,Sti•~l lt11111 J•lio ••Vr H~ghHal«1 I t'il t"lo ~·-~· Col l"1 " Ullr !lv.Mtdlr~111 l\o2 11\~ S1ock SJt tll MoodYCo111'lj21 Avntll11 '2(1p 11 '"" 1'2 J~o . 'll•~ll ft<~• 1 ?' ?• ,7 11 Hvft!(hm 12 1 11•, 1iWi "'' Coton Sir 24\1 ~\It MEid 111 lS l''• Sc:ICo • II • S• Maocrv•i 11 61 1 7J "'""'1 1>12 so 2 .i Jt •1 -1 'll•~ llf 01 .2~ 1111 I• i;•\ 1, +,, ldel>oPw 160 ._. ""' 11,!. 21 Com(et 10 ll M did C• 14 1•\41 B1b1tn • 1J 113 Mirr I'd J 7J I Jf jl,vonPd 1 10 ld 11-Vo 69\lt ro•~ -IJ, .,,,...~~...,,. 4 • 04 1"~ 1". 1''" '4 ldt11,,s11 60 " 11 I(~ 11~ = r: Com Cir 31 JI '" iv,, Neon 11,J 11'3Mlf Giii •61 501 AllecOll 111 lS" 1llta 1• +l'O"l•ho)ld .... ,. 'A ... ~ ..... -, •,d,. ol~l5 l •5 ... ol.S +·-CNll G11 11~~ 111~ M'•w GT ~ l:r.:. l!erq l(~I 1 tS IAJ MvtJ.~ Gv 10 06 10 11 -8-.,,,.l,.,,al~ ·~ • '""• '"" '""· -; " ,',', CCtnl I 14 JJ 'l'o :20''• >o _ ~ Sev'ral lb r 0 Corn T~I '' ''' "' 1• 11\l .,, Giii J1T s •• "'OmG '" ••s "'... '" Dll• ,, • • 1ngs a\/ r an ~ • pl5 G•• !(l1,21 i.., ai.ir Fa s•• sH Mu Oml n 't It fl•bc:k w so 1 ..,,,,,.,.,..,., •~ J• •··~ 1••· 1• • 1 p 11 ;: 01~ "'•-~• 11111 ,.H iii! , • .1 IH \/IG I":~'"" "61!• SJ7 511 "' S~r· 11121212 llkrOlll IJi !~ r/,,., ,r~ 1'"' -'•'""ft• .... ~ , ~··~ , ... , .,,~ -• 11, p0""'n1 .... lS\ro l6 + '4 ~XtenSIOn Of the C U t t I! n l ornt r .;,.• ~'1 R5cll 2 • l !Of' SI 6 I? 1 t5 UI T"r 1 "> 1 t0 I.ii GE l 17 11 11\o 11 • ~j\l _ ,~ "'"~• ~r II ~ ,~ '' '' ~1 ~l'' Imp (p P "'~ ~ll U>, ~ '"" k CmP Cm ,.~ flt .. ~ .. "'• ,•\· •to I Fd.. 'f1 lD .. NEA Mur • 7l • fl B1 nG Pl(• 11'0 jJlj J1~. 31'• + '4 "'11"" c-u '"~ '"''• '"\ ~ ' !NA Co ' «I 1 I• ,.1n-:!} !)!~ -.... mar Cl rally. W E. Hu tton & cmo 111:11 l l.. ,.~ ._, •~ 11 11111 1 •1 1 " N•J Ind •fl 113 11,"~Pnl 15a 16 l\lt ''• 111t _'Iii ..,,.~.,, ,,..... '" 1""• I""~ ,,,, .. , -1'' inc-CiPll .. •T'" 2'1• -•• (mo Tu :1 4"' ~:..CPO< I '!\ ~rO>ld SI 11 111319 Nt 111,,ll • d 1 Ill ll1qgP pl 1 2 1114 11'• lf''• -', "''·'~•·" I "'I ! '"~ '"" •", -'\. lnCCvm 1•e 7 lll''I ~. t>'I -• Co says They are SkCp(lCISm Cornret 2·. ?~o \;O(ire p II JP, Bu•tock C1!v!n H~I Sec11r SQEll: Bk1>IC4l l lt 1 llh 21So 11'11 '"''~···•"" •t •• •··~ '"~ 1•'., lndlfnHd to ~ t '> f'~ '''1-•t Coro Rot~ '1'1?} ~OOlt s ,r111 , •• fluUck "'6 U <• B .. ln M1~·~ B•nk clNY 1 31 ., '6'• •I ..,, ~·n J !·-•••••• ""'It ... lndoltPL ISO 11 J~~ fl'• 211~+'-on the part of broker~ and Contr1d "• l l, Mrpl T1A Ill>\~~ 5f..'l:n '1 JJ 1;:,• BPv~ tll ~M G:~J1j lf.. 1~ ~l·. ~~~ ~;~ .:,,",• ~",,".:;·~ ~ :: ;::·, !:'• ',:•1-_,•1 l~g!~1"~• .. • ", ,,,• 1104 1:~ i~11 = ~ Conrr111 '" l'•"rj, •. , ,,, ,,, •••W $ •I>'" -,,-, >N ''' " --v · l91• "" ••• t ,. t-.r (._ >• ,,, • ., ~ " .. , 1•rll CR ?S 11 40\o 1(1 ...., _. """'~""' 17• ••, "• ';,'!" •>>I " • • Professionals. .., fact ""al c ' • V.o th M JI!.; I NY ,,, ,, '' •• ,, p •• • ... ., Ill ' ' -•.• ~ i• I " 6 ll J4'11 "" 1, UI UI Cor1 .. 4 •'•O..OI Club 11l~JJl \~,'IM Fd lA1JOf Inc:.... ._,.4jj ISlc:nlclO • • 1\11'\-~o ....,"'f •v•• ,.,.,,,.~,,I•\ ft• Sl!1 1191•' .. 2• i:j...,_>;, this 1s the •;me of year when c~,d .,, i:'' 1~1, ~,,'", •, •,.'! 1·~ :c Fd 1 n 1 .. Sltck 7 11 J IS l:l~' 1:i9 1 10 10 10 -·~ """1t r.. n '··~ , ,., , .. , .. " hvnont :19• •' ••• 11, tit + v. • C••• Mo< •• , ,,~ u 1 .,. :!'• ·•:i•• J ''>•~tr Grit! ltl 'l' 0 _1 < " ~. ,111, 11'1 12~~ -•o "n•• "''IV'• '", "'• •••, lnrnl~onf Jlft50 110 so so SO , '' 1, ''' Im" '2...., • • :U 34 + 'I "'Inv•· r• 1~ .... '•' •-~ .t., Ins 7Clb IJ ''' 1.c the appearance of an asserllve Cre1t ,,.,~ 1 I'· 1c" 1., 1 "• I 111'1 2 M J 11 tllW Ct! '14 ' • 9111K11Lb IQ 'I JS'~ i.vt Jj "'-"-, •• lnl c /"' ,, ' ,,... " + :u Cress c .,., _.. 5 ~t "•olt ~.,, 5 <1 fM N111w Fii l1H/12S 1ad1L''' 10 -, '' ,. •• , •··~ '0'~-• r 1 .. 1 tv • 1• -l~ ,_,,,, 2 "•··' ·,·• .. ,',"',',.,' ", ... 1,3 .... •Ill Sh• • -IG ti ew Wld 11 J2 'l, ~) n;• ,,,, 2i -'h .. ~,,,,. .. I ,. • '" ..... ~ ""'II ... ' n1 .. , OP le J~ 4.!•t ,,.,. 4-1\io -~. new !rend'' m-t likely lo\.-·v ... • " "' .. ••···• '''''' l Bt~YkC lv 50 '' ,,.~ •'• '~. ., .... ,"" ''" "' ""''• •••, • +" i111torc .. i 1~ n 30\>'o '"' '' •• "" U!: CV1>rt1 C J" I erC•r R ;h•nn11111 f0Jlld1 "'' " ; Beel Fds I •• ''~ 711/o -i1 "~··• r"' ., , , •••• ···~ " lnlrl!i!n( 1 IO ' 71'• ?l~ ,lj' -• P""Cho\OglCaJly potent, and 0An• Lb\ • .,. IV, Cmp Co :::: r~ ll&i.n 10 24 1l 1t ~ICh Stro •"' ,•I Beckman ~ 111 211!1 2J 27111 -'\, "'•?•r r• B~ • •llL '"''• .,,...._ -"' lllM 4 Ill :lll 7701, 2.iO ,,_ = \'t "J Oanty M 11 11'14 -.11 Gf.O l l Corn Sf 1 41 1 61 11re~11 l 91 l ff llecl Did lO •1 311• J1~ lt'4 -1.:t "•·~• • C• , , , •••Z ,0,_., ,,;·; -"' !nl Ch Nuc1r 41 l6V. JSV, w," _ •,~ evidence th a I Washington D•lt Oe1 J''9 1'1 I t LIO 1i~-nM!o Grwth • ·~ • " ~-~E!' 6,09 'Of llftch"'r 1Sb ,. IUo 11\J 11\io -u ., ......... 1 '" ,, '"' ,.,. ,,.. ,. lll!Fle"• JOb )9 j11o "" ., + .• Oalt G~" ,, •• ,,,, otl ... , Ir.com 1111 I.ti ~ 16 57"1 Oo ko•I. "'>I'•''' OO< + • ••-•l11IH1,.,. Im >I -· • •·th dth Bi::' .,. 20l~2 ., S' OJ t•ol-•< ,, •• ,, ... e •' .,,,.,••oct'1'0 ,., •• ~,. '""~"''"·•• '" '' ''"'-•• wan~ e economy an e •v• Mr" il 1·~ H11 h r i'' 1i, Ch:ti Gr 8,,: ... 10i I'd 11; •.'If Biiden 1 60 1 '' '' '' -'' """1 ·~ ,., "II ·~' ,.,1 •0 , +'" ,, .-.... ne 1 1, 14 1 ... + ~ market to improve. But the , 1~ s•. 1:,,, N:I s1~ ,,• ',t" C•o11 s 51 , 10 Ont wms 11" 12 1• Blld119H "1:1 • i.lli 11111 1'" -" ~ ........ • ••· , .. 1'"' ,,.,, , 11,.1 , • 1"' l11C1u~1 116 u1, ,1,~ 1, B::llb Al ll<~ 2'\t N I I"'' o <t F-r ~· I lO 2 Hi ll 11 "2 11 41 lleU How 60 ll :Ul\ llV. 3l\li -1 """!!"! "1+ <~ 1 ~", ~", ~"~-=. ,, 1~: l~I l>tl 10 II 2•'• 'lit 7J1' + '1ll big thmgs helping stocks IS the !hi 1111 7 •. , .. "'~n GE ,11~ 1,:n, ~~~.to •: tt~J; o:-'t,M : u 1~ r, ::::.1:11(!;~ ~ i:'-: ,:~ 1~ ! t: ;;:;r-;; ;n:..~ .. ~ ~= ~·· ~~ = ~~ In! M11"o'' ~ JI,.,:, 1::: 1!~ I~=;: better bond market and the 8:f111t\•~~ f!~~ f~YI i,,",,"•, ' 'v. Se>e(t 1 ,. Jn 1Tc Set • 2s 10 05 1111'1d1x 1 60 •:i lJh 231, 23'11 -v. .,,,..1 1 ••• 1 ,,.., ... ~··~ '"~ _ ,. 'i"l ~rck 11 10 ""' m• ~~ _1 Oft B 1 " ",,",,',',,._C~•mel 1sn 1•u,P0<IF!l<I 496 7jl 11endl•o•J 2 •O~ l(l'olo Mitro 'lvmolnd "1 11~ 1"• 11'•-• 11 eo SO ld 311\t 31''+ J1\it-U conllnucd softness in short-c.v ,,,:,. 1r;;: /;"• ~i!i! ~ -.. co1on1~1· •u Rtw 'll 1 1 Bt11er1co 1 10 JO 4 1/r 41 .. -i , ovn•"'m :io. "' • ., 6Y. ''" + 1+ 1~;1 s~~~140 " 1v. 7!'1 1 Oew.v E 51 51 ~A 11: 3' J! t=au1y l •l 111 p.,.,. SCI '"' J"' Benell or5sa 11Ullr 142V.l•1V.-1•' -E·F-Int T&T 105 11 >9~ :>t•'o Jf~--~ term interest rates, it adds. Dl•m c~ 1,,~ 15 ' NC••·~ 1~ 11• Fund 'u 10 ~ P~ Mu1 J 11 11 a. ..... 11 .,u » 2 ,..,. 1• J•u ~ TT ..it ..,.,, •l\\ .O\IJ II>(''••!. l·-OI• 10'•10\~ Grw!h $1•,6TPlll" 11 l71316B-ISPl2 50 110lt 19 29 -c••1~•.r, IO ""'., ... ,, ....... :,ri.\11 ·,~ J" ., ll +,· CC:M v• 2V. 7l'J lncom 1'110"1 Plklr!m IJI I Si! Bettovfl 1n1 •'4 S''O 6\1 -1 c~<ro r~"" •' U>~ '''" 10·\-• 1"> p,.o JJ 71'11 + ~ Ji • NPA G1t lJ•~ll14 \/IM l ll'•1~P1""S' ff7ttJ11~,U~1 1fl t1 5'• s>• s• "'•"'"'•L I" ""•1·~··1',U11i-••1nTfP~LS..SO 14'11 62\i 62',.,IJ\.'l-v, The m a r k e t ' s next Ollld~1 L f.: r~· ~: ~1·~ ,·.~ ,!~ Col Grth 11• 41 IO" "'°" Efl1 ' 'Iii • '5 Berktv l>ho h J ,, ' 6'1 ,,t + '• ~··: ,r~~ 1, " s:~ '•'·"·· ·.~·. , ... + ,, l~I Bl!1 t:.· "n' •,•,',>, ',',',,· ll."', -~ nd h • b Oow '81 '' '' • .... re ... ~ fl~ •l"! •~!•ion Fnd 1n2111 n.. c •• ,,, ,,. , ., 1 1, ,. 1,1, ,. .,. re ezvous JS wit 'trou le" Oowt ~Nucr K •,•,1 1 c:wlth "a 111 J 3<1 P1~11 1"v ,2,1010 tm!'C orP ... ·• •1t "'t<K""•~ 1• ,,. ~"• ~"· ~· -1"' uut "' , 1t•1:o 29 •• 71111 _,,. h ' 1 • 11 :!O 201, Olllo Arr , 1 rwl!h ( l l'I 111 Prlc~ f'vnd• 8e1h $11 11n 1~5 11•. 11''• '1l'o -'' "'~tonY• 11~ ., ""'• .,.lo ... ,., +11 lnter1>1ee 1 17 24'• 11~ '•""' +.,,. t e Janei.•i'ay Service says. The ~r:i" NL0 ,'," 1j,, •0•,•1 ,•,,•,• ",,,l",•,v1 ccmo "'' ~ l• , 16 G'""'" 10 1, 10 67 Bt9 T"'~ •o 11 .,,, A6'~ •',; ~ •· "'~'"" o•i ,. 1 ,. ,.. ,. -,, 1111 ar1nd fll 11 u•. 13-. lll-t _ .._. t '" -• ~, O!J ''' B1.n Dk II n •1'• ·~'• •1 t ,, "'~~11•"1 ., •• ••' .,,, •· -, ,•, ln!er,Pw 17• 17 u '''' '''• S reng., of the economy Will ED yr I,•~ ,.. 1·~ Ormonl 1' ' ' OPT!otl ! .., '... ' l!l1lt Jn~ll A 2J lit 1 ' I !tr 151 60 z '•Int 01: 11 ., "'' ,. ' 11. 1!1"10 ~d ~o• 111 N .... 71'1 911!1~ •• ,, 1 ~'· '• E(~t•dJ ?!I ¥1 '''\,. ,. "1" 1,· ,, U11' u~ '1~1 ~ continue to bid liquidity away •,•olC, wr 3,, • ,, NA ~1 • 1,1, eoma Fii • ,, t h •ra 0::11n<1 1 !J 1 fl B,"'1111, f!,v• .~ • l n•, 1t•1 1t<, -·~ .. ~ ·r~e•~• t • ,~., '", •·11. = , i""":eiL''\ ..,. 51 1n. 10• 1 2 ,,, 151 ..,,, Jt, J•I •vC•I •••• ,,,· a<nl!O. l" • 1' Pta Po1tf • '1 • ... "' .... II ,,,, s1•, jJ" + '• "t:-'G ,. .. 10, "'• lf ' """ ,,., " lJ!, 11•. in. '• from the stock market faster ,E{cn L•ll JR , 1~" l'EC 1,,1 17t' 1, • r1ncard "~~v•H PTovdnt •01 • «1 Bhlt B~ll 1 7t 1• "~• •1 •1.. ""•Mosir ('O• ·~ ,., •', ,, -; ,: 111#•111G 1 31 1s 10, 10.,. 1Gl. _ lo d o~ '•• J•o ?>. P•o>O ,, oo' ~l fo...al I~ •I> 1"'• P11t1l1n IOI •1t •Yl"l4Ud 5D 1 'I' '' 14 -'• l'lecl .\s.,.c 1• "• ~'\ •>i ... ·~ ltwtP!.r 160 1 '2'• 21'o ,,~1 ... an mo'' COnt nuou.ly lb " o I • ' •1 Cam I 111? J Jl'I p, '11~"1 Fvnct\ l tufh! pl• 7S 4 !II 111 117 "' M•m M•ft '"' !)'~ 1"'-1?• ... , 1 loweP5~ I J6 1S l"~ It .... It• -•o I I lb , an El11~$1..,1 1l(;1l~~:~~~E' J '"'t'o'' 0111/'M~ •St 6 ,. Eoull IU IC• "o"llT• Br~' I 11 \ 11'1 11'1 -'•"''M""•"rl • 11•0 11•, 1"', 1•"+; 1~,aHos1> 14 11 JJ''> ll'o 11'o -l. specu at ve ent us1 asm can E!Ol'• ee , rn P••ca co 'i\ .,,, rl!l't r.'" 1 \• 1 A• t:a<>•o 1? 1• 11 51 11 .... 1..., co 10 ~n 1~·. 111~ '"• -.. fil•1•"'"' 1"" 11 s•, 1 ~ s·1, _ , , 1 E 1roo 60 1• 11 • n•.. n•~ + 1 t b k I k fi t N11t J>io 3), Pell(D! 0 • Otn ld 11 !I 1• 1~ Grlh I 12 t Sl llol1C1~ JJh 111 45'~ •J tJ'o -•1 "IP~·~NG l •• l<>o 101', "" I' " I!•~ S(Oto 3911 J'10 l?'< Jl -t. pump J ac into I le mar et, F.1 Nuc IO'• 11., Parkr o.. ~1 2,:.. 111v C·~ 10 ,, 11 11 '"com J 11 1 ~ Bond hod 6r ? 8'~ 1•; ••• -•· '"'nr~ ...-. 1 1'I ?< ,,,., '''• 2''-_ ,, 111 v or• so J !~' • tJ tJ h +r lladd dth '· t J E!tlcov 1 ,~,p~rkw If 1,' *'~Ct"Wnlv SJO $)• '"veot IOI&~• Aoo~"11~ 111 •1 1~·. !~'') 1~')->o "'m•rE•-~ 1 117 u •, ••·~ ,,...,.,.., -J•K-san l!!mar,,e aSO JSEllrom tl/,5 Paulo•• ,·,"",,Cr11WO•l <U6t1 Vl~r~ 1~JJ6lllO•de~l?Q P1l'o ?)\,1l'-°'mEICl/l•O •lll ">lll'•l~'•+• ... I bl El C Sn P o?' p 11, , t\/a~ M •6 411 ~ .. Vcw~q S 11 fl' BfW'QW~r I'S •II""" ?t 1•>•.1. • "m•ryjl,lr ~ ll 1111 <t <1• ,•J•...,snA11 2t JI 1•o JI• vunera I! to "the lederal F.1 Dat• 50.,,,·p;;:1 ~1 17 •1 l')Oo'1~w•reC.•ou~ .,.,,e•• '" •u 10,,..a~o l!(I •I 111, 11•. ,,,_.._,;Emll1rr1 10 s JO ,.,~ ?••i-•J•Mt• 10 •••·I\• ·''• + '\ 1·~ -'• ' •••• , boa d' bllil nd/ El Mollu~ ··~ lV, PMrl'-' T ri"" ,t~. Dt<,1 1" lt 11 ,. Ro"tr•t "~ 13 11 l'to• Fd11 ? ,, 7J )''• ,,, ' ,, .... ·~ ""'"Ol•t I ,, I , .. ~ .1~. , ... , + ' ~:~1.:;11 tco:_ 1 l~~ 1]\' .,...e r s 1na ya Ell'loS H• ll'on~1 1 e11111" 3 ~ f'lorlwf 111t12 Jnll:&se11111 S3ll jMBovr..,111C !•ll'111••11•,+"Ent1f!IM1 .ri lnn••'tlv.11~, '•J Fdl06o ,10, •• '"' ·1li t I E""'""' c n :JD p G& ?~"o 2') OtU~ • 1J '1t1 $1lfm I'd • 67 110 llr~nl•.,lr so J1 "'• ,,, rr. ·~ F• M ol• ?< • p~·~ 11"1'~ '"''• ~0 10 n .. 10 l~ 1 ;~ or U~WI ngness O con 1nue Er11ra i:te Ito 11, P~nn ,.: 1f, • 1j(• 0••1~1 n.ts 11.11 Sehv.<I• 12 u 10 OJ e.1.,.,~1 J,1(1,o l •\'• •··~ "'• = \\ E111111 Bu • lJ 11 n•1o 111., n • Jlfl:.Pnoi ~o ' 21•0 ,,,, Pump g th d t E"nls B ........ p j w I ) Or~t Fd 111.0 11 .;\ Sc:udller Func!J 11,1.1 Mw 1 )0 1~• ,, .. SI'• S"' -1·~ EaYIG~$ ? .., 1' l'I'" ,.,. "''~ + "Jtrottll, ... I !O n 15-11 lS\1 in up e C r e I l"1w1u ,l~ 1ol t:0111 • l,;;: ~" 0r1v1 l..v n ~0 12 " 1"' t"" u "1 13 '' t1r111Mv pr , 10 •1•r. "'' .,,~ + , , ~SB inc j,10 J 11~ '"'" •• 4 _ ·~ ir~•J:o :g "17X g:: ;.~ ~~ .. ..:. '" IS't T '' •S•~ -"' '''4 -... Jl, -'• reservoir after the bUSlne!S :uc~r. l~~l~';;;thl~dgu:i fllA t:I' E~f.':i'1'.,How~r~lOlJ l~l n~~~ :~np:.t~,,;;; ~: ~;~ ~~; r~-'•F:~;J~1 1?1'1 1~1 ~l ;:;~ ;r1, j)3;'~Pl1 1~ iJ~ :f.'.J ~· recovery has become ofltctal rlt Ttc ,,. 1-. p"°"'" t'fo 1-~ rwi~ 10 •4 n •1 2-s1 •..u •" 11"" "'~ or .IA ,..,.. ,. ,. Eut• Dl1 '' :it'~ ,.., ,.~ .. , J"" · 'io ~ 11e11m 5 '' S'\ S ... 111'11Y Funds lld>wHAI oi l I 17'~ ]7'~ 37'• • ' E•t1rUn1 111 t U llt\ lJ • + 1~1::~1 ~ lJ ll1 j1'o 5lV, andasthemflat1onarytmpact Sote• '" 101 Equtv 2" ''l """wv o• '° ~ '~·~ 2~·· , ... " ."~w/ c~!" ~· 7D'.i 1•1,1, n1,_,,, __ ,, •,•, ,•, ?!'• )I ••• sr . -•· 21fo -.f It 50\.o-1 SJ\\ -'i 10\• -,., Sk>c• 11 tt ll ID l'!VHI 71)5 111 l!l"'w" Co 1 $''o !') 5''i' ,,.y "" ~• ,. lo~~ lJV, lll.t -1 J""~ ·~ '10 Sl' f'~ of the federal d e f 1c 1 t lbfrsl 11so 11.57 u"'' 5 n • t 11-~~8"' "' 1? 111•, ,~,. IM\ •• "•""°'ner .1"" 1 "'• """ 1~• + ~ °" Y l•o 11 • l • 01t1 1a't' 11 to {'t,\ "'"' I •1 t 11 l'lw"s~-1..,, , 7n ,,,11 17, , v~~'P <oOb • J71' 371~ l 11 lU\1 surfaces." C • • F • mro sc , '' s 16 el -s 13 /11•,,.. 11,...".".;k in ·~ ,,~ 1 ,,~ ,. 1 -' F.~ceuo 1 ~s '.Ill ?fl Ht' "'' _ " Jot<nf.L "' s zto 4J14 •1 trCUtl 1r1n -=11ero1 11,5'11" '"' G1h J s 111 11utwEr ,,,. ,, ,. ,,,, 1,"':;::~k '"•~roe 'o n 111~ t•t• 1~11 _,,Jor,...1ft.,l» 1• lo '"'~ ., + '" ltU -\tt 110.:. -'lo )9\~ -1 31•\ -... "~ -n1o .. +• •s•1 -,,. :11·~ -'• 70\lo -i~ 7G'4 • ,., The early leaders 1n the current rally appear to have flagged a btl , while secondary and speculative issues vt'h1ch began the ir adv an ce somewhat later are continuing lo rise. E. F Hutton notes. The latter group. how~ver. cannol provide leadership for a sustained upward move, and their prominence would be a signal that the advancln& phase is close to complellon. ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS, N J (UPI) -Volkswagens sold during last month totaled a record 41,011 The August high brought tot111 salt! !or thl': fi rst elght months or 1970 to 394.016, 12 perttnt morr: th:in the 351 ,~7 for lhe corrc~nd· Ing period or last year WASHINGTON (UPll Tennessct Gas P1pcllne Co, Houston, Te:r: has applied to lhe Federal Po"er Commis- sion ror authorlly to Increase 1ls wbottsnle n:itural J!ns rDlt! b~· ~108396,100 "nnttflll.}, The lncrea:ie \\'OUJd nffrcl 12'4 dllllributors <1nd m11n1clpal customtrs In 17 sl:a!c' and \l:oUld be effttlive Oct 17. The uliljty'i lap.t 11enl!ral ratti lncrta~ w,, n1ed almost ll years 110. '"'nrprs1 5 • 5 4 !"'"' Fd I ~ I 5" fllll'k! co 1'& 1• ''! •~~ ,,, ·~ '"•tlo•A &Ob 1~ '' ]A ~1 + u Joste111 •w n n 21'"' -=011llv I 13 • '' lltor AD •s 1•10.0 03 fl\lllt " of,M $ •• , ''-' + ~ F1Frc11C .SO Jtt lJ't 2•~· 1•14 _ •• Jov Mfe 1 40 IJ .a .l9 "Gut tl!ll 1 11 • ~ ~ Otnn 14 11 14 •1 flOOe~! 111 ~· ~ 1• o·i O'\ l'•lr Hiii 154! II ~Vi JO ID'l -~ l(~hlr Al I 4J ]11,\, :J(IV, In New SJ., "iOul p,... ':Ill l 113 fld• • ]I t 11 flUl!FCI• 11" ~]] l"~ l•'· l~·-+•·~ Ft1rmo111 1 IS IS "• ltl' -(\Kell 57pU IS 1 611'> "'"" e ".JHJC 1t 10 "10 om1 Fii/id~ llulovl w .o •I 19> 101~ 10L\ .., "•ts!tll !OP I •'o 8 J 6 \ -\o\ K•ls Stllf• JS 7 61 61 cwnl Ill II 07 U 10 C1ol1 1,1' 1 '3 "'""'c i:t~,.,0 1D1 • ' ·~ ·~ -,~ F1"'1tv ,,I ,.O ,0 1,-; l ?lio 1?>0 4. .... Ktll UoU IS 1 tjro 6!'• F-0 (•G ltlllV8ll lnWJI •11 1~ .. "111'~11! Dfl~ • ""·• 111' ,.. -v.F•ns!tet tnc Joi II'• 11•. ll\~+·1 K11 4 1SDf1JJ 1•0 ).I'~ lll~ Al B Phlll' f'lltfd 13' tU Tl'llll ltl II• l'turtll\tl 100 •1 1"'~ 3"'~ :lll•\+i f#rWeU Fl., I~ U1, l"o 14 -••l(ils Ctn'I ~ 10 1G'h 711'~ v1n 1ps, president, J"1rm "" 1 ,, ........ m1111 11 110 1 10 l'ltrt•N~r 1 11, JJ 2,.~ ,.,~ 2Jl.4. ' l'1r111M1 "°" , 54'' '™'" S4V. + '' 1(11,c 1111 n , :io•i;, »'ll "r! <ir111 11,1111 lf.JI 1w1I lllY 11' I 10 Qurl!Jot "' 51 t ~1• ~" At\ ' 1\ ~~11111 .Hi ~· 1'o 1\'I 7~ -\\ K•nC PwL• J I :JOii :JDllo board Chal.TTl1an, and Chlef Fd CfP 10:\CI! ~ s:l~y GI 5'6 Slit llurlldY 1t1 1• 16>1 l\i \' lf~~--14,l'K•r~f 14010 l~OJ r"l'~ r;.• ~1 •• -~~KC "L DU?ll '40 "''lo 5'\~ Eld Fu•d IJ 1' 1$11 vet l11v 12 d. U61 fl urron' .0 ~I! IOIV, 10$\'o 10.flo _,\/) FtdMOO \10 l if, 7' ''~ + ,, executive off1CE'r of General ~i~.~(1~ i:';;J 1' '\~~::-;•G, ~~~ ~~ -C-F9dNMro '' 1111 .,. $11111 l'"" -~' D, I I Co 1__ ovnm J .I' 310 Stu! s1 «1 oo •1 ao ,,-1 c • '' • ' , PICIPtc Elec 11 O''o tu o + 11 1g1 a rpor11Uon , M:Otcd in 111~"'' ·l,. l J1 s1~ndtT>~n FIJ'ld1 cii'Fi,.:"1· " I'' ia,. -1"· f P•c 011 t6 J ""' 1•l't "~~ -'' I"(""' t• s~ jl,m llld 6J\ 6" Ctll81'1n M... ~~ ,;. 1,;: 1;., -;:FrdP•1>ld I I 11:0 .... "" -~ Santa Ana . announced 1oday1=,rF"\.. ~:~1~?: fc'?r"nc ~~~VJ l:~:OL 1•~: 11; r,;) ~:~ ~~~~~JST:"r1 ~ ~ l'i~~ ~: ir'1 =., major financial backing from "'11" l'l'• •'" 7 J1 51•111 Roe ""' c11e.s Oll!O • '' •.•:• ,,:~ •11t -:..\, ~•tdlt•1f5,1;-c, 1,i i"", .r-i ~· = •l F•I l/'IGlh 7 71 l O'I fl~I 16 IS 1' 11 t~ell•--I Ill lit -'"' "' OdHI ~ n \SI,,. T h V I "" 111sr-,., ~ti c~n oo 1u ,,.. ,,,,,,~. •• -• · ittrr• Co 1t n 1 1""" u -.f '' --entures nc a, •• • ,, , ,, , ,.., 16 1'• it. 1u "l"rtird Jo 11• '~'t ''" 1• "'-.,.. , , •I Mui•! 1 lo I I\ "Of~ ' • (d~ Pt~ l ?II •& 51'1 57 I I -1 F IO>ol t •' 6 '' .. ,._ .,.,,. •··· F't Not t O 1~1~"~ lnGt $0' 6~ (dPA f ,7o t S7 17 <1 .,--, " wholly owned subsidiary of F1t s1~'" l • u 31'11 ~11011151 • >' • 10 c111,,',,"1 10 1 ,,,~ 11,; • Fl" Ff'dt••'~ u 1s , .. , i.1. -'• l'le! Ceo '11 Sv"r' GI 7 :JD /" ' c '"' • Uwl Flt~~'"' 1,60 2•1 '5 Cl\'t 43 i'" " El t . c rs Flt>t FnG '" l MR ,,,. 91Jl Si •P < )It ,.,. )'tll J 1A\·-1'4 l'l lC-rort , ... 2117 ttl .. ~I'\ '· r.merson ec r1 c. o. o I "I~ nr~ , kl 5,. TMc11.. •ls ! Jo ••~'"" 'o"° H o1u " '' -'• F\t c"rt 21ti I• 4 \• •I'll ff" '• Lo I """ r;1~ • 11 • ~ THhllCI l •l " C•,;','",·,,,,,• 1 I "'• I••• 1r, +•• ,,,, M!QI I ~ JI ') n ,, -\'l u s, l\1o. FOUl'ld,., ' ,. '"' T•chrtOI '11 'll ,' .... ,. Yo' tSO i.·~ Ml~ .S.1 I • '· FitNCll! , ID ., ,,.. ,, ' ,. -'\ T'he .. !loWlno h • ,., .. ll•fttiMlll 111ff ' • ''"Temp Ct 2_] It ... 0 11'• 71'• '1<.o -t~ l't\Hll If Ir • 31\o ll J3 -1\ The -."""'rlltion's c'trcuil• .. ~~~1~ Gr!.,~ "' low• Mit •,. ~ '° C:••PT~ Mt !? n·· ,_,,_ 'J') "11, r rrd .1~ 1• 11 lO~. 10•1 t11 ""' •l«t: rn1rkn -i.. .. v.,.... • l>NTC 10. '" Tr111 c~o •st 7C'!I l'1r•lr~:• to '' 314 1'\\ "''•-'\ f1lll'rkl 1• foCI t • •It flo :+I• $11'1111111" 11e llfl0fltcl1I. ~1etal Oxid~ Semiconductor. Bf1\"'" iR !!l; ;r~·· EF'li 1llt 1';g,l ~:~:.o~ 1221"'1 ~~Iii ~" j;,, -1• :~:r, f !" n',,,. ;;{. 1'1'~'-1 .• ._.. ... Mir•., I'll'"'"' II-A"""'', ... I Sc I I I I fncom 1 •1 ~ 'fwn Gt '•• •s ,,,1.rw ..a~ ... 1!11 JS~\ l!li + \'o i• ~ ~t l 19'1 lo -•-""" •lwt:k dlvldtfld c-Lkluldtllnt tll¥1> ..argt'l a e n egra ion. are"'"""' , I' , ., T"'r. '" I" • u r11 .. 1..ck ""' 11 ''" 2•u 1< -'i ,, •• ; l '• 1•1~ '" -+-" • wltlely used 10 d I g 1 I a I Fd 11MY! 1 1 111 IJ" 1 Mur 1 r, • N c'''i"c'•' 1 10 Jj UllA 3' '41to ... • /' -M 12 nt •74' •n~ + '• dthd. tj....Ol(lttwd .,. ••id 111 1t7' •lu• Fu"" Ille Gr11 U"lld I I'' • to ft "'" SI~ f<\ l-i. F •"-LI 1 ll Ult M\\ Mt.I • • ...... tllll-' • 0 ' tompult•S data l t!nnina1~ Cmrf 13" tu Uft C:..oh1 7°' M ~Cl Cc• •fl .,'~ 1 l!'~ 11 lf\'i ... 1 l"J1 SIM'! I J lt lW. lt • .._ ... I •1 ""'· .... . ~. •mote OJ J ~I Unlj<o\j Funch ' "'V o·~ I 1 ... Ul\ lo!,t~ -\lo ~~p \rJfl $4 ffi1 "" lffi ... " .. IYlllle "' •todf 11Yt!111 1f'11, 1:11""9tlf s e m I conductor memories, ~lrd '1°'ff 'l ~ ~.:c~ 1t a1f :t f:/!::'l.'il~ . .: '1t ~· !l\t t?t' = :: Fi;fi.., ~.1, 11: 1 '' ~ I = ~ RM Vl lw Oii t114Mdenf .. IT<ll\fttlb!I· cJectronlC CaJCU!ator!i Mld "llnd Arn .U 1,1 Clllft • H I •I r•nu 1111 ~ l•I .l"'I ril'I 21'\o -I;\ I'~, .IJ '3 'l\o 21 f Ito -ll TIM •1tt. ...o.c1trod el .. Id M '-' · ·~ '" '" •r.i , •• J~~ ~·~· Fov ,, :~:"1 JV,~ !'rn=:: ~=:-;s ·J " 1r• !~ j~--""''' .... , ~"' .. ., N141 "'~' other electrical equipment r~.~;c l 1: :~ u:,~ ts"' 1~ I , r:~ u:~ l?. ' ,,\ "~ ~~ +1 ,.,..., M1" G l~ il1A ~ ~ . •Itel Cllwlde:nd II' #11' lllJ. t-Dlcl"'" \Vlth f i n a n c i n g now T"'. s;:· ts• 1 11 ",:-(:!, "i'rn• s ~ 1 06 f;~: (~5 ~121/ li ~11-, ~ ,e,l = :~ ~::.~~10.i 111 .,.._ !!!! f!•\ + ~ ., Hid l!llt tt••· en ~111iv. .. ,.,,, tstabhshed, the firm can e:f Pd '" l" ~·1 L'" s.., '°' !~',; I 1• • \lo ""' 1i1 + .. ioorWI(• .ao tt I' l 1' l~\\ -1, wt11i dlvtd•l'llt• "' •m•n. -H.--.... 'n'ti.I. lb. -·t pba•• O( JJS COm,dSI 1~~.11 M11 "'ms>< ,•,x..,•,•7 t,,1,"iu' ::, 104 • ..it, U\~ -')!'"OJI Wiii .1111 11 l'f• t -'--"•If thl1 ''''· dl'ridm"I OfllittN. 0 .. •~· 11 I ~ :J~ r,.J 11'"'.'WI ~"' vn:s ,,. ' 10 'll "' • 'll ~ l_...11.i Pe~ ffii1• = (t ~~:='l1r ~ HJ '1~; fr: !:t"; + ._ ~ °' "' •C'ller! 1u:t11 e. 1o11 .tivkttllit plan v;hlch WI n c I u d l': .......... ., I) t; • ,, V•ndrbl !--.., • eo-•e I '°"·· )i I ., lN + ., ~t-1:5111 ... 1,J ••• ffll ,,. + ,, "'""'"" r-C>f'tllrM °' Hid lro ltx. '"" ~NI" 1200 !Kl \/~nct!I ).!ii j . f'"'f'f11"" II I ... '"",,._,, rvei<r.• ,,,, 1• l'"' .._ 't'•-'•11--tllVlc!Oft! t .... '" .~ .. , construction of a new ~,.,n1ot1 v•, -,,..,. •ts ._ t'""'"' -l!lll '' '" I' :~ -"' _,..,. 11 .-... 11, ~ 1 .-. -'• ...... · -' ....... r"' multimillion dollnr 35 ,000 ~f~ !~~ :r, ~:U;I tft ftl1t1: t;d::~ ~ t "' *'~ ll' -G-,,,.,ut11o1t1tMc.e$11viiwt1ttJr4l\'ldtttf II Tl H~•blll' 1 J)9 11' Wlllh .... II 40 tt UGI hldbn nt •• 1( r• l\• ~ II -.. ,.t.t: Co 1 SO 16' li'~ 71'-7tl\ -I. or l•·Cl'l1!rlbl,lllon •tit. A-slltt Ill flllL squnre foot fi:tc lly. II! ne.w H,n ... 11 •11 •.n fll lMI" ~o c~~mos l)j! » ~J · '~'; +\, A:c111o,oo ffo ,)• l!, 10••-'•d11 ..C.11M. rx-b>d"''-"'l _h-tllv~ inlt-gralt:d circuit plant to be ~~'c:;. :r. ll: fv~l' 1I-:i:3'l l,.::':r~~~".~ ~ :;~ :i~ ,,:_~ : ... &'o\O» l4 !f,: im'··· lt'•.!.::"""..., ••In"' full .,.1,._&odlt1r~ located on 1 5 acrt 11te at !he ~..,l:~~ 1 :'vi:~ 'm,, ~~ ' ~ ;':~Me•~ 'u m: #'· J:1.o ,+ '• :::If :~·I! l tl: • n:::;:: ~: butloft. •1-e-t11ht. --w,.,_, .,,.,.. I I ~ '\ll I :1' J•1t111 lh,I\ "f ~·' .2• ''• IU "' -\t olrCIOM (.I ii ?lli o 11'< + \o ••111'1.. --Wllll •rr•lll• "-WM.I In•ine lndustra ComplexH J..11 • I~ ~r11t t 011 ~ ..... Nv 1t.0 1 •I '<I to\• 1•r1tck . .o 1'~" 1••·-'••1i1rlbu!Pd ..._Wiit" --·• dj h Or Co I 'jM '"'"' ft • wertl'" 11 1,~ ••1r11wv .10b l2 1'• •1• '\• • t'orw'' 11111 J •, •·· •~• -,,. • ._ '"' :\ 3tcnt to I f?_ ange un Y 11 f,'" l n ·~ Wff'Wfr l tJ ~tmtl•Pn 1 n , '• ,.,, tit. -~ "" :r°'• J2 1~·. 111.;o u•. -•• day Cl!llvtlrr vt-•~ ii.flltrupl(T., nce1 ... Airport In Newport Beach, Is 1·· J..,..Ae .,, : ;1 .. ~'11 ' ·II I ~ ~,,. ... ~,~ ~1t° I .. ~l.. 1;1" :. \.i r,:,kl ~~~ n W! U~! Ut: :: :: ... ftre ., 1111,.. ffllrP"''" I/Mt• '"' htd\lled f JetJ t m1 lh ll • ':/~PJO .._ 4 •~~,Mil sr I lo ,t, -'• A~ i~ lf; ;.r-IO 3•l -1• l1"•r1111cr Aet, '' MCU!'llln i,., HU St; or comp on a ~ di ! t~ t w ?'It )l , ,. 'ti! \ ,, '° ~;i L lo ffi: = u -· ... ti(·:;. ' tilt fl~ n~ -l· temN~ffl. 1>'1-F«e'ltt\ lll\11 M ite! ~ the end of this year. l .... ;r,:i J: .o! "'Cd,. ,_.,r,'J :•,~<IN~ ' 1H. 1lQ 11i.. ... 11: .t0 att 1111. 1 .... ao ., ..,.,..,..., .... 1nui11wi 111 .. "'" of ·~ Syanbob /tlarket \ • ' • ' • ' • • ' i : ' • • ' ' ' ' " ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' " ' • ' ' • ' ' • ' • ' • • ' ' • • • ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' • • • • ' ' • ' N • • • N • N • N • N ' .. • : ~ ~ " • N • ~ • N • • ~ • ' • 1l '• " " " " " ,. ¥ •• Ii • • ' Thunday Stpttmbtr 10 1970 Thursday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Market Continues Decline at Oose NEW YORK (UPI) -The stock market Thurs day continued to give up some of its recent sharp advance, finishing lower for the second consecuUve session Turnover was moderate Shortly be!ore the llnal belJ Ute Dow Jones in dustr1al average was off S 61 at 760 95 Of the 1 564 i.ssues on the tape declines outnumbered advances, 825 to 417, SC DAIL v PILOT :r I .. Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List ' •Q ' N.Y. Winners and Losers S.la NII CM:l.I Mlltl l .. Ci.. Cite ' Finance Briefs NEW YORK <UPI) -A - llght,.etght lnlerlinlnJ lllm~ Jar to the. JlUUJatlon UHd ta astroni:iut apace suits haw-r bec!n designed for the Ull!I ra ,.. ... coats oute:rwear children 1 clothing and other cold l"'N lher garments .. ~ ' ' Called • thenn~line:"', ft provides up to 300 petttaL.--..J more thermal lnsulaUoo tfi111 .. eonventlonal lriterlln1ng;, but •llh DO percent less bulk and we1gh1 Tht: new lnterhnlng, mi'lnUfactur~ by Thtnn-o-Jlne Corp of New York 11Sd metaJ. llml poi) "ler film produo:H by Du Pont .J . . ' .. . . . . . • nw1411, s..temlMf 10. 1970 Nielson Sweep s Two in A Row Nina Nielson, the !Int g~I and the first local Sabot fleet member to win a national \championship In \969 .. pealed her feat by winning tbe. 1970 Championships held recently at Mission Bay. In a field of 6& of the top Sabot skippers 16 local fleet representatives placed 14 or their members in the top twenty. 5. Phil Gautschi LIYC 6. Mark Gaudio Nfrl'C 7. Clilf Wilson NllYC 8. Steve Hauser SDYC 9. Jeff McDermald ABYC 10. Jack Bateman MBYC O'Malley Wins '70 Adan1s Cup VICTORIA B.C. (AP) - ~EWPORT SKIPPER PETER ROTHSCHILO'S 'THUNOERBALLS' NAMEO WEST COAST OFFSHORE RACING CHAMPION FOR SECONO YEAR IN ROW r This years event was hosted by the San Diego Yacht Club which used the racilities of the Mission Bay Yacht Club and the incomparable s a i I I n g waters of Mission B a y • Olympic courses were sailed in each of the five races of the series. Defending champion J a n O'Malley and her crew from the Mantoloking Yacht Club of New Jersey recaptured the Adams Cup for first place in the 1970 women 's North Rican sailing championship. Mrs. O'Malley, and her clew of Patricia O'Malley and Connie Blaisie, finished with 5014 points, 11,r: point ahead of second-place Jerie Clark and her crew from the Corinthian Yacht Club in Seattle. Powerboat Champion j· Wins Casale Trophy ; Newport Beach's Peter _;..-o RothlclUJd, 38-year-old ~ aeruUve vice presiden:,,; ~ Powaine Oil Company, ,. .loo : rea:>gniud today as est ~. c.out OUsbore pow erboat : racing champion for the sec- ~• oad straight year. . Rothlchild totaled 1 • ' 0 0 · point& toward the E r n I e '-.'Casale Trophy presented annually by the P a c I r i c Olfslwn Pow.r Boat Racing ASsod!tlon. f i n 1 I 1970 standings revealed. Rothschild, 1966 national as well as West Cout champion, clinched his right to retain the trophy by· finishing second to New York Bill Wishnlck Aug . 15 in the Long Be1cb Henneuy C1.q> race. · • Standings were announced by Sandy Kemp, president of the organization, who aswted tbal 1970 has been the most competitive and interesting year in the sport's West c.oast blatory. .. Two yean ago," he noted, 11we had races with eight and nine boats. Now, we're getting 25 and 30 -and we bad 38 entries for Hennessy CUp." FortY·eight drivers, Including racers from Arizona, Wasblngtoo. Florida, New Jersey, New York and even New Zealand, are included in the final overall championship poinll listing, Kemp further noted, adding that several other dri\rers had entered at least one of the organization's six races this season, but had not finished. "You don't get points uni ea you finish," Kemp said. Rothschild added the Offshore Clau tiUe to hb -repeat Casale T r o o p b y LOCAL Ne ether newtptper tell1 you "'ore, • .,.ry cl1y, ebout what't 9oi"t on lit the Greeter Or111t• Cottt ffi1n the DAILY PILOT. victory, with Wishnick second In the class on the basis of victories in the Hennessy Cup event and two other Western APBA points events. I n overall points standings, the New Yorker was third behind Ed DeLong of Burbank, president of Spectra Color film processing laboratories and frequent "playmate" foldout ccntrlbutor to P I a y b o y Maguine. Driving a 32·foot Cary hull powered by a pair of 500-h.p. Mer Cruiser sterndrives, Rothschild set a course record winning Rum Run IV last winter, captured first place in February's Catalina Island Race-Cruise and f i n i s h e d second to Wishnick in both the Long Be a c b-E n s e'n ad a International and Hennessy CUp races. He wu un1ble to finish iii Rum Run V last June anJ did not enter the recent Catalina Oia.llenge Trophy race conducted by Calilornia Yacht Club. Other class champiorui for 1970 are Louis Gantz of Long Beach in the Sport Class with a 27·foot Magnum general pllrp()le runabout named Hot Line; Bob Brown of Los Angeles in the Pacific Oass with a 21-foot Schiada named the Ringleader ; 0 u t ch Kallemeyn of Westminster, annual Patrol Boat catpain at the Outboard World Championship at Lake Havasu City, Ariz ., i n the International Class with a 16- foot Stylecraft ·powered by a Mercury outboard engine, and airlioe pilot Jim Autocoast Marauder named Rampant Raider. Casale, who manufactures a V-drive system used by many race and pleasure boat owners and who mo serves regu]arly as a POPBRA checkpoint boat skipper. will present Rothschild with the trophy at the association's a n n u a 1 awards dinner in November. Kingston Good Show For U.S. KINGSTON, Ont. (AP) American skippers won all but one of the Canadian Olympic- training Kingston Re g a t t a races which concluded here last Friday. Winners and second place finishers, by clas.s: Snipe -Augustin Diaz, Miami, Fla .. and Terry Tims, Ann Arbor, Mich. 0. K. Dinghy -Gary Carlin, Long Beach. Calif., and Carig Thomas, Bellevue, Wash. lnl.eraaUona1 lb -Dennis Clark, Kent, Wash., and Baird Bardarson, Benton, Wash. Flrtball -Peter Bateman, England, and 0. H. Rodgers, Tampa, Fla. Finn -Carl Van Duyne, Annapolis, Md., and Henry Sprague, Newport B ea c h , Calif. Llrhtnlng -Bruce Goldsmitt1, Oticago, a n d William Shore, Oepeu, N.Y. Star -Alan Holt, Seattle, Wash., and Gary 1-fcOonald, Quincy, Mass. Dragon -''Buddy'' Friedrichs, New Orleans, and Arthur Henry, Mercer Island, Wash. Wfnner OI BYC 66 Series 'Factory Salling' Yachtsman Airs Views Two other local products, John McCIW< and Dennis Durgan placed second and third respectively. AJI six-teen members of the Newport. Balboa fleet will sail for the fleet championships t h i s Sunday at Newport Be a ch. B"JJ J h J The three top skippers under I 0 ll r • 16 years of ge will compete T k T"tl The growing controversy should also be encouraged to "We are all grown men next Tuesday and Wednesday a CS I e over alleged commercialillm forego the name and size or facing as equals the same against a field of other young LARCHA10NT, N.Y. (AP)- and "profwionalism". in skippers m· the McCullough w·11· J hn the yacht, the names of the elements in a yacht race. All 1 1am E. o Jr., or the sailing has brought some owner and crew. of us want to race against the series. host Western Long Island positive opinions from John B. The top JO m· the Nat1"onafs Sound r•-t look f1"rst lace "J" " K"fro kipper "We should not be overly best competition po ss i b I e . i= • · 1m 1 y, owner·s \vere: Tuesday in the opening of the of the famed ocean racing concerned either way as this Apparently we have developed I. Nielson NHYC 1 1 112 world championship regatta o! yacht Kialoa II, who has SO<!!-lled commercialism is an exceedingly keen group of points the International One-Design competed in major yachting like a Hollywood store front competitors from both yacht· 2. McClure NHYC lfo/4 points class. events all over the world. and doesn't make a great deal oriented and other business 3. Durgan BCYC 29 points 'II Defending tlllist Bert Kilroy aired his thoughts on of difference in the final activities. Let's all keep 4. Bob Burn California Damner of San Francisco wu the subject in respcnse to results. racing." Yacht Club silth in Tuesday's field. memoranda issued byA.shton,-;;;:;;;;:;:;;;::;:;:;:;:;;;;:;:;~:;;;~~;:;;:;:;;;:;~~~~;:;~~~~~~~:i:~:!;~E!:~~~~::;~ Castle, an officer in the I Southern California Yachting Association. Said Kilroy: . "I gather tbat the thrust of this discussion would involve the participation and competition in yachting events of aallmakers, boat builders, naval architects, y a c h t J n g news media, magazine publishers and e d i tor s , yachting equipment suppliers, etc. "Where would one begin and where would one end in outlining such a group? "Many or those who might be considered in the above categories first b e c am e involved in yachting a s co m peti ti ves ail ors. Thereafter, · in quest o f excellence ln perfonrumce, they became interested in some phase or equipment need and as a result, extended into some phase or yachting related business. "Much of the improvement we have 1een in yachting has come from a joint association cf those in yachting related businesses in combination with yachtsmen I n non.related businesses -working and ccmpeting together in one of the happier sports. "Perhaps there are minor degrees of commercialisrri that may have touched yachting from time to time. If so, has it been entirely objectionable? Has it come to the point that the yachtsman who has wanted to become more involved than just a weekend yachtsman should be denied the opportunity to compete? "One or the more frtquently stated objections has been the so-called "factory teams" for yacht b u 11 d i n g companies. This objection is in part related to the unusual amount or "news stories" placed in yachting magazines before and after a particular yachting event -followed by advertising claims as to the yacht's performance. "Fortunately, we can be consoled by the fact that, with few exceptiorui, tm!se teams and their new yachts have gained ony moderate success in spite of their great prior press build-up. "Perhapa the SCYA and other yachting organizatklns might SU&gest that t he yachting news media ne\vspapen and magazines - should consider treating the so-called "'factort team" 1s just another yacht in 1 race. This should go a long way toward taking the emphasis of the controversial subject. "In the same view comes the case or the so-called class yacht sailed by a factory team or partially subsidized team "'here the class yacht is not truly the same as that told to the public and with su bstantlally different performance capabilltiet. 6.SOt 13'bltc~Wlll tubtltss phn Ftd. Et. Tn: $1.78 1nd aid tirt. ADD $3.50 FOi WHIRWAllS "All·WEATHBI JI" TIRE • Clean sidewall detlgn, ndial darts O'll shoulder • Tripl•tempered nylon cord con1truction 3WAYS TO CHARGE ANY OF. THESE SIZES ONE LOW$ PRICE 7.75x!S 7.75xl4 8.25x 14 pru1n.11 to s2.n Fed. Ex. Tax and old tire lllCKW.ILL TUHLISS .IDD $3.0CI FDI WHITIW.IUS n TI NiMf P0'9UI UIS •~lel le5'~rt .... '6'; Cl'ttl'Nlrt 'U.'56 t . ~Jl. l21 1nt1 40t; for• '!11-'M (11c1~t 210 l~f· 211 t~t. $Id., MtfC~fJ '5'-M 111 1td.1 l'v!lt"c '»-'16, '"" -·· F• l,,,. .. liH I "To be commercl1l, the alleged commercialism must I. ....................... .,...,.,._,..._..,.,...,.,._ ... ___ ..,.,._,... __ .,._.,..., ... ,. .... _.., .. . be directed toward the sales effort and the news media lnlerTelatlonship Is severed and no particular call is given the commercial aspect, the most substantial part or the problem is eliminated . GOODYEAR-THE ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAS•TIRlflS YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO. INC. . "Perhaps the news media COSTA MESA LAGUNA BEACH STARS 1596 NEWPORT BLVD. e Phone 549.9313 482 OCEAN AVE. e Phone 494-6666 The Columbia-43 Encore owned by a syndicate facetiously called the "Balboa MafJa" wa1 the overall 'WiMer of Balboa Yacht Club's season-Ion.It 66 Series of six ocean racer. Encore was •kippered by co-owner Dick Blatterman. Others In the 1yndlcata aro Bill Lawhorn, Herb Riley and Fred MacDonald. Svd111y Om'" It '"' ef th• ••tltl'1 9r11f 11tr1/091n, H/1 te1v"'~ 11 0111 ef th• DAILY PILOTS 9r11t f•etur11. ALSO THEODORE ROBINS FORD-2060 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 642,0010 ·I ' I I I ' ( r ' r • • • ' l J I l j ' • < ' I ' ' I 1 I < j t l l I I t ' t @ I ' v u Thundv, !fpttmbtr tCI, 1970 S ·-DAlt Y I'll.Of 0 < Traditional Cle1nente· Clulthouse Offered \ ' I THIS IS ARTI ST'S RENDERING OF NEW SAN CLEMENTE COMMU NITY CLUB HOUSE AS ENVI SIONED BY DE SIGNER ARTHUR DRIELSMA. THE DILEMMA : HOW TO PAY FOR IT Unruh· Claims R eagan Goof On Medi-C ai By GEORGE SKELTON Ul"I lurN U Clll., FRESNO -Jess Unruh campaigned at Gov. Ronald Reagan's home and at a senior citizens" village here Wednesday, demanding that the governor reveal his financial worth and fire his "inept" medi- cal director. Unruh charged that the medi-cal official, Dr. Earl W. Brian Jr., 28, was appointed as a ".political payoff' for his father's support of Reagan in the 1961 presidential campa ign. Unruh also revealed he . will soon propose a new prepaid medical insu~ance program to cover "all Californians" from cradle to grave. The assemblyman said he is asking Democratic U.S. Sen. Alan Cranston to seek a "full.scale" investigation of Reagan's "obvious mismangement" of Medi-Cal , which "may have cost the state hundreds or millions or dollars." The colorful Democratic gubernatorial nom inee unloaded two c a m p a i g n ;.on1bshells on the third day of a "give 'em hell" statewide barnstonn. Unruh rolled his two-bus campaign caravan to the front of Reag"1l's rented 1nansion in fa shionable east Sacramento and charged that his landJords comprised "A syndicate that is controlling and manipulating" the chief execut ive. Unruh re1eased a revised statement of his personal worth -pegged at $100,523 -and demanded that Reagan do the aame. Then, the ~year-old Democrat Dew to Fresno and toured the George McClain Senior Citizens Village, embnr:ing and shaking hands with the wide-eyed and openly friendly elderly retired. Unruh charged that Brian, whom Rea gan appointed lo his $30,(IOO..a.year job last Jan. 19. is "an inexperienced, political incompetent" and ''tot a 11 y inept." The assemblyman called for Brian's ''immediate firing" and said he got the job in the first place because his father, a • wealthy North Carolina p h y s i c i a n , supported Reagan's 1968 presidential campaign. Unruh also said ?\1edi·Cal -a federal- state program which finances health care for the aged and the poor -"should be scrapped as a colossal failure ." The Democrat said he will unveil within two wee ks a proposal to replace Medi-Cal ·with a prepaid insurance program for all Californians, not ju.st the poor and aged. Unruh said Medi.Cal costs have risen by $96 million in state funds alone during the past year -"An incredible increase of 25 percent" "There is no way under the sun lo justify a 25 percent increase in the cost of the program at the same time 40 ,000 recipients have been removed from it ," Unruh said. Standing with one toe on the gras5 or Reagan's man sion, wllile state police peered out from a gua rd house, Unruh held up a sign for television cameras showing the names of the landlords and lhe. amounts they contributed lo the governor's re-election campaign. Among the 17 landlords -14 of them Rcpublicam -is Henry Salvatori. the millionairt oilman who was unexpectedly \rlsited by Unruh Monday. Salvatori is listed as a $5,000 contributor. Toll Call Ge ts Kitty Off Pole HELENA , Mont. (UPI) -An 11- year.(lid Elliston, Mont., girl spent two days trying to find someone to get her kitten from atop a uUli· ty pole, but without results. Sherry Englehardt then broke open her piggy bank lo phone Jong distance to the Helena Police De- partment, 30 miles away. Ofrieer lt1lckey Nelson listened to the liUle girl's story and &!ked station KBLL in Helena to help. The story of the kitten was broa<f.. cast and two local men offered 1s.sistance. Bill l!aney and M&rving Car· • michael borrowed pole climbers from the telephone company and drove to Elli5ton. Sherry and her kitten are back together again and there's word the litl.le girl has a new piggy bank that isn't empty. I Recreation Group Supports Plan A rm y ReportS Prisoners' By JOHN VALTERZA Of t11t D~t, l"lltt St•ff The San Clemente Adult Recreation Association -the city's largest clu~ - has given wholehearted support this week to proposed plans for a new community clubhouse. The association whose 400 members fonn lhe largest group using clubhouse facilities found no objection and gave hearty support Tuesday night lo the plans for a Spanish·style building blended into the undamaged portion of the old clubhouse. President Roy Jenkins, who last month offered his group's support for a bond election to pay for a new clubhouse, said his members didn't take a fonnal vote on the new plans, "but there was no disagreement at all. Most of the members were delighted ," he said. The association is but one of many in San Clemente which will scan the plans in coming days in advance or a Sept. 16 city council metling when c i t y councilmen begin compiling all the citizens' suggestions. The ARA membership spent hours with the drawings which show the front portion or the proposed building and a floor plan. "About the biggest difference oI opinion we had was the kitchen, but as we all know, no two women think alike about kitchens," Jenkins said. He said that in talking w i th representatives of the San Clemente Woman's club and the arts and crafl..'I group, he found strong support from the plans as well. Severa! factors in the clubhouse plans still must be worked out, including possible placement of tennis courts on land elsewhere in the city. "The e1:isti.ng courtJ near the hulk of lhe burned community tlubhouse might be replaced wit.h a parking lot. Original plans lD put new courts where Uie rolling grassy area of the clubhouse lie have won some disapproval botlt from citizens and councilmen. "We would oppose that, becaWle filling up the grass with the coorts would take up all the land. Picnics are a favorite activity at the clubhouse. That would end them altogether," Jenkins said . Mayor Walter Evan·s, who persopally preyented the plans to the ARA meeting Tuesday night, said later that the response was "overwhelming." He predicted smooth sailing for lhe drawings by Boucher and Drielsma Associates, who drafted the plans in August under a city contract. Evans bowed to the majority of his four fellow councilmen and gave up his bid to restore the existing burned clubhouse. But he said he was pleased with the new plans because they integrate the best portion of the existing landmark. The south wing of the building, which has nassive beams and a beautiful Spanish fireplace, will became the "Founder's Room" of the new clubhouse and will be restored, "dressed up" and used for quiet, infonnal activities. "Thal means a lot of us will still have a place to sit down and be sentimental ir we want," the mayor said. The published cost for the actual new building -inclt¥iing a new tile roof, outdoor walkway.! and grillework for the. Founder's Room, has been set al $200,000. But Evans said that the costs would run higher because of grading, new landscaping, ruing of the burned-out ttections and the costly furniahing for the new facility, Installation of new tennis room and additional parking lots could push the final price for the cl ubhouse to perhaps $350,000 or more. 1be ARA apparently doesn't mind . PornographJi Commission Publication Restrained WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nixon's only member won a 10-day court order Wednesday restraining publication or a report of the ·President's Commission on Pornography recommending repeal of all adult censorship laws. Commission member Charles H. Keat- ing Jr. charged the report's recommenda- tion for repeal of so me 100 federal and state censorshi p laws goes beyond its authority and ignores Congress' man- date to find means to control por- nog raphy. He also charged lhe commission has acted to "hinder, hamper and make it impossible" for him to write adequate dissenting views to the majority report. The recommendation for repeal of all U.S. laws against selling or showing obscene film s, books and other material to adults was favored by 12 of the 18 commi ssion members, he said. The commission report also reportedly recommends enaclmen~.of laws again st Oemente CofC Lauds Capo For Sign Ban The campaign to ban billboa rds wHhin 1 mile of Dana Harbor won support from the new San Clemente Chamber of Commerce manager Tuesday. Executive Manager Robert W. Evans praised the Capistrano Beach Oiamber for its proposal of the ban, and for i\s effort.! to fighl unattraclive 1 i g n advertising. Evans told the Chamber or hi.!! experience in sign ordinance prom otion in Pasadena, and offered "belp in any way l can." . lnter..Qamber cooperation in the new C8pistr ano Bay areai c o or d l n a t e d Chambers organization was a I s o approved by Evan$, who noted that the billboard ban also is • concern or that grou p. Reque!lt for the ban came from the Capistrano Beach Chamber 's roads and signs committee and was approved unanimously by the chamber In a general meeUng. 'Ille propasal h11s been sent to lhe Orange County Board of Supervisors, but has not )'f:l bctn &el on the board 's a&Olldl. • exposure of children to pornography and against its public display or use in unsolicited mail advertisements. One of Keating's lawyers ,aid ~ is acting on his own to get a court injunction against the report -which has already been disavowed by the White House -but is keeping President Nixon'.s staff advised. The restraining order l.!sued by U.S. District Judge Oliver Gasch prohibits ~ commission from p u b I i s h in g or disseminating the report before a hearing Sept. 18 on Keating's motion for a preliminary injunction against publishing the report. The final step would be a permanent court injunction either against p.iblishing the report or against pubUshing It without meeting some or all of Keating's objections. Keating charged the commission report ignores Congress' mandate when it created the . commission three years ago l.o determine whether more effective controls can be devised a g a i n s t pornography. "'Mle commission," he said, ''. • • , completely ignored this intenl 0 r r.ongress and did produce a document which made a sham of the Congres5' national concern involving traffic in obscenity and pornography." Keating said also be was denied access to basic material for his di ssenting view, ~·as given only ISO pages while the. majority report run.! to nearly 10,000 and that he was to have had hi.! report in by 5 p.m. today. His action Is filed against lhe commiMion, all 17 members appointed by rormer President Lyndon B. Johnson and W. Cody Wlslon, the comml.sslon'a executive director. Unger's Tax Records Under Scmtiny WASHINGTON (UPI) The nomination of Sherman Unger to be a membe r of the Federal Communications • Commission is being delayed pending a routine chetk of Unger's 1968 income tat return, accordin& to the White House. A spoke$man said the.rt was no indicaUon of wrongdoing on Unger's part, and described the chtck as nonnal procedure. Unger, fZ, a native ot Cincinnati, has served as e:eneral counsel for the Department o( 1tow.lng and Urbao Develo(lllllll~ "We went in last August and agreed to work for bond votes for that sort of price," Jenkins said, "because we feel that a good clubhouse i.! needed right away. This proposed idea seems lo fit the bill jusl right." Many ARA members, he explained, are active in the city's shullleboard program , and under the proposed drawings a new shuffleboard court would be built next to a Real Estate office facing A venida de! Mar. That idea won concurrence' from the shu!f]eboarders, Jenkins said. The next step for the city in the ..clubhouse issue will be blending-in of the suggestions by the dozens of club members and city commissioners and adoption of final plans. After the planning is complete:, councilmen then must determine the financing for the new structure. A relatively small amount already has been received from the city's insurance carrier as replacement payment for the burned.(lut building. That sum is $57,500. Budget reserves might be used to make up the difference. A bond issue still is being discussed, but despite the encouraging .!upporf. of adult recreation officers, some councilmen believe that such an election could never pass. Councilman and former Mayor Wade No Booze With Trash Pl'ITSBURGH (UPI) -Residents in nearby Collier township have been asked to quit glving booze to 1arbagemen to get them to haul away extra garbage. "The practice is slowing d o w n collections tbrOllgbout the tow111blp," said Commissioner John Brandebura. "It simply must slDp if collections are to be kept on schedule." BUSTER BROWN. L . ~ Grown-up Lower recently gave a succunt feeling about bonds. "The citizens of San Clemente ara allergic to them," he said. Camp P endleton Donations Ma y Not Reach Fund The o~xpected military contribution of $70,000 to the new United Fund in the Capistrano Bay area may not be given to the fund after all. Fund President Roy Garbarine said the problem involves proof of residenct of Camp Pendleton civilian and_. service families in the Capistrano Bay area. The fund board mmt submit proof or residence, so the amount of the Camp Pendleton gift will depend on a telephone survey apeal. Garbarlne said the tel~ calls which will bring dollars lo the coffers of local charitie.! will be from base· connected residents of the capistrano Bay and El Toro areas. Fund officials are asking anyone who i~ employed on either base In a military or civ ilian capacity, and does not have children in the Capistrano Unified School District, to call f9%-5078 to add his name and address to the fund survey. Garbarine explained that employe! who have children in the !Chools are tallied by the school district for ( e de r a I reimbursement. The '70,000 ls a minimum estimated by Conner Camp Pendleton Commanding Ot'ficer General Donn J . Robm"Uon. The awn might be upeded from automatic payroll charity deductiorus of base pe1'90Mel. ••• Eye Damage SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Seven young soldiers nearly blinded lhemselvu when they injected homemade liquor intn their veins, two army doctors ha.v• disclosed. The seven young men, the oldest ot whom was 22, "Injected what wu basically garbage in iheir veins,'' when they were held in the stockade at the Presidio Anny Base in early 1989, they reported. Four others drank as much as four quarts of the stuff which was stolen from still another inmate who made the partially fermented brew in empty paint cans out of sugar, baker's yeast, water, potato peelings and canned peaches. The home . rilade liquor had only i percent alcohol, less than beer does , so lhe seven tried to increase the kick by "shoo ting it up" into their veins with 1 smuggled-in hypodennic needJe. The drinkers were only mildly sick bul those who injected the liquor into their bloodstreams fell gravely ill within an hour and suffered hemorrhagning of UM'! retina -the fragile , light sensitive eye lining. Other effects were. fevers thal went as high as· 105 degrees, intense nausea, pain in the eyes, neck, chest and abdomen. blurred vision and numbed extremilles. Doctors at the Lettennan General llospltal on tht post prevented eye damage with quick injections o f antlbiotics. "It was quite possible th at the seven could have suffered blindne.ss or death,'• one of the doctors said. style for can't-sit-still boys It's a schoolgirfs , world OUR FASHION ISLAND STORE OPEN SUN., SEPT. 13th FROM 12 TO 5 30 FASHION ISLAND • NEWPO RT BEACH e WESTCLIFF PLAZA I I \ .. • . . . . . . . .. • v • • DAil Y l'ILOT Thvndar, Stptembtr 10, 1970 Gunboat Fleet Lifts Cambodia Seige t~ .., 111e 011tr ,._. ''-"' f rural mail, box west of Lincls· r1, Kansas appears to be just puzzling to the birds as it is to p sing motorists. A coup le of months ago, Biii Johnston, a fa~­ mer built a stand in front of his hous'e to hold mail boxes for his family and that of a neighbor. Johnston then built a third box out of metal and shaped like an ordinary mail box. On each side he lettered "Air Mail," put it at the end of a pipe 20 feet above the road and hoped birds would move in. "We've got birds livini;t in our house chimney, but so far none has taken up residence in the air mail box," Mrs. Johnston said. • A five-year-old boy appeared in a Guilford, England Juvenile Court ltfondoy u11 charges of shoplifting 1ha11tpoo, batteries, photographic equipment, rub· ber baits, a pot plant, cosmttics and o toy car. Tht boy $at in court holding his partnts hanc:U. Welfare officiala were ordered to check on the cltild for three ~ear1. • Michael Hollings, 19, son o[ Sen. Ernest F. Hollings, (0-S.C.), has drawn praise for his part in a citi- zens' arrest. Detective Capt. H1rrv T. Snipes said Mond ay that Holl· ings. and a friend, Herry Lindler, heard Gwendolyn Benton scream· ing as a man knocked her down and took her purse as she walked to her job at Columbia Hospital early Saturday. They chased the man and wrestled him to the ground. Prof, Henry Lumpkin. of the University of South Carolina, who lives nearby, held a shotgun on the man until police appeared. Snipes said William R. Fredericks, 22, was charged with robbery and assault and battery. • Gary Shelton. Ii, of San Pedro ii allergic to fur so he can't have a dog or cat for a pet. He tried rep tiles, but you can't walk a snake, turtles are too slow, and you a few months ago Gary r ead about what seemed like the ideal pet for him. He saved the $25 purchase price by washing cars. mowing lawns and cleaning s'vimming pools. Now he's the owner of an armadillo, imported from Texas. Says he of the small, armored creature. "It's fun, and it's fast.'' But he has a problem. The beast is nocturnal Gary has to stay up niRhts to play with his pet. • /\ Chicago minister is out of city can't fondle a fish. T he n jail in Ouray, Colo. released two daYs early for "good behavior:" But the Rev. E. Paul Conine said he is still irritated at the five-day jain sentence imposed for a ~eed­ ing v i o I a ti o n . The minister was cited for speeding 40 miles an ho u r in a 25 m.p.h z o n e last Thursday by Police Chief Harold Boyd. The Rev. Mr. C on i n e , 56, charged before bis trial Sunday thal this southwestern Colorado mountain community was becoming a "tourist trap," end he would fight the ticket because "it was a matter of principle." PHNOM PENH (UPI) -A mile-10111 ~llden gunboat convoy twtpt up the Dood«ollen Stung Ben River in a aurprile lllack that broke the !O<lay Comniuntat lle1e of Kompon'1 Thom, the Cambodian command aa!d today. Mllltary apokumen uld the river lon:c •trudc Wednelday nt1ht While Viet Cool and North Vletnamue 1.ttenUon wu ""focuHd orfthe •.ooo-man Cambodian tuk force push.inc slowly toward Kompon( Thom from the south. The spokesmen aaid it left Kompong Thom "wide open" for a "lightning" "General Guilty' \ My Lai Suspect Blames I I \ Deaths 011 Westmoreland FT. McPHERSON, Ga. (UPI) -A young soldier charged with murder_ iri the ·alleged My Lai massacre says Army Chief of Staff Wi lliam G. Westmoreland should shoulder the blame for whatever happened in the Vielnamese village. . Sgt. Esequiel Torres, 22. o f Brownsville, Tex., charged Westmoreland with dereliction of duty in the purported South African Ar1ns Sales Hit During Meeting LUSAKA, Zambia (UPil-lndian Prime Minister Indira Ghandi said today Britain's reported intention to sell arms to South Africa was a "dangerous and retrograde step" which mlght encourage South African militarism and threaten the entire con tinent. Addressing the third world nonaligned summit conference, Mra. Ghandl also demanded the withdrawal of "foreign'' troop& from Indochina and sided with the Arabi in the Middle Eu:t CQnflict. She expressed disapproval of 1 s r a e I i "intransigence.'' On the BriUsh-SOUth African arms deal, the lndJan prime minister told the leaders of S5 nations attend1ng the third and final session of the 1ummit that the move was a "dangerous and retrograde step (which) will threaten the neighbors of South Africa and also the Indian Ocean area." Any increase in South Africa's militry capacity might encourage It to annex olher territories, she said. Prime Mlnilter Lee Kuan Yew of Singapore said a world powtr struga:le was shaping up in Southern Africa as nations Opposed to Communist Cblna reallied Ila political and economic interests were growing in the area. Canadian Murder Suspect Charged Jn Eight Deaths CRESTON, B.C. (UPI) -Accused mass murderer Dale f.1erle Nelson v;as charged with seven more s\ayings Wednesday in connection with the killings of two Britsh Columbia famil ies over the weekend. Nelson, a 31-year-old former mental patient, was charged Tuesday with the killing of an eighth person, Mrs. Shirley Wasyk, 30, and remalndned tor i 31k1ay psychiatric examination. \Vednesday's court action saw him accused of lhe murders of Ray Phipps, 42; Phipps' 26-year-old wife, Isabelle, and the couple'• children: Paul, 10, Cathy, S, Bryan, 7, and Kenneth. IS months. He waa also charged witlt the murder of 1· year-old Tracey Wasyk. The vlcUma were all shot to death in their homes in the small British Columbia town near lhe U.S. border. incident. The surprising move was made \Vednesday durin& a preliminary bearing at Ft. McPherson. · His attorney, Charles Wellner, said he would ask that any action against all defendants in the My Lai case be delayed until the queaUon ol u 1 ti mate rtsPoll!ibil\ty is aettled. Twelve officers and enliB~ men are charged in the alletged 1968 slaughter of Vietnamese civilians . The hearing resumes today. It was recessed Wednesday after four hours of arguments. Several earlier defense motions, including one to move the trial to another site, preferably Vietnam, and another to subpoena Defense Secretary Melvin Laird and Weiitmoreland, were dismissed. Torres is charged with the macltinegun murder of at least three S o u t h Vietnamese civlllam, the hanging of another and the assault with intent to kill three othen. In hls charges against Westmoreland. Torres said : "Based upon my understanding of the findings of the Peers-McCrate inqulry, I believe that Gen. Westmoreland is responsible for whatever casualties that were lnfllcted on Vietnamese civilians at My Lal 4 hamlet on March IS, 1981." The Peers Inquiry was an investlgati'n into the alleged incident by the Army. Denmark Vessel Reported Lost Sigl1ted at Sea COPENHAGEN (UPI) - A Danish submarine with 21 crewmen aboard was sighted early today 1fter It was reported "missing lor eight hours, the Danish naval command said. A broken radio anteruut cauaed the scare. The 1ubmarine1 the 144-foot dies e J powered NarhvaJen, w1a spotted by the Danish depot ship Henrik Gerner in the North Sea southwest of Stavanger on the west coast of Norway, the command said. The broken antenna prevented the submarine from ~porting it had surfaced followlng a 60-hour dive. Jt was instructed to 1ignal every 24 hours and the command said the sub's commander did not realize the antenna was broken until it surfaced. Scores of Britsh, Dutch, Norwegian and Danish shipii, including the Royal Danish Yacht, were enroute to the windswept area in the biggetl search in Danish na val history, the command gaid. "It's a happy ending as far as 'i''ellare l.'Qncerned," 1 command spokesman said. "\Ve are now back to routine." U.S. Death Figures Reach IO.week lligh SAIGON (UPI) -The U.S. command said today 87 Americans ·were listed as killed in Vietnam last Vt'eek. The total included 22 men killed in a helicopter crash the previom week and resulted in the highest toll in 10 weeM. The U.S. wounded totaled 32.1 -the lowest since Marth 5, 1066. It broughl to t 1,&68 the tolal Americans killed in Vietnam since Jan. 1, 1981. Wounded total 288,124 and 1,01 are missing, captured or interned. Showers Plague Midwest Tliunderstorms Knock Out Power in Wisconsin, Iowa Tem,oeret11rf!~ ..,lbll<lu.,...ut " M Afttf\ol'111 JG ,. thrust ftom tbe wett-soulhw1st by the aunboats. ~"The task force, which made up the biqe1t operation of the Cambodian campaign, wag aUll 38 miles south of Kojppong 'niom on Highway I when lhe river unlta attacked. r.t1Utary 1pokesmen declined to say ho" many Cambodian troopa were Involved in breaking the 1 o n I encirclement of Kompong Thom but aald the gunboals "stretched for more than a mile" on the Stung Sen. "The flood helped us M this operation, .. the spokesman said. "In the dry aeason, no boats of thl~slie could navigate that river. But now \fhe river runs (ast and deep because otlfh"e monsoon." Kompong Thom ls a city of 10,000 persons 80 miles north of Phnom Pmh and not only is a provincial capital but an important transportation and communications center. Viet Cong and North Vitnamese units have shelled the city almost dally for two month!. Cambodian spokesmer. said the flotilla began its trip to Kompong Thom two days ago from a point 40 miles southwest ol the beleaguered city. The auoboals crossed Tonie Sap. Cam~la's huge lake, then entered the Stung Sen river. encountulng only Ugh~ Vitt Colli nststance along the w1y and losing one man killed. 'Ille 4,000-man task force ed1Jrng northward toward Kompona Thom bas 'Chicago 3' Refuse~ Algier~ POW Trip CHICAGO (UPI) -Thrte defendan~ in the ••aucago Seven" riot ~onsplracy trial have been refused pe~isiiion to travel to Algiers. to seek the possible release of American prboners of war. Two federal judges Wednesday refused to let Tom Hayden, Bennie Davis and John Froines go to Algiers. Hayden and Davis were convicted of crossing state lines to incite rioting during the. 1968 DemocraUc NaUonal ConvenUon, while Frolnes was cited for contempt of court during the trial, Hayden and Davis also were cited for contempt. eovertd nine mlles in three days, the spokesman said. The lroopa and supply veblcles have been held back by communist obstacles blocking the narrow aaphalt roadway and blown-u p bridges. There has bee"l1 almost on contact with the communists. "Deep lrulde, I honestly believe the Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese are doing e~thlng they can to avoid meeUng e Cambodian army on the batUetleld, the spokesman said. Premier n Nol went 011 nationwide radio Wednesday night and said, "after ~ix montha o~ flghUng, one thing ia clear: the Viet Cong\fannot win In Cambodia. "Jn the comtng week, we will capture as many North Vi,etnamese as possible, and this wUI force the North Vietnamese government to bargain for the prisoners and our price wlll be war lndemniUes. 0 Communiques from Saigon s a I d comm111tlst ground fire shot down two U.S. helicopters Wednesday, wounding three Americans. One AHi Cobra gunshi p was downed 360 miles north-northeast of Saigon and another was hit near Quang the capital. SUPER SAVINGS • FOR ALL YOUR PLUMBING NEEDS WATER HEAlERS REPUBLIC "GEMINI'' 20 Gal ••• 547. 99 30 Gal ••• 549. 99 40 Gal ••• 559. 99 SO Gal ••• 574.99 T~ll ~!Ullty 1Pt t nlltf t !t1• l-w1ttr l!lll1r Is ....,,,,.. wllll ..,.,., ltm,, 1• '""'il'td ty llW. Wt Iliff 11m1 ••Y ift1l1llltllft 1v1lllltl1, If ~·~ Wfl~. An ....... 1 !Mlllltlil!I ,tflt lrlchH.ci. Clll tr ~111t111 thll dlf. AIM llftl""8CY illtllHllll" 1v11t1blt, All -* fM9 by 11'i.tllt l lYll'!lltn. INSTALLATION AVAILABLE GARBAGE DISPOSALS IN-SINK-ERA TOR :;-:.~.:" $33 88 OUlt PltlCf •• Mcd1I lll- 1 Yr. 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Blue Lustre carpet cleaning for le per , sq. ft.! lhw Slue Lust11 $h1mpooer don 1 prnf1uicn1I job f1st1r, Nlitr end rtnll for Oft\y $3 t day •ilh U,1 11u1ch1u of Slut lVSl11. ($1 I day for smaller machlneJ &99 WHEELBARROW -· tarries 3 cu. ft.111ity. Bil 10" wheel with wide tfr1, nylon be1ring. -- !Not An1mbl1dl SllWBO'S TBIUWITB TBISU•W&O• DOORVllWIR Th• Set·Who• let1 you set who's on 1111 othtr lld1 of I~• door without opsnin1 it. P1oteth 7011 from intrudt11. • full l80·de1111 vision. • E1sy to 1nst11I • ., •fits doors ll''to 2~". • Rust·fftt. Only• 2.9S ( Keep household cleanup problems in the bag with ... lllftlt " ., ll1ke'lll~ld 101 10 lll•m1•ck -o so (!Giit II .)I 90<!0!'! 60 S• (flk toe IO •1· :: res~a1·"as11c Baus 1 Line Coad el SuMf but lltlJ focley. l l1llt 111rl11tl1 wlfldt fllt hl '""' "'°'"1111 ""'" llKorn· Int w111ttlf I It IJ knot1 In 111"~ tocltY tlld Ft ldtY. Hltfl '"'' n. Coltltl ....,_1Nr. rt-lrom IJ to 1J. fftltlld tt"'1Wt N""t rt lltt frCM'li lol .. 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NOW•6~ NOW &395 NOW •9~ ' t ' Railroad Bargaining Continues WASHINGTON (AP) NegoU.tor1 for the railrold lndiutry and four AFLCIO wUona continued their w.,e talks after the u n I o n 1 Jl<lltponed loday'a nationwide ~ke deadline for five days at 1ovemment request. Aaai!lanl Secretary ct Labor W, J, Usery urged both sides to use the delay for hard bargaining lowanl I pea<efuJ lettlement that would avert rovermnent intervertim to bait any crippling rtrll<e. ' , "This Is in the best intereila el the unions, their members, the railroads and tbe D&ilonu a wOOle," Usery sakl the postponement and the ebaoce to bargain for an agreement covering the 500,000 workers Involved. The s t r t ke deadline was moved from 12:01 a.m. tod_, IO 12:01 a.m. Monday. Us:eTY aald the roquest for the postponement was made after tu11Ultation among federal o('OCiea including Ibo White House. President Nixon stlll could delay any strike for 60 days under emergency procedli'es of the RaJlway Labor Act, but Vsery said the govenunent prefers to Me a voluntary 1.ettlement. Oklahoma Miss Wins T aknt Test · ATLANTIC CITY, N. J . (UPI) -Kal2lleen Puananl O'Sullivan, Miss Hawall, won swim ault and Judy Adams, Mia Oklahoma, won talent in the lint round of pnollmlmry <001petlUon Wednesday in 'Ifie Ml11 America Pageant. Mill O'Sullivan 18, o f Honolulu, wore a wtUte rwim ault down the Jong ramp, .,...me in front ct the fudges, to wil'I the swlmsuit title. A tall 5 foot 11 bnmette, lhe measures M-1'7~. Mi. Ad~ 20, O.tdng, Okla,. WU .the judeoa' talent ''"""" •• performed • -ond U..Iy -aollt cf ••Hot Canary." with .GLOlll FICKLING WOUUD YOU BEUEVE there are aUll thoR who think of Ben Brown'• "wonderful world" as a private club? Not so! Oh yes, there are familiar faces-and why notT Th'-beautiful Laguna Beach res~rt hotel ii habit forming. It II atmosphere, en- tertainment, comaraderle to the n'th degtte. And the 1lv- ln1 accommodations are out- of·1lght at prices that are \let}' in-ala:ht. There 11 dancing to the 16· piece sound of The Naturals, aonp and anUcs by that f&l'· out cat Duke Mitchell (who'• been 1lgned tor a long-term), people like happy Humpy (Col· ter), fabulou1 Fo~st (Brothel, the manry Montgomery1 are regulara. Celebrltles like Wil- liam Holden, Geora:e Chaklrls, Buddy Rogen often wander In. And the cltentele balls from all corners. At Sunday brunch the friend-ly facu at a neighboring table Included an English Los Ange. r lan,, a Swiss San Oemen· tsn and a Montana Re· noBn congre- gaUn1 at one of their fre- quent re - unions at Ben Brown's. Pic- ture • breath- takin& morn- ing, •oluhlng aun abundantly over the , r olf greens and 1urroundlng hlll1 u you sip champagne that bub- bles over a peach. Or you ml1ht celebrate with a fT011.Y Plmm's cup, tuty 11lver fizz ar creamy rich m001e milk-a 'btauUful i*'elude to a bounUful ...... nch. Egp Benedict are my choice this _ ~1_ a 1allny heaping or hollana&11e ladled O\'er poached ears. Canadian bl.con and Eng- lish mutnn. terVed with steam-ing coffee and hot bisculU. The robust appeUte next to me en· thuses over a succulent New York 1tefl.k, scrambled eggs and crisped huh browns. Dtlret- ablel Hert II a kitchen thtt opena •t 1 a.m.._ serves a fu_U lunch menu, sanawlches until 4 ~· ind dlnnn unW 10:30. Colt buffs swing, 1un-wor- 1htppns luxuriate around two dbnmtrln1 poola, peopl• go "from shuffleboard to table. ten· nla to the groovy game room for blllltrds, card.I 1V • n d fun. It's all ht!ni where we al- way• DO rr UP BROWN! Luxury Lmer Up \for Sale In Florida FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (UPI) -The former IU%Ury liner Queen Elizabeth was put up for auction Wednesday by a bankruptcy court and a firm from Taiwan, made the top bid ct 13.1 million. Attorney Isidor Ostroff of J'hiladelpbla depo.lted I caahler's check for $800,000 representing 25 percent down payment for the ship and all its furni.shlngs, on behalf of C. Y. Tung of Associate d Maritime Industries, Taiwan. Solons Deny Fund C~rges - WASBINGTON (UPI) - lndiacretlon oo the part of campaign ,aides may have 1otteo two West C o a st coneressmen into trouble. Spokesmen for the lawmakers, Sen. Warren G. Magnuson (0-Wash.), and Rep. J'illlam S. MaHllard (R~ Cati(.), however,1 den I e d We~nesday that they know\ngly accepted 111 e g a 1 campaign contributions from corporations. Federal laf prohibit s corporate contribuUons to Congressional cam'paigns. Magnuson and ~failliard, along with Rep. Edward A. Gannatz (O-Md.), were identified in news accounts as recipients of c a m p a I g n contributions from the American President Line s and Pacific Far East LI n e s shipping companies. Garmatz and Mailliard are chairman and rank 1 n I minority member , respectively, of the House Merchant Marine O>mmlttee and Magnuson Is chalnnan of the Senate eommerce Commit toe. I They were repo~ tq have received several h u n ~ re d dollars . apiece ~m th e comparues, Maillard's of'flce acknowledged his campaign had been the beneficiary of some $500 from the two companies, but the aide said the check was a personal one accepted by a local campaign committee a.long wlt.b many othtn. There was n o tndlcaUon tt came rrom a corporation, he llld. "No cbeck drawn apinat any corporation wa1 accepted by Senator M11nu1on'1 campr1lgn. organliaUon," the 1p o te1m1 n II.id. ''In ~nee with the Jaw, only checks were accepted · as ampalgn contributions, and all IUCh contributions were received by t b e camp a I 1 n organiza•0'oos supportlnt bls eendldaey.'~ An aide lo Ibo Seulor llid that Jf there were any penonal checks from ahlp company fJ!!ployes who wtre liter relinbursed by their corporatloM, the Senator and his staff were not aware of It. Gmn1tz was not 1vall1ble for comment. Wild Shootout King Banner Catches Fire W oundedManFellsBandits WA!mNGTON (UPI) -A and shot both of them, nag that baa flown over ResurrecUon Qty near the injuring n e it h e r seriously. Lincoln Memorial In 1988 waa Detectives in the area quickly destroyed Wednesday In a fire arrested two suspects. at the Smitmonian InsUtuUon. John Wright, 28, a n d The blaze was believed set. There's nothing like a new mounting to give outdated or "'drawer'" diamonds new life, Today's mountings enhance size and sparkle. And now you can save 20% on any mounting from our marvelous collection . Men's and ladies styles. Take your pick. Do it now an d show up for the coming holiday season in your "'new'" diamonds. Please hurry while selections are best. Use our revolving charge pfan. CIMI .... Ac_,. l•~it.11 ... ~.11._. SLAVICK'S FREEPORT, N.Y. (UPI) - When two gunmen walked into Ha r r y Bet%' delicatessen Wedne!day he picked up a meat cleaver and told them to get out. Loudovicio Maranez, bolh ol The r.ag, bearing a portrait II FASHION ISLAND New Yort City, were charged of Dr. Martin Luther King, NEWPORT BEACH -M4. I 380 with armed robbery and Jr., wu on display In a • \ Approval of the !ale depends on the outcome of a separate auction of 900 piecemeal lots. Bidding on separate items began Wednesday and was expected to continue through Thursday. One ol the gunmen shot hlm in the thigh. Both men then tied up Betz and a patron, and put them into a back room. The gunmen then took '326.33 from the cash register and began a getaway. assault wilh a deadly weapon. political history exhibit on lhe o,.. M......., ...i Friday ... n 9:30 Betz was taken to Doctors'1 .J,....~;d~fioo~r~o~f the~~M~use~um~of1J~~~~~~~~§~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-Hospital where examination Hi!tory and Te c b n o I o g y . revealed the bu1let t h a t The bankruptcy court has reserved the right to aell the ship on a piecemeal basis if this brings in more money than Tung's overall bid. But Betz, despite his wound. managed to free himself and get a shotgun h~ in the store. He pursued the gunmen pierced his thigh had split in half when it struck the bone. Doctors said it would be unwise to remove the bullet. Harry Betz went home. Now thru SEPT. 13th SUNDAY LATEST L.P. HITS! 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I ' I ' . . . . ..... \ • "DAU.y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE The Skilled Unemployed Orange County "'sidenls were Jolted last week whom the U.S. Labor Department announced that the county wilh a jobless rate above 6 percent in the past two m00Uu, will be added to the growing !isl of "sub- stantial unemployment" areas in October. lt's an image reversal for a county long thought of as an affluent area of sophisticated space age industry in a leisure-oriented .outdoor envi.I'Qnrnef'IL The econOmy of Orange County has been and con .. tinues to be stronger tha n most of the rest of California. And the economy of the Orange Coast area has con· •istently been much stronger than that of the 'f""'tY as a whole. Yet the c,<lUllly's jobless rate reached 6.6 percent in August. 'f!'tUt compared to 5.1 percent nationwide, 5.8 percent for Los Angele's County and 6.2 percent ~ate­ wide, Orange County's deteriorated job picture, wor in eight years, comes from 10,700 layoffs in the aeros .e-~ce \ndustry over the past 12 months, according to the nu .. inan Resources Development Department. The depart .. ment listed 33,900 persons off the payrolls as of August -1,500 more than in July -with further declines an· ticipated at least through October and November. While there has been some gain in employment in such fields as building constru.etion, . retail stores, res- taurants and toui'ist lodgings, it has not been great enough to offset aerospace losses. At least 10 times as many engineers, computer pnr grammers and technical writers in the aeronautical, electronics and industrial fields 'DOW draw unemploy .. ment benefits as did these categories a year ago. And they are being followed by mechanical engineers and machinists. Several moves are under way to try lo relieve the situation. The "substantial unemployment area" label next month will mean that firms in lhe county will re- ceive preferred. status in bidding for federal contracts. Certain public works projects can also . be cbaMeled Into the county. County supervisors and legislators are to meet to detennlne bow to help find work for the aerospace in .. dust.ry's jobless, some 600 tQ 700 of whom are now on weliare. In addition, 'larious private and public groups are seekin~ the means to retrain many of the unemployed for jol>s in other industries and to help them manage their affairs in the interim. _l Having continued. ~ation in tbe midst of a reces-- sion nationally has be unsual and ironic enough, High t\Demployment am n~ the highly educated is in the same puzzling and di rtssing category. i End of the Tra sh Can? Newport Beach, where else, is considering the ulti .. mate in disposabJe containers -the use of polyethylene bags instead of trash cans. The exact cost savings, to the city has not yet been computed, but it is said to be significant in tax doUars. The ease of collecting plastic bags compared with pick .. Jng up containers, dumping them, then returning them to the curb, wouJd markedly reduce collection time. \Vhile it has some disadvantages (dogs can tear them open, they would cost homeowners a little more in the long run than cans etc.) the possibility does seem to have merit. "' ss:zz¥V :w s \ In hwnan tenns, breadwinners who have never be-- fore even thought about unemployment benefits now must fall back on the 26 weeks of such compensation. and also food stamps, to help stretch their savings, if any. Only certain plastic bags that meet specific test· strength requirements would be allowed. As long as one can accept that the world bas pro- gressed to the point of acceptance of a no-deposit gar .. bage'pail. 'Israel to Washingto~ We're still exper~ncing aome take off difficulties.' Groundwater Supp~y ls In Danger • 1~H~ Speaking of city and country Uving, as I was recently. reminded me to look up some notes J took a few months ago or a report by the U.S. Geological Survey. 'Ihe report gave the alanning fact that in the last 30 years, water runoff into the ocean from the western part of Long Island had tripled, beeause of urban w1h in that period. groWhy does this have possibly serious significance? As the journal, Science News, puts it: 1When formerly porous areaJ of relatively open countryside are covered with pave· ment, home s and buildings character· istic of urban growth, the ability of the areas to ab-sorb and hold water lessens dramati- cally." IN OUR WHOLE discussion of ecology the last year or so. we have concentrated on many or the obvious ills: air pollution and inadequate sewerage and peslicid~ and so on. But the fact or the matter is that, perhap8, the growth of urbanization in itself might deplete our groundwater supply to a trickle in many populous areas. . Long Island, actually. is constructmg "recharge basins" that can save about 10 percent of the precipitation that would otherwise be lost. 11lese basins collect rainwater from stonn-sewer systems and feed it back into the ground. WE TALK ABOUT "tampering'' with Dear Gloomy Gus: Finally, someone who can deal with Hanoi about releasing the names of Americans missing in action. Turn the Arab guerrillas loose on them! -M.K, the natural environment -but It ts tampering of a basic sort whenever we put a road where a field was, or a parking lot where plain earth used to absorb the water for reuse. ConcreUng these areas sends the waten out to the lakes or oceans instead of retaining them where they can do the most good. Can the world, as an eco-l}'St.em, sustain the degree of urbaniutloa and meehanization that we are engaging tn at an exponential rate in this century! Even if we don't pollute, even if we keep the air relatively clean and the water relatively pure, if we cover enough of the land with concrete capping, can the system survive such tl'eatment? NOBODY, OF COURSE, knows the answer to this question. The utilization of rain is absolutely essential to most local ecologies; if much of Florida didn't get, and couldn't use, most of !Ls 50 inches of rain a year, it would become like the Sahara -which is on the same parallel! NOw, the rain isn 't goilt.g to stop falling; but It comes to much the .same thing if we cover the earth so that water cannot soak in and runs out toward the oceans. The construction of literally millions of recharge basins seems a high, and ugly, price to have to pay ror the concrete cities and suburbs of tomorrow. Perhaps the preservaUon of aaked land will soon command as much a priority as the parkiJlg-lot and the throughway do in our present topsy.turvy system. Douglas' Outside ln~ome Supreme Court Justice William 0. Douglas has not been cowed by recent Congressional eHorU to impeach him because of his activities outside the court. He and six other members of the Supreme Court have filed v?lu~tary disclosures of income and organ1iat1onal affiliations. All the others reported no outside income for January.June 1970, and a minimwn of afiiliallons with only highly circumspect organizations. Not Justice Douglas. J~e showed that in the first sii: months of this year he received $20,00IJ..plus in out.side Income, and that he belongs to s e v e n organizations, Including lhe Center for Democratic Studies. EVEN THOSE ·wuo admire the ,,,---. ~----""' ' " Guest Edi,~orial " I ; . . ' jusUce, however, m~ wonder why he and others on lhe bench have previously felt it so necessary to get out and hustle a buck by writing magazine articles and books, or giving a series of lectures. A Supreme Court justice ls, after all, one of the most powerful men in the naUon, with heavy responsiblliUes that should lake up most of the Ume and erie.rgy be has for work. And he: nol only has an excellent 'Ulary, $60,000 1 year, but it Ls his for life. Dally Brttze Soutb Bay ~-------B11 Geerre ---------. Dear George: I have read your col umn faithfully for years and even rec:ommended Jt to my friends. Now I am concerned a n d dlslllusloned after lwo C011$eCUtive columns of yours two "'eeks ago. Are you slipping, George? Two of your columns made sense-. DISILLUSIONED O.nr Dtsil!U3lon<d: Jt'• not me, k1d, It's you - when you ttart understanding the:se column.-It'• tirne for a change of pact. Lly olf thi! column. Read the Washington experts for awhile and don't come back until your sc-nse of the ridlcu1ous Is rested and refreshed. (It shouldn't take over two days.) Dear George: When is ll all right for a girl to start neckiag? BLONDIE °'ar Bloldle: Where are you now'! (Send your probletns to George., America 's most.confused advice coluninist -and that'll :saying a lot.) ' I Labor Day Marked E•ul of an Era A Sad Time for Democratic Party WASHINGTON -Labor Day 1970 marked the end or an era when the working man could be counted on to supply the essential ingredient of Democratic political power. Tb.is is a sad time for the Democratic party, but in all candor 1 1oog overdue. It just doesn't wash anymore that the interest or the working man conflicts with Republican oriented ma~gement. It Is J10t, as AFUIO Chief George Meany says, that the Demo. cratic party is being radicalized by the forces of the left. ll is not in fact. The far left has walked away from the Democratic party. What has happened is that both labor and management have found a community of Interest for transce nding politica l afflllation, and there is no surer sign of Utls than Meany's current advocacy of Jome form of voluntary binding arbitl'ation to avoid strikes. TillS PERMJTS OTHER factors than la bor-management conflict to come into play so that the workingman tends to \ can be reversed, it will be happy days again for Democrats." base his political choice on matters Jess of an economic and more of a social ·character. The social character of t b e workingman in the United States is 11t1ique. As Meany has cogenUy pointed out, he has a stake in society beyond that of his job. He can afford to sustain strikes but he does not wish to do so unless absolutely necessary beca\15e of demands on bis income to support the social status represented by good homes, recreation and education of his chlldre.n. In their book, "The Real Majority," Richard M. Scammona and Ben. J. Wattenburg sum It up this way: "that the Democrats have held the allegiance of most of the 'plaln people' has been the critical fact in AmerJcan presidential politics for more than a third of a century. That is why Democrats have won so often. NOW, UPON mE shoals of the social Issue, there seems to be the possibility of a n.Jpture In that pattern. U it happens, it will be bad news for the Democrats. If it can be prevented from happening, if it Meany gives no signal of a reversal In the trend but provides ample evidence that the "plain people" of former years are no longer so plain. So far as Meany is concerned, he has recognized that they have moved beyond that condition in which they were ready to go to the barricades to win the respect, income and status-they desired, They do not need to go to the barricades now e:s:cept to protect the status they have won and will not relinquish to less fortunate classes without a loud and potentially violen~ protest. It is too much to expect that there is or soon will be a complete shattering of all the ties which ~ave held the labor movement withl n the D e mo c r a t i c coaliUon. Old loyalties will hold many, and the general sense that t b e workingman is better off with a liberal Democratic administration will be slow in changing. PERSONALITIES IN politics will have a great deal to do with it, but politicians are now having difficulty finding that golden mean between humanitarian concern for the welfare of the individual and wholesome respect for those who have made it the hard way. The "midd.Je voter" according to Scammon-W:ittenberg, is a 47-year.old housewife from. the outskirts of Dayton, Ohio whos'e tiusbarid is a machinist. She is afraid to w~lk the streets alone and has mixed views on civil rights. Her Jdeas about humanitarianism are modified by her worries about crime, rioting students, drugs in the schools, and weUarism. So far as her husband is concerned, he may have the same worries but his economic future is bound in with Meany's concept of new conditions in which voluntary arbitration will take the place of some strikes. IT MAY BE SAID that voluntary arbitration is merely anothe r form of coll~tive bargaining with lnanagement under the gun. But the cmcept at least recognlzes Lbe public interest i n uninterrupted economiC activity. . Labor has thus come a long way since the threatening CQnfrontations or 30 and '40 years ago when the Democratic party identilied itseU with labor's Jnterests a I m o st to the total exclusion of Republican affiliation. Now it is even conceivable that some Republicans who made the compromises necessary to win labor support may have to move with the time a n d· become more like r e a 1 Republicans because their constituency is moving that way. Hanoi Will Use POW fQr Bargaining WASHINGTON -Presidential envoy Frank Barman 's talks with world leaders ln behalf of American war prisoners were friendly but futile. Leaders on both sides of the Iron Curtain cordially promised to renew their inquiries into the fate of the American captives. But the consensus was that Hanoi intends to use the prisoner as a bargaining cart at the truce table. Even more dis. turbin g, there were hints that the North Vietn amese are withholding prisoner information because they can't afford to Jet the outside world know the true con'ditions in the prison camps. Borman sent daily, confidential reports to the White House as he flew from capital to capital. 'I'his column can report. the highllghl.$ of his find ings : IN GENEVA, ~farce! Naville, president of the International Red Cross, told Dorman that his organiuition has been given free access to South Vietnam's Prison camps and has found no abuse of prisoners. He said the Red Cross has also received full Information about captive'!'! taken by both sides in the Middle East conO\ct. Only North Vietnam has re.fused to rumish 1)fisoner infonnalion or to open Its camps to international inspection. This Jed Naville to exprns his private suspicion that Hanoi seeks to conceal the J1Ul1lber of Americans who have died ia conflnement. SWEDll!R PREMIER Olof Palme told Donnan thil he had sent llanol a llsl of Quotes Pamela Sltvens, 19, •ousewtfe ind sludent at Oakland dttp ~a dl¥ln1 school -"lf you don't do things that excite you, what'• the sense in doina it?" • missing Americans to find out for their wives, in the name of hwnanity, whether they are widows or whether their husbands are still alive. All he got back from Hano i was information that had alreadt been made public about a dozen prisoners. He promised to keep trying. IN BOTH P.fOSCOW and Warsaw, Borman was able to speak only to the deputy foreign ministers in charge of Asian affairs. Both insisted they had little leverage in Hanoi, but both agreed to press the North Vietnamese f or information about American POWs. mE ASTRONAUT got a surprisingly friendly reception from A I g e r i a ' s President Houari Boumedienne who promised to use hi.s il:ood offices v.•ith. Hanoi. Bonnan's visit was so cordial, in ract, that it might help pave the way for a resumption of diplomatic relations between the U.S. and Algeria. JN NEW DEUll, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi reported that India had already made two appeals to llanoi in behalf of U.S. prisoners and expressed htr readiness to make a third attempt. Most leaders felt they could be more effective if the ir efforts w e r e n ' t publicized, so Borman sent cables in advance requesting American embasstes not to call preq confe.renctt on the prisoner ls!Uf!. The tireless Borman, who ~mmanded thft flnt maruied flight artund the moon. came away rram his private meeUngs wlth the feeling that Hanoi In many way s was more remote than the moon. FOOTNOTE: Of all the POW drama, no story is more poignant than that or Admiral John S. t.-1cCain Jr., the Paclfic commander, wlm!e son was shot down ovei; North Vietnam In 1967. L~ Cmdr. John S. McCain 111 "'ound up in a rice paddy with arms and legs broken. The crusty old admiral knows that his command decisions could b r i n g retaliation against his son. Iotimates say his gruff exterior hides an inner anguish over his son 's fate. Yet he hasn't hesitated to diretl military blows against the enemy. However, he has betrayed his agony in anxious, private talks with Borman and ·with prisoners who have been released. From them . l\.fcCain has learned that his son has _received adequate medical care and hasn't been singled out for special brainwashing. He was last reported in a prison camp outside Hanoi. Ho,v to Address Om· Lawmaker s U.S. Sl:NATOltS A1•11 Cr•~tfon !0), 3n N. S11•lflt SI,. lot Al'IDelt' 90021 .... Gfo'91 Mllrllhr (RI,., H. ROCMoo Or.. llevt rlv Hiib. 011r1119 Co111rtHlon1I HUlont1 !.enot1 Offlct 81111 •• Wls/11"91on. O.C. JGlell. ~ U..5. 1t•f'1taSENTATIVliS 1or111" C1vnfr OnlJI R!cft11'1:1 T. HeNW! (:Uln Olllrlct-D), 169! W. (l"tKllll AYt., Siilt. 510. An11H1lm1 Jolin G. khfli!l'l t:l.!tn Olllrlcl-IU, ~ C1m11u1 Orlv•. St/It. 21C, NewPOrl 8t1d'I. Durlnv COMrtulon•1 H iololl1: llen111, U16 Lonv-111 Houw Otlk:• a1111 .. scnm111, Uot Longwon ll Howe OIUc:• lllclg., WIJl!ll!Qkln, D.C. ..,,. STAT• S•NATOltS I'll.OM OlllANGa COUNn' Ornn11 C•'""''' 1~!11 OltttlCl-'tl, 80'I CC, lrvlM 91'6•. Commmftt: A1rtcvn11rt. t..otil Gon•n- mf!lt, Slit(! Commll!ft on Envlronmtflttl Clfllrol. kl«! C(lll'lfli lllff Oii $1Hnlty lntnnlon In ASriwttw•I SOU. Jolf'I! Conwnlti.I lfl l!dl>Clllon EY•llHll"" end Joint Comm!"" 1111 Ut11t111 .... Rtllrtml'l'!f. Jtlllft E. WMtmDr•, (mfl Dltlrk:l-lt), 74'0 Ellf C"-~11, f vl llrtot'l. n.:u . Comrnlttea: •wlftff1 '"' l'l"Olnlloni. HHtlll and w1111r• ...:i Tr1nJP0111tliorl. O\ltlnl ttol1t1n .... MUIOl'I: -"•i. (_,!IOI, ..-~ ... C.111. tSlll1. AN UNPUBLISHED study by the National Commission on Product Safety warns that American industry cannot force companies to make safe goods, even if it wanted to. Only the government can do the job. The study, entitled ''Ind ustry Sa rety Standards and the Federal Antitrust Laws," shows that antitrust laws make It hazardous if not impossible for honest finns to take coordinated action against the makers of dangerous products. Consultant J oh.n F. Graybeal, the author of the unpublished report, cite!'! 500 "voluntary standards" set up by industry and admini stered by the Commerce Department. Yet even when it has a standard to protect the consumer, private industry cannot "enforce it by prohibiting the sale of no~formlng products, trying offenders and imposing sanclions. "'To do so would (reate the most highly .suspect form of standardization -a grour> of competitors seek.Ing to regulate another compe:tlklr ... Legislation to promote product safety must be drafted, enacted and enforced by government." The study will be published this fall by th' Commission. ----- Thursday, September 10, 1970 The edttorlal page of the Daau Pilot seek$ to In/oms and 1tim. ulate readers by presentino thU newspa~t opinions and com- mentary on top~ of inierc1t and &i911ijicaru:.e, by providing a forum fO? the t'ZJl'rtuion of our readert' optnl01ll, and bJI presentino the dlvmc vii~ pofntl of informtd ob1erotr1 ond ipoke.rmen on topfci of the d(l~. Robert N. Weed, Pub!llher Z LC . . • • • ... ,-'···-~-- Mou~e~sker Bugs ~ Cric~et ByL M. BOYD THAT TROO'I' FARM -Do you bow. how ~ mate a cricket angry? '11.ckle lt.s antennae wiUL a m o u s e whisker. 1bls ls what the aim-do -. they want to get flgbllng cricket> upod enough ·lo . put on a performance. Maybe y o u didn't reallt.e the Otlnese stage cricket fights in big wooden tubs. They bet on the results. A good tough cricket with a lot of technical knockouts on his record is worth the equivalent of hundreds of dollars. Arn thinking of raising some of those valuable f I g h t J n g cri<:kets on my trout farm, lf I ever get a trout farm. The winners will go to Madison Square Garden, and the losers, oh, nevermind. A VERA GE MOTHER is 32 when her first child staru school, reports the statisticians • • , OUR PLANET MAN says lb the Libra glrl who's the most painstaking ol them all about bet appearance • • • AC CO R DING TO the sldplrac<rs, that husband least apt to desert b1a wife is the Quaker. DON'T RECALL OFFHAND what the canine exper13 say, but authorities in the U.S. Post Office Department now claim that dog most likely to bite you is the German shepherd and the one least apt to bite you Is the collie. , JF YOU INTEND to d r ive Into Tacoma, Wash., to commit a crime there, you are required by law to stop at the city Umlis and telephone the chief of police to let him know you're cornq in, remember lllaL ~ a ltindly client' 11AJ to wtty we ffler to the batbroom as "the john,' let me ay Sir Jolm 1Hemngtm did not inf ell\ tills I n d o o r installlUon a we know It today, but be did invent IOIIledllng lllitable for ~ Elliabetli. So lbereafter and to this day, said couvenlence has been known as 'the john'." All right, appreciate the report on this matter, but that's enough. Let's put an end to it. CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q. ••0o rats eat fish'?" A. Do \.ndeed. They dive for them, swim after them, and catch tlaem. Rats can clean out a pond full of fingerling trout in ~thing flat, I'm told •.. Q. "Who's earning tbe most money now, the plumber or the briekJayer?" A. Th e plt11tber. At last report he was getltng 16.29 per hoor. The bricklayer was making $'>.14 per hour . ON A TOMBSTONE ffi a cemetery at BurlingtOff; Vt., b chiseled : "She lived with her huro8nd 50 years and died in the conlident hope of a better life." ... AM ASKED the lqe.t goH hole in the WO<"ld. That's the 17th at the Black Mountain Golf Club in North Carolina. It's 745 yards. A par six. RAPID RE P LY - Absolutely correct, :!!ir, our Language man reporb it was at the BuOC{)mbe CoWtty Fair in Aaheville, N.C., where con men first became known as bunoo boys. Your qutstions and com.-menu ore welcomed and tDiU be tLSed in Checking Up whentVff pos.ri ble. Please address your letter• to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Bo:i:: l 875.,Newpon B<ru:h 9266J . . James Bond 'Birthplace' Jamaica Tourist Lure By WILlJAM F. M CBOLSON the 13 James Bond books that ORACABESSA, J a m I ca (AP) -'Ille red bullelwood ~esk where Ian Fleming wrote . his best-selling James Bond spy thrillers still stands in the comer of hls airy bedroom at Goldeaeye, the f a m o u 1 author's Jamaica retreat Flemiag died l!llx years ago this month at the age of 56. But his rambling, three- bedroom house near this sleepy bai;iana port on the north coast remains just as it was when he was alive and is being rented to the vaca- tioning public. And what better vacation for any enthusiast of the exploits of 007? Imagine altURg 01 Goldeneye's paUo overlooking the 17..acre estate's white sand beach while reading a James Bond novel and leisurely sip- ping one of his favorite drinks - a vodka martini, shaken, not stirred. Starting at about $200 a week, depending on t h e aeuon, Golde.eye cu be rented complete wtth its staff of four servant!:. Fleming ooce described Goldeneye as a "modest house with wooden jalousies and no glass in the windows, with three bedrooms with shower baths a n d lavatories that often hl.sa like vipers or ululate like stricken bloodhounds ... " But the one-alory, white con- crete house with Its blue louver windows attracted Its share of Fltmlng's celebrity friends from Its construcUon in 19411. When he wasn't busy writing have sold more than 20 million copies and been translated in- to 23 languages, Fleming and his wife played host to guests includiAg Noel Coward who aicknamed the place 1 'G o ldeneye 1 Nose and Throat'', Evelyn Waugh , Graham Greene, Cecil Beaton, Truman Capote and former BriUsh Prime Minister Sir Anthony and Lady Eden. The Edens spent three weeks at Goldeneye in 1956 after the Suez crisis. A little gazebo on the western con.er of the wooded estate became a direct teleprinter link with No. 10 Downing St.reel in London. Police guards cut "God Bless Sir Anthony and Lady Eden" in the bark Of Fleming's cedar trees. A detective staying in a back bedroom took potshots at bush rats with his revolver. l.Jke clockwork, Fleming would anive at Goldeneye o• Jan. 15 each year from Engla.ld and depart on March 15. He would breakfast at 8 a.m. At 10 a.m., he would retire to the master bedroom facing the aquamarine waters of the Caribbean and work un· ti! lunchtime at 1 p.m. Alter a brief nap, he went back to work until late afternoon. From "Casino Royale" to hf• last book, "The Man With the Golden GWI," Fleming once recaUed he had to write all of them ''with the jalousies closed around me ao that I would not be distracted by the birds ud the flowers and the sunshine outside until I had completed my dally sUnt." HARBOR REFORM TEMPLE An111•1• Reflgloua SchMI Rog!1lnllon , ........ HARBOR REFORM TEMPLE OFFICE 3416 Vlo Lido, Suite H, Newport Bnch Saturday, Sept. 12, t :IO AM· 2:IO PM ,., ,...,,.... .. e.n 671·71JI ff 644 .. 141 f' ·' " " I QUALITY FAMOUS MAKER I BLANKETS For year-round comforl-1 ()()% polyester thermal weave blankett--at a terrific price break! Choose from our Mlection of many exciting sclid colors. 72x90'' fib fu ll or twin .size beds. 'Ha rd.,.,.,pot flaws. •If perfect 6.91 88 Out lOW PllCl l • CHAlel IT ._u...nc.n 'Mitt.,,.., C-4 MAmlCHAlel COSTA MESA Th1.1rs<111, Stpttmbtr 10, 1970 OF WIDTHS DOUILI AND l/2 OR TRIPLE WIDTHS if perf.• $11 to $30 PR. Save over $21 on super-wide 10' to 12' widths! Dramatic window decor at a spectacularly low price! We've a wide selection of exciting prints and solid colors in easy care no-iron Fiberglas• fiber in antique satin and textured weaves. Ex• portly tolla<ed whh dH p pinch pleats, wide hems. •slight -,.NctioM will d affect looks • .... They're the greatest! Pl ump 2 lb. polywster filled Zodiac or Go-Go signs. Use them for slum ber parties o r 0 1 regula r comforten at home. Cotton covers, Prints reverse to solid colors -for added versotilityl 72"a8.(" size when used as comforter. 3088 IRISTOl AYI •• JUST Off NlWPORT AVE • l lTWllN SAN DIEGO FIWY. AND IAKll ST. • ' DAILY PILC! 7 • ' ITOll HOURI hlly 11'19 t , ... ,.t. 11 ,. ' '"" ...... 11 t. 1 "" ( .. ~ ,. ,. .. • ' ' ·. • ........... M. . 101cars Take Aim At lmp<>1·ts 117 LOWELL McKIRGAN ' -.-i.'911 ,,_ ...... ' . DETROIT (AP) -At !all, the..baltle lines aro drawn In the flght between t h e American iito industry and , its tooch lot<lgn compeUtion. Wlth tbe introduction last week of Ford's Pinto, the American automalte~' stratep is clear : 'lbe re bullcllng ears that, look e smaller venlons of standard American ears but Which aim to match or surpass the im- poril' most desirable traits ' low initial costs, economy ln opentioo, eue in parking, few plaMed style changes. Tbe main target for the minicars DOW unvelled by Ford, General Motors and American Motors is t h e familiar Volkswagen Beetle, the he5Wellinf Import, which iot its name from its un- changlnc bug shape. The American entries are aU longer, lOMr, wider and roomier than the Volks which sold $31,933 ears in the United States last year, most of them the Utile two-door Beetle. Prices are: not set yet but the .American mlnlears .are ex· peeled to be slightly more ex- pensive than the VoAks, whose ba.!< cost ia about ~,ISO. Here at a glar..tee ts how the LitUe 3 and the German im· port slack u41: -Volk~wagen: base price about $1.'850, 151.7 Inches long, 61 inch.ts wide, and 59.l tnches high. -American -Motors: 11>e Gremlin, on sa e since April I, base price of $1,179, 161.3 in- 1 ches loog, 70.6 inclles wide, 51.I inches high. -Ford: The Pinto, on sale beginning Sept. 11, no price anoouoced ,1153 Inches Jong, 69.4 incbo wide, 50 inches high. -General Moton: 1be thevolet Vega, on sale begin- ning Sept 10, no price an- nounctd, 189.7 inches Jong, 65.4 inche5 wide, 51.% iocl>es high. GM Is predicting sales o( 400,000 in the first year for lbe Vega .and Ford predicts the same for the Pinto. A.MC say1 it sets sales of 100,000 for the Grfmlin in the year ahead. Against the American · challtnWJ, .the S..U. .is stlll :1:;.t::°'ir.,:: ~be~,i:j 59.1 Jnche•. Chrysler Corp. woo'! ba .. Its own subcompact on the market for at least another' year. But in January, 1971, Chrysler will ' offer t w o foreign-ma.de cats of about·the same size as the Ford Pinto. The Dodge Colt will be built by a Japanese aif\llate and the Plymouth Cricket by a n English subsidiary. The Volkswagen is the primary target because lt ls the leader oI the imported group which sold a total of 1,106,617 cars in this country last yur. However, at the Pinto unveiling last week in Las Vegas, Henry Ford II said the triain competition woul~ come from Jap8'11ese cars, because they have "good sty). ing, good quality." Other top sellers among the Imports last year were two ert- trlet from Japan, the Toyota 117,384 and Datsun 58,569, West Germany's Opel sold here by Buick 91 ,161, and Italy's Fiat 41 ,519. Imports a n d previously marketed domestic compacts account for about 30 percent of all new cars sold in this country and the imports ac- count for nearly half of these. The American makers see their small cars as superior to the imporb in several ways: more comfortable, quicker, quieter, better ventilated and more roadworthy. A check of the four finds more hlp room, leg room and -even though they are much lower than the Beetle -more head room in the American cars than In the Yolks. But the Beetle has a lot going for it, too -excellent gas m11eaJCe, rugged interior, loyal ownership, workmanship tbat has been plea alng American motorist.! for %1 years, and a price that brings piymentl below '50 a month with a modest down payment The Vega is the only one of tlll! lllbcompacts offered In multiple. models -two-door aedan. two-door •Porty coupe, station wqon and panel truck. -'l'8 Gremlin offers tw~ and t•«ll modell. The other can '1e all tour teaters ex- cept the Vega panel truck whcih eomet with one seat, two u 1n option. All four ~mpeUtors can be equipped wilb apUonal air con· dtUonln& and semiautomatic tnn1mla8Jon1, The Vega 1.5 of· ft.red wltli a standard three- tpeed tftanual trensmisslon with 1 foui-·IJ)ttd manual aa an opt.Ion alone w1ttt torque (llee CAM, Pop t) ~·C! 1929 WHITE FRONT OUAUIY • S!IMCE • mStOUIT • INTEGllllY $21~! PIKf PHILCO AM/FM RADIO &>lid state chassis and smart low si lhouette cabinet. AFC for drift· free FM. WEBCOR AM/FM PORTABLE Plays on batteries or with AC adapter that's included. With ca se, batteries, earphone. ·------------PHILCO CLOCK RADIO • WITH SNOOZE ALARM ., ' 'flake to AM station or regular alarm. a!;rmrepeatand \;; Automatic 1097 ~ i:t;.U.:o.;..Ai.i'l'li':.:itra~O Shut·off. !\ So right for casual wear and what a dream to care for. 65% polyester and 35% cotton -ail prettied up with n~elty col- lars and cuffs. &>lids and stripes. Sizes 32 to 40. fi!'!1Pc!~~i!' ,~Tl 397 button lrO!lt vest with belt. Sizes 1 to J( EA. WIES' BlllR, 1111111 Nylon satin, nylon "l!icot panties. jlijef or bikini · ·style; animal prints, assortof col~. 5, 6, 7. 18Yf umwfAR Cottoo knit briefs or T-shirts. Finest quality; 1,11 cut fir comfort. Sizes 6 to 16. Pockage ol 3. I I • • 111. 311\. • .· ... I • • I llK\Ut)IP at.0 UtlA to5t vnnn. ,..,, 3YllR plC1\IRl TUil RIPLAdMDIT wARIANlY· ....... , !M1lf ':;tl •S:t• .. , . -- .--- BIG SAVINGS ON DININGRllM RJRNITUREI FREE llMIYI , . ROYAL CREST BANQUO SIZE 9.PC •. DINETTESOS ' Choice of stylish pecan or .... -·--4 · . · \--· · · heritage walnut oval table • ;:<·· '" '"'[~~-· · ; · top s. 42x53" extends to " . 83". 8 chairs with gold or ·nutmeg. vinyl covers and wood grain backs. OUR RIG. PR!CE 159.97 SAVE 88118 PC. SALEM MAPlf DINING ROOM WITH CHINA , \ • 1 r ,AUTHEllTIC .COLDNIA~ snullG 42-in. 1ound table exterds. to 72 inches, ·has heat and stain resistant plastic top. Six captain chairs and big china cabi1Itlf, CHINA 0ALOflE $139 ~ CHAlliS ... ta.$24 TABLE ••• ~ -. ., . I E I 8. ~I e I e I e. I I ' ,. . " . . . . . " *CHARGE IT* ,. U.NU.MDfCAll e WHITINONT CAii e. MAITftCHAl•I canlT c••• ,. . .. ,•'•• , ..... -.. • ,:.-.. ,.;-• -"-7' c•• HAl•YB Balanced design with pistol grip for ·profes· sional styling results. Model.2332BNLA ~4~·~· e't11J:•~ ~ PIKI DtlNT 3" • 5" ATTG .CASR ' Sleek, trim lilt SaJff 5 9 7 · iesisbnt black;oli'le IX l!IY vinyl. 16~111". Not all colois IX sizes in all stores. • 400" llllllCI• ............ , ... , •.i.. fi·':... .--· !). . .~ 7PC. GOURMET I COIPARE r.-i;, "' [i PO!telain coated sleet. I 11 & z ql ""'"""' 5 qt pot will! coms; IO" slillet. 12!!· • . , T-1Y.·Stptti\lilr1·IO, 1970 Wiii,TE FRONT OUAUTY • lllMt(_: lllSCOUllT • ll)EG!im1 \ BACK·TO.·SCKl 3 PC. DRUE VINYL COVEIEI . LUGGAGE sn FOR IJDIEI 14" vanity case and two matching pullmans. PIIBh·button locks; tongue & grooye closure, tailoredrayonliningsand nickle plated hardware. Metal clad, · ritid frame loci« wjth wildly colofful baked on•mnel .finish. !Wable hasp ard canyiit llrila. 131WF ~= 997 PIKE l COSll M·ESA 3088 BRISTOL AVl e JUST Off NEWPORT Avt -A-STORE HO.URS* Mon. thru ,rl. -"'t p.m. s4,1. 10"' t .p.m. Sun. It"' 1 p:m. BITWliEN SAN DIEGO FREEWAY and BAKER ST. i ') I ' DAllY PILOT 11 CA.RS · ••• (CoaUaaed r-Pip II drive 11rnt!af to VW aut.omatta ltict ahfft and fUU automatic, The Gremlin lt the onJy one or the four which otrer1 power steering u ·. an opt io n. Numerou1 appearance op(ions -such 11 carpe:Ung -are of. ,ertid by lil'll)ltlllactw"ers. ·The VOlksWacen JJi~ op J 1 claim only about ~ n\iles per ,~allpn .ol cuoline for tllelr ~\le. bot publ~hed r.porll from owners who claim 30, 60,c l:nd even 50 m.p.1. in city driving,, 25 mlle1 per 1allon seems about right. ~ aew ·American cars clalm 1U mileage la the 25 m.p.g. area. At a recent preu preview for the vega, the car returned up to 34 m.p.g. over the preScribed course. The Pinto and .Gremlin haVe allo topped 30 m.p.j. under JUch cond!Uons. · All four can are equipped with air Pollution control ~ces. The Volkswagen ill driven by a 57-bonepower, four~llnder engine which Is mounted ln the rear. It Is air cooled .and is quite dei)endable after years of refine~'ent. Tht! American cars au have front-mounted engines. 1'be Vega, with a GM· d e v e 1 o p e d four~llnder aluminum engine built near Buffalo, N.Y., develops from IO lo 110 horsePower, depen- ding tn the carburetor and camshaft used. Ford'·• Pinto offers two four- eyllnder eng ines'; t5 horsepower standard with the automatic transmission and 75 horsepower standard with the four -s peed manual transmisSi!)f'I. ·The four-speed tnnsmlasion will be offered later ·with the larger engine. The Gremlin ill offered with uh.oice Oft" o-c y 11 n de r engines. The amaUer engine develops 135 horsepower and the larger 150. There ls also a choice of three.speed standard or automaUc transmission. The VW has a superior front seat safety harness &r4 rangtment, requirinc just Ol'Je snapping operaUon. In the American can you must anap the aeat belt and then attack the separate ahoulder harness. The Beetle's upholstery Is rugged, somewhat p 11 a b I e , vlnyl plastic ....:. virtually child- proof. Ttte American cara have used a thtnner grade ot_ the vinyl which . ruullJ in, a to!Ur sea~ l!ut blllw PfO- bablllty ol rips. 11\e Amer l can manufac-o turtn are stre.uln.r eue °' iervice, matln1 dO-lt-yourlelf manuall avaJllble to erpl1ln many normal . maintenance and repair operat·lons. Volbwagen does thla, too, Jiv• Ing Jts buyera" a tool kit, a manual, and a plir of gtOve1 embluon<d wltll the VW sym· bol. ·Amputees Of WWII To Gather It is an exclusive club, but Jts founders aay that no one has ever clamored f or membership In it. The members are wwn amputees who came to the ArtHiclal IJmb Shop at the old Mare Island Naval H03pital to have their wounds healed. They were fitted w i t h prnstheUc limbs to replace the real ones that had been ahol or b~own away In such pl~ces a1 Guadalcanal, · Tarawa, Iwo Jima, Okinawa and Salpan. About 3,000 men came to Mare Island during the latter part of WWll mlnua an arm or a leg, Or, in rare cues, all four. Now, some veterans have plamed an anniversary reunion and would like to see their old "ahlpmatea on the ward" out for the occuion. W. M. . Todd, a double 1mputee who-is now a real .. ta.. broker In Haywan! Is acting u chalrman of the remlon. The co-chllnnan It Sid Sanders, also an amputee, nslcllng In Vallejo. They are attempting to contact thelr friends who ~lved treatment at Mare Island. 'Ille three former medical olll"'n In chirp ol the Artllictal Limb Shop hav• abo planned to be 1111 hand for the ....uon, to be bold In Reno, ·Nev. Anyone who WU lrtated It the facility bet,.... Purl Ha-Day and 1950 ii u11tc1 to contact Todd It 1700I MeekJand Avt., Hayw1rd. The nunlon Is planned lor Oct. J and S at the Mapes Hold In Reno, Nrt. Only Ono Ftflal stoeb '" an "°"" tcAUoN. l'Mt'S a bl9 dtll?, It h: kl Ofll'ltl Couftl)', TM DAILY PILOT Is t1M OlllJ. dlllY MWSPllPI' thlt dtliY-- "' Ult JNtkli". I ! • I I . ·-...... . ,\ JO DAit Y PILDT Grades Shape 'Image'· FRESNO (AP) -A Los Angeles psychiatrist a n d 11uthor says when a &.year-old child begins first grade and is alow to learn reading nid is 1llpplng in his arlthmeUc the teachers shouldn 't gtve him a report card slating, "You're a bum, kid." Don't give him an "F," Dr. William Glasser said here Tuesday, because you can't "count on a &.year-old kid reeovering when you fail him." He said once a child has the Idea he is a failure he will adopt that rule, become a discipline problem In school and likely will become a welfare recipient as an adult because "society no longer has a place for persons without an education." Glasser, currently a psychialri3t for the L o s Angeles Unified Schoo I District, told Fresno County teachers that schools are creating the student problems and the sdlools -not the 1tudents -~ changing: Glasser said the Idea is to give a child credit for what be does, but make no mention of what he does not do. A sixth grader who ruds at the third grade le\•el, be said, 1bould not be given an "F" ln reading but instud be encouraged to go on. In this way, he said, teachers can guide students into more thinking and less memorllation, while lending some relevance to various subject!. For two years he has Implemented such ldeas in s e v e n elementary schools. Now, he says, major discipline problems have been eliminated and the children are learning more . Glasser said he al.so favors abolishing report cards in ell~mentary grades In favor of conferences in which the child would be told in front of his parents bow he is doing. He would In no way be compared with anyone else, he said. Glasser believes s uc h changes w o u 1 d effeeUvely eliminate the d iscipline prllblems so teachers could spend more of their lime teaching. Rockets To Trigger Lightning? CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) - The government begins a project this week c a 11 e d 1-tighty Mouse that w 111 attempt lo trigger lightning by shooting small rockets into potential thunderheads. The idea Is to see If the electrical charge in a cloud can be drained enough so that a manned rocket could be 15afely launched through it. The six-week project Is the direct result of the Apollo 12 moonship launching I as t November. The rising space machine was struck twice by lightning shortly after blastoff Into dense clouds a n d scientists determined later that the rocket itself touched it off. The l lgh nlng bolts momentarily knocked out the power in the spacecraft manned by Charles "Pete" Conrad, Richard F. Gordon and Alan L. Bean, but the situation \\'as q u i ck I y o:irrected and the astronauts went on to successfu ll y explore the moon. Because of the lightning strike, tighter w e a t h e r restri c t ions have been Imposed on manned space launchings to make certain rockets are not launched when clouds with lightning potential are In the area. The Cape Kennedy area ls second only to Florlda'9 west o:iast In the number of thunderstoms r e c o r d e d during the year in the nation. Thunderhead1 d e v e 1 o p ne8!ly every afternoon near the cape at this time of yea r. In project Mighty Pifouse, the Space Agency and the En v I ronmen ta I Science Ser v lee 1 Administration (ESSA) plan to fire up to 175 nvt-foot rockets J.nto cloud ct!lll above the cape. A sptelally equipped airplane will be used to find clouds o:intalnlng an electrical field. Whtn a potential thtmdtr cloud moves over tbe cape, a $mall rocket c:irrylnR an efectrle tleld mettr wllJ be Jaunehed. It wilJ measure the cloud's electric c:l1arge on a vertical basis and radio the daia bock to tho Mighty Mouse blockhouu. · \ I Thorsdoy, Slpttmbor 10, 1970 • ICS, NDJ reg, to 4.98 aeltetl tunic lop> ••• long length ribbed nylon with zipper bock. Choos• b•lted with short slteYH in V or iewel neck style with pockets. S·M·L lhlrtl unlimited ••• Care free polyester and cotton in three styles; solids; oxford with dog ear collars, and striped body shirt. 32 & 36. le•lll galore ••• glar• leg jeans of 100% cot• ton with authentic western styling. Stripes,10lids,and corduroys. Navy, brOwn, loden, berry. B to 18. SAVINGS IN SHOES Step Into style-in step with savings! TUN'S & MISSES SUEDE PUMP Soft suede split leather with bright. hardware trim and bow tied styling. To 10. 1peclal purchase •••••••••••••• 'S TUN'S & MISSES HIGH TDNGUE PUMP Shiny mon ·mode crinkle potent uppers, soft foam lining, brass trim. To 10. Brown. specie I punh••• •••••••••••••• •s GlltLS' & MISSES' SUEDE MOCS Soft leather suede uppers, foam cushion· ed innersole, fringe trim. Beige. To 10.· wom•n'1, our re9, price S.49 •• , •• 1lrl1' 1 o-~. our r••· price 3.99.. •a ma,;"1 -.~.111~r I • • • . , WITH Tremendous assortment of our reg. price 8.99 Take a look at these jumpers of acrYfic or wool in a dazzling array of colorful plaids and sensational solids. Navy, brown, greenr beige, cranberry. In jr., jr. petite, and misses' sizes. i JI MEN'S LINED JACKETS ct:~;. 8~!.9• 10.97-1 1.97 Vinyl suede clicker with acrylic pile lining, cotton corduroy trim, two hocking flop poc.km. Acrylic-pile-lined golf jacket with quilted sleeves, two slosh pockets. Men's sizes. ·: . • .. ,, ) ' ' ' '~ , • <..:; .. L . . . '· ;Bl Pern cottc stylir :belt :tion. . YI CH s,c Cott+ """" to7 KNI CCI)' blue PAI with pocl ,A. pip< rib prin • I . ' • ·, ·. :: .-. .-_,_. ---.- BOYS SHIRTS selection of ipon, dr•ss and knit ahirts. Poly•slef~ c:otto1t blenda or 100% c:otton. Most Ofe pefmon• ent p,.._ Si1es 6 to 16. ··:BOYS' PANTS Permanent press polyester• cotton blend twills. Fastback styling~ lots of pockets and :belt loops1 Great color selec· :;tion. Sizes 8 to 18 and 6 to 16. .. . . JR. BOYS' SHIRTS PANTS· OR PAJAMAS YOUR CHOICE OUR REG. PRICE 1.78 SPORT SHIRTS Pe<manent press palyelfer. cotton blend. Solid colors and plaids feo~ing spread or hi-boy button-down collars. sans 4 lo 7. KNIT SHIRTS "Wear Dated" 100% Acrilon® acrylic. Short sleeve, turtleneck in royo};, light blue, gold, brown or green. Sizes 3 to 7.., PANTS Permanent press cotton--polyetter blend with extended tob front, elastic b~ck, trim pockets. In blue, olive or block. Si.res 4 to 7. PAJAMAS Two styles. Middy F>Jllover with piped V neck ond chest pocket or ~:i styling with rib knit collor, cuffs and ankles~ All in action prints. Sizes4 to 7. -.-~-, ---.-.. -.,.~=----~-__,,,,-.. -..,..,,....,... --------.-... . ---.r-.. ---~---~-~----~--------------------,- Thursday, Stpttmbtr 10, iq10 APPAREL SMALL DOWN PAYMENT HOLDS YOUR PURCHASE! SIZES7to14 SIZES3 IOBX Mom, we've got a terrific selection for your _ little glrl at prices that spell savings to you! All the latest styling in solid colQrs, plaids, checks, prints arid stripes. This group consists of basic waistlines, A-lines, straight lines and torso styling. lots of colors that really spell new for the fall season. Not every size in every style. Hurry in! GIRLS' WESTERN JEANS Favorite casual wear al a low, di1taunt price! Wes- tern ieans in stripes or bleac:hecl au! patterns. Lots of groovy colors. Sizes 7 to 14. OUR LOW PRICE 97 -- GIRLS' KNIT CARDIGANS OR BELTm VESTS Choose acrylic cardigans with zip front, cable detail and 2 pockets or button front vest with belt. Great colors. Sizes 7to 14. .. DAILY PILOT J l Rus s Navy Now Ahle To Disrupt BRUSSELS, O.lgium (UPI) ..:.. The Soviet Union's ocean- going navies are now strong eJ10ugh to disrupt shipping between the United States and Europe If a war broke out, according to Allied naval experts. Some experts · at t he headquarters of NATO have begun co.mparing the development of the Soviet fleet to that of Germany's in World Wars I and II. Admirals who served in World War II now draw parallels with the· early years of both world wars when German submarines and ships sunk hundreds or merchant ships bringing . war supplies: and goods from the United States to Britain and Russia. "There has been a big change in the sea in a way which has not happened before in NATO or Allied history," one naval expert s a I d , referring to previous Allied domination of the Atlantic. "We are in a position where we could be vulnercible to blackmail," another official said. The key elements in the buildup of the Soviet ocean· going fleet are the submarine force which outnumbers that of the American navy, a growing merchant m a r i n e centrally controlled by a Moscow computer and a trawler fleet used f o r intelligence collecting. The neW' concern about Soviet fleet st rength, particularly in the Atlantic. follows several years--o f warnings Crom Allied admirals about Soviet naval expansion in the Mediterranean. But Allied admirals have always felt they could contain the Soviet fleet in the closed confines of the Mediterranean because o f overwhelming Allied air strength, from both land bases and carriers in the area. Jn the wider oceans the effect of airplanes would be d Im in i shed. particularly against the submarine threat, the Allied experts said. To counteract the Soviet moves, Allied admirals are pressing their governments to build up submarine forces, goth missile-carrying and the hunter·killer type. They also want improved anti·st1bmarJne warfare forces, b a s e d primarily on new destroyers, that kind of work . Among the 15 NATO nations, the United States has been the only one so far to embark on a major naval expansion or modernization program. It recently ordered construction or new destroyers to replace the workhorses o p e r a t i n g since World War II. The NATO naval experts called the 1962 Cuban missile crisis the turning point in Soviet naval history when Soviet plans were thwarted because of American dominance in the Caribbean and Atlant.ic. Since then, the A 11 i· e d e1pert.s said, the S o v i e t government has listened to its admirals and adopted "the strategy or ocean-going navies in the classic sense 1nstead of merely using ships as an extension or army power. Earlier this year the Soviet helicopter carrier M o s k v a made its first sortie from the Mediterranean i n t o the Atlantic. Since last year, the Soviets ha ve been routinely moving ships from their northern fleet into th e Mediterranean via the Atlantic instead of the traditional replacement from the Black Sea fleet through th e Dardanelles. These m o v e s followed a Soviet naval visit last year in the Caribbean. At a briefing last month for Allied defense ministers in Brussels, NATO ad mi r a 1 s predicted the Soviets would step up such ship activities as part of a program to develop self-sufficient ocean going fleets . I j I 'RCHARGE IT'R e IANkAMlllCAlD e WHITEP:lONT CARD e MASTllCHAlGI CllDIT CAID COSTA MESA 3088 BRISTOL AYE. e JUST OFF NEWPORT AYE. BETWEEN SAN DIEGO FREEWAY and BAKER ST. -RSTORE HOURS* Mon. thru Fri. Noon to 9 p.m. Sat. 10 to 9 p.m. Sun. 10 to 1 p.m. ( t . -. .. . .. . . JJ DAILY PILOT Thursday, Stptrmbtr 10, 1970 Probe Begins Todaff ' 10 Million Smokers Have Kicked Habit Salazar. Inquest Guarded By JOHN PHDJP SOUSA Flttcber aid recent data who smokn 15 cigarettes .-llfo for evory cl1ar ett1 SAN DIEGO (AP) -Al lndlcatll a .,._ man day forltlb II minulel of hla IDIOkad leaal JO.I million Amerlca111 ::=======================·=·=====::::. have quit clg.,.ttes In , lhe 1· LOS ANGELES (AP) -A ecroner11 inquest into the death of newsman Ruben Salaur, killed dw-ing the riot in East Los Angeles, begins today wilh tight securlly meuures to protect witnesses who fear for their safety. Armed officers will gwird the entrance to the hearing room in the old Hall of Rtcords where the proceeding will be held. Nobody will be atlowed in the hallways during the inquest, authorities said. Sheriff's ·deputies posted at every entrance to the building will even check c o u n t y employes for identification, authorities said. Because of the widespread concern over the .tz..year~ld Salazar's death, seven Los Angeles television stations plan to pool coverage of the Inquest, which begins at 1:19 a.m. 1 But the catDera$ WOll't be f111ov.·ed to show witPeJM; who are worried about b, e J n I ~armed, hearing P ff~ c er Norman PltUuck said. Sheriff Peter J. Pltchess •a Id Tuesday some witneaes have been threatened, About 40 Witnessn will come before the s even· member inquest jwy, which will decide responslblllty for Salazar's death. The television and newspaper journalist w a s killed Aug. 29 by a high· velocity tear gas projectile fired into a tavern by a l<la Angeles County sheriff's deputy. Nearly all 78 seats in the bearil14 room are rtserved, some of them for A rWe • di.e S&ap c-.:ia at hon'• le a ...a uip Melt illto tM OW Wat, ---dli. a ,_ hone team ... a s~ Ridet' ... .... -ia a while ..._ Bad c.y. e.-ea tt7 .. .... ... ,. eo-..... j.Ma the tu.a. r.pre1tnt1Uvu of state and federal offlcl.W. Bolh U.S. Ally. Robert I.:. Meyer and callfornla Atty. a.n. Thomaa C. Lynch said Ibey plan to Miid depuUes to view the proceedings. · ' A "blue-ribbon committee'' of 21 community figures, organised by the Congress of Mexican-American Unity, also plam to attend Ole inquest A third vlcUm of lhe rloling, injured in an explosion, died Wednesday. Lynn Ward, 15, of El Monte, had been burled 38 feet by a blast that occurred when an ID'lknown peraoo · threw an explosive into a burning trash bin he was standing near, deputies said. Ward suffered a mangled right leg, which was later am~ putated. He died at County· USC Medical Center. 1be other person slain during the violence was Angel Gilberto Diaz. Sb e r i f f • s depuUes said be suffered pnsbot wounds and craahed into a utility pole when he tried to drive bis car through a barricade they had setup. Rep. Jolm V. Tunney , Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate, made an unscheduled welting tour Wednesday along 1even blocks of Whittier Blvd., where the rioting took place. Wait i ng wi th his shirtsleeves rolled up, Tunney puoed the damaged buildings and the SUver Dollar Cafe, where Saluar Wll killed. Fort Ord EscaRees .Arrested GREAT FAW, Mont. (UPI) -Two murder suspecta who escaped from the Fort On! stock~• tiave been 8lTetted here, accordln' to lhe FBI. They ...,.. identllled as Sgt. Thomas G. SUdham, 22, and Sgt • .John E. Foppiano, U, wilo broke out Aug. 17. Mrs. Dolores Stidham, 21, was also anested at Mooterey, Calif. The FBI arrested the men on ltidnaping c h a r g e s 1 however, since they allegedly took Eustace W. Brooks of Prescott, Ariz., from Hollister, Calif., to Nampa, Idaho, after their escape before releasing film unbanned. The FBI men said the men had been in Great Falls !or the past three weeks. past lour yean, a four-year study abon. That WU lhe "*Nfe Wedlleocfay at the opening aeulon of lbe first National Conference on Smoking and Health being attended by more than 350 physicians, educators, government officials and oth- ers concerned with smoting as a health hazard. Dr. Daniel Hom, whole 1953 report on cancer a n d cigarettes touched off a widespread campaign against smoking, said a recent study showed that the number of former s m o k e r s increased from 18.9 million to 29.1 million during the four-year period ended two months ago. "Data from the study is the' ' most encouraging news in the antlcigarette drive since the first cancer scare 17 years ago," Horn said. Horn is secretary of the NaUonal Interagency Council on Smoking and Health, a group of 31 gGvernment and prlvate agencies which is sponsoriiig the conference. Dr. Charles M. Fletcher, a British researcher, said new scientific data indicates that in addition to causing Jung and other types or canctr , cigarette smoking affects the heart and blood circulation, other body systems a n d organs and bas a bearing on ulcers. "There is absolutely no doubt in any sensible person's mind," he said, ' • t b a t ciga rette smoking is dangerous." AMERICA'S.LARGESl; FAMILY CLOTHING-CHAIN • .r O,IN 9,30 'TIL 9,30 F.OR:FASHION AND .FIT,fMEN ' PREFER THE BODY SHIR I! 99 ~--'Tm1utoWs W todry for fashian--awate men! -tho mw s· Jong point collar, the U-batton bami1 <*Is, the body-line tracing foo a tapen:d I and_ &ti 0-from rontrast-<titched solids cw ~ stripes oo dark grounds. Penna-- --lobrO, sizes S.M·L (141(,-J~.) FOR ·s I YLE AND VALUE, YOUNG MEN . CHOOSE . . FLARE-LEG JEANS! 88 • M-.l:lng tho~"""" in a big .....,.-ea....i.g ;e....,_ ' the most.wanted fashion look for today's wi~it men! Penna.-ly pressed poly<sttt and colton solidJ and mipes in b<ash new colon-trim and 'tapered "Yling. w;de heh Jonp., scoop pockets ••. pr<>- bonnvxl so )ll"C* cau wear 'em homel Sir.A 29 lo 35. COSTA MESA-1601 Newport Blvd. at 16th GARDEN GROVE -12372 Garden Grove Blvd. l I . ,, ANN BLYTH ~e ... atanr Wome Ser-vice Ceriter The new guide that really explains home decorating ... the use of color, furniture arrangement, how to blend the old and the new for new comfort and beauty in your home. A first edition, it's a gi to you from Hom Savings. ASSETS OVER $3 GBillion Strong Assets are hundreds of millions above all others. Accounts insured to $20,000. Multiple accounts at Home may be insured to $20,000 each. CURRENTLY PAYING 5% to 7Y2% per year Your day·in to day-out working account pays 5%, compounded daily. Guaranteed Term Accounts include 5%% for 1 to 5 years ($1,000 minimum) ... 6%, 2 to 10 years ($5,000 minimum), •• and 71/2% on $100,000 accounts, 1 or 2 years. LOS ANClilLts (MAIN OFFICE) HleHU.ND PARK RIAL TO 761 S. Bro•dw_•J' ?i700 N. Flau•rO• M. 148 S. Rl....,.lcle ""· 1-twMn at Ith • (213) U7·7991 at Av•. 57 LA, 90042 lst & Rlallo • (714) 87!i·7010 ALHAMIRA <213) 254·5184 SAN 8!RNAltOINO -401 E. Vellay ltl'td. It HOLLYWOOD 301 W. Hithlend Ave. Sierre Vl1l1 li.vt. • {213) 289·0211 1500 N. vine at Arrowh•ad • (714) 882-3321 ANAH!IM at Sunset• {213) 466•1121 SAN FRANCISCO 0211 C•ljl Lc'r~'""" ,', ve. HUNTINGTON PARI( 2!>00 Mission St. at 21,1 St. ppo.. • ,,.,, ,.,,, ..... ,,. (7 l•I 53~28 S ac:if!c: 61vd. at AltCADIA floNnta • (213) M8·8J77 &AN .lost 60 Ea1t Hvntlntton Drtn lAJClWOOD 1221 Lincoln Ava. at rlnt 4909 La~ewood llvd. Wiiiow Gian Ol11riet (213) 446-1121 • M1-te44 It 011 Amo (409) 287·0107 BARSTOW (213) 634-4909 • 636·2444i .MNTA ANA 1232 E. M1ln St. In t1M lupw S LA MlltADA 1300 NGrth M•ln St. Sl'lopplllf C.l'lter 15128 (. RMecrini: Avir. 11t Waihin1ton A~. (71() 2156-2111 [•tt of l1 Mitldl Blvd. (714) 547-9611 BIYIRlT MILLI (714) 521·1310 MJffA MONICA 9245 Wll•hl,.. l!llvd'. LIVIRMC>ffl: 2606 Wilshl,.. 8111d. 11 Re•fotd Drfllil 215 $. "K"" Sf. •l3td St. 9il 26t1' • (213) 128·5541 1213) 271·6666•171-4455 (4151447-4660 ~fOCm' BUrNA l"AlltlC lOHG IEACH 12051 v.,,tur-1 Bh•d. at !fl~ ~T:, 81\ld. 201 lit! ,..,,1 Sf. l 1ure1 C1nyon • (213) 763·7341 (71 4) 821-4664 1t Locur.t • (2 13) 436-8211 TQRltANC£ BURBANK 840 "·18n MONTtlELLO 151'1 Cr..,.n1 A,,., femendo 81114. 1421 w, Bev11ly 8lvd. • at [I Prido et 8urbenk 81\lld, 11 M1pl1 . (213) 728-0317 (2'l.J)·J2 .. 9244•775-1111 4'213) 84.f.7!81 • l41·Sl4l OAKLAND Y1CTOltvlU.E 14909 7th St. COMl'TON 1101 N. Lone !Ml [ltl 18tl'I SI. ne .... 11,.. 'lklor v.u.,. • • 9• • "C Id Shoppln! Cirnttr •~" ""'· o I n Ptrk 8oult111rd Dlr.trict (714) 24 ·5327 (213) 638-1735 • Uf.3031 (415) 465·3400 tNCINO ,AIADINA WEST COVINA 17107 Vtnl!J1'9 Blvd. NO Eist Color.do Bhld. 100 Vincent A11e. •I Ame1tO)I. •t Llklf 1\ the S.i. a..n.1tdlno,..,. <213) 788-0630 • 172·29JO l213J 195.5174 , A l·Sl74 (113) 966·7591 ' WDlN8RO'fl l"ICOtnYQA W1JllN !:tt2.:.,,ro::'!!Q'1t4f\J0.1uo 912!1 E. Whittler 81\ld. tnt !t'f.~.~:t.::!!:!:" 11\1111. Gl btOAL[ of ltcn•m•.ct. 4'213) 699·1071 (219) 691·6161 620 N. 8r1nd 81\ld. POMONA WllSHlltE CENTER It 11'1• Ventura fwy. JOO Pornone M,111 West S7!50 w11,l'llr1 Blvd. (211) 241-4105 • 24S·Sl!l5 (714) 623-2491 11 O•ford • (213) 385'3973 Member: FEDERAL SaTingw and Loan lrumrance ~tion Mernbftr: FEDERAL Home Loan Bank Srstem ' QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi 0 We b&ve a DUQlber of 'taihea.da' here. Which 'fa.the.ad' did YOU. wilh to He!u Rea gan Raps Vnr,;,h's 'Cheap Demagoguery~ . -----------~-----·-----------~------------·--------:--,._----.- DAILY PILOT J II Unruh's Blast Against Reagan Backfi-res SANTA BARBARA (AP) - }low could Gov. Reagan pay off a 1968 political debt to a mysterious "wealthy doctor from North Carolina" who died eight years earlier? That wu the question dogging Democrat J e s s Unruh's campaign for governor today. "t· At ~no Wednesday Unruh charged that the Republican governor appointed Dr. Earl W. Brian Jr., 28, as director or the State Department of Health Care Services in a "pol!Ucal payoff." Prtued by newsmen for a reason, Unruh said Brian's father was a North Carolina physician who had helped Reagan in his -1968 campaign for the GOP presidential nomlnatlon. Unruh was aske d specifically what kind of help. Republican officials in North Ca rolina could recall 1¥> Dr. Brian active in the \ 1968 campaign. An Unruh aide said that perhaps it wun't Brian's father but some other relative. "We're checking," be said, In his Fresno speech to ~ group or senior citizens, Unruh accused the Reag1an administration ot bungling management of the billion dollar Medi.Cal program of health care for the poor. He said Brian, named to the $30,000 a year job in January, "has no quallficatlons for the job. He ought to be fired right away." Unruh in a prepared press statement at Fresno, called Brian "an e xper ie nee d , political incompetent." "I don't know," Unruh replied. · SF Body Found Within hours, two Reagan Unruh called Santa Barbara crucle oil which later lapped general election c a m p a lg n The 1969 blowout c>tcurred the worldwide symbol or onto the aparkllng beeches of which opened in Im Angeles on a federal lease outside the "environmental catastrophe ot "~-t 8 b nd v Monti stat·~ntrolled ••nt. the 1969 offshore oil spill. omii a ar ara a entura •Y· . ........... ..... Here again, the aim of the counties. I Unruh \ accused Rug an of Unruh'• bill failed to pass candidate was to support his Unruh the assemblyman thwart!~ hb: erforts to gel the Assembly by one vote - argurrient that Reagan is the from Inglewood, came to JegislaUon banning further on a day Unruh happened to .. front ;:'Ian" for callfornia's Santa Barbara Wednesday drlllinJ on •tat e ·owned be out of Sacramento and thus · 1 1 · ter ts offshore land in the Santa didn't vote for hb own spec a tn cs · evening after caritpaigning on "Lock, stock and barrel, the 1 hot day in Sacramento, _Barb __ •_ra_cru. __ nne_>. ____ =m_ea_•_u_re_. ------ oil companies own the Reagan Fresno and Bakersfield. administration and iI the Unruh's first stop in Santa people of Santa Barbara don'l Barbara was a vi.lit to his know that, and U they campaign headquarters. continue to vote for Ronald· "To be frank, I'm tired," Reagan then they deserve to Unruh told an enthuslasUc have that oil on the i r . group of supporters. "I don't beaches," sakl Unruh. A blowout on a Union Oil Co. ~ rig in January 1969 spilled millions o{ gallons or sticky l lA•P IHAJ'INO know of any politician who ever admits that'." He proceeded to give an unscheduled speech -one of the best received of his MANICU•1Ne <(]'he MEN'S HAIR STYLING 8•11' BUY Ill l'OWNf Wfflll SPIC I AL MOST CUS INCl, 14" & 15" FORD• PLY• CHEY etc. CRAGAR Reg. '30 n. WKlll THIY LAST"• administration sources said SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - the charge was blatMtly The body of an unidentified phony because -they said -man, shot in the bead, was Brian's father' died in 1960. found Wednesday slumped 2 I lock• Wat ef 1,..khuri t One source close to Brian, over a railing on the Golden 9568 HAMILTON who was unavailable foe Gate bcidge. He was described comment, said his fathcc died as 5-feet-5, 125 pounds. blue HUNTINGTON BEACH • SACRAMENTO {UPI) - Gov. Ronald Reagan, charging .Jess Unruh with ''cheap demagoguery'' for campaigning at the Governor's leased home, today announced the defection to his side of a major Democratic party contributor. in Raleigh, N.C., on Aug. t, eyes. brown hair and wearing FOR APPOINTMENT CALL 962·8960 major fundraising event Oct. g ~19&>~.lin"i'T'Ti'iii":iiir~a~tan~co~rd~uro~y~sw~·ti. 'r.ii~~ii~~~~~1jfjij~;i~~~~~~ in Los Angeles, headlining,- The Republican governor refused again to bare his wealth but for the first time said he was willing to submit his assets to an accountant for examination to de t e r m i n e "whether they constitute any conflict of interest, which they don 't." The chief exe c u t ive'! campaign o rga n izatio n reported that Eugene V. Klein, board chairman oC the Nation- al General Co r p., a conglomerate, had endorsed Reagan for re-election over Unruh. Klein was a co-chairman or former Gov. Edmund Brown's 1966 re-election campaign and supported John F. Kermedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, and Hubert H. Humphrey for president, campaign a id e s .said. He "'ill be chairman of a Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin, botJtf'b e m o c r a t a supporting Reagan. Klein said that Reagan "has brought common sense ma nagement to the state's business.·• Reagan lambasted Unruh at a news conference Wednesday in Santa Rosa during a day oC campaigning in the California wine country. At one unscheduled stop, R ea g a n participated in a football scrimmage at an orphanage. "One thing my opponent has done is make it,,perfectly clear that I was right in refusing to debate him, because his idea of debate is obviously cheap demagoguery," Reagan said. Unruh stood in front of Reagan's fashlonable leaseq home in Sacramento and listed the names of the 17 landlords he said also contributed to Reagan's re-election campaign. "Maybe I ought to put up a sign: Keep off the grass,'' Reagan said. "That might be a warning to other citizens, because who is next? Like termites, it might be spreading and maybe we need tighter pest control laws." OPEN HOUSE THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 10th 7:30 to 9 P .M. CHILDREN AND PARENTS At Our San Clemente School Only DID YOU KNOW? 80% OF YOUR CHILD'S INTELLIGENCE IS DEVELOPED BY AGE 10 The Choice of A School Is A Crucial Decision! Before You Decide • . . INVESTIGATE!! l e•rn about the rem1rkeble educetion your child ct n obtain 1t Monfe,1ori Schoolhou1e . Age• 2 1/2 to 1 ye•r1. See our uniq ue building• •.. Ex1mine our speci11ized Mo nte1sori equipment .•• Discover why p•r•nts 1r• thrilled with our sc hool ... Your child cen have a wonderfu l Mon tes sori School· hou1e educetion for cnly 77c per hour. W e give so much more, but we cost no more . , , Vi sit the sc hool. Ask for our fr•• brochures • • , Your 'Child deserves nothin9 less than th e best ••• A Montessori education et MONTESSORI SCHOOL- HOUSE! ~ Extended Oty Car• and Tren1pot'1·1•ion Ave ilt ble . alonteeeoriSchoolhou• ORANGE SAN CLEMENTE 11 165 PROSPECT l.l••t Nertli et Qep_..1 PHONE 532-1651 3415 S. El Camino RHI PHONE 4'2·3'1l AmNTION: COLLEGE GRADUATES! There is 1 shortege of Montessori tecu:hers. For opportuniti11 in e growing cereer think tbout Montessori. Write to: Roston Montessori ln1titute for T eech• •r Training. P.O. 8ox 2457, Oran91, Calif. C12669. auGGf.O 4pl."f *1st Qua\\ty "-LL "IATMIR TIRll •••• $15 95 "'"' $ J J95 "''" (Mll/14) 1\11/lS) 155111 115i15 !Mll/15) (Jflll!) _\\ti \IU l1 h •.h1 111 FREE 2 SHOCK "'"'""$1990 wow1 W\Dt tW\ff •• ~ GLASS BELTED • MARKC. BLOOME GAI DI N •IOYt 14040 llOOKHUUT fC•f'M~ If lrtMh1nl Ii W••linln•1ttl IJO.l20t ANAHE IM • IUI NA PAil 6t 61 LINCOLN I LYD. tCetntr If LIMtlft & t<llltf) 126·1110 ••e ABSORBERS •• "':1:·~·. • VALUI FREE ••• Wheel ALIGN. $J.!~ . FREE ... ~~~t~1~~ .......... _$8!~.1 ltl Ill!•'"'° •~ut fltl! .•• Wit~ Pot•••11•I J S.••••I ... P•i<oef Si t .ft! ••. T•hl> ....__,,,,, .. ' .. oc.1 ••u (• TOT•t •f •1 ''" ,u;, ... h i-• & "'""' P•dt , .. , IJU I onnt ... • 2695 ~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • COSTA MESA -NIWPORT I EACH AREA 3005 HARBOR BLVD. CORN ER OF BAKER & HARBOR SS7-IOOO 11 ) ~-[j ---.J-- I .I .f U.ll V PILOT For The Record Meeti ngs Harriage Licenses O•ANGll!: COUN1''1' AU~. ll YOU NG-WELCH. 6-oe D .. ~S. ..r j,(11 IO!h '9., Hllllflllllfon llMdl ll>CI Vlrolnla P., ~ ol 1111 Wfflr.1 OJlve, Ca111 Mne. GAllNElt-McPHEDRAN, Tlmottly It., \f, of 11111 Goldef'lwKt. Altt. IUO. se,. 11 end k•"''-" s .. 1s, of nu Alll1mbf1. both of Hunllnaton Aur.t. HASKINS-ICAOLL. Mlcllffl O .. 11, of Int! Goltlard , H11nllnq!1;1r181Kh Ind S,_rrv E .. lt, of l6N El C1rro, FOll!llllft \11111'1', 811AN~DEEllY, Ronald DM lt. of I~ ~:.~ t~..e.J•~; ..... i:.~ : JA't'S'~~':'.clA~~N ... s, s'""" o., 11, of 1'111 Prnldlo Orlvt . Cotll ~ 1nd lrirne A., 1t1 of 21702 Polvnrslen, Huntlnciton 8e6Cft. H.-NSEN-STANOING, Rtcn1rd E,, 2', of 9601 El Rt¥ AVI ,, Ao!. I, FDUftllll'I Viii•• al>CI Carol l.. 71 .of 1902 A°""ld SI., Hunllnci!on ~lc;h, T~!;.~-sic:~1W· t!i~11!'r11'r"v:kk>1~ l ine. C~l1 Mts.. SNYDER-ADAMS, Joel (,, 25, of l'f68' vr1 San S.1>.1stl1n, L•oune NlCNtl '""' Ml"' A,, JI, Of 4.44 Third SI., La<IUM llt•th. FILElll:·FILER. PIO.II E .. lO •flll Velor"' J .• .i, boll! of J11t P1r1on1 sr .. Cosll Mn •. LAWRENCE-HILL llef't L., l1, of 1c21 E. lifh SI .• Ne~ llltlCh 1nd Sheri t vn M., J.1. of 1702 C.llfrd .t.vt .• Pi.c ... 111. WRIGHT-RIESTER, Nlll'm.tn M., ,1, of '60 Wtr...,. •n<I Lvnn P .. 20, If 111 Ct l!fornl• Aw .. both of Hunt"''°" lll:ltt~~tl'tt, Fr1M 111., "6, of 22• »th $1,, N.-t Bttdl Ind Mtrlfyll L,, •1. ol llt W. llllV Ave., 1!11lboll. S.t.NFORD-P.t.YTON, Rk hlird A,, n DI 1"74 Edaellltltr. Huntlnolon l eKll 1nd Andi'••· 1t. of •n5 Stn Btmlrdlno, Montri..1r. Ctllf. l'".t.ULICNER-EICK. Jalln F .. 71. cf t:ll\.'o tlti St., HUl'lllnolool llHCll t r>d Ctrol J ., 11, of 137t Grtct $1., Aot. :i. Swn•• .tint . CHARBONNE.t.U-llOOIE, eruct F., .. 'n. cf 11091 'A' SI., Aot. E, Hunt noton lltlch ind TMll C., 19. of •lt\.'J S. llrO!ldwtv. S•nlt An1. "°\ICE-ORTIZ, John J .• 71, ofS.W \1 111 R11I, Cwrttl Incl Sl.J111• 0 .. 11, Of JU6 Kll!vflnd:e ltM1 Coslt MHI. ALLEN-MATURINO, PMllG 0 .. JJ, of 11171 s.tndrt Lee, Hunllnaton lltttl> t ncl Evt M., 20. of 161' SunNI Lint, Fun.non. MAUllENCHlLD-GAll.Cl.t., Kiri A ..... "· of 530 Wiison tnd Mtrft A .• 21, of W!I'°"' bolt! of Coslt "°'"''· PEii.Et -MYERS, Ru~n S .. lt, o fsot1 Anl1 emnt •11lleverlv J ., 11, of JUI Cooa de Ora. bolt! of lw Altmltos. LtGUE-COMllE, John Ill., 11, of 11.Ul Kol-. Huntl1111ton •• e,·~~ ,.• ~11 Ptll"lclil 0., 20, "" ,._ G<!rtrvell. l'"ounltln Vt!ltv. D eath Notice• Thund•Y. Se;pttmbrr 10, 1970 • " Political Notes Kilroy Co-chairs Flournoy Drive By O. C. HUSTINGS Of ... Dt.llT , .... Sttff Newport Beach re s i d e n l John B. Kilroy, 1 real estate developer, i! co-chairman of the statewide drive to elect Republican James B. Flournoy secretary of state. Actors John Wayne and Buddy Ebsen, also Newport residents, join Kilroy on the election committee. Flournoy, an attorney who is opposed by Democrat Edmund G. Brown, Jr_ (son of the former Governor), is the fi rst black in the history or California to be nominated for a constitutional office. * * * Lloyd Nocker, Democratic Saturday night from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Laguna Beach Democratic Campaign Headquarters, JSSO S. Coast Highway. Voters are invited to <.'Orne to the party and meet congressional c a n d i d a t e Thomas Lenhart and state Senate candidate Dwight Mize. * * * A reception is slated for Dr. \Vilson Riles, Max Rafferty's opponent for state Superintendent of P u b I i c Instruction, Sunday from I p.m. to 4 p.m. at the home of Mr. and M111. James J. King, 2001 South Forest Ave .. Santa Ana. Laurie's Heart Sw·get·}· Held Off For One Year candidate for the 7 O t h Assembly District (Huntington Beach) will be the host at a barbeque, open to the public. at the Huntington Garden Apartments Saturday at 2 p.m. The event, in the Orient.al Garden of the apartment complex located at 4901 Heil Ave., is being held to give Gun-toting Hitchhike r Sentenced voters a chanee to become SANTA ANA -A gun-toting acquainted with him on an hitchhiker who opened his By TOM BARLEY 01 t111 O.lly Pii.t S!ttt informal basis. · f ed st.rfSSed, that the Children's evening program o arm Nocker says no admission obbe · b t •. $18 nd Hospital team under Dr. r nes Y a mg a a will be charged, but any bill' d I Denton Cooley can not operate lull 1ar cue rom a young GARDEN GROVE -A lilllt donations will "be grate Y c~-M lo 'st ha •·· on Laurie if surgery proves to accepted.,, ""WI esa mo n s ~n Garden Grove girl who camt be a life and death matter. * * * sentenced lo five years to life close to being. the focal point · sta•· nr·so of what would have been a "They can and woold," he A ki ck-Off party will bt held in K ,..i n. sa.ld. "But they think she is Superior Court J u d g e unique heart operation is back holding her own and a year Samuel Drelzen set that term home today without having could mean all the difference TV N for William Everett Hughes, reached the opera';..,. room oC ewsman _, s .• ··-~ in an operation that is bound 23, Ul anta A;i,, «lier .. "!: Texas Children's Hospital in -.i lead d lo carry a great element of defi::uuant p guilty to -~ ed~b risk." Add t ann ·~·,, c arges. But there's no dejection in Heart surgery pi on e e r 1·esS Hughes admitted that he the home of two.year-old Cooley had a mitral valve hitched a ride on the Santa Laurie Graham at I 1 9 2 I transplant in mind when he FULLERTON -Television Ana Freeway last July 17 Shetland Road. first learned of Laur j e '.s newsman Clete Roberts of from David I. Dowd, 20, of ·•we're very happy thal we condition _ the transfer of a station KNXT will address the Costa Mesa, and then forced got the kind of report. we did living valve from its donor lo Sept 16 dinner meeting of the Dowd to drive him to a Santa from the surgeons," said her the heart ol a little girl bom Orange County School Boards Ana intersection. Dowd was father, Gregory Graham. "She without the vital component of Association. then relieved of cash and cue surprised the seven surgcon11 the healthy hearl. The meeting will be held at and ordered to return to the who examined her by her "But they haven·L been 6:45 p.m. at the Holiday; Inn, freewa y. ability to survive to her working oul too w e 11 . ' ' ISOO S. Raymond Ave · ' Police picked up Hughes' and hold h .,_ Fullerton. Roberts will speak present age er own Granam said. "In any event, •-a,·1 after the subsequent be · d · " I I on "News and the Changing "'" in the ways is 01ng. such ' transplanted va ves on Y World." robbery of two service stations NOW PLAYING Only on Cablevision ''ROSHOMON'' JAPANESE AWARD WINNER AT VENICE FILM FESTIVAL. GRAND PRIZE 1952. ACADEMY AWARD -BEST FORE IGN FILM. f'.EWPORT: Mon.-Fri. at 9 PM; also Sat. Sun. at 6 PM. MISSION VIEJO: Mon., \Ykd., Fri. at 9 PM. Nnu before on West Co.st TV: the original, in:ut classic. STARTING MONDAY, SEPT. 14th "EXTRA GIRL" Starring M.bel Normand Directed By Mac Sennett J Lacal Channel 3 Cablevisian Call 642-3260 "There's More To See On Cable TV!" . INSTALLATION $1 4.95 MONTHLY SERVICE $6.50 The tiny, 20-pound Laurie have a life expectancy of three ,·n the area. Hu~ climaxed bo Reservations may be madr. IS""" was rn two years ago to fi ve years and he wants to hool •~ second holdup by ordering!:~~~~~~= · I J hat I through the individual sc .. ,.. without a m1tra va ve -a do much better than t or be! the allendant to drive him .. thal Jd ·t district superintendents ore unique condition wou , 1 Laurie .. , home so that he rould be with was predicted, give her only While a li ltle girl with less Sept. 14· rus ailing mother. six monlhs of life. She has than haU a heart. happily Officers surrounded th e survived until now with the whiles away the time in her (~ance r Group Hughes home and compelled added handicap of auricle and Garden Grove home, medical him to surrender. Jt was ventricle septical defects in iteience is using the time to Exceeds Goal learned that his mother was her heart. seek the solution to her urtique 1 t "They want time ," Grahan1 ailment. TUSTIN -The Orange not ailing and was not, in ac , Nearly Everyone Listens tc) Landers said, "and if Laurie can give It is. in a very real sense. a County branch or t he'l-~p~rese~n~t~at~the~horn~~·'.':·:._ __ _!=================================== Gertrvdt E11tm1!0~~1~. A•• '° o1 1111 them it they might be able lo race against time. American Cancer Society has M011•ovle, Costa Mew. 011• of det1t1. perfect and perfonn in a "I think we'll win it," said exceeded its 1970 fund drive ~eo,...,bt, 1. su,.,.lved tw .an, Edwl", DI ,. • t W'll' F ornon; 1hre1 ~u1hler1. """· M••lorl• year's time the very surgical (;regory Graham. ..Dr. goal, according o l 1am . 1-111nn, cas11 Miu: Mr•. FIDrtf!CI G. procedure that could give her Cooley, his surgeons and a lot Pelis, president. WUkln.an. S.ntt Ant Ht>ltM1; Mrs, t'l'7S OtJO J"""' T11nt1, Lo1111 ee1ch; brotrttr. a nonnal life." of wonderful people ar e The 1970 goal was ..,, , , ~ert>trl c. E••1rnan. Modesta; 11 •••nd-This does not mean, he pulling for Laurie and J'm and Pelis reports that '447,456 clllklr .... SeNlcH. Stl\lrdtl'. IO:lO AM. ""'''' unHtd M11ttoc1111 c11un:11, Coll• than half a heart happily sure she's going to make it." has been collected. Mtui, wllll Rev. Rkh1rd Dun!IP ot!lcl-l~~::;. ... ::,;..;;...iiiiiii. ................................................................................ 1 •tint . lnlormenl. W..,,lmlnlltt Memlll'ltlll P1t11;, Beu B•Oldw•Y Morl111ry, DlrKIDri. "Oii.BES c111drev P. Fort>e1. At• u . of 7CIOO W. Oc:t •n Franf. H...,PDrt Retch. O.lt cf c1e11h, S"lll. 1. Su"'lv«I bV ~1. Rlclltn! i t sl<tr l'll<'bl•, of Glerl01!1; t nd Robert P. F-•· N...,Port Bttch; t llllt trtnd· d•l!Or..,1 eltM 1tt1l-<ar•ncklllldrel'I. S1"'- tce1. Frldly, lO::Jn AM, 51. J•mtJ E,;oco. Pll Cllll•Cll. N""'PDrt llttcll. lnlerm..,I, ~•lv11t. 81111 Clll'On• dtl Mtr Mortu1ry, Dlrettofl. HOIT A,llct . T. Holl. 1615 Tullln Avt ., Ca!lt Mt•t, Su•vlv~ by nlet.1, Ru!ll 8, Curlis. roil• Mew, lnurnment, L•kuloe Cffl'lt- •t•v, C1ovrl•M, Olllo. 8•11 Sroadwl"f MDl'tut rv, Dltecton. ' STEYEMS ""•lilt Ltve•ne Stev ... 1. A11t •s. 11 1142 S•erllnll .t.vt .• Huntlntlon llffth. Ot tt of c1eul\, Sto1. 1. $urv1wd bv hu~ncl, Owtft; motlter, A1111e1 M. All1n1 chlldrlfl, Owen "'fl•n 11'1d Lvnn Alltn Sltvfllll brother1, Ltl•nd Jootoh t l'ld George A~ Ion; t"ret 1l1tt t1, Ethel Crl<!lllt, lmotont 1ten1on and ,.._•lb.II Sl1ndln9; '"" lour u,..ndchlld•fll. S.Orvltts wm bt held Frl- dev, 1 PM, Ctlutch of JtlUJ Chfilt ol Lt!!tr O.v S1ln1s. Hun!ln;IOfl ll11ch. v ;11111;on. smn"' c11eoe1, ranl11M. Tt1ur1- o11y, I ID 10 PM. Smiths Math/IN, 0 1· rKlll<'I. ARBUCKLE & SON West.cliff Mortuary C7 E. 17th St., Costt Mesi 14Mlll • BALTZ l\IORTUARIES c.oron. del Mar OR. S.1458 Costa Mesa Ml 1-tlli • BELL BROADWAY MORnlARY 111 Broadway, Costa Mesa u uw • M<.-CORMlCK LAGUNA BEACH MORnJARY 1715 Laguna Canyon Rd . U&-H15 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Ctme&uy e Moriur)' Cbaptl :Mt Pacific View Drivt Newport Beach, CalUonr. 6"-Z?lt • PEEK FAllllLY COLOMAL FUNERAL HOME 7M11 Bolo Aw.. We1hllllllter llJ.JS1S • SHEFFER MORnJAJIY l.ilpiia -~ IK-1111 Sua..iote ...... •• SMITHS' MORTUARY mM•ll. e .. u..-- AH5lt , Would removing 99% of the pollen in the air help your allergy? Ask your doctor obo11t o Hont'f· wen Elitctronlc Air Cleaner. It removn up to 95°/o of on the airborne irritants p o 1 s 1 n t throu9h. Pollen1, household dust, smoke- • Honeywell Eltctronic Air Cl1111 n11r c•rtches ell kinds of ir· r ifant1. All 1i1e1, t oo. In f ec;f, it fr11 p1 p11rficl111 so small it would take 7000 of the m to 1tretch •Cross this dot I. l ! A Honeywell Air Cleener is no cure for e ller9i111, but cese hi1· tories h11v11 shown it cloes prc- "ide relief. Telk to your elector •bout it. Then, felk to us. FRH ESTIMATE!.-NO OBLIGATION TO ~URCHASE PACIFIC HEATING CO. AIR CONDITIONING SPECIAUSTS Call Us for Prompt Service and Repair ' LAGUNA HACH LAGUNA HILLS-VIEJO 494.9745 837-2000 gas air conditioning 2175 u, ... c .. , .. u. La, .... '"'" Meet Ford's new Pinto. The little carefree car. If }00 have the questions, Pinto has the answers. Q. What e18C is stand1rd eqa.ipment? A. High Back bucket seat.'!'.. Direct.- Aire ventilation ""ith upper-level fresh air outlets. Heater /defroster Q. Whal do yoa mean, "carefree"? with 3-speed fan. Tw4'speed elec- A. Pinto's designed t.o free you from tric windshield wipers. Electric wind- car cares, big and little. Cares about i;hield washers. Your choice of 15 high prices and big gas bills. Cares Pxterior colors. And more. about parking. Cares about service Q. How about optional extras? and reliability. Power and stability. A. Pinto offers a 100-hp engine and Quiet and roominess. :J-speed automat ic transmission. Q. You 1111 Pinto i11 litUe. Ho" li Ltle1 ~ .. ron l disc brakes. Even built.-in air A. Pinto is only 3 inches longer than conditioning. TinLed glass. Vinyl VW. But it.a turning circle is actu-1•oof. '"Fl ipper" rear q uarter '"in- ally a little less, so Pinto can slip d ows. Fold-down rear seat. Bumper easily into tight parking space~. guards and side molding with vinyl Q. And inside! i nser~ to protect the 1:iaint. 1-fore A. Pinto gives you more in ter ior than most impor~ ofTer-aL price.~ roominess overall than Volks wagen. economy-car buyers can afford . And getting in and out is easier Q. Reliability? be<:ause Pinto's doors :ire a good A. Pinto's engine has already logged half-root wider. fiO million owner-driven miles. And Q. Wbal about price? Lhe strength of some of Pinto's parLot A. P inLo is priced like thE' lit.tie makes ordinary little economy car:s economy imports, too. look puny by comparison. ParLot Q. What 1boat power! like the starter motor, ball joints, A. Pinto delivers 75 horsepowt'r and rear wheel bearings are heavy duty. averages over 25 milesp.r gallon in Craftsmanship! P into i!! the only simulated city/suburban driving. American car with hnnd-matched The engine is front-mounted and ex· tra nsmission gears. ceptionally quiet for a car in tbi8 Q. Wht'a Pinto like out on the ro.d! class. Pinto 14 the only American A. P into has a wider st.'lnoc than economy car equipped wit.h a 4-anv economy import, for better precise handling, P into has r.:lck k pinion steering-like Porsche and J aguar-something you won 't find on any other American car. Q. Tell me about service. A. P into is so simple you ean rio much of the maintenance yourself, if you like. 'fhe Owner's Manual ~hows you how. And Pinto's ftef! Do-1 l· '\'ourself Key h!'lps you per- form minor service functions. Q. Suppose I don't service Pinln myself? A. You still ~\·e when your ~·ord Dealer d oe~ it. F'or E'Xl:l.mple, Pintn needs an oi l change half as often M lhe leading in11>0rl. And a chassis lube only ont-sixlh a.~ often. Q. Sounds grc:11-where can I teM · drive Pinto? A. )'our neare:;t Ford De.alcr. And if you have a ny mor1• questions, b. cun a nswer them. '· A little Better Idea from fun!. it-peed, fully synchronized Lransmis· ~ulbil ily in turns a nd gusty CCOIS.'I· 1ion at no extra cost. wind~. For more road r~I, and more ....., ...... .._...a..,. l'"ord PuQt., Paae ~ Kick Competition. Boya, 8-13, l'C&'isler al your ootreal partitipatJDir fotd l>caler oow throua:h ~ptcmber 2aa , , I • m ., II( Ir nl M c. SI ·~ In " n V( ar W• di Yt lh ... A Girl Watcher's Paradi1e • Jhurtda1, StJltmbtr 10, 1970 DAILV '1 LDT J_!f Thai Prince;;;;;;=========-. In Australia For School SYDNEY, Australia (AP ) - Crown Prln« Vajlralongkorn ol Thailand start.d ltudies at King:i; Sdlool here today "and will be treated like any other boy," said the headmaster, the Rtv. Stanley Kurrie. "Hi3 father has been very Insistent on this IOd far as poslble this is way Jt will be,'' Ill< headmaster said. The ll'rye ar-oJd Prince, who has been studying In England for the past four years, ia expected to remain at Kings about a year belore entering! the Aui«railan Royal MiUtary College in Canberra. Bible Thoughts PGl•IYINllJI "._fut'-"' lit •u.r 41iif1 t l wt fo19iv1 our dtbfon". Mtff. 6:1 2. ONLY •• wt for9h•t tho11 who offtnd "' wlll "'l bt fortlvtn OUR off111s11. Ltt "' bt 11 Goll i1, SLOW TO ANGER and QU IC TO fOlt WIVE, Mitt, 1:41, Nth. td 7. J11u1 ••Id wt 1ho11ld for9iv1 ont ,,,,,n 490 tlr1111 I !Mtlt. 11122). H•t 111yon1 tlnntd •91inif you <490 tim11? S11ch t ont lhould IM you~ 6000 i;IUEND thtr 490 c11t1 ef for9i•t1111._ Abrtl<itll'I l iRco/11 1114 tfttr tl6ctio n, thtf ht woul d ELIMINAT E: hit 1n1mi11, bv MA.KING THEM HIS FRIENDS, A.1• YOU •ntrv •t •11vo11•7 R•· pl1c1 thi1 •1191r with LOVE 111d ••• Chriif'1 w1y 1ucc••d: •·- OV•fCOl'll• •vll with 91od", Roll'\, I ?121. Thi1 world NEEDS for• tlv111111. GM'1 LOVE for 1'11111 pr<1l'llpt1d Hill'I to prciv!d1 I w1y 1f for9 iv,. 11011 for Mo11'1 1i111. THAT woy it J11u1. Ho 1o!d, "-I 1m +ho WAY, th1 t1uth 111d tho lif-", J11, t4i6. 011 tk1 c1011, H1 11 id, "-F1tk1r, for9iv1 th1m: fo1 fh•v •11ow not whit th•v dci" ( l~. 2J:l•I. St1ph•11, th1 fl~1t Ch1i1fi111 m1rty1, •ckoM th• ••"'• tho"gllt •t he 11id, "-Lo1d, l•y not tlli1 1i11 to th1Jr c!.1191", wh111111 w111to11•d lo d1•th by 111 •119ry mob, IAch 7;60l. A•• YOU 1bl• to •11hibit tl.11 1pirlt of fo19 lv111•11? It w•t whil1 """ w•r• UNWORTHY of for9iv111111 th•t God'• GR.ACE provided for It; "8"f God comm•11d1th Hi1 lo"'• tow1rd ut, in th1f, wh il1 w• w•1• v•t SINNERS, Chrht di•d for u"'. ·R.0111. Sil . VISIT the Ch11rch of Ckrt.t 111d tl~dy FORGIVENESS with 11t fr~nl'I liod'• word/th• lllLE, 217 W. Wif1on St., Coit• ""•••, C1lif. T• .. TY, C..!MI t, S..Uyt, 7:JD A.M. 'l'hat's Atlantic City this week as gorgeous girls from every state in the union get t()Jl:ether for the annual Miss Amerjca beauty pa~eant, to climax Saturday night with the crownini of the new title holder. Calilornia '• entry ta fifth from the left, front row. Vote Gets Solon in Trouble WASHINGTON CAP) -A married Congressman is like any other married man -he aometime, finds himself in trouble when he goes home at night. Take the case of Rep, Paul McCloakey, Jr., (R-Call!.). He's the man who came to Congress in 1967 after bcatina: Shirley T~mple Black in· a 1pecial election, disagreement with her hus- band. "I knew I should have called and given him the word," she said. "But it probably wouJdn't have done any good. I knew lh1t raao•l w11 Plnl to base his vote on law. Jl eometlme• takN 1 Jlttle emir tlgn kl II!~ thlr1111 don_e.'' Mr!. McCloskey de!'lcribed. herself as "a homebod y myself. I don't want any other career." women," he said. ''Laws against di~urblnc the peace prohibit Ult'! of foul or obscene language in the presence 0£ women a n d children. Labor laws require employers to provide a couch In the 1141ta' l'QOITI. "But the main thiJ1' la the drift. Equal rights meens t!Ulll obll11tlona and 1urely woman wlll be IUbject to com· bat infantry duty. "I don't want to sit buide aome girl In an Anny latrine, and I don 't think she does either. "I rather treasure some of the diatinctions between the sexes, and this amendment wipes out all distinctions.'' Mrs. McCloskey said-her husband did f10t lose her vote, but he probaltly made a lot of women very unhappy. Shlrley Temple Black pro-· bably would have voted the other way. You Work Less You Save Money Keeps things cleaner with<1ut effort, eliminates bath tub rings Soap and clothing last lon;er. He's also one of the 15 men !n the House who voted last week agajnst the constitutional amendment to forbid denial of equal rl&hts on account of sex:. "But I think women ought to 11'"" ____ .,,lt!I _________ ..,,..,""" l..iuandry .. OllhH 0 \11.pet'O Are Cleaner have equal opportunity with Cleans • Sparkle "I·called my wife-"CUbby" is a lovely girl," McClo.skey related. "I said, 'Dear, I just voted against the equal rights amendment. And t he r e weren't very many of who who did. men ; and I don't think they have it. I think that's discrimination in hiring." l\'len in Seryice Ask About Sears Conven ient Credi t Plans FREE Estimates! Phone Sears Today! ''She 1aid, 'I was afraid you'd do aomethiitg foolish like that.' " Caroline ''C ubby'' McCloskey confirmed h e r McCloskey said he launched into a "long, scholarly ex:· planation, but she didn't buy it. She's a delightful person - my strong right arm." "In 14 years practicing law, J've learned that there is an awful Jot of law makina: v1Jid distinction between men end ..... * * * * * * * * * * *,.. * * ***I MERCURY SAVINGS · and loan aslllciation NOW OPEN EVERY SATURDAY IOA.M.-4 P.M. 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COLORFUL PINATAS PAPER UNLIMITED " wtSTCLIFF PLAZA 548·7'21 . . • Sty·le · 'HAIR SPRAY · A ••1•IJr. s.,,r 11e1•'••• U1scetl••· Rti. lk ll 1t. 32 GAL. TRASH CAN No rust. Potyetfrlylent con1tructl0fl ends 9orbacjt con clatter. A.•ocado 9reen. ' RION · 'HARDWAR~ WESTC>LIFF PLAZA 642-1133 Open Evenings & Sund•ys leS.re Te See Our In-Store Specie!! World Famous BEEF STICE Exclusively a.t ~/Iii)~ tfl NEWl'OIT H•CH 'lJ'tj ~ \') (JS~{?_~ Wnkllff ,. .. , 1411 "11 ,,;/' ..... ,,, ~lf~~ OllN~I •n/l9 lJl!J~ ·• Tewe & ~e111h'y Clflfff IJF vrr. 0 141·101' AMERIGA 'S LEAD ING CHEESE STORES I • •9ne"stop' shopping ' • at its finest! OPEN THURSDAY AND MONDAY EVENINGS ' . . .. ' '"'' WEiil'$ . SPECIAls . • NORTHllN_ ·~ • •• • • . · 4 • TOILET TIS:$UE .................. ~~~'.. AU WAtlnllS -MIX Oil MATCH , . . s100 GRAPES ·......................... 5 lbs. ,· PAIMll .IO+tN · · · . . • • ' · ~9' SHO.~LDER ~ICNICS ................ .,'!'I . LL 1,lff:-$9LIP...,,'@UTY SAU..D .' : , , . ' 19' ·TOMATO~S .. , ....... :.: ....... : ... ':. ' . LI . .. · MARKET BAS~ET . .. · . ' WJSJCUFF. PLUA. . '! I\ ' '• ' ' • S:·P'E c;r A .i. ! . UNLINED DRAl'ERIES . . , ~~':~!~ FOLDED .. ' . • ...... ,. ; ;95¢ P~~Et ~~~nc:N~:D51'REA~S, E_T~: ..... : : . . $.0¢ LL .. MONTGOMER .Y • . ·. . c LEAN E RS & LA u N'D RY . li#•l~i"'"'' · WESTCLIFF PLAZA OPEN DAil'( S·:9: OUR IACK·TO-SCHOOL Sl'ECIAL FREE HAIR CONDITIONING With Your Shampoo & Set Optometrist ~-Lou Roy Elder • CONT ACT LENSES • REFRACTING • EYE WEAR STYLING • PRESCRIBING .WESTCLIFF PLAZA . 11 24 IRVINE NEWPQRT BEACH . 6~2.0720 MEN'S FORMAL WEAR SPECIALISTS. darr.etl 's . dedric.k TUX SHOP . .SALES ~ · DE LUXE RENT A.LS WESTCLlfF PLAZA I t 30 Irvin • Newport Beech ••••. 8891 . ~~-z;,.~ '"'' Fall COBBLERS BENCH t..t WI lt1°Stylir Now! I CONftNI ENT SH0'5 e COltONA DEL MAR -J401 I. CMlt Hlthw.., e NIWl'O lT IUCH -J4JJ Vie Lide e 74 FASHION ISLAND -Newpert '-th e WISTCLIFF Pl.Ali -1101 lmlM Aft. -N_,.rt kh • ••IM•"'' Fin1He11 bind . ' } , ' l ! " • • , ' !' I , ' • ' I •• ' 1 l JU .. h• ·~ ,. d• d " rr A II "' It 11 ho pl \ • . . •• I i -~-~--........,-.,-------------------------~---~~~ 1 ;, Fun'S·the Name of .... , . , .. c ·osta .Mesan s Game HUMPTY DUMPTY -1'he famous Mother Goose character Humpty Dumpty has a great many falls in a carnival game de. signed and constructed by Mrs. Riley Gaynor of Costa Mesa. One of • series of games made especially fo r use at school carnivals, . , • , , DAILY,l"ILOT '""-"" bY Lff If"' it is a bean· bag l()ss.· P racticing his tec,hn iqu·e. is~Roger _Rigg~ .. a "customer". at on e of the ·neighborhood · CilrnivaJs stage(! lly Mrs: Ga y.nor's cl!ildren.. 1 , •• 1 1 , • 'FISHING FOR PRIZES -Even if she doesn't catch a th ing, Brenda Gaynor w·nl.~in a prize because s he know s that at her mother's ca rn ivals, everyone wins. something. The fishing game is one of more than 20 Mrs. Riley Ga.ynor . has ·designed. ' LOLLIPOP TREE -David Gordon find~ that you don't •have. to be a sucker to play a carniva l game. Everyone wins, honestly . Hwnpty D.umpty sat on 1 wall, HwnJ¥(y D.wnpty>had a great fall. AJI because a bean bag hit him. Jt 's all the fault of Doris Gaynor, a PTA enthusiast who has an unusual sideline -she builds carnival ga?ies. . It all started when Mrs. Gaynor wa!li ways and means cha1nnan for a PTA, one ol the four she belongs ''1· and was in charge of .th.e annual carnival. Motivating the mothers tp help with booths wa~ d1ff1- cult at times, so she decided to make soJ games hersell to assist the volunteers. Simple Simon , a fishing game, a . Humpty Dumpty were the fi rs t. Then came a shooting gallery, wh~di util izes a barbecue motor, a color wheef, treasure chest, sugar pluri. tree. cowboys ·and Indians. clown bean bag toss, dartboard, hoop-la cats on a fence and a spinning picture. I She has made about 20 in aJJ but some fizzled out because they didn 't catch t'he inteTest of the smalJ fry. MATERIALS EASY The materials for the games aren't hard to find -·plywood , . paintbrushes and whatever paint there happens to be around~ Mrs. Gaynor gets her ideas from carnivals lat fa irs, school canivals and other events where there are games. And she gets tremendously insplr,ed by the rides at Disneyland · where her husband Riley works in ttf.e summer when not teaching el ectronics at Anaheim High Schoof. ~ere mention of· the ''Small World " attraction makes her eyes ligh' up with inspiration. One of the niceSt things about Mrs. Ga ynor's carnival' games is that everyone gets a prize. win or lose! · Besides the schools and churchet lba't use' her games, her most faithful customers 11[e her two youn~st. children, Brenda. '10, and Becky, 13. They set them1up·on the fron1 law_n',and run their-own minia- ture carnival for neighborhood childretJ . MUSCLE M EN ·•· The oldest children. Kenny, l~. aind Karen~ 17. are the "J'!l~!clc ruen'.'._.to-move the heavy games to ~nd from the ir garage storage , spa<;es. · ' When the game of life becomes t.oo hectic. the Gaynors pile into· th~ir camper, attach their "old ski be/at" on the back and head for Lake Mead or Lake Sa n Antonio , l plete with Tashya and King, their ·huge Samoyed and Shepherd d s. A multitalented woman, Mrs. ·ayno r knits, sewlli, paints and nlakes transparencies of technical dra1wings for her husband. She us· ually makes a new game when th ere i;s a need for on e. A faithful PTA work er and dev!¥ted mother, Mrs. Gaynor is-all l or school carnivals, with or wi thout her games. · "The best bargain around fo r children's entertainment is ·a PTA carnival. Where else could they sper.td a dollar and be entertained. all day~" PIRATE'S INTRIGUE - A favoril•J game of most children attending ca rnivals is the ·treasure chest built rlJy the Costa Mesa resident. 08.vid Gordon explores the enticing chest ~hich is full of su rprises for ·tou;, Mom'·s Song Due to End if She Doesn't Change 1Her Pitch J • • DEJlR ANN LANDERS : Here ii is in :i nuc.ahell ~ 1 was married At l!'i anrl had a IOll one ye11r later. The following year t hid another son and two years il!ler, 11 tl*d. .After ID years nr a stormy marriage my husband left me. I was determined to raise my boys lo be good dtlzens. • For some unknown reason lhe womrn f•J".'Y ~amily do ool show their age. My Jriothtr is 69 and could easily pass for •R. ~ Atthough'I am 35 l still get asked for my JD card. when I order a cocktail. Several of my son 's friends have h11d <Cruahe! on me. I've alwa ys ·laughed aboul Jt unUI a few mOllhs agn when 11 ttrlain 11-yMr~ld 11!.arled hangi n~ arot111d tile Mu!e, writing pootry' 11bout mt J1nil pJaytng my favorite scm&s on his guitar. l \ ANN LANDERS am a.shamed to ·tell yoo how much I f'n joy this. An", J've bttn dreaming 4'bout his kid rnr a week straigh t. The next morning I feel so guitly, l can't look al mysetr in the mirror. · I have ple11ty of friends my O"'n age 11nd dn nnl lack for male companionship. My specia l beau is a police ofricer in the juvenile titvislon who ha!!i been a lr€mendous l"flucnre in helplng me·ralse my boys. Do yoo lhink t need to see • psychiatrist! .lf 1 follow my desirei;, J h;ile to thfnk where lhey wlll lead me. \Vhal should I tell myself to keep me nn the straight and narrow'""'7 which I kit0w l must do al all cost.-R.J. of L.A. DEA R. R.J.: tf you rUll)' want ln solve thi~ pl'ftblem, 1'-frs. Rohlnstn , don't talk tn ~·ou r~lr -'-ltY s&methlog lo lht: kid. Like, "f'lake off , Ruddy Boy, I'.m old enough to be your mother.'' DEAR ANN LANDERS : Thls mlghL bt the mosl unusua l letter you.h;ive recei,1ed Jn a long whi le. You frequenlly call on phy1icla•i1 for help. This time: a ph ysici;in is calling on you . Please tell me what lo do about a 2._ year~ld daughter who is divorced, has two chi ldren aod pleRly of money from her exhusband. The gir l will not use the good brains GOO gave her. She runs ;iround with a bunch or crazy kids (mo&t of them you nger th;in )l(rself), drinioi: beer with vodk;i cha!!frs, smokes abt>ut three packs of cig;irettes A day, i.• dangerously overweight. and e a t ii everything ,she shouldn 't She has high blood preMure .a..rl ,· pepUc uJcer but refuses In 't;i\f!. the. mcdi~atlon I have prescribed rnr her. . Jf this 1irl were nol my daughler t wouldn't bother wilh her for five mi•J.e:s. I hale to turn my baek on her, but ~he situation is going from bed to worse. '.!She has seen.two psychlalrisls and didn't1g:et along wil.h either of them. I am drained dry, ta lked out, disgusltd and fed' up, What . do you suggest? -DEN\1ER DO~DRUMS I · DEAR DEN: This girl Is going In pr:io,•e that Y" can't tell her what to do -qi.rea ii if kl Us lter, Aad II ml1llt. · Tell.ber al 1111ce to flDd anoUter doc:¥l>r. Offer te recommend a couple aDd let ~r chooM:. Dt•'t rernJDd ftrer I• lakt ~r medlelne ind don't ask her hew .~ r~·ls. ·"l'be: punUlvr. 1spect11 C'lf thl1 girl'• 8':lf- de,.lructlve behavior art enormou5, She doe.u't care what the does to M.rsclti M ~ lnn1 11 she makes life mlsua,ble for 1"· When 1ht dl1Cflver1t you have.rt:ilped •t her whipplnf boy she mipt 1lve •P ud Jtl well. · CONFIDENTIAL m WHICH ONE WHICH WAY ?: Number one M\UtldS likl the best of the lot. A sin1er can refOl'WI. Manners can be learned. But·an Idiot 11 forever. Do you feel Ill at t.ate ••. oat of It? •~ l"verybody baviai a •ood dmt llllt )'OI? Wri~ fOt' Ana l.andt r:s' '**let. "TM Kty lo Ptp11l..t&y,~ tttelo.U.1 widli )'90t' request 3$ ccnhl In col• tnd a -,. self· addtt8M:d. •lamped cnvektpe la c1re or Ille DAILY PILOT. I • ""~'-'"'""'""""'~-..i:;.;·~~-~-::...!.· -·~""'IOL•_.,•._;;'°'~•CJ•~~<?.t·r:::.!:_=-=."'-':..!:"-'Z--.--Z.:""Jl~""="",_."'°~·~·~·..,,.,."" . ..,"".,....,.~=~~~•~~~~·=•~~~~~-'~=~~~~~-~---·~~·~~~~L~·~~-~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~ I •I Thu~y. Stptembff 10, 1970 J•~---· Your Horoscope Tomorrow P.isces: Look Behind Scenes FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 11 By 8\'DNEY OMARR BrUllut wrtter Aul• Nla la very famUtar wit.II ••troloO' -and eapeclally with ber own sodlacal 11p, Pilcn. r a stadylq my wrtdq1, .Jae waa t1Dd ...,11 to commeat la • Jetter &o me, .iyear bowledre el Pllcea: bi mlrlcu1ou1." ARIES (March 21·AprU 19): Some of your hopes and wiJhes approach fuUlllment. Bert to turn on ch•rm and uu dlplomalie approach. Some elalm you appear moody. So be It. Steer clear of foolish dJJputes. TAURUS (Aprll 20-May 20): Don't 11 h l r k responaibiJlty. Accept challenge . Ba versatile, ready with alternative mtliiOdi. One In po1!Uon of authority I a Intrigued wtth yoor potenUal. llapond acconllnJly. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Brtak through restrlcUona . Much that you do, aay and write will have important be•rinl on your future. Key Ls lo know what 'must be kept, whatdlscar<led .. CANCER (June 21.July 22 ): You may find that Unanclal situation causes pace to slow. Mate or partner reveals need for change or p\aru. Be ne1lble -and receptive. Member of opposite se1 pays solid C1>mpliment. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Aceenl on public relations, l'f:Sponse of others to your special presentations, efforU. No time to push. or threaten. Win your way through diplomaUe approach. -lnclude family member in plans. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22\: Caution la your ally. Be wary -aiia a shrewd observer. Be analytJcal. One who works with you may be trying some unsavory maneuvers. Take your time. You wlll emerge victorious. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ): Emotions •re thick, heavy. You can Cl'f:ale, engage In m e a n I n g f u I relationship. Nothing is apt to occur halfway. Don 't play games. Stakes are hJgh and involve opposite sex. SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov. 21 l: Your efforts are apt lo pay dividend3. Means you know where you stand -and wh•t tD do about it. Refuse to hang on to outmoded concepts. Break through barriers - artificial and otherwise. and fii material H:nte. Bf! receptive. One who wms indifferent Ls arWouf t n please. Know this and respond accordingly. Be altrt for lcglUmate bargain. AQUARIUS (Jan. ~Feb. circumstances favor y nu r efforts. TJke i nltlatJvf!. Expres.s Independence o I thought,' aetkm. F o 11 o w through on J d e a •· Dttplay unique talenta. Important oew conlact Ls indicated . PISCES (Feb. IS.March 2'1 ): You know what you want - key Is to obtain It. You do this by lookirig behind the scenes. Don 't expect the obvious. It will be an un ort hodo:t •pproach that ga ins best result3. Act accordingly. IF TODAY JS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are intuitive, an excellent teacher. willing ID share knowledge. You have embarked upon new cycle and benefits are indicated. Stress wlllingnes,, to Invest in your own abilities. ~OT DOG! A PICNIC -Packing the family car :or the third annual Orange Coast Mothers of Twins :lub's picnic are Mrs. Arthur Tinsley and sons itephcn (left) and Tracy, 2. The outing, which will jnclude a parade of multiples, will take place Sun~ day, Sept. 13, and alJ Orange Coast parents of twins are invited to attend . Mermaids Swim Into Busy Year SAGin"ARJUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): You find there are numerous: demands on Ume, effort . Key Is to ad.here to principles. There ls no easy way. There is only your way. Means accent style, originality and independence. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You gain -emotionally To fl"!! 11111 mor• •lloul ¥OU•Hlf 1mt ••l•D!Mr. orclt• S~dl\IV Om1rr'• 50-.... ~ltl, T~t Trvllo AIMIUI Atlt&I• "~· kt>d ~11nc1111 ind • ctnrt ht Otn1rr laoklff, Tiii Dtll~ "'Ila!, 8&-. JUO, Gri nd Clftttll Sl1Tlofo, Nt,. Vort, N,Y, 10917. Club Members Relish Annual .Twins Picnic Mn. Lloyd Miine will be installf!d u pre11ldent ol the Mennaid!:, Laguna B e a c h Ola.pt.er of Women l n Chamben ol Co mmer c e, durin1. a noon luncheon on Monday, Sept. 14, in the Towers reetaurant. which will begin with an 11:30 a.m. social hour will be Mayor Richard GoldbeJr who will dllcuss recent event! i n Laguna Beech. He will be lntrodu<ed by M.... Wil!Wn Baek, program chairman. Speci•I , guest! will b e members of~the Business and Profe111lonal Women's Club who will toast the new president who also is a member of BPW. Two rings for iwr» _, loverst • ' • I.10th rings $aa.oo Fh1nt 1111 .. lillf tll•-1111 111 14K t.ill -Hl!Cled. ..... ,..111ine41 Easy credit fltrms • sludenl CKtou11to ovoiloble • up to 12 months to P9' lan\cAmwicard • Maiter Ghorg• 1 "THE STORES CONFIDENCE·dUILT" E1tobliohod 43 Y .. nl NUNTINeTOM CINTllll llMCll A 1111 ...... _ .. _ - ' ·--' OHM MON., THUU. I NI. "111 t l't.M. Trying not to forget the pickles or the relish are membe.rs or the. Or•nge Coast Mothers of Twins Club as thf! gro.up prepares for its third annual picnic. Other v\sltoni to Santa Ana Memorial Park will be "seeing double" between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 13, when Recruit-s Requested Single yoong women 35 and under are needed by Stars and Bars to attend week I y hospitality hours and social evcnta for bactielor officers at Orange County military bases. Orientation sessions r o r interested girls will Lake place al 2 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 12, in the California Federal Savings and Loan building, Costa Mesa, and at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. JS, In the Caltfoml• Fedttal buUding, Anaheim. Mrs. Haniet1 W e a v e r • national director. will conduct the sessions, accordln1 to Miss .Joan Fortner and M i s s Shery lie Riederer, 0 r a n g t. County CCH:halrman. M i s s Elaine D' Ambrosio and Mis!'I Sharyl Clemens alto wiil assist. ARTISTS' SIDEWAILK BAZAAR I September 14 thru 19-cti the esplanade at Santa A"a Fashion Square. Watr:h artists create and . seethe colorful displays elf paintina:s, drawlna:s, sculpture.ceramics, wooct:::.rvina:s and watercolors _.l. FASHION SQ UARE ·= Santa Ana anci Garden Gllove FrHway1 at Main . ' I the fam ilies gather for the outing. Fol~owlng the tl a.m. to I. p.m. lunch, the twins and other mulUples will line up for a P1r1de through the park where the marchers will be judged Jn dlfferent categoriea. After the parade, which wl\I be for members' children only. game.a and C1>ntesb will take place for children of all ages. Prospr c tlve members' chlldrf!n also are Jnvlted lo fl)\rUelpate in these game~1. In charge of arrangementa 11 Mrs. Gary E. Johnson. social chairman. The club Is open lo all women in lhe community with twin• or muJliples, • n d prospective membe~ a r e invited lo join the day's activities. Benefit Rummage Offered Speaker for the meeting January Rites Date Selected Other members accepting po9ts are the Mmes. James Brlmble and McClellan Cole, vice president.a ; Catherine MaeQuarrle and M e I v I n Sheldon, secrelarie.s, a n d :Oetty Myera, c h a m b e r repretentative. During an afternoon patio New committee chairmen party, Mr. and Mrs. George include the Mme!. Cttarles M. Cejka ol Cotta Mev an· Gauthey, awards; Ray Friesz, nounced the betrothal of their trees for new babies; F. G. daughter. Janet Theresa Cej-Peterson, beautification ; Peg ka to Charles La Mont Rough Allen and Fletcher Kettle, Jr. of Orange. beauty spot awards. and Members of the Cflgageri Thomas Johnston. dtt"Of'ations. f>llir's immf!diate f • m 11 i e 11 Additional chairmen are the were present for the occ11ion, Mmes. Robert Soule r , inc I u d i n g the future hospitality; Walter Hammond bridegroom 's parents, Mr. and and .Jack Rowe, information M ~-rl I R .... booths; Doris Funk, mailing ; rs • ..,,.., es •• ou&' .. St. John the Baptist Catholic Floyd Lee , membership ; Onrdl of Cost• Mesa wlll be Robert Turner. nominations ; the scene of the wedding on Cy Nuient. parliamentarian; January 29.,_. E. M. Johnston, pubtlclty; Our S1le1 l•dies CARE-fh1t you look your best in • 9own from O'Brien'• FEATURING !HE FINEST SE LECTION OF DRESSES SUITS COATS PANT SUITS LONG GOWNS SIZES 6 TO 10 Our Alteretion D1p1rtm1n• ....,ifl be hippy to 11fer eny 91rment in your werclrobe YOUR CH~RGE ACCOUNT WELCOME •7l·ltt0 MASTER CHARGE AVAILAILE PARKING IN REAR Both the bride-e\e('t and her Lf!onard A1elrod, teacher's riance attend Califo rnia State luncheon ; B. M e r I e s , College at Fullerton, where telephone ; Clyde S fl! i t z, J1he pla.Id to complete work as yearbook, .and Pete Fulmer, an art major in June, 1971 ,~w_l_nt_er_r_es_U_v_al_. ____ .....:!=====================' •nd ht plans to complete re--:- A rumm•ge sale to benefit their philanthropies, including Fairview State HotpiLal. is being planned for tomorrow at 9 a.m. in their clubhouse by tile member1 or Costa Mesa Junior Womens Club. qulrements for a degree in political acience in January. Miss Cejka was graduated from Mater Del High Sdlool in Santa Ana and her future husband from Cre1centa V11iey lllgh School. CaliforniaCo//e9e Busy collecting and JJOrtlng donaUons Is a committee headed by Mn. D a v I d Melcher, ways and means chairman. H e r ~workers include the Mmes. Michael Hamper Delights Mound, David Sheldon and Spanish motif acceasories Michael Byrne. for bathroom beauty Include a Al!o aided by funds raised hamper with matching storage through the rummage sale will chest and basket. ENROLL NOW· FALL TERM: September 28, 1970 TELEPHONE: 436·9767 or 435-5367 "DAY OR EVENING CLASSES" TWO.YEAR COURSES h1ill•H l•111Midt1liooi Hit~" AccM•tffot .l(cey1tiftt -Dill '•KIHiflt. SHORT-TUM COURSES s ....... ,i.i( M14M:.I Tt1•1cr;,tio•"' (1.,M:i l full.CM•t• IH~ • ..,iftt K•n>v"'~ ••Y1h·•' ci.1111 l v1i•t 11 M1c•i•11 Sharthti•4 •n4 '"""' 111•!01 Ani1li•t {G•lft •' Al( Shtrlh.•l) ONE-YEAR COURSES l .. 1l S1tr1!1rill Mt4ic•l S-c,.1t1iol S-cttr1riol (G• .. t or ll( Shrtt..Mi). Junio• .+.ecou•l"'9 be the club's adopt fl! d Unaffe('ted by moisture, the philanthropy, Fir.st Step House set can be wiped with suds. It for alcoholiC9. ,~i~1~a~v~al~la~b~le;ln~ant~l~q~ue~w~a;ln~uJt ;;;~~~~~~~~~:~:~~~~~~~~:~===~~~~~-Mra. Michael E 1 1 e y . or Florentine gokl finishes. memberahlp chairman, Invites all young women from the " ages of lll to 35 to call her at 546-1397 if they wi sh further Information about tbt club, which is dedicated t o community service, Trousers Patterned Fancy pants or patterned lrouterS are papu~r with sch«tl boys. Name the pattern : stripes, windowpanes, herringbones, plaids, tar.tans, or tattersal.s. You'll probably find 1 good seleellon of each in the stcres when shopping for back·lo- ochool clothes. .... ·"::. 11. -.,_ ,. ,",")q-• '~·· . ~:::. -.. :/- .,) . ; "" I' • I I 1y j< • , l' ' Al'l'RAISALS OIAM0N06 GEMSTONES ESTATE JEWELRY Sowllt Ce11I 'I••• l t!ilol 1+ 5111 Oi•90 Fwv. Co,11 M.11 S40.t06• , I I ,. I I HAIR TODAY, GONE TOMORROW WITH NEW A LA NUE A ln Nu ~ i~ l1k~ 110 depilotory yo1/ve ever usl'!d beforf!. Odor· 1t-~~. poi11le:s:s, o\ elf itien! o.\ wox- ing •• , but, the hP.ot is off ! So ~1n1p!e lo use. just apply the gen- !lf! cold creon\ to your a rm~, IP9s, lacr, e-ven your eyebrows. Fo llow the eo~y d 1r ect1ons, nnrl voilO, your ski11 is sohly, :srnooth ly )101rfrf'e for n lor1g !11ne 10 cornf!, And hair q row~ bo ... k ~lower, soi- l"•, w11h rio \l ubble, 6 Ol, 7.50, 12 Ol. ior, 12.50 MISS LUCY SHULER w;!f b1 In our Co1m etic 01p1rtment on S1turd1y, September l 2, to demonstrete thi1 beeuty es1ent i•I. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=.llNtwport •I f•shion ltl•nd Newport Center e 644-2200 e M.on., Thurl., Fri. 10:00 till 9:JO. Other dey1 10100 tlll 6tl0 .. I ' ___ _l__ r t I ' ' t ' " Ye Doir and Co. Bill Hen STY ishiJ peti• as l He c Or agai: the Ed1> place Disn Fo \\ill ,,.,., part COllll aessi• ,..._ ,- Si~ •• ... w. •• Youths Rally Round Conservation Doing their part to beautify America by collecting and returning empty glass containers to Kerr Glass Co. in Santa Ana are (left to right) Mark Dugle, Bill MacGowan and Lynn Dugle, members of the Henry Bowen Society, Children of the American -~-= .. =~-------------------- Effort Wedding Ceremony Pe Ff armed Planning a home In Newport Beach are the former Betty Ann Davis of Santa Monica and Roger Dean Walck of Costa Mesa, who w e r e mmied in St. Olaf Lutheran Church, Garden Grove. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John F. Davis was given Jn marriage by her father for the afternoon ce r em ony performed by the Rev. Ernest A. Gjelten. · Parents of the bridegroom are 11-ir. and Mrs. Herman Walck of. Costa Mesa. Paul Walck was his brother's besl man and Gordon Walck joined Timothy Wier. Andrew Opsal, Douglas Norby and Willian1 Morrow as ushers. Attending the bride was Mrs. Jim Massey as matron of honor and Miss Cindy Rlbal as maid of honor. Bridesmaids included Mrs. Kenneth Davis, the bride's sister-in-law, Mrs. Peter Ross, Miss Terry Nelson and Miss Beverly Doctherman. Niece and nephew of the bride, Tracy Leigh Davis and Darren Davis served as flower girl and ring bearer. ' The bride, who is past worthy advisor for Columbia Chapter, Order of Rainbow for Girls, was graduated from University High School in West Los Angeles. S h e attended Santa Monica College and Biola College in La Mirada. Revolution. The truck was loaned by Graybar Elec· tric Co. in Costa Mesa to assi st them in their proj~ ect, a final activity of the summer, with their first fall meeting scheduled on Saturday, Sept. 12, in the home of Mrs. M. M. Sampson. Her husband, whD will attend Southern California College, was graduated from Newport Harbor High School and attended Ca l ifornia Lutheran College. • Summer Recess Ends For SC Junior Club The Tee CEdlh!/"'1 Note: A colum11 Ill' wom~11'• too aolf 1<-s Wiit 1oi>e•r eetll w1-ek I"""" OAILY PILOT. lo rmort scores t!"~ ...,.~"",, olteM mell !fl.em to P.O. """ 1-. ot!• Mesi. l~ev must i.. recelvlld b\I mondllV.l Summer recess ends when regular bimonthly meetings of San Clemente Junior Woman 's Club resume on Tuesday, Sept. 15, at 8 p.m. in the San Clemente Beac;h Club. To launch tbe season, a fun Lunchbox Improved night with games, cards and EL Tori:o •EST THalEES -A Cl1H, the prizes has been planned by Mmft. Henrv Scl!Wt"fldlmann, o.vld Fltmatrltk, Jl1 E. R, Cla~, Len Mrs. Richard Breeden , S•k1, llv.; c1••'l' M1, •• ziv:11 a c11s., the Mmos Al Tunnejllf11, ll; L. J , program chairman. Murtha, Robert Chr siY1 JlV.J EUii Hitnry, '2; ll.11'111! Ml•htld, l'JYJ; C C h a I. r m e n r e c e n t 1 y <•I••· "''" Mmes. 11.otier1 ev111,_ 31v,; Richard Marlin. I(, W, F....cll1r, .a.:i. completed a master calendar I L N•GUIL llE$T TWO 8ALL OF l'OURSOME - O( proJ·ects and e Vent$ First, !hi Mme1. ErNSt Hwn, Hwm1n Dl!Planou., H"fon Gof/1 Wlllltm --•••uJoo ( the cl b Flllllei"IY, llS; $t(ond, TM Mmts. ~M;U or u year, Les lie-w1111on1 1. A. P••••s'1'11 R. s. Mover. Rober lml>t'I', 136; Th rd, the aoconfing to Mrs, Raymond Mmft. Joe ~ Bello, Rlch1rd Kroomtn, 6"1 Mennt, Mlrlhl Turne•, Lynell, dean of chairmen. 137; Fourth. !ht Mmts. RJcharo inaJ 1 I P11nons, Frenlt L11ruv11rl, Robert F. p ans or a Wednesday. MtCelhlrv. Wllllarn Eoan. 1:11. Sept. 16, Orange District lllV1NE COAST ' . . S •-Ana 'll be LOW IALL OF THllll!SOMIE -Th~ mee IDg U1 anwo. WI Mmes, ROiier Turner,. J1ck JCll.v. Ml"' Among new lunch kits for presented by Mrs Benn Erica Gun11or, 621 me Mmes. T. P. · Y c~~i;1:: :1 i•.aM~~-a. •. J. J.~. DAILY l'llDT Good Things Come in Small Boxes Golden yJest College facuJty wives (left to right) the Mmris. Tom Hermstad, ~yd \VtlC?X and Ray Shackleford ready box suppers for a get-acquainted so- cial on Fr1d.ay, Sept. 18 at 6 p.m. in the Santa Ana home of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Harrulton. Dress and entertainment will be casuaJ for the first event on the calendar and reservations may be made until Tuesday Sept. 15 at the college business office. ' · Tattler Meclical Group Every second Tuesday of the month members of Orange Shores Medical Assistants' Association assemble at 8 p.m. Location may be obtained by calling Mrs. Janis Anderson, D111't WGIN yo1r cllilck crltlcat fonnotl" '"" •• , i!MS...,_ tho Mo11tuteri Method. AGES Jl/2 TO t FALLINIOLLMINTS NOW school are those featuring T a y J 0 r • red er a t 1 0 n Nwrls, '61 Ed'Wllrd Few, Dontld television and s to r y b o o k development chairman. ,;:;"'"====================-I 499-2511. personality decorations, as Following ttie b u s j n e s s well as those in classic plaids meeting, relr~ts will be and floral prints. served by the Mmes. David Whetbe!' metal or soft vinyl, Andersoo, Donald Bare and aII kit.s in the line contain a Richard Benjamen. matching thermos sealed in a Women between the ages of polypropylene plastic jacket. 18 and 35 with an interest in 'n1e manufacturer says this community service are invited bottle is more durable because to attend the meeting. Those it is rust, dent and chip-proof. interested In .inforamtion may To keep kit and bottle fresh call Mrs. Bruce Le w i s , and free fom ha rm f u I membership chairman, 492- ,special! bae'terial, wash each after use. 1764. 1----=----.------11 5-piece Salad Serving Sat Saute ladle, salad serMs: b'k and ._.In sJ<9:lling OrfgJnal ~ s-palrod -SW' ftulad cleat crystal ....,. -and 117' STYLE PREVIEW -Larry Patchen puts the fin· ishing touches on the style he will enter in the com- petition of the llairstyling and Educational Show as Miss Chris Daniel smiles approval. Hairdresses Gather Competition Styled Orange Coast hairstylists will be Miss Sallie Ponce,,sty]e again are looking forward to director of the Official Hair the annual Hairstyling and Famion Committee o( the Educational SOOw, to take National Hairdressers place SUnday, Sept. 13, in the As.50Ciation. Disneyland Hotel. Winners in the styling For the 13th year, stylists competition will receive v.i U attend clasSes in the trophjes and cash prizes. newest look for fall and take Stylists wi.U compete for Utt part in . hair dre ss ing title of Orange Count y cooipetition. Conducting the Haintresser-ol-the-year an d sessions on Gentle Elegance the Orange cup award. ' VIRGINIA'S SNIP 'N' STITCH SHOPPE lll4 East Coast Hwy. • Corona 'del Mer Phone 673-8050 SEW YOURSELF INTO FALL Whtt L111gth7 \VJ!ef w • .,7 Yeut Wa.,! Sill'lpl1city, Vogu•, llutl•ric.k I Mc.Ctll book1 .,f,tr ptfi1r111 i11 '"'l'Y l•11gth '"" look. You c.hoo1e the pttf1111 end w•'ll b• h•PP't. to htlit you 11!1c.f 1uif•ble ftbric.1. W1'v1 "rtplt11ith1d" eur 1upplv ef wool tw .. dt, h,,,;rtgbone we1v•1 ell4 tmaU c.hec.ltJ, 10 populer il'I ready to wear, ~., You Sool'll VIRGINIA PS. Cheelt our Boutique room for 1011'11 wool •11ih tnd 11ov1I• ti11 from • "Ge1l9111r1 workroo1t1.'' , -o saladbciWL $395 only .... Cheftt' It or Ute YMr l~ ll:trtc..,._ • M•ter CIMn't• • h.itANri&Ofd The Store• I That Confidence Built JEWELERS FOR 43 YEARS NAJl.10-SMO,PlHO CIMTIJI: 2)tf M•'"' ''"· '"'' "'-...... MUNTINOTON CfNTl"-llMleh llvd. a ~dl11ter Hlllllllltlell AMC.II tt2,UOI Op11 Mo11 •• "''"" ftf. 10 'ril t '·"'· BULLOCK'S AND ELIZABETH ARDEH INVITE YOU TD JOIN US AT THE RED DDOR BEAUTY CLINIC lrs ttme for a <han~ of fate! So step through Ille l311111s Red Door. You11 receive two and a half houn of personalized beauty instruction from mal .. vp 1uthorities,.a e<illection of 19 beauty preparatiDf!S and a $2 credit roward any Elizabeth Arden purthase. Fe\ $5. Can today and be sure of admission to tJie ciinie best timed for your convenience. S<Mdule of <linics: MONDAY, SEl'T.14 2:00 PM and 6:30 PM TUESDAT,SEl'T.15 10:00 AM and 2:00 PM WE011£SOAY, SEPT.16 10:00 AM and 2:00 PM TlfUllSOAT, SEPT.17 2:00 PM and 6:30 PM FllDAT, SEPT.18 10:00 AM and 2:00 PM ~i SANTA AHA ; . BULLOCK'S SANTA ANA. I FASHIO N SQUAR~ 147-llll, OP£H MONDAY THRU FRIOAY. l:JO A.M. • 9:30 PJI. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. • 5:30 PJI. eathery Headdresses Set Mood for Powwow Santa Monica Home Chosen our Lady Quoon ol Aitpll Ol111rcb1 C°""'a del Mu WU lht !I t1n1 In wlll<h Jl!lll llullman and Jltl')' Callaway flchanrd lllelr Wlddlfte _, and rlnc•. Th• bride, d•ullhllr of Mro. Martha ~lul•man ol ValltJ• ind lfu1h J, Stutam1n or We1tmln1ter, wa1 1iven In marrl11e by her f1tb1r. Olllclatln1 d u r I n I tho ~erernotty w11 Ult R • v • Raymond S1pli1, Attondln1 lh< bride u mold rif honor w11 Miu Cathy Brower and brldt1m1IU were Mi•• Oia11e 8w1rt1, Ml11 Chrl1 Swt1e' and Miu Tana C11lw1y, the brlde111oam'111ll~r. '11\J brldfrroom, ion ot Mr. 111\d Mn. Cocll Callaway of llawl!lorot. Nktd Thomu J. '"""''" to ..,., 11 bo11 ..... lllld .,...11 ... Hiiiei '1'anli Ac>111ll, J oh n t ll!d 'l'honlll La111ln. new Mr,, C.ll1w1)', a 1r1duato of ValltJo Hl1h llehool, attondtd UCLA and In January 1'111 sraduate from lho Uolvtr•lly of lollY>em CaWoriito'• School ol Huroln1 who" oho curronUy II otudtnt body pn~de•t Hor huoband II I sraduall ol Junlpot0 lorr1 HIP llehool and Loyoll Unlvmlly and will ho l'll<luatod In Juno from UCI MtdlQll School whe" he .11 alllllltod will! Phi l\llo 8t1ma lrallmll)I. Tho n1w1Ywed1 will make their homa In 811111 MoolC!. CUSTOM-MADE DR,APERIES ' UH OUa CONVINllNT IHO' AT HOMI lllVICI Hnthtt"it Clltlr I •.... ,,, -· .. ........ A W1r•1 llt,•r•f•r wlll ••II 1t y111r 11111111 •Ith • tlrlkl111 1111111 111 1f ~l1h t111•Utv l•w 111t f1~rl11 fit 1•v t1 th•••• frelfl, Ne •'-llt•tl111I C.111111te 4•••'•t•r 11n• I•• _. 11111h1l1t.,., -1U111¥1rt.. I\,' I• '''It I ' ' I , ) ,rnber1 of Aeronut ronic Wives Club, Inc. will celebr.ate Indian yesteryear are (left to rii:ht) the itme&. Jame& Ku caba, vice m.mer a1 a luncheon theme on Wednesday, Sept. 18, in the Air-president; K. ,I. Domark, president, and J01eph Munroe, tre!la· _rt_e_r _In_n_. _Jo_ln_ln_&;_ln_l_h_• .:.po_w_w_o_w_w_hl_ch_w_ll_I _1e_11_u_re_l_•_•h_io~n_1_0_1 __ u_r_•r.:., _;•_ll_aporting appr-opriate ha ta. Read the Stara With Omarr f. Andrew's Setting • .1sa Knipe New Bride :. Andrew's Presbyterian rdl, Newport Beach Wll setting for the double ring J Jinking U11 Leanne pe and Timothy C. ~tzler. der. .,..LI el tho bridal <00ple Mr. and Mn. Kenneth P. ,. of Newport Beach and and Ml'I. W1Uer T. 1ler of Kanou ctly, Kan. elant wu the Rev. Pr. rleo Dlortnllold. Given in marriage by her San Gabriel liigh School aM fat}ter, the bride 11ked her ;ittended East Los Angeles sister-in-law, Mrs. Gary K. College. Knipe to be her matron of Her husband received his honor. Bridesmaids were Mr1. education in Kan&as City and Lfirry Tew, the bridetl'QOm'a tias just completed four years sister ~ Mia L i n e l le of active duty in the Air Force Wagner. lncludin a tour in Vietnam. Auer.din~ as best man wu M••• • Shtrp Ed Ivy of Stillwater, Okla., and usher1 were Maj . Tew and Tr•de; Use Joe Rabe. · Dlmo·A-Lin11 The bride ts a ~i•::•d:::•::•'::• ,::•'...!' '========,.,,:.'! Free Eiitlmates 1am Radio Rl·UPllOLITIR .uncheon lroadcast he Young Ladies Radio b of Los Angeles will meet he Huntington Beach home Mrs. John Griggs on u:rday, Sept. 12. ach member is reque1ted >ring her own lunch for lhe n gathering, when the nen ham radio operatan J discuss a national _vention of the Voong lies Radio League planned ivn . IJ'J. Griggs, wtMllt hulband .,ultrwestern r•alcnal ?!Ct« far the American dio Relay League, will Mde coffN, 1-• llld -· _earners \ssisted 'arenlJ el. children wilh ming problenu: m11 find xied. help in fall claiSe& pnni~ on Monday, Sept. 1~. ti>• """"°lo1ical Servi"" nter, Orange. :be 7:Jll p.m. els• &erles, JUed Effective Home and 'IOOI Guidance of Children ii Learning Problems. will presented by the Academic bievement and Learning oop. Juest speaker for the initial ;s:lon will be Dr. Milton K. renstein, medical directqr Academic Achievement. lit o is director of the Anaheim ~diatrii: Center and ofes.wr of' ~latrict at lifornia College of Medicine, :i. I. Ca11t,fete 8e1Htle• of l'11'1rle• l•el111ll111: Linens and Velvets M11t1r Cra~•m• Alway1 •• . Rite .makes·QtoWn-up , -forwgrson. That mother his feet. i There's one thinQ~~alhioned about thele amart· I loolung boots: they're built to fit And our prolesaiontl fitters are lrail"9d to make doub+y sure th9y do. Slnde Aile. The most truttad_~ In children's shoes.. $16 ,, $17 Accordlnt To Sire! We C•rry Widths Tt IEE I I __ I ~TRIDERm: ...,., Pick any TWO pairs marked $2.97! · ·l"lc:lured are Just a ,.., \ ollhemany attractive 2221 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA STORE HOURS: Dally 9.9 Sunday 11·5 REG. $3.97 GIRL'S SADDLE ·OXFORDS o:VS! 288 . •tyloo ~·u find at , l, ~.::~~::,k·IO. pa''' 10/t- So soft you can fold them in half! crinkle-patent loafers E'S, BOY'S, YOUTHS BASKETBALL SHOES gg Pill R . I ~ < ·Hi · fashion colors ·Choice of styles • ·Sizes 4\'·10. Matching Handbags 2 tor SS 2.17 loch REG. $6.99 MEN'S SUEDE BOOTS 4 DAYS! 488 GOODWILL Industries GOOD WILLY 1111 "Have you tvtr IN•• I Goodwill t.urf Tl••uunu 4t HCh yt11r, tfMI lrt ... t.nl1hH at Iha H .... el Goodwill lnduotrl11 ,..:C: tr1tl'"· Come '"Y day l•r a 1uldH tour 11 Cloodwlll'• tralnlnf. c ... tor. Call 147-6301 .' 190 W. 19th It. Co1ta Meta o,.. Mon. thru Prl. f.t lat. ' 1111 1110 646147' Your Dollar Buys More At Tho . GOODWILL STORE SPECIALS THIS WEEK! BOX SPRINGS & MATIRESS 533'° R'''"olit!o~otl BOX SPRINGS I & MATIRESS s3990 ····"lllfi·~·· 11111 Ntw Extra Plrm BOX SPRINGS & MATIRESS $6995 WOMEN'S DRESSES 77' .. BABY MATIRESS 5915 MEN'S PANTS 55c.77c AND UP' MEN'S SHOES 51.55 •• BOYS SHIRTS 33c.55c •• GIRLS DRESSES 77c .. Please Use These Booths In Your Neighborhood . . I • l:OOIJll OKI en "-Pritt, ,,.,. O SI -.... ..... ..... ~""" blow I "" mn 11111 @CJ ll!l WI QI() ma. mi. min II!),, IB"' "''" .. mil! @CI 9(1 ll!) La 11i) .. IE• mn. ll!)So IBA 7:1111JCI Ill: ""' m11 .... 9(1 ll!l"' OICI mco Iii)~· '°" r:•Bf• lfr• N 111ests (lppl( BiH to D OI ...... .. 1111ir ,_ ..... ... K•thlti 11'1111 Tc D iil (JO) • ""' ·-. ..... ••• l!l[J ,., (0 rud • ttlltlri 111ilr• fl)lk "'"" OICI tl!lSo !Elk USl!i)C. II "AM * Ente feat GLE fJC _ ... hld1y, ti mu intllor '''"" "'. "'· I "' I 111" Ann·fl! '"· ,,,,.. -DI - ~lO Dt -,.,. HO O ' -·· t:JD O' ·•1- • H I ) '' ...J r ~ , .". I IE.mMnlt 10 .. u lll'J rn m "" ""' 4Cl <30J (R) "Stotb alld tht Si. Girl.• m T1 Ttll .. Trvtil {C) (30) an·-" ·-IC> l30I .,_ ·-(Cl (JO\ 11!1 Prtllilrt Mwil (C) (2 hr) 1:00 e Ila ..... fC) (60') Jlfty Dunphy. 1:115 m , ........ llllllical (55) f!lllllC Ra 11 llkt -c-1:301!19(1)g,1..W. (C) (60) F $ \"I _, (JI) '11tt Machlsmt Bir." A l'I· 1J Tllt AllrM SMw (C) (JO) 1oltn btlliM 1011 of 1 Muic11J·Americ1n ~''· Blfblr1 81111, five• Conpnsiorlll Mtd•I ot Honor wi~ Pnct, Dr. Anton l • V., and Jtlllus ~., h 1Usped1d DJ pollc1 ti ttdl· SUMMr Miiier pllt. tious behtoriof. 0111 ....... -(C) ..... ....... (dr11111) !6&-Jollld Al•1, Rid:•d We.bb, John Huntlllaton. ~rir:c World W•r If, 1 demolitiOfl *lutd k Ofdlftd • 11t11r11 to • tonntr AnMric:11t lleldqu1rtm; ind blow I up. a ...... ...,. tc> (lOJ m"' -"'' (30J m,.. '""IC> (60J u IHl rnm -tcJ <"'J (R) "A lun117 fOf Ttbltha." T1bi· tM't birt~ ii celebl'lltd with • lw 11nlnvilld 11.11111 -a 6Hlk" •fld t pltyboJ bunny. m Dlll'id Fftll ._ (C) (901 m.., , .. _ ,., ''" fl) RIR ,..,.._ (90) (RI "l"•lk· inc It 1 Str1n&tJ-No still " Sps· citl Kflowlldl' Required." 'hnpossihle Years' Set For Mesa The COSta Mesa C i v i c Playhouse will open its 1970-71 season with the popular family play "The Imposlble Years," bowing in Sept. 20 for a tbree- weekend run. 1' Pati Tambellini begins her sixth season as resident director of the playhouse with the comedy of a psychiatrist who is recogni2ed as a teenage behavior ei:perf but has his hands full with his · own teen daughters. Paul CaJdwell takes the leading role of the doctor, with Denise McCanless playing his elder daughter, Monty Durham cast as the wife and mother, and Tracy Thomas enacting the younger sister. TODAY IS HAROLD'S BIRTHDA l ~ THIS IS HIS PRESENT Or•nt•. County p,..miere ''THE BOYS IN THE BAND" We4.-l•••J l:.JO ; · .Jbu th C lHl\i R c1Jcrto1J' • lUJ NnperfltM., c. .. M .. FOR RESERYATIONS-646-1363 AT THI INTIANCI TO FAIULOUS LIDO ISLI EXCLUSIVE •lllf'l'int jooll bo.t • jo. codw -fiil .-lo;urliriti • 1;J.i..~1 • jinlihlll<lrilc ~ ·lechnicolor® from worner bros. Moo. tllr• F'li. _.., •• 9t 6:J~f:41 1ot.-1 ... 10:10 s11-J:tl4:Jt-t:45 Qll (I) ... ;..,., cCi (30) 119 r.-,,..., (!IOJ @CIJ• ...... -(C) (30) fl) WW'• ... (C) (30) Rounding ot the Cost.a Mesa cast will be Paul Gracey, David Pigman, KevinConroy,,j::::::::::::::::::::::::::======::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::='I Betty Evans, Howard Malick, Ronald Gibb , Dennis Backstrom and T~i;ri Vitro. Q!I (I) CIS -(C) (30) Ii) Dutnld:/M11ialt (C) (30) !D-(30) ml T• AMlitwe (C) (30J El Tube • Ln btnll1a (30) ID Wllfiitil l••lllt (C) (JO) l :IOIJ--(30J •:Oll)ll!l (l)cis -.... , "TN ~ ...,.. (Slllf*lll} '65 -Robert Ry1n, Stn1rt G11npr. An America11 11tW1P1per rtporttr ii •bout to break tht bitrest t10fY ol his urffr. U Tiit F..,;tM (C) ('60) "Sl'llOkt Sc11t11." m Q!l IJJ., ,_,, _ 130> lfl) CIJ...., •-(60) U CHEVROL£T SPECIAL Ill (j) • ....., -(CJ (30J * Gene Kelly -Jim fD i. 1w • 7111 ('C) (JO) Garner-arblra Eden llil ,,._, I« Urila (30J PLUS THE NEW VEGA ll)MciwtM IC) (60) D @(])GllHCW! T Ii; I llll"' --(Cl (30} --IC) (60) ........ II!) $11111 ... 4I Li .. (JO} Kelly will li¥f 1 tolltef:'lporllJ tlft• derinf If ""' 111111 P1•rld DJ the GJ A _... Ai*t (C) (30) "int1itocutor" 111 1t11 inilllbll thoWll 1:0l II cu fllli::1 .... (C) (30) flf tlll pllt. --Clrn1r, Bll'tllrl Cl fe WIC li&MIJ ..... (I:) (JO) ldtn Ind Arte Job_,. p11t. M19 fJ WWI If Lille? (C) (JOJ Ptffofmiftl la ......,., ...... lif!I· i111 stAUtioft '""" Holllncl m I llw L., (30) m htr.-/H• CC) (30) Ill .......... (C) (>l) Iii)-(<ll) ~ (j)"' -· -(C) (30) ~ .. 0111 (JJ llll-(C) (30\ fl1J f'laJillf ... ldar {JO) (R) "l.A.D.-Tilt RICliipt." Set. Fri· 9 Cil Td • Couel!11111m (CJ •r alld Officw ,...,. lnwatir•t• I:) Ctirilt * Lllil1 Wft (C) (30) nwo ftflotr clltldiittl 1mtld ef E)Sl .. l1•1!1tt M•ril (55) •tnlin1$800Iron:1 deli llltll. Q)Tl:lt'Cirf (C) (30) BQ)N• (C) (30) l :JO IJ F••ilJ ANlir (C) {JO) (RJ Au· ~M..ic.1t/hdw"1 11111: (C) (30) eree Nortol!, 1ttt1ciilte deaf 1etrns, 10:00 0 0 00 IDT._ llW ...... fC) 1uests 11 1 doetor ~ tilt h•ndi· (60) Music and COIMCty. r.1pped who i1 1nlist1d bf Unclt 0 m .._ (C) (60) Bill to lid Buffy's MW friend. I O @(I)Q)llHC!AI taltmJ DID @ m I lfl<W I TIM ICll Sllllpedt (C) (60) Arthur Wodtrl)' Ptoplt (C) (60) This clocul'Mnt•1Y1 st11s K G11nd M1rshll "' Alberta. atmines the t9\imo'1 lloM1, his J fJ I IBCIA I lillr ,,._ I r liw!lhood alld bit t11t11Hlon lnkt • ~ ft) {60) • • world of 1111tl!lnts. m••'•Lni t•i • """ ('Cl (JO) '"fist &1111.M Kathlet" M1gui11, &Ntoti RtHt @) Jil[T , ..... (60) (It) "Ou~t 11111 TOii! "-llti iu•t Ellinetoit--1.owt YDlll M1dl1.• DIHIWS__. ._. ft> CIT,.,... DnlilM 4301 (JO) ''Opntlon Sii Olt1r.~ «i)MM111,: (JO) CJ -$ ..._ (C) .,..,ailet IO:JO IEI Mi 111.-. ('JO) UlldlliMd" (llMl:turt) ·~sttve ml Aliff 1'w. , .... (lOl Rems, Sylwl Kostin1. lllCID ll!B CIJ lltN-. (C) m, ......... -(C) "'' uooo m-(CJ t!)llPICIAI ..._ ... C.lflt• . (C) (60).'"llle ke foltfls." Bill Bur· OC.. , .. 1" nM1 (C) (JO) Teclmical direcUfr for the show will be Richard Andersen, who has worked extensively at the Laguna and San Clemente Playhouse and will direct one Costa Mesa product.ion this season. "The Impossible Years" will play Fridays and Saturdays through Oct. 3 a( the Community Center auditorium on the Orange County Fairgro und s. Advance reservations may be made by calling the C.osta M e s a Recreation Department at 834- 5303. Tryout~ 5et For 'Harvey' At Laguna The Laguna Moulton Playhouse will mount a revival or Mary Chase's comedy "Harvey" for its second production of the 1970- 71 season. Auditions for the play will be held Saturday, Sunday and Monday at the playhouse, 606 LagUAa Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. Tryout times are 2 p.m. on Saturday and SUJJday and 7:30 p.m. Monday. A cast of six men and six y.iomen is reqllired. , Directing the timeless comedy will be Bertram Tanswell, who s ta g e d ·•Philadelphia, Here 1 Come" for the playhouse two ~easons ago and served the past year .as managing director of tbe Long Beach Community Playhouse. "Harvey," the story of an John Wayne in His G(eatest Role '7*"Wayne 'ts "f'l.•·-" I' (G) Yll.)Ultt .Pl.JJS! Co-Hit H"ry F•-4• • Jen1•1 St1WGr1 la "CHEYENNE SOCIAL CLUB" rud w!fl intn:Mhret lil'tf·nllhl•t 0,.... (ti cellbrities as tl!ey 111ltt th• Pf•· fJ Titllln t : (C) "'J'H lift Han• mill'• of the 1971 let Follin. If;.,.. (dr1mt) '55-tM J..Cobb. eccentric middle·aged man l;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;p;;;p;;p;;;;;;;;;;p;;m 11 a11d his iavisible rabbit, will open Oct. 27 for a four-week run . ED •ail a!MI a. llntllll Ma· m MoM: IC) "lanl1 If tt:• dlint fC) (JO) (It) World" (1Ci·tiJ ·~11ude R1ins.1;::==========,I a rn 111y cm. Cn11Ht (C) m 1°"" I!) $lllcttd FM• (t) (30) U}) (})Sta N111it " ' ......... ' LLMLiiz 'J:n m c-ti.:. .. Strandts m lit'• 111m ..... (C) r ·~ . --'--4 -&-&.:.> m ... '""' .... AMf <.101\ m wn1:m'"" "" ..... <ti !R> '"° ill:SOl)l!!l(l)_I_ (C) ·-Pim.., a"AMER1cA" 1 o@ oo m-._(CJ "THE'LOv'E"euG" * Entertainment Special 0 MMit; "'tttrd:• " .. ...... a ( • J '36-8 "' "JUNGLE BOOK " featuring 1't '"' int Cl r. Cllfltlft-. 0111y 1 ,.,.,. GLENN FORD I O @llll!l ........ (CJ !'-:::::========'.! m Mftir. ....... 1111" (myst1iy) Jr 8 I ltl<®' 1.-.,a (C) (60) A 047-D•na Andtews, ltt J, Cobb. wordl·•lld·rnusic look 1t Ille ll.S. today, in • rtflKtiw• and som•· l:OOU MR: "Atlip...t Ptril• (dra· li rnts wrf, JOmttlrnes sober exam· 1111) 'SZ-Dln• And,..... in•tlOn ~t Amlrict'• betinftinc~ 0 D 111 ... (Cl Gltn11 ford 1tlrs. Coltlli1 St1mns. Qt MW: "SpriftltiMI it: ... lttl· LOI Rawls, John K1rtfo1d, Bill Med· ieir." (rnusic1!) 'IZ -Betty Cniblt. lty, Cary Puckett. M•rtl linds.ay 0 YirtHril CraH• SMw (C) (60) A.nn-M1r1rtl. loult N)'t, Julius fist, llw, Bob H1mnrton 111d "little ,.,... -· f ~· I [I /, y DAYTIME MOVIES l:JO 0 (C) """"'* Whell Wtt" (fO· INlllCI) '$3-fllftl« •ilU•mt, Ftf• 11111do Limas. .......... ~ WWttf" (dram•) '38 -R•r Miiiand. Fttd M1cMurr•r. l :JO a ........ Ill Sldlty'" (com~) '41-'tnflf Sinlleton, Arthur Lakt. 1:15 0 eo.w .... 11r ''"ttll: ...,, fC) 2:00 m All·NitM Iller. "litlll llllm.. ..,, .. "Sellld lips." and "'IHl ti 1'1H11." m -w• ., "" .....,. (tom. Jy) '37-HtMY fond' A11n1btH1. l:tl 8 ......,_ .. fdNlllf) '41 -M111 Ladd. VtrOllicl l- m ....... t.mifl" (drllM) '"- o.na AndrtWs. Ct11t T1tr11t7. i:oo DCCI .,,...,. !«•1'1111 ·ss..- Su•n thywtrd, l'"'" l'Olllll', Ritll· lfd £1111, Q) "WIN hut." (weMffl) 'M- BUI Willllllll,. .lim O.viL 4:JOtJ (C) ..... ft , ..... (wttl· trn) '55 -Jotil' Pty11t, Faltlt Domtr1u1, Aod C.mlfO!I. e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS Qu1lity Print ing ind 01p1nd1bl1 StrYic t for more thin 1 qu1rt1r of • ctn+ury. PIL OT PRINTI NG .. 1111 WIST ULIOA ILYI .. NIWPOn UACN-MJ.4)11 • ' , NATIONAL QINIUL'I CWJSinimst ru11 PLW'ft• -,.. .... ,.._ .......... "'"'711 HELD OVER 4th BIG WEEKI CONTlllfUOUS DAILY •IOM 12:JO P.M. PAl'tAV1SION8 TlCHNICOLORli'J l ;a"".~J!J~ ALSO DCITINa q»i·HIT FAIR Fatf, f•lr, f1 ct1111. Tho11 thrt• word1 11111\ up f•cffra J,. op1ratio11 011 th• DAILY PILOl ..fitoritl p19t IYI,., '•Y· Mil :a) Pr1mltr• IEfttlftlllffll "A lutlt! hr Prirttr lo'f' (GPJ "'" • •r•"~'' •~•IOll ''THE HORllOR HOUSE" • ($1'1 -All Clltr Slllw- All C•lff l'•mllr IEllt•rl•I"-' Wilt 0111111'1' P..-11 "JUNQl.I &OOK" • !Gl 1'1111 0..11 Jffln • s-.ir MMlllll ''THIE LOVI IVG" • (QI Alt C.llH' ,lftlllf •11t"1llnlMfll .... ,, MorH ''TMI IOATNllCS" • IC! ,..,. ltlttrl llTIPI & ChllCll Cl-I "C"l'TAll'I NIMO 11111 THI. UNOEll.WATl!rt CITY" CQI Coler ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Today's Stocks Today . -~~ AUO .... ., -TECttU:ol.llr·om-·----CONTINUOUS FtOM 2 UNTIL sm. 1J Advltl • .IK. Sl .10 •llltll 6 rturrsday, Seplember 10, }q70 OAIL V PILOT 2 l {( \'l'r.trf COMEDY-RATED "R" ~ t'llnn No Ono Under 17 ~ 67WUt Uni"' With Parent 2'05 -C-Hwy. Coron• dol Mir Watch the: landlord get his. ' • ' . -.. BEAU BRIOOESiUEGRANTOIANASANDS 1 .. PfARL BAILEY-:.,:.. ~iliPm BrrCUN~ ;$1iiiUil£R I : f'NOOM'A~ JMSOll HALAsHBY !XlORtii[)}tuxe• ........... -.> llJOl---~--.00----1 1 '.-· . ..~' FAIR F•sl, f•ir, f11ctu11. Tho•• th••• word• 1um up f1clort i~ op•r•lio11 o" lht DAILY PILOl tditori•I p•9• 1v••¥ d•¥· ~ •DWARDe ~ !tft·&i!i H&ATll& ~·-COl'IJi.,.._M .. )!f:l ---·------- Starts Wednesd•y Sept. 16th MATINEES DAILY TNIU SUNDAY cm1· ===~.a:r::"'.--r=: ...... ....,... :· ''THE NIGHT THEY RAIDED MINSKY'S" • SNrri11t J-1 I•"'* n4 Mtt ftt.d FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER PHONE 642-4321 lft 91."!.. ••• -- Roted "GP" MARVIN ~WOW SEBERG PAINT~WAGON · 0,, A CJear[)lf~&11"- Elliott Gould Don•ld SutMrland -2 RATED "R"-Sth BIG WEEKI ill1\S·ll . AlL TIMI GUAT NITS FROM WALT DISNIT I .. "° letff ..... , ------ FINALLY. THE FILM· FOR EVERYONE THE L.A. TIMES SAYS: "'Waves of Change' is a stunning piece of filmmaking ... excellent ... breathtaking ... artistic and entertaining enough to appeal to those who have never gone near a surfboard ... fine family fare." captures the excitement, the comedy and the beauty in surfing. A color film from Greg MacGillivray. and Jim Freeman .----.--AL-IO_A_ Now Playing --Nightly 673-4048 7:JI & t 1JI ,,M.-ADULTI $2.10 CNILDllN l I & UNDll $1 .50 Times Rated "G" -----... -·~ ... ---" -. ~ Thursd11, Stpttmbtr 10, 1970 DAIL V PILDT %%~ Parents" Teens Swap n ·oles nt IJCI Sen1inar "'" ltMMCO -· -· YOU AN TRUST YOUR TRANSMISSION TO ANY OF AAMCO 'S 550 CENTERS. WOltl.D'S 1.MODT TllANS//flfU/ON SPECIAUSTS 1"4 W. Llllcftl 11.... ·-l"e.-.....UWlM A11Noll~ M4I II .... ""· C••'''"'"" •_,._.,.nn J,,,. °"""" , ...... CIHll M-""-1... C.ll,/flt¥-(l1i) sn ..... 1141 """" l t'tt. ..... _,,,_ ., L.M ...... 1'11l ............. 1M9Jt ....... ·-IJM2IO IU Sevlfl IEKIMI tMI .. ,,._ 9nn ....... A Gentleman's Tradition What Ii It th1I th1 H. Cil•'••••• cu1fo,..1r c 111111t fi114 11 oth1t tr•41ti1111I 111•11', cl1thl111 1ho p17 Q11if1 1i111ply, if h 11,..ic1! Al H. 6114111111 Sli1p ~., M 111, WI ~ ... _. i11¥11¥.4 11 h..ipillf '"' o:w1!1m1t1 11l1ct whi t .... ;n 11111111h111c1 their w1..Jr1h 1111ch, ·M1y WI i11.,it1 'f'lll lo .,;,;t 111r pl111111I 1ho;> i11 l t11111 Ni1111f'1 M111rclri l1y P1111 1 11d ch10 11 f ro"I 111 11cl111if1ly 111,.rlt 11l1 cti111 , , , ......... ··-·--L ..... ....... ·-. J.•11 ... I: M.,,a,y - The brolber and lllter came home lite 1t alat>t hlP on red!!. How did flthtr react? "All I could think ol WM to l~t the wife tackle Jt," he exclaimed, frustratedly. A frank react.ion made all the more enlightening because the father Jn this case was a teenager. the brother and slater were adults in a revented1'0.les eltuation. Their reaction to the family scene, • ' H o w defemeless parents make teenage.rs feel." It was a lesson kl fnlltratlon learned many ti.mes over during a five-day aemlnar pmented by tile U C I Extension tbia week. 'rtle idea was to help bridge the generation gap. Not to close it -t he coordinator Mrs. Eva Schwindler· Rainman maintains that's not 10 ell)' -jll9t lo bridge il. To that end about 150 county teadlers, DUl'Be!, librarians, probatioo officers and social joined nearly 30 you'lhs in the week-loog conference at the: Sherato n Beach IM, Huntlng'lon B<ach. "The kids are from high schools and youth centers" Mn. Eva Schwindler·Rainman saJd. "Some we got to come through the county probation department. Some are on drugs, some aren 't." LJ.S()IJA MUSIC COlo\Pltlt fl f'arEO F~ ITS C.Ol<P ....... UNE M"QUOl.l'Y CIA\!ICM. l\lco«o9. AN p.c:eJJ.l,NT MJ.ICT10N °'OAISbl ClrlWfa TW 11'11 temlnar, ti t I e d ''Intergenerational Dialogue," took many forms during the week, all deqned to bridi• the communication I a p 1 betwoen dUl .... t .,e gniupL M"' Schlrindler-Ralmnan, I behavioral lclentist and freelance conaultant. refen to the groups 11 olders and J'OWll"" -though pointing out that there are "lots of 1~ year~lds going on 50" and vice veru. °"" of the moot lnteratlng sesslon1 Involved role playing in -Ibo parllclponl4 revened real U!e alluatJons wltll Ibo youdis p I • ' In ' pl"'111 and adulll takinl tile petll of chlldnm. Most ol the problem 1ituationa involved drugs « girls becomlng pregnant, and occasional' predicaments such as an atblete cooliateot!Y, State Fair ~ppeals . To Wide S pectr1i111 SACRAMENTO (UP!) - Peraoos attendlnj: the 1970 California Slate Fair can choose between carnival rides, John Bi rcb Society pamphlets,.rock band concerts er a barnyard full of livestock. Thi s new diversity is being credited for the increased su ccess of the ll7th annual fa ir. Attendance is up over Jast year. · The festival seeks to appeal to 10ung and old, rural and urban while cutting across political lines. Exhibits reflect a co-existence probably found M few other places. Dow Chemical Co., one or the original "establishment" targets of the "'new left" has an elhibit booth mowing colored slides of its products. There are n o pickets at Dow nor at a nearby booth staffed by members of the John Birch Society, who are eager to pass out their pamphlets. Across the midway in a section called "'Mle Age of Aquarius," longhairs a n d beards operate "head" shops selling cigarette papers and black li ghts -merchandise often associated with the drug subculture -and posters poking fun at Gov. Ronald Jteagan. catile, plus swine, rabbits, sheep, goats, chickens and geese. Attendance at the fair, which opened Aug . 21 and will close Sept. 9, is up this year over last, despite a refW1al by the legislature to give the extravaganza more operating funds. Through the first lilLl days of the fair, 306,491 pat d customers have visited the event, compared to 288,131 for the initial six days in 1989. Several persona: h a v e complained that carnival rides are higher priced than last year, but Nissen and Fair Manager 'Thomas Bair deny the cost of fair • going has gone up. Bair said the same M«nt ceiling for "spectacular" rides applies, although there may be more rides costing that sum this year than Jul Most rides cost between 30 cents and 50 cents. OHlciali estimate it costs the typical family of four between $25 and $30 for a day at the fair. '!bat includes an admls!lon fee of $1 per adult and 50 cents for children between 6 and 16. Parking ls either 50 cent& or $1 depending on bow close you want to be. '11!.e fair site is j u a t northeast of Sacramento off lnteratate 80. Security 111ards patrol the area, but leave the young people to themselves. The youthful section aJsG ~~~~~~~~~~! features a light show in a tent, nighUy rock concerts and leather and metal craft shops. It costs 50 cent.. to get in. tead the Stars With Omarr ·Chee.IC Your Horoscope WE l'-~ 811$f l!TLE WORl<S Ill STI>O<. lllQlollt; l.A6liHI. tNSIC ~ IS ~ GOIOS. 'f() Flll"'UIC Ill-C!SIOl!v. IAGIJNA.M~IC Jll "'"" A•e. UM1M -.cfl Fair officials are quite conscious of their appeal to youth. EtecuHve Committee Cbainnan Ralph N l s 1 e n estimated that ooe.-half of those "tl'alting through the turnstiles are under 22 years old. Meanwhile, 1nimal lovers can see prlle bullJ and dairy CHILDREN LIKE UNCLE LEN • FISH . 'N. CHICK GRAND OPENING SPECIAL. 21or One BUY ONE OF OUR REGULAR ~ CHICK Ol FISH N CHIP DINNERS FOR $1.29 AND RECEIVE A SECOND DINNER ABSOLUTELY FREE NO LIMIT BUY AS MANY AS YOU WANT AT 2 FOR 1 OFFER GOOD ONLY THURS., FRI., SAT. & SUN., SEPT. 10, .11, 12, .13 CHICK DINNER BOX ~ J pcs .. dellclous So.,..,. Fried ChlckOft, Fr111, Roll, Slaw ...............• $1.2 9 RSH 'N CHIPS DINNER ~:!1!:t:~·-~ot1 1.·.~'~---··-·· $1.29 Fish 'N Chick's Full Exciting Menu SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN I AUTHENTIC ENGLISH I RSH & CHIPS J ~~~~'c~i~~e~K& Fren ch Fries . .84 6 ~~~~ :~~e~~h Fries ····-································,.·· 1e7 S 2 ~~~~~~!~~n~1Fr~~~Ro II, Slaw ...................... J .29 3 ~~i;Kct~~:,0 .. ~~-~ .. _ . . . . ......... 2.49 7 FISH N CHIP 1.1 0 FJsh & Fries ··············································-" 1 4 CHICK SUPER IOX IS Pc. Ch icken ............................................ 3. 99 5 CHICK GIANT IOX 21 Pc. Chicken .................................................. 5.49 9 FISH JUMIO IOX 2 79 9 Pc. Fish ...................................................... • . I 0 ~1:~,~ui~h· .. '.°.~.................. ..... ...... . .. . 4.49 SIDE ORDERS -- HOT DOG ON A STICK ...................................................... ,29 HAM oo KAISIR ROL( ·····················-··· ............. ·" SLOPPY JO! wltk fries ······································-···· .St COU SI.AW ....... .... . ··············-· Pt .. 50 ........ Ot ••.......• '5 FUNCH l'lllH ... . • ................................................ 25-.49 DINNll ROW "······· ....... . ............................. 'Ii . Doz .. 25 COLD DRINKS SPECIAL SHlllMI' DINNER Coie, Root Baar, Orang•, Fr•tca •.......... ····-··-···• .1 0-:ZO HOT COFfU ................ -.................................................. , 15 FISH 'N CHICK Ta.ke Home 90'11 Atlanta (At Magnolia) HUNTINGTON BEACH INoxt Door to New Lucky Supormorkel) . OPEN 10:30 AM· 9 l'M SEVEN DAYS Eat In 7 " • c:om1ng home lilt. 1n another aesslon, the partlclpanll -t an hour In n o D-\'erbal comrnunlcaUon. "They tried to speak with their eyet or bands/' the coordinator UJ>lained. "A father w1io juot llll llld readJ tile paper when bla '°" finally comes home -well that's an example of aaylng aomething by o m taalon . Another u:ample ol nm-verbal ccmmunicaUon, say, is a friendly pat on the back." One morning was spent listening to rock m u 1 l c reccrds with the group following tbe music of Bob Dylan, Peter, Paul and Mary, The Ho 111e1 1 Steppenwolf, Rollins Stoneo. and Country Joe and nie Flsh with song sheets. "Some ol the olden obJected to the language and asked for the sound to be turned down - but at leaat we e1posed them to the thoughta and world of alienated youth," Mr a, Schwlndler~Ralnman Wd. "Some ol Che youngers were IO dellgbltd they .,..t up and hugpd tile loclurer.'' 1be lecturer waa Dr. Fran Heusaemtamm, who teacbes at UCLA. Did the seminar achieve anyUilnc? One e 1 a.m p I • augsesto It did. One momln(, afWr tho ""'1lw' bad been p>ln( I couple of daYt, a mothlf confided in Mra. Schwlndler· Ra.inman that she and her dausttter "were talking q:lln11 as a rtlUlt of the course. 'J'tiat same evening, thl daughter who wu a I 1 o atteOOing the 1emt n a r 1 exchan g ed ~e nmt con f i d ence with the c:oonlinator. "We achieve aomethlng If It get.a us closer to our kidl,'' wu Mf1. Scbwln dler• Raisnan'S Verdict. ''Artistry in Moving'' for the BEST MOVE of YOUR LIFE Call: 72 "9() luxuray blanket 497 M a JOI .847 _,,,,,,,,...,:J " .... , __ bedpWows 20 ... _]97 ~;;;J.!P~-..... 217 ,..,...._367 bonded jMiidsuit 1586 ... 7 -·---..... _...;:.r .. 'I ... ~­ve1t1et ~. " ~ 1_~ 93., .. -.... .-...... _._..._ ........... c::_....,. ... :=.=:-.:aii!'· a ,._ ' klney """"~'"" aprhllder ·~-92~ ,.,,,,. ... .. ...... _, ........ ....... ---triggW9P1G)'W =~==-149 -- . vinyl garden hose' 32a .................... .............. ..,_.. .. ...................... ·-coffee carafe "'•~terw ... ~-:.~'' 241 --· '. blcpenflne 18~ 11'1 M Indoor ........... 66~ n a., ............... •--=-fold-a· fence ~::...i.~ . 138 ,.-... 11· . I I , hoMyfolullc milk bottle 54t ... ..-1 .... ..... "":to-: ::::r ... _,_ -......................... ............ , ... pla1tlc 01htray ---............... 67' .., . ....,., __ , ,. -·- '194-'.1025 580 Broadway ... ...,. ..... _ bath ememble __ _.J• -__]11 ...,... ... 57• ......... pillow cover ---:.i~'.::'.:::-99~ .. - 3S-xlr ..... area rug ,_,.,_.w ... ....... .-..r ---397 ::.... ............ -... .... pap• ...... ~A la .. ~ ............... ,.... =.:::._47' --.,_ 34~ ......,. .. ':. _,.._ -----theme 63t r • r 112.- slldcer binder 49~ ~ ... .. ,.....;.-::::·· ... , .... "•' 1 panty hose _ .. --97~ --..., ... , ...... ==="' -- "'" t lela.c)O'a ! :t!.. ..o:r.:::c. ] 99 I .. ______ , ,,,.....100"• --.. ......... __ .... , -----~­,_...2 ... _._ ___ .., 69 "-" .......... 1 . .... - ee• «e•• +ee :::... .... =:. 279 ................ _ 1%8 ' L~ WA&JI QueSllot: •ballo, "'1ry, H powder, ldlme•k iecata, ' Ana we For tlI or the gerieratl This I relatllll in a QIV guide drugs, throuih CHI um· STA .... SMC ... ,._ AN • • CH "" LE ... Kii •• DI , .. D! '" CRE COi ..... ISPI COi 1WA CIRI ~ BEi CH MC OR VII ICll!r• Bii EG1 (IMll STI FIS 9. oc Sii BE .,... <i' LA ------~-~---~ .. --......_ __,,....., -.-~~~~=---------......... --------------..... -.-----------.... --------'""!!• tl!B DAI LY PILOT Thursd1y, Sept!mbtr 10, 1970 Lingo of CREAM PIES :!'.~..".'.~' ........ 27' COOL 'N CREAMY~~~J:~ .. 43' C'l~MllCllOCOU.Tl,,lKIJC90C.,NfTDIC,OTCIQ SPINACH .............. 21· I otMrtDl l•Ol.Pll .• ,-- N 11m".urt-WITil l UTTll 37' COR U.IK(,. WlllTI S.P.1 .. 0L •• ,.._ __ 1 WAFFLES ~~.~~-~.~~~ ........... _W ORE-IDA POTATOES~.:' ...... 43' ... K6/fktt.-- ZEE LUNCH BAGS 23c 50COUNT PACKAGE BEEF TACOS ri'o~~:.~~~ ................ 52' CHILI BURRITOS:::r.~-~-~-~.52' MORTON'S MACARON1:~2•• ORANGE JUICE :~~T'~. A7' VEGETABLES ~L";'r, ___ 38' ICIT co••·""· CUT ,.ll. llAllSI , _ BIRDS-EYE AWAKE :',",.. 37' EGG ROLLS ~~~~--------11 ' CSMIUIU', UHClll. lOl:IHI. _,,, & Mlllflll,, STRAWBERRIES :~;:~_ 29' FISHSTICKS w.'l::~----42' ... K6/B.Jf.-I"'\ ~!!'J.~~ TEA BAGI • , 09 IOI OCIAN PlllCHllVl'tll'.'.-·-'7' SIRLOIN TIPS :~:.~_ ....... -.. 45' BEEF STEW :c:~~:. ................. -...... 361 ci-4 RICH'S 1iCLAIR5~.~~.Jl' .,... NUCOA SOFT l'fltw:.,_..16' lADY LEE BUTTRl:~_ ... .79' Our LOW E~)day Pricc! HARVEST DAY CANNED BEVERAGES 9c 12.0UMCI CAM , Drug World Part of Curriculum .,.-. COFFIE MA TE ='=l' . 65' ORANlll JUICE=.:. ... _ .... _ 59' .,.-. PllEAlil POWDWl)l::.'.'-73' FOIEMOST ICE CIElM ll..~-79' r OREO COOllU.~~--..:.:"54' <;" SNACKS f."l".l:.!! ......... -39' IUSKm FW15:;'lt'::~._J9' IOUILLON CUllS 1/1'1.,._19• ... J:;y&,t.--. &MCANDlll 69C •u•s1z1 12¥1-0LIAS U.LD.L MD IT• COUPONS Glad11 Accepted "" In -1Choall may bo ln•prprlalo or lnM!lcl•nt. Wha K 1111 lorill 1 ra IU,l&Hfod ....nculWN. ror · t11mpif, wllh Ult klndota-ml 11rly 11'•"4 ocilool 111, lllcbon mll)ll "di-trite how 1uilll•- (llko lotloN end p0,_.r11 1lfoot lh• 111111 • • • Ill•• th• child lni.tvif'I 1111,.,..,11 end 1111 mldlol1111 Ill 1111 tok., .• • 11k Ibo n-to dllouN ond thow lnltrunJ.,11 uioct by phy~olw." Appropr~~ 1t 1D uro1 moferllll "'dfod, IUDI tn tht tarly 1<1hooJ y11.rs, why they 1rit 10rnetimet lpt0l1l 1mph1sls ahouJd bl misused. "An I mportant placed on 1 total •pproach to function of the teacher is to ht11lh aod ph)>•IOll, 000111, help lhe <hlid bo&ln to assume lntellootuol 1 n d emollo111I '"llO••lblllly lor his h11IU.. Wlli•btlftr, t~e l\llde 1•y1. ll'lll for th• "C!llth or his HJt II 11t lllil formalivt level famlly and frlend1." of tht early school years that Graduation to the earb' and 1tUtudN mU1t be developed to l•to adoleace11t ytJPJ brtna:s 1trve •• J. baall f o r Ncommendatlpn1 fllf OPtn t:nd undtr1ttndln1, re11pectln1 and candid clussroom di1CU11lon1 appreclalln& th• rt'lle ot d1"'11 a~t drug u1e ;1without In Ura -.nd htaltb,'' t1Gndemn1t1on,11 and educaU'9-g 1 ln the middle elementary youn1 peopla to llftderttaM years, the child should become moUvaUona for m 11 U i t n g familiar with ~ dn&p1 ' dru11 a1 well ~· d r u g bow they .,. purcl>uod 1111 !lllf.,...ment llfObltma an4 CINTll.CUT :~£\FRESH FRYERS cur·cauc ROAST TO:~t~11TY 45 C ROUND STEAK ~27l~ ~ SALAD=:~.:rg. 2t' PORK & BEANS:::l.' .... ___ if' .,.-. HORMll CHILI:"'..."~---U• .,... PUNCH:::t""'-"'-it• TOMATOES=%,,__ t7' ~ SAUCESrm'11~~w-U• .,... C.H.B. SYRUP::;'L ..... 41' DISCOUNT PRICfD PRODUCE t he •eGlOn's finnt quality p,. . ~Htl •rid they OJ• ell d itCOVnt priced. H.,e ore Pitt 2 exa ...... 100~ CHIQUITA llAllD IANAllAS IOlDll ltrl ltHIOlll (llTIALMlllCA'I fllllST .. AUTJ 10~ UJ. 110. t POTATOES '""IT 10 ..... 4ac VAllITT CIUOIAG W• feotl.I,. Sunki1t lemo•• IOllDID lllF KING VITAMIN tVAlli. 'lllAl f;IJllMCI IOI LI. .... PllEAD-""'""""'•"' 47' tMftlll ... oz. u.1 ....... , .. ,,.. GWI JULY :':~': .............. 51' FltUIT COUTAIL ::::.·~~'.--~39' ... UUIHr.'!.r ::r.~ ................ ~ .. ts• f Da *NTE PEACHES ~:t,.., .. i1 ' .,.. LINDSAY OLIVEs:w~:::.•11't'33' CAT FOOD 1':;.t.i:~: ...................... 14' .,+ FllSlllUllllll'l'.'l.":! ..... _ ... 14' HI Cllll DOG FOODl:l'. .......... '1 " LUCKY . TOFQUAUTY IONDID lllF 79~. lllCIY- ••• n&VOI GROUND IEEF 53~ LIAN GJOUND BEH 69C CHUCK QUALITY....... 11 .. EXTRA LIAN GROUNll 79c BHF, IOUND QUALITY , .. ... t:.y&yt-..... ... llLHNIX FACIAL =. ... _zs• DREn DETDGINT ru': .............. a!• <I" WIZAID DEODORIZIR ~~-46· BOLi> DITIRGINT:::~: .. _._ '1 16 .,... KLEAll WAX :::r.:. .. __ as• DASH LOW $UD5 ::'4~.'; ___ . 77' IVORY LIQUID :r.'1.\ll',.,.,_,_ ... 57' ...-KLllNEX TIHUlll:I' ........ 27' IVQRY SNOW ll':.~~---12' COMn CLEAN HI la~ .. -• 18• ZEST SOAP llll',., ....... , .. ,. .. -31 ' TOP JOB CLEANEll l'.~m. .......... 64' ~· ·-·-- CANADA DIYllW,\r, ___ ,,..10' LUCKY LAGO !17/.1r'.\' .. --.'1" WHISlllY f:fllll!ll~\~ .... -.. -'J" (A..U.W09'frlttl~ .. ~I . ;_;,_.__ LUW UISCOUNI PntC[~ OrJ ll[Allll ANU Hl:AUIY A111· ~- VO' HAIR IPRA Y r.:ne.t~~;:~~=:: "~jjWill/'u.eL •1 •• CAI fOl 1 c IX'llA • , ••• VENTljRE HAIR DRESSING A 1r11t :!lftllP hif 'rtsrl'I tbt _,... •ti! Nl•r1I .. 1 •Jtfll ~Ill! aM &lttHllH11£ ~lplHltr ..... 61 .,ICI Hflll.UDlf k Ofp C • QUMCf aon u ., ..••• COLGATE 100 THE IJIDUTHWAIH fDI lDVllS Pl .. lnl·l•lllJ ....... kHfl 'nlfti '1.itt- kltlmr'., ,tt•••· a I c 120UJKl '°Till r11a HKUllKS " DPf Shop Any Doy , •• Sa ve Every Do y •.• With l ucky low Discount policy. • I Guide POW to Get 2nd Chance For Elbow WAliffiNCiTON !UPI) ,.. Navy LI. R•b•r l r. Ji'rishman'11 risht arm wtU never again be as long u 1UJ left. but within a few weeU he may ha\le 11 rii:ht elbow for Ill• firal limo olnco Ille IM7 when he beolm• a prllOMJ' ot war in Hart.ti Vlltnam. Frl..,,111 la one rt _,1y lllne priaQnen rt WI< nl ...... by the North ViftNlm,., lft! d""'ribed hio lmpriaonnJorlt •• !•JI monlhl of p a I n , de11'1datkwt 1n4 tonure1' in • fll·it\f .. ted "hell hola." Tho IW'f•lo-•ir mluil• lhot lilot down Frioillnon'• l'tlol!IMI jol Ool. 14. !Ill, "'" Ill'! l'tiuf Yon Mr6.id auUide Honol •!lo lhalJorJd llJt fi•YY pilq\'o ri.ni orm. JI w•• J'riatu"r!IJ'l 'S laltll oambat miJaion. He manaaod to •~ llf•IY from his ~ppled jet, a,s 4i4 hi1 radii' hrifftlept otriow, E•rl H. f,ew!J Jr. Thty w"" .. pturod •t.mool tmmodlatol~ <fter lhoy hit Ibo ........ Taken to a ~ ~ wat camp jn Ha,noi, Fr\lhmM ._ ql!Ollioned •• d lhno- wilh execution until he paued oot, no n1111 t11y, 1 Nootll Vlolnam.,. N...,. .,..,1111 an hi• arm. "WMn Otey i•moved tht cast from my Mm 1 few weeks latlf, I found l nn ton1w had an el t.aw ,1 1 Frishman said. The sur1eon had """"'e11 th• ""'"""' section rt bolM! "1 hil '"" l!>d fused topthel" wJllt WU left., leavin& a red, Ulll\lturtd scar, and frllhman'• 11"1! was stiff. It took 111 'l'Olllhl tj httl • 'MM North Vtttria me •e relootd Frishman in 1911 to a l*!Co dt!,..llon fr•Jll lll• Ullittd •t•tl<, Ht "'""" in New York ~ ... !, Ill!! Ille Navy lmmtcll1!1l1 p!llM_d !Jin' In Ibo U.•. NIY1l HOtlptlll In Bolheo<la, Md. Early t!\i• Y•V ~· was; moved to Ille Navy HllfPilal ot San Dieao. Slll'f'Oftl in tu• "°"'' 1111< implMtoc! on arUficl•I •lbolr joint ! n FebruafY, ~t tM r.Jlll wwe dioct>urOiiJlr. "II j<1'I fi1! di<l!l'l "'"11," • Navy !IP"k""1"1 •old. '"lllt)' went back in and found thab the cltvic1 ti•• bnt~en. 0 That :secoll<I eporaUon look ploce in June . l\elt11od ""'"' 1111 holpttal to regain W• ~ before another rotmd elf IYfltfY, Frishman wq euilf*I te the staff of t!l• ~rvivJI "*'°°I el tfle Caro"•d• N•v•I Amphiblou1 9,... M\!l!h ol hi• tlnlt '11• been 1pttnt, hQ~wr, t(ying to Jfltke 'lJN ~t 0 t h e !! Alneri-go 11111 1"<1•t -l'!Jllaiplllf! pr'-rs of war. Frimcf• In Ille Navy -lllvo he'""' _, · W,lnt 111 • n Y ard•ln liJd ~ 1bout ltj·~·~· I.at. lllia m!lnlh N I v Y dQct«l1 tllll to 1rY lmp"'1Ul>i aoalhlr f!llflclal !IW# in fri_l9non'1-· 11f WI wor\:1 ,•• ~ 9POk_.. said, "!Jo wUI Ml alil• to -hit ""' ...... But the right ann will always be shorter than the Jett one, and he will always be limited in his use o( it." ' ' 2!C OAll.V PILOT ThurM!ay, September 10, 1970 Art Display '70. At Beach Mall Mort than 'IOll •Mks by CaWornia's leading arlist.15 will go on display Saturday night at the champagne op(!ning of Prospeclus·Art '70 in the Huntington Center mall. The public Is Invited to preview the art works at 6 p.m., Saturday. Admission is '5 per person with the proceeds going Into scholarships for artista. Prospectus-Art "70 ls a cooperative effort on the part of Golden West College, the EYES RIGHT .. DL LOUIS J. HASIU:ILD ._ .. For • Ion• tirn• •li•fl'IPh 11 • .,, ba1n '"'d' i o p1r1u1d1 p1opl1 to fr1i11 th1ir 1 y1t by the u11 of 1y1 1x1r1 i111. llla c1i9in1I 1109111 ""'' "Throw '"''Y your 9l1n11 ind h1 w1 p1rl1ct vi· 1io11". City ol •luntington Beach and HunUngton Center. This is tbe first of whal will be an aooual event· All art will be pul on free display at the mall Sunday through Sept. 25. Funds collected Saturday night will go into International Art Schola rsh ips , an organiution of business and professional persons interested in promotion of the arts. IAS plans to offer annual a r t scht:ilarships to students. Three judges will dole out $2.500 worth of prizes to the top artists in the show. One $400 award will go to the aMta whose painting wins the most votes ot the public attending Saturday's preview. Jason Wong, director of the Long Beach Museum of Art, is coordinating the HuntingtGn Beacb show. Show judges are Miss Clare Falkenstein, a Ca Ii I or n i a sculptor; Pete r Plagens, art instructor and writer: and Ronald Hickman. of the San Diego Fine Arts Gallery. Xi XJ Pi chapter of Beta Ph i Sigma Sorority will host the Sta1np Power The Johnson \Vax Company has come up with a new seli·inkJng stamp which have their oWn 25,000 jmpression ink supply built in. Lynn Thomas checks a batch 0£ stamps made in Racine, Wis<;:onsin, in· eluding the U.S. Flag, and various peace,"dove and love symbols. Unfortun1!1ly, thi1 c:111nol b1 true i11 flltny ,,,,,, Th1r1 ,,, c1rt1i11 lifrlih to preview Saturday night and ----------------------- .trt1h, d11tn1•· tio11 of tll1 op· tic "''"'• •· p1qu1 1c1r1 of the corn1• ind 11riou1 ch111911 in tlt1 r1ti111 1r1 not h1lpecf by 1y1 1111rci111. N11ni13htecl ,_opt• c•n b1 t1u9ht how t• .... ~. b•tf•r u1• of th•ir ¥i1io11, but •11•r,i1• will nol corr•'' th• 11•1ni9ht..dn111. Wh111 'f'Our condition c1ll1 for pr•1triptio11 lJl111•1, It it b•tf to follow th• r•co111m1nd1tio11 of your oplo111•"i1t. Don't 111p1ri111•11t willt vour •v•1 or tho11 of 'f'OU• child. Don•t ••P•tf di1ord1,. to lfi11pp•1r, W1'r1 c~11v111i1nlly loc1!1d in tll1 fi•• Poinh Sl>opping c,,.. ,,,, rhon• ••7-1271 for your 1p,ointrn1nt. OU'J'H COHST " ' . ' . ' ' " " ' ' 0,... M5Pfly, 1:45 p.-. MAnNn AT 1:41 r.M. SUNDAY• MONDAT Now At Regular Prices 11UOOC1- .....:;:...- ... gullw. ledoioob" womerbm..: Opn Nlthtly, 6:41 P·"'· MATINll AT 1:45 P,M. SUNDAY & MONDAY Cl1Ea;wxxfiJ;<~ D:nrt:Wes "ICeDy's "The Big Band of Jazz, Inc." will provide music. Air Guard Honored fl.Ultoo Tobey, chief 0£ the Orange County A Jr p o rt Security Fo~ for the past 10 years, has been honored by the Orange County Airport Commission for his "faithful service to the county." Tobey, a Huntington Beach resident. is retiring from his job Sept. 18, and the Airport recommended to the Cotlllty Board of Supervisors that be be honored with a resolution. PUT WH IN YOUR POCm ~ unwanted Items with a DA.n.Y Pll.O'l' Clalolliod Ad. PHONI U2-S678 ., STIYI, DAN • IYION flNLlY Mlf'"I • Httlt ,._ .,.. 1..i ...-r •Ml (Ill "''I' MIM ... enlfll Wlltft llllfltl 1ni •1111. EMii If 'fM fljftl Ill• flllKll lt -loll e11t i. rtl¥nil:dl ..,...,. "'-It Y" llH I IOl•I lftl •w • """ "''"" ..,..."' -h 911t5\td, 11~1 111 l(!HI lll~•lwy. l"trtet Wllll re-IMM fM' llllllts erl9lnlll'fl flVf MWll wllll I...., MUii CG'I IOCll1• IHI Wllll ... tr ptn:tn!Qt II lllf l9r ...,,. .. , .... . GI lllMCll P'ley tlll lllMI II r .. llW ,,_,, lftt fft '°"I UM yeu'll ,,.. ~1 .. Ml'11•1._ II Mw Yt1"blt ,._ "-furrilsllllllf 1r1. W1 _, ltt 1 "1t "1'1H"I•• It your wff• wln1, 11""', SM lfHt. mo11 II lht IJl!Oit- pi"l I,,,. II lft0,. 1111-Wllfl Clfl' r1t111 ,n.:n tllt11 YM 111, 11 )'llil'fl •11 1¥ffl .. '°"""' If -··"" ~ .. .,... ....... ,.. • 1 .. ""1' llrt IMllFHCt. 11111 -'I .. ,....,. llt • 1111, 11 fld, wt'll ~ "" "' •1111 .. lfl ..... ..,. bllll tc 11M fir ~ ,,,..., wrn •hi - "" ...... It. flrt ""' ... -,..., ...,_ Mii lh lumlNllfltl H Y"f'll ""' c:tll •T•ON l'IN\.E'I' INIUll.· ANCI, ttt Mthl lft M"'!lrttllft Illa.. ,. ...... J».1Ul. T"-I way, _ry...,. .... OAS Seeking ,~ays To Curb Terrorists RJO DE JAi~EIRO (AP) - A group set up by the Organization of A m e r i c a n states is seeking joil'K ways to deal with terrorism without arousing; the ire of eithe r liberals or hard-liners in LaUn ~America. The traditional right or ~hmt claimed by political refugees is one issue. A rash of terrorist activilies in this area has included kidnapings of diplomats and hijacking or aircraft. The OAS seeks a united stand, a'nd is looking to the meeting here of the Inter-American Juridical Committee to s e t up definiUons. It is made up of jurists. The hard-line m i l i t a r y governments, Jed by Argentina and Brazil, would like lo see tough measurC"S. The more demoa'atic governments such as Mexico, Chile and Colombia will be struggling for a softer solution. Other members of the committee likely to side with the hard-liners are Guatemala and ma ybe Nicaragua . The United States tends to lean to the liberal liide, while the positions of Trinidad~Tobago, Peru and Uruguay are yet lo be: shown. One of the most effective M>luti~ to the problems or international terrorism could be the scrapping of political asylum. But it has been agreed, at least in principle, that the right to asylum will not be touched. Se .v er a I Latin· American countries have been used by political dissidents fGr a long, fjme. Today's urban and country guerrillas are continuing to do so. The hard-line co u n t r i e s would like lo establish a distinction b e t w e e n a nonviolest opponent of a government and one engaged in terrorist activities. But any move in that direction 1>romises to bring protests from such countries as Mexico and Chile 'A'hich boa.st of their liberal tradition and hospitality to foreign rebels. Starting from this point of disagreement, discussions at the juridical meeting likely will ce nter on definitiGn of political crim e. lL is unlikely that a terrorist participating in violent activities against his government could be defined as a common criminal and be denied asylum in all OAS countries. PUT YOURSELF IN OUR HANDS FOR A REWARDING CAREER IN HAIRSTYLING All our students are under the very tapabl• hend1 of Armol'id Marcott• NEW CLASSes NOW FORMING SIGN UP TODA T ArmanJj Beaulil College 34052 Lo Pina 496•9436 Dana Point ------------------~-·----· --- In Six Sehools Drug Education, Scheduled NEW PODIATRY PRACTICE Six area .schools have signed up to take advantage or a series of drug education films offered by General Telephone Co. to schoo l s and organizations located in its service area. Of this six: films available In the series, one -"Youth aod Drugs" -has been viewed by more than 700,000 adults and students in the past three years· lo Ruby ?ilillrr, Ge n er a 1 audlenc~. The sixth film ls Telephone's school program especially designed for upper administrator· elementary school children. Titles or the films are Persons wishing to schedule "Narcotics .-The In.side \any of the films are advised to Story;" "Seduction ot the · contact their local telepbooe Innocent ;" "NarcoUcs -Why busiTless office. Not?;" "LSD: Insight or --'---------- Insanity?"; "The Trip Back - Florrie Fisher's Story;" and "Your Amazing Mind." Dt'. J. •. • ......... -'" """.. 1111 l"Mlllll'Y ,rKllO lr.m ,.,........., i. ~ I Hdrl, i111M1 lllmlotlf '9 L .... Ml,. W1rloll, K• Ml ...,,. _..,. fMflHll Ill Ills - lfllu "' l1M ''"ldl ••1611-.. •I 401 OllMeJ,. SI, Df", l•rfllelt-11 • """"'"" fll "'' t111t1rni. .....i ·~ '°"11111')' AUICltllllll. The first five films named are geared to all age levels, from junior high s c h o o I through college and adult Who Cares? ~6~ COIFFURES Among area K.hool! who have shown the films in the last year or are expected to thls year are Fountain Valley High ; Thurston Intennediate School, Laguna B e a c b : Johnsoo lntennediate School No •th1r 11•w1p1p1r in th1 and Webbe r School, world c1r11 1\>out 'f'Our tolftmu· Westminster, and Crestview nitv Ii•• your coo111111uriity d1ilv 11•w1p1p1r 4011. It's th• DAILY. and Circle View schools, PILOT. SPECIAL Huntington Beach. il~~~~~~~~~~I "We anticipate a student attendance of about 250,000 for the films this year," according I IN LAGUNA j N't:~'-'£ l7J So.tll C.-Hitlnnr f :M '9 t :M 7 D•n ._ ... H11911.ot ... 497-1350 •BFT PACUSES BACK TO SCHOOL Permanent , Wave Includes: Perm111ent, J.Jair Cuf, Hl.ir Conditioning, Plw; Shampoo and Style. mother ...... " .. " ... "." ".. '.'25.00 ' . 'J)aughter ................... $ 1.00_ IOTH FOO ---·-... -. _ ...... ·-$26.00 Both Appontmmls .Mw;t Be For 'Ibe Same Time -EDINGER FOUNTAIN VALLEY 842-8010 ··~:·" &40-6011 MAGNOLIA _,..,. ___ .......... M.....W"' l;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~WE~~·~ll.~~Dfi~~i~i~iiliE~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ • McDonacrs LI Uu, 18962 BROOKHURST STREET Comer of Brookhunt and Garfield -FOUNTAIN VAUEY J=d~~7 if you like good • music ) \ J I c••1 ' "" -,_, .. A¥lftlf• Cl llctll .... 0 AND MOLi 11\tf ..W II '~­•llCll "' ,. ...... Kunll111«i .,.,, -· .... c .. ~ft.I Ottlll A~ Ill.Tl! 01" 0 11.NOl I ... _ Pufltk; lri .... ,. . ..,, .. I . S1Utldt'r .. ,..,.. WI IPll Within "WI IXtell IOl'l"tCIAt llOTIC " NOTICE Moftdly, : o'Clock A., N11llon1I F '31 Soull'I c111lor .. 11 1$ Truste4 unclll' lh• DltEW Tl JILLO, 1111 Hovomblr of Otlllc1I CaU10rnl1. dtl111ll In nbll11tl°"1 0et1un • .,. lo be tolo oe1cr1~ vldld for rnonth1 t · •«ord•llor lhelll ..... I L"Wl'UI..' STATE!. ( !.ALE will! P•tu or In encvmor1n •rid -" ~lld • tlll lht (_.ty Lo>IU ·-did Mltctllln Orwn" • lor tt>e pu •Kurfd b~ IOH, char 111'11!1 of Stl DA TEO: ,., " ... I HOTtC On Or:lol A.M. l'lri; Comp11w, , ol Tru•I 19 ENWAl{E .tnd record ..... us ' (ounty, CJ ceN•ln Na! :1111 tl>treut loot tlCll, Or11n1e CO\ ... 10 Otld for Ctsll, S11te1 fll et!lrlllCI I 1.,wranu """ 'IOUl'MI SYrtet1 In Ct iltornl1 ' tonYtY ... I• Trust In · c-n '"" ...~ ..... -_,,_ ,,....,.,, .. 5•kl ..... w wtrr1nt "-11111. r w ll1fy 111• on 11>e no11 to wll: ! f•arn M1r< "°'' '°"'' t~Ptf!MI I .. ma 11 m -ntlf IM lntere1t, I Tru11. D1tlld; /1 l"llllT AM INIUIAN< •Y llTTI A11hi.1it t Putoll1ri. ''''''"Mr I IUl'I STl.1 '"' Pl.UL II INC .. tnd 111 NOtltTH Pltlntllh SGRO, DO Det.ncr1n1J PllOP'll! CALIFOlll• .. '"' '""' Yov t•I M iiion P Ytrlll ... Cl 11!1!ntUb entitled Cll bro119hl IS TEN d•Y• •Ummons, "'med Clll. HrYed •IH Yw ••t • .. !lit""' ol1lril!Ht monev Of Y!ll'!fild (OMl'l tl, I ltnY "'l'Wr com11111ri1. ...... !TM) • OM lt-Jl•llll _ ... •l•lt.i 1'11 ti , ..... 1 .. ff 01111:1 ~ w. " f5IE.\LI .. WALSWOll 1111 WHIC ,,..,.-'I T-4 C7U) ·-l"ubli .... '"''em- NOTI! t:1rl L. "'· J•~· '"" BJ Ylrl11 ,~. Tt?u ti' HUI• Jud Anltl!lff, S ment ~let M1r!on St ••111111 JI delltor, Joh< •cl111lly' • o! "" 119' ltwllCI -ftf .. Id 1U< II•• Counh dtKrlbtd Loi M "'· p MIKt ll1' """ of "'°"'" k ·-ND TICE f'rld.IY, $( P .M. 11 Ir a1 .• Cit¥ o of Ort"" 11 ""bile I Cltll In II' •II Tiit rl lutfllfl'lllll prll'Wft', "11:1_,., ICCrVld If ..... tJ, lfl'I. WMlllflt I Pt.1"""°1 ,,.. Wlhft ltv•"' " l"l/Mllt!t A11tu1I 11 l , . . -.. .LBGAL NOTlCE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ...... t • ,...,. Cl•Ttl"ICATa 01" eUllNUl C:lltTIJllCATI 01" OllCONTl•UAllCI l"ICTITIOUI No\MI --ullCIWll•Md de c1rtllr !MY ,,_ °' USI ANOIOlt AIANDONMlllff Oil MOTICI! 0' l NTINTICIN TO •::o'fi IN THI SALi 0.. ALC IC a•YIUO•I ,,.. JllCTITIOUS Mi.Ml cOftdUcilM • bUMMff •1 lt.M l"!Ktnlll THf UMOflllSlGHED dOitl . Mrfty S.Mmlltr \, 1'1'0 AY-· C:Ol!I Mff<I, C1ll+or11I•, IHlllw tl\t "'"Hr th.ft, fl!KtlYI Awlolll 2t, lt10 Ill TO WHOM IT MAY CONCt:llH, lldll\fW fPr!'ll 11111'19 ., MAITllilll TOOl..S ~-·to ft Mllltt• -· tN llc'flllolot s.i•l•d lo l\Wtll(I of Ill• nc ...... AND. MOLDS, 1 llmll"" Nrlnerilli.t Miii firm 111-ot HAllllOI l'llON SIGH _II .. IOf', N1llC1 11 ...... :-""' ""'Mid 1111'11 11 lllllt'lllOMlll "' tr.I toll••· COM,.AHY It~ It.,,..,... ltr..t, c ... till und1r1!tllt4.•f-MI "' " 1tcoflO!k I ... ...,._ .. .,_ IMl""H 111 !"II 11'1411 MIN, C111ittlll1 "'216. WfllCll 191111-f bt¥if'ft• I I tN lll'tlftftf .. -..Cr .... I I ,iac. "' ,...lilltlU 1r1 11 touow1. wii ..,._..1, ~ ., fM follciwllW loflow1: .__,.. L. w1.il\Cltlo, lttOJ trtw, _Hl'I, -.. 111/1'\1 111 f\lll •Old .i.a .. 1111 H1rtlo<' l ""I"''''· C•ll MIN. H1111t1111111111 ••ell. C•Ulotlllt t0tner1t r•klfnc:• ,. If IOllOW .. ,_ltl "U"U'"' to well llllllllloll, "" l"fll I tt'· ~t!I""" II ... IYllll ti Tiii 0.,1""""! J0.W. • S.l.H'ldWtOf' Ill UJ ,,_.1 ... Nord N, llltcldl, U Slo.lltt U ...,.,.._ Df Alullolk: aiverfft Cllllftl tw 1""91'1<t ., .. c.i. MfM, C•lltw~I. (1..lml!ld ~:: ~:~:,:,en •• ,. $Wiii ~ Oii Ol'ltl111I •Hlk;•tlfn of ·~ •lc9flollc 11111 l ' ~ • """""' llC91'1M fer Uc1nH1) ,., "'- .. ' .. ' Alll'V9t 0 lf7e Clrtllk~ll kr Tflm«flClll It llullMI• pr-IMI 11 fillowi: \ ' """"' lllli '""' llttll'-tlol/nl, ... ... K--"' L. W1Ml!Cl11<1 lldl¥11 oi1....,Dlktlltfl ll'lll'IOI #I 111 Ille ON SALi' ll!lll Johll I . l111ncl1t-Ill Ill ..,. tl!IC 1 1111 c f,, A...,.111 ,,.,1,1111 lo itrolllt 1111 !11111!\U STAT«" Of CALll'OIHIA Or 1 1 -Cl1tt el el 111(11 llc9tl11f1) ,.,,,, Ille 1 Vlf'llltll OIANOI COUNTY! ·-1'°"'"11'' Ullffr "-.,Wll4-If 1re111t ti tny offlc1 of t111 ~·r-0 • .... ··-yt l7tl!. Nfor• _ , ""'" 1tt1i.... ,... q1 1111 ci..n coo.. Ai-·· 1 ... •• " ,, ~ P:bi1c'i':":1111 for t•ld s111w.' Hr-rtv ....,::,~,110.m' 11•!>0 11111 20lh ''' •I Tiii o1'H~~1''1t'" A1~';i.i"k ,:'.,.;, ~~r«I K.....tll L. W1D111!11t1 ..i J11111 fl/ l ldllrd N. llt<l<ll COt1"9t, ltU 0 lll'llft. 1«1'1-tl. a. S.ulldlraor> 111 ~Nl)ll'll to '"'11 .. tM ~lllllltllld Or•"" c .. 11 0,11, l"Het. c111b'ftt1,,.,,,111111111rounc11 w •1111r .. ,_ ....... lltlMI ••• ~llCrllltid .. ""91nt 11 '"' .,.,,,Mt i. 10. 11, .. provlffd 111' 1 ... Tfll •r-..... ,. NI -wllttlft IM!tlll'Mgt •llf •CMIW ...... Im 1Jfl·10 -L!Ulllld !or th• Mii .. •ic.lllllc tt•n 111tcut«1 ttit .. ,.,.. 1--------------1.....,'''"· Tll• '°"'" of ,.,r1nu11111 mt¥ coF,ICIAL llALI LEGAL NOTICE t1t e1:1t1J!Wd '"""' 1n,, .it1c1 " "" C111r111 .ti, w,.,. o-r1m ... 1. Nott,.,. l"l,lflllc • C1Hlor11l1 1-------,.,-,.,,------· i 11111'1.., A. I . Weir~,.,. Prll'ICl"t OWiet .In P.Jtnt l"u•u111., 0•11111 Col•t o.u, 1'1111, Or111t1 CoYlllv CllTll"ICAT• 01' IUllMISI ""'""""'' 10, 111'11 16U•1t Mv tommlulon l!Ulrfl JllCTITIOUI Mo\MI C)c;I. 1. U10 Tiii ""°"'I""" ... Clf'llW ... It Publlllled Orrn94' Ce>a!il 0111,, l'llet, cen1h1Clln1 • llll1l11nt 11 n4 w. ltrll S1. LEGAL NOTICE AulU!il 2(1, V tnd $fPlrmDtr l 10 Coot1 Mtsa, C1lllOl'lllt, Undrr th• I---==~=~=-----· I 1'10 1ID.1D llctlt1out lltm nun• ot (II KA•PE'T NOTICI! TO CJllOl'fOll K.AANIVAL. AND (ll P & P CA•PET IUP'l!llllott COUttT OJI TMI LEGAL NO'nCE JEAVICE Ind fh.11 u hf lltfl\,11 com111tet $TATI! 01' CALll'OttNIA ,.. of IM felkl'lll"9 ...,HI'!, ""'°¥ 11111'11 Ill THI COUNTY O~ OIAlittl ftlll llld llllCt If ,..ldtncl II 11 ft!Mtl! .... A ...... HOTICI! OJI TltUIT•l'S IALI """ 01vlft K1/lo, !Ut 11111 tt.. 1!11111 of Llmtoll •llodr• Dtc:11Nd. L.OAN NO, .utt14'1~¥ c• Mt11, MOTICt: IS HlttlEIY 01¥.11'1 to 1111 NOTICE IS Hlll!l8iY GIVl!N Tlltt '" f?'I"" Aull.Ill"'' l11'G o:tllllfor1 of ~ 1bo¥1 11tll'IM cltc'"""I Melld•Y· 51plemW "· lf'10 ., 111• Jitter D. Kel• ,..., Ill..,_ 11 .... 111e cl•I-"'""'"" <>'<kick A.M. al IM frGl'lt .,.,ttll(I t. tM ..... If ClllfOl'.1111. "*' cllctdt<lt ... ,_Ir.cl .. '"' "*"· Natlonll Flrtl Morl•llt CO<p, lhlllclll\I, Ot0•"'9 CIM.mfy. wllll 1111 llKllMr'f """"ltrr1, 111 ...... f!Ct 631 Selllh Mlll(htster Aven11<11, Anrhllm, n $1t>t. ?, lt70, ridoo'• mt, I Noli,.,. ot ltlt (llrt. ol !I'll 11:11>111 tnlltllll court. 1r ca1fler1111 AGENT'S ESCAOW SERVICE Pllbllc In Ind ti<" Mkl s1111. HrlOl'llllY lo Pf'111nl lhtm1 . Witt\. ltlt llKIUI ..... I Tru•lte or IS $Ub111111TM Tr I • IPPllrtd Piie<" 0t¥1d Ktlb kll(IWll to ITll ¥011d•en;, lo tile .-ertltlllcl ., Ille ott1c• • • U!i ee. 10 DI lh• per"'" Who!i• ....... II ot hi• Attomfy, Doneld E. s ... 1tlwood, ttncltr !he Deed ot Tru•I exec;ulld b¥ AN· tul>M:rltlld to lh• within lll•ll'Vn'l•Ml INI 1617 We1tcl!ll Orlve, Suite Hum .. r JO.I, OllEW TRUJILLO AND LINDA TllU· t cknowledl«I M t)l;te:Ull'd IM lltnt Nt'/llPOrl Btl(ll, C11ltornl1 91..0, '#fllcl\ 11 JILLO, huSDlnd Ind wlf1 rec;orded 911 (0,FICIAL SEA.LI • 111t •ltCI ... bUtl-Of tfW: ....... n;ltllld In HO¥..,,btr l. lff7, In Boot MU l't-1M '"'-IW I( H_... 111 lntlllrl '41rlelnl11t Joo 11'4 "llll of 11141 <II Oll!ICll RKQrlh of 0.•1111 C_I,, Mot1rv i>11Dt1c.C1l1f1tnl1 Cle<«lflll, Wittlin '°""' l'llOftfflt '"'' ttt. c1111or1111. bY rta.on ot • brtach or Prl...:11111 Offk• 111 llf!il 111•tk1t1111 ot t!ll.t l>Ollct. dtftul! In tilt Pll'l';ment ot 111rform1n1;1 •! Or'""' COUii!~ Delld .,.IM!ti.t' 10. 1t1', oblltailon• l«ured lfltrebw, •NI Not lct GI My commls1I011 E•Plr• Arlllur O.Cube!U1 Ot!IUll •lld bet>eil<lllY'• •llcllon lo CIUM NO¥ 21 lt71 IJC~itlr ... 1111 Wlll ., la be SOid lhe .,_ty hlrtlll Mlew' P111>111h11 .. ~·-COMt Diii¥ Pllol 1111 111io¥1 """""' ftcldlll <!~lbed h1Ylnv been rM:"Otded t s pro-Slt>ffmber J 10 17 14. ltlO JUS.70 DOllllllll a . 1"'.i1wt111, ¥•ded for bY llW ind more lfl.ln lhr"l:==::-='::-':=-':::::::::::::-::::::-=11'1tW•tHff om.. months lltYifll eltP•ed 1111(1 1uchl• Sulll N-Mr-. • recordlllo<i, wlll 1111 ti Public 111C!lon lo LEGAL NOTICE --.-M_..,, ~· Cll...,... ""' 1111 lliellttl Olcldlr for CIUI PA'l'AILE IM T"' Cn•l -LAWFUi,,' MONEY OF THE UNITEol---,c-oc-=~~=~~---·i " STATt:S OF AMEllCA AT TIMI! OF SUJll!WIO• COURT OF THE All•lllV lw •oelllw SAL.E wllr.ou! coven•lll or w1rr1nty, IX• STAT• OF CALIJ'Ol.N1A l'OW PU'lllllll«! Ori-Col1! Dlllt l"llot, War, Sex, Alcohol :Under Fire ' u\s ANGELES (AP) - Alcoi.oJ, n1rcotlc1, the practlce of'• a ens 1t1\v 1 t y traJnina:, •• 1e1 education ind war have been condemned 1n a aeries of resolutions adopted by the Nth annual convention o( the N1tional Woman's Christian Temper1nce Union. Alcohol w13 c::rlticized by dete1atea in a re10luUon Monday for "Ila role In brain, heart, liver and other bodily dam•et·" Another resolution de1erlbed the use of narcoUcs as a terrible bawd to lUe and property. Seru!IUvlly training "'I I describtd 11 a "ltrange and new doctrine" and criliciied because ••Jt promotes nudity ,.. !' a meens of callin1 off · lnhlbltlonl, fears, unp1euant moral convlctiw, shame and pllt comple1es.' • Anoll!er resolution opposed Ml educ:aUon on the IJ'OWldS th1t auch lnltrucUon 1hould be 1>rtw or lmplltel, •$lo tltl•, POSlftllon or THI COUNTY OF 01.ANGI' ~lttl\Mt .-tfi H aM ~ I, 1ncumD1'1ncff. t"' inlorrtll conveyt'd 10 ••• A.fJll' "70 1•11 • family matter. .. lld -tllld lw film •• IUCll Tr111111, 111 NOTICI! o" Hl!AttlNO 0,. PITITtON w. r' • a 1 d an 0th er .. nci 11 .... followltie c!IKT~bld pr0Ptf1y 111 FOi JllOIATI OF WIL. ... 1AND 1'01 LEGAL NOTlCE lh• Countr., o ........ $11!1 of C.llfOl'11l1t t.ITTIRS TIESTAMl'NTA•T' --------------1 l'ffOluUon, ''ii destructive to LOf ltJ ., TrlCI Ne. "'· ..... ~ 1:11111 of MA"ll. ti(,"'• 0 N. y IA.Ill m' recordld ... loolr; "· P1t1 '2 ol Dec .. Md. • IUP•ltOtt COUIT °" TH• life and property and • • • MlsctllllllOUJ M111, record• ot "Id HOTICf IS HlttflV QIVlN Tll•I STATI Ofl CAL.ll'OllUA POil there are better ways O[ onin .. CounlY, C1llfor11I•. Lllldl Gl"llr 1111 t11«1 11trtl11 1 INlllloll TH• COUNTY O• OU .... lor lhe PUrPOH DI p1ylns 1111 obllNlllllt for ...-.11 ol Wiii 11'41 fOf' IJIUlll(I of N .. A"6QJ Settling differtncel between ~ecurfd lrt itld 0~"'1 ol Tn11I lncluflnt l.ltlltf Tftltlftlllll,.,. le l"llllloll•r" NOTICI OF H•AttlN• ON Pl!TITtOll nations." The re I 0 JU t j 0 n tM1, cllar91, ind t•Ptn1e1 o1 Tr111ll1 tlflrlnCll to Whlcfl It midi for furtlllr JIOI PIOllATI' OP wn .... AND 1"01. ,..., ot s11.. Nrtlall•r•, .,,.. ttwi1 ttt. time 11111 •1•<• un1tt1 T••TAMINTAaY supported President Nixon'lf OATED:Au1uf1 1,.1t10 ol llHrlrie llll t1ma 1'111 Min llf Tor IE1!1 !1 el LULU WA C Hl L bring ' nd AGENT'S ESCROW SERVl(I ~ WP!lrtltlolr 11, 1'10, •I t :JD •.m., I" Int IMOl!MAl{fl., 0.Cttlld. efforts to "a apefdy e BY: AL. GRAHAM. c-1rwm .. °'Plrtmoril .... ' .. tlld NOTICE IS HElll!IY C1YIM lfllf to Ute war Jn the Far East and AU'f, Ylee Preslcl•nl ' OllUrt lit 1111 Cl¥k C111ter Drtv1 W11t, ln HATTIE HOGUE lltt lllld 1W11n 1 SPS 14711 I '"' Clh' "" Sllll• ,.,..., C1llloml1, 1>11111111 tor Probll• ,of WHI 11111 ,., in the Middle East. .. P'ublllhed Of•nte Co~•' 01il¥ ,1111, 0.lld Slplwnbtr 1, 1970. ltJUl llC.I et Llltrr• THlllMll!ert .To u -F--.1 J T r AUOUl! J I tfld SePtemDtr J, tO, 1t10 W, IE. ST JOHN Hlll!ofter, rwffr.,..;1 Ill wllldl 11 -fir Dua. l.:U • ooze (I 1Mf..70 Ceu""1 Clttll; fuf'lfllr 11rlkul1rs, Ind '"''"""'"-•(Ml Ev an It 0 n. I 11 .. w Ill -------------'--'iP•T•I TOllNAY, •I•« o1 lle1rlnt1 !he i1m1 .,_ Dltft .. 1 LEGAL NOTICE 1111 A'-•• 11111• N•111'-' 1N tor s ... 11m11tr 2s. 1t10, 11 t:• '•"'·· · 111 W\lflimoualy re ~ el e ct e d --~=~~~-==~---·.ICllf• Mftl, CllllWlll• t»ll "'' courtroom ol Ot'Hrt!T!Mt "'-. S ot president of. the union for a ' ' Tll! Ct141 ~ Olk! (Oljrt, II 1111 Clylc c~ °""' NOTICE OF TAUSTEf s SALIE ·--.... Plftl'-Wttt, Ill"" Clf'I' el S1nl1 ...... C•I-. 12th one-year term. Tl.UST NO. 6'1' Pubflll'llCI Otlnel COltl Otllr Pile!, 01ted S.tl ...... r 4, lt7' .. ~1-j--------------j On October ?, 1910, 11 .•l1¥eo •'cloC'k ,._Mt J, ~. 10, lt1t ,,.....,. w. I!. ST JOHN, LEGAL NOTl~ A.M. Flrit Ame<-k1n Tolle ln1ur1ow;1 cou11t~ Cllttt "-.C. Compnnv. •• 1ri11111, •r till cerl•ln OeM LEGAL NOTICE COOKSEY, SlfUMACMla, C°'-IMAM. of Tru•I lltl(Vlld OW AALJIH I(,. MIMYAIO 1...r l'IOWAlllO T41Jfl BENWARE Ind NANCY f:, IENWAIE T"l:IM Uf T,_ Ii C..llt" .... tUP•llOlt COUJlT 0" TH• I nd rKotded Merell i. 1fff In look ..... • ....... <OUIT o• TMI °'""' <•lllwlll• "'61 JTATI 01" CALIJIOllllllA l'Oa P••~ llS of on1c:111 lltc:Or'CI• OI or..... .. T•h MJ·nl'l THI COUNTY OJI OllAMO• Courolw, C11lfa.r11l1 111d our1u1n1 to 11'111 STAT• 0 1' CAt..tl'OllNIA JIOI ""'"'"' llr .... It....... Mt. A"Jtft C:ffl1fn Nollce of Oeleult .tnd Ele<llo<i IO Ttt• COUNTY 01" 0111.A.... Jlu•lltlled Or•-COl!il DlllY l"Het, lllO'TtCI' 0" H•AllHO Ofl' PSTITION sell 1h1reundorr rttorcled Mey 'I'· 1'10 In .... Ml'IM S.Otemblr t , I•. U, lt10 l•JJ.1' FOi. ,.IOIAT• Ofl' WILt. ANO l"Ott Book t.103, Peet 951 of Olf!clrl Record1 Of NOTIC• OJI M•AIUNO 0" PITITIOM L•n•ll T•STAMINTAIT Oran11 Co11n1y, will under Ind Dl.l"\llnl to FOii' PIOIATI OF WI...... AMO Elll'-ef AMll!IE L. SIMMOffl. 1)9. •1tld o.ed of Tr.,.-! >tll 11 Pl.IDl\C .tUcllon COOICIU AND fl'Oll LITT I a I LEGAL NC7l'JCE CNll'd. for ctJh, llwlul .._y of "" United TISTAMllfTAIY NOTICt: 11 HEREIY GIVEN Th-II Sl1!11i of Amlflcl, 11 lhl mrl11 WtJI 1!11111 el JOHN L. kAlSOFF, p ... JJ DOUGLAS C. tlMMONS h1• fUt.i ll1t1I,. 1 ..i1r1nc1 to ,,,. Fir~! Am1rlc1n Tiii• O.C..1111. CIWTIJllCATI 0, IUllM•s• '4!1111en f$f 1roblt1 .. Wiii lllCI tor lntur11K• C0"1PI ..,, bUlldlrie IOC•!«I et MOTICI!' 15 Hlllll!l'I' G!VlM TIYI JllCTITIOUI NAMI IHUl llCI of LtttlU Tffl•-l1rw lo !I'll 'flt SO\l!hll sl eor'llll" 01 1'11111 t ncl M1 l11 Vil.MA KASSOFF hll fllfd 11ertl11 • Thi undl<'lllntd It°"-ctr!I" fll fl Nlllllfltr, rlf•,..ll(t lo whlcll l1 mid• tor $tree!• ln !he CllY of SI"'• ....... PlllllOll fOf' ... ,. ot Wiii 1n<t Cod1C11• conouc11 .... t>u1ln1H .. 2111 w "'"°" turtlltf 11rttcultra •nd 11111 ttwi "'"' •lld CiUIDr,.le 111 tflt,t rl11hl llllt Incl l"lernl 11111 fOI' llllHlllCI el l.tltlr1 TnlllMtlll tY Pl $rlll• Alll C•Hllrnll ~ "" l"llCll of ti11rl111 tfll ll"'t hi• ... II HI cotweyfd to an<t now helCI undor Oltd ol 11 Ille INllllOlllf, rlflf'lnc• le wlllell 11 tici'llleu• firm' ,..,,,. ~ · •· 1 . for llpl...,.,.,. 75, ltto. 11 f ::JO 1.m ,, tn T•utl in lht Pf-rtY 1ilu1ttd In '"' -IOf' lurtller 1J1rtlcul•r1. •nd Ill•!""' l!QUIPMIEHT llE:NTALS .,,. .... , .. w 1111 cour1roem ol 0.1rtmtnl N1, ' 11 Count¥ 11111 $1111 dncrllllel '" lhN •nd •lle11 el llHrl,.. 11'11 "'"' "" firm 11 c_...i ot '"" fellOWllMI -llft, s1ld ceurt •• 100 c1 .. 1c Ctnl•• Orl¥1 l.o! :M 111 lloet " of Trtel No. •n ••• ...., '" ,., $1p!M'l1Mt 11. lfto, II •:• wllPM .,._ Ill tull •nd pt~ "' '"""""' W"'· 111 ~ City .. 11nt• AM. C1ll10rnl1. s~-" en 1 ,.,,. lhll'IOI recorded In 1.m .. II\ 1111 cour1roem o1 °'Ptlrt'""" N1. 1 11 folkl'll•· g.1111 l#tornllll' t 1no b0011 :to, "'"' I 11\d 2, M!Kltltl_. J ol Mid t:OUfl, II 100 CIYIC Clllflt Ot'lq 1 Jloblrl .(ludl J. SfT!ltfl, 711) W, W, •• IT JoHN, • MIN. rtc:Ol'<ll et 111d Or•ftll Counh. Wftt, In 11'11 Cit¥ If"'"'' A11t, C1!1for11l1, Ctrl!Clll Pl,. s-1 ....,,., C1\llor11ll c~ C,_r_. S1ld !ill• wlll a,. f!'INI wllllout cow-Ill 011111 "'°'..,,.., I, 1'1t Oilld s.i.m...-2. 1'1t elll.,.. ... & """'4•• It warrenlY, exprH lld It lm11lled, II le W. E, ST JOHN, looerl J, Smllll .,, JI,.,. '· M .... ..... Hiie. PO$•eUIOll er oMCUm ... lllCll lo COU<tl¥ C1ffl[ Sti ll of CtlllOl'lll• ,., ..... llwtrf'/' Drhl Nlllf'I' flit rtma\nln11 1r1nclp1I ....,, dul WAI.DI, W•IMSTOCIC, 0.•-COVl'!Y e-'Y MH ... C1m.nll• tt111 111 IM ..ote tKured 11¥ Hid Oiied 411 Trull MAJUOl'I I ICINO, INC, o.. .... ,. 2. 1'711, blfort mt, 1 ,...'"' T .. 1 (111) t1Mlll to wit: SS,$00.00 wll~ 1Mt~ft llllNn • ~ •"'""' om., 11t111 • Public 111 '"' fir Mkl 11111, _.._..fir """""'9 lw Jltllll-• '"'"' M1r(h I, I'll\~ •• Ol"ll\lldld 111 N kl ........ Hllll, C111fer1111 tau '"""'"" ttoblrt J, lll>lltt knl'lll!I .. -.. l"utlll•llld Or•nt• CO.II Otllr Piiot. flOlf tOllllllt with IHt, cl'Nortl., I nd Tl!: ftlSI •••ftllew t-4111 Dt 1f11 -"'" whOlll l'lllT'I ll JlllllCtllllli:t lltlf-r 10, II. 17, 1'1'0 l't0·1'tl •~Penile• et ""' Tr1111ee 11nd Wdl ·-A"'"""I ........ It....., to IM wltfllll Instr-I II .,1:::::c::::::..::c.:.::.....:..::.:::...-,_--'- sum• 11 miy "'"' 111e1> 11dY1ncld tw lhe Publl"'9d Or11111 Cotll Diii'!' 1'1111, 1c10-1ildlld 111 1ucut• 1111 uu111. LEGAL N011CE -11er 11111 lloldlt el Mid llCll•. wllll Selt...,be!' J, 4, 10, lt70 1&»<10 (0,,ICIAL SEAL.I ~!er~t, 11 trOllkltd In Wiit ONd el Mlrv K. Hllln' CllTIJllCATI Oii' IUJINl'IS Trust. LEGAL NOTICE No!1n' Jlubllc.C11lftlrfllt JllCTITIOUI MAMI Ollld: iw.ullf J1 , !910 PrlllCINI Oltlew Ill Tiii vndlt•ltllld dell ctrtlf'f" llt "' l"lllST AM•RICAN TITl.I' p ... u °'""'• Counh e91ldll'tllntl I liu1l""1 tt I'. 0 ... X J71, lllSU•ANC• COMPANY ClllTIPICATE OI' IUSINIU Mv Comml11r111 l.~1lre1 C111t1 MIM, C1!1for11l1, un<t1r '"" 8 Y llTT• A. Hot.L•N•ICK "ICTITIOUI NAMI! Nev, 1•. 1112 11 c t It I 1u 1 t I t m n 1 "'1 e f A>1l1hllf S«rlf1rr I Pullll1hld Ori-Cor1t CtllY Pllel f NYllllOMMENTAL. CONTltOL SYITIMS Pu•t11fl..:I 0<1npe Co.st 0.11, ,.Uot ~llCl~,:i';1l:,':n:0,1<1:Jww:.':f'.....!s' Se.temblr J, 101 11, 2"1. ltto iio.11 •rod 11111 Mid firm 11 cornlOMd et 1111 kp!lt!Tlblf' 10, U, l~. lt10 l...0.7' lrYll'll C1lllor11l1 under fill fktlllwl !Ir,,; tollowl,,. """'"' Wl\oll llfl'M In IUll Incl ' '•• o•• ••n••• '' LEGAL NO'l'Irao 111«"" rt1idlncl 11 ••1o11oW11: LEGAL NOTICE; ... me el VANTA 1 ' ".&:oi JlhHIP tt. Au111n, lltlt II J11r11N .-------~~==---I• Lll"llltld P1rlnff1~111 i nd lfttl 11ld Htrll <,. F I I Vi lllr Cl11"'nll t210L II a"--' of lh• "'1-lllt ...,son•. "" 111111•11 • SUPEllllOJl COUlT 01' TM• wllOH "''"" In 11111 .... pl1us ., p.u.... Ctlld ..... I, 1,,0. • . -l"hll"' 111. Au1fll'l ST .. TE OF CALIJIO•NIA 11'0 rtsldtnc1 11r1 ••. lol!oWI. ClttTIJllCATI OP AIANDOl'IMIJfT stile of Ctll!otllll, Or•"'• (Miii!'" THI' COUNT' OF 01.ANOa Genertl Ptrtntr. OJI l'IC'TITIOUI ltAMI 0.. ltlt! I 1'70 01fM1 m• 1 Helt" No. 1111n Dornlf!lc: J. sreou, uoot WflH......,, 1'""'11nt fo 11c11111 2.-.1 If> ftlt Public '" ·,,,;, 1or' Miit Sltti .' ..,,...111¥ SUMMONS lr¥tfle, Ct!llOl'llll Ct ll'°""ll CIVIi Codi, ttt. llNtln..,... 1,....1,ld l"hllll tt, AUtflll --to me lo P .. UL. R. BONSElll CON$Tl:UCTION. IC1.-tll A, Ht111, 1424 G•l"llml ,.lt<I, -· .,........ certlty !hi! •fftclln •1 ol tit ttt. 1111,..,. wll01e 1111..e 11 aubicrllled INC ,. and C. W. HE STE It clOllll 111111"'11 Allollli+J'l'I, C1!ll0f'11i• lt'4 clwe of 11<nlntt1 ...... II at. 1 ... hi to ll'll wltMll 1nttrumi lll t Md ,,_, NORTi-iGATE. 1 UJ'l'llllCI P1r1,..rm11t. 1..lmltt'd J11M,...., ''''Id crolr11 D<lllMH uncltt' 1111 fk!ltlow. •Cllllew!edted he e~tcutld me ,,me. Pllllntlth Va. PATSY J. SGttO !LENE 1'1ul M. Brown, 1to!1 lht!lrr, lrv!M, llrm n•ma of 5totunbe!'I, ll lndlr I. Ct, (0P'FIC1AL. SEAL! SGRO, DOE I 11>rough OOE v, ln,!u1lv• Areh """· 3012 Oc:11nv1-StrHt, 11 )111 VII Lieto, N _ _. .. ,ell, Jo-" 11! OiYll Ortnte· l.l1m S. <;rot1•tr, "°1 LlllCI• C1tltornl1 '26'0. 1nd 1010 Nerltl Nwllll Melll'Y P~bllc . C•Ulernl1 STITI' OI" Wood WIY, lfVl/11, Clln I:. Ltl"rnr, 11'tel. S111t1 AM, C1 lltwnll f2071, Wlllch t'rlnc,.ll Office tn 7'2111 Adell!1, Mlt11o<i Yll!o. H•l'Old M. bu1l,,.n ""'' 1otm1rlr coml"OHd el "'' ar-c-IY Oeltlldanll •tOPL-1! 01' /fii!' CAL-I FOi.NiA II tht 1bo•e 111mM Oeft11d1n1t1 You art hereb1 dlr~!t'<l 10 f\tt I ""rhten Plttdlna In •esp0~1t lo 1111 "e<°l!ltd como11lnl ol 1111 1boYt nam., Pltlnlll!• with lhl clerO ol !ht ~bo'vt lll!llled court In !he 1t>ovt e-nllt!fd adlen brDuehl , .. in•t ¥00.0 In •elcl court, wltt+l11 TEN CleYs t!!er the M!rvl~e on YOO) ot lll!t summol\1, II >trved wl!hln Ille •boYI nemtd ,ountY. or wllhln THIRTY cr1v1 II served ehtwl'ltrt. You a•e 1>1reby noti!IO!<I lh~I unlns you ,o file 1 wr\tten re•POn>lve o!N dino. lllct ot1ln!lfl1 wrn 11k1 h1d1"""1 •or 111y morieY or ct1m•t•s <1tm1ndN In lltr ¥erl!i.11 comollill! ti ••l1ln1 u1<1n c1111t1c1. er wm 111!¥ to 11>1 couri fer .. n~ ol!'llr rltllel 4111'111'dtd 111 1111 vlflll"" •ncl FIYI M. M1t1ll•ll ll/wr1 12.NI IOl-1111 "''°"" WllOtl 111,,,., Ill !UH Ind MY C-IHIOll f:a111trH •rcrw11lnt AY~lll, ''"'' Al'll, llllllilrt F, p!Kn of r11ld111C• 1ra •• "'lk1¥11: J u,.1 ,, u11 lti,tlld.lll, UI Brllll'#OCJd, Coat• Mtu. H....,., I. $talllltDe<I. U1J l llllYI• Jlublllhl'd Oi1nt• COlll 0.11¥ fllte!, IOMll G. RulUI, 2~7•~ 5'>111rt LI"'· NllW...,.I Bu en, C1lller11l1 '26'0 S Plorn .. r !O, JJ. 2• •1111 Oct11 .. r. I. ·Ml11lon Yltlo. Hlllll I , T~ 11141 Tlllodor• 1.. Binder. 21n e1r Ftnn 1:.,. 1611-1' l.rurlncl• W1¥. S111t1 Ant, J1ma F. p11c1. s1n!1 An1, C1lllom11 nnt l 11chtno11, !IOO 0.1111• Av111ue. "'°"' Htrold e . Mn1Y1Jlllc. 141 l lrdlrnMI LEGAL NOTICE ell! '"'-'• llDIHl'I R, Cook, ltlS f11t Drive. it.n11111m. C1IUOf'"l1 n-. 1--~=,;::,;:~;..,~c;;;..,=~-CtPtrlln, L1nc111tr, M1 rl1wn C. "rl... Ollfll Auoull 11, 1910. CllllTll'ICAT• 01" IUllNlll 111\11 M1rl10lll AY.,,.,,., Coront Ml Mir. H1rold E:. M11""1111k l'ICTITIOUI NAMI' tt~" M. Gr11>0W, :mr Alll Vt&la Oltll!NIEJlG & OLUSK•lll Thi tll!der1lelllCI dell' c1rt11Y 111 11 OrlY•· H .... llO•I INch. Oer)Mtlk J, SY: o_,, I. N111tf' c-uc1•111 • 11111111111 •• UH l.ottn. Slc:ott, 11Cm Whlt-ood, !rvl"', ICll'lfll'll> AllWnt1'1 11 U.. COlll M111, C1lllor11!1, V"°'' l!lt A. H1!11, H1' G&ml'llt Pl1ct, AM!trlm. Itel A ... nu1 11"" Slltl lldlllOoUI llrm n111,. Ill TOTl·EM Mallt+-M. Sh1rm1n, t3' !tout,. Hildt, LOI Allltln, CIUI, !ON1 MANUFACTURING CO. tnd !~1! said it.Ml'lllm, C1!1fornla T·UJ21 firm It coml>OHd of tt.e fnllcrw!n<1 Pl'""'· Dtll'd Au01J•I l,, 1t10 Pu~llthtd o.~nt'* Coa•f Cally Pitel, whose n•"'' in lull Incl ~••tt of ruldtlltt Domenic J. Sicoll Autu>! 11 and S!9!tml>lr J, I~. 11, 11 11 lollcw1: KtnMlll A. Hein 1'10 1601·70 Fr1ncl1 M. Gunn, 1SH VI I Mtrlnt . comoitlnl. STAT! OF CAl.IFORHI A. NewPOrl Belch. C•llfornlt . V111 '"'' 11111 ttt. •'vlc•.,.lf '" :,........,.,. OAANOE COUNTY: LEGAL NOTICE , D1!tcl Seolembtr t, ltlO. .., •11'1' !'Mtltr ~ • o.. Au.u11 )I. 1t70, llt!or• me, • f'lot•rv Fr1ll(ll M, Gun,. C .. '11'11111t., 11111 W-1. llldl ltt.l'lln Pu•llc In 1.W lot Mid ll•lr, Prr)Oll11i¥ St•lt el C1llfe<-11l1, Orll'ltl C-ly: •-Ill Ill CSllWlllll w1t11l11 1111 fllnl ""'" 1-r..:r 1(,111111111 A. Htln •nd Oeflll11lc J. P-ll4'6 On S.11"""1111' t. lt70, bl!Of'• ,,.,, • """' ... "'"""'"""' fw Hlfllt. Wf'llltll Sll:•ll ...... n to m• IO llt !Ill ,..,..,., ClttTll"ICATI' 01' susl111s1 Nol•N l'ul)fl(" t" •!Id for ..... , •••• ''"dint II ffll c..,,lllllll, ..-''""" •rl tulltc:rllllel I• 1111 wlfhln J11CTITIOUI MAM• otr1K1111ll'I' •PH1r..:r "r1nc:1J No, Gun11 Ott.cl MIY 1• "70 1 ... 1.ufl'lt!Ot ..... 1ckMWlld... '""' ••• Thi Und1t1l1nld dell Clfllfy ... 11 con· --II 11 ITll "' .. "" ........ Wl'IOI• W. E. ST JOHN, Clort tcll!ld the •imt. ducll"" 1 b\nllltH 11 p O ... f1J n1m1 11 oylMc•lbld fe 1"t wlll'llll BY J1lllcl M. C•l .... •ll !OFll'ICIAL SEAL.I Mldw•r City. C1llfol'f'll1, .;..o., 11\9 II('. l111lr111nfl!t .ncr l(kll(IWlllltlll llt IXKUl«I f~EALl Ar1t111 M. Wll~fnl lllloui firm "''"' ti O AN A ffll 111me. Deputy Cltr't Not•rr PuDllc: • (t!!tern11 OISTRISUTO•S Ind 11111 ••Id fir,., h {Ol'l"ICIAL SEAL) WALSWOttTM~S•IOIL & C•AI... PrlnclHI Offlc:1 In em-.. of Int 1 llow! llo1 J..-f , 01yla ~-;!,=·~~~!1lflnll1 ~"r .... ~°I!::;,, l'••lr• ~m• 1~ 1u11 •nd 11~K• ;:' ,::.:::i, ~ •• : ;~t~rr.,:.u~~~c~~1or11!• Tel !714) .. ,....... MIY n . I,,. ltlkl'lll. T 0••111• c-" Altl"'"1 !It p-:%"" ' '" ... Or•~· COiii 0111, Pllol 01" Uff!M , l1l!S 1•1111 Alllll, Jllklll· MV Comml111on Ix•"" · •· C 1 0 11'1' "Ito! 11 1 .,... • !•In V1t11Y, Ctlll. • "ubh•fllll "" ... • ' Au•u11 11 • ...,,mltllf ), 10. 17, 1rn 0.1..:r AUii.iii '" lt70 JUM ,., ,.,, kellmDtl' ), JO, u. 11, "'° 1'3'1·70 1S'7·1tl 0•1• Tur..... Putlllllled °''"'' c.... DtllY Piii!, STATE OF CALIJIOlllNIA. klllttn .. r 10, "· ,, '"' Oclobl!r I, LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE O•ANGI! COUNTY: lf10 '"'1·10 --~=~=,-,,-:::cccc:-:c::-;:--l-::=:::::-=--:::-::::-:::;;:;-;;-;:;-=---I On Aueu11 u, 1no • ..,_, ""' 1 Neltr¥ LEGAL NOTICE HOTICE O' ~Al.IHit.L'S SALE NOTtC• OF MAllHAL'S IAL• Pu•llc In •llcl for Mid Slt ll, ..,_Uy !lrl L Smll •<Ml Marl(lf'I Smll, P"lnllll Tr1nKonllMnlll Credi! Service, 1nc., •-••Itel 011• T11rnft k-11 I<> mt: 11 Ptl----~===-=~---1 .,1 Jtmel P. Mc:Gown, Oel•ndlot. No. Jll•lnllll ¥Ii. MBrion E. Cro,.,.tr, 0!1111• ltlt PllSOll Wlloi.t n1me Is sulllCflllld to NOTIC• TO f'•tt.IOMS IMT•tt.llT•O IN •J' 7W llrnt, No. C t 731 1111 within lnil•u"""t i nd I CkllOWllltted THE ESTATE OF JOHH D, FURMAN, By wlrtut f)I tn tU!'tllllnn lswrd on ~UIY B¥ ¥lr!ue ot I" 01(Kulllll'I tuued' 111'1 111 ••KU!fl! l~e """"'· Oece11td. '' T970 II• '"" 'M\111lcf1>1I Court ......... ty AutUll 20 •t/9 b• '"' Munlcl••• coun. (OFFICIAi.. SEAL) NOlk l II lltreb• .1 .. 1n: Hi111 Jvdld •I Oltlrkt C-'Y of I.cit °''"" c9'm!Y H•r•r Judl,111 Dl1trll';t, J1111 L. Jobst Tl •II ...,_ ll'lftt'Hlld. wllllhlt ., Anoelet. ST•I! of C..Ut~11!1, UllPll 1 IU!ll< C-tv el Or•-· 11111 Of C1llflrfll1, Hot.t;rv Pllbllc • Ct!ifor,.!1 <f'tClllGra. l"ln, lltll_, It 11 .... IMll, 111 .,,,~! tll!~red Jn 11...., of Etrl L. Smll •nd UPCll 1 !vdtm~I 1nlrrtd !n lt\'Or el Prlncllll Diii<• In lht ~1111 Of JOll" 0 . """""In, deo:11tM. Ml•lon smll 11 ludtmttnl (redllor1 •ncl l••MCe>nllntnl~t Cr«ti! SffVlc•. Int .. tJ Or111~ Caun!Y wllosl ll!il ldd',IH w11 SI, M1rv'1 RK· •t•h•1l Jlrtle• P. McGow~ll •• h1<1•m•nl 1wum1111 (rtel1lor '"° •••Intl M•rlOr\ E. Mw ComJ'l'llnlon l•llftt 16!''1'. SI. MIN I Pll CI, OtnYIT!t, Hew f!Mltll" 11\0Wll'll 1 net ballnce of 11,1J11.IO cto1111r, 11 1ua1man1 dellllr. U.OWlntl 1 M.trch 2. "" Jersov. 1h1t 1111.,, t1111menu,... er of .i.clutU)' ... on ••Id lucll'"'"' Oii llw'll•I• 1111 Miine•., u.12.ll Klut11Y clue Ol'I lllcl ~Wblllll«I Of1n141 C11it 011l!y Piiot. •clJ'l'llnlstretlOll ....... lllt:ll IUUld II """" tllllll!C't Of Mid ••«11llOll. I"'"'·~ otl '"' •••• " '"' IHUl'llCI., AulUll 21 '"" lep!tmblf J, 1e. u. MOm llnlll' l!mll, R. Sucl!cln '"' MOl'rt• lflflld -•II "" ''"''· till• .... l11IM•lf ltlcl ftl(Uflell. I "'"' lt'llld UPlll 111 "" ,.,. 1'°1·1'1 Courot¥ l urrNllt I Court, • court el Cini-"' Mkl !udomll'll dtb!Ot 111 It.I prQl>lrty 111 rlthl, Ullt incl 1nterest OI 111d 11111""'"' lleltnl lurledlct!on af lht Sl1l1 I f Nt• uw1 county of 0r1 ..... $11tt of C1lllor11l1, d4btar 1n Ille 1ro~•I• In lh• Cow""' el LEGAL NOTICE Jl'llY· tltscrlt>tcl fl loll-" °''""' Sl1lt ot C•lltorn11. d..crllllll •• TIM ftlllw1M """'°"' II "'-9t!lld I• "' LOI N, Tflel SdS ., -m111 111 l oot lollow1: llolllllll -MW\111 .,'""" If ""' Mid 200 P•tn 11 lhrllU'lll 21 DI Seull'lwl'lltrlY $&.ff ll:el of NW U).tl P·ll»f dtcWlll!! Ml~ellelllOllS M•~ 111 '"' lrYllll ... IMf •l $W 10,,06 let• ot I.DI 2JI, ClttTIJllCAT• DI" •UllMlll l!qulttblt S.'<ll!WI "' Leen Altoelt lloM, 11111 ol NtwPOfl, Ott"" C-h. c-N_. Ht llllb TrKt, M11 Boo-•. ll'ICTITIOUI NAM• Cltr of Or•-· °'"'" C-1'1', (Ill· m111I¥ _ _,, •11 .SIS AY .... ldl com-P••• IJ, C--tr --., 1U.8 T"" ullOlr11111111 dot• c.rtll'I' ... If ~ '°'"1 •• N-1 le1cll, C1lllo,,111 1!1\t ltr SlrMt. Cotti Mnl, C1!llOl'nl1 d\lc!lnt • .... tlront 11 ... 0. loK , ... , Ceefl Tllll fl'I• ul'Mlln1 ..... '•Ir• II rtctllft HOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11111 t1"1 HOtlCI' IS HElllE8Y GIYIN ll'llt Oii Mest, C1llNll'tlf1, Ul'ldlr lttl flcilllow fltltl 1111 11ld --1 ~GI' cellld 11'11 f'rld1Y Stellt!Tlllll' 1•. '"°' •I 2:00 O'cJOek l"rldlv. '"'""Der It, 1'10, 11 ti., e'(lecll """"' ol Wl\llfll LM•llll 1rod ••eter, tl•llll!ll '"' • ,_.,.. 1111! CllllCl9' OI' P,M, .i lrOllf of CouMl'lollM. ,,,, w .. t lttt! ,;M. •I front ol '°"""""""' w Wn l Utll 1111111 ""' .. 1. ltrm 11 ctm!llOMd ol "" rtc:llY9' trom "" Slllt "' C•ltfel'lll• ,. $!,. Cll'I' of tost1 MtH, C1!1tor11t1. Cou""" St,, City ot Ce111 """'· C•tlfom11, CDl.llll' fltllOwlMI .. .....,, ~ -111 11111 1119 Mlcl tt1t1 .....,_ r.llll't llll1rnt11t•ry <II Orinte. Slate ot c1n1om11, I will tffl If 0!'11111, Siii• of C1Htornr1, I wllt Mii •1111 011c. of rt1idll'IC:1 I• 11 totWwl: " ot '*"l11ttlfltlen "'"" 111111 ht~td. II PUDllc 1ucllon lO 1111 hlefllt.l llddll" for ., -•le •uc:llell fo ltt9 llllflltt •ldcr ... tor Jlll\11 •• S.unffr-Ill, "' ....... All ...,_ lllYllll (lllmt ltllllll "'" ctll'o Ill llW!ul mcoev ot Ille U!'ll"' ll11H, Ur.fl 11'1 flvrM _....,,et 1111 Unltlfl 5!1IH. ltd .. Ceil• Mell, Clllforllll dlc:ldtflt .,. In lll!trftl Ill MW 111111 •lld •II "" rlthl. l(lll Ind lfllt<'"' DI 11141 Ill '"" rlthl, 11111 •nd 11111f"' et Hid DllM .........,,, 11, 1'10 ....... , ... f(I ll]tcl II wcfl rll'NYl l 1!!1111 \llft"""I dtlllor In 1111 1 ... 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''*1\lllM Or11nt1 C!llnf Orllr l'llOf, Au1111f 11 11'11 l t jlllmlllr S, 10. lt'JIO AlllUll 'II 1/M lt11tl!T\bt1 l-II, 1'10 Autu.I JO, J1 t!'MI iWlll!'IW 1. 10, AUWP '1 ft a.lll'l'IW a,, 111~ I!:; l ' I~ 0~·1t 1'10 • 1,,,..19 1f7' _... ' , ' \ Wounded by Booby Trap Doctor t reats South Vietnamese soldier wounded Wednesday when a Viet Cong booby trap exploded, killin~ nine and wounding two other members o( his patrol nea r Fire Support Ba•e O'Reilly, en al· Jied strong point 13 miles: from the Laotian border in north em South Vietnam . }("' POWs--the 'Forgotten Men'· Some Prisoners . in Red Hands Over Six Yea fs - By DAVID J. OESTREICHER UPI Sl'IU Wrilor The plight or American prisoners in North Vietnam is unique In the annals of mod em war. Their number is unknown except to their captorii. few from the outside world have teen them and their chances for freedom in the foreseeable future are dim . They have bet.rt referred to as "th.e forgotten men" in the halls of Congrt.ss in Washington and a5 "war criminals" ln the Communist capitals of Hanoi, Peking aifd Moscow. Some have been In custody for more than six years - longer than any America n captured In other i.vars in which U.S. troops have !ought on foreign soil . They arc largely Jnc om mu nicado. Bric[, re I a ti v e I y uninformative letters trickle from time Ill time out of 11anoi to loved nnes in the United States. Relalives w r I t e regul1 rly. rarely knowing if th c i r messages are delivered and read. Defesnse Se<:relary Melvin R. Laird says there is "clear evidence that North Vietnan1 has vlolat.ed even thr. most fundamental standards o f human de<:ency" in I he treatment of the prisoners. There have been first hand reports of cruelty but these ~have been conlradictcd in parl by some nr the handful of oulsiden whG have visited prison camp!i ln Hanoi. It is a fact thal North Vietnam has refused Io publish an official govt.mment list nf the men it holds in violation of international Jaw. The situation has changed little $ince the lirst American wa!i shol down over North Vietnam in 1964 and captured.· The most graphic account of treatment accorded American POWs comes from Lt. Robert F'. Frishman, one of the nine U.S. servicemen rele1sed by Hanoi over the years. The release of e:ach has been accompanied by an outpouring a f statements proclaiming Hanoi's "good will" and "humanitarianism.'' Frishman, a Navy pilot, wa!i ~hot down by a Sovtet-bulll antiaircraft misslle th at struck his jet flghler-bombtr aver North Vietnam on Oct. i•. 1967, Metal fragments c ut through Ule fuselage and shattered his right arm. Norlh Vietnamese doctors removed his elbow. Bronze Stars Abound Viet War Tops in Medals WASHINGTON (AP) Medals for soldiers symbolize achievement, build morale, look goOO on a man's record and tell of heroism. And soldiers in Vietnan1 have received more medal~ than Gls in Korea. Jn certain area!, V.S· soldiers I n Southeast Asia have received more medals than \•1ere: Issued to troops in World War 11. There are plenty of reason"' for the increases and the services feel the awards are richly deserved. "There's no stated pclicy th1l awards should be given oul more frequently," says Maj. Frederick Vollrath , w h n watches these things in the Army 1djutant genera I's office . Bot. In the case or the Army's bronze star, lhe fourth highest medal for her<1ism. the decoration also can be given l or achlevement. A bronze star can bf" awarded to a rifleman who takes bunker stngle·handedly or to s man who moves paper a bit more swiftly than the fellow at the next desk. '!"he only distinction in appearance js a tiny "V" on lhe""medal. Further, In l!Ome i.mlts, division commanders c a n award a bronze star to everyone in a rifle company . This was 1tand11:rd procedore at one time in the First Air Cavalry Ovlsion in Vietnnm. As it is, the Army alone ha~ given out in Vietnam 317,670 bronie 1tars in all, compared with 73,4&4 In Korea and 396.379 in World War JI. The flri!Jt and only medal in the Army for seve ral decades was the Purple Heart, created by George W111shington . Several limes it faded in use and hid to be revived by special order. The only medal In the Civil War was the Medal of llonot find there were 11'r:lme1' When the honor gah1ed In stature, thousands <1f names were purged from early lilts. The third highest gallaintty award, behind the Medal or HOlll and 011 Dl1tin1uiahtd Service Cross, was the silver ~tar. ll began going to men "mentiDYJed in dispatches" Jn World War I. The rest nf the Army's JO de c o r a t ion s followed soon after. A Vietnam ve teran, Marine Rrigadier Genera l }lerberl Seckington, accounts for the hike in leatherneck awards by pointing out the Vietn'an1 conflicl has been a Jong and often bloody war. More men have fought in Jt, 11nd there is more to day lo day fighting, he said. A distortion in the flgu rP.it comes in one category, the Air Medal. It w11 flven out Jess Jrequenlly when helicopter~ weren·l around. But i n Vietnam everyone rides in helicopters and fnr I he Marines alO'l'le this h 11 s accounted for 80 percent of the decorations. Here's tome comparative .award categories for thr. Army: Medal af Honor, 293 in World War JI. 78 in Korea, 7~ in Vietnam: silver star, 73,651 in World War II, 10,064 In Korea, 17,178 in Viehlam; air medal. I. I million in World War II when the Air Force welt in the Army, !\,SIM in Korea, ind 647 ,S34 in Vietn1m . Neil. Armstrong Sees 6,000 MPH Air Travel WAS1'11NGTON (AP) -Neil Armstrong. the first man to walk oo f.he moon , predicL~ man eventually will fly rrorn New YGrk to Austra lia al 6,000 mile1C an hour. "The frontier.i-of flight have not all been explored," ~aid Armstrong, now d ·e p u t y 11ssociate administrator for aeronautics of the National Aeronautl~ and S pa c e Admlnb;tration. "The application!i of NASA'!i 11dvanced r ese arch In aeronautic~ will continue tn keep the United St11tes in first iilace In commercia l aviation in lhe years ahead .'• Armstrong wrote thls week in the NASA p u b Ii c ll ti on , ''Aeronautics." Annstrong. was chief or the Apollo t I team which went te> the moon July 20, 1969. ln hl!! new job. Ann11trong heads a S160 million program involvlnc 2,500 NASA tmploye.~. The United States w\11 keep Its lead in aviation until th1t day of casua l travel at 6.000 mph, he wrote. Transportation at a u c h velocities IJ called hypenoolc • flight , as contrasted with mere supersonic flight of 1,500 tn 2.000 mlles an hour provided with various SSTs now being developed. "Aeronautics" said the X·15 rockel rt:search Plane d em on strattd hypersonic nlgtit ls poulble, even though the x~1s was able to iuetain 11.tdl apeeds only for relatively short periods of time. It added that the now c1ncflled Dyna.soar porgram conducted by the Air Force with NASA support WIS aimed at extending; the fllghl rangt. from X·IS hypertonlc 1peeds right up to the orbital velocities ot earth utelllte.s. Of h1s new field aeronaullet rather t h 1 n :::at~~Cl~~ntr.,strong "lt is seldom recogn iud by the general public that NASA his a~ vital and necessary role In tht advancement o r m!Utary •nd comm er c I a I avi&llon In the United SUitee, and that the level of effort - whlle 1 rmall fraotlon of the •1ency'1 tot.el r.r.oaram -Is • very substaniia , " "If an elbow bad ti\ be removed:' Frishman told • news conference two weeks after he was freed in August, 1969, "I guess they did 1 good job." But. after the surgery. J.'rishman said. his wound wa:ii left to fester and his ll'!R, where serum was administer· ed, became infected . Frishman told a harrowin" tale of being trussed with rope before his arm was treated, nr being confined in a cubicle 11 feet long and 10 feet wide with brick walls. and a tin roo[ that turned Lhe place inlo an oven. f'rishman also told about treatment given two fellow captives -LL Cmdr. Richard A. Stratton and LI. Cmdr. .lohn S. McCain Ill. aon of the admiral ·Commanding U.S. forces Jn the Pacific, -Frishman said StratlOn, !!hortly after his capture, wait bollnd with rope so tightly it burned his akin and produced festering wounds that wt.re unattended. He Jtaid captor~ removed Stratton'• fingernail~ and burned hls flesh with cigarettes. McCain, Frishman said, w•.• held In solitary confinement fnr more than a year despite· serious injuries i n c I u d J n g •·many broken bones ." Other Information on I he treatment of POWs comeic from Mrs· Sybil Stockdalf! n( San Diego, whose nusband. Navy Capt. James 8 <1nd Stockdale. has been a caplive since Sept. 9. 1965. Mrs. Stockdale. 4S.year-cltf mother of four sons ranging ifl age from 8 to 19, l~ lhe chairmaYJ of the board or the National Leagu e of Pamllie,,. (If American Prisoner~ and Missing in Southeast Asia. All organization wit ll headquarters in Washing ton. "The treatment is extremely crue l," Mrs . Stockdale said, ba~ing her statement nn talks with Friahman and others wh() have been freed . ''The men are kept In prolonged solitary confineme nt. l..ittrt. ar O() communications from home are permitted . The diet I 1 inadt.quaie. Th·ere is no contact with the outside world . 'f'he medical treatment is bA!liC And madequate. I believe the men are tortured·" Mrs. Stockdale received her first letter from her husband. now 46, on April t~. 1968, more than seven months after he was captured. Since then. sM has received 15 other letters, the most recent on July f . All ere written on, a form containing seven lines and each message has be e n similar, rel)Ortlng t h • t Stockdale hopes his wife and <:hlldren are well and that he loves them. lie has rtported lhat he has ne ver seen another J\mertcan since he was shot down . ~1r.s. Stockdale, like most or the POW wives, wrllt.s her husband tvcry month, filling a ty pewritte n pagt. and addressing the letters to her husband in Hanoi by rerul&t mail. Mr~. ScotkdaJt has been tft the forefront o( efforts on behalr of wives and loved onfll' to obtain information from thf! North Vietn1mese delegation to the Vietnam peace Laib in Paris , He~ Parl& mlulou have bctn (rultless to date. • DAILY PILOT Steff ...... Sorceress and Friend Lindy Orlow and her feline companion "Pywacket'' play principal roles in the Westminster Community Theater's "Bell, Book and Candle." opening a three-weekend run Friday a t Finley School in Westminster. Granger Still Seeks A Satisfying M 01)ie By GENE HANDSAKER HOLLYWOOD (APl - \fter starring in fiO films, itewart Granger admits he :till has a goal: "making a novie 1 was really proud of." The tall, handsome !:nglishman, who at 57 jokes .hat he's in a contest with Lorne Greene "to set who can ;row the biggest w h i t e lideburns," explains: As an actor. he's not proud )f his films. Actors don't act o please the aqdlence but to mpress other actors. They're :ailed actors' actors. "They wish another actor lo ::ome to them and say, 'You .vere wonderful in that part.' "When an audience says. 'I loved you in that part,' they're not criticizing you as an actor. They liked you as the person -as Scaramouche. as the hunt.er in 'King Solomon 's :P.1ines.' the •·Prionser nf Zenda" -a few of Grang'er·s roles. "I don't think I ever made a film where other actotl came and said. 'My gosh. you were great in that film.' " 'S OAP' STAR STILL AT 11'. \\'here V.'ere you and what were you doing on Sept. 3, l95 1? Mary Stuart has no trouble recalling her where·and·what. She was on the initial telecast of the CBS "Search for Tomorrow" program in the leading. role of Joanne Tate. She's still al it as vidro's longest-runnJng d a y l I m e drama 6eries enlers !Ls 20th year. Granger, turning lo series television this fall in NBC's "The Men From Shiloh." remarked that his late frie.nd !'pencer Tracy made many films to be. rpoud of. ''His performance in 'lnherit the Wind' was fantastic. If I'd made one film like that l think l coold relax and say. 'All right' I made a good film. "Spence was an actor's actor. Everybody thought he was great. Marlon Brando is an actor's actor -or was an actor's acWr. Richard Burton il an actor's actor. "I don't try to be cruel. but Alan Ladd was not an actor's actor but a very successful Iilm star. Stewart Granger was quite a succe.ssful film star, but I don't think he was an actor's actor." Granger said he might have become an actor's actor in the thea~r. ''l was a very serious theater actor al the Old Vic. Shake s peare. Shaw . Restoration comedies and all that.'' Go back to tht. theater? "Too lazy. The theater's hard v:ork.'' Granger think5 he came nearest to being an actor's film actor in an English picture. "Waterloo Road .'' '' l played the heavy. a character part you could give a performance in. "l think I had more praise from actors than 1 ever had playing these romantic heroes. •·Romantic heroes are the hardest parts to play. I wish J had sta rted my career as a heavy. Heavies are fa irly easy, they've got all the meat. "But to be sort o{ attractive and charming and try to be good looking, and worry about the costumes, if s a strain. lt's a bore." ENROU. NOWI Ctea.., Stert September t4 W rite 01 Call '---··~--- • c.t. M..-N..,_,, INdi Hntl ..... .._,._ -·-' 171 H.,._ lt"4. 1 i , ..... ~ ... CfttMI • •"4l"'t4t tllll M•• St. • 141·1907 • • ...... .., IN fttt '""""''1°"' •bout ~ ''" Hlll lllodr: ~ I T• ~. Tllla oil • -UW. a ...,..... e11:f Md p1-. .,. Wldlr•Ml~•-.NI. • DI' 9-11 • 1 ·-. ·<~ • ~· . ._ -~ Read tke Stars Wit'1, Oma.rr I r-----· Four-hour . ' . Movie for TV King-sized quilted, button·free ma1ttra!SS... No-iron fitted ,. bottom sheet ' Lovely--~~ decorator 1 print cover Innerspring construction 'e· mattress and • box springs three weeks ••a1 from pr1n- cipal pitotography.'1 sald Ku. JUc. a native of New Jeraey who is more handsome than mott ol the atars he has di- rected. ''At the beginning this was going to be a five-hour motion plctur,e . with h·o u r • I on g sequenctS to be shown on consecuhve nights during a single week. ~ut it wasn't realistic to th' that viewers would spend a ost an entire week at home ust to see t.be i;how. • 1 King-Size Includes all 13 Pieces ~, With every King or Queen mattress you buy at Orlho you get: Mattress and two box•prings with the King, tnattress and box spring with the Queen. Plus the Orlh o-Palc which Includes: Fieldcrest no-iron top sheet, Fieldcrest fitted bollom shee~ two King or Queen bolster pillows, two King or Queen pnlow • cases, King or Queen mattress pad and metal fram9 on casters. AJso Ortho'a ) ,. famous Double Bonus of headboard and qulltad bedspread. Total =-the '·'if:~ .. · , · .:·:·::, ~·~~ute best vaiue. Everything at one low, low price,,. cnlya!Or1ho! . ·t1 ',. ·t•c ~ ;., -_~.:;•~.!~' •" , • ' . ~ I . -1. '1r:; •:. ·--~ ..... ,_ . .... . ·:::..':""":; .. properties are tighl .11t the ' King-sized mattress pad ~ 2 King~ bolster pMows '-": ., borX:=:t1 ., 2Boxsprfng foundation · Metal frame , ea::':o~ casters1 Many. more great King-size t.~alues Originators ot.lhe,r;io~~u~. Queens and Twins and Fulls,t.too The nation's largest 1~ il chain of 1·----,~ Mattress Specialists ·FOUNTAIN VALLEY: 16131 Harbor Blvd. (Nut lo Zody.•) Phone: &39-1570 . "'""" . •H~~e original ,O~ · · 1'NAHEIM 1811 W. Lincoln Ave. (Ju•t E••I of FedMortj Phone: n6-2S90 , " . You can only buy ~ . Ortho Mattresses f ~'.at Ortho Stores " \ . L"AKEWOOD. 4433 Candlewoocl Dr. In C.ndlewood Shops (Across from l•lewood Contor) Phone: 63+-4134 • OPEN DAILY 10 9 •SAT. 10 ·6 •SUN . 12·6• IMMEDIATE DELIVERY• CREDIT TERMS AVA ILAB LE •BANKAMERICARD • MAS l[R CHA Rt;f ~--~---- \ I ] Tl old findi "' d toda boy• hind look To som mini Ings visit. ed " Th agait vlslt4 they East univ• good lion • To long inviti and In Cropj [ ' 1\ BU Th< KT"" walet beef! ~rger the ! this t Spr . begin recen has · iOOul( fond"' baskiJ Th< house. Costa! flanki River crol consw beef wine. On from ' ve.rsio waits from I Arg< cmsur !'IE\\ maJor lhey a of mo domest Reasor pas.sen seeing day. A th review policy deciSio Am" show in prenoo: World would mo 11th United policy under "Sur· pass interes· early, sald Americ $1.6 mi months "TW. discont tnornin domf susperu Oct 1 ! This is spokesi 1WA million months Am" daily I Each r ror eac ' ' ., Th11rsd1.1, Stpltmbtr 10, 1970 DAILY PILOT 1§ Long Hair Visitors Gi ven . . . the Shears Abroad By EMIL SVEIUS loog-hain reeenUy caused an whk:Q it says • • 1ocI1 l I y incident which strained rela-pollutes" local young.st.en. The ···Tuoe-0.tls," 30 years lions between the two ocun. Forelgnen are often refused old· and over, aay they are tries. admission to Sirliapore even if finding it increasingly dlfficult The trio were hauled in by they only bear the slightest to distinguish boys from girls Singapore police, shorn of signs ot be.Ina: a hippie. A today. To them long-haired thetr locks, kept in jail peace sign may just do Jt. One boys look like girls from be. overnight and cbarg.ed the group of mon! than 1 doien hind and some braless 1irls equivalent of 33 cents each for Americans and Europeans look like boys from the front. Ji!;' haircuts. whleh arrived ·three months To set tile "image straight, incident ca~ can-ago was turried back 'en masse some counJries a re ad-· c ion of a _v!Si~ b y without . aplanatioo. ' ministering compulsory shear-Sb\gapore Prime Minister Lee 1ron1tally, ,the group in- ings to loo.-haired foreign Kuan Y8w to Malaysia. He eluded two U.S. Air· Force of. visitors lktore they are allow-found out just before boarding fictrs on it.ave. . · ' ed to bit the ~reets. his scheduled fli&,ht to Kuala . Llke ttie wild west cattle The toughest restrictions Lu_mpur that · a f!<>Ck of lo~g-roundups; Sinsapore police against long-haired h i p p I e hairs were waiting for him conduct hf PS¥ roundups Rov- vlsitors are in Asia. Nor are with pic~et sl~ and ~ners in& . patrols\ of, p 0'11 c e they popular in the Middle ~t the mport m the ~igbbof... perlodicallJ IO 00 hippie East. Euro~ is almost 1ng COIJJJ!ry. • universally lenieot, having a , Singapore, the "Cleanest Ci. good-filZed long-haired popula-ty in Asia," .ii definitely not tioo of its own. the place to 'vislf if your hair To police in some countries, even comes close to hanglpg Jong hair means drugs. And it over -your ears . n, invites a search at the border government's hard nosed aod stricter surveillance. policy against Western y~ In Singapore the GI-style styles want& no part of the cropping of three Malaysian "drug favored hippie culture" U.S. S teaks Bland Next to Argentina's ' BUENOS AIRES (AP) -world. The 23 million people • hunts, hauling in lons-l>alrs to give them forced haircuts. Reskftnts say it is u..e.les3 to complain. Nationalist China a: r e e t s foreign visit ors with persooaliud little cards bear- ing th.is inscripUon: "Welcome to the Republic of China. No Jong .hair . or )ong beards pleaSe! Here .you will find the people most friendly and hooest. • "Wh;Je you ire here, we would like to ~er you OlJT . Warm . fileiidsrup and make )'Ot.lr visit a happy one. But we also hope Uiat you will oot wW your hair or beard unusually Iont "1len you enter . The birds sing. The grass average 181 pounds a year, grows greener. The mouth-according to the U • S . watering': aroma cf broiling Department of Agrlcultui:e. beef fills ·tbe air.Spril;lgtime in , Uruguay, located across the Argentina is almost here -river trorD " tArgenti.na, is the seasons are reversed in second with average this hemisphere. consumptiori. of 147 pounds. 2666 HARBOR BLVD. Spring d o e s n 't officially 'Ille United-States is third with . begin until Sept. 21, but a 110. 1, recent spell of warm weather Streets are lined w i th has permited Argentines to restaurants specializing in indulge their 1 e g e n d a r Y steaks broiled ovet charcoal- fondness for beef w h i 1 e fired grills called parrillas. basking under a bright sun. Some resemble a prison mess The rustic, open-air steak hall. A r e s t a u r a n t is houses strung along t h e considered high class if you Costanera, a waterfront road don't have tq use the same flanking the wide La Plata knife, fork and spoon tor the River in Bnerios Aires, are whole meal. ... crowded with diners But the ~ is always consuming vast quantities of superb and tbe .price astoonds beef and hearty Argentine a visitor. ~1.' juicy tenderloin wine. with salad, potatoes, lots of On weekends, the smoke wine, and a·cup·of Brazilian or from "Asados," the Argentine Cclombian coffee cost about version Of the U.S. cookout, $1.50. wafts down tree-lined streets The flavor and texture of from suburban backyards. Argentine beef differ Argentines are the biggest markedly from beef in the comumen of beef .in the Unite! States although both Ea1·ly J ets Dropping Movie Show NEW. YORK (AP) -Two major airlines have annowiced they are dropping the showing cf movits on loog distance, domestic morning f I i g h t s . Reason:!: to save money; passengers aren't interested in seeing films that early in the day. A third airli11e said it wa!'I reviewing its inOight movie policy but had reached no decisions. American Airlines stopped showing movies Tuesday 011 prenoon departures. Tra~s World Airlines announced 1t would end its screenings next mo1tth oo similar flights. United Airlines said "our policy of showing movies is under review." "Surveys i11dicaled t h a l pa sse nger s were not interested io movies that early, and it saves money," said a spokesman · f o r American Airlines, which lost $1.6 million during 'the first s.ix months of this ·year~ "TWA w i l J temporarily disconti1ue showing movies on morning flights o• U . s .. domestic rcutes. This suspension · is effeCtive from Oct. J.through next March 31. 1bis is an economy move," a spokesman said. TWA be added, Jost $37. 7 million' during the first six mcnths of this year. American will discontinue 28 daily mcvies and TWA 22. Each movie costs abcut $180 for each showing. ' • countries raise Hereford , Angus and Shortbam stock. CaUJe in Ai-gentina feed on alfalfa which grows on the vast reaches. of the pampas coonay. A U.S. st¢<, coming from a corn..fed steer carefully bred to produce a tender sirloin « tenderloin, taStes quite bland to someone usa:I. to the chewier, robusct.fiavored Argentine variety. C·aUle ere @lso slaughtered at a later age in Argentina, and the beef isn't hung for aging. Unle~ a diner asks for "jugoso" -rare -or "bien cocido" -well done -beef is always broiled to come kl the table well done on the outside and medium-rare in the center. The word is "apunto." Many N o r t h Americans, once they get used t o Argentine-beef, scorn the tame r-tasting steaks they eal back home. "But there is cne funny thing about the beef down here ,•'• says a U.S. businessman I i vi n g in Argertina. "'Ibe Chinese food you get in a Chinese restaurant he re just Hes on your stomach and never goes away. But an hour after you eat an Argentine steak, you want to have another one." USC Offers Law Courses During Fall Courses in aviation accident Jaw and community property Jaw are among nine courses to be offered by the University of Southern California L a w Center's advanced professional program for the fall semester. The aviation accident course will cover the civil air regulations, weather a n d medical causative factors, the aviation insurance contract and other items. The class will meet each Tuesday beginning Sept. JS from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. in the USC Law Center. The community property coorse is designed for attor· neys handling estate plans or probate. The class will meet each Monday from 8:30 p.m. to 1,30 p.m. In tl>e USC Law Center. Tuition fOr eacll course Is $125 before Stpt. J~ and $140 after Sept. 10. lnttrested persons may contact the USC Law Centtr at 213-746-2582 belween noon and t p.m. 546•7080 COSTA MESA WEEKDAYS 9 to 9 SATURDAY & SUNDAY 9 TO 5 0 II yov want a bath to raall, 1parkla or • kitehan to eoma a liva. 0 C1tl MGM, •r batlar. bvy 1oma of this. 197 0 No batt1r int.rior lit•• m1da, ind no ona 9 iva1 1vch 1tyli1h colon. Sati1f1ction 9vara nta•d •• yovr dou9h bac•, whit mor1 c•n you 11k. ' 0 At twica th1 pric1, which i1 wh1I many 9uy1 91t. J 0 lt'1 1 bar9ain for the "t i111vr111ca v1lu1 alo11• wh1n you think of 1 ru9 1hot to h1d11, DICHONDRA. SEED 0 Colorco1!, which meant nothi119 lo rna, Duf it'1 • Di9 thing with lho comp•ny and th• 9uy wh i t bvyt if. 0 Ju1t found out, it't • lf1rtln9 191111 to 1111k1 th1 ttuff 90 f11t e nd niultiply. sac LI. SHAKIR AUTO DRIP PAN l,;~~~~~~;';'t D All th111 fi111 n1w 1uto1 •••m to cl rip toma all. C and tho old 01111 II•• min• r1ally put It out.I 0 Elld t•••t• 1tali11 '"' '"'" trockttf i11 with thl1 91 lv1ni•M cla1l. 219 ---------------------------=---------- our coo.ntr~/ • as we are anxious to maintain our good custom ." Con 1ervat tvc police as.wciate loog hair wlth drug addiction, a serious offense ln Taiwan punishable by Im· pri90Mlent for Jeven years. enlering the N a t I o n a 11 • t Amer1cans have been cauatit. Chinese captttl. But I n Money comes first to the Soutl>em FOC!D06a, no fewer Flllplnol. '.!be Philippines ha5 than a dozen foreian sailors adopted an apen door poUcy )o were "persuaded" to get free visitors In aa effort to eD- haircuts. courage twrism and bas no Portuguese Macao, an Island restrictloM agawt 1 on 1 · everyone com.inC Jnto lbe country. · " · Governm«it olrn:tab . - tho! tJlis move will hinder tourism, but it will al9o keep • oot peacenlks and olber hip. plea. "Our kids are really and basically good kids, but the coming here o/. ~ many foreigner!, particularly young men . and women, has cor- rupted tbem,''.said a ranking police official who refU.9ed to off the Communist ~ hajre.t foreigner1. , coast, also does not ,f!(OI • "Y" South Vieuiam-CUltoma olftclals recently onlered an Aust.r.aUan rock bend which had performed for alu.d trooP110 cut their haJr before lr•velinj! to Singapore. • be Identified. · · · ·around. The law there is Wfl ' And Japanese authorities any man who M a c a o aay any American youth In autho~ities consider be I n g any clothing style can enter ''dres~ as a ·girl" will be tbe country on a tourist visa puni~¥· ~ unless he has a past record ol ~ governm nt o{ South a erlrninel offf!Me. So far immigration authoriUe! at Taipei Airport say police have not forcibly shaved any "shaggy dos" Kore_,, on the o 1 band, has South Vietnam , the pol no specific regu!Stions against paradise for the GI, is hard entry of long-hairs and other for the casual visitor. Starting hippie types. Marijuana smok· this month, the government Ing is ibited. but so far no hu The import and e:qxirl. or drugs I~ South Vietnam b U, legal, btlt " Lo well blown by now, a joint of grass for the American GI in the Viet· namese rice pacily his almolt become as commcmplace II C-liolw. . FIVE LIGHT CHANDELIER 0 V1ry 11ice looliin9, Ii+.. • lot of Giffer111t decoraliv1 1cham11, 0 Fih our 1ch1m1. whicll ;, lo m1k.1 rnon•y. 0 c ...... d c1nl1rpo1t, end long, ltan, f1nky 1r,..1. 1588 BEEHIVE SWAG LIGHT 0 It 100•1 lik1 1 baahi•o. but th1t'1 wh1ro it 1nd1. 0 Spraad1 1 Rici 1oft li9llt, 1dd1 lo your niood. u . 0 The mood I'm in, noflti119 but• kloi9 li9ht will 91t it. 1488 DIMMER SWITCH 0 600 Welt capacity, whicll m11n1 if will dim 1 lot of thi1191 1U th1u on1 1witch, 0 Ju1t Ii~• in th• hi9h cla11 r11t1uronh, but do11't for9•t to tip your wif1, ELECTRICAL TAPE 0 No m1tt1r what th• picluro 1ay1, w•'ll still 1111 it for 22f:. 1 0 I u10 • lot ju1t to pitch thin91 up, Dut it'1 •••y for elochical u11. GARA.GE FLOOR CUANER 0 Sprin•l1 • littl1 of thi1 around, ho10 1 liftlo, bru1h • llttlo, pray • littl1, ind w1it. 0 u•· • lina out of fii.u"'• Din, ind soon ii'• cl1011 •t 1 wlli1tlo. I 1 PREEINISHED SPANISH OAK OR ALOHA WINDSWEPT PANELING 0 Wh1t'1 th i1 I h11r about tonia l"ople liuying pan11i119 al11wh1ra? D If you 110 th i1 fo r thi1 pric1 1ricl 1till do, th111 it niutl e. your thin9 lo 1p111d cra1y. D V-Groo••d, p1rf1ct, no teconch . •. FULL 4 x •. FOOT VILLAGE BLACKSMITH HIDGE TRIMMER 0 Sup1r 1h1rp factory hon•d bl 1d11 do th1 work f11I 1ntf 11v1 your 1rm1. ....... 700 D Limil1d qu1ntity, 10 don't mi11 tlli1. 15.tS 0 If mor• than 5 p1ool1 co1111 in, w1'ro in trouble. S ONLT · FLUIDMASTER BALLCOCK O End wot1r clo1ot 111 u11l, 9,ur9/1, and w1lor 1011. O Thi1 i1 1 potiti•• 1hutoff with •M'( w1t1r l1v1I 1dfu1l rrw11t. O ltepl1c1 • faulty old deal in 11co11d1. 25 BASIN WRENCH 0 If you're r1mavin9 • faucet or 1ink without on•, 9ood ludr, 0 Ot ••they tly in l ll11ai, "Hurry b-k. yuh hoorh", 149 PRICE PFISTER FAUCOS IA. 0 Th• Hou1• •f ltil!'ll i1 not known for s•lll119 tlta ch11p 9ooclt. O Sine• thi1 • fomlly budntll you know you'll 11• us 1t11f w1ak, 10 w1'cl r1thor ••II t•ocl, D Ancl th•t• 111 9oocl f1uc•h, th• •ind thot lo1t, O iln't th1t 1 b•tt•r wi-,1 CWho 1aid, 'A1n't you 1.t nolhint for 1 buck?'I . i •=-it".". ---,,.,.. • ..,..,,.,., ,.,:1-:-. 1''.itr.1'71-,,..,,,-,..,,..,.,., .,.,.,,,,., .,,...,.....,., ..,,....,., ':'.,,,.,.,,----.,.-~-:-·-:-·--------.,..-.-~----..-------- OAD..Y PILOT McLain's Future Now in ,Douhti UPIT ...... Donors for Allison Minn'"'ota Twins president Calvin Griffith (left) •!and• with a towel covering bis bead as Oak1and Athletics president Charles Finley (seated right) also covered with towels, attend ceremonies honoring rthe Twins ' Bob Allison. The tribute honored Allison for his contiibu· tion to baseball and was staged by the Minnesota fans. Clny-Qziarry Fight Won't Come Off, Says Durham PHILADEiJ'lllA (AP) -Y In t Dqrtwn, manager of heavyweight champion Joe Frazier, said be hopes he's ll't'Ong but he doesn't believe the Cassius Clay,lmy Quarry fight will ever come off, A Clay-Quarry fight was aanounced Wednesday for AUanta (Oct. X).11 would be Clay 's first fight in more than thne yean. The amounctmeol WU made in N.., York by Robert L. KuseB, chairman of the board af Tani1 Unllmited, Inc., and Mike Ma.YU. )l!'l!lident of ~ Unlimited and Sporta Adloa. Inc. "'I don't think it will come off." said Durlwn when infonned ol t h e ~. ••1 tbill it's a lot of bull. I'll bet JD1 _, ll ..,.•t come oft. I hope I'm wrong. That's one bet I'd Ill<• to IOoo.. • LOS ANGELES -Or\):y a light workout m ahead of tbt Southern Ca!Uomia Trojans today as they made final adjustments of their offenae f o r Siturday's big season opener apinst the Alabama Crimson Tide. An estimated 70,000 fans are expected to watch the i11tersectional football battle Dodgers Send Moeller Vs. Reds Tonight L08 ANGELES (AP) -Lee May cracked his 3001 OOme nm a.od a double to back the four-hit pitching of rookie Milt Wtlcox as Cincinnati blanked Los M>g<lei, 6-0, Wedneoday night. -May slugged bis bamer in the second off lo6er Claude Osteen, lf.13, and the Redl collocted two more runs in the lnlllng '° Woody Woodward's RBI doW>le and Wilcox' single. Cincinnati chased Osteen in the third when Pete Rose singled and, after two were out, May doubled and Hal McRae singled to for two more runs. Wilcox, 2--0, pitdlin( bia flnl major i.ague shuto\J~ ocattered three oinlleJ. In tonight's game at Dodcer Sladlum, the Dodgen' Joe Moeller (7 .. ) will face the Red<' Jhn Mi:Glotl>lto (ts.II). at Btnnlnllh8m between Ille Paclllc" and Soutbeaoteril Cool.....,. giants. Trojans coach John McKay said be was worried about bis teem'• lack of eiperience in the defenaive seeondary. HA! described Alabama. led by Moot~ m-pound quarterback ScoU Hunter, as a good thn>wing team "which will make yardage against anybody." 1be Trojans are scbedWed to lea\lt for Bimmlgham Friday morulag. • L08 ANGELES -UCLA coacli Tommy ~thro says he Is saUafied with l).i11 front line defensive unit for the -football opener aplul Oregon State Saturday. Prothro aid the defeDIJ.ve unit includei ~pl Tim Oesterlinc, Bruce Bergey, Mike Pavich and Craig Campbell. Two sophomores, Tom Daniels and Rob Scribner, are atlll cont.eoding for the left liltebacker position. Prothro 1aid be will name his 42-man traveling squad today for the encounter with the Beaven. • DEL MAR -'Ibe wtn.ingat jockey in Che world, newty-erown.ed Blll ShoemBker, took the day Off at Del Mar Wednesday and his rival riders took ad\lantage of his absence. There were nine different winning jockeys for tht aine racel!i. • GLENBROOK, Nev. -The attorney NllftltJ\tl.ng quarterback Joe Kapp said Wednelday there were m developmeuts to unounce in bis attempts to negotiate a contract for the player. Kapp, who led the Minneoota Vikinp to the National Football League title last aeuon, 11 now a free agent. '!be Vikings refuted to meet his ukin1 price for a new contract, a reported $1.25 million over five years. "Joe and I are in contact every day," attorney John E I 11 o t t Cook: said Wednesday from hls home here. Kapp left Vancouver, B. C. early this week. Coot declined to say Wed•sday -be laal met wiLb Kapp in -· NEW YORK (AP) -Only two )'<WI 11<>, Deony McLain bad the world In bia bandl. He waa bueball'• btilhteat atar. HI bad fame, wealth and talent, and I future that promiied ooiy more ol the same. Today. Denny McLain Is sitting di>conaolaltly oomewbete, probobty with only his head in hll bands. His star has fallen . In six short months, he has turnod Into -11'1 bad hoy. He Is critlcl7.ld, be Is bn>Ce and his lulu!'e la rkldled with doubt. It all came lo a cllmu Wednetday alt«noon -blttball commlulooet Washed-out U.S. Open Play Resumes Today FOREST HIU.5, N.Y. (AP) -The washe<H>ut U.S. Open 'Tenn i a Championships resume today with a match-up of the Australian and American powerbouaes, ud one AUUie pro likened it t.o "Ru.utan reulette ••• .. The day one player or one group f1 players dominates tb1J rune 11 aone," said Warren Woodcock. tea c bl n 1 profeulonal ol the Wetl Side Tenail C1ub. "The IUdd.-aLb ICOring system bas changed ev«Ylblni. "Now everybody ftghta to get to M. Then it's just IJl<e toaing a coin, "' RuuJan roulette. One lbot and you're gone. .. WMb the ti&-break, teania will get ¥k• golf. No player, IUCb as Rod Laver or John Newcombe, will be a cinch. lo1J1 top player can win any tounwnent." Woodcock'• theory receives a good test In today's men'a quarter-final matches, two ol which oend ranting Amerlcao players agalnst high-seeded Australian& Jn the tie-break, when a set reaches M, thl players, altemaUng service, play beat fi ve-Of·a.lne points for the set. It can - and ollft --,., down to one point. Arthur Albe Jr., the l1nl U.S. ()pm • lhampion in 1968, meets Wimbledon winner John Newcombe whJle Stan Smith of Pasadena, who ranka No. 1 naUonally, faces the wily Ken Rosewall. Newcombe is seeded second and Rooewall third, hlgbeot seeding aow that Laver bu be<n eliminated. In the other two matcbel, Delmis Rallton of Baterafleld meell Cllfl Richey of. San Angelo, Tex.., In a all-Amerlcan pairing while --Tony Rocha ol Australia goer qalnat UDleflded. Brian Fairlie ol New Z-l1rvt. The men'• llemlfinal1 will be played Saturday wiLh the . final Sunday. The wbner gels $20,000. Two women'• matches today complete the 9mllfina1 bracket 11 that divWon, where fll'st prize is 17 ,500. Margaret Cow1, bidding for a '""''!> of the major c.twnpkmahipr. plays another Australian, Helen Gourlay, whom she led 5-2 in the first aet before Weclnesia.y's matches were rained out. Nancy Richey of San Angelo, Tex., pn against Lesley Hunt of Australia. Pac-8 Director Plans to Retire SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Tom Hamilton, the exocutive director of the Paclfic-1 Confere.ce, annouced today he will retire next June. The former All·Amerlcan football player at Navy will be 65 in December. He became conference executive director in 1959 after aerving as athletic director at the Naval Academy and the Uiiversity of Pittsburgh. Stan Bates, director of athletics at Washington State University, bas been named chairman of a th:ee ·ma• committee that will begin a aearch for a successor to Hamilton. "Bate• 1atd Hamllteli ha1 beet. a great leader with a tremendous amount of experience and has added so much to our athletic programs in the conference." Hamllton, named last moq!b to receive the National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame Gold Medal, will serve as a consultut t.o the conference for three months following his retirement. Bowie Kuhn MJJp<Odad the Detroit pitcher for at least the remainder of the 1910 aeuon. It "'.It McLain's th1rd 1uspenaioo th1' year, and the words "at Jeut" gjve tome caUJe to .Lbint that thia lllle might estend even longer than the 1970 sebOD. \ AD Kli>n woold say in announcing U.. suspension after a meeting with McLain and Detroit offlclals wa.s that It was "pending further proceedings, which by agreement of counsel will not take place· before the eod of the teUOD." MCLain slipped away w l t ~out ~t. and Kuhn requelted Detroit Cll!iclels not to lait about tht IUSpOl>lioo. • Kuhn did n y, in bil 1tat.ement, that "certaln new allegations have been brought to my attention, including •llegations reganting Met.in'• conduct with rerpect to the Detroit management and Information that on occaaioos MCLain haS carried 1 gun." ~I ....,..ied the fmat blow to Ibo 26< year-old rf&ht.hander, who, in 1968, became the !int pitcher since 19-lt to win 30 games in one &etJOn. He became the toll! ol bueball, the Cy YOllDI Award winner. Last year, be was almost 11 ,good, winning U games and allAring the Cy Yoong Award with Mike Cuellar as the American U!ague·s top pit.chtt. But then the bottom fell out when be was implicated with gamblers and suspended in the spring witil July 1. Then, oo Aug. 28. he douoed two D<troll sports writers with ice water, a prank, and drew a one-week suspension l the Tigers. Missing altof spring training and m of the season, in his brief period on ~ JllOUnd he managed only a 3-S record with a [7~ earoed run ~verage. · , 1~ Tigers, without the pitcher wbo hurled them into the World Series in 1• and to second place in 1969, are buried in third place in the American League East Division. ASTROS' JESUS ALOU IS TAGGED OUT BY GIANTS' PITCHER RON BRYANT. Angels Home for 3 Games Halos Drop Twin Bill; Loss Streak at Seven The dog days of September are upon Ill@ Jaggin( Cllilnruia A.ogelt II UJO' return home for a brief three-game teries with the Milwaukee Brewers this weekend in an attempt to halt a seven game losing streak. Olicago's White Sox won a pair Wedqesday, 11-4 and 3-1. After an off.f:lay today, the Angels return to the American League West grind Friday · night at Anaheim Stadiwn with another night contest Saturday and a day outing Swtday. The division leading MinnelOta Twins put the skids to Angel pennant hopes last weekend and since that time the Haloe have dropped four additio nal decisions to the doormat teams of the division. Wednesday evening the C b i ea go WliiW lol rebounded from an ~-game losing streak to band the Angels a tlouble defeat and run the Halo string to seven games. IEtOMD GAME <ALIFOllMl4 <MICAH lb' llrtll llfl!rllt AIO!n9r, !b • I t o MO!'tln , Jll • o O O Gor1ulu, cf • 0 • 0 A1>1rlcio, II • 2 I I Frego•I, 11 • 0 l 0 C.M1y, II 2 I I 1 A.Jal'ln.on, II 4 1 2 1 Mtl!on, rt J I 0 0 Jal'ln110M, rf I 0 I 0 Jor.tpluon, c • 0 1 I McMullen, Jtl I • I 0 81111CO, lb I 0 I 0 Rlvtn, Jlf 0 0 I 0 MOl>l<ln5, pf\ I I 0 0 Eo111, c t 0 0 0 McCraw, lb I I 1 0 Al'P01,1b 2 0 1oa..-rv.d •ooo Art~. t 2 0 0 0 l{noop, 2tl ) I 0 0 Ruiz, lb IDOOWYnne,p 2010 c .wrloh!, p 2 o o o Wood, JI 1 t t o ICTatum, p D 0 0 0 Cowin, pl'I 1 11 0 0 Mes11rimlth, p I I O O Totel1 _ 30 1 6 I Tt1ffl1 30 I 1 t Ct,ilrornl• 000 OI» 1111 -1 Cfllcaoo 000 002 01 -l OP -c111ror111t 1. LO!I -C1 lllarnl1 •, c.hlc100 1. 2!1 -Freogosl, C. Mty, Jo1apl'l1on, McCr1w, HA -A. JC!'>nson 112), '"'1>1rlclo l•l. 58 -A, Jal'lnton, Jo~n•llHlt. IPMRlllttSO C.Wrlg~I IL.lt-11) S.1/1 5 J J 1 l K.Tuum 1/l o ti o I a Ml!:!l .. n mlltl 'l 2 I 1 1 1 Wynne (W,1-l) 4 4 l I I 1 Wood 2 0000 1 S•v• -Wood, M!IP -by C. WriOhl IMHJOnl. Tlmt -J rll, Alttr'lll1rw:a -3.115, 'Jbe double victory was the first tlQuql@l!r..,. victory of the aeason for Lbe Sox. They bad 'dropped 12 and split five prior to Wednesday night. Clyde Wright, tee.king to become the second pitcher in Angel history to win 20 games in a season, was foiled again in hls attempt for the coveted verdict. He was the loser in the nightcap by a 3-1 margin In a game that was called by rain with the Halos batting in the ninth inning. Wright was shelled out in the silth when the Sox scored twice. Luis Aparicio singled and Carlos May doubled him home. Duane Josephson doubled in May and Ken Tatum canie on in relief. Aparicio 9Cored the third run on an eighth lnning homer. The Angels had taken a 1..0 lead in the top of the sixth on Alex Johnaon'f:' 12th .. homer. In the opener, Bill MeJton drove in five runs with bis 27th and 28th homers and is now within one of the White Sox re<:ord or %9 home runs in one season shared by Gus Zemial and Eddie Robinson. Following the abbreviated home stand, the Halos move into the camp of Bill Rigney'• Minnelota Twins for four games La Costa Tourney NEW YORK -The 1971 Tournament of Champions will be held April 22-25 at the La Costa Country Club at La Costa, Calif., Ult Tournament Players Division of the ProfeS1ional Golfers Association announced Wednesday. The gross purse will be 1185,000 compared to 1150.000 for this year's event whic.t was won bJ Frank Beard. Monday through 1bursday night. 'n>ey. play in Oakland next weekend and mov•. to Milwaukee to complete the 1970 road .season. Oakland and Chicago \lisil Anahebn Stadh.nn to close oot the campaign, Sept. 25 through Oct. t. Perry Notches 22nd as Twins Top A's, 3-1 ' Mll'INEAPOLiS-ST. PAUL (AP)-Jbn Perry doesn't worry about his hitting. But he had the Oakland A's fretting abou* ff Wednesday night. Perry won his 22nd game with relief' help from Stan Williams as the Twins beat the A's 3-1 to snap Oakland's eigbt- game winning streak and take a 61A game lead in the American U!ague West over the A's. The second game of a doubleheader was rained out and reacheduled with tonighl'lii game. The "eteran Minnesota pitcher won his own game with a seventh inning li.ngle to center. "I don't get paid to hit," said Perry. "J'll take the wins any day over the hits," Perry, a ~game winner for the second straight .season, has taken four or his victories against Oakland without losing to the A's. Loa Angel'" bad just -base t'\ll'IMn againlt Wlkm the first four innings. Maury Willi 1ed off with an lrifield single bllt WU stranded U Wilco1 retired the nett three bitters. Tom Haller walked to open the second but was erased oe a double play. Wes Parker singled with two out in the fourth but Haller pmded out for lM lhlrd wt. Blanda, Michaels Given the Boot "I'd like to see him finish with a 5-0 ~rd against them," said Minneso.ta manager Bill Rign ey. whose club has woo nine of the 13 games against the A's. Perry, who has lost 11, gave up fl\le hits including a bases empty homer io Don Mincher in the fourth iMing aa the A's took a 1..0 edge. CINtlHMATI LOl ANO•l.15 •• , .. ""' llltll"'4 5 0 1 1W!lll,H 41 t 5 1 1111....-lt,11 ••• Jt lt W.Devlt,d •O 0 •O OOW.P1rklf',ltl •o 0 4 2 2 t Mtlllll', t J I 0 1111s1a...,....,211111 ooo otr•""'O•(l.11 11 o • I 1 I GrtDert;'w!ti,Jll I 0 0 ''''°'~·~ ••• •t l l lt.Lfll'ltl,p 1t 0 Jotl'llM, pf\ 1 0 • HOUOll, JI ti t I 0.t>rlel!oOn, pf\ I 0 t Nll!'f!\111, JI l O 0 O ,•tll .» • 10 4 Total~ ll I $ 0 <wh'llf4 °'" (1(11 '°' -' ' LM ,t. .... lfl 000 000 100 -0 ; I>" -Clnclf!Mll 1, L~ Al!l)tl• 1, 1.01 -~ $, LOl ~lft S. 16 -WOOlf'#fll'll, L #llr .... -L. Mar I ), IP M It ll II IO l·w.u1 's,,,, L.Ja-111 J.tft ' $ • ' • """"' •• ,, 1 • • • ' t I I I I I I I I I I I TllM -r.•. ""'""'nU -20,1'0. BY ASSOCTATED Plllll8 My team in the National Football League needing a place kicker bad quite a choice today. On the market are George Blanda, pro football'• all.time leading point·maker, most of them with hia foot, and Lou Michaels, who ranks fifth. Both were given lhe boot Wednesday by the Oakland Raiders and Baltimore Colts, respectively, although the kick Michael& got made a bigger imprint. Blanda, who wlll be U years old nexl •eek with 2(1 ycar11 in pro football - another record -wu placed on waiver& by the Raiders, but thus far had gone unclaimed. That mel!lt there still wu aome chance that he could bt reactivated for the start ol the ttllOll S.pt. JO. Blanda. who still c:an fill 1n 1t quarterbtck, wu no tottering old man last season, kicking for 105 points last season. He hit 20 of 37 field goal tries and all 45 extra joints he tried. That gave him a career total of 1,471 joints. Mlchael.1, on the other hand, has no <.'banct of rttuming to the Colts, who he helped to the NFL tiUe in 1968. Rookie Jim O'Brien,J No. s draft choice rrom the Unlversi of ClnciMaU, has been l'io/en the job, and alao lhows promise as a wkle receiver. Michaels, who ranks behind only Bland1 , Lou Groza, Gino CappelletU and Sam Baker in the point dtpartment, at\11 hopes to hook on with another team. At 31 with 12 years in the NFL behind him, he has kicked ror 912 points in his career. Last 1eatort, however, wu an off.ytar for him u ht managed only 75 points, coonecUng oo 14 of 31 f~ld goal tries and • 33 of 34 tltra point auempt,. A &tarter at defensive end in 19ee with the Colts and a reserve in recent years, bis playing days in the line are about over. Several once highly-touted you n g quarterbacks also were given the heave- ho-James Harris of Buffalo, Jim Ward or the Colts and BUI Cappleman of Minnesota. Harris, who had started all of Buffalo's live pre-aeason games, was l.hought ready to be the first Negro regular quarterback When he was suddenly and surprisingly waived by the Bllls Tuesday. He disappeared when told of the news, and the Bills had not heard from his \Verdnesday, ·the day he became · a free a.gent when no team claimed him. The Bllb still have veteran Dan Darragh and rookie Dennis Shaw, and C(lr8Ch. John Rauch said ht wouJd decide , Mlt w11k if he would carry three quarterbacks. Then , Wedne.9day, he claiml'd Ward f!:9J»-.Baltimore. WMd ., drafted No. If from Gettysburg in 1966, was playing behind Johnny Unitu and Earl Morrall but wa s considered the likely replacement for the 33-year..old. Cappleman, another rookie, w a 1 praised earlier In the exhibition season by the Vlldngs, who aUU are missing starUng veteran Joe Kipp. Buffalo offer~ a few other surprises Tuesday whert It waived veterans Harry Jacobs, a· middle Unebacker, and George Saimes, a u.rety. Jacobs was grabbed Wednesday by the New Orleans Saints. The Saints also acquired veteran de.fentlve end Willie Towns from Dallas for an undisclosed draft pick. Hannon Killebrew and Brant Alyea slammed back.to-back doubles to tie the game in the 1eventh and then Perry came through with his single up the middle off loser Chuek Dobson, 15-13, with twO out ind runner& on firat and third. OAKU.MO MllOtl.IOTA •llrlll'lll .. ,.,.. C11'!1pin.,1,," J I 0 t TOV1•, <1 4 • t O MCllldlJ, ti I 0 1 0 C:..,,,_1, M I I t t lllldl, If I t 0 011~•. rl I I J I Mm.ell ... lb 1 1 I kll-••·. l 11 1 L""'ll, pt I I Awtl, lb I t 1 F.AIOu. It 1 0 I AIYff, " J I I 6111H, )ti J I 0 HOIJ <I I I t A .Jtt~IOn. rl I 0 0 f1911/ct1;, ,i. I I t T.,..e., c J 0 I Hlll, cf O O· O o.c;.,..,., 2tl 1 o o Mln•rw11d, c t •· & Movl1y, pll 1 0 0 Oullkl, ttl t I OOflllOIOll. 211 0 0 I Mt~llll, Ill! 1 t ' I l)ob1or>, o 1 l 0 Tllom11tOt1, 2tl I f: t Ll"d!)l•d, JI 0 0 0 J,P.,ry, .fl I I, I Gr1n1, p t 0 0 S.WUllt!N, fl O •· t Tot•lt X 1 1 rot"'' Ill •·a O~kl1M 000 100 000 -I MIMllllf 000 000 Jl• -I " OP -O&lo.I•"" '· Ml"""°'' ~.·Loe -01ld1,.. •· Mlflllltcll 7. 28 -Klltl llfl•I", AtyM, Olll11, t1• 1111: -Mlntlltr 12~1. $ -811\do, Dotltofl. 51w -$, Wl!llt llll. WP -J, Ptrrr J, I , Wllllt !TI), T - f :>J. QJ I • .. ~UFI don't f NationE they m Conf!'=rE Miami The 1 tiOw WE an 0Ue1 team o Rau cl offense who, wi run wil SimpSOI yards. Wben have a Mini M Quart problen years. , Raucl Harris, whose season started others t He's no :nan I 1969, is assignn esie on Shaw ol ·Shaw, a late $100,000 He led 1 total ofl Like I the rebl a half . Rauch's Perha win a difensi\ dfaft pi Sbuthen m' pres making1 Other Fowler North C R.eilly c of Graf end. Th man Wi To TOI "Yeteraru and M. Kindig Loukas Rt chard Marchle Bemille1 Wayn1 out the The \ such ve and ta· Tatarek Behin1 Guidry, Dick Cu LIG MEJ LOS ~eric~ tine to1 Guadala Los Ao route at t.mneli 1968 in l lo Rlle 1eeond · two dra 1:.omel boLh he inatch \ Laguna, !!older, - Minne Oakla1 Angeh Kansa Milwa -01.icai Ballin .New· ~Det.roi &stor Clevel _ Washi Cl'llc '""' Mlh •• r1lnl •m• WH 1111 M !t• k•n"'J """'"' ... .et.-(II -OM• WH Jo.ti. Ille ••• fl.I), " ' ' QB Leading Problem :For Buffalo \ ·BUFFALO (AP) -The Buffalo Billa don't figure to be a contender in the National Football League th.ls season but they might finish third in the Ame~lcan Conf~rence's. Eastern Division shouJd Miami and B05ton falter. The Bills' fortune depends greatly on hOw well coach John Rauch can muster an offen.se and at the same lime rid his team of its mistake-making habit. Rauch has been trying to build an offense around, fabuJous 0. J. Simpson who, with some help from blockers could run wild. Without such help last' _year, Simpson, then a rookie, still ran for 697 yards. When Siinpson takes a rest, the Bills have a second brea k-away back, S.foot-3 Mini Max Anderson. Quarterbacking still is Buffalo's big problem, as it has been the last couple of years. Veteran Jack Kemp is retired. Rauch figures te go along with Jim Harris, a strongthrowing 6-foot-4 Negro whose first year of pro football last season was curtailed by injuries. He ttarted one game and played in three others before a knee injury sidelined him. He's now in good health. l>an Darragh, also injured in 1968 and t•9, is battling Harris for a starting assignment. Both, however, must keep an efe on the Bills untested rookie, Dennill Shaw of San Diego State. Shaw, the Bills' No. 2·draft choice, got a late start because be held out for $100,000 -plus before signing a contract. He led the nation's major college stars in total offense last season with 3,197 yards. Like many other teams, the Bills art in the rebuilding process. They have at least a half dozen rookies who could fit into Rauch's plans. Perhaps the most likely freshman to win a season-starting position i s difensive end Al Cowlings, the No. l di'aft pick and a teammate of Simpson at Sbuthern California. Cowlings exhibited iii preseason action that he has the makings of a pro star. other newcomes are tackles Wayne Fowler of Richmond and Jerome Gantt of North Carolina Central, and guard Jim R_eilly of Notre Dame. Glenn Alexander of Grambling could wind up as a tight eiid. The post is occu pied by second-year man Willie Grate. rt1ursday, Stptrmbtt' 10, 1970 DAILY PILOT l7i Tops11•t11rv11 NL East Mets, Pittsburgh Tied; ' • ' Cubs Just One Back The New York Mets, wllh help <run St. Louis and Montreal, crowded Into flrst place in the wild Natkll;lal League East w-1 night. I I "nle Mets, riding Ray-Sadeckl's four~ hitter and batterymate Duffy Dyer 's two- run single in the sixth inning, tripped Philadelphia 3-1tosalvage•1p!lt of their twi-night doubleheader after the Phillies won 3-2. ShorUy after, St. Loul! came from behind to upend the Pittsburgh Pirates S- 4, and earlier, in the aftemoon, the Chicago CUbs blew their chance by losing to Montreal 3-2. All this ""'ed to push the Mell into a first place tie with the Pirates, with the Cubs one game behind. Sadecki, M, struck out lJ as be outdueled Grant ifack.son. But the Phillies ended the Mets' four-game winning streak in the opener behind Barry Lersch, who hurled a six-hitter and fanned nine. Tim Mt'Carver hit a two-run homer for the Phlls against Nolan Ryan, who struck: Saddleback's Hector Now Full-time QB out 13, bot. I WU a plncl>.hlt linllo br, Willie Moptanec that drove in the w1rmlnr nm in the ninth inning. The Met starter mired IZ stralgllt batters between the second and l1llh innings. His only rough spot came In tht ..,,,,,.i, when be walked Doo Money and Tim McCarver walloped bis third bomt run for a to Philadelphia lead. Lersch made the two-run edge stand up until the sixth, when Wayne Garrett ltd off with hb second bit and Cleon Joo.es followed with a booming borne run. Jones' loth homer extended his hiUing slreak to 16 games. Pinch-hitter Carl Taylor cracked a nJn.o scoring double, triggering a three-run sixth Inning burst, in cardlnals win over Pittsburgh. . The Pirates built a 4-0 edge but St. Loui.s got three runs in the fifth oft starter Fred Cambria, 1-2, on Joe Torre'• forcing grounder and a two-run double by Ted Simmons. In the sillth, Lou Brock slnglecl and stole second before Julian Javier waJked.. J oe Gibbon relieved Cambria and Taylor, batting for Joe Hague, greeted the lef't:- hahder with a bloop double to right on • chocked swing. A wild pUch bn>uglit home Javier for a $-4 Cards lead and Vic Davalillo added a sacrifice fly. Bobby W~'s run-scoring singSe wHh two out in the ninth inning snapped a Qe and gave the Expos its victory over tbe Cubs. John Bateman started the winning rally with a leadoff walk off relief pit.diell Roberto Rodriguez and Adolfo Phillips ran for him. Phillips stole second and continued to third on catcher RandYi Hundley's throwing error. Rodriguez struck out John Boccabella and retired pinch hitter Boots Day on a ny to short center before Wine Cami!! through with his third hit of the game. MDNTll:IAL. CMICAM ff r llrtlt M .,.. H1nn. cl l D 0 0 K-s•lntll", H • 1 • S11!nl<'l•nd, lb f I I 0 Bllciltfl, 2ti S I • .Slllltl, rt • 0 I 0 8.WIUllfnl, N S I 'J 8elltr, If J I ? 1 Hlcll1111n, lb l 1 I l•l~men. c l O II D Pepltvnt , cl J O D Pftllll1>1, pr 0 1 0 0 S.Mo, lb J I I lloculllll•, lb f D O 0 C:•ltl9CW!, rf 3 2 0 L1boY, lb l o I 0 HundllY, c l O I Oty,,.,. IOO D Hotl'lmln,Jt 2 00 Wint, n ' 0 1 l W.Smltr., llh_ 1 t 0 -Stonlfllln, p ? o Cl 0 R.Mll!tr, p o I o Mc:GIM, p 0 0 0 0 Popoykll, pt! 1 I I M1rllllll, p I I 0 I R.RGdrlf..,.r, p I 0 0 t or1t1 » l I 'J To!ll1 » I ? Monlrtlf 100 001 001 -l Cllk•"'1 000 001 100 -'J E -Hundllf. DP -MonlrH I 1, C:nlc19e '· JI -511ub, Hldlmen, 8, Wlllllfnl, HI -1•1"'1 (2'), •. WIUll ...... ntl, SB -Plllmos. s -s .... m..,, Hundley. WP -HOtllmtll. T -2:U. A -....... To round out the offense, there's these veterans-wide ra:eivers Haven Moses and Marlin Briscoe, tackles Howard Kindig and Paul Costa, guards Angelo Loukas and Joe O'Donnell and possibly Richard Cheek of Auburn. Center Frank Marchlewski seems to have ousted Al Bemiller. OCC'S PAUL HART SPENDS SUMMERS AS CORN FARMER ST. LOUIS f'ITTSIUl •M 10tlrrM .... ,.. S l\OP1ttll:,» 3112 4210KOPIU,ph 11 1 0 o 1 a o Jem. pr • o • • 2 121M.AIOu,Cf •110 Wayne Patrick and Bill Enyart round out the backfield. The u~front defense is built around such veterans as left end Ron McDole and tackles Jim Dunaway and Bob Tatarek. Nothing Corny About Hart lroc:k, II JIYIH, 2b tt10111. rf c.1.,1or, lb Rdl.AU1n, 111 n.v1m1o, rf Torre, lb C:lnllnll, d Slmmon1, c M•xv111, u 8"'111~, p 1.M, pfl C:llYtltnd, p Hllgtndorl, t tlltJ.M.ty,pl\ 1001 111 1 s11n11um1n,c:•t11 so o 1 •.1obel1-.n1• o o • •02os11t9111,tt .,,., •022P1g1n,Jb '1 1 1 •0 20A.0111f'ff,rt •Ill I O OOC..11t,a 41 11 10 0 0C:•mllrll," 11 0 0 Behind them are linebackers Paul Guidry, Harry Jacobs, Mike Stratton, Oick Cunningham and Edgar Chandler. LIGHTWEI GHTS MEET FOR TITLE LOS ANGELES (AP ) -The North ~erican lightweight title will be on the line tonight when Arturo Lomeli or Guadalajara, ~lex. and Ruben N3varro of Los Angeles tangle over the 12-round route at the Olympic Auditorium. Lomeli defeated Navarro in November 1968 in 12 rounds. Navarro soon after lost lo Rne Barrientos which stands as his leCOlld Joss a.s against 23 victories, plus two draws. l:iomeli's current record ls 30-5-1 and both he and Navarro hope to land a natch with the world champion, Ismael Laguna, or the dethroned 135-pound title- !tolder, Mando Ramos. By CRAIG SHEFF 01 rllt D•llY 1>1i.1 St..r Paul Hart doesn't look the type. A 19-year old freshman from Villa Park High, the 6-Z, 202-pounder is currently vying. for the starting light end spot on Orange Coast College's football team. But during the summer, the rugged Orange resident is a com farmer. "I got interested in fanning com four years ago when a couple of friends asked me to join lhem," says Hart. Hart, along with partners Bob and Rod Grimm, went out and leased 50 acres in Placentia, bought some equipment and started a profitable venture. "I>Jring the summers we'd work seven days a week and many limes eight to tZ hours a day irTigating, dusting for worms, picking and packing corn and then hauling it to market." Presently t.he trio have equipment valued at approximately $18,000. One of lhs partners, Bob Grimm, played with Hart at Villa Park. A guard Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Wes~m Dlviskln W L Pct. GBL Minnesota 84 56 .600 Oak1and 78 63 .SM 61h Angels 76 66 .535 9 Kansas City 54 86 .386 :Kl Milwaukee S3 87 .379 31 -Oticago 51 92 .357 34 ~ Eastern Division W L Pct. GBL Baltimore !l6 SI .641 .New York 81 61 .570 10 Detroit 74 68 .521 17 Boston 74 68 .521 17 Cleveland 67 76 .469 241h Washington 66 75 . 468 241), W"IM'Ml•Y'• •••vit. C:llluoo ll·J, Allftlll +I nnc1 oem. I Inning• r.tlnl Mllwa~~" 11 Kanu1 City, POSlpoMd, r•ln Mlnne$011 J, Olltllnd I !2nd .. ""° PD1l1J011ed, r.ini 8asl0n f, Detroit I W111\l""ton J, C:l1v111rld f &fltlrnor• I, New Yor1< O T ... ly'I 0.ft'ltl Mllw1ul!M !Loc:-wvod 1·10 lrlll MOH)I 1·11 11 k1,,..1 C:lly !Drl9CI 1·1' 1n0 S11tl1r :i.111. !Wl·ni9ht -·-Olltllnd IOclom l·J 11111 Hun!I!' 1 .. 121 11 """""" Ml.t (Kall 11·10 Ind Hiii 1~). lwl.flivtil CIOuO ... -llo1IOll IC11" 1•1Jl 11 O.lrolt IC.In 12-41, ni9ht Wnlllng1911 (H•nn.tn , .. , II Ct...-.l1nd CDllnn!ll(I J.t), nlOlll New Yort; fltllm.,. lJ.ltl 11 811tlmor1 ltol.c+l11!, tl-11, nlvl\I NATIONAL LEAGUE West.em Dtvision W L Pct. GBL Cincinnati 92 52 .642 Dodgers 77 64 .546 13 San FraRCisco 74 68 .521 16 'n: Atlanta 71 72 .497 1911.s Houston 68 74 .479 22"1 San Diego 53 89 .373 '¥1 &stem Division W L Pct. GBL Pittsburgh 75 67 .528 New York 75 67 .528 Chicago 74 68 .521 I St. Louis 68 75 .478 7'ti Philadelphia 66 76 .462 911~ Montreal 11 eo .433 ta n wee"""'"'' •-11• C:lnclnn11! f, DMtil.._ O Montre1t J, Cto1<11111 2 Allont1 6.-11 San DlllVO J.7 San Fr1nc11<:0 t, Ho111ton $ SI, LOUii 6, P!rt1Durgl'o • Pnllll<ltlphll l-1, N-'r'orlt 2·~ , ... Y'l ••-C:lnc!nntff !MC'Gloflllln 1WJ 11 °"WI (Moille!' 7 ... J. nlgnt Phn.oe1p111t !Bunning 10.UJ •I Ntw YOlt! tk-men llMI ).1) Monlr•I fO'°""°""" ._,, •t Ollcev-(o.dcw ni9"1:'· LOllll llrllts W l •t Pltt1Durtl'I fW1lt'.,. 11 ... 1. n10t1~!11ntt (JINd ... ) 11 Sin 01'90 (Rolltril J.IJ), ' ., HolnlOl'I !8111•""° a.O 11 Sin f~lla rtfry If.I)) DEAN L ·EWIS 1966 HARBOR ILVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303 Service, Ports, & Body Shop Now Open Until I p.m. Mondoy Nithll I I Orange County's Largest and Most Modern Toyota and Vol.,-o Dealer DEAN LEWIS · AU.UST SllCIAU SPECIA.L 1970 TOYOTA =~$1694 AllOtWM..-.t.Sfwd: ..... I-HU ...... .,...... L..r Cnhren Ce,... VOLVO DIMO $2950 •1536 "'r-"-...-s~--1967 TOYOTA CORONA $1095 BACK TO SCHOOL - BOYS GYM PANT~l.38 REVERSIBLE T SHIRTS 2.35 A TH LET IC SUPPORTERS 95c ALL STAR BASKETBALL SHOES 8.95 COLLEGIATE BASKETBALL SHOES 11.95 ATHLETIC SOX 59c • 79c • 95c • 1.25 LEATHER TOP SIDERS 25.95 DUCK FEET FINS 8.95 Pr. MASKS 1.19 • 3.49 · 4.95 SNORKLES 95c • 1.79 • 2.95 WATER WONDER BOARDS for BODY SURFING 4.50 CANVAS & RUBBER ROATS -7.95 to 25.95 SKIM ~RDS -4.95 & 10.95 .. 1 o~.1..0 Gll>Oon, P •a o o . OOO IC:llnn,1111 l t tt Gl111U,p 00 1 0 M.M.ty, ~ 1 o 1 o Allt~. rw t o o o tot•l1 ~ f 11 I Tol1l1 )I • 10 4" sr. Louf1 ooo m tDO -1 Plll1bur11h 100 300 ODO -• E -Maxvlll, OP -Sf, Louil I, Pl11bllrgl't :t. LOB -St, Lo11(1 I, Pllllbllrtl'I 7, 28 -C:1rd-1, P•O•"· Jlll'!ll'IOlll, c. T1v1or, M. Alov, SS -M •• Alotl, Broe~. S -C1mt>rl1. JI" -Dlv•tllll, JIWJ -HllgtftODrl. WP -GlbllOn. PB -Sil!f11llltn, A -7),IOO, CHAMPION HANDBALL GLOVES 3.95. 4.50 . 5.95 • &.50 OUTOOOR HANDBALLS 95c INDOOR HANDBALLS 1.10 WILSON -DUNLOP -DAVIS BANCROFT TENNIS RACKETS WILSON T2000 STEEL RACKETS PENNSYLVANIA XTRA DUTY TENNIS BALLS DOZEN • 7.50 WILSON XTRA DUTY TENNIS BALLS DOZEN • 8.35 TENNIS DRESSES 13.95 to 26.95 MENS TENNIS SHORTS 4.95 to 12.00 MENS TENNIS SHIRTS 4.95 to 8.00 BOYS TENNIS SHIRTS & SHORTS CONVERSE TENNIS SHOES LADIES 7.50 MENS 7.95 BIKES -PARTS TIRES -TUBES RACKET STRINGING 538 CENTER ST. 646-1919 CLOSED SUNDAYS , •=.,.if:.-.=,-.-, ...... ,-.,,., .-.-:"'.3?'"."1-, ... .,.-., ..... 1". ""'ffrTf."'',..,.<1.-.,,'i"''"'' .,.,..-·--:--.-~-·-.1-, r: ,,.....,.t.,tc-·-·-..,-:,..,.;.,,,..".-,..,,~r--------~--:-----:; .. -. --; -; ,. f ; - ' . DAILY PILOT WHAT'S IN- OUTDOORS? by Jack Aotloooy The coastal deer season draws to a close this weekend, and tht prospects locally are good. COoler weatber ii kM:ping bucks out In Ille open Inter and with the ruttJnc seaaon belinnlnl. bis- Ml' deer will be a Utile more vulnerable. ~!.,'The C~veland NaUonal Forest 1hould produce some ~ce -dter for hunters hunUna the Sierra Ridge area. There 11 a ~ high fire hazard exilt.fug in all SOuthern Call!omla moun· ta1n. and hunters are warned to be extra careful in the field. Bucks will be ruMin& behind the does so when you observe a. few deer moving, stand f~ and you might see the t>Qck near- by. Dove bunting reamins ooly fair in Orange Coonty and most of the hunting is <ln private property. The open areas in part of Rlvenide and San Bemardlno •:ounUea: are producing some scattered limits for hunLers wlll.J41 IQ.Stick it out. ..., ' Bill White of Irvine Cove bagged his limit of mourning dove jn Jtsa than an hours ahooting but iJ not telling where hla .hot ,pOi it. Seatter-sunnera finding good flyways are getting the best oboOUng. The Imperial Valley is the best bet for unattached hunten lhia weekend, u warden• report a new migration of dove from tbll-n<rtb bu bWlt up the dove pqpulation. Tbete are a Jot of open fields in the valley and I.he beat 11pqts will be next to water and around the plowed flekis ol grain. ~Hunters are warned not to walk through unharvested fields ~to retpect the property o{ tbe·rancb owners. There are very few whltewing1 anywhere in Calliornia, Arizona or Mexico according to traveling hunters. :Most of the private clu.bl jn Southern California have started lhC seuona and all managen report that memberah.ipg are filfinl up very fut for lhia aeuon. Ne"' Sehoob of Albacore :ne word from San Diego is that new 1chool1 of klnlfh11 .bift been foud and tblt die 1ea10t1 could last well in(o October. TM new bite 11 at a cou.ne of 171 oil Point Loma and puts the fldi soatll of when they have been for weeks. Tbe .-tural migradon 11 north for longfin1 and lllerefon skfppen feel tltat tltele are new flJh moviag up from Mexico waten. Let'• •ope d:Ut ii tile cue and that we cu fish tH lon&flns fw tile •rt few wetb. There are 1dll some bJ1 &u.na beln& caagltt ud wltlt &lie increased catches of yellowtaU ud blaetia WU &be tDd of ilte 1ta1on coald be ureal. · Localff, coastal ptr1y boat. are 1till ft.dial food world.as sdtoola of boatto, ba11 and ban'acuda wUb a few yellow1 ud tau sbowlag ap In the Dsll .C1111Dtl. Now thal summer vacations are ·ever dte loads an golnc lo be Uglller. Accordht1 to Ari'• LDd1q ud Davey's Locker fl1hlng is jUI& be,chmbi1 &o gel , .... GOT HIS BUCK -Ken Chpley of Loe Alamitos is very proud ol his three point buck he bagged last ~eek in the Cleveland National Forest. Cbesley's first buck in California after more than 11 years of hunting weighed out at 125 pounds, while his secorid buck in the same day weighed out at 90 pounds. GWC Gets Anderso,n Mountain Lion Jaws Sought for Research f All-CIF' star Jim Anderson Successful lion hunters were Should further protection be Marlln Catrhes Improve of Rancho Alamitos High asked today by the California needed, we would so Marlin fishing is not red bot yet, but the trend pointa to headed a li!t of basketball Depar1rnent ot_ Fish and Game recommend to the Fish and .11ood year'a count. The spikebJlla being cauaJtt now are fish players enrolling at Golden tohf!lplnastudyofthestate's Game Commission.'' lhlt have been around a few weekl, while all the jumpers bting West and Orange C o a 1 t mountain lion population by M a c g r e g 0 r said an aigbted ara probably new fiah moving into channel watua. colleges Wedneaday. submitting lower jaW! of lJons examination ol lion jaws is Al toon u the fish iettle down. veteran anglers predict the Anderson (S-5), along with for examlnatlon. also needed for bas I c marlin will come on very strong. teammates Kurt Brown and Over the weekend five marlin were weighed in at Balboa Calvin Graham (&.S) checked Before 1970 the mountain popuJation in form al Ion AncUDI club, and there seent1 to' be no one best area according into Golden West. A l s 0 lion was cleslfied as a n e c e s s a r Y for proper to catch reparts. enrolling 11 the Ru s t 1 er nonprotecled animal, and In management of the species. The fl5h are being sighted all over the ocean, from the campus was fonner Santiago fact Cillfornia had a bounty Age infonnation indicates "Slide" to the waters off Dana Point. The bi.lUish are not hitting star Mark Dekker (6-10). on them from 1901 through whether sufficient young are on any one bait or lure, which, also means that they just haven't Brian Ambrollch , a 6-5 1963. The bounty was produced and survive to :settled down yet. There is plenty of halt in the water and the liab forward who lettered at discontinued in 1963 on a maturity to either increase or will be around for quite some time. Golden wut two teasons ago temporary b a s i s , and sustain lion populations. "The and ut out last season, permanently in 1967 . at the number of old-age animals Big Bear Lake Spott9 enrolled along with last year's recommendation of the DFG. gives WI an insight to survival VlalUng BIJ Bear Lake over the weekeact Ulla writer can RUJtler scoring 15\ar Oiria Tn 1969 the Legislature and population longevity," report f11bil1 la alow for trout and fair I• 1md blat. Tbe Thompson. changed. ihe status fl the Macgregor said. weed• aloe1 dte U...n.t an Umpuiq 1'°1e ftlbennea ud At Orange Cout, Tony Cate mountain lion to a game -He noted the age of lions can boU aa,len ar tbtdln& I' wery liard &o locate feedJa1 flall. (S.5) from HunUngton Beach, animal and required a tag for be determined through Troat are 11JUID1 lure• ud TNT floatin& cbeete bait i.n • S t e v e M c L e n d o n o f the taking of lions except examination of the growth fe• ol Urie deeper bays while clletse and ulmoa e111 .eem &o Westmtnater CM) and Bobby when they are damaging layers of the canine teeth, and a.t: worktag best _.,. the dam. AwUn of Coltl Mna were the property or livestock. data on the age of lions taken Small ball ire plendhd all over the lake, Qd an blttln• leading freshmen enrollin&. w 11 M bi by hunl..-s 1·5 un· portant •· the ~-pl •••• d •· ,_ the d a '°"ot• w1sT a y acgregor, g game iu t1...-.. ce 111• _,y a.a .. ie ,. ay. Some of ike top plua• •.wnri111• --ui coordinator for the DFG, said overall study. 11'1 lmlUnrfck'•, Lat•y 1.J's ud Rapalas fl1bed very slowly ,1,11:~tr1~fr:n!~1f ... ~f~~'V!.'!i awiy from &.he w--'o. c*"''' 1r1111 Aftlt.rorldl (6-JJ. the Department feels the Macgregor pointed out that _.., ,,.. ... ,n \111 mountain lion is an important Temoval and donation of the Uslnc • Oyrod a.ad popptnc bu& analer1 report lood actlo• y~·~~ :o:!'~._1>: ~.1~r::''b':':h:~ part of our California Wildlife i·aws will not harm trophies, eft tmalJ baal almOlt all day )OD", .. Sl; S111t>~1911 -Don Oanltll ( .. 1). e ·~Kyle 51.11 : M•rk Dekk•• 1 .. 101 ; and should be protected and because the actual teeth and Aue Forbes of lluntlnatoa Bemch spent 1 few day1 •l Big H1'"t111tte11 1ac11 -c~rr Ct•llOll 1s-•·-· ~,1• w"1m1"11tr -1tldt Minn U-4): managed for present and i·aws are not used in modern ~ Lake bui aaid Osblac waa alow, blamJ111 tbe weed1 for 11 _, -Jttt aowm1n 1s-1111 G•rde" ~-I k •Cl'<'t -•rt G•m•t.;\'"21. future generations. . taxidermy. Fot the hunter -poor UC • 1r~'r'Red11~~ r,t,' 1t!idv~!~n$flJ who wishes lo retain the lower C ti Hunll""°" 8,,1;11, Mike Priddy ''"J), "We have no Indication that h DFG • bh a11d Bluegll Be1t at l'all Lake Hu,,1111tM110~;:~or co ... sT mountain lion.! are endangered jaw as a trophy, t e can Wlskerfish and the pan .fish are providing the mOft action ,.,,111:m'!:i,:•, .. \','.'"o':J:~. \U,..1, 0 • in California," he said. "In extract the tooth, removenda It Vail I.••· •· D B U of th ... I l I wh l 11.t"e evi·d-ce 0 -"on from the root, a -,e reporia ave rowoe e manaeement staff. ii. llll'tllntln• ...,....,.,, 111 ac , rom a IJ ~" """' .. The c:ata are hHtlng on cut mackere.l in most areas of the lake •• GrlffllllJt.~i~ol)tfid•I•""' cs-101. we have, they aetm to have repl ace the tooth. and the biggest catch of the week was a 6 pounder weighed in Hurrtln11v1t ••:c'ft LH w11i. ... ''" increased slightly since the Hunters who have lower by 10-year-old David Keay1 of Anaheim. 111·w!~vc~ 1taf; ~!,"!'~r'M;;; abolition of the bounty. jaws from lions are requested Crappie are starting to hit Jn deeper water and the bluegil ~~~~1"1..~iri,.!t'H,~~· .!•L~.;-; "We ho p e throilgh the to call the Sacramento office .are acUve all over the lake. Bau are being caught in deep water ru:1~11f~1\1 M.~:'•-J:~ z.r.tb:Z: return of mountain lion tags of the Department collect for moving up to feed at night in the shallows. For more inform• •>0111,,.. _ c..rv ••lleY (..OJI 1"1 this year to get more instructions on shipping. The lion on Vail Lake phone (7lt) 67M811. 1rHU1i. etc..-.,, Mir •"" °'"'., infonnaUon on its status. number is (916) 44~96. Southland Trout Plant 1-,---iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~0"~·"·--·--~~iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiliii~~ ·10th ANNUAL SUPER The following S o u t h e r n California and t n y o-Mono waters, listed by county, are Kheduled for ato<:king thia week w I t h eatchi.ng.alze rainbow trout, LOS ANGELES -Bouquet Canyon Creek, Crystal Like, San Gabriel River Eaat and West Forks. &AN BERNARDINO -Big Bear Lake, Green Valley j.ake. Gregory Lake. INYO-(.90Uth to north) - Cotlonwood Creek, T u t t I e Creek , Lone Plnt Creek1 Shepherds Creek, Symmes Creek. Independence Cretk, Oak Creek South and North Forka, Goodale C r e e k , Taboose Creek, Tine m·a ha Creek, Big Pine Creek, Baker Creek, Lower Bishop Crtek, Bishop Creek Middle and South Forks. South Lakes, Sabrina Lake, North Lake, Pine Creek, Rock Cree t Lake, Rock Creek at Motquito Fiat. MONO (ooutl1 to nonh) - Rock Cretk above and below Hlgbway 395, Hiiton Creek, McGee Creek. ·Owtns River at ·Benton Crossing and Big Springs, Convict C r e e t , Convict Lakt, Hot Creek . Laurel Lake, Sherwin Creek \ "'" ............ ...... ,....,YM .... t ....... .. ---·· ANIWlllN• IUllA• IJ5-77n SKI SALE ONE DAY ONLY~UNDAY SEPT. 13th *SKIS tu. , ............. jl 75,00 1110-.. m1 •• 140.00 1111 tlllll UIW •• $1Z5.00 help! lillllie 111 $110.00 1fl0Mlrt ...... 1115.00 tlJI ... -Ill.OD 1170 Kart ...., $ 94.50 '"""' 1111 $ I0.00 ltll.ao OOJI , .... $ 00.50 ! ..... 41.50 (Wnt _..,, , I 80.00 $ •.11 A I f Slit Y1111J "-..... S51.!5$IU5 ...... ._ ................ ,...... •••••• SAVI UP TO 70% .... s,oct• ...... .. ..... 132.50 .... ,. -....... $44.95 1111 P&lllS SAU $ I.IS $1UI "" ..... ~......_,, ~i.~1 :.-::...~ ....,.-._,.s-. .....,'i.,. .. _ m· .. ll:: .. = ==::'I-:: Ill: * !K! !20,5 :::: e.;7 mi 11!i =r::,.. il;:n ... 1n a ar tr 11n1n11 Llf6es. 's S..., II lllM 1111• T-llllrtt fl0.00 4.11 Select tr.. I ll"dal t;.;f If Yit, 719/a !111111 ~·.!!!!.!.-,5.11 J,11 11.,_ '21.N llf -'1 f l!I. M(f ~ ~., lzl:lf ,., .,._ 1111 POUS -• "000 115 -ll.M ,r.., "''••·• ..... I IJ5 ... tft,N "'"'"' , .... ,, .......... .,.. • • Lo--========" P1IW" •"""(D.T.> J.M ..t5 =~ '!Wi':::::::::Wo::l ,:: *SKI SWUTERS GIOYI;;:.. ~"'Cl Siiks ft . .. ........ ,. $60.00 11.15 Ill. SIU -110!# ,,_., ··j99.50 4JI LIDIES-llDC'S Imported 100% Wool $14.95 $7.50 .................... 65.00 11.11 -.... ••% $ 995 $495 ...... '!Ptoltitl ....... 199.00 .... l!I llAI[ •• 111111 ... Itel Mb ... 19'.00 .II ""'" l"'I , ..... , ... 129.iis I t.15 + -·s 1111 PAllTI Santa Alla Stare *Ski 110•11 AU. 1/ll NICI lllUUI W.[ 114.95 ....... 11.11 $ 9.95 ..... +.$US --..::-~ ., .... ...... --lllklf ····•••••••••••"f,7.50 S.00 S,etlll ,...., ••••••••• $29.95 $14.IS ...... P. ttt IEL UU lh~tr ········•······ .. 2.50 1.511 s,.1a1 "'" •••••••••. $27.00 111,50 "" ·•••·•· $45.oo !Eli.• *1111 PAllAI llebr •...••.•• '. ....... S0.00 J.H s,..111 Im, .......... $25.00 12.50 ._...,... ....... S3t.50 .M ... •I"' -NenUu ..._ ... ~ ..... $85.00 M.IS Sli,.C~l!l~·=llJl!_·:.:·:.:"~"-....~l'G.::00::...l~t!IM:.=-=-==··=··=··="'=.oo==··=~ 7" -....... \ltlll ..•.•.•.•. $69.SO I.DO r • ...., _. .._ .......,., ..._.,.. 1 t~.=m II--"'• ,_. --......... ,... -·.... llllllUWI• ·~\.t ,..-_ .... .....,, ___ .. ,..,.. ffl':H 'W: Mly, ....... -I.II P.""4 ..,...,, Wo -...,. 04.U t!f.M -·-'9 -.... -· Mt ... JIJ.~i ir.• -~ ---~ !!? .. ..., ~ -..... ,;:t, llft lertlftut• • la1tA1Hrte1N ...... , •••rra • Dllt'1 Cl•• • C1rt1 ., ..... SANTA ANA-219 L 4111ST.-KI7-5721 ~ '21 FASHION ISLAND-llEWPORT CEllTtR-444-2121 INSTANT FuumON401 S. EUOJ0-8n.59u CREDIT " ""' llll'Oflf-17-2545 I ) ----. . . , . ... ... _. . .. " .. Deep Sea Fish Tale Sage Grouse Hunt -A Happy Event group wall hunting wss high ~ge brush and lava rock at an evation in excess Cir 9,000 et. \ After the flocks were broken up, tiunting was easier as the ~ing\es, doubles and lriples held tighter for clo&er shots. As soon as the wannth of the day melted the snow the birdt tame to life and were flying every where. A sage grouse looks similar to a hen pheasant, but is larger and ha! more black and white in Ule feathers. Tl is a very tough bird to bring down and number a high base ammo is advised in a full choke gun. As soon as. a bird is ~gged it must be cleaned before the entlals have a chance to taint the meat. The birds ca n be plucked or skinned and should be soaked in salt water for at least six hours b e f o r e preparing for a meal. My wife barbecued our birds and they Lasted llke quail. The meat wu much darker. ANY SIZE ' 11111111 ,,,,,,, ~­ : Buy a 1hoclc abaorbers •'- OW' averyd1y •in1Ie price .•• GET THE .tTH FOR He fi rt$f Oftt DLC~OO N11Tre1d1 RETllENJS Oil W TIRE llOOIES Oii '9 YOU1l CIWll TIRES FDR ...JI ?4wiWWWJA .. aili4 .. _,,_Ew 1-..-___ , ____ .,_.,. ...... _ We'll rot1l• all I tl,.. and Jnft•t• th•m to P¥0Pll' a.Ir PMNUA. COSTA MESA FIRESTONE STORE 475 E. 17th ST. -646.2444 HOURS: Mon. ·.Fri., I .1.m. to 1 p.m. -Sat. , I a.m. to 5 p.m. HUNTINGTON BEACH FIRESTONE STORE 16171 BEACH BLVD. -147-'011 HOURS: Mon.· Fri., I 1.m. to I p.m. -Sat., I a.m. to S p.m. COSTA MESA -JERRY HALL 1762 NEWPORT BLVD. -646-5019 HOURS: I 1.m. to 5:30 P:'"· -S.t., I un. to 5 p.m. 11 Dal abc fro of l '" year ''™ , ... WAie Gll!'l!I "" '" B•r" Surgl '" o!d' Tlnv Ge~ "'"'' "' ... ltaPll c .. '" Girt, '" "'' Mav• "'prll •o•c '" '" M llfl• •• " eldf '""" FlllY Silen "' ... ,! ... , ... '" Hitt; '" "'' ·~· soc~ c:.,h '" Al, C~• tf!"I', " Tra• " All(>' Mc. 'ro' Trio n .. ·~ ... ,, " .. ' .. Olds "'' "" Ch•• " " .... ... •• " ... ... 11:1~1 •• " " '" •· ' (lai •• '"' ... " ,, "" '" "~ • (ftl• " ''" • ---·~----------------- White Seabass Catch Dale Carter of Huntinm.on Beach displays a nice catch of white seabass taken aboard the Channel Isle out of Art's Landing recently. The nine fish ranged from 25 to 38 pounds on skipper Jim Thompson's boat and were part of a catch of 56 big ?Whites taken the same da y. Racing Results LOS .U.AMITOS •ESULTS W..,.Ml•Y· Sep!'· n7t CIHr 1n4! l'tll FIJIST JIA.CI!. lSO Vlr<IS. Mlid<ttl 1 ve1r olds bred In C1llf. Cl1lmlnv. Puri.t S190Q. Talc"''sChldr (Adtlr\ W11ch Curt Go (Llph1ml G..,ltl Host ID<eyerl T!m1: .T9-S/10. '·"° '·'° 7.10 }.00 2.60 '·~ Racing Entries LOS ALAMITOS ENTJllES "3:HF~l~"'llll:T& l~o\~'f' FIRST POST 7:41 l"M $1 NIGHTLY DOUBLE ON IST & 2ND Ro\CES SI EXACT.I ON 4TH & tTM JIACES FIRST RACE. 400 Y••dt 3 ve1r olds Ind ur. Cl1lml119. Pll•H $1IOCI. ~~·~~~\~~(~~l~~iFll'IChl•l 117 In Rtmel"nb<81'1CI IAd•lr) lU Bio Granda<ldv (Slr•Uld UO BTWs RfQ11ell (Dreyer] 117 Doub~ H~:ly (Cr0>bYI 117 Gold 1ngol (Perner) 120 Moon CJabber fH1rdlfl11\ 111 SIXTH JI.ICE. J50 Yt rds. 3 vffr olds •nd 111> b•ld In C•llf. c111m11111. f urs• S!900. C!almloo r 1c1 S2000. Chill II•• (PIQf 3 OCC Vacancies At least three posilions are up for 'grabs, on Orange Coast Colltge's football t e a.m, according to coach D i c k Tucker. '"We're still undl'cided at quJ..terback , split end and flanker," says Tue \"· Fa!,eshqi an quart~backs Bill Shedd and Gary VaJbuena were impressive in I a s t S8turday's scrimmage with Mira Costa. Shedd, from Newpo r t Harbor, completed four of eight passes fpr 49-yards and engineered an eight-play, 60- yard drive for a touchdown in the scrimmage. Valbllena, a Fountain Valley High product, hit on fi ve of 13 passes for 112 yards. One was ~TIRES BUY IN PAIRS a 60-yar4er to Manker Gary Cwnmings that went for a TD. Cummings. . along w i l h letterman Tony Venti~iglia and freshman Joo Stubbins, S:re waging a fierce battle for the starting f!flnker spol. CUmmings, I 24, attended Millikan High in Long Beach ~nd after a stint in the service, sat out last season. This is his final year of eligibility. Playing with a pulled groin Saturday. CUmmings (5-10, 175) still showed fine speed . Ventimiglia (&-10, I 7 5) prepped at fl.tarina a n d Stubbins (6--0, 150) ls a forme r Huntington Beach star. Doug Young, Geor ge Barnett and Tom Malone are all batUlng for the starling split end spot. Young , a $-9, 160-poonder, attended Corona del Mar last season. Barnell (6-0,, 160) is a letterman w h o prepped at Estancia and1 Malone (~10, 175) attended Fountain Valley. All ¥.'ill see aclibn Saturday morning (10) when the Piratts face Whittier College in a scrimmage. Tucker also revealed that freshman linebacker p. a u I Moro (Huntington Beach) is sti ll sidelined with. a slight shoulder separation. "We thin k he'll be ready to go in a week or so," says the OCC coach. EACH $1695 EACH $19.95 C7t-14t6.95-14 1:71-14/7.35-14 E71·15/7.35·15 J71-14/l .IS.14 J71-1511.IS.15 9,00-15 ''"*rod. b . Tu: $2.17 to 2.23 per tirt •ndin1 n aiia 6.SG.13 7.00-13 6.15·1S A"•~91~ lt.M W. Lb"Ctl• l lV'lll. COlll M__. .... ,..,. 17U Hew .. rt ~I .... ,.u1i.~n·tt• lU SOlllll lil11<li0 EACH $22 95 Pin fed. b . T11 $2.47 to 2.IO ..-r tirw cM,enfi., •" tire C•tlllr•• llff~lll1 Ufff Dell"'}' P1rlr 116. O.-y-UUI JJI·..,. IUi ••-r•• •• u ....... UNutOTAL COAJT TO COAIT ""'"" WAlUNrl 2 •w 538 ~h~!AYAi* ~ ,..._ l•. To, 1<.,. l1 ,J7 .. 12.11 -- ~ WHILE THEY LAST SPECIAL PURCHASE- /SUGHT BLEMISHES FA$TRAK GLAS-BaT Scr1tchtd' -Four And Movl". Trisl>'s l11rre<1, Oeoml W11tch, Peuum Shi. l urvln' Ml•. Sl!COND •ACE . .-)0 oldl 11\CI UP. Clt lmlnD. Tlnv Toud'I IC r11by) Grttwln (Ptllf ) v1rds. 3 ve•r Purse SlliOO. 11.00 '·'° 4.XI Uncle Edoa• (Well1) !l'O MiH GQld Too (M•lsucltl l U M•c A eob CHardloo\ 8obbv 0. Luxe. (Pe1ner) Bunnv'• Best {Drevtr) True Can Flv (.ldtlr) Cando Bav 8 1• (Har!) what Luc• 1w1u11 Unanac!WCI Bin-II Chlckadoozl1 <Kini•, SEVENTH Jlo\CE. 400 v1 rd1. 3 YH r old• and 111> A!low•ntn. Purw: &J50CI f71·15/7.75·1S H71·1411.55-14 G71-14tl .2S.14 G7S.15/l.25·15 H1a.1s1a.ss.1s 2 mr$ 4J'iilf''' 6.00 l.IO Bruk To Win fSmlth) '·· Time: .:!0·7/10. Al.IO r11r1 -Sprln!ln Mls1, S1r1111dor1, Rtoid ~bl. Sundl11<1. S!•r!cl! Pi ner, c ue 0Kt , Valin' euttoon. Scr11Ched -Ooublt Htstv, P1r T Girl, Chu Chu llob, HlthWIY e .... St NIGHTLY DOUBLE, 1 · Tok"''I (l!ltlf & J ·Tiny Teuclt, Ptld S41.60. THIJID II.ICE. 400 v1rds. l Vffr olds And up. Cl•lmln9. Pu•lt $111(1. M111nolll E11I• !Lipl\aml 6.40 3.40 ?.&ii "'"'II Oll!tl (Ad•lr! ).70 1.«I ,lp~Che PllSU"' (W11ion\ 2.60 Timi: .20-6110. AllO ran -Fa•! Eddie, Mld ... IY Miiiie, Mick'~ Mooll. No 1cr1~hes. FOUJITN I.ICE. 4IXI y1rcl$, lYtl• otds end up, Cltlmln9. Pun"' 11'00. Qukk Moolal> (WAison\ •.90 J.«I 7,40 Flllv Roy1I /K1nt1) 8.;>0 J,70 ll!ent Groond fH1rdl"9l 1.90 T!mP: .:I0-6/10. o\lso ran -8 DblW De' Lii~•. Bud Eye, THIRD RACE. lSO yard• S ye1r old•. (!timing Purse S2100. Cl1\mlng proct SJOOD. Klph'• Come! !B•n~sl $\h.eranc/IO<' (Wiii"") H•~• OOllble (M"suct•l Fleet Ch1r11t• [(ro.bY) T!nv Tris!'! 1Ad1lrl Hui' H•tt'e (Pe•Mr\ P1num RfQU1!11 (Wellsl Scot! M1cLe11n (Llpl'ltml "' "' "' '" "' "' "' ·~ FOURTH RICE. olOO v1rds. 2 ve~r old•. Clalmlng. PurW' 12200 Cl1!mlng pr!c• !""' Vlnew n !Plgtl 11' B~!le'I B d {Str1vn) HI Wee WOP (C•o.t>r• ,·,',' Gulde On CSmllll ~r,~1b:J:.·~~e (\Ll~~~;)1 n: Mr. Q1111t: Hiii WaTSOll) Ill Counl Cl1r1n \Smith! m , "Admlral Rid Ka11l1 172 Udy eo.1<1111!11 /"'d• r) 119 Ml1• P•r• Bir Pernerl 119 Solid Rocket (L !>/l•ml 121 Plui;,cier (W•ll~ llf ~:;re: t'~e\ rr..~t~1 \~ R<><:kel Mic~ ( Ortverl 172 NlhTH JIACE. CHI v••d•. l Ye•• otds Ind UP. (l•lml'l!I. Pu•K l\&oa. Cl1!mh1q ~·ke SlolOO. Gillan! V11!or (Cr0>by) G1t1w1Y Jol'ln (Well1l Bav Bir Mon...,. (Wiison) I'm Bario (Llphem/ Allmltas 81r, e ar Dil\'ld, FIFTH RACE. 110 y1rd1 ~ YN • old• Scrll!chtd -Truc~lf 1to1t. Hull '"" UP. (!alm!nQ P11r11 S3500. Gold Lining \Sml!tl B•r Crul1er Welson) M r. Mtr• {81nllt) lttQlle.<leCI Tom !Slr111!4l Sun of Ner•c IOrtverl Str1wdor1 !Hl rdlr.g) Hi ttle, ~::~~fl!lc..e~Wi1 S50«!. l lt T1~11 Tracer fW•IKlfl l 12? l"tFTH 11.1(1'. 170 v1rd1. 3 vtlr cld• SP<:o Trick (L oham) ]16 i nd 11<>. c1111m1n1. Purse snoo. S•nd Rl~er Win !Pernerl 72 Al10 Ellblbl• Tomb&r Tonio (P1rnr1) Roc:ket J11u1r tLlo~am) S.«I J.90 ?.•~:\iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii s~~t Ginger !Oreverl 6.00 ?.IO C1sh Brown IAdeltl ?.«! Time: ,4'-7/10. Also r111 -Su•oe On Ben. (h~rii*.ff Codv,' He! P11>oer Pod, Forw1rd flit. 11f'Y, M"°" ,lg1in. Scr1lcr.ed -llr1s1 Lfnd, Welch Me Tr1ve1. TNdllln Gtl. StXTM llACE. 350 v1rd•, l Ytl• olch. ,1.i1ow1nc11. Purse '7100. Mr. DtnCIY Zff fAd.olr) 3.60 l ,00 7.40 Trutv F tmout (P1rner1 10.00 '·'° Trh>llC, Trulv (Slr111H) 4.80 Time: .II 1111. .llJO ran -Doubll A111!n. ltOYtlell~ ''°""'"' Jlnoo!st, Sirod. L1urlt L1rk. lvv Rolo, Sn11kY Teeky. Scr•ICl>ed -Co1mlc. SS EXACT.I, t ·Mt. 011MfY IH I 4 . Tl'lll'f '•rn••· ••Id 114'.SO. SE:VirNTH •olCE. U(! Yl'"lff. 3 ve1r olds 11>11 UP. l !l11w1nct1, PurH S7llOO. TllN Go (Llo1'141ml t.:10 S.00 •.00 Mlrtlelll (H1rtl t .90 $,t!O Ct11rt1 1t11v1t (W1tionl 4 . .0 Tim•: :r.1.s110. :A1911 rl" -K•-11 EQUI 8•r, Mr. 1!11rnett. Drill, KIPIY't Stge, Cupid •• .... No 1cr1f(:l!n. ll'IGHTM JI.ICE. lSO \'1rd1. ' \'elr llldl tnd ,,.. A!IOWll'ICIS. Pu .. e ,]()l)O, Hobltrll• {Llphlml 4.20 2.«I '·"' Jl lc1't Gold (CrtnbYl 3.00 ,,20 lllM" MtMCI (Ptrnerl ,,., Time: .11·1/16. AllO •1n -Our Deel!~, ltlPIY'I C1bo01t. K1ns11 Jtl, 811d Ltn. No ur1klle1, NINTH IA(f , «JO Yl tdl. J YHr okU. Cl1lmlr>11. Puru U200. A GOln'MI" (ll11nlt1l Tt11 Counl tWttwnl l!IOC't lltr End. !LIP"'-"'1 Time: .20-111n. • • .O!XIJOC •. 40 '·"° ... o\lio rtn -CltltY llcd1I, S1ltt. 0.POtll. l!lell• S!ffPY, 111 ... 1 SUtlr. ,.Iv 0.111, Lltlt LKIY RHr, $!It~ .ire•. kr1tclled -Stoll Mtc LN n. Sold Cllltk. fJ IJll.IC:TA, I · .I o.ln' M1~ f. I • Comprehensive evening programs toward Bachelor of Science and Master of Science degrees System1tic, dynemic lt•bwctiofl Is gi""" by M w11ta11dlng faculty of practicing adentllll and •nglneera holding ed¥allctd degrees from top Uf\Mnihl throughout tt. Mtfon. Bl'Ch•lot of Sdw9 degrMI .. engl...mg. eo1n11 U111 1Ctettee, llPPfled ~ ... 9PPhd ,..,... M•ltefofldtlno9d ....... •fsls•s..., ...... Mld m•ug ...... -..-............... ..,,.1110' I ,,,.. Nftftnli ...... : ~cour-. begll'I Od. 21at Los Angeln Center and Nov. 23 at OrMg. County c.nw. Gradu11e COUfMI blgin Oct. 29 .t l.MAngelel c.n..,. 5-f'ld coupon~ orphoM for infonMtion. West Coast University Accwdilldbf......... ·----~ 91\d ..--1or---. 550 So, Mein St. Or.,._ Clll. l2tll Loo __ , .._.,_.....,, (~3'2·1372, Ext 20 17Ml $41-61'2. ht. 20 Pl ... Mnd l11f0ftr11'*' oa:: 0-- ""'-------'"''"-----,,,.. __ _ Tri. Ct11n1, ''" $1f,f0, ·-----------------------· \ 2 for $25 2 •w s44 EACH $24 95 ., .... 1 •• oMo1, ..... ;... .. 1o .. .._111, .......... d<o:I ,., • .,..,n .... r.,... 1o --•Nicl......,.., ....... d. VW's .560-15 6SOJ:13 700Jl) 735114 73511 5 E7t.l4 l'lus Ad. [L,Ta $Z.!5 -.. ~ GLASS llLT 2 for '56 2 for '60 e~lh SJO 9S FJa.14/7.75-14. GJa.14/8.25-14 "71-15/7.'75-15 G7S-15/L25-15 .... fM.&. T•1 ,....,...$2..U• $1.77 ~inl -oiir- each 532 qs "71-14/1.SS.14 H71-lS!l.5S.1S J71-15/U5-1S PlwM..&.ls ...... $2.f'l te $3.()141 ........ --~· WHITEWALL ONlT $2.95 MORE MOit thes iA Moct. "SNIM •PiW•-~ wtik:ti ll!i no~ en.ct ,,.;-••w••""•-•,. h..-, u .. ...,,. u..i...,.. -.. -_,...,.,. 20,000 llili HAUl1IE BRAKE RELINE Smaitp Tire Stores 'Where tJ:iere is inore than meets the e~ ANAHEIM 1961 llOO«HUIST IA f L!MCOl-M) '3.S-1170 I CORONA I Ut w. 6Hi ST. 735-6010 GARDEN GROVt I HAWAIIAN GARD£NS 1601 WESTMINSTII 11973 CAISON ST. (6 l lOCkl 0.Sl Of IEACHl fllMUt "Oltfff l MOlWMIC) ~ 193-3595 165'"27 I HUNTINGTON 11£ACI 19411 llAOt llYD. M Mitt ant 01 A011iM11 S36-1STI SANTA ANA I MAUOI AT IOU.A ... ~,.. [(~J UNIROYAL SANTA ANA 1211 W. WAlNU AYf. {WAIM~R Al BR!STOlj 5401646 ' TUSTIN 131 £. 1st smn (I• "tit! "O" STJ $44.-9431 UH youa MA.IOI c1m11 CAID I I WESTMINSTtlt W1$1'MINSTll AT ((DAI ·Cl lkOO:S f, Of GOll)(• Wl$Q 193-3521 I COSTA MESA· NEWPOrrT 11£Aot 322 WT 17tt. ST. '42.Clll OPEN 8-8:30 DAILY / 8-5 SAT. I SAN ClEMlllTt 927 Ill. a CAMllO' -........ ., • 'H DAil y PllOT WI HAVI OUR OWN TOP flfTY " TDIY •IAMT, I ... Althoulh W1! have liter&!· ly tbouiands of dltt'uent dru&: products available and vresttibed for, t h e re are only approximaUly fifty that account for over ~ third of all prescriptions. Another o~ hundred and flftY account fot another third. In our pr'ftUipUon depart· men! v.'f' k«p thfte fut· movlng medlct~ In mor' than am.rl• auppty &l'td in fl place where they can ~ quickly retched. Thb sav~ a lf't'•t deal of time In fU.1- ing your . prncrfptlom \Vhen a new drug: la lntro- dueflt it got.1 fl rst to our "new drug'' 1tt1;on until It has been determined that tt should bP or 1hould not bt in tM fut movln.1' aeeUon. YOU OR YOUR DOC'J'OR CAN PHONE US when you ne«S a dtllvery. We wW de. ll\•tr promptly without eic- tra chart•· A crti'lt ffi'1'1J DtOU!e ftlp on us fOf' thf.lr be.Ith rweda. We welcome reQu~ts for dellvttJ 1U'Vb and clwp account!. fAll LIDO rHAIMACT JllH~.._. ............. "'"''" .,.. ...... CALl,OINlA IAILIN9 ACADIMY ' $ 1,_., Of OIL PAINftN•I WHOUSAU WAUMOllH ONlf TO THI PUILIC '"' L !,..~ :r,.TA .A,..t. --·-I U WAHTIEO ..., fW .... n•• NOCMU..• ...... '-""•• $ .... ,..., .... LEARN TO AIL • ' l j ... ~ --~,-·-·-•, ' •'. . . ------. . . - Complete-New Yor~ Stock List Market LK G11 I. t •mJ11 Sells llrall51 .1 LH• Sin • t::~: g~i LNID pf'J,l l.,......, .s lffd1Nor , t:11t:..~ Len Val I• Lthmn 1,u tm:~~11ci ltYFln( .7. "! f in•"' lf Corp tF Pl.50 lbOFroS 1 .. l!bOF pl•,; Llbb McM llbtrly(p .; C\b•IV ln i l bYl pfl . Litt Mv 1, ti'~~v ,;~ t1frv e1f 1 .. le!nNr l.• line N1t ol C\119 TV .:r l ltll AA .1 Ltno TV "' LI-I (MP l l!IOll 1,121 LlllCWI pie I Locltnted A t=~~''".n; L-SCMn · GMSGI 1.1 Lontllll 1.< LIL Pl BJ LIL vi I 5.7! Lor1I Corp Ls Llncl I.I Lovl•GE 1.! Lou NINI ' Lowtmtn .ll Lubrl1of ID Lud!v SI .to LOii~ l,Cll LUMtll SU L111111 Inc: LVO Corp LvktYnt Ai l Ylr.Yt pf2.S Mt(AnF .20 Mt(Oonl(I .l Mackt Co .l Macy RH I Mad F.S 1 ... Mt.S S<1 Ga1 M11k;Chl .• Magnvlll( 1.2 Mtllorv 1.eo M111 nlnd .5' Ml(IPOIW .7:1 ManHtn 2.1 MAPCO .IO Msrt lhn 1 ' M .. cor .IO MMC« pt A Msrtmnl .21 MM Mid I.~ MsrlonLb .:r Mtrlen,,.n I Msrq1,1U c .... Mtrrloll .IDI M61'1hfd 1.1 MM!lllM 1.1' MrYICUP ~ MMCO CP .1 MtloOlllll .n MtlHY F 1 ManevF '" Mtlltl .10 MtvOSlr I.• Mnt JW .JI ~~·y~··~ .. Mc:<:ora 1.M McCrory 1.21 ~''"''I' MIB111td I M< 0 ~ MC r~ 1« McGHlll .61i1 McGrt9 DOflo Mclntvr• k ~gtNl!ll..o!Ot McN':fl ,10 Mead Coro • Mead p!A?.a Moad p!81.tu Mt<lu11C 1.) MEI Corp ~tvSnot .1! Memortt C1 Mtn:1nS 1.• Men:k 1• Meridith 1,, Mt111 Ptl .\ Mfl Sf of1,2t MnlP pf2j0 Me11l>IT .511 MHll Md! ~G'tomd ·~ M~/:i Inv• ~le f!~~ M~odol .» MldCnTe\ .• MltiSoUll .h MIOIO R 1.• M!OWJI 011 ; Mll«Lttl 1.X MlllB•~ ·" MlnnMM 1.7 MlnnPLI 1.'l MlllnCP f.~ M!11ltlv .JDr MoPtc A ! MP Ctn" 1.6' MOPubS ,IOI: MabllOll 2.• MDl'llStO 1.1' MohW~ 011• MolYbd 1.9111 Molyb pl?.SC Mon•rch 1.'l Monotm tnc Moncon RR MMrofq . .C Mon!ln l.IO Mon11 pf1.7 MontOU! !.'. MontPw 1 MDIII' Mc(DI Mor11nJ '·' MorttSl>I> .; M o:r·Nor .IC Mo!oro!1 .6< M!Flli!IS I .I MtStaTT I,! MSLlnd.• M11n1ln11wr Murphv 1.X M~rph'{ Ind MUr Pl'!0!1 ·• Murp0 pl!.) Mur rJ'O!I .'1 N1lco C II .: N1rtP $c:I ·' N11~P .• RJI Alrll!I ,I -AV1tl I. .... NII 811< 1.'l Ntl Ctn ,.1! N Ctn P! I.! N1IC11hlt ,l N11Cl,.,.l .fC N4I Obll! ·' N0!1t 1>11.?! N1! Fvel 1.f N•I ~nf .1 N1IGYPI l.~ NGY'" pU.I Ne1 1ndu1t Ne!1nd pl 6o Nell"" ~!.~ Nt!Lfld 1.J Nt! Presto N11Svcl11 ,/ol N•! St1nO • NllS!1rth .I NI! 51111 ?.! NII Tl' .0 N1!Un I .!'! N1tom11 1 Necr!Uftt • .IO Ntv POW 1; Newblrrv 1 i\'.l ""' "'-Pl'lllll •• ...,._. '" , ...... • ' Stptembtr 1970 DAILY Plllll' ' •• ... n~ t"' s........ '°" • ... "" • "' ,,. ,,,,, .... S11tffltlMlll 1 " .. "" "" " "' 15'" -~ S..U•t •O 10o1 ... ,,. "" "' "" ,,. ,,.. + h .. ,.. -u•-V. SCll.llbll B I JoQ " ... ''" "' "" " n~ -\\ Sowlbtll _. 2 " ... ... • ~· "" • +• S!tlt~Mf 1 _. • "" "' '" -"'' ..,,_. tllr11'1C11 I Ml " "" G ~ "" "' ~ -· !cllln:I ...... a • ""' ... ·~ • ... • +>• SrllrP1l~I .3' " ~· "" " '"' "" 1"" + .. SHI llltl .t.it " " ... " " "'' '" Std Koll-~ '" ' ·~ • , .. 111\-''o StOllCal IM "' .. .,,. " .. " ·~ + ... SIOllll'ld :Ill , .. • • ... " ... ~ ID1'o + l\ StOllNJ 2 70ll "' ... -" ••• "" ·~ _,._ SlllOflOh 2 10 , .. ... .,. ,,, " ... 2~ -.... SIO Oii .rJ 71 ... .. .. Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List -.. c .... ) """ .... ""' c ... Briefs ' ' • ' ' ' • f ' ' ' ' ' • r --, C HICAGO (UPI) McDonold s Corp has •«"'td to buy 10 ol !LS fnncb!Rd hamburger ru tauranta l n Jtawall trom a liceneee for 1tock A lta~aUan rubtidlary will be lorme<l to -ate tho - Jll'OUP .,............, - ------------·-.-.....---...... ---r -.......--r:-r l t .J " •• "•' •f '' I "' -• '• ' ' ThundQ, Stpltmbtr 10, l 970 . ' . . . ' !'~,..,.,~---. ' - , .,. .. ,;.·:~-..::·.•· -: ; ,• .. ... ·~··· . . Nielson Sweeps Two in A Row NJiJ. 'Nielson, the !In\ girl and the first local Sabot fieet member to win a· national championship in 1969 repeated bu feat by winning the 1970 Cbaniplonship& held recently at Miuion Bay. In a field of 66 of the top Sabot skippers 16 local neet representaUves placed 14 of their members in the top twenty. 5. Phil Gaul!clli LIYC G. Mark Gaudio NHTC 1. c1m Wilson NHYC 8. Steve Hauser SOYC 9. Jeff McDennald ABYC IO. Jack Bateman MBYC O'Malley Wins '70 Adams Cup VICTORIA B.C. (AP) - NEWPORT SKIPPER PETER ROTHSCHILD'S 'THUNDERBALLS' NAMED WEST COAST OFFSHORE RACING CHAMP.ION FOR SECOND YEAR IN ROW This years event was tiOsted by the San Diego Yacht Club which used the.facilities of the MissJon Bay. Yacht Club and the incomparable s a i I i n g waters of Mission B a y . Olympic courses were sailed in each of the five races of the series. Defending champion J a n 01Malley and her crew from the Mantoloking Yacht Club of New Jersey recaptured the' Adams Cup for first place in the 19'70 women 's North Rlcan sailing championship. Mn. O'Malley, and her crew of Patricia O'Malley and Connie Blalsie, finished wiUt 501/t points, 1h point ahead Of sec<ind-place Jerie Clark and her crew from the Corinthian Yacbt Club in Seaille. Powerboat Champion • Wins Casal£ Trophy Newport Beach's P e t e r victory, with Wllhnick second Rothschild, 30 • y e a r. o J d in the clau on the basis of uecutive vice ..... sident of victories in the Heimessy cup ,.. ~ event and two other Western _ Powerine OU Company, was APBA points events. In : recognized today as' West overall points standings, the 'Coast offshore pow rlb oat New Yorker was third behind : racing champion for the aec· Ed OeLcmg of B u r b a n k , ond straight year. president of Spectra Color film proceulng laboratories and . Rothschild totaled 1 , I 0 0 frequent "playmate" foldout : points toward the E r n l e contributor to P 1 a y b o y '.Ca.sale Trophy pre s e n t e d Magazine. annually by the P 1 c i f i c . Driving a 32-foot Cary hull Offshore Power Boat Racing powered by a pair of 500-h.p. Association, f i n a I 1970 M e r c r u I s e r sterndrives, standings revealed. Rotbschild set a course record Rothschild, 1966 national as winning Rum Run IV last well as West Coast champion, winter, captwed first pla<:i! in clinched his right to retain the February's Catalina Island trophy by finishing second to Race-Cruise and f 1 n I s h e d New York Bill Wisbrtick Aug. second to WislmJck in both the JS in the Long Beach LoogBeacb·E nsenada Hennessy CUp race. International and Hennessy Standings were announced Cup races. He was unable to by Sandy Kemp, president of finish in Rum Run V last June the organiution, who asserted anl did not enter the recent that 1S'10 bu been the most CaJallna Challenge Trophy competitive and interesting race conducted by Caillornia year in the sport's West Coast Yacht Club. history. ' Other class champions for "'Two years ago,'' he noted, 1970 are Louis Gantz of Long "we had races with eighf and Beach in the Sport Class with nine boats. Now, we're getting a 27-foot Magnum general 25 and 30 -and we had 31 purpose runabout named Hot entries for Hennessy CUp." Line ; Bob Brown of Los F o rt y. e lg ht driven, Angelea in the Pacific Class including racers from Ariwna, with a 2l·foot Scblada named Washington, Florida, New the Ringleader; Dutch Jersey New York and even Kallemeyn of Westminster, New ~aland, are iDcluded in annual Patrol Boat catpain at the final overall cbampkmhlp t b e 0 u t b o a r d W o r J d points listing Kemp further Championship at Lake Havasu noted adding that several other Cl t Y, Ari 1 .. in the driv~ had entered at least lntemational Class with a l&- cne of the organization's sh: foot Stylecraft powered by a races this season but had not Mercury outboard engine, and fmished. "You do~'t gel points airline pilot Jim Autocoast unless you finish," Kemp said. Marauder named Rampant Rothschild added the Raider. Offshore Class tiUe to his Casale, who manufactures a repeat Ca&ale Troop by V-drive system used by many race and pleasure boat owners and who alao serves regularly u a POPBRA checkpoint boat skipper, will present Rotblchild with the trophy at the usod.ation's a n n u a 1 awarda dinner in November. LOCAL No ot\or 11ow1pop•r hllt yo~ fllOr•, •••rv cloy, obout wfiot'1 9oi119 011 i11 flio Srootor Or•rtt• Co1tf fl1111 tho DAILY PILOT. Kingston Good Show For U.S. KINGSTON, Ont. (AP) American skippers won all but one of the Canadian Olympic· training Kingston R e g a t t 1 races Which concluded here last Friday. Winners and second ptaCe finishers, by class : Snipe -Augustin Diai, Miami, Fla., and Terry Tims, Ahn Arbor, Mich. o. It Dlllgby -Gary Carlin, l.Dng Beach, Calif., and Cari& Thomas, Bellevue, Wash. hternattonal lh -Dennis Clark, Kent, Wash., and Baird Bardarson, Benton, Wash. Fireball -Peter Bateman, England, and O. H. Rodgers, Tampa, Fla. Finn -Carl Van Duyne, Annapolis, Md., and Henry Sprague, Newport B ea c h , Calif. Ll1lltal11g -B~ Goldsmith, Chicago, a n d William Shore, Depeu, N.Y. Star -Alan Holt, Seattle, Wash., and Gary McDonald, Quincy, Mass. Dragon -11 Buddy'' Friedrichs; New Orleans, and Arthur Henry, Mercer Island, Wash. Winner Ot Bl'C 66 Series 'Ille Columbia-4S Encore owned by a syndicate fa cetiously called the "Balboa Ma!UI" was the overall wtnner of Balboa Yacht Club's season·lonR 66 Series of !tr ocean racet. Encore was skippered b,r _co-owner Dick Blatterman. Others In Ole syndicate are Bill Lawhorn, Herb Riley and Fred MacDonald, l 'Factory Salling' Yachtsman Airs Views Two other local products, John McClure and Denni.s Durgan placed second and third respectively. All six·teen members of the Newport· Balboa fleet will sail for the neet championships th i s Sunday at Newport Be a ch. Bill John Jr, The three top skippers under The growing controveny lhouJd also be encouraged to "We are all grown men !~xte~~~~Yg:n;~e:i:ea~ Takes Title' over alleged commerclallsm forego the name and aiU of facing as equals the same agairult a field of other young LARCHMONT, N.Y. (AP) -and "profusionalism'' in sailing hu brought itOme the yacht. the names of Ute elements in a yacht race. All skippers in the McCullough William E. John Jr., of the owner and crew. of us want to race against the series. host Western Long lsland pOslUve opinioDI from Jolm B. The top 10 in the Nationals Sound fleet, took first lace "Jim'~ Kilroy, owneNki-"We should not be overly best competition possible. rr• were· Tuesday in the opening of the of the famed ocean racing concerned either way as this Apparently we have developed 1 · N" 1 NHYC 11 ,. world champi"onshlp regatta of yacht Klaloa U, wbo bu ao-called commercialism is an exceedingly keen group of · ie son ~ the International One-Desian competed in major ydting points •-events all over the world. like a Hollywood store front competitors from both yacht· 2. McClure NHYC 1414 points class. and doesn't make a great deal oriented and other business 3. Durgan BCYC 29 points Defending titlist B er t Kilroy aired hi.s thougbta on of difference in the final activities. Let's all k e e p 4. Bob Burn California Damner of San Franci.sco wu the subject in respGMe to result.: racing." Yacht Club sirlhinTuesday'sfield. memoranda issued by Alhton0-;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~;;~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:!:=:!:=:=='f Castle, an officer in the I Southern California YachUng Aasociation. Sa.id Kilroy: "I gather that the thrull of this discussion would involve the p articipation and competition in yachting event! of sallmakera, ·bolt boUders, naval archltecll:, y a c ht in I news media, magasine publishers and e d 1 to r 1 , yachting equipment suppliers, etc. "Where would one begin and where would one end in outlining 111ch a group? "Many of those who might · be considered in the above categories first . became involved ln yachting • I com pe tit Ives a 1lor11 . Thereafter, in quesj of excellence in pN'fo'finance, they became interested in some phase of equipment De9d and 11 a result, extended lnto some phase of yachting related buslness. "Much of the improvement we 'have seen in yachtlng .has come from a joint association of those in yachting related businesses in 1:1>mbinaUon with yachtsmen I n non-related businesses -working and competing together in one of the happier spom. "Perhaps there are minor degrees of commercialism that may have touched yachting from time to time. U '°· has it been entirely objectionable? Has it come to the point that the yacbtmlan who has wanted to become more involved than just a weekend yacht.mian should be denied the opportunity to compete? "One of the more frequenUy stated objections bas been the go..called "factory teams" for yacht b u 11 d i n g companies. This objection is in part related to the unusual amomi.t of "news stories" placed in yachting maguines before and after a particular yachting event -followed by advertising claims as to the yacht's performance. "Fortunately, we can be consoled by the fact that, with few excepUons, these teams and their new yachts have gained ony moderate suceess tn spite of their great prior press build-up. "Perhaps the SCY A and other yachting organisations might suggest that t he yachting news media - newspapen and magatlnes - should consider treatJnc the so-called "factort team'' as just another yacht in a race. This should go a Jons way toward taking the empbuil of the controversial subject. "In the same view comes the case of the so-ailed class yacht Ailed by a factory team or partially subsidiied team where the class yacht la not truly the aame as that IOld to the public and with 1ub1t1ntlally different performanct capabilities. "To be commercial, the 11leged commerclaUsm must be dftcted toward the sales effort and the news media interrelatlonshJp ls severed and no particular call ii elven the commercial aspect. the most aubstanUal part of the problem la eliminated. "P.ertiaps the news media STARS $ytfi.1y 0fl"lltt It 0110 of fll1 worlcl'1 9ro1t ••"olo9on. H/1 colufllfl ;, ''" of tho DAILY P'ILOrS t r••• foo tur••· S.50r ttbllclwlH """'°"pl" Fod. £r. Tar $1.78 alld old tire. ADD $3.50 Fii WHITTWAlLS • c::Jnn sidnnll dntgn. ndlal darts on aboulder a Tripl•tempered nylon cord conttruction 3WAYS TO CHARGE I I I ANY OF THESE SIZES ONE LOW$ PRICE 7.75x15 7.75 xl4. 8.25x14 Ull OUll IAIN CHl'CK ,.OOIAM plu1U.t t to SUl FOCI, Lit. "rolol'lc:I otd tire ILACKWAlL TUIWU ADD $S.DO fDI WHITEWAW ltt11nt ol' 111 1q1tctod IMl"IY llllftl"cl flDt Goodyur Um, '" ~ n111 out ti ,_ 111n cl~rl1t1 ll'll11fl1r, ..,I wt wm bt llli.J to onl1r t011f 1ln II,. 11 tltt ocl..-rtlM p1ie. 11111 '"" row • nill clllck tw flobln cl•ll•uJ of fl• 1111rttuindl••· • FIT1 MllfT NPUU.I CID l ulcl l1$1bre 'M·'66; Cll"""'tt 'U.'66 I. CJI. 121 1~ 40t: FOf• ·~·'54 ClltlPI 260 1n4. 219 en1. •Id.) Mutury 'Slo 64 111 lld.1 l'tft!llC '55-'U, IM -·· GOODYEAR-THE ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAS•TIRES .............................................................. ~ ............................................ . YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO. INC. COST.A MESA LAGUNA BEACH 1596 NEWPORT BLVD. e Phone 548·9383 482 OCEAN AVE. e Phone 494-6666 ALSO. THEODORE ROBINS FORD-2060 Harbar Blvd., Costa Mesa 642·0010 I DI Tl I i1 '~ I ,f, M JI ™· LEA w • l Pl Al 1 Ro • Co II• 10 O• ,, h< 14R • 15 0 '" l6 R 17 c ho 18 B .. B 20 H 21 • h 22 N h 2l c ' • lSP • 27 F " )0 ' ' )1 F I ll 5 JJC "' t I JJ ' 0 )I ' )9 ". • 7 " I ,. • ,. TUMILEWEEDS MUTT AND JEFF 6'TOP MISUSING ~EENGLIS!l LANGUAGE AU-"Tl-IE TIME! JUDGE PARKER nwucs A MtlLION, LEFTV! MV FRIENP WILL rEALLY APPREtl ATE THl!t! • ACROSS l Run \ht - fJ Cosklf· flying lltm 10 Ont .1lttnd ing .1 h11mtcomlng 14 Run .1way with .1 lover l S 0111: Informal l!i Roctflsh 11 Cltflym1n's houst lS Btlth tmploytt: Brit. 20 Hit 21 Play th e hors ts 2Z No ltworthy happtning 23 Colltgt subJtct: Ab br, 2S PTA mtmbt1s 27 Ftminlnt "'" 30 Ma king public 31 Powtrltss to move '.12 Sorrow Jl Orcllnr )Ii "···that touch liquor" 37 Across: Comb . form JS At I ;re1t distinct 39 American lnd11n .40 Sudden fan cy 41 Anlmal 42 Sur9le1I thrt ads 44 l ow rtllow 45 Aircrall 41 Historical narrallve 48 Lan11u1gt 49 Persian or Sl1mtsr 50 us humorlsl porl 54 Nrwsp1prr fr1turt 57 Quick on onr 's frrt 58 Grnus cl plants 5' Comp1ss point 60 Au\omobil t 61 Fix E.2 Ctnsurt Ol 1953 Nobtl prli:e wlnnr r DOW N 1 Opals and rubles 2 "Thtrt ought to bt . --!" 2 words 1 Lisa 4 House stet Ion 5 Golfrr's lCCtlSOry ' C11t of mr1t: Var. 7 "Ste p •. -!": 2 words I Position on t TV dl1J 9 Femalt animal 10 -· im•1• ]l Vind lc IYt 12 Conctrnlng lJ Indoor g1mt 19 Strokt on I lttltr 21 Socl1I affair on tht RIYltlil 24 Makt by way of profit 25 US patriot l& Grttk god 27 Venus dt - 28 P•I of I mi11t1ry ts· tab1ishmenl 29Putin1 di fftrt nt plier JO Brt1kf1st food• 32 Shows pleasure 34 Rtduct lht force 911ono JS Author Harw 37 God of thunder 38 Mus ic man .40 Gal Friday 41 Cont.liner 43 Prtpart d IQ edition 44 Contl lnt r .45 Tr1ns ltnt • br ightness 4li Kind of spoon 47 Highly seasoned .49 ~anlsh domicile Sl Kind of 111 flit1ry officer SZ Pitct cut from a tog SJ Birds SS Hockey otflciat: Informal Sii Adlt t livt suffix 57 Rtquest weu.- 'TAAT'S Pt'MSIXC! lye ........... .. ly Tom K.·Ryam - ly Al S111ltli By Harold Le Qon rvE GOT lHE an-IEI: NnlE WITM ME! I Fl61EE nos WAY t CIOPl"'r MAYE 10 wom AIQIT 'IOI LEAVING MULE I'M ASLEEP! PLE.'.SAWT PREAIAS ! PERKINS I ' f I • MISS PEACH PEANUTS IT WON'T PO \OU ANY l 6000! ! rrs fl<IN:ALLV l.tl!CUCI! ,t U'&: AINR SALLY IANANAS @. ly John Miles ly Mel ly Saanden and 0Yertanl ly C .. rlet M. Schlll Tllursday, Stpltmbtr 10, 1'170 DAit Y PILOT ;'2~ ly Al Capp ly Charles lanottl ----MR. MUM __ --..Jf ~ ~ ly Gus Airiol. ----:::1 1 ' ' • I I ; • DENNIS THE MENACE • • . ,-, --:c;~o.;·--~--------~ .. .....-----· --....---..--··-..--.. ----.. -..... --...---.-----------.'":..-,..-.--==·----·-·---,. ·~ . ,. . . . . . . ... ' .,,. ... ... .... ' ••,==• -,.--.~.----~~.-----:-.-.--~_.,-r·-------.-----.-·,.-.--,,""0",,,_,,.,,..--.C° .. ,,W-.:-;,..,-,,-,..;-7,,;t,C°'"•'"°7'~ ....... ,, ' ... HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE • HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSEi !!OR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE :o.neril JOOOGener•I 1000 General 1000 Gener•t 1000 Gener•:;lo.... ___ _;lc;OOO:..; ,G.neral 1000 Newport S.ach 1200 E11tbluff l~~ii;;;;iiiiiiiiii~iiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii; 1:z::;;;;;;;;.;;;;oft~:=J.~=~~="=;==== I E::!!I !L. Room "~ 2~~.1r:, Bdrm•, Newport Beach Home 1242 Huntington Be1ch 1400 LAST DAY • ·A L..,I ..,... ftpl, beautilttl Jandscpg_ Be h I L tn a ~ e QUALITY BUILT thefinttoseethianewllst. just1s ortboc11: R-ister to vote 10 AM to 10 PM PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES mo Sq."· • baolroom, 2 '"•· fromCr.ffor. -"21 00.th Costa Mesa home. PYRAMID EXCHANGORS SpaciOus 3 bedroom 2 bath -(at our office) Ne,vly listed-Lot • 60: perfect for the tam· Heavy shake roor, oversized ===="=..,,.,=====I master btdroom adjoining ily who wants a spacious waterfront home. 4 kitchen y,i lh tlec bltns, room tile bath with built Ins, plus * If you hive rnoved Extra Jge BR., 4 Ba ., pwdr. rm. L~e. liv. rm . for boat or tta.ilet. LDcated Cotta Me11 1100 fut bath with built Ins; !Iv. * If you ch1nge your n1me & den; 3 car garage. Beaut. pabo/garden; on quie t .street 2 blocks to New Tri·P•-xes in~ room wilh fireplace, din. * If yCMJ 1r1 • first time voter deck & dock. park & all schools, Owner IW' ing area and large picture · t east • must sell!! Assume $57,500 windows overlooking lovely Do not f1il to register or re-r99i1 er For information on all lots & homes high existing 5"4 ~' loan. Large, beautiful "homes with secluded lanai: wood carpet. IMPROVE YOUR OUTLOOK I! EnjQy the "hypootii:" view from this luxurious bluffs condominium, 2 bedrooms, 21Ai balhs and closet& galore • Try this for sighs • Ma in. tenance frtt pool at your fron1 door. Only $49,500. Cali 673-8550 PICTURESQUE SETTING PRIVATE & SECLUDED We w ill stay open tonlte until 10 PM CALL: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR paymentt only S183 a mo. an income" located in the ing and ·drapes, electric Office Open Siturdlys & Sundays Ill Dover Dr., Suite 3, N. B. '42-4620 incl, taxes & insuranee. Call finest Eastside area of Costa kitchen with built-ins. Gar-I-========= EA TY lll=~======~==~=====~I 54().llSl. Mesa. Featuring (1) 3 BR, age ott alley with electric PETE BARRETT R l Generol 1000 Gener~! 1000 2 BA "own<n u";t" + (2) •Y"P'"'r, room'"' boat"' •-0 THE REAL .'."\._ ESTATERS '-' • •, T •" '•• ' Past wrought iron gate entry illlo e.nclosed brick pillared courtyard to gorgeous "OLD WORLD CHARM." 3 llll"ge bdrms, + massive living room with cozy brick fire- plaC'f'. 12' breakfast room. Sliding glass to private, ""' closed patio. Few blocks to beach. t.1ust sell! Value packed at $28.600 w/f'HA. VA lenns. Cail {714) 962-5585 Coron• del Mer 1250 1605 Wedcllff Dr., N.I. 1;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;; --'------SHeritage 2 BR rental units. Set' at camper. Beautiful lands.cap.. 642•5200 lo ''Tl PTOE THRU •••LTo•s 2035 Tustin· Ave., cor Wood-ed corner Jot THE TULIPS" land Pl. or call 6424905 Drive by 328 Albo then call ··~ FOREST l OLSON Immediate Possession Vacant -move righl in. 3 Inc, Realtors 1000 General 1000 General t.::.:.:.::::.;:'------ *TAYLOR CAN BE CHILD'S PARADISE 5 BEDROOM &hoo1, playground, library. OR • . UNIClUI' 11()-'tl'S Atal E111i., 175-e000 heated pool at your child's It now is the most beautiful fingertips_ 3 bdrm, dining big panelled game rm YoU rm, pool ho~ in Westcliff. ever !18W. The home is a SALES PEOPLE Must see! Jol5,850 decorator"s dream, custom UNIQUE Homes is gathering DOVER SHORES Delightfully different! Brand new 4 bdrm. den & garden nn w/wet bar. Dramatic Z. sty living rm w/ba.lrony. OPEN DAILY $108,000 410 Mornini Star Larle' ,.,Our 25th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO. Re .. ltor1 NE\VPORT CENTER 2ll1 San Joaquin Hills Road 644-4910 drps, lush crpts, !rplc, a steam! Sales leads are com- rare pridf' of 0\\'1lt'rship ing in! Excellent opportun. home, As a fast sale ill de. lty for f'Xperienced. quality sired owner will sell FHA salt's peoplt' exists. You've or VA at only $25,900. This heard of "the man to see positively is the best value from \Valker & Lee'" -now on the market today. Call you can be "lhe man lo now and prov" It ro your. geek, the F'reak f r o m sr:lf. Unique". Conlact Jim Wood. Nichols Real Estate· 546-,521 • J K _NlfHOl.S UNl()UI' 11()-'tll ~E-1,1i7S.-iaG 1.40 E, C.Ctt H1"\'. eor-Del Nor, c.~1. Y ·11 It "--f NEAR • • • • • • • • • I owner for appointment lo '" WI .. ,,~ 0 • DANA HARBOR BY STATER BROS. Cen!er 2 BR. Home. CUstom bit; see. $37,500. 646--4032. whUe Your chi ldren walk INCOME HOMES hardwood firs; exceptionally * OPEN DAILY * well-kept·, like new w/w meJTily to Behool and ad-3 DUPLEXES •• $34.950-$44,950 * TOP VALUE * joining picnic grounds, 50 2 TRIPLEXES.$63,950466,:;oo crpl, drapes: covered patio. Artistic & charming 3 br ACRES of f un: baseball, 2 FOURPLEXEs. MANY Extras! I...rg fenced home near Mariners School. tennis or hOrseback frolic •• 161,9"° •69,500 yard, on extra lrg Joi. Good N I ,_, 1· . ... East.side Joe, CM . ldt'al for ew Y carpeu:u 1v1ng rm adjoin t.hr junior high, high (3 ) 3 BEDROOM HOMES. retired couple. 54g...1642. overlook3 lge COVt'red patio school and OCC. We include: .••. $30.950 a • • • • • • • • 1 & lush gardens. Remodeled 3 bdrms l % baths. DINING Brand new under construe. bathrms & kitchen. AppJI. RM happy hOme for $26,500! ! tiOn. Larg~ buildings w/de· • OPEN DAILY 1·5 • ances included. Only $32,500. GENEROUS FHA Tenrui • luxe owners units, ocean 'Tll sold! AMume 6% % VA Buy direct & aave $'.s. Atu.sl ARE YOU GAME? views, xlnt location!!. Take loan. $148 Per mo. Redecor. see! 1512 Priscilla Ln. M. M . LA BORDE, Rltr. advantage of good rental in. 3 Br. W/W cpl!, drps. Im· 646-1355 (owner). 64&0555 Eves: 54&-3265 come + property value in.. med. posses,,ion! Only $22,. ..:..:=::Wc..::A=NTE=c_D __ _ & S creases due to the new Dana 950. l9S4 Federal Ave. ~me ff -~-~,--~~~--Pbone Buildf'r 6424005 oc e Bill H1ven, Re1ltor or duplex wantrd by sun 4 BIR-F/R -1 m -gas bltn sei> a t 33792 Copper Lantern 2Ui E. Coast. CdM 673-3211 v;OJ'Shiper vlith money. ki1 -d/w. Dii>s/shutters -Dana Point BEST 6% GJ Joa.n, No CALL I;\. •••·2•1• nicf' crpt incl kit + F IR-:Jf~-~~=~~~~~~:C qualifications! 2000 sq ft, 4 9!~ ~,. Sprinkler sy~em for easy VIA WAZIERS BR. 3 be, tam rm, 2 patio5, R;IM1E A LT""vC, ya.rd ~-Nice lndscpng -many exlra.I. 3 yrs old. lg cov palio, 2((0 sq ft ol On Lklo lttlr Must sell fast, WiU take Nr1r Nr•p_orl Po11 Offltt; living are11 , apPrOX l bl~s O ose to sandy beech $33.000. Owner, 54f>....54GS. BARGAIN trom SL John's Parochial niC"e 3 Bedroom home 3 BR/2 BA Fam/Rm. Lg. Excellent Newport Hf'ights 3 .school. Asking $36,000. with fonnal dining room unfinished bonus nn. Rltins BR, 1% baths, TeJTific lo. Open Hou1• small privfllC petio -crpts/drps, 2 car garage. cation. Room for boat & 979 Denv•r Or Asking $61,200 Nr. So. Coast Pla2a Shp trailer, plus double gar. & Bednn hOmf' ocean side ol 19131 Brookhurst Ave. hiwa.v. Receritly painted. 2 Hunlington Beach car garagt' -+. Take a look. I •;;;;;;i;iiiiii~;i;i;;;;;m= Duplex NEED ROOM Two 1 Bedrms .. Xlni mrner location. Close to everything. TO BREA THE 7 Euy terms. Near Huntington Stale Beach MORGAN REAL TY 3000 SQ. FT. 673-6642 675--6459 3 Bedroom. 2 baths, family TOGETHERNESS Room wi1h fireplace, formal With Privocy dlning area, huge living room 25x50' Two 2 BR homP.s joined by a RUMPUS ROOM dbl garage. Room 1o add. Easily converted into 4 add'I. Hdwd Coors, shake & shing. bedrooms & 2 baths - le. Below hiway. Only $46,000 ONLY $36,400 University Realty lnimediate Occupancy 673-6510 VA-FHA & Conventional 3001 E. Coast Hwy.,~ RANCHO LA CUESTA AYRES Homes Since 1905 MARVELOUS VIEW t.tODELS AT 2001 Bayskle Dr. Beaut. BROOKHURST & ATLANTA shake roof 1-sty. 3 Br. 4 ba. 968.2929 e 968--1338, waterfront home, xlnt swim. -8 ll a.m. p.m. ming beach. Newly rederor.1~~~~~~~~~1 $175,000 SHOWN BY APPT. Bill Grundy, RHltor CUSTOM TOWNHOUSE 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-4620 f'ri thro SUJ'I 12:30-5:30 Cntr. 6% Loan to qualified hobby shop. Eating area in CHILT ROBl~ETT buyer. $31.500. 546-5259. kitchen . .$28,500. DELUXE DUPLEXES LOW, LOW $17,900 POOL 3 BEDROOMS REALTOR 646-0128 Piinter•i Chillenge MORGAN REAL TY ONLY 2 LEFT BEACH POOL $l9,000 51,4 % Joan. 5 Bdrm 673-6642 675-4459 South of hlway, 3 BR 2~ ba, hOuse. Xlnt CM loc. $26,950. l .BR 2 ba.. Cpt. sundk, sell-ORIENTED777 '"""I'" Newport Hofnhts 1210 """ov<", eom;og cook IOp, Immaculate comer home Reatt--64:).1070 Realtor. ....._,..., • G b 4 BEDROOMS VACANT Relax & enjoy carelree Jiving no upket>p worries. Just keep Up the low, low mo. pay· ments. Co.zy living rm. step. saver gourmet kit_ incl. washer & dryf'r. 2 king size BR's, Desirable l • story. Clubhouse pool. Terms to meel a n'y budge!. Won"t las I! Take advantage. Call (714' 962-5585. "· h d ·t --t;"g "'° ' ;__,:_ __ ..::,___ wlk-in closets, rea( uy, \VALK TO 11-IE SURF & with room for boar or trail-a...us eep pie ...... ,,~ ' ''Our 25th Year 2 ba " massive dblr-flreplacr. fully FAMILY home, 4 BR, • BLUE OCEAN VIEW $69,500. Open daily or call Rear yard? Every inch iB SAND from this almost new er, localed in• coontry set-bltin kilchen 2 sparkling Jn the Harbor Area'' Cpt1 & drps, BJtns, Lge NEW LISTING. Come see 644--0266. concrete except for the pool. Spanish custom-built home tiJl2 of rolling hills. Lovely ., • . __ _, bed 673-4400 Jndscpd yard, $29,500. 2S6 """'~~~~~:"!'""'"' 3 bedrm with four spacious bed· c-a ........ s .tr drape~ enhance bath~ & ·• oversla:u • Camellia Ln. 642-9501 th.is beautiful home with • -- The homt'?' It's • .,,... rooms plus family room.l==~=~====:::::i -:::::CCC::~==~---•plendid view, 3 BR, 2 Ba SHORECLIFFS ~ ty ·th w-" 10 wall rooms. }"onnal dining room, the roomy inumor which in-b 0 ""'t ui:au Wl ..... 1'-antastic value for onl,y 2 BEDR. house, Y owner. with many fine features & ~forning Canyon r, '-'.II> everywhere. Financing?' No separate family room. pool-dudct!: a large family room, .,. = Call 545--8424 close to shopping and tastefully decorated. Gar Most desirable fet' land pool •---,"' problems. Take table-sire GAME ROOM. t'iec bltns & a heavy shake ,,.,....,, · ' .... hool. 54"9148 -· -~ 'UJ'ldeck also has view, A homes. Priced at $65,CKXI. ls TD "th $8000 but Use ot association pools, ten. roof. VA appraised at FOREST E. OLSON =:'A~r wi;;1 help you .with nis l'Ourts &. recreation ArCa $30,950. Qllt of town will Realty Company ASSUME $22,000ba 5\<S3! 000 VA bargain at $37,500. Exclusivr with, inal th! I do 't y 0 Th l d loan 3 Br, 1"'-. . . WANTED -·· -that! Full price, $25.650, for nom mon Y ec. e1msider of'fer-s -llll n ou wn e an 4ZI Cabrillo St, 548-0138. ..-.~.. Inc. Realiors $64,950. INCLUDES THf ~'ail till it's gonP. Fixer upper small houM' C:O..atN-MAtn'INj'l 1~1:i1 Brookhurs1 Ave. • COATS LAND! ! SUnny 3 Bdrm, dining rm or •EAST SIDE-3 br, 3 garage. wanted by young, hard .:;~~~l~li~·=Y~l!~~=°J~· Hunrington &aeh I. ~· CO,.TS SQ FT family nn. Oieerful enclo"" $24,000. Easy terms. By working couple with cuh. _....;..::;~:::;:~='--w•L• •c• Colesworthy . 2,000 • • "'gardeo. Com<r '""" lot. own<r, MS-2!185: ', '$19,850" "" . ...-~ • TWO STORY 1========== CALL 6.0 '''·l•I• Now'Tro'plex REAL T0aS WALLACE Pool & dubh'""', 2 blk> ,,\:#, ill Fi. MASTER BEDROOM aw•Y· MMy, mony ._..,. MHa Verd• lllO 4,. ,._ Good lneom• 4 BEDROOM Open Evenings & C .. , ~1E4A1 LTOR$ downstail"li and 3 huge onesil 00 extras. $J9.500. Call Amy azt~ All units rented .~uu pric(' for lh\~ bargain • 962-4454 • O. _,,.,...... -lllp. "'Enormoos Fam Y Gaston 67a-3210 CUSTOM HOME Golf Nrir Ntwporl P••I orrlrr South of hiway. hunter's beau!y wilh space. REALTOR (Op19:n Evenings) Room." El~·-buill·i~s fot• 67s..321'o 642-1235 Course. Truly magnificent * 644-0266 • age kitchen, DISHWASHER, $1,675 DOWN Newport Beach Oftic• lhe Che!. Redut't'd pnce of1 i~======~~1 with 3000 sq. ft. of living Biyshores 12151"""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""''" I ankle-deep carpels and dra~ PAYMENT 1028 Bayside Drive $.'l.2.000. "N("I Down" to G.I.'s11-----~ -area Formal d I ni ng, 2 UNITS-Lrg 2 BR home, + es throughout. Submit your will buy thls 4 bedroom, 2 fiTh-4930 TV SALES and F1tA Terms. Court sale Sparkling Pool mas!lve stone fireplace. CHARMING, open beamed huge brand new 2 Br & den do'A'n and pay IC'SS than $180 bath home. Needs fixing PICK YOUR • 80 subm!L Freshly redecorated thruout. oversized game rm & ceiling, 2 br. lg. lvg. rm. apt. Good loc. Good fine . By per month !or everything! ~~:~!::,t:;:':~; coLORs! . & SERVICE Walker & Lee ;~:~; ~::i~J,~~:~~~ 5~7"' ~~:~~~' ~ :::.1 ::;: ;:r:~1:37 ~;j~1~:~:"~;~'~; Walker & Lee P _,. buil __. ... ~ Sellf'r ~to paint extenor. Ex It t b 1 Rral1ors , __ 611c F1-lA loan 10 kind for $69,500 • owner -;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Al'A'a~ rented. owner: Realtor! artiOl.Uy 1 't\"'" """'Y· Sharp l bedl'Oom, :.! bath ce_ en going us ness, es-2790 Harbor Blvd., at Adams ....._.ge '0 . requests immediat' sale. • ~·· 7682 Edinger Subject 10 GI Loan of "th BRICK F"IREPl.ACE tabhshed 8.years. Ha~e Zen. 545-9-191 ()pl'n 'tU 9:00 Pi\1 assume. \Vel\-pn~. Call 545-8424 South Coast Pool Table Sited &75-5797· 842-445;, 540-5140 $18,400 with payments of ~1 the BEAl\fll> CIDmG Ith franchise. Net income · 1 <Open Evenlng!I Realtors Bilboa Peninsula 1300 $189.00. CALL! mmil Walk,_ Cath per year af1er all expenses CdM VIEW. ~ ,... "='"'-~=====~ Family Room -----4 BEDROOM Walker & Lee fa Y room. "' · $15,IXXJ. Full price $10.000 Fabulous cus1om built home. m .__, ON THE FAIRWAY Plus 2 BR, 211'1 ba, w/expen-$3l .500 f.'ull price, has 11. ollc_ Oiureh ~ ~0001 aodd cash. No "blue sky'" here. 3 Bdrm -dining nn & <.'On-OLU-J:_,;,E-~~--A·-.Cll Custom built, 4 bednn. fam. . d & t L-OWNER .-n,200 existing GI loan. J ma)Or shopplllg. •£<>, an vertiblt den. View of entire 1.i' ily room, 2 big fireplaces. sl\'e rapes carp g, can...., TRANSFERRED .,.. Bl d Ad ~ • t ' ,....,_ fo only 135 000 Small Baths, shi;gle roof, large 17'90 Harbor \".at ams VA or .,.,1.1, terms, oo. Newport "-~,_ Ov.-ner moving "l,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.,. 1 Thill beautiful home over· y..,...,. r · · * P<"•'m,,la Poino * til 9 00 PM & L ·-~ down paymt ,. -" yo" ___ .. " ... Y•~ . .,,,...,.,..,,.,f' service porch, 54.>-0465{)pen ' : .. Walker ee NcwZt!aland.Aski-SSS.700. k>oks the 17th fairway of Seu> "'""""' L l U .,..,,.... ... al ·~ WHATA HOUSEi Go Co to enjoy luxurioos living in 3 BR. home, SOXIOO lot. gf.!. Jge kilchen with bins. & eal-DANDY DUPLEX Sul>mil any reallOnable otter. • Mesa Verde U urse. patio. Near priv. tennis club, •-I B a planned community. Won't i~ area • paymen1.1> e~s 3).13 \Vt'stclif1 Dr. f,.irview OPEN E."\IENINCS A charming family hOme 6%. assumablr loan. Y own. you r-all us for details?' boat ramp, bay & ocean. than tent. Your down will Y $28 500 646-Till 446-8111 7407 E. Coast H\\'Y near \Vestcliff Shopping on er. 3036 Java Rd. 5404095· e Red Hill Realty $45,950. handle, anyone qualifies, ONL ' n...... 'til 9:00 PM Opposite MacArthur Blvd. one of Eas1side"s choiCI' $63,500. 1 . "nytime meels -3 Bedrooms, 2 2891 Clubhouse Rd. Call anytime 833--0820 5 BR., large den -S51,950 ~" ( J Univ. Park Center, Nlrll' l' FURNISHED DUPLEX 21 -"j;'Ai;rijlijjFi;""-'Ji::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~::::~=~ I baths -Heavy shake rool -Professionally J1tnd5Caped. ~=='l!~===!!!!!!d )lednns. each side. Garages. EASTBLUFF 646-7171 fam'lty home, p11tio. shuffle. ':: Nf'&r N.H.\'.C.: 4 BR., rxl.ra 962-4471 ( ::!!.) 546-1103 Llve in one. Let other pa~ Traditional home with tor. FIXER-UPPER <¥. board. 4 BR. 3 BA family-+ Irvine 1231 R-2RloS1.HOA"LtyLl7Rl,500EA.LTY $50. 1llage Real Estate expenses. A.ssume lo inlt're~1 f!ver view. 3 Bdrms, J baths, 5 Bedroom, big $19,l'.OO, 5\~ 111 formal dining 2 fr-pi es. MA TO'fAL CASH rn GI or part loan . Call 645-0303 large family rm w/wet bar. GI loan at S155 incltKhn~ June Ward, BkT. 6424816 G~ansf~~ ~~ •3 B~.w2n::.:, 675-4600 ANYTIME closing rost f"HA. 2 Story, FOREST (, OLSON Could easily be converted to e ver Y th in~ may !If' CQZV FOR 2 . --on grl'enbeH. Quality home ----4 hr, 2000 sQ. IL Divorce! 5 Bdnns. Low maint. yard assumf'd. Askin~ $26,!tiO, OCEANFRONT Newi!Ort B!.ach 1200 by Ayres at THE RANCH, WEST BAY AVE. g.17.g;,o7 714 : 431-3769 Inc. Realtors 2299 Harbor With Fortitude . & Det1rmin1tion This 4 bedrm, dining rm & family rm Ivan \Veils home at $58,000 ~ill match any- one"s $65,COJ hom4'. Exc!!I· lent plan for family, lari::e yaro . with courtyard. $51,500 bul make offer? Nf'Cds ONLY $17 900 LOT S2S.450. 5111 Ch ab Ii s, Charming new 3 bdrm . 2 ba. "Pleak ca.JI for our picture cleanLup, pain/tO,ytl1~ worii;. ' Balboa Peninsula WA3 LBKR.T·0$2B4E,SAOOCH 8.12-9358. 'tedlt·-a-•" •tyl~·. Block ~ ;Q: I'"••*' brochure of current listings" ••se P ion from ~a~"'S:'baY. Builder's 0 , • 1 • l" ~J" ,f,.1 10 1 • Vacant, 4 BR & !am nn, Own your home lor less than $45,000 Fpl., 2 Ba., bltns, cpts, drps. E tbl ff 1242 -.... .,., ----1 I 1 only $240. 3'.r i;creened in rent. Ni bf><lr ms. 16' !iv. George Williamson X1nt rond. ~1ust sell! as u home, top quality . ~~~ ''I' • .. ..... "' pofo. Option fol ;,,, room. II' '"'· '"''" REAL TOR CAYWOOD REAL TY Biii Grundy, Realtor Heated Pool Estate - -$500 at S:.!7,800 or bt>st offer. refrig, stove i cl: Separare 673-4350 645-1564 Eves. 6306 W. Coa~t Hwy., NB HARBOR VIEW HILLS 83.~ Dover Dr .• NB 642--<1620 833-0700 644-243; Open Even~s garage". A re bargain and PRESflGE SPANISH : 541-1290 3 br, 2 ba, .am. Xlnt cond. I ~========~ · R 2 C ti <« "~' 2 •-beam beaut \'iew, prof lndsc pd. 11s -• 11 '""""""" Atriun1. 3 Br/ "'" BACK Bay. 4 Br, family + r..5:!:~ FOREST E. OLSON ~!~O:r:~~~-6% Z:~c.Cu~~lm o~uil~~e ~~ ~i;,;n't,;~·~io~r~~~x P.ETE BARRET Rl TY PUT THE FAMILY HERE OUEGE REALTY TRADER'S PARADISE 5 Units. $48,950. Eqi;y $18,950. For that item under $50 tr;i l.5QJAllllMttHlttilf,tlt I~. Rf'nllorlli Zl99 ll11rbor PENNY PINCHER Spacious Family l~omf' on a --i~":,;"';,';::·>~u;:;· m::;"';,·;::5~b::;•<;:;k;;'==~~·:;:16-;,,95::;'~28=B=kr=. =====-=""===r========= 642-5200 large, beautifully landsm~ COUNTRY LIVING Thr•• Seper.ate Units 1: •,.,..,..,..,..,,....,..,...,.,I ro, pool sh:,. lot. Has four . ONL\' $33.oOO. One '.I Bdrm General 1000Generel IOOOGeneral 1000 I! S bedl'OOmB with lot~ of closet On a full acre 'A'ilh ranch type unit . 1 txlrm. unit & bache-\~!!!!~:_~============;;:;:;:::::::==:;--_;c;.:.:,._ DOVER SHORE SJ)flCl' 2,,, baths. H~ fire-3 ~R home comple1ely r:e-lor coltagt". Double ganu:e Thia brand new Ivan \Ve.tis plact'' lots of Spanish painted, new dshwshrfd1s. J..ari;:t' laundry rm. Nf'1tr bomf> with View has 3180 sq, tile ssi OOci. Oil! ~2313. ~sal. 4::c detehrt COY. pa -llChools and !!hopping. A tmr. f1. of living area. 4 Bedrms, ' t10, ouhtoor br\ck frplc & gain lor f:aslside Costa S~j BA. panelled tam nn w/ BBQ. Many shade lree!I. trplc & y,•et bar. High beam· Owner v.•ill fuic &t R'7Q ?llesA, ed. ceiling living rm .• "t:oun-$10,000 dn. l!Wi"y lh~ v.'On'I &l~Oa.s~· LeBo;,:e~~ ~~~iu; iry" kil w/brld!!t area. I ,.;iiiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiol la&tf Only $-19,500. The Puule with the Built-In Chuclle Lido Isle 1351 LARGE HOME 5 Bedrm, fam ily rm., xlnl 11treet 10 slrcet 45 ff, lot. B~· app't only. $97,000 Owner may trade down for 3 Bdrm. OOme in Terraces, CdM, "'ith ocean view. LIDO REAL TY INC. 3.17 Via Lido 673-7300 EXPANDABLE cozy crim- pact. 3 Br, on Jg. sunny lot. $52,500. Ownr. 675-2643. Customize(! \Yestmon!. coey Ben Franklin lir'l'placr, tt· rlar panelling, tropical sur- roundings, 3 hedrm, sharp & clean. $34.500. LEADERSHIP 142-4466 PRINCESS ESTATE 2 Bedroon\11. nea1 11.s 11 pin. ldl'al for hu~lncss roupl", low n1aintrnnncc_. Conven- ient location. LEADERSHIP 142-4466 Sparlcllng "'""ml"• pool. NEAR BEACH PERRON ~2-1771 Peninsula Poi"! $108,900. Roy J . Ward, Real· & FHA •= d""" UNDER MARKET -l ft-'. ASSUME •'o ' llodrm ""'"•' •ith ""· 1,;:'°;r;;. ~646-~~;;;·;°"";;;;;"~~i;i;;;·;;;;; I oo." i'C plact'. ~lalntenancf. h't'C RAHROB I I I I I' I~ I ~'.'."".!' a.aeh 1400 Lo Interest/lo Down I• Ml, 1'4 ba, fam.ily nn 'w/ bl N CIDO WATERFRONT used brit"k ti-pl c, crpts. drps, \Yestside 4 BR + c~f'n. 2 ~:!le.~~ .;;;:~·$38~ Al?TS.--320 LIDO NORD hrdwd n ni, 11hake root, dble ha.tbs . $24.~ at 120:1. per 673-3663 673-8tt!6 ('~. NOW REDUCED TO gar, alley 3CC't'5l!. room for mo. can be financed. 1nclud- $lSO,OOO-Xlnt Terms boal or camper. Owners ing P.J.T.J, Low down pay. g; "Beautiful unita. 6 car bought new homt' -fast es· men!. pragH It utility l'Ollm with crow: Costa Me.st Investment '° .. """I""' 00 exc:dl<nt Lac!Mnmyer Rlty 541-7711 ~na be.ch. Units &re C•ll 646-39"13. EVf's: &12-0185 ~,,.,!)' f\lrnished. 1111 Grundy, Reattor Al Dover Dr., N.B. 642-4620 -$28,900- 112 ACRE! 3 BEDROOM 2 BATH 4 BEDRM $25,0001 B"~ ,i;:;,~ ~;~';, ':; Hardwood Floo" Swetpln9 Oce1n View I IUOUnd UPPtT Bay nMr Jo"ll'l'pliU')" $2'!,500 Almost nothing down G.l, • Newpo~;. !i-JO.l720 Wtll1-McC1rdlt, Rltrs. associated BROKE:RS-RE AL TORS JOJS W 9olboa 61)·)11.61 HARD TO FIND Duplex JK'nr ltarbor Ill. 1 roomy ~1t'd uni!A. :l l)ed, t'•ch. Pk'nty room for boal And trallrr too. $29,500 -Phorlf' 646-nn low down payment all olh-TARBELL 2955 Ha rbor 1810 Newport Blvd .. C.i\1. era. 2 bathl. -On a beiut!tul :..c.::::::::::.:.::.....:c:..:::..:.;::::=154s.T11!1 f_;\'f'll: 64~·0&!\1 '-'========I tree Ii~ ttiut • cul-de.a.c. THE QU10."£R YOU CAIL &i.y ycu .,,"' lt 1n thr. \O 'THEREAL ~ESTATERS I, r, ' Ir, 540-lT.», THE QUICKER YOU SEU. Trash !O TTJ&Slln'I In DAii,,' PILOT! TARBELL 29'-=' H1rbor Saturday Dlmt>·a·nnc11. I ' '-'· 11-~B ~·U-'-O~O_N....--ll ! . I' I I I' . • J RIFEY1 l • I I I I ... l he mink in the tktset Is _ _ . . _ .sometimes responsible for tn~ ~---------at the -. I L A T w 0 L I ·-·· I I I• I' 1· e Complol• th• thutltle ci11orod by toltlno In tho 11t1$Slng worch you develop from slep N~. 3 b.low. e Pl!!NT NUMBERED tEfTEl!S IN SOUAl!ES • • • I I I I SCRAM-LETS ANSWER .IN CLASSIFICATION 7000 $24,750 roor~ 11 &: r. : bcdrm. 1~ ba. Close 10 schools & n<"ean. 10~ Down. owner wilt c11r. ry 10% 2nd. SUbmit all orf. '"· 847-8501 E\'es: 64 2-0-17i l!l;h~111.!tg 16x16 F1mily Room Owner will help nnanre lhl' l bedrm & f8Jn nn, 2 hnth hon1~ 11nd Yoll can lake l'l\'t'r 5~ I011n \\'llh pyrr1n1s lest lha.n ron1. C111J 847-8.iJl. ' ~EAL ESTATE MART Liquid1tion/l 'Homea 3 to 5 Bedroom~. crptd, lncd, planned rte.velopment, 2 pools unheheveahle?!!? HAFFDAL REAL TY 142-4405 JACUZZI 'A i1h lhl5 pool plus 4 br. nr\\' t"rpt, custom drps, family rm. Ali fnr $27,9('.n It AAAUm. 6~11~ }11A !Mn at $157 mo. C. V. Col.•111.d1 • rtaltor :.Jll..AAi4 or ~S."\1 1. - S1\CRIFTCE: 2200 ~ ft, 4 RR. dtn, rp/dp, C'OMW"r Int. $29.900. by O\\ner. 961-1636 $1000, Below n ·!A, 4 hr. colld. Pool, f'lcc:t. bllnti, ref, owe 2M., assm. 5\.. ~ FllA. 49:n1418 HOI -H .. 8ACJ Br., W1 -Hun H. -RED Wal ale .... --Lag - 3 "' hom °"'' mall •JOr. en,: ' I ha> my -bdo ba, w/nJ ' po baa< baac er, $69,f -8511' ' Pt.AC Wi """' BETI RE~ H• Ge0< Roni SHA11 apt. e ve mah. Aft. WORi alw> P<O>l 67>-1 GIRL to " "'"' pool. SHA wate Man, 675-4 . ~ W/L OK. Aft f MAN' .... loom• $1251 WILL Mth No 64>-! F EM. roorr aft 5 FEM. ,,,.,. $85/1 Cnt Naw y p !B<d ""' ,,,,. pletf l500 64~·4 '" with """ Sep( c.n • Mac Wint< l300 "( m• NEW d1hv wati n 4: 684-: FDR ' bo Bay mo. WIN'. den, dep. n11 WlN'. o" I s. .. 2 BR N<a ... , Yi 2 BR yd. (21.! ---N" I BR l300 Wint -lay ~ ATn .... ... • • fhlW!dq, S.pllmbtr 10, 1970 DAILY PILOT RENTALS Hou••• Furnl1htd ltlNTALI RENTALS llE ALI RI! TALS " .• Apt!. Puml1hed Ap,11. F ..... llhool _Aftla. .:;F•:::r;;nl:::"':: .... =---=Ai::Pll.::..,;F;u:m.::l:::,d-z:~=--·~,. HOUSES l'OR SALE RENTALS Hvntinfhtn 'hach 1400 i~! Fui'nithtd RENTALS Hou••• Unfurnlahed RENTALS HouH1 Unfurnlahed SA.crona; Presli&e 1800, 4 Irvine T1rrac1 2145 ~L.:•ll"=•~•:...:Nc.1;:9.:."':.:1 _ _:;;270..;.:7 GOMr•I -Unlnrslty Parle . nJ7 !!!-!!!we~i:?!..!!:le~a~ch'!_~'~200!!!,!N!!ow!!!JIO!!!-!!'.!rt~le!!!!ach~~·~200!!, ;.."::'"';.:'.::l'.'!'?'=::..:ll:::oa::ch::;...-=..:.";.;;";.:nl.::lng=tan"'-'le=ach;.: __ =-I er., 211 ba, hi tam. rm. • BR. s Ba. Ray • °" .. 2 er .. use o1 pvt heh• pool. * Move ,_..._ * ~., n---'-In u-·-~~ l;06Ul:=;P:::al::Wd:=•=°'=·=~==21S6="'=! Vlew. ln Irvine Teri f70i) frpl.c.. Nice. Now tW .rune 30 -r "' nimra£S lllVWU"' mo. I $240 ·-· Lrg I BR Triplex. s..,., ro. Park A Tuttlo Roel, Callt Hunlln;ton i:Btil:=Gro=:::ndy=:•;::JU::,:11';;.==:6G-=l620= :i======= Irle, l.....t patio, ..WI pet Harbour 14051 · Summer R1nt1l1 2910 A tot olJ. SlS$. REDEC 4--Lndaepd Coron•'del ~r 22.50 Hom•Jind1r1 '4>2951 waterfron. t 3 BR 4 dock f.or 3 8 ,, cpt/•-. trpl, ~~. Bayfront-Bal. Penln, 3 Bedrm home In country nl 1.4e be ~~ .... ., .. ~l"Q LOVELY 5 BR, 4 BA. atmotphe?e Good t¢hOOls A e, • or option open beama. S250 mo. IM Pitt/float. Avail $(-pt lit. lotl of sooWc. Avail now 'at SU-4221. ~. ~pt 15-June lSi. .Al!IO avail for winter .-en-:i.....,. F ill ..,.,., -· -606 JASMINE ~. per n\O. am e1 vuv· lit Wettwn Bank Bide. Laguna leach 1705 $200 mo-2 BR hse pen.ly ~'=al.:.'·=•~673-20=:;39;·=== :A«n;:,;';,;";;'-';;',;'L:=,=== University Park Ocean View tum. Util incl. Nr. market Duple.x11 Furn. 2'75 Cotta Meta JIDO Day llMIOI Nltht• 3 Btdrm 21,1 bath custom &. rtstaurant. Couple anly, 2 _. __ 1 _ home in law Temple HillA, ~ta. 67:>-.m6 NEWPORT BEACH DESIRABLE 4 ~,., 2:: ;;) Ocean &: canyon view, lo B Ibo 2._ 1355 E. Balboa, lit fir duplex HOME s, ·-mainte~ ya.rd, AmP1eic.•=-"'a ____ .....;:.:-c:.: wntr/yrly, 3 br, 2 ba, ~ & t Br 2 ba cptd m,.. Joroed 3 BR 2 ba sep borne .wi;11 ocean all xtras-wl!lhr/dryjo, air 'heat 'eu~illp blt·lns 3 Br tnhouae Eutblutt S4CXI •~e •r>ace, bullt·in kitch. 2 STY 3 Br, 2 Ba, sp.ac., lcemaker retrlg, gar~. trplc p~Oo a:arag~ wate; • RED HILL k.EALT'l . en, tirepla~. $34,95() erpts. Or 2 BR mod. apt, frplc, Mnd s ho we r . turn.' Adults' only, no' pela; Univ. Park Center, hv1ne elee kit, nl' bl.y. Wntr rent. d 1 h w 1 hr . 0 w n er RATE REASONABLE Call Mytime 83S.os20 0 ,I IF,. ~.~ ... :t7~denll. 871-946 7, 213-m.nn , Across from Country Club ~U,l6/ ~.. RENTALS 275 Mesa Dr. * Ph S&S-6706 !!Vine i2JI REAL ESTATE *NEAR Perun Pt.-3 SR 1"e, Hou11t Unlumlshod 2 BR. 1 BA. w /GAR TURTLE ROCK·LEASE. • 1190 Glenneyre St. gars~. patio, lrplc. Near Newpalni.Crpts.Drps.Bltm:. BR. 2 ba, dln'1/rm, 494-9473 549-0316 Ocean. Adults, m peta;. General 3000 Fncd yfll'd. Child/pet OK. tam/rm Atrium, patios. Nr. liiijiijijji~jijljiiiijiijiiiif;l~l~IOrrlm~o,;;6~7~5-~'1~9'1~.;;-:::-;-;;;; l~ORSE PROPERTY Close to park, tchools, tho~ 1 ehll-poole-prlm. tl2S/mo. MONARCH m * CHARMING 4 BR or 3 BR 2 BR. on 1 acre. Crpts, drps; pg, Nwpt lights arta. Avail n4/8J3...1467 S•v• $4,700 & den. Bal Pen. A~ail Sept-peta & children "''elcome. 10-1.10 $175. 5t0-8638 eves. l'c===d== .. =_=== I have reduced the price of JuM. 2 BR upstain, furn, Screened porch. 2 BR, .;,,, patlo, -ts. d-, oron• el m.r J150 n· Oakwood ... a new way to live in Newport Beach THE HIGHLANDER 0 Scottish Treat" 16161 P arktldo Ln. Mg r. M2·1fff San Diego Frwy to Beach Blvd, 4 blkil So. to 1foJt, W, on Holt l blk. ' lA QUINTA HERMOSA '•Modern Spanisti" 16111 Parkside Ln. M,r. M7-S4C1 FURNISHED MODELS NOW OPEN Lush landscaping, cabana, covered court.. yards, sunken swim'g pools, BBQ's & foun- talns. _ "THE ULTIMATE IN APTS" 1 BR's-From ,150 2 BR's-From f175 All utll. Incl. Furn & Unfvm. N1wport leach •200 Balboa $300 675-1971 ·--· ... lt'o fun, fine neighbors ind preo"-living, my home $4,700 IO that it · $150 atove I relr. Quiet tropical S BR. 2 Ba., cpts, drpe.; ~. "'6" would 11ell in the next 3 wks 2 BR, 1% ba hse, Sept.June setting for adull'!I only, 1 blk Dbr. duplex, $29S On leue. all in one luxuriou1 package. Tha~'I Oak· S250 Mo turn modern 2 br, • BALBOA Peninsula Bea.ch before school atarts .. 4 hr, 3 $160 mo. Fenced yard. ;;, Tele-Trend shops. $160. 5#-0452 or Realtor 675-1662. wood Garden Apartme nts In Newport pr. Pet.I/Children OK. 216 Front: 3 Br. 2 ba. Wln~r ==.:.;_==-~ ba. living rm &: dining rm blk from ocean. 673-t197 646-4430 SEPARATE 1 br, nice yvd, Beach. jUJt minutea from Balboa'• Bay ud ~h St. Rental. ph: 494-4534. w/Dpen ·beam cellifll. Den, L "do 1 I 3 BRl2 ba: 81 ti na-frplc, B-B-Q, For 1 or 2. beaches. 4 BR comp. furn. Winter lse, 2 BR. Apt. S250 monthly. 315 2 pati01, 3000 sq ft family 1 1 • 2351 Syttom• drps/crpts, 2 car prage. $185. 502~ Jasmine There'• 1 •/,million dollar Clubhou1e with cloae to beach. E. Bay. Balboa, Inq at Apt .. "' .. be ch home 1 -old pvt ABBEY REALTY 642-.3850 1 -=C=. 67>-~,:IS21:;;or,,;>l;S-=77Tl,::• :::;:o a ·. J • • OCT 15 -June 15 rental on Fee $15.-buys you SO new Nr, So. Cout Plaza Shp. -· ----partyroom.billiard1room,indoois<>lfdrfv-1: beach~ ~nna courta. Own. Bay, completely' tum. 2 listings daily. Cntr. $250/mo, 1 yr Jse. Huntington &.•ch 3400 ing ran-, men'a and women'• health clubt, ~GanE. nl ~ Bdrmmo-~~?,RY BalL--l1l1nd ••'-< er, pnnc1ples only please. Bdr 1 Ba.flt Patio trpJ 832-7800 546-5259. ov v..""' .,., .... ~~ uva ..,.. $69,800 Phone 499-3742. Cati collect (2t3) ru16. c. ~-=....;.;=-:::.:.:.___1 •135:::..:0=,=1-1-45-fu-m--2-Sr--4-$250 Mo.-Vacant 3 br, w/w 1aunaa, tennis courts, resident tennb pro Stutii!nts ok. 673-8088 , #FURN UNFURN 3 B 2 Br. $160/mo. Patio, relrig, plex bltne pat s~ls ok' crpts, 2 blocks f.o schools, and pro th.op, and Olympic aize pool. All .-\\'INTER RENTALS • ~ow M~ W::3 ':~.!...':: * $34,950 * or. R crpts, drps, Pet welcome. Blue' Bo•~on '* 645-0ill waik to beach. Cu1tom arta. this, and much more, just 1tep1 from your Rent NOW tor sept.! .__,, ... v 850• to heh. View, xlnt cond. HOME. Winter or yearly • • • OR SXIOO down Ir takt> over f . II d d h Adults. 675-8306 «" PLACE REALTY 494-9i04 leilse. Call: 2 BR & den, $195/mo. Fenced 3 BR, Fam rm w/rplc, Pa Y men 111 0 f S 2 5 0. pro e1s1ona y ecorate apartment, eac ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 2131846-7916. S.\iALL Charming 2 BR 673-3948 or 837-253'l yard, patio, huge fireplace. Bltns, Gardener & water Agent/owner 536-8874 or with private balcony/patios. Air condition· LRG 1 BR. Avail Sept. 7. NEARLY NEW 3 er, l ea. hOUse near beach. $29,SOO. 3 BR 3 Ba, off.water home: Crpts, drps, Chi Id re n Incl. No pets, S280 mo, lat & 53&-8311. ing/firtplace1 ('Ptional. Adulll, no pets. \·early. all elec / kit, frplc, patio, BF:l'HKE RLTY * 494-2858 furn., S450 Month, welcome. Fee $l~buys you la1t mo + deposit. 543-9509 l'S2000==--ono"wn-.--""°--0-v-er Oakwood Gud.u _.. __ .. _enta 675-8592 or~. BBQ. Ai.ct 4 Br, 3 Ba. I.ae l~=='""'o-----Bill Grundy Rltr. 642-4620 50 new listings d a I I y . MESA de! Mat>-Lse: 4 Br/l pa"""""ntl •"""'. VACANT 3 n.ra..., LGE, llke new 3 br, 2 ba, bch Sept.June 633--8470, 539-8831. RENT•LS ' TE L'E-TREND S•"'tems, 3 ' .. ~ _.., On 18th Street between Irvine 1nd Dover Or. d pl suoo-·'· · ,.. 2 BR, immac., no pets, S300 J" Ba, added l am /rm . br. CUSI'OM AREA. Walk u ex. ~. a:ar. 2 BR w/boat dock, turn oi: Hou1•s Furnished yrly or S250 winter. Bl2-7800. $250/mo. ind wtr. ~ to to beach & achool. HURRY {71f) IM2-81.?0 Sept-June S250 64i.1G45. anturn, New, Yrly rental, Gener•I 2000 watkef'Realty 675-5200 FOR Rent: We represent &eh(allgrades).56-5694. before schoci a lart1. 1prac1 ... ..a..1a1W.1•......_hn!t!111du l'OCEANFRONTl,2,3,& 6W,20SGrandCanal. 3 BR 2 ba, $300/9 mos lse. -~·000 rentals throug~ut * 3 BR, 2 BA. Ctpts, drps, 536-8311. •arum.u.L ltU .. tllL •• ....... Oenpucy 4 BR'•. WINTER RENT· YEARLY 3 Rnu uU. paJd Oranke County, Houses I~==~~~~== ..... U1J ALS fi73.8088 • Bryant Wiest, Rltr. 675-2723 Apartments, furnished/un: College Park. $265/mo. 2 SI'ORY: Nr bch. ! BRill' .,_ 111 .... 1,. . · $150 mo. Work'g cpl prl, 319 l=~===v=;,o•,oLi"°'do=·=Ni.B'=.=::I furnished. Children le pets 549-253.f Ba, Famfnn, trplc. Avail ** 3 le 4 BR's, Frplc. Fernando 673-5805. 1 RENTAL FINDERS welcome. !\-love in today. $175 -Clean 2 Br, atove, cpta, Se-pt 15th, $230/mo .• 836--0880 YEARLY. 1 blk to Beach! 1 BR, 1 ba Studio type apt Frff To landlords ~· lsl•nd 2355 Placement in 30 days, 18 gar, iricd for kids & pet•. or 968-7472. · Gener•I 4000 Coat• Meis• 4100 Clean! call 673-2455, wino kitchen. '4S.Ol J l TERRIFIC looking nev.·Jy Orange County offices, com. Blue Be•con * 645-0111 li>iij1oiiioiiiEeiRNilN22:iBO.r::', CCrp;;;;ts;:,-;...,.;;;;~. I:=~~---.....:=: OCEANFRONT 2 hr, 2 ba, * Att 6, 6'7>1238 * t -• T 1 1 1 -•·-Sultabl fenctd • ..:i lnd..,...,..d abJve J I f 1 BR. turn. $145 Avail Oct 5. -1 •. ·-simo. •·pi_ Ju.., . • J.wl .... •-M-decorated duplex. Winter. I puer1zcu accuracy. ee-BR.tou&eU•uw... e . JU•. -...-' ' us or ... 11 " ,...,, -' ..._... br, $190; 1 br + den S165 Trend, 832-7800. for retired couple. No dogs. retrig., dt11hwshr. Days Aho 2 BR unturn, $14S. Agent 675-8800. Huntington lk•ch 4oeoo 546-5850 eves 962-7697 Avail Sept 18. See Mgr, Apt ~ util incl. 1 or 2 adults per 3 Br. & family rm&: din rm. Reas. :rent. Close to bus. • . S1"ngle Adults H, 1846 Placentia. OCEANFRONT 1 br, frplc, -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 R I Sh 2005 unir. 221 Amethyst. 1% Ba. Bltns, trplc, crpts, 548-3360. HUNT. Harbour l':atrtrnt 3 crpta drpa. No children or • ent• I to a... 1010 So. Ba·-nt·. • BR a•L d ..... s. Pets le 4 children SHARP 3 BR 2 BA dble BR. $550. (Sec ad under Furn Bachelor&: 1 BR. peta. "s115 Aaenl675-8800. ' ON BEACH I " :z .. u .. ~ ... ' • class' No 1405) 644-4221. South Bay Club Is a whOle Exceptionally nict! . • ; : SHARE Beaut. Laguna Bch. ba waterfrnt home Ir 2 Br. 1 welcom~. pr, Close to $Chools. $210. 846-5041 • · new way of We destsned Below rental value! * * $120 ·VERY nice 2 Br. , apt. View. Walk to ba. gar. apt. Dock. 2 B $""/• •F• ·-~ Calial ~;11 Herltag~I==~·=~-=~~ just for alngle people. It's mo Newport Blvd. CM. Mobile hon\e. Adults only, •Single apts from SlBS ever Y thing . W/clean Bill Grundy, Rltr. 642-4620 r. ,..,,,, mo. enced J'IUU, Re ton, ~ 51. AVAILABLE Sept. 15, 4 bdr. fun llvine with w~, dy. no pets. 642-1265 • 2 BR Furn, From S285 mature employed woman. 3 BR, 2~) ba. all elec Pets & S children welcome. UNF 2 Br Eas!Jlide CM on r.ear beach, drapes, fenced namlc neighbon. It'• a *H $l~ mo. 1 QUl~ 2 _BR. 3 BR. l ba,. Cpts throughout, • 2 BR untum $26o Aft. 5:30 p.m. 494-957'1 kitchen. ~e patio. ~~LSt~r° S~tc= tree. lined. cul-de-118.°c. Sl95. corner yard $210, 536-0346 $750,000 aubho111e w 1t h d:'ti8..!.ht. ~ul·t 0';;i;, ~pets'. few 1tep.g from heh, Adlts Carpetl-drapeMlilhwasber WORKING girl or student to * Aft 6, 67~1238 * 832-7800. ~Y!.~ 8 3 a-2 3 00 • eves •1-LGI EdSh4 brhr, ta.:,~.· b-ltns, health club. saunas, •wim-2295 Pacific Ave, CM. only, $225 mo, yrly, 642--3812 he.!tedn!:'.;::a-: share lovely home, Balboa Charming 3 BR 3 ba family ~~•J1. '"" · wa • ~·r.. • tl'\lng pool, party room, bll-_5'H87=~•:,.:;or:..64>-44==":;_~-2 Br 2 Ba S20'.l mo. 'pa~v ... ·-·•-- Peninllula, $100. 646-8308 or home. ideal at, nr Bay. LANDLORDS 2 BR lY.i ba townhouse, nice yard, covered patio. % Hards, indoor goJJ drivill& * WKLY-Lovely apt. Bach 5000% Neptune Ave N.B. .,.....11 ...., 675-75M Mrs. Brechtel, agt. 6'f3..EOOJ VACANCY PROBLEMS cpt/drp, bltns, patio, Oose ml to beach. $325/mo. ranie. tennli1 courts, pro or cpl. Furn. Kitch. $3S wk * OCEANFRONT • winter =-~ail. GIRL 23 desires roommate ENDED. In. 54:i-6384. 1 ,96=""~'6~25~----~~ shop and ttaldent tennis pro. I: up. $46--0451 lease, 2 or 3 br family units, to share 2 BR house, share L•gun• Beach 2705 Free participation in (mu1tl-EASTSIDE 3 Br, 2 Ba, crpta, 3 BR, 2 BA home, nr schools, Sin&le, 1 & 2 Bedroom lux.. 1'--"-----... ----1 4807 Seashore Dr. HUNTINGTON rent $170. Fenc'd yd, pvt RENTALS/LEASES pie listings rental network.) drps bltns, on quiet street fti>lc. hied ye.rd. S225. mo. ury apartments with all the M!~o.~!:wts 0~·y. ~l.,;3:;8:.:DR.=.=,,::,.:,.::aro::.:..und~-J.Jl~I>-PACIRC pool. 548-0878 bef. 6 PM. UNFURNISIIED Computerized accuracy, For $245 )se. 831-6417 or 548--6330 536-3m or ~l366. modem conveniences avail-~n. ~9278 eves. 40Ut St. $240 675-3249 or S HA RE my e l eganlLge. 3 bdrm, & lam. rm . details, TELE. TREND, •COMPLETEPRIVACY PACIFICSandll-3br,2ba. able,Furnilhedandunfurn.. l BR. Pool. Lra cloeets.l.,:6'15-:::_::m8::,:::_ ____ ~ 7110CEANAVE.,H.B. \1"atertront home w/dock. home. Custom decorated, 8JZ-Gli00. Lrg 2 Br. patio, gar, $140. * Children 1 pets ok. Fenced. ished, Adults, no pets. UtU pd. 1814 OCEANFRNT: 2 Br Duplex. Ofc. open(1l~ ~~481.,.· ~·-· ·. ! Man, 3o.60 yrs. $150 mo. new carpets, firepla~. bilt-FOR RENT 557-8888. $22S mo 2l3/284-6384. MOO~ OPEN DAILY Monrovia * 548-0336 Winter. S200/mo. adlts. ~ 675-4331. ins,exc.oeeanview.l yr. 3BR,den,Penin.Pt $325 C II Pk 3115 Sl~nr&bch.ta 2 ~r. Yrd, ~5 WK. Motel Bungalows, 2131795-3018 WILLIAM~~CX);:~ e WILL SHARE HOME: lease. Ref, ,.q, """' 1110. 2 BR house, Cd M $295 O ege ar c n pe we come. 10 A.M. • 9 P .M. ~""l~""l~!""""!"'!"''!"''"•;I' ,: -Bl Bo con* MS-0111 llPI 6. AP'l'S l$30 wk/up. OCEANFRONT 2 Br. Duplex W/Lady 21-35. Child & Pet FURNISHED RENTAts 4 BR den, Lag, Sch, $650 LEASE u-•·-.... __ 3 uo • RENTS FROM N •· SWl 2 BR. Pool. Adults . OTHERLESS HOME , 1u .. n11 •J<NBIC' 2378 Newport Blvd. S4&-9755 turn. ew .... cbr., gar. OK. M · 2 bdnn. apt. at Woods Cove, Hal Pinchln & Assoc. BR, 2 ba, Dbl gar8.ge, L a. h 3_ $150 tO $UO Furn 1 Br & llacholor ~shore Dr. 673-5031 BeauVQuiet! Uill Inc I • Aft 6 pm 847-4923 • 150 yds. to beach - Lge. R1•ltors Option to buy. 545-46TI. · •gun• •c ,_ $XIO/mo. 17676 Cameron, : MAN Or wom an -s h'l' tree shaded patio. Lease for 675-4392 Anytim• e OCEAN view dream home. NEWPORT IEACH 021:.;1:,:0~Nc:.:,ow=po.:rt:.;_=B.:.l•:.:d;,,_C::M.;; l~;;u;!I ~ ~~bis.W~t~I:~ 842-6121. ' beautifu.I Corona del Mar $165 r-.10. FREE TO Newport Bt•ch 3200 Elegant, SJ>AciOus, 4 BR, 3 SSO Irvine Ave, 2 BR. f'urn. Crpts, drps, $210 mo -no Ise. 642-4lZ74. FRE="°"E="'u"-UL~Fum~~l~A~2~B~R"1 'i home, No smokers. 2 bdrm. at Victoria Beach. S BA wet bar formal din PooJ , Kid• ok. 1998 Maple BACHApl.S••lmpool.G•-. apts. Pool. Walk to beach. : $125/mo. 673-4169. Exe. view, tireplc, A few LANDLORD 3 BR-2~ BA Condo: Furn or ' · · ' · lrv•'no & 16th A t 1 ~2808 .. -.. 1·~ up. SJ6..3717 or 536-72112 Unfurn. $285 unf. Pvt/pa.Uo, nn, magnifJCent ftreplace. P · ' 1 blk from , ocean. $135 + ....,., WILL Share lge beach home stepg to sand. Lease Rental Service. Save time&_ atereo bltins decorator ••• ••50 * DEWXE LG 1 BR* util. 210 c-.... -, 548-1131. •...;0:,r,:;530-::;:-l.166::;::.·..,,,=-.=-I with \\"Oman 25 +or rouple. $275 Mo advertising t:osts. We have pool. 407 Flagshjp Rd, NB. ' ' (714) ~ ~ 1 · No smokers. Mrs. Fenton Charm studio, deck w/ocean tenants avail. for immediate I ..:"':='..:682-3000:::.:::.::·,;0pe:<.:;n:..SU=":..' _1 ~'!~· g~~/:r~~da;:,a·0::. ~l~d!:· :!':761 $2'.lS. BEACH. Winter-3 br., 2 1AZ 2~ .• W:f~ ~~~ 64i-9933 er 673-2l10. view, ac:ean aide of hwy at occupancy. Cali now 3 BR., turn. 9 mo• lse. $250 $450 on lease, Refs reqd. SOUTH BAY CLUB 1 BR $125. Pool, spacious. Ba. Fpl, cpt•, nearly new, unlum. Adult.OJ. 219 15th St. FEMALE Teacher dHites Woods: Cove. Lease Home-Finder• 645-2951 4 BR channel front, yrly De 497.1349 Adult!, ldettl for bachelon. 1809 W. Balboa 673-2223. & 220 12th St. roommate to share apt. Call $135 Mo. N I D at _ _. 1375 1.;::..;::;N;;EW="°3 °"BR"'hom=~-APARTMENTS 1993 Church, 548-9633 OCEANFRONT-Deluxe 3 br, 1 --,A~T"-=ee'".-,~._~w~u.""10-r~Ro-t~,-., aft 5PM.673-1489. MISSION REALTY 494-0731 ewy ecor WU Caywood Realty ' 548-1290 e, • • • 1.;=..::=:::..:.;.:.;.:;:;_~-I 2 ba, frplc, Avail 10/1 $350 FEMALE or male, l8·2S, to 985 So. Coast Hwy, :-aguna 2 e 1 R & 1 o.n 1 , Triplex:. Sdtove, :1::200'-'-_:=3.;9.::r::. ;,;d:..u-pl-,.-.-S~I-ov-,-.1 Place ReJ:° mo. 94-9704i 1 BR upper, flewly redec, l ,:mo:;;f""';:;:,;l~Y:,· 6:;:7;::3-~7Il.13::;:·== 1u~f~!1:~ta:~/ ~: ' . ._ __ ,.,...n .. v•·w 4 br •--. Loose/Solo Furni•hed re rig, 1rep ace, crp... rps, !ri k'd k 4 Live where the fun ial Adlts only, No pets, $140 + 219 15th St •1<U.: ""-"..,,"' ·~ Jrg enclosed patio. ri70. re g,gar, 110 · ---gas&elec.645-4044aft5:45. Newport Hgts, 4210 ' •• $85/mo. 494-7655. Lovely Beach Condo Hom&-Findtrs 645-2951 Blue Beo1con * 645-0111 Miatlon Vlilo l70I [,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; SPACIOUS 2 Br, 2 Ba, 1-===°""=====IAviil Sept 15 for lea&e thni YEARLY-S200! mo. 2 Br. · ~, . $ZI Wk $185, unf $155. 536-3107 232) Cost• Mesa 2100 J une or longer, 2 BR, 2 BA, * HEY KIDS * new carpel, 109 and 113 18th 2BR & den, 2BA, curtai111 Ir .-'From ., Newport lt•ch 4200 WINTER Rental, 2 BR f\u'n Florida Apt. 1. ' · I========= I up....... with living, dining, St. N.B. drapes thr\loUt, w I w cpta, r ..... ,_, Sinale Api.. Compl•t• apt, tplce, patio, $185 2100 ..-. Look al thi'I 4 BR, 2 bath, ~ ... ., ri ••• St 646-7584 BACHELOR. Util Paid, ch 2200 kitchen areas main Door ov-F __ .. _ _.. . fenced yard, cloae to schools maid 1<rvt-. houtewares WINTER n.0-•, '"~Ing .... ....,. · . · * NEAR OCEAN•. * Newport B•• enr.. ....... Yc.tu, patio, crpts, 2 BR, 2 ba. $225 er lse/opt. • ho Ing di·" I.A ""' ~ uu n V U\ erlooking beautiful po o I. drps, elc, $225. MOVE B& $175. Owner 67s-s200 Eves s PP • .... wu,,.,r, linens, all uW, heated pool, girls, maximum 3 . 3 BR, 1 CLEAN l or 2 BR. Adults, no LINOBORG co. 53fr2579 WATERFRONT Large 2 car port plus stor-FORE SCHOOL~ 644-6488 oven, range, disposal. Avail billiards, reataurant, cock-ha, aarqe, $300 mo Incl pett. Lrr kit. $1~$150. 2421 PIER & FLOAT age & complet~ laundry ta-Hom•Finders 645-2951 Sept 1 $250 830-2122. taila, utll. No pets, Avail 9/8, See E. 16th St. NB 64&-1801. Lo19uno1 Belch . 4705 } 3 8edrm 2 b th f rma1 di cillties, AU beautiflllly le. N rt H 1...,1 3210 --VILLAGE INN wknds or att 6pm 116 "A" j " a ' 0 n. rompletely f\lmished, linens, * FIESTA TIME * twpo e ""' 1 _ C•plstrano Be•ch 3730 • --•oa n.8 .. h 494.9436 34th St, NB Coron• del Mar 4250 ---------.1 ;· 1ng nn, fireplace, w/w h' 1 il d••;-d 001.. . 2 BR. C ........ """ .. NEW ocean front, ele ...... t A , crpts, and furnished com-c ina, e c. ...~ · J 3 BR. 2 Bath Townhouse. $175 VERY ruce pts. BALBOA INN WATERFRONT, Winter lse. •-· · • plete. Dble gar. Lease only. 100 steps to private beach, Stove, refri< + POOL! Bring drps, patio Ii: appliance•. 4 BLKS from Ocean w/ Balboa 675-8740 Upper, extra lge 2 Br, 2 Ba, 1 BR pragt_ tum apt Adults, BR, 3 BA, 2 flrs, trpl!, bltln 1 $500 per mo, Realtor Tennia court & 2nd pool al-642-8989 v· ' NEW 3 B f barbq, $650. ALSO 1 or 2 B1',, • .. On .rope...,, with gorg. tots & pets. $170 mo. · d.1ewrm. ~·-dr~•amb1~. trpl, elee kit, FA, patio, no peta $145/mo +utll. $715. 497_1082 ~ 64$4353. • "' Home-Finders 645-2951 ---in • ~ .. .,,, ... -.. '"'" J BR $125/ G crpts deek. Bo11.t 1Up extra. Adi.ts, l•t & last & $50 deposit. ~ 1-'"'-''='====o---1 eous landscaping thru-out. Dover Shores 3227 $2'10 lse. 772-567'1 or n 4-7465 · -mo. ar, ' no pets. $250 mo. 675-1062. Lease 673-5448. FURNISHED 1 BR. CICH to • BAYSHORES Easy access to super mkt, This Won't Last ·-~-----clrps. Poo~ • • OCEAN Id h 2 BR beach & ahopplng. ~sp. · J For lease on the baytront shopping, etc. $325 month, 1 BR Furnished Duplex. LGI•"~" 4< hr...,. 3.ba1ormalhome. SUd•"'n•·~ Duplex•• Unfurn. 3975 % Br. $l50fmo. Crpts, bltM. MESA MOTEL s e wy, Adult. 494-7079 • with slllldy beach. 4 Bed· winter basis. \Vil! consider ...,.,... ._.., . .,, *LOW WEEKLY RATES * w/w, frpk:, wlk to •hops, RENTALS ·, l'OOms. tTSO per month. lease ""'rchase or outright Stove, refrig, patio. .,'-6V. rm, fam nn, lge patio. 3 car -~ Poot NMl' beach area. Fee .,, "A-TV' aid ___ ,._ etc. Adult11, ro pets. $200 !~ U-L. llhod • Sept, tit J une. -r-PICK UP THE PHONE! gar, 2 yr lease, $700fmo to L~AC. 2 Br. crp., drp~.. $15-buyg )'OU 50 new listings n..1tc,~,, • m ~ ... ,._...,, yrly lse. 54()..3864 -~~·· mvm ~ Call Jane Frazee 642-823.5 1ale. Adults only. Refs. Hom•Finders 645-2951 qualif ied persons. bit-ins. lg, prv. COY. patio Systems, 832-7800. Heated Pool M•cn•b-lrvlne Reo1lty 499-2152 AM or 837~791 any. Re l e re n ce s needed. lovely fenced grds. gar. ~nd * OUT OF SIGHT 646-9681 LRG Bach. Prv ent, So. of Gener ii 5000 :.:::7:;;.:0i;i~;;i~'-I_,;"'"~· :;'.':.,-,..,.......,.,=~;:-;-= * READ & RUN * 54-0-2'91. boat prl<g. $160 mam<d UPsrAIBS wlot" ,.""'1 lar Hwy, b<am cln.,, rotr. no -;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;! * BA YSHORES * OCEAN front 3 BR, 2 BA, Sep HURRY FOR TIUS! 2 BR. adults, H.B. S.fl.3276 1 BR. Hua:e living room &: single mature women or kit. $125 incl util. ~ • • : Winter rental. 3 & 4 BR fum. 15. Jun 15, $325 Incl. watl."r, Fenced yard. Kiddies ok.. TIME FOR RENTALS kitchen. completely tum. couple, doe to bch le PART turn-1 br, bltns. W11.lk VEN DOME $300 mo. Avail Sept-June. gardener, trpJ, bathhouses. $ll5, CALL NOW! "UICK CASH Apts. Furnished Only $95. HURRY-HURRY! shop'g Re as 0 nab1 e. to llhoppirut, $150/mo. [)ay8 "C" 11-IOMAS, Realtor 494.5531 or 494-1495 Hom•Find•r• 645-2951 T Hom•Flnderl 645-2951 71-4/~. 645--2m, eve• 675-M89. IMMACULATE APTSJ. -·' ·,.22"'4"'W;;.:.,. "Co"":;':,;Hc,wy;:.-.;."';:g.;';;s::'211~.:,;..-~-~-.--,--THROUGH A G I -1 till ADULT and • i : FOR rent or option to buy, NEW 4 BR. 2 ba home on ener1 YEARLY. Oceanfront 3 Br, BDR. JOUth ot hwy. u · ties FAMILY. Section , .. : : NEW 3 Br, 2 Ba.QAl!oblin.th. fully tum h&e, beautiful Lake Fore!il opposite El DAIL y PILOT Cott• Ml•• 4100 2 Ba. bltns, indoor Bar-8-Q, included $125. er ••• to shopping, Pa ' • dahwhr, gas BB · n e v'•ew 7 bl"· from bcb & T • -· W Id 6 1 RENT IJU ·-~t 15 673-0409 und ' ""' oro J.KtSure or ' mo-WANT AD FURN RE prage. ,...,,, mo. ""'Y ' ' , * S . 3 BR' ' ba water. Winter or YI' ro · downtown Laguna. -494-3604. yr Jae, $350 mo. 633-6139. 2208 W. Oceanfront. n4: * !.~caous '1• n4: 682-4292 or 714 : 1.;=:=:;:=:=:===~=::,s;:=:;:=,::=;~:::;:::;:;::..;,;:=='=='====== 1 BDRM Adlta-No petl. 629--31114 .:)wun P<>OI, put &reen . , 684-7103 •DIRECT TO TENANT S105/mo, Open for lnepec.1-,.C.,0:=~====-l•lbool 4lOO 1t Frei, lndlvllndr)i fac'i.·:. J.! FOR rent thru June ·n furn. 24-Hr. Dei.ivery Sat. 10-12 pm. ~75 Santa * NEW BAYFRONT ---...... -----1 1145 An•htim Ave. : 2 br., 2 ba, mobile home . 100% Purchue ()ptlon Ana. Ave. Apt D. C.M. For 2 BR's, 2 Ba's, 227 l9th St: BAYFRONT-Large 1 Br. COSTA l•rESA 6'2-lDt ': Bayside Village, N.B. $200 Complete 1 BR Apt as add info: Call 642--6742 Lower Duplex. $250 winter tum apt. Patio ovttlooking • mo. 67:>-0052 Sat or sun. Low as S22/mo. before 8 am or aft 6 pm or rental, S330 Yrly. 675-0236. B31. Util. pd, Gange. 2 Br. 1~ Ba. $165/mo. Patio; WINTER . Jge 4 br, 2 ba & JO.Day ?.Unimum 213: 469-8859 OCEANFRONT TU JW>e, 4 $225/mo, yearly •. $185 bltnt, CTplll, drpr, pool h t den, trplc. bltns, $350 mo + '* WIDE VARIETY DELUXE Townhouae, 3 Br, 2 BR, 2 ba upper duplex. View winter. 6'1H790 A: children welcome. dep. 1101 Seashore . CUSTOM FURNITURE Ba, drapes, wfw c:rpts, furn, gar. pat, dshwsr. $240. YEARLY. lower duplex, 2 e e e 11.4/&12-7611, 213/624-9567 RENTAL dshwhr, patio. ~/mo, Seashore Dr/OOth. 646-46al. Bdrm, 2 Ba, carport, JK'ar l Br. $115/mo, 2 children bd H 517 W. 19th St., CM, 548-3481 tum. Nr all tchlll (elem thru 1 BR. apt. Close to "'"" &: new. $210, water pa;d, Fam. Wt':lcome. All utB pd. J'ee WlNTER-Lg. 5 r. om1:: 31 n. OCC 1 Pool • ., ~91 "'Y $15-buys you 50 new liatinp on beach $300 month 7201 32C".ey REMARKABLY ). 1.-..v beach. Funt/unf. 1216 W. pref. 67J..4384 nig hts , Systems, 832-7800. Seashore Dr. 5.16-7937. »~ UNBELIEVABLY Acapulco Apta, attractive, Balboa Blvd, N'B. Eves I~':.:""::':::'::""::'::.·-----Jl~ EXTn•ORD1~•RILY Pool Util paid Gordtn 875-7876 or .... 2250. BAYFRONT Apt. 2 BR. * 1/2 BLOCK *:-. ·,. 2 BR. Compl. turn. $200/mo. GMns -""' Jivt..'... Adult., 'no pet~. Near bay .t: beach. Adults, r,~.... ,BEA.tmFUL 1 B'R...siso, 2 BM17'5 BEAlTI' 2 Br, wntr-Fully furnished. UUI pa.Id, FROM nlE OCEAN. 2 Br • .2 : nG pets. 675-7965 31~ V•I D IMN Gen'en A"9 l800 Wallace Aw, C.M. Oc8nfrtn, frple, fum-excpl Oar. Priv. beach. Boat slip Ba1h; Sundeek w/vlew! Sl?s'. ': YEARLY·$2001 MO. :g:.,. Putttnc ireen. wala'Wf 4 linens. $300 mo utl pd, avai l. Yearly lease: Hom•Flnders 6CS-2'5 ., ..._ 1ltre&m. flOWtt'I ewryW'bm CLEAN 2 BR. 1~ BA ~ $360/mo. 6'JS.6475. 2 Br. lll 18th St. •20.. 45' pool. rec. room ~ Studios. Untum a va II . DELUXE 1 Br. Apt, st:tpei to 2 BEDR. Fireplace, Bar, 2 BR. F\Jnl, All bltns, fenced !!~ BBQ'• Sauna, tm'.n..unfllm Crpts, drpt. Pool, Workinc the ocean. $1'0 per mo Built-ins, 1 OOullC! from NEW 1-2-3 BR'•· All bltm. •• CPI•, drps, gar. Nr. s. Cout ' Plaza.. 540-1973, 54>2321. .· Yd. $250 mo. 1 Child OK. 45 It t A 2 'nr. ar.o Sttltlt1 ~ ®I pref. t145 I up. M'-Of96, Adultt:. Wlnter r e n ta 1 . ocean. Adults only, no (%13) E-2823. !t~h $135, See ll! 2:MX) PanlOtll BAQ{ Ntw b;ffut. fl.Im, $110 87~2677 pots. $l70fmo. ~ Newport Shortt 2220 . 4 DR 2~ baths. 9 mot ltasc. S300 ~mo. Winton Rell.I Estate 6'J$.333l Bty1hore1 2125 :: ~ Rd., 84USTO. 8etwH1I Har-Utll pd.. I.At. Owr 35, No WINTER renttb • ' h.'et BALBOA Bo.yh'ont. Winter Cott• Mita ''°5"pi horltNewport.2 BUtN.19th pets, 2195 MIMr No. 2 from Ocean. J Br., 1 Ba. Rental. Avail, Oct.1st Ve.ry :;::-:-:::'."".--:'."".::7-l t_¢::"'°" HOtJDAY PLAZA 548--1098. f11i. 2 Dr. 2 Bil. $145 mo. nict. J Or. Quiet reaponslble $140. 2 BR \Ulptt. No kids """ DEI.UXE Spadou1 1 Bdnn. $25 Por WHk & Up 96H9113 kffp trying. •dull> only, All utlL CaJ; peU. U111 turn. AVati ~ t!:, Furn apt, $135. Pim utll. Bachr.krr Ir 1 br, TV I maid 2 APTS avtll on >"at round port. $150. 673-1983 20. 642...33i5 days, •, '6You Rented pool, Ample terv. avail, 4SO Victoria. le11.11t, B&lboa Ptnin. UtU. BACHELOR API': Utll pd ... QELUXfr. 3 BR. 2» Ba ' ~~~ parklfli. No childftn -no C.M. $*Id. l br SU5, bachelor S88 ' $92fmo. 310 E. Sl\ldio apt, New crpts A M Md . -pelt. 1965 Pomona, C.M. • NASSAU PtJm. 1 a 2 Dr $140. 6'JS.SC16. •QA!bo& 81. Balboa. bltns. $190 per mo. 546-0451 5110 • Trailer $80 mo • •pt. Furn A Unr. Pool, pthf"· l br oceanfront avail. 9112 2 BR. -eeachlront. Crpts, CLEAN 2 br, crpts, m,., stncle Per.on ,,onr. BBQ, lhldt lt.wna. wlleue $21$ mo. ~. tup. adults only, no bltns. patio. $14$. Adultt.' 2m w. 0.1t llwy, 66-0810 177 E. 22nd St. 64W645 Ml-4928 cNdm, M pets, f.M..0753, 2257 Pomom. Ave. ~ ·1 I • -·..:c-,,: -;.~· --~.--.:----------;--· .··=::-:::-::----·-----·,,,cc:c;;:;;;c:o---;c-;::---._.-::_.-._._-.-:,-~ •• :..,,,..--:-. -.-.-:--. ~.,,.,,,.,...,,,...,..--.~.~.--.~-~.-·-:-::--.--..... Thursd•f, Stptrmbtr lO, 1970 ~!ff DAil V PILOT , ·RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS .............................. ,REAL ESTATE * * * * *Generol ANNOUNCEMENTS ood NO."T"°IC;;.E;;.S;_ __ SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY Apia. Fumhhld ~.t ,-'-"'--'-'-·....;.;.;;c;;;.;;.;;...._ Apia. Unfvmlohed _ ~· Unfvmlohed • Baby1lttlne 6550 Contr.tctors '620 COit• Met• OWNS APTS. ... ADULTS ONLY 5100 Newport Buch 5200 Huntl ...... a..ch 5400 l BR, 2 BA. Unlum, Crpts, e 1 BR. NEW! Firf:pJaoe. dfl>S, blk 111 ocean. Yearly Nl"ll" Oettn. PaUo, Adults, $m. 6n.a8. UNDBORG 00. 535-.2519 .. -----Acre•.. '200 Lost '401 """"~'-'---~~ .:.:.;.~-.--...;;.:.:..: CHILO Care for mothtn 11-111;1111 .. -1111.-1111.-1111.-11111 1 BLK :MaJ Cocku-PoodJ who have to ...,·ark A don't WP EZ.P-AR.LE-'.! ...J silver toe~ poll&b. An& ~ v.'&lrt to leave Ultlt thUdre.n ."Ceorie". Last 1ttn at just anywhe~. W a I k in a: Santa Ana Ave & P&llJade1, dbil&Jlce to Pomona le For your 2nd home "ht "4-CM. Sept 2nd, 6 pm, S50 WU.On 1Choo11, 646-8662. Additions * Rtmodcllng Fred 11. Gfrwick, Lie. 673-6041 .. 549-2110 Carpet Cleaning '625 2 I! 3 BR. A\'aU, Private pa. tio, P»I -indiv. laundry fac. INr. Orange Co. Airport; Tus.. tin at 17th St: nr. We1tcltlt). 2 BR, 1 blk to bch! Sl65 e NEW 2 bt, ctpll, Jrpa, mo/yrly. ht "-lut + dtop. ~. patio. $165 mo. No C'hldtn or pets. 673-4281 ~. •• J BR WATERffiQNT. :z°"u"R.:--upt-c-,,-,.,,,,,.....,-, °'bl"i'" .. -.1 BALBOA BAY CLUB A.PI'. chlldrr:n ok, No fl 1: t1 . vance." Buy your ™1d In reward for relr.irn ~00 ADAMS &. Magnolia, nr :~ Q SLEM~FRonl~E1s8ILmVERJ uVtiU,.ol ~d'01ys~,"'4.:2-0'48:..:::::..•:;"".:'::··---Noodewlandl ~· 5r ootd yat'tlp· -k ~~·· ' .• .1. • " • e LOST-Mbced male theepdog I Uncu•cS, ay1, IC ., 1141 Tustin, 0.ta ?ill"~ ?itgr, ?tint, Carlon. &tl-4641 S400 mo. C&JJ ~221.1 S130/mo. Cail 5J6..U65 BAratow and approx 2~ hrs 4 yn, Black wfWhtte cheat up M later than 6, Pl per CARPET rtom the Orange Coailt (~-A: feet. Gray ~d 11: hind 1_w_k_.-'968--"-1"359'-'-----STEAM CLEANED NEAR beach-3 hr, 2 ba, Beachtront 2 Br . .Apl cording to the rate you drivt-, legs, Approx 35 Jhl. 'Troy". LICENSED Day care, ?ani REASONABLE RATES upper duplex. Bltm. Least:, 2 Riki from Ocean, Jl.B. ~ o! course) Reward 673-5031 5 30 548-0807 L•c L ' • • y 3240 642--6.Wi 968-3132 Whaddy•·Want? Whoddyo Got? p•-o 10 ha · ~ •--• bo"•ht · · to : pm Wttkly. Hot ..,,=~:.::;,=:c..=...,,.,, ••e 1vtn9 1n our · · oo. ve ,,_ur 1&1ru ..., BLK Fluffy poodle wearing tn ea.I s. Harbor/Baker. ;:; OWN HOME •• I J DUPLEX 3 br., 2 bath, ttp, An 5620 SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR & paid for before the time red collar It bella, Anrws 101 ;,...=.,::t539=·------DI:c~N~ ~::tts~~~ing Why pay $l7S for an apl~ • drp, bit.ins, $250 year leau, cS;•;";'";;;;;;";,;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;, NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS comes to build or buy a mo-''Bo Ja.na;os", vie: 19th It FANTASTIC & exp'd mother 300, $l5• Free Est. when "''e can ttnt you one 642:0603 • SpKial Rite bile hume, then you can An ah e i m, C.M. ft.wdl oUUI babysitting service. Repair-Jnsta.IJ. 64.5-1317. tor S140. 2 BR., l'll'.'Wly drc, 1...,='======= VILLA MARSEILLES 5 Linet -5 times -5 buckt dreA.m nf the lovely man-64.2-45U ,.~t"nced yard, nr, school•. crplldrp, encl patjos, SPllC ;l;rv;l;n~•======5;23;;;8 BRAND NEW 1-Wll.t "" """ •,!'~~~ AD MUST ~~~~ .,.... "' "'".. made lake stocked with fish, I "t.0""~===-------Newport Hgis, 6-\2-4224 STEM.I Jet rarpet cleaning. ~rnds . 2 Pools! Adults nnly. SPACIOUS )-YOUlt ,._. Mttlll•r ..,,..... ......., 11,,.. ., t11v1rti.ir., water aiding, "i)Qat rowing," ~ ~P. lilD 3~ mos old. 1 --~-~-'-C-----1 By ClarKatt, nation • wide 2283 fountain \Vay E. (Har-NOW LEASING I. 1 &. 2 Bcfrm. Aptt. J-..f40THIHG FOlt SALi -TltADlt OHL Yr S\virnmlng • for your future Re ~ "slS, -·"t 1•Ba• mku&, BABYSIT prachooler. days. servi«. Free est. 642-4055. lllDEAWAY. Wiuu I.Ala a et Fe~ yard, hot lunche&. bor, rum \V. on \Vilsonl . Adult Llvln9 To Place Your T r•d•r's P•radlse Ad Grant. "Me&n1 a l.Dt" N E"·"d & w New, tamUy and adulU uniti HONE Why not ~t your future plans r. uu..i arner. HARBOR GREENS with total "'""""" club Furn. I Unfurn. p 642-5671 lonnat•od NOW & BE PRE-546-4017, 3012 G•rlIBld, CM.' .:53::'"".:.i::\95:_ ____ _ _ , hoo .. Ollhwuhtr.colorcoordlnat. UJST "'' Be~ .... Pu •· GARD!:N &: sruDIO APTS llnu pre-sc I. 1, "• & 3 I-lave larlies npal ring 10 or 20 acres close ~ big PARED • others are doing : ~. r,,....,. p. BABYSITTING -hly home. Bach. 1, 2, 3 BR'1, from $110. bdttru from ilSO. Nr, shop. eel appliancet • plush Iha.a va.tued at $185 lo trarle lake & river. Fishing, bunt. It -therr are 200+ man-Bm /wht spot.II. Reward! Weekly, Brookhunt & 2700 Petenan Wa":J, C.M. ping, golf, llChools. Julit ~~~ ~'c:..::. 2• C:~ for antique 1words, guns ing & camping, Btwn hwy made lakes in the area and Vic: Park Lldo Area. Adams &l'ff, Referenct>s 546-0370 south o! San Diego Fwy. on shOwets • mirrored ward· or ? !?~ 40 & 50, nr. Wlnemucca, more are ~ing built every =.,._-.°"'~t~™:c.,· -~--~-'-"'"=~'°"=-· ------ VILLA MESA APTS. Culver Dr., Irvi"". m3'733. robe doora _ 1ndlnct Uch'-·r----67_3-<Jl!O __ ,____ Sev. Trade for car, camper, day!! Check your map for BLK Labrador, Male, no REU.ABLE mother of 2 will 2 BR, Priv patio. Htd pool. PARK WEST mg In kitchen _ breakfast 1966 Dodge Convertible Po-OOrse ranch or !'!' 540-m1 location, aee !or yourself, collar, vie Newpon Sch. babyllt 1 child, age 3 to s. APARTMENTS the 8.1'1!• I describe • it is Needs nledicine. Reward! my home. 325 I 11.•k. Alesa 2 car e.ncl'd gar, Childre.n bat • hl.lfe private fenced Iara. Trade. for horst-, hOr:;e g Units, good renlaJ area. 67. 7721 Qv.'l'ied and Managod ~. il high desert, clean, d"" air, :;~>..:.:;:::.· ------Verde are.a. 546-8118 \\Tlcome, no ,Pt'IS please! ";1 patio • plush laooscaplng • n · er or smau foreign $38,CXXI equity I n come .,, '."" 1--------'--- S16S mo. 719 W. Wilson, The Irvine Company brick Bar-B-Q's. la.rze heal· car. it3.SOO. l''or house, corn-be:autilu.J desert country, Bf!. UJST Vic Warner & Bab)'llltting-My home Floors 6665 CARPET VINYL Tll..E LIC CON'I'R. FREE ES?. * 541)..7262 * fyrniture Restorine a Refinishing '675 FURNITURE Stripping le retinilihlng. *642"-9575• 646-!'51 ~~~~~~!!!!:!!!!:~~ ed pl)ols & lanai. ~i5l9359 mercial nr horse ranch. tween 2 major trttways. Newland-Siamese malt-, red EL TORO . $170 310_1 So. Bristol St. Du .... Buggy, l600 .... , ,.,h O\VNER 675-6259 Call me and I will tell you ~:a eollar • infected eye. Any age v.·elcome. 830-8268 Gardening 66IO East Bluff 5142 (" N ~--·) '"' ..... more!! Phone 546-5710 any-,_~~7--~""'=·------3 Br., 1% Ba, patio, hlt-ina, 11 Mi. ·of So. O>e.lft r~ eng .. lop, hi1 ch for Boston COM.MERClAL lncomr pro. time. E. C.M. Reward. Beige long 8ABYSl1TING In my home, AL'S GARDENING crpts, drps. Ask about our •NEW DELUXE• Santa Ana WhaJ~r nr ! or truck, rm perty, tree & clear, next to H.B. a.tta. Presc hoo l tor Gardening Ir 11mall land- t 880 ~ ,ft .. 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lease, PHONE: 557-l200 Bnstol, C.M. Se vat -=ooo F ha ir <'at, male, blue eyea;, children ... reJerred. 968-2425 • --" .,..,.n.,. discount pan, .....,n.... ars. • .,.,.,, • or blk 1'""t on nose S4&-S657. ,. sea.ping services <,:4U ..........,......, S ...... o ... ,. Incl spac. ma&ter suite, din 1~~!!!!:~~~~~~~1--.!:""~":'"~d~·'.::"'---uruts ho'"'-or be&ch prop Government land~ acre "" BABYSl~!NG I ho S. · N rt CdM C t., .,..,..,.,,....,, db •v · ,0 WN-ER 67,.~9 · •1 , , n my me rv1ng ewpc , , cs- • 2 BR. unf ilSS, 1 br, unr. rm &: I garage, autn door ~ Write-Land Package, 1185 "ALE 4 mo. old Siamese by the week. On Placentia, ta Mesa. Dover Shores, opener avail. Pool & Rec. Laguna "Beach 5705 Exchange equlcy in '69 24x An'OWhead , San Bnclo 92410 grey wtdrk grey ma.rkinp. or W>'l""o, CM. o.o i •"'. W•st titt Sl30. Crpts, dtp11, bltns. Pvt ply will trade equity in e 54Pr1831 e -.,,...... JVJ ~·:;,::'~~-~~--c~,..-,1 POOL! No children, no pel11. area .• rnoM $265 • OCEAN VIEW Lrg 60 M~bile Horn1>, in H.B.: 5 acres 2 mi from downtown WOMAN w/2 young children COMPLETE Lawn &: Yard 325-J E. 17th Pl. CM Bachelor, l & 2 BR apts. F'or income propertY nr J Escondido for down pay-R. E. Wanted 6240 REDPekingesedog,\\'earing wishes to care for child, Service by h i-11 chonl 54~2738. 865Amlgos Way,NB F urn orun!urn.Crpl11,drps,hom". Aft. S pm. Owner: t So Ora Co flea collar, Vic: 21.st It 2i,s,,5 ~2'71. 1!!Udenl . Exn, Neat. ,.,anaged by bltns, patios, w a I ki n g SJ&.7967. tnen on · nge · MESA Verde or Colle~ IrYiM. 646-2097. .:;.;~·-".·.:.:;'-'Cc.;;·____ •· QUlET ADULT LIVING \VIU.IAM WALTERS CO. :!----------home. &l6-U16 anytime. Park. 3 BR, fam rm & 21---'--'--""""----* WILL Babysit-my home \Vkly-monthly rates. Reu. l & 2 BR. Shag crpll, blhl!l, distance 10 town. 100 CllU Trade my '64 Olds 4 dr Sta. 2-1· cabin cruiser, '67 Chry11-BA. Can he fixer. Assume ALASKAN malemute, 1 yr behind Pomona llCbool Brian 696-9022, 642--0255. nnnl, beaut. lndscpd. $150 & 2 BR, 2 ba. dishwasher, Dr .. Lag. Bch. il94-M9S Wag, for )'Ollr equity in late t•r, fully ~·;p~. Trade loan, mak1> pym'ts u~r old, gray & while, name 616-5894 JAPANESE Ga t den e r , ,~ :•• dis~-1• avail ai't 9-15, $210 ** WOOD'S COVE ** ·•· ~ H•av REWARD 4"'3191 ___ _:.::..::::.._ __ _ $170 mo. incl all util, ..... ~ · model UI mileage car Call $1500 in boat for booae equ-$180 Inc. PIA. Reaa cash dn en. • ""' BABYSIT my home C.M. monthly tale, Gen. cleanup. A ~ st ,...,, """" mo. 644-5870. Beach ~~ block, new l & 2 """5-~, •. _, 7 p·,, • t n...:---• "'" ""'"~ REWARD • -t Th "-bl F t voca.uu · OW"W"''" ,,.,,,. "" "' = " "" ity, car, i;malle.r boat or '!' pym · '~'"''' On•)'. J'.....-vvu.>, -~ urs. green Prefer tnlant or 3-4 yr old. llXIL50na e. ree es · * * 3IOO * * Coron• d•I Mar 5""'• Br. Gold Medallion apt.I. lD PM Evenings 673-1266.64&-·::;~";;"~==--c-,--7: Parakeet, Skippy, Civic Cent. Call anutime. 64!>-1853 -"~"-:,,="":;:.~-~--=--I UV Each have l Y.i BA. Pool.I"--'-'---~~~-" .~~ ---'''-------c Lov<ty slngle apt. BHns, .....,.. up., ••••• 2t75 S. r ••• 1 Have rare modi') '61 Chev. UNDEVELOPED Land In et. Please call """"' •O AJ..'S Landscap;,g, T tee •"-"' ...,...,... ~ 1935 F -' · k tru k e WANTED: Children to drp/erpt & rebig. Fented * COROLIDO APTS. 2 Br. 1 Hwy. ~97_1630 or 499-3929. Nomad Wagon. Power, very 0•u. p~c -u~ . c ' potential recreational anas LOST vie Emerald Bay large removal. Yard remodeling. yd. working adult!i only. It 1% BA .. frplc, dbl car· dependabll', 3495 v alue, Real classic, in mint cond . d e a i red by publ i c gray male MANX cat. RE-=~I.home C .?¥!, Trash hauling, lot cleanup. 1004 El Camino. 546-5704 port & large Pool. $185 & up. • ADULTS ONLY Trade for furn., TD'S. $1.a>o equily + cash for late development corporation. WARD, 494-3979 ----------Repair spmklen. 673-1166. l BR 3150. 2 BR $165. Poof. 1 i 673-SJiiii7i8iiiiiiiiiiiiii Quiet pteasa.nl unfurn. 64&.6682 model passenger car. 1901 Avenue of the Stars, ,.c.:::::::~=;;;==== BABYSITIING. My home, GARDENING SERVICE El-. & wtr pd. Adlts, no Apl, $175.00 Util. inc.I, 540-2991 Suite 1424, Los Angeles, Por·-als 6405 fenced yard. Whittier School Ex-rlenced Ja .... -st ~--Furn. Sturlk1 w/kitch. 4 Na1ional cash registers _., Dls~ct ~0 '""7 '" ~--ls. Mesi Manor. 241 Cali!. "' · .,.,............, · 54S-0228 ..,.. -$135.00 Util. incl. computer type, rtngs from WhatdoyoUhantotradefl"==..-~-~---S~;.~nB~~~a~ & ~~:~~~. ~~ ~~~!:~.:::,2;3~;31:: ;~r ~s:tr:Ue~e~, 1 tr~~ ~Jn~ .• be~ ~ ~ B~~~'!iS~1;r' FREE ! •hom~~~Glu~, i~e~ ~:n: c1!:~au~:=: drp'. Cpb, patio. Avail 9/1. .._.._ ... <Lt ..... v • ' '"'5 •-........ __ .... -·'-a cteal yard. Call 646-5l5'l. Maint ., ..... """ ""'" 11• "'" o~1 or Zl 3. split level, neWly painted, 547-..... • .. '5 .,.... _,, ,._ Business Wll.L babyalt Infant to 4 yn. J""" .,...,....,.. ...... ~S'J:rl ~ ' l Ir 2°~ TEN n!~nfunl draped & carpeted. Choice * * * * * * . Opportunities 6300 HUNTINGTON BEACH Mon thru Fri. $20/w k. 570 Complete Yard Carel FiteplaOH I prlv. patios J loca1ion , Year round $275. POWER SQUADRON1S Broob ·Laguna Sch .m: 540-4837 lki~c~'. =~xFe~' i!'ro: Poolt. Tennis. Contnt'l Bkfat. ~C~•~ll~538~-Zll9'~5~==== l!!J!J!!!!!~!"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!'!~~~~'1~!!!!!!!!!1 DISTRIBUTORSHTP Wint-BASIC BOATING ===· ====·== Gardening; Land cleanuJ>fto yard. $145 mo. 646-2826. 242 900 Sea 1..ane, CdM "4-2bU R I W _, 5,_ RENTALS REAL ESTATE OUT INVESTMENT: 1De'luxe COURSE Boat M•int•nance 6555 ~prnklr sys, rotCH:ement flowl'r St, CM. {MacArthur nr. C.O.st Hwy) ~~ ant...,. "rYV Apts. Unfurnished Gen•r•l candy & drug 11pecia ties to Huntington Beach work. C.D. Yancey, 646-5860 1----------· I taverns, restaurant.II, stores, Ht"•h School 0 .C.C. Student seeking boe.t CU! & Edg• La··-LGE deluxe 2 br in 4.plex. WRK'G C.Ouple wants: 2 Br • to live on in Newport area .... bltn range & dshwsht, 11hag LRG new apt s on unfurn, crpts, d ra P" s, Mottls, Tra11er Offic• Rental 6070 etc. Direct factory connec-Rooms 121 & 122 in exchange for mainten-Maintenance, Llc'd, lnswed crpb, drps, gar. ;175. ~~:Ueritels Sd of ~:· builtin..c::, fenced yard, pvt Courts __!!!! LUXURY New offices, prime :;~~~:gs.high::~~~~ Start in:;,ept. ~4 an~ ance of same. 1213) 287-2400 548-4808 aft 4. 1 ~54>-i:\ilZJ21jji;~or2i5'1>-mll'7~3;;;'.~~l ,:'"~s.;1~"'3~'-'-·..,.~""',....-=~-· I garage. Approx. ilJO mo. ;;.-WEEKLY Rates. SEA Beach Blvd., air, cpt11, furnished, but must be bond. ••ch M ay~ rout CLEAN UP SPECIALlst NEW Ip 2 BR triplex. Pvt Have 2 eatlol It toy poodle. LARK J1,1CYI'EL. 2 :01 drape.11, etc, 24 tlJ' 6 rm. able handling our merchan-Novem ,. Brick, Masonry, New fence. & repair. odd patio, shag cpl!! & drps, 3 BR. 2 ba, roof Hwy. Frplc, 646-4665 aft. 6 & Wl'l'kends. Newport Blvd, C011ta J\1esa. 11ui1es. C213J 394-0015 call dise & cash. Part or tull * FUU.Y LICENSED * etc '560 jobs. Reas. 54&-6955 Bltn range, end pr, i175. patio, gar. $310, )Tty, Adu9: BEACH Apt, J BR. furn _ • collec.t. time, Write: CHEXCO, 2910 Renowned Hlnd.u. Spiritualist LAWN & Yard Service Avail around 10/1. 545-7517 only, 673-6298 • wanted by active business Misc Rant•lt 5999 * NE w p ORT N. l6lh SL. Phlla., Pa. 19132 Advice on all mattua. BLOCKWA~ -Plante:I'll -Expet, Neat, ReMOnable 2 BR. North of H\\'Y· Freshly woman, yng 40'# or wiU ' Be Ix · Ulvt-. Marriage, Business Patio!! Driveways * ~9855 * flss.-QUIET! La~ deluxe painted. Avail 9/15. im. sha re larger ~pl,** STORAGE Garages for _ach-modem/d .nruces. UNIQUE Beauty shop: (31 Readings given 'I day11 a Sidewalks. 642-9852 morn or BR. 1* BA. GE kitchen. 6T:i 3299 213/592-1983 aft 6 k wkocb;. nnnt•, $25 "'!r mo. Air/cone!. Hlrl. Priv. ba.. Staboru;. tllnesa For ce a: week, 9 AM -9 PM eve, caf' gar. adults, m pets. 2 :,... · •~ •"· 2·100 W. Coast Hwy. Sale. 546-9S27 3-8 PM. ,:,~-~~=--==I General Services 6612 E. 16th Pl. ~2. e 4 BR unfurn hse. for C8.ll S.t~l APPROX TOO llQ ft at l6S2\::=======:;:== 312 N. El Camino ReaJ, BRICK * BLOCK * STONE * DELUXE 1 &. 2 BR ].L_i_d_o_l_i_l~'-----5-3_51 N:hool year. Wcslcliff area. CLEAN Single Garage.. $20. Nwpl Bl, CM. New crpl, Money te Loan 6320 ~9!J6~e,:'~ 642-~~the hou~, after ~~7~ LOVE OF LIFE ••• Garden Apt.II. Bit-ins, priv. LRG BAY VIEW 2 B ud 1415! 284-9306 collect \Veslslde. CM. Easy a•'Cl'Ss. drps. $150fmo. 642-2S2l, -~-'...:."..,:....:.•-~--~··--,I NOT HANDY? patio, heated pool, frplc. crprs, drps. 1% .:.: ~'~~ Rooms for Rent 5995 Ceml'nt fir. eler, 642--5583. 642-5106. 1st TD Loan SMingie. W&idowed -Dlvotted CalllMtmaklng '5IO ~~!a~~ ':ar~r :i~ Adults. $145 mo. 546-5163 Avail Sept 5, L.se $.150. ]--------REAL ESfATE UP to 3600 .. tr.-Oeluxe, alt en Women ing or cabinet!!, ®ors cut NEW 2 BDRM. Beam 675-11592 or 642-0807. QUIET Atttac, 1 br. Pvl/ba General cond, crpts, dfl>l5, ln com-81o INTEREST Fine ~blnetll & Shelving nn:teaky faucel. l{ow's the ceilings, wood paneling. All en!. Linens, Non-Smokl'r ;,..,..,.. puler center bldg, 646-7425 2 d To L Everyone's looking for the * ~94 • 0602 * water heater! Many others. rec features. $165. Adults, Balboa Island 5355 pref, References. 390/mo. Income P roperty ouw or 546-6080 D oa n right nne. We have a way. Call no pets. CaJI now 646--0073 LlnLE BAL. ISL CD.M 673-5..121. NEWPORT office! C'rpt & 547-6667 24 hr record. ~ntering 6590 MORTGAGE & PROPERTY * 387 W. Bay Street. * on Grand Canal. Watertmnt. BEAUT. home w/pool h1ts CUSTOM 4-PLEXES drp11, ocean vll'W, from 375. Terms based on ~~ll Sc call us&. 0 bcgin to Jive! Controls. J\1on-Fri, EAST side • 2 br, 11Ai ba, Boat dock. 2% BR, 2~J BA. extra BR tm" emp1oyt-d Spacinui: 3 bcdrm o\\·ners apt Call owner Rll fi, 6Th-4644. 642-2171 *MASSAGE &. SAUNA CARPENTRY Hours 9to3. 545-4544 crpts, drp11, bltns, refrig., Unf\lrn. Avail Del . .1. $350 / Jarly. Privil. iloo tl'l o . + t3l 2 bednn, 2 bath l'ent-AIR cond orfice. S60 per mo, SeSrvlllolg H•Mrborlr area 21(~· Lovely girls/ EXPERT MAS. MINOR REPAIRS. No Job -APT=~o=WN=E=ru;.==WE=~CAN=~ pool. No pets. 646-6610 mo, yrly. No children or _546-67~-'°--------I als in exclusive area of New. 2435 E. Coasl Hwy, CdM. I er E o17thg•S~t SAGE. Ask about our Las Too Small. Cabinet In Pl" SAVE YOU MONEY. • , LRG 2 " 3 BR. " B•""·s -I•. 673 "20'1 = port Bearh. XJnt owner oc-67">2000 336 u=-qea Ir e t b I r cabinet.. " "' '" ""' • ,~ ..i 2 Rms w/pvl ba, lll'P. ('nt.. ;:~~"-~-=--~l&u.i<i'T.~·;;i;'ii;;i'o;;~;--Vegas vacations lO AM to with preventative mainten-Ftplc, bit-ins, Ctplll, drp!s, ==========-singll' party nnly S75 mo. cup\ed & ta.:< shelter prop-600-1200 Sq . It. Office. also ANNOUNCEMENTS 2 AM, 7 DAYS. 2930 W. 561175• Uno annrer leave ance & minor repain. Call encl gar, patio. 546-1034 Huntington Beach 5400 ·'=''->-C,21=85=··~~-~-~ ~rly, S9.2l0 1.nc:ome, 5 buiJrf. fi()O sq, ft. store. $90 & $150. •nd NOTICES CQllSt Hwy NB. 548-3&18. mq at M&-2l72. tL O. l\10RTGAGE & PROPERTY LRG 3 BR C ts drps pool .= u1gs solrl this month. Only Crt1 646-2130 , Ander9on Controls. Mon-Fri, · rp • • · NR Oceanfront. Oceanvu COLLEGE Or working girl . 2 RYail. Sell'ct yours today. · Found (Frea Ads) 6400 PALM READINGS QuaJ Constr, carpentry, roo. }"amily k 2 child. 2214 r;undeck. Smogtree. Ne\\"et Bal. Isl. Kil & TV rm, tt'le. $15.000 Down. 375,000, * NE\VPORT BEACH * Cards &: Sand ~adings fing, all home irnprvmnts. I ~,.,-,~H-o_u_.-._~~3~. ~·-~4""""4544""~ Colll!g1! Ave. 646-0627 dlx 2 Br, bltns, cpls, drps. S70 mo & up. ~3613. PERRON 642-1771 $80/mo. Air..Cond. , Help in All Matters No job too sm. Free est RAIN gutters Installed , z BR apt-bltn11, crp1t,,5~rp!A. lndry. Nr shops & pier. Sl6S YEARLY 385. *TWO 2 BR H * Ervin * 67>-1601 9;.~~ tym.; ::,,er;;~~ 10 Al\.1-10 PJ.1, 7 days 536-1059. Rainy sea50n here llOOn. Clean. tnquirr 5 .. -Adlts, b3.by ok. 53&-2lll. Nice large mom. 1809 \V. omes "'"".,...-.... · 213 • 697-9272 La H:ibra F~ est. Reas! 968-2208 Coriander, 546-5268. 1 or 2 BDR~i. crptl!, drps, _Bat_~"°"~·...,N~B~.76_7~:<-7m:t~_•_v_•_s. Glenneyt'l'-Downrown Laguna l_n_d_u_strial Re~~~ ~:i~ co~atll P~a:.!n:.~· ~:. FULLY LICENSED ~~~~~nstr~°:'1~nt:~ Ed's Cleaning Service 2 BR apt. Close to iOOpping rangt' & pool. 1 Block to * $15 PER Week-up w/ Good N'n1al units, C-'l zone J\1·1 INDUSTRIAL spece, Please. call &U-7887. SWINGERS! New Orange Free consultation & quote. Carpets -Upholstery -Wln-~i l child ok. Sl20/mo b eac h. Arl ult s only, kitchen. V.O pE'r "'°ttk . up 50 x 108' \ot. Near beach 1250 Ml ft wtotf\Cf' & drive-WllIT E Long-ha ired C.O. Guide. Far free inlo, Call Ken &lf>-004.4, 548-4235. dows Floor Catt. 545-0487 Trarlewinds Realty 84:7~il.l AptB, MOTEL 548-97;).5. S44,950 in door in rear, $155 mo, le.me.le-I bl. rye l green. Writ1> S.C.S.G. P .O. Box Fl~ Custom Woodwork Remodeling, fence bldg., 2 BR. unf. crpt~. drps, Pools, SLEEPING -..... pvl ha. in F.xCt'Uent terms 1240 "C" Logan St, CM. Unusual collar, owner 2111, Anaheim, 92804 Marine, Residential, Comm'! painting &: gen'I n>palrs. K·•-k 1998 'I I A t l A'M'R. 2 Br S155. Pool, All "'""' R I ' C "" ~•t n . Xl I' 64' °'77 '""' 0 • ,. ape, P · f'xlras. Kids & pe\11 ok. new Gold Meclal!ion home. ea onomtcs orp. ....,\MJUQ 1 d e nt i f y. Found vie ALCOHOLICS Anonymous Dave 645-0044, 548-4235 ncas. nt. rr s. ....'" · 5-1~2808 . • l140l·A Kee Iso n Ln. 646-2042 af! 5 PM Commercial B~r. FOR lse. ~ ;1300 sq. ft. prime Foremost Liquor. 540-0029. Phone 5-12-7217 nr write to REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS NEED HElP'!' Look us up at 2 Bt. ""' carport, $115. \Va-847-8335 CLEAN pvt: Rm-Ba & 675_6700 w ~r e h s e ~pace-all/pa.rt. FOUND In San Juan P .O. Box 1233 Costa. Mesa.. * CABINETS. Any size job Nl'wport Services! 642-1224 1er pd. Nr !!Chi~. 21!12 -A~T~8-.,-,-h-w-;-,--..,-1 -f'ntrance, f 0 r responsiblC' Trv1nf Jnd, rt1r. Bullard c 8. p i 5 tr a no Saturday. 25 yrs exper. 548-6713 _d=•=Y="'='=v~•=· ======I "A" Placenlill. 636-4120. 1 & 2 Bdrm;,, ~f~ lurn~sor woman. Aft 5, 893-012'2 121 t.f-LA lots. Production Pl, ~l Mirror-Go-Lightly I r ave I Announcements 6410 * REPAIRS, remodeling & , 3 BR, 2 ba, encl a;ar, pvl unturn. Adults, 21515th St. NICE Room for working Ne\\'flnrl Rr.h. case. Identify conlents. patios. No job too small. ~4u_l~~------6-7:J0_1 yard. Adults $1 75. E. 18th. & 220 12th St. man with rtr without rooking 67:\-7070 or G42-21}15 Lots 6IOO 493-3996. FREE 673.-5417. T.N.T. Lawn Se rv ice , 546-3Ti6 or 540-4431 l c.N"E~W~L~U7.X~.-,~&c-J'""'b"r-,..,.by privl. EaAI C.M. 642--0326. 121'1 x 140 Level 1.0nert M·l SMALL Black shaggy malr Garage clean-ups, he.ul \ng k 2 BR. Duplex, erpts, drps, beach! Crpt!), drp!I, bltna, NE\\'LY dee. Furn rm, Ci\f. Business Rental 6060 \1•it h small housP, 3 Bdrm dog whr_ on chest on COrTl('r Cement, Concrete 6600 lighl moving, 548 -58 63 , stove. refrig, yd, 11:9t. Child izar. fi42-3615, 646-0841. Female only. Student pre!. .~ garage . ownt'r wUI carry of Pnh~des ~ r.eivport Basic boating course 531<1729 OK. 2238 8 Stale. SlS5. 2 SfiO mo. 642-R520 STORE OR OFFICE at 71~7~ -l'ree"'·ay. !">4&-2!1;>T. offered to the ~ublic CONCRETE. All types. Free I "Y""A"R""D"/°"G'"a"•'°.-"c"'°t-,·--·-p.1 BR. Crp{J;, drps, range.. e11L Sawing, breaking, haul· ...... LRG 2 BR. C?l>ls. drps, Closed gar. Children & SLEEPING room, privatr 600 or 1200 SQ. F1. Parking KEYS Found on beach vie. by the Balboa ower ing & sklploading. Service Remove trees, Ivy, trash. bltns. 1-2 ehildrt'n ok. 1Nr small pet ok. Sl40. 842-8365. home. nice area. Real!Onable. 646-2414 Half·arl"t' . ('111 chnicr \\'M;I-Island & BalbOa. Inquire Squadron. S a i I as & quality. 543-8668 Bob Grade, hack~. 962-8745 1dW & shop'g. 962-1545 · 642-50CKI or ~8--0.100 2630 Avon St., Newport sidP :slret't rlose to 19th St. Rt front counter, Dally well as power boat-HAULING $10 A LDAD 5110 $125, 2 BR, Cpts. Drps, 1:;;;;:;,,=~~=~~;;;l,:O::=="°'===='== r.·lav . .,., 12 units with var-PUo!. 221.1 Ba'boa, N.B. MORE Concrete patio for Bltl\ll. Garage. ting taught. Starting Je11a money. Artistic setting. Clean up. Tree Se.rv, Gen. "* Aft • prn . 841-3727 * Motels, Triller Office Rental 6070 ianre · 32SJXKI. J.'OUND Horlf'y co I (Ir~ d 7 PM Mon., Sept. 21 . Uc .. call Max at 644--0687. Pruning ~2528, 543-a'l43 NEW Dec. Dl'lux 2 lge br. 11:i bll. bltns, encl patin & gar. No pell. St65 ~2 OCEAN V ~1 2 2 C• .. rl• 59'7"----------Cock-A-Pon puppy, rems e, e y Monday n · t e TRASH &: G,.,.,,..., clean-up, 7 u: .....,uxe BR ""' ·1· !Di Ff'i't on Baker St. now Vic. Hl'll & Edwant11. H.B. ver I CEMENT Worll: nf all kinds. ~-~ bl\, trp1 , S175 & 1 BR. S12S. __________ 1suPER-DELUXE QUALITY ~1.1 \Viii sell subject 10 com. Jt46-l(l6T. for 13 weeks. At New-Free est. days, SlO a loarl. Free eat. B!llM. Adults. 536-67'20. .., NIOIIT $30 k/ 1·2-3 1"00m up to 3 000 SQ ., ;:::_::::~~-.,--..,,.,.,.. p or t Harbor Ya c h t 6.11j....-OJ14 Anytime, 548-5031. .,., up. w up. ' ·· · "'erc1al 'tonini: .• $32,100 .15:'-.,ALI. Bl1tck It wh i te 2 BR. Neat Ocean. Frplc, SUNNY ACRES ttlotel 2379 f1, nlfiee sui11'11. lmmed. OC· CIOS(' to 2 freeways. shaggy !l'm&.le d~ vie Club, 720 We st Bay DECORATIVE CONCREIE J\tOVING, Garage clean-up & palio. C~. drps. AdulU. Ne\\' port Blvd, 'C~f. cupancy, Orange C n 1 y. Phone &16-7171 lAPi.?. Rd, ~"-H ill~. Avenue, Newpor t DRIVES-WALKS-PATIO lite hauling. Reasonable. UNDBORG co. 53&-2579 54S-97"'a5. Airport Irvine Commerr, 1 29 Be a c h. Bring not~ CALL. DON, 642-8514 Fret estimates. 645-1602. 5200 PARK Nf..IVPORT <'lln' ==================:..I 'Complex, !'dj. AJrpo~~~ jlJ()-o.. 1 h •·-.,, book & pen c i I first • CONCRE.l'E W"Otk; patios, HAULING & CLEANUP rree 11.,... O\rrlkg !he w31er. 7 Fountain Valley 5410 Founl•in Volley 5410 Hotl'l &: Res!Rurant. banM, FF.MAIJF. Tr ,; ...... ttC'r wi t' d Lt d Ito a l•·d * "S.t-... 01 & N' r flei. colhir in J;i l)n1"11.do nite. Any ques ions rvways, etc. ce n s e. • "" .,.. """ pools. 7 tennis <'ls, $750,000 SRn eit) pt. wys. 27 call 673-1855. Phillips Cement. 548-6380 I ~=========I Spa. From S115 to 1450. UNCRO\VDED PARKING homr,., 1130-J•f.,,1, 1t30-36 • H 3J LOWEST RATES _ ouseclea ni"t '7 Bach. ] or 2 Br. Al_, 2 111y BROWN t)~ rrler'M'll)' htf"ltf' CHURCH Choir 11ingI't 11 Child Care, Townhouses. Eltt. kt. pr1 ~~ Owner/mgr. 2172 Du.Pont Dr., Acrea ge 6100 pup founil vie. f1Rmingn nrrded. Opportunily fo t Licensed 6610 pAl. nr bal Subttn prkg, pot Rm, 11, Newpnrt Beach. ----------Hom,.~ D11.n11 r'oilll 496--IMt soloir.L 644-425.'i __ mald se:r, cpt11, dl1>fi Ju~t e 833-322.l Coun esy to Broken; 20 M res :zone(! tor mobile FOUND \VA!ch at Cd~1 -----JOYLAND Kinderg11.rlen & CAR.PET & furnlt 11r-e rlcaning !pe('\al-3 rooms for $20. \Vindov.•s & w a I I 11 wa!'lhed, painling lnlr:t\or & exterior, noors striped A wn.'<erl. 1'faifj lll'rYlt:(' 8\"aili\blr. GmvP. .Janitorial Se r v ic e , Since 1952. S.~9Ml. 24 hour ~er. N. of Fuhkm Isl at HILLGREN SQUARE hnnH' park, Rl'ady 10 hl'a<'h. Ctill 10 ldl'n!Uy I ;C~o~m~•~t~o~r~y...:l=ot:;':,_-~64:.::.;11 Pre-School, 1797 i\!(lnrnvia, .hunbortt & SBn .Joaquin ~ 1900 S" rt Df!luxc Offices '1evrl n p , All pla~. 673--48!!9 6 "PACE" • 11 C.M. F\111 & ~i day care. lillls Rd. 644-1900 for " 1 t 1;_.:..;;.,.c...-----c---,.. ''• ... pru<": fll'C' on. Mll-8373 642--0072 Ava.ii. for lmmrd. JeaSf' in prt f'n .a t on l t>,;ls , Bl..ACK & wh1t1-rxpC!Clifllt lla1'hor Rl'!l 1\1emo1'il'l1 or le.ru ing inlo. t ' • on, of cities bu11lt'sl shop. "1~1 11C'1>nn1t 121;. !'\(luh1e nat, -·· \lorht'lr IJ Baker, ~ d oun at"' .C Id ""I ' ·~·,... rm. S6..<15 orig, prl~. C I d "20 2 Br. unturn.. ._ ••• ts, rps. ff,;J ping rr.;ntcrs. WW divide. :· ~. ·"' argr s~le spari·~. ~1 . 54(>.;.!l2711ft S:JO. Endowmenl <'JlJ' ioc. on ra •rt - pa.Un. pool, bltns. St60. Alt~I.. miiiuc. panrlln.i:. 10 r n n r Ii:. u nus 8<'re5;]..::::::.:.:.:.::::.:.;;c...:.:=~~ 213-59l-.'«l> Se..:lltt Manor Apt&, 152!1 ~Jedil«!r,.an.an Styl• Luxury crptll, drpa, f'olllX.. JIMit 'g &. llva.ilnbll'. Rirh I r w 1 n , Y1N9C.h, B&lk ~~11ole Cl\IW. 1'!,~: TIE ~RE . Pla«nlia. MS-:.>82 lti:k Pyran11d E:x c h3ni;ots ! rnmonl!ll. ....,,. .t v • nef'<t site$ 1n 900!1 m11\nt, 270 E, 17th St., C.r-.1. fi'i~ rollar 642-~ to bt dewloperl an"a at about our d iKounl. l & % WroorM _%&lb. 1'1r Bram 213: &ll-2700 collccl '· · · · · di~nt. Pacltk v i ew XTRA LRG 2 Br. 2 be, C/D, Ad •-DESK SPACE (,\BIN & lull 5 ac. S:l.iOO. K\1AU. Blk Shagy dog, Memorial Puk. p II u l • bltm. f'ncl 1ar: adlt11, no ult U\·w~ Small do\\'n '' S30 per mo. 11t1n1e "''hi. Vic. S.A. C'liuntry Linden. Cou1'15Clor 673-0372 pm_ $185, 648-3708, Furnhbtd & Unturnhbed 305 No. El C•mino Rt•I Rral choitt lflnrl. A lemflc Cluh MS-~'7. 6~2:rnl. Stn Clement• hu;.•! ~ l"l\JIPJ. \\'rite TN'JUR£D Rltten. bikfbm SERVICE DIRE'CTO iY YFRONT e • '*" 492.-i·l20 Jtobrrts. Box -4..11 ''ucca !IJtf't' 11trlpe. •I 3 moe. Vic, • IA • l>t.lurw•h"' Vallry. or loclll • ca ll Pl!t'l'llrn 1.n. 11.B. 962-1898. Applltnce Repalr1 LUXURY Apts. Sterting : ~~1:~~·;::, DESK SPACE i;,1'.J..126'; nov·s Blut' cf\atgtt blkt, P erts '510 at $375, e 642-2201 • Cl-.1 Gnr111._, 222 Fore$t Avenu!t EXOIANGF. Aeylhi~ tif a.rt'• of cri.1 ,.. NEARLY hf'W l br, 2 bll, e 9 .. ,...., C..11~" l B h Vft!ul' lor rquity In ~ .11rrr11 646-.~4 ogu na eac "'A 11· ., 1 T k ~,, -h -· No P"tl. ·~ ,.m,· -v.·a er. 11. t' H.,. ......... 9363 Slater A\'enoe S27S/mo, 301 32nd S I . <19-t.9-t66 o\ "r fl<cymrntr; S6a mo. Lost •--, 1e<1 Dl•t• '•-•1 fi S~1-1117, . 6401 _...... .. '" •"'*'"""' A\fffllll. '*" !-UR LEASE Lrg morlern . ~lARINER'S Square USO 1q. ;-er., "/':.n: ,i••=-,,·~: nr.t'ln Yll'w Offlrt<s • Shnf"i, CO MME RC IAL n. ius mo, t BR 2 M 9fi8..6M6 111.dlshlc-flmf nr btl~ln"''· 4 1 3 Acl'l'.ll, 2 blork~ fT'Om ~Vd,.,,. bllim, pool, rec 19!)9 S Cn1111t lh,,.y, La.runa to.lisaion S.J.C, i.10.000 ocr f11e. &ts.otat Rr.11. 49'1-9171. arrP. Rr11llr)t 648-m.J ' GETti\IAN Shf'p puppy, m1lr. ttippl~rl rel'lr ll!Jii, neM11 m"'1i<:Alifl11. Vil'! M•imtla & Arie.ms, H.8. !l62-6!1U Rew. ew.1.~her .l I>l"ycr Repi.lrze f'l'ff Estlmatt"L Work Guaranteed. Csll 53&-3159 Babv1llli"t 1-.3 \'RS. Wkly U), home. r~ yard, tune"", 642-5639. lSSD My bot A'ITF:~'TTON! Boat Bldrs & WTNOOW~ & walls wuhed. small C1:1ntnlctor1. !'; e w f its, stripped, te&lf'd I, hoist, p.aoli~ po'Ne.rel"I, waxed. Fn!'t' e~l m .7834 2>00 lb. capacity. Rf'taUs day Qr ni1rht. 67J..:iooo • SOOO. Will S&ctilice $400, or ,;;;:;.:~;;:,;:;.::;:.:=:::;'.:...-·f make cash otter. 642-4~1. Dtn'Cll t.fsint. &otvlce, CIU" * "rn.E REi\10DEl..ERS • PM cleaninl?. flror ..,.,.,:dn,;, F'l'T& e11t.1 ~ 100% flnand l'l$t ""i ndow ""'ashing, 537-1* If Klfchen!I, 18 r 8 Iii: f 1 nn an!I call 11tt 3. <:•rp o rta Compltte BAY & Beach JMltorllll Remodelln1. Co\rpels, \!.'Ind~.,. :loot'$., Q\111.Jlty Con1racton S.12-3000 etc-. Rea A Commc'J . MY \VAY, quality home &16-1461, repair. Walls, ce:lllna, noors JOE'S CLEAN SERV. etc. No job too small. We do Evuythlni;:-Riu &: 543-1-ClH Comm. ~ F'At. 642-75.'ll. ADDITIONS. L.. T. Con!!il:n1c-~le,;n Clra nlng Servia tlon, a1ngle or 2 11klry, pl11.ns, Carpets, v.i ndows, fifV>l'!l, "tC. ~t It layouts. M7-15U. Res k Commc'I. 548-Cll l I - • lk DE YO . .. Dtt Tit< HC ... cot· Mii Mii '°' ... . .. '" ... "' .. , .. , ... ... UNI' lllVl '" •••• '" IRYI COR• '"' I ALI •••• LINf .. , .... •ALI NUN" NUN' l'OUI ..... IUNS 9Alll LONI .... DllAf "" ""' tTAJI WSI\ .... IAN1 ••N1 OllAI fUt1 .... ANAi llLVI NAYI .... .... .. .. Miii ... ... CAP'll OANI °'" ••• ••v• HOUt CDlft OUl'l ., .. REP I! lll!Nt ll!N" t OJ1' Ml!ll Mall COLL NIWI .... NI'#! .. .,. DOV! . .. , UNIV lltVll .. ,. "" .. ' lllVll COi( ..... "' LIOO IALI '""' 'OU~ llAL L0Jf4 OllA~ , .. , Wlt1 MIO'# ""' '°" ue1 ueu Miii ... ... CAl'I: OAN' lllV• YAC• t Of'fC OVl'l REI ~ ••NI C011' Mil' ~··· <OU NeWI f'f8WI NI WI .... ,, 00\11 . .. , UNIV t•YI• IACM .... II T1 lll\11~ COllO . ...... '" .... JAL• NIWI ,.,,.., '""' .., "" •allC LONe . ... IANJ', #111 .... '"'"T• ,.,. ... e. ..... Miii ... "" . :A, II i>ANA CONll ...... - ' ............. ,._,..., 1- • Phones Are Open 1:00 a.m •• 5:30 p.m. \ 9 to Noon Solurd•Y. -Cloood Sundoy DIAL DIRECT ••. 642-5678 WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUNrY DIAL FREE 540-1220 Huntl111 ton laach: 540-1220 Llfuno Buch: 494-9466 San Clomonto: 492-4410 Houra-Regu\etion1-0eedline1 rtiuP'ld,y, Stpltmbtr 10, 1970 DAILY PILOT !1!7 SlltVICI DlltlCTOltY SlltVICI DlltlCTOltY JOll I IMPLOYMINT JOll I IMPLO J J IS Housecleanfne '1U l'alntlnt. I ·-~'"~~;•~M~111;n~,~w~-===7~100~ Me Men, Wem. 1100 Jobt . Men, w ..... 7100 ~ M.n, Wem. 7i'&, l·,.,,-,.-... --Ol~Y-,.,,--8-,...-1 . ....;.P.:;•P":;.:;;rh;;1a1;;;-;:ll:;;l"l;.:__;"5=SO \, CIVIL ENGINllRING GIRL FRI tor autbor-ME.;;mA11l•t""', ha<k Care Netd.I. An'9th t n1 NoWutfnc .., A a.tt.r P"ltJ.t ASSISTANT (Ol'l'ICI eontu.ltattt·profeuor, pt omc.. Experienced. Ml&lt ....... N•Wf!"' -· * WAllPAPlill * T --a 'llLD Umt, Cu ...... oched. """"X·Ray. ••l••llo)>, Mi-122.4 dQ ,.. .,. "~-• ....,., ..... "uac'' '1P"" J ASSIONMINT '•4 ~. EKG. Salary open. "11a~" i nix #--..._ • _ _ Vltjo arta, Mutt b e WOULD YOUi BELIEVE SU.14" ..._lnl .I: · ~ LS/BS er tqtial plut one yr HERE'S JOHNNY'S vuutile and e .n er & • t fc . I'll aean Your Home for PHONE 1bt nit _ Chin exp. S86~S11MO aal.. ranp. Takiq appllca~ for &37-U ; Bl "'-'-Stam Chief ot party w/dellrn exp e BUS BOY -1 ue ...,,,~ Pl· phone the .bttt: Jorda • IJL..•fN~~a';,.::J, 1C,2 Jn m1tnlclp&1 tmpro¥tmtntl. e BROILER 75 M ' ""'10! Son Pain .... L,l ,_n.,d, :i:;;,;.,.., c--Exc.pt1o11111• quallftod Ind• e TRAY GIRLHOOTESS en• -, I EXP. lady wtlJ do outolde bondod, .......... -· I-"-'Ill ' e DISllW•~•n vkhl&l Jn1¥ 1tar1 above min, ~... w cleanlns •• llV&-tn. Own *PAPERHANGER* Apply.,.,mploymont '°""' "'11 or Part nm. omen 'fftnl. &42-3187 RecoiniJIPd Au.thorlt)I A..J. lUqHONE Sollc!Ufl& to: £n&inffrlne Div. CITY E.xcellent Opportunlt)' l Women. eHiclent. Prior ll'lltruetor "6-'"9 -1\1.11 time, llO exper. nee. OF LACUNA BEAdt, 505 !or Housewives needed immediately, FUJI '.or Haw tnnlportatlon. MeA.d&ml Paintiiw s.rv. Immediate tmplO)'mfl'lt Fo~it Ave, or.et.U 494-lllt. Call In Pel'IOn pt -time, Lge v:pandlh&'. • MJ.122'7 • Inter. a, Exter. Speci&J Rtel 1-. Newport Blvd, SUit. F COCKTAIL I STEAKHOUSE t :Do AM . S:OO PM cha.In. Now taJc:ln1 appllCa- .... on apts, 64&-3645 Colt& MtM !W~l. WAITR.E~ wanted for-• '725 Baktr, C.M. tion11, Mutt be neat I: at- IAROll: .Wvtrtlltn 1heul• check their H1 4ally .... ...,.. 1 ............. , .,.,.. lrenlng 6755 YOU SUPPLY THE PAINT • Ancient Mariner NEW ORPHANAG E HEY GALS pe.ndabJe. Age IB-35 • ., "'llctuatnuti...._ THI DAILY PILOT auum• llat.lllty hr.,........ •Ir hi • IRONING * 110 Pu Awrap Room R.UrAURANT. e t.quna $3.75 PER HR , tM ..,_. ., '*"'lllhlnt the a4•art...,_,.t ,.,r.ctlr on• tlma. ,,.__ ..,..1 "l-~---... We nMd 10 lharp a:all ruu • My Home, 11 Hr. . r.-..... ~ · N -Now taklna applleationa for .,_.,,h. Call w-twn 2-1 PM, Um ...... 19-30 N S47·1'181 ~'7·T7!2 DIADLINI PO• CO,Y AND klLLI: l:JI P.M. tM ••r w .... 1tUitllutl..., UC.,. Pick Up I Dellv. ~1641 PROJ'ESSIONAL, 30 yr1 day llhltt ~. fuU time 4M-2700. • ~. e. ~· ' o1:::;~::_ ____ :.:.:..~ hrM ..... , ................ u .. ~···· .. ·•· 12-..... -a -COCO'S. REUBEN'S $3.10 -r hr MORNING YOU MUIT HAVI KILL NUMllll WhM lrllllftt aft _, ai.cauta et "ulct Nltll ... 1.J;.;•;.;.n;.;.Hw;;;.;.l;;;o_l ____ ,_7_90 ttnr. from Enctand. ~'TC • lutboyt -COMPLliX -Call Mr. Jen.::.-~28TI BREAKFAST COO~. M ....-. '9 IMk• a r«artl flt the ldll ftumi.r ti"" FM ~ yaur Ml taker M SPARKLE Janitorial A-~ INT. • Ext. Pl.lntinr. Local e Kltch9" Men * verffkliti..t sl y.vr call dow cle...WW Serv. win. ttf'1, Ue'd, tnl., frM •t. e At1t, lroller men 4MT MacArthur IUvd. HOMEWORKERS WANTED IUSBOY IYffY tHwt It MMe h klU er c.arract a ...w .. thlit ha1 Men.,...,.., kt wa u"° dow1, l'ffid .• comcl, <!Ontt Ca.11 Chuck,~. Newport Beach <Envelope Addressers). OVER 11 Mt tvtra..,_ '9 ••It Vfttll the M hM .,,..,.. in tht; ,.,.,. cleanup. Frffe1t. 96J..-06'72 COLI.EGE Studlnta, S )Tl Apply in penon Rlllh 1tamped, 1elt-ad. N drlnJdnc BW or 2ial' W CoutHwy N.B INTERVJEWlNG MON·FRI dre11ed envelope. DIMl·A·LINI Mt are ttrlctly ~ lft ...... ca '1 IMll ., at aft)' _. .t evr .nlca expe:r. 0 ' • ., . 2 ro ! PM LANG DO N WORLD HO -... ..,. Land1capl111 6t11 Stew, 548-4549. APT Qnnlnl:: ht Cl.us APPLY JN PERSON 3 TO 5 PM ONL"t TRADERS, P .O. Box 1117-NEW LAWN'S. ~iii MAIDS only IDr Newports 1. CalU TM DAILY 'ILOT NMI•• the rltht '9 c.lwffy, .. ,,,,....,.er rtfu1t •"l'...,.,.. w-Plaeterlnt, Patch, ftne.lt •pts. Hlabett e COOK e A21. Redondo Beacu, · tlMnMftt, •Ml t• chi,.. ltt ra ... '"' Ntul•tlMt wlthtut ,....,. natka. roto-tlllnna:, renova ..... , _...:.;;:::.;:;;c..., ____ ,_• ___ ,_ -~--·~. Call NO ~.,..,, ........ ,CE N9Y'ITI" -'°"'~· ----~----clean-up. 897-2417 ar Rep1lr ~·-•· ·--·,,_.. .c..v-LsulC.ol~ L\o.,_. REUBEN'S COCO'S Mall M•,....: lex 117S. N..,.,.. ... ch,, C.llfemla M&-09.12. *PATCH PLASI"ER.ING ~wport8ervkt1,~m4. ~:~~G~~H~/~'k ~~~.w:b~t;_~ CLl'ISIFllD COUNTl•I •r• lac.•tM •• f•llews: MAID SKRVICI 6115 .A11 type:~ ~tlmatet Aaaiatanlt OOK * COORDINATOR Nttded fOr hrs rwk:e • 'fo'k. Wrl.te : P .O. !SSS W, ADAMS COSTA MUA 330 W. IAY NEWPORT BEACH 2211 W. IALIOA HUNTINGJON BfACH LAGUNA BEACH 17175 llfACH BLVD. 222 FOREST AVE. SAN ClEMfNTE -30S N. EL C.AMINO REAL Daily Pilot Clauified CLASSIFIED INDEX HOUSES fOlt SALE ltlNTALS CAR,INTIJllNI '"' CIM•ltT, C-... .... t•NllAL NII con• MllA 11• MISA OIL MAI n• MllA VIRDI 1111 COLI.It• '""IC nu N•Wl"OllT eaA<N 1111 NIW?ORT ltflllaJITS 1211 IALIOA COVIi lttf Ill tWl"OltT IMOlll Ult IATCRllT Ua IAYI NOltll I .. CIOVI R IMOlth Im '#llfCLll'I' 1 .. NAltlGJI HIONLAlfOI IUI UMIVll.ll'T'I PA&I 1m IRVINI Im II.Ck aolY , ... IASTll.U,P Ila II Ttl'll 1141 !IV/Ill TllRl.ACI 1tlf COltONA OIL MAit 11M TURTLI ROCK ............... 1Ut IALIOA l'•MllllULA 1111 ltACON •AY '"' l.IHOA Ill.I 1 .. t•l' llLAHDI 11.M LIDO llll IMI IALlOA llLAWO , .. HUMTIHaTON &•ACM 141t ltUNTINOTOJI JINllOUI 1• l'OUNTAIN 'IALUl'J 1411 SI"-•&ACM 1-. 511HSIT llACN ltil •••0111 e11.ove 1479 LONf t•ACM 1M LAJCIWOOO 1Nt OltAllOI COUMTT 141t OUT 01' COUNTY U• OUT Ofl IT•Ta u• IT ANTON 1111 WllTMIHITIJl lllt MIDWAY CITY 1411 IAllTA ANA tut SANTA AMA MOTL ,_. OltAll•• , ... ,..,,TIM ,... NORTN TUITI• 'M4I ANAllllM 1 ... lll.VlltADO C ..... YOlf UN NAVASU U.KI 1'11 LA•UNA MILL.J '"' LAfUNA l•ACM Int LAGUNA lflOUll tm MllSIOlt Yll.#0 Dll SAN CLl!Ml!NT• 1111 IAH JUAN CA•ltTl.tiND 1711 CAl'llTRANO •IAClt 17M OAHA l'OlllT 1111 OC&AHllDI 1,.. IAN 01•ao 1111 lltV••llDll COUNT't 1'" MOUll!I TD •I MO\llD 1,_ COMDOMIHIUM 1,,1 Dll'L•Xflll POI UL• Htl APAITMIMTI "h IALI ttll RENTALS HouMI Fuml1hecl ADfa. Fumi1htd ............ -COITA Mna llM Mau v••o• •111 lllW"i>IT llACll ._ NIWf'OflT "'91fHTI ftll •.wPoaT ltff>ltll mt WlllTC&.I'°" G)I UNIVllllITT PAIC tt17 MC.IC IAT a• IAIT ILUlll" Utt C.OflOMA OIL MAI ml IALto.l ._ .... ., """"°' ... LIOO llL.I art IALMM. llU.llO ... HUNTllleTON llACH .... ..ou•TAIN VALlft .. ,. llAL alACM .... LONe alACH Ult OltAMOI COUNTY ... tAIOIM lllOVI .. ,. WllTMINITll •11 MIDWAY C.11"1' .WU IANTA AMA 4'tf IANTA .UA Mal•lfTS ..,_ TUITIN ..... Co.\tT"'-47'1 l.AIUNA llACH 4.,. UOUNA MllUIL 41tJ MllllON 'lllJO tJtl SAM CLIMl"NTI 4111 SAN JUAN CAl'll'TllANO 4nl CAl'tlTIAMO IU.CH UJI OAMA l"OIMT " .. TllPLIK. .tc. -CONDOMINIUM ftA NOTILI ....... ·-··-----· 4'11 RENTALS Aoto. Unfurnlohed llMli:AL ... C.OITA MllA '1M MllA VllDI •111 NIWl"OaT 11-'C:H "" MIWl"OIT Mltattn mt NIWP>Ol:T IHOltll nM WllTCLllllll ~-UNIVlllllTT PAU tm lltVINI #JI IACK IA'I IHI IAIT ILU"" nq COltOfllA Oil MAii IUI IALIOA IHI IAY llLAllM NM LIOO llL• Niii MUllTlllOTotl •l!!ACH Mot l'OUllTAIN \IALLIY ltlt •.N.•OA llLAllD 1111 ltAL ••ACll 14M LONf t•ACM UM OJIAMa• COUflfT'T J ... MllOIJI •1tov• Nit WllTMIJllTllt NU MIDWAY CITT N" CNILD CARI, Udlt9ll 1'11 COltTRACTOltl .. ,. •• .,..,T t'l •-' .. IN• "" CAJl.l'IT LAYIJtl & JllP'Ala .. » OltAP'ail.11' Mil 0•1110LITICMll ... O••"IHO llRYIC8 MJT DltYWALL MJt aLl.c;TIU,AL .... tOUll'MIHT &IWTALI .... l'IHCtNe .... 11\..00RI .... ll'Ul.NACI! 1.ll'l.1111, ltc. Ml'I PURHITUlf" Rl!STORIH• & Rll'lllllH!He Im ...... Nllllf .... tlNtltAI, 111.VIC•I 1411 OUOllt&. OllC:INf "°' ILAll .... Ollllll THUMI •1• tUM tHOI' t'1t NIALTH CLUll Int KAULIHO ,,,. HOUS•CLIANIM• '1.• INT•lllOJI OICOl.ATIHe •717 lltCOMI TAX •P41 laOM, OtMMtMl4. .._ 41M lllOltlHO •fU IN,\ILATINI t lU INSUltANC I tnt IMVllTll&TIMt. Dtll'ldl'fit 1111 JANITOlllAI. t1" llWILltY Rll'Allt. It&. ... U.llOSCAl'IHa .. lt \.OCICIMITM ... MAICI SEllVICI .............. MU MASONlll:T, llUCk .. ,. MOY1NO & STOl.AOI .... ,AINTIHO, ................. ... l'AINTIN .. I... .. l'AftOI .... l'HOToa•A•MY ..,. f'LASTlflllNO. l'llctl. • ..., .... f'LUMllNa ....... ,., lfllOOMl1t• l'OOL l •llVICI fl'lt ,ow•• 1w111'1M1 "'' l'tJMI' ll!llVICt: fflt fllOOFINGI ... ltAOIG, llflllh. ML ... RIMODl!l.INO & Jlll'Alll ff4I R•MODILIH•, •1n:H•lll IM Sel1 ... ._.,.... fflf SIWINO .... S•WINO MACHIHI Jlll'Alll;I fftl lll'TIC TAlllCI. ....... It&. ffU TAll.OlllNf .. N Tl.llMITI CONTaOL ftlf TILl 1 CW111tll •ffl TILi. Llllfl-' Ml"" tt71 TRll llllVIC• jfft TILIVISIOll, RtMIA. .... .. .. 11,MOUflllY .,,."' WELOINa I WINDOW CLIANtNa -• • •tt1 !!"J! ::: "'1.,.,1 :: JOBS It EMPLOYMENT TUntN U411 JOI WAMTtO, ,.._ ,_ COASTAL '"' JO• WAJITao. --rm LAfUNA 1•ACM 11• JOI WH4TIO, Ol!NIJl.&L ltl!NTALI TO IMARe COSTA MalA •• u.L 11'1 MEN & WOMIN 1t>t .... LAGUNA I SCHOOLS I INSTJIUCTION 1MI lltil MllllON Vl•.IO $7'1 ,00 ••l•AllATION ,... Ml:IA OIL MA& MllA ¥•I.DI COLI.la• ,.IK NtWl'OltT llACM NtWrCllT MfTS. MIWl"OltT 1..01111 IAYIJIOfllll DO'lllJI ... Olth lltllTCLll', UHIYIRlf'TY PARll II.YIN• IACIC •AY l .... T II.Ill', •• Tt .. II.VIN• TlllRACI COii.ONA DIL MAI IALIOA IA'f' ltLANDI 1.100 llL• IALIOA lt!J.HD NUNTINaTOlt ltACM POUNTAIN 'll•Ll.IT llAL alACH LONI elAC.M OJlANll COUNT'r INilTA ANA "•ITMJMITI• MIOWA'I CITY IAllTA M& NlllHn C.OAITAL U.aUNA l•ACN U.•UMA MlfUll, MllllOlt VIVO IAll C.L&MtHrl IA.H JUAN Ul'llTllAJ119 CAl'llTRAltO llACN Oo\NA l'OINT llVIJtltOI COVJIT1' VACATION llNTAl.I COHOOMINIUM DU,LIX•I ,Ullk RENTALS IM CL•MINT• 1111 "" II .. IAN JUAN CAl'llJTllANO ntS THIATlllUIL Uff CAl'llTltAJIO l&ACN ,,,. MERCHANDISE FOR 1111 DANA "°"" ,,. E nu Tl1PL1x. etc. "" SALE AND TRAD '* CONOOMllllUM mt PUJINITUJll .... n ll ltlNTALS WAllTIO "" OFFICE PUJIJll'TUll .. ,. IHt ltOOMI 1'01 llNT "'I OFFtca IQUll'MlllT Mll 1m ltOOM • IOAJIO "" STOJta IOUll'MIMT •n 1121 MOTl!Ll. TJIAIL•ll COUllTS lttf CAl'e, JlllTAUJIAlllT •it t»I eueST MOMll ........ IOUll'MIJIT ..,, "" MllC. JllNTALS "" JIOUllllOLD aooos "" !!!! RE L Esr•re oA••GE ••L• ..,, .. -A ""' • l'UJINITUJll AUCTION IHI ~-:. O.ner•I Al'PLIAJKll ::~ n,1 INCOMI l'ltOl'l ltTV ... A#tTIOUl!v.cw1Ml!I 1111 lHI IUlllllll 1'110,lllTY .... ~'u"'::::l /NSTIUMlllT 11U 11.. Tll .. JLlll l'AlllCI •tH G NI llH Ull IUl1Nlll JllNTAL INt ,IAN05 & Olt A tJll 01'1'1(1 llllTAL Ult ~:~~~lllOM ::: 1.JSI lllDUITJltAL l'ltOl'lllTY HH NO·•O ' ITl!ltlO ftll 14"' CDMMl!ltCIAL .... TA,. lllCOllOllll ftH tl ll INOUITlltAL llWTAL :: CAMERAI & IOUll'MINT Uff ~--= ~:!'c111I '' IUt MOtlY IUl',Llll 1411 •0,.. '111 ll'OJITllll IOOOI ... t41t CITltUI f llNOCUU.111. KO,tl tStt Mii A(lttAal nff OUI M4ll Mlt LM(t IUIHOJll 1111 MllCILL.t.Na .,.11 tlll 1telOltT ,RO,llT'I' lttt MISC. WANTID "" 1'111 OltANOt CG. l'llOl'IJIT'J '"' MACNINlfllY, at.. IYM "'9 OUT 01' STAT• ,.01'. '"' tOM••R '71' ••• ' .. I ITOfllAO• .,. MOUNTAIN a o• ,,, •• , •• MATIRIALI tm IUIOIVlllOH LANO '"' V. ltlAl •ITATI llRVIC8 '"' IWAftl nit 11 ... 1xcN&Htt1 '"' PETS and t.IVESTOCK IJU JI. •· WAMTIO ll'f - :: IUSINES' •ncf ~=~ •••••A1.. :: -FINANCIAL ::::.1 •H :INI I UllNlll WAllTtO .. LfVll rOCI ... ,... IJIVllTMINT °"""""'"" UH G .,. •UllNlll Ofll"OJITUNITlll .. CALIFORNIA Ll\.'IN INVllTMINT WAllTIO 1111 NUltllflll•I .... _. MOHIT YO LOA" "" IWIMMIN• roou P•RIOftAL LOANI UU l'ATlol lf11 JIWtllY lfAlll 6* AWNINOS "" Hou ... Unfuml1hecl cet.LAY•••L 1.0""' "" v.e.cAT10Ht m11 .... =~\:9.:::.•T,1._::_ :!: TRANSPORTATION alNlltAL COSTA MISA Mesa Dl'L MAI MllA VII.DI COLI.It• ,All.II: NIWl'Ol.T l•ACN NIW,OllT MaTL NIW,OllT llfOl•I IA'f'SMOfllll OOYIR IMOlllll #llTCLIPP. \,lltlV•RllTT •Alllt llltVINI lACK •AT ll .... T II.UPP 11 ,,,. UtVl1t• TlltllACI COltOlllA Dll. .,.. IALIO.A IA'f' ltl.AltlHI \.100 hll IALIM llL.lMO ........ , wttf t'INTINOTON lllCM MUNTIHfTOlt MAllOOI • •NTAIN YAL&,eY llAL IUCN IAllllleRen LONO l U.CM DR.-.: COUNTY IAHTA AHA #l!ITMINITll MIDWAY Ctn' OANTA AHe MltoltTt t OAaT•L i.AOVlllA •IACll LAfVltA •taUll MISltoll VlllJO IAN CLfMI O$T• n• MOHIY WAHTIO '* lOATS a YACHn .... tiff I ttlt 1111 ANNOUNCE,MENTS ~~~=~·~Ru111111 .et1 1111 and NOTICES sPEeO-tKt 10An '"' HM .., ..... aOAT TllAILl!RI •"11 :: r.tT:M~L:-A :: :::·: ~~=~=~::c• :! -H CIMIHT'I ICll Ml.AINI I OI.Ill'. "M '"' :~.,c:.~11 •II 1000•.~ :~~V1:'1~ll•I = -PUNIULI IC!t NTAll ~ "'-' ;AID OllTUAltY MU lOAT ltf ARTllt "" l'UNllAL OllllCTOJIS •114 IOAT CM ,.,.. IMt l'LOJlllT1 1411 l'ISHINO l°"ft .. ., ·.i: CARD 011' n.AJIU ..,, IOAT ~V~.·.·. -IN MIMIMI""' ttir IOAT ••v ..,. .... _ CIMeTllll:l 1,.0TI .. It I OolTI WANTIO fltl IT .' C ••• '. ..11 AlllCllAf'T SMI CIM I l'l Y!Mot ll,IOftt •1M .... CRIMATOalll """ "" MIMORIAL ,A.Kl 1111 MOa11.a MOMll nfl WI MOTOI MOMll "11 1111 &UCTIOHI alCYCLll "11 1111 AVIATIOlll l•fllVICI tm tLICTll!C (AU fHf -Tfll&Vl:l .... 1(11 ftrt ,_ AIR TltA"1NltTATfOM ..... :.~·o:~lClft f* >111 AUTO Tll;Altll'ORTATIOll ..... MOTOll;~OOTIRI ,_ ... LIMl ltOTICU ..... AUTO lt:RVIC•I e ,Alll'Tt _ .... MJ1 TVTOltlNO '* AUTO TOOU e 101111'. -SERVICE DIRECTORY fltAIL.l lt. fRAYIL .... WI ACCOUMTJMO ... rltAILlllo lltllllY ,_ NM AMlftlllHO llRVU U. TJIOC:KI ffll MU •l'•ltAllCI flll•At•lo ._,,. 1tU IEl,I fflt IUI A"llAtSIMI -CAMl'lltl tnl J6ll &ll'HALT. 0111 .. 1t CAMll'llt flllffTAU fltt JJll AfllCMITICTU ...... lllYIC'I "2:1 OUN• •Utt1a1 lta INI AUTG Jtll'Alll• tNt 1Mf'OR11CI ol."TOI Im AUTO, 1t11t ...... ,.,., 1tL "... 11'01.T CARI #Ill at.1 ,llTflH• ... AMTIOUll, CL.AttJCI 011 IOAI MAlllTlllNtCI 11111 UCI CAltl1 ltOOI .Pll lllJClt, MAIOflll', .... .... &UTO l'lllMTfl JJJt IUllHltl l•IVfCll ... t AllTOI WAHTle 1141 IUIL.0111 6'7t "IW tt.-:JIN• -"" .... .... .;;:: -"" -•II CATIJl.lltf ········---··-"" MITO ' "71 CAllHITMA•tNI tMl·UJP c.Alt lAll JU.t.111 CAl'ltTIA .. ;,., 1•11ll.lllO l&M".to .>AllA POINT :ONPOMIHIUM 'Ul'LIJlU Ulll'Uett. =-----------------·--· .- * telephone worit lor Boll 2l12, Coe:ta Mesa 92626 COSTA MESA MAIDS Avail. Immed. Xln 6lfO h andi capped eh lid , H01tttW1 Wanted for 1---.,,-CM;OT""E~L'-"MAl:;'::;;D~• , ret'1, Ce..11 Newport Plumblftl • AT • Voluntetr or 1m IA.lary. Valet parking. Call Reliable iteady worker Service:s, &G-1224 dey or PLUMBING-ALL TYPES Also voluntMn needed to Mr. Devit, 540-7632. *** f,94-7~7 eve. 24 Hr. Service THIS help w/physical therapy, 1 HOUSEKEEPER. Must lovel--'---"----'--- FREE ESTIMATES * * hr wk, pleue belp. l'J3..fi5, chlldren (2) Llve In. Five Nursxp'"E'R •IDE Jail ~ P1lntln9, Wattt hfften $60 lnatall. 646-7363. d&yl $40 a week . E •.,., : Peperftanelnt 6l50 Garbq!: dilpol.ll $45 Install. ti job openlnp, tun • part * COOK-HOUSEKEEPER • Reference•. Newport Beach lhlft. Apply Parle LldG ~ HOUSES, doekl, boat 1, JlagpGle1, anyttnc everythinc r~u o nab I Y. painted . For free estimate 646--9752. ~ PLEASE YOU" GladweU Paint Co. * •• 494-9816 •• * METICULOUS PAINT. BLUE OlIP STAMPS. INS. crew col. .tudenta. lnt.xt t.ou.e1. Exp. Docltl, 615-5112 * PAPERHANGING le PAINTING. * 968-2425 llHST RIIS! fJr:Ji, c L A s $ I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 '6 7 8 ALL RATES R.EASQNABLE time, fiexlble bourt. No exp. ~neral U~ dutJei. 5 dayi. area. 644-4188 valeseent Center, 466 J'l.q. Call Jim GleM, '715' Owenai nee. Ap D-35. We train. fVI, 12-7 pm. Good S&luy. HOUSEKEEPER, 1 day per ihlp Rd., NB, 64U044. St.. H.B. !5J6.88()1. Start tod1Y. Mlllt hive car, ~1!18 wk tor hectic, happy NURSE AIDE TRAININQ HOM:' REPAIRS Call 95&-~~ per ~r. Grant COUNTER GIRL FOR DRY boutehold w/3 wns in 2 wk. course, employmti;il Plumbm,..tlectriceJ.f?.SOHr. -=~~-~-~-·•CLEANING PLANT Apply <!Ollege, Tired mother . offered. Pe~ne~ Dept:, 642-2755 or Ml-0506 ASSISTANT, front ottlct. DX> Harbor Blvd,, C.M. M~ll24. Haq Hospital, . · PLUMBING REPA!JL Some Orthodontic experi-COCOS REUBEN'S HSKPRS EmplY?' pay11 fee NURSES: * RN or * LVN No job too small ence nec:euary, 16~2405. ' George Allen Byland Agen-Relief, ma.inly wk endl, all -COMPLIX -cy !116-B E . '"th, 'A. ihltt1 avail ~1624. e 64l-3121 e BABYSMTER Wanted tor XI ill - DRAINS PIUQed! Drt.lnln&, month old aitl from approx. ~T MacArthur Blvd. 547--0395. OFFICE MGR. BOOKKEEf'- alow! Expertly cleaned 19, 5 pm to 11 am. Call ONLY Newport Ba.eh HOURkeeper, 3 day1 wk, ER. Aut. to pre1, near O.C. l4 hr 11erv. $3()..3854. between noon I: 2 pm. p hr. Eut CM Airport Salary bued Clh 24 HR PLUMBING MS-~ INTERVIEWING MON-FRI 646-1400 . exper. can 546-<838 t & REMODELLING BABY SITl'ER-Meture. 4 2 TO 5 PM HOUSEKEEPER for teacher ORDER TAKERS. Wome0- S67-96f4 boys (2 tchool 1 infant), S Ovtr 17 yeU11 1-5 M-1' $2.00 hr. 3 school glrll, over 19, day1 or evef. ~. 8 am -~:SO pm, S160 child, rel. car M2-27Sl . Pleuant w6rk from «Ir llomadellnir a _R,...lr mo. Mr.. Perkinl 5f9-3058 e BUSBOYS INVENTORY Santa Ana Gftice. NG ~· 6941 or alt 6 pm M>-14'3. e DISHWASHERS CONTROL ANALYST ~i 548;:~ ~i:. f;,. hr. BABYSITrER wanted, daya COASTAL AGENCY Calculetor or addlna macbine • ' CEN'L remodellna: &: melnt. your borne or mine. Ref A member of e--'ence, Must be fatnll-Order de.sk-exp'd & pleue.nt No job too •mall. near NB sch. 1601 • W · Snelllnr A Snelllna t nc. 1.7"~t11 inventory Ir pro-t&klna phone orden. TyplrW ,:Ll:=c':i:d/;:llw=:"""==· ::•=ls.8=183=·::::::: I B&.lboa No. A The 'World's L1r911t ducUon control procedur.1. & gen. ottl~. Under 45. 210 BABYSilTER <Mature Proft11lonel Ability to read and work Briggs Ave, (cor Redhill woman) lor Teacher, my EmployrMnt Service with data processing re-C.M. , home, Bol.sa Chica It 2791" Hubor Bl, CM~ ports. Pt\¥11eal tnwntor:v PART Time--F\tll time If S.wl111 "" QUALITY You've alway• wanteci. Dreumaklna' alteratiola. Key Say, 1763 0rana:e Ave., C.M. 645-1292. Alt1ratlona -642-SMS N~at, &eCW"ate, a> year;, 1xp. Edinaer etta, ~3434. I -~-==~B~l~vd,::,,. =":..;:;Ad=ama:::;=-,I eluded. Contact Personne~ you're looking tor ah BABYSlTI'ER, 4 children, COUNTER GIRL, over 21, 12 requlftd, heavy lifting In-unusual ,Job. Ir. a r I! Mon/Fri, My home• tog PM, 5 day1. YES, ONE Office. lnttrtlted in beauty • Tr a ntportation provided. H 0 UR C L E AN ER S . aecrtts e Call Vlv\&ft ~21.5 96&-3428 H.B. L. M. Cox Mf9. Co. Woodard Co1metlei. • ~~-Altera.tlom Deaiantcl to .uit you. Call Jo • 646-8446 BABYSITTER Needed 1 day DENTAL Alillta.nt, fully 1505 IE. W1rnar1 S.A. 8U-2fi&t. : wk, ln Eutbl.utf for aft exper'd, deik only, put ~1551 PT/Ttrne Mt.le R.itaurut school 4% yn:, boy le. 8% yr --·-0 drl ... ~·3 , ....... rnoon1 or eve. ' pl help. Colleae 111Udenta ~-rirt. mlllt ve , ............... · lnlurlJ'lc.e exp det'd. Hun1.,.Equaliiiriiiio•oiipportunla ... ;i;ty;;;;;o;;m._.,..iio;r\ THE PEDDLER. 1024 &:f.· TIJ., Cer•mlc 6t74 BABYSl'ITER needed, CdM, Beh ttta.~ bet I e.m-91• ikle Dr., N.B. M PM M<>n, thnl Fr\dey. pm ........ Call 540--6373. Or aft 5:30.1 ..::::::•_c:.::..::=:.,· ----Prr or Frr Ew1. Alto neea CERAMIC tile imtalled or 67~ DENT AL A11 l at&nt .,. rellfe nlte man. Sh~!' ~. ~na my ,:.,====---.:-=--put-time ne. and S..t., station, 2lllJO w. Cout Hwy =-~~· Pr!t~ ~u~t: ~:~~~ ~ =~~7:;t ~.Million 1_N_.B _______ __, 53i&-24J& goodpay.NB,~9. DENTAL Secreruy...lQl'd, PIT Office Help wanted. BABYSI'lTER Wanted rUtfl, P~ople--orlenttd ~tlce. Morn or Atternool'll!!I, C.0 T,.. Service ,,.. My home NB Penin. S20 wk, H.B. 847·1549 am, 961--5782 Miii Kay: 546--1866 BOB'S TREE SURGERY is back otferin& tht aamt J'ine QauLll;y 'I'rff Service. Coll Don,a, .... ,.,.. pm. IRl/INE fERSONNEL PENSIONER To h•lp with BABYSI'ITER needed In Dlshwuhef • Mornlna:•, fl.JU SERVJCE5*'AGEf\JCY a:arden, 3~ day1 per w~ ft Pomona or Collete Park tbne. Apply In peHOn 2:30 _.,,. .. ·.._ •• c.-e -•.i alt 6, 675--0316. , ·-· JOll & fMfiLOYMINT Job Wontod, Man 7000 area. &C)....f635 a1t 6:30 to 4:31'.1 daUy. Sneck Shop •1 -.ui• PERSONNEL CLERK: BABYSITT!:R '91lled by 2StlS E. Olut Hwy, CdM Knowledge Inaiun.nce. Call teacher weekda,ys 2 to S. EXEC. SECRETARY J . W. ROBINSON'S Loraine, 645-21'10. We1tellf1 Ught hou11twork. 499-4357 Girl w/top tldlls. Adv, bk--NEWPORT BEACH -Pel'lllnnel Agency, 2>C.1 S B ABYSITrER, A1ternoonl -" b I IUI Gd hn k We1tclltt Dr., N.B. SCRAM-LET only, my home. Call aft I i:i~ ... <!O~a.. C.U Mn.~ . Hu an Gpenlna: for REG. Nune • Apply in PM: &75-3415. wkday1 t.5 for appt, tn4) -EXPERIENCED -perlOn. Country Club "'ANSWERS BABYSmER tor... elderly SM-4370. SALISPERSON FOR Convalesctnt Home. 2llll2 ccuplo, P"'I w.., ~ .;,..;=E:....::.~,d-C=oo=~K~-I COIN DEPT Saota Ana Avo .. Sa"ta ""*· Harbor -Bound -'"-· -• ,;;""'::c,:c.· Ph~'-'6-'70-'-lltl'='-'1--..,-Xp • '_,, " A-' In ' Restaurant Tallow -WOLF al the DOOR BARMAID -Days, apply _.y penon The mink 111 the ek>ltt It before 6 p.m·, MAVERICK, DENNY'S Applypln pel'IOlnr:s, p.m. 10tn.etime1 rt1POrt1lble tor the 1728 Ntwport Blvd, C.M. ftESTAURANT el'IO~ P · 31, H.~ Bl d CM • 2 Fuhion Ill., N.B. WOLF at lhe DOOR. BKKPR • A/P. CorwtruetJon 0 """"' v • Equel opportunity employtr Job WantH, Woman 7020 exper, de1lred. CdM All ,.._ EXPERIENCED C t r plies ccntldentltl Send res-Pi U1tmhler. 0c11 1::n *KITCHEN HELP* ume ,; ul.ary hl1tory to Box Cleanen, Bay1lde Center, ~ FEMALE M-1087 Dally PUo!, 22ll W. NB 549-3001 • PBX Rteeptloni1t. lic'lt' Balboa BI v d., Newport ..:;.,.=::-::::-=-:::-I~;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;-;;;;;-;;;;;;-;;; I typi~ I: clerlcel dutle1, Beach. $500 M•n•1•m1nt ~~ experienced, per10nable.1----=~;:-----Tralnff _NEWPORT BEACH- 83<)-103'. ' BOB'S Good worl< oxp, Marriod, C•U EXP. Social Sec'y/Comp., Ann, 645-2770, We1tcliff Per. delver. Typlni:, SH. Loe:. • "HOME OF "Tif:E BIG BOY" ll()nllel Aiency, *3 Weit. hr• ""'"'" Bax P·l078 TRAINEE-COOK cllU Dr., N.B. Da.Uy Pilot .=:::;,,:.::::;.. _____ .I Neat eppearina, good cher. • Fiie Cltrk·Clelms TYPING And Addreulna: In NO EXPERIENCE NEC. " to $3'1.JJ Ha, an opening tor e EXPERIENCED e GRILL COOK BUSBOY Home -Live In FOW1taln Many lrinre beneflt11 Xln't oppor. w/gd co, Pretty Valley. PH: ~. Intervle wt 2-4 Dally ottlce1, lriendly almotphel'!, Appl.y In person 1().5 pm JAPAN~ h!ah IChool &lrl 154 E. 17tll, C.M. top benetlll. Some llte typ. .. Monday thru Frida.)' will live u1. Mother'• helper. Equal oppty employer Ing. Call Miis lktt)', 557"122, Pen10nnel Dept. 548-5182 Ablpil Abbot PeflOnnel • 2 Fuhkln Island, N .B. AIDES -tor convale11eence, CARRIER Aatney 230 W. weme.r, F.quaJ opportunity emplayer elderly Cart or family Catt. Su.lie 2", Santa Ana, ~ Hom•mak•"· 547-«81. BOYS Gen'I olftee -Expd ANTED Want ponn. po•l1lon W MG-2134 efter 5: 30 PM for the Johabo-MMooonn, Worn. 1100 , DAILY l'ILOT FREE JOIS Llfol Trol-$4GO Type 75, knowltdl" lepl tenna tor oPPor. ln outattn4. inl: law llnn. Poyroll $471+ ANL hind peyn>li J'XI, 'T)pa 55, Union nporu 4 c:ott brttkdown. Mn1t reJ..s. MMES EMPLOYMENT AGENCY W.2UI toe No. Ma!n, S.A. 77Ml20 600 No, Euclid, Anaheim ' Dene Point. San Juan C.plttrano and Capl1trano Beach .• Contlct Mr. Seay at DAILY l'ILOT S•n Cltmente oft1ce , llli N, El Camino Real ·-* CAR WASH HELP * Many •optnlnp, full le pvt time Jobi. S Joct.tlons, Ori.tlit County. METRO CAR WASH 2950 Harbor Blvd. C.M. Reuben l Lee Now interviewing -NIGHT-' DISHWASHERS' *APPLY* 151 E. COAST HW~ NF:WPORT BEACH REAL Estate Openlna .. i,r quaJified salesman. Work on fabulOUI Irvine Ranch. Good potential, ample Door time. Jnc:omr unlimited. Call ·¥"' Raisor. : e Rt'd Hill Realt:y ... 833-08l0, Univ, Park Center, Irvine P/Tlmo Mono Clott.: 1111. Exp. Prolern4: M a n y employ..:: benefits. ! ! Apply In per1on : f 1Jt.f130 l R"obtrt Hell Clethn: • 1601 Niwporl 11•4.1 Costa Mete, Calif. ' I I •• ,. • •---.-. c • . _ . -~·· _._ .... ~ ....... , .... , . ,..c ;;-;.~ •• ::.-::,;-., ,-----::.:::_:. -:-:. ·=-=-~.~-°'-=-==~._-":-.-:.c.--.-c_~. ·-~• . , _ ..... -...... -..... , .. ,.. . .... , ................. _ ... -_.. . ,. . . .... TRAHSl'ORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TllANSl'OltTATION TllANSl'OltTATION TllANll'OltTATION lh....i.,, s.,1.-10, 1970 TRANSl'OltTATIO DAlLY PILOT -. Aul<> Suvlce Compen 9520 Imported A-HOO Imported Autos M lmpor!M -& Parts MOO ---,.--1 -~------. HOO lmpet'lodfallos KOO tmoo••ed A-9600 Imported A-HOO'• -----=-~ VOLKSWAGIN VOLKSWAGEN $. , ~ '68 vw '65 vw --': BUG '~ 1-----1967 ENGLISH FOl_D MG POUCHE SIMPSON shoulder harnev& 115 ComP'tihon If em \. ___..---....:,. '67 POltSCHI 912 torque converter S 1 DO ALL NEW ENGLUH .......-----.- ToniuclH" .,.... mi """ CAMPERS FORDS flow tN l!10CK • 'IHlll Wldto w!at ltlAdl -· TOYOTA Brock bi-rise manltold Jor DRASTICALLY w.M6" AMlnf. -pod Mopar 38.1 $4!1 Milodon oll REDUCED runntrw. WYGNS plcl<up and "'" •• pan lot TO Cl.EAR .. $42f5 Mopar engtne1 SfD Chrome AU FuH Enulpped LARGt S!:l..tt'TIOH valve cown fer "B" block Y , TO CHOOSE rROll -IBILANDBI'" CHICK IVllSON ....... $10 poi<, 2 pollohod 100°/o Theodore rn vw 14" E·T ...., $35 Joky G ltOBINS FOID Nl!W MIDOl!T $lffS vasco jet inner & outer UGFGftteecl 12711 ••ACM CNWY • ., Jl'IO HAJUIOR BLVD. Ol!MO "TO Corolla a mt $1694 Sedan Amer1can macs. wide tlrt•, CUiiom metallJa paint w 'h t.tautJful laCe warti:. YPU. SOL Seven! other euatomiztd 100% Wananty, Road rttdy vw to choole fron1 "Loade• in The ...... Otlu" ZIMMERMAN 2845 HARBOR BLVD, ~ID . ' ' v alve 1Ptln11 with USE AS CAMPER 2Mlo -Bl>d. W.7568 • 11!1-COSTA""" aluminum 1'tah>en $35. Coota ..... ......,,0 NEW0 USID-SIRV. ,63 PORSCHI DuCo11 • ""'""""'' • dua1 OR 9 PASSENGER 1~~~~~ ~ coil distributor with ignition BUS j -;; ----------'I'-· ...... Blue ftnllh. ---~ .. ~0----1 AM/f'M, (JOE 972) wires $50. 6.13-5576 • vw pan" uan• ax1.. 1967 lUOL-8731 • bodypart•. 1967 lUQH·6921 •642-0!43 . $2295 FERRARI FEllRAlll N ....... -Liii. 0. anc• c.om.tt• ml1 auk- tzed &Ill•. SAL!S-SBRV!Clt-PUTS -. """'" -BILL YATES ~~u..y, VOLKSWAGEN a-ck our deal• I OTHER. DEMOS AT BIG SAVINGS DEAN LEWIS Ul8 llatbot, C.M. 646-9303 '69 TOYOTA COROLLA ~~ recondltJoned. <WAI<-CHICK IVERSON $1599 $f9.303l ~es or 81 1910 HARBOR BLVD. BIG !~~~!u!L. v.!:~ !~~a~! SELECtlON I White with blac:k Interior. HUNTINGTON' BEACH wtlh •Ub:>matic (YCY961). VW Engine, Good Cond. • 642-0443 • _1~rlllpllt I .11111p ll1 I·., 318!3 Villa Road San Juan C.plltrano 1137400/'9MS111•2111 U c. XWZ683 • 58 vw All ""' und" •lthtr .... OF $1299 100~.,......, wamncy or Tr•fler, Travel MU LIVE OR CAMP IN nus TRAILER 16' '68 field & atrnm sips. 7 complty tqUlp. $900. f>.18--00-M or &<&-7170 W 1100 W. Cout Hwr. Harbour V •• w.~ ....... ~'"' 18711 BEACH BL. • Ml-4435 HUNTINGTON BEACH AutboriJed FllTU'I Dealer cH1cKv:RsON :~-:i =...~ .r.;b~i"'v .w. DATSUN 51~3031 Ext. " .,. ., $38 Down mu BEACH BL. 842M35 '61 PORSCHE 11100 w. Oouf 11wr , 1t.z. CABRIOLET -.... , ... "'"''°" ·-........ '68 NIMROD. Deluxe. Sips 6. Stove, kebo.'\':, din'1 table. $595. 5'8-4156. 1970 GMC 1500 PICKUP WITH CAMPER fSOO 2M engine beater, de1uxe cab, fibe;glas!: tires with New '70 Datsun 1600 OHC, Pickup with camp. er. Sale price $2099 dlr. I# 61798) WW take car in trade, WW finance private party. Call 54&4052 or 494-68ll. }IELP! Must sell '40 Chevy wooden camper truck, slps 5 Xlnt cond. New eng. $450. Ask for Mike aft 5, 642-3053. •1970 VW Camper -fully equipped, pop top. Xlnt cond. $3395. 546-2568 Dun• Bug"'g"le'-'s-_9.;..525_ MEYERS h1anx. blue metal flake, brand new 1600 VW eng. Porsche clutch, 2 topg, chnn whls, Gates tires. Very dean. $1495. 54S-0440, Fiberglass Repair ........... KOO 8 foot cab over King of Road camper. Stove, refrig. I era tor, 20 pl. water tank, natural wood with Iota of $3295 &!rial 58744 UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE 2850 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 54().gMO '61 FORD 31, TON Truck. 390 cu. In. VS, 4 wheel drive, Riverside hubs, 4 speed, radio, CtlSt, cab, 2 bedr, 9' diamond plate steel v.·elder body, wood Ooor 11take body, 65 gal. gu sad- dle tanks, truck in perfect cond with a fl,nn price of $3199. (7797F) CONNEU... AUSTIN HEALEY AUSTIN AMERICA Sales, Service, Parts Immediate Delivft'f ......... 1 ~ l' lll i1L11 [ j\JllP Ll I [ c, CHEVROLET, 28?JI Rm'bor 3100 W. C.ou1: Hwy., NA mvd., C.M. 546-Ull, 6G-94d5 5'1J.171t Confidential Yi>Mll do b, •1, r a l Poppy's 160~ N Ho•ho1 at 1 11~ St. <.unla A••c -~ll ~410 Authorlaed MG Dealer e '64 SPRITE -Xlnt cond. New pain! & top, $700. 673-4807 alter 4. BMW Authorized Dir. Sales e Service e Parts fl...LL ~10DEI.S TO CHOOSE FROM '68 CHM PICK UP : ;:,;:,.~;n~\~,., • Sttvl.ce Monday 'till 7:00 PM Long Berl, vs, Must sell! dlr. Sat 'till Noon :=~) .':."h:'· trado or COAST IMPORTS '64 i'°'ORD Van sink itt box ot Orange County Inc. stove, water,' crpt,' pane1ed 1200 \Y, Paciflce Coast Jfwy &. insulated, tool drs.W'@rs. (Across trom Balboa For \l.'Ork &: campirw, J()n't Bay Club) copd. $995. 642-5565. 6-12-0406 • 5464529 CORTINA * '62 Ford F-100, 4-whl drive, '68 327 Chevy eng. w/o'drive, Gates tires. Call Phil Manu.i fM rompl. into '68 Cortina GT 67a..3331. '68 Chevy Van, white .w/ grey interior, clean van, just tuned $1550. 492-3ll7 '67 FORD Super Van-automatic, Xlnt corxl. 6 eyl. lo mileage. 67~ 1600 engine, 4 speed, radio. {YNB948) $899 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road San J uan capisttano FIAT llBB.B -to •port Ud AuU1arized Sales e Service Parts New and Used SaJes Open Sunday 537.7777 Call Collect. 96l5 Garden Grove Blvd, --······ 44 l.ftil"U"U"le 'IHINI "FIAi ' .. •'FRIEDLAHDBr 11711 llACH fHWJ, Jtl 893-7fi66 • 537-6824 NEW-USED-SE RV • ~ Authodlld llG De&la .Over 'wttb brand new tzt.. terior: chrome wbeell:, ,.... dJal -~' AMIN ndlo, Lie. "'" 215. BE HAPPY PAPPY 1 ~0~ N Hen•-,,, "' I ;,1. S1 \•int" /,,,., '• 11 .i l IU $2199 CHICK IVERSON vw MJ.3031 Zxt. e11 or rr COSTA MESA 1970 HARBOR BLVD. '63 MGB 70 911 'T' 4 ipHd, wire ........ ndlo. Demo. S100 utua1 mlln, I $9111. ·~-HARBOR A'd!:RICAN ePMd trans., ,...,,.i-... , ma& 1989 Harbor Blvd. wheell. errwra1d sreen with 646.o26l black interior. (e1mx•l. --... ~MGB==-GT=--1 BILL YATES Witt -~ ...... -s GEN ...,, •. "'°"· VOLK WA 557-9588 32152 Valle Rl*I MG, late '68 Midget, wire whlt:, tm, 5000 ml'a, $1600. (TI4) 645-0545 or 67>2216. San Juan Capl.tranD 137.-C/GM511/-..ml '63 VW GHIA Convertible. ~nt llflllne NEW FIAT MGI ......... -to !Ind In<> 1970 150 SPYDER 4'1. Radio, hostet, 4 '"""· 1f=co1+",.:: .~ fn>m. '65 MGB ROADSTER ••c. 51099 ca:ll.';:i':~s::.;:c;~s Exce11eo1 ro001uon. -CHICK IVERSON '11 E. l&t, S.A. 542-8801. wheels, (VNE 099), Own~ vw by little old 1chool teacher. '69 Fiat 124 Cpe Take trad• or •mall down. ~ Ext. tit! or t1 Will ... vt. D'· Call mo HARBOR BLVD. Exotic red with black vinyl U' .. P pty. u-, COSTA MESA bucket seals. Low miles, has Pat aft 10 am MO-lm:I or ~~~,-----:c::- had ex""•n• care. s.ctt. , ... ,503. '60 Super 90 fice! (XLY235) Take older ======== car ln trade, WW finance OPEL AM/FM. f PZA «>Ill private , ll'ty. Call Pat dlt. .BILL y ATES aft 10 : .. 1 494-7503, 54().3100, -- ·59 Fial 600. Ideal tor school, 1964 OPE~ WAGON VOLKSWAGEN runs good, lo1$ of S(l&l'e $500. Pvt pty, 494-8660 32852 Valle ~ perts, SlOO. ~1390. San JUM C.platr&no -JAGUAR JAGUAR HEAD9UARTERS TbeonlyauthorhedJAGUAR dealer in ti. ntn Harbor Aft>. Comp! ... SALES PORSCHE m...001m<SU/"9-211t '63 SlfER 90 '64 PORSCHE 356 SC COUPE A• 0... ,,. --· Balboa bl chrome wheelt AM/FM. (J'Z!' 525) 411'. Will ue, ' takecarin'I'rade•n.nce radial tires, concotne a& Prtftt. PliV ...... • dltlon, Lie, XOG997 (96.68ll. ' $3099 'tO POR9CllE ~HOO CHICK IVEISON .....,, wt11t -...,, 11 ... vw onctne. .... dutd>, .... tires, new paint. AM/FM, 1970 HARBOR BLVD. $3li down, ..: $29.11 fer :14 HUNTINGTON BEACH COSTA MESA montl\I. APR is 21.59' total ,63 VW 70 TOYOTA'S ~\~1141• TotAI cub i-mn., on robullt •ngW, In ..,.,k. Jmm..i11i. d•Uv.,,,. CHICK IVERSON n<w dutch, n<w b•ak.,, ndk>, perlect condlUon. C&n IF-l•l't• ua•n La9uu Beach 900 So. Cs!. Hlghwoy 4'4-7501 * 5411-3100 BIIL MAXEY 1191 llACH IL VD. -.leech 147~ I ml H. et Out lh7. •ti 1969 Cororia l-dr HT, f-stxl , VW be 1een at 2089 Harbor Blvd, or phone 6'5-19Bl, 9am to 6pm 549-3031 Ext. 68 or r1 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSfA MESA WANTED '68 vw I'll pay ... doUa-"" )'OU? VOLKSWAGEN today. Call and uk fer Ron Pinchot. 54!}.3Ml Elr:t. 6Ul. 873-0900. Squareback ·:~:z.:· 100% Warranty lWTl' tn) l===*=6'=>-Slf.6==*==I $1788 VOLVO Lo mileage Showroom cond. l.IU'l.rl.rU ~~': ... Am/Fm, Harbour V.W. ~ ""'"' • ""'· xint '°""·to mt". mu BEACH BL. 842M35 'YOLYO: Orlg owner $1400. ~ HUNTINGTON BEACI TRIUMPH '67 Triumph TR6 4 speed w/overdrlve, w1tt wheela, AM/FM dlr. low mllea. Runs like a fine watch, (UOV846) WW take ear In trade ar fiJwq pri- vate part;y. S46-4052 ar •....m. '67 TRIUMPH GT6, new tires, Immacula t e , ~te! $1895 or best 1-,,-----,,,..-,,--"7'-·I ,. Lal'CJ• Selection "FRIEDLANDER" Of VW Campers, 2 dr. Demo. Vans, Kombls, * $2750 * Buses, New & Used '",. ••Aat tHWY • .,, 893-7566 • 537-6824 lmmediote Dollvery NEW-USED·SERV, CHICK IVERSON ~ 549-JOn ~" .. ., VOLVO 1970 HARBOR BLVD, '70 0e1TlO. # l 53fi COSTA MESA $2950 '64 YW BUG ~·H~•~•-~536-4=-732--.,,.--.,-bdin, Heattt, CTAZ 300) '13 TRl-New top, tl:ret. A: Small Down wfil ftnance Check our deals 1800 l" Cpe for delivery, 0YerMaa dl!l Spedallat. DEAN LEWIS dutch., Good cond. Prlvatll P'a!V. Call $M-W 644-0753 « ~ 196& Harbor, C.M. 646.9303 VOLKSWAGEN '57 vw Sedan '63 'YW_, rebuilt e~ne. KOOd Antiques, Cle1•ic1 '615 eondibon. new til'a. Best-·· -----1 ~er,.494-9Kll WANTED: Classic or an- '63 BUS.new eng & ttrea SoOd tiqm car wthuiut. to body xlnt. cond, $9!iO or ofr. •,hi.re nlce shop &: atonge $t&.561!1. f8.cilitie1, N.B. 675-7498, -=-=,,..,,-=,,....-• 6'"'17L '6.9 VW :~· IWL -..,..,..,;:3',-P°'L"'YM=o""trm=--I * 6'l5-69'15 * PANEL TRUCK '56 VW. Need• major engine * 546-lnl * SERVICE PARTS BAUER BUICK 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 just like new, can be aeen work. $125. 207 30th St., NB. A-uto W t·• 675-0839. • an .... 9700 1970 HARBOR BLVD. •t 2Mll Harbor Blvd., or CirMt transportation buy. COSTA ME::="-',;------s....neM>-,_ lamtolpm (PVW7'1) '66 V\V Fastback.1--------1 1N . COSTA MES~ ~-~ $ ft -dlo WI 'PAY TOP PORSCHE • ., 912. N•w 425 ~ /hoaltt. Otlg lnal CA. SH . radials, chnlme whJ.s, AM· ~ CLEAN $1050, 2.l4 E. 17th Street 543-7765 XKE '68 Jag, 20,0000 act. ml. Absolutely perl cond. Must sell, leaving country, Make reu otr M6-0'Z87/5'8-5U2. J AGUAR Mark X, Evtry po6Sible extra, Pe r I e ct 1pecimen $3500. 4M-1702. P'M S/W. New erwJ,ne. $3900. 673-4531) •ay1, v w * '64 VW, SUNROOF * .:"'~)..~-~":;:' :-' ...,...=,.-· 1 Harbour • • GOO~~~: ssoo '<!Ponche OU. ........ Xlnt cond, $4700. 1871l BEAOI BL., 842-+&35 '86 VW SUNROOF R/H, * m.13Sl * HUNI'JNGTON BEACI $875. Pvt pty. KARMANN GHIA '66 GHIA l owner, canary yellow c~er­ ior with black vinyl Inter. lor, tonneau cover. Ha& had excellent care, (SQX 122) $1099 full price. Will finance pvt. pt)'. dlr. Call Maury aft 10 am 540.3100 or 494-2503. -SAAB Authorized Dea1~ '69 911 ·s· Sal .. • ....... •""" Sonet O:iupe1 in Stock Demo! 5700 actual miles. 5 Orange County's N~st Dir. "''"' Inns., mag """"'· COAST IMPORTS AM /FM. Special factory equipped. Yellow with black interior. (•301224). or Orange County Inc. 1200 W, Paclftc Cout Hwy, -'"""'"""' '63 VW BUCJ lllECllANtC SPECJAI; I.Jc. OKCl12 $299 CHICK IVERSON vw 549-3031 Ext. 66 or n 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA • '67 VW w/Sun•oof BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN Balboa Bay Club '82 VW, Orig owner. SUt> 642-04<l6 • 540-4"9 SU.SO. 675-5436 32852 Valle Raad ="=======I root, R/H. Very Low miles. e 'SS.Like new , 30,000 ml, San J uan Capistrano rted Avtot HOO W/S/W. $!li0. 644-0388 new tires. 837-4800/493..4m/499-2261 ;lm;;po;;;;;;;.;;;;.;;;::;;::;:;;;;. 'TO CAMPER. Pop Top, tent. $l79S 54s-.8906 •so SUPER 90 Sunroof, BRAND NU. Warranty. e '61 Karmann Ghia AM-FM, Pil'elli's, chrome 548-1240 Rblt eng, mua1 1eu, 642-2979 nn1, hdn, etc. Xlnt! $1750. '67 YW $1195 "'•-=eu'-'s°"'•58~N~ice-body~-. "t1ttt-, MS-3046. ••.ill•, h••••r. 4.s,..4, trll.m., etc. 810".Vn eng. $350. * 673-0!52 * '64 VW. Bett ofter, May be Ileen at 309 Mesa Dr, C.M. Ask tor Den. * '65 VW BUG * Goi,. back to echool * $800 6'f3.9595 * 1961 VW with Sunroof 11195. 675-"139 NEW VW BUG $55.89 pr. month $147.71 down Include• tax & Lie. Open End VW LEASING AT CHICK IVERSON vw ll70 HARBOR BLVD. lot' mid can 6 truclcr jut call ~ Jor free estimate. GROTH CHEVROLET AsllbSaloo- l.821l Beach Blvd. Huntinefon Beach 847.aT Kl~ WE PAY CASH FDR YOUR CAR CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Hart:w Blvd. Olet• Meu. &M-lDI WE PAY TOP OOll.Aft FOR TOP USED CARS U )'OUI' CU' LI extra clean_ RV UI fln:t. BAUER BUICK 234 E. 17tb St. Costa Meu. 5U-Tl85 Mmo 837-4800/ 493-4Sll/ 49'J..2261 1966 2 DOOR Cortina GT, runs good -good rubber -'65 Porsche SC m I n t below low book. 545-6817 condition. Jow miles factory r••' .i..r, c•r. m.11 •• t Call M6-49'70. l1111y •• OJgi>A MESA IMPORTS WANTED o...nge Countla TOP $ BUYER II "' alr many extru mUllt eel1 a emoo . METRO VAN • SACRIFICE SALE e 00 " T bull tin camper. .:;$:=2850=· ::59Z-::...:.9l=8l::.. ~=~~ '"' CORTIN A GT s1ov., mnk, "'• box, .,.,..,. '70 Targa 911 T • ~1260 . ======== I lng, panelling, bed, n e w Demo! Exactly 682 mile•. 4 paint. Xlnt condition. speed, AM/FM, chrome DATSUN Jeops 9510 DESERT OR SAFARI '69 '70 DATSUN Toyota land croiser soft top 4 poor Sedan, used $1799 full 4 wh dr , moving sarclfice price. (601AVA) dlr. Will $2200. atS-0044 take trade OT finance pri- 1966 FORD Bronce ii whl dr. vate party. Call 546-4052 or Sand tires. Xlnt cond. 494-881 l. -..,==-===~ s37-5548. DOT DATSUN '42 Willy's, 4 wheel drlvr., OPEN DAILY hubs. xlnt cond. $1050 or AND best offer. 531-ST.li SUNDAYS Campers METRO VAN 9520 18835 P.each Blvd. Hun~on Beach 942· 7781 or 5'!Q..044l 1953 % T builtin camper. $ St.:ive, 11:1nk, tee box, ca r--MTIUN -. pedng, pane.lllng, bed, new paint. Xlnt eoOOIUon. * 545-72tS + ''Lel.dtt ln The Ceac:h Odea" vw=-",.'°'10'""'ca::m::pmo=•'"n•:--;,H:o:•,: I ZIMMERMAN ne\\'. romll-equipped 10 2145 HARBOR BL VD. camp. be!lt oner. Al:so ·59 540-6411 * 545-7245 * wheel!!'. MERCEDES IENZ 01.111'tP (oun1)''' L -·'11'"·' <,r·I< r""" N"w & U~rd 1,\,., .. d., Bo,,11 Jim Siem en s Imps . :v . ., ,,. , & M ... 11 Si S.int.1 An<1 )46·4114 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 31352 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 837-4800/493-4511/ 49S-2261 '61 PORSCHl!: CABRIOLET Must 91!11 for best oHer * 675-1323 * • '68 Porsche 912, tangerine rolor, Good cond. Make oUer. 644-~D 1956 J.!<l SL Rd•"'-1'<1 w/blk '67 Targa 911 int. Xlnt running, new radials, $1600. 646-7506. 29,000 milts. 5 speed, maa1, AM/FM. CVGP424l '69 M.B. 230 • Xlnt cond. BILL YATES 4 •pd. AM/FM/SW ndlo. Pvt Pt)'. s~. 94t-29.ll VOLKSWAGEN 1"11 BWE Mel'Cedct 220 S. • ~ VaJle Rold xlnl. oond. $1300. Call Sin J uan Caplatrano fi75..33&!i B37-4800/493-4511/f99.2261 '67 vw $995 F•1tb1c.li: IXWL-ltll New V.W. celet. All ltlecli: ,,.. terior. '67 FIAT $795 Cpe. rt41e, h••t•r. ••M fir••· •M with tileck b111k0 et Met1. fTlY-0161 '64 vw $595 Re .. le. h••t.r; too4 tire•, new paint. ••••lleftf c.MI• tio11 . FMM.ft1. ......... -·-- lee BerleUI'• T&M MOTORS Yamahs Endurt 125 cc. .cc',..~isn~--="',....,.--.,.1 '66 1600 ROADSTER TIME FOR '69 911T·Lo ml'" ...... FM IOI! OARD!N "'UICK CASH """"'· "'w ndials. Xlnt GROVI BLVO. VAN, Walk·in '62 Dodge I· Imported Con KOO Imported Autos KOO -:.• COST A MESA HONDA .Tu I Ant eoot.aO "'OlfT IMlll'l9 e P'•OHT W"•IL .. IYI' I l"OWla A5tll.Tllt ....... alt.IUITIMO P'aOflfT OtK .. .., .. , I MAXIMUM lP'l!lD 1t IU"H • U'° TO •MIL.I .... ........ e P'OUWAlfll'l•la. t Dll. .. -..... , .. •• cw ,..... • .,.. uu1 T,..,.., Ta a l.kiMM BILL MAXEY TOYC1tA 18881 Buch mvd. R. Beach. Ph. MT45!ft Auto Luslng 9810 All Makes-All Models Au tomobiles • Trucks "Where Service Ma~ the Dltterenee" Orange Co .• Newport Beach '570 CampUs Dr. 714-540-3825 WI! BUY CARS *"'""~ 2lOO Harbor Blvd, ~ '$1 CORVEn'E rear end rl2'.I Pos. tr spot di8C tnkes. l7 :R&nchero, 352 ~ $175 S2 Corvalr Van $275, 548-9497. BUICK Pick Up Trucks ALL COLORS READY FOR IMMEDIATE DnlYERY .. ....,,DA!Nj,_" "Leader In The Beach Cities" ZIMMERMAN 2145 HARBOR BLVD, 540-6410 ' BIG SELECTION :- oF DATSUN . Sta.tion Wagons ALL COLORS READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ZIMMERMAN '_; 2145 HARBOR BLVO. 540-6410 . ' FINEST MOST RELIABLE ·; SERVICE ·:,. " ,• DEPT. .. ' . ANYWHER! FOR ALL , SPORT ··: & IMPORTS "' ,. -·- Home of The' Best ··· ' ' s2000."·! Car -- "U:!ader tn Tha Beadi _' : Clllet" .. Ton, 3-iipd. 11uto. pc.rlt'Ct for Sliver finllh w/blac:k vtnyt eaml'('r. $900. 96~ or lrilcrlor 4 speed. Dir., 1nur. •·";;;;:-...,,='=M>=.;;rrn-I 851.l w1.11 take trade or On-.,. QUICKER VOU CALI., ance ru1vate P8J11 call Tiit: QUICKER YOU SELL , _!o4_"'4_0S2_n_•_l;_M.;. ... ;.;U;.;.·~­ •1 T eondl $&100. f13...6U2 U.Ln ONN SUNDAY THROUGH A Tum "'°'' Whit• Elephant• ••m. 11U1c1-DAILY PILOT lnto cuh thru a Dally Ptlol 'ltln.. TMUU.. TIU,,.. Dtm.,,...-llne ad!! U4-U14 lf2..llll __ W_A __ N_T_A_D __ CALL 04wi;1s, °""" ''"" --'-"-"".·.•.· ."'.--'.'- UNIVERSITY OWIMOlllU --lt'fl. <OITA MDA 54M'40 'GS Sl()tl•rk. Ukts seat.I, tilt whl. •lw'pl !900. Ori& owner. !136--275-t ZIMMERMAN -' ! 2145 HARBOR BLVD. 54M411 ~,Q#*iC ;::::s; .... ..,....,,.~4 r • ..;..t.::;z= * -'• •• 'j..* £J i>SS:'.i '<!f,> • £J;e::s::ax:::crs:SC:C<:st er 1m a ya()l!(S c::;nc s a e w •= • DAn.Y PILOT Th\lt16ir, Stpttmbtr 10, 1970 ~~~~~~:j'!~~~~~!!!:::"]f!T~RAN,::::.~S~PO:=;;.RT~A~T~ION:=;;.~l ~T~RA~N~S~PO~R~T~AT~l~ON:;.:._ ,"4_C_a_n ______ Used Car;;.'---'--"" Uaod Cara '9GO Uaod Can '9GO Uaod Can ' TRANSl'ORTATION -TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION '9GO Uaod Cara 9900 Uaod Cera - u .... c ... 'IUICK CAMARO CAMARO cHmoUT CHIYSLD FORD .MUSTANG PONTIAC ~BUICK -O>nvrt. •~t wbetl. ry c;W•n. Must lltll at a ia! sµso. 675--45.17. '69 CAMARO 1970 CAMARo. ""••"· '63 Chevy Orange, Low 11' I le 1 . W '62 Ford Wagon VI, automadt, llO'lltr steer- bl(, todlo. (GWB311). _._ ESTATE SALE. S.. at C1CJOft VB , 4 speed, air ciindltionlng. Bayghore Richfltld, 200 W. Auto,, radii>, beater, W. pow. (\VYB 942) dlr. Will take Coe.st Hwy, Newport Beach, er iteering (JBT726) $fft ~~:=·1~ car In trade or finance pri. Make oHer ln writing to is9' · ;~1F' -or ~.~".~~'':. N,•i~':'. .BILL YATES BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN ii/fl!. $2,095 or bst ofr. ~ CADIUAC '68 CAMARO :~~~~;.~' ,: VOLKSWAGEN S2852 Vall~ Road ~~~=1 TOP DOLLAR \ dtt&il1. Bids close Sept: 3*2 v~ Road Automatic, power stet.ring, 14th; 12 noon. San Juu Capistrano Oll.LAC '66 Sedan de low mileage (WQD341) dlr. 8l7-4800/493-45U/499-2261 De Xlnt oond, Guanlian s-·" d ill"··---~ '65 MUSTANG g cyl., stick, ndio, helter. CLEAN u'SEo CARS (RPM'92).$199 "-own w ~-~ ,... CHEVROUT 55 CHEVY 2 dr Blod< aintE!!'l'nee since new . vale party, Sf6.4052 or w/bl .... •-• . N 301 CONTINENTAL 4 SPEED 195. PVt pt)'. 962-0319. 49f.6811. a...,. llnenor. ew ,66 IJNCO tCAD Sed de Ville . • engine W/350 hi-per! cam, LN-Xlnt cond. • • ai.t, e '68 SS 396-auto., AM/FM, RARE car -58 Chevy new battery &. . radiator Leather, air, vinyl top. !ft0, Wda11, wsw_.all pwr, ma.gs, vinyl, COll80l:e. sedan, deliVHY-panel, very Many extras f700 or Best $1875. 644-2859 aft 7. 8ni~~'RE' .BILL YATES • 642·6173 • = locks. ...,,2 4 O O • $1995 213i59J-2418 eleen. $550. 5'8-m2 oiler, $7-4982 before 10:00 -=::==:,=:=::=== · . '69 CAMARO Z/28-R•d 1968 CHEV. IMPALA •""alt s,>J PM CORYAll ROllNS FORD VOLKSWAGEN :r C('-D CdV, unmac. w/blaclc int. Many extru. * $1300. * '64 I SS __ .:_::..;;.;;.:.::_~~-~~ &~l ~w~· Xlnt cond. Pvt pty, 847-2388 s.it).0083, aft. 6 PM. mpala '66 CORVAIR 500. 2 Dr, S ~ Harber Blvd. ~ Valle Road c.o.ta Mesa San Juar Capistrano &U-0010 837-48Xl/493-4511/499-2261 '66 CATALINA ·Wagon: 9 Pass. p I S, P I B, R / If, W/W. Xlnt cond. ;1400. 962-"'68 • · J.969 CHEV St&Uon Wagon Yellow with black interior, spd. llO eng. R/H. lilt $400 D Coupe de Ville -.Fully NO matter what it !a, you Air.COnd. $25i5. ' V8, auto, dlr. (O'ru750) Must ..,-='=·=84=2-=754=3 ==== '65 FORD LTD '66 M"'lang 28 ... """"'· Radio, heater, Auto. il VII, 4-spd, disc brakes. Xlnt. p.l!pped, Very lo mileage can sell tt with a DAILY Call 838-6342 eves sell. Will finance private -· 595. 557-9886. PILOT WANT AD! 642-aiTS ' parcy, call 49'-17.f.t, power steering. <DKV-665). '"'suoo=-"'."Pv~t '-540--<4-'-0"'""-· -- PONTIAC '70 LeMans Sport-air. FM stereo, all pwr, loaded. Steal ;3300 ITI4) &tS-0545 or 67>Zl16. '69 Pontiac Tempest Cp. O.H.C. 6 cyt., air, p/g, radio. Very clean. $1950. Otter. considered. 64:Z:..5990. '64 CATALINA 4 dr, Radio, auto, pwr &tr &: brks. Xlnt mech cond. ;350. 675-494:; THANKS • • f,OR AUGUST ' .•. 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 HONEST DEALING! that's why why. I NHd we mention Big Selection and Low Prices? Why don't you tell your friends you got a good deal and after sale attention at Connell Chevrolet? A lot of other people did! Even Sal• Priced Cars carry our fuU guarantH ." ' 1969 CHEVROLET ~ TON PICKUP WITH ' SELF CONTAIHED 11 ~ FT. CAMPER Heevy duty thru ·out, shower, t oil et, furnece, eir concfition in9, eufo· metic transmission, power steering, r1dio, i1ir level•r r••r shocks, one owner1 .128474RI 20 Vans--Pickups. Good Selection '69 ~~d~o~~~~.,~ •• ~.~utometic, •ir cond., ·vinyl roof, •II the 9oodie1. IYBZ!ill I > '66 ~~~~~~~. ~~:~~••. Power 1t1eri1111 r1dio, h11ter, 1utorn1lic. I RUZI 52) '62 VOLKSWAGEN S.d1P1. Slick 1hift, r1dio 111d he•l•r. tOSSASG> '66 BUIC K SKYLARK l Door h•rdlop. "•dlo, h1et1r, pow1r 1t.1rln9, •11f0fll1tic. IRWJ6SI CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-1203 I , FALCON '64 FALCON DLX Station Wagon. Auto tn.M, air cone!., lug/rack. Gd, Sb.ape • $575, ... 968-5946 $699 1'111 "'2 BoG, 5 mo old, Jo mi's, $400 dwn, balance .BILL YATES SJOOJ. 546-0097. VOLKSWAGEN' . ., M"'tang 351' air, p/b-disc, p/s, vln. roof, 32852 Valle Road $2495: Pvt pty, 6'J5..6030. ~~~~ 'fi6 Mustang VB, auto. R/H, p.s, Good cond, S900 549-2604 eve1. RA MILER '66 CAPRICE FIREllRD l Door Hardtop. Auto., radio, 69 Mustang Fastback Radio, P /S, 3 spd. 646-2134 eves or weekend OLDSMOllLE 1960 RAMBLER statio n wagon, perfect, 60,000 mllei1. $475 962-0661. V&, air cond., power steer-1 Ing. (RYS4U) $1499 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road San Juan C.aptstrano 837 4800/493-451.V499--2261 ·~ CHEV V8, reblt eng. New '69 FIREBIRD 400, p.a., p.b., auto. trans. Garage car, one auto, $2600 or T , O , p , prlv. owner $550. 540-4190, 64>1831, 968--4707. 837-6383. PLYMOUTH '66 Fairlane '68 Satellite •. 61 CHEVY' Good ""''· FORD SPORT w G R/H, air. Gd. Cond. Convertible. Automatic, V8, F'ulJ + a!A O_~ dlr S300 644-2991 radio heater dlr Excellent power r co.... . . *** FORD '65 Galexie 500 XL cooo.' (ZZV °"741.' Will take (#G257'726) Wi~ take trade LATE '66 Spt CPI! VB, 77,500 2-dr JIT. Lo mileage. Xlnt trade or finance private par. or finance pnvate party. mJ, air. p.t, p.b, 1 pr pty care !iince new, $112:5. Pvt ty can 546-4052 or GU8ll Call 546-4052 or 494-6811. owner, $1250. 675-1380 pty 962--0319. · · ,70 Plymouth Cuda, R&H 1965. Air oond, full power, '&I Chevy Impe.la-4 spd, needs 1966 FORD V-8 XL Hdtp 2 dr 'tiO Ford Falron Ranchero. 44()..6, itraction h cttY 30,800 actual miles. ?.lust minor repairs. Rad. Hlr. Automatic. Will New reblt eng, good-tltts. ~ $800 T' kvy see to believe! Be!lt in good body, needi! ..... inl suspension, . a e over ..-~,., Cnty'. 4~1431 or $395. 548-4928 take who l esa le book .-pm•· -"" .,.,, "..,., '"''"ti '"" .$350/bnt offer, ~3567. <· . ..,,_""~."' ·~ mo. ~, -'--644-5182""-=· ------I '69 CHEVY Malibu COfwt 837-SM8. ....,..., .. ,.. I . N -~ 1"'~=F~odr~r~-•---1~500~-.. ~ '70 Ford Rancbero Squire * '6.1 T-BIRD Landa•, air & ew tires, Perfect l."UUU· .,.... U<UG.ll e con.... AM/FM, pwr di!lc brks &. '59 Plymouth station v;agoo _..._,_ 51l,OOO ••"""' ml. *6'12-6431* auto., p/s, Sacrllice at ;325. ~ -. ............. , $100 ~-· •~ steer'g, Xlnt cood, Must 6 """ ~~ ... t""• ... uOn car 642-0319 Eilli:'iiim:-n:;;;;;x;;;r. I .~"'~'""'~"'!:..· -----1 !J68..8269 .,._ • -"'=~::::=====I REALLY sharp, ~ model. o;:,1 sell, 675-4008. , -======== • 61 Chev Nomad Wagon. u FORD Gal. Auto. Pis & I========' VALIANT PO'A'er $495. Owner 646--f,682 P/b. 390 e~. Lo nit Top """"· '"15· Pv1 ~3" MAVERICK '66Chev.Ma.llbuSUperSporl e SACRIF I CE l9S9 1966 VALIANT 6 cyl . PONTIAC good cond. ;1250 613-3360 Rancbero Gd. c.ond. $560. '68 FffiEBIRD 18,000 mi's, automatic 4 door, air/cond. John VonCloaw. Call a!tor 6 pm 54t>3l21 * '70 MAVERICK $2250. 55,000 ml., 3 now ti,.. pl"' , 64z-<141 <>< 646--3773 aoow ""' and apare ..,.,. •59 Chevy sedan, 67 FORD Falcon. 1 owner. Automatic radio sharp! Fae-Save _ it's JIOt $1100'or best ofter 546-1548 running condition, 35.0CO ml. Ex. cond. Best • .._ ..... .:......-' dlr Must .__, yourJ--carch _ or M&-6334. • $100 After 6 642-'lS!IO Otter 646-6984 •-J ............ ...,.., · ....... ~ rea ...,. your r °"=:,:;:=-~----1 ' ' sell! $l89'l Full Price. Will phone I: call Daily Pilot ORIGINAL Owner. No * '56 CHEVY· $75 *' 1957 Ford 2~r w•gon finance. (167AFU), Cal l Cla.sgifled &tz.a78 Ow"po wreck. '60 Rat Wagon $200. 548·3513 $75. 968-6358 494-1744. ;your ad-fod.~I Call 646-6682 SptCilfizi1J 11 tlllllT'f BRAND NEW 70 OPEL KADETTE BRAND NEW '70 OPEL WAGON Fully equipp•cf. ,I) 1915747 J Deluxe. Fully equipped, 13992994 21 I BRAND NEW '70 OPEL RALL YE BRAND NEW '70 OPEL CUSTOM KAOETTE. Fu lly equi pped. 19292975061 Cou pe. Autom•tic trensmi11ion. 191 9232201 1 JAGUAR CORNER -ALL CARRY 100°/o 1,000 MILE OR 30 DAY WARRANTY ON POWER TRAIN ASSEMBLY-TIRE5-llAMRY;:...BRAKES '66 JAGUAR 2 + 2 '68 JAGUAR 2 + 2 '68 JAGUAR XKE l ow 111ilee9e, I owner be•11ly will! only ll,000 tnileJ. Cllro1111 wi1e wheel1, ••dio, lleeter, •11to11"1•fic tr•n11ni11ion. J u1t in1111ec11• l•I•. ISYWIOI) A very ll•rd fo fi11d model witll 4 1p•ed tr•nu11i11ion, r•dio ell..! lle•f•r, f•clory •ir conditioni119, cllrome wire wh•el1. 11ue witll biu 1 l1•lher i11t1rlor. lov1ly cer. IXl'Gl l!il Ro•d1t11. l riti1h reci119 9r1e11 wi*" 1uede 9re111 le•th1r int1rior, You won't fi11d 0111 cle•n1r. 4 1p1ed, r•dio, h1•t1r. chrorne wir• wh11l1. !YUM9621 $3295 $4195 $AVE Prestige Cors at Sensible Prices '67 CONTINENT AL 2 Door herdtop, You'll jut! h1v1 lo 111 thi1 0111 to r1111y b1li1v1 it. Full pow1r, 1l1t, h11d r1.t l recli11i"t p•n , 11el, •uto., 1lr coftd., etc,. etc, Very low 1111l1e91. IYWS6tl ) $2895 '69 MERCURY M1rq11it 1+etlo11 w190P1. Full power •11d f1 ctory •ir co11d!tJ011i119, llereo AM ·FM r1dl1, l1•ded witll 111 equipme11t, low mil1•9e, I ow111r, fl t • tory w•,,•11tv •••ll1bl1. IYWT79JI $3995 '68 BUICK Sport w19011. \II •1191"'· •ulom11ic lr•111mi11 io11, r1dio, he1t.r, pewer 1te1rl P19 •IHI power ltr1k1t, •i11yl Interior, pow1r t1U 9et1 wfttdow f1ctory 1ir co11Cl!tio11i119. Fl1wl1n. l\IHFI Ill ' $3095 I j Excellent Economy Cars '65 FORD F•irl~111 SOD h•rdtop, \I I , e11torn1tic, r1dio, heeler, pow1r 1t1eri119 I br•ket, i111m•c11l•t1 co11dillon. (PIZl411," $995 '65 MERCURY Colo11y P11k w19011, \II , e11to11"11tic, r1dio, ho•llt, power 1le1 ri119 I br•ke1, 1ir cond., low tnllee91, I owner. IG96ASG> $1395 '66 CHEVROLET M.llltu 2 Dr. H.T, VI, 1ulom1tlc, redlo, h11ter, power 1leeri119, low 1T1il11. CYPWIJ71 l:1 ~ ... ::! < .. ~ ., .. ::> ~ "' .. .. ~ ::> • .. ~ • • z i • Ot wer1 qua1 nam Su pc Coir -Tl !: boat th re that -• was re pc A Rob Tus· Ill n A -Imp "' = sen com ·exi! • pre: = tmti ope: -~ Ji i 11 e (J -z p i cap wh< pc>• nar per u yea T • Val Ill wa: ol J Ill F tole i Me pul her b ••• wh the 1 an• peo A of ·~ '"' 1 Fo gl' Ho In I lie m1 All 8'