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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-09-11 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa' 2·.58 Still Captive I" ' ' Mesa Gir~!t 17!t Kiilnaped:· DAILY PILOT " * * * 10' * * * ERIOAY. AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER .11, :1 970 " Per.,ersion Suspect Held. Board Petitioned Tustin Citizens Attack Jet Use By JACK BROBACK Of lt!t D•llY l'llet 11111 Orange County Airport and its jetliners were vigorously attacked from another quarter today with a filing af a 2,200- name petif.i on with the Board of Supervisors by the new Citizens Aviation Committee of Tustin. The petition. filed with the clerk of the board by David Killon, chairman of the three-week old protest group, charges th at the approach pattern to the airport was completely ignored by the Parsons report and that county Aviation Director Robert Bresnahan has staled that the Tusti n area does not have a problem. The group asks that the supervisors: -Search for another airport site and implement a plan which will adequately serve the air transporlalion needs of the county, but a plan which 'does not destroy ·existing residential areas. -Limit jet service at the airport to the present level during the interim period 1.mtil a new regional airport is ready for operation. Valley Man Held In Sex Kidnap Of Mesa Girl, 17 Police early today chased down and captured a Fountain Valley photographer who they charged with kidnapping, poss ession Of dangerous d r u g s narcotics and marijuana -and a sex perversion allegedly forced upon a 17- year~ld Costa Mesa girl. The suspect. arrested by Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach officers, was identified as Robert C. Albright , 32, of 18862 Arbutus St .. Fountain Valley. Police asserted that the teenaged girl told them she was driving In the Costa Mesa area about I :30 a.m. when a car pulled alongside her and tried to force her auto off the road. In efforts to evade her attacker, sh! eventually ended up in Huntington Beach where the driver finally did (orce her off the road . The driver held a knife at her throat. and forced her to pcrfonn an act of sex perversion, she told officers. · A squad car patrolling the intersection of Yorktown Avenue and Brookhurst Street pulled up behind the vehicle during 'the alleged act, allowing the girl to nee, investigators reported . The car fled with police units from Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach giving chase until It was cornered 11t Harbor Boulevard and Warehouse Road In Costa Mesa , At the time of Albrlght's arrest, of. ricers allege thty found a quantit.y of marljui:ina and other drugs In the vehicle. Albright was booked into Huntingt.on Beach City Jail. -Drop all plans to enlarge airport facilities to accommodate additional jet planes. -Adopt a policy stating that during clear weather all incoming jets using the JLS approach :system shall fly at higher altitudes until they have cleared the residential areas and to disperse flights in the approach pattern :so that no one area is continuely afflicted. In a news release, Killon stated, "We cannot offer you (supervisors) a $40,000 engineering study to challenge the Parsons report; we cannot :supply you with a critical analysis or noise levels, nor . can we submit to you an officia l resolution from any local legislative body but we do have a proble m that must be recognized . . Killon said th is mor ning that the 2,200 families his group represents are "wor· ried about their children who attend schools under the flight path and the noise created by low flying jets." The supervisors will hold a public hear- ing on the Parsons report Ocl. 13. At th at time they will be confronted by the Newport Beach Anti Noise Com· mittee, the city of Newport Beach and other groups who oppose airport ex- pansion. The Parsons interim report, released last month, calls for a gradual increase in jet departures· from the airport over the next four years to a total ol 71. The airpcirt commiMion in a report to the supervisors opposed the recom· men;da~ion and suggested that jet fl ighfli be limited to present contract provisions with Alr West and Air California. Salinas Valley Pickets Return To Farm Chores SALINAS CAP ) -Strikers and strike foes both ended picketing o( major growers today and nearly S,000 workers were back on the job in the Salinas Valley and strawberry field!. The United. Farm Workers Organizing Committee halted picketing or 10 berry ·growers in» ·SaJiQJ1s1 and w.,tMinville areas who signed rec o l 'n'I t'I o·n agreements. UFWOC spokesman aid picketing operaUoos continued against 41 growers and shippers. Inter Harvell, the region's largest let. tuce shipper, resumed full opertalons when a citizens' committee opposing UFWOC ended pickeltng of the ..Jnter Harvest plant. Inter Harvest has 1igned an agreement with UFWOC. Counter picketing halted Its operaUon.s Monday but trucks were dif1patched from the plant Wednesday and Thur&day with police 1taUoned al the 1atei. VOL. 6l, Ho. 111, 4 SICTIONS, a ,. ...... n ues Boating for Birds? Pete. Reyes of Santa Ana works on the fonn for a 53-=foot ketch being built by McClatchie Marine in the firm 's Newport Beach yard. An artistic worker al the boatyard thought the upside down form had the look 0£ an eagle about it. So, he painted a bird's face on it. The face graces both sides of the form. Hurricane Ella Swir~ing Slowly . -. Onto-Gulf Coast BROWNSVILLE, Tex. (UPI) -Smalt but swift HUrricane Ella swirled 90-mile- an-hour whld!, torrential rain and high tides .today toward the coasts of Texas and Mexico. Thousands fled. The U.S. Weather Bureau said the &um- mer's fifth hurricane would hit the shoreline late·today south o( Brownsville. Ella picked up strength but slowed jt,, unusually speedy course across the Gulf of Mexico during the morning. "The center should move inland near or a little south of Brownsv ille before dark," the Weather Bureau said: The south Texas ~t.. had not Yfll recovered from Hurricane Celia, the most destructive storm in the state's history. It raked the shore and headed 250 miles inland 39 days ago. "I am coramed, you ain't kidding," :said T. W. Anderson of Corpus Chri.sti, Tex ., where Celia struck. killing II persans and call!ing a billion dollars damage. Ella churned through the guU al 18 miles an hour. At noon EDT, the storm 's center wu located near latitude 24.5 north and longitude 95.3 west or about 1~ miles east-southeast of Brownavllle. • Arabs Free One Planeload Of llostages; 258 Still Held From Wire Services Ali-1MAN, Jordan -Sixty joyful women and cblldren -still afraid for loved ones held hostage aboard three hijacked planes -were freed today by Arab guer- rillas to continue their journeys. Developments came in r a p i d · f i r e fashion as lhe kidnap story of the decade unfolded on a sun-scotched desert airfield and in the capital cities of thl!: world. The number of hostages threatened with extinction In bomb blasts scheduled now for 7 p.m. (PDT) Saturday f,.ight swelled to 258 with the birth overnight of an -American baby abj)ard10l}C jetliner. President Ricliard Nixon ordered arm- ed guards to 'fly on all U.S. airlines - foreign and domestic -begiMlng this Saturday. Leaders U1rougbout the world appealed to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) to free the 2M cap- tives, whether or not their ransom demands are met. . The PFLP wants imprisoned guerrilla5 in Israel and Europe. released in ex· change, Uberal aovernmcnts of Middle Eastern • ' states, meanwhile. were among those urging the PLFP not to carry out Its ter· rorist threats. Iraq and Syria branded the series of four hijackings as irresponsible and uhrevolutionary. · President Nixon has reportedly vetoed any possibility of direct mllitary in- tervention against the revolutionaries to free American captives. . Six-C-130 cargo planes are. deployed· a.t Inclrlll<, Turic:ey, however, about · one .hour's flying time .from lhe Jordan-Syria border, · Mlneuvets have placed' tbe-lJ.S. Sixth ·Fleet' in the Mediterranean neatb)t. ap. parently to provide support --; if neceu ary -in evacuating f re e d hostages. One radio broadcast from Beirut Lebanon, by the radical Central Com· mittee of lhe Palestine Resistance Move- ment. charged the U.S. I! preparing an invasion. "Close ranks in the face of this ad· vanclng peril,'' the group Implored. Optlml11m was spreading , however, In (See llLJACK, P11e I) 'Whitewash' Charged By~hi~os ( LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Some M"· lean-American leaden: were incensed to- day about what they believe will be • "whitewash" or Jaw officers in the cor· oner's Inquest in the death of newsman Ruben Salazar during rioting in East Lot Angeles. Moot 6( the Mexican-American spec- tators trooped out ol the inQuest room twice Thursday after denouncing hearing officer Norman·Pittluck as a "racist' and the testimony as prejudicial. Four women and five men were serving as a jury to determine whether Salazar's death during the violence which took two other lives and left more than $1 million damage was acCidental or "at the hands of another," that is, intentional. Any pro- secution is up to the district attorney. Salazar, news director or Spa nish- language televis ion station KMEX and columnist for the Lo:s Ange les Times died after a I lh inch wide. 91h long tear ga:s projectile was shot by a sheriff's deputy and struck his head. Officers said they fired the tear gas in- to the Silver Dollar Bar after they had a report of a man with a gun inside. Some 20 persons, including members o( a "blue.ribbon" committee from ·the Chicano community, walked out during the afternoon session when attorney-spec- tator Oscar Acosta shouted at Plttluck, "You're a disgrace to your profession." Acosta and the others were upset by the showing of a ~hcriff's department video tape wh ich depicted tile initial scenes of rock and bottle throwing and bleeding officers during the national Chicano moratotium parade and.rally. He said it was "not POiy irrelevant but See SALAZAR, Page !) Orange l\'eat•er Clouds will hide the sun while the ocean breeze cools things .Off along the Orange Coast th is. week- end. Temperatures will dip to 68,. while holding at 82 further inland. INSmE TODAY S u r f i n g enihusias4 from across the nation art honlna.'in on Huntington Beach whtrt . tht 1970 national champiOnshipt wiU be held next wetkt~Ste Sporu, Page 15. • · '""" . • ....... u.u ... lltll lf Mutwl ,.. It C•llftl'lll• 1 H•lleflf l 1ittwt 44 CMcllh•• I.Ip 11 Orfllft COllflf'I I ' CltHll1" n.~, •Hllilttnh tl•t• C.l'lk.I 11 111\>'lt I"~ 1• c....... ,, ._.. 1•1• °"'11 HtllcM f lfedl Mtftttt1 1•11 llfl'-•191 '"' • TtlWhoitti ti fllMIKI 1•11 ,......,.. U-lf ..__ lt WMlflfr • AM l ...... 1 11 W-•1 H"°' 1).11 Mtl!Mll 6 W1rloll ""'" 4-J "'-rrlffl L~ I WMll""" 11•JI 'Mtltnt1" I ' . --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- J IWI. Y PILOT s Fr/9.J, Sft,tembtt 11, 1970 f'ro• r.,e 1 HUACK ... Washlngtorr after 1 Congressional con- fereoct that negotiations to free the hostaaes will sucettd. Israeli Premier Golda Meir has main- tained a bard line, rdusini to qree to ,,... J,Ollll Arab guerrillu. "Are we to re.lease these people 1n some sort of ceremony or other so they can come back and reput their acta?" she Slid, her voice bitter with anger. Souroes in Jero..salem indicated she may be forced to go back do:wzi. The PFLP, meanwhile, freed 60 of ttfi women and children first removed from the planes today and returned passports. 'Ibey ~·ere to be flown to Nicosia. on the Island of Cyprus, by Jordanian Airlines. Dipk>malie sources said It was un- dttslood the remaining people im- prisoned at the Intercontinental Hotel in Amman would also bt freed. Too&h coodiUons existed at Dawson's Field where the TWA, BOAC and Swissair jetliners are parked, but an International ~ Cros.s team was doing its besL "It is not e1actly a luxurious maternity home," said Red Cross aides who delivered the baby born to the uniden- tified young American woman during the n· ht. 'f:vera1 women abom'd the lanes are also pregnant and the~ Crosa included rubber pants and diapers with a shipment of 1,000 prepackaged meals and medical auppll ... PoUowing the Washington conference, Sen. MJte Mwfleld said the Preafdtnt's tactics ha,. complete Senate 111pport. "'I think the 1overnment has done everything H pauibly could," be said. 'Ille onltr plociag ~federal al"lla ·-an U.S. fllabls -al I 13 per-panenger b:r -offers other deadly possibilities. acCQrding to some. Najeeb Halaby, chairman 0£ Pan American Airways, said his line will cooperate but the former FAA ad- ministrator said they must be carefully trained and commanded by pilots. Once opposed to c:arrying arms themselves, the jetliner captains are no longer so reluctant, accordilUI: to one spokesman. /- "This is a new league we are in," ht explained. "Earlier hijackings were the work o! JOO percent losers, loners, kooks, men who had not made ii," he continued. "Now there's a new twist -the organized use of hijack techniques for in· t.ernatlonal political purposes." RePortiD& lrom DawlOll Field, United Presa IntemaUonal correspondent Ray· mond Wilkinson described one. Abu Ezz, wearing a Lenin badge on his camouflage uniform, gestured with his Russian AK47 automatic rifle at the planes shimmering under the 100 degree.- plus desert sun. "They are learning something," the PLFP chieftain said proudly, addinc his revolulloa I.I beinl lalllllt to lilt ~ bostlgn;, -~ !. And the world waits to 1ee bow the erim lesson ends. * * *' M~ . . CI . 1n1ster arms U.S. Would Take Gentile Captives CIIlCAGO (UPI) -The Rev. Paul Lindstrom, l>ead of the IU!member Ille Pueblo Committee, said today be hM learned the United Stata government wou1d consider accepUng the rtleue o, GenU!es held by Arab Hijacken in ex.· change for captive Arab terrorists, leav .. 1ng Jewish-American passengers behind. Lindstrom spoke at an early-morning news conference with Rabbi Israel Trachtman, father of a JG-ye&r-old boy held among passengers on a Trans World Airlines Plane hijacked last Sunday to a desert airfield in J ordan. In Washington, State Deparlmen\ o(· ficials •lressed that the UnJted States was seeking the release of all the pusengers. But they could n o t calagorically e:rclude the possibility that · a deal might have to be reached whereby the majority of passengers would be freed but that those of Jewish faith might be left behind. DAllY PILOT . ...,., ··-· "-'-... ,11 c ..... ... l"JllA#OI CO.UT f'U•\.1$141140 COM,AN't ...... ""· ""••' ,,.,,_, '"" l'IOl>loM'ltf' Jt~k •· Cu•••• \lit. P'n:~IMrlt .,..-c;.:.,..el Mt-ti' llio11u1 ICee~il l.•ltw T\ti"'ltt A. M111pt.iftt MIM9"'9 l[dl!tr l ic.li1r4 P. N1tt S.UUI Or-Co.int' (dl!tr """" C:llflt MCW ! DI Wt1! I•• $! .... I N'""°'l ltt~ll: 1111 Well 8tlboll loilll'H_, ~ •-.c:•11 m ,,_, ,,_.~ M1111tloof"" lffcll: U•» ltHll l:i..Wlltrd &.11 (kfnfl'I": Z$ ,..,,II •I C1m1M ... I Newport Skyline Law11er Appeals Arabs to Plead For Sirhan Life? BErRUT, Lebanon (AP) -A lawy\ r fo r Sirhan Sirhan called on all the ~X governments today to intervene with the Uni ted States to apare·the life or the con- victed assassin of Sen. Robert F. Ken- nedy . '"The Arab governments and people must make a concerted effort to help Sirhan," George Shibley told a news co~ ference here. Sirhan's chief attorney Is Luke AfcKissack. Shibley, who is from Lo's Angeles, is his usociate. Shibley said he Would not prm Palesti- nian guerrillas to see.k lhe releue of Sirhan as part of a deal for lhe freedom of 280 hostages the guerrillas hold on a desert airstrip in north Jordan. The .Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, which is holding the hostages, repeatedly has denied it would include Sirhan's freedom in its terms for releas- ing the hostages. Shibley said Arab individuals and associations in the United States were unable to render Sirhan any assistance ''because they are terrified by the FBI." for n!lease of more than 200 passengers held hostage in Jordan. The State Department d e t a 1 n ri d Sirhan's mother, Mary, in New York and revoked the passports of two attorntys traveling with her. Ritter said Sirhan demanded lo talk f() a prison official about the situation and had to be subdued after being informed it was a state holiday, California Admission Day, and no t.op authority was im· mediately available. Nelson said the tear gas was used because Sirhan could have hurt himself "they way he was acting." He "could use the fork against himself or be a>Uld break pieces off the metal tray and use them as i;i cutting instrument," Nelson explained. * * * Sirhan's Mother New high rise buildings near Newport Beach's Fashion Island create an entirely new skyline for the city. This view is from Bluewater Drive in the Harbor View Hills section of Corona de! Mar. Shell of building et 1eft is new Irvine Company financial building. Next to it is Avco Building. Two identicaJ buildings are original pair in financial section of He said Sirhan's lawyers planned another appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court to change lhe death sentence passed by a California court on Sirhan last year. But it might take a year to have the appeal filed, he added. Sues Government For Restraint Newport Center. Space Station Students Leave 90-day Capsule Four college sludeols ste pped out of a .space station simulator in Hunl.ington Beach today saying they craved a shower and sunshine after spending their sum· mer vacations confined to a 40-foot-long, metal cylinder. The men, all graduate students, .were greeted with a handshake by Neil A. Annstrong as they climbed, out of the simulator. He called the oo.day ex- periment "a beautiful success." Armstrong, the first man on the moon, is now an official of the Natiooa! Aeronautics and Space Administration 's office or Advanced Research and Technology, sponsor of the e:rperiment at McDoMell Douglas Astronautics ~­ pany, The crewmen conducting l h e regeneraUv life support experiment were John~ Hall, 25, of Portland, Ore.; Wilson Wort, 2.1, of Glen Oaks, N.Y.; Terry Donlin1, 31, Los Angeles and Stephen G. Dennis, 22, of Bradenton, Fla. 'Jbe men wefe pronouced in the "pink of health" after a two and a half hour physical examination. The four lived off their recycled body wut.es -oiygen reclaimed from the carboo dioxide they exhaled and water Nurse Accused Of 1966'Murder In County Jail A former Durse accused in the murder ()f an elderly patient at an Ora11ge sanitarium has lost her long battle to pre- vent her return to Oruge County. Mrs. Jeananne Balch Chernik, 56, also fl:nown as J. Patricia Best, is today Jn Orang'e O>unty jail awaiting the settlng of court action o• charges that she murdered 84-year-old Mrs. Margaret Tagliabue on Nov. 9. 1966. Mrs. Chemik was transported from Manitowoc County Jal! in f\1adison, Wis. by Orange police officers after Wisconsin Gov. Warren Knowles signed the C:(· tradition order requested last month by Gov. Ronald Reagan. She had been held by Wisconsin authorities since last June. Mrs. Chemik is accused of causing the death of Mrs. Tagtiabue by piercing the elderly woma1 's urinary bladder with a sharp instrument. She was employed as nurse by Leonard's Sanitarium . 1240 Stewart Drive, at the time of the in· cidenl Sanitarium officials fired Mts. Chernik one week later. Jt was learned today that Mrs. Chernik has abandoned her earlier intention lo appeal against the extradition proceed- ings in the Wisconsin Supreme Court. Drunk Gives Up, Gets Neiv Room A ZS.year-old Costa f\1esa man sur· rendered to police Thursday night, ac· companied to headquarters by a friend . "I want to tum myself in," he said, but ll was no dramatic desperado-lype deal. He was booked on suspicloo of being drunk Jn public and given 1 bed in the jail. Disease Fight Set WASHINGTON (UPI) -The House has voted to authorize the spendlng or $165 million during lM next tw() years to htlp the states fight polf(), dlphlhrria, measles, mumps, whooping c o u g h 1 sypblllis, aonorrhea and tubl!rculosls. regenerated from their urine and perspiration. ... During the test, no water, food, air or spare parts 4!ntered the cylinder. They dined on specially packaged, space-styled concentrated foods. Dr. Karl lfoughton. a physician and chief engineer at McDonnell Douglas's Biotechnology and Power Department, said the life support system and crew functioned so effectively that the test could have been continued beyond the scheduled 90 days. "This was the first Iong-tenn test of a completely closed ecological system," Houghton said. "It demonstrates that more sophisticated equipment 1n the future will be able to support the long- duration operatil)tlj under. CIXlsideration ·"" .... j~ l!Wl1f1 ~,~.; Tahoe Icy Grave For 100 Victims Says Coast Guard TAHOE CITY (AP) -The cool beauty of Lake Tahoe's waters provide a fa vorite resort for millions of vacationers -but an icy grave for at least 100 human bodies preserved forever in its depths. Each year, one or two persons v_anish mysteriously into the lake following boating or swimming accidents, says Howard Adkins, e:recutivt officer of the U.S. Coast Guard here. The bodies are never round . Adkins says usually when a person drowns, gases build up and are trapped inside the body. They act as a buoy and float the victim to the surface. But in this mile-high sierra lake, wat.ers are so icy this process does not happen. The bodies are suspended at various depths where they r emain forever, Adkins says. Chilly, almost freezing temperatures prese rve the flesh. The cenl<'r of this 26-mile long lake is still, "'ilh almosl no current that could wash the bodies ashore, Adkins said. "We call them floaters . Everything re- mains intact. Even clothing. It can go on elemally. Sometimes fish pick the bodies clean and all you have is a skeleton," he said. Sometimes the bodies are snagged by fishermen . At least 100 who vanished this way dur· Ing the Jasl generation are listed as miss· ing persons. neither dead nor ali\'C. ••\Ve cnn nol say lhey drowned unless someone signs 11 statement sayirlg he saw it." \Vhat many believe to be the scene or the perfect \'acation Adkins says could be the scene of the perfect crime. ··vou could take the body out there and dump it and no one would ever find ii." About hS:lt a dozen drown in the Jake each year but most are found. When a piece of a body or clothing Is discovered in the lake. it is investigated by Cf>roners to see if any of these cases can be closed. "lt'!I all so very mysterious." said Adkin s. "I just don't know how to describe lt." From Page 1 SALAZA:R ... prejudlclal" ln a hearing into I.he death of Salazar. Esteban Torres, president of the Congress of Mexican-American unity, a coalition of 300 community groups, said the hearing was a whitewash. "\\le are not going to tolerate Jt 8nd stand there and be insulted !his way," said Tor~s. who organized the blue-ri~ bon group. Comic to Launch Artists' Forum In Beach Sunday Comedian Jonathan Winters will help launch Prospectus-Art '70, a showing of more than 700 works by leading California artists, when the show opens Sunday night on lhe Huntington Center Mall in Huntington Beach. Promoters of the charity art show, bill· ed as one of the largest of its type in Orange County, said Winters will pro-· bably appear during the preview opening of the show at 6 p.m. Sunday. Admission to the Sunday night preview is SS per person, with the proceeds going to establish art scholarships on a yearly basis. Prospect.us-Art '70 will be opened fr~ to the public starting Monday and run· ning through Sept. 25 on the mall Edtniet"Avenue and Beach Boulevard. Tbe charity event is co-sponsored by the city of Huntingtoq Beach, Golden West College and the H'l"tinaton Center shopping Center. Jason Wong, director of the Long Beach Museum of Art, Js coordinating the Huntington Beach show. Three judges will award $2,500 in prizes to the top artists in the show. One $400 award will be handed to the artist whose painting earns the most votes of the public attending Sunday's cpening. Money rollected Sunday night will be Biven to lnternalional Art Scholarships, an organization of business and pro- fessional persons interested in promotion of the fine arts. IAS will hand.le annual scholarship arrangements. Sirhan was confined in a Death Row isolation cell today after being subdued by tear gas during a temper tantrum in \l'hich he threw food at a guard. The outburst came when the 26-year--0ld pr isone.r refused to give up his tray, fork and spoon after a Wednesday afternoon meal, Warden Louis S. Nelson reported Thursday. Sirhan was given a sedative and removed to a cell without access to newspapers, radio or television. Prison business manager Irving Ritter said Sirhan apparently had become upset over reports or his mother's unsuccessrul attempt to go to the Middle East in ron- nection with airliner hijackings by Palestinian guerrillas. The hijackers reportedly at one time demanded Sirhan's freedom in exchange Statue Looks Like t1ie Devil LAS VEGAS. Nev. (AP) -A 12- foot nude statue of Lucifer facing a schoolyard IS feet away must be covered up or taken away -or its owner will be jailed, City Atty. Earl Gripentrog has ruled. Gripentrog said Thursday the horned and hoofed figure, stored in an apartment house parking lot, violates the city's obscenity laws. He said owner Pau l Friis must "do something to it or I'll have no choice but to lock him up." · Elementary school P r i n c i p a 1 Galen Good called police about the statue after noticin g his students, many of them girls, bunched at a fence, studying the figure. "That horrible face and the rest of it -I can imagine the concept they are developing ," Good said. NEW YORK fUPll -Mrs. ~lary, Sirhan. mother of the assassin of Sen. Robert F. KeMedy, &ued the federal government today in an effort to force the State Department to allow her to travel to Jordan. A judge denied her re· quest for a restraining order which would have allowed her to leave immediately. U.S. District Court Judge John F. X. f\-1cGohey set Sept. 15 for hearing on the entire matter. Mrs. Sirhan, mother of Sirhan B. Sirhan, who is awaiting execution at San Quentin Prison in California, asked that her son, Adel, her lawyer, and an in· vestigator be permitted to travel with her. The suit, filed by the American CivU Liberties Union Foundation, an affiliate of the American Civil Liberties Union, also asked $200,000 in punitive damages for each of the four who the S t a t e Department refused to aliow to leave the country Tuesday. The State Department refused the rour permission to leave under regulations which allow such refusal when it could in· terfere with the national security or the conduct of U.S. foreign policy. The ACLU suil said the State Depart· men! regulations were illegal because the government cannot refuse American citizens or resident aliens, as are Mrs. Sirhan and her son, pennission to leave the country e:rcept jn time of war or when criminal action is pending against those who want to leave. Mrs. Sirhan said in the suit that she sought to leave the country to confer with the Palestine Liberation Front about whether demands for the release of Arab guerrillas in exchange for airline passengers being held in Jordan included lhe release of 'Sirhan B. Sirhan from San Quentin. She said she also wanted to discourage the guerrillas from harming the airline passengers. The lawyer and investigator involved are Charles Luke McKissack and Michael A. McCowan. 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Stoek.8 JEN CENTS Astronaut Welcomes Students From Capsule By RUDI NIEDZIELJ;KI 01 Hit O•llY l"llOI 51'11 Astronaut Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon, provided a surprise welcome this morning to four ~en who had just spent 90 days in a 1pace simulation capsule at McDonnell- Douglas Corp., Huntington Beach. Annstrong greeted the men -John Hall, Wilson Wong, Terry Donlon and Stephen Dennis -at 6:01 a.m. just as they eme"rged from ~e..sealed capsule for their firat breath of fresh earth air. "I, more than-most of us here, a]> preciate what it's like to be cooped UI\." smiled Armstrong, adding that he was glad to rejoin the world after his voyage to the moon. The crewmen. all graduate students, were equally happy. 'nley had been testing life support systems which may ultimately be used for extended stays in outer space. "Today we're all in sort of an exalt1nt glow," remarked crew chief Hall, 25. He added that It was not a foregone con- clusion that the test would be suc- cessfully completed. During the early weeks of ijle ex--. perlmerit, tntlllY cf the systems had broken down, causing both crewmen and engineers to think "that maybe we would have a succeaslul 31'.kiay run." One of the items to experience break down was -the water recycling system which left them with buckets of waste water -both in buckets and en the cabin floor -until they managed to fix it. ''I personally thought a lot about travel- ing," ·said Hall when queried about his mental preoccupations. "I had a Sierra Club calendar with me and every week I turned it over to see what kind of picture it had." • "What about ·girls!" asked one newsman during the press conference which followed their release from the chamber. Replied crewm.n Wong, 13, sheepishly, "Well, i! we had them on board, we wouldn't be out today." For their work in maintaining the cabin equipment and ~rving as guinea pigs for scientists. the men were paid a regular $1.611 hourly salary plus overtime and a daily bonus .. An addjtioqal payment of $2,000 will be theirs for suceessfully com· ~leUng the 90 days. "It wasn't enough," de c I are d "astronaut" Derinis, 22. But crew chief Hall said it was_ an. adequate return. He added, however.· "l would have to say \ ra s ro ea ea State Hints Coastal Freeway May Be Junked By L. PETER KRIEG Of !hi Dl llf fl'Jlol lllll The Pacific Coast Freeway may not be built at all, a State Division of Highways official disclosed today. William Hashimoto, deputy district director of the Highway Division 7, said today the department is considering the possibility of eliminating the entire freeWay from the future state highway systein. He said a decision on the fate o! the controversial super.highway will be made by top departmental officials within the next six months. He indicated that problems generated by the many cities along the proposed route, like Newport Beach, which doesn't want the road, have led the department to think about killing plans for it. He said planning for the section through Newport, itself, has already come to a halt He said that the Newport segment, even under cu rrent policy, would never be built at aU if Newport doesn't want it. Hashimoto said there is no need to spend the time "rescinding" the current freeway agreement. a project spearhead· ed now by a citizens' group; he said a Jet· ter from the city council would do. The. state hailed all design work on the freeway section through Newport Beach follwing the introduction of a bill by (See FREEWAY, Pase Z) Cities League Election Deadlocl{edfor New Head Members ol the executive committee or the Orange County League of Cities deadlocked 7 to 7 Thursday night over the election of a president · for the coming year. Committee members in two secret ballots· were unable to break a tie vote between incumbent President J a c k Green, Huntington Beach City Coun- Beac h District To Vote on Neiv Bond I ncreases Voters in the Huntington Beach City School District will say "yes" or "no" Tuesday to a proposed increase in the in· terest rate on $4.75 million in school con- itruction bonds. Twice before the district has narrowly missed passing the interest rate needed to sell the bonds and build new schools in the fast growing district. The third time is more likely to be a charm thanks to a California Supreme Court ruling eliminating the need of a two-thirds majority to pass the increase. A simple majority is now suf ficient to do the job. tr passed, the interest rate will jump from fiv·e pen::cnt to seven percent. Voters a year ago approved the $4.75 million in bonds, but the district has not been able to sell them at five percent. A proJ>O.$al for a seven pe~cen interest rate lost by 40 votes last Fe and by 42 votes in June. Both of th elections were combined with other issues. This time the election stands by itself. According to school figures, the two percent Interest increase will cost the owner of a $30,000 home $4.75 in one year. School officials note thal the school district population has increased from 1.600 children in 1962-63 to 6,050 this year and will go to an estimated 8,500 in 1972- 7!1. There are seven schools in I.he district. Passage of the interest rate al)(! sale of the local bOnds will also make S9.5 million in state construction funds · av&llable to the district. cilman, and Ralph Clark, Anaheim coun- cilman and a candidate for supervisor from the Fourth District in the November eleclion. The committee members finally voted to delay election of officers until the Oct. 8 meeting. That session will be held jointly with the city of Westminster to celebrate the city's tooth birthday. ·Previous to Thursday night's deadlock a nominating committee had named Gree.11 to suoceed himself and Clark to be re-elected to the post of vice president. The league approved a proposal sub- mitted by a committee headed by Mayor Ed Hirth of Newport Beach that all governing bodies of regional agencies be 100 percent elected officials. The proposal also demands that all meetings of such regional agencies by held within the territory over which the agency has jurisdiction. Hirth's committee had been studying a proposal that all ·mayors be directed elected by the voters and be salaried. The Newport mayor said that more time "'as needed to study that idea and that recognition of the added burden of regional government participation would help to of(set opposition to increased salaries for mayors. Huntington Beach voters will decide Nov. 3 on a proP.Osal to elect a full time mayor with a y~arly salary of $17,000. Fountain Valley and Costa Mesa city councils have both passed resolutions op- posing regional agencies established by legislative mandate. Flag Football Set in Va lley Young boys who want to play Oag fool· ball in Fountain Valley must sign up from 9 a.m. to noon. Saturday. in the comniunity center, 10200 Slater Ave. The league is open to boys in the third through eighth grades in Fountain Valley. Scrimmages start Sept. 19 and league play starts Sept. 26. The programls sponsored by the city parks an~ recreation departmenL DAIL't "lL.01 ""'"" ., Liii l"IJYfle Summe r at Slater Lake It all comeS to an end Monday when school starts. But. t1.ntil then, these youngsters are enjoying the fleeting days of summer. Jelf Spargur, 6, feeds the . ' durks: John Gorlack , 12, hunts (and finds) craw- dads, and Stanley Hurst, 61 sails his boat. Police Capture Valley Beach Women Push f or Tax P roposal Rate S uspect in S ex Crimes Police early today chased down and captured a Fountain Valley photographer wtlo they charged with kidnapping. possession of dangerous d r u g s narcotics and marijuana -and a sex perversion allegedly forced upon a 17- year-0ld Costa Mesa girl. The suspect. arrested by Fountain Valley and HuntlngtOn Beach officf:rs, was identified as Robert C. Albright. 32, ol 18862 Arbutus St,, Fountain Valley. Police asserted that the teenaged girl • told them she was driving in the COsta Mesa area about I :30 •·Rl· when a car pulled alongside her and tried to force her auto off the road . In efforts to evade her attacker. she' eventually ended up in Huntington Beach where the driver finall,y did force her o(f lhe road. ' The driver held a knife at her throat, and forced her to perform a11 1ct of sex perversion. she told officers. A squad car patrolling the intersection of Yorktown Avenue and Brookhurst Street pulled up behind the vehicle during the alleged act, allowing tl1e girl to nee, investigators reported . The car fled with police units from Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach ' . ·giving chase until it was cornered at Harbor Boulevard and Warehouse Road in Costa· Mesa. At the ume or Albrlght'• arrest, of· fiei!i-.'J allege they found a quaritity of marijuana and other drugs in the vthicle. I Albright was . booked into Hunlinllcn ~CityJ1U. . ' " • The Huntington Beach League of Women Voters has thrown Ila suppcrt behind Tuesday's election in the Fountain Valley School District to· continue the district's ,2.99 tax rate. Voters will go to the polls from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. at each of the district's 13 achoo ls. The dislrlct covers most of, Fount.Jn Valley and part o! HUntlngton Beach east of Beach BouJevard and north. of Adams Avenue. If the district loses the tax election the rate will drop to Sl.35. The tax proposal' calls for an indefinite extension or lhe $2.99 rate approved by voters five years ago. • ----. ----~---"""'-· ~ now·1r I were asked' to do another 90 days I would say ··no.' " Today thE: four men will travel to UCLA for medical tesll and then wiJl presumably take deserved vacations before ,resuming classes. This morning, they were treated to a. heavy breakfast, including inch-thick steaks. It was a welcome departure from their nonnal freeze-dried meals. Hall , however, added jokingly that the first thing he· had to get his hands on when being released was a dill plckle. • ine 258Remain Prisoners; Others F1·ee From Wirt Services AMMAN, Jordan -Arab terrorisll have abruptly canceled a 'n-hour deadline on the fate or 258 ho.stages aboard three jetliners parked in the scorching desert 45 miles from here. No new deadline was set for the threatened bombing of the planes and slaughter of the hostages, whlch ,bad originally been tcheduled . for 7 p.m. (PDT) Satitrday. . The announcement -apparently forc- ed by world opinion -was madt in Washin(!;ton by ~Slate Department late this morning. Developments had continued today Jn rapid·Ore fashion as the ~dnap atory of the decade unfolded at Dawson's Field and in capital cities around the globe. The number of hostages had swelled overnight to 258, with the birth of an American baby aboard one hijacked plane. Joyful women amt children -1till afraid for loved ones held aboard the planes -were freed earlier by the guer- rilla Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.· President Richard Nixon ordered arm- ed guards to fly on all U.S. airlines - foreign and domestic -beginning this Saturday. Leaders throughout the world appealed to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) to free the 258 cap- tives, whether or not their ransom demands are met. 1 The PFLP wants imprisoned guerrillas • in Israel and Europe released jn ez· change. Liberal governments of Middle Eastern states, meanwhile, were among those urging the PLFP not' to carry out its ter· rorist threats. .. Iraq and Syria branded the series or four hijackings as irresponsible and unrevolutlgnafy. . President Nixon has reportedly vetoed any possibility of direct military in· tervention against the revolutionaries to free American captives. Six C-130 cargo planes are deployed at Incirlik. Turkey, however, about one hour's flY.ing time fro~ tbe Jordan-Syria border. Maneuvers have placed the U.S. Si:xtb (See HIJACK, Pa1e I) ., Weatlaer Clouds will hide the sun while the ocean breeze cools things off along the Orange Coast this week· end . Temperatures will dip to 68, while holding at 82 further inland. INSIDE TODAY S u r f i n g enthusiast! from across the nation are honing in on Huntiii.aton Bia.ch where th• 1970 national championships will be held next weekend •• See Sports, Page 15. l lrll19 I Mn1" »1' ... 11., 1t MvlMI '""" lt C1Ulln!l1 1 NttltNI Iii ... , 4-t t111Ck1,,. u, 11 °'"'" .c-ir . • Clt1t.1lled 2'·U 1tttf11,_,.. lt-Jf (tflllel • 21 ' 1¥1¥11 ,.,,... • ,. c,.,...,. u ... ,,. '"'' O.Jtfl Nttice. t lltdl ...... l•ll lfl'9rl.. "'" ' T.i.vltlllt II 1'"'-11(' 1•11 TIIMtm 84' llll'IM-11 WM...... t A.ftR l.lflfwf lJ ._,, ...... )).\J MlllMll ' Wtf'N Htwl .. , IM!'tlltt llttl\MI I W......., 1141 _..,. . I • I • • ! DAILY PILOT H Frld.y, S.pltmbor II. 1910 JSJ llnits FHm Page J Council Delays Building Hearing HIJACK •.• Fleet in the Mediterranean nearby, ap- parenUy to provide support -If necessary -in evacuating f re e A hostages. One radio broadcast from Beirut Lebanon, by the radical Central Com· mittee of the Palestine Reslstance Move- ment, charged the U.S. is preparing an invasion. Two pleas for apartmept developments in Huntington Beach failed to impress the city council this week. The William Lyon Development Com· i:any asked the council to overturn plan- ning commission denial for 151 apartment units proposed for the north side of Holland Drive. about 180 feet east or Beach Boulevard. On a 3-3 lie vole councilmen failed to reach a decision Tuesday night and ct1n- tinued the public hearing to Sept. 21 and the retum of Councilman A1 Coen. Another apartment plea, for 100 units In the Huntington Harbour area, was defeated 4-2 by the council. On this one, Lincoln Property Company of Da1las, Tex., had asked to extend ex- isting apartments to the edge of Algon- quin Slreet. Surrounding homeowners in both areas opposed the apartment proposals. Hun- tington Harbour residents wanted no more apartments in th~i area and more than 200 residents of t e Dutch Haven Tract felt apartmen would throw too much traffic on Holland Drive and other residential streets. Both developers said commercia1 zon- ing existing on the two pieces of property C.Omic to Launch Artists' Forum In Beach Sunday Comedian J onathan Winters will help launch Prospectus-Art '70, a showing of more than 700 works by leading California artists, when the shoW' opens Sunday night on the Huntington Center 1.-fall in Huntington Beach. Promoters of the charity art show, bill· ed as one of the largest of its type in Orange County, said Winters will pro- bably appear during the preview opening of the show at 6 p.m. Sunday. Admission to the SU11day night preview ts '5 per person, with the proceeds going to establish art scholarships on a yearly basis. : Prospectus-Art '1'I will be opened free to the .PUblic starting Monday and run- ning through Sept. 25 on the mall at Edinger Aveiue and Beach Boulevard. The charity event is co-sponsored by the cjty of Huntineton Beach, Golden West CoJlep and the HunUniton Center Shopping c.nter. Jason Wong, director of the Long 'Beach Museum of Art, is coordinating the Hunlington Beach show. . Three judges will award $2,500 in prizes to the top artL!ts in the show. One $400 award will be handed to the artist whose painting earns the most votes of the public attending Sunday '! opening. Money collected Sunday night will be given to International Art Scholarships, an organization of business and pro-- fesslonal per.!IOns interested in promotion of the fine arts. IAS will haod.le annual &ebolarsbip arrangementl. Mia, Andre Join In Wedded Bliss LONDON (AP) -1ttia Farrow, the willowy film actress, and Conductor An- dre Previn, the father of her twin sons, wece married Thursday in a London church. A spokesman for the couple announced today they were married Jn Rosslyn Jliil Chapel, a Unitarian church in the fashionable Hampstead suburb. in a ceremony attended by the mothers of both :rtfiss Farrow and Previn. DAILY PILOT 0'1AHG~ COAn l'U•L1~1NG COMl'AN'f floherf N. W11d l'tftloJ111! INI l'OJD111ft..,. J1tk "-· Curlty Viet l"rnl!Hnr .~a ~~"'"' M~11191r Thorn11 K11vil Eoil1>r 1'horn1t A. M urp~j"' M•~•tlnt Eo""' Alo" Dirli" Wal o •• ,... c.ounrr IEd ••or . Alhtrf W. lth1 Auoci.11 EO•\or H•llri11tto11 le.ell Offic• 1117S lttth l oul1w1rd M1ifi111 Add••!•: P.O. 101 1,0, 926'4& • Otllt:r Offlt" .... , ..... lltJtJI: 222 +-or.II Av..,.,., Co11t """" no WC.:! lltw SlfHI N.-r1 1111.:1': "11 Wnl lt1bo• l :iulcwtrf Stn cim-11; J05 Horlll l!I Ct ll'llM 11111 I was worUlless to them. Councilmen George f.fcCracken and Ted Bartlett supported both apartment pleas while Councilmen Jack: Green, Jer- ry Matney and Mayor Donald Shipley op- posed both apartment requests. Councilwoman Norma Gibbs was the swing vote as she opposed lhe Harbour apartments, but supported the Lyon re- quest on the grounds that it was the only possible development for the land. From Page J fREEWAY ... Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R. Newpon Beach) 'to .kill • stretch of the route from Huntington Beach lhrough Corona del Mar. Badham's bill cleared the Assembly but died in Senate committee. "Close ranks in the face of this 1d· vancing peril," the group implored. Optimism was spreading , however, In Washington after a Congressional con· rerence that negotiations to free the hostage.s will succeed. Israeli Premier Gokla Meir has maln· tained a hard line, refusing to agree to free 3,000 Arab guerrillas. "Are we to release these people In some sort of ceremony or other so the y can come back and repeat tteir acts?'' she said, her voice bitter with anger. Sources in Jerusalem indicated she may be forced to go back down. The PFLP, meanwhile, {reed 60 of 116 women and children first removed from j.he planes today and returned passports. They were to be flown to Nicosia, on the Island of Cyprus, by Jordanian Airlines. Diplomatic sources said it was un· derstoocl the remaining people Im· prisone d at the Intercontinental Hotel in Amman would also be freed. Newport Mayor Ed Hirth, following a meeting with state officials Thursday, first disclosed that work on the Newport stretch had been halted and the state would not proceed without the city's blessings. Boating for Birds1' Tough conditions existed at Dawson's Field where the TWA, BOAC and Swissair jetliners are parked, but an Tnternational Red Cross team was doing its best. "They told me the st.ate will not force a freeway down the throat of any city that does not want one," he said. It is because so many cities along the route don 't want the freeway that the slate is considering Ul,I!' action, Hashimoto confirmed. Pete Reyes of Santa Ana works on the fonn for a 53-foot ketch being built by McClatchie Marine in the firm 's Newport Beach yard. An artistic worker at the boatyard thought the upside do\vn fonn had the look of an eagle about it. So, he painted a bird's face on it. The face graces both sides of the form. "It is not exactly a luxurious maternity home,'' said Red Cross aides whe> delivered the baby born to the uniden· tified young Am erican woman durlng the night. Several communities have b e e n fighting jt, and one, the city of Venice, succeeded in g~tting legislalion passed in the recent session of the state legislature that killed the-freeway within its city limits. The community of Beverly flllls con· tinues its protest similar to that of Newport Beach. Orange Coast Students -- Responsible for Dress Court Dismi sses !=ontempt Charge · On CSCF Prof Several women aboard the planes are also pregnant and the Red Cross included rubber pants and diapers with a shipment of 1,000 prepackaged meals and medical supplies. Following the Washington conference, Sen. Mike Mansfield said the President's tactics have complete Senate su pport. "I think the government has done everything it possibly could,'' he said. The Newport mayor is currently preparing a preliminary report <>n the en· tire matter <>f Newport Beach transporta4 tion that likely will be brought up at a council "study session" Monday af. ternoon. Hirth has been plugging for an overall and complete study or future traffic- needs in Newport Beach. In effect, he says, it would be "starting all over from the beginning." He said he does not know whether Newport needs a freeway or not, and that a comprehensive study "of some kind" &hould be undertaken by the City Council. Hirth 1aid Haig Ayanian the division director, and Hashimoto agreed with thls and said all the city need do to stop work on the freeway, forever, 1£ it wants, is to have the City Council write the state DJviJion of Highways saying JO. The disclosure means that efforts: by a newly-formed C I ti z e n s ' Coordinating Comm.Jttee to circulate petili<>ns that would force the city to rescind its present freeway agreement are likely not necessary. The city had adopted a route for the new hghway east from Bayside drive, to the Corona del Mar boundary. The Division of Highways, adopted route, through Newport, has the freeway traveling immediately adjacent to the present Pacific Coast Highway, taking valuable commercial real estate along the way. -4>1.>ponents of the route contend the road will "cut the city in half," and thus ruin its character. By GEORGE LEIDAL Of t111 D1!1Y .. lltt Stiff High school students along the Orange Coast for the most part will share the burden of responsibility for their dress with their parents. With the exception of Tustin Uniop High School District which adopted a slightly revised parent-teacher·ad- mlnistration formulated code, and San Juan Capistrano Unified whose board-ap- proved code was drawn by parents and students last spring, most Orange Coast districts have abandoned dress axles. Newport·Mesa Unified dropped tis dress c:ode in the middle of last year, ac, cording to Dr. Norman Loats, associallon superintendent for instructional opera- tiorus. - ••we more or Iw assume that dress is tM responslbilliy of the home," Loats said. "In indMdual cases, however, we may have to tell a student 'we'd like you to g<> home and dre,ss . more ap- propriately,' should he appear at school dressed outrageously." Districts abandoning formal, restrictive dress do's and don'ts have for the most part adopted short policy statements noting parents' responsibility for dress. All districts interviewed said they r~ qu ire that shoes be worn for health and safety reasons. Laguna Beach wh ich is continuing a gurvey of parent, teacher and student at· titudes about dress restrictions as adopted "one short paragraph" con· stituting its dress code, Superintendent William Ullom said. • •• u,.1 ,,.,. .. Broke, In De bt, Jobless Singer Eddie Fisher (right), accompanied by his attorney, RO<lngo Otero Suro. arrives at lf.S. District Court in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Fisher testified Thursday during bankruptcy proceedings that he was a happy-go-lucky star who left business detaUs to paid profes· sionals and woke up one morning to find himself broke, in debt and out ol work. He has been living in Puerto Rico since tbe end of July. The "code" outlines students' three ap- pearance responsibilities to himself, the school 's image and to the community at large. "The matter of dress and grooming is best determined in the home," the Laguna Beach district policy notes. Dr. Ullom believes the new policy will Jessen the strain between teachers and students compared with the former strict code, although the new code will require more counseling with parents. Scott Flanagan, assistant superin· tenden( of Huntington Beach Union High SChool Dbtrict, said the board adopted a brief dress policy statement JB.St spring. Desaribing it as "simple," Flanagan notes that it states that a school is a place for learning and that parents are re3ponsible for sending students lo school in clothing that does not jeopardize or im· pair the health, safety and welfare of themselves or <>lher students. As Jong as hair is clean and not hazardous by reason of being too long for a student who's around machinery for ex- ample, any length is acceptable, Flanagan said. "I believe the overwhelming majority of our students will exercise good judg- ment," Glanagan said. Group pressures will bring the few who won't into line, he added. Orange Coast Community College has not had a dress code for the past threeyears, Dean Joseph Kroll said. Superior Court Judge Kenneth Williams has dismissed contempt proceedings against a Cal State Fullerton professor accused of ignoring a court order' which barred him from further demonstrations on the college campus. llis ruling agrees \\'ith the argument or Dr. Stuart Silvers, 32, of 114 7th St., Seal Beach, that prosecution under the con- tempt action initiated by Cal State trustees would amount to double jeopardy -being tried twice for the same offense. Silvers is free on appeal from a 60--day jail term imposed when he was found guilty in Fullerton Municipal Court on charge of unlawful assembly stemming from the March 3 confrontation between students and police. The contempt charges thrown out by Judge Williams were instigated when it was alleged that Silvers returned to the campus and actively encouraged renewed rioting by militant students. The philosophy professor is awaiting a new trial Oct. 26 on charges of refusing to disperse and interfering with college business. A jury was unable to reach a verdict in earlier proceedings but found Silvers innocent of assault and battery and resisling a1Test. In another court action, Silvers has ap- pealed his firing from the Cal State Fullerton facuilty. He has been ordered to appear at a hearing before the state personnel board next month . The order placing gun-carrying federa l agents aboard all U.S. flights -at a $3 per-passenger tax -offers other deadly possibilities. according to some. Najeeb Halaby, chairman of Pan American Airways, said his line will cooperate but the former FAA ad· ministrator said they must be carefully trained and commanded by pilots. Once opposed to carrying arms themselves, the jetliner captains are no longer so reluctant, according to on• spokesman. "This is a new league we are in," he explained. "Earlier hijackings were the work of 100 percent losers, loners, kooks, men who had not made it," he continued. "Now there's a new twilit -the organized use of hijack techniques for ln· ternational political purposes." Reporting from Dawson Field, United Press lnternational correspondent Ray- mond Wilkinson described one. Abu Ezz, wearing a Lenin badge on his camouflage uniform, gestured with his Russian AK47 automatic rifle at the planes shimmering under the 100 degree- plus desert sun. Rummage Sale Slated The Soroptimisl Club of Huntington Beach will hold a rummage .sale from 9 a .m. to 3 p.m .• Saturday, in the Odd Fellows Hall, 226 Main SI. A n !J.n vilalion lo Quiel ~ Marchesa by Drexel. -We believe is the smartest most un ique collec- fhat has been designed in years. This group features complete living, dining and occasional to choose from. Our shipments have just arrived and a quantify is now available for viewing al our showrooms. Be among the first lo see this unusual group, or better yet have if delivered. For a Marchesa lion new with experience in furn iture you can't Marchese. Profes sional infe rior design se rvice is availa - ble fo r the asking. Our designers have many years of experien ce and AID decorators are available. Whether it's draperies , carpeting, wallpape r or fu rniture, your needs will be met at Ted von Hemerf Inc., over twenty years in the beach area. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON ~ DR EX EL -HERITAGE 7td11111 " NIWPORT BEACH 1727 WMlcl lff Dr., 642·20511 OPEN PRtDAY 'Tt L 9 INTERIORS Prof1sslon1f Interior Dulgnors Av1il1bl~ID--NSID LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co111 Hwy. 494-6551 OPEN FR IDAY 'TIL 9 ... llllllllllliil .... .;,~~ ... ~T~oll==""i;i~M;"'iii~iiiD;•;1;•~C;";•;1~14;;;;~~1J;U;. ................ ... " :.; , J lo g• u vi •• m Si re M ' ... 1 L Si R• gr th tr Ql hE M en Si Q• ht! vr h• Li of al: ,. °' co pe wl t• co m ga cir Si 'th wl th "' th wl gL P' th Qi } di af to M °' Jy rir Bo F1 °' I gr w SI m th to SI ... ., 'I' n, s c b ti ti • ,, R T h • c • • -------------------~-------------- rr_ld•Y. Srptrmbtr 11, 1970 H ' DAILY PILOT :J Chicanos Incensed Over 'Whitewash'' Lawyer Appeals \ Arabs to Plead For Sirhan Life? BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -A law yer for Sirhan Sirhan called on all the Arab governments today to intervene with the United States to spare the lire of the con- victed assassin of Sen. Rober1 F. Ken· nedy . "The Arab governments and people must make a concerted eHort lo help Sirhan," George Shibley told a news con- feren~ here. Sirhan 's chief attorney is Lu ke 1'.fcKi ssack. Shibley, who is from Los * * * Sirhan's Mo11t. Files Sui.t Against U.S. Angeles. ls his associate. Shibley said he \\-'Ould nol press Palesti- nian guerrillas to seek the release of Sirhan as part of a deal for the freedom of 280 hostages the guerrillas hold on a desert airstrip in north Jordan. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. which is holding the hostages. repeatedly has denied it would include Sirhan's freedom in its term:i; for relea:i;. ing the hostages. Shibley said Arab Individual s a11d associations in the United States were unable to render Sirhan any a:i;sistance "becausejhey are terriried by the FBI." He , said Sirhan's lawyers planned another appeal lo the U.S. Supreme Court to change the death sentence passed by a California court on Sirhan lasl year. But il might take a year to have the appeal filed. he added. Sirhan was confined in a Death Row isolation cell today after being subdued by tear gas during a temper tantrum in v.·hich he threw food at a guard . ·' . . \\ I OAIL Y PILOT 111" Plle'9 -Leaders Say Testin1ony Prejudiced LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Some Mex· ican-American leaders v.·ere incensed t<>- da y about what they beUeve will be a •·v.·hitewas h" of law officers in lhe cor· oner's inquest in the death of newsman Ruben Salazar during rioling in East Los Angeles. r-.1ost of 1he ~1exican-American apec- lalors trooped out of the inquest room twice Thursday after denouncing hearing officer Norm an Pitlluck as a "racist' and the testimony as prejudicial. Four women and five men were serving as a jury to determine whether Sal.uar's death during the violence which took two other lives and left more than SL million damage was accidental or "at the hands of another," that is, intentional. Any pro- secution is up to the district attorney. Salazar, nev.'s director of Spanish· language television station KMEX and rolumn ist for the l.m Angeles Timer, died after a llf.i inch wide, 91/a long tear gas projectile was shot by a -sheriff's deputy and st ruck his head, NEW YORK (UPI} -1t1rs. ?tfary Sirhan, mothe r of the assassin of Sen. Roberl F. KeMedy, sued the federal government today in an effort to force lhe State Department to allow her to travel to Jordan. A judge denied her re- <1uest for a restraining order v.·hich would have allowed her to leave immediately. The outburst came when the 26--year-old prisoner refused t.o give up his tray, fork and spoon after a Wednesday afternoon meal, Warden Lo uis S. Nelson repor ted Thursday. WHEN IT COMES TO POLITICS, SANTA ANA 'S PALCHIKOFF FAMILY DOESN'T HIDE FEELINGS Gres1 Root1 Tour Or•ws Unfriendly Gestui;cs From Businessmen in Cadillac• Offirers said they fired lhe tear gas in- to the Silver Dollar Bar after they bad a report of a man with a gun inside. Some 20 persons, including members of a "'blue-ribbon" committee from the Chicano community, walked out during the afternoon session when attorney-s pec- tator Oscar Acosta shouted al Pittluck. "\'ou're a disgr.ace to your profession." U.S. District Court Judge John F. X. ?tfcGohey set Sept. 15 for hearing on the entire malter. Mrs. Sirhan. mother or Sirhan B. Sirhan, who ls awaiting execution at San Quentin Prison in Calirorn la, asked that her son, Adel, her lawyer. and an in· vestigator be permitted to travel with her. The suit. filrd by the American Civil Liberties Union Foundalion , an aHiliate of the American Civil Liberties Union. also asked $200.000 in punitive damages for ea ch of the four who the S t a l e Department refused to allow to leave the country Tuesday. The State Department refused the four permission to leave undf.r regulations which allow such refusal "'hen it could in· terfere w1th the national security or the conduct of U.S. foreign policy. The ACLU suit said the State Depart- ment regulations were illegal because the government cannot refuse American citizens or resident aliens, as are Mr:i;. Sirhan and her son, permission to leave 'tht count ry except in time of war or v.•hen criminal action is pending against those who want to leave. Mrs. Sirhan said in the suit that she sought to leave the country lo confer with the Palestine Liberation Front about v.·hether demands for the release of Arab guerrillas in exchange for airline passengers being held in Jord an included the release of Sirhan B. Sirhan from San Quentin. Woman Critical After Car Crash A Costa Mesa woman is in critical con· dition today in Tustin ~1emoria l Hospital after being thrown fro m her car into a 50- foot deep flood control channel. The California Hi ghway Pat rol said Mrs. Linda Jean Winslow. 20, of 2659 Orange Ave., was found unconscious ea r- ly Thursday morning in the deep drain8ge ditch bordering MacArthur Boulevard between the San Diego Freeway and Main Street just north of Orange County Airport. Officers said that her car had evidently gone out or control, overturned and she wa s thrown to the bottom of the channel. She was found there by a passing motoOst who did not identify himself to the. patrol. Attendants at the Tustin hospital said today that her condition was "guarded." She underwent surgery Thursday night. Si rhan was given a sedative and removed to a ~II without access lo newspapers, radio or television. Prison business manager Irving Riller said Sirhan apparenlly had become upsel over report! of hi:i; mother's unsuccessful attempt to go to the Middle East in con- nectio n with airliner hijackings by Pales tinian guerr illa:i;. The hijackers reportedly at one time demanded Sirhan 's freedo m in exchange for release of more than 200 passengers held hostage in Jordan. The Stale Department d e t a i n e d Sirhan·s mother. Mary, in New York ·and revoked the passports of tv.·o attorneys traveling with her. Ritter said Sirhan demanded to talk to a prison official about the :i;ituatio n and had to be subdued after being informed it was a state holiday, California Admission Day, and no lop authority was Im- mediately available. Nelson" said the tear gas was used because Sirhan could have hurt himself "they way he was acting." lie ''could u.~e the fork against himself or he could break pieces off the metal tray and use them as a cutting instrument ," Nelson explained. Nurse Accused Of 1966 Murder In Cotu1t y Jail A former nurse accused In the murder of an elderly patient at an Orange sanitarium has Jost her Jong battle to pre- vent her return lo OraRge County. Mrs. Jeananne Balch Chernik, 56, also knol't·n as J. Patricia Best, is today in Orange County jail awaiting the selli ng -0f court action OR charges that she murdered 84-ycar-old l\.1rs. l\.largarel Tag!iabue on Nov. 9, 1966. f\1rs. Chemik was transported from Manitowoc County Jail in Madi son, \\'!s. by Orange police officers after \Visconsi n Gov. Warr en Knowles signed the ex- tradition order requested last month by C'.ov. Ronald Reagan . She had been held hy Wisconsi n authorities slrice last June. Mrs. Chernik is accused of causing the de ath of Mrs. Tagliabue by piercing the elderly womaR's urinary bladder with a sharp instrument. She was employed as nurse by Leilnard 's Sanitarium, 1240 Stewart Dri ve, al the time of the in· cident. Sanitarium officials fired Mrs. Chernik one week later. It was learned tod ay that r-.1rs. Chernik has abando11ed her earlier intention lo appeal against the ext radition proceed- ings in the \Visconsi n Supreml! Court. Hurricane Ella Sivirli11g Sloivly Onto Gulf Coast BRO\\o"NSVILLE, Tex. (UPI) -Small but swift Hurricane Ella swirled 00.mile- an -hour winds. torrential rain and high tides today toward the coasts of Texas and Mexico. Thousands fled . The U.S. Weather Bureau said lhe sum- mer's fifth hurricane would hit tht shoreline lal e today south of Bro\\'nsvi\le. Ella picked up strength but slowed it~ unusually speedy course across the Gulf of l\.lexico during the morning. "The center should move inland near or a little :i;outh of Brownsville before dark," the Weather Bureau said. The soulh Texas coast had not yel recovered from Hurricane Cella. the most destructive storm in the state'" h l~tory. It raked the shore and headed 250 miles inla nd 39 days ago. "I am corcerned, you ain't kidding," ~aid T. ,v_ Anderson of Corpus Christi. Tex .. where Celia struck , killing 11 perso ns and causing a billion dollars damage. Ella churned through the gulf at 18 miles an hour. Al noon EDT. the storm"" center was located near latitude 24.S north and longitude 95.3 west or about 156 miles east-southeast of Brownsville, Emmie Stewart, Dancer , Succumbs Private interment is planned at Har bOr Rest J\.1emorial Park for Emmie Stewart, retired vaudeville dancer and long-time Orange Coast resident who died Wed· ncsday at the age of 86. Miss Stewart and her sister Jeannette Cline, both residents of Laguna Hills, v:cre kn own as "The Stewart Sisters, the Or iginal Dancing Dolls" during their years in entertainment The petite pair played the Orphe um and Lowe cireuits during the heyday or vaudeville. After their retirement from the stage about 50 years ago. the sisters operated the Stewart Sisters Ballroom in San Gabriel. Miss Stev,.art came to Orange County in 1~9. and in recent years lived in Leisure World. She is survived by her sister. a niece. Doris Oickleman , m Los Angeles. and a nephe\Y. Donald Green. of La Selva Beach , Cali f. Airport 'Shot Down' Again Tustin Aviation Com1nittee Files 2,000-1iame Petition By JACK BROBACK Orange County Airport and ltJ jetliners were vigorously attacked from another quarter today with a filing of a 2,200- name petition with the Board of Supervisors by the new Cltltens Aviation Committee of Tustin. The petilion, filed with the clerk of the board by David Kilk>n, chairman of the three-week old protest group, charge!I that the approach pattern to the airport WI.!! completely lgno~ by the Parsons report and that county Aviation Director Robert Bre1nt1han has stated that the Tustin area d<K?s not have a problem. The 11roup asks ttint the supervi.!lor:s : -Sea rch for another airport site znd Implement a plan which will adC<1uately AervC the air tran$portation l'ICCdS of the county, bul. a pl!Jn which does not destroy elfistlna resldentl11I areas. • -Limit jet service at the airport to !he present level during the interim period until a new regional airport is ready for operation. -Drop all plans to enlarge airport facilities to accommodate additional jet planes. -Adopt a policy stating that during clear weather all incoming jets using the ILS approach system shall Oy 1t higher allitudes until they have cl<?arcd the residential areas and to disperse fllgh!s in the approach pAttem so that no one area is continuely afflicted. In a news release, Killon stated , "\Ve cannot ollcr you (supervisors) a $-40,000 eng1ncering study to challenge the Par50ns report : we cannot J1:upply you "'ith a critical analysis of noise levels, nor can we submit to you ;in of(lcl;il resolution from any local leglsl!11ive body but we do hsve a problem that must be: recognized. Killon said this morning that the 2,200 families his group reprtsent& are "wor- ried about thei r ch ildren who attend schoo ls under the fligh t path and the noise created by \01v flying Jets." The supervisors will hold a public hear- ing on the Parsons repo rt Oct 13. At that time they will be confronted by lhc Newport Beach Anti Noise Com- mlltee, the city or Newpart Beach and other groups who oppose airport ex- pansion. The Parsons Interim report, released last monlh. calls for a gradual Increase In jet departure!) from the a\rporl over the next four years to a total or 71. The airport commission in a report to lhe supervisors opposed lhe recom· mendatlon and suggested th3t jet fli ght' be llmlled to present contract provisions with Air West and Air Calitomia. ~ ' .- SA U11rtih Can1paigne1· Prepares Real Ba11dwagon The Richard Palchl koff family is doing , its best to !'iee to il that the man elected governor in Novembe r lsn 'l "sold" lo lht>m "like a bar or soap.·· The six Palchikoffs, a fr iend and two large basset hounds are hilling lhe cam· paign lrail to do some person to person sl umping for their cand idate Jel'ls Unruh . "I'm tired of hearing that this cam- paign Is ae:t be.cause one candidate has more money to spend on TV advertising. I don't think people should be governed by people who contribute lhe most money to a campaign," PalchikoCf said. So, in an effort to take the campaign to !he people, Palchikoff loaded hi! group Into a loudly decorated camper and trailer and !'iet off for San Diego. From there he plan l'I a swing into the Imperia l Valley and then back to S;inta Ana. "\\'e'll put the kids in school . Kim. Jay, Kay and their friend Randy Scholnick at- tend Foothill l-ligh School. The oldest girl, Jan , goes lo UCLA," he said. Arter dropping \hr. children oU at home. Palchikoff and his wife, Dav.•n, will 1·onlinue thei r carnpaigning efforts, follo"·ing slate high"•ay !l9 up the San .Joaquin Valley. They plan to campaign for Unruh right up to election day . "We're just going to go lrom place to place and talk lo people. l think this is a r•flOd way to get people stimulated," Palchiko[f sairt There Is little doubl tbat the Palchikofrs wlll stimulate conversation with their hrightly decorated vehicles. Tbey at- trac!ed so me unwanted attention in Costa Mesa the day ot tbeir deparlure. ''College prolesle rs don't have a comer on !he oW;cenlty market, said Pa\chikoff, noting that political signs on his vehicles 11eem to srour.e harsh emotions in businessmen in Cadillacs. Marines Have Landed- In Cou.nty Government I The J\1arlnes fought two ballles with civil ians Thursday in the halls of Orange County government. They v.·on one. Th e second resulted in a temporary standoff. At issue, from the ?.1arinc viewpoint, is civilian encroachment involving the 1,568-acre Santa Ana r.:arine Corps Air Stati on (IIelicopterJ. The fi rst confronla \ion Thursday was before lhe county Board of Supervisors. It involved the future alignment o( Jam- boree Boulevard. The Marines won this one. Local Agency Format ion Commission (LAfC), Both Santa Ana and Tustin had renew. ed moves to annex the air base. The Marines oppose both merger proposals. • Santa Ana wanted the l,568-acre marine racilily on ly. w.hile Tustin coveted the air base and 900 acres of Irvine Com- pany property adjoining it. The LAFC fla Uy turned down Santa Ana's proposed annexation killing any chance that city has of renewing the move tor one year. Jn Tuslin's case. the commission denied the merger "without prejudice" which means 1'ust.in can rentw it.s annexation move at any time. Acosta and the others were upset by the showing of a sherif£1s department \•ideo tape which depicted the initial scenes of rock and bottle throwing and bleeding officers during the national Chicano mciratorium parade and rally. Ile said it was "not only irrelevant but prejudicial" in?. hearing into the death or Salai.ar, Disneyland Meet Postponed Today By Management · The meeting Disneyland management and members of tM. striking American Guild of Variety Artists, l!iCheduled for 10 a.m. today, was postponed at the request of Disneyland . A spokesman for the park said l" Disneyland requested the postponment because AGVA submitted a new proposed settlement late Thursday night and park managem rnt wanted to study the pro- posal. No new date has been set for lhei bargaining lalks over a wage dispute that rellulted in an Aug. 8 strike by 29 AGVA members. The International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employes (lATSE) also is striking the park over a wage di:i;pute, but Disneyland management cont.ends that the strikes have had no effect on the O eaver Supports J et Hijackings SAN FRANCfSCO (UPI) -Eldridge Cleaver. Black Panther Party leader who fled to Algeria. says he does not know the whereabouts of An gela Davis. In a long-dista nce talk Thursday wH1' !he San F'rancisco Chronicle he called the hijacking of our aircraft by Palesti- nian guerrlllas "a truly revolutionary: act." Clc:iver fled the country after jumping hail following a shootout with police In Oakland. Cleaver told the newspaper he had returned lo Algeria after after a two- month tou r to North Korea , North Viet- nam and China. The county Road Department proposed three routes for the arterial. The Marines !'iaid all lh ree wwld either cut lhrough lhe base, or would "interfere with opera· lions." ' After much debat e. county 11upCrvi~~ ordered the road department to plan lhe future extension of Jamboree Rou\evard around the cast side of the helicopter base. Johns Invaded~ The second battle took place before the Statue LoQk s Like tlie Devil I.AS VEGAS, Ntv. (AP) -A I ~ foot nude stalue of Lucifer fac· scboolyard 15 feel away mu$t t'Overed up or taken away -or it owner will be jailed, City Atty. Earl Grlpcntrog has ruled. Grlpentrog said Thursday 1 the horned and hoofed figure, stored in an apartment house parking lot, violates the city's obscenity laws. lie said ov.·ner Paul Friis must ''do somelhlnJ:: to it or I'll have no choice but to lock him up." F.lementary school P r i n c I p a I Galen Good called poliet: about the statue after noticing hi! studenUJ, many or them gi rls, bunched at a fence, studying !he figure. "That horrible f11ce and the rest of It -I can imagine the concept lhry arc developing ," Good said. Women's Rcstroo1n Rights Debated WASHINGTON tUPI) -Will th• proposed \Vo men's ttlghts Amrndmeni make the men 's room unconstitutional? Sen. Sam J . Ervin Jr., (D-N.C.), said Thursday It would. A law professor said ' It might. Sen. Marlow W. Cook, (R-Ky.), said he didn'l believe it. Ervin questioned whether separ;ite toileL"I for men and worritn In public facilities would be illega l if a proposed Constitutional amendment is 1dopted to bar the U~ited Stites or any state to deny or abrldge equ11lity or rlahta: 1'on account of sex." At a ·Senate J udlelmry Commlttee ring. Ervin noted that AOme: state · la . reqtUre Reparate toilet facilities for wom and men and makt It a criminal offcns for one sex to use the facilit ies ol anothe . He · d those laws would be invalidated by the mendment. :"'hlllp . Kurl and. law professor at the Unlversit r Chicago, said the propo!al was so o n-tnd that court-s might constrt.1e It l way -or might permit "separate bul qual" res trooms. C.ook S•ld lh whole argunw.nl was 1 "ted hcrrln ' a, were E r v i 11 ' s contention11 at the amendment might subject wo en t.o combat duty or ouUaw • ~-··-·--... i;eparate prisons for ~n and wome11. "Surely the elimination of differences between men and women cannot be obliterated hy Constitutional l i a t , • ' Kurland testified. While agreeing that American women do suffer from ''un re1 11 o n ed dlsrrlmlnation.'' he suggested that the problem be attacked by statute rather tha11 11n "instant and simplistic''" Con11titutional amendment. He said it may be posslblt for che generation of women now comlng to maturity "to succeed In a compet itive society In which l'ln differences In leg1I rights between men and women were wiped out.'' ''There remain!I a very large part of the fem;ile population on whom the lml)OSllion of :i;uch Constitutional standard would be disastrous," Kurland said . "Thert is no doubt that IOClety permlUed these women to come maturity, not as lompetl lorK with male1 but r:il her a!I the bearf!rs anct raise.rs ot their children and keepers or lheit: homes. Tticrt arc a multitude of women who stlll flnd fu)flllme.nt In this role," Kurland said. "In the eye1 of "1ornen, this may be. unfortunate, but it 1s true." """' DAILY PILOT Friday, Sf'pltmbtt 11, 1970 Jordan Truce Called Civilians Coming Back Out Into Suee~ - tCOmpU .. -, !flt 0.111 l'lltt Sl1HI Shorry Englohudt, 11, broke tbro~h both the com.munica.tion and generation gaps to retrieve her kitten which had perched for two days atop a utility pole in Hel· ena Mont. Unable to find someone to ~limb up for the kitten, Sherry broke open her piggy bank and telephoned 30 miles to Officer-Mic· by Nilson at the Helena Police Department. Nelson called in radio station KBLL which broadcast the kitten's plight and, then Biii Haney and M•rvlng Carmichael borrowed pole climbers from the telephone company and drove to Sherry's home at Elliston. The girl and kit· ten were back together Wednes- day. • The Bletehlty, England urban council has agTted to relocate Peter Clements, 20, and his wife Janet~ 19, becci'u&e they say ohosta in their -pretent hou.ve, both.tr tMm. "Regardless of wMthtr wt believt in gho1u, thil buiiness hal seriously troub!t'd thi.s /amilv and there· fort wt will makt anothtr plact availablt to them,.. a council ipokemian said. • Five N'ewball, England Police cars rushed to a home after a neighbor heard noises comint from the house while the owner was away. They found a tea-making machine had been left switched on. • Rosie Malone, 18. a student at Metl°O Sta,te College, in Denver didn't ·want anyone stealing her bicycle while she was in class Wednesday so she locked it to a bike rack. When she came out, she discovered the front wheel bad beeTt stolen . • Jonah the whale was left high and dry for a short time Wednes- day when a trucJt transporting it to Peterborough. England broke down Police oaid. A replacement truck was sent and the mammal was soon on its way. • Marlin Martin of Dallas, Te%CU find! a baby sparrow she discovered tats better when fed cooked rice, plucked from Mrs. Martin's lips. • San Francisco Immigration Di· rector Cecil W. Fullilove is asking the State Department to grant a 90-day stay for a 16-foot craft. "Af- ter all, the guy took four months ~etting to San Francisco," Fulli- love said Wednesday. "He's en· tilled to stay a while and look around." Minoru Nagayeshi, 22, arrived without a visa after a 122- day trip from Osaka. He had in- tended to land at Vancouver. B.C .. but changed course because ol eight storms. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 1be Arab guerrillas announced I new peace agreement with the Jordanian government Thursday, .4,1111 the fighting in Amman subsided. . The guerrillas said boJh sides had agreed "to remove the cauaes" of clashes that had been golng on ln Amman for three days. This seemed to indicate a government capitulation to the. ,lllttl'illas, since it is the guerrillas who have been setting conditiona under wbkh the fighting might end. Even this was no assurance that the agreement would last. A similar pact was announced Tuesday, but it broke down and the fighting resumed before the day was over. Soon after Amman Radio broadcast the news .of the latest agreement, the Jorda- nian 1 capital gradually beCID to come aUve again. Tbowands ol perlOlll who bad spent the prevloua 14 houri in basements to avoid the sbellJ and bWlell: began to come out. But sporadic shooting could lllll be heard hours afterward, and ahopt and bazaars remained closed. GuerrUlu con~ tinue~ to man 'road blocks in variou• parts of the city. At least 30 civilians were tilled In the fighting Wednesday, unofficial sources.Jn Amman said. 1'1e guerrillas say 40 com- mandos were killed the previous day. Earlier Thutsd~ the Palestinians demanded that Kini Hussein "purge the royal palace, the army and the government" of enemies of the com- mandos. Guerrilla broadcasts declared that such a purge wu a prerequisite tor: reach7s in Three States Walk Out on First Day Philadelphia's 7,000 public sch o o 1 teachers went on strike over a contract dispute on the first day of school Thurs- day, giving 290,000 pupils an extended vacation. Teachers stayed off the.Ir jobs in de- fiance of a court injunction at Hammond, Ind., and most of the 2,500 public school teachers at Toledo, Ohio, were Idle in the school day of a strike. The Philadelphia school board ordered its 270 public schools closed until a set. tlement is reached with the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers. Several thousand pupils attended clasaeS,conducted in their classrooms by volunteer teachers and residents of their communities. Uruguay Rebels Hit Coke Plant With Firebombs MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (UPI) - Tupamaro terrorists who are holding two foreign hostages Thursday night slightly damaged a Coca Cola bottling plant in Montevideo in a hit-and-run fire bomb at-- tack, police said. No one was injured ln the attack on the • plant about three miles from the center of the tjty, police said. Earlier in the day, a terrorist group compased of 10 men and two women held up the Montevideo orfice of the Standard Old Company (Esso) and escaped with the equivalent of $1,800. In recent day:i, the Tupamaro! have re-- mained silent on the condition of two kid· nap victims, Calude L. Fly, U.S. farm consultant froom Fort Collins, Colo., and Bra:.illan Consul Aloysio Dias Gomide, whD have been held for more than a tnonth. _ On Aug. 10, the kidnapers shot to death Daniel A. Mitrione, a U.S. adviser to the Uruguayan police. Mitrione was abducted July 31, the same day as Gomide. Hatfield Might Leave Politics WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Mark 0. Hatfield, the Oregon Republican who has been a leading critic of the Indochina war, says he may JtOt seek another term in office in 1972. He said the cost of running his Senate office kept him away from his family earning extra money. Nearly all the $28,000 in speech honorariums be receiv- ed last year went for extra office ex· penses, he said. HaUietd's four childre11, aged 5 to 11, "are ~t µ,te very tender age where it is lmPortant to them to have a father," he sald. "Volunteer" schools were a1ao set up at union halls, churches and ~reaUon balls, mostJy in Negro neighborhoods. Unsettled conb'IK;t issues In c 1 u d e salary, length of the school day and whether teachers should be held ac. countable for a pupil's academic pro- gress. Teachers were asking a starting salary or $8,500 a year and the board had offered a minimum or $8,100, up '800 from the I96g.70 pact. Hammond's teachers picketed school buildings and marched to the school ad· ministration offices in open defiance of an lnjllllciion issued late Wednesday restraining them from continuing their walkout. The walkout was in its third day. postponing the return to atudy for 24,000 pupils. Negotiations resumed Thursday but no progress was reported. Negotiations also were to resume in Toledo where teachers were not working but school ofiiciaJs estimated 80 percent of the 61,000 students attended classes condu cted by administrators on the sec- ond day of the strike over salary. Nearly 96,QOO pupils were idJ'<I in several Michigan cities, I n c I u d i n g Kalamazoo, while 4,$00 teachers were on strike. Teachers in East St. Louis, Ill., con· tinued their work stoppage, refusing to report to their classrooms until their con. tract is setUed. Members of the Bethlehem, N.Y., Teachers Associalion voted to strike Fri- day unless their school board agrees to reopen elementary achool districet at San Francisco reached an agreement with its teachers providing a 1 percent pay hike and guaranteeing billngual teachers for Spanish speaking students. Schools open- ed on schedule. U .S.-Canadian Anti-pollution Stance Outlined TORONTO (UPI) -Scrapping the idea of an international anti·pallution agency, Canadian and American government leaders Thursday re commended strengthening of the International Joint Commission (IJC) to combat polluUon in the Great Lakes. 'I1le conference attended by represen- tatives from Great Lakes. The conference attended by represen· tatives from Great Lakes states, three Canadian rovinces and officials from both federal governments ended with a final communique expressing "a sense of urgency" over the ''pollution crisis of the Great Lakes." In Wednesday's meeting the suggestion for a single international agency was made. Ontario'& minister of mines. energy and resources George Kerr sald that delegates approved of tbe idea. 'Ella' Dominates Weather Te xas Braces for Hurricane; Freezing Cold Hits Nort1i CallfOMala IOUTH!RH CALIFORNIA -Motflr ftlr tfl"°"'911 Slturder tivl nltoh! •nd morl'lllll foir 1nd low cloud1 11one co.it. $Olrle clovO\ wll!'I cr...ne• Of M 1111r. -thun<Mril'I-" MlltlPWrn lf\Oll,,. 111rw 1fld 10Ultltfn lnrtrlor 1"rlcl1r . 1 Cool• saturo.r. • LOS AMOIU.ES AHO VICINITY -=~'"' 1:,1, .!"Z"!!i~"':.!:~ 1:;,: cloud• 1nd foe, CoollPr ltturdlr, Ov1r- 1"1l1h1 '°"""' 6S. Ht1M 11 S1l\1rd1y 12. , POINT CONCEPTION 'TO MEXICAN eo•DER~l•ht v1rl•bl1 wlMt nltM tlMI fl'IOmlM 'llou"' ""°"'"'"' Wftlttl1' I N If lf/\Ota In '11tmOOt11 tll"""'ll 4-S,.turdt"f. N/tht I nd MrlY _,,,]flt low" clouds 11'111 fotl wltll 1111r ..unt111,,. t"' ; '"""'°°"" 1.lttlto ttmPtr11ur1 Wl'IH. . COASTAL. 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Wtltt' ltn'IWll\I,. ••· .S1111, "''"'"· :l'ldes ,RIOAY h<DF!d 11!9'1 ··-' ?:»•·'"· , .. IKOlld low • l:XI '·"'· t.O SATUROA'r ''"' lllt l'I " , ,. ..•. t :s.11.m. s.o l"lf'\1 tow .,,,.,, •• ,. t:J01.m ..... S.COftd 111111 ,,,, ....•• ,f :l••·'"-'·' Steorld WW . •• t :ll 1>.m, l.J &u11 ar ... 1:si1.l'l'I. '"" 110'"·"'" MOM II-4:4ft.m. ltJt l:J.2 1.m. V.S. Stunmarv $vrlny 1klt1 incl <:hllll' w••flltr 11,.1c!'Jtd lrom Ille RO(kl•t lo ,..,,. ol 11111 APPtlldllllll todtl'. Sllo"ftrl I/Id lfllilllltt\ioNI'>& Wirt KIUtl'td, ffDfo c!•llr •!-"" G11ll Cotti IMO Tt•••· 5l'IOw •ncl fr"t!lll 1tm,..,1h1r11 W9rt t l>l"tNHnt dllwll !tit Ct11tcll.,1 R0<kln lad•r Into MOft!lll• •ncl norllltrn ld•hO. "fl!>I -lht r llurtl ll MMI lrt\Ot ltf'I' Wlt'ftl!lll _,. Ill lfffC1 111 li'>OM lltnt, wlrh lretll w1r11lnt1 tOt!fd IV fOlllOhl In 11111 norilltrn MC!lon1. • MffllWhll•. H11rrlc1n1 EJ11, tl'lt 1otc- Ol'ICI .iorm trl4H11Htl~t t11t T"t• Outf Cott! 111 1 llttlt -• t montll, ttc.i· ""''" todl., ttwtrf 1111 Untted Sttl• Malt111 llotffr. Alhutl111rf!Ut All8nl1 111ktnn11c1 fl ltmll'Ck l ob t ...... llrown•vl11t Clllt.eH Cl ncln1111ll °"w' OIJMOIMS ... ... Fort WOl"ttt ,,, ..... t111t111 IC111u1 (tty l••""" Let.Allffl• Ml1ml Ml-"°tl' NtwOflttM N..-Ylfit Nortll PltUI 01kl•lld OICll l'loml Clly ...... Ptlm S11!'!1101 l'llO llol)I .. 1"110.nht Pltt1burtl'I Por!lt ncl llt•kl C!IY Jltd 1111111 .... Stcrtmtn!o l t ll l •kt (llY Stn O!ett Si ii FrtM!KO SUllll ' SHlttnt "flltr,,.,.I W11ll lM!Ofl " ' Hltfl ltw Prtt. n " .. " IOI 74 ,, ., " ~ 71 ,, ,. 11 .01 . " " ~ " .. • n ,. .. " " ,., .. t• :u T 71 SS 102 ,, .... .... .... .. ,, ., .. ,,, " .. " " II '1 " " ll! '° IOJ tr 101 11 " ~ " ~ 72 (1 . ... .. . 101 '' " " 1' M .. ~ " .. " .. 111 to N M Al a "genuine and durable" peace between the JordaNan l1'lllY and the Palestinian fichten. They allo c:alled f0< dluolutlon of a '1reactlonary cllp ct CIA "ents around the khlg whlcli .ICU u a 1overn- ment within a eovemment." 'lbe broadcujl menUoned no names but the chief tariet. were Huaeln's uncle, Nasser be Jemll, and the king's cousin, Zeid ben SbUtr. Hussein dilmias-- ed both from key army pools to eppease the guerrlllu alter fighting lo June In which about 1,000 penons were killed or wounded. Liter he rein.ltated Ben Shaker u assistant army chief of staU, and the guerrillas cl&lm Ben J amll bu returned eecretty to Amman from Europe and with Ben Shaker ii Jrying Io foment an army crackdown on the guerrillas. The U. $. State Deparlment announced that Jon W. Stewart, 30, an American at- tached to the U. S. Embassy in Amman, disappeared Wednesday. Ear Iler ' this week, the department reporled that Sgt. Irvin Graham of the U. S. military at. tache's office had been taken into custody by guerrlllas. A spOkesman said Thurs· day Graham had not been released. In Cairo, an aide to Emtian In· formation Minister Mohammed Hassa- nein Heikal said reported U. S. plans tD deliver 16 to 18 more Phantom jets tD Israel will upset the military balance in the Middle East and lead to "military escalaUon and unprecedented risk." He asserted that Egypt had been assured when it accepted the U.S. cease- fire plan that there would be no further 1 shipment or arms to Israel except those- already comracted for. U. S. officials in Washington Indicated that the Soviet Union has joined ·Egypt in rejecting American and Israeli charges that Cairo has violated the cease-fire by moving antiaircraft missile.s near to the Suez Canal. Chile Demands Marxist Grant . Individual Rule SANTIAGO, CHILE (UPI) -Chile's Christian Democratic Party recognized 'Ttursday night that installation of Salvador Allende In the presidency could threaten democratic rule but said it would assure Allende's inauguration if the Marxist president-elect guarantees individual freedom. The Chintian Democrats, with 75 seats fn Congres.s, can make or break Allende, who must be confi~ by Congress as BUCCenOr to outgoing. President Eduardo Frei since he failed to gain a majority of the J>Opular vote. Congress will convene Oct. 24 u an electoral college to choose between Allende and runner-up Jorge Alessandri, whom he barely defeated in the three-man race. Alessandri has RMOUnced he will resign if he is chosen by Congress. His refusal to serve would precipitate another election and probable defeat for Allende. Alessandri's supporters offered to su~ port any man the Christian Democrats run against Allende in the possible un- precedented popular election. In a nationwide radio broadcast Thurs- day night, ~njamin Prado, president of the Christian Democratic Party said, "lf Senor Allende grants the necessary guarantees in a real and effective man- ner . . . he can expect our favorable decision (in Congress).'' Christian Democratic: Party ex- . ecutives said they will accept from Allen· de nothing less than a written guarantee of individual liberties. Agnew Tossing The Dictionary At Ultra Liberals ...i CASP!R, Wyo. (UPI) -Vice Presl· dent Spiro T. Agnew, pledging to "blow the whistle" from coast to coast on ultra liberals in Congress, launched a six-day campaign trip Thursday with attack! on • ' p u s i llanimosa pussyfooting" and ''troglodytic leftists." The Vice President, who sent reporters and audiences alike thumbing through dictionaries, even coined a new word - "radiclibs" -as he spoke to crowds at Springfield, Ill., and at Casper to begin a six-state tour. It was at Springfield that Agnew assail- ed •'pusillanimous pussyfooters,'' ' 'troglyodytic leftists,'' "whimpering isolationism," "mulish obstructionism;" and ''radicllbs, 11 the latter an Agnew word combining radical and liberal. "There was a time when the liberalism of the old (Democratic) elite was a ven. turesome end fighting philosophy -the vanguard pollUcal dogma of a Franklin Roosevelt, a Harry Truman, • John Ken- nedy," Agnew said. "But the old firthorses are long gone. Today's breed of ndica\.llberal posturing about the Senate ts about as closely related to a Harry Tluman u a chihuahua is to a tlmber wolf. "Ultra-llberallsm today translates into a whimpering Isolationism ln forel&n policy, a mulish ob!lructionjsm in domestic policy, and a pusillanimous: J»W:yfoottng on the critical issue of law and order." In Wyoming, where be received an enthusiutle ovaUon from a crowd of more than 4,000, he pledged to "blow the whistle" on radical liberals •ho now were "ln a mad acramble to the centu. •• U'I Tt._...19 Thant Optlml1tlc Despite criticism leveled at him by both sides in the Mid- east conflict, U.N. Secretary General U Thant says he is oir timistic a b o u t international trends even in the face of breakdowns in peace talks and the three international hijack- ings by Arab terrorists. He bases his optimism on the emergence of a wider agr~ ment among major powers on an eventual Mideast setU~ ment. U.S.-owned Tanker Hit Near 'A rabia LONDON (UPI) -An American-owned tanker sank Thursday night after a col· lision With a Soviet freighter in the Persian Gulf, Lloyds Insurance Un· derwriters said today. A Lloyds spokesman said all but one oE the aewmembers aboard the 214,000.ton tanker Aquarius was rescued by the Soviet freighter Svetlogorsk after the col· lision off the coast of Muscat and Oman. The spokesman said the unidentified crew member was missing. The tanker, owned by the Maritime Overseas Corp. of New York, burst into flames shortly after colliding with the Soviet vessel , the spokesman said . He !laid the Liberian·registered tanker was bound for Capetown, South Africa, with a cargD of crude oil from Kbrag Island, Persia. Second Russian Dancer Defects l1i Mexico City MEXICO CITY (UPI ) -The second Russian ballet dancer to defect in a week showed up at the Mexican Interior Department Thursday to ask for political asylum. As in the first case, romance a- gain appeared lD be a prime motive be· hind the defection. Giennadi Simonovich Vostrikov, 22, a member of the Moiseyev Ballet Company touring Mexico, was accompanied to the ministry by a Mexican belle, who would only say her name was Cristina. She refused to give her last name, saying she didn't want any problems with her employer, a government agency. U.S. Planes · Pound Reds Nem· taos SAIGON (AP) -For the !Ulh day the U.S. Alr Force today flew heavy raids against North Vietnamese forces in- tensifying their attacks on a South Viet.. namese base near the Laotian Border. Three waves of big 852 bombers drop- ped nearly SOO tons of bombs on bunkers. base camps and storage and staging areas within seven miles of Fire Base O"Reilly. Other B52s hammered North Viet· namese supply depots and trans shipment points on the Laotian side of the border. Smaller U.S. fighter·bombers also kept up attacks closer to O'Reilly. trying to hit mortars, rockets and recoilless cannon that have pumped about 500 roUnds of shells into the base and South Vietnamese patrols operating around it. Military spokesmen said the fighter· bombers had flown more than 100 missions since Monday around the base. and that this was about 20 percent of the Air Force's entire operation in Vietnam during that period. South Vietnamese m I I i t a r y head· quarters said its forces with the help of American bombers had killed 530 North Vietnamese in operations around O'ReillY. since July I. A spokesman said the South Viet- namese forces also had captured 157 enemy rifles, 33 heavy weapons such as mortars, and 300 tnortar rounds and rocket grenades. The spokesman said 57 South Viet· namese had been killed and 92 wounded in the operations. "The enemy is trying a new push ln ter"ms of softening up' O'Reilly with rockets and mortars," said one informed source. "The enemy is trying to take the place again." O'Reilly is a former U.S. lOlst Airborne Division base reopened by the South Viet· namese 1st Infantry Division last March. It stands atop a 1,500-foot ridge less than five miles north of Ripcord, another lOlst Division artillery base abandoned under heavy pressure last July 23 after 61 Americans were killed and 345 wounded in a three-week siege. * * * ' Cambodia Army Braces for Red Counterattack PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Cambodian government troops who broke the 60-day seige of Kompong Thom are prepared for a counterattack by Communist forces, a high command spokesman said today. He said the troops also have opened the waterways to the southwest of the city withou t resistance and they now are "completely secure:• The lack of resistance probably was because of high flood waters. which enabled the gunboats to reach the besieged city and to open the flooded area between Kompong Thom and the lake of Tonie Sap, 30 miles to the southwest. Intelligence reports indicated "an unknown percentage" of the 2,~man Communist attack earlier this week. Despite the lack of resistance so far. the spokesman said, "we are prepared for an attack -in fact we are tryi ng tD draw them (the Comniunists) out so that we can kill them." u,, "f•tt.llftt VICE PRESIDENT AGNEW LAUNCHES GOP CAMPAIGN C1ll1 for Victory of S1n1J1 Cencllda!O Rolph Smith In Illinois II I /1 '1 A L< be3' .. I ( O"t fied once the der i;lay Tt ning thre. took mur told on v arm a par " T T w. Su pr L.B by c C'OOL jail. Th the mea· are 1 Los Shar La year canr. beca pub! parl in ti whic Atki: new: dcta m"' Tt set victi pare "vir deni y:as w hear pub I cour Circ rule l c 11 w -the ed I 20 J in I-lire 1945 Tl by forn Jap said of : war A1 afle tur:,. pr is Hir< Nea <epc day: Nor mar Bla1 tifie • , "' n i inh~ situ Ms unp <:it!: the the 1dn N mai Pre l!lOI 'llssi tep 'H a ii Hur or •dn lv;o 2oh , II ~hi! pnd .... inci nali by or • I • • • • l • • • . ,• ,• :; . .. - • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE Tax Action-at Last It looks as tboulh Huntin1ton Beach b11 flnally found Its way throu11b the fog and hit shore with a boat· Joad of new taxes to pay for a civic center, library, fir• station and corporation yards. Councilmen have now adopted 1 five percent uWJty tax , increased all business licenses by 50 percent and levied 1 $6-perpun it tax oti apartment units. To ease tht homeoY.1ner1' load they. dropped the Sl.SO a month trash collection fee . It took a long time to clear the air 1round these laxes. Councilmen battled each other, the Chamber of Commerce. and interested citizens for many hours and several meetings before completing the work. It rnay not be a perfect solution. but the cil.Y at ~east has some action on the books which appears 1ustlf1able. Several groups heve opposed one or more of the proposals throughout the summer. The battle is ap- parently over, but not necessarily the war. Individuals and organizations who still disagree with some of the tneasures might well spend the next yeer with an eye On each of the taxes. If opposition still exists there is an entire year to work up better methods. But we 1ug· cegt they do more than ju11t complain. The Chamber of Commerce is one such group that might 11tudy the financing issue over the ne~~ year. Chamber officials have strongly opposed the utility tax, but haven't really offered a better sugge~tion. A~ one point the chamber supported a gross receipts bu1nness license tax. then oppostd it. With such cross.currents and belated stands on the part of the chamber, the coun .. cil Can hardly be blamed for overridini laat·minute com- plaints over the utility tax plan. And pa1111e of these taxes 1bould not mean they ar• established !or inlinity. II they don't work out there 11 the opportunity and obll~ation to chanie them. New tu· es art never PoPular. but some action was nec1111ry or Huntln~ton Beach would have remained a talkln1 town without out any action to ahow why It ought to bl an All-American city. · Can't Seem to Understand Councilman John Harp·er can't seem to under1tanjf why Fountain Valley has more money than it had four years aeo. In 1966 Fountain Valley was 1 quarter m!Ulon dol~ Jars in debt. By tjle end of thU year, the city will show a surplus of more than $1.7 million. But every time he has an 1udlence Harper look1 at the surplus and ask1 "Where did it. come from? It isn't accounted for, is tt?" It would appear hi$ questions are more political rhetoric than serious inqulrles about the city's fiscal state. The income and outgo are there in black and white anytime he really wishes to find the answers. Councilman Harper also expresses concern about a growing surplus of money under future tapital ouUay. 1'he current figure there is slightly more than $6SO,OOO • But it has been a well-known fact that.the city has pro- grammed some $700,000 to be spent \Vithin .the n~xt four years to double the size of city hall, police department and otQer facilities . When that happens there won't be any more future capital outlay surplus. But in the meantime the city it wi11Jy aavini up to pay the coat in cash. H Scrant on Commission 011 Ca m p us llnrest Allott's Scathing Attack A Political Biography of Gen. Franco ·: WASHINGTON -Somttlmu 1ign1il :": are cro&Sed •nd the play Is fiubbed in the :.!_ Nlun administration and that ls the case t: "1lh thl Scranton commi1sion on campus :; unrut. (Y"" ..... ,.....'Ir""'"('"" .. ":" > • stud1nt body at cau~rni• tnatJtute or Technology. Rhodes enaintertd campus reforms without violence, Infuriating the campus radical s and thus persu1ding ~: A 1e1thin& attack by Sen. Gordon Allott cf Colorado, a stron1 •• th ~· Nllooite, on e SCranton commis- tlon 1nd its forth· comlnl report, re- vul1 a ll'tll deal about the !umblln1 Jn the .admlnfslra· lion on this question. Allott, in effeet, Is accusing J o h n Erlichman and other "nior domestic policy advinrt or gelling Prffident Nixon trapped tn 1 commi!sion study which will "pour keroeene on the flames" of campua dl1ordtr. Other White Hou111 1dvl•rs 1up,port Allott's view of the Scr1nton comm u ion and the adminlstr1tlon ll uneuy, to 11y the least, over the comtnc report. THE COP.tft.11SSION wa1 appointed in mid..June after the klllin1 o( four Kent State college students arid 11 hMdld by fonner Governor William Scranton of Penn sylvania who wu relied on to brln& to the commission 1tudlu the quality of judicious rair·mindedneu they delervl. This was a case in which IOrnt of Utt President's advisers wished to pacify flaming student opinion after the Cambodian incursion and Ktnt kllllnJs without. carefully thlnkiq out the probable results. Ailott says there is rt11on to ftar that the Scranton report will be 1 "flaccid Richanf .Wilson ~· --~,..·-.... ; Erlirhm an that he hid mastered the formula for academic peace. But it hasn 't worked out that w1y in the Scranton commission. \Vhat now bothers the White House Is the 1arne thin& A1new objected to, an attempt to ahlft blame for carnpua disorder from flabby unlver~ity administrations ta the Nixon 1dmlnl1tr1tlon and lb policies on v.•ar .and ecology. whitewash or the violent new.left poliUcal movtment that It openly .etklng to capture or destroy our · a r e a t universities." Tht C-Olorado senator i.s unremilUng in h\J criticism of the commlulon. He 11)'1 ll hu been IUillY of hl&h-handed arrogance, confirmed prejudices. non· objectivity, and hi• madl ilMlf an inrtammatory forum for political radicals contending that riotinl la Ju1Ufi1bl1 until the Nixon admlnistratlon dolt what th1 radicals demand. If THE NATION'S domotlc 1H1Jr1 are unsetUed this fall by c1mpu1 disorders. Allott cl1im1, "part of the blame will attach to thl commll1lon on campus disorders. and to Int Prltldtnt'1 advi~rs who assembltd it , , . thl commission establilhed to lnvt1t11ate dl10rder will becom1 • CIUM of dltorder." Storm center of tht commlulon 11 youn1 (22J John Rhode&, Jr. a H1rv1rd lfldUlle student WhoM ICl}p WU urwucceufuUy sought by Vlce-Pruldlnt Spiro T. Agnew after Rhode.a 11ld ht hoped to find out "whether th• President'• and the vict.prt1ldent't statemenlt are killina: people." · Rhodes ta a protege of Erllchman't •ho recommended his appointment I! a commis1lon member on the bula of Rhodes' record a1 president of the THERE WAS PLENTY of evidence prior to the bomblna at Madison, Wis., th1t the university there w11 1 center of 1tudent revolutlonlsm. But not until after the bombing did• th1 commls1\on rush it~ repre1entatlves to the University of Wl1con1 in and it his not yet sent lnveattaators to other univertltl11 known to be potential viol ence centers. The Inquiry into the cauae1 and curt of c1mpu1 unre8t ha1 bffn n I I t h e r proft11lonal nor exhlusUve and It llk1ly to add little mort than tha report or Chancellor Heird of V 1 n d t r b l I t University, which h11 been rejected and dl11vowed by Pre1Jd1nt Nixon. The tltenct at tht fftlrd report Wll th1t Nixon should chan1e hi• forei1n policy if he wanll peact on the c1mpuse1. Note : In a recent column passing ref1rence w•s m1d1 lo the lJnlver1lty of Minnesota as a centtr or student rtvolutionltm . A check with fede ra l agencies, lnCluding the White House and the McClellan inve1tl11t1n1 committee, does not justify this conclusion. Duplicity in the 'Old Days' The rise of tht "consume1 movement" In recent years is no doubt a ~uary Jnd healthful deve\opm1nt: in our complex and vari egated socie1y. tht consumer need1 a lot more protection than he did in the gimple economy or Utt J>''L But it is .a n~tal. 1ic misl•ke to \m. 1(ine that commer· cial life was morl! hone1t i nd d.cent 1 eenwry qo; the •·good old dty1" "'ere full or iuile. duplicity ind mis. repr,1enta1 ion th111 would make a mnd· ern mercha nt blush 0 down to his heels. IN CONNECTION willl lll• IOOth ---- Friday, Stpltmbtr 11 , 1970 Th< <ditori41 pogo ot the Deify Pilot 1eek.1 to Inform and .stim- ulate rHdtra b" prescntino thts MW1P81"""• opfttfom cind tom-nwnta'11 on topic• of i'ltcrc.st 11nd 1ignlficanct, b11 providing o forum for tM eiprc11fon of ••• .-..,.....,, "'4 bw pre.srntinQ tM tlifftH ~ pointr o/ lnJOl'lllfd olM•....,• ••d tpOk•....,. ..... gf I/I< day. Robott N. Weed. Publltbor ~.!!'Jr .,..,rs.' '' Actually, it "''as in Jarae part dltauat with lhese common malpracLiett tha\ turned Barnum from merchandisin& to showma ns.hip, v.·herc he was an hone1t man de.spite hla extravagant p.1blicity ch1ims. He ntver che1ted anyone he deal t with, but was hfmnlr chuttd often by buslnr~s assoclttea, be1lnnin1 with hl1 own grandfather, 1nniver1ary of Barnum's. circu1 thl1 summer -its birUrplact w11 1 Wil1con1in town not far from whert I stay -I reread M. R. Werner's old biography of P. T. Barnum . wt\o beaan his career In lht New Enalancl country store bu1ines1 around 1830. "Deception w3s cornmon practice" in 1hat business, his bioerapher Informs us. "Bamum wrote that often he cut ope:n bundles of rags broughl to the store by coontrywomen to exch1nge for goods, and found lhat \\'hat were ostensibly good linen and cotton rag1 contained In their midat extra wight in lht ihape of stone. eravtl or ashes; and farmers re1ul1rly brou&ht thtlr load1 of oaL'\, corn and rye into town short of their stat!<! weight. .. BARNUM MAO A job in a country store, and said of it : "Our eoltont were sold for wool, our wool •nd cotton !or 11lk and Ii.nm : in fact. ne1rly everything was different from what It was represented. Tht suppliers cheated us In their f1brles: we cheated the custo mer,; with our 1oods. Each ptrty expected to be chtaltd, U it .... f>O'Siblc ... In hls book, "The Humbufl! of tht World." Barnum related an anetdote of the lime thal ht Hid char1cterl1ed th1 pioul-commerk1l 1tm011phere prior to lilt Civil War. and l1t1ln1 lon1 be)'Ond II : "TltEIU! 11 AN OW •nd ,.,11.;nown &lory about a IJ'O(!tr who Wtl I delec>n, and who was heard to call downstairs blfort bru.tfaat to hl1 cltrk: 'John, h1vt IF C0~1ft.1ERCIAL dishonesty was 10 r1mpanl in his day, why was it tolerated. when so much ltss Is under attack today! My opinion 11 that the lmpenon11lty of modern fraud is what Infuriates the public. In the past, tt was face lo fa~. and a custo1ner knew who to 10 to and who to blame In the pel'IOnal tramacllon. Today, evtn thouah the merchandl1er 11 far more hontsl and scrupulous, the gmwth of tht tarae, Im pt r so n 11 corporation hRs frustrattd !he customer In his atlempt lo track dow1 tM aource of hi!! di81a11slaction. · · C c n s u m e r leglsl~tion" is th1 p 1ychoIo1 i al \'engeance for this trtnd. Dear Gloomy Gus: Whit a hlJacklna If they had taken Mama Sirh1n'1 plant to Iaratl! -H. J, 8. ,_.. "'"',.. """"'-.... .,.. """' .... l!M.11 ... fllt ~ .. Hiit ......... ,.... lff.• ...,, .... "'" " fM"'' .... ltlll' ., ... Ne:.lther ulnt nor demon. but 1 hlatorical fltw'e of c ·o n 1 i d e r a b I e m11nltude : thll la how Gtntralluhno Fr1ncl1CO Franco appura in El Caudillo, 1 political blogr1phy by J. W. D. Tryth1\I published rteenUy by McGnw·Hlll ($7.951 A dltpaulonate ltl.ldy of t h e development of the man who has poss.essed supreme power in Spain for more than 30 years. this work calla on some aources of documentation which had been overlooked so far. While earlier book• on Fr•nco usually concentrated on hi• rls1 lo ~er. and on his ambivalent diplomacy 1n World War II, 'l'rythall Is lhe (irtt writer to trace in more d1taU the tr.ajectory 1fter 1945. GOING BACK TO lilt end of tht lut century, the author ahow1 Franco, bom Into 1 t1mlly with 1 tradJUon of MrVic1 In lh1 N1v1J Admlnl1tr1llve Corpa, 11 1hy and aerloua, dutiful to hi s mother ind 10mtthln1 of a dlllppolntment to hil fa ther. Mort dlllcent than brilliant at th1 Toledo Infantry Academy, the younc Franet1 wa1 bullied by his fellow-studenll because of hi• 1m11l stature arid hiJ!l. pitched volct. There wu little, ln fact, in the early life of this unpreposawlna: youth to indicat e that one day he would rule his country. Later. in Morocco. a8 a .soldier P'raneo diiplayed the indomitaible e o u r 1 I e , forceful peraonallty, and m 1 r k e d leadership ability which led to hiJ promolion 1.!! bripdier·&•neral at the age 0£ 33 -on the eve of the Spanish Civil War \vhlch catapulted him to world fame al most overnight as leader of the N1tion1U1t In1ur1ents. TURNING TO THE middle 1t11e of Fr1nco'1 arHT, Tryth11l confirms th1t lf he did hopt for a German victory whlch would live hit country 1 plact in the N11l·ruled New ant.r, ht 1topped short of collaboration. Ottraclam by world opinion reaulted In lean yan for Spain in the late fort ies and 11rly fifties, as rranco pro1reSttd l'lllllUcally from • dream of economic 1ullrchy. stat1 control, and lmperlalllm to Utt realitlu of fnrelgn aid and lndlcaUvt planning. The goals of permanent IOCial stability 1nCI material prOlptrlty btcame a 1ubatltute for Gre1t Spain. Trythall emph11l1U P'ranco'1 a~lllty as 1 paUUcal m1nlpul1tor, llluatr1ttn1 his 1ucct11 In obtaining 1upport from f1ctlon1 which are neither drivtn to desperate, 1b90lute oppo1ltiOn nor to a meaaurt of ttren&th which c o u I d endanier the authoritarian 1tate. Crises develop and peter out. minister& art jetUaontd, 1trtken and r a b e 111 o u 1 atudtnlt 1r1 11ltnctd -and y .. r aft.et year, the restm• whole downfall 11 perennially prodlct«! by the llbtrail tnduru. IN Hll ITUDY, wbl<h oncompoaMI tbt whole span from 1892 to 1970, tbt author rea<htt tho thrtlllold ol Spain w!lllout Fr1nco: ''Wiii hb: rqlm• 11'11CC'Md Ille!!'! Will It be tho foundation !or Spain's 1t1lden 11e? or Will it appur slmply 1 parado:a:tc.1 Interlude In wbidl one man w11 able by hi.$ .lr1T"11Ctndenl poe!tlon to Jmpott peaOt Ind on!w on Spanish IUo!" Born In lht Unlltd States of Brttlth paronu, J. w. D. Trytball lt • leetunr In mod1m Europe1n ht1tory at t tit Unlvmity cl Ycwk. Tho NUii ol hit tho!Wlh rt111rch Inside and out.aide Spain, II Caudillo ts supplemented by a chronofOfl<lli synopsis, bibllD1raphy, •nd tllustratlona. Cows Given to an Unusual Leader A few years 110 a Jap1neu student went to a aoulhem agrlcultur1l school In the U.S. to learn animal husbandry. He worked hard, took a job on the outside, ~ and became expert in the artificial inaemlnatlon of cattle. After treating 12.000 cows and saving $8,000 or his e1rnln11, he bought 12 fine cows and heifer•. ThtH he drovt .acroa1 the country on a rl!nted truck to San F'ran· cisro, and sailed with them on a frel1 hter to Japan. He brought thtm as a present lo a friend -1n American liv- 11g high up in the mountains ol Yam a- na1hl prefecture. If th1t tound1 like In unusu1I present and an unusual friendship , it Is. Behind thi1 incident la 1n unusual &tory of Amerian-Japanese friendship and co- operation which preceded and survived th1 w1r and h11 culminated In a unique community and Institution. THE KIYOSATO Educ a ti on a I Experiment Projtct <KEEP) la located about 1n hour and a half's drive from my parents' home In Yamanashi City. There I met and viaited the founder, Dr Paul Rusch. It w11 he who received th1 present of the cows. Th1 object of Dr. Rusch'!I: dedication hu been the Epi~pal Church. but thi'ou1h • practical Christianity that ei:preues itself in the welfare of Japan and especially the Improvement of Japanese rural life . Not at all the ardent mis.sionary type, Ru1ch Is a cenlal. round·(ated, bald-headed A 'hie r I can •ctivist with demonstr1ted personal ma1netism. His assocl1te1 clearly love him. For more thal'I 20 years Dr. Rusch hts traveled annually to America to 1Zharm and persuadl fund.'I from churches. terviee club•, aarlcultural societies and fOundations for his demons tr 1 t Ion project. Started In 1957 when the future of democracy in Japan looked dim, KEEP began as a series o( organizations to help rural people help themselves. The focua haa alway1 betn on you th, to 1lve practical toob to the lde11lsm or young people. IN PLACl!I LIKE Kiy011to , nOlltcted by the Japanest themselves excepl those who lived lhert, farmers Wirt trying to cultivate rice p1ddle1 on un1ultab le upland terr1in. They eked out 1 llvlnc m•killl 1e11 !Woodin clo1s1 and charcoal. Diet w11 11 inadequate . Health problem• were many. Dr. Ru1ch, who had got to know the rtiion throu1h 1 church youth c•mp he had built thert before the war. wond1rtd what could be done to bllp. And could outsiders -Japantse collt11 1r1duate1 and Christiana to boot, with an American leadlt -011ircome the ditlMl of thtM to111·lsol1tld, tradition-bound f1nn1r1 ? Paul Rusch had ftnl arrived In JaJ>'n oltor the eartbquw or 1113 to h<lp NCOnStructioD lhn>ttih the YMCA. Later. u 1 tNchtr at St. P1u1'1 University in Tokyo. h< belped follnd a chapter of the Brotherhood of St. Andrew tor Chrl!1ti1n laymen. tntwntd 1t the outbreak of the war, be wu ,.changed on the Grlpsholrn, eerv«! tn U.S. ormy lntelll11nce. Wblle on tbe OCCUptUOn staff he resumed hi! friendship wllh St. P1ul grad1.111tes and tol(Olber they planned to e.pand the old Klyosato eamp Into a community devtlopm1nt eenttr, copcludlna that th1 country •'nHdfd i p r 1 c t I c 1 I d1mon11rallon of how d1moa1cy work1 on 11m1U community l1ve:I.'' TONS OF l\OCKS "'ERE ch!ared, as ... ~ .... on New En1land farms, to build a chllrch and a hospil1l and lo create 1 demonstration pasture. (The church 11 I little masterpiece. It look1 like m1ny other Chrl1tian churehe1 except tti•t the re are on pews -only tatami mill, 10 Iha! Japane.se farmers accustomed to 1ittln1 on the floor v.•ould feel at home.) f\.lilk cattle -in 1 non.milk drinkln& culture -were lo be the answer to the harsh economic problems of the region. A prize bull named "De:sianed for St. Andrew'' was imported despite akeptlcal Jeers, Japanese students "'·ent to America to 1tudy rural socioloiY and d1iryin1. Now the Kiyosato area has 11 ,000 head er milll: cattle. KEEP bas started a lar1e poultry industry with stock f r o m Petaluma , California : leads educaUonal efforts In pasture improvement in Japan : provides health educ1tion ; runs a nursery school: conducts a rtsidentlal school for J)roapective young fanners : b r In 11 thoU1ands or vis itors annually to a cultural and a1ricullural fair ; and provides youth camps, a rldln1 .achool 1nd conference centers for young men and women from all over the country. WHY HA.S KEEP BEEN 1uocessful? Ont reaso n Is th1t the decision to 10 Into dalryina came just as the Jap1n11t 1overnment and the American occupation were both stimulating the consumption of dairy products. The post.war emer11ncy school lunch proyram brought powdered milk, then after the emergency freth milk became a regular noontime. item not only in 1choo~ but in factory c1feleri11, profoundly altering the (ood habit.I of the n1tion -and the 1t1ture of youn1 peopl1. Second, durlnc the past two decadtt when millions Wert Jeavin1 the farm1 for lift In the city. thott who remained on the farms could hope to pro1per only by brlngln1 new methods into afrlculture . KEEP provided an inspiri ng model of scienliflc innovation. Third. as Dr. Rusch u11der1tood well. the pragmatic Japaneat ~spond to working models rather than to theoretlcal argument. KEEP has been a working model of pr1ctlcal religion in the 1ervice of man 11 well as of democr1cy in aclion. uniting college.educated scientists and old.fa1hloned farmers 11'1 co-operative effort and decislon·makin(. Dr. Rusch and his colleague• have p\ay~d • part \11 the lncredlble chan11' Japan has seen JJinct 1923. In 1947 they aaw the need for hQpe and helped provld1 It. Many in the U.S. lincludlna the Black. P. Stone Ran1•r1l who let. no hope In quiet rtvolutlons mtaht well pay a visit to Xiyoaato. (The he1dquarler1 of the American Committee for KEEP 11 at 343 S. Dearborn St .• Chicaco, llllnols 60llM.) 81 I. 1 H1y1k1•1 Pml4lool Sa• Frtecisco St.ate CoU1p 1---•• 0e.,.,. -- Otar Georae : My husband Jeana forward wht1 he eata IOUp. ANNOYED Deer Annoyl!d : Malaria Is caused by the female anophelet mosquito. (Well. I ant to ~ay 10methln1. Alter all. If l UNDERSTOOD Whal people •rt t1lktn1 about t \\·ouldn't last a week In this racket.) \ I • I • ' • r ' l I ' \ .. ' I . •. .. ~ . ., ~ ... -.-----.--- -~---=----=----=------=-- ~men JODEAN HASTINGS, 642-4321 f'r1o111.,, S.ttlllllff 11. 1m N .,.,. u Frie ndly Persuasion Pool Set For Party A poolside setting has been selected !or the annual fall membership lea for prospective members and guests of the Fountain Valley \Voman's Club. The event \viii take place between l and 3 p.m. Saturday. Sept. 26, and will follow the theme of Friend· Jy Persuasion, according to Mrs . Clarence Stewmon, membershjp chairman. The public also is invited to attend the club's first meeting of the new season beginning at 7:30 p.m. Mon· day, Sept. 14, in the city's civic center. · The program, w h i ch will precede the busi· ness meeting, will be presented by William G. Schwenn of Lion Co untry Safari, who also will bring a tiny lion cub, one of the ne west additions to the compouqd. His topi c \viii be Darlrest Africa Comes to Califor· nia, and he also will sho\v slides of the new develop- ment. The club's Junior Aux iliary, comprised of girls from the ninth grade up to age 21. met yesterday at the home of Miss Gayle Booth for a splash party and gen· eral meeting. 1\Jrs. Norman Nieberlein, social chainnan, has an- nounced advance plans for a Halloween party which will take place Friday, Oct. 30, in the civic center . WELCOME ABOARD -New members will be cordially invited to join a busy whirl of activities when Fountain Valley \Voman 's Club sponsors its fall membership tea between 1 and 3 p.m. Sat- urday, Sept. 26. Planning to mingle poolside with ne\v provisionals and interested guests are (foreground, left to right) 1Ylrs. Rich· ard Rosebrook and Mrs. E arl Coday \\1hile l\•lrs. Wallace Short, president, waves a banner signaling the event. • . Fire Auxiliary Stretches Fashion Benefit Plans The disaster fund \viii benefit when the Women's Auxiliary oi the Hunt ington Beach Fire Department sponsors its fall fa shion show tomorrow in the Peek Family Colonial Terrace Room , Westminster. Tick- ets for the 10 :30 a.m. event are $1.50, and emphasis \\'ill be on stretch and sew knitted fabrics. Stretch· ing a ne\v style are (left) Mrs. Andrew Vanderlaan. daughter Holl y and Mrs. Jack Lee. In addition to the shw1, prizes will be awarded and refreshments will be served. ' Yachtsmen Stock the Decks for Los Vegas Porty \Vhile Mrs. Kant er (left) and ~Jrs. Stanger busy themselves making decorations, Ben Kanter and Dr. Nonnan Stanger prove they have the situation well in hand for the lfuntington Harbou r Yacht Club's Las Vega s Night party taking place tomor- ro\v in the Lake,vood Cou ntry Club. Centering red- covered tables at the club's annual Call social will be black cones containing huge oversized playing cards. Assisting soc ial chairmen !\·Tr. and Mrs. Harry Burford wil/ be the Kanters, Mr. and Mrs. Cha rles Andrada and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Jordan. Knotty Family Ties Become Tangled in Medical Procedure DEAR ANN LANDERS : Jn your column retently lhere appeared a letter from a woman who wanted to bear a child through artificial insemination since tier husband's tests proved him incapable of fatherhood. I was especially interested in her letter because I am facing a se rklus crisis as a result of the same problem. f\ty husband ha., agreed to artificial insemination but only if I use his fo1ther 's sperm. I was sbocked at first, but his father Insists on U and says unless ~·e agree, he will nol. con.s ider our child his legitimate heir. I have no real objections since I admire t my father -In-law very n1uch and the ~ insemination would be artificial. But I do haVe some slrange feelings. WUI you ea.~ IT1)' consieence and eive me your ANN LANDERS blessings? -LUANA DEAR LU: Since )'91 bavt DO "rtal objections," 10 1bt1d, bat you do 10 •·ithout my bln1i1gs. Saeli 1n 1rrangeme1l Illa eldtn1 poulWHtltt ftr a liftllme of trouble, A falbtr·ln.l1w •·ho make1 such dem1Dd1 mu1t bt wildly egocentrk:, If DOl u11y, A ltuaband who "·ould a1ree need1 to examine hl1 rel1Uoa1 blp wllb bis f1tber . ~ly 1ae11 Is tb•t bt ftel1 vastly l1rertor 10 P1. 11te ultimate act of telf-emasculaUon would be to 11low lil1 father 16 Impregnate his wife. Al for )'ou, my dear, have you consldcrtd what It would ht like \& itve blrlb to your own brotbtr·in-law? I don't know how math mooey 11 Involved lieu, but In my oplnit111 there lsrl'l enou1h money In tbe world to make thl1 de1I acceptable. DEAR ANN LANDERS : 1 need an answer NOW. T tried to call a suicide center a few minutes ago 11nd discovered Cincinnati doesn'l have one. I was horribly depressed and felt the need to talk to somebody. I think I need psychiatric help but J can'l let my family down . They \'lould feel like failures if they knew how disturbed and unstable I am. Why do parenls blame themselves when their children go haywire ? I know I'm 11 slob and it is my ov.·n fault, not theirs. I've had every opportunity to make something of myself but I just can't seem to concentrate long enough to ACCt'lmplish anything. Right no1v 1T\V stomach is tit:d up In knots and my head Iii throbb ing so ha rd I'm afraid it will burst. tr you can't help me, A.nn. J want to say thanki; for listening. -0 .F.S.8 .W. DEAR FRIEND: Clncinnatl has no Suicide Prtventlon Center as yet, hut there Is a tbapter of Recovery. lneorporated five miles away In Fort Thomas, Kentucky, The telephone num· her Is llOM41-2614. I urge you 11) ~Ive lhtm a call, Perbap1 all you need 11 a htlplng hand to &el you throt1.l{b ihi1 tem· Jlfltary crlst1. And pleai;e stop •·orrylng about "dl1graclng" your family. If you brokt 11 kK you wouldn 't be •~hamed to get U 1et, •·ould )'OU? Gel golng: and gnod luck. G4XI helps lho5e ••bo hel p tbem· selves. DEAR ANN LANDERS : ln June I was invited lo a graduation ceremony, in JUiy to a bridal shower, in August to a v.·edding and in f\1ay I received a baby 11nnouncemen1. Same girl -rour gifts wilhin 111'.i months. ~fy pocketbook ia aching. \Vhat can a person say? -RED INK DEAR RED: Say ouch and huy gifts Ml keeping v.·ith v.h11 you can afford. \Vhiit is fl'f'nch kissing? Is IL \\·rong? \\'ho should m:t the necking limits -the boy or the girl? Can a shotgun wedding succeed? Read ~nn I.anders' booklel, "Teenage Sex -Ten \Yays Lo Cool It.'' Send 50 cents in coin and a Jong, self~ addressed. s1anlped envelope In care or the DAILY PILOT. Adelines Sing Song For Peace 'The Mission Viejo Chapter of Sweet Adellnea Inc. will harmonize into world W)derstanding as it joins choruses in the United States. Canada and p._...,,. in a share+<oog program on Tuesday, Sept. 15. More than 20,000 voices will entertain in hospitals and for students, s e n i o r cltlziens, shoppers, club members and civic groups in an el!ort lo promote harmony th ro u g h music. Under the direction of Mrs. William G. :sames, th e Mission Viejo Chapter will sing "ln the Good Old Summertime" and "When the Saints Go Marching In" in the Laguna Beach Nursing Home. Highlighting the program will be mU$ic by a apecial quartet, the Mission Im possibles, composed o f members of the chapter. Gvys and Dol/s'r e Betting on Fvn Riviera Club members and their husbands will head Laguna. Those interested in joining the Guys and Dolls Section at a cost of $10 per person covering bus fare, admission and lunch, may phone Mrs. de Ford at 494-3683. Ccrchairman will be Mrs. Richard Narcotics Program Headlined for Caliente on Sunday, Sept. 13, for a day at the races. The Robert de Fords and Leslie G. Weldons (Je!t to right) will be among those boarding the bus Steinbach. at 9 a.m. in the Alpha Beta shopping center in South -~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ .. ...... Horoscope ... " Scorpio: Be Moderate .,. , .... SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 12 By SYDNEY OMA.RR ARIES (March 21-April 19): Act'eflt on how you relate to those who admire y o u. Spotlight on hopes, wishes, friends. Social activity is favored. You gain if able to convince mate, partner that money should be saved. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Pleasant surprise due. You " receive assurance that ideas, .. actions are sound. Check '~ · details. Have facts at hand. Relax without being careless. ' Message will become ~· increasingly clear. ~ GEMINI (May 2J -June 20): '!· Reach out for greater area or communication. Don't permit ~ anyone to stiHe mode of •' expression. Your chann is appreciated mare than might be imagined. Go ah e a d , Change is 11iecessary. appreciation. Others cannot read your mind . Say what you mean-mean what you say. LEO (July 23-Aug, 22): Get promises in writing. others will respect you i! fair but firm. Slight disappointment will rebound in your fa vor. Close associate does want to help you. Re spon d accordingly. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Set your oWn pace. Be a se\f. starter. Waiting too Jong for instructions· could lead to error. Assert your needs . You get what you want i( not afraid to act, speak. IJBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Money situation improves. Member of apposite s e x provides information -and inspiration. Finish project. Don't be discouraged by one who sings the blues. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): must face your.sell in morning. SAG11TARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): Short journey could bring profit, pleasure. Throw off secret fears, doubts. You are going in right direction . One who aided in past makes reappearance. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19): Friendl1' advice could mushroom i n I o profitable move. Be a ware of opportunit ies . Expand horizons. Accent versatility. No one is really holding you back -get going. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Cycle continues high - get rid o f nonessentials. Opportunity is present: key is to take advantage 0 r circumstances. C h a n g e • travel, variety are high on agenda . PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Civic Duty Discussed ,.. Civic-minded women w 11 1 gather at 9:30 a.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 15, in the multi pu rpose room or Mariners Library, Newport Beach. A ~rogram on narcotics and drug abuse will be presented for the Orange County Council of Hospital Volunteers during a meeting Monday, Sept. 21, in West Anaheim. Community Hospital. Presenting the 9:30 a.m. program will be t h re e speakers, Det. Petu Tisbo or the Anaheim Police The Women's Civic League Department, Dr. Dan I el of Neyrport Harbor will begin Castile or the Orange County its 19th year 0£ nonpartisan, Medical Cenzer, and Glenn A. nonpolitical conslruclive work Timmons of Teen Challenge. toy,·ard "the common good and public e o n s i d e r a I i o n to Three round.table discussion problems and interests of the sessions are pl~nned for the community." afternoon portion of t h e Mrs. Paul J . Gruber.' meeting , inclu d ing program chairman, w i 11 Pa: liam~ntary Procedure, introduce Mrs. Eleanor G. Junior Guilds and Square Pegs Smith, past president, who will in Round Holes. report on a recent vi.sit to Mrs. Jack M. Lyons will Washington, D.C. preside and 20 Orange County Also attending the meeting hospitals will be presented. will be Mrs. Ellen Lee, author Luncheon will be hosted by the of "Old Newport. , .the West Anaheim Community Seaport Years." Hospital and Auxiliary. University Women Take Pretea Tovr A flowing caftan \VOrn by Mrs. Keith A. Kinner, purchased on a recent trip to South Africa, is admired by Dr. Pearl Clark, president of t he Laguna Beach Branch of the American Association of University \Vomen, and Mrs. George A. Bowman (right). The trio is making plans for a Fiesta de las Ami· gas membership tea on Saturday, Sept. 12, from 2 to 4 p.rn. in the Monarch Bay home of Mrs. Robert Berry. Chairmen 'vill discuss study topics under the direction of Mrs. Donald Tanney, tea chairman, during the t ea. \Vomen \vho are graduates of AAU\V-approved colleges are eligible to join. Orchid Bvffs Take Note Orchid enthusiasls w i 11 gather in the Wardlow Park Clubhouse, Long Beach, at 8 p.m. on Monday, Sept. 14, for a meeting of the Long Beach Amateur Orchid Society. clan~;-; 2'40E.Cou~lltrJY•t Corona clef Mat' Doil~ 9'l0 '° S:)I Tel: 673-271/0 lvNloya 11to5 &tFA -M..J...-Chargc AMERICAN LEATHER TEEN QUEEN SEE CONTEST WINNERS TONITE 7 P.M.-CAROUSEL COURT . CANCER (JW!e 21.July 22): ·· · You could get inextricably ;· involved. Don't play games " with emotions . F a m i I y You may be tempted to go to excess in eating, drinking. Wise course is one o f moderation. Don't make big deal of jt. Just realize that you • Communicaticn from one at a distance provides reassurance. Don't permit false pride to hinder progress. F i g h t tendency to brood. News you receive should cheer, not depress. Check Award Heads Harbor Key's Agenda N~~:~~t~~~!'°'!r Be~rdl~=.:::=:::::=:S::o:=~:lf:_ h:=:~:~:•::s:t~?l~-~·~z~a~~:_, A busy agenda, highlighted by the presentation of a check to Child Guidance CEnter of Orange County will involve members of Harbor Key when they gather for a general meet~ , at 10 a.m. o n Tuesday, Sept. 15. Guidance Center will aeceit a check from Mrs. John P. Wright. president, for the proceeds r rom the 1 9 7 0 Emipre Debutante Ball, one or three major annual events sponsored by Harbor Key to support the non profit, county. wide psychiatric clinic for emotionally disturbed children and ado le sce nt s from preschool to the age of 17. • • " . On the Mark Ready for shO\V com- . petition a r e entries by (left) Mrs. George ·Jones and l\irs. 0. T. Wallcey. More than 48 classifications of ferns ·and 'begonias will com- pele in the i6th annual show sponsored by the Orange County Branch •vl the American Be- . go nla Society. Admis- sion is free on Satur~ day and Sunday, Sept. 12-13, from ID a.m. lo 6 p.m. at Brecht's Or- chid Co.. Costa Mesa. For The First Time In Or1np County The M1gnlflcent Color Film Series dvif~aliott Written •nd narrated by Sir Kenneth Cla rk for the British Broadcasting Company. An In spired motion picture history. spanning 1000 years of \Vestern ?.1an's cultural achievements. Sponsored by the Newport Harbor Art Muuum and shown for seven consecu tive Sunday after· noons starting September 27th at the Balboa Thca- t~r. Showings will be at 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. Series tickles arc $15.00. Make chec~s payable to: New,por~ Harbor Art Museum. Box 507. BalboD, Calfiroma, 92661 or call 675-3866 for Information. Coffee will be 1 e r v e d beginning at 9:30 in Park Stanford Season Kicked Off 1t1embers also will ballot to choose the 1970 Angel of Harbor Key, a person selected yearly for outstanding contrib utions made to children's welfare and to the Child Guidance Center . Members of the Stanford Concluding the morning will Club or Orange County will be a presentation of new initiate the new season with a p r o v t s I o n a I members, ldck4f party tomorrow. including the Mmes. William Comfort.able chairs, large-L. Barker, Jack M. Bibb, M. ~ screen TV sets, beer and chips J. Falslev, Samuel Hurwitz, will lend to the spirit o! the Frank Legrand, Stanley Nash, S t an f o rd· Arkansas game Richard Parrish, Ivan W. which beglns at 2:30 p.m. Sturgis and Robert Wood. The rooUng section will~~~---"="'-'="-- gather In the Palisades Tennis Make a Sharp Club, Costa Mesa. Additional information may Trade; Use { be received by calling \Valkie Dime·A·Lines Ray at 642·4210.' BIDWELL OF NEWPORT ~J.... BIDTIQUE 67J-411t SPECIALS FOR SEPTEMBER . NOW THRU SEPTEMBER 30th ' CONTINENTAL ACIDOPHILUS ONE PINT SPECIAL $1.95 llGULAlt SZ.ZS WHEAT 79°/o Natural NATURAL GERM OIL Protein Powder BONE Cold Preued ONE POUND CALCIUM I OZ. S;1e Th i, ;, e bit St •in91 100-7.S Grein T1blelt lt .. 1ler SZ.69 lllEGULAI SJ.fS OUI lllEGULAlll PllCI $2.19 $3.29 ON THIS IS $1 ,79 SPECIAL SPICIAL SPECIAL $1.39 WHEAT GERM OIL CAPSULES 6 MINIMS 100 CAPSULIS .......................... llGULAI $1 .2' SPECIAL "' ... CAPSULIS ...................... llGULAI IJ.71 SPECIAL $2.19 VITAMIN Pure Korean Cold Pressed B-12 GINSENG SOY OIL 250 Mlcro9r1mt The 111w hl9h pot1nt.y I Gr1i11 C1p1ul11 Ou••t Si11 l1bl1t. 50 l1bl1t 1i11. 50 C1p1ul1 Si11 llGUU.l Sl .H llGUU.l Sl.50 ltEGULAl ... SPEC:IAL $1.29 SPECIAL $7.25 SPICIAL 69c VITAMIN "E" -MIXED OR D-ALPHA 100 J.U. -100 CAPSULll ............ HGULAI ..... SPECIAL $1 .98 ... J.U. -CAPSULU ....................... 14.71 S·PECIAL $3.59 SPECIAL 10°/o Of'F ON ALL PAPERBACK BOOKS IN PERSON IN PERSON , GWEN Of GWEN'S COSMETICS Will Be At Our Tustin Store Sept. 18th, And At Our Costa Mesa Store Sept. 19th. COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS COSTA MESA 270 E. 17th SI. In Hillgren Square 541-'537 TUSTIN 1094 IRVINE BLVD. NEAR SAV-ON 544-7134 I· ] I YC j 1 - 1 , SI n bu iii of fie w dire loda fr: 1ysti Ho cont by I next H1 by I rout ( I M• the deac eleci ye.u Co ball< bet• Gre< B T. B Ve Schc Tue: tere. &tru• ,... m~ ""' the t Tl char Com two- ' ' A si the If frorr Volt mill beer A rate 42 v we rt time Ac pen: ..... Sc dis tr 1,60( and 7,, disb P1 the mill. a val ~ - - --• " • Fo1111tain v ·aJley Today's Flnal N.Y. Steeb YOL. 63, NO. 218, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAG ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA· FRIDAY, SEPTEM BER 'If, '1970 TEN CENTS • Astronaut Welcomes Students From Capsule By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI OI tf11 OlllY l'lltfl Sltlf Astronaut Neil Arm strong , the first man to walk on the moon, provided a surprise welcome this morning to four crewmen who had just spent 90 days in s space simulation capsule at r-.1cDon_nell- Douglas Corp., Huntington Beach. Annstrong greeted the men -John Hali, Wilson Wong, Terry Donlon and Stephen Dennis -at 6:01 a.m. just as they emerged from the sealed capsule for their first breath of fresh earth air. ··1, more than most of uA here, BJ> preciate what it's like to be cooped up," smiled Armstrong, adding that he was glad to rejoin the world after his voyage to the moon. The crewmen, all graduate students, were equally happy' They had been.' testing life support systems which may ultimately be used foi' extended stays in outer space. "Today we're all in sort of an exaltant glow," remar'ked crew chief Hall, 25. He added that it was not a 1 foregone con- clusion that the test would be sue· cesslully completed. During the early wee~s of the ex· periment, manY,., of the systems had broken ·down, causing both crewmen and engineers to think "that maybe we would have a successful 30-day run." One of the it.ems to experience break down was the water recycling system which left them with bi.icket;s of waste water -both in bUckets and on the cabin floor -until they managed to fir It. •·1 personally tbou&ht a lot about travel· ing," said Hall when queried about his mental preoccupations. "l had a Sierra Club calendar with me and every week l turned It over to see what kind or picture it had." "What' about girls?" asked · one newsman during the press conference which followed their release from the chamber. Replied crewman Wong, 23, sheepishly, . •·wen. If we had them on boerd, we ·wouldn't be out today ." For their work in maintaining the cabin equipment &nd serving as guinea pigs for scientists, the men were paid a regular $1.60 hourly salary plus overtime and a· daily bonus: An additional payment of S2,000 \viii be theirs for .succes~fully com· pleting the 90 days. "It wa sn't enough," de c I are d "astronaut" Dennis, 22. But crew chieC Hall said it was an adequate return . He added, however. ''l would have to say s ro ea I' .1 .I' Stat e Hi n ts Coastal Freeway May Be Junked By L. PETER KRIEG Of fll• 011tr l'ilDI SllH The Pacific Coast Freeway ma y not be built at all, a State Division of High ways official .disclosed today. William Hashi~oto, deputy district director of the Highway Division 7, said today the department is considering the pOss~ility of eliminating the entire freeway from the future state highway - 1ystem. He said a decision on the fate of the controveriiial superhighway will be made by top departmental officials within the next six months. He indicated th"at problems generated by the m1my cities along the proposed route, like Newport Beach, which doesn't want the road, have led the department to think about killing plans for it. He said planning for the section through Newport, itself, has already come to a halt. lie said that the Newport segment. even under current policy, would never be bu ilt at all if Newport doesn't want it. Hashimoto said there is no need to ~.Jlj!Jhe time "rescindin'" the current freeway agreement. a·project spearhead- ed now b'y a citizens' group; he said a let- ter from the city council would do. The state halted all design work on the freeway section through Newport Beach follwing the .introduction of a bill by lSet FREEWAY, Page Z) Cities League Election Deadlocked for Ne w Head Members of the executive committee of the Orange County League of Cities deadlocked 7 to 7 Thursday night over the election of a president for the coming year. Committee members in two secret ballots were unable to break a tie vole between incumbent President Jack Green, Huntington Beach City Cciun· B each District T o Vote on New Bond I ncreases Voters in the Huntington Beach City School District v.·ill say "yes" or "no" Tuesday' to a proposed increase in the in- terest rate on $4.75 million in school con- struction bonds. Twice before the district has narrowly missed passing the interest rate needed to sell the bonds and build new schools in the rast growing district. The third time is more likely to be a charm thanks to a California Supreme Court ruling eliminating the need of a twi>thirds majority to pass the increase. A simple majority is now sufficienl to do the job. lf passed, the inter~t rate will jump from five percent to seven percent. Voters a year ago approved the $4.75 million in bonds, but the dist rict has not been able to sell them at five percent. A proposal for a seven percent interest rate Jost by 40 votes last February and by 42 votes in June, Both of those elections were combined with other issues. This lime the election stands by itself. According to school figures, the two percent interest increase will cost the owner of a $.10,000 home $4.75 in one year. School officials note that the school district population has increased from l ,tiOO children in 1962-63 lo 6.050 this year and will go to an estimated 8,500 in 1972- 7:l. There are seven schools in the district Passage of the interest r11le and sale of the local bonds will also make $9.S million in slRte construction funds avallablt to the district. cilman. and Ralph Clark, Anaheim coun- cilman and a candidate for supervisor from the Fourth District in the November election. The committee members finally voted to delay election of officers until the Oct. 8 meeting. That session will be held jointly with the city of Westminster to celebrate the city's IOOth birthday. Previous to Thursday iUght's deadlock a nominating committee had named Green to suoceed himself and Clark to be re-elected to the post of vice president. The league approved a proposal sub- mitted by a committee headed by Ma yor Ed Hirth of Newport Beach that all governing bodies 01 regional agencies be 100 perce nt elected officials. The proposal also demands that all meetings of such regional agencies by held within ~e territory over which the agency has jurisdiction. Hirth's committee had been studying a proposal that . all mayors be directed elected by the voters and be salaried. The Newport mayor said that more lime was needed to study that idea and thal recognition of the added burden or regional government participation, would help to offset opposition to increased salaries for mayo rs. ' Huntington Beach voters will decide Nov. 3 on a proposal to elect a full time mayor with a yearly salary of $17,000. Fountain Valley and Cosla Mesa city councils have both passed resolutions op- posing regional agencies established by legislative mandate. Flag Football Set in Valley Young boys who want to pl8y nag foot· ball In F'ountain Valley must sign up from 9 a.m. to noon. Saturday, in lhe community center. 10200 Slater Ave. The league is open to boys in the third through eighth grades in Fountain Valley. SCrlmmages start Sept. 19 and league .pJAy Starts Sept. 26. The programis sponsored by the city parks and recrealion department. Sum mer at Slater Lahe lt all comes to an end Monday when school starts. But. until then, these youngsters are enjoying the fleeting days of summer. Jeff Spargur, 6, feeds the ducks ; John Gorlack, ii, hunts (and finds) craw· dads, and Stanley Hurst, 6, sails his boat. Police Capture Valle y S uspect in S ex Crimes Police early today chased down and captured a Fountain Valley photographer who they charged with kidnapping, possession of dangerous d r u g s narcotics and marijuana -and a sex perversion allegedly forced upon a 17· year~ld Costa Mesa girl. The suspect. arrested by Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach offlce~s, wa s Identified as Robert C. Albright, 32, of 18862 Arbutus St., Fountain Valley. Police asserted that the teenaged girl told them she was driving in the Costa Mesa area Rbout I :30 a.m. when a car pulled alongside her and tried to force h('r auto off the road. In efforL-; 11> evade her attacker. 1he eventulllly ended up in Huntlngton Beach where the drlvet ClnaOy i!ld force her off the road. .. i The driver held a knife at her throat, and forced her to perform an act of sex perversion, she told officers. A squad car patrolling the intersection of Yorktown Avenue and Brookhurst Street pulled up behind the vehicle during the alleged act, allowing the girl to flee, lnvestlgators reported. The car ned with police units from Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach giving chase until it was cornered at Harbor :Boulevard and Warehouse Road in C05ta Mesa. · At the lime or Albright'• arrest, or· ficers alltge. they found a quantity or ,matijuana and other drugs In the vehicle. Albright WIS ' booktd fnlo Huntil'gton • Beach City Jail .. • Beach Women P ush 1for Tax Proposal Rate The Huntington Beach League of Women Voters has thrown its support behind Tuesday's election In the Fountain Valley School District to continue the district's $2.99 tax rate. Voters wUt go to the polls lrom 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. at each of the dlslrlct'a 13 schools. The dislrict covers most ·or F.ountaln Valley and part of Huntington Beach east of Beach Boulevard and north of Ada.rrui: Avenue. tr the district loses thh tax election the TB;le will drop to $J.35. The tax ptoposal «:alls for an indefinite ·extension ol lhe $2;99 ra~ approved· by •VO~s five years 110. • • • • ; now if t were asked to do another 90 days I would say 'n(!.' " t- Today the four men will travel to UCLA for medical tests and then will presumably take deserved vacations before ·resuming classes. This morning they were treated to a heavy breakfast. inc!Uding inch-thick steaks. It was a welcome departure from their normal freeze-dried meals. Hall , however, added jokjngly that the first thing he had to get his ha~ on when being released was a dill pickle. 258 Re1nain . Prisoners; Others F1·ee From Wire Services AMMAN, Jbrdan -Arab terrorists have abruptly canceled a 72-hour deadline on the fate Qr 258 hostages ·aboard three jetliners parked in the scorching desert 45 miles from here. No new deadline was set for the threatened bombing of the planes and !illlugh~er of t~ hostag~s, which ·had otiginally been scheduled for 7 p.m. (PDT)' Saturday. The announcement -apparently foro- td .bf· world, oplniQn -was made bl 'Washm,ton by Q\e ·Stlte Dtp1rtment late this mohtin1. DevelopmentJ had continued foday ln r(llpidJire Jash!on as the -kidnap ltory of the decade unfolded at Dawson's Field and in capital cities around the globe. . The number of host.Ps had swelled overnight to 258, with the. birth of an. American baby aboard,. one hijacked plane. _,. Joyful wom'en and children -atjll afraid for loved onea held aboard the planes -were freed earlier by the.guer. rilla Popular Front for the Liberation of PalestJne. President Richard Nlxon .ordered arm- ed guards to fly on all U.S. airlines - foreign and domestic -beginning this Saturday. Leaders throughout the world appealed to the Popular Front for the Liberation of. Palestine (PFLP) to free the 258 cap- tives, whether · or not· their ransom· demands are. met • The PFLP wants imprisoned guerrillas In Israel anq Europe released in e1· change. Liberal governments of Midq!e Eaatern states, meanwhile , were among those urging the PLFP not to carry out its ter· rorist threats. . ,.,_ Iraq and Syria branded the series of four hijackings as irrespons.ible and unrevolutionary. President Nixon has. reportedly vetoed any possibility of dired military in- tervention against the revolutionaries to free American captives. Six C-130 cargo planes All! deployed at lncirlik, Turkey; however, about one hour's flying time from the Jordan-Syria border. Maneuvers have placed the U.S. Sixth (See IDJACK, Page I) Oruge Cout 1''N tller . · 'Clouds will hide the sun while the ocean breeze cools things off along the Orange Coast this week· end. Temperatures will dip to 68, while holding at 82 further inland. INSW E TODAY Surf f n g enthwiasts from across .ihe nation are honing in on Huntington Beach, where the 1970 nqtionot championships wiU be held ne.tt weekend. See Sports, Page 15. '""' • ...... ..... IMlll!t " Muhllll '."""' " Ctlltor11 .. ' ,.., ............ •• (Mckl111 "' " OfltHI ClilJlllY • ci.n111e1 "'a ...... , .... ,n..1• C-•111k• " SWIVle ll'lrter ,. c,.,._.. " ·-· lf.lt 0..ftl .l"flc" • lllC• .. ,... , .. ,, fcllftf'IM .... • TtleY..,... U , ... _ '"" "Tt!M'9n ·- .. _ " :i!? . Al!ft Lnfft1 " w ....... 1>11 MllllllJ • "' -.. Mtt""9 1.k"'* I --""' MMlll'ltl • " , ' .2 DAILY PILOT ff Frld'I, S.pllml>tr II, 1970 JliJ ·IJniu From Page I Council Delays Building Hearing HIJACK •.. Fleet in the Mediterranean nearby, ap- parently to provide support -if necessary -in evacuatlng f re •,. hostages.• One radiG broadcast from Beirut Lebanon, by the radical Central Com· mittee of the Palestine Re.sistance Mov~ ment, charged the U.S. is preparing an invasion. Two pleas for apartment developments 1n Huntington Beach failed to impress the city council this week. The William Lyon Development Com· i:any asked lhe council to overturn pla.rr ning commission denial for 151 apartment unit s proposed for the north side of Holland Drive, about 180 feet east of Beach Boulevard. On a S.J tie vote councilmen failed to reacb a decision Tuesday nlghl and con· tinued the public hearing to Sept. 21 and the return or Councilman A1 Coen. Another apartment pita, for 100 units In , the Huntington Harbour area, was defeated 4-2 by the council. On thil!I one, Lincoln Property Company or Dallas, Tex., had asked to eitend ex. isting apartments to the edge of AJgon. quin Street. Surrounding homeowners in both areas opposed the apartment proposals. Hun· tington Harbour residents wanted no more apartments in their area and more than 200 residents of the Dutch Haven Tract felt apartments wouJd throw too much traffic on Holland Drive and other residential streets. Both developers said commercial zon- ing existing on the two pieces of property Comic to Launch Artists' Forum In Beach Sunday Comedian Jona than Winters will help launch Prospectus-Art '70, a showing of more than 700 works by leading California artists, when the show opens . Sunday night on the HlmUngton Center Mall In Huntington Beach. Promoters of the charity art show, bill· ed as one of the largest of its type in Orange County, said Winters will pro- bably appear during the preview opening of the show at 6 p.m. Sunday. Admission to the Sunday night preview Is $5 per person, with the proceeds going to establish art 1cholarships on a yearly basis. ProspectU!-Art '70 will be opened free to the public starting Monday and run- ning through Sepl 25 on the mall at Edinger Avenue and Beach Boulevard. The charity event .ls co-sponsored by the ~ty of Huntincton Beach, ·Golden West College and the HunUngton Center Shopping Center. Jascin Wong, director of the Long Beach Museum of Art, is coordina ting the Huntington Beach show. Three judges will award $2,500 hi prizes to the top artists in the show. One $400 award will be handed to the artist whose painting earns the most votes of the public attending Sunday's opening. Money collected Sunday night will be given to International Art Scholarships, an organization of business and pr~ fessional persons Interested in promotion or the fine arts. IAS will handle aMual scholarship arrangements. Mia, Andre Join In Wedded Bliss LONDON (AP) -Mia Farrow, the willO'WY film actress, and Conductor An- dre Previn, the father of her twin sons, were married Thursday in a London church. A spokesman for the couple announced tOOay they were married in Rosslyn Hill Chapel, a Unitarian church In the fashionable Hampstead suburb, in a ceremony attended by the mothers of both Miss Farrow and Previn. DAILY PILOT Oii.ANG~ COAST l'UlllaM!NG COMl',INY a.ob1ft N. w,,, Prn kltnl 11'111 1'11o..wt J1c:k i C11rl1y Vitt P'l'Kfdtal W ........,,I M1n111r Tho111•• Kttvil t:Oi!Dt" l ho,,.11 A. Murphin1 M-tlrle E•• .Al111 Dirk in Wal 0 11no-eo..,.,ry Ed11or ' A lb1rt W. 11111 Altll(:llll E<filor H1 ............ llOfflc• 17115 l11c~ loul1w1ul M1ll!n9 Atlllr1u : P.O. 111 7f0, 92641 Othr Offlc" lal""I lltJ~: 122 1'11<11! ,ly"'ue, C111t Mew: no WlJI ll•r ""'' ltrlt-< ltiotn: 2211 Wnl ltlllon 13'1!1~1 ... J.111 C~ttl llll Ntrlll El Ct,,.!111 llttl DAILY PILOT, WHll wroldl • ~ Wtt .. .-...-.• "*""'" •• u., .c..i '-•• ., Ill ~"C:, 1fllleftt tor \.IOUN IWtl\, .. ,..., l t td\, "(11t11 Mew, HVllll'lt".tll &H<ll Mid "-'91n Vtlttr, titrle Wllll 1*-> "fillrlll M ltlonL OfMtt tent l'WH"'lllt C-11• prlllllllg p1t11ts t•t •• :nn w .. 1 l lftlol llvll~ N...,..., hit!\, 11'.tl 2lO Wnl .. , ~lr'HI. Clll• -.. T1l1,•1 • r7t 41 642"'4JJI ir.11 W•llll•et Cefl 140·1 Ht C*-ffW AMrti1 ... 64Z·l671 COvfrilfll, 1'71, °''""' (OHi "lllllli.111"' c-tny. No -• 1lorln, IJl\llfrtll...,, Jelltwitl INllll' or 'fvtrlhllll..,11 lltr.,11 ,.,., Ill' ~-wllMlil 'llK'-1 l'f•• ....... ., """"""'' ••1111'. lee.NI <1-....... N lf e1 H""*"' lffdt or4 Cll!t -...., C•!lfOrflll, s.io.ui.tll!I '" <••"""" ll.00 mr.tlllly1 91111111 U.Je -llllJI ... 1u11rr 111111r1t1liln" ta.tO """1111,. was worthless to them. Councilmen George McCracken and Ted Bartlett supported both apartment pleas while Councilmen Jack Green, Jer· ry Matney and Mayor Donald Shipley op- posed both apartment requests. Councilwoman Norma Gibbs was the swing vote as she opposed the Harbour apartments, but supported the Lyon re- quest on the grounds that it was the only possible development ror the land. From Page I FREEWAY ••. Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R· Newport Beach) to kill a stretch of the route from Huntington Beach through · Corona deJ Mar. Badham's bill cleared the Assembly but died in Senate committee. OAIL·Y l'ILOT PIM .. ~1 L .. f'l1M ·'Clo.se ranks Jn the face of this ad· vancing peril," the group ltnplored. Optimism was spreading, however, In Washington after a Congressional con· ference that negotiations to free the hostages will succeed. Israeli Premier Golda Meir has main- tained a hard line, refusing to agree to rree 3,000 Arab guerrillas. "Are we to release these people !n some sort of ceremony or other .so they can come back and repeat tt:eir acts?" she said, her voice bitter with anger. Sources in Jerusalem indicated she may be forced to go back down. The PFLP, meanwhile, freed 60 of 116 women and children first removed from thr: planes today and returned passports. They were to be flbwn to Nicosia, on the Island or Cyprus, by Jordanian Airlines. Diplomatic sources said it was un· derstood the remaining people im· prisoned at the Intercontinental Hotel in Amman would also be freed. Newport Mayor Ed Hirth, following a meeting with state officials Thursday, first disclosed that work on the Newport stretch had been halted and the state would not proceed without the city's blessings. Boating for Birds? Tough conditions existed at Dawson's Field where the TWA, BOAC and Swissair jetliners are parked, but an International Red Cross team was doing its be.st. "They told me the state will not force a freeway down the throat of any city that does not want one," he said. It is because so many cities along the route don 't want the freeway that the state is considering the actioo, Hashimoto confirmed. Pete Reyes o1 Santa Ana works on the form for a 53-foot ketch being built by McClatchie Marine in the firm's Newport Beach yard. An artistic worker at the boatyard thought the upside down form had the look of an eagle about it. So, he painted a bird's face on it The face graces both sides of the form . "ft is not exactly a luzurious maternity home ," said Red Cross aides who delivered the baby born to the tmiden- tified young American woman during the nigh t. Several communities have been fighting it , and one, the city of Venice, succeeded in getting legislation passed in the reoolt session of the state legislature that killed the freeway within its city limits. The community of Beverly Hills con· tinues its protest similar to that of Newport Beach. Orange Coast Students Responsible ·1 or Dress Cou11 Di smisses Contempt Charge On CSCF Prof Several women aboard the planes are also pregnant and the Red Cross included rubber pants and diapers with a shipmCflt of 1,000 prepackaged meals and medical supplies. Following the Washington conference, Sen. Mike Mansfield said the President's tactics have complete Senate support. "I think the governmeTJt has done everything it possibly could," he said. The Newport mayor is currently preparing a preliminary report on the en~ tire matter of Newport Beach transporta· tion that Iikely will be brought up at a council "study session" Monday af. ternoon. Hirth has been plugging for an overall and complete study of future traffic needs in Newport Beach. Jn effect, he says, it would be "starting all over from the beginning." He said he does not know whether Newport needs a freeway or not, and that a comprehensive study "of .some kind" should be undertaken by the City Council. Hirth said Haig Ayanian. the division director, and Hashimoto agreed with this and said all the city need do to stop work on tht freeway, forever, if It wants, is to have "1le City Council write the state Division of Highways saying so. 'I1le disclosure means that efforts by a newly.formed C it i z e n s ' Coordinating Committee to circulate petitions that would force the city to rescind Its present freeway agreemen t are likely not necessary. The city had adopted a route for the new hghway east from Bayside drive to the Corona del Mar boundary. The Division of Highways, adopted route, through Newport, has the freeway traveling immediately adjacent to the presen~ Pacific Coast Highway, taking valuable commercial real estate along the way. Opponents of the route contend the road will "cut the city in half/' and thus ruin its character. By GEORGE LEIDAL Of tllt Dell'I' Piiot II•" High school 11tudents along the Orange · Coast for the most part will share the burden of responsibility for their dress with their parents. With the exception of Tustin Union High School District which adopted a slightly r e v i s e d parent-teacher-ad· ministration formulated code, and San Juan Capistrano Unified whose board-ap- proved code was drawn by parents and students last spring, most Orange Coast districts have abandoned dress codes. Newport-Mesa Unified dropped its dress code in the middle of last year, ac- cording to Dr. Nonnan Loats, association superintendent for instructional opera· lions. "We more or less a&Sume that dress is the res-lbWty of the home,'' Loats said. "In individual cases, however, we may have to tell a student 'we'd like you to gG home and dress more ap- propriately,' should he appear at school dressed outrageously." Districts abandoning fonnal, restrictive dress do's and don'ts have for the most part adopted short policy statements noting parents' responsibility for dress. All districts interviewed said they re- quire that shoes be worn for health and safety reasons. Laguna Beach ~·hich is continuing a survey of parent, teacher and student at- titudes about dress restrictions as adopted "one shor t paragraph" con- stituting its dress code, Superintendent William Ullom said. .. Broke, Iii Debt, Jobless Singer Eddie. Fisher (right), accompanied by his attorney, Rodrigo Otero Sl1ro. arrives at lf.S. District Cou rt In San Juan, Puerto Rico. Fisher testified Thursday during bankruptcy proceedings that he was a happy.go-lucky star who left business details to paid profes· sionals and woke up one morning to find him se!J broke, in debt and out of work. He bas been living in Puerto Rico since tbe end of July. < The "code" ouUines students' three ap- pearance ~esponslbilities to himself, the school's image and to the community at large. "The matter of dress and grooming is best determined in the home,'' the Laguna Beach district policy notes. Dr. Ullom believes the new policy will lessen the strain between teachers and students compared with the former strict code, although the new code will require more counseling with parents. Scott Flanagan, assistant superin- tendent of Huntington Beach Union High School District, said the board adopted a tirief dress policy statement last spring. Describing it as ''simple," Flanagan notes that it states that a school is a place for learning and that parents are responsible for sending students to school in clothing that does not jeopardize or im· pair the health, safety and welfare of themselves or other students. As long as hair is clean and not hazardous by reason of being too long for a student who's around machinery for ex· ample, any length is acceptab l e, Flanagan said. "I believe the overwhelming majority of our students will exercise good judg- ment." Glanagan said . Group pressures will bring the few who won•t into line, he added. Orange Coast Community College has not had a dress code for the past lhreeyears, Dean Joseph Kroll said. Superior Court Judge Kenneth Williams has dismissed contempt proceedings against a Cal State FullertGn professor accused of ignoring a court order which barred him from further demonstrations on the college campus. His ruling agrees with the argument of Dr. Stuart Silvers, 32. of 114 7th St., Seal Beach, that prosecution under the con- tempt action initiated by Cal State trustees would amount to double jeopardy -being tried twice for the same offenst. Silvers is free on appeal from a 00-day jail term imposed when he was found guilty in Fullerton Municipal Court on charge of unlawful assembly stemming from the March 3 confrontation between students and police. The contempt charges thrown out by Judge \Viillams were instigated when i.t was alleged that Silvers returned to the campus and actively encouraged renewed rioting by militant students. The philosophy professor is awaiting a new trial Oct. 26 on charges of refusing to disperse and interfering with college business. A jury was unable to reach a verdict in earlier proceedings but found Silvers innocent of assault and battery and resisting arrest. Jn another court action, Silvers has ap- pealed his firing from the Cal State Fullerton facuilty. lfe has been ordered to appear at a hearing before the state personnel boa rd next nionth. The order placing gun-carrying federal agents aboard all U.S. flights -at a $3 per-passenger tax -offers.other deadly possibilities, according to some. Najeeb Halaby, chairman of Pan American Airways, said his line will cooperate but the former FAA ad· ministrator said they must be carefully trained and commanded by pilots. Once opposed to carrying arms themselves, the. jetliner captains are no longer so reluctant, according to one spokesman. "This is a new league we are in,'' he e1plained. "Earlier hijackings were the work of 100 perceTJt losers, loners, kooks, meo who had not made it," he continued. "Now there's a new twist -the organized use of hijack techniques for in· ternational political purposes." , Reporting from Dawson Field, United Press International correspondent Ray. mond Wilkinson described one. Abu Ezz, wearing a Lenin badge on his camouflage uniform, gestured with his Russian AK47 automatic rifle at the planes shimmering tmder the 100 degree· plus desert sun. Rummage Sale Slated The Soroptimisl Club of Huntington Beach will hold a rummage sale from t a.m. to 3 p.m .. Saturday, in the Odd Fellows Hall, 226 Main St. An Jnuilalion lo Quiel f:fegance ~ Marchesa by Drexel. We believe -is the smartest most unique collec- has been designed in years. This group features complete living, dining and occasional to choose from . Our shipments have just arrived and a quantity is now available for viewing at our showrooms. Be among the first to see this unusual group, ar better yet have it delivered. For a Marchesa lion that furni ture . expenence In Marchesa . you can't miss new with Professional interior design service is availa- ble for the asking. Our designers have many years of experience and AID decorators are available. Whether it's draperies, carpeting , wallpaper or furniture , your needs will be met at Teel von Hemert Inc ., over twenty years in the beach area . / DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEt: -HERITAGE 7til 111111/fllleff. "· NEWPORT BEACH 1727 W11tcl lff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Professional Interior Designers Avallabl._AID-NSID LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co11t Hwy. 4944551 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 ,. .... r.n ""' ...... , 0r-.. c..., •••1161 --111151----==---·-----------~ " : I • ' I "' ol di tc "' fr •l - te tli R• a Jo ., I! Cc bu wi Hi fili m Ju pr '" di: dr co '" tic th• .. m to pr dr dr pa "' q• I en Ii ju HI s. lo s. II to II II '" II • .. ' '. Newp~ri Beaeh ED IIION YOL 63, NO. 2!8 , 4 SECTIONS, 42 PA'GES ORANGE COUNTY, CAIJFORNl.A: Your Hometown Dally Paper FRIDAY,, SEPTEMBER rr, '1910 .TEN CENTS State May Eliminate All · of Co~stal Freeway By L. PETER KRIEG Of 1111 Dtll' l"lltl St1U The Pacific Coast Freeway may not be built at all, a State Division of Highwa ys official disclosed today. Wjlllam · Hashimoto, deputy district director ot the Highway Division 7. said today the department is considering the possibitity of eliminating the entire frttway from the future state highway 1yStem. He said a decision on the fate of the controversial superhighway will be made by top departmental officials within the next six months. He indicated that problems generated by the many cities along lhe proposed route, like Newport Beach, which doesn't want the road, have led the department to think about ldlling plans for it. He said planning for the section through Newport, itseU, has already come to a halt. He said that the Newpcrt aegment, even under current policy, would never be built at al~ il Newport doesn't want it, Hashiruoto aaid there is no need to spend the time "rescinding" the current freeway agreement, a project spearhead· ed now by a citizens' group; he said a let- ter from the city council would do. The state halted all design work on the freeway section thr.ough Newport Beath follwing the introduction of a bill by Assemblyman Robert E. Badham {ft. Newport Beach) to kill a stretch of the . rout.e from Huntington Beach through Corona del Mar. Badham's bill cleared the Assembly but died In Senate committee. Newport Mayor Ed Hirth, following a meeting with state officials Thursday, first disclosed that work on the Newport atretcb had been halted and the state would not proceed without the city's blessings. · "They told me the state will not force a freeway down the throat of any city that does not want one," he sa id. It is because so many cities along the route don't want the freeway that the state is considering the action, Hashimoto confirmed. Several communities hive b e en fightiltg it, and one. the city of Venice, succeeded in getting JegiSlaU on pa~sed in the recent session of the state legislature Ulat killed the freeway · within' its city limits. Tbe community of Beverly Hlll.11 con· ra s ro ea ea 'ti 'ti :.:; Stays Behind Jewish Youngster Not Released Yet • From Wire Servic~s BEIRUT, Lebanon -Three little girls tell a hijack slory of triumph and poten- tial tragedy today. "We're going, we're going ,'' cheered Ruth ~mith, 7, of Williamsburg, N.Y., as a contingent of freed hostages prepared to fly to Cyprus. Ruth is going. The group -mostly women and diildren -•tood in line In board the chartered jetliner after a motor convoy from the 11otel whm they had been held. Yvonne Adassi, 8, of Hayward, Calif., was among them. "1'4eel fine except J hope we don 't get another hijack." Yvonne is going. Authorities for TWA. meanwhile, an- nounced that blonde Connie Pitt.aro, of South Amboy, N.J., is still at the scorching airstrip wilh 257 o t h e r hos tages. The litlle Jewish girl was to have entered second grade Wednesday. after a summer visit to her grandmother in Germany. She was traveling alone .-they take good care of you on an airline -but hP.r anguished parenla today live for tvery moinent's news. "What do they want with those kids?.'' pleaded Mrs. Michael Pittaro, the mother or one who isn 't going. Not yet. Orange Coast Students Responsible for Dress By GEORGE LEJDAL Of 1111 D1llr Pilot S11H High school students along the Orange Coast for the most part will share the burden or responsibility for their dress with their parents. With the exception of Tustin Union High School District which ad opted a slightly r e v i s e d parent-teacher·ad- ministration formulated code, and San Juan Capistrano Unified whose board-a p- proved code was drawn by parents and students last spring, most Orange Coast districts have abandoned dress codes. Newport-Mesa Unified dropped its dress code in the middle of last year, ac- cording to Dr. Norman Loats, association superintendent for instructional opera· tions. · "We more or less assume that dress is the responsibility of the home," Loats said. "In individual cases , however, we may have to tell a student 'we'd like you to go home and dress more ap- propriately,' should he appear at school dressed outrageously.'' Districts abandoning formal. restrictive dress do's and don 'ts have for the most part adopted short policy statements noting parents' responsibility for dress. All districts interviewed said they re- quire that shoes be worn for health and Rates Announced safety reasons. Laguna Beach which is continuing a survey of parent, teacher and student .at- titudes about dress restrictions as adopted "one short paragraph" con· sti tuting its dress code, Superintendent William Ullom said . The "code" outlines students' three ap- pearance responsibilities to himself. the school's image and to the community at large. "The matter of dress and grooming is best determined in the home," the Laguna Beach district policy notes. Dr. Ullom believes the new policy will lessen the strain between teachers and students compared with the former strict code. although the new code will require more counseling with parents. Scott Flanagan. assistant superin· tendent of Huntington Beach Union High School District, said the board adopted a brief dress policy statement last spring. Describing it as "simple," Flanagan notes that it states that a school is a place for learning and that parents are responsible for sending students to school in clothing that does not jeopardize or im- pair the health . safety and welfare of themselves or other students. As Jong as hair is clean and not !See DRESS CODES, Page ZJ I Di.IL Y 'ILOT ,..._ W LM''""" Boating for Birds? ' . . . Pete ~eyes of Santa Ana works on ·the form fo·r a 53-foot ketch being built by McClatchie Marine in the firm 's Newport Beach yard. An artistic worker . -. . . at the boatyard th9ught the .upsid~ down for.m bad the look of an eagle aOOut it. So. he painted a bird's face on' it. The face graces both sides.of the form. Teenager Flees Gasoline Burst A Newport teenager escaped without in jury when gasoline he was using to clean an engine with erupted into flames Thursday in the garage of his West Newport home. Firemen said Rick Appell, 14, of 6910 W, Ocean Front was cleaning a sma ll molor when the gas was ignited by a spark plug wire. Flames quickly spread to a nearby pan which contained angine parts soaking in gas. Neighbors came to the aid of the youth with garden hoses and sand buckets. Fire inspectors sa id the only damage from the fire was $10 to a rug used to smother the flames. Arriving firemen gave the teenager a "strong lecture" on the dange rs of clean- ing a motor with gasoline. Council To Introduce New Massage Parlor Law A tough new ordinance to regulate massage parlo rs will be presented to the Newport Beach city council for adoption Monday night. Citing police problems with massage parlors already in existence, City Attorney Tully Seymour has given the ordin ance "emergency" status, which would make it effective immediately if the council approves it. The ordinance would require all new applicants for such businesses to meet a long and stiff set of regulations including 200 hour:! of schooling for operators and all "massage technicians." Jt would also provide for a thorough background check of all potentia1 employes and require operators and employes to provide written statements from five bona fide Newport Beach residenlS attesting to their moral character. All massage parlors now in operation will have' t2b days to comply with these and all other provisions in the new regulations. Seymour this morning explained the new ordinance is designed to help relieve a growing burtien on the police depart- ment. Two massage parlors have been raided in recent months with charges , of pro- stitution resulting both times. Newport Offi,cials Get Pay Raise Seymour explaineU that under current procedures, massage parlors a r e regulated only by the city's general busil'jess license ordinance. With the new document, he said, "The rules to the game are being spelled out instead of left' in a ricbulou.s state." Specifically, in addition to its lengthy application requirements, the ordinance · also provides broader ground! for revocation of pennits. An even half-dozen Newport Beach city tmployes are now making more IJlan $20,000 a year under the 1970.71 budget just adopted by the City Council. Two of them, City Man.ager Harvey L. Hurlburt and City Attorney Tully Seymour, are earning $25,000 or more. Hurlburt's pay was raised from $26,400 to $28,000 for the 197~71 fiscal year while Seymour is now paid an even $2$,000, a $2,500 Increase. Public Works Director Jo~ph T. Devlin t11kes home the next highest amoun t, $24,800. He >A'as gtven a raise from 121~40. Pollet Chief 8. James Glavas ranks fourth, earning S23.435. an increase of 12.IHO lrom 120,805. Assbtant Police Chief Harry Nelson is now paid $20 ,290; his salary was increased from $17,120. City Finance Director George Pappas• salary was set at $21,330, up from $19,820. A number of city officials are now earning just under $20,000 annually. They include Fire Chief Jan Brisco, whose salary was increased from $17,975 to $19,820 and General Services Director Jacob F. Mynderse. whose pay was hiked from $18,420 to $19,825. The salary of Planning Director Laurence Wilson was raised to $19,570. up more than $900 from Sl8,&40. James P. DeChaine, assistant ci ty manager, was given a $1 ,700 increase from $17,120 to $18,875. Philip F. Bet· tencourt, assistant to the city manage r, oow earns $15,160, up from $14,085. Building Director Oliver Grant was given a $1,240 boost from $17,550 to $18,890 while Btnjlimin B. Nolan. assis- tant publ ic works director, was given an increase· from $17,545 to $18,420. Leo Love, deputy fire chief, was given a pay hike from fJS,525 to $17,115 while Fire Marshal W. N. Noller's salary was increased from $14,085 to $15,530. Marine Safety Director Robert Reed Is now earning $17,135, an increase from $15,920 while Traffic Engineer Robert Jaffe wa:ii given an increase from $15,710 to $17,f>45. Wade Beyler, assist.ant genera I services director. is now P,ald $15,920, up from S14,{90 last year. Dennis O'Neil. 11ssistant city attorney, was &iven a raise from ll!,320 to 117,131. J George M. Dawes, harbQr and tidelands administrator, Is now earning $J4,33S, an increase' from $13,320 while Robert Ken- dre, assi.11tant to the finance director, is paid $12.570, up from 111,970. City Clerk Laura Lagios was given a pay raise from $11,100 to Sl2,000 whlle License Supervisor Stan Hirschberg's salary was raised from $9,885 to $10,640. Purchasnng Agent Donald Mea113 is now eamlng f14i7'90, up from $14,085. City Librar1an DOrothea Sheeley was given a pay boos t from $15,160 to 116,715. Calvin Stewart, parks. beaches and recreation director, is now ea r n I n g $13,7", an increase from Sl3,JOO. Norbert Reinhardt, Marina park manager, was &iven a bili:e' from $7,88S to $81625. ~ . Under an "unlawful activities" aecUon, the ordinance states: "It shall be unlawful for any pel'IOn to massage any other Person. or give or ad- minister any bath or baths, or to give or administer any of the other (eervlcts) mentiotfed in this chapter for immoral purposes, or in a manner intended to arouse. appeal to or gratify the Ju.st or passions or sexual de,c;ires. "My vloal\ion of this provision shali be deemed grounds foc..lhe revocation OJ the pern:UL granted_hereunder.'' 1'he city currently bia before it an ·~ plication for a flllh massage parlor in the city and a hearing on Its request will a!SC) be conducted Monday night by 1be clly cou~ ' tinues its protest similar to that of Newport Beach. The Newport mayor is currently preparing a preliminary report on the en- tire matter of Newport Beach transpOrta.- tion that likely will be brought up at a council "study session'' Monday af· temoon.. • Hirth has been plugging for an overall and complete .titudy of future traffic needs Jn Newport Beach. In effect, he (See FREEWAY, hp ZI • Ille 258Remain Prisoners; Others F1·ee From Wirt Servlcei AMMAN, Jordan -Arab terrorists have abruptly canceled a ~-hour deadline on the fate of 258 hostages aboard three jetliners parked in the 112orching desert 45 miles .from here. No new deadline was iet for the threatened bombing of the planea and tlaughter of the hostages, which had originlllly been acbeduled for t p.m. - (PDT) Saturday. The announcement -apparently forc- ed 'by world opinion -was made in Washlngtori by the State Department lite this morning. Developments had continued today fn rapid-fire fashion as the kidnap story of the decade unfolded 1t Dawaorf1 Field and in capital cities around the globe. The number of hostages had swelled overnight to 258, with the birth of an American baby aboard one hijacked plane. Joyful women and children -still afraid for loved ones held aboard the planes -were freed earlier by the guer• rllla Popular Front for the Liberation ol Palestine. President Richard Nixon ordered arm· ed guards to fly on au U.S. airlines - foreign and domestic -beginning this Saturday. Leaders throughout the world appealed to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) to free the 258 cap- tives, whether or not their ransom demands are met. The PFLP wants imprisoned guerrillas in lsrael and Europe released in ex- change. , Liberal governments of Middle Eastern states, meanwhile, were among those urging the PLFP not to carry out its ltr• rorist threats. Iraq and Syria branded the series af four hijackings as irresponsible and unrevolutionary. President Nixon has reportedly vetoed any possibility of direct military in· tervention against the revolutionaries to free American captives. Six C-130 cargo .planes are deployed 1t Incirlik, Turkey, however, about one hour's fiying ttrne from the Jordan·Syria border. Maneuvers have placed the U.S. Sixth (See HlJACK, Page ZI Oruge Cout Weather Clouds will hide the ·sun while the ocean breeze cools things off along the Orange Coast this week· end. Temperatures will dip to 68, while holding at 82 further inland. INSIDE TODAY S u r f l n g enthusiasu from across the tJ,ation art homing in on lluntington Beach where &he J 9.70 national championships will· be held nezt weekend. Ste Sports, Page 1 s. l lrl"9 I Mlvl• .... ... 11 ... " Mutv.I ~ " C91lltntft ' N•lful IMM '1 Clltc:khts U11 " °' ...... c .. ., CllHln.f n.tt ... ,_ ..... S>H C'1!1kt " ·~I'll• ,.,,.,. " Crttt_. " t"'" 1•1• DMltl Httltn I SIOdl M1rbh 1•11 ........ ''" • Ttlif•ltlM .. ...... 1•11 -.... .... -.. ""-• Allll L..,..tn " W-'t '"°'" 1,_lJ •MM/I ' . ... -.. MllTI ... L~ I ·-n ... -I ' • f b.llLY PILOT N ,,,~,. s.,~ 11, 1'10 1-A Rate Increase • Council to Hear • Water Proposal By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tl'lt DlllY ,.lltt 11•11 A proposal LO increase city water rates to bulk. users will come berore Newport Beach city coun cilmen Monday night. Joseph Devlin, city director of public works. said the increase ha1 been rerom~ mended by the city water committee which consis ts of three councilmen and himself. It is needed to keep up wi lh rate Increases instituted this year by the Metropolitan Water Di.strict irom which the city gels its water. The study done by the water committee Colorado Ma11 Sentenced In Homicide with the aid of public works state members recommends increases in four . areas: -An increase from 12 cents to 16 cents per hundred cubic feet for establi!bments that use more than 250,000 cubic feet per mon th. -Adding a surcharge to the e1lsting readiness·t1>-serve charge of $1 per month for each li ving uni t in excess of one per water meter. -Adding a surcharge to the existing readiness-lo-serve charge of SO cents per month for each hotel and motel unit and each hospital or convalescent home bedroom in e1oes.s of one per water meter. -Increase the connection charge from a Oat $50 to $$0 per inch of water service diameter with a $50 minimum. Devlin said all the increa.,,es are designed to bring large users into line with rates paid by homeowners. Newport Skyline r ' • ' ' ' From Page l HIJACK .•. Fleet ln the Mediterranean nearby, 1p- partnUy to provide support -ir n~ -ln evaCUJlling f re e t bost11es . · One radio broadcast from Beirut Lebanon, by I.he rad.teal Central Com4 mittee of the Palestine Resistance Move-· ment, charged t.be U.S. is preparing an invasion, "Close rankir in the face of this ad· vancing peril," the group implored. Optimism was spreading, however, in Washington after a Congressional con· ference thiit negoLiallol\5 to free I.he · hostages will succeed. Israeli Premier Golda Meir has main- tained a hard line. refusing to agree to free 3,00t.l Arab guerrillas. "Are we to release these people In some sort of ceremony or other so I.hey can come back and repeat tt:elr acts?" she said, her voice bitter with anger. Sources in Jerusalem indicated she may be fo rced to go back down . The PFLP, meanwhile, freed 60 of 116 women and children first removed frorn the planes today and return.,ed passports, They were to be flown to Nicosia, on the Island of Cyprus, by Jordanian Airlines. CANON CITY• Colo. -A handsome roamer whose road ended six months l@'.G with capture in Costa Mesa today is being-processed into Colorado State Prison here, to remain for life. The first recommendations wlll affect fnstituLions which include the Irvine Coast Country Club, Hoag Memorial Hospital, Pacific View Memorial Park and Phil~Ford Aeronutronics, he e1· plained. Single family units will not be affected by the change in the connection charge either, he said. New high rise buildings near Newport Beach's Fashion Island create an entirely new skyline for the city. This view is from Bluewater Drive in the Harbor View Hills .section of Co rona del Mar. Shell of building at left is new Irvine Company financial building. Next to it is Avco Building . Two identical buildings are Qr iginal pair in finan cial section of Newport Ce.nter. Diplomatic sources said it was un· derstood the remaining people im· prisoned at the Intercontinental Hotel in Amman would also be freed. Tough conditions existed at Dawson's Field where the TWA, BOAC and Swissai r jetliners are parked, but an International Red Cross team was doing its best. .. James E. Jackson , 24, was quickly con- victed by a jury which deliberated over Labor Day and sentenred for the brutal bludgeon murder o{ a Colorado Springs pawnbroker. His conipanions in the alleged cross- country crime spree that ended last March 11 with an anti<limactic sur· render at 514% Bernard St., turned state's evidence and testified against him. Howard L. Tschirhart. 311 of Costa Mesa, and Jack E. Matney, 32, of Denver. are expected to be extradited to Orange County within 30 days. · Thus, plus Jackson and his pregnant girlfriend -allegedly operating in Bon- nie and Clyde bandit style -are suspected of a string of armed robberies along lbe coast. The woman, who gave the name Patricia Jackson, is currently serving a sentence for Laguna Beach and Costa Mesa crimes also credited by authorities to Tschirhart and Matney. Cost.a Mesa police officers, including St. John Regan, Ron Palmer, Bob Arnold and John Stoneback were subpoenaed by Color•do prooearton Jo leltily In the case. Trial for Jackson, who b e a t pa.Wnbroi:er Erling Nielsen, 61, to death 111 bis little shop lul February spanned I.bout a week, Sgt Regan said. From P.,,e l F'.REEWAY .•• uys, it would be "starting all over from the be1innin1. •• He said he does not know whether Newport needs a freeway or not, and that a comprehensive study "of some kind" 5hould be undertaken by the City Council. Hirth said Ha11 Ayanian the division director, and Hashimoto agreed with this aDd said all the city need do to stop work on the freeway, forever, if it wants, is to have the City Council write the state Division of Highways saying so. The disclosure means that efforts by a newly.formed C i l i z e ll s ' Coordinating Committee to circulate petiUom that would force the city to rescind it! pment freeway agreement are likely not necessary. The city had adopted a route for the new hghway east from Bayside drive to the Corona de! Mar boundary. The Division of Highways, adopted route. through Newport, has the freeway traveling immediately adjacent to the present Pacific Coast Highway, taking valuable commercial real estate along the way. Opponents of the route contend the road will "cut I.he city in half," and thus ruin it! character. DAllY PILOT ClANGE COAST l'Ull.1SHING COllll'AHT 11.ellerl N. Wetd f'rullltnt ..., PWlrtW J.,1o: 1. c.,1 • ., \'la ,._:.WOT •nd C.-tl MIMfW IEOitvr lhorn11 A. M.,r,M11e M .... JnO loOllW H...,.,. ..... Offico 221 1 W11t l 1lt.1 l o-.11vt,,, M•ili111 Addr ... 1: r.0 .1111 1111, tlllJ o"°'°"'"' Ct1i. M .. : ut1 W..1 1ty '"-' lqlll'lf a .. ctr1: m '"°'" .. ' .__ ....... 11/lt!Olo ... Clo: 1J17J l tKll .:l!UltYt,., Su ~: al NWlll El c-r,.. ..... C...llY •ti.OT, w1111 ...,;c:11 II _.,,..11111 ... H~&. II ... ,i.tld fttf"f "'-" S-11"1 111 ..,.,,.tit cllil"'-l ... L-..,.it I~ N.--1 llu<JI, ("'1t Mew, Hll'lllPlllWI h :rn W l"-1•111 \1111ty, '""" wl111 ,.,. rRt,IMll ... ,,_ Or..,.. (tUI ~~bl\lrlf ~ 9"1Mll'll lllol"ll t rt ti 2211 Wnt lllliM I : .... N...,.,1 lutfl. 1"41 lJI Wlllt .. ~ ''"""'" C..N MtM. fll1fl111 f714, 642 .. JJI Cl_,W MMrtWflt MJ-1671 ~ ...... Ul'"llWI CIUI ~Wf!tfl"" ~.,. ... ' ....... l!Otltt. hk10 tl l!Oft\o fll""'1JI "'9ttW .,. t~lUtn ... 11 Wllfl ""'' lie" ....... lllUlll •llh9!,il ltldtit ....... _,...., fl cerrr•t •-. ,_... cl-. "'""' INlll er N,,..,. lttol .... U.f'I MmA. C..lllenli.,, hlllc~lllll"°" W c-•nlw n• -lflly1 W '"'" u .JO _,.,,, fl'lllll.,., .. flll.t • ..._ ii.CO """'~'~· "We used to charge a flat $50. A man building a home in an Rl zone (single family residential) was paying the same as a man building something like the South Bay Club Apartments. It is not equitable. "Moat single family units use one inch meters, so there will be no chan&e for them," Devlin said. If the council approves the increase, 1n ordinance could be prepared for fU"St reading on Sept. 28. The ordinance, if ap- proved after a second reading Oct. 12 would be effecth·e Nov. 11. The first bill· ing at the new rates would be Jan. JS, 1971, he said. Newport Center Fire Headquarters Seeks OK Comic to Launch Arti sts' Forum In Beach Sunda y ··rt is not exa clly a luxurious maternity home," said Red Cross aides who delivered the baby born to the unlden· tified young American woman durin1 the night. Several women aboard the pl~nes are also pregnant and the Red Cross included rubber pants and diapers with a sllipmen• of 1,000 prepackaged meals and medical supplies. "This year the cost of water purchased from the Metropolitan Water District will increase from $45 to $49 an acre foot. Further increases are anticipated in 1971 and 1972. "Since the dty Is almost entirely dependent upon water furnished by the MWD, the increase in rates is needed to offset the rising cost of imported water. The increase in large quantity rates is re-- quired if the city is to avoid selling water to its large users at or below actual costs. "The added aurcbarge rate ls being """1dered U ODO method cl reducllll the present inequity in standby charles th•• e1ilts between the sln&1e r,mily reslden• and the large meter installatloo," be &aid. The Newport Beach City Council Mon- day will be asked to approve plans for a new central fire headquarters at Newport Center. Jt would be the first municipal development in the planned civic com- plex at the center. The station will be built on Jamboree Road at the intersection of the proposed Santa Barbara Drive, south of San Joaquin Hills Road. It will be removed some distance from the main civic cen- ter itself. If plans are approved, bids OR the proj· ect will be fl()Ught and opened October 6. Completion of the facility is scheduled ltfay I, 19'71. A total ol 1667 )IS has been budgeted for the new headquarters. 'I11e eDtire municipal complex, to include 1 new City hall, police building. ~ other faclllties, tentatively has been given an $8 million price tag. Of !he total cost, 1311,167 bas been ear- ,,,..,.. P .. e l COAST DRESS CODES ••• hazardous by reason of. being too long for a atudent who's around machinery for ex4 ample, any length is accepta bl e , Flanagan said. "l believe the overwhelming majority or our students will exerciae good judg4 ment," Glanagan said. Group pressures will bring the few who won't into line, he added. Orange Coast Community College has not had a dress rode for the past t.hreeyears, Dean Joseph Kroll said. Kroll said he didn't understand why many districts faced "a big argument about the way students dress." "Learning has nothing to do with the way they look, and that's been proven time alt.er time. "If we 're in the business or educating. nothing is to be gained by spending time regulating dres:i," he said. A spokesman for the junior college noted that this year's incoming class "was the neatest, best dressed class ever.'' Meanwhile, administrators at Tustin Union High School and Capistrano Unified School District have vowed to en· force their district's board approved regulations. While Tuslio limits boys sideburns to the "bottom of the ear'' and forbids "flared'' sideburns, Capistrano limits length of sideburns to an "inch below the ear" and allows flared sideburns, but not muttonchop whiskers. Tustin allCJWs no mustaches or beards, Capistrano doe;s -at least to the comer of the lip. Both schools require that girlll' un- dergarments not be allowed to show. Tustin girls may wear cullottes and pant dresses, but not slacks. Pants: are acceptable at Capistrano, but not the ''tie -dyed" variety, "whatever they are," Superintendent Tr u m a n Benedict said. Regarding length of girls' dressts and skirts, Capistrano district's code is vtry ··with it" fashion-wise. The code cimunspeclly advises that dresses be no shorter thin a girl's fingertips nor longer than the ankle. ne midi safety fa!Js within that ranae. Sheer, see.-through blouses, backless dresses and bare-midriff ouUits will not be tolerated at Capi!trano. The code makes no mention of brassiues. Boys at Capistrano may wear khaki s. slack, levis or bermudas, but not "cutoffs Disease Fight Set WASlnNGTON (UPI) -The HouH has voted to authorlu the spendln1 of $165 million during th!. next two years to help the states fiiht polio, diphtheria, measles, mump!, whooping c o u & h 1 sypbfUis, gonorrhea and tuberculosis. ' shorter than bermuda length or unhein- med. Shirts other than squared off sport shirts must be wom tucked in, Benedict aald. Tank.type shirts are not allowed. Both Tustin and Capistrano noted that "as a last resort" failure to comply with the dre5' code could result in suspension until a student complies. William Zogg, Tustin superintendent, said dress cOOes were necessary lo pro- vide a "midpoint that is not tot.ally of- fensive to either end of the continuwn 0£ ti:tudmt.s." Unlike colleges, he noted, "public high schools have compulsory attendance rules and students come from all backgrounds morally and spiritually.'' AdmitUng that it is difficult to come _by "empirical evldence" that dress may 1n· terfere with the edu cational process, Zogg contended on the basis of his "years of school experience" that it does. "Over the years I've seen many fads exhibited and most were eventua lly found wanting," he said, although he believes some fads "become fashion and finally become accepted by the community." Tahoe Ic y Grave For 100 Victim s Sa ys Coast Guard TAHOE CITY CAP) -The cool beauty of Lake Tahoe'.!! waters provide a favorite resort for millions of vacationers -bul an icy grave for at least 100 human bodies preserved forever in its deplhs. Each year, one or two persons vanish mys teriously lnto the lake following boating or swimming accidents, says Howard Adkins, executive officer of the U.S. Coast Guard here. The bodies are never found. Adkins says usually when a person drowns, gases build up and are trapped inside lhe body. They act as a buoy and noa t the vk:lim to the surface. But in this mile-high sierra lake, waters are so Icy this process does not happen. The bodies are suspended at various depths where they remain lort!ver, Adkins says. Chilly. almost freezing temperatures preserve the nesh. The center of this 2'-mile long lake I~ sUll, with almost no current that could wash the bodies ashore, Adk ins said. "We ca ll them noaters. Everything re- mai ns Intact. Even clothing. It can go on eternally. sometimes fish pi ck the bodies clean and all jOU have ls a skeleton," he said . Sometim es the bodies a.re !nas:ged by fishe nnen. marked for actual construction while $146,400 will be spent for site improve· ment.s. Furnishings and equipment are expected to cost $170,CMXI. Architect William P. Ficker will be paid $29,561 for designin1 the structure. Additional costs are divided between landscaping, Soil testing, interior decora - 'Uons and other minor ltems. The new station will be tile' city's sixth. The present central fire headquarters. lo- cated behind city hall on Newport Boule· ·vard, will be used as an auxiliary station. Mesa Workers F,ete McKenzie A fe1Uve luau for retiring ama Mesa City Manager Arthur R. McKenzie is bein1 hosted Sunday, Stpt. 20, by city employes. The 5 p.m. soiree at the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club is open to the public and will feature casual dress, Ii· quid refreshment, plus lots of en- tertainment. Tickets are priced at $3.75, and may be purchased by calling Jane Angel at Costa Mesa City Hall. 1'1cKenzie is planning a lengthy vaca· lion in Mexico to convalesce from a stroke suffered In early spring. Comedia n Jonathan Winters will help launch Prospectus.Art '70, a showing of more than iOO works by leading California artists, when the show open s Sunday night on the Huntington Center Mall in Huntington Beach. Promote rs of the cha rity art show, bill- ed as one of the largest of its type in Orange County, said \Vinlers will pro- bably appear during the preview opening of the show at 6 p.m. Sunday. Admission to the Sunday night preview is $5 per person, with the proceeds going to establish art scholarships on a yearly basis. Prospectus·Arl '70 will be opened free to the public startin1 Monday and run- ning through Sept. 25 on the mali at Edinger Avenue and Beach Boulevar~.~ The charity event Is c1>-sponsored by the city of Huntington Beach, Golden West College and the Huntington Center Shopping Center. Jason \Vong, director of the Long Beach T\.1useum of Art. is coordinating the Huntington Beach show. Three judges will ~ward $2,500 in prizes lo the top artists in the show. One $400 a\\'ard v.·ill be handed to the artist whose painting earns the most votes of the public attending Sunday's opening. T\.1oncy collected Sunday night will be given to International Art Scholarships, an organization of busincs! and pro- fessional persons interested in promotion of the fine arts. IAS will handle annual scholarship arrangements. Following the Washington conference, Sen. Mike Mansfield said the President 's tactics have complete Senate support. "I think the government has done everything it possibly could," he said . The order placing gun-carrying federa l agents aboard all U.S. flights -at a S3 per.passenger tax - offers other deadly possibilities, according to some. Najeeb Halaby, chairman of Pan American Airways,. said his line will cooperate but the former FAA ad· mlnistrator said they must be carefully trai'fl~d and commanded by pilots . Once opposed to carryin1 arms themselves, the jetliner captains are no longer so relu ctant, according . to one spokesman. "This is a new league we are in," be explained. "Earlier hijackings were tht work of 100 percent losers. loners, kooks, men who had not made it," he continued. "Now there·s a new twist -the organized use of hijack techniques for in· ternational political purposes." Reporting from Dawson Field, United Press lnternatiO'llal correspondent Ray· mond Wilkinson described one. Abu Ezz, wearing a Lenin badge on his camouflage uniform, gestured with his Russian AK47 automatic rifle .a t the planes shimmering lftlder the 100 degree- plus desert sun. "They are learning something,'" the PLFP chieftain said proudly, adding his revolution is being taught to the 2M hostages. And the world waits to 1ee how the grim lesson ends. ..JJn Jnvilalion lo Quiel Gfegance ~ Marchesa by Drexel. We believe -is the smartest most unique collec-Marchesa tion tha t has been designed in years. This group featu res complete living , dining and occasional to choose from . Our shipments have just arr ived and a quantify is now available fo r vie wi ng of our showrooms. Be among the first to see this unusual group, or better yet ha ve if delivered. For a new with yt>u . expe rience . '" furniture can't • miss Mar chesa . Professi onal inferior design service is availa- ble for the asking . Our de signe rs have many yea rs of experie nce and AID deco rators are available : Whe ther it's draper ies, carpeting,· wallpape r or furniture, your needs will be met at Ted von Hemer f In c., ove r t wenty yea rs in the beach are a. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON DREXEL -HERITAGE NEWPORT IEACH 1727 Wottcllff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Proftsslon1I lnttrlcir Designers Aval11ble-AID-NSID " LAGUNA BEACH 345 Nort h CoHI Hwy. 494-655 1 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 lltio .. Ton ''" Mott ti o,... c.,.., l•0·12•t b .. •• II 0 u d ,; n u t< n le 0 . • • S1 t •. b~ C( ja th m '" Lo SI Y< "' b< pl pi in w· Al "' de m " Yi r.; d< w h< pt cc Ci n I J J!, fh e< 20 in Hi 19 bi lo. .J~ •• of •f tu pr •n N1 ,. da N< m. Bl Iii R lnl nil h• un c::il th• th< •d I "" Pt "" u !'I I ' • du of id lw Jo : I th~ •• .. In< "" by of ---.... ·-~---------------------- Ranch Hand Says Manso11 Had Gun By LINDA DEUTSCH Assoc:iated Press Wrlitr LOS ANGELES -A bushy. bearded ranch hand who says "I could never make Charlie out as a bad man" has testi- fied that Charles M. Pi1anson once carried a gun similar to the one identified as the mur· der weapon in the Sharon Tate 1layings. Thomas Wallem&'!'I, 27, grin· ning broadly at Manson aod three woroe.n codefendants, took the stand at lhe Tate murder trial Thursday. He told of a mysterious mission on which he accompanied the armed Manson to a Hollywood apartment in July 1969. * * * Watson Due To Face Tate Trial WASHINGTON (AP l Supreme Court Justice Hug() L. Black r'jected today 11 plea by Charle~ Denton Watson for continued asylum in a Texas Jail. The action. announced by the court "'·ithoul comment.. means California authorities are now free to take Watson t() to.s Angeles for trial in the Sharon Tate murder. Lawyers for Watson. a 24· year~ld Texan, contended he cannot receive a fair trial because 0 r inflammatory publicity. 'They cited, i n particular. a front.page story in the Los Angeles Times in which a ~efendant, Susan Atki0$. gave what l he newspaper billed as "exclusive details or two nights o[ murder." The Supreme Court in 1966 set aside the murder con- viction of Dr. Samuel H. Shcp- P.ard on a finding that virulent publicity" had denied him a fair trial. Black was the only dissenter. Watson's lawyers sought a hearing In Texas on the publicity question. Both state courts in Texas and the U.S. Circuit Court in New Orleans rule the hearing out U.S. Dea d ·.Confirmed In A-Blast WASHINGTON (UPI) - Records released Thursday by the National Archives disclos- ed that the U. S. Army Usted 20 American airmen as killed in the Atomic bombing or Hiroshima. Japan, Aug. 6. 1945. The search was prompted by Hiroshi Yanagida. 56. a former warrant officer in the .Japanese secret police who flaid in July he was in charge nf 23 American prisoners of war who died in the holocaus!. Army records declass ified after more than a quarter-cen. tury identified the American prisoner of war dead at Hiroshima as S. Sgt. Ralph J. Neal. a B24 ball turret gunner reported missing in action JO days before lhe bombing; Norman Roland Brisset, a man identified only a s Blankbet and 17 other uniden- tified airmen. l\fa nson, JS. and l hr e e w om e n !ollo....•ers -Susan Atk i n s, 21, Patricia Krcnwinkel, 22, aQd Leslie Van Houten, 20 -art on trial for murder-conspiracy tn the killings or Miss Tate and six others in August 1969. Walleman said the trip to Hollywood came after a mid· night phone call was received at the suburban Spahn movie ranch, headquarters ot Manson 's hippie-style ''fami- ly." Alanson .spoke to the caller, he said. then told others "there was a guy coming over to do the ranch in .•• Somebody was Jiving at the ranch who stole some money and he .was going to do the wh()le ranch in for it." 1rfan.wn announced he was going to see the man who was on the phone, said W"aueman, and asked the rancli hand to come along. As they got a car, Manson produced a long-bar· relcd revolver whleh he placed on the seat, said Walleman . They drove Lo an apartment in Hollywood, he said, and Walleman picked up the gun as they got out of the car. But as they reached the door, he said. ''Charlie asked for it." The prosecution, which call· ed Walleman, ceased ques- tioning at that point. A derense aUorney said outside court that a. man was shot inside the apartment, but that testimony wasn't introduced because the wound wasn't fatal and the man refused to press charges or testify. Walleman told newsmen he believed questioning stopped then because "They know I could never make Charlie out as a bad man .•• He isn't one." Depu ty Dist. Atty. Vincent Bugliosi showed Walleman the long-barreled gun w h i c h ballistics experts say was sued in at least one -and posibly lhree -of lhe Tate killings, and asked if that was the gun Manson carried. Sliots Quell R(l.Ce U1irest Ii i Arkansas EARLE. Ark. (UPI) - A !ale n i g h t confrontation between Negroes and police Thursday was broken up by gunfire. A short time later the Arkansas State Police closed off State Highway 149. which runs through Earle, because of sniper fire across the road. Three persons were njured, including Mr. and Mrs. Jackie Greer. Mrs. Greer is a black candidate £or mayor. lt1ayor James King said their injuries were not serious, and were not caus~ by gun- fire. The night supervisor at Crittenden Memorial Hospital in \Vest Memphis, Ark., said the third injured person was a l4·ycar-old girl treated for cuts on th e head and released early today. King said Greer was charg- ed with disturbing the peace, inciting lo riot and parading without a parade permit, and Mrs. Greer was charged with disturbing the peace. Fiften slate police uni ts were se nt to Earle, a city of 2.896 in eastern Arkansas. and other unit~ were placed on standby alert. "Jm't tile Waler polluted enough without putting that otuff in!'' Mitchell Sees Laws '"dli1· Sep"'""" 11, 1970 DAil Y PJLOi S Biggest Retpest Yet Israel Asks V.S. for Arms on Credit W ASIDNGTON (UPI) -Moat -nUy Israel has Israel has made Its biggest received SO Phantom jet&, and defense sources said th!J .{eek arms request to the United the United States has decided States and , for the first Ume, to se.1116 to 18 more. Is asking it be allowed to buy Other congressional !Ollrces on credit. confirmed the Israeli request This report came Thursday is the largest since the Jewish from Rep. Samuel S. Stratton state was created in 1948. (0.N.Y.), chairman ol an Israeli reliance on American arms has grown since France, armed services subcommittee a traditional supplier, clamped dicated It probably would recommend Jsrael be allowed to buy on credil Two Str ikes Facing U.S. Railroads that visited Israel last week, down on sales in 1967. and Rep. Robert L. Leggett Leggett said he understood W ASH!NGTON (UPI) ([).Calif), who also made the the Soviets are supplying arms The nation's railroads now trip. to the Arabs on the basis of lO. face a double strike threat, They said Israeli officials year, 2 percent Joans with a and it appears Congress may told them they have submitted two-year grace period and have to setUe both disputes. a "shopping list" to the U.S. said: "I think we're going to The issues involved are Defense Department for arms have to make something like demands for a 40 percent purchases over the next tw() Planes and Hawk ~iles this available to the Jsraelis." wage hike by four unions years totaling $800 million. have been primary com-Stratton said h I s sub-representing 500,000 of the The Israelis refused a ponents of American arms committee would make a 600,000 railroad workers, and a detailed breakdown, the con· sales to Israel in the ptl$L report next week and in-dispute over whether firemen gres:sman said, but indicated should be used on-diesel their requests included F4 engines. Phantom lighter-bombers, A4 o h · Ch B ty The railroads were already Skyhawk j e t s , helicopters, rp ans eer eau under a Monday midnight Hawk antiaircraft missiles, strike deadline over the wage tanks, bombs, radar and both issue when, on Thursday, tbe ground and aerial electron ic ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. members of the orphanage United Transportation Union equipment intended to help (AP) -Si:tty-0ne orphans, the and nine members of the loca l (UTU) served notice it would detect Soviet miss i I e only family Ch r i at in e Jaycees. woo raised $14,500 feel free to strike over the E • M • • emplacements 1n Egypl J..1cClamroch, Miss Mississ.ip-for the trip. fireman issue any time after as1ng Ofl ar11uana Both congressmen said they pi, has e"r really known, Miss McClamroch, whose midnight Sept. 23. favored allowing Israel to buy have arrived to be with her as parents are dead, has lived in President Nixon could use 1 on credit to help match lhe she competes in the 1.1iss the orphanage since 1955. the Railway Labor Act to call NE\V YORK (UPI) -At-.. We are changing the entire Soviet buildup of arms to America Pageant . ''I thought she was great a oo.day delay in the wage torney General John N. ' approach so the professional Egypt and other Arab nations. The children from l he even when she was a scrawny slrike. but Nixon already has Mitchell predicts the Jaws who makes his living out of Israel has always paid cash Palmer llo1ne for Children in kid with straggly hair," said used the delay provision and against smoking marijuana selling marijuana will get the for its arms but Leggett said Columbus, J\.fiss., were ac-Nena Drew, one or the all other legal remedies in the will be made more lenient, but ~k thrown al him," Mitchell "their funds are scraping bot· companied on a 2 2 • b our children who grew up wilh fireman dispute w h I ch thinks, nevertheless, it is a said. lorn." railroad trip by 13 staff Miss Mississlppi. stretches back to the 1950s. dangerous drug. .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! Mitchell said Thursday he never has smoked marijuana, but once sniffed its aroma during a. demon.slration at the bureau of narcotics a n d dange r ous drugs In Washington. "You don't have to die to know what the sensation and results are." he said. Referring to a national com· mission to study marijuana proposed under the Admini· s tration 's Dangerous Substances Act. 1.1itchell said, '·f believe that study will show marijuana is very dangerous t() the community." The Jaws against using marijuana "have been much too harsh," Mitchell said. Nix- on administration proposals would prescribe t i g h t e r sentences for first-time users of marijuana. Auto Firms Fae~ Strike DETROIT CAP) -United Auto Workers President Leonard Woodcock said Thurs- day giant General Motors Corp. has decided "to take a strike" in support of the auto industry's refusal to meet the union 's new contract demands . GM and Chrysler previously had geen named by the UAW as twin targets for winning a pattern-setting w a g e set- tlement for the industry -by strike or otherwise -if no new contract is in hand when current pacts apire at mid- night Monday. Ford, struck for seven weeks when current agreements were negotiated in 1967, was granted strike im· munity this time around. Editor Dies RICHMOND (UPI) -Artbur "Chick" Richards Jr., for 29 yea.rs the managing editor ol the Richmond In- dependent,died Thursday in Richmond hogpltal after a gbort i.llnelS. He was 63. ONLY •. BOY'S WOVEN SPORT SHIRTS Sale 3 for $500 Permanent Press in many styles. Boy's sizes 6-16. l llarntt of ...... 11111 W-lt11sl w--..lul '\/N.~I Super sheppen' speclall prl-i.1••• to •Ii• your dollar 90 fintlierl We•• 1•11 •...,,,of douu of llrrlftc lily1 111-the ston. COM -"t hr ylllnl CUSHION GYM SOCKS Sale 47'P'· 5old In 2 pr. ,.ck•g• Elastic tops -be av y cushioned so 1 e . Men's sizes 9·13. Official Headqu1rten for Huntington Beach High S<hool Dlstrf<t FASHIONABLE NYLON SHEU TOPS Nixon Gets Letters Gymwe•r Sale Easy care lops In fall prints. 100% textured nylon. SizesS-M-L Millions More Than Pcist Presidents WASHI NGTON <UPI) R i chard J\t . Ni xnn':o; Inher ita nce of a "hotrendou~ gilualion'' in national affa irs has general eel a n unprecedented an1ounl o f citizen correspondence with the White House, according to the Pre~ident's top administrative aide. Nearly five million pieces of mail was received during Pret:ident Nixon's fi rst 18 montlls iD office, prtsldcntial -assist.ant H. R. Haldeman reports. · He sald that oomp.1red wilh • llttle over 1.s million pieces during the comparable period of President Ke nn edy's tdministrat.ion, and just over !wo million pieces in President )ohnson·s first 18 monlh!>. • H aldcman, admini~rstive Chief oC the White liouse sta ff and N I 1 o n ' i appointmenLs -=retary, attributed th e increase to wide s pr ea d national l'!'oblems "m1gnlfled by the determined o~ition of 1 large number of the press corps and the 'l?'litnblishmerit media' who. becau~ of past efforts to write Richard Nixon orr. had a vested interest in his 'unsucces.s.' '' Haldem11n said that among the hi1:hlii;ht s ol' a ''horrendous siwatton," Nixon inherited were: "the longest and most unpopular war in our history; an escalating innauon tiult was based heavily on huge government d c f i c I t speodjng; a totally antiquated, discredited , u n worka b I e weUare system ; a burgeoning, uncot1troll able bureaucracy ; large: and irtn:ing opposition majoritifl'i in both houses of Congress ; ii cns1s o f confidence In the presidtncy ; a great division and emolional lurmoil wi1hln the nation, lhe generational problem and the raical problem.'' lfe sa id he thought l90TI'le of the news media "a re out of touch with the people," but Nixon "ls far mart in touch Y.'ith the ptaple than 11 aeoenlly realized or reported, although apparently the people themselves know it -lhat is what has generated a lot or the mail he has received ." It is significant that 55 to 6$ percent of the public approves er Nixon's oenduct of the presidency according t o periodic polls, Haldeman said. "You would think that be Would have a tough llme getting even a 30 percent approval ba9ed on what you read in Washington and hear on TV," ht :idded. "It seems pretty clear that whlle there may have been a 'credibility gap' with the prtsidency in the past. now, Ironically, the 'credib\llly gap' is wilh the media." llaldeman !;Rid Nixon secs "a sampling'' or the overall content or m11il 3ddreMed to him. and "a great deal of the ma.U that comes from what you would call the leadership scgmmt -the prople who are writing tn by virtue of their offke or their position in the country." RUGGED, READY FOR ACllON SNEAKERS _ ... ...,..,.,_...,PVCIOIU!, heels; durable anny cotton duct upJ>Cl!i; cushioned comtnictioo. 6 'h·l2, 2%-6, and ll to 2. Girts': washablo fabric uppers; PVC oow, cushioned insol"' for added comfort! Snowy whi!G, bacl:4o«hool toa.., 4 to 9. STRETCH ANKLETS Sale 3 pr.84' ·- Lon' wearing stretch ny· Jon in girls sizes 6-8~. Misses slr.es 9-11. GIRLS ACDATE BRIEFS Sale Choose from tailored or lace trim. Newest fashion shades. Girls sizes 6 to 16. Save now! • GRANT PWA • Brookhurst & Adams • Huntington Beach • • • DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Urgent: Site Decision Tht lead paragraph of a news story In the DAILY PILOT. Sept. 3, 1970: "The two-year search for a future 1ite for Harbor Judicial District courts may culminate Sept. l ~but then it may not.'' The date is only four days away now, and we would like to take this opportunity to urge the Oran1e County Board of Supervisors t.o make certain the search does indeed culminate on that date. There has been Car too much delay in pinning down the court site and the need for new courtrooms to serve Costa l\1esa and Newport Beach is serious. action alter studying the latest reports. Tho 1lta ~earcb has now consumed two years and the current court facilities are .so overtaxed that trailers and makeshift facilities have been pressed into use . The Harbor Area halls of justice are phy1lcally .bor· dering on a disgracefuJ state. Supervisors can start remedying that situation by aettine the new court pro- eram in gear next Tuesday. Realism on Jet Noise The choice for the site seems to be boiled down to l\\10. One is a portion of the Orange County Fairgrounds near the Costa Mesa City Hall . ~he other adjoins the proposed new Newport Beach Civic Center in the Irvine Company's Ne"•port Center. · There seems to be some dispute about whether Costa Mesa'1 new hard-line attack on jet noin la realistic. The supervisors' choice may not be an easy one. In the first place, contradictory recommeridations have come from County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas (who favors the Newport site) and Director of Real Propert.y Stanley Krause (w ho says the Costa Mesa 6ite meets more criteria). Moreo\ier, both tangibles and intangibles mus! be wei2hed in determinin.e which of the two offers provide~ t.he most services at the least cost to the County of Orange. First increment-six court rooms-will cost in the neighborhood of $2 million, so it is not an expenditure The Costa Mesa City Council has adopted a resolu· lion saying, in essence, that jet engine noise must be forced out of Orange County Airport-either by remov· ing their operation or by engine alterations. The leadinJ anti-jet noise figure in the Harbor Area, Dan Eriiory, says the approach is not workable, that engJneering modifications are not likely lo be effective for any major reduction in the overhead &creams emanating from the Orange County Airport traffic flow _ In a way, the Costa Mesa resolution is Important, whether or not it proves effective. For it does serve notice that Costa Mesa. like Newport Beach, believes its tolerance of jet noise has reached its li1nits. to be treatad ll~htly. . In addition to '"'eighing the money and service fac· tors, supervisors undoubtedly are feeling strong politi· cal pressure from the two comri1unities. We trust these political implications will not weigh on the supervisors' ultimate decision . Nonetheless. facts are facts. It is unl ike!{. that com· mercial jets can be barred from using the ederaUy fi· nanced Orange County Airport facilities. It is , howevt1r, possible that current limits on flights can be upheld. Most of all, we ur11e the board to take immedlato By holding that limit and by inci::eased emphasis on non.jet feeder operations. we believe the two cities can live with Orange County Airport. Scrant on Commi••ion on Canapus llnre•t ' Allott's Scathing Attack WASHINGTON -Sometimes 111111~ ire el'Olaed and the play ii flubbed In the . Nixon administration and thlt Is the case with the Scranton C1>mmisslon on campus :uncut. • A 1e1thing attack by Sen. Gordon Allott · d Colorado. a strong Nixonite, on the Scranton commis- sion and its forth· com.in& report, re· ve.als a great deal a'bout the fumbllng in the adminlstra· Uon on this question. Allott. in effeet. ls accusing J o h n Erlichman and other senior domestic policy ad1Jlser1 of getting President Nlxon trapped In a commission study which will "pour kerosene on the flames'' of ca mpus disorder. Other White House 1dvlser1 support Allotl's view of the Scranton commlasio n and the administration ls uneasy, to ny the least. 01Jer the comlna report . THE COflofMlSSION was appointed In mid-June after the kUllng of four Kent State college .studenls and i1 headed by former Governor William Scranton of Pennsylvania who w11 relied on to brlng t.o the commission studies the quality of judicious fair-mindedness they deserve. This was a case in which 10me of the President's advise rs wlahed to paclfy flaming student opinion after the Cambodian incursion and Kent klllina• ~." . ' '1"~ ~ • .t • Richard WiJ.eeli ~ without carefully lhinklnl out the prob1blt result!. A1Jntt 11y1 there ii ruaon lo fear that the Scranton report will be 1 "fl1u:cid "''hilewash of the violent new-left political movement that is openly seeking to c1pture or destroy our g r e a t univer&ltiu.. '' The. Color1do senator is unremitting in his criticism of the commission. He says it has been guilty of hi1h-handed arrogance. confirmed prejucfices, non- objectivity. and has m1de itself •n inflammatory forum for palitlcal r1dicals contending that rioting: is jusUfiable until the Nixon adm inistration doea whit the radicals demand. IF THE NA TION"S domestic affairs are unsettled th is fall by c1mpus disorders. Allott claims, "part of the blame will attach to the commission on campus disorders. and to the President's advisers who · assembled It . . . the commission established to Investigate disorder will become a cause of disorder." Storm center of the commlnion is young (22 ) John Rhodes, Jr. a Harv.ard gr1duate student whose scalp was unsucc:enfully sought by Vice·P~sldent Spiro T. Aanew after Jthode1 said he hoped to find out "whether the President's and the vl~preaident's statements are killing people.•· Rhodes is a proteae of Erlic:hman's who recommended hla appoJntment .as a commission member on lht buis of Rhodes· record ai president of the student body at California lnalitute of Technology. Rhodes engineered campus reforms without violence, infuriatin1 the eampus radicals and thus persu1ding Erllchman that ht had mastered th• formula for academic peace. But It hasn'l worked out that w1y in !hf! Scranton commission. What now. bothers the While Hot11t is the same thing Agnew objected to, an attempt to shift blame for campus disorder from flabby uni.,.ersity 1dm.in11trations to the Nixon administration and itt policies on war and ecology. THERE WAS PLENTY of evi'dence prior to the bombing at Madison, Wis., that the university there was a center of student revolutioniam. But not until after the bombing did the commission rush lb rtpresentalives to the Univeralty of Wisconsin and it has not yet sent investigators to other universities known to be pot"ntial violence centers. Nole : In a recent column pauing reference was made to the University of Minnesota as a center of student re1Jolutioni!m. A check with federal agencies. includi ng the White House and the f.fcClellan inveaticating committee, does not justify this conclusion. Duplicity in the 'Old Days ' The. rise of the "cnnsumer mo.,.ement" In recent yea r5 is no douhl a necessary and healthful de.,.elopment ; in our complex and variegated society, the consumer needs ll lo! more protection than he did in the simple economy of the pas!. But ii is a nostal- gic mistake 10 im- agine that commer- cial life "·as more honest and decent a century ago: the "'good old days·· were full of guile. duplicily and mis- representation that would make a mod· t'.rn merchant blush down to his heel!i. JN C01''NECTJON v.·lth the JOO!h 1tnnivtrsary of B&mum'1 clrcu5 thi11 5ummer -its b\r1hpl1ce wai a Wi1eonsin town nol far from v.'here I stay -I reread M. R. Werner'• old biography -----Frid a y, September II, 1970 The tditoriol papt o/ the Dolly Pilot 1e1kl to Inform ond stim- ul4U read•r• b11 prt1entino th.it ntwspaper'1 opinlON and com- mtnuirv on topics ot inrt reit and 1ignlf~nu, bt1 providing a fonnft /or the f%J'rc1ston of our rt(ldtr1• opfnfom, and b11 prt.rentin~ th• diucri, vitw- pofntl of Informed ob t'"'''s 4nd 1pok.ttm1n on lopfr..s of t111 dog. Robert N. Weed, Publiaber of P. T. Barnum. '''ho began his e1reer in the New England COWltry store business around 1830. ··Deception "''as common practice" In that bu&iness, his biogr1pher Informs ua. ''Barnum wrote that often he cut open bundles of rags brought to !he store by countrywomen to exchange for goods. and found that what were ostensi bly good linen and cotton rags contained in their midst extra weigh! in the shape or stone. gravel or ashes: and fa rmers regu larly brought. lhelr Joacl!i of oal~. corn and rye into to"''n short or their stated "''eight:• BARNUM RAO A job ln a country stort, And said of it: "Our cottons were sold for wool, our wool and collon for 1llk and linen: in fact. nearly everything wa!I <iiHerenl from what i\ v.·as repre!iented. 'l'he 1uppllers chea ttd us in their rabrics: v.•e cheated I.he custome.rs with our pods. Each party expecled to be cheated, U it "''as possible ... In his book. ''Thf! Humbugs of the World." Barnum rt.htted an anecdote of the tlme that he said char&cterized the plous-eommuicaJ atm<>!phere prior to the Civil War, and lasting Ions beyond It: "THERE IS AN OLD 11nd 14'tll·kno11.•n &tory about a grocer "'ho was a dr:acon. and who was Mard to call downstairs before breakfa!l to. his clerk : •John, have you walertd I.he rum?' 'Yes. air.' 'And sanded the sugar?' ·Yes, slr.' 'And dusted the pepper?· 'Vea. sir.' 'And ch icorled the: coffee?' 'Yes.. sir.' 'Then l'.'Ome up to prayers.' " Actually, It was in 11.ra:c part dlsgusl with these common malpractices that tumtd Barnum from merchandisina to showmanship, where he was an honest nu1n despite his extravagant publicity clRi m!!I. He never cheRted anyone he dealt with, but was himself cheated often by business associates, beginnlni with his own grandfather. IF COi\tMERCIAL dishonesty WU so rampant In his day. why was it tolerated, when so much les~ is under attack today? Jlfy opinion Is that the imperso111Uty of modern fraud ls what lnfurlattl the public. In the past, It was face to face , and 11 customer knew who to 10 to and "''ho lo blame: in I.he perscnal trans1ct!on. Today, e1Jtn though the merchandiM"r I!! f'1r n1ore honest and scrupulous. the growlh of the large, i mp er 1 on a I corporation has fru strated the customer In his attempt to track dows the t0urce of his dlssatigfaction. ' 'Con 1 um er lcglsl1tion" Is the p s y c bolo CI cal vengeance for thb trend. Dear Gloomy Gu~: Streel sctne: Newport Beach police, driving one block from headquar· ters. parking at mete.r "'lthout in· titrting a roin, ind walkin( down tht strfft issuing tirkets. -ft. E. S. tfrlK tMNre .. _.. .... .,.. •ltvn. !It? 11t<"»•~U1 ltlt1• .i Ill• ~tw1•~,... ft11f ................ ·--' .... 1191" .. 1 .... N Collins Radio Annexation .Was Hasty To lhe Editor: We wert encouraatd to read ~ editorial of Friday, Sept. 4, reeardlnc the hasty decllion of the LAFC to approve tht anne1:1tlon of the Collln1 Radio site to Newport Beach. We share your concern for municipal planninc and in particular lhe plan for the orderly growth of the Irvine Ranch. One of the major factors in our decl!!ion to live in one of the Jrvlnt communities was the existence of a master plan for the Irvine land. SINCE OUR ARRIVAL here from the urban-suburban sprawl of the Eut Coast, we have felt that few i.n the county understood or cared about planned orderly growth. This lack of concern can only lead lo an extension of ~-chaet.ic developmtnt of Los AnJ:eles and northern Orange County. With continued editorial wa.rnings and adequate news coverage, we can hope that county agencies and officials wUI not destroy what promi&eS to be: a truly unlque city of lrvint. Mil snd MRS. MARK J. STANEK /lf ol.orcycle Accident• To the Editor: Severi I days · a10. l happened upon the 1cene of anot~er moton::ycle accident. A young man, maybe ll years old, was "trying out" a new motorcycle on Newport Avenue at about 4 p.m. and collided with a car. The boy's left leg was broken. He had numerous cuts and scrapes. I do not know who was rtspot11lble for the accident. but anyone tryinc out any kind of ·vehicle at th.at time ot day on a busy strett with a.everal interaections lead.int into ii Is not the best plact to bt. THE BOY HAD NO helmet and was wearing sandals. Motorcycles are not kiddie-c11n, as many rldtr1 aee m lo think. Jt takeii a 1tron1. 1i.t1dy , alert. well.trained. licenaed person to-handle one of these moitsttra. Strict rults and a training trick should be l11:luded in a sale!! contract, aloni with a clean driver'• li~ae. Thert art alto1ether too many eycle accidents and the way the driven ioom past, only to have lo stop at the red U1ht 1 If they didn't rnake It throu1h the yellow llcht) 1tartle~ other drivers who have no choice but to .htna on 1.1ntil the lhunderlna herd goes by. L. F. BROCKETT L1tttr1 tram f'ICldtra art uitleom1. Normcdlit \Ofit1r1 1Muld eont>fV thtif' mcuagcr tn JOO uiorda or Iris. Th• right to condcmt lcttlrs to fit apae• or tlimiNft Ubtl is t111rvc4. AU r.t- 1er1 must lncludt .rlgn(ltUrt nd Medlo- lllg eddrtll, bid ....., lllCY II< vllh- htld on nqu11t if IU/:ffcient "°'°" fs oppa:r1n.t. Pottrv tDtft not bf ptib- lllArd. Quotes !. M. Groybo1I, Jlerhley -"Mob p!ychology cruclflts: (and) p1rtnlJ and those In 1ny poalUon of 1 .. de,.hlp 1llould v.·ork to ste1dy nur youngstert to teach them that life is a matter of strildn1 a balance ... of atceplinr t>r choosing the lesser of two evUs at lee.at temporarUy." ' Cows Given to an Unusual Leader A few years ago a Japanese student went to a 10uthern agricultural school in the U.S. to learn animal husband ry. lie worked hard, took a job on the outside, and became expert io the artificial insemina tion of catlle. After treating U,t.UI cows and saving $8.000 of hi11 eaminas, he bought 12 rine cows and heiftr!!I. These he drove across the country on a rented triick to San Fran- cisco, and sailed with them on a freighter to Japan. He brought them as a prestnt to a friend -an American Jlv- ,ng high up in the mountains of Yama- nashi prefecture. If that sounds like an unusual present and an unusual friendsh ip, it Is. Behind this incident is an unusual story of American-Japanese friendship and co· operation whi ch preceded and .!!lurvived the war and has culmina led in a unique community and institution. THE KlYOSATO Educ a tiona l Experiment Project lKEEP) is loc ated about an hour and a half's drive from my parent!' home in YamanaAhi City. There I met and vl!!ited the founder, Dr. Paul Rusch. Jt was he who received the present of the cows. The object of Dr. Ru sch·s dedication has been the Epi~pal Chu rc:h, but through a practical Christianity that expresses itself in the welfare of Japan and especially the improvement of Japanese rural life. Not at all the ardent missionary type, Rusch is a genial , round.faced. bald·headed A m e r i c a n activist with demonstrated persona l maanetism. His associates clearly love him. For mort than 20 years Or. Rusch has tra veled annually to America to charm and persuade funds from churches, service club&. agricultural socielies: and foundations for his d emon s Ir at ion project Started in 1957 when the fulure of democracy in Japan looked dim, KEE P began as a series of organizations to help rural people help lhemse.lve.s. The foc:u!I has alw•y• been on yout h. to give pradical tools to the idealism of young people. IN PLACES LIKE Kiyosalo, neglected by the Japanese themselves except those who Jived there, farmer& were trying to cultiv1te rice p1ddie1 on unsuilable: upland terrain. They eked out a living making 1eta (Wooden clogs) and charcoal. Diet v.1as lnadequate. He111lth problems "''ere many. Or, Rusch, who had got to know lhe rtg\o n throu1b a church youth camp he had built there before the war, wondered wl\at could ~ done to help. And could OUl3iders -Japanese college lfaduates and Chri1tlana to boot, with an American ltader -ovett:ome tht cU1trust of thete lon&·lJolated, trad!Uon-bound ftnntr1? Paul RUICh had fir5t 1rrlved In Japan after tht earthquake of 1923 to hflp reconstrueUon through the YMCA. Later. u a tt1cher al St. Paul'• University In Tokyo, he helped found a chepter of the Brotherhood of SL Andrew for Christian laymen. Interned al the outbreak of the war, he was exchangtd on lht: Grlpsholm, served in U.S. army lntelllgence. While on the occupation 1lRff he resumed hill trltndlhlp with St. Pa ul graduate:s and topther they planned to expand the old 1\iyosato camp into a community development center, concludln& that the country "needed a p r• ct i c •I demonstratiQf\ of how democracy works on a :1;mall community levt'.I." TONS Of ROCKS WERE cleared. " ' ... , :J·' .... 1. (;..' -·~ ; llayaka;~,,'_. ...... on New England farms, to build a church .and a hospital and to create a demonstration pasture. (The church Is a little masterpiece. It looks like many other Christian churches except that there are no pews -only tatami mat.s. IO that Japanese farmers accustomed to silting on the: floor would feel at home.) ~1ilk cattle -in a non-milk drinkinc: culture -were to be lhe answer to the ha rsh economic problems of the region. A prize bull named "Designed for St. Andrew" was imported despite skeptical jeers, Japanese student.s went to America to study rural sociology and dairying. Now the Kiyosato area has 11.000 head of milk cattle. KEEP has started .a Jar111 poultry industry with stock l r om Petaluma. California: leads educational efforts in pasture improvement in Japan: prov ides health education; runs a nursery school : conducts a residential school for prospect ive young farmers : bring 1 thousands of visitor11 annually to a cultural and agricultural fair ; and provides youth camps. a riding school and conference centers for young men and women from all 01Jer the country. WHY HAS KEEP BEEN !Uccessful~ One reason is that the de:c:ision to 10 into dairying came just as the Japanese government and the Ame rican occupation were both stimulating thf! consum ption of dairy products. The posl-war emerge11cy school lun ch program brought powdered milk, then after the emergency fresh milk became a regular noontime item not only in schools but in factor.v cafeterias, proroundly alterlng the food habits of th• nation -and the stature of young people. Second. during the past two decades when millions were leaving the farms for l!fe In the city, those who remained on the farms could hope to prosper only by bringing new methods into agriculture . KEEP provided an inspiring model or scientific innovation. Third, as Dr . Rusch underslood wt.11, the pragmatic Japanese respond to work ing modeli; rather than to lheortlic&I argument. KEEP has been a working mode:I of prac:Ucal religion in the service of man as well as of democracy in action. uniting college-educated scientists and old-fa3hioned farmers in co.operative effort and decision·making. Dr. Ru!!lch 1nd his colleagues have played a part in the incredi ble changes Japan has seen sinct 1923. ln llM7 they 11aw the need for hope and helped provide it. J\iany in the: U.S. (Including the Bl•ck P. Stone Rengersl who ste no hope In quiet revolutions might well pay a vi!!lit to Klyosato. (The headquarters of the American Committee for KEEP ls 1t 343 S. Dearborn St., Chicago, Illinois 60804.) By S. I Hayakawa Pre1lde1t San FranclsCo Staci Collt" 1---B11 George--. Dear Geora:e: fl.1y husband leans forward whea be eats soup. ANNOYE D Dear Annoyed · Malaria Is CAUstd by the female anopheles mosquito. IWell. I got to say some1hlnf. After all, If I UNDERSTOOD what people afe talking .about t wouldn't last a v.·eek in thii> racket .) I • • .. -.-... ... --.. -....... ' L' t •. ! I i r i I ' • J t I t • Signal Gift Parade I Vlsioni~ of sugar plums and all the other nice things associated '''ilh Christmas soon will be on parade again, as Hoag Hospital Gift Box Committee members prepare another preholiday gift showing. The early bird shopping spree wi~ be staged over a tw~ day period, '"ilh refreshments to be served in a relaxed, air conditioned atm<Wiphere. The event which aims lo assist shoppers in avoiding the crowd· ed December ~sh, is being planned" by members of Hoag Hospital Allltiliary for a second year -after the "encore" vote by more than 1000 shoppers who attended. in 1969 • All proceeds will aid the planned expansion of Hoag Memorial Hospital, Presbyterian. Dates to circle on the calendar are October 7 and 8. The selec· lion o{ interesting holiday gifts at modest prices, including stocking stuffers, will be on display from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Hoag Conference Center. There will be no admission charge, and courtesy gift wrap- ping \viii be an added bonus. Unusual holiday decorations also will be offered. ·Busy coordinating the event, which again will feature a Christ .. mas Tree Lane as a special added treat. is a committee led by Mrs. James La Flamme. She ·and her co-chainnan, Mrs . Charles \V. Clemens' Jr .• have bee n joined throughout the past month in planning details of the Gift Box Parade by the Mmes. Williard Chamberline Jr., George A. Cox, Frank T. Eddy, Naomi Fern Jones, Martin J . Lockney and Leonard South. The lane of Christmas trees which will lend a burst of color and elegance to the preholiday atmosphere are being specially decorated by Louis Zaffino. Each will reflect an individual theme, ~uch as Della Robbia. Nutcracker Suite. Nursery Rhymes, Santa's Gifts, Peir permint Candy and Blue--green Traditional. At the conclusion of the gift sbowing, each tree will be a\varded to a fortunate customer. In planning a substantial contribution to the hospital's expaJt... sion fund through proceeds of the Gift Box Parade and Christma~ Tree Lane. the auxiliary will be joining the ambitious effort entitled the Reach Years. ' HOLIDAY P REVIEW -Selecting an appropriate tree for the ~ Christmas Tree Lane addition to their Gift Box Parade scheduled ~ for early holiday shoppers on Oct. 7 and 8 are members of the : Auxiliary to Hoa g Memorial Hospital, Presbyterian. At work with axe and saws are (left to right) the Mmes. Merlin Kastler, Arnold \V, Canfield and Charles \V. Clemens Jr. Decorated Christmas trees will add sparkle to the "encore" event successfuUy initiated last fall. BEA ANDE RSON, Editor . t I i ! Ch aritable Gathering ' Fine Wines Blend In Art ful Display ' { It will be a scene reminiscent of France, transposed to th~ setting o( the Balboa Pavilion, when members of the New~rt Beach Juruor Ebell Club and their guests sample fine wines as they view works of art com-iposed in a variety of media. The benefit party. \vith proceeds to go to various philanthropies, "will take place from 7 to 9 p.m. on Thursday. Sept. 17. Approximately 400 guests are expected. to atten~ the ~howin~ fro~ l th e Laguna Beach Art Gallery, sample wines from six maJo.r Calif~l'.11a ·,wineries. taste rouge e.t noir cheese from Trader Joe's and enJOY Par1s1an C bread from San Francisco. i Organizing the evening and arranging to mail the invitation~ from ,"Balboa fJos L Office are Mrs . A. f;. Hastings, \va ys and. means chairman, J and l\.1rs. Larry l\.1itchell. co-chairman. with other chairmen. the ~1mes. .!Roger Sherman. winer ies; Garry Short, silver a~~ gla sses; Eugene Ko- -t vach. program and tickets. and Dave Snow , publlcjty. ~ Four or fi ve different wines will be available for sampling from Paul Masson . Almaden. Loui s M. l\.1artini, \Vente Brothers. Samuele Sebastiani and \Veibel Vineyard s. ~ A contemporary modern theme will be reflected in the art sho\v· ~In g. coordinated by Tom Enman of t.he Laguna Beach A~ Ga!lery. The !various media represented all are "'Inners of the All Californ1a Annual f Purchase A\vards Art Show. '.: Works purchased each year through funds donated hy th e Fe~tival ~of Arts are on display at th e La guna Beach Art Gallery or are available f for Joan to various organizations. ~ .. Participating artists whose work will be on view for the benefit ,.showing are as follows : Beverly Green, "Orphic Voyage," watercolor; :r.-tax Cole "Skel." acrylics : \Villie Suzuki, "~1-A-C-0 .'' lithograph ; Ferenc ~Csenterv. "Utitlcd B," aluminum and lucite; Lewi s Beken. "Eoi;," acrylic·;· Ronald Pusich. "Room :tt 1," acrylic, and Jay Ma ddox . "Untitled Head,·• resi n. Others are Sol Rernstein , ''Banguet on the ~1ount." oil : R i ch a rd Millar, "'rhree Faces." bronze : flitary Parker. "The Comedy.'' oil ; Rober t 'fhorn·, ''Runaway"; R a Ip h Corno n. "Death Synd rome .'' mixed m~ii:i ; ~Dwight r..'lorousc. ''Trees." wood; David Brockmann , "Untilled." steel: E. 4.J. Valardi. "\Vedded." \\:alercolor: James Strombotene, "At the Beach ," ~oil, and Donna Sharkey, "Untitled," oil. • i ' CON NOISSEU R SELECTION -Assemblihg some of the vintage varieties o! 1vi nes ror their combined wine study and art ex hibi t benefit party on Thurs· day, Sept. 17, in Balboa Pavilion are Ne,vport Beach Junior Ebell Club mem· bers <left to right) ~1rs. A. L. Hastings and Mrs. Larry Mitchell, ways and means co-chairmen. · PPM..,, ~ U, 1'7t N l"IM 11 Debutantes 'Rally' For Carefree Party Lido Jsle was the setting on a late summer evening for gaiety, mock competition and picnic fare when National Charity League debulantes Susan Frances Farrer and Lucin· da Jean Hayes were honored at a party by their parents, Dr. and Mrs. John Francis Farrer and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Joseph Hayes. Theme of the evening's fun was a car rally, lo which all 1970 National Charily Leagued .. butantes and their dates were bid. Before the checkered flag dropped at the "race's'' conclusion, participating cars. each with driver and navig;ator, had maneuvered through a specified. route. collecting various items as they traveled to their destination, al\vays obeying posted speed limits and abid· ding; by traffic laws. A picnic supper awaited them at the end of the "course" and a strolling guitarist fur. nished music for dining. Other d_ebutantes attendin~ were Victoria Carter Bryan and Janet Elaine Colby, whose parents are Mr. and Mrs. Howard Lawrence Bryan Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. John Bancroft Colby; Deborah Groome Corlett and Debbe Suzanne Dean who are the daughters of Dr. and Mrs. Edward Leisy Corlett and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brooks Dean, and Laurie Jean Gage, whose parents are the James Robert Gag; es. Other Included Wendy Mariann Jordan and· Marie Claudine Meany, da6gbters of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Paxton Jordan Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert John Meany ; Sally OWen and Roslyn Jane Rawlings, whose parents •re the John Marvin Owens and the Richard Kurtis Rawlings, and Gail Sparling, daughter of Mrs. Chesler Ferrell Salisbury and John Robert Sparling. ~ Knotty Family Ties Become Tangled in Medical Procedure i DEAR ANN LANDERS : In your answer NOW. I tried to call ~ suicide me , Ann, I want to say thanks for invi ted to a araduation ceremony, In July olumn recently there appeared a lelter o;n~r a ~ew min~tcs ago and discovered listening._ O.F.S.B.W. to a bridal ahower, in Augwt to • rom a woman wbo wanted to bear a C1nc1nnat1 doesn t have one. I was DEAR FRlEND· Clacluatt 111 td,u .... and In . hild through artificial insemination since horribly depressed and felt the need to ' 1 H " ..... <& May I receiVfd a biby r husband 's tests proved him incapable talk to somet¥)dy. Suicide PrevenUom Ctnkr •1 yet, ba.t announcement. Same &irl ...,. four lifla r falherhood. 1 think I need psychiatric help but 1 lbere. b a cbap&fr of Recovery. within ll~i monlh.!I. My pocketbook 11 I was especially interested in her letter can't let my family down . They would lncorporaled five mUt1 aw1y la Fort aching. Whal can a person Hy? -RED au.se I am facing a seriou!I crisis as a blessl ngs? _ LUAN A ultimate ad of itU-emasculallon would feel like failures ir they knew how Thomai, xentuc•.f· ne telepffoe num-INK esult of the same problem. My husband DEAR LU: Sltlct you have no "real be lo allow bis father to Impregna te bis disturbed and unstable I am. Why do btr Is .._..J.u1•. 1 uret yoo to gtve DEAR RED: Say oadl ud HJ slfll k ilia! agreed to artificial insemination bul parents blame themselve s when their them 1 call. Perhps all )'ot lited ts 1 keepll1 wtlb wllat yoa ca• affri !bnly. if 1 use his rather'!i sperm. J was objecU011.s,'' a:o ahead, but you do so wire. As for you, my dear, bave you children go haywi re? J know J'm 8 !ilob llelpl•& haDd to «el you lltrolP ~stem­ j)hocked at first , but his father insists on without my blessl n11. Such an conaldertd what It would be like to give and ll is my own fault, not theirs . t:ve por1ry eritli. And p~•se ''°P worrylnl :it and says unless we agree. he will not arranrement has eDdles1 pos1lblllt.1e1 for blrlb lo yeur own brolher·ln-law? I don't hAd every opportunity lo make something 1bout ''dl•&r•clq" your famJly. tr you tnsider our child his legitimate heir. a lifetime of trouble. A father-In-law who know bow mucb monty l!I lnvnlve4 htrt., of myseU hul I just can't seem to broke • ~I )'8a woald1 't be asUme4 to I have no real objections since I admire makes such demands mu1t be •Odly but ln my opinion there ltn't enough concentrate long enouah to accomplish get It aet, woald y11? Get sola1 alld (OOd y rather-in-law very much and the egocentric. If not cra1y. A husband •bo moitey ID the world to make tblt deal anything. lutk. God Itel" UttM wH llelp lllem· ~semlnation would be artificial. But I do "·ovld agree netd!I to examine hl1 ~ptable. Right now my .!itomach i~ Lied up in 1tlve1. ave !!Orne strange feelings. Wil l you ease rclation1hip with hl1 lather. l\1y guesa la knots 11nd my head Is throbbi ng Ml hard y consicence and (ive me )'Our th•t be feels vastly lnJerior to Pa. n. DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 need an I'm afraid 11 will burst. Jf )'OU can't help DEAR ANN LANDERS: ln June I wu • ----·----- Whal ls French kl!sing? la ll wronc? Who should set the necking limits -the hoy or the gtrl? Cln a abotiun wedcHnc suctted? Read Ann Llndtra' ~ "Teenage Sex -Ten Way& to Cool Jt." Send Ml cent.• in coin and a kin&, Hlf.. •ddrt!MJd, atamped envelope In ctn ol the DAILY P!Wr • • • ' . . . ~ Guys and Dol/s're Betting on Fun Riviera Club members and their husbands \Vill head Laguna. Those interested in joining the Guys and Dolls Section at a cost of $10 per person covering bus fare, admission and lunch, may phone Mrs. de Ford at 494-3683. Co-chairman will be ·Mrs. Richard Steinbach. for Caliente on Sunday, Sept. 13, for a day at the races. The Robert de Fords and Leslie G. Weldons (left to right) will be among those boarding the bus al 9 a.m. in the Alpha Beta shopping center in South ··-Horoscope -. Scorpio: Be Moderate SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 12 By SYDNEY O~IARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): Accent on how you relate to those who admire you. Spotlight on hopes, wishes. 'friends. Social activity Is fa vored. You gain if able to convince mate, partner that D10ney should be saved. TAURUS (Aprll 20.Ma y 20): Pleasant surprised u e. You receive assurance that ideas, actions a.re sound. Check details. Have facts al hand. ~ax without being careless. Message will b e com e increasingly clear. GEMINI (May 21 • June 20): Reach out for greater area of communication. Don 't permit anyone to stifle mode of expression. Your chann is appreciated more than might be imagined. Co a b e a d • Change i! necessary. CANCER (June 21.July 22): appre<:iation. Others cannot read your mind. Say what you mean -mean what you say. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Get promises in writing. Others will respect you if fair bu t finn. Slight disappointment will rebound in your favor. Close associate does want tD help you. Respond accordingly. VIBGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22k Set your own pace. Be a self. starter. Waiting too long for instructions could lead to error. Assert your need s. You get what you want if not afraid to act, speak. UBRA (Sept 23-0ct 22): Money situation improves. Member of opposite s e x provides Information -and inspiration. Finish project. Don't be discouraged by one who sings the blues. SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov. 21): must face yourself in morning. SAGni'ARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Short journey coul<f bring profit, pleasure . Throw off se<:ret fears, doubts. You are going in right direction. One who aided in past makes reappearance. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Friendly advice could mushroom int o profitable move. Be a w a re of opportunitie s. Expand horizons. Accent versatility. No one is really holding you back -get going. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): ·cycle continues liigh - get rtd o f nonessentials. Opportunity is present; key is to take advantage o f circumstances. C h a n g e , travel, variety are high on agenda. PISCES (Feb, !~March 20): Civic Duty Discussed ... Civic·minded women w 11 1 gather at 9:30 a.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 15, in the multipurpose room of Mariners Ubrary, Newport Beach. _ The Women's Civic League of Newport Harbor will begin its 19th year of nonpartisan, nonpolitical constructive work toward "the common good and public cons ideration to problems and interests of the corrununily." Mrs. Paul J. Gruber. program chairman, w i 11 inlroduce Ji.!rs. Eleanor G. Smith, past president, who will report on a recent v..iait to Washington, D.C. Also attending the meeting will be Mrs. Ellen Lee, author of "Old Newport. , .the Seaport Years." Adelines Sing Song 'For Peace The Mission Viejo Chapter of Sweet Adellnes Inc. will harmonize into world understandlng as it joins choruses in lb! United States, . Canada l'lld Panama in a share.a-song program on Tuesday, Sept. 15. More than 20,000 voices will entertain ir:I hospitals and for students, s e n i or citiiiens, shoppers, club members and civic groups in an effort to promote harmony t h ro u g h music. Under lhe direction of Mrs. William G. Barnes, the Mission Viejo Chapter will sing "In the Good Old SUmmerUme" and "When the Saints Go Marchlng In" in the Laguna Beach Nursing Home. Highlighting the program will be music by a special quartet , the Mission Jmpossibles, composed o f members of the chapter. Narcotics .Program Headlined A program on narcotics and drug abuse will be presented for the Orange County COW'ICU of Hospital Volunteers during a meeting Monday, Sept. 21, ln West Anahebn Community Hospital. Presenting the 9: 30 a.m. program will be t h r e e speakers, Del. Peter Tisbo of the Anaheim Police Department, Dr. Danie I Castile of the Orange County Medical Cenzer, and Glenn A. Timmons of Teen Challenge. Three roundtable discussion sessions are planned for the afternoon portion or t h e meeting, i n cluding Parliamentary Procedure. Junior Guilds and Square Pegs in Round Holes. Mrs. Jack M. L)'~S will preside and 2G Orange County hospitals will be presented. Umcheon. will be hosted by the West Anaheim Community Hospital and Auxiliary. University Women Take Pretea Tour A flowing caftan worn by Mrs. Keith A. KiMer, purchased on a recent trip to South Africa, is admired by Dr. Pearl Clark, president of the Laguna ~ach Branch of the American Association of University Women, and Mrs. George A. Bowman (right). The trio is making plans for a Fiesta de las Ami· gas membership tea on Saturday, Sept. 12, from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Monarch Bay home of Mrs. Robert Berry. Chairmen will discuss study topics under the direction of !\1rs. Donald Tanney, tea chairman, during the tea. Women who are graduates of AAUW·aJ>proved colleges are eligible to join. Orchid Buffs Take Note Orchid enthusiasts w i 11 ga~her in the' Wardlow Park Clubhouse, Long Beach, al 8 p.m. on Monday, Sept. 14, for a meeting of the Long Beach Amateur Orchid Society. oanr;-~e 2'40 E.Coo.slHlll'J·i Corona .Jet Mot" Do;ly 9:30 ... S:Jo.... Tel: 673•271/0 ~ ..... rt+o5 &o/A-M•u.-Cha~ AMERICAN LIA THER TEEN QUEEN SEE CONTEST WINNERS TONITE 7 P.M.--CAROUSIL COURT You could get inei:lricably involved. Don't play games with emotions. F a m i I y You may be tempted to go to exetss in eaUng, drinking. Wise course is one o f moderation . Don't make big deal of it. JWit realize that you Communication from one at a distance provides reassurance. Don't permit false pride tD hinder progress. Fight tendency to brood. News you receive should cheer; not depress. Check Award Heads Harbor Key's Agenda Newport spa. Newport Beach. South Coast 1Jua A busy agenda, highlighted ~y the presentation of a check to Ohlld Guidance Center or Orange County will involve members or Harbor Key when they gather for .a general meeting at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, Sept 15. A representative of Child:1;:""~:::::::::::::·::-=-=~=~-~-~~-~~~~~~-- On the Mark Ready for sho\v com· petition a re entries by (left) Mrs. George Jones and Mrs. O. T. Walkey. More than 48 classi!ications of ferns and begonias will com· pcte in the 16th annual show sponsored hy the Orange Counlf Branch ol the American se... gonla Society. Admis- sion ts Cree on Satur· day and Sunday, Sept. 12-13, from 10 a.m. lo 6 p.m. at Brecllt's Or- chid Co., Costa Mesa. For The First Ti~ In Or1nge County The Magnificent Color Film S1ri11 dvi~:Jalion Written ind n1rr1t.d by Sir Kenneth Cl1rk for the British Bro1dc11ting Company. An inspired moUon picture history, spanning 1000 years of \Vestern r.1an 's cultural achievements. Spansorcd by the Newport Harbor Art MuHum and shown for seven consecutive Sunday after· noons starling September 27th at the Ba.tboa Thea· l~r. Showings will be at 2 p.m. and ~ p.m. Serles tickles are $15.00. Make checks payable to : New_por~ H1rbor Art ·Munum. Box 507, Balboa, Callironia. 92661 or tall 675-3866 for information. Coffee will be 1 e r v e d beginning at 9:30 in Park Stanford Season Kicked Off Guidance Cente r will accept a check from Mrs. John P. Wright, president, for the proceeds from the 1 9 7 o Emipre Debutante Ball, one of thrtt major annual event.! sponsored by Harbor Key to support the non profit, county. wide psychiatric clinic for emotionally disturbed children and adolescents from preschool to the age of 17. ~1embers also will ballot to choose the 1970 Angel of Harbor Key, a person selected yearly for outsta nding contributions made to children's welfare and to the Child Guidance Center. Memben: of the Stanford Concluding the morning will C1ub of Orange County will be a presentation of new inlUate the new season with a pr o v I s i o n a I members, kick-off party tomorrow. including the Mmes. William Comfortable chairs, large--L. Barker, Jack M. Bibb, M. screen TV sets, beer and chips J. Falslev, Samuel Hurwitz:, will lend to the spirit of the Frank Legrand, Stanley Nash , St an f o rd-Arkaruias game Richard Parrish, Ivan W. which begins at 2:30 p.m. Sturgis and Robert Wood. The rooting section wU1 ""=====:.:..::..:::::::.._ gather In the Palisades Tennis Make a Sharp Club, Costa Mesa. Additional information may Tradt; Use be received by calling \\'a\kie Oime·A~Unes Ray at 642-4210. BIDWELL OF NEWPORT ~Ju.. BIDTIQUE ,,, .... ,, SPECIALS FOR SEPTEMBER NOW THRU SEPTEMBER 30th CONTINENTAL ACIDOPHILUS ONE PINT SPECIAL $1.95 RIGUU.a 52.25 WHEAT 79°/o Natural NATURAL GERM OIL Protein Powder BONE Cold Pr1i11d ONE POUND CALCIUM I OZ. Si11 Thit ;, 1 big S1¥i1191 300-7.5 Grain T1bl1t1 Ret11I• S2.6t llGULAI Sl.t5 OUR IEGUU.l PllCI $2.19 $3.29 ON THIS IS S1 .7t SPECIAL SPECIAL SPECIAL $1.39 WHEAT GERM OIL CAPSULES 6 MINIMS ,., CAPSULES ............................ Gu._ .. su• SPECIAL 98c "' CAPSUUS ...................... lEGUl .. '"" SPECIAL $2.19 VITAMIN Pure Korean Cold PresHcl B-12 GINSENG SOY OIL 250 M;crotrarn t Tha 111w hi9h pol1ncy f Gr1i11 C1p1ul11 Quirt s;,. ' l1bl1t. 50 tabla! ti11. 50 C1ptul1 Si11 llGULAR SI .It llGULAI SI.SO llGULAI ... SPECIAL $1.29 SPECIAL $7.25 SPECIAL 69c VITAMIN "E"-MIXED OR D·ALPHA ... l.U. -100 CAPSULES ........... ' OIGULA• SUI SPECIAL $1.98 ... 1.U, -CAPSULES · ................... u .... '"'' SPECIAL $3.59 SPECIAL 10°/o Off' ON ALL PAPERBACK BOOKS IN PERSON IN PERSON GWEN OF GWEN'S COSMETICS Will Be At Our Tustin Store Sept. 18th, And At Our Co5ta Mesa Store Sept. 19th. COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS COSTA MESA 270 E. 17th SI. In Hillgren Squire 54a.9537 TUSTIN 1094 IRVINE BLVD. NEAR SAV·ON 544-7134 I ,, l: f • " c c fl • j I c w p n p Y• v w ol "' M P' ' ' • c ,, d. p " 01 d· It a ]II c g· p! " sl d. ir cl n l< b 01 d " p fc •: .. b. •• b: r• w Costa Mesa VOL. 63 , NO. 218, 4 SECTIONS, ~2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER l f, '1970 ra s ro ea ea * * * Sta11s Behind Jewish Youngster Not Released Yet -From Wire Services BEIRUT. Lebanon -Three little girls tell a hijack story of triumph and poten· tlal tragedy today. "We're going, we're going," cheered Ruth Smith, 7, of Williamsburg, N.Y., as a contingent of freed hostages prepared to fiy to CYPruS. Ruth is going. The group -mostly women and children -stood in line to board the chartered jetliner after a motor convoy from the hotel wbere they had been held. Yvonne Adassi , 8, of Hayward, Calif., was among them. "I feel fine except I hope "'' don't get another hijack." Yvonne is going. Authorities for T\YA, meanwhile, an- nounced that blonde Connie Pittaro, of South Amboy, N.J ., is still al the scorching airstrip with 257 o t h e r hostages. The little Jewish girl was to have entered second grade Wednesday, after a summer visit to her grandmot.ber in Germany. She was traveling alone -they lake good care of you on an airline -but her anguished parents today live for every moment's news. "What do they want with those kids?." pleaded Mrs. Michael Pittaro, lhe mother of one who isn't going. Not yet. Police Capture Valley Suspect in Sex Cri1nes Police early today chased down and captured a Fountain Valley photogr_a~r who they charged with kidnapping, possession of dangerous d r u g s narcotics and marijuana -and a sex perversion allegedly forced upon a 17· year-old Costa Mesa girl. The suspect, arrested by Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach officers, was identified as Robert C. Albright, 32, of 18862 Arbutus St., Fountain Valley. Police asserted that the teenaged gjr l told them she was driving in the Costa Mesa area about 1 :30 a.m. when a car pulled alongside her and tried to force 'Boston Blackie' Chester Morris Succumbs at 69 NEW HOPE , Pa. (UPI) -Actor Chester Morr is. who starred in movies, stage and television, was found dead Fri- day in a motel room here. He was 69. A spokesman for the Bucks County Playhouse where Morris w;is appearing, said the death "'as sudden. The coroner·s office said an investigation was un- derway. Morris ' body W<I S found on the floor or his room by Lee R. Yopp, producer and artistic director or the playhouse, ·where Morris was starring lhi!I week in "The Caine Muliny Court-titartial." Yopp "'·as going to meet ti-iorris for lunch. The spokesman said ti-1orris talked by phone with Yopp and other playhouse staff members al mid-morning . Morris was one of television's first sleuths in his role as Roston Blackie. the dapper detective in the series which ran in the mid 19:;(l's. A veteran of more than liO rilms. in- cluding 26 "Boston Blackie'' feature movies, Morris was one or a family of ac- tors. He wa s born Feb. 16, 19\ll. her auto o(f the road. lft efforta to evade her attacker, sh1 eventually ended up ln Huntington Beach whert the driver finally did force her off the road. The driver held a knife 1t her throat, and forced her to perform 11n act cf 1ex perversion, she told officers. A squad car patrolling the intersection of Yorktown Avenue and Brookhurst Street pulled up behind the vehicle during the alleged act, allowing the girl to flee , investigators reported. The car fled with police units from Fountain Valley and Huntington Beactl giving chase until it was cornered at Harbor Boulevard and Warehouse Road in Costa Mesa. At the time of Albright'.s arrest, of- ficers allege they found a quantity of marijuana and other drugs in the vehicle. Albright was booked into Huntington Beach City Jail. Mesa Workers Fete McKenzie A festive luau for retiring Costa' Mesa City Mana ger Arthur R. McKenzie is being hosted Sunday, Sept. 20, by city employes. The 5 p.m. soiree at the Costa fl.1esa Golf and' Country Club is open to the public and will feature casual dress, Ii· quid refreshment, plus lots of en· tertainment. Tickets are priced at $3.75, and may be purchased by calling Jane Angel at Costa fi.iesa City Hall. McKenzie is planning a lengthy vaca- tion in Mexico to convalesce from a stroke suffered in early spring. State Divisiota Says DAIL.Y ,ILOT r Boating for Birds? Pele Reyes ·ol Sal!la Ano worts on ~Jona-a• 53-loot ketch being built by McClatchle Marino In . the firm's NeWport Beach yard. An artistic wOcker at ua.. lloltyard tb~I ~· upside-dOWll form W th1 Jaot of an eaglti about It. So , h:J:'ted 1 bmi'1 1--.on lt.,Tbl faclo cr--botb _ ll&,&U form. Parents Share Burden on Dress Code for School By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 tllt Ot"r Piiot Sl•ll High school students along the Orange Coast for the most part will share the burden of responsibility for their dress wilh their parents. With the exception of Tustin Union High School District which adopted a slightly r evised parent·teacher-ad- ministration formulaled code, and San Juan Capistrano Unified whose board·ap- proved code was drawn by parents and students last spring, most Orange Coast districts have abandoned dress codes. Newport-Mesa Unified dropped its dress code in the middle Of last year, aC• cording to Dr. Norman Loats , associatiori superintendent for instructional opera- tions. "\Ve more or less assume that dreS.!I is the responsibility of the home," Loat., said. "In individual cases, however, we may have to tell a student 'we'd like you to go home and dress more ap- propriately ,' should he appear at schoo l dressed oulrageously." Districts abandoning formal, restrictive dress do 's and don'ts have for the most part adopted short policy statements noting parents' responsibility for dress. All districts interviewed said they re- quire that shoes be worn for health and safety reasons. Laguna Beach which is continuing a survey of parent, teacher and student at- titudes about dress restrictions as adopted "one short paragraph" con- lSet DRDS CODES, Pa1e 2) Colorado Man Gets Life Sentence in Bludgeoning CANON CITY, Colo. -A handsome roamer whose road ended siJ: months ago. with capture in Costa Mesa today is being processed into Colorado Slate Prison here, ID remain for life. James E. Jackson, 24, was quickly con- victed by a jury which deliberated over Labor Day and sentenced for the brutal bludgoon murder of a Colorado Springs pawnbroker. His companions in the alleged cross- country crime spree that ended last March 11 with an anti-climactic 11ur· render al 514 1h: Bernard St., turned state's evidence and testified against him . Howard L. Tschirhart. 31. of Costa Mesa, and Jack E. Matney, 32, of Denver, are expected to be extradited to Orange County within 30 days. Thus, plus Jackson and his pregnant girlfriend -allegedly operating In Bon- nie and Clyde bandit style -are suspected of a string of armed robberies along the coast. The woman, who gave the name Patricia Jack.son, is currently serving a sentence fOr Laguna Beach and Costa fl.iesa crimes also credited by authorities to Tschirhart and Matney. Cmta Mesa police officers. including St. John Regan, Ron Palmer, Bob Arnold and John Stoneback were 1ubpoenaed by Colorado prosecutors to lestify 1n the case. Trial for Jackson. who b e 1 t pawnbroker Erling Nielsen, 61, lo death in his little shop last February 1panned about a week, Sgt. Regan aaid. Salinas Valley Pickets Return To Farm Chores SALINAS (AP) -Strikers and strike foes both ended plcketlQg of major growers today and near ly 5,000 workers were back on the job in the Salinas Valley and strawberry fields . The United Jo'arm Workers Organizing Committee halted picketing Df IO berry growers in Salinas and Watsonville areas who signed reccgnitlon agreements, UFWOC spokesman said picketing operations conUnued agaimt 41 growers and shippers. Inter Harvest, the region's largest let. tuce slt.ipper, resumed full operta.ions when a citizens' committee opposing UFWOC ended plckeitng of the Inter Harvest plant. Inter Harvest has signed an agreement with UFWOC. Counter picketing halted ii!: operations Monday but trucks were dispatched from the plant Wednesday and Thursday with police slaUoned at the gates. Coast Freeway May Not Be Built Drunk Gives Up, Gets New Room By L. PETER KRIEG Of !111 DtllY "Ii.I 111/t The Pacific Coast Freeway may not be built at all. a State Division of Highways official disc losed today. William Ha shimoto, deputy district director of the Highway Division 7, said today the deparlment is considering the possibility of eliminating the entire frttway from the future stale highway system. He said a decision on the fale of the ccntroversial superhighway will be made by top departmental officials with in the next six months. He Ind icated that problem!! generated by the many cities along the proposed route, like Newport Beach, wh ich d0esn·t want lhe ro11d, ha ve led the deparllnenl ' to think about killing plans for It. He said planning for the section through Newport, itself, has already come to a hall. He said that the Newport seg ment; even under current policy, would never be built at all if Newport doesn·1 want it. Hashimoto said there is nn need to spend the Ume "rescinding" the current freeway agreement, a project spearhead· ed now by a citizens' group: he said a let· ter from the city council would do. The state halted all desigtl work on the freewa y section through Newport Beach follwing the introduction or a bill by Assemblyman Robert E. Badham cn.. Ne:1vport Beach) to kJll a slretch of the route from Huntington Beach through Corona de! Mar, ' Badham 'ii bill cleared the Assembly but died In Senate committee. Newport Mayor Ed Hirth, following a meeting with state officials Thursday, first disclosed that work on the Newport stretch had been halted and the state would not proceed without the c1ty·s blessi ngs. "They lOld me the state will not force a rreeway down the throat of any city that does not want one," he said. It Is because so many cities alcng the route don't want the freeway that the 11tate Is considering the action, HashJmoto confirmed. Several communities have been fighting lt, and one, the city of Venice, 11ucceeded In gelling k!gtslation passed In the recent session of the slate le&i.slatur• • that killed the freeway within ILS city llmlts. 'Mle community of Beverly Hills con· Unues lLS protest similar to that of Newport Beach. The Newport mayor Is currently preparing a preliminary report on the en. Ure matter of Newport Beach transport.a· tion that likely will be brought up at a council "study 1e:..ion" Monday af· ~rnocn . Hirth has been plugging for an overall and rOmplete atudy of future traffic needs Jn Newport Buch. In elrect. he says, It would be "starting all over from the beginning." He 18ld he does not know whether Newport need!! a freew11y or not, aad that IS.. F.REEWAY, P•l'·l) J A ZS.year-old Colla Mesa min 1ur· rendered to police Thursday night, .ac· companied to headquarters by a friend. "I want to turn my.elf In," he said, but it was no dramatic desperado-type deal. He was booked on suspicion of being drunk In public and given a bed In the jail. Disease Fight Set WASHINGTOll (UPI) -'l'l1e House has voted to authorlte the spending of it6S million durlng the next two ytar1 to help the statts flghl polio, dlpbt:herla, measles. mumps, wl'looplng cough, 1yphlllls, aononhea and tuberculoall. • _1_ • Teday's Fina) • TEN CENTS • Ille 258Remain Prisoners; Others F1·ee Fl'tlm Wirt Servlctt Am1AN, Jordan -Arab terrorists have abruptly canceled a 'fl.hour deadline on the fate of 258 hostages aboard three jetliners parked in the scorChing desert 45 miles from hert. No new deadline was set for lbe thrtatened bombing of the planes and 1laughter of the hostage1, which bad originally been scheduled for 7 p.m. (PDT) Salurday. I The announcement -appartnlly forc- ed by world opinion -was made in Washington by the State Department late this morning. Developments had conti nued today lrf rapid-fire fashion as the kidnap story cf the decade unfolded at Dawson's Field and in capital cities around the globe. The number of hostagts had swelled overnight to 258, with the birth of an American baby aboard one hijacked plane. Joytui women and children -ttill afraid tor loved cnes held aboard the planes -were freed earlier by the cuer· rills Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. Presjdent Richard NiJ:on ordered. enn- ed. &uards to fly on all U.S. airll .. - (oreign and d<!!!!g~ -~onlq tblo Saturday. . Leaders lhroughout th< world appealed to the Popular Front for the Liberation ot Pale.tine (PFLP) to free the 251 cap- tives, whether or not lhelr ransom demands are met. The PFLP wants imprisoned guerrillas In Israel and Europe re.!eased in ex· change. Liberal governments of Middle Eastern states, meanwhile, were among those urging the PLFP not to carry out Its ler· rorist threats. Iraq and Syria branded the serltS or four hijackings as irresponsible and unrevolutionary. President Nixon has repor~dly vetoed any possibility of direct military in· tervention against the revolutionaries to free American captives. Six C.130 cargo planes are deployed at lncirlik. Turkey. however, about one hour's Dying Ume from the Jordan-Syria border. Maneuvers have placed the U.S. Sb:th (See !WACK, Page I ) Country Ouh Loses Golf Gear A thief has cleaned $000 worth of golf Ing gear out or a frequently used storage room at the Mesa Verde Country Club in Costa Mesa. Barry Sutherland, employe or the private club at 3000 Clubhouse Drive, told police Thursday lhe loot included balls, bags and clubs, as well as clothing. He said it is almMl impossible to keep the equipment room locked during periods or heavy play. Oruge C:.ut Weather Clouds will hide the sun while the ocean breeze cools thingii off along the Orange Ccast thls week· eod. Temperatures will dip to 68, while holding at 82 further inland. INSIDE TODAY s u r Ii n a tnthu.sia&t., from acro3s the nation art homing in on Huntington Btach where the 1970 na!ionol chompiomhip.1 wiU be htld next weekend. Stt Sports, Page 15. •lrltll • IMllolt It C•Hfllnllt 1 Cllt(kl!ll' u, 11 c 1-..i11to11 ,,_., c.itlln 1' c,.u-• JI OMtJI Nllitt. I ·-,.,llJ ""' . l'loilllCt .. 11 ....,.ldN 1• A1111 i..Mws U ~· . Mirr!-I.~'" I _,,,,. . ""'"'" •tt Mlttittl """"' II lllllltfll l N~ 4-a °'"" CMIY I ,_..,._, ... ,. U.M ,.,,. .. ,.,.,.. ,, . ..,., , .. ,. Stlcll M11111tt 1 .. 11 Ttllt..... U 'nMlllln U.M '#MIMI' 4 •-·• 111..,.. 1).U ..,,. 111... "' .. ......,..... ., ..• ... . .. .. . ,• f DAILY PILOT c Vp for Adopt·ion From Pafe l Massage Parlor Law To Be Tough HIJACK •.. Fleet in lhe Medlterranean nearby, ap- partnUy to provide support -If necessary -ln evacuatln' freed -.... ' One radio broadcut lrom Beirut Lebanon, by the radical Central Com· mltlet of the Palestine Resistance Move- ment. charged the U.S. is preparing an invasion. A tough new o~ance to regulate massage parlors will be presented to the Newport Beach city council for adoption ~londay night . Citing police problems with massa1e parlors already in eiistence, City Attorney Tully Seymour has given the ordinance "emergency" status, v.·hich would make it effective Immediately if the council approves it. The ordinance v.·ould require all new applicants for such businesses to meet a Jong and stiff set of regulations including 200 hours of schooling for operators and all "massage technicians." County Cities League Stalled On President Members of the executive committee of the Orange County League of Cities deadlocked 7 to 7 Thursday night over the election of a president for the coming year. Committee members in two secret ballots were unable to break a tie vote between incumbent President Jack Green, Huntington Beach City Coun- cilman, and Ralph Clark, Anaheim coun- cilman and a candidate for supervisor from the Fourth District in the November election. • The commUtee members finally voted to delay elerlion of officers tmtil the Oct. a meeting. That session will be held jointly with the city of Westminster to celebrate the city's IOOth birthday. Previous to Thursday night's deadlock a nominating committee had named Green to suo::eed himselr and Clark to be re-elected to the post of vice president. The league approved a proposal sub- mitted by a committee headed by Mayor Ed Hirth of Newport Beach that all governing bodies of regional agencies be 100 perce~ elected officials. The proposal also demand! that all meetings of such regional agencies by held within the territory over which the &genef haS .jurlJdicUon. · Hirth's committee had been studying a proposal that all mayors be directed elected by the voters and be salaried. 1 The Newport mayor said that more time wu needed to study that Idea and that recognition of the added burden of regional government participation would help to offset opposition to incrused u laries for mayors~ Huntington Beach voters will decide Nov. 3 on a proposal to elect a full time mayor with a yearly salary of $17,000. Fountain Valley and Costa Mesa city councils have both passed resolutions op- pos1ng regional agencies established by JegisllUve mandate. Tahoe Icy Grave For 100 Victims Says Coast Guard TAHOE CITY (AP) -The cool beauty of Lake Tahoe's waters provide a favorite resort for millions of vacationers -but an icy grave for at least 100 human bodies preserved forever in its depths. Each year, one or two persons vanish mysteriously in to the lake follow ing boating or swimming accidents, says Howard Adkins, executive officer of the U.S. Coast Guard he.re. The tx>dies are never found . DAILY PILOT 0A"'40E c;o.t.$l l"Ul l..llioONG COMl" ... NY l11t1rl N. w.,4 ,.,nlllfftl '"° l"u~lllllV CMNI ..... Oi'fict lJO Wt1t lty Str11I M1ili11t Atld,.u t ,,0 . le• 1560. •1616 ............ HI-I leKI\; J1H Wfll lltMI '6111001 .. L.tt,,,.. •Nth: n1 """' Av111ue H1111!1<1fleri luUI: Ht/I l t1c11 1:1111rv1 .. s.11 ci.-11: >01 ,...," £1 ''""'.,. 11 .. 1 _A. DA1lY l"ILOT, wllll wflk.11 11 '°""'"'"' 1111 ,,,,__~-. It M tt-4hlly •~•P' Wti· ..., Ill ..,., ... ..Oii-"' l.atlllll '"'"' Nl"'-1 .. 1(11, (OJll Mn1, Mllfttlflf~I~ I~ -1'°""1111! Vl lll 'f, tlOflt w\111 ! ... r .. ~I 8 11-. Ort* (GUI l"vtlltfl""' (O.._ftl' ,,lrlllf'ICI •~nit IA U ,111 Wt>I ... felM t i"'-Nt-1 ltl(I\. 1~ JJO W•I .. ., "'""'· c..i. Mnt. T.,.._. 111•) 6•1 .. 321 C~-"'94 A4nrthf .. '41·1671 C,,.p'lflll, 1t1t, Oft.... l!Mll 11',,,a!l'."I"' C)tlnH~f. ,_. -"•rltl. Tilllltr•t-, ••torltl ''"".... .. .. .-.111-11 M<•lll !Ny .. r~M •l!lleyt a,MCi.1 ,...... l'fllt•itll .. tejloytlflll -·· ~ (1-M ,..Ifft H1~ II N•..,..., ••ldl ..,,. c;re.,., -._c.uw~lt. ~r1f!itf! .., ttl"rltr U,to fM"l!PllJI ~ l'l\tll H ,Jf """lfll'l'I ... mi.rr "'11owttltfi1, tJ,oe """1111,. It wou.ld also provide for a thorough background check or all potential employes and require operators and employes to provide written statements Crom five bona llde Newport Beach residents attesting to the.ir moral character. All massage parlors now tn operation will ha\'e 120 days to comply with th~ and all other. provisions in the new regulations. Seymour this morning explained the new ord inance is designed to help relieve a growing burden on the police depart· ment. Two massage parlors have been raided in rectnt months with charges of pro. stitutlon resulting both times. Seymour explame.: that under current procedures, massage pa rlors a r e regulated only by the city's general business license ordinance. With the new document, he sak!, "The rules to the game are being spelled out instead of left in a nebulous state." Specifically, in addition to its lengthy application requirements, the ordinance also provides broader grounds for revocation of pennits. Under an "unlawful activities" section, the ordinance states: "It shall be unlawful for any person to massage any other person, or give or ad· minister any bath or baths, or to give or administer any of the other (services) mentioned ln this chapter for Immoral purposes, or in a manner intended to arouse, appeal to or gratify the lust or pa!l!llon.s or sexual desires. "Any vioaltion of this provision shall be deemed grounds for the. revocaUon of the permit granted bereander." The city currently has before It an ap- plication for a fifth massage parlor in the city and a hearing on its request will also b< conducted Monday nlght by the city council. From Page 1 FREEWAY ••• a comprehensive study "of some kind" should be undertaken by the City Council. Hirth said Haig Ayanian the division direclor, and Hashimoto agreed with this and said all the city need do to stop work on the freeway, forever, if it wan ls, is to have the City Council write the state Division of Highways saying so. The disclosure means that elforts by a new\y.fonned C it ii e n s' Coordinating Committee to circulate petitions that would force the city to rescind its present freeway agreement are likely not necessary. The city had adopted a route for the new hghway east from Bayside drive to the Corona de! Mar boundary. The Division of lfighways, adopted route, through Newport, has the freeway traveling immediately adjacent to the present Pacific Coast Highway, taking valuable commercial real estate along the way. Opponents of the route contend the road will "cut the city in half," and thus ruin its character. Newport Skyline New hig h rise buildings near Newport Beach's Fashion Island create an entirely new skyline for the city. This view is from Bluewater Drive in the Harbor View Hills section of Corona del Mar. Shell of building at left is new Irvi ne Company financial building. Next to it is Avco Building. Two identical buildings are original pair in financial section of Newport Center. Astronaut Greets Four Students From Capsule By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of tJlt DIP, ,II« 11111 A..tronaut Nell Armstrong, the first mari' to walk on the moon, provided a surprise welcome this morning to four crewmen who had jwt spent 90 days In a space simulation capsule at McDonnell- Douglas Corp., Huntington Beach. Annslrong greeted the men -John Hall, Wilson Wong, Terry Donlon and Stephen Dennis -at 6:01 a.m. just as they emerged from the sealed capsule (or their first breath or fresh earth air. "J, more than most of us here, ai> prec:iate what It's like to be cooped up," smiled Armstrong, adding that he was glad to rejoin the world after his voyage to the moon. The crewmen, all graduate studentJ, were equally happy . They had been testing life support systems which may ultimately' be used for extended stays in outer space. "Today we're all in sort of an exaltant glow.'' remarked crew chief }!all, 25. }le added that It wa..s not a foregone con- clusion that the test would be suc- cessfully completed. During the early weeks of the ex· periment, many or the systems had broken down, causing both crewmen and engineers to think "that maybe we would have a successful 30-day run." One of the items to experience break down -was the water recycling system which left them with buckets of waste water -both fu buckets and on the cabin floor -until they managed to fix it. "I personally thought a lot about travel. Ing," said Hall when queried about his mental preoccupations. "I had a Sierra Club calendar with me and every week I turned it over to see what kind of pict ure it had." "What about girls?" asked one newsman during the press conference which followed their release from the chamber. Replied crewman Wong, 23, sheepi.shly, "Well, if we had them on board, we v.·ouldn't be out today .'' For their work in maintaining the cabin equipment and serving as guinea pigs for scientists, the men were paid a regular $1.60 hourly salary plus overtime and a dally bonus. An additional payment or $2,000 will be theirs for successfully com· pleting the 90 days. "It wasn't enough,'' de c 1 are d "astronaut" Dennis, 22. But crew chief Hall said it was an adequate return. He added, however. "l would have to say now if I were asked lo do another 90 days I would say 'no.' " Today the four men will travel to UCLA for medical tests and then will presumably take deserved vacalions before resuming classes. This morning they were treated to a heavy breakfast, including inch-thick steaks. It was a welcome departure from their normal freeze.d ried meals. Comic to Launch Artists' Forum In Beach Sunday Comedian Jonathan Winters will help launch Prospectus-Art '70, a showing of more than 700 works by leading California artists, when the show opens Sunday night on the Huntington Cente r 1'1all in HWltington Beach. Promoters of the charity art show, bill· ed as one of the largest of its type in Orange County, said Winters will pro- bably appear during the preview opening of the show at 6 p.m. Sunday. Admission to the Sunday night preview is $5 per person , with the proceeds going to establish art sch0Jarshi ps on a yearly basis. Prospectus-Art '70 will be opened free to the public starting Monday and ~ ning through Sept. 25 on the mall at Edinger Avenue and Beach Boulevard. The charity event is co-spon$0red by the city of Huntington Beach, Golden West College and the Huntington Center Shopping Center. Jason \Vong, director of the Long Reach Museum of Art. is coordinating the Huntington Beach show. Three judges will award $2.500 in prizes lo the top artists in the show. One $400 award will be handed to the artist whose painting earns the most votes of the public attending Sunday's opening. "Close ranks in the face of this ad· vanclng perU," lhe group implortd. Optimism was spreading, however, in Washington after a Congressional con· ference that negotiations to free the hostages will succeed. Israeli Premier Golda Meir has main- tained a hard line. refwing to agree to free 3,000 Arab guerrillas. "Are we to release these people in some sort of ceremony or other so they can come back and repeat tt.eir acls?" she said, her voice bitter with anger. so'urces in Jerusalem indicated she may be forced lo go back down. The PFLP.°' meanv.·hile. freed 60 of 116 women and children first removed from the planes today and returned passports. They were to be flown to N"ieosia, on the Island of Cyprus, by Jordanian Airlines. Diplomatic sources said it was un- derstood the remaining people im· prisoned at the Intercontinental Hotel in Amman would also be freed. Tough conditions existed at Dawson's Field where the TWA. BOAC and Swissair jelliners are parked, but an International Red Cross team vras doing its best. "It is not exactly a luxurious maternity home," said Red Cross aides who delivered the baby born to the uniden- tified young Ame.rican woman during the night. Several women aboard the planes are also pregnant and the Red Cross included rubber pants and diapers with a shipment of 1,000 prepackaged meals and medical supplies. Following the Washington conference, Sen. Mike Mansfield said the President's tactics have complete Senate support. "l think the government has done everything It possibly could," he said. The order placing gun-carrying federal agents aboard all U.S. flights -at a $3 per-passenger tax -offers other deadly possibilities, according to some. Najeeb Halaby, chairman of Pan American Airways, said his line will cooperate but the former FAA ad· minislrator said they must be carefully trained and commanded by pilots. Once opposed to carrying arms themselves, the. jetliner captains are no longer so relu ctant, according to one spokesman. r "This is a new league we are in," he explained. "Earlier hija ckings were the work of 100 percent losers. loners, kooks. men who had not made it," he continued. "Now there's a new twist -the organized use of hijack techniques for in- ternational political purposes.'' Reporting from Dawson Field. United Press International correspondent Ray- mond Wilitnson described one. Abu EiP,' wearing a Lenin badge on his camouflage uniform , gestured with his Russian AK47 automatic rifle it the planes shimmering under the JOO degree- plus desert sun, "They are learning something," the PLFP chieftain said proudly, adding his revolution is being taught to the 2.58 hostages. From PG9e 1 Hall, however, added jokingly that the fi rst thing he had to get his hands on when being released was a dill pickle. Money collected Sunday night will be given to International Art Scholarships. an organization of business and pro- fessional persons inte rested in promotion of the fine arts. IAS will handle annual scholarship arrangements. And the v•orld waits to see how the grim lesson ends. COAST DRESS CODES • • • stituting its dress code, Superintendent William Ullom said. The "code" ouUines students' three ai> pearance responsibilities to himself, the school's image and to the community at large. ''The matter or dress and grooming is best determined In the home," the Laguna Beach.district policy notes. Dr. Ullom believes the new policy will Jesiien the strain between teachers and students compared with the former slrict code, although the new code will require more counseling with parents. Scott Flanagan, assistant superin· tendent of Huntington Beach Unlon High School Dislrict, said the board adopted a brief dress policy statement last sprlng. Describing it as "simple," Flanagan notes that it states that a school is a place for learning and that parents are responsible for sending students to school in clothing that does not jeopardize or im· pair the health, safety and welfare of themselves or other students. As Jong as hair is clean and not hazardous by reason of being too long for a student who·s around machinery for ex- ample, any length ts accept a ble, Flanagan said. "I believe the overwhelming majority or our studenls will exercise g~ judg· ment," Glanagan said. Group pressures will bring the few who won't Into line, he added. Orange Coast Community College has not had a dress code for the past threiyears, Dean Joseph Kroll said. Kroll said he didn't understand why many district.. faced "a big .argument about the way students drtss." "Leaming has nothing to do with the way they look, and that's betn proven lime after time . .. If we're In the business of educating, nothing Is to be gained by sptnding time regulating dres:.," he said . A spokesman for the junior college noted that this yea r·s incomln& class "was lhe neatest, best dressed cl1ss C\'Cr." Meanwhile, administrators at Tustin Union High School and C•pistr1no Unified School District have vowed to en- rorce their district'• board 1pproved rcruJaUona. While Tustin limits boys sideburns to the "bottom of the ear" and forbids "flared" sideburns, Capistrano limits length of sideburns to an "inch below the ear" and allows Oared sideburns, but not muttonchop whiskers. Tustin allows no mustaches or beards. Capistrano does -at least to the corner of the lip. Both schools require that girls' un- dergarments not be allowed to show. Tustin girls may wear cullottes and pant dresses. but not slacks. Pants are acceptable at Capistrano, but not the "tie -dyed" variety, "whatever they are," Superintendent T r u m a n Benedict said. Regarding length of girls' dresses and skirts, Capistrano district's code is very "with it" fashion.wise. The code circumspectly advises that dresses be no shorter than a girl's fingertips nor longer than the ankle. The midi safety falls within that range. Sheer, see-through blouses, backless dresses and bare-midriff ouUits will not be tolerated at Capistrano. The code makes no mention of brassieres. Boys at Capistrano may wear khak is. slack, levis or bermudas, but not "cutoffs shorter than bennuda length or unhem· med. Shirts olher than squared off sport shirts must be worn tucked In, Bened ict said. Tank-type shirts art not a11owed . Both Tustin and Capistrano noted that "as a last resort" failure to comply with the dress code could result in suspension until a student complies. William Zogg, Tmtin superintendent, said dress codes were necessary to p~ v!de a "midpoint that is not totally of· fensive to either end of the continuum of students." Unlike colleges. he noted, "public high schools have compulsory attendance rules and students come from all backgrounds morally and spiri tually.·• Admitting that it ls difficult to come by "empirical evidence" that dress may in· tertere with the e<lucatlonal proceu. Zogg contended on the buis of his "years of school experience" that it does. "Over the years I've seen many f1ds exhibited and most ~·ere eventually found wanting," he said, although he believes some fads "become fashion and finally become accepted lij> the communlQ>." _____ L__ A n !J.n vifafion lo ~ Marchesa by Drexel. We believe ~ Marchese is the smartest most unique col/ec- that has been des igned in years. This group feature s complete living, dining and occasional to choose from. Our shipments have ;ust arrived and a quantify is now available for viewing at our showrooms. Be among the fir st to see th is unusual group, or better yet have if delivered. For a tion new with . experience . rn fu rniture you can't . mr ss Marchese . Professional inferior design service is availa - ble for the asking . Ou r de signers have mony years of experience and AID decorators are ava ilable . Whethe r it's draperies , carpeting, wallpaper or furn iture, your needs will be met at Ted von Hemerf Inc ., over years in the beach area. twenty DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE 7eJ 111111/l'JllMI." NI WPORT BEACH 1727 W11tcllff Dr •• 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Prof•1slon1I Interior D•1i11n•r1 Avallabl .... AID-NSID LAGUNA BIACH 3-45 North Co11t Hwy. 494-4551 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 ...... ,.., .......... ., 0...,. ~ 140.116.J b " •• fl ., tl d 11 n' tJ IC n: ,, •• " a1 , , , Su L. by ro ja. tho m• .. Lo Sh I ye ca· .,., pu 1>" In wh All "' dei m• ' sci vie pa "v de• wa I 11« put COi Ch rul 1 ( I ~ Re tlie ed 20 in Hir 194 1 by for. Ja1 sai• ol wa: A •fl• tur; pri: Hir Nei rep dai N°' ma Bia ti fit " ll I lnho silu has unp citi; th• tho adn N mal Pr< mot ..,.; rep H 3 Ii d11r ol ldn lwo Joh II chiE and ..., Iner no ti by ol a Frldq, Stpte_rnbtr 11, 1~70 DAILY PILOT G Biggest Request Yet Israel Asks U.S. for Arms on Credit 'Not a Bad Man' ~r aua1E~~=~i0;;;:1y~Phl-l_1n_ttr1anc1_11 Ranch Hand Says Manson Had Gun By UNDA DEUTS(;H Associattd Press Writer LOS ANGELES -A bushy· bearded ranch hand who says "I could never make Charlie out as a bad man" has testi- fitd that Charles M. Manson once carried a gun similar to the one identified as the mur- der weapon in lhe Sltaron 'fate slayings. Thomas Walleman. 27, grin- ning broadly at Manson and three women codefendants, took the stand at the Tate murder trial Thursday. He told of a mystf'rious mission on which he accompanied the armed Manson to a J.lol\ywood apartment in July 1969, :x /;( * fl Watson Due ~1anson, 35. and I hr e e 1v o 1n e n followers -Susan Atkins. 21, Patricia Krenwink el, 22, and Leslie Van flouten, 20 -are on trial ror murder-conspiracy in the killings of Miss Tate arxl aix olhers in August 196'9. \Valleman sald the trip to J-lollywood came after a mid· night phone call was received at the suburban Spahn movie ranch. headquarte r s of f\tanson's hippie-style "fami- ly:· ~tanson spo ke to the caUer. he said. then told others "there was a guy coming over to do lhc raoch in ..• Some_body was living at the ranch who stole some money and he was going to do the whole ranch in for it." Manson aMOUnced he wa~ going to see the man who was on the phone, said Walleman, and asked the ranch hand to come aloog. As they got a car, To Face Tate T i·ial "' Manson produced a Jong-bar- reled revolver which he placed on the seat. said Walleman. WASHINGTON (AP) Supreme Court Justice •rugo L. Black rejected today a plea by Charles Denton Watson for continued asylum in a Texas jail. The action. announced by lhe court without comment. means California authorities are now free to take Watson to Los Angeles for trial in the Sharon Tate murder. Lawyers for Watson. 111 24- year"ld Texan, contended he cannot receive a fair trial because 0 r inflammatory publicity. They cited, · in particular. a front-page story in the Los Angeles Times in which a co-defendant, Susan Atkins, gave what ·the newspaper billed as "exclusive details of two nights of murder." The Supreme Court in 1966 set aside the murder con· \'idion of Dr. Samuel H. Shep- pard on a finding that "virulent publkity" h a d denied him a fair trial. Black was the only dissenter. Watson's lawyers sought 11: hearing in Texas on the. publicity question. Both state courts in Texas and the U.S. Circuit Court in New Orleans rule the hearing out. U.S. Dead ·Confirmed In A-Blast WASHINGTON (UPI) - Records released Thursday by the National Archives disclos· ed that the U. S. Army listed 20 American airmen as kiUed in the Atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan , Aug. 6, 19<5. The search was prompted by Hiroshi Yanagida, 56. a former warrant officer in the Japanese secret police who said in July he was in charge or 23 American prisoners or war who died in the holocaust. Army records declassified after more than a quarter-cen- tury identified lhe American ~risoner of war dead at Hiroshima as S. Sgt. Ralph J . Neal. a 824 ball turret gunner reported missing in action 10 days before the bombing: Norman Roland Brisset. a man identified only a s Blankbet and 17 other uniden- tified airmen. They drove to an apartment in Hollywood , he said. and Walleman picked up the gun as lhey got out or the car. But as I hey reached the door, he said. "Charlie asked for it." The prosecu tion, which ca ll- ed Walle1nan, ceased ques· tioning at that point. A defense attorney said outside court that a man was shot iriSlde the apartment, bql that testimony wasn't introduced because the wound wasn't fatal and the man refused to press charges or testify. Walleman told newsmen he believed questioning stopped then because ''They know t could never make Charlie out as a bad man .•• He isn't one." Deputy Dist. Alt y. Vincent Bugliosi showed Walleman the long-barreled gun w h i c h ballistics experts say was sued in at least one -and posibly three --0f the Tate killings, and asked ir that was the gun l\1anson carried. Shots Quell Race Unrest In, Arkansas EARLE. Ark. !UPI) -A late n jg b t confrontation between Negroes and police Thursday was broken up by gunfire. A short time later the Arkansas State Police closed off State Highway 149, \4'hich runs through Earle. because of sniper fire across the road. -Three persons were njured, including Pitr. and Mrs. Jackie Greer. "'lrs. Greer is a black candidate for mayor. Mayor James King said their injuries \4'ere not serious, and were not caused by gun- fire. The night supervisor at Crittenden l\1emorial lfospita l in Y..'est Memphis. Ark., sajd the third injured person was a l4-year-0ld girl treated for cuts on the head and released early today. King said Greer was charg- ed v•ith disturbing the peace. inciting to riot and parading without a parade permit, and fl1rs. Greer was charged with disturbing the peace. F'iften state police units were sent to Earle. a city of 2.896 in eastern Arkansas, and other units were placed on standby alert. "lm't the water pollutm enough without putting that Btuff' in?'' Mitchell Sees Laws Easing on Marijuana I w ASHING TON (UPI) -Most recently Israel ha• Israel has made !" biggest received 50 Phantom je.,, and arms l'H'IUest to lhfl United defense so11rces said this week · y, the United St.ates has declded Stat~ and, for the first time, to sell 16 to 18 more. Is asking it be allowed to buy other congressional aources on credit. confirmed lhe Israeli request Thls report came Thursday b the Jargest since the Jewish from Rep. Samuel S. Stratton state was created in 1948. (0.N.Y.), chairman of an Israeli reliance on American arms has grown since France, armed services subcommittee a traditional suppHer. clamped dlcated It probably would recommend Israel be allowed to buy on credit. Two Strikes Facing U.S. Railroads that visited Israel la.st ""eek, down on sales in 1967. and Rep. Robert L. Leggett Leggett said he understood WASHINGTON (UPI) (D-Calif.), who also made the the Soviets are supplying arms The naUon's railroads now trip. to the Arabs on the basis of IO-race a double strike threat, They said Israeli officials year, 2 percent loans wilh 8 and it appears Congress may told them they have submitted two-year grace period and have to setlle both disputes. a "shopping list" to the U.S. said: ··1 think we're going to The issues involved are Defense Department for arms have•"to make something like demands for a 40 percent purchases over the next two Planes and Hawk missiles this available to the lsre.elis." wage hike by four unions years totaling $800 million. ha\'e been primary com· Stratton said his sub-representing 500,000 or the The Jsraelis refused a ponents of American arms committee would make a. 600,000 railroad workers, and a detailed breakdown, the con-sales to Israel in the pa.st. report ne1t week and in· dispute over whether firemen gressman said, but indicated should be used on diesel their requests included F4 engines. Phantom fighter-bombers. A4 o h Ch B l The railroads were already Skyhawk jets , helicopters, rp a11s eer eau y under a Monday midnight Hawk anUaircraft missiles, strike dead1ine over the wage tanks, bombs. radar and both issue when, on Thursday, the ground and ael'ial electronic ATLANTIC crrv. N.J . members of the orphanage United Transportation Union equipment intended to help (AP) -Sixty-one orphans, the and nine members of the local tUTU) served notice it would del.ect Soviet m t s s i I e only family Ch r isti n• Jaycees. who raised $14,500 feel free to strike over the emplacements in Egypt. McClamroch, Miss Mississip. for the trip. fireman issue any time after Both congressmen said they pi, has ever really known, fttiss McClamroch, whose midnight Sept. 2.1. favored allowing Israel to buy have arrived to be with her as parents are dead, has lived in President Nixon could use NEW YORK (UPI) -Al· on credit to help match the she competes in the ft-tiss the orphanage since 19SS. the Railway Labor Act to call "We are changing lhe enlire Soviet buildup <lf arms to America Pageant. "[ thought she was great a 60-day delay in the wage torney General John N . approach so the professional Egypt and other Arab nations. Tile children rrom lb e even when she was a scrawny strike, but" Nixon already haa ~litchell predicts the laws \\.·ho makes his living out of Israel has always paid cash Palmer Home for Childn!n in kid with straggly hair," said used the delay provision and against sinoking marijuana selling marijuana will gel the for its anns but Leggett said Columbus. Jl.tiss.. were ac-Nena Drew. one of the all other lega l remedies in the will be made more lenient. but book thrown at him," Mitchell "their funds are scraping ·bot· companied on a 2 2 -ho u r children \\'ho grew up with fireman dispute w h i c h thinks, nevertheless, it is a llisiaiid1.11;;iiiiiitoimi.'i' ·~=~;;;;;r~aiilroa;~d;t~ri~p~b~y~l~J~s;taf~[ ;M;i:ss=Miss:·~;ss;l~pp~i;. ~~;~~s~t~re~tc~h~c~s~b~ac~k~t~oEt~he~l950s;;·!I dangerous drug. MitcheU said Thursday he never has smoked marijuana, but once sniffed its aroma during a demonstration at the bureau of narcotics a n d dangerous drugs in Washington. .. You don't hriVe to die to know What the sensation and results arc:," he said. Referring to a national com- mission to study marijuana proposed under the Admini· strat ion 's Dangerous Substances Act. Mitchell said, "I believe that study will show marijuana is very dangerous to the community." The laws against using marijuana "have been much too harsh ," Mitchell said. Ni:ii:- on administration proposals would prescribe I i g h t e r sentenres for first.time users of marijuana. Auto Firms Face Strike DETROIT (AP) -United Auto Workers President Leonard Woodcock said Thurs· day giant Genera l Motors Corp. has decided "to take a strike" in support of the auto industry's refusal to meet the union 's new contract demands. GM and Chrysler previously had geen named by the UAW as twin targels for winning a pattern-selling w a g e set- tlement for the industry -by strike or otherwise -if no new contract is in hand when current pacts expire at mid· night Monday. Ford1 struck for l'ievcn weeks when current agreemenls were negotiated in 1967. was granted strike im· munlty this time around. Editor Dic8 RICHMOND (UPI) -Arthur "Chick" Richards Jr.., r(I(" 29 years the managing editor ol the Richmond Jn- dependent,died Thursday in Richmond t!Mpltal after a short illneM. He was 6.1. BOY'S WOVEN SPORT SHIRTS Sale 3 for s500 Permanent Press in many styles. Boy's sizes 6-16. ' A liunfe of ..... Im! W-i.t 11111--..wl \. s.per .. 1pp1n' apedlds prl_lc .. •• te .... ywr .. ,.., .. flntlllrl W1 .... 1111 • • 111 of.._ of tenlffc hys 111 n• Ille den. ~ a Int fer ylllllll CUSHION GYM SOCKS Sale 47' pr. Sold In J pr. pack1gn Elastic tops -h e a v y cushioned so I e. Men's sizes 9-13. Official Headquarters fo~ Huntington Beach Hlgh School District FASHIONABLE NYLON SHELL TOPS Nixon Gets Letters Gymwffr Sale Easy care tops in fall prints. 100% textured nylon. SizesS-M-L.. Millio11s More Tlian Past Presidents WASHINGTON (UP I) Rich-ard J\'1. N ixon's tnheritance of a ''horrendou!'i situation" in nalionat affairs has generated a n unprecedented amou nt o r citizen correspondence with the White House. according to the President's top administrative aidf!, Nearly five millkm pieces o{ maH was received during President Nil'On's first 18 months in office, presidential assist.ant JI. R. Haldeman report!. He 1'iald that compared with 11 little ove:r 1.5 mllllon p!cce.!I during the comparable period of President Kennedy's adminlstr11 tion. and just ()Ver two million piecei; in President Johnsop·s first 18 mon ths. H aldeman, adminii;trati vc c:hicf of the White •louse stafr and N I x o n ' s appointments secretary. .altributtd th e lna'ease to wid es pread national probltms "magnifit'd by the determined apposition nr a large number of the press corp!ll and the 'es tablishment med ia' who, because of pa!'it eHorts to write Richard Nixon off, had a vested interest in his 'unsucress.' ·• Hald eman said that amon~ the hi gh lights ~ a "horrendous situation." Nixon Inherited were: ''the longest and most unpopular war in our hi.-;tory; an escalating innation that was ba~ heavily on huge government d e f I c i l spending : a totaUy antiquated, discrt'dlted, u n work ab 1 e welfare system ; a burgeoning, uncontrollable bureaucracy: large and strong opposition majorities In both houses or Congress ; a crisis o f confidence in the presl~ncy: a great ch vlslon and emotion11l turmoil within the! nation, the gtnerationnl problem and the rai cal problem." lie said he thought !!Orne of the news med ia ''are out or touch wilh the people," but Nixon "ls far more in touch with the people than is generally realized or reported~ although apparently the people t.hemsetves know it -thot is what has generated a lot of the ma.ii he has received." It is significant that SS to 6.S pereent of the public approves or Nixon's ocndud 'of the presidency accortling to periodic poll!!, llaldeman said . "You would Utink that he would have e tough time getting even a 30 pcrctnl approval based on what you read In Wsshingtoo and hear on TV," he OOded. "It seems pretty clear that while lhert may have been a 'credibility gap' with the presidency in the past. now, ironically. the 'credibility gap' is with the media." Haldeman said Nixon !eeS "a sampling" of the overall conten t of mall addressed to him. and "a great deal or the mall that comes frorn what you woold call the leadership stglTlC'nt -the people who are writing In by virtue ol their off~ or their position in tht country." RUGGED, READY FOR AC I ION SNEAKERS _. .. bors'.7"ll .. 1PVCaol.., becl5; durable amiy cotton duck uppers; cushioned conatructicn. 6!h-12, 2!h-6, and U to 2, Glrh': washablo fabric uppers; PVC sol.., cushioned insoles for added comfort) Snowy whit.., bacl:-to«hool tonea.' to 9. STRETCH ANKLETS Sale 3 pr.84' Long wearing smkh ny- .lon In girls sizes 6-8JAa. Misses ~:izes 9-11. GIRLS ACnAn IRllFS Sale 5,r. s100 Choose from tailored or lace trim. Newest fashion shades. Girls :ilzes 6 to 18, Save riowl GRANT PLAZA • Brookhurst & Adams • Huntington Beach .. . ... • • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Urgent: Site Decision Th• lead paragreph of a news story In the DAILY PILOT, Sept. 3. 1970: "The two-year search for a future site for lfarbor Judicial District courts may culminate Sept. l~but then it may not.'' action alter studying the latest report.s. The 1ite search has now consumed l\VO years and the current court facilities are so overtaxed that trailers and makeshift facilities have been pressed into use. The Harbor Area halls of j ustice are physically bor- dering on a disgraceful state. Supervisors can start remedying that situation by getting the new court pro- gram in gear next Tuesday. The date is only four days awa y now, and "'e wouJd like to take this opportunity to urge the Orange County Board of Supervisors to make certain the search does indeed culminate on that date. There has been far too much delay in pinning down lhe court site and the need for new courtrooms to serve Costa f\1esa and Ne"•port Beach is serioui;. Realism on Jet Noise The choice for the site seems to be boiled do\vn to two. One is a Portion of the Orange County Fairgrounds near the Costa ~1esa City Hall. The other adjoins the proposed new Newport Beach Civic Center in the Irvine Company's Newport Center. There seems to be some dispute about whether Costa Mesa's new hard-line attack on jet noise is rzali.stic. The supervisors' choice may not be an easy one, In lhe fir:-t place. contradictory recommendations have come from Coun ty Adm.inistrative Officer Robert Thomas (w ho favors the Newport sitel and Director of ~al Property Stanley Krause (who says the Costa Mesa 1ite meets more criteria). tt.·Joreover. both tangibles and intaniibles must be wei2hed in.determinin2 which of the two offers provide ... lhe most services at the least cost to the County of Orange. First increment-six court rooms-will cost in the neigh borhood of $2 million, so it is not an expenditure The Cos ta ~1esa City Council has adopted a resolu· tion saying, in essence, that jet engine noise must be forced out of Orange County AirporHither by remov- ing their operalion or by engine alterations. The leading anti-jet noise fi gure in the Harbor Area. Dan Emory, says the approach is not workable, that engineering modifications are not likely to be effec tive for any major reduction in the overhead screams emanating fro1n the Orange County Airport traffic flow. In a "'BY-· the Costa Mesa resolution is important, \Vhether or not it proves effective. F'or it does serve notice that Costa ~lesa . like Nev.·port Beach. believes its tolerance of jet no ise has reached it:. limits. to be treated lightly. . ln addition to 'veighing the money and service f~~~ tors, supervisors undoubtedly are feeling strong pol1 1.1w cal pressure from t.he 'tv.•o communities. We trust these political implications will not weigh on the supervisors' ultimate decision. Most of all, we urge the board to take immediate I Nonetheless. facts are facts. It ls unl ikely that comw mercial je1 s can be barred from usin g the federally fi· na nced Orange County Airport facilities. lt is. ho\vever, possi ble that cu rrent limits on fl ights can be upheld. By hold ing that limit and by increased emphasis on non-jet feeder operations. we believe the two cities can live ~·ith Orange County Airport. c Scranton Commission 011 Canapus Unrest -Collins Radio Allott's Scathing Attack WASHINGTON -Sometimta sJ.a:nalll ire crossed and the play jg flubbed In tM Nixon administration and that is the cau with the Scranton commission on campus unrest. A scathing attack by Sen. Gordon AIJott of Colorado. a ~trong Nixonite, on the Scranlon comm is· 1ion and its forth- coming report, re- veals a great deal about the rumbling in the administra- tion on this question. Allot!, in effect. Jg accuJing J o h n Erlichman and other stnior domestic policy •dviaers of getting P resident Nixon trapped in a commission atudy which will "pour kerosene on the fla mes" of campus disorder. Other White House advisers support All ott's view of the Scranton commiuion and the administration is uneasy, to u y the least, over the aiming report. lHE COl'ltl'ltlSSION wa s appointed in mid.June after the killing of four Kent State college students and is headed by former Governor Will iam Scranton of Pennsylvania who was relied on to bring to the aimmission studies the quality of judicious fa ir-mindedness they deserve. This was a case in which some of the. President's advisers wished to pacify flaming student opinion after the Cambodian in cursion and Kent killings (. Richard Wilson . - without carefully thinking out lhe probable results. Allott 1ays there is reason to fear Lhat the Scranton report will be a "Oaccid whitewash or !he violent new-lefl political movement that is openly seeking tn capture or destroy our g r e a t universities." The Colorado senator is unremitting in his crilicism of the commission. He sass It has been guilty of high-handed arrogance. confirmed prejudices, non· objectivit.y. and has made itself an inflammalory forum for political radicals contending that rioting is justifiable until the Nixon administration does what the radicals demand . IF THE NATION'S domestic affairi; are unsettled lhis fall by campus disorders. Allott cl aims, "part of the blame will attach to the comm ission on campus disorders. and to the President's adVisers who assembled it . . . the comm ission established to investigate disorder will become a cause of disorder." Storm cent.er of the commission is young (22) John Rhodes. Jr. a Harvard graduate i;tudent whose scalp was unsuccessfully sought by Vice-Pre:i;ident Spiro T, Agnew after Rhodes said he hoped lo find out ''whether the President's and the \'ice.presidenl's statements are killing people.·· Rhodes is a protege of Erlichman"s v.·ho recomn1endecl his appoinlment as a commission member on the ba sis of Rhodes· record as pre sident of the i;tudcnt body at California Institute of Technology. Rhodes engineered campus rerorms wilhoul violence, infur iati ng the ca1npus radicals and thus persuading Erlichman that he had mastered the formula for academic peace. But it hasn't worked out that way in 1he Scranton com1nission. ·What now botheri; ~he Y.'h11.e 1-lou.se ls lhe same thing Agnew objected to, an· atte1npt tn shift blame for ca mpus disorder from flabby university administrations to th R Nixon adm ini stratio n and Its policies oo v.•ar and ecology. TllERE \\'AS PLENTY of evidence prior to the bombing at Madison, \Vis., that the un iversi!y I.here was a center of student revolulionism . But not until after the bom bing did the commission rush its rtprei>entatives to the University of Wisconsin and it has not yet sent investigators lo other uni versities known lo be Potential violence centers. Nnte : In a recent column passing reference v.•as made to the University of Minnesota as a center or student revolutionism. A check with federal agencies . including the White House and the r.1cClellan investigating rommittee. does not justify this ainclusion. Duplicity in the 'Old Days' Th'-rise of the "consume• movemen t" ln recen1 years is no tloubl a necessary ant'! healthful de\·etopmen1: in our complex and variegated society. the con!lumer needs a lot more protection than he did in tht simple economy of the pa st. But it is a nostal- gic mist.ake to im. agine lhat commer. cial life was more Mne~t and decent a century ago ; !ht "good old days'' were full of guile. duplicity and mis- representation that would make a mod· ern merchant blush down to his heels. lN C01'.NECTION Y.1th I.Ile IOOth anniversar y of Bamum'g cirrus this s:ummer - its birthplace v.·a! a \\1isconsin town not far from where 1 stay -1 reread M. R. "'emer's old biography --·--Friday, Seplemb•r 11 . 1970 The t ditorl.al page of t h« Da!ly Pilot attlu to inform a"d •tim· ulatc readtra bg pre11nting this ntWspaPfr'• opinion• and com- mtntary o" iopici of intcrtst o.nd significa11t1, bt1 providing a forum for tM f!%J'f't•rion of our rcodtr1• opltt.fon1, and b11 prtsentino tM diotrfc dN- pci•to of fnf......0 obi.,.,.,., al!d 1pok•,,..• .,. toplti of lM dop. Robert N. Wetd, Publlaher of P. T. Barnum. v.•ho began his career in the New England country sto re bU!!lness around 1830. "Deception was common practice" in that bu.sines..;, his biographer Informs us. "Barnum wrote that ofte n he cut open bundles of rags brought to the store by countrywomen to exchange for good.~. and found tha! what were ostcnslbly gOOd linen and cotton rags contained in their midst ex lra weight In the shape of stone. gr;i \'el or ashes: and farmers regularly brought the ir loads of oat s. corn and rye into to11·n short of their stated weight :· RARNU~t HAD A joh in a (;(luntry store . and sllid of it : "Ou r cotLons were )l()!d lor wool, our wool 11nd cothin for silk and linen : in fact, nearl y everything v.·~s different from what ii was represcn!ed. The supplier! chea1M us in lheir fabrics: v.•e cht:att'd tht custo mers v.•it>i our goods. Each party e~pected to be chea ted, if it wa~ possible:• In hii; book, "The 1-lumbugs or the \Vnrlci," 811mum rel ated an anecdote of the time th111 ht said characterizerl the pious·cnmmerlcal almospht-re prior to the Civil War1 and lasting long beyond ii : "THERE 15 AN OLD and well·known story about a grocer who was 1 deacon. and who was heard to call downstairs before breakfast to his clttk 'John, ha\"e you watered the rum ~· 'Ye.s. tir.' 'And sanded the ,;ugar ?' ·y~,, 11r.' 'And dusted the pepptr?''Ves. air.' 'And chlcorictd the coffee?' 'Yes. sir.' 'Then ('()fr'le up to prayeN.'" Actually, II wa1 1n large part disgust wuh these Cf!m:non malpractices lhat turned Ba mum [rom n1erchandising to showmanshi p, where he was an honest 1nan despite his extravagant publicity claims. Me never chea1cd anyone he dealt with, but y.·as himself cheated often by business associares. beginning 9.'ith his oy,·n grandh1ther . 1f C0~1~1ERCIAL dishone~ty was 50 rampanl in hi~ clay. why was it tolerated. when .c;o, much less is under allack today? 1\1y opi111nn is lhat the lmperHnaUty of nioclern fraud Is what infuriates the public. In the past, it was face to lace, and A customer knew who to go to and who to hlame in the personal transacliop. Today, Pven though the merchanciiser is far n1ore honest and scrupulous. the growth of the large, impersonA\ cxirpo ralion has frustrated the customer in hi~ attempt to track dows the source of hi~ dissatisfaction. ' · C on !Ju me r lcglslation " is the p sycho Io g i cal ,·cnge~nce for lhis trend. Dear Gloomy GuR: Turni ng right off 22nd Street Into Nev.·port Boulevard, thtn twing ing l!lcross to rar left lane going lo Fair- vlew I! a haza rdous oper111ion. Why can't y.·e have a three.way llignal there btfort some-one gets killed ? -R.E.M. tMt 1 .. m. ""~ , .. ,,.... ,,,. .. , .,.. ....:n· .• u u" ""'•~ .i '"' "'W\ .. ..,., i•~• ,t\lf "' _.,. If GIMlll, Gtl• Otl" ,lltl. Annexation Was Hasty (• " ... \ " To the Editor: We were encouraged to read your editorial or Friday, Sept. 4, regarding the ·hasty decision of the LAFC to approve the annexation of the Collins Radio site to Newport Beach. We share your concern for municipal planning and in particular the plan for the orderly growth of the Irvine Ranch . One of the major factors in ou r decision to live in one of the Irvine communities was the existence of a master plan tor the Irvine land. SINCE~OUR ARRIVAL here from the urban·suburban sprawl of the East Coast. Y.'e have felt that few in the county understood or cared about planned orderly growth. This lack of concern can only lead to an extension of the chaotie development of Los Angeles and northern Orange County. With continued editorial warni ngs and adequate news coverage, we can hope that rounty agencie..; and offici als will not destroy what promises to be a tru ly unique city of Irvi ne. ~1R. and PttRS. fttARK J. STANEK .Uotorc11de Acclde11I• To the Editor: Several days ago. t happened upon the scene of another moton:ycle accident. A young n1an. maybe 18 years old. wa~ "trying out'' a new motorcycle on Nc\.\-·port Avenue at about 4 p.m. and collided v.1ilh a car. The boy·s left leg was broken. He had numerous cuts and scrapes. I do not know who was responsible for the accident, but anyone trying out any. kind of vehicle at that time of day on a busy 11treet with several intersections leadi ng into ii is not the best place to be. THE BOY HAD NO helmet and was wearing sand als. Motorcycles are not kiddie-cars. as many riders seem to think. It takes a strong, liteady. alert, \vell·trained. lice nsed person to handle one of these monsters. Strict rules and a training lr11ck should be included in a sales contract, along with a clean driver's license. There are altogether too many cycle accidents and the way the drivers ioom past. only to have to stop 1l the rtd lig~t ~if they didn't make il throua:h the yellow light ) 'startles olher dri ver!ll who have no choice but to hana on until the thundering herd goes by. L. F. BROCKETT Letters tram f'coder1 ore t0tlcomt. NormaLly writcr.s 1hould con11t11 their nttlSOQ'tl ift 300 wor«U OT It.ft, Tht right to conden.sc le tter• to flt space or eliminate libel £s rtitrvtd. AU let- ters mu.tt include 1iimaturt 01ld mail· irtg addr1s1, but t1omt1 may k with- htld on rtq~•t if 1ufficif~nt rtcuon i! apporrnt. Poetry will not bt pub- lished. Quotes E. ~[. Graybeal, Berkeley -"Mob p~ychology crucifies: fllnd) parents and those In any position or le:ideri;hlp should v.'ork to stC'ady our youngsters. to te~ch them that llfe Is • m11tter of striking a balance •.• or accepting or choosing the ltsser of tv.·o t vlls .1t least temporarily." ' ... • • Cows Given to an Unusual Leader A few years ago a Japanese student wenl to a southern agricultura l school in the U.S. to learn animal husbandry . He worked hard, took a job on the outside, and became expert in the artificial insemination of cattle. After treating 12.000 cows and saving $8,000 of his earning1, he bought 12 fine cows and heifers, These he drove across the country on a rented truck lo San Fran· cisco, and sailed with them on a freighter to Japan. He brought them as a present to a rriend -an American IJv. ng high up in the mounl.a ins of Yama. nashi prefecture. If that sounds like an unusual present and an unusual friendship. it is. Behind this incident is an unusual story of American-Japanese friendship and co- operation which preceded and su rvived the v.·ar and bas culminated in a unique community and institution. THE KIVOSATO Education a I Experiment Project (KEEP) is located about an hour and 11 half's drive from my parents' home in Yam anashi City. There I met and visited the founder, Dr . Paul Rusch. It was he who received the present of the cows . The object of Dr. Rusch 's dedication ha1> been the Epi~opal Church, but through a practical Chris tianity that expresses itself in the welfare of Japan and especlally the improvement of Japanese rura l life. Not at all the ardent missionary type, Rusch is a genial, round-faced, bald·headed Amer i ca n activist wilh demonstrated pe rsona l magnetism. His associates -:!early Jove him. f'or mort than 20 ye ars Dr. Rusch has traveled annually to America to ctiarm and pe rsuade funds from churches. servict clubs. agricultural societies and foundations for his demonstratio n project. Started in Hl~7 when the fulure of de1nocracy in Japan looked cii111. KEEP began as a series of organizations to help rural people help themselves. The focus has always betn on youth. to give practical tools to the idealism of young people. TN PLACE.~ LIKE Kiyosato. neglected by the Japanese themselves except those who lived there, farmers were trying to cultivate rice paddies on unsuitable upland terrain. They eked out a Jiving mak ing geta (Wooden clogst and charcoal. Diel v.·a~ inadequate. Health problem~ were many. Dr. Rusch, who had got to know the regkin through a church you th camp he had built there before the war. "'ondertd what could be done· to help. And could ouL.;iders -Japanese college graduates and Christians to boot, with an American leader -overcome the distrust of these long-Isolated, tradilion-bound farmers? P1ul Rusch had first arrived in Japan 11fter the earthquake of 1923 to help reC'Onstruction throu gh the YMCA. Later. u a te11cher at St. Paul's Unlveralty in Tokyo, he helped found a chapter of the Brotherhood of St, Andrew for Christian laymtn. Interned at lhe outbreak of the y,•ar, he was exchanged on the Gripsholm, served in U.S. army intelligence. While on the occupation staff he rt!umed hi.'j: friendship with St. Paul graduates and together they planned to expand the old Ji\iyosato camp into a community development center, C'Oncluding that the country "needed a pra c t i c a I dtmon.~lration <1f how democracy V.'Ork$ on a ~mall communily level.'' TONS Of ROCKS "1ERE cleared. ;is on New England farms. to build a church and a hos pital and to create a demonstration pasture. ! The church is a little maslerpiect. It looks like many other Christian churches except th al there are oo pews -only tatami ma ll!, SO that Japanese fa rmers accustomed to sitting on thr floor would feel at home.) Milk cattle -in a non-mJlk drinking culture -1vere to be the answer ·to· the harsh economic problems of the region. A prize bull named .. Designed for St. Andrew '' was imported despi te ~keptical jeers. Japanese students v;ent to Ameri ca to study rural sociology and dairying, Now\he Kiyosato area has 11.000 head of milk ca tlle. KEEP has started a large poultry industry with st.ock f r o m Petaluma, California: leads educational efforts in pasture improvement in Japan: provides health education : runs a nursery school: conducts a residential schoo l for prospective yo ung farmers : brings thousands of visitors annually to a cultural and agricultural fair ; and provides youth camps, a riding school and conference centers for you ng men and women from all over !he country. WHY HAS KEEP BEEN sucx:essful? One reason is that the decision to go into dairying came just as the Japanese government and the American occupation were both stimulating the consumption of dairy products. The post-war emergency school lunch program brought powdered milk, then after the emergency fresh milk became a regula r noontime item not only in schools but in factory cafeterias, profoundly altering the food habits of the nation - and the stature of young people. Second, during the pasl two detades when millions were leaving the fa rms for life in the citv, those who remained on the fa rms CQuid hope to prosper only by bringing ne\v methods into agriculture. KEEP provided an inspiring model of scientific innovalion. Third, a.~ Dr. Rusch understood well, the pragmatic Japanese respond tn working models ra ther than to theoretical argument. KEEP ha~ been a working model of practical religion In the service nf nlan as we ll as of democracy in action, uniting college-educated scientists and old·fashioned farmers in co-operative ('ffort and decision·making. Dr. Rusch and his colleagues have played a part in lhe incredible change!f Japan has seen since 1923. In 1947 they gaw the need for hope and helped provide It. Many in the U.S. (including the Blick P. Stone Rangers) who set no hope in quiet revolutions might well pay a visit to Kiyosato. (The headquarlers of the American Committee for KEEP is at 343 S. Dearborn St., Chicago. Illinois 60604.) By S. I Hayakawa Pl'f:tide11t Saa Fr1acl1co Slalt CCIU1p .---B11 George --~ Dear George : My husband leans forward whe1 he. eal.' soup. ANNOYlD Otar Annoyed : A1alaria l:s caused by the female anopheles mosqu ito. (\Vell. J got to !iay somtthinc. After all, if I NOERSTOOD what people are lalklng about I wouldn't last a w~k ln this racket./ r I .I - s , bui 1111 1 dil' loci po! fre sy~ \ cor by nei I by rol wa to I thr coi I ••• ( 1 I Co bu: wi· ' Hii sliJ mi Ju pr• '" dii dr co SU tic th• .. m ' " I ] u st ., ,, 01 1, ir " p ,, d H t• ,, s ,, 0 1: ' • ' • I ( ' • I .. ~ ~ .... "' r----.---~~--~~-..--:,-.,..----""";:"'""1:'!"."':!'"':'"':~ .... ,~,....---... ~~"!"-~-~~-~~I"'!'~----.------------~-...,. • Saddlehaek \. Today's Fhlal N.Y. Steeb YOL. 63, NO. 218, ~SECTIONS , 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, ~EPTEMBER "ii', ·1970 TEN CENTS Clemente Planners 01( Mobile Park Proposal ra s ro State Dints Home Park Coastal Freeway Still Faces May Be Junked By L. PETER KRIEG ot t~• 0 11tr .. li.t Sl•ll The Pacific Coast Freeway may not be built at all, a State Division of Highways Clfficial dlaclosed today. W.illlam Hashimoto, deputy district director Jl .the Hlihway Division 7, said today 'the department is considering the possibility of eJiminating the entire freeway from the future state highway system. He said a decision on the fate of the controversial superhighway will be made by top departmental officials within the next six months. He indicated that prob)ems generated by the many cities along the proposed route, like Newport Beach, which doesn't want the road, have Jed the departmeot to think about k..illing plans for it. He said planning for the section through Newport,·~ itself, has already come to a halt. He .said that the Newport segment, even under current policy, would never be built at all if Newport doesn 't want it. Hashimoto said there is no need to spend the time "rescinding" the current freeway agreement, a project spearhead- ed now by a citizens' group; he said a let- ter from the city council would do. The state halted all design work on the freeway section through Newport Beach follwing the in trodu ction of a bill by Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R- Newport Beach) to kill a stretch of the route from Huntington Beach through Corona del Ptiar. Badham 's bill cleared the Assembly but died in Senate committee. Newport Mayor Ed Hirth, following a meeting with state officials Thursday, first disclosed that work on the Newport stretch had been baited and the st.ate would not proceed without the city'• blessings. "They told me the slate will not £orce a freeway down th~ throat of any city that does not want one," he 1aid. Orange Coast Students Responsible for Dress By GEORGE LEIDAL ot l~t O•llY '1'-1 SllH High school students along the Orange Coast for the most part will share the burden of responsibility for their dress V{ith their parents. With the exception of Tustin Union High School District which adopted a slightly r e v i s e d pare,nt-teacher-ad- mini.stralion formulated code. and San Juan Capistrano Unified whose board-ap- proved code wa.s drawn by parents and istudents last spring, most Orange Coast districts have abandoned dress codes. Newport-Mesa Un iried dropped its dress code in the middle of last year, ac- cording to Dr. Norman Loats . association superintendent for instructional opcra- Uons. "We more or less assume that dress is the responsibility of the home." Loats said. "In individual case!, however. we may have t.o tell a student ·we'd like you 2 Schools Meet For PTO-hosted Faculty Lun ch Faculty and slaff of Mission Viejo and University Park High Schools who will share the Mission Viejo bu ilding possibly as Jong as Christmas "broke bread" together at Thursday 's parent-teacher organization sponsored o r I e n t a t i o n luncheon. .. A splril 0£ cooperation definitely was in the air," Principal Robert Boasanko 11aid. The luncheon, annually hosted by the parent-teacher organization for Mission's faculty, was unique this year. PTO presi- dent Jesse Noriega in vited Universi ty High's teachers and classified employes to join in the banquet for 160 held in the school's multi -purpose room, Bosanko said. The cooperative spirit carried over to today's Mission Viejo Golf Course faculty organizatkm luncheon to which Unlvers1· ty High faculty also were invited. Basanko looks for the spirit to continue when 'the two faculties occupy the crowd- ed Mis.~ion Viejo building on Mondyay when nearly 1,000 University High students will be bused to the school for 1flernoon double sessions. The University High feclli ty wa.s delayed by strikes and· may be completed as early as October or as late u nen January, school officials have said. to go home and dress more ap- propriately ,' should he appear at school dressed outrageously." Districts abandoning formal, restrictive dress do's and don 'ts have for the most part adopted short policy statements noting parents' responsibility for dress. All districts interviewed said they r~ quire that shoes be worn for health and safety reasons. Laguna Beach which i.s continuing a survey of parent, teacher and student at- titudes about dress reslrictlon.s as adopted "one short paragraph" con- stituting its dress code, Superintendent William U11om said. NEW CODE The "code" outlines students' three ap- pearance responsibilities to himself, the school's image and to the community at large. "The matter of dress and grooming is best determined in the home," the Laguna Beach district policy notes. Dr. Ullom believes the new policy will lessen the strain between teachers and students compared with the former strid code, although the new code will require more counseling with parents. Scott F1anagan. assistant superin- tendent of Huntington Beach Union High School District, said the board adopted a brief dress policy statement last spring. Describing it as "simple,·• Flanagan notes that it states that a school Is a place for learning and that parents are responsible for sending .students to schOOl in clothing that does not jeopardize or im- pair the health, safety and weUare of themselves or other students. LONG HAIR As long as hair is clean and not hazardous by reason of being too long for a student who·.s around machinery for ex· ample, any length is acceptable, Flanagan said. "l believe the overwhelming majority of our students will exercise good judg- ment," Glanagan said. Group pressure.!! will bring the few who won't into llne, he added. , Orange Coast Community College has not had a dress code for the put threeyears, Dean Joseph Kroll said. ' Kroll said he didn'I understand whr many di.itricts faetd "a big argument about the way $tudents dress." "Learning has nothing to do with the way they kink, and that's bttn proven time after time. "If we're In the bu.sines• or educating. nothing is to be 'ained by spending lime regulating dr(lss. ' ht said, A spokesman for the junior college (Se< DRESS CODES, P•&• II Councilmen By JOHN VALTERZA Of ... 0.ll't Pltlt Slaff A resurrected mobile home park pro- posal with a .stiff, new set of esthttic restricUon.s tagged on by the developer won unanimous approval from Sa n Clemente p I a n n i n g commissioners Wednesday. Despite the overwheliming consent given to developers Lincoln Savings and Loan, the firm must still face a city councilmen whose record on passage of mobile home park proposals has been seldom if ever. The commission approved. the Lincoln plan which includes an entire perimeter of modernistic modU.lar homes ~ riot coaches -for the large luxury park pro- poaed on land near Ult ~3th ~ 14th fairways of Sharec:lW ~ a.lt. A propou.l for a less hailrious pirk an the same land won prtvlous approva( from commissioners, but fell t o unanimous defeat a few weeks later after city councilman reviewed tbe commlsskm action. · The developer's promises of the newly· concieved modular homes for tht: edge{! of the park form the main difference between the latest plan and the previous ill-fated one. Dana Point architect Riley Ma rquis, a spokesman for Lincoln, aJso detailed a new set of strict esthe tic conditions which his firm proposes. They include : -None of the conventional, painted aluminum siding would be allowed in the park coaches. Wood treatmt n ~s. simulated .stucco and other terials similar to single-family dwellings would be stressed. -Roofs cannot have air conditioner, coolers or other gadgets attatched. ' ~vered carports provided by the coach owner and built through· building permits must be built on the side of the living unit. -A covered porch o( at least 50 .square feet must be built at entryways. -Materials for roofs must be either . wood or aspha lt shingles-type commooly used in single-family houses. Other self-imposed restrictions include landscaping plans which would be sub- mitted lo the park ma nagement by each tenant plus a general landscape layout furnished to the city for approval. Marquis said his frim had budgeted more than 117,000 for slope landscaping alone. Commissioners, generally pleased with the new .set of plans, had little comment. A public hearing on the plan itlcluded presentations from only Marquis. Op- ponent& t.o the granting of the condiUonal IS.. UNCOLN, P11e II First 911 Call Gets Response- F or Sick Coyote San Clemente's historic new 911 emergency phone number works - even for sick coyotes. Since the · start of tht new emergency service to San Clemente reskients a minute aft.er midnight today, police have received one call on the .special emergen· cy circuiL Before dawn the dispatcher got ule first ring on tht 911 line and took a report of a sick. coyote atag&ering in the hillr. A polic< "'11'1111 dlspalched the allin( predator. And .u of late this morning no one else had used the 911 line. The new service installed this week made San Clemente the first Southern Californi a cily lo have the 1treamlined emergency ·number. Among tht many 1dvanlaJtS are 1peed In reac!Ung help by callers who IO!Tlelimes might forget a reiut.r pal lee phone number In thtir haste and tl· clttmenl durlni 111 emer1toey. ea ea_ • Ille ' 258Remain Prisoners; Others F1·ee From Wlre Servlcet AMMAN,. Jordan -Arab t.-rorilta have abruptly canceled a 72-hour dMdline on the fate ot 258 hostages aboard tm- jeUiners parked in the acorchin& dlle:rt: 45 miles from here. No new deadline W'as set for the threatened bombing of the planes and slaughter of the hostages, which hH originally been scheduled for 7 p.m. (PDT) Saturday. The annou~m~nt -apparently fore. ed by world opinion -. was made'" 111' Washington by the State· Departinom Im this mohtlng. . Developmenl.& bad Continued . today la i:ap;d.fire rubion ... the lildnap ...., 91 the decade unftilded at Dawson's Fiekl and in.Capital cities around lbe &Jobe. 'l1te number Gf hostages· hid nellld • ~ lo .. Zll, wllb IJ!l •blrlh ol ... --bQy aboard ... hljocbd plane. Jo,Yfut' women and cblldrtn -ltU1 afraid for loved onea held aboud U. planes -were freed earlier by the suer· rilla Popular Front for the LiberaUon of Palestine. President Richard Nixon ordered arm- ed guards to fl y on all U.S. airlinea - foreign and domestic -beginning thiJ Saturday. Leaders throughout the world appealed to the Popular Front for the Liberation of ·Palestine (PFLP) to free the 258 cap- tives , whether or not their r&lllOm demands are met. 'WE MUST WORK LIKE THE VERY DICKENS' Writer Hano (left.) Speaks on Dog ·Law Ret.rendum The PFLP wants imprisoned guerrUl11 In Israel and Europe released in ex· change. Liberal government! of Middle Eastern gtates, meanwhile, were among those urging tbe PLFP not t.o carry out Its ter- rorist threats. Laguna Canine Owners Circulate Laiv Petition By RICHARD P. NALL Of I'll• D•llr l'llGI Sltlt Incensed by an ordinance that shi!rply limits the freedom of their pooches, Laguna Beach , dog owners Thursday night agreed to fight city hall with a ciUzen referendum. Petition circulat.ors went to work today to gather voter signatures in an effort to beat a Sept. 18 deadline. If successful, the referendum would force the council to ~ither rescind the conlrove·rsiaJ dog ordinance or put it to a vote of the people at a regular or special election. • The re(erendum, requiring v a I i d signatures or 10 percent of the 8,701 registered Laguna Beach. voter5, would suspend the ordinance until the ctuncil took one or the other acUon. POWER TOOL There were also Indications at lhe !Ugh school meeUn8: attended by about 150 persons th at the referendum procedure might be used as an expanaed 0 power-to- the-people" tool to rounterbalance the council ... The new ordinance that takes effect Sept. 19 prohibits dogs on the beaches from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. It bans them en- Urely from three parks. The creation of Councilman Edward Lorr, It passed by a 3 to 2 vote split Aug. 19 with Councilmen Roy Holm and Charlton ..Boyd dissenting. Writer Arnold Hano, who researched the referendum legal aspects. told the crowd 'Ibw;sday that. il the ordina~ is defeated at an election it cannot, be re- enacf,ed fOr,one.,yur. · DEADLINE NEAR · "We 'must, If we want to do this, work ·Jike the very dickens," nid Hano, ei· ·plaining that the deadline is next Friday. He urged a goal of 1200 signatures to make ·.sure there were sufficient valid signatures to put Lh(l refertndum across. MORE MORE Urging thi voluntctr petition passers to work the ~f"ks, banks, 1upetmarkets and any' place lhe1' aro .peqple, Hono llld, • • ''If you want to remove it {the ordinance) from your throat like some stinking bone Mr. Lorr has rammed down your throat." Commenting that you can't step on the people, Hano asked, "are we manly dogs or cringing curs?'' He suggested also that the people might find a referendwn a helpful tool. Art dealer Richard Challis, ~ho has led the dog ordinance fight, said the means: by which the thing had been handled "jUst got my blood bolling." Challis will appear at the Wednesday council meeting to pre.sent councilmen an earlier petiUon calling for rescinding the dog law. tt does not have legal weight to force !See. DOGS, Pllge I) Emmie Stewart, Dancer, Succmnhs Private lntermcnt Is planned at Harbor Rest Memorial Park for Emmle Stewart, retired vaudeville dancer and \ong·tlme Orange Coast resident who died Wed· nesday at the age of as. Miss Stewart and her sister Jeannette Cline, ·both r'esidenll of Laguna Hills, were known as "The Ste"art Sisters, the Original Dancing Dolls" durini their yearii in entertainment. The petite pair played1 the Orpbeum and, l..o1'• .c1tcu111· durln1 the heyday ol vaudeville. After their 'ritlrtment rrom the stage 'about 50'~ear1ago,1the slsterroperattd the St.Wart Sisters Ballrodm tn Son Gabriel. Miss Stewart came to Orange County In 1949, and In recent yeat1 llv~ In LeLsure World. She Is suf\ived by htt 11ster, a niece, Doris Oic~leman, of Loi Ant:eles, and I nephew. DoDlld Creen, of La Selva Beach,· C.lll • Iraq and Syria branded the aeries of four hijackings as irresponsible and unrevol.ution.ary. President Nixon bas reportedly vetoed any possibility of direct military in~ tervenUon against the revolutionaries to free American captives. Six C-130 ca rgo planes are deployed 1t Incirlik. Turkey, however, about one hour's flying time from the Jordan-Syria border. Maneuvers have placed the U.S. Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean nearby, a~ parently to provide support -if necessary -in evacuating f re e d hostages. One radio broadcast from Beirut Lebanon, by the radical Central Com· mittee of the Palestine Resistance 11-fove- ment, charged the U.S. is preparine an invasion. "CJose ranks in the face of this ad· vancing peril," the group implored. Optimism was spreading, however, ln (Set JUJACK, Pa1e I) Weatller Clouds will hide the 1un while the ocean breeie cools thlngs off along the Orange Coast this week· end. Temperatures will dip lo 68, while holding at 82 further inland. INSIDE TODAY S u·r fin a enthU$ia.!t.J fTom across tht nation OTt honing in on Huntington Beach whc1'e th• 1910 nottonat cMmpion,shipi wtll be held ntzt taee.lctnd. Stt Sf)Of'U, Page 15. ..,,.,.. . . ... ""' .,. c.11tv11i. 1 (lltdill.. tht 11 (lntll~ ..,..., C....lct tJ c,..,_, " DHfll Ntl\at • ...,.,... ..... . ,Ill_ l•ll -" Allll L..,..,.. 11 -· . lilltl'rl... Lkeft... I Mffffflh I Mt.it.' .• ·MlrtMI ...... '' Mllflllllel .... .. °'""" c ... ,., • ·--Sr"'-""1lr 11 l-'11 , .. l . ..... ,liWtlth , .. ,, ·-.. ,_,., "'M --. ~ Jlfwt 1).11 ..,.. ...... ... .. ......, n·• . --·.c<-r_• ··--- ;l DAILY PILOT SC Frldl)', Stpt.tmbtt 11, 1970 Cycle P~rk Approved Clemente ,Planners OK Biking Area San Clcmen1t·s minibike and motorcy- cle park which became the object of ~tormy public hearings three months ago btttied by · planning commissioners Thursday. Planners advocated u.tending the }>ark's permit for at least two years. The action, whlch must be reviewed by city councilmen next Wednesday, came with a clean bill of health -marred by only a few minor problems. A poll of all city departments ~bowed only three minor complaints, "·hlch are expected lo be cleared up in coming days. Assistant Police Chief Stanley Matchett said that for a time. the park's butcher- paper signs erected in an attempt to direct riders to the park entrance were tattered and ugly. The police administrator also cited tM dusty conditions ol. the entrance road to the park. Thi! minister of I.he Methodist church wtiicb lies ne.xt to one end or the 700·acre park1 said that in three mon ths or opera· lion or the neighboring recreational facill· ty, the noise of a cycle was heard only once during church services. That cycle was being driven by a park employe who waa checking fences . It never happened again. Spokesmen for the Mormon-affiliated Seabreeze Recreational Association seek· ing the permit renewal promised that if the tv.·o-year eitension of the permit were dusty condition of the entrance road to to be ratified by councilmen, permanent signs and dust-control oil would be used lo eliminate the two points of objection by police. The park was launched last June after a noisy public hearing before councilmen. Opponents to the park howled that the dust and 1161• plut an .. undesirable element" of cyclists would make the park a disaster, They were outnumbered, howe ver, by bike devotees who signed petitions by the hundreds. Sine~ lheo the park's operation has been smooth with onJy the small number of mloor complaints. The specUic tenns of the suggested commission approval say that the permit would be continued so long as the month- 11>-month lease with the Mormon church exists for the park property. tf the lease remains alive for two years, then the operators of the park once more must return to c:ity hall for renewals. The e1isting permit -originally granted ~or three months -expires next Thursday - a day after the city councll receives the bid by the park operators. Chicano Leaders Incensed Lawyer Pleas At 'Whitewash' Inquiry With Arabs LOS . ANGELES (UPI) -Some Mex· lcan·American Jeaders were incensed to- day about what they believe will be a "whitewash'' of law officers in the cor· oner's lnquest in the death of newsman Rubeo Salazar during rioting in East Los · Angeles. Most o{ the Mexican-Am erican spec· tators trooped out or the inquest room twice Thursday after denouncing hearing officer Norman Pittluck as a "racist' and the tesUmony as prejudicial. Four women and Cive men were serving as a jury to determine whether Salazar's death during the violence whlch took two other lives and left more than Sl million damage was accidental or "at the bands of another," that is, intenllonal. Any p~ aecutJon is up to the district attorney. Salazar, news director of Spanish-- language television station KMEX and columnist for the Los Angeles Times, died after a 11,2 inch wide. 91ii long tear gas projectile was· shot by a sheriff's deputy and struck his head. Officers said they firtd the tear gas in· to the Sil ver Dollar Bar after they had a report of a man with a gun inside. Hurri.cane Ell,a Swirling Slowly -.. .. Orito Gu~f t:otist BROWNSVILLE,;Tu. (UPI) -Small but swift Hurdcane Ella swirled 91J.mile- an-hour winds, torrential rain and high tides today towar'd the coqtg o! Texas and Mexico. Thousands fied. The U.S. Weather Bureau said the sum. mer's fifth hurricane would hit the shoreline late today south or Brownsville. Ella picked up 1trength but slowed its unusually speedy course across the Gulf of Mexico during the morning. "'Ibe center should move inland near or a liWe south of Brownsvillt before dark," the Weather Bureau said. The south Texas coast had not yet recovered from Hurricane Celia, the most destructive storm in the state'• history. It nked the shore and headed 250 miles inland 39 days ago. "I am corremed, you ain't kidding," said T. W. Anderson of Corpus Christi, Te1., where Celia 1truck. killing 11 persons and causing a billion dollar1 damage. Ella churned through the gulf at 11 miles an hour. At noon EDT, the storm 's center was localed near latitude 2.4 .5 north and longitude 95.3 west or about 156 miles east-southeast of Brownsville. Tide.s of eight feet and six inches of rain were forecast for coastal areas in aouth Texas and northern h-fexico. DAILY PILOT N_,_ 1.-. H•llfl ..... .._. .......... di ....... v..,. C... lillM S. Chi 11tte r)lt>.NOI COAST ~•LllMINO (OM'ANY ~e'eert N, W,,.4 l"ruloffott 1r.d ""'!ltJW J1ck I:, C11rl1y Vb ,re1:1wi1 1rod co-.1 Mll'llfl!" 1ho11u1 IC11•!1 JEdl,.,. The11111 A. Mwrphi111 Mltltlllilt ••11er ~ich1nl I'. Ni ll Sovth Or"'°" c....,ty Edi,_ OfflcH ee111 Mn11 U1 w,,, ,,., i.., .. , H • ...,.,., •••tll: nu WNI '''"' t.111"'"' &.•,_ ''''~' m ,..,., ,.....,,"' Mt,ll'lll"llWI lNCll' 1"11 l•t~ll t~ll¥11'd $111 Cl9m.fftt1; JOI NlfT~ I I C•r11111t llMI DAtl."I' '11.0T. wl* lf.\ldl II QINllld "'-..._....._ .. ,.,...i1t11tit ., • .., ..... '- .. .., .. _.,.,.. H lllMI. fw L..-te,:,l'I. ..._.. teed\, Celt MtM. Hvrll ... lln 9Mc11 ... ,......, .... V•llty, .,._ ... wlltl .... ....... .." .... °'.,,.. CMt.f l"WJllllllll ~nf' """''"' •"'•Ill ... ,, 11111 ...... .... , ttwi~ M._t k Kll. ltl'tl lit WW .. 1 Sfl'MI, C..19 Mttl. , ... , •••• 1714) l41·•l11 a-lfW u-thl., l4J.S671 S.. C ....... Att Dt,e~ Tel••••• 4f1·44JI ~ ,.,.. Oflll!IC , .. ., Jll\ltllltfllftt c.m.t11f. ... ..... I JJl(lft, ll!vtlr1l"'"'- dlltrlll 19111 .... ., lf...rfi\-11 ""'"' -1 M ,.,......14 Wl1"9Uf _ .. I ..,. ......... CW'!''""' -· loll:eNll ~ "'"" .. 11 ., ,.,....., ttottll ..... C.tt ""-(•lllWllLll, '"""'""'""' " (~ .... _,,11,,1 ., .... 11 ., .• _..,.,, "'JUt1ty ll•llrlllllfot. 11.00 fMllfllty. Some 20 persons, including members of a "blue-ribbon'' committee from the Chicano community, walked out during the afternoon session when attorney.spec- tator Oscar Acosta shouted 1t Pittluck, "You'rt a disgrace to your profession." Acosta and the others were upset by the showing of a sheriff's department video tape which depicted the initial scenes of roCk and bottle throwing and bleeding officers during the national Chicano moratorium parade and rally. He saJd it was "not only irrelevant but prejudicial" in 2 hearing into the death of Salaiar. Esteban Torres, president of the Congress of Melican-Amerlcan unity, a coalition of 300 community groups, said tbe hearing was a whitewash. "We are not going to tolerate Jt and stand there and be insulted this way," said Torres, wbo organiled the blue·rib- bon group. Comic to Launch Artists' Forum In Beach Sunday For Sirhan BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - A lawyer for Sirhan Sirhan called on all the Arab governments today to intervene with the United States to spare the life of the con. victed assassin of Sen. Robert f. Ken· nedy. "The Arab governments and people must make a concerted effort to help Sirhan," George Shibley told a news con- ference here. Sirban's chief attorney is Luke McKiasack. Shibley, who is from Los Angeles, is his asaociat.e. Shibley said he would not press PalesD· nlan guerrillas to seek the release of Sirhan as part of a deal for the freedom of 280 hostages the guerrillas bold on a desert airstrip In north Jordan. The Popular Front tor the Liberation of Palestine, which is holding the hostages, repeatedly has denied it would include Sirhan's freedom in its terms for releas- ing the hostages. Shibley said Arab individuals and associations in the United States were unable to render Sirhan any assistance "because they are terrified by the FBI." He said Sirban's lawyers planned another appeal to !be U.S. Supr<me Court to change the death sentence passed by a Ca1Uorn1a court on Sirhan last year, But It mlg!>t take a, )'tar to have the appeal Comedian JCMlllbln Winter• will help fifed, he added. launch Prospectus-Art "70 a ~wine oE ,~ I !Sirhan was conf~ In a Death Row .h " Y · ' • i>faUon ctll today after beh/g 111bdued m1KW wm ,f100 works by leadln1 by tear eu during • temper tantrum ln Ca!Uomla arilots, "'1en !be show opens which he lhn!w !ood at a guar<J. Sunday night on the Huntlngton Center The outburst came when thft •year-old Mall In Huntington Beach. prisoner refused to give up bJs tray, fork Promoters of the charity art show, bill· and spoon after a Wednelday afternoon ed lu -of the largest of lls lype In ~!.i!~en Louis S. Nelson roported Or~e County, aald Winters will p~ Sirhan was given a sedative and bab!J appear during the preview openln1 removed to a cell without acctss to of Ole show at s p.m. Sunday. newspapers, .radio or television. . . . . . Prison business manager Irving Ritte r • Admission to the Sunday night prev~ew said Sirhan apparently had become u"pset 1s SS per person, with the proceeds gomg over reports of his mother's unsuccessful to establish art scholarships on a yearly attempt to go to the Middle East in con- ba si.s. nection with airliner hijackings by Pi'ospectus-Art '70 will be opened free Palestinian guerrillas. to the public starting Monday and run-'Mle hljac~ers ~eported1y ~t one time ning through Sept. 25 on the mall at demanded Sirhan s freedom m exchange Edinger Avenue and Beach Boulevard. for release o~ more than 200 passengers The charity event is co-sponsored by held hostage in Jordan. . the city of Huntington Beach. Golden _The , State Departme!lt de ta 1 o e d \Vest College and the Huntington Center Sirhan smother, Mary, m New York and Shopping Center. revoked the passports of two attorneys Jason Wong, director of the long traveling with htr. Beach Museum of Art, is coordinating the Ritter said Sirhan demanded to ta lk to Huntington Beach show. a prison official about the situation and Three judges will award $2,500 in prizes had to be subdued alter being informed it ta the top artists in the show. One $400 was a state holiday, California Admission award will be handed to the artist whose Day, and no top authority was im- pa inting earns the most votes of the mediately available. public attending Sunday's opening. Nelson said the tear gas was \lsed Money collected Sunday night will be because Sirhan could have hurt himself given to tntemational Art Scholarships, "lhey way he was acting." He "could use an organiution of business and pro-the fork against himself or ht could fessional persons interested in promotion break pieces off the metal tray and use of the fine arts. IAS will handle annual Utem as a cutting instrument," Nelson Kholarship arrangements. t:a:pl1lned. Fro111 Page 1 COAST DRESS CODES • • • noted that this year's incoming class "was the neatest, best dressed class ever.'' r-.teanwhUe, administrators at TusUn Union High School and Capistrano Unified School District have vowed to en· force th!ir district's board approved regulalions. While Tustin limlls boys sidebum!I to the "bottom of the ear" and forbids ''flared" sideburns, Capistrano limits lf!nRth of sideburns to 1n "Inch below the car'· and.allows flared sideburns, but not muttonchop whiskers. Tustin allows no must.ches or beards, Capistrano does -at least to the corner of !be lip . Both schools require that airls' un· dergannenU not be allowed to lhow. 'I\lstin girls may wear c:ulloUes and pant dressei, but not slacks . Pants are a~table at Capistrano, but not the "tie· dyed" variety, "wh1tev'r lh'Y are," Superintendent Tr u m a n Benedict said. Rtgardlng lenath of girls' dresses and skirts, <:aplstrano district's code -is very "with It" fashJon.wise. The cede clrcumspecUy advises thal dresses I>! no shorter than 1 girl's LinterUp.t nor longer than the ankle. The midi safety falls within that r1J1Ce. Sheer, see-through blouses. backlHs dresses and bare-midriff outfits will not be tolerated at Capistrano. The code makes no menUon of brassieres. Boys at Capistrano may wear khaki!, slack, levis or bermudas, but not "cutoffs shorter than bermu~a length or unhem- med. Shirts other than squared off sport shirts must be worn tucked in, Benedlct s;id. Tank·type shirts are not allowed. Both Tustin Jnd Capistrano noted that "11s 1 last resort" failure to co mply with the dress code could result In suspension until a. student complies. William 7.ogg, Tustin superintendent. said dress codes were Jle(essaty lo pro- vide a "midpoint that is not totally of· tensive to either end of the continuum 0£ stlfdents." Unlike collel"', he noled, "publJc high schools have compulsory attendance roles and students come from all backgrounds morally and spiritually." AdmitUng that it is difficult to come by "empiric1l evldeDCt" that dress may ln· terlere with lhe educaUonal proceM, Zogg contended on the basis of his "years of school experience'' lhlt It does. "Over the years I've seen many fads exhibited and most were eventually found wanllng, '' he said, although he belleves 1ome fads .+become f1sbion and finally become acctpted by the community.'' . . -~~ J·~ /,.. ' . , REPEAL /4 t ' ' I ' • DOO bRDINANC£ DAILY JllJl.OT Slltf '111N THOMASl~A GU NN RA ISES DOG LOVERS' BATTLECRY In L19un1, Power to the People and Man't Btst Friend From Page 1 DOG S ..• council action but was circulated in hopes of showing the breadth of opposition ta the law and changing at least one council vote. This could strike down the law. Tabulators of the petiton signatures 15aid it had already been signed by 2,348 persons. A breakdown showed that 1,592 were Laguna Beach residents; 378 were under 21 ; 1,193 were adult residents; 756 were visitors; and 265 were visitors under 21. Challis reminded the crowd that Lorr sometime before Aug. 4 had said. ''The proposed ordinance is dead at least for the time being" and that "mysteriously this revised ordinance was intrcxiuced'' Aug. 5 -by Lorr. Challis said he believes it absolutely imposs ible to enforce the new ordinance and said "we are trying to get one of the (three yes voting) councilmen to see our viewpoint." Hano called for volunteer referendum petition circulator! and most hands went up. Others were signed up to copy the names of dog owners from the license records at city hall. 'Mlere was discussion of a more equitable ordinance but the consensus ~eemed that the first order of business was to get the offending la~· off the book>. Thomasina Gun n, local ACLU presi· dent, brightened the proceedings by holding aloft an inexpensive homemade scoop to handle dog droppings. She sug· ges\ed tt mli;ht. be manufactured by Girl and Boy Scouts and sold for SO cents to dog owners. From Page 1 LINCOLN •.. use permit did not appear. Commissioners agreed th at because of the isolated nature of the park -no · housing tracts have been built near the area -the park would serve as a good use for the land in question. The unanimous action, however, does not seal the approval for the park plans. City Councilmen have in past ac tions been much harder to convince that the Shorecliffs 1rea l1nd would be best used for coach parks. Laguna Nig11el Merger Boo st For Projects Takeover of the Laguna Niguel Corp. by Avco Community Developers Inc. is expected to accelerate development of the incl uded properties. · This was the assessment today of Robert L. Follett. executive vice presi- dent and general manager of the opera· lion. He replaces \Villiam Beck of Laguna Niguel. ··Jt will very dclinit.ely accelerate development ," said Follett. He said whi le Laguna Niguel was primarily a land developer setup to then sell the develop- ment, ''\ve are essentially a land developer and builder." He said his co rporation would be bring-' ing new products to the development -that will speedup this year -con· ventional homes but in a variety of styles and sizes. Laguna Niguel Corp. had about 8,000 acres of which more than 5,000 remain to be developed, Follett said. The developed acreage includes more than 1,500 homes and nearly 6.000 residents. Avco Community Developers Inc. is a land development subsidiary of Avco Corp which did an $898 million business in products and services in 1969. Its niany subsidiaries include Seaboa rd Finance and Avco Savings and Loan Associations and Carte Blanche credit card operation. It was announced this week that 81 per· cent of the outstanding common shares and 88 percent of the outstanding war· rants or Laguna Niguel had been ex· changed for Avco Comm unity Developers common stock warrants and cash. A haU share of Avco Community and $2.75 cash was offered for eaCh share of Laguna Niguel Corp. The offer P• riod has been extended to Oct. 2 to allow Laguna Niguel holders v.:ha have not dane so to exchange their shares and warrants. Disease Fight Se t \VASHINGTON (UPI) -The Hause has voted to authorize the spending of $165 million during lhe next two years to help the states fighL polio, 1dlphtheria, measles, mumps, whooping c o u g h , syphiltis, gonorrhea and tuberculosis. An Jnvilalion lo Quiel HIJACK .•. Wuhlngton alter a Concresslonal con· ference that negotiations to free the host.ages will succeed, waell Prtmler Golda Me~ bas mall> talned a hard Une, re!lllll\g to .. ,.. to free 3,000 Arab guerrillas. "Are we to release these people In some sort of ceremony or other so they can come back and repeat U:.tir act.s?" she said, her voice bitter with anger. Sources in Jerusalem indicated •he may be forced to go bac:k down. The PFLP, meanwhile. freed 60 of 116 women and children first removed lrom tbe planes today and returned passports. They wt!:re to be flown to Nicosia, on. lhe Island of Cyprus, by Jordanian Airlines. Diplomatic sources said it was un· derstood the remaining people im· prisoned at the Intercontinental Hotel in Amman would also be £reed. Tough conditions existed at Dawson's Field where the TWA, BOAC and Swissair jetliners are parked. but an International Red Cross team v.·as doing its best. ''It is not exa ctly a luxurious maternity home," said Red Cross aides who delivered the baby born to the tmiden· tified young American woman during the night. Several women aboard the planes ire also pregnant and the Red Cross included rubber pants and diapers with a shipment of 1.000 prepackaged meals and medical supplies. Following the Washington conference, Sen. Mike Mansfield said the President's tactics have complete Senate support. "I think the government has done everything it posSibly could," he said. The order placing gun~arrying federa l agents aboard all U.S. flights -at a $3 per·passenger tax -offers other dead lY. possibilities. according to some. Najeeb Halaby, chairman of Pan Am erican Airways, said his line will cooperate but the former FAA ad· ministrator said they must be carefullY. trained and commanded by pilots. ' Once opposed lo carrying arms themselves, the jetliner qptains are no longer so reluctant, according to one spokesman. "This is a new league we are in," be explained. "Earlier hijackings were the work of 100 percent losers, loners, kooks. men who had not made it," he rontinued. .. -Now there's a new twist -the organized use of hijack techniques for in· ternational political purposes." Reporting from Dawson Field, United Press lnternatianal correspondent Ray· mond Wilkinson described one. Abu Eu, wearing a Lenin badge on his camouflage uniform, gestured with hil Russian AK47 automatic rifle at the planes shimmering under the 100 degree· plus desert sun. "They are learning something," the PLFP chieftain said proudly, adding his revolution is being taught to the 25& hostages. Country Club Loses Golf Gear A thief has cleaned $600 worth of golf ing gear out of a frequently used storage room at the h-1esa Verde Country Club in Costa Mesa. Barry Suthe rland. employe of the private club al 3000 Clubhouse Dri ve, told police Thursday the loot included balls, bags and clu bs, as well as clothing. He said it is almost impossible to keep the equipment room locked during periods of heavy play. .......,,.., Glegance ~ Marchesa by Drexel. We believe ~ is the sma rtest most unique collec- that has been des igned in yea rs. Th is grou~ featu res complete living, dining and occasional to choose from . Our shipme nts have just arrived and a quantity is now available for viewing at our showrooms. Be among the first to see this unusual group, or be tter yet have it delivered. For a new Marchesa lion experience Marchesa . . 1n furniture you can 't miss with Professional inferior design service is availa - ble fo r the asking . Our designers have many yea rs of experience and AID deco rators are available. Whe ther it's draper ies, carpeting , wallpaper or fu rnitu re, you r needs will be met at Ted von He merf Inc., over twenty years in the beach area. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITA GE 7111111111/aui" NIWl'ORT IEACH 1727 Wn tcllff Dr. 642·2050 0,IN f RIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH Professional Interior Da1lgnett Av1ll1 bla-AID-NSID 345 North Coast Hwy. Ool-65 5 J OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 1't1M9 f11' llfM Mw ef o._.. c....., 14 .. 126.S • 7 I • • 1> •01 di le Po fr •! "' b: n• b: " ., I< ~ • ,. j c b ~ H 11 n J p • d d c ,. Ii u ' n l I ' ' I c I • 7 • --' .. ·-... - ---· • r •• - \ Today's Final N.Y. Steeks YO L. 63 , NO. 218, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER If, 1970 TEN CENTS State May Elimin~te All of Coastal Freeway . ra s ro State Hints Home Park -.Coastal Freeway Still Faces May Be Junked Councilmen !JY L. PETE R KRIEG Of tfl• D•llY 1"1111 $1111 The Pacific Coast Freeway may not be built at all, a State Division of Highways •official disclosed today. WiJ(jam Hashimoto, deputy district director of the Highway Division 7, said today tlie de partment is considering the possibility of eliminating the enlire freeway from the future state highway 5ystem. He said a de cision on the rate of the controversial superhighway will be made by top departmental officials within the next six months. He indicated that problems generated by the ffi3'\Y cities along the proposed route, like Newport Beach, which doesn·t want the road, have led the department to think about killing plans for it. He said planning for the section throug~ Newport, itseU. has already eome to a halt. He said that the Newport segm·erit, even under current policy, would never be built at all if Newport doesn't want it. Hashimoto said there is no need to spend the time "rescindinl!:'' the current freeway agreement. a project spearhead· ed now by a citizens' group ; he said a let· ler from the city council would do. The state halted all desigt1 work on the freeway section through Newport Beach follwing the introduction of a bill by Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R· Newport Beach) to kill a stretch of the route from Huntington Beach through Corona del Mar. Badham's bill cleared the Assembly but died in Senate e-0mm ittee. Newport Mayor Ed Hirth, following a meeting with state officials Thursday, first disclosed that work on the Newport stretch bad been halted and the state would not proceed without the city's blessings. "They told me the state will not force a freeway down the throat of any city that does not want one," be said. Orange Coast Students Responsible for Dress By GEORGE LEIDAL Of ll'lt O•llr Pll~f Sll!t High school litucfents along the Orange Coast for the most part will share the burden or responsibility for their dress with their parents. With the exception or Tustin Union High School District which adopted a i;lighUy revi sed parent-teacher-ad· ministration formulated code, and San Juan Capistrano Unified whose board-ap- proved code was drawn by parents and litudenls last spring, most Orange Coast districts have abandoned dress codes. • Newport-Mesa Unified dropped its dress code in the middle o( last year. ac· corrling to Dr. Norman Loats, association superintendent for instructional opera- tions. "We more or less assu me that dress is the responsibility of the home." Loats said. "In individual cases, however , we may have to tell a student 'we'd like you 2 Schools Meet For PTO-hosted Faculty Lun cl1 Faculty and staff of Miss ion Viejo and University Park High Schools who will share the Mission Viejo building possibly as long as Christmas "broke bread" together at Thursday's parent-teacher organization sponsored o r i e n t a t i o n luncheon. "A spirit of cooperalion definitely was fn the air," Principal Robert Boasanko said. The lun che<>n. ann ually hosted by the parent-teacher organization for Mis.~ion's faculty, was unique this year. PTO presi- dent Jesse Noriega invited University HJ.gh's teachers and classified employes to join in the banquet for 160 held in the &chool's muJll -purpose room, Bosanko said. The cooperati ve spirit carried over to today's Mission Viejo Goll Course facultf. organization luncheon to which Univers • ty High faculty also were invited. Basanko looks ror the spirit to continue when the two faculties occupy the crowd· ed Mi ssio n Viejo building on Mondyay when nearly 1.000 University High student., will bt bused to the school for afternoon double. sessions. Tht University High facility was delayed by strikes and may be completed as early as October or 11s lat.e as neX1 January, school officlajs bave &aid. to go home and dress more ap. propriately.' should he appear a.t school dressed outrageously." Districts abandoning formal. restrictive dress do's and don't.s have for the most part adopted short policy statements noting parents' responsibility for dress. All-districts interviewed said they re- quire that shoes be worn for health and safety reasons. Laguna Beach which is continui ng a survey of parent, teacher and student at- titudes about dress restrictions as adopted "one short paragraph'' con· slituting its dress code, Superintendent William Ullom said. NEW CODE The "code" outlines stud ents' three ap- pearance responsibilities to himself. the school's image and to the community at large. "The matter of dress and grooming is best determined in the home," the Laguna Beach district -policy notes. Dr. Ullom believes the new policy will Jessen the strain between teachers· and students com pared with the former strict code, although the new code will require more counseling with parents. Scott Flanagan. assistant superin- tendent of Huntington Beach Union High . School District, said the board adopted a brief dress poli cy statement last spring. Describing it as "simple," Flanagan notes that it states that a school is a place for learning and that parents are responsible for sending students to school in clothing that does not jeopardize or Im· pair the health, safety and welfare of themselves or olher student."!. LONG HAIR As long as hair is clean and not hazardous .by reason of being too long for a student who's arouhd machinery for ex- ample. any length is acceptabl e, Flanagan said. - "I believe the overwhelming majority of our students will exercise good judg- ment," Glanagan sai'd. Group pressures: will bring the few who won't into line, he added. Orange Coast community College has not had a dress code for the past threeyears. Dean Joseph Kroll said. Kroll said he didn't understand why many distri cts rt1ced "a big argument about the way students dress." "Learning has nothing to do with the \va y they look. and that's been proven time after time. .. If we·re in the bu.c;incss of educating. nothing is to be gained by spending time rcgu1ating dre~." he said. A spokesman for tht junior collcae (Set D~ CODES, Page I) By JORN VAL TERZA Of !ht 0.111 l'li.t St.tit ' A resurrected mobile home p.ark pro- posal with a ctlff, new set of eslhetic restrictions tagged on by the developer won unanimous approval from San Clemente p 1 a n n i n g commissioners Wednesday. Despite the overwheliming consent given lo developers Lincoln Savings and Loan, the firm must Still fa ce a . city councilmen whose record on passage of mobile home park proposals has been seldom if ever. The commission approved the Lincoln plan which includes an entire perimeter of modernistic modular homes -not coaches - for the large luxury park pro- posed on land :near the 13th and 14th fairways of SborecUff Co&mtry CIUb: A proposal for a 1eSI lumrious part on the same land won previous approval from commissioners, but fell t o unanlmous defeat a few weeks later alter city councilman reviewed the commission action. The developer's promises of the newly. concieved modular homes for the edges of the park form the main difference between the latest plan and the previous ill-fated one. Dana Point architect Riley Marquis, a spokesman for Lincoln, also detailed a new set of strict esthetic conditions which his firm proposes. They include : -None of the conventional, painted aluminum siding would be allowed in the park coaches. Wood treat m e n t1 , simulated stuce-0 and other terials lilmilar to single-family dwellings would be stressed. -Roofs cannot have air conditioners, coolers or other gadgets attatched. -Covered carports provided by the coach owner and built through building permits must be built on the side of the living unit. -A covered porch of at least 50 square feet must be built at entryways. -Materials for roofs must be either wood or asphalt shingles-type commonly use d in 'single·fam ily houses. Other self.imposed restrictions include landscaping plans which would be sub- mitted to the park management by each tenant plus a general landscape layout fumished to the city for approval. Marquis said his frim had budgeted more than $17,000 for slope landscaping alone. Comm issione rs, generally pleased with the new set of plans, had little comment. A public hearing on the plan included presen tations from only Marq'Uis. Op- ponents to the granting of the conditional (See UNCOLN, Page %) First 911 Call Gets Response- F or · Sick Coyote San Clemente's historic new 911 emergency pbone number works - even for sick coyotes. Since the start of the new emergency service to San Clemente residents a minute after midnight today, police have received one call on the special emergen- cy circuit. Before dawn the dispatcher got the first ring on the 911 line and took a report of a sick coyote staggering in the hills. A police sergeant dlspatch<d th< ailing predator. And as of late this morning no one eh11 had used the 911 line. The new service installed U'!Is wtek made San Clemente the first Southern California city to have the streamlined emergency number. 1 Among the many advantages are spetd in reaching help by callera who sometimes might forget • regular pollce phone number in their haste and U • cltement durinl an emeraeocy. '"" ' ea ea DAILY PILOT Jl.ttl Pllelt 'WE MUST WORK ~IKE THE VERY DICKENS' Writer Hano (left ) Spe•k& on Dog Law Referendum Laguna Canine Owners Circulate Laiv Petition By RICHARD P. NALL OI' Jiit 0•11'1< I'll•! SllU Incensed by an ordinance that sharply limits the freedom of their pooches, LagWla Beach dog owners Thursday night agreed to fight city ball with a citizen referendum. Petition circulators went to work today to gather voter signatures in an effort to beat a Sept. 18 deadline. If successful, the referendum would force the council to either rescind the controversial dog ordinance or put it to a vote of'the people at a regular or special election. The referendum. requiring v a 11 d signatures of 10 percent of the 8.701 registered Laguna Beach voters, would suspend the ordinance until ~ ctuncil took one· or the other action. PO~ER TOOL '. There were also indications at the high school ·meeting attended by , about 150 persons· that the referendum procedure might be·used as an expanded "power-to- the-people" tool to counterbalance the council .. , The new ordinance ~at takes effect Sept. 19 prohibits dogs on the beache3 from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. It bans them en· tirely from three parks. The creation of Councilman Edward Lorr, it passed by a 3 to 2 vote split Aug. 19 with Councilmen Roy Holm and Charlton Boyd dissentll'lg, Writer .~rnold Hano, who researched the referfiidum legal aspects, told the crowd Thursday that lf the ordinance is defeated at an election it cannot be re- enacted for one year. DE~DLINE, NEAR "We mu~t. if we want to do this, work fike the very dickens ," said Hano. ti• Plaining that the deadline is: next Fr1day. Jfe urged a goal of 1200 signatures to make sure thert were 1ulficicnt valid signatureS to put the referendum across . MORE MORE Ura:ing the volunteer pctitlon passers to work the par~. banks, supe.nnarlcels and any -place the.re are people, Hano ?r1d• ~ "Jf you wanl to remove it (the ordinance) from your throat like some slinking bone Mr. L-Orr has rammed down your throat" Commenting that you can't step on the people, Hano asked, "are we manly dogs or cringing curs?" He suggest.ed also that the people might find a referendum a helpful tool. Art dealer Richard Challis. who has led the dog ordinance fight, said the means by which the thing had been handled "just got my blood boiling." Challis will appear at the Wednesday council meeting to present councilmen an earlier petition calling for rescinding the dog law. It does not have legal weight to force (Se< DOGS, Page I) Emmie Stewart, Dancer, Succumbs Private Interment is planned at Harbor Rest Memorial Park for Emmie Stewart, retired Yaudeville dancer and king-time Orange· Coast resident who died Wed· nesday at the age of 88. Miss Stewart and: her sister Jeannet~ Cline, both residents of Laguna Hills, were known as "The Stewart Sisten, the Original Dancing Dolls'' during their year.& in entertalnmenl · The petite ~ir played the Orph.eum And Lowe'clrcuha durliig •th< heyday of vaudeville. After Qielr retirement from \h• s(age about 50 years ago1 the' sl~ta:s of>er1ted the Stewart · Slaten: Ballroom in San Oabtiel. Miss Stewart came to Orange county In If49, and in recent yur1 lived In Leisure World. She is su rvived by tier sister, a nlec(. Doris Dickleman, of Lds ,'AtJgcl es, and a nephew, Donald. 'Greeit, ot La SelYa Beach, Calll. .. . . . -., .. • Ille 258Remain Prisoners; Others F1·ee From Wire Servlce1 AMMAN, Jordan -Arab terrwllts have abruptly canceled a 72-bour deadline en the fate of 258 hostages aboard tbree ·jetliners parked in the scorching deaert 45 miles from here. No new deadline was aet for the threatened bombing of the planes and 61aughter or the hostages, which had originally been scheduJed for 7 p.m. (PDT) Saturday. The announcement -apparently forc- ed by world opinion -was made in Washington by the State Department late this morning. Developments bad continued today in rapi!'.f-fire fashion as the kidnap story of the decade unfolded at DaW1011'1 Field and in capital cities around the globe. The number of hostage1 had swelled overnight to 258, with the birth of an ' American. baby aboard ne hijacked plane. Joyfui women and children -at.ill afraid for loved ones held aboard the planes -wert free d earlier by tbe p er- rilla Popular Front for the Liberation of Paleatine. President Richard Nl1on ordered arm- ed guards to fly on all U.S. airlines - foreign and domestic -beginning thiJ Saturday. Leaders throughout the world appealed to the Popula r Ftont for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) to free the 258 cap- tives, whether or not their ran.som demands are met. The PFLP wants im prisoned g1>errlllas in Israel and Europe releaaed in ex- change. Liberal government! of Middle Eastern states, meanwhile, were among those urging the PLFP not to cirry out It! ter· rorist threats. Iraq and Syria branded the series of four hijackings u iritsporuiible ind unrevolutionary. President Nixon has reportedly vetoed any possibility of direct militaiy in· tervention against the revolutionaries to free American captives. Six C130 cargo planes are deployed at lncirlik, Turkey, however, about one hour's flying time from the Jordan-Syria border. Maneuvers have placed the U.S. SiJth· Fleet in the Mediterranean neirby, •!>' parently to provide support -i! nect?Mary -in evacuating f re e d hostages. One radio broadcast from Beirut Lebanon, by the ra,dical Central Com· mittee of the Palestine ReslMance Move- ment, charged the tJ.S; is preparing an jnvasion. "bose ranks In the face or this ad- vancing peril," the group implored. -. Optimism was spreading, however, in (See IDJACK, Page Z) Orul(e Weather Clouds will hide the sun 1 while the ocean breeze cOols things 0££ along the Orange Coa~t 'this wttk~ end . Temperatl;!res will dip to 68, while holding at 82 further Inland. INSIDE TODAY S u r f i n g cnthmia.!ts from across the naUon are honino in on Huntlngton Beach whert tht 1910 national champiomhips IVtU· be h.etd nt:z:t wttkend. Sec Sports, Page 15. ..... 1'. ... llllt C..Wflnlf• 1 C.IMt-1"' Ut lt C.l•t•fflM ,..., Ctl'llltt 11 t,.uwtn '' °'9111 HtHcM t •ftt9rl•I Ptrt f •lfl•ll« lf.11 --.. """ L......,. u Mtllller f M1rrl'" 1.lctMM e -. -- 2 DAILY PILOT SC Friday, Stpttmbtt 11, 1970 Cycle Parl{ Approved Clement,e Planners OK Biking Area San Clemente'& minibike and motorcy- cle parlr: which became the object of atormy public hearings three month s ago breezed by planning commissioners Thursday. PlannttS advocated exlendlng the park'i permit for at least hl'O years. The acUon, which murt be reviewed by city councilmen next Wednesday. came with a cJean bill of heallh -marred by only a few minor problems. A poll of all city departments showed onty three minor complaints, which are e1.pected to be cleared up In coming days. Assistant Police Chief Stanley Matchett said. that for a time, the park's butcher- paper signs erected in an attempt to direct riders to lhe park entrance were tattered and ugly. The police administrator also cited the: dusty conditions ol the entrance road to th• park. . Tha minister of the Mtthodilt church which lies next lo one end of the 700-acre park, said that in three months of opera4 lion or lhe neighboring recreational facill· ty, the noise of • cycle was heard only orice dur ing church services. That cycle was being driven by a park employe who wa s cheeking fences. Jt never happened 111aln. Spokesmen for the Mormon-a!filiated Seabreeze RecreaUonal Association s!f:k4 ing the permit renewal promised that if the two-year extension o( the permit ·were dusty condition or the entrarn road to to be ratified by councilmen, permanent signs and dust-control cil would be used to eliminate the twc points cl objection by police. The park was launched last June after a noisy public hearing before councilmen. Oppcnents to the park howled that the Chicano Leaders Incensed At 'Whitewash' Inquiry LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Some Mex· Jean.American leaders were incensed to- day about what they believe will be a "'whitewash" of law oUicers in the cor· oner's Inquest in the death of newsman Ruben Salam" during rioting in Eaat Loa Anldts. Most oC the Mexican-American spec· ta.ton trooped out of the inquest room twice Thunday after denouncing hearing offJcer Norman Pitlluck as a "racist' and tbe tatimooy u prejudicial. Four women and five men were serving u • Jury to delennine whether Salazar's death during the violence which took twt> other livea and left more than $1 million damage was accidental or "at the hands of another," that is, intentional Any pro- aecuUon is up to the di.strict attorney. Salaiar, news director of Spanish- language television station KMEX and columnist for the Los Angeles Times, died after a 1* Inch wide, 9'k long tear gu projectile was shat by a sheriff's deputy and struck his head. Officers Aid they fired the tear gas in· to the Silver Dollar Bar al<e they had a report of a man wJth a gun inside. Hu"icane Ella Swirling Slowly Onto Gulf Coast BROWNSVILLE, Tex. (UPI) -Small but awift Hurricane Ella swirled 9()..mile- an-hour winds, torrential rain and high tides today toward the coasts of Te1as and Mezico. Thousands fled. The U.S. Weather Bureau said the IUM· mer's fiflb hurricane would hit the 5horeline late today south of Brownsville. Ella picked up strength but slowed its unusually speedy course across the Gulf of Mexico during the morning. "The center should move inland near or a little t0utb of Brownsville before dark," the Weather Bureau saJd. The south Texas coast bad not yet recovered from Hurricane Celia, the most destructive storm in the state's history. It raked the shore and beoded 250 miles inland 39 days ago. "l am COll!tmed, you ain't kidding," uid T. W. Anderson of Corpus Christi, Tex., Wherf; Celia gtruck, killing 11 persons and causing a bill.ion dollars damage. Ella churned through the gulf at 1& miles an bour. At noon EDT, the storm's center was located near latitude 24.5 north and longitude 95.3 west or about 156 miles east-S()utheast of Brownsville. Tides of eight fett and six inches of rain were ftlrecast fur coastal areas in south Texas and northern Mexico. DAILY PILOT Some 20 persons, including members of a 0 blue--ribbon" committee from the Chicano community, walked out during the afternoon session when attomey-spec- lator Oscar Acosla shouted at Pittluck, ''You're a disgrace to your profusion." Acosta and the others were upset by the showing of a sheriff's department video tape which depicted the initial scenes of rock and botile throwing and bleeding o(Cicen during the national ChJcano moratorium parade and rally. He said it was "not only irrelevant but prejudicial" ln •hearing lnlD Jhe death ol Saluar. E!teban Torres, president of the Congress of Me1ican-American unity, a coalJUon of 300 community groups, aald the hearing was a whitewash. "We are not going to tolerate it and stand there and be insulted this way ," said Torres, who organized the blue-rib- bon group. C.Omic to Launch Artists' Forum In Beach Sunday Comedian Jonathan Winters will help launch Pl'Olptcluo-Alt ~D. a ebowlnr of more lhan 700 works by lead.In& California or!ists, when Jhe allow opens Sunday night on the Huntington Center Mall in Huntington Beach. Promoters of the charity art show, bill· ed a.s one of the largest of Us type in Orange County, said Winters will pro-- bably 1ppear during the preview opening of the show at 6 p.m. Sunday. Admission to the Sunday night preview is $5 per person, with the proceeds going to establish art scholarships OD a yearly basis. Prospectus-Art '70 will be opened free to the public starting Monday and run· ning through Sept. 25 on the mall at Edinger Avenue and Beach Boulevard. The charity event is co.sponsored by the city of Huntington Beach, Colden \Vest College and the Huntington Center Shopping Center. Jason Wong, director of the Long Beach Museum of Art, is coordinating the Huntington Beach show. Three judges wUI award $2,500 in prizes to the top artists in the show. One S400 award will be handed to the artist whose painting earns the most votes of the public attending Sunday's opening. Money ccllected Sunday night will be given lo International Art Scholarships, an organization of business and pro- fessional persons interested in J>J'()moUon of the fine arts. JAS will handle annual scholarship arrangements. dOlll ~ • ~ 91 ·~able element" ct eyclllla WOUid mu. tho pork a disaster. They were outnumbered, however, by bike "devotees who sl&:ned petltlcns by the hundreds. Since then the park's operation has been smooth with only the small number of minor complalnt.s. The specific terms o! the suggested com mission approval say that the permit would be continued so long as lhe month- to-monlh lease with the Mormon church exists for the ·park property. U the lease remains alive for two years, then the operators of lhe park once more must retu rn to city hall for renewals. The existing permit -originally granted for three months -expires next Thursday -a day after the city council receives the bid by the part operators. Lawyer Pleas With Arabs For Sirhan BEffiUT, Lebanon (AP) -A lawyer for Sirhan Sirhan called on all the Arab governments today to intervene with the United States to spare the life of the con- victed assassin of Sen. Robert F. Ken- nedy. ''The Arab governments and people blust make a concerted effort lo help Sirhln," Gecrge Shibley told a news con- ference here. Sirhan's chief attorney ls L u k •· McKlssack. Shibley, who ls from Loa Anaeles, IJ his IWOC!ate. Shibley said he would not press PalesU- nlan ruemnas to seek the release of Sirhan a.s part of a deal for the f.reedcm of 280 ~es the guerrillas hold on 1 desert airstrip in north Jordan. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, which is balding tbe hostlges, repeatedly has denied it would include Slrhan's freedom in ill tenns for releu- ing the hoslages. Shibley said Arab individuals ond associations in the United States were unable to render Sirhan any assistance "because they are terrified by the FBI." He said Sirhan's lawyers planned another appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court to change the death sentence pa,ared. by a California court on Sirhan lut yur. But it might take a year to have the: 1ppeal flied, he •dded. S~han WIJ confined ln a Deoth Row llolaUon cell today ofter belnJ subdued by teor gu during • temper tonlrwn Jn which he threw food 1t a guard. The outburst came when the 26-year.old prisoner refused to give up his tray, fork and spoon after a Wednesday afternoon meal, Warden Loula S. Nelson rtported Thunday. Sirhan was given a sedative and removed to a cell without access to newspapel'!I, radio or television. Prison business manager Irving Ritter said Sirhan apparently had become upset over repcrts of his mother's unsuccessful at~mpt to go to the Middle East in con- nection with airliner hijackings by Paleslinian guerrillas. The hijackers repcrledly at one time demanded Sirhan's freedom in e1ch1nge for release of mort than 200 pawngers held hostage in Jordan. The State Department d e t a i n e d Sirhan's mother, Mary, in New York and revoked the paMpcrts of two attorneys traveling with htr. Ritte r said Sirhan demanded to talk to a prison official about the situation and had lo be subdued after being informed it was a state holiday, California Admission Day, and no top 1ulhority was im· mediately available. Nelson said the tear gas was used because Sirhan could have hurt himself "lhey way he was acting." He "could use the fork egalnst himself or he could break pieces off the metal tray and use them as a cutting instrument," Nelson explained. ""'"""" ~ ........ ~.., :) .From Pogti 1 S. Ckooo•w COAST OU.NGI COAST •lllLIS~tlNO COMPANY DRESS CODES ••• ••--•rt N. Wttd ...... IH!lt 91141 l"ubli- Jtt~ It. Cwrl•v \IJu ,rt1:ffll! t"4 GtM•tl MNI ..... lho1111•1 Ktt•il l(dl!W 11'.oflltt A. M wr,hi~• M.wg'"' ll•ll1ir •lch•14 P. Ntll s.oui-°''""" c-•r Edllw Offlc• ( .. 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UM _,lllfY, noted that this year's incoming class "v.·as the neatest, best dressed class ever." i\1eanwhile, adminislrat.ors al Tustin Union High School and Capistrano Unified School District ha ve vowed to en· force their district's beard apprq_ved regulations. While Tustin limits boys sideburns to the "bottom of the ear" and for bids "flared " sideburns, Capistrano limits length of sideburns to an ''inch be.low the ear'' and allows flared sideburns, but not muttonchop whiskers. Tustln allows no mustaches or beards, Capistrano dots -1t least to the corner or the lip. Boll\ iehools require that girts• un· deraarment.s not be allowed to show. Tustin glrlJ may wear cullottes 1Dd ptnt dresse~. but not slacks. Pa-nl.s are acceptable at Capistrano, but not the "tie· dyed" variety, "11;hatever they are," Superintendent Tr um 1 n ·Benedict said. Regard ing length or girls" dresses ind skirts, Capistrano district's code Is very "with it'' rashion·wise. The cod~ circurnspcctly advises that dresses be no 1hor1er than a girl's finaerUps nor longer than the ankle. The midi safety rallJ \\'lthln that ranae. Sheer, see-through blouses, blckless dresses and bare-midriff outfits will net be tolerated at Capistrano. The code makes no mention cf brassier~. Boys at Capistrano may wear 'khakis, slack, lL!vis or bermudas, but not "cutoffs shorter than bermuda length er unhem· med. Shirts other than squared off sport shirts must be worn tucked in, Benedict said. Tank-type skirts are not allowed. Both Tustin And Capistrano not@d that "'ai 11 last resort" failure to comply with the dress code could Tesult in suspension until e student com~les. William 1.ogg, Tustin superintendent. said dress codes were necessary to pro- vide a "midpoint that ts not totally of· fenslve to elthtr t.nd of the continuum of students." Unlike oolloges, he noted, "public high schools have compulsory attendance rules and students come from aU backgrounds morally and spiritually ." Adm itting th at it Is difficult to come by "empirical evidence'' th at dress may In· tcrfere with the educational process, ' Zogg contended on the basls of his "years ot sdlool erperitnc~" that It does. "Over the years I've sctn many f3ds 4!xhiblterl and most wtrL! eventually round wanting," be said, although he believes some fads "become fashlcn and finally become ace<!pltd b)' the communlt7." " - • DAIL V PILO' ..... ,lltlt Fro• P.,ti J HUACK.1 • Wublngtoo. al<e) a COOgrtSllonal con· rerence that negotlaUw to free the hostages will succeed. luatll Premier Goldo Meir bu main· talnad a hon! line, nftiilnl to a(l'M ID tree 3,000 Arab guerrUlas. "Are we to releue these people in some sort of ceremopy or other so they can come back and repeat their acts?" she said, ber yojce pit~r wilh an_s~ .. Sources in Jerusa.lem indicated she m;oy be <orced ID go back clown. The PFLP, meanwhile, freed GO or 116 . v.·omen and children first removed froro the planes today and returned passpotts. They were to be flown to Nicosia: on the Island of Cyprll$, by Jordanian Airlines. Diplomatic sources said it was un· derstood the rem aining people im· prisoned at the lnterco nUnental Hotel In Amman would al so be freed. THOMASINA GUNN RAISES DOG LOVERS' BATTLECRY In L•gun•, Power to the P.opl• •nd Man's S.1t Friend Tough ccnditions et.lsted at Dawson's Field where the TWA. BOAC and Swissair jetliners are parked. b~t an International Red Cross team was doi ng its best. • .From Pagti 1 DOGS .•• council action but was circulated in hopes of showing the breadth of opposition to the law and changing at least one council vote. This could strike down the law. Tabulators of the petiton signatures sald lt had already been signed by 2,348 persons. A breakdown showed that 1.592 v•ere Laguna Beach residents; 378 were under 21 ; 1,198 were adult residents ; 756 "'ere visitors: and 265 were visitors under 21. Challis reminded the crowd that Lorr sometime before Aug. 4 had said, "The proposed ordinance is dead at least for the time being" and that "mysteriously this revised ordinance was introduced'' Aug. 5 -by Lorr. Challis said he believes it absolutely impossible to enforce the new ordinance and said "we are trying to get on.e of the (three yes voling) councilmen to see our viewpoint." Hano called for volunteer refe~ndum petition circulators and most hands went up. Others were signed up to copy the names of dog owners from the license records at city hall. There was discussion of a more equitable ordinance but the consensus seemed that the fi rst order of business was to get the offending law off the hooks. Thomasina Gunn, local ACLU presi· dent, brightened the proceedings by holding aloft an inerpensive homemade scoop to hand1e dog droppings. She s~g­ gested tt might be manufactured by Girl and Boy Scouts and aold for 50 cents to dog owners. From PflfJf! 1 LINCOLN •.. use permit did not appear. Commissioners agreed that becaust or the isolated nature of the park -no housing tracts have been built near the area -the park would serve as a good use for the land in question . The unanimous action, however . does not seal the approval for the park plans . City Councilmen have in past actions been much harder to convince that the Shorecliffs area land would be best used for coach parks. Laguna Nigt1el Merger Boost For Projects Takeover of the LagW\a Niguel Corp. by Avco Community Developers Inc. is expected to accelerate development o( the included properties. This was lhe assessment today of Robert L. Follett. executive vice presi· dent and general manager of the opera- tion. He replaces \Villiam Beck of Laguna Niguel. ··It will very definitely accelerate development," said Follett. He said while Laguna Niguel was primarily 1 land developer setup to then sell the develop- ment. "we are essentially a la nd developer and builder." He said his corporation would be bring· ing new products to the development -that will speedup this year -con- ventional homes but in a variety of styles and sizes. Laguna Niguel Corp. had about 8.000 acres or which more than 5,000 remain to be developed , Follett said. The developed acrea ge includes more than 1,500 homes and nearly 6.000 residents. Avcc Community Developers Inc. is a land development subsidiary of Avco Corp which did an $898 million business in products and services in 1969. Its many subsidiaries include Seaboard Finance and Avco Savings and Loan Associations and Carte Blanche credit card operation. It was announced this week that 81 per· cent of the outstanding common shares and 88 percent of the outstanding war· rants of Laguna Niguel had been ex· changed for Avco Community Developers common stock warrants and cash. A half share (I f Avco Community and S2.75 cash was offered for each share of Laguna Niguel Corp. The offer period has been extended to Oct. 2 to allow Lagµna Niguel holders who have not done so to exchange their shares and warrants. Disease Fight Set WASHINGTON CUP !) -The House has voted to authorize the spending of $185 million during the next two years to help the states figh t polio, diphtheria, measles, mumps, whooping co u I h , syphillls, gonorrhea and tuberculosis. "It is not exactly a iu'lUricus maternity home ," said Red Cr<>1s aides who delivered the baby born to the uniden· tified young American woman during the night. · Several women aboard the planes are also pregnant and the Red Cross included rubber pants and diapers with a shipmeTit of 1,000 prepackaged meals and medical supplies. Following the Washingtcn confe rence, Sen. Mike Mansfield 1ald the President's tactics have complete Senate support. "l think the government has done everything it possibly could," he said. The order placi ng gun-carrying federa l agents aboard all U.S. flights -at a $3 per·passenger tax -offers other deadly possibilities. according to some. · Najeeb Halaby, chai rman of Pan American Airways, said his tine will cooperate but the former FAA ad· ministrator said they must be carefully trained and commanded by pilots. Once opposed to carrying arms themselves, the jetliner captains are no longer so reluctant, acccrding to one spokesman. "This is a new league we are in," he explained . ··Earlier hijackings were the work or 100 perctnt losers. loners, kooks, men who had not made it," he ccntinued. "Now there's a new twist -the organized use of hijack techniques for in· ternational pclitical purposes.'' Reporting from Dawson Field, United Press lntematianal co rrespondent Ray· mond Wilki nson described one. Abu Ezz, wearing a Lenin badge on his camouflage uniform, gestured with his Russian AK47 automatic rifle at the planes shimmering under the 100 degree4 plus desert sun. -- "They are learning something,'' the PLFP chieftain said proudly, adding his revolution is being taught to the 138 hostages. Country Oub Loses Golf Gear A thief has cleaned $600 worth of gol! ing gear out of a frequently used storage room at the Mesa Verde Country Club in Costa Mesa . Barry Sutherland, employe or the private club at 3000 Clubhouse Drive, told police Thursday the loot included baJls, bags and clubs, as welJ as clothing. He said it is almost lmpossible to keep the equipment room locked during periods of heavy play. •"'--1 <4 An Jnvifalion lo Quiel ~ Marchesa by Drexel. We believe ~ Marchese tion that is the smartest most unique collec- has been designed in years. This grou~ features complete living, dining and occas1onal to choose from . Our shipments have just arrived and a quantify is now a~ailable for viewing at our showrooms. Be among the first to see this unusual group, or better yet have it delivered. For a new furniture you can't miss with . expertence Marchese. . tn Professional inferior design service is availa- ble for the asking. Our designers have many years of experience and AID decorators are available. WJ,ether it's draperies, carpeting, wallpaper or .furniture, your needs will be met at Ted von Hemert Inc., over twenty years in the beach area. DEALERS FOR: HENREOON -DREXEL -HERJT AGE 7td11111 " NEWPORT BEACH 1727 W11tcllff Dr., 642·2050 O'EN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH Prof111ion1I Interior Dt1i9ner1 Avail1bl ....... IO-NSID 345 North CoHt Hwy, 494-4$$1 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 l'ltMI T•ll PrM MMt .to,..,. c....., 141·1 261 • I 7 J t ' I ( ' ( I I I j J 1 t r t ' I l ( ' l ' • r ( ' • r I ; ' I I 7 ---~ ..• -----.---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.-... ~ .................................................................................... !!ll .... 1!!111!111!1 .. ll!!!!ll!!lll!l!!l!!!ll' .. ll!lll!lll!l!lll!!lllllll .... mll!!lll!l!I ·- Shaping Up for s~hool It took 15 months for Thom as f\Jacy, 12. to grow his flou1ing locks. A .. nd. even thou gh he needed a 1rin1, he \11asn't about to see them on the floor of a b.<1rber shop just because school is starting again. Jack Jacklich. hin1self partial lo long locks, solved the problem. Thon1as entefs the seventh grade at Laguna Beach 's Th urs ton Intermediate School Monday. Laguna Slates Released Ti1ne Bible Class es Released time religio115 cd11calion, given in 45-minute sessions to lourth and fifth graders al Laguna Be<K"h's !hree eleme1uary schools, will hegin Sept. 28. P.1rs. Linda Kilpatrick Y•ill serve as 1n· slructor for the c:lasses. They "'ill be in a trailer classroom \\'hich \\'ill visit the various schools. The sessions \\'Ill be held at various limes Monday, Tuesday. ancl Wednesday at Aliso. El (\.1orro and Top of the World elementary schools. f\1rs. Kilpatrick has form erly taught released lime classes in Pasadena and will base educatio111 here on !he book till· ed "Good l'\ews For l\todern l\1an ." a simplified lranslation of the Nev; Testa· ment of the Bible. The released time program. working with a $5,000 budget, all of \\"hich is from private fund s, is ru111 by the Laguna Beach Released Time Corporation. So far. the group has purchased the !railer, equipped il with 35 seats, maps, pictures. electricity, and other needs of a school room. The project. began 1nonthi; <1~0. \\'hrn Dr. y,·illiam Ullom. supcrintPndcnt of the l .1guna Beach Unified S<.'Mol District, called both Arl Colony protesla11l ministers and Catholic priests togclh!'r for a SC'ries of 1nectings. After looking at various programs of this na!ure in surroun1tin~ co111111unitirc:;, this program \Vas adopted by the cor· poration. Chairman of the formalion cnmmitl\'C Is the Rev. Donald H. Baird of the Com· munity Presbyterian Chu rch. According to Baird , one of the mosl heartening aspects of th e program is the widespread enthusiasm for ii. from peo- ple of alt faiths. Ballots Readied For F es ti val Jury Ballots \\'ill be scnl out in about a week to the Festival of Arts 1970 exhibitors and unsuccessful applicants In decide ll"hich artists will serve on the admittance jury for the 1971 exhibition. Nominated for modern art are BiJan Bhar .. Anne Reid Gordon. Herb Gri swold and lleinz Norhausen. F'or traditional art, Lupe Chown. Philip Freman, Heri Hoff, JBcquie f\1offell. Joan Osborne and A. "rellington Smith were nom inated. Fesli\'al of Arts exhibitors and unsuc· cessful appli cants for the 1970 shO\V arc eligible to vote for the top ty,·o in e:irh category. The Festival Roftrd or Direc:-· lors y,•ill select three rnorr ln complete the i;even·man tca1n . Alternates will also be elected. Festival Read y For Board Vote The electi on of three directors In the Festival of Aris nine-member board "'ill be announced at the annual men1 beri:hlp meeting in Irvi ne Bowl Nov. 9. Director.<: whose three.year terms ex· pire th is .\'car are Richard Brooks. Paul Griem and Dav id \'oung. Grien1 has filed papers for re-election. The other tv.·o have oot as yet Another candldnte is artist Bennett Bradbury. Candidate s have until the end (]f !he work day Sept. IR to file their nomination forms. Several have picked up forms but no returned th~n1. Nominations must be signed by 15 members of the fe~tival who are in good standing. Eligihillly to nomi nate is restricted to tho.<1e members who live 1n Orange County. Each may sign only one nomination fonn. Justi cc"s Inj ustice Johns Invaded? W 0111en's Restroorn Rights Debated \\IAS HINGTON lUPI) -Will the propc.>scd \Vomen·s Hights Amendmenl niake the nien·s room unconstitutional ~ Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr., !D-N .C.), said Thursday it "'ould. A law professor said it might Sen . l\1arlow \\I, Cook, ( R·KY ), said he didn 't believe it. Er\'i n questioned v..tielher separate toilets for men and \\'omen in public facilities \\'Ould be illegal if a proposed Conslitul ional amendment is adopted lo bar the U111itcd State~ or any sta te to deny or abridge equality of rights ''on account of sex." At a Senate Judiciary Committre hearing. Ervin noted I.hat some JSlate la\\'S require se parale toilet facilities for "·omen and men and make it a criminal offense for one sex to use the facilities of ano the r. He said those laws would be invalidalcd by the amendment. ~hilip B. Kurland, Jaw professor at the Universit y of Chicago, said the propos al was so opcn-eRd that courts might construe it this way -or might permit •·separate but equal" restrooms. Cook said the whole argument was a •·red herring," as were Ervin ' s t•ontentions !hat the amendment might subject women to combat duty or outlaw separate prison s for men and womeR. "Surely the elimination of different('s between men and wome R cannot bf' obliterated by Constitutional f i a t , ' ' Kurland testified. \\'hile agreeing that American women do suffer from ''unrea s oned discrimin ation," he suggested that lhe problem be attacked by statute rather Iha • an "instant and :simp l isl le '" Constitutional amendment. He said it may be possible for 1he gcticration of women now coming lo maturity "to succeed in a competitive society in which 11\1 differences in lega l rights belween men and women were "'iped out." "There remains a very large part ()f the female populalion on whom the imposition of such Constitutional standard would be disastrous," Kurland said. "There is no doubt that society permitted these women to came maturity, not as competitors with males but rather as the bearers and raisers of their children and keepers ()f \heir homes. There are a multitude of wome" who still find fulfillm ent in this role." Kurland :said. "In the eyes of women, this- may be unfortunate, but it is true." Laguna School Signups Expected to Hold Line Enrollment in Laguna Bt'ach schools is expected to hold the line this year, ac- cording lo school officials. The high school is expeclerl to open \\•ith 1.050 students. according le> Dr. Robert H.eeves. district director of cur· riculum. Ho\\·ever, he noted, there are ahl'ars those students y,·ho don'I show up evrn though they have registered . Aliso and El Morro e!c1nenlary schools are expected lo have about 450 students each. Top of the \\'orld "'iii ha ve 515. Thurston Intermediate School is prepar· 1ng for 456 students on opening day i\1on· dav. Regi stration for kindergarten classc~ approaches that of last year, but there is no way of knowing how many will turn up on opening day. Parents who have not yet registered children in kindergarten are asked to C'ome to the distri ct office. 55-0 Blumont Dr. as soon as possible to do so. All food and cafeteria services will be available on the first da y of school. First met:ling of the Board of Trustees within the school year will be held Tue .<:· day. Sept. 15 at the board room at 7:30 p.m. Board president Larry Taylor in· vitcs any interested citizens to attend the meeting and to ask questions of the board. SA U111~i1l1 Campaigne1· P1~epares Real Bandwago11 The Richard Palchikoff lamily Is doi nit its best to see to it that the man elected governor in November isn't "sold '' lo lhC'm "like a bar of soap." The six Palchikoffs, a friend and tv.·o large basset hounds are hitting the cam· paign trail to do :some person to per!'lon stumping for their candidate Jess Unruh. Cou11t y Appeals For Gas Funds A telegram urging Gov. Ronald Reac an lo sicn a bill giving Southern California 60 percent or the gas tax funds collected for freeway and highway construction "'aS dispatched Thursday by the Orange County Board or Supervisor!i. Board Chairman Alton E. Allen pro- posed the teltgram following a request from the San Diego County Board of Supervisors. The San DiC"go hoard members pointed out that "IJ1ere Is extreme pres.,urc on the governor to veto the bill from i'\orthcrn Qilifomla counties," and ad· dcd. "Southern California m(]torisls P8Y more than 60 percent of the gas \tlx to- day." ~ "I'm tired of hearing that I.his cam· paign is scl because one candidate has more money to spend on TV advertising . I don't think people should be governed by people who contribute lhe most money to a campaign," Palchikoff said. So, in an effort In take the campaign tn lhe people, Palchikoff loaded his group lnln a loudly decorated camper and trailer and set nff for San Diego. From therr he plans a swing into the Imperial Valley and then back to Santa Ana. "\Ve·n put the kids in school. Kim. Jay, Ka y and their friend Randy Scholnick al· tend Foothill High School. The oldest girl, Jan, goes lo UCLA." he said. After dropping the children off :it home, Palchikoff and his wife, Dawn . wl\I c:ontlnu~ their campaigning efforts, following stale highway 99 up the San Joaquin Valley. They plan to campaign for Unruh right up to election day. "We're just going to go from piece to place and talk to people. I think this is a e:ood way lo get people stimulated," Palchikoff said. There ls little doubt that the Palchlkotf~ will stimulate converi;ation with their hrightly dtcorated \'ehicles. They , al· tracted sontc unwanted attenllon 1n COsta ~1tsa the day of their departure. Laguna High~s Officers Have 'Good Thino-~ .~ After altending a rece nt convention of delegates from student councils all over Orange County, members of the Laguna Beach High School student government feel they have a good thing going. "Given time lo reflect upon their ex· pcriences. the general cont-ensus or Laguna's delegates is that. LBHS stands as a relatively we ll resolved inslitution:· according lo high school publicist Micha el Barrios. Keynote speaker at the convention, held at the UC santa Barbara, was Kent Keith author of the book "The Silent Revolution." lie pointed out that in mosl schools, the officers elected are no representative of the entire school, O\\'ing to a low voter turnout . "Al Laguna, however, lhe new con· venlion system has increased student participation ·and hence the respon:sivenes or government to the in· dividual," Barrios noted. The areas remaining to be resolved, ac· cording to Keith, are the :social, in- tellectual, and financial discriminations which affect the involvement of the in· dividual in his .school. '·But I think we're gelling away from lhem. too," commented Lucy Boyd, high school treasurer, who attended the three· day convention. "We have a casual and loose social feeling around campus, We have an in· formed student body Bnd the mini· courses have made many or the students more aware of what's going on. •'One way we can get away from finan- cial discriminations is by doing as some schools do-offering the yearbnoks free or at a low cost. We have talked about it," Miss Boyd noted. Phone Privileges Given to Good Cons .JACKSON, f\.1ich. <UPI) -Inm ates at Southern Mi chi gan Prison who make a good record can now telephone their fami· ly or friend s. Prison officials recently i;et up a li)'stem whk.h alklws "honor block" in· mates monthly telephone privileges believed unique for a maximum securily prison. "11\e. inmates are jusl delighted with the new change in rules," said Warden Perry M. ,Johnson. 'r!d~y, Stptrmbtr 11, 1970 L DAIL V PILOT !J R11le Eased Saddlehack Kids 'Let Hair Down' By GEORGE LE!DAL 01 lfll D•llY 1'1191 51111 Saddleback College "°'iii not enforce its cootroversial dress code until a ruling is obtained from the Ninth District Court of Appeals. Dr. Fred lf. Bremer, superintendent· president of the l\1ission Viejo Junior college campus, said that the code "can't be an issue" if it isn't being enforced. Ile and the Saddleback board are awaiting a ruling on the board 's appeal of a deci sion that grl'lnled fi vt'-long haired students a permanent injunction which rorctd the l'ollege to let them enroll for classes thill fall. "TI1t main issue," Bremer said. "i' \11hcther tllf' federal court has the right to set rules for the local &lard or Trustees. Obvionslv. our board feels the court rl oesn·1 have the right to interfere V.'ith lhe operation of our campus." When asked if he fell the possibly repressive atmosphere at Saddleback has led to students requesting trans.fers out of the district. Bremer replied, "I'm sure Lhere have been some instances where students have not liked the dress code and transferred to other junior calleges." "Hov.1ever,'' he said, "transfers are nnly granted to st udents who want to lake courses we don't offer." Hans Vogel. president of I he Saddleback board, last \\'eek told the Orange County Board or Educalin that transfers out of the Saddleback Junio r College District were costing the districl nne-sixth of the college's $3.2 million budget -about $500,000. He nnted that the provision of teachers and classroom space at Saddleback coupled with pa ying tuition transfers to other dislricl'I canslituted ' ' d o u b I e payment by the taxpayers.'' Vogel and Bremer were appearing at a hearing called by the county board who tater granted three lransfers to resJdents of lhe Saddleback district \Yho c\ain1ed distance was a hardship. Bremer indicaled toda y, "That transfer request was in no "'ay rela ted lo the dress code." He declined to comment on the possibility that the "instances where sludents have not liked the dress code and transfcrTed " might outnumber the hardship cases. He and Vogel told the county board they were concerned about !'Jelling precedent lf the county trusteeii granted the distance fact.or appeals. • "It's a moot question," Bremer sairl. noting tha~ it was impossible to tell whether the students requesting transfers out of the district were doing so because they wre dissatisf ied with the dress code Meno Victory or 'i\·ere seeking '-eourses not offered at Saddleback. Vogel !old cou nly trustee~ the district had granted 700 transfer requests last year. Bremer today said he feels the board ls "slill very a~manl about having a dres1 cOOe at SaddTeback." But until the court rules on its legality, "the kids can wear their hair any way they like. .. I'll stick with the stand I've taken for the past t~·o years," he :said, "that hair and clothes may interfere with the educational process." "I don't object to the 'mod' type of haircut that is becoming so popular, but rather the extremely long hair and mousta ches that I think are symbols of radicalism. "~!any student! have picked up theJSe i;ymbols as a fad ,'' he added. During the height of the controversy last year, students appeared a t Saddlcback board meetings, and many - including the studeDt body l)fesident- said they felt students who Otherwise \\'Otdd attend Saddleback were not be- cause of the "repressive" rules on dress. Jobless Space Workers Unite; Meeting Sl1,1ted Unemployed aerospace and electrcnics workers will meet l\1onday at 7 p.m, in the Huntington Beach High School auditorium lo discuss their plight under current conditions. Gene Johnston, preside nt of Experience l!nlimited, has invited all nut-of.work people in the county to attend the Work session. The ne\\'\yformed group which has been in existence only three weeks now boasts 400 members. according to Thomu Owen, field represe ntative. Some 10.700 skilled workers and ex- ecutives have been laid off by the aerospace-electronics industries in the county in the pasl year. Last week Orange caunly supervisors n:imed Supervisors \Villiam Phillips and lJavid Baker to meet with legislative rtpresentative• from lhL~ caunty to try to obtain more federal and state conlr•ct.a for local firms. Last Th\lrsday the U.S. Labor Depart- ment said the county. will be deaignated an area or "substantial unemploymt nl" · bt!ginning Oct. J. Johnny Moore Lauded On Meal for President The message from \Vashington came today. Nobody got hearthurn last Sunday . Nol rven Johnny f\1oorc, the San Clemente restauraleur who supervised lhe yeoman efforts of the his wire :ind sister-in-law after being commissioned by the White House staff to prepare 30 Mexican dinners to go-for Presidenl Nixon and his party returning lo the capital aboard Air Force One. Moore received the invilalion In supervise the Presidential meal lasl Saturday moming. The owner of San Clemente's f)(]n Juan Restaura nt -where many members or the Secret Service and other White House 11ides regularly dine -said a spokesman for the President called Thursday to report raving reviews of the dinners con sumed during the trip home. "It was a day I'll never forgel," Moore :i;aid later. "\Vhen all· those important people are watc hing you. you just have to do the bcsl job, and my. wife and sister· in·law certainly did." Discounting major role In. the culinary dulies. the Capistrano Beach resident praised his wife, Sarah, and her sister, Gina Olivares. "They did all the work," he said . •·1 just grated the cheese." D41L Y I'll.OT 11-tt l'Mll JusHce m;a y pre,·ail If he spots a 14-fool ply"'OOd motorboat being tO\\"ed around lhe llarbor Area on a f11milillr trailer. Zane Justice of 23Ml Nt~·port Blvd .. Costa (\.'{esa . told police Thursday that ~m~Qne has stolen hi~ S400 runabout from a Harbor Boulevard storage lot The present J11w 1.11ll)tS only 5S percr.nt nf the gas Lax money to Southern caJUomia. "College protesters don't have a comtr on the obscenity market, said Palchikoff. noting that Political signs on his vehicles seem IQ arou$C harsh emolions in businessmen in Cadillacs. WHEN IT COME S TO POLITICS, SANTA ANA'S PALCHIKOFF FAMILY OOE SN'T HIDE FEELINGS Gr111 Root a Tour Dr1ws Unfriendly Gestures From Busine1smen In Cedillecs ' ... ' ' Frfd&y, Stptembtr ll, 1970 Jordan Truce Called Civ ilians Co ming Back 1 Out Into Streets I~ tr ... Dtlly ,. .... Sllflll Shorry Englehordt, 11, broke through both the · communication and generation gaps to retrieve her kitten which had perched for two days atop a utility pole in Hel· ena, Mont. Unable to find someone to climb up for the kitten, Sherry broke · open her piggy bank and telephoned 30 miles to Officer Mic- key Nelson at the Helena Police Department. Nelson called in radlo station KBLL which broadcast .the kitten's plight and then Bill Honey and Marving Ca rm ichael borrowed pole climbers from the telephone company and drove to Sherry's home at Elliston. The girl and kit-ten were back together Wednes- day. • The Bletchley, Engl.and urban council ha.s aoreed to Telocate Peter-Clements, 20, and his wife Ji11et. 19, because they say ghosts in their presept house, bother them. "Regardless of whether we believe in ghosts, this business has seriously troubled this familt1 and there- fore we will make another place available to them," a council spokesman said. • Five Newball, England police cars rushed to a. home after a neighbor heard noises coming from the house while the owner was away. They found a tea·ma.king machine had been left switched on. • Rosio Molano, 18, a student at Metro State College, in Denver didn 't want anyone stealing her bicycle while she was in class Wednesday so she locked it to a bike rack. When she came out, she discovered the front wheel bad beeri stolen. • , Jonah the whale was left high and dry for a short time Wednes· day when a truck transporting it to Peterborough, England broke down police said. A replacement truck was sent and the mammal ivas soon on its way. • ~ Marlin Martin of Dallas, Tt%a8 finds a baby sparrow she discovered eats better when fed cooked rice, plucked from Mrs. Martin's Zips. • San Francisco Immigration Di- rector Cecil W. FullUov• is asking the State Department to grant a 90-day stay for a 16-foot craft. "Al- ter all. the guy took four months gettin,g to San Francisco," Fulli· Jove said \Vednesday. "He's en· titled to stay a while and look around." Minoru Nagayeshi, 22, arrived without a visa after a 122- day trip from Os aka. He had in· tended to land at Vancouver. B.C., but changed course because of eight stonns. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Arab guerrillas announced a new peace agreement with the Jordanian government Thursday, and the fighting in Amma_n su b!iided. 'Ille a:uerrillu said both aides h1;d agreed "to remove the cawes" of clashes that had been going on in Amman for three days. 'nils see.med to lndicate a government capitulation to the guerrillas, since it is the guerrillas who have been setting cOnditions under which the fighting might end. Even this was no assurance that the agreement would last. A similar pact was announced Tuesday, but it broke down and the figblillg resumed before the day was over. Soon after Amman Radio broadcast the news of the latest agreement. the Jorda· nlan e1pltll gradllaily btgan to come alive agaln. Thousands ol perlOlll who had spent the preVious 24 hours in basements to avoid the sbelb and bullets began to come out But sporadic lbootlng could 1Ull bt heard hours afterward, and shops Onct bmart remained closed. GuerrillU con- tinued •to man road blocks in varioul parts of the city. At least 30 civilians were killed ln the fighting Wedneaday, unofficial sources io Amman said. 'lbe guerrillas say 40 com. mandos were killed the previous day. Eirlier Thursday the Palestinlans demanded that King Hussein 1~purge the royal palace, the army and the government" or enemies of the com- mandos. Guerrilla broadcasts declartd that such a purge was a prerequlaite for . reachers in Three States W aik Out on First Day Philadelphia's 7,000 public sch o o 1 teachers went on strike over a contract dispute on the first day of school '1'1lurs- day, giving 290,000 pupils an e1tended vacation. Teachers stayed off their jobs in de-- flance of a court injunction at Hammond, Ind., and most of the 2,500 Public school teachers at Toledo, Ohio, were idle in the school day of a strike. The Philadelphia school board ordered its 270 public schools closed Until a set· tlement is reached with the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers. Several thousand pupils attended classes condueted in their classrooms by volunteer teachers and residents of their communities. Uruguay Rebels Hit Coke Plant With Firebombs MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (UPI) - Tu pamaro terrorists who are holding two foreign hostages Thursday night slighUy damaged a Coca Cola botUing plant in Montevideo in a hit-and-run fire bomb at.- tacit, police sald. No one was injured in the attack on the plant about three miles from the center ol the city, police said. Earlier io the day, a terrorist group composed of 10 men and two women held up the Montevideo office of the Standard Old Company (Esso) and escaped with the equivalent of f l,800, In recent days, the Tupamaros have re- mained silent on the condiUon of two kid- nap victims, Calude L. Fly, U.S. farm consultant froom Fort Collins, Colo., and Brazilian Q;insu1 Aloysio Dias Gomide, who have been held for more than a month. On Aug. 10, the ltidnapers shot to death Daniel A. Mitrione, a U.S. adviser to the Uruguayan police. Mitrione was abducted July 31, the same day as Gomide. Hatfield Mig ht Leave Politics WASHINGTON '(AP) -Sen. Mart 0. Hatfield, the Oregon Republican who has been a leading critic of the Indochina war, says be may IOt seek another term in office in 1972. He said the cost or running his Senate office kept him away from his family earning extra money. Nearly all the $28,000 in speech honorariums he receiv· ed last year went for e:rt.ra office el'· penses, he said. I HaUie1d's four childre11, aged S to 11, "are at the very tender age where it is Important to them to have a father," he said. ''Volunteer" schools were also set up at union balls, churches and recreation balls, mostly in Negro neighborhoods. Unsettled contract issues in c 1 u d e salary, length of the school day and whether teachers should be held ac- countable for a pupil's academic p~ gress. Teachers were asking a starting salary of ;8,500 a year and the board had offered a minimum of $8,100, up $800 from the 1969-70 pact. Hammond's teachers picketed school buildings and marched to the school ad- ministration offices in open defiance or an injunction Wued late Wedne1day restraining them from continuing tbeir walkout The . walkout was in its third day, postponing the 'return to atudy for 24,000 pupils. Negotiations resumed Thursday but no progress was reported. Negotiations also were to resume in Toledo where .teachers were not working but school officials estimated 80 percent of the 61,000 students attended classes conducted by administrators on the sec-- ond day of the strike over salary. Nearly 96,000 pupils were idled in several Michigan cities, i n c I u d l n g Kalamazoo, while 4,500 teachers were on strike. Teachers in East St. Louis, Ill., ·con- tinued their work atop-page, refusing to report to their classrooms until their con· tract is aetUed. Members of the Bethlehem, N.Y .. Teachera Association voled to strike Frj.. day unlen their school board agrees to reopen elementary acbool di:stricet at San Francisco reached an agreement with its teachers providing a 7 percent pay bike and guaranteeing bilingual teachers for Spanish speaking students. Schools open- ed on schedule. U.S.-Canailian Anti--pollution Stance Outlined TORONTO (UPI) -Scnpplng the Idea of an international anti-pollution agency, canadian and American government leaders Thursday r e c o m m e n d e d strengthening of the International Joint Commission (JJC) to combat pollution in the Great Lakes. The conference attended by rtpre1eir tatives from Great Lakes. The conference attended by represen- tatives from Great Lakes states, three Canadian rovinces and officials from both federal governments ended with a final communique expressing · "• sense or urgency" over the 0 pollution crisis of the Great Lakes." In Wednesday's meeting the suggestion for a single international agency was made. Ontario's minister of mines, energy and resources George Km Hid that delegates approved of the Idea. 'Ella' Dominates Weather Te xas Brace s for Hurricane ; Freezing Colil Hits Nortli ' C'ollfornlo SOUTHEltN CALIFOltNIA -Mostly t1lr tllrGl,lf h 1111/r!UY bu! 1119111 Ind mom11!9 lo9 1!1d low clwds 1101111 eo1u , 5orll1 clOildl with clllnc1 DI ,_ ''"'" -ttlul'ldtrd\OWtrt toulher11 mO\I~ l tfM 1nd M1Ulllw11 1n!trlor ftrld1r. Coolw S.lur(l1y, LOS ANGELES ANO VICINITY - Mot.llY '•Ir tllrouol'I S.IUMllY but 11!1 11111'11 •rid ... .,. -It·•• (ql!ll low eJOUdl Ind fol, COCll1r SINl'dl y, OY1"' 11tthl IOwfl tf, Hl9"t 11 $1Nrd1y t2, ~INT CONCEPTION TO MlfXI CAH aollOl!lt-llftlt Y1rt1bll wlnd1 n1111t •nd lnDn'llN ,.,,. 11tcoml111 Wft!9f!'f I to 1J ll!W:>ft 111 1111..,_t thrOl.lth S.tunley, Nlthl •rid Mrl'f l!IDf'l'llllf tow clol.rdt 1rld fol wlffl hm tUMlllflt h'I 1tlltnooM. U1tl1 ..,,..,,111,. ™""· COASTAL ... NO IHTEltMl!01ATE VALL£V'S -"•1r 1'111'11 Sllunl1Y bill _... 109 kwrflr C•Jlll Y•lit7t tlfl'f lfNNty. ClilOltf' S.Nl'llOY, 0Yffllltflf -,, .. .,, Hlt!U es IO 100, S.Nrd1Y .. ~ ... 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Tr11 lllt lli ........ ., 1:1<1 •·"'· ,.0 ll'lrit lqw ... , , .• ?:Jll •.m, "4 1 kot.Dlld llttll ........... tit• •.m, 1,1 hecwld IMt , J:ll ia.m. 1 .~ au~ •1-. l rU '""'· s..11 1:C! ,,m. MOOlt Allel •:•t•·"'· Stlt l1!it 1.l'll, v.s. s ........... knnv tltltl ,,. <hlllY wtlll'tlt llrllel'llf ft0\'11 fN lloctltt fo Hrlt Of "" -'-!l dllllll iocHY, lhow1P1 Ind l!lu"'°'"'°""' wtrt tcllltl'9d. ..,. Cll llJ l loll9 Ille Guff (Mrt Into TfXIJ, ,,,_ Ind trt11l111 ttm-l!uret Wirt l lrttdlrit fOWfl 1111 C1111dlt11 ltOCkl" llMl•Y llllo M01"11tn1 t l'ICI norltltm ldtlll. Thi wtllfll'r llurtl W .. Id lrlffllrl' Wl mhlfl Wfre 111 tfftc1 Ill lllDM H f1J, W!f!I lrfttl Wtl'lllntt H'llld fir fDllfthl ii! tr,. MMP!tnl MCllMI , MlllW!illfll, Hurl'ltt "' l !lt , !Pit MC· Olld ttorm efleltnttrlf!I tl'll Tn11 OU tt Cotil 111 1 111111 -1 month, 1«el-t r.itd ,_., IOWtnl 1"9 Unllld &II,_. # .. IU11 W\lt r, ....... erct•re• Mlft Lew~ .......... a ., Al1111t1 ff TI ••k-tlflld "' " 81M\1rat " " "'" " u .... ~ " " ••-nt.,lllt .. n ... Ctlk.111 ~ .. CIMlllM" " .. ...... " .. ...... _ ~ " ...... ,. .. ""' Worfflo " .. ·-"' .. H1I-" .. T Kll!MtCJtir " .. let v .. 11 "' ,. ..... _.. N .. M1""1 u .. Ml11,,....i1t .. .. NtwOflMNI .. " Ntw Ytrtt .. .. "' Norfll Pl11N " " 01kl1llll " n Olt\1llom1 City " " Otl\ll'lt " .. Pt Im Sorllllt "' .. '"'" llobltt "' " PhDtn1X '" " l"Jtttbu ... h " .. Jttrttl lld " .. R.IPld CITY " " "" l luff "' .. ·-" • SICfl l'lltlllo "' " Si ii Llkl Clfy • " "" 01f90 ,. .. S1~ trr111tiMO .. .. , .. ,,,. " .. ,. ...... " " T~1r '" .. Wtthlllt'IOfl " .. ... a "~ Ind durable" peace between the Jonlanlan aney and the Paleatlnlan lighten. Tiiey abo called for dboolullon ol a "mctlooary cllque ol CI,\ qents ato<md the king which acto u a aoven> ment wl1hln a govtrDment." 'lbt broadc:utl mentlontd no names but the cblel tarfoll were H-io'1 uncle, N.-be Jandl, and the kine's cousin, Zdd ben Shaker. Hussein dlsmill- ed both from key army poll.I to appeue the 1111errlllaa after fighting io June in which about 1,000 per-were ldlled or woonded. Later be reinstated Beo Shaker as assistant army chief of staff, and the 1111errillu claim Ben Jsmll bu returned -etly to Amman fn>rn Europe and with Ben Shaker is trying to foment an army crackdown on • guerrillas. The U. S. State Department 8llllOIUICOd that Jon W. Stewart, *'· an American at· !ached to the U. S. Embassy in Amm111, dbappeared Wednesday. Earlier this -k, the department reported that Sgt. Irvin Graham of the U. S. militpy at· tacl>e's office had been taken into cust.ody by guerrillas. A spokesman said Thurs· day Graham had not been released. In Cairo, an aide to Egyptian In· formation Ministe r Mohammed Hassa- nein Helkal said reported U. S. plans to deliver l& to 18 more .Phantom jets to Israel will upset the military balance in the Middle East and lead to "military escalation and unprecedented risk." He asserted that Egypt had been assured when it accepted the U. S. cease- fire plan that there would be no further shipment of arms to Israel e1cept those- already contracted for, U. S. officials in Wuhington indicated that the Soviet Union bas joined Egypt in rejecting American and Israeli charges that Cairo has violated the cease-fire by moving antiaircraft missiles near to the Sun CanaL Chile Demands Marxist Grant Individual Rule SANTIAGO, Cllll.E (UPI) -Chile's Christian Democratic Party recognized Thursday night that installation of Salvador Allende In the presidency could threaten democratic rule but said it would assure Allende's inauguration if the Marxist president-elect guarantees individual freedom. The Chirstian Democrats, with 75 seats in Congress, can make or break Allende, who must be confirmed by Congress as successor to outgoing President Eduardo Frei since he failed to gain a majority of the popular vote. Congress will convene Oct. 24 as an electoral college to choose between Allende and runner-up Jorge Alessandri, whom he barely defeated in the three-man race. Alessandri has announced he will resign if he is chosen by Congress. ffis refusal to serve wouJd precipitate another election and probable defeat for Allende. Alessandri's supporters oflered to sup. port any man the Christian Democrats run against Allende in the possible un- precedented popular election. In a nationwide radio broadcast Thurs- day night, ~njamin Prado, president of the Christian Democratic Party said, "If Senor Allende lfants the necessary guarantees in a real and effective man- ner . • • he can eXMCt our favorable decision (in Congress)." Christian Democratic Party ex· ecutives said they will accept from Allen· de nothing less than a written guarantee of individual liberties. Agnew Tossing Th e Dictionary ' At Ultra Liberals ..i CASPER, Wyo. '(UPI) -Vice Presi- dent Spiro T. Agnew, pledging ta "blow ~e whisUe" from coast to coast on ultra liberal~ in «?>ngress, launched a six-day campatgn trip Thursday with attacks on • • p u s i Uanimosu pussyfooting" and "troglodytic leftis:ts." The Vice President, who sent rtporlers and audiences alike thumbing through dictionaries, even coined a new word - .. radiclibs" -as he spoke to crowds at s.pringfield, Ill., and at Casper to begin a Sll·State tour. It was at Springfield that Agnew assail- e d ' ' p u s l llanimous pussyfooters ," ' ' troglyodytic leftists," "whimpering isolationism," ''mulish obstructionism," and "radiclibs," the laUer an Agnew word c:ombinl.ng radical and liberal, "There waa a time wben the liberalism of the old (Democratic) elite wu a ven- turesome and fighting pbilo90ptiy -the van,uard pollllcal dogma of a Franklin &ooevel~ a Harry Truman, a John Ken- nedy ," Agnew aaid. "But the old firehort65 are long gone. Today's breed of radical-llberal potturing about the Senate Is about as closely related to a Harry Truman u a chihuahua is to a timber wolf. "Ultra-liberalism today translates Into a whimpering lsolationism tn foreign policy, a mulish obstructionism in domestic policy, and a pusillanimous pussyfooting on the ctlUcal ilsUe ol law and order." tn Wyoming, whtt6 be received an enthusluUc ovation from a crowd of more than 4,000, he pledged to HbJow t.ht whistle" on radical liberals who now were "in 1 mid scnmble to I.be center. I . ' • • , U,I T ........ T hant Optlmu t le ' Despite criticism leveled at him by both aides in the Mid· east conllict, U.N. Secretary General U Thant says he is Of> timistic a b o u t international trend s even in the face of breakdowns in peace talks and the three international hijack- ings by Arab terrorists. He bases his optimism on the emergence of a wider agree- ment among major powers on an eventual Mideast setUe- rnent. U.S.-owne d Tanker Hit Near Arabia LONDON (UPI) -An American-<>wned tanker sank Thursday night after a col· Jision with a Soviet freighter in the Persian Gulf, Lloyds Insurance Un· derwriters said today. A Lloyds spokesman said all but one of the crewmembers aboard the 214,000..ton tanker Aquarius was rescued by the Soviet freighter Svetlogorsk after the col· lislon off the coast of Muscat and Oman. The spokesman said the unidentified crew member was missing. The tanker, owned by the Maritime Overseas Corp. of New York, burst into f1ames shortly after colliding with the Soviet '{essel, the spokesman said. He said the Liberian-registered tanker was bound for Capeto~n. South Africa, with a cargo of crude oil from Khrag lsland, Persia. Second Russian Dancer De fects In Mex ico Ci ty MEXICO CITY (UPI) -The second Russian ballet dancer to defect in a week showed up at the Mexican Interior Department Thursday to ask for political asylum. As in the first case, romance a- gain appeared to be a prime motive be- hind the defection, Giennadi Simonovich Vostrikov, 22, a member of the Moiseyev Ballet Company touring Mexico, was accompanied tD the ministry by a Me:itican belle, who would only say her name was Cristina. She refused to give her last name, saying she didn't want any problems with her employer, a government agency. U.S. Planes Po un d Reds SAIGON (AP) -For the fifth day thO U.S. Alr Force today flew heavy raids against North Vietnamese 1....., in- tensifying tbelr attacks on a Soutb Vie~ namese base near the Laotian Border. Three waves of big ~ bombers drop- ped nearly 300 tons of bombs on bunters, base camps and storage and staging areas wiUtin seven miles of Fire Base O'Reilly. Other B52s hammered North Viet- namese supply depots and trans shipment points on the Laotian side of the border. Smaller U.S. fighter-bombers also kept up attacks closer to O'Reilly, trying to hit mortars, rockets and recoilless' cannon that have pumped about 500 rounds of shells into the base iqid South Vietnamese patrols operating arowid it. Military spokesmen said the fight.er· bombers had flown more than 100 missions since Monday around the base. and that this was about 20 percent of the Air Force's entire operation in Vietnam during that period. SoUth Vietnamese m i I i ta r y head- quarters said its forces w)th the help of American bombers had killed 530 North Vietnamese in operations around O'Reill)'. since July l A spokesman said the South Viet· namese forces also had captured 15l enemy rifles, 33 heavy weapons such as mortars, and 300 mortar round! and rocket grenades. The spok esman said 57 South Viet· namese had been killed and 92 wounded in the operations. "The enemy is trying a new push in terms of softening up -O'Reilly with rockets and mortars," said one informed source. "The enemy is trying to take the place again." O'Reilly is a former U.S. lOlst Airborne Division base reopened by the South Viet· namese 1st Infantry Division last March. It stands atDp a 1,500-foot ridge less than five miles north of Ripcord, another 10lst Division artillery base abandoned under heavy pressure last July 23 after 61 Americans were kllled and 345 wounded in a three-week siege. * * * Cambodia Army Braces for Red Counterattack PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Cambodian government troops who broke the 60-day seige of Kompong Thom are prepared for a counterattack by Communist forcu, a high rommand spokesman said today. He said the troops also have opened the waterways to the southwest of the city without resistance and they now are "completely secure." The lack of resistance probably was because of high flood waters, which enabled the gunboats to rea ch the besieged city and to open the flooded area between KomJ)Ong Thom :~~~~~~~.ke of Toole Sap, 30 miles to the Intelligence reports indicated 11an unknown percentage" of the 2,~man Communist attack earlier this week. Despite the Jack of resistance so far. the spokesman said, "we are prepared for an attack -in fact we are trying to draw them (the Communists) out so that we can kill them." Ull'lt1_... VICE PRESI DENT AGNEW LAUNCHES GOP CAMPAIGN Colli for Victory of Senate Candidate Relph S1T1ilh In llllnol1 7 • bu oil dh toe po '" syi I CO• by ne: I by rot wa to I thr COi ~} tVI ( 1 E c"' bur wit v Hi~ sli.~ mu Jue pre ''" dis ~ drE cor 8Uf tio1 the sai ma 2 F F F Un •h• as tog or1 lun " In sai 1 par fac der Hif to set ga) 1 tod Orf ty t wh ed wh stu aft j d~ .. J• 7 San CleJQenie Capistrano VOL. 63, NO. 218, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CAIJFORNI>: • Today's Final N.Y. Steeb FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER rr. "1970 TEN CENTS Clemente Planners OK Mobile Park Proposal * ' ra s ro State Hin t s Home Park Coastal Freeway Still Faces May Be Junked By I. PETER KRIEG Ol tllt Dallr '°1161 Stiff The Pacific Coast Freeway may not be built at all, a State Division of Highways official disclosed today. William Hashimoto, deputy district director of the Highway Division 7, said today the department is considering the possibility of eliminating the entire freeway from the future state highway system. He said a decision on the fate of the controversial superhighway will be made by ·lop departmental officials within the next si1. months. He indicated that problems generated by tile m8"1'ly cities along the proposed route. like Newport Beach, which doesn't want the road. have led the department" to think about killing plans for it. He said ~lanning for the seclion thrOugh Newport, it.self, has already come to a ttalt He aaid that the Newport segment, even under current polley, would nevtt' be built at all if Newport doesn't want it. Ha shimoto said there is no need to spend the time "rescinding'' the current freeway agreeme111. a project spearhead- ed now by a citizens' group ; he said a let- ter from the city council would do . The stale halted all design work on the freeway section through Newport Beach follwing the introduction of a bill by Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R- Newport Beach) to kill a stretch of the route from Huntington Beach through Corona de\ Mar. Badham·s bill cleared the Assembly but died in Senate committee. Newport Mayor Ed Hirth, following a meeUng with state officials Thursday, first disclosed that wt1rk on Ole Newport .5lret<;b had been halted and the state wouiq not proceed without the· city's blesJinss. · . "They told me the state will aot force a freeway dowtw the tlu'oet or UlY ctty tba' doea not want c:me," lll uML Orange Coast Student,s Responsible for Dress By GEORGE LEIDAL Of 111• 01HJ ~It.I 5!1H High school studenU along the Orange Coast for the most part will share the burden or respo11sibility for their dress with their parents. With the exception of Tustin Union High School District · which adopted a slightly r e v i s e d parent-teacher-ad- ministration formulated code. and San Juan Capistrano Unified whose board-ap- proved 9>de was drawn by parents and students lasl spring, most Orange Coast districts have abandoned dress codes. Newport-Mesa Unified dropped it.s dress code in the middle of last year, ac- cording to Dr. Norman Loats. association superintendent for Jnstructional opera- tions. ' ''We more or less assume that dress is the responsibility of the home." Loats said. "In individual cases, however, we may have to t.elJ a student 'We'd like you 2 Schools Meet F or PTO-hosted Facul ty Luncl1 Faculty and staff of MiS.!lion Vieio and University Park High Schools who will share the Mission Viejo building possibly as long as Christmas ';broke bread" together at Thursday's parent-teacher organization sponsored o r i e n l a I i o n luncheon. "A spirit of cooperatio n definitely was In the air,'' Principal. Robert Boasanko &aid. The luncheon, annually hosted by the parent-teacher organization for Mission·1 faculty, was unique this year. PTO presi- dent Jesse Noriega invited University Higb's teachers and classified employes to join in the banquet for 160 held in the school's multi-purpose room, Bosanko aaid. The cooperative spirit carried over to today's Mission Viejo Golf Course faculty organization luncheon to which Unive.rsi- ty High facu1ty also were invited. Basanko looks for the spirit to continue when the two faculties occupy the crowd· ed Miuion Viejo building on Mondyay when nearly 1,000 University High students wUI be bused to the school for afternoon double 5esslons. The University •Ugh fac\llly was delayed by strikes and may be completed as early as October or as late u next Janull')', ach<>Ol officials have aald. to go home and dress mort ap- propriately. • should he appear .at tehool dressed outrageously." Distri cts abandoning formal , restrictive dress do's and don'ts have for the most part adopted short policy slatemenU noting parents' responsibility for dress. AIJ. districts interviewed said they re- quire that shoes be worn for health and safety reasons. Laguna Beach which is continuing a survey of parent, teacher and student .at- titudes about dress restrictio111 aa adopted "one short paragraph'' con- stituting its dress code, Superintendent William Ullom said. NEW CODE 'l'He "code" outlines students' three ap- pearance responsibiUUea to hlmaelf, the school's image and to the community at large. "The matter of dress and grooming Is best determined in the home," the Laguna Beach district policy not.es. Dr. Ullom believes the new policy will lessen the stra,iPA;etween teachen: and students compared with the forrner strict code, although the new code will require more counseling with parents. Scott Flanagan. assistant superin- tendent of Huntington Beach Union High School District, 'said the board adopted a brief dress policy statement last spring .. Describing it as "simple," Flana11an notes that It atates that a school li a place for learning and that parents are responsible for sending students to school in ~lothing that does not jeopardize or Im- pair the health, safety and welfare of themselve..s or other students. LONG HAIR As long as hair Is clean and not hazardoos by reason of beinc too k>n1 for a student who's around machinery for eJ· ample. any length is acceptable, Flanagan said. "l believe the overwhelming majority of our students will exercise good judg- ment,'' Glanagan said. Group pressures will bring the few who won 't into line, be added. Orange Coast Community College has not had a drea code for the pul lhreeyears. Dean Joseph Kroll aa\d . Kroll said he didn"I undenland why many districts faced "a big ariwnent about the w1y atudenta dren." "Learning hn. nothing to do with the way they look , and that's been proven lime after ume. · "If we're In the business of educating, nothing is to be gained by 1pendln1 time regulating drH.li," be 111ld. A rpoke:im111 for the junior collep !Set DRE COD!:S, Pap I) Councilmen By JOHN VALTERZA °' '""' O.ltt '"" fll lf A resurrected mobile home park pro- po.sal with a stiff, new aet of estheUc restrictions taged on by the developer won unanimous appNival from San Clemente p I a n n In I commissioners \Yednesday. · Despite the overwheliming consen• given to developers Lincoln Savings and Loan, the firm must 1till fa.ct a city councilmen wbo1e record on passa1e of mobile home park propoaab has bee11 seldom if ever. • The commi.uion approved the Lincoln plan which includes an entire perimeter of modernistic modular homes -not coaches -for lhe large lua:ury park pro- posed on land near· the. 13th and 14th fairways of Sborecliff·Country Club. .A pro~ for' ·le~ lµ~riou1,park orf "" ~ '-"°'1 -JR'!l"'!i -'1 from eomnil•klnti'I. \ti' fell -•·t •. ....-deleal,a.Jn -1-lftar cll)o "''-l!~'tlle -mi-' action. The c!Oveiopet'« prMILlol ol the -11· concieved modular homes for the edi:e1 of the park form the main difference between the lalelt plan and the prtvious ill-fated orie. Dana Point architect Riley Marquis, a spokesman for Lincoln, also detailed a new set of strict esthreUc cooditions which his firm propoleS. They include : -None of the convenUonal, painted alumlnum s1din1 would be allowed in the park coaches. Wood t re 1 t m e n t 1 , simulated stucco 1111d other teriab similar to single-family dwellings woukl be stressed. -Roofs cannot have air conditioners, coolers or other 1ad1ttl att.atched. ~vered carports provided by the coach owner and built throua:h buildln1 permits must be built on the side of the living unit. -A covered porch ol at least 50 aquare feet muat be built at entryways. -Materials for roofs must be eilhtr wood or asphalt shingl~type commonly used in single-family houses. Other self-imposed restrictions include landscaping plaris which would be sub- mitted to the park mana11ement by each tenant plus a general landscape layout furnished to the city for approval. Marquis saJd his frim had budaeted more than fl7,000 for slope landscaping alone. CommissioneN, generally pleased with tbe new set of plans, had little comment. A· public hearing on the plan included presentatioos from only Marquis. Op- ponents to the granting of the conditional (See UNCOLN, Pase Z) First 911 Call Gets Response- For Sic k Co yote San Clemente'• historic new t i 1 energency phone number works - even f« sick coyotes. Since the start of the new emera:ency aervice to San CJemente residents a minute after midnight today, police have received one call on the special emer11en- cy circuit. Before dawn tht dispatcher got the first ring on the ti l line and took • report of a sick coyote 1taggerin1 in the hills. A police sergeant dlspitched the alllng predator. And as of late this momin1 no one·else hod uJOd the tll line. · nie new 1enice tnstaHed this week made San Clemente the llnl Southm! Calif°""' city to hove the streamlined emer1ency number. , Among the many advantages an tpeed In rtachtni htlP by calla who ' aomedmel ·mltlhl forset 1 f'!SUlar pollce pllone ·-In __ hatle and ... cll«neOt dl&rini ........... ,. • ea ea DAILY 'II.OT Steff ,,.... • 'WE MUST WORK LIKE THE VERY DICKENS' Writer Hano (left) Speaks on Dog Law Refer•ndum Laguna Canine Owners Circulate Laiv Petition By RICHARD P. NALL OI !ti• Ol llJ l'Hol 111!1 • Incemed by an ordinance that sharply limits the freedom of their pooches, Laguna Beach dog owners Thursday night agreed to fight city hall with a citiz.en referendum . Petition circulators went to work today to .gather voter signatures in an effort to beat a Sept. 18 deadline. If successful, the referenpum would force the council to ejther rescind the controversial dog ordinance or put it to a vote of the people at a regular or special election. The referendum, requiring v al i d signatures of 10 percent of the 8,70l registered Laguna Beach voters, would suspend the ordinance until the ctuncil took one or the other action. POWER TOOL "lf you want to remove it (the ordinance) from your throat like some slinking bone Mr. Lorr has rammed down your throat." Commenting that you can't step on th• people, Hano asked , "are we manly dogs or cringing curs?" He suggested a1so that the people might find a referendum a helpful tool. Art dealer Richard Challis, who has led the dog ordinance fight. said the means by which the thing had been bandied "just got my blood boiling." Challis will appear at the Wednesday council meeling to present councilmen a!" earlier peUUon calling for resClnding the dog law. Il does not ha ve le1al weight to force (See DOGS, Page I) There were also Indications at the high S IChool. meeting attended by about 150 Emmie tew art, persons that the referendum procedure might be used as an expanded "power-to-:"u::te"' ioo1 to counterbalance the Da ncer, Succumbs The new ordinance that takes effect Sept. 19 prohibits dogs on the beaches Private interment is planned at Harbor Rest Memorlal Park for Emmie Stewart, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. It bans them en· retired vaudeville dancer and Iona-time tirely from three parks. Orange Coasl resident who died Wed- The creation of Councilman Edward sci t th r 86 Lorr, It passed by a 3 to 2 vote split Aug. ne .ay a e age o - 19 with Councilmen Roy Holm and Miss Stewart and her sister Jeannette Olarlton Boyd dissenting. \ Cline. both res},dents or La~na Hills, Writer Arnold Hano who researched were known as The Stewart Sisters, the the referendum legal 'aspecU. told the Ori~n~I Danci~g Doll!" during their crowd Thursday that· if the ordinance iS years 1n enterta1.nment. defeated al an election it cannot be re-The petite p~1r played the Orpheum enacted for one year. and Lowe circuits during the heyday or , vaudeville. DEA.OLINE NEAR After thtir retirement from the st.age "We must, if we want to do this. worlc about 50 'years ag1), the sisters: operated like the very dickens ," said Hano, ex· the Stewart Sisten Ballroom ln San pl~g that the deadline Is: next Friday. .Gl!briel. He ur8;ed. a goal of J~ slgnflture:S to Mis,, Stewart CJme to Orange County In mak~ sure there were . suf!lcltnt valid 1949, ·and In r'ecent years lived in Leisure ,aigna~ures to_ pul the referendum ·aero!!. World, ,. ' MOM MORE Sht Is surv\\1~' by htr s1sttr. a nlece, Uritfll the voluntttr petition passt.rs £o Dorb Oicklemall, of Los' Angeles, •nd a ~the park.a, banli;s, supehnarkets and nephew, Donald Gr6erl, ·or La Selv1 lllj' )lla<e thua ·art. people,. lllilo said, Beach, Colli •. • Ille 258Remain Prisoners; Others F1·ee From \Vire Services AMMAN, Jordan -Arab terrorists have abruptly canceled a n-hour deadline on the fate of 258 hostages aboard three jetliners parked in the scorching desert 45 miles from here. No new deadline was aet for the threatened bombing of the planes and alaughter of the hostages, whJch had originally been acbeduled for 7 p.m. (PDT) Saturday. The announcement -apparenUy forc- ed by world opinion -was made in Washington by the St.ate Department late this morning. Developments had continued today ln rapid·flre fashion as the kidnap story of the decade unfolded at Dawson's Field and in Capital cities around the globe. The number of hostages had swelled overnight to 151, with the birth of an American baby aboard oce bl.jacked plane • J<\l'lul women •nd chlldrfn -111111 afraid !or i....i __ held. -tho plhtS -were freed earlier by the pr· rilla Popular Front for tha Uberatloa of Palestine. President Richard Nixon ordered arm- ed guards to fly on an U.S. airlines - foreign and domestic -beglMing tb.1a: Saturday. Leaders throughout the world .appealed lo the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) to free the 258 cap- tives, whether or not their r111110m demands are meL The PFLP w.ant.s imprisoned gue.rrUl11 In Jsrael and Europe released in t i• change. Liberal governments of Middle Eastern atates. meanwhile, were among thole urging tbe PLFP not to carry out IU ter- rorist threats. Iraq and Syria branded the aeries of four hijackings as irresponsible and unrevoluUonary. President Nixon has reportedly vetoed any possibility of direct military in- tervention against the revolutionaries to free American captives. Six C.130 cargo planes are deployed at Incirlik, Turkey, bOwever, about one hour 's flying time from the Jordan-Syria border. . Maneuvers have placed the U.S. Si:lth Fleel in the Mediterranean nearby, ap- parenUy to provide support -if necessary -in evacuating f re e d hostages. One · radio broadcast !rom Beirut Lebanon, by the radical Central Com· mittee of the Palestine Resistance Move- ment, charged the U.S. is preparing an invasion. "Close ranlul ln the face of thiS ad· vancing peril.'' the group implored. Optimism was spreading, however, In (See IDJACK, P•ge II Orufe Wea tiler Clouds will hide the sun while the ocean breer.e cools things off along the Orange Coast this week· end. Temperatures wlll dip to 68, while holding at a further inland. INSmE TODAY S u r I l no nathmirut.t from acro.ss tht 11atio11 are honing in on Hunti11gton Beach wlltrt the 1910 national champiomhips will bt held ntzt wtcknd. Stt SpotU, Page 15. llrlllf • MtflM •H IMllft• ,, ~· ,.... ,. c .. 1""°11 J NltltMI ,..._ 4-f Clledll119 u, 11 ~--C-IY I c.......... ft.ti ltMl-..tl n.M C-kt tJ IJl'ril "'1w It C~ 11 IMm 16-11 DMlll Neflcft t l!Mtl Mettlth 1 .. 11 lllll9riel ,... ' T"'""'" ·t1 llil!lllCI 1 .. 11 "'""" tt.N ........... II WM""' 4 AM ........... U w--. ...., 1)-IJ IMlllP • 'llhrW ..... W ~ uc--• ........, n·• -. •• fl DAILY PILOT F•ido), Stpttm~" 11, 1970 Cycle Park Approved Clement,e Planners OK Biking Ar~ San Clemente's mln1blke and motorcy- cle park whlc.h became the object of stormy public he1rlnp three months 110 btttu:d by phmn1na commissioners Thunday. Planner• advocated e1tendlna: the park's permit for at least two years. The act.Ion. which must be revi,wed by city councilmen next Wednesday, came wilh a clean bill of health -marred by only a few minor problems. A poll of all city departments ahowed only three minor complaints, which are expected to be cleared up In coming days. Assistant Police Chief Stanley Matchett said that for a lime. the park's butcher- paper signs erected in an attempt t.o d1rett riders to the park entrance were tattered and ugly. The police administrator also cittd the dusty cooditiona o1 Ille <nlran« road to the part. '!be mlnlNr ol Ille Methocllat church which lies next to one end of the 700-acre park, said that in lhree montM of opera- tion of the neighboring reert1Uonal facill· ty, tht. noise of a cycle was heard onty once during church services. Ttlat cycle wall being driven by 1 park employe who was checking fences. It never happened 11ain. Spokesmen for the Mormon-arn.uated Seab reeze RecreaUonal APoci&\iOn seek- ing the permit renewal promised th11.t if the two-year extel'lSion of the permit were dusty condition of the entrance road to to be ratified by counC'ilmen, permanent signs and dust-control oil would be used to eliminate I.he two point! of objection by police. The par~ was launched last June alter a noisy public hea.riT!g before councilmen. Opponents to Ille park howled that the bl and """ ,ivo p "undulrable element" ol eycllatl would mike tho park a disaster. They were outnumbered , however, by bike devotee! who signed petiliom by the hundreds. Since then the park's ope.ration bas been smooth with only the small number of minor complaints. The specific terms of the suagested ~mmlss.ion approval say that the permit would be continued so long as the month- to.month lease with the Mormon church exist! for the park property. If the lease remains alive for two years, then the operators of the park once more must return to city hall for renewals. The ·,listing permit -originally granted for lhree months -expires next Thursday - a day after the city council receives the: bid by the park operatori. Chicano_ Leaders Incensed Lawyer Pleas At '.Whitewash' Inquiry With Arabs LOS ANGELES (UP!) -Some Mex· lean-American leaders were incensed ~ day about what they beJieve will be • ••whitewash" of law ofl.icers in the cor- oner's inquest in Ult! dt!atb of newsman Ruben Sa1uar durini rioUng in East Loi Angeles. Most of the Mexican-American spec- tators trooped out or the inquest room twice Thunday arter denouncing hearing officer Nonnan PJtt!uck as a "racist' and the lestimony as preju<liclol. Four women and five men were serving as a jury to determine whether Salazar's death during the violence which took two other lives and left more than $1 million damage was accidental or "at tht! hands of another," that is, lntt!nUonal. Any ~ tecution is up to the district attomt!y. Salazar, news director of Spanlah- language television 1tation KMEX and columni5t for the. Los Angele• Times, died after a l~ inch wide, 9~ long tear gu projectile was shot by a aherilf'• deputy and struck bis head. OUic.ws said they fired the tear gas in· to tht! Silvu-Dollar Bar aftt!r ttw:y bad a report of a man with a gun insJde. Hurricane Ella Swirling Slhwly Onto Gulf Coast ..tL ' BROWNSVILLE,.'l'n:. (UPI) -Small but rwtft Hurricane Ella nirled flO.m lle- an-hour winds, lorrential rain and high tide! todey toward 'the coui. of Teua and Mellco. 'lbouaencls fied. 1be u:s. Wt!ather Buteau said the sum- mt!r's fifth hurricane would hit-the ahoreline late today south of Brownsvlllt!. Ella picked up 111'ngth but slowed Its unusually speedll ooune. atro1S the Gulf of Mexico during the morning. '"Ibe center should move inland near or a Utt.le IOUth o( Brownsville bt!fore dark," the Weather Bureau aid. The south Texas coast had not yet recovered from Hurricane Celia, the most destructive stonn in the statt!'s history. It raked the short! and haided 250 milea inland 39 days ago. "I am corarned, you ain't kidding,'' said T. W. Anderson o( Corpus Christi, Tex., where Celia struck, killing 11 persons and causing a billion dollars damage. Ella churned through the gulf at I! miles an hour. At noon EDT, the storm's center was located near latitude 24.5 north and longitude 95.3 west or about 156 miles east-eoutheast of Brownsvillt!. Tides of eight feet and six incht!s of rain were forecast for coastal areas in south Te1.as and northern Mexico. DAILY PILOT N..,... .... HMtl ..... .... L..-1tec• ,. ...... ,....,. c.... ..... s.. er s111w 01.ANH COAST ,.Ul l.9$MlN0 COlll,.Alf't' loitrt N. Wo14 "'"lftrtt or.I ~lllllw J•c• a. c,,,.r,v Vk9 f't"t~.11 .. 1 -Gnw-ol MMlllr 111111111 1Ctt¥il ldlltr Tho11111 A. Mur11hi111 Mlf\ll"'9 Ellllw llith1r4 '· Nill So\lltl °'-C-tt 611"'" Offlcff c.11 Mntr m ~st t •v '""" NtWfill'I lllCll: 2211 W•I t 1l .. 1 ""'"""' u-lttcll: m 11<-1 ,._ No.1111i..,...., a-: 17111 tHdl ~!t.,_N 1111 C""-11; lOJ Nori~ ll (-Int .... C».llV "llOT, wllll w:"lldl .. ~ Wl9 Mt•..,.,_ .. ii ............. 41111\1 •t.i S..... eay Ill _.,,N M l!""" fw ~ t e.:cll. ........ aMcl'I. c.11 ~. """''llltlfll ... 0 ... ,_ ... \11111,, .............. ..... ....._. ., .. ..,.. 0r-c-1 J"*11111'°"1 ~ ,,..,,;,.. ...,.ft,_ .... , 1:111 .... , •.oit• tl'4~ .,,_, k«fl, .... -W..t a.r Slr.ei, CO.tt 11MW. tll:;' • tJl41 64J-4l.ll Ct J W Al\twtkl .. 642°1611 ht a....t. Al "'°P•' s tu l•l•••ers 4tJ-44JI ~ 1'1',. 0,..1'111' C-.t ""'°""lfll ~,,,. ... ... ""'.... llhn1t11-. Hftttl•• rMlltl' ., ·-i.-11 Mnlll _., " .......... "'""""' -"' ...... ...... .,.,,.,_. ._., ~ ....... "!41 II .,...,.., .. Kt! .,. CO.It ......_ tllll'lntlit, S.C.r1911111 .-, ... ,,,... UM -..tNr1 1W -II U .. -"""'' ..,tllftry ... liMTliint.. U ,90 -~If. Some 20 persons, including members of a "blue-ribbon'• committee from the Olicano community, walked out dlU'ing tbe afternoon RSaioo. when attorney-spec- talor Oscar Acosta shouted at PitUuck, "You're a disgrace to your proft!SSlon." Acosta and the others were upset by the allowing of a aberlff'I department video tape which depicted the iniUal scenes of rock and botUe throwing and bleeding officers during the national Chicano moratorium. parade and rally. He said Jt was "not only irrelt!Vant but prejudicial" ill • hearing illlo the death of Salazar. Esteban Ton-es. president of tbe Congresa of Mexican-Amt!rican unity, a coalition of 3:Kl community groups, said the bearing was a whitewash. "We are not going to tolerate It and stand thue ind be insulted this way,'' said Torres, wbo organized the blUt!·rib- bon l'OUJ>. Comic to Launch Artists' Forum In Beach Sunday ColJ\edlaD Jonallwl Wimer• will li411P' laundl Proopectus.Art "IO, a ahowlng of more than ?C» worU by 1eadlng Callfomia ~· when Ille ahow opens ,Sunday night~ the Huntington Center Mall Jn Huntloiton B<acb. P.romoters or the charity art show, bill· ed • 11 one of tile largest of lls type In . ' Orange County, said Win ters will pro- bobly appear during the preview openlnf of.the show at I p.m. Sunday. Admission to·th, Sunday night preview Is ·is per perSOtl, with tht! proceed! goin& for establish art scholarships on a yearly basis. Prospectus-Art '70 will be opened free to the public .starting Monday and run- ning through Sept 25 on the mill at Edingu Avenue and Beach Boult!vard, The charity event ii co-sponsored by the city of Huntington Beach, Golden West COilege and the Huntington Centt!r Shopping Center. Jason Wong, director of the I.Ang Beach Museum of Art. is coordinating the Huntington Beach show. 'Illree jlldges Will award $2,500 In prize:s to the top artists in the show. One $400 award will be handed to the arUst whose painting earns the most votes of the public attending Sunday's openi ng. Money collected Sunday night will be given to International Art Scholarshlps, an organi:r.ation of business and pro- fessional persons interested in promotion of the fine arts. IAS will handle IMUal tcholarship arrangements. For Sirhan BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -A lawyer for Sirhan Sirhan called on all the Arab goVt!mments todly to intt!rvene with the United States to spare the life of the corr victed assassin of Sen. Robert F. Ken· nedy. l•The Arab governmentr .nd people must make a concerted t!ffort to help Slrha.n," George Shibley told a news con· ference hen!. Sirhan's chief •itomey ts Lu le e McKis.sack. Shibley, who is from Los Angelt!S1 1s hi.s associate. Shibley .said he would not pn!s.s Palesti- nian guerrillas to seek the release of Sirhan as part of a deal for the freedom of 280 hostages the gut!nillas hoJd on a de.sert i.lntrlp in north Jordan. The Popular Front for the Llberation of Palestine, wblch is holding the hostages, repeatedly bu denied Jt would include Sirban's freedom in tts ternu for releas- lng the hostages. Shlblt!y said Arab individuals and associations in the Untted States were unable to render Sirhan any assistance "because they are tmified by Ille FBI." He .said Sirhan's lawyers planned another appeal to the U.S. Supreme CoW't to change the death sentence passed by a California court on Sirhan la.st year. But It migbl !Ue a J<q to have the appeal ,~lle l4dedl t • ~l ,f siriwi was -rn a Dtlth 11ow loolatioo cell today after ~Ing subdued by tear gu cfurinc a teqiper tontrum In which be threw food at a guard. The outburst came when the 28-year-old prisoner rt!fu!led to" give up his tray, fork and spoon .after a Wednesday afternoon meal, Warden Louis S. Nelaon reported Thursdey. Sirhan w1s given a sedative and removed to a cell without acl't!a to newspapers, radio or television. Prison business m1nager Irving Rlttt!r .said Sirhan apparently had become upset ovt!r reports of his mother's unsuccessrul attempt lo go lo the Middle East in con· nection with airliner hijackings by Palestinian guerrillas. The hijackers reportedly at one time demanded Sirban's freedom in ex change for release of more than 200 passengers held hostage in Jordan. Thi! State Department d e la I n e d Sirhan's mother, Mary, in New York and revoked the passports of two attorneys traveling with her. Ritter said Sirhan demanded to talk to a prison official about the silualion and had to be subdued alter being inrormed it was a state holiday, Calirornia Admission Day, and no top authority' was im· mediatt!ly available. Nelson said the tear gas was used because Sirhan could have hurt himself "they way he was acting." He "could use the fork against himRlf or he could break pieces oU the metal tray and use them as a cutting instrument," Nt!lson explained. Prom Page 1 COAST DRESS CODES ••• noted that this year'a lncoming class •·was the neatest. best dressed class ever.'' Meanwhile, administrator& at Tustin Union High School and Ca pistrano Unified School District have vowed to en· force their district's board approved regulations. While Tustin limits boys sideburns to the "bottom of the ear" ind forbids "nared" sideburns, Capistrano limits length of sideburns to an ''Inch below the ear" and al\ows flared sideburns, but not muttonch-Op whiskers. Tustin allows no mustaches or beards. C.pistrano does -at leasl to tha corner o( the lip. Both schools require that airls' un- dergarments not be allowed to show • Tustin &iris may wear cuttottes and pant dresses, but not 'lacks. Pants are accepbble at C.pistrtno, but not the "tie-dyed" variety, "whatevtr they are," Superintendent Tr um a 11 Benedict said. Rtpnllng length of gltls' d•eues and skirts, C.piltrano district's codt! ls very "with it'' fashlon·wlsc. The code circumspectly adv!SM that dresses be no shorter than a firl's finc'ut.ips nor longer than the ankle. The midl safety falls within that ranee. Sheer, see-through blouses, backless dresses and bare-midriff ouUits will not be tolerated at CapistrltlO. The code makes no menUon of brassieres. Boys at Capistrano may wear khakis, slack, le vis or bermudas, but not "cutoffs shorter than bennuda length or unhem· med. Shirts other than squared off sport .shirts must be worn tucked in, B'enedict said. Tank-type shirts are not allowed . Both TusUn and Capistrano noted that 11as a last resort" failure to comply with the dress code could result in suspension until a student complies. William 1.ogg, Tustin superlntt!ndenl, said dress codes wtrt! necessary to pro- vide a "midpoint that fs not totally of- fen sive to either e:od of the conliDuum of students." Unlike cotleaes, he noted, "public high schools havt compulsory attmdance rules and students come from all backgrounds morally and rplritually!' Adm11unc 111111 It la diUlcull to come by "empirical evidence" that dress may in-- terfere wlth the educaUonal proceu, Zogg conlended on the~·~ o( bis "years of xhool e:rperie.nce" that It does. "Over the years I've seen many fads exhibited and most were evtntually found wanllna,'' he said, all.bough he btUtveii eome fads ;,become fashJon ind finall)' become accepted by the community." • DAILY "ILOT S"lt P:Jlt• Fr om P•1e 1 HIJACK ... .. W ashlngton alter a Coni:resalonal con- .ference that negoUations to free the host.ages will succeed. , laraell Premier Golde Me~ bas malto talned a hard line, re!ualn& lo ..,.. lo free !,000 Ar•b guerrillas. "Are we to release these people In some sort of ceremony or other so they can come back and repeat their aclj?" she said, her voice biller with &flier. Sources in Jerusalem indicated she may be forced to go back down . The PFLP, meanwhile , freed 60 of 116 women and children first removed from the planes today and returned passports. They were to be Oown to Nicosia, on the Jsland of Cyprus, by Jordanian Airlines. Diplomatic sources said It was un· derstood the remaining people im· prisoned at the Intercontinental Hotel in Amman ""ould also be freed. THOMASll'IA GUNN RAISES DOG LOVERS' BAT TLEC RY In Laguna, Power to the People and Man'• Best Friend Tough conditions existed at Dawson's Field where the TWA, BOAC and Swissair jetliners are parked, but an International Red Cross team was doing its best. From Page 1 DOGS •.. council action but was circulated in hopes of showing the brt!adth of opposition to the law and changing at least one council vote. This could strike down the law. Tabul ators of the petiton signatures said it had already been signed by 2,348 persons. A breakdown showed that 1,59'.cl were Laguna Beach residents; 378 were under 21 ; 1,198 were aduJt residents; 756 were. visitors; and 265 were vlsilors under 21. Challis reminded the crowd that Lorr sometime before Aug. 4 had said, "The proposed ordlnance is dead at least for the time being" and that "mysteriously this revised ordinance was introduced'' Aug. S -by Lorr. Challis said he believes It absolutely impossible to enforce the new ordinance and said ''we are trying to get one or the (three yes voting) councilmen to see ou r viewpoint." Hano called for volunteer referendum petition circulators and most hands went up. Others were signed up to copy the names of dog owners from the license records at city hall. Theft! was discussion of a more tqultable ordinance but the consensus seemed that the first order of business was to get the offending law off the books. Thomasina Gunn, local ACLU presi- dent, brightt!ned the proceedings by holding alort an Inexpensive homemade scoop to handle dog dtoppin11s. She s~g­ gesled it mighL be manufactured by Girl and Boy Scouts and aold for SO cents to do&OW!l!'"· From Pagel LlNCOLN ••. use permit did not appear. Commissioners agreed that because of the Isolated nature of the park -no housing tracts have been built near the area .....;. the park would serve as a good use for the land in quest.ion. The unanimous action, however, does not seal the approval for the park plans. City Councilmen have in past actions been much harder to convince that the Short!Cliffs art!a land would be best used for coach parks. Laguna Nigi1el Merger Boost For Projects Takt'Over of the Laguna 'Niguel Corp. by Avco Community Developers Inc. is expected to accelerate development of the included properties. This was the assessment lodii.y of Robert L , Follett, executive vice pre~i­ dent and general manager of the opera· tion. He replaces \Villiam Beck of Laguna Niguel. "It will very definitely accelerate development," said Follett. He said while Laguna Niguel was primarily a land developer setup to then sell the develop- ment, "we are essentially a land developer and builder." He said his corporation would be bring- ing new products to the development -that will speedup this year -con· ventional homes but in a variety of styles and sizes. La guna Niguel Corp. had about 8,000 acres of which more than 5,000 remain to be developed, Follett said. The dc?veloped acreage includes more than 1,500 homes and nearly 6,000 residents. Avco Community Developers lnc. is a· land development subsidiary of Avco Corp which did an $898 million business in products and services in 1969. Its many su bsidiaries include Seaboard Finance and Avco Savings and Loan Associations and Carte Blanche credit card operation. It was announced this week that 81 per· cent of the outstanding common shart!s and 88 percent of the outstanding war- rants of Laguna Niguel had been es:- changed for Avco Community Developers common stoc k warrants and cash. A half share or Avco Community and $2.75 cash was offered for each shart! of Laguna Niguel Corp. The offer period has been extended to Oct. 2 to allow Laguna Niguel holders who have not done so to exchange their shares and warrants. Disease Fight Set WASHINGTON <UPI) -'l'he House has voted to authorize the 5pending of $165 million during I.he next two years to help the states fight polio. diphtheria; measles, mumps, ~hooping c o u g h , syphillis, gonorrhea and tuberculosis. "It is not exactly a luxurious ma ternity home," said Red Cross aides who delivered the baby born to tht! unlden· tifled young American woman during the night. Several women aboard the planes are also pregnant and the Red Cross included rubber pants and diape rs with a shi pment of 1,000 prepackaged meals and medical supplies. Following the Washing ton conrerence, Sen. Mjke Mansfield said the President's tactics have complete Senate support. ··r think the gove.rnment has done everything it possibly could ," he said . The order placing gun-carrying federal agents aboard all U.S. fl ights -at a $3 per-passenger tax -offers other deadl y_ possibilities, according to some. Najeeb Halaby, chairman of Pan American Airways, said hi.s line will cooperate but the Jormer FAA ad- ministrator said they must be carefully trahled and commanded by pilots. · Once opposed to carrying arms themselves, the jetliner captains are no longer so reluctant, according to one spokesman. "'This is a new league we are in," he explained. ··Earlier hijackings were the work of 100 percent losers, loners, kooks, men who had not made it," he ~ontinued. "Now there's a new twist -the organized use or hijack techniques for in· temational political purposes." Reporting rrom Dawson Field, Unllt!d Press InternatiO'l'lal correspondent Ray- mond Wilkinson described one. Abu Ezz, wearing a Lenin badge on his camouflage uniform, gestured with his Russian AK47 automatic rifle at the planes shimmering under the 100 degree. plus desert sun. "They are learning something," the PLFP chieftain said proudly, adding his revolution is being taught to the 258 hostages. Country Ooh Loses Golf Gear A thief has cleaned $600 worth of golf ing gear oul of a frequently used storage room at the Mesa Verde Coun try Clu b in Costa Mesa. Barry Sutherland. employe of the private club at 3000 Clubhouse Drive, told police Thursday the loot included balls, bags and clubs, as well as clothing. He said it is almost impossible to keep the equipment room locked during periods of heavy play. ~ ...... of An .!Jnvilalion lo Quiel G/egance ~ Marchesa by Drexel. We believe -is the smartest most un ique collec- has been de signed in years. This grou~ features complete liv ing, dining and occasional to choose from. Our shipments ha ve ·just arrived and a quantity is now available for viewing at our showrooms. Be among the first to see this unusual group, -or better yet have it delivered. For a new Marchesa tion that experience Marchesa. . In furn iture you can't miss with Professional interior design service is availa- ble fo r the asking . Our designers have many years of experience and AID decorators are available. Whether it's draperies, carpeting, wallpaper or furniture , your needs will be met at Teel von Heme rt Inc ove t t ., r wen y years in the beach area . DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE 7ed• " NIWPORT BEACH 1727 Wolh:llff Dr,. 642·2050 OPI N FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH 345 No•th Co&Jt Hwy. 49~51 OPEN FR IDAY 'T IL 9 ..... '"' "-....... 0.-.. Cent>r ..... ,J6J Profe1.afon1I lntfflor Doslgnora Avallablo-AID-NSI D , Friday, Stpttmbet' 11, )q70 DAILY PILOT 9 Pat Brown Publishes Book Called 'Reagan-and Reality' SACRAMENTO (AP) in his attitudes and political two terms as governor 1 1 ' The major It y of differ in basic patterns or "Twenty years ago, Nixon aberration of Californian anct political men ta JI t y he Gov, Reagan today strongly temperament and · 1 t • n d s defeating Nixon for the Californians were ripe for a political conduct. · \\'8S a har!h and negative Americ<1n . poUUcs, but I represents will be with l1! fo: ~=~~~es po~t~ca;·~:1e .. ~~ above and outside of the governorship in 196!. radically different type of "President Nixon respects political voice in caJ1t9rn!a -='='='""'=l=lh=at=h=ee=an=d=lh=e=r=a=d=ic=al==m=a=ny=ye=a=rs=,="=B=r=ow=n='='=l"=·=. Richard Nixon 20 years ago, c ompromi.sing, conciliatory, He lost to Reagan, the 59-governor and immense I y and is a part of our system or and nationally.'' • r fonner Gov. Edmund G. moderate vortex of year~ld former actor, by one receptive to the personality, representative government," Time and service i n Brown says in a new book. government," writes Brown. million votes in 1966. style and philosophy of Brown w r It es , "Governor govemment have mellowed Nixon has mellowed over the The official publication date Summing up why he lost, Reagan," writes Brown, now a Reagan detests that system Nixon and his politlcaJ views, years leading to t he or the $6.95 volume, from Brown admits : prosperous attorney living in and seeks to tarnish it in the Brown said. presidency, adds Brown in tbe Praeger Pub l i ah er s, is "And to be frank, a majority Beverly Hills. public mind and tear it down . book titled "Reagan and Wednesday -two days after of Californians were simply Brown ch a r a c: t e r i z ea Jn the state budget." Reagan does not fit into that Reality." Republican Re.agan kicks off bored 'with me, the oth'er Reagan's fii-st tenn as Brown adds, "Reagan today kind of political tradition, Brown doubts that Reagan his re-election c a m p a t g n Democratic state officers. and negative and destructive. strongly r e s e m b I e s the Brown says. FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER PHONE 642-4321 wilt change politically. against Democrat Jes,, Unruh. the Democratic party in He says Reagan and Nixon Richard Nixon of the late "I am tempted to think - "Reagan i4. .f.iJ:ed and rigid _.:B::ro:.w:::":::·_:•:.:Ile:mocr=:.:•:~.:serv=::.:':d-'.g~ene=r.:•I::..'_' ________ •:r:.:•--•::l::lk:•_:in:;.:m::•::•;:Y_:w::•Y::':.· .:b:•l:__.:194-0s=;_and:_:. ;_ear=.l:::Y_:1:::950s:_:·__; __ __:•::·i::•hl:u::l:::IY_-_:lh::•::t_:Re.:;:::!ga::n:.is:.:•:::•-===================== Library Readies For 1976 WASHINGTON (AP) -Jn Jts own scholarly way, the Library of Congress already had started the 1 9 7 6 celebration of the 2 O O th annJversary of this nation's birth. The library has established a special American Revolution Bicentennial office which will provide i nformation to scholars planning to d i g through thousands of books, manuscripts, diaries a n d letters of the period. The library anticipates an avid search of its records by scholars searching for the meanings ol the revolution and its relevance to America today. "The celebratiOn in 1876 got people to thinking about these things," Robert A. Rutland said in commenting on how wealthy men of that day began collecting v a r i o u s documents and letters cf revolutionary times. Rutland, author of three books on the revolution and a professor at the University of California at Los Angeles, is head of the library's special American Revol ution Bicentennial office. With him are four other historians w o r k i n g on bibliographies and guides to manuscripts in the library, including official papers and soldiers' diaries and letters back home. · The library also has named a special advisory board of ten leading historians who are specialists in early American history. The library has no way of knowing how many new books on the American Revolution are coming out, Rutland said in an interview. "Researchers always are at work here," he said. The library has published a selected reading list of 340 titles on the American revolution, meant for the general reader. A major project is the publication of Letters of Members or the Continental Congress as a supplement to the eight volumes of such letters published between 1921 and 1936 by Edmund C. Burnett. The library also plans a major exhibit on the American Revolution and t r a v e I i n g exhibits to go around the country. For anyone who would like a bit of Amarican history on the wall of his den or living room, the library plans to issue facsimiles of engravings and rare maps of revolutionary times. PUT WH IN YOUR POCKO Sell unw&t1ttd Sterns with a DAILY PILOT O&nttlfd Ad. f PHONI 642-5678 NtmtMll~ l•u.s C-P t ....... PRE-SEASON DEAL! WE'RE BACKWARDS. WE LOWER PRICES AT THE BEGINNING INSTEAD OF TIE END. FREE PRE-SEASON SPECIAL STANDING FIREPLACE If some lummox reads this ad we'll catch it. He'll think the thing is frff and offer to whup th• fireplac• deportment head. U'm btitting ou th• on• in the pink trunks.) A beautiful ilnplac• you don't have to brick or mason in. Compl•t• with base. Th• other guys sell it for more without the baa• a wish lb• boss would let me use their names. If you went then you'd still come back to us. unless you wer• a masochist.) - SATIN BLACK AVAILULE IN COLORS Got th• thing In Tang•rln•. Fir• !llf<i. AYOCado. and White. (But •till J:IO Strowbeny). 13987 • LINDY PENS Th• big pin •Ith the w•ll thot a)mo•l do••n'I run dry. (You·n nollc:e. J l(l:id 'Almo1t'), Color•. a bucketful!. REG. 59< LABEL GUN Mcik• o labeJ Jor hi1 book• ond maybe. ju1t maybe, h•ll Hnd them again and not ho¥• to buy new, A good gadget. 99c SPONGE BUCKET A bucket of tponge• In a S Qt. buc:k•l. (X••P the butbt o.nd lhl'<lw th• 1pong11 away.). Ch•ap at the pric•. or moni. 67CQ~. CUSTOM MOUNT FIRESCREEN Fil• an opening up to '° inch•• h•hlcb 1bould to.b COr9 ol mr bl'<ltMl-in·law mouth.) No big l111tallalloa. ten1!011. type mowall.1:19. Dtaw pulls, 1299 CAST METAL FIREPLACE DECORATOR KEY Very h.avy ll•m. {though lh• kid1 would lik• that.) Addi a little 1om11hing to your llr•plae• .c•n•. Wh•n you Jll:1d out whot lt 11. l•ll 111•. larv•r •b•• crrallo.b!• Jew hlggn 101 (ha. haJ. 299 ' . •, 1 4 PIECE TOOL SET Satin blatk flni1h, Th• ••! intlud11 lh• btuth. th• poker, lh• 1ho••l. and lhat neo:t old •land. {And you'r• •tutk with a go1 fir1pla:e1, tough.) 497 SHAG CABPET TILE 67c ~p.r ADHESIVE Thi1 look• like oboul 110.00 a yard 1tult, bul lt'1 bet11t he<:au11 you don't ho•• wait• ta cul olf and 1011. In a choic• oE color1 to inolch out roll corpet. Big J2xl2 !nth 1quar11. REGISTER TODAY FREE CLASSES 2000 LB. HOIST Mu1l b9 lh1 d11r 11a1ora. or the cruto llxlng l.O:llOn. bec:GUI• you lolk1 are buying th••• thh,01 Ilk• hotc:ak11. (Maybe_lf1 th• botcall• 110101:1?1 299 ZODIAC BULLETIN BOARD. You 011rolo;iic:ol lfP•• will gr01J¥• on thl1, Th• r11t of you will just like lh• color1 and pattern• end hang thing• on It. 147 COLOR TY ANTENNA Thll pull• Jn th• weak 1lgnol1, 9reo:t lor block ond whl!•, or color TY. Many dlpol••· gold onodl1•d. and G ••I of Jn1tructlon1 you Just gottG II•. J87 LA MIRA.DA CO MMUNITY ROOM W•dn•1day Ev1ning1. 7:30 to 8:30 PM. Thi trowd will all b• th1r1, We'll hav1 goodl11. a 11111• cup of coll•• and giv• GWGY 1om• dOClt pd•••· CHAPIN SPRAYER Do11bl1 dom• lop. hand pump, adju1tahl• wand Jrom )•I to fin• 1prcry. for anr liquid J1rlill1•r or inMCtM;ide, Wi1 h carrylng 1trap, 31'< 699 GAL Septtmber l& "f ini1hlng of furnilur• cmd D•toupaging" Sep!1mb1r 23 "How To ln1to.IJ Ah.unlnum Windows and D01Jr1·· by lh• ! Hi.Lite Corporation. September 30 ''How to Antique and Gold L•al" by Glldd111 Company. FRAMES Th••• ani beautiful. JI you don't think you gol a buy you C1in't gonna think anything'• "•TY much good. S"xl0" ... 2.99 9"xl2" ••. J.44 12"xI6" ... 3.99 BIKE LOCK Th• 11rong d•al with lh• choin thing and th• comblno.tlon loc:k. I call It a cable, who Jinow1, (11'1 a cho.i1s. dummy), 147 SMOKED OR COLD VEINED MIRROR TILE PUSHY BROOM Slilf bri1U11. It JnCh bcrrdwood. haDdle. <t tough thing lo Mat. An 1v1n tough•r thhlf 10 whack with. JI OAILV PILOT SC r,1d1y Stpttm~ 11 1910 Your "/Jlonev's Worth OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List C e e H I D II HEW YOll:I( l""I • P.rkl•v't tomplti. I•• Ntl 111" •• S 0 ar t, .............................. ,N•,. Ywlt ltodl EllCIM'l!lt jll'OC•• lMJ.I Mltfl ...... CN C:llt 1111&.I Mltll U9 Cine 0-. rl ls e PS I' hit Met 1 \ NASO Losll"tll for Thursday, S.ptembor 10, 1170 '"""' '-,_,,. ~fi~·~£ ,~ \t lt' J, ! \' f,;,£ir'.l'J '~ \i~ \J~ " + '' By S\'L\11A PORTER ln only %5 of the past 100 years has Ulf' cost of Jiv ing or American fa milies declined .and the US dollar gai'l'led ln huveng powtr -and almost without eJ1t!:pl1()n those v;'tre. years of nationaJ cr1s1s ln the pOsl Civil War tra the posl \\orld \V3r 1 era t ht catastrophic depression ()f Lht 1930s Wh1\t Americans ¥. I I h steady jobs and s a v I n g s nesteggs benefited from the increases tn lhe buying power ar lhf' dollars they were earning and saw1n~ 111 those 25 ve.ars tht1r good fortune was dwarfed by tht suffering or lhe: mdhons without JObs without earn1ng11 without cash m the bank In 58 of !he past 100 years the cost ()f J1v1ng has climbed sbarply and the dollar has t11Jumped In buying power In ()nly 17 years 1n a whole century have prices .and 1he dollar s purchasing po w e r bttn suffic1enlly stablt to warrant the JUdgmen1 that fa1n1l1es hv1ng then wl're h()Jd1ng their ()Wn 1n lhe marketplace Each generalion born 1n the past 100 years has had Jess than one chaoce out of JO that the nestegg ()f dollar!! it worked so hard to earn and accumulate would ma1nta1n Its value ln all the 30-year periods since 1870 -each 3(1 years equaling a genera11on -lht chances have been 91 out ()f 100 that the cost ()f J1 v1ng ""ould raise and the dollar would shrink in value Inflation has been and inflation 1s the way or life 1n the Uruted State11-and 1n the. "\liorld -of the 20lh century In ract even thal llal icy s l all!mtnl 1s far too C::O'llservahve to be accurate 'T'he h1stor1a n Arnold J Toynbee has reported that 1n 6000 years of record ed history he has no! found any instance 1n which the value or any currency of any country m any era has gained over a prolonged period of time The Vl.Nlent 1nnat1on of Uie Vietnam era flt never has been officially declared a war you kMw) IS starting lo sub- side The annual Tale of rise 1n hv1ng costs is now under 6 percent as against 8 percent a year .ago and the rate 1s heading Jower Realists hope that the pact' of increase 1n l1vmg costs can be brought down lo the • percent a year range 1n the neJ:t few years Few obJechve aulhor1t1es expect that rate 1n the near future though and many think we will be lucky 1( we can curb the general sinnual rate or rise 1n prices to :i ~ to 4 percent in the ne~t fi ve years A rate of rise ()f 4 percent a ) ear would put prices 2U percent higher ()O]y five years from now If you compound a ~ percent .annual rate during the 1970s you pul pnces almost SO percl'nt higher a .si ngle decade from now No matter what percentage }OU choose you must (.'{)nclude. that this l~ye;:ir span \11111 be a period or relentlessly r1s1ng prices and a steadily declining dollar value. 1 000 S 0, Oil PAINTINGS WHOLHALI WAl!lHOUSE OPIN TO THI PUlllC SS and up Ult E EDINCl!lt. 'IA.NTA AHA 1'HCNI: 1u-. • DEALERS WAJ(TED ~ ~ I NEED 2 MEN Cir WOMl:NI e WM ti... NASD ••UI 1111 u,_ • w ......... ,.. • H-M1Cut1f•I t•te!'• e Ar• wlffl11t ,. '""' •Ml ••• •• , ....,. l11•h .. ,.., .... ff yn -111, tall BOB HARBISON 645 2111 I )I 1111., Tllft n.-f'rl ., .Ml-41• 111 -IMI .. -r--at~ 1U, Cttll MIU COMMODITY FUTURES TRADERS s-4 c • .,.. kr h1fe Ow Co"' ,v..,.1-4 T1..,.., A••lfth er the r.n lefty Sii"' tlfld s.,...._ M ....... ·---..... R. J. O'BRIEN AND ASSOC .. INC 16tf W.-Nff Dr ·--w.!?~~.!4JF~ No matter how opllmlSl1c 31ou are aboul control ()f mOat1on you must. conclude t.hat 1t is unhkely we wUI return 1n the foreseeable futurt to lhf Ill to 2 ~ percent an11Uiir increases in hv1ng t."OSts or lht e.trly 1900~ for lhe cos! of that achievement would probably be a r15e In unemployment to thr 6-8 percent rangt for understandable reasons we art not prepared 10 aceepl that cost In social or tc000m1c terms One implication or all \his to me 1s that we will move closer and closer to ma k Ing adjustments to higher price levels automatic ' Democratic Preside n t Johnson only a few years ago reJected tying Social Sceur1ty 1t...-at1._•-•lw4MltlitM_,e_,t_l91¥t•n1fl'Ml11WIL -A-~~~:.~ l:1#~1f~'1 ft:~,..~~b ~fltJ 1 ;tll a lo ntt~-·--1 !: l>tk .. ••15-W.Nld•~_,. ..... -i.... :::r.~D"ll. ll)tll .. 11~11~--rn~'il: ·.fO· l 't Ill, iJ~ !l~-,c"':i~t)~ ~! 11'<o 'H!! \11 l benefits to the consumer price .r.cF 11111 'I.A h ~ • ~ .. +"" ""GE (.if 'l ?....., ''", 1"" + lo r. M~r ;ti.ii .1 "'"' '2. "'* rrw Acf'M( .. yt I u I• 1311. I• + "' ~" MI 1...0 I l'> M ~ ~" G~f'C•m c u )l . 1l Jl\\ + Index as an 1 n to I e r a b I e •Mi..,... aw '"AM• ai. A(.m. M«1 1b ,, " a"' "3 + 111 l'tFr11 ''° • .o ?ti :it , .-~GP i111.1 1..a I)' 1-9, -r,,, ". -+ AOl'l'IE• I J.. 11 "'\ l~• 12to-+ • 11e,~ve 1 01 Ill "'• ~\\ ~·• .,..., t;.~ ll lr1c1 9 11 l!'O '" -t ~~~~10~nn~tl~n w~o:Ub~~ :~,~~1::~~~~(~ ~r~~1&~ ,~ ,1~ rmr.; ~~ii~ s!\?.i:~.:: f! 3J': ~~ *..i~~'-1.: 1H lJ~ !!~ ~~ i11! 1:1~~:rilr !~ ~:: ~\; ~l ;, ~ ~~s?tf.j 1{ t U .. ri .. ;1 Pr''ldent Nixon I' guiding • 1101u,,,·~•,ll•_:l. __ bv ,., ... ,._, ,.,., .,., Porlr HIC I,,,, 11'1.t llfOtl F I . ,I, .... 1rieLll 1 40 ls.I a • •l • •2"--lot It $tr' 01> I "" ,,, ~' -G T~i1 '' 09 ?!\; ~n,. '1'•" -;: •• tti1 ;OM ._...cl, I -,, ~ •l \lo Pto Got l . J1t l&bO Fd n. •JO A"u1,,, Co II lllt~ ID !Otl.i -~ t•""E'I 1 •O JI• l1 )'.I ~ l -81"! ot "' ) 31 31 ,.-bll l throuoh Congress which .. ~ I( Se<t,1r!l!e1 Fl G R•~ 1 I Prot .,.. 7 'I 31<.o T1m1>• HJ llO "' Hft Inc I 3l J2~1 )J + +. ··~ QU *3 0 11 ·' t ' T!l 1111 Iii uoo \\ ~ LI j ~ -• e O.tltf"l I>'< •re Fl WFln 310 jlll Prud Min 111 2fra T1a~tt "I' 1m IA. r p po1 lOb Jl U'4 ~ ~14o ltv( 111 1 IO '' "lo "' tf'l -it <" T e !li 91 ~, 1 , 11,_ + o WOUid do preCUiely that -flDf,><"0al :!',-,~ •,11c~l'IV, 11 I 11 P\lbS NH U ..... 2Slo'I T1yl6r W SI l i10 IA.Jr P~-oio 1~ I IH 119 lit + 'It 19wEU I 1.1, ~I :l' J)._ 33.,, O!;nr_aw 0 1' )Ii.;, 1 • Jl\.1 -i. iloll bl/ -.....-llOd" I' > • P11ttS NM 11 • 11'1< Ttllcl•I .s \ n:. IA.Ir 1te.f .60t 11 ITh 11llo 17'°' -+lli lorlllu' 1S._ Jt 16 1 ; • u.. C-ertita IC11 l•j I 1 I + ... \Ii OU Id a11tomahcally increase "w.111 v, 1n1ff F,•",.011 11 1l>11 P1111 s NC. IO:• 10-0 Tv com •v. 1 IU '"°"'"'1" tt o-. •'-<lllo rr t• ... 11 1•. 1si..: 1ti, t .., ritoo!~Pt!tl' >:. • '° • :io • -i , ••le< OflCH I •• OI orm l .., P11biif11' , ~ T1111N1nt 11\, 111:1 All Gil 110 l lS\~ u lS ! AF >fll 50 171 U\. u n"' . l':i] P.c ft 11• )t I .. • t ' Social Securdy benerlts as the 10CH"ul1T11t.iv 1 F041 Gm1 XI~ lt ~ ~..,...,. • ,..., Ttr1dyn 1111 11~ ,.....,1.11;1 1n1a" " 111;o ltlli "'-_ '4 NA ot A11 o ss 10•• '1011. o.:. -~ G.P'11e "I"" 1 11 • I,. n; h o 111 It whltll :".:J"•:ri; » S I o--o ''' •• ''''' AS o o ··-·"' • •• •• .. , JO +O D•UI Si Gas 2J6 l9 ll 1 -I~ G&l'tc Pl ~ ) 11 l 5' rl Ind '' •' I' , ..... H <'U~ ~· .... .... ... ~·... .... '''' , ., ~· ,,, &''"''II. u "• "' l' :i , consumer p ce ex rises )ecur t 6 cou ,' I! " ... P!lrllY 51 1, 16 t.._rm A , J Al11ert111J :u 20 .-. ti, ''• -+ 14 "~ • " ~ 0 • ~•v• """ our ' n E t t~. POUO c11 ,., 4\11 Tlllnw Co t t lo'i AlcinAlu l 'lO •• ~11• 211• 11 ouCo 114' Ill n • I ) n\o -"" dh 1 J9 :IS 51• 1\o\o On top Or th'! Pr.s'ure I' thlMd !111ket1l or FUhlt'll!. n. I\.}~···· ,,. -· • ''"' '" ••• ' '"'''""' ,, ,, ••• ,.. , •• + • ~·B II 11 11 40 )9.... «I + ~' Gtt y pl XI •' ,,• • 10,1•, '"" -h llCllG Ctt!dl lnlt 1'11ua 13w R? !~ II CM .~1&~T 11n GI ... •'4Alt!AnG t XI• St ""' .,Oi; 11~+\0c~Olat•!.t~JS ..Ro,1 3fJ0 7:1•-l'&!t~~PTCFI~~ 16 io -t '° ::JJ.:t.i! growing to lie home mortgage ru::.. ~~~,," Ff.'(~ 41} s Sy1! 4') S\l.i Trtc C"Z 2'l 21\ "'' f9 Cp 10. :t0 1!,ti 1i..., 1,,. .f.\lo ~ 111 Alk I J6 ll\lo 31~ llW. _ ~ c; ll<IL•w 71J• 16 ~. ' 'o 9\• -\ rates to the price level and to ou1 111e Nv l'rlc~ .,,nt,' 1111 12 11•d o..... • • t v. •11e11t l•h "" AlltilLW 7 •0 io 11.,, ,.,,., n:i;, -"' 01 ~tit '°" 210 u , ll ,. • ~ t, gl11e t~ 1 «i l • •1 .oo>• 4 t • 00 "°' lnckldl' •1 vc l~ ··~ ll&lllU c ,~ 11 \!o Trncnl 0 I 114' All111LllCI "'J • n~. »la SM. -~ olotl\"' '"° '7 3S I ,. , :Jio-+ Vi m~l llr 1 ll l lO. JI~ I . link bond interest rales to the rtlllt m1rk1111 Alrct1 1 21'. lllnlb El lr\oo 11111 Tr/Mob H •• ~ Allei Pw l.:U 11 10'" ~ 20\I) + lo I 1nd 1 •! 11 ""-·~ -• """ >'< llO 311.., :rt' JO,' 1 :, fnH~OOWft .... tom kl:r.hc 1'• 21:o llowcl!C1 Ill .. tr~,_Pa 30""11~,..UlioC:ll l 70 :Hiio !lllo ,.,,. :IO>+!o< Ol lnp!4U I u ..... -l)GltflAlaeft l•I 1 6'0 .... price ievel too As for wages: T!'J~,, ••""~, 'l ·~• 111vm C• u • J)\j, f~ J\i • •nlaMtlt tOb ., JD • )l)l., 10 • as 1 -4e111 111 31 ., XI fr' _ ~ Gi.onA1 1111 1 1 s s1 s ........ .. I'' 2 E.I n • lleco,_ E11 19\:o '101,(o tyfllP FO 3:t: ';1' A St-'10 " )f~ ""' 3' 4 -\lo as Bl' "' ltVt 19 l" -• c;l~f\Akl "'l 1 ... " '! ., never before have cost ()f •"••' ,',•,• ,',.! ,lh i'l'e~ 2 ~ 2¥1 llllf C•N H,. ~:Z un1::: , A11sve 1 60 1 JJ 25 JJ + .., co1116a, 1 6' s> n J ~ ~ -( Gk>tl• M1rln 1s u " •~• l!~ + 1: I Jal. I '' i\ 6'-11,"" s'o' ->< un 11,,m , ... ,,. •,,',~, ... 11,, ',~. 4 1J.\O 15~ 1J"°I-iol~P1d 41r '91 13 12• 13 -V.GC>lle. Un •ft \• 0~> 1D '6 + 1v1ng esca r causes 1n "lo 1 ~n io,•,,• m,,i, 111111 11 2j"" u..., o .... 6~ 11. J ;o Ult 1~ 1 -~• o Soon 1 16 •o ''Yo u u _ :i.o Gooc1r1cii 11 1 • ,, ,,,. j -, AfS I>'< ••n w fl '1 2\'l lloea E• 2111J2l11JUnMtG1 l l'I '""Ami aim 311 IJlii U'M 11'\0fV. omttEn 1.X1 211 o1& .. ..s11r •~Gooctvra 11 19? JI 1 '•+~1 wa.ge contracts been SO A c; 100 ', ,,. "utt t~ JVI Robin M 11 i us 11•no1 11o tllo .t.ipMP c Xie 16 n~. 1s u _ \"-mbE 9 11 to 1 .i1 .i11o , 1 Go aJl•IA. '' 5 1 1'~• u ! "" A c;. "' ., Sl~ Id eve • ·~ llOHlan s JV, us Ertvtl 19\IJ ,, Al(Oll I 611 " !J\lo ,..... ''"' -1'o om~/\I 40 ., 221. 21'to n\, t .. Gok,/d >'< I .Ill 30 tt '9\0 -important IA.VM ~ ' • "' iiil LS 1\ot a 111111 C111 7V. 21'1 us S11t•r •l\lt 41 IA.llOMUI ISti ll 1Jto ~-?Jt-o + .,,,, omJSel "'to I • 16 1• t \Iii Gr•ceCo !IO IJ1 21-. !"• ''"' + ~. I hort r JI ADtrlt! In 4j • llo OllW'f C 1 2\11 11115 Slow NV.Vo,.;,US Tt1c.l ;!?, ,™,,t .t.ll ld PO.bl 111 11 't li•t 17\.\+lil emwEd 110 .. lt .. lt :Wh l-t11 Gronbv IM 11 ll<.. 6 0 11 -• YI s we re I n a y ,..,,... El 1 ~ •I? IDI\ Cn ' 11'1 -~·"' Ho ... ...~ Ult "'f:!!P '"' .... Al [ec!Str 1..0 :u 71 • 21\.'o 1J.... CmwEa ... Ill • IOI 1~11. OI ... G anaun '° ~ , • ., 21V. ..... acknowledging that inllatton "•"!• 0s~!1~ •,,~ ,ra 0,,•"l.,><, 4\11 IS Sldfll'I' .fl4 Jl."-u1~h 5Ld n, n. At Id s1 pl 4 ,100 "' ,,.l •1,,. -111i CmwE _p11 ,q 1 nq 21\lo ,. t I\ Gron!leC s11 11 11• 1 11 +~ ,....,F ~ c;. .., 31~1 3.) Sc1n!n E 3\oi ' Ut I Ind '!::Z 2lv. AltlOSU11 llP IN 1 J , l'h -+ t.t Comw Oii 6t' l2 '/ 11'• 11•, -~Gran l•w!l<I I S 15' 15 ') 15"' + tndeed IS a way or life and so •"',"" ', •• ','"•· ~•,H,,• ,M,• •,s~, 16111 if" '" s , .... ~·1 LQS ' , AM8AC ..so SJ !Oh 10\1 101.r. Cotl'llNI $c l•I• 1 Ult 13\lr ... ..., Gr•ntw so " Cl 0 .:i. Cl\io + •• be ., ''" 11'11 Cplr 1\1; 1\ vlnct • J l 11 Amtr e1 1 20 13 111• "~• 110 _ I.(, 1omwt '6 o1.. 07•1 lfl 0 -~, G ayOro l 20 lt Jl 'l lO 'I t \oJ + • now were on the way Jo ',".,e ~ ',,·, 's •,•.v~ P,,' 4 '" 111<1 3\ii •\ovtiton ''' s IA.mEt on60 1 31 , 31 0 J1 +4 onf M111 l 11 UO\i 1s\~ ll'IA i lolo Gt A&P 1:ia •6 1a 11~ 111it-1. " ~ 6\'a 7\J S.COI Som 19V, iO W•ch R t 1~ :IOV. ~m Hen 11r ,,, :Ult Jo6 36\o ormMl11 lOt JI ll\4 2210 ?l o; G No t 1 Jlq 10 l);i. 1J 'a ll°'lo -• maltlng il respectable !A.lie• Lncl t• 1•\.\! •rd c~ 3;,; •I• Scrl::r. H 20~" 21 v. w1a1w P 15 16 ArneH Pt.I so u •n~ 71,~ IO f ij, conrKC11 60 10 l•v. ll, 1•. + ~' GtNoNe~ 160 2a1 .. • .. .,. '61! -, IA.Ila 8ev ,~. ] 'a uu l"I .. II 71/o Ser p 0 A •• •Vt Wiit l!d 16, '"'• L AAlrFlllr Ill lt so~ •• l so I COii eOTs • Ill l]j ll . n h 2l -~GINN 11181 ro 7 11 '°"' ,, + ' : ~d c;".; i , ;~ H:;..:r, S ti~ ~Y, Ser:ltc.::! l~ I~~ :.,~~dt J ~ J>'"' Am A r111 911 16.S ltl'a llV. H ConEd I pl 6 l 11\' 11U 11' -IV! GINN l'fA «I I? a 17 o 11\t -o ::;:'f,~n 17"l 1i~ ~~r..t 1~ ,:~JU l:5_n1tr0'C,. 's > •'"' :Z:~ ~~ 1:~ 'r.t'.; ;~a,!..,','"•,'?! ,I ~ ;J: ~~.,, -+ \o l:;:~::, 1~ 1l J ll11 tti-. 1~ ~ .!: ~ gtw~i~1 Fl:J 1.i: ~\~ ~· ~~t +1 •• " H C 0\ >'" ·~ '~ :(; '"'" ,.,, ll •l 't t)o 41o-,ConFo Pt50 1'! ll>o 116 Mo + ~GWUft oflll 6 ll 't ..... 11Vt-" IA. El Litt l't l~ fft D • ''"even Uo '6 •7 Wat Tr J o 7 AtnCem 4.!1> , I'-1 1 ,_ ,co11Frelthl 1 15 11 , 21. 7••-+.Gtw1~rn so 11 ••• •• ''! t ., ~~ ~~rn .... ·~···~~lftr..n1"1 Ii. ~l~M r: m::rd~r11lle :"Jg{,:,A!Crvltl 4SI j.O 62 Al'' ~,.,con Lea1"1l 11 6 • ' +'l. G"e"Gnt t6 6• 11 . 11\'J n t 1~. A Gre~I ... r, 50V. HOim EP Jo )t Sol a SI $ l ?t ' Wei ng M 1! 1 16il AJTICyAn I lS 3, l1U 11 • 3? • + I. ConNa c;. 7~ 40 11 11l,I, 17' -'I/ Gr,enS~ l XI 4 1J o 7t , 1t!o .f. , More Industries Lean J IA. Mtd!co 1•~• IS lo HOlobm n l l• SC I W 1:»i l6V. Wsltd p 10 1~ Am 0111 II I t 11 16 17 Con• Paw 1 l?t ll ' '.l7 ll ~ t G o ltr ~ f 71 t 1l 7.J~• -1-o IA.m Telv ll<. 1'\IO Hoo~er Jo~» Sa~E T!'c ll )!\~ W1!n HA .... sv. AOlt!Tel Xie JJ 2•. 1J 23 -.. ConPw .... so I D j9"' J9 t ~ G Uft'mnCo ¥9 1) • 16 . 16. -1 ···~II t 7V,.. ttor ll Ro t fli SoUn Gt 23 1 1:n, Wlln Mlt 6, '' Am DualVell 71 I r I I , + tt COlltA r 711> I 6 0 9 ' -V. G IL!H G tOt 11 l S'lll 13 , ?SV. +H• ,.... l\1 t Hawrd GI 7°'11 t Sw G1Co 14 U>o Witn Pub 1>" t AOU1 Pf.... 10 11 11 11 l""1 Cen 1 IO •1 6S • 6~i, 6S'• -\.0 G IMO/I 710~ I 56 56 56 + 1 IA.rel ,,., s ~h Howm In ''" ni• SW El Svc 14'4 1J w n11 VIII s...: s ~ AmEtPw 1 "' 11l 11~. 'll I 1s•. + • fM' ,1.S.°" ... ,",'• ,J ,,• • ,•,,• ,•,,. Gun 0 t 1 IO 3lt ,, ,,.. ,,._ Ar~ M 1t l\'a Huck Ml 41 1~\ t.I.< ! ~WI\<: PL 1 f>.1 Am Eftk~ 11 .. jll~ JD ll\1 -t ~ ""' N '"' Gull R•• (f"\ ~ 10 t 11 -, IA.rdell or ,. :l!I HIHI pp ,,~ :It~ ~r:~tr.,.:; ""' 71\'J Wrdlw e ; .... ', Am E•1t Ind 265 l • 1'' 1l + • Ol\I CP , I 6S n•o ll'lt ,,., + ... G llltt J:" :l!I • II ~ II : ' .... - \ :~~aw Mo~ ~1i! y1~ Huo,,,,••,• nv. ll s1a RKs lt~ 70 w 111>1 w 10\/J 21 v, ~g~~n'o115fo I~ ~Ii: H: ~I !++ _l!n1M1':,1~]" 1f1 186° °lfs' 31;• -'Gull~!• 1 t6 S• n1. 71'4o ?ti,\-+ Ir Toward Imported Parts DETROIT 1 UP I ) Mulbnat1onal Sourcing /Ike 1t ()r not ll something high-cost labor markets wtll hve with 1n the coming decades ll means simply that parts for an aut()mob1le or a ltlev1s1on set ()r a radio set sometimes can be bu11! more. econom1cally 1n r o r e 1 g n countries then assembled 1n lhe home country than d()1ng 1t all 1n Detroit or .New York -0 r Pittsburgh Aulomob1le producers art leaning 1n ltus d1recUon especially s 1 n c e tbey ve been forced Jnto the ~ub compact market For some years Detroil s b1g three have expanded fac1ht1es Jn foreign nations but mostly to C()mpete there General Motor s Opel ls built In Wl'sl Germany Fords Cortina Jn England Now they re heading 10 these sh()res Ford 1s budding its import f1ghtmg mlnicar the Ptnto 1n North America for the U S market but the engines are being built 1n England and West Germany G~1 s new m1n1car the. Vega 2300 will have a transm1ss1on built 1n lhe Opel plant near Frankfurt Chrysler s m1n1car due 1n showrooms about Jan I 1972 will have its engine manual transmissions steering gear and front s u s pcn s 1011 con1ponents built 1n Europe Fords four speed gear boxes v;1ll be built at Dagenham England The reasons behind the shift to multi national sourcing are practical and economical \Vages a re considerably lower in the foreign countries than 1n lhe U S but it 1s more than that ' H 1 1\lo St1n HPG 12 n Yranv E 4 '"'• Arnu'''' '' '' ,.,, 00 00 ••+ I'"' 0 1 1.50 19, 25 • :1110 2, 1 c;~ I SU pl s tl:I 60 64 64 +7 b I r IA.rwlaa t V, Hv1tl \0 II II~ • H" O O "' hR DI oO > O •·•· >o • GullSU j)f4IO 1h0 5!'> ~tQ SS\lo +OJ) Euro~ has uo 1 o u r '''' .., ,, .. ", "'''' , -· , o,.,. '° " 1' s9 , " , '• -· , ,-, ",, ",, " -, 0,,,.,.. ,. ,,, ,,,, ,, , ,,,, I e• d f ed IA.u o Sci 6 ., ·~ Hvde Alll ~1 jli IA. Homt Ill 1 1 19 BB!t !l!o-~ ! Onl TS 1, ' ,, '' , ->> I f • GuUW ';;ii 15 I Sl\• J1i o S1;~ ~ ~. cy 1nder cars an our spe 1111 d A1 l \lo ™ 1m-st" .. 6~; t~ ~:;:1:;!.":fr ,% : i~~ J~ : f~it :t ~1 g:::,0 e oa'! ,1, .tJ , ~ 0 , •• Guuw P J !>II 1 ,~ 10 1t1 -1-1 transmissions tor years while n:~e~•lnt 1!.:: '~"" I~ ~:1 il"' 11~ "'~•IC JI I.., 1. 31.\a J1 J1 .+ """ °""'-1 '° • u >, l•V. U \'t :i. Gu IW 1>IJ '' 1 • \• •o.-. 41 -• th A S h 81rwdt t • 10 • lneJ1Co O l>i, t~1 Am Molon 1(1] • ..., 6 ~ ~ + '4 Cool! Unll !IO ~S Mio 21 J+:l.~tl Gu IW p!S 15 1 SJ SJ SJ e mer1can companie ave a.1 n ,. 4v, ''" lnfrira 1>;i, 1 1o MUTUAL AN11G11 2 10 1 • oo 1 J9 ~ ..,,,,. + ~ ~-· n 1 oo 1• 11'-l J1 11 -o Gu t011 1nc1 "tJ •1• I'!. m -'' g-• t -• e ghJ cyJ d 1!1um•I '""' 21V,, Int Cont 7 71.. Am Pl\Oto U 14 1oi. t>o 10\'t ! Ill -TR I I 16 lt • 16 • '""-H f-"'"' 0 Sil 411\1. I Jn er 81vl~• 1J u o.r. lntrtn 1n o ,1;; Alle•Ov Ile 119 57'\ »'• ~VI •• -!al'ICI I 711 )I ~:µ, tll1 oJ>t -o h 8 13 2t "' Am Seit ng I 1 11 u .. 11 o.r. (OPPRge .50ll 19 W J.l'o Joo! t -I 1 HackWe 1111 I 3110 30'" lO'o -\1 eng1nesandl ree spee d 0:~h"'•tt 11~·••l~IA'rf1~r,~li 13 Am S11l1t60 40 111411 ~1714 COPws111711 J1H a1 1 ~"'•-•H~P 11"-1116•~16'>1'1-1 lr I lie m l!>d I 6 \ o ' 20•~ 21'M A Smell I 90 475 1• Js> 2< + •· Corlnlh8 17~ 19 Jr.I• 1•'n 11 ~a bl/ I I 05 4 39 38 ~ JI I ansmissohs s .. k H~ •Oto 47 " ~' s~•111 u""16(.1 FUNDS AmsoAr 1t1 .J,J ~~ ~.'.-, ~:ui-u:c,",~.•.,,,"',', 19H•l.1n 11•«.f.•b Hamw~ 111 1 s, 1,, s .. England nd c,ermany have 8ttr Litt 4l/O ••I··~ 1~' • ., 1\ AmSAlr '" 10 .., -v ... •v 0 23 2J 1J i-<amm P•P I 1• 111•, 11'.1 10"-+. 8llllPI w 1,,. •'-lon e• ll<l<O l•" Am sa l ~l Jllla lio J6 Cowlt1 Com t • l~ • ti Hammflil JG ~ 91 t~o ''•-some of tbe most modern a1ra s...i lS l1 11 Sou 1 2•. Jlh AmStd ot• TJ 1G f'I~ ,. ., "'' 1-.,_~cox aoc,1 JO •2 111• 16"' .,,,_ ~ H•~a1mn 6f 11 11 • Ja • :n • -~o Blrtetll" ) 3'11 JtcoO• F ,,.,, S'A ""' STUii " Jl It 1u. 11 • ..). '• CPC Inn l I~ 5' 7' • 7' ,.,..,, -\1 H1na H• n 70 19 11• ll"l -• engine plants m tht v;orld B11ek H• 211 71\) J60lln c •'I 1'-' ",,s.u1a• }.'° •s, ~ ,,i. lO'o +Ril !c~:.,~111'1: 1 1~ ls, "•' ',,s,_-+ ~. H•IM'S Cp .~ Vt 1~ • l!\~ 1s•,· t • r lloct..e El ''" ' • Jim WI! .~ ... .,~ ,;I. •m"',,",-• .. 5 41 •• •1 ~ -~ '" -, , .. Hanf>1M I.... JJ ., • tit. ., ) .,. • geared to product 0 u r 8011 Stf n. I\.\ JlrnlS F l1"\:o ll~ SI I I ., • l'<H'TIO ... 11 •• I 11 I 14 HI''""''' 1 u 1S l • J,I I JI F d Boothe C Holl",JamsDv tV,10 IA.TloT wl l:lol ;\lo; ,1 rawCol IDll 111 ll1 11>.. !Ft +• i-<arrls 1~11 •I•~ 41 0 -19~+1 <'Ylnder mJ S Or S&ooiAH ll t l61IJlll¥ fG• 1\o. t l'o S"ltmtler11 tna"v 3 79 t lMAmTloT 260 J.4> '1\1, 41t '''•-+•~ rown Cor~ ti Ut l.S 15 -l'l.illr~coCo 9 11, IT'o li t D nh I t B°' Cal> 1V, '"' Jhn'n Pa w . 'l ft, HEW Y()llK (al') INTGN 1 l6 I ti IA.mWWk$ ..St H ,,. ts. 9lo Crw" Ze I l '° 51l l2. ll • 32 ) • ~ Ha s ~ • 90 11 ,, • ~J. 22\1.o -,,, age am pan turns ()Ut 8d~k1 In J1Vt371,(,K•~' si •• .tt _,.._ 1ouawna ouo In• Co!A. 113s1210Am Zinc 1 IV. '°" 1\ot+ crs Cop-'° n •>.. 1•1 16~ ~'Harv A 10 1 ll• 1 11~ •ooo d flh l600 b flrk; Sea I~ 1•""K•11s1o1 17 18 1111,,.,1 WOPttd by Inv Gud 11 ltlAmeron 60 11):1 11;. 11\~ 1 1a+~C11Gah ~1111 <I l• IT lJlo ~•Haw l E l7 11 'lllo 76 76 + "' per ayo e CU lCBrwft Ar t K•vlr II l t V.1.,_ Heton1I Anocl· nv 1nac 600 600Am~!1!41:'" .01 :16 lJ\-, IJ\\ 13\oi !l Clld~Y olU ,',," ,,i'•,,l'+' ,"'H~V~• ab .l lo • 14'1 Ull -Ct!.ntJmeter engines that will 8resh B• l • 11~ K•lt G n l ·~~ anon of E KECU lnve!lon Gr""'o AMF 1...: l'O 151 J5\o 14 • 21 • ._, ~u l 111n 11 • , Haze 1 nt t 9i , , • t • + , Th • l::C--"c11 ~'I! i:~ ~IV-T i :~ Dt•lt•i l>'C .,, il'ust nd itt l:' !~~1(1nc'° sa ~~ ~': fil! =ft_ !!I c::;.rg,i:,, 1e.~ r r: 'I; 2: ~ + 1. Hee &Mn 11r ,. ,, ... ,. ... 11v, -1 power !he Pinto a l s eu ~ s ,3 ,,~, IC:•11eu 1 ,,,., ::::WDrk:H :~11~n~~ P .,., i" J 11 AmN" c:..,.1> 1n 11._ 11,._ '"" ... curuu v1r1 1 si u 12 , 11 ~ _ He"' HJ 1 •l 111 31, • J11--> enough JO !UppJy all Jhe PJn!OS CIC Ltel 1 1\~ l(e W'd 70 ~ 1114 toukl ~1ve -" Stock lo I II SI Amlltd 2 .0 J » > 30 , » • _ ~ !"'' Wt A 1 I 2t t 21 o 1• 1 -~1 Htlr~ Cu I 1 t • t -• Cl/ W Sw ll lo ,]:,. l(euU £ 1\1> t'lo !!Old ltt Gl or bouohl Stire! I 61 t ?• Amt )2 t '1't 1','a J~o u1le Ii 110 O 19 I t II ,_ 1~ He le tnt &4 I~ 19• lt lt'-< Plus: the Euro""an-made cars Cameo n u Kevt F o 11~ 12\.\ l•slildl Thv wv 111 Pv • u t 6'I AlllCOl\d 1 "° :190 n, '°"' 11 vclot>• I~ :JI 1~. 21. 15'• + He"'' Pd1 1 I ' 1 • 1t • -'• I""-CollO!I M tJ 61 ICtYI Ct.• 10 10\lo Bid IA.lk Inv JI.ti~ >'>'>'>,•,ff< ·.~~oc,,•, o "• ·.~;•, "s" ',',", .t1~ 11>ru1M 1 IO SI 61) S9~ 59, + \• ~:~~';.!; C7000 ·~ I~ o 1~1: l~:-+ • Ford produces such as its l'"anf'IM • tl .. kev11 PC. '"' IV• Atierdn 1" I'» tstel ·~-~.. .,... 0 Canr1d l • l'-1\ Klno In lV,. 3~ Admlr>llv Fvna1 lvv 6 •l 6 4J IA.nd c 1v 1 70 J n: 37 -. '' ~ _ ... --Hem tnc lSt I 6\ t 0o 4 ~ + ! Cort ma and the Capri C11t Mio.. lt"lt 16 ~IC ntn El • • s Grwtll s •• s ,6 J Hn.;ock •IS 1 J• 1A.11&che<:o 1s 45 16 1v,; 0 .,;: + ,z oanR vr llll J6 n1 1•, 1 + He c tnc l~t 146 '6..._ lS • l6,.. ,+ •, Cap Sow r . 1W Kirk c, l" ~ l>'Com l SS 3., J011n1tn 11 01 11 01 AocoO I I Jn II ,,,.. 2~ li"' -v. Din.II (p 1 25 n ll Zl 1 11 --"•He ·~Fd 1 0 11• 71 ,.,,,, , •• -\• Moreover the Br1t1sh planl C.t1> Int A ,,. J~ ""'" vot 2 2li 1111ur 6" 1 n K1v1t011t funds IA.PL cor11 ,.. 16\i '' 161~ t ~ o arl l'ld lOb JI l "" 3 11-1o t ~. Houben '° 1 11>,1, J~ 31•1o C10Tdl 7\'I l LMC 01t 11,< l:V, "'""l"i ;1 60 S OJ IA.OPllo 111 I S8 APL pt Cl tit 1 !&\lo lt _. UV. '' 01'1 Ind Pf 1 1 ll JI ll Htw P•cl! 10 261 27 16 11 ~ + has turned out that basic C•rr o..v t I~ u"'' In ,, 2i 1111 .,d 6 6J 1 11 Cui e1 1113 11 6t AllA Svc 1 a. 1• 102"i ioov1 lOl\"-,... 0111 Proc:t~ 4:11 ll•• 11 l 11•0 +1 Hon valt•11t 11.1 1D , t\• 1olo + 1 , h d Cerh' l'I 7~ l [•nllRtt l Jiii !lllrt 111 •11 Cua B1 110ll l97'1A.rct11N 1~ 210 10~ 10 20 -'1401vcoC111i. lt 161o 1• 1•,. Ht,,.,Hatl 1 111 l) lJ ]l\l+T engine since l e m1 1950s II c~rtr Gn ~ 21"" '"" wo 1v. •• II Am F '° " C111 I!• 111 1 <11 IA.ruortN 111 1 ni,, n, 3,.,,, _ v. 01vtnHuc1 50 2J 75 . 21 , 2;S. -\\ H-nw11 ,., :n J4 1i, ?l, _ , h be de I d CIK NG ·~ '1t L1rW111 1 211:1 5&1 '" '' 1u• kl 70J 7711A.ch Oln I tJ 2' 21\.t ,..__-\<O•vlnPL 160 • 711 7llo Jli +\ i"<o!f Ee<ln It ,._ l\o 61-">-0 as en ma arger an c1111 Cao I'• J L1rwn M l~o 1~ ._111n1 Fa t J1 10 10 u• k2 • ll • 67 Ar 1P~vc 1 Oii ss i1 , It\• lib + ~ Off" Co ' •• ll • n~ 33 • +1 Ho ov nn n ?Jl n , 79 ,.,... + • II b I I th Cenln 76. l6•• LllGY Ld II• II mcao SID s SI u' SI 1'19112] IA.floftl OS 10 hi I ••• 8~ OelT\lrP 111 } 17 l)' 11 .,. '•Ho dA I IOb :io ~j •1 ,, ..... Sma er U a Ways on e Ce" VP~ IAt\o 1~ Lei! CCIII 1111 ,_. 'm llUI 7 90 l H Cul S1 9 D• tr ArmtaSI l IO 115 70, ,0 ~ W Ot Mnte 1 JD 19 13 11 o 11 o ->Ho lvSua 10 .SS 6 16 I '> + >o same block All the bugs are ~~:,r1~ i--6~. t:.:~· 8Gp ll"' l:v. .. :::ert>'JE•;o,t'n l ',. ~~: il t ll ~ .~ :,~or'~ 1\ ~ ~to ~; ' !~" + \~ 8:1:~ "1~1 SG 116 19 1810 :It • -I Horn•• ~e 40 •1 14 13 • 1l • -" out It even has won its share c~~ ~~: ! ~ ~1, Linc M11 11'1 1r. f~~ ~~I ~ ;~ kn:~·b ! ~ i rJ t:;:L1~: i'°.o 131 i:', ~ , ~~. + "-8:~~~ Pt'r ~1 t,' ',t., f,\-.. 1, ~::v'B l ~ ~! ~ ;~~· ~ 1 ~ 1 ~ of Euro,..,.an road races ,ci:r'a~i : ~i""~J"'t:ftl1'Ca1 ~\O ~~ ln\lfl,' •,~.·~~:_,lclt0~,! ,",,'',~',",,,'", .. ' "• •,I•'• 1 • ._ l"·-.0tnn11to10t,J 1: 1• 1: .. ~.~:~'".!:i 1:o ~ 1J, ~n ""?li.~: ~ '·-'t" l~'L ll"' !pee " " lt1 H ""f ~Otnho!Vnl I 11111 >o -, There s one version with "'1" s 1111 11 :-"" h c 11t; 11" 1oc~ 110 •»Le• •ht.It 1110 u 11 1A.1hkl 011 1 XI ., ,. , 21. ,, , • o"'RGr M ' .. 1 -H~u" M 1 •o n 11 11 • " • -c11.i,1 1> I t i " .. ¥nc \m Eolv a '' • H Llt1er1 .SIM j..!1 Ana 8 tw " 1 • a-. 1 • ,., OtSoto l'IC Al U U n • H""'tPnF I 10 ff :lt ~ JI :lt ~ +I overhead cams and 16 valves c11a0e1 'Ir 1 ~ 1r l'" n " 'U: \m G-r h 5 1 J 111 L11e s • 1 i1 01 A1ac1 OG 1 XI , :it l1\lo lt Oe•En 1 00 1• 11L. 1e 11 H""'~F 11u oo l 1 s> 114 , 115 ... • Clllr Mio 10 I M1 tv t" '9 \m Inv t lS 411 Ll9 In~ 600 ito IA.HdSllG 1 l'!> 1 291 ,..., :l'fl"o-+ '• Oel Ed ptS!O Jl lt II I •+'"' Hou1I' pl1!JO 0 lo\ 4.1, ·~ t _,. !, f()urroreachcylinder c!u'u"' 7l JJ '>Ml~rt 'i•oH't\111Mu 11s1$11Lnc Na1 111t..1JA1GT1111 osp , 11 110 1•0 -Ott Steel •n 7 11 ,+1 Hou1Fpf7l1 ~~s~ 51' !t ,.i..2,. Fo rd COnsiders 't •-noml< f1/v~n UJ. 7Jv. ~] ' it:::/~ ~ 1 l~ \mN G•h 1 .S 1 Ml L'r,;Ooo , •• J 10 l JI' "' n °"" Ind 10 lSi• 15 • l~ + 14 Dtxle 1, 3~ H 11 ' + l ~• Hov11L1> 1 20 •l ~1~. •D., • + o.u c IFk Ml 11 lt Mll\or ( .,, 6! ln<;llof Grouo ! ,,..yin "'' ClyE 'Jo ~1• 21 '°'" n + "" 0 alF lnan •o • 6 t H011!ilNG1 10 13'1 ~ ., • !Q -• I b Jdth EI d 1 ~'n~ Ctot ias1.s1 1n1d J:lllll1l1A.C•~Elo1~ 11os5 ss u t O•mlntllll 5 1 0 010. HwGtc!l)Q lO<i ti •!t-+l 0 UI e engine In ng an c, ', ¥1 c;:., ~ ~ i ,• ~t MGt t 0 tY Grwrh ';M 10 2• Clll! t t lt t 34 IA.I R clllld 1 .16"l ff" ',,", .,111 :-: O •m SMtn ' 1l '.16 J5 o 31 • -"1 How Jahn 1t 1)6 !>; 13 1! 0 + , I II , d I n ., 1 m' l11Cmt /ls11<1 Mui ns21257,.. R ~h!Hl -,.. 111 1 .. 11, It > Ho,.met 711 ., ~'" 1si0 15 ,+v. Or 3 r or Cars US Ing I CHlllOfl 0 t • S ~ M Brow• ,6 U Fa llW 1.51 I Jl Lurh Bro IQ J9 1 t 11 IA. tllcll ol'2 IO 91 .. t5 4 •S '> _ ~. Olt~h pl Cl I 11 11 71 H~t.llrd I •1~ ,_~5 1l 11t n 'a.her than bu.Id a Separate 'c~,<0• ",,•,• •• •,•0u~L0P ~'190h \/en! 312•..0IJM••'"' ln t e• t•'AllttChem 1 n 1l !JV, ll'•+'lOltS 1110110 UI JJ o u t!•oi ••Hud6a1 110 s 1'l 10 20 ~ -v ~ " I •ADOlloF~ 119 1116MU>llln •Jl •I IA.tis Carp "'? 1 , 1\o+ ~Olct1Phon '8 I.I 111, /lo Io -•Hu9n Hat .o 7 9 ~ 9 t '4-+ lower t Ian' n th.us Cfl<ll Co ~I "1/1< UY ?1 21 Auocl• 111 116M•n Fd 9S)JO"'"'lQl.-c Oii 6S 11, I ··1 ,oe0aa tlO 11 . 591 ' -t l\.'i H.,nl(~m 1 1 ll io lT I. 11' '¥0 ume p l zoltm £ 1 lV. Medk H ,:.,, 1;~ Ail Of! l t6 • JJ :•s~ GI. IO 1J 11 01 Aura11 Proa 101 1 / '"' I .., 0 G or11 G .0 9 12 11 l 11~ aolhoP"' 60 .01 11 ll 11" .i. Just fnr the P~nto engine c~~~'s1 F ;~ ;~ MM~ ,,M1• JS Jl'I. AJ,•,,HouAatito,•_ , ,, M:1,', " ','•" •,• ,", ,',',~, ,'," •..,nc1 2 o s • s 11. 'la 001 nonm 8.a •l ll . 1i1. ui. -•• ldt!! 8~1 60 '' l'a H""o 11 , ID •v ,, 1d" ,. •t 11 1 H>., 1Ht I'> "Iii Ill 1 21 11~1 ?1 >-dt811 pftl.'t 1 ~4._, 6l 1 'l -• L1kew1se !he t"o hlre t"11g1ne c~ce , " :it • ~e,,• ,• ,'", 1• ..... Fund 11 i 11 17' M•Hitri • 10 t 1D Avco 11!l :io 11 l7 J ~ 12 .,. o 11,,., Co ~· tJ 1~\o ~ 1i _ , 1 1 C••t t • sa 11\1. n ~ ii " ... "'• ~'"" ~ 11 ,.. 4 'o 1 Stocio' Slo0 6 ?Mer1Gt.,d ll.lll2'1Av1v Pd 1'0 t 7i!o 11lo ?1\,-\.0JntY JOb 100103' HID• ltl ~ ~FIC"n 11f)O 6 t > tl•' • ~ Ford will use as an option tn c::: 1:1 H 1~ ~~·GT ,I~ 1}'• 11,~c11 : ~ ~ ~ ~:::., ~ ,: fl 1J U ~:::l 10n1 i'°" N 1l. 1\o "• o 11$eaii 1 ~ 1 41 ' ,6 • ,, ~ 11.oi p..,.. , 15 l6>.o Jj , ~~ + , lhe P t II he b It 1 0tn HI II • I I ...._,, SO< 1·--01 SI 11 SIM_.,, I II•>,,. ·-·· O OO I II 17 11 t .. 0 Vt I l'ld l6 II II 1 ~ t 11 "T •o Ill P .. plJ lS 1100 31 31 l + '• in 0 WI UJ 10 Ol\'I ...... 71 • MPll c;.,, 1''1.o UV. er~ic:~t , ... s , ,, MIF Fa '71 • 3' 1A.iiK Oil 1Jt 1n :! • :~. aio n. o ••• ,'":.!-~ " 21 1'l • 71 ~ -.. Imp C• Am DI u ~ 11 -17,,. ... Cologne \Ve,, Germany omo I l'-' ""1'' \l lG l 2n an Giii s 13 S.t l MIF Gin 4 Sf • " ...... ..... I 11. I \ l<l"lt NA CP I'° 1S1 .i.l • ,, :It. Cma Cm I J '•/,lo JlKll n?. Sl1lr Fl S n iOO M.,IJS Gv 100'110'1 -8-l>omeM11 IO 7 'Cl > .Sf 1 3t 1 \ lnt11mfClol I 9lo ft 9 • For GM lh~ same reasoning ~:;:: ~n~t J • ? = .. :C'it 1~: 1:~ l:!,O::. t t ;, ~~ ~~ 8{;':. : 11 : ;ll 1:~~1 ~ ,'f u2 it • 1'"" 1t .._ g~;:i~~ .. '.: ,: 1f"; 1f 1 1f ~ -+ ~· \~~:1~P1° 1 rg J11o 1~ , ~f : J! + ~. IS behind 1ls plan to build the Com •\ ''' 1 1 ~~'m <,•,1 11 11~, Bos I Fan t ,, 10 41 M.,1 s~rs 11 tl n 1 Bi 1 GE 1 11 !~ ~J':: i2~: 1°j~ -\t Dore Cp l2 J u , 1~~ u • tna11 "'• 90 • I ' 18 • 111. t '• Con lloc• 25 'r 21 """" •••->'5 ll•Mul Tn1 ff 0-8 • -~Dor O Vt< ll !II.I 10 10, ", nll('tll~"° 1 .U 390 3'I JNo • nan I r bo C t Id 1 e MOore P 11 f\lo -· ~E ••BIG Pl t 50 J S9 S9 J t ~ OoverCp IO I JI, '' ,, ... .,. ,f:lnwRa pf1li t J6 1 Jt~1 Jt• 1 ua gea xes in ,a..• • H MOort s lllol2 &1>1a St 12cn1su AMut '" ll6&•noPn1 lS11 li' •~• '" l'lio -~1 0,,,.m,•• ''' ,, ,,, ,, -·•tn1anas1 1 S9 14'1 lt 2••+, c Th th Ol'•~n I 'Mt T IA. 11i.1•~ llullock Cl!vln • 1111<! 171111&•IHIP pf? 11 111,1, '''" I ___ ,, OU I I ?t 15 I • I ermany ey re e iame ~"""'" L 11 • u~ M1r,, .,1 1 , 111 B1111ck n" 1>.s1 Hit 1nv11 '" 1 P4 &k., ca l.J• 11 17 11..., n +"" or1woep 1 41 1 1& , :it • 21 , _ ".~~ '/fJ: 15 H.; ,~ lS\: = . gear bo•es that go into the c~~5vr :~ ;u;Mt>l"cM ''' c-.. 1110 ""H~I Stcw Ser 111n1r.01NY1 • "6to o.i.11 ~u -'l:.OrtHIM ltO S.1,, ?9 -. 1911 +t•1nlc o!A111 1 1•1~ 1u. lln-'" C~I d 11 11 Nw WO 11;;, ll¥r Owa l JS ll7 •In t.5'10 •!Bink T 1 .. 16ol&h tl'o .,.,,. f i o Oru.r 11f1?0 s Jo ;w J• + • llt'l1>r Cop l• 11 05 ", d, + • Euro""an car!! GM build~ Cre~ Ma1 ... ' Mueller' 6V. 1\ "!•IW s '" ''' gr"° 4 11 s Plrb 0 ! I"' :it JI ~. JI "" Ortslf of B2 l .ll lColo Xllo -l~' co 1 10 15 30 JO )'.I~ -+ '" I h·1· I Cr•I! Mh I I 'Mu RI • 1 1~ NY Vnt ll 011• '•' G v ah J 6' ~ 00 81ra Cll ls 11 IO . --00111 "' 0 twf ui Cl' I 11 II •• 111. -"-nt k "' I 80 ?1 ll 13' l3llt. 'fie the mu!lnat1onal ro .. c~ ,.1 30 "MltrLE.1?,n&1111""Fa,4 7 •WI 1•1 •s1 e11 c 1...:10 •1t•11 .. 11 , "-°"'ktPw100 16'1'•1 1 '1 ~ IBM •llD 2412' 7>1'42611"+> r I '''', 0 '' 0 "c ,.. , S"1G Fd 711 111 PIS~ 6Df 66.le1te1 Mio o lo.I• 10 , 101, •1 0uktP pft)J l 90 O'll ~ '"''~ ••·-r >o ,., >• "•+, M 0 I " " ,.,. 1 '"'1o•m• 7 0t1)1 1nCOf'1 •t548'8 0 00 >" >>L ••O••o8••o >O OO O ""~ ,..~ "" . ...,urcing o au par~ JS now Cv1t e~ c 1 1 ~ N1r<•• c 1n o u :ii 10 , inv 1116 J IJ siock 116 111 a1t• M P • 1 • ··• ,,. ~. • .,,. u • ol6 • ''" ~ , 111F11F JUD ;o }I ~·· ~l'-l + ~. I II 0 •• '0 o "H•I llrnd 1~ 1' C S •• ''' "'' G ,. ' 111 h Incl l 17~o 11 • 1'\~ ()~p In .01 •l 71U. 16l 2'~t + J nt H1 ~ 1 IO 18 )l , 'l• 11 ~ con1ned bas1cay lo the o~~v .. M' 11"11i..NatCirll 1:i..t 1 •0 ' h• s,. N '" HISl111~1nof1so Il l• JJh .ll1"-.auPon1JJJf" e.o1 nu1n1n ,._ lntHod lll' 61J1,1.J41 lll.4- mlnlcar' It I k.ly JI d 01 • De' i ~ 1 NCm1 CD l\oo l~ Er.~n~ Fi.!t'l lO Ii N::::: ):~ I~ a 11 ~ BIUlcllLD IC J4 JI .)oli. ]t•~ -~. Gu Pon t Pl~ 50 t 6• • 61\o 1• o -+ 1 Int ll<luJt l:U u:i, u:i., UV. l-1 \\I s prea ™ a G6'1 76t. 77'1 N11 EDU! ,, u II• lft 10 ,1 11 Ii NtW' WIG 11 21 "ll Bl• •Lab ID lO<I ?J I l~lt ?J\• .. • DllO Lt I " JI ~1.. 21 • J • Ir! Ind P!I 711 16 ,. ' 7l , ,, ~ + ln a few years lo the larger 0•,",'," ,', '• " ',.I ~',', '•"°• 1v. t\\ com s1 1 '' 1 60 N""" on u u n 10 a1v111tc Q !>II 1• 10~ •J.io lD -+ ~. 01/QLI •ot 1 ri.o 1• 1 n , 26 1 11 n• M ner 11c1 O\• ,.. 10 11 -+ •, , -. ,. .. 11 11 Grwth 1 .s • h Nlcll Stro I It I .. 6t1 rln<11 I I ll • 31 • 31:1\ -1 Ocl 1 IOPI? 10 UOll 11 11 1 16 2 1 Inf Mno )lf 11 lJ 12"t 1J'o Dav M 16'l.I Im Niii Mtd " I ,., ~ ln.;om • 11 1 °' NO<tlll I]~ ll '6 8,ae FG\ I I I ,. • ,. • 111> 0Ymo Ind le I I 11)• I > +" in• Nkk 11'<1 •11 4() J'I~ 41\lo -+ "' l'lecor In S\< 6 ~ N•t Pri 1"'1 J o Soect 1 61 \ 61 Oc!IOl>f> , lO 6 ID Se<km•n 0 II l1h 21 11 o i '1 O'l'n•Am 200 ff 6., 6 0 I _ "' nl Pap I !>11 /Ol 15 , .)ol t :IS 0 -1 o Oe~!tt IA.o 11 :Ht; N1! *II r., l 'h '~''' Gr 1!05 Omt<i1 s 6, s >S 8tcl 0 t• O Ill Jt > Jl•o lt • +I E f In I Reel t JD I I 1'\io .... + \o Oelh lnl '" ''~N11 s-HO ,, C11tll !Slil~tOO Fa l1'9 ll•lBeee~A 7.Sb 51 1\io I l o-i. -• -"Sa 140 l J9o Jt lt -• cars U.S. Lagging Belii1id In W orl.d Parleys Ofu•Ch Sl v,1t'NI $1vr •·~Fund 1St1?4101FG &JDt29ll!leoPtl SO 116 l••ll o 11~1 E•t ePe~ ID 36'7 1 11 2l 1-o ln l&T1 05 ?UQ\1 '2•U'"o-o g;: ~g~t ::°: /, ~~nN~~ l~}; 1f' {11~fut 'J ~ t~ 't ~,:,~ms \' !' \l !~ ::11an~~"' 6~ 11 ,! ~ lj ~ ~~~ + ~:~c IA.~0 l~ tB i~ o j~ n.: _f ': ~'1t~ ~ ~ : 1~ \3\l4 nt~ !:ii& :+1 ~ Dev !A.m 11v,1:i Nlch1nF 1'130 Soecl 7Xlltt nh •717uBellnertcn 10 911 I\•• +•1Ei•IGF Il l "'l•?I ll i-'t lOIT&Tpff<t 1 11 e1 11 1-l OeweY E s .J\ .. NIP$1A. ll>..lt\)C~mcl 1515Ul9 IA.M •1~•tt6tm1Col 1116 o16 o161\ .. E111u11140 •11.u.11•1 TToll•IO 10 80 11 •711'1P -2~. 011f1 Cr l4'r 1J N!elt II :l' lS (olOlll TC Sec 926 1jO&B-• 1.0 ?I 11\o l l 7l\'o -~Ea1ICOdi111; 11 !IOI 67'0 ..Sr. 61 ..._IV.fnll &T nfJ • I I 71~1 ti '"I i 0 1ct~r l •••H,..,llnc l o ? eoulY Jl'lll'l!PaceF'>d 6tS IOBel'lll•Pll ll •O•o l9.,-IO _'"Ell011Ye140 t01'1 191t 2'~ ntl&T<r>llt• 7J7l n 7) 1-1 0 ver CM l t NC&r NG 10 llP-Funa 'U 10.SO P1uJ ll!V i 511 7 lt 8-llCll 1 60 1' ti '''• 46~t -1 'o Echlin Ml .51 It 7l )l 0 2Jlo --i. nlt PIL S-10 J30 &t 6• .. i I ~ Oocu• 511 StNEurOI 7 1~ Cwh !11560Ptnn S<a 72.1?6Btnat'IOIO JCI l 7• 7l 74 -~EckedJ20 Jl?/1 76171 !nTTofNllJ 161 0•, ... SJ .. 'IEJ''i ' Dn<hn L I ll t NPA c;1s 11 11 tnc""' tll 10 01 P• Mut JIO JIO Btntt .S..U!IO l 60 ,. :If 19 EG&G 10 •t ! 14 1 ' _ In Ull I ilQ I 11 JI"'• :0. now Jon '' 11 ')NW N1IG •I· ,.~ \lent J 19 • ,. Phi. l) 1911 36 Btntiltl 1•8 • • ) • • -• e M11s t Ott 71 • • • 4 M u t A l 19 . :1'1\/r ,,~. • • DclY t 08 9 19'!0NW PuSv 19 l~Col G h 10S4105'P[alm 111 150g1111911e1 In 1 s 1 :S 'r s~ Eect Auoc •Cl So S o So n•n•~• I 6 11 14 74 -• Or•w HL lllo l Nut;1Jl.t(. S 5\ltComS!ld 4?1 40<IPnrSI 9tlt"aer~tYPh~ 411 lo J? 7 ,.,_,EIMetnMfo IJ)IHtlo llo -•,lnlerPC~of! SIS 1IJ 15 -\ OU"~" 0 I 11i0h1o Al i -. I Cwtt" IA.8 J)l l)!IP1011 Ent S91 64 Berm~ Coro :l6 ~, l t 7 + ,etMM19 Jiii 15 lt 1 111 J],_ ln10 •nd 9~ I J o Il l l J~+ • rz~c;.nl lA t 1t ~OhloW•t tt 7 1t 1SwftC 11J I SS PonFndlO?~llllatllSlllO u 171, 21 22,'-+•tEJnN•tln(! )6 3 S ~ s _, '"•1Pw 1• 2 16 16\il•'*-+" NEW YORK (lJPl )-Th1~ week 1n the nations capital the S e c o n d lntemal1onal Congress of Parasitology brought togelher 2 O 0 I) 5ctentisls lrom 66 countries Next month 1n Ph<>en11 the \\ orld Shooting Champion ships hosted by the National Rine Association will attract sharpshooters rrom 90 nations Sounds as d the United Slates is faring well 1n the gro"'ing 1 n I c r n at 1 on a I COO\eOllOn bUS LO('S!l Actually lhe te\erse 1s true According to the f\11kh:ul S Soloviev Viet president of the lnstilute or ?.:lodem Language: ( 1~1L) the Un11ed States 1s getting ()nly a S percent slice of the $.500 million dollar 1nternat1onal convention pie \\hi le re~nt mflalion and relatively i.:maU prolTl()t1on programs have done htllc to lure foreign tounsts ind conventions I h e r e r.rt techn1cal reasons v.hy tht economy ui m1ss1ng out on this gmw1ng bus1nen Sclov1ev w~ r 1 r m provides lnnguagc teaching fac1htics lranslal!on s~rv1ces and lra lnin~ a I d s ltt govr.mn1enls Jnduslry .and 1ndh !dual po1n1s lo 1he findings or 15 lnlern;:itlonlll p r o r e $ $10nal nr$::in l1n1 ion execull\es Thev toured US convcntir1n facilities IAsL )ear utlder the ausp1cts of the lnlcrnat1()nal Association of COnventlon Bureaus n1t1lr conclusi()n Tht United States has bttn a poor potentlal site for !ht.Ir cOnvMhons becaU!e ' It lacks lranslalJon facihtlu In Its major hotels and convcnllon ctnt~rs 1~11.. a $Ub11d1ary of Aml"rlcan Exprc.q hopt~ In brighten Ill profil plcturt by f111Jng this vacuum 'fhroUgh EIO C w! 11, t ~ g•,_!.<0•n ll ~ D ~-IA.S \ 'O '21 ~ '" ~v 9 11 10 0) 111 Thret 60 JI 4lt .. .. ~ E ll~NG I •? 16 o 16 i 16 -•• tni. I SI &4 !lll 11 t IS ' 16 ~ .f. I o '' ' • 0 ,, .,,_. ,,',',,,•,,~',, 0 0M0 ,•,•,s ' .. c,•.,,und..,,5 __ 1 61,ct Ok 11 1 01 46, ,6,, ,,•,1t••,'•''° l7 n 11, ,,,_, ow1 Betl 91 77 10 ~ 71~+, .. gntr TP ~ -·-.,. •• .u,.. '' • •• ". • -~,' c t 2IO ~·· 15. Sii .... '\lo 1crwaE l JCI J 1 ~ 11 1111 • Its rac'lltl•• 30 Russoan Eton Lto i1.1• NA l l~ omu Fd 1:w. •oo HE•• •a. ... ••~Ol'n • 11 ° • em t PtB~ 1 n ,, .. , . ow111c;.111 ,.. '°~'to "°" -,•r~ ••. •,, .i. I 1l : ()~:c., 10 .. 11 Com111< l " 4 I N HO< 20 jl 10 fl 6 lH l fY8 I 7 9 • 19 • ,,., \ -e ... ,Y•IA.lr '°Cl • 11 ~· • 51 ~ IOWaPL I 60 ?l 1] • ~'~ n ..... Sc e I •· ttend ng t h t DEC lltl I?~ ll'~ Conc!H'd un~vf I P a F11nd I 7 I tT lllocit HR. 36 ?6 JI 0 57 t t 'I Emha t I XI 5 lO JO ,,,, ~ 1owe1'Sw I 36 'I 19 0 H 0 19 'a I n JSL'I a I e F b• s. I I llo p II Al .1 .... con,ol !ft '1110 l• p 0 Po If un1v1 I a ue St 10 ? •• •O. • ":i 't EmPO ,, 1 16 ' 16 • ?6 ~ u . ... pen Ho•o J<I 11 i. 7J ' IJ ........ P J I r E•H,.111 I 1,ra~\IA 1 6 4 Con•ul~ JOO l'1Pr~vdM •02 1)9ot>be er•• 111 11 •117 ·•EntlhMnllO 10J1T t70• 71 [TE mo60 1111' 77,74 +JI• aras1 o ogy con crcncc v.cre E,• ~.-' ,>;,',,' •. •,:t Fai 19 11 co"ll Ml 6 :is 6 SI Pu ll•n 19> t 16 Boe na co ·~ l •I 11 11 • 11 ~ -"lo t:nnh 8111 37 1 1 11 • 11,• 1~~ ca o i ' i• , ll , J6 -+ 1 I n v• 01 c ?>..:. l ~ iont Gth I so 7 5! Pu n1.... full<!• Bo 1C1$ 1»1 4'D •6 I .tJi,.,· ... -t 1~. Eo~!Ga1 110 n JD JO 'o »> -J K able to hear simultaneous Elc1c1>• ' ') p'~':i • , , o 11 Ld 13 •6,. 11 Eau' 6 J9 '•• Sonc1 1n11 61 • • • ~ -t • Esa "' , 10 1J 11 • 11 • -0 -• -•,ttrom , •0 •, P:~. 0 7'o 1; nty Cao 10)1111 l Gtaro Ul>UdBoOlcMth lll I 11 11• 17~-~£1our1 JD 1 11 , 1 ~ J,1•+ ~Jec~•n!A.t! 11 70 1~• l o 1 0 Russian lranslallons or the,','••'••''' S7~P·~ .. H ·~ .. rnWOlw J11 Sl6 Gr!h ...... ,or~nll'O 5•11 •1)\o :u•• ··~•fll 1 70 :1!111h:U o 71 '1,J•U.IA.!plll0 n" J .Y•-· p I p •• • .z , .. wo.1 SM •«1 •...:om 114 771 oraWtr IS •O 11 • "• .. -Pl21• ] J'll , l9 3•' Ja"9• 10 •• 8 •• WashJngton proceedings from ,E!_Ms°t\ ,,\, ,;'{ P~:r~ 1, 1,,~ d9Voh M 56 40 '16..0 lnveo.1 1 03 •St llor m•"• ID IJ ll\o 11 • 1:1>' ne 7J u T ll • lJ ~ + , Jani/en ~ \ 1, 0 11 1 1,-. ,.. ~ ... ~ l l p ,y,r "" 9'l Dtl1war1 G•ouo V I I • 91 7 6l llos £01• 11• 7} l lU n • 11>, ++ It 11s 7111, ""' 20 -+ , Jap•nFd OG• 1~ lO 1010 10 • _ •• the offrc1a l language English IM::i•"•'• ~, 1 ~ P::' ., T ,., n~ Ott.et io 1111 'l vav•o 5 n '16 llO!lrn• Ince •1 12 • 11 • • "° 11 n 11 ll • • J!ffnP 01 111 1• 11 • 11 , 771'> -• 1 i 7'~ O.wr 1114 171 Fl tv1t 191 1J18tn!A r .JO •? l o I I + 7~ 11 I• 18,, .. oo•~ Jeoen•IA. J.O l l 6 J o ~ +, French and German delegates nn . • • I , Pl Fl'I" 1 1 Oe " 6 (It • 60 Rln••er "15 IJ l BrltqS 1 •0a !Q ,•J1• ·~ •St• -a"I" 6C"ll ?J 37 ., l,,. •• -Jewe Co 150 JI •s:i.. •J •Sl1 -• Enlw•'' '.' t :0 G~-:c ~: l"torexlll l11411~llo•~~h 5l7 5116r•TMv 1711 1~6 $6 • •"••' ~~ ceto 11s 16 11 , 19 • ~!,7 ~JmW•t ~o 16 n 11, 11 _ had the same t:()nVen1ence"°"corn • t @"n DrtvJ Fa103'111SSlltmFG 4t.$Jo1ar111Mv1>11 l •! •014 -1~oo«1 2l'"''' ,, .-.~Jmwpi160 1r)J'l 12 13 Eout 01 Ill lO\i Pto1l Wt ,•,~,,!'tt'lrev l v 11J5U U 5c~1111 12IO l4 016rl Ptt J7e 19J 9 1 t 9 > l-°"F•ctorA 600 -1 00 ''' ,.,•-,--.JO!inMa~ 170 5 Jusl So long as the' Stayed rn Fr' TM , •• 7 Pel a t • .,. EatonloHQVjan:I Sc:uddtr Fu..,,. B Pf! '"lit I I • J"' • I F• "'' -''' ... I -I •n~ i--•,, '' •. ,•,, ,•,,. -' -FS Ctce 1 ... 1 PllRGt 1tl 55 ~ 81 IOI • •J 1& ot In nY 1J '4 I,'' 8•> HoOe to IJ 190 ., 2' .f. ~ ""' 7~o 1•"' ?llt 1-.. "'"'n "''" •• u1 ·• h JI d I • 1' F1rH 1 IS. ll 1(1' IG JO J°"n• vt IO ICI 11 ?6 16 0 -• 11'. room a eei;:ates \lit>rt Grwll 103411 )(1 .. oc:1 l'l•l?ttlaa-Hal o•J 1 JT'• JJ>o ~!.•t ._F1lrtn0n11 , to.'" u ,+ ,Ja..L0111n IO 16 Jl J. 51 -I • lncam I it. S t i 1111 !l JS ll lS ar~Wll GI ro •1 101 • ?6'• 'J'• _ .! F,~ls!af 10... 1l uo &to 0 , _ '• lo""L~u l•P G 11 10<.. o -+ .able to hear th<' English ff:~ 1{ ~ 11 ~ ~::':'tw St Fu~": '-"' ~~!:'nuc;co' 1J ~ ~ 2f • ,, + I 1m "' F '° 1] n ., n 11 ~ j J-..&L pl J r •G .a 41' , ,. • -t 1"' S"" 1ker 111 thr1r 0 \V n Ebe•51 11 S1 "s• EOUIY 161 1 •1 !lwnSh~ a ,., l 10 : 10 • 10 -• Fin• eel Inc 11 11 , I' 11 ~ I • JOtler>• IG ' 111 ? lo , "' "' JI N Eoet 10B•ll l• lnvt.il 10.169HwnS'-1J.O 111H~170 11~+1 ~•:,.~til~~ ••I• 1) l•1 f ,JOYM!o •a l1l9llf .>t\'i t IROL!Uage5 WltbOUt being Lied 0 lllsen ew Emo Sc t 61 5 ID U Ir• SIT 6 )I 8rU11$W~ 10 11 16 IS 16 + '• F1s I ti I I 14 t 5• 't JI Kl 1' Al 10 l It 30 • l -o " Entrav 11..'i?ll.sl!tlec lA.m 138t 098ucvEr ''° 11 9 1•• 1tlo-f3•F n 11 1~1 I• lo I t• ,Ka1!11>U I~ ~I ~• a +'• to a special booth or even a Enl0<•• J u .i So«s 1J 0114 n Bu11<1 co 10 11 •~• ~ 1 • l--. F::~;t 1'fo '!I r, ,• " l ,, 1 1 Kari MPt• 11 ' i~ •A4 •sJ.:o -, Eoulv 1011-ltnllGih 11J11saooaFot60 1' t 5 •' -"FeaMao lto 11 o n -~1C1sCemllO •10~u.,, "II -' 11eat andw1thoulbe1ng\\lred EoulGlll 7to l.lllllmFa I SJISISUCF,tt1~6• 11 I 1 ~ lloo F NM "R:io n l1~•-tK1!1C ol7~ 1171•l oll1I+ ... Cpl Ch . f t:cou1 Pro l ll 36S ,,.., "'" ,.'11Cl.Jl e .. uForo 1 0 ,., 34 )If 36 + >t.F:::lP QEft ''" -llli I• •?<t K1 sC pll l1 • '° 70~ 10 ~ This rs possible through le euek l? 10 n 111 !n 0e1n r' Jt" 11 au1c1v1 w .o J7 11 , u 1 • •t Fe<1P:~u ~ ,: /: • 10,,. ,•,o K•nC PwL , • .)0 • :io .. 10ia -\ l h h bl IML Fv~ll In 11031105 kit Ill tl2&1/f11! Ramo H ' lo l'o I ~Fec1Son$ 60 1 I "' •+ kC Sol/Incl 1 t Jl•t J l •t+"' 1g twe1g I porta ' F 0 CIP 11new11 !omt Fo11<11 ·~111>,ll ""JO l Jt 11 ,. + ... Ffeltrllf IOI( I : l~l.o 1!>.. K•n GE 1 00 lOS 2110 7!"t 7110 ... 0 S)Sle • nCOSp O! F1lrld t »tig C•oll 111111&urll!>d l loD 110>,<00 ~,, , .. , t~.l"edOttitS! 1 ffJOS~l•o l'j •• K1n,.,.LlU )(IT.I 1• ll ms nO I n ICUU RalphS Johnsenhasbe<'n~~m~r..':~1rn1:11 {~~~)I ~u1::r,~"l~D•'1>(1fs ' F..SOfv Ct, l I Kowlnd :tO 1 • JAi ~•+" transmtttcr plnCCd next tO the f Fla ao 10 11 1111 im !h !I IOl I DJ aurn<IY 70 l~ 1!,~ l~ l li~~ j+ ~ ~r;..:bl"~P fQ 114 1:,11~ 1064<;. ',' let k o I h appointed manager o F[a vnd 1J' '•~ "'It 1~v 11~ •• e~l'l"oh• '° s11 ~ o 1C'l'11 lOSlo• .-. "'"'dtlM 100 , -• • CUrer Spca Ulg 10 i;.llglS Fa Ttnd :0117'ot!wnv GI IM Jff Bulf1UnY Ml 1 l'\.'t ll\.o 11Vt-l\1"1111>l lA h ;.;\~lot Jr j 1• relays the speech 10 a ballery operations for tht ~I 1 en t Fr~i:;c,..11 'lei;\ '" ::v.::~11"" 'l:: 1lt~ -C-~1nl tr:",'~ 11 lA , 1• ~ 16 , 11 • or 1nterprtlers: The\! then ~rvu:e center of Certified ::-ou" •"••' ·.~ •• 1'1•':,m.~I _u•"'•Vt.[!t'bcl Cit 10 11 :WI ~ •• ~ • .--•• -F: M~ llO ';~ {f 1i~ ;J -• 1 v3"t" l 93 • 31 e.o!m•~ F~ncts _,,, 1 F Nl~no ~' "• ll• 11 : _ t~ ~ll~C '/ 1 "° HI '-1 6'1: 61 • t tr<1nsm1t to any number of Portfolios Inc New p 0 rt f, ~ vi , JI,, ,5 .,Iii na i Jo6 6 ,, :.!,·:~L ..s. 4:1 'lii. 16 1,1t ~u " 8 1r e J l2u 11il J1 , _ dl'legates \\hO are equipped Be;:ich a C.:a l iforn1a~::~-·~\i. tt: '1'1 ,rci."~, 1i};~~c~~~s,~ ... 1:, n 2~ 2*!:1~ +1~l;~h~:1'~ ,: 1:, ~i, l~~.=. y; ilh Ir 1ns1stor1z~d receivers ,,., 1';;f t , " 1 1 1•1,. °' F~• an p8c .J 10 'Cl st s1 st ... o11 F/•"''5<1 1• ·~ 101. "• 10 -+ , about the: size ()f a pack ()f corpornlion spec1all2ing 1n the ~:: ';l~\11 t~ 6.; ';~ 0o 1t ~j 1t J~ ~:n,• ldBJc~~ J ~~~ J " ,i~ _: I• ~1l~~~~e F •• 1•~. 1~ : ,~ : _ , 'I' $11r1 .J.121 31 J:l i"tOCk 11 S.1 11.s• ! b 1 )(I n 01 <16' """ _ • Fl1 E Ce..11 1,1 t , "' 19 , _,,, cigarelles de v e I 0 fl men I 3 n d F el (ID J JI Sua lnG! ?10 ·g :in~~: '° 1) 10•1 14 II .. + '• ~\: ~:. r 6D l•t. It. '" -, 'I" """ • 71 111111~st I]$ 'I C&Oli ' on !6'4 M~ '6h + • Fl p WI.I l 7~ .. .,., t1 • llardY<are 1s JUsl part or the .adm1nlstrat1on or custom tax "• G111 • ~~ .1 :io rno:r Gi 11s ' :,:l'L• 1" 11 ,].., ?l 1> -1, Ft: !1ee1 ~. • t." 6,,s • + '• The follow\M 11 1 te-r" n'l!'lboll Viti I I Fncl Gth Jtl l ltTMR IA.o f 6S IO !irolch l.,60 11 231 ?l ?l t Fl C 131! J so ut on \\hen the !'IUbJccl sheltered retirement a n d ~::~:' ; ff '~ l~~::;:r 1 ~ • ~ • , ••C• 60 11 M l ,,. ~, ' -l"l:'r o' a J 7 11 ' n•1 " r" '~ •to:rct ""'t" ""°rfll. m:iu er Is tcchn1c1l ii also Fr~!!.1111 Gr0\11! l f"ch11at '" 111 1 1••W o0~ tt14 1J44 1J,', 15;1-1, F~..:i 111 100 :lr: 1i:: ::!•-r 1: !.ltti •vu~ 1r1 LK'IOfflcl•L takes sJtlllcd Interpreters and profll!ihar1ng p I a n s for g;tJ~ ill ~ ~ J=:i J~ 1~ ~'~fl ;1:11,•, ~a '~1 ';'; i~ JS ~ ~:::l.~ ~o/, 111 i~ '1~.; ~~' i\ ... l1 -..1,. "'"' or mr1 .. bo-A1111111t "'" achnnce prep:irallon corporation~ and for self u11 SJ• i 11 J'•~ c11 ,., 1fi ~lc~"';11 ,, • lt• ''" ,t =11 ~::rf•ce ~ ,~; s: 1~ rs~: 1>101 11oc11 a1v1oeM. -L111u1t1,11111 avi. F•= {f; 1 ~; T~ E:'d ,,'i} 11 :, KG cor~ to 11 11 • lt.'o !' • -+ ·~ Foo!e M n •• 1J1 17 ! 11Ja! ., "' cft'nd o-Dec!J•ed or Nlo In 1'10 •kll lu h11ndl1n$: lhc Parasitology f'mplo\ cd 1ndi\ 1duals under Fa t•Mut 1 " 1 ,. l~ Gr 2 u t •• f '"''"ip Ji 4: ;} ri1• !f• -"" ~:::~~.:\', ,"'.o 1 11 • 15 ' • ~ •to0: a1v dlol'ld -Pait! 1 •, , nfll' ,_ Conftrcnc(' for txampll' 1~1L !hi' prO\\SIOn! of lht KeoghFr,:;,ric <;•"» .(lti:~~:. l" :~~:~~t'!t 4,JO 11; ll J~~ -... ,~ForM(l(f, 90 ;1! n~: ::; r. !'..!""'""In •l«le ,.,Ii,,. ltJI, 4'ttill'llltH n1ttrprl't1:rs \\ere selecled Act l:::!'t.f • .i ,: ~ii ,, 8~ '~~ol. ~ ~, :t :tr~' I:! ) J!~ ll!~ u'~.~ . ~:~k~r fo ~J tJ •• n I ~f . .: ~I U•ft v•l11t 1111 U.Olvltterld Of t_o'41111rfW. ft r !heir prnf1c1•ncy I n John!!cn \\ho will i;Utv>rv1se Piiot 6 ,. ~ 71 u~ ltd lluncl• "'••' t l>l•.JO ii~ JI , ·,; Fo•bor,o J01t u f' " 1• -'•Ion o.1n. -Oe<llf'fd • .,.111 • '•' ' r•~ Fund IA.m ~ J '& ~ccm • jJ 16l ... 11! lit " • 1 1 a I o ~~== Sul : 1',,' 1/ 1• 1~S ~~ 16\ -I l lh' Wf~r 1'1-0PCl~•etl "' ulG 11111' sclcntlf 1c parlanrr They also al l c:ontrol room 3CllVlllCS :lf g•~e"'Sec : 1• .!~ ~:~ 1: l7 1• :i ~: ~s E! , 't l! ... n~ r:~ -.. Frwt~Co I 10 $4 ,, • " 11 • ttlKk d yJ""'" or """ \lit. k-OKllP'MI spent h 0 u r s fam1hariung ti~ sc.rv1ct tenter joined CPI a=us~ SU Jl1 ui:"t.n 1:: lU ~5~ :~ " " "'' •1 " Foou• 1" lOt -G'n 171.o 1111 If ~ ~II"' P4IO m11 WU• lft l(CllmUl•ll'te ltave themselves \Ii 11h advt1nct te11:ts 1n June lit br1nl!s to his new Aot• F • s1 11' v1t11r Ll11t Fa "'t,"•u''.oo'° ,. n•\ n•• "'i -wtth a1v aer.c11 111 1r ••rs. r.-Hrw 111111. I!! pat Fd 1 .. I )'I! VI 1,ln 3.50 4 Ol tn e I! II 1 11 ~ !Ill. i 0 IA.~ Cl I IO 2l0 !1 '1' ]') -0 -Piie! IM1 vtlt t lvldrNI tmlltH. ... of krv addresses and p.ipers pos11fon the experlentt gained ,)f: si 1~.ts n i; ~°Tii ;,,.'t : N :~~'°b ; ?f! 'i;~ l!~, 1 :: :,, f:.1 ,.,:1 J : f 1, ft ,. -0-1 •vrte1 or "° ac1Jet1 11-en • i.1t dholetnof \\hen you rt handling 3 .-s an oper1:1ll()n.o; managt r 1n &,,n ,flel oil1 J t! Vri«S "IOI I.,. • ""1:1 ~~ ;li, 1• 70 :+ ' _o 1.... ,, ),,, 1 ~ lJ~ "'111i '""'',,. t-0.Ctireot or Nltl .,, ltXi 1iw %'""~" n n \• ~ V•Mrbl M 6 2! 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" ~·':!~.&: , ' 1• i; :_io llllf1o11. •t-E• '"~' --wllhovlwt,.. .. N y a1rltlt r ~ ' ~tch.r ~\'i :::,,,.,"'" 1 ll ,,,, 1• ~ 71 11 -~ •n i.'° ,j J • ~: u I .. , lf11. --w1111 W•nlln!I. Mt-Wlltll tht paraslto!Qgy conference ' Al"Ca for a maj"r ew ork M•mi 'j'·~ t~~l' • u !WV """HY U,!I " 'l ~ ,f: •1~ .i: :! .., r. on io • r,~ ;;,1 j~~ di''' IM.11" M-Whtn llM,llCI, IMl-Nm Sl id Soloviev • T h e r e s Stock Exchange Member Firm ~r"",.'1111 ~ 18 ;:r~n, 1i il ~~ 1'.ril • " • tt ,. -\t ~·~r I~ J!i~ ~~ y n· .... 1•Y ffl "tfT v1-l~ ~l!tl"uolao ., ,fl'Cel"' nolhlng like having 11n and the Cjt•bll!ihment ~nd\l: ~lh n i f,::Wle~•ra 1111• ;m~"ttr:,·, ii w~ n· ~11--J>I fl&l >D:· ll I 'I"'"'~' o• Mint ,_.. •• ftll'H OMll f , .... .dv.-Io 0. •I the d I I t t r NASO -~" 1·11 ·:<il~o lld •O ' •F-~11 u • l' I' jll + '~ .Jh .!j ~ itl• • ! ....... ll1tn~roft'!Cr AU Of" "°1!"11'" '"' wc:ll .. ,., " " m n 1 ra ion o a orw I""' r11 , 1 w1~n.ia J"J 1' I ~ w1 SP' u • ~· --. en Eltc 1 '° we. ,,,. m ... ..._. mattr1als 1'1embcr hrrn .~• f, :fi'~"it.F• tj 1U ~~~ ... ;\","' ,! \)..~ Y' ~)~.!:.,... n•,:tz: 1ai ,; ~: ~ :;',::~;!.,.1,11 :,.~~: "-wttlK1 " Jflnrket Sy11tbols ... ... ~ii '" '" '"' '" , .. ·~ " " '" ... ~:: ,,. ,,. ... "• "" •• ... . "' "" ~~ ~':. " -~~ f.11IC( Nerco ··~ Hat, NA vi N1! f ... "'' ... , H11 C NoK NII I ... ""' "'' NllG ... ... N11L "" "'" Nat~ N1IS Ntt 1 "'' N•ttl .... ""' ""I ·~ .,. "'• ·-NYH NYSI "'' ... ... ... ... .. ••• - F"rld.11, Stpttmbtt 11 , 1"70 SC Friday's Dosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List l•IM Mtf 1-------------CW..) """ Ltw ci.wi c-. S•ttt Hft 1·······························1 (Wt I Mltll l-CllM c., Market Finishes Sligl1tly Higl1e1~ • NEW YORK (UPI) -The stock market finish· ed irregularly higher Friday in moderate turnover. Shortly before the fina l bell , the Dow Jones in- dustrial average was up 1 09 at 761 84 Of the 1,554 on the tape, advances topped decllnes, 771 issues to 479 Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List illfl "'"' CMt ) H'lll ltw Clffe c11, S1ltt Nlf lfldt I Miii! Lew Cletl CJ19 hlll .... CllA) Mltll ltw C ... Clltl ,... "" Olft I ""' Lew t• tllt DAILY PILOI t J J - f I JJ DAILY PILOT frld~y. Stpttmbtf 11, 1970 ' CHECKING •UP• Wife 1st Suspect In Man's Murder By L.M. BOYD WHEN A MAN is murdered, say experienced policemen, first to be sos~ is his wife, second his father and third his brother , .. IT'S A FACT 1 newborn baby's body is 71 percen t water. Might mention, though. that the lady friend, who has changed a diaper or two, says that hardly ser:ms enough ... WAS NONE OTHER than. George Meredith, that cynic, who said. "Women will probably be the last animals civilized by man." LANGUAGE MAN -A client asks who first said "Nothing succeeds 1 i k e success." Our Language man looked it up. Originator cl that one were the doctors who witnessed first use or sulfuric ether in a surgical operation in Mass a ch u setts General Hospital in Boston, Oct. 16, 1846. The anesthesia worked. The doctors spoke. Eight years later Alexandre Dumas, the elder. quoted them in fiction , and the line took hold. OPEN QUESTIO N -Is there any other word in the English language b e s i d e s "indivisibility" which contains only <lne v()wel repeated six times? CONSIDER THIS -Were you aware we're rapidly running <lUt of giant pandas? That's correct. Altogether, only nine have been brought inlO this country. First to get here came in 1936. Problem is the .Qnly place in the world you find them wild is the western China province of Szechuan. And Inasmuch as we 're still not getting along any too niftily with the mainland Olinese, our giant panda 11upply Is cut off. Too bad. CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q. "Which hu turned up most on the cover of 'Time', President Nixon or former President Johnson?" A. Mr. Johnson. Last count for him, as t recall, was 41 treatments on the "Time" cover . 1 • Q. "What's the fastest speed a hockey player makes during a game?" A. Fastest so far timed is 29.7 mph. BObby Hull did that. SKmTS -Those fashion designers dreamed, up the rnlni, the midi and· the maxi. But why ha ve they so far failed to dream up the multi? Everybody knows fashions are dictated by the sellers of costly clothing. So how does it happen said sellers have failed to introduce the multi skirt? This skirt should have three layers of materia, each a different color, shingled so each color would show. Such would require three times as much material as an ordinary skirt, almost. Am thinking of hiring out to the textile makers. CAN A GIRL inherit a knack for cooking? Lot of argument over this question. All I know is a girl definite ly can inherit a knack for tasting delicate flavors . Some people are born with 'especially sensitive tongues. Thal has been proven. So as far as cooking goes, wouldn 'I they have the edge on the rest ol us? Think so. Your qutstions and com· mrnts art welcomtd and 1oill bt used in CHECKING UP whertver possiblt. Ad· drtss letters to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, Newport Beach, Calif., 92660, Doctor Studies Blues In Pregnant Women GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) -Dr. Jsmet Karacan is paying pregnant women $10 a night to sleep in a laboratory so that their brain waves and 5Jumber patterns may be analyzed. Purpose of the project is to seek ways of predicting cases of "postpartum block," a form of severe depression which overcomes some women after they have given birlh. The federal government has provided $80,000 for the study by Turkish-born Dr. Karacan. Psychophysiology of S I e e p Laboratory at the University of Florida. "In my first year of psychiatric residenc y my first six patients had postpartum blues." Dr. Karacan told an interviewer. "One mother killed the baby. Those things made a heavy impact on me. "From a blue sky the person can become like .this. They have the first baby, the pregnancy is normal, now the woman has the fruit of nine months waiting. "Wilhin a week or two she becomes incompetent emotionally, quite disturbed and depressed with severe crying spells and so on." Each night the subjects come to the laboratory to be wired to machines whi ch ........ ""' ., • .,. SLIM GYM U»l A Dll[fS tlZt IN 1 WElkl Fiii HOME DlMQHt11tATIOH 111'•'.-u Tt.LEPHONf. WALT (714) ..... ,,. • electronically read b r a I n \Yaves and record s I e e p patterns on iraph paper. "Already we are finding that in later pregnancy sleep is quite a bit disturbed despite the fact that the woman is clinically normal ," the doctor said. ''There is no sign of depress ion or the blues but she sleeps not so soundly. "Brainwaves of these patients are like those of sick, depressed patients and we find they are occurring two weeks or a month before birth. "When the changes occur early and more severly we find the patient is not as apt to recover so fast after birth as the normal patient who snaps back in about two weeks." Learning to spot the early warnings may enable .doctors to predict severe postpa rtum reaction and treat the patient accordingly, Dr. Kara can said. Dr. Karacan · was asked v.·hcther these par a tlo n , sometimes four nights in a row. bothers the affected couples. On the contrary. he said, "sometimes I think husband and wife get sick and tired or each other and being away helps." Israel Reports Cholera Death JERUSALEM (AP) Israeli health authorities said today that 66 cases of cholera have been reported in Israel and the occupied West Bank of Jordan and that one patient has died. UN ITED STATES NAT IO NAL BA NK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH HOW OPIH SATURDAYS t M 1 r.M. MON .·TMUlS. 10·1 P.M. FllDAYS 10.l P.M. 17141140·5211 , Lec9"4 l1t: S.. Cfflf ,._, Cette M_. Alll. 'hl:t ...... 411......, E. H. LEVAN Nixon Knows ••• It 's not easy to report sports, advertise bargains, carry your favorite cartoons, write up a wedding, record history and analyze global events ... in short, to make anything that happens in the world local news. Only the newspaper can do it. We know it's not an easy job, but we accept the challenge. .. I l' p y s p 1, ,, h L ' ,, v • n " • h d a a. h T po • lh of " ., "' " D H lo • rl• cl. I th Sc re th Le Vi Cr • he Vi ch R; R< p, Mi Joi ch ye • I o!I 1'.fi 1 !!Cl Bo lrE le~ ye. Jn: pli "" Ro 1 1 l Sci ad d• s.· bu ad· Jar In :Fi( Tn 1 11<1 bel P.e bl• ! set Cle !al• lhe T Iha Down tlae Mission Trail School Milk F cc Upped Slig l1 tly CAPISTRANO BEACH -School mJlk pri~s will be going up Just slightly this year. Trustees or the Ca pistrano Unified School District have voted to kee p the price of a half pint of milk at 5 cent s, but lo raise the price of the 113 o( a quart to 10 cents. ll has been seven cents. Corine Green, dirt'Ctor of food services, liad reCQmmended raising the half pints to 10 cents and the 113 quarts to 12 cent~ ,;ince the federal school m I l k reimbursement program has not yel been voted on by Congress. e S11oo py T oo? SAN JUAN CA PISTRANO -You mi ght even see the Red Baron if you look real close at Saturday and Sunday's fly-in at Capistrano Airport A bevy of vintage planes "'ill be on hand to compete in flying events. displayli, and sailplane exhibitions from 8 a.m. to dusk. There will even be a hol air balloon ascension by Don Piccard of Costa t.1esa. The fl y·in is sponsored by the Independent Protective Order o ( Taiklraggers, Inc. and is open to the public. e Crai n Ap poh1ted CAPISTRANO BEACH -Trustees or the Capistrano Unified School District orficially appointed Dr. John Cra in as assistant superintendent of instruction and personnel Tuesday. Crain replaces Ra y Oliver who is the new Associate Superintendent o f Instruction at Santa Ana Unified School District. On the motion n1ade by Trustee Bob Hursl, Crain was appointed to the post • for one year. Crain has served the district in many capacities for nearly 20 years, and most recently served as Director of Pcrsbnncl Scr\·ices. e Ari Offered MISSION VIEJO -The art of decoupage will be taught in a two session class on Mondays, Sept. 14. and 21. Doris Swanson will be instructor during the '1-10 p.m. sessions in the Linda Vista School multipurpose room. The fee will be $2 but sludents v.'ill be required to have several n1alerials with them. For a complete list co ntact Lowana Carter. pres ident of the Mission Viejo Association of Artists a n d Craftsmen. 830-4175. The class is sponsored by the art group. e De 1noc rol C/1olrtnon f\11SSION VIEJO -f\1ike Michaels has he.en elected chairman or the rirst Mission Viejo Democrats Club. Also serving will be Ed Clements. vice C'hairman: Irving Stewart, treasurer : Ray Cooper, parliamentarian : Mary Rego, corresponding secretary, and Peggy Russo, reco rding secretary, all ot Mission Viejo. Interested persons who would like II) join the organization may call the new chai rman at 837-2595. Dues are $2 per )'ear per person or $3 per family. e Ell'• Elect MJSSIO VIEJO -The first slate or officers have been elected by the new ~1ission Viejo Elks Club. Don Robinson, exalted ruler. will be ~crving the new organization along with Bob Rusie, secretary ; Wall Cassel.a, treasurer: Jack Devereaux, esteemed leading knight, and Dolan Ginger, third year trustee. The term of orflct will begin at Jnsiitulion Charter Night which will take place Satuday, Sept. 26. Applications for charter membership are still available. If Interested contact Robinson at 83G-0260. T r ustees Okay T ransportation Uni t a t School Trustees or the C~pistrano Unified School District have given the adminii;tration the green light in the development of .a lranspo rtation center at Serra School in Capistrano Beach. The plan calls for demolishing the building which house3 !he dl3trlct administrative office, replllcing It with a large parll:lng lot. "This butlding i! causing us problems In gettlng insurance because It Is a pre- Fleld Act facillly," said Superintendenl Truman Benedict The estimated cosl or converting the school to the transportation center is betv•een SJS.CW Md $50,000 act(lrding to P..enedict. The figure y,·ould include new blaclctopplng and the building demolition. lknedlct rtrommended moving the tiChool board meetings to the San Cltmente: High School little lhc:Her, He said i;t:iff meetings could take place in lhe remainini;i bulldirlg ~I Serra School. The project win be started no later than lhe first of f~e >·ear. • iebra Skin Roof? t\llhough zebras are a favor ite dish of lions. these two striped animaJs did not escape to a jeep rooftop to avoid being dinner guests at Lion Country Safari. They are on a bank in back of the vehicle, separated from their foes by a large fence. The effect was produced through a telephoto camera lens. Adult Education Program Offe1·s Fou1· New Courses Four new courses will be offered when lhe Capistrano Unified School District's Adult Education program begins Sepl. 21. The new offeri11gs will include an adult basic education class, which will not be offered for credlt, featuring reading, grammar, spelling and a r it h m e t i c refresher courses. as special occasions. Students will be required to provide their ow• fQOd and utensils. Adult education classes .are taught at San Clemente High SChool. For information on this year's schedule eall Ule &ellOOI at 492-4165. 300 Marines Return Home Frldq, Stptembtt 11, llJ10 DAI L. Y PJL.OT ;s Saddlehack Rule Eased Hair Curbs Suspended Pending Court Date BJ GEORGE LEIDAL Of .,.. ~ ...... ,.., Saddleback Colle1e will not tnforce itt controversial dress code until a ruling is obtained from the Ninth District Court of Appeals. Dr. Fred JI. Bremer, superintendent- president of the Mission Viejo Junior college campus, said thal Ult code "can't be an issue" If it Isn't being eniorced. He and the Saddleback board art awaiting a ruling on the board'• appeal or a decision that granted five-long haired studmt.s a pennane:nt injunction whkh forced the college to let them enroll for classes this fall . "The main •·issue," Bremer said, "is \\thethtt the federal court has the right to set rules for the local Board of Trustees. Obviously, our board fee ls the court doesn't h:i ve the right to inlerlere with the oper.aUon of our campus." l\'hen asked If he felt the l)OSSibly repressive atmosphere at Saddleback has led to studtnts requesting transfers out of the distrk:t, Bremer replied. "J'm sure there have ~n aome instances where students ha\'e not liked the dress code and transferred to other junior colleges." "However," he said, "transfers are only granted lo g\udents who want to take courses we don't offer." Hans Vogel, presldmt or t he Saddleback board, last wttlr told the Orange County Board of EducaUn that transfers out of the Saddleback Junior College District were costing the district one-sixth of the college 's $.1.% million budget -about $500,000. He noted that the provision of teachtrs bardshlp cases. He a~ Vogel told the county board they were concerned about tettlna precedent If the county trustees granted the distance factor appeals. "It's a moot question," Bremer said, noting that tt was impossible to tell whether the studeflls requesting transfers out of the district were doing so because thty wre dissatisfied with the dress code or were seeking courses not offered at Saddleback. Vogel told county trustees the district had granted '100 transfer reques!s last year. Bremtt today said he feel s the board i!ii "'stiJI very adamant about having a dress code at Saddle back." But until the court rules on lts legality. "the kids can wear their hair any v.•ay they like. "I'll stick with lhe stand I've taken for ih.e past t~·o years," he said, ''lhal hair and clothes may interfere with the educational process." "I don't object to the 'mOd' type or Menu Victory haircut th'~t la becoming so popular, but rather tti; e1'lremely long ha ir and moustaches that I think are symbols of radicalism. "Many studl!nts have picked up these symbol! as a fad," he added . During the height of the controversy last year, i;tudent11 appenred .t t Saddleback board meetings, and many - including the student body prcsident- said they felt students who otherwise would attend Saddlebllck were not be- cause of the "repressive .. rules on dre!iis. Aft er being asked Ir the board might consider lifting the "repressive'' code In view of the district's transfer derlcit, Bremer said. "You're the one who's calling it repressive. Thal is an ediorial viewpoint. The fa ct of the matter is, it is illegal for stud ents to transfer For any reason other than to take 1 course they can°t get here. If they don 't lake tho damn course, then they can be expelled from the other college -and that's happened to some, I understand." ' Johnny Moor e Lauded On Meal for President and classroom space al Saddlebact The message from Washington came the S«ret Servke and other White Hou11e coupled with paying tuition transfers to today. aides regularly dine -said a spokesman oUier districts constituted 1 •double Nobody got heartburn last Sunday. for the President called Thursday tt'I payment by the laitpayers." Not even Johnny ft1oore , the San report raving reviews of the dinner• Vogel and Bremer were appearing at a Clemente restaurateur who supervised consumed durin g the trip home. hearing called by the county board who thot yeoman efforts of the his \\'ife and ··It was a day 1'11 never forget." ftloore later granted three transfers to residents sister-In-law after being commissioned by said later. "When all those important of the Saddleback district who claimed the Whlte House staff to prepare 30 people are watching you, you just have to distance v.·as a hardship. ftlexican dinners to go-for President do the best Job, and my wife and sister· Bremer indicated today, "That transfer Nixon and his party returning to the in-law certainly did.'' request was in no way related to the capital aboard Air Force One. Discounting major role in the culinary dress code." • tiloore rea?ived the invitation to duties, the Capistrano Beach residen t He declined to comment on the :super\'ise the Presidential meal last praised his wile. Sarah, and her sister, po3Sibility that the "lnstancts where Saturda y morning. Gina Olivares. students have not liked the dress code The owner of San Clemente's Don Juan "They did all the work ,'' he said. Physica l anthropology \\'ill also be offered this year. The course will cover man's origins and relation lo other animals, fossil evidence of prehistoric man, heredity and evolutionary change, and the origin o( mari 's cultural behavior . and transferTed" might outnumber the Restaurant -where many members of "I just grated the cheese." Four Pacific Flt?i!t ships bearing 300 lr ______ ;;;;i _______________ ;;;;i _______ ;i;;;;.,;;.. ...... ...,-.. .-.-.---;;, ~1arines returning from Vietnam arrived Vocational landscaping will feature the theory and practice of I a n d s c a p e maintenance to prepare students for employment in that field . It will include practical principles of horticulture, turf management, plant diseases, p e s t control, and mai11tenance skills. Another new course \\'ill be Cooking For the Family, a course fea tur ing European st.y le gourmet c o o k i n g • Jncluded will be menu pla11ning, buying, and preparation of main courses, soups. and desserts for everyday meals as ~·ell Triton Week Announced 111 San Clen1cnte Sa11 Clemente ft1ayor \Vatter 8. Evans Jr. has proclaimed nrxt week ;as Triton Booster ~·eek in honor of lhe adult support group which ra ises funds for athletic and other causes at Sa11 Clemente High School. The proclamation, ~·hich coincides lvith the opening week of the school year, praises ·the grou p led this year by President James Faith . In past years the booslers have raised money to provide a football sco reboa rd, band uniform s, a videotape recorder, blazers for the music department. athletic equipment, uniform s ri 11 d facilities to cut down theft on the athletic field. The week will be launched by a Booster-sPonsored pan ca k e breakfast followed by a football scrimmage Saturday starting at 7:30 a.m. The scrimmage. pitting the Trilons against the team from Savannah High School, will start at 10 a.m. along the Pacific Coast today and the happy cargo will immediately retur111 tG Camp Pendleton for processing and reunions with loved ones. The 300 leathernecks are part of the America n cutback ol forces in Viet.am. The Amphibious Dock Transport USS Juneau and amphibious Cargo Ship USS SL Louis, both amved at the Long Beach Naval Station carrying Marines from several units in Vietaam. The Dock Landing Ship USS Alimo landed at 11 a.m. today. The Tank Landing StUp USS Fresno arrived at 12:30 p.m. in San Diego. But most of the reunions took place at Camp ~as Pulgas south of San Clemente, \\/here friends and relative3 of the tifarines were encouraged to meet the t.farines at a reception tent especially built for men returning from combat duty. P er so nal Plates 1'o Fig ht Sn1Qg San Clemente Chamber or Commerce offices will di11pense applications for the state's plan to offer personalized lieen!t plates to motorists willing to fork over $25 ex tra. The special plates, issued by the state with proceeds going towa rd .an anlipollulion campaign, can bear any v.·ord which fits, isn't confusing and docsn 't offend normal taste. A four-page brochure explaining the program is included in the application. For those motorists contemplating lhelr "ideal'' license plate chamber spokesmen offer this tip: The letters on the special plates must be between two and six in number. ··Home of .the We!lern White House'' won't fit, they added. Johns ln-vaded~ W omen's R estroorn R ights Debated WASHINGTON (UPI) -\\'il1 the propo5ed Women's Rights Am c11d1nenl make the men's rootn unconstitutional? Sen. Sam J . Ervin J r., (0-N .C.), l'iald Thursday it would. A law professor !'laid it might. Sen. Marlow W. Cook, (R-Ky.), said he didn 't believe it. Ervin questioned whether separate toilets for men and women in public faciliti es would be illegal if a proposed Constitutional amcndl nt Is adopted to bar the United Stat or any state to deny or abridge equ dy of rights •;on account or sex." At a Senate Judlciary Committee hearing. Ervin noted that aome state laws require se parate toilet facilities for women and men and make It a criminal offeJllSe for one sex to. use the facilities of another. He said those law1 would be inv1lldaltd by the amendment. rhilip 8. Kurland, law profe550r at the University of Chicago, said the propo1al wa5 so opcn~llld that courts might construe Jt this way -or might permit "sel)'rate but equal" restrooms. Cook said the whole argument was • ••red herring,'• as were E r v I n ' ~ mntentlons lhal the nmcndmcnt might subject women to comba l duty or oullaw 11eparate pri.sons for men .and wome•. •·surely the elimination of differences between men and' wome11 cannot be obliterated by Constitutional f iat ,'' Kurland testified. While agreeJng that American women do suffer from ''unreason·ed discrimination," he suggested that the problem be attacked by statute rather thaJI an "instant and simpllsllc'" Constitutional amendment. •le said It may be possible for lhe ge11e.ratlon of women now coming to maturity "to succe~ in a competitive society In ~·hich au differences in )q:al rights between men and women were wiped out." "There remains a very large part of the remelt population on whom the imposition or such Constitu~1! standard would be disastrtNs," Kurland Jald. "Thctt ls no doubt that JOClety permitted these women to oorno maturity, not as competitors with malea but ratht r .as the bearers ind ralsua of their children and keeper• of their homes. There i re a mulUtude of woqlelll \lo'ho still find fulfillment in thi! role," KurlRnd sRid. "In the eyts of 'lll!Omtn, this rriay be unfortunate, but It ii true:• Don't Be Fooled By The Beard, Long Hair, Grandpa Glasses And 'Message' THIS IS NO LIPPY HIPPY This Is Gloomy Gus, Invented by the DAJLY PILOT 1 dozen years ago, when hippy still meant maybe yOu needed a new girdle. He appears daily on the editorial page where he stars as a so rt of ventrilo- quist's dummy who talks only when someone (DAILY PILOT readers , in this instance) puts \VOrds into his mouth. But he has been saying a mouthful every publicatJo n day for yea rs now. Want to know what your neigh· bors are thinking ... what'& wrong (or right) with the world, nation, stale, community, neighborhood you live in? Want to give oI1 Gus a piece of your mind to pas3 on? Then aet with the hippest lip In town, Gloomy Gus, "communicating" daily (Monday through Friday) ON THE EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE • J ! DAil Y PILOT Friday, Stptembtt 11, 1970 . CHECKING •UP• Wife 1st Suspect In Man's Murder By L.M. BOYD WHEN A MAN is murdered, say experienced policemen, first to be sus~ed is his wife, 5eCOnd his father and third his brother ... IT'S A FACT a newborn baby's body Is 71 percent water. Might mention. though. that the lady friend, who has changed a diaper « two, says that hardly seems enough ... WAS NONE OTHER than George Meredith, that cynic, who s.aid , "Women will probably be the last animals civilized by man." LANGUAGE MAN -A client asks who first said "Nothing succeeds 11 k e success." Our Language inan looked it up. Originator ol thal one were the doctors who witnessed first use of suUuric ether in a surgical operation in Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, Oct. 16, 1846. The anesthesia ~'Orked . The doctors spoke. Eight years later Alexandre Dumas, the elder, quoted them in fiction , and the line took hold. OPEN QUESTION -ls !here any olher word in the Eng!lsh language b e s i d e s "indivisibility'' which contains only one vowel repeated six lim • es . CONSIDER 1llIS -Were you aware we're rapidly running out of giant pandas? Thcit's correct. Altogether, only nine ha ve been brought into this country. First to get here came in 1936. Problem is the only place in the world you find them wild is the western China province of Szechuan. And Inasmuch as we're still not getting along any too niftily with the mainland Olinese, our giant panda supply Is cul oil Too bad. CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q, "Which has turned up most on the cover of 'Time', President Nillon or former President Johnson?" A. Mr. Johnson. Last rount for him , as I recall, was 41 treatments on the ''Time'' cover ... Q. "What's the fastest speed a hockey player makes during a game?" A. Fastest so far timed is 29.7 mph. Bobby Hull did that. SKIBTS -Those fashion designers dreamed up the mini, the midi and the maxi. But why ha ve they so far failed to dream up the multi? Everybody knows fashions are dictated by the sellers of costly clothing. So how does It happen said sellers have failed to introduce the multi skirt? Th.is skirt shou ld have three layers of materia, each a different color, shingled so each color would show. Such would require three times as much material as an on:llnary skirt, almost. Am thinking of hiring out to the telltlle makers. CAN A GIRL inherit a knack for cooking? Lot of argument over this question. All I know is a girl definitely ca n inherit a knack for tasting delicate fla vors. Some people are born with especially sensitive tongues. That has been proven. So as far as cooking goes, wouldn't they have the edge on the rest of us? Think so. Your. questiot1s and com· mrnts are welcomed and wfll be used in CHECKING VP wherever possible. Ad· dress letter1 to L. M. Bo~. P.O. Box 1875, Newport Beach, Calif., 92660. Doctor Studies Blues In Pregnant Women GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) -Dr. lsmet Karacan is paying pregnant women $10 a night to sleep in a laboratory so that their brain waves and slumber patterns may be analyzed. Purpose of the project is to seek ways of predicting cases of "postpartum block," a form of severe depression which overcomes some women after they have given birth. The federal government has provided SS0.000 for the study by Turkish-born Dr. Karacan, Psychophysiology of S 1 e e p Laboratory at the University of Florida. "Jn my first year of psychiatric residency my first six patients had postpartum blues." Dr. Karacan told an interviewer. "One m o t h e r killed the baby. Those things made a heavy impact on me. "From a blue sky the person can become like .this. They have the first baby, the pregnancy is normal, now the woman has the fruit of nine months waiting. ''Within a week or two she becomes inc ompetent emotionally, qui~ disturbed and depressed with severe crying spel\s and so on ." Each night the subjects come to the laboratory to be wired to ma chines. v.·hich • electronically read b r a I n waves and record s I e e p patterns on Q:raph paper, "Already we are finding that in later pregnancy sleep is quite a bit disturbed despite the fact that the woman ls clinical ly normal ," the doctor said. "There is no sign of depression or the blues but she sleeps not so soundly. "Brainwaves of these patients are like those of sick, depressed patients and we find they are occurring two weeks or a month before birth. "When the changes occur early and more severly we find the patient is not as apt to recover so fast after birth as the normal palienl who snaps back in about two weeks." Learning to spot the early warnings may enable doctors to predict severe postpartum reaction and treat the palient accordingl y, Dr. Karacan said. Dr. Karacan was asked v.·hether these par a ti on , sometimes four nights in a row. bothers the affected couples. On the contrary. he said, "sometimes I think husband and v.•i!e get sick and tired of each other and being away helps.'' Israel Re ports Cholera Death JERUSALEM (AP) Israeli health authorities said today that 66 cases of cholera have been reported in Israel and the occupied West Bank of Jordan end that one patient has died. UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW OPIN SATURDAYS ttto1P.M. MON.•THUlt. 10-S P.M. 1 PllDAYS IO·• P.M. f714 I 140·1211. le<9"4 I•: le. CMlt pt-. CMM M ... AMI, Vlc:t 1',,..,,M111 ..... E. H. LEVAN \ Nixon Knows ... It's not easy to report sports, adv!!rtise bargains, carry your favorite cartoons, write up a wedding, record history and analyze global events ... in short, to make anything that happens in the world local news. Only the newspaper can do it. We know it's not an easy job, but we accept the challenge. • ~ ' .. ' • I;; ..., l c pri1 ica 1 Set prh In 10. c ha< to ,;in• teh \•ot • s mi1 rea at A har dis a.rr T asc T Ind Tai put • c the offi ass and c nOY Ins Dis 0 Hui for c cap rec Ser • N dee cla: D the Sch 1 rcq the· Lm Vie Crz T gro • • "'" Vie A cha Ra: Ret Pe! r.fi~ 11 ]oir cha yeo; • • (l(fi f\fi! [ ser Bot tre~ lea· yec 1 Ins pl a A are Roi 1 1 l , Sci ad! de• Set , bui ad1 Jar In Fil Tn , "'t bet E• bl• I get Cl• 15ai the , Iha Down the Mission Trail School Milk Fee Upped Sli gh)J y CAPISTRANO BEACH -School milk prices will be going up JUSI slightly this year. Truslets of !he Capistrano Unified School District have voled to keep the price of a hair pint or milk at 5 cents, but lo raise the price of the 113" or a quart lo JO cents. H has been ~even cents. Corine Green . director or food se rvice s, had recommended raising the half pint~ l.o IO cent s and the 113 quarts to 12 cents Eince the federal school m i I k reimburseme nt program has not yeL been voted on by Congress. e Snoopy Too? SAN .JUAN CAPISTRANO -You might even see the Red Baron if you look real close al Saturday and Su nday's ny-in at Capistrano Airport A bevy of vintage planes 1o1.·ill be on hand to rompcte in fl ying events, displays, and sailplane exhibitions from 8 a.m. to dusk. There will even be a hot air balloon ascension by Don Piccard of Costa ~1esa. The fly-in is sponsored by the lnclependent Proteclive Order o { Taildraggers. Inc. and is open to the public. e Cr11in Appointed CAPISTRANO BEACH -Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District officially appointed Dr. John Crain as assistant superintendent of instruction and personnel Tuesday. Crain replaces ~ay Oliver who is the new Associate Superintendent o f Jnstructlon at Santa Ana Unified School District. On the motion n1ade by Trustee Bob l~urst, Crain was appointed to the post for -0nc year. Crain has served the rlistrict in many capacities for nearly 20 years. and mosl reeently served as Director of PersOnncl Services. e Art Offered fl;llSSION VIEJO -The art ol rlecoupage will be taught In a two session class on Mondays, Sept 14 and 21. Doris Swanson will be instructor during the 7-10 p.m, sessions In the Linda Visla School mul tipurpose rooin. The fee will be $2 but students will be required to have scver1ill materials with them. For a complete list contact Lowana Carter, president of lhe Mission Viejo Assoc iation of Artists a n d Craftsmen. 830-4175. The class is sponsored by the art group. e Democral Cl1air1nan r..IJSS ION VIEJO -l\1Jke ~1ichaels has been elected chairman of the first Mission Viejo Democrats Club. Also serving will be Ed Clements. vice chairman ; Irving Stewart . treasurer ; Ray Cooper. parliamenl11rian : 1.1ary Rego, corresponding secretary, and Peggy Russo. recording secretary. all of !\fission Viejo. Interested persons who would like IQ join the organization may call the new chairman al 837-2595. Dues are $2 per year per person or SJ per famil y. e Elks Elecl MISSIO VIEJO -The first slate of officers have been elected by the new l\1ission Viejo Elks Club. Don Robinson, exalted ruler. will he serving the new organ ization along with Bob Rusie, secretary; Walt Cassela, treasurer; Jack Devereaux. esteemed leading knight, and Dolan Ginger, third year trustee. The tenn of offiCf will begin at Institution Charter Night which will take place Satuday, Sept. 26. Applications for charter membership are still available. If interested contact Robinson at 830-0260. Trustees Oka y Transportation Unit at Scl1ool Tmstees of the"' Capistrano Unified School Dislrlct have given L h e administration lhe i:reen light in the development of a transportation ce.nter at Serra School in Capistrano Beach. The plan calls for demollshlng the building which hou!ts lhe dlstricL administrative of(lce, replacing It with a large parking lot. "This bulldJng Is causing u.s problems 11'1 getting insurance bccituse it is 1 pre- Fleld Ac! facility," said Superintendent Truman lk!nedlcl The estimated cost of converting the school to the transportation center is bel11•ttn $.1$.<nl and $50,000 according to Benedict. The figure would in<:lude new blacktopping and lhf building demoliUon. Bcntdict recommended moving the school board mtetlng' lo the San Cltmente Hlgh School little theater. He st1id $Ulf( meetings cnu1d take place in the remaining building !I Serra School. Thr, ·project wtll h<' &tarted no later lhan the first of the )'ear. • Zebra Skin Roof? Although zebras are a favorite dish of lions, these two striped anlmaJs did not escape to a jeep rooftop to avoid being dinner guests at Lion Country Safari. They are on a bank in back of the vehicle, separated from their foe s by a large fence. The effect was produced through a telephoto camera Jen:i;. Adult Education Program Offers Fou1· New Courses Four new courses will be offered when !he Capistrano Unified School District 's Adult Education program begin:o; Sept. 21 . The new offeri11gs will inc lude an adult basic education class, which will not be oUered · for creclit, featuring reading, grammar, spelling aJ1d a r i t h m e t i c refresher C-Ourses. Physica l anthropology wi ll also be offered this year. The course ¥.'iii cover man's origins and relation to other animals, fossil evidence of prehistoric man. heredity and evolutionary change, and the origin of ma11's cultural behavior. Vocational landscaping will feature the theory and practice of I a n d s c a p e maintenance to prepart. students for employment in that field. It will inclurle practical principles of horticulture, turf management, plant diseases, p e s t control, and maintenance skills. Another new course v.•i\I be Cooking For the Family, a course featuring European style gourmet c o o k i n g • Included will be menu plaining. buying, and preparation of main courses, soups , and desserts for everyrlay meals a! well Triton Week Announced In Sa11 Clemente Sa" Clemente l\1ayor \Valter B. Evan~ ,Jr . has proclaimed next week as Triton Booster 1o1.·ee k in honor of the arlull support group which raises funds for athletic and other causes at Sa11 Clemente High School. The proclamalion, v.•hich coincides \Yith the opening week -0f the school year, praises 'the group led this year by President James Faith . In past years the OOoslers have raised money to provide a football scoreboard, band uniforms , a videotape recorder, blazers for the music rleparlment. athletic equipment, 11niforms :i: "rl facilities to cut down theft on the athlelic field. The week will be launched by a Booster·sponsored pan ca .k e breakfast followed by a football scrimmage Saturday startiJ1g at 7:30 a.m. The scrimmage. pitting the Tritons against lhe team from SavaMah HJgh School, will start at 10 a.m. as special occasions. Students will be required_ to provide their ow11 food and utensils. Adult educati<>n classes are taught at Sa.n Clemente High School. F o r inf-0rmation on this year's schedule call the school at 4.92-41M. 300 Marines Retm·n Home Four Pacific Fleet ships bearing 300 J\farines returning from Vietnam arrived along the Pacific Coast today and the happy cargo will immediately returit lo Camp Pendleton for processing and reunions with loved ones. The 300 leathernecks are parl of the American cutback 0£ forces in Vletaam. The Amphibioos Dock Transport USS Juneau and amphibious Cargo Ship USS St. Louis, both amved at the Long Beach Naval Station carrying Marines from several units in Vietaam. The Dock Landing Ship USS Alamo landed at 11 a.m. today. The Tank Landing Ship USS Fresno arrived at 12 :30 p.m. in San Diego. But most of the reunions took place at Cam p Las Pulgas south of San Clemente, 'vhere frienrls and relatives of the l\larines were encouraged to meet the l\1arines at a reception tent especially built for men returning from combat duty. Personal Plates To Fight Sn1Qg San Clemente Chamber or Commerct offices will dispense applications for the state's plan to offer personalized lictn!t. plates to motorists willing to fork over $25 extra. The special plates, issued by !he stat~ with proceeds going toward a n antipollution campaign, can bear any word which fits. isn't confusing and doesn't offend norma l taste. A four-page brochure ~xplaining the program Is included in the application. For those motorists conte.mplating lhe.ir ''ideal" license plate chamber SJXlkesmen offer this tip : The letters on the special plates must be between two and six in number. "Home· or the Western White House'' won 't fit, they added. Jol1ns l11'7aded~ Women's Restroo1n Rights Debated WASHINGTON (UPI) -Wiii the proposed Women 's Rights Amcndmenl make the men's room unconstltutional ? Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr., (0-N.C.), !alcl Thursday il would. A law professor said it might. Sen. Marlow W. Cook, (R·Ky .), said he didn't beUeve Jt. Ervin questioned whether separ1te loilets for men and women in public facilities would be illegal if a proposed {',omtituUonal amendment is adopted lo bar the U11ited Stales or any &'late to dmy or abridge equality of rights "on account of sex." At a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing. Ervin noted that some state laws require .separate toilet facllities for women and men and make ll a criminal offeJl.Se for one seI to use the facllltles of another. He said those laws would be Invalidated by the amendment. Philip B. Kurland, law professor at lhe Univeraity or Chicago, said the proposal WU so open-eltd that courts might construe il this way -or might permit ''!leparate but equal" restrooms. Cook said the whole argument was a ''red herring," as were Erv f n '' contentions that the &mcndmcnt might 1ubject women to combat duty or outlaw .separate prisons for men and wome11. "Surely the elimination of differences betv.·ee n men and· womeR cannot be obliterated by Constitutional Ii at 1'' Kurland testified. While agreeing that American women do suffer from ''unreason·ed discrimination," he suggested lh1t the problem be attacked by statute rather lha111 an "instant and simplistic'" Constitutional amendment. He Said it may be possible for the geReratlon of women now coming to maturity ''to succeed in a competitive society in which all 0difference1 in Ie1al righlS between men and women were wiped out.'' "There remains a "ery larae part of the female populaUon on whom the impct81tion of such Constltu~al standard would be disastrous," Kurland 1aid. "Tbcre Is no doubt that aocltty permlttcd these Womtn to eamo maturity. not as 'ompetitora with malts but rathe:r as the bearers and railers of thclr children and keept~s of their homes. There are a multJtude or woqiea v.·ho st lll rind fulfillment In this role," Kurland said, "In the eyes of women, this may be unlortunatt,rbut it 1& true.11 f'rld1,1, Stpttmbtr 11, 1'110 s DAIL V PILOT :1 Saddlehack Rule Eased Hair Curbs Suspended Pending Court Date BJ GEORGE LEIDAL or .... EMilt1 'n" ..... Saddlebiek COilege will not enforct Its C()ntroveraial drtss code until a 1'\lllng is obtalned f~ the Ninth District Court of Appeals. Or. Fred H. Bremer, suptrlntendent.- presldent of the Missk>n-Vlejo Junior college campus, said that Q>e code "can't be 1n issue" If it isn't being enforced. He and the Saddlebact board are awaiting a ruling on the board's appeal of a decision lhat granted five-long haired students a permanent injunction which forced the college to 1tt them enroH for classes this fall. "The main Jssut," Brtmer said, "is whether tile federal court has the right to set rules for the local Board of Trustets. Obviously. our board feels the court doesn't have the righl to ln.terfere with the operation of our campus." Y.'hen asked if he felt the possibly repressive atmosphere at Saddleback has led to students requesting transfers out or the district, Bremer replied, "I'm sure there have been some instances where students ha ve not liked lhe dress code and transferred to other junior colleges ." ''However ," he said, "transfer s are only granted to students who want to take courses we don't offer." llans Vogel, president of t he Saddleback board, last week told the Orange COunty Board or Educatin that transfers out or the Saddleback JW\ior College District were costing the district one-sixth or the college's $3.2 million budget -about $500,000. He noted thal the provision of teachers and classroom space at Saddlebaclc coupled with paying tuition transfers to other districts constituted ' ' d o u b 1 e payment by the taxpayers.·• Vogel and Bremer were appearing at a Maring called by tl)e coW\ty board who later !fanted thrtt transfers to residents of the Saddleback district who claimed distance l\'as a hardship. Bremer indicated today, "That transfer request was in no way related to the dress code ." He declined to comment on the po.sstbility that the "instances where· students have not liked the dress code and transferTed" might outnumber the hardship cases. He and V<>1el told the county board they were concerned 1bout setting precedent 1f the county trustees granted the distance factor appeals. "It's a moot question," Bremer said, noting that It was impossible to tell whether the students requesting transfers out of the distrlet were doing so because they wre dissatisfied with the dress code or were seeking cour.sea not oUered at Saddleback. Vogel told county trustees the district had granted 700 transfer requests last year. Bremer today said he fee\5 the board is "still very •damant about havlng a dress code at Saddle back." But untU the court rules on its legality, "!he kkls can wear their hair any way they like. "I'll stick with the stand I've taken for the past lllo'O years," he .said, "that hair and clothes may Interfere with the educational process." "f don't object to the 'mod' type of Menu Victory haircut that Is becoming so popular, but rather the extremely long hair iind moustaches that I thlnk are 1ymbob: of radicalism. "a.1any students have picked up the.5e symbols as a fad," he added. During the height of lhe controver'y last year, student s appeared at Saddleback board meetings, and many - in cluding the student body pres\dent- said they felt ·students who otherwise would attend Saddleback v.·ere not be- cause of the "repressive" rules on dress. Afler being asked if the board might consider lifting the "repressive" code in \'iew of lhe district's transfer deficil, Bremer said. "You're the one who·s calling ll repressive. That is an ediorial viewpoint. The fact of the matter is, it Is illegal for students to trans!er for any reason other than to take a e-0urse they can't get here. ff they don't lake tho damn C-Ourse. then they can be expelled from the other college -and that's happened to some, l understand." Johnny Moore Lauded On Meal for President The message from Washington came today. Nobody got heartburn lasl Sunday. Not even Johnny J\.toore , the San Clemente restaurateur who supervised lilt yeoman efforts of the his wife and sister-in-law after being commissioned by the White House stalr to prepare 30 J\.fexican dinners to go--for President Nixon and his party returning to the capital aboard Air Force One. ~loore fea!ived the Invitation lo supervise the Presidential meal last Saturday morning. The owner of San Clemente's Don Juan Restaurant -where many members or the Secret Service and other White l-lou~e aides regularly rline -said a spokesman for the President called Thursday tn report raving reviews of' the diMers consumed during the trip home . "It was a day I'll never forget," Moore said later. ''\Vhen all those important people are watching you, you just have to do the best job, and my wife and sister· in-law certainly did." Discounting major role in the culinary duties, lhe Capistrano Beach resident praised his wife, Sarah, and her sister, Gina Olivares. "They did all the work." he said. "I just grated the cheese." Don't Be Fooled By The Beard, Long Hair, Grandpa Glasses And 'Message' THIS IS NO LIPPY HIPPY This Is Gloomy Gus, Invented by the DAILY PILOT a dozen years ago, when hippy still meant maybe yOu needed a new &irdle. He appears daily on the editorial page where he stars as a sort of ventrilo- qu ist 's dummy 'who talks only when someone (DAILY PILOT readers,1n this instance) puts \VOrds into bis mouth. But he has been saying a mouthful evtry pub1Icallon day for years now. Want lo know what your neigh· bors are thinking •.• what'~ wrong (or rJght) with the world, nation, state, community, neighborhood you live in? Want to give ol' Gus a piece of your mind to pass on? Then &•I with the hippo•! Up in town, Gloomy Gus, "communicating" daily (Monday through Friday) ON THI EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE Frldlf, Stpttmber 11, 1970 Jordan Truce Called Civilians Coming Back Out Into Street,s f~'-' .... ftM Delly '""' Sl.tf) Shorry Englehardt, 11, . broke throua:b both the communlcat1on and generation gaps to retrieve her kitten which had perched for two days atop a utility pole in Hel- ena Mont. Unable to find someone to climb up for the kitten, Sherry broke open ber piggy bank and telephoned 30 miles to Officer Mic· key Nelson at the Helena Police Dei>artment. Nelson called in radio station KBLL which broadcast the kitten's plight and then Bill Haney and Marving ,·Carmlchael borrowed pole climbers from the telephone company and drove to Sherry's home at Elliston. The ~irl and kit· ten were back together Wednes· day. • The Bletchle11, England urban council ha.! agreed to relocatt Peter Clements, 20, and his wife Janet. 19, because they say ghosts in their J)Tesent house, bother them. "Regardless of whether we believe in ghosts, this business has seriously troubled this JamilJI and there· fore we will make another pl.ace avail.able to them," a council 1p0Jc.esman said. • Five Newball, England police cars rushed to a home after a neighborDeard noises comin2 from the house• while the owner was away. They found a tea-making machine had been left switched on. • Rosie Malone, 18, a student at Metro State College, in Denver didn't want anyone stealing her bicycle while she was in class Wednesday so she Jocked it to a bike rack. When she came out, she discovered the front wheel had beeri stol en. • Jonah the whale was left high and dry !or a short time Wednes- day when a truck transporting it to Peterborough, England broke down police said. A replacement truck was sent and the me.mmal was soon on its way. • Marlin. Martin of Dallaa, Te%a.S find! a baby sparTow .the discovered eat! better when fed cooked rice* plucked from Mrs. Martin's lips, • San Francisco Immi~ration Di .. rector Cecil W. Fullilove is a sking the State Department to Rrant a 90-day stay for a 16-foot craft. "Al.· ter all, the guy took four months ~etting to San Francisco," FuJli .. Jove said \Vednesday. "He's en· titled to stay a \vhile and look around." Minoru Nagayeshi, 22, arrived without a visa aiter a 122- day trip from Osaka. He had in- tended to land at Vancouver. B.C., but changed course because of eight storms. B1 THE ASSOCIATED PREM The Arab guerrlllas announced e new peace agreement wlth the Jordanian government Thursday, and tbe fighUn1 in Amman subsided. The guerrillas said both sides bad agreed "to remove the causes" of clashes that had been going on in Amman ror thrte days. 1b.ia aeemed to indicate a government capitulation to the guerrillas, since it is the guerrillas who have been setting conditions under wblcb the fighting might end. Even this was no assurance that the agreement would last. A similar pact was announced Tuesday, but It broke down and the fighting resumed befort the day was ever. Soon after Amman Radio broadcast the news cf tbe latest agreement, the Jorda· nlan capital gradually began lo come alive again. Thousands of peraoru who had spent the previous 14 hours In basements to avoid the shells and bulleta began to come out. But sporadic shooting could still be heard hours afterward, and shops and bazaars remained closed. Guerrlllu con- tinued to man road blocU In varlaw: paru of the cllf. At least 30 civilians were killed In the !ighting Wednesday, unofficial aourcts in Amman said. 1be guenillu say 40 com- mandos were killed the previous day. Earlier Thursday the Palestinians demanded that King Hussein "p.irge the royal palace, the army and the government" cf enemies of the com· mandos. Guerrilla broadcast.I declared that such a purge was a pre.requblte for Teachers in Three States Walk Ot1t1 on First Day Philadelphia'• 7,000 public 1 Cb o o I teacbera went on strike over a contract dispute on the flnit day of school Thurs- day, giving 290,000 pupils an extended vacation. Teachers stayed off their jobs in de- fiance of a court injunction at Hammond, Ind .. and most or the 2,500 public school teachers at Toledo, Ohio, were idle in the school day of a strlke. The Philadelphia school board ordered Its 270 public schools closed until a set .. tlement is reached with the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers. Several thousand pupils attended classes conducted in their classrooms by volunteer teachers and resident.s of the.it communities. Uruguay Rebels Hit Coke Plant With Firebombs MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (UPI) - Tupamaro terrorists who are holding two foreign hostages Thursday night slightly damaged a Coca Cola bottling plant in Montevideo in a hit-and-run fire bomb at- tack, police said. No one was injured in the attack on ~e plant about three miles from the ctnter or the city, police said. Earlier in the day, a terrorist group composed of 10 men and two women held up the Montevideo office of the Standard Old Company (Es!<>) and Heaped with the equivalent of $1,800. In recent days, the Tupamaros have re- mained silent on the condition of two kid- nap victims, Calude L. Fly, U.S. farm consultant froom Fort Collins, Colo., and Brazilian Consul Aloysio Dias Gcmlde, who have been held for more than a month. On Aug. 10. the kidnapers shot ta death Danlel A. Mitrione, a U.S. adviser to the Uruguayan police, Mitrione was abducted July 31, the same day as Gomide. Hatfield Might Leave Politics WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. M&rk 0. Hatfield, the Oregon Republican who has been a leading critic o( the Indochina war, says he may JIOt seek another term ln office in 1972. He said the cost of running his Senate office kept him away from his family earning extra money. Nearly all the $28,000 in speech honorariums he receiv· ed last year went for extra office ex· penses, he said. Hatfield 's four childreit, aged 5 le 11, "are at the very tender age where it is Important lo the.m to have a father," he said. "Volunteer" schools were also set up at union halls, churches and recreaUon halls, mostly in Negro neighborhoods. Unsettled contract issues i n c 1 u de salary, length of the school day and whether teachers should be held ao- countable for a pupil's academic pro- gress. Teachers were asking a starting salary of $8,500 a year and the board had offered a minimum of $8,100, up· $800 from the 1969-70 pact. Hammond's teachers picketed school buildings and marched to the school ad· ministration offices in open defiancg of an injunction Wued late Wednesday restraining them from continuing their walkout Tbe walkout wa.s in its thJrd day, postponing the return to atudy for 24,000 pupils. Negotiations resumed Thursday bu t no progress was reported. Negotiation• als-0 were to resume in Toledo where teachers were not working but school officials estimated IO percent of the 61,000 student.I attended cla.sses conducted by administrator1 on the leC· ond day of the strike over 5alary. ~ Nearly 96,000 pupils were idltd in several Michigan cities, i n c I u d i n g Kalamazoo, while 4,500 teachers were on strike. Teachers In East St. Louis, Ill., con- tinued their worlt stoppage, refming to report lo their classrooms until their·con- b'act is settled. Membera of Ute Bethlehem, N.V., Teachtts Association voted to strike Fri- day unless their school board agrees to reopen elementary sehool distrlcet at San Francisco reached ID agreement with its ttacbers providing a 7 percent pay hike and guaranteeing bilingual teachers for Spanish speaking 11udents. Schoo~ open- ed OD 1cheduJe. U.S.-Canadian Anti-pollution Stance Outlined TORONTO (UPI) -Scrapping the idea of an international anti-pollution agtncy, Canadian and American government leaders Thursday re commended strengthening of the lnternational Joint Commission (JJC) to combat pollution in the Great Lakes. The conference attended by represen- tatives from Great Lakes. The conferel'lCt! attended -by represen· tatives from Creat Lakes states, three Canadian rovlnces and officials from both federal governments ended with a final communique expressing "a sense of urgency" ever the "pollution crisis of the Great Lakes." Jn Wednesday's meeting the suggestion for a single international agency was made. Ontario'• minister of mines. energy and resources Ceorge Kerr 1aid that delegates approved of the Jdea. 'Ella' Dominates Weather Texas Braces for Hurricane; Freezing Cold Hits Nortli' California $0UTHERN CALIFORNIA -Mosllv lelt ~ S..N!lll¥ bul 11ltM •1111 ITIOtll!l!I fo9 ll'loCI low CIO\>OI llOllti COii!. ~ ci-1 wlltl t"-llU of llW •lltr· llDClll tl'tulld<ett.l'll•w•rs l0Uther11 mll<I~ 111111 "'" 1<1<1ltler11 l11!1rlor FrH!•Y. tooltr $1h.lrdeY. Al~~ All1/lf1 81kn-1l!tfd Bli.m1rQ 80111 " 101 .. " " " " " .. .. a 1'genulne and durible" peace between the Jordanian army and the .Palestiniu figbters. 'Ibey •llo called for dissoluUon of a "reactlonary clique of CIA agent.I around the king which acts u a govern .. ment within 1 government." Toe broadcasts menliooed no names but the thief target& were Hussein'• uncle, Nauer be Jamil, and the kina's COUlln, Zel~ ben ShaUr. Huaeln diamla&- ed both (rom •·e1 army poets to appease the guerrillu 1ftor flghU"' In June in which about 1,000 per'IOnl wert killed ot wounded. Later he reinstated Ben Shaker as assi!:tant army chieC of staff, and the guerrillu clalm Ben Jamil hu returned secreUy to Amman from Europe and with Ben Sbater ii trying to foment an army crackdown on the guerrllbs. The U. S. State Department announced that Jon W. Stewart, 30, an American at .. tached to the U. S. Embassy in Amman, disappeared Wednesday. Earlier tbis week, the department reported that Sgt. Irvin Graham of the U. S. military at· tathe'1 office had been taken into custody by guerrillas. A spokesmin said Thurs.. day Graham had not been rtleaaed. In Cairo, an aide to EgypUan In· formation Minister Mohammed Hassa .. nein Helkal said reported U. S. plans to deliver 16 to 18 more Phantom jets to 1srael will upset the military balance in the Middle East and lead to "military escalation and unprecedented risk." He asserted that Egypt had been assured when it accepted the U. S. <iease .. fire plan that there would be no further shipment of arms lo Israel except those .. already contracted for. U. S. officials in Washington indicated that the Soviet Union has joined Egypt in rejecting American and Israeli charges that Cairo has violated the cease·fire by moving antiaircraft missiles near to the Suez Canal. Chile Demands Marxist Grant Individual Rule SANTIAGO, Cl!ILE (UPI) -Chile·s Christian Democratic Party recognized Thursday night that Installation of Salvador Allende in the presidency could threaten democratic rule but said it would assure Allende's inauguration if the Marxist president~lect guarantees individual freedom. The Ollrstlan Democrats, with 75 seats in Con&ress, can. make or break Allende, who must be cenllrmed by Congress as successor to outgoing President Eduardo Frei 1ince he failed to aaln a majority of the popular vote. Con&ress will convene Oct. 24 u an electoral college to choose between Allende and runner.up Jorge Alessandri, whom he barely defeated in the three-man race. Alessandrf has announced he will resign lf he Is chosen by Congress. His refusal to serve would precipitate another election. and probable defeat for Allende. Alessandri's 5UflJIOl"(trs offered to su~ port any man the Christian Democrats run against Allende in the possible un- precedented popuJar election. Jn a nationwide radio broadcast Thurs· day night, ~njamin Prado, president of the Christian Democratic Party said, "If Senor Allende grants the necessary guarantees in a real and effective man.. ner • . . he can expect our favorable decision (in Congress)." Christian Democratic Party ex. ecutlves sa1d they will accept from Allen- de nothing ~ than a written guarantee of IIldividuaf liberties. Agnew Tossing The Dictionary At Ultra Liberals ~ CASPER, Wyo. (UPI) -Vice Pnsi· dent Spiro T. Agnew, pledging to "blow the whistle" from coast to coast on ultra liberals in Congress, launched a six-day campaign trip Thursday with attacks on • I p u • 1 llanimosu puu:yfootlng" and 1'troglodyUc leftists." The Vice President, who sent reporters and audiences alike thumbing through dicUonaries, even coined a new word - "radiclibs" -as he spoke to crowds at Springfield. Ill., and at Casper to begin a aix.atl.te tour. ll wu al Springfield that Agnew ...au. LOS ANGELES AHO VtCtN1TY - Molli' !1lr Tll•outl't SUurC11v bu! 111t 111"'1 1l'loCI H rlY mo....11111 coe1111 -clovdl 11)11 tot. tooltr lllu•lltv. ~r· 11l1ht lowl 65. Hlthl 17 k!Urdl'I' 12. Bolton 1!1•11Wft1\lltlt ChlcHO Cl11el11Nll .. ~ " " e d '' p u 1 J llanimous pussyfoote:rs," '' troglyodytic leftists," "whimpering isolationism," "mullsb o~ctionism,'' and "radicllbs," the latter an Agnew "' word combining radical and liberal. 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T ''There was a time when the liberalism of the old (Democralic) ,ute wss a ven- lure.,me and flgbUng phU""Jlhy -the vanguard political dogma of 1 Frani.lin Roosevelt, a Harry Truman, a John Ken- nedy," Agnew said. "But the old flrehorses art k>ng gone. Today's breed of radical-liberal po&lurlnc .11 about the Senate is about as closely re.lated to a Harry Truman as • chihuahua is to a umber wolf. "Ullra-llberallsm today lranslates into a whimpering isolationism In foreign policy, a mulish obstructionism In domestic policy, and 1 pu1Ula.nimou~ pussyfooting on lhe c:rlUcal Issue of law and order." tn Wyoming, where he received an enthusiastic ovaUon from a crowd of more than 4,000, he pledged to •·blow the wblsUe '1 on radical liberals who now .. were "in a mad acramble to the center. U(l'ITe...,. Thant Optimistic Despite criticism leveled at him by bolh •ides in the Mid· east conflict, U.N. Secretary General U Thant says he is op. timistic a b o u t international trends even in the face of breakdowns in peace talks and the three international hijack ... ings by Arab terrorisli. He bases his optimism on the emergence of a wider agree- ment among major powers on an eventual Mideast settle.. ment. U.S.-owned Tanker Hit Near 'Arabia LONOON (UPI) -An American-owned tanker sank Thursday night after a col- lision with a Soviet freighter in the Persian Gulf, Lloyds lruurance Un· derwrlters said today. A Lloyds spokesman said all but one or the crewmembers aboard the 214,000-ton tanker Aquarius was rtscued by the Soviet freigh ter Svetlogorak after the col- lision off the coast of Muscat and Oman. Tbe spokesman said the unidentified crew member was missing. The tanker, owned by the Maritime Overseas Corp. of New York , burst into names shortly after colliding with the Soviet vessel, the spokesman said. He said the Liberian-registered tanker was bound for Capetown, South Africa, with a cargo of crude oil from Khrag Island, Persia. Second Russian Dancer Defects lrt Mexico City MEXICO CITY (UPI) -The second Russian ballet dancer to defect in a week showed up at the 1'.1exican Interior Department Thursday to ask for political asylum. As in the first case, romance a· gain appeared to be a prime motive be- hind the defection. Giennadi Simonovich Vostrikov, 22. a member of the Moiseyev .Ballet Company touring Mex.ico, wa.s accompanied to the ministry by a Mexican belle, wh<l would only say her name was Cristina. She refused to give her last name, saying She didn't want any problems witb her employer, a government agency. U.S. Planes Pound Reds Ne~· Laos SAIGON (AP) -For the rnth da1 lhe U.S. Air Force today flew heavy raids agalnst North Vietnamese forces m.. tensUying their attacks on a South Viet .. namese base near the La-Otian Border. Three waves or bl& 852 bombers drop- ped nearly 300 tons of bombs on bunkers, , base camps and storage and staging a~a.s within seven mlles of Fire Base O'ReUly. Other B52s hammered North Viet .. namese supply depots and trans shipment points on the Laotian side of the border. Smaller .U.S. fighter-bombers also kept up attacks closer to O'Reilly, trying to hit mortars, rockets and reC(lilless cannon that have pumped about 500 rounds of shells into the base and South Vietnamese patrols operating around it. Military spokesmen said the fighter· bombers had flown more than 100 missions since Monday around the base, and that this was about 20 percent of the Air Force's entire operation in Vietnam during that period. South Vietnamese m i 1 l ta r y head· quarters said its forces with the help of American bombers had killed 530 North Vietnamese in operations around O'Reilly, since July 1. A spokesman said the South Viet· namese forces also had captnred 157. enemy rifles, 33 heavy weapons such as mortars, and 300 mortar rounds and rocket grenades. The spokesman said 57 South Viet· namese had been killed and 92 wounded in the operations. ''The enemy is trying a new push In terms of softening up O'Reilly with rockets and mortars," said one informed source. "The enemy is trying to take lbe place again." O'Reilly is a former U.S. lOist Airborne Division base reopened by the South Viet .. namese 1st Infantry Division last March. lt stands atop a 1,SOO.foot ridge less than five miles north of Ripcord, another lOlst • Division artillery base abandoned under heavy pressure last July 23 after 61 Americans were killed and 345 wounded in a three-week siege. * * * ~mbodia Army Braces for Red Counterattack PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Cambodian government troops who broke the 80-day seige cf Kompong Thom are prepared for a counterattack by Communist forcu, a high command spokesman said today. He said the troops al59 have opened the waterways to the southwest or the city without resistance and they now are "completely secure." The lack of resistance probably was because of high flood waters, which enabled the gunboats to reach the besieged city and to open the flooded area between Kompong Thom and the lake of Tonie Sap, 30 miles to the southwest. Intelligence reports illdicated "an unknown percentage" ol the 2,000.man Communist attack earlier this week. De.spite the lack cf resistance so far, the spokesman said, "we are prepared for an attack -in fact we are trying to draw them (the Communists) out so that we can kill them ." ti,, T•..,... VICE PRESIDENT AGNEW LAUNCHES GOP CAMPAIGN C11l1 for Victory of S...11• C1ndld1t• Rolph Smith In llllnolo < j t ' I ) c t r ' i • I r d r s ' r .. d v h p c ( T F ti e i h F I' b I• J s 0 • • h p I' ~ r• d ~ " B li n ir si h u c: ti ti a " p " ., " cl ., .. Ir n; h: ot . ·---·---~----:---------------------------... F'rlday, Stplemhfr 11, 1'170 DAR V Pilot 5 'Not " Bad JJlan' ·QUEENIE By Phll lnferlondi ~~--~~~ ...... --~~ ....... Biggest Rep.est Yet Rancl1 Hand Says Ma11so11 Had Gun By I.INDA DEIJTSCU Associated Prtss Writer tos ANGELr:s -A bushv- bearded ranch hand '""'ho sa.Ys "I could never niake Charlie out as a bad m3n" has testi- fied lhat Charles !\!. l\tanson -0nee t arried a gun similar lo l he one identified as the mur- der weapon in the Sharon Tate !ilayings. Thomas Walle1na11, 27, grin- ning broadly at l\1anson and three women codefendants, took the stand at lhe Tate murder trial 'lllursday. He told or a mysterious mission on which he accompanied the armed ~1anson to a Hollywood apartment in July 1969. Watson Du e To F ace Tate Tr ial WASHINGTON (AP) Supreme Court Justice Huga J,, Black rejected today a pica by Charles Denton \Yatson for continued asylum in a. Texas jail. The action, announced by the court without comment, means California -authorities. are now free lo take Watson to Los Angeles for trial in the Sharon Tate murder. Lawye rs for \Vats.on, a 24- year-old Texa n, contended he Cannot receive a fair trial because () r inflammatory publicity. They cited, i n particul ar, a fr ont-page slory in the Los Angeles Tim es in whicti a co-defendant. Susan Atkins, gave what t h e newspaper billed as '·exclusive details of two nights of murder." The Supreme Court in 1!166 set aside the murder con- vi ction of Dr. Samuel H. Shep- pard on a finding that '"virulent publicity" h a d denied him a fair trial. Black was the only dissenter. Wa tson's lawyers sought a Jiearing in Texas on the publicity question. Both state courts in Texas and the U.S. Circuit Court In New Orleans rule tbe hearing out. U.S. Dead Confirmed In A·Blast WASITTNGTON (IJPI) - Records released Thursday by the National Archives disclos- ed that the U. S. Army listed 2Q American airmen as killed in the Atomic bombing of lliroshima , Japan, Aug. 6, 19~5. The sea rch was prompted by Hiroshi Yariagida, 56. a former warrant officer in the J apanese secret police who said in July he was in charge of 23 Am erican prisoners of war who died in the holocaust. Army records declassified after more than a quarter-ctn· fury identified the American prisoner or wa r dead at Hiroshima as S. Sgt. Ralph J. Neal. a 824 ball turret gunner reported missing in action Ht days before the bombing: Norman Roland Brisse t, a man identified on1y B s Blankbet and 17 other uniden· lilied airmen. ~fanson , 35. and th re t w o m e n followers -Susan At k i n s , 21. Patrici a Krl'nY.'inkel, 22, and Leslie Van Houten, 20 -are on trio! tor murder-conspiracy in the killings of M.lss Tate and si¥ others in August 1969, WaUeman said the trip to Hollywood came after a mid- night phone eall was received at lhe suburban Spahn movie ranch, h ead qu a rter s of fl.fanson's hlppje-style "fami· Jy," fl.lanson spoke lo the caller. he said. then told others ''there was a guy coming over lo do the ranch in ..• Somebody was living at the ranch who stole some money and he was going to do the whole ranch in for it." Manson announced he was going to see the man who was on the phone, said Walleman. and asked the ranch hand to co me a!ong. As they got a car, 11anson produced a long-bar· reled revolver which he placed on the seat. said Walleman. They drove to an apartmerit in Hollywood , he said, and Walleman picked up the gun as they got out of the car. But as they reached the door, he said, "Charlie asked for it." The prosecution, which can- ed Walle man, ceased ques- tioning at that point. A defense attorney said outside court that a man was shot inside the apa rtmen t, but that testimony wasn't introduced becau se the wound wasn't fatal and the man refused lo press charges or testify. Wallema n told newsmen he believed questioning stopped then because "They know l could never make Charlie out as a bad man • • • He isn't one." Deputy Dist. Atty. Vincent Bugliosi showed Wallem an the long-barreled gun wh i ch ballisli Cs experts say was sued in at least ()ne -and posihly three -<1[ the Tate killings, and asked if that was the gun A1anson carried. Shots Quell Race Unrest In Arkansas EARLE, Ark. (UPI) -A late n i g h t confrontation between Negroes and police Thursday was broken up by gunfire. A short time laler the Arkansas State Police closed off State Highway J.49, which runs through Earle, because of sniper fire across the road. Three persons were njured, including Mr. and Mrs. Jac kie Greer. Mrs. Greer is a black candidate for mayor. /\1ayor James King said their injuries were not serious, and were not caused by gun~ rire. The ni ght supervisor at Crittenden A1cmorial Hosp ital in West Memphis, Ark., said the third injured person was a 14-year-old girl treated for cuts on the head and, released early tod ay. King sa id Greer was charg- ed with disturbing the peace, inciting to riot and parading without a parade permit, and fl.1rs. Greer was charged with disturbing the peace. Fiften slate police units were sent to Earle, a city of 2,896 in eastern Arkansas, and other units were placed on standby alert. '.Im't Ille ·waler polluted enough without putting that stuff in!" Mitchell Sees Laws Easing on Marijuana l NEW YORK (UPI) -Al· Israel Asks U.S. for Arms on Credit WASHINGTON (UPI) -Most ree<mUy Israel has I I h d It bl t received 50 Phantom jct!, and srae as ma e s gges defense sources said this week arms rt!QUtst to the United the United States has decided Stat~ ind. lot the flrst time, to sell 16 to 18 more. is asking it be alJowed to buy Other congressional sources on credit. confirmed the I!l'aeli request This report came Thursday is the largest since the Jewleh r Re Sa el s Str tt state was created in JMB. rom P· mu • 8 on Israeli reliance on American (0..N.Y.), chairman ot an arms has grown si nce Frante, armed services subcommittee a traditional supplier, clamped dicated It probably would recommend Israel be allowed to buy on credit. T wo Strikes Facing U.S. Railroads that visited Israel last week, down on sales fu 1967. and Rep. Robert L. Leggett Leggett said he unclenstood WASlllNGXON IUPI) (0.Calif.), who al~ made tbe I The nation's railroads now lr'p the Soviet& are supp ylng anns face a double strike threa• 1 • to the Arabs on the basis of 10-"' They said Israeli officials year, 2 percent Joarus with a and it appears Congress may told them they have submitted two-year grace period and have lo setUe both disputes. a "shopping list'' to the u.s. said: "I think we're going to The issues involved are DeJense Department for arms-flave lo make something like demands for a 40 percent purchases over !he next two Planes and llawk miss lies this available to the Israelis." wage hike by four unions years totaling $800 million. have been primary com· Stratton said h i s sub-representing 500,000 of the The Israelis refused a ponents. of American arms committee would make a 600,000 railroad workers, and a detailed breakdown, the con· sales to Israel in the past report next week and in-dispute over whether firemen gressman said, but indicated should be used on diesel their requests included F4 engines. Phantom fighter-bombers, A4 o h Ch B l The railroads were already Skyhawk jets, helicopters, rp ans eer eau y under a Monday midnight Hawk antlairaaft missiles, strike deadline over the wage tanks, bombs, radar and both issue when, on Thursday, the ground and aerial electronic ATLANTIC CITY, N,J, members of the orphanage United Transportation Union equipment intended to help (AP) -Sixty-one orphans, Ute and nine members o( the local (UTU) served notice It would detect Soviet mt s s I I e only family Christine Jaycees. who raised $14,500 feel free to strike over the emplacements in Egypt. McClamroch, Miss Mis.sis.sip. for the trip. fireman issue any Ume alter Both congressmen said they pi, has eve r really known, Miss McClamroch, whose midnight Sept. 23. favored allowing Israel to buy have arrived to be with her as parents are dead, has lived in President Nixon could use on credit to help match the she competes in the Miss the orphanage since 195S. the Railway Labor Act to call ''We are changing the entire Soviet buildup of arms to America Pageant. "I thought she was great a 60-day delay in the wage torney General 'John N , approach so the professional Egypt and other Arab nations. The children from l he even when she was a scrawny strike, but Nixon already has Mitchell predicU the laws who makes his living out of Israel has always paid cash Palmer Home for Children in kid wilh straggly hair," said used the delay provision and against smoking marijuana selling marijuana will get the for its arms but Leggett said Colwnbus, fl.1 iss., \\'ere ac· Nena Drew, one of the all other legal remedies in the will be made more lenient, but book thrown at him," Mitchell 1·1heir funds are scraping bot-companied on a 2 2 • h o u r children who grew up with fireman dispute w h l c h thinks, nevertheless, it is a said. tom." railroad trip by 13 staff Miss Mississippi. stretches back to the 1950s. dangerous drug. l~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-I Mitchell said Thursday he never has smoked marijuana, but once sniffed its aroma dur ing a demonmation at the bureau of narcoti cs a n d dangerous d ru g s i n Washington. ''You don 't have to die to Jmo,v what the sensation and results are," be sa1d. Referring to a national com· mission to study marijuana proposed under the Admini- strati on' s Da n gerous Substances Act, Mitchell said, "I believe that study will show marijuana is very dangerous to the community." The laws against using marijuana "have been much too harsh," Mitchell said. Nix- on administration proposals would prescribe 1 J g h t e r sentences for firsl·lime users of marijuana. Auto Firms Face Strike DETROIT (AP) -United Auto Workers Pres ident Leonard Woodcock said Thurs· day giant General Motors Corp. has decided "to take a strike" in support of the auto industry's refusal to meet the union's new contract demands. GM and Chrysler previously had geen named by the UAW as twin targets for winning a pattern-setting w a g e set- tlement for the industry -by strike or otherwise -if no new contract is in hand when current pacts expire at mid- night Monday. Ford, struck for seven we e ks whe n cur r ent agreements. were negotiated in 1967, wa s granted strike im- munity this Ume around. Editor Dies RICHMOND (UPI) -ArthUT 11Chick" Richards Jr., ror 29 years the managing editor ol the Richmond In. dependent,died Thursday in Richmond hospital after a short illness. He was 63. ~ . p.2 DAYS ONLY. Bors WOVEN SPORT SHIRTS Sale 3 for $5°0 Permanent Press in many styles. Boy's sizes 6·16. ' 1 A INlmlg1 of .......... W MYl19d W _,. ...... 1111 '\ s.per .. ,,,.,., 1p1dllls prl-lulittl II_., y•r •Hu 10 f1lltlltrl Wt .... l•lf • -.11 of •-ot llnlflc kys afl lllr tH ..... C... IE ... hr JHlll CUSHION GYM SOCKS Sale 47',,. Sold In 3 pr. 1Ntk•1•• Elastic tops -he av y cushioned s o I e . Men '.s sizes 9-13. Official Headqu1rttrs for Huntington Belch High ~chool District FASHIONABLE NYLON SHELL TOPS Nixon Gets Letters Gymwe1r Sale Easy care tops in fall prints. 1001& textured nylon. SizesS-M -L. Millio1is More Than Past Pres idents WASHINGTON llJPI ) - Ri c hard 11-1 . Nix o n 's Inheritance of a "horrendous situation" in national affairs has g e n e r a l ed an unprecedented amount o f citizen correspondence with the While HOU.!IC, aCC<>rding to the P r es id en t 's top administrative aide. Nearly fi ve million pieces of mail was received durin~ President Nlxon's nrst 18 months in ofrlce, presidenlial a~istant H. R. Haldeman reports. lie sajd that compared wllh a llUle over 1.S million pieces during the comparable period or Prt.sldent K e n n e d )' ' s idministration, and just over two million pieces in President Johnson's first 18 months. Ji aldeman, administrat ive chief of the While House etaff 41nd N i x o n ' 11 appointments act1'Ctary, attributed th e Increase to w i de s prea d national problems ''magnU\ed by the determined opposition of a large number of the press corps and the 'establishment media ' who, because of past errorts to VrTite Richard Nixon off, had a vested interest in bis 'unsu cccss.' " Haldeman said that among t~ hi g hJi g ht s of a "horrendous shuation," Nixon Inheri ted were: "the longest and most unpopular war in our history; an escalating Inflation that was based heavily on huge government d e f I c i t spending : a totally antiquated, discredited. un workable welfare system; a burgeoning, uncontrollable bureaucracy; large and strong opposition majorities in both houses of (;(Ingress : a crisis o ( confidence In the presidency; a great division and emotional turmoll "'ithin the nation, the generational problem and the ralcal -problem." Ile said he thought some of !he news media ".art out of toucli with the people," but Nixon "is fttr more in touch with the people than Is generally reallied or re ported, although apparently the people t.hemselves know it -that is what has generated a lot of the mail he hes received." It is sfgnirteant I.hat ss to 6S percent of the public approves of Nixon's ocnduct o{ the presidency according to periodic poll'I, Haldeman said. "You woukt think that he would have a tough time getting even a 30 percent approval based on what you read in Washington and hear on TV,'' he added. ''ft SffmS pretty clear that while there may have been a 'credibility gap' with the presidency in the past, now, ironically. the 'crcd lbility gap' ls wtth the ml!dla." Haldeman said Nixoo sees 1'a sampling" of the overall content or mall addressed to hlm. and "a great deal of the mall that c:omts from what )'OU woo ld call the le>dershlp segment -the people who are writing In by Virtue of thei r off ice or their pog!Uon in ihe country.•• RUGGED, READY FOR ACI ION SNEAKER& _. .. ..,_..,.......,PVC ..... hocls; durable aimy -duck tlppem; mshicJDcd eonstruc:tim. 6%-12, 21Ji.6, and ll 1o 2. Glrfl'1 '"""1lable fabric oppmu; PVC !Oleo, cuahicmed inoolea for added comfort! Snowy whit.e, back·lo«bool loo& 4· to 9. STRETCH ANKLETS Sale '• ·- 3 ,,.84' Long wearing stretch ny• Ion 1n girls sl7es 1>8\0. Misses slzes 9-11. GIRLS ACnATE BRIEFS Sale 5,,. $1 00 Choose lrom tailored or lace trim. Newest fashion shades. Girls 1lzes 6 to 16. Save now! GRANT PWA • Brookhurst & Adams • Huntington Beach • • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Solving Bus Problem The City of Laguna Beach is looking towaro Wash· lngton Jn hopes of turning red ink into black while solv· ing local transportation needs. Current apple of the city's eye is a $50,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation. Coupled "'ith $25,000 in municipal funds, it would purcba11 two 30-pas.senger buses, three 15-to-18 passenger mini buses and maintenance equipment. The city entered the field of municipal transporta- tion this year. The small local bus line was faUing and local residents, many of them elderly, depend on buses. Another significant factor on the transportation scene was removal of the summer mini buses that the Festival of Arts subsidized to handle its throngs. This compounded summer transport problems and the city is inviting the festival to split the $25,000 municipal lihare if the federal grant is approved. TJle city also might Lake a look at scheduling bus service to Top of the World. 'For Our Neighbors' "\Ve wanted to do something for our neighbors,'' aaid B. R. l\ileriwethe.r of Laguna Hills. The Meriwethers did-in a big way. They gave a half-milllan dollars to the Saddleback Community Hospital scheduled to open in Laguna Hills in 1973. The donation was not a legacy but money in the hank. It is believed to be the largest private gilt eve-r made to a medical facility in Orange County. It Is earmarked for a gerentology center to clul with affiictions of age. · The hospital is being planned to meet tho health needs of nearly 100,000 P.ersons by 1975. The 25&-bed hosi;>ila! will have facilities !or . general, maternity, ped1atr1c, emergency and out,..pat1ent care. The Meriweather girt was a tremendous 1tep for- ward in the important Wk of providing comprehemlv1 medical service to the rapidly expanding population of Saddleback Valley. Better Luck Next Time San Clemente became a worldwide dateline about a year ago v.•hen an expensive piece of real estate· changed hands. The publicity hasn't ended since. . And t~e out-of-town writers sniU about re(Ularly trymg to find San Clemente's "changes" since Richard Nixon bought his villa. '.f.ime magazine i.s the latest publication to make the disco.very. that the city really hasn't changed much. Tourism 1s about the same. No one is selling vials of sea water from Cotton's Point. . But in Time's zeal and inimitable style. former ~ l1ce ser-'!:eant Bruce Cre~o became a "red-haired jliant." .Local folks remember CreJ;:o as about fi ve feet seven inches tall. And '.!!though M~yor Walter Evans spent a good deal . of time with Time talking of the imp<>rtance or ope~n:ig Camp Pendle.ton beach to the pubhc, the most s1gn1f1c~nt qt_Jote attributed to him was about banner• welcommg Nixon : "l personally think it's kind of small· town hinky-dink." Better luck next interview, Mayor. s Scranton Commi••ion on Campus llnrest Allott's Scathing Attack Complhints of Spero Janise, William Leak Cows Given to an WASHINGTON -Sometimes 111,nalt are crossed and the play is flubbed In the Nixon administralion and lhat i1 the case WJth the Scranton commission on campus unrest. A scathing attack by Sen. Gordon Al.Iott of Colorado, .a strong Nixonite, on the Scranton commis- lion and its forth-comtna: report, re- veals a great deal about the fwnbling in the administra· tlon on this question. Allott, in effect, ts accusing J o h n Erlichman and other genior domestic policy advlser1 of getting President Nixon trapped In a commission study which will "pour ker05e-ne on the flames" of campus disorder. Other White House advi.sert 1upport Allott's view of the Scranton commission and the administration is uneasy, to uy tbe least, over the coming report. THE comnssION was appointed in mid.June arter the killing of four Kent State college students and is headed by former Governor William Scranton of Pennsylvania who was relied on to bring to the commission studies the quality of judicious fair-mindedness they duerve. This "'as a case in which tome of the President's advisers wished to pacify flaming student opinion after the Cambodian incursion and Kent killings without carefully thinking out the probable results. AUott says there is reason to fear that the. Scranton reporl will be a "flaccid r. ,Richllrd whitewash o! the violent new-left pollUcal movement that is openly seeking to capture or destroy our g r e a t universities." The Colorado senator Is unre.mitting in his criUcism o( I.he commiuion. He says il bas been guilty of high-handed arrogana:, confirmed prejudices, non. objectivity, and ha1 made itself an innammatory forum for polltlcal rad.ica!J contending that rioting lll justlliable until lhe Nixon administr1tlon does what the radicals demand. IF TRE NATION'S dome1tlc affairs are unsettled this fall · by campus disorders. Allott claims, "part of the blame will attach to the commbslon on campus disorders, and to the Prtsidenl't advisers who assembled it , • • the commission established to investigate disorder will become a cause of disorder.'' Stonn center of the commission is ,young l22) John Rhodes, Jr. a Harvard graduate student whose 1calp was unsucctssfully gought by Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew after Rhodes 11id he hoped to find out "whether the President's and the vice-president'• statements are killing people." Rhodes Is a protege of Erlichman's who recommended his appointment as a commission member on the basis of Rhodes' record as president of the tludent body at California tnstftute of Technology, Rhodes engineered campu11 reforms without violence, infuri1ting the campus raWcal! and thus persuading Erlichman that he had mastered the formula for academic pe.ace. But it hasn't worked out that way in lhe Scranton commission. What now bothers the White House is the same thing Agnew objected to, an attempt to shift blame for campu!' disorder from flabby university administrations to the Nii:on administration and ita Pollciea on war and ecology. THERE 'WAS PLENTY of evidence prior to the bombing at Madison, WLs., that the university there was a center of student revolutionism. But not until after the bombing did the commission rustl it~ representatives lo the University of Wisconsin and it has not yet sent investigators to other universities known to be potenlial violence centers. The inquiry into the causes and curt of campus unrest has been n e I t h e r professional nor exhaustive and is likely to add little mon than the report or Chancellor Heard of V a n d e r b i I t University, which has bee.n rejected and disavowed by President Nixon. The essence. of the Heard report was that Nixon should change his foreign policy if he wants peace on the campuses. Note : ln a recent column passing reference was made to the Uni versity of Minnesota as a center of student revolutionism. A check with federa l agencies, including the White House and the McClellan investigating committee, does not justify this conclusion. Duplicity in the '01~ Days' The rise of the "consumer movement'' in recent years b no doubt a necessary and healthful development : In our o:implex and variegated 50Ciety. the consumer needs a lot more protec:Uon than he did in the simple economy of the. pasl But it is a nostal- gic mistake to im· agine that commer- cial life was more honest and decent a century ago ; the ''good old days'' were f\111 of guile, duplicity and mis- represenlation that would make a mod- ern metcha.nt. blush down to his heels. IN CONNECTION "1th th< tooth --.. -- Friday, September 11, 1970 Th• tditorlal JNIO• oJ the IHJilu Pilot ittb to inform and stim- ulaU ,.~, bt1 JWertntfng tJt.i1 nflDSPOPt1"1 opinion.I and com- 1Un2arfl on topic• of ~l'ltn't.JC ond tlgnifi<411U, bv prmridino a /Of1lf11 /M SM C%Pf'CU&oh of oMr · f'todni' opfft.imu, and bu Pf'tunttng tM cUwnt vf.rto. DOinU of ffl/Of'ff'lcd obacrocr1 and .,,.u....,. on toplcl of IM dag. Robert N. Weed, PubU1her anniversaty o( Bamum's cireus this summer -its birthplace was a Wisconsin town not far from where I stay -1 reread ~1. R. Werner's old biography of P. T. Barnum. who began his career in the New England country store busin!!'is around 1830. "Ot<:tption was common pr&eUct" in lhAt bu!iiness, his biographer informs us. "Bamum wrote that often he cut open bundles of rags brought to the store by countrywomen to exchange for goods, and found that what were ostensibly gOod Unen and cotton r11gs contained in their midst extra weig1it in the shape or stonf!. gravel or ashes; and farmers regularly brought lhelr loads of oat.5. corn and rye into town short of their stated "'eight." BARNUM HAD A job In a <."Ounlry alort, and 5aid cl it: ''Our cotlons "·tre sold for wool. our "·ool and cotlon for illk -11nd linen: in fact. nearly eve rylhing w1s different from what It was represented. Tilt supplltr5 chtaltd w in the:ir fabrics; we cheated the customers With our goods. Each party expected to be cheat~ if it wai possible." In his boo-. "The Humbugi of Utt World." Barnum rtlated an .anttdote or the time th1t he sakt characterittd the piouso(()mmerJcal atmosphere prior to the Civil War, and 1.utlna Jona beyond It: "THERE IS AN OLD end woll-known tlory abnut a grocer who was a deacon, .and who was htard to c11l down11tair1 bt-!ort breakfast to his clerk: jJohn, ha ve you watered the rum ?' 'Yes, tir.' 'And sanded the sugar?' 'Yes, sir.' 'And dustt'd the .pepper?' 'Yes, sir.' 'And chicoried the coffee?' 'Yes, sir.· "Then come up to prayers.'" Actually, ii "":u; in large part disgust \\'ith th ese common malpraclicts that turned Bamum from merchandising to showmanship, where he was an honest man despite his extravagant publicity claims. He never cheated anyone he dealt v.•ilh, but was himself cheated often by businr~~ associatei, . beginning with bi1 own grandfather. IF CO~fMERCIAL dishone'Sty was IO rampan! in his day. why was it tolerated, when so much less is under attack today? My opini on is that the impersonality of modern fraud is what infuriates the public. In the past, it was face to face. .and a customer knew who to co to and who Lo blame in the perM>nal transaction. Today, even though the rnerchandlH.J' ls f11r more honest and scrupulous. the growth of the large, impersonal C'Orporation has frustrated the customer In hi~ fltlempt lo track dows the !OUl'tt of hi~ rlissatisfaction . • 'Consume r legislat ion" is the p 1 y ch o Io Ii cal vengeante for this trend. Dear Gloomy Gu~: What 1 hljacklog if they had tak:tn Mama Sirhan'• plane to laratl! -11. J. B. ,~.. ,,.,,rt ""!Kii ,..,._. ....... 1191 llWtt»r!!'t' lhttr ff "-l'ltwtt""•r. JM -.., -... ......., ..... """ ....... If all the corrections wanted by Spero J IDl.!e end Wlllilin Luk to .U.r the put operation of the Featival of. Arts is adhered to, the lfll Fealival .i.s doomed to extinction! If one can not park in town ud take a tram to the festival ~. then one must park near the arounds. But if one can't park near the ground.I, he 1111: ""To heU wilh It!" and goes home! The tourists who cram our community dally from Memorial Day to Labor Day are certainly not going to WALK to. the various art festivals from the center of town -:..,.d some of them can't! I DON'T KNOW what type of driver fl.fr. Janl1e is, but it is evident he does not '"""' the width of hil car well enoul!h to drive through narrow ttreeta. If .be measured the width of the average car, then me:uured the widU! of Laguna Canyon when parking exislt on both aides. and divided by two, he would tee that there iJ ample room for two lanes of traffic to flow both into and out of Laguna. Frankly, it's the stupid driver• who make it into a t"·o-lane hiah.w-ay at such limes. AND THE CRmCISM of the tity or Laguna. Beach for allowing more than one festival and the Playhouse to operate simultaneously is ridiculous! Thia is a resort community! You know this before you move here. And in a resort community you mu!t 1upply the visitors with divertissement during the peak summer months. Having jual ONE entertainment is hardly enough to combat the ennui of the \W-etk·long tourist, seeking a pleasant vacation,.and spending pleuant money in a pleasant town. MR. LEAK BAS removtd t h e delightful, colorful a.nd t h o r o u g h 1 y t.njoyable trims from OlM' city. 1'.ir. Janise seeks the removal of the "congestion" on Lagun11 Canyon Road. Aren 't there any real problem.1 ia Lquna that these gentlemen could tum their talents to? Like a three-way lipal at Broadway and Coast Hl1hw1y? Or a signal of aome tort at Beach and Broadway? Then -maybe Mr. Leak and Mr. Janise are thinking of ll.lrtina a t.ai:icab company! Why not? LEE C. MILLAR flfr. Janise wrott to tht dty, F,.1ti· val of A ru and State Diwtcm of Hioh- 10011" 1aying t.llot afl iJt.e parking at tht ft1tiool's Of'OU'7lds ii 1Utaal be- co143e it blocks a state hioht0011. Mf'. Ltok complaln'-d thot tht trtnn1. wtre illegal without wind.ahittd wfpus ond porlc'ing bf'Gktl, cauring tht tf"01ftl to shut down operotiona. -Editof' Quotes !. M, Grefllc•I, ller•dty -'.'Mob paychology cfuclfla: (and) parentl and those In any politlon of leadtrshlp ahould Y.'Oti to •teady our young3te.r1, to teach them that Ufe ls a matter of strWna a balance ..• ol accepting or ~inti: the lesser of two evils at least temporarily." Unusual Leader A few years ago a Japanese student went to a southern agricultural school in the U.S. to learn animal husbandry. He worked hard. took a job on the oulslde, and became e.xpert in the artificial insemination of cattle. After lrealing 12,000 cows and saving $6,000 ol his earnings, he bought 12 fine cows and heifers, These he drove across the coontry on a rented truck to San Fr.an- ciscQ, and salled with them on a freili\tu to Japan. He brought lhenJ as a. present to a friend -an American liv- ing high up in the ·mountains of Yama- nashi prefecture. lf that sounds llke an unusual present and an unusual friendship, it is. Behind lhis incident is an unusual story of American-Japanese friendship and co- operation w~ich prece.ded and survived the war and has culminated In a unique community and institution. TRE KIYOSATO Education a I Experiment Project IKEEP) is located about an hour and a hairs drive from my parents' home in Yamanashi City. There 1 met and visited the founder, Or. Paul Rusch. It wu he who rece.ived the present of the cows. The object of Dr. Rusch's dedication hu been the ~pjscopal Church, but through a practical Christianity that expresses itself in the welfare of Japan and especially the improvement of Japanese rural life. Not al all the ardent n:iissionary type, Rusch is a genial, round-faced , bald-headed A m e r I c a n activist with demonStrated personal magnetism. His associates clearly lo\'e him. For more than 20 years Dr. Rusch has traveled annually to America lo charm and persuade funds from churches. aervlce clubs, agricultural societies and foundations for bis de mo n st rat io n project. Started in 1957 when the future of democracy in Japan looked dim, KEEP began as a series ol organizations to help rural people help themselves. The focus bu always betn on youth, to give practical tooll to the idealism of young people. IN PLACES LIKE Kiyosato , neglected by the Japanese themselves except those who lived thut, farmer1 were trying lo cultivate rice paddies on unsuitable upland terrain. They eked out a living ma.kine 1eta !Wooden clogs ) and charcoal. Diet was inadequate. Htalttl problems were many. Dr. RuJCh, who h•d got to know the n1Ion through a church youth camp ht hid built there be.h>re the war. wondered what could be done to he.Ip. And could outsiders -Japanese college gradu1te1 and Christians to boot, with an American leader -overcome the distrust or these k>na-i!-Olated, tradltlon·boWKI fannerst Paul Rusch Md rirtt arrived in J11pan alttr the earthquake of 1923 to help reconstruction through the YMCA. Lllte.r, u a teacher at St. Paul 's University in Tokyo, ho htlpod found • chopt<r ol t"' Brotherhood of SL Andrtw for Christian laymen. Interned at lht outbreak or thl •ar, he .wu exd\ln1ed on the Grlpsholm, 1trved 1n U.S. army Intelligence. While on the occupation 1ta!f ht: resumed hls fritndthip with St. Paul graduates ind topthtr they planned to expand the old Kiyosato camp lnto • community devtlopment center, concluding that the country .. needed a p r a c:: t I c 1 I dtmonstratlon of how democracy works on • small c:cmmunity ltvtl. •• TONS OF ROCKS \\'ERE cleared, as l Hayakawa on New England· farms. to build a church and a hospital and to create a demonstration pasture. (The church is a .little masterpiece. It looks: like many other Christian churches except that there are no pews -only tatami mats, so that Japanese farmers accustomed to sitting on the floor would feel at home.) Milk catUe -in a non-milk drinking culture -were to be the answer to the h8:rsb economic problems or the region. A prize bull named "Designed £or SL. Andrew" was imported despite skeptical jeers, Japanese studenl<1 went to America to study rural sociology and dairying. Now the Kiyosato area has 11,000 head ()f milk cattle. KEEP has started a larae poultry industry with stock f r o m Petaluma , California : leads educationa l effo~s in pasture impr:ovement in Japan: provides he.al th education ; runs a nursery school : conducts a residential school for prospective young farmers: b r i n g 1 thousands of visitors annually to a cultural and agricultural fair· and provides youth c.amps, a riding ' school and conference centers for young men and women from all over the country. WHY HAS KEEP BEEN suixesa:ful? One reason is that the decision to go Into dairying came just as the Japanese government and the American occupation were both stimulating the consumption or dairy products. The post-war emergency school lunch program brought powdered milk, then after the emergency fresh milk ~came a regular noontin1e item not only 1n schools but in factory cafeterias, profoundly altering the food habits of the nation -and the stature o[ young people. Second. during the past two decades when millions were leaving lhe farms for life in the ~ity, those \1'ho remained on the farms could hope to prosper only by bringing new methods into agriculture. KEEP pro\•ided an inspiring model of scientific innovation. Third, as Dr. Rusch understood we!!, the pragmatic Japanese. respond to working models rather than to theoretical argument. KE;EP has been a "·orkJng model of practical religi()n In the 1ervlce of man as well as of democracy In action. uniting college-educated .'scientis~ and old-fashioned farmers in co-operative effort and decision-making. Dr. Rusch and his co lleagues have played a part in .the incredible changes Japan has seen si nce 1923. Jn l!M7 they saw the need for hope and helped provide it. Many in the U.S. (including the Black P. Stone Rangers) who see no hope in quiet revolutions might well pay a villt to Klyosato . (The headquarters ()f the. American Committee for KEEP i! at 343 $. Dearborn St., Chicago, Illinois 60604.) By S. I Hayakawa PretW!:.at Saa Frand1co Start CoUtp .---B11 Geo"'" ---. Dear ~rge: M'y husballld leans forward wMa ht eats iOUp. Af'!NOYED Dear Annoyed : Malarl• Is caused by the female anopheles mosquito. (Well. I got to 11ay !Omethlnc. Aflff all, U I UNDERSTOOD wb1l people are talkina about I wouldn't Ja1t a "'et!k in thl.s racket.) r. ~.:11, Stplt mbtr 11, 1970 DAILY PILDI 7 Goofs Won't Curb Smte Will Appeal Welfare Violation Charges SACRMfENTO (AP) would order an immediate hal t portionttel)' ll ued It 1 •mines the procedural Ir-helping I.host who truly nttd Unruh's Campaign Sltlte welfare officials· aay of •II federal Social Seairity payments to welf~ fllllilies regularities which preceded public assistance." t..os ANGELES £UPI ) -unemployment line whert he. Jess Unruh's c amp a i g n had been CSJnpaigning. manager said toda y the "?l-1ove to the back. We don't Democratic nominee intends want politics in here. \Ve have lo conduct a "no holds bal'-to mind the store." Unruh was red" fight for Gov. Rona ld told by Richard Jon es . Reagan's job, "even if we do manager of the St 1 I e charges that the state is funds to the state and would with dependent children. the .rullng tnal California's "The continued lnstatenee b.)t violating federal welfare Jaws also order the slate to pay Lucien Vandegrift, 1t11 e position wUt prevail ," Van-the U.S. Department of He1lt.h, are "nothing more th a n back to Washington all Social human relation.1 ttt:retary, dtgrln said. Education and Welfare on bW'taucratic mumbo-J umbo " Security funds received since said Thursday that he had Vandegrift S8id the question complicated arithmetical com. and Thursday·s federal COllrt June 1969. asked Atty. Gen. Thomas C. of California's conformity with putations, in the name of con· Zi'l>Qli s aid the slate had Lynch to take immediate step! federal laws \(as "a matter of formity is nothing more than order that welfare payment s re c ~ J ve d cost-Of.Jiving 1~ to appeal Zirpoli's rulpig. , lechnical and procedural dif-bueraucraUc mumbo-jum~­ must be increased will be ap-creases in Its share of federal "l am confident t_hpt when ferences -semantics -Indeed a wasteful exercl In pealed. "'elfare funds under the Social tbe appellate court ~ars the which have lit e if any rela· administrative paper wo , " U.S. District Court Judge Security Jaws but had not pro-atate's arguments ar ex~ ~ionship to the real i•ues of VandergrUt charged . Alfonso J. Zirpoli ruled Th urs-~ --- make mistakes." Unemployment Offict. "It wasn't so importanl Unruh, trailed by a scort or vt'hethe.r we were 'right' or newsmen and aides, was ·wrong' about Henry politicking among the 200 Bus Binge Salvatore. What was im-persons waiting to pick up portant Was tha t we. got this their "'eekly unemployment campaign of! the ground. I check3. Brings Bust feel very launched," said Phil "There won't be this many Schott in a candid in terview. people in here if I 'm SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) - The. plush Belair home of governor," the assemblyman It's nice to permit a man to do. millionaire Sa lvatori. one or told one unemployed con· day that California was short- changing 3.10,000 w e If a r e families of their cost--0f.Jiving increases in welfare payments and he gave the state 60 days to correct the situalior .. Unless the state acts within 60 days. the judge said, he KIRKPATRICK'S 24 YEARS IN THE HARBO R AREA FREE R,.ui.. $1 . walue U.ND McNALLIY TU.VIL GUIDI No l'wdime Nee_, Reagan's closest intimates, stniction laborer we a r j n g his thing. but Lewis Jef· was the lirsl slop 00 Unruh's khak~. lersoo's thing is laking city Jtuuper Killed '71 MODELS· IN STOCK faJI campaigning agenda. The The visit was designed to buses and driving l h e 1n THI FUSll Model FM -477 It" clie9. 110 ,q, in. pie· twre. h • S 0 AN FRANCISCO il'PI ) AND •UDY PO• IMMIDIATI DILIYl•Y Democrat c arged on Labor point out in full view of around . - D a Y th a I S a Iva I or i te In is; on cam er as J ellerson. 25, drove oil Wed· Margaret Ann Allen. 41 , ol SUPER SAVINGS ON '70 MODELS "manipulated" Reagan and California's high unemploY· nesd~y in the fourth mini bus Oakland, jumped to her death enjoyed tax Io op h 0 I es, ment rate _ 6.5 percent. from the (}()Jden Gate J;lridge no" Salvatori called Unruh to his Unruh told the recipients' he has commandeered this Thursday despite an attempt SALES & SERVICE fa~ an "ass" and a "liar." Reagan contributed to the year. , by a passing motorist to save "l think we 've got Jess unemployment rate by ac· Jefferson, an unemployed her. Unnih on the map, 1 really cepting President Nixo n 's janitor, has spent 45 days in She was the 39~th kt1ownl 2760 Coast Hiqhway Corona del Mar do." Schott said. "People -~·co~no~m~i:_c_i:po~l~ic~ie:s·~ _ _:_· __ ~ia~iit;l~or:_ih~Iss_:pa~si'_'b~u:s~jo'l'y_'.r~i\i"'.es:·_~'"'.'.ic:'.id~e'..'o'.'.n'..'th:'e~bc~id~g".:e.~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ realize that we're in this cam- paign seriously, that we don't consider any holds barred. e\'en ii we do make mistakes." Unruh ended a four-day campaign roadshow Thursday in San Diego. Among bis final acts of tn explosive week was to be kicked out o{ an Cigarettes 'Foul Form Of Suicide'. SAN DIEGO (UPI) -U.S. Surgeon General Jesse L. Steinfeld called c I g a r et t e smoking a "chronic form of suicide" Thursday and pro- mised continued government support to help halt it. "I believe the time is ripe for government and voluntary groups to mount a much more vigorous program on all fronts to portray cigarette smoking for what it really is - a dirty, smelly, foul , chronic form of sui cide with the added un· certainty of Russian roulette for the individual smoker," Steinfeld said. The surgeon general. ad- dressing the conference or the national interagency council on ~moking and health, said medical authorities co u Id '"prevent h un dred s of thousand~ of deaths due to pulmonary and c a r d i a c diseases if we would apply our knowledge regarding the hazards of cigarette smok· ing." Steinfeld, noting that nearly seven yea rs have passed since the surgeon general's office issued its report 11 n k i n g cigarette smoking and cancer. said the resulting campa ign against smoking "has been one of the most amazing health education programs un- dertaken in this country .. , He said government is using a three.pronged approach in its attack on cigarette smok- ing by attempting to en· courage present smokers to quit. discouraging n o n - smokers, especially youth, from lltnoklng, and b y developing I e s s haz~rdoull ways of smoking such as Jess dangerous toba ccos. Steinfeld said a recent study In ?1-taryland showed that discouraging youths from smoking cigarettes is not driv- ing them to smoke marijuana or take drugs . He said the survey indicated that "the boy or girl who experiments with marijuana was first a cigaret- te smoker, and continued to smoke cigarettes after smok- ing marij uana." Steinfe ld said the study did not show that cigarette smok- ing "leads" lo marijuana smoking orthat one habit is a substitute for the other. Stressing the health angle alone Is not enough to keep le.ens from c i ga r el t e s, Steinfeld said. He said the in- fluence of the p a r e. n t s. espeei11Jy the mother who smokes, is strong on children. ROii IN DAllA POINT 1971 MODELS AVAILAll.I ON DISPLAY .MILLS TILIVISION J41SS C CN1t Hlthw.iy o...,. ,.,..,, .... ,.,. 4ff..1744 137·1111· AccuColor-RCA's new system: for color televlSion. Model-for-model, dollar-for-dollar the most vivid, most lifelike, most consistently accurate, most dependable color in our history. And our most automatic. First RCA brought you black-and-white televisie.1. Then we pio- neered color. Now we proudly present AccuColor-a system that combines the three fealures you want most in one set consist- . enlly accurale color. fiddle-free tuning and slrong. dependable performance. Pertormance I hat's backed in writing! Here are the major componenls lhal make ii all possible: 1. An AccuColor Tube. Compuler-designed for optimum color accuracy and sharper. more detailed pictures. Each AccuColor tube has RCAs own Permachrome Sha dow Mask: It prevenls dislortion of color as the picture warms up. You get consistent color hour afler hour. 2. An AccuColor Automatic Tuning System.lls fiddle- free color because critical con1rols are aulcimatic. RCAs Auto- matic Fine Tuning locks in lhe correc l signal on all channels. And AccuTint-our one-butlon automalic-gives you more nal - uraf flesh tones and consislent color on all channels. 3. An AccuColor Chassis. In RCAs AccuColor "New Vis la" sets many tubes and in :·rrans Vista" models al/ lubes -are re- placed by advanced solid slale devices; the most reliable. mosI long-lived kind of componenls used in television today. The Problem with AccuColor. We know ii sounds too good to be true. So don'! believe it's everything we say it is. Be- lieve it's everything you see it is. Al your RCA dealer's today. ' -1 ,l (\ J, f -' . -. ' I u)• 0ACCUCOLOR PARTS AND LABOR COVERAGE-BASIC WARRANTY PROVISIONS. RCAs new Purchaser Salisfaction program .. "PS" for short -provides that for one full YM!" from the date of purchase. RCA Corpora- lion warrants lo the first re1ail purchaser lhat it will pay all r~borchargesforrepairofdelectsin 100%solidslaleAlxu Cofor "Trans Vis1a .. models (~'1li on AccuColor "New VISla" models) and wilt make available replacements for any defective parts. (If the piclUre tube becomes defective Within ~...:J!li. It wiU be exchanged for a rebuilt picture tube.) lnslaltaflon and set-up, foreign use, anlenna sys- iems. and adjustment of cuslomer controls are not in- cluded. To obtain warranly benefits, contact your RCA dea/lef or the service agency of your choice with your W!Jfrsnty Registration Gard. The Raoburn, "New Vista" model GP-590 An AceuColor conso\e at a budget price. Bril!1an1. lifelike aolor on a big 23" d1ag. picture tube. Dependable performance plus accurate au tomatic tuning. The AI!amira,-=N-Vls1a" model GP-~28 Brilliant RCA AccuColor housed in romantic Spanish style cabtne.t. AccuColor picture tube !or extra sparkle. AccuColor cha~s includes many solid state deV1ces l~r greater dependability. Plus RCA's AccuColor liddk!-lree Iun1ng sysiem . Se~ it now at your dealer I -. The Cllhoun,"Now Vlltl" model GP.592 AceuColor in hand- some Early American styling. Big 23" diag. AccuColor picture tube. Dependable AccuColor chassis for long. strong color oertormance. Plus AccuCoJor automatic tuning that makes RCA color TV liddle-free. j~ AccuColor~ The Chlndler, "Tr1n1 Vlltl" model FP-562 Tabl&foP Jr;; B<g-screen AccuColor piciure QUahiy. ease<>l-Iur>ngp.oo. I an all so!id slaie chassis: Oe~gned lor long. suong de able pertormance. AccuColor@) 8 DA.II. Y PILOT Friday, Stptrmbtt 11, l'iiO tlAllY PILOT lleff ..,.._ Ready for Rodeo f.1ike Barnet. 8. and bis sister, Christy, 6, check out western star Andy De-- vi ne's hat size as they look forward to benefit rodeo Sunday in Santa Ana. Montie Montana's Wild \Vest Show will perform a t 2:30 p.m. and at 8 p.m. at Santa Ana MunicipaJ Stadium. Proceeds go to Orange County Association for Retarded Children. Ticket!: will be available at itadium box office. For the Record u .• wn1ml11Ster. •lrl. Alftllfl 'Jt Supervisors Delay Court Decisio11 Postal Burglars Studied' Special to the DAILY PlLOT PJ-IOENlX -S w a ppl 11g stories is a common custom at conventions, but information '"' being passed around here may spell a crackdown on fat1l· moving U.S. Post 0 r r i t'e !~:~i~. \covering a11 Or POWReleasc Detective Tom DelComa. or tbe Oran ge Police Department. is a (ll o n g delegates to the 21st Annual Western States Safe Burglary Jnvestigators' Conference. Petitioned By OCVFW He said Wednesday that i111!or ma t ion about SANTA At\A Orange safecrackers known lo be County member.~ o( t he engaged in interstale activity Veterans of Foreign Wars is being exchanged in an effort have joined in a nationwide ta make captures. drive to get millioos or Not money, but stamps capable of being illegally signatures demanding release resold are the p r imary of U.S. prisoners of war in UC Irvine , Student Gets Grant , UCI Offers Taboo Study IRVINE -A lecture :series will be presented at UC Jrvine during the fall quarter entitled •·Totems and Taboos." 'l'be series will describe IRVINE -A UC Irvine historical and contemporary junior in biological sciences taboos throughout the world has been awarded a $250 grant and will explore tradition11l to study pollution of the Judeo-Chrlsli an r c Ii g i o u s Newport Back Bay. views, modem sexual taboos Mark E. Emmerson ot and medical praclices. The series, offered for three Corona del Mar, was granted units of credit, y,·ill meet 12 the research fellowship by UC Thursday evenings from 7 President Charles Hitch. DAILY PILOT Stiff ll'lllle p.m. to 9:30 p.m. beginning Emmenon bad sought $800 Sept. 24. Further information to conduct a t~week study of WINS RESEARCH GRANT may be obtained from the UCl as many as three sites in the --~S~tuden.:.:::.::.•:....:E~m=me::..:.r~son:.:c.:_ __ E_x_1_ens_;_on_o_n_ic_e_•t_833-_S_<_l4_._ Back Bay, measuring e.coli -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ a non-pathogenlc bacteria. Considering the award he received, Emmerson no w · expects the study will be reduced to a 24-hour 53.mpling period. It's Habit-forming Don't get weary. R!ad Lrary. Bill L!ary's on!-Hn! commtnts on th~ world around us can b! habit·fonnlng. Chtck today's Graffiti by Lrary. H~ and his marine biolOgy professor, Dr. Roger Seapy, ~=========::::==-::::==~~~~~~~ and another student will rent /· concern ot postal burglars, Vietna1n. according to Inspector W. f\.1. samplingandlabora tory TI!e drivt', dubbed Project equipment and conduct study during Christmas vacation, PO\V, has been endorsed by Emmerson said. Langston, or the Sacramento More Security With the <:ounty 8 oar d of•:~~~~~~~~~~~[[ Supervisors in resolution designating Sept. 20·26 as AO\IEllTISEMENT \'F\V Freedom S i g n a t u r e Police Department. He described one such Northern California job as netting $300,000 in stamps. mostly destined for consumers such as business firms of questionable reputation. Week. Wh<n s;gnoturcs Ir o in .FALSE . TEETK Knot1'1 DertT Fana i1 e~tending i1:1 r.o~d"." c ..... 1~dll of Couatry It 1Ve.tei:n Mule'. nu~ II 1be 14th JH•I week! Today, Frid11.• rcwrd1og 1tar JERRY WAU.ACL S1tw-d1y. h eck by popalar deina•d, ROY CLARK oC TV't Ree Haw. :;unday, 1he oulllla•dh1i1 YOll&! an~ li_i•:rnmental 1roup TUE REINSMEN. l>oD I nu .. 11. throughout th< naUon are w~u. Eatl•CJ· Talkl•CJ galhcred O<.'t. I in VFW Don'1 tie'° air.kl that ,.our !•lie national headquarters in :::,,00J:i•ic;:~~~~i For fie bett guide to wh1t'1 Kansas City, Mo., National ~~tute ~Z.~!8!a~r li•ppeRilNJ oft TV, reed TV Commander H. R. ,;Chief" platel. PA8TUTB holU l1•11turea WEEK -d i1trilt10ted witlt the Rainwater will present them ~ ~"."~~:~:: ON THE TUBE Meetings FRIDAY M•t \ll1le M•$Ol'lk ~. Ma.onk Tem111t, 1«11 !)th $1., Ntwl!Ol'I 8e•cti, 7:XI p.m. \IFW POii 3536. Am¥k1n ll!llOfl 1-Qoll, S6S w. lllh St., Con!• ~ ... I p,.m. Newport Amlleur Jtl<llG Socl•l'I'. llecrNllol'I 8fd9., )JU 811bN 11...0., Newpor! 8ffdl, I p,.m. Mr. •nd MIL J1..-C. Hf!llMll, Jllf E. St4 MCAS, El T-bo<r, A_,,. Mr. end Mn.. Rkilmrd C. R.-, 2"17 Embliiloorn Lint. Mlltloft \ll1lo, "'· Mr. I nd Mrt. Cllarles 5._, ~I c;'°"'nvUlt, Wll'STmll\llff, bo<r. Mr. Incl Mra. D1vld W. N.!SClft, 25312 Wllllt• Piece. Legu,.. ttltli, tior. S1turd1y eclaior. of th• DArLY to the North Vietnamese 1ooe,.,Pdtft.-t.e.Derr.tun1ui.t11t By JACK BROBACK !)f ll'lt DIHJ "''°' Stiff delegation at the Paris peace 11ent1-t NCU1Ut1. Get. eM1-to-u111 ,,.., ,~• ·"' l'AST&BTB •tall drua: COWl\elS. -· :-;:.. ~. negoti ations. 11~·1llO~f§.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;·;N~~~~~ ... ~~0o~b~ ... i<b~.~ ... ~JO"'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SANTA ANA Orange --.. --.....,,...,. , County Super:'lr Courts want two more court clerks and two sheriffs deputies to take advantage or an offer or attorneys to sit as judges and help alleviate the h e a v y backlog of cases in the coorts. 0•1n;e Co.ii Jtar1I Arch MllOlll 156, Hun1111t110fl 8Nch MIMlrliC Ttmple. L.tllt Inell P1lm. H\lnllng~ Bt1c~. 7:30 p,.m, UTUltDAY Cl'lri,tl1n l uilnnimllfl't CDlnmlttM. eattio• a,., c1u11, Newsx>rt 8HC;11, 1;JO 1.m. Birt las ST. JOSEPH MOSPITAL A11911tt 2' Mr. and Mo. Per..-11. OIU llo. lllll El C1bello. El Toro, 11r1. Mr. and Mrs. Oon1ld s. UPt:ll~e. 1S.•1 Ch1mpl1fn ftd .. LlllUlll Hint. 1lr1. AW\lfl l1 Mr. and Mra. John Saucedo.14lU 011 ... Death l\'otifl!s coo,. ... Flt1l)jli,Y DIUTS -'91>1. 11 -........ . Louhl Bullr c-. 1'21 Rltlft1nd ""·• N-part 9ftdl. DI'-"' Dull\, s..t. t. SuNlwd by Wtfw. ... _ M, ~I tw. """"''-· Mrs. J-Mlllft', Vlrflrol11 Mrs. \lldtl s1.._, s.n ...._"""°' tw. al1twrt. "'"" v.,_, FIO¥'d 9flOI Mr1. Mw• lel Bolten. boll! d G~r Wllt~t. G r1nl 8 . C-, lo. A-*1 fl'lrN t1rWICtchl~ Flf..,..el notlctl wl" tw eflfQ!nnd Wllw bl' ••tit Cosl1 Mesi Mortu1rv. a>OT SldM¥" A. Cort. Aft 17, of tl'O W. Uth St., Sp. 63, N--1 l!INCI>. ltts~nl lllf $1lbool Jll .,ffrli dale Pl fflll'I, Set>I. •. 5utY1Yecl br wire, Gl-OrlJetl•, ef tl\t "°""'' broltllr, Wl!111m E. Corl, Glen- d'"'' rwo 1l1tff'S. Doro!t'rl' Strldll~. L1 H1tw1; Martol rl'I MKOonllcl, Lt/sure World. L11ur>a Hms. flfne<ll 11rvlct1 .. .,. held T~y, $wt!, lo II WHI• ml"""" Memorlal P1rk. DllUTOWSW.I AM ~I. Ave 6'; rHldeflt ti ~" "Mn.a. 0.11 of death, s..t. t. su...,lred tw "' ..... lllKH, Mr&. l or.tt1 D. Glrto, Torrenc1; Mni. BlllV D. Hutdlbon. 0.1· ho; Mrs. Dorothy Sll'ffllt, Ohio. Services, S•turd1.,, :: PM, Btll Br•llW•Y c~. with AIY. TNllTlll H"'ln e4fici1ttne. 1 .... termtnl, Good Shtp~rd CMitllf"I'. ltl/ a r-..1Y Morluil...,, OlrKtor1. KlllK Henri' Cllffonl Kirk. A91 11, of »5 l 1rl!· ..,ur, cor-di'! M11. 0.11 of o1e1111, s ... temt>tr t, Survived b1 wilt, IC1lh1M~; "°"'' H-r C. !Cir-. of Mt~lc11; Wlnl1m Kin., of Venturi; 1nd two 9r1ndclllldren. ~vkn 1nd lnter.....,1 PriVtle. ll1llt c~ ft! """' Mortuu..,, Dlr.ctc-n. MAllTIN Ltr<W w. ,,..,,1 ... m w. Wlllllft. Sp. n. Cotl• Mew. Servkel ~i"' 11 l!ltll BrOldwl., MPnu1rv. STEWAltT Emmit Slt'Nllrl. Al t M, ol SOS Avtnldl Sevllll. L111un1 Hllli. Dill of <ff~!~, Sell!Miber '· Survived bw Milt<', JN~ll• Cll~. L19u,.. Hills; niece, Daris 010:,•I· n1111, Los Afl9tllH J ftffllew, Donald F. Gr.en. L• Sllv• e..c~. C1!1f, Servlc•S will be ~tld Mondaw, 11 AM, Weitcll!f c~1~1. Prl•ll• inl••.....,I 11 H1r11ar 111••1 Mt<T1ori1I Ptr~. Wntclilf Mor1u1r,, o;. •octors. ARBUCllE 6 SON Wesldiff M-..Y 427 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa -• BALTZ MORnJARIES Coron• del Mu OR UGI Costa Mwa ~n 1-tct • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 Bre11h,,ay, Costa Mes. u "3433 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORnJARY 1795 Lqu111 C.nyo. Rd. Ol-9415 • PAClFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PAR& Cemetery e Mtrhl•ry Cluopel 3511 Plltific View Driw Newport Beach, Californi• Mf.!'111 • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME '1911 Boin Ave. Wtllmla11tt m.lm • SHEFFER MORnJAllY Larun• &tack fH.15SS Sa1 C-t. nMIM • SMJTllS' MOlmJAJIY ftl Miia II. -....-... AlllYsl JI Mr. 111d Mn. 01vlcl L. HleMf', 111! Coriendlr, No. C, Coste Mtwo, brn. -· Mr. end Mni. D1nlel J •• ,_,,11111, 5201 Q St •• El Toro. 9Jrl. Mr. encl Mrt. Georgl W. lOOll 111, J1m C111e 11er"1ld.. Ho. A. :r;1n J111n Ca.pl11,_ 1lrL •A•DllH l'A lllC •INlllAL MOl,.ITAL •-n Mr. •nd """· L-nl M. Wlct"" *21 Unlw..-slh' Drl.,r, Coale Mrw. girl. Marriage Lreenses OllANOI! COUNTY AU~. 17 CAllPEHTEA·FOGEL. SIH!hfn £., lt, ol l'SU Allllrll Circle ind Lindt J .• 19, QI '9111 Oontr11 Prlrt, belt~ QI Hunllnt1ton h1C11. MUSVROVE.tJPP, Rottr E., l•, QI IW.1 E. °""°""-..... O, icolltdall, Ar11. end ~ .... 11. "10111 ...... -.. HloMlnsf91! iltKh. K.~\IES.fl:ISHE118MS£"-llto:ti." L., •s, ..,. Cttol s., ll, -"' "' 11n Donlf L_, C.11 MHa ,M.ll.AHD-GOllOOM, L«TY Al IJ, of In 2'nd St .. Apt, n Incl Jo .. ti, "' Mil MtrrlmK Way, APi. 1, lioolh ol C91t1 Mell. CULLEN·8UTLER, J•n'le$ G., 22, of 2') N«lh Park LIN, Or•nee •NI Jan E .. J.t. "'410 ''"' cor-IHI Mir. CMURCH-HANSEH, J-ll•1n M .. )4. of 1~ w. llr encl Senora J .• 2S. Ill l.fO!Vt w lllr, born of Ntwpor1 BlaCll. TUIHEl·MAHE. T1nlwt. 15, 1nd Ltlklt IC.. 10. both of 1211 21 11 SI., WeslmJnslff. FULTZ·HEl50N, Wendell F .. ~. of 1111 Piii! SI .. Apl. T, Butnl Plr~ encl Liii J., 31. of 250!'$ Cl'IAmPllln, L1guna Hlll1. TVRHER·HEUER, Pelf! G.. n. of lJMI cr..11 v1111. Dina Polnl 1N1 Ta,,,...1 J.. l•, ol ' C1nel ClKle, NewPOO'I 8"c:h. FA$SET.LONG, Robert H •• SO, of lOS E. Pint St., .... I C, S1n11 Ane I nd Arltftt 8., SS. of 2'J.n Pl!llll Orlvt, Mission \title. TAtTE·JOHA.$,. Mlrll A., lt, d 71110 Hunlln•""'· Al>!. lJ, Hunt111111on llNCli •NI Jovc1 M., 11, ol fllt Sl'lrfkt Avt., Foun11ln \lllltr. I MtTJ+HICl(EftTZ. 0.1111 S., '1. ol l.S7$ OreMt Avt4 Cotti Mt.le Incl Ki!Mttn M., It, Ill 201 V!I Genc11, NtWPOl"I 8tKh. 4'.0STA·POMCE, Hermtn (; .. 19, o1 ?SlS W. Pomon-, Sln1a An1 1nd lllO!i<f, 19, of 1'611 lluen, Founl1ln Vl llev I OYD-&JIAHS, PIUI W., 1', ol 2Q W, 8rOldw1r, Anaheim Ind ((O"I A .. :JO. of 1"21 Shtffltkl Lint, Huntln9tan flffch. GREEN·ftl!NFllO, R~I R., )1, ol l l6ol\ LI ,.,, P~, Ind Cllrltllt L., ?4, QI 1011 211t 5t., APi. O, both ol Westmlnsier. MtlNJOS·JARVIS, John T., 11, of $1!15 LI POild1, Lonti !kith Ir.cl 8arblra J ., JO. ol lklf h9onl .. COl'Ofll RI ~·· WELLS.BOYLE, Rober1 L., 21, of :Ml S l1llnd \l ltw Drlvt , Coron• 11.i Mar ~r>d ven111 c .. n, o1 1m A11111>e1m, C01t1 Mtlf, H•SEMANN·KOSCELNllC. Kur!, 24. of 1401 Ollvt I r.cl Karen l • ?l, ol 110 J1r Clr1:1t, IDl'll of Huritlnglon Bt ltl'I. ~Ill.COOK, Ron1kl L .. :l'I. of l'/l AYM\dl Ctrr\lot, He"IPOrl 8ff(h Ind Btr!>ltl L .. 21, of SJ/4 CltnPO Wat., l-8e1ch. AUC. 11 fl:OCEllS.!IREWSTEll. Gary L., tt, of UDO S1nl-ll• 1..-r1ct, C-1 dtl Mir Ir.cl IC1th'"11 M., 11. QI 2'UO \11•11 Holl(, Nf'wPort llNth. HOLSCHLAG·SMOKE, Jottn 8., ,.._ of 11111 Fmw17, Apt. 1]. We11mln11tr 11'111 lt'L-J .. n. of \Olt'I fd9t!...od Ltne. G1rden c,.,~,.. MISICO\l·OAICE, Jotnoll, 2'1, flf 111' Ocean. mt ee1r11 •nd D••M• a .. )), f)f !QIN. Olive SI , Orin..:. LAS \IEGAS, New.. -Marrllog1 lice<11e• 1uwd htrt lnc:tudt: LANGE\llN·llADER -Auo. JD, CllUdf, n. ol Fount•ln \11lle¥, 1nc1 Joe An"· 31. of L1Htbr1. scs~:~~r~r.rd7~ -.,/C"!i1:'M::.· .~.; EwlYn Hoenne, 11 QI Hunlinctlon lltKll. KNIGHT•KlAUIC -Sf!)!. 1, JOWOll HUTll, :n. Ill Anl~flm, Ind 1(1rln Btrl>lr•. 2', of Hun!l119ton llftc~. CAMPllELL.t..EONARD -~pt. I. 11•r1 Gr1nt. 29, 1nd Aul~ ,. , n, bolll of Hlfflllngton Bitch. ! ... !IAlDANO-SCANLON -Sept. 1, Jos.epll I .. 5L Ind Mlr91r1l·JNn, .\6 bath of Cffll MfU . HDlL·T11181TS -5ePI. 2, Peter Hein!. i.. •"" Toni Ann. 70, D<lln of W.slrnll\$1 ... CO\llNA·BllOWM -5.t-111. !. Rots. 40. and Slndr1 Orlllen1, 24. bolh o! Hunllnglon 8e1c11. WEL1Y·HOL.MGlllEN -Sept. 2, Ga..., G..,.., 21, ol C91!1 MIMI I nd Lindi 01r11nt, II, of S..nl1 Ana. OlGUIN..CllAWFORO, Sfpt. ], Alfon50 M., "6. Pl S1n Pedro. Ind Dori• Stempel, '-'• ol L19Uf\I Hiiis. JOHN5TDN·WILSON, Sept. I, Ttddv H1111n, 12, of Cosll Me11, Ind Bevt•I• o . lS QI Hvnli1>9ton lleKll. MATIHEWS-ROSE' -Sell!. '· Jlt~ =~~. ~ s':nf.°'l~~"'· tnd Slbwt FARKAS·ALLEN -Sept. 4, RudOlpl\ A •• ». QI Sunset S.Kh. Ind Dororliv J •• ..i, QI F-•ln \ltlln. WILLIAMS-KENNEDY -Srllt ,_ 01vlcl LH, :it, of Huntlng!Ofl 81tcn. I nd Lindi LM 10, ol OrtnQt!. SMITH-5AND!Jt5 -Slof. I. Rtv1110 ·-j l'I, ol F01,1nt1ln V1llf¥. Ind (lr1nd1 O'l'CI Mari.. :n. ol HarDor cu.,_ SLATE-MUllCHISOM -Seo!. '· ltobttt HUVo, Jt , Of llfll G~rdeM, tnd T..-eH, ~!z.!'f W~llmll\Sltr • l'ELLEV.u<.l'NHEll -$e-pl, S. P-ld L""lt. JS. 01 M""t"'Oi.. llU(J'I, 1114 IOflt'ie LH !1, f//f W""'tlr"l'tr, CARDEN.WALLS -Stilt, J, Im F., <It, •"" lerblr1 8. 16. bolt'! of Co111 ·-· k11AU 5FELDT·80Wlle:S -Sfpt, S, IC""""1'!1 Allft. 2l f//f NfWl*'I !..O.. 1._ Nino Gell, It, o1 Ger*" G~ . CA,.ALM>SIOM.AN -'"'1. S. An!l!Gnr I,, Jr., 2'-Ind Nldlnt It,, 2t, bolh -Hunflllllton leedl. (Al.t.JlnPHIFEll -S..OI. " W1!U1m C,; "· .,,.. Judy, )4. boll'I ... u.v':=t:H1n -kllf. s. 0enn1, MOl'I .... It, 111-d "t•lll lOU1.MI, II, bOlh II CMll Mtw. But the request. presented to the Board of Supervisors Thursday by Presiding Ju?ge William Spei rs of Newport Beach. will call for an expenditure of $21 ,000 more than budgeted at a time when the county is tightening its fisca l bell. Supervisors aller 6pirited discussion over what department was 1 p e o d i n g what money delayed decision on the additional positions for a week to allow further study. Judge Speirs explained that Orange County Bar Association has agreed to n1ake available 20 to 30 ··experienced" attorneys to sit in two additional courts on a rotating basis • The judge said there: ts cu rrently a backlog of about 130 cases per judge in the Superior Courts, an increase or 50 cases each over a year ago. He added that the number of new cases In the courts has increased to 500 a month, up 50 percent over last year. Supervisor David B a k e r complime nted the Bar Association on their offer but pointed out tha t the coonty does not have the money to pa y the clerks and deputies. "\Ve told the county adm inistrative offi~r to cut Sl.9 million out of the present budget and he recommends that we not approve this !21,000 increase in the courlS. 1 th ink we should support him." Baker ad ded. ''Perhaps the courts department can rind a way to eliminate some other costs to compensate for this new expenditure ." County Clerk William St John said he coold provid e the two clerks without increasing his department's budget bu1 thiit he could not speak for the Sheriff's Department on the t"·o deputies. The board finally instructed CAO Robert Thomas to study the situation and provide the deputies if no ad d ition at overall expense is involved. 2 N elv Deans At CSCF FULLERTON -Tv10 new essociate deans of the School ol Letters, Arts and Sciences :11 Cal State f'u llcrton heve ........ befn appointed by ))resident \Villiam 8. t..angsdorf. They are Dr. \\'illiam C. L:111gworthy. a ss or i at c professor ol chemistry, and Dr. James 0. Young. professor of thealcr. The two deanships previously w ' r e held by Dr. HA1.cl J. Jones, now dean or the school, and Dr. Charles A. Po\llovlch, no~· . exetuti\·e associate to the vice presidcnL for .acadcmtc •Hairs. ... ' ' . ..., GENERAL RECTRIC MATCHING HI SPEED DRYER NO GUESSWORK DRYlHG ... st!tcl tht flbrle type, push· one button aJMI clothes tomt out pelfeclly soft, and 1hlffy. PCRMANENT PR£SS CYCLE ttlnbln DUtwrilk!ft- clothts 1re r!act)' lo .,..l!lf. SPECIAL HEAVY DtlTY SET• llNG for bedspreads, bath malS, wark clothes. elc. FLUFF CYCLE fnr 1tnU! 11D·ht1t tlllllblin( •ction. OPTlOl'IAL END-Of.CYCLE BUZI£1 kb 'JtlO know 'llhlll loalod~ $16495* MODEi. DD£7100l .-;. I I • t I l ! f i t ' p ' Now-Get More For less! ,,, MORE CAPACITY .-' MORE FEATURES ~MORE VALUE For less than. a comparab"le 19511 model! IE FILTER FLO® WASHER ll llC, lllAVY l1JIY DP TD II IL W'ACllY ••• -·"'111 bff IOldt, el .. """1-nslly~ .... l:J CFS FAMOUS F11.Ttl RI 1BSIDI S1'STDI tnps: lint tml fuzz and even dis- penses drttr(ellt 111tcmtica1Jy, [J OCLUSlfE "'MDff.IASXET'" anfuly lluDISers IP ID Z tbs. Cf -i.~n.-Overs" Of' cl!Jiette ttiilrs JOU .... n1 Miid wash. a ~EW lllZ'flE SUll mu 1111111>, am -dol!m to sook tor about JO Minutes blfcn,....., Mlilq: C)'Cle. a PllllQtlfTl'lllSStml_cdd_olirtarlPioto-ll<ld......, ~---"' .-m-nmnm ... _. __ ,....,,,.,, ,.;, __ .., .... _..--.Pt-JOO"•'-. tor rnJ l)'pe Df 1atmcfly, lndud"111 the new lliTlctt flbrics. DON'T BE SWITCHED ••• INSIST ON GENERAL ELECTRIC QUALITY TV and APPLIANCE IN HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 540-7131 Daily 9 'til 9: Sat. 9 'til 6 Friday, Stpttl!'lbrr 11, 1970 DAILY PILOT jJ Pat Brown Publishes Book Called 'Reagan and Reality' SACRAMENTO (AP) .... in his attitudes and pollUcal two tenns as g o v e r n o r , • • T h e m a j o r I t y o r dlffer in basic patterns or ~Twenty years ago, Nixon •berration of CAl!fi:imian Iner political m e n t a 11 t y he Gov. Reagan today slt'Ongly temperament and 1 ta~· defeating Nlxon for th e Californians were ripe for a political conducL s a har:h and negative American · politics. but I represents will be with us for reaet'{lbles the "harsh-and d f sus~t that l)e _and the radical ma ny years," Brown Sa)'!. negative political voice" of above and outsi e o e govunorship in 1962. radically different type of "President Nixon respects tical voice in California;:======::;:=============:. Richard Nixon 20 years ago, c om~romising, conciliatoey, He lost to Re agan, the 59-governor and i ~men s e l y and is a part of our system of nationally." former Gov. Edmund G. mode r ate vortex or year~ld former actor, by one receptive to the personality, representative government." Time and 1 serv )ce I n Brown says in a new book. government," writes Brown. million votes In 1~. style and philosophy of Brown w r It e $1. '·Governor government tiave mellowed Nixon has mellowed over the The official publk:aUoo date Summing up \v•hy be lost, Reagan," writes Brown, now a Reagan detests tha t system Nixon and his political views, years leading to the of the $6.95 volume. from Brown admits : prosperous attorney living In and seeks to tarn ish it in the P---'dency, adds e-wn "'' the P P b 11 h •-'A d to be I k · B I H"lls bl " · d d · d Brown said. 1cu •v raeger u s er s , ut ' n ran , a ma1ority every 1 • pu 1c mrn an tear 1t own book titled "Reagan and Wednesday -two days after of Californians were simply Brown c h a r ac t e r i 1: es in the state budget." Reagan does not fit into that Reality." Republican Reagan kicks off bored with me, the other Reagan's firSt term as Brown adds, "Reagan today kind or political tradition, Brown doubts that Rtagan his re-election c a m p a la n Democratic state officers, and negative and destructive. strongly r e s e m b I e s the Brown says: will change politically. again.!t Democrat Jess Unruh. the Democratic party in He says Reagan and Nixon Richard Nixon of the late "I am tempted to th ink - FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER PHONE 642-4321 "Reagan UI fixed and rigid Brown, a Democrat, tervtd general." are alike in many ways, but ·1940s and early 19SOs. wishfully -that Reagan is an 1-=-'--~'---'---~_:_'---~~~~~~~-'--..:.::...C-'--'--=-.:..:.:..:...:.:.:__~~~'---'-----""--'---'======================= Library Readies For 1976 WASHINGTON (AP) -In Its own scholarly way, the Library of Congress already had started the I 9 76 celebration or the 2 0 0 t h annJversary of this nation's birth. The library has established a special American Revolution Bicentennial office which will provide information to schola rs planning to d i g through thousands of books, manuscripts, diaries a n d letters of the period. The library anticipates an avid search of its records by scholars searching for the meanings of the revolution and its relevance to America today. "The celebration in 1876 got people to thinking about these things," Robert A. Rutland said in commenting on bow wealthy men of that day began collecting v a r i o u s documents and letters of revolutionary times. Rutland, author of three books on the revolution and a professor at the University of callfornia at Los Angeles, is head of the library's special American Revolution Bicentennial office. With him are rour other historians. working on bibliographies and guides to manuscripts in the library, including official papers and soldiers' diaries and lri:ters back home. The library also has named a special advisory board of ten leading historians who are speciallllts In early American history. The library has no way of knowing how many new books on the American Revolution are coming out, Rutland said in an interview. "Researchers always are at work here," he said. The library has published a selected reading list of 340 titles on the American revolution, meant for the general reader. A major project is the publication of Letters of Members 0£ the Continental Congress as a supplement to the eight volumes of such letters published between 1921 and 1936 by Edmund C. Burnett. The library also plans a major exhibit on the American Revolution and t r a v e I i n g exhibits to go around the country. For anyone who would like a bit of Amarican history on the wall of his den or living room, the library plans to issue facsimiles of engravings and rare maps of revolutionary times. PUT CASH IN YOUR POCKET Sell unwanttd Item• with a DAlLY Pll..OT Cusified A4. PHOlll 642-5678 N"-1'•MAL &•L4& C ...... P C~ee~ PRE-SEASON . DEAL! WE'RE BACKWARDS, WE LOWER PRICES IT THE BEGIRNING INSTEAD OF THE END. FREE PRE-SEASON SPECIAL 4 PIECE TOOL SET CUSTOM MOUNT FIRESCREEN Satin bl~lr llni1h. The ••t lncludu the br111h. the poker, lb• 1h0Tel. and that neat old 1tand, (And you're 1tucli.-wlth a g-01 lireplac•, to11gh.) STANDING Fili cm ope1dng up to 40 ineh•1 (which 1bould take care of my brotb1r-in-law moulb.) No big Jn1tallolion. t•llllo11o t}'JMl mountlog, Draw p\IU .. 12'' 4'7 FIREPLACE If some lummox r.ad1 this ad we'll catch ii. He'll think the thlnQ-11 frff and offer to whup the fireplace department h.a:d. n·m betting OD the on• 1n the pink trunks.) A beautiful fireplace you don't have to brick or mason in. Complete with baae. The other guys sell it Jor more without the haH (I wish the boss would let me use their names. Ir you went there you'd stUl come back to us. u nle11 you were a masochist.) SATIN BLACK IVllL_IBLE IN COLORS Got lh• thlog In Tangerloe. Tit• Rid, A•ot'ado. and White. (B11t 1llU no Strll'ffbeny). LINDY PENS 13987 Th• big p•n ... 11h lh• well thot almo1t do11n't run dry. {You'll notice. I said 'Almo1t1. Color1. a bucketJull. REG. 59c LIBEL GUN Mali• a label 101 hi• book1 ond maybt. ju1! maybe, he'll !Ind 1h•m o:go:in ond not hafl to buyn••· A good 9Qdg1t. 99c SPONGE BUCKET 2000 LB. HOIST Mu1t be lh1 d11r ltCllOJl or th• auto 1!1Cing 11a1on •. h1eou1• you lo!k1 are buying th••• lhlno1 like holcak••· IMoybe_ 11'1 th• hotcake 1•a1on?) 2'' ZODIAC BULLETIN BOARD You 0:1trological typ11 will groo•• on thi1, The r11t of you wlll Ju1t llk• lh• color• and poU•rn1 and hang thlng1 on It. 147 COLOR TV ANTENNA Th l1 pulls In the w1a1r A buck•! of 1pong11 in a 5 01. bucket, (KHp lh• bucbl ond throw the 1pong11 away.}. Cheap al th• price. or more. / 1lg no:l1. g r.at for blo:ck .ft)"t'!'.t. // and white. or color TV, Ma ny dlpol11. gold onod!11d. ond a ••I of ln11rucllon1 yo11 Ju1t gotto •••· JB7 CAST MET IL FIREPLACE DECORATOR KEY V1ry h•ayY U•m. (though the kld1 'Would llk11hat.) Adds a llttl• .011:11thlng to your llr•plaee ae•n•. Wb•ii rou llnd oul what It J1, tell 1n.e. Larger 11111 cnailabl1 for hlgg•r lox (ha. baJ, 2'' SHAG CARPET nLE 67c SELF ADHESIVE Thi• look• llk• about IJ0.00 a yard 1luff, but lt'1 bell•r b.cau1• yoU don't hafl wa111 to cut oll and 1011. In a choice of colors to match our 1011 carp1t, ll!g l2xl2 Inch 1quar11. REGISTER TODAY FREE CLASSES LA MIRADA COMMUNITY JIOOM'. W1dn11day [v1ning1. 1:30 lo 8:30 PM. Th• crowd wlll all be lh•r•. w1·1l hav1 good\11, a 11111• cup ol coll•• and glv• away 1om1 door prb11. CHAPIN SPRAYER Double dome lop. hond pump, adju1tabl1 wand lrorn jel to Jin• 1proy. For ony llquLd l•rlillz•r or ln11clicld1. Wi1h cctrrying 1lrop, 3'!. 6'' GAL Sept1mbtr JS "F!ni1hln; ol Fumllur1 end 01eoupa;!n;" S1ptemb1r 23 "How To in1lall Aluminum Windows and Ooor1" by lh• Hl·Lll• Corporation. S1pl1mb1r 30 "How lo Antlqu1 a nd Gold Lied" / by Glidd1n Company. FRAMES ThtM a,. beaull(ul. J! you don't thin k you gol a buy you oin't gonna lhinlc anything'• very much •""'· $"xl0".,,2.99 9"xl2" ... 3.44 12"xl6'' ••. 3.99 BIKE LOCK Th• 1lrong d~l w!lh lh• chciin !bing and lh• comblnoUon loclr.. I call It o cobl1. who lrnow1. (l\'1 a chain. dummy). 147 . --- SMOKED OR COLD VEINED MIRROR TILE PUSHY BROOM Stiff Lrlttles. 11 Jnch hordwood handl1, a tough thing to bff:t. An ,,,n tough•t th!nsr lo whack wllh. JO DAILY PJLOr S f"d._, Stpttl'llbtr ll liJ70 Your ltlo11eg's Worth Complete-New l'.ork Stock List -OVER THE COUNTER Crisis Helps Dollar NEW YORK , ... ,.,. Th;i"'"y I C:ot1'111lttw ,... "'" I , ................................. ,Ntw Yori!. $10(11: !llCl\tl'IM .-.ru1 ••• , .. .,.. l •• c-.. CM I' -• • • llMll I Hltll LN '""" Cllt. mi'r1' ,_,.. lS ~. 1 , 1n -"&•i.<1f k~ J:i r.~ U\41 n = •! "''ft -11 ..,, ti 4•-•Gn 0: .,.,_ 1t 11 1 II•~-., --r:"'"' : .. ,";' t 1• u.:i.i u:t it:=:: ~ f~ J llO 1u ... ,... ri. .. •--...., •w __ ,...,.. ... MIMI•_...,." t ..,.,,,.... "'"'°" 11..,...,,,.,,,•,•,, •• nt. nn 12\1 ,, rom• 1 JiO <11 IT\l 1•i.. ""' n l'ltJ• ,~, ••' ..?!•, ,l\ 711r -• NASO L1st109t for Thursday, September 10, 1970 ay SYLVIA PORTER In only 2S or Utr pan 100 yea rs bas tht cost of II~ Ing of American families dec!Lned and the O S dollar g;."1n1ed in buying pol'ier -and almOS1 \\'llhout exception those wf'rr vears or national crisis in 1tie p0st.C1vil \Var era the post World \\ar I rra I hr catastrophlc drpre!S$1on of tht 1930~ \\TJlile Amerleaos w 1 I h stead} Jobs and s av 1 n gs nesteggs bentf11ed from !ht: lnc:reasts 1n the buying po"er or lht dollars they \lietf' t'.arn1ng and sa\lllJ: 1n those 2ii \ears their good fortune wa8 dl'iarfed by the suffering of the millions l'i1thoot JObs "1thout tam1ngs without cash m the bank In ~ of tht past 100 years lhe CiJSl O! hvrng has cllmbed sharply and thf dollar ha5 slumped In buying power In only 17 years In a "hole rentul') ha\e pnces and !he dollar s purchasing po w e r been suff1c1enllv slablt lo warranl the JUdgme11l !hat families hvlng then "tre hol41ng their 011: n 1n lhe marketplace Each generation born 1n the past JOO years has had Jess lhan one chance out of IO that the nestegg of dollars 1t v;orked so hard lo eam and accumulate would maintain its \alue In all the 30-year periods since 1870 -each JO years equaling a generation -lhe chances have betn 91 out of 100 that the cost of living would raise and 1he dollar would shrink 1n value lnflatl0t1 has been and lnflahon ts the v;ay of bfe 1n the Uruted Scates -and 1n the world -of tM 20th century fn fact e\en that flat icy l'itatement ts far too conservative to be aC<"urate The historian Arnold J Toynbee has reported that 1n 6000 years of recorded history he has not found any instance 1n which the value of any currency of any country m any era has ga!ned over a prolonged period of tune The virulent 1nflallon of th• Vietnam era (11 never has been off1c1ally declared a Y.ar you know) ts startmg to sub- side The annual rate of r1Se 1n living costs is now under 6 percent as against 8 percent a year ago and lhe rate 1s headirig lower Realists hope that the pace of Increase. m liv mg costs can be brought down to the 4 percent a year range 1n the next few years Few obJec!Jve authorities expect that rate 1n the near future though and many thmk we will be lucky 1f ~ e can curb the general annual rate of ri se in prices to J •i, to 4 percent 1n the next five years A rate of rise of 4 percent ~ ~ear would put prices 2U percent higher onty five year~ from now If you compound a 4 percent annual rate during the 1970s yoo put prlces almost 50 percent higher a single decade from now No matter v;:hat percentage you choose you must cooclude that this JO.year span will be a period of reJentlessly rising prices and a steadily declining dollar value I DOO'S. Of Oil PAINTINGS WHOLISALI WAllHOUSE 0,EN TO THI PUILIC $5 and up 161t I IDINOE• S .. NTA ANA ~NONI: QS.4Mll ~ DEALEllS WANTl!D r I NEED 2 MEN I•• WOMlloll e WlMo lrl9" NA.SD ••Ill 1111 l ic-e w ....... ,. e H.,. ,., ... t,t rK•rd • A,. will! .. t• ...... •114 WM .... ...,. •••h ....... th .. BOB HARBISON 645 2111 I M •fll Tw1 Tl'lvn '" It ,...., .... Wtelct~GI ' .,. 1111141 ,_.._.,. m C1111 Mt" COMMODITY FUTURES TRADERS ,.... c..,.. ,., , ... 011 c ... "'1'flri-4 Tl .... A111elyi" •f Ott ,_,. ...... Sllftr •11il Seybff• M-·--· .. R. J. O'BRIEN AMI ASSOC .. INC 1'4• ...... Or , ,. •• ,..1 ... . 1714) MZ-1004 Wr1t1 "' w•z """"""" No 1natter how opUmJstk \OU ar~ about control of Ui!Jatlon you m°'1 conclude that 1t 1s unlikely "°f ~ill rrturn m thf' fortseeable future to the J\, to z~ perctnt annual ll\Crtases ln hvlng 1:osts of the early 1960s for 1~ cost' of that achi~emcnt would probably be a r ise 1n unemplo)ment to the 6-8 percent range For understandable reasons we are not prepared lo accept th:it cost 1n social or economic terms One 1mphcat1on of all lbl5 to me 1s that we will move closer and closer to ma k 1 ng ad1ustment.J lo higher price levels automatic Democratic President Johnson only a few years ago re1ected tyin g Social Seeur1 ty " .. ""' • ...._ ........... _.... .. .u ~ ~ ~ =" ''Ti:! ~1 ,J ~\.. ~ ~; ~ .. v. ::: Fr.·":,, ... 1s ·r. , · 1 -,, bene!JIJ to lhe ~sumer price .... ""' :it..t':~!1 • It • lil'I -~ ~!YI J.'O I n~. lt\o lt\lt -"i tn Ml ~ ·~ ln' ~t· 1,1o t ll Ind.• 08 an In 1 ol er ab I e ... •·•-•• o·~ ··~ A<;meMlu ,11 ,1 ~1~ 1-. ,,1, + C in;; 1JO '° l-:t, 'Ii. u -•• enl1!$•r ot s, ,, j,, " ,._ .. _.,. ... AOME!• 1J:o1e 1 i.J' I" !no_,, 111 Pl 1 1100 2'1 5 ., S?'t r,tM, •• , ,., 1 , • ' d lhl '·· Id I AdMUUllO ti I.. 21.t~ IMMlll«) ·~,...~· MU~ ..... , ·~···' a m1$.'10n a 1¥e COLI n NEW YORK fJPJ F•ll f t*, I'' ·~ P~I ""' 11 11\o Sltfll SIT ..... 10\'i Adell" IAO " \'l ru~ lllio -t1 f,T'l!I IM _, 40 3' ~ ef!MO! , ~ 1U n l II -... lrol Jnll ti N GOP -n.. l!;lllowlNI IQ "f"'J~ \> J"" P "o 1 i• !'''w Cl .n lS Aatn~ • \• t lo _IO 1Lt15V(' l 20 lO .Vo .. ,, .. • -'' Mot .kl\.11 j •,~. il1, 1110 :+1 : (00 a on OW '11d ... krd .... f;Nll¥ •j"-l~l"I Ill .. u o• ...OK "f¥ .,... l Al!NILI 140 IOii l.t l lt G.14+ ... 1., 111¥ _ _.50 IM l~o 11 Tit+ ""°' oU1 }\o Pre•Jdenl NIXOO •· guJdJng a ...... P,"" ~ FlllQl'lll Ito tl.!i Portr HK IJ"' llV. s..it41i F 11t tlt A~r1 Co 1, I loo II II CJl'l'lllW ., 81 '°' ~1 30r1 l \t + lo '," .. "~~;ljto 11 P fl, 1l.., -' .. ~ '"" NII Al f1• IQS! <12\io .,,., Pro Goll )lo tt• 11b0 fd l!t ~ ... A Ir><: UJ Ill .n Jt\lo _,,_ IYlfl pl\ ll I :w a. )4 ·t I 1 ' • • I - bill through Congr• .. which ttkwl SKur 11H Ft1G Rt• 'i-I;· ',',!I! ~.ri-, in l\lo T•m•• UJ 1a:i A Ir rod ·'If 1 "~ " '4j!i -i.:. 11., ,..,., .20ll • 11• 1 o .-;, -Gt11 •'"'•'-• r,•• fl• • • -........, Offlf'I lncw 1rt F11 WFJ11 ,. o ..., ..lln ?lo tf1 T•o-•• IO• , .. Alo''',/'' o J ''"' ''!" '' _,, lar~E~ I 4!1 !J JI 30 0 ,, Gon a •w II lo Yl\'O .5CI • -' I I h 1 1 f!;ek 1"t 1 \.I Pubs NH in 7 -•• ,,., "' • -'"'' , " , _ ! 113 11 .o ,. 71~ 70'il ,1 . +t i'".,,','"'"••' ' I '' '1 -t 1' ~-ou d do precise y t al -lt,, .c~: •r~·~:. Fooc1""FP I • Pubs NM 1• '. 1il:; ~:r.:r.;1 w ... .-.. • ~ 1 IO , ~ , !• 1 ~ 1 11 ~ "oold automatically 1ncr~ase 1t11111111vr, 11111r for111aon ' lt~ Pubs Mc 1olt i~ v corn s1:. w. ~-1a"lu1111"' '' ·~ ~ r.:-v. "" \11il·1 " ;! • ;J '',• ""'"0 T~•EI ! l! •' 1' 11 • 11~, -v. Social Security benefit.$ aS the :=:c1~~:1'v I I o; ~::"Grlll ~t JJ~ ::i!: ! ~ ~ T:n:;~ :?rl :i~ i~~~llil lp ~{. ;fti• ~ • ._ \• "'wi~p~~~ ·: n~ n.~ tr~+ 1 l:\F \,~l ~ ~~a Ii~ :1~: ir~ ::' 10 0 m II \lttllch lfWlt Fo!YT )"1 lh" a.-11 ... :tt TIXll ... s ' \\la ... lllerlitll ..3' If •v. t\1 "' -lo "" .. I 7 ,. 0 •• I u I ........ ' • 111 I consumerprict lnde1rlses oKWllln cou1df•;;i;i,cl 11 '~P"'I"' 51 • 15 Tlltfm .., 2 3 Ak:1,....1u 120 11 11" 111, 21~ "'"1111 se ''' n , u . 1si,-1 ,~:o ~f: i; 1~11 :;:: 1,.;-• ~Vt -OW Fr Ill r \ :~ Pe>uo Ct .,1 ~ Tlltn1 (1 t tV) AlcoSt11111 .21 ~ 11~ U\'Jo Lj lllA ~Al 10 Ill :r-!O\o 20\'I I ~ n',.! 15 J JO 1 )I)' 1 lO l -• On top of this pressure Is ~"',,"' ,,!•,'~\,,"'~ ~~·wnw '•" '•'•' ~. •,.. • 1io T 11111 '" 1v. 1 Aj•xNlrt ..>or-u m. :111~ 20"' °'•'•'" ..,G11 •s " Jt -1' Pac t111> 170 11 , ~1 1111 _ 1o -di .--~ """ . ., f'-1 lO"'T11n Go • 1\~A!111C1 .10. u. J~ (1<"-V. 11: • .,.11t '•fl.<.,, .... •114• 1P c.olf•1 I 1l ll 1) _,, growing to Lie home mortgage dttltr m1rkt tc F-,~• , , 1 RT Snl , , Slo Tr1e CPll ''' ·n , A lttl..:::I 100 J2 :rt ma ,. , -1.:o 1111:1C01 1 "' ll'' n n 11 + • ..!. \ 1C s l6lo 36 0 u , .... , en•"'" 11\r-n §Ill ro II\.\ U lled O~n t >.:. t i\ frnclll G It • It 'o ... 11 .. L Pl l I ll l 31~1 ll\I, CM.18llq l 3? J 40 J9 'I lt '> -'• ~ i'o 0..: lj 51 l 17~ y < -a rates to the price level and to °"' in, di' p,i, .. •rln~ 11u 111,. R•1111 c 1011 111o. tr11e111 o l 'lli '"' A ltll Pw in 1n 21 ~\ ~. -11 c~ P11 1 JO ll 39!1 38ft ,n, -•• 111; 01110 11 1il..< 11 .r ~. I d I h CIO llOI lllC!Ud• 11 VC l 21/i lllnlll E 11 ..... JtlJ. lr!Mob H I 'o II\ A II.de~ 1 20 101 20~1 20~0 20 • -11. COia P pll 50 r:IOO 11 fl SI i 1ntPC tOe • •1.o ~ t>\ -ink bon nlerest rates to t e •I• 1 ""~uo G :1•<1! ni 7 l R•l'Cll f P u 16 Trko Pd 10, J1\o'J Al li!Mn1 ooo 12 JI"' 1011 » o i•Uln1 AU< 1 111 J I 1 31 • , _"" lbri 1 ",. l?J 20 1, , 1,t0 t ,, I I As f merkdow1t or '"""' G ,..1 c 1,., 1 1 Ral'm 0 IJ\lo 1:w, Trloelr l\1 • Al !IM1 I ,7$1> 11 7J 1 22 ~ 1»o ii"' 11111n11t >Oo 111 IJ\1 u lJ \ -,. li.lduw ;ioo 11 t t, t, ., , price eve too or wages x.l'l~ 1 I'll. 7 %Riu~~t' rn 1 Re.;09 e 1ti.. 204 T •k• 1<1111 Uh A11 1c1 PG" 1u "" 1•'11o 1'1o ~. 001n111 1..0 1n JJ l<I ~ '""' _ , lili!r e 1 «i 11<1 <at.. 400.. .oo11 - l",'.'.',n'g' bees'ca•·,·.,.h,av•,,.'::'.'.,' •,n' ~ •• ,f~Pc,.~! 1,,1.~. ,,!"I'™,·.~. ltt I~ =~C·~ r~ ~t'l Lr.is:: "0 ~ :,,.. :~"t1. '"I~ ,1 n\t n11r ~. _r: ~::: r~l\d pllts '1 ~\. ~~1• ~! ... + ~ ~11911:C 1 ri ~ 0 #,.: ~: -0 , ..., -· ~ it ., 'l 24\\ RllH Sto 20 11 Un lllunl 7t1"0 21 \lo ... !UdSup I~ 1JI 1W. ~ 1\\ + 'I C..il In pl1 flO 2 II lJU 11 -tt\ Gltn Aid~" 19 6io 6... tor be Al s Inc 11, IU. .. _ w 2 u n 11 Ro,1d Ell 7111) 23\\ Un McGLI S\-'o '"" Alll• Cllllm '52 l''• j•"lt lS\1 + f1 CIS l ;eb '" :IJ\lo 3lto 31•, -1'~ gl"""( Cll IJ 1 SI 51 ~ I wage contract! en s o ASG 1N1 , .. 21.i 1cb •w ,.,. Jl'i 1100111 ,., 21 21 us ,_"°' 11;, •1• All>klPc ioe l 5~ sv. 1s11o -\. c11s 1>1 , , 70 0 1, lf.t. _ lo '""., pt l , 11 ') 11 '' ~ 1 I ... SG DI • S'-4 old Cvc • II? ll0$11Dtl s S~I us E"V•t 1'111 ,. Alcu I Ml Jl » 1 55~• ""' + ~ Co u G•~ 1 ti •• ll 'o JI'>(,. 11 ........ ~n JS 1 ,. • 11 • 26~• 1mp¢rtan ... vM (.:. '" ~\ Good LS ,....., I Rov C1$1 1 ~ 1-. us s .. , •• •1 .... 4) AMBAC so " iO\o IOl. ''™ +Iii CO!uPlct I... 110 lM'o 1?~. 11 . G ob.J Mir n ,, IS I •\i 11' .. • Jn Short W. re f' n. I I Y AA,D!,'2t ,•, ', ~ ·.~Goel••" <, 1 JV, 11,us 5!ov 16'4 11 'o U"S Tr I ll il~• A•"'•' Es 1,• ,J.! II o 17~1 17'1 + \o (Ol$o0h 1 76 61 77 1~ Uh _ ~~~ l[n' •,, ,', ,'°, o ,'°,,. , .. ,. ,,_ • ·• 1 "'' C~ I l\l 1111 Ha 41 4l.\lo D p..,,p :21». 71 • m ti• 7r '"' :M\.:o :15'° »I-lo -¥1 Cl)l'll~EI' I 30 'A~t 4o1t~ tl1/i « 0 .j. • oodr tn .. acknowledging lhat inflation "'••"• ,s~... •t~ '," ',,•"l.,k, •,•,•u u ~ •• "~,, , ~ s1oO u11n SLd 1 o ~. AmBdc1 1 211 SJ 21 ,,.,. 111o -1, com Sol.. ., n ,1.., 1~1 , 1.-+ 1 • vef 1s 1i1 11 21 21 • -•1 ·-· j ... .... .... llli 4 Ulll Ind lll\75 AmC•11 220 is 111. 11 ~11o -:i.com .5t>l D'to 1 Ul.l. lSIJo lS"l:o uruiJvA .1Ji ' •• •0 M·+~· tndetd IS a way of life and so .·,' ... "'" •' .. , ','.. •,•.·,,· •"•' IS 14V. kl>oll 1,. 5 SV, VII l..D WI 1\/o 'II -t"ik " '"' SCI Of't1il M•WV c-ed 2 :!O l\S lll't :u !4 -.\, uldlM I ~. '°,, ' ~, •• li"' .. : .. 16\a 11\IJ kl Cptr lllo 2, V1nc1 !>I 15 U)'J AAlrFU\r .Ill :53 ~ .ol::.lo 111, -nt C:MWEil pr of 11 !Ono 1QI"'\ 101li -•t<'!'CO 1 SO ..., now we re on the Wlil" to ,1, 1>e<I\ •. 1 •O'l't0 '•' • •V. ~I ll"ld Jlo •\• V1ttrP11 ''"' s Am Al U11 10 11'1 lt>t 11 • 11,.. _ h cmwe I'll 0 1 11 ~, 11"" 21 0 •n..,"' • ~., 10 71 • "116 7 • -" Alc.olK •l• s w n •• , J\'0 OI Soft< '""' 20 W•c~ RU It~ 20\t Al •NII , 10 " Jt•o 31 . ,,~. \\ r. 01 •A .... ,,.. % • di.In 15 ,. •• a. " -making JI respe t bl Mf(t Liii! I• 11"2 GUJfd Cll ]l; I ~ rlpK H 20Vt lit~ WU1w P U 16 Am 91~er ' Uta 111 n ':j: \t omw .., "" 17 17 ~ -11 1111 tC !i I 11 I '1 10 o 10 1 -~o C a C "II 8 j'~ Jl'o Gull Int ,t, ~ lit. S.:rlolo "' 4\li •Vi w111 Bit 16 Hl:lo AC•~ pf 1,7S ) JS 1•' 15 ' Comri...1 Sd 1111 "11 111• 11 o to '" •v ~ 1 t 15 1 11 • U , + A °.d tto :. IV. Gvrodn 1\• ' SIM•ll pf I~ 1114 W Rtllie I I V. Am Ctm tSp ll I 1..: I > ,,_ ComM!t 1 l ~\!1 0 "3 • -II G 1ntw 1 SO l• <l <11;1 ~3 -Alon Gl'll S'o 5l'o HtMVr S lll'o 20 ~Sell (mp S • '• W1 lhw J , l < A Cr.. 11 1 iO S 2J : lSI.:, 15\a -\1 C:0... Mii > t 10 1!'h H>• 1! ~ -Gr1~0 o I 20 i6 :!01.o 10\, 10! - More Industries Lean Arnldc 1 lo l\o'J ii1v.,. In ' .,;. IE""" I l I~ WUl'I NG 11\lo 11>• AC•l'S... 1 40 J 10 20 20 -' COlllllM'1 ~ O 1"' 71• 2"I -• GI A&P I XI ,. 11 !I • 11!• -...,.,. Bu1n •vt 11'Jo Kt'll'ed F 21\lo fl ve Gt11 5,. W11n RE 9\l"i t~ AmC¥1n l 1$ lilt l2 Jt•1 Jl 0 _ \ C011r1cCo iO f 11 • 11 ~ ll o + ~ G NOrlr I lSo 2 1J1t l .. lllt :l A Et L1!1 7'11 '4. Htrll Co ,1~ l~ ~.., Uo .. jl 11 Tr 7 '* 7s, AOlllTll .1JOe 21 111) 1• 1 2I 0 + ~Con F.r+l1 I IO 17! 'l r> o 7' .... \lo GINONtll I 60 1) 11 4ih •I >o Am EllOt IJ\\ 670\ Wldoc Inf ~ ~ 5'1 Sh Wellll Ill t 1 10 "'m 0....lvt~I 71 t•1 I t fl• CP11Ed ~ tit 6 f 111 'i 1" 11 G NN p!Bl 60 l 10 > 1111.o 20"' -Am Fu 'I 1 1'~ Mlllnvn I 1 1\oi Smltfl M I 0 m Wtldtr11 tl.t IO\h AmE!Pw I '4 ~lO 25>, 25, 15 > _ \, l""onFO I Pl S • ,, ,, ~ > •t , -to Gt W'°'I Finl 101 11'" 21 211'1-o ... G••el 41 Jllllo HOI ff Joi JI So Id 51 s ? ?l• e ... IA l'llo ""' Am Enkl I• ,. JI JI ' Jl -i.. ConFood I 10 711 ll ' 31 l :n ") ., G Wnun I to J1 .... "'" ' • -A M...,ICP 1• IS• Ho~ 11\ 9*" SCal Wal 11 0 11 ~ W5llC:I p 10 lCP• Am Eoo t1d 110 11 l 17 17 ~ + o,. ConFd pU SO I •6 ll M -1 GWIJn p!l U • 11 • II 1 lllo -lo Toward Imported Parts Am T1tv IJ"1i 11111 HOOVef" :3111 JI $ONE Ttl lS 3J ~ Ws n NA 1 S\o A~ll'ICI PIA' •Ml S6 \ JS .U _, ConFrelQh 1 I' 1 • 24 '' C!Wa,ntn SO 7 3 \ 1 1 I 1 ...-o A~MUI a ''"" H ... h "' t ~Soun Gs 2ll'i r.17'0 W111 M,Q 6>• l~ ... nln• .50 ,101 'l' l'O 11 -0 ron l•81tld 11 l ' ' \ G ~"Gn ~· ISi n•o 10 . 21 ·-• Atlk..,,ln l~t MoWGGI 1vt l SwG1Co U ln)W•t1Pb 8'-o t \A'llllOlll<I 111o 1l 23 -\f:<1nN1 r. 7& 1?~ 1l 2! -•1Gee,,~fll ?O 111J ?•••14•-• A cs Ind S Sl'l Howm In ll<o 11 , Sw e Swt '' 1S w ~• wn ~ '> s ! AmM,.,111 10 !I 10 > 10 , !O C"Oll• Po.,r ) •~ 11 , 1• '' i. ;, Grevh0un90dl ''• ,•, , ,", , >,•, , _ , Arden M l'~ I \' Muc:k Mt I 2 1 1 ~Plcerv •1 i' WIK PL U lt A Hom. 1/60 102 St'io lt t jt o ->t Ce11Pw pr• SO IYO ,.. 50 ) .. 1 -I ~G Ol tr < > Arlien of '\~ » Hul:I PP 21 21\lo. St1nOYt1 ,1 ..., n"" Wrdlw E 7 ') 71 A Home D 2 l t'I • t'I 19 +i ron•A 1•~ J 10 1 o , 10 _ \ tummn P ~J ;!~~ ~~ ! l~l! = •! Ark MoP u \ 13~ Huo Gil 110.. lll!a Sta II"" It. l'O w 1.nr w '°"" 21t~ .... ~.~~.·. ?~ ... lll• ,, ll . CO"I c-... , •o " "' • t '! ) llllHkl 'De DETROIT I U PI ) Multinat1ooal Sourcing like 11 or not 1s something htgh-cost labor market$ will live with 1n the coming decades It means simply that parlll for an automobile or • teleV1s1on set or a radio sel sometimes can be built more economically 1n fore 1 g n countries tben assembled in the home country than doing 1t all 1n Detroit or New York o r Pittsburgh Automobile producers art leaning 1n this d1rect1on especially s 1 n c e they "'e beeri for~d into the sub compact market For some years Detroit s lag three have expanded fac1hlies 1n foreign nations but mostly to compete there General Motor s Opel is bu ilt In West Germany Ford s Cortina, tn England Now they re heading 10 these shores Ford 1s building its import flghtmg mm1car the Pinto 1n North America for the U S market but the engines are being built 1n England and West Germany GM s new m1nicar the Vega 2300 will have a transm1ss1on built 1n the Opel planl near Frankfurt Chrysler s m1n1car due in showrooms about Jan I 1972 will have its engine manual transm1ss1ons steering gear and front s us pen s 1 on components built 1n Europe Fords four speed gear boxes "'II be built at Dagenham England The reasons behind !he shdt to multi nal1onal sourcing are practical and economical Wages a r e considerably lower 1n the foreign countr1c.<; rhan 1n the US but 1t 1s more than that Art-M 17~ 2t • Hur1I P J 1•0 $t•" HPd 12 H y dnY E 4 l'.o ••.•• , .. ,·,, >Co 11 10 9 1 10 -t \ r.,,. (loa l':IP 'I ~, , , \ 4, llMOll1l~ 6 W o SS o .1~1 -E h b I J Arwfill I IV, l'\Ylll Co II \ll't .. II » Jl'o ll • -lo ('.on! co ' ti! 31 , ]I • 11 .j. f 0 I,.. J?l 11 1 27 • 'Oi: t urope as Ul I o U r "•CC BO! 7' h 'I H¥1t1 tn1 .1"' n11 Am MO•on l1J '~ • l • • -, r1 ,,. of A'~ 1 ,. ~ l" ,. t gu1~ R";r1t;& 3! l~ 1: ? J, h • Cyl'nde' Ca's and lour Speed Auto Sci I •• H~de Aln l'"-ll-AN• G•• , 10 714 10 39 ' " -It ConlMl<I " u t• 1! • • -•• g " '' ' ' l••f Al l"1 ~1-sw "'6h AmPhoo n 11 •••••• Ca ("I -.. IR!~P lO I . Bl'+ f llil liker U '"" 16 nd G11 71°" U \, ARe11ho llt 1•1 SJ SS lo Jfu -1 'I r "1 01 1 l.lP 4U 1 14 ~ 11 u IS!~U 'ii '6 11•0 11<11 71 .. + lra11sn11ss1ons or years w e e81 P11,.1 • r •"1< 1.,. Nutt 13 23 Am se5' "° 1 J 11 11:1., n. _ u, an• 01 7 ' 71 • , "' "'-l... -N> Gu11su pro •o 1 o s 1) ss the American companies have B• wck •" lOv. '""~co o 1 • t l MUTUAL Am s a to 1 "" 11 ~ 111, -,., ~:f ~~ 110 1i: -n , ;~ ._ Gu11su of~ xi 110 s1 -i s1 , s1Vt B:~~rlp 1~ ,:..; ·1~: ·~~1 l~· ~ " Sme I 90 'st ~~i~ n : ll~ ~ ~ Corlr~ 01 ~ ~·~ ..,... _,.. ~ ..., \ ..j_ ' g~ r~1":1J ll Ill 16 ~ 16 • II • -• goneto s1xande1ghtcyhnder e~vie" tJ'.\u l,(, ~•nn ,. , .,, ~~~1•,,.70 1 ., 0 ., r:110At 0 u o 1"18 "" '°• ..-+l .. Gu1w ~l!JS 1 t~ ~.,, jj"-~ engines and th re e s peed eeec~ 1J 11 tnt aw111 S\\ ~n Am Std 1 11 JI\ » lli -l1 ~onwood 1 9tl 1 l• ~ Ji• l• ~ Gull011 tNI ,. 1•1 11.J t11 - •·ansm··s-n• R:1~ 1~ i~v.1:"" ~: 't:~'' ~.,.r,1.... ~~5s1e;-'i:'.!: 11'\I°.,: t:, n111 ='":'":'"...~;"..1 ,: J ~ 11 ~ Ii!+, -H-1- u Engl;'nd""and Germany have :r.~ ti·b :g~ :~121~:!.~v ol ,~i! II~ FUNDS :~'·;,~'& n !;10 ?':1: nw t ~ ~:fli;i11,,i 1'~ ~! \ ;"', ~ :;: lj Er~~:: l,lJ 1~: J}: ~j .. :i}\: ~ ·~ some of the most nlodern R~'.r's.!" l~V.1f'11 1:'~u111 16•111~. :~._¥'w'1 11 )11 :: l o :0 +~:•~wstt l'>G 111, H '> '' H1mmP•P 1 o 10 190 i•o-o Il l<~• 3 l!'oJ1co1u F ••• 51'1 AmT&T 160 591 d / 11• 11~ ~ ,.or"rnB 'it ~ 7 '' 0H1mmna 10 " ,, 9, 9~•-o eng•ne planls 1n the world 11ack HI 11>; 11v1 Jaciuln c •~• 1'/o AP11WWk1 ~ s '• ''-''"' = 'o rorGW 1 Y~ 6 1 H'' i•~ He"<! m~ " 119 11 1 21 21\\ .,.1 B .... ue El ,,.. , • Jim Wit ~ '~ AW ! ,, 152 11'0 ,, I• " r'nf~fl<!I" 27 ,. :r.:i l '~ 21 Hftn<I H• n • " a. I. geared lo produce f o u r Boll a.r J't 1.,., J1mt!S F ll\~ u v. Am nc ' 1v. 1.. 1, -'"' C"ow ~~ (!)I'll • , • :fll n1 -1 H1Ms c., 50 i.u IJlo iv. !JV. -• Boollle C 111'1> lP'o J1m'1>v tv. 10 Amt on 60 t 11~ 11 11 rn~ lldat "' 11 ' • 1• + Hat1naM I :111 10 n 11 ,, • -1 cyhnder mills f' o r d s Boo.i AH u1. U\'o JUI¥ ""' 1'• •l1 s.,1em1Mr 11 tnds rw \ ~ • °' Am•1.t. -·~1 ll\lo u u 1 r Pc inn ' XI 11 '''• :>t , ,. ., -, H•rcourt 1 11 li 1 :u>:. 3,,,, eo. Cap ,., 1111 J~n·ft PO m o 21~ Hew YORK !AP! INTGN -196 AMF Inc 90 I IJ 25 l• 0 ll. -I,,~,.. I <tOb ~ , l" -• Ha,. I" I 3• ., .... d Dagenham plant turns out Br!nb In Jl\o'J 3' • Kil~• s1 41 ., -Tiii totiow ,... 0...,,. 1 .... CoA n 11 n l o Am lac IO t Jlh 311/r lll'r _ \:. r edltn F " I ' 1 ., u.., , -H1 •to CP , 11 0 1r, 11 ~ _ , b Brb S<.• It lt"1K•lSI o 117 11 111-WllDllld bY'"" Gud 181 181AMP nc ..511 90 •t 4 I'/ -lliomo)(ft I" 4 1 l• -' H~tSM~ 111 I ?Ho 2l • ~l •-• 2 000 per day of the 1600 CU IC 11rw11 Ar I t 1<11v1r 11 I~ lllf Nonon11 Al!.OCI nv 11\d c 6 oo 'oo "'m11ex Cor• ,,, 11" 11 """ -11o r:""-1 tHlrocr I 1 .., ~ •• .. -~ H• v A 10 l 1 • 11 1 17 + , eenllmeler eng'n.s th.I .'II Brush It 1 1'~ lj 't l(•lr G 11 1:14 l\o 1rl0fl 01 EKECU lnve1to11 G ouo Aml ed ! 40 7 3011 l01f JClh + \~Cr ovror n I 'II, • ' -Haw I e 1 ll 7 75>.:. 15' 1S _ " BU(kfY '~ "K1flm 3 l'lt o11ltrj Ill( &rt 1051\dll6,l•IAmltlJ S J\41'" J 1 +\.\rowC of1 " 1• • -'I H••es Abl ID •">l''ot•~• power the Pinto Th a t s Bunn ca •" sv. kt•• T ' t l't tilt ..,. <t• ., w~ en Mut 191 t 01 A111cond 1 '° ~ .. n1. :iov. 2{1\o .... io ~:.!~;r i" ~u-1• 1 c" ~ Hiu •I~ 1 ,..., ,11 r ~ + , Burnl/O s 1J 131'/Ktllrl l l"'tnne lt<llfle-!. PDCI loa l71AMll Hoel< I .501 ,,,,. ''"' 1.s .-~.,.T, ,,, • .,, ,? " ~ -·HCA tld 1Qo 1 4"'o 4>;. ~ enoughtosupplyaUlheP1ntosctc le•s 1 1""K•UWd N"'t 714could "'"' betn Srock u111111AMorpNSw 1 • 1sv. IS\1 1s10 -\~c.:0.1iv ,, • n , 1 ,'•-:-,'HecaMn 11 31 11.,, JJ 1,: 1, Ctl W Sw ll • 1l K•uff E IV. t\li r.kl Ibid/ or bouoM St Kl I 61 'H A"'""' 25 JI 191 15 l lJ.lo ... pl I• ~ • -M< o> HJ •> " '' • '''• " , + , I th E d C1mc1 IS 16 KtY O f ill ll'!t lll!o iM';edl hy•sd'/ V1r P~ I l 66'Ape_,...,, >>>• -.,..rutl•tn 7° '1 I 1 , 1•1 -• _., ..., p US e uropcan ma e cars c • ...,, M 11 " Ke.,1 Cu• 10 1011 •kl ..,.., •~w "''" 1 OJ • ..., A Pl"" corf 2~7 l~:· 't,v, •:si~-+ ~ r,~.o~, '"'•• n :>t • ,, \ ,. .. ~ ~,e f1!_t ,,cu 60 11~ 1; , ' v 1 -, Ford produces such illS lls C111nM I 15 61....._ km! PC 1"1 I . Allercln 1 It I tl fl!~ 17 JS 1,• ,•, APL 1)1 c 06 10 lt ... lS'rt u•. -~ ,,··,,,, "w ' ' '" • ,,·.~ .... He~·-PG! I 9 U'"-1~' :~ ~. -.. C1rw-ad ,~ .... I( llO 1111 Jlo ~Adm ,.,. Fu""I lV'I' 'IJ 1> ' s " , ..... .. .... Cortma and !he Cap,, C10 Mle>t U>O 16~. K ... El I. s Grwth 5 ... s ·~ J Hrw:ock 6 JS J :u APL pf z so I 1 11 + v. "ti'! w A ' l ,, ~ ' '.' ' -" .... ~.~~ ,•,, •7 19 13 . lB~ ~ ,, C10 Sow lo JV.Kl \ (1> J\1 I f11t°"' 35i 3"Jolln1ln 1101llOIARASvcl06 l0101 9'10/t lOll'•-:lorur ~r H ~ Jl 10 1 11 .,,,.., ! l"' lo J -, Pti oreover lhe Bnllsh plant C10 1 .. A '' ll'l)(.1111> va1 '' 2i 1nsv elt 121K1nt011e F1md1 Arci11N IOt ll 21 '°"" JO\lo -\1 .-.,ctot>• 1911 l ,,,.. ' 1 ,-,,H•c •nc JS.. 10.1 l6 • 3~~ :16••-~• CaoTcfl ?Vr l LMC Oa I Ao l"' Actvlsn 4 60 s OJ Aoo ID 112 • SI "''In 0111 1 6 ni. ""' 29\'o -'-C1orv1M 160 ' ,,., Sf .. st . -'• !:!,','•"·"· •,,o II 15 a lS has turned nut that basic C•rr Dev 1 1 t\lo u11e• 111 21 21 '"11•!6 • 61 111 Cu• Bl 1111111i "'r lPS¥c 1 Cll "ll 11!1. '' 11 -0 " 61 Jl>o J7, 111:0 C•<lt 8 7 l I •NI Rtl J l\}) flllrt 6 11 6 l ~VS B1 II 08 19 11 Arl1n1 DS l'O 211 1;, I • t'h -~~ --Hew Pack 10 i 11 7l 0 21.., 1S engine since the mid 1950s It cartr G" '°' 21 \/t u,,.. Wd ,v, "'1o11 Am f 60 " "' B• 1 n 111 ArmcoSI 1 ea UJ 701.0 10\\ 2"'!;. +i.r. "~n•1"r 2•e 311 P~ , ., 1 \ _, HIO~ vc 19" 11 9\-. t . 1~. _ , CISC NG t t\1 Llrlor! 2 1\'t tlltl!e t :n 'n us Kl 1 tS I JI Armoc PIJ 10 J lll 'Hl'r 26\o "lftl Co 1 'H I• ,, "' .,.. 11 • MIT!or>Mo e 50 ll 0 31' ~ -, has been made larger and C••" C•o to ' urw" M ~ 1w. "'°"' "" , 31 10 2• u1 K2 1.21 1.62 A•m11c11. sa 311 271• 21 ~ 2n. + •• r)art 41111 ......, to •1~. .,, 11 • _ \ Hob.I 1 1 1C 11 11 l6 0 36 , _ , h Ctrnn ~ 'lt> L.ff(IY Ld J. II me... 110 I .SI (Ill .Sl u 1917.J] 1.rmllub I 60 5 ,,~ 2'\'o """ .... ~ l'J1rt 1"'11 pf 2 ' • ,, ~ JO I ~ t-loefnw11 " JI 1• I• 11 • I smaller but always on I e Cefl VPS ll>ft "" l..el'I COi '. N;""' BVI , " ] II C111 l' 'OI 'II Aro Corp 90 l 1S u I! .... ,. ••or• lA• "\ I \o ' _,_ • Holl Elecl n J6 6~ 6 '. "'me block All the bugs are Ch1rnll ,.,. 21' Lt sur G lS\11 1111 m °"'" • l) ',. Cui 3 Ill '91 Arv II l'ICI I I ltt. 1' ,, -• ,,~vrof.o 1 • ,•, .. lA 1• ~ ., Ho lill'J11n ,, '' 19 • li 7& • -~. _.,., thartO 6•6 1..-iai:: IJ II 1,,...rE•ores1 Cv1!.4 l61391 ... lhd01 110 1$121 1l 21 -11 r)•vlnP !ft 1 o 1\l,•l-HodA110b ]I Q>l l 11 > Out ll •"en has won '" sh ace 0.m ..... 11'1 I L M IV! 1!\ CIDll 112 7 ,. Po,, 3 01 3 XI Asno I pl2 IO ! .. • oa~. 18 ~ "PL ofB l 1S t '>!I ,, ' ,, Ho YSu9 ) '° 5 16 • 16 • HW -J • C~es lna •'ti"' llC Y i.ru lncme t 16 t03K11dcb lll6,SA.ssdBew l It I I• l'Je•r•l""ol ''l''o .l•~ .. "-•Mome•~••O , '''•?• ,4 _, of European road races c~es ur 1 lW. ''ih t=111~dY ; ,.,,, •"""' 1 ~ 1 'l Kn ck Gr 111 1 OJ MsG oG 1 :io ,. 11~, '.l6 , JJ , -t " l"/etm~•" 1 ~ , ,, 1,., _ • Honeyw l .lll /4 •• • ,, ~ It! ~ _ 0 ','., ,', ~· ,!l •"• !..oil Eu11 IDYo 11\'l .so,,!!, ', !!/ ' ... !-•,·. ·.~!h, J " , ... And Spq 1 :!O 1'. 1'\lo 1' ~ -t .... M .. 1. I ,~ • .,.., 1-•........ -' Hoov B t 10 11 11 2J 0 1\ ...-! There " one .erS>on with ~ "" n , 11\'t 11 -... ~· .. -1110 1• n "'1<1Tran Olp JI n1 1•1 1~, -,,.. ,.,...,,~ ,. • so 1•1 ,, ,, 2• Host 1n1 Jli 1 11 , '' , ;s Cnrlslol tl tt LYrlC I] U \m falv •!6 •SJllbtrtv J O.SllAfllaotlfld JJ1•0 U o15,,,-f'lo~c nf 1 ~' 1 o overhead cams and 16 valves ~1;11~~1" 1~11 ,:~ """'d i 1Ey ,•, ~ ._.6t: ~~ co;.,1n ~ ~1 ~ :g ti\: s~~ : C ! ~ ~:i~f1E~1l r, 10s1 z110 l~ ~111 -v. ::?!_~~,... ~· ~~ ,. • } : ' • ~ + ~ M ~ : ,~ :~,; l~ • 1~~ -; 10 four for each cylmder c I' u A n n " Ml>Ul ' ,, -,1, \m Mui 11s 1 Ja L nc N•I • n t.U "'" Rkflfld 1 n~ st\11 st 59 _ .._ ~':;:;"¥"" 0 1; '! • 1• -1 Hou~nF r 10 11 "'• J1,_. :!I , -t l'.ll UB '' n 11 M1ml A\ • '\mN (;h 211 2j.tllno J IO J JtAIRth llfl 7S llJO 4 4 .. ]~ • ~I HousF ptllO l lll ,1U<ol1l~o ... 11. ford considers 1t economic c 1y1n M• isv. 1• M111" M J ll• 1nc11or G•-1 · l..OM1ls S•Ytl'i ..,, 111c~ p1 J 1 " \ " < 99v. -Ji' "'""'P1.,r~ • ~ ~ ~ ,.. ~ Hou1F otl 50 J •• "" '' (1••~ Ml 19 19 M•.-c ~· .... Clot 015 ,,, C1n1d ll11331l AllRcn pf?MI 31 .. \lo U"-. -.... ..,.,,,,0 018 I ~·1 ~' ~ i Hou1F Pill! )I JI 5J 51 -i . to build the engine in England Cl1¥lon I • • M1 M!t !Bo .,.,_ Grwtn '31 10 1~ C•~ t '3• 9 :u Atl'' cnem 0 n~. n~. 2llti "•" "'nr o •' • • Hous1LP 110 111 10• AO ...: + '• C.!n Mc I • •~Marm Gr t 9V. lflC me 111 7!.I Mui 115l1lSlAtsl COii ff 1<I 7 1 21>-~ """'~i •• 1 'o • HouUNG1 !0 l• JO 411 SC + • for all Ford cars using it Clinton o • o 1 • M arow• 1' 11 Fd Inv 1st I ll Lu ti Bro 10 s~ 11 ~' ATO l11t 081 1oe 1, 1 • , _ ,. ""' F" .. s so ' " 1 HouGs ot110 10 o •1 • 11~ + ~ Clow Co 11 li MIU LP t,o ,"~ Vonl l72t~llMlan• lt1 ICM f,9Aurort Pr~ II l'-11 •1\ ,{0_ 0 ~1 S•et '' • • ..i. HowJOlln 21 60 Jlo H 1S -., rather th an b1.11ld a separate Coe..o• o \ o •~ M<Ye o 1,. .,_. APOiio Fa ' lt 116 M1nMn • ll • 1 A.u!amln INI 61 p , 1• s ~ _ , .... • 14 , 11 • 1 Howmet 10 11' 1171 1.s ~ u,. _ , I h Us Cootr Cl!~ 11 MCOUY 11 "12 Al1oel1 !IS ll&M1n Fd t.511041AvcoCo 60f t9 lPo 11. ll>t-~"'•"'~•~ ~ 11 ~1 '-• l'lubbrd 141t :!O 11'• 12 :11>•+, 1owervolumepanttnle CnemE !"o l ·Me<i"ll • 1\1Ai1ron 1'1 1JJM111G1.1onuo1 "vcot11J.o ''l' Jl,ll ... -"1 "'""'11 1,r~.,. , + HuoB4v1111 Jl\I 20 .xiu.-, I h P Co I <>J f 0 11 !<I Mt1 II ) 19 , Au M-MOll M1n Tr IJ 10 11 l2 ..,,,,,.., Pa 10 10 llto 11ll 21 t + ~ '\ •-SI>•,.. t 1~1 "o o 1 Hu9fl H11 Ill I 9-\o 9 0 9h -JUSt or le into engine COIOll Sr 11 '' MMt n JS l~ FuNI A,,. S11M•t... 341 1.u..,,v.,.1111 l'tlo 11 11.o 1\1 11, ., •• 11 ",. 1 l Hunicn"' ll '11 , 6• 1r L k th I I l e Comet '~ 10 "o Metld n I• II~ Fund a • n 12' MatM•I '10 t 10 Awnrl on 10 1 •1 Jt 11 -1 "·~ ~• .,, ,.. " ., td1fl0Pw 60 6<1 '' 0 ?1 , 11'9 _ I ewise e WO 1 r engine Com c. * lt Md" Ct ' ' 1 Stodo s 60 6,, Mt• d Fd n II 11" ... Y .... Pd I 0 Jc; 1 69 t 10-b -l~ " .~ ... "" j I •• I ... lde1 II•• 00 ... 11 I ~. ll<ifl - Ford will use as an option 1n lg;::: ~:· n 1' ~~.:·GT 1i 1 1J'• 1:J,0nca : J; i ~ :::~v ~~ 1t l~ 1/ /1 Anrc <>11 nr JS B-14 JV) ,, + 11 ., ~r" "~ 6• •• ... 11<k~c~nl'1' 11 1j &s ~w. tt !. lh P l JI b b II Com H n ~ 0 ~ M G w~ 11 \oi BflCO'I l\JI 11.51 MOO<IV'S 1162111a -:!".., ·~ ·~ • • !Cen of) SO 0 i 0 I I ~ • '' -I! In 0 WI e UI Ill Com P'" I I I P 1 ~ Ul~ Uto 61<0 K11t I IS 1 <S MIF Fd 1 Jl l..M ltbe-W ~ .. :!ii lt'l _ V. ;..: "al>m '~ ' UI Power 1 '1 36 ' 0 Colo W 'Germ' Como ... J • MS$ VI ' '' Bri Gn SIJ S61Mlf Grn '..YI I ,,,,_,,, .. ',, •• , ... '' ''"'" "'"' , .,.,') ~ I Pw Ol"ID.o ,, ''' =,.,, 36 +. gne es ny !§cm I ')• ~11~r sJ 1°eitlrFil i 4'6 00MullSGw10~10.nB:1t°GE 1 i7 1~21~'1)\0 27 '_....,"~•"'&• '' ?0 lmoco"m 1:111,.1,171~~-For GM lhe same reasoning •, •,~.' ,• •, M-k 11 u 1, ""' Bodon .st 1.11 1 M> Mu omG • ~ 1,tl 1111G l>fCA 110 J ~ 1 51~~ + u " ""' c " • " ' "'"' co r 40 11• 10 1~ , 29 , _ " MOlll c 1 )!-1 A Bonl:l$tk .S lJ llJ Mu Om 11 t U •11 lll"9Pnr 5., St I ~ 1 • I 'j ""> "~Y JI"' '" 1~ ,,.... ~ 11"' -1 ncomr Ca~! 7 10 • ~; t, _ • lS behind lls plan 10 build the <oo •,·~. ,',",.~I Monm ~k 11 11'1.l 110!;1 Fdn t SJ 10 C Mui Snr1 11 fl ll l B.,19P pf 2 l 110.. 11 11 = ... '\ ~ n I ~ " I " •• -\~ nCCurri 7•• ) • 1 9 t ~ _ ~ "' Moerl p l 'o t \lt llOllotl 7•5 lllMut Trsl 119 119 Bk al Cl l-1 1 1Ho 11 .... 21'11 ._,,_"" ,, " n <. lnda~HO to I 71tt 2J 22\ + manual gear boxes j n C(llllrtd 1 ° I• MOGrl S 11 n lro•d ~I 17 07 U U NE4 Mui I It 116 81nk Of NY 2 l7 1J .O\.'I 11 "u•~ • I J ~ .,. ~ ndo •Pl 0 11 1•' 1<~ 1~ 1 _ C:on<~tl > I• M f A ll'llo Jll.i B11Uock C11Y n N1 lll'ICI 171 111 81nll Tr ?tA I •l o 61•• ll't + ~ ">rP~~"·r ·~ ?4 '• _ mist N~t 10 • 18 , I I -: Germany They re the same c-r L lA u Ml:~. wl 1 , , , sunck 12 l5 ll 52 Nil 1nv11 6 41 1 D• e1,11 011 i ;a1 1~ J.l \o 36 ,., 361~ -!'Ill '"l~m·"A,. .., •• n11e•ll•r><1 i ,. 19 • -M 1 31 11 j '• bo h th Co O S I I • Mil n M S\ 6 C~ndn 11l'O1' 611 NI! SKur S~r Bird CR 2.1 11 IQ 'o IQ 40 _"" """'"'"" •1 , , .i. •> tl'IQ"d pl! JS 6 l.I l''' Jlio 0 gear xes l at go 1nlo e c ... ~ V• ,:' 1;11Ma1cci~ ,,, lll't Dvd JH J6J B11111 •..1t1011 B•sc ,., IO , 11.:. 111-. 1 Vo "".,,,,.,..1 ... ,, ,. 1n1~ .. d s 1 1~9 2,~ 2, 21 -"I. European cars G~t builds l~~ dMot 1 ~ • M•~•'", •, t " 114 ~;rwv,.5 1; 011: ;~ 8~ ~ U : M 111t1 Ml• s 10 10 10 = ~ "Wit r~ .., • nmon r l'lo ., 1i. ' , ill + • Ce1 Mfl I 1'11 ul \ 7 2>1us.M Fd 1<11110 (;rwlll 114 1.5Jlltlll 11'1<1 .5CI 1~o l:V, 1111-'h '"lnrr ,.,1.,... ~ 1""/~"l~lJO tlO .SO .IO YI \\'h1le th t multt national r.ron co ,..,, Xll't M,~,• ,lE n 21~0 CG Fd JJI 111 01s1t 6 09 '" B111>1,, Pl110 •7 l ' J.1 JI + •• .,,.._.,.., J~ < i "' o Ob IJ l•A l!l\I 16 + ' I r I Cutct.R !l1 6 H nd l oS~C•olmr 70fl11 lncom 145 1uB1uichLbllO 11 3i ~J.lvtlS ~("~.,.,,.. oo •• ,1n1llc1>1A!l5 1 1' 19 It _, sourc ng o au O parts IS no" cvorei c 1 J ~ N1rr" c 11•, 11111 !aou In• 116 111 Slack 1 16 J ll B1x1rL1b o •l 11.-. 1,1.~ 15 -Vi "'"""'" ' .., • ~• :;-nsp r Cao l• u 1s1. " , AJ\li _ • " d b II I th 05ftl Lbs llo 11oN• '""' 11 1l\ •ot 5" j!oO ll!lNr Grtn 1t'I ISi BarukCI jl) ' • .. "" '"Ir'"'''"".~ 5 .. ,.· ... ~ ~:~·k'°r.c'\~.A n JC It 29, Jo -~ CQnune as1cay 0 eD•nvM 11 IH.j,N;ilC1rR ll~tVi rntSnr tfllO UHtuwCel 41•1s.Btl!Fdsl llla o ;lt.21 ~-~"••ro"'"" "" •llo2l~'1 -• Jllk l JI d oer•Oes 6 ~1 NCmo CP l'l'ol:W. ~.n,.llOFunils Ht11wFdllUlllJB1t<km1t1IO 11211111 ~I_.,,...,. otB1 "' • llM•IO lt270l\U.I 2611 -0. mlntcars ieyv;:1 sprea D••Ge" 16''71'>Na\EQut 11 11 p.~1,,, 10111116 NtwWldllltl23lBec1octJO OltoJJ' x _,.,. c~ • -fnC~Nuc • l6 •l1 ~ :15>_1 I I lh I 0<1l•t1 P 2 ?·~Na G&.0 !Jlol"°' Com SI 1 .. l i.l)Ntwon l2Hl311BfKl>A 1Jll 7' ll•t 1Vt 11'•-l/t ">+•"w 11" 1 lnf•Fr 5011 :If Slo Jo&>:. :Jl o i ; In a CW years 0 C arger 0•• , Fd 1 1 I 0 Na\ L 11 '7 :111 Grw n 4 u i 16 Nlcll Slro I II t IA llrk:o Pt! .IO 1U ti o 11V. 11~1 .+ "'n" lld 10 o , !~1H~"td" f 1Jf: 1 6 15 11 11\.l -cars O•v M 1~"" H it. N•ll Mtd ""' ,., '> l11tom ' /1 'IU N"'e•SI ll ff 13 ., Btlcl•" , iO I 16 16 26 -• ..., ~1." .... " ,. • • • •• i 1 t In\ IMUll 1~ l!-,,• ,•, + O..c"' 1.. P.. I. NII P•t 7 0 2 . SDKI I" 161 oc.-h I 10 '10 llelclnpH .oil • ..~ 6 u -~. ~ .. .,.. , • ~ 1• " ~ 1,.. (? -' IM ll\CI Pll IO -. Oek b Aa 11 2114. H1t S«ll: 1" I ' Cl>11t (;.-IDS Omfal i IJ 5 15 Bell HOW 60 tl J.111 ll 33 , -1 .., "°"' ..r " 1 ' • ~ ~! M ""' 11 lf 11 o 1l' f. O.,n l"I I• Io NII S'-1 0 l • C101t SSI 610 100 I'd 12291311 Bt !nlf!"Con S1 l•o 1 , lb t ~. n """ I \Cl • ,... 1 nt M.,qi JO<-311 9 • t • .. - V.S. Lagging Beliind In World Parleys O.ux Ch SI •! N~I Sl!vr I I • Fund ISi 11•101 Fd 15<1 9'9Btm 1 Co I ~ 16'~ 16 > l•'>-,1"111<1tl 146 •1 • Int N t~ JO 19 t: 11 , 17' -O•r (1t1T 1'1o 1 \ NEn GE 1S 16~ F n! '5 CJ 6lt60M Wm! 1211111' Bend• 110 •l 7l o 2l t 7)• -it"'"' t' 1 t?..., In! Poo )5j] l ?l .o1)1, :rlh :19~-1 Oet 8 l!'' l• NJ N1IC: TS1 16 'Sflrhd t :JO 10 16 O'Nt 1121112 llel'ICI ~ Pl J l ll)l(o •O IOI,. "¥"'11 !Pd I I ; I t ld JI• JI JI -~ 0•~ Am ''>ll NCl>lll F ,.i,)Oh S111t<I l :Jll ltlDooenh '" 1ll B•~ll(p 60 JI) 11 /o •8 ii -10•n•Am "'" ·~ .. i~ I ~J1 s~~14(l 9 I• '• I Dtwt•E S 5•0Nt •A J)l.>UV.~htmct 1S •Sl6'90DoP.M 9"'"B•nelP S50 1 u1 ~111~ll?'r -J ) -EF &T l?J? 3"•:19'""-~• Oimtr ll •lJ Ntlsl JI .~ 0ec:::i1"v llt3111 ~~ft5t~d!~1 1~:BontUoU "JO '"'" 1••-~F1el.0Prn to .,,;-,,,, .,1",i,',,'.,",',1,',s ";;i~:1 '":'i..+1 81~~. 1(~ ~ ~ : ~~. R~l 10 10:1 Fu"d • 64 10 s. P1u1 Rev 'sa 11t 8-• Jo>l2 10 110 :rt " 1' "'~• o ro ..., Yl • • 6J n 11•, n + , O«u el S--o S•NEvr01 ? 1 ~ Gwn Slll66Pet1n So 11'11'Btt>11url lllC I~ lo 61 -I O:tstAlr Llr 3'11\ll 'I: =J~l~TrT'otll~L,>1~, U061 -.62 J tlV,-~1 Onl<l•t1L t 11il NPA G~• 17 11 t11torn t21 1007 PtMut lial80 ll~11t1elln t So S>o Si O:e1GF91fS\t1~ ''"" 1-s " 111Sll>52 •jl1-i1 Dow Jo~ ?1 lJ'' NW NelG l't l 'i V•"' l ilf 1 l• P~ II 12 19 13 )6 lerl<orv Pflo &6i I • 6 • 1'• t •I "'1• U 11 1 IO , 11 • 1• ,: _ i: r~: "',11: l 111 n Uit '7l1 I 1 Dov t OB 1• ltl'NWPu~v 11llli COIGrlh1056101/i Ptom IJ1150Bt•mrcCoro ~ 1•o ?\~ 7• E.,W:"'1•~1~ ••M 61 66 1-1 l"l•o•r<l l?t l9 1 :rt1 -• Dew NL ,., l Nucl ll K. 5 1v,ComS Bd 12J 16"1Pln• $1 991 191 lleth 511 llD 105 7714 77 , mi -•FaonY~ 1-0 fl"'"..,,..., , JI 2~o ll• 2•'\-t, Dunk n D ll ~ I? " A I ',, • Cwlln Al , ,, I XI "lo" En! s •i •6 B g Tnret 60 ll 41'1o 16 ,, Al. -+ ., l=1lon p!I It " " '' '= l~',B.~'!,,il I~ 11 ll. ll'• ll'' -,. Out•on u1~16~onoW•t 1'~•11 ii>CwllnC l13155P onFl'ICl1016112lB•ckDkSI '9411•6•11+~"'(n l,.Ml'7 J ? ''"•-l-._!ners!Sr60 n11 1'•1&~, NE\V YORK !UPI J This week 1n the nations capital the Sec ond Jntemallonal Cangress o f Parasitology brought together 2 0 0 U ~c1ent1sts lrom 66 rountr1es Next month 1n Phoenix the World Shooting Champion ships hosted by the Nahooal Jt1fle Association will attract sharpshooters fro1n 90 nalions Sounds as 1f lhe United States ls faring well 111 the growing 1nternat1onal convention business Act ually the reverse 1s true According to the Mikhail S Soloviev Vice plCSldent Of !ht Institute of Modern Language ( IML) the United States 1s getting only a 5 percent sher. of the $$00 m11hon doll:ir internattonal convention p11' \Vh1le recent 1nflauon and rela tively ~mall promollun programs hnve done htlle to \urt foreign tourists :ind conventions I he re ire technical reasons v.hy the economy 1s missing out on th1 ~ growing busmess Soloviev whose f I r m pro\ 1de!i langualile le:ichinc lac1hlics translatton scr~ict's nnd trtun1ng a 1 d s 10 go,ernmcnts 1ndustr) :incl lnd1v1duals points 10 the findings or 15 lnternallonal 11 r ores s1onal org:in11..at1on e~t'Culives They tnurC'd U s C(lnvcn11on fac1lltlcs last 'Cilr under the ausplcts or tht Int~m .. uonal A$!0Clat1on of Convention Bureaus Their concluslon The: United States hns been 11 poo r potr.nllal site ror lhe1r conv~nlions because ii Jaclu: translation fncU1Ut:s In its major hotels ind convention cent.ers tr.n. a ~ubs1d111rv 0 r Amc.ncan Express hopes to brighten ll3 profit picture "by EZ P1 "I lG'~ 11 ,, Ont Sein 21 , ?l Como As I <IC t 11 P &n Inv '1110 03 61al•John •I 1l l• • II ~ 11 1 + ~' ",c,erd J 20 •1 'I• '1 1 , Iowa Beel 71 IJ o ' • lS\• + "' filling this vacuum Through E<tti c: wt l' • 0 m011t 1 1 Camoe s ~9 6 •S Pr ct Funds a 1n 1..auv 1 J ", 19~. 19•• -v. ii ,o,.Bros 1 , ,, 1 , ...... _ 11 21 20 , 11 + E1s1 Sft I 7>.< °''"' TP u•~ \IV. Como Bd I 01 a 11 Grwln 20 •S 70 <J Bloc:~ Mii J6 IJ s1>;, JI\• 51 -t 10 l':'G&G JD '' I.I'• 11 • u _ , 1~:Elh \ ~ n II ') 11 • 11111 + • lt.5 fac1hllcs 30 Ru s s I an ECOll L•b lR ~It °""' NA J~ J'iC""'o Fd 13" '°' N E . 1'6 Ill llkltBfl( 110 lt 11\lt ,, I! IM lk 09• n • • • • ... 'o IS 10• 10 . 101. -\· Echn: s .. ~ llo , .. o.vc:11 10 I com.rk J1' •11 H HD• 10112001,.,lnHUCI .so l 76 ?I u -v.EIK! As.ot 11 i • s~ l ....... \~lowaPll 1.0 J "~ .,,. "•~+-. scientists attendmg 1 he El P••E:t 11t• 11~ PEC 1, 1 17v, 11111 C011eora un•••I Pro Fund I •7 1 •7 a1uae1 pl• JI" , 111 111 111 El Mtm M,... '~" 11 t 1~'• u , , "~ i:"t~~o 1 ~ iJ ~~ ~ ,; : J1: = ": ','.~!_ SB~1 f '~ PiMI B~ or •1\lt ~on!'ll In t 1110 :U Pro Portf UlliJYI I A!lbblr B k• I 11 \ 11 1 11 0 -'ii" MM•o nl I IPt 1"• U~ I• + '>!TE mo IO 1 1' l P "'I r 'l"'Ni~ JleJ"lo PK AU'> \ l\•°"'vln l00371Pravdnt •02 1ltBoel"'ICO'O Sll ll llv.17~ >,1 Elcl\t1Nl!ll"ICI ll S•o S'> 5 >-\letcCoo .W:lo>:J~:lll't ..:1,1 aras1 ogy ron erence were £ Nuc 10,. 10,~ p"' FeE ,_ '1 c .... 11 GM~ '~ t H Pur 1a11 " 1 9J '11 BolsC•• 2Stl )SJ 11, 1s <LS _ '• ~IP•50NG 1 61 ,.,, u > !!,•. _• ,, ITT sv ,,,, so J 91 , ,, tS"1 +I II ', ''" ~ 1 i p~~co co 7 \ 3 Cont 1 -. 1 Pu n•m 11nd• lloM tnd 67 ) I , lli 1,, _ 10 £1tr1 (11 T :!ii ,,", ?J\o ?7'' ., -.J K able to hea1 simu aneous ,,,,__ , , , Pancol , 1 C11<0 La J .,. u R ~ou 1 ':rt 6 ti ~ool<Mrn 1,. •J 1!'• 1~ ~ 11 1 _ i, ,m~ E!ec 1 '"' < " .111; .. ~~ • - Russian translaltons or the ~. ~~~;1 sl\o 5~ o ;:r~w 0~ i11 ! ~ ~n~v ~8.~ '1 ff 'i !! GJ~ 1J H 1f ~ Ii~~~~~' ~~s ,;i ff.! ~i~ f~~ ! t Ef~t,B '°:g 1f ~ ~ C: ~ 4 ~ 4 j!a~;:t ,~· J? 1f• 1i : \Vash1ng1Dn proceedmgs rrom ,'!..,","'o"'• ,,"', 1~'~ P:~e1re u n>-1 devo~ M ~ "'° !• ~0 t""6 ! 0> • 59 Bos eo 1 ' 2• 13 l' • l"l1" 3i ., ... ,~ Em110 11 1 16 1 '~ • 1A • 1 ... J1 .. •nFd 06r 1 10 10 1 h E'" C ?t JI PeerlMI t\I, toDe•wart GrOUt) Vl$1t l~tJ6JBO!lfn' Inc :Ullo 11 \o 111 +\\l"'lh.MI 40 10 7? 11 0 '1\ •J10Fd lnOl>fo • 10 lD t e Off1Cl81 Janguage_, EnglJSh E:::v Ill II 2 P-!·s T 77 2l ~ 8:f:~ :~ i! a fl Jl::~!D i ~f tJt ll•~t1llA! IO 11 W \ I• 1 'o -\ :,.~ Bof,52§, I~ 11; I 1~ • Ill'~ '"l°41.I JetlnP IOI ~ 9 21'4o 21>o o h d I E: I I ' •~P1 Frt11lt1 ?Vo 1 0.11 '°' 1.011111tre1 n1s1 ll Bl<oo1! ?•O>o l 11\ •<, •s»-\ tG u • '17 JerqensA .so 11 U•• 11\ r renC an German de egateS E~r.Js t 1 • P1 G'-W I~ 1 Hl o [) e•tl 111111 fA llotf"!h 5 lJ 5 11 Ar SI My I lO I•• }Po 561• SA4o -1' E:~ I~ }~ l~ f.iZ nv.• fa l + ~ Jtwe Co 1 10 ' •S 1 •1 • h d lh FOii Coo I>• 1 o P1nn P~c I 0 I '> DrtWI Fd 10 311 ll JS S1tern Fd I '5 j 01 Br UMy II 1 0 II • 41 l •1 • + Eio Ir XI t 1, l1 -Jim W•li «I ,_,10 '81~ lt \o a e same ronven1ence Eoull o 1 10 lO>.o P~I w1 • o 1\\ ori:rtl lv 11 JS 11 41 sc11u11, ,, Ml 11 01 11r11 Pei ,.,~ 1•t ti ' .,, -•• Eu: •• ~, 1 10 11 77 ,6~ ;J ~ J mw on 60 ~to ll ~ ll Just SO long 8S Jhoy Stayed IO E•ll Tee 11 ll~ Pe '11 It ll-, :l9 E1,.,,,&M-•rd !><:udder Fundl Br Ptl I~ Jle 400 IV, Ut •'4 Entll on II I _,, :rt 30 .j. Jo~nMln I l'I 93 lS ~ l,•,1•, FB Ctto l 7 Pnll:Ot Pl SS st Ao ~n 12l1G llf In\ Inv 11 t• 13 lt R wv "' o l • ?t 'o !>I .,., Elter! M 1'r t IJ 0 l1: ll I + '1 Joftt1 Joht1 l2 1~1 Ut, lhe room '" delegates were G "' h 10 1111 30 So(I 2a 11 21 tl ed.....,Ma ,., ; • 37 • " .. ll 'i ! 11,,1 co tA ~' 70, 9 19 , • JOll~l svc aa •o ?!; 'A • •~~om S•a,t7 Ba Ul513JS"rkwvG iO 1•11 '-2• '' t~wlol'l.00 ,_34 )33 :1, -1 •Jo~nvco!7 17 ,. so, 'bl. lo he'r the Engl.sh Soecl 7 30 1" Com 51 I 19 I If 8tOWI\ Ce I 5... ! ... s l ,_ •• .., ,_ ' ,, '' '' -+ ... J011Loo1n 10 ,•, SJ I Sl I S!oc~ 11 fl l30. Srcurllw Funds AwnSn • .,, '° n ,,.,., 1~-. JMo E;~P .Ob 1 37.;z 31 • 31,: "0ntL11t l•11 11 0-I• sp(':iker 1n their own EM 51 11n11J' E"""' 2.61 291 Aw .. s11o11wi • '"'/'r_. 11•. -'•i=.c.110 1u lO N 19 , .. ,_._Jones.&!.. PI J ''° •1111 11 J I N Enrol 10 It 11 Bl lt1vtst 1 0. ) H l'lrunoWlr n •t 111, 1 ' lUii -a• F•Derot 1o 11 11 ~ 16 1 16 f _ ~ Jor!lfl\WO I :lO II 10 1~•~ languages Withoul being hed 0 }flSefl e\V Emro !M: 167 510 Ultrt Sil 611B1Kl'Er 1 1'1 I• 11 l''' 1• + l'actorA 6ab 7 11 311 37 +..._Josltftf l'D :t1 7! '1'~ Enf!l"ov 11 5'1l.Ji7 Se K Am Ill 9 09 lllMld Co 1(1 It I~ I • -t\ Fl!tcll\ ..5e1 314 15~• ?IV. 1• 1 _'•JOY Mfe 110 IJ •O Jt lo a special booth ()r even a Enr111w SIS lei S'*i l/Ml<JIAud• F Pit.fl l 4 ••+ ~F1lrHl1 1St 1l I0\1 10 lOo-1Kal!o«All I) 311 JC I> d I hou Eoullv I 0. I ~1 1111! Glfl \J 1 J5 8udoel t" II ~ t ' I I Fil monl 1 lS 15 l• • 11•, _ K1l1 5Jpfl 1J 1 •tit H "" seat::rn wt tbe1ng\\1red 1 £ E11u1G11110 15SSh•"' Fd 1s11ss1Ju1Fora1 10 •:P lll l•• ll'"+llh Filil•fl lOD 1 ,,, 6 ,, 6 ,_ Kts 59o11 11 1 •• 61 Tl I h Cpl Cl Faul l'>ro Jll 3USllelf Ao '11\IOJSI 8UIOw1W iO 41 II~ •• l•\_,.,FlmllvFI 60 lO l'l 11~, 17 ,.j. 1 K11 '6P1415 6~l 61 ... llS 1s poss1be lhroug lle E1~• 111012101h i;i.,,. 11 )111 1J 11un~ A~mo 101 ° ~,. • -F1nire1 inc 36 1111o 11 0 ~+ ~K• 11501211 10 J.11., 31 , I ht hl t bl I 'll "'verit In llOJlJOS lrlt IU tUllun•JI 11 50 '1-~ 1-,.,_ F1rWtit Fn 1J 11 \ lJ• • -iol(ii Cem 10 a 10 10\ 1g "e1g por 3 c " FD Cto UNIYlll SIQn:>e Fund1, B .... 11110 111) 11 Jt \ l" \ Jt \ + h Fl OllMI MID I .S•lh .S30.:. 5•" I • 1(11!1C of ..ll 1 'It ?O Sys' A F~ rid I ll '10 CMlll 1 I 'n llurtNor 1 n~ 11 11\• w ,, .. FAS lntt Ill ]ti Jlt P O 1i, -•• K c Pwll ' • JO. ltl"o ems "n 1nconsp1cuou., Ralph S Joh"""n has been firm Bu ta:i 110 t'"'u' t l6116J Ru'1Nor P'" • ,,, •~ •~-'"~'!., 140 .JOl• 11~1 :io -~'K<~"PL oti 20 ,10 '1~ ,,~ I ti I -" ltlh ...... Fl!'dGrlhll .. llS7Trvsl Jll161B"'"""lfl '"'~ll>~ISl-''""'er1 l ?O 211J ..,,,t ,, ral\!lm1 er p a,.P.O nex o e r FJd cao 10 n 11 11 !m 1~ a • 05 1 05 aur .,,, ..eo 111 '°'"' 1osi... Its\• -11~ ~ec1Moo: lll'l 1, ,, ~ n ,, ' :;-le<turcr spe'k'n' •n E••"l•sh apjXllnted manager o Fld f vnd 11''"'° ....,1 Inv 1 1i •• -C-F..tNMta" 1111 5,., 5!1/J Slh-•• rela ys the speech lo a battery operation~ for the c I 1 e n t fln1nc it P•oo ~ i .... n i1 u '' C1bol en 10 ss .:lt'lll ll " "'' -1 4 ,. "at Dfl 26 ' i • ~ """ '' ~ --. '" ' ,,_ 1Jb .. 101. -4- " 21 ... -n•o -t •5'o -''" -" -~. S2 o -.., 1610 -f. I 50' -1 il 1 -I lOlt -'• 11 + • It~ -• 2tldo -0 3'1..:. -1 ,J :~ -~ MllJ -\Vi 61 +1 ~f'~ -• 3• • -0 ?O \ -~ ~ "" 5"),(, + ' ~ "' Fd Trl'ICI 10112209mlll\I Gt SM'" l'edPIC EK 11 10\ tli 10 .. o,::r.m l S5 )'9 Dr.I•• 5f6 • SI C1 Fl,.,n, 43 t I 0 ; -'FlldP1Ded r l 11. 11•t 1~. -• of interpreters The) then service center of Crrtif1ed :nc:.: l r. I~ :.:,m s~1 :rt~.:~ l::!i1o'WL M~ ~~ ~I; 11r· ~,·t + ~ ~Js,g,.rn ~ 1n n·~ ~~ ~': = ~~ lr.nsm'I lo "ny Oum be I Vtt11 J tt 1 ll 1teckn1n Fu""1 C1mo5<> I 10 11l JI ' llo 26'• -~l '"''''' •-I "• 11' 5'1 -~ r 0 PorlfoLios Inc Nrwp orlF11Fv~ ':111o?S Ar>1•N1 •361t1cn~0tt o • 2211~11~•1 \-rl'OdfOts1;~, 11 3G1 ~s "'·-! Market dele··tes ••ho ·re MU•pped Ffllfl~ll• .... J:tl f kl\I(. S.51 '°' Chl!'M'brOUI UJ )llO Jn'I ll ···-,, '' IS " ""' II + ·-"'" " ~'t Beach a Ca 11 r or n 1 a Fit ' " 1 11 111 s.:iio11 11s l 11 co~ lrtw 40 11 1 1 Pi J ' FirKCttrd 10 ,,, ,, " u, ,, v, \\llh trans1stonzed recen:er.; F11•n1~ 14' 111 sreln Roe Fos Cd11 P.c l?t ..., !7'• .SJ s1 -1 F11,01 JG 4 n>< 11VI ,,,, .... Corporal'on Spec1ahzlng Jn the Fs Munl 7 n 1 tA B•I .. 16 6116 ,, CdP1c '"; 1'11 t S7 SJ ~I F n Ftlie I " •1 1S ,.~. , •• -• aboul lhe SIZC Of Iii pack Of F\t Net 140 699 Ceo 11:1 1'1 C1n.1lld110 & li t !I~ lSw' flrt~IM 160 1•1 .U IJ-t .S -'I I d Fil Sle 1 )4 JI l7.J) S otk 11 S• 11 JI Cop C &!kM Jlt ?tlo nu; 2~1' -1 ti Pit (nr! 1 -4 l 61 !91,.t \11H , + ~ Sgnabols clgare1tes de v e op men t an Ftel l'o 15~ suo ,,.c;, 110 f :w c11br"n 1 YI '' '1•1 11 '' -••Fu c~rt , ,,. 1• •7~) ,,., •l • • F el nd '11 Suo ~SI \ j5 J 15 c1r!l111 .o 1 '•'1 111~ ••o +,. ,,, M.lot 1 10 .11 'l 12'1. '7•• -o llard\\nrr Is rust part of the adm1n1strat1on of custom tax Fl• '" 1 e,~ s lll !v.~, •" , II' ,, "• C••o c1.0ii s 11o )6 ~ " ' 56 • + 1, F11Nc "' 2 .a '' ' '' ,, -Tll!! ll)lio..1111 " • ~ .. "' mnboh , ... I \\'h Fiii! Glh lf •l• • o "C•roPl• IM 7 ,,,.?l o 21•-l~FllNllS!r It 1 llo JJ ll -lo ~ ollon en the SUbJet:I h II ed ret•-menl a nd F""""" 1,. 1 o j e1Cnrs • •,., c1•0Tc~ '"° !t ,,., ,~ 11 1 Fl_1hr ,.., ue ,. 11 ,0,. 10 1 111 1111 ,1oct; m1r-tt ,...,_., S C er '" F""'r'o I 16 t SJ ecl>ncl I 17 J 1t i•rrltrC"o 60 ~1 )41, lllt Joi 1 -ti Fl1hnStl 1• ~ t 1 9\f I t ~ \t 6'1°"' 111\IH!t lrt UllC#icl•t ni:i1tcr 1~ technical 1t also 1 f Fr .. "" " Gr"""' l'C:hnol '" 1 u .,, ,,, ,, no 37 :n 3' F"'"'"" ..s6 I , .. t~o , 1 k profitsh:1r1ng p ans or ~WTC 1•7 761 Ttmo Gt nJtJ600 ~~n 1 ,,,,. , ,... "' 71 ,._ FHMtcot~ 1 ,1 ,,, U\ 11 -.1.1,..1xtr1ort111r1'-b--AIW'l\Nlfriil• l:i c~ skilled 111terprclers and corpor111Jons :ind for self :1""h 1 n : J? io:~ r..: : : : Ii 1':1:i:.-": ·~ 't, '~ .... 'f1:~ I~~ ~.! ~I: 8.,cOftYI' H r:... l:'., i: : : plv1 •lock lllvidtl'ld. -Llou~lln1 dlvlo ach nnt>e preparation ncom 1 " 1 01 11nv EJI 121 l'~ 1 er Tr 1 '° 'I 01 ~ J~ 31 ~ + , Fl• Pow 1 '° 2 '"' '''" ., , .+ tt MNI d-Dff 1red or oAlcl 1n lflt ~ " In handling lhe Parasitology employed indh iduals: under ~~"P.',:;.ut 'l~ ~ 11 J~ Gf 1 I{ 11;1 ~I cC.0'!11 ,, ~ 1\1~ 11 ~ 1i~ t 1"k :i:'rr~l l 1~ ~·· t:~ t;.1.1. 1111d: cirv1,,.,,. .,_p,111 t• 1' nit' ._ Confcrcntr for example 1~11 the prov1s1on~ ()( !ht Keogh '"t"~ inc c1 .. _ i-~.~~~::f jll : U iec:o C0<'6 'IQ 1,~o 1~ 1 1& • -1• l"lolrtC• 1 •1 ,.. r.r~ 7'' ,, + P•~"" lfl ••Mt Cl\lrlfl• "1'. "n"'''" ~ .., vrv 1,_ j;r., •• ~l•MH'CIJ 11lloOio Jl).:i\t -~l'~l>lll J'7 1 •11 47t-l h l !1 'nlerp'.l'r• were •el-led Acl moK u G."I U""' '119,..,u,.~ 1 -'1 f' $1 _ ,, er 111 111 ••• 1-.. 111._.,c-. "a111en t•-11wc11ot111 ortt<11'i,tr11uo ~ '-"-tnd Trd II 1t 11 lt U" ;:o I t t '°' C~nco ~I JD 1'1 J"I ~ JI~ Jl \ -~ F Ct lS 111 11•o ,1 11 1 -o tloft f~l"I. 1-Decllred ,.r N kt ti f for lhllT ptof1clrncv In Jnhnsen who v.11l superv1stFi:;:~· ... "" tl:4 UU'.l.~crn"' '°'''JCtn!Fdv ,•,!ft\ lft lft l • t FO!lllF1lr '° n \J't "'' '!• !hit rut ~Kl8r'11 or"" ,," I JI l 'f: /!' 1 11 V•1•1"•~ud 14 JI \ tt• '''•-lll Foo11 er. M 8 1" ,_1, 1 tt ~1cnl1f1r partancr They Riso :'Ill control room net v I es a ':.-l.c , , 4 5~ , n • rt" LI 1.0• 1 ''"" •• 'r" +1 l'00t• Mln • 17 o 11 u • •. '"'° d v1~ tr wtlt v11. 11-0lct•r~d spen1 h {) u rs rnml!H1rlt1ng lhe St'r\'ICC center 101ned CPI Gr.;:..•11·sr J 5 'u~3"t.~" tJ: t ~;~1 .~s E 11 ~ lit. ~ •• Jo.= J Fi:.'i~o""l0oo ..u n~ .:v. i"" +~or l•!d lfll1 Y••r Ill lfQimU!•llw 11'" lh I h J H b l h •,cru• 'JI '17" 1 IM Fd tllM!' .. 116 ' 1ii•• *''• "'· .... ~ or~tKt to ·~ It II • II , -I\ wltll "Ylllfl\Cll 111 .,.,..." it-Hew flWI. emsc \es \\It advtince texts 1n UnC C Mn{lS 0 IS new ~:fll Fd 1 .. I 10 t.~f L 11 $ n ·~ tftl SW I ti> 10< 4f.! 44''1 U ~ -, oril Wiii IO II 11 • 17't 11 o -1• -~•k:I ftl 1 l'tlr G vktCllll Oll'Jtlfod, cit- Of kev addre,.•s and pupers ~•l•on lhe expenenc:e gnlned om st 11~111• 1~ • 1 ~"'\50'' " '1 1 n~ H\\ -.1\ "0Kller0 "*' 111 14""" u•. ''•+to """"'"" 1t11011 I•~"'• l••t dlvldtnll ~ ~" irllFdA I •" ,ol Sll • I 1~ffltlU ">II 71 1~~ lfl~-~Fr..,k Slr 40 I 11 '1 ll'o !J ~ ..._ \I/hen iour' hanclllng , a.!i an 0""ral1ons manaroer 1n rlll 11111 I' 1 11~vnc1s .. 1 •"' .. ,, .,,. f.IOll '' '\..i 1"" \~•+ ',,_,su ., u~ •• "' 1~··"""",. '-..-ll•r<l•••~1~1'"'""" I'.. I) r\'Oflfl ' 1• I'"'"" 111 J" 1.0, erl I~ .IC ,, l 1'\li • -tlo fltwl!Cr, 110 11 1n1 Jt "1 -• lltlct" dl~ ._,.1,. 111 llodt d~r'-paper on the .. h e m 1 c a J l h e sccurtlltes 1n,.estment v11f. 11 " 1 v-J " J 11 "1'1.., JOb 11 11 , •,s u -'' '""""' " J'OT "" ''-11., 11\o -tt ,,_ ,, _ .., ~ " tf I... V•r lftd Ill I il Fl ti = ' I ~ t\~ 1~ -G-'"' ft ""'"" ti VIII# flft f~41¥1d~ prophylaxis of lhe htlminltt field where he was mfl ill :~"l!'i\'ri In J ~ '.!! ":~n.:n, 'f 1 l ... ~-1' A·I '~•1" ... 11' lf.: n\-1W t).if!1l•!IMlofl Oflf •-1•tot Ill 11111, ploy para.sltlsm 1n SUS scrofa resnnnsfble for all operations ~·-~ l ' w., .. Mu ,; ' I' tt ~.mpl I )0 3' ,! ' n a + Ct. 40 Sto , ~ -\t cl!l-C1llt:ol, E"r-E•-11 Yllltn!l. w-!.r<lllv• f"-irl'wM W•lll:rlfl GrouDj hlt! .. NY !l 4 Q • 11 A 1>tl.2t 10 l•\t •I'-1 0 i 0 Otftll -Mitt I "·" .., • domestic. such as wa.!i rt3d In and administrative runctions ,, ""'" 11 ~" lj H • !! 1h•seMn 1 ., .,.,. io ,,. -m $~o · 1..10 ,. 2l • '' 1.s -~ n •w• .. •-v•'-"11r• ... ... I I" y" II lllHMI~ r li'f ,.~ lT' ~ + ~l 11 I ?t'-w· lt llU'tlofl. ••-'"9 '""' •w-Wlfhouj ••• Iii thick Romanian accent al ()f tilt Los Angtlts Regional :ro. 1 7 ~ ::,. ~ • "' = ~r \3 ".\t Ill ':.is -14 • _.'itfo ~ ul: :: n ° '! Jnll ._..w"' .. IPrflltl.. Wd--WM~ tht parasitology C'On(ertn« Atta for • major Ntw York tr?i~ 'I" •jH ''I' t 1i~61 ~;'v 1.0 121 11 .o .,...., : .iii J 1'~ ' 1• -• t1b1r1bYIM. ..i-w"'" tu"" OtO-lff"i t d So be F .., H wr• '!"1 .0 ...-a lft ,. ,, •• ""'r.:'• .... , .. ••·-, 531 loviev • There I Slock Excholnge Mem r 1rm Ir '"" •I !! w"' ' H 111 ~ ... ' ~ "lo If• ht& -~ ... :t~ 1 ... lttl H•o --d•• dfllftn ¥1-i-ll llllfltl'll!ll('t., rtcel~ OOthlOg hke bi\llng ll t\ ind lht-eSfabllshment and ?,lh r ! :;il•hf-11 t I!~ ~f.1ti 11r j "1' r," -~ !_ ~ ~~Ill lfjf ~ ~IJl: ~ ! ~~ '.: 1! ""' 1 _, belllt ll!Ol'.tflllti! _,.r 1111 d r NASO I ~" ii ·~ Wl~r. if I I ...t t'~!~ll \"" 1 It i., -\\ r, ~ 1 1 «! 41;1'• -'l•n';nlltltl' Ac! er UC'lltll!ts Ill' ~ ill vane~ Ion k •1 the adm1n1str3llon o • new :;:: '" .._ ""/"" iii J 1 l~ M " o< ij"' , 1 • ~ ''" ~ iii: 'I" -~ (Oll"!pt"ltt. ,,,._,,0,•l<oft It.WI ''"' I I M be (I Inc di njt· W1c f 11.t Cll!l'neu J •I o -1,!o ••f'IC. J I~• 1 ~1 I su 11 ma cr111 ~ e:m r rm lldloncl It .. I~ .JI C~R!P cl w J '• • , lbl' • _., XI . I ,. .. "11'111'1•1 HUl/11'104' i. .. I I • • ' ' I I • ' • ' I ' • ~ f • ... Ntrt N••I "' ... ... '" . ,, "" ... ... . .. "" .. ' Ntk ~a., '" ... 11 Nill N•tl "' NarS ... N1!S "" ... NII\ ••• ~:et E~ .. ... ... ---~~~~~~~~------------...................... , ............ ... • I • $tpUmbcf Thursday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Mru·ket Continues Decline at Clo se ' NEW YORK (UPI ) -The stock market Thurs- day continued to give up some ot its recent sharp advance, !hushing IO\Vet' for the sG.,."Ond consecutive session. Turnover was moderate. Shortly before the f1nal bell, the Dow Jones in· dustr1aJ average was off 5.61 at 760.95. Of the 1,564 issues on the tape, declines outnumbered advances, 825 to 447. DAILY PILOT Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List NEW YOal( «.t.P)· Tlu,1.,.;.~•_. C~l1!1 A,.,...tc•n 51"'k E~cr.tno Dries. Sllff Nef \hell I Hltll Lew tloff Cllt. '''" "'' I-) Hl•ll Lew CllM (flt 11i. H .. CMIJ. I Hllfl Lnr c-. C .... ..... ... Illa.I Hl9 U. C.._ Of, Briefs NEW YORK (UPI) -A..., lighlweiahl lnterllning simi- lar to lhe Insulation used tn astronaut 1pace suit.. has been designed for the use in coal,, outerwear, children's cloUung and other cold wea- ther garments. C11ltd "tbmn+line", • provides up lo :.lO ptrttlll more thermal Insulation than conventlon1l lntcrJ1nlngr, but wilh Oo percent lus bulk and weight. The new int.tirllnlng, m1nuf1~Wred by Therm+line C.Orp. of New York. u.ses met1J.. liU<I polytsltr film (lnlducod b1 Du Pon!. JZ OAILV PILOT Friday, Stpttmbtr ll, 1970 CHECKING •UP• Wife 1st Suspect In Man's Murder By L.M. BOYD WHEN A MAN is murdered, say experienced policemen, first to be suspected Is his wife, second his father and third his brolher ... IT'S A FACT a newborn baby 's body is 71 percent water. Might mention, though, that the lady friend, who hu changed a diaper or two, says that hardly seems enough ... WAS NONE OTHER than George Meredith. that cynic, who said, "Women will probably be the last animals civilized by man ." LANGUAGE M AN - A client asks who first said ''Nothing succeeds 1 i k e success." Our Language man looked it up. Originator ol that cne were the doctors who witnessed first use of sulfuric ether in a surgical operation in ~f a s s a c h u setts General Hospital in Boston, Oct. 16, 1846. The anesthesia worked. The doctors spoke, Eight years later Alexandre Dumas, the elder, quoted them in fiction, and the line took hold . OPEN QUESTION -Is there any other word in the English language b e s i d e s "indivisibil ity'' whlch contains only one vowel repeated s.ix times? CONS IDER THIS -Were you aware we're rapid ly runniog. out of giant pandas? That's correct. Altogether, only nine ha ve been brought into this country. First to get here came in 1936. Problem is the only place in the world you find them wild is the western China province of Szechuan. And inasmuch as we're still not getting ·along any too niftily with the mainland Chinese, our 1ianl panda supply is cut off. Too bad. CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q. "Which has turned up most on the cover of 'Time ', President Nixon or former President Johnson?'' A. Mr. Johnson . Last count for him. as I recall, was 41 treatments on the ''Time" cover ... Q. "What's the fastest speed a hockey player makes during a game?" A. Fastest so far timed is 29.7 mph. Bobby Hull 'did that. SKIRTS -Those fashion designers dreamed up the mini, the midi and the maxi. But why have they so far failed to dream up the multi? Everybody knows fashions are dictated by the sellers of costly clothing. So how does it happen said sellers have failed to introduce the multi skirt? Thls skirt should have three layers of materia, each a different color. shingled so each color would show. Such would require three times as much material as an ordinary skirt, almoEit. Am thinking or hiring out to the textile makers. CAN A GIRL inherit a knack for cooking? Lot of· argument over this question. All I know is a girl definitely can inherit a knack for tasting delicate flavors. Some people are born with especi ally sensitive tongues. That has been proven. So as far as cooking goes, wouldn't they have the edge on the rest of us! Think so. Your question! and com· mrnt.s are 1oelcomed and will be used in CHECKING VP wherever possible. Ad; dress lttters to L. M. Bot1d, P.O. Box 1815, Newport Beach, Calif., 92660. Doctor Studies Blues In Pregnant Women GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) -Dr. lsmet Karacan is paying pregnant women $10 a night to sleep in a laboratory so that their brain waves and slumber pa tterns may be analyzed. Purpose of the project is to seek ways of predicting cases of "postpartum block," a form of severe depression which overcomes some women after they have given birth. The federal govern ment has provided $80,000 for the study by Turkish·bom Dr. Karacan. Psychophysiology of SI e e p Laboratory at the University o( Florida. "In my first yea r of psychiatric residency my first six patients had postpa rtum blues." Dr. Karacan told an interviewer. ''One mother killed the baby. Those things made a heavy impact on me. "From ;i blue sky the person can become like this. They have the first baby, the pregnancy is normal, now the woman has tht: fruit of nine months waiting. "Within a week or two she becomes incompetent emotionally, quite disturbed and depressed with severe crying spells and so on." Each night the subjects come to the labor;itory to be wired to machines which ••"' ...... SLIM GYM I.Oii A OllllM Ill[ 1N 1 w1u1a •111 HOMl OfMOl'ftTllATION l41:fi TtLEPHOf'/E WAlT "SLIM ll'l'M C714) 1St·S77S electronically read bra l n waves and record s I t e p patterns on graph paper. "Already we are finding that in later pregnancy sleep is quite a bit disturbed despite the fact that the woman is clinica lly normal," the doctor said. "There is no sign of depression or the blues but she sleeps not so soundly. "Brainwaves of these patients are like those of sick, depressed patients and we find they are occurring two wee.ks or a month before birth. "When-the changes occur early and more severly we find the patient is not as apt to recover so fast after birth as the normal patient who snaps back in about two weeks." Learning to spot the early warnings may enable doctors to predict severe postpartum reaction and treat the patient accordingly, Dr. Karacan said. Dr. Karacan was asked whether these par a ti on, sometimes four nights in a row. bothers the affected couples. On the contrary, he said, "sometimes J think husband and wife get sick and tired of each other and being away helps." Israel Reports Cholera Death JERUSALEM (AP) Israeli heallh authorities said today that 66 cases of cliolera have been reported in Israel and the occupied West Bank of Jordan and that one patient has died. UNITED STATES NA TIONAL BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW OP'lN SATURDAYS t M 1 P.M. MON.•THUlll:S. 11·1 P.M. P:llDATI 1f.6 P.M. 17141140°1111. Lecttff l•1 s.. c ... ,.....c ......... AHi. \11'Ct f"m.~1lllftl' E. H. LEVAN - Nixon Knows •.• It's not eosy to r~pcirt sports, advertise bargains, carry your favorite cartoons, write up a wedding, record history and analyze global events ... in short, to make anything that happens in the world local news. Only the newspaper can do it. We know it's not an easy job, but we accept the challenge. • .r ; I '. • ' ' 1! I , ' r ' I • t r k • • ii c ' t I ' • ' IT'S EASY AS PAINTING -. Guest artist Armen Gaspa:rian gives away a few painting secrets to Mrs. Joseph Holleron, a member of the Niguel Art Association. The Laguna Beach artist will dem· onstrate his technique for members and guests o! the group in Laguna Niguel on Thursday evening, Sept •. 17, Elementary School. in Crown Valley Ploy's the Thing Work With Sunshine Makes Dazzling Folly Even though lazy summer days are still with us, members of the Las ~1adrinas Chapter of the South Coast Community Hospital Auxiliary are at work. Sights are set on a successful 1970 Fractured Follies, possibly the biggest and most entertaining ot three previous shows, as mem· bers send out patron letters for the November event. With proceeds from the three-day show going toward the aux· iliary's pledge to the hospital, the community-participation show is scheduled for Nov. 5-7 in Laguna Beach High School auditorium. General chairman of the 1970 show is Mrs. Edmund Van Deu· sen with coordination provided by l\1rs. Macauley Ropp. Other chairmen incJude 1i1rs. Violet Adams, finance; Mrs. Zachary T. MaJaby and l\1iss Peggy Taylor, program~; Mrs. Jeff Townsend, talent: Mrs. W. L. Dooley, pub 1 i c relations, and Mrs. George F. Woll, tickets. Al so working under the chairman are the !-1mes Charles Quil· ter, protocol; Sam Garst, courtesy; John ~f. Shea Jr .. patrons; AUred Kress and David Rosen, posters; Theodore Taylor, walking ads, and David Kawasaki, cast party. Additional committee members include the Mmes. Neal Am:i;. den and Evelyn Reynolds. \vardrobe; Gordon Fleener. secretarial; John B. Lawson, auxiliary ticket coffee, and Jack Snipes, art. Van Deusen will serve as stage manager. Rounding out the list of chairmen are the ?i.1mes. Malaby and Chuck Colgan. technical advisors: Jack Lyons, props and sets; Gene Brookbank, makeup, and Jun Chino, ;publicity. Jerome C. CargilJ Productions of New York wiU direct talent from the community and provide costumes and sets for the show, Volunteers still are needed for behind-the-scenes jobs such as make· up, dressers and stage hands. As \Vas said two years ago, "You have to see it to believe it." and being a participant is just one step better, according to Mrs. Van Deusen. SUMMER SUN -It's oll to work they go. but in this case Mrs. Neil Haller files and Mrs. Douglas George addresses patron letters while relaxing at the beach. BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466 Prfll1,, Su'-Mr 11, ltn I '°"' lS Brushing Up Art Expert Gives Tips A program and demonstration on the subject of acrylic and oil painting techniques will open the sea· son for members of Niguel Art Association. Artnen Gasparian. Laguna Beach artist who is kno\vn for his impressionistic works in acrylic and oil will provide the kickoU program for the active group on Thursday, Sept. 17, at 8 p.m. in Crown Valley Elem· entary School in Laguna Niguel. Officers hope interest generated within members and guests alike will stimulate' formation of a \vork· shop in acrylic to be conducted by the guest artist in the spring. Casparian \viii answer questions and present a pr°'" gram designed for those who enjoy color, style and creativity. No admission wiU be charged for the evening and those interested are invited to participate. Refresh· ments will be served following the demonstration, ar· ranged by Mrs. Raymond Hougard, program chainnan. Those desiring information regarding the program or membership may contact Mrs. Hougard at 493-1882. Letters for the 1970 Fractured Follies are ready for mailing and volunters in both theater and backstage slots are being recruited. ' Knotty Family Ties Become Tangled in Medical Procedure DEAR ANN LANDERS: tn your c:olumn recently there appeared a letter from a woman who wanted to bear a child through artificial insemination since her husband's tests proved him incapable of fatherhood. -I was especially interested in her letler because I am racing a serious crisis as a result of the same problc111. My husband has agreed to artifi cial insemination but enly if I use his father's sperm. I was •hocked at first , but his father insists on Jt and says unless we agree, he wlll not consider our child hi.!i legitimate hei r. I have no real objections since I admire tny father·in·law very much and the jnsemination would be artUiclal. But l do ha ve some strange feelings. \Viii you ea~e my consiccnct and eive me your ANN LANDERS blessings? -LUANA DEAR LU: Since you have no "real objections," go ahead, but you do 50 without my bles1i.ng1. Sucb an arrangement bas endle11 posalbllltlea ror a llfellme or trouble. A ratber-in·law who makes such demand1 mu.at be wildly egocentric. Ir not craiy. A hu11band who \\'OUld agree need~ to examine bl~ relationship wlttt~lli• father . ~1f iiues• is that be feels visJly inferior to ra. Tbe ultimate act of ttll-emascal•tion •quid be to allow bis fatbtr to impre1nat.t his "'lft. As (or you, my dear, have you C1>t'lsldutd wUt tt would be Ute to lfve bfrth le your on brother-In-law? I don't Dow bow much money 11 l1volved llert, but In my oplJlion tbert. Isn't enough money la tbt wtrld to make Ud1 dtal acceptable. DEAR .ANN LANDERS ' I ne<d an • answer NOW. 1 tried to call a suicide center a few minutes ago and discovered ClnciMali doesn't have one. I was horribly depressed and felt the need to taJk to somebody. I think I , need psychiatric help but I can't let my family down. They would feel like failures if they knew how disturbed and unstable 1 am. Why do parenL' blame themselves when their children go haywire ? I know I'm a slob and it is my own fault. not theira: I've had every opportunity to make something of myself but I just can't seem to concentrate long enough to accomplish anything. Right now my ,stomach Is tied up In knoll and my head is throbbing so ·hard J'm afraid it will burst. If you can't help me, Ann, J wanl to say thank s for listening. -O.F.S.8.W. DEAR FRIEND: Cincinnati bas 110 Suicide P~venllon Center as yet, but there ls 1 cbapttr of Recovery, incorporated five miles away In Fort Thomas, Kentucky. The telepbooe num. ber is fOM41-2614. I urge you to give them 1 call. PerltaPs all you need Is • belpinc bind to gel you through thi s tern· porary crisis. And please stop worrying about 1'dl1gracing" your family. If you broke a leg you wouldn't be ashamed to get It set. would you? Get gotng and good l11ck. God ltelpa those who help tbem · 1elve1. DEAR ANN LANDERS: In June I was Invited to a graduation ceremony, ln July to a bridal shower, in August to a "·edding and in May I received a baby announa!ment. Same girl -lour 1Uta within JI ~~ months. My pocketbook is aching. What can a per&an say? -RED INK DEAR RED ' Say ouch and bay pita • keeping wilb wbat )'OU can a(fcd. What is French kissing? ls it wrong! Who should set the nocking limit! -the boy or the gir l? Can a shotgun wedding succeed? Read Ann Landera' booklet, "Teenage Sex -Ten Ways to Cool lt.'• Send 50 cents in coin and a long, aeJf. addressed. stamped envelope in care of the DAILY PILOT. • • • I -~ '•' 14 OAllV PILOT ... ,., .. ... Guys and Dolls're Betting on Fun Riviera Club members and thei r husbands will head Laguna~ Those Interested in joining th~ Guy~ and Dolls Section at a cost of $10 per.person .covering bus fare, adm ission and lunch, may phone .Mrs. de Ford at 494-3683. Ce>-<hairma:n will be Mrs' Richard for Caliente on Sund ay, Sept. 13, for a day at the races. The Robert de Fords and Leslie G. Weldon s (l eft lo right) will be among those boarding the bus . ,. a t 9 a.m. in the Alpha Beta shopping center in South , ... _ - Horoscope S\einbach. · . . Civic Duty Discussed . ' Scorpio: Be · Moderate SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 12 By SYDNEY O~tARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): Accent on how you relate to ~ those 'vho admire yo u. Spotlight on hopes, wishes, -friends. Social activity is favored. You gain if ab le to convince mate, partner that money should be saved. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): ,., Pleasant surprise due. You receive assurance that ideas, actions are sound. Check details. Have facts at hand. .•. Relax without being careless. ~ Message will b e c o m e · ~ increasingly clear. ' '. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): • Reach out for greater area o( • · .' communication. Don't pennit .,. ' an yone to stifle mode or expression. Your dlann is .... appreciated more than might ·~ ', be imagined. Go a b e a d . Change is nocessary. CANCER (June 21.JuJy 22): appreciation. Others cannot read your mind. Say what you mean -rpean what you say. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Get promises in writing. Others will respect you if fai~ but firm. Slight.. disappointment will rebou nd in your favo r. Close associate does want to he lp yo u .. Re spon d accordingly. VffiGO (Aug, 23-Sepl. 22): Set your own pace. Be a self4 starter. Waiting too long for instructions coUld lead to error. Assert your needs. You get what you want iI not afraid to ac.t, speak. UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Money situatibn improves. Member of opposite s e x provides' information -. and inspiration. Finish projet:t. Don't be discouraged by one who sings the blues. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov, 21): must race yourself in morning. . SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Short journey .could bring profit, pleasure. 'I'hrow off secret fears,. doubts. You are going in right direction. One v.•ho aided in past makes reappearance. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22--Jan. 19): Friendly advice could mushroom i n I o profitable move.· Be a w a re of op-portun l tif:s. Expand horizons. Accent yersatiltty. No one is really holding · you back -i;et goiTig. . AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb: 18): Cycle Continues high - get rid ' o f nones.sentials. Opportunity is present ; key is to take adv:ant.age o f circumstances. Ch a n g e , travel, . variety are high on agenda. r Civic-minded women · w i 11 gather at 9:30 a.m. on Tuesday,. Sept. 15, 'in the multipurpose room or Matiners Library, Newpor t Beach. 'Ibe Women's Civic League 0£ Newport Harbor will begin its 19th. year of nonpartisan, nonpolitical constructive work toward "the cQmmon good and public c on s ider at i'on to Problems and interests of the community." Mrs. Paul J . G r 1,1be r . program: chairman, w i 11 introduce. Mrs. Eleanor G. Smith, past presklent, who will report on a recent visit ~ "Washington; D.C. Also attendini the meeting will be Mrs. Ellen J,.ee, author of "Old Newport. • .the Seaport. Years." Adelines 'Sing Song For Peace 'll1t Mission Viejo Chapltt of Sweet Adellnes Inc. will harmonize into world understanding as it jolna choruses in the United States. Canada apd Panama in a !hare-a-soog program oo Tuesday, Sept. 15. More than 20,000 voica will entertain in hospitals and for students, 1 e n I or citlziens, shoppers, club memben and civic groups In an effort to promote harmony t b ro u I h .muaic. Under the ·direction of Mn. Wllllam G. Barnes, the Mission Viejo Chapter will sing ''In the Good Old Summertlme" and .. When the Saints Go Marching ln" in the Laguna Beach Nursing Home. Hlghllghtlng the program will be mwic by a special quart et, the Mlsalon Impossibles, composed o f members of the chapter. Narcotics Program Headlined A program on narcotics and drug abuse will be presented for the Orange County Council of Hospital Volunteers during a meeting Monday, Sept. 21, in West Anaheim Community Hospital. Presenting the 9:30 a.m. program will be t h r e e speakers, Del. Peter Tisbo of the An a he im Police Department, Dr. D a n I e I Castile <>f the Orange County Medical Cenzer. and Glenn A. Timmons <>f Teen Challenge. Three roundtable discussi on sessions are planned for the afternoon portion of t h e meeting, including P a r liamentary Procedure, Junior Guilds and Square Pegs in Round Holes. Mrs. Jack M. Lyons will preside and 20 Orange County hospitals will be presented. Luncheon will be booted by the West Anaheim ·Community Hospital and Auxiliary. University Women Take Prefea Tour A flowing caftan worn by Mrs. Keith A. Kinner, purchased on a recent trip to South Africa, is admired by Dr. Pearl Clark, president of the Laguna Beach Branch of the American Association of University Women, and Mrs. George A. Bowman (right). The trio is making plans for a Fiesta de las Ami~ gas membership tea on Saturday, Sept. 12, from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Monarch Bay home of Mrs. Robert Berry. Chairmen will discuss study topics under the direction of Mrs. Donald Tanney. tea chairman, during the tea. \Vomen who are graduates of AAUW~approved colleges are eligi ble to join. Orchid Buffs Take Note Orchid enthusiasts w i 11 gather in the Wardlow Park Clubhouse, Long Beach, at" 8 p.m. on Monday, Sept. 14, for a meeting <>( the Long Beach Amateur Orchid Society. d°"r;-.. ~ 2'40 E.Coo.stl-lll"J•• Cofofto del·Mot" Doil~ 9,30..,5:311 Tel : 613·2.1/IO luftoiov• 11 +.5 lo/A• M.,forCkargc AMERICAN LEATHER TEEN QUEEN SEE CONTEST WINNERS TONITE 1 P.M.-CAROUSEL COURT · You coold get inextricably involved. Don't play games , · with emotions. F a m i 1 y You may be tempteq to go to excess in eating, dri'flking. Wise course is one o f moderation. Don't make big deal of it. Jusi realize that you PISCES (Feb, 19-March 20): eor:nmU"pication from one at a distance provides reassurance. Don't 'permit false pride to hinder , • progress. F i g h t tendency to brood. ~ews you receive shoilld cheer, not depress. Check Award Heads Har.bar Key's Agenda Newport spa, Newport Beach loath Coast 1tua A busy agenda, higlllighled by the presentation of a check to Ohild Guidance Center of Orange County will involve members of Harbor Key when they gather for a general meeting at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 15. A represen tative of Childli-~::::::::====-==·=-=· ==·~-==~==-~ On the Mark Ready for sho\v com4 petition a r e entries by (left) Mrs. George Jones and fi·trs. 0 . T. Walkey . More than 48 classifications of ferns and begonias wiU com· pete Jn the 16th annual show sponsored by the Orange County Branch of the American Be· gonla Society. Admls· sfon is free on Satur· day and Sunday, .Sept. 12-13, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. al Bre<ht's Or· chid Co., Costa Mesa. . . \ . For Th.• Fir1t Time In Orange Countv.,, The Magnificent Color Film Series duih11alion Written and narrated by Sir Kenneth Clilrk for the British lsro1dc1stlng Company. An inspired motion picture history, spanning 1000 years o( \Vestern l\fan's cultural achievements. Sponsored by the Newport Herbor Art Muwum.. and shown for seven cnnsccuUve Sunday arter· noons starting .Septem~er 27th at the B.ilboa Th ea· tcr. Sho\vtngs will be al 2 p.m. andr4 p.m. Series tickles are $15.00 . Make checks payable to: Ne"':por~ H1rbor Arr Mu•eum. Box 507. Balboa, Calflron1a. 92661 or call 675-3866 for information. Cof!ee will be served beginning at 9:30 in Park Stanford Season Kicked Off Guidance Center will aceeJt a check from Mrs. John P. Wright, president, for the proceeds rrom the 1 9 7 0 Emipre Debutante Ball, one of three major annual events sponsored by Harbor Key to support the non profit, county. wide psychiatric clinic for emotionally disturbed children and a dole scents from preschool to the age of 17. Members also will ballot to choose the 1970 Angel of Harbor Key, a person selected yearly for outs t anding c ontributions made to children's welfare and to the Child Guidance Center. Members or the Stanford Concluding the morning will Club of Orange County will be a presentation of new initiate the new season with a p r o v i s i o n a I members. kick-off party tomorrow. including the Mmes. William Comfortable chairs, large-L. Barker, Jack M. Bibb, M. screen TV sets, beer and chips J . Falslev, Samuel Hurwitz, will lend. to the spirit <>f the Frank Legrand, Stanley Nash, St a n f o rd-Arkansas game Richard Parrish, Ivan \V. which begins at 2:30 p.m. Stur Ls and Robert Wood. The rooting section will ,.-==-==="-"=::..- gather in the Pal isades Tennis Make a Shilrp Club, Costa Mesa. Adililional information may Trade; Use be received by calling Walkie Dime·A·Lines Ray at 642-010. BIDWELL OF NEWPORT :::J~ BIDTIQUE '71-4111 SPECIALS FOR SEPTEMBER NOW THRU SEPTEMBER 30th CONTINENTAL ACIDOPHILUS ONE PINT SPECIAL $1.95 WEGUl.Alt SZ.25 WHEAT 79°/o Natural NATURAL GERM OIL Protein Powder BONE Co!d Pr•n•d ONE POUND CALCIUM I OZ. Si•• Thi 1 i1 • bi9 S•wi1191 300-1.S Gr•i11 T,bleh ltet•l•r SZ.69 WIG-ULA.It SJ.95 OUlt ltEGULAlt PltlCE $2.19 $3.29 ON THIS IS Sl.7t SPECIAL SPICIAL SPtCIAL $1.39 WHEAT GERM .OIL CAPSULES 6 MINIMS 100 .... uLn .......................... uGuu• "·" SPECIAL 98c 2;1 CAl'SULIS ...................... HGULAl Sl.7' SPECIAL $2.19 VITAMIN Pure Korean Cold Pressed B-12 GINSENG SOY OIL lSO Micro9r•rn1 I Grein C•p111lo1 Th, "'"" hi9h pot•llcy Qu•rf Si11 1.b1.1. 50 1.bl1t ,;.,, so C•p111lo s;., llGULAI SI.It WECiULAlt SI.ID ltlGULAlt 15¢ SPECIAL $1.29 SPECIAL $7.25 SPECIAL 69c VITAMIN "E" -MIXED OR D·ALPHA 100 l.U. -100 CAPSULES ............ llGULAl '"'' SPECIAL $1.98- • .. 1.U, -CAPSULES ................ UGULAl ..... SPECIAL $3.59 SPECIAL 10°/o Off ON ALL PAPERBACK BOOKS IN PERSON IN PERSON GWEN OF GWEN'S COSMmcs Will Be At Our Tustin Store Sept. 18th, And At Our Costa Mesa Store Sept. 19th. COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS COSTA MESA 270 E. 17th St. In Hlllgron Squaro 541-9537 TUSTIN 1094 IRVINE BLVO. NEAR SAV·ON $44-7134 I I r ' ' ' ' ' ' '• • I • •. ' • ; . i • ! £ • ' ; DAILY PILOT JS LEGAL NOTICI T41• ~ LEGAL NOTICE .. YM• ......... C.Uft Olll TMI MTIC• ff 11.0.llllJ'Tlett C•ITl,KATI 011 l llllM•ll. p .... 1 ITATI W UUll........... U.MI~ l &UM LONI. ftO. Int. l"ICTITICMoll MA.Ml CllTll'KATI 0" I UllMIUo TMI CWUNTY IP MAMli lil'OI TN "'*"lfnM t1M1 cff11f¥ lie ii COii-111 CTIT OVS .... AotMN IUl~OI.. CllTll'ICATIS Mtl!ll 1 Wti-t et 1"1 H.,._, COllt T I 1 'IAMI l l HI T9 IMOW UUll l"lilnwrit t. •W tf Gf•"'' l.tdH. Mt6t. C•llfitt11Mo, 1MM1" fN flcllllolis nr.n cond":c1::""~~ c:f11~1tttY..:: ~ -'" tM 1Mttw "' "" Nltllc•llM .i a-i.nt W ,.,..tttlv• OrW 14' llkl, MIM ti tn1iel • Acc..,h &'-llvcl . 1t ttvfttlfttlOl'I a..d'I. C1Hf!liMllf LAWiltlNCI OlllGOtl:V IAMllllZ lilt 11'\11'9M of U91.111t ... c:h L.MM ~ tM n..1 Mlt llrM 14 ~ .r tM '' tt • ....... 19 ChtnH 1111 !WI...,. .. L.AWlllNC:E !JM. wlll ~ •f It<• "'""" ell .... IW flollewlN --wflelt 111...., Ill l""1 tlW llndtl" 1119 lktlllGul llrm nenw of fH( Gllt:OOllY l!LLM>TT. tM "'"l•<WltW itulldlns Clr11fketM ,1ac;1 If rMldt'MI II •• l94lllwl: E.LEGAHf HAYSTACK •IMI lfltt u lf firm L.AWlllM(a Olll!OCHlV lltAMllttZ "'41• tloftdol ht(...._ i.1111011 1W M id lttllll .. Cfl\fNlll,. »t.t a!J1111 Uillt b--•• "".v..~l ... O"l'lrll...,•~ l'll'tlM flltf 1111 hfltltll Ill "" •""""* !Met -111•...,.,., 11 111f cmltlc•IM lnilM, c1.' ' ~ , ..,KM .. lll!M c.ta.. Mid NII NlllM M'tlM ,... .. Wiii trw!IM 11 1M offlct of lt°"'1 1, Cet..i AW. n, 1,l't r.i~ "'1 M flflCIM, ..,,.., .. ,., ........ "' w ..... Mlltloner'I WllOll, tot ,., .. WMltln htl:lt l1111411nt, St111 " C:.•llfol'nle °''"" C:.Wlll,1 H ~::'on'~tt. lnn Jokll L-. NIM fnm L.AWlll!NCI! OIU!GOllY 116 W•I F-1ft Slrlllt, 111111 ...,.., CM Allf, M. Hrt, ~ ..... 1 NOllf'I 11 ' l:AMlllll. "' ... Wllt:NCE GlllGOltY Callfornll ttnll. .. .... k Ill IN .., Miii S11!1,. __ II, u-c, ll••lnt«. ,,,n ''"'' ELLIOTT: SI.Id C.,,ltlcl! .. t'l'lllSI Ill i1111!v"1111 If ,_,M Ktllll ... C..nlltlf kflO<ofn 1'I fN l .. •~ ... ':!~1111 .. '°:f,:*11 (a. IT 11 HIElll lV OltCElllO tMt 111 Mr1t ~ ,_b ter.,i 1n.1H IMlrll'le ......,,, 19 M ttM> Hrton v.11o11 Ntrll b 1 ....,.., --""'-'" In Mid INUtl ..... , f\111 ... rilU "'' ..... """' Nev ......... I, ~·OH .. 1111 wlt1!111 l11•lr11"""" .,. ~L~~LIEE~E K'Es~lul~~°-lll!N lll+ort ftlft C_. Ill IM Cwrt HtuM II "10. 1ck-ltltttd 11t t11tct,1tW 11'11 Mmt ' OINrt!Nnl J ttltrlof tit Oct. ), ltJO. .ti Trll61MS • Ll llllll ltlc:ll lldtl tOl'l'ICIAL llAL) . Sl1!1 ti Clllfornll, Onont1 CIUlllY; Ille hour" t 1• A.M ........ "*' .... lllWI No. 1114 M1rk IC Hf:nry ()ft Autllll"' Jf19 Mfor• ...... Holltv al'ltW U\111, H eny 11111'1 '""' "M, WhY ttobtrt • W... h I Not ,;,. k C I I ,utllk In •1'111 for Mid Sl•lt, --ll't Ille ... 11c111on llflould nol ... ••1111.0. II .. • • c • fll'Mfl .,., I • •I lorn. ·-·td O.rlftll •. Nt,1U119n ,,,. 1ren. lllrlfttr Ol'w.d lflll 1 ce.'I' II ttll• trMr lllltMl l T1111\1f', Tr11t1• .. ,~IHI ~!kl In C. K•nlnMI' known ·10 nM tro ... 11-. .. .I "-1 _ 0 -C • .,,,, Or. lloblrt •· lloii.. fr111t11 Df•ftf• CllllftlY Pll'I-wllol.t 111-1,1 iutitc:rlbMI le .... ··-II ..... r OI It ........ w-. MY CDrnmllllon l•1llrot1 I I I ' ,llot WICI I ...... 1w IOI.Ir -cM•l"I ,..,..., ti Llw Nov, t•, ltl? 1111 VI Ill n Ml~ 11\d ~lllWlllOlt~ -· ......... ,Mid 11>11bllt1llon ... C111'11•., ... ,.., ...... .... ...... ..11!lllthtd °""'"" Co111 C•llY ,.llOI, ~-;Frc~f'.:~1 .. mt. pi.tM ..,.1gr 19 lfll llfllrll'll ti ltllt ......... hllf• AM. Cllltnll1 taJll A11t111t U Inf Sl!Mlfllblr' 4 11, II. JEAN L JO IST 0.lt<ll Allt. lt, lt10. T ... I 0141 MW,. 1t1t "10.10 . ltA'l'MOHC TMOMPSON .. 11-lltl'IW Dflll" CMil Diii .. llol NollrY .. l,lbllc: • C1llfol'nl• JUDGI! o,. TMI!! Al.llUfl JI • M SI-' ' LEGAL NOTICE ,.rlnclN I Ofllc:• In SUPl!ll.IOll COUllT 1 ' 1 ... 11• ll. 21 0!'111M Covnt' JOHH A. M.t.La'I' 114 Odooet 2. r .. 1t10 ISSl-70 p:-.n ,,.,., comm1 .. 1on hl'iru 11• W•I 0.-Mw&, lllllte MM LEGAL NOTICE Cll.Tll'ICATI' °' •UllNlll Mirth 2. lfn LMe •Mell• c;....,........ l'ICTITtOUI MAMI .. 11Dtl.nH Or11191 C011I 0.111 .. Hot. T.._,.._, (tli) HIMl9dl l-14Jt T-41Jn Tiit ll!lderlltrd dOft ctrtll¥ lie h J.1111111 2• Ind S...tlmber •• 11. It. Alltr-W ANlklllt IUPl lt lOll CO Ul.T OP THI condYCl1n1 1 bull"'U 11 kS W, ltlh St., 1910 l"J.1'11 '11bllshld C>fMt• COlrt DlllY .. uot, STATS 0, CAL..cNlN .... "Oii CMIO Mtll1 C1llfor n11. ""'°'' •lie A119111t il, • •M S.,.l1mlllf 4, 11. TME COUNTY OP OIU.MOE llc:llrlou• firm l'llfM 91 C1bbl111 1nd lt19 1Sf.J.10 Ne. ..,...,.. Kl1111 IMI 11111 Hid nnn 11 com~ OI • MOTtC:I .,. NllA•IN• Ofr PETITION tM lolillwlno --· whcKe 111me Ill 11111d------c.c.,.=,c,------ .. OI': f'ltONiT• OP, WILL ...... ,0 11 Ind I'll<• ot Alldent• 11 I I 1onow1: Llintlll T•STAMIMT.A•Y l!llen •••• tol w. 11111 S1.. C•I• ClltTllllCATI! 01' I USINUS. E1t1t1 If AMlfE L, •IMMCHS, O.. MIJ,t, Ctllf. fl<ICTITIOUS NAMI T-41116 C..$1d. °'"" 5"tl!Tlller J, int TM 11""'r•ltnld -1 crtlt't lie I' NOTM:I TO ClllOIT'Ofl~...i NOTICE IS HE•El'I' GIV!• •"·• INt. Elltll kll tond11tllnt 1 Mint11 11 1101 JlrnblN'M IU .. 1•to1t COUaT Oii' TI'll OOUG I -$1 I .t C Ill l Ad.. l•h!wtorl ll11ch, C.I.. llndw 1hl STA.Tl OP CALI ...... POR LAS C. S MMONS he• tllM Mrtlft I •I I orll a, llcllliolll nrm n.1"" ot NEWl"O•TEll "'""" tor IHtblt. II will 11141 !(Ir Of•-COlllllY: , TNI COUNTY OP ......... luu•n« 9t Ltll'lrl Tf$lllft'ltl'ltlf'I 11 lfll O.. Siii'!. s, lt1', Detort "''" 1 Nolirv MENS SHOP ...., !Ml wlol fltm I• .... A"'2M Mtlt1-". rlltrlflCI lo 'll'llkll 11 mlH i.r .. ulllk In Ind for Hid Sllll, ""°""llY C...-.d ol Hit followlnf ..,..,,, whlll £111• If l lUINICli I!, JEltOME 11,1~ pirllC\llln;, Ind lllll lfll llm1 Ind 11_, .. Elltn hll krlOwn to mi to Dt lllml ~ 11111 tnd PIKt Pl rtlkltnno II •• o.c....... pllc-" """"' ..... -1111 ..... wt Ille ... ..,, ~ "''"' It 111bstt111ed to follow•· MOTICE IS Hl!llEIY GIVEN II ttll tor Stltembtr :tS. ltl't, If t·!lf 1 "' In 1111 Wlllllfl in1tt111Mnl 11111 1c-,_lllltecl lloC>ttl Vpm Cltlf, 17JD Wlllttlft' Ji vt.• cl'lldl ..... If lfll ·~ 111/Mll llKldllftt , ... COllrtrGPm II' c..,,..,..,;, .... i If Ille IXl(llfld !Ill HIM. S»tt ~. Coua ,,.,.,. 11111 111 -141111 fll'tltW cllltM -11'1•11111 w ht COl.ltl, ii 106 Civic Clllltt DrlY9 (OFFICIAL SEAL) Clttd A.111. 21, ltlO wlol dlCtcllnt ,,.. ..... vlrld to Ille "'''"• WM!, In Ille City el hnf9 AINI, C•llltl'llle, Miry K. Hfflrv Aobtrt v .... ci.11 Wltll 1111 MC:ffllf'l' v-lllf• ,In '"' of· OITM S..lemblf • 1'10. Nll•rv l"11lllc-<1llltrnl• St1te of C1ntor11l1, °''"" COllnlY: lie. If Ill• dlrll II IM 1btv1 tntlllld w. I . ST JOkN, ... 1nclp1t Offk• In On A11e1111 11, 1t70 bllor1 m1, • No11rv cwrt. If hi ..-lllftl JMm, with IM count1 Cltrk Cr"''' Coun11 .. utlllc In incl lor wld S11t•. --•II~ ntt1111rv 'tOUC:....,.., II tltl vnd•••ltntd •t •••IN'l•H a M.Ui1 t Mr CPr11ml11kln .,.,,,., •-•r.d A~t T. Vom Cllff •nown ta '"" offlC• II' lllt '"°'""" IYHOWE•, .,; '"''* '·Ml... Nov.,,, "" me 10 mt Ille ,..,_ W'-INlmt I\ LCNGLl!!V & .. l!THl!ll.l ltlOGE, 1n2 ifJ s.t11 .._ly Drl.,.. .. 11llll111M C••-C:•$1 D1ll1 PllOt, •11D1crl~ lo O>t wltMn ln,tr11m.-it 1!td Norfft lro.dwtY. Slfttl An1, C1llfornll ,_,,. Hiii• C•ll'-lt N it !1tltmbtr' " n, 11. !!, 1t10 1'50-70 1cknow!ld1ed lie ••atuttd '"-"'"'• tt106. wtllcll l• !hi Pl«• •I IM.l•I ...... " T .. : mn i1W..1 (OFFICIAL SEAL) 1111 Ulldtrlltnld lfl t ll rn1t1111 ""'Jnlns """'-' ,.,.,. ... ....., LEG"• N~CE JUANITA M. SHl!l'FIELI> ti !lw. ,,.,,19 el uld dtcllltnl. wllllln lovr .. dilllohld O••llll• Clllt Oillt .. 1191 ~ v11 Not1rv P11t1!1e-<11Uornf1 m.111111 11111" IM l!nt lllilbllctlltn If fflll s.11~ to, n 11 1110 IMO-Ii Or1"91 Coun11 n11k 1. ' ' P-i*t Mr Commlukln Extlr11 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE COFFEE GARDEN COMES TO CAPO -Members of Itas BUe nas Amigas Auxiliary of Family Service A spoc.iation will pour a champagne opening fo r their new coffee garden in El Pas eo Real. Hostesses (left lo right), the Mmes. Robert Rusin , Frank Farrell a nd Don Divel preview the Sunday afternoon affair in the garden patio while looking forward to the of· ficial opening . 01IW A~·· "' 1t10 LEGAL NOTICE •• , MM SIPI. 1. 1t1l F•ANK E. IOGUE, Jll. ClllTl,ICATI OP IUSINISJ l"ubU1Pted Or1np C<1111 Olll'f Piloo , Admlnl1tr1tor Pl 1111 ,.1111 ........ ,ICTITIOUI PllM NAMI SWlembtl" 4.. 11, 11, 2S, "'° lMi-10 II' 1111 1bo\11 111mld 111eldent. ClllTIPICATI. 01' I UllHlll, Thi wtdlt'll1Md doff h1r1b't ctrtlf\o LEG 'L NOTICE l r!Wwlr, Lfffll'I' & .. ""-r.111'11 ,ICTITIOUS HAMI 11111 1tOA•K M. GOUltLEY It Clftdllct. n 11n Nf.'1111 ,,..,..., Tiii vnder11tr.tel clots clrtlh' lie Is COf\< Int ' wholfl1!1 1l'MI r11111 m1mJf1¢,,.rin,:I------. ~.c...,,"'°',------ Slnll AM, c1111w ... "* O\H:tl .... ~•11111 II 1125."" VlclOl'll St., Incl •ti Wiii 11111111111 •t City el New· Cl!ITl,ICATE 0, •UllNlll Lightness Sets Day Sugar and Spice . a lighthearted look al toclay's .,..·oman. will ente rtai n members o f the Monday Morning Club during a m embership tea on Monday, Sept. 14, at 1:30 p.m. in Ben Brown's restaurant at Laguna B each Country Club. Lecturer Mrs. Anne Re her, who holds degrees r r o m Loretto Heights College in Denver, Colo., and Mount St. !\'lary's College in Los Angeles \\'iii provide the program for club m ember s and guests at the flrst [unction of the club year. Special guesls will include 1ttayor and Mrs. Richard Goldberg, Willia m Harcum, president or the Community Players, and Mrs. Jack Lyons, president of the auxiliary of South Coast Co mmu nity Hospital. Presiding at the tea table will be club officers, the Mmes. Harold Oaily. Olive Danie!S' Tea le, Ca1Vin Gibbons and Howard Morritt. Mrs. Daily and Mrs . Donald F oste r a r e in charge of arrangement s. Those interested in reservations may call Mrs. Ruth Hatfield at 494· 4650. Buenos Amigos Pou r W-elcome Tll1 (n4) "41-tnl Coal• MIN. C1llto,ftl1. lllMler Ill• tk• _. lfftll. Co..nty of Of'1n11 Sl11t of Jl<ICTITIO!n NAM• ................ fw Alllnllllllr11tr II~ firm llllTM ti Jtfl'1 Aull 5-lt C•llfornt1, 11ndtr thl ffctlllo.n. iJ,,,. 11.une TM 11ndt"ltntd don ttrtlly No 1, P11bllslltd Cr111" c..11 D•ltY ,.not, •ncl 11111 Mid flrrn b com"* ol "" .,.. ftt1t11111on wflldl lllot• not "'°'* Ille c-ucll"' 1 bulJMu 11 JU Gr1M c-1 A\191111 21 1M ~lmllll" 4, 11, JI, followinl -•Oft. who)I NIM Ill lllH Incl tn11 111m1 or ri.mn pf 1t11 ~ Jn-llllbOI l1~nd. C1llt01"nll, undoir ~ 1'10 1611·10 tHIU of rnldtrtce Is II 1-ollows: • ••-01 111' .. lld In Mid bu1lnl11, l•wlt: l llCTH-lltllllovl lltm ,..,.... of ME.l.OOtl LEGAL N011CE A~~~t~d.ns:;:v;, rW,j~ Slnll It Ell: AllT tnd 11111 11k1 "tlrm 11 corn~ INVESTMENT GllOU .. (1 11m11 1 d • --C•IMI A1111. ,,, 1f1t of .... lollowlnt -son. wlloal II-Incl Nrll'le>WllPI Ind 11111 Mid !Inn I• D ....,,1 .i.ffle It. Slffotlll 1cNr111 ''' 11 lollowl: compaHCI of the followlt'll --· w11m~ c:••Tt .. ICATI o .. l llSIMI U, Slife ., C1Ulornl1, •a1rk M. 6-lt:'t. •1' ¥1111 Sr1ncl1 lll'l'lt In 11111 •ncl PIKI Pl mklllftet .. I I 00 rs ,ICTITHMIS lllAMI Ofl flfl C-l't· N..,....ort 8Mdl, C1lltorr>11. ' tol-1: TM llNlllf•ltl'lld do C111H1 1111Y 1r1 Oii ,._., v: 1,11. Mflrl -1 Noli ry WITNESS my MM lt\11 12111 do1 al Ch1rlils E. Ju-$1, 313 Gr11'M1 C1n1l. C-11tllne I b\lllMU II llO'h 1111 SI .... \IDllc: In Incl fir 11lcl $1111, -HMllt Awl.Ill, lt10. 811bw l•lancl. (1111, '26'!. Siii •Nell, C1Hfol'nl1. llncllr ,.... flc!lllO\ll ........ Id Jtfflt II. Slltord •-n ...... II lt N•t M. 6-le't Olrecl Sepllrnblr 1, 11111 llrrn Mrrll 11 WOODSTOCK MfG. 1M1 bl Ille -•on -H Mml II iUOlcrlDtcl ITATE OF CALll'OllNIA I Cllarl11 E. J-11 Champagne Opens The champagne opening of a ne\\' San Juan Capistrano Coffee garden operated by Las Buenas Amigas Auxiliary or Family Service Association will warm the patio or El Paseo Real on Sunday, Sept.13, from 4 to 7 p.m . Champagne and h o r s d'oeuvres will be served in a s hady paUo of flowers, trees and fountains as well as in an indoor room off the patio area. Tickets (or the g r a n d opening at ;a per couple will be available at the door. This project has become a r eality due to a generous 11mount of work and time donated bv members of the auxiliary. The coffee garden is located in the new El Paseo Real building adjoining the bank complex. Volunteer help dressed in colorful aprons will staff the garden and serve coffee and pastries. Profits from the operation "'ill support Family Servicie Association , a counseling program designed lo strengthen families. 11111 H id llr'" k Com.and 9f tlll 1o Ille w!lllln in.tr11mll'I 1nd i ckl\tWllll .. COUNTY Cl' ORANGE I 11, IGlner1I P1rtn1r~ 'fbe m&in OffiCe of the ser • toltowln1 HrlOnl, wlloM n.1""' In 11111 H l>t IJll:llllll lfll wm1. On lllll l?lh di¥ of Aul llJI. A,0. 1'10. Stilt ol C1lllorn!1, vice is located in Tustin and Ind PllCll of ... lcllnCI ••• II 194lowl: (OFFICIAL SEALI bllo•e me, !hi UN11r11fned, • Nollrv 0·o•M•, ' .. ~"'-" .. . C1v1 I(. Mel>"°rtl n, UD\o; tlll St Sell MlfY K. Hlflrr .. llb11c: In Ind lot .. 111 C011nl1 Ind Sl11t, n l l9 r, 111. !ore mo!, 1 staffed by accredited counsel· •••en, c11. touo .,, Nol•l'Y .. ut.1k·C•t1fornlt rnlClll!ll 1111r11n 111111 COl'llml»lonld ind Not1r't Publlt I" •nd to• ''Id St•"· ors whose ,.,,,,.....,..,.e is to aive ttoblrl L. Dwo,.kr. 2.11~, lllt St.. ,,1MJ1111 ottlw In • ·-n. __ 11, •'!;'••ltd A01r~ M. :e.;,:n•l:Y ''":'"111 c~~!1e1 E. JllP....., .... ~1 !""'"""'. . "' S11I l t1ch, C1I. ttl• or1,... County Gollt'llY klltWn 11 '"' 11 bf! !hi -14111 n ° ""' 0 '"" "'"'°n - Strength to families Under Otttd AUIUll Jl 1910 M'f Commlultrl lxslrt l -· ""'" 11 IUDIC'lbtd lo Ille wllhln ::i's'::.~!! ,:D~~!i: • ..:..r :• w:; StreSS 0.._,. K. McN.Ortln NOii. 24. lt1t lnlltllt'l'ltlll, Incl ICkl'IOWlld"" 10 11'1• 11111 Int $IMf llflC • lloblt'I L. Cwor1k1 .. llblli.htd Dr11191 (Oltl OlllJ' .. llol, lie UKlltld !hi.,,..., fO Fl'ICIAL SEAL} Las Buenas A m iga s, 11111 11 C1llftrnl1, 0<1n•• County: A11111ft 21 •nd s.i.mw 4 11. , .. 10~~~~~t ;n;..,11~no •1'111 •Hltl•I •e•I, cne1lt• Ferrell siulbu!'Y 11 d . -•· ( $ On AlllUll JI, 1'70, btllrl ml, I Noll f't ltl'O 161).10 ltutlt W Ld Hol1rv Put1t!t<1tllarnl1 rawmg me~111A"n rom an Put.lie In 1m fw Mid s1111. Hr-111 LEGAL NOTICE Notirv ;'1111111: '" 1,,. ,.r!11C!i111 OHie-In Juan C a p 1 s \ r a n o San •-rid 01" K.. McM1rr111 •nd "'*'" 1or S.ld c "" nd s1 11 or1rt0e county .' L. OW<1r1k1 k-lo m• lo Ill Ill• p.... .. llll.tltd o.. oun 1 1 Mr Commh~lon ExplrM Clemente. Mission VieJo and -1-wllOI• "'""" •r• subKrlDtcl i. · 11 '"'' CNn 0.11., Pl1ot, October 3. 1911 L•m• •••ch . thr yea tnt wllllln lnitrumtnl 11111 icknowlllll ld ClltTl,ICATI 01' •USIMlll, AU9. 21, :rt Ind SIP!. 4, 11, U10 15'7·10 Publl11ted 0,1,.1 C<11st DlllY .. llot, _ .. na ....... ' IS e e rs !MY ••Klllld the ........ ,ICTITIOt.IS MAMI SeioiernDtr ~. II, u . 15. lflO '"'·ID Id Th 27 t . ISEALI Tiii unCll'flllll\ld dotll elrtll't 111 11 <M· LE o . ere are ac 1ve l'RANK L. SHUl'ELT -""""' , IHlilrtt•• ,, 11122 '"ch 11vd.. GAL NOTICE members, an a s s o c I a t e No11rv .. llbnc suu1 100, Hunllntton '"en, Ct lll. uNllr NI C minion f I lltl lk'lllkw.11 llrm "'"'' ll l 11Y lt llllr tH16 membership and a patroness 0:.. 1~'.""12 ••r" cn1r1 ... 1nc1 11111 11ld 11,,,, 11 comPO'tcl NOT1c1 OF 1NTl!NT10N TO m embership s upporting the T"'U" " "" tellowlrl• tttrlCllll. *"'°' 11111'111 CllllATI! ll!CURITY INTEll:EIT N01•<• .,',"'1?!,' "th t ·b t' f .. llDllltlld 0<1n" CNl1 Dlll1 .. llol, In lull i ncl 111<11 II r"!Olntt 1r1 u lS1c1. ""-'"' U.C.C:.I T• .,•·,,Tll'I SA.LD i:e.roup w1 con r1 U ions o $wl.mblr •· 11 , 11, u , 1t11 1.-.10 i.tlowi: NOTICE •• "'"'1>1 1iven to the • 4•11 t . e and funds Chitin J Htlllf 1"91 h ltrl L-Crld!IDn; II ALAN MEACHAM C•btor On Sie1temblr 2'. lt7t, II 11 :OG A.M . Im · LEGAL NOTICE NuntlnllOfl 9NCti. c1n1. ' wn .... 111111nn1 l<Mlre .. 11 .;0 Ocu~ TITLE tNSUAAHCE ANO T 11u 1 r G-Gr"'°"' lJ.IO .,.vld UM, \.IS 11...t,, H1111llntlen llNCll, COllft1'1 QI COMPANY, ll cl\111 I PPOlnltd TrUltff LEGAL NOTICE Ebell Officers Writing P..-.W Alimlltt Ctllf 0!'1,,.1, 51111 ol C11lfor1111, 111111 1 -., •nd Pllttulllt lo o.9d If Trull CIRTIPICATI O' IUSIMllS, Oi'911 ~ ,0. 1t1t 11Wrlh' lnlorn t 11 lllP\lt to be trMltcl by clllH SIPlernO« 22. lttt E~ICVl9d l 't' PICTITtOUS NAM• Sl•I• .. c1ut0.111 •• °'"'" C-ty: Oeblol' •nd ......... "FLOYD KENNETH ELINOlt GRACE MC COltMICI(. ..... Tiii ""'6trlllnld dotll clr111Y lie Is ~ On Allt\llt 10, l910 blforl ..... , 1 Miii_., NI CHOLS SKurH .. ,rtv, whoal bullnell rKordld J1111>1<'t Jt, lf70, 11 lftslr. No. lll11ttlnf I bllslMll II U0:Z MrrllMOolll, Pllblle in Ind fir llld 5111-, HrlOfllll' 1cNra.1 11 •II °"""' 81Yd., Hllftllntlon UIJO, In book '201, "" UO, Pl Olllcl1I C11t1 """'· c111totni.. \l!'ldl'f "" lk· ·-·-Cfllrlll J. H•lllr '"" G-'""'· COi.int¥ If °''""' ..... ., llll;Onb In 1111 oflkt of Ille c-v 111"-firm 111 ..... If AM ENGINEl•ING G.._ --" mt II bl IM -son• C11tlor11!1. ltlKO<'-ol 0rlll9t C-l't, C11!1otttl1, lrlill 1111! Mid tltm II tom ..... II' ti. wllow ,,.,,.,.. ..., llUtlKribtf .. IM wllllln 1ltl ~ 11'! wllldl ·Ille Stcurltv WILL SELL AT PUllLIC AUCTION TO loll.Wine l<ltllfl. wtlMI 1111n1 In 11111 aM Wt,_. IM ~ltdlllll lihl'lt I.II· ln1treat wUI bl crelle4 II. In lffllrll, 111 HIGHEST lllCOE ll: FOR CA$H IN,l bll Unveil A bevy of fund·raising events will be unveiled for members of Laguna Beach Ebell Club as they g ather for the first meeting of the season on Monday, Sept. 1-4, at 11 :30 a .m . in Don the Beach comber restaurant. Corona de! Mar. Mrt. Lincoln Grindle 1 ttl1ct el rul~• k •• lolklwt! K""" 1111 .,.,.,. n1111rM 1nd 1Qul1me11t turn1111,. ind •I time ol wll In ~wtul mon1t ol th• Art1111r Mllllr, 11102 Myrt"-11, CKla \OFFICIAL SEA.LI "'"'""'"'' o1 Otlfor c0,,,,,1,.. pl"OOl'lf1V Un!tld St1tal If the North front entrtnc1 Mn1, C11lt, Jetn L .Jobst -loc1ted 11 41• Otttr1 l lvd lo Ille C>f1rt01 Counl't Courthollll locll~ CATEC Au-t. 70, 1t7t NOlll'Y ... ublk. Cil\IN"nll Huntl1111to11 lf1ch, Countv II' Ori"": II 100 Civic C'"lm Orlvt Wt JI (IOl'rntrl1 b d Arlllur MIU1r .. rindNI Ctllc.t In ' Stitt of C1lllarnli , ll'MI D\lllnt'I ~-n 11 West 1111 S!rffll S."11 Aruo, C1!ll«n!1 111 E h • "t St1t1 al C1Ulorn l1, C>f1r111 Countv: 0,11!111 Counf't "THE Ftll:ESICI!! IEEll: llAll:", rltht, !!tit Ind lnttrnt tonVl'ftd to 1n4 president, will announce the x I I e On Alltlltl :IO, 1'10, tlforl mt •• Netlf't NIY Comml11lon 1-.lr• Thi 11or,s1111 llCll•lh l••ll••dl(tll wlll now held bv II ulldlr 1•1d OHCI of Trus t '11btlt In •nd lw .. 1c1 Sti tt, """"'Uv Mlrdl 2. lfn bl con1umm1tl'd on or 1lter fhe 6tn d•Y 111 !hi Pl'Oll'lftv 1lt111tod In thl city or H obo Hop chaired by Mrs· '""",... Artflur Mllltr ~n lo m• i. bl ,.111111111H Of.,..• '"" Dill' .. 11" ti Oclllbtr, 1t10, •' lt;OO A.M. 11 Coal• M111, 111 111c1 CPUnty 1nd Slit• W • lhl tt•r1on whOH nlrrll ii IUbKribld lo A ' u "" Wte "" ... fl 11' LAWNDALE E!CltOW COMPANY 121f dlHCrlbtd II: Donald Knapp; a day al the Members or the Oman s lh• within l111tru .... nl •rllll Kknowltdtld it':'' • m 1.1 .. 10 Soult\ StrHt. L-l 11cn, C1l!lor.;i •• Jn Loi 5S ol Ttl (I No. S403, II rl(Orllld Club of San Juan Capistrano h• ••K11tl'ill 1h• 11m1. 1n11111m1n11. In &oak 1:w. "'" lS, » 1nc1 31 0, races organized by Mrs . (OFFICIAL SEAL) So fi r •• known 10 1M Stcurecl P1nr NllKtll1neou1 M111t, rteOl'll• of Cr1nH Dou , glas K en 3 , t 0 " •· a will kick off a year·long golden JOSEPH E. 0Av1s ..... oko 0 Shorp 111 111111....,, n1me1 1nd •dllrO!Sss u!ltd b; County, c 1111orn11. .. · I b t · Not•" "ubl!e, C1llfernl1 m 1111 Otblor fer lllt "'"' YHtl 1111 l'llf S•ld w11 wlll bl mldt, lllrt witho\11 a nniversary C e e r a I o n Prlnc1t111 OHie• In .J 1r1: NONf ' coven111t or w1rr en11, ... ..,111 «" lll'l!llilll rummage sale in ~ January tomorrow with a new m e mber o r1"" COi.int... Tr1uej Use DATED : """"u1t31, tt111. •t11~rdl,.. 11111, "''•••••on, .; . h Mv Conwnf1tlltt 1•1ra 'kll'll K111ntlll Nklllt• f'tlC11mbr1nc11, to ...,, lhl r1rn•lnlne directed by Mrs. Macauley luncheon at 12:30 p .m · 1n t e Ju,.. 21. 111• Dim•A·Lines SECUll:EO PAl!TY orr11e1~1 "'"' 01 111e nott -11r111 1w Mid Ropp a ·d Mrs. IV ,. 111· a m clubhouse .. ublllhld O!'lft" C111t Diii~ .. li.t. l.AWNDAll! ~ICll OW COMPANY Off<! Ill Tru11. lo-wll; U.IOl.1,, •• Ill llllf " • 'I A111u1t 11. 2t Ind S1111 . .., n. U70 1"""7t llU 11111• Stntl no1e provided, 1dv1ncn.. If '""· llltOf!r t~• lli··wood, and the a nn"al Hanch•:riting expert 1>' rs. LMe .__, C11H. NM term' of ,,1c1 Oetc1 o1 Tru1t IMS. dllrttt• " " J Du 'II h th I K,_ h. lS:H Incl UP1n11$ el !ht Trtnttl lfld ol 1M Events Expertise be II I d une ncan WI s are e .. ubtri.lllll o''"" C011t D•ll'I' Pilol, 1r11tt1 ''"'" 1w w1c1 Died " Tr1111 nefit ba p anne by l\1rs. latest university m e t h 0 d s Stptf1711Jer n . ,,... , .. ,.10 TM 111n111c11,., 1111del' ••Ill o..d " .James Agnew, assisted by exploring -rsonality throoah LEG'L NOTICE Trini."" ''"°" '' • 11ruc11 ,,,, c11111111 1n ,.,.. • n lht OOtltllloM WC\lrld I h. r I b y • ~1rs. Aldon Clark. handwriting with tbe club 11------------l""ttotort 1x1e1111e1 -..,u....,., 1a "'• Volunteers Invited i\.1ooies collected from these d the d " 1· r M '16" 11nd .... l9ned I .... 1nen dtdtr1Holl or un er 1rec ion o rs. MOT!Ca TO ct.I DITOtt• 0e111111 Ind Otmlnd 1w 1111, '"" wr1t1.,. events will enable Ebell to John Given, program Cl• • t OJI< 1uL1: TltAHs,111 no11c1 a1 11r11c11 •nd o1 e11cnon 10 c1u,• I hol h' tp ., c11a. •IH-6lt1 u.c.c.1 11w. wncler•llMd lo Mii ultt -"" 10 iponsor annua sc a rs 1ps chairman. .., ' HiHc• 1s lltr•llY 11~" "' 1111 CrHitOl'i ''"''' 111d Obll1111on1, •nd 111ern11er, on and aid American F i e I d f\frs. Duncan, a graduate of " FLOVO KENNETH NICHOLS ..,.,1111, 1t10. lht 111\0trsJltflld' c1tnt111 wld s . Bo Cl b YMCA Save .,,· t . Ttl Nltror, .....,_ bl/1lneu llld1'1111 II •10 l>Otlc• of llruch incl ol •lKIJon lo b• To Workshop Session ~lrs. Sheldon J . Brown. consultant-director of I he North Orange County Child Training Announced A 30·hour treache r aide trai!,!ing program will begin Tuesday, Sept. 15. on l he Orange campus of r-.1arymoLMt College. The sessions will lake place from 10 a.m . to noon each Tuesday, offering training in reading, phonics, o I f i c e procedure and the philosophy of ,teacher aids. Sponsor of the series is the Los Angeles Archldiocesan Cooncil of Catholic Women· Classes in library aide training also wi ll be given on the campus beginnin g Monday, Sept. 14. A c harge of $5 will be made for each course. Guidance Center. will speak e r v1ce, ys u • · Southern Methodist University Oc-eln 11¥4., """'1"'11n le•dl. countv of recOl'decl in boolc HIS. ''"tot. .i wla Laguna Moulton Playhouse. h hold st d gr · Or•,,.•· 519"' 11 c111forn11 1h•t , but~ 0t•1<1•1 •-di. on Understanding during a w 0 s a ma ers e ee in 1r1n1f1r r. •beut to "' m~clo 10 ALAN 0111: s.i.m111r 1, 1110. Girl SCouts. Ly ric Opera psychology, is the founder of MEACHAM, Tr1~rftrH, Wl\o5I b\11Jnq5 TITLE INSUR ANCE ANO volunteer \vorkshop tomorrow Association, sad d I e b a c k Jobs for T-ns and w-the lltd¥111 r. '"'° T11>111 w.1• M•rl"' eei T•usT COMPANY '"' vu lll'f, C:11111ly (Ill L• A,...llll, Stile f 11 .,Id Tr11llH in the Creative Day Care College, Laguna Beach Civic Disneyland Service Award for C1t1fllrn11. 0 .... Eim... w. H11n11r B JI t School of A I d h ff h' Thi ''o''"' to M tr1Mi.trec1 Is Alllhorlzld s1-111r1 Center. Santa Ana. a e • r an ere or ts in t is category in 1ou1M ,, •1t °'••n L'Uvd .. Hllntl>11ton P11Dll1111t<1 o • .,... c ... 1 0.111 ,.f!gt, Design and the adopte d ward 1""• '""'· c1un1Y II' 0ti11te, si.11 o1 s...1em111r-4, 11, 11, 1'70 1u1.10 'T'he 9 a .m . to noon session is wo. c1u1o.1111. at Fairview State Hospital. A Hawaiian lunch will be S1ld 11•-rh' 1, 111eserlDtc1 In •-r•I LEGAL NOTICE geared for new and relurning The president will b e served by Mrs. Melba Hansen 11: All 1tock 111 tr1c111, II•'~'"• eci1111>m1n1 I h · h tnd food wUI o1 ·1~1I Dff r b1r bllllntu<l----,-~~-------- VO unteers w o w1s to assisted at the luncheon by the and committee members, the k,_n ••"THE '"l"E11c f aEEll 11...;;i·.1 01101N.t.NC1 NO, n.• become acquainted with the Mmes. Gordon r 0 r be s. M J E . Le •nd 10c1t111 11 •10 °'"" 111~e1 """ 01101N•NCE oF THI c1TY mes. oe v1nger, s H11ntt"''"" ll11ch. Cowntv of or...e: COUNCIL OP THI. CITY 0, COSTA aims and goals of the day care Edward Nell , Richard Racich, Re mmers. c. c. McCary. Wes ''''' II' c1u1orn11. MESA, cALtt<01tN1A, 1111ouc1,.,. TNll ' t . G"lt tt ff" d J T~1 blllk lr1n1lu will bl tonwrnm1ted $,.EED LIMIT OH ANAHllM AVINl./'I! cener. .ou1s 1 e c. o 1cers, an Kusman,T .W.Billips,Harry \ onM11t"'"''""1111 ... ofOe1ctotr,1t7t, t1<•0M w•s' '"~ 1T•11T Establis hed to care for directors . the Mmes. Douglas Sowden, Ralph Quackenbush , 11 1o:eo ""·""· " LAWNOALE ESCROW Not.TNWA•D To IAY sT•••T 1N K Lo · z· k COM,.ANY, U!' Soul~ SlrMt, L1n9 THE CITY 01' COSTA Ml!SA. children of Io w . i n c om e enaston . u1s 1tni • J. E sther Austin. Louisa Stoffel, , '''"'· Counl't " Los """''te,, s111e If Thi c11"t c"""n o1 tM c ity ,, C••• mothers Who a re Worklll. g or Agnes. Hinwood and R ichard Ralph Bell and R 0 n a Id ' Cilllern11. Men, C1tllornl1, Ootl Mrtbr ••a.tin ·~ So l•r •• kn1Wn to lllf' Tr1nfftio•H. 111 looltow1: · attending school or work Boswell. Birtcher. _ Du11n111 nlfnls •l'MI 1c1e1 .... ., """' tw SECTION 1. secu~n 3-11._1 .,, "'' l~=:~:=:::::ir.;;1g;~i;;;;;c:;,;c Tr1 "11'tror lot 1111 thrn VNP'S ltsl NII, Mllf11t1'111 CD!k ol I~ City "' C.t• training programs. the center ,,., SAME. Mn1 r. ""''b' •rnl<'lltld b'I' Ill• 11e11:11en fr ed t. I ro~am C•lld: """'"'' J1, 1•1•. tlllrrirom o1 "'' 1o11ow1tW 1e111tnu· 0 ers an uca Kina p r Al•n MNdll!TI "ANAHE IM AVENUE. "'"' SUPl'rlo~ for preschonl c hildren. RE-UPHOLSTER '"M"'" '"~ • "' """· ••• •MPH" •M l.AWNDALI IKllOW COM .. ANY IN ecldlllon tt1 .. t10 ol lhl trottcrwlM Mrs. Brown earned her BA ux 1111111 lfl'llf 11ertltnc:u: "ANAHEIM AVENUE .._. ~ llMll. CtllJ, ..... ' S!/ttll'llr A-II Wiii 't t I It from the University 0 f Comp,le t e Selet!tion ol I Krtw""" ml llrHI, •. .lS MPH," •t'ld "AMAH&'IM Washington and has done .. 11t111t11111 0<11111 c.. .. C•llY P;i.1. AVENUE, 1...., wm 1t111 ''"'' Fabrlt!I ia t!ludi11g: ,.,.,....,,., "· "1t ",..H nortt1w1td I• 1111 SI•••· • '.tJ M .. H.'' graduate Work at the UOfW, SECTION 2. Tiiis ()ralfllflCI 11111'1 Col b, U · ·1 d '"-L' d y I t LEGAL N011CE becOl'N llflcllve 1nd fn luN fora tlllrl't um la n1Ve rSI Y an -..n:: 1nens an e ve s (JOI 61Ys from tft4 llt1r 1M Nl!llf• University of Denver. \Ion• "'ilh n e"''• ~ol umi1 i!1l!i,. <.om.ir1 a nd MOTICI op PUILIC M•A•I•• '"''"°' •ncl ''lo!' '° ,.,. exolritloft •1 ' d flflten llSI dl'tt lrorn lhl -llot Anyone wishing information M•••• Cr•ft•mtn Alwaft l°c•t ureA, reiden ~njoy ad,ert1!11n,; ·~ I t'· NOTICE 11 HElll!IY GIVE N 11111 • 'hf•tvf Jh•ll be 1tvtin111ec1 onte 111 "'"' ' at IUa JJv loo'· fo<•·•rd 10 •'la a•-arant'!it I.ft thit tl>llbllc: hllrlne Wiii be htlll llY 1111 Clly OlfANG£ COASf CAtL y PtLDT, 1 about the center and its .. t'T'-c1111nc11 o1 1111 City ., c"" Mii• en ~ 1 C Os I.JI N-h h S•l1rnblr 21, 1t10. 11 -·~ •. ,of 1 ... nl!W1.o111er •• •t.,.rll t rcult flon, r''ng n pr r1·1 Paren! ZYK Kl .... ..-vlT ILYD. ·1··-··· •• h eJn1. t hiem p la n p ure Heil.•. O'P'" """ ...... .... prlnlfll Ind •lltlllsl'led In "" City ol sponso on 0 r -r-• m,, " 11 -lfllrwlter " lllt rNtler C,otl• M111. tot•llttr wlt!I "" "'-• Involvement Council. may call COSTA MESA Olllf H•,..,I J>in!J 1riP6-Gi,·«• h elpful in.form~•·o• Ofl m1v M hlud, In IM COi.ineii Cn•mDer at ol 111t• rnernbtf1 of Ille CJty c II h d )M•l1on. And ""'Cltr Hin. 11 fl<ilr Ori.,., C:o111 MM1. vo11.,. for 1nc1 1911n11 111e ,_wM Miss Carlene Blass, volunteer tSY·KOS·l:EYt (inant'in, 11ore ours an · c1nfet'n!•. "' !"' 1011ew1"' ""11-for ..... ssEc ANO ACOPTEO 1111, ttft ., v d·,r-tor at 0~ M« Phone "~2-1~"~ how m an v' ~ou non• are Tedetm.~ frem ra• cfl•111• 111 lflnl. If Slplembtr 1t11 • ".. • _..,,.,,;hi. V'9: ....... ··-ltllOlf• Pl.TITIOM •+~ 11tr... 1toeE11T M. WILSON dio u dT,. e omme r t:ial1! 1111 n1111on " 01v1c1 E. c r1n1, " M•Y«" a1111e l 1lbol Cov". N_, •••ell, for C11¥ Of COlll MN Jeh'lllMlln lo retont .,_,,., from ftt ATTEST· Ill c2. dtKrlllld •• ,..,..Ion pf LO! to. EILEEN .... flHINNE Y' P1lnilirw F1rm1, MIK11llllNIOllf M ..... CllY c1..-t el Ille HARBOR REFORM TEMPLE EVENING CLASSES Paophl find MWtpOJ*I rt, kteOl'dl of Crlt'lff COUlll't, In tht Clh' ef Ce1t1 Meil ""''•I tltltloft ti 4'6 Hl'"lllon Str .. t, STATI! OF CALIF0!1:~1A Co1l1 Mai. COUNTY OF OltANGE A,...,.. RELIGIOUS SCHOOL REGISnRATJON HARBOR REFORM TEMPLE OFFl.CE 3416 Vi• Lido, Su it• H, Nawport a..ch S1Jurd1y, S1pt. 12, 9:30 AM· 2:30 PM ' P.EGISTR.\T!ON EXTl!NDl!D THROUGH PRID.\ Y, Sl!PTl!MBl!R 13 (0-lkg;. s.,c. 8) * c--""fUl..d b •MY ~ ... uJ all Pu.It °"'" lll''VTUll ..... n.bk .. lit .nem-tnd •\IMlllQ· . ' * Publ\c wllld ~II~~ HI ~ -.di· Inv· lrCDndary "~ Md ..... ,14. * ~ ~nll ... Hr:-. * Stta. _. O.Cnibtr 19. 1m . CALL e..-., Collt:gr: Offiu (710 Ul.8311, l!n. llf •Chai>man G Collilge °'-· Qillflnf< ·-,, ...... ,-· .... ,,... ___ .,_ l•"'l'ltfl II llt 20 lO 30t 30 "IHI Mt.ilfyin& • without advertisinr Sorue o f the be3 t for iri ads • '" • y ou ia DAILY PILOT ltllONI PITITIOlf lt·1·7'. bll119 ltll CITY OF COSTA. Ml!'5A I M HltllOtt el W)ol'Mn •. Wlltl""'-4" I, EILEEN '· flHINN('I', Cll't Cltrk tlf DeSo11 TlfTtct. CCH'MI dtt Mtr, for tnt Clt"t II' C:Olll Miii •nd l>t-.illclo .-rmll111tt '' ret-,,_ny lrlll'll 112 Cttr• al tM Clh' Covncll ol tM Cll't o1 .. lt4'CP, lllttttlbtd •• 1 POl'lltll ti Lot Cot!• Mffl. llertb't ctrtl!Y 11111 tne 1bov• "· TrKI asi. 111 "" """" loc•llon el 1..t '°''"'"' OrdJ.nlflC4! "'°· JIO..a WI• 1111 lllrfllWMI COl'llll' ol Vl(ftrl• llrftl lntfllllucld l'f.d COMklertd HCllon D't llMI C."YOll Oftv., C1tt1 Mnti. HCllon 11 1 r"11l1r llltlfllM (Ill tht whr llt l:C*t PITITtQ# •• ,.. bllnt Ille Clh' c-n 111111 .. ""' 11111 .. , ot Hllrlon lf'C. V • .tnd V, Jt, lottorl, ._, AutllJI, tt7t, IN 11\trtttter l'UHll 11111 .. rltlctlM C>l'/¥t, Cllll Mlwi It. end N, tcloPftd ff 1 W1111t ti I r111tllr rr11tltnt M«1I", 451 PrlnctlClll Crl'tt, Call al t11d City COl.llKll lltlll Ofl 111t HI! di ' 11 Mii.ti IM N.. G. ffllll R. C. Al>boll, •s.t Sllltrnblt, lfl'O, 1W Ille fOl'llwlM nlll c111 "rlMUOll Drive, Clll• Mtwl frllt' ¥Gft: "'"''"ltn l'O l'llOllt '""'" ·-Ill AYES: C1111ncllrntl!: wn-. 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J 8 DAIL V PILOT Fr'dl1, S.pttmbtt 11~ 1970 Surfers: Zany Clan of .E-arly, Icy Water Dips 1 II)' RUDI NIEDZIELSKI °' ... Deb ""' si." Some people say aurfen are crazy, ind tnaybe lhey'r< ri&f!L WM elae would get up at s ft .m., put Oii a clammy welSull and hit the icy water while moat eight to !Ivers art still under the covers? la Huntington Beach, where the 12th annual U. S. Surfboard Championships will . play before a crowd of thousand$ Sept. 19 and 20, that sort of post-dawn. manl1 has become a regular feature near the municipal pler. With the national tiUc at stake, wave enthusiasts from as far away as Hawaii, Tbas and Florida are daily polishing up Players Rap Sudden-death; '.Ashe Beate11 · FOREST HILLS, N.Y. tAP) -"ll'I eerie out there ,'' said Arlhur Ashe. 0 There's not a sound. It's as iI nobody's breathing. All I could hear were the typewriters i• the marquee." Such is Ashe 's descript\c;in or the tension generated by the tie-break, the new sudden-death scoring concept of ten· nis whlch has become a raging con· troversy of the U.S. Open tennis cham· pfonshlps. -•:1 can 't comment much on it - I've ne\'er woJ11 one," added A s h e c!Uconsolat.Jy. "I don't like it-it's unfair," said John Newcombe, the Wimbledon champion from Australia. NeWoombe survived two tie-breaks for 5-1, 7-6, 5-7, 7-6, victory over Ashe that sent him Into the men's semifinala. Three Aussies and plucky Cliff Richey of ,San Angelo, Tex., remain lo fight jt out for the title. They play Saturday -Newcombe fac- ing 35-year~ld fellow couJ11tryman Ken Rosewall, whom he beat in the Wimbledon final in July, and Richey going against left.handed Tony Roche, another of Australla's impcl!!iing racket squad. Richey, standout or the recent Davis Cup Challenge Round in Cleveland, became the lone American hope when he out.bustled his Davis Cup coach, Dennis Ralston of Bakersfield, 7-6, 6-3, 6-4. Roche toyed with Brian Fairlie of New Zealand 6-3, 7-S, H, although be, loo, OltCe faced 5Udden death. Rosewall, displaying remarkable touch IDd finesse, destroyed towering Stan Sm1th of Pasadena, S.2, 6-1, &-2. • Newcombe, who beat Rosewan in five sets, was reminded that little Kenny had cotne back to beat ·him at Newport, Wales, later. "Yeah, and he can have it,'' said Newcombe. "He can have the one next week, too, the Pacific Southwest, starting sept. JD). This Is the one I want. $uml'l'ltrle1 of 1'1'111the1 Tllur1d•v lri the U.S. Ope11 Mrinla '*'-"'olalltll!p_1: W°"'1n'1 Sllltlotl QU1"9r·•lllf1l Mtrat"I Go!.lrt, AUllrtllt, dll11!9d M1ltr1 Gour .. v, Allltr1l!1, 6-t, 6-2 · Niner Rlcti.v, Stn Angtto, T••·• c111 .. 1..t lal..., M1,111t, AUll•t llf , 6-4..t~1 SI ...... o.:;,,....,m.11 'rOflY Roctw, AU51~11 .. , def .. !ICI lrlln F1lrl~, lttW ZHllNI, .. ,, 7•J, 7.,_ CUff Rldley, Stri Af!Mlo. Tu.. dtfHtld DtMIS R•~,Ol'I. e11c1r•11r111, 14, w, M. Ktn ll:OMWtlj: Alill,l_';llll, deftlllwd SI I rl 1~~":::!~. 2A.tilr111!·. dllHt.d Armvr Ashe ..,. \, 7-4 S-7. 14 In jury-riddled Halos at Big A Despite Injuries to two key players, the California Aagels hope to end a seven- game -losing streak against MUwaukee at Anaheim Stadium tonight. Short.stop Jim F r e go s i and first baseman Jim Spencer are still on lbe Angels' ailing list. Fregosi bruised his shoulder when be fell going after a popfly again.st Chicago \Vednesday. Spencer cracked a rib trying to break up a double play against Cleveland two weeks ago. f.tanager Lefty Phillips will probably use Sandy Alomar in place of Frego!ii tonight \l'hile Spencer's replacement for the leadoff game in the Milwaukee serles was uncertain. The Ange.ls &o into the three-game series trailing the front-running Min- nei!IOt.a T\l·ins in the American League West by 10 games. They are 11,J games ·back of the second place Oakland Athletics. The Angels \11il! go with Tom Bradley. 1-3, while Milwaukee !itarts with AJ Downing, 4-12. their style in the moraJna pea«iup fo1 before bleary-eyed girl frtends and those who weren't invited to participate. This year the competitioli for the covet!d Duke Kahanamoku Trophy promises to be even tougher than before, already evidenced by the fac t lhllt there wiU be only 210 conlestants instead of 300 for the Invitational meet. "We have turned away about SO entries,'' said Norm Worthy, director of the city's recreation and parks depart· men! which &ponsors the championships each year. "ll was the consensus or the aurflng associations in.volved to do that in order to keep the contest a little more exclusive and to nm ft off a UtUe more smoothly. But wt't6 bavlng I rew prvblems pacifying U-who got lurned away." Although Dana Point's Corky Carroll, lhe 22-year-old hotdogger who captured la st year's all-around surfer tltle will once agafn perform for the crowds and the teJevls.ion cameras, jt looki as though the best rn&JI ln surldom will be absent. That peraon is Roll Arneu, winner of the world championships In Australla and son of television gunslinger James Ar111ess. ;'We haven"t received hls entry and 1 don.'t know how it could be handled through the seeding committee since It's way past deadline," Worth lamented. It I• poulblo, bowevu lb1t the Y"""I Amm will aerve as commentator fOr a to-minute color TV doc:wnenlary to be productd by O..nnd • und<r the dlrtction of N•tl 0-011. Worthy uld tllat Croaa la now trying to sign Amou for the ahow. "'And that show la 1olng to be all HunUngtoo Beach surfing and It won't be co-reatured with destrucUon derby," smiled Worthy. "But maybe U the 1url la big enough, we'll hive a destrucUon derby anyway." Th~ comP<Ution will be broken up Into several categories lncludin1 t b e Kamaainls (over 35), junklr. men (11-17), yofutger), pier piddle, 2-maa dory race, mi.J:ed tandem, ~ Beach junior DESPITE HEAVY TRAFFIC, PITTSBURGH'S RICHIE HEBNER IS SAFE AT FIRST. Sports In Brief Bears Hit by Injury To Star Running Back BERKELEY -Football fans.at Satur. day night"s California-Oregon ga8"le in PorUand may have to wait a while to• see Cal's highly touted sophomore Isaac Curtis.· Coach Ra y \Villsey named his starting lineup for the season opener Thursday and Curtis, who suffered a minor knee in- jury last week, was not included, although he is expected to play. Senior Bob Darby and junior Tim Todd will be the starting running backs. CUrtis finished second in the 100..yard dash finals at lhe NCAA meet last spring, timed in 9.3 seconds. The 6-foot-l. 200- pounder is billed as the fastest athlete ever to play ruMing back. Westminster's Dave Penhall. a senior who started some last season, will be at quarterback. • NEW YORK -lt will be a nonlille fight scheduled for 15 rounds. but a!i far as Jerry Quarry is concerned It will be for the heavyweight championship of the world. Wby? Because Quarry's opponent on the night of Oct. 26 in AUanta will be Cassius Clay. "I feel I would be the champion if T won," Quarry said Thursday as he and Clay fonnally signed for the fight al a packed news conference at a midtown hotel Thursday. "Nobody ever took the. title awa y from him (Clay} in the ring," added the BellOower filht.er. • • NEW YORK -The National League champion 'Will host the first two games of the 1970 World Series Oct. 10 and 11, baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn announced. Plans for the Series and the league championship playolls we re. outlined by Kuhn who said following an ope n date for travel, the third, fourth and fifth World Seric!I games would be played Oct. 13, 14 and 15 in the city of the American League pennant winner. Should the sixth and seventh games be necessary, the teams will return to the National League city after another open dale. World Series ticket prices remain the same as last year. with box seats selling for $15, grand stand reserve seats for $10, pavillion seats at $8, standing room at $6, 11nd bleachers at $4. • DEL MAR -Jockey Bill Shoemaker register:ed a riding triple Thursday, to boost his record total to 6.039 and Danny Velasquez booted in a longshot. Duke's Little Gal, to win the $8,000 feature purse at Del ~far. • LOS ANGELES -Coach Tommy Prothro has named sophomore Bruce Barnes to handle the place-kicking and punUng duties in the Bruins Pacific·8 opener against Ortgon State at Corvallis Saturday. Prothro said Barnes lacks game tI· perlence but has good kicking range. He said Oregon State will be a tough opening test for the Bruins. "Dee Andros always fields a good root· ball team, but believe me, \l'e are happy after three weeks of practicing that the first game has arrived," Prothro added. • LOS ANGELES -Tennessee Slate, renowned for his track athletts but fast developing as a power in black co1\ege football, sends its best against wrll- established Alcorn A&i\t of ?.1ississippl tonight in 1i1emorlal Coliseum. 6-11 Cage Ace Changes Mind, PicksTerps COLLEGE PARK, Md. tAP) -Tom McMillen is safely registered and tucked away at the University of Maryland en· ding his odyssey of indecision. "I am happy 'to be here," the 6-foot·ll Mansfield, Pa., lligh School basketball star said Thursday night. But then he headed for bed. lo fight a cold and physical and emotional fatigue. He said he had gotten only a few hours sleep ln the past three days and nefded some rest badly. ?.1.c?.1illen was expected to head for the University of North Carolina lhis week to fulfill hi.s letter o( Intent to aUend that ochoo!. Ills sudden change of plans and his decision to register at f.1aryland was reported in the Elmira, N.Y., Gazette Thursday. "I am pleased, yet surprised at Tom's decision,'' said Lefty Driesell, Maryland's basketball coach, "I have not talked to Tom or seen him in over two months. "Needless to say, lam elated that Tom ls going to further his education and basketball career at the University of Maryland,'' Driesell said . McMillen, 18, cited "personal and family reasons" in the Gaiette for his decision to switch from UNC to f.1aryland. He said it was not reflection on North Carolin& coach Dean Smith or his pro-. gram. "As far as I am concerned , this matter is finally closed," he was quoted • "Obviously this was a decision by Tom Ind his family,'' said Driesel!. "I feel it is a tribute to the. University of Maryland academic and basketball programs that Tom has chosen Maryland." Sm ilh was informed of ?.1cMillen '1 change of plans in Germany where he is on a lecture Lrlp. Bad Boy McLain Slips Into Hiding DETROIT (AP) -p;tcher DeMy McLal.n of Detroit, lalely one of lhe big· gest headllne-get.ters In ba seball, has become suddenly, totally slle11t. "He's hiding out for a few day&," said hll wife, Sharyn, when reached at lhe couple's Lakeland, Fla .. home. Mc.Lain, the 26-year~ld Cy Young Award wlMer, fell gllmt after baseball commluloner Bowle Kuhn su~pended him for the third lime this 11 e a s o n • Kuhn Imposed the latett suspension for the remainder of lhe &ea.aOn with 1 ter,c;e p.ibllc. statement that seemed to rai6e more questiou than it answered. 1-tcLain reported to Kuhn 's New York office with his lawyer to meet with the commissioner and Tiger officials. After the 21h-hour conference , Kuhn emerged and told rtporters, "certain new allegatlon1 have been brought to my at· tention. including allegations regarding McLain.'s conduct with respect to the Detroit management and informaUon lhat on occasions McLain has carried • gun." Kuhn added that his ir;u!!pensNJn did not 1tem from McL.aln '11 involvement wl1h J;amblers ln 1967 th11t brought about the first :;uspcnslon from the bcglnnl11g of tho 5eason until July I or ti.1c.Laln's dousiftg or two sport.s writers with Jee \o'."aler Aug. 28 that led to suspension No. 1, a one· week banJshment. McLain was sUll on PfObation for his: first 1uspension and Kuhn said he was ttlnstating that suspension "pending further proceedings which by agreement Of coUmel, will not take place be.lore the end of the season." Kuhn didn't aay what l)'pe of gun he wa!I referring to and f.fcLain l'ilipped out a 11ldo door or the commissioner's office without commonL "There was no wggestion on the part of anyone that he threatened a yone with a gun -ereept that he was carryiag It,"' said Mcl.aln's lawyer, Bill Aikens. Carrying a gun "can be interpreted many ways. If 1 put a deer rifle and a shotgun Jn my car and take it up north to my summer place, I suppose you could $BY 1·m carrying a run." Aikens said. Michigan state police said f.fcLaln does not have a concealed weapons permit o" fll~ In Lan!ilng. J{owe.ver, 1-fcLain OIC· qulr!d 11 perm.Jt to purchase and keep 111 pistol in his home. In 1964.. men. and women's cb&mpionlhlp. SUrl ~ lhla yoar wlll be Ilona Lllucbulla of Lal Alamllol who bu be<n a:itued in the Womena• cDvlllon. Some oHb< P<J:IOll&Utln who·wlU be trickling Into town duriq the lltmenln& day1 for the early morninrworkouta when the surf IA beat lnclud< (lorry Loi><• or Hawaii who ' atunned spectators with bis darlng pier ll»ta lut year. .Jimmy Blears, allo of Hawaii and ton of television wreaUtr "Lord Blears,'' Mike Purpus of Hermosa Bacb and Randy Lewla ol Huntlnrton Beach. Otbu Or""' Cout -a•ll by city are the followiaC : San Clemente -John Howe, David Wert. Sheri Crumtr, Bill Welzel, Randy Sltlgh, Dan Tilton, John INvall and Corky C&rroll Fountain Valley -Steve Wunttr, Don Psylor and Gary Wurtl!'J'. Laguna Buch -JeU Jone1, Doui I Bunting. Fred Eck, Goorg• Carey and Kevin O'Sullivaw. Newport Beach -Mary Lou Drwruny and John VaaOmum. Huntington Beach -Nansi McKiMey, t ··ad McCaull, John Davis, Greg Tucker, l<andy Lewis, Dave Van Drulf and Jack Ellis. Costa Mesa -Ray Kunze. San Juan Capistrano -Hal Sachs and Mark Silzl<. 20-game Winners Perrys Bag . Spot In Sports History SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -When Gay· lord and Jim Perry were starring semi· pro basebaJl teams In Wlln)ington, N.C., it never dawned on them they would IOIJle day make baseball history. rut they did Thursday when Gaylord blanked the Houston Astros on four hi\$ in an 11-0 San Franclsoo Giants' romp . The victory boosted Gaylord 's record to 20-13 and, coupled with Jim's 22-11 mark with the Minnesota Twins, gave them the distinclio• of being the only brother team in major league history to wb1 20 games the same season. "When we were youngsters,'' Gaylord recalls, "We never thought about winning games in the majors -we were just hop- ing we'd have a chance to get here." Jim was .a senior, and Gaylord a wild- throwing freshman when they led the Wilmington High team to the atate cham· pionship. The two laaky r:lghthanders 11lteniated between the pitcher's moWld and third base. "I'm very proud of the fact J've been able to have two 20--win seasons," 1ays Gaylord, who was 21-8 in 1966. "But it's even more important to be. consistent and to be able to help your club. "I only woo 19 games last year, but I helped the club because J wa s out there every fourth day doing my best," he ad· ded. ''Today, I didn't have all my good ttuff. My shoulder was 1Wf -1 was fortunate." Gaylord, who will be 32 'J\lesday, allow- ed only two hits after the first iruling while recording his aeeond straight shutout a.id his 20th complete game in 35 starts. He has had three shutouts this season. Jin;i. now 33, and Gaylord, 31 Once pitched Williamston High School to the North Caroliaa State baseball cham- pionship. But on a local summer team they were the second and third string pitchers behind their father, James E. Perry Sr. "He was the ace of the staff," Gaylord said Thursday. He was a great coach, too, he added. James Perry still lives in Williamston. Both boys sigJ11ed professional baseball conLracts when lhey were 19. Jim broke Into lhe majors in 1956 with Cleveland and Gaylord joined the Giants in 1962. Jim has a Ufetim.e mark of 148-105 and Gaylor is 115-97. Dizzy and Daffy Dean came clole to winning 20 games apiece for the 1934 St. Low> Cardinals. Diuy won 30, ~ \9. Dodgers, SF Open Battle For 2nd Place LOS ANGELES (AP} -Cincinnati's brash Reds prance into San Diego tonight, needing only five victories in their remaining 16 games lo wrap up Ult crown in the National League West. The Los Angeles Dodgers, meanwhile, struggling to cling to second pl1ct:, engage tbe hoUest team in the Jeague over the weekend, the San FrlDcilco Giants. Pitching for the Dodgers in the terie! opener at San Francisco will be Don Sul- On TV Tonight Channel 11 at B ton, 14-11, against the Giants' Ju.an Marichal, 10-10. Cincinnati reduced its "magic number" lo five Thursday night wilh 1 13-4 blasting of Uls Angeles, leaving the Dodgers only 2112 games in front of the Giants which are shooting for their sixth itraight runner-up finish. Johnny Bench clouted his 44th home run aod Lee May his 31st, a grand slam- mer in the first inning, to spark the Reds 19-hit barrage against three Los Angeles pitchers. ·'-,· After"·ard Dodger manager 'Va 1 le r Alston shook his head and said, '"l't)V've ~ got all the guns." , I \ T OM MCMILLEN Alston's eye u·as intrigued hy the work of Cincinnati's l9-year-0ld Jefthander Don Gullett, who worked in 1 213 innings arler J im McG-lothlin left with a stiff arm in the seventh." "Gullett." Alston said. ''has the closest thing to Sandy Koufax's fast ball o( an yone l'\'e seen." Sparky Anderson. the Reds skipper, had some words of praise for Gullett. "He's ahead of Koufax right now," the manager _said. "Koufax ha s seen him , too. and he says he's got it all ." The romper by the Reds was their seventh victory in nine starts at Dodger Stadium and their 11th in 15 games 1gainst the Dodgers. "It really makes me feel good to have whipped the good clubs," Anderson said. "We've won eight or 12 with the f.1.ets and f!ight of 12 with the Pirates and 11 of 15 with the Dodgers. The other clubs? Well, let's just say il's 1ood lo beat the good ones." Cincinnati put the game away early, bouncing Joe Moeller for five runs In the first inning, four of them on May's grand .slam. It was his third slam of the season and second against the Dodgers. Cfl'tCIHHATI I.OS AN••1.•S •"•l'lrtl •llorll ,.I Toltn,cf 11111Wlllt.i~ JOOI ROH,rl JfJ l G1n11y,.)lt 1101 Cltllo,lt •?!IMcll,11 4111 M<"lf. 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I On M; Gu Ge J Arr tea giv sue Mo Pl) Ch' s Ja• Pei rac twc wil > the ma A pr< 0 En, Cai Le! anc B N B D c w w 0 A K w c RUSTLER RUNNING BACKS -Charlie Buckland (22). Dave Johnson (33) and Monte Downing, will handle the important tailback position for Golden West College th is season. Buckland was returned to the position this week after spending early drills with the defensive backfield. He is the all4Ume leading gr0m1d gainer at Golden West College. 200-mile Run Buckland, Rustlers Set At Riverside Next Month · To Scrimmage Hancock Parnelli Jones, owner of the (\lr'O J ohnny Lightning Specials and a form er Indianapolis 500 winner, will lead a hvo- car ractory Ford Mustang team in tl1e fifth annual Mission Bell 200 Trans-Am at .Riverside International Racewa y, Oct. 4. Maf'Jy of the driven who competed Sunday at Ontario Motor Speedway will be racing at Riverside in the 11th and final race of the 1970 Trans-American Sedan Series. Among those drivers who raced at Ontario and who have entered the Mission Bell are: Peter Revson, Dan Gurney of Costa Mesa, Mark Donohue, George F'ollmer and Swede Savage. Jones won three of the first four Trans. Am races held this year and his teammate, Follmer, won one other to give the Mustangs a large early lead over such other pony car entries as American Motors Javelins. Chevrolet Cama ros. Plymouth Barracuda s, Dodge Challengers and Pontiac Firebirds. Since then, however, Roger Penske's .Javelins driven by Mark Donohue and Peter Revson have won three or five races and finished second in the other two to pull within 11 points of Mustang wiih two races left in the series. A purse of $25,000 has been posted for the Mission Bell and the entire series may hinge on the fina l race at Riverside. A race in Kent, Wash. Sept. 20 will precede the Riverside finals. Other entries include those u r Englishman Vic Elford ( C a m a r o ) , Canadian John Cordts (Fi rebird ), Ed Leslie (Camaro), Milt A1inter (Cam aro) and Sam Posey (Challenger). By HO\\'ARD L. HANDY Of lhl D1il1 l'Htl Siii! Charlie Buckland, in one season at Golden West College, is the best all -lime running back in the school's history. He has been concentrating on 'defense In early drills with the Rustlers this season but ~me Saturday in Santa Maria when coach. Ray Shackleford sends the team against AJlan Hancock College in a controlled scrimmage, all of this will change. "The stress is now on offense wilh Cha rlie," Shackleford says, "although he is still working with the defense as a cornerback." Bllckland is backed by Monte Downing of Wesbninster High and Dave Johnson of Estancia giving the RqsUers an emphatic one-t"•c...three punc~ at the important tailback position. Steve Griffith will open at quarterback and will be backed by Rick Saeman (Marina ) and letterman Tony Bonwell who is still concentrating on defense al a sa fety position. Letterman Bob Cornuke suffered a slight groin muscle pull last week but will start at fullback, backed by Don Fischback. Injuries will hamper t.he squad al the flanker or wide receiver berths, Pe'rhaps the most serious is letterman Mark Whitfield. He suffered a knee injury in the opening scrimmage with Glendale. A doctor's report Wednesday indicated an operation will not be necessary. "The doctor doesn 'l think anything is lorn." Whitfield related to the DAILY PILOT. "lie says I can discard the crutches Monday and be read y lo play by the first or second game." Major League Standings American League East Division \Von Lost Pct. GB Baltimore 92 51 .643 New York 81 62 .566 11 Boston 75 68 .524 17 Detroit 74 69 .517 18 Cleveland 68 76 .472 24 ~ Washington 66 76 .465 251> \\'es t Division Minne sota 86 56 .606 Dakland 18 65 .545 31,~ Angels 76 86 .535 10 Kansas City 5~ 86 .394 30 Milwaukee 5.1 89 .3i3 l1 Chicago 51 92 .357 3.')I : Tnur1cl11'1 ••1v111 llo<ton u , Dttroit o 81l!lmore 7, N!'W Y0<k I Cltvtl•nd n. W1•ni1>r1on • Mlnneso11 6-1, 01kl•"" 1·1 ICll>lll Cll., 1·111. MllWIVkt~ o.: Only t•m~ Kheclul«I T"••'• 01m11 MllwtullH fDownlnt .-.1n 11 Ainttl1 llrldl1¥ 1•ll, nlgM 01-f1r>d ISl'tvf 10.1a1 11 1(1nw1 Cit¥ (l!lunktr 1·91, 1>lg M cn1c1tto fJot>1>1ctn ?·!) It Mln11C10!1 fl~o• 1·•1. nl•l'it Nrw Yor~ fPt~r.on ll·tl 1! C!t~tl1"'1 IP•ul l·J), """' 8ostlln fl'tlt•l l•·lO! •t 8t!!lmort (Ptlmt r It.ti, nl9til W11l'olnrton rGotolew1k1 o.O\ •I Delroll (Nitrkt u .11, n!•ht New York Pittsburgh Chicago St. Louis Philadelphia Montreal Cincinnati Dodgers Natlona1 League East Division Won Lost 76 671 76 67 75 68 68 76 66 78 61 81 Weft Division 93 53 17 65 San Francisco Atlanta Houston 75 68 71 74 68 75 San Diego 55 89 Tll\lrMlt Y'I. lt9'Ulll C~iC8VO f , Monl••ll J Pct. .53 1 .531 .524 .476 .458 .430 .637 .Sl~ .521 .190 .416 .381 llew Yort l, Pnll1oC1tl11hl1 f, '' ~"'"'""' PilllburOfl 1, SI. 1.0Uil • (lnclnnttl J), O.Cttrs • S.n Fr1nci1Co 11. liou•tffl I S1n Dlf11Q J, Afl1nlt ' , .. .,. .... _ GB ,. 16\\ 21% 231\ 37 Phlledtl11hla CStlorl f.1-0 11 MOl'tlrttl (M11r11>n 1$-10), nirM SI. Louis tGlb'IOfl *411 ,, "''"' Ywti; (5M Vtr !!·IOI, nlthl J1111n11 !N~11> u ,t l 11 Heu11on ,,..,lth 'l.o or Blll!no~•"' 11·1), nloht ClncJnn111 (Nolan 1•"• 11 Sin 0 1-!DM1ctn 11·1•), nioht Dedtt" !Sulton 1•11) 11 S1n Ft1nchtt tMlr1. ch•I 1(1.101, nlvl'il Onlv t•mu 1checlu"'d DEAN. LEWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303 Service, Parts, & Body Shop Now Open Until I p.m. Monday Nights I I Orange County's Largest ind ~1ost Modern Toyota and Volfo Dellet \\Thitfie\d will have another checkup Monday and at that time seriousness or the injury will be determined. If an operation is necessary, he will be lost for the season. Don Hellon. another I et le rm 1 n, suffered a pulled leg muscle last week and will likewise remain out of action at Santa Maria. He is dividing time with freshman Mike Shaughnessy (Estancia) at the wide receiver berth. Others who will be kept out of this week 's scrimmage include letterman Ray Strotman at fullba ck and freshmen Greg Newhou se (WestmiMter) and Dennis Kennedy (Marina). Newhouse is a defen sive back and Kennedy a defens.ive tackle. A welcome addition to the defensive unit this week will be Tom Allanson. A letterman, he has been .moved to the important middle linebacker position for the Rustlers this season and will team with Ruly Membrila and Tom Coleman 1t the three linebacker posts. The defensive secondary will be handled by four lettennen. To m Lawrence and John Carroll at the cornerback posts and Bonwell and Greg Henry at safety. The starting offensive line will include Billy Champion and Roger Kenney at tackle; Andy Vorono and Curt Sutliff at guard: and Dan Passalacqua at center. Pete Dugan (Huntington Beach) and Jeff Goelitz fCorona del Mar) divide lime aL tight end. Defensively the four line starters are still uncertain. Last week it was Randy l)oyd and Sam Wurtzbacher at ends with Doug Hillard and Dave Edwards at the inside tack.le posts. DEAN LEWIS AUGUST SPl!CIALS SPIC I.AL 1970 TOYOTA = $1694 All OM. M .... h1 St.cir M .. 11-fthl Pkl1P- '-lf C11lsar1 c .... VOLVO DEMO $2950 •1536 19'7 TOYOTA CORONA Sl'd9ft, ~IKllO, MHltr, j llllmlllc lt'tflt. !VIV lUl $1095 J'rid~y. St1Utmlw 11 , 1~70 DAILY '!LOT .J7 Contenders Win Cubs, Pittsburgh Await Crucial 2-game Series · ' There was no cJn.e in the wild Na· . •• \;; T w i c e failing on sacrifict bunt •I· tional League East ICl'lmble after all tempts, Banks drilled a pit.ch ~nto the th~et contendtr1 won Tbunday, but theN Jeftfield catwalk for his 12th homt.r of bis figurea to-be firework! this weekend. career. That broke 1 2·2 'tie and moved In Thursday's action the New York the Cubs into a S.2 lead. Met.s went 14 innings before nipping PhlladeJphla, S.2; Plttaburgh's Pirates.. behind Luke Walker's two-hitter ed1ed St. Lad!, J.O; anr Chicago held pace .with an W win over Montreal Thu.., the Mets and Pittsburgh remain In a 'first pl1ee tie with the CUbs one game back. The Cubs and Pirates i re idle today be(ore beglnni.ng a crucial two-game series in Chicago Saturday. The Meta could take a half-game lead if they defeat St.' Louis tonight in New Yort. The Mets al!o have games with the Cardinals Saturday and Sunday. The Mets,._ Cleon Jones ripped 1 triple off the right-center field wall in the 14th · inning, scoring Tommie Agee who had opened the inning with a sinale and scored the winnbig run. Ron Herbel. 1-5, with one iMing of scoreless relier, picked up his second vie· tory as a Met since being obtained from San Diego. DaMy Frisella had hurled f i v e scoreles! innings for the Mets -ninth through 13th -allowing one hit whi le Dick Selma held New York to one hit and no runs in four innings, leaving after the 12th, giving up one hit and striking out six. Ernie Banks' three·run homer, after two sacrifice bunt tries in the fourth, broke a W tie and led the Cubs to their victory. The »-year-old B an t 1 also singled across a fourth run in the seventh and received a standing ovatku't when be feft for a pinch-runner in that inning. Chicago's Milt Pappas, who requested the start after only two days' rest, got his 12th victory against seven defeats, leav· Ing for a pinehhitter in the sixth with tht Cubs ahead 7-3 ... Pappas yielded four hits, including Rusty Staub'a IOlo homer in the sixth, and gave up a pair of unearned rum irt tho fourtll when Buty Williams dropped Staub'• lwl><>ul fly which was followed by Bob Bailey's double and Ron Fairly's &ingle. Ron Santo drove in a pair of Cub runs on a sacrifice fly and one of three Ilic· cessivt hits including a pair of singles and a double. Banks' game-breakjng homer in the fourth came after Jim Hickman walked ind Santo singled to lead off tht iMin& against starter John O'Donoghu~. The Pirates' Wiiker, 12-6, &truck out nine and walked one in snapping the Dues out of a three.game losing string. Willie Siar1ell drilled a bases-empty homer over the right center field wall oft the Cards' Nelson Briles, M, in the se- <.'Ond inning. MONTll•l C"tC:•GO .,,.,.., .. ~ .. ni Go.t..-, II • I 0 I K•t~tl', II S I l I 01y. ci'• J I I I l tckl'l'I, 1b I l J IJ PhllijM, cf I 0 I • l .Wtll\tflU, If J l l 0 Sllub, ,, • 1 1 l HICll,,,.ft,' rt • I J l , 81l1ty, lit J 1 l I 11.0.~ll, fl( 0 I I I Ftlrtv. lb 1 o 1 1 C•rn.-n. rt o • • ' ll1ltm1n, c • • t 0 $1nlo, lb J t J :r St•tllt., Jll I • l o ll•Nt1, lb • 1 l • S"'1ltrL1nd, tb 2 o t o C.J1mn, d 1 I o o W111t, II • • • • l'tOltont, cl s 0 1 0 O'DoMlhlMI, • I • • • H,urod ley, L l • 1 • M.ltt«I, p I 0 I I P•lllPI'• O ? I I II M.Jon& ,... 1 0 O O A.Gt,.elt, jlll I 0 0 D Stronrnoy•r. , 1 I I 1 ,l1•r•t. t 1 e t • Mlollor1, pll I I 0 I R-t, ' t t I I McGlnn, ill 0 0 0 0 L•lilOY, pll I • I 0 To1111 l2 l • J Toll!• » ' 1' t Montrtll 006 :!ti OOll -l cn1c1to 70ll no l b:-• OP -Mont1r1I '· Chk •IO t. LOI ·-Mllnlrt•I '· Chtc1go 10. 211 -Sa"lt, JB -l11lty. Hit -llaftl11 02), Sttull i:IOJ. S -l..:kffi, HUl>dl•J. S, -Stnto. S•v• -Pll•rrf, W,. -~enka. T - 2:31. A -l ,i2f. IT. LOlllJ •11•11 ~ Q rlltllf l lDCk. If ~ I e 0 Ptlek, " f II 0 t J1v11r, 211 • 1 o o M,Alou, cl • o • • C.T1ylor. rf • • I 0 A.Oliver, rl J I I 0 Totrt, lb l I I 0 $1'r9t1!, II f I 2 1 C1ro1n1t, cl • I I t 11.ltober?lon. 111 l O o I llHucl'i•mP, lb l O I O .Stngulllen. o; J 0 0 0 Simmon" c J O I O Hebntr, lll 3 O 2 • M•1tvlll,u 1 0 10C1sh.lll 1 011 Rcl'l.Al!en. ~h I • • 0 W•lkl'I'. II 1 0 •• Crt1by, 11 0 I I I llrllts,ill '10 0 D•v111no, 1111'1 I I • O HUgtft<IOrf, ' I 0 O I Ch.T1ylor, .. I t I I TtlllJ SI I 2 I lol1!1 11 1 1 I St. 1.ovt1 000 D cm -I Plttlllllrtll 011 ltl 00. -2 . £ -W111i:1r, Sttroell, HH11tr. DP -SI. L...,<> l . LOI -St. L011!1 J. Pirl1bll,Ol'I I. 2a -A, Ollv1r · H• -5,,,,,11 nil. s -walker '· SF -II. ltotMort· l O!I. W, -Wl lkl'I'. T -1:41. A -1•,lH. P"IL&DILPHI& ~ Nl"W YO•ll •• r 11 "r l 0 0 0 • I 1 0 i I I I 6 e l I l 0 1 1 l ••• J I I I J 0 I I I I • 0 • I 1 I ' • 0 • 1 •• 0 l 1 1 • I I I I l 0 • 0 I 0 0 II l • 0 ' ' • 0 • "' J l2 2 111 ... rfl 4 I l • G15p1r. cl ill2AQH,tl 4 I 1 0 G•rrtll, .ltr l owt, " ar'9Q•, '' MDll•Y• lll O.Johnson, 1.11, II Hl•I•, er lf • I J O C.Jont'I, II s .. ,,,.. ,. R.Stont, rl MC(l l'¥tr, C DoYlt, 2b •un~lflll, P Hvtft, itl'I FtV"""' P MOflt1n1z. rl Ho.rntr, ' 6 I • 0 ShlmS~J. 1• o I O 0 (!tl'ICllMll, Ill I I O O Mlrlhlll, rl I I I I SWObfid.t, rf I I J I S.OS1•••l1, 2b o 1 • • G11n, e ' I I o Wtll, Pl' I I I I Oy1r, c 1 I 1 I H1rrell0ft, n 1 I o 0 Koatl'Mn, JI •• 0 • $1ngltt«l, !Iii Fi1.i!1, p s11nton, pn Herbel. t lo!1h j(I 1 I 2 l ot•!1 Ont tvt Wht!1 wlnnlnt run •terl'd. PnlltOelpl'll1 000 002 GOii 000 00 -7 New Ytrk 002 000 000 aoo 01 -> f. -Alff. M1rrtlion. OP -PlllllOell>hl• 7, LOI -,hllldtlplllt t , N-Yl rk l~. 21 -Mon•Y• G1rrt1t, aew1 2, McC11"¥et. la -•ts~I. c . J.., .... H• -••Ill• Ill. Sa -Htrrlll-. S -IC-m•n. HllP -1oy aunnlnr (G1rr111J. T -J:lL A -l•,3117 • •The superior, exclusive built-in pourer prevents splashing' and spilling. •The exclusive design and balance make it easier to handle and pour. 9 •The special price makes our better half even better. •Our Better Half. More smoothness, more full flavor, more true, old-style Kentucky Bourbon. IUJ1cue.Save 10% mort Twins· Sweep· A's; Magic Number Is 12 MINNEAPOL!S-l>'T. PAUL (AP) -Tht MJnnuota Twins, September spoctalla,. of the American League West, virtul1111 wrapped up their second straigh~ division title with three came swee.pe the pas\ week over the contenders. But manager BUI Rigney w1nts to falk of magic numbers, even after the T'trins ¥Wept 011tland g.1 , 7.2 Th~•Y night fot an 8\~ game lead over the A's. The California Ang~ls, three11mr losers to the Twins last weekend, are lt games off. Going .into September the 1\\1ns held a three-game lead. "l don't know what the magic numbct is," said Rigney. "I do•'t want. to know. Do•'t ask me. I'm only worried •bout winning the next one. I'm never COJ"G- fortable unUI it's all over." If Rigney doesn 't want to know what combination of Minnesota victories and Oakland losses wlll give blm his rtr st championship i11 14 years as a major league mana ger, the players were talking about it iJI the locku room. It 's 12. The stunned A'5 were contenders last year in the West, until the Twill! headed into September and won going away. saC:OND UM• OAKLANO MINN•SOT.I 111 r •1111 lllrllrtl C1mplntrl1 .... i ' l • ,,, .... c( ' I I • ltudl, rl • I 2 2 Ct"5trlas, 11 • I I 0 l'.Alov, er • I • 011¥1, rl • I I I T O.vl .. If • • • • ICUltlbrlW. lit :r I • er ei.nc!O. )lo " 1 2 e 1110mvs111. ~ 1 t • • Mlnc:l'itr, 111 1 o o o lttoHt, lb l 1 1 II R,Jad10~, cl 1 O O O A1Vt1, If J ' 1 2 !Nnctn, c • o o I Holt, ct I I I er D.Grfffl, l'b l I l 0 lll:enltk, .... l I • 0 Mtnd1y, pl'! I I 0 I Hiii, (I 0 0 0 II Odom,p ?1101tll!\!1,C 1 0 11 'lnget1, p 0 0 0 0 Nllll, ~ I I 0 1 T-c1, p11 I I t I Mltttr-ld,, C I I I 0 1.IMlblt d. p I 0 0 I Qulllcl, 2tt 4 I 2 t l.•chmlftft. JI O O O I K11t, ill • I 1 1 Htvll'f, p11 1 o ' • t .wm11-. " 1 • • • ltll11 )1 1-I I Toll!• n 1 • ' Otkll l\d IOl -ll0-1 Ml""'"tl 111 M •-1 McKay 's Hopes On Sophomores LOS ANGELES -"The ooe thlni that worries me eight now is our in~ eiperlence," coach John McKay said to- day as the Trojans prepared to leave fer Birmingham and their tealOn football opener against Alabama. McKay named flanker Bobby Chandlr 1nd defensive halfback Tyrone Hodsm co-captains !or the contest. McKay said 24 players on the Trojans 5+man traveling squad have yet to play varsity football. "I'm hoping o u r .sophomorei can come throlllb for us," he added. · ' ··4 ' " ' ;, .. I ' ' • • . . . .. • DAILV PILOT • Start Your Engines! by Deke Houlgote .... ., ,.-.. ....-.. "' 30 Vets Bolste1· Edison By ROGER CAJll.SON Of IM I Dicllf ~lltt I i.ff With the first out :s ide scrimmage oo tap Saturday, ONTAR10 -The U.S. Auto Club cha1npion~hip !rail "''ill be shortened next year, but 10 tht• delight nf drivers, car owners and fm\S it will bt pa ved wllh gold . A -proposal lhilt goes to tht' US AC board of dirtctors Sunday in lodlaruipolis ll'ill, ii adopted ; 1.his • IJJe thumping and hlltlng has l) Cut the nunlber of champ races from 20 to 12. 2) Raise the minimum purse to SS0.000 or SSOO per racing mi~. II currently Is $25.000 for JOO-mile races. 3) Create a triple cro"'" cha1npionship romputed on the rfJSUlts or the three 500-milrrs neX't year at Indianapolis. Pocon9, f's., and Ontario. 4) Spin orr the chi1n1p1oushi1i dlrl and road races and create l.\\'O new ra cing divisions for eilt·h ol those separate types of ~a,rs. The triple crown ol racir1g "'ill augment the natlonfll. dr1v1ng <·hampionship ttn1t datt's back to 1008. I! wi ll a~d. prestige t~ _a racing serf~~ !hilt ~'ill pay out rnore than $2 m1l11on to partlCJ· pants in only thrt.'l' e\'l'nls. Uosl f1rlrig11h1g Cl111ngp" The mosL inlriguing of lhe (•hanges envi sibned by USAC's exrculi\'e dirrc1or. Bill Smyth, ls the establishment or a road ral'ing dh·ision 1ha1 "'ould rompete dlrerlly with the Sports CIU' Club of America Continental grand prix championship. F'ir~I, lhe roud riicing divii;ion "'ou\d create a 11chool for USAC's young drivers, many of whom arrive al Indianapolis lo cake lheir rookie tests wilh little experience In rear engine cars. Thr Johnny Parsonses and ~1erle Uellenbausens of lht t lub, talented young midget and !iprint car pilots, could feel their way along in road ci/cuit cars before lhey ha\~ lo nut up again1t A. J. t'oyl, IUario Andrttli and the Unsers ia an important ratt. Second, it wuuld provide a training ground for mechanics. t•ar builders and other support personnel "'ho have been forced to educ1ue lhemselvcs nbout rear engine ca r!i up to nuw. · S1n~rth pointed out that it took quite a bit of time even for ·.Ii.. J. Watson , the master car builder. to learn his way around (his kind of machinery. · Third, ii would provide SCCA rormula car drivers like Ron -<.:ra ble. John Cannon and George Wintersteen an opportunity to -:C:Srive additional 1at.<e!i. Smyth didn 't say, but It probably will ht ito'i11ible to inte rchan g:r SCCA Continental series cars with USAC foad r:.tcing machines. ,\·e11· l.Jet1se '''' Life • fourth, the re are a lot of non-compelitive Indianapolis.type. ):ars around that are gooQ for road racing. A series like this .would give the m a new lease on life. • Fifth, 305 cu, in. pushrod engines tentatively proposed for jhe series arc used in sprlnt cars. Sprint owners would there- iorc add road racing cars to their stables with very little ad· ~ilional expense. -Sixth. lop USAC drivers like Andretti and F'oyt 'might want ~o run an occasional road raCi! on weekends when they have ~othing elSt' to do. ~ The road racing circuil "·ould begin hie with eight or nine l'aces. Sn1yt h said. Already track owners arc !:!landing in line Jor dates. as nine road courses hart lo be turned down for .l=hampioohip rircuit dates this year. The new dirt lrack circuit would start with five races al- )"eady on the champ trail, !'plus one or two more perhaps," Smyth said. Purses for the dirt races would probably average $40,000 ~ race. while the average road circuit purse would be in the . pejghborhood or $25,IXX>, A1w1her G&nl Set by .S111ylh Sm~1h, In offirt as the lop staff man al USAC-il is nominal-- ..: !y run by the bnard of diretlors-has set another goal for his • ~lub. • "I rea lly have a ~eling 1hat racing is at 11 point that under •iood n1anage1nent it could find il s pl act in lhe sun , a place it 'ilever had before," be said. :-"Fans have been a rather purochial group in the past. I • lf'el that road racing has had as much to do \\'itb bringing in 1 :broader segment of the public as any ntht".r fac tor. It's about ;lime ""t slop preaching in th<" n1onas1ery and start goi ng out lo -the high\\·1:1ys and by" ays. ·• In addition lo th r ne11• rat inJ;: date alignn1ent that Smyth ba1 ~·orked out, he is proud of the pro~ress made hy USAC in safely. ·•The biggest hn1ard \\t have is fin• in the race car,'' Smyth .. ?aid. "\l'e are "·orkin~ "'ilh a major chemical l:'ompany. which :•ti; developing an addilive for fut:I that will make it absolutely noo..c.·ombu~tible "'hen exposed lfl lhe al111osp here. "It wi ll \\'Ork fo.r gasoline. rul'inR fuel, paint. anything.'' lli111I 1tlt1i11ftti11••tl '''' T11rbi11P LSAC i!ii accused or bei ng reat·11onary by its crit ic~. par- :licularly when ii conies to lht• lurbu10 cn1:1nc . Smyth maintains ·an open mind on th e turbine. "That "'holP .suhjcet can1c up "'hll<' I was of! rhe board,"' '.!iiaid Sm~·t h. \\·ho "'B~ an exreutive ol the New Orleans Saints . during the turbine controversy. "I haven't any prejudice one way or another. In t'act, I see ·Andy Granate!li (STP racing learn director . who almost won at .tndianapolis tv:ice with turbine carsl all thE ti1ne, and since I ·have been 1n thi s job. he hasn't brought up the subject once." • At the board meeting. tht! turbine \\•ill bt' a di scussion sub- :Jec\ Car O\\ ncr .Jack 1\d:ims. who o\\·ns !he last turbine in the :Sport. has asked for ;in 1ncreaSt.' in cngill<! size to make ii com- ·petil1Vt' again Me \\'as turned down by the rule!ii co mm1lll.'t', but :11 only make;\ reco1nn1endalJOns. The board makes th e !inal :<1ecisions. stepped up 1t Edison High School where c:oach Bill Vail is poltlng his Chargers through their drills. Edison meets host Tustin Saturday morning in scrimmage "'arfare, t h e n continues preparation for its .J9'iU football opener al SI. John Bosco Sept. 18. Vail has 30 returning lettermen and eight other 1969 squad members to work with. He has returning starter.i at every pcisltion except offensive center and one defensive end. One transfer is in camp, Larry Swift, a S.9, ISG.pound junior guard or t a c k I e candidate by way of Mater Dei and Saddleback High School. He sat out last year as a sophomore. Across the line Vail has split end John Fisher (M , 19$ sr.), left tackle Dale Norton (S.- lt, 220 sr.), left guard Jeff Carter 1>9, 165 jr.), right guard ~1ark DeHuff {S..9. 185 sr.). right tackle Cr aig Mortensen (5-11, 217 sr.) and tight end Gary Balch (&.2, 190 jr.). STARTING CENTER Penciled in at center is Doug CaJdwell, a &.4. 217· pounder who didn't play last vear because of an auto accident be fore the season. Pushing this starting front seven are Randy Mills (S.-11, 100 jr.). Bob Casum (S.-9, 18:> sr.). Jeff Noble (S.11, 185 soph. ), Mike Roberts (S.-10, 170 jr.). Brian Bayless (5-10, 17S jr. I, Bob Graves (s.4, 193 jr. ), and Richard Thompson (g..2, 180 jr.). DeHuff was a second learn All -Irvine League selection last year at his guard spot and of course, the Chargers will be t'Ounling on the offensive sla nts of Jim Moxley from his tailback pc>St ror most ot their yardage. Moxley returns a I l t r making fir.9t·leam honors in Irvine circles and • second learn berth on the all-county tea m along with first.team laurels on · the All-Orange Coast area team. TOP CANDIDATES 1be lSS.pound l\1 o I I e y operates from the tail end o( the Chargers' I formation that includes a wingback and Vall is hopeful lhat either Steve Timmerman (6-6., 200 jr.) or Mike Balch (S.10, 190 sr.) can fill the bill at fullback, thus enabling Vail to use returning fullback Kenny Funke (S.10, 185 sr.) and Rocky Whan IS.I I, 185 jr.), the backup tailback, almost exclusively at lincbacking. Vail feels he has 1 n excellent s e c ond · team quarterback in junior Mark Hannon. a s.4, 21)0..pounder who's equally proficient at baskelball. The "'ingback slot I s currently manntd by Terry McNly (S.10, 160 Jr.). Backing him up are Lyle Raymond and Terry Kipper. The QB spot ts manned by the improved .Jerry Hinojosa . The scene at Edison appears to have few football problems these days -in contra.st to the shaky beginning last year when adversity seemed to be the rule of the day. OPTl~llS~I FADES iiowever. Vail's optimism fades somewhat \\'hen he. considers his team's chances for a league title. "Yes. we·re optimistic lo a degree around here. b u t everybody else is going to be good, I 'd s a y the l'h:lmpionship is up r 0 r grabs." Another \•eteran with all- leag ue and area credentials is Carter (second learn All· Irvine League and second team offense on the All- OrBnge Coast area team). Also Lyle Ra ymond was a l!econd learn defensive choice on the All-Orange Coast area eleven. INSPECTED USED TIRES Big Sel ection Most Sizes $ Big savings on slightly used new car takeoffs, too! Costa Mesa Firestone Store -475 E. 17th SL -646-2444 HOURS: Mon.,. Fri., I •.m. to 7 p.m. -S•t., t •.m. to 5 p.m. Big 'rest Trojans Get Pirates, Whittier Dual Duty Tangle Saturday In .Football ---------~-,,.-rw"-.. ,..·~·~r.j!!_ty .. the Mier of Just how good Is the 1970 edlllon of 0rqe C o 11 I College football! That 91"'111ion could be answei.11 Saturday morning (10) •whee OlS Pirates scrimmage ·a tough Whittler College team at Le Bard Stadium. Coach Dick Tuckt:r's club looked good, both oftmslvely and defensively against Mira CA>sta College last week in 1 scrimmage, out.scotin&: the invaders, 4-1. But tht Pirates w I 11 undoubtedly get a m u c h bigger test saturday, OOt wttk prior to the 1eason open.er against Golden West. Tucker, along with line coach Jack Fair l1ld backfield coach Dale Wonacott. are all \VhitUer alums-thus it will be a homecoming of sorts. "Whittier is supposed to have a good ball club this year. I understand they have two good passers and two good running backs. "It should bf: a real ding· dong scrimmage. We don't expect .... to blow them out, but if we can stay with them. we'll be alright," says Tuck tr. The OCC coach 1!1 1till undecided about a starting quarterback for Saturday's encounter. It will be either Bill Shedd or Gary Valbuena. ''Shedd is ahead as a ball· handler while Valbuena his the edge as a passer," 1ays Tucker, "although Shedd's not a bad passer and Valbuena's not a bad ball handltr." Tuclcer allO op... that ht ts ul\decided lboUt a ltl.rtin1 deltnsive backfield. "We've never had as many good defensive backs u we have now.'' •A !Dial ol e;pt aie lltll In line le< the foor openliig •pol>. Tucker will problbly open with lettermen Bill Qirry and Jessi Hemandtz at two of lbe spots Satunlay with Cri ig Zaltosky (Huntington Beach) and either Paul Renfrow (letterman) or Bob Blanchard at the other spot. Blanchard is from Colorado Springs, Colo. Freshmen Steve Mitchell •nd Doi> Preleylro. both from Fountain Valley, and Mike M<Cord (Huntington) also ""' alaletf ID see plenty of duty. Other defensive s t a r t e r s lnclude Harry Carmack, Dave Gleason and Kurt Clemens in ~ interior line and Lee Walters and Bitll>urkin at lhe defensive end s po t s , Dan Moats will bf: at o n e linebacker spot with Tucker undecided 1bout the other linebacker. · on offense, Greg McCants will be at center, with Harvey Surprenant and Dick Durante at the guards, Dennis Walters and Karl Pedersen at the tackles Ind Paul Hart at tight end. Doug Young will open at split end with G~ry Cummings at flanli:er and Mike Haynes and cOe Meyer u tht running bacb. · the day for Unlvonlly Hllh 1ridders as they prepare for their first.ever combat Wilh oulaidt forces. The Trojans will travel to Huntinpia Beach Hi I h Sllurday monU!lf ID mett tbe OUtt junior varsity in a acrimmage, then wtll tet their lights on the 1118 tirlcfoptntr with Boys Republie t he following Friday night al Mission Viejo High. Cooacb Jmy Redman reports that nearly evtry slarting offensive player will be required to go both ways. His oquad nwnben 29. The spUk of lht club fiiures ID be at qu-k and fullback with Tom Walker (5- 7, HS jr.) handling the QB role, Dave Ong haa be en impressive from his fullback post and packs 190 pounds on a siz.foot frame . He's alao a junior on these n lo r 0 le s • eleven. The three top candidates for tt1' two halfback spots are F.d Cal( (s.t, t65 jr.,), G<orge Harney (S.9, 15.5 jr.) and Ed Riehl 5-3. 150 jr.). Dave De Lapp (6-0, 160 jr.l. and Ross Underhill (l-0, 165 soph.) are contending for tight end duty while Randy Rogers (5--11. 175 jr.) is operatlna: at ltft tackle. Los Alamitos Left guard is Up for srabs between John Schaefer (5-8. 155 soph.) and a S.-9, 170-pound freshman, Ted Crego. Don De Rado, at 200 pound.$. r~esent! the blggest ,ndder on the squad and the &.I junior appears to have I.he ~ter job nail~ down. Racing Entries Bob Gill, a converted IECOftO •Ac~ v•r~~. I ve1r ellh 111111 uo, Aao....MK ... PUfM l lHO. Hy lttoUlll (L~lll"') . 121 l.Htt. 011111 Ultrdll\01. m TrlDI• OKk•r !Mlle 11) 117 •ov•I Wiii ((•"lsJ lU Si<ttll Slrl"fl'I l'°er11•t 1111 Sllrt.11 T-(t41rt) 11 Elelll TWWl'1' CWltWll Ill Nld l Oil Mw (Dr"'erl 1111 Ti:oci lloc:kel (W1h.ot1) 111 T•u Note (ltl>ks) 111 112 halfback, is Uie 1 e ad i n g 11t candidate at ri~t .guard. Ht's "' 1'? a 5-9, ISO.pound junior. "' 1n The other tackle posi tion is '" 112 held by 6--2, ISO·p oun d sophomort Ed Bailey while three players are vying for the split end rolt. They are BiU Riddlt (&-l. 165 jr. ), Bob Kop( (>-7. HO jr.) and Bob Patterson (54, 140 jr.). "r.':Jw\'11Lflc.,~~ ~:.d; ·· 1 vN r Joel Champlin fltures in the ,1m. A1iow111en . Pura. IJJOO. ,,, Troi·ans' nmni"• attack and LadY 8l111lrli (Adl lfl ... lll:ecktl s11ur. 1we1fs1 1,•,•, will ue action at dffensive our 0ec1~1on l1i1rf1 R111um ''"'' ~1 I"•") ,",'• comtrback. He's a junior G9 Llfrlb !WllMllll Lrne P•51• tLloti•"'' ,",'• transfer from Desert High KIW~ll W Tap !Per111r\ lludV AM Gold IM•rd!nel 11• "'here he-was 1 starter 1ast Llr l•b~ !Dreve<I 116 year . He 's s.11 , 165. '1' One other player may work n: into the defensive starting ll: pos ition. He's Don Tague, a S.. Hl 8, ISO.pound junior transfer ll~ from Fountaift Valley, who'll 111 ste action at offensive guard MINTN RACI!, lSO v1rds , ve•• •Id' and llnebacking. Ind.""· Al-•Mt S. Pur .. 112IOO. J•a111r llock•' (Cro:;llYJ 111 The secondary figurts to =~:1l~~,(~~~r"1 n; have Walker and Champlin at l'tlllblr 1w11111 111 tht corners, Call and Riddle 1t Go Llk• Jtt tt41rdlnal 11c O•rwlV ••• 0111 tMtt-sud•I 111 safety and Ong. Giii and OfliOfTl'lf .. CLl1fl1m) 111 I b k" sweet ~111sur1 1or1ferl 1u Tague at . ine ac 1ng. Mv K1n1ce Cl'••.,.•l 11 • Defensive ends include De K1n11•Jet CAcl1lr) 111 Lapp "and Harney and the· Racing Results doo;\"TI linemen are Rogers, De Rado, Schaefer, Crego and Bailey. LOS ALAMITOS ltlSULTI Tltul"Mlt1'1 s .. t. It. ltH CINI el\4 ,Ill .. lltST ltACll, 100 ftrds. M1 ldtn 1 ~·r ot!d1. Clt lml11t. "ur1r 11'00. Dldl;ey BtV 81r (Wt ll!I 11.IO ~.Ill 7.to Trlsll'• t1r1ed (Acl1l•I 1.00 '·'o ~ti M1rl1 (Lloll1ml 1.'-0 Tlmt; .2M/lt. AliO rtn -Tiii~ Pit , "IHI Wl11, t lw ~!19011, Just A St>Ur. Gr1nl1 Hl11. lll:tt•tl"s, W~sow, $cr1tched-1'1r Nell, Wt• Wot. \l tln lll:Mtr~, Panum Shi. SICONO ltACI'. Hit Yl rdl. 3 v~•· ol41 l'ICI u•. Cl•imin•. l'~rtt 'llOO. $oo;lftv MtC IS"'ilhl tl.10 6.60 1.IO Mr. Mlnit (Slr•U!.sl t.40 I.Oii OK1 lll:ettl !Pernerl !.IO Time: .Tt-4110. AllO rtn -Mr. Jlrlr 11•, Stvt~ Srr1w1, Deck1d0n, Pamdon I••· l otltll1 l ll'O<I• l1rrftl TO!I, OO·ll clv L1n!1nt. Scr1IChtd -ll:ov•I ltle!, Short lltck· tt. Tr.s Ne'ft, llrllt lied A,,ew. OO·Fl11l1htd l rcl 11"1<1 dltOUilll!t!d. tt Nt•Mtl.Y DOUILll:, t · Dl<klt ltJ l1r a 1 • SKlerY MK, ''" 191.tf. Mr. Cu1ld (l•f'lkSl L1'11' Gri nd !Lll'll•ml CIW••e• lff ("•••I Th'!lt: ,C7·1/10 . '3.60 11.13 7.68 •••••• "'' Also rln -Cr1sh S1r1, Fi nn Wll· low. "Kine Sl<lrm, a u11nv'1 W1rrior • Toltdo's P11teo. 5crllthtd -P1r1r1r•s lmttt, Ctlth 0.C:lr, lllcllum Qu.,.... Glr!lt'I 11:.e<kel. l!IGMTM ltllCI!. 350 r•rdl. 3 ¥11• GIG!. ,l.!IOWlllC~. l'Ufll 111«1. OKlr P1wolf (l1nksl 1.20 3 . ..0 J.'IO lltM! Chtrllt !Adllrl '·'° 1.68 Li11lt COfl!Hlll (Wllll) 7.IO 11 ... 1: .1 .. 1110. A15e r1n.-Kcko Moen, Owtn l"or A 01~. L1u le't Go Min, HNl~'I lllK!ltl. llltf VlfW, JttUlt't Ge Ge. Bucs Begin Polo Play An OCC alumni Jineup featuring Bob Nealy, Bill Leach. Mike Wilson, Doug Redwine and Mike O'Gara will challenge the Pirates' 1970 "'ater polo team in the season opener t.onigbt at 7. No i.cr1lth111. OCC coach Jack Fullerton MINTM 111:o1cl' . .eoo v••ds. 7 v••• tkls. will go with the starting lineup c111,..1~1. Pu•H '"°°'· of sophomores Chris Gi:on, A-ll•llDU:.ti IW•tlonl f.60 3.60 7.1!1 J h Bl J hn g Mr. s11111y fAd1rr1 1.to 7.1t o n auer. o , s1 ... , The vei 1~1 .. 1 >.• Randy King, Bill De Huff, and Time: .~.5110. i!h Bob Sch f hm Ah o r1n-011w •i.v. Old H-rttd. e er aer or rts an or. Out, 'ocu' ,.,Ille,, l rcker's Tum Warnecke of Newport CllGICt, Oii Dtdd~, (OamlC, sc11ktltd -Tl"llf "'''-· 1.1t111tt11t Harbor. t ld. Freshman Bill Rice will be TMIRO ltACll:. «10 w1rf1. Mtldtn ' w11r l)ld1. ~u•s• SltoO. lted '" J~ !Htrtl JJ l'lllACTA. f -A..,_M a l •Mt, -'° , 111 1 11J ..,,,, ,.;, ur.-. the goalie. . s:.o ,:,01 --~----,-,..-,======= Moort Ch1nt '(Pitel Jllunder I t• (Wtllsl ••• Tim1; .204110. AIM ''" -II.Mel• Wlir, Di ve• JI M, our Cevtt Glrl, Nlthl l id. NO 1CrelCl'Hll. ~OUltTM ll:ACI'. 1111 w1rd1. J VHr 11ld1 1nd v•. Clt!m!111. "urs1 11COCI. Nt)ll MINI IW!!!IJI l.IO !.OD 1.70 ll.111 MCCO'I' !Htrll t.IO 5.10 ~MO ltllt (Adair> I.to Tll"l'lt i ,17.3110. it.110 r1n -111:1111.111, ,.,,11cl<11tel'. Molllt F~I LfdV, ltrrM'I l ltcult, Weil COlll. scrtkhtd -Tll\1 Fol!w, J1v ll:olth, '"""' •• , lN. Miu Wt mNm. Jl\il'TM ll:ACf, IOCI •t •t .. ) l'llf Ill s 11111 ut. Cl1lmh.,.. ,.,,,, ... IMIOll. Olll\ t veblt (Adair\ 10.# I.OD J.IO l'tlll:O ttr '""'' !8tnk1l SAi 1.00 H1'1 A lti!'OUl!~I ll lit111m) J.40 llml! ,204}10. Al.-rll'I -MU111n Dtlroll, l it St¥, ll'l1b()tr. No .cr1tthl1. IUlTM ll:ACI . d w1rft. 2 .,,., t lds. Ct1lrnlne. ~"'" '*'°· Kl•IY'I Mtoft CCretb¥1 It., W•r Cllk (P..-Mrl Otl Tff •ot•I IMtlllm.l ""''" .t.wno, AIM ,.., -5"1tdblrf, ll:O(l{tt h r I W M.t1ldl'lf6, GUtl'l'I 111:"\lftl, W1t<ll 111:oe1111. s."""' 11d. 11nfl1'1 0.11. ktt lthM -Lint• Sllll. U I.II.ACTA. t ·Kl,.,.'I MMll a I • 11¥ W1r Cll\C, ttlt Uf ••• s•vl .. TM RACa. ., ..... ,,,. , tffr t ld1 •llf -.. (!11"'1111, l'ur .. l»)t. • --YOU AN TRUST YOUR TRANSMISSION TO ANY OF A~'S 550 CENTEl_IS. WO.ll..O'S lM:IES7 rlf.AN$MISSIOll urGWA71 ~ w. U.Ctllfl •• ·-~ .... ....... AM!lti~ '"' ........ ... ~ llll<fl-4N.11tl ""' """-" ~.,.. ll:f, Ctit1 M.........W-1• Otwllty-(1111 m ..... ll• "......,, ....... .... ._,_ ...... _ 11111...,__.,,...,. •• ,..,, ... ,. ··-IU S"'111! SllCllll , .. , .,.._.. o""' 11'1><!, '. . . Same Old Stoey . Lack of Depth Plagues Eagles By PRD. l\OSS ., .... ltr ..... ''-" Depth-a problem which plaped the E>tancla Ea1Ies loolball oquad In I-Id make or brook coach Phil Brown"• Earle pidde11 In 1179. Eotaneia pooled a »I mark In ••. Tiie CON Men achoof only bad 34 proopeda a~ the tlarl ol lasl ...... and jml 21 survivors re.m1lned 1t the conclusion of the eampaign. "Since depth Is a problem again ( 44 players on the varsity) I'm not too concerned with trying to play two-platoon football ," Brown usert.s. "We'll probably have at ltast seven frontline pl1yers 1oing both way:s on a re,War basis." The Eagle! will be. relyin c on the smalle.r, quicker brand of perfomiers for bread and butter with no one on t.ht pment roster tippln1 the scales at over 200 pounds. Most of th°e bigger people 11 Estancia will bt toiling in tht middle of the offe.ruive line. Cal s-.. (195), Larry Gauchos Scrimmage Mt. SAC ly CRAIG SHEFF et ... 011h' Plllt llltt . .\. week ago tod a y Saddleback College's football coach Geora:e H a r t m a n commented that h e w 1 s scared to death over the prospect or meet.inc a much bigger !ICbool (Santa Ana ). But whe n the scrimmage we over, Hartman came away ••ilh 1 smile on his fact. He was smili'i1g because the Saddleback deftnse had held Santa Ana scoreless, and although the Gauch<l1 were also unable to score, llartman pointed out lh1t the defen se is usually ahead oC the offense 1t this time of tbt aeason. Thus, the Gauchos have bun wortina hard on offense this wt1ek in preparation for Saturday ni:ht's (7) scrimmage at Ml. San Antonio College. Saddleback has the talent offensively, but couldn't put it together in a smtained drive against Santa Ana. Quarterbacks Chris Hector Moulton (Ito), Crlic Dennis (196), LoolH Florts (115), Sttve Snyder (17~1 and ~ Brant (175) -a~ all tnterlOI' line letter-wiMers retumin- for another crack at the Irvine League tllle. Regular tight end Le-• Friederado<f will be holdlnC down a nant on the Eagle offensive and defensive front walls. Brown ls loaded " I t h talented wide receivtr.i .in seniors Bob Kaiser and Bill Thomas, juniors Lee Joyce, Kevin Brown and ~f a t t Wukawitt and aophomort Joa Barnett.. Santa 1'-ionica transfer John Dixon, at 5-10 and 195, will be joining returnees CW1 Thomas (quarterback) Jim Schultz (tailback) and Bill Wagner (fullback) in the Eagles· backfield. Thomas should get 1 1tiH challenge from g..1 sophomore Hank Moore while Bo b Conklyn, a mKidle guard in '69, will be pushing Wagner and ~fark Teriin w i 11 complement Schultz. Howard Bennett, a ~11, 19n- pound e.ichange student from South Africa , is a candidate that could also figure in tilt Eagle kicking game when ht get.1 more acclimated to American football. BeMett la an experienced rugby player. Defensively the Eagles stack up with Friesdesdorf, Joyce, Dennis, Shores, C o n t I y n • Brant. Bryan Sle,vard (170) and Jim McFarland (175) up front. Jt's f\fcFarland'1 first fling on the gridi ron. Dixoo, Wagner, Terr In . Snyder and his y ounge r b rother . Dennis, are E st ancia's corps of linebackers with Kaiser, CUrt Thomas and Wukawitz the standouts in the secondary. Brown's .coaching staff lhis year includes v a r s i t y assistants Gary Carr (line), Roger Clark (defen siv e backs). Dave Knott (line ), Paul Pedigo (lint backers and secondary), Art Perr Y (flankers and secondary) and Jim Yakubousky ( Ii n e a.ssistaiit) along with lightweight mentors Ke n Keifer, Dave Carlisle, John McGee and Ken Millard. Brown figures, "we should be. improved if we can stay htalthy through our pr~ season games (aga inst Twtin and Buena Park). "It looks like every team in. our le.ague will be 1 factor this season", he concludes. and Bob Bosanko looked good lr==========, M tht Santa Ana scrimmage. Hector, a .!Ophomore , completed only four of 18 passes, but a nu mber or other aerials "'ere dropped. Bosanko. a freshman who attended Warren High la st year, hit on eight of 21 passes for 88 yards and looked better as.the .scr:-immage.got older.. Toby Whipple, one or the top ground.gainers in j u n i o r college football last season, is 11 prove'l1 product. A n d although he only picke d up 31 yards in 17 carries last wtek, a tough Santa Ana dtfensive line might have had something I to do with that. • CONTACT it ~ _ .... --·"'·. Kff.lS WEmS WITHOUT lid!SONING SOIL I OT. 1.1 !1 I GAL. 3,21 Exotica Nursery 17•12 IUIHAlt FOUNTAIN VALLIT ••2·1611 TAKE A SWISS TO LUNCH TODAY " • llO~U The Rolex Doy-Oate h11 30 jewel ulf-wlnding S-c:hrJ>nometer "'°"'""'"t to keep you porloctly on time. The 18 karat gold Oyster case gu1ronteed to 1 depth of 165 fHt". With 18 k1rot gold bracelet. S 1.150. •wMrt cue. crown ltld crystal .,. lntKt. J • C~lfOI ACCIUI\" l"vllN , Ameok•~ E•t1rtu l lllllA,.,.,.,lurd • ...., M111ter Clllr11, tee. SLAVIC K'S II FASHION ISLAND NEWrORT IEACH -644 -1 110 ' \ 1 · . • F'rfdaJ, !tplfmbtr 11, 1CJ70 DAJLV ~ll!T Jf) Newport:s Ficker Seagoing Perfec~ionist lllltln .... : ............. ""-• Wtllw J-DNtw flat .... Ml/It'll ...... t in-t ff'IM fM tllftt &1111 Wt• -~ " Wiie tfld htl COlfl•IM Ill rte• lrl fNftY _,. et 111t1 -1111. Sl'll> ,, .. --...c ..... llllt 1111 ,!Ck .... ....... -... '"" AlriWlt•'• CV. ~ ,~,...... .,.., floth ., •• "*""'" •• ef f~ """""'1. Htrller Y1ct11 C"*-Ml~ E*lll'" k-the Amtrlct'• Cu 1111--. P:lckl( tfld Jim H•rfl' of the Gnftl 11. 11111 Allllnllllit Olll ..... Ml11 Oelllt wrllll ebWI l'kll• tll4I 1111 11Ptr1floM I" 11111 MW)' tlllll ~"I' will '911 ef H1~. aallln&, there are rBfAY facets. ''My most important duty is crtw has spent five hours on staru earned hlm 1 berth ;;all: You' can't sUcceed if IP31bfng concentraUon," says Ficker, the watu and .seven 1ddlUonal helmlman oa C:Olumbl.a in ls out Of place.'' ' who during a race will talk hours each day In callstbenla, IN?, the year Bus Mosbacllcr, "-Ficker -is quicker," read only occilsi~y with Steve IJilicing wires , and sawin& tbe now dlief-of pLO to co 1, the green. and wb1te buttons Van Dyke, the lntrepid's ends of bolts to reduce wei&ht au cc e 1s ruI1 y Ulppered his crew· members wtar. In tact~ian. It wi ll be Van and increase Intrepid's spetd .•. Intrepid in the defense of the hb: ac:tims, Ficker_ ii the Dykes responsibility to watch At nigh t, at Sea Edj:e, the cup. 1epitome of affable patience. Gretel · ·II and with Pete damp, wind-swept Newport "I feel better for the sake of •t['m a very competiUve Wilson, navigator, determine 1nanslon which houses the yachting in general than ror fndlvidual,'' says the former wind velocity, speed and Intrepid team, Fl ck er my personal benefit or By JANE M. DOZ1Ell Star Class world's champion, relative boat positions. discussed video-taped movies recognition,., says Fi c k e r NEWPORT, R.l. ('AP) -who by. perseverence came "Personal self-discipl ine Is of the day's performance, about lhe fact that In 119 • 11t'he America's CUp is the from 22nd eight years lattr to extremely important in life· At home, Ficker races a 12--years of cup defenses the Holy. Grall of yachUng," says win· the St a l'b oat learning to get along with foot Lehman dinghy. The first sldpper has usually betn an Bill Ficker, U, skipper ol the cbamp~p. "l like to have people. I like to think of boat In his life was only four Easterner. "I thtnk m y defending boat Int rep Id. goals and to make an effort to myself as a perfectionist," feet smaller, a Sabot given selection lndicates there isn't , "Whatever ls done casually Jn win something unique. I lhink says Ficker. "In boats I've hhn by his father, an architect tbe provincialism that tl'lerc \ other yadl.ting endeavors is everybody is a bit of a ham, sailed I've always tried to get who emigrated from Hungary may have been before." BERMUDA HOST -Commoclote Jimmie Amos of Bennuda;s .Spanis h Point Boat Club prepares t~ welcome Snipe sailers to the 11th Western Hem1· ·sphere Snipe Championships which gets under way Sept. 12. · done with perfection here." and I like to have recognlUon the crew that have the proper in 1912. The Fickers spent Ficker's opponent. J I m In the tension-filled days of in things that count. The Britton Chance Jr .. from the temper amen t and can their summers in the sailboat Hardy of Gretel 11, made this the Auiust elimination trials, America's Cup ls the compromise their personal racing center, but lived in comment about the Intrepid. a Crtwmember of the Valiant, summit." original Olin Stephens boat feelings for the team effort." Pomona where Bill was born "The sails are so clean, the the yacht Ficker defeated to "He-leave. nothine t o which auccesslully defended Most of the intrepid crew -and later met his wile boat so clean, the crew so earn the rjpt to defend the chance." an Intrepid crew the cup ln 1967. This year's students and boys on leave 'Barbara at Pomona College. tidy. Whe~r sailing or tied America's Cup, Io o t e d member remarks. "It's his version is so [inely tuned, so from the Navy - have been The architecture degree was up at the dock, the whole woefully across at the Intrepid attention to detail and his technologically high-strung winning skippers in their own earned at the University of outfit looks to me as thou gh dock and lamented : "It's control over his emotionl. If with space-age mater i a Is right. Younger, average age California at Berkeley. someone really cares. I guess Ficker's organiut~n; it's just we make mistakes, ht doesn't . Ut.anium and beeyllium that 23, than the Australians, they Ficker'§ ability at racing that person ls Bill Ficker." better than ours.'.' blow up-he esplain1 bow we the 1lrain on man and are unmarried for the most,;====================; No one who has seen the can do better. Ficker can equipment is im·mense. part. "1 wanted them to be LEARN t a 11. bald-headed architect make mistakes, too, but he 11The hitrepld is difficult to without other responsibilities, ,.,.aa .from Newport Beach· can !ail· aJways comes back." steer," thos'e close to the and be able to take victory .r_,&.i•"" O to be impressed with his poise In the America's Cup, Intrepid admit. But during a and loss with the same ?111& T and self-discipline, Even his seconds determine a boat's race, Ficker's long, tapered emoi\ons and go on and win." SAIL speech 111 u st r a t e s the edge. The Intrepid w a 1 fingerl grasp one or the twin During three months of textbook-like precision of his. _•:_::•::d•::•~ig".'.ne'.".d'._th::'.:is~y'..::e:ar:_b::Y:...Y-::ou~nf~.:":::bee!a=:..:wt:.::lh:_:<::•::m~par:::•t::i•:.:•:..:eas::::•::.·_:i::nt:•n:::s::i•.:•_:tr:::a::in::in:!'g'.., _F:_i::ck:::'::.''.:'!!::::==========:::::::::::::='=====' · in ind and methods. • · Snipe Sailors ~ead For Bermuda Contest A ·traditionally w a r ro to more than 40 participants Bermudian welcome is being . when they arrive in the mid· prepared for · sailors from Atlantic tpurist resort for tile North and South America and races. · Jap a n who will b e Prime contender in the · participating in the J 1 t h regatta will be Earl Elms of Western Hemisphere Snipe San Diego, !iv·e-time national Championships .to be held at champion and· current world Bermuda's Great Sound, Sept champion in the Snipe Class. 1~20. · Elms has never won the . Bermuda's Spanish Point Wes.ternHemi1phere Boat Club will be playing host championships. The defender'. is Japan's Deadline For Ensenada Race Given Deadline ror entering the 7th annual San Diego to Ensenada -yach~ race ~ Sept. lB, tbe · comm.odor.es or lhe c 0 - sponsor i n.g SOufhwestem Yacht Club and Ensenada Club de Yates announced.· The race is scheduled to start Oct 3. Sponsors of the race called attention to new requirements for the race. AU monohull yachts ' musl have Nort h American Yacht Racing Union sail numbers, a v alld Cruising Club Of America measurement ·eertilcate . and specific aew safety re(iuirements must be met before entry forms are accepted at sWYc. . Also important to note is that SWYC will not provide measuring service as has been done in past years. Minimum criw age has been reduced to 15 years. However, all persons under 18 must either be sailing with their parents or have a notarized permission s I i p signed ,bY pa~ent or guardian to epter Me~co. Quest · Takes Series Lead Takao Ninomya Who won lhe championship ~aat . year · at Jacksonville, Fla .. Competing for the Hayward Trophy, which · goes to -1he winner or the best six out of seven races will be sailors from the U.S., Cail8da, Japan. the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rica, Br'azil, Argentina, Odle, Colombia, Bermuda. a n d ·possibly Ur u g Ila y and Paraguay. · Endtiro-Race ' ; . At Tahoe Scheduled More than 100 rocke\jng ouµtoard sj>eedJ>oats a r e expected to froth the deep blue waters or Lake Tahoe in the HJgh Sierras S4!pt 19-20 in the first Inian Summer Six·Hour Enduro. · Officials or the c o- spon.!oring South Lake Tahoe Visitors Burea'u and the South Tahoe Boat Club . anUcipate that drivers and boats from more than 15 sta~ will contest the two-di'visjon marathon· ror $10,000 in cish and other prizes. Race director Rich Marshall of the . California Outboard Marathon · Association announced that the ·winners of both single and m u 1 ti p I e engine classes will receive $2,500, with the remaining awards divided proportionately among the top finishers. Racing will be c:onduct<d each day from· 11 a.m· to 2 p.m. over a triangular four· mile course off the Tahoe Keyes Pope Beach arta, Gaudio Takes BYC Race COPENHAGEN (AP) - Australian challenger Quest Il Wednesday beat Denmark's Slejpner the defending cup. holder, by two minutes. and +l seconds to win the second race and take a 1-0 lead in lM <t~. for the catamarin Li t t I e • America's Cup oo t D.e 6ere•und Strait h<re., Mark Gaudio o1 the N""11i><t With Bruce Proctot of Harbor Yacht Club t 0 o k Melbourne's Sofr"nlD B a Y overall honors In the Balboa . Sailing Oub at 111e· ·he1!", 51o1>o1-FI e et CblmpiOOlhlp Quest II . trailed the Dani!h ·. Sunday, hooted by the Lido boal, skippered by· L •f f ISlimd Yacht Club. Wagner Smltt, by 40 aeccllds: Second overall honors In the at the second mark. . ··five-race program went to But as Quest II turned into a OJrt Wiese (Balbtta Yacht crosswind a~ter the first roun_d 1Club) with Nina Nielsen on the 1.0-mtle course, ibe arid.1 (Newport Harbor Yacht Club) Shot ahead. third and Phil Gautscl>i (Lido Yacht Club Alters Rule Island Yad>I Oub) 1""111. Fillh was John Mc<:!ure (Newport Hari>or .Y 1 ch I Oub). '.'At times, loo mu c h emphasis is put oo boat design or skipper or crev/. Like any other effort, business or Yacht Race To Catalina Set Tonight The Balboa Yacht Club's Catalina Island race for ocean racing yachts will get under way from the Newport Jetty entrance 7 o'clock tonight. The race has long been known as the "backwards Catalina Island race" beCaµse the Oeet circumnavltates the island from east end to west end -leaving to 'starboard - instead of tbe usual port side rounding. Although sponsored by BYC, the nee 11 also the windup of Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Ahman.900 Series of s I x off$hofe races during the sum.. mer season. TroP.hits at stak·e are the Brebhe'art Perpetual for the overall corrected time winner; James Cagney Perpetual for the Clau A winner; Antigua Perpetual for t;he Class B win- ner; Scandia Perpetual, Class C;· Starboard Perpetual, Class D, and the Frank C. Wood Ill Memorlal Trophy for the first BYC-yacht ID flni!h. Under favorable wind con- ditions, the fleet should come bombing home Saturday after- noon under full spinnakers. 12 Honored At 111.te rclub Beach Party Twelve trophy winners and 40 portlclponts In tho 1970 Jnterclub Serles were h'Jnored receitly at a beach party and trophy pre...taUon. · The series consisted of JO races sailed at each of the five plrlidpating yacht c I u b s , Balboa, Lido Isle, Balboa Island, Bahia Corinthian and Newport Harbor. Nina Nielsen, International junior Sabot champion .wttched ID the Kite Ciaos and won the serieS over Warmi Penoo, Mary Ann Colville and Ptillip Ramming. A slrl aklpp<r from BIYC, Linda Fulton, was the winner In tile Kite B 0..,. Craig Uhl and Nici< -"'" oec:ond and thin! respectiftly. Doug Birney, Ken Kllngmllnllh, Leurle Lloyd, Page Camlin, Paul Sdmelder, K.U, Doyle and 1ohn 'nlompooo completed lhe fleet. 1n the 8abot A Qua Mart G1udio of NH\'C w11 the -· BW.Sk:k Ray WU eecond, Barr Smith, Martha Seawr, Vicki Call ,,_ all adlve portidpanll. VW BRAKE SPECIAL . ..... --·---·-~ .... ,. .. .,Cl Ill ...... 1 1 UtOf f'tlO.UHD'J $39.95 YW SHOCllS -·-... -·-$7.tl ,... •• ~ 100,000 "mile ruannteed (not, IJfO-fa,ted), WE 00 ALL FOREIGN CARS. COMPLETE BRAKE RELINE 95 Do1't ......... -...es tMt ,.11 ••• t Nll • •• feel .,OllfY , •• MM , • .,1 ... 5'-P I• ~ Ilk ltelt way Y•• c•I -4 let ••r ..nice spftlolhta ~,.. ... ... , wt.eels .. ,.,, c•r ••• r"!Hfeu cb•-...ii Nb1lld cytl~· CAMPER TIRES Tr1ction Master 10-16-5 6 PLY $45.00 PIT. $4.01 - Use General's c:onvenientAUT<>-CHARGE Plan .,,, ' • • edd ..... ..., .., .... k fl•ld • • ..... lust bN!c" t• f111 c .... t •.. -4 1-,.ct .wl Mint tN •-• •"''' w.. •. n.. yeit .... lhp ..,. ....... s.t.ty. 8 PLY $50.00 " ·• noinonerdown . • ltlohths ID pay n5 x 15 n s x 14 ••••••...........••••• 825 x lS 825 x 14 ••••.•.....•..•.•..••• '560 x l5 TUBELESS -BLACK FET, $1.16 885 x 14 855 x 14 ..................... . • get famous brand SHOCK ~ ABSORBE U.S. INDY PLUS FET, FROM $2.04 TO $2.91 LOW MILEAGE USED$ TIRES YOUR CHOICE MAG WHEELS Set of 4 ..... $99 Fonl-Chevrolot-Plymoutl>-Ottsun 14. 7 · IJon Swedlund m . S4.6t • Correct castw. camber • Comet k>IHn. toe-out • Jnspoct ... adjust stoerQ only Mo1t A"'1rlctn c1r1 w;lhout powt P 1q~ip· ,.,,nt, 95 COMPLETE ,, CAR CARE Since 19.19 Hours: 7:30 to 6:00 Dolly I • 19 DAILY PILOT 7 / 'trld.ly, Stpttmbtr 11, 1970 ,. FENCING (RANCH STYLE) APPEALS TO ORANGE COAST CONTINGENT New Arrivals Find Perhct Perch To Look At Ranch C11mp Lih < FOR TENDERFEET !AND OTHER TENDER SPOTS, TOOi FIRST RIDE IS TOUGH Orqon Trail s .. m, Encti.11 Fir1r Ftw Houri in Tht Saddlt BRANDING IS BRAND NEW GAME FOR BRAND NEW WRANGLERS AT NEW HORIZONS (From Left) Susan, Uveklo, Vernon •nd Robby Steady.,. The Steer City Kids Return 01,d Horizons Closing in on Neiv Horizons Campers All the back-to-school clicbes possibly will be just a little stronger in mtaning this weekend to one group of Orange Coast area residents. Afaybe it coold be argued lhal, come -~~""'Monday, they are giving up more than "' most to shoehorn thEmselves back into the confines of their life here at home. What they're giving up is under the big, blue sky of Oregon. Jn fa ct, part of what they're giving up is the big, blue sky of Oregon. "They" are four young people, selected by the commwiity service officers of the Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach and 1 Laguna Beach police departments as the youngsters in their respective cities (or areas) who most deserved the chance •to find oot wh'at it's like where the sky is really blue and where there an green trees, dusty tra ils and fun-~ide horses. "They" also Includes Dolores (Jeans) Valencia, onetime airline stewardess and now director of the stewardess training program at Orange Coast Coll ege. Her students might be surprised to Jeam that their sophisticated and well- coi!ed mentor is, in reality, a gal \vho swings a mean skillet in a ranch kitchen designed to feed more Utan 100 hungry wranglers and stnnmertime campers. And that she enjoys wearing blue jeans and riding horses maybe a Jot more than wearing heels and riding supersoni c jet liners. Mrs. Valencia's husband, Gus, is a former Orange County area building contractor and also a onetime sea captain who now operates tbe Oregon ranch full time. Dolores gives him credit for being the one who really halched the idea of inviting some special youngsters on "httbie" trips to New Horizons Ranch Camp. How did it work? l lere's the ·way the kid s, themselves, saw ii: ROBBY LINDSEY, 13, so n of ?<.1rs. Doris Lind~ey af·.f204 E. Coast Highway, Corona deJ Mar-"I eat peas, now ." Robby (and Valencia) explained that they reached a man.to.man understanding about Robby's handling just about any of the ranch produce placed on his plate. He also learned to ride and care for a pinto pony named WarpaWtl. "I wasn't sure whether I really wanted to ride or not when I sta rted to camp. But now 1 think horseback riding is great," says Robby. SUSAN DEEGAN, 13, daughter of Mrs. "Ruth Barns of 2426 Santa Ana Ave .. Costa Mesa -'The riding was great. We even got lo fope the horses." Susa n had ridden t tr all rides and other "rent-a.nag" operations) before going to new Horizons. But she, like the other kids. spent up to half a da y each day caring for her horse and riding. Yes, and they did get to "lope" the horses, running them· across a wide open meadow behind the bam at New Horizons Ranch. UVALOO RA NGEL JR., 15, son of ~1r . and Mrs. Uvaldo Rangel of 10411 Cinco de ~tayo, Fountain Valley -"It was great, man, the v.•hole scene, 1 mean ... Uvaldo, described by Valencia as a ''young man with a great knack with younger kids.'' just may be invited back {o Oregon next summer as a paid counselor on the staff of New Horizons. VERNON JSBELL. 15, son of Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Isbell of 1931 Pomona Ave,, Costa Mesa -"The horseback riding was great, but that rainstorm and lightning was weird ••• and that runny little town ••• and splitting all lhose shakes • , ." Vernon. who seemed to be impressed by evet}1hi ng, was talking about riding the horse assigned to him on a fulltime basis - a mare named Pal -about an overnight trip which included standing 'vith their horses on a hill overlooking the surrounding countryside whlle a ligh tning and thunder storm played across the area. And he also mentioned that ''fuMy little town." The youngsters visited Bty, Ore .. where the movie house opens only an those evenings when five or more patrons come to see the show. ~nd "splitting shakes'' refers to a job all of the youngsters got involved in. Form er building contractor Valencia was ·quick to show the visiting "city sllckers'' that it's sti ll possi ble to go into the forest, chop down a tree and split it clear down to shakes (shingles) to cover a roof. \Vould they like to go back? "You bet.'' Even if it means working and caring for the horses? "Yeah, man." "That sky sure "'·as blue.'' NO COFFEE, TEA OR MILK CHOICE FOR THESE YOUNG CUSTOMERS On1tim• St1warde11 OCC't Dolor11 (J1an1) Valencia ·Still Servel Drinka T ope Iha La! con An! Dot Stet Bal two en T es.so sun Fur mid on ~ p doc ap an ' I . • DAILV mor E E R A Comp/e 'te Guide ••• Where to go ••• What to do • •• JUMPERS WILL BE PART OF THE EXCI TEMENT AT COPS AND COWBOYS SHOW Photogs Capture Balboa Newport Harbor A rt Museum Features A rea Pictures The Newport Harbor Art Museum opens it s 1970-71 season with an exhib ition that has been ten months in the making. Last D ece mb e r the Museum commissioned three well-known Los Angeles area photographers: William Doherty, Edwin Sievers anrl Robert Von Stemberg to document the area of Balboa bounded by the ocean and bay on two sides. and bounded by "C" Street and Cypress Street, on the other two sides. This project resulted in a photographic essay reco rding the Bal boa Peninsula surrounding the Pavilion including the Fun Z.one, an amusement park set in the middle of the area. The exhibition opens ()n Sept. 16 and "'ill ron th rough Oct. 18. Part of · the. iihportance of this kind or documentation is the certainty of having a pictorial history of a region as well as an entire "era" ~·hich is slowly vanishing , -.............. _ • ) .. I " ' r • ... ' from the American icene. The Balboa Fun Zone seems an incredible incongruity amidst the grander scale enterta inments to which we have grown accustomed and its interest lies in its survival amldst those very entertainments. The show focuses immediate atten tion nn the sights, sounds and smells of this small area. The rich mixture of people who come here separately during the tourist season are brought togeth er in a potpourri of sensitive studies about human nature. The exhibit also brings us a cross section of the people who li ve and work here -the old timers and the young adults who make this region a multi-faceted example of Americana. The architectural studi es o( the su rrounding dwellings, the apartments, shops, boutiques and expensive houses are balanced against the l i r e d I A • amusem ent stails , unpainted signs and weather worn shacks, and are recorded with the concenlrated pitch that only the camera permits. Thomas H. Garver, director ol the muse11tn, "The exhibition in a way ls a study of the archaeology of today. A reco rd of a life style that is swallowed up in a socie ty which is becoming more and more stratified." Balboa is still homogeneous. I t combines Jiving, wo r k i n g and rec reational activities in one hub, and it is because of this centralization that the environmen t is one that poignantly highlights the contrast of such an area with the more sprawling urbanization taking place today. Museum ho urs are Wednesda y through Sunday 1-5 ".m. and Monda y nights from 6 to 9 p.m. .,..-~ --7'"T.. ,-T~ - ., PHOTOGRAPHIC ESSAY RECORDS THE OLD AND NEW DF "BALBOA PAVILION AREA Dime Mai·cl1 Breakfast Scheduled The Cops and Cowboys are presenting !heir 16th annual March-0-Dimes western style breakfast -rain or shlrlJ -in the Junior Eihiblts Building at the Orange County Fairgrounds, S8 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa, on Sunday, Sept. 13 from 7 a.m. to noon. A bigger bargain would be hard to frnd . Imagine being servtd a chuckwagon breakfast of eggs, hotcakes and sausage by the cops, then being entertained by dancers, musicians, cowboys and other horsemen -all for 10 thin dimes. All proceeds for the day are eannarked for the local March of Dimes birth defects program. The Cops and Cowboys Horse. Show, an approved Junior "B" point show by the Pacific Coast Hunter, Jumper and Slock Horse Association, will have' 32 events in the Junior, Open and Gymkhana Classes. They will be staged in the main arena and the outside arena in the morning and afternoon. Starting at a a.m. In the main arena will be Classes One through Eight, Hunter Seat Equitation for 14 years and under ;Stock Seat Equitation, 15 through. 17 years: Hunter Seat Equitation, 15 th.rough. 17 years : Stock Seat Equitation, 14 years and under; Westem Pleasu~. 15 through 17 years; Western Pleasure, 14 years and under ; Stock Horses 17 years and under, and Stock Horses, open. Classes 9 through 15 will be held in the oulliide arena atarting at I a.m. and will i~lude Jumpers, Working Hunters, Pole Bending and a Figure Eight Stake Race. ln the afternoon at 1 p.m. Classes lS POLE BENDING JS ANOTHER FEATURE IN CHARITY SHOW through 24 will be held In the main artna while Classes 25 throug h 32 will be staged in the oUtside arena. The show i~ sponsored by the Orange County Sheriff's Reserve Unilli and the Associated Riding Clubs of Orange County. Three and one-half.year-old Samantha Graham of Orange is the 1970 show Princess. The Birth Defects program of the March of Dimes, for which the event is being staged , has been working . lo emphasize the urgency of immunizing all ch ildren, ages one to 12, against the common childhood disease of (rubella) German measles, Little P r i n c e 11 9 Samantha is a rubella baby, with a hear ing defect, whose mother contracted the disease before Samantha was born. It is hoped that the break.through discovery ol the rubella vaccine will put a halt. to such birth defects. lnternai.1.1ion Season . Offers Variety By TOM TITUS Of 1111 ~"° l"t .. I 5t1ff Just what does th.is new 11ea!On which gets UJ1der way officially tonight with openings in Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach and Westminster -hold in store for the Orange Coast theatergoer? Jn all probability, judging from the 15 new productions to be placed before county audiences during this month and nt1t, there should bt not only a greater number of attracltons (with five new theaters born aga inst a single obituary ), but also a much wider variety. There will be more new plays presented, and those which are revived will, in the main. be relatively unfamiliar to coast a I ptaygciers. Inevitably JOme of the more popular plays will find the ir way to community stages after. only abbre viated absences. We will again be seeing "Generation ," "The Impossible Years," ''Harvey" and poss ibly even "Night of January 16th." And it wouldn't be a full sea.son without another mounting of "Stop the World -1 Want to Get Ofr'; this also is forthcoming. Yet, imaginative programming will flourish more than usual during the 1971). 71 sea!On. Orange Coast viewers wtll get their first look at "The Boys in the Band," "A Shot in the Dark," "Don't Drink the Water," "The Royal Hunt of the Sun 11 "Love and Kisses " and "Jndiarls,~' among others. Some original plays also are in the works. SOlITH COAST Repertory, as usual, may be expected to lead the parade. This superlative Costa Mesa company ls · kicking off the new season tonight with Oranp County'• first look at Mart Joan's Daughter Wins Video Role Christina Crawford, daughter of Joan Crawford, hu been ai(Jltd by execu tive producer Frank Glicksman to guest as Dr. Myles, a young child psychologist, in the "My Name Is Jenny" episode of MGM's "Medical Center/' starring Chad Everett and James Dely1 which Vincent Sherman is directing for CBs. TV. Christina, who has been feature~ as Joan Kane In the soap opera, "Secret Storm," In New York for lhe past two years, is l1u11chin1 ber Hollywood career al MGM. ' Crowley's highly acclaimed "The Boys in the Band" -which may be an indication of the county's theatrical maturity. Next month SCR takes a wha ck at the women's lib move ment by dusing oft the classic ''Lysistrata." The Huntington Beach Playhouse season opener, also being unveiled tonight, is "Once More With Feeling," which is far from brand new, but Is a comparative stranger on the Orange Coast. One might also add , for what. it's worth, that your columnist is directing this particular comedy. Like the Huntington entry, "Bell, Book and Candle" has been around a good while, but ill! production -also opening tonight -by the We s tminster Community Theater will take on premiere status for most c o u n t y playgoers. Coming up with a genu ine county premiere is the Irvine Community Theater, one of the five newcomers of 1970, which will fire "A Shot in lhe Dark" next week. This mystery-comedy is one of the "sleeper'' variety, which didn't stand Broadway on its ear and hence is relatively unheard of hereabouts. A BIT MORE familiar is "The lmposs ible Years,'' which played to Huntington Beach and Long Beach audiences earlier this year and will make its latest appearance at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse next week. This, however, is the type of fa m 11 y entertainment which produces large smiles at the box office, regardless of Its growing absence o! novelly. Woody Allen 's comedy "Don't Drink the Water" was tossed to the llttle theaters . this year -and two of them 'g'rabbed .it at the same time. However, the Long Beach Community Playhouse i1 opening it next Friday, beati ng the Santa Ana Community Players to the punch by a single week. ' Only the virtually li mitless expanse Of the Laguna Moulton "PlayhouSe: could do justice to '"The Royal Hunt of the Sun," a 11teeping historical drama with a cast numbering over 30. Lagunans are beating the drums for this one, whlch launches the season on Se pt. 22. Taking another "sleeper" from the recent Broadway season is the San Clemente Communi ty Theater, with Its production of the latest in a current rash or generation gap comedies, "Love and Kisses." This one 1lso Is a first timer on county stages. SOME INTERESTING things are under way in the Santa Ana-Tustin area and both will be revealed lflf-rh'!t-part or October. The new Tustin Commulihy Theater is working on a melodraina'- "Dirty Work at the Crossroads," to ~ ·produced outdoors. while a Santa Ana group affiliated with a German theater is preparing a touring production of ''Tobacco Road." Huntington Beach's two new producing groups, the downtown Nifty Theater and .the church-based Ensemble Theater. both swing ·into action on Oct. 9. The· Nifty players will mount a pair of one.acts, "The Popeorn Machine" and "The Den!ist," w~ile tije Ensermble g tJ0 1U p makes its debut with an ·Old standby, "The. Diary of Anne Frank." . Arthur Kopit'S "lndians" at Orange Co.sat College promises' to rate more than a passing glance. As. mentioned in this space last week, it's the first West Coast production of this sprawling historical epic centering around Buffalo Bill. "Stop the World," a first rate musical which has drawn raves in Anaheim, Laguna, San Clemente and Costa Mesa. touches down next in Fullerton late In October: And another favorite from 'the pages of vintage theater, "Harvey,'' heads the same Week for Laguna after revi va ls.. in Costa . Meia, Santa Ana, Fullerton and Long Beach. Some plays never yellow with exposure , it seems.· WEEKENDER JNSmE FEATURES Friday, Septembtr 111 1171 The late Woody Gutherie, folk music great, will be honored In a concert at Hollywood Bowl th.ii Saturday . night. Story and picture may be found on Page 22. Travel Page ll Gulde 10 Fun Page n Wittels and Camplo1 Page tl Uve Tbuttr P1se tl Ellington 1t Di51ey1and P1ge IZ Out 'N' About P1ges U • 24 Television Log P11e 15 Gukle to Movie1 r.,.u Peter Lawford 1 Gent Pase U In the Gallerlt1 P1ge 2' Charlotte RtlmbJlnc P1ge 2' Chlca10 1t the Sfl.wl Page ft Comlts P11e 27 • • • DAILY lllLOT rrlday, Sept rmbtr 11 , 1970 D,uke at Disneyland Fantasy Ballroom in the Plaza Gardens will pre- sent the music of Duke Ellin.i:::ton tonight and to- morrow night from 9 p.m . to 1 a .m . as the swnmer program at the Park dra ws to a close, "Show Me Amer ica" will be presented at 9 and 11 p.m. on the Tomorrowland stage tonight. Travel Anyone Can Tour England for $200 By STAN DELAPLANE LONDON -The summer tourists have flown home. The schoolboys back to school. You can re. serve a table at Stone's Chop House without hear· ins . "Sorr y, sir. We are con1pletely booked." You might even see the Changing of the Guard -not using field glasses. What I mean. pity the poor people who had to come in JuJy and August. September's the month. . * For merry En~l and, here's a seven-day pub crawl. You can do 1t on your own with a rent car through the green West country. E stimate: $200. for two. The pubs are s mall country inns. Breakfast goes with the cost of the night's lodging. * F irst day: London to Hawkhurst, 100 miles. The Tudor Arms, home of the notorious "Hawkhurst Gang" who waylaid s mugglers. Second day: Ha\vkhurst to Christchurch. 112 miles going through New Forest . The Kings Arms is a coaching inn on the River Avon, dating back to 1796. Third day: Christchurch to Darlington, 95 miles. Ye Olde Cott Inn says it is the second oldest inn in England. (I said : "Why second?" The owner said: "Oh, if you sa y the oldest , somebody always starts an argument."). I made this a stay of two-days and hated to leave. F ifth day: To E xford a c ross \Vild Dartmoor. Tbe Crown is in a lovely v illage on the river Ex. Sixth day: To Chipping Camden. The Noel Arms is a 14th Century inn. Next to an antique church with wonde rful brasses . Seventh day: Return to London through Stral· ford-on-Avon, Oxford and \Vindsor Castle. * Hovr do you do it: Book your rooms from Lon- d on . The hall porter w iJJ d o it by phone. (Tip him a couple of dollars.). These pub hotels are only 15 rooms or so. ).'ou can't just walk in and be sure. \Veekends a re apt to be crowded. Try to make your t"10-day slop on Saturday and Sunday. * 1 'ls ther• • reliable place for breakfast in Mexi· co City? I mean American food as I like to start the day with something I'm accustomed to." All the big hotels do the ham-and-eggs. hot ca kes a nd so on. Sometimes it comes with a f\•texican accent though. Place I've been having brea kfast ror years is Sanborn's -the original San- born's in Madero Street in the old House Of Tiles. Indifferent ser vice but the food is good. Pick up a copy or the Mexico N E\VS on the "'a y irL The wait- r ess "'iii get around to you sometime. * Soft-boi.led eggs at Mexico City's 7400 feet should cook five m inutes. Hot cakes and waffles in 1'1exico are c hancy. A lot o( them turn out like a piece of blanket. * "Should I buy sandals for Haw•ii? Here or ther1?" So much c hoice or all kinds of sports and beach things in Ha waii, I tell women to go \Vith empty suitca ses. \'ou're sure lo load up when you see the shops. Good sandals. (I rind slip-on canvas Keds most con1£orl<1blc for the tropic s . Leather sandals are dashing but they're hotter. They mildew and rot and Lhe straps break.). * "Can we ship prt"lients under $10 from Mexico without pay1ng duty?" ).'es. just like frorn any foreign country. But sh ipping frotn Mexico is a game foi-optimists. I've had all ba d luck on it. * 1'Should my boy friend cut his hair before we go to Europe?" No. t hey're getting used to hair and beard. back pack and guitar. So1n e IO\\•ns in f\·Texico are star chy about It. 1'he c hief or police at San Miguel de Al- lende has a re al thing going on it. * ''What do you think of the book 'Europe on $5 a D1y'?" I th ink irs a great title. I'd like to live ANY· WHERE on $5 a day. Actua lly. I only checked one -11 Jreland on $5 and SIO a Da y.'' Has good sug~ gestlons. P a rticula rly on country hotels. In Ireland you can do It on tha t price. · * 'We want to buy rosaries In Rome . , • " Shops for these a re Jn P iazza ~linerva , be.hind the Pantheon. Guide to Fun Rock Groups At Village • SEPT. 11 • ll DISNEYLAND SUMMER -Disneyland is c e I e b r a t I n g Its 15th birthday with over 500 entertainers all summer Jong Jn the "Super Summer" celebration. There wiU be 28 special shows and talent groups with "Show Me America," musical comedy on the Tomorrowland Stage at I and 10 p.m. 1'1on.-Frl. The Tomorrowland Terrace will ha ve ''Sound Castle Ltd." with new sets, new costumes and top rock fa vorites every evening from § except Sen. The ''Minority or Six" will take over the Terrace on Sun. and 1 may also be heard on the Tomorrowland Stage on Sat. The "Entertainment Committee" plays on the Terrace Fri. -Sat. afternoons. The Plaz.a Gardens will ha ve "Big Band" sounds for ballroom dancing, nightly with Duke Ellington. Sunday brings "Country Jubilee" on the Tomorrowland Stage with a different group each week, drawn from folk·music experl!. Jazz will be heard in New Orleans Square and aboard the Mark Twain. All this plus the S3 permanent (un- filled all summer long. Hours: 8 a.m. to 1 a .m. through Sat. SEPT. II TRAVELOGUE -The Newport Harbor Kiwanis Foundation is presenting a travelogue in OCC auditorium, 2701 Fairview Drive, Costa Mesa, Sept. 11 at 8 p.m., narrated by Chris Bor- den. The title is "Bali" and is the first major lilm to be made about Bali in 15 years. Tickets at the door, $2 for adults, $1 for students for single performances. Season tick- et.s for six travelogues are $10 for adults, $5 for students. SEPT. 1% KNOTf'S BERRY FARM -A Golden Cavalcade of Country and Western Music will be staged each weekend at KnoU's, through this Saturday with showtimes -Fri. • Sat. 6:30, 8:30 and 10:30 p.m.; Sun. 5, 6:30 and 9:30 p.m. "The Sound Generation," a group of 24 young men aod women from John Brown University, will present shows Mon.-Thurs. at 7, 8:30 and 10 p.m. Hours: t a.m.·11 p.m. Mon.-Thurs.; 9 a.m.-midnight, Fri.-5at.; Close 10 p.m. Sun. Admission $1 adulU, 2S cenU for children 11 and under. No additional charge for shows. 8039 Beach Blvd., Buena Park. SEPT. lZ JAPANESE VILLAGE -Rock groups and light shows will be the "heavy happcnin~" at Ja):>anese Village on Sat. even- ings this summer, from 7:30 p.m. to midnight with the "Samu- rais" and "The Prophets" performing with the aid of Fila- ment -a light show. All this in addition to the other attrac· lions at the vJllage including trained bears, a seal show, karate exhibitions and tame deer. Food is available. 6122 Knott Ave .• Buena Park. Phone 523-2381 . SEPT. lZ TEEN CLUB DANCE -The Westminster Recreation and Parks Department will hold a Teen Club Dance in the com· munity Center, 8200 Westminster Ave., (for Westminster teens) each Sat. from I p.m. to midnight. Admission. $1. for members. $1.SO for non-meipbers. The "Faith Crusader" group will play for dancing Sept. 12. SEPT. 13 COPS .,.ND COWBOYS-The 16th annual Cops and Cowboys breakfast and llorse Show and Gymkhana is set fw-this Sunday from 7 a.m. through t.he afternoon in the Orange County Fairgrounds, U Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. Breakfast, $1 , from 7 a .m. to noon. Horse show and Gymkhana events from 8 a.m. All proceeds go to the birth defecU program of the March of Dimes. Information, phone 542-3277. SEPT. 13 JAZZ CONCERT-Jazz Jnc., is presenting Barney Bigar and his Sy ncopaters, Ed Leach's King Zulu Paraders and the Happy Jazz Band of Newport Beach Jn concert in the Moose Hall. 7400 Lorge Circle, Hunting ton Beach on Sunday, Sept. 13 at 2 p.m. Guests $4 ; members, $1.50. Phone 532-4958. SEPT. 18 · 19 SURFING CHAl\tPIONSHIPS-The 12th annual United States Surfing Championships will take place near the Huntington ~ea~h Pier starling at 7 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 18 and con- tinuing through Sunday, Sept. 19. About 300 of the best men and women surfers will be there to enter the various events and the Best U. S. Surfer will be named Sunday. OCT. I SAN FRANCISCO BALLET -Santa Ana College will sponsor a performance of the San Francisco Ballet Company at 8 p.m. in the school gymnasium, 1530 W. 17th St., Santa Ana, which will be made into a theater-in-the-round for the oc- casion. Tickets, $2.SO for adults, $1 for students and children under 12, are on sale at the College bookstore. Phone 547-9561 . SEPT. HARBOR TOUR -'Mle Pavilion Queen, Newport Harbor's newest fun attraction, is making sightseeing trips at 11 a.m., 3 and 5 p.m. daily, departing from the Pavilion for the 9().. mi.note cruise of the bay. Cocktail cruises with an open bar s~1l at 7, 9 and 11 p.m. The boat is a replica of an old -time river boat. lavishly d~orated in rich reds and golds. (Avail- able for charter parties, too.) Fare for sightseeing is $2 for adului, $1 !or children under 12, tots under 5 tree with adults. ReservaUons -673-5245. SEPT. • JOAN BAEZ, PETE SEGAR, ARLO GUTHRIE AT THE BOWL New Developments Made For Mobile Motorhomes T h e c a m p e r-traileris14 motorhome owner is far from the forgotten man judging Live Theater from the number ol new items "Sloti" aDd a nd new developments offered "Tbe American Drtam" for his consideration. Two one act plays are on At the gadget level there is the V'orta Mark II Scout, low, stage at the Nifty Theater, profile, all directional antenna 307 Main St., Huntington By JACK KNEASS designed to give color TV, dry and powerless, or that Beach al 8:30 p.m. Fri. and UHF, VHF and fumes penetrated his living Sat. through Oct. 3. Reserva- FM stereo re-q uarters will be grateful when lions _ 536-9158. ception, with a sometime riext summer some range of so ol these batteries will be "ODCe More With Feeling" miles. Compon· available to the public. A comedy about symphony en ts are sealed HERE'S WHY. Never needs conductor's sour notes is on in polyurethane filling ; no vents, cannot "gas" stage at the lluntington Beach foam inside a or spill acid; when not used .1.t.c1C 1CM•1.1s h a r d plastic for long periods of time has a Playhouse, 2110 P.1ain St .. Hun. dome 8-inches high by 181h slow sell-discharge rate and lington Beach, Fri. and Sat. at inches In diameter. the new side-design terminals 8:30 p.m. through Oct. 11. 11\e manufacturer claims resist corrosion. It maintains Reservations -SJ6.8861. this $59.50 antenna can be a high state of charge and the "Boys In the Baod·' mounted in 10 to 20 minutes. omission of battery posts For data, write Vorta. Box 613, means no danger of A comic-drama about homo- Round Lake, 111. 60073. ..shorting." sexuals on stage at South ON A MORE important This sounds close to battery Coast Repertory, 1827 Newport subject Hayden offers a "Rat· heaven except for one item: Blvd., Costa Mesa, at 8:30 Pac" oil cooler intended for dlecking the state o( charge. use with all Vo lkswagens, but You'll need a spec i a I p.m. Fri. • Sun ., through Oct. more speciJi cally those used instrumem. for this, as there is ll. Reservations -646-1363, as dune buggies or to haul tent no place for a hydrometer to "Bell, Book and Candle" trailers. The manufacturer take an acid reading! Baez Stars 1 ~t ·Bowl Sept. 12 • ~ Jo.ft Baez, the m o .s t ~lrov1r1!1l young eln1tr In' Amtrlcl loday, will be one of ·the lok music artis t• partici pating in "The Musical Tribute lo Woody Guthrie ,'' Sept. 12 al Hollywood Bowl. One of Joan's fier ces t skirmishes a few years back was with cartoonist Al Capp, who allegedly lampooned her. J oan is honest, outspoken. non· violent and courageous and it runs in the family. Her husband and the father of th eir infant son is now doing time in prison for refusing to .serve in the Anned Forces. Above all. Joan is a superb vocalist with a world of talent, qualities which provide her with strength, appeal and popularity. The young people of America listen to her. Joining Joan at the Sept. 12 Bowl dale will be Woody's son, Ario . folk singers Pete Seeger, Rambling Jack Elliot, Earl Robinso n and Richie Haven, plus Country Joe McDonald and Odetta. Only Woody Guth ri e's compositions will be heard on the program. Actors Will Geer and Peter Fonda will narrate and all pro c eeds are earmarked for the Committee to Co n'I bat Huntington 's Disease and its much-needed clinic. Woody, one o f America·s most h o nored singer-composers, died of his dread·illness some years ago. Smith Stars In 'Ryder' says, " ... helps engines reach A contemporary comedy is peak perfonnance, extends on stage at the Westminster William Smith has been life of engines and components J Sh Community Theater. Finley signed for a starring role with and keeps oil temperatur~ ugs OWU School, Trask and Edwards Ann-Margret and Joe Namath bel 200 d ·• St.s., in Westminste r, at 8:30 in Joseph E. Levine 's presen--ow . egrees. talion or an Avco Embassy The -mplete Rat Pac Oil At Bowers' p.m. Fri .. Sat.. through Sept. F't .. v 26. ReservaUons _ 897•8315. 1 m. "C. C. Ryder and Com· Cook ing ki t retails for $59.95. pany," a co ntemporary drama and can be purchased at most "A Sbot in lbe Dark" dealing with motocross racing, su pp I y h 0 u se I . F 0 r M useitn·i A comedy-mystery on stage slated to go before the loca tiOD informalion write Ha yden, cameras soon at T u c s o n , 2109 Valley Blvd., Rialto, Ca. al the Corona del P..1ar High Arizona. Seymour Ro bb i e School theater. staged by Ir-d. lr · I 92376. Fine jugs, jugs in the British vine Community Theater, irecls om an or i g I n a Our experie nce with testing sense of the word (pitchers to Th S t 8 30 screenplay by Roger Smith. produc'ls of this company is the Ameri can), will be Se~rs. 17 . a Oct~t 3. : Res~~~~: Smith will play the leader of that they perform about as featured at Bowers Museum, lions_ 8J3.-0793. a motorcycle club called "The indicated in their claims. Santa Ana, through Sept. 27. I-leads" in "C. C. Ryder and Th · be' d' t d "Impossible Years'' Company," which Alan Carr Chevrolels, 171, light duty e Jugs ing isp aye are and Roger Smith are pro- and step-van trucks will have belonging to Mrs. J. W. A family comedy presented ducing. front disc brakes as standard. McConnell of Santa Ana. She at the Costa Mesa Civic Play-Smith recently completed a Brake JX>wer assist is now says, "I've been collecting house Orange County Fair-starring role with Rod Taylor standard on three.quarter and jugs or something for as long grounds {West Gate). Fri. • ln "Darker Than Amber," and one-tone models and all as I can remember." Mrs. Sat. at 8:30 p.m .. Sept. 18 was one of the stars in the Blazers, Suburbans and 4• McConnell had the opJX>rtunity through Oct. 3. Reservations television adventure series, wheel drive models. It is a to travel the United States and _ 834-5303. "Laredo." required option on half-ton Europe wilh her late husbandlijijiiijjjijjjjjiiiijjiiijjjjjiijjjiijjjiiiijjjiijjijjjjjiiiijjjijjjjjiijjjiijjjiiiiiil James as they produced pi ckups, chassis cabs and step-Vans when the Gross c o u n l r y ·western music Vehicle Weight is 5,000 pounds programs. Included in this exhibit are or more. THESE ARE most signifi-fine examples of I8lh and 19th cant improvements to RecVee century c er a rr: i c jugs owners who are in the market produced b Y Wedgewood , ror a truck or van, and will be Allerton and Mayer. as well as extremely important if a two handmade pieces and a woman is to do much of the Shape and sculptured designs, Salem sandwich glass piece. driving. Braking a heavy truck Shape and sculptured designs, is never the most relax ing of glazes of copper and silver exercises, and if the driver lustres and glazing techniques weighs 9:; pounds or so it can such as spongin g and transfers become wearying after going can be seen in the pieces. a few hundred miles. Museum hours are : daily A new Delco-Remy battery except Mondays. 10 a .m. to will be standard equipment in 30 ~1 1· 1 GM 4: p.m.: Sundays, I to 5 a gvuu y por ion o cars p.m.; W ednesda y and Just Barely Open HUNTERS BOOKS THE WEST'S FINEST BOOKSTORES FOR 120 YEARS-SINCE 1851 NOW IN SANTA ANA AT FASHION SQUARE U,500 looks l ~.p.,boeks 32,000 Unus~cd Gretil119 Cards BARGAINS GALOREI OPEN EVENIN6S & SUNDAYS and trucks this coming year. Thursday evenings, 7 to 9 p.m. Anyone who has ever had an The museum, located at 2002 overfilled. gassing batter Y North Main Street. Santa Ana . inside a unit, or found to his is open to the public without dismay that the battery was ~c~h~ar~g~•·~~~~~~;~;~~=:::::;,:::=~~====~ CHALLIS "NEWPORT" HAS THE "Flowers by Debra" r GALLERIES FINEST PRODUCE'. , . His The Finest Flowers REPRESENTIN~ And Thousands Of (IHI Of Them And Thousand~ Of Thl'm ILAlll llANDT COOMll ••• HAMILTON MIX llOUCH WllllU COME SEE, COME SAVEi ~:mH.~~e~:;,h~~; BELGIUM ENDIVE, CARNATIONS HARBOR CRUISES -Fully narrated cruises around New· ~rt Har~r leave each hour, II a.m.-7 p.m. and a moon- light cnuse. at 8 p.m .. from the Fun Zone Dock by the ~erry Landmg on Edgewater Ave., in Balboa. Boats cruise 1n sheltered water around the Islands, viewing the homes and yachts of the area. Tickets, $L2S tor adults,· Ch1'ldren tiff 1 c H e ... , wy., CELERY ROOT, CHRYSANTHEMUMS MANGOES, ROSES, ORCHIDS MARIGOLDS, a l~~~~~~~~~~~~!'!!'~~ .... ~·i-~"~ ... ~~~~ H S• Delly 11 A.M ... I P.M. ansen 1ngs .,..,.,, New Ballad : • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • II Actor ,John Hansen, who stars in the title role in "The ' Christine Jorgensen Story," currently playing locally. is also conternplaUng a singing career. The 19-year~ld newcomer is • being pagtd to make his night-• club debut In Honolulu, and • he has also cut a r ecord , • which several recording com-1 panies are interested I n rtleasi ng, In which he sings I a new balled written I especially for him. 1 • 14 DAYS :::., $169 • U 0•fl l•r Ml\' llff ""' ,.,_ Mltrllof • ll'hl1 11r1 • MEXICO • • MEXICO CITY -S NIGHTS • TAXCO I NIGHT • ACAPULCO 7 NIGHTS • October 31 -November ll • PAPAYAS, ETC ., ' ' ENDIVE, ETC. MELONS, 6 VARlmES •• " •••• " ilC ....... "''"-' --And Many, Mony Mor• ,.,, v .. 1 WI! "Wu1•-"Low111s ) LOOK AT THI COUPON SPECIALS • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • In Our PNlh ~'1· Dept. In Our Prnh Pruit Dept. In our !'lower Shep • • FRES" • VALENCIA • • • TOMATOES • ORANGES • CARNATIONS • • • 10 • 25 ,,, • 5c POUND • LIS. 79c • FOR • Limit 6 LM. • Limit 11 Lk. • Limit 25 • • • • With Thlt Coupen • With Thlt C.upclft • With Th lt Coupen ............................. ~ COUPONS IXPIRE SEPT. 14, 1'70 These restaurents clem1nd the fine1 t for their customers. Th•f's why they fteture ~IWPOIT PlODUCl'I Petronize them! Howard's, Newport; FflhKman, Hunt. 1n9ton Beech ; N.wport Grotto, Newport; Tite Arches, Ntwport; Charin llstro, Coron• del Mer, encl over 200 other1. How ebout you callinq us1 .. Ora~pt Count.11's Fa.tttst Gro¥'ing Produce Orga nitation" ~ NE!,!! w.~~~~~CE 261' N...,.,. laol°""" °"Th h•l.,.lo .. .... '7M71S 17W711 671-6191 When he was discovered by • producer Edward Small and 1 director Irvin« Rapper for the Christine biolllm , John was 1 11 member of lhe Kids of I the Kingdom singing group at a Disneyland, and he's also ap-• pr.ired locally In s e"er1l SINCE 1888 • "35 Years of Product "W" Q lit / Th llelllMe11'• -N••Pert lffcli • ,.ere 11a y s t Know How'' Order of the House" musical stage productions. ~ •••••• I W • W W • • • W W • • W • W hao:::::::icc;o:;==Cli~~~-:....::::i:;:;..:c~c:;i::;:::.'.~- • --~----- I : I • • -- DAILY PILOT p WEEKENDER OUT ' ASOUT N' NORM By STAN LE\' ORANGE I COUNTY'S RESTAURANT, NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE Sumtller's End I Sunny September days and balmy e.v~nings offer some of the year's finest hours for dinin~ at the seashore. The time and place are as compatible as Romeo and Juliet. Actually there isn't a bad month among the 12 to head for a restaurant with an ocean or bay set· ting -but September (and usually mos~ o! Octcr- ber, too) somehow always· manages to dispense a specia1 kind of pleasure and contentment. THE WHOLE COAST BECKONS This fact inevitably brings on a bit of annual musing about the ideal way to _drift through South~ ern California's languorous Indian summer. In that dream state the days are passed sipping and sup- ping at every spot along the Orange Coast from Seal Beach to San Clemente. Reality intruding as it does on imaginary no- tions, though, we q~ck1y le!ll11 to settle for wha_l· ever opportunitie~ ar1se to .drne near the beach this time of year. Which explains why we wer~ up and away when the idea was proposed one night lasl week. The Fisherman Choice of place fell to an old favorite in HWll· ington Beach -The Fisherman. which stands al. the entrance to the pier. Not "old'' in the sense ol having been around a long time (the restaurant has existed onJy slightly more than two years) bul made so through the pleasant familiarity of repeal· ed visits. Then there's the matter oi oldtimers in the area such as ourselves always being drawn to the spot with a tinge of nostalgia. Today's first-rate restaur- ant is one thing. But we can never take our seats 11ltqttr Enrsr 1Juu Dance To The SOYnck of MARK •11 MOIL tin Sat-9 pm to 1 :30 am BUFFET LUNCHEON 11 :)0 to 2:30 Mon. thru Frl. Suncl•y Brunch 10 to l :lD * Mond11y Night Special Complete Prime Rib Dinner ... .. .............................. $3.15 * Wedneld11y Night SpKlal Ch•mpAgne 11od Stroganoff ..................................... $3.25 • • 3295 Newport Blvd ., Newport Be•c.h Reservations 671-1174 ............. HANK SU RAMIE .... l'WICI UR ·WORLD FAMOUS .Si11ft ]')22 ••• I.mt~ Pof)'NtJia• Jrinks snrd ;,, 11 1ropir11/ j)4rad11t SUPERB SEAFOOD AND STEAKS LUNCHEON SERVED 11:30 A.M. to 4 P.M. fOl ll'fS(RVA TIOtrlS . -. 592-1321 16278 PAclFIC COAST HWY. HUNTINGTON BEACH "'Jl"hy don't we do Ibis ntort ofttn?'' • • W't think JO# sbotJd. But then, having offered Laguna's bet view ol the Padfio- beautiful Frendl Garden,.... wtde choice of good food arw;I drink~ siderate scrvicc- and, enjoying this unique atmosphere ouBefws for OYeT 25 yean. wt may bt: a little pn:judiced. YKTDR "°'°IM Oiff Drive it Coast Hif;ttway Llguna Be;ich- -9'77 Optn Daily Lunchrono-Oimer- Cockbils 5undoy °"""""'" BMl<h --IVIHJbif! (19(fl.1Tf0 rf f fl£0 l<lllvt'I' M cAmfac t()MP.1.N'( • \vilhout recalling that we're sitting where the jump- Jng Pavalon Be.llroom once stood. J; BIG BANO TO ROCK In that original strucWre (destroyed by fire in 1966) dance music ranged :from the "big band" sound of the early 40's through later country and \vestern to deafening rOck and roll. And while mel- odies of a more contemporary nature drifted to our table from the lounge the other evening; we still seemed to pick up a lingering trace of. those earlier strains. NOT JUST FISH The Fisherman, by name and location, readily suggests a strict seafood bill of fare. Such is the 1na.ior emphasis. to be sure, but those with other tastes can consider anything from brochette of beef teriyaki, $4.50. and Long Island duck, $4.25, to a ni ce selection of steaks ; $3.50 for ground sirloin to $5.95 !or !ilet mignon. OUR CHOICES To us, however, The Fisherman issues a clarion call for seafood. Turning to that selection of the menu without hesitation 've Jet eyes and palate contemplate everything from egg dipped filet of English sole to the combination seafood plate. The first nod went to broiled swordfish steak saule. meuniere, $3.95. as savory and generous a portion of this taste-treat as ever came from the briny deep. Like all seafood entrees here, it was served with a choice of Manhattan clam chowder or tossed green salad (with choice of dressing). po- tatoes and hot bread . GIANT Second choice of the out 'n' abouler dining duo \Vas the item billed on the menu as giant Australian lobster tail, $6.95. Which led to the conclusion that use of the word "giant," far from being a superla- tive, actually represented understatement. This mammoth allotment weighs in at 16 to 20 DELANEY'S SEA SHANTY Featurin9 Oron9e County's Finest OYSTER BAR Eastern Blue point Oysters on Helf Shell $1.50 E•stern Chertyston• Cl•ms $1.50 Large Shtimp Cockt•il $1.35 M_, ..._ W....,,.. Sel""- Opeti t. 2 P.M. Enterta inment Nightly By KAPPY At th• Pi•no l•r 630 LIDO PARK DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH 675-0100 WHERE IT'S HAPPENING.'.~~ (,,;)} /t ,. :"l IDO IP~NGE PRESENTS (' ( BOB BROOKS DUO 4:30-8:30 THE EXCITING SOUNDS Of ROY ANTHONY 0 -i { ft~ii o/mi (: NfWPOIT lfACH, (AUf0ftNIA THE BERLINER German Fa11iily Restaurant Famou' For SAUERBRATEN with POTATO DUMPLINGS Oplft Daily For Di1111n From 5 P.M. CLOSED MONDAY CHILOIEN'S MINU a.nkAmwk•N M•ster CIN'11• Banquet Room For I 0 to 70 Persons !<. • . , VISIT OUR HOFBRAU ROOM ·-~~~ •• 18582 IEACH ILYD. Tow11 & Country Ceftttt HUNTINGTON IEACH llllS i~ 961-SIOO ALSO VISIT ' .. DER IERLINH DELIKATESUk 6ftty H •erll OW... ,.,.Ill 11.-i..,1111 ii> T-& C-'fY C:WllP OPEN DAILT 111e '-CLOSID SUND.AT t61-4lH Conli11111t1 I Cold Cuh. S1u1•1J11, P•11r1•1, lr••d1, lmporl•d •••• I Wi11•1 S111dwlth•1 I Lunt h11 to &o '' f•I 111 C1!1rl119 S•r .. it• ounces but must be ieen for true appreciation oC quantity. Happily, quality stays even right down to the last flavorsome tidbit. Considering the })rice and average quantity of lobster served in most restaurants nowadays, Th e Fisherman's offering has to be one of the best buy~ anywhere. It is served with drawn butter. a tossed ~reen salad and hot bread. Dinner.capping desserts. for hearty eaters, are four. Jee cream, sherbet, French cheese cake and ice cream with chocolate sauce. Perhaps next time we'll get around to trying one or both oi the new diMer selections that have been added to the menu recently. Lobster-steak combination, $7.50; or the gourmet special, deviled crab en shell. $5.25. Beyond the seafood rea1m, the house is also of. rering a one night a week specia1 that's been prais- ed to us by several scouts. It's the Tuesday even- ing Hawaiian barbecue ribs. with paradise frui t salad, fried rice. Bavarian melba and choice of beverage, $4.95. . WHAT AVIEW The sports minded may want to take up day- time viewing pasts at the restaurant's picture win- dows the weekend of Sept. 19 and 20. That's when the west coast U.S. surfing championships will be staged on the beach outside. During a brief conversation w,ith the always efficient and charming manager, Mrs. Coleen Ba- ker, we learned the restaurant now figures promi- nently in yet another sporting vein. This by way of hosting the twice a month meetings of the comblned membership o! all Orange County ski clubs. One need not be athletic in the least. however, to enjoy the extraordinary food. service and atmos· phere that characterize this place. Unless, of course, you want to turn the act o! eating itself into a kind Evei1 our l1am1Jurger '-"Omes fro1r1 ~ te11dttloi11. 'Ill Now-Tue. thru Sat.-1:30 to I :30 TIM SCHAAF TRIO Starring Th• Southland's N•w Singing Sensation S11eci•li1i119 h1 S••food AllCI Ste•kt with th• Oc••• At Y•ur T•b l• IANOUrT •ACIUTllt Jl7 PACIFIC COAST HWY. HUNTIN•TON llACH •• ,., ... 110111 Atc1pted '36-2555 THE WHISTLING OYSTER .n J. IJ! Wedding Receptions ~/ ,;. & Banquet Facilities Now open ror Sulld1., Ch1mP•IJ"' lrufl(.h 10 lo] THE RAY BROS. App••ri119 HUNTINGTON HAUOUR 146-3177 ot ~ourrnandizing competition. The Fisherman is open seven days a week. from 11 a.m. to 2 a .m., for lunch dinner and c:ock· tails, and features dancing and' entertairunent in the lounge. Address ls 317 Pacific Coast Higbway Huntington Beech, under the ligbts at the pier. ' Temple Gardens A sage piece of advice attributed to the ancient ~hinese philosopher Confucious is the idea tha:t any .1ourney of a 1,000 miles must begin with the first step, Which pr~tty much seems to be course they're following at Costa Mesa's Temple Gardens restaur-ant. ........ ~ Taking up just one year ago where and when the old General Yen's left oU, the new management has. undertaken many changes on a step by step basis, The results has been a ~radual and persis- tent upgrading in every phase of the operation. The most dramatic alteration. of COlirse, has been the addition of the strikingly handsome Rick- sha Lounge. Cozy and colorful, this room begs one to stay on well alter any planned time of departure. Aside from the perpetuaJ motion ot the wheel on the authentic one-half ricksha that hangs behind the bar (the other h~lf of the same vehicle hangs by the outside entrance off Harbor Blvd.). there's an overall lulling of the senses to stay put and relax. LI BRAT IONS Not the least or the lounge's attraction are the heady and exotic spirits served therein. A~ tropi· cal librations go, they're both patent and delicious. One of \he best, however, has to be the original concoction of bar manager Gum Lau. which goes by the name of the Gum Special. Containing coccr nut, orange, lemon and pineapple juices, two kinds Continued on Page 24 FAMILY OINING COMPLETE DINNER UNDER $! "OCEAN FRESH SEAFOOD" 0,... ' A.M. hi 11 ,....... 0.11, mJ VIA LIDO, NIWPOIT llACH WITH THIS COIJPOH CANTON!Sl DllUXf DINNEI $2 95 TWO ml THI PllCI OF ONI! • 041N M011119" ltlr. T~ursdt' to S•IJf, ' Temple Gardens Chinese Restaurani 1500 Ad•mt (At H11rbor) Cos•11 Meu ~1n1 540-lm • OPINr 11 :]0 •-111. t• 11 P·"'~ s..ci.., nw.111 .. ......., ~ 11 :lO e.111. t9 J •·"'·· Frid.y eiid Sohtrdey ~ Real Cantonese Food e•t h•r• or t1k• home. ST AG CHINESE WINO 111 21st pl., N•wporl BHch ORlol• 3-9S60 o,.. Y .. lrti•"" D•lr 12-12 -Fri. 9" Set. 'Ill J .... COSTA MESA GOLF , COUNTRY CLUB Proud ly Presents George Tipton ;, U.NQUETS AND WIDDINli llClf'TIONS _,,_ ,__ ..:-...:::._ -~ ...... CFert11etly 9t ffte le Cotte C.C.1 ---l -·-· --· ~ ....... -... WEO. & SUN . AFTERNOONS THURS., FRI., SAT. NITES --- -~- "•" "0.111tte lofty" ""'· .. .,....., ..... "'*"· 4 ,. ' ALL FACILITIES OPEN TO PUBLIC -FOOO 1701 Golf Course Dr., Co1t1 Mesi 540-7200 DON JOSE' Now Appearing THE FANTASTIC PRIMO KIM AT THE PIANO e COCKTAILS e Enchilada and Taco ... , ....••••.... $1 .35 Chili R•ll•no . Enchilada ........... , $1 .50 5*f¥ff whti II~ ....... Teste4itn M4 S.he 9093 E. Adams lat Mognoll•l Hunt. Buch 962-7911 r;._· • -r I I i I ! ' ' . . • ,. ". r = -~c~c ~,-~, ' . ' • 2f DAIL V PILOT Friday, Stptft'ftbtt 11, 1970 WEEKENDER OUT 'N ABOUT Continu.d from P•t• 23 of rum and a few secret ingredients Gum refuses to divulge, it's a delectable and kicky brew -to say the mildest thing. ON TO OINNER Let it be quickly understood, our most recent visit to the· Temple Gardens didn't end in the Rick- sha Lounge -inviting as the thought may be. Ad- journing to the dining room for dinner, 've also found a commendable number of recent changes there. Foremost among these have been the addition of still more dividers, creating a greater feeling of intimacy. and the placement Of full-length drapes at the windows. No,v , for all appearances, a party of diners can take up their own private little cor- ner of the Far East. DINNERS Family dinners range from the Hongkong at $1.95 per person to the Formosa, $5.35 per perso n. Between those two are severaJ others such as the Shanghai, $2.45 per person, which offers egg Clower soup, fried shrimps, fried rice, egg roll, barbecued spareribs, sweet and sour Pork. chicken chow mein. egg foo yong, tea, fortune and almond cookies - and for three or more persons the addition of pep- per beef. We tried our hand (with very tasty and success- ful results) at ordering a la carte. Among the high- ly palatable dishes chosen were shrimp chow mein , $1.75: pork fried rice, $1; chicken chop suey, $1 .65 ; sweet and sour fried wonton. $1. lobster Cantonese style, $2.95. ' Tina Schaaf at Fishertnan Some 30 to 40 other possibilities existed in thi s department but there is, after all, a limited intake for two people on any given occasion. So maybe next time we'll explore such prospects as sweet and sour subgum wonton. shrimp '"itb lobster sauce, steak kow or moo goo gai pan. BUFFET LUNCH We further learned the restaurant offers a lun- cheon buffet. served ~1onday through Friday from 11 :30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., that sounds like an excellent midday buy any time one can make it. For the thrifty sum of $1 .45, a customer can partake of all you can eat portions of sweet and As if the view from the Fisherman in Huntington Beach were not enough -the management has al- so engaged the Tim Schaaf Trio to entertain in the lounge Tuesday through Saturday from 8:30 p.m. These latter are varied daily between such of- ferings as almond chicken. pepper steak. Cantonese chow mein, chow yok with China peas, shrimp chop suey and chicken or pork chow mein. shnmp chips, fried won ton and two other dishes. Open 11 :30 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sunday through Thursday, and from 11 :30 to 2 a.m. Friday and Saturday. Temple Gardens Chinese restaurant is located at 1500 Adams, corner of Harbor, Costa Mesa. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~so~u.r~sp~a~r~e~r~i~bs~·~.e~g~g~l~oo~yong, fried rice. ei?J! roll, 1r======-,~__,.... ''GRANTS BRADFORD HOUSE'' EVERY FRIDAY s129 All THE FISH YOU CAN EAT Wll~ l'"r-" Frie,, c .... ,...,. Colt 51-. "'' Ito!! • lutllr, T1r11r 51UCf, Your Fa1nily R es taurant EVERY TUESDAY AND THURSDAY BUCK NIGHT YOUR CHOICE Jtocrsf T•M Twrtr.., Golff11 friH Ctlkl• lOCMt..., .... J• ••• ..... i.. •1111..-..i ........ " tr crttm'I' Clll ,..._. Hol 11011 & •11n..- 1 /1 rraltGois' CONTINENTAL CU ISINE sunday Famous For FLAMING DUCK Open 11 :00 A.M. -Closed Moncley HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIFORNIA 11151 BEACH BLVD. 8~2-191 9 BRunch 11A.mto4 p.m. ~~ 3801 EAsr Co.&.ST flJGH •AT u-i..t. na. MA.a, Duro.Ml.l Pnotft: (714) 675-1 374 OPEN FOR BREAKFAST, LUNCH AND DINNER Yis,it a. bit of OIJ Japan· • • 1 8:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., Monday thru Satur.day-10 •.m. to 6 p.m .. Sunday ' GRANTS HUNTINGTON BEACH BROOKHURST & ADAMS I THE OCEAN TOAD PRESENTS ••• Prim• Rllt .................... 5.50 @MIYAKO I l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;ll LUNCHEONS•DINNERS I ii ~ ·COCKTAILS Ground Slrlol" --·-1.SO Sptr• Rlltil -·--······ 3.15 I Mf K•ltob -···--3.15 Potorfi no Shrlm11 ··-3.fS Swordfish -·····-········ 3.fS Broil"' Cent11r Cut To11 Sirloin ·-w ... ·-·-4.25 T1rlyakl •······--ww-4.50 Pl•t• 'Oleef --··w-4.50 New York ·-·· .. ···--5.25 Fi11t ·····-··--··-········-5.25 Loltst•r ...................... 6.25 Pork Chops .........• 4.25 Comltlnetlon .......... _ 6.25 Nightly Enlerl•inmenl And Danc ing Featuring The GARY ED UN TRIO I E•tencl ing • specie! inv it etion to 111 the wondtrful fr iends EARLY SPANISH CALIFORNIA FOOD <With a touch of Otcl Mt1ico> SpKialty of the House BURRITO Dl CHILI RE.LL ENO DINNER $2.60 "ComblnotiOlt Plat• Dtl111t" I Jtanch.,o) $3.50 Includes Soup or Siled, Chicken En~ chilada Verde, Sour Cre1m, Chic.en Tostecl1, IGu1cemol.I, •nd • Fresh Green Chili Relleno, Coffee or T e1. El Revel• Comidas !King of Food1I "SI" For the Hungry B•ndido 22 01. Porterhouse St e•k served with Se led encl B1e '1 1peci•I Portuguese Beens encl T ortilla1. MAlGAllTA57 Sil I Fl•tst i• tfrlt South'-d J BUSINESSMAN 'S SPECIAL LUNCHEONS $1.35 wt made durin9 our recent BANQUET & PARTY FACILITIES 1tend et the Derby Re steur1nt l All ITEMS PREPARED TO GO 650 N. Tustin Ave .-Orang-532·5931 CASA GARCIA IFor-1, Mr. 11111'1) NOW SllYING AUTHENTIC MEXICAN FOOD Noo11 lllffet 11 t• J Di1111er 4 t• 10 F11hiri11g Your F1votit1 M11ic;111 Oi1!.11 Food to Go Coc;kl1 il1 1712 PLACINTIA CIOMd Su11d•p COSTA MISA 646-6124 h.'l 1..J.303 33 Toy.·n & Country, Oranae FOR ADVERTISING JN THE \VEEKENDER PHONE 642432l PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT SINCE THE OLD DAYS Tim has a voice you'U not soon for,get.Ale is back- ed by Ed Hail at the piano and T~ -Canedy on drums. The trio plays for dancin,2" or listening - have dinner and drop in to hear them. Great Seafood! TAiiE if 14" WHAtE AT THE HISTORIC OLD ~\DA PAVtti1, ~~ 673·4633 ~" 400 M1in 81.lboa Peninsula RIVIERA ft£5TAUllANT Contin•ntal Cui1in• Cocktails Serving Luncheon and Dinntr Mondat1 through Saturday. Closed Sundays We ere locetecl ne•t fo the May Co. in South Coest Plaza. lllJ 5. lrlrt•I C•thl MftO 540·3140 Enchantment in Dining For tho!t u:ho enjoJJ Alagnilicent Cui1ine and Fine ll'int.t Romantic Voca l Guitar OPEN TUE, THllOUGH $Al, RfSCRVArJONS Pl£ASC PHONE 644·1700 I For on e eg9nt evening Goach& GJiorses Superb Dining and Dancing SEVEN NIGHTS 6 P.M. to 2A.M. FOR RESERVATIONS, CAll OPEN FOR LUNCH Int imate •ncl Delightful FRENCH RESTAURANT 101 JOTH ST. NIWPOIT IU.CH IUllYATIONS 671-0JIO Prl"'e Eatern Beef Aged and Charroal Drolled LORENZO'S SPAGHml BENDER The Fin•st In lt1ll1n Food CLOSED fOl VACATION SEPT. 7 THRU 30 ll:Nptn 11tursclay, Octobff 2 at 5 p.m. 6204 W. Co11t Hlghwoy Newport Be1ch 645-0651 • i '""I .. -(<)( .. , . I "" ---(C) (90) "" Allln'1 ttntlfiwly 1thedultd 1uats includt: Budd)' Htckett, Jen· nlfer, Rkhtnl Huatiec. Jane How1rd, Robert Chott.. Intl halrdrustr 1 01nitl. ..... .._ .... , (C) ...... 11"'".W ill Mil Af•" fdr1m1) '52-. GrtJO!Y Pd. Ann Blyth Anthony ':251 ''" U1 Dis Dlf (C) Inn. ' &:lO Sii•-s...tlf (C) MtMCt llld Co1W11 (C) (JO) 7:00 u (Cl "'"-•1<11•oi ¥ m-•-(C) a. TrM; (C) (60) • Pi£MIDI£ TM lttlllt" WMr1 Jltw (C) (30). -tallt "°" l Mr. Tull (C) 0..../MlllicW (C) (30) I Mr. Wi*klllt (C) TM ~ Wiii (C) (30)' ·I 0 m l'RDllERE: w-. llllrlp (30) 7:JD i ,_ (C) ......... &Crllltl (30) Mdil (C) ....,.,, ....... IC> 1301 a oo m...,.om -. &:JO Catlclid Ct•n (30) ...,. (C) am •1Fnor1t111art111 (Jo> 1:0011 a rn n. ,.,. """''..,. Ln Tor tile '70s (C) (30) ltlllfllt H011r (C) ..... tot Uwin1 (30) 0 @ 00 m l'IOllDlt , ... llaticier1 34 (C) (50) loolt!I Show (C) .... __ (C) (30) 2 llllCil .. .-u.~ ..... S.nta .... Li1111 {30) .,. ... ~ l..L ""' ,... -A Wtrtd Apert (t) (30) ~u11nll-\"I 7:00 CU (...... Ntw1 (C) (30) Ttln .t Wiiii FllJO m "'' -_ 1ci 1,.1 '"" 11> @m '""''m"" ... M.f1 MJ IJaef (C) (30) I C.(CI """ ll.Mlay(30) 8 -• IMl .. God (Cl (30) • Molle: '111111111 lit • .._. Th FNMll CW (t) (30) (R) Cscl·fi) '58--Rieh•td Ttll'lll. MldJ. ........ lllril (55) ltl Whel•ft. t111t: 111• <t> (30) m t1a Ki• 1:JC1 a rn w s...t (t) <30! <R) m 111w: ....... s.w~ m Hlati Qaparnl (C) (60) (R) (sci·fi) '58--Judd Holdem. A11111 Guns of .lohnn7 Rondo." Towne. &J JfYPD (C) (30) Jick W1rden, 9:00 6 9 (jJ P'RDllERE Stbri111 llNI Robert Hoob and Frink Converse ttl• Clroavit ••In CCI star In this police ~ries. 0 @ @m PREMIERE Dr. Dr 0 "BYE BYE BANDIOO" ''"' (C). . *Me . A . a--..-J.1.,.. 11can· mer1can {mystery) "50-Don Dtfon, And,.. Success Story, hosted Kini. by Ricardo Montalban O @(})P'R'EIHOIE )Inf LIWit 0 I SflCfY I I,. IJI IMdido (C) Shtw (C) (Jfl) Sawn stirrin1 t x1mples ol m Moniq Movltc "Stnntlt ... pernmn1nu CIYtf 1dvenit)', with wivor'' (d11ma) 4S-Austln Tll'Yl'.lr, tilt JllCteSS stories of t1tin Ameri· .lohn Sh11rt. ""'"8 1nd tflt Litt CIAS Vikki C.rr Judp Leopold San· SeCflb ff Hipfllcrttt1" (1dv111· chez Mrt. Ra~a Banuelos. Raoul tu1t) '66--Cltyton MOOfl, Ka7 Ai· G1rdUno. ht.er S1n1cho. Dr. Julian , : dridge. N1v1 and RudJ' Cemntes. Rit1rdo · 1 C.ndHel J Mlllka Mont1lban 111rrates. Panor ... Utin1 G•_l_(C)....,T• ~30 llJ OO l!!!~•t -!Cl ltd•" (COll'led)') 'SS-Tom r .. u. @m PiiOllEIE Sa.per • Marily!I Monroe, Ewlyn ltlJft, Son· "" Dnbhd1f11111 (t) iTutts. GI C.... J C1itlrr• Dodaw haMt IC) 10:00 IJ ta (j) PREMIERE .r.-l '111 ...,,, MUNI (60) m (C) ........ fC) (30) .,. "'D' I (!) m .. , ....... (<) Mtxlcan American" b7 Stan (}J Hot .... (C) Steiner, is discuwd bJ Rob1rt · Mowlt: "'Tw Im _, • Jf Cromie. I lad1t" (westem) ~IYM MClf· " I Sellc:W , .. (C) (30)' ris. ' Mu f.U 111• fl' Amor (lO) Q) Morit: -...., A .. ftiltt" 7:SS Dodpf 8aMball (C) Oodgw. n . ,.;~ (dr1m1) '59-lex 811br, C.!0!1 Sari Francisco Glints at S.f. $';. Math~ I _,,,.,_ .. !Et..,.., l.tlD 9(1)Mt _,Slit (C) (30)10:3069(]) PREMIEI[ Harlt• Y'qhM • ...._ Show (CJ (60) 11~ (C) Sclllduled ftlesb includt Art Met· 0 @ Ci) m Hert C..... 1t11 r1no Toni Arden. Peter £111~ and Sr11•p {C) Dr. L01T1lne Ctlut. O Mowit: "Rtsfl ind th Sp1,1,- 0 @ @ &l Thi lrad'J lundl (wtslem) '56-John Ag11. (C) (30) (il) ""Thi Under1r1d111ti." D @ Cil SkJ Hob (C) fDC ...... • (30) "Qn the Edp," ll:fl08@ CIJ An:bit'1 F•llNst f11- • tiJ111 br Curti& HlfTlnetM, mlllt lilnt llllllbol (C) t..dll ('C) (30) blH 1 .... to be annollllCld. I ... ,."'" t<l tl-0> a oo m-....,. .... ., ........ (50, . I rn n.-.... (<) 8'30 l(J)""""1 .... (C)(30) • ....... @ mNa•,. • ...,11:30 lfl)Cll...._ ll'••'"'"'•"d(C) (C) ( ) (R) "Ofll of tilt Qrl1 ill Didi Cl.Ti 11osts. lltSNICll." Glenn H.ow•rd ~· out CJ MoN: "SH . " .... ....... to find 1n tcetntnc, pubhcity·sh, (western) '53-Xtith lafWI!. lnclustri1!ist wllo la tryin& to put him &:J Morie: "'T1lt D11P11ad1• Ari out of busineu becl1111 Honrd is f} bi TllWll" <-sttmJ '56-ta: hi· p!11ming 1 Covet' story about him. ~· son. a IHI rn m 111e 111o11: ''"' Mrs. .. Mair (C) (30) (R) '"Pardoo My •" , ..... hi! 111111 KenndJ {t) (60) Dlwld lmtind (C) (Z hr) lZ:CID 1J a (j) lua•J D11i, ... Ari Pot l Sex: Tiiey Blow Their Y-01! (C) Mlrtds at Woodstock." Put L @II Tutti F1dlilf Im R*r F•ltJ (30) CS Dniu dt .. ,.... m Lal 11..tr di,., .. PD> 12:1s e MOlir. -cMm • '" ....... t:0D 8 la (f) CIS ff'Wly Morie: (C) (comedJ) ''3-lnt Sidt J(jds, '1\a. i*""s.wiM" (dr11111) 'ti9-m Doqw Dlliwt (C) Vinet (dwwd' Rlchanf ~1seh1rt, 12:30 8 a (JJ Tiit MOll•m (C) Williem Shit~. Lou Antonio. l•t'.J Moillt: "Pwt SlnUttr" (•dwn· Ca117, Dtnn11 CooMJ, Brad David ture) 'S3-J1mn Warren, l ynnt •nd Pttrick Wayne. Roberts D I IHCIAl I H.,., Mid Lau (t) · ~ {60) H•"J Bll1font1 and ltn1 IZ:to m Dodrw W...O, ('C) Horne llar ill this "NoW" stlOW of 1%:55 m Dodpr .... II (C) DDdprs i Low and Br«flemood. n. San Francisco Giants fmll Saft 1 EB""' C... 11111 lridll (C) Fr1n<Hco. t OutrMdl/FI• CC• (30') l :mt 6 ~@ U.S. 0,... TMllh ~ Hor (30) pioltSllips (C) fmm forut Hill1: Nl\ldll (60) I New Yor1(. with Bud l:ollias . Ind t:XI CD Mtlft (C) (30) I J1ek Kramer reportlnr th• tction. Mlaiclll/htttr'a Dell (C) 0 Mowle:""" ....., .. Q1p1h1111" -ie (30) (drtme) '62-MoU7 Mith. tklinut lltlO <Ro m lmhtt's Wtfld (C) Scllmid. ( i'R> '-'ifA meet Piec:e of Cast· I Pablie S«Yict Fil• (t) i • Tm Vidas Dlllilttn . 81 5 11tws (C) {tiO) 1:30 Clll111pionship Wmtllftf (C) a U... A111riun !tJ'ft (C) ~reddie Blassie n. Tht Grut ~ { ) (R) Guests includt Burt Re7. jib. nolds, Elilabelh Ashley, Othbit Wat. 1:45 0 Morie: ''lli&fll l'\Mt ff'M .son Jtcllil Coop11, lnlie McRI)'. Cll•ltlnl"' (YnySttty) ''3 -Elin o 'Act af ~cc• (60) Quest D1ew. R~bert Preston. Otto Krull~ is Oavicl WUntn. creator of 0 MllWll: "J\I WllJWll'd 111 ~Funky ftshions." (dr11111) '57-Jt)'nt M1Nliald, 0.11 a.tia't Lew (60) D•ilq, Joan Colllu. Rick Ju:in. ,,.. vw. Dilllltll (30) 2:• a amrm ,,..,.. a.. T..Clu•r to (Z 1w1 r....-1crHcoN MM -. r ... 10'.JO Tlla J1.nca1 "-(C) (30) (R) nHMI Ml. 1111 ..... (30) m 11t .. uu (t) !~~SU.=rl(t)fC) Z:JOll:,." tc9>' ht (C) n ~ .... (C). Z§v ....... .... '" .. "'"' (l:J ....... -" ... (<) 11llllJt I: .... ,,. • "• . Mwle: ..... c....-· (llra-........ (lllJll•IJ'l 'S&-8uddy Bltr, m•) '49--Kiit Doilcln. ltut~ flo. .... ,_.. JltM. (C) man Mll11r ~ ~,:. • , < o iH> rn m •••• ,_ (l:J r~· .... (Rl /, ~11nfMt tit Mt"*-The eplfl• .. a,_ .\ 1ng of tbt rtCM 11110111 wfttl 1111 Ella llodlt a Lis Onca St•nford l!tdlans 11~1111 on 1111 "1· Llf'I MUI a Datt (C) k1n•1 ltuorb8* It lfttle M, 11,io u-""''' t<l G ••-""' oo m Jo11n11J CltlOI (Cl m •• ""' .. ..,,.. ~ IUnd" (<:Ofl'ltdy) (Wiiiem) '51-tluch M•rtowa. • Slcln.!f. Poitier, Jofln Clt$rlll1s. I Olltrtldi UM1191W (C) fl l\?,2lf "'' ";:..~~... ·-:ii .,,_,_ ~ c..... . f!:.. "": a. ThoimplOll. Rita G1t11. I II 1 _ l --& lteldn M (C) : , .. , 11.'ilO m ltlt'lll: "TM lady W111b Min•" 1:30 C.Wlf.tlM1 W1tt1 1 ~ (corntdJ) '$2~11th HuSlef, Dtnl'lll trllt (C} Dr. E~11d Sl•lnbroot. ~""'' I ..... TIM (C} t:Oll IJ ... "Wt Wttl Stralll'I"' Trw&I Ill ..... (C) (dr•lfll) '4!t-.ltnniftt -... John. ClllW!w'a c.,.I Miii' (t) e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS Qu1lity Printin9 ind D1pendable Servic• fer mot• l h1n a qu•rf•r of • c1ntury. PILOT PRINTING nt1 wm IALIOA ILYI .. NIWPOIT UACH -'4J-41n ; Your Gulde to' Movie• Friday, Septlmbtr 11, 1970 DAILY ~ILOT !!J New Surf -Film at Balboa TODAY IS HAROLD'S BIRTHDAY THIS IS Oront• county l~ HIS ''T:r'B'Avs IN E'ditor't N O t C : T-h i I movie guide U prepared bt1 (he tiimi committte o/ Har bor Councit PTA. Mrs. Nigel Bailey is president and Mrs. William Ware ii committee chairman. lt ti intended as a reference in detennining auitabte filrru f or certain a g e groups and wilt appear weekly. Your viewt art 1olieited. Mail them to ~f0r vie Guide, cart of tilt DAILY PILOT. * MATURE TEENS AND· ADULTS Ba.ndolero (G ): Post.Civil War western in which two outlaw brothers, James Stewart and Dean Martin, join forces with the sheriff when the posse pursuing them is attacked by Mexican bandidos. Raquel WeJch co-stars. Lawford Always A Gent By VERNON SC01T HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Peter Lawford could talk about is rill with Frank Sinatra, his divorce from Patricia Kennedy, romantic flings ' since, inside stories about Jackie Onasis and other bits -0f gossip. Lawford, however, is a gentleman. ADULTS Caleb n (R), Account of a bliarre bomber squadron on a MedilCrranean lsland, alarring Alan Arkin and Oraon Welles. El Condor (R): Two men try to take a fortress filled with gold. J im Bro'tfD and Lee Van Cletf star. Tite Grudtopper (ft), Jacqueline Bisset f)lays a Canadian girl who seeks excitement in the United States and finds narcotics and prostitution. Joseph Cotten and Jim Brown. M-A-8:8 ( r ) : Irreverent comedy about the Mobile Army Surgical Hospital during the Korean War. Elliott Gould, Donald suuierland and Tom Skerritt. Woodstock (R): Three hour film of a music festival. A Bullet for Pretty Boy · (GP): Biography of Pretty Boy Floyd starring Fabian Forte and Jocelyn Lane. ~-, .I !· F _, ~,, .. • ' l • ' He is the son of a British ~ Army General and a well·bred Englishwoman. His g e n e s , plus his youthful environment and life-style set him apart from most of b1s peers. .l ~ I PETER LAWFORD H1'1 No Goa1ip • Pasternak was making. And my age~t contacted him. Pasternak said l was a little too.old for the part. Peter broke into movies as a juvenile at MGM when he was in his teens. Every time the studio needed an aristocratic kid with a tennis racket and an English accent, he got the job. Who could forget him in "White Cliffs of Dover" and "Son of Lassie"? He recently completed "One More Time" with Sammy Davis Jr. and "A Step Out of Line," for Cinema Center-100. Lawford, who could drink with the best of them, knocked off his intake to an occasional glass of white wine. His weight is down to 155 pounds, his hair is salt-and-pepper gray, his finances a re considerably Jess than they once were. "And I've neve r be en happier In my life," the actor said, meaning it. "I remember when I was under contract to M G M (producer) Joe Pasternak: told me to wait for stardom until J was in my 30s. I did a Jot or movies and then a television series, 'The Thin Man.' "Finally an excellent role came along in a top movie 'T asked him where those glorious five minu tes went when I was Mr. Perfect." Lawford has a sense of humor about himself and an ability to roll with the · punches. The tragedies which befell the Kennedy family - or which is now an ex-officio member -llave left him pensive, less ebullient than in days past The conversation turned to his accent which he identifies as Mid-Atlantic East Coast. "J·m acceptabl e to Englishmen when I'm playing a British part." he said, "and Americans wilt go along with me when I play an American character. "I guess I'm rorlunate in that respect. A good many Englishmen never lose their accents. But then, I've lived in America since I was 13 years old." Lawford laughed and added, "but put rrie to work in a British movie surrounded by the natives and I revert to an English accent." DON'T MISS THE LAST BULLFIGHT ""' OF THE SEASON! THIS SUNDAY AT 4:00 P.M • AN EXTRAORDINAR'l'. BULLFIGHT FEATURING TWO OF THE GREATEST MATADORS OF MEXICO COMPETING MANO A MANO ALFREDO LEAL lntornation•lly f•mou1 m .. tor m•t•clor AND ' CURRO RIVERA Only 17 yHrs old, the now sonsation of Mtxico ~ SIX LAS HUERTAS BULLS MONUMENTAL DE TIJUANA "THE IULL RING IY THE SEA" The Cbeyeo.. Social tlub George S. Patton portrayed by - 'GP): After the Civil War, a George C. Scott. Karl Malden Texa s cowboy inherits a plays General Omar Bradley. bordello on Cheyenne. James Waves of Change CG): A Stewart, Henry Fonda and new surfing film, shot by two j PRESENT-;f~~'!! ;:,. "-· .Jbuth Coa st Repcr/1 ir_v 1121 Ne_,.,,. .,._.., C..... .w ... Shirley Jones. men from Laguna, in France, FOR RESERVATIONS -646-1363 JS:eUey's Heroes (GP): Portugal, Hawaii andl~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ World War II comedy · California. Rolf Aurness, World adventure with Clint Eutwood Champion performs. and Donald Sutherland who lead a gang of aoldiers in an F AMO.. Y attempt to steal gold bullion behind enemy Jines. Don Rickles co-stars. Tbe Moonahbte War (GP): Story of a young Kentuckian's battle with revenuers and booUeggera to keep his illegal whiskey. Stars Pal rick McGoohan. Richard Widmark and Alan Alda . Ned Kelley ~GP): ?.tick Jagger stars as one or Australia's most notorious outlaws. One More Time (GP): Suspense-comedy about two London nightclub o w n e r s . Sammy Davis Jr. and Peter Lawford. Palat Your Wagon (GP): Musical of the California gold rush days with Lee Marvin, Clint E8'twood and Jean Se berg. TEENS AND ADULTS Airport (GJ: Film version of the best-selling novel. BW't Lancaster, Dean M a rt i n , Helen Hayes and Van Heflin. Be1teatb the Planet of tbe Apes (GJ: Sequel to "Planet of the Apes" starring Charlton Heston and James Franciscus. Cockeyed Cowboy1 of Calico County (GJ: Comedy.western with Dan Blocker and Nanette Fabray. Patton: Salute to a Rebel (GP): Portrait of General The Boatntks (G ): Disney comedy filmed in Newport Beach about the S u n d a y sailor. Stars Robert Morse, Stephanie Powers and Phil Silvers. Captala Nemo and tbe Underwater City (GJ: Robert Ryan and Chuck CoMors star in Jule.s Verne science-fiction adventure. Hello-Dolly fGJ: Barbara Streisand portrays Dolly Levi, the matchmaker, in this lavish musical set in New York at the turn of the century. Walter Matthau co-stars. The Jungle Book (G): Walt Disney's version of Kipling's tale about an East Indian boy reared Jn the jungle by a family of wolves. Tbe Love Bug (G>: Disney comedy starring a Volkswagen with human feelings . Dean J ones and Buddy Hackett. Pufnstuf (G): Music a 1 comedy fantasy starring Jack Wild, Billie Hayes and Marlha Raye. * The letteT immediately after the title indicates the rating give-11 the picture by tlie Motion Picture Code. The Motion Picture Code And Rating Program may be found on the motion pidur• pa.ge. ·a\1•1rf COMEDY-RATED "R" ~ ':itn No One Und1r 17 ~: &7M2M Unl111 With P1r1nt Coron1 del Mir 2'05 e..t Coat Hwy. Watch thetlandlord getihis: • ·-BE"Alf BRIOGfSi lE£ GRANT· DIANA SANDS ,.ffNll!Wl£f .it:,;..~ ~ :RiS'rm~ • W11Ylml Hl"Wisv 1X1.0R ~eetiie11r11111..._ l 111e1--..-lll:ll.lll-... ... .-.UGll\NTID~ -11 Al1e Pleyl119 ''THE NIGHT THEY RAIDED MINSKY'S" 5*rl .. ,,_ leW. lllHI lritt 1Eklo11d 0 CJ has fun at the big Las An!elas DauntJF411 POMONA, CAJ.JFORJflA SEPT.18*0CT.4 """' •~urtn t.,,,llrf Al1Ntlfr >AWC GENtR)l Al»l/$SIO/f HRU 12-SOC UNDEA sa -Fllll / EXCLUSIVI: QI) ORANGE COUNTY ~ .• ,, • ENGAGEMENT ~ j . .... nnm. .... 1er.M. u.r.1...,....,...1,::•A IH.1-1111141•7••• .... ll tCITCH·2Zi IS, QUITE SIMPLY, V !f rv~":E~5lH~~~:~~~.~ :~~~ .. ~ <· .wwa =-a-l:, • 1•1111.1111. . •. Miiia . mi i ~-1-1-"'(~ ' "~-~ ·--------.111--••1•-· --... ----·-•-1111u•-1BWrr••'9l81t•Cllff•1n1-.i!Biii•• ... --~---·-·--T-1,_ __ NO R£SERVl:D SEATS· FREE PARIONG ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT NEW "DOLLY" SHOWTIMES!! a MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 7,00 & 1 o,oo .,, SAT. & SUN. 1,00 4,00 7,00 & I 0,00 " SPECIAL NEW Pll'IJLAR PRICBJI OllLDREN<:iJLY $1.00 oil tim« O'iS <:iJLY $2.SChll ri"* io-cod-•-lrJjo.t&llw fith • <1o0,,11illr. & .., I , j;,,,;'-*ix • ....,.....,.;oi...1eboo!ic.o •.._,_ r'~ If,. ...t.o • ...... 400.000 ,,11., i....ui;ful ... ""1 .. .,Alicl"s ...._ .... CWl17'11 -·-M:A:S·H iBJ .. l'WS "I low You Alice a TQda,~ EXCLUSIVE 0.1. SHCWNG/ 20fl ~Oii,,..,.. JJA'J"l'f)N ~ --- _..,,....,,, •• u5 CARD STUD• John Wayne In His Greatest Role .< ta.;r~johnWayne is "Chisum" fooest irler·Oiristqtier C.eorge Gem Gxbett· Patric Koo.vies ~ D1r· Ben)olnsoo·Bnxe GIDot Anciew Pme·Richard Jaed<el Ard ttrodri1g, t., ~Deuel &Pamela M<Myier ~ Wrillen and Produced by Andrewlfenady ~· ~= IGl==·I ~ ElleCUtive l'roducer Michael Wayne • ·, ;, IMc1ed by Andrew \l Mctaglen . -· ..._,,,; Plus Co-Hit· Both in Color Henry Fonda· James Stewart N • CHEYENNE SOCIAL CLUB • .. • . . . . j l DAILY PILOT ·. LU<JL1~z _,,,....., .... ..1. " -itL.' ........ ., ·----"THE LOVE BUG" • mtuenY um ma • rwi1111111 » PICKWICK~ BOOKSHOPS Slit• c..c ""'-(Atl ... ,....,, • ' I • In the Gal"leTfes Art Forum Chicago Set For SOUTH SEAS TROPICAL FISH • --~--"JUNGLE BOOK"--c.M ...... Dlllf 1 ,. .. "" .. .;,.-,-... ""-"' 1111.,,.._. CUJ;I MO Ultl At Center Concert Tropical Fish & Largest Selection ot Supplies in the area. ~ f'I•• J Loc.tt.111 fl•W,IJlllLION,COITA lrilfU HELO OVER 4th BIG WEEK I CONTINVOVI MILT FIOM l:l:JO P.M, S'MNC: INTO A WAAI 0# LAUGHS! ' atJ!lllT • *Jungle • 1kJij[ I \'Ola$ IY PHI\. MAlllS • UMIJS llllMA SPECIAL ADULTS ANO JUNIORS $1.SO UNTIL S:OO P.M. . WAl.T . '!'rl!Y· k:,lm..; ,. 0 CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM 2 P.M. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• All Collf' F•mlly E111ert•lnint11t Wi ll DI_., p,_ts "JUHGll!" •OOK'"' • !GI .... Deaf! ~ • • ...,. HIKketf "THE LOVE 8UO"' • (G) HUNTINGTON CENTER l't1AL1-Edbiger Ave. at Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach. On exhibit !ree during regular buiness hours, Sept. 14 through Sept. 25, Prospectus/Art '70. Tbls is a gtatewide art forum sponsored by the City of Hun- tington Beach and the Huntington Center feat~ 725 works of leading Calif. artists. (Inaugural reception at 6 p.m .• Sept. 13, open to public, admission $5 to raise funds for art scholarships.) FIRST WESTERN BANK -18022 Culver Drive, University Park, lrvine. On exhibit during regular business hours. o:il paintings and collages by David ~nes, through Sept. 18. CORONA DEL MAR UBRARY-420 Marigold Ave., Corona del Mar. On exhibit through Sept. during regular library hours, water color portraits by Peggy Sheppard. LAGUNA ART GAU.ERY-307 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach. Hours: noot to 5 p.m. Mon.. Sat.: l • 5 p.m. Sun. Admission 50 cents. On edtibit through Sept. work of Taiwan artist Liu Kuo Soog; Ralph Tarz..i.ari's bronzes and hard-edie paintings by Floreoce Arnold. MARINER'S UBRARY-2005 Dover Drive, Newport Beach. During regular library hours, the Jr. Ebell Artists Of the Month exhibit featuring acrylic paintings of old Newport land· marks by Gretchen Williams through Sept. BOWERS MUSEUM-2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana. !fours: 10 a.m. -4:30 p.m. Tues.· Sat.; I to 5 p.m. Sun.; Wed. .e nd Thurs., 7 to 9 p.m. No charge. Pre-Colu mbian ceramics on exhibit through Sept. 27. MESA ART LEAGUE--513 Center St., Costa Mesa. Hour: Sat. and Sun. 1 to 5 p.m. continuous exhibits or art work in various media by Art League members. No admission charge. NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK-1090 Bayside Drive, New· pot! Beach. On erltibit during regular business boors through Oct., acrylic paintings by lofaryon Henrietta. NB CIVJC CENTER GAU.ERY-3300 W. Newport Blvd., Newport Beach. On nhibit during regular business hours, through Sept .• a collection of photos gathered by the New- port Beach Historica1 Society from 22 sources, showing old Newport Beach and BaJboa. CHAUJS GALLERY -1390 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. Hours: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. Current exhibit, 001..-'- man show of Shirley Weekes' recent paintings, thr6ugh Sept. 27. COFFEE GARDEN GAU.ERV -2625 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. Hours: 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Mon. ·Sal. Currently on exhibit through Sept. 30. The Hurschler Collec· lion of Modern Tapestries. BRITAIN'S CHARLOTTE "Going All Out" for MGM Chicago is coming to the Hollywood Bowl Sept. 18. Not the city, ol course, but ("" FllN~w II.If-, J4-7'f1 1)7.(J, ......... ~ °'· -Ne_.-t k •trl lbdltl'ICll"" l"oll Off1G9) W-&S3' an exciUng, seven· ma nli~~~~~~~~~~:11 musical aggregation that is selling albums· like mad all over the land and packing the ~*•' • "" n. cash customers Into t h e -pr arenas and auditoriums they Jliilia. are currently playing from ~ j~ coast to coast. The band comes from the TONITI AT 6:00 & 9:50 Windy City and was fl1'st called the Big Thing, which was changed. to C h i c a g o Ram piing Co-stars In Film J Transit Authority . Now the , name is simply Chicago and like its great m· i d w e s t British actress Charlotte Rampling has been signed to co--.sWr with Rogert Blake in .f\1GM's "Going All Out." V.'hich is in production in Dallas. Miss Rampling fir st won critical attention in "Georgy Girl" and recently co-starred with Dirk Bogarde in Luchino Visconli's highly acclaimed "The Damned." She has just rompleted major rotes in "Vanishing Point," "The Ski Bum ,'' and earned international altention with her starring role in "Three." The Him is directed by . namesake, it has vitality and I io-c om la A appea . The question is "What kind of music does Chicago play?" The ans\Vi!r is "everything," rock·jazz, jazz-rock, 8 little or the classics and it even sounds at times like one of the Big Bands of the "olden days." -------------~---~ ® .. 01( Ullll 11 ao.1nlD j.l.gt '""'' ..,y .,,.., lftUl'l.IJftat'IH) ·•·······················•·· AT THE INTUNCI TO FAIULOUS LIDO ISLE Leonard Horn, whose rirst feature was "'The ri1agic Garden of S lanley Sweetheart." Producer Bruce Geller. who crcaled and was execut ive producer of ''Mission: lmpossiblc," afld '"Mannix,'' wrote the original screenplay with Eugene Price. "'' !i:I! l4e -I!! ....... .., ... ........ Cit .. .... ..., ................. _ .. _.,_ Mo11. thru Fri. show11 o t 6:l0--t:45 Sot.-1 a1td 10:10 S11-J:154:JO.t:45 .tr.a Color f"•mlly Ellhr11illmMI W11f Dl-.y Pr-11 "JUNGLE •OOK" • (GI ..... ~ J-• a.tdr H•clletf "THE LOV• •UO" e tGI GLENDALE FEDERAL SA VIN GS -500 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. On exhibit during regular business hours, oil paintings by Faye Curtis. GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE -15744 Golden West SL, ~lun t· lngton Beach. On exhi bit in the campus Library, Community Center and Administration Building, contemporary Japanese graphic art by 31 artists, through Sept. 30. Robert Blake marks his' .':::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: third starring role wilh "Going r· All Co!W SMw Unftr 17 MllU .. Wltlt 1"tn11: "EL CONDO«" e l•I f'lus Jim ll"'DWft • JKq..,lne 8isMI' "THIE GlllAS»IO~lt,"' e fR) EU'-'" Drl'¥•hl ~ """"' W•yM ii "CHISUM'" (G) pl9s Auoa:n NEPIURN ''WArT UNTIL DARK'" (GI') -All c ... r s..._ All C•l9• F•mllr Enlsrttinrftttll "PUFNSTUF" e (G) Plus R1btlrt Ry11>-Cll11<k can,,.<$ "CAPTAIN NEMO & THE UNDERWATER CITY" {0) C.IDr LIDO GALERIE-3102 Lafayette Ave., Newport Beach. llours: Daily 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. On exhibit Sept. 12. Oct. 4, ontffilan show of oil paintings of Cape Cod by lfiro Chhal- par of Bombay India. CALIFORNIA<. FEDE,&U. SAV1NG~2700 Harbor Blvd ., Costa Mesa. Currently on exhibit, during regular business hour, oil paintings by Lucille House, through Se pt. _....,.....,. _ __,. ___ , WiTWlUI MIDlll """l • 1M 011110 rw.o !HERB IE the Incredible little ca4'!., ID •:;":~ I ''·/Ill?; WALT DISNEY ·:.!l'f.-· ~ ',..;,:.. -PLUS -~r::::IONS' • : • _ a c.au .. ~SWING INTO A SAFARI OF LAUGHS! ft IWl'llllln' -....,1<..W/ • .._ -Dftftbo • ,; ' JJUUlt ...... ~ l(' -" vora:s BY PHrL HAllts • LOUIS PllMA • GEOIQ SANDOS FINALLY. THE FILM FOR EVERYONE All Out," since playing the lead in Truman Capote's best seller. "In Cold Blood" and starring with Robert Redford in Abraham Polonsky's. ''Tell Them Willie Boy ls Here." ln "Going All Out." he portrays a young mechanic who envisions a new life as a successful stoc k ca r driver. Miss Rampling plays his Texan wife. "Going All Out," will use actual fairground and race track locations in Dallas and Birmingham on an eight week shooting 6Chedule. THE NIFTY THEATRE Pr•i1nh EDWARD ALIEE'S The American Dream • •• ILLIOT fJllED'S Slots NOW THAU AUGUST 22 FRI. & SAT., l :lO P.M. 101 MAIN ST. HUNTIMliTON IU.CH for Resenatioin Coll 17141 5J .. 91SI 250 2" hoph-Shi...., THE L.A. TIMES SAYS: "'Waves of Change' is a stunning piece of filmmaking ... excellent ... breathtaking ... artistic and entertaining enough to appeal POSITIVELY F.Nnc; TUES., SEPT, 15th to those who have never gone near a surfboard ... fine family fare." captures the excitement, the comedy and the beauty in surfin9. A color film from Greg MacGilliv roy and Jim Freei;nan --.-.1-1-0--.A Now Playing --Nightly 673-4048 J 7:30 & t :JO P.M.-ADULn SZ.50 CHILDltlN 11 & UN Dllt SI.SO M1t inte on Sat. & Sun. at 2!30 P.M. TIMES RATED "G" '-do111fitltne..I l.oM~ a.ulf1. ,_ RAY\VA.l.STON HARVE PRESNEU. ::::. .. =~~ .._ ...... a.AU.NL.i.Yl.EM .....,"lldil,°'""" -·mAALCXAN [GPI 1 -...i.REtMllOO\I """·-... ~ANOREl'll\1N .. --Ja.~JAYWL\1.11-~\.$'.llo· TIONlJCI' AN.00,T!C!IJI -:-•-t Plus Second Feature--Richard Harri,- "A MAN CALLED HORSE" "* * * * Hlg'-t Rating!" ......ll.Y.W'y,._. "'M1\:S·H'IS THE BEST AMER(CAN WAR . "Without a 'doub t the funni est COMEDY, SINCE SOUND CAME IN "'-.. ... I service comedy I have ever seen," ..,. .... -,. ' ., . ' ''p'.' z ......_., -OONAlD S!JlllRIAlllHillJIT ID.lD ·TC* sml!IJTT .. ~ .... -· ... ·--1)-"IS·•·--~ -·-·-· ~ llGIPllmll llllRl"-m9 IKUlllllLt.I ...=:-_.:.. ____ , -·--1 ~ ~- Collw~~~ "'=:-- 5th RECORD BREAKING WEEK ~. " 'M*A*S*H' is what the new freedom of the screen is all about." "A COCKEYED MASTERPIECE!" NOW AT BOTH THEATRES POPULAR PRICES! Rated ''GP'' All Ages Admitted- Partntal Discretion Suggested Coll 544-3102 Wll"ll!llnllH -00Nltn Wn l It!-01rC1r11 ONvt • hll bifll """'· Coll 892-4493 -.... " .. -"lhe !J)ic American war movie lhal Hollywood has alwaJS I wanted lo ma11, but never had lhe . aub lo do before~ ---. Coll 639-7860 .. DICK TRACY ' TUMBLEWEEDS l!OOO SEWER1 MA'M'li!'U. Y ! _ .... .;:;:--· - ~~--• Mun AND JEFF l'£oPLE AR&. auTCllERING OUR ENGi.iSM LANGUAGE SO MUCH SO 'THAT PRETTY SOON rT\.L. BE LIKE "TllE CITYOF BASEL-ALL. coNFUSION- NOBODYWILl. UNDERSTAND EACHoTilER WE WON'T BE ABLE TO COMMUNICPi JUDGE PARKER I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A POWER I ACROSS 1 HaH: Comb. lorm 5 Btaslol burden 10 Olplo1111cy 14 Ending used W it~ Hel and Rub lS Oil source l b Roman god 17 Nol bartloot 18 Otclinrs 19 Rom an 3'' of \11un tr 20 Sc itnG t dealrng with sound 22 Music al group 24 Peggy or Canada·- 25 Group of ~.Y. stocks 27 City on the Hudson 29 Lively and modern: Slam;i 32 Sister 33 State: Abbr. 34 Hockey Cir basketball 36 Ho llow cavity ol the skull .-o Zone "2 Whiskty dr ln~s 4'4 Flooring piece •s Diseas e sprt1dtrS •7 "--of a Salesman'' •9 Rtsinous subst1nce 50 Dt1am;itd !'i2 Tissue conntcti ~g bones 1r ooa~a o 54 Ha bitual 58 Sin11er 59 Gaidtn implement 60 Puff on a ci11arelle LZ Lookin~ In a cer ta in .. , Q 1l CR l •l l GIL( L ( (l S T S£0 AN 110 <L l Y ~~(BS &5 •.• Boleyn b7 Baseball sco1er's decision 6'l av any ch~nc r 70 Undergoes de com· position 71 Cause \Cl smart 72 Pre l l:ir 111ean1n11 half 73 Allowanc e lor waste 74 Wigwam 75 Ga it DOWN 7 Monty· ma~ing establish· ment 8 Each 9 Wciun d 10 ···Mahal 11 Soap planl 12 Overlay 13 Ki!mtr title 21 S'!lokes: Informa l 23 Burden lb Headband 28 Work with woo l 2'l Obstatl e JG Ex isted 31 Cooked 1 Sound of certal disapprova l 35 Characltfistic z Repe~t 37 Historic 3 A. William•' wate•course: lht me : 2 words ~ Sartre or Siou x 5 FJciwt1s &--mcide 2 words 38 •·• S ator: Mongolian capi!al 39 Rel igious gro up 91ll.'71J ~l Shot and shell: Slang 4 3 Legendar y dragon slayer: 2 wards 46 Budding material 48 t~e cute, in ce1ta111 way 51 Most terrible 53 Ha1ass 54 Graphic 1eprese11I· a lion 55 High publ ic esteem 56 French income 57 Ala ··• bl Golfer's concern L3 J ules Ve rne c haratter ti4 "True -··" ti ~ Superl1ftita ~ulfi • 68 c~1d inal ' number ' ' I" 11 " " " I 16 1 • ~ •• " •. 22 l " " f, " " .,. ' ~ l3 "' " " ... " " " " .. " •l " ..~ .. " .. " .. •• . .-,. " ,, " " " " " h " ·;~ • ' l ' " .. ,,. " l . " ' " • ly Cliester Gould By Tom K. Ryan 000! HOW CONTINENTAL! HOW SUAVE ! W\VE YOU EVl'i~ SEEN AJlRQo\D? GOO'NESS NO, SWEEJ;! ONCE A FELl.ER1ALWAYS A FOLLER!... RULES O' nu:. GAME:, \"KNOW! oH,IT's LIKE THAT 'RIGHT 1-!ERENOW- I DON'T UNDERSTAND You-_.,"" lrLOST AND FOUND ..... PERKINS MISS PEACH M/MOT!£R UKES 'iOU VEfe! ~ .viuc:H,FRANCJNE! I • f l . STEVE ROPER EVEN IF YOUR FIAWCe'E OIO FL 'f BACK 70 IRELAMO, MIKE, ~ CAfJ REACH MER BY' 1RANSATl..ANTIC PHONE ···AMO PL EAD YOUR CASE/ PEANUTS ---.... ...... By Al Smith -AND'lt>UOON'T UNDERSTAND YOURWIFEAND _ MOTHER·IN-· -. LAW! SH!!'Q BE VERY HAPP'!' 70 SEE US MARRY SOME DA'f ! ')!l<J MIGHT PUT CAAVI. ST/JU< OM THE l !UE l4JJO MA.VE HER i ADWT THAT 9-IE FRAMED I YOU! Ll'L ABNER ?.?. $ . . SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS ;;;.:•r. "'S' ' "-) ._, 7 ® '?!'·MAM l-IEARI~' MUST &E PLA"fOJ1 TRICKS 0tJ ME!! IT15 iTUSI 1HE SOOIJDS' OF THe <ruue;i..e Ar IJlbll'f'- AU.WELLAND GOOD, ARTHUR,Bl1r WHAT WILL /OU DO FOR A LIVING ? By John Miles By Mell MYMOT'HER . WARNED ME. yalftj BE THE TYPE Vv'f-10 WOULD EXPECT #E. 70 EARN A LNING ••• ,,,, C.."c. •• 1,, "l-•• - By Saunders and OverlJOrd I.JO-I BETTER GO Hoti4E NOW-AN' CAJ.ICEL ORDERS FOR FLOWERS, A CAKE AN" A HOto/EYMOOJ.I COT°t'\GE.' By Charles M. Schulz .--------.. il)IEN '((XIR Al1™~TI~ I~ 60Nf, '«XI LOVE evtMODI' ! -. '. f'rld~y. Sfpttmbtr 11, 1q10 " . . ,. " ·' THI STIAHGI WOILO .. MR.MUM • • DAIL V PILOT 2{ ly Al Capp ; .. ~·c~ • . • • • . • . l&.e.111.i By Gus Anlola ) " !l j ~~~~:;.:r-""'i DENNIS THE MENACE JI DAILY PILOT '68 DODGE SUPER BEE 4 1pt10~ t.1n1m i11ion. r1ilio tnd h11!1r, pow· 1r 1t11rin9 , pQw1r br•k11, 115557) $1395 '67 CHEVROLET IMPALA VI, 1ulo'!l1iic. rtdio, h11!1r pow1r 1l11rin9, P"'"''" br1k11. -.in·1I top. !TXT9 !01 ~395 Frld.iy, Stpttmbtt 11, 1970 NEW 1970 BELVEDERE COUPE $ '66 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON va, 111+01111tic, r1dio, h11l1r, power ll11rin9, 1ir condition ing, (YCM l641 ~395 '68 Ford Country Sedan Wagon v .1, 1ulom1tic, t1ilio, ~e1!1 r, pow1r 1l11ri"19. ftclor'I 1ir, whil1 w1U1 •nd m1ny other 111· "~1995 '69 PLYMOUTH l!ELVEDERE SEDAN A v1ry low mif1191 1ulomobi!1. Thi1 ;, r1•ll'I 1 nic1 "'"'· IYXX0291 ~595 '66 FORD CUSTOM 4 DOOR VI, 1utom1tic, r1dio, f.11!1r, power 1t11r- in9, JMI"''' br•k11 ,;, 'aM$995 '64 lnternatn'I Travel All Family w•gon. v .1, •ulorn•tic tr1n1., ••· dio. h11t1r, pow1 r ile1r;119 i nd br1k11, 1ir conditioni119, 1•c1I· l1nl condition. Low ''$1'295"' '66 DODGE CORONET 500 VI, 1u+o,,.1lic, rtdio, h11!1r, pow1r 1!11ri119, !UOA65JI CHOOSE FROM I ROADRUNNERS BRAND HEW ROADRUNNER AT~5 Sii.ViCE 01,AllTMINT We!c-Ind hotlllrs 111 ChrYSltr CMPOflt!Oll virhk Jes f'9CJUlrlng Hf'· Viet Incl WtrrtnfY work, rt09rdll:s1 ol Wlllrt ur w11 pun::r..1«1. Wt honor M1111r Chlr!ll', Btnk Ameri- ca..,, Ctrlt Bltncl'le, Amttlctn E•· Pl"ftl I nd Dln..-1 CluD. MllUtry llnt nclng Is our 1pecl11!yl OFF MANUFACTURERS STICKER PRICE.$ 7 5 7 Luxuriously Equipped With: '""L ••. •• .,,., """ Bucket Seats • Power Disc Brakes Console • 4 Speed Transmission Tinted Windshield • Undercoat Radio • Heater • Power Steering Vinyl Top • Fiberglass Tires .•• SPECIALS ••••• '68 Chevy Camaro VI, 1ulom1lic fr1111 .• reilio, h11+1r, b11uli· ful throughout. !WXL· 1941 '69 PLYMOUTH ROADRUNNER 4 1p11d, r1ilio i ncl h11t1r. lYQW4961 ~895 '69 PLYMOUTH Belvedere Sedan Autom1tic, r1dio. 1!111· er, power 1l11rin9. !YON554l '67 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2 DR. HARDTOP VI. e utom•lic, rtdiQ, h11!1r, pQw1r 1l11ring, f1c!Qr'I t ir cQndifiQll• ···$f3'9s '68 Chevy Impala 396 V-1, 1utorn1lic, r1dio, h11ftr, pow1r 1t11rin9, br1k11, win· dow1, tilt 1l11rin9, •ir cond., vin'll top, tl1r10 t•P•· !XVS249l '66 BUICK LE SABRE 2 DR. H.T. v.1, 1utQ., ttdiQ, h11l· er, pow1r 1!11rin9 I br1k11. wi11dow1. fief. .;,, con1ol1. I RPM. 1951 $1295 '69 Dodge Super Bee v.1. 4 -1p11d, rtilio, h!'1+1r, power 1l11rin9. A r11I p1rforrn1r, low mil11. fXWZ.465l '68 FORD Custom Sedan VI, 1ufo,,.1lic, ttdio, h11!1r, pow1r ll11ring. IWTP616 1 ~395 '69 Volkswagen Autorn1tic tticlr 1hifl, r1dio, httltr. !919 BHKI: $1595 '65 P.ONTIAC Catalina Wagon VI, 1uto"'1tic, rtdio, li•1l•r, pow1r 1!111ing, I NQX264l '66 Dodge Coronet 440 Station Wagon VI, t ulolfttlic tr1n1• rr1i11ien, 11i:lio, h11l1r, power 1i11ri n9, t•ctl· lint 1h1p1. {9211711 '69 MUSTANG 2 DOOR HARDTOP VI , I UIOIJltlic , r1d:o. hetftr, pow1r 1+11rin9, vinyl top f1clorv t ir. Be•uliful condition. · (XJJlJ9l $2395 All Cl,.. 1111 ... }let '9 ,,., ..... AU (llrkw -lf'9 ,_ llX -llclMI. All ptkts ••• -.11111 Ul'lrll IO:OI it.m., lilMlily, Slpt_ n. 1'711 j • ' f I . . .. ''lday, Stpttmbtr 11 . l'J7Q ~~IL 1 PILOT 21 -· , *5 YEAR 50 000 MILE · FACTORY WARRANTY-REE! All remaining new 1970 cars and . trucks corr y the Fard Motor Co. 5 year/50,000 mile warrantY which wiQ not be available on 1971 models. Do not wait for the price increase, llHJke your selection now. ~· · ''TH.E BETTER IDEAS FROM FORD'' . SMALL IN SIZE Y-l.u-.i ..... tk,,...,1h",.,...., 1tc ·kes,A C .,,..,. i•I •lrr•r1, r••I•, ti••• tc•••• tl•t•• ,1.11, wh i~ility tr•••• w/t/w flrn. AIWM ,..,.. r.l~OIUM1•m• . SMALL IN PRICE NEW 1970 GALAXIE "500" Aitc•ltiitiMM. •i•yl tHt, ...... ,,,.,, ltltct 1hih u1ii11, 71a1S Mltff ti,... ,.. ... 1telri.., ,..,, frHt lllilc lihll11, AM re4ie, ti•h411nt.m.,lrwf.SILOJHT1:11SS4 \ SAYE$900 \ . SA VE $500 w:-m'""~"'.:.'un_ .... _ .. ~~S_A_V_E_$70w10WT ~·ii-ii'r:·'"":;::''';.:"·:·":...,!Af_ ~Y~E;_;S~l;!5~0~0~~~:MM~~0~:&1~~·~;,·{~u~~i1!!!T1~-_;:~;:;;~==~~~-- NIW l970 uviaicK NIWl970TORINO . NIWl970TllUNDIRBIRD NIW1970GALA 11500 ·$1888 • FULL PRICE $2188 • FULLPRla $3988 • fUllPRICE $288.>".".~1 FULL PRICE OK91U 221653 ()11261.155823 OJ8310SS9BS . . ami1BB96 NEW 1970 fALCON CLUB CPI.- AM Radio, Heater, 200cu. in. engine fUli $1988 S"iolNo. PRICE . OK10T19B392 NIW DMORIR Fl .. P.U. $2488 "' FULLPllQ 1 CREDIT COUNSELING let us help you reaminge your. budget if you feel _. loaded with bills. bul -.Id like to buy a -or used cor or lnlck CALL ~= For This Free Se"ice " NEW 1910 MCi'tTANO MACH. I V-8, ci uh?. power steering, di.c. bfolc.e-s. oir cond .. waw tire1, tirited gloss, tpl. reor seot. Ser. No. OF0.5H167996 SAVE $800 Fro11FamrylistP~ NIW 1970 MUSTAllG Y.a $2488:. fUUPllCE I BUY -RENT -LEASE RENT: WHY WALK? DRIVE A MAVERICK '6 :!~~1~' jlA.all L.Tlt 2•MOl!I HARDTOP P.-slllring. diJC brakes, 3'0 '11/ ....,---., wNtewall tm, 24""""' .,..:...i ,..... ... CAll IEllTAL DEPT.142-6611DI540-77IO. •11511 ~na1 '66 DODGE . f~~~~~~ .......... .,... $988 V-8, R&H, powtrr tfetrfl"1• ! XP29G6 I I 59777 I '64 FALCON~. $488 ) '67 FAIRLANE~::;,.:·$1088 '65 MUSTANG~~~"· $488 '67 MERC. ;~:~=;, $1288 '65 YOLKS.~-~ $788 '68 MUSTANG fuf.~:::$1388 '65 T-BIRD~~~ $788 , '68 FORD~~~:-~.. $1488 '67 MUSTANG~~.~ $788 '69 MUSTANG §E::.$1788 . '67 CHEV. ~~~~im $888. '69 · COBRA ~A:~~Mm $1888 '69 Dune Bug.[~:~ $988 '69 PLYMOUTH i~~::.$2688 NI 1970 f250 ~.CK U j'.JRUCK AND ELDORADO ca• OYIR CAMPER long led·,.U, willl "OTIOW..t." 4 1lt10trr. l!o~gtr,~ d•ntrl!tr, 'I:~.,~ ,;H~ &. 1td. 11ztrd bed•, t!C. ' 'illU fllU ... ' . SERIAL NO. f2SARG80160 NIW 1970 CORTINA SAYt: $500 • ,_.._ ... -.., .... IA98JK71887 7 Day Trial Exchange IUY ONE Of OUI AOYEITISlll USlll <AIS • llllYE IT fOI 7 llAft AND If YOU All IOT SATISfllll TIAllE IT fOI ONf Of TIE 110 UHllCAIS AYAIUILI .. ,.,.....,,,.i .. r UH TH IQUllT 11 Y-011 OLD CAI TO MAlf THI DOWN rATMEIT 01 Tlll llW Oil. r1111ro101 IOTI CALL 842-6611 OR 540-nao '60 CHEV ~i~k_2P • Sreol. K 661 SO '64 F·ORD ~I~~~ ~-Slyiftide. 1•9S9A '68 FORD PICKUP t '.. ' $17'88 : ' =~·25~'1.fvl( - . ' ! '68 El c . . SS 396 ~1688 ~m1no ~;:;::;~;"';!::'. . · · l •. ...................................................... ~ ............................................... _.. ....... ~ ....... ~ .... ~ .... ~~~~~~ ... ~-~~~~ l·H~OU:::,;;;S~E~S~F~O~R~SAL.;.;.;;.E~-'-HOU~S-E_S_F_O_R_S_A_L_E~l-'-';;..;;_o.;;;..;...;..;.;.;..~;.;;;..~.;...;..~--''--~~-I HOUSESFORSALE General 1000 General 100I GeMrel 10000ener•I 1000. General 1000 General HOUSES FOR SALE. HOUSES FOR SALE 1000GoMral l~iiiiiiiiiii--~~--iiiiiiiiiiiiil""':*--*:--*:---*-:--*~-:*-:-* --BRAND NEW PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP MACNAB • IRVINE This gracious 2 story residence In Dover * TAYLOR * DOYER SHORES Shores oUers the ultimate jn Juxurtous com~ fort with a Bay View from every room. 4 Bedrooms, 3 baths. family room, 3 car gar- age. Quick possession. $89,roo. GARQEN COURT ENTRY Leads to this truly Spanish style home with tile roo!, 4 Bedrooms, 3¥.. baths, panelled family room, formaJ dining room + 9xl 1 breakiast room. Ri chly carpeted, draped & landscaped. Unobstructed View. $98,500. ROY J. WARD CO., Realtors Dover Shorn Offic. 1430 G1l1xy Ori .. , N.B. 646-lSSO ---- TWO LUXURIOUS HOMES Dramatically, situated oceanfront home with 5 BR. formal dining rm & den. Have your own p o o I & own access to beach. $232,000 Magnificent 5 acre estate home. One of the last in Newport Beach. 4 BR. Jorge formal dinin~ rm, plus lar~e lanai for in- formal entertaining off spacious pool area. $225,000 Kathryn Raulston INCOME UNITS 19 fully occupied apts in Garden Grove. Excellent rental record. Near shopping & freeways. Good return. Try $35,000 down. $210,500 Mrs. Harvey FIVE BR BA YFRONT -SUP OPEN SAT & SUN 1-<i 11 2.12.1 lloysido Dr. 3000' on one level with 3 baths & shared pier & float for 40' boat. You own the land & it's huge. $179,500 EMERALD BAY Superb ocean view -beautiful, large home with every extra & the best construction -interesting & flexible room arrange- ment. Owner will finance. $145,000 Carol Tatum SEE THE PAVIUON Lights twinkle and !lllboats parade from high above the Harbor! Large exec home; exquisite decor. lush landscpg, near pri· vale pool. $72,500 · M. C. Buie HARIOR VIEW HIW This Lusk two story 4 BR. 3 bath, fam·kit room, liv rm & din rm & entrance hall have cathedral ceilings. No I and lease •i1t11 Fee." $64,000 'Al Fink OWNER SAYS -SEU ml Nearly new 4 BR in Harbor View Hilts. Walk to pool -mtn vie\v -owner moving & must sell -see it nov,i! It won't last at t his be\o\v market price. $63,900 Bud Austin VIEW -CORONA DEL MAR Executive hom e \vith lovely decor 3 BR 21h ba. Formal dining. large family rm, enclosed courtyard entrance with 2 patios for entertaining. $59,900 Harriet Davies EXCEUENT LIDO VALUE This well designed four bedroom home is just steps from the beach. Master bedroom bas its own fireplace. The $59,500 is most realistic. Gene Vreeland EASTILUFF-5 BR-VIEW Who could ask for more? Home is bright & cheery. Separate dining room. Large family room. Walking distance to schools. $57.600 Cathryn Tennille WALK TO THE BEACH Where else can you find 4 BR home with formal dining -builtins -2 baths plus po\vder room. S t eps to pool & tennis courts. $46,5-00 Belle Partch WALK TO THE BEACH 4 BR home reduced to $42,500. It has 3000'. formal dinin~. family room, 3 car garage and on land you own! Enjoy ocean breeze~ on your derk! Bill Comstock WALK TO THE BEACH $39,500 Outstanding 4 BR 2¥.. bath 1lr conditioned home. Carpet & drapes in A·l condition. Beam ceilings. Near Clubhouse with ten- nis & pool Mory I.Du Marion ••ptease call for our picture brochure of current listings." "TAYLOR·MADE" HOME TOURS TaUored To Your NMCls Looking for just the right home can be tire- some and confusing. Our capable sales staff can make this a joyful experience. ·Call for an appoinlment for an in spection of homes suited to YOUR needs. EASTBLUFF JEWEL-$62,Soo Picture your family in this lovely setting. Well-designed patio area around sparkling pool for entertaining & easy care. VIEW! Lusk 4 bdrm, F.R. & sep. D.R. 2.527 Bunya St. Open Sun 1·5:00 A BIT OF HAWAII In Corona del Mar! Enchantin~ gardens and view of the bay & ocean. Spacious 4 bedrm. home w/formal D.R. & famiJy rm. All the ingredients fo r a happy home life. $79,500 2716 Windover Open Sun 1-5 :30 "SPIC AND SPAN" DOLL HOUSE Newport Heights 2 bdrm home ideal for cou· pie. Lge rooms w/beamed ceilings. Lge. rear yd. Owner movi ng north. By appt. $28,000 LINDA tSLE-4135,000 Spacious 5 bedroom & den home with Mexi- can tile 2-story entry: Pier & slip. The best buy on this island of boating & fun ! DOVER SHORES Brand New deligbtlul 2-story home w/4 bd· rms, den & garden rm. with wet bar. Formal dining room & gorgeous master suite. Mar· hie baths and kar garage. $108.000 410 Morning Star Open Sat-Sun 1·5:30 A CHILD'S KINGDOM! 3 Bdrm, heated pool, on quiet Westcliff St. adjoins playground, library, school. Close to shopping. $45,850 1215 Pembroke Open Sat-Sun 1·5:30 IRVINE TERRACE-$40,000 Close to Fashion Island is this dellghtfut 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. New carpeting, invit- ing pptio and built-in range and oven. 1515 Bonnie Doone Open Sat-Sun 1-~:30 YOUR PRIVATE KINGDOM Close the courtyard door and enjoy this mini·mansion, spacious 2 bedrooms & den borne with Spanish motif. $41,750 2039 Irvine Open Sat.-Sun. 1-5:30 RECOGNIZE VALUE? See this WestcJifi 4 bdrm home. Family room and large garage. Just reduced. $49,950 CORONA DEL MAR An e xciting home with a dramat ic flair. 2 yrs. new custom built 3 bdrm & family rm. Teak- wood & glass. Walk to ocean~ , $79.500 228 Goldenrod Open Sun 1-5 :30 IRVINE TERRACE Convenient to Newport Center ! Lovely cor- ner 4 bdrm & den home wit.ti H&F pool. Sep- arate dinin_g rm. See today! $67,500 1536 Dolphin Open Sat 1-5:30 BEST BUY IN AREA-429,950 Great for young children. 3 Bdrm & family rm w/iarge pool-sized yd. Built-in R /O. BROKERS & SALESMEN We have an-opening for one experienced man or woman in our Residential Div. Applicant must possess integrity, enthusiasm & ambi- tion to match our own high standards. If you are a professional, interested in a beautiful office in the finest location. working with con- genial associates. we are interested in meet- mg you. OFFICE .OPEN SUNDAY 10. 5:30 ''Our 25th Y •ar'' Luxurious custom dwelling for the truly discriminating. This brand new Ivan \\'ells home with outstanding View ba3 318) sc;. ft, . of living an.>a. 4 Bedrooms, 3% baths, richly panelled family room with fireplaee &: blln \\'el bar. High beatned ceilmg livlng room & modern '"country" kitchrn w I I h breakfast area. Beautifully landscaped patio with spark- ling swimming pool, Dover ShOres best buy at $108,900. Ivan Wells & Sons Roy J. Ward Co. EXCLUSIVE AGENTS 1.UO Galaxy Drive &16-1550 !Open Daily) $7.SO MOVES YOU IN 3 BEDROO~f NE\VPORT llElGllTS That's i;even dollars a nd fi[ly cents. -Seller pays all costs for Ve1s. This custom built home in Newport Heights is a beautiful ranch style with floor lo ceiling brick fire· place, beautiful shake roof, 2 queen sized baths. 18 x 10 brick patio & trees like a fores!. 0-.\'rler asking $32,500 -l\1ake OHr:r! 546-8660 .... HUNTING For a la rg" 5 bedroom hOmf'. Ser a hiq. i;upPr r;harp 2 ~tory for $32,950. Large lam. ily room bltn kitchen includ. ing dishwasher. play yard & patio. in1maculalely care~ for. Perfectly ~l up for a . larg(' family. Ste It soon! can 540-1151. sH~~!!~ge -STATE PARTIES BAY VIEW FOREVER !\1agnificent euslon1 lavish!)' appointl"d. Doors r r o m SPAIN. Gracious all'ium for ,_tale parlirs, Water view from J<~an1ily roon1, Fonnal dining rm. Massive beamed Jiving rm. 5 bt>dron1 suiles. Assumt> lo interest $67.000 loan. For appt. Call 64.').-0303. FOREST E. OLSON lfle. Reallot"!I 2299 Harbor BACK TO SCHOOL EASTSIDE BARGAIN Close to Catholic 1ehool, \VoodJand and Kaiser Jr. Hi, Four large bedrooms. two ba1hs, dining room, exttpt- ionally large Jivins; room \\'Ith fireplace. Sliding dors IC patio a nd lanai. The kit- chen is a delight to nny hon1rn1akcr 1vi1h its Bi!t.ins, dish\\·asher and disposal. FINER HOMES DOVER SHORES VIEW Large 4 bedroom with 4 spacious baths, all electric kitchen, dining room, marble fire.. place & huge living room. Landscaped in a manner to maintain an open feeling & to al~ low maximum view of back bay. Only $89,500. Call for appt.. LINDA ISLE Spacious 5 bedroom home. Sunken living room overlooking terrace & bayfront. Ex· ceptionaUy large master bedroom, dining room, 3 fireplaces. Pier & slip. $165,000 HOME PLUS INCOME Duplex -let it pay the way. 2 bedrooms each unit. $37 ,500. Call Maxine Williams for appt. RARE FIND Dover Shores Bayfront with pool. Exciting 2 story with 5 bedrooms, located next to pri· vate beach. P\er &: slip. Seller will carry financing. $197,500. TOGETHERNESS Can go too far. How about a home where the children have all one wing & you have the other. Smart builder designed thia for him:. self. 4 bedrooms, dining room & family room. Large lot -quiet street. Lots of wood & brick. $69,500. BAYFRONT-PIER & SLIP Just listed -very attractive 2 bedroom & den home. Unusual kitchen canopied patio with built-in BBQ. Situated on quiet New- port Island facing Balboa Coves. $96,000. Shown by appt. only. P lease call Mrs. Fay -642-8235 WISH Upon an "Evenjng Star" home in exclusive Dover ·s hores. 62 feet of blue water frqntage with pier & float. 5500 sq. feet of luxury liv- ing. Shown by appt. only. $22.'i,OOO CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS VIEW As far as you can see. miles of ocean from this outstanding 4 bedroom home, h igh on a bl uff with an elevator to swimming beach & c~bana house, plus 33' lanai & play room with pool table, beamed ceilings. Many other extras & seller will carry financing. AU this in exclusive 3 Arch Bay. South Laguna. Hur· ry & call Amy Gaston 675-3210 IRVINE TERRACE , 4 bedroom home with den & family room. Beamed ceilings in living room & m aster bedroom. Wet bar -eating space in kitchen & a pool size yard. $65.000. NOTHING like .it in this area. A Sl!Jashing .. everything" Mediterranean home with 4 bedrooms,:t.fami- Jy room, formal dining -pool & steam bath. Come see the borne of your dreams. $89,500. LUXURIOUS BAYFRONT DUPLEX Best waterfront buy on Balboa Island. Excel- lent t~ation on main baf with sandy beach, rnoorrng, spectacular view. Custom built. Less than a year old. Each unit 3 bedrooms. 3 baths upper, 2 baths lower. Fully carpeted & draped. Built·in kitchens, self-cleaning ovens. Marble fireplaces. Top rental area. Asking $160,000. Good financing. To see call Bert Fehren 675-3210. ATTENTION DOCTORS Close to Hospital. .Quiet location. AU one floor. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, Cathedral beamed ceiling, li ving room, separate dining room. I-luge gourmet kitchen, plus swimming pool. $58,750. MACNAB·IRVINE WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER 644·4910 This beau1iful ho1n1" can be Realty Company yuurs v:ith a small down 1080 Bayside Drive '7S·3210 642·1235 * * * * * * i111ymf'nt and .. ~.II.A. lerms. 901 Dover Dr., Suite 120 Full price S29.!Y..O. Newport Beech l i:::==;;====~'======="°='-1 M. M. LaSorde, Rltr. _______ ...£... ___ _ lOOG General 1000 646-05.'"ii 642-7438 L4£WWL.LU.<LLL.<SALU.ASK..8' $795. WE SCOOPED General 1000 G I $1.00 Down r.1ove1 you in, MESA VERDE -'""--""----~ -r•·.:... ___ _:,:::: Total eost to you to move in. Vacant, 4 bedrm, 2 bath home w/dbll': car garagt' & CO\' patio w/brlck BBQ. Ex. cellent 0.ta Mrsa Jocation. YOU MUST HAVE 5 IN FAMILY TO QUALIFY. Exclusive With: Newport •• SELLER \\'ILL PAY ALL Huge 4 bt>d1'00nl and •·Fam· DANDY DUPLEX l'OSTS >"OR ANY VET. Th~ ily Room", ''"'"" boll!· Custom Ne\\1por1 homl': is a ins in kitchen. Beautiful S"aJ. 3 tn:m'""°"' b<:d· plo"' "'w ,,., . ..,~.Go"''°"' ONLY $28,500 roon1s, 2 full baths. Great view of the golf course. Own· Patio, and a tree covered er out ol 101\'n, Submil on lot. Romantic fireplace, plus $28.500 price and take over a Huge 25x22 garage Y.'tlrk-a 5~ annuaJ pcrcenlage rate sllop. N().NO Down Pay-G.t. Loan v.·ith lolal pa.y- n1ent. A steal at $32.500. ments of $1SJ.()D. '"'"'' "'ll. ....... Walker & Lee Rc;1l10111 2790 Harbor Blvd, al Adan1s F1JRNJSHED DUPLEX 2 bedrn1s, each side. Garages. Live in one. Let other pay expenSl':s. A.'lAume Jo Interest loan. Call 645-0303 FOREST l OLSON Inc. Rca.ltOf'! 2299 f{arbor j.1>046.1 Open 'Ill 9 Pr-.·1 LIDO WATERFRONT t•nytim•l Owner Wants Action! Beach House $38,950 APTs,.320 L100 NORD 2 Bednn hon1e in \ve5t New-NOW REDUCED TO Sell. lease oplio11. brin,::: of· port. t~ rondltion, % $150,~Xln~ Terms fer! Beaul!ful 1:ri.lrvt!l. .f block to beach Good rental 6 Beautiful un1ta. 6 car bedroom1. 2%. baths, la.rgl': Area, · .rs.rages A: ~tility room with family room, wt'! hllr. One Crill· 673-~ 673-8368 Ev6 80 rt. fronting on excellent SEASIDE BEAUTY PLUS A POOL Nov.·hrrt In this country can •nil" rrom OCt'fln. Af\k ing · · swimming beach. Units ~ you beat this! 4 custom bet!-onJ.y S.36.500 ne11•ly f\lmished, SUNDAY I . 5 2402 Vi1t1 Hogar Off Del Oro to Hacienda bf'. hind community cent~. 3 BR, 2 baths. Only $34.000. 277 Morning Canyon Shorecliffs. Corona del Ma r. l BR 2 ba. BeautituJ cond! 2715 W1vecrest Corona del Mar, f Wrrns &: family room. CORBIN- MARTIN FOR.1\1.AL dining room off a & 83.\ Dovtr Dr., N.B. 612-4620 REAL TORS 67S.16'2 rooms with Sl':Pflra~ vanity. • COATS Bill Grundy, Realtor modern pushbutton kitchen I ~~~~~~~~~ I ;:'~!;::.:.'·::;~ ~i~~I------PIER & FLOAT NEW cozy FOR 2 It. iw'at~ POOL. Profe~ion. Open Evening s H ONLY $17 9-00 "'""""'''"""""''""••'' • 962-4454. NEAR BEAC 4 BR. ,$84,500 I asJdnr $47,000. Will concld· Ownl':r's bought nf'w h<unr! .. FHA'"" VA "-"· 4 BEDRM $25,000.1 ""'' •""' ' IJ<'orn. 1~ °""'""''home for i... than W 'k & L ba family rm w/usl'd brick Striking l~Btory new ""ater. ttnt. Nice bedrooms.16' uv. a er ee SwHping Ocean View I frplc, crp11. drp!I, hrthl'tl hoo t beauty. OK for 40' ing room. \Vllshrr, ctryu, Alm<:tll nothing down G.t • flr:1, shake roof, dblc:-gar., boftt. lmml"dialt PosM-~lon. rtrrig. 1tove Incl: ~ti.': On BrookhUl'$I low down ~ment all ti1h-tilll"y a«'tu, room for hoal \Viii ei1chan~'l' for lots or QlU'ngl':, A N'lll btirpin and Nr:xt ro Gtmro crs, 2 blltM. On a beautiful cir <iam~r. f'allr r.11Cl'tlwl land. CA ii 6'!5-030.'.:, its R-2. C11l 645-0300 ""''171 • '''"""'" v.n., ~""' 1;""" """'' • '"'"'''"'· Lach enmyer Rlty FOREST E. OLSON FOREST E. OLSON F'or lhAf 11rm undtr $50 try .1~0.tnt1. c 1 611> :i~ · . 1 ·-our PENNY PINOIER. TAROELl 2955 H6rbor i•l , .. I<\('~ 1\1:.-0l!>i.i lnr. nr,.ll(lfll 229!l ll iu·t...,r1Jnc. R .. 1'11 ....... ~-'--'"~"--=""'~·~·~'·~·""::::' HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE General lOOOGonorol 1000 READY FOR LOVE This 3 Bdrm. Newport Heights borne is VA· CANT and immaculate. Only I block to school-a great family borne. Excellent buy at ~.ooo. · OWNER WILL HELP -With the financing. This sharp 3 Bdrm + family room Westclill home can be yours: with only 10% down. Transferable 51h% loan. Owner wiU carry balance. RARE OPPORTUNITY -Owner transferred to East Coast. Offering nearly new 4 Bedrm beautifully upgraded home several thousand $$ below cost at $46,sOO. Employer subsidizing. OCEAN SIDE OF HIWAY 607 Carnation-Open Daily 1·5 "Dutch Girl Clean". 2 Bedrm and dining rm home. Zoned R-2 for extra units. Price re- duced to $42,500. 675-3000 OPEN EVENINGS 675-3000 Coast Hwy. Opposite MacArthur Blvd. Open Houses THIS WEEKEND ""' this ll•lldY directory witll fO• this .... .-• Y•• t• llone-llnth19. All "-locotloa 111"4 betow -clncriMtl I• tffftOf dtffll by odwnhllll) ·~ whete I•~ DAILY PILOT WANT ADS. htl'•• lttewl .. .,.. Ma. .... Nie ., te ,..., -~ te &lat W-. I..,_.... ill tM1 coJ1• .-Ii hlMy. HOUSES FOR SALE (3 Bedroom) 1537 Santanella Terr. (Irvine Terr) CdM 675--0473 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 422 Belvue Lane, Balboa 6754600 (Sun 12·5) 4607 Wayne (Cameo Highlands) Cd~1 673-6642: 675-6459 I Fri-Sat-Sun) 24-02 Vista Hogar (The Blul!s) NB 675-1662 (Sun 1·5) 277 Morning Canyon (Shorecliffs) CdM 675-1662 (Sun 1-5) 2039 Irvine Ave., Costa Mesa ~910 (Sat & Sun 1-5:30) 1515 Bonnie Doane (Irvine Terr) CdM 644 4910 (Sat & Sun 1·5:30) *1215 Pembroke (Westcli!f) NB ~910 (Sat & Sun 1-5 :30) (3 Bedroom & Family or Den} 1206 Pembroke Lane, (\Veslcliffl NB 673-65 10 (Sun 1-5) 301 Visla Baya (Nr Back Bay) CM 548-5247 (Sun 1-5) 335 Nassau Ro ad, (College Park) CM 545-2703 I Fri/Sat/Sun 12-7 PM) 228 Goldenrod, Corona del 1\-Iar ~910 (Sun 1·5:30) *10382 Monitor Drive, Huntington Beach 962-4670 (Sat & Sun 10-4) 5810 Trophy Drive, Huntington Beach 842-6611 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 19031 Lindsay Ln. Huntington Beach 842-6691 !Sat & Sun 1·5~ 2215 Araiia (Eastbiuff) NB 675-3210 (Sun only) 433 16th Place, Costa Mesa 675-3210 (Sat & Sun) (4 Bedroom) *1721 Galatea (Irvine Terr) CdM 642-6472; 673-3468 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 611 W. Bay Ave., Balboa 675-4600 (Sun 12-5) *** •5 Coll ins Island. Newport Beach 835-5164: 673-0043 (Sat & Sun 12-5) 1330 Galaxy Drive (Dover Shores) 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) *4627 Camden (Cam eo Shores) CdM 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) 1130 Santiago Drive (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) 1606 Antigua Way (Dover Shores) NB 675-3210 (Sat & Sun) **11 Linda Isle (Linda Isle) NB 675-3210 (Sat & Sun) (4 Bedroom & Family or Den) '2715 Wavecrest, Corona del l\far 675-1662 (Sun 1·5) 979 Denver Drive. Costa Mesa 645-0128 (Fri thru Sun 12:3().5 :30) 410 Morning Star (Dover Shores) NB ~910 (Sat & Sun 1·5:30) 2716 Windover, Corona .del Mar 644-4910 · (Sun 1·5) *1536 Dolphin (Irvine Terrace) CdM 6444910 • (Sat 1·5:30) *2527 Bun ya SI (Eastbluff) NB 644-4910 (Sun 1-5) 1430 Galaxy Drive (Dover Shores) NB 646-1550 (Open Daily) 5810 Trophy Dr., Huntington Beach 842-6691 (Sun 1-5) 1216 Sandpoint (Harbor View) CdM 833-0700 : 644-2430 (Sun 1-5) 20732 Spindri!t, Huntliigton Beach 546-5440 (Sun 12:3<>5) 839 Santiago, Costa Mesa 546-5440 (Sat & Sun 12:30-5) 2873 Boa Visla, Newport Beach 645-1848 (Sat & Sun) (S Bed.--n1) *1536 Galaxy Drivt, (Dover Shores) NB 842-8235 (Sat & Sun) (S Bedrooms & Family or Den) **2323 Bayside Drive, Newport Beacl\ 833-0700 ; 844-2430 (Sat & Sun 1-6) ..... , -, ---. l ' • .. .. . •' : ~ ' ' I . ' ' . " . ;! .. : . . .. . ,.,. -•• r ,. HOUSE Ooftor. ' l~ Split- Bedr expo Forri Roo< bas oven servi nook dres: mor4 joy. Ver} with sbak kidd sell $31,: Chai heal' rear ~ue~ SHE tern Sma dbl. I eve· will 646-' 3 BE ch er lot"' inte1 A sr • bl On!: Spot part Roo: 950 .. Thi! lam sepa poo! 950 Sma enjc Cov tror decl Fee Bea bat! ster root st. ; Pbc 2B Bri• pan De~ Gri In 1 2 s gar ent me To N 17 cc Ex Friday, Srptembtr ll, 1910 DAI LY PILOT !I HOUSES POlt SALE HOUSES '011 SALi -HO_u_s_1_s_F_o_1t_SA_L.;.;l_H:,.;;;..OU;;..S;..;E;..;S_F..;O_ll:.;SA;;.;::L.:;I_ HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR°liLE ~ES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE OUSES FOR SALE ~o;.,;'";ra;l;;;;;;;:;;;;il;OOO;;;Get;;"";r;al;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1;000~iOi•i-i'"'"iailiiiiiiiilOOliii°"'i-i'"ii;'aiil••••l•iiil ,;G;•;";'a;l~--..:l:OOl:;G;or;'"'~a~l;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;IOOO;;:'.l~G:!.,~'°!!r!al~::::;:-_!1!!000!! Mau Varda 1110 University Parlr ltJ7 THE CUSl'OM HOME • Golf 1;;;;;;;;;;,;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 COMPLETE "°"""'· 'lruly mqnllict•I EYJ!-CA-TCHING Pete Barrell /Za/ig • I l THE -REAL . ESTATERS ~-P·A·N·l·S·H Split·level design In Elegant Mesa Verde. 4 Bedrooms, 3 Baths, 3-Car Garage. Vaulled exposec1 beam ceilings In living Room & Formal Dining Room. Extra large FamUy Room with exposed beam ceilings. Kitchen has built-in hi·IO\V electric range & double oven_s, sliding window "pass thru" to patio serving bar, luminot1 s ceiling, breakfast nook. Extra large Master suite with Private dressing room, and there's much, much more. It's a fantastic home to see and en- joy. Call NOW for a showing .... 546-2313 Price -$47,900 COLLEGE PARK BEAUTY . Very unique 3 bdrm. completely remodeled with new kitchen -large covered patio - shake roor -beautiful cul de sac st. for kiddies -O\vner wiU help finance or may sell FHA VA -DISTRESS SITUATION - $31,950. Hurry. 646·7171. CORONA DEl MAR DUPLEX Charming 2 bedroom front house with new heavy shake roof and TOTAL PRIVACY rear yard PLUS n e w e r 2 bedroom and guest room l 1h bath rental with a BOMB SHELTER. O n I y $49,950 with excellent terms. Call 673-11550. SOMETHING TO SEE Small house on large lot (66x305~ Separate dbl. ,garage and many trees on this R·2 level lot. $24 ,950; with 10% down, owner will carry 2nd T.D. I<> new loan. CaU l<>day 646-7171. MESA VERDE FHA • VA $28,500 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, all electric built-in kit~ chen, large family room home on a corner lot with room for Boat storage. Assume low interest loan. See Today! 546-2313. con AGE-BY. THE-SEA A smaJl 2 bedroom family room home. Just a block to the ocean with an ocean view, Only $47,500. Call quick. 673-8550. HAPPY HALECREST Spotless 4 Bedroom or 3 and a den-Kiddies' paradise close to school s and a bi~ park- Room for dad's boat or trailer -only $26,- 950. Call 546·2313 NOW. SPANISH RANCH TYPE This lovely near new home. 4 lge bdrms + fam. rm + formal dining. 3-car garage. Yard separate from pool area -beautiful heated pool -Park & schools close by. Just $69,· 950 -To inspect phone 646-7171. PICTURESQUE CHINA COVE Smog and heat ~at you down? Retreat and enjoy the serene waterfront life in "The Cove." 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 fireplaces, tropical patio, boat davit and upstairs sun deck and exciting channel view, $128,000. Fee land. Call 673·8550. SPANISH-MEDITERRANEAN Beautiful home with red tile roof -Roman bath with picture window garden view - step down to family-living and master bed· room -Jar2:e covered patio -cul de sac st. 3 years new. Only $33,000. better hurry. Phone 646-7171 to inspect. CHOICE ON EASTSIDE 2 Bedrooms + Den + Family Room. Hugo Brick Fireelace. Rustic with lots of wood paneling. Big corner lot. Room for boat. It's newly bsled. "Come Seo" or Call 546-2313. A RESIDENCE OF DIGNITY Gracious adult livin J? for two can be found In tills spacious bun galow with Roman bath, 2 secluded patios & fireplace. AND an ele- gant garden walk to the uool and outdoor entertainment area. A special property to meet your special needs ••• onI.y $48,500. To inquire call 67~. NEWPO RT BEACH 1700 Newport Blvd. 641>-7171 CORONA DEL MAR ll2 M•r9uerite 67J.8SSO COSTA MESA 2790 H•rbor 81vcl. 5-46-2l I l INVESTMENTS 2784 H•rbor Blwd.1 Suit• 201, Cost• M••• S46.ll 16 Experience Eliminates Experiment pnd•nlf NEWPORT HEIGHTS AREA 403 16th PIK• Open Sunday 2 to s 3 car garage, with n85$ tbru doors to patio. This nearly new 3 bedroom home has been adult occupied. Worth your time to visit us. $36,750. CUFF LOT -CHINJ: COVE Overlooking. Cove and entire Harbor area. This is l<one lot in a million" for the person who wants an exciting and different place to live. ABSENTEE OWNER 1tNXIOUS To sell this 4 bedroom, 311.a bath home in Baycresl Dining room & family room, large yard. $58,000. VIEW THE LOVWEST PATIO Surrounded by a custom Westclilf home, 4 bedrooms, dining room, f3mily room, built on quiet street by architect for own family. 3 car garage + shop, basement. green house, min maintenance & more & more. Call for . . Ice Optn Salvnlay1 & Sundays - apptto~ee. ' ETE BARRITT REALTY 1605 Wastcllff Dr. N.I. •-. 642.5200 1000 Ganoral 1000 CAN BE 5 BEDROOM MESA DEL MAR SPECIAL It now e~ ~t •beautiful Bia: 450 plan with 4 spacious bedrooms includinc aepar· big panelled game rm )'OU ate master suite. Anxious ever MW, ~ home is a seller wm give qu ick posaes. decorator's dream, custom · Pri M 900 d I h I f I :uon, ce...,l, . rps, us crp s, rp c. a rare pride of ownership • COATS home, As a fast sa:le 111 de-& sired owner will sell FHA WAL.LACI or VA at only $25,900, This REAL TORS positively is the best value on the market today. Call -546-4141- no\V and prove it to )'our-1 ~~(~Opo~~n~E::::v~o~n~ing~1~I= self. J · N. h I R I E tat EIGHT UNITS IC 0 s ea s e Commord ally '""''d ,... perty on Beach B 1 v d • 546-9521 65'x570' running tram mvd. ., J ~ 111•11Jl). Come & See 4 BIR -FIR-' ba -gas bltn kit -d/w, Orps/shtrtterr; ... nice crpt ind kit + F /R. Sprinkler ll)'Stem for ea!6' yard care. Nice lndsq>ng • lg oov patio, 2CKXI 9Q It cl Jiving area. &J>Pl'OX 2 blcks from St. John's Parochial school. Asking $36,000. Open House 979 Oenwr Dr Fri thro Sun M:30-5:?.() CHIL T ROBINETT REALTOR 645-0128 POOL Lush deep pile carpeting, massiv@ dble fireplace, fully bltin kitchen, 2 aparkling baths & 3 cvenbed bed· rooms plus fainily room. Fantastic value for onlY SJ:i.,950, c.au 545-8(24:, ot proposed nrw atttet at rear. All l.bdrm. units. Priced at 4 times gross with existing income which bas room tor ~ni: ~. Once In a life time • partunity. ACT FAST!! M. M. LaBORDE, Riff. 646-0555 Eves: 542-7438 4 BEDRM-$29,950 Si-.cious larp lamily bomt: • many twuay featurts. 2 bath!!. used brick tirepla~. electric kitehen. Plush C81"- peting, heavy shake roor. Owner de11 perate! submit all oilers. 540-1720. TARBELL 29SS Hart.or DUPLEX Lge bedrooms, (1) each, near downtown. C.M. Park. Wo- men's, Boys & Girls Cub. Illness forces s.ale, Lachenmpr Rlty CAU. 1546-3928 or 5C5-3tS3 3 BEDROOM 2 BATH PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY ff Linda Isla Drlva Corp. owned. 5 Br. 5 balh homo facing Harbor ~sland. . .r~cll2Zi • uuna. Comp. turn., for unmod. occup. W/dock ............ $200,000 S2 Linda hie Dr. Cust 6 BR., study, 5 hath homo w/3 lrplcs., circular slairway decorator selected carp. & drapes. Shown by appt. .......... '210,000 60 lfncll Isl• Drive Newly lisud. PresUge waterfront home. 4 extra lg. Br. 4 bl, pwdr. rm . Lge. liv. rm. & den; S car gar. Beaut patio/garden. Deck & dock. By Appl. .................. $220,000 n Lll'Mhi Isl• Driv• New 5 Br., 5 hath home on lagoon. Marble entry, wet bar, AM/FM lntncom, Huge mstr Br. bas beam cell. & own !rplc. Large liv. & lam. rms. w/frplcs. w/deck •••••• '185,000 Watorfnlnt Lots ,- No. 44~ 108 Ft. on water ........... $150,000 No. 76: Wide lot on lagoon •• , , • • • • *85,000 No. 881 View. With plans ••.•••.... $145,000 For compl ... inform•tforl on all other homes &. lots, call: llLL GRUNDY, llEALTOR 133 Dovar Dr• S..lto 3, H.B. 642-4620 Ganer al 1000 Ganoral 1000 2 BLOCKS ')l~~sei\ ~r~~ ')\ccilt\' ' 546-5990 with m aq. n. or living And '° lMblef It'• nnn A HOUSE ...... ro......i d'"'"*· ,...."'"'· -• ..,.,.. CF YOU NEED muslve !Mone flnplaoe, like. All tbcN qualiUt1 are ovenh~ed ome nn & found In lh!A 3 BR. 2~ bra. ./ 4 bedroom.\$ eoontry •lui kltchtn. 4 plus tam. nn. townhou:M. ./ Separate dining room Lll.f'8e beQrooma ol 3 Won'.t 10" let us ahow it to _ </ HUge famIJ,y room isparkllr«: baths. One or a )'OU today 1 Only SJJ,000 wtl.b # Step dOwn living room kind tor S69,500 • owner ~ntraJ alr-condltlonina. ./ uilt·ln kitchen opening to requests tmme<tlale aal.e. l• Red Hiil Reatty "venlied rear yard Ca.II ~~24 Soulh CoMt Univ. Park Center, Irvine ./ Handsome hcaV)' shake Raltors Call Anytime 833-0820 # ;:::'! lral!Jc eul·de-.ac ON THE FAIRWAY """' custom bun~ < bedrm. ram. HANDSOME HOME I Lo,., $-19,800 "'""Ct" Uy room, 2 big fireplaces. Well prdportloned for the lar· , .. • Thia ~autlful home over. ger-than-average rlze tam- ./ Many, many more quality }OOks the 11th fairwl.Y of Uy, 4 br, 2~ ba. pf9feuk>11- Jeaturt's Mesa Verde Golt Course. ally landscaped exterior, Com(' by and see 6* assumable loan. By own. 1martJy finished interior. 21SI BRAEMAR er. 3006 Java Rd, 540-4095. J.'ully fenced back yard la SUNDAY 1-S $63.500. viewed from kitchen & Jiv. or call 67l-85l!O JM!\tED. occupancy. b '/ ing nn. Within short walk of owner, Lge 4 BR hi>me. 3 elementary school, Mopping ba, fonnaJ D.R., Jge fam & pools. For sale by owner O THE REAL "\. ESTATERS Cotta Miu 1100 rm, many xlras. $45,500. 1 ::'::' =$32=·=900=·=833-=llll==· ===I 2873 Boe. Vista, &i5-l!W8 1 · Open Sat&: Sun Irvine 1231 College Park 1111 GI Resa le , owner 4 BR. + nni. 1nr1 ---'-------...,,.,.,.....,, "" 3 BR, 2 b•" UI" IUlUt By OWN E R on grcenbel t. QuaUty home l.arge .s OR + lam rm. Lots by Ayres at THE RANCH, + POOL WOW! of extras, close to schools., ~~ 5211 Ch ab 11 s, markets. \Viii sell at 1''HA 1.;o;::=;=====:ol $28,950 app<al,.d valu. 128.450. 335 Nal!M.U Rd, Cl\! 54~2703. Turtla Rock 1239 JUST LISTED and unbellev. able. Beach IU"Ca. Tree lin-1_N_•_w;.po_rt_Baa __ c..;h __ 1200_ ed st. Sep. entry hall Pan- eled living rm. w/sto~ fire. place. Wife.saver kit. Heavy shag carpets, 14' 1nastcr 1:1uite. WaU of glass to pool area. Sep. yd wilh noor of brick. Covered BBQ area. F1:tA-VA terms. Bcner hur· ey! Call (714) 962-5585 WE 'RE EXCITED About this new lisUng! On a clt'ar day you can sef! all the way to Palos Veordes A: the thousands of twinkl ing lights EVERY nigh!. are truly a sight lo tiebold! 4 BR., 2\~ ba., tam. rm. & IOnnal dining nn. Many ex- 1ras & in spoUess cond. Priced at jU5t $42,500 • JN. CLUDING THE VIEW! FOREST E. OLSON New Tri-Plexes $57,500 Newport Beach Home just • short block from Cliff Dr. (' l I ' I I 111 l I 1·t!d. ---l 11·1d\1ir Spacious 3 bedroom 2 bath - mo.ster bedroom adjoining tile bath with but.It ins, plus . rw:. bath with built ins; liv· it\1{ room with tireplace, din.. lng a"'a and lnrge picture windows overlooking lovely Ae<:luded lanai; wood carpet. ing and drapes, electric kitchen wilh built-ins. Gar- age o[f alley with electric 1st Weatem Bank Bldg. eye opener, room for boat or University Park camper. BeauUtut tandscap. D•Y llJ.0101 Nights ed corner lot. Drive by 328 Aliso then can Eastbluff 1242 cwncr for appolnlment to IMMACULATE sec. $37,500. 6464032. iiiiiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOO..iiO;; \ This home: is 1polless, 3 &d· PRIVATE ROAD Best buy in area Jmn\ac 3 BR, den, dln rn1, 3 ha; on lge Jot Light, airy rooms: hcauL landscpg & fenced. Garage w/shop. Assoc, pool & putting green. Only $64.50CI. Call 6-124620 for app't. Bill Grundy; Realtor &.ti Dover, Dr., N. B. rm & family rm, 2 baths, lot:: or extras. Prof. land· scpd. Priced to !!ell. May \\.!' show Yf'IU lhis? MORGAN REAl TY 673-6642 67S-64S9 Coron• •I Mar 1150 -TOGETHERNESS W ith Privocy Large, beautiful "homes with OPEN Sat .. & Sun. 12-5 No. 5 an income" localed in the Collins Island. Spacious COUNTRY finest Eas~ldc area of Costa !ktory fo'rench Regency Mesa. Featuring (1) 3 BR, overlooking turning basin & Two 2 BR homes joined by a dbl garage, Room to add. Hdwd Doors, shake &: 11hing. le. Below hiway. Only $46,IXXI University Realty 67J.6510 HOUSE Realtors 2 BA "owners unit" + (2) Nor1h Bay, 4 bdrm. 3% IN ''Our 25th Ye•r 2 BR rental units. See at balhs &. a living room as In the Herbor Are•'' 2035 Tustin Ave., cor Wood. · large as all outdoot's. Small CORONA 673-4400 lam Pl. or oaJI 642-4005 •w;mm;.,. pool, p;., & •lip. ~ E, <:oruit Hwy., OW OPEN Fri-Sat-Sun • • • • • • • • • 1 By ~Tier. 8.'5-5164 or by "91 MAR 2 BR. Home. Custom bit; appo1ntmt>nt 673-0043. 4601 Wayne, Cameo Highlands "~:.m~:3 ~n:'~~~ Sp•rkling Pool =-=; ~~eex:r~1o:~~ OCE 'N,WF'RAONTNTE,mDall "°"'" A Charming 3 Bedrm home dining room, famlly room ~Y redecoratrd .tnniQUt crpt, drapes; oovered palio. " ... with lots of appeal. Pe-rfect home pl~ gu.est oottage on Koll-built Mesa Highland.~ MANY Extras! Lrg fenced or dupl('X wanted hy sun !or good family living. Quick 8 67 foot frontage just % home on cul-de-11ac: Adult yard, 00 extra lrg lot, Good worl'lhiper with money. poss. block to ocean. Fabulous occupied 3 &. family rm. Ea.stside Joe, CM. Ideal tor l'ALL E) 646·l4lt MORGAN REALTY grou.nds for entertaining ln· Large 6~% fl:1A loan to retired couple. 548-1642. A~_~4MIL 673-6642 675-6459 dude cabana, badminton e.ssun:e· WeU·pn~. • • • • • • • • • 1 ~...., COUl"I, and out&ide bar. Re· Open FNenings) e OPEN DAILY 1.5 e Nt•r Ne!p~:tL~o~t orrltt UNEXCELLED VIEW a tore this country style home &$41-SllO "Til sold! Assume fi% % VA of Harbor & ocean, Attr. and own one of O:l~na de.I _.._.... Joan. $14B Per mo, Redecor. * TERRIFIC BUY * split level home on R.3, 5100 ~--• t -w GE REAL_, Lovable l br home in prime sq. ft Jot IdeaJ fof 4 Apt " ..... ~ oRcH"ID~~•. Mlllit-u<Pi ~!:.· =ss~~~· ~;· /;,: Newport area. Loaded wilh units. SDl.000. 2rC1 Ocean OPEN HOUSE 950 1.984 Federal Ave 6lra'l! Prit.'Cd to sell fast Blvd., CdM. By appt only. 1:00 TO 5:00 Call; Patrick Wood s4s..2l00 at $32,500. Buy direct & Bill Grundy, Rt1ltor OR CALL 673-8560 A HORSEMAN'S e Bill Heven, Realtor save. Open dally. 1512 B33 Dover Dr., NB 5424620 PARADISE 2lll E. Cnw;;• Cdt.l 673-3211 Priscilla Ln. 646-13.55 (own-.. er) Thi11 five-eighths of an acre BEST 6% GI loan No 1-~----~--CAMEO SHORES BARGAIN H1rdwood Floors with lovely homey three qualifications! 2000 ~· ft, 4 Baycrest * Pool .. bedroom, large hearth com· BR. 3 ba, fam r m 2 patios By owner. Gracious 3 BR 2 3 BR office-at-home, 2"-ha, O THE REAL "\. EST.l\TERS Firepl1ce $22,500 J •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~J pliments a wood burning many extras, 3 'yrs old: ba, spac kiVblln'I huge !iv sweeping view. A little TLC W•ll ... McCerdle, Rltn. FIX IT UPI fireplace, fonnal dining Must sell fast, Will take r m w/trpl, din nil, masttt makes 1ltls home the bar-ASSUME 6% FHA 181D Newport Blvd., C.M. Bring cleaning 1':81', paint I: area and eating area in kit-$33,!m. Owner, 54X>465. ,;ui!e w/('ll'gant bath over-gain of the ""ar. $67,500. 548-7729 Eves: 6M-068C gardening tools + "TLC". c~ only $25,750 and nice 3 BR/l BA FamiRm. Lg. looks pool/palio. Beaut Jnd. Univeniit)' ~;ity 673-6Sl0 Westside 1' BR ... den. 2 2 Story, 5 bed.rm &: formal location for three or more unfinished bonus rm. Bltim; scpd., choice Joe. Bargain 3001 E. Coast Hwy1 CdM baths. $24,000 at $205. per RE.,..-SALE dininarm.2585Sq.tt.,Santa horses. _ crptsfdrps, 2 car garage. 81 S5.'i.OOO. &12-8062 mo, can be fjnanced, incJud. n I' Ana Hghts. Easy.to-buy! 3 BR $24 500 · 2 --Nr. So. Coast Plaza Shp • • , ing P.J.T.r, Low down pay. or lease option, 3 BR. BA Asking $34,500. iJIL9 I Cnlr. 6'%1 Loan to quillifie<J WALK TO BEACH DELUXE DUPLEXES ONLY 2 LEFT' C~~~~ Mes• Investment ~00:· ~~ :~tr~'Tde: V Le~se,~ioi:m buyer. s:n.soo. 546-5259. Fpl., 2 Ba., bllns, cpts, drps. Costa Mesa. Call Glen acanti2to 33' I: d ":.; ---OWNER/Bh'R.-Vacant-$1000 Xlnt cond. Must sell? South of hiWay, 3 BR 2~ bll. 2 BR 2 ba. ept, 11undk, aelf· clng oven, Coming cook top, wlk·in closets. Great ~. $69,500, Open daily er call 644-11266. sa.ml Queen, Heritage Realtors. =h or ·patio~: for 1093 Baker,·C.M. 546-5440 eqty, As.9.lme exist. VA CAYWOOD REALTY DOVER SHORES 541}.ll5f.. r-.M t...,., 8'.lO ' best tter loon. ! fam, 2 Ba. 18x21' 6306 W. Coast Hwy.1 NB BARGAIN ot a Wetime all'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""° _..a "'"'• or o • CUTE AS CAN BE game rm. F/P $27,500. 548-1290 $77,500, including the !and. PRESTIGE SPANISH; ~ Evenln&:a Two bedroom "Doll House". Must sell make 0 f I e r • BACK Bay • 4 Br, family + Abium. 3 Br/2 ha, beem &-•Ill Quiet east·skfe Costa Mesa sn-1622 Pool! custom built on cuJ. See this superbly elerant 4 ceilirc. Formal din'i. 61A. ._.._ near St Joachima and abop-Assume $19,300 51A '/ti fl{A d!--sac. Sell ar trade to BR 300) sq, ft home quick-FHA. Owner 846-6428. ..:.;;:::=:E:ff.t::=:rt~I ping. Priced at $22,750 and Loan on :l br, 2 ha, lge Units. $48,950. F.qty $18,950. ly, Sell Kile items around yoor • • $2800.00 down payment will heated pool, $29.300 full &16-9528 Bier. New Tripl.x Good lncom• $76,500 home for cash. Call 642-5618 nagy DUPlIX tak'! It Subject to an FHA priee. By_ owner. 242 Joann SCS.9865 mw. UIUt L<ian with $153.00 mo, pay. St. 548--M~l Newport Heights 1210 11~========.:.:i='======= ment WHY RENT? Painter's Ch•ll.nge OWNER All unita renttd South ot hiwa,v, * 644-0266 * EXCLUSIVE FIVE BEDROOM Immaculate home on pool :sized ·corner lot 2 fireplaces. f a m 11 y dining room, bre>.kfast area. 311.a baths. One bedroom/ bath suite has separate entry which can be used for playroom, IN·LA W·SUITE or POOL house. Excellent terms available. $65,000. HOME & INCOM~ASTSIDE TWO homes on corner Jol One 3-bed· room and one 2-bedroom -each with Individual fenced and landscaped yard. Both recently redecorated and in excel· lent condition. Live in one & let the other make y o u r payments. Call now! Only '39,500. Colesworthy & Co. REALTOR Nowoort lloadr Office ID21 Bay.W. Drive 675-4930 ONLY $28,500 Walker & Lee $1!.ooo ""' '""· , Bdrm hou.~. Xlnt CM loc. $26,950. FURNISHED DUPLEX 2 Realtors 645-1070 Realtor. 642-5140 bednns. each 1kle. Ganger. 2790 Huber Blvd, at Adams CUST0..'1: 3 BR + den Live in OM let other pe,y 5f9.9491 Open 'til 9:00 PM EastskJe home. Beaut, expenses. Assume lo Inter-COUNTRY LIVING lndscpd. By Owner $36.750. ~t Joan. Call 645-0303 On a full acre with ranch type1,",.,.:.~,,,524_7c_· --~-~-FOREST l OLSON 3 BR homo completely r<· FAlllfLY homo, 4 BR, 2 ba, · painted new dshwshr/diL Cpts & drps. Bltns, Lge Inc. Realtors 2299 Harbor p()Aal. ~e detchd cov, pa. Ind~ yard. $29.500. 256 .. ,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,., tlo, outdoor brick !rplc &: Camellia Ln. G42-950l NO DOWN GI BBQ. Many shade trees. 2 BEDR. bou11c, ~Y owner, $650 FHA Owner willfinCati~%.On.. cl05e lo !!hopping and 3 BR. 2 ha nr Boy's/Glrl'I Jy $49,500. school. 5-1~914R Clob. Oruy$21.400 fUU ....... PERRON 642·1771 ASSUME $22,000 5% VA Coll 54l-3209 Anytl-OCEANFRONT lowl, 3 8'· ll4 ba. lll,ooo. BAYFRONT LOT 2119 Bayside Drlva 88 Ft, bulJ<;teac!. with pier area. $2'JO,OOO (Fee. •imple). Bill Grundy, Rltr. 833 D:wer Dr., N.B. 642-4620 LOT 4» CabriUo St. 54&--0138. - • . ..Ibo• Pentnsul• ASSUltfE S'22.000 5%. VA e 4 GD. INt'OME an\1$. on 2 4ili!E $45 000 loan. 3 Br. 1% Be.. $31,000. B•yshores 1225 adjoinlng·Yaluable Lot11 • -• • G.orve Wn111mSOft Cl Cabrlllo st. ~13& --------Alwa)'tl rented. G..., n ~ r : I\ !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I REAL TOR •EAST SIDE-3 br, 3 garage. CHARMING. opc.n beamed m..5787. A SCARCE mM· 67M350 645-1564 Eves $24,000. Ea"' tmna. By .,,u,,., 2 br. '•· lvg. rm. I ========I OPEN SAT/SUN. 1.S ' owner, ...,:1811,, '"'"· 136,000 611. 642-190> Baltooa p.,1...,1a lJOI 1537 Santanolla Tarr. EVERYTHING I I 5 BDRM/2 BA: VA·FHA TIME FOR ' Charmine a bdnn. s bath View. Pool -4 BR. .. 3 Baths, A~ $27,IJOO.. Stuirw . tiome In quiet lrv!ne Ter-bu .. new dr&pH:. llCW car-Jll"100 ~ ae.me. 962--3930 W. Bly Wetvfront .,. 950 .... N 9UICK CASH Sea"tllul. nowl)I -.. 4 BR race. ,,_, . pet .. new .,......t. ow vacant M V bo CLAUDE SHIFFER ~ ,.•<11 • """ u,;, Irv!"' au trda lllO + ""' """"-Pallo-d«k. REALTOR 67$-0l'7! Terraoe "°""' """' $19.500. 2191 Clubhouse Rd. THROUGH A be•.ch·Plc( " .Up."$115,000. s.w ,..,, .,.. • 1r1 .., CURT DOSH Realtor ""'''"~""!)I ''"""''""'· Bill Grundy, Raaltor ,.r! Just """' lW :rour 1 11 famUy home, patio sh"rn.. DAILY PILOT 83:" °""" Dr., N.B. 642.Q phone A call OaU,y Pilat 642-6472 !Ms 673-34.68 board. 4 BR. l BA io.mily + NO matter wbel h: Is. )'OU C...uted 1HU611 C>up mo IV. coaa1 Htih..., fonnat dl"l"g, 2 lrpl". WANT AD ..,, ... n II wltb a DAILY )'OUI' ad• tadq! Ju~ \VAJ'd, Bkr. ~2-4816 Pll.OT WANT AO! ~ --------· I DAILY PILOT FltdoJ, -U. 1970 ~$· '.Q, ~I ., ilOi)lll ~ ffLI , ltlNTALS -lllNTALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS R ENTALS RENTALS _.:._ l"...lmut. 1• Huntl~ INdt 1411 lfoutt• Furnl....., llouMa F urnlshM Ho<IMa Furnltltod HouH• Un furnl1hod Houses Unlurnl1hod Apl$. F urnished Apls. F urnlshod R~ I ~ ~--C •-• u. -~ L •-1.. 4'200Newport Beach 4200 • OWNlll .NEAR THE ~·• 1 -_,. -.,_ --• ~ · • ..,... llNch 27'5 Generel -University Pt rlc 3237 .!:.N~t~w:e~~·::.•~~:::•<~";_...;;;;:.:.;==-'----"';.;..I ~.a.NsfllltRID IEACH SHARE Suut. ~na Bch. 3 BR cpt/drp, frpl. yard, S BR. OCttn w , l\\ blks to 3 8ednn ta:ime In muntry 2 Bdnru 1.ba1b S2SO _.ii~inaw.. Allnt • apt. VieW. Walk t o QP!'D beams. S2SO mo. Lee beaCh. ,pes._mo. 1 ar. f140, atrnc»pbqf/. GQ9d achoOls &: 4 Bdrml: 2\.i ba $350 at~. "°'°'° lot Let. LESS THAN. ONT ~~~;:I!!~!;... = rtq, Se:.~:~ ~-· 232 Dllquiea. lots ol 1hopp£. Av all now a.l 3 BR 2 ba IJ.tP borne $375 ~~Mr prfY, ttnnls club, l 0roorny bedroom., 1tep •v· Ar 5.30 -$9577 -...-'213!~ $230, pt'r mo. F'a.m!lle1 only. 3 Br lnhou.st: Easlblut1 $400 gll:"tall'IP, bay 1 ocean. 1n&' modtm kitchrfl.__tnti.. l,_ ' p.!J'I, S200 mo-2 BR h8e JIU1l1~ . A;ent SM-4141 . • RED l~Il.L RE.ALTY ~~. mate Pr.dtn patio' and • WIU. SHARE HOME: turn , Util Incl Nr. maritet Lijuna Nfiwt 2707 lJnlv, Park Center, lrvlnt LARGE 12 x .20 separate \V/L&dy 21-35.. Child" Pt-I & rtstl.uranl. C.OUple otlly, iBr' • ·~ Coste Mis• 3100 Call Anytime 833.Q82l) ~tars:~ -$57,&00 Famll1 Room .,;th wtt bar, ~~-6~~~5: HOM&. no pei.. 613-8936 rrpU;. ~itt. ~~ ~ ~ .. DEStRABL~ Last 014nec, Turtle Rock e:··~ 1tert0, and wll'e racks. Only _ 2 BR. f,1.ll'ft. Lrs livi,.: nn, S240· 495--0042. , ' !IOME 4 Br, 3 ba, 11ep tiled PQl lo ~~N.H.Y.C.: •BR., C".Xtr. WSJ72 pelkr month,for ALLL I 1-~ulifu~ co;:~m:~-~~ ~~Jcm~. s~\no~~o 2 Bi'., 2 ba, cpt<l, dl'P$, lorced move now. 18805 K&bor. $362 :::~H~LIT~~LTY a er ee hom•. No •mokers, Summer Renttla 2910 air"''• Carb<llsp. bll·im.1::::::::::===::::::: 675-4600 ANYTIME $125/mo. 673-4169. Belboe 2300 leyfront-B•I. Pen1'n. trplc, p.tlo, p.tage. waler Irv ine 3231 Rea.lion fur n. Adul ts only, no pets. -_.;... ____ ..;.;;.... 768J Edlna:l!r \\'ILL Share 1~ beach home 2 Sl'Y 3 Br, 2 Ba., •pac., LOVELY s BR. • BA. RATE REASONABLE TURTLE ROCK-LEASE ... ldo Isle JUI M2..44M 540-$140 with ""-om.an 2i +or mu.pie. ttpll. Or % ·eR. mod. apt, PSl!r/tlo&~. Avail .Sesit l sl. Acroas trom Country Club BR, 2 ba. d in' g Ir m. No smokers. ,.tt'l, Fenton 1 Id Also ava.il tor winter ."en-275 Meu ~. * Ph uo61~ !Am/rm A~um. patio«. Nr. $24 750 6-12-9933 or 673-2ll0. e ec I, nr ba.y. WnlJ' R!nt tal 9 673-20.39 u~ .rtO" vu "' LARGE HOME , No student&. 871-9467, s. · ~ schs-pools-prka, $325/mo. Btdrm, Wnlly rm., xJnt POOL H Ii: J', ..: bl!drm, 1% FE.\fALE Teacher dnm 546-9574 _.,5 WON9T LAST! 7141833-l467 ftl!t 10 street 45 ft. lot ba, aose to schools le ocean. TOOmrnate t9 share a.pt. Call Duplexes Fum. ,,,,7, 1-=:========= :;; a.pp't only. ior;. Down owner will car-alt 5 PM. 67l-1489. •NEAR Penin PL-3 BR hse, $14().3 Br sep house. lnctl Coron• del M•r 3250 $97,000 ry 10~ J!Q1, Submit all oH-WORKING Fri or i tudent to garage, patio, frplc. Near NEWPORT BEACH yard for kids Ii; pets. ~r may trade down for 3 abate Jowly home. Balboe. Ocean. .Aduh~. no pets. 1355 E. Balboa, lst Or duplex Blue Be•con * 645-0111 3 BR. 2 Ba., cpts, drps.: trpl . ,dnr., :'lame in Terract!S, 8:~ Eves : &42-0C2'7 Peninsula. $100. 646-m or $210/mo. 615-2199. wntrlyr:ly, 3 br, 2 b&, bay 1r; ~ Dlx. duplex. $29:> On leaJ'ie. 'd?-1, with ocel.ll view. 6'T>75M * CHAR.MING 4 BR or 3 BR ocean all xtras.wahr/dryr, 3 BR/2 ba; B 1t1 n s · Realtor 61>-1662 . .. IDO REAL TY INC. m J ,,v &: dl!n. Bal Pen. Avail Sept. icem.aker refria:, pra.ge, drps/crpl5. 2 car garage. 2 Br. 2 Ba Nr. Ocean. ~ Via Lido 673-'D'.XI 1~!·~~··~~-·={:.!~~j~l·~";•j"~~! MAN 3S-45 uMncumlll'!l'l!ld to Jul'll!. 2 BR up.sta.in. furn. trplc, sand s ho we r, Nr. So. Coast Plaza Shp. $%7:'>/mo G 11 Robt'rtson _ ., ,1111 abaft ex~nses in beautiful $300, 675-lm d1hw1hr, Ow11er Cntr. S250fmo. l yr be. Realtor '* S,i,24.10 ' t:PANDABLE cozy com· apt. 1427-7440. 213-79()..n73 546--:-,259. · · · act l Br, on 11. 1uney lot WINTER Rental: New 1 y RENTALS 3 BR % Ba. cpts, drps, irpl. jJ.~. Ownr. 67>26.u. $1000. Bdow FHA, 4 tr. cond. decOr. 2 Br. Bltins • pr, 4 BR. 3 Ba-Colleg! Prk. New Deluxe , duplex. m;; on Pool, elect. bJt.ns, ref, owe Newport Beech 2200 SD>/mo. 675-8424 HOUMS Unfumlthed cpts, fresh. p&1nted. $255 lease. Realtor 675--1662 ~~:;. usm. 5"~ rnA. WATERFRONT Gener•I -:2Xi~8 Hanover Dr,1===.:=:===== ~··....... Botch 1400 'CTUllESQUE SETTING UYATE l SECLUDED < tit -wrought iron gale ealJ'y ttcr enclosed brick pilla.ttd ~a.rd to gorgeous "'OLD ;l>Ri.o CHARM.'' 3 1.,.. ~-+ massive living ~ v.i th cozy brick fire. i.ee. 12' breakfast room. !idiDC glass lo private, e~ DWd patio. Few bloclul to -.ch. Must sdl? Value licked. at $28,600 w/f'HA. A term.. Call (TI4) 9C-558S [OREST E. OLSON " :. Jnc:. Realtors ~18 Lido Isle 2351 Huntington Beech 3400 W TAXES: 3 BR 2 be, tam. PIER It FLOAT ;;;..:;;;...:..:::_ ___ .:;;:.: FOR Renl: We represent SI~ or Sl45 turn. 2 Br, 4-1 -.:.c.;;;.:.:..:.:.:..:c:.::.::...:= fr p l , jumbo pati o , 3 Bednn., 2 bath, formal din. QCr 15 -June 15 rental on 18,000 rentals through-Out pll'X, bltn!. pat, sngts ok. $TJO i\10.-Vacant 3 br, y,•/\Y cpl/drp/shtrl, nr 9Chla. Ing rm, fireplace, w/w Bay, aimplete!Y turn. 2 Orange County. Houses Blu• Be•con * 64S.01l1 crpts, 2 blocks to schools, XL.NT. 21,3: ~ crplJ, and furnished com. Bdr. 1 Bath. Patio, ltpl.c. Apa:rtme-nll, fumlshedluri. 3 ·BR. Fam l'm w/rplc. walk to beach. Custom area. =:;:;;:=;;;=:;::.I plete. Dble pr. Lease only. Call collect (213) 654-3016. furnished. Children & pets Bltns, Gardener le water OR $2000 down & take o.ver Huntlngten .$500 Pl!t mo. Realtor f/FURN or UNFURN 3 BR welcome. :Move in today. incl. No pets, $280 mo, 1st & pa Y mt' n 1 s 0 r S 2 ;i O · -.;.H.:.•:;;rbou~:;::.• ____ l:.;4D:;;5 I ~"'"'~:.,4::,353;::.,· ~-----llOME. winter or ynrty Placement in 30 days_ 18 last mo + deposit. 548-9509 ~~~~'>l.11Cr 536-8874 or BEA\1I'IFUL. 2 BR, 2 Ba. l.l!ue. call: Orange County ottlees, com. MESA de.L Mar-Lse: 4 Br/2 . . RED EC Ir: L n d s c Pd .frplc, huge fncd pat i 0 613-3948 or 837-25a2 puteriled accuracy. Tele-Ba, •d•-1 am 1 , m . $2000 Down, take o 11 e r \Vaterfront 3 BR I: dock for --t... f ••--Tre ~ ... ""' t ..,....__,. VACANT l 6 a..""'n carport, cu.,,.,,,.,, 3 BR 3 Ba, off-water h<>rM; !'Id, 832.7800. $250/mo. incl wtr. Close to ,.-., ... en 5 ;u.N. • sale. Lse, or bCI option pvt bcb, hea.ted pool, rue.rd turn .. $450 Month. LANDLORDS ach <all gradesJ, S45"5694. br. CUSTO~f AREA . \Valk ~-===· ======I patrol. Adults, no pet•. SlXI 1 to beach &: school. HURRY. ""' mo, Jeue SepUJu.ne. Call Bii Grundy. Rltr. &42.-4620 VACANCY PROBLEMS • 3 BR, 2 BA. Ctpli, drps, before school star ts . 1410 EXECUTIVE HOME! CUSTOM FEATURES! Extra sharp S BR, l BA, Cll>ld. drpd, fenced, many extras. Sun 673-4081 or wkdaya 2 BR, immac .• no pets, $300 ENDED. College Park. $2S5fmo, ~\gent/owner !l36-8874 or (21!) 243-1323 yrly or S250 winttr. Frtt particlPf.tion in (mu!ti· 549-2S34 536-83ll_ BAYSHORES Walker Realty 6T>5200 pie listings rental network.) s11a. Clean 2 B~, stovr, cpts, li,:=M;;•"IA;:,C~.:.,,,.=B,-.-d~o-,~,.,-,--,.,-,., For l.eaae on the bayfront 3 BR 2 ba. UXl/9 mos lse. Compuleriud a.ccuracy. For gac, fncd for kids & pels. dll>s .• blt-lns, lg, prv, t'OI/. with Sl.J'ldy bea.ch. 4 Bed· Bry~~!t,Li~~-N~2723 details, TELE .. TREND. Blue Be•con * 645-0111 patio lovely fenced grnd!!. ?'IXlma. S7SO pu month. 832-69J:), 1 BR. House unlum . Suitable gar_ and boat prkg. $160 SePt. tit J une. &.Ibo. lt l•nd 2355 FOR .RENT IM retired couple. No dogs, married adults. H.B. 842·3276 Call Jane Frazee 642-8235 l BR, den, Penin. Pl. S325 Reas. rent. Cl~ to bus. ~ STORY; Nr bch. 3 BR/2~1 Mecneb-lrvlne RNlty TERRIFIC looking newly 2 BR house, Cd ltt $295 548-..\Wl. Ba, Fam/rm, frplc. Avail Oakwood ... a new way to live in Newport Beach It's Jun, fine i:eighbo rs and prestige living, all in one luxurious package. That's Oak· wood Ca rden ,Apartments in Newport Beach, just minutes from Balboa's Bay and b eaches. 'fhcre's a 1/c million dollar Clubhouse with parly room, billiards room, indoor goll driv .. ins range, men's and \VOm~n's health ~lubs, saunas, tennis courls, resident tennis pro 11nd pro shop, and Olympic size pool. All 1his. and mur.h more. lust steps from you r p rofessionally dccol'atcd apartment. each with private balcony/patios. Air condition· ing/fireplaces optional. Oakwood Garden Apartments 011161h Street betlveen Irvine and Dovrr Or. 1714) 642-8170 Spaciou11tudio, 1 a 2 Bedroom 111ite1. Turaisbed or u11lurn.i1bed. $145 lo $Jt1t. lmmediale Occ11pa11cy Modtlt opeo daily 10 am to I pm 1'131 Brookhunt .Ave. , tfuntington Beach ;NEED ROOM HAFFDAL REAL TY 142-4405 BY OWNER 3 br, % ba, ll'elh -pa.int Ir; .shll&' w/w crpt thru-oot. Nl!at school. AS8Ume 5~~ '% l0&n. $29,000. Call 968-8004 a.ft 6 ' \lllmdt, DUPL.EX-Upper: Lge 3 br, 2 d~ated duplex. Winier. l 4 BR den, Lag_ Bch. Sli:>O SH ARP 3 BR. 2 BA. dble Sept l51h. $230/mo. 836-0880 ha, gar, sm mo. Lower: 3 br, $190; l br + den $165 H•I Pinchin & Assoc. j?at . Close to schools. $210. or 968-7472. Gen•;.;•..;•_, _____ • .;_~;; I Costa M esa br,· 1 ha gar, sm mo.·Both util incl. 1 or 2 adults pe:r Realtori Call Larry, Her I I ag e 3 BR 2 ba. fam rm. Jg patio 4100 .. TO BREATHE? ar Huntington State Beach 3000 SQ. FT. ~m. 2 baths, fa.mily om with fittplact!, fonnaJ ~area. huite livinr room ' 25.SO' •,JtUMPUS ROOM slly conwrted into 4 add1. bedrooms 1r: 2 bath5 - ONLY $36,400 -1•1• Occuponcy r A·FllA Ir; Convl!ntional INCHO LA CUESTA f1tES Honvs Since 1905 ~f MODELS AT OOKRURST l ATLANTA .., 968-2929 • 968-1338. ~· 11 a..m.-1 p.m. iEo • BEDROOMS? tt-~ $18,400 GI Loan $-I annual p!roelllqe e •and total payment of ~1.00. Owne.r will ca.rry ill TO il nr:~s.sary. Huge, 111. l ml!an HUGE cul-cle- <: Jot with tfeeg and work foci, Needs TENDER LOV- IG CARE. CALL! on oceanrtont. \Viii consider unit. 221 .Amethysl. 67S..C392 Anytlm• Realtors, 540-1151. le play area. Nt'w cpt. Nr J f unfurnished, .Avail mid-8ept 1010 So. &ylront: 4 BR 3% FREE TO UNI''. 2 Br, East«idfo, C~I on school. lmmt'd po11s. $215. ust or to mid.June. ~1093. ba walerfrnt home&: 2 Br. l ll'('t? l.ined cul-de.sac. $195. 968-901.8. WATERFRONT .. 3 br. den ba. gar. a.pt. Dock. LANDLORDS Days 8 35-2 3 00' f'ves l;M:;;O;;;D;;-E"R"N"'°'2"B"'•-. "'c"'rp"'~-.-d7rp-,-. s.· n gle Adults 2 ba, frplc. washer/dry~ Bill Grundy. RllJ'. 642-4620 Rental Service. Sa.ve time & 646-2751. fe nced yd, lndscped, stove, 1705 Le•H/SeS. Furnished dshwshr, fenced Ya rd. 3 BR, 2~ ba, all dee advertising costs. We have 2 BR l ~J ba townhouse, refrig., dishwshr. Days South Bay Club i!'. a wbole Lovely Bee Ch Condo Winter. lJ'l.1 f' in I e y. kitchen, Lae pe.tkl. tenants avail. for immediate cpt/drp, bllns, patio, CloS<! 546-5850, eves 962-7697. new \vay or li!e c!esignec! just for single pt•op!c. ll's run living ,1·i1h \111rn1. dy- namic neighlxlrs. 11 ·s a SiS0,000 Clubhousr w 1 I h health club. sauna~. ~11 Jm· ll1ing pool, par1 y roon1. t111. ho.rd~. indoor i.:olf drn•ino;: 213/6~ * Aft 6, 815-1238 * OCCtJpancy_. Call now in. ~5--6384. HUNT. H-~ .. , wa-·t J Avail Sept lS tor Jeall! lhru H F nd 2951 ~~ """ June or longer. 2 BR, 2 BA, . * BAYSHORES * Charming 3 BR l ba family ome-I era 645-EASTSIOE 3 Br, 2 Ba, crpts, BR. $.l,j(], CSce ad unrl('r upper with living dining Winter rental, 3 & 4 BR furn. home, i~al st, nr Bay. 4 BR. l~i Ba $210/mo drps bltns, on quiet str~t <'la ss f\o. 1405.) 644--1221. kitchen a.reu main' Ooor ov: $300 mo. Avail Sept-June. l\1rs. Brtthtel. agt. fi7J..6000 Fencd yard. Stvldshwhr: S24S ·1~. 837-6417 or 54~ 846-5041 , er\ooking beautiful P oo I. "C" ntOMAS, Realtor Pets k 4 childrtn welt'Ome • C0i\1PLETE PRIVACY AVAILABLE Sept. Jj, 4 bdr. Large 2 car port plus slor-224 W. Coast Hwy 543-552? L •gun• Beech 2705 3 B • • • Lrg 2 Br. patio, a;ar Sl40. * r.ear beach, drapes, le~ age 1r; ('OITlplele Ja.undry fa-BIG Bay Front, 3 Br .. 2 ba.. RENTALS/LEASES R & den, 2 ba. Sl.9f>fmo. 5.11-8888. . corner yard $210. 53&-0346 cilltles. All beautifully A: a 11 b 1 t n s , d s h w hr, Dthwhr, trpl. crpta, drps, ~-t•--'39 W """ A UNFURNISHED ail'---.. , u. ac. F-. T<i"-3 BR 2 ba. cpt/drp., sly, fncd •. LGE 4 br, lam rm, bltns, completely furn.ii~. linens, 111;,., ...... ,,., • ~ ve. ......,,..., ~ ,... " --• d h h W . t 1 210 Lae. 3 bdrm. &: fa.m . rm. Trend Systems, Inc. yd. Refs, lJlt & last. clng 1'."'"'· s 1vs r, crpts Ir:~. china, etc. it desired. Only 1 n er · -'-1195 ~ ~ d --' · "' -~ui•~ ~.. home. Custom d~t-, 832-7lDJ .... p. req. . .noriJJ;;N· nice yar , coW"r,... paflo . .,. l"" ste ... Lo pn"vate beach. .,,,,......, ...........,, · "'-"'•cu · .... h "" r"" ~w ca..,.ts, fittplA-, bill· 2 b $125 Ad Its mi 10 urac · S325/mo. Tennia court 1< 2nd pool al· FOR ~nt thru June •n rum. ·..-""" Newly Decorated r, ' u 962-762$ 11 "th 2 br 2 ba bil born Ins, ~c. ocean view. t -yr. I ~·~"'~';,· ~l~~B~21~,~1 ~s~1,~C~.'~'~· ~liS.CT'iiA:iiOrn.:ru:-;:i;ooi<. '° onl-~~ Y 1 "'t!u'ugorgl-u.. .... ·:_,_ Viii. mo N•B ..,!.; leal!t'. Ref, ft'CI, $350 Mo. 2 BR &, Den. Triplex, Stove,)-: _ 3 BR, 2 BA home. nr i;chools , eoo.19 .,,.._p llJl: <OU ...._,,,i""' •• ' · -.FURNISHED RENT refli f" la I d ftll.I fncd rd _..._ Euy acceu to auper mkt, mo. 67S-0052 Sat or Sun.· ALS g, irep oe. crp 8• rps, Mes• Verde 3110 c, ya · .uMi. mo. 2 bdnn. apl at Woods Cove, lrg enclosed patio. SITO. _ 536-3777 or Sl&-1366. shopping, etc. S32S month. WINTER • lge 4 br. 2 ba Ii: 150 yds. to beach -Lge.. Hom•Flnder1 645-2951 CONDO 3 br. 2'2 ba.. Adults, PACIFIC Sand! -3 br, 2 ba. winter be..sia:. Will consider den. lrplc, bltns. """;n mo + d 1 13131 • -..,.,.. tree •ha eel patio. Lease for * HEY KIDS * no pe s. mo J..case. Childrt?.n &, pets ok. f ent'W. leue • purchase or outright dep. no1 Se ashore • $16:> Mo. 3030 Clubhouse Rd. CM . $225 mo 213/284-5384. 11alP. Adults only. Rers. 714/642-7Gn, 2U/624-9567 2 bdnn. at Victoria Bl!ach. Look at this 4 BR. 2 bath. Open Sal & Sun 1 1() 5. <499-2152 AM or 837-0791 any-LG. l Br: Bltim, patio. Btw: Exe. view, f1ttplc. A few Fencl!d yard, patio, crpts, Phone eve11 714/68l-8709. 4r~f~i;nd!~::'1~r;lt?c ~~~;~· time. Bay Ir; Beach. Yrly. 1tepg lo sand. Lease drps, etc. $225. MOVE BE· 1·200 1 · · $165/mo Adults. 675-6781 aft $275 r.1o FORE SCHOOL? Collqe Park 3115 now. Imo, sf'. 493-3418 MOs~!:~1:.AY 4. . ChArm studio, deck w/ocea.n Homm-Finders 645-2951 LEASE. Untum houst"-3 Fountain Vall•r 3410 ------~~ range. rf:'n11 1s t-ourts. pro srtop and resident trnn1s pro ~inglc. l &: 2 Bcdroon1 ]IL\.· ury apartment~ \\'i th all lhr modern convcnien('('S a1•ail· ablC'. t'urnlshf'd and unfurn.. ished. ~tODEL..°" OPE;.! Di\IL Y 10 A.:-.1. • 9 r .:.1. RENTS FROM $150 to $350 NEWPORT BEACH 880 Irvine Ave. 1 have reduced UI£ price of 2 BR. l~i BA. 3 blka to view, ocean 1ide ot hwy •t * FIESTA TIME * BR. 1 ba, Dbl garilgc, --~ . beach. Sept. lhru June. \VOO<ls Cove. Lease Option to bu . 545-4671. 3 BR 2 BA. Modern F'rplt'. ·~ Realton my home $4,700 90 that it Child accepted Sl!O . $1.J:> 1'.to. 3 BR, 2 Bath Townhouse. Y \V/\V t rpls. elec kit . Drp~, f.alker & Lee Irvine & I 61 11 ( 7141 645-0550 !I Harbor Blvd. at Adams would Sl!ll in the next 3 wkB 6T;)o(16.12. 1'.USSION REALTY 494-0731 Stove. tttrig +POOL! Bring N•wport Be•ch 3200 Garg. Sl'iO/mo. Oct. 1. i49-9491 ......_n 'tll g PM belore schooJ sluts, 4 bl', 3 =--------.985 So, Coa.st Hwy, 1 --·ns tots I: pels. $170 mo. 17600 San!o Dom ingo Cir. '"'I"' .,,. Ii.,;.,,. rm &-dinin& rm ON the Beach, modern 3 .._.. H F ' d T • Ad I 511,000 Full Price ;i' ...... ~Hb@am ceiling. Dtn, br, bltns, frplc, Cll)ts, drps", L••s•/Sele Furnished omm-in er1 645-2951 I owl ""o,uH .. u ti I (7141 6~3914 for appl. vr-...,,. •-""-· 1-i L I 0 • h c--' ..... W , La Sp it eve\ BR 2 bath, 1rp . Wroom 2 bath, MlxlO(I 2 pa.tioe:, 3000 sq It family .. -• ... u ....... ,, nn. _, mo on V uwec -• t nlS On t St bit-ins, patio, Facts pool. 3 La gun• Beach 3705 SOUTH BAY CLUB APARTMENTS .•. ,~lot. dble prace. COY· beach home. J yr old, pvt winter. 6201 Seashore Dr. Avail Sept 15 for leue thru t BR Furnished Duplex. car gar. 1--"'-''--'_;..;..;_; __ :.:.:;c td patio, eltt bl.tin ranp beach Ir; tl!nnls eour1!. Qwn. 2 BR. Comp!. furn. SD>/mo. June or longer, 2 BR, 2 BA, Stove, refrig, patio. $120. REAL TOR 548-6966 ·• OCEAN vie\\' dream hOme Live where the fun is! (OVl!Jl. carpets Ir; drapes. er. principles only please. Near bay II. lll'!ach. AduJll, upper wilh living, dining. PTCK UP. THE PHONE! BY OIVNER. •-I•-' ·a••. Elegant, spaciou~. 4 BR. 3 ~bi leS! than rent.1 '!!$69!i!i,800i!P~ooi!""i!fj499-l'l!!!!i!"!!·!!!l!!!!I no pets. 6r>-796.l kilchen areas ma.in Ooor ov. H F nd 645-2951 ""'" '""" "'-B1', \\'Cl bar. formal din jOO,, Oo11,•n. I! WJNTER..lge 5 br home-on erlooking bea.uliful pool om• 1 e rs \Veslclilfs 3 Br. 2 Ba, lrg r n\ magnificrn1 lil'l'place, J • CLOSE -IN beach. S300 mo: 7201 Larae 2 car port plus stor· 2 BR. $150/mo. 1 ac. Tile H/F Pool, new erpts. drps. stetto. bltins, decorator RENT FURNITURE r Seashore Dr. 64,. .. ~...... agi, & complele laundry fa. root, Zoned lor horses. & painl . Gardener & pool d""', 'P", hobby ""'· dOg ' •-•-m home located in ~ e e e · .. 1 pd $ 4 9 51 mo •rq * DIRECT TO TE~Al\1' DCU1vv cillties. All beautifUUy I< 2 _ mai .. -• · run, -~,..,,.. Adu!•-only. , .. u71 1--1 "' "IOI cloo-• --a·· a pn'vate WINTER rental-furnished BR Duplu $1"/mo &"' """"' 6 "-'u ~ !?1-Hr. Dcli\'e'"" ~ --a. ae cu"''" "" · c:omple!ely furnished linerui • . JJ • ""'"""""· $450 on lease. Reis ........ d. ·" sll'ttt. Close to town. A house . Lido Sands . . d ' Newly pa.1nted. Fee. Tele· BLUFF 2 b f ·~.. 100% Purchase Option 550, _,, ho Commun'oty ..... .,_,. china, etc. d desire . Only Trend ~-t•m• 1 °'"?°"" EASf -l br, a. am 497.1349 Compl•I• 1 BR 'pl , bria:ht, chee..... me on a · i:n-..o 100 steps to private beach. .,~~ nc, ...,,_ _.., rm, frplc, lg~ Hv rm, din'g . . " " 5 f'"'"., ~SHI .!?AC, I• "'s,':!:, nicely 11.ndllcaped lot. $25.950 YEARL y. $2001 MO. Tennis coun & 2nd pool al-* READ & RUN * rm. spac ki! w·/bltns, lndry, F,oRB1;,EAStlE. Lagu,':,_N1gucl Low as SZ2/mo. " ......... rn .. .....,, 2 B 11118 h S 2 1-~ yd N hool " om(' ...,., mo 30-D:iy lllinimu1n ,.., 2)00 sq. It. Divorce! r. 1 t. so on 1 prodperty wilh Sorg· J-IURRY FOR THIS! 2 BR. 1~1!~'";"'.;'""'/mor ~7 3,;j Oish'>l.'asher i.. retr ig : • \VIDF. V/\RlETY ~ 714 : Ut-3769 V-_0 la,·## eou~ an scaping thni~ut. Fenced yard. Kiddles ok. . ~ ' • included 494-4146 or CUSTOM FURNITURE .,,,./T(Jr,1 16/ !"_•_w_,_po_rt __ S_ha_r_., __ 2_22_0 Easy aettss to super mkt, Sll5 CALL NOW' or 644-0061. 499-1 331. RENTAL I. W--41 :11!1V REAL ESTATE 4 BR 2!'-baths. 9 mos lease, shopping, etc. s325 month, Ho~•Find•rs . 645-2951 • LIDO ISLE-4 BR. 3 BA NEW 0 BR i ~i· \\I 19tn St Clt •1s "I" , :,•l"'1 .•.•1n 711 wlntt?r basis \Viii consider acm!ts from tenni~ crt, ·' 10nu·. · 1 1 · ·· · · .~ ... ~1 ~~-!-~~·~·~·~~~1 ~~1l~9ll~G~l•:•:"'~"':~s1~. ~!! $300 pl!r mo. lease . purchase or outright NEW 4 BR. 2 ba ho_me on playgrnd. clubhou!ir & SJOO 1110. REMARKABLY ~ 494.9473 549-0316 \Vinton Rea.I Estalf' 675-3331 salt. Adulls <1nly. Refs. La.ke ~on:Sl opposite El beach. S6!l!I mo. 673-7489 or Placr Rf'ally 4!M-!l704 UNBELIF.VABL\' tx16 Femily Room 2 lots;Victorie Beech Beyshores 2225 499--21 ~ AM or 837-0791 any. Toro Le1S_ure. World, G m<>-l 642-6500 O EXTRAORDINARILY !'let v.ill help finance thi1 time. yr lse, $3:JO mo. 6l:Hil.39. 3 BR·2~i BA Condo: Furn or S!'~lem•nte 371 BEAUTTFUL ·, lt1odern l BR house, ma.ssivt ATTRACT 2 Br 2 ba * M T d * V I D " G d A ~ le ta.m nn, 2 bath lrpl. Also guest hou~ " d!hwshr,' \Vinter' le a.1 e : VIE\V home, oceanside, 2 BR OYe 0 ay Unturn. $285 uni: Pvt/patio. NE\\' J BR. 2 b.1 on goll • 1sere a r t n pts ftit and you can take ovtr bath. vu from patio lot to Ref's . ..,.,.;.. Call 548-!147G. &: den. 2 ba, wash/dry, l.rg 2 BR Triplex. Stove re. pool. '1D7 F'lagsh1p Rd. NB. L'O\lrsr. t'am rm. formal Putting green, walerfall l: ~ loa.n with pymnb less m.ild. Steps to beach. Priced .,..... dslrwsr, S773 mo lse. Avail frig, fen~ patio, small pet 213: 682-JOOO, Open Sun! din'g rm, Atriun1, frplc, -:!rum. fl~n ewl')'\\'berc, in rent, Call 847-8531. ..-:io. SOO S.13 to 7-1 or 1horter rental. le lot ok. $135. , 3 BR.. furn. 9 mos lsc. $250 BltM_ . Urps l.: cpts, IM, 45' pool, rec. room. billiards, llfAL E\TATl ~~PT ~Jed Pool Estate ftbrnixed "'estmont, t'Ot)' !\t'P'ra..nklln flreplflOI!, ce- :r.. D&t1elUn1, tropica.I IU!'. Y!.14in&s. l bedrm, .abarp ·~¥· $34,500. iAqER5H1P 142-4466 iiiNCESS ESTATE under land value •I ....,, • Irvine T•rrece 2245 ~3769 H 'nd m; ~ 492-2033 BBQ's, Sauna, rurn .. unfurn, 642--1272. om•F1 ers '4~2951 f: BR channel front, yrly lse 0 1 & 2 Br. also Single!! from OCEANVlEWHome.lBr,l 4 .BR,~ Ba,_Bay & Ocean OCEANfront3BR,28A,Sep MI toNptonGG-3 & $375 C , $!35 •--it•_ p Ba . w/ multi-u!ilt room. vtemow. m ltvinr Terr. $70;) 15 ·Jun 15, S325 Incl. waler, fam nn. N. Tustin 'area. CIY\\'Ood Realty 5-IS-1290 _ap1strano 3725 · ~ · ~ arsons ard hill b&thhou Rd ., 64U67tl. Between lfar- Bltns, applisnces. comp!. Bill 'c nd RUr &12-l620 g ener, · ses. \Vrkg cpl. Teens ok. Ref! I YEAR Round, Oceanfront. • NEW 4 BR-TROi' ho~. bor le Newport. 2 Blk N.19th carpeted. Balal'ICl!d poMr ni y, · 494-SS.11 or 49'-1495 $210. 646-5S93 from 9/l:J. 2 BR. h~. $210 family room, 2 Baths. CaU Mme. S31,1j(j, IO'i'~ down . Gener•I 200CIG me> incl util. Families only. 493-3237 t1ft 1 pm. 102.1 II.1029 Katell•. 4~ ener•I 2000 Gener•I 2000 1806 \V. Orc9nl.ront. 673-J675 -- or 49'J-41'.E4 YEARLV-$200! mo. 2 Br. C11pistr•no Beech 3730 HOLIOA Y Pl.AZ/\ DELUXE Spack>u~ I Bdrm. f urn apl. Sl3:>. Plu~ ut1!. II """ tr d pool A111ph• parking. !\o c:hildrrn -J~! pc'I~. 196.'1 Pomnn;1, (_' '' LAGUNA Bch 3 BR, 2 BA, d../IQ'fi ·j'\, .( /)"'Cf}C.8 ne\\' carpel. 100 and U31Slb 4 BLKS from On-on y,•/ patio. 51'.l'x\OO' level hillop, \:)~ J.'"tJ ~).. -~ J;I l:) St. N.B. Viel\'! NE\V 3 Br. fa.m rm hi-dry. Bltns. crpt s . , • '""'""'"'"· Aok 133.950 1.0 The .. Pilaf~ with the Built-In Choe'/, 7 BR, 2 ''· ""' 0 ' 1 "1°'1. din ""· ''"· • .,,,, "'"'· * OUT OF SIGHT <I n. AVAIL NOW 494-9382 Ill "' Sli;,. O\lo·ner 67~200 Eves $260 I~. i7'2-5677 or 774-7465. I BR. llugc• living roon1 ·" kitchen. Co111pll'trly r11rn Only $95. llUR RY -HlJRRY ' Home .. finders 64S..2951 * $••,950 * O lemn:ino-len.n of the i .;:''=·f..64,;:8;.,8 ====="'I "" four ae:rorflblitd W«ds b.. I D•n• Poin t 3740 850' tc> bch. Vlt.w, xln! cond. tow tc> fOl'l!I four aimple wotch. Dover Shor es 3'227 1;::.:;c:_:...;c.;::::;.:. __ _:::..;;: PLACE REAL TY 494-9704 I T E E T A s I '----. . 4 BR. 2 BA. NEW LGE 4 br. l ba home. Sunken CRPTS & DRPS. REHNo!!~Sfumlsh-' I i I I I 11 llving rm. tornutl dining Call 675-73'18 or -t96-S.12J. _ . _ • • • . rn1, fl\m rm. lgc pntio. 3 car gar, 2 )T lease, $700/mo to Dupl•xe1 Unfurn. 3975 • Trallrr SSO mo • Single Person 2912 \\1• Coast Hwy, &!~HI I r.or.;--1 Adl!s-No pets. 510."1/nin. Ojl('n for inspec. Si.ii . JU-1 2 pn1. 2~175 Santa 1'nil /\I'". Apl D. C.~l. t~or add info· Call 642~742 brfore 8 am or ail 6 pm or 213: ·l6~S.~.·1.~ DELUX~: Townhouse. 3 Br. 2 Ba. drapes. \\·fw crpts, 1!shwhr. patio. S:/:l.;i/mo. lui·n. ~r :11! sehls (elC'm thru QC\1, :: Pools. 833-369-1 A<'a1>11!t'f) /\fl1"-. a.ttrac1111e, Po-11. Ulil 1)aitl, Garden l1\1ng. 1\duhs. no p<'t~. 1 BR-$150. 2 BR-S !l1 l'iOO U"all:tc<' A\'C, (.,\!. CLl'.:1\~ 2 Bl~. J 1 ~ BA S111d1os. Unfurn a 11 a 1 I , Cqil~. rlrps. Pool. \\'ork1 ng rpl prrl. SI I~•~· up. IHG--0-196. BACll Ne11 lx>au!. furn. SI ID U11l pd Lsr. O,,..r ::;;, No prls. 21!1.) ;\1ir11•r No 2 ."1IS·IO!l~ • $25 P er Week & Up Bach~·lor .t· 1 bi'. TV .t: n1aid ~f'r\·. ava1L ·l:JIJ \'u'lor1a , c.~1. .~~~~~-I I RH . ful'n , Sl lj ,\\'ail Qf·r 5. Abu '! UR unfur11. S1•1S. /\\'ail Sept 18 Src .\lgr, Apt IL 1~-16 Pl11c1•nt111, Furn Bachclor & 1 BR. Excl'pt1onall.v rllt't'! Bclnw rental valur! 2110 f\rwport Blvd, C:O.f. e NAS~1\U P11lms 2 Br a11t Fi.n·n .i;, linf Pool. ping• IJ(lt\~. r:r:Q. ~tn11l\ l11wns r;; E. :!!1~1 :-· 1ilt~:o.r.r1 ' 6; $1~·1 lllO. Qll~:-J'2BR. lif'a1rt1 pnul C'1·ri1~. 1lrps. rl~l111hr AduJ1 onl~. no prt11. '.!~fa P;tc1Hr ,\\'C', C\1, :.1~ilng nr &12-H29 F'OR U.·a.~r-"\1r11, Condo. 2 Br.. I '~ 111\, /\du ll s. 1>•11mm111,i:: r'°°I. ~177.:,0 nio. \lu ll:in lte11ll) -. :}10-2960 • \\"J\.LY-l-:;11•'1.1 ~1 rt. Bach nr rrl Fnni 1..;ueh. $3~1 111k .'i: up :.uHn:11 1 Hr. Kr11 hr-HUI furn. )!11-.\l.i. .<\1Jul1s only. 2220 1-.hlrn, fi·H~9~7R r-i·t•s. I Bl! Poul. Lrg--~, .• -, . .--1-,. 1'd1111 ~. I~) f)(''"· Ulil pd. 1884 ~1r111i1\'ifl * :11~o:t"l6 s: 1 \\'I\, 1\lo1rl Bungalo1l's, t>lp~ i;_ 1\PTS S30 \1'k/up. :?.~;1, ;":o•11·purr Bh·rt ;,.1)l.f!i5:j Furn 1 B~Bachelor 2110 Newport Blvd, CM 2 BR. r·urn Crpls drps Pool. K1d!i ok. 1998' l\lapl~ Apl I iolS'-280~. -,..o .. ~1:f;~E-1-,c~· -, -.R-,-1 Qu1r1, ;_:;ir, rii!ll~. :"I.:! t.ht1•11, li!1i-'}j!~~ liiR-sl2:1~ P001-:-;;;;;:1;m;- "t1u11 .. lOl':1l f!ir ha(•hi·lors l9'J;1 Churrh :.~.~.:11;:\:~ , 1 Bit up[IC'r. n1'1l'ly l'<•rl('C\ i\rU!~ Only, No lll'I~. $1 411 + gn.~ K: ,.ler. 6.fj..-4().M art !i· 1;-i BACHELOR. ant . ni1·rly fl!~ S100 mo, Rl'fr1g, no .s!rHe &1;~:; ' 11!_4roorna, ™;&1 as a pin. l!J . for buSll\l!IS couple, N'-*'Wla.intenance. Convtn. M IOcaoon. iADERSHIP 142-4466 ~---Coste Mesa 4100 Newport Beach 4200 -------'1 1 JACUZZI _. ~- 8:'\hb ""°' P'" , •r. ... w SURFS UP! pf. ct.mom drps familJI $300-S Br. 2 Ba. Stept; to bch. 1. 'All for $27,900 ic a..uume ramili~ er Slncles. ,~ nlA. Joa.n 11 $1!17 mo. Blue le•con * '4S-C1111 jColatadt .. •rtallOt ~ or.....a!U. ~ l V 0 L 6 E I q ua l l f l rd p c rson1 . ------ '- -1-.1...-L-L...1 ! Reft ren C'f'll nf'f'ded . Q!JlET C.1'.f. art-. 2 blk.s I I I I I l' j.I0-2991. lrom shopping ctr . Plly l -F ," R ~ ; I }!! 1.u;";:;; .. ;:";;,;;ily!;;;P;:•;,;•;;;k;;;;;::n;;;';;71 ~~i~S:~:;;,, ! !~~~~ ; ·~;1~;;;~'1,,",'f ~:I~;,~ . . ,. n--•-. u . . * Motel-Apt•. * l\f\ICll , Yrly (JI' Wini'' I I• I I S;gn in 0 doctot's a -oam·. 0r ncntai.s 1n • tuvl':rs1()1 I!.-I • "'1 ---"""' Park 4 Turtle! Rock, Call: ,;-;;no;;;•;•;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;-~ Sfudlo I. 1 n_..a 1 1-i.nlr;.o /\ppt Qnly ~11 -Grot.fully R•· ~rooms Arilt~. no per$, 8J.'l,...ii3" 0r ,..-,,...,,....,..-,-.--~ ctl...t.• LOW RATES 673-8249 · ~l Cle.n- so.y 3-5 bdrm. irii7rm usily ~ ll 8'), °""' .. nd. !IOtc<O rted pool. All -Beck rd. • A f\.M1 Bn.Ut)ll \ltlfl. SC-4610 S.. O.K. $135-1 BR C.ouagr F.aatJride. Patio. Slnalea ok. ~ Ront1l1 hi Shore 2005 r.· SHARE m y cll!1 a n1 ;rune,:: %100 aq ft, 4 watt.rtront homt w/Ooc:k. \! de~, cp/dp, toma' lot. lt!an. 30.fll )'rt. 1150 mo. •.soo. by owntr. 962-16.16 ;...::61>-<::..:33=1=------ l F E T L A R I ..,..From $28 Wk. 0.,, Week " Mon th I i11ifi·1 ~ii-;=,...,.,,,.,,._..j A '"' 1' • Color TV Air Cond. .l\'Tt-:R Rental, ·,\'orlu nc I I j j I' j V ~ln 1tte d!udde q!JOf9d Luxury Single Apts. Compltte • Pool • ~--•-· Incl inrls. ma.x1n1um :\ -: Bl:, 1 .,, f1lll:t!, tt.. f11111ing·word. mald sel'YiCf' hou9el\'l.1"H .-• ..,.Ill' """'.. ba r•rn ,,~ • -d-...1-.,. .. ,_ l L-•--. · • tlfaJd Strvice •••II • !«'. ·""' nlO incl ,~ __,.,,,. .-. _...,.. linens, all utll, he•tcd pool, util. ~o prt~. Avatl ~/8 ~ • PR~~frs~;,~~slfllflS IN I' I' ,. 1· I' r I lit \\'ettern Ba11k Bldg. ~!~~ards. restaurant, cock-1 Si~~~J~ .• o.c. ;~~~"~1.o~~l 6pm lit) ".\" Unl\'t·rsiry Park v· ILLAGE INN 2.176 Nc1vport Blvd. · 0 ~fN~~f L1Tffl$ I I 1 I I I , I ) Dey l l l-0101 Nithts l.aguns B<>A<'h 491,!MJfi 548-S7K1 \~~,~~~~1~'°J~ \~"i1~;~r., ~: -..... BALBOA INN • CO:'ltPLETELi' J\lt·n. J. !rpl, l'lr~· kit. 1-·.\, '1:111~' SCRAM~LETS A,NSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 8000 TRADER'S VARADIS• 'BAlhru. gr;4;40 RR •pt. '9Slmo. ""'·Boot •lip'""'' Arlll<·, ---~-....:;.:.:..:.:.:.:..::.=..:.:.=.:::....:.:.:.....::===::.:=::::..:.:::.::_:::::::__1,.!ll!!?"'!!'~.S!_;l!!!lm~•:!'"'::'c!b~11!!<k>!!._ __ ,...,,..,,..,,..,,..,,..,,..,,..,,.,1t_3_1 _'1;.;o_w_" ____ ~::'6~'•!:13 I' no Pf'tll. -'51l mi:i. G7:t J{l6'2. '· • LA QU "Moc 16211 M, F Lush yard~ ta ins. 1 BR Newpo1 ME "* l.D\V' l\Jtc:hen, I OCEANF "'· 2 V1tw. rl~hwhr. Dr/50111. LGf: Nev Close lo $200/rno, CalJ eve STEPS BR. 2~· or tamil • utll, Co. 673- I Bd, NICE! Avail. ti adulls, • 613-0349. YEARLY 2 Ba, bl garage_ 2708 IV 629-3914 UPSTAlf single couple, shop'a:, 7141686-t * NEt 2 BR'1, IAwer : rental. : l BR. a beach. Balboa 67S.-7816 BEAUT o-ntr linens. &4&""19 l APTB I lease, J I •• paid, I $140. 67 BIG Ba: ...... vn:hr/d1 613-2:112 • l BR '. duklrer: 51, NB. OCEANi Y.'lhr • • June 15 4 BR 001 clo1e to ABBEY LARGE °"''"· student: LRG 1 Adult5, 6'1~92 LGE. lik rlupiex. Sept.Ju 'QCE, ' BR't A.1-'t 6" •• 3 YEARL aean! OCEANi trplc. $ Arent t OCEANi ctP~.' petll. $1 ;-;sf: lolobile no ~ts 3eR.2 ff:\9 Iii+ only,$'. --,-; !iOOO'.• ..-ocr lrase,: 4801 S< 3BoR .fOlh ' 675-271 iiffiN \\'Inter 213/19! i5CEAN furn. r Sear;hQ OELUX loc. p 1210 m -BAOI. I blk uttl . 21 ~ ""· r 1809 \\ OCffi ' ... ""' >~ OPEN 2006 I ~11tr I Sl.&O·bh .... ' 675--10 RENTALS _.Apto. Fumlahod H-!'!lon - RENTALS Apto. Fum lohod THE HIGHLANDER uScottish Treat•• 16161 Porkoldo Ln. Mgr. 142-lMf RENTALS Apto. Fumlahod 4705 FURNISlfED 1 BR. CloM to beach ~ ahopplna. Resp. Adult. '494-7079 RENTALS Ap!o. Unfurnlohool Gononl 5000 VEN DOME lMMACtJLATE API'S! RI NTALS lllNTALS RI NTALS ~II. Unfumlahod Apta. Uoluml"'°" Aptt. Unfumlahod 52Ulnrino 523' Lido lolo S!SI LRG BAY VIEW 2 Br, study, crptl, drp11. l~ ba. trple. AvaU Sept 5. Lie $JM, 675--8592 or 64~7. -- Rl!NTALS Apta. Uoluml ...... ltental1 W11nted 59'0 RI NTAL FINDERS Froo To Londlordo 645411 1 ,.,., San Dle£O Frwy to Bf!ac.h Blvd, 4 blks So. to Holt, w. on Holt l blk. ADULT &nd l-~AMJLY Sect.Ion CI010 to ohopplng, Pork * Spaeiou.t S BR'.•, 2 bt NOW LEASING! Pork-like living for fomi- lies with children end edu lts. I, 2 end 3 bed- roo ms, furnished or unfurni shed. Shog cor· pets, drapes, air conditioned, with self- cleening ovens. Complete $'400,000 recrea· t ion cl ub in three e-cre pork. Pools, tennis, volleyboll, heelth club, teen locilities end e pre· school! Next to shopping end golf course, nee r U.C .I. llnd Newport Beoch. From $150 per mo. At Sen Diego Fwy. end Culver Drive in Irvine. Phone 833-3733. Whoddyo Wont? Whoddyo Got? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR -· LA QUINTA HERMOSA * swtm pool, putt,ll'ffn NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Special Rat• "Modern Spanish" 16211 Parkside ln. * Frpl, lndiv /lndey fac 'It 1145 Anaheim Ave. Hunllngton llMch 54" NR Oct-anfronl, Oceanvu sundeck. ~. Ne111-er dlx 2 Br, blll'lll, -cpts, drps. 5 Llne• -5 times -5 bucks •ULel -AD MUST IHClUD• 1-Wfli l JM IM'll ff .,.... )-WIMI """' Wlllf M ,......_ a-You.--... ,,..,w Miii•""' ......, lllMI .. ...,~ COSTA I.IESA • 643-2824 Mgr. 147-5441 -....HOTMIH• ,_Oil SALi -TllAOl l ONLY! FURNISHED MODELS NOW OPEN Lush landscaping. cabana, covered court- yards, sunken swim'it pools, BBQ's & foun- tains. 1 BR $110/mo. Bltrar, crpt.5, drp~. Child welcome. All util pd. Rooms for Rent 5995 lndry. Nr ahop6 It pitr. $165 ROO~r To \\'Oman in Te Place Your T r•der's P•radl1e Ad PHONE '42-5671 . . , .. Adlts, 1-b)I ok. ~2131. exchang" tor babysitting, Dune BUUY, 1600 dual ('arb "THE ULTIMATE IN APTS" 2 BR $1%;/mo. Blint . Childttn ~col'tH!:. Lr& rooms. Fee. Tele-Trtnd Sy5temr; Inc., 832-7800 ' BDRM d atesa Verde atta, dose lo ent .. top, hhcb fOr Bo.!iton 1 or , crptll, rps, ...._ \Yhal ranre 1: pool. l Block to a • .....,·, ctr, 'M:>Uld conskler e-r or ! or truck. Z777 Owned ond monogod by Tllo Irvine Compony I BR's-From $150 2 BR's-From $175 All util. incl. Furn &. Unfurn. * 1/z BLOCK* 4210 * * beach . Adult• only. cSunoU'! ~·. non-smcktrs, Brillo!, C.!\f, Ttadewinds Realty 147-8511 .,;:::..:~:.::..:'":.:::'-----___ Ot&-__ ""' __ ••_Y_• __ NE\V WX 2 A 3 br. 'by QUIET Altr&(, 1 br. Pvt/be. Exchange equity in '69 24x Newport Be•ch 4200 Newpeirt H1ti.. ,1~!!!!!:!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!';'!!!!!!!"!"'!"!"'~!"!"'!"!"'!!!! ent LlMru;, Non-Smoker --'-------I FRO?tf THE OCEAN. 2 Br. 21: 1>8.ch! Cl'pts, drps, bllns, pref. It.fen!nce&. $90/mo. 60 Mobile Home in H.B.: MESA MOlEC WJNTf~R Rental, 2 BR furn Bath. Sundeck w/view! $175. C It Meal SlOO Newport hlch 5200 1ar. &ll.-3615. 646--0841. CO.M 67J...5321, For income prO~rty or tt11t, tplce. patio, $18:, 2100 Hom•Finders 645-2951 ·.:•;::;;:•:..;;:;;::;;:.. __ _;;.;.;.. • .;....____ $1""' 2 BR epi. o-I =;;:,;~==:::...____ homf'. Aft. 5 pn1. 0>A'ner: * LO\V \VBt:KLY RATf;s • -loJ, ' ' A ..... BEAUT. home w/pool has Kitchen, 'J'V'11 m111d ~kc:. Clay SI. 646-1;,s.1, Z BR, 2 ba delwc prden • 2 BR. uni $155, 1 br. unt. DUPLEX·3 BR. 2 Ba.th, Bll:nl, Garage. extra BR for employed 1-5.16--"'....:'·------ tlentf'd Pool Cl.J·:AN 1 or 2 BR. AduHs. no pe.tio •pt. •,-i mi from So. $130, Crp111, drp&, bltM. crpts, dtps, bit-Ins. $250 mo * Aft 4 pm, 847-3727 * lady. Privil. i100 mo. Trade my '64 Olds 4 dr Sta. 6'1&.900. 111·1~. l.rg kit. SL'l5-Sl50. :Mn Coast Plaza Sl70/mo Ca.II POOL! No cb.ildrtri no pets. "'"'=ar:..::l"::·c.642-0603=-==-----2 BR. Near Ocean. Frplc, 546-6740 \Vag:. for your equity in late l"-l-'·:.=016::th=St::. =N=B=.,=""='::'°:o'=·::::: I 968-2126 nr 546-Q99 32.>J E. 17th Pl. CM NEAR beach-3 br, 2 ba. patio. Crpt.1, drps. Adults. I~~==-~----model l.o mileage car. Call OCl!:ANFRON'I' 'Ill .h1n", '1 NEW J.z..3 BR's. All blt:na,l.:."::&-.,:'7:;;38:::_. ~=~==,-upper duplex. Bltn15, lase, UNDBORG CO. ~2.579 2 ROOMS, Costa Mesa. $45-S79? betwec::n 1 P~l &. Br, 2 811 upprr du11lt>:(, Back Bay 4240 cpts, drpg, gar. Nr. S. Coul QUIEJ' ADULT LIVING $240. 6U-68J6, e l BR. NE\V! Fireplace. Comp! \lie of home. $20 Per 10 PM. View. fuJ•n, ll:!lr, ,, "1 · Plau. ~1973. 545-2l21. 1 Ir: 2 BR. Sbq crpts, bltns, Near Ocean. Patio. Adult1. wk per rm or arra.nrements I =c:..:.::.. _____ _ r!~hwhr, S220 s t1 11 ~ h n r r XL.NT localinn fl_ vltw, 1 BR pool, beaut. lndscpd. $150 &. ~-~~1,,.3 ,br ~ .!::iec:!'~ LINDBORG CO. SJ6..2S79 I -'m::•::"':::..· Sl::.:~.::::::'.::'::"o::':.· __ Have rare model '61 Chev. Or/Sllth. ~; •P•, llf'11l.f'd pool, Adull, no Code Mete SIOO $lTO mo, incl all util. 241 64i'.oooa _.., .,-COLLEGE Ot working girl. Noma~ Wa&'On. Power, very LGE: New 2 br. 2 be rurn "fl' 11"1 Sl 21'i r'll<I., S.iS-4845 Avocado Sl 646--0979. ========= 2 BR, crpU, dtps, bltns, Bal. Isl. Kit & TV nn, ~It. dependab~. $49,j v a I Uc. "· & I I children ok. No P et 1 . 170 ~ .. to •· TD'S Clo~ lo ....,ach . ••rpp ns: Coron• del Mer 4250 ** .$100 ** Newport Heights 5210 $130/mo Call S36-1165 • mo & up. 61:>-3613. ~•a r aum., • SlOO/mo. 1510 >fore'"· N.B. ORLEANS APTS. L<woiy alnKl< apt, Bitno, _ _:_ __ ::_ ___ l;Fi,~~;'-;;;;f";;;m: YEARLY 185. ...- Call eves 673-197j. I BR a:&ra.ifl rum a.pl Adultw, drp/crpt & rtfrig. Fe.need 1 BR Twnhse, pool. pnge, Nit'!'' lug,. room. 1809 w. 4 National cash registers STEPS To Ottan, Allr. :\ no P''llll $14;)/mo +util. ADULTS ONLY yd. Woriting aduIIB only. ~NICE~·::· =!!Ck. crpt, drps, ~~rr;;uh-dry, Balboa, NB. 673-Jns eve!!. computer type, ring15 from BR. 2~~ ba, frpl. Teechf:n 1111 &.. lnlt k $50 de~iL 2 .l 3 BR. Avail. Private J*-lCOI :E.1 Camino. Sf6...{i704 ~?'· no:.r.' .,~,; a,.,,.1 ' "'1..:pa""'Oo"'-'St._.407-. ~""=-·..,...,--* $15 PER \V"k·"P w/ le to $999, 3 depts. trade fa il \Vt I $~1-' -,~ ... , · I Ind' I ndry pe ................ on..........., o r "---L•--t 2 Br. Apt il •Call or m y, r ff:, _, '"'' .....,"~ , ... ...,.. • uo, poo • 1v. ~u fac. 1 BR $150. 2 BR $165. Poot 642-8006 uo:auUJvu kitchen. $30 prr week .. i.lp for house tra er or . + util, Balboa Real Estate OCEAN llide hwy, 2 BR (fl!r. Orange Co, Airport: 'I\la. Elec ... wtr pd. Ad.Its, no 1-'::.:.C='-------2 Blks from 0cttn. H.B. Apls. MOTEL SU-9'15S. :".::'.:·156::=":.· ------ Co. 673-4140. w/w, Jrplc, v.·lk to shops. tin at 17th St; nr. We11tc.1W). pet!. MN&. Ma.nor. 241 $160. 2 BR, l~· ha. studio, 1====""'=;;';32::==" l ~::::...:::::..c::::...:.::..::..:::c_ + 8.5 acrei APPLE VAL--l Bd, firepla~. VERY $200 \Vil90n Aw, CM 548-?405. cpts, drps, bltns, prqe, SLEEPING room. pvt ba. in 8 NICE! xlnt. PeniMula loc. etc. l\dull!I, no pets, 1141 Tustin. c:o&ta Meu. pvt pr. 67~3708 alt 5. S.nta Ana 5620 ne1v Gold J\tedallion home. LEY Janet 623 It, "'''Y 1 Avail. til Jun I~. 2 en1ployf'CI yrl)' lse. ~ Mgr. lttrs. Carson. MH641 Sl70, :I BR. bath I: lhail~tud9;,,l Bluff 5.-1 ---------~ l ,C.,._c;,.:;21H.:.2:."=t.:.>.:.P.:.'c_1 ---~~t;~efor ~~~ B!~C:: adults, no pets. 61:i.-2123 or LRG Bach. Prv ent, So. of drp11, cpts, patio. Av I · E1st ~"' CAN'T BE BEAT CLEAN pvt: ~ &. * * 644•16Zi. 613-0349 Hwy. beam clnp, reir. no ...,.,,_...,..,..,_..,.._,,,---1'114: 548-8301 DI' 213: entrallC!!, for reKpoNiblel.:...:C..::..::..:::.::. __ ~~ . kit. $125 incl util. 613-6904 Like Living in Your 592-5227 e NEW DELUXE e ,voman. Mt s. 893-0122 BALDWIN ACROSONIC YEARLY • Oceantronl l Br• OWN HOME I I 2 Ba. bltns, indoor Bar-S..Q, PART furn-1 br, bltns. Walk • • 1 BR. Duplex. Crpts, drps, 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lease. Single Stoey NICE Room for working SPINET, LIKE NEW. EX- garqe, $295 mo. Sept. 15. to shopping, $150/mo. Da.yg \\''hy pay $175 for an apl? • kltch. turn. Fenced patio. Incl spae. muter suite, din man \\'ith or without cooking CHANGE FOR QUEEN 2208 W. Oceanfront, 714: 645-2820. ('ves 6T>2089. \\'htn \\'e 2 can rent youl done yard. $145 mo. ~283i. itZ nn A: dbl aara&e, auto door Soulh Sea Abno!phere privl. Ea.sl C.P.1. 64~. SIZE 8EDROOJ\.1 SET. • ~3914. for $140, BR., new Y ec, F10\ver St, CM. ope-avail, Pool A: Rec. 615-4422 OR 675-6060. on""" .t-/d 1 tios ,,... .. ~ 2 Bath NEWLY dee. Furn nn, CM. I:;::.;:.=:_.::.;...:.;.'--"=--. !Al 1 B1lbo1 -crpl l'P. enc pa • spac LGE deluxe 2 br in 4-plex. an"a. 4 B m 1 F al l stud 1 r r.tountain home UPSTAIRS \v1nter ren or grnds . 2 Po:ols! Adults only. bltn range&; dshwshr, shag • FROM $265 • em e on y. en pre. $;,500 eqully for single rnatur~ woman or BAYFRONT-Large J Br. 2283 Fountain Way E. (Har-crpts. dl'Jll!, gar. ;115. 865 Amigos Way, NB Carpel!! A: Dnpes $60 mo. &IZ-8.i20 l!hoP ~uipmenl, couple, close to bch & furn apt. Patio overlooking bor, turn w. on \Vil.son). ~2321 or 541)..1973 SLEEPING room, private ghop'g, Reagonable. Bay. Util. pd, Garage. GREENS ........ 9:-!~~CO AitCondiUoned home,nicearea. prcas.,• .. ~.,: .. or 1~ 714/6fl&-6,j.53_ $22;>/mo. yearly, $18 5 HARBOR NEW Ire 2 BR triplex, Pvt "'a....w&l"' W • 642-5000 or 5"8-0390 u.w * NEW BAYFRONT winter. 673"67ro GARD!:N a: mm10 APTS pa.tio, 1tiac cpu A: drp!I, LGE turn room, nice home, * I Units, good rental are\ . $38.lm t'QUity I n c o 1'i e $13,SOO. .f'or hou~. t.'Om· ~rCial or horse n.ncb. ' O\\fNER 675-6259 COhL"\!ERCIAL.Jncome.pro. perty, free & clear, nex,~.l~ Sears. Val . $6.J,000. 1--j,r units house or beach ~· 'o\VNER 6'15-6259 •I Pvt pty Y.ill trade equi~1j.p S acres 2 mi from downMtJ?I Escondido for down pay. mt!nt on So. Orange @ . homf". &IS.1116 anytime. · 24' cabin cruiser, '67 C~ Jer, fully equipped. Tta'de $1500 in boat for hou!:' e(ru. itY, car, 1maller boat <Ii 1 Evenings 673-12ti6. 1005 Ford pick-up trudt, Real claMic, in mint cond. $12.00 equity + cash tor late model passengtr car. · 1 5'1>2991 Commet"Cia.l & income pro~ erty do'A'ntO"'n Laguna, old· er. Trade for San Franci9co or No, Ca.Iii. recnatiol'lll aett&gt!. Owner 4S~l&a2.-... 20 ac, 5 yrs old, o,,na:e Grove, Rivenide Cpty, mngment ~t!. W9 M,'eq. $82 ~I. For: TD'!!, land'« submit. -494-2936 • 3 BR, l *-BA ea. One hoo1' & I Condo, vacant. ~th lower $20.000 bracket. Tri.dt: ('l'l. for TD's, aulo, trlr or tn· me! Ownr/a11 S46-5.l80. * * * 2 BR's, 2 Ba.'1, 227 19th St. YEARLY. lower duplex, 2 Bach, 1, 2 3 BR'1 from $110 Bltn r .. , encl far, $1'75, J.m\•tt Duplex, $250 winter Bdrm. 2 Ba. carport, near 2700 Pe~ Wa,y, c,K Ava.ii around 10n. 54~1517 rental. $330 Yrly. 67S-0236. new. $210, waler pa.id. Fam. 54&-0370 fl65-QUlET! Large delun • 2 Bdrm. 2 Bath ... [)istr.\uher. dispoul. Avail aft 9n5. sno mo. M4-5870 pvt entrance. RA!ferenct. l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!•!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!'!!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!••I ~190 Costa M~. RENTALS I RENTALS ' Prtf. 673-4384 nights, VILL• MESA APT5. BR,!•,;. BA.. GE kitchen, Coron1 cltl Mir 5250 J BR. apt. Close to bay & "' dultll ts 2 beach. Furn/uni. 1216 \V. weekend,., 2 BR Priv patio Htd poot car pr. a ' M pe • I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Balboa Blvd. NB. Eves BALBOA Bayfront. \Vinter 2 dr encl'd &~. Childttn E . 16th ~I. ~-( 1 Carport ~ $tnral• 61~78'76 or 494-2250. Rental. Avail. Oct. lst Very v.'t!lcome. no pets pl!aR! Men Verde 5 110 .-:; BEAUT z &. wntr· nice. l Br. Quiet responsible $165 mo. 719 W. Wihon. .._l::.a --~ 11IDDEN VILLAGE Plent)' at lawn Bedrm for emply'd/mature lady, N. Tustin area, Privil. Rell!. $7S. M&.5.'i93. e $75 FURN ROOM e AT THE BEACH * 673-4Tl1 Oceanfrtn, frplc, fw'fl~X"cpt adults only. All utiL Car ~1251 . ,~ !'74!_' GARDEN APTS linef\!I. PXl mo uU pd. port. $150. 673-1983 $170 NEW Dec. Dehm 2 J1e br, 2500 South Salta Motels, Tr•ller UIL'lll'M BACHELOR A.PJ'1, Util pd. , .. Ba, _ .... bit-Inti, l~~ ha, blttie, .ncl pa.tio &. ON TEN AatES Santa Ana * 546-1S25 c-·~ 5997 ~· $92 910 E. 3 Br., 711 ...,..., p.r. No pets. $165 644 0962 l a J BR. hra A man. .............. ;om~~ 1-~-~"~·---~ avail on ~ar round :'1ix! Bl. ,:0i,;,.. crpts, drpL Aak about our Fh'etl•'* '/, pm, patb I VILLA MARSEILLES ..,,., Balboa Ponin. Util. ditooont plan, 880 Center Newport llffch 5200 -.-.Oiotllt'I-. IRAND NEW paid. 1 hr $185. b&ctlf:lor WINTER 2 BR apt. Adlll.ts, St, 642-8340. 900 Sea t.., OD1 ""XU SP •c IOUS Sl'" 6""' 5416 no ..... 18. $ll0. utilities ...,.;d. __ • .-. "' ....,.. ,.,... · 6n:l'is:z .-2 BR, 1 Ba, sinr!e atory J Br unturn Opts drpa. (M.....v ... ar Ill'. o..t Hwy) t & 2 ldrm. Aptl. BIG Bay Front. Penthouse garden unit. Shag crpts, pa~. pool,' blw.' $160. Adult Llvlnt garage apt., t br, 2 BR. BeAch!l'Ont, Crpf!:, drps, dt;;~her, patio, Seaclilt' Maner Apts, l525 LRG 11 e w a pt r; on nfu wshr/dryt>r·222 10th St., drps, resp, adul!s only, no beam ceiling, trplc, gep Placentia. S4S...2S82 a 5 k Marguerite, S. of Hwy. Furn. Ii U m . 673-:a'.1121~748 chldrn, no pets. 6#-0753. garage. Adults, no pets. about our diAcount. Bltns, c.pts, drps. $250. Dllbwallhtr ·color coordll!at-* 1 BR Furn Apt. POOL. No 2 BR. Apt $T;;i0 monthly. 315 $170. 2650 Elden. 536-0062 or·1 ---~~----548-7983 ed applianoet • plmh Iha& children, no petg, 2405?, 16th E. Bay, Balbofl. lnq at Apt ~5'~!>--06-=-7',8 =M='gro-.,,U_n_it_P_ . ..,....-, I X~ Le~! 2 1°:r; 2 .:ta~/~ I =o~E-L~UXE=-,~,-.,,-.-,~B~R-.-.,-,· I ~ ~=-2_ = St, NB. 646-4664 C. 673-1521 or 548-7771. e BEAUTIFUL new luxury pels. $l85; 5 48 _370g, 2 BA, bltm, crpta, drp11 lhoftl'I _ mimftd ward- OCEANj'RONT 2 BR. gar. 1 & 2 Br. unf. aptg, Shag 673-2370. frplc. patio, S/Hwy, rot. doon. 1n41reet lizht. .,.,"Shr. dt)'T . Sept Jjth to Bay_ lsl•nds 4350 cpts, drps, dsd gar, pool.I-'='-"'-'~=~~=~ 6f;>-2747. fJ1S tn kitchen. b:ft1dut June 15th $22j. 673-1247 OIARMING 3 BR f:irepl BBQ. rec. room. Adib:, ro • BA YFRONT • , _*_CO_RO_LIDO __ APr __ s_. -,-Br-. 1 bu • huie private fenced 4 BR comp. furn. Winter lse, patio. $170/mo. 117 Pearl'. Charpets.I ~!5001& $185 3Jl7 LUXURY Apts. St•rtint I: l~ BA., trplc. dbl car-patio • plush !am8Cll.pins • close to beach. (2131 792-2573 or inquire at e ' ' · at $375. • 642-2202 port&: latV Pool. $1851: up. brick Bar-8-Q'a. Wp bel.f.. ABBEY REAL TY 642-3850 addresg, NEW 2 BDR.i.\f. B ea m * NEARLY new 3 br 2 ha. 673"3378 e:I poola I: lan&!. LARGE 1 Bdrm. NEAR ceilir?\uv.'OOd ri:~·ul~I trplc, crpts, drpl. N~ petg'. '3.:,B,.:R.;,.:,,'-.,.-.-,.-.~,~H~...,-. Frp!~~,., JIOI So. lrlstel St. Ocean. f150 m<>-YEARLY B•lbo. Island 4355 rec ea "''· · ' $215/mo, 301 32nd St. patio, gar. $310, yriy, Adu• Oi Ml. N. ot So. Cout P1u.a) Students ok. 673-$88 . -·--no* "'38'7'·wCal. Bai noywS::,n;548--0'7 ·=;.:.:';.,,.-------•-"'..:Yc.·-•_73-<_'98 __ .____ Senta AN $400 MO winter-3 br. 2 ba, -PHONE : "7..nol LRG 1 BR. Avail Sept, 7. new on north Bayfront. id 2 b l~ b MARINER'S Square 1280 IQ. 2 BR. North of Hwy. Frahly I t y ! EAST 5 e ~ r, . a, fl. $2-45 rno, 2 BR 2 ba painted. Avail 9/15. $~. "'!!"!"'!"!"'!"!"'!"!"'!"!"'!"!"'!"!"'!"!"': Aduts. no pe1. eaty. Adults. 67:>-8306 or crpts. drps. bltns. retr11 .• cptfdrp, bltina, pool, rec 67~3299 '= 61~ or &12--080'1. 213/846-7916. pool. No pets. 646-6610 fac. 64~. ,:;.:.:=-----= L19un1 B11ch 5705 LGE. like new 3 br. 2 ba. bch 1 BR, 1 ba Studio type apt I ~fi";;r.:t;;-c3;-;;8:;;R:--;:21aa<;;;th;;:I~~~~~~-~-2 BR, New, Avail 10/l, $JJO ----------duplex. Sundeck, gar. 'A'/rt0 kitchen. I LRG 2 ~ ' . ll. 3 BR. 2 BA. Unfurn. Crpts, mo. Will show, call 675'1874, ""pt.Ju~. 1250 642-1045. 7,1238 Frp\c, blt-1":'• crpts, drps, drp1, blk to ocean. Yearly 700 Na.rcis.l!us. OCEAN VJE\V Lrg 1 ~~~=-=~=="'"-=--:--:I ,==*=A=!t=6:o, 6='==*==I encl gar, patio. 54~1034 sm . 673-8088. '""-"'"~==-~-~ Bacl'H!lor, l Ir: 2 BR apts. I OCEANFRONT l, 2. 3, &. LRG J BR Crptll drpg., pool 2 BR. 2 BA, wshr, dryr. pool, Furn or unturn. Ctpt.s, drp!I, OPENING SOON RESERVE A SPACE NOW! • A private, we lled mobile home com~ munity I 0 m in ute1 from Palm Springs. • A ccommodefel 2-4' xl4' coachel • 11 hole golf course & driving ran9e • l avi1h clubhouse •., b illie rds, loun9e, shower•, leurid ry & stora9 e * G iant 1wimmirig pool • T1 nni1 l shuffleboard * Boe t & trailer storage Apts. Unfum1thed Apts. Unfurnishe41.. S Mot.ls, Traller Courts 5997 --------NIGHT up. $30 wkfup. SUNNY ACRES Motel, 2379 Newport Blvd, CM. 5<l-S'15$. ** WEEKLY Rates. SEA LARK MC7l'EL. 23 01 Newport !llvd, Costa ?tl~. Office Rental 6070 FOR LEASE Lr& modern :'· OCt"an view OHices -Shop$. suitable-pro!. or b111inen. · l!>J!I S. Coo>< Hwy, '1 Bch. 494-94TI. • LUXURY New o!licH. Pri'io;; . Beach Blvd., air, qiJJ. drapes, etc. Z-4 or I ~ suites. (21..l) 394-00:W tU1 · .M.~l~•·~·~R~•::n~t~•l~•--_5_9'9_ ~"'=ll="=~'~·""'"""'""';:--­-* NE\VPORT , • * STORAGE Garageg for Rent: $25 per mo. Call 642-63'91 CLEAN Single Garage, $20. \\'e1lllide, CM. Ea~y acceSJ. Ctment fir, elec. 642-5J&3. ENCL. Storage Garages for ~nt. CM . $10 mo. lnq: 1959 !\taple~\-e., Apt. 5, Qf. REAt ES'fATE Gener1I Income Property - *TWO 2 BR Homos* Glf'nneyre.Downto"''n Laguna Good rental units, C2 zont SO x 108' lot. Near beach $44,950 Exttllf'nt terms ftEALONOMICS CORP. COr.tMERClAL BKR. 615-6700 Beac~modern/dlx ott!OllJ· Ail'/coOO. H1d. ?riv. Jilt.. 2400 \V. Coa.sl H1vy. ~ ' APPROX 700 sq n at;J" N>A'Pl Bl. Cr.f. New crpl, drps. $150/mo. M2·2821, &42-5106. .. UP to 3600 sq ft-De.luxe, air oond, crpl!I, drps. Jn ~­ puter center bld&. ~'14Z or 546-6080 NE\\'PORT of'lice1 crpt 'I' drps, ocean view, from S71 Call ov.oner aft 6. 6T>-4644. · AIR cond office. S60 pf'r Tht'1, 2435 E Coast Hwy, . GT:>-2000 ~' • ~ 1200 Sq. rt. Offict •' ' filO iiq. ft . stort. $90 k $ts&. CM 6'$.2130. 1 BR. Apt. Busi!'IW! ~. Newport Blvd, $9a/mo .. • 4 BR's. WINTER RENT· Huntington Beach 4400 il &: 2 'h"ld 2214 2 BR, 1 blk to bch! $165 adults. ~ mo. Ca I I: bltni, palios, w a I kin r 1 s 673-8088 Fam Y c 1 • mo/yrly. 1st &: last + dep. 673-4769 distance to to"'"· 100 Clitt A*. ·, & ' • BR's ~le College Ave. 646-0627 No chldm or pets, 673-428lrr c::,:.S.::;:W::_O_ND_EltFUL ___ t_h_e Dr., La.1. Bch. 494-5498 RESERVE NOW PALM SPRINGS MOBILE COUNTRY CLUB NEAT, clean, local l\1obile S.t5-3S68 * . . , • ,,, . c 2 BR apt-hltns, crpt~. drp11. ** 1 BR WATERFRONT. YEARLY. 1 blk tn Beach! ON BEA H! Clean. Jnqui ~ 1552-A BALBOA BAY CLUB APT. ~~~uy~ :e "t:=: n.*.c*h~,'•~~~.co,:~1*: 2 Clean! Call 613-2455. Coriander, 546-6268. i•-mo. Call ... -· ~ ' •· e SI l 1 ,_ 1165 1 -::~:==:=:=::,;:-:="=:u==;_:::•:;•;:•·:;Check=::=,"":=;m;""":=,':= I Br. Gold Medallion apts. OCEANFRONT 2 hr, '-"'• nge ap s .. .,m 2 BR apt. Close to 1hoppifl1 1; Each have 11,.1 BA. Pool. trplc. sm7:.1,:e; Sept -June. • ~ ~RB~ur';d Fro~ici285 & park. I child ok. $120/mo Newport Buch 5200New~ a.. ach 5200 $200 up. Lease. 2175 s. Cout Agent 6 ,,.....,.,...,. u urn 645-1891 i~~ .. ~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iii;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij Hwy. 497-1630 or 4.9!}-3929. OCEANFRONT 1 br. trplc, Carpets-drapes-dishwasher Pool •· tod pool t · 2 BR. unt crpts. drpg. 11. e ADULTS ONLY -~ drpfi. No children or '"'"a -uuna. enrus '"',.. • 675-8800 rec room~ views Kld!I ok. 1998 Maple, Apt 1. Quiet pleuant unturn. ~ts. fl75 Agent , patios.ample parkine. 548-2808. Apt, $115.00 Util. incl. + * $120 . VERY nire 2 Br. Security gua.rtbi. 2 Br. iv/ carport. SUS. \\'a. fllm. Studkl w/kitch. '-fobUe home, Adults only, FURN. also Avail. ter pd. Nr schlii. 2192 $135.00 Util. incl. no pets. 642-1265 "A" Placentia. 636-tllll. Ph coll. Dwyer 213:431-621'.M 3 BR, 2 ba, Cpl• th'°"""°"I. HUNTINGTON 3 BR, 2 M, en<( pr, pvl 36200 D1te Palm Rd., C1thtclral City. Ca. C•ll Lind• Velentec few stepg trom bch, Adll1 PACIFIC yard. Adult!! iJ,75. E. uqi:. only, S275 mo. yrly. 642....J812 546-3716 or 540-4431 2 Br 2 Ba SDI mo. 711 OCEAN AVE .. H.B. 50001,~ Nf'Plul'le Ave N.8 . (n4) 536.1487 2 BR. Duplex, crpt1, drps. Ole. open 10 am-6 pm DaiJ.y atove, refrlg, yd, gs.r. Child * OCEANFRONT • winter Managed by OK. 2238 B State. SlS5. \Pase. 2 or 3 br family units, WILLWt WALTERS CO. LRG 2 BR. Crpts, drps, 4807 Seuhort Dr. bltn&, 1·2 childrtn ok. Nr 3 SOR. ye&r around 120~ 2 BR. Pool. Ad 1.1 I ta' schgl &: shop'g, 962-1545 , Beaut/Quiel! Util i n c I 40th St. $240 6'ffi-3249 or UlQ/mo. 17676 Cameron, $140. 2 BR upPer. No lridft or OCE67~AN717FRNT8 •. ' Br Duplox. 842--tilll. ~.ts64~~75~fg~wJI Sept. F"REE Util. Furn l k 2 BR _.;;:~~;:.;:_""'o;,......,,,-,,,. Winter. $200/mo. a.dlta, apti. Pool. \Valk to beach. -DELUXE-J BR. 2~1 Ba 213/79:)-3018 $!30 up. 536-lm or 536-7282 Studk> apt, New cl'J)ts & drp!I or 536-1366. bltn!I. $190 pe.r mo. 546-0451 OCEANntONT 2 Br. Duplex 1-=~--~-~-- N .. 5101 AT Beach • Winter Rates. CLEAN 2 br, crpts. drp11, furn. ew cor .. pr. b U $145 Adults Seuhore Dr. 673--5031 1 &: 2 &inns., pool ; furn. or ltns. pa o. · · unfum. Ad11ltt. 219 l~th St. 2251 Pomona Ave. 56-6800 DELUXE 2 Br .. Westdiff & n! ]2th $1. 3 Br. 2 Ba, Crptt, dJ'P8. 1016 Joe. Pool & bltns. Adults. El Camino Drive. CM. $Zl.O mo _ no lse. 64~4. SPACIOUS 2 Br, 2 Ba, furn .._.~ ,....,0 , e\J'f!5 &TW5.U $185, unf $155. 536-310'7 2m 1.::-:::~;;;;::;.,:=:.;c""'::;;=-:::::' BAOI Apt. Swim pool , Garg. 1'1orida Apt. 1. * OEJ..UXE J It: 2 BR. 1 blk from oct!lln. S13S + BAQ-IEWR. Util. Pa.id. Cenkn Apts. Bit-Ins, prtv. utn. 210 Cedar. MS-1131. * NEAR OCEAN! * patio, heated pool, trplc. $%25. B EAQ-1 \\lintt>r-3 br .. Z LlNDBORG CO. ~1\79 Adultii. $145 mo. ~163. &. f'pl, 4"pbl. ne1.rly ft(:W, 2 BR. New paint It crptt. 1809 \\I. &lt>oa 673-2223. L•1un1 Beech 4705 S160 IM. 557..,g745, tnq : 134l Baker Apt B, C.~t. OCEAN.FRONT-Deluxe 3 br, 2 ht. trplc. Ava11 1011 ~ \VlN'J'ER: l bcdrm a.pl by 1 BR. A(lt. Business Joe, ma yearly. 673-7053. hc&ch, view, deck. pa!lo. Newport Blvd. S!tllmo. fireplat't!, 2·car car• re , 545-3863. OPEN 12-4 Pl\t, Stlt J:. $.In, uUUtltt1, cablfl TV. Sl75. t BR "-'* .a-. ttow --\", ~an~nt. 2 BR, .... ..... "'""' • "'JllU ,,, v..-.: u" Adulls. No pc11 . .494-9603 -!rig no ~, ••ui" SllO wntr lse $217/mo 548-4928. "" · ""'' ' '"' ~· · NEW oef:an front, ~legant 4 ~0.39 aft 4. $140°btvtn ocean & bt.)', I br BR, 3 BA, 2 fln, trpl1. bltin NICE l BR Townhou11e, 1~ 3pt. 5tudl!nt.!I w,., corn e. barbq, $6.VJ, ALW l or 2 BR. b&, $151'1 mo. Awl! now. 673--1011 Aft 6 &: y,•kndl $27';). 497·1082 • !J4~ * PARK NEWPORT High on • bluff overlooking t ho wotor, 7 pools, 7 tennis courts, $750,000 hHlth club onCI Sp•. Bocholors, I or 2 bedrooms. Also 2-story town houses with 2 or 3 bed- rooms. Electric kitchens, private b1lcony or polio. From $175 to $450. Subtor- r1n11n p1rkin9, elev1tors, option1I m1id service, convenience shopping. s.. 7 be•uliful model •portments, opon 9 o.m. to 6 p.m. d•ily. Other limos by •ppoinl· mont. Locoted •t JemborN •nd Son Jooquin HiHs Roods, in Newp ort, jus! n o'rt It' of Foshion IJond. Phone (714) 644-1900 for !Hsing infor mation. Park Newport 'Apartments Rental1 W1nttcl 714/32M515 • 4 BR unfurn hse. for ac:hool year. \Ve11tclllf area. (ill) 284-9306 collect A member of !he U.S. Financial Group Foumoln Volley 5411Fountoln Volley :J.ounlaiM· Medii.r-Style Lua,,. 1Al--1a.tbo Atlalt Livia& Fanbbtd a tJllfolnlsW . , ... ·~ e .S ... Car,,_ .,,,..., ... . ...... -... ........ c.1-.. t585Slat.A_.. 5411 Home Park. Pool , rec room * NEWPORT BEACH etc. Spend $13,000 after $80/mo. Air-Cond1 $75,000 down. 7% on ===E;::"':;::in=*='="-=160=1 Ba I an c e , Wally f.1c.Coy, 67f>.-Ol16 anytime. Commercial (21 r.f-lA lots, Production Pl, e S"J'ORE Bldg tot ~ Newport Bch. 686-698 \\'. 19th SI. ~lhtl 673-7070 or &42-2045 To11'f!r.i corner. 543-1768 Mh Business Rental 6060 ~~uitri•I ~~~­ WEST S~ of C.111. •cnm if·l lNDUSTRIA.L 0 1paee, f'rom serv. dept Th eo ~2jQ sq f~ w/oUice A drl\~ Robbirni Ford muld be gm m door 1n ttar. $155 mo, part hie-or offlce or coff~ U·lO "C'' Lozan sl, QI. ahop. Lola of pa r k 'g . &tG-06S1 -, '.;:di 646-2971.. FOR lse • s.300 sq. n. pnm STORE OR OFFICE w~reh !!f! 11pac~PMf. ·-,_ Sq Ft P--'-· Irvi~ Ind, !\1r. BWJIAt WI.I or .IJAlll • , ...... 1n1 ~'1. ' '- Reasonable, 646-2414 · 2630 Avon St., Newport Lots •Ii JtARBOR BLVD front. 19x37' w/rt&ITOOm. 2110 Harbor Blvd, CM n» mo. year'1 leMe. 54M783. ~ORE, 2110 Harbor Blvd. Prim«' location. A. C, Pelllte. Rltr. Sfs.432'l. Office Rent1I 6070 HILLGREN SQUARE 1900 aq ft Deluxe Ottlcn Avail. for tmmed. leU!! In one ot cities buOOt ahop. Jrltl& ce:nten. WW dh•kle. AINOnd ,, mua.ic, pa~Hrc. crpls, dl"PI. Mu. park's It m.1int. 270 E, 17th St., C.M. &lr Bn.m 213: 651-2700 collect DESK SPACE JOS No. El Camino Re •I Sa n Clemeftt• ... .- DESK SPACE 222 Foros! Avenue Legune Beech 491-9416 '" Half-aC'l't • on choiCI'! W!fi\. slde .th'e:el clo&e to l"h .:ij.. !'.l•y take 12 unit& with m · iance • $25.000. "3 -107 Fttt on Bairn' SI, ~ f.l·l \Vill lle.ll aubjeet to,,,._ ml!rcia.I zoninc •• 132.llll~·. Cloae to 2 frftway1_ ~· Phone ~TI71 '1. " Acr11 .. ··-COMM ERCIAL .,. 4 IJ3 • .,,., 2 block> trO.. l lllh1kln S.J.C. $30,000 P"'1. a ~. ~llltor 541-ml ·. - Government land.$5 ecl"ih: \Vrlte-Land Pac~~. na1 An'OW~ad, $an Bndo-!Dno-· --------------.................... ------------------~~---·- Friday, St,tembff 11, 1970 ESTATE rel BUSIN&SS wl ANNoUNCEMINTS SERVICI DllllCTOllY SlllVICE DIRICTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY FINANCIAL ....i NOTICIS 6735 --a.lrrtfttl"' '5141 C--. "20 Houoocloonl"I lie-'200 Buol non Loot '4111 cmihc. r -----"--...;.;;:;; -QgpertunJtles 6* &re or mothen * 'I1lE REMOOELERS * DUTCH Atalnt. ~~. car-.-.. ~ri--·--·--·-..... -.. 1,.--;..':-::-:-LOST Vic Warotr " who have to won: It (bl't Fft.e_ utt: ,. lOOIAi finucin( 1 ! .VV.JL UNIQUE Staub 1hop: f3l Newlancl--Sl&.rneet f!Wt, ftd want to leave lhtlr dtUdren Kittbenl. 1ara1ea ~~~~s.n~~f ,,. PAREll StaUonl. lllneet F or ce• flta eoU.u I:. Wttted eye. Jwt •llYWht.rt. Wa l k i ns c arport a Complete llO ... ._ __ ,, _,. • :~1.. •• Sale.~ ,s...a PM . 557-9,JIO. dlALance-lo Pomona • ~. 1 ,,;~~""'.~""..;~:;;..;•~~-~ ~ 2nd home ·•tn od--tl, c ,M, ,..._ud. Btia< ..... Wlllon ochoolr, "4Wll62. Qua!t1y _<l>!l!fJ<l«i -BAY • Bach Janilotlal •• Bqy )'()Ur laDd In MMMt .. LMn .. bl.ir cat male blUe t)'CI IWAMS & Map10Ua nt MY WAY quality home C1.rptt1. wlndowl, ~· QG.FR£E SILvt;RVAL. biki-f0t 0ono.'~T. 'NewlandScbl.Fncd~-\ttpl!r: W~ eetliie-floora etc. 1te1 il. C ommc'I , Ali)[· only It ml. "'" ol 1st TD Loan ALASKAN good luncheo, • ..,. P~k "" No Job loo all .:6'6-;oc:14:;::."'·-----~ and approx 2~i. hrs old ,ray ~t~~t., ~ up nG later tb&n 6. s2I> per SU:UM am ' JOE'S CLEAN SERV. ~ lhe On.rip Coast ~'"°" If. tNTERE.5T H~ven. RE\VA";u, t ,494.3191 ·wk. 968-7359 ADDMONS. L.T. Oomtnao-Wo do EverythlnJ-Rn &. cori:hnc 10 tht n.ll' you dn ve, 2nd TD Loan . wCENSED Oa.v care, 'lam lion, •ln&lc or 2 . ..,. • .,., COmtn. Free F.&t. 642-7551. of counc). Por...,•I• .t_.Ar to 5:30 pm weeldy Hot est •-1 ..... ,,. M7-'5U M•u ct ... .,.. •-rv•- :>!an to ha\'e )'OUr land boU&:h• -m ea.Is , Harbor/Baker. .. ~v • ..... • ...., """ !f")mitl for bc.'ferf. the tlmf' Tmns based on eqully. 546-1539. Additions * Remodtllnc Carp!!t•, windows, floors, etc. 1;1mcs 10 build or ht.I)' a mo. '42·2171 S4s.o61l FREE! NT 1'""red H. Cerwick, I.le. Res 4 Comrnc'I. 548-Ull Jo'A ASI'IC &. exp'd mother -, .... , * ... ~10 1~0 ••· ~ Y H ' ··, hOITit", 1hrn :-..-ou t'•l'I ,serving Harbor area 2.l ...-v• .n~.u un --v ... ~ out ome .1.... ofter1 babyglttinz SttVice. ca N-·• t I .1-am of the lovely man-S1ttl•r Morti• .. Co. 'L'•---.a ·--' -~•-re ~!. An Y h n ~ ~-'th 11-.. r.._.,,_.,,.. J' .... , nr, ....: .......... Carpet CS..nl,. '615 a nytime Ne..._ ...... ,.._ Services, m11dr lake stocked "~ .... 336 E. 17th Street HUNTINGTON BEACH Newport HaU. 60-4224 642.-1224 day~~ W<te"kllng,J"'°"t '°"1''"•·" ANNOUNCEMENTS POWER SQUADRON'S BABYSIT ,.....,1>oo1or, doy•. ~--Q'· ..swimming_ or your uture ond NOTICIS • ••ic •~•Tl WOULD YOU BELIEVE IUD£A\\'AY, ~ -.-NG Fenced )'ard hot luncher. I'll Clean Your llome lor .vl\y 001 get )'OUI' future pla~ Found (FrH Ada) '400 COURSE Nr, Euclid ' ~ \Varner. +;c•RPET · Blue Chip Stamps. ·tormaJizt:'d NO\\' & BE PR& Huntingtott leach s.l.1-0195 "' 894-6103 PARED. -0Ult'r1 att> dOing s-5. r,..o mo G erm a n Hioh School TEACHERS children, child STEAM CLEANED y -there are 200+ man-Slll>pherd type do&:. 40 lb& Rooms 121 & 122 care to 4:30 pm, r.1y home REASONABLE RATES qwte lAkts in thr area a.nd vt'/2 collars &. ~', rope, vie: Stertlng Sept. 14 and Warner &. MqnoUa Area. 54&-0IOJ f)l(lt'e are being built every 19th " Plaeenti&, 8M. each Mondey thrqh 842-7674 DWfOND Carpet Cleanini: dii,y? ! Check your map for Please call 642.-7887. November BABYSI1TING -t.ty home. Back lo School Special .14¥'.aotion, see for yourself. \YHJTE Lone-ha i red *FULLY LICENSED* Weekly, B.rook.burst &. lOO' $L'i. Frtt Est. ~ area I dP!cribe • ii ls fe male-I bl. e)-"e 1 ll'ffD, Re!owned Hindu Spiritualist Adami t.t'ff. Rtferencet RtPJl,r-1.nstalL 6'5-Ul7. =~::.;:;.~::.,; ~'. ~:~~~I y ~:..,,e. w n :~ A~'~~:!'.':!'""" R'::':~;,., moll~• ol 2 •'1t ~~~:.,~ 11,1.ieeu 2 major \\"a.)'I. li'oremost liquor. 54G-fi029. Re-adlnp etwn 'l days ·a ' babysit 1 ctuld, q e 3 to 5, lt'l'VW. Free est. 642.4055. Call me and I \\ill tell you FOUND Jn San Juan week; 9 AM • 9 PM my home. 325 I \vk. Mesa I===::::::::::::::::::=:::==::: I • •. " PhOno 54G-5n O any. Ca p i•tuno Saturd.,. 312 N. El camlno Roal, V•nle area. 546-31!1 Floon , --;-_ __ _ 01 t.'Ilrror--Oo-Llgh!ly tr ave J San Oemente, Babysicting-My Jiome-1----------,j!~Z~VV-1911 c!l.Se. Identity c ontent1. 492-9136, 9-12-0176 EL TORO LI~~VINYLTILE n Acres t0ned tor mobile 493-3996. &n-ie • Widowed • Divorced Any q-e welcome. S30-82M NTR. FREE ESI'. R d I 50 * stG.7262 * homr park, ea Y o S.'1ALL Black shaay male * LIFE BABYSITTING in my borne, I~====='=== d eVl'.'l o p . AU pla.ns, do&whton c::be:atonconser H .B. uea. Presc hool F p e r co I at ion t e •ts, of Palilades & Newport hild 1 d ~2425 umlture Restoring ~int't'ring. 128 d ou b I e F'"tteway. 548--2951. I.! exciting U shared w/1he c rtn ptt em · _ &. Refinishing "75 wide. 30 large single 1pacts. KEYS Found OTI beach vie. rilht one. Stop wutinc \VOMAN w/2 young children ;o ro nl i£uo u 1 acres yours. \\'e halle a smart wilht:s lo ca~ for child, ,ii;;ailable. Rich 1 r wi n . Island &: Balboa. Inquitt wty. 547.fi66'1'. 24 hr. record 2\~-5. 546-527l. FURNITURE Strippinr A rtlinishi.nc, •642-9575• Pyr h at front counter, Daily ;. amid E xc a ngor tt P Uot, Zlll Ba'boa., N.B. *MASSAGE & SAUNA * \V.tLL Babysit-my home >;T>-fPIJ-Lovely cirl.1/ EXPERT MAS-beb.ind ~~-~hool Gerdeni"I 66IO !iWlN & ful l 5 ac, "500. B~;~E, ~~ ~' SAGE, Ask about our La11l=-c==,.:~:::..:::~:.---,,-,,­sma!l down I. $30 per mo. , ........ .., Vegu vacatioll!. 10 A?.t to BABYSIT my home C.M. * LANDSCAPING * &al choice land. A tttrTiUc Park. Reward ftJJ' contents, 2 ·AM, '1 DAYS. 2930 w. Prefer infant or l-t yr old. New Lawns, lawn removal, buy1 Free maps, YWrite call collect Dunkirk 3-4092. Cout Hwy, NB, ~-Call anytime. ~1853 ttnovatine. All phasea land· rta. Box 431 ucca FUUND Honey colored • WANTED: ,.._.,~n to in.tall " T YOUR -•010 tend, my home C. M . Lic'd contr. 12 ..,,.. 1oe. exp. . .tlley'6:: or local • call Cock-A-Poo pu-nny, female. ABODY PAINTING ._,.,. scape &: designs. Vic. Heil &. Ed\\uds H.B. .,,.,, area 546-fi631. J '" )l!:::'.:~~...,-~o--cf 846--Hi67. • OR HO:\fE 1 _536-_!225=.~===~-~ptANGE Anythinc o A RELAXING AND BABYSITJ'ING, My home. AL'S GARDENING 1.'alue for equity in 5 nett! S:\1.AU. Black &; w h i 1 e FUN-FILLED AR1' FOR.i'f fl'nced yard. Whittier School Jar Gardening ' small land. *1: Hemet -\\'alt>r. Take shaggy female dog vie * 5.57..f290 * Dl11tr ict. 548-36:)7. acapine servicea·call 5tl)..5l98 <l\·er payrnenls $65. mo. l..aPaz Rd, Laguna Hills. Se · 8:\7-4147. PALM READINGS • LOVING Catt in my rinng: Newport, CdM. Cos. .......,----_ . 836--7029. Cards li Sand Readin&:S home-hOI lunche11, Jenced ta Mesa. Dover Shores, ~~tort property 6205 t'OUND German Shepherd 11elp ln AU ).fatten ya.rd. Call 646-5151. Westc!Hf. victn!ty Edtna:e:r &; Ward 10 AM-10 PM, 1 daya WILL babysit infant to 4 yrs. JAPANESE G ardener, wilh nea &: chain dlOke 213 • 697·9272 La H:ibn J\'lon 1hru F ri. $20/wk, 570 monthly rate, Gen. clea.-1up. \'e Attention Sportsmen! Ritklay va cation (It tttitement; fishing all year. ~ lols-Your gain. Cement block 2 Bdrm turn . House. A;ll conv. Locatl!d on ~~ acre N. Stev.'ll"t's Pt. Lake t.fead, *v. Asking $9500. Will ~nsider fair offer. (714) ~,_. collars. 531-7864 FULLY IJCENSED Brook8, Laguna Bch. Reasonable. Free e a t . MALE Collie found at Monte SWINGERS! New Orange I-3 YRS \Vkly $20. !\1y &tZ...2'l39 Vlsla School. Please caH Co. Guide. For frtt Info home. Fenced yard, hot AL'S Landscaping. Tree Carl 642-44.24 \Vtlb> S.C.S.G. P.O. Box lunches. 642-5639. removal. Yard remodeling. FOUND mo.le Irish seltt.r in 2lll, Anahe-im, 92804 ___ Tra.s~ hauling, lot clelnUp. Costa Meu ne11t Hamilton• ALCOHOLICS Anonymous Boat Maintenanc• 4555 ~pair sprnklers. 673-llli6. W.tllact. &15-2149 Phone 542--1217 or wrlte 10 ---------GARDENING SERVICE rE:\tALt: lrish Setler wilh P .O. Box 1233 Costa P..1esa. 0.C.C. Student ~eking boa1 Experienced Japanese nea t'Oll11.r in El Dorado to live on In Newport area 54S-0228 t E w t.cl 6240 homr!, 830-345.1, R.'l,G.3627. Announcements 6410 in exchanc,. for mainten-EXP. Japantse Gard'11er. Qon. cleanup. Haul ing trees. Jo.la.int. yard 64&-0619 :;..'..::;·:.:.:_:.:•;..•:.:.:_ ____ BROWN Dog friendly large ance ol aame-. 1213) 28'7·2400 !u:sA Verde or College pup found Vil', Flamingo FREE. BOAT CARPENTER '9..ik. 3 BR. tam rm .I: 2 HomH Darla Point 496-484-t 646-5219 Complot• Yercl Carol Jt~: 54MS37 :bl\, Can be: fixer. AsAume FOU w Joan. make pym'fl ,Alnde:r NO atcb at. CdM 4_, inc. PIA. Hui (uh dn beach. Call to identi(y 1'jmt. Prine. only. 54CMl603, 1,,:;•7:.:>-<..;::899::;·------~1286 BLACK le white expectinc fi(oEVELOPEO Land in cat, near llubor It Baker, pptcntial ft(reationa.I areu 1 ,-,°'=l.-54!).=-50Z1-',-~·~1t~5-'~'°~·-~ (lo.e si r ed b y publ ic YNG Blk femall' cal. Vic: lI e velopment corpora.lion. 19th I.: Pomona. \V /flea 1901 Avenue or lhe Stars, collar. 642.-26216. Sulle 1424, LM Angeles, Sl\fALL Olk Shaggy dog, ejliI . some 1vht. Vic. S.A. Cou ntry WANTED Location f o r =Cl="~··~"="-"'~'-·----Uqoor store or cocktail INJURED Kitten, blk/bm lounge in Orangl' Co. \V ill liger stripr, at l mo!. Vic. i>li>"""'• . • or lease prop. Pitcairn Ln, H.B. 96}.2898. &ti-3982. BOY'S Blue charfer bike, OOJJA·KONA: Residential area or Ct.1. lot. Submit price & le-mu. 64&-5244 ~1 After 12 noon. lost 6401 Basic boating course Brick, Masonry' offered to the public , __ •1_• ______ 65611_ Ganlenin&:: Land de:t.nups, 1pmk.lr l)'tl, roto-<-emenl work. C.D. Yancey, M6-51160 by the Balboa Power r Squadron. Sa i I as BLOCKWALLS -Planters ~ Cut It FAge Lawn Patio! -Driveways -well as power boal· Sidewalks. 642.9152 morn or M1lnlenance, l.Jc'd,, In!!Uttd ting taught. Starting cvl!. 548-4808 a.ft 4. 7 P~1 Mon., Sept. 21, ''•"R;.:JC~K-. -.-e~LOCK~-.~STO~N-E CLEAN UP SPECIALIST every Monday n i t e By the hour, after S'.30 New fence &: repair. odd for 13 weeks. At New· 642-1948 * 64:.-0758 ,...,;;.:;.•:.:'-' ~R.:;':.:';;.'·...;:,~::_:.:;953=·- port Harbor Yac ht --LA\VN &. Yard Service Club, 720 \Vest Bay Ceblnetmaklng '5IO &~per, Neat, Reasonable Avenue. Newport I----------* 64&-9855 * Be a Ch. Bring note-Fine Cablnels & SkeJvinz ROTOTILLJNG, Treea &: book & p e p c i 1 first * 494 • 0602 * shrubs removed. new lawn!. nite. Any questions Frt"e est. 548-109'1. Gardening Serv. By Japanese Amerkan. 847.2944 "c"'all:;.6;;.7c.:3..:·lo:8.:,55:..:·---tCerpontorl"' OIURtl-1 Choir 1 I n C c r s needed. Oppor1u nity for 1--c-•_R_P_l_N_T_R_Y __ 65!0 IUSINESS ond ''FINANCIAL JUsiMll ~rtunitie1 soloist. 644-425.l ,.. OLK J\1ale Cocker·Poodle. "-"·==-=-======IMINOR REPAIRS. Ne .foll General Services "'2 silvl'.'r loe polish. Ans lo Cemetery lots 6411 TOC' Sm.all. Cabinet In Pl" "°'°"':;..:.:...::;:;..;.;.:;::c.....:.:;:: "Georie". Last 11Hn at ---..:..-.----ace1 6 •lhtr cabinets. LOVE OF LIFE ••• Santa Ana Ave 1.: Palisade:s, BEFORE nttd 1ite1 in soon $6&17S, U no t.nne:r leave NOT HANDY ? ~ CM. Sept 2nd. 6 pm. $j() to bl' de\·elope:d area at mas al ~2312. fl o. Need repairs or minor alter- llSTRIBUTORSHlP \\rrnt. rew11rd for return 549-1841 diarounl. P acific V ie v.· Anderson a tions! t'.g. garage, sheJv. W1: INVESTNIENT: Deluxe days, 6.12-0648 eve8. ifemorial Park p a u I Qu Co-----ing, or cabinet•, door• •ut 6300 f.ti.n<b' & drug speciallle! tot -~--------· 1 · al nslr carpentry roo-.. ll"yerns, restaurants, stores, LOST-1\Jixed ma.le sheepdog Linden, Counselor 613-0372 flng, all hl'.,me imprvin.nts. 4.1ft, leaky faucet. How's the ete. Direct factory t'Onnec-4 ynt. Black \\'/"11ite che!t 6 SPACES, Spru~ section. No job too am. Free est. water heatl'.'r! Many others. •ion earning high da.lly cash & feet. Gray head & hind Harbor Rl'~I 1'1 e m o r i a I l;i;53&-;;.;l~0='9~. --~-----Cal! ~ril.missioni. Everything legs. Approx 3a lbs. "Troy". Park. $69:; (!rig. pr~cc. QUALITY \Voodcra.Jt, aml MORTGAGE & PROPERTI' :&fnished, but murt be bond. Re"·ard. 67l-5001. E n do \~ n1 t: n l care inc. £en'I constr. & carpentery. Controls. ~ton-Fri, able handling o.ur men:hon. Bl.K Flu ffy poodle \Vet.ring 213-591-5560 r·rce consullatlon & quote. I-lours 9to3. 545-4544 disc & cash. Part or full tttl collar & bells, Answs to SERVICE DIRECTORY Call Ken 645-0044, 543423.i. APT O\VNERS..WE CAN I . W it CHEXCO ·~10 "Bo J a.ngwl"', vie: 19th & r · c SAVE YOU MON EY .. 1me. r e: • .t>:• II 1ne ustom \V()()(hvork z:t.·fGth St., Phila., Pa.'19ll2 A n 11 h e i m. C.M. Rwd! App •nee R1p•lr1 J\1ori11l'. Residential, Com m'I \\'Ith preventative mainten· lftWopanar Doal•rship &12-4jlJ Parts 6510 nave 64;,..oo.t4, s.ts-4 23.) ance It min()f repairs. Call •· LOST Pup M 3" mo old ~10R1'GAGE & PROPERTY •.~or L.A. llC!rald Examiner · 1 • ,l/ ! • e \VM her 1.:-'"--r ~p·l-e Custon1 Cabinrls, remodel R.-mbl-Oob r .,.,.I'"" .. '" Controls. t.1on-f rl. Jin Costa t.tcsa. Be In busl-"" '"" e m 1 n • Fret Etitimate1. \\lork & Tepair, fonnica \\'Ork. Re\\•ard SIS Lost at Baker & R 1-fours 9--3, 544-4544 nes.s: for ......,,rseU. Cash de. Guaranteed. Call 536--3159 eas. Rate~: 6-16--!j2J9 JV~ Grant. "t.teans a Lot" RAIN gutters Inst a 11 ed. '°511 req'd. "'rite Box RP, 546-4077, 30lZ Garfield, Ot. REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS ~ Llncoln, AAAhl'im. ~1by1lttin9 6550 * CABINETS. Any size job R<1itty season here .900n, BL.ACK beaded coin purse 2• .,. •nl J'ree C'S\. Reas! 968-22CWI _. • RESTAURANT, 42 S<'lls . · • · CH!t.O "·-ho .1 yrs exper . .,.......,1 conta1n1ng rings. c .r.t. area. ......,.., my me, need Ed's Cleaning Service Fanta!tic opportun1:Y! Sub-Re\\'Rtd 546-3811 r.trt. Oll'fl transp. Back yd I.:* R;EPAIRS. remodeling & ifttr: Dana. Point. 496-9042 a1t Fo!ler meals provided. Child 2 & patios. No ;lob too small. Cal"J)('IS -Uphols~l')I -W\l'I· \f.11191-8182 mominga. up pref'd. 642-3942. 67~11. dows Floor Care. s.t>-0487 RE\VARD! Lrgfgm parrot, Re:modeling. fence bldg., ~,.,pPERATOR. bf 11 u t y Ans11't'N1 to "GRAFITI". Bab · · , c L A 5 5 I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 i bl ys•ttin&·All age11. C•ment, Concrete '600 painting & gen'I repairs. , n prof. dg. Good Vic: Channel St or Balboa 126 l\fonte Viata, c.~I. ReAs. Xlnt. rel'&. 642-&ln. ~~=='=· = .. =":"';:=:;":'"'.';'=·=:.:.=£~o·=·'=·~PH;:,'~C;:ol~lttt~~· .... ~~H~9::..L==~·~-~~255~·:::·~==I NOW'S THE ii1 ., CONCRETE. All types. Frtt NEED HELP! Look Us up at i.rt:" ~st. Sawing, breaking, haul· Ncw·port Services! 642-l:224 (l\.;m;J STAR. G 11.,._E"D~tHl.'i ~·qu~t~kip~~-,:.rvl«l ,•="=0='':,v'==·=== TIME FOR ~ -Oii~;u+:;;:::;;::;;;.ll'-;:.:_~·1':f Co Heuli"I 6730 1.atn Byct.ATJ..l'I ?>10RE ncl't'le: patio for -·-·------- -"' lrfM.l' }( y..,o.;ftActi¥1r~ )( l.llU less money. Artistic setting. T.N.T. La\\'fl Ser\•lce . QUICK CASH ~J.tl ft ' "Y" Acc•rtli11e .. ,._,,.,._, T m;. iJ m Lie .. call l\lax al &M-0687. Garage' clean-up~. heuling & r\'"2742..i ToclMlop,,..,.fGr~, OCT.JJt.O.~ C1'::\1ENT \\lork ol all kinds. light movin1. ;;43.:)86 3 , ~ TAUIUS :,cx')'lM'~':;t;'~tonnar. t.JJ:'-c~ Jo"reeest. .,;,."~.74 531 -3 729 THROUGH A .,.,. tcOt.M .,,,.,....,,, YARD/Car . C leanup. "" ::,: ~:--. Jliltwlj~= • ~::...,. aq.n~ DECORATIVE CONCRE"l'E Remove b'ff:s, ivy, tra!h. O\i.i~ ln..:• aJT......., ..,,.... llOl'.'1~ DRIVES-WALKS-PATIO Grade, backhoe, 962-8745 DAILY PILOT ~ ;~n. ~~ ~=. ~ CALL DON, 642-8514 HAULING $10 A LOAD MMftil ~w..t. 36Try "'c.• n ~ 11r CONCRE'T£ worlc patios, Oe.n up. 1'rre Serv. Gen. MAfJt .=.,. 37~ QS....., MSTTAllUI dt'V\\'a,yi,etc.L lcen1ed . Pruning~2.J28, S4J..MU WANT AD ~~-a tV1t11 ~'• ::~ #0!·2t.Jt.a Phlltlps Cement. 548-6380 TR G <_ ~ IOC-.-. ... 70,,_. DIC.ff Mtl ASH &: arage Clt'an-up, '1 :~ ..,_ .u 0t 11 v-' IJ.-22-~ -dayi:, $10 a load, Free esl. CAMCD l:I~ ~~~ ~=-hUJ~ Chll\I C•r•, Anytlmt', 548--5031. 84lt-5678 fJ , .. .._ .... ......._ ,,,..._ CAHKlllM Llcennd '610 l.JOVING. Caraae clean-up" I. W~ ',',°'"'-..,,..... 7'~ ore.a, lit" haul; .... , R••""nobl• .......... .. •,,' • ... ..,..._. nwJ pleu ,...., ... .,. '~"'*" Phones Al9 Open 8:00 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. 9 to Noon S.turdey -Closed Sunoey Dl,+L DIRECT ••• 642-5678 WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUNfY DIAl FREE 540-1220 I Hunll"llon l11ch: 540·1220 Lo~uno Booch: ~94-~ Sin Cltmonlo: ~92-4420 . Hours-Regulations-Deadlines IRRORI: Mvwtlltn lheul4 ct..ck their t4t 4•11r an4 rOJOrt lmm .. lat1ly ,,,.,. ._. •laclUlfflatMM. THI DAILY PILOT auumn llaWllty fer trrert only,. tht •xftnt tlf pu•lllhlfll the -4~t c.,Nctly Ml t.,,.. DIADLINI roa COPY A.ND KILLI: l:Jt P.M. tht 4ay w ... ,.,w1at1M. •xclpt farMlflNy Mlt5tn whtn dMlllln• la laturtl•Y• 12 noon. YOU MUIT HAW KILL NUM.1111 Wlte11 kllllnt 1n 14 IMc•UM tlf 111vkk l'llUlts. .. .,,. t. tMlct 1 rKonl •f thl lclll ""'"Mr ti"" .,... ., y111r H f1kw u nrtflcatlM .t pur c1U. 1.,.,.., dftrt la INll• ft klll 1r conec.t • ntw ail tflat ha• ...,. 9'11"911. 11ut wt C•n- Mt 1uannt11 t. dt H until the Ml ha• .,,..,.... In thll ,.,.,. DIMl·A-LINI Adi '" 1trlctly c:a1h In l4111nc:• •r mill •r 1t any eM .t 1ur tffkN. NO ,-,.eN.,., TM DAlL Y PILOT ,........... the rl9ht ft c:leulty, 8'1t, c:trtMr er nfuM an)' •• ,.,.. tl......m, Mii t• chant• lt1 r•tll an4 Nf\llttllfll wtthwt pritr ft.tk., Mall ~,....: a.a: 1175, Nrw,.,t IMc:h, C1llfornla CLl.lllPllD COUNTIRI 1r1 lecat .. 11 follow1: COSTA MESA NEWPORT BEACH 330 W. BAY 2211 W. BALBOA HUNTINGTON BEACH LAGUNA BEACH 17175 BEACH BLVD.· ~2 FOREST AVE. SAN CLEMENTE -305 N, EL CAMINO REAL Da il y Pilot Clauilied CLASSIFIED INDEX HOUSES FOR SALE Apts. Fumiihtd cA1l'ENT111N• ..,. CIMENT, C-r• 6M llNIUL ... RENTALS CHILD CAlll. ~ UM CDIT,\ MIU. U• llNllAL Mill COHTllAtTOll a. MllA DIL MAI 111!1 COITA Ml!U ti• ,.. .... ,.,.-rl 11•lft'4• MH1 MllA Vl!IOI 1111 MalA VllDI •lit U.ll'ET UYIH8 & 11,All MM CO"IOO •• HIW,Oll IUCll CM OU.l'ERIEI ... NmW'HltT ':IA.Cit :: NIWl'OAT Q"lfHTS q11 Ol!MOLITIOW ... ltfWl'OIT Nl18MT1 Int NIWl'OIT lltOlll mt Olt.loFTINO 11!11\IQ ""' II.LIDA COVl!I 1t!J WllTCLl,I' 4tM DIYWALL 6U1 NIWPOIT IMOlll 1HI UNl'lllaSn1' •••It '"' llLECTll~AL .... IAYCIUl lW IACX IAY ~4f EQU"MENT llNTAU '6N IAYIMOllt Ital IAJT ILU'" tt41 FENCINI .... 00\111 IHOlllt 1DJ COl:ONA DIL MAI •Ht FLOOlll MM WllTct.ll'P ltlt IALIOA .. l'UINACI! llltAll •• lie. 6'H HAllOI HllMLAHD1 l!)S IAY ISL.ANOS ~JM FUINITUIE ll!STOllNI UNtvllllTY PAIK nll LIOO ISLI 4)11 & llFllUSHJHO 6m 11.VINI ua IALIOA ISLAND 4Slll OAIOllNINQ Mil IACK 1 .. Y IM HUNTINfTOfil llACH 44M GINEllAL tll.\llCl1 ..... I AIT9LUI', 1MI "0UNTAIN VAUIY 4411 OltAOINO. DIKINI Mil 11 Tt'9 1'44 IU.L llACM oMH GLASS ...,. 11\llNI n•••c• ltU lONt llACH '* QltEIN THUMI "" • CottONA Oil MAI '* o••N•I COUNTY o• •UN SHOP •ne TU.TL• •OCK •• , .......... ,.1nt OAltOIN 0110\11 4tlt HEALTH CLUll fnt Ill.MA PININIULA IMt WllTMIMITll ... ,, HAULING 1111 lllCOM aAY 1111 MIDW.tY CIT1' ... II HOU$1Cl!AM1NI Oll LINDA JSt.I ,.. t.t.N'TA AHA .WM INTl•lOI OICOltATINe fnl l .. Y t1LANDI 1llM tANT.t. .t.NA MlleMfl "6lf INCOME T.loll .,. .. LIOO Ill• 1•1 TUSTIN ..... lltON, Ol'MIMl!ll, II&. t 7M IALIOA Ill.ANO 1• COAST.IL '1M lltON1NG .,... MUN'TINGTON llACM , ... UIUMA llACM '7tt IN~llU.TIH• tUI HUNTINITON HNllot.I• 1• LAGUNA M/eU1P,,. ~JU lNSUllANCE tnt FOUNTAIN VAUIY 1411 MllSIOM VlllJO 4101 INVISTIGATIN .. Otttct\Vt t111 llM. llACM 1• IAN CllMINT• 4'1• JANITOllAl tne IUNlff llACH 'MU JAN JUAtrlt CAPllTIANO '111 llWElltT I.IP.loll.. 11&. .... GAIOIM 01.0\11 1•n CAPllTaANO llACH _,,. U.NOSCAPtNIO .. ,. LONG llACN 1511 OAMo\ •01,.T '1tf lOCICtMITlf ,_ LAlllWOOD IMI T•IPLIJC • .-C. "* M.1.ID SEIVICI .. -··-·•-.. "2t OIAHOI COUN'TY , ... CONOOMINIUM .... M.1.iONltT. s1t1CIC ..,. OUT~ COUNTY u• NOTILS ....... ·-··-----· .,,, MOVING & STOIAGI .... °"' M ITATll "NII RENTALS PAINTING. p............ ... ITANYott 1'11 PAINT ING, 1.... _._ ... W11TMrM1n11: ••n Aptt,. Unfurnl1hecl PAT101 ... MIDWAY Cm'" 1t1t •INIUL ... PHOTOCl.AP'HY .... u.NT.ti AMA ••• cona •sa J ,,. PLA1r11•Mc;., Ptlcfl. •••Ir ,.. SANTA A ... ...,... l&M •M W•o• ~ Int PLUMllNG ... OltANff ltM MSWl'OlllT 111.M:M ... l'n liltOOMINO .... rUSTIN .... NIWl'09:T Mll•HT1 nu POOL SEA\llCI tnt NO•TM TlllTIM 1'11 Nl'#POIY IMMll Int POWlt. SWllPtN• tnl ANAHllM 1dll WllTCLIPP: ~-PUMP Slll\llCI .,,. llLVllAOO CMYOflt '"' UNf\llllln P:allll fHI lOOFINO "" HAVASU U.KI 1tn 11.\llNI st• l..loOIO, lt•,.lrt. Ile. .,. LAGUNA HILU 11111 SACIC 11.1' JIM ltlMOOC:llNIO a llPAll e.41 UeUNA 11111.CM 1111 IA11' I LUP:P: IH! llMOOELINO, IUTCNIN1 ... LAGUNA NIOUlL 1m COIONA OIL MAI SlM Sdu.,. SllttHll ... MISSION VllJO 1111 IALIOA JIM IEWOIO tNI IAH CLIMl!NTI' 1n1 •AY ISLANDS IHI SIWINIO MACHINI' llPAUU •t•t SAN JUAN CAPISr•ANO ,,H LIDO llll lllll Sllil"TIC T.t.Nl(S, S...,,_ lie. IHI CAPlnlANO IU.CH 17M MUNTIN•TOM llACM ... TAILORINIO mt DANA POINT 1JM "OUMTAIN YAlLIY l4lt TEl!MITE CONtltOL •tn OCIANJIO• tttt ... LaOA ISLAND »II TILE. Cnmlc .,,. SAN DllOO Im SIAl llACN MK rlLE, Un.itvm I Mtl'tllt .,11 11\lllSIOI COUNTY 1• LONI llACll JAi Tl.Ee 5EltVICI" ... HOUSll TO II M0\10 1• OlllANQI COUNTY Ult TELEVIS10N, AtNI'" lie. ''" CONDOMINIUM ,,,. I AIOliN ••ov1 .Nll Ul'HOLSTlll;Y .... OUl'LIXlt POI SALi ''" WllTMIMITl'I un WILDIN(; "" AIAITMINTS POtl IALI 1ffl MIDWAY CITT NII WINDOW CLl!!AN INO ...-. •• "'' RENTALS Houtft Fuml1hed GINlllL ll'NTALI TO SMAii COITA M•IA MISA Oil MAI MESA YllOI COt.l.101! ...... NEWPOllT llACN NIWPOIT MOTS. NIWPOIT IMOllS IAVSMOAIS OOVllt SllOll!I WllTCLJl'jll UNIVSISfTT "All 11\llNI IACIC IA'f' IMT ILUP" II Tf111 llt'llNI TlltlACI COi.OMA DIL M .. I IALIOA IAY ISLANDS LICIO ISLI!: IALIOA ISLUIO HUNTINGTON llACll FOl>Mr .. IM VAUIY SIAL llACM LONO llACll 01.ANOI COUNTY IU.TA ANA WISfMINSTl.I MIOWAY CITY SANTA ANA HlllMTI COASTAL L.AOUNA llACM L .. OUlfo\ MIOUIL M"SIOM \Ila.ID IAN CLEMIN11 SN! JUAN CA~lrTaaNO CAPtlTRAMO llACM DANA POINT 11\lllllDI COUllT'I' VACo\TION llNTALI CONDOMINIUM OUPLIXIS PU'lil"- RENTALS IUITA ANA NM JOB SANTA AMA Hll•KT• UM s & EMPLOYMENT TUSTIN 1tM ,01 WAN TED, MM ,_ COASTAL SHI JOI W.loNTEO, w .... ,. .... LAGUNA ll!!ACN J1'M JOI W.t.NTIO, ... u.•uNA NIOUIL sm MEN .. WOMEN ,.,. -,. MIUION \111'0 1111 SCHOOLS I INST•UCTIOll rMI IAN CLIMINTI ml JOI PltlPAllATION ,_ :::; SAN JUJliN CAl'lf1'•AN• fJH THEATltlU.l ,,. 1111 ~T~!T::rNoT Ill.Cit :rr: MERCHANDISE FOR. '111 r•1PL1x. ..ic. ''" SALE AND TRADE ' = COMDOMIMfUM ttst PUINITUAI' UN llNTALS WANTl'O JrM OFFICE FUINITUll -••• llOOMI FOi llNT fttJ '"'' !!:! IOOM & IOAID #fl S: EQUIP.MINT WU n-. MOTILI, rlAILllt COUITI tff1 STOlll IGUIPMENT ..,••,• OUl'IT llOMIS '"' CAFI, lllTAUl!UIT ",,.n MISC, llNTALI Im IAlt EOUll'MIN1 llll HOUSIHOLO 00001 9HI ::,,::. RE.,_A_LneEroSITATE, :o::fTl!!u.::L:.,CTION = V. ~ APP.LIANCIS t lll nu INCOMI PIOPlltTV , ... 'HTIGUliS ttll 1$ IUllNISS PltOPllTY 4'H SEWING MACHINl!I '"' tMt fl.tJlll •AIKI ffU MUllCAL INSTltUMINl lllS ntt IUllNIP llNTAL INt PIANOS a OllGANS llJI 11S1 O"f'ICI ltlHT.\L •tH IAOIO ntl !»S IHOUITllAL l'IOPllTY '"' TELE\llUOM •N tlll COMMlltC!AL MQ 111·1'1 & JTEltlO •11 1111 INOUSrllAL llMTAL ""' 1'API ltECOltflEl.t IHI tOI LOTS 11• CAMEltAI I EOUll'MINT di UM llNCHll flJI HOllY SUPPltl!S .... , ... CITllUS 011:0\111 111S SPOITINQ GOODI .... Ult ACllAtl GM l\NOCULAIS, JC0,11 lUt tlU LAICI ILllNOll ,,., MISCILLAHIO\JS IMt tUI llSO•T PIOl'lltl"r QtS MISC. WANTED llltTI tut DIAN•• CO. PltOP••TY l?t? MACHINllY, lie. ttll tnt OUT Of' ITAYI PIOI'. 4l'lt LUMlll t Ut t,_ MOUNTAIN & OltllT •111 ITOIAOI mt '"' SUIDIVlllOM LAND •111 IUl\.OIN• MATlllAU 111• l1ll llAL ISTATI SllVICI 'fll IWAl't '"' 1111 It.I , llCCHANOI 4ut '"' 111. •· wA•no '* PETS and t.IVESTOCK r,: BUSINES' ind ~=~ •1 " 1••1. = -FINANCIAL ooo• -~ IUSINllS W.t.lfftD .. ~SlS -= lfllVltTMlffl' ~ •Ill LIVllTOCll' ... IUllNl:lt ...... TUMfTllS ... CALIFORNIA Ll'JING IN\lllTMllff WAWTI• '5'1S NUlllltlll "'' MONl1' TO LONI '"' .... ... PlllOMAL LOINS •m nr1 ...... 1N• LI ... PATIOS -11 Ho U I L-.1 JIWILll't LOAMI 4Jlll AW'Nl1t•I ..,.-UHi n umi•nwu COLUTllAL LOANS ml llM•ul -ltlAl llTAr• LIANI 4JM V.CATtOMS ... COITA MIU. 11• MMT•M••·""" OMii ..... TRANSPORTATION Mll.t. OIL MAI 11• MOttlY W.t.llTID ... IOATI a YACHTS ... MllA. v110• ant ANNOUNC!MENTS IAILIOATt H it ~;~~.~ ~~" = ind NOTICES ~:;;,i:_~:~•:::~s = NOl'O•T NOTS, Jilt P:OUNO (P"" A• ... IOAT Tl.t,tlllS 9'119 NIWl'OIT I MOllll -lotT IMlll 10.tT MAJNTIMANC• t111 IAVtllOllll Jm1 l'llltoNAll .. IOAT LAUNCHIM• "'4 D0\111 IMOltd aDI AJilMOUllCUIMT1 •ot MIJllMI' IOUIP, ... WIST"CLIJIP: .. lllTHI 6411 IOAT SLIP, MOOllllll• ftJt UNlVlllrT'\' l'All am ,UNll.AU .. It 10,1,T ll•YICll ... tlYtNI -l'AID .. ITUAIY .. IJ IOAT llN1ALt ,_ Lt.Cit IAT .,_ P:UNllAL DlllCTOll '414 IOAT CNAITII "3 aMT ILU'P: ntt P:LOl:lfl'S ..... "/SNIN9 IOATt ... 11 T-:1244 CAltO Ofl THAfltU .... toAT MO\llNt ,..,. 11\llNI TllUCI tt4f IN MIMOllAM ._., IOAT ITOltAOI tMf coaOMA OIL NM ,,. CIMITlltY LOn ..,, 1o•T1 WAMTID ... IALIO& ,_ CIMIT•IT CaYl'TS t41t AllCU" ~-lAY llU-MDt UM CltlMATOltlll 64M ,-LYIMO ll'SSONS t!JI LIDO •LI *111 MIMCMl.t,_l PA•Jtl '411 MOllll MOMlt "" IALaOA tSUl'O ua AUCTt0N• ...,. MOTOll MOMI* fl'll NIWl'OllT nST .JUt AVIATIOM lllVICI Mil llCTCl.11 "" MUMrlNQTON I EACN ,_ TtlA\lll IQI lllCTllC CAii ,, .. MUWTINITOll MAl..U. ,_ All TllAMll'OIT .. TION ... MIMI l llllS -··· -"" PnUNTAtN VALl.l1' Mii AUTO TltANtPOll'TATIOW ..U MOTGllCTCLll ·-... MAL llACM a. Lii-Al MDTM:ll 6419 MOTOll1COOTlllll ... 1-Al"-M ,....,._ Mii TVTOllllJM ... AUTO 1111\llCll a PAflT1 .. Cl ·•yo ~..:.~"J:." .. SERVICE DIRECTORY t~u~~ .... ~.t•UtP. ::r'"' • ft ..... ACCOUNrlJM ... 1'1.All.IAS, Ullllry SANTA AJilA if'lt AlllWlfl.INO tllYtt• ... n;U<ICt = t nttMftilrTI.. •• Al',ll ..... CI l l PAlli. ...... u1• , •• ,,. ~ .... ~.!~ 1 7~ :~ '~=-J.uf.tt~ JO\'LAND Klndcrcarten ' Free tlfh~::e11. ~1602. · 1 ~ .... ,~ ::c:• :~ 1 ~::-'-!t!~ Pre.School. l7'9T ).tonrovla. HAULING & CLEANUP 2DS." \I'• '°"""° C.i\1. Full It t; d•v c:t.rf, ... 21¥ ..... ' SIA :i't' • ...... i-18-837lor6U--0072.... SlOa k>lld * 548-10S2 _Aa Mr.JJ 22r..., ~~ NY• ~ IAll.>I~ .&I ~~· ~~ . :!=t" ... ~~ 11 ,a,, 25n.t 9W.. ISU. 1-llaa ll Ww'7 ,. """"" ...... .._ ~~ ~= :t=e. I lllCIS Goir'I ".. .. ._ • na. " lQ:i f'Nidll .. ,..... • ,. ""'" w.-t ,. JO\ "ff12 ' • 11"6-GM 181.U.. ()-. • .!-!·~ t.l: .. ,, .. +!· • AS H' MIDWAY cm ,.,, ........ ,.... ... CAMPlll SANTA Aflt.\ NlteMTI *"' .. l~MA~T. Oft MN CAM ... I IINTAU "11 WfN[)()\\'S " \\"alls \\'8Shcd. • C"OA.IT.\L I* Afl.CN!TICTU•AL llllVtC• "U OUNl IUOOIU tm '735 Contractors "20 Houaecleanlng A'ITENTION! Boft.\ Bldrs i tm11ll contrllclm'A, New hol.sl, a-aaolinr. pcm'ttt'd, 2000 lb. capacity, ~talls .$600. \VIII Sacrifice. $-100, or maJt:e cuh orttr. 642-4!i91. Fl-tr! -· 1~ U.IUMA llACll .,. .. uro ltlP•lltt ........ ,.o· '"''' ... '"• II Jll""-'• It# ,_-u It LA.UNA frll•Ull "'1 AUTO, Stet ..... T.,._ ltc. u• ll'OIT CAIS .... ~·axtd, f'l'H: e11 897·'7334: I~ MlllKtN VllJO JM •Al ,llTTIHG .,.. AHTt•u•s. cu.site• NII d ay or night 673-.iooo. • ...... CLIMIOfTI 111t IOAT MAIMTlNNICI .a» I A(l CA••· •oo• ff11 'JAN JUAN CAPllTll:ANO Im lllCI(, MA.ION.,, -. •Mt AUTO IVIN"TS "" 2 \\'oml'n. ~f\cle:nl. C:Ar llllMO 11At.a 11)t I USINllS tll\llCll Mil AUTOI WANTIO "1.I II t jii:t-.J;;·r ... ll OANA l'OINf If._ IUllOlltt "" Nn CAlll "" A\'t ran~2';;r1aUon. \;ONOOMINIUM .,., CAY .... • "•J ' I 1·111N• •••••·-.. --.... 1111 .....,Tl l.tAllWI HOI ~ .. tu L XU UN,\fl~flL "111Clil1Nlf,,.,.KtNt .,.. UlfO u•• ____________ _.::._::;::_::::,_ ___ , __ ".: -------------- SEllV -1 .... 1n * M.! Pl<k t11 l RONil' O.Uv. """""" Janitor SPARKL .... d -· clet.nup - Lendtc NEW l roto•I clean.\.IE M&-<19.12 Llmous -- llalu, ' nri'll. 2 -MAIO l\fAIOS ref'&. "'"""' ..~. Paintil Pa!M l!OUSES flagp• evecyth painted. &16-9752 ~ PLI Gla1 ••• *WI """' 548-1444 PHONE ...... Son Pai bond«l, *PAI ""' Prior 11 McAdE Inter. & o" YOU St lib p Free E~ PROFE! exp. pa ting, m INT. & : ref's, t Call Ch COLLE< expe r. 51,.., 1iPA & PAI!I Plait• R•I" COMPI' "'"""' atude Wkly-n Brian ' ....-PK All !yj --Plumb HC Plumbir 642 ~ PLU: "' DRAIN:' slow? 24 hr ' • --.. .. : Remo Rep --GEN'L No Lic'dli --S.win EURO! oflr:rs dr ess ai!lO c' '"'"'" n2" 673-18' QUi\Lf wante alteni.I Orang Ait.i Nt.?at, i .-ore °' c = Tiie, -CERA! rcpai1 specie Reas. 53&-24 TrH -BOB \g bac FU.. -Upho -DISTU -· REA! 962..S: QI Tl 'D - Frldar. S.,ltmb<r II, )qJO OAICY PILOT 115 SERVICI DIRECTORY Joas" IMPLOYMINT JOIS i.IMPLOYMINT ·JOIS " IMPLOYMINl· JOIS " EMPLOYMINT JOIS" IMPLOYMINT ,.Joas " EMPLOY MINT JOIS " tliii'LOTMENT MERCHANOIS! l'i51i:-- ---~E~~i 1 .... 1.. 1755 JoliWllllM, .r.i. M..-.w-1100 Joi. Mon.w-7100 J1~1 Mon,Wom. 7100 Joi. M..-.Wom. 7100'.l~:Sc:h:'"°:l:H~-~~~~7IOO~!Sc!ho!~elo~lnot~ru=c=tl=..,=7600=11 ~;;;;~~=;;;;~'"'~~-1 W----Furniture • * IRONING * ' -8asiness ""-r1llllit1 # DO Babyai"""' Dyo.wb 11SKPRS Emplyr ...,. '" Mottl M.onqv•llu.band A . Piclc ~ ~~I '1 ,.'f!!·'¥A OUTSTANDING L-.Dablsb Ul'iM 1 or hriy. S.A. H@iafsts area, Ceota:e Allen Byl&nd Alen-wile. J'ndU1ll1ous. ft~ •· MUST SELL • P v, .,...,..,.,.1 Cook-Houseloeeper Mid. for * 546-6487 * ey lCJrr.8 E. lllh. 4,A, billty, 646-4701 "1~,. IRONING' 20c. P.u. 4 Sii day live 1n job. Min. Extra 1nco..,. "" m•• ~ EXECU11YE 541-0395. MEDICAL """"'"'· back • OVER STOCKm-~-50c ~•ch w 1 y • IO.faJy $300 11\Q. ~ ~n of ~~· Pa~ or H~kffper, l days wk.. oft.let, Eiperlenced. Must • ~ 'I!~~~ ~ ~ .. ··--·--&16.!l'.58 ...... ''" HMlth. J".omily ....... _ .. •ammp. SECRETARY 12 hr East CM know x.n.y, lojcclloo, ~··-· • .... -Care~. 5C1.Qlrjt. PMuant dl.anlfted •'Orit. 6.i&-1400 EKG. Salary open. Miulon : l r.i J _ Twtn Size He#lboarda Janitorial 6790 • PBX D.--•'-'-" Dt"Xible hGun ••• Ptrl'll!!Ct 1or VieJo MUAt b Tnmdle Sets $89.9S 'Roll~, ~~ ..... ~-ll@t llM!ll wHb-Jobt ... womtn ..Matw:eindivklualwithhtaQ. llOUSEKEEPER 1-1 :30, &nfl, • -... way-bedt, 129.95.:s . SPARKLE Jardtorlal " Wino typfnc t1e' cleric&I dutlel, wUb acbool q:e ehUd:ren. marketing exptrience, to u. $40/wk, Cook eve meal. w-raatUe and en e r1e t le , Couches S19.00. Bu.nk ·~ dow cleaning Sent, Wino ~e need, ptlllOnal)le, Tralfthw pnMded, COhtact tllt VP/Gen. Mir. A M&J't. * 84M«ii5 * &3l-'253> $89.95, -~ · ............... _... consL EXP 032· . H ... aft.''"' ........ 10!4. ~:.'.'!.....~·" Electronlcs INVENTORY 75 Men--SIESTA SLEEP SHOP d..,, .... n.e .... ......,, . . Social ... .,,,°""""' ,.ARR•n --Q ............ CONTROL ANALYST MEN wOM•N 1927 -.... Bl-.!, or::· dnver. 'I!PUW. SH. Loe. • ~ . . • CaJc:ulator or &ddinr machine • w r. S45-2'7fi0 1 Lancls ceplng Ill~ hrs ........ Box P-1018 I BOYS ·--· _,,_to.· ···--· -"" famll. omen w.ss Cst Hwy, Duo~. NEW LAWNS, -.,., Dail>P!lot -·--·-lar with"""'""""" pro-G: ~y n ' 496-455~ • roto•till.nng, ftnOftting, AIDES ... for comUtwnce, WANTED ducdon control procedurn ~ Immediately, :run or i--. clean-up. 8 9 T - 2 41 T ar eldttly ea.re or f.am.lly care. ' ' .GA m LEARJ~ Abilit,y to rt'&d and work pt • time, Lge_ ~in& nro L ow. t.WST Sell OUt' be a I.I J. 846-<J!W: "°""maken, 541...U. i.. tho · COR ORATION with data "'°""Ing ,... chalrt. No" tatd,,. .. ,.,... M<dH'"'""''" "fumlturo: j • JOB .,.....,, Will ..,. fol' DAILY l'ILOT I' -P-al tov'"""' ..... MW<t be ,..., ~ do-vclwt '°" " ~·· Limousine Service 6115 ~ lad}' and live in. duded. Contact Ptlr90Mel i>endabl.e. Age l&.35. hi-back vr:lwt decorator --Dana """'· Ian Juart U651 Voo Karmaro Ave, roqulred heavy lilting ~ $],75 l'ER HR <hal,., 2 k;,,.du ..am, ~~f! Gen'l otfice .. Drpd Ca~~ Be~.. lrvh:1e, Calif. 92664 Ottice, I 547-1781 1W7.7182 m Ji I d ::b-I set.a, a· IW.Up}\yde tofa & n .. ..,........... Want perm. pmition P ...,,, F_,qual opportunity employer • la love&eat, p.me .set, eoff'-'C n.ru, 40o a mil" Min. :lO -att.r g,., PM Contact Mr. s.ay at L M C Mfg. C .I. e tea en table l cod cornrnod8, m1· ................ _ ====='"==1 DAILY l'ILOT Exp'd COOK 1505' E. w°" s~ MORNING •""""" .... "'J."·AllWO. MAID SERVICE 6125 MAIDS Avail. lmmed X1n ref'•· Call N e:wPort Services, &n.-122( day or "''· • amer, ,,... BREAKFAST COOK ttw:I 4 mo ol • Pvt J1Y. Job Wanted, San Clemente o«lce Apply 1:n penon ~2551 * 1~7669. •1 Mon & Women 7030 Iii! N, El Camino Roal DENNY'S BUSBOY R f 492-f.a> RESTAURANT Equlll opportunity em.ptoyer , BEAUTIFUL. pecan T jlr. QUAUFIED ~' retired *CAR WASH HELP* !ll?O Harbor mvd, CM OVER II e/'donne bedroom, kins: i;iie Simmons to provide ll!n'bs m, l!'llt:cb. Many ~ full 6 part • • satin bed, linens, sprea'a. fw apt a.t flalttttst Qub. .,__ .w..... l •--~--. ~~·=•~D C t APPL. Y IN PERSON Pair twin beds, headboads, ... ,..., _.. ,.,.. ..... ....., .........-.c..n.u:.i~ oqn er l TO S PM ONLY almost nt!'W, Mahosan'y l!hist l!'njoy children a: ~CAR w'CSHount.?;... ~ girl &SSl!'mbler. Clown "-a ~~ ,,,..,_ CALIFORNIA Victorian dttsser. minoor, Painting, ~~ ~mifw. lntor. " -~ .... UUl" Cleaners. Bayaide Ceriter, ~. IEN'S -~-• Lane el!ld tables, dett, Poporhonglng 1150 c:'.;, c.:... my ~-. NB • RECOUCO'S '\ PROFESSIONAL "'•~. ';;::.,, ":'\~m.l'~i Joi. Mon, w-7100 ·~·~ u50 -.,. HOUSES, doc Im, boats, OIM. t er 3 d)'S wk, 9.>e will .,... """' L dispo9e 847-5066 ·1 ll•OP•l.,, anytina transport, Cali .,,,. '°"1" -~Call Loralr>e. • • l5i5 W. ADAMS •vllllJOlHE -D SCHOO SCR.AM LEJi§ '"'"'"""" , .. ,ooably "'A_, Pooltlon '15-fl01 e<>:mo, W....,itf-...1 IR\llNE ococONNEl p1ln1<d. ror ,.... .,timate ~ ClllLD ~.u holqmg, A8'''>'. 2043 w .. tcllll•c!"·· n .rv 1---'co=sro:.A.;.lltESA==---1 OF MIDICAL.& DINTAI. PlllSONNIL • •. ..,._,.,,, 9 -· 30 .. ~-N.B. SER\llCESl"AGENCY *MOTEL MAID *· 1195 Newport Blvd., Costa Mt.. ~645·2922 ANSWERI' ,,. . _J =-= ' ,..... '41"• pref -••-•lllV..:•c-••-.w 'RcUable, a:teady worker • ~ ~t!r,tw;.~ M&-5833 $500Management · · .... ,.,. *** 494-7557 PLEASE YOU" Trainee Jobi Men. Wom. 7100 Jobt Men, Wom. 7100 E5tate -Clove -Forty ,;.. Ciadw~l Pai"t Co. .,. • .,....,. -.t!!!t CIVIL ENGINEERING Good work "P. Mam.d, Call J. W. ROBINSON'S j/J_llBW""'t : -Faitar -FEVERS. o *** 494·9816 ***' «Nf=or. • ,,..,..,....,. ASSISTANT (OFFICE Ann, 645-2770, Westcllll Per. -NEWPORT BEACH -.,_. * TOP SALARY * Sign in a doctor'11 a.ntr· ~~ ,._ ,.::,?J.~if & FIELD aonnel ~ncy, 2043 West. parsormal See Betty Bruce at For exPl!'r. Cook·Houaekeep. room: "Small FEVERS No Was1Jng ASSIGNMENT) el!H or .. N.B, 1-IU an opcnlng for m fl l!'r w/gd ref's. Must be cap. Gratefully Received." ''~ * WALLPAPER * • An , ...... Marl 1.8/BS or <qua! Plus ...... FEMALE, ,.,..., • ....,..... -EXPERIENCED -agency U:J wee .... of •h«rlWly carl"g lor SALE' GE """· lamp•. ' \Vhen you call "Mac" C ...-.. net' exp. ~$1MO saL range. tnYentory mntl'ol, Exper. Profesaiol.1il Service house&: youngsters. ~In. desk " chair, slnsfe 548-1444 646-l'ili Ch.Id or party w/dl!'Slgn exp only, Ph: 64wm SALESPERSON FOR Agency fir Carter Girls 675-0481. beckompl, formi. kitch. let PHONE Th t li9n Now taking applkatlans tot tn municipal improvements. Fiie Clerk..Cl11im1 COIN DEPT. for the employer 410 W, Cout Hwy,, N.B. + TR[MMER or UPHOL.s. w/6 du'I • 2 ex.l's. 9x:l2•roi, phone the ~s~ Jo~atl & day llhift only, full time ~ceptionall,y qualified i~i. to $361.33 and the 11pplle11nt By appoint. 6f&3!l39 TERER 10 work on boat in. night stand, recliner · ,;.-a: Son Painting L 1 c ens e d Vidual may atart above nun. Xln't oppor, w/gd co. Pretty Apply in person 10-5 p.m. Ul Dov•r Dr., N.8. teriors &: canvu cover. more. Eves aft 6:15 Ph: bonded, in~. 968-9126. 1 0 Bu1boy1 Applyfo;rem~ntforms otfices.triendlyatmmpbere, Pentonnel Dept. 642·3170 *SALAD GIRL* l'enn. job, fringe be.neflbl. 49'h3857. '! * PAPERHANGER * e Kitchen Men to: Engineering Div., CITY top benefits. Some lite ~ • 2 Fashion Isl., N.B. NIGHT WAITRESS h1on, thru Fri, 7-3:30, Call LAKE ARROWHEAD MA. FURNITURE tttumed frWn . . e Aaat. Broiler men OF LAGUNA BEACH, 5«i ing. Call Miss Setty, 557-6122, Equal opportunlty employer • DILLMAN$ • P.trs. Pennington, 833-0600 RINA <714) 337.-0629. display atudies, J'DOdl!'l hoin. Pri Rerognlledl tru Autho~z,.., ForKt Ave, or call 494-1124. Abigail Abbot Penonnel ------ - -801 E, Balboa Blvd., NB Ext 2137, betwn 2-5 PP.f. ** WAITRESS, ....... time 5 ... decorators canceU.tiOD. or ns ctor .....,.. Apply in ptl'IOn"-· COCKTAIL I SI'EAKHOUSE Agency, 230 W. Warner, J.'W:Ro~ Nursing 10 9 P~1. .,... • Spanish & Medi~ McAdams Pai"ting Suv. 2601 W. Cout Hwy, N.B. WAITRESS wa"t<d fol' e Sull• 211, Saota Aoa. _NEWPORT BEACH_ EXPER. AIDE 3-11 :30 SALES LADIES ** FRY COOK lral,.., .., R D FURNITURE Inter. & Exler. Special rates API' Cleaning: bt Cass NEW ORPHANAGE *FRY COOK-Part time shift, ApplY Park Lido eon. ~xp'd, part or t1 time, No 1144 N•wport Bl., C.M. on apt.s. 6'16-3645 MAIDS only tor Newprts RESTAURANT, • Laguna * DISHWASHER-Part um. Hu an opening for valelcent Center, 466 lla.J. P /Tlme Mens Cloth-Sundays or ho 1id•7 s every nite ''11 9 YOU SUPPLY TIIE PAINT finest apts. Ht1beat ,::C~ Call betwn. Ui PM, C'OCKTAIL WA tTRE SS· e EXPERIENCED e ship Rd., NB. 642-8044. ing. Exp. Preferred. KRA':\1ER'S COLONY AL Wed., Sat. le. Sun. •tn i'.. ilDPttAvuageRoom earnings guarantHd. Call · ParttimeAakforWayne. M11ny employ•• KITCHEN, 512 W.19th St, JlEPOS SESSEO-Beau~· Free Est. 557-8638 Newport .$enticer, Mi.-1224. COCO'S. REUBEN'S Rancho San Joaquin GRILL COOK NURSES: * RN or * LVN benefita. C.M. Custom velvet sectionll, · Relief, mainly wk eb, all .. ""-==~-----PROFESSIONAL. 30 yrs Assistant -COMPLEX -Goll Coune BUSBOY shifts avail 646-l624. WAITRESS -uperienCf'd" sold originally over .f*X>. , exp. pa~ & pa.in. * LQftll * 18021 CUlver Road Apply in peraon lunches only, Apply in pel'90n 1..iki! new. A steal at i@O. ting, from Engtand. 968-7461 Vft '647 MacArthur Blvd. Newport Beach Apply in person 10-5 pm ORDER TAKERS. Women... 9:31).9 :30 Delaneya Sl!'a Shanty, 630 See at Medi terr a n e.~ n INT. & Ext Painting. Local • Newport Beach Irvine Branch Monday thru Friday girls, .over 19, days or e:ves. Lido Park Or N.B, Furniture's wa.rehouu', l'l77 ref's, lic'd, ins., fl'ff eat • AT Near UCI 83.l-0112 Personnel Dept, ~~an;na ~ce~ e~ Robert H•ll Clothes WAITRESS. f~U timl!' nights Newport Blvd, C.l'tt. r! Call Chuck, 645-0809. • INTERVIEWING ~ION-FRI FULL or PART TIME • J Fuhion Island, N.8, nee, Salary ii.6S per hr. l8 Ir. ove.r for ca,;r11 Jr. QUAL. tu~. Ex. cond ~n COLLEGE Students, J yn * 9 HIS * 2 TO 5 PM Earn up to $5. per hr Equal opportunity employer Call 547~ • .,~ before 5 pm. 1601 Newport Blvd. Apply at 1550 Ada11U1 Blvd., beds, 72 dresser. RoUftd exper. No dJinkin&, Bill or I FULLER BRUSH 546-S745 ~ ~ Costa Mes•, C•llf. C.M. Cay Pinheiro, Mgr. roff. table, step e.nd tbh., steve S4&-4549 e COOK e FOOD SERV, JIO!iil's avail, Lady to do housework. PART Time.-Full time. lf lam1> tbl, sect, !Ota &-ct9's. ' · ~ job openings, fUIJ "' pa.rt NO EXPERIENCE NttES-Uni'Y@l'flity of Calif, Irvine. 4 hrs per day. Own tl'an!. yoo'r!' looking for an SALES • Career • Unlimited •WAl'mESS wanted. Will misc. 1136 Pembroke, tm '*' PAPERHANGING time, fiexible houn. No l!'xp, SARY. FULL TIME, PART Mon-Fri shift, Ve. nd 1 ng &12-ffi39 unu!lual job, &r a rl!' opportunity $ 8 SO mo. train, Must be. 21. f''ull timr, 5-lg..()J81 ·- &: PAINTING. * . 968-2425 nee, Age 19-15. We train. 1'IME, DAYS OR NIGHTS. rouie .....,..., Relict cook, LEGAL TRAINEE intl'rested in bl'auTy e guarantee. no expetie ru penn, 613-4110 MAPLE Twin beds, box'.>'1. Start today. COORDINATOR. Ne.:e<l~ for Crill ~k." Call lot" appt sccre111 e Call V'.v.lan ne<'. \Ve fully train yo u. WOMEN WANTED inner apring ma!L, J;; Pla1tering,P•tch, $3.50perhr. 833-6900 , TO$SOO . Woodard Cos me.ti c s. ne"t, training dus ~tar111 FORPHONESURVEY atand.Xtnt&"9braitled ReJNir 6UO Call 556-2870~. Crant ~~1::ihc:npepedwo~khll~~ FOREMAN For day shift in ':!. opri;~~(ve~: 842--2664 . Sept. 28, call Mr. Welton WORK. WORK IN rug, All Reasonabl•. COMPLETE Lawn I: Yard A·l TELEPHONf! Solicitiqi Voluntttr or £m sa!ary. sm. plastics mfg Co. Min s cond. Gd bl!'nefit8', Call MW PART Tl.~E hcUl!keeper, :t. 962-2480 °" 839-0400 • YOUR OWN HOME & 642-6437. " Service by hi-sc hool ·Full timl!', ID aper, nee. Aho volunteers ~ to yrs exper req'd. Send Ellubeth, 557~. Abigail hn da, i2 hr, 4 du wk. SALE-Earn Chri alm&• EARN COMM. 546-116' OOUBLE bed, headboard"~lt: .tud."'· Ti"'v-oo, Neat. Jmmedia.te ~nt. help w/peygical. therapy, I repliesto BailMro12,_Da.ily AbbolP lA""' 230 Cook e:w meat •. Westmont money part time. Sarah MISS KAY ,,___ad l20.Mapl•-~.. 1869 N WlQt Bl.Yd, iuit F ~ enonne ''6~ncY, track, nr Ed1rce.r It. · ~t"~ Wkly-monthly rates, Reas. Costa ~ea 14S{(i(ll hr wk, plea&e help.~. Pilot_ 2211 W. Balboa Bl.Yd, w, Warner, Suite 21l, Santa Bushanl 1• V M/have car ~tl'Y, hiring now, No \VOMAN to work tn donut table Pl. 9'llt:12' rue JlO. Brian ~9022. 642--0255. M&-7363. NB. Ana. S27-6020 · • 1ove-st, no del. Free shop early morning. Part 91)2....89>.J 20861 Woodlea .J.n, AFTER •ch/bab)'Sitttt •OOOKJIOUSEKEEPER* ~EAA • training. For info PH: H.B. * PATCH PLASTERING OO · ..--LOC, Mgrs w/sales abi! to PI'/Time Male Rf'Staurant 3471388. time. No phone calla pleue. ===~~-~-~I All typoCalls. ~,,e:,.ttmates = ~r 2::::: -.; Gene.:ralH ••7lite duGoodti~ 5Sal~ ~~mLoc'"'ai""'ean'nee . M-ar-ope~ neExw typod ,'"',. v.u. help. College student!I O.K. SALESMAN •-•···-WINOIELL's Donut Hou8e, ~r1'ANX1 tH~~ .. boardll5 ~~twinw. -"""""' Peninsula.. 67J.-069S nr . .u--pm, -~· 1·1a.1. , equip p es no nee. ntE PEDDLER. 1024 Bay • ..... -~ •c, 2947 Harbor Blvd, CM. ....:u, n .. vuu, · ~ • I===="='"'====;='." 11 2:~~~~~~-..,..,. Must have ear. &44-lllB &1S.2770, Wesk:JIU Person. s.A. it. FMh tsl. 642-7281. . • v:pe:r, for ~cutity alarm Balboa Blvd. (upat&ln), Plumbing 6890 ASSEMBLY worken ;;e;;;J. COUNTER GIRL FOR DRY ~! Agency, 2043 WMclil.f LOOKING FOR side Dr., N.B. sys. w(young Co. w/great WORK Jn your neighborhood, NB, 11.11 day. ,. 1.:..:.:;.:.;.;;.;.;.;.::....._____ Apply Me.lcsol Company, CLEANING PLANT. Apply Dr, N.B. WORK? pfi' OUice Help v.uled. potential. Ref req'd, Write ::::: 7nq'd u!~r .ac~~c: l'"A"N'°G"E"L"E"s°"'a"R"EA'"KFR"·=o=NT=,·I HOM.,. REPAIRS 8'5C W. 15th St, N.B. BJ·... CM Mom or Aftemoon11, Call Box 369, HB 92646 Solkf Frui1"'-1Xld. Fttn0ti Plumbing-electrical. f1.50 Hr. BABY SITl'E"Ma•·-. f 2200 Harbor vu., · · •GARDENER TRAINEE• How would you like t~ pUt Mim Kay: 546--lS66 SALESMEN n..-o ti"m• •. ,.... n e i rhborhood, Nat1onally n.-'"'"" COCO'S REUBEN'S No exper. is ftl!'C. Xlnt opp. your name and quahflca. ~ ... ~ .. u1 known product, a&1Ul'e rood Provincial finish. i 9..5, 642-2755 or 642-0506 boys C2 school 1 infant)', 5 -COMPLEX-cnu 51&--!Kl85•494-5427 ,. tn the hands of 10000 PERSONNEL CLERK car. Leads furnished. Work income.. For interview, 968-5946. ·; PLUMBING REPAIR days. 8 am -5:30 pm, $160 ~onr ' Knowledge Insurance. Call any 4 hrs, average $100. per bfi& No job too 11mall mo. Mn:. Pl!'tkins St9-3058 GENERAL office work. part flnns In the next tew.w~k!: Lor . &45-2770 We.st lift wk le up. Call 544-8136 aft _,....,., ___ . ______ s;!E~~~~: i~1':tr!1'~ • G42-3l28 • or aft & pm 645-J.453. 4647 1tiacArthur Blvd. time gtl. with figuft!I, for i10.00? Our pubhcation ai~ A .... • ~3 6PM WORKING mother nttds Newport Beach sho!'thand &: typing h!Cf'd. 24 will be printed and mailed Pel'llOn. ._ .. ncy. · . . child care-lor 2 &: 5 ;yr old w/waJnut frame 525. DRAINS Plugged! Draining s:low'!' Expertly cleaned $9. 'M hr scrv. 5J0...-3854. 24 HR PLUMBING 1G REMODELi.J.NG 557-9644 BABYSITTER. 4 childttn, ht wk. Perm. &7S-S333 to thousands of prospectiw Westchff Or., N.B. SALES, with Shm-Gym, you Mon thnl Fri, Must have. 6'14-5998. ·' Mon/Fri, My home, JNI'ERVIEWlNG MON·FRJ mployers ·It you need a PENSIONER To help with can earn what you 're tranllp. 10 take 5 :yr to KING-SZ BED: Finn, iifii Transportation provided. 2 TO 5 PM GffiL for Talent ~ncy. ~b, don't· df>lay. Call now garden, 3 half-days per wk. WOl"th! Call 1tfa.ry Lou Good. kinde-rgvten 1:1-3. Cd M. packaged frame. $1)$. 548-tns must be attr. Send photo Ii ~n your -am• ··--·1 •· left Ph. aft 6. 675.0016. 968-2-4t6 or S43--8329. 673-5109 Worth 1260. Usually •--1 Over 17 yeani: resume St. J amel'> Prod. .,._. " """ uc ..... """' BABYSITTER needed, in e lflfSBOYS 2377 s. El Camino Real San oui. PERSONNEL CLERK 8:4-LES W~:\fAN WANTED YOUNG Man, nea t S42-&'i36. ..... Corona del Mar 3-& PM Moo. • DISHWASHERS CJeme..nte LEDISCO PERSONNEL Knov.•ledge Tnsu~. Call With expenence. 819 W. 19th appearance, student ok., * MOVING · from cit¥'&: thn.I Friday. Call 540-6373. COASTAL AGENCY GIRL Friday: !11ust driw, 1t1ANAGERS CUlDE, Loraine, 645-2770 • Westcliff St, Costa Mesa. w/car for handyman work, r_ urn l tu l'I!' & ~s i=Or7.;;oal::,t,;5,;''°"·;,;.67.;.,._7--·.,-,,,-., Amemberof speak• t1nder stand {Il-4)530-3020 Personnel Agency, 2043 SE~RETARY · part l l m~. Mr. Forney forsaJe..:1:>5 AptA,4lst'$t, •MO aABYSI'ITER le l ighl Sneliini 1; Snelling Inc. Spanish, gd penionality, MEOLANlC, foreign car \Vestcliff Dr., N.B. Call Lorauie, MS.mo, West. ,54<).3862,;;;:;:;:,;· ====== N.B. 67!>-871).f. ··;c GEN'L remodeling Ir. maint. hou9elreepe.r wanted, my The World't L•r9e1t Call Addy, 642--1224. exper. Sheehan Foreign Car REC Nur5e • Apply in cliff P~rmnneJ Agency, 2043 PROVINCiAL • style efril. Remodelin9 & Rep•lr -·~"------- No job too s m •ll. home, Mon tbru Fri, 8:30 to Profetslonal GIRL FRI for & u th or· Repa:lr. &42-5133 pe~n. Country Club Westclitt Dr., N.B. School1·ln1tructlon 7600 chair, beige, perfect ~I Llc'd/insured. 6'&8183. 3:30. Top pay. 5'1>2571 Employment S.rvic1 con l u I tant.profeMOr, pt !ifANAGER for ocean.front Convalescent Home. Z>362 SECRETARY Part-time, ·+SPECIAL* &lightly faded. $20. 67~. Sowing 6960 EUROPEAN fa11hk>n trained oflers her ta1ents in dressmaking, alterations, also children's clothes. Very reasonable, Simplf' llhifts $12 & up, skirl1l $10 &: up, 671-1849 BABYSITI'ER Needed l day 2791' Harbor Bl, CM S40-fi05S time, flex. M>rk IChed. park apartments. Santa Ana Ave., Santa Ana. trave...I business. Must be Multi-engine r•tlng t.fOVING Saleo-~,,jo wk, in Eastblull for aft Harbor Blvd. at Adams 644-5625. ** Chalmers Apts. * + xJnt typist. 642-4045. $550 go, F'um., appliancn. ~. schOOI 4% yrs, boy• 8'h yr ....::::'..::::.,:::~,.:::..:::::;:'.!,,.,I ;H'AR'"D'°W"'7ARE-;;-;;:-SAL"°'c;E;;S"°MAN=, 364 Cliff Dr., Laguna Sch Restaurant SERVICE STATION misc. 421 Catalina Dr .• lj!lt girl, must drive, 644-0543. ~~N~S ~:~ ;~;, ~N~ part time, eves, Sat & sun. MANAGER Apt&, Retired R b l l A'M'ENDANT, lull t Im f! • F~~ ~ ~e_:s::P~~e.d BABYSITTER -for 20 mo. HOUR CLEANERS. Exper. pref'd. 2666 llarbor couple willing lo work, eu en ee mechanical, Sha.rpman w!)I) Aircraft F1ylng Service Sel Maple bunk bed•.•!11 JO years old i.10. .11 boy, lite hsework, live-.in.. Blvd. Col!ta. Mesa Balboa beach apt+ salary. want.I good opixirtunity. 19531 Campus Dr good pay. NB, 644-S249. c968-~°'"'='"="=·8~·=,,,..--,--675-8740 Mr. ColliM. Smog license pref'd. Neat J. COUNTER GIRL, part HERE'S JOHNNY'S N . te . • ........ ft_ .. _ .. ,.,.. Al.SO • Orange Co. Airport LEAVING Country! l\1"'11t 6¥.Mll61 o;) BABYSITTER Wanted nites, T ,. ti · J f •---• OW lft rYleWlftCJ _,.... ... a.. ... "" '""'" ~9656 -time. Apply 2-4 PM a 1ng app cations lor MAN To ass st mgr o ~ part time man. Apply to ..,.., Sac! Spanish ?.1edit~ My home NB Pcnin, P> wk . only. 899 \V, 19th 8' •BUS BOY •ppliance store. Neat ap. Jerry, 2590 Newport Blvd., loi•;;;;;..iiii.iiii ... ;;o;;;;o"' Furn. 548-1784 .,.,, Call Donna, 54&-2-420. c.M. Foster Freeze e BROILER pearance. 496-2383 Mr. -NIGHT-c .M. AIRLINE MAPLE twin bed, bOx ......m .. QUALITY You've ~wayt1 BABYSrITER wanted by _ _::::::,.:,:::=~:,:.::'= e TRAY GJJU,HOSTESS 9-10 only l~::,C,=------SCHOOLS ~ .... M.., a7t~:l'l!!.~~m~11&3 teacher weekdays 2 to 5. CUSTODIAL HELPER • DISHWASHER *Wright am . * DISHWASHERS srr::.r~Eda:~~~-u:ic::; PACIFIC $~.mattre:.. 494.4~ Orange Ave .. C.M. &15-1292. Light housework. 499-4357 Oce.an View School Di!trlct. Full or Part Time MEN and WOMEN training. $2. per hr. Prl!'f Da.Y I: Night C&sae.a S pictt sectional. ,.;!;; Alterations _ 642-5145 BABYSITTER. Afternoons $2.n per hr. Part time posi. Excellent Opportunity * APPLY + mature woman. Contact SU--6596 Needs 11ha.mpoo $55.":7 only, my hOme. Call alt & tion, 2 to 4 hrw. ea, AM. for Housewives l'ART TIME 151 E. COAST RWY. OHice M .... &12-4435. ClO E.. 17th St., Santlt. Ana 64&-39ll or 531-49117 ,, .. , Neat, accura~ 20 year .. exp. PM 61: •A-Call in Pe.fllOn ..,...""'"'RT BEACll •· ,.,.,..,..,....,...,,..,....,.,I -===;::::====:;;:;;;":! ! .,_.,,;i, Perlonn lite cleaning duties 9 ... 5 N·.wrv SERVICE Station Salmnart "' e Dre!!making-Alterationa ..:.::::B;,,Y.:.SITTER==-,~~l'°'d-"'"" I 1 tary h l n-:ooh< ... :OOPM FULL TIME GERMAN Lan.nag• Office Fumltu-to'J.~,., BA or e enY a e emen SC 00. ~ • .,v. -~ Bak CM ---===---,.-,.,.,-:! wanted. Salary &: comm. •• .,.. Designed 10 mit you. couple., part time, Cdlf v.uit exper. in cleaning de· ---·~--'-'~· _. _.__ RFSl'AURANT·Now takinr 16001 Beach Blvd. H.B. ltwltruction eviery Sat. 9 AM· f--'---"--;..._...;..;c.;;._-"'i: --- Call Jo * 646-6446 atta. Ph: 67J...!391 sired, Applications must bl!' HEY GALS REXAIR INC. apOlication& for full time ST. J•~ PRODUcnONS l2Pri-f. For children +l4. Rcftn'd 3WiO wood de!!'W, Tll•, C•r11mie 1974 CER.AM1C tile inilitalled M' repaired. Rtmodd.ing my specialty. Work g u a r. Reas. • priced. Free est. P C · · N ....... ~ Gl!'nnan Sehl Newport ua.so e Refin'd wood~ BARMAID .. Day11, apPly filed er!Onnel ommiSSJOn We need 10 sharp ga:i11, full ANAHEIM DIV. DISHWASHERS. 0 one.: Casting for singer" & Harbor. For info c all ;;tary chaini:, $29.SO e. • before 6 p.m·, MAVERICK, Olflce, 7929 Warner, Hunt· or pe.rt lime. Age 19-30. No under 18 nttd •pply. er.tert&inel'll for bookinp, 644-4433 49S-4340 1728 Newport Blvd, C.M. ington Beach, by Sept, 21st. exp. nee. Now Hiring COLONY KJ'J'CHEN, 32ll recording & mgmt. Send • . • have the largn:t ae.lttmlh H!U'bor Blvd c l\f PIANO • VoiC4'! l..eNOM, or used oWce tum tn this ••• BOX BOYS • $3.10 n.r hr Evening work 6:30 to 10 PM · · · photo A details to 2.177 S. El Pro aedential teacher uea Oepliing!I now for Fall Must $-Oil)> ~-nek/ Combination Call Mr. Jemfn-52871 NEW BRANCll REAL Estate Opening for Otmino Reill SAn Cle.me.nte Fre; leuon e.very lrd mo: . ·Mc Mahan Desk be avail. momi111, wkdaya Nurse houseke.eper, SJlO EXPANDING TO qualified sal.esman. Work on SfUDENTS, 11 yn Ir up to S4Q..4757 1800 Newport Blvd, pt time Ot" ft time Apply in mo. Live-in pret'd. 646-7316 HOMEWORKERS WANTED OR.ANGE COUNTY fabul6!-lal' "'""'p1 Ra0"'00~· ~ aell candy ln your own area, .:::::.:.:.:.:______ 6<"450 _ ·-peT'90n, Richan:f 's Lido Mkt. DENTAL A~lstl.nt. tully (Envelt;IPI! Addttaen:). potenr1 , am e . M k good 1 1\uoring math, Germ., Span., l .:.T.:.'"o;.;;;St;;.:..rv;.;l.;;ce;;.... __ l_H0_ 1.,:34:c33::,,V,,;;•:c..L-klo=-. N-=-·"-·.,,....,,,.,,, exper'd. desk onty, pert Rusd h atam,ped, ••l,f·ad· .TOP STARTING PAY ~~;e unlimited. Call Lee ti;eeand hel.r;;o:.:!tyns:i7 Ru~s., Eng .• l-fi1t,. l\f.A. '>36-4126 __________ , BKKPR. A/P. CoT'l.'ltruction tlmc, afternoons or eve. resse env• ope:. Wt need 22 men and women n.1 .• 'Red Hill Re.:alty No CMh requlttd. Call In Ed. All age11. S43-&61. BOB'S TREE SURGERY l!'.l<Jlft'. desired, CdM AU re-INUrance exp de.!!'d. Hunt. LA?:lG D 0 N WORLD wtlh ~~ typesN of ~:.. ba~· a:l3-0820 64-2-®3, 9 AM tD S PM. C'-...jal•~Pro':!.~.,~- i" back ofierlng the &ame pl.le• confidenllal. Send ru. Bch area. Call bet I am-9 TRADERS. P .O. Box D21· grou........ o exptne .... "' ·~ . ,,.. . ~ .,-,...,!CIA "'" Fine Qaulity Tree Service ume .: salary hlttor)' to Boot pm, 846.J540 A21, Redondo 8l!'ach. Calif. f!Slaf')' L!I company training Unrv. Park Center, Irvine •TACO BEU.+ $3 hour 61>7513 Office Eqvlpmont IOll e WANTED: DRY PHOTOCOPCER. ---·-------*---M-10871>a.ily Pilot, 2211 W, DENTAL . Assi alant "91l271~"""'===~,.,.,...,.-ia f~\11hed. II yo11 qua11ty, RELlABLE livt·in sitter for Part Time ·De.;yt, ~llflf! #SCUBA CLASSES • Balboa BI v <I.. Ne'WJIOrt part-time eYC. and Sat .. HOUSEKEEPER. Mu•t love rapid adVllncl!'Ment to key 2 achl·agc children. Unwed student or houae, wire, no Fon:nlr!i. lleate.d Pools. REASONABLE * 842-2626 ·-Be h ........ -Id•--•-. Min'-children l2l Live 1n. F'lvt ..,itlon M'1111t be over 111. mother ok, Sl5 wk. Befatt g expcr, necca$. 818 0 c ~ • n * MS.1816 * Upholtt•.l"f,_ ___ ~_ I-~"=· =,....,.,=-=,.,:; "'""w-..,iu .~.... IVll k · ·~ ~13 Ave II B ~7800 __ _:__:.::..::;:;:c....:: __ ·-Viejo &17-7454. daya $40 a wee . f'OR INTERVIEW CAU. pm . .........,.,. · " · · · G•r• .. Sale DISTINCTIVE Upl~sl~ry &. t.'Ompl!'ll' 1ntf'rior11 senoicfl . REASONABLE. Lt>cal area. 962-5274. TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A 'DAILY l'ILOT WANT AD ·P!::C,~~~~ ~:. 30 _.;,""',,::,:..,'-;;.:;.---~ Re.fcttnces. Newport Be.a.ch SATUROAY ANO MONDAY RESTAURANT help, female, TEACHER. dcs:iml ttliabk' Plano ll!'uons in your • . \V/\ITER, under 23, w/gd Dp~~pTe~e=ta~r-::~~: area. G+t-4.188 , 774-7253 part time. over 21. Ph, a!t 11ilhtr rron1 :i.5 P~1 dalf)'. ~~·a.~~.T~;"~· C~G~::v ~:·.ms~: 11tcakh<Juse exp. A pp I y: H.B. 847~1M9 am. OOR-5782 HOUSEKEEPER. 1 day per * • 1:30 ~5-1&86. l\.1tsa Vt rd4'·atta. S49-4369 lit•, end of Meq Dr. Sl.l THE OCEAN TOAD, 103 N, pm . wk for hectic, happy *MEN or WOMEN* RESTAURANT. Mt1.I!', 18 or TffiED of bclllf l'l!tlred'! MERCHANDISE FOR !'Inly, Sept !:!. Bayslde Dr, N.8. or PH: Dishwasher • Atornlna1, tun housthol.d w/3 90tlll In Turn time lnto SS. Set )IOUr ove.:r. Apply aft 2 PM, 2966 Pen.ik>n not qui'! enough? If SALi AND TRADE GARAGE So.le. Many Good i :::•;:.44:..403=':.-------I time. Apply In per.m 2:30 collrp, Tlrtd mother. ownhours,partortuuttme. Brl!tol.C.M. /::i~.':~::;oie~ F ftvre --Items. 1568 Creenbrl ar Is )'OU ad tn t~ daaifled srertON! So~ Is watchlnr toir· n. Dial 64J..567B tod'Y! NO mafia What it b , )'OU can atll It with a DAILY PILOT WAf'lT ADI 6CJ..66YI to 4:3:> d&iJy, Snack Sl)op •11 ="='5-~!324==· ==--=..,-Call 90--7S59. ROOM To 'Mnnlln J n 6 pleaAMt •day WDrk A I "-"'";...... ... ..;.;.;...... ___ 11_0-_oo LaM, Coata Mesa, Fri-S..t.- 2305 E. Cout Rwy, CdM HOUSEKEEPER 4 Mature MEN IWtt 25 wanted fOt ~ tor bab)'Slttlt$, ,"''OU!d Hkt to tam Ult mu. KROEHt..ER bed~tvan f ,;"";:,::",;545-2929;;;'0,:::::.,~--,--~ I --~-~=""~-·I woman to care for 8 yr old ~arly AM a.uto routci. P.1utt ~1tsa Vl!'J"dc a.re.a, dOH to allowtd hy Soc. Sec. ftlll· 66" lone. ('.old tw-ttd SAT le S\Jn an day, bargain EXEC. SECRET ARY boy, 3 to 6 pm 'llt1cdys, Pis m idi! Wm of Harbor'. llhop'r ctr, 1 ... wld mMkkler laUons APP J Y Sun. thru • 5Q.649S • In flirn, clothq, mile from Girt w/top aldllt. AdV. bk-leave phone No, •t ~O. 847-8979 ' collcgep cp' ~ l'fl, Wed. ~'ti all 7 PM at the 2 homH. n3.ll l))ckdde gmd helpful. Cd hf'll, work. HOUSEKEEPER. Dependa· Sun 5C>2792. Paulo OMvt ln, 3051 DON'T rive It aWQ", tel Cl~. HB. ~7493. in1 con:l 'a. C.U Mra., Ro8t hie, with transportlUon .. 3 ls ttw.t IP&A room bulab'.i:? rrs Beach h:lwJe t.frne.. Blc· Newport Blvd, C~J. A.Ill: for quick cub f'M' jt wttti 1 AU.. KINDS OF wkdt..vs 9-5 tor 1.ppt. fn4) day wk, Salary. Lklo. Sell tut with ClaMilled sut ll!:Lectlon e\l'e.rl See the the DWWlgtt, No phone DAILY PILOT Oua!Oed Houl!e.'hold l~etns! S..t-&ln MG-4370. 67J.0629 Ads. DiaJ &Ci-6673 tod:&.Y. eectlon now: t"alls ple11• ' Call &C2-G67S ol dMirc-ti. 233 E. Palmtt St CM _""!! _____________ ..,. ______________________________ _ I -~y PILOT Fri.Uy, StpUmbtr 11, 1970 ~"'NDl"'°'S£~F"O"R..-"M"'•:><ftc""H",,...m;D;;;>1...-H°FO""R.--,;uMr.;;Eii'.RCHANOISI FOR : MERCHANDISE FOR -·--------------1..!T_::RA=:.NS!!PO;:::::ll::_T=AT:.;f:;:O:;:N_-_:T,:R::;:A:;:N::;SP:.;O:::R:.:T::.A:.:.T;.:10:.:.N:.....1!~NSPORTATION t.:S:::Al::;l:..::;ANO=-T;.;11;;;~;;;'°.:E~.:SA=LE:;..;.AH=O-T.;.;R.A.;;.;;:D;.;E;._.l;::SA=LE:;..;.A;.;N;;;D_T;.;R.A;;.c~ SALE AND TR.ADE FREE TO YOU FREE TO YOU Moblle HomOI 9lOOMoblf• Homes '200 Motorcycles 9300 'urnltwe IOOOfurnltuni IOOO Pi1no1 & O r91nt 1130 M iscell•neou• 8600 lQTTENS • he I.! wh ite &.tAU. black malt dor· All • • ? -sAve Now *Mwit Stu Even-thini:• :~~:.,ng;ioJ,~~ :.:1a:~;! ~~~~re:.OOM~~· ~m S~lling Your Mobile Home. ~ r ' * PIE• FIRE SALE!! * DURING SUMMER Glass' top table. oUiee desk. longhair. Ra I & ed by C:l) 3 MO. old female kittens ~\Ve Will List-Advertise -Appraise -HON...,. Jll.' The IMta says if weclon't mo•• all theN items CLEARANCE SAL~ bunk be<ffo. li~reo. TV. affectionate children. l mo fluUy white with blk stripe11, Sell _ Arrange Financing at no Cos l ~ .we will·•• firMI Either the furn.ltvr.e goes 0.1" Wtt have trade.Ins, re~. Comm color Tf· ~net ~ .. ~ d1;,9 110 oaf' bro k 1 9'1"11· ~need rd. hO_m~. ~845 9111 to.Jh_e Seller, Many Buy~rs Waitlng., ... _ 1-w. dof.___s. w.'••--ic:ed-it so i.t'..a nnt t0-9ol rent tttums & floor modCls /ltaplt tablt, v c!Wrs. v:s...-_.., '~ You Mui. y~.;;. S.tf..S.rvice • .--o1' every nii:IC!et Hammond o~=~"'="-------1 NP ttompo~r,y liOrne for ve.,; At!~o&t~~She~ w· E·s·TER'N-MOBI [E-H'OM ES 8, G Id I & cha' NEW tall """-<>rsan. Buy now &; rettlve \\'ATER :!Ofte~r. aulo. nr lovable friend!)' wbl cat blk 1 O SO a IJ", le ..-... extra dilcount. new $70. Modern V.'ooden trim Ii 4 kittens \\'ill place 5 CUTE-cuddly kittf!IUI to rd. Pr•Fire ••I• prlc, $59 ltAMMOND diniaa: 11rt $65 Naugahydt mother & kittr.m \\'hen home. 548-6933. 9/14 L icensed & Bonded 80'' Orange velvet so(a & chair_, new retail 1 ... ~· • rt ·-d ... ~13 "'7~ IVESTOC $ In CORONA Dt-:L 1\1AR WllJ(C e .... 1r o omkn •.Jv, 'weane . .rtO"Y<I • .,,.. ... 91"~Jt PETS •nd L K 1311 SO. ANAHEIM BLVD., $290 , ...•.••.. , . , . , . Pre-Fire ule price 75. 28j.t E, Coast Hwy. 673-8930 ";i:C:,;..ooo;.',·~· ~----- 3 blk & wbt 23" console TV's, $350 .. $65 e•. Open Mon &: Fri .... v~. l..ADIES Oyater perpetual LOVABLE ttru. breed mixed C1t1 U20 778 5620 S pc Dinette sets, antique whil e &. walnut. Date just Rolex chronomet· pups ma.le all blk, wavy S • New retail $19 ••••. , ........... Now $39 set. 11 SALE 11 er gold watch. $3C(L Call ha.ir, poodle tYf*. ren1ale, Purebred S.•lpolnt i•·"==========-======''""'"·=-=·=· =~I Overstuffed chairs. Values lo $100. 6754801 all 6. ~ m•H kitten• $25. c.111~ P F , S I ' $25 Big Piano&. Organ Sale blk and br. mother pure 646 6314 after 10 •m. Bo•t• &. Y•cht1 .... , . , , , , , . • • .. •, r.. ire a e price ee. going on RIGHT NO\V at MATI'RESS & a pr in rs' breed doxie. 542--7096 bet. 9 Nice 5 pc \Valnul Bdrm set consists of: dress-\\'ARD'S BALD\VIN STuo;o dinette set, 26" girl• hlke &: J'.l.m. 548-0813 ' 9111 D 1825 2'1 ' ARENA-Craft wf trlr. SEAGULL 5 IIP outboard er w /mirror, dbl headboard, 2 nite stands. 1819 Ne\11port, c.~1. 642-8484 m.i11<:. drapes & rods. 4 DARLING kiltens w/k>ts ~09~•--------SIS radio. Full camper with clutch. Call: t714 l Yalues to $200. p,..Flr• 11le price $69. set. ~76!t. cit personality, J llu!ly &: J *OLD ENGLISH SHEEP covt'r. :P.1My extras! S9200 673-5!m Sat. Box springs & mattress sets, sanitized & llA!\t:P.tOND Organ w/perc, R E'LA X-A-SlZOR. Dlux short hair, 2 gray, '2 striped, DOGS. 4 MMe pupa, AKC, new -I yr a go . 36 sterilized. Values to $125. wiarranly S28S. r-!ew piano model, JO!f' incheli ~hile you 8 \\'ks. pa~r trained. Dogs to be shown by APPT. Moving-sac! !or S650Q. t714J Bo•t Slip. Mooring 90 Pr•Flre sale price $21. set. made 111 USA. 11181., all ex· 1iilecp, iron. do dishes or 548--0"'a.12 9/11 ONLY. Tentis avail to 1_:731::;.._..,:.:.:1~.---~~-~ SLIP A11all-up to 4 o ', 7' sofa & chair, avocado green. new retail tra~. 15 yr \llarranty $~99. Whatever, S200. 646-4162 °8 MO. old Black &. \\'hite (fUallfir.d buyers. Plraiie SHARP JT 011i.li. util. 'fish&: .Ne\\·por1 Harbor. Call Tony $250.-.............. , Pre-Fire sele price $59. COULD MUSJC CO. 2 Desks, re.frig, stoves, table male house car . A I s o CaU: ~2549 er 548-1002 bay boat. New top, «>VeM!, btwn 11 a.m-6 pm t2131 Bunk bed sets. compl \\I/mattress, new $125. Since 1911 ,,,_ hulfet, headboard & i;evcral kit.tt'ns 10 a:ood PICK OF LITI'ERr uphlstry. Ready to go. $995. 872-2872 . . . . ..••. , ..•.••• P .... Fire sale price $29. set. 2045 No. i\lain, S.A. dtt11lfer, chair & rug. homes. S46-3566 bclr <I •GREAT DANE PUPS • t-'644--094&_,_~,-------Boat Slip Side Tit's up 4 80" Spanish sofas. top cond, new retail * 547-0081 * !JGS-5993, ~~8. p.m. 9112 Martincrest Kennels * 25' COLONIAL Jnboard. 195 le 25'. $2 per t1. $250. , ..•.••..• P .... Flre sale price $71. ea. LEAVING State will discount KITTENS-3 black & white, 1 546-0989 hp. Chrysler marine . l----'~7~3""1:'.'.:50"---~ 2 portable bars, walnut finish, new retail ~vision 8205 membenhip in Colo de gray & white, Mothe'r ls SHERRY'S Pc;iodle•. DinJfiy, depth tinder. 90-W *DOCK SPACE* ANAHEIM 9000 M1rlne Equip. 9035 i'FRIEDlAHDER'.l lil'• SIAat OIWY. 1'1 I 537.£824 • 893-7566 NEW-USED-SE RV. n.n.rvv'I . ' $65: .. , _ •..•.• , , Pr•Fire sale price $29. ••· • 23 .. fo.lotorola color TV. Caza outdr. lan1. rec. club. registered Sia?Mse. Mortu1 Cock·A·POO'l'I $15. Poodle SIS. 545-0820. 4 bar stools, n ew retail $20 .. , . NoW $9. each New picture tubt. Save SSOO. 9fi8..6018 • & eves.· 67>3558; btwn IO-S, pups $50/up. Studs av!. BEAUT 33' s!ephens, Chrys d d ~ 644-5411 9/11 .,.,, ..... , 0 for rent for up to 30' Po\\'er boal . 675-1062 196!1 SUZUKI • 250 Savage 6 fawer ressers w/mirror s, new retail.,.,,.,, $150. 557-4292 NEW auto. radio, 4 & 8 track .rou-.Jo-o • eng, $12,500-$2500 down. nr . ,., ...........• Pr•Fire sale price $45. ea. 21 •• COLOR TV $l2S. 17 .. tapf' player. 2 AmpPX ND foster home for mother RHODESIAN Ridge back must McriJice! 673-2807. THE USED FUlllllTllRE FACTORY k ho t d cat l: 4 kittens owner ill. AK~ Ch · d x-M !'?!°'!"~~ $~. ,23" TV $JO. ~J.>etaapem• "'"·':'A~ ~ver e ' New o\1•ne r tills own pet1. "' pups. '·lire ' ... yl----------.....,.....,." • ., ...,.,, .,............. clear. Stud Service wkdys S 'lboat 9010 1815 Harbor Boulev1rd, Costa Mese 11 .. B/W RCA TV. 3 Yl'1I old. HOUSE F1.JLL or .!>'urn & =:~n ~:~~a~~t~~~-aft 5. 548-Sm. . 1.:0•~•:::0=:.:•;... ___ _:.~ sq..M57 Contemporaey. Good cond, ODDS & ENDS. Moving 2 SHORTHAJRED Pointer HOBIE CATS o,.. W....,_ M~ S.wMp f·I, ~1ust sell All. Bfr: 3 pm S BEAUTIFUL k i l I ens-2 pops, AKC. last of lirter, CIHWI s...,. $60. &4!>-0l6l 846-1229 tabby, 1 tortoise shell. 1 cheap, shots A: wcnned. black. l bJack .t. while. Very 968-1390 H. ·::.i·.:F..:i..:' &::..:S:.:te.:.•;.;eoco... __ 12..;;;..;10 WEBCOR record p layer, uniq~. 9M-9307 9/ll """""""~---~- ALL COLORS FREE DEMOS CAP'N EDS l ..:G.:•::.•-•t::c•_S_a_l• ____ I0_22_ Appliance• 1100 -bookcasP. 8' beige sora, SILKY Terriers, Champ. e ti' SOLID DANISH MOO. i;kate brd like nu. Ph: ..AKC Bassett Hound, female, line, male, fem, SlOO &, $L'50. ANTIQUES -Collectables, GAFFERS & Sattler ga~ ERN WALNUT CAPEHART Ms..6815 afl 6;30 PM. lri·colored, 4 yrs old, 11eeds 1'.1iniature Collie S 50 . 2200 W. Cat. 8\\'Y, NB 64i>-2Ut • BotUes Cans Jars Signs atove-rotiSSttie, broHl'Y' & STEREO. fer!(:ed y1rd. loving family. 493-3796 • , • • • .,,7 540--:w:il NEVER used. <.'Omplete sci Call-eves: ~ , 9/ll ------~~~-t CAL•25 $6250 ~ Old soda fountain inseru, grill. Xlnt cond. S7S. o-:c':..· ---~,-.-·~·_...,. of \Vorld Book Encyclo. AFGHAN PUPPIES ~ PD~:s.~=~.' ~~ 't=.· , .... -"'~337:::,c'~·-------t.1orse sterec-<lark wood cab-pedia. .NED g? home tor 2 darling Exotic colors * ooz.9989 Full Race! 4 B & c Sails! -• y~y O'KEEJi'E & Menitt gas inct w/record storage •. Xlnt * 491·1528 • kittens 1 malt. 1 female. SUN.COUNTRY KENNELS SIS Radio! Dinette! 9HP , GlllSll C8.tlblell, etc. ttc. range-gri:ll &: hoodtd 1...... cond. $150. 646-2663 Box , iralned & weaned. : Interestingintineoldstuff. v,. VW bumper, fender&dcck 64&-1403 9/ll PUPS-Greyhound &. E·rude:!ChoiceSlip$50 , 604 Clubhouse, N.B. $40. 646-5409. REALISTIC FM stereo tuner lid. 20· & l\\.'O 10 gal :shepherd, 6 wk& old, $5. Call JOHN GRANATH 673-3570 ! look fur IM open garage door BOTPOINT washer &-dryer, in perfect coOOition. $45. aquariums comp.I. 847-5840 WE have 4 darling faced 968-3870. LOOKING? ; Sal &. Sun Kint rond $135. ti73-'F.i79 evtnings. aft 6. pure bred mutts. l just HELP! 3 fat tri6ky male STOP! , •54&-9885• perft"~I tor your Jamlly. 3 '° GIGANTIC Garflge Se.le: 3 MAPLE piano, Col'Pf'rlone ~2139 911I Oobenmln puppks $5. Need Coronado 27 Loaded for race ~ homea houschld, ~. ----------Cemeras & fl"Cl!l-frce bollom freezer TLC 968-6595 & romfort.' Stt to believe! ~ coUect.ablcs. bike. pwr Antiques 11lO E , t l300 refrig, Blk & wht JB" portbl 3 Month old blk lemale pup. • AKC St. Bernard puppies ti4S..08IO 1 mcwer. manglt. wicker quipmen TV, 536-4506 aft 6 1 ~ miniature Schnauzer s ks Id chair, turn, much more 8142 GOLDEN OAK -extra NE\\' su""r & C amera · Cockapoo needs loving home "' 0 · 19' WINDWARD S I oo P • ,,... FfRE\VOOD for sale. $47.50 CaJI 893-7051 after 6 cabi n, tresh water. Wenlock Cir., HB Ir Bcii & p'ieces al cost. Unique desk w / zoom. Dl.ial 8 mo v IP crd. $Z7.50 •'J crd. Df'!v. & 962-2045 9/12 _ Yorkklwn. ~. frail top, file cabinet), s:m. SO'" la.ncr ul 8 MOS. Irish Setter, male-, Outboard auxiliary. Beisl •=::.:,:=c...::-c....=-~--1 box S65 Set 1 4 projector. IC ar stckd free. Day or ni!I" (11 l Kittens a wkis! blk. turning AKC extra lriencly, lovable, olftr over $700. Call 540-1120 • SAT & sun. Jllam-6 pm: .!:., ~· Oak• Mcane sctten. $140.' Ph: B i 11 ti88-0846_. (1) 687-7599. smoke,y v.•ith while trim J .Must sell! 546-298S. or 540-1123, Greeting ear&. ~i price; .. ~ .. n, '••J. orris 642-MIO or 645-0852. * J-IOLIDAY HEALTH: SPA silver. l ·tiger I ab y 1 .:::::::..:=_:c::..:::::.;.,,,-~. 1-C,,~"'="==~=-~ Collector's iteUlS: Record chair, $27. More. 2443 E. e USED .ROll.EI-FLEX. Exee membership, INCL 2 836-4493 9/12 Toy Poo:tle puppies aClcrable, e ERICSON 23 • • .~ .. m··. •1·. Thtalr• Coa&l Hiwa,y. Corona. def XI 1 ,,. fffl AKC, apricot. f.tust .ell Delux interior! Sharp! 4.4 -0 • M •-• ~ ... , Of""'--• n co1 ..... ·"""' FREB YRS. paid Iii Ocl. J \Vhl Siemese 1 yr .• Odd ............ ms&. m,....,.,._;...,a. -ar n.ca1 6'#0 e , ... ...,, * 84' ~"' * quickly. $75. 846-5006. Chrysler outbrd, like ?le\\'! ... ~..._-.. --·~ ..,., 6'5.Q1X1 Fri Sa n1 ...-.-n •10. 546-3762 ~ytt.. also 2 spayed 1 yr old VistaHuerta,Eat lbJufl · A to .Y. • "ats o wners moved AKCDobennanlyrs. YachtsRoyalelnc,&4S-08IO. (NBJ 6#-0493. ANTIQUES: Paintings. Tea Hobby Supplies .8400 WASHER & gall' dryer. xlnl ~>48-0813 9112 Needs kids $50 to good hOme. e HOBBIE CAT l ·----------1 --• •-~r Bro··---· -·--.--cnnd. $175, 2 VW SOO\V Ures ,,,,0 ,,'--"" ... ...,, '""""" · ,_...,, ~ SAIL a 3311 GARAGf; SALE! Canrelled Va sts. Pr. Corner au~ e H.0 . TRAIN SET e SID r.a. Couch $ti. Ya1hila NEED Foster home for .10 1 ~! I I Sa $200 Le . from 2 "'ks ago. Baby cabinets. Sifver, French All or Pllrt • 54s.5109 camera $.10. 4~1 mo. old spayed tiger cat, SILKY Terrier pups • 2 mo o o d. ve · av1ng f\lrn -fabric -\v&U clock. Desk. French chair. I =~~-::,,:~~-===== I F1.JLL wel suil, hood, lop, 1vill help place I a. I er old, AKC. Male It female. lor sch. Ph: 5'14.o-776. hangings -decor·ltems.1 ~536-ml~~~al"'-'"~'c.5:c''°::.::.P_M__ Sporting . .-G:.ood=;;;'--'-500°' bottom , glovr.s Ir boots S40. 897-5480 SJ&.4493 9/12 5311103 or 53l-9839 * CORONADO 30 * MUOl MORE! 17564 Santa 100 LB Wooden ice box, l -6 ·:.7'~.r~3~598:;;... ---~---PUPPIES border f:Ollies & r..fALE POODLE Completely equipped ~ Domingo Circle. F. Vly. dJ'A', goOd rhape. One copper POOL TABLE PING poog.poo\ table, cues. shrpherd mix motht'r dog 1. __ Lo_"_'~'~Cb'!'.:'ild~re~"-''°--.lii~G~W>f'(t;;sa~"~'~""~'~';;64f.;5.(t8:i';l~O;;d, .... ~'l •·· f 4 x 8 Regulation. k ball .~,. males Ii females. 645-2832 ~2398 • FANTASTIC Bargains on w ...., r:r, u=t o fer. rac , s -... HOBIE Cat 14. Perfect cond, SIJede & leather Hems. 833-3349. Complete with all 646-40ti7 9/12 MALE POODLE Jl('W 2; '70 Trlr, bo om , Some like new, 9n2·9n3 AUTHENIC aotiq. 19th CAnt. acc:euoril'll, Xlnt cond. POOL· TABLE ·t--STICKS,, MALE Gl'rman Shepherd Ir Love! ~i=n· i20 vang, modified travel.et, • SUPS 32._38,. Also Dry XlnL cond. 1200 miles $500 .. storage & hois t launching. ~r. best ofcr, Call alt. 6 P!lf. * 613-6606 * 64J-027 l 1910 Triumph 250 Trophy . Boat Charter 9039 Xlnl cnnd . $6j(). Under . ll'arranty. 6 16-9 J 34 or E~E'.CUT I VE t.1ar l~n 5-J8---4j()3 Fishmg. 6 pass. Tackle in· " eluded. $135 +fuel. 646--9000 '68 BUL'rACO. 2JO cc. Gd . ------for slrPel 11r dirt. Extras. Boats Wanted 9050 $.l!l:J. 540-~198 W~EO~;M BOAT r o R s -.~.,~,,~T=,.,-,=01-•="-eo=,=m='"="~t=,-:·1 CHILDREN. L1kr ~w, _-1000 mi. Sl2!LJ * &46-:347l * firni. ..>19-27;i-1. 1952 BSA SOD Single Mobile H .. ;;om;.;.::•::.•_...;9'l=00 1 ~~st~"'c:·~"~'~' "'"'',."'="'...,,,84,,9.,77=1 --... *BULTACO 200 er dirl bike, •••••••••• F•t -><l<abto, Xtot <Ond. THE MEADOWS '"'·-~•n -• (In the Irvine orange groves) Now renting spaces a·lulti·Mjllion Dollar Mobile Home Communily e 521.~ acres o( fun living • $300,000 recreational. SO· ciaI & cultural 'ccntcr, full lime, in park service c:en- ter. e Daily smog • free ocean breezes, surrounded by or- ange groves & mountains e 7 min from world's largr.st shopping center {Fashion Island) e Championship la1\'n bowl. ing green e S111all pets allo\\•rd Enjoy the abovr at $81 .SO per mo, CALL COLLECT 714/:.31-8105, 714/53()..2930 714/SJ2.85&i, 213/860-5210 •••••••••• Auto Service & Parts 9400 Slil1PSON shoul der harness $1.1 Conipr til!on ll ~mi · torque converlrr SI 00 'rorqur.Ui1e rrani; S12D E<lel Brock hi·riSr ma n1[0Jd Jar l\lopar 383 S-1~ ,\J tlodon oil pickup and dt'C P oil pan fca• fo.topar t'ng1ncs $:io Chromr. valve covers for ··s" block Mopars SIO pair, 2 polished 14" E·T mags .$35 Isley vasc:o jct i11ncr &. outer val\·r_ s pr1ni::s w·l t h alu n1inum re lalne rs $3j. DuColl -dulapo1nl • dual Ntil distrib1116r 'vlih ignition w1rr~ .~.'i(J ll~3-5.'i7S I V\V pa n$. trans axles & btxlypar'"· • S.!2-041'.l • VW Engine; Good Cond. • 642-044:! • • SAT·SUN 1-4 pm. 2627 marble top dresser. Oval $350. 646-3629 BALLS & RACK, $40 Samcyan Hu.~ky aboul -4 llJMlJ'e parts, $1075. ti46-0919. BlackthornSt,NB.644-0935 mir r or, walnut SlSO.SPAULDJNGGotfc l u b1, *fi46...540!>* moll. Nds rood hom e **Scllnauzel'PuJJS** 71• Venture, sips 4, trlr, RIVER SPECIALS Trailer, Travel , an 6 pm R33-0083 Elite Reg. Pro SS irons, 2 SJJ.7796 9/12 Malt at stud & grooming outbJ'd eng. ht-ad. complete New 12' wide homes, slightly 9425 i..::=.;.;~;;:;,.,,;;o'°'SA'"''Er-1 -"':....:.~·=~=~---thru 9: PW S\V Exec •'OOds 3 TV's, your cl10Jce $25. M&-0839 dam~-d. Perfect for the do. LJVE OR. CA·'· tP. lN. THrn RUMMAGE l * * HARDROCK Maple 4-Craig home stereo I ape $50. U nu g u a I k i 11tn 11 . equip, set for rac'g, $3200 or -~ TR~ll l::R Iii fiS r Id .f; -_ •·t 9/10-9/12 ~. d . 1 thru .C &. bag. Make offer. _.M!Onalit -1 .. __ t eA•'GHAN _BEAUT, AKC. best offer, ~1--083 __ 1. it-)'DurseUer. Original sell· ' · ie ' • iuU•-, ....... .,,.er J"e'8lltf with min"Or. r.Ao .. u5 615-3598. .,.. Y "'U!i. ·~ O J" I••,,., .•• •-•7000 R-• .... stream sip<;, 7 N>mplty COME' SEE' BUY! $50. ''"12Ll I ~~=-~~:.::.~·~"~=·~·-~-~-•ppr<'ciatP-, 7 \\'ks. htalt 7moold ....,, 1•EATHER SI -t ,.., -..o;.,..,.,...,... """'"" ,,_. •I SILVER dollar lrce with M ' ' "' & oop, ._..,,, s ed for clearance wi00.$5000. ~uip. $900. J-18-00-W or B&clc of Warret1'a Magnavox BROWNING Lightnirlg 12 ga my $4] & craek home tape • 8-3842. 9/12 $150***537-8144 ofwrl. Gd cond, must sell BAY HARBOR t -"-"~'-17-0===~=~·• at 1714 Newport Blvd, CM. Mu1ic•I over k under. ivory aight, -•a.,..r. 536-302l. BOXER, 9 mos. male. Lo~.~ e ffiISH SE'M'ER PUPS S1695. 67>1393 or 531-5363 e .68 "ORTf·tl\'ESTE'RN e I I Pachymar pad w/ca5e, nr ..,. ~~ h'ld T ~ ho · C • 1425 Baker SI., Costa Mei;a '~ $5. $W, SIS Garage Sille nstruments 125 new, mint cond. s 3 5 O. WHEEL CHAIR e ~re~ 0 6"""yti. me;~~ AK • P CAT No. 431-6 mos old, Just So. of Harbor Blvd, & Jr Trav<'I T1'a!lr r TV's, Odd bits of tum, Fender Super R~ Amp 1cm-=.:";"='~· -~-~~~ Like new! $50 ~a~. Fo~n:n ~ey9":, * 892-5188 * fully equipped . Call San Diego }'r wy (714) Smull. Easy Towing Sterto. Rellig, File cabinet. Excelle11t cond. S250 132 W. Wilson. CM, Sp 25 'u l.J-IASA Apso, female, AKC. weekdays 11·2 pm. &Ta-0595 541).9470. • s:,:ia "* 616--7j88 545-5974, 558 Traverse Dr. *" MEN'S gcll club&, bag. 5 Beautiful little kittt'!-• wkl Must se:. to e -SI .. _., k l •··• I c::::::.:.:::::.. _______ f:,-7"""'7'7"ccc=== OM 646-4277 alt 6 PM &: ball $50 642-3414 RJ;".f1WQOO fence 75 fl s;-,o b .. ..,. 0 • ~ ~wvuu ee .....,.,., 10 x 40· MOBILE home fol' e l.l' CA a1 P trailcr·vecy . cart, s, • ~· t • • lack or gray. ?.1other 1,~ appreciate. 546-1260. slcepo 2. t 1 1 · Fender baseman tor sale 9am1pm. GOOd . you remove. Foor .Y . l th f ...-..i rent. Sept t.hru Dre only. c ean. nt• awning, hitch, SAT • Sun. 3 in 1 Garage furnace $20. 557-4849. -e.rs.J~h'ood"ss"',~,·. ·,~/ AFGHAN PUPPIES snoo. 837-7039 Furn Adlt Pk. •OA mo. jacks. &r I() appreciate. Sal'· Refr>g· . wficfo maker • Brand DeW $280 • neig uu• · """ U AKC .,~ "'7~"" · "°" S69' · t"19" Gecrg{' R.Oberts, 8.U-338.'i M11cellaneou1 l600 CARPETING, good coridfl1o n, •.JAN, .....,... """ • 7')' Sloop • 548-1406 •ft 4:30 :J. ,} v-,-..). $100. To)'S, clothes. wigs, r ·-; 'COCK-A-POO, Silver. l ~~ -\Vood keel boat, SleefJf; 2. kingspread. record players. FENDER TELECASTER * AUCTION * 2' yard s: $20. Large creacn. yrs old. Like~ children, Horses 1130 Make oiler. 837-7039 •MOBILE Home 8x40' air ·5s NIMROD. Dclux<'. Sips 6. 579 W. Bay. CM . AlmO!rt new 1.a $.3Cl 646-13:lfl needs home w/fenced yard. I ~.::::.::::_ ____ ....:::::1:::=::c.""::;,-,,..,.,..,=..:.:= I cond $1800 or •best Oner. S1ovt", i«box, drn·g table. PATIO Salt. lo.iapledin\bl.4 548-9337or646-5630 Fine Furniture :\ ANTIQUE ll'llnk . .$20. 557-4031. 9/14 QUALIFIED HORSE *Hobie Cal.14 * Call9ss-tt89 ,s='9=3=·~"'~"'='='i6=.=====I ehrs. chain M.W, J'.lt'OPllne sr. c1...,,e1 Guitar & Vox Auclio~ :~~~~;, p M Grnle :75•<64ec2 . .!a78 \ LOVABLE part· Si am e se TbRAINak. ER ajvail •. Experl:d in SaiJ.~ ~~~ cond. Yell ''FORE & SURFS UP!·· Truck;~-9500 tanks. Wa.rdrobe drs. elec. •mp or.ne. Both tor $95. -v • , • opener., . -•a kittcrui, 1 male 2 female re ing, umprng, reS11-·1-~~-==--~~=---~·I 24xj,j, 3 br, 2 ba. Adult --"jjir,ijjjijiiiiiiinii roaster, mlsc:. Sept U-13. JO. Call ~1543. Windy's Auction Barn MOV. Sac. 5 New Snat'!k 548-1009 9/12 age. polo. etc. 548-2988 Balboa 201 fixed tffl park. Easy terms. 53&-0321 " S. 2156 Visla Dorado, NB DRUMS, 1\111 set, Lud\\•igs, 20751,t Newport., CM 646-8686 VeMing Machines on loc. 4 PUPS, sni. mixed breed. GENTLE 4 yr old: 548®2 1970 OEWXE 24x52, 2 Br, 2 ' I 1 I I ' * SALE·ffi riSf' '"'in beds, & cymbals, Xlnl rond, S375. Behihd Tony's Bldg. t.1at'I. Orange Cl'lty. 833-1172 2l89 Pacific Ave., C.M. 'i Arab/% Qtr horst matt. COLUMBIA z. '70, many Ba, dressing rm, lndry, chest or drav.·ers, desk, nite 64&-4162. STOP & SWAP BICYCLES, 1·3-10 iqxt . New &12-0116 9;12 $3.)(}. * * GtG-3142 xtras w/slip. ST;iOO down. awnings, patio. 968-6158 stand~, l:twn mOWf'r & CONN Directcir Cornet. good 5~~101 & usOO, trade in old bike. 3 K' "" APPALOOSA • \\'ell trained A!iSUme loan. 8l2-0561 ·'· _1 5., .. , H •1 _K_,. . ...-c. "-'t ... ".· •• "·t ''''· C'l , 1uens .. months 2 loving . .1 t ~-Motor Homes -is ""6er. ~~ 1 1... u .. · .. vuu11lon, ...,;.., ""' .... :>-9393. 2013 Newport Bllld, c .a1. ·""' '-"" " home 1 female 2 male gelding. Beauli u mar .... oa.,· •MALIBU outrigger. ts·.1 ~.:...;__.;.;;;.;c;_ __ ,.~ • Harbour 8'1~93.'U art S pm. (nexf 10 Tony's Bldg t.1al,) * 70 yards nscd shag l'arpel, ~-.48-1009 9112 81~ }TS. $225. 67:J.-4().'>9 hinged ann. w/trlr. $49j M:ini bike I 1aperflex ski/ TENOR Sax: Gd, l"Ol'ld , Gd. Used furn; Stoves: Refrig's; beige, $3/ya.rd. Gentle Riding HorMI Xlnt example. &12-4;)94. 3J' GREYHOUND BUS: I I I "' ~1, COCK·a-poodle puppir.lt tm-washer/d!'Y"T -aquariums/ case. Brillhart mouthf.l lece. & Misc. .,........,., 10 good home. Call after 12 968..2918 or 549-1940, Paul COLUMBIA 22-Two yrs old, IUl'lboa1'ds~88!H. 2160 E. _!=1=40". "51&-9=='="===== "Ir v.·e 0011·1 have v.·hat you MOVING r.tu~t Sell : Obi bed. 00011 613-Taotl 9112 TRANSPORTATION fUlly .'"quipped. See to Conversion. Sips 6-8. 3,000 Watt power plant. 250 Gal wtr/lanks, 9j gal holding tank. Color TV-AM/Fl\I Stereo 1\-tulti·plex. Ta p e deck & record player. Fu!! bath w/tub. Ovr $12,500 invested. Bst. ofr. or wlll trade. 826-945.) ... Ocean Blvd. NB. --wan!, l\'e'JI get II for you" Sear'!t FrosUcss Ref ri g , .o;c:;:.:;::..;:c.::..:.:::...:.;:;;_;."::l..'.''~PP~roe~•~a~"~·~-~~22~.;_--~INS Galore? Prtbl P ienos &. Organ1 1130 K'""'NMORE ivasher, ...-..i \\'/icrmaker. Etr. 557.3391 cun: btk male doi: needs Boat1 & V•cht1 9000 BEAUT 52" 8·meter Sloop, .. ' •M ft....... child~ love, doesn 't bark ·----------1 TV, Furn, Misc ilem.<1. Smne "ONE ONLY" SALE ccnd. S45. Apt s i i e ~l'16-!l642 9112 $17,50). Term11. Slip T·38 1970 GMC l'\U, J10me ttte. 511 Jasnlinc, Nf'w & Ul'ied Frig\dalrt. pretty $75 Ga!i M isc. Wanted 861 FREE Oceanside. 7141794--J&t:i. Cdi\-1. ,.~ri/Sat . 9.4 _PIANOS :17" range, pcrlectly clean 0 .GLASS Bottl<'s for' salvage. GARAGE 11ale: So ra. chain;, ••·--t s · 13IVI $45. Baggagl', hauling or LARGE fam ily w-"d Jikt" to J'.{O()(I for youth. organization, Power Cruisers 9020 1500 PICKUP WITH CAMPER ...... """"'"or pine, ••· .. · "" "" 516-m7 9/12 dinette sci. much misc. Sat. ?>,'ell' KIMBALL Console $699 lawn mo1ver trai1Pr ti. :< 5' buy a refrigerator. Sun. 910 4, 4612 Seashore-. KIMBALLC ...a we JJ .b\1 , SIG;i, 2U<f 64~7 1 Small male terrier dog N.B. 6To>-8089 OR~~~g····· $195 Continental, 0.1 ----------1 with t'!Ollar 10 good home TI-JOMAS Organ •..••• $179 NORCQLD 1.5 cu. fl . JIO &1&-1923 9/12 HAMfo.10NDChord "A-1" $299 Pe-rl'-"Ct for bar or camper, FREE TO YOU l Silver laby. 1 pul"e blk HAMMOND Bl ...... $1995 Vfl'/I/, AC/DC rf'fr i g. ----------1 mitten toed 5-6 mag, old 8100 LUXURIOUS electric range, u.ged 4 mos, 40 .. v.·hile, cost includea bench, df'livery & $385, S a c r i f i c <" $225. warranty • • • Many other Luxurious Frigidaire. u.-d Bargains .•. tevtral mos. Large Iretttr MUST BE SEEN! below refrig. alone. coat • ALSO • ~'Tfi. perfect. Sacrifict 2114 "l"AMAHA • KThtBAU.. Q>1111nental. CM e THOMAS KENMORE lvashers & KOHLER & CAMPBELL dryer~. Cold!pol ttfrig's; COAST MUSIC f"reigh! dainaged. N to 1l·, N.EWPOr:T 6 HARBOR lull)' guaran!tt<I , rt'ductionl'i Cosla Mesta * 642-28.51 IC $80, PhoflC' 962-77~1 Sea.rs Aug. Hrs 01'\ly 10-6 M&I Rot"buck Co, /11lan1,; al BALO\VIN ACROSON TC Magnol ia, HB Lilc:e new $680 CE tttrig 14 cu ' d~f. 2 dr !op 673-7894 alter 1 lrff-zer L/H dr. Pelul pink, PJANO..MOBILE SIZE llkf ne.w-$125. (:E por1 Lll<E NEW! $300 dlabwulw!r ~ CE 18" po1·1 &16-9792 TV $50 All In perl. cond. 'w~·u~RL=rm:===R""-m-'-,~,~1,-,.-,-,-,,.., 9'8-4507. xlnt cond. $5.'iO. St+. an 6-prn N'l."W/Used appliance~ & or wkndA 1I6 "A" 3Clh. NB. T'r.11 All g-ua Tanteed . •SPINET 111alnu1 Grand ~ap'1, 1815 Ntwpon, C)! Co t """' -· pl.1no -2 yn. x hi cond. .,,.,.., '00 S•l25 9f;&.-~48. FRJGlDAUlB Eltt' dryt•r, ,;,,.:,..,~,,::_,:... ___ _ xJnt cond $40. \\'cdgrv.-.,od \VUr{L.fTZER iiplnet JUIUIO. ..... dryer, roocl rood $2l (':\:ft':lltnt condition, 2 yr1 old ~j • ~72 S500. 4!M~ $j -&Uii, "'~ • LEAVING fOwn! J7' GE BALDWlN ACROSONJC rthit • WJtop fr e fl I c r . Like new $495 P'r'otlfnlt. Uted 3 mos $2$0 67""'1-4422 .. 615-(i()GO l ;.M;,;U332:,;:::;;:,· =-=;;--:-= 1 e Gulbraneoo Piayt-r piano ANT IQ U E 11;all hunt: "1lhtlul motor $450, Call JN!ndulum clock, Strlkes the1~~="-·,;;!S;,,1 5;,,·=-~~~- hcNI' k l•ll hour $300. BEAUTIF1.JL t1.•a/nur E\'t tcll fW2--29J1 spintt piAnn, pvt ply, $500 SF.RVE.l. ias T'f!(ripra1or, * * S45-Q60 h'ttttrlict makrr. S l 0 . ntE QUTCKER YOU CAU... ~~ $10. Call ~7292. THE QUICKER YOU SELL Perfect lor 00.r or camper. SUPER friendly lamily rat. S.16---449:\, 897-5480 ~112 $110 2 Ea. Ftndt"r .12" (Ill champagne & white \\•lth SC spe&kers by Jensrn $40 t•agi?, water container. O'ITY Cocker mix 1 yr. gd bo1h. 892-I573 \1•hr<'I, :l02 Vic!ori11 $1. \\'il h kids, !ld~ ho m r 01 9/14 ~7-:148C 9/12 ALVIN Sterling, grapefruit & bullion spoons. cocktail_ & lc't!' cream forks. 8 each. Monogran1mC'd; s cj u a r e piano. linens, Franciscan JIOUery. I Pr i n1ro,•I , rurkey router. fi73-600.l. JIAMMONO organ: MOL C· 102, Ch<'rrywQod ronsoll'. Llk<" J')('\\'. 2 <:rpts-11:rn/gld. & !\1isc. Gamge sale type ltems. Stt nl 432 Catnlllion, CdM. or 67~102 TELEf'UNh.'EN lti , "'i 1.un/fm I !\\'/JlhO!\O, 1 \ g h I \Vllinul l'Hbll'll'l. ST.l, ,\faple doublr bed $-10. Z<'n1tti TV 135. &MHI06.i aftrr !1. 356 A Pof'sc.he. bumPf'r, Pur· isc Delight! N'ver bttn ding. ed $7S. ~nmnre 2 ~P. 1vuh· er. m. 81 1s, 548-840-t af1 6 PM. MINI\ ~role, 11u1u111n h1u:c, luxoriou.11 skins $1000 value, s:tn or OfJ'. !lli.~2o:i:i ART SA LE. prit"<'S uri 10 S'lO. 10121 f orn•J<tal Dr ltunl Bch. 962-9811 FREI-; to good homt"· Springer ispaniel femaJe, liwr &-\\'hitf', !ipayl'd. AKC. 5 )'ears' old. fl48-379-t 911] S:\1, brt'ed blk Ir \\'ht. fox lt'rrier & tan chihua.huA. 6 rno. good \\'/Ch i l drrn. Adol'tlblr 540--0111 9/11 2 Tame tcn1alr cage bla<·k & 5·JG:ti441 1·a ts \\•llh 1\1 h i '('. 9/12 BEAUTIFUL. Crntlt- paJ1 Siame.llt', &-ek." ho1nC", call 673-4169 killr11 loving 9/12 rR.EE lo qualified homC", '.\ & -" n10 old kil1e1111. 1\'ilh · i;hots. Liltt'r bo.'< trnd. ~9-1846 9/11 3 GUINEA pigi;, I nlOufif' I han1pster. All to j!:d homCs. CUTE l\itte11s-i;on1e llu ff)I . 1110,ke good Pf'ls plcai;c call \Vil! hf' good mousl'ri<. :>18-2951 9/Jl 548-4(ilj 9/U AUSTRALIAN I G f' r n1a 11 BEAGLE, l yr, Gcod Shepherd pups free to good \"I chlldl'l'n, Mt1le. Ousticte homes. Diane Wieed altt'!f 7 dog, 642-0016 9fl1 p.m. 968-7019 9/ll TIGER kitlens fi 1\-'k.~ n111J1? &!..ACK short h;ll.rrd lr.rrif't". \\-'f:aned Ii box traillf'd. ff'n111Jf'. 6 moH. Vtory nk't' 546-1570 9/lJ p r-t . lfou s ebrokl'n , 2 'W-Siamf'~ kiltr rt11. blk &1Z~9S;12 9/12 1v/1\'h1 !Ot'j !· 11hi~krrs. BORDER Collir/Shepht'rd S.1&--J:l.~ 9/1 1 f<'nu1lr 11 11"\0S, G d Si!.1.hLL black r~rrier round \\'/children &1~2832 9/14 vie. San1a Ana Ave. bl '.1'11. 6 \Vk old klltel\5, blue><f'yes & 20l h & 21st SL ~2315 9/ll pllfll)' IM\lned. :"1&frJ68 9/14 1 YR. old S amoyed fREB to goo<t ·home killena. n?Jrii;tered with pape:r.s . 1622 Baker St, C.M. 546--4188 545-6817 9/11 4 BABY & 2 adult rabbits, 2 Black 11' J black k white grey or u'hilt'. 646-9<MO 9111 pllpplto~. llll f e: ma 1 e , P ET Rats, Call JIMfer: 548-11304 . 9/1·1 lKITrE~s 6 v.k~ old. I blk k RT._.., l!lript'd. 538-8493 9114 Oassi!it!d •ds • G(Z..5673 ~~l 9/12 ADORABLE stl\"1' 1niniatu~ poodlro f"ll'di.l!T"r to • lovin~ family til.>-6319 9111 DODGE Travcc 27' rielu:-:e 1967 All extras it~! radio- telephone. Xlnt oond. $1000 Bas ic boating cours e SACRIFlCE • 24 ft cabin offered to the public cruiser 18.:;: h.p. big Chrysler by the Balboa Power Marine, Just pa i nted Squadron. s a j t as thmout. Perteet shape all arouTld. In v.·i1ter l"JO\V, well as power boat-Red~ prict' s2100. call ting taught. Starting aft 7:30 p.m. 493-3996. ;v:~ ~~~·da~ep~. i 7~ 2.l' Unifiile cruiser, 215 HP. cir mftke offer 833-2079. 291. cnginr, hra.!rr. dl'hr.l'e 30' Dodge bus, 95% conver!. cab, (ibc1·~Jasl Urt'~ with 10 motor homti. Sips 6. All 8 foot cab over King ol facil. 540-8059 btwn 6pm & Road C11n1Pt'r. Stove, re[rig. 9pm. cralor. ZO gaJ. \~·ater ~ank, natural \\'OOd \\'ilh lots of for 13 Weeks At New t>lec head & \11ater, S-S M ini Bikes • 9275 room. • • radio, direct finder, ~lee :;;::.:;..:;::::.:. ___ .;.::;:1 $3295 port Harbor Y a ch t eompass. r-lc. ~adcd! Cash 68 'BONANZA Mini Bikr. ,j1:. Club, 720 'Vest Bay price S4500. ~46-29 4 8, hp Licensed for i;tl"t'E'!I~ Avenue, New port MS-9511. APPl'O''cd s]):lrk afTestrr Be a c h. Bring note. ,f 14 ~4· SKI Boat : Glas~ over ..:S:::J25=':..· =633-3,;=c:':,'7:::6 _____ 1 book & pen c i I first \\'OOd. 40 H.P. Johnron * MINI BIKE $80 * Sr·ri11I SST! I UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE nite. Any questions Electro ~!art. Z ietTian 642-0064 caU 673·1855. trlliler. HDrrires. $4.10. _ _ 2350 Harbor Blvd. ~-'-'-F-'-R"-'E.:.E_l---1 67~7208. Motorcycles 9300 Costa l\-1eAA ~·10-:1640 11' Cabin Cnuser, 7j HP '6-1 j;'QRD Van. ~1nll. 1t:(' ho.'<. • Johnson. Fish or ~ki. xlnt 1967 YAl\1A1--IA Trai!maisr1>r :<tovr. \~;ilrf. r rp\, rwineled cond. 'l'rlr. slip. 61:Hi655. 100. Xlnt conrl. Xtra big k insu!nlcd. IOI)[ drawers. HUNTINGTON BEACH 20' CABIN Cntlser -Glasis, til't"s. Call 83i-88j2 .l'O!' \\'Ork_ & ra:i:~~rig, :d n'I POWER SQUADRON'S OOl-p v , 85 Johnson. tr!r. 50CC SUZUKI Dirt Bike t'!Ortd. $99J. 6~2-.~~·1· BASIC BOATING S2.<IOO or best oUer. 962--2159 Good cond, Good beginners e '6~ forrl 1:z ton e COURSE -bike. S9.l. 962-4356 \1'/delu)( 8' shell camricr. Huntington Be•ch SpeedSkl lo•tt tOJO 66 HONDA Scrambler 30:l Sacr111cc $915" * :136-3046 High School '6' CHRIS CRAFT Big tires. Xlnt S32j. l62G '6& Ch!.'vy Vnn. \vhilc w/ Room 12," 122 •:;a~·~n~t•;,:,';";'·~C;>~t~•;"'::.:'--·I .crrt'Y lh!r nor, clron '""", 1 CONtaJr 18' .l>'lberglass. 150 • .,.., St•rting Sept, 14 end TIP. V-6 e_ng., \v/Ol\tC out. 1962/6.'i().BSA Chop~r. Jullt h1111~d $1:~·1(1. ·192..31-17 ••ch Mond1y throueh drive, vinyl iop. Al! & sklc SG00.00 '61 r O R D S up e. r November curtains. TN"-nee trail<'r. •:HS-'.>167"* Van-.11.u!omar1c . Xln! ,..,nd, ti FOR SALE . LEASE Likt-II('\\' conrt. Prlcrd tor 6j(I Trfuntph ChopJJl:'r ~~I. lo 1111 lr11i;:r _ li73-?i6.\J. OR CHARTER qu ick sal~! C11.ll &44-2717. Rl'bollt. Silcr lfi(t ! $.).j() '717 FORD 1.. Ion I'.U . 6i3-7637 11 /!nrn. ti .. ,t· ''''"k $It' $4-$5.000 Do?.11, 5 yrs balantt, IS' lb,)itoncrafl Ford 406 c '' ..._ ... · ·1· 41'." Tlybridge WhttlerCruls-IJ"ipower, vclvei drive, tut! • '67 Triumph, Cherry. l.ots -;:':";;';;;'"";;9;:260:=::::::::::::--I e.r, SI~ 8. Comp1ettly lmtrumtnl&, r.nclostd of chro~. Musi sacrlllct. • • rcconditioood lhroufhout, e:nc1ne. J>.1nt cond. $4500. Sell or trade. 646-,i98J. "1970". MINT CON D. 213/69!f.-0464, * '10 Honda S.-90, 3 mo old. >.'TRA~ PLUS! "Pi fake otter! 15' SKI boat. 1 n b 0 a rd . Fabulous roTld. Days 539-3978 £\tea A ...tc. E:xetllent for lhe casual S7l5 Urm. &fti...67&1 ends 893-M{l5. s,kier or fisherman. $300 or 1-IONOA 12Zi. E x C'~ 11 en t e CH RYSLER intxt / culbd. BeJll oil~. 213: 633-7738 C"Ondlllon. S32l. Af!er 5 • '68 rul'l!'lbou1 \1/r.nnv1, !Of'· Iii° Clu:J ~kl boat l'o'/trlr, nu J.W:ll Z.it7.ito, Dana Poinl J"e"· hfl. n1n~ & loolu likt bi' lirc1. boa! nt\v l y •'&I Yamahe Enduro nt<111. 49+.Q . fll.iltlfl!. Alt!\: l3t~7~. l.'iOc~ F'u l! !l\7·11~12 .. I I I " T T s, • Tt • ' b • • d 0 • c e Lo I fi . ., N p c. VI , " y 4! VJ T In TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ~ TRANSPORTATION Trvc,_k.;.s ____ ,_5-'00 C•mJl!!'_s ____ 95"'20 '6 7 International Scout .f·Whei!I drlY<!. 'R&.H . Fun In the sun! VtUt..!IGIJ. $1888 MIKE McCARTHY BUICK '68 CHM PICK UP Long Bed, VS, J\lust sell~ dlr. rt4710AJ \Viii take trade or finance. 494.7744 '64 ~~ Ton Ford P.U. 4 spd. New tire~. Xlnt cond, $1000. 1967 1_P_h._S<_S-_7_63_2. _____ 11953 %. T builtin camper. J}rtuµort jl111µorts --------I St.;vc, sink, ice box, car. Jeeps 9510 pcting, panelling, bed, ne\v Paint. Xlnt condition. 3100 W, c:oa.t Hwy., N.B. DESERT OR SAFARI '69 * 5'15-7245 * 6f2·94t'6 540-1764 Toyota land c1~iser sof~ '.OP HELP! Must sell '40 Chevy Authorllfrd ?..IG Dealtt 4 v.·h dr, moving wcifice wooden camper truck, sips 5 e "64 SPRITE -Xlnt cone!. S2200. S48-0044 Xlnt ('Ond. New eng. $·150. New paint & top. $700. 1966 FORD Broner 4 whl dr. Ask for Mike aft 5, 642-3053. 673-4807 after 4, AIL NEW ENGLISH FORDS NOW lN STOCK DRASTICALLY REDUCED TO CLEAR LARGE SELECTION TO CHOOSE FROM 1 Theodore ROBINS FORD 2060 Harbor mvd. ....... , ............. -'~ - TRANSPORTATION Frtd11, S.ptembtr 11. 1970 DAILY PILOT :n: TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION i'UNSPORIDION lRAHSfidRTit10fi -· ·--9600 lmpertod Autos 9600 lml'!rtocl Autos KOO ~~od Autn tlOO lmportocl Autos - 2 Door Hardtop, 4 cyl., 4 speed, Radio, Heal"°, Bucket Seats. lXEP 1831 $1795 BILL JONES B.J. Sports Car Center 2833 Harbor, C.t-.1. 5404491 '67 850 Sport Cpe. KARMANN GHIA MERCEDES BENZ MG ~ $795 '67 XKE Roadster BILL JONES B.J. Sport.a Car Center 2833 Harbor, C.~t. 540-4491 4.2 liter. Conver?ble, 6 cyl., '67 ?>fercedes Benz, 2S() SL 4 speer!, Radio, Hettter, Sedan, power 5tttrtnr, 1 Bucket Seats. IVAL 907) O\Vllef low mile31e, TSP $2499 4S8, $3,695.00. JIM BILL JONES SLEMONS !Ml'ORTS. µi B.J. Spol'ts Car Center W. \VARNER. SANTA ANA. 283.1 Harl>or, C.M. 540-4491 OPEN EVES. & SUN. '69 M.B. 230 -Xlnt cond. 4 1pd. AMIF'M/SW radio. Pvt Pb'. $3900. Cl13l 941·29.10 MG--'67 MIDGET MK Ill ~ ..... .,,. ... ~. 'Bucket Se.ts. 1100 AME> $1095 BILL JONES B.J. Sports Car Center 2833 Harbor, C.M. 540-4491 '63 M~B 4 speed. wire wheels, radio. ·""8. HARBOR A'iERICAN 1969 Harbor Blvd. .....,., ............ -&¥ ~~ NEW ;DGET $1"5 lUll aa If C...,., W) 8Q3. • 537-NEW-USEO.SERV. ~ MG Soleo, Servi< ... -lmmediat.e ..Dtltfto, AllModU J1rtU t',': i Jl111µ l' ! 1 ·:, l"'f!Ortocl C•n 9600 Imported Autos ·~.w COSTA MESA HONDA s:u Sand tireis.. Xlnt l'Ond. *1970 VW Camper -fully '62 SPRITE raodstcr 837-5548. •=~-------I equipped, pop top. Xlnt $·195. or best offer. '42 Willy's. 4 \1'hcel rlrive, cond, 11395. 546-2568 *~9400* Cos!a f.fesa &t2-0010 4 cyl.. 4 speed. Rildio, Heater, '62 XKE ROADSTER Orilll'J(' CoLJl•ly'~ L,1 . g.-st 5,.1, rt.011 N• v. & U ~··d r.'r'(t·d···· r . .,011 hubs. xlnt cond. $1050 or be!! offer. 531-5726 --------Dune Buggies 9525 BMW FERRARI 9520 '70 Dunebuggy Authorized Dir. FERRARI Radio heater (94351' Sales • Service • Parts N'iWpart Imports Ltd. (Ir. VW 1970 Campmobile like '$]695 P.LL MODELS TO ange C::ianfTa eJy autbor- rte"'· comp. equipped to CHOOSE FROM ized dee.Jer. camp, best otter. Also '69 ~ ,..,__..__. • 2800 Cpes in stock SALES-SERVICE-PARTS Yamaha Endure 125 cc. ~ •Immediate Delivery 3100 W. Cout Hwy. 492-2571 2100 Harbor Blvd. 645-0466 Sen.'ice Monday 'till 7:00 P~t Newport Beach 1'v"A°"N-, °"w'"°aJ"'k-.,.in'""'6"°2 -=Dod'""i:e-,-t· ---5=9=9=5---Sat 'till Noon 642-~ 540.1164 Ton, 3·spcl, auto. perrect for 1969 DUNE BUGGY camper. $900. 962-6322 or 64~5278 CABOVER 6' camper. Will tit .Ranchero. $200. 833-3349 ffot Coivair Engine. Radio, & automatic, Priced to sell. DEAN LEWIS COAST IMPORTS A"lhorized Ferrari Dealer or Oranie County Inc. 1200 W. Pacillce Coast Hwy {Across from Balboa Bay Club) Bucket Scci.tt. •VOP 263J $795 BILL JONES B.J. Sports Car Center COJ1vertible, 3.S Liter. 6 cyl., 4 speed, Radio, Heater, Bucket seats. <UJC 515) !!833 Harbor, C.M. 540-4491 - $1099 BILL JONES Jim Si emon ; Imp>. V\1,1111•'' /'. f/IJ.tl 51 s~nt.iAn.i 5·164114 '68 850 SPYDER B.J, Sports Cu C.nler "10 Convertible. 4 cyl., Radio, 2833 Harbor, C.M. 540-4491 Mercedel al250 C. full! power, lactory r, sun ftlO, Heater, 4 gpced, Bucket XKE '67 Jag, 20,IXXJ act. mi. sold new $9.100.00 Now (X1'G 274l Ab&olutely perl cond, Must ;s,995.00, No. 12000044. JrM $1495 sell, leaving country, Make SL.EMONS IMPORTS, 120 BILL JONES ""' o!r 546--0281/54S-541.2. w. WARNER, SANTA ANA B J Sports C.a Ce t 1964 JAGUAR XKE OPEN EVES. A SUN. 283.1 'Hartior, C.tll~ ~91 5,000 mi. ovhd eng cust int 1956 190 SL Rd11tr-:red wfblk FM mlsee bst or. 1014 Bal int. Xlnt running, new NEW FIAT Bl. No. 2 radials. $1600. 646-T::iOG. 1970 150 SPYDER J AGUAR Mark X, Every 1959'BLUE Mercede's 220 S. e .AIR c:eo\ID ,IDHT l"GIMI • f'RONT WMtll e•rv• e '0Wlll: ASSISTl!D Sl!l.111• AOJUSTIMO •llOHT Dl$C •lAklS e MAXIMl,tM Sf'l'IO 7S Mf'M e U,. TO .. Mii.iS Pill: OAllOH e P"OUR·•ASllMOlll. I DL ''°"" s1395 1966 Harbor, C.M. .. .. _ 642-0406 • 5464529 TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT ADS Ali colors to choose from. possible extra. pert e ct xlnt. cond. $1300. C & 11 $2335 + Tax &. Llc, gpecimen $.WK!. 4~1702. 6T:>-3.185 , .... 11• MN Ctr ,,..,., ... ~ T ..... Tn a ...... Imported Autos 96001mported Autos 96001mported Autos 9600 How does Fiat do it for the price? Demo & Executive Sale * SAVE aasa NEW 1970 FIATS *1970 FIAT 124 "S" AM/FM Radio, Radial Tires, All Fial Equipment. #728992. SALE PRICE $1895 *1970 FIAT 124 5 DOOR WAGON Air Condi tioning, Radio, Radial Tires. Luggage Rack, All Fiat Equipment. #739847. SALE PRICE $2395 1970 850 SPYDER AM/FM Radio) Competition EX· haust, Radial Tires, All Fiat Equipment. Only 3,780 miles. #768BBf . SALE PRICE $1995 BIG MONEY SAVING SALE 58 Fiats To Choose From. All Models & Colors Available. Visit Our Hu9e New Service Dept. 16 Stalls Servici119 All Sports & Forei9n Cars Bill Jones' F I A T B. J. SPORTCAR CENTER 2833 HARBOR, COSTA MESA AU models to choose. --I .,:::69::.M.::er=-=--...,,,,-230-S<d-- C•lifornio Sport c... KARMANN GHIA 1ae1my Jr. xxz ••°:: 901 E. 1st, S.A. 542-8801 $3,995.00. JIM SLEMONS You don't need a gun to e "68-Like lli'!w • 30,000 ml, IMPORTS, 120 W , UNIVERSITY Ol.DIMOBIU Draw Fut when you place new tires. WARNER. SANTA ANA, 2150WIOlllYD-COSTAMISA~ All ad in the DAILY PILOT $1795 545-8906 OPEN EVES. &. SUN'. lmportocl Autos 9600 tmported C•rs 9600 Imported Cari Dot Sing Says ••• • "Ho Boy! You guys •re re1lly finding out we have No. I fine car." • 1'We pretty good guys •fter ·all." • ''We try very h1rd when you come in to see us." e ''Want to be n ice guy? Wo soon." IN • SALES • SERVICE• PARTS MANAGEMENT• ADVERTISING CUSTOMER RELATIONS AWARDED BY NISSAN MOTOR CORP., U.S.A. . ~ 9600 hnportod A-96001mported Autos 9600 --·- Datsun Quality Dealer Award For Outstanding Aehievement 18835 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 842-7781 540-0442 !1119 .................................................................................. _. ............. ~----~~~~~--~~~~·-~- LDAl\.Y PILOT FrldaY, Sfpltmb« ll, 1970 SPORTATION ' TRANSPORTATION rnTRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 1970 MUSTANG i 400f Jlonttop.11igll bucket 1ecrtt, color co~, 1;-!Mit..iwhllt•ldftall!V-.GT.tripo.. • c.1.0. -'*- (Seri1I No. 6517 ·S2599 . ._.., ... a uc. .Special of the Week · '69 Mustang 6 Cvl .. s1.nd1rd Trtnt. A1dlo I H••ftr. 19FOIT l43 1901 1970 MAVERICK NOT STRIPPED Y·I 52299 AUTOMATIC RADIO & HEATER '64 STUO. PICKUP I cyl,. 4 IP., lt/H, f't.S.195, $1899 70 vw $999 OUNE BUGGY '69 PLY. $1999 ROADRUNNER XTM·l33 $2099 lo ml., I c)'f, •llto ltfH, PS, lWTX· 1•11 cot. yellow 2Sll '66 SUZUKI $299 MOTORCYCLE ~J·l16 '69 TOYOTA $1399 CORONA LIC, (Xss-&74) '69 CHEV. IMPALA TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 'TAANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATIO" ;.;lm"'porled'-'-~-'"A-'_..;.;. __ ff00_1,1;;.m;.<eport!d~o,;;..;A..;._;;...;.. __ ff00_ 1 ~ A-9600 Imported Autos ffOO MGI PORSCHE SAAi THAMES '68 MGB GT '67 PORSCHE 912 Autlx>rbod Deal" Sa1es e Service • Parts White with black tntenor. &met Coupes in Stock 4 eyl., .C speed. ~o, Heat. ~M. exceptionally good Orange O>unty's Newest Dir. .... -,;~ (5'0 ZCP) l'IUUllllg. $.1295 COAST IMPORTS \ BILL-;JONES CHIClrlYERSOf•r -01 0;.~ ·g, c:.;;;;--., 1;.,. B.J, Sports Car C.nt.r VW 2833 ... _......__ CM O<An """! l3XI W, Pacific Coatt Hwy. nu>Nr, . ' ~ A-.. from 1970 HARBOR BLVD, ............. COSTA MESA Balboa 881 Club '65 MGB '61 PORSCHE "0'""ftiblo, 4 cyl. Engine, CABRIOLET ·~· Duckt:t Scats. ( 906) Hrrdtop, 1Ieaming metallic ~ $1399 silwr, with brand new in- llLL JONES rerlor, chrome wheels, o:a· dial tires, AM/FM radio, B.J. Sportl Olr O!:ntt'r Lie. WYW 215. 2833 H ....... C.M. -$2199 '63 MGB Convertible. 4 cyl., 4 speed, Radio, Heater, Bucket Beets. (AVR '157) $1095 BILL JONES CHICK IVERSON vw 549-3031 ::!:xt, 66 or fl cosrA MESA 1910 HARBOR BLVD. 6(2-0t06 • 546-4529 TOYOTA ITl§JY!OIT!AI DEMO •10 Corol.Ja • 3824 $1694 Check our deaJs 8 OTHER DEMOS AT BIG SAVINGS DEAN LEWIS B.J. Sports Cer Center 2833 Harbor, C.M. 54()4491 '60 PORSCHE Cabr!ole~ 1600 super, with bard top. New 1966 Harbor, C.M, &tS.9303 eoglne, ,..w c1u1ch, new '69 TOYOTA '65 MGB ROADSTER tires, new palnt. AM/FM; SI u· W 4 d n '·H •··t 1.k be a on agon. spee , ~ , ,..... 1 e new, can lll!en Lie ZSG 126 •• """ Harbor Blvd., .. • $15. 88 Excellent condition. wire wheels. (VNE 099). Owned phone 66-1982, 9am to 6pm by litUe old school teacher. PORSCHE "61 912. New Take tra~ or small down. radials. chrome whl!, AM- Will !in, pvt. pty, Dlr. Call FM Stw. New engine. Pat aft 10 am 540-3100 or $3900. 673-4530 d a y s , -'194-750.1. 673-2976 a.ft 7 '68 MGB GT. wws 235, '64 PO RSC HE .$1,995.00, JL'\I SLEMONS JM PORTS, 120 \V . 356 SC COUPE WARNER. SANTA ANA, Balboa blue, chrome wheels, OPEN EVES. & SUN. radial tires, concourse con- dition. Lie. XOG997 OPEL MIKE McCARTHY BUICK 15550 Beach Blvd. al San Diego Fr'YI')'. 894-3341 • 531-2450 '69 TOYOTA COROLLA White wit& black Interior. Lie. XWZS&J' '66 OPEL WAGON $3099 CHICK IVERSON $1299 VW CHICK IVERSON Automatic, radio, heater. U- ttn&! TAX065. $988 MIKE McCARTHY BUICK l~ Beach Blvd, at San Diego Frwy. 894-3341 • 531-24S} 1964 OPEL WAGON $500. Pvt pty. 4948660 PORSCHE 549-3031 Ext 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA vw 5'19-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '70 TOYOTA'S '67 HERALD 1200 2 door SC'dan 4 cyl., 4 speed, radio, heater, bucket ~ts (VOT 359). -$795 BILL JONES B.J, Sports Car Center 283.1 J-farbor, C.P.1. 5404et '66 Triumph TR4A, Convertible Roa.aster, TFS 446, $1,4 95.00. J[M Sl.EMON& JA1PORTS. U> \V, WARNE R, SANTA /JiA, OPEN EVES. & SUN. '61 TRIU1'1PH GT6, new tires,\ im maculate . Desperate! $llm or b!st offer. 536-4732 '63 TR3-New top, tires, Ir. clutcp. Good cone!. 644-0753 '00 Triumph Spitfire hardtop. TFA 35t $1.095.00, J™ SI..DfONS Lm>ORTS, 1ID W WARNER, SANTA ANA, Of.EN EVES. &: SUN. 'K'J TRIUl\otPH SPITFIRE '1 cyl, si>Orts car. $395. • * 642-3159 '63 TR4-A Convertible 4 cyl, 4 speed. ra- dio heater bucket seats. (\V44812J. I $1099 BILL JONES B.J. Spor!s Car Center 2833 Harbor, C.~1. 5-104491 VOLKSWAGEN '57 vw Sedan Creat transportation buy, tPV\V711) YOU MUST SEE IT IN PERSON AT CONNELL CHEVROLET! "THE LITTLE CAR THAT DOES EVERYTHING WELL" 1971 TEST DRIVE TODAY! E.G CHECK 'OUR SAVINGS ON ALL REMAINING 1970 CHEVROLETS. THEY MUST GO NOW! • NEW CARS • , • USED CARS , • , '69 9llT-Lo mi's, 5-spd, FM stereo, new radi&ls, Xlnt cond! $5400. 673-6132 9800New Ca rs My Dad Says •..• We're Out To Be No. 1 AIR CONDITIONED 7JDUSTIOSINQR~ND NEW 1970 DUSTER ~·2388 $80 TOTAL sso TOTAL DOWN MONTHLY 'AYMENT PAYMENT FOR ONLT 36 MONTHS ~ FREE 10 MINUTE D~~ CREDIT CHECK ~"'" ASK POR CREDIT MGR. TO ARRANGE PAYMENTS TO SUIT YOUR /:lltt.1 BUDGET 0 530·8550 I ' TR Im ' s l!X ff 187 I l 0 ' B1 h c I '&I ., ' ... •SA• ' cl• • , ' TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION - 9700 Used Cars 9900 Used Ca rs -·.;;._.;_ __ _ TRANSPORTATION -TRANSPORTATION - Imported Autos . 9600 Autos Wanted 'f~ANSPORTATION I TRANSPORTATION DAILY PILOT 3!) TRANSPORTATION ~ rrlday, Stptttl)btr 11, 1970 TRANSPORTATIOt< TR SPORT 9900 Used C•r• fmport.d Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN 9600 lmuorted Autos 9600 VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN ~:~P"e~~R. CAMARO CHEVROLET CHEVROLET ' : -~~--~·.1 : '68 vw Squa.reback 100', \rarran1y 1\VTI•' t71) $1 788 '68 vw 100" \\~~~~~ .... i ,.;. fully l'<'t.'OJ1ditln11t•d. \\\!Al U20+ Harbour V.W. Harbour V.W. l8711 BEACH BL. ~42·•1·135 :_ JIUNTfNGTON BEACH 1871 l BEACJI Bl,. li4:t44J:i HUNTINGTON BEACH Large Selection NEW VW BUG $55.89 pr. month $147.78 down includes tax & LiC. Open End VW LEASl l'iG AT CHICK IV~RSON 1~70 llA~R ~LVD. COSTA ~I ESA '66 V'.V F asl back . P.adio/heater. Ori gi n a I '65 vw BUG An1crlcan ni<lgs tl'idc rircs, 1;uslom tnetalliC paint w 'h tx·autifW lace \\'Otk. YPU. !lOI. Severa l other custo1nlt:cd V\V to choose front CHICK IVERSON vw 54~3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVQ. -0"_·~·-'-· _c_LE•_N_11 _"_ 0 ·, '69 VW Sedans 673-6120 REBL T. '62 V\V c n g . Complete. N>ady to install. $150. 673-4162 '67 l\Alti\,IANN Chin, xln'L If your .car IJ. extra clean. 'liG SS. 396 &"lo .. AM/f',''· ' • I t ... LATE '66 Spt Cpe VS 27.!"IOO '66 CAPRICE New tirt'S, bck." & battery. ~us lf'S, • discs, vinyl, console. · $1~50. 646-4286. BAUER BU ICK ~uuges, air shocks, $1750. mi, alt', 11 '8' p.h, 1 pr pl,Y :l-Ooor H.'r. S.S. Auto., radio, ; 234 E. 11lh St. 213. '·"~''·'IS O\\'O!'I', S1250. 67~ ... t:ki\O ,_ '56 V\V B f lt oud .,,.,.,...,,.. heater, llOWl'r ~toormg, • us. u seats g O>:sta ?ti:csa 54$.-7165 --· -------'&I Chl'Vy In1pala.4 s1xl, ne«ls bl k 1 coria. r'Uns \Vf!JI , $6-SO. ---'6!1 CAMARO SS 350. Grotto nll nor N'pairs. PQl\'Cr ·o l'~, f:icl!!!)I !,__' 612-05()4. IMPORTS WANTED blue \\'/blk vinyl r 0 p, ~'1111d.. vinyl top. Li~. Orange unties r /equipt. StOOO 493-3723 1395 --·------'"-~-'-"'-t RUii ~'01 TOP S UYER , . '69 CJ1EVY J\1alibu Convt $1688 BILL MAXE TOYOTA 69 CA~l~RO z 128-Red New tires, Perfect cond. 18881 ... h "'"'· •:iht"k mL M8'y .. tra•. •6<2-<431* MIKE McCARTHY fl. Beach. Ph. ~7.m Xlnt cont!. Pvt pty. 847-2388 ~ RF.ALLY sharp. rarr n1odel. \VANT late ir1 K Chiu, CHEVROLET 61 Chrv Nomad \Vagon. BUICK THINK Volvo or 8~1\ . Ex L'Ond ' Poirer $49j, owner fH6...13682 'VOLVO: only. _\Viii Y ca s h . '65 El Ca~1lno: 327 neiv eng. '59 Chevy sedan, 54~75."I. Ne11· pa1111 , tonneau rvr. running condi!1on, Sii ~lus1 Sac! 673'.-6613. $100 Arter 6 &l2-7fl90 VOLVO .. "FRIEDLANDER" Auto Leasing 9810 • '68 Capr i:e-5I1'1J:l >.:lnt rond. Days ~3-188 ; eves RAHE car -'58 Chevy sedan, dellvery-panel, \'cry clean. $550. 548-9762 1.:»iO B1•11('h Dlvrf. at Si1n l)icgo J.'1'\\'Y'· 11~11-.)3~1 -5..'11-2450 ' *'6(-i Clll::VY :\lalil.Ju.Xlnt· ' 549-2845. l'Qnd . SJ:lj(). \Vork 673-3360; home 494-4440 1 • , Of VW Campers, . Vans, Kombis, lluses, New & Used Immediate Delivery 'SB VW Original blat·I. finish \1•ilh 1.:ontrastjng t'\.-rl interior. Lie GBV710. $38 Down s::i. 11011'11, ,\,. S~»9.7S ror 21 n1onths. AP/l is 21.5% !olal lnicrest. $148, Total cash 11ric1• S7?.S. • 'G:1 VY.', rl'buil1 engine. good l'l.IJld.ition. Jll"W t.irE's. &st 0He1'. 49-1·~13 V\V '70 Bu~. 2400 n1 i. Beige-, undereoating. driven in EurOpt> 51 900. 64~78 PVf'S YES! 1961! Volks au1on1alic is only S1400 San101ians. Call 536-3107 HURRY~ Eight to choose lrom. $17j(} with automatic ·(YCY961l. All arf" 1.1nder ei H\er our JOO•;;, used car warranty or new car warrant)'! Harbour V.W. 1J1SO 8EACH (HWY, Jf) 893-7:-iGG • 537-68'14 NEW-USEO•SERV. ~All Mak•s-All Models 18711 BEACH BL. 842..4435 ==-oVOLVO-Automobile!! -Trucks HUNTINGTON BEACH "\Vhere Servire- CHECK this '63 Jn1pah1 ln XLNT COND. R&H. S<>e a1 2442 El1ll'n. C.M. ·a,1 CHl::VY Non1ad !or sale Jfar. blown rod, $250. Call af! 4 P~1 . &1;,...2154 1968 CJi EV. IMPALA * S1300. * 540-0093, aft. 6 P~t. 1969 CllEV Station \Vagon, Alr-Cond. $2575. Call 838-6342 CVC,!1, '63 I:'.lPALA: V-8/283 cng, 4 Dr-P/.'> P/B. R/H. Runs , • c:d. S275. 6•16-5::.i:ll. ( '6-1 CheVt"lle Malibu SS Auto "; trans, R/J-1:, lo mi, orig. ownrl'. $750. 644-23j6 aft 5 CHICK IVERSON vw :'"1'-:i031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA ~rESA CHICK IVERSON vw '6!1 V\V ~•·clan. l>t'1gc, F~I !'ad, Custn1 inl l'r1or. Xlnl 1-:ond. SJ7jl), ti7~-tl:i90. '69 YW Sedan S1111ru0r. ·l sp•.'ed, radio, heal· f'1'. (SVD :.::111. $1499 ·7D Denio. # 1 :1:~ !\ta kes the DHference" $2950 Orange Co., -Ne\vport Beach C:hrck our deals 1800 1'' Cpe for delivery. Overseas dcl Specialist. 4570 Campus Dr . 714·54G-3825 F' J..rnsc: 1969 Cont1n1'nlal 1 '6·1 V\V, Xlnl cond. :'.1us1 Sl'!l ' qu 1t:kly $79:'! ;.19-36..'>0, or 1 set• al 3017 Grant. C.M. '.'119-3031 l·:xt. 6G or 67 1:170 1-lAfIBOR BLVD. COSTA l\I ESA '69 RED V\V Bug _ hlal'k intl'rior. r/h. Good l'Qnd. Cll'ao. 51493. lil.J-ti915 BILL JONES r 18 mo. $175 n10. closed end, present mi's 11.000 n1i, Oaily; 546-44~0. alt 5: DEAN LEWIS 675-7377. 6116--9303 B.J . ~ports Car Cf'nlr r 2833 Harbor, C.l\1. 541)-1491 1966 llarbor, C.!\I, ---• '65 V\\I BUG * Going back to i;;chool * ssoo 673-9:>95 * : SACRIFICE '68 V\V, au!o, 1 • '67 V\V Bug, Exira clean. clran, Sl lOO. sunroof, fac stereo, $1250. * ~J !!J-jfj61 * 962-2131. $2795 1968 VW Ca111(X'r. i·adio, hca\£'1', 4 spt>ed, exlra clean. Lie. V\\IV 919. ~111~1 sr.ll. ·:,9 VOLVO: Gd cond. Bes! OUcr • •96t-190911t Used Cars WE BUY CARS DEAN LEWIS I I New Cars 9800New Cars Antiques, Classics 9615 9800 New Cars 646-9:ID3 $1995 1966 VW CAMPER 4 speed & ;iwnini:::s. n1ust sell SV H 7S'.J. DEAN LEWIS 6'1&.9:J03 '6.1 V\V Low m ilrs on rebuilt engine, ne1v clutch. new brakes. radio, perfect condition. Can be seen at 2089 Harbor Bl\·d, or phone G4:-rl9S2, 9am 10 6pn1 WANTED I'll pay top dona~ for your VOLKS\VAGEN today, Call and ask for Ron Pinchot. 549-3031 Ext GG-67, 67J..0900. Su ndia l r;:an1per \\'/l\1~·ning 1f'nt . Fully f'qu ip'd. $1500 or $5'Xl & 1·.o .P. 6-fJ-!S~:i ~ VW, SUNROOF • COOD COND 11: S800 "i !142-3148 '66 V\V SUN ROOt' Hiii. \\'ANTED: Classi1.· or an-2100 Harbor Blvd. {H5..()~66 liquc t•ar <'!ilhu~iasts to ,.7 CORVETTE Kl shar1• nil·<' shop S:: i;;lorai:::e '1 r£'ar c_i facilitic~. N.H bfJ.7,198, Sl20 Po~. Ir spol d1~ :,.JS.!i\71. brake 1 , 1 .7057 62 Rancc hci:o. 352 cng ;i orvair * l94!i 0\R\'SLER l:OUJIC $275. 548-9497. :'iii.000 n1i. Pcrr~'el l'Ql'l.t. I"'=::=:==:==== ~ •G7; .... s~;96• e '36 PLYMOUT\l PANEL TRUCJ< BUICK '66 RIVIERA * $.1~1713 * ----"'::.C=---Au1o .. R&H, ptl\\'(>t' s!rrring Autos Wanted 9700 WE PAY TOP CASH for used cars &: trucks just call us for free ostim ate. GROTH CHEVROLET Ask for ~le!': ~,anater 18211 Bcac-h Blvd. · Hu"ltington Beach 847.f.087 1.:::1 9-3331 & brakes, air. 1·hromc \\'hN!l~. Lit't'nSt' SYlt 9~1!1 $2388 MIKE McCARTHY BUICK J:'lj;J(l Beach Blvrf. 11! Snn Diego F l'\\')', 891-3341 -!"J..1l·24:iO '64 Buick Riviera 1~1adc1r. 10\\1\'.m+. $1495 WE PAY CASH ~ ~ :ll(l(J lla1'ho r Blvtl. li4:.-M66 FOR YOUR CAR '67 \VlLDCAT 4-dr hrdtp, full pw<·. '"' cv<>d. AM/rM, tilt '64 VV'I, Best offer, Ma.y be CONNELL "''hl, ne1v lire~. \Viii take seen at 309 Mesa Dr, C.M. trade, 8<16--6120. Ask for Dan. CHEVROLET '66 RIVIERA Xtra Clean. All 1968 VW with Sunroof 2828 Harbor Blvd. Po\\'f'r. Air. Fae <:stm inl. Sll.95. 675-6739 Costa Mesa 54(" .. 1200 AM/~"i\1 . $1.09:1 or bst ofr. """"""""""""""'""'~~~~~~~============:'..=======o======oo=..!.~~~~;::;;o:~~J 836--0S'8 ~==~~~­'67 BUICK ~kylatk convt. \TIAUElt~ BUICK1NCOSTA MESA _, :GUAR ?pe~£l Speci11izinc i• QUALITY , __ ,_ -· COSTA MESA BRAND NEW '70 OPEL KADETTE BRAND NEW '70 OPEL WAGON Fully equipped. 13 19 35747 ) Deluxe. Fully eq ui pped. 13 9929942 8 ) s223 BRAND NEW '70 OPEL RALL YE BRAND NEW '70 OPEc:--etlS KAOETTE. Fl.Ill y eqllipped. 1929297506 ) Coupe. Autom.!tic trd n ~m ission. !91923 2203 ) s2452 JAGUAR CORNER -ALL CARRY 100°/o 1,000 MILE OR 30 DAY WARRANTY ON POWER TRAIN ASSEMBLY-TIRES-BATIERY-BRAKES '66 JAGUAR 2 + 2 '68 JAGUAR 2 + 2 '68 JAGUAR XKE l ow milt•9'1', I owner b<t•uly wi!h only 21.000 miles. ChromP wire whe1l1, ••d;o, he .-ter. •ulom•lic fr•n1m 111ion. J111I imm•~u· l•le. !SYW808> A very h•rd lo !Ind mode! with ~ 1p1f1d l••n1mi11ion, ••dio •nd lle•ler, f•clory •'• cond:t:on1n9, duom~ wirt whe1l1. 81ut with blut 1,~1h1H inferior, l ovely c••. IXPG21SI Ro•d1ler, 8rili1h ldtin9 9•e1n with 1ued1 9r11n le•th1r inltrior. Vou won't f;nd on1 cle1nf t. 4 •peed, rtdio, he•ler. dnomt wirt wht eh. ( iUM9b2) $3295 $4195 $AVE Prestige. Cars at Sensible Prices '67 CONTINENT AL 1 Door h•<dlop. You'I~ iuil h11•1! lo '"" !hit o~• ln ,,.~llv b .. I ;,.~ .. ;1, F.111 pow~r, el.,c. h11•d •01! & r,.tlin.n9 p•u. 1e•I, '"~lo., ,;, tond., etc., '"''· V•ry low miht19t. I YWS6Il 1 $2895 '69 MERCURY M11tqui1 1l•t:on w,.9 c~. Full powe• •nd ftclory 1ir conditionin9, 1tereo AM .FM ••dio. lotd~d'wilh ~I I equopm•nl, low m<l1•9•, I owntr. fi t · iory w~n•ri•v •~•;l,blf , i vWT79J \ $3995 '68 BUICK Sped w•go~ VS '"9 "' 1111lom•1'c h1111\m•u•o•1, r•d•o, ~ .. •ter, po,..~• 1!etrin9 •nd powe• b•11k1•, ~•nvl inle•ior. powtr l1il 91111 window, ft tlQry "" to.,d1t!anit.9. i Excellent Economy Cars ------- '65 FORD f11 irl 11nt SOO l>11rdlop Vi, '""'""''"lie, r•dio, ht•ler, po ... •r 1leeri119 & b•t~e1, i"'"'•'ul•i• co11d ition. j PIZ84S' $995 '65 MERCURY Colony p,,t w~9on. VS, .t11lom1tic. r•dio, ht•I••. pOWdt 1l1triri9 & br•kt " ,;, co11d., low mil1•9e, I owntr. {C.9bo'\SGI $1395 '66 CHEVROLET M11l1bu J Or H.T. VI, •ulo,,.•tlt., ••die, h111 l1t, pow•• ll•••i~9. low m:111. I VPW8J7) AM/F'.'vT. Air. Clc11n. Low book S\351'.l, will sell for $1300. Can finance. 675-4537. '65 Skylnrk. Bkls !;C'atii. til1 \vhl. sh;irp~ $900. Or lg- owncr. ~i:w.,_2754 '67 RIVIERIA, vel'y cond. 1n/sc!I $2•1."iO xtras, pvt ptY. 6'16-4569 '65 BUICK Elc(", ·1-Dr. &d. V-8. auro .. R&H . P.S .. P .B., r11('!. <1ir. J-:J R 6Tl $1488 MIKE McCARTHY BUICK 1;~);)(1 Beach Blvd. :1t San Diego Fr.vy. !\!}.l-3."WI -5.'ll-2~SO CADILLAC '67 Cadillac Sedan dr ViJI(', f ull [1 0\\'f'r, ra c tory :iir-<.'011<lition1n~. TEX 906, $2,!19:-1.00 .r1:-.1 SLEMONS JMPOHT S, 120 \V. \VARNEI:, SANTA AN A, OPEN EVES. t.,, S.;;,U::,Nc.. -~ CADILLAC 'tii:i' Sedan de Villr Xln1 r·ond. Guardian Main1rnunr·i• ~111ce n e w . $219i Pv1 ply. !162-0319. ·5g EL DOltADO, lmniac, full p11•r. air. ~!c rro, r verylliin,I;(! Beauti ful <.'Ond! $•MOO. 6·12-S062 1964 CADILLAC Coup c D eVll!f" $l2 5 0 . 1961 Co111 inl'nlf1I $27:"1. 67:l-1564 * '67 CAD CdV. inimrit·. Lonr!cd! Prv 11a1•ly, $3000. Call al! G. (ti 774-2097. 1970 Couf)f' df' VIiie • rully ·~uippcd . Very lo mileage $58!};1, ~{17-9&%. CAMARO CA~l ARO. II u g g c r. Orancc·. Low m i I e s . 'ZSTATE SA LE. See at Bayshore Rlchtlcld. 200 \V. Coast 111 ... y, Newport Beach, i\1akr offer In writing 10 Sccuri1y Pacific Natlon.'ll Bank. P.O. Box I 7 6 0, Ne1vporl Bt>at·h, 921lG3: or call 644..QI 13 t:"xl i U for• delails. Birl~ clo~e Se pt l•l1h, l'l ooon. '68 CAMARO Aulom11tl1'. f>O\\'Cr st~cring, )O\V mllOllgc l\VQD341) dlr. Snu11I dO\\'l'I will finance pri. valr par1y, 546-40J2 or 494-6811. '68 CAMAnO Convcr1ihlt, pWT' st~ .• auto 1r11n~. pri\• priy 51iu.1. vvzw1 71 ·1: 644-5173. THANKS FOR AUGUST e AGAIN CONNELL CHEVROLET SOLD MORE USED CARS AT RETAIL THAN ANY OTHER MONTH IN THE HISTORY OF THIS DEALERSHIP. NICE CARS! that's why. 100°/o 30 DAY GUARANTEE! that's why. HONEST DEALING! that's why Need we mention Bic;i Selection and Low Prices? Why don't you tell your friends you c;iot a good deal and after sole attention at Connell Chevrolet? A lot of other people did! Even Sale Priced Cars carry our full guarantee. 1969 CHEVROLET ~ TON PICKUP WITH SELF CONTAINED 11 Yi FT. CAMPER H eavy dut y thru-oul, shower, toilet , furna ce, air conditioning , auto. mafic trans mission, power steeri ng, radio, a ir leveler redr sho,ks, on e owne r. (28474R J '69 $3699 V.W. CAMPER On1 owne•, li~t new, R•.!io, 1lf r10 !•pe, ~•••1111 m;l t1, 1S l 9AGB! 20 Vans--Pickups. Good Selection '70 ~~~~~~=er~~1~i~9~ eutom•t:c lten,m:11ion, vinyl tool, •ir conditioning, ''"'"inin9 f•clo•~ 9u•••nt1,. i 460AOV I '62 '66 VOLKSWAGEN· S1ddn. Stick 1hift, r1d io end h1•ler, {055 ... SGJ BUICK SKYLARK 2 Ooot ~•rdtop. Rodio, h1 •lft, power 1l1erin9, autom•li,, f RUJ)65) CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546~1203 .. --· ··-· --.. ·---. ·--~ ----. .,_ -----..... ---. -____.. ________ ----.. - : 49 OAILY PILO Frlda.1, Stpt~ibtr 11, 1970 TRANSPORTATION fR(>NSPCR r,.TION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION RANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION BRAND NEW ----~,..,.., -~ '71 DEMONS ON SALE -NOW! I \ ONCE YOU SEE IT -DRIVE IT -PRICE IT --~OU'LL NEVER WANT A FOREIGN CAR .BUILT IN AMERICA, BY AMERICANS, FOR AMERICANS CLOSE-OUT SALE ON BRAND NEW 1970 DODGES 8~:~0 '70 DODGE CHALLENGER BRAND NEW '70 DODGE DART CUSTOM 2·DOOR 8~;o '70 DODGE CHARGER a~:: '70 DODGE CORONET R.T. •75 No. /Ot4JO OVER FACTORY INVOICE COST .75 No. 17ll l0 OYER 'FACTORY INVOICE COST •75 No. 115'4'4 OYEtl FACTORY INVOICE COST •75 No. 11021t OYER FACTORY INVOICE COST 5,000 BLUE CHIP ''Judi••'"' first .tnd you'll r.tceive 5,000 Blu• Chip S!.tlflp1 if yo~. buy STAMPS from rn• or ""Y oth•r dt•ftr. . "JUST 5EE ME FIRST" '69 CHEV. Y2 Ton P. U. 8' Bed, top free Money Back Guarantee & 10 Day Trial Exchange. 538 160. '65 CHEV. Y2 Ton P. U. Free Mon'ey Ba ck Guarantee & I 0 D•y l rial Exchange. C4 7966 .. '68 CHEVROLET Auto. Iran,., P.S., R&H. Free Money Ba ck Guarantee & 10 Day Trial Exch. VHB53 I . '69 PLYMOUTH FURY Auto. Trans., P.S., R&H . Free Mon•y Ba ck Guar. & 10 Day Trial Exch. TF894. CHEVROLET CHEVROLET CHEVROLET I want to thank all of you folks who hev• bought cars at Worthington Dod91 and I want to thank you for referring your friends and r1l11tives to Worthing- ton Dodge. You and your friends have made this one of the largest Dodge Dealerships in the world. If I can help Y,Of! in any wey, please drop in. Sincerely, Ca/Worthington NOTICE! If you are short of money for the down payment and need extended terms and very low monthly payments, bring your good credit references and come to Worth· ington Dodge and Sff for yourself how easy it is to get the financing you need. tBHiHI IHll 6D f!ll THiii ltl,16L t!l'H * MONEY sick sOIRINfEE oN EVERY usEo clR lo9ERfisEo * o"" ....... w•• .. "'M"' "'" I 'f<lll iv. llGI ~lleft_ Ylil~, ·""'"' ... cw~ lht .. °"'" pwiocl end gel all your "'°"'' lloc~. ., '66 CHEVROLET $795 '68 DODGE $1195 Auto. trans., P.S., R&H. Free Money Back Auto. tran s., P.S., R&H . Free Monei Beck Guarantee & 10 0.iy Trial Exc,h. RSB960, Guarantee & 10 Day Trial E)(ch. VS 502 '68 PLYMOUTH $895 '67 FORD Y2 Ton P. U. $1295 Auto. trans., radio, heater. Free Money long Bed. (457823). Free Money Beck Back Guar. & 10 D•y Trial Exch. 678880 Guarantee & 10 Day Trial Exchange. '69 PLYMOUTH .$1695 '69 DODGE Super Bee $1995 Auto. trans., P.S., R&H. Free Mon1y Back Auto. trans,, P.S., R&H. Free Mone~ Back Guar. & 10 Day Trial Exch. UWS430 Guarantee & 10 Day Trial Exch . ZK 165 '67 CHARGER $1295 '68 CHEVROLET %-T $1995 Auto. trans., P.S., R&H. Free Money Back Carryall 10 pess11n9er. 1420331 Guarantee & 10 Day Trial Exch. 601287. 9900 CHEVROLET CHEVROLET COMET --~--- '6!1 CAPRICE: Turbo, Fart/air. 350 HP. V-8. '.6.1 CHEV V8. rrhll cng. Ne\v 55 CHEVY 2 dr Black au!o, tr;u.,.,;. Gar:igc c<1r, one \1•/blal'k interior. New 301 pn,·. 0\1•ncr $:,j(I. :>4~190, C'nginr \\'/350 hi·pcrr can1, 837-6383. n~·11• b:-1ttcry & radkl!or. •65 Chevy S/S 4-spcl'd, radio. hearer, rrcsh pain!. tNQZ-59.1\. '67 CAPRICE WAGON 61 COMET \Vgn. New valve job, ne\v brakes, \Vhee\s turned, lune-up. need s mu!Oer $165 firm. 157 21st, C:'-1 Time for QUICK CASH Through a DAILY PILOT ~~~1:1~~1,;:1\\'i~~~; ~; '. Stra11 I seals. tinted glass, frnder skir!i;, nrw tires. S'Z77j or bs1 olr. 546-2019 DThIB-A-LINES. 642-5678 $1 ,395 e·st CHEVY: Good tires. r.1any extras $700 or Best ~---··• ,,,,,., _ _. __ .. R/H, air. Gd . Cono.. offer. :-,..')7-4982 before 10:30 I~ lnAHA1'14 $300. *** 644-2991 and aft 8:30 PM 2100 Harbor Blvd. 64.'>-0466 Daily Pilot Classified Ads Saturday -DIME-A-LINES! &turday -DIME-A-LINES! New Cars 9800 New Cars 9800 New Cars 9800New Cars 9800 494-8515 I HERE NOW Free Refreshments Frff Pony Rides S•turd1y & Sunday South Coast FORD-MERCURY 303 Broadway, Laguna Beach 549-3851 9-Pa.~s.. au10., po11•er slr., faclory air cond. Lie. UOE 008 $1988 MIKE McCARTHY BUICK lii:it Bca<'h Blvd . ;11 San Diego Fr.\'y, 89.\-3341 -531-2450 '63 Chevy Wagon 9 pass. Radio, heater, (JJU. 770). $895 ~~ CONTINENTAL '66 LINCOLN-X!nt con d, Leather, air. vinyl top. Sl87:J. &14-2859 aft 7. CORY AIR 2100 Harl}or Blvd. 64;;-0466 '66 CORVAIR 500. 2 Dr, 3 spd. 110 eng. R/H. ls! $400 2100 Ha1·bor Blyd. 6454166 l1tkes. MZ-7543 '65 CORYAl!l -=.=c =o=RY=ETTE== 3 spt'«i. radio, heater. Li· ttnse Number NGA liz.I $488 MIKE McCARTHY BUICK i.·1::i7JO &ach Blvd . at San Diego f'nv). 89 1·3.~4l -531·2•1:i6 '64 Impala SS Yel101v \\'ilh black interi<lr, V8, auto, dlr. tOTU7&1) Musi 1963 YELW\V fastback 396 engine. Radio. C I ea n . O\\·ner. 675-1285 COUGAR '69 Cougar XRZ. factory air, a u to m a 1 i r transmission, p<)\\'e1· steering. disc brakc:r1, 4,:;60 n1iles. 91"981-1540982. $3.19.:i.OO Jll\i SLEMONS IMPORTS, 120 W. WAR- NER, SANTA ANA. OPEN EVES. & SUN, sell. \Viii !inane.-private -------- party •. call 49-1-7744. I.ATE •Gfi !nip. Spt Cpc VS. Zt,;iOO nii. air. pg/pb, 1 pr pty o~·ner S\250. 675-1380 CHRYSLER DODGE ---·~.-----'6.1 DODGE 4 Dr. V.IJ R,~J{. 11·hite\\•all~. $4j(), Ca 11 847-4026 FALCON '64 !-~ALCON Dl.X Station \Yagon. Auto trans. air cond, lug/rnck, Gd, Shape. $575. * * 968-59-16 'l\1rn those White Elephants into cash thru a Daily Pilot With jUst a call, you can 11cl\ it all! Place a Dally ·Pilol Clas~lfied Ad. Call direct 6~2-5678 TODAY! -------"'----·'--·------~----·---·-~-----------------~----~ New Cars 9800 New Cars 9800 Used Cars 1967 We expertly parform all Pontiac warranty work . . • re9ardle5s of w here you or iginally purcha sed your Pontiac • 1968 1969 Nobody knows your Pontiac better than . • . we have been selli ng , servicin9 Pontiac people for ov er 25 years . . . Ponti,,c people and sdtisfyin9 SERVICE .FffiST j I 9900 • .. ~-,, ·t.r ;<; • .. ;~.' , ... •, ;~ ' .. I ~ l -~ ~: .. . . ~.-., ' ., :(. "' •!• ;... ,. • C· /· . •: • . ' ' " , .;,. . . ·.•· ·, .· ' ·: . ' r. I· • •: \ . 'TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TONSPORTATlON TltANSPORTATlON TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION -- 1u.""ood,_c_._,."---"-9900= 1 u~ Cars 9900 Used C~rt 9900 Used Cui 9900 UH d C1r1 FIRDIRD FORD MUSTANG OLDSMOBILE PLYMOUTH 1961 F""' Gt.laxy, Cl•an, low LEAVING country, MU$! '67 TORONADO 'TO "',,mouth £!Ida, R&H, '67 • GT 0 mi. Auto trans, P/s. $625. Sac! '10 Mach J, Lo ml, F\lll power Air .~ .... 1 to" 44<Mi, posttra&, bvy dty V.S auto r:d: ~ t 54$.-5067. Xlnt cond & 5 )T warnnty ·,' • ... y ,,,. suspension, $800. ~ over • ·• . '°• a er, 1962 Ford Galaxle 500 convt. 548-1184 ' Ucensc XXE ~ pm ts, '$'95.25 mo, . 6f6..{M6J. P 0 we r steenng, POM?r auto., pl~ Sacrillce at.$32$. $2388 4,~M. """"'· """'' top, Rally i'6W140. MIKE. McCARTHY ··59 Plymouth •tation wagon -wbeels. Ue. UEN 035. OlDSMOBILE -transportation "' 1100 s 1888 MAVERICK BUICK -.i1.' MIKE McCARTHY BUICK . , '67 CUTLASS , I fON'f1~C · 70 MAVERICK ...... ...,. '"·· "'I"· '""'· '69 FJREBIRO 400, p.s., p.b., ' fact. air. Lie. TSR 025. , auto, $2600 or T . 0. P, Automatic, radio, sharP! Fae. $ 1888 64f>-1831, 968-4707. tory waJT&nty, dlr, Must .. u, 11899 Full Price. will MIKE McCARTHY FORD TOP DOLIAR fo• CLEAN USED CARS Sec Andy Bro1>.'n THEODORE ROBINS FORD ~ Harbor mvd. Costa Mesa 642-0'.llO fina.nce. (761AFU). Call . 494-7744. MUSTANG '66 M u s ta n g Convertible, a u t o m a t i c transmission, V-3. power steering, RPL 3J,3, $995.00. JIM SI.EMONS IMPORTS, 120 W . WARNER, SANTA ANA, OPEN EVES. & SUN. BUICK OVER FACTORY INVOICE* 19SI, A.tr cond, f\.111 poww, '61 SHELBY GT lOO 1)8(11) octua! -Muoi 1 Owner Al Cond. New .M to believe! Beat ln titt1, A real good bu)' Orang• Olt;yl •'U31 w 646-21.M. * &Mo-S1112.. T·BIRD "·65"T°'HUND="°ERBIRD=='°'~=·=.I fuU power, air, wiftl wfwtla:, Perle-ct Conditm. A yebow beauty fer $1D>. e&-sm or 4')9..39()3 VALIANT '60 Ford Falcon Ranchero '66 Mustang 289--4 be.n'el, New reb!t eng, good tires: 4-spd, disc brakeg, Xlnt. good body, ueeds painl $1100. Pvt 540-4439. $330/best offer, 646-3567. 1970 302 Boss, 5 mo old, lo '70 Ford Ranchcro Squire mi's, S400 dwn, balance AM/Fi\f, pwr dise brks & S3000. ~9097. We have a lanie selection of Cougars, MontefjOS, and we arw making available again this weekend our popular $70. 11ver Factory In· voice Sale! *Add 2°/o . for handling. steer'g, Xlnt cond, Must '67 Mustang V-8, p/s & brks sell, 675-4008. o+air. Lo mi's, clean. $1400, FORD '65 Galaxie 500 XL ~SJ0..4-~"'-·--~-~ 2-dr HT. Lo mileage. XJnt '69 Mustang 351, a ir, care since new. $1125, Pvt pfb...di&c, p/s, vin. roof, ply 962-0319. $2495. Pvt pty, 675-5030. 1966 FORD V-8 XL Hdtp 2 dr '66 J\.fustang V8, auto, R/H, Rad. Htr. Automatic. Will p'.s, Good cond, $900 take who I es a I e book 549-2604 eves. 837-5548. ·"'.,~M~usr=AN~G'""'c"on-v,...t. "'v""".s, '61 FORD Gal, Auto. Pis & air, 3 speed manual. P/b. 390 eng. Lo mi. Top 84&-Sno cond. $1475. Pvt 548-6432. 69 Mustang Fastback e S ACRIFICE 1959 R..adio,P/S,3spd. Ranchero Gd, Cond. $550. ~2134 eves or weekend Call after 6 pm 540-8021 * 1966 MUSI'ANG GT Hrcltop. mE QUICKER YOU CAIJ... 289 V8, rlh, 'fJ/s, air, Xlnt THE QUICKER YOU SELL cond, $1395. 842-1591 Used Cart 'HOOUsed Cars 1961 CAMARO f dr. flfrdtop l•llY•• Gr•en with COIW tr•sting bl1cli int.rior, f•&t.r"t •ir co11di• tionin9. !XEZ<M9J $2495 1964 PLYMOUTH WAGON Furv111, Ol'I• owner e1r I ,,. ••c•ptionef "•lu•. 01'1• v••r w1rr1nty IOXS2521 $995 1968 PONTIAC VENTURA 2 dr. l.1 rdtop. Factory 1ir, power wit1• dows I f1c-;tory w1rr1nty 011 tfli1 e:rec. •• ,. 1104)77). $2595 1969 GTO 4-SPEED lea11tiful Ve rcle ro Gr••n, pow1r alc1rin9 I power di1c br•k11 . I 1.000 milc1 l fie.· tory warr1nty. l 714AFXI $2895 1967 GRAND PRIX f•elory 1ir condiiionin 9, vinyl fop & lo1ded wltli e.-t.11. A b•1utiful gold. ITRHJ171 $1995 1969 FIREBIRD CONV. S1Jtrklil'lg r•d with bl1ck cudom 'triin, p•wtr •'••ring I f1tlorv 1ir, IZLHOll) $2895 1968 BONNEVILLE ? J1, h•rdtop with •it cond., pow•r win· dowt, li9 ht gold body I mtlching int,,. ior. !WXG621 I $2595 1967 MUSTANG 1 dr. h1rdtop, Dtrk blu• with vit1yl fo,. & f1 ctory •>r. Ouht•nding 111td •ufomo• bil•. IXXY039l $2195 1964 CORVETTE STINGRAY 4 tp11d. Sp1rklint 1il1ter he"ltojl wltf. tit• Iv 26,000 mltet. IVCJttJIJ $2495 1969 FIREllRD 350 l u1ho hydr1n"11tic, pewer tl11rin9, 1lc, Y1rd1ro Gr11n htrdtop. Lic1n1• N1. IVCJ9,ll $2495 rM}JROY CARVER ~ROLLS -ROYCE 29l5 HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MESA 546-4444 We Have Some CYCLONES, ELIMINATORS & COUGARS ALL PRICED AT s7g OYER FACTORY INVOICE* For the Cat That Likes to Scat! CAPRI DRIVE THE SEXY ONE FROM "GERMANY'' $2499 DEMOS 19 TO CHOOSE FROM ···COUGARS TO MARK Ill AT FANTASTIC SAVINGS COUGARS We have 50 brand new Cougars, all shades & colon -XR7's & 91 models; they're marked down to s7g OVER FACTORY INVOICE'* A New & Better Small Car 1971 MERCURY COMET 1. Take the best smaD-car ideas. 2. Add the styling and performance of a bigger car. 3. Result: a better small car. ON DISPLAY NOW WE NEED USED CARS TOP DOLLAR PAID CAU BILL TAYLOR AT 548.5638 MONTEGOS Coupes, Sedans, Hardtops, & W119• ons. We have over 20 to ch-. s7g OVER FACTORY INVOICE'* CONTINENTAL The malt fantastic this generation. DRIVE IT TODAY SAVE UP TO $1800 SPECIAL PURCHASE PIOM FORD MOTOR CO. ·10 cou•ARS _, __ ............ --$3333 '70 MONTI.OS ----$3133 All c•n h•"• r•dio, h••t•r, VS, •utomatlc tr•ns .. pow•r 1t••rin9, f•ctory eir, & in factory wa.,.anty. Now Is The Best Time In Ten Years To Bu11 A Lineoln-ltlercur11 Product ·~ /' •rt .... Md 1% for ••IMlll"I J'ohnson ... SOD n.n~©®n.~ ©®~'ii'n~rn~'ii'&in. • l&ilffil:\ lIIlir • 1rnim©l!!lffilW • ©®l!D®&ill 540-5630 COSTA MUA 2626 Harbor Blvd. 642.0981 TnREE GENERA'J'IONS IN 'J'BE AV'J'OMOBILE BVSINESS THI OLDEST ESTAILISHED "FllCTORY DIRECT" LINCOLN °MEICURY DIALll IN OIAN•E COUNTT ' - ' \ -.. - • ALL NEW 1970 MUSTANGS IN STOCK s7500 OVER ACTUAL FACTORY INVOICE .POSITIYEL Y NO OTHER ·DEALER CHARGES NEW 1970 MAVERICK IOK91L ll19lll SAVE s400 FROM WINDOW STICKER FROM WINDOW STICKER EVERY NEW 1970 ' TRUCK AND CAMPER IN STOCK NOW AT TOP DISCOUNT SHOP WHILI SILECTIONS ARE LARGE! ROBlNL RELIABLE ' MUSTANG SALE •• razt;a ~ PINTO IS HERE AND YOU'RE IN:VITED TO ALL NEW 1970 TORI NOS IN STOC K s7500 OVER ACTUAL FACTORY INVOICE POSITIYEL Y NO OTHER ·DEALER CHARGES FROM ·WINDOW STICKER I NEW 1970 FALCON IOKIOT 17b662 l 2-DOOR CLUB COUPE FULL PRICE ! ! STAFF CAR SALE llG SILECTION OF EXECUTIVE CARS AND DEMONSTRATORS NOW SLASHED TO FINAL YEAR END CLEARANCE PRICES . TEST DRIVE IT THIS WEEK.! READY 'FOR IM MEDIATE . DELIVERY! DON'T WORRY ABOUT CHRISTMAS BILLS! ·ASK ABOUT OUR PINTO· MAVERICK HOLIDAY P.llRCHASE PLAN! LEASING? ORDER YOUR 1971 TODAY FOR EARLIEST DELIVERY OYER 2 ACRES OF FINE TRADE INS TO CHOOSE FROM· A THEOOORE ROBINS EXCLUSIVE TRUCK-VAN-CAMPER SALE . 15 to chooH frOm. '65 thru 70 models. Coupe1, hardtops, co.,. vertible and 2 + 2 F11tbacks. Some with 4 sPffd'•, 1lso 1ir con· ditlonlng and automatic models. LOOK FOR THE DIAGNOSTIC CENTER SEAL ON THE WIN DSHIELD! 100% PARTS ANO LABOR ,10 to choose from - '64 thru '70 models '-~ tons & ¥• tons, standard, automatic, 4 speed transmissions. Some with air con· ditioning, campers and camper shell s. ·EXAMPLE: '66 '69 '69 1967 MUSTANG HARDTOP A11tom1tic:, r1dlo, ltttt.r, P.S., air cond. ITXSl741 OUR PRICE $1495 MUSTANG >.utom1tic, RIH, pow1r 1!11ring , 1pproir. 16,000 '"il11. ISIY4101 MUSTANG HARDTOP Full f ief, tq11ip., radio, h11!1 r, f1clory w1rr1nty 1~1il1bl1. IXXSl871 MUSTANG lo1d1d. VI, RlH, po-r 1ietrin9, 1ir conditi1111in9. !XWY005 ) '65 ,~,1 !.!.~.~~. ,.~,:!· I P8V0 26l '1 795 ~--------------- '69 '67 CHEVELLE MALIBU W.rdtop. Fully 1f•c.tory ,quipp•d includin9 •ir cond. (ZXV332l SHELBY 2 plus 2 4·1p11•d. 11dio, h••t•r, ,,,w p1inl, •l<-ell•nf co11d. IUEN51 4l $2395 WARRANTY 4000 MILES OR 90 DAYS Co\'.,. .......... ,... llld .... ..,-, "-"lhilM tM.. n.., ,.., ottd, rLUS bfohs, IMtttefy-M ..._ .,.._, Al ropllr __. ff• I• 01r •-Mr'Yice •••I 11t. ALL OFF ER S CON SIDER ED TRADES ACCEPTED EXAMPLE: ,1964 GMC PICKUP V6 •n9i11e, 1t•nd•rd lr•n1m i11io11, long b•d. IP9<4557l OUR PRICE $795 PAID FOR OR NOT '67 ~~~•~'10~!~,to,PS,P.B., $1 699 "inyl roof, (TAN901 ) '64 FORD XL GALAXIE 500 $795 GALAXIE 500 $ F.~~'~I;,~1~t·~~:~· '67.· , o,,. "'"· ""· ,.,,, .... , ,,.., ,,.,.;,,, 14 ft~ --·~t N:,:CCD04:c:..=,2)'--=c:-:--------=-;--;;c;;;;;; ,;,, 390 '"9· I U0Ll091 7 ~ '69 FORD ~. TON SA VE ;~;;~~F,f;~~dc.vt:.:i~~v~.r:.. '65 FORD FAIRLANE $8.95 approx. 13,000 milel'i. (f2SYRE74086) 500 2 dr. H.T., v.a, 1utomafic, '67 CHEVROLIT MALIBU $1 495 ___ '_'"_" _,,,_.,;,,, IPBH040I f~.1~;,r.;::•ulo,R&H, ' '62 CHEVY II WAGON $595 Fully equipped, automatic, '68 FORD WAGON $1 695 6 "'· CWY17241 ia~i~.tl~~'!:fe~c<rrS:S1)tcering, '65 FORD LTD $"195 '67 CHEVROLET CAMARO $17 95 2 Or, H.T. A<1lllf'lafic, •ad,o, h11hr, P.S., I V8, automatic, power steering, _ 1 ___ •_;'_"_''·-"_00_13_"-----~--- rally sport, vinyl roof. (VJS259) 68 ~:.~:.,., ,.,;, ...... $14 9 5 S.le Prlcel o... fir n H--. Ctn s-.ect le'"" h lL • low m;l1•1J•· !WWY92~J 2060 Harbor PARTS-SERVICE HOURS 7 AM To 9 PM MON 7 AM To 6 PM TUE-FRI • • I PARTS DEPT. ONLY • 8 AM to 6 PM SATURDAYS J I • r • j • 4 ] tr ol v Ci c A G co 1: ti ~ c ti E d c h ' I•