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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-09-25 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa17 ~ ,. . . . ·. • ~---- • I ·Newpor(~s Nndie Studio Evieted. After · Perlllit Flap j • , ....... ~ --,Price~ .of. Ha&~u-ts. "!. • , • ·1 • • • .. · · ·1:~·· ~et. Clipping. M4 er·:Eo11ri ·:If nlingi • • 1 ' .. : .. '. ' f' • • ' ' 0 s own 0 DAILY PILO T an rena .•. :Unexplained ,., . ~· .. ,,,.~ ! ... ...,.. ';1 --..,, . j May N!W«·,eo~i! . .__ ... · , · Kittens-Put Oqtf ot.Nigllf ·we~pons, Exp osiv:es Uncovered In Newport Nudie Fra~ In Riverside By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ,., "'-DtllY .. lit! S!lff Federal authoritiCs today entered the case of a cache of military weapons and . explosives -plus instructions for ' sabota ge -r uncovered accidentally Thursday night by Cosla f\1esa police checking out a false alarm. A ~ir of teenagers was arrested on state charges of possession of illegal firearms, while Treasury Department agents were en route today to determine U a federal offense was committed. Police were reluctant to speculate on any possible connection with radical politic factions until each of 18 weapons -including automatic rifles a n d machincguns -was checked and the 6USpeCts questioned. They were identified as David B. McLau ghlin , 19, and Douglas M . Langevin , 19, both of 108 Cecil Place, the house where the arsenal was confiscated. "Some of the items that are illegal to possess appear to be deactivatl'd," ex- plained Detective Lt. Harold Fischer. He said a bomb disposal squad from El Toro Marine Corps Air Station was called to headquarters this morni ng when hand grenades were discovered in one con- fiscated carton. "We don't know if they're live," Lt. (See WEAPONS, hgt !) • A photo studio today has been fully ex· posed to the fact that Its tenure In Newport Beach may be nearly as brief as the attire of its models. Compounding its troubles over a cita· lion for opening without a permit earlier this week, Kitten Productions Thursday was thrown out of its Campus Drive of- fice suite. The cited operator, Mary F. Wagner 31, of Placentia, summarized the plight of her business v~nture most aptly today when she said she first thought the office 6he had rented was in Santa Ana, not Newport Beach. "I thought I was in Santa Ana until I went tO the Sheriff's Office to obtain Thieves Tee Off At Co unt ry Club Fay W. Tunnell was out at the Mesa Verde Country Club Thursday and lost 12. golf balls. Cosla 1'.1esa police said that wouldn't be too bad for a poor day on the links, but Tunnell. of 274 E. 15th St., aald they were in his golf bag. So was a full set of Irons and four woods, totali ng $430 in value, when a thief swiped them out of a &olf courae equJp- ment room. permils ind the deputy said, 'Hey, I think you're in Newport.Beach." Miss Wagne'.r wu not ava!lab1e -thi1 morning to comment on her plins for the future of her IS.ilten Productions Studio. The eviction notwithstanding, chances of the studio ever opening in Newport Beach were growing slimmer by the day. Upon receipt of the application for · a business licente, the city moved lm· mediately to start prtparation of an "emergency ordinance" that would either ban or .strictly regulate such studios. There iJ nothing on the books now ·thlt -would-effeclively-keep such an operation oUt of town. Miss Wagner, meanwhile, had vowed the legitimacy of her enterprise, saying "We just want a chance to prove that We're not like som-e other busine!!eS police have had trouble with in Los Angeles and Hollywood." , Prior to her arrest Tuesday. Miss Wagner had reportedly detailed·the prD- t'edur.e1 of·he!"studip to a· Newport Police department undercover agent. She allegedly told him that the studio had 10 models available to b • photographed in the nude "in-any posi· Uon" for a fee of '25 Jl'r hour. A public hearing on Kitten Product.ions' request for a license hid been achtduled for MoncfaY al 7:• p.m. in. City HaU btr°"' the City CGuncil. It ls probable the bwln1 ·will -· bt cancelled. It's Someone's Move! • Paralyzed County Yout h Seeks Chess Partner By RUDI NI EDZIELSKI 01 1t!t ~11'1' P'llM 11111 .Kenny De.Busk is waiting for someone to make the next move. Because he can't. Not since last October when an automobile accident severed his spinal cord and paralyzed , both arms and legs. When the doctors l ell you that there is 1itUe, if any hope that you'll ever run or throw a football again, life can gel pretty depressing. And from Kenny's bedside at Huntington Valley C.Onvalesecnt Hospital, the :uturt looks pretty dim. Mentally alert and able to talk well despite the tra gic accident, Kenny sa ys he would like to play chess with someone but thal he can move neither pawn or king with his hands. "J'm looking ror someone in their early_ !Os to play a couple of. games a day.'~ 1ald Kenny, 19. who attended Huntington Beach High SC.hool. He says It really doesn't matter II it's a boy or girl u long as they like to play chess. ' ·Kenny doesn't profess to be an expert at the game, but it looks like he'll have a Jong time to practice. "I'm really not very good at it but I know all the moves," he explained. Ironically, a chess set bought In Mexico was an indirect cause of his predicament. -"He and another boy were on their way back home from Mexioo where he pu(cllased the chess set. He wu asleep In the car when it rolled over several Umes and got hurt," said Mn. VM>lel Ta bu, the hospital 's director o( nursing. The olher "boy, who escaped virtually unscathed, still hu the cbea set, IC· cording to Kenny. l\trs, Taber added that the nursing 1tafr has begun an intensified program to help him feel better because he had been feel- ing so miserable of late. ';We wanl to get him an attachement for the telephone. 90 he c1n ar least t1lk to•people. And hil brolbor ii 1•ttlna him a stereo," she aaid. "Right now ht only bu• i.lt-•nd he can 't even tum on-the call Ucht ror help." Hospital 1taH memben: m alao Jook· Ing 'forward to providinl him with a reading apparatwi and perhlpa 1n eJec- tric wheelcheir he can opente with hil mouth. Another thin1 that's botherin&·Kenny ls the flld U..t ht I! the only -penon In the hoopiW llnd surrounded by octo and nonotenarianl, aCC'Ol'dina to Mrs. Taber. '1He hu M>me visit.on but mClll of the frltncb hil •It hive cln>pptd by tht wayside. ''They 've just forgotten," 1he !'-Aid. Right now, the mOll importut.tblnl ii to provide him with a cheat partner to break up hll televialon watctdn& routine, Mrs. Taber fee.ls. Anyone w1>9 ls inim,tecl may phooe her •t llUNl. ll't your move. '· lpedll to tht QAILY PILOT RJVERIIDE r-Ricky· Leamon w11 13 Thursday and hJs aflter gave. him a foot- ball that bounced over the backyard (ence while he and tWo buddies were paatng it. He and Bobby Ewin& and David Crawford, alSo 13, went into the neighbor- lnr yard and found the footboll. but they allO found a box of 11 military fragmen- tation grenades. . The f<><iball and the ...non were both ·in sOme shrubbery, Just eucUy what happened from that point may never be known -up Until the blast that shaUered ·every window in the Leamon hoine ,_ but" autboritief" can 11pecul'ate. Ricky Leamon Wu killed ·on his birth· day, blown to bll!. Bobby Ewina was killed ln tht ume in. st.int. bloWll to "bll.!. "They were just torn apll't," II.Id one. 1ickened Riverside: eollnty Sherill's depu- ty. • David Crawford wn terribly mutilated and Js bl e1:t~mety-eritk:il condition tGo day following hours.of surgery.; Mr. and Mn .• Jerry Prim. in whose yard the M2l5 grenadel were found, were: ~about Wepl --ol the military WUpoOI. 1llty refllltd to clilcual the molter. Man, 82; Hacked · ·To Death; Police . . Arrest Student NEW PALTZ, N.Y. (UPI) -An elderly man was hacked. to death Thunday with a fire u: at h.ia home. State police ar~ mltd a f~lp student In • murder cbarle. " 'J'be·vldim was JdenUlied as Howard Grimlfl, a , who lived neiu the wnpuo of the SUie UnivenilY CoDqa at New Poll.!. Authorltieo laid Grimm. a lifa long ... -. -itruct -the -and fact. Jiii body WU founcf In hil ila<k yard. Pollet Ul'll1td Henry Baddoo, 14, a ltudenl 1\ the IChool. He WU treated at Klnpton ctty llospitol for a oqlp wound prior to mal1111rnent -· police Mid. was • citizen of Ghlnl.1 but wen unable for the• moment tollft• morelflld!IC-.ar furlbtr 1111111·-ltll hl<qround. - • * * * 10 ' * * * . ' . ERIDAY 'AFTERl'IOON,. SEPTEMBER 25, :1970 VOt-f.l,INO. 211, 4 lltTIOJll,.-.. ,P&elS sP...,bi ~"1tellll ' 4 ) ' • Gov ... Reag.~u Makes Plat, ~ ·F~r Solhl tor.· Msjflf'ii~· . . By JOA""1; REYNOLDS .. .. DeflT '1IM ltefl ' Governor Reaaan Thursday called upon Californians to re-elect him and to giy~ him a clear cut J.tepublican majority iii the Legislature iii November to be cap carry out his tax reform, welfare and law and order progtams. Reagan spoke to a crowd ol 1,000 Republicans al a $100-a-plate dinner Thursday night at the Anaheim Con- vention Center. In a gathering attended by t~e Republican candidates for · 1tate con- stitutional offices, the Legl1lature-and Conp'eu, Rea1an 1bared the speake~'s Haircut Prices ·May Be Clipped · By ,Couri R uling • Haircut pri ces In Ora!l,le County may be· due for .a 1cllpplng1·1n the 'light of •' Superior Court rullhg· to the :etleft !th.at the . .etUng of riilnimum rates . i1 un- conlututional1 · . . :Ju.dge· ·Raymond · TtiOmP.500 df:Uver¢ that-verdict Thurntay ln•!lllpport ·of t!le frgument · ofrerea by Fullerton barber Paul· M. ·Blake that the California Boafd of Barber Ei:aminers can not -Oiscip'line him for chargtna Ins than· the state" minimum of.itl.91. " . Blskt and ,15 oth¢r Fullerlpn· bar!>trs · tisked Superior Court ·for al writ.of .man- date ordering the stale• group to abendon its attempts -to force Blake and other rebel halrcutters into line. Judge '1h>mpson '1 ruling c I o s e 1 y followed the lines of an earlier ruling by Judge Ronald · Crookshank to the effect that the State Board or Barber Ex- aminers could not force Garden Grove barber Ricky Star to up hit $1.75 rate to the $1.91 minimum. Star Is still embroiled with the state regul1ting agency in a dilpute that see.ms destined to go to the UniU!d States SUpereme Court. He said ThuradaY I.hat the state board met -with failure in an appeal to the Fourth Dlitrict Court of Appeals on the decision handed down by J u d I e Crookshank:. He Is determlnt'Cl, he said, to ao on charging below-minimum prices in dtfinance ol the ba-.' board. A union spokesman predicted Thursdl)' tl\lt the fur\her rtvene may temporirily Jowtr hair<'ut prices In Orange County, ~rticularly among the 35 percent of the cOunty'1 barbers who a.re not mimben.of the union. He declined lo state If the union will persist In its: efforta to have. 1111 barbers toeln1 the minimum price line. ••rt is a matter for dllcwalon wtth our le1at· ad· . vlsers." ht aald. "COme to my Stop for 1 • ebelp haircut." commented Star. I platform with Senator Ceorge Murphy, who also iJ ieekina re-e.Iectlcin • Reagan ·cited the "broken Jog Jam" el legislation that o c c u r r e d when .Jieplblicans gained, a alight til,e In bcilh •houSts of'the ·state Ltgl!lature oftet tht 1968 elections. And be outlined·adclltional J>t011U1S he would push through if· given' a 10lldly Republican Legislature this year. A~"' programs he said he considers neoeaary .are welfare reforms, Medical reforms, a judicial. selection reform and ~ , tax · reform, , "" "If _you believe in ·the need for. tlie,e t~s as I do, then iiv.e me a temf¢ Republicans Who will.' get lhe:jOO ~,, be said. · .. , · The campaign Iao!ics o( Reag111•1-<11> poneftt, Jess~Unruh, were ·noted.Sy tbe • gOvemor. "This busine;u of popplng . Up . on my front •lawn or at the houses-of Republican sUppOrt'ers i's ludricrous." . ~ ' . ' ~ ·Reagan..tdrew. a-laugh ·from hii . ~ porters "!heri he added,-"You kftoW It U&o .efi to ht that the only t~lng you had to ! worcy about on your· front lawn was crab .. I Jr&~, , .Murphy-.extended some Iii· .lleoP,n'• · M!D)8.rk.s to the natlonal-~e\!el, notll'lg!&bat Pre!ident Nixon also needs a Repub).lem 1•team in Wa shington. , f ."In f~ciWetb-or1hantcampltgtitng,up { and down Olis state, I've found out1a few thinp·about<wba< Cal\lornilns w111~::1111 1 [Uplained. • '"I'hey,want jUdges Who will enf~·tbe . laws as 1they,are\wrlttep. 1 found out the I tu_. of,tJiisJJlate arrt~iol,.,.... , ·. ((lloe\DIMmlr Pap I) , Oru1e Weadaer Gusty Santa Ana winds will blow up a. storm over' Oie weekend. aendlri'g the coastal temperature• lllmling toward the: 90 mark. The mornings will offer fog, a1 usual. INSWE ToD.4. 'l' "We wanttd to d.o something for our neiahbor1," said a La,. quna Hilla cowpl.e 10ho have doo Mttd -l/(JIJ 10 tl1• - Sadd1'ba<k Communftr HOJPi- tttl. Thtir •toru ii in todq'• · Weekende r, Page 25. -.... --~ __ .. __ ......,.,.. ,..., ..,..... ....... ,, _,. ... .... ,.,.... t•11 :::.':':':' ..: -. ~ ..... ,,,,. --.. Wll It 1W1 .. $ '""'· s.,1 ... i... 25, 1970 -• • ordanB·loodhath Over ,.,... P•re 1 WEAPO NS ... FJseher gaid. - -Jl ut Ar.abs Continue Fight for Free Palestine "But we do have ammunition boxes containing some spent and some live rounds, plus numerous pamphlets on bombs and booby traps," he continued. ) ..... Wirt Servlc .. e days ol blood an<I born· al't ov~· ln Jqrdan \• clvU Wlr, • npung to create a Palestine for tnutt conUnue, rebel leaders today. ~·1 King Huuein 1hd Poleatlnlan • a leader Yuir Arafat announced ..,..ct peel and 1 team of SUdanese ~ offk:eil WU aaaigned U I police RAollel was expmsed throughout the }fiddle East and America in some ~ers, while bitter Arabs Joyal to the iwbei c1111e cried out in race. : A crowd of 200 poured out of noon ~ayers at Ar Aqsa Moique in Jerusalem· ad charged through the · ancient city's lrindin1 atreeta. • "Kill Hussein," they screamed, charg· inc his army is slaughterin1 their brothers in Amman and demandine a new revolution. ' They proclaimed worse bate for HU55ein than for Israel.• --Fean for the lJves and safety.of UMC-- • :..W.t<d-for airlille hijackiJ>I bostqea • ( -~ lessened 'o m e w h a t , wben Klng Hussein's troops freed 15 6f the st at 1:31l a.m.' (PDT), found la eannoo-rlkedl Am: man. None "'ere Ame1·ican. 'Ibey were reported to be well and the . hunt continued for 3t othen -mostly Americans -still millin&, while vanJah.. ~Tt:!: ~~:r=~1!abammed Foul play was feared Thursday when Daoud -who r..icntd his position - disappeared from the Nile Hilton Hotel, but he told agents who traced him be simply wanted to be alone. • Developmenll in the. Jordan civil war and the international crisis it provoked appeared lo be slowlng·today, but-all-Ciln· cerned were keeping a close eye on the tilualion. Jsraeli leaders expressed confidence that it will be quiet for a while, even as Arabs clamored for new war or' squabbled among their own political factions. Re.lift efforts by the International Red Cr<>M and ill Arab counterpart. the Red Crescent, were stepped up as the plight of tbouaaDda of war victims inWl!ified • }Huntington Official Quits l lkague of Cities Campaign • ' l'IJLU OUT OF RACE L-CondidmGr- tJ.S. Navy Joins J n Newport Raid; ·Three Arrested : . Three Newport Beach men arrested 'i.ttu Offict of Naval Intelligence agent.s iand Newport Beach police allegedly ·found 180 pounds of marijuana in their apartment have been indicted by the Oranee C.ounty Grand Jury on drug :Charges. , · District A~torney Cecil Hicks got the cpanel's approval Thursday to a complaint ~ging William Archie Collins, 21, Glen Warren Win.nor, 22. and Barry Louis 'Rigimbal, 22, all of 1965 Sherington 'Place, with possession with intent to sell and transporting of marijuana . : Investigators Said the trio UJed the '"swinging singles" apartment as the headquarters for a thriving drug gale ·business which included several contacts and clients beyond the Orange County line. DAILY PILOT N""9" h•ll H•lltl ..... IHcll .._._ .. ,. ,. ...... , ... ., c .... Mn• s.. ca ...... 011.t.NGI COAlt .. Ul l.ISH1HG COM.,A NV l•\•,t N. w .... .. rl•iffnl •NI .. llt>I,._ • J.,. II, C••l•v Vitt l"ruAtnl •flt ~It Mt~.,.. llt-•t Kt••il lt11'tl' T>t'"'" A, M~,,11;~• MtMti..s ldiW l ich1r4 I'. Ni ll lliulll Ori-C....,,t, IEtU.,. • c--. M..-1 »O W11l ltY IT••I H,,_,...1 .. '""1 nu w..1 111Ml '-'!tw•r-. 1,.N111M 1-c:lll m ,....,, A- w....,11111"" s.tdl: 1'11J .. "~ lwltY11'f t.ft °"""""": al NWffl El (t ""IN lt•f Huntington Beach Councilman Jack Green bu quit the race for president of the Orange County League of Cities. Green announced this morning he Would not seek re • election to the president's post becauae at least eight ciUes were opposed to him succeeding himself in office. The Huntington Beach Councilman fac- ed a runoff Oct. 11 against Anaheim Coun- cilman Ralph Clark. The two men Ued 7-7 when the League of Cities met Sept. to. Green bu served this year as President ·and Clark as vice presldentof the 'Orange County League of Cities. The league has 25 members in the county. While eliminating himself from the race, Green also asked for nominations to be reopened, so cities would have more than one man to choose from for presi· dent. "I would urg-e that nominations be again opened on Oct. 8," Green said. "But it should be noted that during the period in which the nominating com· mlttee was active, no one came forward to suggest names for consideration.'' Clark. Green's onl.Y opponent, is also a candidate for Supenrbor tn the 4th District. He faces a runoff Nov. 3 with G<non Bishop for the supervisor's post to succeed Willi.am Hirstein. If Clark is named President of the League of Cities, then is elected a county supervisor. he would have to quit his League post in January. Green said he waa quitting the race because Garden Grove and seven other cities had eipressed dissatisfaction with the League's policy of allowing oflictn to serve consecuUve term!. Clemente Youth's Flag Case Set For Court Rule , When are the stars and stripes not an American Flag! Would substitution of the color green for blue make the difference ? Apparently the matter -which crop- ped up in San Clemente reeently ._ will be settled in court. Matthew Udall. 18, of 140 Avenida Algodon, was cited by a San Clemente police officer last week on charges of desecrating the American Flag. Police impounded hls van, which they said had cut portlons of a flag as window curtains. Udall was released on his pro- mise to appear. his nag curtains seized as evidence and he is to be arraigned in municipal court Oct. 2. " Udall has maintained that> his greenish flag with stars and stripes was not an American Flag but an ecology flag and that his display of it was a positive act not a disrespectful gesture. Edward Tornell, deputy dislrict al· tomey, fetls the circumstances of the Case fall into a difficult area but intends lo throw some light on It by prosecuting and letting the court decide. Japanese Scientific Rocket Launch Fails UCHINOURA, Japan (AP! -A Japanese attempt to ·get a scientific satellite into orbit failed today when the fourth st.age of a 43.7-ton rocket ap- parenUy did not ignl~. SclenUst.s said they then lost track of the 77.foot rocket. calJtd the MU4Sl, and thst it apparenUy burntd up' in the atmosphere after reaching an altltudt or some 350 miles above the central PaclfJe. A par~ent JJurglary Discovered in Mesa' A burglar broke Into a Costa Mesa a~nl and stole a portable rtcord player and cash worth nearly SlOO, the • ..,,.. told pollc. Thursday. l.atayette G, Bald". of 2'.84 Miner St .. aafd the intruder prowled through the rooms, but •PPlrtntly took l)Ot.hinf tlst. .. Arabs from the occupied west bank of the Jordan drovt trucks carrying canned 'fodd -latills ident:ifyiagtbml-. llraeli· made torn off -rolled 10 IDd will .carry wounded women, chlldrt:n and old people out. HOrbert G. Klein, White bowie com· munleationa direet«, said today in Bl'ankfurt, Germany that Ainerican response lo the Jei'dta cri.sls blas been aimed at avoidlq intervention. Ift an interView with the Alne.rican Forces Radio network here, Klein said the Presidtnt carefully explored all Con- ·(Jingenclel and wben forces were alerted ·it wa.s based Qn the hope that they would not be used. "But you must be-prepared 'for the worst as well.'' he added. "It wu fortunate we didn't have to use the forces." A beefed·up U.S.' Sixth fleet still at.earned along: in the. Meditttranean only 150 miles from the criUcal area, its ships, plane11 and men alerted two weeks ago c•1Lv PILOT'""......., when the three hijackings occurred. PARTY TALK -Senator George ~furphy and Governor Ronald The Soviet Union's potent . Mediter-Reagan chat \ritb-.li1rs ...... Marsha..Benl:s-of..N.c\\!.POtt-Beac.h,--Co..hostess. ranean-squ~dron ~t.e~med along-polltely--"1--'-0 n 100-a-plate Republican fund-raising dinner· Thursday night at but .~eterm1nedly m its wake. Anaheim Convention Center. ln background (glasses ) is Newport "You could uy we· share a common in· Beach attorney Alex Bo,vie Reagan's campaign chatrinan tor terest In what the other guy is doing," Orange County. ' remarked ·Rear Admiral Roger Spreen. Israel expects quiet along its bor<ters with Syria and Jordan, at least for a while. But military sources Jn Tel Aviv said today it is ready to act if the guer· rillas decide to switch their attacks from Jordan to Israel. The sources said Palestinian guerrillas suffered up to 20,000 casualtie! in fighting with the Jordanian army in the past nine days. In addition, they aid, Syria lost between 75 and 100 Soviet-built TM and TSS tanks -almost 12 percent of their armor -as well as rro military transport vehicles in the battles in northern Jordan. The heavy losses. according to the Israeli military sources. will guarantee quiet, at least for several weeks. Leaders differed in their opinions. with Defense Minister Moshe Dayan saying the Jordan civil war was dying out and none of ill principals wan ts more. "I hope the King manages to give them a severe beating," said Dayan. "I am on the side of the king and not on the aide of the alternative." The alternative would be Israeli in- tervention and Deputy Premier Yigal Allon said in a hard·line Meet the Press interview Hussein may now be in worse trouble. Diplomatlc sources say Allon favored immediate Israeli intervention, to 11ave Hussein's government. ' Newpor:t Council Eyes Excursion Vessel's Perniit A staff report recommending·the gran· Ung of a permit to the Pavilion Queen and a letter from the excursion boat's main competitor recommending against it will be before the Newport Beach City Council fi.1onday night. George Dawes, Harbor and Tideland s administrator, in a memo to the council released today, urges approval of the license, but recommends a long list of conditions that should accompany the ac- tion. ,, ~ From Page 1 DI NN ER ... porting re volutionaries in our institutions of higher learning. "And they want people in public office v.•ho will tell it like it is. Tliey v.'ant representatives v.·ho will vote the way they talk during a campaign and they want men who v.·ill show up in <:<ingress," he staled. f..1urphy concluded his spcE:ch by calling upon audience members lo get out and work for the candidates Lo make "the greatest Republican victory in years in lhis stale ." Also attending the fund raising dinner were· state Treasurer Ivy Baker Priest; state Controller Hou ston I. Flournoy; James Flournoy, candidate for Secretary of State. and LA'ls Angeles Qistrict At· torney Evelle Younger, canrudate for state. Attorney General. GOP \av.• makers attending \Vere Assemblymen Robert Burke (Huntingto n Beach), Robert Badham (Ne wp o rt Beach ) and John Briggs (Fullerton) and Stale Senators Dennis Ca r pent er (N.ewpoft Beach ) and James Whetmore . (Garden Grove). ~mbly candidate ~ruce Nestan(le (A'nabelf!l) and congre5J1ional cindidate Bill Teague (Anaheim ) also attended the dinner. · Woman Asks $I f5,000 For Savings Deposit A C.orona del Mar v.·oman v.•ho claims the Newport-Balboa Savings and Loan Association refuses lo allow her to v.•ithdraw the $15,000 she's had on deposit since 1963 now wants to withdraw $115,000 from her bankers. Mrs. Amanda Lloyd added $100.000 in damages to her claim when she Hied the lawsuit in Orange C<iunty Superior C<iurt. She claims the lnstltullon "acted with malice" in denying her access to her funds. Judge Orders Probation OnFraudRap Jnsurance salesman Paul Farowich was placed on three years' probation today ·for his part in issuing a $15.000 life policy on a Corona de! ~tar man v.·ho is dying. Superior Co u r t J udge R on a l d Crookshank refused to consider any other sentence for the 34-year-old Tustin man \\•ho could have been senr to state prison for up to 2Q years. Farowich wa s found guilty by a jury last Sept. 2 of charges of attempted grand theft. conspiracy to commit grand theft and forgery. He and Lav.,rcnce Odenz. 47. or 2933 Jav a Road , Costa Mesa. were arrested after clothing stor~-tl}anage~ Murray Bronson v.·as billed for the first payment on a $15,000 policy he had never applied for. It v.·a.s learn~ that Odenz, who tmployed Bronson at his Michael's Ltd. store in Costa P.1esa. took the physical for Bronson after learning that his manager was suffer ing fro.ma terminal disease. - Odenz ,.dmi tted before Farowich's trlal that he-'-made arrangements for the issuance of the policy and then pleaded guiH y to reduced charges of conspiracy. Odenz was fined $1.000 by Judge Crookshank, placed on probation for one year and summoned as a wi tness for the prosecution against Farowich. Odcnz testified that he intended to hand over the $15.000 he v.•ould have receive d on Bronson's death to Bronson's widow. That payment would have been made in the name of Odcnz' business under the type or insurance arrangement authoriz. ed by Farowich. It v.•as learned during the trial that ~1rs. Bronson v.•as never advised of any such arrangement. "That's what scares us." Lt. Fische r said chemical compounds commonly used in making bombs -in combination with other readily aVallable Jngredients -were taktn from the Ctcil Place res idence. He said McLaughlin listed his oo- cupation as a headwaiter and Langevin. who was not present when the we•ROM were discovered. is an auto mecltsnic. The l.,.,'O suspects apparenUy have no direct military connection in which they ~ mlght have obtained the weapons , he ad· ded. Besides the military weapons, which in· ch.:ded a mortar launching device ap. pcaring lo be Japanese-made, police seiz- ed an infrared sniperscope used to pick out victims in total darkness. "Numerous hand weapons and .rin~ which appear on the surface to be legal were also picked up," said Lt. Fischer. The discovery began shortly before 10 p.m .. wheri an emergency callbox in the 100 block of Ceci1 Place went off at police headquarter$. Officers G~ne Norden and Dave Ha~es, of th de t ent's felony: unit .were nearby so theY responded and stopped a youth later determined to be McLaughlin for questioning. "He admitted touching the box, but said he didn 't set it off ," Lt. Fischer ex- lained. adding that he carried no· personal identification at that point. "The subject volunteered to go to bis home and get somJ!." said Lt. Fischer. "He was accompanied by the officers and they observed the weapons when they entered.·· Shortly after McLaughlin was arrested, his room·mate arrived home and was taken into custody on the same char1ea. Fiv~ Indicted By Grand Jur y In Dru g Cases Five alleged drug trafficker!! were in- dicted by the Orange County Grand Jury Thursday in two separate actions by the investigative panel. The Grand Jury capped Us busiest criminal calendar day since its formation nine months ago by endorsing district al· lorney's charges against George Alex4 ander Casas, 24. and James Gordon Hor. an, 32, both of Garden Grove. Both men are accused of selling LSD. 1.nvcstigators of the district attorney's office and the Stale Bureau or Narcotics enforcement moved in on the two men after Casas was allegedly caught selling LSD on tY.'O dates in August and Horan was booked for the same olfcnse on Sept. 17. Grand Jury action moves the pro- ceedings from Santa Ana municipal court to Orange Gounty Superior C.ourt. Alleged sales of marijuana and LSD figured in the Grand Jury's indictment of lhree county men also awaiting municipal court action. James Stockard Buck, 28, of Santa Ana, Richard Frank C<inley, 24, of Hayward. 'Calif. and Ted Frank Le Blanc, 21 . of Garden Grove are accused of selling marijuana and LSD. Conley and Le Blanc are also charged in the indictment with lhe possession of LSD for sale. .. ln\'l"stigators said the amOun t of LSD In- volved exceeded 40,000 doses of the illegal drug. Arrests or the trio. they said, closed an outlet that had provided LSD over a con· siderable time to a number of users 0£ the forbidden chemical. A public hearing an the request by Davey's Locker. Inc., for a Harbor permit to operate the sight-seeing and entertainment boat will be conducted by the council Monday at 7:30 p.m. in City Hall. The boat has drawn mixed reactions fr om the community during its 91klay trial operation, which expires early next month. The latest public opposition lo the Queen came Thursday in a letter from the president of the Fun Zone Boal C.om- pany, which operates three sight·seeing boats in '\jiwport Harbor. For The Unusual .... Thinl{ Of Ted von Hemert Dal Grettenberg. writing the city coun- cil, said he feels that the cruises his boals provide "are more than adequately sup- plying" the need for such cruises around the bay, Pointing out that lhe Fun Zone Boat Company boat operate under Public Utilities Commission permits, Gret- tenberg said his company's newest boat. the Queeen of Balboa, is available for private charters. _,c- 1'he Pavilion Queen ls primarily a charter craft, while Fun Zone boats sell tickets for cruises to the public on a daily schedule. Dawes, In recommending approval of the Pavilion Queen 's permit, suggests the Ciluncll impose a series of six provisos. The first would deal with boat route limits, while others place conditions on the craft's sound amplification system , Its handling of litter and garbage and technical 1tipul1tions. Student Nabbed On Drug Char ge A 17·year~ld San Clemente HllJh School senior was 8JTesttd at school Thunday on charges ol twice selling I.SD to an undcrc:ove.c... narcotio.otficer- Detectlves Iller• the long-haired you1h had on twn occasion! 10ld 10 t.ablt.tJ of the psythedellc mind bender to 1 Son Clcmenle officer. The you th was liken to juvenile hall to await the dlapG&ition of his cue In juvenile court. Pollet said the boy had a clean record betore the TbW'lday arrest. - .. The se unique piec11 ire • new look 1t the Old World Ir om Henr1don'1 Folio Nin i collection. Div1r1ely deii qned, yet inetely her. mo nious. Thi1 differ1nce is _with Ted von H1mert, Inc:. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON DREXEL -HERITAGE ,NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wostcllff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN f RIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Prof .. slontl lnterh>r O.algners Availtbt~AID-NSID " LAGUNA BEACH 345 No•lh Coost Hwy. 49~51 OPEN FRIDAY 'TI L 9 I I' 1i I I I I I I II l' I ... • -Saddlehaek ~ EDITIO N · ,-. ' VOL:. 63, NO. 230, 4 SECTIONS, '44 PAGES ORAN6E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25;' 1970 Boyd's Report Raps Laguna Riot Procedures . ' By BARBARA KREfBICB Of ... ~.., •1111 l'-ft Among members of a city invesUgating panel, Laguna Beach C o u n c i I m a n Chaflton Boyd issued the report most ttrongly critical of Woodland -Drive riot control procedures, the 'release of statements indicated today. In discuuing the Woodland disruption last July 4, 1Boyd criticized procedures used to control the situation. He urge$ development of better relations between , poliCe,-clty officials and resident!. Boyd concludes his report with the aimment. "It Is clear that this incident should not have happened.'' Boyd's Is the longest of three ind.ivlduaJ . reports by members of the committee of inquiry into the riot released to the press today. His nine-page document compares 'with three-page reports submitted by the other two committ~ ·members, Mayor , DAIL'.Y. Pli.oY.St .......... !'ARTY TAllt -Senator George Murphy· and Go.veroor Ronald, Reagan chat With Mrs. Marsha Bents Of Newport Beach,. co-hostess '. -$100.•pla!e ~blicln fund,raising dinner Thuriday night at Anaheim Convention Center. In background (glasses) is Newport Beach attorney Alex Bowie, Reacan's campaign cha1rman ror Orange County. . . ·Driver of 'Drug Wagon' , Sentenced to Prison A Laguna Beach drug trafficker whose ha:sh1sh·filled minibus is n o w im· mort.alized ln ·Superior Court records as "drug wagoll" was senlenced Thursday to one to IO Years in state prison. Judge ·James F. Judge handed that term to Tod Will iam Carey, 2.1, of 1476 N. Coast Highv.·ay, and canceled a $5,000 bench warrant issued earlier when the La guna Officers Net 3 Suspects Laguna Beach narcotics officers , seek· Ing to serve a warrant for violation o( probation Thursday night, netted three additional 1uspects and a quanUty or dnlgs. Arrtlted on the warrant and also on suspicion of pos9e51ion of marijuana was Gregciry Stone Mooney, 19, of Mt Griffith Way. Also arrested at the .Griffith Way residence and booked on suspicion or posstaion of marijuana and being present where the drug was used. were, Edwlird Robert Gilstrap, 23, and Michelle Karen Mellino, of the Griffith Way ad- dress and Brel Nelson LaBarts, 19, of Arcadia. defendant failed to show up in court. Carey was one. of three persons ar~ rested on drug charges last May 4 at his home after investigators said they watch- ed Carey, his brother Robert, IS, and his wife, Ann, 21 , removing hashish valued al nearly $100,000 from Carey'.11 car. Drug charges filed against Mrs. Carey and Reibert Carey were later dismissed. · Carey's "drug wagon" got its tiUe from investigators who said he had the brand ,new-vehicle ·shipped·from..(iermany with considerable quantities of hash ish stuffed into every available recepticle including the ash tray. Superior Courl records indicate that Carey was a slude nt at the University of Heidelberg in West Germany when he became interested . in the &muggling or hashish. Investigators said he bought his car in Germany and drove to Morocco where he purchased the· hashish Riled last May 4 for $800. Carey returned to Germany -•nd had the loaded car shipped from that country to the Uni~ States, investigators aai&. Strike Authorized NEW YORK (AP) -Metnbers of the American Newspaper Guild at the New York Times have voted 1,143 to 79 to authorize guild officers to call a strike against tht paper. No deadline was set for 1 strike. Richard Goldberg and former city manager James D. Wheaton .. Before copyinc the individUll report& for public consumption, . the c l t y manager's office blanked out n!lJntl of all witnesses testifying at the inquiry and names of person! referred to by the writers. · Following the readini of a summary of the three reports at an adjourned council mtttin& Wednesday nllbt, Gokil:.ul bad not~ that the three commilttt member& had come 'up with different views of the · Woodl'&nd affair and, for this reason, the complete individual reportl also would be made public. Goldbefg's twt1:;part report deals with Investigation · of ·charges of Jmprop;er police conduci and meaaurea suggested to prevent a recurrence of such a aituaUon. He notes that only three participants oth<r than police penonnel testified, and only on< cbaraed phy~cal viol...,., stating he saw an ~floer hit .a female and pull her hair, pull a mate by ~hair and mace him and that his own neck WU hurt. Goldberg notes that ·.:'polloe_ witneuu did ·not confinn or deny these charges'", and that OM witneu qreed there "rnf&bt have been &0me over-rqction" in con- nection with one arrest. He also llatar that the police wltntss. laid takiD( of ~ prisoners by balr·boldln( ii not ... common. The only record of bospita1 treatment a1 an aftermath of tbe r.,t coocerned a police officer whole ahouldtr wu cliliocated, Goldberr 11atea. He says it • appean any buis for . charges bf violence would have resulted. from the !•ct tbal -_.. reUllinC orr..t 0< olbm were •llmlpiinc lo pre. (lee' MINJ Rior llZl'ORT, Pip II Reagan in County, Bids -. For Republican Majority . ' 1,000 Hear Governor Flag_ Not Green Bloody Nine Days _ Oyer In Jordan . Ecolog y Banner Goes to Court In Anaheim Whtn are the stars and stripes not an American Flag? Would substitution of the color ereen for blue make the differencel Apparently the matter -which crop. By JOANNE REYNOLDS ped up in San Clemente,ncently -will ot .. EW>ltY ,. .. ...,. be settled in court. , Matthew Udall, 11, of 140 Avenida ~ve~ Reagan Th~ay called upon Algodon, was· cited by a San. Clemente . C:-liforn1ans-to-re-elecrt--!'W"-and~-ai~•-f!O\jc:e;:-officer last week .on cbaraes--ot: him a ~!ear cut. ~blican JM.)Ollty L1J. ~•Ung lbe America• F1fl· ~ , the Le111I01Ure J!l :"""'"ber ... ..,. can ''»llce'1m~ Hia •u, wlddl,~ carry out hil t.aJ",nfonn, welfare'IM law 11id had cut° paitiona of •a Jlal p?ift~ and order progrmn:a. curtalu. Udall wa1 released•on·hia 1 ~ Reagan IJ>Ob. io a crow~ .of 1,000 · mise to appear, his na1 curtaiftl aeiJed u evidence. and he Is to be ,arral~ JD municipal court Oct. 2:. Udall has maintained that .his lfH"nish flag with ·a tars and 11tripes wa1 not an American Flag but <an ecol6gy flag .an'd that his display ~ it •s1 a positive act · not a :dt.mspeetful .psture. -Edwal'd "!forM.11,.__,deputy diatrict• at- ~. feela the clfeiaNtan:i·~ef ."tlil! c .... fall ·~ •·dilflcutt.... ~ lo ~ • liP,I !"' •lljl>y;w~ iod -.. !be eour\ dedff. . From Wire MMces . The . nine days ol· -ml -~t are over·ia J~a clvll war, bUI Iii< li&)lU~ tO crnto a Palol\llM la< fr.et··Arabl Jnual ·continu~ real llldln pioclolmed lodoy. . 'J~'s l\iDI ·H.-n ml Palelllnl•n Republicans at a SlOU+pJate dinner Thursday night at the Anaheim Q:m. vention Center.- In a gathering attended by tbe Republican candklatea for it.ate con- stitutional offices, the l.egislature and Cqngress, Reagan 1hared the apeaker's plat.form with Senator George Murphy, who also is seeking rw.lecUon. Laguna Planners to Hear pen-tµa lea~r Yuir Arafat~ •. poK< ·pacl Cid • lwn o( Sud- ltrmy offj~ WU aMiped &I a polioa force. Reagan cited the "broken log jam" of legislation that o c c·u r red when ReRUblicans gained a slight edge in both houses of the state Legislature after the 1968 elections. • , And he outlined additional programs he wOuld push through H given a 90lidly Republican Legislature this year. Among programs he said be considers necessary are welfare reforms, Medical reforms, a judiCial selection reform and property tax reform. "If you believe In the need for these things as l do, then give me a te&m of (lee DINNEII, Pop I) Stud ents -Given Rec Brochuers Copies of u.e ncenUy compltted Laguna Beach Recreation O.partmeoll program brodH.'f~ are being dUrtributed to all students '(ft . the Laguna Beach Unified School District. Copi" of tbe in· formatlona l brochure are also available at the City HaU and the library. The brochure deacribel a wide variety of instructional classes such as karate, cake decorating, creative dance and ten- . nis. Residents may register for ~y of the classes or 1ct.ivitit1 at the Recreation Department, 175 N. ~Highway, from 1 a.m. to noon and from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday throullh Friday. Further information may be obtained from !he llecrution 0.pl. •t llt-W4 ut 45. Road Extension Proposal · Relief was expr1ued throa&hout the Middle East and America in IOl'ltl quarters, while bitter Arabs loyal lo the rebel cauae cried out in rap. A aowd of 200 poured out ol noon praytt1 at Al Aqia Mosque in Jerusalem Cid charged throuCb !he ancleot city'• windin111reela. The Laguna Beach Planning Com- mission will hold a public bearing Mon- day 1t 7:30 p.m. on a propoaed road con· 1truction p111ject which will affect Riddle Field -the home of the Laguna Beach LitUe Lague. Marine Arrested In San Clemente _Rape Atte.mpt A former Camp Pendleton Marine was arrested in Oceanside on suspicion of at- tempting to rape a San Clemente woman. James Alonm Nella, 2.1, was arrested on a warrant Obtained by San Cleinente police. Police said he would be arraigned in municipal court today on charges of ra'pe and burglary. BIU wu set at 125,000. A detective aaid Neila's 'picture, one of several shown the 24-year-old victim, was identified by her. Neila derued the charges, police said. The victim, a market checker, 1tru1- gled with an uuilant in her home early Sw"1ay morning until her KrUms drove him of£. She suffer~ cull arid IC?lpea in the tU1Sle. Police said the 1t11pect did not know the victim. Entry into htr home was 1•lned by slitting • window ICl'eeri and reaching in to unlock the window. The propoul lnvolva conslruction ol the campus Drive e1W,..ion from tKe North Coast Highway throuah Bolt can- yon to the city limits, a diatance 6f about one half milt, as part of lht coun- ty1s ·arterial road plan. Acting City Manager Joseph Sweaney said today the engineering plans on the projects are not complete. He noted that, if the road goes through the baseball Held, another field woUld be built to replace the old one before the start ot construction. - A public bearing will also be held Mon- day on a proposed extension (If Alta Laguna Boulevard from Treetop Lane lo Balboa Avenue in Arch Beacb:Heightl. Following the schedul~ public hear~ ings, the commission will continue its study session on development or the Maln Beach. The commission also is &eh~uled to hear a re.port from city Sign Inspector Bill Meyer on the status of hotel and motel aigns in residentlally zooed areu of the city. "Kill Hussein," they IC!'eamed, ehafto Ing his army Is 1J~uP,terinc ·their brotlle!'! 1n Amm .. and demand4!f _a _ _ _ new revolution. They proclaimed wane bate '?" Hussein than for Israel. Fears for the lives aDCI salety ot umc- counted,(or _airline-hijacking _ _,.. lessened 1omewh1 t, when Kini Huasein's troops freed 15 of the 54-at l:Jo a.m. (PM'J. found in ~raked Am- man. None were American. · They we" ... ported lo be well ml the h~t continued for 39 otben -mmtlY. Americans -still mining, while vanisb- ed Jotdanlan Prime Minilter Mohammed DaoUd turned up J&.fely in Cairo. Foul play was feared 11lunday when Daoud -who resigned his position - disappeared from lbe Ntle Hilton Hotel. but be lnld •1"111 who lrlced ·blm Ila limply "'anted to be alone. Developments In the Jordan clvU wu. and the intemallonal cria1a ~ pn!Wlied •ppeared to be •lowtn( loday, bul all_ Laguna Police :f~tion".'" kHPJnc • c1 .. eye 00 the IsrHll leoclers up.......i -Che. ck. B urglarv tba1.11 Wilt be quiet ,., • while. ·-u J.. (Ila JORDAN, hp II Laguna Beach police are lnvelti11:tit1nC.;fr===:;:::;:;::;:::=~;;;;;==;~-~ a Thu....tay morning bur11111'y •t 1he White Hall llresl Shop, 305 N. Coul Highway, ht which wmien.'1. ~ \lalued at about $10,000 wu taken. • . ...... 'Bus jac king' Foiled in LA Dress Code • Ill Effect Entry to the ahop WU apparenUy «•in- ed through the rear door· at about ·2: '5 a.m. ThUrsday, •ceonlinl lo polic .. The 11toi:e'1 entire invenlory of women'• COits, dreues and pant sultl· !'•• tateft, Police reported, with the erceptton of about 11 pieces of clothlill hanglnc in a ckllet. The ThundaY theft WU the -d ... porled burl1lll'Y •I the atore wllbll· 1111 pell thr .. m«>lhl, pollco -· GU!ly S.nt. Ana w1ndl will blow U.P a itonn over tht , weekend. seoding the couW temperlllum lhool1n( toward !he to mark. The momlngs will oiler for, u lllUal. ' L05 ANGELES (UPO -O.ryl Sweet, 19, stuck a broken wine bol- -tle to the head of the-driver of 1 bus carrying 22 persons and told Cle mente Hi gh Sc hool Students Comply W ith .Rule s )'W' 1t JJ a11ow.c11o touch 11>e ""'of a T· Body of-~.o~an · 011111r1 .,,u.,., -1n1· 111e 1q111 11111· w r. h A h · , him, "We'rt going to San Diego." By PAMELA HA~AN The "bu!jacking" Thursday 0t t11t DtllY ,..., Sfllfll lasted only 15 minutes. A You might think Bnkle length dresses puaenger, Robert Davis . 2 4, incongruous with ·Creedence Clearwater overpowered the would-be hij•cker .Revival, moon landingl and women's lib. when the Southern CaliJornia Rapid But'yOU canfiri(tbem•t 8111'1 ~ Tra!)s11 Dislrlm :Mis ~'°P!'ed ... ,. High School wi.n ai,n'i ! -V. -..t-llg____.....,.._...__ --"'de..thiJ yoor, _ tersecllon. ~ "MMt of the girls unde.rsland and com· The drivtr , Ed Hudson, Jr., l•ler ply with the drcu ,cod~.·· s~ld. Mrs. told pellet, "He 81Jd he was goln'-B11rba~a McCarthy, girls vt~ principal. to kill me." sWett was charged Su.t JUll ~ make s~t lbe~ w~s a v~ry ... with kldnaping .... A1tthoriUes llid spectal fashlOll show 1n the glTls physical there are no statutes dealin& with education clJMes Thursday. . . _..__ "T)lrough aklta we showed what kind ol th• h•l~· .. of bulea. .in,,,. la •pproprlate for dllfmnt °" • -· c_asiona, '' aaid Mrs. McCarthy. · Ailhou,h a few of the girls are wtaring long dresses, a gn:at·numbtr of them are wearing long pants. "We're 1jll·~ lroublt .lflth !•clod jeano, bot lllOll of tbe , .po,U, loft l>etter than I apeded," •be said --J.-• Jo n marl.boys v ce prlnClpal ,'all"fil that the new dress code ii working very well. "We've had to iJIUI! a frw •arnings and we've had a fe-ii; brltf 8Ulpt!lllionl, but you have lo exptGf. a. few ln I IChool with 2.100 lludents," ho Aid. The '""'t cootrovera!ll, )111'1 C.Jbo. t1tw' cod• bas -boys" 9lr; lqjll. 'Tblo, -. - ,gesl<d IC< ttucleoll •~nnrby Sllddleback . " ftS e8 8 Ofe • ~~~i .npoo1od.tbat I ·,;,. boys •ro ·~,.;...;.,;;.;, ii.y, h. iJ..',..; ill. , opo')in1 · buolly ,muidach.1 , and : Uorln( body of • -wom .. wuhed .abort ·olioul .aideborM, ~ new llllow'"l"'• bol noon ·lodoy neir P•elllc CoMl lllli>Ni' ·most loolt·llk• they did Jut yur. •nd El Pueo ,In l,olun• Beodl. ............ 1llor ha p:odllced lolaof--.wthorltlU ooid It w~· dlfllcUlt In cJe. bermUdu on boys and mlnil on girls, but t.ermine how Jani the vk:tim hiif·bem iii there is J>M mode of acceptatilt drell for -the ocean due to the condition of· the 1tril tbal la c:onsplcuoul by Ila -.. c0rp1e. Ptrllo)ll !he drtss code commltttt. O•anl• C®nty C.-r's deputln which ii ~ed lo _, 1Pln In picked up the reNiil! •nd wm In bc- ottoMr· lo NYlt'f'tlle .,,..., JiblCIOA, atn •n inVMlil•t)oll lillo' lilil -·· wtll w. ·-look II It • .. .. ..... [denl1ty ad 1111 ...... of doath. ' . \ • INSm E TGBA Y "We to0ntcd to do romeUUno /or our "8iahbort.'' .said s lh o•na Hill.I couple toho Mut do- .. i.d $500,000 lo tht ..., Soddld>GCk ComMUlril¥ Hospi- 141. TU'ir •torv '.is hi. teda•'• Wull<..!lr, Pog<' 25. -" --, ._ .. , c......... ., ... ,_ . -~~ . --. -. --. ,...... \toll -M --~ ,, -· . ............... ----.. __ .. --. ........ ...., ..,.....,,.,..,_ .. -... ............. 1, ·-. -... -. _.. ..... ,,.,. --.. ••• • • • •. )I DAllV PILOT SC Fl1d1y, Septa:: .. 25, 1970 ' ~-?'"" • ·(/5f) 0 F~m Pqe I JORDAN •.• Arabs clamored for new war or squabbled among.their own .. J>oliticll factions. i. Relief efforts by the lntlmltlonal Red poss and its Arab counterpart, the Red ,Crescent, were stepped up as the plight !Ol' thousands of war victims intensified. ! Arabs from the occupied west bank of lhe Jordan drove truck! carrying canned kood -t.bela identifying them as Israeli~ >"n•de torn off -rolled in and will carry 1wounded womtn, children and old people but. ; Herbert G. K1ein, White house com- tnunicatlons director, said today in t'rankfurt. Germany that American response to lbe Jordan crisis has been 'llimed at avoiding intervention. In an inter\liew with the American Forces Rad.lo network here, Klein Hid the President carefully explored all con- tingencies and when forces were alerted I~ was based on the hope that they would not be uaed. , ''But you must be prepared for the V.-orst as well." he added. "It was f9rtunate we didn't have to U5f: the forces ." A beefed-up U.S. Sixth Fleet r;till steamed along in the Mediterrl!-nean only ISO miles from the critical area, it! abip.s, planes and men alerted two weelu: ago when the three hijackings occurred. 'I'.he Soviet Union's potent Mediter· ranean squadron steamed along politely ~pt determinedly in its wake. ,: "You could say we share a common in- t.rest iii what the other guy ia doing," remarked Rear Admiral Roger Spreen. Israel expects quiet along its borders with .Syria and Jordan, at Je1st for a while. But military 10Urces in Tel Av iv &aid today it is ready to act if the guer- till•s decide to switch their attacks from J0rdan to Israel. The sources said Palestinian guerrillas suffered up to 2Cl,OOO casualties in fighting with the Jordanian army in the past nine days. In addition, they said, Syria lost between 75 and 100 Soviet-built TS4 and T5s tanks .=""'111ifost 1% perCent of their 8rmor -as well as 170 military b-anaport vehicles in the batUes in northern Jordan. ~ 1be heavy losses, according to the Israeli military sources. will guarantee: qwet, at least for several weeks. Leaders differed in their opinions, with Defense Minister Moshe Dayan saying the.Jordan civil war was dying out and nooe of its pr¥!cipals wants inore. "I hope the King manages to ~ive them a aevere beating," said Da}tan. 'I am on the side of the king and not on the aide of the alternative." The alternative would be Israeli in- tervention and Deputy Premier Yigal Allon said ln a hard·line Meet the Press interview Hussein may now be in worse irouble. Diplomatic sources say Allon favored immediate Israeli intervention, to save Husseirfs eovernmenL Woman Hangs Self STOCKTON !UPI) -Leung Shoe Ng. BB, complained to her daughter that her dentures did not flt and she "had no reason to live if I don't have good teeth." The woman·s body was found hanging. from a rafter Thursday. ' DAILY PILOT .. ...,.., .... " ...... , ...... LAiflMi .... ,. ...... '""'rt Cette M... S-Cr-."'9 Olt4HGE «IAIT l"UlllSMIHG C()Ml".fkY lo'llert N, Weo4 '"1ic11t11 •~f l"ulll"i.. Jtclr I . Cu•ley I/kt l'rt•!oonl '""' Gc-flffll M1,...1r lkol'ltt IC1o•il ll•IW Ttio111•• A. M..,,,hh10 M.,...1111 E•itll' ltrch tr4 P. N1!1 Sto\1111 Of'•,.• c-1r EdlM<' Par aly zed Y outh Needa Chessmnn BJ RIJDI NllllGElBI · and pl burl," Ilk! Mn. Vlolit' T-. • -..., ,., .... lbf,.Meplte''• dlnctar .. ,.... K111ny llelluolr fl WllllllJ !or-Tht·-lifr, wbo ____ , lo mallt the -1 move. uoocatlled, llllf ua Ibo .-. -. .e. Bec1U1e he con•t. Not m-1111 °'"""' lo "-'· October when an automobile accident Mn. Taber-adCled that the n'ursing 1laff d .,_ · al · d d ·"-·d hu1begun an intensified procram. 10 help &evere •UJ1 •P.tn air an par...,-'t"' hlin feel better because he bld'been'feel. both arms and legs. th lng so miserable of late.' When e doctors tell you that there ia "We want to get him an attachement little, il any hope that you'll ever run or for lhe telephone so he can at Jeut talk throw a football again. life can get pretty to people. And hi s brother ia getUng him dep{Wlil)&. And from Kenny's bedslde at a !lereo," she said. · Huntincton Valley Convalescent Hospital, "Right now he only has a television and the future looks pretty dim. he -can't even turn on the call Uabt for Mentally alert .ind ·able to talk well help." despite the tragic accident, Kenny says Hospital staff members are also look· he would like to play chess with someone tng forw.ard to providing him with a but that he can move neither pawn or reading apparatus and perhaps an elec- king with his bands. tric wbeelchair he: can opf:ralc with his "I'm looking for someone in their early mouth. 2<ls to play a couple of games a day," Another thin& that's bothering Ke.My ia , said Kenny,-19. who attended-Huntington. the tact that he is.the only young person Beach High School. ·He says it reilly in the hospital and surrounded b)' octo d.oesn't matter if it's a boy or girl as long and nonogenarlans:, according to Mrs. as they like to play chess. Taber. KeMy doesn 't proresa to be an expert "He has some visitors but most of the at the game, but it looks like he'll have a friends bis age have dropped by the long time to P:racttce. "I'm realll not waysi!!e. · very good at it blit I kriow it Ui~,--=<.'Ny ve just forgCitten," she said. moves," he explained. Right now, the most import.ant thing is Ironically, a chess set bought in Mexico to provide him with a chess partner to was an indirect cause of his predicament. break up his televtsion watching routine, "He and another boy were on their way Mrs. Taber fee!J. back home from Mexico where he Anyone who is intertated may phone purchased the tj)ess aet. He was asleep in her at 842-5Sr51. the car when it rolled over several limes: It's your move . • From Page J DINNER ... Republicans who will 1et the job done," be said. The campaign tactics of Reagan's op- ponent, Jess Unruh. were noted by the governor. "This business of popping up on my front lawn or at the houses of Republican supporters is Judricrous." Reagan drew a laugh from his sup- porters when he added, "You know it us- ed to be that the only thing you had to worry about on your front Jawn was crab grass." Murphy extended some of Reagan's remark.! to the national level, noting that President Nixon also needs a Republican "team in Washington. "In two weeks of hard campaigning up and down this state, I've found out a few thing"s about wha:t Californillll! want," he explained. "They want judges who will enforce the laws as they are written. I found out the taxpayers of this 1tate are tired of sup- porting revolutionaries In our institutions of higher learning. "And they want people in public office who will tell it like it is. They want represenµttives whG will vote the way they talk during a campaign and they want men who will show up in Congress," he stated. Murphy concluded his speech by calling upon audlence members to get out and work for the candidates to make ''the greatest Republican victory in years in this state." Street Project N earing Finish In San Cwmente A 2,400-foot strip of Avenida Pico, delayed by the construction of in: tersecting sewer Jines, s:hould open in Sa n Clemente late next week. This was the estimate today of City Engineer Phil Peter who said work is nearing completion on laying two 14-inch efnuent lines under the road. The tw~lane section of Pico between El Camino Real 8nd the freeway is a joint city.county project constructed at a cost of about $170,000. The $2.3 million sewage reclamation syslem should be in operation by the New Year, Peter estimated. It was delayed by work changes. The plant will have sophisticated ter- tiary treatment that produces sparkling clear water. The water will be sold for ir· rigation or piped to catch basins in Camp Pendleton for percolation into un- derground water stores. A federal grant of about $900,000 is helping pay for the project. A dedication date for the new facility ha s not been scheduled. Peter .said it would likely be sometime between the end of November and the new year. _San Clemente officials initially sought the help of the city's most prominent resident. President Nixon, with the dedication. He could not attend so another star attraction is being sought. F rom Pqe I MINI-RIOT REPORT ••• vent arrests from being made. ·However. he added, "It ls the job of. a Since no auxiliary weapons were used police officer, when he observes a despite stone and botUe-throwing and specific person breaking the law, to en. physical resistance, he concludes the for ce the law. police conducted themselves as well as "In this case, the necessary force that could be expected under d i I f i c u 1 t had to be used to accomplish the arrest circumstances, though not without some undoubtedly moved the people in the over-reaction, noting that "the decision is crowd · to the intensely hostile att itude necessarily subjective since t h e that developed. If the people of Woodland testimony of witnesses varied on several Drive had accepted the proper function of minor points." · the police and nol interfered (as they Taking note of the presence of many have relrained from doing many tiines in ''outside!'!," he suggests that the trouble the past when similar arrests wer11. might not have occurred if only residents made) the problem probably would not had been involved. have occurred." Goldberg sai d he agrees with the l!Ug· Wheaton concludes that the city can do gestion of ·•most of the witnesses" that a better job of C1>mmunicating with better communications should exist various neighborhoods and that a more betseen police and res~ents of the area. deliberate effort should be made to He also support! suggestion! that the de velop every police offlctr as a "com· police develop a plan of action designed munity relation! expert" so that en- t() head off such confrontations In future forcement of the Jaw and respect for the law can be enhanced. and that the city consider appointing a community relations olficer who could Boyd describes his lengthy report aa. an allempt. to solve problems before police attempt to. docUment the event &tep-by- action becomes necessary. step as it progressed from a minor disturbance to a full-scale riot. This he Wheaton, in his report, finds that "no information was submitted .•. that would maintains. did not occur until police rein. sustain any allegations of physiCal abuse forceri'lents arrived from other areas to or ijlegal behavior on the part of any produce a full-dress show of fotce that part)C\llar police department employe promptly resulted ln pandemonium ln the that would indicate disciplinary action is area. justified." He is sharply critical ol the fact that no Noting that "the committee learned 11pecial plans bad been made for police quite a bit about police operational pr~ coverage of the holi day weekend, that the polict chief chase that weekend to start cedure and manpower allocation," the his vacation and 'the city manager former ma11ager suggests sever a l permitted this. matters that need review. 1'bes:e include a written plan of Following broadcast of a 999 call (of- preparedneu for major distW"bancrs that fice.r needs help urgently) units from six would include calls to superior oUicers J11w enforcement agencies converged on not on duty, calling of off-duty personnel the area, Boyd noles. to duty and the calling for mutual aid "With the arriv.iaJ of outside agencles,"' assistance from other agencies. }le notes he writes, "the officers wue organiied that the police chief has started such a tntO teams to pick up anyone on the manual and urges that It be com.pleted. str,tt and hiding in the yards ..• these With regard to the July 4 affair, wide-sweep teams trlagered the over· \\'htaton cites a number of factors wrought crowd intG a state or wild con· leading to the riot situation. When cf· fusion, retreat and flight through the ficers first arrived to check on fireworks, lakes and into the hil!J .•• with police tn l he u ys. a "party and hcllday mood hot pursuit ... " prevailed in the nelghborhood" and the He describes how an old·Umt resident. crowd was "not hostile." treated with ·~absolute disrespect" by of· -1--Allfmpled rreal-ol-a-marij111111_ flws..J:tll~'-!!!Jii> homo II A smoker, resistance to the amst and a police helicopter hovered overhead. chase by police~ ended the party mood He notes Uiat durtng bobkinC of the and resulted Jn apprehension that prisoners at the Laguna Beach station, gradually built up to the minor riot situa· accordlng to an officer's testimony. tion , says Wheaton. ~ "handcuffs Vt'ere not immedla_tely remov· He observts lhat ii the arrest had not ed because of the hostile 1tt1tude of the bttn resisted, or if b•d not been at· prlsoner.s'' and. threal! to "kill" the Of· tempted, '1the party atmosphere would fleer. •'ho wu alone, U the cu.ffs wera probably ha\'e contlnued." removed. Sabotage Seen -. Weapons Found In Costa Mesa / PULLS. OUT OF RACE l••tue C1ndld1t• GrHn 1 Gr een Steps Out Of Cities Lea gue President Race Huntington Beach Councilman Jack Green has quit the race for president of the Orange Count y League of Cities. Green announced th.is morning he would not seek re· election to the pre~i~el)t'S post because at least eight cities were opposed to him succeeding himself in office. The Huntington Beach Qruncilman fac- ed a runoff Oct. 8 against Anaheim Coun- cilman Ralph Clark. The two men tied 7.7 when the League of Cities met Sept. 10. Gl'een ha$ served this year as president and Clark as vice president of the Orange County League of Cities. The league has 26 members in the et1unty. While eliminating himself from the race. Green also asked for nominations to be reopened, So cities would have more than one man to choose from for preSi- dent. "I would urge that nominations be again opened on Oct. 8," Green saii:I. "But it should be noted that during the period in which the nominating com· mittee was active. no one came forward to ·suggest names for consideration .'' Clark. Green's only Opponent, ls also fl candidate for Supervisor in the 4th District. He faces a runoff'Nov. 3 with Gbrdon Bishop for the supervisor's post to succeed William Hirstein. If Clark is named President '()f the League of Cities, then is elected a county supervisor, he would hav.e to quit his ~ague 'J)OSt in January. 1 Gretn sai4 he was quitting the race becaus~· Garden Grove and seven other cities had expressed dissatisfaction with the League's policy of allowing officers to serve consecutive terms. J apanese Scientific ·Rocket Launch Fail s UCHINOURA, Japan (AP) -A Japanese attempt to get a scientific sateUite into orbit failed today .when the fourth stage of a 43.7-ton rocket ap- parently did not ignite. Scientisls said they then lost track of the 71-foot rocket, called the MU4S1. and that it apparently burned up in the atmosphere after reaching an altitude · of some 350 miles above the central Pacific. By ARTll!Jll ft.. VINSEL Of !IN 01ll'f' l"lllt Stiff Federal authorities today entered the case of a cache of military weapc>ns and explosives --plus jns:lructions for sabotiige -uncovered accidentally Thllflday night by Coata Mesa police checking ou't a false alarm. A pair of teenagers was arrested on state charges of possession of illegal firearms, while Treasury Department agents were en route today to determine jf a federal offense was committed. Police were reluctant to rpeculate on any · possible connection with radical ·political factions until each of.-J8 weapons -including automatic l'iJ\es and machine.guns: -was checked and the suspects questioned. . They were identified as David 8. .Mcl.aughlin, 19. and :qc>~las M , Langevin, 19, bolt? of 108 Cecil Place. the ·house where the arsenal was confi5cated. ''Some of the it.ems that are illegal to possess appear to be deactivated," ex· plained Detective Lt. Harold Fischer. He said a bomb disposal squad from El Toro Marine Corps Air Station was called to headquarters this morning when hand grena'des were discovered in one con· fiscated carton. "We don't know if they're live," Lt. Fischer said. "But we do have ammunition boxes containing some spent and acme live rounds, plus numerous pamphlets on bombs and booby traps," he continued. "That's what scares us." Lt. Fischer said chemical compounds commonly used in making bombs -in combination with other readily available in~edients -were. taken from the Cecil Place residence. He said McLaughlin listed his oc- cupation as a headwaiter and Langevin, who was not present when the weapons were discovered, is an auto mechanic. The two suspects appareilUy liave no direct military coMection in which they might have obtained the weapons, he ad- ded. Besides the military weapons. whictl.in- cluded a mortar launching device ap- pearing to be Japanese-made, police seiz- ed an Infrared snipe.rscope used to pick out victims in totaJ darkness. "Numerous hand weapons and rifles which ap~ar on the surface to be legal were also Picked up," said Lt. Fischer. The discovery began shortly before 10 p.m., when an emergency callbox in the 100 block of.Cecil Place y,·ent off at police headquarters. Officers Gene Norden and Dave Hayes, of the department's felony unit, v.·ere nearby s:o they responded and stopped a youth later determined to be McLaughlin Student Nabbed On Drug Charge A 17-year-old San Clemente High School senior was arrested at school Thursday on charges of twice selling LSD to an · undercover narcotics officer. Detectives allege the long-haired youth had on two occasions sold 10 tablets or the psychedelic mind bender to a San Clemente officer. The youth was taken to juvenile hall to await the disposition or his ~ase in juvenile court. Police said the boy had a clean record before the Thursday arrest. ~ for questionln&:. ''He admitted touching the J:>ox. but said he didn't set it off,'' Ll Fischer ez· lained, adding that he carried no personal identification at that point. "The Subject voluilteered to go""io his home and get aome," uid U . Fischer. "He was accompanied by the officers and they observed the weapons when they entered." Shortly after McLaughlin was arrested, his room-malt. arrived home and was taken into custody on the same char1ea. Hand Grenade Kills 2 Boys In Riverside Speclll lo Ille DAil.Y PILOT' RIVERSIDE -Ricley Leamon was 13 Thursday and his sister gave him a foot· ball that bounced over the backyard fence while be and two buddies were passing it. He and Bobby Ewing and Davld Crawfdrd, also 13, went into the neighbor· ing yard and found the football, but they also found a box of 11 military fragmen. tation gn:nades. The football and the cart.on. were both in some shrubbery. Just exactly what hlppened from that point may never be known -up unW the blast that shaUered every window In the Leamon home -but authoritiea can 11peculate. Ricky Leamon was killed on his birth· day, blown to bits. Bobby Ewing was tilled in the same in- 11tant, blown to bits. "They were just torn apart," aid me . 11ickened Riverside County Sheriff's depu- ty. Women Injured In La guna Crash Said Improvin g Two victims or an automobile collision that took the life of an elderly Laguha Beach woman Wednesday are in im- proved condition at Sou th Coast Com· munity Hospital. • ' Gertrude Huber, 85, of 600 Gle.nneyre St.. has been taken off the critical list and is now listed in serious condition after suffering multiple fractures in the two-vehicle collision. Marilee Jean Gafney, 22, of 190 Canyon Acres Drive, is in satisfactory condition ·after undergoing surgery for internal in· juries suffered in the accident. Mrs. Huber was a passenger in a car driven by Gladys Geier Wilson, 74, of 502 Brooks St. The Wilson auto turned left from Glenneyre Street onto Los Olivos Street and collided with a vehicle driven by Mike Gafney. 23. Another" passenger In the Wilson vehi- cle, Florence Martin , !WI. 1294 Temple Hilla Drive; died in the emergency room at the hospital after suffering multiple in· j~riyi in the collision. For The Unusual .... Think Of Ted von Hemert Thete unique piectt ere e new look et the Old World from· Henredon 's Fo lio Nine collection. Oivtrsely clet ign•d, ytt intftly her- monious. Th is ~ifftr•nY.l!... with Ted von Htmtrt, Int. 0 DEALERS FOR: HENREOO ~ -DREXEi. -HER ITAGE _1eJ11111 ~ NEWPORT IEACH 1727 W"tcllff Dr,. 642·'!050 0 ,IN FlllDAY 'TIL 9- INTERIORS Prof ... tonal l"terJer Dotltnor• AW1i11W-.t.IO-NSI D LAG UNA llACH J4S Hirth Cooll Hwy. ~51 OPEN FRI DAY 'TIL 9 ..... ,,. "-...... Or.,. c..., ..... ,161 I I I I I II ' j: ,· I 11 .. , • Teihy.':11 M.•I N.Y. VO~. 63, NO. 230, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FIUDA Y, SEPTEMBER 2S, ·1970 . JEN CENTS ' • Boyd's Report Raps Laguna ·Riot Procedures By BARBARA KREffilCB- Of .... DlllY ~llllf ll•ff · Among members of a clty investigating panel, Laguna Beach Co u n c i I m a n Charlton Boyd issued the report most strongly critical of-Woodland .Drive riot control procedures, the release of 1tatements indicated today. Jn discussing the Woodland disruption last July 4, Boyd criticized procedures used to control the situation. He urges development of better relations between. police, city officials and residents. Boyd concludes his report with. the comment, "It is clear that .this incident should not have happened." Boyd's is the longest of three ~vi~l!•I reports by members of the committee of inquiry into the riot released to the press today. His nine.page document C<lmpares with three-page reports submitted by the other two commiUee· members, Mayor ' ' Richard Goldber& IJ1d -. dty manager J1me1 D. Wheaton. Be!ore copying the indivldµal .reportl for public consumpUon, the. • c J t y manager'• office blanked out names of all witnesses testifying at the·lnquify and. ·names· or persons referred . to bY the writers. Following the reading of 1 sun\ihary of the three reports at an adjourned council me<tin& Wednesday niJht, Goldbera had noled U!at the three commlltff members hid come up with different views of the Woodland a.flair and, for this reason, the complete Individual reports also would be made public. Goldberg'• two-part re.part deals with lnvesUgatlon-of charges -ot improper police conduct and measures auggeste.d to pre\lent a recurrence. of such a 1ituation. He notes that only ·three participants other than police perOOlllltl iesUlied, 111d ollly ooo chal'led phyaical . violence, statin& he aaw an office.i' hit a femaJe and pull her hair, pull a male by the hair and mace. him and that his own neck wu hurt. Goldbir& ..... that "police wi- did-not~COftfinn-or ·deny-theae-Cbarjes' l and that ono wltnea qreed there. "mi&ht h!lve been 'som~ over-reaction" in con- nection with' one arrest. He al10 stat.a Ulal 11\t ~ witness lald llkin& ol prbonen by JWr.boldini Is not ... common. The only re.cord of hospital treatment as an aftermath of the riot concerned a police officer whose shoulder wu dJ<localed, Goldberg atales. .He uys -it Fappean any bull-fDr charses of violence would have resulted from the fact that pertons were: rtlisting arrest or others were attempting to pre- (See MINI Bl<IT lllCPORT, Pap.I) Reagan in County, Bids For Republican Majority l,OOOHear Governor Flag Not Green Ecology Banner Goes to Court . ~"·I DAll.Y PILOT ..... ......_ ' ' In Anaheim By JOANNE REYNOLDS ot Ille Dlolly Pli.t ltllf Governor Reagan Thunday called upon Californians to re-elect him and .t.o. give hi?n a clear cut Bepub!.ican 1Dfja(ity •ia the. Legislature in 'No'ftmbe.r to he ean carry out hi5 tu tel'onn, welfare·and law and order programs: .. When ire the stars and stripes not an American Flag? Would substitution of the color green for blue make the difference? Apparently the matter -which crop- ped up in San Clemente recently -will be settled in court. Matthew Udall, 18, of 140 -Avenida 'Algodon. was cited by a San Clemente police, eHicer last week on chai:aes o{ 0tsecratiD1the4merlc..,l!lq. · Police imPouMed his van .. whlch they uid hid cuc]lllrllom ol 1·1Iq u .- cuNins, Udall was ?e!t•sed on his pro- mise to appear, his naa: curtaiAI Mlzed as evidence and he is to be arr1iped in municl"p-al court Oct. 2. Udall has maintained that hi1 greenish flag with stars and stripes was not an American Flag but an ecology flag and that his display of it was a positive act not a disrespectful aestUre. Edward Tornell, deputy dillrict! _., tomey, fet!ll the ~'tltt CaJe fall into I difftclllt aN·"'1t latenil1 lo·throw -liaf!l • It ·11y -liq llld lelllq lbe court decldl. PARTY TAI:!( -Senator George Murphy and Gilvernor Ronald Reagan chat with Mrs. Marsha Bents of Newport Beach, ca--hostess of $l~a-plate Republican fund-raising dinner Thursday night at ~eim Convention Center, In background (glasses) is Newport Beach attorney Alex Bowie, Reagan's campaign chatrman tor 9range County. Reagan •poke to a ceowd of 1,00'.I Republicans ·at a Slf».:1-plate dinner Thursday ni1ht at the Anaheim eon.; vention Center. In a gathering attended . by the Republican candidates for state con- Laguna Planners to Hear -D rl•ver of 'Drug Wn=~g~o~n~' ..... ·-, ~· •tit••io••I offices. the. Legislature •nd {,I; Congr.ess, Reagan shared the 1peaker'1 platform with Senator George Murphy, . . who also is seeking re.election. ~eagan cited-the .. broken log-jam" of legislation that o c c u r r e d when Republicans gained a slight edge in both houses of the state Legislature after lhe Road Extension Pro.posal Sentenced to Prison The Laguna Beach Planning Com- mission will hold a public hearing Mon·· day at 7:30 p.m. on a proposed road con· atruction project which will affect Riddle Fie.Id -the home of the Laguna Beach IJtUe Lea(ue. A Laguna Beach drug trafficker .whose hash ish-filled minibus is n o w im· mortalized in Superior Court records as "drug wagon'' was sentenced Thursday to one to JO years in slate prison. Judge James F. Judge handed that term to TOO William Carey, 23, of 1476 N. Coast Highway, and canceled a $5,_000 bench warrant issued earlier when the Laguna Officers Net 3 Suspects Laguna Beach narcotics ollictrs, sttk· lng to serve a warrant for violation of probaUon Thursday night, netted three additional suspects and a quantity of drugs. · · - Arrested on the warrant and also on suspicion of possession of marijuana was Gregory Stone Mooney, 19, of 669 Griffith Way. Also arrested at the Griffith 'Way residence and booked on suspicion of poSsesiion of marijuana and being present where the drug was used , were, Edward Robert Gilstrap, 2.'1, and Miehe.lie Karen .Me:lllno. of the Griffith Way ad· dress and Bret Nelson LaBart.s, 19, of Arcadia. 'Bus jacking' Foiled in LA LOS ANGELES !UPI) -Daryl Swee!, 19, stuck a broken wine bot- 1 -ue~ to the hea<Yof the driver or a bus carrying 22 persons and told him, "We're going to San Diego." The 1'busjacking" T h u rs d a y lasted only 15 minute!. A . passenger, · Robert Davis, 2 4 , ov~wered the would-be hijacker wi,n the Soutl>ern Calllomla Rapid Trtnlllt Dbtrlcl lius 11""""1 Ol I -f'ed Jight-iA-a-down&own tersection. The. dri\ler, Ed Hudson, Jr., later told police, "He. pld he was gciing to kill me." Sweet waJ charged with kldnaping .. Authorltl ts said there are no statutts deallna with the hlj1cklng of b.,... .. defendant falltd to Show up in court. Carey was one of thre·e persons ar- rested on drug charges last May 4 at his home after investigators said they watch- ed Carey, his brother Robert, 18, and his wife. Ann, 21. removing hash ish valued at nearly $100,000 from Carey's car. Drug charges filed against Mrs. Carey and Robert Carey were later dismissed. Carey's "drug wagon" got its title from in\lestigalo rs who said he had the brand new-vehicle shipped from Germany with considerable qu anti ties of hashish stuffed into every available rece pticle includini the ash tray. Superior Court records ind icate that Carey was a student at the University of Heidelberg in West Germany when he became interested Min the smugling o{ hashish. Investigators said he bought his car in Germany and drove to Morocco where he pu rchased the hashish seized last May 4 for $800. Carey returned to Germany and h~ the loaded car shipped from that country to the United States, investl1ators said. Strike Authorized NEW YORK (AP) -Member! ot the' 'American Newspaper Guild at the New York Times ha\le' voted l,l43 to 79 to authorize!iguild officers to call a strike against Uie paper. No deadline was set for a strike. 1963 elections. . And he ouUined additional programs he would push through if gi\ltn a-10lidly Republican Legislature this year. Among programs he 1aid be. considers necessary are welfare reforms, Medical reforms, a judicial selection . reform and property tax reform. "If you belle\le in the need for these things as I do. then gi\le me a team of (See DINNEll, Plae II Students Given Rec Brochuers Copies: of . the rtcenUy completed Laguna Beach Recreation Departments program brochure are being distributed to all-students in the Laguna Beach Unified School District. Coples of the in· formational brochu~ are also available ' at the City Hall and the library. The brochure· de9cribes a wide variety of instructional classes such as karate,... cake decorating, creative dance and ten- nis. Resident.I may register for any of the classes or adivilies at the Recreation Departmenl, I~ N. Coat Highway, lrom 11.m. to noon and from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Further Information may be obtained lrom the Recrealloo Dept. 1t Gl-1124 m II. Dress. Code • Ill Marine Arrested In San Clemente Rape Attempt A former Camp Pendleton Marine was arreated In Oceanside on suspicion of at- tempting to rape a San Clemente woman. James Alonzo Neila, 23, was arrested on a war.rant obtained by San Clemente police. Police 111id he would be arralgried. m municipal court today on charges of rape and burglary~ Bail was. set at 125,000. A detective said Neila 's picture, one. of ae\leral ahown the. 24-year-old victim, was identified by her. Nella denied the charges, police said~ The victim, a mtrket checker, strug~ gled wilh an assailant ln her tiome early Sunday morning until her la'e1ms drove him off. She auffertd cuts and aaapea in the tU5Sle. - Police said the Mpect did not know the victim. Entry into her l\ome waa '" gained by sllUlng a window acre.en and ,..cblnl Ill to unlock the window. . Effect Clemente. High School Students Comply With Rules_. B)' PAMELA BAl.J..AN casions," said Mn. McCarthy. year it 18 allowt:d to touch the top of a T· °' ""Dllfr ,..., 1'-" 'Although 1 few of the:.-..,re ..,._, ~ eollm\. aceedlng) the lentth SUI• You might think ankie •Jength dresses ~-~7 • gHted f0f.1tudenb•lt nearby saddlebaci Incongruous with Crei!dence Clearwater long.dreaes, 1 great n are Colle:ge . . .. Revival, moon lan<liaP IJ1d women's lib. wear!IJI .)ong panls. ''~I · hlvlntl . Sm..i ~'lluot a · feW" boys m llutyou,can'lillll .... a&Sll>Clemerile -wtthfadiid.jtonl,_MltllljJUol~ '·-'"'I .bp111y -Md 01rln1 High School -u.r.·1,1 __ .,._ panls lool bettor .JhlllOJ spected," ille oldeburi>a, lllOlher bow ' allowuce, but _OJd< this year. 11ld. • · -most look lll•tbey did lut )'Ur, ,"Mos t of the girls undf.r1tand and com· John Smart, boys vice ~I. greed 'nle_,arm Wtathtr ha1 productd Jets or ply;-wttb the dress codes." said Mrs. that the new dreu code ._ .. ,.-~ very1 • bermUJJIS on boys and mlnla1on cirll, but Barbara McCarthy, girls viet principal. well. "We 've had to i.slae: a~ wnln11 t.he1'1:1!J_ one mode or acceptable1irell klr But jwt to ma ke aure there was a very and we've had a few ftrtet ~. girls tnat 1a coilspicuoul by Ill abaenct. special fashk>n sho w in the girls' physical but you have to e.x~l a flw· ln a ICbool Perblpt the dress code committee, edocation claa&es Thursday. with 1,400 students," he 6,. which ii IChedule.d to meet again in "Through 1k.Jts we lhowed wbat kind of The moat cootroveni&l pwiW• new Odobfr-to review the code'• ~ .... dress b appropriate for different oc-code bu be.en boys' balr knltb-11'hll will take a RCOpd l.90k at it , ••.• lbt mldJ, (' • • ... • • "I , ) The proposal involves ·construction of the Campus Drive extenllon from the North Coast llighway throu1b Boat Can- yon to the· 'City limitJ, a distance of about one half mile, 11 part of the <Xllln.· ty 's arterial road plan. Acting City Manager Joseph Sweaney said today the engineering plans on the projects are noi complete. He noted that, il the road goes through Iha bueball field, another field would be buift to replace the old one before the. start of construction. A public bearing will also be held Mon·· day on a proposed extension of Alta Laguna Boulevard from Treetop Lane to Balboa Avenue in Arch Beach Heigbta. Following the 1Cheduled public he.r· tngs, the commisaion will continue Ill study session on development o:l Main Beach. The commission also ls IC uled to hear a report from city Sign Inspector Bill Meyer on the status of bQtel and motel signs in residenUally mned llUI of the city. Laguna Police ·Check Burglary Laguna Beach Police are lnvestigatinl a Tbursd1y mominc burglary 1t the White Hall Dr.,. Shop, :IOll N. Cout Highway, In which women's clothinC valued at about $10,00'.I was taken. Entry to the 1hop wu apparently &lin- ed lhrou&h the rear door at 1bo4Jl 1:45 a.m. Tbursday, 'according to police.. Tht store's entlre'lnventory oC women's coats, dresses and pant suits was taken, police reported, with the exceP.lion of about 15 pieces or clothln1 han&ing in • cloaet. The Tbundly theR WU the -d reported bur1lary at the atore within the past three months, police note.cl. · Body of Woman Washes .Ash0re . 0-.~lnm ••In 111e·-·· bodtol1...,.._· __ _ -fllclay .. ..-Pacific ~ •H)lbwty .ncl El Pnoo In l.qu111 -· Authorlttn Mid ·It Wiii difflallt to ... termlne hlW lonl the vl<tlm hid be"' ii> the ocean d..-Io !ht -ol Ii. ..,,,... onnge County Coroner'• ·-picked up the remains and were to bft.ol 1ln an lllvatllatloo 1n1o Ii.-·• ldenUty 111d CIUll.ol death. Bloody Nine Days Oyer. In Jordan From. Wlre Servk:el Thi nine d,ya of blood llld boln- bardmtnt art over in·Jordan'1 civil War. ~t-the fighlin& to create a Paleatine ~ rm · Arab< must coaUnue, rebel - proclllmed todly. Jonlo'1 liq HUIRto IDd P.-n perrtDa leader Yuir Aratlt ... rmoanred I peace pad llld I team o/ Sudanese Army ollicerr YU I~ U I polic8 forte. Relief wu expressed thtoupNt the Middle East and America in some quarters, while bltte:r_Arabs Joyal to the rebel cause cried out Ut rage. A crowd ol 3111 poured out of noon jir1yttfit AIAqS1 M""l"e iri'Jenliilem IJ1d charged thtooih the IJICienl city'• wfnd.ing streetll. "Kill Hussein.'• they screamed, chars· Ing his army Is slaugbterlllg their brolbe.n in Amman and demanctm, a new revolution. They procl1imed worse bate lot, Hussein, than for Israel. Fears for tht lives and ·aaJe.ty of unac- counted-for 1lrline biiackini bostqu lessened 1 om e what. when Kina Hussein's.troops freed 15oftheMat1:30 a.m. (PDT), found in cannon.raked Am- nian. None were American. They Were 1reported to be well and the hunt continued for 39 others -mostly Americans -still missing, wtu~-vanish- ed Jordanian Prime Minister Mohlmmed Daoud turned up ~fely in Cairo. Foul play was feared Thursday wbell Daoud -who resigned his positkm ...:. disappeared lrom the Nile Hiltoo llolel,_ but be !old agenls who lrlced him be 1lmply wanted to bJ alone. Developments in the Jordan civil war and the international crisis it provoked appeared to be alowing today, but all con- cerned were keePinc a clcle eye. on tbl a.itUation. • · Israeli leaders expressed confJdencl that it will be qu iet for a whJle, even u (See JORDAN, Pip IJ . ....... ' Weatller -G·usty Santa Ana winds will blOW' up a storm over the weekend, tending the. coastal temperatures shooting tow1rd the IO mark. The mbminp •ill iiller 10(, u UIUI!. JNSmll TODAY I '• ' I i I DAILY PILOT SC From Pqe 1 JORDAN •.. ),rabc cll{nOred for new war or squabbled among their own political factions. · llellef ilforu by the International Red os:s-.aJJd its Arab-counterpart;-the Red Crescent, were stepped up as the plight of thousands ~r war victims intenslficQ. · Arabs from the occupied west bani of the Jordan drove truck.! carrying canned food -labels identifying them as Israeli- made torn off -rolled in and will carry wounded women, children and old people .out. Herbert G. Klein, White house com- Tnun.ications director, said today in franklurt . Germany that American response to ·the Jordan crisis haa been pimed at avoiding intervention. • Jn, an interView with the American forces Radio network here, Klein said .lhe. President cB.refully explored all con- jlngencies and when forces were alerted It was based on the hope that they woul d not be used. "But you must be prepared for the )llorst as Well," he added. "It was fortuiiate we didn't ba"ve to use the forcts." A beefed-up U.S. Sixth Fleet still steamed along in the Mediterranean only }50 miles from the critical area, its ships, plane& and men aler~ two weeks aa:o lVhen the three hijackings occurred. The . Soviet Union's potent Mediter- ranean squadron steamed along politely but determinedJy in its wake. "You couJd say we share a common In- terest in what the other guy is doing," remarked Rear Admiral Roger Spreen . • Israel expects quiet along its borders ~ith Syria and Jordan, at least for a while. But military sources in Tel Aviv kid today it ls ready to act if the guer· f\IJ1S·Peeide tb sWitcb their attacks from Jordan to Israel. The aources said Palestinian guerrillas suffered up to 20,000 casualties in fighting 'Willi the Jordanian army in the ~ nloe ~ys. 'Jn 1ddition, they said, Syria lost tietween 75 and 100 Soviet-built T54 and T55 tanks -almoat 12 percent of their armor --as weU as 170 military transport vehicles in the batUes Jn northern Jordan. • The he.avy losaes, · according to the Israeli mili~ sources, will guarantee quiet, at least for several weekS. · Leaders differed in their opinions, with befense Minister Moshe Dayan saying i.he Jordan civil war was dying out and Done of its principals wants more. "I hope the King manages: to give them 'i severf!'·beating,".said Dayan. ;'I am on lhe side of the king and not on the side of the alternative." The alternative v.·ould be Israeli in- tervention and Deputy Premier Yigal Allon said in. a hard-line Meet the Press 'Interview Hussein may now be in worse trouble. Diplomatic sources say Allon favored immediate Israeli intervention, to save ~ussein'a a:overnmenL .:Woman Hangs Self STQCKTON (UPI) -Leung Shee Ng. 88, complained to her daughter that her dentures did not fit and she "had no 'reason to live if I don't have good teeth." 'nle woman's body WI& found hangina from a rafter Thursday. DAILY PILOT H11at1.,. .. .._. h11•t.I• , .. ..,. S.. CJ: 111e •o9ert N. W11d ,,,1..,.,,r '"' Pw11111....,. ;.,~ •. Cw1I•¥ Vk• ,ru:o ... 1 ..,. Gent••I M•nttt" 1h•111•t Ke1Yil •""" 1ile1111• A. Mwr,"l" MllMtlftl Elllet •ich1r4 P'. Nill Sow!ll Or11.,• toi...tt1 t•;tw Offk .. C.'9 M .. 1 Ut Well ... ., 11'"1 .,.....,, Mk'" an W•t ••~, """lt\I"' """' •1te~1 m ~' •-Ml.M'I~ w.ai: t7t1J .. "" ·~ ........ IN t ..-olf: .m Hwtfl I I CtmlM 11•1 1It!'s Your Move Paralyzed 'l' otith Need& Chetaman . By llUDI NIEDZIELHI ~ ud·lol hwi," aid lira. ViOlot T-, .> ., ., INllrPI•... lbt boop)tal'I ~al Jlnlnl. Kenny DeluU ii wliUDc for Nm1oa1 Thi ..,. "'1, • _.. ~ to ...U tbe nut -.: Wlltlllled, llUf bu lht U.. 1111, ... Becauie he can't. Not 1lnct lut cordlnt to Kenny. October when an automobile accident Mrs. Taber added that the nursing staff severed his spinal cord and paralyzed has begun an intensified procram to help bo~ arms and Jegs. him feel better because ht had betn feel- ing so miserable of late. When the doctors tell you that there is h' tta h little, if any hope that you'll ever run or "We want to get 1m an a c ement throw 8 football again, life can get pretty for the telephone so he can at least talk depressino. And from Kenny's beds. ide at to people. And his brother is a:etling him ·-o a stereo," she uid. Huntington Valley Conv3lescent H~pital, "RJght now he 'only 1iu a television and tbe future looks pretty dim. be can't even turn on the call li&bt for Mentally alert and able to talk well help." despite the tragic accident, Kenny says Hospital staff members are also look- he wouJd like to play chess wilh someone ing forward to providing him with a but that he can move neither pawn or reading apparatus and perhaps an dec- king with his hands. , tric wheelchair he can operate with bis "I'm Jocking for someone in their early mouth. 20s to play a coople of gaines a day ," Another thlng that's bothering Kenny ii Said Kenny, 19, who attended Huntington the fact that he is the only young ~ Beach High School. ·He ~ys it really in t,he hospital. and su~rounded bf octo qoesn't matter if it'S'a boY or j"lrl"O long and nonogenanans, accort:qna to M'rs. 1:5 they, like to play chess. · Taber. Kenny doesn't profess to be an expert "He has some visitors but most of the at the game, but it looks'like -be'll have a fr iends his age have dropped by the l~ng time to practice. "I'm really not wayside. very good at it but I know all the ''They've just forgotten ,11 she said. -move~''-he-explaineU:------Rlight now, the mostJmportant tbil!g i.s Ironically, a chess set bought in Mexico to provide him with a chess partner to was an indirect cause of his predicament. break up his television watching routine, "He and another boy were on their way Mrs. Taber fetls. back home from Mexico . where he Anyone who is intere!ted may phone purchased the chess set. He was asleep ln her at 842-SSSl . th'e car ,when It rolled over several Umes It's your move. From Page 1 DINNER •.• RepubUcans who will get the job ·done," be said. The Ca!Ttpaign lactfcs of Reagan's op- ponent, Jess Unruh, were noted by the governor. "This business of popping up on my front lawn or at the houses of Republican supporters is ludricrous." Reagan drew a laugh from his sup- porters when he added, "You know it us- ed to be that the only thing you had to worry about on your front lawn was crab gra ss." Murphy extend(ld '°me of Reagan's remarks to the naUonaJ level, noting that President Nixon also needs a Republican "team in Washington. "Jn two weeks of hard campaigning up and down this state, l'\.'e found out a few things about what Californians want," he explained. "They want judges who will eniorce the laws as they are written. I found out the taxpayers or this state are tired of sup- portif!g revolutionaries in our institutions ot higher learning. "And they want people in public office who will tell it like it is. They want representatives who will vote the way they talk during a campaign and they want men who will show up in Congress." he stated. Murphy concluded his speech by calling upon audience members to get out and work for the candidates to make ''the greatest Republican "'.ictory in years in this state." Street Project Nearing · Finish In San Clemente A 2,400.foot strip of Avenida Pico, de.Jayed by the construction of in. tersecting sewer lines, should open in San Clemente late next week. This was the estimate today of City Engineer Phil Peter who said work is nearing completion on laying two l~inch effluent lines under the road. The two-lane section of Pico between El Camino Real and the freeway is a joint city-county project constructed at a cost of about $170,000. The $2.8 million sewage reclamation system should be in operation by the New Year, Peter estimated. It was delayed by work changes. The plant will ha ve sophisticated ter- tiary treatment that produces sparkling clear waler. The water will be sold for ir- rigation .or piped to catch basins in Camp Pendleton for percolation into un-. dcrground water stores. A federal grant of about ,900,000 is helping pay for the project. A dedica tion date for the new facil ity ha s not been scheduled. Peter said it would likely be sometime between the end of November and the new year. San Clemente officials initially sought the help of the city's most prominent resident, President Nixon. with the dedica tion. He could not attend so another star attraclion iJ being soughL From Pqe 1 MINI-RIOT REPORT ••• vent arrests from being made. Since no auxiliary weapons were used despite stone and bottle-throwing and physical resistance, he concludes the police conducted themselves as well as could be expected under d I r r i c u 1 t circumstances, though not without some over-reaction, noting that "the decision is necessarily subjective since t h e testimony or witnesses varied on severaJ minor points.'' Taking note of the P(esince of many "outsiders," he suggests that the trouble might not have occwred if only residents had been involved. Goldberg said he agrees with the sug4 geslion of "most of the witnesses" that better communications should exist bet.seen police and resklents of the area . He also supports suggestions that the police develop a plan of action designed to head off such confrontations in future and that the city consider appointing a community relations officer who could attempt to solve problems before police action becomes necessary. · Wheaton, ln his report, tinds that "no information was submitted .•. that would sustain any allegations of physical abuse or illegal behavior on the part of any particular police department employe that would indicate disciplinary action is justified." _ Noting that "the committee learned quite a bit about police operational pro- C«lure and manpower allocation. the rormer manager suggests 1 e v e r a l matters that need review. These include a written plan of preparedness for major disturbances that would include calls to superior ofllcers not on duty, calling of off-dut y personnel to duty and the calling for mutual aid . assistance from other agencies. He notes that the police chief has started sue~ a manual and urae1 that il be complelrd. With regard to the July 4 affair, Wheaton cites a number of fact.ors leading to the riot situation. \Vhen of· ficers first arrived to ~ on flre"A'Orks , he says, a ''party and holiday mood provalled In the neighborhood" and the crowd wu "not hostile.'' Attempted arrest of 1 marijuana smoker, resistance to the arrest and a cha" by pollco ended the porty mood ·and resulted in apprebell!ion that grJdua Uy bullt up to the minor riot sltua· tion. 1ays Wheaton. He observes that If the arrest had nol been resisted, er· If had not been .ti· tempted, "the party atm~phere would probably hAVt contlnued." However, he added, "it is the job of a police officer, When he ob&erves: a specific person breaking lhe law, to en- force the law. "In this case. the necessary force that had to be used to accomplish the arrest undoubtedly moved the people in the crowd to the intensely hostile altitude that developea. If the people of Woodland Drive had accepted the proper function ol the police and not interfered (as they have refrained from doing many times in th e past when similar arrests wero made ) the problem probably would not have occurred." • Wheaton concludes that the city can do a better job of communicating with various neighborhoods and that • more de liberate effort should be made to develop every police officer •s a "com- tnunity relations expert" so that en: force ment of the law Ind respect for the Jaw can be enhafice<I. Boyd describes his lengthy report as an attempt to document the event step-by. step as it progressed from • minor disturbance lo a full-scale riot. This he maintains, did not occur until Police rein- forcements arrived from other areas to produce a full-dress show of force that promptly resulted in p1ndemonium in the area. He Is sharply critical of the fact that no special plans had been made for police coverage of the holiday weekend. that the police chief chose that weekend to start his vacation and the city manager permitted this. Following broadcast of a 199 call (of- ficer needs help urgently) units from six law enlorcement .agencles converged on the area, Boyd notes. "With the arrival of outside agencies,'' he writes, "the officers were organized into teams lo pick up anyone on the i;treel and hiding hi the ya rds .. , these wide-sweep teams triggered the over· wrought crowd into 1 state of wild con- fusion, retreat and {light through the lakes and Into the hills •.. with police ln hot pursuit ••. " He descrlbts how 1n old-time resident, treated with "absolute dlsrupect" by or· flcera, crouched in fear In hll home as 1 police helicopter hovered overhead. He notes that during bookin1 of the l)rtsoners at the Laguna Beach stAUGn, aecordlng to an offker's testimony, ''han<kuffs -...·ere not lmmedi1tely remov· ed because of the hostile 11ttllude of tht prlsontn" and threat. to ''kill" the of- ficer. who "'-as alone , U the. cufla wert re.moved. PULLS OUT OF RACE L11au• C1ndid1t1 GrHn . Green Steps Out Of Cities League President Race Huntington Beach Councilman Jack Green has quit the race for president of the Orange County League or Cities . Green announced this morning he would not seek re • election to the president's post because at leas.t eight cities were opposed to him succeeding himself in office. The Huntington Beach Councilman fac- ed a runoff Oct. 8 against Anaheim Coun· cilman Ralph Clark. The two men tied 7-7 when the League of Cities met Sept. 10. Green has served this year as president and Clark as vice president of the Orange County League <>f Cities. The league has 25 members in the county. While eliminating himselr from t~e race, Green also asked for nominations to be reopened, so cities would have more than one man to choose from for presi- dent. "I would urge that nominations be. again opened on Oct. 8," Green said. •·But it shouJd be noted that during the period in which the nominating com· mittee was active, no one came forward to suggest names for consideralion. '' Clark, Gieen's Dnl y opponent, is alS(l a candidate for Supe.rvisor in the 4th District. He faces a runoff Nov. 3 with Gordon Bishop for the supervisor's post to .succeed Will~am Hirstein. If Clark is named President of the League of Cilies. then is elected a county supervisor, he would have to quit his League post in January. Green said he was quitting the race because Garden Grove and seven otber cities had expressed dissatisfaction with the League's policy of allowing officers to serve consecutive terms. Japanese Scientific Rocket Launch · Fails UC HINOURA, Japan (AP ) - A Japanese attempt to get a scientific satell ite into orbit faHed today when the fourth stage of a 43.7-ton rocket ap- parently did not ignite. Scientists said they then lost track of the 77-foot rocket, called the MU4SI , and that It apparently burned up in the atmosphere after reaching an altitude of some 350 miles above the central Pacific. • - . Sabotage.Seen Weapons Found In Costa ·Mesa· By ~RTHUR R. VINSEL 01 ~ o.llY 'Ll•I lt9ff . -Federal authorities today entered the case of a cache of military weapona •and explosives -plw lnstruct.iona for sabotage -uncove red accidentally Thuraday night by Costa Mesa police checking out a false alarm. · A pair· of teenagers was arrested on stale charges of possession of illegal firearms, while Treasury Department agents \\'ere en route today to determine U a federal offense was committed. Police were reluctant to speculate on for questioning. "He admitted touching the box, bul said he didn't set it off," Lt. Fischer ex- lained, addlDg that he C&[ried 119 personal identification at that point. "The subjttt volunteered to 10 to his home ancl get eome/' said Lt. Flacher. "He was accompanied by the offic:tt11 and they observed the weapons when they entered." ShorUy aft.er McLaughlin was arres ted, his room-mate arr:ived home and wu taken into custody on the same chara:es. any possible connection with radical H ! d G d poLilical factions until each ol 18 weapons an rena e -including automatic rifles a n d machineguns -was cheeked and the suspects questioned. Kill 2 B They were Identified as David B. S oys )1ct.aughlin, 19, and Douglas M • Langevin, 19,. both of 108 Cecil Place, the_ln house where the arsenal was confiscated. Ri •d "Some of··the uems that are illegal -to verSI e possess appear to be deactivated," ex· · plained Detective Lt. Harold Fischer. He said a bomb disposal squad from El Toro Marine Corps Air Station was ca lled to headquarters this morning when hand grenades were discovered in one con· fiscated carton. "We don't know if they're live," Lt. Fischer said. "But we do have ammunition boxes containing some spent and some live rounds, plus numerou.! pamphlets on bombs and booby traps," he continued. "That's wh at scares us." Lt. Fischer said chemical compounds commonly used in making bombs -in combination with other readily available ingredients -were taken from the Cecil Place residence. He said McLaughlin listed his oc- cupation as a headwaiter and Langevin, who was not present when the weapons were discovered , is an auto mechanic. The two suspects apparenUy have no direct military connection in '!_hich they might have obtained the weapons, he ad· ded. Besides the military weapons , which in· eluded a mortar launching device ap- pearing to be JapaneSe-made, police seiz-e4 an infrafid sniperscope used to _pick out victims in total darkness. "Numerous hand weapons and rifles which appear on the surface to be legal were also picked up," said Lt. Fischer. The discovery began shortly before 10 p.m., when an emergency callbox in the 100 bl~k of Cecil Place went off at police headquarters. Officers Gene Norden and Dave Hayes, or the department's felony unit, were nearby so they responded and stopped a youth later determined to be McLaughlin Student N ahhed Ol!J)rug Charge A 17-year-old San Clemente High School senior was arrested at school Thursday on charges of twice selling LSD to an undercover narcolics officer. Detectives allege the Jong-haired youth had on two occasions sold 10 tablets or the psychedelic mind bender to a San Clement.e officer. The youth was taken to juvenile hall to await the disposition of his case in juvenile court. Poli ce said the boy had a clean record before the Thursday arrest. Spe<laf 1" tbe DAILY PILOT RIVERSIDE -Ricky Leamon WIJ J; Thursday and his sister gave him a foot· ball that bounced over the backyar{ fence while he and two buddies we?"! passing it. He and Bobby Ewing and David Crawford, also 13, went into the neighbor· Ing yard and found the foolball , but they also found a box of 11 military fr~ tation grenades. The football and the carton were bQtt! in some shrubbery. Just exactl y what happened from tha1. point may never be known -up until the tilast that shattered every window in th1 Leamon home -but' authoritiea can S'pecuJate. Ricky Leamon was killed on his blrfh. day, blown to bits. Bobby Ewing w'as killed in the wne ifl.. stant, blown to bits. "They were just tom apart," uld. one sickened Riven:ide County Sheriff 's depu- ly. Women Injured · In Laguna Crash Said Improving Two victims or an automobile collision that took the life of an elderly La&una Beach · woman Wednesday B.re in im4 proved condition at S o u t h Coast Com· munity Hospital. Gertrude Huber, 85, of 660 Glenneyre SL, has been taken off the critical list and is now listed in serious condition after suffering multiple fractures in the two-vehicle collisio n. , r-.1arilee Jean Gafney, 22, of 190 Canyon Acr.f.S.. Drive, .i:i in. saJisfactory condition after undergoing surgery for in~rnal in- juries suffered in the accident. Mrs. Huber was a passenger in a car driven by Gladys Geier Wilson. 74, or 502 Brooks SL The Wilson auto turned left from Glenneyre Street onto Los Olivos Slteet and collided with a vehicle driven by Mike Gafney, 2.1. Another passenger in the Wilson vehi- cle, Florence Martin, 80, 1294 Temple Hills Drive, died in the emergen.cy room at the hospital after suHe:ring muJtiple In· juries in the collision. For The Unusual .... Think Of Ted von Hemert These unique pie,11 1te I r1ew loolr at th e Old World fro m H.nredon'1 Folio Nine collection. Oiv ersely cl esiqn•d, yet inetefy her. moniou1 . This cliffere nc e 11 \lt'ifh led ¥on Hemert, Inc. I NEWPORT IEACH 1127 w.,1<1111 Dr., 642·2050 OPIN ,RIDAY 'TIL 9 \ 'refeetlon•I Interior Detlgnert Avoll1ble-AID-N51D • LAGUNA llACH )15 North Coos! Hwy. 4~11 OPEN ,RIDAY 'TIL 9 . ...,, I l I .. ' ,. 1'rlda1, Stpttmllff 25, 1970 L Health Planners ·studying Mellieal ~ . . ~ ay JOANNE REYNo~ps -"""' serv~ ,..,>1BI b< -.cl and whert Of ..._ N llY l'li.f Jtt" - PopulatJ°" growth and medical costs 11re the subject for an ln~ive study being started by the Comprthenalve Health Planning Association of Orante Counly. • The volunteer group is surveying medical resources or the county ln an ef· fort to determine what health care Cost a Factor the ~uld be located. , . Wallact. Gerrie, a Newport Beach physician wbo is presidt!nl of the group, said the authority for the organization wa.s granted in the federal Partnership In Health Act ol 1167. "The idea wu to get the Malth plan- ning procus out of the hands of the federal and state covenunenLs and·into Tennis Addition By BARBARA KREIBIGH Of "'' O~lly l'llfl Stiff The Laguna Beach Tennis Association \Vednesday night presented the city coun- cil with three proposals for expansion of tennis facilities in the community and, as expected, the least costly proposal arou~ ed the most promising council response. Following the presentation by Norman Povt'ell it was proposed by Mayor Richard Goldberg that Co u n c i I m a n Edward Lorr and Reereation Director George Fowler could meet wilh a com· mittee named by the Tennis Association and which probably include represen· tatives of the schoOI district. Lorr and Fowler. Goldberg noted. already are working with the school district on plans for · a Joint recreation . ' program. Feslival of Arts Director Stuart Durkee said the Festival , too, would be interested in participating in the talks, since o n e proposal concerns Irvine Bowl Park -pro- perty. Powell told the council the LBT A would regard development of an entirely public tennis center, independent of 'the schools, as the most favorable course of action, but reaii;:t's this would be more costly. An interim solution, he said, would be increasing the number and quality of school district courts to make more courts available for public use at lower cost. The latter proposal. which Goldberg said seemed "the most feasible for the present," includes construction of six new tennis courts on the nort h campus of the high school. across Park Avenue from the existing sc~ool rourts and re.surfacing the two existing high school &surts and the Laguna's Martin To Moderate Two Route Hearings An ()Jd freeway hearing expert, former Laguna Beach mayor William D. Martin. will ha ve an opportunity Lo,.practice his expertise as moderator of two Riverside County freetA•ay hearings next month. ti.fartin aaid he has beeii asked by James A. Moe. Slate Director of Public Works . to preside at public hearings in Fontana, on Oct. l, and in Riverside on Oct. a, ()0 location of Ole Route 81 freev.·ay between Sun City and Devere. During his eight years as mayor of l.aguna Beach. Martin played a pro- minent role in discussions with the state lead ing up to the d~ylong Laguna Beach hearing \\'hich resulled in adoption of the inland route. The hearings are presented by the State Division of Highways to·presCnt the results of its studies of route locations ;11nd to receive public comment on facts "'hich may influence final selection of a route. • two at Thurston Intennediate-School. Construction of the new courts, he said, would be conUngent up()n removing tern· porary classrooms and the handb!lll courts. He estimated cost of this project at $50,000. The two existing courts and the l'A'O at Irvine Bowl, it "''as suggested, could be reserved for public use. with the new courts serving school physical educa· lion needs. First proposal of the LBT A would in· volve developrp.ent, by a major cut and fill (lperation, of 17 acres of city-()wned, undeveloped land. Potential use here. Powell said, 'A'Ouid include a public tennis center,-i)Ublic swimming pool, community recrealion building and picnic grounds. . He urged a cost study ()f the cut and fill operation as compared with the cost · of acquiring nat-land acreage. Cost of a six· court tennis center with pro-sh.op and restrooms was estimated at $&1,000. Other costs kl the cl t y and/()r the Festival o( Arts would be for cut and fill, access roads, parking lot and other facilities. A recreaiton lxlnd of perhaps $500,000. would, if approved by the voters, finance all improvements and all potential uses at the Irvine BotA'I site, according to the LBTA study. The second proposal in the study v.·ould call for development of a greenbelt on the Irvine side of Laguna Canyon Road con· necting Irvine Bowl with the Sycamore Hills triangle and the LBT A already i5 engaged in discussing this possibility with the Irvine Company, Powell said . The elongated greenbelt, h.e said, would provide space for a public tennis center in a meadow about three-quarters of a mile up from Irvine Bowl, other meadow areas for picnic gi:ounds and hiking and horseback riding ~alls. Best method bf financing th.is proposal wou1d be the creation of a ·recreation district to include greater Laguna ,· the new city of Irvine, Leisure World and perhaps other benefiting communities. State and rounty funds might be available to finance this proposal, it was suggested, along with. a bond approved by residents. living within the recreation district. _ _ The Laguna Canyon proposal would be dependent upon progress of the greater Sycamore Hills greenbelt project, Powell said, along with the results of LBTA talks with lhe Irvine Ranch Company. In discuss.ton of the need for the public tennis facilities, 1Powell said he h.ad been advised by representatives of the Hotel· ti.tole! Association that at least five per· cent of their guests are serious tennis players who would appreciate and use a tennis center. It 1A1as noted that many tourist:<>riented communities p r o v i d e such facilities as a tourist attraction. as well as for the enjoyment of residents. The LBTA, he said.· now ·has a membership or 125 dues-paying fam ilies and expects to have 200 within a year. the counties and reitons where it can ~ Membership in the· auoclation ii n designed to local needs," he explained. to all lnter~ted county residents. By April o{ 1969 the Orange County The five committees are : group was operatkinal. CHPA ha 65 -Health.P'adlitles and Services-Com· dlredors ~ five committ::es. ' ', mittee. By stac.e law thil committee ha.s By law, mem.shlp on the board or · the.., poWtft to approve all prospective dir~tors and committees musL be health hoapital1 or remodeling of existing services consumers and providers. with hospitals. Without Its approval , hospitals the m1jority or the members of each 1ub are nof eligible for state licenses (Ir gl'()\tp ~Ing consumers. government funds. -Mental Health Commit!~. It works on ple.nnlng meotal health programs countywide. -Peraonal •leallh Sen'lces Delivery. This committee iS t90(erned with seeµig that there are facllitJes and peraonnel to deliver health care uniformly countywlde. -Health Care Manpower. Closely allied with Health Servitt.s Delivery, this commiUee works on Ole Lraining, recruit· ment and retenUon of health care peraon· nel. --Environmental Health. Tbil com- mittee II tho a,oaJ .. tling unit of th• . group. 11 helps oet lbe guidelines by which the other commJtteee function. John Traband, CHPA e1e<:Utiv• direc- tor 1 said 50 percent of the orgam.tion' 1 fundinf comn from Waohbi&loo, 25 per· cent must be raisid in the county and 25 percent comu from donaUons, 1uch. Ill the office in the old county courthoUJe the county turned over to the auociation. •·t.ast week Gov. Reagan signed a law which requires hospitals.to give us $4 per bed. We would have preferred volunlilry donations. but nothing can be OOne about that now.'' He also said the plaMing association will seek donations from the county medical aS!Ocialion. · As far as membersh.ip in the CHPA gots, Or. Gerrie says he doesn:t believe the people involved could profit by the association's actions in approving or de· nying hospjtal appli~atic~. . l • A:side trom the-s1X paid ataff members the executive director, 11 sociologi!'lt, a statistician and thr~ secretaries -the 184 members of our group are all v()\unteers, the major_i 1 ty o_f \\'hich are health care ronswners, Dr. Gerrie said. Traband said theassoclation has appli· ed for $127 ,500 in federal Cunds Cor 1971. Traband said money to be raised wUI be used to finance a countywide study Qf health care facilities. ··we need to know what our resourw are " Traband explained. "The cost or heaith care is already high, and if more hospitals are built in areas-that •r!' saturated, then empty beds will force hospitals to jack up their fees." . "In addition to needing to know -where the h.()spitals are, we need kl know whitt services a.re available in each ~p~ and nursing home, where the traininf facilities are, where -tlle popu1ation is growing, and what and where the future needs are gSfng to be." Traband said. LAGUNA PLANNING COMMISSION SAYS THESE OLD BUILDINGS OUGHT TO GO Traband-slhnmed up the problems fa c· ed by the association: "Our committees are biting \he bullet and making decia.iona with crude tools In the face of un· necessary criticism from unsophisticated observers. On El P•1eo, the Wrecker's H•mmer Looms •• Thrut to L• G•leri•, Four Neighboring Structures Up Artists • Ill Arms "Bul if the CHPA fails because of a lack of funds. then Lie coUnty will be forced to get its health planning from the. state and federal governments," he said. Plc1n to Destroy Laguna Art Shops Angrily Opposed Orarigc Coast residents who ar• members or the CHPA board of directors include : Bv P ATRJCK BOYLE • 01 lfl• Dlil, ,It.I 11111 The Laguna Beach .Planning Com· mission's proPQsal lo raze the cluster ot art shopS on El Paseo has sparked a pro. test from artists who lease the buildings from the cily. Mechanic Spends Big Windfall; Error VncO '!lerecl DENVER (AP ) -Prentise Sykes, 60, -who makes $3.94 an hour as a govern· ment mechanic, opened his mail last Sept. 12 and found a $27,054.49 govern· ment cheek made out to him. Sykes paid off morlgages on his house and car and two outstanding loans and sent his wife, Rose, to San Diego, to see their son graduate from Marine basic training. He took his wife. daughter and two grandchildren on a weekend Lrip to Wyoming. . But then the General Se r v i cc !'I Administration informed the Secret Service that somebody put a wrong number in a computer and Sykes got a check intended for a Kansas City firm that had submitted a S27.054.49 bill for paii1ting a federal building. Commission members agreed Monday that the City Council should investigate the possibility of doing away with the live -properties and repla ce them with a park:._ ing lot, a park or a combination of both. Commissioners said the. shops are pro· vi'l'lg to be a financial burden kl the city and "are not carrying their own weight.'' The five properties in question, Chairman William Lambourne said. are leased at a rental insufficient to cover taxes the city must pay on them. But tenants of the five properties, mostly successful artillts. don't think thel is Lhe case. or that a parking Jot would be more profitable. ''Before .I moved here and invested S25;000 in improvements;' says artist Paul Blaine Henrie at 309 El Paseo, "There was an orange juice stand here that wa~ an eyesore to the community. "I have people come here from all (IV<?r the world to see me and buy my pain· tings. I have paid $18,000 kl the city ()Ver the pasl three years to lease my shop. and a parking Jot would not approach that figure . Th.ey would have to get lheir revenue mainly from parking tickets." Henrie, shaking hiii h<?ad in di sgust. points out that one of the buildings is the second oldest in Laguna Beach -built in 1896. "I would be content to tear the place down for progress if it will be replaced by something charming for th.e town." the goaleed , internationally known artist adds. "The only Industry in this town is t.hc ::irtists and these buildings are lhe only charm left in Laguna Beach," he says. '·The city officials try at every turn of the hand to stop the art Industry." A man who is attracted by the art in· dustry of Laguna Beach is Theodore freistat. a Beverly Hills businessm an and patron of the art shops. "I come here and spend 1 lot of my money," Freistat says, ;'If they tear thi!'I down. Laguna Beach will only be a dirty little beach town. And If it's just a beach town. the only people who will come here will be kid~ 'A'ithout money. ''This Is supposedly an art colony, and the day it stops being known as an art colony, lam going to stop coming here,'' Frcistat adds. - ''I think it i~ outrageous to give in lo the automobile monster that will ruin your city," another visitor f r om Encinitas says. "There won't be anybody to park in your parking lots and you will Jose the charm of the city.'' Another man renting one (If the buildings from the city is Richard Bigler al 323 El PaSC<i. bolh an artist and a landscape architect. He is currently designing the Pat Nixon Park for Cer· ritos. "It breaks my heart that they are i;oing to tear down another lovely thing in this town.'' Bigler says. •· 1 have probably done several hundred paintings of just this builUing. I can paint It and put it in the window and it will be gone in a week because people love the quaintness of the building." Before the eity starts destroying it~ landmarks. it should decide what type of city it wants to be -Palm Springs or Laguna Beach," Bigler adds. According to City Planner Al Autry, the city is not presently working on a specific development plan for the Main Bea,ch. Autry is now preparing a letter' from ihe planning commission to the city council concerning possible destruction of the buildings. Autry notes that the existing parking lot on El Paseo. sh.aded hy t'A'O trees belonging to artist Richard Bigler, is not wide enough to be funclional. He says lhat it rould only be widened by using ()ne of the Jots in question for more parking space. The trees in the parking lot were purchased by Bigler a few years ago for $450 to save them from being cut down . And all of the artists are saddened that their buildings may soon be cut down. "The smart people set aside a piece or land and sa~ 'This is our heritage'," Paul Henrie says. "This is one of the first buildings in Laguna Beach and ir they tear it down. all my six-yea r.old daughter will remember 20 years from now is that there was a parking lot here. "You've got to leave something !or the heritage of your children.'' Capt. Victor G. Benson. M.D., Director f\.1edical Dept., El Toro, MCAS. Robert C. Combs. M.D.. Associate Dean, UC Irvine College ()f Medicine. coordiiiator area VIII Regional Medical Program, delea;ate to American MediCll Association: board of directors, Oranp County Cancer Society. Wallace Gerrie, M.D. past president, Orange County Medical Auociatk>q; associate professor, UC Irvine School o, Medicine; foonding member Community Action Council and South Coast Child Guidance Clinic. . Robert M. Gordon, lecturer In in- rormation and computer scleriee, UC rrvine ; chainnan Gitiz.ens Organized to Support Schools; Orange County Fair Housing Council. Ada Mae Hardeman, Urban Programs Coordinator, UC Irvine Extension; pail president. Orange County League of Women Voters ; American Society for Public Administration; Orange County Fair Housing Council : Tr I· Count 1 Conservation l..Eague ; Regional Plan Association. Dora Hiii. former Mayor, Newport Beach: vice president, Florence Crtt,- tenton Home of Orange County. \Villiam Jlirstein, supervisor. Fourtp District. William Hudson. Jr., administrator, Hoag Memorial Hospital. . Rufino Mora , M.S.W., psychiatric M>Cial worker. Fairview State Hospital ; ei- ecutive board, Orange County Chapter of the National Association ()f Soeial Workers: Committee for Protective Services for Children 0£ Orange County. Charles J. Mosmann, Corona del Mar', Computer Management Consultant. : Gladys Prothero. Orange County Farm Bureau Rural Health: El Toro Women'1 Club. Ernestine Ransom, counselor, UC Irvine. John Ptl Rau. Newport Beach, preal-- dent, David Industries : Orange County f.1ental Health Association: Orange Coun· ty Child Guidance Clinic; past treasurer CHPA. Olive Reese. Chairman, Health Science Division. Golden West College. Richard Reese. vice president of plan· ning, Irvine Company. Gerald B. Sinykin, M.D .. Dirtctor Stu· drnt Health Service. UC Irvine; Ment1l Panama Student Advise1~ Health Advisory Board; instructor, UCI lifedical School, family practice. Richard L. Stott, PhD, Newport Beach, Clinical Psychologist: past president, Orange County Psychological Aaocl• lion : board of directors, California State Psychological Association. Ho:1JO.redatLagunaD_inner Gwenda Watson, Newport Beach, March of Dimes. ·American Field Service sludf!nt11 and Adult advisers gathered Thursday night for dinner in Laguna Beach honoring a visit by Bolivar Tang, AFS student ad· viser from. the Republic of Panama. Tang, currently vacationing in the United States. serves Jn Panama as ad· viser for two Orange C-oasl students cur- rently studying under the AFS program In .his country. Floyd L. Wergeland, MD., South junior at Laguna Beach High School at Laguna ; vice president medical affairs, the Ume ()r his selection. They are the Leisure World Foundation M e d i c a I first schoOI year AFS students in Center; Committee-on Hospitals, <>ranae Panama. Sansone is in the town or David County. liledical A.Moc:iation : cl\ainnan, and Murphlne in Panama Citf. _Committee for Health Problems ~ thl Among guests meeting Tang w c r c "g~llfomla t.fedlcal AUOOJaUon: Laguna Hlgh's two AFS students this Com!fllSSton ror Community Health year, Francisco ''Chico" Soares Senna• Suvtees, CMA ; board of directora. from Brazil and &a MaM Crom O r a n g e County Hearl Alsociatloft: Switzerland, whose AFS sister Wendy legis.lali\•t committee. Orance Countr Taylor was alMI present. Also attending 1'f~1cal AssoclaUon: Amerk:an C1nctr \VBS Kathy Colli11$, Laguna Hlgh's 1969 Society. American Abroad who attended the Nell Wood\vard, Divlsl()n Chairman. school year program In New Zealand. Divbion (If Consumer and Health Others Included Al Licon , language In-Services. Orang~ Coast College. FROM PANAMA TO LAGUNA -Bolivar Tan~ fleft ), 'AFS representative lrom the R~poblic or Panama, meets Laguna's AFS delegation .(left to right) Wendy Taylor, Kathy Collins and Bea Mann from Switzerland and (front) Francisco "Chtco'' Soares Senna from Brazll. • They are Paul Sansone, son ol f\fr. and f.1rs. Philip Sl.ln80nc, 2151h f\fsrguerite Ave.. Coron11 de! Mer : and \ Tom flfurphlne, son of fttr. and Mrs. Thomas ~furphlno, 462 St. Ann 's Drive. Lagurni Be•ch. Sansone was gr11duated from Coronia dcl Mor lil&h Scbool and Murpbille'wos • 1'trucfor at Thurston lntermtdlate School, Ro$ematj Saylor, South La cu n 1 1 111r. and 1'1r11. Milan Chiba , Mrs. Sally chairman. Mental Health Adv i •or 1 Stars, Mr. and Mrs. Robert McDonnell Board; League or Women Voters; Oranp and Mr. ond Mrs. Manboll Hou!!. County.Cowi<:il oo lleolol Rtllrdotioa, ), I .. • • ' DAILY 'ILOT Red -Es(!ape Paths Hit - Cambodia Closes In; More Copters Lost f~IM ., .. Dall'f PAft SIMU • ; Linde &amttt bad quite a sh?P- Jilng""trip. Her car was stolen twice ill three hours in Bakersfield. Mrs. Barnett told police that after doing some shopping, she returned t_o where she bad left the car and 1t· ,us gone. Police found it 90 minutes liter in a parking lot around the d>rner. Mrs. Barnett left it there abd continued shopping. Theil she returned to the' parking Jot, agaih nb car. The California highway pa- t fol, bearing a radio broadcast, Jo-- cited tt six blocks from the second 10cation. I • '-- Sen. Richard Russell (l5·Ga.), Prest- dent Pro Ttmpore of the Senate, takes 'a ride on his motorized-scooter down the halls of the Senate. Rmsell, w~o .'iu.ffers from emphysen1a, uses the $Cooter to conserve energy. • A disorder common to another era-the panty raid-has reappear· ed at the Cornell University cam- pus in New ·York. Campus police said 800 male undergraduates marched on a coed dormitory, Baker Tower, Tuesday night and called for the undies. They march· ed away hall an hour later, many waving prizes that had been tossed out of windows by laughing women students. Sgt. Jemn Cunninghem of Cornell's Safety Division told a university official later: "The nos· talgia was unbearable. The tears were practically running down my cheeks." • A would-be robber honded Portland. Ore. bank teller Carot Head two notes de11un1c.ting ·1 $4,000 Wednesday. Them.an l1ad ~ • o gun end ordered her not to scream until JO minutes after he had left. Mrs. Head said. "l 'lt have to check the signature on this," and left t~ window. The man stood there a mi11ute. Thell, as Mrs. Head aske d a11other em· l~ ployee to phone police, it dawn· ~ ed on him tliat this wasn 't 11or· ' mal bank robbery procedure. He P. fled from tile bank and disofr pearcd into tltc crowd ht down· town Portland. • The tvlaui News this y,•eek apolo- cized for running an upside-down picture of a house along with an article about Architect Harry Rice. Said the newspaper: "The article 'vi th the picture told of Rice'SJli_sion of future building methods, but, a s he good naturedly pointed out, it did not describe any starting with the roof and working up to the foundation.'' PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Cambodian t.ro0p1-mantUvered today to cut off the Jast escape route of an estimated 2,000 Viel Cong and North Vietname s e defenders of Tang Kauk on the highway linking Phnorii Penh and Kompong Thom. An artillery commander said Cam· bodian forces driving from the west had reached highway 6 on the northern edges of the town, 52 miles north of Phnom Penh, and had blocked all Communist escape routes to the west, southweat and .northwest. ''The Viet Cong rtmained well.en- trenched along the road.'' aald an olflcial military spokesman. "Every time we at- tempt to move in from the aouth on Tana: Kaut, we receive heavy fire," A 16-battallon Cambodian force totallnc nearly · 10,000 men bis been stalled at Tang Kauk tince Sept, 14. The drive, described as the · biggest of the Cam· bodian campaign, originally set out from Skoun more than two weeks aa:o in an ef- fort to clear highway 6 between the capital and Kompong Thom, a city of 10,000 person1 IO milea north ol Phnom Penh. Engin-s"worked Tbunday n!lht to repair three bridges on highway t blown up by the Viel -eon,-!ate Wedneoday nlghl Officers at Skow!, loglatica bue for the operalion, aald Vlei Cone bomb squads bad moved at wlll .;> datn>y the ~ridges. '!be blown briclg,. marked the thlnl " . Canada Shooting Suspect Gives Up to Coast Guard VICTORIA, B.C. (UP!) -A man who shot two Canadian policemen and then held three hostages aboard a sailboat in AmeriCan waters orf Stuart I.sland 1ur- reodered early today to the U.S. Coast Gyard._ Tbert was confusion as to the name of the suspect He first wu idenUfled as WWiam L. Olenik, 28, who escaped from jail here SepL 7. But he gave authorities another name today. Final identification will await a fingerprint cheek, the Royal Canadian Mounted. Police said. The gunman and his three tired but unharmed hostages arrived before dawn Nixon Chooses Men For Postal Service WASH INGTON (UPl ) -President Nixon reportedly has setlled on lhe men he will nominate to run the new U.6. Postal Service. They include a rancher, a former professor, a labor-management consultant and the heads o( several busif,esses . One of the nine he will ask I.he Senate lo approve for the service's board of governors is Frederick Kappel, board chairman of American Telephone & Telegraph Corp., congressional sources said. Kappel headed a commission which proposed -turning the post office over to a non pt o Ii t governrnent-ch.artered cor- poration. at Anacorles, Wash., aboard a Cout Guard cutter. Tbe hostages were iden- tified as Pele and Elrae Wells of Portland._Ot<.,_...i Roger Smit!\ ol Van- couver; B.C. The lieavily anned bandit bad wtlWlded two Victcria officerl dllrinc:· a robbery here Thunday, authorities u.id, and then led poUct on a wild chile to the 1e1:. He crashed through two police roadblocks alld laid down a curtain of fire at his pursuers. He then commandeered the Wells' 22- root sailboat and aJao grabbed Smith, who was fishing nearby, police aaJd. • As Coast Guard veuels and RCMP boalt surrounded the litUe u.ilboat, k released one hostage who boarded the Cutter Point Richmond to relay con- ditions for his surrender. These included that he be lw'ned over to a U.S. marshal and provided with _. U.S. lawyer. Chief Petty Offlctr T. E . Anderson went by small boat to negotiate \\•ilh the gunman, wbo surrendered at I :37 a.m. about 12th hours after the drama began. U.S. Marshal Charles Robinson took the suspect into custody after the Coast Guard cutter arrived in Anal'Ortes. He was taken to Seattle where he was ex· .. peeled to make an appearance before the U.S. commissioner today. The chase started shortly after 4 p.m. EDT Thursday when a man carrying a rifle and a bandolier of ammunition alung over his shoulder-entered a Canadian Imperial B 1 n k of Commerce branch here. V aga-hond Dies BritiSh Poet Assumed Island Throne LONDON (AP) -J ohn Gawsworth. 3 poor -itinerant poet who assumed the mythical throne of a minature Caribbean island and abdicated after 20 yurs of carousing in Lond on taverns, died Wednesday. He was 58. Despite a shower' of honors, Gawsv;orth was a vagabond , a fellow of the streets of London, sleeping in rooming houses when he had the money. on part benches when he didn't. He left 17 publicatioru; and hundreds or unpublished verses, some of which are soon to come out in print. The London Times noted that In a short time he would have become heir to $32.300 from an aunt and an uncle. John Teranct Ian F.ytton Annstrong Gawsworth, born In Kensington England, assumed the title of King of Radonda, an uninhabited speck of land ln the ~eward Islands, which he said he inherited in 1947 from the late Irish poet Michael Shiel. He abdicated after 20 years of holding court in London taverns , aUributing the .move to "doctor's orders." "I think I've ~ad it," Gawsworth told a visitor Sunday. In a letter to the Times, he referred to 1970 m "this impossibly painful last )rear," producing "a couple of hundred attempted verses in Ht months from this still homeless gangrel (vagabond) man." Gawsworth was an editor of "Poetry Review" until 1952,1.when his job was abolished in an econo'my move. His dr:lnk- ing also aroused a stonn of controversy in London literary circles. Gawsworth was a founder and editor of "The English Digest," London editor of "Literary Digest," an inspirer of the pre- World War II neo-Georgian lyric poetry movement, a member of several foreign literary societies, a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, a Freeman of the City o( London, and a Royal Air Foret of- ficer during World War It. It was not known whether he left survivors. 1 He died al Princw: Beatrix Hospital of an undisclosed illness. Jack Frost Nips Rockies Colorado, Wyoming Get Snow, Weather Fair Elseivhere Callfornlc PllYllW OF USIWUTMf.llllllUroRlWT TO J:ll A.M. llT 4 .,. .. ,. • V.S. SuMmar" II lnllY M MllllPftllo IM,11 le 9'PM tti.. ... •1141 'N¥MllN rttldtfltt " .... Ilk• w1111tr. tlit flrlf .l.....,.•11 tf l"4 .. ,.,,. CS.. ·~'""" Ofl "" Dtll'ft' •••• ..,1,. ... d11. lll• -*rr -,_..., lt'll'll'I Ill IM .-.1lt•ll tllbllfbl •""'<NIM 11111 looll\11!1. LWIOCr, Wl't.t PK ll'ft<il tM lfttlll t of 1110w I" '*''· 011\fPWlff, itlr i. H ftlV t lel;dv wt1ll!i'!° .. 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"' .... time In two weeb the Viet Con& had cut the supply lines to the Cambodian forces . drivin1 up blgbway 6. The communique also said Viet Cong .and North Vietnamese forces·amb1111bed a Cambodian army convoy Tbunday at Kirirom, 50 mllet westeuthwest of Phnom Penh. The attack killed IS Cam- bodian JO!dlen and wounded three. The ambush wu carried out on hrpway '-Phnom Penh's only land link with the natloo'a principal ,..port of Kompq Som, known In the daya_ol Prince Norodom &hanout's regime as Slbanoukville. The Communiati closed the blghway for elibl days lbt -b ago. Communist troopa kept up their preuurt 'lbunday night Gn Moat Krasas Krae, six mlla eut ol Phnom Penh with an l2mm mortar barrage. It was the se- cond time in three days the Viet Cong were active th1I cloee to the capital. No cuualtiea or damage were reported. Field repurtl from Saigon 1aid three cluhea OD A'merican polilioos 00 South Vietnam'•-central-coaat killed ' one.- American and wounded 11. In the nortbweat corner of SOUtb Vietnam. waves of BS2 bombers dropped 300 tons of exploaives on communist troops threatening artillery Base O'Reilly, 12 miles from tbe Laotian border. At leut seven U.S. and South Viet- namese helicopters were •bot down.today in an inferno of Communist ground fire near the roctplle. a stroncpoint ail: miles JOUth of the Demilllarhed Zone (DMZ), mUltary ......., noporied. They lllld unconllrmed reporta In- dicated u many as 11 allied choppers may have been knocked down. Only 324 Yank POWs Allowed To Write Home PARlS (UPI) -North'Vielnam and the Viet Cong hold from 457 to 600 Am'ericans prisoner in Vietnam, but let- ters have been received by the familieii: of only 324 of them, an American official said Thursday. Stephen Ledogar, spokesman for the U.S. delegation at Vietnam Pea~ Conference, issued the figures, he said, to refute claims by Hanoi and Viel Cong negotiators that all Americans in their hands are allowed to write home and receive parcels. The number of Americans missing in 1ctlon in Southeast Asia OW month stands at 1,550, Ledogar said. Fii·emen Dispute Seen Resolved In Rail Talks WASHINGTON (UPI) -Signals that . the ll·year-o1d argument over firemen working on diesel locomotives is nearly · resolved are being reinforced by the union's new cautio~ approach to sidetrack a br:taltdown in negotiauo'ns. A potential breakdown was averted when negotiations rolled past Thursday's 12:01 a.m. ae,adline for a potential strike. Labor Secretary James D. Hodgson said the United Transportation Union (UTU) and the National Railway Labor Conference, the industry bargaining agent, agreed to continue the talks for two more weeks. "" But UTU talks Leader H. E. Gilberl told UPI that the extension of the negoUaUons wu unlimited. One IOUfCe close to the discussions at the Labor Department said one e1.- planaUon for the apparent contradiction was the t.rrU's desire; not to give the im- presaioa that it bad set a strike deadline for OCL I. 'Pretldent Nixon was told on Aug. I that the parties were on the "thretbotd" of aareement on the issue that hu generated a series of s~ and strike threats since JIM over tbe jobs of 31,000 firemen. Both sides agree in principle that the jobs of firemen and brakemen abould be combined Into a single dua~purpose posi- tion. But mediator Frederick R. Uv- inpton says there is dispute over the meens of tffecUng the chan1t. Sleps' "'"' begun '!11unday to ,.,.Ive another rail strike that was averted only last weet by a federal court order. An emergency board appointed by Preaident Nllon held Its orglllizatlonal ~ling. In this dlspule, the UTU and three other unions art seeking pay hikes of 15 pel'Cfl\t. Jn addition to the waae and firtmtn battles, the.re are two other disputes that could lead to natlonwlde rail 11trikes In the comin1 weeks, accordln& to Aulstant Labor secretary W. J. Utery Jr. Rifles Said Shipped To Northern Ireland DUBLIN (UPI) -Alrlcullure mlnbter J1me1 Gibbons 1..Ulled '!11unday lCIO r!Oes were shlpptd toward tht border ~·Ith Northern Ireland at the height of the Belf4st riots earlier \his )'Cit. Glbbonl testified for lhe prosecution Jn the trlal of four ofOcJals acctJsed of con· spiring to smuggle Arms tnto the north to aid the Roman Catll<llic lhlnot!ly. • ' " Royal Reaper Japan's Emperor Hirohito reaps rice in a paddy on the grounds or the royal palace during the annual Imperial riete of rice harvesting in autumn. Manson Defier To Testify At Trial Today LOS ANGELES (UPI)~ The stale had on tap as a witness today the only member of the "Manson family " who ever defied the hippie cult leader and made it stick. Juan FlyM, a rangy young man in his late 20s, was expected to testify for the prosecution t h a t Charles M a n s o n ' s brainwashing of young women and men much bigger than the 35-year-old ex-con- vict misfired when Manson tried to give him orders. The Tate murder trial bogged down Thursday in the cross examination of 18· year-old Barbara Hoyt about her story that she overheard defendant Susan Atkins talk about the kjlling of aclress Sha ron Tate. , Defense lawyer Irving Kanarek ga ve Miss Hoyt an eye and ear test on her visual and auditory capabilities and, wben she was \tlrough, appeared to have proved she. was telling the truth. Kanar.ek, in fact, so irritated fellow defense lawyer Paul Fitzpatrick that an appeal was made to Judge Charles H. Older to squelch Kanarek. The tenacious attorney finally sat down. Kanarek, who represent.. Manson, had the young woman remove her thick-lens- ed glasses. He then stood at the rear oJ the courtroom with his right hand raised and four fingers extended. He walked toward Miss Hoyt and had almost reached her before she could count his four fingers. t\1iss Hoyt said she never wore her glasses during the time she lived with the "family." But the experiment establishing her poor vision seemed somewhat pointless since the young woman's most significarit testimony had been about overhearing a conversation about actress Sharon Tate's death. Moon Color Telecast Seen for Next Year CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The moon car journey and probably the lunar launch of the Apollo 15 astronauts will be televised in color to earth next summer. The unique-moon telecasts will be made possible by a new com1nunications relay unit designed to bypass the Apollo spacecrafl and beam voice, television and engineering data directly to earth . The space agency announced Thursday It had awarded a $3 million contract to RCA Co., Camden, N.J., to build the new SG-pound units for use on the final three Apcllo missions. 'Ille system will not be avallable for Apollo 14 Jan. 31. i\'fxon .(:rltic 'No-knock' D1·ug.Bill Approved ' ' \VASHINGTON (UPI ) -The tloust overwhelmingly has passed the ad~ ministration's tough drug abUJe bill, in- cluding the controversia l "no-knock" pro- vision. The action rounded out a week of co.ngressional victories for President Nil· on . The bill would make simple posstssion of any drug a..inisdemeanor, but WO!lld provide stiffer penalties for pushers. Passage came Thursday by a 341 to 6 vote despite a noor fight over the pro- \'ision that ~'Ouid allow federal agents \\'ilh warrants to enter private homes unannounced if they felt there was risk to themselves or danger of evidence being destroyed. Although the "no-knock'' provision Is found in some state laws ind the recently enacted ~District of Columbia federal crime bill, its _adoption in the drug bill would mark iis first applicalion na· tionwide. House Commerce Committee Chairman Harley O. Staggers (D-W.Va.), a leading opponent of the "no-knock" provision, warned it could-r.esult in "hundreds and thousands" of police being killed by persons protecting their homes. "If somebody tried to knock do\m my door, I probably would take a gun and shoot him," he said. Despite Staggers· plea , an amendment to kill the "no.knock" provision was defeated 119 to 60. The drug bill, a major element of Ni1.· <1n's anticrime package, would provide. $165 mill ion over three years to expand rehabilitation programs for drug users and would authorize $6 million for the hiring of 300 additional agents by the B u r e a u of Narcotics and dangerous drugs. It would increase Justice Department control over imports and exports of drugs and require licensing of bonafide drug handlers, i n e I u d i n g manufacturers, distributors, doctors and researchers. The Senate, which passed a similar but more limited bill several months ago, is. expected to go along with the House changes, enabling the measure to become law in a few weeks. Earlier this week, Nixon's bill against organized crime and terrorist bombings \von ·approva l of the House Judiciary Committee and enforcement assistance \\'as approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee. Both measures are expected to feceive final congressional approval next month. A controversial proposal added to the drug abuse bill on the floor would allow judges to impose an addilional 2>year prison sentence on "special dangerous of· fenders" convicted of drug violations. The sentence, which could be imposed on the basis of ev idence the defendant would not be allowed to contest, was termed an unconstitutional infringement of in· dividual rights by opponents. The House rejected by voict vote an at- tempt by the House Select Committee on crime to amend the blll to eive the at· tomey general authority to limit pro- duction of_ aniphetamines or "pep pills." U.S. Cal's Burned 111 Rome Protest ROME {AP) -Thirteen autos with U.S. license plates were set afire on the streets of Rome during the night as lef- tists prepared protests for President Ni1.- on ·s visil here next week . Gasoline was poured on the cars park- ed along streets in widely separated RC· lions of the city. Most of the autos wert destroyed, police reported. Anti-Nixon rallies started t w o nights ago with a march and anti·Nis:on pickets In downtown Rome. u,,, ....... Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) was among 0.mocrats whn began ·a broadside a~tack on the Nixon Administration's environmental record Thursday. "l'e•Lifylng before the Democratic Policy Coun· cil's Committee on ·he J.Juman Environment. Kennedy said Nixon has deliberately lnlllbled action to prosecule major polluters. ' \ • ' i( • ' ..... Huntington Beae . ' EDIJIO,_ '* .. * VOL. 63, NO. 230, 4. SECTIONSi ~~PASES FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1970. . --. City Unanimous on Pay Cei·ling Set in Huntington-Despite Opposition By TERRY COVILLE otflltltelCF'"*'l'9ff C.Ouncllmen we:~· WWllmoul wm.. nelday nlibt when they cut lnlm 11 per· cent to l.2S percent, the pay ra1ae re- quesb of fire.men and poi.icemen in Hun- ... -tington Beach. DAILY PILOT ltatr,..,. Rustler Girls Golden West Co!Jege ch·eerleaders will be making themsel ves heard Saturday night wh'en Ru stler football team takes on Mt. San An- tonio ball club at LeBai-d Stadium at Orange Coast College campus in Costa Mesa. On the wings are Sue Emerson (left) and Terri Kent. From bottom to top (center) are Kathy Ready, Vicky Klatt, Linda White and BoMle Fo~ter. They toOk their positions in the factJ or strong criticism from spokesmen for police and fire workers and the possibili· ty of binding arbitration, d. court suit, or * * * Pay Increase Action Sought By Employes Huntington Beach Policemen a n d firemen will decide within the nert few days what action they will take to oppose the 8.25 percent ;1y lnc'rease cranted Wednesday by the city council. . Both groups have told the council they want the 11 percent increase agreed to by the city administration. ''We're still holding our same positioil.'' Vic Subia, vice president of the Firemen 's Association, said today. 1'We signed an agreement with the ad· ministration and we feel the council should honor it." perhapo even I strike by publlc 'safety C~y Finlnct Dlttdor Ben ArlU<llo ez. employer.-· · plaloed Qle tUm "dellcll budiet." When interviewed,·councilmen's views ''OUr budget reflected enouah money to followed three patterns. They felt 8.25 percent wu slighUy above the cost of liv· pay for an 11 percent wa,e tnc:reue," be ing, the general econom1c situation Ls 11ld. "But the·Jncrtase would come from· depreaaed and any increase would be last year's surplus funds. 1bue are not dertclt budgeting.-· - -enough .reven~ coming tn tlifi yar to The federal cost of livilJg index shows handJe even the 8.26 perctnt increaie, but about a six percent rrse: The economic there are enough leftover iurplul-funds situation is largely because of aerospace to handle either raise." · industry cutbacks. Arguello s a i d the d I ff e r e n c • ' lJne~pl.ained betWMn an 1.2& percent .and an 11 ~· ctnt raise iJ •bout $1),000. Here are the conunentll ol "six coun- cilmen o'n their vote for an 8.2S ·percem; pay raise for firemen and policemen, Councilman Nonna Gibbl 91'U out o( lnwn. Ted Barlett felt the. raise was fair to all parties concerned. "U we bad ciVen 11 percent to police and firemen It would !See COUNCIL, P11e II Grenade Kills . • Riverside Boys Spo<:lal lo tile DAILY PILOT RIVERSIDE -Ricky Leamon was 13 Thursday and his sister gave him a foot- ball that bounced over the ,backyard fence while he and two buddies were passing it. He and Bobby Ewina and David Crawford, alao 13, went into the ne.i1bbor· lng yard and found th• rootball, but they •lso found • box of 11 military frapltn. tatjon grenades. • The football and the carton were both ~amon home -but authorltSll an ape.cul ate. Ricky Leamon was killed on his birth- day, blown to bits. 'Bobby Ewing was killed in the lllDI In- stant, blown to bits. "They were just torn apart," llid om sickened Riverside C4Unty Sheriff's depu. ty: ' . David Crawford was ,terribly muWat.ed and is in u:tremely crl.tical condition to- (day following hours of turaery. · Mr. and Mrs . .Jmy Prim. In ..- llussein, Arafat Announce Jordan :War Peace Pact "We plan to take further action, but not uiitil the membership ha! a chance to meet on it," Ed Pratt, president of the Policemen's Association, said. ''The real lssue1 is not a difffrt~ of 2.'is wcent In pay,'' P.ratt axiiliWecL "We feel we 'were wroJtCtd beea.UM we asaulned we were duliftl "Ith u acent fiuLUOUT O!''RAtl L-• Cudldoto G,._ In ·-lhnlbbery. . Jult tue!!Y whit lio~ -!b!I point may nrver be knowa ~-U(l 1111.tU tlll blu&r&W •1t1Nil ,.~la the ylld the Mll --..... -· ""'" q~stioned a~ lll!_eal pllll •• ., .. milltuy. wupons. \ FromWln- The nirie days or blood and bom- bardment~are over In Jordan's ciYil war •. but the _fiR:bting to create a P~lesUne for free Arabs must continue, rebel leaders proclaimed today. Jordan's King Hussein and Palestinian guerrilla leader Yasir Arafat announced a peace pact · and a team of Sudanese Anny officers was asslgned as a politi! force. Relief was expressed throughout the Middle East and America in sbme quarters, while bifter Arabs loyal to t6e rebel C&JJ¥ cried out In rage. A crowd of 200. poured oat of noon prayers at Al Aqsa M~ue in Jerusalem an!I .charged through the ancient city's windjng streets. ~~Kill Hussein," they screamed, charg· ing hls anny is slaughtering their brothers in Amman and demanding a new revolution. · They proclaimed worse bate for Hussein than for Israel. Fea'rs for the lives and safety of unac- counted.for airline hijacking hostages lessened s o m e w h a t, when King Hussein's troops freed 15 of the. 54 at 1 :31) a .m. (POT ), found in cannoft.raked Am- man. None were Ame1ican. They were reported to be well and the. hunt continued for 39 others -mostly Americans -still missi ng, while vanish· ed Jordanian Prime Minister Mohammed Daoud turned up safely in Cairo. Fool play' "as fe'ared. Th1nda7 -when Daoud ..., who reslpod hil·pooitlon - dlsa ppeattd from U.. Nile Hlltaa HoW, but be told agenu who trKed blm ' ho simply wanted to be alone. Developments, in the J<inJln civil war and th~ international crilil ft provoked appeared 1o·11e slowlol lodaf,bllt all con- cerned "ere ketpinl a c1oll eyt on the aituation.. , Israell leaders expressed confide.net that it will be quiet for a while. even as Arabs clamor~ fCJr new war or equabbled among their own political fictions. Relief efforts by the International Red Cross and its Arab counterpart, the Red Crescent, were stepped up as the plight or Utousands ·c(_~r victims intensified. Arabs from tlie occupied west bank of the Jordan drove trucks carrying canned food -labels identifying them as Israeli-- made torn off -rolled in and will carry wounded women, children and old people out. Herbert G. Klein, Wllite· house com· munications airector, said today in Frankfurt, Germany that American response to the Jordan crisis has been aimed at avoiding intervention. In an .interview with the American Forces Radio network here, Klein said the Jtresident carefully explored all con· tingencles and when forces were alerted tt was based on the hope that they would not 'be used. "But you must be prepared for the worst as well," he added . "It was fcirtunate we didn't have to we the forces." A beefed-up U.S. Sixth Fleet still steamed along in the Mediterranean only 150 miles from the. critical arta, its ships. planes and men alerted two weekl aco when the three hijackings occurred. 'The Soviet Union's potent Mediter· ranean 1quadron steamed iaion&,poUtely but determinedly in its wake. , ''You oould aay we share a eomman~m­ terest in..."hat the other guy.JI. dolnc,., remarkedJlear Admiral Roger Spreen. 1.mel e1pects quiet along lta,..bordtrt with Syria and Jordan, at least for a while. But military sources in Tel' Aviv said today it is ready to act if the guer. rillas, decide to switch their attackl from Jordan to Israel. The sources sliid Palestinian guerrillas (lleo JORDAN, P1fe I) Teulaing Fadlltg of the city,.'' . "Our baa:Iing over the money ls not IO important u trying .. 1loOp 1ood faith In the dty. If we Jet Jt go n6w, who knows what will happen nezt year." Pratt said the policemen (and firemen) had bou1ht the city's proposal In Rood faith, but the city'li tliminaUon of part of that proposal was why the policemen were fighting the pay offer. The City Employes' Assoc I a ti on, largest of the three emp)oye groups, ex· pressed agreement with the council's 8.25 percent pay offer. "Generally 1 think everyone is pretty happy with it," Ted Kramp, president of the City Employes' Association, aaid this morning. Kramp said city ·employes have no plan to hire legal counsel or ask for any changes. City employes bad previously signed an agreement with the city ad· minlstra tor for an 8.25 percent lncrease, thus the council action did not affect them.' The man in the middle is City Administrator Doyle Miller. He signed the memorandum of agreement with police and fire. officials callinl for 11 per· cent pay bootlts. whatever the nezt action on salary talks will be, it probably won, come from Miller's office. "At this point the council's action (granting an g.~ percent raise ) is final." Miller explained. "Neither side has asked me to do anything.'' Queen Mary's Story To Be Told Saturday Tbe story of convtrting the "Queen Mary" lrom a lumry liner to a tourist at· traction wlll be told this Saturday during a breakfast meetin1 of the Fountain Valley YMCA. Speaker at the 7:30 1.m. get-t.ogether in Mile Square Country Club will be Tom Witherspoon, pboto director of the Loni Beach News Burea;.i. ' Green Steps Out Of Cities League President Race . Huntington Beach Councilman Jack Green has quit the race for president of the Orange County League of Cities. Green announced thi.!I morning he would not seek re • election to the president's post because at least eight cities were opposed to him succeeding himself in office. The Huntington Beach Councilman rac- ed a runoff Oct. 8 against Anaheim Coun· cilman Ralph Cla rk. The two men tied 7-7 when the League of Cities met Sept. 10. Green has served this year as president and Clark as vice president of. the Orange Count)'. League of Cities. The league has 25 members in the county. While eliminating hlmsel£ from the race, Green~asked for nominations to be reopened cities would have more than one m to choose. from for presi- dent. "I would urge that nominations be again opened-on Oct. 8," Green said. "But It should be noted that during the period in which the nominating com· mlttee was active, no one came forward to suggest names for consideration." Clark, Green's onl y opponent, is al5o a candidate for Supervisor in the 4th District, He faces a runorf Nov. 3 with Gordon Bishop for the supervisor'• post to succeed William Hirstein. U aark is named President of the League of Ciliea, then ii elected a county supervisor, he would have to quit bil League post in January, Green said he was quitting the race because Garden Grove. and seven other cities had expresaed..fJiuatlsfaction with . the League's policy of 8Howing officera to serve consecutive terms. Tbey refUIOll lo dllcua 1111 -· , Police Eind Weapons Cache in Costa Mesa By ARTHVR It. VINSEL Of fllt ~Ir Plllt lllft Federal authorities today entenil the case of a cache of military "eaporis and explosives -plua instructions for sabotag~ -unoovered accidentally. Thur&day night by Coata M,.. pollct checking out a false alarm. A pair of teena1ers wu arrest.eel on state charges of poaeukxl of illec.t firearms, while Treasury Department agents were en route today to determine U a federal offense was committed. Police were reluctant to speculate on any possible coMection with radical political factions until each of 18 weapcns -including automatic rines a n d machineguns -was checked and the suspecta questioned. They were identified u David B. McLaughlin, 19, and DoUglas M • Langevin, 19, both of 111 Ce.cil .Plact, the house where the arsenal wu confiacated. "Some or the. Item! that are illqaJ to possess appear to be deactivated," a· plained Detective. Lt. Harold Filchtr. He said a bomb di1pcul aquad 'from El Toto Marine Corpo Air Stalion WU callld to beadquorters lhll mornlas wl!m hind crenades were cl1acoYered in OM coo- liscaled corloo. Ficker Corks Champagne m Foes Celebrate . 0 WI!! don't know if tbey'rt live," Lt. Filche.r' said. "But we do have ammW'l!tlaa bozll containing IOme spent and IOme live rounda, p!UI numerous pampbJetl OD bomb• and booby traps," he continued. "That's what .cares· ua.~' · Lt. Fischer -Pld chemicalcompounda commonly Uled In mlllni bomlil -In conibioation with other l'Oldlly avilllblo ln(redleni.. -were taieo from the Cecil Place residence. He llld McLaulhiin JiJi.d hll oo- cu'paUon as a headwaiter ind Langevin. who was not present when the weapona were dilcovered, is an auto mechanic. The two awptcfl appiren,Uy hive no d~ed .millllry connection In wblch .lhly mighl bave obtained the weapoi>a, ho ld- ded. Besides the: military weapons, which in- cluded a mortar laWlching devlc» ap- pearing to be Japanese-made, p>llce aeiz.. ed an infrared anlperacope Uled to pick out victiml in total darkneu. •'Numerous band weapons and nn.· "hich appear on the surface to be ka.t were aJao picked up," aaid Lt. Fiacber. The dilcovery be1an lberlly before It p.m .• ·when an emirpncy callboJ: In the lllllblock of Oecil.P1--oil al polica headquarter» • Olficen Gene Norden ud Davt ~ (llee WEAPONS, P111 II . We•.._, , { I Hospital a~ UC . 1·rvine? Slogan Contest Deadline Soon Special to CM DAILY PILOT NEWPORl, R. I. -Skipper Bill Ficker and his Intrepid crew bad their chtm· pagne on ice Tburlda.y. They tbou&ht they hid the ...._.,,.,. Men than 200 entries have already Cup on ice. been received for the HuntiniJloo Beach Bui pddy Gre!A!I ll <nw•n H- Chlmber "' Conunerco colDIDWlily u111 Auatralla In 1111 prr'fflllm ~ 1lopn CM!est endq llepl,. llO. evtn IWilled A..U -u . -llld Gusty Santa Ana winds will blow up a . storm over. the 'lf!tkend, eending the coastal temperatures rhoollng lnw•rd the to mirk. '!'ha _,,.,.. will mfer IOI, u lllUal. INSWE TOD.4.Y By GEORGE LEIDAl °'* Ddy,.....,. Tho Cllilomla Collep ol Medldno •t- UC Irvine "Ill request approval of a· m.·' bed teachin& hospital It '.l'uesday'1 meeting ot .the Comprehensh·'! Hea lth Planninl As8ociation of Oflnge County (CHPA.). ~ ---'boSlting an estimated $30.~ million, the ·seven-story hospllal would-occupy 14 acres or the UCI campus. lt would give hospital experience for metlcal 1tudenta as well 1s complete medie1I facilllies to the fi i-w port hospital ' Bet'Vlce. area, Con!itructJon ls sched uled lo begin in Ju- ly, 1973. • OWi Warrt11 L. Bos"llck •. llld lhl . . ·• fscillty woold proVide · :MS modicaJ. IW'aical 1bed11 32 ma~• 44 pediatric, Ind :a poyd>latric -in .JG ... le. rooms, JO ttro-bed warill and llYtll (CJuro. bed wards. Under sule In. 1ppo'ov1I o1 the CHPA is ~ in order for the project to qualify for government funding . A College spake.man 11ld that the 3fiO.. bed hospital will not Provide all the 1,500 teaching beds required· by the college, but W'OUld bring to the campus enough beds lo IUpport I.he teaching needs. The col~ lege would continue its relationships with other holpitals in the community i~ cludln1 the Oranae County Medical Ce~ler, OC Childreo'1 Hiiipttal, HOii Memorl1I ind Fairview Stale Raopi411. '!lie wla!lillC ~. ICCordint to his ~IMIT)' DMll·illjll.-....... It will wva 1]01 only tho tll,'!111 ·Chuqher M-N]pb XIW, will best Jl"IM ..,.Pel. , --"~-J ·~ N-,_...,,, affil, typify lfunllnslon -II the herel• "They Clh'l·ldo !Mo.-<aWIJ' -i,;";; j; ~'t."c1r7,.'"i;. the, lionll -If or-. Caanty. A flllll us," Gnlel ·ll lldjlpif' Jim lllrdf , b11anl:< el Oruie County's u millioa prl• -. to the-wlnnel'. declll'td Iller' stoollq <il<illldl _, J>OPll•U"" ., well. Entrlt1 may be ltnl lo the dwhbtr of. from Intrepid In the lillll • 711111 lo • Cost of buikling . the steel arid rein-nee, ll5a Beacll 'Blvd. keep tbe contelt a11 ... •IOl'<td coocre!A! iacillly 11 sel al 112 !Sea DAILY PILOT Boatlnl Ullm' million, with another f1 .I~ million pro-Almon Lockabt '1 account of the tlltt on jeclrd ror equipping 'U. Land c .. i.. ar. Strike A-uthorized -Page 11 · estimated at $375,000, and architect's fees "That wai a beaullful r.ce. V«Y we)I 1l 11.3 million lor tht 1ot1I $30.7 ,million NEW YORK CAPI -Members of the done. l shire your Joy, yau . certainly project. Am«lean Nfwoplper Guild at the New dtlervtd tt," Ficilfr told lltrdy. The cost per bed ror the prqpotod ' 'Yori Tlmet ~ -1,14.'I lo 71 to "We Ifill hive lo do ll tbnt ""'"' hospital Is 171,11111 and coot per -' 1ulllori>e IUlld ofllctn lo call a strike time!," Hardy replied, wtll '""" lhat fool would be 116.!0, bUed oa 1111 Iola! • a1al111t lhl pa!!ef. No deadline wu It! no ioreipl yldlt ln•tha llt-yar hillar7 of <Oil 11d1NIA!, for a strlft. the -.:1 Clop bu -Iba-· " -· • J1 " - • ! ! I , .• =J IWl y I'll.OT K M dlY, SI-25, 1'70 ~$,,•et..,.."'1 SoatNI' { 2 ~ ' ' - Air Force Fill - Gets Clean Bill . ' ~ WASHINGTON (AP) -The Air . Peno"• IWllll·irinl F·lll fllhler bomher : baa been pro n o u n c e d "1tructurally ~ . tound'' by the Pentaaon. ~ plane has been undergoing slruc-lurat testa since a fatal crash lut· . December casued by a failure ln the _ &Wlnt··win& pivot section. ' The Senate Armed Services Committee, • in reporting the Defense authorization biU fpr the cun"ent fiscal year, conditioned its approval or more funding on a ee.rt1flca· tiOn from lbe Defense Department of tbe '·plane'i structural integrity. • David Packard, dtputy staelary of .. defense, informed Committee Chairman .. John st.Mil (l>MiJs.J. in 1 letter that Ille r..Wts thus fsr in Ille testing pro- i1tram "permit me to conclude that the F· "111 Oeet will be structurally IOClnd, and • 111a1 it will indeed perform Its intended ·'IDiaaiOIL" '· After the crash, the Air Force ground- ed all p:i F-111'1 alrudy in service . Since t~ew test program began. 46 planes have been examined and reen- tered serv ice. Another 136 are In the pro- cess of being. -trana!ured. back to operating commands. Packard's letter preceded Alr Force anmuncement of a Sl77.I million contract award to General Dynamics C.orp. for an additional 24 of the F-l ll's. Judge Orders Probaiion On Fraud:Rap . L ~ --. _ .1C.enses _· .. Tickle the SACRAMENTO (lJPI) -Inm1te1 at the llcell!e platt factory at Folsom State Prilon may get 1 chuckle atampinc out aome of the new penonalized licenae plates. . rQf exainple,,lhln: may bi a few grin1 when they get the order from one woman who wants JKT-3ol8. A State Motor Vehicles Department (DMV) spokesman said the JKT stood for her initials. He did not know about the ... MB,-but the convicta will problbly t buatd a guess or two. "ll she wants to advertise, lt'1 all rilht with us," he said. · · ·AM the prisoners may ttt i · utue .,·thirsty when I.bey stamp out the ltldly·rt- . quest for HAMMS. · · The DMV spokesman u id Thursday that since the ne°" personalized lictnst program went into effect • month •So his · agency has received 10tne 4,500 requests. Fret11 PflfJe I OOUNCIL ••• Insurance salesman Paul Farowk:h was placed on three ye~· probation today fOr his part In issuing a 115,000 life po!IC)'. on a Corona dei Mar man who is dying. · . . . . • DAILY: PILOT .SI'" Pllt .. HOUSE TH~· DILLB!ilRGS BUILT FORMS BACKDROP FOi! ROBIN , AFGHA!i HOUND 'BEGUME' · In Old Huntington B1.1ch, D.1vld Dillber9'1 Home 11 His C11tl1 Gov. Ronald Reagan slined the bill permitting the plates for an addJUonaJ $2S with the revenue going for tm- provement of California's ecology:· DMV deputy registrar Elmer Brown said that once the plat~s sta.rt hitting the itretls "the idea will be eyen better advertised"' and his agency should be ffooded with'requests . " have opened it up for other employes, . too." ~-"They got all their Jringe benefits and • thll~1 also-a lot of-money," Bartle tr.- ' Al Coen was worried mO!lly about •deficit budge.Ung. "Even the l .2S percent increase is a deficit. U we carry it ou t ~=~ .. a Jew yeart we 'll be in a U&bt posi- ,; "This raiJe is also above the cost of liv- : Jng," Coen continued. "And we have to :.'lOOlpete within our own mar~t. Orange ._County, not cities in other 1tt1s. In some cues the lrlJ>i• bellOIU. equal a 30 pu· cent. raise." .. "I felt this was a fair salary increase," -:Jack Gret.n explained. "It's near the cOst :Of Uvtna and is what the city can afford, ~but even thJs Is sWI a deficit." "I don 't think the city can afford , anypwre," Jerry Matney said. "I just !.don't think we can.meet their demands." 1, Matney also said he felt there .was a tack of communicaUon with the city ad- ministrator. "Our salaries compare ~favorably with the surrounding cltie.s. I don't think the correct cities were .~eyed. 1 just can't jll!tify a greater taiM. If the voters come down and say five it to them, okay." , · Ge!irl;e McCr.ackt.n was abstnt from ~ '.\rf~'I .... tin&. bl!t &IVO his ilup-.J>ort to the cauncil'a action. ' "What i! fair for one is fair for all," 'McCracken uid today. "I think there was a fallacy in the cities surveyed. Even ,tbouch the area ll in • depression. pay . Taisei could keep, .spira.lio& based OD a -.urvey of ot.ber clilts." ' Mayor Donald Shlpley also felt the 8.25 'percent was a fair raise due to the economic conditions of the limes. ::"C.onsidering the situation I think it 's .very reasonable. This doesn't mean we 1 have any complainta about our police or 'firemen it'a just the current situation." , .. ~.Speech Scheduled _By Ray Bradbury Amerie1 '1 besl·read science fiction writer, Ray Bradbury, will return to .·Golden wtst C.oUe1e lhi! fall to initiate the 1970-71 1rtist-lecture series. ·· He will seeak at ti a.m., Oct. II in the colle1e forum. Prlct ol admission ii l-1. · · The 5G-year"ld novelist began writing at the age of 12 and 10ld his first story "when he was 19. Of the 300 stories and 14 books of ttories, novels and play1 he has 'published, perhaps "The Ma r t 1 an 'Chronicles," "The lllustrated Man," ""Somethin& Wi cked This Way Comes,'' and "The Mlchlneries of Joy" brought him rhe most recognition. La1t year when Bradbury came to ·.Golden West C.Ollege he addressed an ~ ovuflow audience of 1tudenta and rt1idenls 1t the forum. .· ' ' • . . .. ·' .. ' . . ' •• ,. DAILY PILOT OllU!el COAST l'U.1.liNtNG COMl"ANY Roll1ii N. Wet4 ,,.w...1 .... ""*"'- Jac.k I, C111l1y Vite '""81W..I •NII G9r.Jrlt M11111tr Tlio11111 1e., .. a ,,.. ..... 1111 Etftl' A1111 O;,~;" W•I O••llM C9t,Nlty l f !!tr ... llitrt W, 11111 ...... i.i. f f11.,. H9lltl ..... .._, Offic.• 17171 l11cli l111l1v1r4 ,.,ui,1 A411411n: r.o. ••• 7to, t1641 _Oii,_ ~ ••ctu m F., .. , ... ,,....,. • • """ M ... I nt ~I a1y '""' ... ....,/ loffd'll 2'11 Wwl lt1M1 1 .... t1v1<-.I .... (lf!Mllltl .. HOttR (I (t m• II.Ml ,_ Superior Court Judge Ronald Crookshank refuaed to consider an y other sentence for the 34:;-year-old Tustin man who-could have been 1ent to state prison for up to 20 yeairs . Farowich wu: found guilty by a jury laSt' Sept. 2 of charges or attempted grand theft, conspirlcy to commit grand theft IJld for1ery. He ,..aiid Lawrence Odenz. 47, of 2983 ·Java Road, Costa Mesa, were arrested after clothing store manager Murray Bronson was billed for the first payment on a $15,000 policy he had never applied for. '" It Was learned that Odenz. who employed Bronson at his Michael's Ltd. store in C.osta Mesa, took the phys ical for Bronson after learning that his manager was suffering from a terminal disease. Odenz admitted before Farowlch's trral that he made arrangements for the issuance of the policy and then pleaded guilty to reduced charges of conspiracy. Odenz was fined $1,000 by Judge CrOO kshank, placed on proba~ion for one year and swnmoned as a witness for the prosecution against Farowich. Odem: testified that he intended to hand over the $15,000 he would have received on Bronson's death to Bronson's widow. That payment would have . bee,n made in· the-hai;ne ol Odenz' business u• thJ type of insurance arrangement ailthoriz- ed by Farowich. It was learned during the trial that Mrs. Bronson was never advised of any such ll!angement. Y ·Indian Guides Meet Wetlnesday A program for fathers and sons inter· ested in joining Lhe YMCA Indian Guides is scheduled. for Wedn.esday at 7:30 p.m. a"t the Edison High School cafeteria in Huntihgton Beach. Indian Guides is a program open to boys ages six to nine and their fathers. The orientation meeting is for residents of Huntington Beach who live south of Yorktown Avenue. Indian Guides meet once a month and spansor father and son campouts. nature walks. picnics and other recreational activities. Further inlormation on the recry_itment meeting can be obtained from Jim Weik at 962-7652. Field .Stripping Fountain Valley Newcomers Get Warm Welcomes Welcome to Founta.in Valley. Starting Monday new residents to the city will be greeted by members ci the women's division of the chamber of com· merce. "We just want to help new residents become acquainted with their city," ex- plained Mrs. Lorin Lammers, organizer of the chamber's new activity. Mrs . Lammers, with two other women, Mrs. Fred Funk and Mrs .. Thomas Kohl, will spend a few days each week making individual visits to new families in Foun· taln Valley. Jn their hands will be a small bag full of useful gifts (matches, pencils, nole pads, etc.) from local merchants, plus several pages of information on acliv1\ies and organizations available in the city. The project, which is still nameless. has the blessings of the city council, the Chamber aiii;l.Other civiC organiiiµons . "We don't waTit to call lt the welcome wagon or any other name already in · use,'' l\1rs. Lammers said. "But it is that type of program ." The names of new fam ilies will be pic k· ed up each week at c.ity hall, as the fam ilies have their water meters turned on. The program starts~onday, and Mrs. Lammers asked that any local merchant who wants to donate gifts for the new ar- rivals, should phone her at 962-3453. From Pqe I WEAPONS ... of the department's felony unit, were nearby so they responded and stopped a youth later determined to be McLaughlin for questioning. "He admitted touching the box, but said he didn't set it off," Lt. Fischer ex· lained, adding that he carried no personal identification at that point. "Tlfe subject volunteered to go tll his home and get some," said Lt. Fischer. Field hands strip bean field between Bushard and. Magnolia Streets in Fountain Valley. This field. south ol Eding er Avenue. is typ ical or most truck farm ing locations still round in the area -it is sand· wlched between housing developments. Area was once known •• Southern Californla '1 "vegetable basket." • Douse Restyled The most popular request, he uld, was for PEACE. 'Country Look' Home Co~ts $200 .The one wto gets the plate w\11 be decided at a drawing next mooth. Most car owners want Jett.era spellinf oUt their names. By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI . · , 01 Ille o.JIJ l'ii.t ll1ft Whether you call it "stunning" or ''kooky/' the house that David and Robin Dillberg built is i:eltlng a lot of attention ·from Huntington Beach residents these ·days. · . Probably anything with a IS.foot an· . lique win dmill in the front yard would. Passersby strolling past 903 Delawa re St., loca"ted in an old pi:irtfon of the city are amazed at the architectural ·wonder going up there . lt seems to be a, strange mixture of Dutch and Western id ioms. "They just happened to be tearing up an old railroad· in Inglewood so David latched onto some junk railroad ties and began building the porch," said Robin. Working in his spare time for about one year, her husband has changed the shab- by old house he bought for $15,000 into a place he wouldn't sell for $29,000. Ordinary telephone crossarm.s a.nd pieces , fr.om the junkpile. have .. ~n the ·materials for his artistry. ' . ' > Already well.known. by city building in. spec~ David hi,,,. far <!!1)y spent l200 . on-the conversion .project, main1y to put up !he shake• n>Of. The other ports he scrounaed~ "He Uk" things that look kind of · wesJem· and Is trying to create sort of a rural aiJNl!iphere," said his wife .. . Th" ~de4Atouch was .an old Dempster windmill that formerlY pumped out·water over bean and t-0malo fields on Bushard Street and now has a permanent place in Dillberg 's front yard. "He bought it from a guy for SO bucks and got it working until It broke agai n," Robin expla ined. ~ ' · Further improvements planned by the Dil lbergs consist of a second -story bedroom reached by a spiral staircase, a sunken kitchen with a big , hooded stove and big windows all around. The neighbors, so far at least. ha ve given their approval . Ifs about the last · place they can•tee the "country" that bas \ 'been vanishing In Huntington Beach. But, Brown said, IOIIle have a pedant lot the bi:r.arn. For example, one request from Southern California wu for BRtiIN. Brown said he presumed this Was frOin a rah-Tab UCLA .student. Another wa:nted BEAR. A UJjlftraitY GI California, Berkeley, student! Tb e ·registrar said he did not know. : There wete also reciuests fOr BANJO. DERBY. SMILE. MINUS I, VIP. EGO, MR BUG and GIDGET. . Brown said offensive requesl!i would be rejected. JORDAN ..• Haircut~:to Be Clipped? r;uffered up to 20.000 casualties In fighting with the Jordanian army in the past nine days. In addition, they said, Syria lost between 75 and 100 Soviet-built T54 and T55 tanks: -almost 12 pefcent or' their armor -as well u 170 · military ·i1ransport "vehicles 1n the b1ttles · ln northern Jordan. '. ' The heavy losses, accOrding ta" the Israeli military sources, will guarantee quiet, at least for several weeks. Haircut prices in Orange County may be due for a clipping in ,the light' of a Superior Court ruling to the effect that ~he setting of minimum . rates is un- constitutional. • Judge Raymond Thompson delivered that verdict Thursday in support of .the argument offcrc1 by Fullerton barber Paul M. Blake '. the California Board of Barber Exa1. .ers can not discipline him for charging less than the state minimum of $1.91. Blake and 15 other Fullerton barbers asked Super ior Court for a writ of man· date ordering the state 1roup to abandon Its attempts to force Blake and other rebel halrcutters into line. · Judge Thompson's ruling-c 1-o s el y followed the. lines Of an earlier ruling by Judge .Ronaid Crookshank to the effect that the State Board of Barber Ex. a~iners could not, force Garden Grove batber Ricky Star :to,up his $1.75 rate to the $1.91 minimum. Star is still embroiled with the state Leaders differed in thtir opirtion1, 'With Defense Minister Moshe' Dayan uytng the Jordan civil war was dying out and none of its principals want.I more.· "I hope the King manages to give them a severe beating," aaid Dayan. "I am on the side of the king and not on the aide of the· alternative." The alternative would · be Jsraf.lf. In- regulating agency in a dispute that seems tervehtion and Deputy Premier Yi.all destined td go to the United States Allon said in a hard-line Meet the Presa Supereme Court. interview Husieiil inay now be In W"Ol'll He said Thursday that the state board trouble.' · met with fa ilure in an appeal to the Diplomatic sources say Allon favored Fourth District Court of Appeals on the immedilite Israeli intervention, to uve decision handed down by Judge Hussein's government. Crookshank. He is determined, he said, to "Thete ·is no more room far Xing go on charging below·minimum prices in Hussein in Jordan," a apokesman far the deflnant e Of the barbi!s''1Xiii'd. -paJestinlan~guerr111a-rdecl1ret110ilay.-- l fl ., .. For The Unusual .... -Think Of Ted von Hemert 0 .• These wniqu• pi•c•s er• • ,new look: •t the 0 10 World f rom H•n,..don's Folio Nine collection. Dlvets•ly clesigned, yet int tely her • mo nious. Th i1 differenc_e II with Ted von Hemert, Inc • NIWl'ORT lliACH 1727 Weatcliff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TI L 9 ., Pro'f111fon11 Interi or O..IJ•ers Anll1ltlo-AID-NSID LAGUNA llACH 345 North Coast Hwy. -JI Ol'IN FRIDAY 'TIL ' ...... ttft "-M• el ONiitt C.., .... tlU - I /· ·- 1rld.1y, Stpttmbf'r 25, 1970 ..... H D£Jl Y PILOT jJ Health Planners· ·studrln·g )ie.di~al _.. . ..,_,/ .. ,.. I. ' ' Costs. _,,... ly JOANNE REYNOLDS 1tnktl wll! be nted6d and wbut iht counties and rtctonJ where it can bt MemDeraJ;ip bl ·the asaociaUan ~Is open -Mental· Health Committee. It ..-orls ment and retention Of bWtb cue ptrlOfl. " ... ...., "11"' , • .,, they lhould be located. detfcned to loul needs, .. be e1pl1ined..... to all interested county residents. on planning mental health prograrnS nel. Population growth and medical t:oats Dr. WallMl~Gerrlt, a Newport Beach By April of 1169 the Orante County ~ The five committees are : countywide. · -EnvJronmtntal Health. Th1'com- Are the aubj~ for an intensive atudy phydcian. who b pnlklent ot thl gri:ap, group was operatiou.I. CHPA has 65--Health Facilities and StrvictS Com--..... Penona.l Health StrvJces Delivery. uiittee 11 the coal setting unit of tM being at.Jrted by the Compreben1lve gk:I the · autbority for the organiulion directon and nve committees. mitlee. By state law lhia torrunlUee has This committee ls concerned with seeing Health Planning Assoda.Uon of Oraoce wa1 ll'•nted Ja tht federal Partnenbip In By Jaw, membetthip on t.be board of the power to approve all prospective that there are facllltles and periOflne.l to group. It helee; aet the 'guldellna by County. • Hulth Act ol 1987. directon and commltteu mll5l be health holpit.ab or.. rtmodtllng ol existing deliver health can:. unilormJy__wyntywide. which the other committee& .fUn~ion. The volunl~ group !s surveying "Thi idea ,WJI to pt the health pllll· _servlces conaumm and providers, with hospitals. Without ita approval, hospitals -Health Care ~1anpower. Closely;-,--=J~ohn Trablicl, C:H'PA executive di.rte. medical resources ot the county in an ef-nine proce11 eat of the bind$ of tht the majorjty of lhe memben of each aub are oot e1igible for 1tat1 lictnses or allied with Health Services Delivery, this tor, uid 50 percent of the organliatton's fort to determine what health care federal and. ate pammeats and lnto aroup belnc corwumen. 1overnment f~. committee W<lrks on the treining, recruit-fundina: comta from WuhJnclon, 25 per· cent must be railed in the county 1nd·U- Noise "Level to Dip Je.ts to Change L~nding .Techniques Residents or lhe Tustin-Orange area are due to get a break in the noise levels from Air West jets approaching Ora111e County Airport !or landings. Following a series of meetings with a Tustin-based anti·nOi!il committee, the airline has agreed to change procedures to insure its pilots will not descend below the instrument landing system guide alopt . ":), In addition, Air Weit hu promi.sed to use • visU&1 flighl .li>Pr:o-ch down the Newport Freeway whenever weather con· ditions permil. Onnge County Supervisor William Hirstein, who announcecj 'the agreement, also disclosed today today that two ad- ditional noise monil<iing devices will be installed along the la.nding approaches. A similar verbal aareement is alrudy Flag Not Green • Ecology Banner Goes to Court When are the. stars and stripes not an American Flag? Would substitution of the color gfffn for blue make the difference? Apparently the matter -which crop- ped up in San Clemente recently -will be settled in court. Matthew Udall, JI, of 140 Avenida Algodon, was cited · by a San Clemente pol.ice officer last week on charge1 of desecrating the American Flag. Police impounded his van, which they said bad cut portions of a flag as window curtains. UdalL was released on his pro- mise to appear, his flq curtains aeized as evidence 1nd he is to be arraigned in municipal court Oct. 2. Udall has maintained that his areeni.sh flag with 1tan and stripes wu not an American Flag but an ecology flag and that his display of it wa1 a positive act not a diarespecUul gesture. Edward Tornell, deputy district at- torney, feels the cireumstances of the case fall into a difficult area but intends to throw some lia:ht on it by prosecuting and lettin1 the court decide. Auto Strike Causing Job Layoffs in. Other Areas DETROIT (AP-l -Employers in the tire, metals, and transportation in- dustries laid of! more workers Thursday as the effects of a Hk:lay~ld United Auto Workers' strike against General Motors Corp.Jpread. One . of the anticipated effects of the labor dispute surfaced Thursday in Detroit as GM officials announced an a.verage price increase for its 1971 cars of $136 per car over current prices. And the corporation held the door open for stilt higher 1971 prices saying that at the con· cluision of the strike car prices "will be reviewed in the light or pr.evailing economic factors and competitive con· ditions in the marketplace." One of the hardest hit among the 31,000 firms selling goods. or services to GM was the A. 0. Smith Corp., of Milwauktt, ~-hieh makes car frames and other automotive equipment. The company said 3,150 of its 5!500 pro- duction workers in Milwaukee and Granite City, Ill., were being laid ofr Fri· day because of the strike. _ An_EasLS~,_Jll., melals company Cig Triggers Store· Soaking SAN DIEGO (AP) -A burning cigarette In a wastebasket set off the automatic sprinkler in a Mission Valley department store Tuesday night. Nearly 200 gallons O{ water was spilled before firemen, alerted by the automatic alarm of the sprinkler system turned it off. The fire wtnt out by ,ittsU in tht wastebasket. which makes high-trade alab title for GM'1 die cutin1 operations has laid o[f .CJ of its 510 employes. Some 600 men were laid off the Grand Tnint railroad, which aerves}GM plants in Michigan. Uniroyal Jnc., laid off l,100 rubber workers in Alabama because of the strike and announced that eoo more would be laid off at Baton Rouge, La., Monday. Other tire makers alto &Mounced strike-induced layoffs. General Motors has tatimated that its suppliers are losing $40 million a day in sales beeaUse of the strike. Disabled Ex-GI To Marry Nurse STEVENSVILLE, Mich. (AP) Charles C. Hill Jr., who Jost his legs in a mine explosion in Vietnam, will marry the student_nurse who__inspired him to Jfarn to walk again with artificial limb!. llills. 25, and Nancy Kotlan, 21, of Chicago. will be married Saturday at Chicago's St. Marks Roman Catholic church. The couple met in May, 1968 at West Side Veteran,, Hospital in Chicago where the soldier had been sent for rehabilita- tion after losing both legs above the knee . Hill "was ao depressed ht didn't care if he lived," recalled Miss KoUan. "I decided he needed a friend." She visited him at the hospital often and Hill's life br1ghtmed. After his discharge from the hospital. he returned hom to Stevensville ind began writimg to Nancy. "We had become great friends," she said. "He wu ao proud the day he. bepn driviq his own car with hand controls. He started huntin(, filhiq and boatin1 ... in effect between Air California, Robert J . 'Q,resnahan, C91\flnned today. _ 1be monitoring ~tations, operated by the Northrop Corporation, will bi: in· stalled '-ionday, Hirstein said. Gordon Bricken, systems engineer for Northrop who designed and in.stalled the devices previously under takeoff points, said additional portable systems will be operated within the Tustin-Oranie area during the next few weeks . Army to Cut Troops Back By 45,000 WASHINGTON (APJ -The Army will cut its troop strength by next June by 45,000 meo to the lowest level in 10 years. Robert C. Moot, Defense Department controller, said three divisions will be dropped from combat forces by mid-1971, Jeaving Army strength at 1.2 million, a 12-month decrease of 125,000 men. Moot disclosed the cutback Thursday during a panel discussion before the Na- tional Security Jndustrial Association , a group ol defense contractors. Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird has established a goal of 2.9 milliofi men in uniform by next. June. The armed forces now have slightly more than 3 million men, compared with the Vietnam war peak or 3.5 million in 1968. While Moot did not say how the cul<1 will be made, the Pentagon lw fiillOWeil a policy or inactivating Army units as they are withdrawn from Vietnam . _Moot said the cutbacks will come as a resutl of Preaident Nizorfs doctrine of ~I U.S. commitments abroad, thus requiring·a smaller standing i.r.my and a greater reliance on providing allies military aid in the form of equipment and training, rather than armed ~ps. With the exception of three 1~.~man divisions to be eliminated b)' next June, most of the Army cutback will be made through phasing out support units. The Anny combat force is composed of 4 2/3 infantry divisions, 4 mecl)anized di visions, an airborne division and S in· dependent brigades or about 3,500 men each. 'Bus jacking' Foiled in LA LOS ANGELES (UPll -Daryl Sweet, 19, stuck a broken wine bot- tle to the head of lhe driver or a bw carrylnf %2 persons and told him, "We're going to San Diego." The "busjacking'' T h u r • d a y lasted only JS minutes. A passenger, Robert Davis, 2 4 , overpowered the would-be hijacker when the Southern California Rapid Transit Di:ltrict bus stopped at a red light in a downtown in- tersection. The driver, Ed Hudson, Jr., later told police, "He uid he was going to kill me." Sweet was charged wilh kidnaping. Authorities said there are no statutes dealing with the hijacking of buses. Move! DAILY PILOT Stiff .....i. PARTY TALK -Senator George ~·Iurphy and Governor Ronald Reagan chat with Mrs. Marsha Bents of Newport Beach, co-hostess of $100-a·plate Republican fund-raising dinner Thursday night at Anaheim Convention Center. ln background (glasses) is Newport Beach attorney Alex Bo,vie, Reagan's campaign chalrman tor Orange County . Spe~s In Anaheim Gov. Reagan Makes Plea For Solid GOP_Maj.oritr By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 ... O.llr PllM lllff Governor Reagan Thursday called upon Californlans to re-elect him and to give him a clear cut Republicap majority in the Legisl ature in November so he can carry Out his tax reform, welfare and Jaw and order programs. Reagan spoke to a crowd of 1.000 Republicans at a $100.a-plste dinner Thursday night at the Anaheim Con- vention Center. In a gathering attended by the Republican candidates for state con- stitutional offices. the Legislature and Congress, Reagan shared lhe speaker's platform with Senator George Murphy. who also is seeking re-election . Reagan cited the "broken log jam" of legislation that o cc u r red when Republicans gained a slight edge in both houses or the state Legislature alter the 1968 elections. And he outlined additional programs he woul d ~push through if given a solidly Republican Legislature lhis year. Among programs he said he considers necessary are welfare reforms, Medical reforms, a judicial selection reform and-._property tax reform. "tf you believ e in the need for these lhings as I do. then give me a team of Republicans who "'ill get the job done ," he said.' The campaign taclics or lleag~n's op- ponent, Jess Unruh. were noted by the governor. ''This business or popping up on my front lawn or at the houses of Republican supporters is Judricrilus.'' Reagan drew a laugh from his sup- porters when he added, "You know it us- ed to be tha t the only thing you had to worry about on your front lawn was crab grass." Murphy extended some-or Reagan 's remarks to the national level, noling that President Nixon also needs a Republican "team in Wa shington. "lrl two weeks or hard campaigning up and down this"state, rve found out a few thingii about what Californians want." he explained. ''They want judces who will enforce the laws as they arc written. I found out the taxpayers of this st.ate are tired of sup- porting rcvolulionaries in our institutions of higher learning. 1'And they \Vant people in public office wtro will tell it like it is. They want representatives \\'ho will vote the way lhey talk during a campaign and they want men who will show up in Congress," he stated. ~1urphy concluded his speech by calling upon audience members to get 9ut afid work for the candidates to ma~e "the greatest Republican victory in years in this state." Nixon Slates Ireland Meet To Discuss Peace Talks · The presirlential party will ny to Spain Oct. 2 where Nixon will be welcomed" by Gen. Francisco Franco, his wife and high . Spanish offi cials. Paral,~d County Youth Seeks Chess Partner WASHINGTON (AP l -President Nix· on, Yi'ho leaves SW1day for a nine-day trip to five European countries. will meet in Ireland with U.S. representatives to the Paris peace talks. The White House announced Thursda)t the President will discuss the Vietnam peace talks with chief negotiator David The Spanish Foreign Ministry an- nounced today that Nixon will confer with Franco in El Pradg Palace . Accompany- ing the Spanish leader will be Prince Juan Carlos de Bourbon, Franco's eventual succes.sor as king; the Spanish Viet!: presi- dent. Luis Carrero Blanco, and Foreign A1ini8ter Lopu Bravo. By RODI NIEDZIELSJU ot "" DeflJ' ,~,,..,. Kenny DtBusk is waitillC for aomeone to m1ke the next mo'te. Because he can't Not since last October when an automobi1e ltcident eevertd hi1 spinal cord and paraJ1aed both 1r1111 Ind lep. . Wiien the -tell )'OU !hit there is UtUe, if any hope that ~·u ever run or -1 fo0thall 111aln. Ule can aet pretty depmalng. And from Kenny"• bedside 1t Huotmaton Volley Connleocent Hospital, the Mun! looks pretty dim. Mentally alert and able to talk well despite the tragic accident. Kenny qy1 he would 111ce to play chess •ith aomeone but that he can move neither pawn or kine With his hands. .;J'm looking for someone in their early 20! lo play • couple of a: a mes a day t" 111id Kenny. 19. \\'ho attended Huntington Beach High School. He says it real!)' doe8n't matter il lt's a boy or cirl as Ion& ... Ibey like to play dleos. Kenny doesn't profess-to be an expert al the a:ame, but it looks like he 'll have a Iona time )" pnc:tice. "Tm , .. ny not very good It It but I know Ill the move&," he e1plalneU. lroolcally, I c:IMa Mt bouibt In Muic:o WU ID Indirect CIUll ol bil pndicament. "He and lilatblr' boJ were oa their way blc:k home from Mulco whero he J>lll'cblled the ..... 11111-lie w11~ In lbe car wt.a It roDld O¥er llftral tbnts Ind IOI hur1,.. llld Mn. Violet Tiber. the holpital'I dirtctor of nunln1. The other boy, wbo l!telped vlrtuoily U111C1thed. 1UJJ bu the c1-set, IC· c:onlinl to Ktn117. M_rs. Tlbet.lll<l<d Jllll.the.11urllng.Jlal lias 6egltn an intensified prosram to heir. him fetl better because he hid been fee • ing 90 miserable of l•te. "\Ve want to aet him an attacheme.nt for the telephont IO be c1n 1t i<&tl talk lo people. And his brother i.s 1ettin1 him 't stereo," 'she 11kl • • ''Ria:ht now he orily has a television and K. E. Bruct at KiUrush House, 12 miles he can't even tum on the call light for "''est of Tiperr8ry. btlp." ~1rs. Nixon will accompany the Pres I· Hoipit.tl ataf( members are also look· dent through mOltl of the trip, but will · forw d to 1•••• hf th stay in Rome Monday while he and mg ar prov .... '& m wi • Secretary or State William P. Rogers reading apparatus and perhaps an elec-visit shi-of the 6th Fleet in the Mediler--~~lcbair be an ope_r_1i._ with bis ranean. ,.~ Anolhtr thl.na that'a botherint Kenny is Mrs. Nixon plans to visit Boys Town In the fact that "he ii the only youns person Rome and Inspect Jn adult literacy pro- in the holpital and aurroonded by oCto gram. She will rtjoin her husband in and nooogenarians, accordlQC to Mra. Naples Wednesday where he will meet Tabtr. with NATO'• JOUthern Europtan com- "He ha1 some visitors but most of tht manders. friends his ace have dropped by the Fron\ Naples, the Nbcons will fly to \flyaide. , Belgrade -lhe first vl~ll by an • .:ve:...Jus:Uoraotten.:_sbe u.id Ameri~ p~.lidtn Right now1 the most important lh-lng-is-;Yugoslavia. President Tito will host tht to provide him with 1 chess partner to Nlxons at a black-tie dinner and a recep- brtak up his teltvlalon w1tchinc routine, lion. lttrs. Taber fttls. Mrs. Nixon will entertain women Anyone wbo ls lntcresled 'may phone reporten Thursday, and lhe Nixon$ plan her al 842-5561. 11 formal dinner for Tito ind his wJfe lt'1 your movt. Thursday ni&ht. The Nl1ons will be entertained at a din· ne.r In the royal palace and leave for England the follow lng momlng. President Nixon will have lunch with Queen Elliabclh and British Primt Mlnister Edward Heath at Heath's country C!tate. Tha pre.sidentlal party will spend only a few hours h) England, flying in mida f- ternoon to Shannon. Ireland, for a motorcycle to Kllfrush }louse. While Nixon diSCUBses the future of the Pari11 peace talks, Mrs. Nl~on will lout nt Ma to st tsee and IOot for kin ar ng er ma en name rRY• . She and the President will tour County Kildare on Monday and drive toJ)ubtin where they will have lunch with lreland '11 Prciidcnt Eamon de Valert. The party plans to return t o Washington the night or Oct. 5. percenL comes frvm donattons, ,uch Sf the office In the old county COll1'llloo!le Ill' l'OWlty turned over to the aaociltlOn. ''Last week Gov. Reagari signed a Jaw which requires hospitals: to give us M per bed. We would have preferred voluntary donations1 but nothing can be done about that now." He also said the planning association will seek donations from the county medical association. - -As far as-irletn6ershlp in the CHPA goes, Dr. Gerrie says he doesn't believe the people involved could. profit by t;be association's actions in approving or de· nying hospital appllcaticns. "Aside lrom the six paid s~f members the executive director. a sociologist, a statistician and three secrelilries -the 184 members of our group are all volunteers, the majority o{ which are health care consumers," Dr. Gerrie said. Traband said theassoclation has •Pl>ll· cd for $127,500 in federal funds for 1971. Traband said money to be railed Will be used to financt!: a countywide study of health care facilities. • - "We need to know what our resource" are ," Traband explained. "The cost of health care is already high, and if more hospitals are_built bLarw that are saturated. then empty beds will Im:• hospitals to jack up tbetr ... fees.-" -- "Jn addition to needing to know where the hospitals are, we need to know-whit services are available in each botpital and nursing home, where ttie training facilities are, where the pqpulition_Js growing, and what and where the future needs are going to be,'.' Tr~ said. Traband summed up the problems fac- ed by the association: "OUr committees are biting the bullet and·~ decisions \\'ith crude tools in the face of ·un- necessary criticism from ~icated observers. "But if the CHPA fails because of a lack or funds , then the county wiD. be forced to gel its health planning from the state and federal governments," he said . ' Orange Coast residents who are members of the CHP A board of dlrector1 include: --cipt. Victor G. Benson, M.D., Director '-ledical Dept., El Toro, MCAS. Robert C. Combs, M.D.. Associat~ De.an. UC Irvine College of Medicine, coordinator area V!ll Regional Medical --Progrirn,--delegatenr-Ainertcan-Medical Association; board of diredors, Orana:e County Cancer Society. Wallact!: Gerrie, M.D. past praident. Orange County Medical Aaocfation; associate professor, UC Irvfnt School ol Medicine ; founding member COmmunity Action Council and South Coast Child Guidance Clinic. Robert ~f. Gordon, lecturer in In- formation and computer acience, UC Irvine; chairman Cititens Organized to Support Schools ; Orange County Fair Housing Council. Ada '-fae Hardeman, Urban Programs- Coordinator. UC Irvine Extension; past president, Orange County ~League of Wo~n Voters ; American Society for Pufi · Administration ; Orange County Fair ousing Council; Tri· Co unty Conservation League ; Regional Plan Association. Dora Hill. former Mayor, Newport Beach: vice president'"-Florence Q'it- tenton Home of Orange County. William Hirstein, supervi1SOr. Fourth District William Hudson , Jr., administrator. Hoag Memorial Hospital. Rufino Mora, M.S. W ., psychiatrk: IOCial worker, Fairview State Hospital; t.I· ecutive board, Orange County Chapter or the National Association of Social Workers: Committee for Protective Services for Children of Orange County. Charles J . Mosmann, Corona del Mar, Computer Management Consult.ant. Gladys Prothero, Orange Count;· Farm Bureau Rural Health: El Toro Women'1 Club. Ernestine Ransom , counselor, UC Irvinr.. · John M. Rau , Newport Beach, prt!li· dent. David Industries : Orange County Mental Health Association; Orange eoun .. ty Child Guidance Clink; past treasurer CHPA. Olive Reese. Chainnan. Health SClence Divisioc, Golden West College. Richard Reese, vice president of plan- ning. Irvine Company. Gerald B. Sinykin, M.D .. Director Stu- dent Health Service, UC lrv~ne ; Mental Health Advisory Board : instructor, UC! Medical School, family practice. Richard 1.. Stott, PhD, Newport Beach, Clinical Psychologist: past president, Orange County Psychological Associa· lion; board of directors, California State Psychological Association. Gwenda Watson, Newport Beach, March. of Dimes. Floyd L. Wergeland, MD., SOllth Laguna : vice president, medical affair&, Lei.Jure World Foundation Mad I cal C<nter: CornmiU.. on Hoopltall, Onulge County ~fedlcal A$SOClation ; chairman, Committee for Health Problem1 ol the Agifli. Calilornfa _MedJcal Auoclatlon: Commission for Commw1lly Health Services, CMA-: board of directors, 0 r a n g e County . Heart Association: ltgislatlve eommltlet, Orange COUnty Medltal Association: American Canctl Sotlcty. e11--. lo!1.:bl • Division of Consumer and Health Services, Orange Coast College. Rosemary-Saylor, SoUtb La 1un1 . chairman, Mental Health A d v I so r y Board : League ol Women Voten: Oranp County Council on Montal llelardltlao • I • ' 4-wu PILOT F'tldat, SepWmbtr 25, 1970 Red Escape Paths Hit Cambodia Closes In; More Copters Lost I ' I ~ I~ tr IJlt CMHr PlllM ....,., ~Inda lamett had quite a shop- piilg-trip". Her car was stolen twice 'in three hours in Bakersfield. Mrs. Barnett told police that after doing some shopping, she returned t~ \Vhere she had left the cer-and 1t \V¥ gone. Police found it 90 minutes later in a parking lot around the comer. hfrs. Barnett left it there 311d continued shopping. Then .she rj:!filrned to the · parking lot1 agail'l no 'car. The California highway pa .. -trc:il. hearing a radio broadcast, 1°" cated it six blocks from the second location. • Stn. Richard Russel! (D·Ga.J, PTtsi· de1lt Pro Ttmport of tht Senate, takes a ridt on hi& motorized-scooter dmmi tlit halls of tht Senatt. Rit.!stU, who suffers from emph11sema, uses tht scooter to con$trve tntrQJI. •• A disorder common to another era-the panty raid-has reappear· ed at the Cornell University cam· pus in New York. ~ampus police said 800 male undergraduates marched on a coed dormitory. Baker Tower, Tuesday night ·and called for the undies. They march· ed away half an hour later, many \vaving prizes that had been tossed out of windows by laughing women students. Sgt. Jame• Cunningham ol Cornell's Safety Division. told a university official later: "The nos· ~algia was unbearable. The tears were practically running down my cheeks." • A would-bt. robber handea Portland. Ore. bank telltr CaTol Ht.ad two 1iotes den1anding $4,000 W tdntsday. The man had 4 aun and OTdered htf' not to scream until 10 minutes after ht had left. Mrs. Head $0id, "J'U have to check· the s-ignatuTt on this," and U!f.t th.t window. The nw 1t stood tltt Te a minute. Th.en, ~ a& Mr s. Head asked a11.otheT em- ; ployee to phone police, it dawn· ed on him that this wcan't nor· ~ mal bank Tobbery procedure. Ht fled from tht bank and disap- peared into the crowd in down- town Portland. The ~i New~this week e.pol<r gized £or running an upside-down picture o{ a house along with an article about·Afchltect Harry Rice. Said the newspaper: 0 Tbe article 'vith the picture told of Rice's vision of future building methods, but, as he good naturedly pointed out, it did nol describe any starting with the roof and working up to the foundation." PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Cambodian troops maneuvered today to cut off the last escape route of an estimated 2,000 Viet Cong and North Vietnamese defenders of Tang Kauk on the highway linklnl Plmom Penh and Kompong'l'bom. An artillery commander aaid Cam· bodian f""" driving from the west bad reached highway a m the northern edgtt of the town, 52 miles north of Phnom Penh, aod bad blocked all Communist escape routes lo the west, southwest and northwest. ''The-Viet Cong -remained well.en· trenched along the road," said an oUiclal military spokesman. "Every time we at- tempt to move in from the south on Tang Kauk. we receive heavy fire." ~ A 16-battalioa Cambodian force totalin&: nearly 10,GOO men bu beell stal.led at Tang. Kauk since Sept. 14. The drive, described as the b\ggest of the Cam- bodian campaign, originally set out from Skoan more than t .. -qo In ID el· fort to clear highway I between the capital and Kompcq Thom, a city ol 10,000 penona IO miles ni>rth ol Phnom Penh. . Engineen 1J0rked 'J'buraday nJPt to repair three brld(is oo highway I blown up by the Viet Cooc Jato Wedneaday nl(ht. O!!le<rs at Stoun, logistics bale for· the operation, aald Viet Cone bomb squads bad moved at will to destroy the bridges. '!'be bl'"'!' brlcliea marked the third Canada Shooting Suspect Gives Up to Coast Guard VICTORIA, B.C. {UPI) -A man who shot two Canadian policemen and then held thret hostages aboard a sailboat in American waters -off Stuart Island 1ur· rendered early today to the. U.S. Coast Guard. 'l'hert was confusion-as to the name of , the sw;pect. He first was Identified as William L. Olenik. 26, wtio escaped from jail here Sept. 7. But he gave authorities another name today. Final identification \viii await a fingerprint check, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said. The gunman and his three tired but unharmed hostages arrived before dawn Nixon Chooses l\fen For Postal Service WASHINGTON (UPI ) -President Nixon reportedly has settled on the men he will nominate to run the new U.S. Post.al Service. They include a rancher, a former professor. a labor-management i:onsultant and the heads of several businesses. One of the nine he will ask the Senate to approve for the service's board or governors is Frederick Kappel , board chairman of American Telephone & Telegraph Corp., congress ional sources said. Kappel headed a oornmiJaion which proposed turning the poet office over to 1 n o n p r o ( i t government..ch1rtered cor· poration. at AnacorW, Wash., aboard a Coast Guard cutter. The holtllges were iden· tified as Pete and Elrae Wells of Portland, Ore., and Roger Smith of Van· couver, B.C. -- The heavily armed bendlt had wounded two Victoria officers durtnc a robbery here Thurlday, authorities said, and thi!n led police on a wild chue to the sea. He crashed through two police roadblocka and laid down a curtain of fire 1t his pursuers. He then commandeered the Wells' 22· foot sailboat and also gr•bb¢ Smith, who was fishing nearby, police said. As Coast Guard vessels and RCMP boats •surrounded the little ullboat, he releised one hoetage who boarded the Cutter Point Richmond to relay con· ditlons for his surrender. These included that he be ·twned over to a U.S. marshal and provided with a U.S. lawyer. Chief Petty Officer T. E . Anderson went by small boat to negotiate with the gunman, who surrendered at 1 :37 a.m. about 1214 hours after the drama began. U.S. Marshal Charles Robinson took the suspect into custody after the Coast Guard cutter arrived in Anacortes. He was taken to Seattle where he was ex· pected to make an appearance before the U.S. commissioner today. The chase started ahorUy after 4 p.m. EDT Thursday when a man carrying a rine and a blndolier of ammunition slung over his shoulder entered • Canadian Imperial B a n k of Comnien:e branch here. Vagabond Dies British Poet Assumed Isl.and Throne LONDON CAP) -John Gawsworth, a poor itinerant poet· who assumed the mythical throne of a minature Caribbean island and abdicated ·after 20 years of carousing in L on d o n ta verns, d i e d \Vednesday. He was ~. Despite a shower of honors, Gawsworth was a vagabond, a fellow of the str.eets of London, sleeping in rooming houses when he had the money, on park benches when he didn 't. He left 17 publications and hundreds of unpublished verses, some of which are soon to come out In print. The London Times noted that in a short lime he would have become heir to $32.300 from an aunt and an uncle. John Terence Jan Fytton Armstrong Gawsworth, born in Kensington England, assumed the title of King of Radooda, an uninhabited speck of land in the Leeward Islands, which he said he inherited in 1947 from the late Irish poet Michael Shiel. He abdicated after 20 years of holding court in L<lndon taverns, attributing' the move to "doctor's orders." ''I think I've had it," Gawsworth told a visitor Sunday. In a letter lo the Times, he referred to 1970 as "this imposaibly painful last year," producing "a couple of hundred attempted verses in JO months from this still homeless gangrel {vagabond) man." Gawsworth was an editor of "Poetry Review" unUI 1952, when his job was abolished in an economy move. His drink· ing also aroused a storm of controversy in London literary circles. Gawsworth was a founder and editor of ''The English Digest," London editor of "Literary Digest." an lmplrer of the pre. World War II neo-Gecrglan lyric poetry movement, i member of aeveral foreign literary societies, a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, a Freeman or the City of I.<>ndon, and a Royal Air Force of· ficer during World War II. It was not known whether he left survivors. He died at Princess Beatrl1 Hospilll or an undisclOled illneas. 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A11<11ot11111 All1nt1 •• ~ .... 1.1111 l l1m1rtk '"" .... ~ Clllcltl Cll'l(ll'IMll Cttv.l111C1 ..,_ Dll•olf ~UNkl FM!Wol'lll , ..... ·-Hout!Oll -· ··~ ... (fly l11 Y"ll lm """"" Mt1111I htt:ll Mllwauk• M""'"Mlll Nfw Ol'lelM ........ Ot~l•l'llll °"'" ''" -~' Pllll1llllDMI Pllt1llli•t/I l"l\otll!'l .... 111/WI llfj l luH ·-ltt••-1• SI. Loult $111 l tkt Cth' l•n OiMo S..n l',.~IKO hn!1 ••rki•• St1ttlt ""''"' Milfl I,.-Pttc. ll ~ .. " ., ,, .. " .. " JI .. . .. 7t '' I.IS • n .•1 .. .. ,,. .. .. •• u .c, " .. " JI " . lO H It 11 ,Of " " II JI " ll H U IM 11 ,,_ .. ,, ,, .. " JJ ••• .. " .. .. ,, " . » JI ,II t i •7 •s u ,, " ., fll Jf . ~ 1i •S " .. " . 1• 1r " . " " IJ Jl .. " 11 •l k H time In two weeks the Viel Con& bid cul the supply Jines to the Cambodian fll'CU driving up hljhway 6. The communique also said Viet Cong and North Vietnamese forcea ambushed a Cambodian army coovoy Tbursday at Kirirom, 50 miles west·southwelt of Phnom Penh. '!be altack killed u Cam- bodian 10kUer1 and wounded three. · 'I1le ambush was carried out on highway f, Phnom Penh's only land link with the naUon's principal seaport of Kompong Som, known in the days of Prince Norodom Sihanouk'• regime as Sihanoukville. 1be Communists closed the highway ror eight days six weeks ago. Communist troops kept up their prasure 'lbursday night on Moat Krasas Krae, slr miles e¢ of Phnom Penh with ID 82mm mortar barrage. It WU the se- cond time in three days the Viet Cong "'~ere active this close to the capital. No casualties or damage were reported. Field nports from Saigon 1ald th"° cla&bes on American poltUona on South· Vietnam's central coast kllled one American and wounded 11. In the northwest corner of South Vietnam. waves or BS2 bombers dropped 300 tons of explosives on communist troops threatening artillery Base O'Reilly, 12 miles from the Laotian border. At least seven U.S. and South Viet· namese helicopters were shot down today in an inferno of Communllt ground fire near the rockpile, a strongpoint six miles south of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ ), military sources reported. They said unconfirmed reports in- dicl}.ted as many as 11 allied choppers may have been knocked down. Only 324 Yank POW s Allowed To Write Home PARIS (UPI) -North Vietnam and the Viet Cong hold from 457 to 600 Americam prisoner in Vietnam, but let· ters have been rectived by the families of only 324 of them, an American official said ThUl'Bday. Stephen Ledogar, spokesman for the U.S. delegation at Vietnam Peace Conference, Issued the fiiute1, he said, to refute clalms by Hanoi and Viet Cong negotiators that all Americans in their hands are allowed· to write home and uceive parcels. The i:iumber of Americans missing in action In Southeast Asia thia month stand> at l,~. Ledogar said. Firemen Dispute Seen Resolved In Rail Talks WASHINGTON (UPI) -SigtlaJs that the ti-year-old argument over firemen working on diesel locomotives is nearly resolved are being reinforced by the union's new cautious approach _to sidetrack a breakdown in negotiations. A potential breakdown was averted when negotiations rolled past Thur$day's 12:01 a.m. deadline for a potential strike. Labor Secretary James O. Hodgson said the United Transportation Union (UTU) and the National Railway Labor Conference, the industry bargaining agent, agreed to continue the talks for two more weeks. But UTU talks Leader H. E. Gilbert told UPI that the extension of the negotiations was unlimited. · One source close to the discussions at the Labor Department said one U-· planation for the apparent contradiction was the UTU's desire not to give the im- pression that it bad tel a strike deadline for Oct. a. President Nixon was told on Aug. I that the parties were on the "threshold" of .agreement on the issue that has ~enerated a series of strikes and strike threats since 19SI over the jobs of 31,000 firemen. Both sides agree in principle that the Jobs of firemen and brakemen should be combined into a single dual-purpose posi- tion. But mediator Frederick R. Liv- ingston says there Is dispute over. the means of effecting the change. Steps were begqn Thursday to resolve another raJI strike that was averted only \asl week by a federal courl order. An emergency board appointed by President Nixon held its organizational meeting. In this dispute, the UTU and three other unions ire teekin& pay hikes at 15 percent. Jn addition to the wage and firemen battles, there are two other disputes that could lead to l\IUonwide rail strikes in the comin,g weeks, aecordinC to A11i111Dt Labor Secretary W, J. Uoery Jr .• · Rifles Said· Shipped To Nor thern Ireland DUBLIN (UPI) -Arrk:ulture mlnl.sttr James Gibbons tautled 1burtday $00 rifles were shipped toward the border with Nonhem 1reland 1t the height of the Be trast riots earlier th ts year. Gibbons testified for tht prosecution In lhe trial of four ofricials accused of con· 1f!iring to smuggle arms.Into the north to aid the Roman catholic minority. • - ' Ro11el Reaper Japan:'s Emperor Hitchita reaps rice in a paddy on the grounds of the royal palace during the annual Imperial riete of rice harvesting in autumn. Manson Defier To Testify At Trial Today LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The state had on tap as a witness today the only member of the "Manson family" who ever defied the hippie cult leader and made it stick. Juan Flynn, a rangy young man in hls· late 20s, was expected to testify for lhe prosecutJon t h a t Charles M a n son ' s brainwashing of young women and men much bigger than the $.year-old ex-con-- vlct misfll'td when Manson tried to give him orders. The Tate murder trial bogged down Thursday in the cross examination of 18· year~ld Barbara Hoyt about her story that she overheard defendant Susan Atkins talk about the killing or actress Sharon Tate. Defense lawyer Irving Kanarek gave ?tUss Hoyt an eye and ear test on her visual and auditory capabilities and, when she was through, appeared to have proved she was telling the truth . Kanarek, in fact. so irritated fellow defense lawyer Paul Fitzpatrick that an appeal was made to judge Charles H. Older to squelch Kanarek. The tenacious attorney finally sat down. Kanarek, who represents Manson, had the young woman remOve her thick·len.s- ed glasso:. He then stood at the -rear of the courtroom with his right hand raised and four fingers extended. He walked toward Miss Hoyt and bad almost reached her before she could count his four fingers. Miss Hoyt said she never wore her glasses during the time she lived with the ''family::"· -But the--experiment establishing her poor vision setmed somewhat pointless si nce I.he young woman's most significant testimony had been about overhearing a conversation about actress Sharon Tate's death. Moon Color Telecast Seen..for Next Year CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -'!'be moon car journey and probably the lunar launch of the Apollo 15 astronauls will be televised in color to earth next summer. The unique moon telecasts will be made possible by a new communications relay unit designed to bypass the Apollo spacecraft and beam voice, television and engineering data directly to earth. The space agency announced Thursday It had awarded a $3 million contract to RCA Co., Camden, N.J., to build the new SO-pound.units for use on the final three Apollo missions. The system will not be available for Apollo 14 Jan. 31. Nlxot• Critic 'No-knock' Drug.Bill Approved WASHINGTON (UPI) -The House overwhelmingly has passed the ad· ministration's tough drug abuse bill, in- cluding the controversial "no.knock" pro- vision. The action rounded out a week of congressional victories for President Nix- on. The bill would make simple posstssion or any drug a misdemeanor, but would provide stiffer penalties for pusher'i. Passage came Thursday by a 341 to 6 vote despite a floor fight over the pro- vision that would allow federal agents with warrants to enter private bomet unaMounced if the)' felt there was risk to themselves or danger of evidence being destroyed. .. Although the "~knock" provision ts found in some state laws and the recenUy enacted District of Columbia federal crime bill, its adoption in the drug bill 'vou!d mark its first application na- lionY:ide. House Commerce Committee Chairman Harley-0. Staggers (D-W.Va.), a leading opponent of the "~knock" provision, warned it could result in "hundreds and thousands" of police being killed by persons protecting their homes. "If somebody tried to knock down my door, I probably would take a gun and shoot him," he said. Despite Staggers' plea, an amendment to kill · the ••oo.knock" provision was defeated 119 to eo. The drug bill, a major element of Nix- on's anticrime package, would provide $1M million over three years to expand rehabilitation programs for drug users and would authorize $6 million for the hiring of 300 additiorial agents by the B. u r e a u of Narcotics and dangerous drugs. It would Increase Justice Department control over imports: and exports of drugs and require licensing of bonafide drug handlers, i n c I u d i n g manufacturers, distributors, doctors and researehers. ihe Senate, which passed a similar but more limited bill several months ago, is expected to go along with the House changes, enabling the measure to become law in a few \!.'eeks. Earlier this week. Nixon's bill against organized crime and terrorist bombings won approval of the llouse Judiciary Committee and enforcement assistance was approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee. Both measures are expected to receive final congressional approval next month. A controversial proposal added to the drug abuse bill on the floor would allow judges to imp<>se an · additional 2>year prison senteoce on "special dangerous of· fenders" convicted of drug violations . The sentence, which could"be imposed on the basis or evidence the defendant would not be allowed to contest, was termed an .unconstitutional infringement of in· dividual rights: by~opponents.. _ _ The House rejected by voice vote an at- tempt by the House Select Comrrtittee on crime to amend the bill to give the at· torney general authority· to limit pro- duction of amphetamines or "pep pills.'' U.S. Cars Burned In Rome Protest R0?\1E (AP ) -Thirteen autos with U.S. license plates were set afire on the streets of Rome during the night as le!· tists prepared protests for President Nix- on's \'isit here next week. Gasoline was poured on the cars park· cd along streets in widely separated see· lions of I.he city. Most of the autos were destroyed, police reported. Anti-Nixon rallies started t w o nights ago with a march and anti-Nixon pickets In downtown Rome. · · Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.l was among Democrats who began a broadside attack on the Ni xo n Administration's envJronmental record Thursday. Testifying befor~ the Democfatlc Polley C'oun· cil 's Committee on he Human Environment, Kennedy sa id Nixon hu deliberately lnhibted action lo prosecute Jn ajor poll uters. • I f · I I A Cuhai. .First Castro Returns Hijack Suspect MIAMI (UPI) -R~ J . Labadie, a husky blond ex· 11oldier, has become the first airpJa~ hijack suspect return- ed directly to the United States by the Cuba9 govern- ment. Labadie arrived in Miami Th.ursday aboard one of the twice-daily Cuban r e f u g e e flights from Varadero, Cuba, accompanied by a Deputy U.S. marshal and a Public Health Service Doctor. He was ordered held in Dade County Jail on $500,000 bond at a preliminary hearing pending a decision on tran.sferring hlm to South Bend, Ind., where he .. is I under llldictment !or the Aug. 21 hijacking of a Trans World Airlines (Tl'{A) jet. 'The 747 was diver.led from a Chicago.Philadelphia Ill I b t ;ond lotted lo fly to Bav- wlth II penOns aboard. A man who identified bbmell as "Capt.In George" threatened ~~ 1:::u~wr~ ~ lbe rear of the pas••r RC-- lion. When the plane arrived in Havana, only the hijacker got off. He later was identlfied as' Labadie, who was reported on leave from an Army hospital in Valley Forge, Pa. His retur. on· one ol the airlilt-internatlooal II l g h ti sponsored by the U.S. govern- ment for relatives of Cuban exiles in the United States marked the first time that a __... hijack suspect has been hand- ed ove r to U.S. officials by the Cuban government, although ottien have returned through Heai Wave Continues In East Canada. u,1 ,,........... By United Press. International Swe l t eri ng weather stagnated over much of the East tod ay, closing out a fret- ful week for power suppliers 'vith more record-stretching temperatures. Prospects for major relief from the hot and humid weather during the weekend were slight. 'Ibe affected areas ranged from up<tate New Yorlc to the Carolinas and into Western Pennsylvania.. 'I'bere were no int.entiona1 electricity cutoffs by utilities Thursday, although voltage reductions. generally 5 per-- cent, were common through- out the area. Public coopera· tion throtighout this week's heat wave has been credited with averting a major black· out. . Temperatures of 85 to 90 were forecast fc:r the weekend. The weather ._bureau's listed average temperatures f o r most o{ the East during late September are in the &Os. 1be temperature in Phlladelphia 'I1nzrsday was 95 degl<es, a record !or the tllird straight day. New York City equalled its record of 89 degrees. ' 'Ibe heat was the PJrte of ~-and peropiring complaints everywhere. particularly in the cities. In New York, where electricity lhortpges have been a con- cern all summer, many ~ turned o!! cor· ridor lighting to conserve power. Some buildings reduc· ed elevator service. State Department spokes-SUSPECT RETURNS man Robert J. McCloskey iold Robert J, Lobodle reporters in Washington the--------- Cuban government contacted the United Slates through the Swiss Embassy Tuesday and agreed to return Labadie. A deputy marshal new to Vara· dero airport tram Miami on the health service plane, ar. rested Labadie and returned with him In a plJile fUll ol re- fugees. Conferees OK 2 New ABM Sites WASHINGTON (AP) - A $19.9-billion military purchas- ing bill including lwo new sites for the Safeguard antiballistic missile sjstem bas been ap- proved by a Senate-House.con- ference. Tbe agreement. subject to approval of boCh houses before going to President Nilon, is $1 billion under the Nllon budget. The ABM system, a subject or Senate debate for two years, will be expanded to four locaUons. But the conference accepted the Senate's. elimina- tion or funds to begin deploy· ment of a Chinese-oriented area defense system. The conference -$'ltlO million which had been cut by the Senate. The House version carried $20.S billion, about $100 million les.1 than the Pentagon asked . ~ - ' Balloonists Still .Lost In Atlantic NEW YORK (UPI) -A Coast Guard 1pote1m1n reported today It hu no Idea what ·chances for survival are for the three balloOnl!tl mis- sing in the North Atlantic since Monday. • Two U.S. Coast Guard cut- ters, 11 American planes and one Canadian plane are in· volved in the search or 50,000 miles. 'lbe Cioast Guard said it woUld continue the aearcb at least through today. The search was hampered Thursday by fog that reduced the visibility to virtually nothing. The missing persona tn- duded Rodney Allele-. 112, a New York commoditle1 broker, his actress wife, Pamela Brown, 28, and British ballixn pilot M a I c o l m Brighton, 32. 1bey w e r e launched Sunday from Lone Island in an attempt: to c<m- plete the first balloon journey in hl.tory. They tut ,,... heard from 90Uth of Cape Race, Newfoundland, Monday night when ar .term forced them to spluh down. onx~DA,SJllE°""-A' 12-5 . 12-5 PIANOS ORGANS :rRIMENDOUS SAVINGS ON ALL f100R MODELS, DEMONSUATOU AND TIACHING INSTRUMINTS Atl instruments corTY, our exdusWe NCoost Music'' wamJntrl SPlllO COISOW onus WURLITDll SPINIT $395 Oior• lllOH!1, 1pinels & _,.In, ................... ····· .... .. .••... NEW ••• usm ..• ROOR MODILS. ~· ..5.!~.!!.... .. .. . ... $395 MMy 1tylta, ..... wl.. lflyttoo & CAILl-NILSON SP1NrT $495 i.r,..... • • • F--lnadL ........... M..-................ .. ~~~-=~no $595 ••• l'WIOS !~~~~1:...:,. ...• ,. 1695 ~~ ... 5795 ~OUAN GIAND ; Sft ::-.~.~~.~....... 5 ~GllANS ' 1:.:::..-=.·:,;7 .... , ......... Sft5 ...,. __ C9Clll _ ..-DMu.-. T..-MA & !WOMAI_.... --..u.-.,,... _ KOMLm -lnctudi~ =-~~ ......... 5250 "--'1995 ........, .. , ...... , ........ ........... ,...: ............. . --t"t-M:t'l."!.:.O.~·h ...... -1795 ----ll.OO!l-S _ ... _ .. a_.. '600 .. • .... ..,.... llel. ........ L--~·~ .. ~·:-:-::.:":":-:._,,_llAlltJ TQ:M:S:---,,~~.=.-= .... -~= ... = .. == >'90'DAlCASll -- "'Fla .... ~ ...... DEUVaT ::.. -: :-.=··~ ·=~ .... "TUOUIS, , -11795 Of ((QSl • ' I r rlday, Stpttmbtr 25, 1970 DAll V "11.0T 5 Beston Pellee•an, Cut ,Dewn Four Youths Sought in.'Radical' Bank Holdup BOSTON (-AP) -Pnllct ob- tained warrant& Wednesday for the arrest oC two men and two young -..n, charging them with (OM1.ng down a policeman during a $28,000 bank boldup Wednesdilio. The city's po 1 Jc e com- missioner termed lhe' killing the act of a "damn radical group." A fifth man WU captured Wedneoday night and charged with murder in the robbery, which police sald was lllmed by cameras in the bank. Boston Police Commlssioner Edmtmd L. McNamara told a n'-ws conference that the dead policeman, W a It er A. group springs up from ou r col- Schroeder, was the victim of leges· and robs banks, it's "a damn radical and a damn revolutionary.'' revolutionary" group. Questioned, McNamara said Named ln the warrants were he didn't have any "documen·-two_women. Su.san Saxbe.~. lative evidence but when a of Albany, N.Y., a graduate o! Brandeis Uhlvtrslty In nearby Waltham last June, and Katherine A. Power, 20, of Denver, Colo., a member or the aenkr class at Brandeis. 'Die two men sought by police were identified as Stanley R. In San Diego, Cal~., In 1161, was sentenctd to M years in Maasaclw!etta state prllm in 1161 !or armed ro11berJ and aasaul~ pollco said. -PoUc• meamrblle. armed with • aearcb -~ forced the door of a Bae.EBay Bond, 25, of Cambridge, al-----...,...------------- special student at Brandeis, SPECIAL PURCHASE and William Gilday, 41, oflr---. --""II Amesbury. Arrested Wednesday night PIUL •UY SYNT"nlC s395 was Robert Valeri. 2l. of ENAMEL · •"'- Somerville, identified a.S a stu-FOi PLO.ATS I DOCD dent at Northeastern Universi-1._ _________________ _. ty in Boston. 1----• MOBIL HOME OWNERS ----.. Meanwhile, Miss Sube'• lather, Eliot. contacted at hi• Kool Kap home in Albany, said be believed tiis da'Jghter waa mistakenly identified. He said ROOF COATING she had lost her driv:t licen!e-two-months ago, -lond -R--L--for~ that he believed someone must ~ ba;:.~W:~1~ hi• daughter, • Gravel Landscaping Hemophiliac Gaining -magna cum laude graduate or1._ _________________ .. BrandelJ last June, went to ....... Oregon Sept. t and planned to IP" _____ I FOOT ROLLING ------. ,. SEA'M'LE, Waah. (UPI) - Carl Fletcher, 39, a high school teacher, was reported in "satisfactory" condition to- day from a dangerous opera· lion wich required J,000 pints ()f blood. work there ror a year. PLATFORM 510800 , blood does not clol. More than In Denver, Mrs. Winfield S. l 1,200 students at BaUard High Power, mother of the Power LADDER School promised to give blood girl, said her daughter ':had ~ He bad an artificial hip joint Inserted Thursday by doctors at Swedish Hospital, who said he would have died within a year without it. · But Fletcher also is a hemophiliac. which means his in an effort to save his life. been out of contact with the ,._ _________________ .. From the donated blood, family for a Jong time." Sher· r·: doctors will er.tract tin Y declined further comment. -----------------.. l amounts of a clotting protein Police said Gilday was ! called cryo precipl.tate. paroled from state prison Buy Locally and Save The mass donabon to sa.ve-after-tttving part or a 1~12 the popular teacher·s lire year prison term imposed for came after Student Body armed r,0bbery. Police ~id President George Guy, 17, Valeri served a slate pnson Tuesda;y called an assembly of term ror burglary in 1966. the school's 1,750 students. Bond, convicted or car theft -WALKER PAINT WORKS 816 W. 16th St., Costa MeA Now-Get More For Less! ,,,-MORE CAPACITY Y MORE_fEATURES t" MORE VAWE · For leBB than.a comparable 1956 model! IE HLTER FLO® WllHEI • • lll'IY-•" II IJ. llPllll'l ... --111-.11-. 8EllEllAI. ElECTRIC IATCHINB HI SPEED DIVER Ill) QtJISSW011K 1111'11fC,,,-t111 fllllc:llPI, pall!" .. -... --·~toft,Olll fll!fy.PllllA1EITPllD$Cla!_Olt_ -.. ""11 • -· --HEAV'I DUlY S!T· TillG !or --bl11t llllll, ..n dotlies, 11'. nUff•CYCL£ for 11nt11 ltH11t tumbUn1 ICtiOft. orTJ01W. lllDQ'~YClf BU!lill lits ,.. lnow -~-~ $164~5• llllDll. llllE7l Oil I Ii l I j --radJ-. . • ll'S -IJJll RI W-llrllll llT(lo 1111lid1111111-• -dlllrplt-.ny. ' ' II Dll!Z'llmllllC'laJ:tms ... a.--tomw•• --..-----11 __ ClaJ:_Cllll ___ ,...lD~llld- ~---D ~l-ILDmJIT,,,-11--ftrm .. --------.. --..... ,..-1or .. ~o1~.lldadill .. ___ . -......... _ .. _ . - • • • DON'T BE SWITCHEO ... INSIST ON GENERAL ELECTRIC QUALITY • TV and APPLIANCE IN HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR BLVD • COSTA MESA 540-7131 Daily 9 'Iii 9; Sat. 9 'fll 6 -• \ • DAILY PU..OT EDITORIAL PAGE Meadowlark's • Future on.. -Meadowlark AirpOrt 111111 bu blown _into a tun controversy that apparentlf 'l'ill cootinuo to lntar-rup~ 1enJlhen and distlirb Huntington Beach City Co1111- cil meeting• uniil -tho council doe1. 10melhln1 about It. _. Studle1 may help, but they don't seem to be·relO!vlnC tbls very controversial problem. · No doubt the airport study committee appointed by the city c"ouncil to investigate the melter I.a trying to make a thorough study of 1t. But so far the committee bas done litUe to alleviate the problem bomeowera say exists. ' Instead. Bob Dingw8.ll , htead ' of ·t~• committ •• 1eems to view his role as one Of defend.inf ·the aJrport -slating-and reslating hi.a v~w that the ~ntrov.en• lat 30().foot runway extenS1on and "lhe pigbt li&hll Diak• the small airfield safer -for e~eryone. A tower might make it aafer still, but that's not nally the quesuon . Just. what the city want& at·Mea: dOwlark is the real question;- • It has always been a aman private afrllo~ No one can deny its value to at least 1 ~ of fhe com• munity. But residents are justified. in complainin& about any expansion of the facility.. , _Expanmo.n....becomes the· c!ntral question of the mal ter. Night lights and • 19nger runway rgake the air· port more accessible for pilots. ThiJ i! going to attract more planes. If that is what city councilmen want, then ttiey should say so. But more likely. the city would prefer to see Meadowlark remain a small, local community airfield, It bas been there.a ·tong Umt Ind abou1d;re- ---1main. - In one breath Dingwall states the Diib_t ligbta ·and - .. runway extellllon make the 1liyoi:t safe. But in an- othot .be prailOI the airport for 1ta long safety record. But that aaflly record w11 .. tablished before night- liiJita or the runway ertinalon wore installed. It'• time the council came 'to grips with the issue. Din,W.U '1 committee Is to make a tull report and re<:omr.nendations on Oct. 5. If nolhin.& new ts forthcoming then-if no new evidence or hne of reasoning is introduced -the coun· ell shou1d there and then state what it intends to do '. with Meadowlark Airport. Junketeering -C-ut-hack The pendulum always awing• both ways. Last year Huntington Beach aent 25 people at a cost of $6,275 to thL Cal_lfornla LeJgut p_f Cili<J meeting ill -~ _Fran· Cisco. This year the pendulum went the other way. City councilmen authorized only them.selves and City Ad· 'ministrator Doyle Miller to attend the League of Cities rileeting tn San Diego. Perhaps there are a ·few Otner department heaas who ought to attend the Oct. 25-28 conference, but 1t would be hard to justify a repeat of last year's per- formance. It was a good move by the council this yea r to cut back this expense. San Diego isn't so far away that a few departm'ent 'beads can't ·drive down for spec1aJ. -sessions without-devoting three-days.¢ lodging and ex· penses to participate in the conference. · ----=---- • H Notes on Japan's Wild' Radicals Dear Gloomy Gus: Oregon Constituent• Are Disenchanted SECONDLY, THE Japanese student movement is better organized tactically. Students are anried with si:r·foot_staves and riot helmets. As is explained tn the recenUy·publtshed boot, "TA!ngaturen," edited by Stuart Oowsey (lshi PrtM, rokyo and Berkeley), Cbutaku (Central Core Faction) and Kakumaru (Revolu- Nonary Man:ist Faction) wear white; Shagakudo (Socialist Student League) ml 1nd Shaseido (Soclaljst Y.outh League) blue and the Socialist Student Front, green. They go to demonstrations in disciplined ranks like an army. They would be even better organized if the variOUl!l .groUps 'weren'.t·so divided 1gaimt !ach other. :Before I left for Japan, ComuL General Eikichl Hara of San Francisco 1ave me a chart of Japa.nese re.volo- tlonary groups and the ir relatioTllhips - 1 v~t;ablt juna~e of ideological factiona. JAPANESE POIJCE are better trained tor dealing with studtnts than· Americln police. They have simply had mart P· C1erienct. They use water cannon ·Ind I.ear gas. Since 1961 they have carried duralumin body·lenlth shields, IO lh1t when rocks start f[ying they can form protective phaiarms.. It wa.s my privilege to gee by courtesy of tht Secvlty ~ tjon of the National Police Agency. movies of student riOts over the years as well as tr1inin1 films showing how 1hields and other equipment are to be us- ed. The riot pictures were truly dramatic. For example. when Prime Minister E~ku Sato w1s to vlslt Southeast Alia in OctobH, 1917, thousands of students hnY --II !bat obout 10.000 ""' lnvOiftdl rrom 1 doaen or more uni-plbii ed tllt-llilht ........ et • I -l, So many youn1 women want to be "liberated." Well, we could start by drallinc them Into the Army and then assign them to permanent K. P. - -H.B.M. !I I Ir .... If .... ••••• ... .... ............... ei..w ..... ,.,. ,.... cmnmuter llatlotll an 09tr Tokyo lo con- . ·~' tht .-..i momlng, •ccmlln( to well·JftPBred plans at Haneda airport 'to prevent Mr. Sato'• departure. SEEING THE MOVIES of actJons like the Haneda incident, one is Impressed in afterthought by tbe feeling, In spite of tbe drama of the action, that because of long experience in confrontation both sides observe artain unspoken "rules of tilt: game." While tbt action may be furious, it almost alw1ys stops abort of being lethal.· Guns are never drawn on either side. alld the pollce rarely get rattled. Disa11ten auch 1 1 thoae of Kent and Jaduion State 1imply don't happen because the police know their business. Al one writer in the book "Zengakuren" rernlrb, '"It is odd :that although the students place great emphull on vi~lence the worst. d~m11e • to bt U· pe<ltd ii ·bn>lten windows and burnt-out 'vehJ.cles." TifEtJE ARE PROFOUND almilarities between the' Japanese and American atu- dont .mc>VJlri""'· Both -ft!y 00 TV. As one writer in "Zenpkuren" 11y1, ' "U this (demonstration) dqenerata Into a fight, \hen the focua · of televlaion cameru Is assured.'' Both rtly heavily • on incanlaUon and alogana rather than on rtuon and argument. "The most popular." the wriltr continues, "are 'am- po fuhsal' (Smull the security treaty!) and 'Toeo shoril' (Victory to the struggle! ) •.. Also heard Is the blood- lhir1ly cry of 'Minlei Koroee' (Kill the Minsei! ). These chants flt Into the ·rtlythm of tht demonstrationa and follow a pattern laid down in' anctent fesUvala a.ll tM!I' Japan... . . Both Japaneae and American student redk:ala .-a upper dua, olltllt and antl- cteinocraUc. Both lf'OUPI are attracted not b)' the auuntlnilm el-UM PoWWful. present-day Soviet elllblllhment. but by the..-_,, ·-of Communist _,. lillo Ttolltylsm and -- Both .-. bulnl --... ,,. of ••capn1Ust Dnperiallsm" on the writinp of aatborl lool -· Ila Mari and Enpll and Unln, who' could " nol hive prtdldeif and did not predict whit capitallom would be Ukt In the latter hlll of the twenUedl c:tlllun>. tum. llkt Eldrldp c1u .. r and ._, Sclietr, to bulh-1-potlce lllla tikt Noni! Kono for -ideal.I <II puce and freedom. ly I. L Rayekewa .......... ... ,.,._ -(lollap Mark Hatfield Is in Deep Trouble W ASHIN(;TON -There • was much more than worry about "family financial needs" behind Senator Mark HaUield'1 · hints that he may not seek a second term in 1972. Real reason for this carefully planted triaf balloon -to sound out voter re&c· tio• back l)ome -was deep coacern about hi1 reelection cbancts. As of now they art eiittmely clouded -to put it mildly. 'lbe mod dapper Oregon Republican Is deeply in troiib!e with a large and powerful element of his party. Hatfield' a militant dovisbness and persistent op- position to administration policies and proposals has 1tOt 011Jy put him in hot water with lhe White House, but aroused the furious ire of GOP leadtr1 and their follower• in the 'st:ate. He has been deluged with castigatin1 mail and warnings of bitter opposition when bis term upires two year1 hence. IT IS AN OPEN secret that ambitious Republii:ans already are eyeing his seat and seriously consJdering challengiag him i1 the primary. In 1966, Hatfield ran for the Senate a.s the incumbent governor. :ke w_!ll't have that hefty advant.a_s;e in 1971. ~· ·"', ""I'•-. .,.,_ .. _ -~,~; ' )? ' ,, ·~ ,. -~ AUen-Goldsmitli ' -), ., . .., f \ """"'"~i!il;'"· ..,,_ __ __.,..,.~ -...,: : But he definitely will have a raging party split that could be fatal. One lhilig the ardent anti-Vietnam dove and outspoken liberal is certain of is a tough primary fight -a11.d apparently Hatfield doesn't much relish that es· pensive, arduous and highly uncertain prospe<t • So he iS looking around for possible 1lternatives. In effect, his inti mations about quitti11g politics are notice that he is available for job offers -preferably a good paying university presidency or head of a well -heeled tax exempt foun. daUoa. In Hatfield's self-penned biography in the Congressional Record he notes that he. is an educator ·by profession and possessor of "'20 honorary degrees.'' UVING IT UP -There is a hollow sound to Hatfield's plalllt. that he is hav· ina a hard time to make do wjth hi• $42 ,500 senatorial salary - plus another $28,000 he admits making ia lecture fees When the fund plan came to light, public reaction in Oreg on was very critical. Hatfield hastily announced the las t year. scfleme was being dropped. That $70,500 is more than"he ever made Similarly, he deAied he was preparing before -in public or private life. to Dolt the Republican party when he Further, the •10.500 isn't the whole isSued 1 blast at President Nixon last sto ry by far. In addition to his $42,500 June. Hatfield charged the President was salary, Hatfield also gets another $300,000 gravely jeopardizing the future of the for clerical hire, telephol)e ·and telegraph, GOP · with his "Sou them strategy" and six trips to-and-Crom Oregon, free mail warned thal he "could be dumped." and various other .perquisltes and ac. Thi s startling bluntness immediately commodations, among them a ha1;1dsome-raiied C911jectures i• politil'.!al quarters ly furnished five-room office suite i• that the liberal Oregonian was. gettl!g set Washingt.9n and anqtber .commodious of· to switch to the Democrats -as fonner fice w~ a s~f in Oregon. . Senator Wayne Morse, another Oregon. HaUteld denies he has a pnvate fund militant did years ago. raised by wealthy lJberal friend! and ;id: . :11 • mirers. ;. , Btf:I''HATFIE[;D\emph1tlcally denied He admits one" Ct the former is a that: He Insisted h& intended to remain in member. of hii staff as a dollar·a-year lhe GOP, although admitting his anti-ad· ma•. ministration record and denunciations IT IS ALSO A FACT that not long after he came to the Senate it -was disclosed that "friends" were raisiag a $100,000 fund to pay for extra staff and other ex· penses. At ,.that time Hatfield was ac- tively harboring vice presiden_tial. aspira,: tiOOs. - made 'his reelection as a Republican very uncertain. '.'If I had to run. today /' said Hatfjeld, "I woul(l be in a.l.ot of.trouble.'' <;:olleagues att,ribute Hatfield's ex· pensive living style as a likely importut reason for bis wuting a bigger income. By Robert S. Allen And Jtilui A. Goldlmflh - Kitchens • Ill Elementary Schools? To the Editor: After looting al tome of the recent New Homes magazines and promotional advertising of tract developers, I am in- clined to reflect on lhe currenUy stressed "Gourmet Dream Kitchens" as shown in homes costing $28.500 and upwa rds. What a laugh for the average Mr. & ?.1rs. America, wkelher he is black, v.·hite, brown or otherwise. The average worker today is the developers' market for sales. We wonder how many of these people read the come-on gimmicks as, ad· vertlsed in every newspape_r, mag12ine and home builders' periodical. BECAUSE A gifted dr aftsman dreams up a kUchen which would give the finest cooks a place to.create cuisine fit for a gourmet, what makes the developer (who 11ell1 these homes) think that the average housewife iJ·that good a cook? Ttie food and beverage people. v.·ork bard t, prepare food and drinks. Even in· atant tea if you please. There are some 'Who ·will nevtt learn to brew a good pot of tea! We have love ly pictures on the frozen TV dinners; etc .• which· would en- tice any bOusewife not to bother with preparing a well·balanced and attractive me1I for her f1mily. If the home builders and the food processors should get together. 1 believe that all we need is big· ~ ger and better refrigerators a n d freezers! But the ideas that the builders are puttlng forth to create sales show a deep yearning in our society for a real homt with rul "'°""- BUT DO OUR schools and educational a~irls alike) how to boil an egg, make a French apple pie or whip up a batch of bread like grandmother used to make? E. WATKINS Fluoride Que1tloou To the Editor: Would any doctor or dentist be abl e. or willing, to answer the following ques· -lions: Do children or adults with kiclnty disease, diabetes, haeture of bones. thyroid disturbances. tuberculosis, or wha t have you, eliminate nuorides as ef· ficlently as normal people do? Is it true lhat more teeth are l05t because of "pyorrhea" than dental decay! Can "pyorrhea " be induced or ag. gravated by certain chemicals, including fluorides? HA VE STUDIES been conducted on people in their SO's. &O's and 70's., to stt what effects they have, when they drink fluoridated city wattr. which the city council claims is "safe"! · centers ·teach young girls to become 111 sodium fiuorkle. which our dty coun- coots, proper mothers or even pas.sable cil voted to put in our city water a highly bouaeketper:I? No ! What a IOrrY pligh~ -toxtc.-water-soluble salt, lhlitY a-deldl}' Lucky ar• thcise men who.have n1ee poison to enzymes, upon which all life ....... will! ........ In tbe kitchen who depencb! can really tum oat a first duo dimw, hive "'°"'h money to buy cbampliijie of euolltnt quallty and tht time to est and appreciate a punnet dino<r prepared In • ·.....-· kitchen. 'lbe trouble with our seneraUon is a gap all right. but it ii a cap between the idet: of everyone desirina food of the par. eictllence variety AND our public school l)'sttm whtcb b so busy with iU lu pro- bltml that It can't take time to ttach out ,_ ......... of tbe other """"lrY thifllS In Ure to tNke living crt•t. How about putlln.g a few kitchtns ln our elementary tchooll to tuch lllem (boy1 • JACQUE!JNE· NORMAN Reeenlh19 Blltort1 To tbe !ldltor: ln talking t.o ptrtOnl who apf)lrtntly have nevtt" tbough.t about the dllference bttween newspaper publishing aod the television and r1dkl media , 1 find much Ignorance. The newspaper ls an entirely dlfftttnt Institution of United States life from ttlat ot television ind radio. The dlf· fl!:rtnce lies in that ~ newspaper prinls in black and white or colors oa paper l • from a plant that has typesetting equ ip. ment and presses which it ov.·ns and operates. IT RECORDS the history of its com· munity day·by-day or Week-by-week, whatever its frequency of publication may be. You cari read the newspaper all at once or refer to it during the day or lay it aside for reading later. It is there. You may file it away and if you keep a year's supply you may have it bound into a volume which constitutes the history of a communi\Y for an entire year. Most newspapei:S, bind their newspapers into annual volumes or subdivisions thereof. So the newspaper is a historical medium of communication. J>;OW AS TO RADIO and television, they are both tra.,,,itory and deal in both news and tntertalnmenl But you can quickly forge( what was on ··Yesterday's television or radio program unless you refer to a guide in prinL The channels on which they operate are ve~ted · the United States of America and y, the televis ion 'broadcaster or the dlo broad· caster, gets I.he privilege of using certain channels or rights by getting a llceme from the Federal Communiact\ons Com· mission unless the laws ha ve been changed from my days in tadio broad· cast after Woild War 11. and the televised or radio word . We hive had nev.:spapers since the days of :Ben· jamin Franklin but not radio or television. We have newspapers 100 years old but oot ~ither TV or radio 1tations:I hope I have cast some enlightenment, but for anyone who wants more, write to .the Federal Communications Commiss ion iii Washington, D.C.-alld ask how toge~ the license to build a radio or television Jtl.. lion. RUSSELL BENNl'IT Agabut Abortlo11 To the Editor ; Regardless of the law:. When a woman agrees to, or seeks Ill · abortion she ls saying to herself and to the world that she will not accept tbt r~~J>?llSibility of her actions, she ii uc- r1f1c1ng . the life el ln innocent chlld for her own selfish reaSMS. The same holds true for the man who allows or seeks an abortion for the woman who carries his child. LET THOSE who are considering an abortion ask thtmselves. "Will thia child be the only child the Lord will ever ~ to me !" Let those who art COMidering "an aboi-4 tion remember that the spirit of thit un. born child will forever be before them in ·their minds. ' MRS. BARBARA R. SAKASKE- ' THE RADIO OR television channels never leave the ownership of the United States or America but are licensed. To ~et a license requlrta going before the Federal Communication& Commissk>n ·~ and tiding out forms and no individual · IR••••• geta the right to UH a channel ii he or--L~~~-~ELllfEIM11 11he-<hll-Men 0>nvicied-of-moral ~ turpitude. Juat how it works when a cor· porate_form got1 before tbe FCC, I do Friday, September 25,. lll70 not know. The ume· rules for radio l The edito,;cl page of the Dailv uswne apply to television. PiWt 1e1kt to inform and 1ii~ AU. t QO",iln havlng been ....,i. in • ti/ate rtader.s by prt&tnting thii """"' ncwspaptr'1 opi11ion.s and. conv radio broldcast and n e w 1 P a P er ~nto~ on topic1 of interest publishing. ii that they are entirely unlike 11nd sig1'4ficanct, bM providing a media of communication. For a forum for the t.tprt&.siqn of newspaper own, II! equipm·ent and rt· oul' rtoder~' opinioni,• aftd bv quires only the right to distribute through prt1tntbtg the divtrse vftw. lhe mails of the post office by pofnt.t of lnforTMd observtr1 • establishing that right through meetlng cand ipokt1m1n on Copier of the certain qualifications. ' aav. I don't know of· any ol her wa y to ex· plain the differ~n.Ct bl!:twee.n the tv.·o Robert N. \\1eed. Publisher forms at med111 that Is, the; printed word, 1 I I I J I ~~ . I . !"" --le '"'11 arawid-the Two ol lier lln>lben, Natbaniol ml ~ ~ lrri"'4 ill -/be lllmljn(loJt lluldomer J)lo .,. Methodiat mlnllten Valle7 If become port ol ill od>oal llld ind llor ·1111en, Erleee and Elvira tie cwnm:i$.J We for a year tbrougb p.e ~red nurses. Erlene is 'mahied and Amer1ciD Field Service P<osram. Urii>c In Alabama and Elvira wu an AFS I llUdent In lllU. ;~a1:3-·'-' taln V'11ey, W ' ., Marina llld She hu\two brothen in cone,., Fred ~ blP achoab and vial with area and. Marvin, bnth studyl!>I lo be fiinlJllt .... Alilko NJ:ama ol Tokyo, eqineors, one brother in hJilj od>oal, l!lmelllida MlmleJ · QoWIOll City, Samuel, and one in fdlh grade, Gideon. Pinioolne .blanda. IJonlebson ol Hiliiiitad. -. 1 Maria Ouistina 11« home clly of Que,on la localed near ~to-Pooada of ~. Colombia, Jean Maoltla and la the site 'o1 mucb bulineaa J...-Btu of !Wmes, Fraoee, ond ind induslry with a population of 110,ooq. Geraldo_Souza oC.N,lal, Brazil. Erny la tnjettsted in Enclilh Bterature, -AIW!o NU.,am(. wbnoe home ls In a pl•yllli the gultar,-sewing, batinf.and bu suburb of 1"*'9~Called OKlfu, resides been ICUve in her church. She allo ii -'-· wtlll· the 'lbompoona • I n. -w-atleoc!I· Wmmfm1er' dyinc In be» nune, ·'lb6 Wiiiiam Gelcen ui ... ~.1..-1 are her bost-f1mlly. · -. ._..~. I Her ·falber, Ken la an -•-. with FIRST STVDENT 'roohlba Ci:nmlcs and ber Q~ It a · '11!0 nm AFS student to allend ~ houRwile. She,has a brother, Yu, 11, a Hl&b $chool It Lan Daniebar of oiudenl. and ia lnt<reatod In readloc IJld Halmstad, Sweden, who resldet with Mr.' c<lligrapby. , · llld Mn. Charla Reeva of l!untlJlllon FATBD A Moom!a . Bea<:h. ~· Attending ~ HuntJngton Beach High ~rs, the '°'1 of Mr. and Mrs. Hant -Scbool irEtme-uiiila O!iiiiieT.'knOW!i -IJonleiuoo, hopes.to learn to JUrf and Einy, of Quezon City, P!>lliPI>;nes. U:, play buketball With the Edison High father, Guillermo Manuel is a Metbodist team. miiliat.r and her mother ii a boulewde. llalmsWI ii aituatecl. l\i the Swediah ,. ....... dal'y cllllrlol ..... -• die --With lit mllcf--. ..... ...,. • eolcl'wloten, it ii a ,__ tourtot ,... • wt. Hil lather ls lll'.elemenWy IC!lool principal and bit mother is; a ..,.. lie ~ ~ bro&her, Snn, lt, and a•lilterf, Gerd, !3.. . ~ Fountain· Valley',1· stuciei>I Ii ·!hria .' . Ouistlna ~ilato-Pooada, n'I c't n •,nfe d Chris, of Bo(ota. She' It the daughter of Vietor M.:AJzale1 a lumber dealer, ..ad &at Abate~ Pooada, a-e. Chri& ~ two, brotbtr1, Juan, 11. &llCf · Carta., 18, and one lister, Martha; 1$. Juan bas J'!st returned after befn& an ei· c:b3nce student in fdah?e. Chris·enJOys ·eomlllCilldlnl wllh fanlil:y. '·and -and·readinc but 11 undecided about' her 'future plant! She attended • Cathollc glrll' ac!iool ln Jlosola a~ pro, bably will attend the unlYUaity. lier boots are the Robert CllJIOll!en. • Her naUve llo(ata II the capital of Columbia and very cosmopolitan. Tiie home of Simon Bolivar, the city is 1it. uated high in the moun&abia and has a cool, unvarying climate: MAllINA BIGH Attending Marina Hieb SCbooJ is Jean Jacques Bras, son of Mrs. Jacqueline Bras who is a workwoman in upholstery. From Rennes, France, Jean enjoys 'rock. and roll, chess a,nd readin&', is an aecomplished,..sailor.·•nd holds a· brown belt in judo. He also favors languages and philosophy and has traveled in West Germ.iny¥and Scotland. Mr1 and Mrs. Eug .... zwtcli are bit hosts. -· • ·-. • ' . - I I Huntin&ton Beacb.Hl&b School's second student ii 1 Geraklo Soma from Natal. r-Br~l.·1'1e ~ of'M'r. and Mn. Geraldo Bezerra ¥ Souu, he has two brothers, Magelo, ts, aod Mareelo, I, and three sisters, 'Vlrginil, "13, Carmela, 7,and Adriana , 3. JOO!E:AN ·~INGS, '42~1 •rNey;>.~.-·""!" & l•Jt tt• ""II Beginning ii! second year in a school also entering jta spohomore year \s the S-club of Edison High School, Huntington Beach. ~~l --==l:A service club for girls sponsored by·the Hun!Jjjjton l!Hcn-SOi'()ptlmls<Club-, the,-~.,..,,"-'~,.,_~ .,organization· is .d~icafed to community sup- . ,;port an~· p4rtl~~ates· in ·a· VJiriety, of school .and civic a~tiVI es,. _.. . . . -. . ··-~ - ".ueon.,joining S-Club;:the:grr1s take the fallowmg .pledge: \'L Ried&• nu',auppor.t .and · ·li>~fy ti> ·the gliis i.ei:vfoe:clab< of Edison J11th ~001,.th .. &clu~. !•will.carry out its • ·purposes : friendship,. Joa~ership. and . servjce· ·· · .. to• l1IY' school and -comm~nity; · . · "I will cooperate. whole-lieartedly. with my sponsors ' and C~Jllembers. I will re- member·· my obligations to promote good <;itizensbip arid' a right spirit in my school and community. I wiU . contribute loyalty to the school, tlie community, my country · and-my God." The first members-were initiated d,y,iigg a bullet diMer in the ·Sheraton Beach IM and Soroptimista have met with the girls throughout the year in bi·monthly campus gatherings. The faculty sponsor Is Mrs. James C. Montaomery. Often attired In their snappy gold and blue uniforms, tl)e girls h•ve ushered · at special events on the ·campus, served at awards banquets, me.t with other . S-clubs from throughout the llate and delivered · Easter decoratioM to ·!M ch11dren 's ward at Huntington Interconimunity Hospital. ·service ' I • ON PAllADE -Preparing a float for a parade are (left to right) Barbara. · Delahoyde, 16, and Lynn Krekemeyer, 16/both of Huntington Beach. Partic-.' ipating in parades is one of the many activities of the S-club of Edison High School. They' alai>, bava sP.iisorecl Jund-raising projects , aiMl a May breatfas\ at wftlch Son>pllmut' Club members and their moth· •rs were special 111ests. TRAY BRIGH.TENERS -Rosemary Castro, 17 (left). of Huntington .Beach,: president ot Edison High's S-Club, and Pat Kelly, 16. o! Fou¢ain Valley, work on decorations .for. trays for th81 children's ward. of Jluntington Intercommun- . ity Hospital. . • . . " Dentist • ' •• ,. J Exchang.e.s-. Srriacks for Clean Bi.It o·f Healtn: • ' 4 • • . DeAR ANN LANDERS:_Am 1 ouLol line lot objecting to • kiuinl. relaUonahlp between my dentist husband and 1e:ver1I of hit female patients .-. ranging from 15 to 70? He kisses them hello and &@by In his office. He also kisses them when they meet in public. I juzt stand there, and look on and don't even know most of these women. I am eager &o bear your optnion. For reasons . you can guess, I must remain -ANONYMOUS A NN LANDER.S ~ Npectloo .olllceri and 'building codes. Slip b so sweet, steady, loyal l)ld endUr-· r .. a -le I-tloe bell ans-11, ---MJ-hulbtnd talUd everyoae!1-1&r1-0W-in1 that it wtll l•st throu&h • whole We· ''l'U I• wltll Y,OQ io tbe beU 1111 ltelp )W , '!or a IO!ld year, but I lei him Wt and I time -II not'asked to lend moriey." pt a Ieaa."Y• ... 1c1 slUI l"t -t. bat hoped our frleni!I -1d understand. Now 8'dlY enooch, I had to. learn this 'ledon ''"" .-.... are •..U1 _, -ti that we IJ'e livlfll tn Ulla be•utifUI home tHe ' hard w1y. 1 lent aome money t~ a )'OD tlmply tland _eYer yow. IWI ... y. I -k -wwth ll I '-the womm lriond and '"""1d up IOl!ng bOt1i 'the 11le frleocl ... pll atl'J wlln ,.. wa•I · who llava thla experi«lce ahead ol them money and the friend. I prirod this ttla· ,..r _, reta M -aa lrtncl ta Way." I Cll t<lslly aMn&ud I WllllU slYln1 tier deat11t a 11Ud -.., Uve .... at)'ltll, . 4 DEAR NONY : Ne wamH -Id worry 'DEAR ANN LANDERS: I hope the -... kl""" lier lltl.-does la ' WClll&n who signed heneff "Fed Up" will pabl\e. Obvto.11)' )'OI Uve lot Mel t•· , read thi1. She complained bec1u1e her tnttYe mw1 werk ud de wot U... dlt husband was building their. new home ind joy ... grat!lade -letb -tloe ... talked of nothing ebe -mominl. noon list HllOllDCU. 04No cavltfel, ... JtuT' Ind •night. He cmied blueprints In his • ... , are perfecl. We'D Jul -tile• pockel aod borocl their friends to deatli. • M; hull>aed buUt our hciilla and I WU warned by -who had -throulh 11 Uial It would probably be the wont year of m1 Ule. It wu. 11'aele poor IU)'I ' work their heada of( at a recuiar job. Then they nm to the new p I 1 c e, IOlll<Utnea skiPJllnl """""" to .. Hn u ...Ch -k u poulble -dark. They WWT1 abOut whelhet' or not the malerlal llley Ordered wtn come lri. and win ~ bl rip!. Then they ban ""'°tmara abnul • will be amart .,,....h lo give their &UY• tlonlhlp highly and I am heartalc:k. . · llfp witb. v .. Ille ....... wllea )'W a pot .., the bact irotead of a llic:k in H"" does one say "no" a,nd still lose tloe !rtead1blj ti T •- the pants. -PROUD WIFE pmerve a friendJltlp?-CLOSED-0001\ . 'Give In or iMe llim ... ~lien a &UJ DEAll PROUD: naau '" wrhtog. Df!;AR DOOR: l"HeMQ!p meus ,..,. gives yoo fh11 line. loC!f< GUI! .For "111 oa A .. MW _ M 11 ,.. a• ..a &here wlte btf llt Ille ,... " U.. et crlU.. 1'1r1t how to handle the saper 111 l&lrtsman, lllJ M f.eecl .,_. tile experience -Irey word, ltowever, 11 J•dtemelt. check Ann Landers. ReM! ·htr booklet, reMftDber! hi lie llM:~. Dla't ldek tM F• 1m•ll "favon,'' 111 Jn1 Ml ttltrt "Neckin' and Petting -WW..Art •" ,..U. it.kl be llmtta tve11 titre. If Ute fr1e11d Limits?' Send your request to, A.nm 4 hs repeatedly f•Ued M rtPIY prevll'll Lander1 In care of the DAILY PILOT. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Mark Twain small 1moat1 die -.wer IMld be. encloelng 50 Hnt.s In t'Oin IDd a .. once aid, "llla holJ pt8lion ol lricmd· •·Sorry -eo .,...,• • stamped, sell .. ddre.ssed eove)opc. • ,__ I • • -J 4 DAILY PJLOT Scores Fashion WASlllNGTON CAP) Jom Kennedy. who once Cf""4 a mlnilremor in wllbiDcton aoc;:iety by weir- -a thiJh..uposing miniskirt1 le tlie Whit. Houae, has scored -I-first by Wear• inc a ,...through bloose and midiskirt to an East Room reception. ,,. blonde wife or Sen. '• J!;clwanl M. Kennedy ([). 1 Miss.), easily created the big· ~ gest-sUr Tuesday, at the recep. tion Mrs. Richard M. Nixon held forl Mrs. Ferdinand Marcos. '-wife of the president of the Philippines. Mrs. Kennedy's blouse was a gossamer, transpare_nt light blue lace. A slightly darker blue brassiere was very _yisj,. bl• through 111< iaC.. The blouse was verY visible through the lace. The blouse was tucked into a mi~ fl en gt h silver-colored leather skirt with a slit up the front. She added a .pair of lronl-laced black boots to complete the ensemble. She told reporters, almost nlischievously, she had decid· ed she was wrong 18 months ago when she wore a very short miniskirt to President Nixon's first receptii>n for { Congress:"' ':\ Photographers at that time C..@l}ght Mrs..,, Nixon starin(~t the goodly expanse of Joan Kennedy 's thigh (her mini was one of the shortes1 then seen here). cameras at Tuesday's event preserved the glance downward by Mrs. Marcos as · she and Mrs. Kennedy shook bands· warmly. Mrs. Nixon wore a turquoise midi at the ~Ion. HB Auxiliary Plans .Lunch ~1embers of the Huntington Beach Boy's Club Ladies AUX· iliary will gather for a lun· cheon meeting on Monday, · Sept. 28, In the Furnhlll Con- dominium clubhouse: A board meeting will take place_atJO a.m. and lunch will be served at 11 :30 a.m. Card playing will follow. rrtday, Stpttmber 2S, 1~70 ' First Another ,.. t •• Sti r DIFFEREN~E A YEAR MAKES -Joan Kennedy is an example of the fash- ion industry's ups and downs. She appears in a midi at a White House lunch· eon last T.uesday and selected 8 mini for another function in May, 1969 which created a mini tremor. .Noveinl:ier • • Nuptials ·· Planned · Mr. and Mrs. M8x Gudowskl of Seal Beach have announced ·the engagement of ·. t h. e i r daug!tler, J u d It h Anne Gudowski to Stephen James• McAl'lirew, son of Mrs. Lowell Shuck of Costa Mesa. The couple is planning 1 Nov. 21 wedding in St. Anthony'3 Catholic Cburcti, Long Beach. Miss Gudowski is a graduate of St. Anthony's High School, 'Long Beach and attendea California State College at Long Beach. Her fiance is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School •nd attended Orange-Coast College.·- Both of lhe betrothed are professional musicians. The bride-to-~ who appears as . Judi Richards, is a vocalist and hi.$ sung in .Phoenix ' and Las Vegas. M.cAndrew is a vocalist aOO llliunmer iM has appeared with the Long_ Beach Civic Light Opera. Presently both a r e en- ' tertain.in_g in a Long Beach restaurant. Islands Glimpsed It will be a Hawaiian night Monday, Sept. 28, f o r members of the Monday Morning Club of Laguna Beach when they gather in the · Laguna Federal community room al 8. Dr. and Mrs. j!obert W. • ' Fashion Takes Flight NOW Fashions with the accent on the unusual will be sho\vn during the annu- al Clipped Wings-membership luncheon Monday, Sept. 28. in the Airporter Jnn, Newport Beach. According to the chairman, Mrs. Thomas Saffer of New· port Beach, startling table decorations will carry out tbe NOW theme. Com- paring "then" and "now" are (left to right) Mrs. Saffer and· Mrs. Wendell Smith, 'VhP \vears a gown of the late 40s. Former United Air Lines steward- esses are invited. ' Roper, hosts of the club's re- cent trip to Hawaii, will show slides of the tour and a surprise announcement con- cerning a future cruise will De-------------------------------- made. Tour members wilJ wear Hawaiian fashlon s, a n d refreshments will be served. Club members will visit the Ropers' vacation home at Lake Arrow~ad on Wed· nesday, Sept. 30, enjoying lunch and cruise around the lake's perimeter. Horoscope Aries: SATURDAY SE PT.EM BER 26 Use Golden Rule change. Ride with the tide. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jin. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): 19): You can get to bottom of You could be slightly irritated mystery. Key is to overthrow By SYDNEY OMARR by delays. Somebody obviously superficlal values. Get p1ng . ri~ .... !>:LZ'.."' ·~ -: _, ·f New Tall · .' -• ~· Mme. Ky Tones Down Look_~L_Ro/e 1n Public Life Drug Abuse Discussed ARJES (March 21-April 19): "is -giving: you a run-around. on project with real substan<:e. One in authority may be in Respond by sticking to facts _ Financial questions cap be aet- cmbarrassing financial situa-an d principles. Refuse to be -;Jed to you r sa_tisfaclioo. lion. Understand this and shaken by double talk . AQUARIUS (Jan. ·?O-Feb. ,..... -----... -·-· --·-·---·----·--·~ .. , ! ,. ~. ~''· 1~ ~ i • ·! ti .. . .... .. ~ SAIGON (UPI) -When Mme. Nguyen Cao Ky, wife of the South Vietnamese vice president, arrives in the United States next she will present a more reserved im- age than she did in the days when she campaigned with her husband wearing a flight sui t. older. Ky is 40 and the couple . has had one child. The vice president was divorced from a French woman. Five of the praCti~ Golden Rule . No time 1 18): Comp I e.1 e transaction A team of former drug users lo make demands. L BRA (Sept. 2.1-0ct. 22): h' h h .1 E 1· fl · w 1c en ances sec ur1 y. will present a panel discussion TA UR US April 20-may 20) .. · mo ions y m numerous . 1 1 durl·ng the mee"ng of the directions. Your feelings can One versed in rea es ate Blessed Sacram:Ut . A I t a r Added responsibility is in· be described as being in slate va lues can be of aid. ~ge Society at 8 p.ffi. on Tuesday, dicated. You may be called of confusion. Give yourself horizons. Be paUent . '?'Ith S t 29 upOn to ship v a 1 u ab I e time. Applies especially in mate, partner. Legal. rd_aqtu· eKo:beri Urmston. s c h o o I material, including b o o ks . relation to member of opnn<:it" ver boomera111s in JOUr fafpf . Purchase of household items ,..~ ,,. PISCES (Feb . .it-Mardi :It): riage. team ,coordinator! for · 0r.a11n~: indicates some renovations sex. Stress origin atl It y ;' )ii. County'Teen Chai enge, w1 ut: are taking place. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): _._,_ \Vhen Ky . ~elivered his the speaker. E A relative Seeks legal counsel. dependence. Improve ·iq1· children are by the' f.irst mar· ' spe-h, he gallantly r•ferred Teen Challenge is a non· G MINI (May 21-June 20): Do h tions with associates. CO· " -M k 1 rts · · d. w at you can-within the M' d' le · ~ denoml·nati'onal, n 0 n pr 0 fit a e new s a in new 1rec-workers. mor ~ can_, to her several limes. She grin· · 1· A t · d d Jaw. Be-patient. Obtain hint ed A 'd -•"""• J' Church rcla. ted organization ions. ccen in epen ence. settl . vot ~~ •. ma or ncd al the audl.ence 1·n recogn 1• • · l't y r from Libra message. Support f · de'•" N · whi'ch emphasizes new direc-or1g1na 1 Y. our sense o 1 ~sue, o nunor ~. . tw f h I. bu ,. h 1 bl 11 family. But rea ize you also k di led lion o t e comp 1ment, t ti·ons for youth troubled by umor proves va ua e a y. outloo is in ca . II • Cha · l b d. · have a Jife of your own. -.. .................. .., ..... .. cssentia y sue looked ~If-con-drugs and delinquency . nge ~~v.1ronmen. Y tn1ng r1 I 7 . I The beauteous Mme. Ky - Dang Tuyet Mal -apparently has chosen the role of the traditional oriental w i f c , always in the J>ackgrOund. Her private life !s very much her own. scious or slightly bd'red during The public ·is invited to al· out, . v1s1ting friends or SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22· IUUTIFUL CLOTMD ••• the evening.-She avoided look~ tend the meeti·n· g 1·n tc0---relatives. Dec . ...21): alm appr..o.a$:h,.7~~!£0n•Y. suu11tl'f' UHll o---;i~ "' ks d If k 1• 8'/' 11111 'ifM Cl'!l'l-bff---Y-"--. -~ I ing into the n e w s and multipurpose room of the CANCER (June 21-July 22): wor won ers. you ma e twk• 1n-t111.-,.... dras. I ! I r I I I I 1 · ' •' The body suit plus tunic Is the perfect way lo achieve the tall, tall look of the new season, 'vhat~ 1+-.... --·e"'v=e~r ~yo=u~r~elglir.'ThTll&IY-sultinibbed;-skinny but stretcnable, wilh the high, girille'-neck zipped with a 22-inch invisible nylon zipper, preferably at I the chin level. lt can also be turned over into a turtleneck. Over this, wear a split-Iron\ plaid tunic io invisibly zipped tl[at the plaid is unintertupted. Both of lhese are included in our Printed Pattern 9186 in NEW Misses Sizes 8 lo 16. Send 75 cents for PRINTED PATTERN 918~ -;;nd 50 cents for our New Fall-Wi11lcr Pattern Cala'-- log to the DAIL\' PILOT, Pallcrn Dcp~rlment, P.O. Box 55, Old Chelsea StaU'!!', New York, N. Y. 10011. (Add 25 cents for each pat\crn tor Air Mail ' and Special Handl ing.) Whereas Mme. Nguyen Van Thieu, the president's wife, and Mme. Tran ,'Illien Khiem. wife of the prime minister. divide attendance at official functions and entertaining between them, Mm!!. Ky is rarely. present. television cameras. Blessed Sacrament School, Learn by teach~g. Means demands, others begin pro-Their Loss -v-O.Jri 1 The couple maintain a home Westminster. gain indicated if willing to gram of resistance. Study Leo THI SICOND TIMI AIOUNI at Tan Son Nhut Air Base on shar; kno~dge. Review message. Flatter individual .... £, ua st .. c..11 ~ soml. basiC lessons. Your _ _:w"'.'h~oo;i~s .'.'h~un~g:i_ry~fo".r-'a"'ff':e<:':l:"io"'n:_ . .....'.~~~-~~,,~·~· ~-~-~-!!!!!~!!!! the edge of Saigon. Ky fre· quently receives visitors there Moose Group memory may need some jog- i9stead or his offices at ging. Guard valuables. thdependence Palace. four \Vomen of the Moose, 1158 LEO (July23-Aug. 2 2 ).: ·1 assemg\e the first and third There may be some room for mi es away. Thursda y of each month for doubt. Realize this and Clon'f ·South Vietnam's 5-!cond lady meetings in Moose Home, insist on definite "yes·• or speaks English, French and Costa Mesa. The programs "no" answers. Cycle is high; Vietnamese fluently. She also begin at 8 p.m. but conditions are subject to Her p u b I i c appearances usually are with her husband. She accompanied him on a state visit to Cambodia earlier this year , traveling by air and wearing a handsome brown silk bao dal, which Is the tigbUitting. Jong Vietnamese dress worns-over slacks. is an a c c 0 m p 1 i s h e d ~-jjiiiiiijiiijjjiiiiiijiiiijjijjjiiiiijjijjjjjiijjjiiijjjiiijiiijjijjji-i I riOewoman and shares Ky's I love of flying and tenni s. · Mme. Ky smiled ~weetly, was gracious to everyone, bill said nothing quotable. At a recent evening ban- quet in Siagon where Ky was the mai n speaker, she ap· peared with her jet black hai r parted in tm center, offsetting her high cheeekbones, with long curls lacqu ered at the nape or her neck. She wore a dia mond choker al her neck and matching earrings. A fOrmer Vietnam air hostess when she became Ky's second wife and mother of six children, s~e followed the fa shion of many wealthy Both husband and wife are accomplished pilots w h i c h caused some start~ looks among the peasants when they campaigned In 1967, arriving at a remote mountain village at the controls of their own plane. They wore matching black flight suits w i t h la vender scarves at the neck. Her dcsire ·to remain in the back~round probably can be correlated \\'ilh Ky's position of second place behi nd Thieu. •lo\l'~ver. \\•ith the presidential election only one year away - and Ky a likely candidate - the visit to Paris and the United States is certain to put them in the spotlight again. dental women ~ho.desire<Uo -VFW-Au"Xilhr""'--1 look· more western and had her eyes "rounded'' by a Coastline Auxiliary 1 o relatively simple operation. Veterans of Foreign Wars, Her official biography lists Post 3536 gathers the first and her birth year at 1944, bUt the third ~rlday$ at 8 f>.m. Costa medical change in the lhape oT Mesa's American Le,Son Hall her e}'ts makes her apptar is the meeting, !tt:ne. MONTl550R.I OPEN HOUSE AND LECTURE Mont .. Hrl Prl n(:iples in tM Hom• & Schoof SUNDAY, SEPT. 27, 1970, 2:00 P.M. PRIMANTI INTERNATIONAL MONTESSORI SCHOOLS ANAHllM HI N. HAllOI ILYD. CALtll e TeltJheH 1714) 12l·ll4J I l t PUBLIC NOTICE! LOCAL FURNITURE FACTORY . PARKING LOT SALE MOST ITllllS flOlll Dl,.PLAT STOC K Cf'O AT .•• WHOLESALE TO THE PUBLIC ! lllNG TlUCI 01 TRAILllt & SAYE! FACTORY AT 2013 PLACENTIA lfft"'9 1fth & Yict.rie -Colt. M .. J __ _,'Items on Sale lnchid• - • SOFAS • LOVE SEATS • CHAIRS • TABLES • BAR STOOLS • DIVIDERS SHELF. UNITS • WALL DECOR· I OPEN TO THE PUIUC ! FRl.·SAT. & SUNDAY This Week Only! .. I I MAKE HER MISTY --"Collection Golo~is our name for ·diamonds of exceptio.nallv fine color. It takes a very special diamond to· earn the name. Ask to see them in rings. pins, pendants or other pieces. Or, let our designers use "Collection Color" diamonds to create your original . Cl•11r" Ace""''' 1n'v11•. •-1c111 ·~,,._~ l•nllArntrk•nl •M Molt.If!' fMrtt. ttf. .SL~VICK'S • Jcv.·eif;'tS .. Sincc .. 1917 I 8 FASHION ISLA ND NEWPORT BEACH -644·1310 o,.. Mooday ""d FriHy .. 111 t :JD • · . • iai,11 v ·atley T ... y'a Fina) • FRIDAY, SEPTEMIER .25, · 1970 JEN CENT$ City Unanimous on Pay " Ceiling 1 Set -in ~unting ton Despite Opposition • ---By~TERR·Y-COVJl:.LE__.._.,. DAILY PILOT ll•tf ,._.,. Rustler Girls Golden \Vest College cheerleaders will be making themselves heard Saturday night when Rustler football team takes on ~Mt. San An· tonio ball club at LeBard Stadium at Orange Coast College campus in Costa Mesa. On the wings are Sue Emerson (left} and Terri Kent. From bottom to top (center) are Kathy Ready, Vicky Klatt, Linda White arid Bonnie Foster. Hussein, Arafat Announce 4' . • 7 Jordan 'War l!eace Pact- +- From Wire Services The nine days of blood and bom- bardment 11re over in Jordan's civil war, but the .fighting to create a Palestine for _ fr~ Arabs must continue, rebel leaders procla'imed today. Jordan's King HusSein and Palestinian guerrilla leader Yasi r Ai-afat announced a j>e3ce pact aiid a team of Sudanese Army officers was assigned as a police force. Relief was expressed throughout the Middle East and America in · &Orne quarters, while bitter Arabs loyal to the rebel cause cried out in rage. A crowd of 200 . poured out of noon praf ers at Al Aqsa Mosque in Jerusale'm __ arnLrliai:ge.d_through 'the ancient city's winding streets. ~ --- ''Kill Hussein," they screamed , charg· lng his army is slaughtering their brothers ln Amman and demanding a new revoluUon. They proclaimed worse hate for Hmsein than for Israel. Fears for the lives and safety of unac· counted.for airline hijacking host.ages lessened 1 o m e w h a t , when King Hussein's troops freed IS of the Mat l::kl a.m. (PDT ), found In cannon-raked Am-- man. NOiie were Amel'ican. 'They' were reported to be well and the hunt continued for 39 others -mostly Americans -still missing, while vanish· ed JordMUan Prime Minister Mohammed Daoud tUrned up safeJy in Cairo •. Foul· play was feared Thursday when Daoud -who resigned bis position - disappeared from the Nile Hilton Hotel, but he told agents whi traced him be simply wanted to be aJone. De.velopments in the Jordan clvlL war and the. International crisi1 it provoked appeared to be slowing today, but all~ cerned Were keeping a Ctoee eye on the eituation. ~sraeU leaders expressed confidence that it will be quiet for a while. even as Arabs cla mored for new war or squabbled among their own political factions. Relief efforts by. the International Red Cross and its Arab coun~rpart. the Red Crescent, were stepped up as the plight of thousands of war victims Intensified. -'Arabs from the occupied west bank or the Jordan drove trucks carrying canned food -labels identifying them as Israeli· made torn off -rolled in and will carry Wounded women, children and old people out. Herbert G. Klein, White house com· munications director, said today in Frankfurt. Germany that American response to the Jordan crisis has been aimed at avoiding intervention. -in arrlnterview~wtth the American Forces Radio network here, Klein said the President carefully e.s:plored all con- tingencies and when forces were alerted it was based on the hope that they would not be uSed. • "But you must be prepared for the worst as well." he added . "It was fortunate we didn't have to use the forces." A beefed-up U.S. Sixth Fleet gtill 11teamed along in the Mediterranean only 100 miles from the critical area, its ships. planes and men alerted two weeks •le> when the three hijackings occurred. ~ The Soviet Union's potent Mediter- ranea n squidron steamed "alon& politely bul determinedly in ita wake. ';You could say we share a common trJ.. terest in whal the other guy j1 dolnl," remarked Rear Admfral Roger Sprefn. Israel eipects quiet aklng itl bordfrl with Syria and Jordan, at least for a while . But military sources id Tel Aviv said today it is ready to act if the pr· rillas decide to switch•thtir attlckt: from Jortlan lo Israel. Thetaources said Palestinian guerrilla• (See JORDAN, Pa1e l) ~ Teaching Facilit11 Hospital at UC OI tt11 O.!tr Ptw ltrlfl' Councilmen were unanimous· Wed- nesday night when they cut from 11 per~ cent to 1.25 percent. .the J!IY ioat.e· re- quests of firemen and policemen in Hun- tington Beach. They took their positions in the face of strong criticism from spokumen for police and fire workers and the possibili· ty of binding arbitration, a eourt 1uit, or * * * Pay Increase Action Sought By Employes Huntington &ach policemen a n d firemen will decide within the next few days what action they will take t1;> oppo.!le the 8.25 percent pay increase granted Wednesday by the city council. Both groups have told the council they want the II percent increase agreed to•by the city administration. "We're still holding our same position," . Vic Sub\a . vice president of the Firemen's Association. said today. "We signed an agreement with the ad· ministration and we feel the council shou Id honor it." ··we plait to take further actio n, but not until the membership has a c'hance to meet on it," Ed" Pr1tt, president of the Policemen's Association, said. ' "The ~al issue is not a difference ot !.7S percent in pay,~ Pratt continued. •·we feet we were wn:inpd because we assumed we were dealin& with an aeent of the city." ·:Our.haggling over the money la not., · Jmportant as trying to keep good fatUI in the city. If we Jet it go now, who know1 what will happen nei:t year.~• Pratt said the policemen (and firemen) had bought the city's propogl In good fai th , but the city's elimination of part of that proposal was why the policemen were fighting the pay offer. ·The City Employes' A.1 soc I a tlon, largest of the three employe groups. ex· pressed agreement with the council's 8.25 percent pay offer . "Generally I th.ink everyone is pretty happy With It." Ted Kramp, president of the City Employes' Auociation, said this morning. Kramp said city employes have no plan to hire legal counsel ·er ask for any changes. City employes had previously signed an agreement with the city ad· ministra tor for an 8.2S percent increase. thus _the council action d!!! not affect them. The man in the middle is City Administrator Doyle Miller. He 1jgned the memorandum of agreement ·with police and fire officials calllng for 11 per· cent pay boosts. Whatever the next action on salary talks will be, it-probably won't come from Miller's office. ' "At this point the council 's action (granting an 8.2S pereent rai se) is final," Miller expiained . "NeJtber side ha• asked me to do anythirig." Queen Mary'g Story To Be Told Saturday The tt.ory of converting the "Queer Mary" from a luxury llner to a tourist at.- traction will be told thi1 Saturday during i breakfasl meetin& ol the Fountain Valley YMCA. Speaker at the 7:30 a.m. gel-togetber'in Mii< Square Coontry Club will be Tom Witheropoon, photo director of the !Ana Beach News Bureau. Irvine? I By GEORGE LEIDAL fa cility would provide · ·245 medical· Memorial and Fairview State Hospltall. ot,... o.ttw ,, ... .,... 1ur1ical beds, 32 mat.trn1ty, f4 pediatric, It will seive not only the 145,IOI The C.lifornia College of Medicine~at and• 22 i>syc:hlatrlc beda in JG 1!113\e. .residents · of the Newport hospital am, UC JrvU, will request approval of a :J50. rooms, 30 two-bed wai'ds 'and seven foUr· bUt also 11 expected to draw from thf bed teaChing hospital at Tuesday's bed wards. balance of Orange County's J.4 million meetinl of the Comprthensive Health Under slate law, •pProvsl'of the CHPA population as well. Planning ASM>Ciation or Orange County Is necesa&ry in order for the projec.1 to Cost of building the steel and 'ftl.n-- . perhaj>sKeveii-a employe1. • trlke-by-public..aalely_ City F.i.naoce Dir~r Ben M~9 q. between an 8.25 percent and an 11 per. cenf raise ·11 about .,-:,Got, ; - Wbtn interviewed, councilmen's views followed lhree patterns. They felt 8.25 perce nt waa alighUy above the cost of llv· ing, the general economic situation 'is depressed and any in<nase wou1d be deficit budgeting. The federal cost of livi~g index shows about a sii: percent rise. The· economic sltu_alion Is largely because of aerospace industry cutbacks. • ' . • • l f PULLS OUT OF R,\CE ~-ue,Condkl•t• GrM Green Steps Out Of _ Cities Lea·gue · President Race Huntington Beach Councilman Jack Green has quit the race for president o( the Orange County ~e-cf Cities. Green announced Uiis morning he would not seek re • election to the president's post because at least eight cities wete opposed to him suc~ing himself in office. _ _ The Huntington Beach Councilman fac· ed a runoff Oct. 8 against Anaheim Coun· cilman Ralph Clark. The two men tied 7.7 when the League of Cities m&t Sept. 10. Green h.as served this year as president and Clark as-vice-president olthe...Orange County League·or Cities. The league has 25 members in the county. While eliminating himself from the race, Green also asked for nominations to be reopened, so cities would have more than one man to choose from for ·presi- dent. _ "I would urge that nominati ons be again opened on Oct. 8," Green said. "But It should be noted that durlng 'the period in which the . nominating com· mittee was active, no one came forward to suggest names for consideration.'' Oark, Green'a onl y opponent, is· also a candidate for Supervisor in the 4th Di!tricl He faces a runoff Nov. 3 with Gordon Bishop for the supervisor's post to succeed William Hirstein. lf Clark is· named President of the League of Cities, then i! elected a county supervisor, he would have to quit h1I League post in January. Green said he was quitting the race because Garden Grove and aeven other cities had expresatd dissatisfaction with the League'• policy of aJlowing officers to ~ serve consecutive terms. Slogan Contest Deadline· Soon More than 200 entries have already been rtceived fCX' the Huntington Beach Chamber or Commerce corrunulllty •log~n contest.tnding Sept. 30. ~--.rJniiina 110P.n7 according r Chamber Ma-r Rafph Klw ,,will best typify Huntlnf!M Beach " the Tl!CrU· Uonal center ol Orange County. A S180 prize eoe• to the winner. Entries may be sen( Co the ch&nlber·of· lice, lllD Bucb Blvd. plained the term "deficit budget." "OUr budget reflecled enough ._Y to pay for an 11 percent wage ina"eue," he said. "But the Increase w®td eomg-from last yelµ''s surplus funds. There are not enough revenues coming in UtiJ year to handle even the 8.25 percent increue. but there are enough leftover surplus ·fundl to handle either raise." Arguello said the difference llnexplAlined Hen are the comrne:nill el ab: eom- cilm"en on their vote for an I.• percent pay raise for firernep and policemen. Councilman Nonna Gibbs wu out" of. town. i . Ted'Barlett felt the raise was fair to all parties concerned. "U we btd· atvea 11 percent to police and fittmen it would (See COUNCU., Pap I) Grenade Kil.ls Riverside Boys l!pedal to the DAILY'PIWI' RIVERSIDE -Ricky ~mon was U Thursday and his sister: .gave him a foot- ball that bounced ovu the backyud fence while he and two huddle• were passlng it. He and Bobby Ewing and David Crawford, also 13, went into the nei1hbor· ing yard and found the football, but they also found a box. of 11 military ftqme'n- tation grenades. The football and the carton were both in some shrubbery. ,. , . . Ju1t exacUy wba~ bappeoed f:Eont ~t polnt.mly MVtr be klilft-u,...U.diil bia1t .that lliouerecLeveey·-Jn.lbO •·I , . • I , LwnOn home -but autborWes tan opeculate. I ' • . Ricky Leamon wu.kllled OD hill blrtb- day, blown-to bita. I Bobby Ewing ,. .. klllOd In the Wilt II> Nnt, blown to bita. . "They, were just tom apart," aid one 1iclwled Riverside County Sheriff's aepu. ty. ~ . . .. David Crawford waa terribly mutilated and Is in e:1tremely1critical coridition. to. day following 'bo\u'.1 of 1Urpry. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Prim, In - yard the M26 grenades ,.... found, ..... que~ ·~ llleP1 ,.. ...... " Ille mtlilarY --. . • . • They-to-Ibo-. Police Find W-eapons Cache in Costa Mesa By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ltMI 0.llY l'I• ltlff Federal authorities"'"today-entered tbe case of a cache of military w'-'pons and explosives -plus 1J11tructions for sabot.age -uncovered accidentally Thursday night by Colla. M... polica checking out a false alarm. A pair of t.eenagera -was arrelted on 11tate charges of poueuion ·of illegal firearms, while Treasury Department agents ·were en route today to determine if a federal offeMe was commJtted. Police were reluctanr-to-speculate-on any possible connection with radical political factions until each of 18 weapons -including automatic rifles a n d machinegurui -was cbected ind the suspects questioned. • They were Identified as David B. McLaughlin, 19, and Douglas M. Langevin, 19, both of 108 Cecil Place. the house where the arsenaJ wu confiscated. "Some of the Items that are. ille1aJ to possess appear to be dt:acUv11ted, .. U • · plaint:d-Detect~ve LL Harold Fbcher. He 18.id a bomb dispoal aquad·from El Toro Marine Corps Air Slatkin WU called to headquarter• th~ morning -llaild grenades were dilcovered in ODI ~ flacated carton. Ficker CQrks Champagne w . Foes Ce'lebrate Spada! to IM DAILY PIWI' NEWPORT, R. !. -Skipper Bill Flclcer and his Intrepid crew bad their chem· pagM on ice 'Mluraday. .... Thty thought they had the "-lea'• Cup on ice. But li<fdy G"'tel II crewmen ,. ....... ting AUl!ralla In the pnstisfoul yachting even swilled Aussie beer u rlcktr·llld. his len.tha~mmrmen lrept their ablm- pagne corked. • "Thfy can't take thla one away frum U!," Gretel II 1klppar Jim· Hard)' declared alter 1iealln1 dtcidl"' •lclGry from lnirepld Jn the final 300 1"rda to bep the coqtest alive. "We don't know if they're live, M u · Fi!char uld. .. But "" dOhavTlmmiiiiltliirlmM containing 10me spent and tome live rounda, plm numerous pampbleta cn bomb• and booby traps," he contlnued. "That'• what scares us." LL Fischer -said cbtmlcal campoimds commonly \lied in makinC bombs -in combination with other readily aVallabJe ingredients -were taken from the-Cecil Place residence. • He II.id ·McLaughlin listed hla. _ oc-- cupation-uTheaclwait.e:r-and-hlnteYtn1c, ---l who :was not pre&ent when thl: wupooa were dilcovered, is an alito J!MlC'hanic,' The tvtO IUSpecla apparenUy bave DO direct military """1eclioil In wbldl they might· have obtained the wupona, he ad- ded. . • . • Betidell the military wea-, which II> clllded 'a mOrtar launching device ,ap- peariq to.ho Japaneoe-made, police aefl. eel an lnlrared llllponcnpe uaed to pick out vic:ttm.. in tMal. darkness. "Nwnerous ·bind Weapons and rifla which appear on the surface to be 1epl were·allo picked up," Aid Lt. Fileber. The diJc:ov<ry bepn oborlly be1on! II p.m., when an emerpncy calltm in the 100 ~lock ol Ced! Placa _.all at polkt beadquartera. Offioel'I Gene Norden and Dave Haya. ' Ille< WEAl'OflS, P.qo I) ....... Ce••· ---· ····tl!V Gusty Santa Ana wtoda will blow up a storm over the wee~. ,...,inl tho coeata! temperal!Jrea aboollng Iowan! the It mark. '!Ila mominp will offer. f1111 u~..aal. r INSIDE TODAY "Wt 1'C•lcd to. do ...... ill!lg I Ot' our-viohbon;'-' 3Clid. a-Loo guno Hlli.. COllplo ""° how do- Mltd 1$()(),000 to lhi W Soddleback Cormn1nttv Hosp!. ' tal. n<ir •lot• " in todef'• W ttktndlr, POflf :IS. ~ ''; --(CHPAJ. qualify for government funding. forced concrete facility is aet al m Costin1 an cstimaled $30.7 mllllon, the -A C01lege:-spok"mn1n 111d-thst-f:he,-154!~mttlkm1 wlth.,.anothtt-$1;-fl·1nillkln~c1M'<>--,,,..,-"'T--..-- ae.ven--story hospital would occupy 14 bed_ hospital will not j)l"OVide all the 1,$00 jecled for equippJn1 It. Land costs are -(See DAILY PIWI' lloellllr Mlot ,:;..,,.1---::Al~mo~n Loclcaboy'a ......,t lf1M.r-on1 age6 7 ... _ ca..111t u. 1 ,_ .... --.• ................ ~ --. ••• -· ~II' h'Me.... ,. acres of the UCI campus. tt Would give te~ching beds required by the college, bul e.stlmated at $.175,000. and architect'• fers hospital expe.rieilce for medical 1tudenta would bring to lhe CJmpus enough beds at $1.3 million for the tot.al '3Q.1 milUoa as well as complete medical f!lcilities to to support the teaching needs. The col· projeet. ~ the Newport hospital service an!ll . lege would continue Its relationships with The CQ8l pP.r bed for the pr~; A • Constru ctton Is scheduled to begin in Ju· olher hospitals in the community in-hospi tal Is $78,100 and cost per lqliate ly. 1973. eluding the Orange Coonty Medical loot would ho ISi.iii, baled an the tolll Dean Warren L. Bootic~. said Iha Cenler, OC Children's Hoopltal. Hoa1 cost tstimala. ' \ ~ I ' < llllW YOl\IC fAP ) -Members.of Ibo ._... '"-"" Qql)cl ~ New YCI'~ T!mel have voted 1,143 to 79 to 11uthorl&e guild officers to call a •trike aaalrist the paper. No deadllnt was aet for a 1trlke. "Tbat •as a beauUru1 race. 'VII')' well done. I .,hare your joy, you certainly duuvedJt," Flclcer !Old Hardy. ''We 11till have to do It thret more times," Hardy replied, wtll •••A &hit no foreign yacht In tht 111-yar hlatoey ol tho Amerlct'1 CUp hu wan the aertu. =... : --. -. ............. ..._ , .. 11 --=-=. : -. ......... " ...... ' . . -... IMCll ..... •n -. -.... -. ._.. ..... ,,..,. --.. w s r II-!" • ~ s --_,.. • --• I DAll.T I'll.OT • • F•ldl)', ...,_ 25, 1'10 'M•r11e• ..... n1 s ... .., .Lice~es ·· 'Air Force· Flll • _Tkkle ·the • Gets Clean Bill . .. . Priso1t'3.rs • . . WAlllJNGTON (AP) -Tho Alt FGtt11'1 ninC·•lnl F·lll fighter bomber hu been pronounced "1tructurally aound" by the Penllton. 1be plane has been undergoing 1truc· tural . t.ll since a f1tlil cr1.5h last December cuued by a failure in the iwinC·Yinl pivot section. The Senate Armed ServicK Committee, ln r!porttng the Dtlense authorization bill for the CWTtnt fiscal year, conditioned it.s apprtval of more fundinl on a cerUfica· titln from the Defense Department of tbt plane's itructural lntqrity. David Packard, deputy aecrelar)' of defel1", informed Committee Otalrman John St.nnil (().Mils.), in a letter that the results thm far in the leltinC pro- IJ'Am "permit me to conclude that the F· 111 neet will bo llructurally -· and thal It will indeed perform Its inlonded mlaaion.'' Fro111 P .. e l COUNCIL •.• have opened It up for other employea, too." "1bey got all their fringe benefib and that'• also a lot of money," Bartlett. Al Coen wu worried mMtly about deficit budgeting. "Even the 8.~ percent increase is · a deficit. If we carry il out aver a few ye&r1 we'll be ln a Usbt posi· lion." . "This raise is also above the aJSl of liv- ing," Coen conUnued. "And we have to compete within our own market, Orange C:Ouniy, not cities in other areu. In some ca ... the' frll>(e benefits equal a 30 per- cent raise.". "I felt this was a fair salary increase," Jack Green e.1plalned. ';It's near the c;ost of livir!e and is what the city can afford, but even this Is •till a d!flclt." "l don 't think the city can afford anymore," Jerry Matney uld. "l just don 't· think we.can meet their demandJ." Matney alto aid ht felt there wa1 a lack of communication. with the city ad- mhilJtrator. "Our aalarlea compare favorably wUb tht surrounding di.lea. r don 't think the correct cities were IUl'Voyed. I Jutt con't juatlly a 11:U"'' ral..ee. U tht voters come down and HY cive it to them, okay." Geora:e McCracken was absent from Wednell5ay'1 meetlnc, but 1ave his sup- port to the council'& action. "What 11 fair for one is fair for all,'' M:cer.cken ·uld today. "I think there was a fallacy in the cities surveyed. Even though the area is in a depression, pay raisea: coul(i keep 1piralinl bued on a survey of other.cltlea." M1yor DOnald Shipley also felt the 8.25 percent was a fair raise due to the economic conditions of the times. "Considering the tllu.ltlon I think it'a very reasonable. Th1J doesn't mean we have any complilnta about our police or ·firemen It's just the current situation." Speech Scheduled By Ray Bradbury After the .... crash, ~ Air Force ~- ed all 230 F-lll'a already in aervlce. · Since the new test program began, 46 planes ha ve been e1arnined and reen- tered IE!l'Vict. Another 13' are in the pro- .,... '~-being . ltanaferred back to operaUlll commandl. Packard's letter preceded Air Force announctment of a •111.1.mllllon contract award to General Dynamics Corp. for an additional 24 of the F-lll's. Judge Orders Probation OnFraudRap • 11nlur1nce salesmll\ Paul Farowich wa1 placed on three yeara' probation today for his part In Issuing a 115,000 life policy on a Corona del Mar man who Is dylnf. Superior Court Judge Ronald Croobhank refused to consider any other sentence for the 34-year-old Tustin man who could have been aent to atat.e priaon for up to 20 years. · Farowich wa.s found guilty by a jury last · Sept. 2 of charges of attempted grand theft,. conspiracy to commit IJ'and theft and f«loty. He and Lawrence Odem:, 47, of 2983 Java Road, Costa Me.sa, were arrested after clothing store manager Murray Brooaon was billed for the first payment on a $15,000 policy he had never applied for. It was learned that Odem:. who employed Bronson a~ hi! Michael's Ltd. atore in Costa Mesa, took ,the physical for Bronson after learning that hia manager was suffering from a terminal disease. Odenz admitted before Farowlch's trfal that he made arrangements for the lsauance of the policy and then pleaded guilty to reduced charges of conspiracy. Odenz was fined •1,000 by JUdge Croobhank, placed on probation for one year and aummooed u a witnua for the proeecutlon qalnst Farowlch. Odenz testilled that he intended to hand over the •15,000 he would have received on Bronson's death to Bronson'• widow. That payment would have been made in the name of Odenz' busiJ)ess under I.he type of insurance arran1ement authorlz- ed by Farowich. lt Was learned during the: trial that Mrs. Bronson was ne ver advised of any ~uch arra~aement. Y Indian Guides ' Meet Wednesday SAC!IAMENTO CUP!) "-' lllmlft• 1t the llcenae. plat. factory at JollMlm Stat• Prison mJy &et 1 chuckle atamplnl GUt 1ome ol the new pertonallled lletnle pla!o. Far ewnPte, there nily be a few pinr when they' 1et tht ardet, from one woman who w1hta ·JKT-3tB:~ _, A Stst. Motor Vehlclu Departm111l (OMV) spokesman aaid the JKT atood for her initial!. He dld~not know abc:l.lt the 3411, but the <onvtcts will Pf'bab!y buard a guess or two. "U she'w1nta to advertiJe, lt'a all ript with "'·" he llld. ~And the -prilorler.:.1111y ... t..a 'lltll& thinty when they atamp out 1ht wday re- .q.uest for HAMMS.-· The f>MV spokesman aaid 'Jbursclay that since the new peraonallzed llcenae prorram went into effect a month ap hl.s ·agency baa received IOmt 4,500 requutl. HO\JSE THE ' · • · • • ; • , .QAl'-J'0PILOT lltff Pt.ete DILLBERGS BUILT FORMS BACKDROP FOR ROBIN,.AFGHAN HOUND 'llGUME'. Gov. Ronald Reagan alped tha bJll petmittinc the plates" fOr an iddltlonal · '24 with the ·revenue ,Oina for :tm- provement of Callfornla'a ecolop. ~ In Old Huntlntlon llffch,. David Dlllber9'1 Homo la Hl1 C11tla ·• · DMV deputy regbll'ar Elmer Brown said that once the plat.es start hlttlq the atrtet.s "the Jdea will ht even better ad 't'.ertised" and his ap:llC)' • abould be flooded with reque1ts. Fountain Valley Newcomers Get Warm Welcomes Welcome to Fountain Valley. Starting Monday new reaidentJ to the city will be greeted by members d. the women's dlvillon ol the chamber ol com- merce. "We juat want to help new residents become acquainted with their city," ex- plained Mrs. Lorin Lammers, organizer of the chamber's new activity. Mra. Lammers, with two other women, Mrs. Fred Funk and Mrt. Thomas Kohl, will spend a few days each week making individual vlaits to new families in Foun- tain Valley. In their hands will be a small bag full of useful gifts (matches, penci11, note pads, etc.) from local merchants, _plu.s several pages of Information on actlv1\ies and organizations available In t~ city. The project, which ll still nameless. has the. bleuings of the city .council, the cham~r and oth~r civic org~nlzaUons. "We don't want to call It the we\C<lme wa gon nr any other name already in use," Mrs. Lammers said. "But it is that type of prog ra m." The name• of new families will be pick- ed up each week at .city hill,· 11 the families have their water meters turned . ,. 'Ille program starts Monday, and Mrs. Lammers asked that an y local merchant who wants to donate gifts for the new ar. rivals, should phone her at 962-345.'l. Hoose· Restyled 'Country . Look' Home CQsts $200 By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 ftM o.ltr '"•' '"" Whether you caU Jt "stunning" or "kooky," the house tlmt David and Robin Dill berg built is setting. a lot o{ attention from Huntington Beach residents these days. . . Probably anythin1 with a 15-foot an· tique windmill in th.e ffont yar«t would. Passersby strolling _past 903 Del.aware St., locited in an old portion of the city are aniazed at the· architectural wonder goin1 ·up there. It seems lo be a strange mlxtu're-of Dutch and Western idioms .. "They just happen~d to be tetring up an old railroad in Inglewooa so David latched onto some junk railroad ties and began buildlng the porch,'" sald Robin. Working in his spare time for about one year, her husband has changed the shab- by old house he bought for $15,000 inlo a place he wouldn't sell for .$29,000. Ordinary t.elephone crossarms and pieces from the junkpile have been the piaterlals'for his artistry. .. Already weU·known by city buildln1 in- 1peclon; David haa 110 far only spent '200 on t~e conversion Jl"OJect, maln1y to put up the shake roof. The other parts he scroun1ed. • "He likes ·thi9g1 that look kind ol We1tem and Is tryin1 to create aort.ol a ·rural atmosphere," said his wife. · ··The added touc~ was an old Dempster windmill that formerly pumped out water over bean and tomato fields on Bushard S!reet and now has a pe rmanent place in Dillberg's front yard . · "He bought it from a guy for Ml buc ks and got it working until it broke again,'' Robin explained. . Further improvement! planned by the Dillbergs consist of a second-story bedroom reached by a spiral staircase. a sunken kitche,n· with a big, hooded stove and big windows all around. The neighbors, so far at least. have given their approval. It's about the last place lhey can w the "country" that has been vanishing .h-i Muntington Beach. Haircuts tQ B·e Clipped?, The most popular requert, he aaid, wu: for PEACE . The one wto gets the plate ·will be decided at a.drawln1 nut month. Most car ownera want letters apellln1 out their names. -~ ~ · - But, Brown said, IOIDe have a peacha'.nt for the bizirre. _ For ~mple, one J'flQueat. from Southern CaJHornla was for BRUIN. Brown aald he presumed th1a waa frorit 'a rah-rah UCLA atudent. Another wan~ BEAR. A Unlvtrlity rJ California, Berkeley, atudent? The registrar uid he did not know. ' There were also requests for 'BANJO, DERBY, SMIL·E, MINUS t .. VIP, EGO, MR BUG and GIDGET. . Brown said offensi ve reque1ts would be rejected. From P-.e 1 JORDAN ... suffered up to 20.000 casu.aJties in fighting with the Jordanian army in the past nine day1. In addition, they aald, Syria JOit ·between 75 and 100 Soviet·buUt 'IM and T55 t.aDks -almost 12 pei-cenl of their armor -as well as 170 m.uitar_y transport v'eltlclea in tbl battle! in ·northern· Jor'dan. The heavy losses, according tO tht Israeli military sources,· wlll guarant.ee quiet, at least for several weeks . H · 1 · 1 o eou-1 may iollowed the 1,·.nes ·01 8• ,,,1,.,, .ruli·ng by Leader• differed in their opln1ons, with a1rcu prices . n range , n Y " Defen.se Minister Moahe Daylft aaytnr be due for a cllppin1 in the light of a Jt,tdge ,R,onald ,Cr90)tshank to the effect the Jordan civil war waa dyini ou.t and Superior Court rullng to the effect that that the State Board o! Barber Ex-none of its principals wanta more. · _ the setting of minimum · rates is un· aminers could not force Garden ·Grove "fbope the King manages to 11ve tl'Wlm A program ror fathers and !lions inter-con11tlUJtional. ·barber Ricky Stir' lo up hii •1.75 rate to •severe beating," said Dayan. "I am on ested in joining the YMCA Indian Guides p,.0 ,.. Pqe 1 Judge Raymond Thompson delivered the aide of the kins and not on the 11de of 1s sch~ulei:I for Wedne1day 1t 7:30 p.m. lhe $1.91 mintmum. the al'·-ati've." t . that verdict Thursday in support of tl\e i.ei" at the Edlaon Hilb Schop! cafeteria in WEAPONS argument offerri by Fullerton ·barber St.ar is still embroiled with the ital• The alternative would be Iarael! m.. Huntington Beach. • • • Paul M. Blake .. the .California Board regulating agency in a dispute that Sl!f.:ms tervention and Deputy ·Prerniet Yilal Indian Guides is a prorram open to of Barber Exa1. .~rs can not discipline destined to go to the United States Allon said in a hard-line Meet the Preaa boys ••es 1ix to nine and their fathers. of the department'• feJony unit, were h f h 1 h h I.al · s Court · .,_ I H · i.. • • The orientation meeting Is for residents Im or c srging ess t an t e s e upereme . 1n~rv ew ussem may now o. in wane of Huntington Bea~h who live south of nearby ao they responded and stopped a minimum of $1.91. fie said Thursday that the state boerd trouble. Yorktovm Avenue. youth later determin~ to be McLaua:lilin Blake .and 15 other Fulferton barbers met with failure in an appeal to :the.,.: Diplomatic IOW'ttll aay Allon favtftd ~erica'1 beat-read sclenet fiction Indian Guides meet once a month and for questioning. asked Superior Court for a writ of man-Fourth District Court of Appeals on the Jrrimediaie Israeli intervention, to 11v• ~r, Ray Bradbury, will return to aponsor father and aon campoull. nature "He admitted touching the box , but da te ordering the atate group to .abandon _!:lecision handed down by Judge HUsst!in's government. Golden West Collep this fall to initlale walka. picnics and other recreational said he didn't aet it off," Lt. Fischer ex-its attempts to force Blake and other Crookshank. He is determined, he 1aid, to _ "'I'h~_no_mote room fOr ICIDJ-- theJJ70-71art.l.!t·led.urt1trie1._ ~ _ activJdes.---lained, adding that _he carrled.......no rebel haircutters into line. go on charging below-minimum pricq in Huuein in Jordan," a apokesman fer the 1---He willapeak al 11 a.m., Oct. I in the Further information on the recruitmvit personal ldentificaUon at that point. Judge Thompson'1 ruling c ·1 o s e I y definance ol the .barbers' board. Palestinian guerrillas declared today. ~llese forum. Price tl admisalon ii •t. meetJns can be obtained from Jim Weik "The aubject volunteered to 10 lo his r-~~;;;::::::;::~;;;;;;;;~~;;;;~~~;;:~~;;;;;;;;ijiiiji;iiiijiiiiij-~...:..- . - • 'lbe 50-year-oJa novelist be1an wrltinc at flD.1852. home 1.nd get aome," 1aid Lt. Flschu . •t ~ a1e of 12 and aold hla firat story -------------------------- when he t' 11. Of the 300 stories and 14 booU cf ries, novels •nd plays he 1 ha1 t,""'r ~ ):' " published, perhaps "The M a r t a n ·Chfonlcles," "The llluatrattd Man," "Some\hinc Wi cked ThU Way Comes,'' and ••nie Machineries of Joy" brou1ht .. • him the m01t r.cop!Uon. Laat year when Bradbury came lo (joJden Weit Colleae ht addraaed an Overflow audlenct ct atudenta and reaidents at the forum. DAILY PILOT Ot ..... tl C041T Pll•L~IN• COMl".lH'f l•li•'rt N. ·w,,4 .. ~.,... ...... ..,.... J1ck '-· c~rl1y Vkt ,,.. ..... , 11111 ~111'11 MIM .. r n,,,.,, K .... a l•l- 1~1"'1' A. M11r~hi111 Ml ....... 'll- J.1111 Di•~i11 W.1 o ..... O\lflly t:lllllf • Al\t•rt W, l1tM ANlcllll •11111t tt..Hwt••• ..... Offtw 11111 l111lo, l•1111v1rll Milli .. A4llr•111 P.O. l tt 7t0, t 2641 --LNIM t•Cfl: tit,,_, ........ CMtl --: -w..it .. , twte! ........ , ~I Jtll W .. I .. !Mt ,..,_,., S.11 (.._It; • M9t!~ I I Ctffllllf 11"1 I • • • •• f'f.ef.d Stripping Field hands strip bean fiel d between Bu1h1rd and Magnolia Streets in Founlain Valley. This field , south of Edinser Avenue, Is typical oflriost truck farming location s still found in lhe area -it'·' 1and· wiched between hou1lng developments. Area was once known 11 Southern California'• 11vegetable basket.'' ' .. . • For The Unusual • • I I Think Of Ted .von Hemert Thest unlqi.1• 1titct1 trt a r\ew lo'ok t f' th e Otd World from H1 nrtdon'1 Follo Nint collection, Oi,tr1tly cl 11i9n1d, yet lnt+•ly htr• moniou1. This differen ct 11 with Ted von H•mtrt, Inc. DEALERS l'oR: HENREoON -DREXEL -HERITAGE 7td 11111 "'-· -- NIWl'ORT llACH 1727 W•ttcliff Dr., 642·2050 OPIN fRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTEltlORS LAGUNA llACH 34J Nerth ,_ Hwy: 4'4 ,,., O~IN fRIDAY 'TIL 9 """ '"' ,... ...... 0...,. c..., ..... ,,,. PrefMtlOflal lnterlot 0.1l1nan AYlllabto-AID-.NSID ' \ I f I I r ,. • • • • Ne TNaY'• Flnal V9I:. 63, N0 •• 230, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PA"GES. ORANGE COUNTY, CACIFORNIA FRIDAY,.SEl'TEMIER 25, '1970 , . JIN CENTS • Hospital ReqtieSted UCI Seeks 350-bed ·Teaching . Facility · S~lutlng Their Sailors ·These Newport Harbor High School cheerleaders will 'be backing their football team Saturday night when · the Sailor' take on c1osstown rival Costa DAILY PILOT lllft l'Mt9 Mesa High at Davidson Field. Girls (from left) are Marly Moore, Jennie Farber, Sandy Tedesco,- Terry Amies and Kathy Kawamura. Ficker Corks ChamfHigne as Foes C~lebrate Insurance Agent Placed On r'fhree-year-Proltation Spetjal le Ille DAlf,Y PILOT 'NEWRORT, R. 1. _ Skipper Bill Ficker Imurance salesman Paul Farowich was ~.ht1 Intrepid crew bad their cbam-placed on · three year5' probation today pap on lee Thursday. for his part in i!sulng a $15,000 lif~ policy over the $15,000 he would have received on Bronson'1 dta!h to Bron&on's widow. • . By GEORGE LEIDAL hospital experience for medical 1tudents . --~CM-• o.11r..1ta.i.""'-----as well-as·compleJe medical faclliUa to 'ntt CaWornia C.Ollege of Medicine at the New p 0 rt hospital. serv~. area. UC Irvine will request approval of a 35().. ConstrucUon b scheduled to·besinrln Ju-- bed teaching hospital at Tue9day's ly, 1973 •. · . . meeting of the~ Comprehensive Health Dean Warren L. Bostick, sald the' PlaMing AuoclaUon of Orange County racillty would provide 245 medical· (CHPA). , surgical beds, 32 maternity; ff pediatric, Costing an estimated. $30.7 million, the and 22 psychiatric beds Jn, 282 single 1even-story hospital ·would occupy 14 rOoms, 30 two-bed wards and se•en·four-' acres of the UCI campils. It would &ive bed wards. Fighting Seen After Jordan Tells Peace Pact From WJrt Services The nine days of blood and bombard· ment were officially over toc18y in Jor .. dan 's ciVil war, but a noon report by guerrillas· accused Royal Army troops of attacking rebel hospital patients with machineguns and axes in the ravaged capital of Amman. · No confirmation cauld be made . but fears mounted in some quarters for the continued safety of 38 remaining airline hijacking hostag"es who may now ·be in militant Syria. Jordan's King Hussein and Palestinian guerrillai leader Yas.ir Arafat had earlier aMounced a peace pact and a team of Sudnese Army officers was asai&ned ac a police force, · Relief was expressed throu&hout the ~le J;;ast-ancl Amlrial-ln 101M qUarlers, 'while bliter A~b1 loyal to the rebel cau.se cried out in r11e. A crowd of 200 poured out Of DOOn prayers at Al Aq11 Mosque in Jeru1alem ancl charged thlOlllh llle.,nclenl clty'a winding streets. • u~ state ~w, approval ol ilie CHPA- IJ tieeos$ary In order for the projtct to qUailfy f0r goVernment fundln(. A C.OUege 1pokeaman ukf that the -. tied hospital will not provide all the 1,500, teaching beds required by the college, but would' bfing to the campus enough beds to suppcrt the teaclling needs. The col- lege \YOUld continue its relaUonthlp11 wltb other hospitals ln1 the community U... -(See HOSPITAL, Page I )• They thought t.My had the America's on a Corona-de! Mar man who is dying. Superior Court Judge Ronald eup•On Ice. Crookshank refused b> consider any other That paymeqt ~Jd have been made in the name ol Odenz' businesa under the type of insurance: arrangement authoriz· ed by Farowich. "KHI Hussein," they screamed, cbarg• Ing hls anny ii slaughtering their brothers In Amman and demanding 1 new revolution . · • ' J • · ' llAll.Y PILOT ...,; ...... POLl.~E TAKE i~VENTORY -A~1TE .t-CON,,SC0\1'ING GUNS, AMMO $91.-Thall Ol•acocl\, lnvutltl•tor Geot:t• .Wilson Ch.,:k·C•clie But-giddj Gretel II crewmen represen-sentence for the 34-year~ld Tustin man ting Australia ln the prestigious yachting who could have been sent to state prison even swilled Aussie beer as Ficker and for up to 20 years. his Iess-than,.merrY men kept their cham· Farowich was found guilty by a jury k d last Sept. 2 of charges of attempted pagne cor e · , gl'and theft, conspiracy to commit grand "!hey can't take this one away from theft and forgery . " w," Gretel JI skipper Jim Hardy He and Lawrence Odenz, 47, or 298.1 declared aftef' stealing deciding victory:_Java-Road,-€osta-Mesa0 were arrested from Intrepid in the final ~ yards to after .clothing store manager Murray keep the contest alive. Bronson was billed for the first payment (See DAILY PILOT Boating Editor on a $15,000 policy he had never applied Almon Lockabey's account of I.be race on for. Page 16) . ' It was learned that_ Odenz: w~o "That was a-.kauUful race .. Ver-y-well employed-Bronson at his Michael s Ud. done. I • share. four joy, you certainly store in Costa Mesa,, took the ~hysical for deserved it," Ficker told Hardy. Br~nson a~ter learning th~t his ,manager "We still have to do it three mart was suffering. from a terminal d.1se~se. times," Hardy: repli ed, well aware that Odenz admitted before Farow1ch s trtal no foreign yactlt ln the ttt year history of that he made arrangements for the the America'• Cup has won the series. issuance of the policy and then pleaded guilty to reduced charges of conspiracy. Newport Studies Business Tax Major Changes By L. ?t;'TER KRIEG Of Ille .,.itr Plitt ltlff • An lndicaµon,lhlit Newport Belch·may be oons1dering 1ifti8cant chances i~.lts Business Licena ilx proposal was 11.v.en too.y ·by Citf Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt. HW'lburt said the updated tax packaee will not be preteiied to the City Council Monday as oritinally scheduled. The ad· ministrative sllff,nee<h time to consid,.er objections that have tie'en ei:pressed dur- ing recent weeks." he explained. Odenz was fined $1 ,000 by Judge Crookshank, placed on probation for one year and summoned as a witness for the pr:o1ecution against Farowich. Odenz testified that ~e intended to hand Woman Asks $115,000 A Corona de! Mar woman who claims the Newport-Balboa Savings and Loan Association refuses to allow her .. to withdraw the $.1510!!0 She's hid on deposit since 1963 now wants to withdraw '1151000 .from her bankers. . Mn. Amanda Lloyd added 'UKl,000 In damages to her claim when she filed the lawsuit in Orange County Superior Court. She claims Jh~e Institution "acted with malice" in denyin1 her 1ccess '8 her funds. It was learned during the trial that Mrs. Bronson was never advlsed of-any 1uch arrangement. Winds flare Up; Temperature Too A Santa Ana wind blew out of the desert shortly afte!' 10 a.m. today, bring· ing hot., dry gusts sweeping across the Orange Coast. -- Officials at Orange County Airport rt-- ported they switched to the standard northea st 1akeoff pa.terns with tie coming of the winds. which have been 'blowing between 32 and 35 knots. Tower officials reported only minor problems created by the winds, 1lthough. they said an unusual amount of dust was being blown about. The temperature at noon today was 89 degrees. Thieves Tee Off At Country Club They proclaimed worse hata for Hussein than for · Israel. Fear1 ror the lives and safety of unac- counted-for airline hijacking hostages lessened 1 om e w h a t , when King Hussein's troops freed 15 of the Mat 1:;11) a.m. (POT), found in cannon-raked Am· man. None were...Ame1lcan._ ~ They were reported to be well and the hunt continued for 39 others -mostly Americans -~still missing, while vanish- ed Jordanian rime Minister Mohammed Daoud tJ.tmed p. safely in_Cairo_. Foul play was feared Thursday when Daoud -who resigned his position - disappeared from· the Nile Hilton Hotel, but he told agents who traced him . he simply wanted to be alone. Developments in the Jordan civil wsr and the international crlsi11 it provoked appeared to be 1lowing today, b1.1t all con· cerned were keeping a close eye on the situation. Israeli leaders expressed confidence that1it will be quiet for a while, even as Arabs clamored for new war or squabbled among their own political factions. Relief efforts by the International Red Cross and its Arab counterpart, the Red Crescent, wer.e stepped up as the plight of thousands of war victims intensified. F~y W. Tunnell .,,,as out at the Mesa ~abs from the occupied west bank of Verde eowrtry·Club Thursday and loat 11 the Jordan drove trucks carrying canned 1olf balls. ~ food -labels identifying them as Israeli· Costa Mesa poJJce.aaid'that wouldn't be made torn off -rolled in and will carry too bad for a poor day on the linkl, but wounded women, children·and old people Tunnell, of 274. E. 15th St., said they •-ere out. • in his golf bag. Herbert G. Klein, White house com· So was a .full set of irons and four munication1 director, said Loday ln M'Ooda, totaling ~ In value, when a thief Frankfurt, Germany that. American swiped them out of_ i golf course equip-response to the Jordan crlsil bu been ment room. {See JORDAN, Pace I) He said a second reason for the delay l! 1 request by key oUicials of the chamber of commerce who will not be able lo al· tend the Monday afternoon 11tudy session. Kitten Fir·m Under ·Fire , The Newpoi:t Harbor Chamber of Com-mer~ playe& a key role In. draf~lnr the new licensi ng structure, which will more than doub~•' the current $225.000 in revenues the brings It. , Under the posal, whichl'1he chamber Ne wport 8usiness 'Pur-rr·mit' May Be Hard to Get ' ' . . has said It y doe111.'t1llie, the-pment A p~studlo today .hu·tiet!n fU'l)' ei:· '21 flat foe wllo\ld ~re~ by a """'' pase<1 lo the fact · ihat Ill ' tt..:.re In' of cmnplei: ~i'S in ,am.punts depend· Newport Beach may be nearly as brit.Lu IOI on tht! IYJ!l•and voW--ol.buslnea a firm --· !he--.1Ure o! Its modeb. . , . The chamber tlas recommeoc!ed s\mp)y Compounding-it.. -~bles-over-"'1-(!ila· Increasing the nat fee to $40 or &SO an-tion for opening without a permit earlier nually, but hU reluctantly endorsed the this week, Kl(ten Pntductk>nl Thursday classification 11Ctem ''as a l1sl rtlorl." was UifOWn out er urJ:snei't .DffVi of .. The Newport HRrbor-Costa-MCfla Board • nee Nite. 1-11---•of Re1llon hal Ll)en.Lstand.J.1 tan 'IJ!e ciled operalor, 'Mary F. Wagntr 31. Increase. of Placentii, sumriiarized. the plight of In announclnf the delay lo da y, her business venture most aptly lod11y Hurlburt told council me:mben th1t both when she said she flrst+thnught the office chamber Prtskteht Charles R. CurreY she had rented was In Sant• Ana, not and Robert McCurdy, chairman of the Newport Beach. chamber'• Buslne&S License Committee, "J thoiJght I was In Sa nta Ana untif I , .. UCENSE, P11< went lo the Sheriff'• ,Offlee lo obtain ~ pennll! and tho·depuly:lllld0'Hey, I think you're tn Newport Beach." .Miss Wagner was not available thit momq,g tQ..£9mment oo ~ plins for ,the future or her Kitten PTOOucOons StUclio. • The evictiorf notwithstanding, chances of Lbe studio ever opening in Newport Beach were growing slimmer by the day. Upon receipt of the application for a business license, the city moved im· meriiat~lI o ~ pr!;p;a.ta..li.on of • "emergency ordinance" that would either bao or strictly regulate such studios. There Is noUilng on the books now that would effectively keep.1Uch an operation out or town'.. Mls.s Wagner, meanwhile, had vowed the legitimacy of ber ~~"""a1yin1 0 We just want 1 chance to prove that we·r~ not like aome other businesses police have had trouble wllh In Loa Angeles and Hollywood." Prior to her arrest Tuesday •. Miss1 Wagner had reporiedly, delalled the pro- cedures ol h<r lludto lo a Newport Police department undercover agent. , She allegedly told him that the studio had 10 models available to b e pholographed.ln the -._"in any poa1. lion" for a ret of $25 pet hoor. A pub.lie M•ring on·KiUen Productiom' request for a license had been scheduled for Mopday at 7:30 p.m. in City Hall hefQre lbe City Council. I It ls probable the hearing will now he. callcelli<I. • · l , ... ',. Police Find .Weapons ~ --- Cache in Costa ~Mesa By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ,... o.llY ,,~ ,,.., Fetieral authorit.les tOday entered tHe case of a cache of military weapons ind explosives -plus instructions -for sabotag.e -uncovered accidentally Thur9day night by Colt.a . Mua police checking out a false alarm. A piir,of.. teenagers was .arrested on 11tate charges of j>ossenion of Illegal firearms, while Trea1ury Department agents w~re en route today to. determine if a federal offense was committed. Police were reluctant b> speculate on any possible COMecUon with radical political f1'cUons u.ntll each of ta, 'feapbns. -including automatic rifles . ·in·d machineguna -.,,,, c:becked .af.ld 'the ropedK questioned: . · They wer• Jdentified as David B. McLaughlin, • 19, ahd Doul!•• M. Langev.in, ·19, both of tM Cecil-Plice, lbe · house where the arsenal was confiscated. "Some of the ltema that are .illepl to possess appear to be dea~t!Vated," U• plained Detective Lt. Harold Fischer. He said a bomb dlsgosal squad 'from El· Toro Marine Corps Air Station was .called to.headquarters this morni ng when hand grenadea we re diac:overed in •one con· fiscated carton. , "We don't know If they're live," Lt. Fischer said. , "But we do have ammunition bo1ea ' conlainln& 101T1e apent and 110nte live rounds, plus numerous pampbletl on bombs and booby b'1pa,'' he.continued. '-rh•~'• what 1C1re1 us." U. Fischer Bild cl!emfcal t'Olllpoundl commonly Uled In maldnc bombt -In comblnaUOn With ,other readlly 1V1Uable iqreillenlJ -wtra tann lrom the <;tCil Place r!sidenee. He Aid McLaugblln l~ted 'hiJ . oc- cupation as a headWllter and Lingevin, who was not preatnt whe:n the w!apl)RI were-discovered, ls 1n auto mechlhiC. The two auspectl apparently. have no direct military connection In Which they might have obtained the weapon1, he ad- ded . Be1idts the·mllltary weapons, Which ln-· eluded a mortar launching device a~ pearlna lo be Ja-made, pollce.aei.>-, . . . ed an infrarod lllipmcnpe uae•M•·plck ou~victlina·in total darknet · · · "Numerous hand ·Weapons and rinea which appear On the surface to bt ~ were also pi~ up," uld Ll Fiacber. ·The dillcoVery··began1ah6rUY befOre 10 p.m., 1when "in emergency callbox bi tbe .. !!JO bloclt of Cecil Place went off.al pol1ca headquarters'. . Officers Gene Norden and Dave, Haya, of the department'• felony Wtit, were tiearby to-they responded and' atopped' a youth later determined lo he McLauaJ>lln Jor queationing. · "He admllled louchlnf lhe bor, bdt 1aid he didn't tel lt off,"· Lt. Filcbe:r ts· lalned, addblg that he carried m penonaMdentilicallon at that pNll., 11Tbe wbjttt volunttered to go to b1I •home and let IOi'ne,"·.~d ·Lt. l"ild.r. Ceua I Weadaer Gusty Santa Ana. Wind.I will blow up a atorm over the. wee.keDCf, aendiflg · the cOastAI temperaturt1 ' 1booting toward the IO mark. The monilnp. will aUer foe, as UIUl1.. INSIDE TOlllAY · . ' "'Wt wanttd to do tome Ching jor--our miallbon," iaid a Lo,.. guM Hill& .coaiplf toho havt do- Mtt<f $500,000 lo 1/14 MIO SIJd4l<bd<IL Comm•nll~ HOflii. tel. Thtir 1torv iJ in todor'• W ttkf~r, Paae 25.. • ....... •, '' ·t""'""41 1 Cl!edl .... U• ' c........ 11 .. _,.. n ._ n 0.---• -. • ...,let ,,.. ' ,._. 1 .. 11 -.. .....~. 11 ...... . ""'"'" &. ....... t ,. -· ... --.. .. ....., ..... --. """"""' "'" ........ ,.,... ti --SIM• ......... II ·-. ---. .............. 11-11 .... Nolwl ... ........ .... l I llAll.Y l'ILOT ,,,,.,,.,... jE ' •• • • .< Riverside Boys ,. • l l!,odol ID tk DAILY PILOT : 1 RIVERSm! ·-Ricky Leamon Was lS : .. ·Tbursdly and hls sisttr 1ave him a foot. ball that bounced over the backyard · fence while he and two buddies wert . 'pualn& It. ' . He and Bobby Ewini and David 1 'erawtord, alao 13, wtnt into the nei&hbor· Ing yar<I and found the football, but they ' ··also foQnd a box of 11 military fragmen- "tation grenades. The foothill and the carton were both "'. ln°10mt shrubbery. ' -Juat e11ctly •hat happened from that ' • point may never be known -up until the • 'blast that shattered every window in the .,. Lumcin bom• T but iiitborlties can · lpeculate. I ' Ricky Leamon WU killed-on bis birth-..,. 'day. blown. to bits. I Bobby Ewinl WtS .killed in the Amt in- . · ·atant, blown to bits. · "They were just torn apart/' uld one . :Newport Council Eyes Excursion ::·vessel's Permit ~ . ' . . A staff report recommending the ,ran- -• ~ of 1 permit to the Pavilion Queen · =;)M a Jetter from the excursion boat'• · ·inain i:ompeUtor recommendinc •&•inst ; :it will be bdO<l! the Newport Beadl City :. 'Caw>cll M(inday rugbt. -" Georl• Dawes, Harbor and Tidelands adm.lnlltrator, in a memo to the council ieleued today, urges· approval ol the · · uceme, but ncommenda a loll( lilt fll · · cond1Uqo1 that lhould accompany the ac- tion. " A P,b!lc fieailng on the roqueo1 by Davey's Locker, Inc., for a .. Harbor •'permit .to operate the aiaI>Hfflng and · 'entertainment bolt will be c;onducted by the council M"'day al 7,311 p.m. 'In City ila11. · Tht boa( has drawn mixed rucUons from the community durinC its 90-day trial operaUoo, which uplru early nm . Month. The late•l public opposition to the • ~!Ouetft came Thursday ·in a letter fro~ • 1he pnsldenl «.the.Fun Zone Boal Com-"~ny, whldl•operates three •l&h1'aeeinl 11oall Jn Newport llaJbor. - · • Dal Omttenberg, wrilinl the city coun- cil, said he feels that the cruises bis )oats provide "aie more than adequltelY sup-plYina'.~ IK llftd for such cnalaea ll'Olllld the bay. . . Pointing out that the Fun Zoae Boat · ~.Company boat operate under Public Utilities Commission permit.!, Gret· , tenberg 1aid his company's newest boat, , -the Queeen of Balboa. la available for private chaf\er~. • .. The Pavi!ion Queen is primarily a charter craft. while Fun Zone boat.! sell • :.tickets for cruises to the public on a daily . '"IChedule. •, • Da"lll'.:!. ln recommending approval of _ _,__the P.Pilion Queen~s.permit, auuests the council impose a series of six provisos. The first would deal with boat route limits, while (lthers place condilioi:is on the craft's sound amplification system, its handling of litter and carbage and technical stipulations. Marriage Counselor Steals Wife, Sued CLEVE!.AND (UPI) - A 1uburban Qeveland man claims hiJ marriage ',counselM advised him to divorce his wife -~ so the marriage counselor could marry her himself. Dean Svec of ·Bedtord made the ac· cusaUon in a $800,000 conspiracy suit filed _. . in country court against Richard Stover Of Suburban Parma and Barbara Stover. ·the former Mrs. Svec. -" ' ' . .. . ' " DAILY PILOT C•ANCJI COAIT l"Ull.ISHING COM'ANY le~rf N. We.4 l\e1111tt ketwil ...... 1\tt1ff A. Mur,hi~• ,,,. ....... ,~- H..,.n .._.Office 2211 W11t 1.11 .. , leul•••AI M1lll111 Atltlrt1.: '·O: I•• 1111, tt••1 --C.tt M-: la Wllf .. , StrlM L ...... llltd>: m ....... ,........,. Hill'lt ..... IM lttol: 17'1J lftdl • ..,....., .. ... c-= .. Nerffl ., ~ .... . ·~L ' sickened Rivers.ide County Sheriff's depu- ty. Davld Crawford wu terribly mutilated and is in el"lremely critical condition to- day followln& boun of aurgery. Mt. and Mrs. Jerry Prim,. in whole' yard tbe M2I gren.df:I were found, were qutStioned about We&il posset1im!: of the military weaport!. They refused to discuss the matt.er. From P .. e I JORDAN •.. aimed al avoldln& ln1"ven- 1n an tntervW:w · with the' American Forca Radio network hen!, Klein aaid the· Pielldeilt corefully explored all con- tingencies and when fMces were alerted It WU baled 00 the hope that they would not be Uled. . "But you must be prepared for the wont· u well."· he added. "It was fortunate we didn't have to use the f(ll'ce! ... A beefed-up U.S. Sixth Fleet still 1teamed along in the Mediterranean only 150 milu from the critical area, ill sh.ipS, plant1 and men alerted two weeks ago when the tbhe ,biJackinp occurred. Tbe 5ovlel Union's potent Medit.r· raneln squadron .Wmed aloni polit"1y but determinedly In Ila wake. "You could aay we share a common in· Weal In what the other guy II doiJI&," remarked Rear Admiral Roa•• Spreen. Israel upects quiet along ill borders with Syria and Jordan, at Jeaat for a while. But millLtry aoureea in Tel Aviv said today it i1 ready to act if the suer· rillu decide to 1witch their attacb from Jordan to JJrael Tbe _,,.. Aid Palestinian guerrillaJ IUffered up to :111,tltlO caaua!Uea In fl&htini with the J~ army In the put nine days. In adclJUon, they aald, Syria !oat between 75 and 100 Soviet-built T54 and T5$ tub -almost 12 percent oCtlielr armor -as wtll as 170 military transport veblclea in the batilea in northern Jordan. Tbe heavy 1 ..... , according to the Isratll miUtary IOUrCU, will guarantee quiet, at lwt for aeveral weeb. Leaden differed in their opinions, "Wilh Defense Minister MOlhe Dayan saying t.he Jardin civil war wu dying .,t. an;d none <II it. ~pals wants more. "I hope the Kihg manages to give them a aevere beailn1," said Dayan. "I am on ~ aide of the kin& and not on the side of the alternative." Tbe altmiailv> would be lm•ll ·In- tervention and Deputy Premier Y!gal Allon said In a hard-line Meet the Pras interview Huaein may oow be in worse trouble. Dipl6matic sources aay Allon favored immediate llraeU Intervention, to 1ave Hussein'• government. "There is no more room for King Hussein in Jordan," a spokesman ror the Palestinian guerrillas declared today. Kama] Nasser, spokesman fer the Cen· tral Committee of the Palestinian Libera· tion Organization. made·the statement--at- • news conference a few minutes before Amman -radio announced a ceaae-fire- agreement between the king and Yasir Arafat, the head of the committee. Nasser aocus"'1 Hussein of being "directly responsibJe for the massacrt" in Jordan. "We shall liquiC!ite the traitors who shed the blood of our people," Nasser ad· ded, promisina hey will be hounded to the corners of the earth. From Page 1 HOSPITAL •. : eluding the Orange County Medical Center, OC Children's Hospilal, Hoag According to the application to the CHPA, the University (If CaJifornia Regents will stand behind the fundin1 of the facility, althou&h C&lifornia College of Medicine trustees will provide funds from the sale of the former private medical school's downtown Los Angeles site .. Al mueh 11 35 percent of the hosoital's 41Kl,OOO gross square foolaae wfu. be devoted to multi-purpose rOOIJl.'I satis- fying the classroom needs of i teaching hospital. The hospital facllily would be an ad· dilion to the medical college campus distinct from a planned $28 million medical sciences building. Development of that classroom com- plex ha! been held up by the defeat of ProposiUon One on the June primary election ballot, Federal funds totalling •14.7 million await approval of the state share • If .tpproved by the CHPA and the University Regents allocated fund!, the combination of state funds and bonds , private funding and the college's property ule proceeds will provide a basis for matchinc sranta from othtt aources in- cludln& the U.S. Public Health Servi<:o Diviaion of Ph)'llcian Manpower, and the OepL of Health, Education and Welfare. Tbe buic ~a to be aerved by the hospital covm <;:orona del Mar up the Eut BluU of Newport's Back Bay, to the san Diego Freeway, east to El Toro Marine Carpi Air Station and includln1 Mission Viejo. Lelsun World and the area to the coa1t jUlt north of LaJUnl Beach. The 3'0-bed facility would nqulrt a full Um.e f1cu.Jty and teaching staff of 92 of which IO woold be In medical clinical pooition•. Another 61 part lime l1culty positions, I! full time and five port Um• mwdl poaltionl,would be required. ' OAIL.Y ,IL.OT 11.it ''"'- Litell$es . . Ti kle the . C .~ Prisoners SAC!tAli!tN'i'O '<UPll ....: lnmi!e1 at lhe Ucen!e plate factory at Folsom State Prison may get a chuckle stampin1 out some of the new personalized license plates. For ei:amp1e, then ina~· be a fe~ grins when they get the order from one wom&1li who wants JKT·MB. ' A State Motor Vehicles Department (DMV) spokesman said the JKT stood for her initials. He did not know about the 3Ul,' but ; the convicts will probab1y hazard a guess or two. • "lf she wants to advertise, it's all right with us," he said. · And· the priseners ·may· &~l . a litUe , . thir.sty wbcr!. they stamp out the audsy ~ __..QM~~J!>r f!AMM~ _ _ • ~ _ Tfie ~ DMV 1pokesm1• aaid 'n!.ursday · tbal since the new personalized licen.Je .program went into effect a mmtb ago hiJ apncy haa received some 4,500 requests. , Gov. Ronald Reagan signed the blll ,, pennittlng t~ plates for an additional ~ with · ,the i:evenue · gojng (or im· provement of· C-lifornia's ecolol)'.. ·· OMV deputy registrar Elmer Brown aald that once the plates start hitting the 7 PULLS OUT 01" RACI. Leque C1Mllcl1tl GrM"h I • '. I • ' ' I Green St~ps _Out Of Cities ;teag.;ie President Race ' · street! "the idea will be even better ~ • adv,,-tiscd" and his · agency' should be Hlintington Beach Iuncllman Jack flooded with reqiiests. , Green baa quit the-ric for· president of The JTl(lst popular request, he said, was the Orange County Lea e of Cities. for PEACE. Gre.en announced this morning he The one wto gets the plate will be would not seek rt • election to the Ferry Commenaorated • decided at a drawing next month. president's post b;ecabse ·at 'Jeast eight Most car (IWners want letters spelling cities were opposed to him succeeding ···out their names. , himself in office. , It Was a family affair Thursday when the Newport Beach Historical Society unveiled its placque marking the Balboa Island Ferry as a local historical monllrnent~ On hand for. the Balboa Island ceremony were (from left)° Barton Bf:ek. Seymour· Beek, Allan Beek _arid Mrs. Carroll Beek, the sons and widow of the late Jo·s~ph AJ.18:11 ~eek. Ferry started in 1909 and the Beek faJajl)'. operated it since·1922. But, Brown said, some have a penchant ' The Huntington Beacll. C<iullcifinai:i .fac- for the bizarre. . ed a. ruooff Oct. 8 again!t ~~iJJl. qoun- ·For example, one request from cilman Ralph Clark. Tbe iwo.~eri.tied 7.7 Southern 'California · wu for BRUIN. when the U!ague of Citlea:met ~-10. B . Green baa served this y~ar ·aa F.~t · · rawn said he presumed this waa frcm a and Clark u vice N'MlideJitof the Or•.,«e rah-rah ·UCLA student. · r· -. -Another wanted.BEAR. A University of Coupty League of Cities. 1'lbe feague bu C I"·-• · 25 members lit the count1.: . " ·: · a umuia, Berkeley, student? The Wbil elimlna. tin ":..:. •• 11 ~ u.~ Adjacent Cities Asked · registrar aid he did not know. e . I lUU~ ;':'~.we · There were also req1:1ests for BANJO, "' ract!, Grten also ~ked tar noml,DltJOftl to DERB·Y, SMILE, MINUS l, VIP, EGO, be reopened,.so cities \\'OUld h,ave ~or~ ·MR BUG and GIDGET. than one man to choose: from for .pr.est· Brown said offensive requests would be d~~lt. uld th t · t' b About City of Irvine rejected. · wo urge a nom1na 1ona e again opened on Oct. 8," Green said. From Page I "·But it should be ·notj!d that during the period in which the' rtlminating CC1m· mittee was active, no one came forward to suggest names for cort!ideration." Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and other towns surrounding the proposed City of Jrvine have been asked for formal com· ment on its incorporation plans by the t.ocal • Aaency FOrmatlon •commission. Jn memoranda to all area cities, the . · LAFC said it requests "your report on the advisability, in terms of general pub-- lie Interest," of the incorpo~ration. The request is routine, Newwrt Beach city officials said. They ·also pointed oot that the city council ls seeking a meeting of officials of surrounding ctlmmun ities, including Costa Mesa, Santa Ana and Tustin, to discuss the incorporation bid by Irvine residents. The bclundaries cited in the fonnal ap- plication will likely be the major aspect U.S. Naq-Joins In Newport Raid; Three Arrested Three Newport Beach men arrested after Office of Naval Intelligence agents and Newport Beach police allegedly found 180 pounds of marijuana in their apartment have been indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury on drug charges. District Attorney Cecil Hicks got the panel's approval Thuisday to a complaint charging William Archie Collins, 21, Glen Warren Winnor, 22, and Barry Louis Rigimbal . 22, all of 1985 Sherington Place, with possession with Intent to sell and tra~portlrig of rnarijuan~. Investigators said the trio used the "swinging singles" apartment as the headquarters for a thriving drug sale business which included several contacts and cllents beyond the Oran&e C.Ounty line. ·- -Newport Police Check Gun Theft Newport Beach police today are ln- vestigaUn1 the burglary of 10 guns valued at $1.250 from a Baycrest home Thursday. The shotguns and rifles were taken from a case al the home of James R. Bradley, 1427 Priscilla Lane, between the hours of 11 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Bradley told police his wife Jocked the house when she left in the mornint1 and he discovered the burglary when he re· turned In the afternoon. Police said the thief slipped the lock on the rear door and used a claw hammer to pry open the locked doors of the ·run case In the Uvlngoom. The burglar also too'k a list Qr the guns' 1e.rial numbers which Bradley kept in the ca!e. Strike Authorized to come in for criticism by adjoining CC1mmunities. A map submitted with the application by the Council of Communi- ties of Jrvin e included . among other things, Orange County Airport. Earlier, Irvin~ interests had indicated· tPe .airpor~_would no'l l;>e inCluded :Within the requested city limits. · The proposed bclundaries also include the controversial 177-acre Collins Radio Company property. 1 \ This tract already has :received I;AFC approval for annexation · to Newport Beach. Body of Woman Washes Ashore · Decomposed fr:om days pi the -sea. the body of a woman washed ashore aQ<iut noon-today-neat...Pacific_Coast_Highw ay _ and El Paseo in Laguna Beach. Authorities said it was difficult to de- termine how long the victim had been in the ocean due to the condition of the corpse.' Orange County Coroner's deputies picked up the remains and were to be· ' gin an investigation into . the woman's identity and the cause of death. LICENSE ... Clark. Green's on1y opponent, is aJgo a candidate for Supervisor in the 4th requested a dela y beCause they will l>oth District. He faces a runoff Nov. a.with be oul of town Monday. Gordon Bishop for the supervisor '• pogt He. al so said a postpQnement will give to succeed William Hirstein. the staff additiOiiil t iiiie --"to refine . lf Clafk is named ·President of the 'fnrther. the: business; ·license ."ORllu.nce League of Cities, tben is elected a oounty ~nd staff report· in order t:hat it cin more supervisor, he would have to quit ..Jtis thoroughly and , equitably reflect the League post in January.. : desired objectJv.es reasonably consistent . Gree,n said he was quitting the · raCf: with CC1mmunity sen time~ as , to . the because Garden Grove and seven other various formulas proposed to be.used for , . cities bad expressed dissatisfaction witb the .revise$! business liceme or.dlnance." the League's policy of allowing officers to Besid~s the chamber and the realty 1erve CC1nsecutive terms. board, a number of individual businesses have voiced strong protests" (Iver pro- visions In tht! new plan. . Among these are a number of CorOna de! Mar retail merchanfj, 1 major grocery store and an owner of small apartment building, all Of whom claim the ta:x would be unfair to businesses ol their type. Woman Hangs Self STOCKTON (UPI) -Leung Shee Ng, RB, complained to her daugh.ter that her dentures did not fit and she "had no reason to live if I don't have gOOd teeth." The woman's body was found hangina: from a rafter Thursday. Deputy Hears Holdup Orders over .Phone NEW ORLEANS (AP j -Criminal Deputy Sheriff Charles Angle. bad just telephoned his wile. a furniture store Cashier:-Thursday when J;e overheard a gunman -ordtt everyone in the stoI-e to stand against the wall., 'IJle telepQone clicked off. Angle ran to his police car and radioed lluthorities that a holdup was in. progress. Seconds liter police arriv~d. arrested two men fleeing from the scene and charged them' with armed robbery. For The Unusual .... Think Of Ted von Hemert Th•~• un1qu• pi•Ct1 1rt a ruiw look .•t the Old World from • H•nredon'1 Folio Nin• collection. Oiv•rsely cfe1 iqn•d, yet l11at•ly har· mon iou1. Th i• difftrtnc.• i1 'tolith T.d VOi\ Htmtrt, Inc. • DEALERS FOR.: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE 7td 11111 . " NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wutcllff Dr. 642·2050 OPIN FRIDAY .'TIL 9 INTEllOIS ,, ..... IMal lrttwlw D,oaltr>on A .. naw.....AID-HSID LAGUNA llACH Ml North Coatt Hwy. 4'4"551 OPEN PRIDAY 'T!L t ..... , .............. C.., .... 1H1 NEW YORK (AP) -Member& of the American Newsptper Guild at the New York Times ha ve voted 1,143 to 79 to 1uthorlte. guild officers to call a strike again.st the paper. No deadllne wu aet j __ _::~~~~~!!!!~~~~!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:__ for •a strike. ' I' A. <:nu First . Cl1Stro Returns . . .. ·/. . . . Fo-,,,r You~.Sought. in 'Radical' Ban1'.Hoklup Hijack Suspect ' MIAMI (UPI) L R~ J. Labadie, a hwky blond ex· aoldier, has become the first airplane hijack .._i-... •d directly to the United States by the CUban govern- ment. Labadie anived in Miami Thui'!d&y aboard one ol the twice-dally Cuban r e f u gee flights from Varadero, Cuba, accomp;mled by a Deputy U.S. manhll and a Publlc Health Service Doctor. I H~wu ordered held in Dade County Jan ... ~.ooo bond at a proliminary bearing pending a dedsion on tnm.ferrj.ng him to Soa&b Bend, Ind., where be "" is under tndlctment ror the Aug. 24 hi]acldng of a Trans World Airlines (TWA) l•L Tha 74'1 was dim1od lrom a Chicago.Pbillldelphia 11 l I h t and forced to fiy to Havana wilh 8' penoni aboard. A man whO idclilied blmaell as "Caplain Geor!le" tllrealened to' have the pWie hlow!i up by an accomplice with a bomb in the rear of the passenaer leC'" tion. When the plane arrived in Hav-only the hijacker got .,_ off. He later was Jdentified as Labadie, who was reported on_ leave from an Army hospital in Valley Forge, Pa. B05TON (AP) -Police o1> --wuraots Wednuday fer the arrest of two men and two yoong WOOien, charging them with gunning down a policeman durir:lg a $21,000 ' bank holdup Wednesday. The city's po 11 c e com- missioner to.-mecJ the ldlling the act of a "darro.n radical group." A fifth man wu captured Wednesday night and charged with murder in Ut&"robbery, which police lajd" WU filmed by cameras in·the bank. Boston P.olice Commissioner Edmund L. Mcliamara told a news conference that the dead policeman, W a 1 t er A. Schroeder, was the victim of "a damn radical and a damn revohrtionlry" group. QuestJoned,McNamara s~d he didn't have any "documen- tative-•vidence·bat when a l!raDd_els University In nwby In San Diego. Calif., in Jiii, a~ 'l'baradly nllh~ Waltham last June, a n d -was ...,leoctd to U )'<lt1I In and rtparted rinding two Katherine A. Power, 20, Or Mas&achuseUs atate priDI tn rifles. a q1a11tity of Int' Denver, Colo., a member of 196& for a.rmed robbery and m'urlittoft and other artlclea. ' . . the semor class at Brandeis. assault, police uJd. 111eY takl the apartment Boston police meanwhile, was-that of Katherine Power. ! Tha two mcp-.Ought by police armed with a aeardl warTID~ one ol the two girls llOlllht Jn >Ver< identilied as Stanl•Y R. forced the door of a Back Bay the robbery and alaying. ~nd, 25, of Cambridge, al---------'----------~ special student at Brandeis, SPECIAL PURCHASE ' , ~ and William Gilday, 41, or1 __ Amesbury. Arrested Wednesday night was~ Robert Valeri, 21, of Somerville, idenWied u ·a stu- l'IAIL •UT SnmtlTIC ENAMEL POI. Pl.OATS • DOCIS dent at Northeastern Unlv'ersi-1._ _________________ _, ty in Bos_ton. Ir-"'""---MOBIL HOME OWNERS ----.. Meanwhile, Miss 5axbe's group springs up from oiir col· !allier,' Eliot. c.iniacted at hi< Kool k. ap -$.,40 leges and robs banks, it's home in Albany, said he revolutionary." believed his da;.iihter was e.t.L Named In the warrants were mistakenly identified. H~ said ROOF COATING she bad lost her dr1ver's two women. Susan Saxbe, 20, license two months ago and ci Albany, N.Y:, a griduite oc--tfiifllibelleveaSonie:One imut have found it. ,Bond Rock--for Gravel Landscaping Heat Wave Continues In East His return on one of the airlilt.JnlerDatiooal lll g.h_tl· spoNOred hy the u .s. goven> ment for relatives of Cuban uiles in the Unit.<! States marked the fll'SI time that a hijack suspect has been hand- ed over to U.S. officials by lhe Q.iban government, although others have returned through Hemophiliac Gaining Saxbe said his daughter, a magna cum taude graduate ofr._ _________________ ,., Braodeis last June, went to,~-----I FOOT ROLLING·--•--• Oregon Sepl 1 and planned to rr By United Press lnlematioaal Sweltering weather stagnated over much of the East today, closing out a fret- ful week for power suppliers with mere record-stretching temperatures. Prospects fur major relief from the hot and humid weather durini the weekend were slight. The affected areas ranged 1 from uprt.ate New Y<ri: to..tbi Carolinas and into W..tem PitmsylvanJL 'Ibere were no intentional electricity cu~s ~ utilities 'I'hunlday, alttbugh voltage redudions, , ..... a11y 5 per- cent. 'ftre common through· out the area. Public cooprera· tion tfiroughout. this week's heat wave has been credited with averting a major black- oul Temperatures of 85 to 90 were forecast for the weekend. 'Ille -,,,....u·s listed avenge tempa"atures for mmt of the Ealt during late September ""' in the !Os. 'rile tempeir ature In Pblladdphia '"'1jnday was 95 ~ a nciml for the thinl etraight day. :rYork City equalled its rd ol 89 degrees. 'Ille beat .... the """""' of ijiocomlorl ·~ penpiring complaints ev rywhere, particularly in the cities. In New York, electricity ebortpges ha e been a con- cern all suruner. many H.ysc:rapers llU'1led off cor· ridor ligtting to cooserve power. Som~ buildings reduc- ed elevator wvice. Canada. Ul'I Tt ........ State Department spokes-SUSPECT RETURNS man Robert J. McCJoskey told Rollort J, Lllbodio reporters in Wullington the--------- CUban government contacted the United States through the ·Swiss Embassy TUesday and agn!eti to return Labadie. A deputy marshal flew 1? V~a­ dero airport trcm Mianu on the health service plane, ar- rest.cl Labadie and returned with him in a plane fUll of. re- fugees. Conferees OK 2 New ABM Sites WASHINGTON (AP) -A $19.94>illion military purchas- ing bill including two new sites for the Safeguard antiballistic missile system has been ap- proved by a Senate-House con- ference. The agreement. subject to approval of bot.h houses before going to President Nixon, is $1 billion under the 'Nixon budgi!t. The ABM system, a subject of Senate debate · for two years, will be ex~ to four Jocations. But the conference1 accepted the Senate's elimina- tion of funds to begin deploy- ment or a Chinese-oriented area defense system. The conference restored $700 million which had been cut by the Senate. The House version carried $20.5 billion, about $100 million less than the Pentagon asked. Balloonists Still Lost In Atlantic 'NEW YORK (UPI) -A Coast Guard 1pote1man reported tOday it has Do idea what chances for survival are for the three balloonists mis- sing in the North AUantic since Monday. Two U.S. Coast Guar-d cut· ters, 11 American planes and one Canadian plane are Jn- volved in the search of 50,000 miles. The Coast Guard said it would coritinue the aearch at Jeast through today. The search was hampettd Thursday by fog that reduced the visibility to virtually nothing. The missing persons In- cluded Rodney Andmon. D, a New York commodities broker, his actress wife, Pamela Brown. 28. and Britilh balloon pilot Ma I co Im Brighton, 32. They were launched Sunday from Loni Island in an attempt to com- plete the first balloon journey in history. 'Ibey last were heard from soulh of Cape Race, Newfoundland, Monday night when a storm forced · them to gplash down. Q -11-1'-'E' IUNDAYL w= -a1.D-IUNDA'I'. 2-5 . . 12-5 IANOS ORGANS DIAl .. IOll: .A IMOMAI OllO.un -TAMMIA -KOMLm c• ur-. flAHOI C1lonl MOdtl•, •pl-& -NIW ••• USED ••• FlOOlt MODB.s. Meny otyleJ, _. wflil lhylllol & larphoMt • ' • ,_ -........ -Including- ~~ .. ~--···-· '250 ---~ ........ ,_ 11995 ............ r.-.............. . --1:"'-...:t=::. ......... .,.,; ~795 11IOMA\I OltOANI -ll.OOll MODIU __ ._.,_._., UAA l•I I la ..... _,.._ '-L W "9 .• ~...,., l.t!.., .. ..,..,..,..,.., ... ..,IAH .. l'ltl::MS::'"'..,";:~~~~~~ .-90 DAJ WM MUllCIAJll IPICIAL .-rt& ftr... ..... .............. ~ DBJYllT C: ..... .., T ..... .. TUDf.INS, -· 11795 Of COUllSI -DAILT llM • lllOAJ 'Tl. 9 • SUlllAYI 11.1 llnli-t~" ....... c.... ... 1 How 1 Sttdt "-lldo II Rodr • SEA'!TLE, Waah. (UPI) - Carl Fletcher, 39, a high xbool teacher, was reported in "satisfactory" condition t~ day from a dangerous opera· tion wich required 1,000 pints or blood. He bad an artificial hip joint jnserted Thursday by doctors at Swedish Hospital, who said he would have died within a year without it. But Fletcher al4o is a hamopblitac, which..llleans bla \VOrk there for a year. Jn Denver; Mri.-Winfield S. Power, mother of the Power girt, said her daughter "had PL.ATFORM-- LADDER blood does not clot. More than 1,200 students at Ballard High School promised to give blood in an effort to save his life. From the donated blood, doctors will extract t i n y amounts of a clotting protein called cryo precipitate. been out of contact with the ., • family (or a long time." She l._ ________ ._ ________ ,._;.._ declined further commenl Police said Gilday was paroled from state prison after serving part of a 10.12 year prison term imposed for armed robbery. Police said Valeri served a state priaon term for burglary in 1966. ---------.... Buy Locally and Save WALKER PAINT WORKS 116 W. 16th St., Costa Mou 642-5776 The mass donation to save the popular teacher's li(e came art.er Student B o d y President George Guy, 17. Tuesday called an assembly of the school's ~750 studenls. Bond, convicted of car theft ' ---IMkUB.EmlC IATCHlllB HI SPEED DIYER ID -lllllllG ••• -flt --Jlllll' --... --Oii """"WI, ... lltll7.~l'llDS C'll:t.!-eotnklts- -n ""'1 to -· SPlcw. fDYY DIJ1Y SET· TING tor ........ llotlt """' wort -etc. RUFf'CYCLE for 11"t11 ltHl11t.tambn111 action. ·~~~6495* .aI.1111171111. i Now-Get Mom For less! ,,-MORE CAPACITY ·y MORE FEATURES ~ _MORE_VALUE For leBB tha~ a comparable 1956 model/ IE HLlER FLO® WISHER • .. JIM lllT •n 11 IL CIPllllT .,, I lllllJl!Ji 111*,ti-...., ---• In I-Fl.Ill RI W-llllll qo llll IOI flaz IOI-· ,... ...._ ... lkd)', a mmn ._ •asm= anfulJ 1a11n "111 211. ot "LlftOlm" • __ ,_"""'II"""-I a n lllllE,U criu llill,., .. --"Ill,.. ... __ ....,._,..,... ' • __ mu_cold_dlllll.,.,pr.min-11_, __ .. -............ .......... •27000 -........ -..... •, • " ; j . ; ' DON'T BE SWITCHED ••• INSIST ON GENERAL ELECTRIC QUALITY -· TV and APPLIANCE IN HARBOR GENTER 2300 HARBOR BLVD • COSTA MESA 540-7131 Daily 9 'til 9; Sat. f''tll 6. " • •• • • . ' DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • • A Re.al I -Mind-bender -: The ~uandary that Newport Buch ii faclnc tryljt( to fi1 ure out bow to figure out jts prea~t and ~utur1 · transJ)Ortation problems is a rear ~bende~. Trying to unravel the counlles1 . altemBtlves·, or even trying to understand them Iii the!( proper per- apectives. is at best a frustrating cballmt11. Mayor Ed Hirth , reportedly rebuffed on at least two recommendations on how the city council ·should t:>roceed . gave up Monday nig~t and tumed the matter over to the city's staff. The council directed the traffic department to d• r;ign specifications !or· a ·thorough study of Newport's traffic picture, stressing that it .sbou14 raot ~ perform- ed under the influence of the fact there is an adopted free\\•ay route. . , · The specifications are to mclude what should be studied who should be involved in the study, the exact approaCbes to be taken and .any limitations to be im· posed . · 'rbe ,council said lhe'ouUine should be ready by ita meeting Monday night. · · · It will at least give the city an opportUj\ity 14 en<l its scattergun approach to· llnC!ing a soluµon 14 th• problem: ' Problem of Dead Beats certain '°"'" peUenll doo't take frH rides at the H· pense of other patients. Hoac administrators began 'to find out late last year lhllt nian,y patients wtio did not have -group in- surance -thole who bad no inlurance or who held pri· ' vale. lildivldual l>oepllAllzaUon poUcies -were creat- ing a problem. Jn ma.king p,ayments. insurance com- panies often-paid directly to holders of private pollctes rather than sending them directly to the hospital. Of· ten the money never got to the hospital. The. problem was . even more acute . for admissions where no proot of any insurance could be shown. As a consequence. Hoag instituted a policy requir· ing cash payment from such patients. Hoag was not the first hosj>ital to adopt such a payment policy; many hospitals, especially in Southern California, require such prepaymept. Understandably, there was public reaction. An ~in­ dividual patient with a private policy couldn't under-- stand why the· money he had paid in prerhiums didn't entitle him to the same privileges as anyone ~lse. He wondered-often vocally-why he was being discrim· , inated again.at just because he was insured differentJy from the_man n Uie next tied.---' And often when one ls under the mental strain or illness., be is not in a frame of mind to undel'stand the broad financial policies and obligations of an institu· Hospitals -at lea.st in countries without SOCJaJized ti on that Hi chargjng $65 to $100 a day. • mtdicine -face a thankless decision when it comes to Alter bearing of some of the complaints, the Costa money. -Mesa-Ghambe~-Commerce-askedJoLaILaudie""''--- On one hand they are thought of by'the public at with Hoa~ Administrator William R. Hud son. '(hey got large as institutes of, healing, as mercy organizations together 1n what turned out to be a very productive 1 - that place health and life saving above all other co~ session. iiderations. In effect, Hoag altered its policy -agreeing that ! On the other llanCI, hospitals are extremely expen-private policies are acceptable if the patient can pre-1 . ' ' . ! I sive to run. Jn order_ to stay (n .operation they must sent a "proof of insurance" form from his company "~>"'Jf.;;:.._~.,. ·' I exercise the best of business practi~s. In short, lht!Y as~igning payment to the hospital. It \va s a proper and .··. ""-~ 1 I ·must coUect the money ow ed them. 1 • welcome relaxation of the ru1es-a perfectly acceptable ~ The Harbor Area's Hoag Memorial Hospital is qo amendment that very likel.y. will assuage some of the .,. .:"'i~,.~,.. 1 ~ I exception. It must straddle that tight line Of fullilting rulfled feelings an<l still give Hoag maximum assur· I. "WEU,Sl)I, fRi)\ Hr1IJ ON YIJJ WON'r UAVE b m. J'EH~ '(ou'~; Poat" ~~--i-ts_·o_b_l_i1_•_ti_on_s~l4-th~•-P_u_h_li_c_anc1~-a-t_th_•~•am~-•-t_un_•~m-att~•~~~-a-n_c_•_of~p-a_ym~•-n_1_.~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~-N~'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·ll_~~~~~~· j Notes on Japan's Wild Radicals Dear Gloomy Gm: Oregon Constituents Are Disenclaanted Mark Hatfield Is ·in Deep TrolJ!ble Ctn 't someone at Or1111e Coast College muute that public ad- dreu .announcer who ruins tbe foolboll llind wltli hiJ llii!tlunt and llnnecesaary moooJocue? We're there to 1ee the a:amea, not to hear them. ' -R.R. ' ,,. ...,.,. ...... ,.....,.. .......... _.,.., ... f!I ... ·•-••r. ,.... ...._ ___ __, .... ....,, ..... WASHINGTON -There was much more than worry about "family financial needs" ·behind Senator Mark Hatfield's binta !hat he may not seek a second term in 1972. · Real reason for this carefully planted trial balloon -to sound out voter reac- tio1 back home -was ·deep coacern about his reeleCUon chances. As of now they art extremely clouded -lo put it mildly • 1be mod dapper Oregon Republican is deeply in trouble with a large and powerful element of his party. Hatfield's militant dovlshn.ess and per~stent op- position to administration policies and proposals bas ~t oily put him in hot water with the: White House, but aroused the furious ire of GOP leaders and their followers in the state. ' He: has been delu1ed with castia:aUng mail and warnings o! bitter opposition when bil term expires two years hence. IT IS AN OPEN secret that ambitious Re:publicans already are eyeing his ·seat arid seriously conslderine challengiag him ia the primary. Jn 1966, Hatfield ran fnr the Senate 11 the incumbent governor. He won 't hive that hefty advantage in 1972. r.;r··-~. . ,, ,,,, i · Alle'1-Goldsn1ith i ' . .b No • •'-•· But he defi'nitely will have a raging party sp lit that could be fatal. One thh11g the ardent anti-Vietnam dove and out!pnken liberal is certain of is a tough primary fight -aMI apparently Hatfield doesn't much relish that ex· pensive, arduous and highly uncertain prospect. So he Ls looking around for possible alternatives. In effect. his intimations about quilling politics are notice' that he· is available for job offers -preferably a· good paying university -presidency: or head of a well-heeled tax exempt foun- dation. In Hatfield 's self-penned biography in the \Congressional Record he notes that he is an educator by profession and possessor of "2Q honorary degrees.·· UVING lT UP -There is a hollow sound lo HaUield's plaint that be is hav- ing a hard time to make do with his $42,500 senatorial salary -plus another $28,000 he admits making in lecture fees last year: That $70,500 is more than he ever made before -in public or private life. Further, the $70,500 isn:t . the whole story. by far. In addition to his ~2.Socl salary, flatfie ld also ge ts aiiother $300,000 for clerical hire:telephone and telegraph, six trips to-and-from Oregon, free mail and various other perquisites and ac- commodations, among them a handsome- ly furnished five·room office suite i• Washington and another commodious of- fice wilh a staff in Oregon. Hatfield denies 1le has a private fund raised by wealthy liberal friends and :id· mire rs. - He admits · one-of the !ormer-.\s · 11 member of his staff as a dollar-a-year ma11. ff, IS A~O A FACT. that .nol .Jong'.afi~r he came to the Senate it was disclosed that "friends" were ralsiitg a $100,000 fund to pay for extra staff and other ex - pel)ses. At that time Hatfield was ac. lively harboring vice presidentiill aspira- tions. ' W.hen the fund pl~ came to light, public reaction in Oregon was. very critical. Hatfield hastily announced the scheme was being dropped. Similarly, he de11ie<{ he was preparing to bolt !he Republican party when he Issued a blast al rre:sident Nq;on last June. Hatfield charged'th e President was gravely jeopardizing jthe future o[ the GOP with his "S6u~rn strategy" and warned that he "could bi dumped." This startling blun\ness immediately raised conjectures i•I political quarters that the liberal Oregonian was gettillg set to switch to !ht! DemoC:rats -as former Senator Wayne Morse, another Oregon militant, did years ago. p ' ! . . . ~l!7 HATFIELD •Q!Phatically de"led ·that. "lie ia.sisted he Jritlnded to·remain in the GOP, although ·adn\itting his i'iiti·ad- minhilration record abd denun ciations made his reelection as a J\ep~blica.n very uncertain. '1f I hz.d to·f un loday,•• said ·~aUleld. "I would be th'~ lot·of trouble.•• Colleagues attribute. HatfielEl'·s ex- pensi.ve livi"g style as 11 ikely impnrta11t reason for his waat.ing a igg~r income. · By· 'Robert S. A.Uea· And Jobi A. Goldlmltfa -·Kiichens • Ill Elementary. Schoo. s? · SECONDLY. THE Japanese student movement is better organized tactically. Students are armed wilb six-f.oot. staves and riot helmets . Al is explained in the recently-published book, ''Zengakuren," edited by Stuart Dowsey (lshi Press, Tokyo and Berkeley)" Chuk.aku (Ctnlral Core Faction) and Kakumaru (Revolu- tionary Marxist Faction) wear white: Shapkudo (Socialist Student League) red and Shaseido (Socialist Youth League) blue and the Socialist Student Front. green. They go to demonstrations in disciplined ranks like an anny. Tht:y would be even better organized if tht: variws'group&:wereh't so· divided agalmt each other. Before I left for Japan, Consul. General Eikichi Hara of San Francbco gave· me: a . .Chart of . Japanese: reVolu- tionary groups and their relationships - a ver)table jWJ&!e .of i~eological factions. . . . JAPANESE"POLTCE are better trained for dtalinl with students thane Amer:ican. - ,,olict. They have simply had more ex- perience. They use water canoon find · tear gas. Since 1967 they have carrie4 duralumin body-length shields, RO that when rocks start. flying they ca11 form protective phalanxes. Jt wa11 my privilege. to set by ctUrtesy of the Security Sec· lion of the National Police Agency. movies of 11tudtnt riots over the years as "·ell as training films showing how shields and other equipment are to be U5- ed. Tht riot pictures were truly dram1Ut. For example, when Prime Minister Elslku Sito was to vtsit Southeast Mia ln Odober, 1967, thousands of students lmy Impmsion I& that •bol!.t 10,000 were Involved) fl'om a dozen or more uni-1athend the DICht bdcn'at .----•• Gn,..e ---• Dur Ge«p: -. How did yoo develop , 111Ci1 an ,, am ni tt!lJe of ~dtntandln& any and all problems . ·"-~ ADmuu.R SEEING THE MOVIES of actions like the Haneda incident, one ii impre!Sed in arterthought by the feeling, in 1pite of the drama of the action, that because or long experience in confrontation both sides observe certain.. unspoken "rules of the ga me." ·While the action may be furious, it almost always 1tops short of being lethaJ. Guns art never drawn on either side, and the police rarely get rattled. Disasters such as thO!e of Kent and Jackson State simply don't happen because the police know their business. As one writer in the book "Zengakuren" reniarU,. "It "is Odd !hat although !he students place great empbl!ls on viol~i:ice the worst .damage to be ex. pecttd Is· broken windows and burnt-out vehicles." To the Editor : After looking at some of the recent New Homes magazines and promotional advertising of tract developers. I am in· · clinecl to renect on the curre:ntly stressed "'Gourmet Dream Kitchens " as shown in homes costing $28.500 and upwards. Whal a laugh for the average f\.ir. & Mrs. America, whether he is black, white, brown or otherwise. The average worker today is the developers'· market for sales. We wonder how many of these people rea d the come-on gimmicks as ad. ·· vertised in every newspaper, magazine and home builders' periodical. BECAUSE A gifted draftsman dreams up a ki tchen which would give !he fl nesl cooks a place to create cuisine fit for a gourmet, whal makes the developer (who sells these homes) lhink that the average · · · . housewife ia that good a cook? , T~RE AR~ P~OFOUND sfn:tilaritie:i: _ The food and beverage people work between, the Japanese·and American atu-hard to prepare food.and drinks. ~ven in- dent movtme~ta. ~ Jl'OUPI rely on slant tea if you please. There are some TV Al one writer 1n "Zengakuren" 11ya "If.Ibis (demonstration) degenerates tn~ • who w11ll never lea.m to br~w a good pot a fi&ht, then the focus of ttltvilion of tea . We .have lovely p1~ on the cameras is assured." Both rely heavily froun TV dinner~, etc .• which would en- on incantation and sloaan1 rather than on tlct any housewife not to bother w.ith reason and argument. "The most preparing a well-~lancecl and attr~ctive popular," the writer continues, "are 'am-meal for her famil y. If the home butlders po funsai' (Smash I.he security treaty!} and the f~ processors shou.I~ ~et and 'Toeo shorii' (Victory to lht together. I believe that a~J we need is big· struggle !l ... Also heard Is the blood-ger a~ better. refrigerator& .and thirsty cry of 'Minsei Korose' (Kill the freezers. But the 1dea5 that 1'1e builders Mimell). These chants flt into the are putting for~ to creat~ sales show a rhythm .of the: demonstritiont and follow deep ye~rnlng 1n our society for a real a pattern laid doWn In ancient futivala home with real cook.s. al.I over Japan." ' Both Japanese and American 1tude.'1t radical• are upper elm, tilt.lit and anti- democratic. Both groupa are attracted nol ·by the communiml of lhe powerlul , present-day ·Sovlet estal>ulhment, but by tht revolutionary vet"stons tA Communist theo<y '1ille 'l'rotskyism and Maoism. BUT DO OUR schools and educational centen teach young girls to become cooQ, proper mothers or evtn pauable ~eepera? No! Whit I IOl'l'f pl.ighL Lucky are those men who have nice homes wttb a wom,.n In the kitcben who can reaJ17 -out • lint claJI dlnDer. havt enouch money to buy champagne or excellent qua.Illy and the time to eat and appreciate a eourmet. dinner pttpared. In I 'parmtt' kitcbeD. Dear Admirer: OevelopinJ the understanding Is ealf. Ifs tr)'i:nl lo figure. out what It 11 !hit rm understanding . . . lh1t'1 the baflllng part. • • Both .. croups, basin, their views of "capJtilist imeeriallsm" an Oil wrlUn1s of 1utbor1 long ittad, Jlk~_:-Mar'I and Enc<il and !iJilll. -could '10l ha•• pndlcted and did not predict what copilllbm would be like In the latter half ·• M ~ twentieth antury, turn, like Eldrld1e Cleavtr and Robe.n Scheer, to bull>!..,.. . police -Jlke North Ks>reo for !heir ideala ol puco ond The trooble with· oar pneratiOn b a gap all right. but it ii a gap between the idea of everyone desirir1g food of the. par excellen~ variety AND our pubUc achool syirtem which ii so busy with itt ser pro- blem1 that H. can't like time to teach our younc 0nt1 tome ot the othet nete111ry lhinp In Ufe to makt llviftG lf9ll. How 1bout putting a few ll:;ltchens in our demenllry achoob to teach Ihm (boys !Send your P,.obleml to Georae, the N1lioa'• No. l Worrywart.) -· 11 S. L R1y1taw1 -Ill~ -Colle .. ........ ·-"·· MaiU~x Letters from Teaders are weLcomt. Norm.ally writers slto1d.d -convtJ1 their messages in 300 words or less. The right to cundense letters to fit space or elimi nate tibef reserved. AlL le t· ters must include sig11ature and mail· ing address. but names may be with· ~etd on request if sufficient Tea.son 1 is appare:nt. Poe try will not be pub· Li.shed. • and girls alike) how to boll an egg. make a French-Jpple pie or whip up a batch of bread like grandmother used to make? E. WATKINS f'reetD•fl Signs To the Editor : Af~ a trip to. Loi An1eles on, the freeway, J am like the drunk sitUng on the curb at 5th Ave. and 57lh Street. New York City. A cop tapped him on the shoulder and told him to move along. ·'Where am I?" he said. The cop told him 5th at 57th, to which he replied . "Never mind the detail!!. offictr, what ci· ty is this?" SO ,.'RY NOT LET the motorist know whRl city he·1 approaching on the freeway, and how far to it.s center or outskirts. AU we get 1' the street signs and unle!IS you are a lo~-tlme native you don't know whether EdisOn Boulevard is in Weslmlnsler, Long Beach or Santa Monica. How can we get the Department al Hi!lhw1y SilDI to help us out of lhia morass? "BERNARD BARTON .. Refff'tli"9 Bl1tor11 To tbe. F.cli~: • In talkinc to persons who apperenlly have never tbou&ht about the difference between newlplper publishing and the h~ltvWon and radjo media. J find much Ignorance. The newsptper i.s an entirely difftttnl institution of. United States life from that of televlsJon and radio. The dif. ference: lies in that the newspaper prints in black ahd white or colofs on paper from a plant that bas typesetting equip- ment ·and presses which it owns· and ope.rates. IT RECORDS the history of its Com-' munity day-by-day or week-by-we:ek , "'hatey~r its frequency of publication may be. You can read the newspaper all at once or refer lo it dur~g the day or lay it aside for reading later. It is there. You may file it away and if you keep a year's supply you may have·u bound into a volume which constitutes the history of a community for an entire year. Most newspapers bind their newspapers into annual volumes or subdivisions thereof. So the newspaper is a historical medium or communication. NOW AS TO RADIO and television. they are both transitory and deal in bolh news ·and tritertainment. But you can quickly forget what was on· yesterday's television or radio program unless you refer to a guid! in print.. The channels on which they operate are vested in the United States o( America and they. the television broadcaster or the radio bro.ad- caster. gets the privilege of using certain channels or rights by getting a license from the Federal Communlactions Com· mission unless the laws have been changed from my days in radio broad- cast after World War II.. THE RADIO OR television cliannels never leave the ownership of the United States or America but are licensed. To get a license requim going before the Federal Communications Commission and filling out ·forms and no individual gets the right to U3e a channel if he or she hii been convicted of moral turp.itude. Jast how it "'orks when a cor· porate form gOes before the FCC. I do not know. The same rulea for radio I assume apply· to lelevision. ALi. t.iNOll'dn havlnt_heen..bolh In .· radio broldcast and n e 'w s p 1 p e r publl!bing; ii that they art entirely unlJke medlA of :tQmmunlcatlon, f"or a newspaptr owns ii.a equipment a.nd re- quires only lbe right to i:Hsl ribute through the malls or the post office by tslabll!hlng lMt right th.rough meelin1. certain qua.Uflcatlons. J don't know of any other way to ex- plain the dUt~renct bttweeo · the lwo • -- forms of media, that Is.~ printed word, and the televised or rad· word. We have· had newspapers slnce days of Ben· jamln Franklin but . ot radio or television. We have new!:pers 100 years old bul not eithe r TV or adio stations. I hope I have cast some e · ghtenment, but for anyone who wants g rt:, write to the Federal Communicatio Commission in Washington. D.C. and a how lo get the license to build a radio television Ill· tion. RU ELL BENNITI' rt Ion To the Editor: / Regardless of the la When a woman agr to, or seeks an abortion she Is saying herseU and to the world' that she w not accept the responsi bility of her ·ons. !He iJ 11c- rificin·g the life 'of....an , nocent child for her own selfish 'lea' ~ sanie hold• !rue 1for the man who ows or seeks an abortioo for lbe who carriq .,_ ~Id. .., - LET THOSE' who consid'ertng an abortion ask themselvei "\Viii thil child be the only child I.he will ever Cive to me?" ... Let those who are coa dertng an abor- tion remember ~t tht: irlt ol. that un-._ born child will forever before them m their. rrilnds. ' MRS. BARBA R. SAKASKE . .----+--..:.,· Friday, Septcm r :25, 1970 /Tht editorial page the Daily Pilot seeks to info and .ttlm.. ulatt reodtrs by ~ et1th1g thii newsPQptr's o.liliii and co~ ' -mtntat)/ on topld oJ lntertsi---- and sfgnlffconcc, providing a forum. for the reui<m oj our rt adtrs' opi1 1u, amt bN prtsenti1ig the erst view- point& of ht/or observer1 and spake smtn ot optcr of lht do~. I Robert N. We Publisher I 1 I . 1 I, t ., } BEA ANDERSON , Editor l'rMtw, ~ as. "'* H ,..,. u . ' ·• . • ~ PAUSE THAT REFRESHES.,... No· matter the ·mode ,ot transportation taken by partyg~n1 theil;.1thirst ._J;J'r~ises to be quenched when they arr1,v1~;at the 1Balboa.~ Philbar·. , ' 'lnonic nroup'f' benefit part)'\ 'Mrs. Dorothy Hutchinson· offirs tefreshments to.:early amvals (left to right) Mrs. .Edward Keny ;and Mrs • .Emory Moore. .. I Dual Parti;es Coffers 1 .1: '1·! Boo.st " . 91GNS O~ OLD -R~miniscent of the old Burma Shave. signs will ~e the four-line rhymes to b.e posted by Cinderellas to direct friends to their annual benefit, ar western barbecue in Bommer Canyop. Placing one a re (fore- ground) Mrs. Donald Gustafson, (Center) Mrs. Joseph Ryan and Mrs. Robert Hurtt •. Cinderellas' B.enefit Adds Western Flavor It's not a mere stroke of luck or touch of magic that turn s the a n· nual Western Barbecue· into a financially successful adventure. It takes careful planning and constant foll ow through, attest the sponsors who work as hard as \Y ranglers of old. And, the evid ence of this hard \vork \Viii be ih full viev1 when party- goers a·trive at Bommer Canyon Saturday, Oct.. 3. tor the event, a benefit !or Orange County Children's Hospital. This is a major fu nding project of Newport Beach Cinderellas, a hospital support group. The ranch setting will lend an authentic atmosphere for the western party, and feature of the menu. Of course is trarbecued steak. Bales of hay will be provided for seating as 1nerrymakers watch the Art Miller squa\'e dancers. Guests will be invited to whi rl along or dance more conventh:lnal steps on anot~er floor. · l• , ... Dinners will Qe seatea. at tab~es., draped with red and white checked :Jothes and i!Juminated with candlelight. Tables will be pl aced under and near trees which will be hung with li ghts. Orang~ .C·ou11 'ti1 Philharmonic Sodeity cott.S· will receive .a doable .bboSt after two benefits ate:stapd i · week apart. by wornen's:eom. · mittees. --Upper Bay Associates aff· planning a pragressiYe d~, entiUed Noche de Ronda Sun· day, Sept. 27. On Saturday, Ocl. 3, the Balboa Philhannonic Group will present its annual cocktail party in the home of the Fran~ TraQes. The Robert B. Smiths will open their bay front home for the first ronda of th e associates' party, the social hour. La ronda ensalada and la ronda principal will be served in several homes,. and for the finale in tl\e :home· .d · the William Masons, Christopher Gaynor will entert:ain on-h1S gultar. The musiciian, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sydney. Gaynor or Coroni: del Mar. is home ort a short stay before returning .to Alicante, Spain for further study with Jose Tomas, . an associate of internationally famous guitar~. Segovia. Mrs. Stanley . Le Lievre is chainnan of the associates. Mrs. Corydon Austin is diMeJ' chairman and Mrs. Clinton Rygel, co-<:halrrnan. The cocktail party will begin at 8:30 p.m. according to chairman, Mrs. Jon Visel who promises an array of gourmet hors d'oeuvres. Dancing to the music of the Terry Levitt Quartet in the gard~ , will conclude the eYenlng. . . . This benefit has annu•lly- netted more than $1,000 which ~elps support, the socjety. in . sponsoring ftte . Youlh Con- certs, for all county· students. .. ' ' ' ., Mrs. Sam .Gurley has served as "boss l_ady" of.the round-up. and sub-foremen include the Mme s. Mortimer Gherman . invitations; Edwin Finster. reservations; Donald Gu stafson. entertainment: Lee Ros'e, Harold Dixon and William C. Brown. decorations; Marjory Da vis, menu, and James Evans and Ri chard Robinson. liquid refreshments .. AU funds are donated to Chil dren's 1-lospilal. Cinderellas also help raise money for the facility by jointly sponsorin,1? with oth er county ,guilds the annual spring fa shion show and luncheon and the late summer Christ-' mas card sale. Tickets will' be a'yailable ,it the door or from , any 'Balboa member.' ReserYations for the pro- greMive djnner may be made with Mn. Kenneth R. Swift. SPANISH ·SERENADE -Gultarlst CllrilloPl!er GQllOr 'lln entertain at the con- clusion of a benefit·planned l!Y-Upper Bay· Ais9ciates. Pr.,.ieiving his program are (left to right) Mrs. Corydon· Awlm. benefit chl\i"l'an and Mts .. Stanley Le Lievre, associates chairman. , · '. · ~ ·Derat,ist Exchanges Smacks · for Clea·n .Bill :· of . Health DEAR ANN I.ANDERS: Am I out o! line for objecting to a kissing relallomhip between my dentist husband and several of his female patients -ranging from 15 to 70? fie kisses them hello and good-by in his ornce. He also kisses them whe n ""lhey -meet in-publie-1 just-sland there ----- A NN LANDERS ~ and look on and don't even know most of today.'1 I can tasily und critllnd a woman these ~'omen. I am eager to hear your giving her dt ntlst a smack -and tiavt opinion. For reasons you can guess, I dont se mystll, must remain -ANONYMOUS DEAR NONV: No woman sltould worry lbout -&k kissing btr husband does in puhllc. Obt'louiily YIMI bave not bad ex· tensive dental work, and de not know tbe joy and gr1Ut11de one feels when Ute den. list 1nno11nce,, "No aYltles, and your rums 1n pedecl. ·wc'Q J111t clean them DEAR ANN LANDERS : I hope the woman who signed herself ''Fed Up" wi ll read this. She complainM because her husband was buildlng their new .borne and talked o( nothing else -morn"lhg, noon and night He carried bJueprlnl$ In his pocket and bored the ir rricnds to death. - My husband built our hoUlle and 1 was warned by women who had been through. ii lbat It would probably be the worst year of my life. It wu. These poor ~ys wor k their beads off at a regular job. Then they run to the new p I a c c, 'oineUmea skipping supper to get in as much work as Possible before dark. Thty worry about whether or not the material they ordered will come in, and will It be righl. Then they have nightmarea about .._u.. olrl<ers anct buildlng' codes. ohlp '11 so m!et, •l<adY.'loyal and --My huobanct tallred ...ey,.,,., ears off 1111 that, U Wtll lut ~ a whole Ip., I:~ '::rd,;:;., ':.:ldlet.%.=~~ u~dly~:i!r to~":::':>"~~ that we are living In illb btauuru1 home the · har'd way;_ I lent some iooney to a I -ll_wu wwt11 IL Lbope the -liiiiiil ond -nd Op locllig both the who have this experience ahead .of them • mone1 lftd the friend. J prized Ulil rela· will be ·~ enou&h to give tll<ir guys tlonlhlp hlPJy and I am heortslck. - a. pat on the baclt lnitead of 1 kick ln Hnw does ooc say "no'' 4 and still Jhe ponts. -Pl\OUD WIFE · preserve a fri<vdsblp?~ED DOOR DEAR PROUD: no.lo ftr ...tdnf. DEAII. DOOR: Frie-p me ... com, ADii ..... te •• "' .••• , mt.re • hit II .... relClt .. Ume of crill•. 1be may be •-wD th •11P<riellco -lley _., -•er, It jll(pmul, remtmber : Pll tllie btek. Doa't kick-tM For 1mal1 ••faYot1/1 111 )"fl, bit lbere pa1U. 11tt1lll H ltmlts eftD hre. If tbe lriefHI Jiu repeatedlJ fahed to repay prevloa1 DEAR ANN LANDERS: M11k 1\oiain ,,.,11 ·-Ille """' · Poakl be, once said, "The holy puaton ot friend--•1Sorry -11 more." -- Fir a oblble llon, Ille· hll -It, 0 I'U p ~yea to ... bank utl. btlp Y" pt 1 •·" You COl'kl ltlll set ttuck, but )WI':. tN!'CS 1tt ~••lllJ beUer t•n lf -you .limply band· over ypar ewa 1moiary. TM: IBeacr •bo 1et. •PY"Wbe• yea want Yoar' ..... y rttanlei Wll IO lrloaol to bep wJJll, Yoo r... -1· wlla yOI IOse the lrlend11blp tf I •adbel&. Cive in or lose him ••. when 1 gu7 gives you this line. look out! J'f//l tiPt OD how lo handle the super $f1' aalesman. check Ann Land<t3. Rood her bookle4 "Necking and Petting -What Are tht Limits?" Send your request to An1 Landers In care o[ the DAILY PJLO?, tnclosing 50 oenls In coin and· 1 king. stamped. self-addressed envelope. I • r . • • . . • J 4 D~ll y PILOT Scores · Fashion First -I .. Ftiday, Sfpttmbtr 25, l!J70 ' - Joan E:reates Ano.ther Sti r' Novemb er 'Nup ti als Planned~ 'WASHINGTON iAP) JOM Kennedy, who once ... created a mlnitremor in .• Washington society by wear---5 1tng a thijb-e.xposing minlskir.:t 'to the White House, has scored another fasitlon first by wcar-- ing a see-through blouse and midiskirt to an East Room reception. · The blonde wife of sen. ,. I= Edward M. Kennedy ID- ,~ ?!fess .). caiily created the big-,. ' ,.. r-st stir Tuesday at the recep- r:; tKln Mrs. Richard M. Nixon held for Mrs. Ferdinand l\farcos, wife of the president of the Philippines. l\frs. Kennedy 's bTouse was a gossamer. transparent light blue lace. A slightly darker -blue ..:brassier was-ver ~isb ble through the lace. " The blouse was very visible through the lace. The blouse was tucked into a m· i d I I e n g l h silver-colored _kather skirt wiU! a slit UR. the fronl She added a pair of front.laced black boots to complete the ensemble. She told r~rters, almost mischievously, she had decid· cd she was wrong 18 months ago when she wore a very short miniskirt to President Nixon's first reception for Congress. Photographers at that time caught Mrs. Nixon staring at I.he goodly expanse of Joan Kennedy's thigh (her mini was one ol the lhortest then 9een here). Cameras at Tuesday's event preserved the glance downward by Mrs. Marcos as she and Mrs. Kennedy shook bands warmly. ?i1rs. Nixon wore a turquoise midi at the reception. HB Auxiliary Plans (JJnch Mr. and Mrs. Max Gudowski of Sea I Beach have announced the engagement of t he l r daughter, Jud Ith Anne Gudowski to Stephen James McAndrew, son of Mrs. Lowell Shuck of Cotta Mesa. 1be couple is plaming a Nov. 21 wedding In St. Anthony'• Catholic Church, Long Beach. Miss· Gudowski is a graduate of St. Anthony's High School, L6ng Beach and attended Califomii' State . College at Long Beach. Her fiance is a graduate of Newport Harbor Hil!h School and attended ange-Coast..:.Colleg,~--­ Both or the betrothed are prolessional musicians. The bride-to-be, who appears as_ Judi Richards, is a vocalist and has sung in Phoenix and.- Las Vegas. McAndrew is a vocall.!lt and a dwnmer and . has appeared wllh the Long Beach Civic Light Opera. Presently both a r e en- tertaining in a Long Beacb restaurant. Islands Glimpsed IL will be a Hawaiian night Monday, Sept. 28. r o r members of the Monday Morning Club of Laguna Beach when they gather in the Laguna Federal community r oom at !. Dr. and ~trs. Robert W. Roper, hosts of the club's re- cent trip to Hawaii, will show slides of the tour and a surprise announcement con- Fashion Tqkes Flight ~ NOW. Fashio~s with the acc~nt on the unusual will be shown. during the &MU- al Clipped Wings membership luncheon Monday, Sepi. 28, 1n the Airporter Inn, Newport Beach. According to the chairman, Mrs. Thomas Safier of New .. port Beach, starUin~ table decorations will carry out the NOW theme. Com- par~ng "then" and .' now" are (left to right) Mrs. Saffer and Mrs. Wendell Smith, who wears a gow n of the late 40s. Former United Air Lines steward· esses are invited. Cft'ning a future cruise will be-------------------------------- made. Tour members will wear Hawaiian 'fashii'.lns, and refreshments will be served. Horoscope Members of the Huntington Beach Boy 's Club Ladies Aux· iliary will gather for a lun- cheon meeting on Monday, Sept. 28, in the Furnhill Con· dominium clubhouse. A board meeting will take place at 10 a.m. and lunch will be served at 11 :30 a.m. Card playing will follow . DI FFERENCE A YEAR MAKES -Joan Kennedy is 'an example of the fa sh- ion industry's ups and downs. She appears in a midi at a White Holise lunch· eon last Tuesday and selected a mini for another function in May, 1969 which created a minitrepior. Club members will visit the Ropers' vacation home at Lake Arrow~ad on Wed- nesday, Sept. 30. enjoying lunch and cruise around the lake's perimeter. _Aries: Use Gold.en Rule SATU RDAY change. Ride wilh the tide. CAPRICORN (Dec. %2-Jan. 19): You can get to bottom or mystery. Key 1.s to overthro1Y superficial values. Get going., on project with real substanct. Financial questions can be set· tied to your satisfaction. New ·rall Look - I .. I .. ·-' >! • i:: ' ' --:. ~ ;i i:. .. "" . . . c: "' ~ ----...__ ___ >!:' ·=-·~ -The body suit plus tun ic Is the perfect way to _ achieve the tall,. tall look of \he new season, what· ; ever your height. The body suit is ribbed, skinny but stretchable; with _the high, ~iraffe-neck zipped • with a 22-inch inyislble nylon zipper, preferably at -tile chin level. It can also be turned over into a lurUeneck . er this, wear 1-split-front-plaid tunic so invis ibly zipped that the plaid Is uninter~pted. eOth o! these are included in our Printed Pattern • • 9186 in NEW Misses Sizes 8 to 16. ; Send 75 cents !or PRINTED PATTERN 9186 and 50 cent.! for our New Fall·Winler Pattern Cola- : log to the DAILY PILOT, Pattern Department, : P.O. Box 55, Old Chelsea Station, New York, N.Y. lOOU. (Add 25 cents for each pattern. for Air Mail -' and Special Handling.) Mme. Ky Tones Down Role 1n Public Life Drug Abuse Discussed SEPTEMBER 26 VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221' You could be slightly irril.ated By SYDNEY OMA.R R by delays. Somebody obviously ARIES (March 21-April 19): is giving you a run-around. One in authority may be in Respond by sticking to facts - embarrassing financial situa· and principles. Refuse to be lion. Understand this and shaken by double talk. practice Golden Rule. No time SAIGON (UPI) -When Mme. Nguyen Cao Ky, wife of the South Vietnamese vice president.. arrives in Uie United States next she will prescnl a mote reserved im· age than she did in tfie days when she campaigned with her husband wearing a flight suit. A team or former drug users to make demands. UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): older. Ky is 40 and the couple will present a panel discussion TAURUS April 20-may 20): Emotions fl y in numerous has had one i:hild. The vice i:luring the meeting of the Added responsibility is in-directions. Yuur feelings can Blessed Sacrament A l l a r be described as being in state AQUARIUS (Jan. 21J.Feb. 18 ): Comp I e l e transact.ion which enhances s e c u r I t y. One ve rsed in reel ·e s t a t e values can be of aid. Enlarge horizons. Be patient with male, partner. Legal maneu- ver boomerangs in your favor. president was divorced from a Society at a p.m. on Tuesday, dicated. You may be called of confusion. Give yourself French woman. Five of the Sept. 29. . upo,n . to! lnshilpdiv 8 !bu a bkl e time. Applies especially in hild Robert Urmston. sch oo l maerta, cu ng 00 s . 11· I be r c ren are by lhe first mar-Purchase of household items re a ion o mem r o opposite . team ~dinator for Orange sex. r.1age. . County Teen Challeoge,_will be indicates some renovations SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): When Ky delivered his the speaker. are takinlfplace. PISCES (Feb. 19-Marcb 2<1)' Stress originality,· in- dependence. Improve rela· lions with associates, co- workers. Minor di!pute: can be settled. Avoid milking major issue o( minor detail. New outlook is indicated. GE•UNl IM 21 J -) A relative seeks legal counsel. speech, he gallantly referred Teen Challenge is a non· ~ ay · · Wle "u : M k ( rts · d' Do what you can-within the l h I ·· She · denominational.non n .r of it a e new s a in new 1rec- The beauteous Mme. Ky - Dang Tuyet Mal -apparently has chosen the role of the traditional oriental wife • always in the background. Her private life is very much her own. Whereas Mme. Nguyen Van Thieu, the president's wife; and Mme. Tran Thien Khiem, wife of the prime minister, divide attendance at official functions and entertaining between' them, Mme, Ky is rarely present. Her p u b !,i c. appearances usually are with her husband. She ace<1mpanied him on a state vjsit to Cambodia earlier this )'tar, traveling by air and wearing a handsome brown silk bao dal, which_ Is the tightritting long Vietnamese dress worns over slac)s. Mme. Ky smiled irweetly, was gracious to everyone, but said nothing quotable. At a recent evening ban- quet In Siagon where Ky was the main speaker, she ap- peared with htr jet black hair par~ed in th! center, offsetting her high cheeekbones, with long curls lacquered at the nape or her neck. She wore a diamond choker at her neck and matching earrings. ~. A former Vi etnam air hostess when she.became Ky's second wile and mo\her of sis: children, she followed the · rashJon of many wtalthy oriental women who desired to look more western and Jtad her eyes "rouiided.. by a relaUvely simple operaUm. Her official biography Jisl.9 her birth year at 1944, but the medical change In UiflMpe ol her eyes makes her appear o er severa \Imes. grin· " lions. Accent independence, law. Be patient. Obtain hint --• I lh d' · church related organization r Lb 1rt:U a e au 1encc in recogni· h h d' originality. Your sense of rom I ra message. Support ti r lh I. whic emp asizes new irec· family. But realize you also on o e comp 1ment, but lions for youth troubled by humor proves valuable ally. essentially she looked ~U-con-drugs and delinquency. Change environment by dining. have a life of your own. scious or slightly bored during The public is invited lo at-out, visiting friends or SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· the evening. She avoided look· tend the meeting in the relatives. Dec. 21): Calm approach ~IAUTIPUL CLOTH ES ••• _ Onlr,_ Sl\9htW Ulld lly 01111 -c•n't tie... ,. be -rwlc• In lht 11me dr111. Their Lou -Your Glln ing Into the new s and multipurpose room of the CANCER (June 21.July 22): works wonders. If you make television cameras. Blessed Sacrament School, Learn by teaching. Means demands, others begin pro- The couple maintain a home Westminster. gain indicated if willing to gram of ~istance, Study Leo TMl SICOND TIMI ~'OUND at Tan Son Nhut Air Base on share knowledge, Review message. Flatter individual -E. 11111 u .. c.111 MtN the edge or Saigon. Ky fre· some basic lessons. Your rrw~ho~i~s~h~unig~r~y~fo~r~a~fr~ec~t~io~n~.gi~i0""~~,,~·~·i·~-~..,_~~~~ quently receives visitors there Moose Gro up memory may need some jog- instead of his offices al ging. Guard valuables. Jndependence Palace, four \Vomen of the Moose, 115!l LEO (July2J.-Aug. 2 2) : miles away. assemgle the first and third There may be some room for South Vietnam's second lady ~he~~~:: ~~ ea~~:on~~~~~ f;~~:· !ea~:~nj~!s ~~~·~o~~ speaks English, French and Vietnamese fluently. She also Costa Mesa. The programs ··no" answers. Cycle is high ; is an a cc om p 11 shed ijibeigliiniiiaijljiB~pij.mjji. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiibujjjlicoijjinidijitijionisiiiiaiireijjisuiijb~jjectiiiijliol rinewoman and shares Ky 's klve of nying and tennis. Both husband and wife are accomplished pilots w h I c h caused some startled looks among the peasant,! when they campaigned in 1967, arriving at a remote mountain village at the controls or their own plane. They wore matching black flight suits w I t h lavender scarves at the neck . Her .desi re to remain in the backgtoUnd probably can be correlated with Ky"s position of s~nd place behind Thieu. However. with the presidential election only one year away - and Ky a likelv candidate - the visit to Paris and the United State! is certain to put them in the spotlight again. ' VFW Auxiliary Coastline Auxiliary to Veterans or Foreign Wars, Post 3536 gathers the first and third Fridays at 8 p.m. Costa Me!a'rAmerictn Legion Hall is the meeting scene. I • • • • PUBLIC. NOTICE! I LOCAL FURNITURE FACTORY PARKING LOT SALE MOST ITIMS FIOM DISPLAY STOCll' GO AT , .. WHOLESALE TO THE PUBLIC ! l llN• TIUCI 01 TU.ILll a, SAYE! FACTORY AT 2013 PLACENTIA 1Mt .... 1tttia,v1c..n.-c ..,. M .. > Items on Sa!. lndude- SOFAS • LOVE SEATS CHAIRS • TABLES BAlf'STOOCS • DIVIDERS SHELF UNITS ! WAU DECO.R "Collection Color" is our name for diamonds of exceptionally fine color. It takes a very special diamond to earn the name. Ask to see t!>em in rings, pins. pendants 0< other pieces. Or. let our designers use "Collection Color" diamonds to create your original. PIONTE:550RI ·I I Clll .... Atc-t. IMilllt. ---a....n.:111 Ill'"'" l lllltA..,...1c.1A1 6111 Mt"'' Clltrtt. _ lw. OPEN HOUSE AND LECTURE Montessori Principles In thti Home & School • SUNDAY, SEPT. 27, 1970, 2,00 P.M. PRIMANTI INTER NATIONAL MONTESSORI SCHOOLS lJl M. HAllOI I LVD. ANAHllM CA LIP e Tll1 .. 1• 4714, JJJ.Jl 4J Ol'EN TO THE PUBLIC ! Rll.·SAT. & SUNDAY This Week Only! ' .. I -~ SLAYICK'S Je\vclers .. Sincc .1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644·1310 o ,.. MOfldoy oo4 fflday until f :JO .1 I. J ,1 . . ' VCC.-63.._ NO, 23d, <4 SEGTIQNS, ~ PAGES FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2S, ·1970 - .. , UC Irvine S·e.eks 350-bed Teaching llospital 111 GEORGE LEIDAL Of-~ P119t1'-" as well as complete medical facilities to ls necesury In order for tbe project to Memorial and Fairview State Hospital. the -N e w p or t hospital service area. qualify for 1overnment fundlftl. Accordina to the application ·to the Construction is scheduled to begin in· Ju. A College apokmQ&n.aaid that the 351). CHPA, the University of California ly, 1973. ' bed hospital wlll nol __..._ Ill~-· J,IOO Regenla •will Itani! behind !he funding of ,.. •• _ -!he (ICillly, allhoqh Ca!Hornla College of . f:!e.•n Warren L. BosUct, &aid·. :yie_ leachin1 beds requlred by the cOllep:, but Medlcine trustea will provide funds from hospital. University Regents allocated flmds, the ·The ho!pital facility would be7an ad· coml:tination of state funds and bon&, --' dition to the medical colle&e campua private funding and the colle1e'1 property dlsUnct from a planned $21 ~ aale prOcted.s wW provide a . buis ·for medical aclences buildifli. matching grants fr_om other aoarces i.ft. '!lie caJl(omla Collqe of MedlCine at 'UCirvine will reqtiest approval of a 3$0- bed teochlnc boopital at Tuesday's J:l1Hfinf of the Comprtmnsl.ve . Health PlaDniric: AJSociaDort· of Orange County (CllP.A).;---- . Costing an estimated $30.7 million, the seven-story hospital ·would occupy 14 acres of the UCI campus: It would 1ive hospital esperience for medical atude.Dts licility would provide. Ml medieaF · would· bdnll to Ihe,c,unpwi ·._gh beds the sale of !he former 1if1'8to_~ical surgical bed~, 32-materruty.-44.lpedl~ic,. ur:--suppoi1 the tiiCtiffic .J'iiiili 'l'He cot. · -actiOOfildowntown ~ Angeles !!ille.: - ~ 22 psyc!Jlatric beds-in la linile lege would eonUnllt! its relaUonebips with ~ much as 35 percent of Ule hq.pilal's Developmept of that clasar(IOm. .corn-' duding the U.S. Public Health Serv~ pl•><ll•• ~~ held.'.up. by lhe_de!eal of _DM•lin o!.Eby.sldan.M111powe<.~tile ---• Proposition One on the June primary · Dept: of Heal.th, F.ducation and Welfare. elect.ion ballot. Federal fundt 1• tOtaJling 'Ille basic area to be aerved by the rooms, 30 two-bed wards and aewn four· other hospitals tn the community in-481),000 lfOU 1quare footqa Will be bed wards. cludin& the <>ranee County Medical devoted to multi·purpose lrooms aatis- $14.7 million await approval of ·tbe irtate hospital covers Col'Olla del Mar up· the share • East Bluff o! Newport's Bacl: Bay, to !he boder atale Jaw, approval of.Ihe CHPA Center, oc Children'• Hoopjtal, Hoo1 !yin& tile c:laaanlom -i. or a teacbinl If approved by !he. CllPA and .Iha (See HOSPITAL, P11t I) ea ons ncovere Cease-fire Reporwd In Jordan From Wire Servleet The nine days of blood and bombard· ment were oUicially over today in Jor. dan's civil war, but a noon report by cuerrillas acculed Royal ·Army troop1 of attacking rebel ~tat patients. wilh machineguns and uq in tht ravaged capital ·ot Arriman. . • Ill esa •' ! Mesa Police · Discover Gun Cache By ARTHUR It. VINSEL . \ Of * 1N1tr Pli.t lt9'1 Fldlral authorities today entered the cue of a cache of military weapons and uPJoa!vea -plua lnatructlant !or llbotlge -uncovered accidentally Tlurlday night by Cotta M-~ dleddnl ·out I la!H alarm. ' A p&ir o( teeupn were armte4 • atata .cllarjeo ol poueaalon or llllia! No confirmaii'on could. be made, but fear1 mounted in 10m1 quarters for the contiiwed aafety of JI rtmalnlng airline hijactina: hot:tqa who may now ·be ill militant Syria. I flrearma, Whllo , 1'reaaury ~· Joi-dan's King HuSsein and Palestinian • guerrilla luder Yasir Arafat had earlier announctd a peace pact and a team of Sudneu Army officers was assiped al • a police force . Relief was expressed throughout the Middle East and America in some quarters, while bitter Arabs loyal to tJie rebel cau.e cried out in raae. DAIL.'l",PIL.OT lllft ""'9 .j· A crowd of 200 poured! out of noon prayers at Al Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem and charaed through the ancient city's POLICE TAKE INVENTORY AFTER CONFISCATING GUNS, AH.Mo · Sgt •. Thell Gl•seock,• lnvestlgetor G.Oreii:'Wllson. Check C•~ Winding streets. · Mustang Backers Costa Mesa High' School cheerleaders' will-be making.plenty of noise Saturday night when ¥ustang football squad t~es ~ni crosstown riVal Newport Harbor High ·School at.Davidson Field. Girls ar•;(f~~ left) Nina CaMizzo, Joyce Dawson 11 Beverly Bums, N.ancy P.rill, "Kill Husuin," they screamed, charg· ing his army I.I .slaugbterlng their brothers in Amman. and demandin.1 a new revolution. Grenade Blast .Kills 2 They proclaimed worse hate tor Hussein than for ·1sra.el. · · · Cathy Dolan and Gail Al1.derson. · Fears for the lives and safety of unac· countd-for airline: hijacking hostages lesRM<l 1om~what, ·when King Husselii'1 troops !iieal S of t.lii54i£ l :JO a.m. (PDT), found in cannon·raked Am· man. None were Amei'ican. Boys-One on B·irthday ~ --. . --. ·~.--.-- Illsurance Agent Placed On Three-year Probation . They were reported to be well and Ule (lee JORDAN, Pa1t I} Winds Flare Up; Temperature Too Special to the DAU. Y PU.OT RIVERSIDE -Ricky Leamon was 13 Thursday and his sister gave him a foot· ball Ulat bounced over the backyard fence while he and two buddies were passing it. He and Bobby Ewing and David Crawford, also 13, went Into the neighbor· lng yard and fOUnd the football, but they also found a bOx of 11 military fragmen- tation grenades. David~Crawford wa1 terribl'y mutilated and is in extremely critical condition to- day following hours of sureery, Mr. and Mf'l!i. Jerry Prim, In whole yard the M26 grenade3 were fOWld, were questioned about llle&al poasession of the milltary weapons. They refused to discuss the ma tier. tnsurance salesman Paul Farowich was placed on three years ' probati?n toc!ay for his part in Issuing a $15,000 life policy on a Corona del Mar man who i! dying. Superklr Cou rt Judge Ronald Crookshank refuaed to coutder any other aentence for Ule M-year<lld Tustin man Ficker Corks Champagne aS Foes Celebrate . Special to !ho DAILY PILOT NEl\'PORT, R. !. -Skipper Bill Ficker and his Intrepid crew had theU' chain. pagne on ice Thursday. 'Ibey IhoU1hl !hey had !he America'• Cup on Ice. But giddy·Gretel JI crtwmen ~ ting Australia In the prestigious Yldttinc e9fn •iUed Aussie beer as Ficker and his teu-than-merry men kept their cham· pagne corked . · "They can'\' take this one away· from us 11 Gretel II skipper Jim Hardy d~Jarid aner stealing deciding' victcry from Intrepid in the final 200 yards to keep the contest alive. (See DAILY PILOT Boalln1 Edilo< Almon Lo<;kabey's accou_~J of the race on Page 1.6) "That was a beautiful race. Very well dune. I share your joy. you certainly deserved it," f K:ker lold Hardy. "We still have lO do it three more limes." H1rdy replied, well aw~re that H rtireign yactlt In the I It year hi~ol the Ame;ric1'1 Cup bas woo the aer1e1. • who could have been sent to state prison for up to 20 years. r. Farowlch was found ·guilty by a Jury last Sept 2 of charges of attempted grand theft, conspiracy to eommit"'snnd theft and forgery. He and Lawrence Odem, a, er *3 Java Rbad, Costa· Mesa; were~ after clothing store mana1er Murray Bronson was billed for the first payment an a $15,000 policy he bad never applied .for. It was learned that C>den%. who employed Bronson at his Michael'• Ltd. 1tore in Costa Mesa , took the physical fflf' Bronson after learning that his manager was suffering froni 1 terminal diseau. The football and Ule carton ·were both A Santa Ana wi,nd blew oot ol lhe, , ln ·some shrubbery. desert lhortly after 10 a."!· today, brin8· 1 Just exactly what happened from that l.na bot, dry IUltl neepmg acrou the point may never be known -up until the Ora~ C:O.sL • blnt that shaUered every window in the Officiall al °""'e County Airport re-Leamon home -but authorities can ported they IW'ltc:hed to the standard speculate northeast. tlkeott paterns with the ~g Rick}' Leamon was killed on his birth-• et tht winds, which have been blowing . between 32 and 35 knots. day,. blown ~ btt.11. . Tower official• reported only minor Bobby Ewing was kllled in the same ~ problems createa by the wi'"1s althou1h stant, blown to bits. they uld an unusual amount oi durt wa11 . "They were j~ torn apart," 5;'1d one beina blown about. The temperatura at 1nckened Riverside County Sheriff s depu· noon today wu • deeree1. ty. Marriage Counselor Steals Wife, Sued · CLi:VtLAND (UPI) -A -Cleveland man cla1ml hla lrim'iale counselor advised him to· divorce b!I wife so !he marrlqe .00-lor could ·inan'y h<r himlelf. Dean Svec of Bedford 11\D tbti ac- cusation In a l&ll0,000 conaplracy 11111 !lied Jn country court ag1Ioat lllchard' Nover of Suburban Parma and Barbati stew•, the former Mrs. Svec. • Odenz admitted before Farowich's trlal that he made arrangements for the Luuance of the policy and then pleaded guilty to reduced charte;s of conspiracy. Odenz was fined ,1,000 by Judge Crookshank, placed on probatk>o for one Kitten .Firm Under Fire year and summoned al a witness for the proeecutJon against Farowich. Odem testified that he. tnt.odoil to -over !he 115,000 he would hfve reqe!ved N,ewport Business 'Purrr·mit' May Be Hard to Get on Bronson'• deal~ lo·J!r'"lllOR'I wldop. . A photo lluclio loda!' ... bean fully IX• That payment would have ·been mada poled \o the fact that' 'ftl' tenar. in In the name of. Odem'-bustnesl under the-I . type of lnsuranct arr..,,,._t·autbOl'lt-Newport Beach may be nearly u brlel u ~ by Farowlch• the attire of lb models. It "" Jesrned darlllf thetrfal tbal ~odlng lls ·troublei ove~ 1 dta· Mrs. Bronson w11 never advised of any lion for openlfll without • permit earlier web amnaemeoL ... this wetk; Kitten Productk>ns ThuJ1d•Y was thrown oul of Its Campus Drive: of- Wou1 an Hangs Self- STOCKTON (UPI) -Leunr Sl>ee Ng, 118, compl1ined to her daughter that her dentures did not fit and lhe ''had no reason tn live if I don 't have aood teeth ." The woman'• body Waa found Jlantina: !tom 1 ralter Tburld1y. , Jlce...auile.--.. ........-_ The ciled operator, Mary F. Wagner §1, of Placentia,. summariled the plight of her busine~ ventu~ moat aptly today when she said she fint ttloulh\ the effice 1he had rented 1'11 Jn Santa Anl., not Newport Beach . "I thought 1 "'' in Santa Ana until J wenL to Iha &ha111'1 Ollkl lo ol>lalJI \ pennltt and:thedeputy llfd, 'Hey,! Ihlnl: ,....,. In Nnport,lluc:h!' Miu W-WU •I available lllla moreliil til·commelit oo lier plans !or <he future of her Kiiien Productlona .StudJO. The evlcllon notwithstanding, chances ol tht ltudlo ever opening In Newport Beach were growing slimmer by the day. ,1.1Pon recelpt 1o[ the application for a business license, the city moved Im· mediately to start prtparation of an •·emergency ordinance" lhal would either ban or strictly regulate such studios. There 11 noth\Qfl on the books now Vial · would tffecUvely teep 'guch an operallon out·of town. MW Wagntr, meanwhile, had vowed lbe l•lillmlcy of her enterpriae. NYinl t "We jut! nnt a -lo--;Cbal we're ""' lib --..... police have had -ble 'lllla •• I.Gt Angeles ~ Hollywood." · - Prior to her amet 'l'ueldlJ, Miis Wagner had reportedly dolal1ld !he pll>- cedurea ol her studio to 1 Ntopon l'oUce department unden:oftf apnt. She allegedly told him that the atudlo had 10 ~ available· tQ b\t,• photographed In the nude' "In any posi· lion" for a (et of SU per hour. A public hearing on Kltten,P.rodUctiona' request ror a license had been 1chedu.led for Monda y 11 7::.J p.m. In Cily Htll before th• City .COUncll. ll 11 probable !he hearlnl will -·be cucelled. qentl were en roUte today to determine if a federal .offense wu committed. Pollce were reluctant to apecillote .. any ~ co~ wilh radical poUUcal factiom unfll each ol 18 .... ~ -includlq: a:utomatie rifles · and madllneguna -.... cbeclted and Iha upedl qlleltlooed. ' . They ,..,. ldenli!ied u Do.id B. McLaughlin. It, and· Douglaa· M • Lanpvin, Ill, bolh ol108 Ced! Pla<e, the botlSI where the arsenal was c:onfllated. "'Some o! Iha Items !hat an UJoia! to · pouesa appear to be deactivated," a· plal!led U.lectlve Lt Harold Flacber. He said a born h dispOu.J squad fi"om Et Toro Mafine Corps Air Statkm WU called to litiaguartera tilts morning w11en baod ~Were dilcovered in one con- ftacated Catton. ''We don't know if they'r. Uve," Lt. Fischer said. "But we do have ammunition boles oontiining some spent and some live rounds, plus numerous pamphlets oa bombs and booby traps," he cootlllued. f "lbat'l1'h•Mcmes us:'''--------h Lt. Fischer said .chemlcil compound1 commonly used in making bomba ~-in combinaUon with other readily available ln.gredientl -were taken from the Cecil Place re1idence. Re said McLaughlin listed hla oc-- eupation as a headwaiter and ·Lan1evin, who wa1 not , present when thl!l weapou were discovered, is an auto mechanic. The two SWlpecia apparenUy .have m dlred military connection In which. !hey inlgbt bave obtained !he weapo111, he ad- ded. • l!elidee Iha military weapo111,. which In- cluded a mortar launching device ap- pearing to be Japane1e made, police~ ed ID Infrared enlpel'ICOpl Ulled to pick out. vi!:f.ims ·In 1 total darknea. , "Numeroua hand weapons and rtn. wblcb appear' on !he surface to be lepl (.See WEAl'ONS,. Pl1t I) Weedier Guaty Santa Ana. wl;.i, wUI bk... up a storm over the weekend, 'IOlldlng !he coaalal lempmluies thooUnl toward !he ., mark. 'Iba marnlnl• will .Uer !or, u ma!. INSIDE TODAY "'We tDan.ted to do .smvU.lng for our neiahbors.'' said a:·~ puna Hills coup!< toho "°"" i!o- . M!cd · $500,000 to tM ~ .. Soddl<back Community HO(pi-. tat Their rtoru (.s in toda:w'• Wtrkender, Paa• JS. tc -.. CtlHwtlle 1 Cllldllt!t U• l ( ........ Jl•U c~· n -.. --. -. ... i.i .... • ,.,._. 1•11 ..._ ,., .... ~ , .. -. ~~ ...... -... Mll._I '"""' 1• __ .. or-.. c..., • hilwnllfl .... , .... ~ ...,,., ,. ,... .. ..... ........ ,..., T....... • -.... ·-. ._.,,.....,." --w w s nii·-' .,. I .. I DAIL y PILOT .. c '" ., • - l 1970 ~if.S.,._t9"'•Uu SolllMI' ' ·.·:· Air Force Fill • ~ ·. ,. Geis Clean B'ill • ... • ,;··.WASIUNGTON (Ai') -The A~ • • For~t'11wln&·winl F-111 fighter bomber ~.1 ."1al1 been pronounced "structurally ·.• lound" by the Pentagon. ,'JM plane has been und rgoing struc- \.:' tural testa since a fatal crash last • 1:Decem_ber casued by a failure in the ~~in&·winl pivot aeetion. 1bt Senate Armed Services C.Ommlttee, ln reporting the Defense authorization bill ., . ··for the current fiscal year, conditioned its · •. llpprovi.l o( more funding on a -certifica· ·::.:Newp,ort Studies .. - ,·.Business Tax -·. . . :Major Changes By L. PETER KRIEG 01 '" Dally l'llel ll•ft lion from the Defense 'Department of the plane'~ sti:uctural inteerity. David Packard, deputy secretary of defense; informed Committee Chairman "JObri SteMi! {0-Misa.), In a letter that the r~ts rtlwl far Pt ~ testlnc pro-- gram "permit me to conclude that the ·F· 111 ~eet will be structurally sound, and that it will indeed perform its intended mission." · After the crash, the Air Foret ground- ed all 230 F-lll's already in service.· · Since the new lest program bega n, 46 planes have been examined and reen- tered service. ~tber 13' are in the pr~ cess of being transferred, back' to o~rati@& ·commands. · . Pf,ckard'• letter preced~ Alr ~FOrce annauncemut pf.a 1177.8 million contract award to General Dynamics Corp. for an addiUoul 24 of the F·lll'a. NeWp<>rt 'Police ' ' Check Gun Theft An iodication that Newporl Beach may bt. considering significant chanies in it& .11usiness License t.a..J propo!al was given today by City Manager Harvey L. Newport Beach poll-•-• In ,l{urlburt. . ..... wuay are • ' ' D•ILY l'ILOT Ii.II Plllte Kids Meet Belicops · F~ P.,e. l 'JORDAN •.. hunt continued ftlr it others -!lfOllly AmericaN -1Ull mlsslnj:, whilt vanish· td Jcrdanian Prime Minister Mohammed Daoud turned up safely In catro. Foul pl.; wu fund Thund&7 when Daooll -who ""111\ed bl& poeltloo -disapp!ared from the Nile Hilton Hotel, 'bqt he told' agents wbo traced him he simply Wanted to be alonf!. · · DeVelopinenl!: In the Jordan. civil war ·· and the inlematlonal crisis Jt provoked appeared to be slowing today, but all con- cerned wf!re kttpinl a close eye on the situation. · Israeli leidert· e.s:pressed conlidence that It 'fVilrbe qulf!t for a While, even as Arabs clamored fOf' new war or.squabbled among their own political factions. Relier efforts by the lntf!rnational.Red Cross and it! Arab counterpart. the Red Crescent, were stepped up '°s the plight of thousands of war victims.iritf!f!.sif\ed. · ' Arabs from the occupied west bank of the Jordan drove trucks carrying canned food -labf!ls id~ntifying them as Jsraeli- made torn off -felled in and will carry PULLS OUT OF RACe -wowided.women,.cliildten and old people __ ..;·_.Leeg1,1 Cendld•t• G;Hrt 1 Out. . Herbert G. Klein, Whitt bouse 1com• munlcations director, aakt . today in Frankfurt, Germany ttiat ~merican , respon~ to the Jordan crisill baa bf!en . aimed -at avoiding intervf!ntion. In .an interview with the American Rorces Radio network here, Kleiri said the President carefully explored all con· _ tingencies and whf!n forces were alerted It was based on the hope that they would not be used . Green Steps Out Of Cities League President Race ·.··• Hurlb'urt said the updated tax packa1e vesti1aUni the burglary cf 10 guns valued · · . y.•)11 not be presented to the City Council .at $I ,251l frorr) a Blycrest ,home Thursday, • l---, ... -'-~.~onday·as~originally-seheduled.-:rhe-ad------Xhe-shotg...&nd i!les_were-taken •. !"':tninistrative staff needs time to consider from a case at the home or James R. Costa Mesa poU.ce officer James Wagner talks to students at Killy- brooke School about the ·helicopter he rides in. Helicops staged a "fly-in" at· the school Th'ursday to acquaint youngsters with their craft and1fow-tbey use it to protect the citizenry. They will be visit- ing other schools throughout the year as part of community relations program. "Bu.t you Jl'IUSt bf! prepared for the worst as well ." he added. "lt wai fortunate we didn't have to we the. forces." A beefed-up U.S. Sixth Flttt still 1teamed along in the Mediterranean only Huntington Beach Councilman J ack Grttn has quit the racf! for president of the Orange County League of Cities. Green announced this moriiing he would not seek re • election to the president's post because at least eight cities v.·ere Oi)posed to him. sue~& himself in office . · • Chjec~ons that have been expressed dut· Bradley, 1427 Priscilla Lane, between the iAi recent weeks, he expla ined. bours of JI a.m. and 3:30 p.m. ~-1 He said a second reason for the delay ls Bradley told police his wife locked th! • ·150 ·miles·from ·the a-itical·area, ita ships, plane1 and men alerted two ·wttkl ·ago ·;. :. '-.i:f!Qutsi ~Y 'key o.lflcials Or the chamber hou~ when she left in the morning and . ··' qf comrrierce who Will not be able to at· be di~vered the bµrglary whe:n he re- . ,"':·ttnd the Monday afterrioon study session. tur~ tn ~e afte"!oon .. . ' The Newport Harbor Chamber of Com-Police said tbe tb1ef slipped the lock on • . mercf! playe~ a key role in drafting the the re':l' door and used a claw hammer new licensing structure,. which will more tQ Ptr open .~ locked doors ol the run Adjacent Cities · Asked when the thrtt bljackin1s occumd. The Soviet Union's potf!nt Mediter- ranf!&Jl squadron steamed along politely · but .detwninedly in its wake. · "You could say we share a common in- terest in what the other guy ia ·doing," ·remarked Rear Admlr1lllopr Spreen. The .HuntiJ1.gton Beach Councilman fac> ed a runoff Ocl I against Anaheim Coun- cilman Ralph Clark. The tWo meri tied 7-'I when the Lf!ague of Cities mf!t Sept. 10. ··~ d ·bl ··th · t ..,.,.: 000 1 case m th! liv1ngroom. . ' •.• an . ou e e . curren '"""' n 'nit burglar also took 1· t of th • ..• ·'Tf!venues tbe fee brings it. . I is e gum ' .•.. Under the proposal, whiCh the chainber stt1aJ number& whlcb Bradley kept in • fl~s said it rf!l.11 y doesn't like, the presf!nt the cm. ·About· City of Irvine Tsraf!I eipecb quiet along its bordf!rs with Syria ' and Jordan, at least for a while: But military .sources in T!l Aviv said today it is rf!ady to act if the guer- rillas decide to switch their attacks from Green.has served th.is year as president and Clark as vice president·of lhf! Orange County League of Cities. The league bu 25 me~rs in .the" county. · ~$25 flat fee wollld be replaced by a series of complex charges in amounts depend- " • jrig on the typl!! and volume of businf!ss a .. •:firm d"". · I · ~ . •· The chambf!r has recommf!nded simply lncreas1n1 thf! flat ftt to $40 or $50 an- ·'J!ually, buLhas reluctantly endorsed the .··classification system "as a last resort." The Newport Harbor-O>sta Mesa Board ... ·01·Realtors has taken a at.and against any lncrf!asf!. ~ ,•·~ In announcing thf! delay to da y , , :. • Hur.lburt told..council · mf!mbers that ·botti . :·: cbJmber tPresidf!nt Charles R. Currty • .... and Robert McCurdy, chairman of the ·. •',Chamber's Businf!SS Llcensf! Comm.itttf!, · request.eel. a delay because they will both ··be.out of town Monda)'. ~ ~;He ltso1uid a postponeml!!!,t will give , -;;;the-· rtafl additional time "to refine · · ·~ 6U'tber ·the bu!lness license ordinance · ·~:and staff riport in orde:r that it can riiore thoroughly and equitably renect the . desired objectivf!s reasonablf consistent · .. "1th community sentiment as· to the -. various formul as proposed to be used for · ~Ah r~viaed businesa Ucenae ordinance ." · · . Besides the ·chambf!r and the realty ·~·~·a number or individual businesses · ··~ J:ia~e: v~ced strong protest.I over pro- .. YisKms ·1n the new plan. · ...,. Amon& these are a number of Corona ·_de! Mar retail mf!rchants, a major . grocery store and an DWl'lf!r of small • apartment buildi ng, all of whom claim • · the tu would be unfair to businesses of . their type. From Pagel 1-~~-~~~~~~ HOSPITAL ... · ' San Diego Freeway, east to El Toro : ._ · 'Marine Corps Air Station and including ·-Miss ion Viejo, Lf!lsure world and the ·. ~ 8.rea to the coast just north of Laguna ' Be•ch. The 350-bed facility would rf!quire a fuU time faculty and tf!achlng staff or 92 of which M would bf! In mf!dlcal clinical ·.~itions. · Anothf!r fit part time faculty positions, 16 full time and fivf! part time research , posi~s would be required . DAILY PILOT • ORAllGI CO.Ul l'UI LllHlllG CC)Ml"&NY ,. '. .. • • k • ! " . ·~ ;, • .. -.. --. • . .. • • a.i..r+ N. WtM l'rnl!IMI tnd ''*II•...,. J1cl l. c .. ,1,., Viet l"t"ld.ill tNI ~ti Mt ........ Tl!''"'' IC11•il Et I lot • Tlleffl tl A. Mur,liint '-''""h'll ltlror c ... M .. 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(.el"""lt. ..,_,,_.. .., u ...... -t11••1 .,. ,...ll u.• -9111,1 "'II~ M!IMIJIM, ., .• ~~l'f, From Page l WEAPONS •.. were also picked up," said Lt. Fischer. Tbe discoverf began shortly before 10 p.m.,. when an emergency callbox in the 100 block.of Cecil Place went off at poUce headquarters. Officers Gtne Norden and Dave Hayes, of "" d0jiiijiile1l'1 .fd<my uni!. '1- nearby ao they mponded and alopP'd a youth later·df!termined to be McLaughlin for questioning: "He ad_mlt~ touching the bqx, but u.id he dldn\t set it off,1' Lt.1Fischf!r ex- Iamed, addini thit he carrlf!d no personal ldf!ntification at that point. "Tbe .subject volunteered to 10 to his home and 1et some," 1ald Lt. Fischer. • Thieves Tee Off At Country Club Fay_ W. Tunnell was out at thf! Mesa Vf!rdf! Country Club Thursday and Jost 12 golf balls. Costa Mesa police said that wouldn't bf! too bad for a poor day on the links , but Tunnell, of 274 E. 15th St., said they were in his goll bag. So was i full set of ircw and. four v.·ooos:«;taling-$430 Invilue, when a thief S\viped them out oI a golf course equip- ment room. .. . N!Wport Beach, Costa Meaa and other towns surrounding the proposed City of Irvine have been asked for formal com- ment on its incorporation plan_s by the Local Agency. Formation Commission. ln memoranda to all area citif!S, the LAFC said Jt requests "your report on the advisability, in tfrlll! of general putr lie interest," of the incorporation. The request is routine, Newport Beach city officials said. Thf!'y ~lto lfisrted <lilt that 'the. city council Is seeking a meeting of officials of surrounding communitif!s, including Costa Mesa, Santa Ana and Tustin. to discuss th! incorporation bid .by Irvine residf!nts. . The boundaries cited in the .formal ap- plication will likely be the major aspect to come in for criticism by ·ad joining communities. A map subrilitted with the application by the Cou ncil of Communi- tJes of Jrvinf! included, among other Woman Asks $115,000 For Savings Deposit A Corona de! Mar woman who ·claims the Newport·~lboa Savings and Loan Association 1efuses to allow her to withdraw the SIS,000 she's had on dl!!posit since 1963 now wants to withdraw '115,000 from her bankers. Mrs. Amanda Lloyd added •100,000 in damag~s to )ler claim when she filed the la wsuit In Orange County Superior Court. She claims the institution "acted with malice" in denying her access to her funds. Teens ~aimt D11stroplay • ., .. """"" .... Costa Mesa leenagers Jodi Palmblade (left rear), Louisa Lombardi, Jeff Palmblade (le!l front) and Jim Herman are among Orang• County Teena~ers Again•! Dystrophy (TADs) seek ing funds for fight against criP.phng diseage, Fund rai sing effort began today. If a '!'AD doesn L conllcl you and you wish to contribute, conlacl a TAD at 541H524. \ I things, Orange County Airport. Earlier, Ir-vine interests bad indicated the airport would not be included . within the requestf!d city limits. The proposed boundaries also include the controversial 177-acre Collins Radio Company property. This tract already has recf!ived LAFC approval for annf!xation to Newport Beach. Ross, H: Hines Jordan to Jsraf!l. While ·eiiminatini himself trOm the race, Green also asked for nominations to bf! rl!!Opened, so cities would have more than one man to choose from for pres!· dent. The IOW'ces said Palestinian guerrillas suffered up to 20,000 c1aualties in fighting with the Jprdanlan army in the past nine days. Jn addition. they said, Syria lost betwetn 75 and 100 Soviet·built T54 and "l would urge that nominations be T&S tanks -almost 12 percent of their again opened on Oct. 8," Green said. armor -as wf!ll as 170 military "But it should be noted that during the transport ·vehicles in the battles ln period in which the nominating com- northem Jordan. mittee was active. no one came forward The he.avy losses, according to the to suggest names for consideration." Israeli military ·IC>Ul'Ct!!, will guarantee .. 9ark, Green's only opponent, is .also a · cjufet, al lea~t for ~vet-al wttb: · . candidate for Supervisor in thf! 4th Leader1 ~•f!ered in their opinions, w,ith District. He 'faces a runoff Nov. ~ With Ha ho G d t De:fense Mm1sler Moshe Dayan aaymg ~: GordQn Bishop for the supervisor's j>ost r r ra ua e, . ~ ~ord.an civil war wq dying out and : -. tO SU~ W.illiarri Hirstein. no.~e of ib prlnctpa1s wanb·mor~.-Jf Clark is named President Of ~the S umhs t. 19 /, I hope the .K~ mana1ea to ~ve the.m · League of Cities, then Is elected II cOunty UCC 8 11 severe beatlng, aald ~yan. I ~m on supervisor, he would have to quit his the side-or ~e ~n1 and not on ~e 11de of Lf!ague post in January. • Ross H. Hines. a 1969 graduate or Newport Harbor liigh School died Thurs- day In Long Beach Community Hospital following a lengthy illness.· The 19-year-old youth, a resident of Nl!!wport Beach for m06l of his life, had . worked in construction in Hawaii aftf!l" gradu.atillg from.high school. He leaves his father, Jahn E. Hines; two sisters, Cassand ra and Mary: a brother. Jahn E. Hines III. all ()f Newport Beach, and his grandmother, Ethel Cooke of Long Beach. Funeral services .are scheduled for noon, Saturday, at Baltz Mortuary Chapel, Costa Mesa. The family has suggested mem«ial contributions to the-Orange County Chapter of the Amf!rican Cancer Society. the alternaUve.. . Green said he was quitting''lhe face . The ~lternahvf! would be Israeli . in-because Garden Grove and sevf!n other tervenU~n and Depu.ty Prf!mif!I' Y1gal cities h"ad expressed dissatisfaction with :4-llon said In a ~d;hne Meet tJ:'e Press . the Uaguf!'s policy of allowing of{ictr1 to interview H~m· ,may now be m worse serve consf!cutlve ter!TI!. trouble. Diplomatic aources iay Allon favorf!d immf!diate Israf!li intervention, to save Hu.55ein's government ''There js no more room for King Hussein in Jordan." a spokesman for the Palestinian guerrillas declarf!d today . Apartment Burglary Discovered in Mesa Kamal Nasser, spokesman for the Cen· A burglar broke into a Costa Mesa tral Committtt of the Palf!stinian Libera-apartment and stole a portable record lion Organization, made thf! statement at player and cash worth nearly '100, lbe a nf!WS conference a ff!w minutes before owner told police Thursday. Amman radio announced a .cease·fir.•c _ __,Lafayetle G. Baida, of 2284 Miner Sl, agreement between thf!-ktng-anll Yasir sa10 the Intruder prowlf!d through the Arafat, the head of th! committee. rooms, but apparently took nothing else. For The Unusual .... Think Of Ted von Hemer·t Th.••• u"t~u• pta~•• •~• 1 .new loolr •t the Old World fr o fl'I Henredon'1 Foli• Nin• collection, Oivenely ~tsi gnecl, y1t inetely ~.,. moniotu. Thi• diff1rtnc1 is with Ttd von Htmtf't, Inc. ' ,. DEALERS l'OR: HENR~N -DREXEL -HERITAGE 7ttl 11111_ "· NEWl'ORT llACH 1727 Wo1tcllff Dr. 642·20$0 °'IN FRIDAY ·'TIL 9 INTERIORS LAGUNA I B CH MS North c .. ,, Hwy. 4""551 OPIN FRIDAY 'TIL f ,.._ , ...... Ii• ........ C..., '*1HI 1 J I • A Cuba Flnt Castro Returns Hijack · Suspect MIAMI lUPI) -Robert J. Labadie, a husky blond ex- eoldier, bas become the first airp1ane hijack suspect~. ed directly lo the United states by the Olbln govern· men!. Labadie arrived tn Miami Thunday aboard one of the twice-daily Cuban r e f 11 g e • flight.I from Varadero, CUba, accompanied by a.D<puty U.S. manbal and a Public Health Service Doctor. He ..... onlettd held In Dade Coanty Jail on !500,000 bood at a preilmlnary bearing pending a dedsion on transfetring him to -!lend. I!>d·• where he I Heat Wave Continues In East ... is Wider Indictment for tho A1•g. 24 bljactinc of a Tnn.s World Alrllnel (TWA) jel. Tbe 747 WU diftl1ed from a ChicapPblladelpbia II I I ht and lon:od to Ily lo Havana with•penomaboanl.Aman who ldenll!led bimaell as "Captain George" --to have the plane blown up by an accomplice with a bOmb •In ·the rtar of the ,...,...., IOC"' tion. When the plane arrived In Havana. only the bljacnr got off. He later was identifled as Labadie. who was reported en, , leave from an Army bllp1ta1 in Valley Forge, Pa. His retum OIJ. one of the airlJft Jnternaijonal I 11 l 'h t I aponsored by the U.S. ,.....,,. ment for rtlaUves of Ctlban eliles lo the Unite</ states marked the lint limo tbM a hijack -baa been hanclo ed over to U.S. officials tit the ~ Cuban government, althougJI others have returned through Canada. UPI Te ........ By Vatted Pre11 JaternaUoml Sweltering weather stagnated over much of the East today, closing out a fret· --ful week-for power suppliers with m«e record-stretching temperatures. State Department spoke.. SUSPECT RETURNS man Robert J. McClookey told R•rt J. Lobadio report.en in Washington the-~------­ Cuban govmunent contacted the Unit.cl States throUlh the Swiss Embassy-'I'llesday and agreed to return Labadie. A deputy marshal new to Vara- dero airport from Miami on the health service plane, ar- Balloonists Still Lost In Atlantic 1 i Proepects for major relief from the bot and humid weather dnring the -"end -1lighl The alfect.d .,... ranged from upotale N"" Yori< lo the Carolinas and Into Wootem PeamylvanlL 'Ibere were no int.entionat electrlcity cuinffs by utilllies 'I1mr9day, although voltage redodlonr, generally 5 ,,..- cent, were common through· out the area. Public coopera- tion throughout this week's heat wave has been credited with averting a major black· out. TemperaturtS of I& to 90 were (<recast for dle weekend. The weather bureau's listed averaae ~ores for moot ol the East during late September are in the 60s. '[be temperature tn Philadelphia 'Jbunday WI! 95 degrml, a recont (or the third straight day. New Yort: City equalled its r«Ml of 89 degreel. r..t.d Lobadie and -with him In • plane fUll ol ... '"-' Conferees OK 2 New ABM Sites WASHINGTON (AP) -A $19.9-billion military purchas- ing bill including two new sites for the Safeguard antiballistic missile system has been ap- proved by 1 Senate-Home coo-- ference. The agreement, subject to approval of both houses before going to President Nixon. is $1 billion under the Nixon budget. NEW YORK (UPI) -A Coast Guard 1poteaman reported loday ii has no Idea what chancel for sunrival are for the tbree balloonl!ta mis- sing in the North Atlantic llince Monday. Two U.S. Coast Guard cut- ters, 11 American planes and one Canadian plane are in· volved in the search of 50,CMXI miles. The Coa'st Guard aaid it would ~inue the 1earcb at least through today. The seardl was hampered ThurSilay lfy~fog that reduced the visibility to virtually nothing. The beat was the -.:iurce of amcx.r.rort and penpirinlJ complaints everywhere. particulariy in the cities. Tn ,,,...J;ew Yori<, where electricity lhortples have been a con· cem 111 IUJMltt, many ~ turned off cor· ridor lighting lo """""" pow<r. Some baildlnp reduc- ed elevatcr eervict. The ABM system, a subject of Senate debate ror two years, will be expanded to four locations. But the conference accepted the Senate's elimina- tion of funds to begin deploy· ment of a tbinese-oriented 11tta defense system. The conference restored $700 million which had been cut by the Senate. The Houae version carried $2o.5 billion. about $100 million less than the Pentagon asked. The ml&si"I -Jn. eluded RodDey Andenlon. 32, I New Yart commodities broker, hia actress wife, Pamela BlVlm, 28, and Brlllsh balloon pilol Ma I e o Im Brighton, 32. They· w ere launched Sunday from Lang Island in an aUempt ·to com- plete the first balloon journey in history. They last ...,. hea<d from llO\lth of Cape Race, NewlouocIIJnd, Mooday night when a dorm forced them to 'Plash down. - ;ruMEHDOUS SAVINGS ON AU. ROOR N'O"llS, DEMONSTUTORS AND TEACHING INmlUMDnS AU inst.-""'7.-ucJ.,,;,,o "'Cocrsl Mu«" -•adJ:I SPlllET COllSOW onus wunmn SPINIT s395 Chonl -~ .,..... , -.. •••.t .................... ···~····· NEW ••• USED ••• fLOOI: MODILS. ~· .!!'~ ............. 5395 M'l'J """' -...., •"""'" & CAlll-NIUON-S495 ~ • •. ,_ --. ,,.,,_..., ....................... . =°·~~~IC .... 5595 ... PIAllOS 11ULTZ&IAUU $695 .............. $1'911.-.... - ·~~~~'"" 5795 AIOWIN RAND '995 ................... _ --.................. ~ ........ .. wmuTJD GUJlll(' • -=::"it-.. .... . .. 5995 MllOr----PIAHCHISID DIA&ll POii! YAMMAftlOMU ..... llmA&l-1'AIUNA -KOll.8 • Cl Ml ftAHOI -fndudi~ H--llll"'A .. -· ... '" I I ..., ...... ~ l.'ilU H•--· -...... N•I-51995 ............................... --=-~::::.~.:. ........ -5795 ~­__ _, ___ ._ .......... $600 I II--,..,._.. ............. . YWMA IPINIT CONl«IOROAN$ =::. "M:....:. .. .. .... .. . 5675 ._~---------~-Ulll_.Jll::~~-::=.=u=JllC==IANI==~ ~to~YWll llllCIAL .,,,,,.. ..... ..... ..................... D8JVllT ........... , ... -' ~ !Wf.M, -51795 llf,CGWSI -DALY IN• llllAY 'TJ. t. • -YS lU Wl ••• MJ.2111 DAILV Pnor I Boflten Pollee•an Cut Down ----... Four Y outhS ,Sought in 'Radical' Bank HolduP, ' I BOSTON (AP) -Police ob- tained warrants Wednesday for the UTest of tWo men and two young women, charging them with gwmlng do"'1 a policeman durina . a '2',000 bank holdup Wedneaday. Brandeis University In iitirby In San Die&O. Cam., In t•I, ~ '!1Janday nlch~ Waltham last June, 1 n d was een&en:oed to N )'ell'I .in and reported ' finding two Katherine A. Power, 20, of Maaachusetts state prison in rlnes, a q111nUty of 1m- Oenver, Colo., a member of 1966 for armed robbery and munitlob and other articles. ....u1~ police uld. They Aid the •partmenl the-senior ~at Brandeis. Boston lice meanwhile was thlt ol Katbsine Power• The two men 50\lght by piilice armed w1ur. search ...rn.~ one oL the two tirll IO\llhl Jn were identified as St8ntey R. fonied the door of a Back Bay the robbery aDd 11.aying. Bond, 25, of Cambridge, al--==:.::..::..:...=..:.:..:._ __ ;_ ___ ;__.,....:._:. __ ' L The city's po I i c e com- missioner termed the killing the act of a "damn radical group." special student al Brandeis, SPECIAL PURCHASE , and William Gilday, 41, or ll------- A filth man was captured Wednesday night and charged with murder in the robbery, which police said was filmtd by cameras tn the bank. Boston Police Commissioner Edmund L. McNamara told a nen conference that the dead . policeman, W a I t e r A. group aprings up from our col· Schroeder, wu the victim of Jeges and robs banks, it's "a damn radlcal and a damn revolutionary." revolutionary'' lfC'JP. Questioned, McNamara said Nam;ed in the wa;rants were he didn!t have any-"documen----two women, Susari-Saxbe, 20, ta.live evidence bat when a <i Albany, N.Y., a eraduate of Hemoehiliac Gaintng Amesbury. Arrested Wednesday nigbl l'IAIL •UT ITNTHnlC' s3'~•• was Robert Valeri, 21, of ENAMEL _ Sorntrville, identified as a stu-POI ROATS • DOCll dent at Northeastern Universi-11------------------• ly in Bost-On. .1 .. ----MOBIL HOME OWN~RS ----• Meanwhile, ,.1iss Saxbe's father, Eliot. contacted at his Kool Kap home in Albany, said he believed his daJghter wu mistakenly idenUlied. He said ROOF COATIN~ she .had Jost # her driver's license two months ago~and ,BinaRoCk for that he believed someone must has::'xf:un~i~· his daughter, • Gravel Landscaping magna cum laude graduate ofl'------------------.i Brandeis last June, w<nt te I FOOT ROLLING ·---'!""-• Oregon Sepl..l.and planned lo II"'_____ _, . work there for a year. In Denver, Mrs. Winfield S. PLATFORM LADDER .. ; ' l ~· ,• . -.• SEATI'LE, Wash. (UPI) - Carl Fletcher, 39, a high school teacher, was reported in "satisfactory" condition to- day from a dangerous opera· tion wich required 1,000 pints or blood. blood does not cloL More than J ,200 studenl.'I at Ballard High School promised to give blood in an effort to save his life. From the donated blood, dootors will extract t i n y amounts of a clotting protein .called cryo precipitate. Power, mother of the Power girl, said her daughter "had been out of contact with the 11,. _________________ .. ~ family Tor a long time." Shel- He had an artificial hip joint Inserted Thursday by doctors at Swedish Hospital, who said he would have died within a year without it. But Fletcher also is a hemopblliac. which lllWll his declined further com ment. ~ Police said Gilday was -J The mass donation to save the popular teacher 's life came after Student B o d Y President George Guy, 17, Tuesday called an ~mbly of the school's 1,750 students. paroled fron1 state prison Buy locarly •nd S.ve after serving part of a 1~12 year prison term imposed for armed robbery. Police uid Valeri served a state prison term for burglary in 1966. Bond, convicted of car theft ' ' WALKER PAINT WORKS 816 W. 16th St. Cot!• Mou 642-5776 Now-Get Mon For less! ,,-MORE, CAPACITY Y MORE FEATURES ~ MOREVAWE -For less tlm~a comparable 1956 modllf IE Flt1ER R1r WllB • •tm1111YWllllll.1111111'1 •• ,-.1111111t,tl• --,..,_ . • R'I -Fl.Ill RI ---lit 1111 Im llll • • · -dolqoil-,. --lliERAL EUCTillC IATCHINB HI SPEED DllYBI IO IWSWlllll DR!lllG ... -!ht'*'< llPt. ,.ii· .. -1111 - -Oil Jlllflc1ly IOI!, ""' ,..,,.-PIDSC'IW-Oilnldot- c-n llldJ ID -· Sl'l'CIAi. HEAVY DlllY SU· llNG "' ......... ,,,. NII, llOlt -. lie. nuFF· CYCLE for 11ntl• 11H11t hnDbllftl ttlloa. ~ -.cYIU IRl!lll Jrll,. .... """' '!*~:.+ $16495* -- ~ l ' • ___ ..,,,.,_1111Dlklll-• _,,..,......, ... _ a R lllllll-mu • • 1111 --" lltl Ir .... __ ....., __ _ • ,_a 11111111111-""'-""'"*",_ld_ "_, __ I! --IUllllUIY ....... -----...... -....... ,, I""'°' __ ,,...,__ fir""O..llltom7.llilllll••--. - --...... -..... I ·. "- , :.:: • . • • . I • ! • l ~ l • 1 ' • ~ ' . •, . ' .) DON'T BE SWITCHED ... INSIST ON GENERAL ELECTRIC QUALITY • I • TV ,and APPLIANCE IN HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 540-7131 Daily 9 'til 9; Sat. 9 'tll S • > ~ I ,I ' • • ,,, DMLY. PROT EDITORill PAGE • -Higher DellSity Ahead . Aro apartment dnlJ ... llOillr.·citizeN jlll\ bocaUH !My livw In ruldentill campluea ot ·more than one family?. ~ f ' Cnsla Mesa Planning Director· Wllllam L. DUM •eemed to be hinting Iha! such· mi&bt be the cue last week when he a.Sked the city cauncil to start worrying a litUe more about the number of iapartqlent units that are being built within-the city limita'of COiia Mesa. And Dunn had several suggestions for either .curt). ing the construction 'rate or rai1ing'the tone (and rent) of un~s that are built in the future .. Soaring land prices, along wJlh.hiih interest r~tes, have crippled the single family residential bulli:l~ng industry to a point where some experts are forecasting that single family tesidences are'. virtually , a . thing of ... the past-except for families with extraordinarily high· r incomes. DU.nn's suggested rrioves m&y force a hlgber qual· tty of apartment construction.' Bat unless 'the price of land miraculously begins lo DiOVe down •instead· of up, bigber density of usage it iDevllable. The.city counctl mar ... well face lhat fact. --. -- ' . , Problem of Dead Beats Hospitals -at least in countries without socialized --medicine -fac' a thankless decfsion' wJien it comes to r;ioney. · . On. orie hand they are lhnugbt of, by the public at large as institutes of healing, as mercy organizations . that place health and life saving above alt ·other con· 1ddefations. On the other hand hospitals are extremely expen· sive to run. In order' to stay in operation they must exercise the best of business· prac:ti(:es. In short, tney mu.st collect the money owed them. The Harbor Area's Hoag MeJ1'.t<>rial. Hospital ~s .n.o uception. It must straddle lhal llgbt Imo, of lulfllllng lts obligollons .tp Ibo public and at Ibo ·~• time.mu• certain some patients don't take ·free rides al lhe ••· penn of olher patients. Hoef aclmlniltrators be1an to find op,I late Jut year lhat many patients wbo did not have group ·~· surance -thoae who had no insurance or who held pr1· vate, ihdivldual bo1pitalization po1icies -..J were crea~ ing a problem. In making payments, insuranc·e com· panies often paid directly to boJders of private pobCles • raUter than sending them directly to the hospital. Of.,. · ten the money never got to the hospital. The problem was 1even more acute for admissions where~ no proof of any insurance could be shown.___..;.--- As a consequence. Hoag instituted a policy requ1r· ing cash payment from such patients. Hoag was not the first hospital to adopt such a payment policy; many hospitals, especially in Southern Calilornia, require such prepaynient. Understandably, thel-e was public reaction. An in· dividuaJ patient with a private policy couJdn't under· stand why tlie money he had paid in premiums didn't entitle him to the same privileges as anyone else. He wondered-often vocally.o-why he was being discrtm• inated-agaimt--just-because.he~was insurecLdlttetenuy __ -.-·I~--_, from the man in the next bed. And often when one is under the mental stfclin or illness, he is not in a frame of mind to urKlerstand the broad' 1financial policies and obligations of an institu• ti on that is charging $65 to $100 a day. After hearing of some of the complaints, the c.:osta ?\.Jesa ch·a-mber oe -commerce -asked -for-an audience ·\vith Hoag Administrator William R. Hudson. They got together in what turned out to be a very productive session . Jn effect. Hoag altered its policy -agreeing that private policies are acceptable if the patient can pre· sent a "proof of insurance'' form from his company assigning. payment to the hospital. It u•as a proper and welcome r.elaxation of the rules-a. perfectly acceptable amendment tl'lat very likely will assuage some of the ruffled feelings and still give Hoag maximum assur· ance of payment. , C I . Notes on' Japan's Wild Radicals Dear Gloomy Gns: Oregon Constituents . Are IJisetJC~."tefJ SECONDLY, THE Ja.pant.se student movement i1 better organized tactically. Students are armed with six-root staves and riot helmets. M ia explained in the recently-published book, "Zengakurtn~ ·• edited by Stuart Dowsey (lshi Press. Tokyo and Berkeley), Chukaku (Centra l Core Faction) and Kakumaru (Revolu. Uonary Marx ist Faction ) wear whitt; Shag~o (Socialist Student League) ttd and Shaseldo (Socialist Youth League) blue and the Socialist Student Front, green. They go to demonstrations in disciplined ranks like an army. They would be even better organ\ied if the variom "°"Pf! wtren'l ao·divided agaln!it each other. Before 1 lefl ror Japan, Co~J. General Eikichi Hara of San f'ranciM:o give ·mt a d)art of Japanese re)'9.lu. tionary groups and tlltlr relationships - a veritable jungle of ideological factions. ' JA,ANUE PouCE ore bett.r lralnOd for dtaling with students than .American potice. They have 1imp1Y. had more e1'· perientf:. They u~ water ca~· and tear gar;. Since 1967 they have carried duralumin body-length shields, so that when rocks st.art nying lhey can form prot.edive phalanxes. It wu my privilege to see by courtesy or the. Security Sec- tion of the NatiOMI POiie!: A41:eney . movies of ltudent riots over the years 111 Ml.I as training films showing how shields and...otlter, equipment are to be us- ed. The riot plctur:ei "-'trt truly drama Uc. For eiamplt. when Prime Minister Eiaaku Sato was to vilit SO\\lheast Ali.a jn October. 1967. thOusands of st.Ude:ntJ r my lfi4ii .. .., ii that •bout 10.01111 -. In-) fnMn 1 , ~· or """' uni'I"-.. -lht nJPl bolo!.. 1t ,....,.--· •• Ge• ... e . ...,_--. • _ _,., --,... dovtlop IUdl .. enwi.. ..... al undmlandlq IDY ond II pnblema! ADMIRER DeuAdmlm: oOvtin!lllc t11J Ullderslodinl II easy. It's lrYlltc to fllUrO nut what ~ II tl!at rm undontandlni • • , lbal'I ,Ibo llolflio( pert. (Send ycor pr~ms to Gtorce. l"8 Nollon'1 lfn. I '11'orryw1r< ) I " ~an't ~ II ' Oranp Coul 'Collep muzzle that public ad· dius IMOuncft,. Who ruins the football •·"*· with bia incUlant a ·n d unnecessary m<n>Joeue '?' We)'e there to see the pmes, not to bear them. -R.R. """' ........ ,.,..,. ............. ... •. .,., .................. , ...... "'* "' "'"' • ...., .... ., Hit. SEEING THE MOVIES of .actions like the Haneda incident,-one is impressed in afterthought by the feeling, in spite of the drama of ~ action, that because of long experience in confrontation both sides observe certain unspoken "rules of the game.'' While the action may be furious. it almoSt always 'stops short or being lethal. Guns are never drawn on either side, and the police rarely get rattled. Disasters such as those of Kent and Jackson State slmply don 't happen becauae the police know their business. As one writer in the book "Zengakuren" remarlu, · "'It II odd that lltbouah !ht students . place creat emphasis on viol~ the worst. damace ·to be ex· pect.ed' ls;brolcien wlndowa and. burnt-out vehiclu." TllEllE .AR! PROFOUND similarities between the Japanese· and Amtrican stu· dent movemen~ Both sroups rely on TV. Aa one wrlW in "Zengakurtn" says, "lf this (demonstration) depnerates into a fight, tbtn the focus of television ca'¥ru ii assured." Both rely heavily on incant'.ation and slogans nther than on reuon and argument. "The most popuJar," the writer continues. "are 'am- po fun&1i' (SmaSh the security treaty!) arid 'Toso shorit'· (Victory to the atruuJe!) ... AIJo heard is the blood· thir1ty cry or 'Minsei Korose' (Kill the Min.ti!). These chants fit into the rhythm of the demonstradona and follow • ~U.ern laid down in ancienti festivals all over Japan.,. Both J•panese and ·American student radicals Jre upper d•, elitist and antJ. dfmoer9Uc. Both 1ft111P1 are attracted not by .tile communism al tile llO•erful. praenMay ·Soviet eitahll.ilimtnt. but by the .....WUOO.ry -al Communilt u_, lille Tl'ollkyl!m end Maoilm. Boll\ pooJll, baib!c lhel> "ie"" of "coptlalllt bnporilllltn" "" Ille wrltlnp , al aulbnn inlll deod. lille Mars end Eoeels end Lenin. wbn 'could !IOI have predkDd and did not predict what (lpit•Hsm would be like ln tht latter h11lr al the IW'enlleth -,.. turn. Iii« E1drldte Cleaver ,and....llobert Scheer. to bush·lequo l'Ollte ll1la like Nll<lh KorH lor their ideals al pe100 and lretdom. ly S. I. BayWw1 ...... _ Su Frucilcl Stall Colkp I Mark Hatfield Is in -Deep -Trouble WASHINGTON -There was much more than worry about "family financial needs " behind Senator Mark Hatfield's hints that he may not_ seek a second term in 1972. Real reason tOr ·this carefully planted trial balloon -to sound out voler reac· lio• back home -wu deep co1teern about his reelection chlnces. As Of-now they are extremely clouded -to put it mildly. The mod dapper Oregon Republican is deeply in trouble with a large and powerful element of his party. Hatfield's militant dovlshness and persistent. op- position to administraUon policies and proposals has Mt oaly put him in hot v.•1ter with the White House, but aroused the furious ire oC GOP leaders and their foUowers in the slatt. He has been deluged with castigating maJI aod wantings of bitter opposjlion when his term upira: two years hence. IT IS AN OPEN secret that ambitious Republicans already are eyeing hiS seat and seriously considering challengillg him i11 the primary. ln 1966, Hatfield ran fnr the Senate as the incumbent a:overnor. He won •t have that hefty advantage in 1972. ·t But he definitely will have a raging party split that could be fatal. One.thi1g the ardent anti-Vietnam dove and outspoken liberal is certain of is .a tough primary· fight -aid apparently Hatfield doesn't much relish that ex· pensive, ant40us and hia:hly uncerl~in prospect. So he is looking around fof' possible alternatives. In effect. his intimations about tiuitti11g politics are notice that he is av.ailable for job offers-preferably· a good paying university presidency or head of a well-heeled tax exempt foun· dation. ' In Hatfield's s~lf-penned bi9graphy In the CODgressional Record he ·-notes that he is an ed~ator by prof~ssion and ~essor of "20 honorary degrees.·• UVING IT UP -• There is a hollow sound to Hatfield 's plaiat that he is hav·· ing a hard time to make do with· his $42,500 senatorial salary -plus another $28,000 he admits making h1 lecture fees lut year.· That $70,500 is more thari he ever· made before -in public or priviite life. Further, the $70,500 isn't the wbole slory·by far. In additio.ri to liiS Sf2,SOO sa lary, Hatrield also gets another $300,000 for clericiil hire, telepoone· al}d t~Jegraph·, six trips to:-and·from Oregon; free mail and various other perquisites and ac- commodations, among them a handsome. ly furnished five-room office ·suite i1 Washington and another comrtiodious of.! fiee wjth.-a ·11~ff,in Oregon. ·Hatfield denies he has a pri vate fund raised by wealthy liberal friends and :i(j. ' ' m1rers. ··: .... ,.. ;. , . . He , admits .one or .-the former is 1 ' member of his.· staff as a dollar.a-year ma". JT IS ~LSO A FA.CT thif not JOng 3fter he came to the' Senate ft 'was diklosea lhat "friends" were raisi11.g· a ·1100,000 fund to pay for extra gt.aft and other ex· penses. At that time Hatfield was .ac- tively harboring vice presidential aspira· lions. · · When the fund plan came to . light, public reaction in Orelon was very critical. Hatfield hastily unounced the scheme was being dropped. Similarly, he deAied he was preparing to bolt lhe ·Republican . party when he issued a blast at President Nixon last J!Jn~ .. Hatfield charged the President was gravely jeopardizing the future ol the GOP with his "Southern strategy•~ and warned that he "could _bj: dumped." This startling bluntnes.s immediately raised conjectures ia potiµcal q~rs that 0Je liberal Oregonian was get.till set to switch to tht; Democrats -ai. f«J1Dtr Senator Wayne Morse, another Orqon militant, did years ago. BUii' HATFIELD emphatically -denied 1hlt. 1Je ins!sfedtiie int.ended ,to .remain'in fhe GOP, although admitting his inti-ad· ministration record and deounciationa made his reelection as a Republican very Uncertain. "H I hc:I to tun tOday," said 'Hatfield, "I would be in a lot of troub"." Colleagues attribute Hatfield's ex· ~slve living style 8$ a likely importut reason for bis w111ting a bigger income. By Robert S. Altt1I And Job A. Gnldllllllll Kitchens • Ill Elemen-ta:ry Schools? To the Editor : After. looking at !l<lme of the recent New Homes magazines and promotional advertising of tract developers, I am in· cllned to reflect on the currently stressed "Gourmet Dream Kitchens" as shown in homes costing $28.500 and upwards. \\'hat a laugh for the average Mr. & Mrs~ America, whether he is black, \\·hite, brown or otherwise. The average ·"·orker today is the developers' market for sales. We wonder how many of these people read the come-on gimmicks as ad- vertised in every newspaper. magazine and home builders' periodical. BEtAUSE A gifted draftsman dreams up a kitchen which 'i'-'OU.ld gil·e the· finest cooks a plaCf: to -create cuisine fit for a gourmet, what makes the developer (who ~lls these homes) think thi:lt the average housewife is that good a cook? The food and beverage people work hard to prepare food ,and drinks. Even in· slant tea if you please. There are some wbo will never learn to brew a good pot o{ tea! ?t'e have lovely pictures on the froun TV dinners, etc .. which would en· tice any housewife not to bother with preparing a well-balanced and attractive meal for her family . lf the home builders and the food processors should get together. 1 believe that all we need is big· 1er and better 'refrigerators a n d freezers! But the Ideas that the builders are putting forth lo create sales show a deep yearning in our society for a real home with rtal cooks. BUT DO OUR school!i and educational cinter1 t~ach young girls to become cpoka:. proper mothers or even pa.Mable houstkeeper1? No! What a sony plight. Lucky art those men who have nice homes •ith 1 wom1n in the kitchen who can . realty turn GUt a first cl•• dinner. have enough money ll'I buy champagne of e1celle:nt quality and the time to ut and •PJ¥'0Cllle 1 gourmet dinner prtpmd In a •gourmet' kitchen. The trouble with our generation Is a 1ap •II right. but ll Is a 1a~ between·the Idea or everyone deslring-fmd·of the ~r e1cdlence: variety AND our public school system· which Is so busy with Its sex prn- blema that lt can't lake lime to teach our youog ones 10me of lhe other nect9$1ry thlnp ln lift. to make tiving IJ'Ul. How about putting a rew kitchens in our elementary IChools to teach them (boys -~-..... -.. ._,.;.. ,,.,., . ., ""'" ' . Mailbf>x ~ .. '~~-L. " ' Letters from readtrs are welcome. · Norrnal/y writers sho uld convey their messages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to f it spcice or eliminate libel reserved. All let· ters miist illclude signature and mail· ing address , but names may be with· held on reque~t if sufficient reason is apparent. Poetry will ·not be pub- lished. and girls alike) how to boil an egg, make a French apple pte or ·whip up a ba tch of bread like grandmother used to make? E. WATKINS All. States Festh•lil To ·the Editor: At a recent evaluation meeting, the All States Festival Committee spontaneously agreed that the overwhelm.inc success of the August 16 fest ival was largely due to lhe pertinent photographs and in- formation as provided by the DAILY PILOT, 1'he fegtiva l was jointly !iponsored Dy the Cosla ~1esa Chamber of Commerce. the \Vomen·s Divi1iob, the Jaycees .and a hard-working task force or .jrurested citiiens from clubt and organiuUohs of the area. The All States Ftstival C<lfnmittte U "' tends sincere •pJ>ttelatloo to 1 h e management •nd itaff of the DAILY PILOT. t .. JOYCE MARTIN Publlclty Cbainnan ference lies in that the newspaper priilt! in black and white· ·or colors on paper from a plant-th.at has typesetting equi~ ment and pre:;.ses . which _ it owns .and operates. IT RECORDS the history of its com· munity day-by-day or week·by-week, whate_ver its frequenCy or publication may be. You can read the newspaper all at once or refer lo it during ihe day or lay it aside for reading later. It is there.. You may file it away and .if you keep a year·s supply you may have it bound into a volume y<hich constitutes the history of a commu.nity for an entire year. Most newspapers bind their ·newspa~s into annual volumes or subdivisions thereof. So the newspaper is a historical medium or communication. NOW AS TO RADIO and lelevision. they art both transif,ory. and. ~e~I \n bqih news and l!nterta:irunenl. But you can quick!y forcet what y;as On yesterday's television 'or radio prografl) ~'M you refer to a guide in print. The ..channds on which the'y operate are vested in the United Slates of America and they, the television broadcaster. o~ the ra.dio broad· caster, gets the privilege of using certain channels or rights by getting a liceme from the Federal Communiactions Com· mission un less the laws have been changed from my da ys in radtO broa(j. cast after World War fl .. THE RAblO OR. television channels never leave the ownership of the United States of America but are licensed. To get a license requires going beffi>re the Federal Commwdc:aUons Commissk:ln and· fillibg out forms and no lndJvidual gel.I U..:.ljiht to ,,.. 1 channel il ho or she his been convicted of moral turpitude. JliSt how It works when a cor· poralt form goes before the FCC, t do' · not· lcncnt. The same rules tor· radio J auume apply to television. · Ati. "1·1'Now. In having been botll i• ra<ho brotdcast and n t w s ll a p e r publishlnc:ll that lttey att entirely unlike To tbt Editor: media of comptunication. For a Jn talking to persona Vt'ho appar,ntly new1paper owns it• equipm,nt and re- h11.ve nevtr tho\llht about the difference quires only the ri1ht to distribute tlvou&h between newsJ>lper publishing and the the malls of the post office by televisiol'l and rlCtio media . t find much t!ltblishing that Mght through meetitli ignorance:. The newspaper is an tntlrtly certain quallflcations. diffmnt lnstltutkln of United States life 1 don't know of •ny other way to el· from that of t.elevilion and radio. The dif. _ plam tht dlffertnce hiween· the · two foi'n'is of media. that is; tl1e printed word. and the televised or radio word. We have had newspapers since the . days of Ben. jcimin Franklin but not radio or television. We have newspaQers I~ year• old but not either TV or radio stations. I ho-pt I have cast some enlightenment.. but for anyone who wants more, write to the Federal Communications Commission in \Vashington, D.C. and ask how to get the license to build a radio or tt.levision 1ta· tion. RUSSELL BENNITT Agelnst . Altortio11 To lhe Editor: Regardless of the law : When a woman .agrees to. or seeks an abortion she is saying t<1 herself and to the world that she will not accept the responsjbllity of her .actions Me ii sac. rlfielng the life ol an innocf:nt child for her· own selfish .reasons. The same' hokfa trwe tor the man who allows or seeka an abortion for the woman who carries his child , ' ' LET THOSE who are considering an abortion ask the013eJveS. ''Will this dllld be the only child the Lord will ever .give to me?" Let those who are considering an abor· lion remember that tbe. spirit of that am. born cllild will forever be before them, in their minds. MRS, BARBARA R. SAKASKE -~-- Frid a y, September 25, 1970 The editorial pog« of tlh! Dailr, Pil<>t seek& to inform. nnd •limo lllate readers by presenting thia ntw1pop«r'1 opinions ond com- -meniar11 o" topics of intertit and sfgnificanc«, b;i prwidtno s • foftim.' for the ttfPrtuir:m ol our Teader1' opinao1fi , and bv prc1en.ti11g the diDtr.!t t1itw- poi1tts of informtd obstrvtr.y on!' .spokt.tmen on topics of th'• da11 . Robert N. Weed, Publisher 17 I .. I 117 I ·. San Clemente - Capistrano • EDITI O N ~ '* voe 63, NO. 230, 4 SECTIONS, .... PAGES . - • • ORAN&E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, SEPTEM BER 25, 1910 • ' , ' JEN CENTS .. Boyd's .Report Raps Lag~na. Riot Procedures r By BARBARA KREIBICH development ol better relations between ot ... De11Y '"" ststt police, city officials 8nd reaidenUI. Among members of a city investigating Boyd conclu~ his report with ' I.he Richard Goldberg • and fotine\' cily noted !hat the t1tr .. commillee members manager James D, Whelton. had come up with dilferent views of the BefOl;e copying .the individual reports Woodland affair and , for this reaSM, the only one eharged physical violence, priaonus by bair·boldin& ii not un- 1lating ~e saw an of fleer hit a female: and common. puU her hair, pull 1 milt by the balr and The only record ol bosp{lal treatment panel, Laguna Beach Councilman comment, "It is clear that this incident for public consumption, the , c i t y complete individual reports also would be mace him and that, his fOWD' neck wu u an aftennath If the riot conctrDed a Charlton Boyd issued the report most should not have happened." ~ly cri~cal of Wood.land DrLv_! riot ---~d1s~is 'lheJrui~-three ~~~dull_ control ures, the re ease of report5by members of the commit~· of manager'• office' blanked out names or made public. ~U..,.ltn•s1e.U•1tifytng.aUbe tnquiry.and -Goldbe•g'1.tWo.part. report.deals-with "names of persons referred to by the investigation ~ot~chartet of improper hurt. police officer whose lhoulder wil ldber1~notes that·..!!poJke---wHftesaes-dillOClted;-Ooldberr-ltati!s. • --- did not confirm or deny the~ chir1es" He 11ys it a_ppean., .,ny bllil hr statements indicated today. inqillry into the riot released to the press In discussing the Woodland disruption today. His ni~page document compares last Ju1y 4, Bofd crilitjz.ed proced~s with three-page.reportl submitted by th,.e used to control the situation. He urges other two committee membtra, Mayor . , writers. police conduct and measures suggested to FollowinJ: the reading of a 1wnmairy of prevent a recurrence of such a sltuaUon. the three reporta at an adjourned councl1 He notes that only three partlclpanls meeting Wedn...tay nilbt, Goklber1 bad other than polici personnel t'3tified, and . . ' ·.and that one witness qreed there "mi&ht charlftl of violence would hive raulted have. been 10me OYer-ruction" in con-from ·the feet .tblt·penom·'ffft'e rt111st1Da: nection with one arrest. He aho .Uta: arrest' or....otherl ..., ~ptin& to pr .. that the poUce witness sa\d takin& of (!lee MINI Rlor REPORT, hp I) Reagan in County, Bids • For Republican Majority 1,000 Hear Governor In Anaheim By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI *' D-'tr l'tllt ltetl ·• Flag Not Green Ecology Banne r Goes to Coutt When are the stars and stripes not an American Flag? Would substitution of the color green ror blue make the difference? Apparently the matter - which cro~ ped up in San Clemente ~cently -will :be settled in court. · mlse to •Wt-, hi1 flag curtains seized as evidence and he ls to be arraigned ln municipal court Oct. 1. Bloody Nine Days Over.· lnJord~ Govemor·Reapn. Tbmlday called Upoll Califoniius ,.,,re..re.f<Un .. •·P. him a clear cut JtepybliCan !llljGrity in the Legiall:tun ilr:Nnember • be can carry out hiJ tu: rifota, welfare and law and orde r pnlll'aml. f Matthew Udall, ll, or 140 Avenida '>Ja<!don, was cited by a iin Clemente ~ Officer J1st week .Oft.~charau ef desecrating the American !'lap ,, . Police impouMed bis van, wbk:h IMy 1aiit had cut portions of • n., .. window curtallll. Udall Wal rlleaa.d .., hil (XO- Udall has maint&ined that his greenish flag with stars and stripes was not an American Flaa but an ecology flag atld that his diaplay of it waa a potitivei IC( D9l ·a tlilrapecllu~ ...... , • ' . Edward Tornell, deputy dbtrld at. torney, feela the cir~ -et the ... 1an inle a difficult ~ bul \DI¥ fA> thrOW ·""1" llllht •·lt·_by ~ and lettlq Ille court dlclde. --~· Driver of 'Drug Wagon' Sentenced to Prison I A Laguna Beach drug trafficker whose hashish-filled minibw: is n o w lm· mortalized in Superior Court records as "drug wagon'" was 1entenced 111ur!day to one to 10 years in state , prison, · Judge James F. Judg'!._ ~n<ted that term to Tod William Carey. 23, ol 1476 N. Coast Highway, and canceled a ,S,000 bench warrant issued earlier when the Laguna Officers Net 3 Suspects Laguna Beach narcotics officers, 11ttk· ing to serve a warrant for vkllation of probation Thursday night. netted three additional suspects and a quantity of drugs. , Arrested on the warrant and also on suspicion of pouession of marijuana was Gregory Slone Mooney, 19, of Ml Griffith Way. .Also arrested al the Grilfith Way residence and booked on ~picioo of ·possession or marijuana and !:?f:ing present where the drug wu used, Were, Edward Robert Gilstrap, 23, and Michelle Karen Mellino, of the Griffith Way ad· ~ and Bret Nelaon LaBarts, 19, of Arcadia. defendant railed to show up in court. Carey was one of three persons ar- rested on drug charges last May 4 at his home after investigatorS·sald they watch· ed Carey, his brother Robert, 18, Ind hi• wife, Ann, 21, removing hashish•valued at nearly $100,000 from·Garey's car. Drug charges filed against Mrs. Carey and Robert Carey were la~ dismisaed. Carey's "drug wagon " got its title from investigators who said he had the brand new·vehic~ shipped from Germany with considerable quantities of hashish stuffed into every available recepticle including Ille 'ash tray. Superior COurt records indicate .. µiat Carey was a student at the University of Heidelberg in West Germany when he became interested in the smuggling of hashish . Investigators said he bought his car in Germany and drove to Morocco where he purchased the huhish seized last May 4 for $800. • Carey returned to Germany and had the loaded car shipped from that countrY to the United States, inveatlgators &aid, Strike Authorized NEW YORK (AP) -Members of the American Newspaper Guild at the New York Times have voted 1,143 to 79 to authorize guild officers to can a strike against the paper. No deadline was aet for a ltrlke. Reagan lpOke to a crewd ol 1,000 Republicans at • $18N-plate dinner Thursday night at the Anaheim eon. ventlon Center, In a gathering attended by tt>e Republican candidates for slate con- stitutional offices, the Legislature and Congress, Reagan shared the speaker's platform with Senator George M~y. who also ls seeking re-election. Reagan cited the ''broken Jog jam" of tegisl!ltion that o c c u r r e d when Republicans gained a slight edge in both llouses of the state Legislature •after the 1968 elections. And he outlined additional programs he would push through if given a solidly Republican Legislature thi.s year. Among programs he said be conslden necessary are welfare reforms, Medical reforms, a judicial selection reform and property tax refonn. ~ "If you believe in the need for these things as I do, then give me a team of (Ses DINNEll, Pap I) Students Given Rec Brochuer s Copiet of the rtcently completed Laguna Beach Recreation Departments program brochure are belhg dl.stributed to all atudents in· the Laruna Beach Unified School District. Copies of the in- formational brochure ate also available at the City Hall and the Ubrary. 'I1le brochure detcribel a wide variety of instructional claMI such u karaY, cake decorating, creative dance and ten- nis. Residents may register for any of the classes or activitiea at the Recreation Department, 17~ N. Coast Highway, from 8 a.m. to noon and from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday throogh Friday. Further information may be ot'itafued from the Reautloa Dept. al llHUI at 4$. 'Bus jacking' Foiled in LA Dres·s Code •• Ill Laguna Planners to Hear Road Extension 'Proposal The Laguna Beach Planning Com· mission will hold a publi~ ~g _Mop. day at 7:30 p.m. on a proposed road eon· struction project which will affect RiddJe Field -the home of the Laguna Beach Little League. Marine Arrested I n San Clemente Rape Attempt A former Camp Pendleton Marine wu arrested in Oceanside on 1usplcioli of at· tempting to rape a San Clemente woman. Jame3 Alonz.o Neila, 23, was arrested on a warrant obtained by San Clemenk police. Police said he would be arra.igned m municipal court today on charges of rape and burglary. Ball was set at 125.000. • A detecti ve said Neila's picture, one of several shown the 24-year-old victim, was Identified by her. Neila denied the charges, police said. The victim, a market checker, strug· gled with an assailant ln her home early Sunday morning until her meams drove him off. Sbe suffered cutl and mapes in the tussle. Police said the fUSpect did not know the ~ictim. Entry into htt home was gained by alitting a Window screen and reachin& in to unlock the window. Effect . The proposal involves <Mltruetion of. th~ Camm,is J)rivLq_~_IQ.n_.miin the North Coast H1ghwlly through Boat Can- yon to the city limit.I, a distance of about one half mile , 11 part of the a>Un- ty's arterial road plan. Acting City Manager Joseph Sweaney uld today the engineering plans on the projects are not complete. He noted that. Jr the road goes through the baseball field, another field would be-~lit to replace the old one before ~e ltart of construction. · A public hearing will also.be held Mon· day on a proposed ei:tension of · Alta Laguna Boulevard frOm"Trettop weto Balboa Avenue in Arch Beach Heights. Following:"tbe scheduled public hear· ings. the commission . wlll continue lta study session on development of;the Main Beach. The commission also is ~u.led to hear a revort from city Sign Inspector Bill Meyer on the statua of hotel and motel signa in mldenUally zoned areu of the city, I Laguna Police Check Burglary ._ Laguna Beach police are tnvesti11lin1 a Thursday morning buralary 1t the White Hall Drw Shop, 30& N. Cout Highway, iR which women's clothiac valued at about.f!0,000 wu taken. Entry ID the shop was apparently 1aJn. td through the rear door at about 1:45 a.m. Thursday, according to police. The store's entire Inventory of women'• COila, dresseJ and pant sulta was t.g_en', police reported, with the exception of about 1& pieces of clothinC hangtnc In a closet. LOS ANGELES (UPI)·-Daryl ,S¥i-·eet, 19, stuck a broken wine bot,.. tie to the head of the tlriver of a bus carrying 22 ~rsons and told him. "We're i Oing to San Diego.'' Cle mente Hig h Sch ool Students-Comply W ith Rules · The Thursday theft WU the """'"41 reported burglary IL the lllM< within tilt pall three monihl, pollee noted. llod~of Wom~n . Washes AShore The "busjacking" T h u r s d a y lasted only 15 minutes. A ~' Robert'~ .Davis, J f, ovti-powered Uie ~d-be hijllcker 'wtien the Southcm California Rapid Transit District bus stopped 1t a red light In a downtown in- tersection. The driver. Ed Hll<bon. Jr., h•ler told J>Olite, "He s11id ht was going to kiU me." S•-eel was char1ed ~ilh kidn11plng. Authoriti@s uld there are ntt •Atatutes dealina with the hlj1cldng of buses. . I By PAMELA HALLAN a aions." aald Mra:.-~. • . Of~ ~" .. ~lllt·tMfl . Althoucb a few of~lhe:·pll art wea.r:ilC . Y~u might t.J:imk ankle length dreues ·long• 1 11 1 great ..... lff them 1n 1 1noongruou1 wtth ~ Clearw1tet ':l. ' _.. • • • , 1 ~Ril1.va1 moon landiics,U(women's lib. weartflg Yong ~nts. -we!te ll.111 ))lvJnj -eut you can find them at San Clemente trouble with faded jean1, kit most of the High School where there'• a new drea pants look better lhan I UP'"'''d," ·~ code this year. aald. -"Most of the girll undentand end com· John Smart, boys vice prtnciplf, agreed ply-with lhe dress code!," s1lld Mrs. that the new dress code 11 worting v.ry BarlMra Mc:CJrf,hy, girls "ice principal. well. "We've had to liilut'.f few wamiftls But Jmt to make sure I.here was 1 very and we've had a f"" llrtif { iidens, @eCla l fashton show iJI the &iris' physicaJ but you have to ei:ped a "1f}D a ICbool education classes Thunday. with 2,400 students,",,..... • "Through skits we lllgwed What kind of The moat controvenllil llorl el Ille new dress Is appropriate for dillerent oc-~ bu -boy•' balt lonJth. Thia " -year'it ~"allowed lo toueh the lop al a T· .iilrt collar. ..ceec11., the lencth 1111· .,..led for 1tlldenb at nearby Saddleback College. Smart reported that a law hoy• are •P'!rling bUahy muatachea ud Hiring sideburns; another new allowan~. bu.t most look llk.e they did lut year. The warm weather has procluoed lots of bermudu on bbfl and minis on tirll, but lhere. is one mode of acceptable dress for 'g~b th1t ii oonsplcUOUll by Ill a1-1Ce. Perhaps the dreas code, commltlee, which II IChec\uled ID meet• qaln In October to review the code's ~· wUI tsile a _..i looi at It ..... JIM midi. l De<ompooed"from da71 In u..-... tbt bndy of a WOl,1\ln wuhed ashore ·aboUt noon todly near Paellk: Coat .wpway ., ·and El.Pa,.. In Lacuna Boch.· • Au!horllitt said it was dlfllcult ID de, lentl ine how laol the victim had beeR in the ..,...; duo le tbt condition Of• tbt rorpee. -• . Or>anc• County Coroner'• deputies picked up the remalnl and were to bt- lin an i,nvelUcatJon into the woman's Identity and the CaUlt ol deal!>. ....... Weadaer Gullly Sanla Ana wtnds will ble!f up a storm 'over the. weekend, lelldinl the coallli lemperUuru 1bootin( toward the IO ·mark. Tho momlna• wUI offer foe, as UIU&L INSIDE TODAY "We tDanttd to do 1omethino for our ntiolabort," IGJd a. Lo- gu,,. nm .. couple .... -• 1 .. te.i i.ioQ,ooo ID , 1M -Soddkbacll C-••ltt Hoef>i- Wl. Their 1wn{ ii in todcw'• Wttktlldcr, Po{IC JS. ........ '' c.......... , C~"'9 U. 1 (......... ... ... ..... .. -. --. -. == , .. ,.1~ -.. AIMI .. ,_,. II ==. ....... ; -.... ..,...,,.. tt --.. ... _'-' •• 7 .. , Motl' . ..... ,.,... ,. -... s .. ,.._ .. ,, -. ---. ~....,.,,.,, --.. Wld J ... • • ~~~-~~~~~~--'---'""'::...::~·::;~:~··:.,,·=~:.:..::·~=c~·:::...~~.;;.;-=;=-:.:......;·~-·=·~==;,==;,,..."""'~«""''~·~·---·,~·:...,, .• ,.?~'D•'~F>--.-·~·._..i.1s.·""•"-•"'"*•l•••,•ti'•nr•a•n .. u•·•'b ... -•.•·•··~t•n""'"•1 A .. Z-M: ......... , .... _., .............. ~.r l r • 'J DAILY PILOT SC • I • • t From P .. ~ 1 JORDAN •.. Ar1bl: clamored for new war 'or aquabb]ed among their own political factlons. --Reliri efforts by the International Red Cross and its Arab counterpart, the Red Crescetit, were stepped up as the plight bf thousands or war victims intensified. Arabs from the occupied west bank of the Jordan drove truck.! carrying canned )ood -labels idenlifying them as Israeli· inade torn. off -rolled in and will carry wounded women , children and old people Gut. • -Herbert G. Klein, White house cOm- municaliora director, said today Di Frankfurt, Germany that American 'response to the Jordan cri.si! has been ·1imed at avoidina: lntervenUon. In an interview with the American Forces ·RacHo network here, Klein aai.d the President carefully explored all con- lingencieS and when forces were alerted It was ba!ted on the hope that they would not be ustd. . ''But you must be prepared for the "·orst as well," he added. "It was fortunate we didn't have to ·use the forcea:." A 'beefed-up U.S. Sixth Fleet still steamed along in the Mediterranean only 150 miles from the critical area, it.s ships. planet and men alerted two weekl ago when the three hijackings occurred. The Soviet Union's potent Mediter- ranean squadron steamed along politely but determinedly in its wake. · "You could say we share a common in- terest in what the other guy is doing," remarked Rear Admiral Roger Spreen. Israel ei:pects quiet along its borders with Syria and Jordan, at least for a while. But military sources in Tel Aviv ii.id today it is ready to act if the guer- rillas decide to switch their attacks from Jonlan lo Jarad. The sources aaid Palestinian gberrillas suffered up to 20,000 casualties in fighting witb the Jordanian army in the past nine day1. In addition, they uid, Syria lost between 75 and 100 Soviet-built T54 ahd T55 tanks -almost 12 percent of their armor -as well as 170 military tranaport vehicles in the batUes in oorthern Jordan. 'I'he heavy losses. according to the Israeli military sources, will guarantee quiet, at least fur aeveral weeks. _ Leaders d.Ufered in their opinions, with Defense Minister Moshe Dayan saying the Jordan civil war was dying out and. none of its principals wants more. · "I hope the King manages to give them a severe beating," said Dayan. "1 am on the side of the king and not on the side of the alternative." The alternative would be Israeli in- tervention and Deputy Premier Yigal Allon said In a hard-line Meet. the Press intervieW Hussein miy now be in worse trouble. Diplomatic sources say Allon favored immecllate Israeli intervintion, to aave Hussein's iOvernment. Woman Hangs Self STOCKTON (UPI) -Leung She< Ng, 88, complained to her daughter that her dentures did not fit and she "had no fe1son to live jf I don't have good teeth." 1be woman's body was round ban&inc from a rafter Thursday. . DAllY PllOT • N...,.rt le9di ._ ....... I c... ..... S.Ck:it1Nle O•ANGE COAST .. UtllSHING C()Ml"AN't ..... ,, N. w .... f'•~loOenl •NI .. llO!ltillf J•cli •· Curt,., Vk• ,.,U.Hftl ..,.. G_,I! M•lllM• 1h•"''' k't••il ...... 1\o"''' A. M11r,hl110 M~I"' EOl!tl' lich~ '·Nill *Ill Orf..;; C-.1y 1:411W Offlc• C"'lt M-~ S» Wt.ii lly '''"'' fillft'MI'/ .. Id!! 2:111 W"I ................ ~ ~ ... tl'I: m ,.-,,..., ..,_ ~·~told!: l717J •••tll ....... ,. a.11 ci.-•; au ,..,," 11 ''"'"" ... , • •. It's Your Move -Sahtage Seen Paralyzed ¥ outh Needs Chess.man Weapons Found .. In Costa Mesa 81 llUDI ~Kl ... ... llaH Kenny 'lllButl< la waltinl lor --lo mtke the DUI move. Becauae be can't. Not tlnoe 1ut October wbell an • aµtonu:iblle accident severed his spinal cord and paralyzed both arms and legs. When the doctors tell' you that there Is litUe, if any hope ~t you'll ever run or throw a football agaln, life can get pretty depressinC~ And from KeMy'a bedside at Hunt.incton Valley COnvalesctnt Hospital, the future looks pretty dim. Mentally alert and able to talk well despite the tragic accident, Kenny says he woold like to play chess with someone but that be can move neither pawn or king with his hands. "J'in lookina for someone in their early 20! to play a couple of games a day ," said Kenny, 19, who attended Huntington Beach--H.igb--Scbool. He-aays it· really doesn't matter if it's 1 boy or girl u loni as they like to play chess .. Kenny doesn't profess to be an expert at the game, but it looks like he'll have a long time to practice. "J'm really not very good at it but I know all the moves," he explained. · Ironically, a chess set bought in Mexico was an indirect cause of his predicament. ''He and another boy were on their way back home from Mexico where he purchased the cheu set. He was asleep In the car when it rolled over several times From Page I DINNER ..• Republicam who will get the job done," he said. The campaign tactics of Reagan's op- ponent, Jess Unruh. were noted by the governor. "This business ·or popping up on my front lawn or at the houses of Republican supporters is ludricrous." Reagan drew a laugh from his sup- porters when· he added, "You know it us- ed to be that the only thing you had to worry about on your front lawn was crab grass." Murphy . ei:tended some of Reagan's remarks to the national level, noting that President Nixon also needs a Republican "team in Washington. "In two weeks of bard campaigning up and down this state, I've found out a few things about what Californians want," he ei:plained. '"They want judges who will enforce the laws as they .art written. I found out the taxpayers of th1a at.ale are tired of sup- porting' revolutionaries in our iristltutfOns of higher learning. "And they want people in public office who will tell it like it is. They want representatives who will Vote the way they talk during a campaign and they want men who will show up in Congres.5," he stated. Murphy concluded his speeclt by calling upon audience members to get out and work for the candidates to make "the greatest Republican victory in years in tltis state." and 1ot hurt," aid Mn. Vkitt Taber, Ibo botpllal'• -ol ...... -Tho -·boy, Wbo ...... vtriually UDIClthed, .wl hu the cita--~ tc-cordJ"l lo Kenny. . .• Mrs. Taber added that-the nursJ,ng.1taff hai'begun an intensified pi-ogran) io help hlm reel better because be bad been feel· • inf. ·so miserable of' late. 'We want to get him an attachement for the telephone .so he can at Jeut talk lo people. And his broth.er II &etlll!i him a stereo," she •id. "Right now he only bas a te:levilion and he can't even turn·oo the call Uabt for help." Hospital staff memben are also look- ing forward to providing: him with a reading apparatus and ~haps an elec-- tric wheelchair be can operate with his l)lOUth. .. ' ' ' • By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI ,_. D .. IY l"lltl •teH Federal authorities ~ay entered the case of a cache o( military weapans and explosivea . -plua 1nstructton1 tor , sabotage • -uncovered accidentally Thurtday 11iaht by Costa Mesa police. checking out a false alarm. i A pair of teenagers was arrested on state charges of possession or illep.1 firearms, while Treasury De~t agents we(8 en route today to deternilnt if a federal offense was committed. Police were reluctant to 1pecu1ata on . for questionini. -· "He admitted touching the box; but said he didn't set it off," Lt. Fischer tJ.· lained, adding that he carried no personal.klenuticatian at that point ··The subject volunteered to 10 W his home and aet.10me1" uid Lt. Fischer. ··He w'as af!t:ompanied by the officers and they observed the weapons when they entered." ShorUy alter McLaughlin wu arrested, his room-mate arrived home and was taken into cwtody on tht aame char1es. Another thing that's bothering Kenny II the fact that be is the only youn1 person fn the hDflpital ,and-aurrounded-by--octo and nonogenarians, accordin& to Mrs. Taber. PULLS OUT OF !\ACE League .Candidete_Gr,Hn -;--any possible connection with radical H d-G d -'polilio~I f•~lions _unUI each of. II weapons--an · · rena e ·-mcludmg automatic rifles / n d . - "He has 10me visitors but most of the Jriends his age have dropped by the wayside. ,;They've just forgotten ," she said. Right now, the moat important thing is to provide him with a chess partner to break up his televlsion watching routine, Mrs. Taber feels. Anyone who is lnttrested may phone her at 842-MSI. It's your move. Street Project Nearing Finish In San Clemente A 2,4()().foot strip of Avenida Pico, delayed by the construction of in- tersecting sewer Jine~hould open in San Clemente late next week. This was the estimate today of City Engineer Phil Peter who said work is nearing completion on laying two 14-inch effluent lines under the road. The two-Jan~ sect.ion -of Pico between El Camino Real and the .freeway Is a joint city-county project constructed at a cost of about $170,000. The $2.8 million sewage reclamation system should be in operation by the New Year, Peter esti~ated, It Was delayed by work changes: l The plant will have sophisticated ter- tiary treatment that produces sparkling clear water. The wate.r will be scld for ir- 1J'lgation:or piped to c;itch b~ in ~P Pendleton for percolation in'tO un- derground water stores . A federal grant or-about $900,000 is helping pay for the project A dedicaliori date for the new facility has not been scheduled. Peter said it would likely be sometime between the end of November and the new year. San Clemente officials initially .sought the help of the city's most prominent resident. President Nixon, with the dedication. He could not attend IO another star attraction ii bein& JOUght. Green Steps Out · Of Cities League President Race Huntington Beach Councilman Jack Green baa quit the race for president of the Orange County League of Cities. Green aMounced this morning he would not seek re • election tG the presil:lent's post because at least eight citles ·were opposed to him suceeeding himself in office. The Huntington Beach Councilman fac· ed a runoff Oct. 8 against Anaheim Coun· cilman Ralph Clark. The two men tied 7-7 when the League or Cities met Sept. 10. Green has served this year as president and Clar·k as vice president of the Orange County League of Cities. The leagu.e has 25 members in the county. While eliminating himself 'from. the race. Green also asked for nominations to be reopened, so cities would have more than one man to choose ·from for presi- . dent. ''I would urge that nominations be again opened on Oct. 8," Green said. "But It should be noted that during the period in which the nominating com- mittee was active., no one came forward to suggest names for consideration.'' Clark, Green's only opponent, is also a ·candidate for Supervisor in the 4lh District. He faces a runoff Nov. 3 with Gordon Bishop for the supervisor's post to succeed William Hirstein . If Clark ts named ~President· of the Le;1gue of Citiea, then is elected a county - su~isor~ he would have to quit his League post in January. Green said he was· quitting the race because Garden Grove and seven other cities had expressed dissatisfaction with the League's policy of allowing officers to aerve consecutive terms. machineguns -waa checked an the . au.spect.s questioned . Kill 2 B They were identified as David B. . S oys McLaughlin, 19, and Douglas M • Langevin, 19, both of 108 Cecil PlaCe, the In Ri • d" . house where the arsenal Wll confiscated. versI e "Some of the Items L\at are illegal to possess appell' to be deactivated,", ei:· plained Detective Lt. Harold Fischer. He said a bomb disposal squad from El Toro Marine Corps Air Station was called to headquarters this morning when hand grenades were discovered in one con- fiscated carton. "We don 't know if they're live," LL Fischer said. "But we do have ammtmilion boi:ea containing some apent and aome live rounds, plus numerous pamphlets on bombs and booby traps."' he conlinued. "1bat'1 what scares ·us." ·Lt. Fl.tcher said chemical compounds commonly used in malting bombs -in combination with other readily available ingredients -were taken from the Cecil Place residence. He said McLaughlin listed his oc- cupation as a headwaiter and Langevin, who was not present when the weapOns were discoverrct. is an auto mechanic. The two suspects apparently have no direct military connection in which they might have obtained the weapons, he ad· de<!. ' Besides the military weapons, which rn. eluded a mortar launching device ap- pearing t'o be Japanese-made, pOlice seiz.. ed an infrared anlperscope used ta pick out victims in total darkness. "Numerous hand weapons and rifles which appear on the surface to be legal were also picked up," said Lt. Fischer. The discovery began shortly before 10 p.m .. when an emergency callboi: in the 100 block of Cecil Place went of{ at police headquarters. · · Officers Gene Norden and Dave Hayes, of the department's felon1 unit, were nearby so t.heY responded and stopped a youth later determined to be McLaughlin Student Nabbed On Drug Charge Speclal to the DAILY PILOT . RIVERSIDE -Ricky Leamon was 13 Thursday and hia sister gave him a foot· ball that bounced over the backyard fence while he and two bu,ddies were passing it. 'He and Bobby EWing and David Crawford, abo 13, went into the neighbor· log yard and found the footbtU. hut they also found • boi: of 11 military frqmen- tation grenades. The football and the cartoa were both in some shrubbery. Just ei:actly what happened from that point may never be known -up unW the blast that shattered every window in the Leamon home -but authorities can speculate. Ricky Leamon was killed on hill blrth· day, blown to bits. . Bobby Ewing was killed in the aame ln- atant, blown to bits. "They were just torn 1part," uld one 1ickened Riverside county Sheriff's depu· ty. Women Injured In Laguna Crash Said Improving Two victims of an automobile collisi&n that took the lHe of an elderly LagUl\a Beach woman Wednesday are In Im· proved condition at S o u t h Coast Corn· munity Hospital. Gertrude Huber, 85, of 660 Glenneyre St., bas been taken off the critical list and is now listed in serious condltfon after suffering multiple fractuns In the two-vehicle collision. From Page 1 Japanese Scientific Rocket Lafiltc,h Fails A 17-year-olcl San Clemente 'J.ngh School senior was arrested at school Thursday on charges of twice selling LSD to· an undercover narcotics officer. Marilee Jean Gafney , 22, of 190 Canyon Acres Drive, is in satisfactory condition after undergoing surgery for internal in· juries suffered in the accident. MINI~IOT REPORT • • • vent arrests from being made. Since no auxiliary weapons were used despite stone and botUe-thro¥""ing and physical resistance, he concludes the police conducted themselves as well as could be expected under d i f f I c u I t cirCllmstances. though not without some over-reaction, noting that "the decision is necessarily subjective since the testimony of witnesses varied on several minor points." Taking note of the presence of many ''outsiders." he suggests that the trouble might not have ocCWTed if only residents had been involved. Goldberg said he agrees with the sug- gestion of "most of the witnesses" that better communications should exist betseen police and residents of the area. He also supports suggestions \hat the police develop a plan of action designed to head off such confrontations in future and that the city consider appointing a community relations officer who could attempt to 10Jve problems befOre police action becomes neceSsary . Wheaton, in his repo'k, finds that "no information was submitted .•• that would sustain any allegations of physical abuse or itle{al behavior on the part of any particular police department employe that would indicate disciplinary action Jg justified." Noting that "the committee learned qUite a bit about police operational pro- cedure and manpower allocation," the former manager suggests a e v e r a 1 matters that need review. These include a written plan of preparedness for major disturbances that would include calls to superior oUicers not on duty, calling of off-duty personnel to duty and the calling for mutual aid a$Sistance from other agencies. He notes that the police chief has started such a manual and urges that it be completed. With rtgard to the July 4 a.Hair, Wheaton cites a number of factors leadin& LG..-tbe r.iot s.ltuaUon. When of. ficers first arrived to check on fire.Works, he says. a ,;party and holiday mood prevailed In the nelgh~hood" and the crowd wu "nol hostile.' Attempttd IJTtSt or a marijuana smoker, reslstance to the arrest and a chase: by police ended the party mood and mulled In apprehension that Jll'.Adutlly bulll up lo the minor riot situ•• tion. 1ay1 Wheaton. He nbst!rvt! that U the arrest had' not betn resisted, or if had not been at· tempted, "the party atmOlphett -,ould probably have continued.'' However, he added, "it is the job of a police officer, when he observes a specific person breaking the Jaw, to en- force the law. "In this case, the necessary force that had to be used to accomplish the arrest undoubtedly moved the people in the crowd to the intensely hostile attitude that developed. If the people of Woodland Drive had accepted the proper function of the police and not interfered (as they have refrained from doing many times in the past when similar arrests were, made ) the problem probably would not have occurred." Wheaton concludes that the city can do 1 better job of communicating with various neighborhoods and that a more deliberate effort should be made to develop every police officer as a "com- munity relations expert'' so that en- forcement or the law and respect for the law can be enhanced .. Boyd describes his lengthy report u an attempt to document the event stei>bY· step as it progressed from a minor disturbance to a full-scale riot. This he maintains, did not occur until police rein- forcements arrived from other areas to produce a full-dress show of force that promplly resulted ln pandemonium in the area. He is sharply critical Of the fact that no special plans had beel). made for police coverage of the bolidatff'et.kend, that the police chief chose that weekend to start hi s vacation and the city manager permitted this. Following broadcast 0£ a 999 call (of· ficer needs help urgenUy) units from sit law enforcement agencies converged oa the area , Boyd nolcs. "With the arrival of outside agencies," he writes, "the officers were organized into teams to pick up anyone on the street and hiding' in the yards ..• these wlde·sweep teams triggered the over· wrought crowd into a state of wild con- tusion, retttat and fillht thtOuth lM· Jakes ind Into lhe hills i •• wlth police ln hot pursuit , •. " He de.scribes bow an old-tlme resident , treated with 0 ab90lute disrespect" by of· fictl'I, croudltd In fear la his home as a police helicopter hover.d overhead. He notes that during hookin& of tile prt.!OMrs at the Laguna Be1ch atalion, according to an 0Uicer'1 testimony, "handcuffs wtre not immediately rt.mov- ed because of the hosUle atUtude o( the prisoners" and threats to l•kilJ" the, of. ficer, who was,alone , U the culls were removed. . : • UClllNOURA, Japan (AP) - A Japanese attempt to get a scientific satellite into orbit failed today when the fourth atage of a 43.7-ton rocket ap- parently did not ignite. Scientists said they then lost track pf the 77-foot rocket, called the MU4SI , and that it apparently burned up in the atmosphere after reaching an altitude of some 350 miles above the central Pacific. Detectives allege the Jong-haired youth had on two occasions sold 10 tablets of the psychedelic mind bender to a San . Clemente officer. The youth was taken to juvenile hall to awa it the disposition of his case in juvenile court. Police said the boy had a clean record before the Thursday arrest. Mrs. Huber was a passenger In a car driven by Gladys Geier Wilson. 74, of 502 Brooks St. The Wilson auto turned ·Jeft from Glenneyre Street onto L:ls Olivos Street and collided with a vehicle driven by Mike Gafney, 23. Another passenger In the Wilson vehi- cle·. Florence Martin, 80. 1294 Tetnple Hills Drive, died in the emergency room at the hospital afle( sufferina multiple in· juries in the collision. For The Unusual ...• Think Of Ted von Hemert The1e unique pieCe1 are a. new look at the 0111 World from Henreclon'• Fo lio Nine collection. Diversely cle1i9necl, yet inately har• mon ious. Thi• clifference 11 with T 1d Yon Hemert, Inc, 0 DEALERS FOR:l'tENREDON--DREXEL-· HUITAG ' NEWPORT 1£ACH , 1727 Wettdlff Dr., 642·2050 °'IN FlJDAY 'TIL 9 INTEltlOltS ..,.,_ ..... , lnlorlor 0..lfnen Avall1Wo-AID-NSID " LAGUNA llACH )45 North Coat! Hwy. 4"-6551 OPIN FRIDAY 'TIL_ 9 • ' •· 'For the Marriage Lice11ses Deatl• Notires HINl'S Jlou H. Hines. An It, of 7Gl 47/'ld SI.. I ~NPDrt 8Hcll. Dalt of de•lh, Sto!lm• Mr 2•. Survl..e.:I br fathe!', John E. Hlne1, J r.; brolt!tr. Jahn E. Hln•1 Ill: ,_ 11,. h rs, (11JNl'ldr1 1nd MArv M1r11ret Hin11, 111 of Newi>orl BIK"; tr1"4o motMr, M,,, EMifl Cooke. Loni 81Kh.. FunerJI MrY1<n. 11 Noon, S111.Jrd1v. 81tlt CMll MtH ~rtu.rr. F1mll'f lli!I• •ell• IMH wlMl"!JIO m11kt m1morl1I contrlbu"OM, 1le11e amtrlbll!e lo tho American Ctnctr Soc1t1V. Blllll Co1t1 Mua Morluarv, D!reetor1. HOOD W1lrtr Mood. 718f B11v1ho•t Or,, Nrw~r! Aeacll. O,,!t of dtath, StPltrnber 21, 1910. Surv\Yed bv lwo 1!1ter1, Mr1. Lulu Plkt,. New1>1>rl Beach; l/f"I. Annt Hummel, cl O&Ut"ll. M•oonlc \erv\ce1 will bl! held MP!141V, 10 AM, W11lcllll (h&"'I Mertu· 1rv. lnltrme!lt, Ch\.HI ct Ille Chlm11. Oakland, CtlHcrnla\ Wtslcllll CP!.1~1 Mort111n'. Directors.+ L9YE .l.nnle C. LOYI. Ave 96, of HO Clennevr1, L19\lne Bt1cll. 0.11 pl de1111, Stl>lembe< ,l. Swrvlvtd b'/' llfl>l)twl, Junes Love, Vtnl11r1; John Low, Mllll'lllltn 8tad" lwo nlac11, t.Yrlorlt Witld• Sin Ptdroi Btllv Love, ven111r1. Stnlce1 wilt be httd Salvrffv, Set>tember 16, 11 AM, Sheffer L11un1 BtlCll Cl\1pel, Wl1h Or. 011111 R. Turner ol lh1 Commu~il'I Pr11bYl1rl1n Cllwrcll, of!lcl1lf"9. tntermtn!. F1lrNvt~ Mernorlll P•rtl. Shtlftr L11UN BtlCll Morlu•l"I'• Olracrors. MINEAU Frink Ml!\1111. A~ 17, ol 109 C1llfornl1 SI., Hun!lmi!Oll Bt1tll. Dolt ol dff!ll, S<!otembtr 1J. 6(1 y11r rnembtr of M11011k Lod11. Si.irvlYed b'/' wilt. 1(1!1 F . Mln1011; son. Clvcle M. M1MIUI slsrer. Ztt41 Slo· tum. S1rv1<e1 wm be 1111d S1turd1v. l PM, S"'ltl>s Ch1Pt1. tnttrmtn!, P1clfk view Mtmcrltl Ptr~. Smllll~ MorlutrY, Olrtc!ori. SPALDING Oonn1 L. S1>1ldlng. ?U61 V111H1 Rica, C1ohtr1no 81ac11, Date of det!ll, StP. timber 1•. Svrvlved bY llu,btnd, W!+ll1m1 two -•· 5111wn T. 111d Otvfd R. Sp&!0-1~1. boll! ol Ille l'IOme; two brother1, Ra"' dill Htdltv. of Sin G1brle!; OCnald H•d· 1ev, Httnth 1l1t1r. Ol~lt Lvnn, of Sfful- "ec:11; rnoti.t1, Mrs. H1rrv A. Ml!ler, H...,tl. $1rvlce1, Noondav, Seotembtr 11, Pacific \II-(1111>1!; with Or. 0•1111 R. Turner olflcl1tln\l. Patllle \liew Mortu· ,.,., t>lr1e1on. , ARBUCKLE-& SON Westcllff Mortuary 427 E. li'tb St., Costa l\fes1 • BALTZ l\10RTUARIES Corona del Mar ... OR 1-1451 Cost• Mesa ........ mi &-U%4 • BELL BROADWA V MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa l\tesa u ll-3.i3 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 17'5 .Laguna Canyon Rod . 494-9415 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Ctmettry · .l\1ort Ch•ptl ;seG P1clfic View Dri,·e N'ewport Beacll. California Ml-!lM • PEEK FAMILV COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7111 81111 A~e. "'estmlnster .... 113-3W • SHEFFER MORTUARY Lipa Beach .. , .... 4M·15.15 . Sa• Clemente . . . ... 49%.ftOI • SMITHS' MORT UARY 121 l\taln SI. ll11ntlngt011 Reach 536-113t - , Record LAS \/EGA~ -MtrrllDI llctnHI !uul'd ~ere "IClltdt:: ESPINOZA·!l:AS !(EL\ -5<!~1 . ll. Rudi' Jr., 1l, 1nd Kr s Kll~I, Ii, torn II Hunllnq!on 8e1en. 8 ANCUCCl.JE861A -Seftf. U , J1mt1 o .. :i<ll of Tvslln, tnd Jiii Ann, It, ot Fo1m11 n \lalle'I. STUOLE'l'-KITCHENS -S'fll. U, Llr· ~unrfno~· 9~~11~ecxtv. 1, both o1 WILLIA.MS-GUSTAFSON -5ffl. 15, ~~!1.121" !~· ~~ .. ~n'r0!1A'rii ·~ Leo.-.. GRISWOLD-HARDI~ -'i!.,1 15, Samuel PeterL.. '26,_ ot H1111!lt1Qton ee1ch, i ncl u.vlot Lv11n, 21. ol Wesrm1n11e•. HIGCINS·SMITH -Sept, 16, Jahn 0. J r., 11, cl N1W1K1rl 8ttClli •rid Julie ci:.t~:Ji'N~".!~ ~t 11, Joe J ., •1, t lld RY!t, 26, boll! of Hu ... lltlQton B~Kll • ._G<\L-MC MILLAN ,-Set>!. 17. Chlr u c., ~. or W~tm!nsler1 •~ AMle H1,,.ll!on POilock. l , of G1rde11 Grave. FENNELL-GIBSON Seo!, I I . Ed'l:/ltd Johll, 19. DI CC!SI• Mal, '"" Kal'l\l"n Mlr<tL.,1.1, ot CltWSll", Ml<ft. KAMIHSKY.(;OL.va ltG -!.Ml. 11 Eric 8., 11, and lsobel1t. ?J, bolll ol Hunll!IQIOll Stith. 9A.8COCK-t1AHNAHS -Sept. 11, Fred R .. '6. ot Costa Mell, and '''"' J,1nne. ••· ol Hewoor! Betel!. COCICRELL-GITSHAM -5<!111 1', Hrnrv Etrl, Jr .• .C, of Hun1 lno1on BeKll. 111<1 Seu,· Btrnlct. «. of sX'rt'ti~~H~W~'RsoN -5"t. 1', Jolln Edwtrd, olC), or Hunlhw•on effdl, i ncl Lttn Peerl, 31, ol Ltwn· ~dale. NEWTON·OOWELL -Seul. 1'. ltOl'ltlcl e., 11, or cost• M1>1. 1nd Wlf\dv L""" 21 Of Wwllltr. fL!PPlN-'tANN -Stat. 11, •ru<e Allen. 'H, Ill •lmlnstw, i ncl Jovce Ann. 11, g/~•hllm Sl~~~-i~ER'l'A~tl~PI. ,,, Victor Alfre'd, n , of Hunl111<1I011 BttCll, ind Sandri Elaine. 20, or Gardin Grove. OGILVIE·BELL -Seel. u . bonll4 J .• 21, of Stnt• Ant. and cvnthl1 1':tv, Lt1::~IRN~~e8-:'ac~. Still. It. Garv Mk."l;aeT."'iJ. and N1ncv Jean, JJ, boll! of Wetlmln,ter. RONSON-FOGG -sect. lf, Steollenl J;5, cf tlY"tln<1lon se•th, I /Ill Ciro Ai.X~'1'f-08H~ W~lm~~'.''it, Abtl l'l. Jr. n. of Fountain V1lltv. 1iid E!.'(1111. ,U, Hun!ln<1ton Btacft., ·• ' HVOHES-tNCE -Sect. It, 1 ... ,1r B1i*1. /.'" 31. of Los A.l•mllol, i ncl Ctrol L ndl, t, of Casi• Mnl • SOLLINGER·Bl.1.EMIRE -f.Hll. 11. ErMI G..._ lo\, of NtWDOrl Bttell, •rid 101nn1 ...,, of"Los Anc1etes. H MB'l'•SNilTH -Seel!. lt, MtNlll l ., 31, tnd Nlf!CV J .U, boll! of Hlll'l-wU'.1~....8;f~:_ s.p1. n, 0.111 Al•~· 1nder. 1 .. Incl Chfn"I LYM l'leH. n . botfl of C0\11 Mei.a. MA.NNY·HVNTER -Sept. 11, Mk.111~1 G , 'H. of G1rden Grove, and C.!lortll G9!1, 19 of Wnlmlfl,ler. BtLLSTRlNC>-M.1.NHING -Stol. lt. BrUCJO; JGhn, tt, of Sant• Ane,. 1ftd Judllft l'lH. 1~, of Faunt11n Vtllrt'. OVRNIL·JUltAN -Seat. It ,Ltrf'I Let. 13. DI (05l1 Mesi, tnd Su11n Fllp, 1'. of P11C1!nt11. MOORE-GRAHAM -Si!Pt. lt, Rlcftt rtl t<t~rv, t , of Wntmlns!!r, Ind Henrv, lt, of Wt•lmlnsltr. I nd J11nt11t Ktlft•vn, 11, ot Ltkt~- Dissolutions Of Marriage I . -... ' DAILY l'!LOT 9 fridi11, Septtmbtr 25, 1970 Educators Question Reading Test Value I \ • ,. 37% TO 50% OFF • regu larly 95 .00-130.00 • 2 and three bvtton· single-breasted sty les • pure wool or polyester and wool blenas . . •an enormous co lor and -pattern choi ce •you'll find short, regu lar and long sizes Here co mes fa ll. Winter is right on its heels. Are you ready? You will be if you take adva ntage of this sa le . You'll find thousand s of exceptiona l values in thi s mammoth · suit sale . We've got great-looki ng suits for bu siness or pleasure. The choice is all yours. Pi ck from so lids, st ripes, plaids or check s. You can have wool or wool and polyester blends, whichever you prefer . Ju st ome i·n, look them over and take your pick. may co men 's )ui ts :! I shop monday thru saturday I 0 am to 9: 30 pm. sunday noon 'Iii S pm may co south coast pla1~, san diego fwy at bristo l, costa mesa, 546-9321 .. • "Particularly In a yeor when the school w1s cloaed for near· ly 1 month by 1 strike." What the shift means is th1t the Loi Angeleii student! scored, on the whole, better on the new test which the state department has mandated be used by all Califor nia districts, Mrs. Craig said. The Cooperative Primary test replaced the Stanford te!t last spring for first graders and will bt phased into use for second and third R r a d e students in the next two years. SEA SCHWINN 42t r.11 .. ~·M .. WE HAYE ALL .MODEL.S NOW! MAVCO I 11 , ~mplete-New Y'Ork Stock 'List OVER THE CO UNTER Repair of-Appliances Costly , -•--'*" .................... ti., dOiltlMllfJO t a.-. .,..,...ua, NlW '!'J, .. _f.Alll •. f'rW.~-. ~le .... __... 1Mt ,,... .. llfl ....... ,... ..................... ., Cliff ii.. -..... '"'*'·""I.. ,, ~ ..rlC-~· tiillill ...... a..°' NASD l i1t1n11 for Thursday, September 24, 1970 ~=I Hltft l tw ( .... ct' s~~~v ., tl ic:~~ t!~ lf.,: + ~ 1·~r :.~ ~SI f.1\i ~2~'· tt(A, t ' ... 8y SYLVlA PORTER phanc'-and if he refuses to By the end of 1970 we will help then wr}te or telep~one have bought 28 m1thon maJOr the manufacturer s customer appliances -an outlay 1n JUSl relations department tJ months ot $6 8 bUl1on ror And ii the manul1ctu.rer 1s wuch conYtJ).1en c es as unresponsive appetl to refn,gtralors clothu washers AHAl\t s c o m p I a 1 n t es dash washers. freezers etc .change launched this pa.st And the total 1s beading for April under the name or '8 9 b1!bon by 197S MACAP (for MaJor Apphanct Today you and t have 1n Consumer Achoo Panel) at 20 1;talled In our homes ONE N Wacker Drive Chicago BJU..lON apphaoces _ and 60606 MACAP conSJsts of "ht le three out or four or them eight cor sumer spectatist.s I I I equipped not only to get action are sma 1 app iances we a 50 from manufacturers but also ()\VO about 250 million large nnes ff you re average in fact to find new ways for the In you have 11 small and large dustry to avert complaints a_ppbance& (count them) and So far four out of five com the complexlty of y 0 u r plamts have been closed machines is gro\Vtng daily satisfactorily and MACAP , has drawn up gu1delmes and Its convenience carr1"d recommendaUons for ad -to-a neW-d1mens10n-And •Is -vertiSJng h 0 me appliances repair agony also stretched lo a new dimension ~ ~ -ct:lft1t cl A, .,. fJ ll ltWIY h~ i. .... -.,... ranging ~om electric ranges ...,.__ ~t11KF~11 l& !I "' 1u -~ A c"~ 'i'r' IJ",. '1 .. isiq -l~' l'ntr ,.,... Ableo.t• 141 :t7 I)"' ll'1' 1) -! \ll il~!J Cttl• '°'> 11·\ J\! 7\o~ 7'l.i -' ~!~~n '°!~ 161: w": I • + \t to aU' coodllloncrs MACAP IS ........ •kl ......... -~~:. ~ ~ :! tt"' t: ~~ +~t~ ~ g,llfro: 1 m; mi ~ t •. :-.ri .. 1. ,~,... 10 .tt\4 ~ 2t + •• now t'Omplellng a mJor study NEW Y"'ll:K IAPJ 'lrrh1e 4 4\.11 ,0,1r HK 11 it f~ Tv m J'lli Acmeci.v1 l ,, 11~ " 1• +""""-:Ii" Jo u; ll!ll jltt 1ru + H ~n l:H,. H ~ m~ '' +t'= Of IUCh problems as the .;MjTMf~J'"'~wt~ ~!:~tr l~\Q I~~~:. Cif~ 3j!l\~ r.? r::::I F~ :~ ! .. t:\~t ~ Jf 1lt. 1~1 ~~~=a lll~tl:;l'-~'°.o ~~ 3m 3r" l~ + V. ~':ir1:.:~.Ji lr 1·1~ :11l: #~: ~1.4 agornz1ng length of time ti 1i01"111. -11ee1 •r. 1<11 ·~· "•~ 4lV. 11t 5M!n .1h T1mp "! 111 A<I Miiii• 20 so 14'1i 1~ 14 -'.Ii 1111 GE 1 so -.. ~· ,,..,. 14 2#11 + !Ai l!C1t111 1e1 2'4 io 1w. '"'~ + lo ,.. NlfklMI A.WC l'•IO .. 7U Po~ NM 1 lUi TIU!lt I VI 11 AlldttM 1 411 V I J5 .. 3-1\.t )4\\ -~ l110E '".-i ...,..'"":-:.. II ci. 1;20 "' m. 32\lo !th ~ often takes to get service and 111~ ot S.C.\lr1114ls F~ w~ 11 1Jttl ,!!>•,\I .~~.!'' 1~1i 11~ !~ w ,, ... v. Adln1,.1 " t'li t1.t ""+ ~ 1tuo lot'*"-iot lot ~~11 U!.. 111 2'1-1 2l lt'" -• the poor quality of service :r41 ~.11ir4111:.~· ~oJ"'" v. M: ,,,;;;; 1 '~ • 1 Mto,. lr.u ~~ .... ,,,',' ,•,• " ~. 41 .o !lnGl5. '" 15 rio !j" ~U"'" ·~ ~y" 110 i~ ilw. ~11? ~ + ~! wh I tt """ J\i' .,. ~ For11 011 lS '! '~ • t Com Ari 11 f\.1 r.\ f\1 .• ., II GE .. ' ?10 " lil 5n~t lfl IK-) }$ .. "' -;.u + l en You g. ,-·•) •• loo-f•••~ ,~ ·~ P lltnnet '1 \It 22\t. l4lftn111! 0 11 A11-lllC • 11\'.11 )1\ii lJ~lo -I'• n11 Mii · l~* ' 3 V. l 3h, -~ • ',lreP 2•.11: ~.. ! 11•1 >>• • ... ~~ '• ••. , .... "" Pur ity SI 1• " erl$htn 10'4 tlV. Ar p,OCI -111 •Tl-0 ~ ~ -I/, IT Fin 1.w 164 "° »~ + Gt 1.... ,. 'o I -I '!AC •p IS entirely fr-or --.. :rlf:S,,' ., .,., ,!!!_ ,,,, '••· N,. ~vo., C• 4 .. 4" f1x11 AS I )h Alr Pd ,. 1s l 11•1.t 11' n·~· -t-li l''-1Svc '2t :v "'\ii ... (, ..... + lfl 14ul ).\ ,••. ,!., ,,'.'i 11 "' '-"'""' ol "''v'" ....,.., t \) 1 !Mrrll A 2\t. J AL, lite •o. j30 171.1o lh'O 1,V. -~ ty Inv JO '15 1~ :t.tll •Vt -I 111 IMI 3111 HI ti ..., "' industry control or influence " 'm,,111_ w111t~ ,''!!.'' F,~11u,, c, 51n • Qu•I CM 11 11v. ftt11Y <:1 ~ •I~ AJ 1nd~11r1es ,, •1i •I~ •lJ t Vi ,.,.,~ ... tt ., 2s w . 3l\ :lll4 -\' Get1t11'"" ,. 1 ' 3M lS • ""' -1- 141(. ,.. ""Id rllt £ t t \• RT 5}'5 J ill +lllY 111 4~ 114 Al• Git 1 10 11 m~ I~ 1jl'f \• C Ir .Sirs 2<11 I W. 4;1 4l.< -* q1<'l MUb U 147 304 H\~ .:ii~ 1 " claims the appliance industry ~~:tci 'T:k.Ml ....,;,. ~~-nw ''"" ne R1c1 orn 11 Uli r11111 o.. ·,~ "'• All$k• 11111 , 10• 1 ~. ln-. 1 _ v. c11r1tEi, 1..0 s• 114 .10i-. JO>>• -il GMlll• ,o 11 ' SOI~ 4t so 11 .. •• ,, ,,,., I F -.... J~ ~ R1n11 c I]' 1,_. Trtc CP!I .. '~ AltosnOC 21 " lh lJ • ~ -h !'•rll II .... ~ ,, ' n l. 111-0 -~ Gll'M\111 1 ~ IOI 13b n1. 13V. ,.. It JS designed to be the m dt.1., Id .... ~N:r. G°1t~' ,m; ... •Vi lt•n'b El 17>.li 11\t TtllCnl G 1'\t 1t'll Alllerls!"15 .J• 21 10!• '" 10 l<IVC\11 1 to I tt4 4'\I· .,,.,~ i . G MOI s.>i 5 2 ),j 13\h 14 + "' en nM Ill OJtti G I ~I 1f'-" 1:l~ ::~~ g ~~ P,~ t~~?. J:Z JU AIC41Mlu 110 111 21lo 2l'A 21~1 ""E 1n 114 U ~·U ~\\ 34\'1 :,t G Mol ptJ 7! I s:m u<l. SlU dustry s answer to Lhe threat o<J: 'tr,; cl•r ~r'c"es G:~ nsvc 1m 1m llKO!I e'* 111.t '"vt Trir.1,p4 ,.'"' 30.., :~:',,:,~':' ~ !! ~~t: ~ ;r• .!:_ ~~ !;TrP1!M-. 1:: 1l,iJ m: Tn! , g;~~ 6080 1!t U 1~: :~i + ~· 0 f recferal State leg1Slat1ve ~1410 not ..;:~ & :1~lk i ~tt ~fJ..,Cr~ l~~' tt~ t~:1~1 3U, ' ,r,11~ Co 10. 112 It I'll •'• + h \n!IP it! l I U 1~ 1S + '4 G911 llttfr~t ll t\, t f'lo -\e Curbs m.,kdOWll ... '°""* G Ulou JI\~ .sv. ltltev $10 11 ,. T Fo 'l,, •, .. Alltslllld 1"" " ,,.. 21 " -~'t A Finl 5b 231 1•\) l:nt H + 1,1 Gen Sit 1111 " J3\4 ",,,. Sl\\ -lot m!Hlon Gltl e11 ••• l\.'i It E 'fl 22.,., ~SOii "' AiietL.llCI pl J J 31";1 31'4 llllo NA pl Al 10 31 11~ 11 'lmt~ Gen St pf I 1 ti t i fl Ok le'' 'I th I AAA Ent 1'.I<, ~ICl!tl '"'" 2v.R::r11 J 10 ... uu:"!<•ll•-31\' AllevPwl ):I: ,. 2Ulo 1'~ 20 -\\ ~»ISi G•• ''° )tlo :lt A+t•Ge .. 5111...t. •o Jl 12\1111\~ lffi +. ay es e n AA• cr.r! l 1in 111en 1ia "'Roseion ~ •n 'nl '!~ AllledCll 1t20 111 201, 1,,,, 1th-• ~ITsnGfk.,,,,, 131 1!J:{J,t :r !1 1:u G Tei e1 1 s1 .c.11 l'"' 14 • 21 -• dustry s word Use this new w•ttllf I• 1$ l1Utll ,,,., ,, ROY C~tl l~ i111 81 ~~' 1" .... Altldi.Vll 40b ll 31. 31 JI!,, rn "' ' '' ' '"'" ~ + GTtll!!I 111 so I ' ,, :it -to AO Inc lJ 1311) le1sn W 21 21~ Rut \lov u~ 21\\ u Envel .. "' AllllNllll I~ 11 2411 11 ~' + \\ oc::auo ,"* 2u 11\11 u + 1 GTelF 1<'11 ll tl30 1$1,(,, JS',. in;. + Y1 compJalnl exchange the AITS 11nc 'lli .n• GIOb llt~ll o'>" 0>1,~ 1tv1n Ho .i.i .UV! US S11t1r lll'I ~)'} Allled Pd 41 .. 11 ~ U\ll 11V. + ~· '*!m Pot 1~ tt~ 4111!' le -a Gf1I pf&l lll JIOO 1._, H~lo I&;\ t•s8 nd 21> 7llo Gold (Yf; .., .. !acl!ler 3 ·~~ US Trkl lJl'I u\: Allled5tr l olO 11 l • l~i l4 + \II p pt] dQ iifi.. '°""Q 491Jo -1~ Gin Tlrt lb M 11 llli 11'4' -4 nexi tune a probltm comes up :~M "ti ; :~ 8=,.,L~ ~~ t~ c1n1n E 3 , 4* u1 ,..,, 'l~ :nl'I AllklS\11 u. u 1 1Y 11\ -\• 011 M Alk " :n ~" "!!1-1"' G 1111 " J J:lO i&oVt .Ot'> '°"' +1 • Jh " I Ablrle t I 0 choll In •VI •Ii u1an 5Ld ~ 71,& Alll1 Cllllm 131 IWi l~ I~ -\;, i>l lftlllt 201:1 145 i;~• \4 U + 14' Gentsc:o 1 10 lit 21"tl. '1\1 21~ + \a Wl an appuance gas ore ec Acme E1 ~~ '"' g~::~ ~ 11~ "~!cl c11r p., 1v. u11/ 1nc1 ,, 21Y:i AIPlliPC 'JOI so1 u1<o 1'1• '"'• "'1'1111 '·'° ! JO .v -, Glfltt1r 109 ~1 n, ru th+ • tric Let s make MACAP All SI• 1 1in GIA M•e 15 36Y:i cl 1no1 3"' ~ v1 1.0 1 1!/i AICOI 1 10 •~ .s1;q 4~• sot. -,. 01 !Id 1 n 6 • 11 I .i:, G8"ul11Pf 1s 21 lnl. 32 ~ + '• •1r llld\I~ 3\'o 3\lt Grffll Ml 1•\li 14<\ Scol Soni "20\) ~ V•l'ltt Se ljVt 14\/o Atn1lktl I Ml ] "~· 2"• 2S14o co11111 •fl ,, ( 43~ 4~~ (l\lt Vi tll P•c IOll 11' "I• Slh .ulO +1 work For If It does It II save A rbr11 F lO I ll'M< Grnll Ae Ull 11!? $(rlPl>t H II~ 19\i Vl1!doll v. '~ AM&AC 50 101 1Bo 111h II~ -\-t 1'1"• ell~ ,,', ..... \\ !!,, ·1~·1 ~ G1P1c I'll.,, t »4 1' 71Vt +2 ~ Albee H 4 ~ GroY4I p, , -Ao~.",',,"," • • • WKtl A I 10 ~ ~ Amir Et I 2C 20 It 1 191\o '"'+\Ii ol"'O o•• i. fli~ " ..... GHber 1 20 •J 31 36h S~ +I~• a IOl Of money for US and fOr AJbt~l .ffi .,_, grwth In 6"\o m 5:11 0n'~ 1:~~ 1:1: ~:r~wl: l: It lJll ~~-~Sur 1,U : ~,,_ :r• = ~ olu GI$ i \I 'i !3V. l2~: fl1• -~: ~~O .:,o;: 4 ~=~ tl~ t: =\: the appliance industry too ~lf:o ~ l~~ ,iv. u~f{41nTh :~ ~v. St-nts '•'" ',~-.,~~ ww ~.!1d•-.)'ilo • AArFttr '° n ss14 n u~-~h.. 1~~~~t.~I-1~ i~~W,' M = \ &1.,.,,,, • 1' 11_ ..ioi .... 1~---A I•. le-. ~ n. GYrOCln 1'\(o •v. vc rp • ,. ar ... w I ..... Am .VIII to ,.I 2(1 lt lf\lo -'U Ol'l'lre~ I 30 1l2 "" ... v. """• -~-Glllr•ll Fiii JI 21 20 • 20 I -"' The agonies and costs of repa1r1ng and serv1c1ng your apphances ba\e a Imo li t become 1 way of hfe Vandalism in Business At!lffl E~ 5l~ ''" H1ncwr s 17'h ,,Vt ~ ..... _n u. •Sh .. ~ W11ti NG ll~• l•Wi Am&lkt SOI • 13:00 13 ll • omlSo v '° llO 1m 1ni :ti ~ +lil GlllklLIW ~ •7 • ~ t\, , ... A p~ Geo :rn '* HIYI~ 1.. l~ lb Sm!lfl M J11 'h W1$11 RE ·~ ''h A8raN:ls 1 lG l.iG J7h Jlh .'.11\ot -~· ComlS.01 •I IO l l.Jll 15 r,\~ + ~ Gl1111l41 I •O 7D drt n :i. 4249 + • Amklc 1\11! JIJi Ht"f !d F 26 17111 Solid St ~ l , 1\: ~:~b T~• !~ Iii!. Amldct 1 ~ It 2tlo 11 1 :zt + ~ CGmwEG 2 20 •13 XII~ 32to '\o -Gimbel 8r 1 '9 30 » lf -~ Aml\l•n 11 lU4 He11C11 }~i,4 sC•I W&t llh l•l4 Wtldtrn llJi t\AmC1n 220 lo.l •n•~•41 +ltComE onn., ~5101 lGI 11'•+ Glnostne lH Jl12f ~-2 ~.,..EIE~~ 6~::t ~ ti]!l:bn nt 1 1~, SoNE Toi l l\, 3.SV• Wt lno M l6'4 l1 • AC•n Pl I IS 5 2(1; 21~• 241h + I• C'mwE fl'I ~1 lllf n 2H• 11;, + \,GI .. ~ Aid"" 11• 1~o 1\• 7\ll -Am F~rll 6y, 1 Hotm EP ll 3' Soun G$ 2l 23\'0 Wiies! p •l'O t Vt Am C1m •51 '3 t 110 t + I• Comw 0 I l' t 15' lj l• 11",. II -'! GltnAld l>I J 2 SI Sl Sl A Gteet •t'h .5011.i HOIObm I •Vt Sw GsCp l31o 1• W•ln NA S\'O S~ A Ch111 1 60 t 1, 'O 2~, 1Sh -\o C:Ol'l'l(IUf S' 1111 1 l~, 1'\fJ \:I GltnAI PU 2~ ( ?t 21\iio ,...., -'• A MtdlCI 16~ 16'.l Hoover lSV. JS~ SW EISvt 1''4 15 W5ln Mii •Vi 1 ACry \It I 10 ' ltV ltt:'! th -,. ~Ol'l'l.-1 11, Jjl'I 'i 1 4i + t Glotlll M1tlft 111 151/i U l •Vt -• YOU'RE NOW typical if you!ve brought home some brand new gadget found 11 to be a lemon -then struggled through the utterly frustrating experience of having the dealer "ho sold tt to you pass the buck to the manufacturer '\\ho ma1nta1ns a stony silence for weeks before your com plant 1s even acknowledged Or you are now typical 1f you have registered a complaint during the warranty period and watched the dealer welch out of the warranty because HE failed to cope with the proble,m before the warranly ran out Can you prevent at least some or todays apphance repair agorues -and repair costs' Yes you can Jf you fol!ow these basic steps suggested bv the Assn of Home Applianc e itanufacturers 1n Chicago Fir.st when an apphance fails to operate properly check through the owner s manual which came with the device (keep a f1!e of these manuals lor the ltfet1me of the respective gadgets) These booklets are your best source of 1nformat1on on what to check if something g o e s w r o n g common errors to a void 1n operating the ap-- phance etc You may for ex ample be overloading your dishwasher Or you may be overworking your air con d1honer Simply reading Instruction booklets could el1m1nate the need for half the apphance service calls you are making today SECOND before you com plain to the retalier who sold you ,an "lpphance or to 11!1 manufacturer check the elec trlc plug lo make sure ll 1s plugged tn firmly Also check dials buttons !\\itches and safety valves to make sure they weren t ac c1dentally pushed 1n the wrong d1rect1on And check fuses lo make 1ure they haven t blown These steps alone says AHAi\1 president Guenther Baumgart could save you the consumer more than 25 per cent or appliance service costs If these steps yield no clue to the problem go back lo the dealer who sold you the ap- I Tho Finest In Pipes Tobaccos And Gilts SOUTH COAST PLAZA l•wel' ...... N-Ttie Mey Ce --Phone 540-8262 Am Ttlv 16 16\lt Hr.r"IJ Rt ll 4 I! Sp1cerv 'I., S Wsln Pub tV. ru Am(;~&n 11J Y,9 JOI\ 2t t JO l \t (':-Miiis 1 21 J t,Yo 211 • ~l\) ~ Gll>til U11 40 tt 1 'h 111.'i 111\ -to Anti1U1 & 71,,. n111 Howrd GI 1 1V2 St111dyn 1tv. Xl llt w1n1 w~ s s~t A"1.0 01s1111 1 11 It 1 1' lt\li 1. f=:~~D MJ 5,,..7~· 17 ~ 17 -• GOOdren 1 n lil 2!\fi 11h 21~ + • Ankt n I~ IV. a\l:i Howm 1n II.lo ll>io Std Reols 1tl.7 20\~ W S< Pt. lt ltV. AOlstTel Xlt 3 1•~• ,. 2110 \t Ollr~dls l IO 270 1ru 1l 23'/o -\·~ GOOdYt ... IS 1H 2"' 21 • 2U• -• Arcs ll'ld 51, ~Hu<k Ml 6Yo II~ Stan HPd 11V.UV.Wrdw E l 3\(,, Am 0\lllV•st 20 II• 1'111 • ,,..ld1 ,,. I n 'h 11 ~ tt'h+l~{GordJIYA ,. 120 IHo 15 ISli +l ..... Arden M 11\, 1\4 Hud pp 71V. 21\lo Sltrll S!r 10 1014 WrleM W tt 22~ AOu1l o!U41 1' 11 lll.lo 12 +\<Ii CooiEd!s of S 4 '1 U 61 + ~. GOllldlllC 1 (G l5 3!>U 30 I )OV, T" ,r,rc1en ,1 11V.Xl\IJ Huo Gas u 1tt n111 J!r1w Cl :l.S 36\\Yrdnv I! 4\.\ ~Ii AmEIPw 11'4 :J.S• 2•!~ ,,,., 24lA+lic:onFODd.llf '5 ff~ lS'o 3Sl•-11oGrt(fCO 1 50 11' 3011 '9l• 2''11-~• Ark MoP 1llo l•\\ l'i\lrst p 1~ 11'1 Am Ellkl" i l ol :Ml,. Jll•J lO\lo + ~' ConFd t14 so n n , tG +I lirfnl:IY I 60 !I 2i 1S•o 2W. -Mr-H '' 29-111 Hyett C1> 10.,.. '°~v, Am E•P ll'ld 5S,UV. 1•~ 1•1• + ~1 ConFrtl~trt 1 lJ 1 ~~ 2.1 7~• + ~. Gr1MUn ID :I'll 2'\• 1Sh 1H'o -"• May Bring Tight Curbs NEW YORK (UPIJ Imagine having to show an 1denhf1cat1on car d to 11 securi ty guard to get into a deparl m e nt store to shop' Wtlh1n a decade or so ihat could happen 1f the present lrend t o w a r d s perm1ss1ve dishonesty vandalism and disorder 1n America 1sn t checked ' says Ira Lipman, head of Guardsmark tnc one or the 10 largest 1ndustr1al security hrms 1n the country Doubtless many of his com pet1tors would consider Ltp-- mans forecast unreahst1ca\ly pessimistic but an expos1t1on held recently 1n New York by 150 companies showing new electronic electrical and other security control s y s t e m s demonstr ated how m u c h business and industry a re con cerned about the matter The dev1cei; ranged from Motorola Inc s omn1po1nt which pro- vides for total electroruc surveillance of up to 10 000 points in a 3Q.bu1ld1ng complex to y;aJkie talkies for guards and burglar and 'ire alarms Lipman of Guardsmark a 29 year old executive who grew up In the iecurity in dustry says industry and commerce will have to become a sort of private pohce stale 1f the present pilferage trend continues Virtually ever ybody will have to have a security con trol number and undergo all kinds of police checks health d A,Vdl 9 t'llo Hv•ll lnl .... ,~.. A~llncl pfA6 :1(0 s!M. St/i 5''1<+1\•con L.t411lna lot • 1. 1'•-11Gr•~ttC SU »lit. 1~ l!Mto -•.-. checks polygraph checks an •sec Bot :ll\4 16\'•HY<I• "''h J 1n "'e"111s so '"•• •"• ,',"• m 1.+1'1C1111N•1G IN "° tt~ ,_\., 111'1-• G'•ntevue 1 l 15'!1. u; 1sv. h d bl th A\llO $(:! 'JO 6 lm&te Sy 6.lo 6:V. AG11ln Pll IO j I Ul -I ~on• Pow, l 15 U\o :t2'.<t JJ +\I Gr1nl\Y l SO 2t .t5 • "'-• '5~ + •, ot er 1sagreea e 1ngs 1n B1 ,d At 11o ,. h ,..., Gi• '••'• •,•,, AmHol11 1t1 JI 11 co 1ou 10 • -'" anPw •" 50 :220 5,,~ 51\h St • +n. Gr1111 •' 11s rno so .., .. so +1 ~ Order lo hold a Job he said a,,",',',,, "• 1,111 1,~,,',",1 •~ome ''° 104.) 64 • tlV. u +HI 1>11tA1' 1511 1•s 1~:n lG 1010 G[41yOre 1:io •1 11v. 21w 23v.t , ""' ·~ II 11~. A ome pf ! 1 ••• t5. •s1. + • COtol C1n I '41 ,14 <Ill 31~ jjo G A .. I' 110 It 11'1~ 2R1 21~ l' gloomily ea~ n p llo 41/0 Inf • d 3 ).11 Am Hoso 2• 191 3$V, ll • .'.llh +1-• Cont C90 »• lt 1, r.1 ,., -Vt G Norlr 1 l5o t n .. tl u1, , Baum 31:1 l n Cont 6' 1 lo MUTUAL Amln•tsl 50 l• 11 i J.O'A IC • + C:ont (.;• 2 11 J5 • 3'~• :>.4& -~~ GtNoHt~ 160 " "*~• •J., .:l\z _ ~ The troublo I' OU r &~vies• It~ 15 /J lnlrm In 310 • ~ AMt!CI~ 1 •0 61 3~, l•\\ lli• + Ct Co ofA150 lO lt$\ Jt;i 17,.; -\~GI W11t Finl 375 11,., :10 , 1P h ~ ~ Bee-cnm 21 15 1"' I Wsn •• 5\!.o AM"'~ Pl ' l 93,, 93 • tlt1 -~ .. Oll!M!loe ... ,11 tA. 11~• u~, -~~ G1WnU11il to 73 2• 23 1 24 '"'.f1 Permissive s-iety We hve Be e 11 t 11. 1a:v. In M\I t f 111 21 Am ~to,s 1'55 I• 4~• 1n + 1 Cont OH l 50 IL!it '6'• 2(0• »\• + 1, GWVn •111a • t9'• ltl'> 19'1 11 v... Be!m 111<1 J 6 1n1 Svs 1011io 210,1t~ AN1tG11 l lO JOI •N 1 ti -421• t t rant S!I 1 I ffi• fl "\t --'• GIW11h!n 50 l t 0 ~-f-10"::,. a rebellious goneration Be,~ Ha 00 •1 Int Sy Pl Am Pllo!O 1? 190 1(11;• D 10 i "" Cant Tt! IO 303 22~ 71 71 + 0 CrHnGM t6 , 21~• 21"i 21'• -'• Jn "' Bell I.ab •?'h.Ah tnte•r f\o 11~ AResOv l•e <IOt 6t\> '1 '1 61\i "control O••• 1•• 4~ '5 •5 -1 Gret11Sn 110 lt 27"' 7611< 1~-w many of whom don t beheve e111u11 w •, t lo"lcs ''"' 1s FUNDS AmSe•11ne ' 2 11 111• 171, -10 CnOfl 1'45" uso s1 50 ~1 +2 G'4IYll011nd, n ' I•'• u,. i•iot ,, Bl,d Son 35 .It 141 SoVlll 16 1 2~o Am Sn P 60 S 19\, lt-\li 1~ i-;.o CanWOCld I ta 1S $.I 33~. 3' + \~ &roll., fO J7 Ullo 24 241'1 1 ils wrong to sleal from the 8rtcn ra l>.4 J..cob1 F •~1 O'• A Smelt 19o )fl 2n. 261• 21'1o+'K ooku .. 1 so 15 1111 1111 '•'h-v. rummnc:o I 206 111• 16\it is -•• 81•(k HI 21V, 29 1< J41Q\l/n c 6\• 1 A AmSaAlr JO (J I] •2V. 41o.f +l'f 00'*''11 1.•D 53 .11 n ll + '• lrlfl.ild ,<Ille IO 2Ai HI\ + '• business establishment or Boaue Et 1'111 :11oto J41m w11 e, ~ AmSAtr In 10 1 ,, .oo~ 42 c-r Tit 1 24 u 1. 13'111 l:R~ +v. GllMOll , 1111 "° '°"' S61't 1 -!k Bolt hr 1~~ IV. J1mes F ~1V• .13 Am SIG 1 IOI l5 J(4 3'.\'i +\, C-T pfl :ll l Ul'o 161.'1 1'"• G\l f 0 I 1 50 •11 71\• 21~ 27l commit vandahsm and engage Boothe c 12\1 11.\0 J1m1bY 1Gv. 11 AmSld pfl 15 1a ,. ,n, '' +2~. c-1al'ld 1 2fl ., i! s1 s1v. s:u11 Ru•<n •6 n:o ,.,., ,;; Jn VIOient d1srupl1on ::1 c~~ 11~ 1i .... j~~~ .. F~~ 2l~ ~~ :~~::1116041 1t3 1:l~ "':!· ::•_+\; E::!1/iT ~ 1~ 1,'• t'J! l'v.": =k· G~llU1°:1s~ 11~ n~ ~~ ~VI+., St.allng from business has llr!nk, In ]! ~ 31'1/o ICalMr SI •l « AT&.T wt Sd I Y":> IV. ... 1orlnlh8 ne ' 211• 11\'1 m. -~· G\l!IWlnd so 161 """ ''"" 17 -... Brks S.:1 It l9VoK1sSl pf 17 11 AmT .. T 2'0 1'5 .tH-. 44,~ 41•.-O orGW 2.SO. :U llJ'<lM,lM1 -1 GvlfW pf3SO .1 71l• 1V 11'11 -11\ be L Brwll Ar •V· '"' IC1lv&r 79 30 s"'."""' H In• CoA II 57 12" AmWWk• S6 II '"" t'4 ,~. o,_, ... n '" ,,\'o 25V. 25 '> _.,. G\l IW pl311 5 "2'h a 42 + • COme SO COmmon lpman Bru$11 Bt 17 ll'hk1lt Grn 1 o l\t NEW YOllK \API nv Guld 1t78791 Arneron Mt I 191~ Ill.• 19 + ,CowlesC1m 51 4\• (\o 41~_,. •Gulton Ind UM 10~ 'ilt t -~• Id !hat without a complete 8\lcke' 61.> 7\• ICIYSl'l'I J JV. -The tol ownv ~ua-lnY 111<1c •63 663 Ametek 6W " 13 • u:i. 13 C01C ldcs1 :io 35 11 16 '1 u ... 1. H-I Sa 811U~ CP ll• 5 • l(e•• T I I t::i~ lltOnS SUPDlltd br. lnYfS 8os 10111 11] AMF Inc ~ 238 '6lo 26 16\o ~PC 11111 11V 17 21::.1 21\.o 21~. +"'° - - security system a firm With ~rc"t1oa~ 1J1~ '°::Z ~:1:~ 1~"' 1f! ~~fan Na:.i.ona~~. lnr6~!o ~I G~%'° 1 lJ :M~'1~a !II 1~~ ::1• :fJ !~\o t+~:. C~~111 F'f: I ·~ t5ri: l~. ~h 1 -Vo ~:f1~"i'1111 !it ,; n~ n'~ mt + '• 300employes probably1slos<•IW5v 21~o2JU ICeufrE 1ot.11 Oeale,s •ne-n•e Mut lt?t•tAmpe~c0 11 1151 li t IS! •c,&n1~1C11111J 111i 15 lS -t H1lllbur11os 11llr.1»~•''~-l .. <•mco 15to 16¥• ICeYe F b 11Vo 1n~ t~e orlc:n •I w~ll'.h Pr1>11 J 61 J 93 Ami led 2 10 1 1 • 2 • Tllo Crws.Hllld I 1• '' 21~. 12 H•mWll ZS• n s 1.. "'1 ~ -!o mg a m1n1mum Of $50000 In Can"" M 64 U Keys CVJ 17 ll lhef JeCUtltlts Steck 16Ul761Am!el 31 61 Jl\o 30\'o ll ~:i;C,O'wCol lOtt lll U\'o 14'o l~o -•...t lf1mmP&p 1 SI 20'\.C 20" 20 -1 C:JnnM B 114 66 l<eys1 PC 1l.'i I ~ co~'d ti1ve been s~l•ct I 66 t 31 AnacMd 1 fO 1ll 2{ • 1tl' 1"1} ± ''Crown Cork tJ7 11\o 1.Re 11'• ' H41mmnd 10 ,, 10 !. tlo ''• -• merchandise pilferage alone C41ntad '"" J""' Kf'"' 1111 2~ 3.,. 101d (bid I or !IG<i9ht v, P1 • 11 6 n An.en Hock 1 • ~ ..,. • Crw111.i1 1 '° •:u 3lT• 11~ l1'l1. -• Huld1mn " 61 J!~ 31h 32'-'o H d ca .. M1'• l& 17\lo K 11~1 El ,'.. •,~ c11~K) Tnu,~•'••• •,•,,•,,Re11i •••"s"'o'o'•'AMo•o"I• 0 " '1"1• 25 > 1$\t -1 Crn 11410 J1il0 •~ 60 60 -L'I H111d Htr » 101 11 It\~ 20;,ti I"' e sa1 11 1s easier to pre Cao 5ow ''' 1i-. !<:Irk co ..., '"' ' '• 16 • 16'14 crs corP * los 1n 1 11 i, 111• +t'. H11111 ca so S41 1111 11v. 1114 u. Cap lnlA 1~• 3 !Cnoo Vol 2•~ ",'• Abfrdn 111 l N l~Y 6.64 6 6• !~c~tl, 1./f ~2 1~1, 1i{~• 1~~ -~· CVdtllV it! 31 1H1 Jllo ll'o + \, H111111M I XI l 4311 .:J:t< °" W vent pilferage and vandalism C1pfch 1 l V> "'•111r z,.. ·~ ''"''' , ,,,_, J Hncock , n 1 ·~ AocoO, 1 ''' " ..... L • -•• t\ldhv -'1 '' 1 11 11 11 + "" .. ,,, ..... 1 '' -~ '''• ,..,. ,,, than to detect pilferage after ~:~r.o:v ;~1~ ... ~~.0.·~ 2~~,!~ P..7~ !wif;::~c::.~~~~e F1~,:J,11 4i\~~t ~°7.JO llO ti\;}~ ~:~!+!:ll::~~l~"'~I> ,t ~i\; g\; rn:!;:~:~i-:'i2~ \ fg ~h~ t:-rJ1_1f: I t I bl 'h t C1tr GP 'l~•ff land Re1 J\~ ~ 1111.Ur 7M 769 AP<tlo 103 11 ARAS 1' ll'lo 1J llli+~C\lnn0r119 M 17 t V. I • f H1rfSMrl! IO 100 11\i :zH ~llii I Sars U e COS ISC•iKNG 9:\10 l.~rieWd 6h1 Advls,s 111$1 Cus ll110lllt1Art"if 1°' !,'">'>I~ 1~,+.1 CurllssWrjO IS l1¥.11 'h l1'-lo-ti H&rvA112tt t J1 1111 .,.)I b I I I I I I C I Ca5t1 C•o 1~ 2'111 Lin.on Ho 1h Aff Ueld 'J.6 1 09 Cus 81 11 30 It t7 Ar~t'•• ,}~, •• •• • + 1 !urt wr A 1 • 2~1 23'• 2~ -~. 1t1w1l El 122 1 ,, ,. u=w 1•T• SU s an ta e s 1ma e a OS Ce111ex 16 :nv. L1rwn M 17·1 18" Alulre '51 6 st Cus 8• 711 •jl Artll 0111 I sl ~,. rs\. M -\0, ut tr H 1 'O u :io~. 20 • ~. + • H41YH Al• I l( 16h U\ll 2614 + •• of $75 ooo a year for complete c,•,•,,,v,,"5 1!~ 1,•~, ','.,'",,',', 10v. 11 All Am F dl ff cus 1C1 1 u 1 l ArliPs 1 °' 31 >•• "~ ,,1 -ycl01s 1 t0 • :u~. J4V. '•I•~. H1u111M « '"' ,1, 16.,.'"" + ''" "'""' ~• 1.\-'o Allst&le t ss 10 11 Cus 1(2 • •1 '11 ,,,,,,'o's '' • • yeruaM l.. S2 .i''!.< Sl"U ff,_ -•4 .. ,, o , '' +•• Prot'ctlon Or ' 300000 oouare ,c11"n ,o rn 6~Lel111t G 13•.1.16 c s1 l5t.St1"' J'3 '""• l'hi l~•-1'1• ,., n " 1 •• '1.1 4'.1-.,. ~,. nm .. e1 1 1 I \.ews BF l?\l!!UV. Alone Fd ''l1D52 cu• s ""Armc:oSt 160 43l ~h !t~o 20'h+~o -0-Htcl1M11 11r .5:1 214 ~6V. '61'i-._ , ! J I Ch~ 11>11 sw. ~ '' Mo ,L •Amct<> sn 5711 "' 1 toe f9'1Armco Pil o JO 21~ 1~. 21 H1l11r HJ 1 t•3 .1f.! 34, ~+I 100 pan '"'' urn >>" 10,! ,,.~ •• 9 In I Am Bus 1 ff 3 21 Cus SJ i 'I 7 lf A'ITIOllf IM 16 ~1 ,.,.._ o> , , 0111Rlvr 15• St I i 710 1~1 -1 tfe tllt C~rl Jt t • ••, "' n 6io 7l'o Am Own tl<l\011 Cu• St JU •21 •••••C• " .....,.. 7 Olnl(O "' IO>> '''' •>• •I " I I .-. t +1,1, That Includes fencing 'Jee Cnl &r&l S.f 5' Loll Cdv 1'h l p ,,.. 3 ot 3 39 19'1 71~• 27.\io 21'1 -~• .... -.., ,.,, ler 111 Ml SJ lf49 ltV. 1m + ~ c~rlsl s 10• lat L~ eo , lJ\' l•lll Amer Express ~ 1•,' ArmCk pfl IS r 10 jJ 52 S2 -J 01rt 11\d 30b 17 l''1 32 • 32\.4 -1 .. H1lme Pdl 1 21 ll'h u, ,4, .. + Jr JI d • c~rls!Pf ti>lOO ,-·,, ,,,11, CaPI 1~1 '6 11 c l) 6lt7D<1 Armltubll0 lJJ• J)l o .'.l:l~'o -o 0•rt lndof2 1131<fill\~li1 •+1.l.Htlmlll>~ 1~6 ,0 , "• on1c surve1 ance ev1c s c 1~c1ei ,.., 7 ,_ .lla".f GEi ... • 111crt1• 1 11 '10 n a r.1 1 ~ • •l A,0 c 90 , 11v. ,.,,, u v. + ~. g111 Proct•s tou u :io u 1s " +1 • litml•llll c., , 4 , 1:11 it1, -1 JdentlfJCalJon and 0 I h e r C I l M1q lHo 1 ll'o Mal ft!TY ll\IJ l3'• lnY~\l 1 06 I ii lei( Grll> ., 4 I '6 Arv111 °{,(d l 4:1 7Jl• 22'1o 23 +~ 41YCoC• 114 6l 16\• H lo 1~1 + ~ H..,.,ltnc 7S. I 6' • \ t '141 Clll1 VI< 73 ll'll Mll~,t 6 JV> Soecl 1ll Le• Rsch 1'73\S01Ashd01120 12S z4f., 7311 2J o +V:t 01YCO pl4 2J •o.lo •O\ HercFnc IS.. 103 37\; 36 " 6\i • sefeguards :ind s e v c ra 1 l l~cn UJ, {~"' ~~~ ~o~t ~ 1 · ~\' A~tocE\1v ~ ~ ! ~ tl~'tl,~ ! ~l ~ ~T ~~~ JIJ1';' 111 ~~ ~ , .J~ 3\" -• oivtnHua SD :l~ 21 13 • rt,1 ++\: ~=~~~:i: 1110 60 J:f: 2~ ~~~ :t" ~ uniformed guards A big guard c ark Mt n lt M:nC::. c 1 1 1 ~ ~~ ~~ h ~ 5f ~: L ~', :r;; ; i; ; 9 A,ssc1 s.,. 10 1 1n . 11\• 21•. ~ , DaytnPl 1 1.11 J6 :ti 4 211~ 2211< +-\• l'itw P•'k 10 ,.1 ~ 7,i. ll~ ~ + •• f h h Cav1pn 1;11 MarM19 l l ll Am M 7 ~1164 Llng l •I J7t sdTrinOlo '•• 1 I • OPL1>rA 315 no ~• ~7 •It' ktahVoJl•g~ soi~.1~.n~+\• Orce WJIJ run ltl er we nt Me I 't Ma,m Gr I 0 ''• AmN Glh 2.S5 119 Loom, Siy es A,,•,0•,,e Ina •1 11 • 11 1 1Ho geert ~o 12 I 176 'o>', lllo J.f"o + 't HlffOllHO ol l 116 :Jn;, ]I)') Jli< .:t ~ Tl ff f C: nto" 0 11• f~IM Brow ' 7.61f>1<ncho G o p CJnMI Jl 9tll" YI JI J ?O o lOto 10 0 -l 1 emir 11 11 11• •Hob.at l?O 3 391, lt 39 .+ lo icre1s oneo sell1ng <tC l1owcr; l•"-lS'•.M•~LP 11,11 io cae1t 16115 ca .. u ,1,,11 A1Rchlld 1 •o.15'4l o 5.2 •.S1 i -1 .. gei,M"l•'~ 1 i1l~ ~·n-\lo+•iHoe,nw11t0 ,1,.11 ,24 ,:. ~ Jor Armed guards and c\cc ,~·.; co .~'1 .!1 MM',o",, o n • ••~· Grw h t 65 o se M~t 11u 12 u Al R,n Pll 1 5 z?O •I ~ &1\\ 11 1 , 1 • ' • ' 11 • -\•Hoff Elecun J1 6,.. "• , , _ 't w• """" 1 11~ lncm~ 176 11Jdl~hB,o101'117'A11Rl(lopl3 t t ..1<19\1H1-l pe1te<lnt t7 1'!i6•1 6 0 -•Hc1ld~l~11 1'SJ13l JI~ 1ron1c s ec uttly dev1cos also l:,'1;,", ~ 1? 1~ t MM~ cM"•• • 1 • Fd 1nv 1 JJ 1 •7 M•tn• n 1 11 • 9ll Anllcn 111110 11l •! • •2 •1 .,. Oenn Mlt 10 l2S ™~ 20 10 + ~. Hc11rsvg 1 20 ' u • u i, ~~ • t 1 ~ ..., ?01,11 ~> Venl 31111 •10JM~"~n •44 •tSAlllt (hemJ 1111<>2• 21 -l'OOenllMfg pfl I II II 1t +l~Home.fk4140 ISUI W .... • t provide protec tinn a g a 1 n s l co on s r 7•11< 15 Mf'd n 3~ l •1 A1>01 o Fd 1 u • ~ M4IS1 Fd '10 10 •J A ••s CorJI lH l 1>.. :p; \ OtnnvR~• °" "'' 10 t ' • ' • + 1~ H-vwl i » 11• '3 ! tl\; •• • + 'lo l:~ec r :Jon J/~ Mt' d n 15 16 Assoc 4 1 u 115 M•» G h lG !I II S6 AllsCP pl.15k i no ll~ 13 , n~ '.: : ~M!DIYln l '' 2.1401 • 1•11 2•1i -I• Hoov e 1 20 1 l•h 2,,,. ;1~ + '• fire ComG~s 11 ll l.!i lolddC1 7' l~A1l•on •t •S7M•ts T, ll40l•..64ATOtncO!a 106 n t , Oe11RGrllO • 1! 1$ +,..Hostt~llJ' 4130.,.. 4 -t Th r h b ' ' th Com lei ~ 21" Midi•• ? ~ ' • AlP Hou¢!cn M•tes l IO l IO AUtO<"I Prod 5t I : I • ... • ge5e(O pl & l l~ 31"' J7~ + .,, HcYd Ind 10 •• IQ \lr -ir~: 'ti. ...:!" tt ere ore ex I l ON: a e c:,om H Ill •V1 1 MMr,•· •• •••• 11 ~ II I Fund /to • ?I 5 J7 M1lhe • t 91) '90 A\llomln IM 1t "' • • ' • -.~,·.",,'M• _ .. ,,,•,1 ,..... UV.. ,',·~~ Houg Mllf 40 • 17 u ,, N Y k S t E t o IO oo •L Jo:l> l1 Fund I 6 U 1 <I@ Me• d Fd II 9J 11 IM Awco Cp 11Ci 163 14'1 1~<1 o•• o ~' ·~ II~• 11\. .,. Hous&ltl' 1 10 ><• • • >"' ew or ecur1 y xpo51 ion om iv ,.,. Mn v G •~ U\1 Stock s,. 611 lloldA Mu •61 s 11 Avco .,13 10 • "" "'' -'Pet Ed plSSO ~J 11"" >111 u t +n11 H • '""" 311-' -b h d Com• .. ' •'llo Mo lt•(ll , •• J $( (p 411 ~6'MOodV CI011Xll23lA~r~Pd )0 JO Jn. l~. l5lo -l~Det Sll!tl '1.1 l)~. 13 '+\ OUS~lfl40 SllS:loll.W.11S'4 +'.lo Said COmpanlCS Wll 3: gOO ~;:1: fnT. ~:. :i?MOCI 5c jS, 4 Bab~~ 1 .10 l lCMOOd~I 11Sll266Av II lQ .i: "1:~~ 21 , 1:,•.++:1 D1xter 1• 43 17 16'~ 17\.'&+\:H:::F ~1' 20 !!i~ '-'1• (P,'o-\0 d I I I I C T S m M<>llwk R II 16 B•acgn 11 '5 11 95 MIF Fd 1 73 I l6 Av:::I ~l2 .o "" 0 &IF Nn •O 16 IHo 1~< 1~1 \1 H LI"' I ' "'''" 5'~, S6J.< -1 Jn US r1a SeCUrJ Y SY 5 e m c:r.::reesK J; , M4M Ccl 1 I ~ Rera ICnl 1 S1 1 52 MIF Gth ( 11 S 09 A t :fl :z,. ~ .tl"', D 1mlnt1 116 n :U lS 4 3~1 + v, H::::NGs In 111 41 ~0 'r 41 +~11 realize very sub~tanhal sav con lltock 261'1 11 ~~:': ':,k i n eerk G ~ Is. 'oa Muu~ Gv 1D 15 111.30 A:~~~/' 111e ''s n~• Ml n ..i 1 o11m lh1m l iu " Jtl'>' 111/t -• H1w John 24 111 s2 Sllir. JI • -~ Contrld • .... .,.,., ~ • 9 R • Fd l/~avall Mii OmG 4" 5 0$ Allee 011 IJI Sf 14"· I ,· 1"' • 1Sh pl C1 10 ,, 11 '11 -h\i Howmtl H 1~ 111't u 17 • + •• Jngs on alJ the p!Operty Jn Conlran 1, 1 1.S MM\",,',~.1. 11 H\li 8cnds1k JS66oeM110mln 921 1009 n ,. J o ••1 -iOl&S Pl012C ll 15\lt 1•'• 14'• lillllllrd l llf ~ l4h ,,.,. lt'h Coooer L 16 17\'t Ml T 1~ I• 7 Bos1on SI 1 OI 1,. Mu~ Sh,. 13 ?• 13 14 --Dh:t•Pribn ,. ns ll 'h 11\1 12% -\~ l'i11C181~ I JD ,. 11 lOli 2! t .. SUranCe COslS Caro S 3\1 371 Mo'<<•' WM '~ ·~1 Bosl Fdn 'II 10 1t Mui Tr$! l 96 l f6 lllb<:k W j(I 115 2(1~, 1D 10\i +~~ 01,bold 4b 11 64~ 43\• IJ1.• + ~ .. Hudlly t~I ?0 t 2Q\'t 91-ii 211),. ... Co•m Yr 9 10 ~ • Boston 1 S1 I n NEA Mui t lt ':JI B1k•Oli• '' '' '' .. I ' OIGloro11 60 5, 11. ''' ,. + •• " • .. ,0 2C 2(1 crwlrd It uv. ~· 1 Clllb l?V. l 'ilo B,oad Sr 111~ 13 40 Nat Ind t I '11 Belt GE 1 12 13 261i -..l /],,; =t: 01Glore pf 11 1 ?O\.'o 201; ,O~~ "H~~ich: ~ ,1, JG>-' lo:.i lo~, Slow , Steady Boost In Economy Predicted Ctea Mft II') 9V. u~ er I t 8111!ock Cl vln Nat 1nvsl 6!61 1 30 B1llG pfC• :loo S3 ~Yo 53 + \.'.t 0111 nghm 40 '2 14\ir. JJ\~ Ill• _ v ldahol'w I 60 ~It 1' l•11o + :+ Crtat Mh t 1" Mu!ltl Es 1 ~ 1 Bull(k 1);11 ll t1 NJI Secur • BantPnt l5o 16 ., I I\• -'lo 0 JlllO pl A 2 , 21 21 2f ldeal 91, 60 '3 ' ?IV. tt~ -._ Cross Ca 29 h 36\li Mt(r I~ '1•o ?lVt C~~dn 1 11 20 21 Bila~ 'St 10 4 la~P pf l 5 11>! 11\~ 1• 1 _ IO 0 11\111 ~I I J 1 JI\~ 71 ~ 11\~ +1 ldt1ll ol• IS 1 J 4 ll !6 '',",','•"• c' •"• •' ~a rag c 1~t'11;~ ~.~~ 5 i~~ 1~{~ 8~~ ]~ ~g~ •'•'•'••'•'Lv' ", 59 23~ 2l\1 ll\ii -• Dl!lo11 Co '4 1 15'111 1517 Ull> ti! Ctnl 11• 121 16'19 :n 26~ N Ce ft t o G ,. o OO o OI " 19 •1~1 'I 44\, Disney Jllb 111 123 l:IOU. 121,. -~. Ill C!n •fl O 1 t&'.o 46 •• _ ... 01nalbs 6 16\li a • NYVn!llll1Sl2 rw.. Ba111(Tr1 .. •4 63 o l2 o O"•+>o DstSe1oll9 J 'l'.lo 'l~o'"»+1•llt Powe,)"" •• -.,. Oanlv M " 9\l:r NCmo CD 1 . 1. B SM Fa ~ f>ll J 1l Pt Stk 61' 'n ll•rb 011 I HI 17 "" g -",, ,. ..... .... .u·~ 1' .Ullo -"" Data Ile• 6V. 6.,,.Nal Eoul lS 16 ~cG Fii 7911•2 lncom '" 4tl Baro C• '' 53 . l~o J.flo -i 1Vt'5lnd )4 15' 11 10\o 10\ir.-l'I I w llf121 2100 311 lt 30 +j~ ' Na G .. O l6!h lJ c ,_ ,,, so' ,,, ''' ltJ ·~· 39, lt:i..-~1 IYMto IS.... •O U't n u. 22'.'>-"9 111 Pw Pl1 1l 1'1t0 ltV. 21•.o. ,, ... o,,",'ooo'o'"> 4~. 1>1•h Nat I.lb 16 'J ?1" .ro~mr "" oc: BISlc Int; IO 21 IPo II 11\~ + \\ OrPel'Pef 30 ,5 11 0 17\o 1~~ + \1 t)l"I Pw Pl? 0 J:!O lt ""' " -••I OO ,,,!Capt Inv 197 316 Ne Grh 116 198 l ales Mfg 35 11 oo•, Olo + "0 Ml 10 • "• "l .. , Pw , .... m >l ',', n,, t', OavltFd • (\17 "a Mli'd »C~Pl5hr5lo061ANtuwCtl•'24148iteiMlfl • voomen "' ... ,,,,,_,, """ O&y Mir ,~ .. 16,_.Nat l>e1 11,",•ce"t Sht" 01•1119 Neuw Fdll2111 ~1Batn 11111" IS u, 15 lS\1 -\,0omF'lld tie lJ tH •• ·~ 1mPC0Am 19, Ht\ 11~ 11~1-~ Doco, I~ , ,,,. Nat SecR I • cn~nnlng f"tilldt New Wld 11ffn56 eithln Pfl .iG •• 15 It u;. -~i 01>1111tlleY "* 1t 1' • lit• 100 +J/i NA CP 1.-IO 111 ?ln l l\11 311, + "" OeK b ~D 79'<1 JOV. NII Show 1 • '>'t. B.ian 10 JO 1 26 Newto" 1310 u ]l Blusel!Lb IQ 11 lfiJ JI 't 37'.t -1 ~Dor c (!' 31 Jt Uh U\2 U o +I ~re Capll 11 l~ 10\'I 10, 8:1~~ •ch 5~ s~'" ~~1n 5d¥ :~,u: l:,.~ ~~1hSI ! ~~ ~ ~~ ~~.~a~i'' 1: ~I~ tt ft:::'.!:~ , 10 ,\~ ;~. ;~~. ;~\~+Pig~~,~~ ve;o ~ 1: 't .j1' 3:t; + \: "ldl~~Ha'4e.., l~ 2I~ 1ru 2~ .! ~ NEWTON Masi; (UPIJ - The nation s busi n ess economists predict • steady but small forward movement 1n act1v1ty for the coming year with a modestly 1m proved economy and a Gross National Product ( G N P I reaching $1 42 trtlhon ac cordmg lo the Nat i onal Assoc1al1on of B u s 1 n e: s s Economists (NABEJ In its annual s urvey releas ed Sunday the NABE said most bu s 1 n e s s economists responding rated the Nixon Adm1n1strat1on s o v e r a J I economics pe1formance fair to good Donald R Burris NASE vice pres1den1 1n a paper to be delivered today before the aliSOC1a!Lon s 12th a n n u a I meeting said the maJortty of those responding to the survey 1 000 S 0, Oil PAINTINIS WHOLISALI WAUHOUSI OPIN T~ THI PUILIC $5 and up Ult I: I D,NGl:R l.l<NlA ANA PHONI: IJMMI DEALElll WA NT•O I See by Today's Want Ads • Ch1ttk (IUI our ftlltil.Sl.f' u ll" 1ttm, today 11nd bl' pll'al\Cd 111 the dlM:<>Unl PM«'$ • Porscllt 91~ ntw 1netalllc green / betgft P1rclh Urt'f lca~r litttr 4 100 Can )1)0 bear that pnct' • Burmese J<lt~, ret:1Slt!r ed S3.) ~ JO\ 1°'- hom,. and som(>Ont 10 cat't for 11,, I ' d th O~t C~11T lS 1S ,, NJ N•tG '" ~· ,, • lntvm 6 ., J .. Ocnloh 6 'IO 6 10 Be•I Fd• I ~r 39 :ia, 3t +114 DowCllm 2 '° 207 '~ ...... 61 ~-j~ l~:lf~L I ':!! ' 2• 2~ 2Y,o + 141 an 1c1pa e ne1 er a con 0 ,1 er 19 "~• N chsn F ""' SPK 1 5' 1 10 ome<>~ s '' 6 06 llt<:km•n so 111 JI • a " JGV. -'• Or•voCP 1 oo 1 :it " :it r • ... 1 1~• •1• 111\ Dev Am 1J '>U Nels A J,,3 -~~ Cll!ose Gr Bo• 100 Fd ,,,S1361 Be<IOck XI l&I 11~. ~'· 1,•, +~~ DresslN:l l'O 13• .'.IJ\lo lllo\ 31'•~ •1::::rd1t1;11Jl 3T 31to lit\ 31'!·+~ hnu1ng dO\\nlurn 1n business Dewey E • .1.\1 N els I -.... C1p' 1 Cl 6 '4 101 Fd t 6J • 4) Bte(hA 15, 39 39i , ~~ + '~ OrMsr 1>12 20 n JS\• J5\.'I ln• + .,. 1 1 "" 511 2 11 ·~ .114 3~ + 0 1m (, 16~ 11 NA Rest '•"'•"' F\lnd 1011110rw!WmS 119812 tlee1co Pet 50 435 11•1 11 1 110~+ 1 0tetsr 1>111 1' 32 l lV. J1'1o 111 1 ~g 25 24~ 2•'4i -act1v1ty nor the start of a new o sc tnc 1u •'" N<•r NG • Ftn1 •a It n 1• o Ne 11 ss 11 Sii Belden 1 '° 3 '""' ;~n 1,\ • + ,_ Dreyfus co 1 1' 22.\1o 1jili 22 -o 1:1 1:: •v. •4 •~ -'Ai 0 Yer CM 3i, -Al NE~r 01 •'•" ,•,,~ Shrnd • bl IQ S• Opoenn 6 14 1 d Be d"oH Mlb JO ~: • • • .... CMcePw 1 AO ll ""' 2 ~ + 1/o I ti I 11, "~ j6Yo 11\'o + v. boo Oocute I '-'< 6w6fllPA Gos ... .,. Spe-cl 116 14000 AM t'9101SBe1How M l 151. l.W, D11k•P 11161$ U 90"'1 ffl'o ta +t;1115 f P.l"l15 21 I ,1 +U. m1ng expanSIOO O"ldsn l lh Pio NW NalG 10:. I'll (htm< 1S 11 1115 OTC Sec t 31 10 11 Be t lnlercon It J9 ~ JI'~ 31':~ + 'I du Pont l 151 tt 119'• 11t lit i llSP r Cop 3t tl 4,jl_. .tl\G '4 -1 lo oow Jon ll 31v.NWluSv 1P lllil co10r11a PactFnd 1111191emls C&l !! 1: 1fl~ 1•,,1 i1~10unBr•dl20 4' '9 ..,,. 411~1 -Vt l~l::irl'!cl\OM '113311, 3l ~+-. Rather they indicate only ocvle DB 2i.:i 11~ Nucl Rsc •~~ ' Eav v ~nav111 P1u1 llev 6 11 1 39 ee11<1 x 1 '° ,31 ' • • ::? O>i1'141Am 20• >a 7\.lo '"" 7 + ~ llM , to ,l,1 J 1':", .!"', ,..u:~ + "' Orew NI. ~v, J Ofl 0 At 1'h I F""d • 11 10 " Ptnn SCI , n I 1i f'lelld )( of l 11 !~'I< 2''11o 1,,.. ,~. DUQ Lt 1 " 11 11~ 2l • 111/i ... In! c~ N .. ... .. A modest bllt Steady move Oun kin 0 l•lo 1~ 'o Ohio Wa1--:l\.~ 2(1/1 Gl"Wtn ~ 1S ~ 14 P1 Mui • 6t A flt Be"tl Co I tO ~ 'I: f>ut1!111 t41 1U :it~'° 11>,;, 21!4 -lt, I F '' llC r ln d'li 41 '° 'j\• -''" Dur ron ii:i.. S\'1 0111 Scan 1R ~ 10 l'ltOm t u t" Ph I~ 116t 1311 Benell 015 j(I '' ,.,.., il•l+i ,..lo + tO 0UQLI ~ l 110 2•h j6~ ~ -4i, nt l&Fr SO:tt 16 ll 611\11 ' --..it11o nlenl forv;ard he said The EZ Pain! 110, n >,; o,mon1 1 11' ven , 11 • n P! 0, m , n 111 Beneu 011 30 2 hi 1•1 l•1 +1t; owmo tnf 11 14 3<0 13 \"' H1rv 1 to 116 2»1-n:r,:; ,, _ 1,11 Ea a IC wr 4 ,, 5 l'Jt " TP ltl ~ 11 Col Gr ti 11 oo H oo p"' St 10 11 10 11 Benet S1>1l • •17 ll~) 11 • J3V• + > E F 1 ~:Ho1 d 1 Ile t ~11'9 1,,,_ 13 -\• Easl Sh 6i 7'1\0Vt' NA lh l coms Bd •11 •l9Pon E ~! '" 611 Benauer lO •• ,. 19 ,<, 2t 1 -• -n nd~st #0 lli\ l''o ltlh-\T,: survey also revealed very real conce r n o v er higher unemployment s 1 u g g 1 s h capital and continuing 1n flahon ' Burrus added !Ocon lab 1S; 110.:. O~vCa ,,,., IJt Cwlth AB 1 XI l )OP on Frid 10 1• 11 .10 bl"l!Ullt In l.. 1 • u, ''• + \o Ea~nYa 1 fO lM 31~1< ~· ll 0 +1 Ml 11\d Pll 11 36 ~l'h :U~ 27 -1;'o. Educ. SYS 1V, 1'• PEC: ls,I 11 131'> Cw 1h C l •? l Si Pl1n '"" '57 10 AO Berlte-v Pho 70 •11 •'lo 6\~ Elsea Cl .. n11 1trt 1'\1 lt\.l -\~ Int Mir.er 1S4 !1 O'• 11 + )4 El P11EI '1 o 12111 P~bs II (J .', 4• (f)n'I~ .I<! I 61 t 50 P IC• Fund< Bermt( C •15 ~. I~. f -~ E(-trd 2<t 11 17l't 21 + , In! Miit l041 31 11 lW. 1'1> -I,;, F. ba svst 1 ~ 111 Pa c .l<u a so,,., 6t'I comoet 6 n 6 11 Grwl~ 11 31 n 31 Beth St 1°1g 316 1 ~ l l• 2V. -~ E ~ 11H1t lr.d ~. 6 6\lo -~\ Int Nlrt 1111 '2 ~· 41/i •l\ti t ~ E'der I• 6lo I Pa< F1E .lO 31 CDn'IO Bel 1 11 112 N Er• tQll t OlllJ11Tn,11e 60 119 22 i ,, »t.. EIMM111 pll n lS\~ ,..1414 1f\o +;, Ill! "•P 150 1~2 36 35 3' "• El Nl!t l :1>i P1kco Ca 3 1' 3 ~ (OrTIO Fd l 07 9 11 N H~ )19111 91 Blac~ Ok H 41 •7~~ " 41 • +1 t;&!On Dll 1' l ~ :lloo T l fllll Re<! I 54 ti~ l~io ru -&\ El Nuc I 1' t Panccl H o 1\lo (omit~ J 11 '13 Pro Fund 119 I 19 Bl~lrJonn 4I It "11 ff •t11 -t• E&!I Alr L 11 410 If l5h 11-!o -" Ill St!! I ·~ l ll ~ 'IV. :tl1h ElctCPV 1c. 1~Pa'k'Or 1,\ I (or>tord 111)111lPro Pcr1( ilo07 11 Bllso l.u1<1 l 1 IS!o IS i• l~o +~tE<hll11 Mfn 251 2"" 2,_0 1lV.-'Ol11IT&TlO! )11 4.1.V. 4>* .Q'llit > l"Urom ••.sv,1>arkwH t ll tllt conoo1 111 tJ5 1025ProV<lnt 4 10•llBlockHR ~· 1 1!1 l9~:10.+1i FIMu1k~ u ,1~ '"° -"• !ntf .. TplO• 1:!01.U '" j• • El CSl'I 1 , 1\oo Pe~ ~y P 5., 6 • Canll Ml 6 SI 6 YI Pur Ian 909 t93 g "' lli '1\o 15\'• 11~1 +ll1 El M1m M•I 22..0 ,. l• l• + \• 111tT .. T p/F. ( l10D 13'ljj lll\'o :u'4 +3 6 El Oal• '' '4 P1v~l!e 1)~. 1•'-' co~t Gin 116 ''' Putn~m Fund• Bl~o~ert,1•, ~,, S.f '5~ "'' ••1• + 1-> ~lKt As•oc (5 1 .~"' 1 + • ln!T"T 1>IF' ~ 1111! 12' 125 +2 EIModv ( 1i,Peerl Ml '~1 ~!•(or11ld 1J7(1SI Eau1 •111 5!8 •121 115 1'1 +l'~E•1IGF l1! 13631"1 ~ ~I -~\lntT .. TotH • II] 11 ll +') EmDS 0 I ll ~ lltio Pi!e Its T 2~ ~ U CnlV (IP 10 12 !1 1U c;..,,. 11 •1 13 14 8~~: c'o"'•o .st It 0 1~1 14~• + l'o E1~l(Oc1Jk It jil '6~0 6Sii '6 0 + ~lo ITT Dfl (:ill I Mio tl\'r 13 ... F:ne gy C 2" )1 Pi" Ent!" 2'-'o 210 C111 WO Iv 5 l1 ! 11 Gr th I., t n lo!sCoo ,.0 lOI 11 • 11\o I"" -\lo i:~QltPth to 21 22~ i"o U I + ~ lnlT'-f llJ 4 ' A3 ~' IJ\io • "' E"ere Re 111! 7~0 Pa G&W II• 19\ Crn WO al 4 u 6 l'l<Ol'l'I J '1 7 st !iond fwi...., 61 lJJt Jl • •I $0 -1 E1P1toNG 1 110 1~1 V. 1'~0 -\.1 Intl .. T /11<4 16 7'V. 11 ~ 7tl'r +1 4 E~n • I 4 ~ J\lo Denn Pee llo lill< d~Veh M !t 4 !11 ' Invest 6 "15 ~ &3 8oolcMlh 111 ' t>o 9 fu + n Ellr• Co 1 :IO l2 'ru !~ii'f 2JV. + ~ l11TT pf S .SO t20 U 6' ~ '6 +l En wl11 1 'f I 4 Pel)!.1 I'll G • 1 " Otliw1r1 G1'tlPU Vl!I~ 7 •1 • 1~ Bora en 1 20 11', '>'' l1'!i 1j + Emfr £lee l 70 .SO • ,,.. $1' • + >j 111TT•IN 11$ 361 S6\'o Ut'o ~i + "' E1>11 Corp 1h 1\ll Pt!rotll :tn Jt~. Ot<:•I 10 S6 ll S• Vovao 611 6 69 8crQWI 1 2S '"" 23 2 \~ -EmEl IJf I IO I 40 "° • .o\. -1\lo 1111 Utll l 40 IJ :zt1'o 111. 2''1\ -'Iii commercial bank economists EQull o 12\• 11~ 1>~1tdo "' s• St oe1wr 11 •• n so 11 .... ~,~ 'l6 10 u llo•ma~s 10 P i1~ 231• 111.~ + ErnervA r 9o u SU'o 51 1"1 51U Int Ullt A 5 Jl'la Jl'lio 31~ + \'O Erlt "Te< I. 1t' lhll Sub 11 • 11•. OeH• 6 11 I 07 R lllret 13 10 13 ll Bos Ed, , l• I • 12 • n~~ -tt Emto1rl I 2C JI j l.\.O lG 11'· +lh lhler••c• 1 1 " ,~. 25 t ~ In d1scuss111g the Nixon Adm1n1strahon s pohc1cs he noted about l:i percent or the rated the admnst t Fii Ceco 1>, ''"'~otoft "10 °0,•-el uun1s11:01en111 S6t,21 &ourni Inc 1~ tt'Z ~~~~ fll:tl'!Em11o 'I '" • 5;, 1s ' 1.i,, /"'1•,•K•,•I..! 1 ti t 11 1 l I ra Jon s Fib T1k • "' P!llk I 50l1 51 \17 0 evf Fd 10 S6 11 51 S• em F'd ... 5 'M B,1nlfAlr .so :m II• ™ 1-\< EnefllM II •O l4I l.<V1 ,•,11.< :nl.4 t l II rin "" ,, U>\ 1n \ 141to +\.\ ( JI O>fVf Lv 11 13 U 15 ~! u5 , ll "lt U 5l lirlOQS! 7 ((la ll ot\ •lh -~i -E1111 s 8U1 17 1) 12'1i 11\~ "1 l11!1r$PW 1 7' t 1611 \'" 1~ per ormance as exec cnt El!on.,How• ., seoodtr Funds erl'I Mv 1 20 ,,, .o;; .st 5~~ + i EQ~tG.ls 2 20 11 ll\\ l.:t(• JO!Ao -I•• 1111er11stt 10 •1 16"\ 1~~ 16" \i l•I& tlt.1013 IM nv 1J 1S IJ5Q B'SM¥ •f1 11 lflii Jt~ lf.fi +~·t:$1Inc 1 ;0 II 11\i'I 11 . ll\'t-\1low• let! 1$ 'll Wfo V' + i However not one or 54 Grwth 10 &J 11 1, soc1 :it 10 "20 11r11 Pet •lll 1n '~ '"' ,~: ~~ e,~•,",•,, ~, _ ,", ,", ' "\lo ,",t! .! l! ,:::~1k l 31)11 ,t !.."' !..~ J.!Vi• lllCOn'I I SI 110 B~r ll.!11 13 51 8wv H•11 .~ -~" H ?t ill »f "" 27\• ,. .,. ,.. 't •v .. •w responses from consultants soe-c 166 1 31 COl'l'I s1 116114lld•-"a •11 1 \Ii ~ Il~=v.c1ternnt 22. 3Gl ••~• 14 u1~+1~•ow•PL11111 • 21 1J n• w. \\ Sloc:lo; 1, 30 11 " Serurnv F11"d' ,, WV. t 60 ... , H!o + ., Ethyl CP •• ICS 11 \'t ™• N l'I -\~ lowalSv I H • nu. lt\~ lt'lil-academ1c government and Eber$1 1 ao 11 t0 Eou1Y 1 •• 3 10 1,k1v11u 1 n •2 Dh 21 " ~ , + u ernv1 p12 40 il .141.1 J•l'I loll.< ,',K•", os• .'t ~ 2st~ '~• 1.'l\li + ~t Ettel 11 33 12 31 lnvet1 7 It 1 M ,•own Co J 6 ,rr0 F,~ E\ltOflld Jl9 U 11\o l. II mp .. II 26\IJ :z5; 25'\' -It\ non bank finance economists Emre Sc J 01 s it u tr• ,,, ''° wnlh'"' ..211 30 t~• ,~ t\ -~Ev•n•P ""' µ, 3t \; 39 .Jt _,.,utt Cor• J1S ~,,_JI -1 !nt,tY 11 11 11 11 ~elei: Am I SI t n Jt°'.':"1 •,H 11JO 11 '1fV.. 11>'' 29 + E•CenO 1 1$ S2 1911. U lo Uh -\'t -J•IC-mdlCated S"Ch high praise "'•n t Ill 5•1 S•KS ll.4ol 1''' •"" Y •u •2 n h 11Y> n + • F1be'rl"t «t l1ot 11;. uvo 171'9 -~ '' ... E•l\lllY • 1t I's Stnll Gill , fR • IM udd Co 70 ., •h ... , "' Fl!IOrA 60ll 13 l.... lAi .1Rlo -\'> ••c~~nAi,11 2• ' • ' • hesa1d E<1ul Pro 341 J l•Sham Fd 9.ll t uB,\lddC0 01 ! 110 so so so -1 F1rct1C so 111 :IOli 11\o 21\1 -1 J41ckAtl '1..0 ll '•~' 6\, ~+I• Euex 1l 111J ,1 ~flt~ Aot~fi1ft51i ::3'F~60 •fl i ll< J t t oF&rHI! l>I tl IOY. 10 IOl~+U.J•••er 20 ' 1 1 • , .. , •I Burris siud y o u n g e r Ever•• n 11 11111 " sn o.e1~ 1S 01 u 01 g\I,,,",'' In, •,•, 1 1~ 1 o 1' " F1 """"' 1 40 11 111.1 l6h -" J1n!1•n '°~ 11 14\~ ui' F O Ci!> un1va I Side ~St ;i 41 B o 8 0>.,> ~,,,. J.! 36\'t ~• F411111ff 10., it ''' ~ l h + \~ JJ!!i':fa.._ .OW ~ 10\9 ,1,0,~ 1100)1< + '• memberswereless1nchnedto Fir1c1 110ts1 s11m• F\11111s 111ov41 W '° • 7ou n $#1F~muv F1 10 t1""11\~ 12 ~-, "w .,.ow 21 1°'' • .. ,, •. , th-administra tion hi•h Ferm 1u 'llCI '°" c1~11 1 11 • '1 ',',:\", "m, 1. "'•• 101 10\io ll:A'i \t Ftns1tt Int n lT~ 1n• 1n. + ~. ie1,;,•,","•' ~ 11 p,,; 201.• ",,,•,•-~ "' .,-., Fl!dGtlh 118611ff lllVt•I 1•11ot0,,;•,, ... , .. ,,.., 3'~JI Jl'.7 \F1rWeotFl~ ll15 i.i.u . n -... -'" L~ F d (ao 10 J9 11 :16 Trust 111 117 I 101 o!Ol1 'ill> ilO • -ll F1r1r.MI IOb 1t .fflo SA , 5,1 + 1 J41rCl"l. pf 4 ~ SD"' .SO\\ mar,.., Fld Fvnd ll U 1$ 11 Smith I I 12 11~ U'!Nor 1 17t 1'1 .10 lit. 1'>• t • FAS lnll 7" Ul t l>to t pi _ '" Jtw1I Ce l 50 1 -4Jlilo ~ -IT.\ Nearly 50 ,. ........ 11t.. o[ tho F1d T,nd ~11 ti.1• Sw5t Inv un&v41U =~.!:!.!"pf.SS SO u, '"'l '• ~I Fedd~'' 40 2<.IJ >.c. 12 • 3 _1 '""' FlnK!1I Proo ~win" Gt u111v41f1 lurr-• .70.. SI 11~1 11< 11 -1 Fe<1tr1I l 20 l• 2( 23 )) -1., respondents Undc 3; 'led th. OVl\lt'I J H • 00 Sove, lftY ., ., 'o\11 ells m lll'W 111~1 lll'.l1 -• FIKIMot 111) 40 ni• 2 •• ,, ~ ..... r r /N:IUI! l it 1'J lDKtr• 11$174 8\llllUft" '" n 11\~ ,, 11 -~F'dtNMtt •• 131S 13 1 5 s1 _,. adm1n1Strahon as only fair or llCom j ?J s1 •F•m G1 15• ·~ -C-Fe<1P1( E11<: • 11 11 ' 1 ve .. 1 l ,, 4 lS 5Tflt St •O 7J 11 15 C11lol (p 10 lJ 31 ~.. '"' + F P1c r.1 ,. I 1,1 • u~. U(t + • poor he said 1'1tf V• • SS 101• $!~1dm11n Ft lldl~ ~-r Fl11•~I " •• • • l'IKIPI~ d l ' 11<. 11 -• F$11n Ols 4 tS 161 Am I rod 3 :JI ~ 10 4111 .. ,o, "> I 'I -'i F'l<ISltnS 60 P lfl.t 11 1' + l.i 1n looking to 1971 the Fs1 111G1h 11s t" F!Ovc: ~6~ •It 1"11 Mn• '7 1U• 111~ -\ Ffdtt•l1 Tn' l• 6l..i 111 ,,,. F\I Ni t o1t 1 ot S"'t11 Rot Fds &rTIPltl d& •' jl '>/!!', 15~ FtdO SI 1 ... ,, .. >I ., economists (ore<:as\ ar 1n Fu s1..-1 un•v•U B•t 11 t1 u •• c:~g~•, 1 ~0, 1" 2t + • FH fe~ C. • ! 3!5 • T1 F1tl C10 $7.t ,.. C11a OP I.ill 1..511 CO w IJ 7li Jl1 +!Ferr (' 70 ~ !1 1•• •• +< crease of $&3 billion 1n the Fte• Fncl 100 s1oc:1c. 11tl 11 •l "Pee 310 " llV. •· ll -1 F1~:ii111 1Ct na 15 u l ,~""'· • I d Fl1 Gii! JOI J65 Sup l"Gt 101 662 ~e,,.lltd l 10 I lJ Ulo l,!_1, ++~ FleldctM 1 olO i1 3014 30\i JO) t a gross nation.a pro u c l FnctG h un1110Suo1 .. sr ~n •.s5c 1"c&<1a1 n :io n ..... llll Flu,01100 "!''""'s 2s;,+l• h·[ di! Fwlldn 1.l1 00 Svntr Gt 1 U I 31 ••brvn I S4I d '' ~5).~ ti + -· Fin FtOlll"•l~ • ·r. 15 \ JS .... -,, ~ense Cl""ll ure~ on I FOii'"' 'QI tttlMR Al> 111 111C•rl1t. '° ,. Ii ll~' 11 +'"'"F I , •• ,, .. ••• --... , ' • • ~ '''"'' 0 G•-·o , .... ,, '1 ,,, Ciro <•O• ' •• ,0 •• \l\l • let n1 -. ' ... .. ... .+ b '"' ,... 1111 , • ., te •"""9 Wit GNP b.SJ' .r •• •peeled to "" --..w • u .. SHt -11 ~ F ~ Ch,, 1 2!! 1'9 •1V. ,. •• Al -I I --" ONTC I )0 I gf ftll'l<I )j(I 3 tJ C1roPL1 I " lS ,,,, 1l\.t + '0 Fsl M~ 1 D •o t(\~ 2)~ t•t\ _ It 11 ml ,......, m•rlltt ""'"9. continue to drift downward 3;;r111 \~~ : ~ 1~~c1 ,t-;J ,{ ~ ~!~~:~~p 1 ~ ,ll ~~\t JJ\t ,, ' + ~ F$1Nc iz 1 4 u1 "~~ 'h' nu -i.1,, 111urtt ,,. \llllltf1a.1 [-m $78 ' bi JI I On In the .,_.Ond Ir.com I t} lllj OW• MR I M •ti CJrr •12 25 1:ito l1 ff~ .if' -h r1!c~t~n1' 1~1 11' ,f;_, 21 t ,f' -'• II-AIM .,.1r1 er 411dru. ~I , ... •v U """ Ft~m 1..i. f.".~ 'Ill C11" I"' 1" Ct,rG11 1 10. l 11 111• 11 ti F tl!t Fd I 5" 6t 111\ JI flt .j.'. I fotll f l -.0 J..i quarter of th!!; year to $7• Fd Ir Mui •" t" t r iv Ea s1 • :.i c1,1trW •Ofl '" u , u q u~i = \fo Fbntrkf '' n 11 11 n1: _ it '111 • ~1--··-c-L ukllt.,. -.+-F\llld Inc G ., ':':f{ Fcl l Jl ., Ml C411llf(:k 6llb lS 131• 1Jl'I 2J I Fl!mlnt 50 .!, Jil?' • I t. dtl'ICI •-Ot(IJreol .,. N lf In '"' •!• b1lhon In the first quarter of Pron1ol ed cmrt • I • II Tw Gl ',, '15 C1terTr l 20 211 ",1, JS • ~·· 1 .. · Fll1l••olt 1 ~· , ,. • 1 \ ltodl tlv~ _,,411• •• 'f ---ffllol!C •.&.S r21 lw nc l ti 19:! CCI t or11 ··~ 'I 1~, 5 \o Fll111r!fl t2S JJ\1 lllt ¥--1971 and lo $72 b11llon ln the ll'ld ltd II~ 11~ tl"l(!Mut ~$~ l:Jl CCI en ~!l 25 j! 1t 16 llH ' Fii Cl~\! .. lilt ,1 21t1 ~· P•v•blt ti\ lotk tllrl~• 1"" utlll'lllllf final quat•cr C E C ha s F:lldo ,.m ',. : u:, <••,n 'Oii 111 ,',K1,•,<,,M•, ~, 11 • I& • 11 -~. ~11 j•t » IS 1,-t u1o H \ i J' Cit"' ..,,,~ 111 tlt41vT•tM ., ex..f!J1? 1111 eorge crner o~iewv , 94 1 u11 tNI ~Ml .c •1 H 56 . ,, ,j• ow '60 11•1 ~ •, o ~· -1, 11 0 O.sp1te a n :intlclpa!ed 19 G,11 $@( ••1 ''I ACtl'l'I .,, ... , Cet1n plAI SO , WI U'• ll'•-t1 iPor,;;Lt I l u " •11• on ••1n. -ecflrtll ... HJf .. "' been appointed Indus r.br~1r '" "' 1ft1om 11 ~s 1Jt1C1nC01"' :io 101 a~ JS"I• u -1 ,~1l~fc",11 11 ...,f '°,,,: ,•,•, •,,',!•u 1111, '"' "-De<llll'• ,, N fe_ 41ftw. percent loc:rease 1n prh:ate Gr""° 5"< sc ~n '" r 14 ce" HI" 1 '' • 11:u 21 11~1 -~ F •• • \ ttct fl 1 .. trial relations manager ~""*,. I"'~ v•~e 1~ J" !~'I" /4• 1 111• n\lo ,,~ u F ur, •1•3 J1 •• .1J .11 ' • •d8"•" """ 11 .. t-Dttr,,.. hoUSl0£ StarlS from ;\ll ex 811 ~d ti i UFd CJn I~ 1' •nli $ 20 t.6 l(., 1, o 16 1 -FZc(I~ Jl1 .: ]11? 1-1:: w1~ • :t ,.~ Ot ella tll!I ¥tlr tll •«IH'l'Wlltf1 .... b $1.il !':led 1.. mllJ1on 1n U1e for the Anaheim a s· eom 51 "!j 11 • vAh.lf "°1"' .lr ent l• Ei 1 '~ .,, .. 'IO ~ 10~· ' FMc •ti u • » t: 1 + w1ih •1¥1c1tllfs 111 et>"ten. _,.... .....,., O"hFd ,.. u 11} y~ Lill !,.._s ')& (e..f>IPw 114 ,?11 1•'· I"• !£,• + ,•, FOOdFllt .. u .'i l • -r. -"•lf 11\11 '"""' ollv!Otn4 -lf1'td. ...... ourth q11arter to 1 6t mllhon scmbly plant of Philco--fi'lh ~net \ J; I: 11 ~oo:\, ;-'} • ll ~:=sS::. 1:: ,~ ;;,, ~.; ii' -,, ~oott ca .t0 1 11• • • l + ~ ''"""" 11e 1C'la'I hQll ~ ltfl ~.., 'n the fin.I qua rter or 1971 the ~~II '1 H ::J Vn(tS ~et i ft J ~ Ctl!Trtl.I ,_ •• 11 ) 11 l~ + \1 .. :ii: ~Jn,_ 1f ~n~, Ifill~\. '>!UI l + tt iftwt I'll r-0Kllref er NM I" 1flf, slut " Ford C orporation's H~mu11>11 V•rwJ~r ~ .. ' c.,.,6 ,'°" "!"" 11\1 1n' ,,,. ~ •• + ... fi.ct flY ........ eeooom"ts said 1t walin t ex HF1 " 1 ,. Vang(! 'i ... Ctrt "'" • '' 1lt !f.l • [:. u F:~"l, '~ "1 16\i• • Pl\' -+ ' ......:.. """'•1111 • .,.. 1Vr1,. AerOnulron1c divis ion H:r!!'_. 1 n ~~ ~~.Jncl" 1· : H Ctm•A .. ~ '" 1t l'Mt~.l!f II .)~~ II\~ !II; Jl~ =\\t 1'1'. esl M•IM Cllh YI-.......... iPf'dtd to do much_ for the H4lf'l'Wl! 10~ Im WlllSt In 11 iii ~~,!J,1~ 1: I flt ••\ .._ U ~oil yt."' o/ a ! ~ II It\\ .,. n-flstrlautlon Mlt. 1-lellt lfl f\lll unt.'fflployment rate He replaces R1 chard F ~~\ ic; tn 4 ;:•13 i;;.~ '. •' oo c11•m~s , ~ • ~·, !t, -11 ,:'~ •._1 , ~,1-. ;"' 11~ 1 ci..c4111eo1. n-E•4lvi.t11& T-EJMM. The Pfrctntagc ol JObJcs.~ 1:s \Va rren who ha• •oined 11~.11r t 1i 10 1 tll':f, ~.~ ftu ~~~~v1_.~ .1 ~ ;1~ '••n1.'l1r o& 1• ,t., •11 ••~.,,.•••ta 111 flit~ ..iM.11.i11r., .,--J Hltei 10j 7 -1""" U~lt fl (II MTt lk i1~ l lf 11··1'1 ~1~• ~';ti~~1\11 lf: ~Sl ~ lfa irt h1tu11"'" 111',,,f)( r!1lll .-Wrtl!Mwt,_ t:xpected tu l'.l\'Cragr 5 2 per Plulco·Fotd s staff in ' ""~~" 1j.! ,. '/."'' ~ •ff c~~n~/ ~' ,1; • -'! ,._. frt lo1 ~n ,,, ·~· u • -~ ~. tt. -...v11111 w•rt•n1t. we-w..,. I Ccnl rn bo lh lh. 1.,1 quorter 01 n:u~'"liini ~ f~l' ,~r , , 10 '' cn•1t•• l' u ia • t" ~ · Ne B ch G '!• oltl , n • W•'l'" 1e .-11~ C':11tm~• Oii 1 M '' M11-1tu u; --di trlblrtH ... 1-w11t11 tnuH. ,,._,._ I !hi! )t.'lr and lhe first j \\port ea crncr 1 1 I'( ,., ' Wnclr IU . 'itMHY 11D ·1· SL St -1\!Ae C• ''" ,1, '4 1 I'll tt"'1 -'•d•rl~tl\>t,,-'1'1 .. 1n llnllntlln trr.cei .... C 'I '~" !," ·~ t wesl Ind I !lllmwy 1Gll • • ,,, -U ,., Co1e oO l~I 11 ' It• Ii" -1, q uarter nf 1971, dechnlng ln lives 1n osta i.•CS3 '""' ,.., s. ,;,av~1enu 1 1 11M.v• 1~0 i 11• ,.,_1 t11.-1 .-.~_,11 20 i~ 1& 1 11 'J' ~,mn• ,, DiTh1'"''1n1ieo1 111\dtr "" '· ( h h h i f d lh tnt dll i.1 1'1 W toCI ,d 'J I f Ill'\ Olllo ; 11'"J '1°!• 16 '-ii\ "'t t •mS~onl,lll JJ ffi ' 111• ''• -1 (111 kr\l-'C~ ,\(! ., wtll!'ltiu I)' 11,!fft '. percent b> Ii~ oorl "1t s "I e an ree ·~~11(1 N i w nt!TI >M t 'rii''~1 t tf •1'• ••• •I I •1 •mi I r,s 11 2 \ ,.~ m· ' to'nl'lnl" ln-'•rtltn 111.Ut tu•r ..... • hlld 1111hl'¥ ti ~ Wl•t l'f ,,C:. If I I I ..t I o .~, I'• t fM~ _,I liO l h )~I ~ -quatter. Burris :tald c ren i'<l'GN • 1 1 w..-111 J r vc~1 1 SPP 1 ' 1 "' n~. ll . +"' ,,.flt'l'I' -. 1t 111 ~ 1 +"' •1ttt11 ··~•nttltfl t111 Market Symflob .•, • f r ~ j: ~ !: •• :: " u: •• ~: •• u: •• u: ,, s: i1 Kl ~I •1 ~I E! ~: il • •• .. "' " " " ,, " « ,, ,. " ,, t: ~: ,. E; ti fil 'I ~ " H f/ ~ t 'I E: " " " ~: " " !: 1: ,, " ~ II: ~ • :I M • • ~ ~ M ~ ~ • • M M M ~ ~ N ~ N z N N N N N N • N N N • • ~ ~ • • • • • ' ' • • • • • ' ' : ' i • ' ' • • ' • • • • • ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' " N .. Y. Winner• and LO•ers • ··--· SC DAILY l'ILOT J J Goo Rings LA Scliool LOS ANGELES !AP) About 2 300 .studtnl!J al Pau l Revere Junior High School had lo ata.y two hour~ after cl ass Mltn I high prtssure oil J1ne burst aM surrounded the achoo! with a sea of black goo ~ 1tudenl1 were finally 1blt to 10 home alttr f1remera mannlnl huae v a e u u rn cloinor-type devlc., sucked usi the OIL A •pokmn1n ror Sbtll 0.1 <A '8ld at \eQl 111& fallona of oil were l0$t from the u~. which run!I underneath the school s parking lot and con- nttts V e. n t u r a producl.ioa lleld• wltll 1 rtflnery In Wilm• 1ngton j r ' • " I ~ . r. I I . . IJ DAILY PILOT • • : : . . .. . , .. '. .'one-:stop '. ·shoAping · .. " " at ifs finestl ' . ; ' . . • • 1 • . OPEN ';fMURSDAY AND MONDAY EVENINGS · ' . . ' . ' . . ' ... ' , . ,. ' ... ' I ' .. ,: ' . ' . . -.. . . . ' . ' .. : . : ' . . . ' C'M.GN : .. KIDS ! .. ' .. ANY DOG CAN ~NtER:.~: ~ ·~ ANY DOG · CAN WIN · fUN 'N PRIZES; ~FOR·:·EVERY . BOY 'N GIRL -, . • IN . PARKING .All!A-Ji:RONT om; BANK OF .AMERICA ; • . ' • 1 _ . ' ' I • ' ' • • ... . · ... . ' ' ' .. . .. . . 1 " . ~ . ' ' .. , . ' . . . . ' . ' .. . . ' . . ; I " . KEN_. t • RA·TION . . . . CLASSIS ••• ' I ' e BIST COSTUMED DOG · e BUT TRICK DOG e SMALLEST l)OG e LARGiST DOG • BEST GROOMED DOG FIRST PLACE "WINNER IN EACH CWS ELIGIBLE TO COMPETE FOR ••• ''BEST OF . SHOW'' GIFTS FOil ALL WHO ENTER . . , PRIZES TO WINNERS IN EJCH CLASS IT'S ·FREE GET YOUR ENTRY BLANK tiiOW AT MARKET . BASKET --T . . • . ' -. , :·s Landowner Asks Access Preferences By RICHARD P, NAU. Of ... IMlt1 POlt llaff An owner of 2'0 a.ere! of land bordering the municipal plf tount b>s 11ked 8'!! Clemente planning cm:nm.issJonera to get ....._ cracking on access routes that wUI be compatible with golf ·course use, city planning ane development of ~his pro- perty, "There's going to be problems with the golf course, I know that," s~id G. Canon Rasmussen, "but if we get the golfers together, they might have some preferen. t-e. The.re has to be a decision soOner or later." • ' ' Abou"t 3,SOO feet of Rasmussen 's pio- perty borders the front of the golf course, He urged the commissioners and city PA•L't' PILOT stttf Pflt1• ,staff to take the initiative in working oul SAN CLEMENTE CLUBHOUSE AWAITS ITS FATE AS OECISION·MAKING GRINDS ON ~pJab~ucces " · t:_don't . ..haye_to-------, , ' ~ =·-'--race 11 lot of problems. · Curren -Pli"iilC11 tll oT'FOunder'IRoom to e Ret11in 1n Wltl1lh9 P•• DAILY l"ILDT Slflf ....... ARTIFACT ENTHUSIASTS -Four San, Clemente High School stu- dents will report on a reCent field trip to Arizona where they studied Indian artifacts at a poluck dinner in school Tuesday evening. Stand· ing from left are ).'like P.eduzi and Jay Wentz . Kneeling are Brandon Birtcher (left) and John RusselL Boys Tell Trip Teachers to Hear History Lecture Four enterprising San Oemente High School students who decided to take their humanities· studies-to tOO-.-scene of the culture will tell teachers, parents and students about it Tuesday night. The four, John Russell , Jay Wentz, Brandon Birtcher and Mike Pedwi, took a week's trip through Arizona durinc: spring vacation to study Indian history and culture. It was a field trip for their humanities class but it also became a personal ex· perie.nce. Brandon Birtcher feels the Navajo and Hopi Indians are losing their pride and identity to the white man's cuJture. Said Jay Wentz -of the visits to old ruins and talks with Indians -he reaJi z. tel bow "sad it is that such a once proud and majestic people could be reduced to 11 level where they sit on the edges of the Grand canyon selling beads in the · hot IUn to tourists." • Michael Peduzi said , "after seeing the type of life most Indians are forced to lead, if C0u1donly be concluded that there is little romance involved in being a Twentieth Century Indian.'' Johll Russell felt that, "society is not willing to accept this type of culture in a vastly modernizing world and the American Indian must survive the best v.·ay he can." The four will show movies of their trip at the 6:30 p.m. meeting at the high school cafetorium for the parent, teacher, student association. Principal Darrel Taylor will give the welcome and Mrs. Eugene Koster will serve as mistress of ceremonies. Families attending have been asked to bring enough salad, main dish, vegetables or desert to servt eight persons and to bring their own plates, cups and silverware. Clemente _pJanne,r_sDelay Mobile Traile1· Ordinance A proposed . ordinance regulating the parking of trailers, campers. boats, disabled autos and airplane parts in residential areas caused one S a n Clemente man tc as!t planning com· missioners: "Please take us poor people into con· fiideration when you revise this." John Gragg, :ftl Cille "'1'o"led="o-, 0sa"1'a when he moved to town 31}~ years ago he found the 'rules governing hjs "motor home" made it necessary for him to move it every 72 hours. He said someone objected 1.0 ffarking the vehicle on the street and he now parks it on a.neighbor's dri veway. "I was told by police that I had to have it off the street between 3 a.m. and 6 a.m.,'' said Gregg. • fie said he can't get his motor horiie in- to the back half of his lot and predicted that the new ordinance could be a definite - hardship on camper and motor home owners. He said tourists in San Clemente ca n't _sleep_in_their-traveling-homes and can't go to a motet unless it has space to llC· commodate the vehicles. Referring to the existing ordinance the resident dubbed it "the old street sweep- ing ordinance" ··Jf that's the excuse, they should sweep under cars too,'' he said. Commissioners agreed Wednesday to hold the matter over for further study. ''I'd like the city to get together with the golf committee and have everybody happy. I'd like to have the city initiate it." c He said that he believed that problems <!Lsew.1ge service .f1>r.lbe ma hav" beeJl \\'orked but that there remain other mat- ters to solve. Rasmussen pointed out to planning t'Omniissioners that four lines of access already exist. "I want to know the besl access the city will accept if we ultimate· ly sell or develop the property," he said. Bill Ayer, who with his brother Gene is associated in South Coast Engineering, said, "no matter what we do there are ci. ty facilities on the rights of way. There are likely to be relocations that require some coope ration." He said City Manager Kenneth Carr had spok1..n of a three·year program to enlarge the golf greens. "It would be senseless for the city to spend large sums of money for green improvements that have to be relocated," he said. Gene Schulte, city, planning director, saicttoday the existing. easements are: -A paper easement between the fifth green. and sixth tee from the end of tX· isting Avenida Magdalena. - A floating easement which parallels the easterly side of the fifth fairway at the end of Vista Bahia at the entrance lo the little league field. -A continuation of Calle Peub\o in Palricia Villa across a canyon, requiring extensive fill and drainage, near the back tee of fairway seven. -Extension of Bautismos Lane which takes off at Magdalean in a 30-foot right of way and narrows to 20 feet as it pro- ceeds along bordering the seventh fairway and deadends. Gene Ayer, former city engineer, said, "It doesn't do any good for us to make plans and draw pictures if we're goln_g to get shot down by the planning com- mission. We're trying to get some pro- blems solved." The hilly area, in the southeasterly, por. tion of the community near Camp P.(ndlel!>n '!JI _gnce dfmied_a_permlt _fM use as a mobile home development. Ac· cess considerations were a problem dur. ing those discussions. Commission Chairman George Bowles suggested that commissioners take a look individually at the physical terrain and then meet with the courcll. Cig Triggers Store Soaking -SAN DIEGO (AP) --A burning cigarette in a wastebasket set off the automatic sprinkler in a Mission Valley department store Tuesday night. Nearly 200 gallons of water was ;pilled before fifemen. alerted by the automatic alarm of the sprinkler system turned it off. The fi re went out by ilesll in the wastebasket. Clubho1ise Plans Sent J For Cou.ncil Approval San Clemente planning C()mn1issioner.!i have sent the fluid plans for a new con1- munity clubhouse on to city councilmen with commission blessings and a list of .suggested changes or additions. Commissioners Monday unanimously adopted the proposal of Commissioner Ray Mccaslin that the council consider: -Installing a ramp instead of a stairway to the founders room. -Establishment of a trash collection area . -Creation of a room for atorage or other use beneath the stage. - Enlargeme nt cf the restrooms, particularly the women's. · -Removal of tennis courts. -Retention of the shuffleboard courts at the site. Commissioners, required by laW<to con· sider the use of public land, were told by Dick Ahlman, city planning and building director, that-life coifncil ii considering expanding the shuffleboard courts to six . City Engineer Phil Peter explained another possibility for tennis court.!l. He said tlle city is considering excavating at the tennis court site for parking and then elevating the courts.to an overhead deck. Councilmen this month appointed a committee to work out numerous details cf lhe c\11bhouse. The commilte,.f serves as liaison between the many civic groups inte~~ed in specifics and the architects. The 10,000' square feet of Spanish style clubhouse will replace the community's social focal point, destroyed by fire early this year. Cost is expected to run to $300,000 or more . Gover11or Reagan Ol{ays New Water Bond Method By JACK BROBACK District legal affair!. D1 "'' DIHr Pli.t '"" The legislation provides that general Five water districts in Orange COUOfy obligation bonds can be' issued-by resolu- may riow issue general obligation tion provided that owners or ohe-half of (longterm) bonds without putting the the assessed value of property in the matter to a vote of the people in the district. district do not protest at a public hearing. The new procedure w.11s sjgne.d into !aw }ra~~!!>n!'1ly, directors" of "California" by Governor-Ronald· Reagan this-week-water-ihstr1cts ha.ve controlled more-th~n­ and becomes effective immediately as it half th.e ~ssessea value of property Jn was passed without oppo~ition in the such d1~tr1cls. . . . state Legislature as an "urgency" The bill empowers the directors, if they measure. C()ntrol most of the land in the district, to issue bonds which will be repaid . by an· nual property taxes levied against all property owners within a district. The new Jaw allows directors of the water agencies to issue bonds through the adoption of a reso lution after a pul'llic hearing. Water agencies affected in Orange County are Moulton-~iguel, Los Alisos, Irvine Ranch, El Toro and Talbert. Before the signing of the new law, general obligation bonds could only be issued after an election in which voters in the district cast their ballots. Each-of-the -five-county agencies -is classified, legally as a "California" water distri ct. Historically, such districts have served ag ricultural areas with each voter casting one vote for each $1 of assessed valuation of property he controls. The new law was carried through the legislature by Assemblyman Robert Badham IR·Newport Beach ). It was writ- ten by Santa Ana attorney Alex Bowie who handles Moulton-Niguel W a t e r Residents Wage War on Weeds r-.1embers of the ACgcan Hiiis Home· owners Association have declared war on weeds. In an effort lo control weeds in their development, the group is again meeting for a "weed in." The event will take place Saturday at the corner of Spartan and Muirlands at 9 a.m. Residents of t-he area have been re· quested to donate from 30 minutes to an hour of their time for the project, which is part of a beautification effort. Down the Mission Trail - Tustin Trustees , Air, Drug Report SAODLEBACK VALLEY -Trustees of the Tustin Union High School District will present their views on a summer long study of drug abuse slibmitted by a district comtnittee. Reactions to the recommendations en- compassed in the report will be given at. Monday's trustee meeeting" in the con· ference room of Tustin High School. The committee, made up of teachers. parents and students, has suggested that teaching specialists in the area of drug abuse be hired and that student anQ par~t a~areness Programs~ p~ep~r~. The rc?Jrl also suggests that night meetings be held weekly with a counselor as chairman and that adult education courses and speaker teams be pr-epared on the subject. It further recommends doubling Uie lime spent in clas'srOoms on druf abuie study 'and openll!l ,l"~de\lt resource center. • ltllHlster Elected SADDLEBACK VALLEY -The Rev. Domenick Tamietti has been elect!<f president of the Saddleback Valley ~1inisterial Association._ __ _ Joining the new president, who ii pastor or the Shepherd of the Hills Unitid Me!hodist Church in Mission Viejo, wUl be the Rev. Frederick Hammond of St. George's Episcopal Church, vice presf· dent; the Rev.1 ~ichael Hawkins of St. Nicholas Cathol c Church, secretary, and the Rev. Paul Uhlar, Mount of Olives Lutheran Church. treasurer. The group meets the second f'riday (If eRch month at Buffy's restaurant South of Miss~on Viejo. • Detnocrat C:lu& Open MISSION VIEJO -Anyone Interested. In joining on-on the activities of t~ Mission Viejo Democratic Club are welcome to do so. Interested persons . may call " Mike fl1ichaels at 8.17·2595 or Ed Clement i:t 837·4067. Aclivitics include work sessioM for a fund raising steak barbecue al the O'Neill Ranch picnic grounds, coffees, luncheons ::ind a membership drive at the John Tun· ney cocktail party slated Oct. t at tlie Mission Viejo Inn. Health Planners Studying Medi~al Costs Ry JOANNE REYNOLDS Of "" O•ltr 1"/111 Stell Po ulation d medical costs 111re t subject for an intensive study being ~by the Compre hensive Health Plan · Associ ation of Orange County. The volunteer group is surveying mi!dical re.!M>urces of the county in an ef· fort to determine what health care services will be needed and \\'here they should be located. Or. Wallace Gerrie, a Newport Beach physician wbo is p_resident ol the .gro~p. said the authority for the organtzabon was granted in the federal Partnership in Health Acl of 1967. "The idea was to get the health plan· ning process out of the hanCls or the {ederal a.nd state governments and into the counties and regions where it can be designed to local needs." he explained. By April of 1969 the Orarige County group wes operational. CHPA has 65 directors a.nd five committees. By Jaw, membership on tl)t. board or directors and committees mu.st be health services consomers and providers. with lhe majority or the members or each sub l>"roup being coOMumecs.._ , . , . ?\1embcrship In the assoc1at1on ts open tn all lnlcrcstcd county residents. '.T'he fi ve commil.tcts are: -flcallh f"acilitie.s aud Scrvicts Com· • mittee. By'state Jaw this committee has that now." the power to approve all prospective He also 1aid the planning association hospitals or remodeling of existing \vii i seek donations from tht County ho~pitals. With<lut its approval. hospitals mcdiCal association, are not eligible for state licenses or Al far as membership in the CHPA government funds. _ goes, Dr. Gerrie says he doesn't believe -Mental Health Committee. It works the people invol\ted could jrofit by the on planning mental health programs association's actions in approving or de· countywide. ny ing hospital applications. -Personal Health Services Delivery. "Aside· trom the six paid staff This committee is concerned with seeing members the executive director, a that there ·are facilities and personnel to sociologist, a statistician and three deliver health care uniformly countywide. secretaries -the 184 members or our -Health Care Manpawer. Closely group are all volunteers, the majority of ~Uied with Health ~rvices Delivery, this ,which are health care consumers," Dr. committee works on the training, recruit· Gerrie said. ment and retention of health care person· Traband said theassoctaUon has appli· nel. ed for $127,500 in federal funds for lfll. -Environmental Health. This com· Traband said money to be raistd "'ill mlttee 'is the goal setting unit or the be used to finance a countywide study of group. It helps set the guidelines by health care facillties. which the other committ.ets function . "'Ve need to know v.'hat our resources John Traband, CRPA executive direc-are," 1'raband explained. "The cost or tor, said SO pei-ceftt of lhe organlzaUon's health care ii already high, and ir more funding comes from Waahlngton, 25 per· • hospitals are built in area• that art ctnl must be raised in the county and 2$_ 1J1tur11ted, then empty beda will rorce pc!'rcent comes from donaUons, 1uch SJ hoapitals to jack up their ftes. '' the office in the old county court~ust the "Jn addition to needing to know where coui\ty turned over to the associat10n. tbt hospitals are, we. neea tO tnoW what "Yst week Gov.1\eagan slgned l law~ services are available tn ea(h hospital "'hlch requires hospitals to give us $4 per and nursing home, where the training bed. 'Ve would have preferred volunt::iry racilitiu 11re, where the population is donations, but nothing can be done about irowillc, and ~hat and wbere the future needs are going to be," Traband said. Traband summed up the problems fac· ed by the association: "Our committees arc biting the bullet arid making decisions with crude tools in the race of un- necessary criticism from unsophisticated observers. "But if the CHPA fails because of 1 lack or funds, then the county will be rorced to get'"its health planning from the st.ate and federal governments," he said. Orange COast residents who are members of the CHPA board of directors include :- Capt. Victor G. Benson, M.D., Director Medical Dept, El Toro, MCAS, Robert C. Combs, M.O.. Associate Dean, UC Irvine College or Medicine. coor~inator area VIII Regional Medical Program, delegate to American f!fedletil Association; board of directors, Orange County Cancer Soc\ety. Wallace Gerrie, M.D. past president, Orange County Medical Association; associate proftsSOr,....llC 1rvine SChool of Medicine: founding member Community AcUon Council and SOulh Coast Child Guidance Clinic. Robel't M: Gordon, lecturer in In· formation and computer science, UC Irvine ; chairman Clllzens Organized to Support Schools; Orange COunlY. fair Housing Council, --• Ada Mae Hardeman, Urban Programs Coordinator, UC Irvine Extension: past president. Orange County League of Women Voters : American Society for Public Administration ; Orange County ,air Housing Council ; Tr i· Co unty Conservation League ; Regional Plan Association. Dora Hill . former Mayor, Newport Bea.ch ; vice president, Florence Crit· tenton Home of Orange County. William Hirstein, supervisor. Fourth District. William Hudson. Jr .. administrator, Hoag Memorial Hospital. · Rufino Mora. M.S. W .. psychiatric social worker. Fairview State Hospital : ex~ ecutive board, Orange County Chlipter of the National Association of Socia l Workers : Committee for Protective· Services for Childten or Orange county. Charles J. fi-tosmann, Corona de! ~lar , Computer Management Consultant. Gladys Prothero. Orange Count:; Farm Burea,u R.l,ll'al Health: El Toro Women's Club, Ernestine Ransom. counselor. Ve Irvine. John M. fulu. Newport Beach, pres!· dent, David Jndustr\el ; orange County Mental Health Assoclation: Orange Coun- ty Child Guldance Clinic; past treasurer CHPA. . - Olive Reese. Chairman, Health S<:Jenc~ Di vision, Golden West CoUege . Richard Reese, vice president of plan- ning, Irvine Company. , .Gerald 8. Sinykin, M.D .. Director Stu· dent Health Service'. UC Irvine: Mental ffe allh Advisory Board: instructor, UCI Medical School, family piactice. Richard L. Stott. PhD, Newport ·Beach, Clinical Psychologist; past president, Orange County Psychological A!IOCia- tion; board o.f director!, California State Psychological AM<>ciation. Gwenda Watson, Newport Beach, ?-.larch of Dimes. F'loyd L. Wergeland, MO., South Laguna; vice president, medical affairs, Leisure World FoundaUon Mt d i c a l Center; Committee on Hospitals. Orange County Medical Association : chairman, Committee ror Health Problems of the Aging, CalUornia fl1edical Aasoclation: Commission for Community Health 'Ser"ices, CMA: board 0£ dire(tors, O r a n g_ e Count~ Hcirt Association; lt!gislalive committee. Orange Count)' Medical Association : American Can• Society.. · Nell Woodward. Division Chairman, Ol\'lslon Qf Consumtr and Health rvices. Orange cbast COiiege. Rosem•ry Sayl , SOuth-b a g o n o , chairman. M~ntal Health A d v i f"O r y board.~Ltague of Women Voten; Oro-nee COunl.y CouncU on Mental Retardation. . - • -.... - ' • DAil Y I'll.OT i~ 11¥ ... De1tY "llM Steftf Lindo Bornott had quite a shop- ping trip. Her car was stolen twice in three hours in Bakersfield. Mrs. Barnett told polic;e that after doing some shopping, she returned to where she bad left the car and it tvtls gone~ Police found it 90 minutes later in a parking lot around the corner. Mrs. Barnett left it there, and continued shopping. Then she· · etutneiLl9...!W pJlrking lot,...fil:ain na car. The California highway pa· trol , hearing a radio broadcast, lo- cated it six blocks from the second lofation. • c;-.-. ,.._ml -1....;;..J-.W:-~ Sen. Richard Russell (D·Ga.), Presi· dent Pro Tempore of tile Senate, takes n: ride 0 11 his motorized-scooter dow1i the halls of the Senate. Russell, who suffers from emphysen1a, uses the scooter to conserve energy .· ,. A di sorder common to another era-the panty raid-has reappear· ed at the Cornell University cam- pus in Ne\v York. Campus police said 800 · male undergraduates marched on a coed dormitory. Baker Tower, Tuesday night and called for the undies. They march· ed away hall an hour later, many waving prizes that had been tossed out of windows by laughing women students. Sgt. James Cunningh•m of Cornell's Safety Division told a university official later: "The nos· talgia was unbearable. The tears were practically running down my cheeks." • A would-be robber handed Portland.. Ore . birn k teller Carol Head two no te s demand ing $4,000 Wednesday. Th e man haa ~ a gull and ordered heT not to scream until 10 minutes afteT he II.ad left. J.frs. Head said. "I'll H' have to check the signature 011 th is," and left the window. Th.e nia1t sl.ood tllere a minute. Then, ~ as J.frs. Head asked another em· ~. ployee to pllo11e police. it daw11· , ,1 .. cd 01i llim f/wt this wasn't nor· mal bank TobbeTy procedure . tle fled f rom Che ba11k and di.Sap- peared into the crowd iii down· 1 town POTtland, .. ':"'"""' .,. • ... The Maui News this 'veek 3polcr gized for running an upside-dO\vn picture of a house along with an article about Architect Harry Rice. Said the -newspaper: "The article with the picture told of Rice's vision of future building methods. but, as he good naturedly pointed out. it did not describe any starting with the roof and working up to the foundation." • .. • Red Escape Pa.tbs -Hit 'No-knock' ------~--. Cambodia Closes In; More Copters Lost Approved PHNOM PENH (UPIJ -Cambodian troops maneuvered today to cut off the last escape route of _an estirna.ted 2,000 Viet Cong and North Vietnamese defenders ot Tang Kauk on the highway linking Phnom Penh end Kompong Thom. An artlUery commander said Cam· bodian forces driving from the west had reached highway & on the northern edges of the town, 52 miles north of Phnom Penh, and had blocked all Communist escape routes to the west, southwt:st and northwest. "The Viet Cong remained wt:ll.f:n- trencbed along lht road," said an official military spokesman. "Every lime wt al- l.empt to move in from the south on Tang h."aUk, we receive heavy fire." -~---~------ ' \ A 11-batlaUan Cambodian force totaling time in two weeU the Viel Cong had cul nearly 10,00D men bu been stalled at the supply linH to lbt Cambodiah forces Tang Kauk aince Sept. 14. 1be drive, driving up highway 61 Wc:rlbed u the blggtal ol the Cam· The communique also said Viel Cong. WASHINGTON (UPI) -The House bodiao. campaign, orlalnally set out from and North Vietnamese forces ambushed a overwhelmingly has passed the ad· Skoun more thin two weeks ago In an er-Cambodian army convoy 'niursday at ministration'• tough .drug abuse.-bill,.ifu - fort to clear highway t between the: Kirirom, SO mUea west.JOUtbwest or eluding the controversial "no-knock" pro- capital and Kompong Thom, a city of Phnom Penh. The attack killed 13 Cam· vision. The action rounded out a week of 10,000 persons ao miles north or Phnom bodlan soldiers and wounded lhree. Penh. The ambush was carried out on congressional victories for President Nix· Engineers worked Thursday nilht to highway 4, Phnom Penh's only land link on. repair three bridges on bJabway 6 blown with the naUon'a principal seaport of Tbe bill would make simple possession up by the Vitt Cong latt Wednesday Kompong Som, known in the days or of JUlY drug a misdemeanor, but would night: Officers at Si.oun, logistics hue Prince Norodom Sihanouk's regime as provide stiffer penalties for pushers. for lhe -ation, said Viet Cong bOmb Slhanoukville. The Communists clostd Passage came Thu.rsday by a 341 to 6 squads had moved al will to destroy the the highway for eight days ail: weeb ago. bridges. Communist troops kept up lheir R I R UPI T...,..... vote despite a noor fight over the pro. The blown bridges marked the third pressure Thursday night on Moat Krl!as !Ill• eaper vision that would allow federal agent.5 __ Kro=ae, six milts eaat of Phnom Penh with Ji~'s EmP-eror with warrants lo enter private homes ~an ftmii mortar 6iffage.,t waa tbe-w~--o'.r"'eaps ' nee in a~p:<ia<r.1iyFt.oiin"11'J>e-•lffiiliffiOuhced""Jf-they-felt there-was risk to' cond lime in three days the: Viet Cong grounds of the royal palace themselves or dailger of evidence being were active this close to the capital. No during the annual Imperial d tro ed casuallies or damage were reported. es Y • Field reparts from Saigon aaid three: riete of rice harvesting in Although the "no-knock" provision Is Canada Sl1ootn1g Suspect clashes on American positions on South autumn. found in some state laws and the-recently Vietnam's central coast killed one enacted District or Columbia federal Gives Up to-Coast Guard __.Amu.ican_arut _woundd_ 11. In..,.. tb.c__ crime ·bill, its adoption in the drug bill northwest cornu of South Vietnam, Manson Def1·er would mark its iirst application na · VICTORIA , 8.C. (UPI) -A man who shot two Canadian policemen and then held three hostages aboanl a sailboat in American waters off Stuart Island sur- rendered early today to the U.S. Coas t Guard. There was confusion as to the name of the suspect. He first was identified as William L. Olertik, 26, who escaped from jail here Sept 7. But he gave authorities another name today. Final identification will await a fingerprint check, the Royal Canadian ~lounted Police said. The gunman and his three: tired but unharmed hostages arrived before dawn Nixon Chooses Men For Postal Service WASHINGTON '-(UPI) -President Nixon reportedly has settled on the men he will nominate to run the new U.S. Postal Service. They include a rancher, a former professor, a labor-management consultant and the heads of several businesses. One of the nine he will ask the Senate to approve for the service's board of governors is Frederick Kappel, board chairman of American Telephone & 'l'elegraph Corp., congressional sources said. Kappel headed a commission which proposed turning the post of flee over to a non p rof 11 government-chartered cor- poration. at Anacortes, Wash., aboard· a Coast Guard cutter. The hostages were iden- tified as Pete and Elrae Wells or Portland. Ore., and Roger Smith of Van- couver, B.C. The heavily armed bandit had wounded two Victoria officers during a robbt!ry here Thursday, authorities said, and then led police on a wild chase to the: sea. He crashed through two police roadblocks and laid down a curtain of fire at hiJ pursuers. , He then commandeered the Wells' 22· foot Sailboat and also grabbed Smith, who \.\1as fishing neatby, police said. As Coast Guard v~ssels and RCMP boat! surrounded the little sailboat, he released one hostage who boarded the Cutter Point Richmond to relay con- dition! for his surrender. These included that he bf! turned over to a U.S. 'marshal and provided with a U.S. lawyer. Chief Petty Officer T. E. Anderson went by small boat lo negotiate with the gunman, who surrendered at 1:37 ' a.m. about 121h hours after the drama began. U.S. Marshal Charles Robinson took the suspect into custody after the Coast Guard cutter arrived In Anacortes. He was taken to Seattle where he Was ex- pected to make an appearance before thf: U.S. commissioner today. The chase started shortly after 4 p.m. EDT Thursday when a man carrying a rifle and 1 bandolier of ammunition slung over his shoulder entered a Canadian tmperial B 1 n t of Commerce branch here .. V agahond Dies British Poet .4ssumed Island Throne LONDON (AP) -John Gawsworth, a poor itinerant poel who assumed the mythical throne of a minature Caribbean island and abdicated after 20 yea rs of carousing in L o n d o n tavErns, d I e d \Vednesday. He was 58. Despite a shower of honors. Gawsworth \\'as a vagabond , a fe\k>w of the streets or London, sleeping in rooming house! when he had the money, on park benches when he didn't. He left 17 publicalions and hundreds o( unpublished verses, some of which are soon lo come out in print. The London Times noted that in a short time he would have become hei r to $32 ,300 from an aunt and an uncle. John Te rance Ian Fytton Armstrong Ga"'sworth, born in Kensington England, assumed the title of King of Radonda , an uninhabited speck of land in the Leeward ls\ands, which he silid he inherited in 1947 from the late Jrish poet ~tichael Shiel. He abdicated after 2Q years of holding court in London taverns , attributing the move to "doctor's orders." "1 lhink I've had it," Gawsworth tO!d a visitor Sunday. Ia a letter to the Times, he referred to 1970 as "this impossibly painful last year." producing "a couplt: of hundre.d attempted verses ir. 10 months from this still homeless gangrel (vagabond) man.", Gawsworth was an edito r of "Poetry Review" unUI 1952, when his job w1s abolished in an economy move. His drink· ing also aroused a stonn or controversy in London literary circles. Gawsworth was a founder and editor or "The English Digest," London editor of "Literary Digest," an inspirer of the pre· World War II neo-Georgian lyric poetry movement, a member of several fo reign literary societies. a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, a Freemal) of the City of U:indon, and a Royal Air Force o!- ncer during World War II. It was not known whether he left survivors. He died at Princess ~atri1 Hospital of an undJsclosed illness. waves of B52 bombers dropped 300 tons of e1plosives on communist troops tionwide. threatening artiUery Base O'Reilly, 12 House Commerce Comm ittee Chairman miles from the Laotian border. T T 1•£ Harley O. Staggers (0-W.Va.), a leading At leasl seven U.S. and South Viet· 0 es I y opponent of the "no-knock" provision. namese helicopters were shot doym today \Yarned it could result in "hundreds 'and in an inferno of Communi!t ground firt thousands" of police being killed by near ·the rockp ile. a strongpoint m miles At Tri· al Today persons protecting their homes. south of the: Demilitarized Zone· (DMZ), "If somebody tried to knock do,,·n my mililary sources reported. door, I probably v.·ould take a gun and They said unconfirmed reports in· LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The state had shoot him," he said. dicated as many as 11 allied choppers on tap as a v.·itness today the only Despite Staggers' plea. an amendment may have been knocked down. to kill the "no-knock" provision v.•as Only 324 Yank POWs Allowed To Write Home PARIS (l/p)l -North Vietnam and the Viet-tong hold from 457 to 600 Americans prisoner in Vietnam, but let,.. ters have been received by the families of only 324 of them, an American official said Thursday. Stephen Ledogar, spokesman for the U.S. delegation at Vietnam Peace Conference, issued the figures, he said, to refute claims by Hanoi and Viet Cong negotiators that all Americans in their hands are allowed to write home and receive parcels. The number of Amer icans missing in action in Southeast Asia this month stands at 1,550, Ledogar said. Firemen Dispute Seen Resolved In Rail Talks WASHINGTON (UPI) -Signals that the ll-year--0ld argument over firemen working on diesel locomotives is nearly resolved . are being reinforced by tht: union 's new ca utious approach to sidelrack a breakdown in negoUalions. A potential breakdown-was averted "'hen negotiations rolled past Thursday's 12:01 a.m. deadline for a potenlia1 strike. Labor Secretary James D. Hodgson said the United Transportation Union CUTU) and the National Railway Labor Conference, the industry bargaining agent, agreed to cootinue the talks for two more weeks. But UTU talks Leader H. E. Gilbert told UPI that the extension of the negotiations was unlimited. One source close to the discussions at the Labor Department said one ex· planatlon for the apparent contradiction v.'aS the UTU's desire not to give the im- prfssion that it bad sel a strike deadline for Oct. I. member of ~he "Manson family " \vho defeated 119 to 60. ever defied the hippie cull leader and The drug bill, a major element of Nix- made it stick. on 's anticrime package. \vould provide Juan Flynn, a rangy young man in his $165 million over three years to expand late 20s, was expected to testify for the rehabilitation programs for drug users prosecution that Charles Ma n so n 's and would au thorize $6 million for the brainwashing of young women and men hiring of JOO additional agents by the much bigger than the ~year-old e1-con-Bureau or Narcotics and dangerous vi(\t misfired when Manson tried to give drugs. him orders. It \l'ou ld increase Justice Department The Tate murder trial bogged down control over imports and exports of drugs Thursday in the cross examination of 18-and require licensing of bonafide drug year-old Barbara Hoyt about her story handlers, i n c I u ding manufacturers, that she overheard defendant Susan distributors, doctors and researchers. Atkins talk about the killing of actress The Senate, which passed a similar but Sharon Tate.. more limited bill several months ago, is Defense lawyer Irving Kanarek gave expected lo go along with the House Miss Hoyt an eye and ear test on her changes , enabling the 1neasure to become visual and auditory capabilities and, law in a few Weeks. when she was through, appeared to have Earlier this week. Nixon's bill against proved she was telling the,, truth. organlz.ed crime and terrorist bombings Kanarek . in fact. so irritaled fellow "·on approval of the House Judiciary defense lawyer Paul Fitzpatrick that an Committee and enforcement assistance appeal was made to Judge Chai:Jes H. was approved by the Senate Judiciary Older lo squelch Kanarek. The tenacious Committee. Both measures are expected attorney finally sat down. to receive final congressional approval Kanarek, who represen\s Manson, had next month. the young woman remove her thick-lens-A controversial proposal added to the ed glasses. He then stood at the rear of drug abuse bill on the noor would allow the courtroom with his right hand raised judges to impose an additional 25-year and four finger"s extended. prison sentence on •·special dangerous of· He walked toward Miss Hoyt and had fenders" convicted of drug violations . ahnost reached her before she could The sentence". which could be imposed on count his four fingers. the basis of evidence the defendant would Miss Hoyt said she never "'ore her not be allowed lo contest. was termed an glasses during the lime she lived with the unconstitutiona l infringement of in· "family." But the exp er i men l dividual rights by opponents. establishing her poor vision seemed The House rejected by voice vote an al- . somewhat pointless since lhe young tempt by the House Select Committ;ee on ,~·oman's most significant testimony had crime to amend the bill to give the at- been about overhearing a conversation lorney general authority to limit pro- about actress Sharon Tate's death. duct ion of amphetamines or "pep pills." l\'[oon Color Tel eca8t Seen for Next Year CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The moon U.S. Ca1·s Bm·ned In Rome Protest car jourpey and probably the lunar ROME <AP) -Thirteen autos with launch of the Apollo JS astronauts will be U.S. license plates were set afire on lhe televised in color to earth next summer. stree ts of Rome during the night as lef· The unique mooo telecasts will be made ... . . . possible by a new communications relay lists prepared protests for President Nix· unit designed to bypass the Apollo on·s visit here next week. spacecraft and beam voice, telev ision and Gasoline was poured on lhe·cars park· engineering data directly to earth . ed along streets in \Videly separated sec· The space agency announced Thu rsday lions of the city. ~fost of the autos ~·ere it had awarded a $3 million contract to RCA Co., Camden, N.J., to build the new destroyed, police reported. • SO.pound units for use on the final three Anti-Nixon rall ies started t wo nights Apollo missions. 'flle system will not be ago with a march and anti-Nixon pickets available for Apollo 14 Jan. 31. in downtown Rome. Jack Frost Nips Rockies President Nizon was told on Aug. S that the parties wt.re on the "threshold" of agreement on the issue that has generated a series of strikes and strike ":threats since 1959 over the jobs of 38,<llW firemen . Colorado, Wyo ming Get Snow, Weather Fair Elseivhere California II "'II ma1ll• WMW •rid .... ,.,,, IOOI Y I v ... SOUtti«ri C1lll'Qf11I• wl!h IOIT"t lot •IOl'l9 lM a.tr !fl !flt tlrl~ ft'HI'"'"' houra. II w11 tl'l1tr1ll• w1rmer t lortq co11I· •I lf(llen1 t1v1 1e ..... r11vru d,_d h1i.fld, Tlleft wtrl tlr-Ioctl t VllY wflleh Ill "'°'' 1rt11. lOll ol""!tl Wll IYllllY 100.f \ll'fl .. morfllnt lot ln «•tl•t r .. lorlt. Slront Ml't ~lf'l'lf wll'ldl r11 '"' c111< 'J'Olll _. fortaU for fOOtf arid Stl• v'1Mf· tt w11 con1kMrll:i1' wtl't'lltt 100.f wtlfl • 111.,n otl n. Low l'oflltht WIS ... t i tl. Uf\lrCM1 ¥'S Mt fl Will 0. ~· flit ollr ~lh1tlor> C.on!rol 0111tltl 111·1dlCIM 119111 en lrrllt llon •rom '"'°' l!t """ W'I'-Of tM Lii "'"'•lu ••till. Tiit btKMf -· llll\fl¥ Iii ~ ,.,. ~ •lter .,. Mr'IY '°"''I'll Of fol. ~Jtl'I NllMd nMr '1t Wl\Ut Int w•I« ... "· . ~""" '"" *"""" _,. -· wllfl '''°"" 1ot1lly tullf w!M-. Tht ,,,_ia!M Md IWflt 111 lht 1'1. u-r ,......,,, new• t..ntJOtrttur" In ll•t '°' ._tllfe Nwet '°""" re<'llMd Ill ll'lt .... "IOUTl:llU UJ..lll'OltNIA, -f'llt flt '""' t•f'!V '""'""" fot ''°"' """· O!l\ffWttt I.it" "'"""' l.llllfdlY, Or'r .,.,., l'IOflll .. _.,...... ...... ~­ ., llfMll "" .,.. _.... "'°""tllrtl 11'14 !lltttlor --"'""°"'' Wl•lfttf' '"' -~ _. ..... 11'9Mlt UOIW Iii• leflor JlrMtt. LOS ANr;11.4J AlllO VICIH'fV - ,,1, """""''kllfl"llt r 11it,t1 tOfl'lt 11'""' ..... ...,,, _,.. ... • ..... °"' Wtr'frlt(' ~·.s. ~t """ llttr 61. """ ... "'"" ...... ..,.. "1¥1lW Of l.SSA wtAllltl MlAU FORlWT TO J:H A.M. tST 4 ..... ._ . r-.__ ~~..,...-,.-.._r~I IO ..;..,. Hlrf IYntfll"'t !Oi91Y. Llftll v•rl•blt •/TIO• nllifll ind tnOrfllrit tlollrs btc.Ofl\o 1<'111 "'""'' I te 11 knoll '" 1lltt- V.S. Sum1nart1 rt .... ¥ ~ IYl11mr1, tpyl IO ·-Colto ••&o •l'ld WVOmlftt r11l0t111t II leokl TCICltY 11111 l.llU'l'dtf. H .... lo.MY ll. likl Wlfllt r. CMl!itl te-1tur11 ren" ""'" U Tht 1lrtl ,,...wl11f et !ht ,,,..,, °"" .. n... 11\1.111111 l~ltll1'tt fll'Mt l•Ol'l'I U to "' Wtltr lt mPtrt tutt 11. tcll'IOfll:I, on ff'tt DtftVtr •rtt flffl i.. S u ""Id .. ,...:Tiit _,,..,, _.... ~°"~ lawri' 11n, .,.oon, .. · es-111 111t •••tt"" w11ur1H •IHI t°"'" 1flt "'""""' kC'Ollll' """' 1:11111.m.-1.1 looll'llllt. second ltw , -loU •.II\. t,I l•llffr, wn ., '"'!Yd ,,.. lfldlt1 $ol1Ua0olT of INIW nr -'*''· '"'"' fl ftl\ f:1' a.If!. '·" Olhtrwl•t · fair lo Ptrll• rloulv '°'"' tOw • '"«I 1.m, t ) Wtlllltr w11 ll!t rvi. I Crtlt mV(fl el ht.ON! 1'11t!I , 1:4' •.11'1. 1.J '"' l'Mllitlt'U t llflOl.lt/I 11 w•1 11111 hol 1<1 itCOl'lf ... . 1:51 •. m, 1 1 I~ lljf, k tllltl"H !Mwttl wttt U • SVf1 I I"" 6 'll l'I, $tit t.d•"' l«IH 0 ...... H ftt of ltM tll!t rfl .. I ll ,,,,_ lllltf 1,t't t .m. l~I •:2' lfJ"I, ti !flt l'Nll!et'I, 11 Mii IS Ill !!Mt wtll. - Temperatures o(lfluolutnivt AMllerfft ""'"'' •tktrlllttd l l•m•rtk l•N .... ~ ClllctM Clncl11111li Cl..,..t111C1 0.11••• 0.1'911 E11rt1o;1 '"OftWlll'I~ "'""' , .... Hwt!Orl Mono!ulu 1(111Wt C l!~ l tl V"tl Lot """ltt Mhlml IM<ll Ml""111t'M M!-••111 Ht• Otlttllt Hew York Otkltlld ... ... ..... lltltlff !l'fl~tdt!!l'l!I Pl!lltlurtll f'llotfllf, Pot1l111d lll'J &lvft ·-SKr•-·· $1. L0\1'1$ Salt Lfllt C.l"r Strt l!llt•D S.11 l'r111d1<0 !11111 .. ,llofrl $ttUhl $Hlltnt - "If-L-Prtc. U M •t JS " .. . ., " .. .. ~ " ~ :'GI 12 I.ls • n .. , :: ·~ .n I• IS .02 " .. " " ti SI " tt f1 lO ·°' " n 11 .SI .. " M ~ ., 11 ... .. ., 1 ... ff JS •·,ll h 11 .02 •• 1• ., . n 11 ·" ts ,, ,, 1• .. ., IJ fO .,e " " It t S n • ... " " " ,. 11 JJ " " h .. .. ,., .. .. Both sides agree i{I principle that the jobs or firemen and brakemen should be combined into a single dual-purpose posi· tion. But mediator Frederick R. Liv- ingston says there is dispute over tht means of effecting the change . Steps were begun Thursday lo resolve another rail strike that was averted only last week by a federal court order. An emergency board appointed by President Ni1on held ita organiialional met:ting. In this dispute, the · UTU and three other unions are seeking pay hikes ol 15 percent. In addlllon to the wage and fi~n battles, there are two other dispufts UW,.could lead to o•Uonwide rail strtkes In the: coming wet.kl, according to Assistant Labor Secretary W. J. U1ery Jr. RiOes Said Shipped To Northern' lrelancl OUBLUHUPIJ -Agri<ullW'e mln~ltr Jam<s Gibbons testified Thursday lOO rmu were slilpped lOward the aorder wtth Northern lrtland at the belibl ol the Belrast riob earUer th.II ye1r. Glbbo111 testifit:d for the pro!ecution ln the trial of four officials accused of con· apirlng to smug1le· arms into the north to &Id the Romu Catholic millortty. Ni.ran Critfe Sen. Edward Kennedy (O.Mass.) '''as among Democrats who began a broadside altack on the Nixon Administration's ehvlrorunenlat record Thursday. Testifying berore the Democrallc Polley Coun· ciJ 's Committee on he liuman Environment, Kennedy said Nixon has deliberately lnhibted action to prosecute major polluter~ . T 0 r .....,, __ - Prld111 Stpltmbtr 25, 1970 DAIL V PILllT 1J A Caha First Boston-Polleemaa Cat Down Castro Returns Four· Y outlis Soug hrin'Rmlical' Ban"lf HolduP, uspect ~ andeiLIJnivorslly_ln.ll0'1lby_in Saa Dlego.-Calll.,,Jad~~'-"!Cbl~-­_..,.,,.,,uN (!Jll...,,.J>-DllJ:l..ol>-_ ~ MIAMI (UPI) -Robert J. Labadie, a husky blond ex· roldier, has become the first airplane hijack suspect return- ed directly to lbe UnJted States by the Cuban govern- ment. Labadie arrived in Miaml Thursday aboard one of the t wice-daily Cuban r e f u g e e flights from Vll!'lldero, Cuba, accompanied by a Deputy U.S. marshal and a Public Heallb Service Doctor. He was ordered held in Dade CoW1ty Jail on $500,000 bond at a preliminary bearing pending a decision on transferring him to South Bend, Ind., where be ~ l! undo;. Indictment !or the Aug. 24 hijacking of a Trans World Airlines (TWA) jet. The 747 was diverted from a Chic•go-Phil•delpbla 11 l g ht and forced to fiy to Havana with BS per&olll aboard. A. man who identified bimaelf as "Captain George" tbteatmed lo llllve the plone blown up by an accomplice with a bomb in the rear of the pas.senger aeo- lion. When the plane arrived in Havana, only the hijacker got off. He later was ~ as Labadie, wbo was rePorted on. leave from an Army hospital in Valley Forge, Pa. His return on one of the aiilllnnteffilitlOIW It! g h n - warrants Wednelday tor the arrest of two men and two young ....,.,;, diar&lng them with gunning down a poli<"P.man during a ~.ooo i llllnk holdup·Wednesday. ~' The city's p'O 1 Ice com- missioner termed the killing the act of a "damn ridical group." A fifth man wu captured Wednesday night and charaed with mur<ler In the robbery. which police said was filmed by camer!ll in the bank. Boston Police Commissioner EdmWld L. ~cNamara told a news conference that tbe dead policeman, W a It er A. Schroeder, wu the victim o! 0 a damn radical and a damn revolutionary" group. Questioned, McNamara said -he-didn 't.have_any~documen­ taUve evidence but when a group springs up rrom our col- leges and robs banks, it's revoluUonary." Named in the warrants were two lfQ~llo ~ SUI!", JQ, ol Albony, N.Y., a graduote of --Waltham laSt June. an a was sentenced..lcr'AfeUS:-ur-affi!~-rtNllng two Katherine A. Power, 20, of Ma~ta state prilon in rlfies, a QuanUty of am- Denver, Colo., a member o · 986 for aoned robbery and mwillicll and other articles. the senior class ~t an eis: assault, poll«: said. . 'Ibey 11id the apartment . Boston pobce .meanwhile, wu that of Katherine Power, The two mi:!J.-l()ug t by police armed with a seirch warrant, one of the two girts sought in were identified as Stanley R. for~ the door of a Back Bay• the robbery and alaylng. Bond, 25, of Cambridge, a special student at Brandels, SPECIAL p•iRCHASE •nd William Gil<liy. i1 , ol lr---U ---.. Amesbw-y. ArrestOO Wednesday night was Rdbert Valeri. 21, of NAIL ... , IYNTHmc ENAMEL Somerville, identified as a stu· FOi ROATS • DOCU dent at Northeastern Universi·1i--------------------" ty in Boston. Meanwhile, ~1iss Saxbe's father, Eliot, contacted at hls home in Albany, said he believed his daJgh ter was mistakenly identified. He said she had lost her driver's icense..iwo-months_ago,. and that be believed someone must have lounct it. MOBIL HOME OWNERS Kool Kap ROOF COATING -Bond Rock-for - 'Gravel 1 Landscaping s 40 6 •AL s4 Jo-•AL Heat Wave Continues In East :iponsored~bY tbe U.S. govern- ment for relatives of CUban exiles in' the United States marked the first time that a hijack suspect bas been band- ed over to U.S. officials by the Hemophiliac Gainin g ------ Su be said his daughter, a magna cum laude graduate of Brandeis last June, went to · _Qr_egon S.p\...l.J11J<l.plaru)«llo_ work there for a year. -·---t FOOT ROLLING -euban-govemment:· although others have returned through By United Press lntematlonal Sw elter ing weather stagnated over much of the East today, closing out a fret- ful week for power suppliers with more record·stretching temperatures. Prospects for major relief from the hot and humid weather during the weekend were slight. The affected areas ranged from upstate New York to the Carolinas and jnto Western Pennsylvania. There were no intentional electricity cutoffs by utilities Thursday, allhough voltage reductions, ·generally 5 per- cent, were common through- out the area. Public coopera· tion throughout this week'!' heat wave has, been credited Canada. Uf'I T.._.llln Stale Deportmenl •Poke&-SUSPECT RETURNS man Robert J. McCloskey told Robert J. Lobadio reporters m Washington the~~~~~~~~~~ Cuban government contacted the United States through the Swiss Embassy Tuesday and agreed to return Labadle., A deputy marshal Oew to Vara· dero airport from Miami on the health service plane, ar~ rested Labadie and returned with him in a plane fUll of re- fugees. Co nferee s OK 2 Ne w ABM Sires Balloonists Still Lost In Atlantic NEW YORK (UPI) -A Coast Guard spokesman reported today it has no idea Wt chances for survival are for the three balloonists mis- sing in the North AUantic linoe Monday. SEA'ITLE. W•sh. (UPI) - Carl Fletcher, 39, · a high school teacher, was reported in ''satisfactory" condition to- day from a dangerous opera· tion wich required 1,000 pints of blood. He had an artllicial hip joint inserted Tbl.ll'8day by doctors at Swedish Hospital, who said he would have died within a year without it. But Fletcher also is a hemophiliac, whic.h means his blood doeS not clot; More than 1,200 students at Ballard High School promised to give blood in an effort to save his life. From the donated blood, doctors will extract t i n y amounts of a clotting protein called cryo preclpltate. The mass 4on.ation to save the popular teacher's life came after Student B Gd Y President George Guy. 17, Tuesday called an assembly of the school's 1,750 students. In 'Denver, Mrs. Winfield S. PLATFORM ~0800 LADDER Power, mother of the Power girl, said her daughter "had been out of contact with the family for a long time." Shel .. __________________ .,. declined further comment. Police said Gilday was paroled from state prison after serving part of a 10-12 year prison term imposed for armed robbery. Police said Valeri served a state prison term tor burglary in 1966. Bond, convicted or car theft Buy locally a~d S•vo WALKER PAINT WORKS 816 W. 16th St., Costa Mesa 642-5776 . • with averting 1 ,majoi-black.-WASHINGTON (AP) -A out. · -$19.9-bilbon mililary purchas- Two U.S. Coast Guard cut- ters, 11 American planes and one Canadian plane are in· volved in the aearch of 50.000 miles. The Coast Guard aaid il would continue the search al least through today. '· TemJ)eratures of 85 to 90 ing bill including two new sites were forecast for the ~ee~end. fo r the Safeguard antlballistic 'Ille weather bureaus listed missile system has been ap- average temperatures f o r-proved by a Senate-House con- most of the East during late ference. September are in the 60s. . The agreement, subject to nie t e m p e r a t u r e 1n · approval of both houses before Philadelphia Thursday was . 95 going to President Nixon, is $1 degrees, a record for the th~ billion under the Nixon budget. straight day. New York City 'Ille ABM system, a subject equalled its record of 89 of Senate debate for two degrees. years, will be expanded to four 1'be heat was the source of locations. But the conference discomfort. a n d perspiring accepted the Senate's elimina- complaint.s e v e r y w h e re , tion of funds to begin deploy- particularly in the cities. Tn ment of a Chinese-oriented New York, where electricity area defense system. &hortgages have been a con-The conference restored $700 cern all summer:, m an Y million which had been cul by skyscrapers turned of£ cor· the ~nate. Th.e !fouse version ridor lighting !G conserve carried $20.5 billion, about $100 power. Some buildings reduc-million less than the Pentagon ed' elevator service. asked . Theo search was hampered Thursday by fog that reduced the visibility to virtually nothing. 1be missing persons fn. eluded Rodney Ande1"90D, 32, a New York c ommod ities broker, his actress wife,' Pamela Brown, 28, and British balloon' pilot Ma 1 co Im Brighton, 32. 'Ibey w ere Jaunched SuDday from Long Island in an attempt to com.. plete the first holloon journey in history. 'Ibey last were heard froIT\.. aouth ·1 of Cape Race, Newfaindland, Monday night whe n a 6loTm forced them to splash down. £! 111' E OPEN SUNDAYiz ~.. • J OPIN SUNDAY. 12-5 12-5 PIANOS ORGANS JREMENDOUS SAYINGS ON AU FLOOR MODll.S, DEMONSTRATORS AND TEACHING INSTRUMINTS AU in.struments CO"Y. our exclusive ''Coast MufkH warrantll SPlllT COllSOW onus -Including- WURLITZIR SPINET s395 C1Lori ioodtl1, lplnoh & C11111ol11. ........... .... ... ............... NEW ••• USED ••• ROOI Moons. ·~~~!1~111.~!1=. ............... $395 MMJ '""" ...... with lhytliM a CAILl-NILSON SPINET s495 brphoMs • " • ,_ --~ , ... "'"4. Ilk• •••..•............ ••• ' ~:.~.:i !!l!.~so,.IC n 5595 -CONIOlll 51995 ................ w., ........ 'u.1111 ....... !'nm .... '' ........ . IUllD PIMOS ~~,,~'!':...-...... $695 ~~.=~~~ ....... $ns AIOt.IAN GllAND ............. """-" Mb-· $f95 .... tint ...................... . WUI LITZll GRANDI' Sf9 :=...-:::;:?111 ......... ". 5 ~ ... JOCMDOll ..0. I UHcHISID OfAlH 10t1 TAllAHA A ntoMAli OIO.ud •NUAU.-TAMANA -KOMl.m a c.t.......a. fllAMOf wu~ !:!!" 5795 =-..................... .. ntOMAs a.GANI NIW l'LOOll MODl1S ._ ........... ...,..,Al ............................. TAMAllA- CONIOU OIGAHI =:..'-='1r~ ............ .. 5675 - ' BEllERAI. B.ECTRIC MATCHING HI SPEED DRYER llO GUISSW!lfl1( DIMllG ••• ulod lllt lol>rlc lfpl, push' ... -Md -""' out po1ectlJ ""-l"4 ~utfy. Plllll!NlllT PR!lS C!CU tLl1LlfH oat 11111~ d-n lll4Y II -· Sl'!CJ.11. tJl.IYI llUTY SU· TIJtG r.r IMdsprudt, bl~ ,.., ""k cJothoS, ete. nuFF· cYCLE for 11nU1 no·h11t tvmbllnf 1ctlon, · OPl10llAl lltJ)(f.CYCl! BUZllll lots )Oii lnow - klO ~ $16495* MOOD. Jl0£7UIOJ. Now.-: Get More For lessf ,,,-MORE CAPACITY ¥' MORE FEATURES . ~-MORE VAWE For less than.a comparable 1956 mo<kll IE RL1ElrR.O~i-w1SHER a 1•, tll.IYI 1m Ill' 1111 IL J:.IJ'IC!IY ••• -·--IWloodr, 11-hu¥J lllJlfcs, rully clan. · a ars , ... fllll RI •-rmar""' IL!"" 111z • • • Pl'*' dtllfpnt mbwtk:aDy. . a DCLllllll 'llJJlllAllln" cmluli1-IJI ID I k II 'I.Ill-• dlll<alt lhllp"' """1tllY hlLLd mil. I I, a !Ill 1111m 1111 mu 111~ tm,""' --to .,.. .... •in bolm np1or llllhil>C.,.,. L .... t I • ----ooN-llrrllll!ll to..-in-~ .. ,,-- d ~-~-------..... .. .. IN185B ·--......... *27000 _ .. ,,., ........ ,,.. 10•.-1111 ... ...... !"II 1111 llllo --... --....... ,._ lo'IOJllJllfl_,,lldoliw .. __ _ . . • ._ ... ,... ... __ _ DON'T BE SWITCHED ••• INSIST ON GENERAL ELECTRIC QUALITY ------. . ... TV and APPLIANCE_ IN HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 540-7131 Daily i 'til 9; Sat. 9 'tll 6 ~ • ··~ DAILY PILOT EDrr~· PAGE . . ' ' -~ ~ .,,______._.__--llnOari-nted :.,Residents -Two yoon a10 1 11'\>UP 00(~ c1uiient1 resMl•nu ask!nr for' a financial. al•lst with an undor1rounc1 utill· ties dlstrtCt were unauCCessful. •, . moval.of oil f-an11"barrlm oo·IU sands. Hunt!nstoa Beach ii Iola& oil out wlfh a ·COltly cowi case, even .. aeeklna damat•• in an lnst1nc1·when • apanmonu nn built on the .and. • . T • · They would have ba1Ltoprodu<;e lbousalids Of Id· ---·.-~-m·tional-dollar1~a1-their share fot µie costly burym1 .ot. unsighUy wires and etynination of poles. . San ct-'8 Coundlma1 Wale Lower .said · bl • . wan,!a .,.,pAit <if •OOptlon to-pi'ovtde recrealional·eastr· ' Undaunted residents of · the Pacesetter·HUJ~J'elt area waited t;o more year1 'for functs ·to build in ·tbe ~ial accounl It fill$ slow!Y, lbr!>ugh modesr a11oca- tiOn1· by utility firms. · . . ' 1 ' They returned to c;ity ball,. '!"!I. 11\e Cjty, coqned . agreed to release $50,000 from the uniiergi'ound fWKl. for a project desti ned to. cost about $200,000. It Is eafl. · l"•ted the individual hom.,Wlle,.a·expe!IS• fer th• Pl'OJ· eel might be $1,200. · · , · ; menll, commmtina. ••Just because tome lawyer found . • ionj9.1ooP11ofl;I don'ttbin11 ii'• r1 ht." · • Tha'La..,,councll coui.nt!:f itself with a simple ' / ~t!Oli tliat it lllPPOrll·Ulo principle Of conlinulll pubUC 'ricrff.6onal UM ·Of l!Oaelles in tho city, llOll!ll · ' · I that>tt . does not anUclpata any litigation, Wiless it· '1bould'be.in._ by a property'owner wbo flela _llil · rilbu an beinl infrln1ed. It is to be hoped t.}\at-the 'Yillingness « the P~~ ••tier-Hillcrest folks to put the!r'money wnere· tneir . N 0 Winter Doldrums. esthetics are. serves Bs a pil9t ldT 'future under~ ing. • · . • • · ' There'll be no ·wlnter-doldnnns ·in Lagiui.: Beaell Skies unmarred by a tic .tac .toe of wirea -"are • . lhia year, il energetic ba'ckera of the Art ·co1ony•1 1"71 I ' ------)i!Yr\!!¥-goal but one that is expensiv.e and1~ve1. ·~-In .. livai · th · .. · -ly. This i1; ·as ep ui tti .. gtif11irection aJ\l!~ra p•hik. ~---'-·n tetJS a ell' wa • -----1--.c- a.Pher has said, "a journey of a IJ!ousand. "YI beg\llJ · WiHly, plaDning started early ·this year,· so tho with but one step.•• ,, complete pJ'Oltam . wlll .. be . ~vailabJ1 for · inc,lusiqn . in 1 calendan of events published in papez:s and magazin~s, broadcast and distributed by tour firms. · · cautious Midille R0ad .. ' . , Jn voting to suppoi;t the.ita!UI 'qU. oll ·il•.;Mi!C~~l .,,-· simply confirming the establisb'4-P!lbllc, rtillt rto rec- ·i:.eational use of the san~s. and!in~J~rt}.ni·'a;l)J'n .~ future construction on sandy beach areas, the Lapna Beach City Council trod a cautious middle· road in. tbl beach use controversy,. , · , , _ .. . Coastal communities have COIJ\I up with a 'V.aJ::iety of responses to the California Siipmne ~ beach·us• decision. , ~ . ~ -,-.. . Malibu plunged right in and ordered•immedla.te·rtr ' : Chamber of 'commerce _directors bl'Ok! iilto. •P-. plauie lhis week wbeil.they'beard the Ii~ ofev'1!U al· ready linediup·by-Eloise Fulmer who, with her te·am ot ' · ' hant·workinl volunteers, is 1cheduling tbe 1971 ceJebr•· · tion. , · · · · Like m,.ny beach resorts, Laguna has sWt'eTed from an annual business &lump in the "off 1eason" .monuL.._ Est,abilshment of 1 1fuJ.l~ress Wiriter. t 'estival as a re~ar event can· do 1 Jot to ease that ailm.ent, . And. as · noted by Chamber directors, a sampling of Laguna's friendly midwlnter,,1plrit could enily per· 1uade a ooe-day 'Winter Festi't"al 'visitor to return tor a more prolon&ed visit . s Notes on Japan's Wild Radicals Dear GI0$11y Gus: Oregen <:oiutit~t• Are Disenehatated t Mark Hatfield Is in Deep Tro·uhle ; . ~· ' '<,.,.WI<--~-~-':' Hbw does the student ra~ of .fJamtils ·~ ..... ·to . .ipavtill .... Lquna'• $1 'mtJliall . • 114AIP $ Beach Par' lor 'tourllt . 'iiorftiOI: Chalk up anoCher for lbe · :~Chamber Gf Commerce. (hill> ··rise, hotel-motel, bmine111nen'1 ·<union) vs. Laguna · residents. : • ..,;t -B. S.;H.• ·-.~-...... rwlldl .....,,. ...... -?•ii ......... ., -...... , ... ---·-....... ~ ....... ., ...... Japan differ from that of the Unlted States? During my visit 'to Japan J·had the opportunity to compare notes with many university ad~strators u well commuter 1tAuon. alllGftl' Tokyo·to·con- as a chance to talk ·!'•!h slw\enll... , . Yall•· tho neit -.. ~ to The postwa~.stu~t.radh:al ,onOrimen.t , '\well-pnpar"1 Pl,UL.al -·alr,.orl:to tn J~. which was prevent•Mr. sato•a :dtpartilre.: well ·itarted by 1943 and has continued ever since, is more exper~ 'and llol- ter orga~, tllan· ' the American move.: ment, whic·h can be said to have started with the Free Speecll Move- men t in Berk.. e I e y ln 1964. The . AT ·STATIONS"NJ!:All -and .t )1¥1t.~ approachlDg ·Ill\~ . ·,. ..... .... clajlw _.,. · . Dis• .J'.11':. Wbflel ~ prime minister'• JUnt1 wn·takinl-all,:llbdentl stole pol!Ce -·and ·diatied Police Jines. Police mounted · •· IUcceutul counter-att1Ct:, trappln( . hundreds of students, m1ny:bf1wbom )umped into the rjver to escape. WASHINGTON -1llen wu much . ...... -worry -"'llllllly -liilcla?' behind ' Senator Mart Hatfield'• hints Ibo! be'lll>,Y DOI -I -·llnn In 1172. I ' R..i ......., for tbll esreful\y pllnted trial balloon -to eound out Voter rue-But he definitely will have a ragin1 ~~ r:'~ ,;.,~~p coacem party split that could ht fatal. Al of now they are u:tremely·clouded One UUg the ardent anti-Vietnam dove -to put it mildly. and outspoken liberal is etttain' of ·jj·a The mod dapper Oregon Re;publltan•b lc!tJgh primary fight -aJKI apparently · deeply in trOuble , with .a l'1'1e _and Ha,.tfield doesn't · much relish that ex- powerful•tlement o(,hll party. Hltfield'a , pensive, arduous and hiahly uncertain mtlllanl do-and penlstat' .... prospect. jiilritiDn •to -&auon polldos ud So be II 1oot1n1 around for poalblt .,,._io•b• .. 1 aaly •putdlim ·ln ·~ altomatives. Jn . eUecl. hlJ intimalion1 -."111111·11)1 Wl>lte House,. but mmed , about q\Jlllla1 poUtict are notice;Uiat be tl1e furious lre·of GOP leaden 'and ·their .( 11-avaltable for job ollen -praerali!jo. ti 1-·ln tl1e stale. pd payin( unlvenity preoidencr or He .m.·.beeal'dtinpd dh-altip.tin& head oC a well-heeled tax exemjit ,foun- maU and .wanilnp Gf 'lilttor· optiollll.>n datioa. '. . ' when hlJ term upinl IWo')Un'bence. In Hatllekl's sell-penni!d · ~iography, In IT D AN OPEN secrwt lllal.ambiU.... tl1e Congmsional llecord he notes· tljal be II an educalor by proleuion and Ropublicuui airwly are.eyein1'hls. oeat poueuor Gf· "211 honor. ary degrees." and'serioul!y OOllliclorinl chslleqtaa' him ia the primary. In ltM, Hatfield tan for UVING rr UP -'there is a ,hOUoW. the.Senate a1 0. incumbent eovemar. H1 l(IWJd to Hltntld'1 plaiat that be is hav- -'t11aYe thst·befty advantap In 1172. inl ·• .bani ·dmo to make do with hlJ ''4;,soo senat;orral salary-plus another' When the fWld plan came _to . li&ht, . ~.000 he admits making ia lecture fees' public reaction in Oregon w1s. very last year. crjtical. Hatlield hastily ,uriounced ~ . Tha~ $70,500 ismore than "tie ever made scheme was being dropped. · · before_ il'i publi.·c 0, private. lift.. . Similarly .• he deaied he was preplrlnc i to bolt the Republican party when he Further, the $70,~-. isn't he 'whole issued a blast at President Nii.on last story by far. In additiOn. to his '42;500 June. Hatfield charged the President was salary, Hatfield also gets·a·~ther S3QO;OOO gravely jeopardizing the future of the for clerical·hire, telephone and te\egraph, GOP with his "Southern strategy;' and six trips to-and-from Oregon.' lree mail warned that he "coli Id be dumped." and various other perquisites and ac-This startling bluntness immediately commodatjons, among them a handsome-· · sed · t · 1·ti I ~-ly furnished five-room officfl . suite ill ra1 con Jee ures 111 po 1 ca qua1 icrs Wiahin ....... an. d another colrimodious. of-that the liberal Oregonian was ielt!-c set a..,,• to switch to the Democrats -as fanner fice.wlth •staff ill Oregon. Senator Wayne Morse, _anoth,er Qni!lO · ·~atfield ·denies h~ has a .. private fund militant did years ago • r11sed by ·wealthy liberal friends and ;1d· ' niirei:s. -"' . . . . . i .... Bt)T'HATJl'IELD .emphatically:. denied ~e admill one of tHe foontr'_ jj..,_,a,. '_·that 'He P.)sis~ ~ ip~ to n!na~ in . member·.o( . .biJ staff as a dollar-a-year the GOP, although admitting hla inU-ad- .maa. . ministration record and denunciations IT JS ALSO A.FA Cl' that' .lot long after . he ·citme to the Senate it ·was 'discloSed · lhat "friell(ls" were raisiJ1g 1 S100;000 fund to pay, for' eztra staff and other ex- penses. At that Ume. Halfidd was ac- tively harborin.J' vice ~deritii.1 aspira- tions ' ' . . . . ' made his reelection 8:8 a Republican. very uncertain. "If I had to run today,•• said Hatlield, "I would be in ai lot of troilble." QJUeagues-attribute--HaUitld'I ex~ pensive livillg style as a 1ikely importut reason for his wllting a bigger income. . By Robert Sc Aun Alld Job A. Goldsmllll JapaAeSe movement is, lirit of all , betiflr. organized ideologjcally .. Student socief.iea, Marxist-Leninist, Trotskyite, M8otst and Toglilittist. appear 'to be clear not only about what they believe-;-but' al.90 abOut their theoretical differences wilh each olher, unlike the American movenlerit, which organizes it.self mort around life- Summary: a atad*lts•injured, 1111'· .nsted, ooe killed ~apparently by ao- cldenl! -and 1,000• policemen lnjiired. CUriously, the Minlet\ atodents, affiliated wifb thf Japan Gomrftunist.P.arty, did net ta_ke part in ~-airport _!ray. Thet !'er!. having a Red Flag festival instead. In the context of Ja~se 1\udeftt• ndic~lism. Ille Communisl feculan aPJ1Ut._to be ll!o Kitchens: in-Elem.ent8:I.-Y Schools? 6lyles than ideologies. · SECONDLY, THE Japanese student movement iSbetter organized tacUCally. Students are armed -with &ix-foot stayea. and riot helmets. As is e.xplained in the recently-published boot, "1.engakuren, •• . edited by Stuart Dowsey 'Clshi Prw.' Tokyo and Berkeley), Chukaku (Central Core Faction)-and KUumaru~'(Re_Volu­ tionary Marxist Faction) wear white: Shagakudo (Socialist Student League) red and Shaseido (Socialist Youth League) blue and the Socialist Student Front, green. They go to demonstrations in disciPlined ranks like an army. They would be even better organiud if the variotl! grouP.S. weren~ .~ 4i\'..ided agap.t each other. Before I left for Japan , Consu'l. General EikJchi Hara of ~ FranCisCo gave me ' .chart or 1J~ ~l;u­ tionary groups and lhell' relationships - a veritable jungle or ideological factions. . ',• . JAPANUE POU(iE art l;iel~r fral~fd ' for dealing with studef!ls th~n j.meriel[ft police,. They have ~ply had ~· e•-_ Mrience. They use water canQOO. avd tear gas. Sjnct 1967 they. have cl!"ied duralumin body-length shields, so that •'hen rocks start flying they can form -protective pbalam:es. lt wu my privilege to see by courtesy of the Security Sec- tion of the National Police Agency, movief1)f'ltudent riots oytr the yean as well as training filml showing i how shields and other equipment •re to ht us- ed. nie riot pictures · were · tndy dramatic. For eumple, when Prime , Mlnilttt Eisaktl Sato was to visit Southeast Asia In October, 1967, thousands of students (my Im~ Is tbit about 10.000 were involftd) from a dozen or · men uni-ptberad lbe nilbl bolan 11 ,c<ihare:rvatives. · SEEING THE MOVIES;Gf actlons lib the Hanedi•Uteiaeftt,,one ii impreaed Jn •llerlhooiht by !lie leell"l,ijn.spile'of tl1e drama of the action, that btcauae fl. lorit To.:tht Editor: '- :An.. looilnl at·sonio of,u. • ....,1 New--lnqazjnes•aiid,...o-i advertillnl of'tract-developets; I-ant Jn. cUned to rollect On tbe eurreDtly ·-•'Gourmet 'Dream 1\itcbena" u . lhown in horn .. COOiin( $21\500 and upwaids. Whit a laucb for-the average Mr. Ir 1 Mrs. America, whether he ii black, whlte, brown or otherwiH. The average worker today ·ii the developen' market for sales. We wonder how many of these ~le read the eome-on gimmicks as ad· ver'tiled in every newsp.per. m1guine and home builders' periodical. · e'lperiei.ce 'in confrontation bQth · aides 05• ce~in uns~en "rules of Ibo game. '~WhUe·lhe aCllOn m_1y be furious, it all110!it always 'stopo short of being lethal. Guns are never drawn on either aide, uKf the Police i-arely id r1ttled. Dfsastera auch as thole of Kent and Jacklon state· simply don't ha-ppen because the P.Olice know their bwineas. "'-._one writer in the boot ·~'Zmpkwen'" o:e-b, "lt"b: odd . thst' allhoup tl1e BECAUSE A•lilled .dr11laman dreams atu~fa·: ,pl1ee creat emphull, on up a kt\chen which would 1!.V~ thf: flnut Violence t» ~"'Cht" d1m11e to· be tZ· coots a place to create culah)e ftt for a ·pedocl.b .broteo Windows ill4I buml-out gourme~.whst mak .. ·tl>e devel-(who vehicles.'.' ":i alls tMse homea) think that the nerqe . " ,Muaewife,il that good a cook? . "DIEIUl!ARE' PllOPOµND .~lmllarlliu _ ::rti.'. iood '.and.. bewera&e -1t-work belw.., ~ Ja,.-and An*lcan Siu; hard to fftpar• f"9d .and drlnb, Even Jn. dentJ'l'IO~~ · Bqtb gnlUpl nly on at.nt ·1ea· it you pfeUt. There are aome TV. Al !JM wr.lter-ln·','zencni-''. 11}'1; wllo ~ ....,._...,,_to 11n.._a pd pot •tf !hi• (demonsb'atloil)~de,.IW'ile• ttdo ·of tf.1 ,We ~ iovfly' plcturta on UM a !ight, then the .~ .of tel~ f~ TV ·dinner•. etc.,. which: would en-c~ •. wured. Both· rely beaviJ~ uCe . any bo\llewife not to bother with on mcan~tm. and alalans nther thin on _.,.,..,,, a ell-balanced 'and attradiVe reQOll 'and arsument. '"'fhe most -... ·r--· w • -·'ar" n ..... -iler con..,.-..... , "a-'s--meil for bu lam.Uy. lf tM home b\lUders ....,..., ' ,"~"' ""~' .. •;r and lite fnnd . prtlcesaOn · '"-·'d. get po lunul (Smash tl1e security treat)'.) •l• ,..; ·1 .i:;_,. that " :i:; Is b" and 'TOIO ahoii.J" (ViCtory to the . ..,.ewia;, uo::1n:•e . a,.., we i.-u JI· sin/git! ) ... Also beard Is tbe blood-1er al)d · better. relrlltr1tors • n; d thinty cry of 'MinaeJ ,KOrme' (Kjll :the fri!Uers! But the ideas that 'the builders • M.inlei!). ,,_ ihsnts flt Into tho ·are jllitllnl !orth to cr•.ite ulea show · a rhythm of the demonltr1tiC1111 and folio• deep' ,.amlnl ID our sOcietY !"". a real a 'pallml laid down Ill andelll f,.Uvals home· with ml cooks. , all over Japan.'' -· Both Jipueaie •nd American ttudtot radlcals an upper ·daa, tUUat and anu. democ:r1Uc. Both l"l'IPI are attncttd not lly tho -Gf tho powerful. pn?sent-day Sovlel'•llablisbment. but by aur DO OOll schools an<1·ec1uc111ona1 ... ..,. leach· )'<111111 &Iris to -coou, proper mothfn or ..... ·-blo -t..pen! Nol What .. _, pllchl the rovolutlonary viniom Gf Communist ,_--811 Gett1'91! .lbeQey lib 1'iO!Urilln and -!sift.- Luclly are -"*' who hive nlco homes with a womaa In tbe..'11dlai 'l!llo CID· really turn out a lint dul d-. hlV•·-h .-y to buy diampape Gf ezcellent quallty and lbe -ID• ud •PfftCll!e. ---........ ii ............ _. ~., ,._, ~.-.:::to:;:ifiltlb grwpe, balinl their •lews of ~· ~·· -· "cap• -lmllO'lllJan" .. tbe wrlllnp How did you devtlop '" of ~u ..Jllld. like Marx ud amazing Knie of undersJandinl Enge11 I.Min, whO could,. itot have Ill)' and aU probleml! ADMlllEll = =d ":i:!rl :citii.r~~: 1lear Admlm' ' • Gf tho twentitlll centary, -· Ullo O.veloPln& tbe '111derstandlnc Is Eldrid(e Ci•1Ver and Robert Schier, IO euy. It's tryln1 to fllur• oul..wbat busl>loa,.. police -ilala lib North h ii tlut 1'111 understanding , • • 11«es rw ll!elr --·., peoee Oil lhlt~ tbt llolllinr part. fl'ttdcb. • , , 11J l «L .., ..... (Sm4 your problems lo veorge, P'l•I••• the Nation'• No. j Worryw1rt .l la P'flldlct_l&llil CtlJep • • The -with ... 1••alloo ii • l•P all rilht, but H ii a 1ap bet,,_ Ibo ldu Gf .....,_ deslriDC fool of <UJo. par et«ellenc< varloty AND our pul>UC scbl>ol syilem whlcll 11 so busy wit!' lit ,.. pro. blitml thsl k can't talle Umo to teacb our . )'.(IUnC oftn IOIM of'tbe Olbtr netlllll')' lblnp.Jn !Ho· to malle li!l1W ptol. How -pultinl a few klldleiu In -elementary ICbooll to teach them (boys Letters from ncdert are Wt'lcome. NormaU11 toriter1 should conveu their message1 .in 300 word& or leu. Tht right to can.dtme letter1 to fit -apace OT eliminate liOel' reserved, All kt· terr mu1t includf! lignaturc and mail- i.ng .addre&s, but names may be with- held ;on t"equf!lt if sufficient· t"tason is apparent. Poetr1f will 'Mt be pub-/ li.!h<d. and lif'la allkt )>how to boU an eg, make a Fn:ndl apple pit « whip up a ~h of brffd like sr.-ber med to make? E. WATKINS f'ttl!ICllfl s ..... To !he Edilor: Arter: a trip to .Loo An;eles oo .Ille freew11. 1 am. like the drunk sitting on tbe curb at 5th' Ave. and 17th Strf!OI, New York ~ty. A. cop lipped him on tbe shoulder and told him ~ mo~t along. _ "Whtrt am t?" he aald. The cop to1d him• 5th at 57lh, to which be replied, "Never mind the details, officer, what ci- ty ii Ulla?'' SO WRY NOT LET the motorlil lolow whit city ht'1 1pproachinJ: on the freeway, and how 'far td Hi center •or outslilrls. All we ll'l"fs tilt sir.et ligns· and '*'lea you are a lonc·time ~tive yoo don't know wbetber -Boulevard Is In Weilmlnster, 1"llg Beach or . Ssilta Monica...How can we p.t µ,e Dtpvtmet1t o1 Hllhway lip to llelp us out of ·this moraut · ·BERNARD BAllTON ' . ' f~nce lies in. that the .newspaper prints in. blfct ' 1nd white or colors on paper ~Ill· a .pJUt th•t has typesetting tquip- ment and presses which .. it owns and operates. IT ·RECORDS the history • of its com-· muriity ·day·by-day .or · 'week-by-week, whatever its frequency of· pqhli<;ation may be.. YOl.!--can read.the newspaper a!I at ·once or rifer to it' dfiling the da:y or lay it aside for reading later. It iS there. You may. file.~t. away aQd -if you keep :a yeai-'s 1upply you .may have-,it bound ·into a :volurt'!e wJiich' constitn~ .the history of a community for an entire year. Most newspapers bind 1tle1r newspapers into annual yolumes or subdivisions thereof. So the newspaper l! 1 ·historical medium. of ·communication. NOW AS TO RADIO and television, they. are bot.Ii transitory and deal in both news .an~.'.tl'l~inmeo.t. But you can quickly forget what l"BS <>n.)'eaterday's television or· radio program ,unless .you refer to a guide iQ prlnl .'the: chaonels on Which they operate .are :veiled in ihe United States of America and they, the . television broadcaster ar tbt radio btpad- caster, gets1he privilege or using ~rtain channels or rights, by getting a, liteme from the. Federal Communiactlons Com. mission unless the laws have beeri ch1nged ·from ·my days in radio broad· cut after World War U. 'TH!: RAIJJ() OR television channel! 'nem''leave the ownenhip of the United Stateo of America but an -To· ,:et a licert9t requJra going before the Federal "Communk:1tions Commi.sslon and filling but foMnl and no individual ('II the right to "°' a channel II be or she has" 'been convicted of moral turpitude, Just how It works when a cor- poral< form goo, belor• tbe FCC, 1 do not know, The aame rules for radio l auumt· apply) to ttleviaion. ALL I llN<\W, In h•vlng been both In . Reeerill.. • .. ....,, '.' , rldJo brliadcost Ind n • W Ip a p er • • · pol>lfsblna, illhsl Ibey ar,.nUrely unlike To 'U. Editor: .. .JMdla q1 __ .comqn1nicatton.. For _ a In lalth., to paras Who appoieoUy newspaper owns Its "I)i!pm<)ll and re- blv1 never thoqht lboUt the difference quires only the right to distribute through i: be""'" newspopor publlsh\n& and Ille tbe inaUs of the post omce by i.levlslon and radio -.. I rind much • . fttibllshing jhsl rlghl through meelin(I • lpor1nce. The newapaper b: an lntftly _certain ~1lificallons. dilltftnt inst!tuUao Gf Uniled States life I don~ ·know of 1ny other way Iii ... from tb1t of tel-and radio. The dif· plain tho dlffelt!lct bel..,en tbe two -- forms of media , that is, the printed wtrd, and the televised ot radio word. We have had newspapers since the days o( Ben- jamin Franklin but not radJo or television. We have newspaP.el'S 100 years old .bu_t not either TV or radio 1tatiom. I hope rhave cast some enlightenment, but for anyone who wants more. write to the Federal Communications C:Ommission in Washington, 0 .C. and ask bow .to .get U. license to build a radio or television ati-lion. · RUSSELL BENN!Tr Agahut Abortioa To the EdltQr: Regardless of the ·Jaw: When a woman agrees to, or seeks an abortion she is saying to herself and to the w.o~I~ that she wi!J not accept the respons1blllty of her actions she is aac- rrificing the life of an innocf:nt chJld for her own selfiSh -reasons. '1'he same &olds · true for the man who allows or seeks 1n abortion for the woman who camea ,bis child. LET THOSE who are eonsiderin, an abortion ask themselves, "Will this child ht lht only child.-the Lord wilJ'ever (ive to me?" · Let those who are considering an abor- Uon remember that the ·spirit of that qn. born .Child will 'forever be before them, in their. i;ninds. # • MRS. BARIWIA'll:-SAXASKI!:--- ---iW- F n day, September 25, 1970 Tht editorial paae of the· Dailv Pilot 1ef!ks to infornt and stim- utatt rtoder1 bt1 prestnting thl1 newspaper's opiniun.s and com- me·nlary on topics of intf!rf!st and sfgnf/ico.nce, by prOviding a forum tor· the e.rprtisfan of our readers• opjniom, and bt1 prrst-nting tilt diverse view- points of informed o servers da on_d 1pqkeimtn on topk3 OJ Ult y. Robert N. Weed , Publisher • • • DAIL V 'l((IT, 'f ~ v,...,., otJ-:At!!!f! :~ . . . . . -~~~ :f ~~s ~'Y \ ~qstliigs ·-~ ,, . . ! • • • • · 1. By lbc ·A..0Cl8teor' Press .. ·A,.ites, uilnih idlotlllod 'I'll~ thlt ·Ronald Reqan sUll lios T~eYouHome ~~(UPI) -Ray Ashwill, b I 1 id· Both major candidatea for tie 11 one of Reacan's the freedom to crack dow6 oi . ' lnlslt I . ta • of ~-1·r . .,._.t~--' b t '' 'the (Uta --.try"" Sen. Richard J, :.Dolwic put 1 m , at ve 1ss1s nt an"" , j tgoyemo,r, • ..... 1 om1 •.. were .. ~ -'"F'1, . c ~ r.el.. ol Unruh aid T\iute h 1 d stop today to .. -·· prao-former lobbyist, hadmeen .,.. • ~:JI"' liuslht":e ag11tn Jtll!i. millkif'Olre.advf!frs,u .por)ol become• millionaire ••-··h m, his capitol office... .. 1. Weo;•, w1 Ll'll'mocra ess ... _. ·-·u-i· 1..:.-1. .. __ __, • r ~,. r .... ,,... Uce. of uslna the lMmWr's . 'uiiruh· . iisumlng his shirt-"Jiii: ,,., ......... t Wua;u putt--.. hU auto •1ceney. • Where Kathleen? state olflct aed te''"'--· to · '.'I'm certainly going to Jl"l • · · ·· -· • •• I a •·-amento -for l<ue Meanwblle Rea1an .,_. a .;..~·c··-"----'-~ JWP. tt,''•·~a _totd ·a_ sleeve,· \live 'em httl ••·: """"""' . ' . , , , • ,~ _ .. uswpn:n; a..-........ ,.... newsman. sUf~alk news confirf.nces to Retll!fti.U a Jnijor.fteagan group1 of San Diego ROtary .,..._ aervice. , a ·n ct' Rep.iblican Ron a Id ca~pallD ~coatrfbuJor and. u Cfu~ rnem~ to. ~e , a ~ a fullti(DIY.lot>. Ash.will, whb has workectfot ' ReapO''llrglng 1 gtOUp of cbi.il;mln ,ol two Re11!'1 ~1tfV~ appr'Oach tn ~aUnr . , byilt' 9DU1ht support; for a Dolwlg for 15 months, said in-. · · biWM~mt:n to try hedtr·to . reelect~.cor:nnU~. ~~ •with ~lltants. tAM: "&ND WA:lt -Mn. fonQlfdUktltar"oaoe"Down ~tnt-:!f~'!.; ~~.~~i!~:~~J:r!~ D'.A GiJ.ilty· •'undttstandlhemilitant,oung .. "~ow .~ at •11 .tbue ·"'·~e'Ye 'enoughoC1r:t.1rl-Thereu VlllJl!tu .... her ., ;8blrley Tom~ llY• the ~ .,_ Jobb . •· . ' . . ·Unruh pot in two ·Jl"bllc ap-link.i between Rea1an and lnl, tile R<publlcan IOYa;nor Uktl to atdt docton throqp public ·t:tlltlim~ ef-yi1ts has ;been favorable. ·. · · · · · 1 · · 1 pearanlu ~ in Los Angeles HoJmet ~tle," uid. Vnnlh, said, "Show ' ~m I.hat. you name. Or one et her names. an~ Ftnt aarcery~ '~ lnc:ludinc <twioni :,to When a reporter•a!i.ed him ·. Of "-n•;..m' • p· {·~nn.crsday;·~t 1 sidewalk new.s j•i..~re anyone who believes recopl&e. the'iJ<.klealism.'": At the age of 24~.lhe wu put ever ran .cr"OM. When lhe ••[ap with kids'"· in '!'~le wf heli~r the · use . 1 olbu. public \:.AJ, t.C eoofereJU· tn front of the autol--"':"'.,.--'--------.::,...~----...,._- on trial ln'Sbelfield, Enfland, was 14, she 111)'1. a JOUftl-c u~ms. . · , ~ ·~ ac1 ties to promo e sine.s.s ,. · · · ; ·. • · · \ · agency ·:P>wroom owned by a on charlS of bigamy. At tokiier •bd her to be with Dolwi&, a Repubticii"' from was proper, be responded: "It ALHAMBRA! Callr. (AP) -major Reagan backer and at wh?Ch time .the conftllld.she .him while bis ler was be. 1_ Atherton who is retlrtnr after may have been an in-. .Los Angeles Dist. Atty, Evelle a fund aislng di ' · ! H uoa 24 years u a fa.ri•1•tor, Wd discretion" J . Younger says he's pleased . r nner. 1 had married It dlller<n ·men amputated, ao she held his ........... ._ •a,-: -· · ,. t · M . 1 C . ""'" In a statement, · IInrub ••-·• ·~ f-c.-. . '"''""!.....~ ~.,,.,unaware that "1 was hopln" the ......... pie or u•a a unc1pa ourt J'""6e .1. , __ , Re , . •tiuJUUL Qll:lll:ol o -..:J"Yerunc hand: throuihoUl the operation. . " ,...... . round him guilty or cOntempt cr1 1cu.cu agan s r •·c e n divorce. In onty ftve years. All Since then, she report1 lhe has the third ~. (lo~~sts.? . for violating lhe,court's order decisi~ to cut back a pay right, how did the manage witne11ed numtiout would come in and see me, (t' d' ·d · taile for the California M Slai Ashwill s ·d "Y 'r · .. 'f' 1 ll9 . o lSCUSS a mur er case. . , · that? It's common knowledge pfirformances in 1 u r Ii ca-I an fl a1 · OU I 1.11e 1rs . ·•~All we.' h-· • -~ted'to Htghway ·Patrol from .five to 1 _,....., ........ .u ......... _ person to call ,, ave ever. wa., .. 1.. . f~W'~ll.!,.p:.__..,..~ICIM&lla,....W])at lhe likes belt .. . _ · . do Was. ~eSt the validity or ftie '"'u~ percent. H~ sa!d ~ three m~al proposals the 18ys, are the 1aD bladder . In~a.~page,-t1pewmten ~1>rqer-and-1hlrgi~s-us-the-typ.-_dQion wu an e1pres'100 _of 1_ in their llf!lfroe. OUr Love mxl operations, becamt'·tbe colors p · t · ~· l~formation pamphlet Astlwill Portunity:" Younger sa!Cl'af'ie:'r . Ronalil-~gan's let-thli~t-· War~ ii l>afned_ , , are so ·beautiful. , ro ec.. ' {1 Clf'Clllated to lobbyists, lie OJ·· 'Jeai'niJig of U1' decision THun-ca,ke· plillo.Ophy." GET lT.'JtlGBT-: "You_iay ·uoME -1n that dandy dit-f~d tJi:em su~h services as day.. • · · • ·· · · , •.·;~~use Ronald Reag Is no' min k.iUea by liifitnlni diw ty, ••10 .Take You H 0 me secretarial typing, travel ar-Jlldg~ · Peter· ·smith fined " a mlihonaire surround y tbe_boh tb&t .lllled hlm'. ~ow Aa:ain, Katbleen," whtrt is T1·ny Tr' ee rangements, a conference Younger; the Republican ·c&n-· 1 millipn_a{r~." Unruh said, "he f!'.l_@Y_ct the af0re..4eacribed satd home? Did you aay room ~nd telephone message dldate -.;for , state· attorney ·will i e~Y:,e r appreciate the victi.m:I did you Interview to Ireland? .Wrong. Germany-'is recording. · · · general, $50 for -is.suing. a· lis'. plig))t of .people struggltne ,on arrive · at this uinine con-where 'Ibomil Westendorf, .J..OS. ANGE~· (AP) _ "It's a combined home-of witnesses and a brief sum-inadequaie salaries'. To hiru, closion, you idiot?" So writes the composer ol that number, Sheriff's deputies say• newly away-from-homf,t' be said. mary of .their tesUmony al a they are merely statistics.". a .. sieptical customer. Loot, promised therein to take his planted eucalyptus tree _ one "It 's ,essentially fQr" the -little . closed .hearing . ..Aug. 13. _for . Earlier1 at the Holmes Tut· lightning paralyzes. Am it wife. Why that song alwlY.I or a ' row ol. trees rectntly gu_y who is operating'out·of a Siegfried ·(Fµd) Senff. . tie . f'or~ .showroom }n LoS travels ao much raster thin ttrm up in Gaelic musical designat~ for 1 normally briefcase in his hotel room." the nenie 1mpUl1e1 that the programs is a mystery. qui« residential secticm of A'stlwill said · so far "28 ar scienceboytltiltlnsistaobody CRAVINGS ·-ll you find East Loi ~es ·-cost the 29'' lobbyists have inquired trlt by it •rer saw same. An yoursell cravinC 1 chocolate life of Javier Ponce Placentia. about the service, but•he said idiot, am I? Thi 1 cor4 bar, a hot dog « a handful of 28. he 'll need between 35 to 45 to r'~~ never t.JloUld have peanuts, coosider this. A 8ludy He_dj_dJJ.'.t want (o see it sign up before the business said that. Patience, patience. by one Dr. William Kaufman uprooted by a motorcytle will· be profitable. Som e how • o m e w .b t re indicates these are the three group, sakt Sgt. Edward Fran-He•emma~ the cost per sometime, l 'U get him. . delicacies most often devoured cese. · mOQth _to a· lobbyist for . the RICH AND JuCBEll -by people wheh they feel sorry· Booked fOr investigation of 1er:vice would be "modest:; Mister, do You discuSs ·your in--fer theMelves. He checked murder Thursday was Richard wtuch ht said would be vesb:Denb with your Jrife? out ·the. food compulsioM of Rodriguez, 23, and 1 15-year-"between $1~ and S~75." Nevermind. it'• just a l,ZOD dtir.ens to gather -tlie old youth was booked for in- r he tori ca 1 que.s'tlon fottgoing data. lnterftting. vestigation -of use of danger- preliminary to reportin& the Recall another 9tudy wherein ous drugs. result.a: of a sizable study on researchers teamed that the Deputies said both were the matt tr. Surveytakers digestible most Often craved memberi of the Lil' VaJley chec~ed •'!I 1,450 couples, by the llOldier fresh hack from Gang of rnol<lrcycllsts and each of whom owned cor· COIJlbat is a glass of milk. that other members or the Studio Sues Fran~iosa porate stock. 'Ibey found the Your que1tionl oud eom-ell.lb were being questioned. 'husbands and wives who talk-mtntr art wekomtd and Placencia died Wednesday LOS ANGELES !UPI! - ed it over before investlnc will be u.sed in CHECKING night, Francese said, of two Tony Franciosa's former were considerably richer than UP wherever pouible. Ad-stab wounds in the: chest and ·employer, Universal cl t y the husbands and wives who drtu letters to L. JI. Boyd. one in the leg. His brothers, Stildio, rued the actor Thlifs. did not. P.O. ·Bo% 1815,, Newport Ped ·-' J ·d the f · ro •1.u ose, sat Rml-day foi $'750,000, claiming he MRS. BLACK -T h • t Beach, Calif .• 9ze1JO. I tchi tel '"-y WU Wa ng · evuwu acted in I "totally un- Lyman Named New Stanford · President STANFORD !UPI) -Stan- ford University has named u its ·seventh president, Richard W.. Lyman, • hiltorit.n who .Afl •'univehitie1 ( I I I 0 t Youth Gets LOngTerm , LIV!NG6TON, 1\lonl !API -A· Jt-year~ld San Jose, Calif.' youth hu been 1tn- ten.ced to 4% yean at hard labci for 1tllln1 marijuana to· thr'ee teena;tts. William T. Campus was se·ntenced Th u r 1 d a y by District Judge Jaci D. Shanstrom after changing his plea from innocent to auUty. Shanstrom said he believed the. sentence "> be the most severe impo&ed in Montana for a first offender under •1e II. VNl'l'ED S!l'A'l'ES 'NA'l'l01\'AI. aANK -SOUTH COAST JIV.V; I RANCH NOW ONN lurch forward from one con- frontalioft to another u ... i have-been dOing in the past haU-<lecade: •• '' Named tiy trustees Thur.. . day, Lyman is 4&, 1 Phi Iida·' Kina at Swarthmore Collep whb earned a doctorate at Harvard University and hu been ... 1C'tln1 preai~..llere . aince ·chemist Ke~th Pltw' reai,ned after a \year ct cam- pus disorders. Confrontations must end,· he 1ays, "because· the ·direction will cease to be forward and • .• becauae society will find alternative institutions to do · its higbts:t level ol thihking for it if universities cannot man-- tan tn0ugh peace for that kind of thinking to proceed." He ·was a key figure last year when -polict agencies were caned on the campui 13 times as s tudents demonstrated a1ainst the war ih Vietnam, war-related ruearch and the reserve of-nCers training corps. While ht was ac;llng presi· dent, tt>e-11nlversity 1U,ngthened .its campus police force, assigned a full-time prO-: aecutor for disciplinary pro- ceeding•, added ll0.000 worth of 1ithting and rtq~lre _d students to carry Identity cards wilh color photoci'aph1. when Javier obser .ved .. members ci · the cycl~ club professional maMer" while uprooting the tree. . under ·~ntrac:t- He ~ Out, they 11~ . n..~ sui\ said that in Fran- and died in a _ICUfflt in tbl"' CKIS8 s four years on conQ'act driveway. . for. tne. ~evision ~.es ''The F--1..1-""""1.-....:i ,...., Name bf the Game," he"I! was ·~:--.._. • .,. -~r-•AC\f ........ ~. himSelt in' •• u.e.. Not mad> o1 a u.e to . ·•-" .· . . . . nd .totan die for\" ht sl)d, "but .J iu-· . uuswe,. ~IVe a y ·1 · · ---oa. .:R· • " • UnprofmJonal manner .•• ~ I WIS wunu -ving. . ~.' 1r'' I r•.\ • ,,.. . . . . ' ~ .. . • , a so flcctised Ftanciosa or Grenade Blast Kill& 2 Boys . RIVERSIDE' (AP) -· Two boys ..... killed and • third badly injured 1,bursday in the explOsion of. a '-00 grenade. police reported. Investigators listed the dead u Bob Ewin1 and illcty tee Leomon. Police said tDey were each~ about 11 years old .. Taken to Parkview Hospit.II in aitical condition wls David Crawford. Pollet. 1akl they had no other details. .. ~~.t aJ¥I battery ~ri . pro- dutjip,~ · ,persohoel" and or i-efµslng to render ~i~es· ll;it- . tiJ paiJ~~ney-not· tn· ~-:con­ tract. Train, ·cutha~k LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Southern Pacific Railroad. claiming it .is losing ... an estimated S3 million yearly oo u.· AngelfiS to New Oi-le&nS - Sunset passenger trains, said operation to three time.$ a · 'Iburaday it will cut its daily ....... Crusty Old Crustacea11 . Saved from Boiling Pot SAN·FRANCISCO (UPI) - A . J{l3:year~ld lobster · has jumped from the boiling pot into the water. Officials of the St. Francis Hotel said Thursday they had pure~ the 25-pound· crustacean from the "Great . Atlantic LObster Co. o f Oakland which bad imported it rfom New Bedford Mw. Plans were to make a mess of Newburgs. stews I n d frlcassea out of the. palriarch and then have a taxidennllt mount the massive lobster ·shell for use as a centerpiece at banquet& When word got out, perSOl\S of all ages called the hotel and pleaded with management to .... lilt crusty old lhl!lg. ' Qo:cl . officials . lhen ,. •. nounced 'ih~_ay the' iobsltr would be retired at Steinhart Aquarium. Its age was figured on the basis that a lobster weighs ont pound at the age of 1even and then gains a quarter of a pound each year. , • I ' : ' l ' ... " .... . \ . . ;, 'lw.'•• , ..... :-:: ... ,-... 's ,_,_ .... ., « .,. ___ , .... _ ..... _ c. I d ··=· .... ' -... •.•·-· ,, ...... _ ....,.. uMI 0.. fdlla1 JmY IN •......,_, k'• THE OaJCINif. BOOS. JEil BOT SllOT8. .t:M .. '.--•·-a. TONS wit1r. n.. ' a....., a.an. ............. -......... --~~,....,.-~ . ...,, . ,. . .. : '. .. : "' "r' SATURDAYS- t le 1 ,.M. •tAny time it becOmes necessary fur a university: to · summon police, a defeat bu taken place," M auerts. "The victory wt sttk at Stanford ls not a military Victory', "it Is a vktory Of reason and the e1:- am.ined lift over_ unreason and the tyrlnn)' Of coercion." Choose On~: of th9 Many Coast & SouthMn Fede;a./ Offices to Sel'Ve You: .. .. ' ·. Art Unklerter ShoWs You COsst & Southern Federal MON.•TMUU. 1M P.M. NIDAT1 1M P.M- 1714l 14f.111t ............ llt s..c.. ...... c.. .... ""'-......... ...... E. He LEVAN · ·HARBOR REFORM TEMPLE -HIGH HOLY DAY SEIVICES (Sept. Jt.Oct, I) (Oct. f.lt) To 111o hoW ot * ...... Cl.: ... ltltl,l.Clll~·US-1951 1 WLWllGMllllCT PLACl:3113Wllhlr9 .....,u ... 1• · ·. ; .. U. CMC WWW I lit: lftlll I ll\i4dwJ • 111-1 tOI . *"""'*''°" IUCff: n """"""'°" Ctnttf • (11~1 •7·10<! • . . . UMTAMALOMllRllCIUBICY: . • . 1 .. N. ......... (71~) 147"2S7 ' *UllTA~·711Wlihlr.11Yd.•3":074& •IM.-0:1Dll1Pldto•l31-as41 . ...... CO¥lllA: E9illfld...,. Ctr •• S31-nC11 -*IWIM•"t: cnY1 •11Vtri.Nu;.1Nit.11V2·1171 • , .... '11711 v.u.....,..,.... ,......,. ~u.l..C,.:lnl& ....... •.07·7411 • ___ ...... 1,. 111111--·-·· .. • NEWPORT HARBOR -LmERAN-CllllCll-·-1-i..""'.'-.~--..-:----~,~~ .. ~. -.:::::=::- DoW.r Dr., No..,..,. looch llAllr l'llNAllD KING CANTC?,11 Allll ICHICKLlll TICKETS & IN~OllMATIDN 675-mt . .. . -· . ' • • .. ' ;·aNewW~'i.toBeat1n;1ation · Offers You·These : · , . ;Ju.$t Join· . · . H_ighest Prevalling Rates: .. ·.tm1'e1 · -· :-;::~~~,---,;· Oub ... Pa1rbr"Ot;NoMlftlmunL . . . ' . . 5.25 '\t-5.39"' . '~ .. . ' ' ' . . ' . ·· WltflaC!,SOObo_ln.,..r•~ . • ·1ccount. you .,..1111• • blca1M ..,.,.,..,. SublWldaf ..W., ire . IVlllOl>lo-Jl"l<hollng --• tndudn; automolllltl, ........... . l -t ••. ·~ ,. • ..., ..... """' ,,...,. ... _ ._Ofdora, ; . , .... -...... ~ ...... ·1--~.NoMlnlmum . 5;75~-5.92"- .. Ofti.Y•Cel1t!la011,S1,ll!IOM!nlmum. . . . . . 8o.00411tw8;.18"' .11,o.Y~-.ll,OCIOMlnl"""". .. I I, I I - • ---- r,1<1a1, Stpltl'llMt 25, 1970 3 DAILY PILOT __ -._..__ - No Banks,,,...~_'"'.""o.:..,._ __ .... ., ___ ~_ii '-"'•_rfaiicll""'"~..,1 Nixons' Private But Irish Get Along Lives Revealed 21st <:)~, Clll• II ~ BETTER KOPPERSOL ' A SPIAt FOR FUNGU& ~DISEASE IN @·::. R.OWElll · · -. "" ~ i tpt., :II - TAKATA NURSERY 111 Miii ·sr. C'im'AlllllA ·-··JiQ.172· Ann.ual LOBSTER BAKE Sponsorecl by BAllOA BAY LIONS :·CLUB SATU*DAY, & SUNDAY SEPT. 26 & 27 FROM NOON to 9 P.M. , CORONA DEL MAR MAIN BEACH Eun For ~veryone CJlRNIVAl,:.RIDE~GAMES HOT DOGS POP·COIN ·SOn DRINKS conof( CANDY ( shown to visitors at the ~ Eisenhower Library. ,,, After dl'nner with ·fttrs: Gre~ted by Head Man This group of tourists got a real break Thursday. While they were w a I kin g around the White House grounds, President Nixon came over and greeted them. He had just finished breakfast with fre shman congressmen. 1 ~~~---'-"-""---'--"'--~~~~~~~ Airman Slated For New Post Navy Airman Mario A. Bonilla, hus b and or the former Miss Sandra L . Sankman of 901 12th St., Hun- Sept.23-24-25--26-27Daily1P.M.to10 P.M. Sunday, Sept. 27, lastday l ~.M. to 7 P.M. S•11I• M•nl•• Clvl• Audlt•rl.,111, 111•111 ltreet a Plce II•~· D1ll1 o-Prlz•• • Ad111l11lot1-$1.75 • Chndl9n Ulldtf t2 fl'ff ~~ ~1~·IQM ~'OlOI --otfi...Y ZENITR "HAS-rr1-·-- 19" CHROMACOLOR D<AG. · •Zenith handcrafted Titan chassis •Solid-state Super Video Range Tuner •.AFC-Automatic Fine Tuning Contrd • Exclusive Zenith Color Commander Control • 25,000 volts of pictu~ power Abo na-W. with Zefritb Space Comnl-.f 500 Remoe. O:lntrol 23" CHROMACOLOR ""G. • Zenith Titan 80 handcrafted chassis •Super Gold Video Guard Tuner •AFC-Automatic Fine Tuning Control s599ss ,1,.. • Exclusive Zenith Color Command• eonm:i. ,-• 25,000 'IQlts of picture poWer •Tone control and 5 .. a:J • twin a:rie speaker -• .. loblt wffll z..,;n, Sf'OCO C-'""" fOO R-. ConlnJI 25" CHROMACOLOR · OIAG.. COLOR TV's BIGGEST PICTURE A tot.Uy advanced Chromac::oior system in a b111nd new size. Featvrinc a more poworlul hander.iftod ntan 100 ehassiS $649 95 Super GoJd Video Gulrd Tuner, Zenith Automltic Tint Guard. AFC-Automatic Fll'lt Tuning tnd Color COinmander Controls. AIM 1wa#lable wftfl Ztntttt S,..ce Command dOO Rtmoft Conlrol Spee Ctnnf & "&1111" YllF RetMtt Collnl TY lllilll --~-evei aljUit c:oklr Ms from ICf'OSS the room! Jmt Pfta buttOfts • •it IOI: adjust col« Imes, adjoot -ID low, med..., ""' mift. '""' 111 ., .., oft, -.. V\lf -~" .. rictit. '""' oil -white pict:11re stays. TV and APPLIANCE IN HARBOR CENTER ' 2300 l;IARBOR Bl VO, COSTA MESA 540.7131 . . DEoUAIE · CoURIESJ PARKING AVAILABLE • • ~~-Dai~_9.'.'.tiL9:Jat_9...'.tiL&,~- • I I .. ' ' ' ' ' ' •• '" ~ ,, .. "' m " •• .. • , For .the · Record Marriage Licenses ARBUCKLE & SON We1tcllff J\torbtary• tt7 E . 17th SI., Cosla J\t~sa • BALTZ MORTUARlES Corona del 1ifar . . . OR 3-M50" CosUI J\lesa . . . . . mi f.W4 • BELL BROADl''A\' l\10RTUARV 110 Broadway, Costa Mesa lJ 1-31.13 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1'7'5 Lagvn1 Canyu Rod. 494·'415 • PACIFIC VIEW l\IEMORIAL PARK Ctmekry .J\for1 Cllapel 3508 Pacific View Drive Newport Beacb, California Nf..Z70lt • PEEK F Ai.'llLV COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 71fll Boin Ave. Wt1tml•1ter .... m4W • SHEFFER MORTUARY IApna lk•cb ....... 49J.1535 San Clemen le ....... 4tl.OIOI • SMifllS' MORTUARY m J\fahl-St. lfunllngt01t Btacll m-1m Dissolutions Of Marriage D~Y '1LDT 9 Educators Question Reading Test-Value - J 37% TO 50% OFF MEN'S SUITS • regularly 95.00-130.00 • 2 and three button sing le-breasted styles • pure wool or polyeste r and wool blends • an enormous color and pattern choice •you'll find short, reg'ular arid long Si?:eS • Here comes fall. Winter is right on its heels. Are you ready? You will be if you take advantage of this sa le. You'll find thousands of exceptional values in this mammoth suit sale . We've got great-looking suits for business or pleasure. The choice is all yours . ·Pick from solids; stripes, plaids or checks . You can have wool or wool and polyester blends, whichever you prefer. Just ~ome in, look them over and take your pick. ·may co m(!'n 's suits 21 ' • 1'ParticWarly in a yur when t.ht IChool WU cloaed for DtV· ly • ~by • atria." Wllll the 1hlfl ...... II that tht Los An&olea 1tudtots ~. on the who)e, better on the new tut wblcb the state c1eportmenl1w ~llldlted be used by 111 Calilornil districts, Mr•. Cral1 said. The Cooperative Primary test replaced the Slanf«d test 1111 oprtnc for· first grodtrs and will be phued into use for second and third I rad e students tn the neJt two years, SEA SCHWINN 411I.1M It .. C... Mali • -WE-HAY.E---• ALL MODELS NOW! -• >-• ,. DAILY 'llOT ' - .... .. ..... .., \WLJ •6'1i ...., ~ o.. .-.1 Miii! Lew c• a. ' NASD Ll1tin1• ,., Thoradoy, S.plombor 24, 1970 .~' ll ~~ Jlil ii\\ '"tt §i~I ~l:ll I ~ n~ !~ ! ~ 11 IY.LVIA PO.RTER pllanet. and Ir be rtfU8f:s to ranging ftom electric ran,is ..._ ~ ...,.. . _,.. ..,. ~ J~• ~ IN. 1m + i~ 1~ li ~ '1-i5 ~i::~= "1 l!;, ,;r, ~ 211 ha~ ::~,~~km·~~~: ~~P·m~:r.:~eer~! ~~= ~~;i~c:i~~~-~!ct~1: HEW YO•K V•,1F,J!}lllll14•l .. ::,°''' ~I( 11 .I• ~Jf·;v-:-~~.; :i ~ i *i 7~* ,u• :tr~~ ~E ~¥2 It\ ,;11~f11r-,J~ij,~!Eltdt:ltrn~i~'e ·-H·-· -an outlay In )us\ rt1ation9 ........ rtmenl, of such ptoblems •s the -"lM •• ':!11.r«11111,.~~ ~f11i,!tf--1 14 1L l'rt Golf ~ ~ SutG•I F i\>'i l" ~MIO ,_ 'lei ..-N. "~ 41'" -M "•" " ,,,... l , ... ~ 'H ~~~ 1"!1 n li t: "-~-And 1r ~:,•manufacturer is n= -.,J •n~u~~~-..:i~· U J~t'~ ,. ,,f"1~M''~~u~.2J: ill\~ ~I:: tri.tt ~.'1'f;!.~w' ll, !b ,•~ 1l,'. ..... :: e11_,t•111;'1' .~ ~,•, p,1 "'-~ -11 montbs of •·• billion for u1 a.gonazing length or time it I ... 'i..,t:=• 1urfu7. ~:lG-•r~ ·~ , • Pubs NM 1! 't" '••M'T, 11..., t, ......... ... •P 3Sl't i.~-. u + ~ ~· I 1, 11t: ·t'-... ....; l!:l"• ~ + r. aucb con v en I t n c es u unresponsive, a pp ea I to often takes to 1et 5etVJct and t•lon oi *"" i.s ,F11 WFlfl ~· ••• ..,'"',~M!'lc 1 ~ l "'!•YkN' w u """' 4'n'!1ral "' ,.,. • •v. + \.\ ·)Ill . St" » •t 1~ + 11 1£1. 11 2 ~ .. +1~: J ' 0........ .,.. •rt ~ .. ~ 1 ~ t~ltht ~i 'I.ta fi"'::l:,!-.lr dt* 1;: ~ • 4~ ':u+ ~ t ln ~-r nf n" m~ Jtr"+lt ~vw': ·.~ It J?~ MO nli -V. rttr;,eratora.clotheawa.shers, AHAf.f's "complaint ex~ lht poor qua ity of .aervict;:.~1:';'1 1,~~~°"' oft 1 1r'~""ee::..i 21 ~i:J1.1or "':' ,,"1; ~ 1115 311~ i:~.1,. 21,. ""'""'.Jar 1 I 't 1, +'Jo en 1« -24,1 •w.,1i~ 'k.J ~ dilh washers, fretzers, etc. change" launched this past when)'ougetit =-"l"t:.,,!:~~~r"", .J'l)~~~c$~ 1:04 1~"~5f'~s -"f'l A ~~·.r•'1 1i11'1'J•1• ~=:ii l"' :=:~"J. .: 111, 1 l:v.+·,; ";::.,i'i: ,,., ~~ 15 'lw. ~ And the. total Is heading for April und~r the name of MACAP IS "tntirel)' fret ol 1-i;na\:t[" "' '~0~':r c '"' ~ ~·r t 'n 1 Tt.e"'" A 1~ ' Afr 11: .-HI ow. 16v. 1m + = ~· "ti'• l I~~+ U ,,, rnri .»t )II Ji'" H't 11\4 !. --'tACAP (f M 1... A r lodustry control or il)fluence," ~u.:11~ w (C:,U F~~111 I :~ i 1,, rt''sr'•"• 11 11\'j flthw f0 m m "" •flduJ1r1111 "' ~ 4\to ·~ + K , 111111.ir pf , , ll v. :i. -" $1.9 billion by 197$. " or •l"r pp Janet -" ""'~ • llllr F11IW111. . 11'1 11'1 JIM ~"' 1~ 1; Tli::r G~ ~'Iii~ ~ ~IZ.c:'\111.!~ • 1U lJ~ 1ill-'h J:(l :j: lf ~ l,'ll I~ ~~ w uli'· ,··;;: ,•,,"','11 •Jf 11 '.ia~ _..Mt ~ti tit~ Tod nd I h Consumer Action Panel) at 20 claims the appliance industry. (~":.. t•IUdl ~ FQ..,. TWt !~ ~ •. ; 1.&r111 c 131 .. 1m !rac. '" 2 2u Alben&C ,. 13 """' . ,.\i +"' .--31 n 71! ?lv. 12~ ~ t11 I)', you • avt in-N. \\'acker Drivt, Chicago It 1s dtsigned to be the in-:~ .... lbkll. 11\&:i.:;r;;wr c':: ,1; ~ .. ••Nb !1 1"' ;i11o rMnt G it lfll. A111r,_ ·,6 ,. 1~ '' ... I '~ ·• 1' 11o ;:, " ~i "! 1J1" ~tU' ''\4 ~~o~n a~r1~~e~ o: 60606. MACAP consists or dustry's answer to the threat~~ 1111.1ft~= ~:~'1!..: l~ l~r! :t:: ii Ilt~ lJ~ t:~~r ,!a JU =."i!=. 1J: 1~ fi?'i '~ ~:a~"' l~L.~.::.:~~-i ll~,·.· i~ ~~1·i:·,· ~~.~:~ ~.1J U,·,~. l~,·· $,:, ~1~ •·ho"-,. ___ out or four of them eight cor.sumer speclaUm 0 f feder&l·state le11slative :..u"'°' ~= tl~lit !~ 11211:,r;.,crp ul'I ~~ l='· JJ\.\ ~ ~'.:i?,. ~ ~ ,.l~,~ ~~ ~~ -i r. In: II• "' 1 1,. ., l\i \fi + K ••~ I II b ,,,.rkdOWtl or ~ L1IJ11r 1·. J•,. lift s1: u ,4 TY"" Fd !~ ti.~ ,.,,i.e.. ...... -• .-.... 2t..., l1r1tt~, :u JI 31 11 !\' t • lf ~J n ff 1 are amalJ appUances, we also equipped not on)' to get IC On Cur S. mlllloft ltl Et! t~ t~ l:o~ Ea 11 ZJ'h UnOec 'h 4 Al!st!Llld r 2 • :II~• ii\\ 311~ \\ l•~lnfff<IO r, ~I I ll, i i, YI 111511 ~"' ~ 'j l'i\~ ~~ 11~:.: ~ from manufacturers but also Okay. let's lest the in-~r c~~ ;~ 2l'h M=: ~!b ,JU :=t'lo...M ~Yi 21 ~ft ,l~~'ll 27\) 27t} ~l~: 1.: ll~ ~ m! 20!~ ·+14 ~V.1111 J:tt ,. r:!! r: l-1\t ~ •I El 'll n 2 .. ~~l ?7\it + v. own about 250 million large to f1'nd new ways for '"'e 1·0-dustry·s word. U!it this newr',o"',~~' l1 l v. l:!'~'w J'o"2f .. 11w c111 2\.\ 2t1us '-"°' Jt :11 A111dM111..-''11A :Kl\ll l\4i+1 lot'oK .15' io1 !r, I.to 11~ ~, lt1F .i1 21 1, •. '~' u11ot• ones If you'rt aver•ae in tact "1 1 .. .... •1 .. •~1 sto~ ,.,, u"' us E-• 21"' 22\'i A1rr=111 .?~b ~ 23'~ "'' :r.lh + ~ ~~ ..... , "'• "'nt. i 1m+ tt GT•i,i:11130 11 1:0 1r~• ":.., ''" • · -' • dustry to avert -mpla1n1S. ''""'mplaint exchange" the A,,"'.~ !~ l~. "' c'"',, ,j •. ,j111 •Y•n Ho 44'h .Ut'-us Mir ,, . .nVi AllM N "' " 111't l•'• u + ~~ ~ -, •• , ,, ., ~ you have 16 small and large .... ""' ~If ,... ~"<II 1~ 11, sa1111t<-11' ~v. us Trlo;L nv. 35\li All Sir I.Ml ))I 14 131'1 i>U -l'i AF ~:ft m1"° 2JU \. 21~ .-~ lr•r~l~ l~o StV. Jill'' j'\~ t i So far, four out of five com. -next lime a problem comes up !v"'M 'c' •, I'•' ,", ,,. i~ !lin'" e ~ ~ u1 Pe~,. 21.0 :nv. Ali.Id s1 pf ' llll "' • "' •... A•~ ,, -~ •. ,. •••• _ .. , W: , ,, , . i\t _ 111 a. nhJiances (COUJlt thtm) and. 1 • • I ,, , .• \; ,... ·• ("'°" lft •v. ~1• u1a11 st.• ~~ ... AlliaSu• .u. " 1 ru • +>.a -, , •• • •,, ••• , ,-•• , • _, "' ~ pla1·nts have bein closei! with an appliance, gas or e ec· ~.-,•, t , !11o ~'•" " ,,,, ,,.. ci c .. 1r ~ 2\lo u111 ,.... 24 »~ AUi• c11am u1 1m. 1..u 1~ + " 11 1 •"·" o.. ... ... -1' • ,,. !\;" :a + " the compitxi.ty Of '}. 0 U f ,. "-"'' "" ~ kt ll\CI 4 V•I LO 1 7"' AitMPC .JOI I 14!t 1•~ Ub + 1' :: 1 'I~ IJ: ~ nu Ifill• f; :"jl~I r!i 113' ~~ .niZ SW. -\o machines is °"Owing daily. ~at1sfactonly. ' aod MACAP tric. Let's make MACAP ~~ ?~ ~ ... m" ,~~"M~t Hv. n .. ~IJ:"A ?rJ ~r.~s. 'l"" '*" Alto& l.. 1'2 " SI $1\'I -2 ~ 1· 02 n·· ~-IP'IC •11 •4 ' 1J\\ 14\, 1~~ -•• •• has drawn up gu"1del1n•• and work For iJ It does it'll save Alrbr ... F 111'"' 1 rftfl •E 11'!.lo ll'h SCrlolO A ' '\lo w ' ., ..... "' 20~ ~m•'•'•'"'c _iM ... • ',!l!, .. ~!l', •,•,.;-.,•,, ft 1tt Jiiii) I s 11'1t o>ll..IO I $1\0 n .... ~. t J,', lt'I ''convenience'' carried . . • Al-H ~ roYt ,., :~~ :u S..rl• Pl ,.~In!. wU.w ~ f7~ u~ Am.. El L20 .. 1ti': 1Tv. ,,~ + v. un•lt. lk 1 151 tt lfil ••lier 1.20 1s ~1' u~~ 11~ +J11 to • n.w dun. ens'1on. And 1"t'• recommendations r 0 r ad· a lot of moner for us and for :1·~r.~ ~ 1~ :;:::; t'i. J\o ~ G:·.ftcm11 '" '"' W1lll lid u 17\!I Am El .n 61 ,,." Jilt llh 31h +YI ;r~lll ·12~ ltt .Jv. l ' J. n e~O Ji~ "• t7l~ '"' lftlo -~. rt. · h 0 m appliances the a~u .. ..-industry too. A 1c• L"ll lJ'!'J. I ult 1111 •11t Jv. nurn lit. '" w 1tuc11 ~ 4111 """11111 .nt »l• 31\.1 J7U -v. 1nc1 * 161'1 :i.:. " • 1 bt•lt Fin u3 2H• 'JO\• J + 1• I t t h~ 1 ve 1smg e YY ..,,.... Alie 11.,.. m JV. noe1" '"" •i1 Y( Gr1 51' ~ W••lhw ' ~v. Al'hlH pfl so ln 1s 11\i 1:m _ ~ I" •M.2S 1 4 .u ,l • c1c11.ew .10,. n .it t\~ tit +' • repair agon)' a so s rec GU o A111e11 E• j" '"" H•-r s 11v, ''" ~"' ~1~ •• ww',"'"' "•'• »,•~ 104~ M1rF11tr .-211 .uv. SH\ J.1v. t"' i" ~PIM ' Jf, " ~ . . 11~11 1..io Ht j!1" •1• .a .... .+ •· A IHI GIV h ~ H•Yell I" 10\t I•• " n Am AlrNn It 10'5 20" llh 2t I'.. l > a""i + ~· mbll llr I • ~ II< lO lOV. + 11 1-------"-41ew..dhne0 s10n. _____________ ~~----~~.,~~,• ,j• ",!O,'"'c•' '*-r'•'"' J:.si~ 11-. w11 Tr 1J ,• .. Amllilk• . .sO.. 5 11~ 13 uv. + {\ 1 ' 1 n 111,•, !trti"' -\, 1-inc: 111• ,.," ~,1', ','", -t1:•, T•· agonies and costs of dali B • ~"E1 L:b ·,1~ ~~HiOcc 1n1 ih iu h'e1 w.1 1~1.1mw~;:• -Allri11111·i 1r--"ltr39w 3~-mr=-u !m' 1,Sr .as ~• ~. 4~ ,, l:::if1:rr'"'2;-s.i111 s1"-s.1~ ' --t-1~ ·~ Van 'sm •. n us1ness . Am Euir ••\• 10\lll HUll1b!I 1 ni SoNE Tel ~ JJV. Well!!• IA 11~ 1;\<ii Amll<fc1 I,. 4CI I 29'• ™• 11·~ -•• t .76 ,, 21\li \~ 7>< ,, ru"~t 3 10 JI 4i~ St , re"airing and servicing your Am Fur" '"" 1 Holm El" :n 'I Sol.Jn Gs n 'UI? W1ktt ,. t>t. •IAi A~"'"' 2 70 ,, '1 ..O'AI .io~ + ~. om 1.30 211 11~ \.ii •11~ tt 1 15 6 ,. 11v. ,. t'" t' A Greet .., .... $0\'• liolobm 1 111 lw G1C1> U\i U Wslf! NA JI~ JV. AC1n pf I 15 ' 24l'< 2•111 2•'AI mll~pn .10 J YI •IV• "20" +, ti rll\ 13 1"\ U~• l$l'I I appliances have a Im 0 s ' A MM!c9 16\fi 1,1.li H-""' )5~ w EISvc , .... 11 Wtl ... Mlf '\) 1 All\Cltn . .u. ,. "" m tl• + \io ""' IV A us 20~· ~ l + u ... .io 3 11·· 1Gl~ 11'.. ... Atn T•lv lf J!Yi-liot'lr ... Hlli 12 Pla•r •Vi: s WIT" ..... •Ill t'.1~ A C~ill l.60 lt x~ 2Slil ,~. -~ llt!IW d 1.20 "l '" ll -~ rid• t.n 1 j I.\ '"' 2~ -'• become a way of !He. AMttn 1 1 4 "'twwrd GI 1 1v. Sl111C1yn lt1\ '°"" w1r11 wt1 s ~ ACrwklt 1 . .it 1 20 20 20 •• mw d 1r '1 I Vt lot\• 1 1'11 crr••r IJ tel a111 111~ 2~ + '• "f M B . r· h c b Afllltn 1... 111 I "\ lotowm 1... 11\li 11'-'o SM .3'' ""' 20\li WIK PL "• ... ~~ ~~~ t.n ~ M ~ ~!lo +I\\ ::'w or."11 I~ fli\ jJ-1 n'lll dJtfA :u ll U"l l•V. ~'II + I YOU'RE NOW typical I ay ring 1g t ur s t~ ·~ ~f. r.: ~~II;.~' 1,'a ~Ci ~::;19 "st~ 1~"" ~ :'ri'~. ~ "" AD111T11 JOI lOl 2:S 24R ,....., ,. -uf kl UP 1#• J\o 14~ .... r.:t':" 1-: 150 n~ ~\lo .. + ~ you've broosht home some ~~r"~ t~~ n~ ~l:Jt Gis 'JU 1:~ Str1w Cl lS :M""YrcitW E ~\lo 21\; :'" ~".'"' ~ 1,lil ,r f ~~\lo ::MM1111 ' 'f: ff11o ~ t'sR .:..:.·\~ '::0~ ~ ;!i 2~ 21J• -~ .:;._.,, brand ntW gadget, found it to ----Airvw H 2t 2tU Hw111t Ca 20;r-20>~i _ ---Arll~1PW ~ '91 !•h 24 r-l4l:--~ """"'"' ... -JI~ i4 Ir fM"jl,!i r1nll.C -Sll n Illa 101/i 1114 + '• be a lemon -then struggled YORK checks, polygraph checks and ~~~·eo1 2I~ 26~ ~~~e1 lr~ -~ .. l~ ~~ 1:~·1n': Ji~ ft\1 n~ ft..~=~ ::r:;?.11\ Ui llll Ui: t1~ ~=~1t:v11•so1 ,J ~~ ll~ ll~ +·1 . f NEW (UPI) d bl th. · A11to Sc• J\• ' I""~ sv a•Ai •~i A8'"1"' \so i'7 14 13ll 'P.f" ·· : S1: :f's 1 fih '°'~ WZ iv. r1n1 Of :1..1s 150 A• .. l'I .. .,., -'. through the utterly rustrating lmag1ne having to show an other lshaglrdeea eb" lhngs ~nd =:~: Al l~v. 1J~ .~ ~~I J~u ~~1~ :~~·~ 1E !U 14~ L~ irrt! t~t ::Fr'D1lJJ u7 it\.o ~ ~ Iv ;~·'S.'i1 ~·J: i~ JjU r~ ~ +'!; d","'alerie:eho .. ~~ ilht~viyno~ p!~ 1denti11cation card lo a securi-orlder tloy o a JO • t sa1 1:~1.."'~", 1:: 41/o :~;.c,o,.o '; i~: :.!''l::oD' 1 ,J U •i ;,"' ts>.U :"~~Ina• l' 21;t 21t,; 2~ i~ l~:J;k1.,~ ,; ~vt ~n ~~n =i1: d to t t d I g oom1 • !ll>ll'H'I lCI 3I Int COl!f ~ llo MUTUAL Amlnvtil .U " II~~ lo>. lo;I -I onN•l'G 1. 1C 291~ :Mio ,,... '.li INN p/111 to I 2114 tlloO 21:\0 -.... the buck to the manufacturer ty guar ge in o a epar · "The !rouble 15 our •Ylt51 uu uv. 1n1rm 1... :Mo •'1 AMe1c1x 1., "' lS\.o u1o 34~ -)_. ~'"""', '" J11t n :12~ 1 1 Weil Fini 01• 21•• 21 1110 t :• lleKhm , .... 2S 1 ... 1 BWtl'! •I~ St• AM•~I• of 4 ' ,. tJ ,. +h~ Df4 50 l<IH .Hl'I Sil., Sii'> Vi 1wnu ... 11 tO ... 2JI~ n •· 23 • who maintains a stony silence ment store to shop! permissive society. We live ',','••" ',','•' "•'",1~k ',",', M,,0,1111 10 " Am Motor• us 1•, •'t 1 + ll °"'Ar .2ki 1tt iin. '"' 10,,. " wu ... otl" 10 19'• 1t\• 1th ~1 21\ii 22'1 ANllG•t 210 !JO .ct •1~ •• , -onlC•~ l.itl 2~ 3t1• l1-. Jt Ii~ IW•~ftln so It ••• t\1 ·~ + ,• ror W .. k' befor. Yo"r Com• "IV1th1n a decade or so that rebell1ous generation B•rk M• •o 42 1n1 Sy pf is 111• ""'Photo 12 nt 1ov. flll 10 ! ont 011150 4?t ,,'Al 2s·~ 26 ~•1r••,.Gnt '' l n " t2 -• In a ' l''I LIO 411~ '31'> lnlt•I 1h ••• Al.t•Ov 1:.ii 5ll 41'3° '3"1 ,,,,. 6 I SI 1 ] 21\lo 27'~ 13'• + ~ rnn5h 1.20 11 Vl1 21 2~1 + '! Plant is even acknowledged.° could happen Jf the present many ol whom don't believe ,",,",u11~-~ .• ! ..... J ,•~. ",.•,,,, 1••· u•" FUNDS Am s..11,.. 1 1 11 11"' 1m ~ °"' T11 '° us 21.:. ,.,,. 1n. + I'• r1r11o11nc1 1 u 1~1 u11o 1•·~ -. ;· _... ..... ... 16h 27•~ Am -Shi. 60 211 ltU. It\~ 1 -~ oMrol 0111 ,s. .. .,. 4J\1 "' .+3\\ ro11 ... t(I 11• 2J\l 11"' 2l\ll • Or you are now typical i( you trend towards -rm1ss1vf! ifs wrong to steal from the 111r1c11r lh ~ J1co1>a F •• ,~. A 5,...11 1 t0 "5 1w tfl• 2 + >.i onwooit to 1 u~ JM 3lV• t '• rummnCp 1 12 11i• "'• 16Mo . ,.... BllCk Ml ,..,. !t\I+ JiQUI ... c 'l.. 11~ AmS.OAlr ·'° ,. 0 ., 421• + ~ ooll u~n so 1J )tllo 1'\\ 21\9 \\ llLIHld Clot n 1 161~ 1th + I\ havt reiristered a complaint dishonesty, vandalism and business establishment or '""ue E1 >!• ~ J1m W•t .fl "1\• Am s1" 1 11' 35 JJ411 l<l'.!i -.,. -·1~ 1 e 3' 31'.ii 31'9 311• + "lllMOll 2.10t it '°•L s,'~'-i' tt., •t"' o· • • Boll lie• 1\1 IV. JI...., F .... AmSld l" 1S l5 t5\'J tl\1 tSV. ilV. -l!MI PIAS I '° to tO • ulf OU 1.51 S6I 21.. 4'• ... during the warranty period. disorder in America isn't commit vandalism and engage 11001ht c 1n" nli J•"'*"v 10..., 11 ,.,,. s11r, _. 21 20~. 1~. 20~ ~ _., '!'11: 1 u 13i,; ,,1~ 13v. . .. 11tf ... ,,"' •l J'1 t "' ~ • ., BOO.I. AM U\~ U Jiffy F<1i J\i 4\'o A 511t1r 1 60 U JOI;, 2t~a JO\• \I+ -T· &fl 2$ 2 11.V. Ml) I'"" 111.H llfl 30 2 11 . 11 ~ ... 4, and ~at~hed the d~ale~ welch ~~!~k:?huaS:ls~~~=. 11:.~::~ Jn s~~~fi~~ d}~~~tl~~~iness has 1~1k;J; ?i~ i!~ ~~ :1 1~~ ::\/+ ~~1r11~i1~J s.~ ·1~~ '°rt? 'i:± ~~ =~ I~ ~! tt~ N),! w~ +i~t ~:1eu61 q ;li ~~ ~ fi~ = ~ out o t e warran )' cause . 1 •· L. lltw11 Ar l\lt tv. "'"''' ,, JO s.,1t111 .. r 14 Inv CoA 11 '' 11 '' ,.,,, T&T 2 M i609 ~n; 4-1'!1 .s + \'.? orlnllll 72, u 30'AI ,...,, 1t'i + to u1rw111c1 so 2r. ;;;, 17\\ 11~. + ·~ HE failed to cope with the of the 10 largest 1ndustria uccome so common, 1pman Br11i11 a. 17 11\~ K•te G•n 2i. ~ NEW YORK IAP> "v Guld 1.t111t1 AmWWks s. 1 11 ru ..,,_ .• , orGW 1§1 ~5 1161~ llJ\11 llS.., ~ u1fW ~1111 , 41'• '1"" 4no + :"' Securl.ty forms ,·0 the -untry. said. that w•"thout a complete •,~"•"<• ~ •"•'"',,-, T J Jl'i -T11e 1o.11ow1n1 -Inv lndlc 'u •.'1 AWWJfJt 1 n 2100 17'~ 1n:. 11'1.1 + ... .,_1111 .n ,. ~ 2,~ H\li-::;.. \\ u11o11 1nd " 1oi, t i , W\41 + .~ problem before the warrant)' """ ·-..-K 111 ~ 1111001i. •Uillllltd 111 •nv~• aos 10.1~ 11.n AW Drtf 1.25 JJOO u 1<o 1•1• u10 -~ cowi~ com 2, •Vt .,, ,:,, + \\ Doubtless many Of hi. Com• ·-ur1"ty system. a firm with 8U'l'0,"'i',.~ :n..,_, n r,i ic:•'•',!!!! J ~ tlle N•t'-1 Ml«!-lnve11ors Groua Am %111C ' '"' 11 ~ IV. +1~ Co• 1111u1 !II l 11 16-!f '"-' -v. ul ran out . .,,...... ! . -·-ffli ·-· •,,••,. ",'," lllOI! of S.C:11ttllt1 tOS ndl 3 IO •.tJ AmtrOll .60 71 II~-11 11'>1 t ... CPC 11111 110 1102 111 1r.,. 21\.io + 1; _,,. - I pet tor Would Consider L'~ ·~ employes probably IS Jos OI w Sv 27h \ ICIVfl E ~ ~•lers. Inc . ¥t Mui I t1 t .ff Amtllk ·'°' 61 1;mi U•1 13 \II ,.,,. I IOll 3' S!I~ " ~ + \ .. HICkW•I l 2t 1 ~-· 32\'I J21'i -'• Can you prevent al east Is r '""' • 1mco IJ~oU Kh'IFlb 121\ol1hth1orlcesllwtll(h Pro. l•l 3'3 AMFl11C .to •?t11'•2Sb161 .. +I~ rtdlrl!Fln l 711\\11••lRt +l~Mllllburt105 "' »•<o 3N +'' some or today's appliance man's forecast unreal1stically ing a minimum of $50.000 1n :~~ ~ ~ t2 ~~;1 c;i~ 1J,_., 1f1, ~~~~ ti•v~u·~:! ~~~~' 1': 1~ tt z::~•c int' 51 ~3 ~~ ~71" ~~~1 ++tt ~=~rnc1~ ~ H·~ lftt ~ :j: ~~ ~:~~a~·~'s: df 11 v. 2f• ,f .:.:.,. · l b t ·1 h d" Jferage alone C1nrad '"' 3\\ Kin• Int 1'1.i Jti:; •Old Ibid\ or 11ovg.111 V•r Py a 11 'n Am~• Corp 311 It\~ Ill~ If''< +1•.:< owe. • U\'o • 1 " 1011 ''' 101'11 •• repair agorues .-and repair peSSlmlS JC, U an expos! Jon mere an !Se Pl • C11> M1111 16~ 11~ ICl,,gi El ' 4:W lillledl hurst1~. 1,,v Rnh un•v•d Amsted f...o 6 30\1+ JO\'i 3014 +llt r "c1t11 re Jft? l1ft l1<0 + 1 ~1~7'"" : 101 Jl Jl'-t 321/0 '• held recently in New York by He said it is easier to pre-C•• sow 111 !" Kirt c" '"" 4 11• Astt l$ltl 11.as 11 oo Amtel :12 21' •t;, ''~ 6' + \\ ~l.u 0fM 1" ,,.,. 31~ lJIJo l1lt H:nc1 ~In'· n' 2, 1t 1r.1. ,'!., + '• COS!S? C•a FntA l~' K""' V<ll !tA:. 251.41 Aberdn 111 I ff IVY i.•t ''' AnlCOl'!d 1 to 7ot 21'~ llµ t'll, -'It TS Cart '° all4 1711 ll'o 11~• \\' M11111 • SO •72 1p;, It'~ or '9 Y.s. l•ou can if you follow 150 com'panits showing new vent pilferage and vandalism ~·•tch l l \.'JI Kre111r "' 2~ A<lmlr•ll' F"""' J HnccicM 6., 1.u Andi H<Xk 1 u ?~ 1s1, 'l5U +Vt llll•hv ·"' 36 111, 11~ 11~ •i H•nn&M 1.30 ,. 4Jt.:o a>~ 01~ + " 'lectron'·c, electr1"cal and other th t d I ct ·11 ft ... o:v t~\lt 1r. LMC 01t ,,·~ ,1;it Grwth 'u • u JOfl .... ,... 11.U ""l AntorDN~Y I 17 llh 1•U 16 •;+ ~ \/Ml~ 111 21 I 111'1 1611 1•12 .. HlrCOlll'I 1 16 3'l6 .)6~. ~. -~· ' "-ba ( Uggestedbu an 0 ee p1eragea erctrlt 1 -Linc:el" •"'•" lnc:om l633ftktYll-l'undt: AllCl(layltt 11 ll~ll l-lia +l\\11Wlt1"2I 1011 lNll ~ H1rrls llltl S.Sll1 50\'J S1 +I 11c:se SJC S eps S J. I I I .1 1 b I th 1 · C1r1r GP 211 " L•l'ld I.es ,, lnwr 101 J6t APOll• 101 1.11 Apiit,;lltC• 2.s )121 u 1m 1~. + \\ ummln ICb 10 J7\\ 31~ nv. .+1 H1~0 c1 1 ?6 1 n~ 16'~ '"" + \• theAssn.otHomeApphance securt)' conro systems I star s. U e cos IS •it NG ~~10 L•ntWd ti'~,.Aovisrt •n11t c~111111o:111t1AKOOll1J11 1t•2'V.1111211,_~!un"Oru1..a 11, t , . Hir11oMna& 21nv.tl'.li2J'h +~. demonstrated hoi• mu ch subslanhal."Jestimateacost :~:~~'•• ,~~·J~~:~M 11~11,1 A1tU1a1d '" 109 cu. B7 tt :iou.t7APL cor11 n ll"h 1,i, 1n~+'4 ur1111wr '° "u 111111\~-V.H•rv.t.1 1,20 11 11 16\• lit•. Manufacturers in Chicago· PS 1 ~ ll'ii " 21 Aru1re 6.Y 1 l• Cu• '' 1.11 !.ll APL "'c1 °' 1 " 1Stli 1ru -~ ~" wr A 2 1 211'> ,,~, ''\• M•wll El 1.J1 • "'• '~• 2"1't -"' b~·nessandindustryarecOn· of$75,000ayearforcomplete ~.nY, ~\ ,~~~"vc~1 ~ •AllAmF '3 ·''cu• Kt 1.1t .1sAPLP111JO 1 ll'fil lR"t 1na-\t 11111rH120 •1 201/0 in. 20•,+~•H11e1A1111 Al li\"t ''~ u~+1~ First .when an appliance tel" r ·~ooo lllr!O 5'A •'.liLtl$1.trG 15v.1I1 A11st1le t.5S 10'1 Cu1Kt '"'"AllA SV(.1116 "'°' 1111',~11)( +1\\CVClo&llfO S2.I '""'' -\~H11tll1nt 21 ... lft tli+\o ct about the matter. The pro c ion o a oXN, square hm Lt• 1" 1 Lewis llF n111 131• AIP1t1 Fd t.6J 10.s2 C::u• s1 is ts 11,40 Ar(•t•N 10., 1• n w 21 22•~ + v. C¥11n1VA 1 M tt '° ""' stYJ • • HCA 11'111 .10.. ' ''' ~111 -. • fails to operate properly, !f: OM l' "'L 7111 1 •Amc-g sn 510 c111 s1 '°' ,.,...,(•t•N p12 , 34,1 l-1 :U\\+nr, HKl•Mft .ur 20 17\11 ~·2'\lo-1• ••-··gh 11.6 , devices ranged from Motorola, foot plant ." , l u1;1 , ;.: U\.'t L::i • .:111 ,, 1v. Am 11s ''' l 21 ~11' U '!1 119 Ard\ 0.,, 1 " lf\t 34,, 36 +iVi -D-H~lll! HJ 1 1n :uv. 14 ~ + 1o check uuvu •1c: owners t h h Thi .elude f c1n lee h Ir&• s. s. Lottcdv ,tt l ~~ercE'~or:i~1021 ,:r,, ~g_;.~At11PS0Kl01 3l1t1,~1t1 .1tl'l+~o. ... l1vr15• ,,, t\a +v.~:IT:1n~"'lo ll1lt1::?'1tl(i+•• manualwhichcamewiththe lnc.'somrnpo1n w1c pro-a in sen g.e. "'1irs i1M 101 Le11E1r ... n~1 ''7 Ci11ll 1u12iKhoc~b •.3t1.M""11111os .20 •1110 . ~.10 +,.e O.ft•C•1 2s 3;~!211l :t<u+t•H•*"l•"d•' 2•H1214v.1~"-'• vides for total electronic tronic surveillance devices, ft,•' .. " 1 ~ "•·" •~,. fl,~,'•'•• 17.\li 111> 1ncme 1 n '20 ""!ck c.1 1 u 1" AtmcoSt 1 '° 2JO 201. 1fh 101to + ;~ g•rt Ind .• 162 u 32.,. lN• _ ·~ H•mlSPll C•• t • JU JU _ ·~ d.vl·ce (keep 8 file Of these I 1 .,.., ,., IJ .... Jn, lnv•~I I Oto I.ti Lu: Grit! J'74 I"' Atfll(O 11210 5t 21 2i'4\ 17 , + ,T Ir! Ind pf J 104 311'1 ll JI -~"t HemUnc: .2St l •l'r '\II '"' -\o surveillance of up to 10,000 1denllrication and o I her 111 Ml• 11~ nto ~1 11.1ni • •111 51'.>f<• 1 u L•• I.IOI IJ nu 01 Atmwr 1 . .0 s •O'I• •O •~1, + t\ 8:'' Process nt u 111~ u1• +1 Herc Inc: 1s• ~s 3111+ 36h 31o,;, _ ~. manuals [or the lifetime of the !'\11 u A 23 21~ M1 lkfl 11.1 61 sroc~ , oo 111 1.111erni 5.21 5 '' Armr p1 '1S 1 S-11'1 5• s1 -1•• •vcoCp 1 14 24 16111 16 161, + ~. Hor,llFd 1 ,, 16 u 21 24 • ,, points in a 30-bui\ding COmpleX safeguards and St Ve t8 1 t,;111 UJ1 n \'o ijv: ~::a! ~ l ~lo 1 Am EQ1Y 1.lO •JG Lii• Slit • 16 J 21 Arm1!Ck IG 121 2t',~ 211.~ 111~ + 1\ IYCO "'·25 U60 '1 St\T 61 • , H111lllll" I~ 406 Jt'i lt~-=1111 - respeci.iVe gadgets) These lo walkie-talkies for guards uniformed guards A big guard ···-Ml 11'.t l ""''"°' c r· ~~Am G••h J JC) s.n Lii• Inv •. ls '13 Arml.1111 , 611 s J3'\4 ""• JWi + ~ DlylnHu<I so 2S 2ru 231~ n~ -~ Hew Pltk .10 14,>, ',',',•,. ", •. , •,t~". ,., " boo I ·-t . llYIOf! l"I It~ Mlt Mii I lJ U, Am In.. 1 °' 5 °' LlllC Ntl 1.U '6t Ato Cott t'O ,.. 1'"1 1••• ,...,,, + ~~ 01ytnPL l.6G " 221\ 2B1 72 + ~. Hlrh Volllo• ... ... k els art your ui:::S source and burglar and fire alanru. force will run higher. wt:11n1 Mer 1•1i ~,.... Gr ih ''" Am M"' 1 t• '" LI"' J ~, 3 1• .vv1 ... i..11 1 1i ,,,,. "'• nu. + u gPL 110 1.1t iso !!'• !t,. " + v. Hllla11HDte1 1 Jt lf\lo """ Jtt'o +" f "of h l ·~ c11 ... 1on 0 ..,, ''• •• ···-· ••~' ..... ~ AmN Giii 1 SJ J,, Looml1 S.~tes; Ast.Id en I 10 101 1Y.1 J)\o 2:r.~ -·~ " .. Co , IOI .D ... " 341.~ +I HtO••I I 20 I ll:U JP~ Jl\11 $' o l ormalion on w a "" L. a of Guards ark There is one offsetting Jae !'° c u~~ 1~... v~ • ·~,·· Al'>dl« G•ouP. ca"" u " u tt A,l!Ou .n.<111 2 u 46 "' -"' ge1mt1P 1.u :u 11'.li 11 11 -•\ Hoer"w11 " .. 1 2~ 21•0 2~ ~ h 1pmn m 'a . w :; ""'-6~MAUILP 1,,1;•1,,1i~ Cao!! IU7.IS (apll ''''''AssdB .. w 't \lt 1·~ 1•:.+1. •I MftltllO l013M1J mt +•,liHotfEl1ctrn ll "''·I~"' l• check if sotrW?t ing go~s ""year old cxecut1•e who Jr A ed guards and tlec oeu• M~•er 0 • • Grwt11 •6s1ose Mui 11111211A1M10G •M .i 36'• :14 J61:.+•'o ~11t A!rJO 151 ~ 211.,. +1 Mo lldYIM n ?U 3\ ,.,. l!'H-,-..1 ,.,.. O rm • ot•• ca 56 10 McQu• 11 lll. 1ncm~ 11• 1M Lull! ''' 1oa 11,, .,,, '", -, "'' ,,., 2,,.., . Den-1n1 1•• "' , .... I'll +\" 1-lolld" 110ti 11 4S •S ~5 +•t W r 0 n g Common errors to th · ·i d I olem £ l >I J'" Me'dlc H ..... '" F .. .. ... """ ... ,, , •• • grew up 1n e security in-tron1c secur1 y evicts a so co111ns F 111;, n v. M" Mio 10, 71v. d 1nv 1.n 10 ~·•,n• n • • Ito Atftlon• 11"111 »1 11 111• ,,., + ~ o.111t •nr"' •1 6 6 ' .. Ho v5~• 1,.. s "~' "1~ 16•t d t. g the a~ f ~.. 14>..o 1S''> • ' v~nl :ii ll ., OS Manllln 4,U 4 IJ A11r.1ve1 1 u ,. '1 '" 10\o ~. • •• . Oen ... M" ·'° f3 20 If'~ lf'~ + \" Homftlkt IO Sl 21'. ,,,... 12'\o -IJ aVOI In Operam r dUSlr)', Says industry and providtproteCltonagain s t ~el I 1;";::~1,;nln u,·~:"APO!l~Fd 1'11?1Miss Fd t10IO'lA!ICEtptS,t7 711 IJ 14 , g~nYA110.4\ISZlll1o t•lt fl~-~~Hl!fleYwlllO 7541l''~•t'OlA+•~ J ance etc You may for ex 'JI r om c1r JtlJ. 'II'~ Mldl<I C• 1,' 1, ""ccr• 1 11 1 lJ M•s• <0111 1115e 11 56 Atl 1.1cftlld 2 •n S4>.!. )1'" s1•, -~. 1n1111,1n1 1 21• l4h 2lh 14'• +1-10i H«i• 111 1.10 • lJh 1s 1s Pl • • ' • commerce WI have to ire corn/G•s 11 11~1 .,,,_, ,· ,,'A•lron •II 4 51~St Tr U.«1l4-''A11•chPIJ7S 1no 4''1 ., •i1o +•,1 cenl.Gr 111 1 u :i. 11•. u <>. . Host Intl )6 71 JO ,,,,. lt\lo -'19 pl ~ o•erloading your b ! T 1 ~ 11~ ~ :• " Ai<e Hou9hton Mates i 10 J IO Att 1.lch of 1 1 •1"' tc'" tOh _, ... Ot•cico ,.1 A 1 :i110 31~ 31:;. -·~ Koud 1n11 • lf 11111 10 1ov. + 1~ am e, U<" become a sort of private Therefore.exht 1torsatthe '::Hfih a'n J ~~wGGT 11 °11~· Fu11<1 A •.t1511M111\tf1 '"'·"Alll.(h"2&o 11t4J>,411oa&•-~10e•ec1pfll 11 311 11 J11.1i +i.:.HOU1Mllf .~ t5 11u.1•••11 +•• dishwasher. Or, you may be poli"ce state ,·f t•-present New York Security Exposo·1,·00 om ,.,, 11 111~ M~,: vi1l!' ~ ~~,,! Fu11<1 11 •.u 1 .II ••kl Fd 11 n 13,Dt All•• c11rm 1 ll 74;., l41'o 2~1i. -'' o.1'11al11C .... " 111~ 1" 11v. +"-MousenF 1 11 11101 :ia·~ J1u 31 +~• IK" °"'' A 4 4'1< Mo lticft " S1ot.k 5 1' 6 )7 MklA M~ 4 6' j•ll All•s Cll"P 5.11 l\o 1.._ l + '' Ott .is l 4CI 151 111.0 llV. ttl.< + \~ HoulF ,,,.51 xll '6\fi 4JV, '6 t " Overworking your air con-·if 1 d 1 said compano·es ,,,,••a good!m' cm 11; '""··-~ ,,, ',:• l sci c,. 'l' •,61M«ltJ'.ICa11..u1 :JIATOIM OI• 112 t\'o 1tr,' i'~ Det d11s.51 , 1s 1•·~ 74u.,t 1•H11111F .,,,, 111 111:, JN 51'1• ., Pl erage ren con 1nues. . " 1.11 m11 lns1 41, ~ ,...,.. " • 11absa11 1 JO •:JG Moodr's 11 sa llM A11ror1 l"rce1 10 11; J'lo ""' '• ~1 11 .. 1 1 ,•,2'14 12,,., ,2 '• ~~ H011t11.P 1 '° 31 .eu, :it•. •1'1 l " Wtioner. "Virtually every"'""· wo"JJ 1·ndustrial security s y , t e m mo> rec s,,''i ,m ~ ... , •,,1 1~1 • 1:1 11e,(on 11 •s 11 t1 M•F F• 1 n 1.:111 Aviom1 ... 1nc1 :it1 6h •1'• '1" ~• xt., .2• 12 1•l • u1t + \~"°""NG' ,,o;o •l ,,,..., sov. s11? 1i•. vvu1 omrHI '"" ' 'l'ltro IC~! 1,!t 1,J1MI F Giii .. 71 !otAvcoCo '°" 16! l'\'o 131, II +~ t"l!nll lto SO 35!\ 35 35\.\+~MIKtGI pf\SO S !!Cl Ith .SO I Simply read mg Instruction have to have a security con-realize very substantial sav· !~' •,,ock !601'1 21_, = r:.-·~~ 'i Ber-G111 5 Sf 6.0I Mu us Gv 111.ts I » Avco ol! to 11 3'V. ™• u •i. + , f"rSh•m 1 26 ,","" 1ra 1ru -v. How John ,24 '' 11 1••• 11 ti Oii r .,. 11 11 , 'lttlr Fd u~1v•ll Mu OmG • '5 .S.05 AvtlY Pd 20 21 211 1ito :rt + >,io 11 f' Cl " 1•1• """ -v, Howmll .70 :106 15i'o ll'i 1"1 -\~ bookleb could ehminate the trol number and undergo all ings on all lhe property in-Oh-'","• ,,",',,','l ~-.-'T'•• •11-srk 1.u 6.ot lm O....ln t.J11o&tAvMltn °'°" l6l' 110 • +7"o 11 1 01.1a 21 u111 1.P~ u u -\"tN11bbrd 1,,,., "20t1 ~ toi\+1. • I ..... lt ltl, Bo•lon SI JOI 1,74MUI si.rt 1l.2•1j.2•Avnet "2..SO 12 441• 4!\oJ ~i·~ '-)'t lcl•Jt'!on .41 2n U!a 1110 12 "'il"'°Mllllll•v 120 4 1t•; ltlO lt•o-" need for half the appliance: kinds Of police Checks, heaJth SU ranee COSU. C~m 'v, '•"• ,•, ~Ti~ ':'} :;~ :~ eost Fdn t II lt 7t Mui Tnt l.N .M Avor-.~d I IC Jlll n•~ 15 7'>,0 + '.lo 0 lbold .~b s'I u\I, IOV, 411\ l Hu1h Htl 4 t I !~ ll:li l~' ••• II ki C,.. \', Mol Cl lo U\~ 131.li Bos tor! 7 57 t :r.t NEA Mui t.lt t.ll AZ!« 011 ·111 •1 l'I• 14 II -\0 Ol!tltfltO . .0 1 \\ 12" Ill\ + \'o Hul\IC!lm '12 13 16•>. Ii 16 -'l service ca s you arf ma • ng l~~"',o,101 •::~ i~~ ~"t:r~ ~1 ; l~t':k st,lJ1~ u..«1 ~:: ,1~" :!a ;,~ g:1ri1;:~m., i 1A u~t l°.i~ ~t + ~t 1::.11::, 1:: l: ?::-~~\'>-; :: todSay. !''11 Mft I 1~ M~rr LE5 n•! 2n~ c'o"o"o"'o 'o?~~ !1 ;J N~.,;~iir t U"io. Oo-f St -1->"' \ + , 0'011Dn Co ·" •' ISi\ lS\~ lS~t + 1~ 111 Ctlll 1 u 1~1 26\' 2111! 26''1 +11• . ECOND, •-fore you rom· Sl s d B rou Co ?9'"1 361/t Ncc Ind ii" o~ •v .... K lit lltii ,.,.. Ho • •lltY 30tl 37112rn.11r .. 1m~+mn1 ct,.Pl3'0 lt "''~ ut~ "''"':I:'" = t l ,~,,',',', •, ,•',~ ': .. ,,,,,, ''' ,,, .. Olv!d l ll 370 Rend •76 S20B•kr01t ts 169 11 1?''< 'j"+~•o1wutnd 36 '17 11 ,~, lMo+I ,,,,_,,.,, '' '''•,. ••• , ,, ~-Id ow ea y oos ,. ,. . " N~IW s t 15 10 13 Ol\lld J.n 4.01 8111 GE l 12 5{I 26'• u,u ti 1 ~. "' 0 VM'9 l..$4t 4t 13\o'a 23 --23• + \~ vn~ ....., plain to the retailer ~ ""' 10 g•n• LI» ,I,. ,,, N~TC1r JI •,, ' ,,•, NY V"I ll 11 lJ u Grwlh 110 •. ., B• G pflU so r1« st>.< !..... 5 ,,. -1 OrP'Hpt 2IO I I ~. Ill ~w 111121 rlO 2•• .. ,.,_., 2.V. + "" I t ' enty M 11• ··~ NCm,, CP " • 16''1 8••-.M Fd ~AO 1,23 Pl Slk '" '11 111 .... Pnl U• ~ Ila IV. .,, + ~ Oom•MI~ ao .,: 5:,. J7~· sl{~· ::-~~ Imo Cl Am 111 121i 11'111 u .. II\ you an "PP iance, or to Is g•11 Dn .l. ,,, NII Eoul I•'• II CG Fd '·'' In tncom 4,ll •. .,., , ..... ~ pf' l 11''1 ll''t 111\ + 1111 Ol:TIF ,,. ~· tt, I! ll' INA C"1 IA In ll11 ll 31Vt + 1. fad h kth I •llGe+'! 14l.i 7Sh NttG&D ,(ao1mr 1,otl7' S!ock 1227ffB..,~PP'll.2) 'll\413''.ll\6-~ 1 .... 44 14-11'vt 1'it 16~±' t;lncem1C1011 lt lO\~ t"o101t +~ manu urer. c ec ' e ec-I E d d D•l•l"P ? lo 1h N•t L•b n~ ti~; CtPll h'IY 2 tl 1'6 He! Grit! , ,, 191 Ilk Cll 1 1' ,•, ,. 2l'• nu -•• le Co .lt •IJ 15'6. lf'.i 15\~ •• 1nCCum ,7# I ... "19 '" .. "" I . I t ake surt it 1.5 p . t Divis Fd 4 •\\ N•ll ~HI ,7 2! t'.to'il Sftr J 6G I.II Neuw Ct! 4.'2 •.14 a. ol NY 7 U\'o ~.ii• ""~ + ..... rr Otlvtr • It ~· It + ~· ll'ldt• ... Hd .IO 11 n• .. '2 :r.tV. ...... nC pug 0 m n conomy re 1,c e O!!',,M',,' ",'~ 16.~;-~:: sJ~ 1 I~ Ctn! !.ftr 101411 It Neuw F<I 11.211'21 B•"k Tr ?II TO ~.... ;lo a1>,:, -lo OOvt•CD .7t 3 3''.li ]I JI'~+ V ll'IClo~PL 1.'0 (& 7<1• n·~ '3'1 -l\i I A.I • f tmly 0., "' S 11 2'~ Ch,,..nlnt ,.,,f>dS Nrw Wkl ll ... 12 $6 lltrll Dll l Sii I ...,,, JS J5'4 t l'o Oowehm 2·'° 1111 6'1~ ... ~ ''~ +1•f. !ndlll N•I fll I 111• lilt 11'1 + \.o puggcu1n l • Oek111 Ae m<JO•,o.~al sWW ,.: .~ Bii•" 1n 30 11.21New1on n.1014.l2B1•d Cl. 15 11 11 •O .ion 1 Or1voe. 1 . .ao •,, '1\'i.,, t'•l"••rl•nrl 7 J• ,_1,. 1n.o !II\:&+~; Also check dials, buttons. 0.1~1 tnl R ~~Nl' c;f 1 , 1,,,. corn St 141 ll2N1cl'!S!r1 '"'t'6B111c lnc 111 • n 10::, n .. Dr1sstnc11.ao HI 111'1:llll'o 111 ~ 1 ,~1,,1A11ei12.Js 1 l"'• llV. Ul'o+• .. 0e1111c~ S3 SI NJ"N!G 1~ils'l Grwlll 4,IJSDtNo•et•I l•14141'B•IUM!• 3111'• to,,. u.v,+1 ,Dr•ur11f2.20 ,,!W l~\~S>;tt.-~,1nr1nc1su2 ••2i:i.:.2~•2m +·~ •witches and safety valves to NEWTON. ~lass. (UPI) -''ant1c1patcd neither a (:On· g:; 1&~T a :~ Nlch•n" F lCI ]1 ~~~ t .S6 ~~gem":.."!' ~ n : ~ :::~· ~ ~1 I .~ lflo ~~l? !1~ i ·.~ 8~:1"1~ roBt ,J ~~~ 1li? ;:~ l'~z :::.:',::so "' •IT Iii l \<il + 14 make SUft they Weren'l a~ Th · • , · · do b Otv lun lJ'~" ~I'~: ll ~ Cl'!••• Gf llos· 11111 Fd U.'5136111111\ln 1111..Y lt Jai. 311Ai -ug::~Pw l<IO N JlU. 21'-'I ni.:. ~ rll'll SP\ Jl fl'h +1v. Cl.d-•-'Jy pushed 10 the wrong e nations bu 11 n es s tinu1ng v.'Tlturn in usmess ~ey c' ,"• ,•,~Ni '1....c .,., Jvo c11>11 6.ot 6.601 101 Fd 1.63 t .. o B•u..U.Lb m t16 ~~ ~1"" ''') 1.. nlrM 1..21 75 'P.9 •t• ~ "' 1~,11a1 Job 107 14~~ 16 16 _ ,~ elM.iU ol::n r '"' NC NG ,, 1111• Full<I I OJ I 8N' WmS 1J .. n" ll••lrLtb .10 '31 ...--11•. nir. ..., ..... 1." "" <127 lll\7 1't:t\ lO + 11,1 h•sl1c 1'fA1 2! I 21 20•• JO.I• -,.. dl·r-~•on. economists predict a steady, activity nor the start or a ne\V Ol~~r I~ ~;: ~:NE~~ 011 1~; ,,,; r~~d ~·:~ fli.ll c~~~ 1 ~·r. •; ~ R:r.t..;~· ,Jt 1: 3~ 3;:: 3i~ + ~ d~~I ~~o 1oi l~ji 1,1~~ n·;~ + -· 1 ... 1..ir Co• ':i. T7 £j .. '"'" i."14 ~" t f boo · Oo<.uttl 6" •w,NPAG•• 11:,11•, SPecl 1161 .i&QopAIM •2'10UBel!Fdl 1 111 l'l :imo 31''i "du~ 13Z 1 ..,.i; u ... +~~rni.rco1 ,11 "1 33\A 31\~ :n +1\t And check fuses to make but smal . orward movement ming expansion on1d'" L .,, , ... NW N•tG ,,.J. 11,y. Chemci u 11 11 25 orc sec ,,31 1017 eeckm•" ,so 191 21,0 l &i• 27,~ 1~ o.x.°C1 f" 6~ fr.; ~~ so,,. +. 1•tr1~1"c 1111 n ,~ 1TIO 11 + "' t l f th • · 0ow Jon ll ll'ft NW PuSv 6, J ' Colon111: P•ct F"d 711 7 79 8ect Dl(k .JO llt 3tlf 38 31lit + ~t OVllLI lpf ! 110 ti,_. l "v. + 1' !l!l-Y .. r.i 7'11 W ''o ?8? lU'.<, .i.7,,. sure they haven't blown. in ac IVI Y or e commg "Rather, they indicate only oovi. oe l''· 2111, ~'11 ~5~ 1,• e11u1v unav111 P•ul Rev 611 1,. seechAr ,Hb ~' 11l, 11 ll'AI +t~ Ovmo '"" z152 ll'l~ 1/~1 f? • +lv. 1n1 ct1 N11d• J'Y! 11·~ 101T 4111, +1\.\o Year with a modestly im D•!'f'f NL 1~. l Olnlo wr ,11~ ,~,., F11ncl '11 10 11 Pe11" 5• 1 n 1.11 1.ico Ptt so '°' 11~. 16•11 16'~ -~~ 0Vn1,i,m 200 .16l Ito ,1, '' .+ ~ ln!F••Fr sfll! 12 '"""' m, •~ +2~• These steps a1one. says · ·a modest but steady move-Dun~lno '"'1·~~0P,0 S4'•• 11,~20 Grw111 1 s 51'P1Mut •ot •.oa 11,1ofti!H 6011 115,,. 1su u>r.+•~ EF • ••n1 M~rv1 •0 114 131;,3 1.l'i+•1o provtdeconomyandaGross i¥rlrM 14l.IS•~0° in 11. 1,. ~ ''''·"Ph!ll 126Tll8J B~ll How6CI 1nJt :i.~\J~+'vt -·-intHnlo:'T 4,.. 4 1lt\1l 131•+1.\ AH.N\f president Guenther . I Prod (GNP ment forward," he said. nie,,,,,'".,n1 1~~·','•"'rnr;::"'~11 u,:11,• vent '·", .. !!Pn1r1ot1 112 •.t7atn rn1et'cO.. 31 I'• 11, "'• ,e1ottP!h .Ill I• n11 n1 .. "1\-''•1n1 1rd11st 1011 1~'111 11'• lN +lla I "-Nihona uct ) EISI Sii •'• '" Over NA ,., 31' Col Grll\ 11,00 I "" Pl"' S• 10 ll 10 n llemls Co ' JS 11 1' 11 + u ltct ~ ·" I ltll It l!';i + Ii Int , .... ,,n 10 ~? 1"• 27 21\'t + Vo Baumgart, cou d save you, tul:: hi , 42 .11. survey a'"--•eated very real ,_ .,, ''" ,,.,_ o,•,•,",' , 12,, u~ coms B<1 4 •1 4.1'9 P1on "'"' a.1~ 611 ae..olw 1 u lot 21 , ••• ,., + ~ "•11 "r Lin , ,, li.\11 1, ,. l"' 1n1 ~o-2ao """ 1~ 1nu + '• h 'IC reac ng ,1. tn ion. ac::· !.:IV... F~~· .. -12111 Ill) Cwllft AB 170 I.JO P+on Fnd 10 3111.XI Btndl• '" l l •JV. 0 .,,., + i-< ~·n GF nf " II"' 31 3l'll lo I"' ~ .... 3111> It 1~ l?to ll -t~ consumer,moretanwper-d" 1 th N 1. 1 c oncernoverhigher •',~,,,',vi 1,,~1~r.Pab$!Kr ,3,1 ,, cw1m c 10•!-4P11 ... 1nv •52 10.ioae11efK:plOO 57 41 •~•~v.-v.•11u1111 .io 5 ,~1, 171,, 1~···f'flc-1 oe ,11 .,,.,~...,""i +ir. f I cor ong 0 e a I o n a i,, 0 , , ,, !" corno A1 • •' t so Price Fuftcl• , '' ,, .. ... '' '' .. . •,11K0111k 1• 136 "'" 651, u ~• '"' ~·• , st "'1 3~1~ 3''~ ··~~ + l'• cent o app Janet service e101 s .. 11 •~ I.\\ a( u•11 " ,, comPrt 6 12 '11 Grwltl 11 3121 37 "'' P ... ....... " •llHIY• 'l! t lli: ,, , ,, , , , ,.. ,,, o•c p + Association of Business J t J · h fld rBt 6\Q7 Pac F1E :ic,J •• comp ftd 111 111 NE•• ,01 ,oa11tMfl11u10 111o.1i121t n:ia. F.~lhMf 30\\:JO,-V+n eor:• " ...., '"' ~ COStS Unemp Oymen • ! U £ g I S El tut l 310 Plk(O Co l 't ~t, CcmP FCI I •1 t 2l N Mer t>.t> '' 01 BtMI ~t2 SO llO 2t\\ 7' 2'\)• +v.1.<~ ft J XI I\ 2! 2t\'o +I'~ Int ~•!! 1 In 4 Jot~ 38V, :lltl\ . Econom'•ls (NABE) ; Nuc IV. t Pancot 110 l\i 1_,_ t o> •.ts 0,, ,.... O." ' ... Btlllllill :17' 1 a10 ,i~ , , . ,c trd, .70 II 1n< 211• ?N .+ •; Int t~T 1 M f.!$ 'JU "1\'t o0•• -" ''o If th St.-Y C)d 00 Cfue w • •apilaJ ao\d COnllnUlng l·n· O~ >>• o '"' Oo ''' 0 ~" •• vnu " " O > O • •>• ''" ,,._ Mn ros I I 23\11 21\a 13\'o ., , '"IT~T J>'r 4 T"JO 1 ~ 14S l" .i., ese r u I I ... ICICl'V I ,,, "' onco•cl 11\Jll.llPro Parff 160 771 ,e"!IUI ,~. • •.• • .-,,_ ... G&G .10 1.c? ., .... IS'• 1Sh.+·~ lntTlot •o • rlllllld 10 ,,, .• , I back to th in its annua survey releas· Fllr"" ,, 5"• PBrkw H • consot 111 t.1110 1s Prownr •10 441 erkh' ·~ 420 "' •• !M111Jc Ok 1ao ~ 111 ,., , tTAT ttl"' ion 1 l\li ... to the prob em. go e ed Sunday, the NABE said nation." Burrus added. ~I ~~r .r· J'' ~:~~~l'r p l}:! 1~~: e:::1 ti~ 'n :i ~~~':~ Fu::::· t.f3 l:i~u c1°t~ ~ J!: ,1~ ,m ± i. el~~~ 211il, ls t:! ,,, t""~ l~ITAT '""' ~ z I .~ \~~ \~"' !:t: dealer who sold you the ap-I d·scussing Ute N xon Et Moau1 • 111; Peer• Mf .,.., ~·• Ca•P Ld ll Ul•SI Eaun 617 7.11 1119 Thn!e 641 11 ~" 4Y.o '6l~ + •• F=IMM• "'' ,. 1u. ll!~ 2 ·~•"loT D1-.4 ' rv, 111~ '"" +1 most bu s i n e a a economists n 1 1 £m11s 011 u·~ u•' P~r•et t 'f.~ 1i~ cnni c.11 10 12 11 11:1 r.eort 1~ <7 13 11 s11ck ot u llM Jp, 01~ 50'.• +2\t e1a1nt1•\ Ind ;: 'f.J 1li1, 1: ~ +1 ~ ITT ''" 4 5tl 11 11•~ II' .. n•• . r''pondlng rated the Nixon Administration's policies. he !E:::•,•,•,', •,,,','.-,~: ~!!,~n 11, Ut''cr,.wo1v sn s11 Gr111 11t •nB111rJOt1" .u 11 IS'• 141-1 u·~+~~F1r,110NG 1 •i 1'~• 11 1,;, +'~ 1n•Tt.t ~rJ1 1 ln'h 11·1o 11 -·~ ·~ • ,• Crn WOii 6U ~ lncom 1'1 199 BUIS L•ll9 t t 1'~ It"• It~ +l'•Elr Ca 1.20 .ct 1i•a 7, 74,~ + >\ ln!TAT ll!IC• 11 /f'\ 1~ 11'~ .i.11• Ad "n stration'S 0 t a Ji d bo < f h nnlo II 4'1 4'• Ptn~ II&( 'i• I l deV!lh M H41 Sl 4J Fnv111t 615 613 Block HI. l.! ,41 '6'1 tJl1 U +J l':m••l!IJc I 10 5t'• sr, JYl •\ tnTTr''I !~! 3" !S 5•\'J SJ + ~. ml I V r note a Ut Jv percent 0 t C Enlwl" '" I ''• Ptosl IV• ,~,· r.J,, ~liwtrf G•OP\I V151, 1,11 ~.I• ll!ut Bell 1 JO H 4410 <&] '01~ +2 EmEI J>l 11 to JO 4p, •1•, •l l~ +i 1111 U<.! 1 IO 17 ,..,~ ,. l'f1~ + \;, econClfflJCS periormance ' rair fon (11tP. l'o 2" ~~otil . ' t' Oe<•I 10 lot II SI VoVtt • U i 69 Circusel F•~ 21 I Ho ID'• 10"~ \\ Em•IV,li,lr 'IO 11 Slit 51' SP .._ ' 1~l 11111 t. U l1'• lll'llo •I•~ _. '4 commercial bank tCQTIOffllSIS EQult Oil "" 12'-"0 rl ~~'' 11, Ol!lwr 11 '° ll SO Oevt•f. 12'10.n lll11Btl pf4 1S J UJ \• l?t IU'• ±SIA Emhtrl 1 ltl U 30'4 ,.,,' 31\: + ,: 'MUtll pll :!1 1 11'" ti 771? +1 to good.'' Erl• tee 7'• 1" :hn SuO t l 10,• Otlll I ~I fOI 1.1 ... 1re1 1310 Ull llobblt 11r1u 120 I•'~ UY, I•'~ '• F=m110111 l,1' J ?6 "'"' 2.~I· _ "• •r'ern~ 1 $ 7•V. ••·~ ~n\ rated th t admin1strat1on'1 F,•, 're:-0 ::G !l; ,.~:~~ 50,' ,11' O<t•tl n.u 1211 "'"'"'" s•• •.11 RotlM co • Jl 4 1111 111\ 11 + 10 El'!Q1ttM1 ... e IH 11~~ 21 11.,. + %1 1n~•11Ce ot ~ 1 1t1 .,. !11'1 Donald R Burri!, NABE F • ~ O•eY! Fd 10 S6 11 51 S11em F" 'n s 1' 11or1C1i .lib 57' J1 "'' st +llil F.1111 M llli.lS s 1311 121 121 i' 1n1 ''"'" "II 4111 12'• 12 'lto "d performancease,ellent D•t¥1Lv111111.u sd!u1tr lltt 14"11olMlt!MI u • t ' • -"'EN111tus .31 1112•' 11i,., n•• (\1m.,1•w114 '' 1i .. , 1&>• 1!:1t +"• vice pres1 ent, In a paper lo E•1on&Mow••d. 5CVdde• Fi.md•· Borden 1.20 sa1 ?JU 11·~ Ut\ . ~""'Gas 2.1t1 1 l1u !k'h lt.\I Hi 1ft•er!'IMr to · ,., 16'• '~"" ,,,. + b. dell.Ver~ today •-•ore the '"However , 00 one of ,4 salin '36 10 11 1n1 '"'" tJ u l~.!f! llo•oW•r 1 u 151 ,,,~ 1J~! ,, ~:.-Vi es1 tnc 1 20 s1 ,.,, II\.'< u i:. 1_.. llH 1 ,., .,. ,on.;. ?&!1 +21 .. ~ vc-1 ., Grw1h 1aa3 11&4 SKI :rt?Oltltl lormtn• to 21 Ill\ 111 ll~ + \~ Esq~lr• ,JO t 111' 14\t 14"' towtF'l 1.~ 1'I 111\ ln1 17'/o +1~ assoc'·a11·on's 1~• an nu 3 J from consultants. 1ncorn s 11 6 '~ 1111 n 51 "st 11~1 Ed11 2.2, .u 341,1, 3!1~ 34\tll .. Esst•lm 1.20 •411 21:lli ,. 21,AI +ii\ 1ow11nr. 1,,, • ,,,,~ 10•4 'll'~ . 'lll responses 1oec1 766 111 '""' 51 176t.7tllour~$ Inc 4112\fJ 1 l)l'l +\iE1ttr11,,..2ie 105 1• 121~ UIAJ .+l\<o1ow1P1t •AO 10 "'" 2'1'o "Vi .. tin. a·d the •t f Sl(l(k 11JO13 U Strurll\I l'11rld1: 11rr,nt1Atr 56 1171 1\11 7Vi 7t\ -\; !ltwl Co II U """ :IO'lll "" _ '4 i""°'tf'Sv I '.16 1 1"'" 1'\li 0 11, _ \1 mee g, s I ma1or1 )' o academic. government and Ebe•sr 111G 11 '° Ewni 2 14 s 1~ 11r or,s1 t.40& n ., •m 4' tn' ElllY 1111.«1 s is 3"'~ ~ ,.,,.., Mos• 3~ 11 1s n 1111o ... ,.,. those ..-..nruling to the survey b k f . Ettel II lJ 17 ~ lnve•I 719 716 Brh M• I.HI 21' SI'• S1 Sir. lt~ Euroflld .251 l 11 II 11 ..• ITI; 11110 60 f { u•. 71'~ '~;-.. •t ·-I"" non-an mance . economist~ Eml"tll !>c 5 ~ I·" unr1 'n •.eo 11r11 M~ pf' JI :Jt\~ 3' l 1-16; E.,.111,. .1e1:1 q :ni:o lt~ :tt~ + ·~ 111~ corn · sn 1"111 1110 !II .4101 Th. Fi-st \n indlcat-• such high praise." e11er1v 11.11 1 .11 seitt Am 1s1 •21 Br11 •11 ,.,. u1 t11 "'-ti + "E•Cttio 1.u ,. ,,,, II\\ 11,0 •. ltTsv 11uso ~ •• 91 ,, + 1-1 ,,.. t:\.I en111nt 5 3 Set Sof(S ll •lll~t Ir Pt! '"-'lt> I ' t f F1bltrge A 311 10 ,., ,.. " -J IC P. Tb h d Eoultv 11• 1'5 Se,.llG•h 741n.ie.,,..,H1i. to 11 3''~ JI J1i1:.:1 F1eror,i, 6Clb 0 :ia.., :ii' ·~-"' • -1p•S1 0 ec:cos 1,Ht'S OP OIL PAINTIN•S 'sai . EQUI P•a l,41 ,,,. ~am Fd t .n tll BdwyHal .,, s 37''. 3'•\ l1ti -'1 F•l•chC JO 11ll "'~ m• l. + h l•c~·~•H ,:JI '~ '. ro •nd G'1ft1 WHOlUALIWAllH'OUll Burris s:ud )'Ounger Euei u 2113 11 ~~e1rAa•~tilM,Ql 11rt.,,..,GI '° n 'li' 14..., 15 +~~l'•lrHlll 1St 5110''< ,;, 10 +••J•c-~ttofao "1:1\ •·~ ,.., EY,rll In llHU»S~ De1n 15011511BklvnUG 1n 10 ll \·2~· 1.l\.':. 'F1l•ll'IMI I 1$ 17'4 1~·· 11" t,.J.n!P. ... •a~ J 11'~ ,, .. 0.1. To THI .u.llc members \\'ere less 1ncl1ned to F-C Cao ~n•v••• ~Ide 'Jt 'c1 Brow" C• 1,s ,,• , " ,, "'' •· ,, F11111lf 10~ '' ,, t ,,.-''" '+ .. _ J•""~"d 06• 10s 1~1t 1e IOU' .. COAIT PLAIA F11rtd I.JO t Sl Sl•m• Fu/Mis· Bw,.Sh1r11 :io I -. '' , ~ • .. , '' , ., , " '' the d l t h.h F••m llu •ootS c1011 1•11.11 11w,.S1'oll50 1 2t i' 1 ·~i•i..+1,.--•mv 1611 11u• .. 111,12"+''<"'" n ... • <-...., $5 d g1\'e a mmis ra ion 1g , , 0 -,, ,, ,, , ,, , , ,, ,, • I .. -,, ,,, ,_. ,,. • ,,~ F1fttl~ tnc: " 11 l!'' 11 + ,, 1.11 .. 111to1 •o " 1•~ "'• Gft .. marks. "ero c:::fi" 18Jf 11 T°hi1; tt1 1'n ~~l';ft 1'1e ~I 7{;J 1tif ?fii +1J1 F1rw.s1 Fi,, 21 11\ 11 '"' _ \, ~,,..·~1" .50 1" 11·~ 11•, N ... ,... .. ., Ce. F Fund \JM U,11 5m!ll! 11 11l I 73 lllldd Ci .:iii Jt tl~ llo a..+ '\ F1rthMI ~ J"U Si " 5' •n~ JtrCPL ti 1 tH M\1 M\'i P··-·-· ····262 ,,,. l.IDtN•tll,IANTAANA ··Nearly 50 percent of 1he Fii Trncl 2011 1~14 SW$1 1 ... v untv1il 1110C1 F pft(I ' ,., ' a _,..FAS'"" HI 4.., 11'~ ,,, t>r. ... l. nv'1 -I'----··-PMONI..... \t Fln1d1r PrCll: Swlnv GI 1•,,.v1U IJCl~tll" '' 1! I~ 1 7•1 -1-~ Flddtrs «I UI JSllo '1'1 34•0 '-~, ,~========~~~~~~-~;~-~·~·~·~"~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~~~';,1 respondents under " rated the Dv~m 1 6S 4 oa ~· 1nv •t 12 11 .wr ull~ort 11.1 1' U\lo 3'l\• w.:. 11"' F111<Jr11 1 21 n 11•• n1~ "" +11.• vv lndutl l 41 j·" j11Ktr1 6IS ,,741111ov1W it1 111 21'0 lt~t 70\9 1\.11 FadMot I.JO 1t Ult 17" 11''< -lo administration as only fair or 1ntor11 si1 n tF•m G1 4 ~4 '·~ 1111\ 11.11T1G 311 10\i ~ 10•~ v. FellMM!f ·" 1m ss s1u ,,1, _ '\ v .... 1 J,t) '" Slllt St IOJJ 11.1$ unlllt llLSO 'I "~ ., 31 .,, FldFt ( Elec J \1 11 11 -Ii poor." ht.said. Ft!!' V• •ll 10.4151~edmen r.u"41· urllnd 1IO :Kl 41! tOI' ~'F "•cr,121 1 41\ 111\ J'o ~•O I k F1t1n DI• 6 •s 1.'l Am 11'111 •, 311 J.7t" llurlNor 1 11t 111 2t 11\t ll • \i. ""''"' d 1 1rt II\ II ll'i + \' In oo ing to 1971. !ht Ftt 1nG111 1.n 1"' Fiduc' ~· a.It B11•11(1y " M 11•~ n 1•, •l\\ F Pio 011 u 111e W'-~· ri·. -nomi"st• for-ast an · FSI N~• 6.At 1 0t s"'1" ll:11t fdi: 11urrt111 u •J.1 u1" 11••• 11•1• +1•, Fe11S0gns .ao '' '"' tv• "" +t """" .... In• Fii sr~r• vn•v•lf llBI • u n •~ -C-FedTl111 fll( le ,,o ••• 6•i • crease of S63 bllhon 1n lhr :::: ~: t~ ·· f:;\ 0• 1l-.5f 1f.~ f 11oo1 C• 10 •'•' ~,:,~ J••1 l•;• + 'I ~::0~.i1'(;61 ~& 3:~ :S1; Js~, ti I d t Fii G"" SCI S6S SUP !..Gt aO• ''' 11 "Fr"1"! ,~, t 1 -1 Ft tr"f C::11 .1' H llV. If 16 gross na ona Pro u c • Fnll Gt~ 11111;•11 s.i111nst ~ n t ~J 1111t1n Mn., 101 ", 'L", '~ -\l l'tbr•Ord 110 1c.;0 ,J~; 24,, , Def d t ' FOUfldrs 1,32 ,00 Svnir Gt 1.1.1. 1,u •m~AL 411 ti 26'~ •J , FOoO-OM ,. > •• ... !01\ ·•• cnsc ex pen 1 ure. on a F""fW '·°' , ,., t M AD ,~·•i 11. lrl'1P3• 1 1a 4t 21:y, 111~ '1.~ ~·, .. Flut'Oi 1,.o'"" " ~·i H"":i ls·~ +11! Tl\• tonow1n1 11 1 11:..,. i.. '""IMlt """ GNP b.sls .r •• '~·· to F•• 11n GrLJo· Teeehrl \'1' d" llrew .• d 1'-t 1~2 '' , .. Fn Ftcteri'"' 13 10,, , ,, ''' , 0 I''"'"''-"' O TC !l l 00 TK!lnc: J 40 l '~ ~n P•c J,2t 21 IS'I 63 '1~ .,-~ Flrtrlfle I fO' 47 U ~ 1,.. ' -"' 1111 11o(i; •r11rtitt ..-rtt. continue lo drift downward Grw111 . a7 Tt<ftt'IOI 1·11 t.oJ dl"it '"J" 1 6r 1 •111 "' •• • Ftt Chrl t-1" 1n, 4\11' 4:11: ::•• .:!. : s.111 t111.1•"' '" '"'°lfltl&I. U!ll i~ ttfl T9l!l11 r.t tJ,111 H.tfl Mllld''"f:1t I· l<'i .·~· tt' + u Fll'MfM I.It ~· f f'lo .., \fi " from 178 ' biJIJOO on· the s-nd Incant tJ rll Towr Mlt 'St 4.t• •II C e.k~1 7J !t .. + , •CO~ t •· ?:,__ -t,,", "-.Al• tlllft·W .iraa. .......,_., ,. .. '11 ....... l'rffdl'l't ..ll ,01 Tr•n <°•• 6,.q 7.16 trllf'\111 1.st >•' >"'•'•; 'Vt .Ult -\ H 6' 1<1'5 61'' I' .. ~ -quarter of this '-·tar to $74 Fii "","' 1." ., Trav £~ I" !·• •r1191, '° Ullo 1~ _ \41 ,Ff!.~~tr .!• ,,•, ,1,.,., ~, •• ~~ + ~ 1h11 ttock tti•/dtflf. ~iiMIW.11111 •i'lt- -1 F11nd Inc: Gro1 TuOOr Fd • .$1 I .'ii trt ca.Oh J .....-... "" '\ '" ~ •• dtl'\f. lf-Oecttrfl II' Hlol In 1t7' 111111 Worth 1 (.ompletr-New York Stock List OVER -THE COUNTER - Repair of Appliances _Costly ---...-...... ......... 1 ........... I dfll;, .... ._ ...... . ,... ........................ _ ... ,.. . -. Syuahob 1'1arket Want Ads I See by Tcxlay's ' .. • I I I ' ' ! ' • ' I r ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' t • • • • • • • • ,, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N • • • •• • • • • • • ' • ' • ' • • • • • • ' ' • ,, , . • " • • • • • ,, • • • • • • ,. • ' • ' ' ' •• •• • t ' .. ' ' ' • ' I • ' • • ' t • ' ' ' ' • ' • • ' • ' ' ' • Check out our gara,e snlc h~ms today and bl! pl~ascd 11 lht discount P~. 1971 and lo $72 billion in tht ,,_ l~ n oi u a• u"I' ""'' ,,$1 • !' ••o tft 1.1t1 113 1 1• jjll \' F11m1~ ·'° ' w t•, ,•,·,< '•! '•••bi. 111 1tec:k ~,1~1 lf1'. .. ,1_, .. Pilot e'l• ·~ tJnftl '·"' • ~ lrrltl'CO ·'° 1¢1 l•'• 1~ ~ IA> Fl"ltlelt I ll l&'• t~• • final quarter. George 1-:. Gerner has Fufllf ,.,,, I" I un c.11111 1 °' 111 ,.,. "'' u 1J..io n•. 31 -1~ F11 ... 1 JlfA,.,,. 1•1 1.1 111o 10 -+r, <•"' v11ut 111 •MIY~,.,.. or a'!llstr~· --11-... .. -- billion in lht first quar1er or Pronioted i~!~ f.:l ~·J' t~ ~ 1.\~ l~ lro~L' 11, 11'~ ~·. ~jju ~11 £'" ~l~!S:1 ·~1: 1ff ,1 1lt f;;t 1 : ±+~t rtect 1i•J•t11C1. t-P11t •1 •, ""· .... . • G•lewY .. u ... ne.11 •\11\d~ ••rG ... 2.10. I "' M•1 21~. " l'la E Cout n 11·. :n jf\\ 1 I •i. ... •••u. .... o.c111'H ... N 1f II .., Despite an 3n!IC!p31ed 19 been appo!.ll[cd i"ndU S• Gt11 Se< t'47 9,42 A«m ~:it 6ff rltrW .«ll "" 15'• j•'> !4to-" Fl1 Ci&I .511 24 1,_~ !•'~ n'"•~' it.,•,'''' ........ ,. .... o0- • • e Poracht-91~ II('\\' rne1all lc Fffn I beige Pirrlh llfl'~. leather 11ttr. 4.100. Can' ~ btal !hf.I prlrt!' • llnMlt Ktttn, l't'#ttlt'I'> .. $31 Nttth a IO\"lris: a.me and someont to care J ... ft. 1 • • I f;lbt"lltt ,·,. '-11 !l""Oll'I 1!115 13.•I 1$1f..Ck l.(b •11 1,.1i1 'J!t U(1 t U Fl• PWI ,1.. S6 4''1 .,,.. .. -""' -, .. percent ncrcase 1n pr1v:1 c , 1 , or-s-c : sci•~ !" '·" •t.,tr 1Jt n i-r. " I 1• t11•"0'!'1Lt 1•2 13.,. u ,.,.-•, l1tdl ~kltMI w ,..11 •· t-O.Cia,.... ho · f trio relol1ons mana•er "11t• , ~ 1s '.-v.... ,~ !·'1 cl coro u 1!0 4 • 4'' , " Ft• s11e1 • 1~. ~·1 ~' •\ using Stflt1 S, rom An rx· ,, e.1 '" J" t.70 UFd c~ °' n c co on u 1 1,"' \'" 1•·· ... "' Flllll"C• 1 :111 11 n• I '' + l1 or N11 tl'!lJi ~r. •n 1WM1101.ir.• bwe t-• t " Ill · Ill for th• A ialte cam. st 11u1! ~J V•lll!' L1111 \it· uo Corp .N 21 ~ il'' 1~• •f 'I-11ii3 •1 11 ' u ... Ir.. with 11rv1erM1 111 •r"""'· tt-Ntw to~. pee"' "tll m ion 1n e 1 1m a s· Gril\Fd "' '·U 11 V•• L1 ... ~. s 1 xi ~1•nt1tco , tt1 s1 to u l'I "vr1 .. , .111 m tt·1 I"' ~ + 1~ _,,1• IN' ~"' .i w'"'"" .,..,111H' .., fourtlt quarter to t,68 m1ll!on sembly plant of Phi"Jco-r .. ,~ 11'111 " 717 •' 1~om •JI 4.11 1::!1•" a!A•.jo 11 ji'• !~~ a1o t.lt FMC er. f " ?~1• 11\ ~· • •• ••rrtd 01 119 1c11c; ta~'" , 11$1 111.1dt,.. &~~: lt ... Jt~ vi?f~s5.!:.t t t{ i·n '~~~~ '° ·~ •1~ ~ "\14. 'fl~~11:1P .te1 ls•, il~ ,+·e,m .. 11,..,_o.,11f'M9'Nlf-"'-ltx. ..... inthefina.lquarterofl971.the Ford Corporation's H•f11Utt11i vinc1roi ~i• •.:as e11~11d '·*'· 1 2111t 21 21q, ~tt-c11 .M 10 !" ~ 1•t ···u l'-ct ""1ot!I-14,,. 111 ,_,,. -'·!• said 1·1 wasn"l '' "" t•1 •·r, v1nt11 , 1 •es .,, ' 1Lt ~4 11 21 ~ Hi.a , P'oot• Miii • I 1 • 1~. 1 ~ • • ._-...vuviul:I • G j) 1, VII'. INP !ti ~ m SDI II rJt ll'4 \.\ tl :f. \\. Ftol~'°.)t " ' 2.1111 ;,_I 1r11, ~111'1111 .. UWI Vt ill& WI 1114 ... fflolf ~.., to do m"~ ror the Atronutronic division. "~ J, s v1111.,. ! ..... 1 u o· f• • -"' ,..,d tA ... ff:! f T -,,_,_ ll\.:ll H •IWll 1 IO:J1 W1Hll In · 1 ' ,..l.t i M 2f't 20'• ..... E" (Ks IO u · ti t. '"".,. ,,.,,..,-.,.1 .. ll•IL _,..Ill tii& unemplo"""'nt rate. He replaces Richard F. Hft. t " 1 IJ s w~·~ M" 1 '. 1 Ml'v 16 111 i11t 1 l\ 1ll:i'1 ... Mc .n.tt_ -. ' ... , df·C•""'· a-!w1 • .,. Y-£a...r.,., ,, •••~ H~i, Cor 6 '3 !'oil Wt_!ll~R C'f_rG!tfi• tnl IW '° '6 tt!t 1' -~\ tU WM .M "' 1111 1ro:; 1119 + -' The ptrttntage of jobless i! \Varrcn \VhO has joined 1'1~ t.u 1 ~ E•11lr lf:~ it'• ..,.\~• .M 51 fr.' It t ti t-~ l'flt~ .i l i ,j ~ I~ -h ,.,"' •!Ml .. t.s Iii tull. Wb-b'!llt1t .. upected to auerj"e S.2 ...... ,. ~trll~'"n l~ 1·11 lr:~~ ~ll 1::l :~;oe1Y.M/:0 n 11~ ·r.· lf~; ~ ~=~h I.' J )l l!'~ J:"' .f.1tt bYti&fl. 111"-f• '""'· .-w-Wl1'1111! WI,. centinboththelastquartrrof 1r.""' ,,,,. .is .,,"•' ·u·~i1on ... ,rl'if'"' I" 111 t'·~~=tilr.',f 'fln'f~\ '~'zltr+'h'"•'r1111it .... w+-w11t11 1uuM. 111-Nnt this )'ear and the 'firsl j\tewporl Beach. Gerner :1: G~ ~.u ::ri:r .,. 1~~ w~.1 I • ' I .... 1~· II Joi ht I' 1• -ti 'ftft"'"' "'-"' ~tlllt'"lalC'rw lllClhlo '" 411 11M .' ,; hlftr Jrc U2 ~~ f. ~ -G 1 ll r Ph1\co-1"°'ord's S-la[f in HuMm" 11· 't4't1 lttftv n ' er ·'fl'lli lot Jll<I t1 'lo + h 'r•~ltr . .o ,. 1111 dr If\ t:~ ,.,._ --wr"' W••f111ts. ..,_Wft• q".~,, of 1111 d-lining to lives in Costa l\Jesa ~6 b; j• wn'"'' , . ''· ,_/ j. 1o; ''' '! ~,.~ -1~111i. e1 ~ll!f -. .... ru. l;lnftr 1111 '"'' • .,-,_. .,,.,, r,,, '7 ;:'~. 'f • I l·" 11••1tfN 11 ~ t '1 at • lAC e. 1Jt 1'1 »1• ~-.• w• + \o •tft!lt""'lt?--4("' --~ .., tOC." '·' pcrct"nt by lhc fourth \\11th his l\"lfc and three 1~,~ ~ wi111111111 j·ff .'1 ft1ttM ..... 1 '•" ,•,l ,1" il :1 '•'r(.i'~·· '"•• ",,•,·1 -I :•,-tS<""••l'll, .. '-'_,.,, "'"" 1111111e1 11 I " I "d h'Jd M"" ••• ,ii W!f " ' ,.~ ~~·.1· '"', ,, -' 1;u:1.r er. oltrT s sa1 C: t re:n. •NlGN 1. il w..rt!\ 31 ,,~ .. -u ,,., J.114 -111 tft'I k• .>t u 1 2 ~'-,..,' ,.,..,u.,.,,on ... ~-1-~~~~~~~~~"""========:..~ ~ .. -• • • • ' - ' l I ' • l • • • r--....--:---...,...---:-----=---------;c----------·--=--"--~~ -~--r ~ - -' C'MON 'KID'S! ANY DOG. CAN ENTER ••• ANY DOG. CAN WIN . . . FUN 'N PRIZES FOR EVERY BOY 'N GIRL • ' • IN PARKING-.A'REA4RONT Ofl B4NK OF AMERIC~ . ~ . . "' . ' .. '. .. ·' .. f ' ' . 'one-stop' shopping at its finest! OPEN THURSDAY AND MqNDAY .EVENINGS • '' . KEN • L • RATION '" CLASSES ••• e BEST COSTUMED DOG e BE$T TRICK DOG e SMALLEST DOG· e LARGEST DOG e BEST GR001"ED DOG • FIRST PLACE WINNER IN EACH CLASS ELIGIBLE TO COMPm FOR ••• ''BEST OF SHOW'' GIFTS FOR ALL WHO ENTER PRIZE.S TO WINNERS IN EACH CLASS IT'S FREE ' GET YOUR ENTRY BLANK NOW AT MARKEJ . 'A$KET· I ,._ . ----------------, ---:-=-oc------. • -. - • BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466 'rw.r. ltflltmMr u. 1t11 1 ,..,. 11 .Bast, ,West Meet Showin I -s Fashiona _ble East will meet \Ve st on Wednesday, Sept. 30, in Hotel Laguna , as members of the Riviera Clu b model the latest in western styles along with Far East fa· shions. Members of the Creative Living Section \vill dis· play dresses, go\vns, sweaters and exotic accessories from Rene's, Beach and Boulevard, DeauVillS Anne Chase Fashions in Leather, Lois Paul and l'ashion Gallery in the Hotel Laguna. Artist Mrs. Joyce Clark also will model one of her criginal Batik gowns from an upcoming Hawaiian show. Mrs. Harry Pisegna is chairman of the ·event aided b~,Mrp,, IVJlli'll!l~!l9J-ey, ~\oducer~ ~nd Mrs, Arthur • , \llr'8gsi-'t t.~~ ~Ufia.: · .~,· ,.__~ i.\.~ • · . r;t~aI ~~r ~ begin,,4't_ 11 :'30 "I! luncheon and ,' •·' fas& n•i;to!' ini' t 12 :30''.jt;,m, · ' ~~, f' , .. :l•·~Li' e~rv ~ '.ns : . Iini;)ie.tJtia~~i .be made with :,~, 1·,; ";•M~1, 'lic 1~ats . waro,Cf;,~~ tliat~~ Way, Laguna ·~. ,,., . •'(Be4eh,~ !drs.,, ae Bll#ltiliil:'i-11'.!~l;th Encino Road, ··, South Laguna. T1cK'ets lire $~ eitch . .. . , " ORIENTAL INFLUENCE .-Mrs. William Roley lends a· Far East·flair to Riviera:,Club'iashions. :Npdding approv8! are (le!l · :-to right) -the Mmes. ,furry Pisegna, Vasco Batscbwaro!f and Rickie Weir; The Creative Living Se.ction will present an East Meets West ·showing in. 1-lotel Lagun a 'vith designs from several < • _, • Lagµna Beach ~hops. .1.o • •• ~ .. • ''·· '? • Opetd Leagu& Opens Year Ncf w~le~d~r-Con ducts ' .. Harmonious ' Projects H8.rmonizing plans to raise funds for the Lyric Opera Association .of Orange County will be members of the Opera League who will begin another• year under new leadership Sunday, Sept. 27. Mrs. Stanley Eichstaedt, 'incoming president has selected Let's All Sing Together as her-th-eme. ' Iristallation will take place at 4 p.m. in the Monarch Bay home of CoL and .Mrs. William Hilby Bruggere. .. . MPs. Sidney Johnston, retiring president will enumerate the succeSs- _ful actiVities staged. this· past yejl:r. )'o date ·$3,000 has~ been conttibuted to the a~sociation, and next Sunday a check for $400 will be prese nted to H. Jean: Bedell, association preside_nt. Conducting installation ceremonies will be Harry Early, and serv- ing witli~Mrs. Eichstaedt will be the Mmes. Robert H. Crowell, vice presi·· dent; Jay 0. Pyle, ways and means chairman; Farrell Smith and Brug .. gere, volunteers chainnen; Robert V. Myers and E. R. Tamblyn, record- ing and corresponding secretaries, and Thomas Armstrong, treasurer. · Also on the board will be the Mmes. Frederick M. Oliver, publicity: William Wittman, membershipj Wales Wallace, soc ial chainnan, and Johnstoil, parliamentarian. Funding activities will begin with the second ' annual Bridge Mara· thon which will open Oct. 1. It is open to all player's, and rese!vations may· be IJl!lde with Mrs. Tamblyn at 673-7668, Mrs. Johnston, 499-3939 or Mrs. Eicbstaedt, 494-0223. Also on the October calendar is a membership tea. A rummage sale will be conducted in November;, a Christmas party is planned in · December; a home and gcirden tour dllring the -W.ffiter Festival will be sta.ged 1n February,; and a clam blite next summt:?r, Tiie lt!ague was founded in 1963 as an auxiliary to the Festival of Opera. Its pufP.Ose is to <Stimulate interest and promote opera in the county: ; .. "1 .. .. ' _, , ' . ' ,_ r • !·· Regular club meetings are conducted the second Wednesday of each month, September through June, at.:l~~-a .T,~-~he. Bal~· .• ql\'~:.~ .. :1~1t.; ··.-;~ ' -f.. .... Iii;'•• • • '~ . l; ~~ "''! ~-. • (• ; , .. ~1 .. ·, "11 -~i I •• Many. successful operas have been produced in Irvine Bowl. Last year the programs included ·'jSound .. of Music" and this .past summer the association co-produced w.ith jthe Laguna.Moulton-Theater, "Oliver" which ran for ·eigbt weeks. SINGING T0GETHE~ -Conducting .a p~w .Year of activities for the Opera League will be Mrs. Stanley Eichstaedt (ri ght). Fol- lowing the.theme, Let's All Sing Together which has been chosen by the new gresident, are board members (left to right),-Mrs. William Hilby Bruggere and" Mrs. Robert Crowell. Denti~t Exchanges I S.macks for Clean Bilr F- -ef Health DEAR ANN ,t:ANDERs: Am I o..i of line for objetling to a kiSsing relitionShiP lnt;peclion officers-and building codes. between my dentist husband and several of his female patients -ranging from 15 to 70? He kisses them hello and good·by in his oilice. He also k.isses them when A NN LANDERS My husband•lalked everywe 's ears orr tor a solid year, but I let him talk and i hoped our friends would understand. Now that we are living in this beautiful home l know it was worth it. I hope the women who have this experience abead of them will be smart enough to·g1ve their guys a pat on the back Instead ol a kick' in the pants, -PROUD WIFE they meet in public. I just stand there and look on and don't even know mos t of today.'' I can ea1ily undentand a woman these women. l am eager to hear your glvbig ber dend1t a smack -aid llave epinion. Bor reasons you can guess, I dote '° myself. must remain -ANONYMOUS DEAR NONY: No .. mu ..id worry l>EAR ANN LANDERS: I hope the about tbe kis1hlf her bu1baad doe• in woman who signed herself "Fed Up" will pubUc Obvloaaly yoa blve not lu!d_es:-read this. She .complained because her ttnltve dental work and de 11el bow I.be-husband was building their new borne. and .h.Y and gralttude one.feel1 wllen th* deD-talked of nothing else -morning, ooon Ust UD01oce11 "No c•vlties, and ;;your--and night. He carried blutprints in hi:r iums •n: perfect. Wt1U ja1t cleu tbtm pocket and bored their friends to death. \. i\.1y husband bLtilt our house and T was warned by women who had been through it that it would probably be the worst year o( my lite. lt was. These poor guys DEAR PROUD: Thanks for . wrldng. wtirk their heads off at a regular job. -And nnw-to all-you ials our tbert wlto Then they run to the new place, may be faced wilh the experience - sometimes skipping supper to get in a1' rcmOnlbtf: Pat ibe back • ..D:on'l kick lbe much work as possib~ before dark. They pant$, worry about whether ot not th e material they~ontered will rome In, and wHI It be--IOEAR ANN LAND'eRS :--Mark-'l'wain right. Then they have nightmares about one~ said, "The holy passion ot friend~ ship Is so sweet, steady, lo)'al and endur.. For 1 1iiable loan, tbe best answer 1t1 ing that it will last throu gh a whole life-"1'11 p wltb you to the bank and tielp you lime -ii not asked to lend money." . gtt a loaa.11 VOi could still get 1tack:, bat Sadly enough, 1 had to learn U1is lcssori your c:haAtt1 Mt \'1sdy better Ulan If the hard way. lJent sOme money tQ a you simply 'blad·o.ver your own money.· friend and ended up losing both the ne frieDd wff,1ebJ angry wtiea you want money and the friend. I prized this rela-· your moaeY ~ed wa1 DO friend ~ tionship hlgllly Bnd I an\ heartsick. begin .with. ·vou , Iott. ltthtng wbea )'fl How does one say "no" and still. · ·1ose Ute rrteld*tp of a CleldNet preserve a friendship?-CLOSED DOOR Give ' in or loee him .' •• When a guy DEAR booR: Frleftdllllp means com· gives you this tine, IOQL obl! For tips on , Inf lo Ute re1eue In dme ol crisis. T1te how to handle the super atx, .. ie.man, key word, however, la jadimenl. check Ann Landers. Read htt''tlooklet. · For small '1avort," 11y yts_...but there ~ ".Necking and Petting -What A:re the. sboufd be llmhs even here .. If· lbe friend Limits?" .Send your request to Anrl has repeatedly ra.11ec1 to repay previous Landers In care of the DAILY PlLOT:--•-- smtll tmoantt the aatwtt lltoald be, l!TIClosing 50-cents lr'fCofu afHl-atong, "'Sorry-10 more." stamped, self-addressed enveklpe. ... , ' • • • -• 14 bAllV PILOT •• Scores Fashion First -.;---, _ _,......J-oa-n-E-re .te·s ---AM;t~e__,f'=. Stir November Nuptials Planned WASHINGTON . (AP) ~°"" Kennedy , w~ o cruted a mlnl~r--in " Washington society by wear· '"• ff ~igtl-Uposing miniskirt · to1lie White House, has scored another fashion first by wear· Ing a see·through blouse and midiskirt. to an East Room i rtteption. The blonde wife or Sen. Edward ~1. Kennedy (0." Mass.), easily created the big~ gest stir Tuesday at the recep. • tion ?11 rs '.• Richard rit. Nixon held for !i.1rs. Ferdinand ?ltarros. wife of the president of the Philippines. ?ltrs. Kennedy's blouse ~·as a gossamer. transparent light blue lace. A slig~tly darker blue brassiere "'as very visi- ble through the lace. ---The-blouse was-very visible through the late. The blouse was tucked into a m id i Ieng th sil\•er-colored leather skirt with a slit up the front. She added a pair of tront~laccd black boots to a>mplele the ensemble. She told reporters. altnost mischit:vouslv. she had decid- ed she was ·""·rong 18 months ago when she "'ore a \•ery short miniskirt to President Nixon 's lirsl reception for Congress. Photographers at that time caught ~1rs. Nixon staring at the goodly expanse of Joan Kennedy's thigh (her mini y,·as one of the shortest then seen here). Cameras al Tuesday's event pre se r ved the glance down"'·ard by i\lrs. i\l:ircos as she and ~lrs. KeMedy shook hands \\'armly. i\trs. Nixon "·ore a turquoise · midi at the reception. HB Auxiliary Plans Lunch fl ~1r. ahd fl.irs. ~1ax Gudowskl or Seal Beach have a.nnou.n~ the engagement or t h e i r daughter~ Jud Ith Anne Gudows)ti to Stepllen James McAndrew, son or Mrs. Lowell Shuck of Costa Mesa. The couple is'" planning a Nov. 28 wedding in St. Anthony';; Catholic Church, Long Beach. Miss Gudowski is a graduate or St. Anthony's High School, Long Beach and attended California State Ccllege at Long Beach. Her fiance is a graduate· of Newport Harbor High School and atteOOed Orange Coast College. 1 Both of the betrothed are professionil musiCians. T-he- bride-to-be. wh~ appears as Judi Richards. is a vocalist and has sung in Phoenix and Las Vegas. lt1cAndrew is a vocalis t and a dummer and has appeared -with Jthe Long-- Beach Civic Light Opera. Presently both a r e en- tertaining in a Long Beach restaurant. Islands Glimpsed ll will be a Hawaiian night Monday. Sept. 28. f o r members of the ~1onday 1i1oming Club of Laguna Beach when they gather in the Laguna Federal community room at 8. Dr. and Mr~. Robert \V. Roper, hosts of the club's re- cenL trip to Hawaii , will show l'iilides of the tour and a surprise announcement con- Fashion Takes Flight NO\V Fashions \\'ith the accent on the unusual \\'ill be sho\vn during the annu- al C11pped \Vings membership luncheon !vlonday. Sepl. 28. in the Airporter lnn. Ne\vport Beach. Accoi:._d1ng to the chairma n. ~lrs. Thomas Saff~r of New- port Beach, startling table decora tions will carry out the NOW theme. Com- paring "then" and .. no\v" are (left to right) !\1rs. Saffer and Mrs. Wendell Smith, 'vho wears a gown of the late 40s. F ormer United Air Lines s teward- esses are invited. cerning a future cruise will be-------------------------------- made. Tour members. will wear Hawaiian fashions. a n d refreshments 1.rill be ser\'ed. ·Horo scope 1'1embers of the Huntington Beach Boy's Club Ladies Aux- iliary will gather for a lun- cheon meeting on ~londay. Sept. 2.8. in the Furnhill Con- dominium clubhouse. A board meeling will take place at IO a.m. and lu~h ""'ill be served at 11:30 a.m. Card playing will folio"'. DIFFERENCE A YEAR MAKES -Joan Kennedy is an example of th.e fash- ion industry's ups and downs. She .appea rs in a midi at a \Vh ite House lunch- eon last Tuesday and selected a mini for another function in !\lay, 1969 '''hich created a minitremor. Club members "'ill visit the llopers· vacat ion homr at Lake Arrowh~ad on \\'ed· ncsday. Sept. JO. enjoying: lunch and cruise around the lake's perimeter. Aries: Use .Golden Rule SA TU RDA Y change. Ride "1th the tide. CAPRICORN \Dec. 22-Jan. SE PTEMBER 26 VIRGO tAug. 23-Sepl. 22): 19): You can gc~ to bottom of • You could be slightly irritated mystery. Key is to overthrow By SYDNEY O:\lARR by delays. Somebody obv iously superficial values. Get going :.New Tall Look ,, Mme. Ky Tones Down Role in Public Life Drug Abuse D'iscussed ARIES (JI.larch 21-A pril 19 ): is giving you a run-around. 011 projectwithrea)substance. One in aulhority may be in Respond by sticking to facts _ 'Financial quest;@ns can be set- cmbarrassing financi al situa-and principles. Refuse ti) be lied to your salisfaction. lion. Understand this and shaken by double tal~. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. ., ·-• ,-. -.-. - ·1.:· =--+' l ' SA IGON tUPI ) -\\'hen ~·!me. Ngu yen Cao Ky, wife of the Sooth Vietnamese \'ice president. arrives in the United States next she will present a more reservl'd im· age than she did in lhe days "-hen she campaigned with her husband wearing a flight suit . The beauteous fl.1me. Ky - Dang Tuyet Mai -apparently has chosen the role of the traditional oriental w i f e . aiv.·ays in the backgroWld. Her pri\'ale life is very much her ()V.'11. \\'hereas lo.I~. Nguyen Van Thieu . the president's wife, and lo.llrf~. Tran Thien Khiem . "'ife of the prime minister. dh•ide attendance at offi cial functions and entertaining bet"'·ecn !hem. 1-lrm. Ky is rarely present. Her pub Ii c appearances usually are with her husband. She aceompanicd him on a state visit to Cambodia earlier this year, traveling by air and v.·earing a handsome bro1\'n silk bao dai. which Is the lightfitting long Vietnamese dress worns O\'er slacks, r..1me:. Ky smiled swee1 ly. was gracious to everyone. but 153id nothing quotable. dru practice Golden Rule . No lime LIBRA 1 Sept. 2J-OcL 22 1: 18 l: C o m p I c t e transaction A team of former g users to make demands. I · h I · t 1 d. · Emotions fl)' in numero'us \\' 11c en iances s ec u r 1 y . Older. Ky is 40 and the couple will present a pane iscussion TA URUS Apr1·1 ~. ma)' ~1·. o d · I s t J e h t. f 1•-•~ '" d1'rec11·ons. ''uur 1-11·ngs ca11 nc verse in rca e a during t e mee 1ng o ut: Add d 'b·1· · · "" -has had one .::hild. The vic;e Blessed Sacrament A 1 ta r e respons1 11ty is tn· be described as be ing in ~tale val~cs can be of ai~. Enlar.ge President was divorced from a · 1 8 Tu sd dicated. You may be called of confusion. Gi \·e vourse!f honzons. Be patient with Society a p.m. on e ay. upon to shlp v a I u ab I e · · 1 Le 1 F h F. r th S 1 29 time. Aoo. lies es""c1alh.· 1:1 ma te. par ner .. ga maneu-rcnc woman. J\'e o e ep · · materia l. including book s . t'~ b r Rober' Urmslon 'C h 0 0 t -1a11·0n to member or opposiic \'er oomerangs 1n your avor. children are ·by the fi rst mar-· Purchase or household items "' team coordinator for Orange sex. PlSCES (Feb. 19-Mai:ch 20 ): riage. County Teen Challen~. will be indicates some renovations ScoRPIO (Oct. 23-~o\' 21): Stress or i g i n a Ii t y , in- \\'hen Ky delivered his the speaker. are taking place. . dependence. Improve rela- GE,11,.1 l'lay 21 June ~1 . A re latn•e seeks legal .cou. nsel. 11.ons ... 1-1h a··-i·ai-. co-spcech. he gallanU}' ~ferred Teen Challenge is a non-: 1 " • "u · Do h " """"" ..... denominationa"I. n o n p r o ti I ~lake new starts in new di rec-w at you. can-\\"ll~1n t.he \\·orkers. f.Iinor dispute cao be to her .se\'eral dmes. She grin· tions. Accent inde~ndence. la11•. B~ patient. Obtain hint settled. Avoid malting major ~ l lhe di . . church related organization . . 1. y from. Libra mess.age. Support ·issue or in·inor de'-·il. New n .. -.. a au ence 1n recogn1-which emphasizes new direc· origllla 1ty. our sense or kl tion of the compliment. bul 11·ons ror youth lroubt·' by humor proves valuable ally. family. But reahze you also outlook is indicated = ha ve a life of your O\lm. · essentially she.loo ked self-con -drugs and delinquency. Change en\'ironment by dining I . 1· hl l bo ·' d · oul ,,;,1·1111· g fr1···'-or SAGll'TARIUS !XO\'. 12-IEAUTIFUL CLOTHES •• , sc1ous or s 1g Y ri:u urmg The public is invited to a\-· .., "''Uo') \ the · s•· ·d~ 1 k · h -1a11· .. ,, Dec. 21 1·. Calm approacn· -,, ,,,, •. ,, "'" e\'en1ng. '"" avo1 o;u oo • tend the meeting 1n t e ,... ~ · "" '" CANCER CJ 'I < I -i 'A'Orks "·onders. If vou make ay ;11s """° <1 n'1 t1t:1r ~ • ~ ing into the n e. ~· s and multipurpose room of the 1 · une --..u Y ~ ; -. 1 ,..;,._1..._me Y mt drH~. ~ tele\'ision cameras. Blessed Sacrament School. Lcam by teaching. fl tcans demands. others begin pro-Their Lou~our G•"" Iv 1 . t •a1·n 1'nd1'cated 1·1 ... 1·111·ng lo gram of resistance. Study i..oi TH.' SECON D TIMI AIOUND The couple maintain a home es mlllS er. " ., at Tan Son Nhut Air Base on share kno1s ledge. R e \' i e w message. Flatter individual I 4M E. 11111 s1., c.11• ~ ba · 1 Y 'A'ho is hungry for affection. , 0~ 11 19 5 -'42 .. "' the edge or Saigon. Ky fre-some sic essons. our ~'.'.'.''..':.'.'.'.'::'.".'.~'.'...'.'."..'.~"':.~~~~~~~~~~~~· quently receives visitors there Moose Group memory may need some jog- instead of his o(fices at ging. Guard valuables. Jndependence Palact!. four \\'omen of the f\.loose. 1158 LEO tJuly23·Aug. 2 2): miles away. assemgle the first and third There may be some room for Thursday of each month for doubt. Realize this and don't South Vietnam·s seeond lady meetings in ~1oose Home. insist on definite "yes'' or speaks English, French and Costa 1.tesa. The programs "no" ans\\·ers. Cycle is high: Vietnamese fluently. She also begin at 8 p.m. "' but conditions are subject to is an a cc 0 m P 1 i s h e d =fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiijjiiijjjiiiijiiiijjjiiiijiiiijjjiiji I riflewoman and shares Ky's ' love of flying and tennis. ' Both husband and \vife are accom plished pilots which caused some startl?d looks among the peasants "'hen they campaigned in 196i, arriving at a remote mountain \~illage at the controls of their own plane. They wore matching black flight suits w i t h lavender scarves at the neck. I PUBLIC NOTICE! LOCAL FURNITURE FACTORY PARKING LOT SALE MOST 1n111s ~OM Dl~PLAY STOCK CiO AT •.• I ( ! • .. .: l -: --J At a recent e\·eninst ban- quet in Siagon where Ky v.·as the main speaker, she ap- peared with her jet black hair parted in lhe center, offselting her high cheeekbones. v;ith long curls lacquered al the nape of her neck. She v.·ore a diamond choker al her neck arnl matching earrings. A f er VI et n a nl air Her desire to remain in the back~oond probably can ht!\ cort('!aled "'ilh Ky's ix>sition of second pla~ behind Thieu . llo\\·~ver. "'ith lhe 'presidential I ele<"tion only one year away - and' Kv a likelv cand idate - the 'isit to Paris and the1 Unit ed States is certain lo put them in the spotlight again. WHOLESALE TO THE PUBLIC ! lllNCi Tl.UCll: 0 1 TRAILEI ' SAVE! :-,-~,-...-,~.!£;~~! ~ n she became Ky's ... ~ (" serond wile r of si:t r The body suit plus tunic l~ rfect way to chiklren, she follo""'ed 1~ ;: achieve the tall. tall look of the. ne\v season. '\'hat-fashion of many vo:!althy k · oriental ""·omen "·ho desired 10 ever your height. The body suit js ribbed, s ·1nny look mort western and had but strftchable, l''ith the high . gjraffe-oeck zipped her eyes .. rounded " by a ~·ilh a 22-inch invjsible nylon zipper, preferably at relatively simple operation . · H"er offi<'lal bincrraphy lists the chin level. It can also be turned over into a her birth year al.iMt. but the turtleneck. Over this. wear a s plit-Lront plaid tunic -medical change in the shape of VFW Auxiliary Coastline Auxiliary to \'eterans of Foreign \\'ars.1 Post 3.>36 galhers lhc first and thi rd Frida ys at 8 p.m. Costa '-lesa·s Am erican Legion Hall is the mttting scene. so in\'isibly zipped that the plaid is uninterrupted. her C}U maket her appear BOlh or these are included in our Printed Pattern ii';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;91j 91.86 in NEW Misses Sizes 8to16. • h"ONTESSORI Send 75 cents for PRrNTED PATIERN 9188 OPEN HOUSE A!'f D LECTURE a nd so c ents (or our Ne'v FalJ.\Vintc.r Pattem~Cata· Monteuori Pr inciples in the Home & School P I De tm t SUNDAY, SEPT. 27, t970, ,2:00 . P.M. log to 1he DAILY PILOT. 8 tern par en' PRIMANTI INTERNATIONAL MONTESSORI P.O. Box s.;, Old Chelsea S!atlon, New York, N. \j. SCHOOLS IOOU. f 1\dd zs cents for each pattern for Air ~tail fi1 N. H.t.1101 ILVD. -ANAHllM CALI, e T•I••• (7141 S2J-ll<tJ and SpeclaUlandlina.) • , FACTORY AT 2013 PLACENTIA l """" 1 ftti l Vlctorie -Coshl Mnol Items on Sale Include - • SOFAS • LOVE SEA TS • CHAIRS • TABLES • BAR STOOLS • DIVIDERS • SHELF UNITS • WALL DECOR I OPEN TO THE PUBLIC ! FRl.·SAT. & SUNDAY This Week-On~y! I MAKE HER MISTY "Collection Color• is our namo for diamonds of oxcoptlonaUy lino color. It takes n very special diamond to earn the nnme. Ask to sec th em in rlngs, pins, pendants or other pioces. Or. Jet our designers uso •co11ection Co&or"' diamonds to create your ortginal. C~•l'ff llC~lt 1 .. ttW, A-lt•R l•IH'ft• ltlltlAMtrM:•t• •1111 ~tiff CU-.• IM, SLA..VICK'S 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -o~<-ll80 Optft Monday ond Fri~oy "ittil t :lO • I • . .. ' • / Wedding. In Offing Diane AndersOn, daughter of the Dwight P. Andersons of Lido Isle and granddaughter of ~Ir. and M_rs. Walter Knott, will become the bride of John Roni Wakula J r., son"'of Mr. and Mrs. John R~ Wakula of Costa Mesa . A wedding date has not yet been selected by the edga5ed pair, former· classmales at Orange Coast College. The br i d e .e lect was graduated from N e w p o r t Harbor lllgh School and also has attended Chapman Col- lege's World Campus Afloat. Her fianCe, is an alumnus of Costa Mesa-High School. Balboa, Fun Zone Featured A photographic documen· tation on the "int r in sic qualities that make Balboa the unusua l place that it is" was welcomed to the ~ewport Harbor Art Museum diiting an opening night reception. Frld.ly, Stpttmbc!r 25. 1~70 DAILY PILOT lltMrtt l"ftl!O Frames Feted Go lden wedding-celebrants-Jl.llr . and ·Mrs. Sam Frame were feted dl,\ring an open house hosted by their six d~ughters . The Frames, former Costa Mesa ns. both a re natives of Texas and were mar .. ried in Texas. Hosts were the l\1mes. Robert Pierce, Sid Car r, John Dunlap, Don Anderson, Jim Mar- quis and Judith Gatchell. ARTISTS AT WORK -Designing posters for the contest to be sponsored by the Ch ildren's Theater Guild as publicity for its up-. coming production, ".A.I i Ba ba and the Fort.y 1'hieves" a re Karen Inbernino of Costa Mesa and Mark Wayne of Newport Beach. The )Vinning poster \vill be r eproduced fo r distribution all over the county. Balboa and the Fun Zone is an exhibit by William Doherty. Edwin Sievers and Robert von Sternberg. Museum members a n d guests also danced to the music of the Soclty for the Preservation of Big Name Bands. Evening Rites Link Couple Marriage Children 's Theater Gu ild • ,,..-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ rites wa s the Rev. Anthony ~fcG01van . Poster . Contest Opens The hospitality committee with Mrs. Richard Braley as chai rman Includes the ~1mes. H. Jurgen Lore ntze11, Geral9 Madigan. David ~torphy and Har.vey Somers. The exhibit will run until Oct. 18. An earl y evening ceremony. i111 St. John the Baptist Catholic Church linked in mar· riage Patricia Ann Costello and ..Bruce Randall-Chadwick Jr. Parents of ·the newlyweds arc Mr. and ~1rs. John Lawler Cos tello of Costa Mesa and ~tr. and Mrs. Bruce Randall Chadwick of Parker Dam. A Gaucho, Qle! A gaucho sui t by David l I ayes for De Graff of Ca li- fornia features a r ed bolero jacket over a black crepe top and a side \Vrappcd skirt edged In braid. The new fa shio n portrays the took o( ~pain. It cart· be found at the f\-Iay Co., South Coast Plaza . Children in the third through eighth-grades have been in· \'ited to enter a poster contest sponsored by the Children's Theater Guild of Ne"rport Hart1or. The "'inning poster will be reproduced for use all O\'er the county in advertising lhc November musical produ ction of the guild . "Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves.'' The contest will begin Mon· day. Sept. 28. with contest rules to be ava ilable in all Huntington Beach, Costa ~1esa and NewµQrt Beach libraries. Judges will be Tony de Lap. professor of art at UC I and nationally kno"'n sculptor and Garden Grove Church Chosen for Ceremony Given in marriage by her rather, the bride was attended by Mrs. Sandra Ryle and Mjss Bonnie Ranabour as ma tron and maid or honor. Bridesmaids were the ~1isses Rose Bud Piazza, Debbie Kelley, Linda Petty and Arrn Rowland. The bridegroom, son of Mr. '<Ind ~1rs. George DuBose of Garden Grove. asked his brother, Dan-Du Bose to be ~ .. ~ best man . Guests were seated ,, ' by Paul \V illiam , B o b Jtttrirr .. ,.. .. Buckman, Tom ~1itchel . ~·l ark MRS ROBERT OuBOSE Kroeger, Ken McCray and Jeff ' f DuBose. A ternoon Rites Loir Ann Rodri quC'L. was flower girl and Mark DuBosc, brother of the bridegroom , WCIS ring bearer. The new Mrs. Dullose is a graduate 0£ Fountain Valley lligh School and her husband is an alumnus or Garden Grove High School. Lynn Wynkoop to Wed In Summer Ceremony St. Andrew 's Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach will be the setting for the rites linking in marriage Lynn \\lynkoop and Thomas O'Neil Clark. Their betrothal and Aug. 14 painter: George Willia1ns, arl inslructor at Santa Ana High School; Jack Glen n, art col· Jector of Corona del f\.1ar, and Tom Garver, director of the Nc\vport_ Harbor Art f\1u scum. Three fi rst prizes will be given of full tuition to a 13· v.·eek session of lll<' guild's creative drama workshop and tickels to the November pro· duction. Three second · prizrs will be given as well . All poslers submitted will be displayed at Orange Coast College Nov. 27·29, duri ng the produc tion of "Ali Baba," and 40,000 copies of the poster, signed by the artist. will be distributed to schools and libraries and placed in special displays. l<ickoff Signaled Meadow lark Country Club. lluntington Beach will be the se tting tomorrow evenin g for the annual kickoff da nce for ' the Huntington Beach Junior All American Football pro- gram. Dancing will begin al 9 and continue ~til I a.m. and a white elephant auction will be featured during the evening. Tickets, al $5 per couple, will be available at the door. The football league serves more ttran 500 boys in Huntington Beach from 8 to 14 years of age. Air Force Mothers Gather-ing Life and service in the Air Force will be illustrated dur· ing a membership tea for the Air Force Mothers, Gemini 4 • Squadron on Sunday, Sept. Tl. M. Sgt. James Chapman will show a film during the 2 to 4 p.m. tea· in the Peek Family Terrace Room. Westminster. Mrs. Ray R e m i llar d , squadron chairman. and hfrs. Leroy H a m·m ac k , co- chai rman, will be assisted by J.1rs. Arnell Hansen, national Solemnizing the double ring chairman. Mrs. B. R. CHADWICK Organized 18 years ago, the Double Ring Rit•s group promotes the educalion. "'el fare and social interests of parcnls or people serving in the Air Force. ' -.. Peering Escorted. to the altar by her father, the bride asked her sister, Miss Peggy Costello to be maid or hoiior. Other attendants were the Ptfisses Kathleen Co s t e 11 o , another sister, Sandy French and J\.1aria Gonzales. Michele Johnson was flowe r girl.· The benedict's brother, Dick Chadwick was best man. Scaling the guests w e r e Douglas Marsh and the bride's broth ers, Dennis and Mike Costello. A graduate of Estancia Hiili School, the bride is a junior-at the University or California. Santa Barbara. Her husband is a graduate of Parker High School, Pa rke r, Ariz. fj'e is a junior and a nuclear engineer- ing major at UCSB. Foll owing a tour o f Ca lifornia, they will reside in Goleta. Around · Screenings Scheduled VISITING Mrs. Ve d a vacation In Australia were Mr. Thon1pson or Newpart Beach and Mrs. Robert Marshall oC Mar.isiers Library will do is C. F. Grundy of Kansas Ci· Newport B e a c h • Mrs. double duty as a movie ty Mo. The visit co'mes af\er-Marsh;:all, for!11e: Newport I r ' , · mayor, was en10ymg a mlJCh.. theater the ast Tuesday o 58 years separallon. The reu· deserved rest. each month when films from re-==~-~~---'-. lh a d·o-vis' ual de a t enl nion was made more en· r:vr:11v ·1oov· SLIM GYM I e u 1 P r m joyabl e by trips to such • I arc shown. Southland sites as Disneyland , ~-~~ LOS[A1J111Eas s1zt Free to the public, the 8 , WEE,. ho . '\I r Sea World, i, San J u a n I 1 p.m. s wings wt eature Capistrano Mission and '''' .J films of an enlertaining nature 1 as well as travel and educa· Knoll 's Berry Farm . ' · HOME DEMOHSTl!ATIOJ\11 1 • • tO!l .,;,;. TELEPHONE WALT t1onal seletc1ons. ,,. 11.111 Gv w (714l 1Jt·S77S The fea tures for Tuesda y, ENJOYING a month·long ....,~~~~~~~~..,...., Sept 29, will be JaC<lUCS , •••••••••••••••••••• .,, Cousteau's "Coral Jungle" and • W a travelogue on Holland, "Ter· e A lhr""'1ay rummage sale ra FcDrl:isn.c"e Club .: 1Y2 -CARAT :. begins tomorrow in the Odd "' Fellows Hall, 11 u n I i n gt o n • Beach. Square Rigge rs S q u a r e e Rummage Offered Sponsored by the B'nai Dance Club "swings out'' • DIA . • B'rith Women. Orange Coast 1Coe~ersta~i71,"°081 3"M.~~~fs1t 8 lh~~~~ •• Mo N.D •• Chapter, the sale wlll extend 1 , through Mond ay. Sept. 28. e e P~eds will benefit pa· tients at Fairview S t at e Beach Bab es • • Hospital, Vetera ns' Hospital, • e Long Beach. Operation Stork Every Wednesda y at 7 p.m. • LIMITED • and other charities. members of TOPS Beach e e ~1rs. Da,tld Forman is Babes convene in Huntington e QUANTITY. • Provi sional Members In Places of Honor • ~i~~ale h~e been an- nouncci:I by J\.1rs. Alfred J . Verine of Newport Beach and Norm an ~· Wynkoop o ( Bloomfield Hills. Mich., par. cnts or the bride-elect. l\1iss \Vynkoop !!ii a graduate of Seaholm High School in ~Uchigan and San Diego St.ate -.A• available for f u r t he r in-Beach High School for pro-• • i.-\o=rmat=io~=~ %=~;=Y=N=E;;;g;=;W=S=T=ON=;i;;;;J ! $ 2 5 0 ; Announces the Opening of her new e e Provisional me1nbcrs of l{arbor Key of lhc Child Gu.i dance Center, u r a n g e County will be honored during a luncheon Tuesday. Sepl . 29. Jn the Newport Bench hon1C of l\1n. \\o'illlam H. \\leaver. The new members "'ill mC<'I first ,v;th lit rs. John P. \\'right. pmidcnt, <ind fl.lrs .J O'Hara Smith, provL<1ional ad. \'isor, in the TI1rlrL Sllop lo learn ilS optrallon~l pro- cedures 11nd the n1ms llarbor Kc)'. • The i,:rouµ \\'ill lour the Ct'ntcr and he11 r an address biY Dr. IA'-On:trd I. Lfsscr, clinfc direcior. lhcn adjourn for lunch. Supported in part by pro- 1.~ds rrom lhe thrifl shop, the guidance cenler treats youths from preschool age to 16 for cmution:il probttmS. SJtc.lliLc cllnk~ were eslnblisht.>d thl~ c~r !11 the San Clemente. Orange._ 1Uld. Garden Gro\'c- i\nahc.lm areas. College. She attended Stephens . LYNN WYNKOOP Summer Bride College. traveled around the _ _ __ world on the World Campus 1••••••••ililliilil'I Afloat of Chapman College SEA and wili coniplele her f':lemCn·I tary education credential next SCHWINN June. ~11ss Wynkoop is presi- dent of Little Sislers of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. 420 I . 17" St., c .... M ... WE HAVE ALL MODELS NOW! SCHOOL OF MUSIC : sJ9s.oo : . Openings Now for Beginners or Advanced Students ORGAN VIOLIN • PIANO • ACCORDIAN Private Lessons Only _For Personal Consultation Call 646-6701 e VALUE e • • • kirk Ch1r1• ~ Mastlf' Ch•r .. -l1nkAfMf'lclf4 • : ..... , ... , j(. k ........... ; .. : •• IH<Cltl:Tll.I.~ ~ I y ... =· ...... . MIMl""'911 htclt I j CIMf9 ,.._ e .,,,...,, . A_c. -e • ~ w~ • . ·- Her finance, son or ~tr, afld Mrs. Charles O'Ncll Clark or Pasadena, is an alumnus or Pasadena High School and wl\11 graduate from SDSC I n .Januaq~ He ia--affllialed withl SAE. .. _____ _ • o,.. M-.. """·• M . II 'II t ,.._ • 11...~~~~--~~~~~--''······················ lJ " • • I ~Gretel I~ Sllek~ Aussies Pull It Out oaOIN.A.MC• MO. JWt T .. tf.11 (11.Tll'ICATI H lllllNIU. Alf OllOlllAMCI CN' TMI Clti' COi.Hi!· HOTICI 01' INTINTIOM TO HOTl(I 011 T•UIT•l.'I SAL• lllCT1'1eUI IUMI T ...... C9'. Diii TNI CITY -COJTA MIM. IJllCUTI. ••<UllTY•AOlll.MINT t.o. "'' n UJ.11 """ ~ .......... mrlltY ..... amlo IUl'l.•IOll: COUIT Oii Tiii CAUNl:eitAr ..... NOi ... llCTtOM Cleo. '1"-'"·' u:C.C;J On Oc:"'*'-r ll. ltl'I. •I ll;CIO A.fol.. TI· Mtlnt • .....,_ " ... H, ,.._.., ITATI ... CALll'Otl•IA HMl ......... ""' MUfOCll'il.L COOi Motkt II II«..., .... ..,. Ill "" (,Miion TLI! tNIUltANCI! A.HO TRUST tOM--IMI .. NfWlllOl'i fMctl, Cl ........ lll'ldllt TMI COUMTT 011 Ol.AIMI: ilMJY ... ,... INIO LIMIT OM ol lr;fNNllTH 0, OUHN, Oebtot, wflol.t PANY, II lll.llY ._.n!N TPVllft llfldtf +hi l\cfll'-11'1'!1 -ti CALll'OINIA .... ._.,,11 _.. ....... ·--l'ltOM • Ml'lt Mllwt4 ...,ett k Mn s... HIWorlt Cir• '"" P<ll"lllllnl Ill DHd °' tnnl ... ,.,, Mno C:Ottel!J•T .. Of.SIGlll ~ ""'' Miii llrtfl MOT.C:• OP MLU:H .. ., ...,.ITIOlil -• • ••-• cit. IUIM P1r'k. C-1~ et OrMft, Sltlt ,,, 1Ht E~""ltd ·~~ JERRY 0, 11 ~ ol Thi lowltlf _.., ~ l'IOIAT• 01' WILL AlllD PW TO • MN. of Ci !llotnll 11'111 1 MCUtll'I' lllltrtlf 11 TIMOTH'I trld ANN W. TIMOTHY, hllt· ..._ -In fllU 1..i I tct tf rttlWKe LITTllll:S TllTAMIMTAlll: 1'HI e!TT COIJMCIL 01" THE CITY 1bol,o1 lo 11t' tr.,.IM to llt!GITTE IN• Nnc:I •fld w/19, 1nd -dMI JUllt U, la 11 Pllllllwl: E 1t1I1 1 f S IO H I y I Oft cotTA MllA DOIEi Hllll:llY 01· GIHO MILLA, Ille Meurld l'tffY, wl!Mt Ifft, 11 1n1tr, No, t)tJ, Ill book ..... lltt Crtlg Otlll, 1i ltnl\Ort, No. J, Lont CAITflt, 1k1, SIOHIEY fltHtSf DAIN Al •OL.LOWS! butlllttt ldclrMI 11 1S)f W, Mc:'•d6tft, MJ, ol Oflf(ltl ltKGf'd1 lfl llM offl« o4 l .. i;Ji U.ltTl!lt, 0.C..Md. SECTION 1. IKllon )ll,.O of t!lt S."11 A11t, CMT'I' .. Ort"91, S!t!t gt lllf COUlllY Rtt0r0tr ol 0!"11111 COUlllY, Ot!Od 9-f, ,,, 1'71 NOTICI! IS HERl"IV GIVIN Tlltl ltt\vft(dNf COde .. llt,..Y llMlllled •r .... Clllforill .. '" .,...."' h:allfll:I .. ,,)t w. Celllofflll, WIL L-fl!LL AT ll'UILIC AUC. Cr•le ~ . DOltOTH'I llll[l!Vl!l CAlllTI• "" ... ... l!ltfl ti ll'lt ft.llowl"" "'"' ...... ' Mel'"*""-llrolt Afll, COUlll'I' o1 Or1Mt, 'TION TO HIGHEST llDOE!R FOR CASH ll1t. of C.ll+ortt.11, Ori ... Gollrlt\I; M1r11rt 11 Detllloli tor ~-ti W1H efld Ol!L MAR AVENUI! ''°"' H-1 ''"' OI C.ll!Of'11ll. !ll'artbl• •• time ol Ille 111 ltwf\11 -On ""'· "· lf10. '""°" IM, • Htltl"Y IOI' 11-11(· or L~ T .... """''"' lit hlllt'lllhl " S1"!1 A!ll A....wt • .. , '° $lllf ,,_.,, 11 dtK'*td In "'9fftl of tll9 Unl!H Sl•ltd 11 tllt Norltl ''°"' ll'llllllc Ill Mii for "kl St1N, ~llY fM Hiii'-,..ftrtld to wf!ICll It -0. Mll'H"' N ' Al lllrtur" 1nc:I -.111'1'11"1 fl 1i..1 ..,1,1111C* to 11'11 Or-t CMllllY Caivr1'1>Du" _I,.., (rtll OIM Jll'IOWn to IM lo bt lol' turllltl' 'NrtlcWlll • lld ..., ,,_ Sl(TION 2. Tlllt OrdlMllC• tM11 1.U ~.,., bl#tillul k<low'll 11 llt!GITTE'S ~HO ti '°' Civic: c ... 1., Ori ... W"I Hit Ht-wlllM lllfN It 1111Mcrlbed .. lllfll tlld I«: ol IHlll "i 111'11 Ill ..,_.MCI lie 111 fUll ~ lfllf'fY l•l Wn FAMOUS DONUT IAKE"RY. IH lllUled ffll(metl'I' Wtjl 1111 Strfff), &anll A111, Tiit .. 1tti111 lnllf_..., 1111111 ~ Mtfl It.!~~,',:!. .~ ' tr1lm IM 1lfttr lh -· tnd IH'lor l'O s. A c t C1llfor11l1, 111 rleht. IJlle •nd lnl«tfl con. i. •~tcllllfll:I 11'141 11me. ' .... ._ • .,., •I .31 1.m .. '9le Pfll,.t)Ofl o1 """"' IUl .i.n Ir°"' 11 ,,,. W, Mc:l'lddlfl, ftlt 111' OUll' \l'tYtd fO 11\d now htllf IN II 1111d1r wkl IOFFICIAL SEALI lfl IM (IDlll'frwm II 0..rt-t ,.._ 'II 8 "uoN L()C• 'BEY tl1t iNIMff 1twW 111111 lllt Mlltllecl ti Ol'1nM, $llft ol C1llfol"lt. OHd al Trwit In. t~ ll'«lHfl'I allueted 111 REIA H. CAHETTI wk:I court, 11100 C!Vk: C.• Oo'I .... w.-, 1 aun AA encl tn ll!t. 011.AftGE COAST DAIL y Art ·~~~":! ~~rlr. •11·~·t;'llt., "" Mid Cl!Utll'f •nd $1•1• clltcrl~ ••i Nol•rY Pvbllc, C1lllorn!1 In ... Cltv ol S.nl• Ant. C.lltornte. Per!ect-1-·-· "u"11"'1 F"'"•r •n "'LOT, • nt'#SHM• Gf nntr1I <ll'(Ult• '!~'!'.• w t ~..... II tit' (Al "" undivided 1/11111 te111110ld I~ Prlnc!NI OU!(t In 01tM $eplrmbtr ,., 1970. u1u.oi. ..... ., tloft. 11'•1"'-d ,,. Pul:lll .... 111 ""Cfl'I' el ........ 11111 ~r " Oii or • ':" tere1t In •nd lo: Ol'lflM Cou"" W, E. Sf JOHN, County (llrll. th ·-·-1 ' Cup •·f ·--C~I• Mel.a, twtllltr Wllll tt1t NJMJ CPI 5111 lhr of Octolle,, 1t70, et t:CIO Oclock Tiit! oorflon of Lei L of T,Kt tit, ln M., Cetnmlll!Oll Ell,lrta HUll.Ll:Y, 'HAW a TOMICN e nu.ria C. & ..,.. tf\\R:.I tttt !Tltmller"I o1 1111 Cll'I' Covncll YO!l,. A.M. ti Sovlht'1' '-111, UT Nell. B.... 1111 City 11 ~~rt IHdl, Cou111'f of SHf, 14. lt7' !141 Hullll"'* Ol'IM Jntrepid made mistaie .... Incl"''"" rllt ....... 11U1 Bffcll 11'1'11.,i H""lllltlDll Buell, Ort119t, Sl•le CPI Ctlllornll," pet""' t'ubHillld .or-<ot•I Diiiy ll'Llot ..... Mlrllll. C•llfW• '"· a PMSl!O ANO ... ~TEO 11111 flit "" C-1'1 ol Ortf!M. Slit. of C•l1""11!•. fKorclld In boot 1t -" lfl•Cll.llltl ,.. Ws>ltmblt II, u .,.,. Odoller f, ,, Ttl• lfnl Hl·17'1 Thunday. 9f """""°"' 1t1'0. So l•t •• Ir-i. Tiit Securlfll:I "•'IY• lnckOlliv., of Mltcelleneous Mtl>t. ltl'll 1n1.19 """"°'" fir• "9111...., It b'• ltOIElltT M. WILSON •II bull .... "'""' • .,.. 8ddr"-UMd"' r.<Ol'dl of Ol"lntte Counly, CIUIOrllll, Publl"*I Or•-CCll1t Ollly l'llol, was a '6 one. M1ror """ CllY lilt OtblOf' '°'""" "''" _,. i.11 "1'· If 1~rn. t111nl'I' et• line wl'lldl btlll111 11 LEGAL NOO'JCE ,_~, 11, ''· n. ltl'll 1m.11 Jt allO\Ved Jim Hardy, ski~ ol COii• Mew d!lltrenl frDrll ll'lt •tlovl •r•: IM mldPO!nt on 1111 JOU!tltrl't' n111 CPll ------=='-'--'-'----1·------------- ATTEST· NONI!. -11ld Lot .L ..tllch It locltld WHlt:rly 11'.alll per or the Aust r a Ii an EILEEN.,., PHINNEY 011rd kPltmlw• fl. lf?O, u.1o11 '"' 111r-11 , ,,.,,,.1 •nelt o1 c•11T1•1CATE o• su11t1111 LEGAL NonCE challenger Gretel • II t 0 City Clerk ot Hit Cll'I' lrlglllt l11tr!d M•Ut 2''5'41~ from !lie llOU!hNtterlY" corner PICTITIOUI filAMI et Cot•• MIM Secund PlrlY of Mid Lot Li lfie!l(t ntfl!l91'lr Oii I T1!1 undtt1!1flfd doel c1rtlty tit b SUll'•llOI eOUIT OP TMI overcome a one-minute, 22-se. STATE OF CALIFORNIA Publl11!td Oruiot Coillf _Ofllf l"l.IO'. "r•kll\1 lint lo !ht midpol11t ,, lhl Ir( eondlll:ll111. 111n1 ..... ,, .us W, lftll $1., JTATI 011' CALt•OlfOA •01 _ .. deficit at the··11fth· mark COU NTY OF ORANGE n ~'· ?S. 1t1' 1m .70 "' ltlt cu,ve Oii "'' Stitt HlehW•~ Colli lt\eM, C•1lfl)r11l1, UNUr !tit THI COUNTY OP ORAlllOI .. VIN CITY 01' COSTA MESA 1 Ottc,!brd I" ll'.lt oet<I r«Drdrd Jut¥ I, flc:tlrlous firm -of Ci~ t!ld ' .... A"'nft to COn'i"e from behind and Win 1 ELLEEM , PMtHNEY c ii,. c 1tr11 o1 LEGAL NOTICE 1m 111 book ?M', P'91 16.J, Offlcl•t Kin .. •!Id tl'lll Mid flm1 11 mm-'d et NOTICI °" MIA•••O OP ,.ITITIOM the fourth race _, , he • ~· ClfY cl c0111 --'•nd t•<Oft/(kl llJKOl'ds: u Cllll(~ lo tht lOIJltl-1'1 "-folkrlllng "''°"' whose llllftl 111 Ml •o• ll'IOIATI Ofr: WILL ANO 11'01 . Ul L CIM'll of Ille Cltr Council ol lilt CllY al ~l'ld ... Yll'lt. rldlu• of 1150.CIO '"'Ind. •nit ~-ol 'tsldftM:• l• II lotlowl: Ll"TTllS 0. ADMINISTRATION ,\merica's Cup by that same C11tll Mell. f\ef'ttlf «rt!lf tl<itl 11\t lbow (llTll'tCAT• OP DISCOttTINUANCI: ltn9!11 of 194,if Itel, Elle11 l1M, toi W, 11111 St., C•ll WITM TMI WILL AlllNIXIO •<Id lor-.Oll'ltl Ord1ntnc1 No. 10-:Jt w11 OI' USI AHO/Olt AIAlllOONMllllT TOGETHER WITH Ind tutolecl to ltlt Mtw, Ctlll. E1t1lt of MAltl( &. GOt.OAINI!, margin. Mft!Olflered lfCllM b'f'" IKllOl'I ,, • rnul•r 01" l'IC1'1TIOUS HAMI belltflls, bu,cleM, rklhlt of WI., •lld O•M s.tllft.mbtr '· 1t10 Oectli.td. . Ficker-ts m.istake was ,,,· not "'"'!1'111 or fhe 11fd Ctl'I' Counct! "-kf Oii THE UNOEll:SIGNEO 00.I l\tftbo, 11aements lmP05rd '""" wtd , .. t 11r• Mt1. l!lltn 11111 NOTICE IS HEii.Eii'( GIVEN Tri.it fl!~ 1111 dt of-k!llf!lftbef', 19H.-•"" CtffitVlhit tlfl!dl"' $tpl~mw 1•-1m !'fi.!.L.tn!l_!rruir.9.tt001.rils ~lhtUDll..fllr...IU. St11Lof.C.llfot!ilt.-• -.ll08EllT It, HURWIU:Jl~!lltd M.'tlto 1. keeping hia_opDl'lru':nLcov:er;ed_ 1111,.tlltr Ptt$1<1 •rid 1daoltd •• • wl!l)l1 1111 crtted •10 "° bvlll'ltH under 1~ fie-mu!u11 bet>t:flt DI lh1 OW11er1, Lente~ or Ortnt1 Cou~tt: ii!Ulon for problte ol .. m-Tnci for the 'C'."C- •I I retUltr mHlll'lll or Mid CllY COll'ICll llllov• firm ftlmt ot SHINING EXAMPLE Ptrlltl AulgMn II~ tht Dtcllfllloft or On '""· J/ 191', bolo,. mt •• No!try l11111nc1 al Ltlltrl ,, Admln!1lrtll011 Wiii! on wtndwitd lea:s of lhe lltltl on f11t '111 d1V of S.Oltmllu, 1t10, YACMT SERVICE INC MARINI! &. Coven~nb, COl!Clltlon1 11\d Rttl11cilOlll ll'ubllc Ill •rid for tlld Sllf•, PlllWN1i't !ht will Anne•td le lllt Plllltlolltt, mile course -..... ..ilcuJarly the ~ ""' lotlowlnt !"Oii ull vote· ' • • •Ko,lled on lilt 2'th dtr ol Jul\<, 1961 kl IO_..., 1!11111 hit lu>o\oln to mt to bt rehlrtn.:1 to ..tlldl 11 madt for tu111'11r J"U .. AYES: COl.lllC!t""" ll'lM!iY, SI, Cl1lr, ~:iTERV JHOll'P1E :' '1:;'4 ttil~°'j'' llDllk '614 IN9tl Mii to .ult lnclu1fve of Of· 11'141 lltl'IOll w11oM lllmt 11 1ul>lcr\bed to Hrtkulerl. -.>ti th1I ltlt tlmt ..... ~llC1 last one When the dying wind Wlhon. JC"'•" Hlmmtn 9 wtr. 0 ~~· • NC.: • n 1· lltl1J ltt(Otdl ot Ort119t! Cou11tr, wlllch !tit wlll!IR 11111""""'1 allCI 1dl:now*'tld fJf 11Nrl11t1 the Mll'll 1111 bffn ut for n~.,;i '·-"' NOES· cwnCi~ ~ wflfdl llu•.""' ••• rmt'·~ «m1101fd CPI rlgllh o1 "''"· ~""· condLlloni .,w1 1tll ••tc11tlfll:I the Nmt. ' Oc~r t, 1910, 11 t ;:IO 1.m •• In 1t1t Oii nuuue ISuuiu S 0 Un d All&H!i: Counctlmtl'I NOM lht loHow1t1• iNfllOfl, Wl'IOSr lllmt 1" lull ,tslrktlDlll ,,. 1ncorOOl'tifd ~n tnd iOFFICIAL ll!ALJ courtroom flf Ot111rtmt11t No. , of Niii became shifty After Ficker's-Goof LEGAL NOTJCI: LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOl1CE JE(lAL N011CE r IN WITNESS WHEltiOF I htVI •"!" Pl•ee ol fflldtll<t II " folll!WI, 1• "' rtfet....CI mtcll • ••11 htteof. •rid Mlt't' I(, HtflrY court, ti 10I Cl11lc Cl!Mr o'"'' Wal, Ill • --1\•ie""te.vt n!Y.)lllld t]ld ,, td""' Sul wit; wlif<h 111111'11:11'5 ••• l'ler~ _..." • ..,,...,. Pllblt«:llllel'nlt Tiit CITY CPI Slnl• Ant. C.llfotni.. It was one o! these shifts l'lf "" City d CCIII• MHI. thl 1 ll II.Ii of" 90.-~. J"1:r'"c 1fi', N.-H•mllloll Odv~ 19}-Tl!e-.,chnl ....... 1,ht fa OCCUllY-I ll'rlnc:IPlll OffkLJ OATEO Snh!mbtr 12. ltl1. • ... t.~•-·-· Gretel ll cl-r ·- I j St•ttmber. 1t1'. tvtr' 1• • • ~,!ITn eNrtmlffil on Ille fnd lloor o1 the o,,,., C111111-ty w :-e ;--sT -JOMN, Ul.ll ,..._,i.eu ,,_. LU EILEEN Jt. PHINNEY Cer11Htf!t '°' 1t•n1ictttm 0 ' bU\lntn 1111r1..,.n1 Mu.. bv!ldl111 on s1111 M~ Commlulon Explr11 Cou111'1' Cterk. the tini.sh line less than a mile Cl!r Cltrk and tl<-olll<kl Nier lht tbovt lk tl!llkJ: nlmf, Ind ti· Pl'l!ml1e1, wl!lel! 11 now kf!OWll •nd NOY. 24, 1'7Z NUftWITZ, HURWITZ & llEMl.11 Cl1r1c o1 tl'9 Clly C1111n.:ll of fldlVll of PUbtlcillOll Ille tol, t re Dll Illa dt!fonaled nt Ao•rlmenl Ho, 1A {lrld 1 Publl11!td Orlllll CCIII! OlllV ll'ltol, UI 2211111 Slf'NI from the finis h and Je.ft 1111 CITY d coc11 Mew In 1111 ofllee of the C111tnf'f Clerk o1 Lot cert11" g1r1111 1111c1 In 11ld tPtl'lmtfll s"'11mblr '· 11. 11, ,s, 1'1V US0-7V ,,..._, •11c~. Ctlllrll'lll• nMI Intrepid struggli'ng 1·n a dym' g "ublllht:d Otlntt CN •I Ol!!f P!lo!, An91IQ County, under 1~e 11rov!ll0111 of bulllflnir whlcll 11 ,_ known elld Tltt (1!4) •1•,.,. '"'' tt im • uss.10 Section 2'46ol o1 '"" civn c~. llt'llo"•'"' 11 •••A<n w1c1 No 1•1 ,1 LEGAL NOTICE """'"""' tor: 1".i11.....,. breeu:i far to leeward. • ' ~11TNi!,SS 1~ hlrld 11111 :nt"d di., ol 11w>wn br, 'pltl llltcl!ed lo stld "0ec1~r• Pulllll>l'led Or111tr COii! Otll, 11'11ot, G J COF ~~1:( SE.I.L I llDll, ICIHll!er wlltl • ''°"l<Gl·Wlr tor ]fl. NOTICE 01' RIOl!Ml"TION 5'111. 24. 25, Ocl. 1, 1t1fl UU-1' rete '! amazing victory 0 L FREO ''"" •!Id eereu lo •rid tram Hid '"''· , aoU•• ''''" , "DO• ••· 1_ leaves the score in the best · · mrnr 11nc1 11rag1: 1111<tl 1nc1 ,,.., '"" .... .... · • .., J.EGAL NOTICE LEONARD .I.. CilOVINETTI rl9M to tllt use d 1\11111, Pllbllc rOGm~ l~I: four Out 0( seven Series al }·J No"'' Publlc.C1lltorfll• ""''WlleWIVl •nd •M Olllet 11uto11c llClrllOM IUIL01NO CEllTl•ICATl!S ''"'''CATI! OP •U•"''' in f I lnlr 'd T42"7 Or1nge CounW ~ 111(1 llu!ldlng a'ld Ille eoulpmefll ftvrwenl to ~ of Grind Lodt•, aVOf 0 epl • 1 'Ull'IR101t COUIT 0,-TH E Mv Coi;nm!11lon El11!res lt\tteln, In'°"'"'°" .. Ill! oll!er OCCUPlnls 11..,.volM!I end Pl'etKllvt Of'dlr ol Elk1, ll'ICTITIOUS NAME '!be Spectator aeet for the LEGAL NOTICE Ul"I T•1toho!11 ST.I.Tl OF CALllOllNIA l'OR DCI ••• 1tn Slid .. i. Wiil be made but wnl>oUt !hi trinlffl of Ltoun• a .. ch LGdte No. Tile und4lr1l1ned do cel'llfV """ .,. THI COUNTY 01' OllANGI. cou111r Cltlk'I Flit No. 1J6'·1'0 to'IMtlll Cit w.,,.n!Y. t11ore'u or lrnpHl'd, im ... rn ,tdttm, ti llCI Vll!lf, 111 Vllld COl'lducll/19 • bu1l111H ti 116.JA NIWPCll'I fourth race was light, and Nl •. A .. ntt Publll!Md Or•11tt Coesl Otllr Pilot, ,9111,dlllSI lute POUtHIOll or tnd ouliltndll'ltl bvlldll'ltl <erll!lcetn lllrcl .. COl!t Mtll, C11flornl1, urlde• IM t f ••-·· ho di .. OTICI 0,. Ml!AlltlNO 011' PlflflOH Sept, u . Oct. 2, '· ,, 11"'" <urn.brtnc:ts, IO 'o • ., 11\t rem~lll1"9 pr\::: •ndlOt' ~ 11trtto+or1 I.sued Ill' Mid flclltlOU• l!rm lllmt CPI w E. c 0 mos 0 UIUM: w .d tum out PO• "•09ATE 01'" WILL ANO rlll'a l wm !!If !ht not• MOJ•iecl br Ill lodttl -JllM'elldfl' d Hill etrllllClll TYPESET'"" thll llkl firm II-'" had left the course early after GRETEL (dght) TAKES LEAD IN STRETCH Aussies Grab Victory From Jaws of Defeat ''''''' ••• ••• L • ' ' •• ' LEGAL NOTICE ...... ' ' ,,. H I of 1111 lollowll'ltl "'""''· wlloM "'"'" ... .. '" Mii ' T•w ' tt,OG.:rt, wllt! If!. lo.llld lnnltll ti !ht offlai ol Roller! •• tuH Ind ll'llCH °' residence .... •• tchin In Tl!STAMl!HTARY ....... fn:otn Ml., I. 1'70, u Ill nld ncot1 Webll, JOt Flrtl Wnletn l111k lulld!l'ltl, followl · wa g trepid 0 u ts ail r:.:~1:~. of OLGA F. LtNSTRUM, T..-ol Pl'OY!dtd, ldv•Mn II '"" lllldtr '"' H» W11t FOIJrth Slrlf:I, S.nll Ant. Ed;..•rd Welltr, ru2 T16t••lrr Clrclt, Gretel JI over five legs of the NOTICE IS HERESY (;IVEN 'Ti\111 NOTICE TO. Cll!OITORS ..,,.. al llkl Died ol Tr1,11I, ftts, Chtf9el C1llfol'nl• '2701. t1uflllll9!ofl lltl(.ft, Ctlitornla SiX-leg course. • l"WIN GUSTEN OHLSSON II•' lllfd 01' IULK TltAHSFl:lt •rid fXl>l!flM't ol lllt. T,UllH •rid of Ille S.ld c"lllkt•n mui.t Ill det1111rlfll:I or EllM 11 11111, 1035 Mlriofl Orlve, Glrn· "'••In • Htlllon lor 11n!N!t of will U!d Cite•. lltl-4107 U.(,(.I lrv•ll crel!e<I br Mid Ote<I ol Trmt. nnl llY rttlslered mall bttrl ... ltfllltt'I d11le, C11lllor";' But the scream s of "un- c:odlcll ind IW IHu•n<• ol Letten Nollet 11 h91'eb., given lo Ill• c,edftors Tiit llene!lclarf ullder Mid Ottd ol full 1cld,n1 net llllrr 1t11n Novemtitr I, oatet1 Alll!ult IG 1910 be 'Tt111m9111f.., to tilt lll!tftlaner. releren.:e of H•••n All, 'Tr1n1lt•l'Cl'I', wl\olt·bvNnftl ,,Ult. br re11$0fl of• l>l'e1c1l Dr delaul! In 1910. EUen R1091 Jievable" and "incredible" 10 wfl lcll 11 m•M fo• tutther 111rllcut1n, tdd'l:H 11 Ut Rlver1lclt Avenue, NewPOrt the ob!!gilloni HCU~ 1 h' r 1 b Y · Tru11-ol L.iiu~• Beacn Lcod!lt Edwl!'d Weber could be heard in Sydney'. .,nd n..1 tne llmt e!ld p!I<# CPI lle1rll'llf the llff"i:I! '2."3, Co•mlY CPI Ort11t1e. 51111 CPI :;'~~l~~·•e:ut:1,11';,.~ d;;!";T;~1i:;, th;i No, 112• Stale of cal1~rnl1, · s•me hff been •ti '°' Ociobt' '· 1m, 11 c1111or .. 1a, 11111 •bulk"'"'''' 11 a11ou1 to Dtliutt at\CI Oem•tw1 1or 5111 •!Id wrltlen RObe•1 8, Webb, ch1T;m1n Lo• Al'lttll1 c1111ntv: Australia, as Gretel II crossed •:WI •. m., 111 tM cour1room of Fullfl'!Dll be medt to Robert G. Sllr1eve1, nollce 0r b,each •rid o1 e1«i1on 10 eiu1e ~'':" T~~'R:!.!'!'"f' on Auoull 10, 101:, btlo•t m•. • Nollrr the finish line. °"''""""I of u ld court, '' 1115 !'lorlll TnrultrH wticlM bv•l11tu 1ddre11 11 !tit undtrsltMd lo 1111 llld orOPl!rty lo · Oller • """' ruirtt Public In trltl for .. 1d i11te, 11eoai1nv ller1ctltr Avenut. In 1l'le (llv of F11lltrlD11, 114112 llt""'' ..,....,_, ~rdtn Gt-ovt ulls,., ililfcl olltl11Uon1. ind 1tier11tter, on Jllllltrt S. WeMo. a1111e1,lllld Edwtrlf Weber Ind l!Utn Ritt• But th:;noisiest ovation for c1111otnl1. n..a. C11Unl'I' of Or1n.e, s1111 of C.I~ Ju11t '· n10. !tit urldtnlel'ltd <•lllld wld Au.,...., 11 L.tw --to "" to bt "" "'~ wM1e G-tel was a s she pulled Oeltd St~ltmber '1. 1'10. lornll, noll<t al brea(ll I nd of l!IKllon to be Jtt •1rtt WiasMl'ft ...... llfll<dl"'' n1mtt lfl 1Ull6,,lbld IO IM Wllllfn 1... ' .. w. E. ST JO~N. "" .,,_,"' ta lie "•rulerrtd b recorded 111 11oc1r 9311 ,.0, as1 , 11 Mid 51111• """'· C•11'"'" '21'! 1t._1 •rid 1cknowltdtld _.., UKllled along-side the dock at Newnnrt Counl'I' Cit,~. loCfllld at 14t•Rl.,..,lldt Avel\Ut "'""pert Offlc!•I Record• Ttt.i 0 141 ,.M,., lilt 11me. :._ "t"" - .fOHNwo' .... • ........ '"'.,"~ ,,., '''' Beaeh, Counlv of Oringe, 's1itt ol Olte· SePtomber 15 lt1' Pullll1hld Ortnt• C1111t OtHr Pllo1, !OFFICIAL SEAL) Snipyard, Every boat horn and ...-.. n Ct!lfom1i, ""3· 'TITLE INSUA,.t.NC[ ANO Autu11.21, 21 •rid Stllftn'tbtr ... 11, If, 75 El•lne M. Gtucllf hi ti • N rt H bo l.11 A""'"' (llilenlll tt!lll S.ld pr-Iv 11 detcrlllecl In llMftl TA UST COMPANY Incl Oclobtl" 2, t, lt1' 1"6-70 No!1rr t'UllllC • Ctllforn!1 W S e JR ewpo ar f - T11, UUJ J11.1.s1 11: All 11edc 111 trlldl, t11ttuA1, eeu111m1nt ••said Tru11H, Lot A11otl11 c1111""' including those from the ""'""" .., ll'•flllMll' 1nd tCIOd wlll of tt111 artaln Glineral Oft. er ELMER W. HE1NZER LEGAL NOTICE My Commission £1tplm I d ' d ll'ullllll'led 0<'11'111 eo-1 OtHr Pltot, s.1e bull-k,_., u Mtrlner• Bottlt Aut1W11td s1g,,.1ur1 JulY 11, un ntrepi ock -let go. s .. 1. '" 25, Oct. 1, lt1'fl 1161-70 SllOP..,,, 1oce1w:1 111e 1t1w,.1c1e Aw111UI'. Publistof!I NtwPG<'I H1r11or Hew_\ "'"' p.mu Pu1111shlfll:I o •• ,., C11111 0111r •111t. It was a reception usually N-1 lffdl f'HQ, Counly al Or-e, (Qn'lbfnl!d wltll Olllr Plklt, NtwPO!'l Cl:IT11"1CATE 01" •USIHESS, Sslemblr 11, 21 Incl Oct*r f, t Sl•I• d C1Hfor11l1. llffch. C1lll. FICTITIOUS MAMI: 1f70 1133-70 reserved for the ·actual cup Tilt bulk tr1111ftt' Wiit bt mmumm1te<1 Stoh!••~~ 11. 25 •nd Oct. 2. 1t10 .• 1n3.11 Thi ufldff111nec1 do <tr111¥ '""' ••• winner. --,,-,,,,,.,,,,-.,.,co,,-=-::::=--Jon or •fhlr "" Jltl d•r o1 Clclolltr, 1'10. conduct1119 • bv1tnru 1t 2:IOVt ttll Sr.. LEGAL NOTICE sul'EllOR COURT OP TM• '' 10:00 A.M. et The ''"" 01 c1111ornl•. LEGAL NonCE su1 11!1(11, c1tuorn11. ul'lder ""11cut1ou1i--------------Jim Hardy and his cre\V STATI 01' CAl.ll"ORNIA POii N,A., «ll CIYl',C ... t1r Oriv1 Wtll, Stnll firm Nmt of WOODSTOCK MFG, 1rwl ... •poo bbe<f b THE COUNTY O• ORANGE An• 911112, Ca(inly of Or•"l!t, Sltlt o1 NOTICE 1'0 CltEOtTOltl IPl•I llld firm b rompnil!d of !he .,. Were ffiO Y Australian NI. A~nn C•llfotnl1. SU,l:ttlOlt COURT 011' TME lollowlnt Petsont, whost n1m11 1~ tu!! Cl:RTIFICATE OJ" IUllNISS. and American rooters .as they "OTICI. O• Hl:Alll:ING O,. l'l!TITION So fir 1$ kf!O,.n to tilt Tra~1fer.,., 11! STATE 0' CALll'OJINIA •Olt tnd lll•<n ot rt!ldl!nct l tt '' tallows: •ICTITtOUS NAMI! POii •RO•AT! Of' WILL ANO POil bul!fltll "''"'' • ..., •cld•IHIS used"' lht THI!' COUNTY 01' 01.t. .. GE 01v1 K. McMOl"rlll, 2.lf)l'I tth SI .• $ral Th• urlder1ltn« dOIS ettllfy he •• struggled ashore. LITTl!lllJ Tl!STAMl:NTAJIY Tr1111t.rer for lht thrtt r11rt 1111 !Nil, No, A4tUt leiell, C.il. tol.O eot\Clvctlnt 1 bv•IMH 11 1101 JtmbOr<'e H ·edJ f h ' ed · f E1ltle ol NOR!.VoN CIRKLE, DKffi.td. '"" S.mt. f:1t1t1 of l illlt G. P.,..,, 1110 known IS Rober! L. OWPrlllr. llll\'.1 Ith St .. Rd,, N£WPOrl IHeh. c11 .. """" IM urr1 y as ion signs 0 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Thi! 01ttd: s..trmbtr 17, 1910, 11111• "''"' Dtct•led. St•I !It.ch (11 901«1 flclllloul fir"' "'"" of NEWPDllTElt "Gretel is Slicker" and "God t4ELEH M. CIRKLE hal !tied tltr•ln 1 ltobtrl G. Shteeve" T11ruttr.. NOTICE 1S HERl!'SV OtVEN to ""' Oiled ~I ll, lt70 MEN'S SHOt' 1nd ll11t Iller firm II 1111111on tar P"lbll• of .. 111 •rid for Tiit..,. II c111twni., H.A. (re<iltoo o1 tilt •bowt "'"'"' c1e<:PC1e<11 0 K Mc.Mor 1 comlDOllCI d !he tollowlnt ""°"' wllost Bless Gretel" bloomed in the 1,_11(, of ~ Tntt1Mnl•FY 111 !tit .. Clwlc c...,.. Ort" w .. t rhtr 111 11ersot11 h•vln. ct1lm1 1omlru1 1111 R:=,, i. ~-~ name In 1\111 1rld pl1e1 at relld111et 11 11 s pectator fleet mm' u•-· after ll'tllllolltr. rtflrence '' wltldl 15 mlllt for Slllt• AM, C•llfwnl• '21t1 11111 dec:fdtnl ••• reoul,rd le flit them, · r tollows' ~ fllrhr 1Nrtkultr1, Incl 1t11I ffle tlm9 1rld Altlt1 ·-OINrfrnt11f WLl!l IM 11«•111ry YOUdltrl, 111 Ille 1111,t Slt tl ot Cilllotnll, Orll'lff Count.,; 1tob.rt V°"' Cltll, 17Sll WMl!ltr Avl,. the finish. .. i.e ... 11t1rl1111 "" """ 1111 been "' llC~ ,.., p..tNM of Ille cler1c .. ""' •boY• enlllled COUl'I, or On AUllUlt 31. 1'10. blfort ""· • ffol.'IT $NCI: '5, CC11t1 Miii LEGAL NOTICE test on either yacht. In fact. most observers here lee.I that Gretel's victory takes the onus off the committee for disqualifying Gretel in the se- cond race. tor Oclebfr '· 1910, 11 ,,30 1.m., In 1111 PublllMcl °'"'" co.111 O.llY Pllo!, ro 11,neM """'m. wr111 fflt 11eas11.., Pullllc In •l'HI '°" said S••11• ""°"'11' bit.I Aut 71 1'10 Bill Ficker on Intrepidi\rais-'81/rttoorn ol °""'rtlMnl NO. ~I ot $lld Sip!. 2S, JtJO 1177·10 ~OUl:l'len, to !he undtr1lgnlfll:I tt Ille office ll>PH•lid OtVI K. McMorrtn •nit Aobel'I ll bt;..i Vom CJtff ed ' Jute I d Fl k I · d h' I 'I court, 11 100 Cl'lk c.nw Orlvt wni, In or 111r A!lor111'1', Jon11 w. l!'r11tldlng, 1100 L. OWOl"•-v known lo "" to :::.,.1111 51111 of Co•ITlotnl•, 0,,...,. COOJnl,~ an arm in sa 0 ar Y c er exp a1ne IS a1 urr. "" c11y of 1111i. ""'' c.111orn11. LEGAL NOTICE Glenoon Avenur, Sult~ N111nber nu. Lo• POI""""' wh01t ntrnes ••• •ubtcr to on Autu11 71 1t70 11110'9 mt 1 NOit,.., as he watched helplessly from lo cover Gretel by stating that Omer s.t""~ ~· .. 1no !1~~~· ~1=n~~ 1~~~~'!,/!11 ~';1 ::_ ";~~~t~'~m~n~,~rld •ekllllWllllld9te1 :=:~n :~~~orT s.vi:,..st~l!ff,=1~ a few boat lengths astern as he felt Intrepid had better 'f· E. SClert ' lllOTl(I OP MARSHAL'S SALi_ melltn pe,ltlfllnt lo the .. 111. al 5'1111 (SEAL! mt to "" 1111 ~r ..... wroe "'"" hi Gretel slid across n ... Im' ish bo t ed . -· t . d MUlllAY~7 CHOTillllll llllf .......... lcl" OUlllOOl'I. Ill(., Pllt11tlll, \II, cllctdtnl'. wiltlln lour '""""'' 1fltr Ille FltANI( L. ~HUFELT wllscrlbfd IO the within lnsll'\lrnlftl tl'HI u"" 3 Spe In m ...... era C V.'ln S • H •• ' ·-·• Clio M. Jo11n1oon. o.1"'46111, Ho. "' '"· ""' 11ubloc1uon ot 11111 noll<•. Nottrr Pulllil ..:k,_ ............. hi tlleevtld""' 11,,.,. line. and could not acceler a te a s • ' -ly Ylrlw ol In exKUtloll l1IUICI oo Otled Seplftnbtr If lfi'O Mr Comm!HIOO E•Plru _..., ' '*'...,.. Drtw. s.nt' StPMtrlbtr ll, ltJO .... "" Slllllf"lor c1111rr. J""' sm111r1.,.;, Oci 11. 1tn !OFFICIAL SEALI Gretel ll's victory was one fast in swapping tacks. - --~ Co-·•o -"' . ' T JUANITA M SHE"FFIELO _,,, "' Cl>Unty of Ortngt, Stall of C"1llfornl1. Exe'Culrl• ol 1111 Wiii "6!3" N p 1111C<..11to I lhat Cannot be d b ih clespile ii hard-fought gan1e or ring-around-thc-ro.sy b e h i n d tl1e llnc ln \l'hlch Gretel a p- peared to be shoving Intrepid orr the line. \\lhen Grelel came about t.n cross the line on port tack she Jc(t Intrepid room to slip through to star board and gain a v.·eather position -Ficker's ravorite sfarting tactic. Hardy said he did not a sk for a lay d a y today becaus e his crew \1·a s anx ious to meet Intrepid again. "\Ve felt \\'C had the boa t in good e-0ndilion and were up lo the task." he said. But Ficker said he asked (or the day off to do some more practicing and !o look over l nlrcpid's light-v.·eather sails. \\leather permitting. t he fifth r ace of the series v.·i]J be on Saturday • ·French Boat Takes Lead Ttl: (n41 '*"'I up.on , Judtmtnl enrerl!d 1., 1a~or ot of lh• 1bovt nemtd lleetdtnl Publl!J!td Orenge C<>1111 Olll'I Plklt, 0 °11rv Cu 1 rn i erase Y e "Obviously this did nol pay """"'" ........ tnllMr Am«k• OuldOO•'· Inc, '' llldgmtnl Jtllft w. El""Ollllnt. 5111romller 4, 11. 11. 25. 1t10 1Uf·10 ;:"t!m=.1:.i EIUlltn race committee or protest off in th rght ' th I T ll'ulllfllled Or111tt Co11! Otlt~ Piiot, ctlllldllot lrld 1g1fn1I ClllO M. JOl!n..,.. 11 1100 Gl1ndo11 .t.ve11u1, S I l lfll 'ti Th • e J er aJrS on C 11 empest '"''· 2$, "'· Oct. 3, 1•10 1710-10 ludllmenl clllllor, 1howl119 • net lltltnet al Sulit Numlllr ""· LEGAL NOTICE IP ' ' I 1"1 comnu ee. ere was no ltro-last leg after Gretel l I Sl.0.5.M IClul!tr dut D11 Mid IUOlimfnl en LIS A"ltlQ, Ctllflrnlt tf014 Pulllflhlfll:I 0'"'" COISI Ot Ir IOI, LEGAL NOTl~E ""dire of 1t1t 11111af1Ce 01 ,.1a ~•PCut1or1, '''' n1J1 t1M11t Seotembtr '-11. 11. ts. 1'10 1""'10 LEGAL NOTICE benefited from lhc wind -----~=~~=-c==c--1', "', w 1eY1ec1 u0 ioon 111111e ,;9111, 1111e '"" ""'~~ ~~.~'•cft&'' 011 •. Pltoi. :~~~':. o~H~u~~~~ ~~u~'~1! LEGAL NOTICE shift," he said. PORT HALTGUEN. France CllTll'ICATI 01' SUSIHllS n ''"' of It d IUO,met1I dK!ot In ll'lr '""' -" · OF THI! T"'HY H · (APJ A f' h boat t k PICTITIOUS NAMI PrtoPHIY ln '"" Cou111Y al Or•lllll'· $l11f al Snl1mbtr If, " •!Id Ocloblr 1. '· CITY 0,. FO\HtTAIN VAlLE'I 'Ull'ElltlOlt COURT 01'" THE e explained his tardiness in -renc 00 The lff!llersltl1'd' "" certlly tlifY •re (11!fll(nl1, dtlCrlbtd II tollowl: ''10 l1ll·JO NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEf' lftal °" CERTIFICATI[ o• IUSINISS. IT.I.Tl! OP CALlll'ORHIA ,01. coming across to rover Grelcl lhe lead in the (ourth heat of l!Hlduclln• 1 butlftfll 111 Mt Vlctor11 Ho. Loi S, Traci 1221, 8°'* •1. ~191 11, T1JrM11v, Oclebtr 6, 1910, 11 1:00 P.M. lfl ll'ICTITIOUS NAMI! THE COUNTY OJ" OIANGI" h W Id Al, cast• Mtw. cantornl•. und•r ""tic-• Ml1<1ll1111:0U1 M1111 Oren11t cou""'· •"" LEGAL NOTICE 1,,. CouMll Ch•mlltrs. cnv Hill, urno 'Th• urld1rsl11"itd do certl!r 111ev •rt N1. A·'"* II by saying: "We felt it \110Uld t e or Te mpesl Sailing llllou 11'"' ntm• 01 Vtl Cr•ll Ind loc1tlfll:I ti: lt01 Kin. Ro.id, N'Wl>Ol'I Slalfr AVlflue. Fount1ln v. 11 t'' ~onductlno • bv1lne.1 •I 16MS Ptdflc NOTICE 01' KIAltlHO OF l"ETITIO.. be better to take our beating Championships Thurs day, b ut ' '' '' . ' --~ o•o !allow B~acn, C1llforfll•. (ERT1FICATE OF IUSINE$S Calllornlt. the Cll'I' Ccun<ll wltl hClld 1 Coeot Mll!llw1.,, '""''' lt•cll, Ctllf., FOil ll'ROIATI! 01' Will AND l'OR !Ml ,.. •m I com,.._.. "' " • NOTICE 15 HEReev GIVEN lh~! -....... , .. _ tlc!Hlou' llrm n1mt cl t d th I' • h h . I a S••·cd1's l1 )'acht st'll ' lnll ,.,..,..1, W'l>oll n•m" '" lull 11111 , •••••.•• , ... , ••. ··-,, ,,-,., •• ,... _., l'ICJITIOUS NAME ~ub!I( heiring en l~e followlnt: U·~~ .... L8TTER5 TEITANtl:NTAllY owar e 1n1s -oping or .. L w a. 1t11et1 ,, Aslcltnu ·~ 111o1iow1: PM. it;;'"°"' of coUri~ie. S6i'We.i ii"' The unaen1anec1 does ct1111v ht is con· • 1. 11111 ClllRH No. n1 -Ao· s~oo,.;r.·~-~{' 111111•1d 11~~!! C:.:'i! E11111 of SIDNEY E. CAATEA, another wind shift. especially le<iding in the general stan-Verr11 A. Graver."' Vlctorl1 $1,, No. sr .. C!l'I' ol CCl:llt Mf'Sll, caiii,,..111,, Countv ductfn<;t • bu1lllfu 11 on H1w1U Clrclt. 111lc1tlcn lile<j br Dltt,!(h·L•le1u "' "" "'ft nt 11enon•. OKea•ffl. . . Al. COii• Mt11. C1HI. ,, Or''"''' s1111 f)f C1lllornl1, I Wiii Hll Co1t1 Mesa, C•lllornla, under '"" ne-oe .... IOPmlffif Com111nf , • q u f I 11 n g full Ind plKtl of rtildlnu ••• 11 NOTICE IS HEit EBY GIVEN Thi! \\•hen "·e noted that Gretel did d ing s. Alfriecl H. Gl'OYlf. tet Vlclerl• SI., No. ,, -·O•O< ood'--.._ ........ ,,.,,, OOOd<•· o-llllotn firm ntmt al WES TRON CO. 111<1 'hlntt ol lOllt on 11ro11trlr loc11ed on loUows: IAltllAltA J. WALKER h11 llllfll:I l!ertln 1 h h h I 1'h f ' h bo t f' · ~ ""''"""'"" .~o··o '''' o ..,.-''' • ,,, •• "' RoblrtFwe111 1'602 1tU1T1lt'l"L•ne ,,,,., --•not avetef1'n1·s 1·nela1·d ." c ·rcnc a,, .. , ••st Al. COil• Meu. C1tlf. P&•• lo··-··-·,,, •• ""''" •••••. '"' .. rm I Con'tflO '"' 0 OW• "'' IOlllllwtsl COl'llf• .. • ' • • Pf "" -l'vblte ol Wiii •rid tor . " . ... I 17 1910 ~~• "''"'w' '"" ~ · 1"9 llttlOll, ..t\Olf "~..,.. In lull arid llllCf Magnoll1 from lt1·1 to Rl. tmtndlnt t1ullll"l!IDll lr•<ll. Htr,_, F. lecllll, IUUlll(t of Ltlllrl Tttlt..,.nl11"Y to Ptlf• Th OJOd t e<f ·a. \\"ith no po'n'• h'I th Dlltdv • A• G,,_, 111 ll!t r19111, tlllt •nd lllle-111 o4 1•ld oi •t1IC111>Ct 11 ,,1o11ow1, s.e.;111111,1 011,,1c1 Mall J6.S.ll. 1ttn StieHhld Ln .. Hunllfll'lon tuch. llontr. reftre"'e to Whlcll 11 m•!lt for ere v.•a s g na ur r1..,. I ...,, v.· I e e A~:t, Gm.,.,, ~=~ !"':' m~ "':t,.~!:'~,df~~~': Alber! T. Torre, 111t M• .. •11 cttcl•, T1111 rn•ll•r 11 being proc"'" 11ursu1nt Of!rd As":,';,'~· 1!,~1 furll!tr P<1rtk:u1'", •ntl tt111 lilt lln'lf 1tw1 bing on both sides at the post Aincrlcan team. Dyson Bruce SI•~ of C1tlfeml1. ~ •••• -,, •• ,,,,, •• ,, ··-···-"''" Coote Me..1, (11\I. to !II~ Pltl'lftlnt L1•1 fJf ltle S••lr ot 0 ' t s Pltct of ""''"" ""' 11me 1111 been Ht r and B ..... F I f °''""county: ·~~ .., .. , 0 ; "' -1 ...... ~.. 0111!d Stlltemllfr 14, 1t1t1. C1ll lOl'nl• fGov'1. Code 65,ooo 11 no.I •rid H•r,.., I'. tl!tltH '°' oc1o1>1r t, lt10, 11 t :.)O '·"'·• In 1~~ r ace press con ercnce. r ..... c a coner, o On Sept 17 lt1' bf+ore ..,. • Noterv '"' n rrtt • <~ 1· Albrr! T. Torr• lllr Foun111~ Veller Zoning Oro1n1nce. St1!1 ef C•lllornl1, Or11111t Counl'I': c1111rlrm111 of Offtrtmtnl No. ~ of s•ld Sir Frank Packe r he d I Norotnn C y Ny was 5 , bile In ".,,.j fot '111d Sl&lt 'P1•1ot1tllr Oiied II Co,tt MtM, C1lllornl1, St1te ol C•l~ornlt, D,1noe Cl!tlntv : Tnt Zonln1 Ordlnenee, Zon1"9 MIP" •11d On Seottmbe' U, 1970, btlore ff''• I eourl. ti 1flO Civic Ctnttr O'IVt We1!, In ' r O • '' • ·• e• •~PNrtd Vernt A.. GrO'ltr ind A.llre<I H. S111ltmll~~~~ClltS70i.. GLASER On Se11!. 1•. 1970, belo•e m,, 8 Noterr E•l!lbl1~ ire "" Ille In !hf Plen~fnt Hcl1ry Pullllc In lr'lll lo, •8ld Sttte, Ille Clho of Santi An1, Ce!llo,nfa. the Australian Syndica te, sajc:f COnd With three points. Thircf Gtowr knOWA lo -lo bt lllt oert.:>111 Ml ~•L Pulltlc In • ...., tor 11ld Sttlf, llft1onal!v Denartmtnt •nd ••• •v•ll•lllt lot pUllllc oersonellr 11111e1red Rober! F, Well5 l!ld Dlted s ... 1 ..... btr II, lt10. he. had retired be I 0 IV on \\'aS a B!'itish e.ntry with S.7 ,.l'IOlf n•Mfl •re iubtcrlbtd fll llot •lltlln M 'j 1 1 C rt tPDNrrd Alber! T. Torre known lo m' to Jn111e,!klfl 1nd e•1ml111ll011. "''"' F. 8edt11 kl!OW~ to "'' ta be Ille W. E. ST JOHN, 1n1trlllftlfll •rid 1cknowltlilt11 tl'ltV U:· 0,~,..!,"c--'!'. "''"'' lie. 1111 11e•1oon whol• "'"" 11 1u1ttcrlbtd TllD11 dt$lrln. fO tet.lltr Ir! 11vor o• lft ""'°"' wflo5e n•me• ire su~crlbo!cl lo COlllll'I' Cltr-his spectator boat thinking points. fllllld "" -'"' ~ .. ,. 10 !he wtltll11 l11slrurntn1 •nd t eknowltdlft· 01>111>1IH011 to th11 fll'Cll>Olll will be given rl>I wllll!n ln1lrlllntftl Ind 1tk110Wltdlfted JAMES A. MONTPAS O ~FFICIAL sEA°LJ Juc11c111 0111r1c1 "' tit ,•reutfli 1111 wme. 1n OPDOrtunltv "' do '°· 11 1urll>tf 1 ... '""'' txKuted Ille 11me. ,,,, Ttmtl• Cfl'I' • ..,,,,.,. Gretel had been bea ten. 1hcr results of Thursd ay'.s MllT K. Henf"I' Br I!'. J. Pi»ltl !SEAL) lormtlton 11 cleslre<I, rlkJ mtv (Olltacl Ille 10FF ICl.t.L SEAL) 'Ttm•lt City, Ctlllwlll1 "Th bel r "(' e 1• CI U d d t h Nittl'Y Putlllc-C•l!toml• s.er1t1ftl M•rv K. He"N Plann1,., oserlmenl ,, 961.1n• •rid r~er .JEAN L. JOBST Ttl: 12111 ,..._7,,, e n someone came O\V • n e e SC Pt1t!ClN 1 Olflct 1" Wllllem <. Sl•rr1tt, 11 N011rY Putinc . c1111orn<1 10 111e •bovt uem. Noi.,.., PubUe · C•H~•nl• •tM•lltY fir: 11'.t"ie-and told me we're v.·innin~. I American s: Orl"91 Counl'I' P. 0 . Ill 4119 Pr!nclo..I Dlfl<t lfl CIT'I COUNCIL O~ THE P'111cl111I Ott!ce In ll'ullllll!td 0•111111 C011I Diii., l"ilOI, "d h , M S I M c-1n1o11 Eitlll,t1 A~11111m, C1llflrn11 '21111 Dr•n•t countr CITY OF l'DUNTAIN VALLEY or1n91 count• sntember n , "· n . lt70 17.JO·JO sa1 I at couldn't be, bul when ,_ rs. andy F a coner and H;., 24. 1tn ll'l•lnllfl'l Affllrlll'f M~ Cnmm1s11on Exo!'"' M•rr E. Cole, M• Comml11100 ExPlr!t I ( k d t th l 't Alec \\!' · A · y C "ubll.i.ed. Orin°' coeit O.ll'; ll'ltol, Pulll!•hld Or•ntt coett o.or Pllill , Nov. 11• 1,11 Cltv ClP•k Mire~,, 1t1J LEGAL NOTICE 00 e OU e por I \\'as igg1n. mcr1can •• , s.twnbtt 11, 2S •nd Octobt, '· t, s.,rembtr u. ll •rid Odobe• 2. 1t10 Pu1111st1"' 0!'1nt • c o1u t 0111~ PHot, PubU1n~ o,1>191 ca1•t 0111v P1101,l ~'~"'~'~"c"'~'o0co':'~':_M~•,:.'.'~'~"-'_"_'_"_'._,,,'~'"~'j--;;oTI.;<O.~rui>io.oo:;;o-I so." J\'ew York. eight points. 1m 1n.1.10 1136-10 Set>•. 1!. Ocr. '· t, "" 19l'O 1n•·1a Stet. u . 1•10 1n1-10 Se~t. 75' Oct. 2• '' 1'' 11"° 171s-7o NOT1c1 o• suLIC TIAHSfll• "I hope the ncxl t in1e Ficker :>. \\lil!ian1 Saltons tall and °' No~i~~:T~":'"';N~~~o to :it_..C,:~11;;! decides to lose a race he will Peter Tu·ining. Beverly Y.C., LEGAL NOTICJ: LEGAL NOTI,CE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ---:=:::::-:::::--:::-=::-----;--:;-;::=:-::::::;:--;::;;;:::;::---·J;:;-::::;-=:::;:::::-::=-----;::=::::--::::-::=::::::-:::::::-::::-:-::c I-----;:::-::::;------l•r1111te'1 FamOVs 0oriu1 & l•k•'•· do it earlier," P acker said. 1\lass .. 10 points. Ot101NANCI NO.,... ti 0!"11191 COUlll'i', C1lllo,~!1. IW tnc:I 1011111! 1111 H..,.. . lrocklctd Ind CDllllllll'fd IKl1111 b'f'" sec:-•AR 21>ol Tr1n1lt l'OI', wtwat bUllrM!OS eddrttJ II H39 .... OllOINAN(I:: o• TMI CITY COUN-of SecHDll "311.l o4 ""M1111i<l1111 Code ol Pl5SEO AND AOOPTEO lhll lht dlY 111111 ., • lt9Ull' """'""' of lh• Cil'I' 'Ull'f'RIOlt COUltT OF TM• w. Mtftddtfl. St"'' ....... CCIOlftlr of Asked how hf! rega rded 12. J ohn and James Linville. 11 , __ DI seo111m11er. ""°· Councu o1 111e c11, of Coit• Me11 held °" sT•T• Oii' CALll'ORNIA l'Ott °''""' s111t CPI ci111o1111•· ""' 1 bu!-Gretel's fi'rst vi"ctory he sai'd : 1 archmoot, Y.C , New Yor'·, CIL 011' THI! CITY 01 COSTA M SA, SECTION 1. Pur1u1nl to 1111 IH'OYl1...,,1 ltDllERT M. WILSON Ille flft aa, al Seoltmblr, 1'1', ind THI COUNTY o• ORANGE trtn!ltr 11 t boul to bt .....01 t1 KEN· . IJ< n (ALlll'Olt:NIA, (MANGINO TM• :ZON-'"' Cl!r ol Cost• Meu, 0 111,kl MIP C·4 Mav .... ol lht tllf•eane• ... ,sri1 •nd ~""' ••• wl>olt Nil. A-inti NETM 0. DUNN. Trtn1ter1e, ,.,.,,., "I don'l consider il our first. I 18 poinl'i . .... OP " "°ltTrON OP TN• EAST ol "" Cll'I' ol Cos!• Mn• Is l!trtllr CllY of C11$1t Mrll •t a regular mMllnt o4 ••Id Clly CouflCM NOTICE OF HIAlllNG. ON ll'ETITION bvllMH 1ddries1 11 8011 S.n Hiiario Cir-cons1'der o't our second.'' t'. Peter Nes•·da and .fe lt •lftOflde<I b'f'" IM 1ddl!lon ttlertto ol 1111 ATTEST: ht ld on l~e ?ht da1 of !>fplembrr, 1910, POlt ll'ltOl.t.TI OF WILL ANO l'"Ollt c!1, llutn1 -•rk, Countr or Or1n9'l', Stile , = QNI MALI' OP LOT t O' T~CT 19' R~·CP 1re1deurlbld111 Stcllon 1 l'le,tol. EILEEN P, PHINNEY br lhe lollowl1111 'oll C•ll volt: of Ctlllotnlt F ' k ' I j H D Bot y C " · ,..OM Q ANO (I " lt+c". SECTION J. Thi• Ordlntf!Cf 1hall take Cllv Clttk of lh• AY ES: COUNCILMEN; Plllklrr. SI. LETTll.S TISTAMllllTAJIY Tiie ll'llllt~,., to be lr1n1lt•ed .. lllClll!d IC er congratu a tet nrdy uncan. s on ' • 'u points. Tiit cttr covnc11 o1 "" Cll'I' of c11111 e11ec1•ndbe 1111u1t 1ora 1111rrr 1:1111 d•V-cu~ of Cost~ '-'•s• c 1•T•, wt11011, Jotdln, H1mmtn Eilltt of ALFAEO P. FtSC!>lEll. •k• ,, tnt w MeFl<!Oln, S•n•• An• counl'I' on an excellent race "By that 17. G len f"osler and Peter Mill doll~ Gl'dlln 11 llllaw11 from •nd airer Ill PIUIGt. tnd onor lo STATE OF CALIFORNIA NOES: COUNCILMEN: "°""' ALFltEO ~tS~~EA, lkt AL FISCHER, of 0r1111e", Stitt Ill c1111,,..n11. ' ' SIECTtON I, All llltl POrtlon al tilt Ille f~lllr•llon •• ""-11$) lflYI lror!I COUNTY OF ORANGE I u AISENT' COUNCILMEN; N-1~0~'1lE ~i ~~sir::· ~':~"·111.1 Slit! PfOPerfy 11 dac,lbed lft ~-,•t . I don't mean lo say J'm happy Dea n. New 'l'ork Y.C., 23 tollowl.. clt:K•IOed tell -"' 11 "' IN1$1ff ""'"' .... II be 11Ubtl5'>fd CIT'I OF CO!iTA MESA l EILEEN ,., ,HINNE'I ROSALIE FISCHER MAKU•DL• ·-111. 11: All 111:1di In ,,.t(fe, 11~1Ulfl, f'IU•Pll'lf'lll I lost,'' he quipped. points . """'*",i.e.. •rid lntludld In !tit lt..CP MCI In lilt ORANGE COAST OAILY /,EILEEN II'. PHINNEY, C•lr Clent OI Cttv Cler-'"" '~'°"kit .... Incl toOd will ol "'" btktrv bvllnlll z-. ID ..ti: • PILOT, I flftl'S-al -·· (!rwl• ,.,.. City ol Cos!• Mew •rid tlt<Gtlk lo Clerk of ll!f Cll'I' Coun.:11 ,, t/lt eCI 11e ... in • "1111°" for Probtlt Ill Wiii ~-II •I llllGITTl!'S FAMOUS OONVT Packer said he told Hardv 20. David G11ridoltl and John Thi -1 -"'JI of Lot 2 o1 'Trad tioft. orln!PCI '"" PU11ll111PC1 1 .. tilt Cllr et Ct••-of 111e cur COU11ell ot "'' c11r o1 Cl1'1 fJf c0111 Met• •nd 1°' lu 41•11<1 °1 Ltttus '"""""''"" & IAKEltY ..,,, loc•ttd •I 2S1t w. and the c-w lo sa;I the r ace' 11 I C 1.111. " "' ""' tfltrtol 111 8°'* 11, Cotti MHI, 1ot1rt1tr wit~ '"'""""'et C•N Mes. 111rt1w eerll!Y 1i..1 ll'lf 1bovt Pu1111111ec1 ori nt• Cot1t Otl!r Pllot, :,0~~\::'.;,~:::r• ~~c~ 1~ "fi'°" McF1dden, s11111 Ant. CIMlnT'I' CPI Or1nrie. '"'" a tcn nunn. Santa r U 1., ..... 47 ti Miki!'-'"''"'' Rf(otd• "" ,,..,.be,.. of ll!t Cll'I' Councll vollnt tnd litretolng Ordllll'ICt No, 10-«I w11 If!. St11t. l S. lt1G llS.<"' ,.., 1 11'11 St111t ol C1Jlfor"I' and OOl protest "YOU C"O't Cal•'f 2G poo'o1IS •w Ind O(KI ti llH•ll!f the t1m1 1111 bff" Tl>e but-tran11,:r wlll bf i;on1um,.,1tl'd · ., " · '· . . -- " .. ' , .. -·c L• , -·r __ ' " iii l..CGlllO .... ..... ---.. ' .;. ~""..:.-... . ""-· ..... --··1---............. . :: ~=---=-- ,. ·1 -. ~· I_.,.., .. , ... " / ~ Ii ., =-- CtSTl!ICTING MAP -·"""6: .. ~ _,, C/4 '''tor Oclobtr '· 1t10, •I t :lll •.m .. 111 '"or'"'' lht Sth da., 01 Octobet, 1t10, ·win tha l wny~' he s:ii(!. 27. ~lary Clark and Vnn ttie coun,oom 01 Deo•~mtllt No. 1 of '' SoulMrn c1111. F1r11 N111-1 B•n~. Hardy admo'tted that F'1'ckcr All"n Clark. "-vcrly Y.C., 111t1 court, •I 700 Civic C•""' Orlvw 111'1 lttch Blvd,. Hu"ll11ttDll IM<ll, " Ut: 'Ntd, 111 trw CllV of Stnt• Ant, C1Uforn11. CC01ftlv °' or1..,., s111r o1 C1llfornl1. had the edge al U1e stnrl i\1a~s 32 po1'nts Dlltd s.tllttmbtl' 11, 1tlt S. fir IS k_ ... tllt Trtniltf"H. 11! Ir=============-:=..=="-'"='="=-'--==-~·=======~ W. E, ST JOHN, !IUllM 1 ,....,,1 end eddrtUtl ui.rd llr -----COUlll'f Oltk 1 .__,._ 11'1 I OA'llO s, TIHOLIR T,l'\Jltrer ..,.. mrM Yffrt 1 !NI , !NI Wltidttl' Or., Jilllt J11 II d11191'tnl from Ille 1bovt, •rt; ,._,IMC~. C1Uf, n1M NONE T•h cnt1 .....nJ Ollfll, Sff'lemlwr :n. lt10. Allll'""' fw1 t'llllletltr K•11~1t1 0 , Ollltfl P!JbUshed OllnM C1111t Olli't ~llot, Tr1nd•t11 ' -o 1, 1• -0 1 ''" ,, .. -Publtlllld 0r11111t eo.11 O•lty 11'!1&1, '". ' ~ ""'' ' ..,.,w Jtol. H, 1t10 1111·7(1 ' LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE I 1~~"""""'~~-'--1-~~~~~~ su~f.1~\ ~iJ!~o~1TsNI c1RT11icAT~; su11N111 I STATI 011' CALl•ORllllA •Olt 'l(flTIOll'I NAME The undtrt!'11td t10t1 ttrlltv !It i, TMI CO\H\ITY 01" OlltAMOI! <ll'llUtf'IM 1 butlrlt'll11 312 Gtllld Cl!Wlt, NI. """'IU Btltl<>ll l•I-. C1llfor"!1, undtr tnt E11tt# of (MAll.~l!S R. KEENl+ON , llCllllCllJI nrrn ""'""' o1 , MEAOOW om~,l~tE IS Hf.IEOV GIVEN lo !~-INVESTMENT GltOUI" {1 11m11 t d '"" ""ntnllltll •lid 11111 w ld firm 11 treGllOrt ti 11\t ttlove Nrntd dttlllflnl allt\Pllffd .ol llH! follOWlllL -ttlOfl, who't 1'1111 Ill H,,_ MVI .... clllmt 1111111111 ll!t lllllM Ill fl.In 11\111 •IKI 91 n 111f111C1!1 t t Mtcl dlcrdl!'lt lnl rMUl<fd le lilt llltl'!\, followl: wl!h ll'le flt«'IJI,., "9UC1'1frl. '" 111t olllft (hl't" !. J....,.tl, ll) c;,11'111 """'' of "" cltrt. o1 Hit •bott tflfltllfll:I l'IM/rt, er ltltlol h LinO. Ctlll, "'4J. "' 11,eltlll ll!M!, "'1ltl lr.t MCftMl'Y Ofltll $10ltfll9w 1, lt1• vwclwn "' t11t undtrsl'""" II Ille ottlu (Mltltf l . Jlltllt1t fll l'H1 lltwMY, ltDIEllT DALE HIROH. lG-ral ll'1nne,J II'. 0. kll "'6M. Ill ••"'"''°" Wiil. Lii 11111 of Cintem11. Antettt. C1Hf111'!111 '°°"'' wllkfl II !flt Or•l!ll CouRT'l'l 111<9 ol IMll'ltll fJf lllt Ufldtrlltntd I" l lt On 1 "9ttmtllrr, 11te. tiitffr• ""-I 11'1111-fltrlelnl"' Ill "'' "''" of ••Id NollrY Pllllllc In 1nd ter 111d Sttlt. dtcldll'll, w!tM" flur monlll1 lll•t 11'111 H'lOlltM~ HHlrtd Cl!1rltt 1:, JYe .. 11 llr1t PU1111<111ort ol 111b nlltce. ""°""" to "" to M !tit "'IOI! wPtelt Dlltd $ttl1"""-' ''· It"-Nmt 11 aulmrlbtd to tt'1t ,.t111tft E~lllT L. Kl!ENNON JR.rfVlft.nl ltflf 1C:JUW'11fflfll:l1 ... hi UIQlltCI AOl'Oll"latr1tw Ill t1!t t tt1i. flt fl!t """· fllt lbow lltfPllllld ....... 10,ll'l(IAL $(ALI IOlllllT OALf MllOH Cllttltt' F.-nll ltlllllvrl 11 111 ''"'"""' wani: f'lott(Y 'ubllc-C1•ittr11lt ~ Aft1tl..,_ C.1~"'9 ~ otf1et lft Tiii 111)) 41 ... 146 Orllf!fl c-tY Alt«M., ,., AlmlRlffr•ffr Mr C.i:tn1mllllOll l .11•lrt1 l"vbHIMd Ort.... COii! c.1.., ,/It!, Octobl>t J.. ltn casy·C•[C a c.tiYe we•r 1o, man •nd boys new 1hipme11t of bo y' h•ng-fe n in solid c:olori h•1 ju~t •rrived b1n•1m .. ,[c 1r,j e in•1l1' t ftlhfe~ iele11el, "ewpo1t betclt cht191 ~5010 &f'PletTll>Gf 11. 21 11111 Ot!Ollt, -'JT .!• Pub!Jt!lld o,.,,.,. C011t Diily •11o!, ltJCI lliWV ~ttm~r t; 11.-it. is. .,.,_ ~ 1iff·1'11 ~-------------------------• .. ' . - \ ti -AW 15 k ¥ p I P S -wave MADISON, Wis, (UPI) - ~1ichael R. Molnar, a 2~year­ old graduate student I n astronomy, had nea~ly com- pleted his doctoral thesls "''hen _a_bom '"Plod.o<I at !!'< University of Wisconsin on Aug. 24. His thesis and moSt of the research that went into il were virtually destroyed. The explosion shattered the U.S. Army Malhomatics Research Center, causing an estimated $6 million damage to the facility and several nearby buildings. .. "i would like to stay away rrom campuses until they cool orf,". said ~1olnar. "I think a lot of my colleague~ feel lhe same way. Academic freedom does not exist. You live in an atmosphere of fear and terror. It's a terrible wa y to live.'' The blast killed a 33-year-old physicist who was working ---late-and-injured-fouF-Other persons. Molnar was one of about two dozen graduate students who lost I h e i r research data. ' "It wasn't completely destroyed ." Molnar said, "but it sure came close." The young astronomer from Coils Neck. N.J., who was allowed to skip his Master's Degree work \G go on fGr hi s Doctoral Degree. said he lost .111 of his textbooks and •·a lot of personal things" in addition tG research data and the nearly-finished thesis. He said he had been researching a new type of star just recenlly discovered and had hoped to be among the first scientists publishing in th at area. ''I thought I had a jump on ii ," he said, "but now other people have probably passed me." •·The only th ing 1 \Valked out "''ilh was about half of a thesis," Molnar said. ··rm going through some of the charred pieces of the pages and trying lo read what is readable. A lot of the im· portant things are gone." . "Some of the things can't be reproduced," he said. "I went to the national observatory lat Tucson. Ari7..) to g e I photospectra of stars. It cost Ziggy Gets to Look At Outside CHICAGO (UPI\ -TI10 door had been closed and bolted for 29 years. \Ved· nesday it swung open and Zig· g.y, a six·ton bull elephant. has his firsl took at the outdoors since J94l. The old rogue eyed the outside warily. He was free lo \valk out into the Brookfield Zoo's elephant enc losure but he.was in no hurry. First he stuck out his trunk and explored a bit. He seesaw- ed back and forth, apparently reluctant. Standing in plain view was George "Slim" Lewis, Ziggy's old keeper and the only man the zoo could find who ever successfully gave Ziggy an ordet. Lewis tried to coax the SS. year-old elephant into the ya rd . Afl er a half hour of in· decision. the elephant finally lumbered boldly through the door. He looked things over. sa mpled a few leaves. from a tree , picked some grass v.•ith his Jong trunk and soon discovered and sampled a bale of hay. Perhaps Ziggy's indec ision \Vas indirectly caused by Lewis's presence. He Was locked up and chained in locked up and chained in April . 194L for trying to kill Lewis. pinning the keeper to the grciund between his lcthel tus_ks. No'v 1..ewis had come from his Sea ttle. \Yash., home lo advise zoo officials on plans lo release Ziggy from solitary. \V c dnesday's experiment. Zoo Director Peter Cro\vcorft explained, was intended to find out whether Ziggy would 'vanl lG visit the outside if a spec ial cage were built to pro- tect the public. He did seem tG like it. ror about 90 minutes. that is. until his regular feeding: lime rGllcd around . Then he headed right back Inside for dinner. PUY.WH IN YOUR POCXB Sf!lt um'8nted ltC1T11 \vith a DAil.Y PILOT Oassified Ad.• . PHONf 642-5671 • "'.. . -" sa • "·•·--- Friday, Stptei+ibfr 25, 1970 OAILY "LOT Jf of College Boinhings ~Scares Off · Researchers many thousant;ls of dollars Gf thesis," he said. "ft could be the taxpayers' money and it anywhere from a few monij1 can 't be replaced; It's lost to a year." no"''··• Molnar ~Id he expects tG ~1olnar said his Gffict and begin "''orl:: for the National w.ork was the har<test till in AeroiiautJcs and S p a c e the 11stronQ!llY ..... -departl'Jlent'-A1:1if\inlstration (NASA-..... at 1 and tbV-aepartment 1i a d Goddard Space Flight Center, agreed lo accept a shortened Greenbelt, ~1d .. next month. version of the thesis. But he I-le said he would have taken sa id he still did not knGw how the post th.is month, but was long it would take to piece it forced to delay-it together. Asked if the Aug. 24 bomb- "It depends on what the lng has' hurt research efforts department will accept fGr a at the university, Molnar said, "Definitely." "People are a lot more cautious now," he said, "A lol of fello"'·s working on disserta· lions are taking ho1ne extra copies. One friend even put a third eopy..in-a-bank vault.'' "This is a terrible way IG live," he said. •·making duplicate copies of everything and expecting to get bombed or firebombed ." While he suffered a major setback. Molnar said he felt lucky he was still alive. "1 was lhere in that building unt.il..about 11 p~m.," he aald, '1and I went home and to bed, I heard the (3 :24 la.m.) ex· ptooloo bu< l juit though< It J<~lbund.<r.,~l!ol!l l :lO in lhe morning, a friend of mi.l)e came running into t h e bedroom looting for me and told me tha t they had bolwn up <he bulldlJll." "I'm just thankful," Molnar said. "Many Umea I have worked late.'' · Four young men have been named in federal warr~nbi_ for the bomb blast, set off In a stolen truck driven lo the center's loadinc dock. The fu ilives· -two of them former writers ror the stu ent newspaper, The 0 a i I y Cardinal -have continued lo elude police and are believed to be.in Canada. Molnar said he was "pretty well 'disheartened about the whole thing. But I'm pretty lucky I didn't get hu;L .. "I have. ~lw1ys been againsl the "''ar," he said, "although ne¥C.[_ ~loJently a1alnst the wa~. f"t'ould like to see us out of there on mOral grounds, but t think it ls ridiculous to start bombln& bulldlnp," '"I hope olh<r 1tlldenll will learn rrom this and put a stop to JI," he Slid. "It his a step hert and no"." BAHA'U'WH, DIVINE PHYSICIAN brlnt• tht "ltfMllly tht W•hl NeMtth" 1,..ir1n.: ........ M.lry H1lc:1Mf l'l1e1: a111t•1 t ... 11r, MS Vlcien. TIN : P'r5'1y, I l'.M .. 11 ....... • GOT AN ADDITION IN MINO? Sweet Music. you don't need a big bankroll to have the things you need to improve your home. ii you shop our ads. Buy what you need. not what everyone says you need, and you'll . be all right. -· • •.. • • .... . .. REGISTER ROW FOR FREE "HOW-TO-DO-IT-RIGHT" CLASSES EVERY WEDNESDAY JOTE. 7:30 to 8:30 P.M. • SEPTEMBER 30 REFRESHMENTS DOOR PRIZES "How to An llCf\11 and Gold t.a1:· by 1h• Gllddtn Company OCTOBER 7 NEW IDEAS EXPERTS TO SHOW YOU HOW NOT TO MESS THE THING UP. La Mlroda SION Community Room. Rtvl•l•r in any 1tor1. "How to Jnttall G111ter1 and Down1pou11" OCTOBER'' ··How to R•Rool Your Home .. FIVE-FOOT CEDAR PALING FENCE m aac}!t Personally checkff by th• writ1r. The paling• ar• ~ 1111 a nd 11lc1 mat•rlol. roil1 and post or1 lncludl'd to make lhe J1t1c• d•ol compl1t1. (II I lied. may I get indig111ion). DECORATIVE BEADS Th• IYi·loot airing lo mo'tt a neclllnc1, a diYider c11r1oin. a d.corolion piec1. or to l•lr• apart to play t11orbl11 with. 29C BAG FOAM BACKED CARPET TILES Soll d .. J. in1id• or ovl. no bocking nMded. 111 CGlort. Wh111. ·., Hv.n1Jng1011 leach. otk Acnon to show you 01u ptiYC1t• 11ock. • ···~ .. RYE . ,. IO~DS UIUIL BYE Her· plot 11U• MW and rou wo8t ka" a browa lown thl1 winter, Th• stlaff t. mon'itl.0111, (1 !!peak tni• npera-c.. whlc b It ~J. A .ti ftMn ta.a thni the trtnt.r.' REG. l.29 99c HEAVY DUTY VINYL RUG RUNNER 77c ~~· Thi• l1n'I th• 1hllty on1.1hln lilt• a 1andY1ich wrap or like 1hat. Thl1 l1 rugged. thlC:k. In colors, and gOt lilU• te•th to hold I\ In pJm;e. PORCH LITES 199 CHOICE OF REG . t.99 Satin black lh1tur• loolt1 pmty ••01hlag 011 your porch. Look1 •t ry dull 011our 1h•lf. ntttlt p1rchology her1, C1rd•.l . . MIXED TULIPS OR DAFFODILS Look Ilk• ugly drild onion1. but II you'll put th•m In th• vround ..oon. you'll~ d1ligh1.d with lht lo•1ly bloom• in 1arly spring. !Put tht tu\lp1 in th• ic•box !or owhil • lir11. it work1 b1tt11). REG.Sc 3~. 'l" OFF BAlfDDfl SUPER WEEDlLIZER Tough 11ull. w1.d1 ond l1r1ll\111 at the &e1m1 tim1. (w•ll actually. I think lt wMd1 tlrtt and thin Jerl\1!111 OT 11 II lh• olhtr woy oround?J. REG. 7.45 6 45 . \ " \ VENUS FLY TUP ., ... Thi1 ho• gotta b1 a w1ird one. Th• thing traps Jly1 and eatt thtm up or IOlll.•lhing, Gel a biq on• o.nd maybe It'll toll• car• of tht bill collectors. what wlll tht y think of next? DBIYEWIY COITllGID SEALER T1M ~-W.Ck 90MY m.ll p11 •-1' arouitd cuwl git aaotbtor fHI' out ol rlM ,id drtnJ'OY. 211 " Say1 It lull m1h1 lh• fol 111. Mcrybe my brothtor·in·low wovld wnrp Ofl• erouncl hit head. Tob • chenc1. what ha" )'10)U got to Jo"? !About 30 pounds) • PLANTING MIX JHc• ••!!11 ii you wa nt ~ur plants and bulbs 10 haY• 11 bltt11 chanc1 in th• world. It wont them to h11•1 It easl•r _than m1, 11m1mber tho11 wolds.) \\cu. FT. BAG KING O' LAWN POWER EDGER Thi hunlt ol pow•r lllad• h9T• In th1 Wut by shorp guy1 lrom lh• Ea11? Up top control 1. lull adju1tment lrom ldg• to 11\m. •·cycle n.gi111. aad all lh1 r••I of th"• llotf. ~~~i~ ~ ~ TUNSPLANT TOOL Righi. right 1hap1. rl9ht lenqlh. right handle grip. wrong d•parlmt nt. I was looking !or Wimpybuf11'"'· You gotd•n lyp•• know all a bout th111 things 10 why should I lry lo loll• It. rlgh1? CAULKING CARTRIDGE Go around the bou" and ffCd up crocb la th• ••l•rior. arouDd. th• 11111. fla9bbig. etc. flit the Ila ..... 9110 and1b9Wcry -- folks UM It -~. a quaall!J dMI. l '· • ,, . ' ' r ' ~ ' \ Ii DAILY Pll OT FrlNJ, S.1ue111btr 2S, 1970 Laver Advances to-Qllarterfinals of Net Cla·ssi _c " Conn~rs Ousted Frorri Tourney __ Top seeded Rod Lave r or COrona del 1itar advanced to ffie quarterfinals of the 44th a1U1ual Paeiric Souttnvest Open ten- nis tournament Thursday nrght with a 7·5. 6-7, 6-4 victory over Nikki Pilic of Yugoslavia. But lhe spotlight was roe used on .young Jimmy Connors, the kid who knocked off · a pair or international stars in his first two matches or the tournament at the Los Angeles Tennis Club. In a tough, bruising, er.plosion-filled match Thursday night, he loot lo Clark Graebner of New York, 6-3, U , 6-2. · COnnon, who earlier had erased Roy Emetson of Newport Beach and Ray Moore of Soul.It Africa , got an ovation after loling. 1be youngster is headed for UCLA this fall. Third seeded Tony Roche 0£ Australia was ousted unceremoniously by Marty Riessen of Evanston, Ill., 2-8, 6-2, 6-3. J Riessen, arter dropping the first set, turned the match around with a poWerful serve and a sharp effective forehand to take the final two sets handily. SeatUe 's unseeded Tom Gorman upset Andres Gimeno. Ith seeded, 6-3, H , 6-3 and second seeded John Newcombe of Australia rallied to whip fellow coun. tryman Fret! Stolle, 5-7, 6-3, 6-3. Seventh seeded Arthur Ashe (If Gum Springs, Va., ca.me from behind to down Czechoslovakia's Jan Kodes, 2--6, 7-5, 6-3. Ageless Pancho Gonzalez of Malibu us- ed clever volleying to down Roger Taylor o( England, :!-<, 6-3, 6-3. 'Ille 4~yNN1d Gonzalez ls fiftb seeded in tbe low'Oa- ment that concludes Sunday afternoon. In other matches, John Newcombe. Australia, defeated countryman Fred Stolle. 5-7;"""'"3, 6-3 and Stan Smith •O{ Pasadena beat Brazil's Torilaz Koch, 6-3, M . ~ l~ women's singles, toi>-seeded Lesley Hunt cf Australia nefded three "Mb to deteat Esme Emanual of South Afnca. ._ 2. 2-6, 6-1 : Sharon Walsh of San Jbfael upset Helen Gour lay of Australia, t-1,·M ; Patricia Walkden of South Africa defeated Janet NewberiY of La Jona; 6-3, 6-4· and Cecilia Martinez of San J!'ran-ci~ eliminated Linda Lewis of Palos Verdes, 6-3, 6-2. I ~yra-cuse-Situ11ti-o-n-Boils-- ,.,... .. A CUB GETS THE BOOT -Chicago Cub second baseman Glenn Beckert (18) is upended by St. Louis Cardinals' Carl Taylor to break up a double- play. Taylor's slide was wide of the bag as he kick- U,I Tt""9 .. ed the feet ou·t from under Beckert on the force- oµt at second. Cubs resume torrid Naional League East ~e in Philadelphia tonight. · Showdown Series in-NL East Pirates . Open Tliree~game Set Witli, Mets By the Assoclated Press Jtbe wbacky National League Easl lille fight resumes tonight with all three con- tenders looking, for a change, like con· tenders. New York. tied for second place wilh Chicago 2lfl games behind Pittsburgh. opens a three ga me series with the Pirates. The CUbs, meanwhile, will be watching the numbers on the scoreboard and the Philadelphia Phillies on the f!eld. The Pirates prepared for ,.. t h e i r showdown with New York by whipping Montreal B-0 Thursday night as Luke Walker scattered seven .hits and Gene Alley drove in four runs wHh a triple and two singles. Chicago moved into a second place lie with the_idle Mets by whacking SL Louis 7-1 on Ken Holtzman's seven-hitter. Pittsburgh and Chicago, both stag- gering lately, looked solid for a change Sports In Brief Thursday. And the idle Mets, trying to pump some life back into their. pennant hopes, ralli'ed in the late innings for a pair of victories against Philadelphia earlier in th e week. The Pirates, who had dropped two of Hal..,,at Lt•twe 1:111 Pt1111a11t lllce al a Gi..nct " WINI Liit Pel. ltfllnol Plly Pll!~Dut!ll> I• 11 .UI ' Cllica1111 11 7• .51) 1'~ 7 Ntw York 71 7• .SJl 11J> 7 P itt'"""'911 -At home l. Ntw Yori!; Away l. St.Louis. ClllCI .. -Aw1y 7, PhllM11!pll!1 '· ...... Yor-•. New Y..tl -Ar home "-Chicego; Aw1y -J PHl!.llurgll. three to the Expos before Thursday, gave ·Walker plenty of offensive support, ba t- tering four fl1onlreal pitcliers for 15 hits. Alley was the key man, singling home one o( three runs the Pirates scored when they bunched five hits in the third inning. He singled another home in the sixth and then tripled for two more in the seventh. Dodgers in Cincinnati; .!:Everybody had doubted that we could .win," said Alley. "But we're still in fir~L place. They have to catch us." The Mets would need a three-game sweep to al-complish that this y,•eekend . New York and Chicago each have seve n -games to play and the Pirates have six. The Cubs, .,.,,ho play three garries in Philadelphia before finishing the season with four in New York, kept their hopes healthy by whipping the Cardinals. Chicago shattered a l·l tie with four runs ln the sixth inning with a bad-hop single and a juggled grounder playing key roles in the rally. Glenn Beckert opened with a walk and raced to third when Tommy Davis' bouncer hopped through the Astroturf in- field for a single. Ron Santo bounced to Dal Maxvi ll but the Ca rdinal shortstop juggled lhe potential double play ball and had to settle for a forceout as Beckert scored . Jim Hickman doubled one run home and Randy Hundley's single and a wild throw by Lou Brock resulted in two more. Billy Williams' 2ooth hit of the season helped Chicago's two.run rally in the seventh. MONTlll:"L PITTSIUllOM ·~•llt.i •lll•lllrbl Hahn.cl •OI OM . ..t.lou.d 5120 S11tlltrlloo>d, 1" l 0 0 0 C1lll. :Ill S I 2 1 Sllub. rf l o l O A.OUw r. rf ' I I I 81ilt y, II • O 1 o $!t r1ttll, 11 • O O O StudenJs Call for Strike of Kansas Game SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) -Emerging bitterness between black and white players on the Syracuse University foot- ball team, apparently soothed for Saturday's game against Kansas. sho\\·ed signs Thursday of spilling over int.o the surrounding city. A group or about 100 Negro residen~ and !tudents went to city hall Thursday and read Mayor Lee Alexander a state- ment "calling for a strike or the game Saturday." 'Ille action followed declaration! by some white athletes 1Wedn·esday that they would not play in the Kansas game because of the way in which eight suspen- ded black players were reinstated on the team. The black players had boycotted spring practice and had nol been inviled back for early practice by Coach Floyd "Ben" Schwartzwalder. . They were returned to the team roster ~ ·Tuesday after a series of meetings that saw ulliversity officials hUddled with Alexander, State Human Rights Com- missioner Robert J. Mangum, and the 68- member squad. The meetin~ were the culmination of a series ofa"Ctions by the black afhletes and the university. The Negroes had accused the athletic department and the football staff, in particular, of ,racial bias, which the university denied, and were suspended Aug. I after rejecting a university offer that included a statement of commitn1ent to the team and its coaches. Thrtt of the eight filed ctisc_rimihalion charges with the local human rights com- mission. Later the blacks proposed a reinstatement program o( their own thal contained a university inquiry into the athletic department University Chancellor John E. Corbally Jr. then announced that a student- faculty-administration inquiry would be undertaken and Tuesday's round of talks bc~an . Following the meeting a spokesman for the univ ersity said the reinstatement had been r ec ommended by Schwa rtzwalder. upon a vote of the team members. A statement issued by the team said only that they would accept the suspend- ed players in order to play the Kansas game. Later, some white members said they y,•ould not play the game themselves, declaring_·that they had been forced to accept the reinstatement l)flhreat of a court order banning the game. Alexander had asked universit y of- ficials to tell· the team he would seek the order to a v e r l possible violence in Archbold Stadium. The black group told Aler.ander Thurs· day that "y,·e are concerned with the safety of the eight ballplayers if they do return to the squad." ··Judging by the reactjon of the white ballplayers, the athletic department, and the university, there are obviows racial overtones." lhe group added. "We are convinced that the black players were used as pawns in order that Saturday's game could be played." Wright Goes For Angels Against A's · No manager has ever lasted two years on the Oakland Athletics under ov.ner Charles Finley. But John ?o.tcNamara begins his second year today. The best McNamara·s Athletics can hope for this season is second place in the American Leagu e \Vest and the team they·re battling y,•ith. the California" Angels. has its ace Clyde Wright on the mound tonight when the teams cllr:sh. It'll be the beginning of the final btlne stand for the Angels. ; Wright, unquestionably the comeback player of 1970. is 21·11 this season with a no hitter previously agairuit the A's. Last season he was a relief pitcher with a 1-1 mark. Another problem the A's of flfcNamara will have tonight is Alex Johnson, the silent. sullen but brilliant batting star of the Californians. He is the America11 ,loop's top batter al .325 3.nd has collected 11 hits iii his last 20 at bats to ma intain his lead by a point over Minnesota's Tony Oliva. The three-gamt series is the key to y,•hich team will reside in second when the year is over. The Angels are 121/2 games off the AL West pace of the Twins with Oakland 91h back. A three-game sy,·eep by the Angels here would knot the teams with five left to play for California and three left for the A ·s. Lakers Fall to -Rockets illlttn.111, c: • 0 l .0 8.RoOerliM. lb • 2 L G-- The Angels dropped three back o( the A's Thursday when they lost a 7-3 decision to the Milwaukee Brewers in Mil waukee . The Angels out-hit the win· ners 13-11 but Tommy Harper was the show. He slammed his 31st homer and became one or only five men in history who have slammed more than 30 home runs and stolen 30 bases in the same year. Southpaw Claude Osteen (15-13) takes 10 the mound lonighl against the Reds in Cincinnati as the Dodgers try to break a second place tie with the San Francisco Giants. Osteen's n1ound opponent wiU be ex- Angel Jim fllcGlothlin (14-9). The game will be.broadcast over -KFJ, beginning at 5 p.m. ~tanager Walt Alston·s Dodgers Were Idle Thursday after completing the season's series with the Giants Wed- nesday . The San Franciscans swept two of the three games played al Dodger Stadium to even the teams' head-to-head 1970 series at g..9 and keep the biiter rivals deadloclf- ed in the runnerup spot in the National ~ague West. • HONOLULU -The San Diego Rockets, with Elvin Hayes blocking shots in midseason form and scoring 22 points, led all the way and defeated Ule Los Angeles Lakers 123-111 Thursday night in the se3son exhibition opener lor both teams. Larry Siegfr~ro. obtained by the Rockets from Boston in "the off-season. had 21. '!_lie Rockets led 31·22 after the first quarter and 61-50 at the half. Willie M~er and Jerry \Vest led Laker 1COrer,s with 17 ea ch. \Vilt Chamberlain had I&. Elgin Baylor. had a bruised heel and did not play. About 4.500 wat ched the basketball game. The Lakers mcel the ~lihvauket Bucks tonight in the same arena . •· SAN JUA."l, P.R. -World lightweight boling t\ampion Jsmae/ Laguna or Panama and hi' smoothfaced challenger from SCOU&nd, Ken Buchanan went through f1n&I workouta Thursday prior to Saturday'• 15"-round title bout at San Juan's Hlnm Bl!horn SUdfom. ''I'll l"ft tl'• not lmpos.tjbk! lo brlng a ttown b8d; to Britain,'' the !>year-old Rochanln IHI When It was pointed out lhat only one other Brltl!h boxer· had ever won a championship outside his home soil, and that> was in 1915. Saturday's fight will be televised live. \•ia satellite as part of the American Broadcasting Compan y's Wide World of Sports program. A crowd of about 9,000 is . expected at ringside for the bout, set for -2:30P,fu. EDT. Both fi ghters predicted~ victory today. Laguna said he was faster and had more. experience.. Bachanan claimed he was the. harder puncher and benefited from youth. • LONG BEACH Fears that Los Angeles Rams quarterback R o m a, n Gabriel had suffered an appendicitis at- tack have proved groundless. Gabriel, who has been troubled wilh a hip bsuise, left the practice rield \\led· nesday and went to the training room. \Vhen a muscle spasm occurred. the trainer fea red a possibility of ap- pendicitis and Gabriel went to a hospital for tests. a Ram spokesman said. Tests were negative. • EDMONTON. Alta. -f>nly one player In the Los Angeles Kings' preseason training camp at Victoria. B.C .• was "'ilh the team when the Kings ""ere fonned three years ago and even he niay not be around when the 1970 season open.!1. Bill "Cowboy" Flett. a 6-foot-2, 204- poundcr. played ri ght ·wing for the Kings for three season~. Run1ors spreading lately Indicate he n1ay be traded to Det.rolt. The only other King associated wlth the 11117.Y team sllll considered with the tt4m Is Eddie Joyal, the center .. 11o ~ • holdout. • . 1'be Kings take ori the Vancouver canucks, the National Hockey IA!ague's newett expal'l6ton tNm, &onlght in the flrst or three consecutive pmtuon con-tem. The game is at Edmonton, followed b)' games 1t Calgary on Saturday and 1t Victoria on Sunday. F.irty. lb J o l o Seng11mm. e .o 1 l 1 L~bGy, 3b I 0 0 0 H~br>tr. Jb • J 1 I M1sl\ort, cl J O O o Alley, H • O 3 • Wine. U • 0 1 0 W•lklf, p J 0 G 0 A.enka. p 1 O O· o $1ron<TYver. p o o o o McGlfln.p 0000 Pllllllps, PIO l O O o A.11 ......... P OOOt Ta1111 l1 0 , • TOlll1 JI I n I MonlrNI 000 000 000 -I P lthbur911 OlO 012 2011 -I E -Heoner, Sutllerltfld. I.IP -Mc>nrreet l. Plltliburgh l . LOB -MOnlrtll I, Pl!tlburgll I. 11 -I . Roberll(ln, Het>nt r, A. Oliver. ll -Alley. S -W1lktr. " " • .. .. .. .... IL. l'l-11) ' • • • ' • stror1m1rer • ' • ' • • MCGIM ' • • • • • ..,,,.,. ' ' ' • • ' Wilker CW.15-11 ' ' • • ' • Tlmt -l :ll. Artfftd1nct -1 .. 016. CHICAGO ST. LOUIS llrllrbi •-rllrbl Ku slngtr, SI J I I 0 Broe~. It • I 2 0 BK ktrl, 2tl • 1 0 O J1vltr. 111 • 0 J . B.Wlllltm1, rr j 0 l I C.Tlyklt, lb J 0 I T.O.vl1, It • o I o Torre, l b • o 1 C1lll10<1. •I o o O O C1tcltt1el, d ' o o Slnlo, lb l I 0 l Melncle1, rf • 0 0 Hltklflln. lb • 1 2 I Slmmot11. C J 0 0 CJ l <M$, ti o I o o ~nilll, " • O 2 PitPI'-• cl 2 l I I TorrtJ, p 2 I 1 liur11:11er. c • o 1 l C1".T1ylor, ·, o o t 11otum1n, p • 1 I I Be1uchlmp, p1o l 1 o Br!IH. p O O O Tol•ls JJ 7 1 s Tote~ u l 1 Clloc:~~ 010 OD• "'1 -1 s1. Lau11 roo OOI) ooo -1 £ -l•oc• OP -Cllk:IQO '· 1.01 -Chlcaoo S. SI. l.0'111 1. 28 -Hk:k-. Hit -PtPllOlll 12•1. II• H It Ell Bl SO Holllmln IW,U-11) t 1 1 I t 3 '°'"' fl..1-10) • • • s s ' Cll.TavlDr 1 l 1 1 I 1 l •lltl 1 • • • 1 2 WP -Cll. Ttvlor. l -2::11 ... -u.tlJ. His Eyes are Closed ., • Jose Gonzalez coni'iei;ts \Vith . a right to the side of the head of Lui~ J\1anuel Rodriguez during th~ eighth round of title fight in Miami Beach Thursday night. Rodrigeuz y,•on a 12-round decision to become the Latin American middJeweight champion. CALl,Oi NIA •b .r " •• Alomer, 1tl • I I I T1tum. d J I I 1 Cox,p 0 001 RIYf r$. Ph 1 G I 0 T1!11m,o llOOD f rewsl, ph I 11 I O A, Johnson. If 5 D 1 o COW1111, tf 1 ? t Sotncer. lb o o e f.1c111.c O J I A.ult.lb_ Ill lol>1111ont, ..,, 1 0 0 0 Ptr•1.si IO "ll C11v1er. 11 7 G I o A:e1101, cl J o o o Brncllev. • O o I I IC11lev. • o o o o Von,lll't 1011 MILWAUJCll HarPir. lb Hn11n, lb OM1y, cl 5""1ff. If Bur~. •I S1ndtrt, 1 Pena, 1s Roof, c 1Cubl1~. lb ~~::~,_· SnYder, rl M r 'W l J ' ! J I ' I ] 1 1 • • I ! I • 0 0 • 0 0 I I J o 1 a • I I e 4 I l 8 J I •I o • • • • I I I I i '. //lilt .,. • 0 • 0 Grlftln. 2D 0 0 I - Go11>1l•r, pit 1 G I 0 lot11 31 J IJ J Tot•! .>..~ 1' ? 11 , C~ll"°rni.. 000 OOl --~ MllWIU~tt HO 100 ,,Oh -r • E:-J, T11um; O,-C1lllorni1 J. M1twellkff 1. 1.oa-..:c1)ftwn11 •. Mllw•ul!M 1. Js-4l. Mar , J . T1lum. HR-.rl>tr 0 11. -Greene One Step Up on Major Goal C.'OLUMBUS, Ga . CAP) -Bert Greene Says his fervor for hunting and fishing equals his desire to-play golf, but that his major goal is lo win a tournament on. the PGA lour. lie may gel all three during the $60,000 Groen lsland Open golf tournament which Slatted Thul1dtf '{ith the Georgia na- tive ca rving out a. five-under-par fiS to take a one-ltroke lead into today's sec- ond round o( the 72--bole event. "It's great to be home In these pine trtt1t" said Greene. who chatted with writers as 11arry Toscano ran Into lrou· ble on his final ho)e and took • bo-gty nvr, finishing one shot.back at 6' 1n the tit' with Australian Bob Stinton. ''l gol rogo dove hunting Tuesday on the edge of Alabama and rm going to try to catch a few bream lhls afternoon and again tomorrow morning before I tee off," said Greene. who has played in only .six tournaments in three months because of bursitis in his left shoulder. Greene said the hot Georgia suo helped his ailing shouh:t~r. "I was really surprised on my first hole • when I made a 35-foot putt for a birdie because putting is usually the first part or your grune to go y,•l\en you lay o!r awhile ," he said. Orecnt said he hed played only t\\·o rounds of goU ln tl\'O v.·cck,, "l drove '!ell and putted \\·ell,'' Greene said. "I had only one lhree-pUtt green Jtnd 1"11 be happy lo have just one every mund lhe res~ of the \11eek." He predicted somCone ma)! shoot a 62 or 63this week over"the 6.711-yard apr 35- ~70 Green Island Couol)I Club course. "You ca,.n make lhe birdies here," he: said. ~·but you have to elimillal.e the bogeys .. , .. · · Creene·s round Included seven birdies and two bogeys, one on the fifth where he 111\ssed a three foot putt, Toscano, finishing on lhe tront side, drove his tee JihoC., Into some trees on the right or the fairway aild then sha nked his v.·edge IQ'ing to get out or lroUble_ lie gol down in two from 18 fetl away for • bogey. which prevented him rrom gain in& a first-round Ile . Toscano said he made the "hardest putt I ever had in my life" on the fifth hole. "1t was a 12.footer that rolled right off the table. Jt must have broke sii feet," he said. Stanton played a steady round wilh twt birdies on each side. Another Georgian, Bunky Henry, and Tommy Jacobs nre tied at 67, while six player• wctt· deadlocked at 70 -Richard Crawford, Bobby Gteen.Y"ood.. Bob Stone, John Ja .. cobs, ChrirBarker and Bryan Comstock. The field will be cut to the low 10 iicores and ties after toda.y for the final ty,·o round$ S•turd1y and Sunday. • ' ' • .. " " ., -,. ' ,, ' ·. ' ' I " ·, '1 ., 1 1 ·, ·- • -. • Friday, Stptt"'11tr 25, 1970 DAILY l'ILOT Jt Oile~s Face Tough St. Pa~l -I --, Swordsmen Six-point Fov orite in HB Tilt By llOGEB C.\lll80N ............... S'lfOl'dsmeDI' 104 mart Jut year . Complemenll"' Quirk ... a pair of. Tiie prldt o1 the -t and Anplm banl-nmnlnl backs, fldlback llartln leque is· at· llal:• lOllilhl wbeo perm. Medina (llO) and Tooi Smith (111) at ntal power St.. Pao! lllgb of Saala l"e llilbock. Spriop illvadel !IUnlllllloa Beach lllgb'i St. Paul alien a tood lile ~ (llS campus i.. a . maJI" , .,.ml'Olllalloo av_. cm the lino and Ul In the i.tween a pair olJltill ~ Game bacllleld) llllt f11r trom ...,. ol the time ii t. , mam•m• .._. st. Paul bu fielded 1D SL Paul, under the .~ or.coach Mm-J>UI -· jon ,lnCieb; id<Jn\11 lnln town .WI HlmllllllOD Bacb, _.wblle, eounlln ••-~-Ing 7 • ,__ with the oulltandlng play ol tailbaclt sma • ..,. •-a .._....pen ~ -Girth Wlae, wbo'1 turned In In cme of IOEIRancbo. Huntinitcm. meaawblle, •lightly lea Orance County's premier numen after touted ·m the ,,....,.._ ,.._·•-·•, will lllidlnC the Olten In a 7-2 marl< laat ye11r ..... n-r """t-..._... u a quart.erbeck. }lunttncton's *i&ht be trying to mab II )-0 for the ,.... 171 _.., ca-·•-alter nail'•• La Habra In the a-per • ........... ... Hll quarterbocldng _.,.. adds wall laat week, IM, with • pair of lint further -In the ._iuan with bis quarter loucbdowm. ability to -from bis tailback 11ot. St. Paul hu been inatalled as I six-Wise ICOl'td both touchdowns in the La point favcrltt. Habra victory. Junior Steve Pickford has The blue and white 1969 Angelus taken over the fullback position where St. ,.. ..... •• ... IJI Jta Orlnt II! WM .... """'-1'5 110 *" M<Goum T Jim ,.._ ,,. Its It.., Ml•-119 G Jim ,_rt Ult Its Jatln Gt>ll c Twrv DtV-1M 17S J• ,,,,.., G GHINrt Ct .. t 1'5 US f'.tt 0. Gru.. T 9111 TWiii D 110 Mt•t Traul t! T ..... CleNll I• US Jitmle 0uh1r. I Q Jim M#tl11 1• League nmntrup ls expected to field a coach Ken Moats bad ezpreued concern balanced attack behind the quarter~· earlier in the year. -lng--0!-junk><-Jamle Quirk,.a.17~WIWld"1----Rlckl'"1 <amO..lbraugh with oome vltaL- junior wbo wu lnatrwnental in the yardage lut week and appears to hive llJ TOUJ'.Sln.,_, >=--1.._o.rtfl,WIM '---I 1'0 Mlfllll Metl!nt 8 Amlllli ltlillI '"'TRIPLE THREAT -liuntinglon Beach High 's Garth \Vise is an all-round standout for coach Ken ··~ Moats' Oilers. \Vise. \\'ho quarterbacked Huntington •'·!o ·a 7-2 mark last year. is a running and recerv1ng DAILY ,ILOT S!tH ,...,. threat from bis tailback position. Wise e3rned firsl- team All-Sfilfset League and All-Orange Coast area honors last year at quarterback and will be in action tonight against St.. Paul. ~ ., . . .• ", ·Proth t o Frets .About Texas ... \ Northtvester1t Game is T une11rp;Says Bruin Coacli 1 j.os ANGELES -Texas, the nation's ·No. 1 football team, worries UCLA coach Tommy Prothro. even thou ch Nbrthwestern is this week's foe. ·• PrOthro. early this y,·eek, said he was "'shocked" at the way Texas mauled California last Saturday, 56-15. And he in- -dicated that although NorUiwestern is the '\'JV:t foe, the game 1vith the \Vildcats will 0bt a tune-up with a revamped lineup for ·tne Texans in ty,·o wee ks. ··':fnjuri es in UCLA's previous two vic- tOfieS forced Propiro Thursday to an- 'noUnce that Reggie Echols would start at wide receiver, that Terry Vernoy would stnrt at fl anker, Doug Huff at linebacker ·and-Jerry Jaso and Frank Jones at safe· ty. • Of that quintet. only Huff is a senior 'ind he's new to the position. .. . Sn11thern Cal ·:· LOS ANG ELES -Marv Montg omery, n senior offensive tackle, and Greg Slough, a senior linebacker. have been named the University of Southern California's captains for Salurday's game with Iowa. . Only one change \Yas announced for the Trojans by coach John M c K a y : sophomore John Grant will start in place of defensive tackle Tody Smith, who has an injured ankle. · Rain has hit Iowa City on six of the last seven days, and ,;fcKay said Sho\\1ers are expected ~or Satun:lay's game. Stanford STANFORD -Stanford coach John Ralskln announ ced two lineup changes Thursday for the Pacific·& 'Conference football opener at Oregon Saturday. Ralsron moved senior Jack Lasater to the starting split end positiOn ahead of Demea Washington. Lasater started against Arkansas. but \Vashington got the nod last week against San Jose State. Th.e othec switch puts Art Smiley at an offensive guard spot, replacing Terrell Smith. who has a leg bruise. Smith .is expected to play, however, along wiUt':Mike Simone, a linebacker ·µoyals' Strik eout Whiz . . . : Overcom~s. Cycle, Cras ~ ' • KANSAS GJTY (AP) -Kansas City ... pitcher Bob Johnsop nearly lost a leg in a motorcycle accident three yc~rs ago and \\'as told he ~·ould never pitch a baseball .again. ' Bµt the doctors were wrong. . "I used to have a goal or just getting to the majors," Johnson said, "a:nd getting one strikeout •.• just one. Now, I'd rather not strike out batters, and I don't try to. It takes more out of you to strike them out." He got that one strikeout in his major league debut with the 1'.fets 1 last Sep- tember. . who missed the San Jose game with a sprained ankle. Tom Jones will slart again at Simone's outside linebacking sP9l as the third· ranked Indians starl .their conference schedule. ' Califo rni• BERKELEY -Calw-nia football coach Ray WilllJ:CY announced several lineup changes ~ursday, including one that returns sophomore running back ls3.riC Curlis lo the-secoOd string. Steve Murphy and Tim·· Todd are scheduled to start aS running bacb Saturday in the home opener against ln-- diana. Curtis is the team's leading MJSber after two games. Steve Curtis will make his first start. at quarterback. replacing Westminster's Dave Penhall. in another offensive change. .. qn defense, guard 0. Z. White returns to the lineup after recovering from an ankle injury. Bob Roger! replaces Sherman \Vhite at one tackle spot, Tom i1awkins takes over for Tom Davis at right linebacker and Jerome Carter will start instead of Joe Acker in the defensive backfield. Washin gto n SEA'tJ'LE -The Washington Husklesr held their final workout Thunday ind concentr'ated on goal line offense and defense in preparation for Saturday's football game against Michigan. "We realize we're up against a tougher team this week," coach Jim Owens said. "Last week we had a very sound total ef· fort by everyone and we look for the team to play as good if not bttter against Michigan," he said. Aerial-minded Corona Duels ~peedy Saints A wild-scoring pr<p football game <OUld be in store for fam tonight when speedy Santa Ana invades Newport Harbor's Davidson Field to duel ~hippy Corona del Mar of the Irvine League. The kickoff is slated ror I o'C lock. , Both teams are coming off opening round lesst1 and trying to get on the wi n trail, Corona del Mar losl a heartbreaker, 7· 0, to Newport Aarboi:, Jast week when the 'SaiJors scored with less than a minute to go after a 39-yard punt return set up • nine-yard scorin& nm. Santa Ana, mtanwhile, opened the 70 Mason against Mater Dei and lostJ 2&-7 decision after giving the tough Monarchs a hard time through the first half. For corona del ftjar Its the second straight' Sunset League opponent prior to Irvine hostilities and coach Dave Holland is expecWI to d!recJ. the Sea Kjngs with another aerial displa y. Quarter~ack Keith Samuels, a lefty, tossed 21 times aaainst Newport. With · the proper support, he could easily outdo . his 11 compleUons or last week. Several · key tosses were dropped by CdM ceceivers, includi ng a cinch touchdown. Holland has 1hlken up his running backs somewhat. inserting 144-pound John Miles as the Wlbact in an effort to off~ set the expected pus rush of Santa Ana, Standout liDeman Alee Ramsay suf. fered i sprained ankle in the Harbor loss . but ii expected 'to be ready for the Saints. If not, Ken Carpenter (115) is billed for offensive tickle duty while Phil Tanner (150) woold take over at defenslve tlckie.- Coach Tom Ba1dwln's Santa Ana Crew meanwhile, ahowed an impressive aerial display against Mat.er Dei's zone·defense. The 'Saints picked the Monarchs' defens.e apart with shocking ease at the outset and setUed for 11 completions in 27 tries for 125 yards. Like Samuels, quarterback G a r y Brown's ~fctntage suffered somewhat because or dropped passes. Eipecled to start at Lallback for the Saints is normal split end Walter Mead, a 180-pound junior. The Saints were hopeful, however,' that Monty Floyd is ready to go again after suffering an ankle injury against Mater Dei. Floyd broke off a 59-yard touchdown run for the Saints' only score against :P.fater Dei. ....... 140 Jlllln Tl'omll 11$ Jim Wtltri XS Geo. HN!hel'lntltw! 700 cnnt Hr.lff !10 0-111 Wtltlno 'lolO Bob ltl'(ft 1 H lllV Rob!MOn no G•rv ,,_" llO Wtllr~ Me.., 110 Klrll: ,.,,.,., llS Jefl Clarv (IAM ... MW t! Ktr1 IOlllfll' '" T Sltn Nls,...lm 167 G Tim ltndel lit C 0uct. Mlllt•' 1'5 G c;o.,.rt ZlnwNrlf'lltt 171 T Al9( lttl'llMY 1'D IE Jiff Rtltllerl lm Q Kfll~ S1muels ID • John Mii• 1.t.t • lob Ftrrtro 171 • $1111~• ltkhtrdWI 1 ... M4IV GETS PRAYER, DIA.LS FOR DUCAT LUBBOCK, Tu. (UPI) -There are no more tickets to be.h;ad to tbe Teus-TeI· as Tech football game here 'Saturday. A record 1tJ,endance of more than ~1,000 is expected, and the stadiwn seats only 41 ,500 . A min called the Lubbock A vllancht- Joumal '111unday to place a classined •d in the paper. 1be ad uid anyone needing two tickets to the 1ame should leltpbone 76H6!0. ' The number turned out to be Dia1-A· Prayer. '-..I 17S Ftrnlt llobtdlllt, I SI-°'1¥tol lllili Baena Park Inv ades High-scoring Estancia Seeks 2nd Straight Win A hi&lwcorlni Ealan<ia Eagle football team will entertain Buena Pck tonight in Le Bard Stadium at Orange Coast College in the flnal tuneup encounter for the Irvine LealU'. Game time is al I o'clock. Coach Phil Brown's Eagles opened the season with a 30-0 victory over 'I\lstin. This is the widest margin of victory in the ochOol '1 blatory and the tblnl 11111est scwe ever pooled by the Eagles. Jim Scbulll, laat Ytllr'• •tarting fullback, has been installed 11 the starter at the important tailback poaltlon. Schultz takes over from last week's starter Mark Terrin who will concentrate on defense tonight. One other offensive backfield change will be made .for Estancia. John Dla:on moves into the starting fullback slot with Bob Conklyn and Bill Wagner remaining with the defense 111 the w1y , barring in- jury. One player who will see action both ways as well as with the special uriit teams is slotback Bob Kaiser. He does the punlln&, is the deep man on punt and kkkolf .. turns, plays halfback 111 defense and Is cme ol the top receiven on oflense. Quite a load for one player to carry but Kaiser did It well enough Jut week to be named player of the week for the Eagles. The Estancia offense is pnerated by letterman quarterback Curt Thomu, in his second year at tbe helm. Buena Park, alter a 1low start ln whicb Mayfair pooled a 254 vldory, will lldd a ereen team lrith 1 new bead coach. Mike Lanctot, a aopbomore wtll 11.arl at quarterback and dlrec:t the Coyote 1- f ormaUon. Alan Yee at fullback w~ a part-time backfield participant last season and Re.: Grigg at slotback was a defensive starter. •tt-1• -· ... uo LM Frlldtndorf • ltonU~ "' -1'~ Ctl Sllor" ' SOii Z1lk1 '" 1• Ltr,.,. Mtul*°'i G T-llrr!1 ,. "' Slt~I SnVOl'T" G MLkf H ... rv "" 110 LOUli Flortf ' Al Fr1kn ·~ US l 11b V1nv11,.,.n , ltkll S!tl-rt '" UO 11111 Ktlser • ltt• Joto1111111 m ·170 Cuf' lhOfl'lll Q MLllf Ltl'l(lot ·~ ISO Kt~ln lrown • Altn Yt• , . lfO JoM Dl•on • Hl lTY Dollll m 16 Jim k~ultt • RfJI. Grip "' EAGLE POWER -Estancia High School's hopes fo~ a first .. ver wln- nlng season aDd a solid crack at the Irvine League tiUe rest on tbe S)loulders of' quarterback Curt Thomas. Thomas completed 38 of .1111 attempta for a 47.5 percentage and SOii yards last year. He's atso a threat running from hll QB post, accowiling for 252 yards in '119. Not only has Johnson resumed his pitching .career but he's .on the threshold of becoming the best right-handed rogkie ~tri)Jeout artist in the Ame~ican League HI 6" years... • Johnson, b'aded to the Royals b)' the New York Mets last December, has struck out 188 ballers in 197 innings and ~ on!y two more to climb into third place in the AL's all-time strikeout ret:Or'(is for rookies behind Herb Score, a -scmthpaw. and Russ Ford. Gary Peters ~ritly is in third place. Johnson's won-lost record ·isn't great. lie has won seven and lost 12 but his pitching has been better than this record inWcates. · • , . The 27-year~ld rookie has given up on- ly two_earned rum or lc5.'1 in 15 of his 24 starts. He has struck out 10 or more four times, incjudlng 11 against the east division champion Baltimore Orioles, and hit his peak Aug. 23 when he struck out U Boston Red Sox. ~ions Hope .to Feast -on .Jackrabbit · Score faMcd 245 ror Cleveland in 1955, and Ford · whiffed 209 for lhc 1910 New York Yankees.· · • , There 's a lot of feeling throughout the . •league tha t Johnson is the year's No. 1 ·rookie. Jqboso n will pitch next against the lYest Division Champ ion Minne90ta. l'wlna here &aturda)'. night. Royals P,iannger. Bob Lemon said today JohnsOn \viii h:iYC one other start b(fort the !ea.son ends. Johnson 's strikeout accompli9hment! is etreft more remarkable because he speot more than orle-fourth of the season in the: bullpen \\'hen the Ro)'als weri" thin on late-inning relief. Lemon. a pretty fair judge of pltchtrs si nce he .won 207 AL games, predicts Johnson bas a tremendous future. "There is no doubt he has a good arm:• temon said. '1Hls concentraUon hit' im· proved considerablf and he should be a good starting pitcher for a long Un1e.'" Westminster aod Long Beach Poly root· nlng allack, Boswell has ahullled his ~ball teanu have one thing very much in 1tart1nt'b.ckfield whb Chuck Winkles set common-botharebungry!orivtct.ory. to go at tailback ud Jlm Hotland at The tw<i CJF AAAA dubs <laah tonight fullbac:k. w-..-netted only 27 at Westminster. Kickoff is at I. yards ruabina qainst Le~ The Uons or Westrill.bster are coming Jet.£ Sltmena wUJ key the Lion attack at ocr a 2tHI setback lo Lakewood, the tap. -qljOrlerblU, Lui woek, the junior 174- ranked team in the CIF AAAA division. pounder •p1etec1<e:l&bt ol 17 passes for Long Beach Poly also dropped Its flnt 85 )'ardl. game , 27--0, lo Redlands. The lone Westminster TD came via the Westminste r coach Bill Boswell has aerial route wTth raerve quarterback stressed execution Otis week in practJce Terry YOClJ'll teamlnl •iUi wingbatk sessions-. 1rylng to correct a number ol • Wilt-illddocks on a 15-yifd strike tn the mlst.akes made int~ leti$ to Lakewood. final quarter. • In an auempt to beef up the Lion run. Lons Be_acb Poly wJJl_be l'ilbold the r . : servl<es ol starling quartelilack Roy<e Smith. He alflued a broUil 1q early In the Redlands -and will be aldelined the .... of the Ytllr· Poly coach Pbll Santla will O!liy 1tart me letterman en offenle. He ·II la<tle Ulba Tuliau, I 1-41, 215- pounder who lettered as a defnlve llekle Jut IUIOll. Tuliau and _, David Wilanll anchor a Poly line that av.,_ 211 pooncll. WllanU, a ltllior, ~ another 115-pounder. Other lllO-poundm up front for the ~ad(rabblls loclude guards.Larry Love (230) and Terry Montgomery (2tl) and li1ht <1111 Joe -(300). ' p ~. -L~ .. 1 ?op nmruna back r..-Poly, ...,,ntlnc lo SanUa, ii junior ballback -Willia, a t»pounder. Santia, in bil leCCXMI year at Poly, MY1 he rears the llze of the Weotm._r dereJ\Sl•e line al1cbor"1 by Deam ~dridp, a M, »pound aenlor. W9'e::IRlla 111 ..... Otell• n1 c;.,.., ""'",,.. 141' ...... JIOdl; 1•1 Mt•tl!I kl! ...... 111 hrt ,.,.....,.. a.Todd Jiit,,._ 16"1 '"""' Gr--..1111 lHJtff~ "' OWdr. w1111r.• .. J llf'I HelllllCI 16' Wtll MIMMlu -. - ------- . - • . • • . ,, • F'rld•Y, Stpltmbtr 25, l.970 -Artists, Tritons ·Resume l!J'lll-ry I By PlllL R08S ot .... ~ ..... •••ff The .. Laauna Beach·Sa n Clemente football r l v a I r y (formerly the Lquna lleach- Caplotrano oeries) ,.,..... tooigt>I (8) II Sin Clemente Hilh and the hoot Ttllolls or ~ Eldl will 1tt.mpt to wllilll• -. the JM-2 l,aguDI edge with a dupllea. lion ol last year's 27-G Triton triumph. In fact, since the Capistrano Cougars beeame the San Clemente Tritons back in 1164, the -bai supplanted its pall losinc percentqe qainst tht Artiata witb a more Diablos, ~,~cifica __ Tangle ''He'll be the best running back we've faced in the last couple: of years." Those words nowed from the tongue of Pac ifi ca Mariners' head football coach Art Michalik when queried about Aundre Holmes, star tail back cf the Mission Viejo Diablos, ' who h-OSt t h e Mariners tonight (I) in a pre· league contesL Michalik adds, "he (Holmes) has exceptional speed and we'll have to stop him before we ean even think of stopping Mission Viejo." Pacifica opened up the 1970 campaign last week by pasting Cantwell, 24-12. while the Oiablos weren't so lucky, being on the: short end of a 20- 0 SCQre against Saddlebaek . The P a e i I i e a resistance agents don'( run very big physically, but Mi eh al i k claitn! that quickness Is their strong suit. A good example is eenior Dave Genovese, a safetyman .in the Mariners' three-deep setup. • reasonable 2.S-1 showing. pretty equal Although Eads thinks hi! ''They can 1llo kick and 1qu.d can tum the winning Uvow lhe -lor:lc ball well loo," trick for the second Umt in a says Eads. row , he knows coaeh Ha1 Al-Tbe lone ba.11 •rtilt In ins' Arllsts will be hightt than Laguna's re,:iertoite ia junkr a kite in the Jong-time arch-Gary FiaeU.e, a 145-pound rivalry. freckle ffCt!d, lad who'll be "We always have to ~ chucking the plptln to .. , end ready when we 10 qaimt one _ Birt Tal>or and wtncbllck Walt o(·Hal Akins' teams. Ottmer (145), among others. "H~'s a gre1t imovator and Laguna 's tailbaek Gree we can always be in itore for Kessler wu knocked around a surprise when we play against Los Amigos last week Laguna," Eads continues. and 1'5-pound Mike Sweeney "People keep Wlting about will be starlinf in place of the how Laguna is down this year $.2, 180 pound junior. and how t.dly they're going to Atirm wu aatiafied with the do. But I think -our teams are job Mil« Wieibowsld did 11 lullbl<t In the Loo Amigos aJ. berth. • flir and hopes lo ,.. him do Ddeo&ive hopa for lie the job qlln. The talt.r Ttltoos lie in the hands of rtp1aced Ttlford Cott am rovir Nolen Boyer· (171), a before the llart cl the season, iuard en often.. when Cottam shattered IDl\e The blaeA runawa1 ln the bones in his ankle. 3S-year-old mlel wu • 7M_ Senior Keitb Gibson will be Laguna win in 1M5 ftill lut 1t the throttle of the Triton year's 27.0 marlin WM -. engine wUb Rly CaMavo widest rolled up by a Saft (115),. Tom Morris (165), and Clemente.Capistrano ~· Bob McNamara (166) finin.r up· L•.... ..... • c...-..,. •~•nd hi . ·-oe lMI L•.!Jlblrl l Duv•lt i.-u m . us Ktl'r 1 It-• 225 John Romero, the Tritoos' ~~ ~i:,C:-~ ~ ~: biqest ltarter at 215, -has uo o.v11 G ~., ,,. been nuning a_..bnii!ed knee :: = ; :.'= rs: mOlt of the week, but Eads 1.as Ft•ll• o GI'-" , .. says he'll be in toni~'1 OPfD-1.s s_..., • C•-.,. :: int tineup at I two-w1y tacJU1 ;: ::W1111 : :;:,,.. w Irvine Coast Golf Tourney Winners. Winners of the. recent Member-Guest Women's golf tournament held at Irvine Coast Country Club are "Pictured displaying their prizes. ~From left) M.pies. Max Nadler and George Hesik (low net) and Mm ... Dee Dee White and George Fruehling (low lfO'll). ' -ARTIST THREAT -Laguna Beach High's Greg Kessler is expected to see ac- tion for coach 1-lal Atkins' ouUit when the Lagunans meet San Ctemen~e to-ni~ht. Kessler is a 6-2, 180-pound senior and is considered the best runner 1n the Artist c3mp. "Why, that Qoy weighs in at-----------------,,-------------------------- 140 pounds but that's after he gained 17 pounds," Michalik says. Defensive Duel Expected In Edison-Santiago Tilt Pacifica's two good linebacken -Blaine Gunsill and OJuct Wilson -att ursine behemoths compared to Genovese. 'Ibey c:hect in at 150 pounds ·~· The Mariner offense is guid· ed by ISO.pound quarterback Bill Quinn, who h e I p e d Pacifica pile up over 330 yards total offense in the Cantwell A pair of defensive giants wilh potent offensive unils that blanked first game foes will meet tonight on the Garden Grove High School field v.·hen the E d i s o n · Chargers and the Santiago Cavaliers tangle at 8 o'clock in a non-league football en. counter. Neither team gave up a Cage Clinic Scheduled The 13\h annual basketball clinic, sponsored by the Southern California JUJlior CoJlege Athletic C o a c he s ' • Association, will be held oo the Mt. San Ar.tonic College cam- pus Saturday, Oct. 3 from 7:30 to a~proximately 1 p.m. 1'1S;\C basketball coach Gem: Victor says the program promises to be one or the. best, with outstanding ·basketball personallties Dick B a k e r , Lo)'Ola University; Jerr y Tarkanian, Cal State (Long Beach )~ and Lute Olson, Long Beach City College, headlining the day's events. All cOOchcs from the sur- roonding Southern · California area and their staffs are cor- dially inv ited. Registration fee is $3 per person, an~ may be paid at the door of gym No. 3 the morJl)ng or the clirUc. Coffee and doughnuts ·will be served during Registration <it 7:30 a.m .• and refreshrrients ·will be 1erved throughout tbe clinic pttiod. - point in f!rst week competition as the Chargers defeated SL John Bosco, 20-0, and Santiago tripped Ganesha, 9-0. Coaches (If the two teams decline to talk much about their .defensive units but each knows full ·well the burden they carry. Edison, in its Second season of varsity football, will use the game as a final tuneup for Irvine League action. Coach Bill Vail has a veteran lineup back from last ~·ear's 4-3--2 team directed by ,/ erry Hinojosa at quarterback and sparked by J im ~1oxley at tailback. It isn't either one of these players that " Vail talks about these days. though . Terry McNa y. a 165-po).lnd wingback. drew the praises of his coach as the finest little man he has ever coached. As for the defense. each team changes five players from olfcsse. FA:lison will · have Brian Bayless, hfike Balch, Jeff No- ble, Dave Cantrell and Lyle Raymond in the lineup. Santiago will counter with Tim Young, Randy Meier, Adrian Montoya, Steve Popichak and C I a y t o n Rogerso'h movin g into the lineup on defense. The , Santiago offen~ i!I directed by r.tike Randall with I-tick Riel' the counterpart of ~·toxic)'. !Uce operates at a halfback 1xist. is the cffcnsivc captain and an all-league let- trrman returnee front last :season. The Santiago line w J 11 outweigh Edison two pounds per man in an evenly matched lilt. affair. The Cavaliers ·average 195 \Vhile Ediscn's starters average 193. ln the back-field its a dif· ferent situatioo.1 Edison will average 176 pounds per man while Santiago wiU average only 162. Center Bill MeNulty (1!10), the biggest. player en the Pacifica $1.arling line, is flank- ed by such giants as tackles Ed Stan and Rick Mosilenko, boll> 180. EoflMll 5•nll1ff PKifK MIMllll vi.i. ltCI Bflth ' Sn11dtlt •• 11'11 Sp1tU • .......... , . 115 MOrfltMOn T Wrlthl "' 180 Siu• ' ..... '" lie cleHutf • L~bell!I' "' lFG Smllll • Doutlll "' n1 C11dwtH c Cri......n ·~ 1t0 McNutlv c !Ir•"'" '" 16S C1rltr • "~ "' 170W•O.. • Marlin "' 190 GrlYH ' HlndlCln ·~ llC Moslltrlko ' ·~H "' ltS FIWltr ' Mct .. nll "' 1eo Lrndholm ' Gilv!n "' 11$ Hl"°l .. 1 Q R1nd1H •• lSll Quf11n 0 .... ~ ns 115 F11nkt .. Gullerru ·~ llO Cobb • ""m~ m l&S Mollie¥ • l!lct <ll 165 a.en ' Mo-"' l.S Mc:NIV • P111ilol •il ltO Mont-I • ,_ •• Bucs Tabbed to Win Water Polo Tourney Orange Coast College Is Crossmosl favored to capture its own JO -OCC Red vs. LA water polo tournament when Harbor the om!-day affair is held JI -Sarita Monica vs. OCC Saturday. White , Six team s are entered in the 12 -LA H a r b o r vs. fifth annual Pirate Tnvitalional College of the ~uoias wilb t~·o competing from t _ College of the Sequoias Orange Coast. vs. Grossmont Other colleges in the tourney 2 _ LA Harbor NS. Santa include G r o s s m o l\t , LA ~1onica llarbor. Santa Moniea a ltd-3 _ occ Red vs. occ College of the Sequoias. White · The tourney gets underway 4 -Gr~moot vs. OCC Saturday at a a.m. with Se.-White. quoias facing the OCC Red team (varsity), The OCC White team. composed mostly of freshmen, will fact Santa r..1onica at 11 in first round ac- tion. ~ Orange Coast has wOn all four previous tournaments. Following are the pairings: 8-College of the Sequoias vs. OCC Red & Santa Monica V!. Good Ca tch Wayne Daniel, a student at UCLA who resides in Corona de] J\far. made a good ha ul on dolphin recently on a Mexican fishing trip. 01\niel pulled In t9 of that specles in coastal "aters off .Baja California. ~BRAKE SPECIAL ••fin• 4 Wheel& MM:hlM 4 Dnl"'I O.WIMul 4 ~ tyll"4"1 ti;• Miit UIKM"'il .... I .... llllM fHOT f"ltO.llATIOI $39.95 YW SHOCKS .,_ ... _ ......... $7.H lostallotl 100.000 mile gua.rantttd (nol pro-rated). \VF. 00 AO. FOREIGN CARS. Area Polo Marina Battles SJl!lrtans Teams Go I . E. l S . T . S. f . s· n ,ina unset uneup IX or IX Six for six was the record scored by area water po I o teams in two tournament.!. Thursday. Anaheim tourney play sa\v Newport Harbor crush Chaf· rey, 17-1; Costa Mesa whip Long Beach Millikan, 13-3: and Corona del Mar blank Rancho AJamitos, 11--0. By BOWARD L HA NDY Of fltl O.llJ Pllift Sllff It's tuneup time at · Marina High School and coach Leon Wheeler is meshing the gears he hopes wiU make the Viking machine roll smoothly as the Sunset League entrants tangle with South Torrance High tooight on the Spartan field. Kickoff is at a o'clock. After tonight's game its' full speed ahead in the torrid Sunset eittuit and Wheeler is and Steve Hemandei in the ol- fenaive backfield. South Tona.nee will oounter with an experienced quarterback in R i c h a r _d Peterson with balance of the last season. Da ve Jackson 1t }tft. Uckle is the lone lineman over M pounds (he we;gtis 20 I ) , Despite his prttenee, the two lines averaa:e enctly b same, 179. starting backfield lacking ex-MtrlM s.. T.,... 115 Win I ....,...ullt US perience. 101 JICMIClll T P1r9!ll . Ito John Winner at left halrback ,1; ~~'::'r:;:S ~ =11 ~ is a sophoroore and weighs in. 1111 v«-co G111s11, 1to at 185. Dean Curtis al fullback ua .._,d ' .M111tr 1u 115 LoUM.r I. HIWll.!lft IU is .a junior with no varsity ex4 1111 Moll•h•n o ,...,_ 1,s Meanwhile, in the Valencia tournament, Marina defeated Sonora, 9-2;. Estancia outscored Troy, 7-3: and Westminster \\-'Oil by forfeit over Morningside. periencc. Steve Jarvis is also ~;: =~1,111 : ~= ~:! Dll'KI.,_ i. 11utt1 TM'PllOCI HI ... r··~jun;;;·;·.W~ho~p~la~y·e<f~OO~def·en-se-·~>O~H<~,M~ ... ~·-·~~,,~~~"-•;;;' .. TM• 1111! Sin oi.. F..-, to 1111! H1rbor Fr-fV. Go IO~fh en 1t1e 1-t1rbor Fr-•' i. l'Klllc Cotst Hlehw•~ !11111 wtll lo In. ~ 11 Giii l'tclllt Co•d Hl--Coaeh Terry Bowen's Costa "•V In Torr•nce, Mesa' outfit is undefeated after cognizant crf the toughneM of five starts in romping over hi 1 ~fillikan. Ron Misiolek led ·s eague foes even though he 1 is new to the group. the scoring with .six goa s Marina's footbalJ fortunes followed by Bill McAneney with four'. have been UJ>-and-down with John Carpenter. M i k e the emphasis on the latter iii o·Brien and Bob Walters each recent years. · contributed one goal. This sea.son the Vikings have Garth Bergeson with six a smaller team with less ex· fl'.Oal, Greg McNamme and perienee than the pa.st two John Holyoake with two apiece campaigns. and Greg Loitz with one turn-Whatever t h e situation, eel in the Corona del Mar Marina and Sooth Tc:nanee goals. have one thJng in common. Newport Harbor s~·ept intn Eaeh lost an opening en- a 7--0 halftime lead and counter by a one touehdown dominated Chaffey ~II the way margin and each coach feels as for\\'ard Jay Farrer set the his team sh<>ukl have. won. scoring paee with eight goals. Marina dropped a tu "He happened to be in the verdict to a potent La Puente right plaee at the right time," team and South Torrance lost coaeh Bill Barnett explained. to Garden Grove, JU. The Tars displayed a free Last year the Spartans top. scoring lineup with eight pled the Vikes in an offkial· player:s having one or JTI(lre Jess contest at Westminster, goa ls. Kevin Ashe and Rick 20-&. Snyder scored twice and Jim 1'tl 1 nl Smith, Matt Greer. Kevin e wo teams are eve y Charles. Steve Batcheller and matched in the weight depart-ment and each has an iD-Paul Lindroth added one each. Goalie Char lie Shiosaka, experienced lineup. Comprehensive evening programs towsd· Bachelor of Science and Master of Science degrees e;1a1111tie,d;1...-c1111tt1ct'ou•"'9Rllf•••l sn n a flCUfty of pnctk:lng sief1"9tl Md ............. ... _ ..... .,._ .. _ .. _ 11altelofaf .... d1 ....... •nnt••• Kllnu..,..._ ... Mlll,ad ...... F ... II ............................. ,, ..... Wllll I FllCIWI ............... ---·----CJ&•• ..._.,.,......,_ ..... "'-.....,_ ~ cour.. begk'I Oct. 28111 Lol:Malil&C:-. -----.. ~--\ "'ho blocked t"·o penalty shots, Directing the Vikings at shated the heroics for vie-quarterback is Steve Monahan torious Marina with Alan and he will be working with Hoops and John Maltby. who ~Bob~=M~err~;t~t.=J~oe~V~e~n~ll~lftl~·g~ll~•~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ scored four and.two goals. .: Chuck Holloway. Ken King and Bill Fahrenkrug chipped in the other Marina goaJs. 11lt Vikings led &-0 at the half. SEA SCHWINN 421L17 .. St., C.... .... .WE HAYE ALL MODEL$ NOW! INSPECTED USED TIRES Big selection Most Sizes $ Big AYlnga on *'lglltly usedn-cer takeoffs, tool Costa Mesa Firestone Store -475 l 17tll St -646-2444 HOURS : Mon •• Fri ., I 1.m. to 7 p.m. -Sot .. I 1.m. to S p.m. J . ' . ·-•. , ., ... -·· F ' '. ... '· ., "' " •. '. -" - ABOUT 65,000 SURFiNG FANS T\Ji .EO Ol{T FOR 12TH ANNUAL U,S, SURFBOARD CHAMPIONSHIPS IN HUNTINGTON BEACH Af Times, 11,Seem-ed .Half the City's Population Was lining the Old Pier to Watch the Action Below ·' ' ' .. ·, ' .. f"r;t-.f·J ... ) ,,,, Friday, SPpltmbfr 25, 1970 DAILY PILOT -• ~-ll~ntingion Bea~h Stages-HAL SACHS, PATTY YOUNG CRAJlllFORD WIN TANDEM EVEN..; Red, White and Blue Day for P•triotically Garbed P1ir ·.·• Wet~ Wild Duel • ID the Sea DAILY PILOT PHOTOS by PATRICK O'DONNELL HBI CREWMEN FIND THEMSELVES IN A TUNNEL Under the Pier, A Sense of Impending Doom ~-' • ' .. ' AND THEN;' DORY CREW P~LES UP ON PIER l>I LINGS - . After an Eerie Calm, Ood'msday Comes In Waves r SURROUNDED BY POUNDING WHITE WATER, LADY SURFERS GO THEIR SEPARATE WAYS IN RUN -TO DAYLIGHT Crashing Waves and Crash Helmets All Part of U.S. Surfboard Championship Spectacle on Orange Coast ---MIKE-BUSTER AND ROGER SMITH JIAIL OUT FDR P'llNT TO BEACH TO WIN TWO.MAN DORY COMPETITION Zuma Beech Pair Capture Crown With Orarnetlc Da&h, Edging Another Loi Angelet County Team ' ' ' • - - r "• ""' OATI..V PILOT f.~I , Stpttinb·r ~~. l~i'tl ---------~------• Rumors Disp el.led, ... Hampe' C:rop Prospecf.s Good --• • • . McN-amara ~f_or Real II)' HOWMID L. HANDY .... .,....,. .... , .... . M)'l"CIQ McNamara Js for ... 1. He isn't a phantom as fias been ru mored by those-close to the tennis scene in the Orange Coast area . In fac t, he showed up on schedule h1r a l unche'on engageme nt recenlly to dispell any and all rumors to the con- trary that UC Irvine was run- ning a tennis program with a phantom coach. McNamara has one. big prcr blem. He .spends most of his ~·ak· Ing hours at UCI around !he siI teMis court.'! and there thf: returnln11: players plus the newcomers." The team will undoubtedly be ancMred by G re g Jablonski, a sophomore lhb: year. He teamed with Chuck Nachand (a junior this year) to win the NCAA doubles title from teammates O"Nei ll and Neslage. Other returnees i n c I u d e Richard Tr ipp ( a n o t h e r sophomore) and Bob Payan, a senior. NewCQmers Include Glen Cripe from Newport Harbor; Jim Ogle from Orange Coast College ; Steve Emery from Estancia: Kirk Orahood from Huntington Beach; Bob Chap- pel from Santa Barbara: For Waterfowl By JACK AHl'llONY a IllOllUI. a~ lhl~lw kopt the ot .. DllllY,..,.... duCks'around with the help of "1bere ate mote ~U..ill 'the--natural food at nearby the aouthland now. for this lak lime of year, than there has taf.ms, ranches and es. been in over 20 yean''" is the Some clubs kept wa ter level! - report given to this writer by high all year long and had duct club managers from all mallards, sprig and tea l parts of Southern California. nesting on the ponds. John Laugblln has spent The current duck population more than 12 years developing i the Htdden Valley Gun Club is made up mostly of Bpr 11 Into one of the top pheasant teal and mallards, but as soon and duck hunUng clubs in as cooler wtather sets in the Riverside County and predicts ·other ducks will slartin& I f ... best migrating to the southland. that this wi l be one o u-=: Hunters can start looking for waterfowl hunting seasons he ound has ever seen. th~·honkers to arrive at . mid-November. 1 Bill Tate of the Las Flores The Ke~ National Wiidlife · isn't a telephone within balr a mile. of lhe area. Even' if he ·aa--a-runner btiSi!Y eng!gea to carry messages to him on the court. it is doubtful U he would take the time away fr om his charges lo an~.wer the call. MYRON McNAMARA ·.-stevt NeWbr og -from Bakersfield College; a nd Bruce ~fintow from SUnny Jiilis. All but Ogle and Hunting Preserve ~~·· thaJ Refuge· will be'" clOled. this -tl!o.. ~JJCU J1!'Ll>IJ!l"4lw>R-season-due-1o repain·an1MIU• steadily on his many ponds will put a lot of pressure on Jnd lakes and tha.t the cover the Wister area on the Salton • 1nd natural feed in the area Sea. Reservationl at all state !!!llllti will attract ~ of ducks and federal refuges will be al Such. is the dedication of the man who guided the Anteaters to the NCAA College Division tennis championship in the spring . .._ "I'm an entemal optimist.'' McNa ma r a says upo n brooching the subject of a repeat performance. 1'1 think we can successfully defend the title even though we lost Earl O'Neill and Craig Nesla'ge fsingles finalists, OOtb l rom UCI )." He waxes enthusiastic about the Anteater team for thie coming school year. "Everybody says we will be weaker because of a lack or experie nce. I think we w.ill make up for it with ability or Drives Javelin Composer Races In Mission 200 By DEKE HOU\,(:ATE 01 ttlt D1ltr P'I~ $l1fl w Ted Roberl.S.~who co u 1 d logically be described as a modern day Walter Mitty, is one or the leading independent dr ivers entered in the Mission Bell 200 Trans · Ameri c a n ·cliampioMhip road race Oct. 4 a t Riverside In ternational Raceway. ,,, .... Roberts will drive his Norris Industries Fyr-Fyter/Pyrene/ Co-0-Two J avelin in th e Tnu&Am season f i n a I e against such top stars as Pamelli Jones, Mark Donohue and Costa Mesa's Dan Gurney then a day later will return to a real world. Currently .on leave of absenee to meet his raciJlg Baseball's Top Ten AMl!•ICAN LEAGUE l'Llret Clllll 0 Aa R M I'd . A.. John-C1I Id 511 7' ltl .l'l~ onv1 Ml" ua 602 t• 1ts .n• Y1Slrlel'Nkl 8'1ft Ht S'f 171 116 .l21 ANrklo (I'll U• $.Cl Iii U] ~16 Foue Cle ll'O .SO 17 UI .]1)7 II. Smllh 8 111 1'l no 101 11• .JGS Mii_, HY 17' '35 JI U2 .JGJ cir..-NY 111 S11 ""UJ .JOJ F. llobl-911 11' •SI M 131 .JOO Tov1r Mlt! lll UI 111 IN .JOO M..,.. Rllft• F. M-lfd. W151'11.nelOA, "2: kille· br.,., Mlnr>n0t1, •11 Y111n.emt.kl. Bos· ion, «t; J. P-11, lle!llmore, JJ; T. Conlvll1rv. Bo•lon, JS. ltUM a11t .. In F. Mow1rd, W1:11'1lr191Gn. 17:1: J. P- ell, l•lllmorr. 1121 T. Conltll••o, '°"'"" IO)t!, Ill; klllrbrtw. MlnntiO!I. 1111 011¥1, Mlnl'l!M1!1, 104. l'Udtlnt U DKl1lon1 Cue11... l1ltlmort. ~.... .1501 Mc· Nally, B1lllmore, 1:J..9, .llt; P1lmf'r. 8alllmore, l'G-10, ,t6l1 J. P1rrv. Min- MIO!•, Jl•!J, •SJ; C. Wrlvhl. (:111!(>1-nla, 71.11. ,.Si. NATIONAL LEAGUE .... , ... Clu'° G A8 • M I'd C1rty AU Cltmt•Ut Pe~ II. Wlltl1m1 Ch! Sa"9Ullletl Pell HIO.nwon C~I TONI 51. L lltOH (In W. P1rll1r LA. Tolin Cln • ·Ga1!on 50 US 111 M UJ .lt7 104 olOS 6S 143 .n:J 1So1.io 1i.c * .m lJJ •IS " ISS .nt U7 "9l "\st .m US !ft IS 1'1 ,:m 15o1 121 n t xr.i .m us Jtl u 119 .320 U1 m 107 111 .J11 uo l60 "1n .s" MMlt ltVftl leo1eh, Clnckln.rl. IS1 I . WUILlmt.. ClllcaOO. "21 Prr11. Clncl""'U. «t; M. A.1rat1, All11'1ll. )11 McCll"ffT· "'" l'r•n· d-l6. ••n• •111" In aenc11. Clnl:lnnltl, l"t P .. t L c1 .... clnnetl. Ut; I . Wllll1m1, Cllk190, 1211 Mc:Co¥n. Sen Fr1nclKO. 1201 M. A1ron, A.tl1n11. 111. l'lldlln11 IS Dtd 11Ms ilrftD10fl, ClftclnntlL u.J, .121; 0111- son, SI. LolllJ.. U ...• 1'1: Wiik~, Pll!s- bvrth. IJ..L .11•1 Nolin.' Clntlnn•lf, 11·1. J'Cll1 P.,.r~. Sift l'r•nt1W:o. 2J·U, ..... 27·0 Victory Quart..be<JC ·Kim Carlson ecored three touchdowns to ltad El Modena High to a 27..0 victory over Santa Ana Valley in 1 non.league 1ame al Santa Ana Bowl Thuraday nigtit. Ca rlson tallied all three or the TDs in the se<Ond hall. co mmi t m en t s, Roberts normally Works as a motjon picture studio film editor and music composer. "Ken Norris. J r .. president or Norris Jndustries. my sponsor. gave roe the. greatest opportunity of my I i f e , ' ' Roberts explained, "to devote myself completely to racing against the great talents of the sport on an unbelievably oom· petitive circuit." Norris Industries. a Los Angeles-based industrial firm. is the parent company o( the sponsoring Fire and Safety Equipment Divis iOn. which produces" modern Fyr-Fyter, Pyrene and Co-0-Two fire ex- tinguishers. The veteran driver Roberts started as an amateur road racer in 1958 -realized his-dream of turning pro-- fess ional in 1969 when he purchased a year~ld Javelin and drove it against most of the same top pros with so me success. Twice he SCQred im- portant points toward the U.S. manufacturer's championship for America n Motors during last year's campaign. This season he reva mped the car and added the most up.to-date set of safety ac- cessories ever installed on a race car, a ·Freon charged f'yr-Fyter fire suppressing system that will choke out any gas, oil, electrical or any other type of fire that might start in the car. Jn addition lo having a highly tuned racing machine . Roberts drives a moving testbed for the latest in fire fighting equipment -com· peting in a sport that is very conscious of the danger of fire. To date Roberts and the Nor ris Industries Javeli n have been pl:igued with bad Jue!<, a)lhough both car and driver have shown CQmpetitive pro- mise during 1970. llis best finish. seventh. v.'ould have been better except for <\.Chinese fife drill pit stop at Bl'idgehampton, N.Y .. when Roberts paused at the start of a storm to change over to rain tires. El Modeno led 11 the half, &--e, a11er· reaM!fin1 1 fumble at the Volley nine-yard line. Brad . J oyce ICOl'Od the f I r 11 Vancu•nl TD four pl•Y• later frvm the '""'Yard stripe. Two of Carlson's touchdown runs coverOO tv•o yards While the final score, with !JiX Newbrogh are freshmen. McNamara also hopes to have Art~ Rossetti (Estancia) and Kent Orahood (Kirk 's twin brother) on hand. Tur ning to his philosophy on tennis, McNa mara revealed: "! don't think the average person realizes how much work is iDvolved in making a good tennis player. ''The public can't relate to tennis as well as they do in other sports . They don 't understand the science of the game. . as well as -providing excellent remium.... valuable cover . for pheasant, a ~unters are warned to chukar and quail. follow applications directions Don Walker, who operates a' carefully when filling out their large dt.ick and goose club near applications for hunting dates. Lakeview, is also very op-AP,Plications .are available at timistic. After coming off a alf sporting goods stores and great honker seson last year, gun shops. Walker feels that the big Canadians will number fa r more in the area than they have at any time in recent years. Tar, Oiler Harriers Triumph "We are fortunate to be 1n a tennis oriented area. You can't find a better brand of tennis anywhere in the country tha n we have right here in this area . ··uc1 is fortunate to have a group known as Friends of UCI Tennis backing the pro-- gram. These arc people .in. EDISON LIGHTBULB -Senior Jim Moxley, leading ground gainer in the Or- ange Coast area in 1969 with 911 yards, is back bolstering the Ed~son c.~rg~rs' hopes for the Jrvine League foo tball cr own. Edison head ~ch Bill V~il 1s tink· ering with the idea using Moxley at both tailback and defensive end this season. Vern Gilbreath at t h e Gilbreath Bros. Duck Club in Wasco says his ponds are alive with young birds, and that water and feed conditions in the central valley will be responsible f o r attracting thousands of sprig a n d mallards to the valley. Jerry Stevenson. w _ho manages some ·of the private duck clubs in the area, can't Oood ponds fast enough to Newport Harbor made a clean sweep of Anaheim in an opening cross country meet Thursday on the Tars' home course to • open the Sunset League while Hu n tingt on Beach was d e!eatin g newcomer Loara in another J,!ague encounter: terested in what we are doing and they give us solid ba<;k- ing." The group in cludes Don Burns, an aut6mobilc dealer in Garden Grove: Bi ll Scholle, a rorrner player and manufac· turer making plastic cartons; supervisor Ron C a s p a r s : Arnold Ford . a real estate man: and the Ne"·port l lar~r llacket Club. Multi-talented Moxley Makes Edison Attack Go keep up with the daily buildup of spr ig. Most or the clubs in the southland fiooded their ponds and bunting areas early this year in preparation (or the bumper crop of ducks and federal agencies and DU predicted the Pacific flyway would ht getting. John HoJCQmb and Rick Fleming paced Newport to a 15--50 victory when they closed in a deadhead in a good early season time of 10:34.8. After revealing the names of those who support hi s pro-- gram at UCI. the phantom was orf to the tennis courts to get a second squad of players ready for the spring semester sport. After all. he only has six courts on which to prepare the lea rn and adds that there is competition for the courts at mid-day by two more of his backers: Chance llor Da niel Aldrich and athletic director Ray Thornton. lie doesn 't want either to become too proficie nt. They may discard thei r doctorate degrees and return to the undergraduate ranks and spoil hls team ladder. By Pm L ROSS 01 ,_ O.Hy l'IW St1H Moxley runs good like a tailback should. That might ·ht bad gram. ma r, similar lo the situation on a current television ad· vertlsement. but it just about ·sums up how well senior Jim Moxley does while operating out of the tai lback slot in the Edison Chargers' J formation offense. • A prime mover in Edison's sparkling, 4-3·2 first year record in 1969, the 5-11, JBS-- pounder crunched QUl 911 ya rds in 170 rushing attempts and also paced the fledgling· Charger gridders in scoring with 76 points. He was also ac- Madison Heads List Of Bowling Entrants ' -The O<M;la Mesa Open bowl- ing tournament is scheduled for Kona I,.anes Saturday and Sunday. • Qualifying lasts from 9 a.m. lo 6 p.m. Saturday with the finals beginning at 10 :30 a.m. Sunday and lasting most of U1e day. Jn performing the feat, souUipaw Madison duplicated the trick turned by Reseda's Lamar Keck in both 1968 and 1969. The top area performer on hand wi ll be 1969 Costa Mesa Open titlist Fred Riccilli of Westminster. corded all-Irvine League and all-Orange Coast honors. However, running isn't the only thing Moxley excels at. His coach, Bill Vail, figures the powerfully-built se n i o r does well in complementing the Chargers' basic I attack. Vail says. "Jim is basically a football player at heart. He is a good running back who has good lateral movement and who can move quickl y into a ho le to pick up yardage. "He's also very strong. and likes to make contact with people when he gets the chance," the F.dison head coach-athletic director adds. According to Vail, Moxley got oU to a slow start in prac- tice this fall. bu t the star . ta ilback is CQming on stronger at present, having picked up 73 ya rds on the ground against St. John Bosco in last wee k's 21)-0 &fison triumph. The former Westminster liigh backfield coach. who doubles as head mentor and backfield tutor at E d i s o n , thinks Moxley has the poten-- . tial to be the best running back he's coached. And !hat's saying a mouthful since Vail had people like Charlie Buckland, Ron Shepherd and Clarence and Jack Haynes, to mention just a few , under his tutelage at Westmimter. "Jim ran as well as anybody I've had as a junicr, but what he does as a senior will detennine how good be really is," Vail says. "He's a really true I fonna- tion ta ilback who runs his pat· terns well and who can cut eilber way out of his spot at the tail of the I. "Jim is also a fine blocker and pass receiver," adds Vail. In fact the multi-talented Moxley has so much support at the tailback slot with Rocky Whan and Bob Sm1th backing him up that Vail may Mart playing him more regularly at defeniive end as the season progresses. Perhaps the primary reason the squad's leading rusher may be utilized more often on defen.se, the presence of Whan and Smith notwithstanding, can be boiled down to one observation by Vail. "Moxley loves to hit people and knock them down," con- cludes Vail. Maybe that bad grammar should be changed to read: ''Moxley hits good' like a defe nsive end should." Most every duck club In Southern California has had some water in their ponds for Rustlers In Tourney Golden West College's water polo team will meet Riverside Jn first round action in the third annua l Gaucho water polo tournament Satur~· day morning In S a n t a Barbara. The Rustler tilt will get underway at 8:30 at Los Banos Sdiool. If coach Tom Herinstad 's RusUers are victorious in" the first game they will face the winner ol. the Mt. San AntoniG- Santa Barbara City College g ame at 1:30 at Santa Barbara CC. The championship game is set. for 4:30 at UCSB. Following are the first rowid pairings: 8:30 -Golden West vs. Riverside at Los Banos School. 8:30 -UCSB Frosh vs. Santa Ana at UCSB 9:30 -ML San Antonio vs. Santa Barbara at SBCC 9,30 -Foothill vs. UCSB J V AT UCSB Newport CO!>flOd the nezt five places with Craig Clarke (10' 48) third, Dave Cross (IQ,53) loortb1 Tim Ruo!y l!ll ,57) filth, ..... Bat.op (11:03) sixth and Dlnnf"Cline (11:06) seventh. Huntington Be,ach scored a 20-37 win over the Saxons with John Mullins tht individual winner for the Oilers in 10 :30. Greg Pechia (10:35) finished second for Loara with Hun- tington ·Beach grabbina; the next three spots. , Dana Babin was third in 10:38, Joe Wheeler fourth in 10:42 and Marc Mitchell fifth in 10:45 .. John Pfeifer broke into sixth" place for Loara in 10:49 with Marv Hill (11 :00) ·seventh. Rob McNair (11:33) tenth ind Dennis Potls (11:40) eleventh to complete the Oiler fini!lbing order. Bruce 1'homp&0n captured the junior varsity race in 11:36 aS the Oilers won, 1$.50. Prep Football ,.,.... ,...,." NewPOl"f o o e •-a WHlmln!!ef" II 11 I 1-3' TOI: WH!mln1ttr -Blumbl1"9 ..... ,. comonoo 2, W1rr111. ~11w1rt. PAT - W1rr1n, Mit h. s1.P1ut o o e ,_' Hunting Ion lt1ch I O 6 O -lf T~ -Hunllng!on 8Hch: Mll!1n. 81ker. PAT -Hunlln91gn Bffch; Miii !•un). The meet, held u,nder the auspices of the Professional Pacific Coast Bo w I e rs (PPCB), will spotlight the top bowling stars on the West Coast. San Bernardino's Gary l\tadison will be gunning for a possible triple crown:. It has been 32 months since .. anyone rolled a perfect 300 game at Kona Lanes but Jerry 'J'wardowski of Huntington Beach nearly turned the trick last Sunday. Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East Divlsloa W L 101 54 89 67 83 74 76 79 75 81 70 s; NATIONAL' LEAGUE East Dlritloo W L 84 72 81 74 81 74 74 a 10 as DEAN LEWIS SIPTEMIEI SPECIALS [!]Olrt]~TI@[ He recently won the \Vest Coast Match Came Elimina· lions and then came back to ca pture the Western States Championship roll~ff. Twcirdowski slammed the first 11 strik~ before being derffiled on his lzth delivery, thus ending up with the 298. Normally the Huntington residen t b4'.nvls-ck>Serlo his 170 average. YOUR, SWING ANALYZED e Hl9fl .,.... <•-• I I fr....-,.,-•eHJ eN 'P• recel" th. plct•rwt Fiii •• , wlttl ....... l e1HCll'1 OllOlysfs. by BARBARA ROMACK h -• 9otf ,,.,........ -MMINr el C11rris C1p "'°"' -Hekk ... ttMe tcerl .. recot'f M W...,,_I Worid of G..,, e t.totrit 65. SN ... ...-wltti Mklr*Y Wript t. i...t AnMW , .. .., -4 Dew Fl•• ,..,.., .. tM en s,o"' 5"c••••· IN PERSON . ·ITS ALL FREE MONDAY -S("IMl ll 21TH e AT OUI FU LLllTON STOii 11 A.M. TILL 1 P.M. e AT OUI SANTA ANA STOi i 2 P,M. TILL 4' P.M. e AT OUI NIWPO IT l lACH STOii 1 P.M. TILL f P.M. • W1 wtll h1v, 1om• 1vper 1p1ci•I pric•1 011 golf 1q11ip,.,1nt d11ri11g tlii1 •C1P.1•1nc1 of lttb1r• lll o,.,tc.k. e Olf1 Ctrtllk 1I" • llllllA.1Mri1:1rl e MMttr Clllr,. e Olrtt" Clft e C1'" ai.lldM SANTA ANA-21f I . 4tk St-'11 l·S71J r t1 F.t.SHION ISLAND- N~ C......-6444111 fULLllTON-601 S. 1 .. 11._.71 •l tn Ballimorc New York Boston Detroit Cleveland Washington ~1innesota Oakland Ang:el1 Kansas City 111i1Waukee • Chicago West Division !H 61 s; 71 ft l 74 62 93 61 !H 55 99 Thurt•~r'1 ll•wll1 ll~ton I, W11h!n110n J !11lflmor1 1, Detroit ~ MllWl"*M 7, A11 ... 1 J , ... , ..• _ Pct. .652 .571 .529 .490 .481 .<SI .60< .545 .523 .400 .391 .557 GB -. 9!h 13 32 33 :181> Ollo;llnd (()Oom •11 11 l111Mh (Wtitnt 11•111, 1111111 MlnntlOll (atytewn llM) et 11:,tnMs Cl'1 Cknli· tt 2•10f, nlettt MllwlUltM (LOCkWCIOd •11 11!d "~ I• •l 11 Cflk;qo (Jcl\M 11·1' '°"' ,1 ......... 1 10.161, L ......... ll1tllmort iM<Hl llr ~).ti 11 CIWti.M t llt lll• .., ... I-ti, n!9bl . losllln t0.I• 16"1 •1 •I Wtslllfttltn , __ Nd; WI, 1119111 Oel.-olt {LDtlclo 1).11 Ind tf)flll'I U~U\ 11 H,... V•rt; !I....,_ U·ll ..... IC!h M l, J. - nlt hl. Pct. .531 .S23 .S23 .474 .451 Pittsburgh Chicago New York Sl Louil Phllaclelphia Mootreaf 99 17 .442 West Dlvbloll CinciMaU llodpn ' San Francisco Atlanta Houston San Dieio 99 SI 84 71 84 71 75 12: 72 83 61 s; ,.......... .. _ ... Chtcqo 7, SI.· l.1111!1 I ,PIUlbll .... I. Mofttn.t • Sltfl DlltD S. Att.nl1 I Ontl" --tcflldllfld, .83f .542 .542 .478 .465 .391 GB 21> 21\ 10 l3'h 15 14 14 24 26 ~37Y.i --. $!. \.OUlt ((lflllft 9'1t) It Moliil'ffl (tl"Ulfllll• tM 2·Sl. nltM Chic.M (.._... IMI 11 1'1111 ... llltlle !Wiii 1 t-1 S 1, lllthl H-Yft (Kl>n!Mn 11•71 11 l'ltlttwl'fll !Malt 11·11), ...i.tlt • "-• <WU-. lNI t i Atl11111 CM"" 1·101, nlefll°""'" i0t""" l ).U) 11 ClnclNMll (Md,011111- llft l•t), nltM Sell Dl"9 I~ l).UI 11 'lft ~''"'°"<» 1111""'"'""'''..,., DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARBOR ILYD., COSTA MBA 646-930~ Servi .. , P1rh, & locly Shep Now !>pen Until I p.m. -.toy Nltht1 f 71 COROLLAS HERE NOW! Al Otllar M ..... la Sted: M .. 11-ftHB Pict:.,_ L..llCNlw;s c .... VOLVO ,,., . •• ..,.... ··•·•"" • • ' ---\ DIMO $2862 . 1536" ., 1967 TOYOTA CORONA SEO. •t M, Sl"°rl Tr_'"......_ Vwy clMll. IVOIUl41 mlnutcs to play n the g3me.1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'.!!'!!!!1!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!!'!!"!! was • 12-yard scamper. J. · ,.!___ • F!JH ll'°IT-kl 7.Jl4S Orange County's w gcst and Most Modern Toyota and Vol•o Dealer $1195 -. • .. ~ • " •• j . . - • -~ -• •' / DAILY PJLOT ll A Comp l ete Guitle ••• Where to go • •• What to tlo .., Jain Session • •• . · Set ~ Cultural Garden ... By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of nit o.rrr '""'' '"" There's more to Corona de! Mar than meets the eye. In the middle of a community known for its beaches and rolling hills, a cultural center is growing up around a colorfuJ garden. Located at 2647 E. Coast Highway. the Sherman Fotmdation currently consists of• a garden, a research library, an art gallery and a small outdoor restaurnt. Wade Roberts, a spokesman for the f9ll1ldaUon, said ~he entire block of pro- perty from· Dahlia to 'Fernleaf and from Coast High\vay to Third Street has been· purchased by the foundation. Evenlually the gardens.andJibrary will be expanded and perhaps a small theater will be ad- ded, he said. As it stands now, the center occupies about hair the block. All the existing facilities are open to the J?Ublic at no charge. "TilE FOUNDATION owns the pro. perty and cares for the gardens and library," Roberts explained. "We turned the gallery and restaurant over to the Women's Service League of Newport Beach. They run it with volunteers and use the profits for their charity pro- jects." COFFEE GARDEN A PLACE OF QUIET LOVELINESS I~ CORONA dol MAR l11tern~ission -· The Sherman Foundation, which has been in existence for 19 years, was established by the heirs of General Moses Hazeltine Sherman, a p i o n e e r businessman in Arizona an(( Los Angeles. A native or Vermont who came west in 1874, She rman's major business ventures New Group Ambitious .. JAZZ BANDS WILL RIDE RAFTS DOWN RIVERS OF AM ERICA A~erica's Top Jazz Stars To App ear at Di sneyla11d More than 80 of the nation 's foremost jazz mu sicians including Bob Crosby. Mickie Finn, Turk 1t1ui-phy, "Wild" Bill Davison. Art Hodes and Doc Evans will assemble for a marathon six-hour jam · session this Saturday for "Dixieland at Disneyland." This year 's 11th annual musical spec- tacular will feature the revival of a popular tradition as the Rivers of America once again serve as a stage .for some of t~e floating caravans of ragtime bands, backdropped -by Tom Sawyer's Island. .f For a single admission ticket, guest maY enjoy the entire Dixieland festi I from 8:30 p.m. until 2:30 a.m. and also unlimited use of all Disne~land at- tractions, except the shooting galleries. By importing' groups from all over the nation, each with its own di stincti ve style, Disneyland will add a unique flavor to this one+night-0nly jazz festival. One or the majOr jazzy .men will be Bob Crosby, who will direct the appropriately named World's Greatest Dixieland Band in the Land, featuring the Bobcats. West Coast favorites include the Turk Murphy coterie from San Franciaco and· San Diego's famed MiCkie Finn Show. Both have been pioneers in the rebirth of modern jazz in calitornia. Representing the East will be Davison and his Jau' Giants, who will fly to California expressly for this appearance. Doc Evans, Art Hodes and the Chicago All-Stars w,ill add their own special blend of jau, popuiarlzed in the Midwest. A .Jllew Qrlearis transplant and now a regular perlormer at the Park, Teddy Buckner and hi.! band along wi!.h vocali st Jewel Hall also will be on haod. Others adding their talents to the musical Mardi Gras are the Firehou se Five Plus 2, the Royal Street Bachelors, ragtime piano player Jbn Hesston, the Young Men from New Orleans, Pete Lofthouse and the Second Story ~ten, the Strawhatters, the Banjo Kings, and lhe Southern California Hot Jau Society Marching !,\Ind. Setting the mus ical tempo for &he evcn- ~1n·g, L9ftbouse an d-the Hot JAzt bifly Band •ill aerenade guesti withi..a syn· CROSBY'S A FAVORITE copated welcome as they enfer the Park. Center or attention wi ll focus on Main Street U.S.A. at 9 p.m. y;here the stars o( Dixieland will board old·fa shion horse· dra"'" "'agons for the traditional torchlight "Tailgate Ramble.'' A local group formed to preserve the legend and tradit1on of Dixieland jazz, members of the Hot J azz Society will escort the parade down th e streets and by-ways of-Disneyland. At I.he . conclusion of the "Tailgate Ramble" the. sides above Fantas)_'land will be illuriiinafCd, wJth a· ipcctacular fireworks salute to Dixieland. A·leanwhlle, the artislo; will SCl\tter throughout the Pa rk to bandstands and podiums where they will offer a continous stream or the world's fi nest jau 11\u5ic conllnuously untll _!:30 a.m. !See JAZZ, Page 2.8) ,· _in Los Angeles ·centered-argund a local street railway system, the Los .,\nge~es Steamship Co •• and developing the San Fernando Valley, Sherman O.iks and Sherman Way in the valley are named after the businessman who died in 1932. A distant relative of the Civil War general, William Tecumseh Sherman. his title of "General" was a holdover from his days as the Adj utant Gen~ral of the Arizona Territory, a post he held from 1883 to about 1886. UNTIL 1115, the work done by the Sherman Foundation consisted o{ con- tributing to various charities. 0. W. Hen· dricks, a history professor from USC "'ho was Wi'iting an article on the history of land use in Southern California went to Arnold Haske!J, head of the foundation for pemtission to use some of Sherman's records for his research. "One thing led to another, and he of. (See GARDEN, Pa1e 13) By TOM TITUS 01 1119 O•llr "11'1 S11FI 111 the beginning there was the Hun- tingto11 B.each Playhouse. which after two years or nomadic existence settled six yea rs ago into a home at 2110 Main St. Then, earlier this year, a new group called the Nifty Theater set up operations in downtown Huntington Beach, at 307 Main St. Next month a third community theater will makC its debut in Huntingtol'! Beach , iind if all goes weJJ L it too w!_ll be head- quartered on Main Street, which the city f~thers perhaps might change t o Broadway. Why three little theaters in Huntington Beach? And what has this latest group, the Ensemble Theater. to offer that makes it so different from the other two '! Judging from its statement or purpose, Hollywood Backstage Ann-Margret's Nude Scene Inspired by Her Husband By VERNON SCOTI HOLLYWOOD -It wasn 't Ann- Margret's idea to play a nude s:ene with Joe Namath, , the flower of professional football quarterbacks, and it wasn't Joe's inspiration either. The man who insisted the scene be shot was Roger Smith, Ann-Margret's husband and producer -writer of he film "C. C. and Company.•· Now why would a tender. loving hu sband want his wife to take on every" stitch of clothes and ask the athlete to do the same and then have them play a love scene in a bedroom? "So it wouldn1t be a cop-out," Smith replied. Couldn't they have just talked it out or something? "No," said Smith. "The: public ind the press is retponsible for the nude scene. Originally the idea was to play the scene in shadows and silhouette ind both or them could have worn anything they wanted. "But maga2ines and newspapers wrote so tnucb about the nudity I.he interest created in seeing them nude was phenomenal. ''So if I had gone along •ith I.he original co_ncepi it would have been ~ cop-.out~-Audiences would have (ell cheated. "The fad lh1t my wife did the scene without clothes d0t.$n't make her #unfaithful," Smith said, not wjt~t J9gi Some people· can't understand how you can klve someone and have them appear in the nude In a movie. Nudity is a st.ate or mfnd. I'd much rather have my wife doing a nude 1etne which is AOt • ' erotic, than have her do a kissing scene fully clothed where there was some personal meaning to it." Smith is satisfied that there was no personal meaning to Ann-Margret's and Namath's nude love scenes. Still, when the scene was filmed in a. private home he went -downstairs and played ping-pong while quarterback Joe and Mrs. Smith were prancing around in the buff. "It was embarrassing for them to work nak~ , and I thought ft would be ... uncomfortable for all three of us," Smith explained. · , 'There's no questi9n that they have no clothes on in the completed film. But it is not offensive. There is nothing wrong with the human body,'' At least there is certainly nothing wrong with Ann-Margret's. "Before I shot the scene I told both Joe and my wife that if they didn't like the way it was done I would cut it out of the final print. "'But .It was done like a painting with quick cuts. Both ot them liked it. H'fhe director filmed the scene in SIOW motion. "'l'here is no real continuity of love making. It just gives the impression of love. Ann-Margret was upset about the idea at first. Now she doesn't mind. ''l think ·she and Joe Nam¥h will generate excitement at the box office. He dfdn1l want a fortune in salary. Instead he too~ a percentage or the pro!its .. "He was always on time and knew his lines. Before he changed a word of dialogue he "'ould check with me htcause l wrote the .scrlpl. I chose him for the part becau se the public see ms to care mOre· about-him than they do mOst actors.'' --------------------·-- plenty. While the Huntington . Beach Playhouse js commu1ity . theater ia its more traditional vein and the Nifty -Players deal more in newer, unproduced and avant garde. works, mem- l>ers of the Ensemble organization are gear- ed toward production or the classic dramas, both ancient and m~. dem. with heavy em- phasis on" the Stanis- MIKE l'•J'.M .Javski "Method." GUIDING THE fortunes of the new Ensemble group are the trio of David -a-nd -;J(jy'Maiville, both' teachers of drama _ in th e .4naheim school system, and Mike Frym , an IS.year-old college student who lwo years ago qrganized a teen.age re~, crtory theater in Huntington Beach. · Frym, with possibly a bit of telltale youthful enthusiasm, declares, "The Ensemble Theater is not Just a com- munity theater. We intend to produce better shows than 'any plafhouse in Orange County. We will always produce in our winter season, the best of theater. and only the best as specified by world scholars and not curbstone philosophers." Not that the Ensemble leaders are "putting down " community theater. f\1 aiville, who is staging the group's in- itial production, "The Diary of Anne :Frank.'' will then swing over to the 1-lun· tington Beach Playliouse to direct "My Three Angels." hardly a legend in its time . He also had a nice sized ·hit on his hands in "Barefoot in the Park'' there a couple or seasons back. But the first season for the Ensemble Theater certainly adheres to the foun· de rs' credo. Following "Anne Frank,'' which opens Oct 9, the Ensemble Plan!! to stage Shakespeare's ·"The 'Paming of the Shrew," 0 1Neill's "A Long Day's Journey Into Night'' and Maxwell Anderson's "Elizabeth the Queen." The summer or 1971 will be filled with lighter fare, such as "The Star Spa"gled Girl'' and "Cactus Flower." Just where the first curtain will rise on the Ensemble Theater is st.ill a matter o( doubt. The group ha!! acquired the old Holly Sugar building on Maiii Street near Golhard.,Avenue, but may not be able to bring the structure up to the city's building code -in which case the show Will' be staged in St. Wilfred's Episcopal Church at Beach and Ellis. 'l'llE SO-CALLED ''gentration gap,'' a . phrase bandied abou t-quite regularly these days', is nonexistent at t h. e Ensemble Theater, which boasts a tnembersliip of 30 persons ranging in age from 14 to 40. Three teenagers -Frym, Scott Crane and Valeree How -are' playing adult roles in~"An111e Frank." "We cast our pllys according to a person's ability to play the role.'' ~m­ phasizes Maiville , who·recenlly finished a !feminar af Uie Lee Sli'asberg Institute In Hollywpod. ''I don 't tare if a persoa is 16 or 60, ii he can play the role he gets the part.'' - According to MalvUJe, the Ensemble'• appli~ation or the Meth.od ·ma t ·e·s believable adults out of teen-age actors. The cast or "Anne Frank," he poJnts out, has been rehearsing under conrutions as _ closely imitative of the Actors Studio as possible. Although organized Jess tha11 two months, the Ensemble .,Theater has made its presence felt in Huntington Beach before the opening of its first production. The group has bee• given a temporary theater by the Huntington Beach Com· pany. several hu ndred dOllars in patron- age from merchants· and others in the area, and philosophical support-f r.o-m the city council and parks and recreation commission of Huntington Beach The groundwork has been well Jaid for Huntington Beach 's third community theater. Now all that remains is for the Ensemble players to live up to their lofiy promises when "The Diary of AAnae Frank" opens next month. · * BACKSTAGE -"Wher~'d all those JJi. dians come from?" may or may not have been Custer's last words, but they'll be the comment Jf playgoers . in the Costa Mesa area next month -a week aftCr Orange Coas.t College stages its pro. duction of Arthur Kopit's "Indians.". 4 South Coast Repertory will mount its olRR version of the play, with Hal Landoo Jr. in the role or Buffalo Blll. Memo lo all actresses who were. going lo try out for "Ma me" al the Laguna Moulton Playhouse -forget ii -the musical has been replaced on the Laguna schedule by a tevival of the old time Cole Porter chestnut "Anything Goes.'' The Irvine Community . Theater is the latest local group to adopt an awards , . presentation, aDd will offer trophies for its first full season of.J976-71. •• the five judges who will be watching !CT with a critical eye this ye.ar are Jo Anne Black, Mrs. William Mason, Gene Moon, William Purkiss and Jim Stewart, with actress Claire Trevor Bren as alternate. WEEKENDER L'¥Sm E FEATIJRES Friday, September is, lt11 Fall -ls the traditional time for cruises to sun drenched islands ahd tropical countries, You 'll find cruise news and other travel lea-. tures 011 PB1ts1 24 and 25. Travel Vie•• Wbetl• 1ad C.mpi1t M-Nllllll Coocert R<liel llkk El7 la Ille Gollerle• Tiit Miitwilltin rnvel 0.t 'N' Aboat GuWt.. lo F11 Uve The1ter 'G4itde &o Movies Televllloa 1.or Pase zt . Pap Zt Pap 14 Pap Z4 Pap Jt Pap Ji Pa~ Ji Paie• za.a Pap a~ Pep JI Pip n -Pip D • - • • • 14 DAILY PILO'I' Rick~y • Starring • In Show . ' . • • .. •• • . . ' • • Rick Ely, tllo Q el Alla • Televtllon 'Network's "'Die • r;;. Youn1 Rebfb." fs t new face on the teleyision scene.· Prior to being cast as Jeremy 1,.arkin, the leader of the fic- ' • ' ' lilious Yankee Doodle Socfety L hat is set in the American Revolution, he ap.. peared in only one major role, "The Whole World is Wa t· ching," a television film. Off the screen, other than his Iona; hair, Rick contrasts his rebel role by being a very peaceful individual who enjoys the outdoors, music and a ~ menagerie of pets. •• Rick hasn't changed hls life ~ F1lda1, StptMtitr 25, 1970 style much since he acquired 1-,--..,..-o.;,,1najor"TOle-but--continues1-fo""""""' to live ·in a small house jn North Hollywood that is a col- lection of anliques and odds ~ and ends of things that in- terest the young actor. "I enjoy music best," he said. "It is about the most pure form of self expression I have found." In addition to an extensive collection of music albums that run the gambit from rock'n roll to classical, he en- joys singing ballads a n d chords a 12-string guitar to ac-· company himself. Recently he 'REBEL' RICK ELY ENJOYS LEISURE S..a Eye-to-4ye With Napol .. n, Pet Guinea Pig signed a contract with RCA the tropical fish in his J'eCords where he will soon be aquarium. But whenever he involved in the production or , tias a few days free Rick his first album. often retreats to the 'moun- ~t home.' in addition lo his tains and state parks to "clear guinea pig, Napolean, he his head." spends time with his English ''The young Rebels" is seen Setter, Oliver, a parrot named on Channel 7 at 7 p.m. Sun- Sigmond and enjoys watching days. ~'--~~~~~~- Travel Views Wann Weather Cruises Slated for Fall Month s R\o::hard Arlen , motion pic- ture and stage star, will hosl an 11-<lay visit to Soutb America which will include air tendance at the World Cup Golf Tournament and a chance to play on the championship Jockey Club Golf course in Buenos Aires. Pacific Far East Lines, plan to continu.e the UkJay cruises between Hawaii's four major islands. Travelers from the mainland may utilize an air- sea package for these cruises using the ship as a floating hotel for three days each in Honolulu and the big island of Hawaii with two days each on l\.laui and Kauai before return- ing to Honolulu . The SS Monterey leaves Honolulu on Nov. 3 for the next of these four island cruises. * Matson·s SS Mariposa ls MARNI NIXON In Scholarship Show LA Concert Will Aid · 1,. the Galleries Blattenherg Art at OCC OCC GALLERY -Orange· Coast Collge Gallery Is oo · campus, 2701 Fairview Road, Co&ta MW. Hours: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. On exhibit through Oct. 16 an exhibit « John Blatten- berg's sculpture. LIDO GALERIE-3102 L.afayettC Ave., Newport Bttch. Hours: Daily 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. On exhibit through Oct. 4, ~man show ol oil paintings of Cape Cod by Hiro Cbhal· par of Bombay lndhl. HUNTINGTON CENTER MAIL-Edinger Ave. al Beach Blvd., HunUngton Beach. On elhibit free during rtgu1ar business hours lhroogh Sept. 25, Pnl5P<Clusl Art ~O. This is a statewide art forum sponsored by the City o( Hun- tington Beach and the Huntington Center featuring 725 works . . . lea:liol-Calif ... ar.tilt1 • CORONA DEL MAR LIBRARY-420 Marigold Ave.1 Corona del Mar. On uhibit through Sept during regu1ar library hours, water color portraits by Peggy Sheppard. LAGUNA·. ART GAUERY-307 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach. Hours : noon to 5 p.m. Mon. -Sat.; 1 -5 p.m. Sun. Admission 50 cents. On exhibit through Sept. work of Taiwan artist Liu Kuo Song; Ralph Tanian·s bronzes and hard~ce paintings by Florence Arnold. MARINER'S LIBRARY-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. Hours: 10 a.m. -4:30 p.m. Tues ... Sat.; 1 to 5 p.m. Sun.; Wed. and Thurs., 7 to 9 p.m. No charge. Pre-Columbian ceramics on exhibit through Sept 27. ~A ART LEAGUE-513 Center St., Cmta Mesa. Hour: Sat. and Sun. 1 to 5 p.m. continuous exhibits of art work in various media by Art League members. No admission charge. NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK-1090 Bayside Drive, New- port Beach. On exhibit during regular business hours through Oct., acrylic paintings by Maryon Henrietta . NB CIViC CENTER GALLERY-3300 W. Newport Blvd., Newport Beach. On exhibit during regular business hours, through Sept., a colleCtion of photos gathered by the New- pOrt Beach Historical Society from 22 sources, showing old Newport Beach and Balboa. CllAU.JS GALLERY -1390 S. Coast Highway , L~guna Beach. Hours: 11. a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. Current exhibit, one- man show ol Shirley Weekes' recent paintings, through • Sept. 'ti. COFFEE GARDEN GAU.ERV -2825 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. Hours: 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Mon. .. Sal. Currently 00 elhibit through Sept. 30. The Hurschler Collec- tion ·of-Modem Tapestries-. --- - GLENDALE FEDERAL SAVINGS -500 N<wport Center Drive, Newport Beach. On exhibit during regular businf!ss hours, oi l paintings by Faye Curtis through Sept. The trip will leave Los AngeJes International Airport Nov. ll aboard an Aerolineas Argentinas fan-jet. ·The tariff of $475 per person will include first class hotel accommo- dations, all admissions to th~ _golLt.pw:nament. golfing fees, a wide range of parties and tours plus three fiJll days of golf _and fun at Mar Del Plata, Argentina 's ram e d Atlantic Ocean resort about 250 miles from Buenos Aires. Air fare for the tour is extra. Travel agents are handling the arrangements. Students GOLDEN W~T COLLEGE -157« Golden West SL, Hunt- Proceeds from a concert by ington Beach. On exhibit in the cam~pg Llbrary, Community * INFLATABLE BOAT CAN CARRY UP TO 1,764 POUNDS Weighs 207 Pound1, Comes· in Seven Mod.11, Costs $265 to $1,280 orps11uilds S ores . --------- Army Engineers Develop 600 Beaches Until a few years ago, when capacity of 1,764 lbs., although conservationists began calling it weighs only 207 lbs. attention to the Army Corps of Standard equipment Includes Engineers' di s regard of pump, rowlocks, oars, repair ecological considerations, and kit, seat, windshield, ski trac- its tendency to tum a river in-tion rings, pennant with bow lo a series of concrete-lined socket, a manometer t o flood contro l dams, tbe Corps By JACK KNEASS · ma..asure 'inflaUon pressure, paid little attention to recrea-._ _________ ,, two intercommunication taps tion. from the Department of tbe and a quick drain. Optional The Flood Control Act of Army , Office of the Chief of accessories include two wheels 1944, which tied in Federal Engineers, Washington, D.C. for easy portaging. Government construction of 20315· Seven models range from 8 certain recreaUonal facilities M o s t camper-trailer-tent to 15 and on~alf feet in with a requirement that. cities, guides neglect to give full data length and cost $265 to $1280. CQWJties and states share in on these projects, and it is Available from Gemico Corp., the cost of cosstruction and certainly worth while for the 131 S.tate St., Boston, Mass. handle maintenance, helped dedicated camper to add such 02109, it appears to be one of change this. material (o his travel 'files. the better innatable boats The Federal Water Projects In California the local office which are growing in populari- Recreation Act of 1965, helped is P.O. Box 2711, Los Angeles. ty . this change a·. Jn Oregon, 628 Pi ttock Block, Jong with 8 ,re· Portland and in Washington, quirement that Bldg. 602, City-County Airport, non • federal Walla Walla. public bodies There are impressive pr~ pay h a I f of jects in tbe east and south the construction which offer fishing, boating cost o f recrea· and camping, yet are little tional facilities .IAcK KNir.us knovm to those from this area. and all operating costs. At one time the Corps put out Today the Corps, which has a booklet cov.~ring highlights built over 350 reservoirs in all oC these developments. When but six of these United States, writing Washington D.C. it has developed a tremendous would be well to ask if this is ·amount ol shorelioe and has stlll in print * When buying a camper, what is tie most important It.em we should consider? We intend to travel far and fast, but money ·is a major object. · P .M.O. Huntington Beacb Weight! Few are t h e manufacturers who w i 11 certify the weight Quoted in their brochures and many a camper owner has found himself with an overloaded truck. __recreationaLareas..otover 600_ beaches, 2SOO picnic areas and 1300 campgrounds with ap- proximately 45,000 campsites. An item l'd be deligfiled tolr-------------. test is an inflatable "Bombard 4" boat that can be packed in The Corps has 38 district or~ fices, anyone of which has in- formation on recreation available.' Master data and a list of offices can be obtained LOCAL a camper, trailer or car trunk, No olh•t n•w•p•p•t ••11• yo11 and is said to be ideal for rnor•, •v••v d•v, 1bout wh11'1 9oin9 on ifl th• Gr1•l1r Ot•n9•. fishing, trolling, swimming orl eo ••• fft•n th• DAILY PILOT. scuba diving. Jt has a 55 h.p. '----~------' rating, and a maximilm load To accommodate the m o r e than 24 perC!!fll or So. Calif. trarfic which originates · in Orange County, Delta Airlines has expanded its sales. serv ice and ticketing facilities by opening a new orfice at 124 Tow n and Country Sho pping Center on l\.fain Sl. in Orange. scheduling two South Seas cruises this fall on Nov. 3 and 2(1 from Les Angeles (Nov. 2 and 19 from San Francisco), stopping at Bora Bora, Tahiti, Auck.land, Sydney, S u v a , Niuafo'ou (Tin Can Island), Page> Pago and · Honolulu before returning to L o s Angeles. The first of these will have artisl Arden Von Dew i t z aboard to lecture and conduct art classes and on the second cruise George and Eugenia Gooden will conduct morning clin ics and afternoo~n bridge tournaments with prizes and trophies for all grades of players. Center an~ Administration Building, 't:-ontemporary Japanese Marni Nixon at the hfark graphic art by 37 artists, through Sept. 30. Taper Forum on October s Even if your farorite' • • {uxury [ CALIFORNIA FEDERAL SAVINGS--2700 Harbor Blvd., will help e s t a b I i s h a Costa Mesa. Currently on exhibit, during regular bu.sinesa: scholarship for music students hour, oil paintings by Lucille House, through Sept. at the new California Institute resort cOu1d float.to • \ •• * Princess Cruises are of- fering a variety of trips to J.1exico ~·ith two 11-<I a y cruises slated for Oct. 5 and a Thanksgiving trip Nov. 25. These will visit Acapulco, Puerto Vallarta and Mazallan. A tw~week cruise to the J.fexican Riviera Is scheduled for Oct. 30 with stops at Acapulco, Puerto Vallarta , Mazatlan and Manzanillo. After her return staleside, the SS Mariposa is scheduled for a New Year's Eve cruise to the l\.1exican Riviera (for Jo.days), sailing Dec. 30. An· other 10-<lay Mexican cruise sails on Jan. 10. Fares start at $560. Bisset Stars In 'Speed' of the Arts. JACK GLENN GALLERY -2831 E. Coast Highway, Corona The r~ital is to be del l\.far. Hours: 11 a.m. to S p.m. daily. Currently on exhibit presented by Sigma Alpha through Oct. 9, two man show: Richard Jouharian paintings Jota, international professional and the inflatable vinyl sculptures of William Soghor. ~tl still have ftm music fraternity lorwomeo, inl~~~~iiiiil more on . association with caurorn.ial,= Institute of the Arts, the only the' • professional training ground for For CHALLIS Jta11•a. all the arts in the United GALLERIES Stales, consisting of schools ol Art, Design, Music. Theater weekender REPRESENTING 1HAMILTON MIX lOISCH WlllttS and Dance, Film and Critical Studies. The scholarship will Advertising be sponsored by the SAi Foun- ILAltl llANDT COOMll ••• dation. Phone Reservations by mail for the 1 Jto s.. C••' Hwy .. concert may be addressed to / 6424321 -l.ot1111H1 kocll Mrs. Joseph Fil,Gerald , 9i1t , : ' lk L D•llrllA.M.t•SP.M. California. There' will be two seven-d:iv cruises to Puerto Vallarta and Mazatlan on Oct. 16 and 23 and a special Gounnet trip Nov. 13. with Carmel Manto. host of the La S trad a restaurant in Los Angeles. ~elping to prepare special dishes from the Calabria region of Italy, for the passengers. This trip vis its Puerto Vallarta and Mazatlan . Fares start at $245 for the regu1ar seven.day tour: 5400 for gourmet cruise . and $495 for two-w·eek cruise. li~~~f~in~d~a ~A~v~e~.,~a~H~a~b~r~a~,~~~~~~~~~~~~Siiiiiiii~4t4-24t7 Jacque line Bisset has been ··-;r signed fo r the fe minine lead to co-star with Michael Sarrazin SERVICES-WE HAVE THEM C<uise lbePrincas Italia-world'• happiat floating resort, counb:y club, theater, discotbequc, and gourmet restaDtaDt Swim, sun, dance, play while your spcctac:Dlar ocean view cbanp f:'lf;Tf second. Meet warm new friends beside cool margaritas while 247 charming ltalian crew members F?Oil you with so much Old Worl<l service you'll fed Brand New. And then lhetc's Mexico. Puerto Vallarta and . Mazatlan Oil the 7..S.y auiS<S. On the II.day tripo, it's -,our luxury liner attracting the jet set's aniou.s eyes in Acapolco Bay. On thc 13 and 14-<lay cruises, )'<Xl'll also fiesta in ManDnillo, No bags The cabins are air <.'00- dJtloned, have p r i v a t e facilities, telephones and multi-channel music. The l\.fat.&on Lines ships. soon to sail under the flag or in the htGf\1 Robert Chartoff. Irwin W i n k I er production "Speed Is Of the Essence," ~·hich goes into production O<;l. s. , . ~tiss Bisset, currently star- ring in "The Mephisto Waltz" for 20th Century-Fox. ''Speed" "'ill be filmed in New York Ci- ty primarily in the city's East Village. As a young girl introduced to drugs by her boyfriend ~Sarrazin), Miss Bissel will be seen in her most powerfully dramatic role to d a t e , HUNTERS BOO.KS THI wrsrs FINEST IOOKSTOHS FOR no YlARS-SlllCI I HI NOW IN SANTA ANA ·AT FASHION SQUARE u.soo ....... ,_...ks lZ,000 U-Greotlot C- • IARIOAINS GALORll Ol'F,N EYENI NGS 'l'IL 9 r.~I. A Compl•t• Flow•r Shop th•t is th• "•nvy" cf the trade! We wir• flow•rs, thousends to choos• from-ind whit low pric•s! A compl•f• "re1dy tossed" '1l1d dept. with foil wrapp•d/otatoes, t•ady made cole sl•w, carrot sticks, c•l•ry sticks •n many many more! A Compl•t• Shippin9 Dept. re1dy to ,hip a carton of oranges or a fabulou' 1rr1y cf California fruits sh ipped 1ny- h•r•! Guarant••d d•liye ry. So send the folk, a Californi1 surpris•. Use your Bankamericard or Mast•r Charge. Just phon• we do the r•st. AND OllAllH COUNn's FINEST FIUITS AND VIGITAILISf WS Wtlll: irLOWEllS . ....... . Ort .... C-ty ir11t11W A-. YOU SAVI DOI.LAH WITH THISI COUPONS ...........••................ , • n'INOT~t;Hlltl • THlrllNOTl;Ll .Hlll. Ti.y'reNt14.tl· ....... • LA••• 1c111•• • 11Y1N1 ••oWN • 12 Roses or • •HEAD LmUCE • WATERMELON • 25 Carnations • • • • • • 2 ""' 39c • 2c u.. • 99' • • LIMIT 4 • LIMrT J MU.OMS • LIMn 1 IUMCH e • WITH THIS COUf'ON • WfTH THIS couroN • WITH THIS COUPON • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COUPONS EXPIRE SEPT. 10, 1'70 Th•s• r•staur•nt• d•m1nd the fine1t fer their customers. Thet's why th•y f•etur• NEWPORT PIODUCEI P•troniz• them! Newport Gfotto. Newport; 1'e Ardn. Newport; lerlltMrn I• Tltt Sky, Airport: Ahy West, N•wport; VI• NOYO. N•wport-an~ oY•t 200 others. How •bout ycu. c:all in9 u17 · ''Orarrv1-co untV'r Faste1t Growing Produce Oroanizo:tion!' -~ NE!,O_!r! J~~~CE .-----.:§.~ Zi1' Nowpo<t INotail oo TM Pftl... ~---· "'35 Years of Produce Ordtr of th• HoUft" ---~~~ ·-~ ,_ to pack or unpack. Your $20,000,000 resort does the1rave.ling. Take a week. Take two. Take a Princess Cruise to Mexico for the pcrlcct getaway. Your travel agent can arrange it. c.n him now before he slill oo lhc PriDcas Italia. Or call Princ:en er.;,.,, (213) 380-7000 Fall sailings: 7, 11, 14-day cruises from Los .l\.ngeles Oct. 5, 16, 23,30, Nov. 13,20. $350* to Sl,450. ".ater J Spring sailings: 7, 11, 13, 14-daycraises from Los Angeles . Dec.15 (Christmas cruise), Dec. 29 (New Years cruise), J an.11, 22, Feb. 5, 19, ·Mar. 8, 19, Apr. 2, 9, 26. S425* to Sl,395. ·~ lllf*ll"~-~ •Ilia• "!boM/V llali&ll cl. llelleo-. d • ' " ' Dtpl. 0~·21 I I 3435 Wihhire Boolevard I I Los Angeles, California 90005 I I lfcclacruisecOmingon.Plcueprodmo I I with persuasive Princ:cs:s bnx:h1Zm'. 1 I D MClico D Party QWe ! I I I I I ~ - - DAILY PILOT l!S $500,000 Gift Veteran Travelers Give Funds to Saddlehack Hospital By PAMELA HALLAN Of IM 0.11~ ~LIM ll•H Mr. and P.trs. E . R . lt1erlwether gave away a half a million dollars recently. "We wanted to do something for our neighbors," said the couple, who reside In Leisure World, Laguna Rills. So they donated $500,000 to the new Saddleback Com- munity Hospital to be used for afnictions of the aged. The gesture "·as magnifi- cent -perhaps the largest private donation ever made lo a hospital in Calirornia. But it \\•as typical of the couple who have never let the word "boredom1' enter their vocab- ulary. He grew 11p in Newman. ' mustard gas and wasn 't ex-proj>riate .to the occasion. so peeled to survive," s a i d the radio was turned off. ~1eriwether. "They sent me lo They were in Atlantic city. Letteri:nen Hospital in San strolling on the famous board· Francisco, supposedly to die." walk when they made r deci- But he_ wasn't ready to leave !Ion that was a turning point the v.·orld, particularly arter in their li/e. he saw a certain pretty nurse ·•1 turned to my wife and from Colorado who had all the said, 'let's give up everyth.ing patients eating out o{ ber and devote the rest or our hand. "Even lbe well ones lives to travel, tomorrow.' She didn't want to leave," he said answered . 'tomorrow ma y chuckling. never come, let's go today.'" "I enjoyed my profession." uSing the ·Nation a I added his wife, wh.o gave up Geographic Magazine for a her nurSiag career to become travel guide. and cargo ships Mrs. ~teriwether on Christmas as their conveyance , the tv.·o Eve. of 1920. set off on 35 years of travel. The newlyweds settled on They were careful to look the West Coast where he for special events, like the became a promotion con-opening of the United Nations. sultant to several large firms. the Olympic games and World Ga .• -cn bis:. 1.amily's cotton plantation ~9 miles south ot Atlanta. "I decided early that plantation life wasn't for me,'' said Meriwether, who packed his few belongings and took off for New York City while( still in his teens. "All the while I sa ved n1y Exhibitions. They were in a money.'' said Meriwether , few places when unexpected ' descfibing-hiS success.-''Effi'C a dVe'fffifres conffi>nted-Uiem. during those years in the "We were in China when the Army and in the hospital, Japanese attack e d the every cent was saved." He ad-mainland," he recalled.· They mils he made a few wise in· were staying with a n vestments, purchasing orange Englishwoman who had mar· groves in Anaheim and Santa ried a prominent Chinese and Ana. and leaVilig the pro-were thrilled because they h.ad duction to ~'the experts.'' been allowed to see the THE MERIWETHERS DINE SURROUNDED BY TREASURES Year.s of Travel Together A11embled Meny Collector's Items KIMONO BROUGHT FROM PEKING IN 1930 Worn Du ring Reign of Empress of China "I .had no idea whal 1 was going to do when I got there," he said, smiling. But he soon discovered he had a talent for sales pron1otion and the then famous \Vanamaker Depa rt- ment Store chain put hini to ~·ork as an "idea man ." One reason he didn't overSee Forbidden City and · the em- his own property was his rre-press dowager's pr iv a t e quent absence. Not having gardens. certai n coun try. they would "\Ve have n't lost our love of add a roo1n on their hoine to adven ture. I.hough, adde d lo every country in the world customs. We've never been Anahei1n and a home \Vilh a deror:itc in that country's r..1eriwethcr, whose friend<:: except Nepal. Tibet. and 'Ugly Americans.''' Japanese motif in Santa Ana. style. \\'Ouldn't be a bit surPrised il children to tie them down . the "We left by train just ahead Meriwethers fowtd they liked of the attackers and that was to trav el. the last time we saw the Russia and a few islands. ''\Ve They ha'e li ved in two Both horn"<' "'e'c featu ,ed 1'n Bu t lhe y en'J"Y 1·1,.-10• ·,,, they open their newspaper.<:; had trouble with the Russians L,, .. ,. I> homes in Orange Count y, the mag azines and on home tour~. Leisure \Vorld and vo1v that s om e d a Y a nd r c ad in Vienn a right after the war, Casa de Esper anza in since 1vhenever they l1'ked a th · I 1· d "r..1eriwethcrs Fly to ~1oon." so we haven't tried to vis it '-------------------'-----'-"-"-'-'-'"..:&:_'.:.Y_'_'_"_0_''_e_'·----------- t~cir country," he said. One one trip around the mainland." said Meriwether. He was in Europe on a business trip for them in 1914 when he saw the mobilization of the French. Belgian and German armies. "l was in Warsaw v.1hen the war began and I was on the last ship allowed to leave Germany." United States in one of tb_e They were in Algeria when first Buicks to come out . the French-Algerian war Meriwether decided to visit broke out and in Saigon v.•hen his birthplace. "I had one of the last French troops left the first car radios ever in-Vietnam."lt was s econd stalled ," recalled Meriwether, nature for me lo live out or a "And when we got to my suitcase." recalled M r s . home lown. J thought l'd turn Meriwether. "I. -~h~ay~ -~a~ it up real loud and realty clothes packed for a year and make an impression." But the we tr ied to plan our trlps so only song playing was a that we would have the same popular one called ''Brother kind or weather wherever we They list their favorite places as Japan for beauty, China for thrills, Africa for excitement and the Holy Land, v.·here they followed in the footsteps of the Master for 28 days, as their most inspiring . 1-fe returned when America en le red the war. this time as a soldier, and was the first American officer to be sent home disabled. Can You Spa re a Dime" which went." . they decided would not be ap-The globetrotters have been -"\Ve'VeilWiyS had a couple of rules," said the travelers. "We've always learned a Jew ""'ords of the country's language, always used theiT money and observed their "I walked into some Travel Blue Hawaii Is Paradise By STAN DELAPLANE KEAUHOU BEACH, Hawaii -A blue day in blue Hawaii. The coco palms lean into the '"ind. You could dip a brush in the sea and paint with it. The surf piles like white sugar on a black lava reef. This is the lush Kona coast. The Big l sland or Hawaii. . The luxury Keauhou Beach Hotel opened in Hawaii fa shion: A kahuna (priest) chanted an anci- ent blessing. (You could call it superstition, but Hawaiians don 't like to work in a place that hasn't paid tribute the old gods.) They cut a wreath of fragrant maile as the sun went down. Bright as a new copper penny. Luau torches blazing gold. * THIS IS SOUTH of Kailua village. A green coast of endless fJo,very shrubs. White plumeria blossoms shower the ground. i It's new resort country. (Keauhou Beach Hotel is Lyle Gu.slander and Amfac -11 hotels now in four islands. Inter-Island is building another down the road.' A half hour from Honolulu by air. Rates $20 double. Add $18 for breakfast and dinner. Be- cause nowhere else to eat now, brudda. Except Kona, $5 taxi ride a\vay. * Hawaii architects and builders have had a lot of practice. Keauhou Beach•came out with all the things learned over ¥ears: A~ 18-hole golf cours~. The swimming pool 1.s alongside the sea. Open-air dining rooms. Long breezy lanais. Room balconies overlook the water. The trade wind comes pouring into the room , warm as a si lk aloha shirt. (Blue Hawaii gets to me. Brudda. '1'00 much ~) "'- * "Are fares to Hawaii any cheaper on the new jumbo 747?" Auwe ! No chance. But the cheap fare out here is commuter class. (just ne\V this United . but all airlines have it.) That's S88 from the West Coast. No meal service. I bought a hot sandwich for $1.50. (\Voman next to me brown-bagged her lunch.) Pay $97 and you get a free hot lunch in tourist class. For $160 you get a gourmet thing and free drinks. But why for five hours? First-class lands a foot- ball field length ahead of you. But you ALL wait for the bltgga ge. Save your money and buy a muumuu. * . Oh yes, you all see the sam~ movie. Carry five single dollar~ and be a hero with the stewardess. Drinks are 50 cents. A half dozen people wiU try to pay \vith $20 biJ\s. And they just don't have that much change on hand. -· * . "W• pl en to bike across Europe next year. Would like •ny suggestions ... " · Friends tell me you should ride at home a month or the newly-used muscles will murder you. * Don't bike ACROSS Europe. Bike locally. Then put the bike on a train and R~DE to th~ next a~ea . Consider a scooter, too. J tried the bike. Believe dant.n .Jfit. g...ien 2'40 E.CoulH°"'' Cofono dol M.,. toH~ 9 'J0 .. s:JD Teh 67:J-21/IO s.Moya 11,.5 BJA -MosforC~•¥ me. after you're out -of th~ teens, all the world is uphill. • * ''We don't think we're odd, but people think long hair •nd • guitar makes you a freak. Where do we go? Money enough to drop out for a year ••• " Greece is cheap and warm. Didn't look to me like the hips were being rousted. Amsterdam is the hippies delight, but cold in · winter. Many, many couples, communes, single in Hawaii. ParticuJarly on Maui and along this Kona coast. (Hawaii Visit- ors Bureau just~took away my Good Conduct Medal. Whassamatta you, brudda. Jus' try to HELP.) -* . Portugal's cheap. Starchy though. You'd do better to cut the hair. You can keep the guitar. It's local. Spain same. Got a hunch a real sleeper is the British Virgin Islands. Cheap. \.Varm . People easy going. * Most countries are accepting beard, hair and guitar -reluctanUy. There's tourist money in it. The BIGGEST bunch of passport holders art 15 lo 30 years. More than half a million, and they do spend some money. * " ... two secretaries going to Hawaii fo r Chris t- mas. Friends suggested a hotel in Hilo. Drear, dear. Mainland· wahines -should wear their bikinis and stay at \\1aikiki. * "How can we get a beach house fo r the summer in Hawaii?" Best is a month's sub scription to the J-Ionolulu Advertiser and look in the classified ads under "Vacation Rentals." Now the good houses on Oahu island (Honolulu) are priced way up. Like $1500 a month. Migh1. be better on the Outer Islands. T checked local weekly papers and found houses at $250 lo $300. * "Do you know of any condominium type hous ing in Jameic• wh ere the owners rent to visitors?" · Don1t kno\v exactly the condominium set up. But there's a thinS called Jamaica Villa/Car Holi- day - a combination of house rental plus rent car. {You need a car on the island ). Brochure from World Wide Living, 6290 Sunset-·Bo\llevard, Los Angeles. * Mostly I'm against ren'ting hou ses Jon;; dis- tance but this looks reliable. Pictures and complete description. They also have -MeXiCoDOUse rentals. •••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • PLAN YOUR • ~ --• TRAVEL VACATION • WITH US • • • • CRUISES • SIEAMSHIP • • • • and TOURS • • • • Charge Your Travel • • At Robinson's Upper Floor • • SINCE 1888 -FASHION IS~AND • • NEWPORT BEACH, 92660 • ••••••••••••••••• • • • • • Salawayona to sunny Mexico aboard the I Iott,! SS 30or What coold be moree:1cumg ! A festive cruise to the sp6rkling Mexican Riviera. Acapulco, Poertn Vallarta.andMazatJan-viorant,colorluI and cbamting. The weather will be perfect in Merico, with clear, sunny skies and balmy b-ade winds. So sail away on a lo.day adventure that's more than a vacation. Enjoy the elegance and convenience of the SS Mariposa, your luxurious Boating resort hotel And delight in a staff whose only concern is your comfort. (On the firstcrnise, dance the night away at a brilliant New Year's Eve Ball atsea!) The first cruise departs December 30 from San Francisco, from Los Angeles the follow!ng day. The second cruise departs from Los Angeles January 10. Fares begin at $560. CONTACT YOUR TRAVEL ~GENT FOR COMPLETE INFORMATION. 0r mail um coupon. Shipe o! U.S. ,..;.try . Matson Paul 'Thompson, Cru i11e Consull.ltnt Matiton Li nes ~Zl West 6th Sime!, Loo Angcloo, CA 90014 Telephone ( 213} 626-0F'JOJ. • OP/867/SE'JS P ieaee 8CDd meal! the inlormation an your f<A-o 11).daycruiSf'tli to sunny Mexico. OIC! . NAMF>-~-~~~~-~~~--~~~-~ Ann.m;,;;s_ __ ~----------~ CITY·-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ STATF.<-------~----ZIP·---­ TRAVEL AGE:N'IC--------~----- ' . I . ............. ~--~····················--···········································•-\. -• • . I I • " DAILV 'ILOT A-B-6-tJ T By NORM STANLE\I ORANGE COUNTY 'S R ESTAURANT , NIGHT CLUB AND EN tE RT AINM ENT SCEN E McDooalds When it corfles to volume food sales most or- ganizations woQ.ld be hard put to top the ou~t that utilizes what is perhaps one of the country s best known symbols. A soaring pair of golden arches. As th~ record n.ow.s~ands, the McDonald'~ chain has sold over six billion hamburgers nationally since it was started in 1955. Enough, it would seem. Sept. 261 at 2 p.m. in the restaurant parlting lot, will meet Ronald and receive an individual gift. El Pueblo Tlie search for new places to partake of what ranks as just about our favorite national food - namely Mexican -never seems to end -with the net resUlt of many years of pleasant journeying. to pave several highways between Connecticut and The latest such jaunt -with considerable re- California. wards for our efforts -carried us up the Newport Current sales are holding in the neighborhood Freeway to Orange. For a visit to that city's El 1--~oLmore...ihan. !our million.J)amburgers_daily:a'..A.Uh,_l _ _.,..e,,b.,,lo restallrant. moi-e than 1400 McDonald's operating in all 50 states. STAND WITH THE BEST NOW IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY Acting on the advice of others, we immediately The latest pair of golden arches bas just taken found ourselves in like agreement that Ulis spot root in Orange County -y.iith the opening of the stands with the best tn the field. And merits place- new McDonald's restaurant at 18962 J3rookhurst St., ment on the favorites list of all dedicated Mexican at Garfield, in Fountain Valley. food aficionados. "" Cv Special ceremonies earlier this month marked the public grand opening. Presiding ovf!r the affair and welcoming their first customers were owners Joe Nibeel and his son, Bob. Fountain Valley's Mayor, Ed Just, cut a unique ribbon comprised of 50 one-dollar bills. Immediately after the "snipping" it was donated to the Fountain Valley Boys' Club, represented by its director, Bill Di Prete. J UNIOR MISS -CHRISTINE Also present to help launch the new McDonald's \vere Dr. Marvin Adler. executive director of the Fountain Valley Chamber of Commerce, and pretty Christine \Yea ver, Fountain Valley's 1970 Junior 11-1iss. In another grand opening treat this weekend - for the· e_xpress benefit of local kids - the Nibeels . have scheduled. a personal appearance by the fa- mous company clown, Ronald McDonald. Every child attending· the program, set for tomorrow, Sat., CASA GARCIA lfo,_,.y Mr. ld'1I , NOW Sll YIJrtG AUTHENTIC MEXICAN FOO.I> N ... luff-' 11 te l Dl111er 4 t• 10 Fe•lurin9 Your F1 .. orile Me11ic1n Di1h11 Food to Go Coc•t1i!t 1712 PLACENTIA Cl.....ii s.-,. COSTA MISA 64M 124 DON JOSE' ·No w Appeari ng THE .FANTASTIC PRIMO Kl.M AT THE PIANO e COCKTAILS e Enchil •d• •nd TKo ........ , .... , , . $1.35 Chlll Rollono • Enchillda . . . . . . . . . . . . $1 .50 '-'"' ..... ,_ ..... TnfHltM .... s-.. 9093 E. Adami (at Magnolia) Hunt. lloach 962-7911 . . WHERE IT'S HAPPENING.'.~~ IDO · ") , , IPUNG .( PRESENTS (' l BOB BROOKS DUO . 4:30-8:30 THC CXCITIHG SOUNDS OF ROY ANTHONY 7 .. #~~#mt (: • . • In addition to the di stinctive taste and quality ol the--fare we sampled, service and decor were in line with the standards of a first-class establish· ment·. ~colorfully attired waitresses, dim lighting dramatized by candles on each table, wrought iron dividers between the spacious banquettes and a sparing use of ornamentation offered further evi- dence. CHOOS ING OINNER Made comfortable at on ce in this cozy atmos· phere, \Ye Jost nO time scanning the menu with its 12 dinner combinations. various house specialities and broiler selections. Our final choices !ell to one of each of the first two categories. The combination plate was that ofiering one enchilada, chile relleno and beef tostada, fried beans -and rice. Ordered on the complete dinner rvaneois' CONTINENTAL CU ISINE FLAMING DUCK Open 11 :00 A.M. -Closed Mon day HUNTI NGTON BEACH, CALIFORNIA 181 51 BEACH BLVD. 142-1 919 111 JITH ST. NIWPOIT IU.CH l'ri111e Ea ste rn Beef A ged and Charcoal Broiled Est. 1921 -A Forty-Nine Year Traditi0t1 THE Wedding Receptions & Banquet Facilities Now op•n for S1,1rtdey Ch•mpe9ne l runc:h t 0 to l THE RAY BROS. Appeerin9 FRIDAYS & SATURDAYS ( 16903 ALGONQU IN STREET 40 flfl l'AClfllC co.t.n MIOMWAY a WAINl:R AVE.I HUNTINIHON HAHDUI • MO KI'S TIKI LOUNGE 1146-JJ77 DICK AND GREGG DUO NO\\i Appearing Tu n . Thnt S.t. .1 1:30 p.rn. to 1 :30 •.m. Hi ppy Hout 4 t'o 6 p.m. ·Ho~ Pupus (Hora cfoeuvrell VOLCANO ROOM-Lunch & Dinner Deily MOKl'S CO,Fll SHOP l f••turl"t Mo•1'1 Ftll\01,11 Hui• l wr,er l i·s .. ~DI .. • ,.,,.,., J Ope" d1ily 6 •·"'· to 11 P·"'· Z , 1 I ~00 PALISADES RO . ~ ,,,.,_ .... COSTA MESA 557 -8466 '-;--w- -c.c"'-' "' n. ••""' ''"' J l ,.~·s ' !or $2.95 (a la carte, $2.25), ii included a choice o! albondi~as (meat ball) soup or tossed green salad (choice of c!_re.ssing) and choice of beverage. H OUSE SPECIAL TY The other dinner cho!ce, listed undei the chef's suggestions, was 'carnitas ·as_adas con enchilada," $3.95. We later learned it enjoys 1 reputation as the restaurant's most popular dish. ~ mirth. But two routines we particularly enjoyed \vere ''Chokey the Bear" and "The Lone Ranger." "Like all good laugh men, Don works from a frame of reference which his audience quickly recognizes -the outlitndish husband-and-wife jokes, the drunk explaining things to a cop, in- duction into the army. His sense of what is funny is unerring and bis delivery is polished to perfec· tlon. It consisted of marinated strips of tender beef, SWEET MUSIC broiled to i(ldividual taste, served with chile strips, .. "Bringing down the house with rib·tickling con· guacamole lnd a cheese enchilada. Included were vulsions must constitute an especia!Jy S\Yeet kin<l of rice, refried beans, flour tortillas, and a choice of music to Don ~s ears these nights. Felled by a he'art ice cream or..shetberLand .. coffee-or.. tea. -----attack-in-Las-Vegas-.-last-January,....-this-current -----1 ENTERTAINMENT appearance marks his first full.fledged return to Moving from the dining room to the lounge the stage followin~ the long recovery period. after dinner, we were delighted to renew acquaint-"Prior to his illness, Don appeared at several ance with one of the areas favorite entertainers, Orarige County spots and toured from New York Don Lucas -he of the rubbef face and unlimited to Hollywood . During those travels, he performed talent for comedy and characterizations. Don is with such stars as Della Reese, Louis Jordan, backed by the "Plus Two" duo which plays its Louis Prima, Rudy Vallee. Don I-lo and Red Foxx. heart out for the patrons. FILM CREDITS of~ I ~~ When we reviewed Don's last show 've wrote at that time the following review-: I "Don can provoke laughter with just the funny sounds he makes or with his facial expressions and by talking in various dialects (from Italian and Russian to German, French, Jewish and Mexican). ."-nd when he combines these talents with telling a story, he cracks you up but good. "The Lucas talent doesn't end, however, with stand-up comedy' routines. He also dashes off a number of mighty credible vocals that lend .the act welcome variety. "Whether giving an impression of H3.rry Bela- fonte singing "Day-0,'' or shifting to his own voice for such songs as "Bill Bailey" and "Moonlight In Vermont." HIS OWN MATERIAL "Recent film credits include "One for the Books" and ''The Love God ." At the present time he's before the cameras again in the Mark IV pro- duction of "Jack." ~- "Past television appearances include "It Takes a Thief," "The Outsider," and the Bob Dale, Lu Ryden and Libby Williams shows. Much the family man, he and hi s delighUul wife, Charmaine, have six children." (End of Review.) Don and the duo appear Tuesday through Satur· day from 9 p.m. to closing offering a floor sho'v plus music for dancing at the El Pueblo. Closed Mondays, El Pueblo is~located at 650 N. "Just about every line of his material (all or which he's writte·n himself). is good for ho\vling Tustin Ave., Orange. In addition to dinner, lunch is served from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Tuesday thro}lgh Sat- urday. Sunday hours are 4 p.m. to 12 midnight. (Cont inued on Page 27) 1-, I OPEN FOR LUNCH lntim1te a nd De1i9htful FRENCH RESTAURANT DINNER 5:30-10 P.M. T uetd•v tl1rr.1 Sr.1rtd•v CLOSED MONDAY C•rtier ef ._.. .. ,. M amt.I CNte M.. H o-J641 " Now-Tue. thru Sat.--1:30 to 1:30 -TIM SCHAAF TRIO Starring The So"uthland's New Singing S.ns•tion Spec:i1lilin9 in Seefood And Sl11ln with th• Oc:•1n Al Your T1ble U.N9Utt FACILITllS J l7 PACIFIC COAST HWY. HUNTINGTON HACH l\11er'felion1 Acc:eptecl 5l 6·2SS5 • We 1er "e tl1e o n l11 r e al garlic bread.., WORLD FAMOUS (Jil!ftflJNMllH HANK SU RANI£ t1 l~f PIANO Ill SiHrt 1912 ••• Ex11ir P1 f)'Ht1i111' Jrinlu strt•tJ i1t ~ tropir11/ p11r11li1t SUPIRB SIAFO.OD AND STIAKS LURCHEOI SERVED 11130 L M. to 4 P•!i· fOI\ •ISl•VA flONS , -,;· .•· S92-1321 16271 PACIFIC COAST HWY. HUNllNGION SUCH " DELANEY'S SEA SHANTY Featurlnq Oranqe-County's Finest OYSTER BAR E1stern Blu•point Oysters on Half Shell $1 .50 Eastern Cherrystone Clams $1 .50 L1r9e .Shrimp Coclct'iil $1.35~ M.-, otftff W0Herf1,1l S•l.crioM o,.. to Z P.M. n o LIDO PARK DRIVE NEWPORT IEACH 675-0100 O.ce To The Sounds of MARK J ll Mon. thru Sat-9 pm to 1 :30 am BUFFET LUNCHEON 11 :30 to 2:30 Mon . thru Fri. Sunday l runch II ta 2:30 * ~:1~t!'1J~fm!':i~11 DI rm er ..................................... SJ.2J * WMMICl•Y Nl9ht S,.cl•I Ch•mSMttte and Strot•noff ...................................... Sl.ll " 3295 Newport Blvd., Newport B••ch 3344 East Coast Hwy. Reservations 473· 1374 • Luncheon e Dinner e Cockloils F l~ ITAL IAN CUISINE '-"'"' .. 1 A.M. I ' = I -• • • I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I • -. COSTA MESA GOLF - , COUNTRY CLUB Proudly Pre.sent1 ,, UN9Um .. 1 AND • ..- WIHING llCEnlONS --·-""' :-..:..... ... ..... ..... , ... I _ ..... --.. ~--· ... ~-- 1701 Golf Course Dr., Costa Mesa S40-7200 WEEKENDER (Continued from Pagt 26) Roy AntJ1ony Entertainment wise, there currently is a stellar attraction on tap for out 'n' abouters in the New- porter Inn's Lido Lounge. To Uio_se aJre_qdy in the kn ow, it's · the exciting sound whipped up by the Roy Anthony group. Outsiders have only one course of action left open. To make tracks as soon as possible for the Newporter. .,. SKILL AND TALENT COMBO As good a\ quintet as ever took to the band- stand. these fi ve talented and skilled musicians combine their instruments and voices to make · bright a ne\v music. The pr09f rested in the enthus- iastic response given by the yQunger members of the crowd the night we obser,1ed the pfoceedings. It's difficult to come up with an exact term or phrase to describe the unusual sound created by Roy Anthony 's ensemble. They hit the top .notes ilh-tbe-'Pijuaoa--BFass-soundrtr:aditiooal-Dixieland..!-. jazz. modern rock, bits of Tin Pan Alley and big- band music all rolled into one. Making dancing the order of the day with its, "right-on" beat. PEACHES LABEL There's evidence in every number they play but these five mu sicians really have it "pulled to- gether" with an old standard , "Mc.ma Inez." Aod listeners \viii be pleased to kno"• thi s hit is avail- able on Roy Anthon y's O\\'n Peaches label ,_ F,lday, Septembfr 2.5, 1970 OAJlV PILOT 27 The Ne\\'porter engagement marks Roy An- thony's fi rst appearance in Orange County. Follo\\'· ing in the \\l ake of successful engagements at Sea \Vo rld 's Atlantis. Palm Springs ' Howard Manor and J ill y's. and the Islander in Ha\vaii . \Ve can onJy suggest you prepare to find your- self nostalgically drifti-.g in a new dimension - whil e dancing through any number of musical eras. Roy Antho•iy at-Lido Lounge DAILY l'lL.OT S1111 l'ltOto I The Roy Anthony group appears in the Lido Loun ge, 8:30 to 1:30, Monday through Saturday. The Ne\vporter Inn is located at 1107 Jamboree Road. Newport Beach. A li velier group of musicians th an the Roy An- thony aggregation would be hard to co1ne by - even in th is day and age. Playing in the Lido Lounge of the Newporter Inn, Roy Anthony (lead- er in front) whips up plenty of customer enthus- --1 FOR THE FINEST I N Yisit a bit of Oft! Japan •• PRIME RIB A••TAUAANT tl41 Wiii CO.lit 1410HWAf NIW,o•r llACH IT'S N01V (114) MMN1 RICHARD'S VILLA VIDA 1 Great Seafoo(I! Serving The Area 's Best LUNCHEONS · DINNERS ·COCKTAILS . Roast Prime ·Ribs of Beef EARLY BIRD SPECIAL 5 to 7 P.M. Comp lete Dinner 400 Main Balboa mmufa PRIME RIB OF BEEF ·;..· .... . NEW YORK FILET ........... . $2.85 $3.2S h'I 1-3.103 33 TO\\"n & Country, Orange FRIDAY WEEKLY FISH FRY ALL YOU CAN EAT ..... . ....................... . •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ~) SHERATON~ BEACH INN ~ $1.75 $1.75 sun day BRllflGl+ • • • • • • • • • • CARIOE ROOM Pre$ent$ --Entertainment -Dancing -Mon. thru Sit. Back From A Smashing Success In Las Vegas BUFFET LUNCHEON MONDAY thru FRIDAY Gary Grande Songstress/Song Writer KATE PORTER Now Appearing In The Caribe Room 5:30-8:30 P.M. Mon. thru Fri. . 21112 PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY-HUNTINGTON BEACH-536-1421 THE OCEAN TOAD PRESENTS ••• Prim• Rib .................... S.SD Ground Sirloin ........ l .50 Top Sirloin ,_ .. , ........ 4.25 SP11r• Ribs ........... _ ... 3.25 T•rlyakl .................... 4.50 Beef K•~la ............ 3.lS Plate 'OBHf ............ 4.50 Potorflno Shrimp .... l .95 · N•w York ................ 5.25 Swordfl1h ................ l .95 Filet .......................... 5.25 Broll ... Centsr Cut Lobster ...................... 6.25 Pork Chopt .......... 4.25 Combination 6.25 ~'GRANTS BRADFORD HOUSE'' Your Fa1nily Restaurant . . EVERY FRIDAY I ~129 • All THE FISH YOU CAN EAT •1111 11...cll ,.rln. Crelfllt Clll l llw, Hot Jltfl & a~, T1rt1r ·-· EVERY TUESDAY AND THURSDAY BUCK NIGHT YOUR CHOICE Roost To"' T111Ley Golde. -Fried Chklt .. -Roost ..,...-,., Jiif ... "'""· •~11 ... ,. ., ...... _ 1r er•~'"' '''-..... . Mot lall I 111t111r OPEN FOR BREAKFAST, LUNCH AND DIN NER 8:30 1.m. to 9:30 p.m., Monday thru S1turday -10 1.m. to 6 p.m., Sund1y GRANTS HUNTINGTON BEACH BROOKHURST & ADAMS • TUESDAY ·WEEKLY BUFFET DINNER ALL YOU CAN EAT ....................................... . f/lie sea..; has many moods · Orange-gold sunny; blue-gray somber; Moonlight romantic; sprightly gay; Serene ; stormy. Breathtaking! Refle ct on this ever- shifting seascape fro m the.Eest vantage point in Laguna V1aoR UuGO IM Cliff Drive at Coast Highway Laguna Beac~94 ·947l Open Daily luncheon-Dinner- Cocktails OPERATE D ev FRED HARVEY AN r:AmfdC COMPANY ,11 a.m. to 4 p.m. !FM~ 3801 EAST CoAST HICDWAT CoaoNA na. MA1t, CAL1ro11N1A PnoNE: (714) 675-1374 I For on e egc;int -evening Goach& 'ilorses Superb Dining and Dancing SEVEN NIGHTS 6 P.M. to 2 A.M. FOil ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER PHONE 642-4321 ·PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A :tOT SiINCE T-H-E. OLD DAYS Now Me 'n Ed's mobile ovens speed delicious piping·hot pizzas to Your door in minutes. lf·f:~'~' ·~,.~~ . ".°"•:,. • ~.'.I .A . .. ' . ., 'I = -. ' iasm \vith. Jim Hutchins on trombone ; Mario Esco- bosa, drums; J\tlanu el Castaneda, trumpet, and ·rony Castillo Jr.. vocal ist, on trumpet , fron1 8:30 p.m. to closing. Out 'n' Abouter solici ts comments; criticism and praise about Orange Coast restaurants and night clubs. Jf you have sof!1elhing you would like to say, \vritc Out 'n' Aboul, \Veeke nder,Box 1875,.Ne\vport Beach, California, 92663. _WITH THI$ COUPON CANTONESE DELUXE DINNER. $2 95 TWO FOR THE PRICE OF ONE • GoH M_a, thrv Tllurld•r 111 Od. I Te11111lc Gnrde11.s Chh1ese Resla11ra11t 1500 Ad11m1 (At H11rbor) Cos•-, ,.,.,.e,. 540-1937 540-1923 41' OPEN: 11 :lO o."'. to 11 P·"'·· Su11doy thru Thursd"Gy 11 :30 a."'. to 2 a .m., Friday ond Saturday ~ • OPEN 7 DAYS 11 A.M. TO 2 A.M. Brunch Lunch Dinner -ORV-· -· /·--DQG\( 2b0t W, Co11I Hwy .. N1wport B11ch ''Laun ching- Hour" 5-7 Fo1 R111r~1tion1, c.11 FOOD:_t: 541-1 lbb "That · Ronicnttic Little Place on the Bat1" Entertainment Nightly F.eaturing Those Deli9htfully Eccentric CORSICAN BROTHERS TUES. EVES. -MICKEY FRIZZELL A111ta•11cl119 Our New L1111ch•lrunch M..i11 Sened Da ily Until 4 P.M. Fe.rurhHJ Such DMKtable Items A1 1991 leMdlct e H11efn lo111;Qr05 The Martini lur!-r e AbalaN Stf'Ok •• , And Mony Others ·' THE BERLINER Gertnan Faniily Restaura11t Famous For SAVERBRATEN w;+h POTATO DUMPLINGS Open Dally For Dinn er From 5 P.M. CLOSED MONDAY • Banquet Room For CHILDREN 'S MENU BankAm•rlc11rd Master Charge I 0 to 70 Persons !<. • VISIT OUR HOF8RAU ROOM o,,.t: • '~. -ollt~[A' 18582 IEACH BlVD. Tow11 & Country Center HUNTINGTON BEACH ~! ttl!1 .. 9 ,. D -~ '°""' • "" COW!nr t · · ts . 968·SBOO i;.\H1'1 t OPEN DAILY 10 t• '-CLOSED SUNDAf t•8-4l00 Cont1n•nh11 Cold C11h, $1~1,9t1, f'1tlriet, Brt1d1, Jmpotted !lt1r & Wi111i s.M1 ... i,h11 ' L<it1<Gh.t ,fe G. Of £-11 In C~t1rin9 s,,...;,, , ' • • .. ' J ' -.. J ~ . -·· 1 . • • • r . \ • . l II C.llLY PILOT Friday, Seet•mber 25, 1,.70 Ya•r Gt1ide to Fun Play Proceeds Aid' Villa' ' SEPT. zs. ts the gale are $1.50 for adults and SO cents for chil!,U:en I VIlLA BENEFIT _ n:ie Hamsters. a IQCal theatrical through 12. These ~Jude all events except the races. group formed a year ago to stage fund-raising prc;xtuctions, SEPT. zc ,. ~ , is donating the proceeds of its next play to The VIila. a re-TEEN CLUB DANCE -The Westminster RecreaUon and hlbWlation home for women alcoholics in Orange County. Parkl Department will hold a.Jfeen Club Dance in lhe com- "Love Rktes the Rails or Will the Mail Train Run Ton~ght?" munlty Ctnte.r, l200 Westminster Ave., (for Wtst.mlnster a three-act melodrama, will be staged at 8:15 p.m. in the teen 1) each 84t ftom a p.m. to midnight. Admission, $1. • College Park Elementary School, 2380 Notre Dame Road, for member_s. $1.50 for non-members.. - Costa Mesa, on Sept. 25 -26. Ti~kets at the door ~or the show suitable for the whole family, $2.50 by donation for SEPT. 21 adults, $1 for ch.lldren. , NEIL DIAMOND CONCERT -Neil Diamond will appear in concert In the Arena of the Anaheim Convention Center, 800 SEPT. is · Z7 w. Katella Ave., Anaheim, Sept. 21i at 8 p.m. Tickets, S3.50 KNOTTS BERRY FARM -The Covered Wagon Camh • $5.50 available at the box office. For inlonnation phone area will be the scene ol country mu~ic this ~e= S'!t 63S-SOOO. Jerry Inman on stage tonight: The Hoosier o L SEPT. n TO NOV. g night and The Leightons Sunday night. Show times, Fri. ~nd Sal, 6:30, 8:30 and 10:30 p.m.; ~unday ~· 5:30._ 7 FlL!\f SER~ -The Newport Harbor Ari M~um Is pre- and S:30 p.m. Latin music will be played 10 th~. Fiesta Vil· senting a film series, "Civilisation," at th e Balboa Theater, lage Sat. and Sun., a~d "Fireworks on ~he .Lake are sched-700 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa, on seven successive Sundays uled for JO p.m. Fri. and Sat. Knott s ts at 8039 Beach starting Sept. 27. There will be two films per showing with Blvd., Buena Park. two screenings set at Z and 4 p.m. Tickets for pies are $15 for non-members, $12 for members. Tickets for individual SEPT. Z5 -OCT. 4 screenillis, $2.50, and may be purchased at box office before LA COUNTY~ "FAIR-...=-rhe-i..os-Angeles-eounty-Fa;;, -~ach~w;"tt"zeats-are-available-:-?or nformation-or-tlck at the fairgrounds in Pomona will run ~rough Oct: 4. orders contact the Museum . 400 Main St., Balboa or phone Live ~ .T heater "Oace More With Fee:ling" A comedy about symphony conductor 's sour notes is oo stage at the Huntington Beach Playhouse, 2110 Main St., Hun. tington Beach, Fri. and Sat. at 8:30 p.m. through Oct. 11. Reservations -536-8861. "Boys In lbe Band" A comic-drama aQout homo- SGxuals is on stage at South Coast Repertory. 1827 Newport Blvd:, Gosta-~tesa,-aL.&3 p.m. Fri. -Sun., through Oct. II. Reservations -646-1363. "Jltll, Book and Candle" A contemporary comedy is on stage at the Westminster Community Thealer. Finley School, Trask and Edwards Sts . ..Jn_lV.eslminster .. ...ai-8 ~ p.m. Fri . -Sat.. through Sept. 26. Reservations -897·8315. ---· ~-~ ---------------------- ' Fro~'" Pn11e %3 GARDEN ..• place to put them -you -woordtl't-betieve bow much there is -so ¥.'e moved in here," Hendricks said. \Vhlle organizing lhe thou- sands of letters, busineSs cor- respondence, £flee memos and rttords of Sherman 's Jong career, Hendricks found he needed books for cross re. ference purposes. The researchc library papers grew out of the collection of Sherman 's papers and the sup. plementary books used by Hendricks . It is focused on land development in Southern catilo~_ and closely rela ted areas. sUCh-as Arizona and southern Nevada, during the last 100 years. "ntE AIM OF the program is to further knowledge about the phenomenal development that has taken place in this . . . area -a subject on \vhich comparauvery liftle docutne·•n-c--'-- . "' Hundreds of exhibits and dozens of maJor attractions 675--3866, during hours it is open. -plus art shows an~ a nortw~r anld ~r-~~ud ~(ng~a;: OCT. 2 ' scheduled. Free evening ente ainme~ wi ! . e ' TRAVELOGUE -The Newport Harbor Kiwanis Foun;da· "A Shot In the Dark'• A comedy-mystery on stage at the Co rona de! Mar High School Theater, staged by Ir· vine Community Theater, Thurs. -Sat. at 8:30 p.m., through Oct. 3. Reservations- 833-0793. led research. ha~ been done," Hendricks added . The site of the library ls property formerly owned by lhe Sherman Co. -a hold.over or Sherman's business ven- '· a circus, and a rodeo all included in admission cost: ~e lion will present Clay Francisco's latest film. "Russia in racing meet runs during the Fair except on Sun. Adm1Ssion the 70's" in the Orange Coast College auditorium , 2701 Fair-Co:nabo's Mather is separate for these events of two hames~, two . quarter C 8 T' k ls h horse and eight thorobred events. There is .Par_i-mutual view Road, osta Mesa, Oct. 2 at p.m. 1c e at t e tures -which was donated to Shirley J ones star s tonight in premiere of '4The the foundation. Partridge Family" at 8:30 on Channel 7. As mother j:>etting including a daily double and exacta. Fair tickets at door, $2 for adults, $1 for students. OCT. 4 "There had been a coffee of five talented youn gsters she finds herself lead garden on the place before we ftMEftA ftESTAUftANT . Continental Cui1IM: Cockt1il1 Serving ·Luncheon and Dinner Mondau through Saturdav. Closed Sundays We ire located next fo the M1y Co. in South Co11t Plaz:1. JJJJ I • ...._. c.... ..... 14~3140 PRlllCE o~ w!Wes FAMILY RESTAURANT --llUD DINMERS 1ttrt1 $2.15 .. S&.n Ol'Ell l1111 a lO,. {dDM M....,..) :IAKTA ANA: 1st1S 111111or '""· nuno (I bloct It. fl Edmtoirl Andy's Fun Ask any kld. "Ask Andy" Is fun. Ste It Saturdays In lite DAILY PILOT. LORENZO'S SPAGHml BENDER The Finest In Italian Food CLOSID fOR VACATION SEPT. 7 THRU 30 Reopen Thursd•y, October 1 at S p.m. 6204 W. C01st Highway Newport Bolch 645-06.51 Real Cantonese Food eat here or takt home. STAG CHINESE WINO 111 2ht pl., Newport llHch · ORiol1 3-9560 o,.. , ....... hlfy 12·12 -M. ... Set. 'tll J .... THEmYALmmT OF THE SUN ., Ptcu Sa.Ifft -.ntJ i1 Mat llciu Atpiect.-...-s1_,.proi1.._ ., ,..,. •• dtelllMic ~ ... ,.,.. llnllflll 2Z ...... OCTOlll 17 ·--1o•-;i~ -..... U.t;llNA MOULT PL.A'IHOUSI ... ._ __ .__ . Ml••••• .............. .t Arh ,,.. ......... •.""-"" ,,..... -""""° ... ,,.. ... ..... - · Everyone Invited THE CORONA DEL MAR KIWANIS CLUB i~ sponsoring • PANCAKE BREAKFAST Saturday -October 3; 1970 achcomber P•rking lot ----- 3901 E. CNtl Highway CorOM 0.1 Mir 7:00 AM till Noon S1.M • AUT0~10BILE PAGEANT -The Boys' Club ot Tustin will receive all proet!eds from the third annual Automobile Pa· geant to be staged at Union Bank Square, 500 S. Main St., Orange, Sunday_, Oct. 4 from noon to 5 p.m. Several hund· red elegant, interesting cars from individuals, car clubs and sports car clubs will be on display. Admission is $1.50 for adults, 75 cents for children under 12. Monies will go to aid the club's continuation of its "Fun with a Purpose'' pro- gram for best utilization of boy's leisure time. "Impossible Yea rs'' came in .'' Hendricks explain· singer in their rock combo. A family-comedy presented at the Costa Mesa Civic Play- house . Orange County Fair- ed. "and since manv similarl----------------------- librliries. such as the Hunt - in!!lon in Pas-aclena arc bul\1 with a garden. it seemed sort i:rouncls (\Vest Gate), Fri. -of a Jo_ltical outg rowth of the sat. at 8:30 p.m., through Oct. library.·· -- 3. Reservations -834-5303. ' The garden , which is a com- "Royal Hunt of tbt Sun" bination of four gardens, is a A historical drama on stage constant profusion of color. at the Laguna Moulton Play· Roberts said the plants, most 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, $2.50 for adults, $1 for students and children under 12, are on sale al the College bookstore. Phone 547·9561. house, 606 Laguna Canyon of which are annuals. are Road, Tues.~ Sat. at 8:30 p.m. chaneed "''hE<n they are finish-. lhrough Oct. IZ. Reservations ed blooming -about every -494-0743. three months . OCT. 6 ~NOV. 14 PADUA PLAY -"Concierto Mexicano", a musical tou r of Mexico will be at lhe Padua Hills Theater on Padua Ave. in Claremont through Nov. 14 at 8:30 p.m. Wed.·Sat. with matinees at 2:30 on Wed. and Sat. Dining room open fo r lunch and dinner. Reservations -1..026-1288. OCT. 8 BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS -The Blood, Sweat & Tears group will be .heard in concert in the Arena of the Ana- hei m Convention Center. 800 W. Katella Ave .. Anaheim, Oct. 8 at 8:30 p.m. Tickets· at the boll office $4.50 to $6.50. ocr. ID BILL COSBY CONCERT -Della Reese will be an added attraction on the show when Bill Cosby appears at the Ana· he im Convention Center Arena, 800 \V. Katelia Ave .• Ana· heim. Oct. 10 at & p.m. Tickets, $4.50 • $6.50 will go on sale Monday, Sept. 21 at the box office. J\1ail orders filltd now. For infonnation, phone 635-5000. "Don"t Drlnk the Water" A comedy on stage at the Santa Ana Community Play- house, 500 \V. 6th St., Santa Ana, Fri.~Sal. at 8:30 p.m. through Oct. 3. Reservations - 543-7647. "Love and Kisses" A comedy on stage at the San Clemente Community The- ater. 202 Avenida Cabrillo, San Clemente, at 8:30 p.m. Thurs.· Sat., th rough Oct. 10. Reserva- tions -492-046S. From Page 23 JAZZ ... THE SUN GARDEN at the Coast Highway entrance con· tains bed f\owe.rs and a g61d· fi sh.filled fountain. Adjacen t lo it is the shaded display garden in which ferns and tropical plants are shown. The restau- rant is set in between the two around a fountain and under a wisteria covered arbor. A cac· tus garden is the latest addi· lion to the garden. As it now stands. the Coffee Garden is a place or quiet love- liness. but if it is expanded to the degree wished by Roberts and Hendricks, it might be· eome the thing for which Corona del Mar is most famous. • C'OllWI.• nt1nC COAST ........-a m tt. Cros by has retained the au. -p thentic delta _ rhythm style Lucas Golf Invitational which once won his aggrega-j lion recognillon as the ~best lli"",. All-American jazz band in the ~tarts in Orange County land'' by leading national au. thorities. A new golf classic is about lo make the scene In Orange County. It is scheduled to be an annual affair and will be called the Don Lucas Annual Invitational Celebrity Go I f Classic. It is all to honor Don A vivacious blonde. Mickie tend and play. The first tee-off and her husband Fred Finn will begin at 8 a.m. and one have captured the hearts and ticket entilles the owner to a fancy of ragtime music buffs round of golf. dinner for two, a across the cou ntry with their chance to win door prizes and lightning -paced syncopation AND AT 7:50 ONLY trophies. and a night of un· and rapid-fire romedy dia log. forgettable entertainment. The ~1urphy, his golden trombone entertainment will include a and talented ensemble have who certainl y is a celebrity's comedian -cind will be played al the Mile Square Golf Course in Foun- tain Valley.on Nov. 2. Anyone who wishes may al· bee n given credit for pr:omot-f u!l band. many Celebrities 'ing San Francisco's novel jazz and the hono red one himself -style. Don Lucas. Advance tickets are on sale SOUTH SEAS TROPICAL FISH Scheduled to play in the for $6 each at all Southern Cal:- celebrity bracket are such ilornia branches of the Bank of stars as Donald O'Conncr, America with BankAmeri- Robert \Yagner, Richard Cren-cards. ~·· HEY IUDS! •-, na and Alan Hale among Although traditionally a pre. ~PAL SHOW iAT. l :JD many others. event sellout. if still available -• Donation of S25 per ticket is that evening, tickets may be the tab. Tickets and reserva· purchased at the gate.forJ~.50. lions may be obtained by call· On this Saturday <Sept. 26), Largest Selection of ing Joe Sisco at 962·9031 or Disneyland will opera1e from Skip Whittet at the Mile 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. and then re-Tropical Fish & Square Golf Course golf shop open al 8:30 p.m. for those who Supplies in the area. 968.4556. have tickets for "Dixieland at N•w 1 \.eutleM Dis neyland." !II W, WIL50N, COSTA M•SA mJCMRYlAllct'$!0Cll. •('ft"l"I' 'ti! JO I============= (off Fairv iew Rd., ~7'11 1; In·•· "w••• ···-........ wdo PICKWICK ~ Who C•res? ttlehllld tht ~I Offictl ....as:ll l~~~~~~~I !~~~.~~!»!.! 540-llt~·--- No othtr ntw1papt r i11 lht world e•••I •bo11t·vour COl'l'll'l'IU• 11ity like your co"'"'""ily dtily Rtw1paptt dot1. lt'1 tht DAILY PILOT. TH E 11111to11ywoof .. .,.,. NIFTY THEATRE "'-~"''° .. "' J1••1•11h 'SON OF NIFTY REVUE" ST.&lTS AT l :JO FllDAT I SATUlDAY 107 MAIN ST. HUNTIN6TON llACH F..-leMrfffi•• C•ll 17141 IJl0 tlll •200 '1" PHpk St.Miits MOVIE RATINOS FOR fWtENT8 AND 'WOUND PEDPl£ ""' Mi«-"'*-,..,. Ill .. w.. ,..._....., _ __..,,.,,, _. ·-"" ........ .,. lflw cllilo*M. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ... 31 -..... -. .. ............ -...... "'1' __ .. ..._ ......... _ "'M:A:S·H'IS THE BEST AMERICAN WAR COMED\' SINCE SOUND CAMf ·IN'"-·-• N-Vet••• 7TFrF.ABULOUs -wEEK! •• ! . ' ------1 nu~.-s.n...-hi "I "-" °tM, Alie• 9. 'f•ltl°"" CALL 546-3102 ,,...,.le,.. E.,....-.1 • 1"'1 L-a1llr • tMllfl Mer1111 • "AIRl"ORT" • CGI c....-• Alift Allla e Rkll•nl Widnw1111: • "THE MOON~HtNE WAR" e IGP) • -----Ul·l211 T-. Sv1MllM l'lllelll Morrtr $ll9Wll Jinn C••wftnl "TROG" e IGPJ ' Ctilr ,1111. "TAITE THE LOOD D, DAACULA" • 16,) C.lfr E•clvslve Drlv .. 111 SIMlwillll Unffr U MllU at Wllll ''""" "GIRLV". Ill . Coler ''Ill Richard 811tton e M1riltl •r ..... "CANDV" e CRI • Colo!' ··············••••o••··················· •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -----!M7-IOJI Pttml1r• Enta11mtnll "STAAT THE REVDLUTIDH WITHOUT ME" • (OP! ,1.,. EVI Mlrlt 51lnt • "''" Artl111 ''THE RUSUAN5 ARE COMING" ······························••••a• -E~c!111h•t Drlv .. IR SIMlwlllfl ......... ) ViMtft! Prict r-"CRV 01' THE aANSHEE" e 10'1 Ol -Pion • "A BULLET l'DA ,RE TTY MS.»IJ ' BOY" • (GP) All Coler Slttw ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• AM C..ilr FomllJ' Ellllf1t'--' JflTY L-h "WHICH WAY TO THI l'RONT" • IC'OPI ''Ill e "THE CDCKliVED COWIOYS OF CALICD COUNTY" e 101 Dol;lllt H1rr1r Sllnrt Jotn Cr•wt.nl ''TROG" e IC'OPJ '"" e "TASTI THE aLOOD 011' DAACULI." • CG,) All Collr Show lOTH RECORD WEEK "The 19ic lmericon war movie that Hollywood has ~·•JS Wllll!d lo mak~ but ,,.,.. ""' "" Jiii$ to do belm." .... _,_ "WHlll U6Lts DARI" • i -. f R I 0 A Y • . • ' . ';:::===================,II ~ • • FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER PHONE 642-4321 . ' . Friday, Septrmbtr 25, 1970 DAILY PILOT 29 .. > / 'Darker Than Amber' Stars Rod· Taylor ;it's pure Gould SI!_~~. flllOTT GOULD PAULA PRENTISS GENE'l1EVE WAITE ~MOVE _ AUO '1111 THE MOllfY, . IDRUI" llA180A 673-4048 OPl!it 6:45 '" .. _ ............... ,. Now fl'l-:U ll"UMCl1y . FELLINI'S AWAID-WIMNIH MA.STllPI~ "JUUE'I\ OF THE. SPlltrTs" .. _ STi'RTS ·SiPT. all "THE CANDLDRD"- & "THE HAWAIIANS" EYI SHOW STA.ITS 7 P.M. CONnNUOUS SUNDAY FtOM J P.M. TWO BIG FEATURES TbelllOlt eledtif • ritual•YIDI 1 ewrteen. -···· t& ALSO THIS Plllt IUN PIA.TUii , !-' ,.,. .. ,· ... - "Darket' Than Amber" "'TOU•H -n "'9VIDIS NU.T YOLfS 0, wtOUtlT ann.- TAINMIMT'" -nMI MA•AllMI IRYINE COMMUNITY THEA YER presents A SHOT IN THE DARK • IOllCJ ,,... •• ....., ......... Clffolm d'OIH•r '11110.•M •• s.t. C11rtal•: Sept, 17--0ct, J 1:30 p.lft. · Corona del Mir High School Llt'tl• Theaf1r · 2101 l•tl»lllff Drlw Newport leoc• CALL· 833-0793 for reservations -ALSO-.-....--.ill\! 11.--··--.~. D• ..... ...-... $1 .10 ....... ,. ONLY ONE SHOWING EACH EVENING BOTH RATED "G" -IT'S FDR IVERYBOD'I' I , ! • .,Nf')'f':" ...... I 'J,;-; Jouth Coa st Rep ertory "Kell)'s llen1cs" G ';" . .. EXCLUSIVE lll!ANGE COUNTY ENGAGMNT • «®. l:ATCH·ZZ IS, QUITE SIMPLY, THE BEST AMERICAN FILM l'VE .SEEN THIS YEAR!" -~~.::' .... ··-----,·= ----··-1-llBllli . -----·•lllU!•--illiill---~--· I -T---WWW Rod Taylor Suzy Kendoll "Darker Than Amber-" (~ Color) P/111 Richard Horris "A Man Called HoNe" (R) 0P£N lrOO " BOTH IN COLOR move ·j it's pure Gould ·-~­ELLIOTT GOULD PAUIA fiENTISS GENE'l1EVE Wo.ITE A.•~S.~IOSENIUG,.~ OltteftO l 't SWAl'f IO$ENB!JG ~bl< JOit lttNJ ..... SfANl.fl' IWf' ._. .. h ttM b, .IOll llfl!« MWo. ty MAMN MAMUSCH '""""'~ •..• ~·...,:_;_ Plus (o-Hit ~-~·.. ··-· "GOODBYE COLUMBUS" (lnJKIW1kolorJ I l ATLA . • t . • CHR'fSLER PL'fl'IOlJTH! IMPERIAL · ~ ' " I • • . . . · ··'.C,p sta. Mesa " ' ": '66 CHEVROLET '67 CHEVROLET '65 FORD '68 FORD STATION IMPALA GAL AXIE 500 Custom Sedan WAGON VI, tulo111ttic, r1dio, 4 door~·htrdlop. v.a, VI, 1ulo'"1tic, r1dio, h11 l1r pow1r 1t11rin g, Autom1tic, r•dio, he1f· VI, 1uto1111tic, r1dio, h•1l1r, pow1r ll11ring, power' br1k11, vinyl tr, powtr 1!11ring, A h11l1r, pow1r 1l1•ring, air conditio11inljl . top. ITXT9101 t11I buy. IS LU0?7 1. IWTP616J· l'f'CM ~64 1 , ,395 '1395 '795 $1295 ' -..J '69 RENAULT '68 DODGE · '69 . MERCURY '66 FORD ' ' . SUPE ~ BEE COUGAR . GALA XIE 500 R-10 SE DAN " A11lom1lic;," R1dio, 4 1p1.d lt1l11miu ion, Conw•rtibl1. YI, 111~0· • do~r ·h11tltop. VI, 1111tic, pqw1r 1!11rln9, aulom1tic, r1'clio, h11t. .. r•dio. ind h11t.r, pow. he1l1r. Ei c;•/11111 con• It. .1t11ring; pow1r E11!r1m1ly cl1111. IY.VS "' pow1r •I-iring. ".iitlon'. I Zl).U (6) I · b11k11, 115557) 105) Cl1111 I !TYS9b?I . . '1'395 ' ' ,1.95 '2195 '995 "~r) ,. I ... 7 ' .. . A SERVICE~ :DEPARTMENTi · 11>~· I . .er:;:::-.. . ,c....__ ...... .. ~ ~ .... "!llu;, . ....... """-... -·· ......... .._ --...., . ..... . ~ "· . . . ., " ...... :.,-., ... BRAND NEW 19;70· ··: ·. :~::·~~- BELVEDERE· COUPE "· '.~--~ ' . . , ·. .S1ti1I • RL21COEI 15J40 ' ·s· I . ••. ' ·• ' ' < ' ' '66 BUICK '69 FIAT '65 BUICK LE SABRE 850 SPYOER 2 DR. H.T. Station W1 gon v.e. 1uto .. r1dio, .... ,. Comrtriibl •• kttlio, . . et, pow•r 1t•1ring l h11f1r, 4 1p1•d, D11d VI, a•fo1111tic, t1dio, br1k11, wi11dow1, '-t i, h11t1r, pow1r 1l11ti11f ,;;., c;on1~l1 . IRPM· 1h1rp! IYIXliOJ.,_ l br1ka1. INOl2J21 195) ... ··-·····-·· .... '1295 $1495 $1095 '66 DODGE '69 TOYOTA -'66-DODGE CORONET 500 Coron. 4 Dr. Coronet W1gon 2 door h1 rdtop. VI, Sod1n 1ulom1tic, r1dio, h11I· VI, 111tom1tic, r1di•, er, pow1r 1t11ri119. e •• l.11!1r, powt r 1!;1rir19. ce ll111! 'ond. IUDA Autom1lic, r1di•, h11I· 653 1 ,,, IY,W71 I I (Wti4if612t26711 '1195 '1295 '95 ~ .. ·'66 Oldsnitibile '67 PLYMOUTH St1t1on W1gon Fury Ill VI . 1ulo1111tic, t1dio, vt, 1ulom1tic, RIH. h11l1r, powtr 1l11ring, P.S., P.I., 1ir cond., 1ir cond. ITtiA547J. vinyl lop. {VAl3141 ........... .... .. -~-. 51495 s1495 '68..PllMOUIH_ '68 DODGE Fury Ill Cho""' VI, 1ulom1tic, klH, YI, 111t•matic, r1Jio, P.S., ,.I., air cond., h11t1r, pow1r 1t11rin9, vinyl top. IWWA49SI •Ir ·contl. IWNAD261 51895 51995 ' ' ,' l • '· .. '65 Oldsmobile : . Cutl111 YI, 1ulom 1tic, r1d:o, h11t1r, powtr 1+.1ring •. INJD07JI • 5995 '68 CHEVROLET C1m1ro 396 VI, 4 1pe1d, p•w· 1r,1!11rint, 1ir c;ondi; tioning. IWJM-4621 51995 • ' ' • I I I 2""' ll78xl_4 Belted~Tircs · 2o1tr.R.T.S"ert1RMf' . 52088 .. , 52688 · . ·sedolNo. OA26L 19 586 OJSSVll 8896 · ... Prlday, Stpltmbtr 2S, 1 q70 ~Y PJLOT •2J .6 Hardtops 12 Landaus . . ;.Demonstr•tors . · • SA VE ESTRA $ $ '·: · · ·•nr :'1 .•·~1-•~~s.o · "ICK·V5' UC!l , . : .. .· :. . ·Tj58Pr.Tircs ... , ·.· .. 288·. ••• T·ORIJ(.0,$\REM~INING'l~·s,ocK . ·, . ••• ... G'~AXJES REMAINING IN STOCK ... TRUCKS & VANS REMAINING IN STOCK 30 TWO'DO'ORS. , . .ti· . · · • .i26 tYIOl>OOi:ttDTPS. 4 FOUR DOOR SEDANS 2 FOUR o·ooRs : -~--:. ;.. _ .. _. -~ ~ ~·:·a F,CHJ.R~DoO,IJIDTPS. 6 LTD's 2 STAt!ONWAGONS ·:· ~ -~ •· • ,·" · 3 DEM0r,IS1!RATOIS SAVI IXTRA . 12 · lttONSTRAT()tlS SAYl IXTRA $$ '· "Tllf SMAlusT .IMHICA# IUllT CAt" . . . .... . ' . . . . . · 7 F,250,·F 350, F 100 16 ECONO VANS -6 CLUB WAGONS· 4 RANCHEROS MAVERICK 2 DOOR i 4 DOOR _,_ '&:t.f·ORD cusr:oM~5o·o. ·~ _$98. -8 · IranSPodat:.io»P-t1iolsf.;;. ~~ '~ "HE;11 1 P1~~u~ ... .~ i )''>88 ,. 'V!,Auto.PowSteng,wund. .~ . ! • • •• ··lr-'I " ~.%1-.~~ _... ·--~-~' 1J ' '66 .FORD ~~:~-~~ $988 J&4 GALAXt·E·~~w. -·.f4 8 'BB 'MUST;ANG~~.~2~:~:~1488 '67 FORO ~g~~!n $1088 • ~64-CHEV.~~~-· $ 8 '67 FORO-gr!~-P~.~... . . $1588 · '68 FORD~~::t1 $1188 .;65EORD~ · ·2 2 :588 '67 T-BIRD ~~~· $1688 'e··a·· CH.EV CAPRICE --$1288 ~ · · -"""': ~ ··1 fe~-s· "'FD .. RD 6~~AXIE'500 · · ·"$16. 88 .· " : . ' ~ .. -~==::~;: "''~. "... ' .. ~.65 . DODGE C~RONET · . $ 88 ' ' . ~~~~=~:-;;;;:·~-' 166 CHEY.~~~~~. $1.283 ·168~ OPEt · '""'" ~~E ssss '69 CHEV.~,~~~~m $21.88 f • • • • j •w••'••., .. •• • \ -. . -.. ' . • ' j I I ~ 111--DAll Y PILOT •• '; I 1, I• I ! •• D1C1 ·11ACY MUTT AND. JEFF . . JUDGE PARKER -Frldu, Stpt!mbtr 25, l t;10 f -15 • . ; VE5! Tl-IE UGMTS WENT OIJT A FEW IW TI-IERE, M.IHUTE~ AGO~ WE'llE 60lN6 TO ·, MOVE IN ON 11-fEM A.5 SOON AS WE WAVE THE AREA SURROUNPED ,\NP 'fl.IE OCCUPANTS OF TME ADJOIN· : ING MOMES HAVE !~EN TOt..Q TO "'·--t sr,.y INPOORS! PERKINS · j DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by ..... POWER I I .AC_ Ros.s 4S Foll ow , 47 Spani5h 1 Trtt man's n~mt ' (,Hindu 49 Adht!si ve · dt ily 50 And not 10 "T.h•l's -!" 52 Small 14 City in sltd Bt!glu m 53 Att~ntion 15 God ol attr1cting ' war and c1lf · wisdcm 54 Fo ot: '16 Hindu' Sufrix Spring 57 Stiltt : f!l.S liv1I Abbr. •l7 Dtprivlng 59 Ge t going • or strt nglh 61 Super vl5or . J 9 Of tht 64 Fragrantts : mouth 67 ld t nt lcal 20 Thorough· b8 Tropic •! far t Amtrltan 21 Pul up shrub with 70 Kind of '3 R;izor j11cktt sh;rrprnln g 71 E_dit~'s dtvJ.ct · . riickn~T' 25 M1rt11 Gras 1i Alcoho · cli aractt r used in '126 Wlt ldtd p~rfumtry lhr ba ton i J D1sp1tch t l7 As ian 74 Bark !I an Im.JI 7S -: Lakr s ,. ?9 Cut t 11 Tr1r ' JJ F11nch ·3& Slight • 0 0\lr'N ) lttVffl~fS ~ V1rn flu ff J Ltal~tr Ytstt iday's P11zz.le Solvtd: 8 On t below legal agr 9 OuldaOI" sportsman 10 Gort of thundtr 11 Pe rtain ing lo hours lZ Having wings lJ Did 1 rool!ng ]ob 18 Eiplaltd 22 Egrrs·s 24 Ha iry 27 Ivy l,tagur univt1sity 28 Vt rl ly 30 f !owtr .part 10/25,'70 39 AbounrtJng in crrtain \rt ti 4l Old Sol 43 Gl 's idrntlnc11tion: Slang 4& Vr1~ long limr prr iGds. 48 Coming tlostr 51 Kind or railroad c11: Colloq. 54 ~odrl'' ;i;t\l ludes 55 E11g·shaprd 5b C1ur l prr sao · 58 Opr1 1 compo5rr 60 Lasso u5tf &2 Ruphi1r ... MISS PEACH AFtTl-IUR IS TA}o(ING F"~.-NllNE OilT FOi< M'Elt SU:t.TMDA"f ! STEVE ROPER . . ~· >-ly Chilter GOlld I I By Al Smith By Harold Le Doux tM. CERTAIN TMAT JASON we're ALE'l:ANPEI: PURPOSELY KEPT MOPING TME PMONE CONNEC..TIOtij T,H4T NO OPEN 50 TUAT WE COlllP ONE Will ma TME CAU! WE DON'r 6Ef~ HllRT. W"1rl"T MIM Mil~! SAM! ----.-.. --- u·l ~INa GORDO ® I "TF!'UST Ml' 'l'ltOl<IMITYTo SO MAIN APtRITIFS .... SN'T INFLUl'NCED YOU!< '5CA~ES UN~UL-Y1 l>OCTO~. - 0 HEED MIJ iooeDs, ~~ Al.lD i:a:fftlfSI J: llJTE~D, IJOr OIJW '!?;) AA~ aQr; TO .-0 POIOIJ llJ .l.VtAft()ll lllsu<,' J:; Cll): OF TIE ,ij,l.·TIME ~!~~ -~ ____ _, ~s . . .WCK.Y . Goilll.1 .. ' .. -ANO I'VI!' ~l!'t:>·TMtS SW&!..~ "ISTAUllANT WMICM !SE~S' Al.L YOUlit f=°flVOR ITf TH1"'!6S. IT'S Tl-IE ~EAST I ~ PO FOR 'IOU!l. 8 JRTMDA"I! OH1 --.--:~-,r-_..,· n.ANK vour ·--..... - By John Miies By Mel .--............ "" .,,._ "°"" ~ MR.MUM ly Al Capp . By_ 6111. Arr~ . By Roger Bollen •• fl '1 ,, " .. ' DENNIS THE MENACE tr. J4 ~i=~:,":.n 1-dr!ret of co oritlon '•o Binoc ul1r p1rt 42 Yl'tl\I sourtt: J2 Spot on 2 WOfdS I c11rd 4 Bird 35 Broth t r 5 Grat shift of Ro111r 's bJ \lr'tatht rmAA'S ,.~J;;ii~;;d_J;~~\¥~~~~Yi~~'Ji? WOid b5 Crltbts o• lib Stdimrnt b9 Man's ly -Saundeios and Overgard ~-~7.'!!:;'!11 11//EllAS llOIM's. SfN~/-StEEP WELL / .. •ANC1 PRE.AM CF All 7HE lllll<GS SOOO y....,.. !10<,_,,.S WOLLD IAJY/ , out with i 44 Unll of f mrdlc Int ... posilion loundtr li "Poppytock !" 37 Bad drram 7 Entr lTICt JS Adhtslvt nicknlmt l I A POSSIBlE •fNINGE BENEFIT•.! .,, I ' .. ly Charles M. Schull --. •-"--"-"-""'"-=-------. , • --- • (ioy! YA.mroofr eEAT'!Mts MtKJN' 'TM ta::uSH 111E V..o:DS. HUM .1ll.l> ? ' ---• ~· .. HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSIS _~R SALi _ f:l(IUSli FOil SALE HOUSU FOR SALE HOUSIS ·fOR SALE HOUSl:S FOR SALi HOUSl5 FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi 1G __ ,_ .. _,_._, ____ 1_•_ O-rol 1001l~o·.,~..,--o1,.iiiiiiiiii-1·•-o~ ... -._.1_iiiiiiiii-'1'•-O-.•I 1• DOLL HOUSE VIEW-VIEW-VIEW O"rloolting Nowpori Contor. oWnol 1-rtl 1• 0-rol 1• 0-rtl --* *·*:*-~* * * * . ,, ,Neglected NEWPORT 'ff[Jl!UJS' ;; ..... """'1°' il_"_': E X CL1US IV E only with SOUTII COAST REALTORS. Delightful and charming 2 bedrm -a wonderful start. er or retirement home, Fan- tastically landscaped, im- maculate Interior. Pleaaanl covered patio &: excellent 10- cation. You \\'On't believe II for $25.000. Call 5't5-8424. \au_th (-oast Loury and Quality *·TAYLOR eo.1a M• .. : '"" "'"""'u1 MACNAB •· IRYI. NE Newport Harbor, The eve~ Ing lights are like a seventh Luxurious CW1tom dwelllna heaven. \Veil kept, thrtt for the truly diacrimlnatlnc. badrwm, two bath born< FINER HOMES nu.. "'•nd now '"" Wdb with Fam/Rm, Din, Rm. home with outatandtrw View NIGHT AND DAVI and B/I elect Klt. l..uie Serving Newport· HarJ>or 1inct. ll54, twenty· ha." 3180 sq. tt. of livlna' This is' "the 9ne! Blue sky makes it clear Living room is located above five e;r,rienced nsidential salesmen with arta. 4 Bedrooms, J'Ai baths, th th bdrm h. h !! . at is -t. home will look as nood in garage w lC <> ers pnvacy over 2 years of service. richly panelled family room " and urisurpused vie,v. Cool, with lireplace &: bltn wet the 1lill of the ni&bt. $49,950 quie1, patio and rear yard BAYFRONT bat. High bfoamed ceilirll' WE CAN'T CONTAIN OURSELVESI area. Excellent i;chools • Exciling. Own the whole end of an Island: ll"'-r 0 0 m • ~,. T ·-· ... ..........., his house offers so much we don't know near shoppine and only 218 feet of waterfront with pier and float. 3 "country" kitchen with h t tart minutes to the Dunes and bedrooms, family room. FUn beach house in breakfast area. Be•utifully w ere o s . Library. playground, school sandy beaches. Priced t<i lovely condition. Upper story bas large view landscaped pati<l with~ all s hort leg .walking distance. Much more aell at $5.5,CXXI \vith very sun-deck. Only $84,500. line 11wimmin1 pool. Dovtr including H&F pool. $45,850 ur.-"fil:ed neclect'" • ·ahall ~ Near school.a Ac lhoPI. Via.it our riell'-new S ~. 2 bath. t.amUy room home thi9 weekend. It al.lo bouts a 3 car prqe with lhru open- U!c .. Y"d. 403 !Ith Pltct Open Set & Sun I to 5 . aay, ia still a better delCrip. tion for thl.I larse 5 bed; room with both dinlq and breakfut nns in ti. Baell Bay area at only $34.750. See ii! ()pen Evtnifla:1 REPOSSESSIONS Spadclq dean homes, aM • • SEE YOUR REALTOR reasonable terms. Shore• belt w, at ~08,BOO. 1215 Pembroke , Open .Sun 1·5:00 -FOR-YOUR-BIG-FREE--M;-M;-l:aBontt,Rttr:--LINDA.-:!SL.ii--:,---:--::-. -.,--,----,---+ii::':·;;-vr.n ... 1n.-,--~fAff=-l----NEw-OFFERING =$69;950 NEWCOMERS KIT ~ Eves: 67J.6ll6 Newly listed. One of the finest bayfront lots in. nc~ .JUI~ This sparkling executive home must be seen. PETE BARRETT REALTY , ... W81CUWil.- "IWPO" IUCH II .newly ~led • i:upeted. 2,., • ._..._ .. 3;"T I; 5bdriiil. Some 'tfi · on Linda Isle. 6 bedroom•, formal dlnln( 1000Gentrtl ·1000 room. Exqulsittly decorated. $245,000. in-"Roy J . Wtrd Co. BApRprodx. 3,000 sq. ft. of luxury living. 3 Ire IRYINE COYE -IMPRESSIVE YU Ultra excl. 6 Bdrm., Slh bath h ome in secluded community. Meticulously land- scaped patios & gardens. 125 ft. or ocean frontage with steps to private, sandy swim- ming beach. $385,000 Kathryn Ral!lston 5 BDRM. BA YFRONT /SUP OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1·6: 2323 BAYSIDE DR. 3000' on one level, 4 baths, shared pier & slip for 40' boat. YOU OWN the land! 53' x200' + ! See it. $179,500 Bill c omstock EMERALD BAY Gorgeous ocean view from charming, well- huilt-home w/2 bdrms. & 2 garden baths. 2 Patins &: view deck amid beautiful lndscpg. Complete privacy. $115,000 Carol Tarum ' FOREVER VIEW OC bay & mountains -custom 4 BR., sep. family room custom built home, only 1-lh yrs. old -for the most discriminating buy;, er -over 2750 sq. feet -S baths -expen~ sive cpts. & drapes -14' beam ceilin.e-: in choice Ne\\'port Beach Joe. Only $89.000 Art Gordon 2 HOMES-CORONA DEL MAR OPEN HOUSE SUN. 1-6 e $77,500 -€orner Larkspur & 4th St. 4-Bedroom.-de , fm. rm. & pool plus nice 3 bedroom rental" Walk lo beach. Mary Lou Marion BAYSHORES Private area w/2 lovely beaches. 2 Sty. con- temporary home located nr. beach & boat docks. Home \v/3 Bdrms. & gst. rm. Lrg. patio. $67,500 Mary Harvey SHARP NEW LISTING! We've just listed a beautifully decorated 4 BR., 2'h ba . home in Broadmoor. It's the popular "D" plan with fireplc. in mslr. bdrm. $67,500 M. C. Buie IMPORTANT PRICE REDUCTION OPEN SUN. 12-4; 1216 SANDPOINT WAY. Reduced · almost $2500. Popular tri-leve_l plan w/4 BR. +FR. +D.R. + 21h ba. Walk to pool, in private area. Only $66,500 ~ Al Fink READY FOR BARGAIN? OWNER MUST SACRlFICE this nearly new · 4 BR. home located in one of Corona Del Mar's most exclusive areas. A must see at only-$62,900 Bud Austin LUSK HARBOR VIEW HILLS ·3 BD. 2 Ba. Vie\v of canyon & sea: large corner lot w/courtyard. $49,950 4 BD. 21h: ba., view! Lar ge healed pool. Wonderful for fam ily fun. $58.950 4 BD. 3 B•. Fam .. rm . + bonus rm. Cul De Sac. Only 1 yr. old. Fee land. $72,500 Harriett Davies EASTBLUFF A great family home near schools. 5 BR's., separate din. rm ., fa~ily room bo~e ln good condition & everything works. Vte v. $57,- 600 Cathryn Tennille DROP 'BY AFRR CHURCH 224 ALTA VISTA. EASTBLUFF & Inspect this outstanding 4 BR. F.R. home -Spanish decor·-bltns -2'h ·baths. Quality w/w cpt.s. -drapes -poolsize yard -owner Jeavini area. Priced to sell al $47,500 - Art Gordon • eluding large pier & slip. EXO..USJVE AGENfS , ., inmg rm & masive living rm. 1430 Galaxy Drive 646-1"" OCEAN FRONT-$115,000 PHOTO FINISH J · A difficult decision between these 2 fine du- plexes -excellent rental record1 --· One.:._ with ocean view. '49,500. and '51,500. For additional information call Mrs. Miller. (Open Daily' Top DNwer! Pegged fioors. Cedar closets. TOGETHERNESS Can go too far. A home where the children have all of one WinJ jncluding a giant family room·playroom. Privacy for everyone. Build- er's own home with much warmth and qual- ity. Four bedrooms. Fee land. '69,500. HARBOR VIEW HOME Beautifully landJcapod, decorated & lushly -carpeted•4 bedroom-home plus large family room, 21h baths, 2 fireplaces, approx. 2300 .sq. ft. Many extras. Owners business necessi- tates leaving area. $54,500. PARENTS DELIGHT CHILDREN'S PARADISE -5 bedrooms, S years young Wint central refrigerated air conditioning. Electric kitchen ·with double oven. Gas fireplace. Com{>letely fenced man- icured grounds and patio. Lots of extras. $41,000. Best 'buy In University Park. Call Tom Queen or Joel Smith .. BAYCREST Another new exclusive listing. Large S be<J..· - room hople on pool .size lot with complete yrivaci . -~alli!!I c9urlyard entry. Large mas- ter suite wiLb -21 f~et of closet apace. Big , rormal dining room. , Sp•cious family room with. ffreplace fltmked by bookcases. Built by Lyons &: Cashions .. $94,500. MINIATURE CASTLE Fit for a king. Perched in an English Village Square, This 3 bedroom, 2 story has princely- cbarm and a fairy-taJe-Jike price. $37, 750. forJdngly buyers. · BALBOA PENINSULA 2 story Bayfront with pier & slip on Wes.I: Bay. Beautifully decorated & in prime con- dition. 4 ~drool)'ls & study -2 stairways - South patio. $175,000. Seller will finance. Fee land. U you've craved a bayfroot home - Jet us show you this one. HARBOR. VIEW HOME 2 bedroom, den, 2 bath. Beautifully carpeted & draped. Many· extras. Owner transferred -immediate occupancy. Asking $37,SOO. Another exceptional buy. LUXURIOUS BAYFRONT DUPLEX Best bayfront buy on Balboa Island. Excel· lent 1ocation on main bay with sandy beach. spectacular view. Custom built. Less than a year old. Each unit 3 bedrooms, 3 baths up- per, 2 baths lower. Fully carpeted & draped. Built-in kitchens, sell-cleaning ovens. Mar· ble fireplaces. Top rental area. Asking $160,000. Good financing. To SU tall Bert Fehren 675-3210. Eastside Duplex 2 Bedrooms in each uhit. Bir yard b' the owner occupant. N~ Solt course I: Irvine complex. Full prict: wllb temu. $29,950 Newport •I . 'l' ...... • ··r\ .. ,,,' '1"11• l ,1..)..4 '•I.\ .... ' 546·5990 PRIVATE ESTATE CORONA DEL MAR ~ block to Qc;can Blvd. A rarity·-67 feet fronlage on Orchid. Plus a 3 bedroom home with formal dinlnc room, ruest Muse, cabana and badminton court. With a little remod@ling this could be one of Corona dtl Man finest propertieiii. OPEN SATURDAY le SUNDAY 1-l 216 ORCHID CALL ma;,;o THL kf.AL 'Z LST.Yl'l:RS COUNTRY LIVING OCEANFRONT With a flai r in Newport Beach. 4 bedr.oo.ms.... . •-Walk .out. door-to -one or tnr. family room, 2 baths, many eztra features. best swimmlnr 1: aurtin& Huge lot. Picture your family & friends in beachea . exclusive Cypress · the beautifu11y 1andscaped patio encircling Shore• euatom home . beaut- a beautiful pool. All for only $59,500. Call iful decot • exquisite bath· 675-3210 for appt. dressing rooms. $169,000 CUSTOM BOIL T SPANISH home with large walled terrace, providing perfect privacy for sunninJ. and entertaining. 4 bedrooms, 6 baths, family room, gourmet kitchen with buUfr's pantry. Formal dining room plus large breakfast room . $130,000. Newport Beach's "finest built home. CORONA DEL MAR South of Highway -3 bedrooms·, 2 bath on 45' Jot in prime area 1 block from ocean. Priced at $49,500. Call Tom Turner-M2·8235 11'1 Still Pool Weather We have 2 ol the very ,1<>ve- liest pool 'homes -a 3 ... Copper ·gutters. 3 car garage. Recently re· deco. Updated kitchen. 5 Bdrms, den, 4-bas. Unique New England farmhouse. · A-1\IT OF HAWAlll In Corona del Mat! Enchanting · gardens and view of the bay &'·ocean. Spacious 4 bedrm home w/formal D.R. & family rm. $79,500 2718 Windover Open Sun 1·5:30 WHAT CA~ WE SAY? It's roomy, airy, priced right, inviting, ro- mantic, 3 yrs. young, shiny clean. Come and see it and you tell us what to 11y!. 2039 Irvine Open Sat 1·5:00 OOVER SHORES Dramatic brand new 4 bdrm, den & garden rm with wet bar. Formal dining room, fine carpeting & marble baths. Cathedral ceiling in mstr ste. Be the first owner! $108,000 4.10 Morning Star Lane Open Sal-Sun 1-~:30 LIOO LOVEL VI \Vonderful open feeling in this 3 & den func· tional home w/large sunny patio. Low inter· est rate on assumable loan. $69,500 109 Vja Dijon Open Sat·Sun 1·5:00 EAST BLUFF SPECIAL Beautiful view from this really sharp "Lusk" home. 4 Bedrooms. family rm & formal din- ing. PLUS lovely H&F pool $82,500 LINDA ISLE -$225,000 ~11LE long water view from this fabulou5 custom built 2 story Colonial. Regal & color- ful outstanding beauty with pier & slip. " 11' WATERfRONT-$15,000 3 Bedroom hom_e with pier & float Walk to Lido shops. Owner. will-qrry 1st .T.Do at\J,ow interest rate to qualified buyer. Zoned 1\·2. BROKERS i. SALESMEN. We have all openiD:g for one experienced mll'I or woman in our Residential'Div. Aj>plicant must possess integrity, enthusiasm & ambi.o, · lion tQ match our own high standards. If you \ are a professional; interestet;l ~ a beautiful · office in the fi nest location, wort.mg with con· genial associates, we are interested in meet- ing you. "Our 15th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., RHlton 2111 s,n J .. quln Hill• Rood NEWPORT CENTER -10 * * * * * * * General 1000 General ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ OCEAN FRONT lllO And ocean vitw lots in f!'Xciting new P,):.clusive community with private beach club . tennis courts r.IO!ed circuit TV Security systen) and many mor• desirable features from only '$33,000. Real ton "Our 25th Year In tM Harbor Are•" 673-4400 Open ~ily " 328 Aliso New110rl Htlthh <.'Orner <if Beacon 1 short block frem Cliff Or. By Owner $36,500 Spacious 3 bedroom 2 bath, living room with fireplace, large dlnlnr arta overlook- ing lovely aecluded Janal, carpeting, drapes, built-in electric kitchen. Garan off alley with electric eye open. er. Nicely landscaped cor- ner lot, -5'1-1114 MACNAl-IRYINE RNlty C-llO•Y lOIO Bay.WO Drive • tamily In the Colltg:e Paric I!!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~:;,;;:~;;;;;;::: II area with top mA financing 1 ·-- 901 Dover Dr., Suitt 12t Newport ...... ~O:':"°:r::•I:':::==='"'= 10...01 st&,sm Mast Fir The least and a 4 A: family rm Glen ;::::::::;. ___ ..;;===::...---..;;=.II Mar beauty from under $29.000 .. $3j,b. Open Evf:nlna:" ... ,. --1• ...::~u A IAYCREST EXCWSIYE ••• I 14Z·$21!G ,;.., poola. FHA·VA conv. terma, from S11,000 to $tl),OOO. C<llliM a Wattl Inc. SS43 Adams Ave. ~ 1111Gtntrol THE REAL ESTATERS UTILE JEWEL It sparkles with cleanliness, baa new kitch- en, new bathroom, new carpets and drapes plus a beautifully landscaped y rr d and patio -Perfect for young couple or retir- ed. -'24,500 -See anytime ..• 848-7171 EASTSIDE Rustic 2 bedroom and 1 den;~ 'I u-1 family room home on a bii comer lo\ with room for that boat or trailer. Lota of wood panel .. Ing, large birch fireplace over 1ize double oar garage. There's much more. Please cail for showing, 546-2313. CORONA DEL MAR COTIAGE·IY·THE-SEA A small 2 bedroom family room borne. Just a block to the ocean with an ocean view. Only $47,500 . Call quick. 673-8550. MESA VERDE , . COUNTRY CLUI D.RIYE A cheerful setting for a happy home In this beoulifully appointed 3 bedroom. 2'h bath home with all the-bulll·in's. 90xl20 ft. lot with large covered patio for the family. 51>4 % loan available to the qualified buyer. Price $43,950. Call 546-2313. CHOICE NEWPORT HTS •. Corner" Location Grandiose View of Sea & Bay. Step out onto -quaint patio from-huge-living-room -with open beam ceili.ng and g re a t fireplace. Simple and rustic two story -4 bdrm. home with unique top deck, surounded by beautiful trees -peacb, nectarine, tanger- ine. etc. First time on market -own the land -immediate possession -'55,000. Excellent terms -better hurry. A~UME A $24,SOO, 71/2•/1 FHA LOAN On this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home in beautiful Costa Mesa. Large pool size back yard with boat or trailer access. Only $6,300 down and Jow monthly payments. Call now .... , , .• Just listed. 546-2313. NEWPORT HEIGHTS FIXER-UPPER 2 Bedrooms + 1 Bedroom rental -$240 per month income -needs cleaning & paint- ing. -$22,500. Try 10% down. -Call now. 646-7171. MODEL HOME CONDmONI Beautifully done and only 11 months new. A roomy 2 bedroom. den and dinini room home on an elevated comer lot in Newport Beach. Only $43,500 (including the land) with outstanding terms. Call 673-86ij(). CORONA DEL MAR SIX .,PLEX Six well kept 2 bedroom units on Bayside Dr., close to beach, only 10 years new. Bullt in kitchens -private patios. and a tropicol ,.1ting. Ideal for the owner occupant. Call 873-8550. OPEN-OPEN-OPEN For your inspection Sun. 1·5. 1218 PEM· BROKE (near Mariners School) 3 BR., I ~ baths, 1 a r g e family room, spacious entry hall Harry Frederick 11Please t all for our picture brochure of current listings." Here'•, a bara:aln tPeCl&l likt Modern 4 bedrm. 2 batli Ken the kind We need mcq ol. Koh bWU home on Jup cor- 3 Bedrooms. JU"p! t.Wntry l'M:r loeatkm, Bia: boat entry style ki~ and bil ntine and nnp ana. Lup pa· nook with lowly rreen ttJ1. Oo and bltn BBQ IUITOttftd. peta If llf'Cf: .KID STYLE ed. by block wall febCIJW. tie.ck... yard, Auume 7% ~ ne e>tl.stina 5" ':f · 1ou nlA ~n and ha.ve ~-tra.nsfmolble to Q)'One with ments LESS THAN RENT, a all:uble down payment. and only $154 TOTAL! Pflc. Monlhly PQmtl'ila just $1'5 eel at $22,t:iO! include1 evtr)'thin(. Out of IT'S ORooWII s,>me Jucky Gt or'n move: tn absolutely COKt free. Seller will pay aJt htl~1'1 clclflin& COits. Immaculate 3 ~ room, 1% bat.ha in an exctl· lent area dclse to ~hoolL Extra larp cul-de-Uc lo!, perfectly manicured. Childt playsround &: equlpmen1 and extra room for a boat or trailer, You must tet t.hil todly • please call Picture book beauty with a pleasant Im· pact throughout. Wr0u,ht i r o n entry g•te, 4 large bedrooms 1ncluding a dw· ling master auite. Separate formal dining room and • family room with atone fir• place. Sparkling kitchen and breakfast area. Beautiful manicured pool • sized yard. Offered a.I $65,000. HOME & INCOME Two homes on a comer lot: oile 3 bed· room ••• each with lnd!Yldual fenced and landscaped yard. Both recenlly redecor· ated and in u.cellent condition. Live in one & (el )'OW' tentnt make· the payments. Call now! Only '89,500. · :1 \O]THE REi\L ii \_)iESTATERS S50 NIWPORT CENTER DR., N.I. ' \ Co.t.TS •... ' WAL LACI lllALTOQ --lll4i41'"44141-'°""' ._ .... , town owner A¥J tell • home now nct.nt. Larwln Re•lty, frte . For ~· 96U988 anytime N-rt * OCEANFRONT * * DUPLIX* II lolllN PenlnaUlo FalrYilW SU,• .. _ Gt.wtt WlllltmlOll 646-11 RHltW (•nyllmel ln.4JIO 145-15'4 lv11. !D!!!ll!!!IB-;::' A-.!::!:LIN~ES.:!;_!:M~Mm::!::., , _______ , .. _ -Dll<E-A-UNESI • Colesworthy &· Co. REALTOR Newport -h Olllce 102' loywltle Drift 675-4930 ' j ,, I I NEWl'OAT IEACH 1700 N1wfl0ff t f.d .. ..... 11 11 -CORONA DEL MAR ))J Mer9uerite • ,,, .. '° COSTA MESA l790 Ha ..... lllvtl. M .. lJll INVESTMENTS l714 Htrbir llvd, Suitt 201, Coste M ... 544-Ull ExpeTience Eliminates Experiment ' • , l .. IL DAILY PllOT *' FrfdaJ, Stp tmlltr 25, 1970 1 .,.,. i.;JlllU=::U=S:..::1'..::0:::R:..;.SA:::' ::L.:E....:;H::OU=SE=F:..::0:..:R:.;S:::A::L:=E_.,,H..;.O=S..:;ES~FO.;;.lt~SA'-L:..:E:......,,;H.;.;;0:;;:.U.;;.SE:..:S;_. '-FO"'R.;..;;;SAi-'L"'E'--11-H:..:.O;::U:;,;S;:;;l.;;.S..;.l'.:O:..:R.:IA;;;;;;~•=-:..:HOU=•;;;•;;.S..;.l'O=lt.:IA;;:L:::I:....: HOUlll l'Olt SALi HOUllS '1'011 IA.LI HOUllS l'OR SALi 0 F r.1 , • IOIO 0-ral IOOO GonorOI lllllllO-ral ~ '' IDOi -ral IDOi lrvlno IUllrvlnt IUI 1111 ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~--iiiiiiil 675-3000 The nu~btr to call whether buying~ 1ellln9 or IHsl"tl· llOO IRl/INE, BAY CREST 0pen.daiJ1. 1•51'.M. ! BR, 3 ba., many trees. Xlnt-fainily rm. $49,500. / _. IRVINE TERRACE Quick possess. Vacant. 4 BR . 2'h bn., lge. lam. rm. Plenty of yard $49,500 -Hurry!_ BAYCREST BetLer·lhan new! Shows like a model! 4 BR .• 3 B8., ,fQrmal dining rm., fam~r._ rm. w/wet bar. Brkfast. rm . Price only '891500. IRVINE TERRACE •4 Slightly Spanish. Very quiet. Panoramic bay & ocean view. 3 BR. & fam. rm. plus convert. den w/wet bar. Frplc. Price Ju st reduced to $84,500. Owner anxious! ! 675-3000 . OPEN EVENINGS 675-3000 Co.st Hwy. Opposite MacArthur Blvd. Open Houses . THIS WEEKEND ' 1 .. , this lloHy dl.-.c:fory wit!. you ti.ls weekend 01 f'•• t•" M-.1!11at1.,. All tile locatioes llst.d below .,. 19ac.rilllN I• .,..,., defeil by edYel'tl1l'"J elle- ..... h1 Mdey'1 DAILY 'PILOT WANT ADS. Patrou *wt.t .,.. .._ fer .... " to ,... -•'9ed to ., wll ..... ,... ...... c ........ Fridcry. HOUSES FOR SALE (3 Bedroom) 1537 Santanella (Irvine Terr.) CdM · 675-0473 !Daily) 1206 Pembroke Ln. (Westclilf) NB 67USIO (Su n 2039 Irvine Ave., Costa Me sa 644-4910 (Sat 1·5) :kl2l5 Pembroke (Westclilf) NB 644-4910 · (Su n 1-5 ) .'Jl-4127 Charter Oak, Orange 546-5440 (Sat & Sun 1-5) (3 Br. & Family or Den ) 333 Catalina (Newport Heights) NB 67USIO . (Sun 12-1) 2420 Cliff Dnve (Newport Heights) NB 548-7711 (Sun 1·5) 3082 Ceylon Rd (Mesa Verde) CM 545-8155_ (Sa l & Sun 12 ::Ja.5 :3{}) 422 Catalina Dr (Ne\vport Heights) NB 646-7484 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 216 Orchid, Corona del ~1ar 673-5500 . . . . . (Sat & Sun 1'5) 1127 Highland Dr. (Weslcliff) · 673-5500 (Sat & Sun 2-6) 611 Poinsettia, Corona del Mar 675-5726 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 109 Via Dijon (Lido Isle) NB 644-4910 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 2215 Aralia St (Eastbluff) NB 675-3210 (Sat & Sun ) .Jfr1707 Tradewinds (Ba yc rest) NB 642-8235 (Sa\ & sun) 1218 Pembroke Lane, Newport Beach 833-0900; 644-243{} (Sun 1-5) ( 4 Bedroom1) :kl721 Galatea (Irvine Terr) CdM 642--6472 ; 673-34GB ' (Sat & Su n 1-5) ,Jfrl007 Dolphiri Terr. Corona del Mar 673-2222 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 2349 Cornell Dr (Coll ege Park) CM 540-3003 (Sat & Sun 11-6) 'il-*11 Linda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle ) NB 675-3210 (Sat & Sun) 1606 Antigua \Vay (Dover Shores) NB 675-3210 (Sal & Sun) 1130 Santiago Dr. (Dover Shores} NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) '*4627 Camden (Cameo Shores) CdM 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) 1330 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) J\'B 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) (4 Br. and Family or Den) 9791 Flamingo, Fountain ''alley 962-1373 (Sat & Sun '* 1424 Lincoln Lane ( Baycrest I 673-5500 (Sat/Sun Z.6) 1430 Galaxy Dr. {Dover Shores) NB 646-1550 (Open Oaily) 2057 Commodore Rd. (Baycrest) NB 646-3255 (Su n 2-5) • 1984 Konat Dr. (Mesa Verde) CM 546-7540 (Sat & Sun 11·6) 919 Sandcastle (Harbor Vie\v I-fills) Cd~f 644-1133 • (Sun 1-0) 986 Sandcastle. Corona del 111ar 673-2222 (Sun 1-5) 410 Morning Star Lane (Dover Shores) NB-644-4910 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 1912 Port Weybridge, Ne,vport Beach 642-8235 (Sat) 1216 Sandpoint \Vay, Nc\vport 13each 833-0700: 644-243{} (Sun 12-1) 224 Alta Vista (Eastbluff ) NB 833-0700 ; 644-243{} (5 Bedroom) '**2323 Bayside Dr., Newport Beach 833-0700 ; 644-243{} (Sat & Sun I.OJ TOWNHOU Sfl, FOR SALE I (3 Br. & Family Room l llOS6 El Amarillo, Fountain Valley aim -(Sat & Sun \·5) HOME + INCOME !4 Br. & 3 Br.) Comer Larkspn Ii 41h, Corona del Mar 13341aO; 844-2430 • !Sun 1-0) DUPLEX FOR SALE t3 & 2 Br. and 0.n) 609 Poinsettia, Corona del Mar 675-5;!26 (Open Daily) t4 Bedroom ) llD8 E. Oceaniront (Balboa Peninsula) Balboa 675-!foOO (Sun 11-5) *'"' .. __ ,,_, *** ..... -._,,_ I ,.........,----,~ -~n~ J~t A·l condilio~. f.!~~~ bUlll now 1-------- OH THI l'AIRWAY ~bull~·-­°' roam., 2 au Jbq'eeea. THE RANCH--UNIT 4 lnine ArerYaa OWn tile land home. 4 Be~m,_3 blth, fa m HY. room, PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES VIEW from •·• • r y room, proteiilonllly OPEN HOUSE SUNtrAY·--~-ll_ decorated and landscaped, room for pool 1'1dl beut'ftal .... OWfo •• -tho 11111 falrwOll " . $89,500. -v-Gall llolno. 26 Lind• 111. or;•• DOVER SHORES Corp. O\Vned 5 Br. S·bath home facing Harbor '"' ......., ..... bn. By O'WD-er. 30.1I Jan ltd. llMOl5. ~- 30% Sllll oat rrst 3 Weells 1 1 d J · & c I 1 !Jmost new, 4 bedrooma, 3 blths and lamlly s an · acuzzt sauna. omp. urn ., or room. 2800 sq. ft, 40' TraverUne marble en· REPUBLIC tri-ltw!I S BR + den, 2 frple. Lei tam nn, .Din rm. !'mt " NU' patiol: ,..,.. ... ,_ pit!, ~ ..... .... 7361 immed. occup. W /dock ........... $200,000 try '"""-ul VIEW d , •..-.-ar an unusual llop!Dg Solec:t Your Now AyrOI lulll Homo Ourl"I The Cuttomllinj St1to 60 Linda lslo Orlvo lol.-$109,900. · Newly listed. Presitge waterfront home. 4 extra lg. Br .. 4 ba. pwdr. rm. Lge. liv. rm. & 5 IEDROOMS Choice of •II Modal• 1"41 1-lort Solocl Your Lot Location -den; 3 car gar. Beaut. patio/garden. Deck & dock. By App.I .................. $220,000 Hard to find - 2 separate wings, large. fam- ily r o o m with fireplace, separate dining room, Galazy Drive View. •95,000. BY OWNER • 4 br, tam nn. lnumc! Quirt st. $41.SD. l!U-- 77 Linda Isle Drive Move In Before Chri1hM1 or ..,.,. the 2nd Semester Jn January New 5 Br .. 5 bath home on lagoon. Marble entry, wet bar, Al\·f/FM Jntercon1, Huge mstr Br. has beam ceil. & own frplc;. Large !iv. & fam. rms. w/frplcs. \V/deck ...... $185,000 ROY J. WARD CO., Realhtrs 0-.r Shorft Office 1430 Gtluy Drlvo, N.B. '°"'ISSO Coll .. • P•rk 1115 !/.!.,,,. ~ =.!_ ~ PRICES START AT ......... $30,440 muat to aiee. Open S..t A 4 to 7 ._ .. 107 Linda Isle Drive Sun. 230 Cornell Dr. ..aroom 5 BR. 3 baths; family rm. & formal din. rm. IGii;ii"""iiira~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~IOOlii;i;~G~..-~,.~ra~l~iiiiiiiiii·iiiii1~101~1 li"""3003~~-S;=:;::;:=:=:=.l-----,1~~~~~'.__--_;,-J --------------- _ 2_Erplcs.Jim.Jo pooJ......Dock • ..Jl ap.l!L.,1, 2 to 4 lalld · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · •.. $l45,ooo DANA POINT INCOME HOMES Nowport INch UIO lncludOI all l>ulltlnt, carp11tl"t, -I Waterfront Lots 2 DUPLEXES ............. $34,'50 • '4§,tsl dlnl"t ......... l•mlly ........, flropl-, No. 44 : 108 FL on water .......... $150,000 2 TRIPLEXES .............. $63,951. $66,511 unclortround ulllltlM ond mony olhor No. 49: 54 Ft. lot on lagoon w/plans . $70,000 ~2~~::~=~ iioi.\°iis".'.$6'.·~: :::: Millian flllar fft qllllllly foaturK No. 76: 3 car garage, tot on lagoon $85,000 Brand new, under construction. Large build .. ings w/delxe owners units, ocean views. at the IUDUllit of am Dr .• livinc area on 2nd floor with iso• pinoramie Ww ot blue -• Bay, Look down on 1JdB. Spe.e, S Bedrm. 2 ha, W/MW crptr, drp9, inter. ior_ ftdee._l:_PfJ.nte4 thruouf. ahake root, bltns ete. -OPEN HOuSE AYRES Built Homes No. 88: View. With plans ... :-: ..... $145,000 xlnt locations. Take advantage of good rental Excellent terms & loans now available on all income + property value increases due to properties. the new Dana Point Yacht Harbor. OPEN HOUSE WEEKEND , .... lffll BILL GRUNDY, REAlTOR PHONE .'IUILOER ~OR IRVINE AREA 133 Dover Or., Su ite 3, N,B. 642-4620 SEE AT 33792 COPPER LANTERN DANA PDIN-r-- General 1000General 1000 [.-;iiiiiliiiii~~~iiljj~~-~iii~iiliiiiiiiiiiii[oener•I 2420 Cliff Or,. ~.I. SUNDAY 1-5 Cute MeN Investment 541-7711 --•s•t ,. SANTA ANA FREEWAY & JEFFREY ROAD THE TOWERS LIDO WATERFRONT -------1 APTS • .m LIDO NORD BARGAIN HUNTER? S.le1 office open from 11 131-5136 Panoramic bay & ocean View. Exclusive 2 bedroom apartment s. Elevators, terram·, · Jacuzzi pool, 7% Financing wiht 10% down. Very special buy! $44,500 to $58,500. Open Daily 1-5 P .M. 3121 IV. Coast Hwy,. Newport Beach. EAST-SIDE · ·· :i~.=.~\'!~~.!,~ · In :.!;!!"l;.ch 6 Beautiful unit& S car $4.000 Under sre-nt market garages &: utility room with valUe, 3 BR. 'front row' view am to 7 pm claRy 131..5120 4 Br. Very neat adult oecu- p!ed home, cement drive- \vay, beautiful paneled fam. ily room. Close to schools. mA/V A lfnanclni ia only S12SO down • • , No down for Vets. \Yith these temll &: price ol $29,500 ahe won't --------------. 80 ft. fronting on excellent condominiwn in n. Blutta 1---------.. --------s~_ beach. Units art Outstancl1rc view ot i.,: """Iii lunlimed. Call tor app't. Unlvortlty Par~ 1237 CMon• dol Mor 12JI MACNAB· IRVINE Biil Grundy, RNltor l:~~~~~~~~li;;;;;;;;;I 833 Dover Dr., N.B. &a.a Harbcw' Vtew Rills (&: We do A Hawn for Chlldron .• mon VIEW! J 3 BR, 3 Ba. With tha to _,. --~ Realry Company BEST VALUE LOT H/Fpool; tovlnglylandlCpd. Neu .. _, ;;;;.,°'.;:.a OPEN SUN. 1-6 Newport He_la:hts Seel~ patio. Immac, in-...... S Bdnn 2 u • Jaal! •642·8235 675-3210 IOoo General 1000 Nl'chols Real Estate T•rms Avtilabl• t•rlar. By •pP'l aiily, plate, ..... • -% ~RBOR VIEW HILLS Jean Smith Rltr 646-3255 SEMPLE· baths, complettly redemra.t. LUSK HOME RHI Esteta ed. With auumable low int Come 1tt 919 Sandcutle • BAYCREST truly luxury 4 bedrooni hon1(> 1virh ramily room, for- mal dinin:; room and study. PLUS Sparkling pool and lo"' m;1in- lena11ce yard. ONL\' 2 y1•ars new and beautifully c11rpered a 11 d dCC"Oraled w11h Van l.uit wallpapPr. One o! BaycreS1s 1',inest 1 IQITleS. Only m .soo To inquire about the many additional features. OPEN Salurcl ay & Sunday l-5 1424 Lincoln Ln. Call 67J.8550 546-9521 ·c--1100 2515 E. Ooul Hwy m.2101 rai. Joan. 139.000. brins ""' kids • -bta: FORCED SALE 1:;;;:;;;;~ e .Rad Hill RHlfy "Montney" •IYle 1unJJy Owner has been transierred BEST BEACH BUYSI Univ. Part Center, Imne home on football field Jot • & husband is aJready gone. e * OCEANFRONTS Call Anytime ~ 4 spacious bdnnt., a M1 MUST SELL IT NOW! sac--~ 3 BR. hOme, R-2 •••• $49,EO :z;:::==::=:=:::=:::=:::=z I baths, formal dinin& nn. rificirig this lovely 2 years 4 BR. + 2 A den •••• $59,500 · SEE US and, wow • what a family ne"" 4 Bedrm. separate df'n, $34 950 . ~ixer Upper 4 BR. 4 Ba. home •• $105,000 For a fine sel@C~n'oi homts room! Add tht 3 car aanae formal dining rm home for 1 Bnngyourpaintbrush .own. *WATERFRONT offeredforsaJe inUniversity 6th~ hu to be the bnt 14~.700. Absolutl'ly top con-PARTY PALACE e.r moved e~t, must aeU Pier&. floet Park & Turtle Rock • Per. va1ut-under $57,000 now d1lio11. All bllns in lge kitch-20· x 25• added PARTY Jtxer upper. Will J*Y part of 3 BR. fam., 4 ha., Jrpl., sun-haps ft have the ri&ht one a vailable: f'n w/ealing area. $29,000, ROOM opening to a 32' ~uyers coet. 4 Bedroom. Jam-deck plus 2 BR. rental. Re. for YOU! 6~4 % Jni;ur11.nce loan can SPARKUNG POOL. Beau~ ily .&: den. All bltns and ducN to $'11,500! be assumed al $191 per mo .. /ully d~ted 4 bedroom shake roof. VA no down or ae. "'" ae.y PROP princ & int. we·ve told it llll 2, t.th hOme complete with !ow low flfA terms Call -LB..--• • now you must see H~ FIREPLACE built-ins and 540-itst • Dl9 W, Balboa, NB 113-TCO near • new sbag CarpetiJw. PAllLOWBIB s.u..-will ~ ';'!,' t<r ISH11 ilogeJ ~~v:,.r,~c:_o ..... "I ' I ! 11 I I , , I .. I I ---l 11 "1 l1w 2t14 Vista Del Oro Ne:wJIOrt Beach _ 6'f.UD ~~ · w.,vl•k:;r & Le' ·e"~·::::;;;;-;;';-;;;·1 :...""~'"":,.~;.: i.·~=t:: ... -nI ~ _, • I cured l•wn• 1: beaut. pr.. Dey 13U101 N1tht1 1093 Baker", c .. M_ 546-544{) 2043 w esteliff Dr. WestlNy Income Hom•• dens; dbl, praee I: shop. lz:z:i=::::=:::==:==:i=·I•;;;;;-::~=::~ $l,675 DOWN 646-7711 New Tri-Plex ... $57,500 . Aaoc. pool lo pu-.,.... OWNER TRANSF CHEERFUL: .. ~~.!Iii PAYMENT •l; ... 0pe~··~·w···9~,llO-P·M-· ~~~~"'O: ::i::.::-._w~·500· Mustsellfast!A smau down 81 .J!E~~OMEI . ~ will buy this 4 bedroom, 2 fl E Ibid et llll 0 _ _._ R I pi.yt, will buy th1I: 3 BR 2 · 1 ' "'!1""J "°' bath home. Needs fixing-up, OPEN DAILY =:~~~) 3°::·1 ....... -~·"'l'!--~··!'!-!'! .. !!!!!to!!!!!r ba.--town~on1.&ewI,·~1 i°B~ ~~1'tiaZ:'. bu t sound 11nd solid. 11uge 2 BA "owners unit'' + (2) -BY OWNER new shq: ~tr., beau~ Beaut trff·lined street anJy Country Livin9 On A Full Acre "'Ith raneh type :l llf'droom home. rnmpl n>pa1nted, new dshwshr & disposal. 1.4:le <lC'· tacherl rov. patio, outdoor brick [rplc ' & BBQ. r-.1any i;hndf' trees. Ownl'r will fine. at 71 ~~1· -hurry 1his v.:on'l last?? Only .•. , $49,500 642·1n1 Anytime NEED 4 BEDROOMS? Take over $18,400 GI Loan "'ith 6 annual !lf'rccntnge rate and total paynlC!nt of $151.00. Q\vner \\'lll carry 2nd TO if necessary. HUGE, and 1 mean 1-IUGE cul-de. sac lot with lrt"'!l nnd work Ahed. Needs TENDER LOV. JNG CARE. CAI.I.? Walker & lee cul-de-sac lot. Plen.ty of ac-1537 Santenella T•rr. 2 BR .rental unit1, See at WESTCLIPF AREA plant@d atriwn. t Minimum 1 blk:to CdM btach•a:°wtth- c.ess for ~t or trailer. Par. O\vner has just moved to 2035 Tustin Ave., cor Wood-f br, frple, hltns. crpts, drpli, care lndscpc" A ota of pri-In walk1na: dlttance of lbopt hally built \VOJ'k 1>hop. Sub-l,arg1:r home in 11ame area. land Pl. or call 6C-4905. sprlnk1en. pool • ailed yard, vacy. Full pnce $3l,500. & re11taurants. 'l% lntenst jec1 10 e r Loan ol $18,400 This :\ BR., 1% bath home 511. Nr schools. You. own land. e Red Hiii Re•lty loan ia ~ ~ \vlth jl3ymrn1s ol $1.89.00. has beam ceil., parqUel * 14 % * Univ. Park Center, Irvine ' CALL! nooring, paneling &-a reel. VAC:::L v $31,500 Call Anytime 833-0820 Walker & lee ~.:~~i:;::,;:~,;~ $27,950 642-16llor64~- 1rv1ne: Terrace at only 4 bdrm, le Jamlty rm · DUPLEX 4 Br. Up, 2 Br Irvine 1231 Realtors 2790 liarbor Blvd. at Adams !">4.=;.o.165 Open 'Iii 9 PM ~L':uoe SHIFFER T~~ ~:.~taR.!!!. =; ~ :wbe::~ ·-cru-.-~-~-E-~-B-R/-,---,,.-.-.-:,1 REALTOR 675-0473 5474463 547-SSU Sacrifice, owner (Tlf) THE RANCH. Below eo&t. L • H e OPEN DAILY 1..S e 1.="3&'::.:;l«ll=-----~1 $27750 G!Auumablelo&n Ot G OUSe 'Til .old! Assume '" 1' VA MOBD..E home· w If u 11 $23.l ~ mo Jncld all. . for $30,000 loan. $141 Per mo. Redecal'. caban& Luxury P • r II • I::=::=:=:==:=:== I "1\lOVC'-in" condition. fast cs-$21,000 and no l Br W/W cpbl drps. Jm.. baytront pe:nln, A di ta. Coron• clel Mar 1250 l't'O\V • best of financing . med.' poaeaa1on!• Ortb' p:i:. 1673-81~~00~, ~ClgS-1321~~=== 1~=7,;;':;;~;;-.;.:;;;,; VACANT. ""'" "+" ,.,. down payment 9>0.1984 Fcdoral Av.. = 675-3000 QlLA NGY REAL ESTATE --. 2121 E. COAST HWY. Corona del Mer 67W77D turt's 111cluthng, o c ea 11 You can buy this nice home Call: Patrick Wood, 54>2:JOO Newport Heights 1210 w~ don't boast about our ser. OP'EN 1·5 Sat/Sun. br~ze. nr bl'ach, also 3 BR, even ii you don't have a VA e Bill Heven, Ruftor vice except. 1. Jlo>e've been 1007 Dolphin Terr. 3 ~ batt'I, lgt!~1amiJy rm y;/ -eliglbilily. 3 BR, huge trftll, 21ll E. Cout. CdM S73-32ll arvlng the Harbor area n Excellent borne for tht entft'. 11~ bri~k firep\act-, crpts, olily-2..._ blks to s~p'g. Op-DRIVE BY sz Darrell St., hKutlYe Manor yean. 2, A high perctntage tainer; beaut. 4 Br, bomt, drps, IKl"·d floors, shake portun!ty foc the 111ve:11tment C.M. Sale by owner, vacant, Nearly new 2 1ty ma.nor. 4 of our clit nls have been ~ pool. view. roof, dble gar, It's a beauty! buyer. Immediate pouH&ioft. auper BR, 2 Ba, beaut decor, I.ct: fm'ed by people who have OPEN 1•5 SUN. ()pan Oaily-.515 Tustin N. h I Real Estate "'"" 3 BR, 2 BA Cornor ""'""" kitcMn w/tll bltno. --· with .. ... '" s.nc1 ... 11. Newport Heights · See todaY,I IC 0 S >ut, dble gar., new crplll, Frplc of Italian marble. 1o Lachenmyer Rlty ""9521 tfl1il-1:-dttoratli\i. 009e-io--ChandeUen, lee livinc • ~7~ OPEN EVES. 4b!;; 2% 8:-·;_ fam . nn., ~ schools. Low FHA dm\.-n PY· din rm overlooldnr 22x'2 2407 E. Cout Hwy. l area, _._..,, protected cii• 6-46-3928 Eves: 642-0185 ment. Full price $23,950. w pool w/lots or ~· 81 d patlo. Call 5t6-..m& Oetan view from ballroom Opposite MacArtbur v ' BLUIEP'S BEST IUY OPEN SAT. 1-5 URY · '-•-· A btautlful 3 BR.1% ha. townhouee, dOl9 2511 CRESTVIEW OR. A BIT OF LUX ..,. -•q. $l3,500 home for only $55,000 or to abopping, $26,500 Winner in Ba)'shores. Your Neat 3 BR in Weit C.M. 1 ha, trade locally. 3 BR. 2 Ba. J -Plan, overlook. house hunting days are over" Sp.1ciou1. Private Lge yd w/2 patios A fruit CALL 4\ f4f·1414 Ins bay. $38,500 R~nl!ol'l! whc.n you Sl'f' this. move-in WOODED 100' x 125' tm. 697 "W ~ 3 BR. 2% be. apllt-lnel J'nn. 7191' lfarbor Blvd. al Adams t:ond, Cat><' Cod homf'. De-ROO~f FOR TWO ADDI-trees. Sti-l ...... .::;=;;:::==;::;:::;::;:::== ctscan model. ovvlooldnl MS.9491,t Open 'til 9:00 p~, lightful patio areas. Sep. In. TIONAL UNITS. Very com-BFY Qwner, ':'~~~ei:: &&ALT!' 0~':.'~~~LY be.y, $44,500 . * MESA VERDE * t...a.w BR, scc=tion. $45,(0), 1o11ablr three bdrm .• 2 Bath am. rm.. · • 1!11ar Newpert Pe1t orr1ee DON V. FRANKLIN Nlee :\ BR. + fam ily nn. Call: G7J...l663 Eves. 673-1186 lloml' with dining rm., built-ing rm, 3 BR. Xlnt cond. OWNER'S naUy btautit)'ins 6ot PoinHftle, CclM Realtor hol't1e, k>catl'd at D2 CE'ylon In kitchen with bftaklut Move ln I: livtl $11.500. thll }Owly S BR. home new-3 BR 2 ba ~t; S BR ~-•7~2222 Rd . Open llouse Sat. & Sun, area. Covtred patio and 54&-3112. ty ,.inted, new carPettnc, reai:. Good~ncome, sood fin. j·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;0 I 12:30 10 5:30. 4;'e. poolsl:ttd doubleprage,-Prioedto-eell OWNER._U ... 1R,_J ~ =-tanmd.)'UdtQrtJmechlld-~~"TusErnA lBr 2Ba. HARBOR VllW HIL"S yiu·d. N~w )(hag cnrp., new at o;ity $37 ,500., -No Fl~ :~~Dr, 0pe~i /Sun re~ pool.meet krt; ln the 10W tee. family rrn. Wet bU. Ap. Best buy in area. Immac. ~ drapes: blln. gas kUch. 4;e. ance probltnuil ,$ s.t6--ia40 $301. Take a look! p:ol(. 1900 111 ft. Rm. fol' BR 2 ha ~le 1tory home. CO''·d. patio, Xlnt Uoor plan. M. M. L18orde. Rltr. · . MORGAN REAL TY additioM.I unll $49 500 Lo patio. Newb' deetlr. For additiol\lll Inform. call: SPECIAL * * * 646-0SS.l Eves: 54SDiS BY OWNER: 4 BR, bl& cor· 61J..464:2 '7$.6459 CaJI· m.s726 • view ot Bay 1; Oeean, On1:J fl11"1i. Ouko\\'Ski 545-81~. Ask. Vtew. Pool. 4 BR .• 3 Bathl, ner lot. 'Loe: dole to ID E RTBRIEAK · $58 {QI Call &l2-4620 tor ing $34.500. bar . nf'lw dr11.~!I. new cal' DIAL 675-5930 ahQrlplnc conwniienca. Ph: _H A • aW•t • CHILT ROBINETT pe!. new paint, Now vacant To see the beat E-Plan: a 540-5615 owner ~ Jeaws ~ 1111. G und •--•a- Rt::AL'rDH. 645-0128 & ready • U'C this lrvlne rtal clvumer! In the Bluffs! 2 BEDR. boule, by owntr, dl'ftm hDu:le. 3 BR. I ball». - -r y, ._...,... Tr.rraoo home now! $79,500. WHY NOT clole to •hoppinc and 1CnUDptioal plan, $42,500 -C Pr•,.,tln 833 Dover Dr., N.B. LOW, LOW DOWN cum DOSH . Realtor M•k• '"" mov. to that qui•t ocl>oot. _,.. JACK ~..84 ".'""" 3 fkdroon' lamllY hOme "'ith ft I , itrecit, Into a sparkling 3 BR: 3 BR home. Pl.000 F.P, with .,,.,.. TREASURE CHEST MARVELOUS VllW 2 bu.ths, Hugf' fam!J.y room ., • :2\ii ba, home w/beauUtully S5000 do. lmmed Pols. 1m l.ol.ded with Ww, \llew, wt1h open) bcan1 c.oe1Hni:. 642-6412 J::vf'~. 673-3468 planl'll'ci living IU'f!l.ll, Orange Aw. She 1220 view, Prime 1oc., prtSt:i&t: 2001 Bayside Dr. Beam. ParkJike-rmck yard • grc1't 1730 \\t. Cout H.aah\\•ay BOYD REALTY Newport ,.. area : pllatlal livlnc pl111! Wke roof 1-lty. 3 Br. 4 be. tor ehildrrn. Close Ir\ school.! ::z======-1 , LGE. R-2 k>t w/olckr houM. 3 BR. 2~» ba, hobby rmt. waterftmt borM, xlnt ~ Good hnanc1nc bvallnble. ----3G29 £. Cottst,.1!.wy., Cd~l Od-1 $1J,fi00 owntt/Bkr. LIKE new 3 BR., 2 t., bltnl, play rm, play dtck A many ml111 beach. Nt'Wty rtdecar. Only l~•.500. Partial Ocean View '7>5·-Ew•. 67"'1031 or -lrplc, .... boam coillnp, ......... peikt _,. 11v. 1175,000 SHOWN BY APPT. TH!f •FOX. CO. COLLEGE Pk. 3 BR, 11{ club !&ell. Wolk to bch, '"'" $102,500. 1111 Grundy, R .. ltor REALTORS 67~'495 On 1i.-nMi.. Wt11Slde, '-fller•U,..r-BA.-o.m.r. 232 Pl1llc<1Dn $32,000. 2131157-7391-. Untvtnlty Roatty 673-$510 1133 ""-Dr., N.B. - •BEACH BARGAIN • C!"llO Me1a, 3 Bod"'°""· DUPLEX-$20 950 Dr. 121·900· 51~ :nu E. Coast Hwy., CdM c!inlnc nn "llUCE" lamlly ' Wntcllff Int oitlAT VIEWI -HARBOR VIEW Owrll!r bought anolher. quick sale net"d<'d of thls1mm1c. •4 Br. hon\(', I hlk, to ~un. JIUIT)'. S33,9.j0', Sub. lrnt!I, CAYWOOD REAL TY room crp.ls dl'Jll. dbl(': car LARGE Bedrooma, (1 'ach). Mela V•nle 1110 ot harbor A ootan .\Ur split f BR., 2!A ba. Wabtut paneled g"ra~. quiet i'UI • d~ • UC ~11.r downtown c.M. Parle. 5 BR., S BA formal dlallw ll:vtl bOrne on Ji.s suio .. tam. rm.; din. rm., flople~ S!retit. !knullful yard. $:29,500 ''•lk to shopplnr. Good fin. thag CIJ'pt~ liQii Pool .~ s:n °:':'30yb:;,,~1; ::N: ft. lot. Ideal for 4 &Pl. unltt: :::-OUI ot town owntrl We ll1-McC1r~le, Rltrs, aLanch11:heavaUable, Rlty ed lot, one 'block to Me1a NCI&: drapes, Walk to all ,000, 2501 Ocnn Blvd., ' 1810 N11"por1 Blvd., C.~t C nmyer Vtrde roll count. Owner. schll A ahop'r. J*.500. CdM. By •PP'l only. Call : ...... ,_ :1 1~,ii2!1 J::\·r•· IH4·06.~ CALL 6$39:?8 or ~ Quick-aale. 30 ,Day A11ume ?re S.5"i' loan. 642.+62.(I-• C°"9fN·MMn1Ntt posseu.ioll. $42.500 ~3842. 1424839. Bill Grundy; Reitter 171·• ~ •. ·'' -. -.• HOUSES FOR SALE ~ HOUS IS FOR SALE -RI NTALS RINTAU RI NTALS ....._ --: RI NTALS ~ HOUSES FOR SALE Apts. f l#ftlllhod Houooo f'umlllhod -Unfvmlohod ~ ~ Houo• """'mlohod Apts. ,.....,_ Co<ano dol Mor 1150 HunltM'°" IHch ;140I ~ INch 1715 -l~~~~~:J~l :.,!!N~o.:::•!!J•:;;=~=!!.~~l~::.:.o!!•~ch~~~-.!·!'}t-l!!o~o:;;-;~rtt,;:1~::.:.1!!0~cht~~-4l!!!llD-I N looch 2200 0.•llno Pu;,.. 2'75 Chnoro.1 -• ~ dol Mor ml : • ·~ ~ .,.!~~tDj,,_P?~~E~. ba. PICTUl£SllliE SETTING 7 .~:_::,;.,.":: owport NEWl'Ol\T BEACH $130 SHAlP 2 R 2 llDIUI-. Xl8' .,., • double a:ar, + elCl.nl nn., · uvb., l'OQm w/beavy beam CAMEO Shores .. deluxe, 1355 E. s.lboa, ht ftr duplex tr.at to be&dl;' S2151mo frpl, F/A heat. Octtn 1Jde PRIVATE & SECLUDED oelltnr, .... fireplace: Roomy r..ewly decOn,led tum homer wntr/yrly, l br. 2 ba. bq Ii: SPACIOUS .. I Yl'I NEW • ~ CTS-U.U of hiw1y, Take • look. kltcM-n wlbruklatt • an:a. 2 br I: d!n. $415 mo. Avail oettn all xtJl.s.wW/dryr, ~ • teb1c ·~ nnoed. 1 BR Homt. Frp&c. Yard. To MORGAN REAL TY, Front )'ltd pttvacy behind Separ.ite dini. roont. Spac.. Nov l. Adults only. 615-5698 icem&Rr ietrll. ,.,..., _._ aatal't· TQ. ntpanllble pumn. Ca 11 67l-46tt 675-4459 brick pillared fence. "Old ioua muter bldroom w/fire.. WINTER 5 Br, 2 Ba nt hpk, and tho'ftr, dltlwsbr. D.AYl 1 .m.om::::.:;:::_ ____ _ ' BAYFRONT LOT 2119 B•ysld• Driv• 88 Ft. bulkhead, with pier area, $2ID,000 (Fee simple), Bill Grundy, Rltr. 833 Dover Dr., N.B. '6424620 World" charm., Romantic place, walk..in clolets A ·Beach. $3CIO mo. 7201 Owntt 2l3: mnn Horftlt.'lnden "5-2tSJ 3 BR. 2 8A. Deluxe Duplex master bedroom suite with. .ocean view. Recftation room Seub:lre Dr. -646-51118 RENTALS _.__,._ 1.,. _ "lM J'rill. pt, lawdry, '215 mo. bath, Fireside livin~ rooni. w/wet bar oU larp Anthl>ny" l BR beach cottare • ll'lO mo ffOUMt Unfvmlthed '"99MI Mele • Waillerfrunt Dr. m..Gllt 12' breakfast room, sliding pool. Private ~ courts, thru June, t block trcm · 3 BR, 2 ba. .ittory J.at glass to private enclosed pa.. beach, auanfed p.te. Onlf ocean. 915-8230 Gentrel .. S ~: F~ :.· ':{1~ YU'd. ~nt btautlfl.d ~ Uo. Mlnutea to beactf, Value '891500. 2 BR. 1% Ba,,fndc }'I'd. Ollld DECORATOR'S home 3 BR, bench A ~ cabinet.. a,pprox J2'15/mo. 6'1lSili5. pa?kk.ed with terms to sell LIN~~"""'~ATE Ok. Thru , June. $ 1T5. formal dinlne + l&rre fa19. 1ardener A wtr incl. No l!':~~~"::"~':"' ... ~I quic Hun')'! Dial 714 'u'l w .c.o;)•-=,,•~ 675--0&42, (213) 3$-3690 ily kitchen. JncludiJW iard· pets. $215. ht A Jut + BalbN l11aNf 2 UNITS.Lrg 2 BR home, + 962-~ 32325 Coast Hwy S Lquna -~ -·-·- JUS , ' • OCEANFRONT • Wintn p:io e:ner '350 Mo. · ........_.,, -~::f,•ci:;"'1oc~C!i8~!.~~ FOREST [ OLSON OCEANV:':om. •Br 2 mo. 2 ""',.3102 W. "*'> ., 2 •. n-• pts 2 BR. Gar. Patio. C>'pts, 3W1'!,.4.,.m;;...";"-°'uni, owner. 673-6904 or ~7983. • • fi'ont. Re:utor. 613-4350 .r<f!W • 3 &K'\lnn a • tropkaJ .e:tttrw for adults 173-lXIO lltand 'D .... u •• Inc. Rea.ltof'l!i Ba. w /multi • ~ room. -·· '170 A $2fl0. F.a.stalde df1>1, .towlft:tria'. Quiet :==:;:::::::·:::::;;:;;:;:;:=:::·~:= HARBOR VIEW HILLS 19131 Brookhunt Ave. Bltns. appHance:s, compl. -tropkal 11t:1.tinl for adult:I - Sale or lease option • 3 br, Huntington Beach carpeted. Balaneed power N.wport ShoNs 2221 5 Bectrm., J Ba tiotm, IOmt criy, 1 blk to ab.Jpl ............... IMch MOI family, 2 ba. View, prof lnd··i--.,=--''===--home. S31.750, 10% down. _ v>ew, Newpmt Hei&hta. SlG9/mo. Mft..4430. -- rr Oakwood ... acpd, $.52.900. 614-1121 FHA BUYERS 1023 Katella. 499-3005 or 4 BR :I~ baths. t mo. Jene, Jun Smffh, Rltr. 3 BR • i.mmacula~ eond. l,~ oindo. Near,~~· 49e-4084. $300 per mo. 141 1251 Avail Oct ht • $175. Yn be -• rec. ana. • T1.Ullll. LOOK AT THIS e $750 DOWN e Win""' Ilea! Em" 6lS-3331 • 1.'t A lat + S>I dop. Call = ~m;.:~ a new way to live in $100 DOWN Pennanent Ocean vlPW lot, e S4~ South Coast Dr. (nr. Atlanta • Beach Balboa Penin1Ula 1300 W •. Bay Waterfront Plwi: $650 at close of escrow $5.~ F/P. Assume bal, on Irvine Terrace 2245 832·7800 Reallots. Blvd), 4M-55l6 1'..T. rt B h • ----fJ"''!'"til"ul"'~ ec 4 BR ..nm'CL.Yo1Llnto this super existing toen. Bkr. 491-1210 --. $160-~-Bed~. Fffe'td gtEERY &: ~in. l ~ S;tUQE.NY; _:__:_j.. ·_D eumo e1;1.c -~ + bonus room. J;Jit.UOOeck. sharp 4 bedrm rancher w/2 or ' -"'a"?....._, yard Ho all tilitie paid. Fen rm. 2"'Bi: op&:-;-Gijii; SUS. 1 Br; Putl)o tum. Neu ~~ - beach-pier & slip. $175,000, baths, w/w crptg, cust drpe BY owner, Custom 3 br, 2 4 .BR.~~ ~ ~Ocean •pa ,.rlc. u 1 blO.. Jee patio, nr all 9Cblt beach Won't tut Bill Grundy, Realtor +encl patio w/Jots of tall ba. &ams. 1%%-$212 mo. :~ Rirrttr. 6'~ Next.;&LE-TREND •.,.So, ~5'1t,!!ua, $tl5'lrlO"oa Blue ii.aeon* IM-7m ll's fun, fine ntigbbcra and ~tl&'f! Jiving, all tn one Juxurious packqe. That's Oak• wood Carden Aplrtmenta ln Newport Beacb. jus.t mipu~ from Balboa'• Bay and beac~. There's • % million dGllar Clubhowe "1th i-rty room, billiards room, indoor golf driY.. Ing ran1e, men's and women's health clubs, uunu, tennis courb, resident tennl11 pro and pro shop. and Olympic size pool. All this, and much mor~. ju.st steps from )'Our J>tOfe:ulonaJly decorated apartment. each with private balcony/patios. A!r eondiUon• lng/tirepl.ace:s opUonaJ. sr Dover Dr., N.B. 642-4620 s~. $24,000 Full price, Gr Pm '9f-0(28 da, 832-7449 10:::::i=::;:=:::=::::·==== l::-:~!:!~!!:~'.!:..-::::l~!!:.5:-!!'::!~!!!•• _____ I l!!!!!!""'""'""'""'""'""~I no cash down or take over eve-. 1 BR furn trlr •••••••••• '95 AVAIL now, 3 br, 2 ba,, bltna, •BR, 2 ... b&bw. 8-8-Q, Dtn. 2 & 4 BEDROOM Oceanfront ~ low Int. VA 10Q!1 .. total EXQUISITE hideaway, 1 BR, Corona del Mar 2250 2 BR kids/pet OK •••••• i110 cptr, drps. frplc:, cov. -patio,-Nr Marina HI Sehl, Avail Duplex, $59,500. 67>46001 _pymnts $84 per JUG. Agent. Jiv rm, prdens. $18,500. l k ti:llM-por>J:"utll Pd • • '135 n.e. Cocta Mesa aft&. $'l25. Oct, $2115 14'1-5222. Frank Marshall Realty Hom•Finders 961-1931 49'-7329 bet l;O am; alt 4 wxuruous home a n 3 BR 4 Jdda/pet O~ ··•· $1fAl Incl lawn care 114-1385 £\fl $185 ·Sharp 3 Br, 2 Ba, Blt.M. Lido Isl• 1351 $17 950 Tue, w~. Th, Sat, Sun, day. bea".'1-Hua:e kitchen, bn.~t. •"°"'ea, ~tt! ~da .. $1$1: $135 .. w/util. 1 Br. Semi-tum nr ahl. Oilldrtn ftlc. • f'Urnished, Pool/dub avail. ...... •• • • Bunplow Nr town Blue Beacon * M7577 LARGE HOME FULL PRICE Son Cl-1710 Mo/mo OK. $400 mo. STAR.LET 77._7»0 lluo affcon * '6.o111 r .,_ ~·--2 613-.1696 • F-oln Volloy 3"111 5 Bedrm, lamily rm., xlnt or ti-3 u•:•.•n••nu batb witb 2 STORY residence 4 BR, 2 LOVELY t BR, 1"-ha. nu :...::::::.:.::::...:.::;:;:.,__= street to street 45 !t, Jot. large patio, bllilt·ins, ~ lull le 2 half bath!: pvt ac--I lboa ·--·· ··--;· df1)1 6 -t'pta de. to lhop'a, 3 BR. 2 BA. M:Gde:m trpe. B~· app't only. FAMILY ROOM. and tall cess to bch, Ma'anwcent a 832-7800 Avail 10.1° lit b•for e . W(W npta, elec kit. Drpl, $97,000 ~~e tttes, Hurry befOtt view, $66,500. Owner n4/ CLEAN 2 tr. Month to $140 • 2 Jle:droom. }·enced 642-«mi c.r,. $250/mo. AvaY. Oct 1. Chvner may trade down ftlr 3 1t s gone! 871-9300 492-2111 by awt. month. Walk to lhoppQg .a: yard Carpets Drapes '1·$150.:;:..o:;lledoc;_._2-8~-.. --..,-17rm s.nto oamqo Cir, Bdrm •. home in !en-aces, Wd ker & Lee . bus. Prefer olde:r coupJe TELE-TREND' ~· &tide-r. p. • (n4) 129-3914 tor appt. Ookwood Gonion Aportmonts Cdl\'l, with ocean vie,v. ii I S J 5@..3158 ..... .,.c. ' · · ....... a t LIDO REALTY INC. Ro'1-oCop'::t~ono 172.S . • * SWINGERS * Bluo leocon * ~111 4 BDRM I ' e.u.. Bui"'"'· On 16th Street between Irvine and Dover Dr. cn4J w..s110 "33:7=V=ia=Ll=·='°===673-=7::JOO=I 7682 &Unger P~~!:Nr~ ::: $265. s + POOL • PLUSH. 2 .. BR.~,<!'~~ ~ atov11~' i .,;~:lu:;:;;:t.='42-:0 .. ;;:ti0:;:;...:;· ;,-==·=Lt!::. ,. 842-4455 540-5140 S ACRE ntate land or blrse -Family. $245/mo. rn-9467 Air, w/w, FIREPLACE, etc. re ... 14 ......... """" J.... ia. ,; Huntington Beach 1400 ranch, w/nice view, adj. Families ar Sin&'le:a Ilk! Call 3653-G Oranct' Ave., C.M. Wntmintter ,,.. ......... 112 ........... r.. II~­ ·••rlr~rL $141 t. 1111. I•• I•• o.a,_,.. :1612 M._...,_...,,,_,.,,_ 1-U • II other estate parcels. $35,000 Lido I I 2351 NOW!! ' 2 BR. Gar. West. Wilmn. . WALK To THE BEACH -r YlllCJ•• w/$10,000 cln will "'"'"' 1 O ---H.,....ffndon 645-2'51 A-. Od. lit $1«1 mo alt 5 113>-"" Util Cmy 1 Br. Cot· Coveted 2 bedroom, 2 bath, clear bldg alte for 100% 3 BR. 3 ba. otf·water home S"'UAD * pm. rB-4816. tace. Fenced )'I'd. Adults. I ::========--=========il I 2 story condominium, Catt-Jinancin(I:, Bkr. 493-1706 or Furnished -'450 mo * MOD ..,. 2 BR, brick frplc bltns Blue S.•con * -.1m I· In Your Bathing Suit From this lovely California Classic: 3 -BR, 2-BA. dble gar., 1800 sq. Jt.~ hdwd Ooors, w/w crpts, drps, fun !amity rm., beaut fireplace, modem tree living among lovely 494-8100 Bill Grundy Rltr. 6U-46'20 $145. 2 BR'a. SUPER SHARP! crpt11, $140/mo. 1 baby .: $l5Rffwly dee, 2 Br. Ops, Newport Inch people and pools, (Enjoy this RENTALS BA.YFRNT, 5 br, 3 ba S1fm W/w drapq, pra~. Kklll Aftil Oct L -..12116 drpc, RIO, Tht 1: pet ok. 0-r•l 40001--'-:-:--".':'.:'.'.'.'.':--fjlJ jaouuj thenpy pool).-<om. ·tlouM• Fumlohod mo winter. Ken Brit· ok. Can TODAY!I s BR. , eau.. COu.EGE lluo .. _. llM-7m --------1 MESA MOTE~ plete outdoor recreation fa.. tingham, Rltr. 675-0123 Home-Finclar1 645-2951 PARK. Crpta, d rapes. • SHARP-a.EAN-:lBR cilitles. Best buy at S23,9SO. General 2000 WINTER Rental Furniebed 3 UD 2 BA Condo. an bltnl. $255/mo. Call 549-2534. Dana Point 3740 ~ •1140Wllum.Adul~ HN!d pool (Assume 6'70 gov't JoariJ. .,_.., ... ..,... .., o pets • 2 Bdnn, 2 Be.th Close to 1Chcxf9 I: shoppe. 2 BR houae--$1SO-Ferad e 4 BR 2 ~ w -· " • ' • · * :s25 WEEK J: UP 'ti Kitchen, TV'a maid llooted Poul ........ as lomorrow kit., lovely Larwin Realty. Inc. 673-2559 Pool I: rec facllllWL im yatd, sardenu .I: watrr , ..., ne .... _ Teem OK M2--8520 l<ondscaping k excellent For appt. 962-6988 anytime: 832·7800 mo. Avall 10.1·70 · C a l I -1.1. 2'75 Knox St. &12-&38 .,.,,e.~ -_,_ ,,_ BONUS ARRANGEMENT neighborhood. f., n 11 price Bal•--I I ncf .... _.. u -u ........ RE 50-1151 --, ... 1-.... ..-~ SAVE '1$ IDEAL 1 I: 2 br apta only $29,900. You can live $1000 Mova (n $65 .1 Bedroom Mobile Home, -1 • ...._ ~...,,~., 3 .BR. 2 ha. llll Panrll St SHARP.a.EAN· 2 BR Newport Bay, at the beach for just $3400 No other costs. 2 Bedroom 2 Fenced patio, built·ina, car-LOVELY 3 BR home with a Show w.eke:nda. Conllomlnlum 2150 Furn'. It untum. Htd pool v."atierfrnt view, down & assume lhi5 grcal bath, elee bltn range Ir: OV· pets, drapes, ChiJmn ok. ~~ :n:;::. i;:pc~ Jee yard. Lit: or lse w/opt S23S 54~7971 from St• . .Adults. No pets. n.tH. winter or yrly. loan of 6% • $212 per mo. en, dishwasher, used brick TELE-TREND &: r~. dys S.S. 540-8623, ~~ ~~~~ 3 BR, 1% ba. cpt:a! d:rpl,...J e THE BLUFFS 3 BR, 1% TetnsOK.CU-9520 C.M. Goole Apts, B a l ba,a Owner must sell. Now is the fireplace, patio, shingle roof, SllO. trrIL pd. Bachelof apt. ews/wknda 61&--1238 Wallace 546-4141 car ~. !'-tiO, _., BA, pools. Avail Oc:t 15th BONUS ARRANGEMENT 6'i'S-6491.. J time to by thi11 .homc. separate Jamily· room, car-Avail now. Mee.. Verde. 56-6321. $295 mo. &M-'432 THIS WEEK ••. SAVE $$S YEUU.Y • Ocearftont l BR: pets &: drapes. Payments e Broker 53419111 1~ !t::::n! ~2 ~ Take A Daily Dip LOVELY S Br homeJor sale:, Duplem Unfvm. "75 HOLIDAY PLAZA 2 BA, bltns, indoor BBQ. C:l 00 DOWN less than rent. e:xi!t~ FHA Sl30 • UTit.. pd, Nr ocean. 2 1 ba garage apt Dock. ..,, AND RELAX! 3 BR. 2 BA, trade or ttnt In C.M. DELVXE Spacious 1 BR sanre:. $295 rm. Avd Oct ~ . ~ 6% loan anyone qualifies. Br. Dup'ex. Child ok. BiU G~y. Rltr. 642-4620 st~. refrir, carpets, dn~ &i>8001. or t2ll) '1!&S6 DELUXE l Br. 2 bath crp. furn apt $135. 2 BR + den ~ W. Oceanfront. n4~ ~Jusclo:'ingcostsmove ou lflll ::•.. lill:I •Broker.™ WINTER 3 br, es. POOL. Child~n okay.2 BR.Hou~.upta.drpa.$145 ~~1:~~~~r:i:,,: :s~eat;10~~~ SAIL INN MOTEL mto this very sharp 3 R, _,IU!ll•!!!IJll !,!!! Washer/dryer. 107 Jade, Sl85/mo, mo. 1 Small baby. 2m ~ peta. 1915 PonM>na, CM. e ADJ. BAY ~ BEACH 2 BA, 2 car gar., w/w ts, t•2A4ll ( :J Mtiln R•ntals to Shar• 2005 $250/.mo. Call 2131838-4310 Home-FlnMn 645-2'51 w.a.c. apt• OL to abopplJll and acbooll, _. _ l>Swce f'OOJJHI from ..... SL ~ mod•mbltnkit be.U· --------· ....... _ • * JET SET * • -c.a.-i ,.._ ~· ··~· .. Want""-D"' F ·1y MAN ... -• •hr .......... -.. _ .• RENTALS p~.-.--41IO -.... ---..v, J!ful STARDUST. bome'IOcaL W"""'V15 3111 beautiful Corona .tW-1. Mar . ~ ~ -drps. Qme:t •ldertf ~ -• -Manthb' nta. IT>lHI. ed on a small Clf'Cle Cul-de-, . hOme No a molr:e ri. Huntinrfon Beach 2400 OIARMJNG1 BR.'15D.= Phom 5M-Ol2I • Apts. '""""'•• -BA~ Aptl .. Sao.ma nko n•lghOO.hood $26,500 G.I. or 'FHA $125/,;,., 673-1169 NEWLY FarnMlbod -~ ~·.~i«iwi 1 BR.,_ aps. ----rol -* SUNNY. * ........,.. O>mpl. """'& it:: 10a:iu;i~~~0:05~th 4 ~~2H~°do!:ril~~ y:a~::S: ~r~ S: =r.·S:~· Wat to Hom.FlnMrs 6&2t51 ~.~~dlld 511--'t~ -J sf f * ACIE5 * :::rm.~&::~ just $4000, Tull pnoe S2l,950. Pot Robertson RHlty 1"8nd """"' w/p;.,, Sl.50. $135 • 1' Br. Duplex. ·Neu 1 BR ~ $95 4 BR!2 BA, Nr. So. Cnut I or * Motwl-Apts. * ;::;';;;-.;;;;:,.-,-.=.,..,__..,. ~:~,:0:n:o !:w~!~nlx 147-8553 Ev•s: 893-4152 67S-5388. Bea.ch Tot or singles ok. Plua. Avail 10/l... $225/mo. s· I Ad Its Studio & 1 hdroem• DELUX apta, steps to bay .. -Farr-W--SOLD OUT! YOUNG l>aoh. "". !Lve f!luo Boocon * "4-7577 CHOICE LOCATION! Stovo, so;..284; 1ng e I LOW RAtES ........ ,,.n1n1u1a. ....... type, tee:ks same to thare -re:frir, yard, prl,P .. HUJt. 3 BR V.cant. Nice yard. Day, Wttk ot Month Call aft 6 ot wknds, nO apartment in beach area. Leguna Buch 2705 RY WON'T LAST!! ' Family Gniy, '225/mo Act. South Bay C ub ls a whole e c:oktr-TV Air eor.:t. students, $135. 673-2677 NEED LISTINGS BADLY Call Jae ~1 aJt 6 PM Home-Finder1 645-2951 A1k tor Don, 130-«J60 new 'NfY ot life deaJped e Pool A Phone Serv incl OCEANFRONT • 2 br, 2 ha REAL ESTATE 6 Hou~ Sold in 2 DAY• E $/LEAS just for ~ ptople:. It'• Maid I!'-""-van ' .- SHARE my •hgant R NTAL ES * Cli-C,__11 --e ~"-a $250; 1h•,1 bo $10>. -HUNTINGTON BEACH OFC. MANY BUYERS WAITING!" waterfront hotne w/dock. FURNISHED RENTALS -r-,__,.. Mna Del Mir lan-llvintr-wltb-wann; d:y.. -1 Slpal-So;-GC-O.e--have-ttpts; drpa,, ftpk:. 8~5313 430.7511 847-3507 e 431-3769 ! 642-0427 $1SO 2 bdrm. at Victvria Beach. $15 (1.JTIL?I'IES PAID) Cozy namic neilhbon. l t'1 • Fairpoands 96l-2Ml Open 7 days-s :·:~rto 8:30 m ,!,.,. ~~~ yrs, mo. Exe. view, tireple. A few BACllELOR CO'ITAGE • DECORA'IORS horite a BR. $750,o:» Clubhowle w I t h 2316 Newpirt Blvd.LG;?-, "i1°";;8;;R'.'": -;81;;;;;..,::-,,.,"'.pat;o.=<·::"lfl • • ,\,1'41 jf w.. WANTED-.......,...nial lady to ateps to sand. Leure Call~,~::... "-•r _.1 form din., tam Jcit, open ~!,tbpooldub, A WIU, ~ sta.rrS5 Btw. Bay I: BeadL Yrlt. • ,!ti ,.i ..... ..... ..... ~ $2'lS Mo, Home-.._.. -~-.... sun l..S. l3f St. Clair, Rltr. ....... • JIUV room, -* LOLITA GARDENS winter, Multi 675-ml aft. NEED ROOM oo I ~ ~~ "!.v\'.'ulfik1:::: Chum •tudlo, d"" w/_,, LANDLORDSI I -llanl' Indoor ""'1 drivlnc Lowly 1 • 2 BR. Pinell""' 4 pm. TO BREA THE?· RARE OPPORTUNITY 644--0369 W., °'"" olde al ....., at Vacancy Problems Endo<! ,...., """" cour1s. "" bltno, . ..,.... potlo. Or Un!. ~OCEANFR;;;;c::;::;=oNT=l:-Br;;-, "'11'::-::-bo,-lll --. + Woods C.OVe. Leaa FREE su-i .. or quallfie:d Mull Vercle 3111 ahopand reaidenttemil Jn, Ga I: wtr pd. m92 w. tip.-~. Jrloe _._ ...._ N.ar Htlnt lngtonSlat,BeacbBig 2story,3bednri den. YOUNG \Writing mother $135Mo ~ ~~, t6 2 Bedroom lwc -. .. 1-.... H be -uy11......., ... .,... .. _ · tenants at no COit IO you. ........, ' • """'u•= • nr a r r • mv po• ...... ~ tno wnll!r, 3000 SQ. FT. Priced under appraisal. GI v.'Ould like: roommate to MISSION RF.ALTY 4!M-0'131 Alk for LEE or OLA TRI-LEVEL l BR + den. 2 ury apartments with all the ....-.. (l) 17~7is5, s;:'l9'.l5. 3 Bearoom 2 w-rns -1amlly or FHA bllyers-..--the-owner. -Share .apt, Call beir 4:30 985 So. ~ Hwy, Lquna -u.a _, ... ' -tam nn,_Din nn, modern conwnle:nce:I avaD-, • will .. _l --ur t m ar aft 10 p m 541)...5549 --.. _.. ...... L-.a --$25 P•r w .. k • YP BAOIELOR apt-to Room wlth fire11lace:, formal '"' p pay .1~ cos., p. . . • BEAT IF UL Co ndo . * AND ;N SEA Fm_t. I: rear ~tioe (rear able:. Ftzmis111:1.1 and u ...... -... Bachelor A 1 br, TV &: maid beach. Priv ent. YeuV °"" diningarea,hugelivln(room The Real Estate M.lrt •_WAN'l:'ED! Roomi:n~te,~ oceanfront, 2 br, 2 ba,. 5 w/fire pit) $.'6i DJG incl iabed. aefV, •vail. 450 Victoria, Jy, ill l4th St. 6'13->m RUMP 2USxs50'ROO"M --c.11 847-8531-21·l0/ aha:! A:,ar, AJ/ap,l, Yrly lrplc, pvt bet.ch, pool, ~ PIO 91.ARP! l + RUMPUS, prdener. 6'2-7364 . MOD~. OPEN DAILY C.M. eves. $70 mo .. .,,......,. t · $350 mo. Larry Clody wkdys: 2 bath9, w/w Cf'lltl, fenced, COUNTRY Club Villa Condo. ~ FUm Bachl'lor I: 1 BR. ======--,,.,- EasiJy converted into 4 add'I. Huntington ROOI\fMATE WANTED! 7 14 /5 47~6 614 ; Sun: patio, kids I: pe:ta tin!'. VA-J Br, 2% Ba. frplc, 2 car lO A.M. • t P.N'. Exceptionally nice! OCEANFRONT-Deluxe S br, bedrooms&: 2 bath!-Harbour 1405 FEM., COM AREA. 'llt/499-3028. -CANT7 MOVE TODAYI! pr, pool. Adj. Mesa Verde Below rental valuef ~~-~~/1 J.150 ONLY $36,4~ * 673-1182 * l BR le Fam. water, trash I: Home-Flnd9rs ~2'51 Country O ub. 56611&1 R$El'::~F._~~M mo Newpart. Blvd, Of. LARGE 1 Bdrm. Ne a r Immediate Occup1ncy """"•••T.,. or male, 18-25. to g-~-ner, North end, 1" FOR RENTll .... C · 1 rc.-.1.~ lllVI: 7S N IHch -e NASSAU Palma 2 Br Ocean. $150 mo-YEARLY. VA-FIIA & onvenuo11a PANORAMIC VIEW s"--ocean view -4 BR hse, .. , .... to bch, Roi lleq'd, No " .. L 2 BR Hom•a In ""-ew-rt .,_ 0 LA CUESTA ·~· "~ • • K v~ '~· NEWPORT IEACH apt."°" A Uni. Pool, ping. Stud<n .. ok, 673-8088 RANCH s · """" $85 mo. 494-7655 pets, $225 mo/winter. 1-213-~ Coonty, Re:ntall 1tart-poni, BBQ, shady laWtl.!l. =='-~-"-'--'""""-~ AYRES Home11 111ce ...,.,,.. .696--1371 ing at $12.1.SO, Fum ar Un-Townhoute .. Adult• 880 Irvine A ve . 177 E. 22nd ~. Mz..3645 LGE. Like new l br, J t., 1'-10DELS AT Best Joe., l large bedrooms, Newport S.ech 2200 OCEAN Iron! home:, 3 BR, 2 turn. A11k for BONNI, Split level 3 BR. 2 bath, f:r:pl, Irvine & 16th $90 1; up. Nke: 1 1: 2 Br. ~t.~':~ex= ~.pr. BROO~~ ;;l~~NTA ~~~:!::t ~u:~~~::~ 6210 W. (keantront i!~v~;· l-Ap~2s 132.7100 blt-irul, pa~a~ ei*2~ (714) '4S-OJSO lnile.n. AdUlw':.o GlllJ8_!6 no DELUXE 2 Br., Westditt JGc, 11 a.m.-8 p.m. bar, pier le slip. $127,500, Lrg 3 Br. 2 Ba. upper apt. * MINI RA.NCH * car pr, ' ,, peta. 132 W, n TI Pool It bUns. Teemaer elk, PETE BA1tRm !:r~~f~.wi~i= Dena Point 2740 Approx.%acre!BR,2 Bath :E"iLcTof:rage. 5411"6 SOUJK BAY CLUB A;::-:L 5. let 1 Br. $2lOmo.noJae.6GG7t. NOT BRAND NEW BEACH -$19,950 RcallY TI4: 642-53XI rental. S46-109l ar wknda TQO'nIBRUSH ALL u home. fl!nced yard. Brina: fUrn.. ii.cs. Pool • carport. ./ OCEANFRONT I. 2. l , A 1 ~~~~~~~~~1.~<213~J~59&-~171l9~·..,..-:--: NEED To •nloY my ""d!Mml.$195/mo,THIS e LIDO ISLE-4 Blt,I BA APARTMENTS 1 .. ri-11a,s..-No. 4 BR'" WINTER llJM'. Fount I V 11-1410 e eoN 1he BNch, mod"'" 3 be<utllul 2 Br, 2 Ba'+ don -WON'Tf'LMl'!I~·' 645-2'51 ....,. from ,._ crt. • • • H. ALS. m«la, •" a .. , Br, bltns, lrplc. crptA, drpl, bornt. Finest cout w from .._n Paygrnd. clubhoule " Liva where the fun 111 1 BR.. Furn. w/w cpta, e:ltc 2 BR Oceurront. Not new, but . only I Yf':'I· Easy Terms/law Int gar, laundry rm. $DI/mo. priv. p&lo" liv. rm. Adults: $125-2 BR Dupkx. Patio. =~$650 mo. '73--T• Of stv, drpl, nr shop's . $140. Winter ~$2J!;/me. young. Fantaslic value nestl-winter. C'.>l Sealbore Dr, or no pets. $315/mo, ieue. f96.. ~/Clfth. 'Family ok. Q) .~ St CM. ed among Z..Story homes val-(213) 197-4287. 9563 • Broiler ~ 2 BR/2 BA: Lie: or la! opl REMARKABLY Trdtr HOUR $115 Complttel)' tum dalDxe 2 tw· U~at •%,ooo.'BR'•,2full NurGolf/NMrP•rk $225/mo • i 11s1mo. UNBELIEVABLY l BR. per _. ... ublkto ....... Maler• ·~ -' I ----EXT••ORo•u••1LY mo Ind'• utU. 181 -· -~·~ -baths Gou~t kit. with Jat. 3 BR. 2 BA·+ GIANT BON-i.::G:!°'~'°:;r'.!o~l ____ :;2000::::_;0::::::•n::10::.r::ol:__ ___ _:2000:::~0::°'::.,.::'::o::_ ___ ..;_=:..1·~°""~=""::::'::rn=: ::;"';:_~,::_:,::_:,:·== 'BEA~" nq'd, 5'&--fT'l9 be. '1S5 6 up, 5ts-2m est ~iltins Cloud soft car-US ROOM (could bt hobby Val D'lMre Gardin ... ..._ l Bl\ turn. $15G incl \ltil, 2 BR Oc Vu apt. wiMlr ~ l~-"n· ~~~ '~ .. ke;:,:~~: H.:~~ti~r ~L wt! $@"MllA &~fiis• Puttlnc ITftft. .. ,.,,;;". pool. car. dilpolal. Adults, !::°C: ,..,...,... ..... 842--4405 -C BR, 2 ba. 2 *"1 hGme, l ll'Mm OOwtn everywbtrt, no pets, SC-231.1. cheaper than rent. Better · bilna, crpy;, drpl, $3rXI. mo. 45• poo( rec:"'°"'' bWf&rdl. 1 Bit. pool VtD pd, Adult.a, no BALBOA Pmintula tum •· hum\ cau mo OLSON ~ENT ~sat• "~ '° The Pun/e with the Built.Jn Clrud/e ""' Meeai.tle, Rl!r . BBQ'~ •una. --~ pom. N• -· ll«Jlmo • .fu:."'s':;.41~ .!'*' FOREST E. ;:i·ntenance.rr:'BR. 3~ b6~ Q har•mlOI a.n.s Cf the 54-mt. -:~ 2::; ~:~ :.W.lnl&e:I ~ A5!:.'3:"c."'Furn61>-,J~ ........ ._.,, 2 BR. tmmM:. ao.: Tnc. Realtor.!! 19J.31 Brookhunst Ave. all executive.leatures. BKR. 1 1ftbW words ht>-• •n.n J;I«\;•~ 962--1373 GUl' aaa · Untwnfty P1rk 3211 Rd., ICU670. Between ffv.. '11)/mo • Adulta onl)r, no brHdl. Winier or Yft!'IY. m Huntington B<!ach 1610 3 Bed -Po.01 N.E. Santa Ano. xb'a -A rooms clean 3 BR. 2 ba & fam nn. priced to Mll. ma 541-0050 Choice downtown location, 543-44M>. near Lake Park. much Im-I.,::=::::====== proved tiome wilh gigantic Laguna Be.ch -1105 18n1ily room+ 3 baths. Lot1,1--=--·------ ol "'"""'" '""'"• tho ... ,. 5 BEDROOMS Seeing is t>t:llevlnr. $37.000. Built-In kitchen with dish- &. mom. tittplaec. Double pr. • COATS washer. 3 . baths.. dining WAL LACE .... Lo!WoaP'd " rene<d REAL TOIU youil with oprinldm. G,..t famiJt home on 011 De Sac .AO tan REAL ESTATE Open Ewnh'I• •~t. ln exceptionall,fclean • Ma-4454 • "'""ltlnn, for only $911.950. 1 ~~~~~~~1 Call. $24.950 B OWrlC!.r • 3 br low to fClfM fovr llftllpr. words. bar A Nt"P011 • t Blk H. lllb pets, 21s's ~n No. a, CM. S4th St. NB. 673-1473 ews. I N E E II 1 G I . lldtml., Fam. ..... Din. RENT fUlllTllllE • BEAUT. -• , 1 Br. OCUNBr .J!'ONT·.:!,W. .~ l I 1· I I I . nn. Torti• -...... $365 .... 121.so wl<Jy • .... • ~ .... ,.y; --' --, ... atll. ,._.... """"1 1215. Abbey batty lft.3ID 3 BR. 2 batho .......... -* lllll!rr TO TENANT, 1 ..:•.::::-~::.::::.:;:::,:-;:;.;c;,:.~ I I 2BR, 2boths .......... 1265 2f.llr, ~ f'urn I Ir I. Bacho ... J~all10•!;:.":;.~~ II K S H I f 4 BR. 21> batho ........ S325 lllOll -.. -2111 No.,.ort -· CM I ' I I . I t >;:-;;;,;..;.-., f" °'1!•.: .:: • ~ :.";:,::1'!!'.'· !IWM 1 .. ~ ·-·--·· ~-~~ ~~ I L I C M A I f l s; . • • * WIDE VARIETY 1--_:..:::....;::: __ ::::...,,,.--N,,-I CLEAN 1 .. I BR. Mullo, no . . CUSTOM f'URNITURI 1 BR. Now. -•t. · 0 pou. Us kit $135-$1.,, 'JGl I I I~ I • gn on o btitther oliop: RINTAL io '"" Adufll-..... 22211 'E. Uth St. NB '*'1alL . "Hone.st Scoles'. No TWO> -mdtn. -..am """· 1=:==='77=:===::::::1111 -About 11.• lit ---BWr. "Sliii'1twiil.ii191iiiii'iistii'iiCloliiiiii, ·-•• 11 •• ._.tu ,., l odult .--..,....-,,....,....,.,......., Un-Pollr 1• -~ c-4ol Mor ·I S E N R A II ' I A ~ ..,. ,_ ~!,· Doy ~Ill .Nflhlt .,..._ $30 Wk. ::...-· lli4/-1-llR. 1 both • . I 1· I' I 1. .. "' ....... ""' - - ' BR. ' Ba -$350 ....... S-At>O. ~ MODERN , BR, pil1 ..... ~BR. 1 ..... = '°" -.-.... .Ho..1-. 3 BR. 2 k -.... 1141 IUld """""' --l1lO. Wiil -"""--2 Br. 1 ho. ""tlo Ii ~.S ..... E 22.umas ... I' I' I' 1• r r I 'Bdnn~ .. 1 boll! .. :::: SllO =-·.:. ,,..~ .=: .......... .., 10, alt.. S.nijlflt•alDlllO -1n ~•re.> • _ _ _ _ _ ~ e Red HUJ RnltJ --. u.ran' fl40 A UP. l.oYelJ Mn 1 J: 2 Ute. f\JrnllMd ........ • ... uNtSCo•G~t ANAswtootE.lETTll5 I ' I I I I :I I univ. PutrCoottt, rrv1,. wi.\llLLAGI INN er. Ex--Ila--. ::·~~Sa. ol u..,. . V i; ., -• - - - -• Call Aru-tlme 833--0l'lO Lquna Belch CIM·Ma 1S2 W. WUIOn, 5'M5T7 1,;,::·;.,;;;:..:;.;=.,,-,,---:-;,: VACANT, l.M.i\lACULATE IALIOA INN J Bedm .. uw. incl. SlDll OCEAN •kk Of hwy -1 br town.Me. 6-A loan. All kitchen bltn.,, 2~ oar g&.r, pvl paUo, 110 \ flXt. ma Int. pla)'ip"C>Ond , pool• \cnnl.!1, •11una . Nr ..,,,..;.. '"'P'"'"· ...... 1100 G'"'"'""' s1. scRAM·LETS ANSWERs-1N-ctASS1FICA noN tooo 968-.l198 afl 5 pm. '1!l1-M13 549°0.116 I _ _:_=.::::_:.;;;:..;;;:.:..:.;..:.;. _________________ _ 3 BR, 2 ba. t'ant nn, Julliord 11111"" mrl40 Oidn' ,_,,.. ..... !um, l.co IU!ldeck. M°""'! .-r. !3l0, -Mial! ·odul .. only. $100/mo. l I • I ' • • I t ' • • I DAILY ~ILOT Fri~, Srpttfl'lbtf ~ 1970 It t r-. 'lll!N1',_. > • RIN1l'LS· · ' · Altls. '""""""' II~ • , . Apts. Unftlrnl"""' ~ _...... ..... · /1 n . ...,,,,,. ·c1..a lo(11i1tl11· ..:fftti'.WJ.04a , , • :"ett.a1e ~•ill&· Enter t.a Quin~· Iler· IDOll'I lush grMD •~mospbere & sttblll• lilied walk ways to4our apt, · J. " ; · A~l UTILl"(I ES INCLUOID.· ;: ~. 1 111. Uiif., flSJ) -f um.;.i1 iii •; I .. Ri NTAL S RENTALS Aptt. Un!Untlohod RI NTALS ~·-- ""' * 2 BR. Unf. $\75 -f urn. .. 2.Jlf", ,. , · •• 3' Spac. floor Pt~s; decoral<ir !igoj'IJll!i~:: ' · t':lOW L,EASIJ..i<;?! :Po;k.likl!~iVi~g ·1o·, fomt;l WhHdv• Wont? Wh•o!dY• Got? SPI CIAl CLASSIFICATION FOR vacy. ;r:;c:ect ir~ .pn. i."::''111:.:,..-: · rooms, furnished or unfurnished, Shag COf•. -·.., live within rolli4ti~ setting w/!UD·~;l; _lies with ~~ildren end·~d9Hs; Ii 2 end .3 beg·: ~~· NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Spocl•I R•h 5 Linet -S t lmH -s buckl allLI S -AO MUST NIClllOt: ftu•~ 1M ,nr;comp w ;' •• ~ ,"· · · p~~s .. draP.ps •. air .conditio_n~d, _with self. . • \. . ., • d" """"' ~: • cle4ntnkoveQS. Cofriplete f49Q.6oo re,cr.e•· ON TEN ACRES 2 Bedtm, bltn&, refria., crpts, drp&, adult!, no pets. $150 "mo. incl utt l . Tradewinds Realty 847-8511. e LANOLORDS e FR.EE RENTAL SERVICE t-Wll9t ,.. ..... ,. ..... 1-WMt .,.. ...... " .... ................. ,.,........... 4-& ........... ...... * Colo; U.:9rd. k,;t Wf! in ir•cf 'l 'I'"''"'" · ,!' I • j'• ' k p • 1 ·t , · ~ 1 a·r2 BR. Furn A Unfllnl * o.1U" •• reng•.li:'"ov.,., * P. el.at .c;ptf. !:: . ' I 1.()(\(: u ~iAt, iw-ee 'lier~ .par . ?;> _s, el)nts,l ~*· ·I pri•. patios I -·-, 1-HOTNIHe POlll SALi -TUD&I OfLIL.YI *•Bonus ~~or•9• 'P~'· * CoY. c~rpo.H~ . ', ...... ~ll~ball,:health, ~lub, t~en f~~1ht1es Mid a ·. P.oali.. TftBla.o.atnnBkbf. ~~ B~:!_~~oo~...':i: ·=~=•~em::! r * So•lpfurM "lorblO pullm•n I t1I, ,bo+fl!;.,., ~ 'l'J~ • sch69I! i'(e X t ·fo shopp ing and goJf: 900 ' SOa Lue, 01M llf"'1l LINOOORG co . .,._2519 home U. HB. "'6'l059 To Place Your Tr ... tr'• P•r•diM Ad PHONE 642-5671 !!'· * ElelUl:Nisiff·~·~E.,LS ·bi!•~' dAI~,, ··. ; co·"""·: n o a. r U,C.I. and Ne.wµo:rt Bea.ch. <-..'"'·a..! H..,.1 1125, , Bil. epm, °""· 1 un11a, ...., rental .,.,, !F; Jilk·. from 1ruuliD11<in Center, SAA : ;Di~go ' ;Frol)l' $,I ?O·por-.17\0 .. At s ••. o.!ego·Fwy; ~nd 705 & .707¥,t ORCHID BJtns, Gorago. R....,,. for Ront 5"5 138.000 oquily; Inc. m. t~ Frwy GoldenMet Cblleee. " ·~• , I .~uJver ,Dr1v~ ·11n . lrv.1no. P[lone 83.J.,'3733. -2 Bdrms., l t.ths, wtth sun. * Aft 4 pm, 847-3177 * SHARE lux home-w/ refl.ntd $13,500, For· house, comme.r. ~ , ·• • • • 1 • • • ~ • ~ , . , • • • . deck, '235. Al.SO 3 Bdmu., TCWNHOUSE: 1 BR ~ Pri BA ci.1.1 or horse r9.nch. ~· ' San pje£o ~~. 'ib Beach Blv4.,~;~· !Oll .. ~and ~n1ged by The lr"il'!t Compiny ·3 ha~ Carpeted, draped, Pooa-:bltins: D/W; patio ·• :=:;· nn. v;e!~~aut e! 1.,,.-0-WNER....,.~_.,...,,,_..."---li~ ,Beach C.,bl¢Jrt:1~f'°~RM~~,'',.'~. " " .. ·"'. " . ,,..__ Mo~.,;~'y.~~ ~~~·:..., .. W-103< . M--.v1o;o. ~:1;J:;';'~:"f~ '' 71'4: 847-5441 ·.. ; 1 ·r ~~:.. t..a..'.--, ~. • ,. • , i , ln.aoie . o ~D~~~·:t_~':g l :NEWL==Y,,--:;doc:-:-_-;;f,-urn-=--·-=rm-.1 ~~al~i:·:·:,:,.un- r _, ' ,..-... ~ . "5180, Niw-1.'rt. ·a.._ a Ch 5....., -· a.a comm. bath. Costa Mesa. OWNER 675-6259 . t-. ~ 1 BR Townhouse, pool, w/w Student pref, $ 5 5 /mo , , RENTALS , · NEW ·DI.LUX£,.)' BR. ·· .. · • OELrrYi;-du...i... crpt, drps, bltlns, wash-dry, 64~ Will .U of•trade 2 yr old lalMa . , . .,,. · Apts. UftlUriijhtl' , ~~ •. ~dthWhr .. Shf:l ·ct~, 2 '.~.'~untUi:!!:' ~ ~-bl~~~~ Joe~~~ l "°pa°"tio"° .• _$1~40...,...,. S4_ .. _,10,,l9_,. . ....,.= WEIJ.i furn/rm. Prvt/ba, whH~ el~ drye!', xlnt cond. ?t , · · · ' · ~ drps. gafX. $1~.:.~ up. , P8~V•-•. Jl9P.I •. bltns._ ,$.l(JO. Crpt. d,rps, frplc, -patio & 2 BR, crpta, drps, bltns, Klt priV., aep/rdrig. aoee loc..cu dr>Tr or equal val.. 11 'ON 'ffiE DAY ' ', G I · .:Jooo M0-1973 or ~Z'l;#i .. " See.cliff Ma,nor Apbl. 1$25 gar. $26,s. 61""'81135 510%1 children ok. No pets, in. Man • No smoken. OI!:. !~ J14tt Wintff, 1 BR. :~t:d .n.r• ,,. · · , 'BR..~'% 114 nu.pi.ei.,l3l!nfi. ·Placentia •. 54S-2682 ~aa,k ~m,'CdM, •.• ·· · $130/mo. Call 536-1165. 646--0439 ~Ca-'ll:..968-;.....~'1.coo,.....-a-'lt~S-''°c..-- ! Adults. 926 E. Balbo&. .FOR 'RENT f I : W p.1.he r I (t ry~ r. ~ N~ abotit .our diacoqnL . LRG New Apts, 2 Br, 2 Ba, 2 BR duplex, close to bcb 4i: ROOM w/bl!<th. tum, uni. or Have ttmod older hoWle + ·~ 61a--4~ · · 1 2 &. 3 ea A~tl>-thnl· carpeJs,. ·~ DAr:ie I.I.· ,2 *1t,. 2 BA. apt d~e. Hit!' on Marguerile, So. of Hwy. downtwn, cpls, drps & stove share apt. Pool, patio. Fem. J garages + storage shl!:ds [ BAY Vi:EW-2 br,·.~. 1 br, ~ut Orange c:ou,nt.Y .. ~ ~~ _ . _ :~-~u~f ';:'-t?&Y ~1.e~.!.!'-vall Bit~, cet}, drps, RQtCh. no pets, $145 mo. 536-3507. Reas. Eves 546-6130 ln lge. lot, Costa Mesa. 5130, Utilitiei paid. Be:&ch, from ~.50 'to-$188.00 • .:fum $),65-.QCllET. ·4rR:e .4e4u'e. ~ , att Oct. :i. $275. A~ts onJy, $250. 548-7983. DELUXE 3 Br, 2 Ba, bltns, * $15 . per week-up w/kit-I'rd for Yu~a Valley 01 .. vic. ' pier, parklnr7 Adul.la. 303 ~1 or Untµro. A,ik.'.ior)OI11; . br, l~ ba. GE 0k1tc~p., .2 ~ .. ~~MZ~98[lo64m~~~,. Dr., LGE 3-br, 3 ba. Cpts., drps, ff1)1c, pool. $225. No sml chen. $30 per week-up Apta. tett. or com, lot 673-2022 r.I Eda:ewalir. 714/ffi-2111!8 '· m7Mft ·--•"l -ear g8J'8ge ~dultt... ~ l':. · "" · ..-uvu 1 ti rnmd k ~ children or pets. 5.16-2398 MOTEL. 548-9755 2 BDRM, house on 5 scenic .. ' ...... . ' . . .... .,,,. ~-:-·'' . . • BAY""'ONf • pa o. ' ec • ar gar, ! 2 BR. SS mo rtlY"I ;us .E~ , .:-.,· ·' f!!'K blk· from bch, no clop, yr LOVELY master bedroom, litres, 4 mi. from Palm Des. ~ Bay,. Balboa. lnq,. ,.\pt 'C. Cost• Meta • : , . 510I MOD~.2 Br, t±pfs. dr]}s.· .L\»(URY Apts. Sf•rtiM lse.•$290 tno. 54s.-.400:. _ S•nf• AMI 5620 refrig, pool, tenoil 1·2 ert. $25.000. value, dear. ·'73-15.%1. or 54-7711, . J -GE r)dlehell, enc lo sf d $37& • 642: 2202 r• LGE" :t br ck 2 ba, I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 536-8518 Cout Hwy. Beach Trade for beach equity or 2 BR .. Btach~t.. Cfp~; ftnl r•us &DJS.•~ .• araae: •.near ' :.tim. $145 .. '•t • I • (lrps .dsh!Jir nf..;.1e ·~i VILL'A MARSEILLES $75 &; ~<:;<:; tum room, Hntg 1st. trust deed, '192-6160. '. ~ _.1,.,,o;.; ~. .... UftLIAR ... . , Adults 120 E 20lh ' '· NR. ·fl'AY 'Ocean •tt.npc . . ....... . .,..,., drps ~ ... ao1,1.ua ..... ,., • • · ' • · • · • ·· •. • • · ' · , • "" . ' hwy. No peta $235.mo yrly. BRAND NEW Beach. 'Great for Student. 1 20 Atte1, possible mobile ..i...a.a-.., no_ ... ''-. ". . ' "'~ ' '·" AN'""• like a ..,,mP.! 2J:Br's. chahnel al'ff., 1 Br, 2 ·• 310~ •~· 67 ... 5359 aw ... .,... ..,.,_ ADUL1'$ O!'JLY .•~ i YY"'·-., 1 1 crpt. drp1, appl 's, gar. YftY I~~· ~n_. ~ •• u ~·~-----SPACIOUS blk to pier. 6'2.-8520 home park site, Hemet. ExcelJ.nt view, ~ 2 .'= 3 BR •. AVa,i't. P;ivafe. pa. ~~it. O~~tb-~. $225. ~127' 1 1 B~. Crpta, drps. stov~, ./ FURNISHED room for Want R-2 to R-4 lot vie. Or. l Bdrm. util ,pa.id, fill UCI, pool -:,n;Jdt¥, Jau~ry fac. · . · , ; ;* 1t-WE&TCUFF ~ 2 Br I 'ii 1'!f.ri&" $150. 1st t\ last .mo s 1 & Ju'::'i.i~1~· rent, Costa Mesa. &nge County. Pyramid ~ pets. $160•m0. 67~ (Nr . Orarige Co. Al)tlqrt; "11-N:R. NE}t'. 2 Br, l ~ . Ba. °.:sA Townhse erPts -drp , , ;+ S35 dep. 600 Marigold, F & Unfu 546-1807 changon. 678-8800 EARLY 2 B~; 2 • 8"~ tin at 17th St;: nr. '.-fi!p~clilf) .... cR!J4rJI, ~st;Lif®~Whf, rar .' ·• blt~s .. Adult!! ~y. ~ pei:'. ,_54= .. ~2"9"'"'.==~=== Dllb~~!':... eokll' coo':lin..t. NICELY furn room i\:ir 3000 Altts Boxelder Coun- , lower duplex.· ·s:DO. ;'Fam ·: · , , ·~ W. Wil~n. 642-1~ . ~'200.'. !?48-'1fl¥·-· . '. . 1$2so 'I?UPµ=x. S BR/2 B~. ad ;;;;;;.,.. • plush &hq elderly lady in priv home / I)', Utah, frazing liind $75 prtf. 321 Alvarado'P~ce.... 1141 Tustin, Col!IJ M~ LRrl 2 BR. un!. &pill .. ~. * * DUPLEX 3 Br. 2 1'a, CID, patio. No chl~NO carpet • cboice ol. J color meals & laundry. 56-l285 per acre. Trade for Orange. BR. Furn apt;. U,til , paid. Mer. Mn. ~ ~ bl~ No pe~:. ?~ M,iskiqn. orpts, ~. bllns. "'250/mo .. Pets A&nt: 6T:>-4930. or mcbl!:mes • 2 . .,.tbs • stall COILEGE .or woriri.ng &irl. Co. property. Submit: Wally $12;)mo•Adults.No.pet~310 ; ·. . • . St>~. ., yr·Jeue.642--0603 615-4847 shoWeJ'I • mfm::nd ward-Bal.lal.Kit &TVnn,tde.I M·~"""-:,.y~m-O--ll-6'-.~~~.,- E.1BaJbda Blvd. BaJ~ .. 1, Lik• Lfving' i'il' YOvr ~ fl~ UT~ pd,1.2·~~·.1:~ BA. 3. BR •. 2 BA:. Unfutn 'Ctpt.s, ilB~ER 3 BR 2 BA-3 ~ults, robe doa1'JI • ind.Ired Jjgbt. S70 mo & up. 6'1S-3613 10 or 20 acres nr big lake&; YEARLY reDt8is on the. ~·r~ OWN ·H~, :, .• ··~ l :1 pr1 .patio. ~ Jttgr .,,:'.f!9 · ilrpa; ~lk to ocean.· Yi!ai'Iy No pe.ts $300. or funushed 1nr la kitebl!:n • bred:fut •ru=RN..-, "'Pn"°'·v'"e"n°'t.'°"W"in°'t-.,-or ri9er. Fishing, hunting le 11 2 BR's. Actvlta oriy. ~ ,Why J>.!Y .$1:15. ~,.an .aptt • CabriUo, 548-8i03,. 846-RIO . $275. 613-8088. . · ~235.5 Ol' 67~. . bar • huae private fenoed yearly, Cloee to beach. U2 camping, Btwn Lovelock &: "E. Bllbba. Gt3--681D· . , . . ·when w,e, C¥o ~t )VU one DELUXE new 2 br ..Ir. 3 tir 2 BR, Unt 1 bJk-to bear;:h! BA~l.OR, patio. $lfAl incl. patio • plush tandlcapinc • 34th St. NB 671-24?3 eves Wlne.mueca. Nev, Nr hwy 40 for $140. 2 B~i-~w~ ttc .. ~pt.· Gall .~5426, ~ 'SISO/m; Yearly. l..ease. No utils. 514 Fernleal., brickBar-8-Q'•·lupbeat. VERY nice room fo-r leSO. Trade forcfli-,camper, .:;:::::;;;;...,;.;;.,;"'--~..:"~=-' crpt/drp •. ~L"l'alioli,. ·•pa.e 'Woodland A , C.M. ·~tl 673-4281 ~ ~2..6i66; £75-fiM4 td poola A lanai. employed man. OOl!le in. Ilse w/Pool or ! S.14J..2333 NEARLY NEW ! Br,''t ~Ba. gmis. 2 Poq~11!-,1'~ults-onlt.' 'BR. Crpts, 'dtpS, 'dsh'i'br, 3 BR/2 B Ii . BR .. 2~ BA. Studfb apt. 3101 So. Bristol St. Colta Mesa. CaU 642-79:1) 11 Acre11 zoned M·l with l'I!· · I ',. • ·;., Zl83 FountaHi•~·E:·(Har. $120/mo. 724 $halltJyu' Qr. , A: !tins & D/\V. Clea~!, 714 Goldenrod, °'Ml.N.atSo.O>vt PJazaJ teue11 fi.om $331M 1st ID. .U eltc/kih: frp ,C, ,pat!.,,,, bor tuhf~{'IHf'Wil~tn1'.' r'nil "-""'-Mf3 Chldm OK! 370i'.W. Balboa 13751....,.. VI' Jra "'~"7573 S•nt• Ana . BBQ. AlllO ~ Br .. 3 Ba, ·~ · . . · · '. ' ' ......., · Y"""'Y'1 .Bh YRLY' $195 548-0213. '""· J ' -. • .n.r · Motels, Tr•lltr l'r $85M eq for big boat. :t Sept.June fi38.-M70, ~ 2 BR, 1 . ~~~. 1"8'.le.:,story LRG 2 Br, crpts,<lfl)S, bltns, . . 2 BR, No or Hwy, Frplc, PHONE: "7-8200 Courts 5"7 residential inrome or ? Ed garden uMt ' crpts, l ·2 ch~~ ok. Nr ~s Ir ~ 1rg t Br. 2 Ba, Cl~. freshly pe.Jnted, Avail now, Riddle Inc .• 646-8811 ~ ..... _ai_..... •~•..a.'. ....0 dri>S.o disl\ ... ~r f>alio, 51.nnn, $145. 9$2-1M5 01tns, ."nc gar, prv patio. $220. 675-3299 .16 A-• G-•ts P••·. ~. J~. nun''"ll"-• u. Ul · · · · ·i • ·' 1 ' '"'HI!'. . • • • Adlts, no pels. $175 5't&-S108 L Bt h 5705 ""'" ,_. .._. vu: '· beam ttiling-•. trpla,. iep N~WLt'.,DEC ~· 2 BR w/ · . . 3 BR, Apt. Crpts & drape!!. agun• •c House & ham, suitable sub-,. A·ca•· g~rage. Adu!!s-,,nct pl?IJJ. '$110 garage. $120/mo. Wtr paid .. 3 BR. Close lo beach. View & Range & refrig $115 mo. 1 Bdrm, !iv rm, bath & kitch· OPENING SOON div. $3SM. Eq, $23M. Trade Granada Hill: 1 sty view home, 2800 sq ft, like new, $57,750 val. 4 Br. 3 Ba, fam nn. For :;MLR HME NB. l r Cdt.1'. OWJ:JR Ofc 6tM5T1 V ew state S Br, 5000 sq, ft. FDR. f&m.-rm. Dke new. Trd fl0,000 eq 'for Res .. lolll, Smlr Re1, CdM HI. 645--0303 Jo"orest E, Olson Inc realtors '&I CAi;> CONV. Full power, aJI exttas. XI.NT cond. $975 val, For later Coupe. Aho, beaut. st. buggy, aamt val. 491).2500 eves. 12 Units, Palm Springs: 6 yrs. old. Exchange for du· ple.x or home, beach area. Rich Irwin, }'iyramid Ex- changors. 6'ffi.6060 ~ DelightfUJ triplex, xlnt in- come beaut oond. Adu.Lt oc- cupied. Will trade 1or 3 br home to $30,000. Mr. H8lTis 545-8424: So. ~t Rltrs. 1969 Dodge Monaco sta. wagon, M,000 mi, T.O.P, or refinance. Will take older car, chain saw or ! for our ,qulty, 962-8208 Two (2) 1st claiis Airline Tickets to Anywhere 1n The World & Retur"· Value $1000 ea, Trade FOR car, condo, TD's, trlr, etc, 6'f5..2260 :!restline mountain home S550 equity, $10,000 balance, far machine shop equip. ment, press brake or ! ;<S-123> Have 10 dlxe. apt, units in Downey: equily ,$55.~. .Vant income, Laguna Beach >r Newport, Lee Pereyda, Realtor 546-1698, 494-5488, r, ON IE . 2650 Elde.n. ~~ ·or l 5n"8' Orange Ave. 63&412o sundeck, Yearly orlly. W 1213) ~7-365.S , I rr· Adu! '•r •-. Cal•'f. u--· •-yoolds ' . • 549-0678 Mgr·Vni1 P. · : 34th.St fi7S...J4T3 eves en w stove & re i.g, ts .u .xi ....... ,. ....., ---llil-_ _ . , ' ' 2 BR/1% BA TOWNHOUSE only, No pets, $160. >36-1366, 536-3TI7. .-Siltli! 1Pb l'l"'rl!t5•-NEAR --1~~1-;BA.--li:i'J'!' .. ifiw.,-tilf'l"i paO , ' , B•lbN 5300 MARSHALL & ROPP Z Br. Guest hse, potential ~ommereial. Sunland Ta.I hunga health area. $Ht,<XKI )Q. Want land l'.lr mobile hln. >46-7234 or 213: 353-4600, Will trade 16', 50 hp boat w/trailer, etc, for good soJ.. id pool table. , Call 84&-3177 or M6-5207, I • 1 BR~: -Shag crpt!, . <ira.P8 &: :i: ' ~"'MS-6384 . . JI • B ' ' -52·40 ' ~' ,, . ' 211 Oce La Bea h RESERVE A $10Cll SLATE POOL TABLE ~ e 2: BR •flie -~. Priv,.,., 7'. Jlfjv, ~ · , •c.,. IJ"f .i • • . • 9CEANFRNT dUpl.e.ic !_Br. an.f9.l..l~ c ftg\ll&tion siu:, Uke new Cupe · -· ,.,...., ¥. .wloofmn):So.2BR..N..,·PA!~l,pi>1',drp<, · 1o ..... ._hpa .... $250yr. SPACE NOW! WILLTRAOEFOR heof>id ' --, Ooast _Plaoa. J115/.,o , blt~_RJO, no ,pot>.· !1'0.. va:w,. 1 BR/"..,,Wdepa .lY . .673'5729 . \'z BLK TO BEACHI EqlllcylnBoet. reit ro.m.ocea.n ftwl 56-1636. : '~. ·-·' •' 1 ·~i.455. ., '" ~· ~ .. ' . bltlns,:.poot On Irvine Ave: • · ·. From $100. New 1 • 2 Br. &'ffi.2151 • 646-3434 ask for Tony, ,_~ ~ '; VILLA .~$~:APT~ .. ./. 1 ~.All ~~.SJ~. ·$1.70/mo ~· , ·" Lieto _'•te ' ·· . 5351 POOL. ·2175 s. Cout Hwy. • A priYat•, w•ll •d WbatdoJOU U.vetolrade t SecUri~~·· '" 2 BR, PrW\.p9tleJ'Uhl1MJ0l Adults, \.illf~~ .!';1 ~.eo1 LRG. BAYVIEW. 3-BR, 1 499-3929or497-1630 n:tobil.hom.•com-Lilt It her9-ln ~ WAIKIKI, HAWAil. Beaut. view apt., oompl. furn. many extru. $19,000 eq. J'rade for N.B, or Laguna Bch. prop. ReaJtor 646--0732 • FURN; allci, ~YftlL · . , 2 car . encl'4.~~i'.','Cb!i~~ .~vocado. 54&'... .m" .. -; &ett:·Bluff . 5~2 BA . Cpts, drps. Adults. Yfly OCEAN VIEW • Lri 1 BR rnunity I 0 minuf•• County'• 1aqe1t read tnd-HUNTINGfQN ' welcome., no .'~t.;.rplee.se! l BR, 2 Ba. l>OOi.. lrg · lease.:642--0807, 6~. apls. Furn ot unfurn. Crpta, from Pal!" Springs. llW pOlt-aM mike• ctuL . ·c"IFIC. . : . $165 mO.' 119 w:·wuwn. cloaets. ~ts. nct.pet3. Util . drps, bit-ins, patios. walking • Accommod•t•• 24' PA , , . ""'~ . 646-1251. -, : .. .' • ·pd~ 1884 MOIW'OYia.•54&-0aJfi. NEWP~R-T BEA¢H .. BalbN lsl•nd 5355 dJstance to town. 100 Ctlff x60' co.ch•• . m .pcF..,\)f AVE, •. 111 · QUIET ADQL1•. ·~G lf "LRG 2 &: 3 'BR; 2 B&Ulls. . . · 'Dr., Laguna Bch. 494-5498 * 18 hol• golf coun• "'') ~ H81. . • , , 1 • 2 Bft ' . ..t.~::;;;,,;;:if"' .... 'tne(, "'"'4-J~·. 'btt·1N .• --0 .....-.. , -Yr,ll~0~~MNid• AptL UPPER 2 BR, de n• SPACIOUS l BR in m•iot area & d · • , ..... _. . .....:cs. • nw. ,.....,,..,..,..,"' """ ~·0~..,. 1:1"11 r• ... bednxrrns ..nHo crpl/drpg frplc.. gar, .. --r1Y1n9 range OIL. open 10 ~ "'',......,-pool, beaut Jr)!;lecPd; ~ ~ .end &{U'. ~M ... •"ll'::l! .... ' r.":'.bal.· '--· . .__ ~1 •t" <fi& ... ...,,,1 S260 yrly inclds South Laguna, 1 blk 9th St. • L•vish clubhoui• •. t . ,.-~-M·~-""-"~·"' $170mo ind&u .... a":.;dults~ ... .,.,. 'de 2 l'{ 11L ...,. ' eenietf ariuve & l1'i."OW • .--. • ·beach. $165 Inc utilities. L·11 d 1 --~ ,,,. • """" """=""' s1 • · ~-T• G · r· uU 675-6017 DI iar 1, oung•, · 'W!LlJAM'. WAI;.TEM·CO, only, no pej&: ' .~-.';," ·. 'Cr,its. ~ blths:< retfir.,' ra~~tas !,Ying & ~iet SUI" . , _:__ Weekend only 4!J9..lll5, show•n , l•urHiry I ff:l""'ll!!!!!"'"'!"..,.;;..~~~· !241 Avocadrll ,SL., . Q6-09'79 poel, N&.-pe.ts. it6-o661a . -, round~..: <for ~mily ~th Huniinaton 8-eh 5400 sforag• 2 . :ea.· Poot. ' Ad U1 ts . ~ . ·~,' BDRM .. *. ~.e'.a m 2 BR 'lpt-bl.tm,. crptS, •dr)i!I. ~~~h r;-~l~;::ia ~l .. -~ . .. . •· -Rent•ls W•ntec:I 5990 • Giant swimming pool ~,·:i~ Utilca~~C.,~ 'ceilings, "'1'f4.·1l>ft,_,~, ('11., Ol!ah'. · Inquire '1552~'A .wet .bar &: .built·in kite~ GUND OPENING • .T.nnis l _.., rec features. lDil. ,,...u • Con11.nfler, ~· · ' . 1· s'ullleboerd 1 84U12l no pet Call now &t6407l · ~ Jf· I? mnce.'l. " s. . ' . ' • LGE 2 BR 'TUD!O l ", ' ·111-os WAY' . ~~~:-m1 321 7th $tree' H B * B I & I ·1 1 BR. i'dri&. · titrill, .. crpts. * 387 W. Bv. ,Street.• BA .APT . t-. · " .-.. :-iu "!' ~~ SAT & suN"':J2.5 · RENTAL FINDERS 0 • ra1 •r stor•g• -· J>OO!, ....,. boaoh. l!lll HARBOR G."EE"S ·*637·2943• NEW be ·1 1 FrH To Londlords pe.rmot,ili:lults,nopets. l' fW PRiV4TEViEW' ,aµtiuJ · .tlBR. .... S.011'1 ~wj.rxi& Realty·.341-3511 GARDEN a.~~m·:APTS, SPACIOUS.2.& 3 BR. Crp!IS, 2 ttdfms., 2 lj&ths; CiU'l?eltd ~ts. Fr'p\e'11, iundecks. bit. - 1 BR· Medallion O>ndo. A,ll Bacb.1, 2,.'3·mt·:.. ~:Sl,la; Qrys. Cpl wit or 2. child. draped, bit.Ins, dishwdr. s, carpets, drapes, garq:. bttn1', refrig, ·enel ·,patio. 2700 ~~·W-ay0 -€.M. Qi'{. 646--0627, ~il.2-6344. ' Upiitairs $235 . Month Min. es. Sho!'t walk to beach, poqi' q_uiet. $130. 615-5034 . 54&-0370 . ~' · ·.:. .' .' M ·-• _ • • • • 1 year J~ase., . ' . ' LINDBORG·CO. 536-2579 l AT ;~CH ) &, .2 .BR's.~ 8 2 Btt. u1:il .. ~1$5 .. ~· $;.,Uni. NeWP-Cirt BNch . '. 5200 . , •7U05t 0 SPACIOUS~ sparlcling new • I 1· bH.ut. bldgw. POOis. 220 12th· Sll:l. CJIP.ts1: ~ .. ~tns. . ~ -· . crpts, arps, bltns, gar , r'· st or 2l91Sth SI, KB; ' POOL N\l ch~~ren~ ,r», ~ts. 2 A: 3 BR: $170 up., Crpl«.·. -..... w/aulo df, ehcl Patio or ~1 ·· . 325:J. ,,E, l1fh ~''· C.M: dt'pat · bltm,.;· watth ·& dry , · balcony, Nr beach. 2 br, 2 I . BACH:£L0R., Ulil. P~id. 54g:.:.7738 ' . . • ·,.~· 'pa·tio~-No HS& 2 br ·2~ b&, blt111 be. frplc, it75: 2 br. 2 b&, • *NEAR' OCEAN! * . ,•P,&t:!• gar":t'":. • · · -•1 . ·" ~ ' frplc, ·~180. 3 br studio;· 2% : LIND80RG\C:0.5364m• DEL~ ~S bt, 2 .ba: pets, r sm. ·dlKc;lrel:i ek. frpl~, patip, end, gar, '1:52, ba ~ $2'5 0,0 ~,1 • . d,...,., wfw •.Cf1>(&; Jshwiitir, ~. 4217 Dana· Rd. • ·ArnJKOS Wa,y4 6'j5-5033 • uine · .,.,.,.......,. • , ·...,. · 642-0393 or 642·E5 ) I I--• Beech -410$' patio, ~,\ltlf. ·?fi''t:lemtn. 1~, -.--. : tary ~s tml ootkge; 3 Newport luc:h 5200Ne wport"8Hc·-h-·5100 NEAR Huntington Harbour ' · " · il .......i .. .,_:-.... • New Triplexes. Quiet area. I" KJ'I'O{EN a'pa'H.men(&,eva • """''" ~ ..... , Weekly, monthly·ra~~· Heat· ·LRG 2 Bft Trlpl~,. ,.cr,,t1, ~·a~:~.~~·::: ~h?i~i eel p:iol, tropic~ g&J'lkn, drps, garqe, · ·pa·t.lo. " NOelf-tobead!. 494"52!;14 $14 5 /alao 'flP'"-·.~$1J5. • 1 ~:: (213) 592.2623 DAILY PILOT reporter ar'<I . wife want to rent or least small furnished or unfutn. i.~hed house in Laguna Can- yon or other O.C. canyon area by December. 546-6380 days, 53&~ eves, FA.iVIlLY ol 4 needs lge 2 BR or 3 BR hse, duplex or apt, unfum, Yrly, NB, Cd.i'\!, CM area. Children aees 11 &: 13, Rers furn. Aft 6 pm: :ml !)14-3328 RESERVE NOW PALM SPRINGS MOBILE COON.TRY CLUB • 36200 D•te P•lm Dr., C•thtodr•I City, C•. C•ll Lind• V•lentic 714/321-6515 A member of the · U.S. FinanciaJ Group * * REAL ESTATE Gener•t · * 6000 * * .. * REAL ESTATE Gener•I 6 UNITS Eutslde CMta Office Rent•I Mesa •. 2 Br, ea. Nice pool.. Good rentil area. Pyramid Exchangon, 675-8800 Bsnlne11 Ront•I -SUPER-PELUXE QUALITY 1,2.J room, up to 3,000 sq. ft. office 1uite1. Im.med. oc. cupancy, Orange C n t y, HARBOR BL VD front. 19x3i' Airport Irvine Comm.ere. w/restroom. 7ll0 Harbor Complex, adj. Airporter Blvd, CM i200 mo. year'11 Hotel & Restaurant, banks, Jeue. ~. San Diego & N'Pt. Fwys, CAFE for leut or rent UNCROWDED PARKING Downtown Costa Mesa, 1824 LOWEST RATES Newport Blvd. Owner/mgr. 2172 DuPont Dr., ~~..,:.,1200""".:Sq"'-.:, ... , -0~u~·--a1~ Rm. 8, Newport Beach. -· · let?, 50 83J.3223 Courtesy to Brokers 600 sq. ft, store. $90 & $150. CM 64£..2130. CORONA DEL MAR· 5 'Rm ========= suite, Storage & parking. Office Rent•I 6070 1080 sq ft. Ground floor. 2 ---------1 Ba. Pb, 675--5851 MEDICAL· DENTAL Suites avail, Best location. Xlnt p8ndng, 111odern facil· ltie11, Immedl•tely available. •DELUXE air-<:ond offjce In Computer Center BI d g , Crpbl, drapes, Up to 3600 sq. ft. 646-1425 or 546-6080. l BR. P.XtlY .~ultS criy. 548-l8G7. ·• '' .. No pm. Neaf, ~ch A LRG Airyl ·BR~ •tw'·crpt'g. •lltl'ftl, 544 Glefln!yre Apt 1 drps, atove, . utlJ, ;1'J!l • .,, new ELUXE ke 1 br, ocea,ri' paiot. Adlfs, nD< pets . vw., tundk. ber. 111etto. $165. $135/mo. fM6.8373 7 FRESil·AIR Walk l blkl lo ,Beach! BeMlt~ b ig 2 br. apts. w/w crpts, drps, · blhlll except tt,[rig, $1;;<> • '$1.!Ki. l child ok. No sn.gl1/pets. SJ&-11ll. ELDERLY a:e11tleman desires nn/bOe.td. in simple Prvt borM or apt., Reas. Can furnish rm-bedding etc. Gel. Reference. No Problems. Ph: t'!ves 646-8645 WORKING 11Ude"t needs clean apt. in Nwpt Sch BAYSHORE CENTER ""*i°'*·'"""' _w .. "EE=RL=Y'""lla""'t.,-. "'SEA=· I IOl Dover Dr., N'pt Beach LARK MOTEL. 1:?0 1 &-••iO 0 700 SQ. FT. Prime Office space. Good N.B, location $2'25 mo. 646-3434, 675--2151 r i1~1ae.;:u;;111;·:"";;·::':,..::1='"=·=·=:'":, I• CLEAN 2 'l!'R; '.l~ .BA STUOIG. ·O'pts •.. ,d r p •. ~, POOL. World.or ·~ou·ple ~~~~;:;;::;;:~';;; pref'd •. $145lRJG. 646-0f96. 0 . p lf~ p'!.i.;:; 1 ·BR. uni. $B()Jr9o .. 'POOi. \lll!W ~ :oi 2. BR apt'. Elec • , w~, pd:. Adl~ nq, Pvt 'n1 . • ' ,. t.M pets. 111eaa , MIV'OI\. t 24f ~ o 3'··1~ pe · · Wilson Ave CM. MIJ..1«15l S30D/mo. llw:Jwmg Sllf·Sun.· • · . 34375 t>arw. scntnd. nr' LGE 2 br, l':l be, pvt, patio. Marn ·496-3441 Xlnt location, • ~ Pon. · • .:... ....., derosa. No pets.. ' t 'SI. GLE., heRu::u ' ' y. tM!-0962 ' ' .. """ ..... bt:b, '35. . . . ~ t.0 a0n Col.It * DEWXE :J,.' 1 ~'1· BR. H ~~ Pt ' • ' Gardeo Apa. ;BJ ...... ,.nv. "'·· ·~ : • •• . , petlo, lt'll\'d' ~ 'frP.lc. It NTAL • 1 Adu!,.. IH5 mo. 516-ql63. Ajllo.·~fllt4'~' I BEAUT \§°" 2 'aR · ..... • - ' ..... 111\rW •• "\"Pt, 111.' y . ::;~ .. ~~~~;;:I ...... XJn( El<•<!oi'b: 100, • Atllll, 6<2-<9M°31e1':_.,. Stt -2 BR ,CptlJ, ~~._~, Stow, ' t..c<I yerd. • Gar, Matott adUJ. .l ,~hlld, m • ptl.I. ~-6Q..W:l ' • -. 'BEDROOM. l!I .. u. $160 .... month. """ "~"t rte.ltor 541--me. , 1 IMMAC l .. 2 bi, 2'\;; bltns. .,..._ drpa.c'~. J\llllltl, no PtlL.Jll5.•~·-,;. fl!'9~~1r'JLARGE\ t ·i8R1 'tar9et , drapes. Patio. No-pm~J12). 548--ai& •fl • AVAlL &1... 1. l.e.tp· l Br. u SJ75. Nr. • Cout ......_ crpts. -~· • bltra.'' pr. µI 51)..Jm °' 5CM92J Adlt., no pett. $U5; M-1i62 . . ., : . High on • bluff ·o~e~O.~i ng "tile water. 7 ' '-P.~ol•, 7 ten ~ls co~rts, tJS0,000 healt~ · ..;lub a~d ·S~. Bochelon; 1 ·or 2 bedrooms.' Aho 2-story to-;_.n housei with.2 or 3 'bed. homs. 'Ei4C!tlc :kitchens. priv1.. bolcony' or p•tio. From $175. to $450. Subt,r- fa~e1n 'P.~1r\:inrj1' el•v•tors;-optio~al .maid ' . . service, convenience shoppin9. Set 7 :~•utif~,f!!OCfi!-,.,p1rtmenls, 'Open 9· •.m. 'to 6 p.;;,. 'd•ilY· Other time'. by.,oppoint- fll,••!.. ~.ocelod at · JibnbOr.. · end S10, ~oiqui'n 'H\lk• R .. ds, In Newport, just n,o r,t ~ of, ~llhioe Island. l'fio;,. (7l4) 6ll4-1 900 Irle.sing inlonn•tion.· ·,··· ... . ... ... ~ ·Pmi 'New ort , •+t.\ '' .P. I •' ,, . . ·-tiP artm•nts • ... -···-· . -~ ... ---·--~-- Newport Slvil, Coata Mesa. It t...u ..... G_, Homn 59'1 • 2 BLKS from ~11,ch. New CdM, Laguna area. Around 2 & 3 BR a.pis. Crpts, drpl, $110 mo. yrly. ( 213) PRIV A semi-priv rooms in patio, garage. ~3132 388-7981. afler S PM, CoUeet lic'd gilest home for am- bulstory senior citizens. Lge Fountaiil V•fley 5410 Fount•in V•lioy 5410 ,..m • patio. eood food , liiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiii ~nraJ atmo8phel'l', CM :lounlaiM 1 11 s w--1 Bodll AdaH Llvln& . .. flll'llbhotl & Ualimdolletl area. A vd by Oct 1st ......,,, PRIV rm for ambulatory . lady in lkd a:uesl borne, Costa MHL Good food efrwd family style. ~ ELDERLY Gue.ts, ocean vaitw, loftly home i n te.pna. Beach. 497j686. 5"' e GARAGE $25 mo, 19th A Santa Ana. Coata Mesa. ...... 289. • • SI"ORAGE GARAGES $25/mo. 6f2.639l untU 5 pm . GARAGI! $25 MO. Ff!mleaf, CdM. m,.2919 REAL ESTATE Gonor•I - -· .... DESK SPACE lO& No. El C•mino R•a l S•n Cl•m•nf• ~ CORONA DEL MAR Ground Ur«luxe priv of· fi-ce:s. PriV batht. Prkg $1%1fmo. Uttl pd. Abo 5 nn Suite; 2 ba. Owner 673-6751 DESK SPACE 222 Forest A.vonuo Laguna llooch -Prestige Ofc SUlte Avail. 2:K3 WestcliU Dr, NB. 560 911 lt. Ne.v.'ly crpled, J>lln- elf'cf Ir: painted. $290 mo. Mgr. &15-2831. FOR LEASE i..,. modern • ocean Yil!:w Oflices • Shops. IUltable.-prof. or busineu. 1999 S. CnUt Hwy, LqUna Bch. 494--94n. LUXURY New oUkft, prime 8e11.ch Blvd.. air, cpts, drt.pa., etc. 2-4 or S rm. DWNTWN HNTG. BCH Remodeled offi~. 1 'blk ro ocean. Lindborg: Co. 5.1&.2.m NEWPORT otflcn crpt A: drps, ocean view, from S75. ,. Call owner ail 6, 6154644. OFFICE, Corona de.I ll1ar - crpts, drps, panelinr . Outside entry. 54>3868. 2 F'URNISHEO office truitn. 250 sq. ft. $125/mo, Coast Hwy, Nwpt Bch. 645-2182 lndustrl•I Property COMMERCIAL STORE FOR LEASE TOOO sq, ft. + 1000 ICI. ft, loll. Le!a than 15c {ll!:r ,.q , ft.. Art • joining 4000 sq, ft. also 11.v-.11. •ble. 17th S!rett and New • pon area. c.II Gl!orge Ta. her • Investment Dept. • 546-2.116. O THE Rf.AL ""'-F:STATr:RS IUltes. (213) 394-0015 call N. w. Corner or 16th I ts UNITS: Xlllt Covina loc. collttt. Porucma • ..i'\t::l, 1..4 Q.x...L4 ti • F/P $368.m, lnc. $$Sm, dn • NEWPORT Rt1du«d S12,SOO for quick $68m Ow/e blll, Prin. Only! Bt:ach·mod~rn/dlx oUlces. Mll'. $8000 °""·n. Lt-on Coco • Bkr. ~7..&334 Eve•· Atr/oond. Hid, Prfv. ba. Vibert R1tr. ~8-0588 ar --------------~~· -~-=------·_,... __ w_._c.._,._H_.,,..:.....· __ m.<.\1< I - I •'AZ I £1£ a s 0 S 0 0 I -.... _. . . ..... • • ,.., SIRVICI DIRECTORY SEllVICI DllllCTOllY llllVICI DIUCTOIY - ·-DAI.LY PILo'T ~ F"rld•y, Stpttmbtr 25, 1970 ~)RreE~ALr"i'IS~Y.~A~TEE-~lliANiiiii~jliliiiiift::'"""lfAJii~NOUNCIMINTS. o-rol .... NOTn:ES ..... •NOTICIS ConwnorcNI Siii.ViCi DIUCTOIY -·-llo!!_yllttlng WI C.-, C-•le -............ Mii MAID SlllYICI t1t1 -Found"-M·»-1.,:';;,_...:;;;;:;:;:;;:;:;;:;-;.; l·o-,-ILD--c ... ----CONCBETE. All ...... no. AL'S OAJlllENINa . LOCAL Qlm.w ... To eou , :aAlllfl• INDIX • STOJU!,: Bide 1ar sa1 MALE Slame-si cal mtdlwn I~ wbo ha to ~:a::,~ ~·L s.w.. bnaldl:w. baul-... Gudisnln& •--n .... ~-• Prlv, hcmel. Od I llfJ..69S W. 1Jtb St. Bt.~ :,i =-• t&il.,C.M. / / want to ~w ~lt childft:n uni, a Skipkwctinc. • ICIUbc ~-cd -..ma nf'u •·wry nu. rtta! Towenmrmr. 5tl-1'168agt! .._H-aa'f'I just a,l\VWhttt. Walkins "Q\l&lib' • ..-8ob aen.,Nwpart.Obf.C:O.. _·w.="'UM=·----- SETTER PQPlW -tl~ La r j distanet ., Pomona le MORE Conctets patio ea ..... Dewer -. c • S· MAIDS AVAJL. - FOR LUSE: ·Next to HIUl-gun.a Thurldai--. WUaon IChooll, 64&-3662 Jal money. Arti1tic .ettta:w. Wtltditt, mediabtt,. Re t9re net a. ~~~·~sq.ft • 494-1824 n ,/ I L";:.,callMax at........r .. JAPAN.ESE Gardener, ...... ..,.... HOUllS POil SALm • mt~irJAn, s 1 AME s E cat found V-'irlhdag C:~ ~iu~.~·;: ~. wortc ol. all ldnd1. =:~ .. c;e~ ~: P•'---a iiaA"::::.::::::::::::;l:pi ,.J:"...r lncluetrNI R•t•I '"° F.utl?luU area. ye.nt, Nr McNall)' Jehl. Will f36.0314 IQ..m9 ......... "941 ..• ::..·:;;:;:::·:: .,...::'r."n•"''"'"' 644-0805 transport. Mrt, -Fudae , ... .,.,.......... QIC .............. t .rust.11 ,,..,, ;Jj 548-383.f DECORATIVE CON AL'S t,anct~at. Tr•e 0: ............ m a1nai. .......... . , N: ~··41:::ie~ !,l; ~~d~n:.. mi:1~a~f~ _ ~ ,,.._ RELIABLE High aChool aUi DRIVES : WALKS· PATIO nmovaL Yard·' rel'ftOl)eliJll, ~SF3.rpole~' .:::i~sl, ~.:::::::::· 1Jlfa..-Y~iiiTY''.' •• : •• B··~-~ L Garti Id,,., • ...,... ~ .. t b b 1·t ti al CALL DON 60-U14 Truh baullnr Jot clftnup. , ........... c.MMlltCtAC J.!.~·· ......... . lease. &ulliva.n, SCJ..2176 ""'-.. ..-· e .....,..,~ wan a • ya na • • . Re Ir IJlmkkn turllll ~evtr)'thiq' .reuon&b·IY ... t................ 1...u1t11AL llDIT&L .. , •••• FOUND Id. . h GJ ternoom: & evenlnaa. * CONCP.E'l'E wc:ft: .-Hoa. pa • , • .......... Md. J'or 1rff estitD&te .............. , .... ;:••'""" ......................... . FOR lse • 5300 sq. ft. prime a .ie:s wnst watc ti N rt H J-ts I d HONORATO II Sntl• .... -.-.,.... • ............... · UlfCMtll ...••... -... -... -.. • warehae apaCHll/patt. viclrilty ofCdM. • ewpo e... a r ea. drvwayl, etc. L cenue ' ·~·~ ~. '"' ..... ..--. ... ·············-cn1w•.....a ........... .. tnaer 642-0022. Phillilll Cemeat Ml-'3IO lawn 1ertve~ For tNe eet. 0 ,.,-.... • ....... ..,. "'.,.' ................... . Irvine Ind, Mr. Bullard 644-2038 · ~ 1..:c:..::;::::.... ______ c:::::::::;:::::;·::::,;:=:::;I Call 147--3620, 531-eS 1ft • FAUw 30 day qieclal! lmtr. '*sv• ........... utca aulUIM• .......... .. c ..-llM1 w1u. babylit tor inrants 1r. --• ..._.__ ... 1 ... 1-~.., -•• ............................ , ...... m ........ . .,.............~ FO"'ND bKc Ir. white Dahna-In ~-v· Contr----PM ..,,...,,.. -·-· .., • ...., • tACk ·u,. ........ _, ... , ...... = iMtAMel co. Pfff"HTY ... . . 7'~==-==-=I Grandmother Ma~. toddlers 1D,)' ,_,,.,, ic: -·-· ·~· ...... Lic'd • ··--~ ........ -........ DUT .. ST.&'8 """i •····•• Mol SPACE w/otfice1, lge tianpupinKMartShoppillg ·~ y · ·-~· n... GEN c 1· T -·~ •-~ ... . . Be·-·· Dick•-N' ky Harbor & ic"'""-... ~ ot , aanup-l'et 6 C&l1 ...._....._ f43.0ll9 .OUNfAUUUaHlll ...... ,· rear door. 1250' • 2600'. 12i'.I Center. 642--2882 '"'""• • IC · nlle, 5t8-n2l * THE REMOOELERS * Sprinkler Serv. Rototill, ..,_... ' I.._ ftl:UC'I ............ lMI IV&%'11m•&.t.m ....... .. • -"St, C.M. 64&<1681 1·rou"Oiiii:iNiio-;Be;;;;;au;;t..,Siam<h·;;;;J,~;;>-ki;;;.,: I~-!!!-~!!!-'!:-~-!!!-~!!!-'!:-~-!!!-~!!!-'!:-~ ......... -llltJl' ........ N-· la"--~"-9 -*-··111.u•-111. * i::"::: ....... ~! ................ !-.. u•'•" ........... . ....,._. 11 • • ~~ • Sin& idowed o· reed CJULD Care I: ala 3 "" ..... ...,....,, .. ,.. ~ r-.-.r ,,__ : --......... " ................... . en. Vic. Baltioa Island. le*· W • l\'O •-up Ne·-mPo'monaage •. Kitchens, 1Cara1e11 1 6t6-6148. RMftP'" Alrttaity .. ",''::.:.·""""'"··-· •. ,.,. t. a.~ ................ ... Lt 1100 LIFE • · .... .. carporta c mp • • .. ,.,,.......... •• , ....... _...._ --•-... -................. IUSINISS ~ o s 675-5794 :.~ N~ own tramp. ~iractan IG-.1860 ~~. ;;'°i.:: ~i;::. . = ~-~~:::~~:::5 flNANCt:L 11 , • WANTED-LOTS Lost '401 -v Free st. SU-5924 I: £xWriGr n.e limlikll. """~ .......... ,. ... _ ...... fWniu .. bu.lid ' Llc'd Day care, 1' am to 5:30 _, .. 11 e r ea LW llU . WI ltJSnm....,... ....... . to CASH Apt s, LOST • 9 mo old male ls . eXcltin&: 1t shared w/!he pm wkly, Hot meala,. Har-~~~~ •;-w':.: = Japaw Gardener, Exp. B·A l ·PaJntlns 81'M2. :::L":.':ri"~ .. :::;;:;::;: ===--· .... ;:· •1.U. •nmtT Nz.uJa '•· ,.., ............ .....,. . ········ • I I Write detall1 to: Daily Pilnt ucnnan .,. ...... VIC esa W have a smart etc. No l'oo Rn&U. • 5-&l8!M • Inter. I: Ex.ter. SJKial n'81 wN• ••ow• .............. Mid ...__,,., LOM1 .......... .. "-She~~ · M right one. Stop wasting bor!Bak!T, 546-1539. ~ · job ' __ ,, General Oeanup. HaQliQc MeAd6ms Palntinc Strv. 1u111111T auc:• ............... Mii ......, 19...,. ........ -.. ~ BoxBlvd,MN·"104.B., 22U' W, Balboa ~~~er'~~ild ~artb::kento. , :;,8541.«.tt. 2.f hr. rerord. CHILDhocare, da&es ~~u!: ~149( y J G--"---on apt&. ._3645 t::9~~.::::::::~::::::::: a.~'f.Y~icl'::::::::. my me, a.ys, ..-vi•-• Additions * Remodelinl' . our ~se ........ --. · .,.... aMHn'f' ................ aua. nTATI LOo\NJ ..... .. · ~Rt'ward;-55'M0111 ME!'f!+-Eveey-~1-our--School ateat C:M"&42-345S--Ges'Wic.lc-1r.-Softi-,;ic;-· --Any-pidenlh&~wtc.~ .YOU...BUEPLL THE Mdfm.L...~ .... ·~' =~~ .. ~.:::. il--.,-1 Acr.... 6200 "HERBIE", lge shaggy lt twurcuts is a creatiOn. \Ve, \I/ILL babysit any age chiki, 613-6041 * • 549-2l10 aerv.1 nme OK. &47·5141 '1¥ Pft' Aftnlt: ~m :1u.:. ~ .. ::::::::::::::::wu ANNOtJNCEMINTS l;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1 brown shee pdog lost Susan, Unde. and Mary ni.y home near MWkln Vie-GARDENING SERVICE Free Est. SiT-1631 WUTflWIWT9 ............... :ms --..1 NOTICES I I' SUB DIVIDE Harbor/Wilson area 9/20. strive for magnificence, See . 83()...6009 ROOM Add!Uonl. 1 A: 2 •tot)' Experieneed Ja PAINTING -ExL-lnt. IS yr&. rr.ff:tt.":'.:::::::::::::::::ml .... ' Reward, 646-5800. 642-4904 youraelt at Sir Walter's JO. It pr. call Gen. O:intr11ctor paMllll • Lie Free Ill. wn.a AU ML ............ we ...,... C"-Mil .......... . . OR HOLD 2052 Nowport Blvd., C.M. • WILL babysit my C.M ............ -·· -......... --· -o.u· ' -· M--............ : •••.••• ··-=-••r ::::::::::::::::::· 646-4!!04 by hr, day or wk Cilf . . . EXP Japanne GuOene Aceous:t.-inp, _....Mii'. mv:· .......................... untouNCIM9SITI .......... . Approximately 9'Ai acres on SEPT lat, Sheep dog type, * MASSAGE * &4&-m8 • GNEN'Ljo-b -"" •mnwnallt. c:.n: ckr&nup. Haul; ... ~: 1SI' Clua,J>aintina: I: Piper ..... ~ .. :::::::::::::::: 1PV'"•'"'•~LS···""''"'"""'-·····' SAln.tA _., ntu1'01nnnL 0 ..,.. I .... Sil.VII ..... CANTell Mid !"''""'"0•••••••••• Foothlll Blvd Nortb Tustin ...... #OaU_bead-1:-i--blk._. -i.u~-Tt.~vv REWABLE mother---•-to ""'di!.-__ ,. .,~,,....,. • Maint. yard &t6--0619, u ... -.f.,_, Fre. Eat. Call , .... UM& ••LLI ......... ,.·'AUD ITV"•Y ., ......... .. ' "'-7 ~"· Lov J ~ •-Pl"•' fa iJ'U w...,... ~ -~ .,.....,., -. -.. _ .. ,. -.,_ ............. ,., PUMIUL DIAIC'fttU prime residential a re a. gray w/'\"'ht le ,tan. Wht tip e Y •• r.... ...,, c 1 es. babysit. Behind Woodland . . • • GARDENING It ~ 515-3459. =-= ::fA ...... ''''""I;: R.OllST1 ... · · · · ....... ::::·: $185,000 with $50,000 down on tail, 4 yrs, male, "Troy". Open 1' days, noon.midnight. Sehl. 54&-3988. C CtHnlnt '625 tng: Prunirc·TrimmUia 1: PAINTING .nN.t A reliable. Mllltu ·VSSJ9 .:::·.::'.:-:.:· ,,. CAID 0" nu.AS ...... : ..... and owner will carry back Rwd! NB, 673-5031. Bl> W. Cout Hwy., Newport •rplt Remvating 548-Sal9 aft 5 Call J~ tor rre. ut. =.jitz:~T"a.t.Me'"""'~rJ ~~m~~·~·::::::::::::: balance at 7*%. For more SUBSTANTIAL rewitnf -2 Beach. stS-3608 CHILD care, my hOme. DIAMOND Carpet Cleanifl& . 846-4871 OI' U'l-tl.28 CAPl&T••NO IQClt 11• CllMITlllY CIY"9 ....... .. NOS Fence d p I a y • re a . ..... s c1al GL"'Clenln&. Land cleanups IMISA POINT 1Mt Cl ... TISIY CIYPTS ....... .. i~formati~n. p 1 ea se call yr old male Irish Setter&. 8 PALM READI . Reaso~b!!.~~ ~ack to Sc J>1!! spmklr l)'J, roto-cemeht' FOR your palnttns needs It ocu.•sroa ................... 1Hll ~='o::·~~iU"::::::::::: K.W. Small wt th mo ol~ mal~ Germ an Cards I: Sand Read1ns;s BABYSITl'ING, mv home in 300 -.$15. -• ~ Ell Mll'k:. C.D. Yance)',,~ repairs from ftODn to doors, = DlMD .... ··· ......... -.. 1111 .. uctlCMSI ................... . Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. Shorthatr Pomter, c . M . Help in All Mattera "V ~rair-Install. 66-1317. WI Paul 5S'1-745S . ..=:~ ~:U:r-vn ·::::::: .,v.,,,• s1nu ......... . 532-2538, Eves-wknds 538-5971 area, 6Ta-8350 10 AM-10 PM, 7 days ~~~. "'~miel==-Full .or part Sl'EAM Jet carpet cleaning. J~~ESEN t~~~~i~.1 * •Al'l~•-ING _...,...,. ................ '!!, !f:WmNnATIOif:::::;· 1-;,;~~~~~!!~~~liwm-:-p;;:;e;;i;·iie-;;ie% 213 6979212 1.a H:.bra ....... ..., ,,._."""" ,., _ _u__ .. _ -'de -1'\'IC'e. "' -. ............ ,. r-... .._._ ......... ,... ,.. u.L• ........ l~ .&U'ro tttMPOUU1'•''°" I! -pure white cat, ~~ -• • By .._.nao.,, na ....... • ..,, )'d unaint. ~2303 A: PAINTING * 82425 .a~tm"' SAU ·· •• 1• uua. llOTN:ll ......... ::;:; VJC"IURVll.LE CENTER Persian, area Harbor View FULLY LICENSED Boat Mliintenance '555 service. Fl'M est 6'2.-4055. ' · • llKTA:LS •UlllWS a WTMSH ..... .. Improved fairway, lakeview Hills, CdM. Reward. ''HOUSE-Sl'ITlNG" in your ~ie:.SPECI~ • . NoWutlnc . HeuM!l.Fumlshecl SEIVICI Diii """°" $500 down. 1% mo. 644-<tYlll home wlllle you .,., away, BOAT CARPENTER C•rpot L1ylng & ..,,.ir. '* WALLl'APlll 'Ii -•"' .................... -""-............... .. Alao small acreage parcels. BLK small I.ab w/'lr'hl feel by local buaintSS couple. 646-5219 Rep1lr 162' jobui. Red.· 5CM9ii Wlletl:)IOQ.'caD "Mu" =....:.: ~~~.:::::::::= ~ l'J:: ';;.;,;ti~. * 54&6522 * star on chest, vie Del Mar&: ~1542 --·--· Garde~·Sert. By SO.IMC ...... lm -~~ MAil .............. -~--............... .. M CARPET LAYING Japanese Americ&n.. Ml •••• ... ·---··--sns WY9 , .. ,.,., ............ .. For Acreage in Orange Co. Orange, CM. Rew. 646--9523. t NEED A MeticuJous 1 Brick, asonry, IMMEDIATE.Eat. on quallt;y COLL H PAI• .............. llU: MITO. Seit .... '""" Pl. 2 MALE Dob.rm.n De .. ~ble GI~ !or APT etc 6560 C.A, Pqe &e.Xl'70 Mf·l!W4 interAuttt-Apts. 11..,..T 1a.ac11 ············-&Aanm• ······ ........ .. . II fa 20 •alf-.• ...... .. · .• ,.,...., "•'•· .............. ms *' ... ~soc• ....... . 8ft •• .. tt Pinschen, Need rnedic.a..v.... CLEANING. 642-1224 --·---Cemplete Yanl C•rel bomN or jU9t a room. Jack, UWU>Olt PSMlt .......... -1a1C1C. ..,, .... ,.. * ...... . ·-·-~· .... ,.,, coon ....... BLOCK wall-Planters-Patios-Electrical "40 JIM. . 5tM83T 131-8825, 194-3195 u.YPN•s ..................... •IUllMUS IUvtCIS ...... .. C"1J &'Al) &'<:et\ ............... ......,..........,,, ALCOHOLICS Anonymou• D . s·d ··-"-':-·----...,.. SMOlll ................. auu.HU ................. . , __ _.::::·'.'.:.:-::::::;:.., __ l<>rn<'Oi•<;;;;;;--;::-:: r1ve11t·ays • i ewCUN1. ~· .... ~1CIAN Small (,,lo. PAINTJNG Inter A Extier rtttftLJI'• ...................... -CAHI ........ ·-····-··-CALIF. Land 10 Acre s SIAMESE._ Fem, c oco Phone 542-7211 or write lo 642-9Sj2 morn/eve. c.i..u...•n. • ,._, • • • USSWltt•ITY•P.U:tc .......... .ltD cu1NnM.&kSU1• ............ . ...;~1, ne·"·Adln, Northern e•-s I ta•I, wht / hody, ~ p O •-x 1233 ~-ta Me'8 m&intenanec I: repair 1, Gener•I Servlce1 6612 State II City Lk:, Ad: for •""'• .......................... ua .... •••,T111• ............ .. ..---..... ... ,.,.. •• DU \.AID • &'><> """~ Bill lf2-023I IAGUl l.&Y .... _ .............. -N • c--. ············ Calif. Tenn1. Eve11 839--06.55. REWARD! 546-0037. Cabinetmaking '5IO -LOWEST ••TIS ·. ""' ILU"" .................. nes cssuLD c.a11, ~ ····-·· Announcemenfl 6410 -·---•s _. 1M4 CONT•ACTIMll .............. .. LOST:Gennan She pherd, F'~-LLLlf Hot water services and l'I•~·..._, •itch, .. YIM• tlllACI ........... ll4S e.&••n CUAN•• ......... . E W .. _ _, 6240 al blk & ,.,,:; . Cos Fine Cabinets Ir. Shelvin& -· -........ r C91iOdlA HI. MAI ............. CU:PIT ............ ••PAta R. . an.-~., !:.,,. .... .. VIC ta * ASfROLOGY CLASSES * 494. nL,.... * aprinkler syttems hwtalled llopolr "" MUU ....................... -..... Hin ................. . .,........... VVVL CARPET VINYL TILE It repaired. Cheapest ratel I.IN m•. ........................ NMOLnuoN · ................ . DANA pr vie--lot or small . . NOW FORMING. CALL -~.' ................ nit DllAl'Tstle SUYIC• .... -... . • .......,.... S"""'tacular view FEM blk muted temer, So. THE SUN SIGN 675-6661. ·-lJC CONTR. FREE-... in the county, Free quota. * PA'l'Ol -PLASTZIUNG D ............. .mt lllCTstcaL ................. . ...... -~, .... ~ t --· "Reefe " N 1 . C terlng 6590 * 540-'7'262 if ti Call 6'M18I be-AD ..__ Fne ..u.a-. atACM ........... sM11PM11tT •.PT.au .... .. ~not-n:q'.d . .ca,n....ou_$.f!QO ~ .. na. _ . r .• -. o co. --~t~s-2140,_ 6]!;1'7(3 * arpen ons. •"''""'" 1vr"· -15ra• ·~ , ............... PINCIN• ..................... . ~--• •~/mo ·•n balance. !Al'~Wd. 586:0'l8t of 499:3ST3 CHURCH ~-Ir , ,. n •er, -· -----~.,;;=--.......,._ tAM•M""MOb:l_,.Fridays::-CaJl .. ~ H.&CM ····-·····-.-.lLWI .•......... ···········-··· """"" ,,.,.. v "'"" ,. CARPENTRY ,_ auc:ll ..... · •••••• '. •• ,..,,,.. 'u•••c• 11,a1a1. 11c. ...... Contact Doug Erway, 22574 needed Opportunity for ,....... 9..F. Fumlture Restor"• RAIN autten lnstall-ed. euMH Ceutrn'T ............. ,.. PUa•nv•••UT'Oll·-• Tentfleld. Colton, Ca. 9'2324. Personals · 6405 -IOloist.'644-4255. MINOR REP~ No -& Refinishing '675 Rainy seuon here-to0n. "" =~=.. .. ::::::::::::::::=; ..... ~:::U':~~~ .......... . nd TOD Small Cablntt 1D.IU'" -Freeeat.~as! 963-m: DRAINS PltlaedT"Dralnin& Ml9WA't'CIT'f' ................. IA• .......... SllVICIS ....... .. BUFSININAENSCSIA•L Re*oo~~yn~~u Sps~,a:st Cem.tery Lots '411 :.:. :::~= ~ .. i;;rung.REPickl'tfl~P· : ~model1• ... fence w.t. ukrwT Expertly dMned 59. l::.t-:.~~~~.~:::::::: .. : :f&*.~.~~~.·~~.::::::::::. ,.,..,,,. n1.11u "'' •" "' .. ,., -·• 2' Ju' ltf'V, c,... H~~ ...... a•.&C11 ......... ., ... 1111 HllM TdlUMI ,. ...... _ ... ,, Advice on all matters. · S I' Dlll'. at 162312. IL O. Delivery. palntln& It pn'l rrpaira. ............,.. LMUSS• ... .,., ............ .-9tHU IMOP ................. .. Buslnesa • --"U--=-B-, acrl 1cel AndenoD call 646-9523 Reu. Xlnt ftf'•· &a-S4n. H'"'"~ REPAIRS Mbsseost 'tllJS .... _ .. _ •• ,. -Mlo\l.TIU CLUIS ............. . Op •t• 6300 .....,v ... •<UU• ... a:e. usiness 4 cemetery Iota, Blue Spruce ==========l.f.ifil~QQ;9t.;'21i;'i;i;; I vs..o:. IAM CL1M1un1 .............. tn1 llAULI• .................. .. portvn1 1•s Readings given 7 days a . REPAIRS* AL'IERATIONS AVAIL from ' lo 2 to take Plumblna:-electricaJ. $1.50 Hr. SAM•IUAN·C.UtlTUNS ........ llOUl9CLIANIM ............ . I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1 section, Harbor Rnt Memor· -tAl'llT•AN•' SIACN ......... 11• •T••ao. Dl!CDIATIM• .•••. 11 week, 9 AM. 9 PM ial Parle. Call 548-3075 * CABINETS. Any siu! job Gardettlng you shop'g, read, type. 4th 642·2'755 or 642-0506 ....... '°"" .............. t7• IMCOMI TAX ................. . LIBERATED LADY 312 N. El Camirio Real, 25 yrs exper. ~3 at Bridge--try me. 642-7226 24 HR PLU•IBING aiv••stoaucou••NTTALS ........ _ .... ,'-'°"',.-• ltc. ...... .. Needed! Established BCcre-San Clemente. SERVICE DIRECTORY ROOFING * LANDSCAPING * SECRETARlAL SERVICE 1: REMODELLING . :~~J/:"111t1TAU .::::.::·:·.., •suu.t1Ne·::::::::::::::::::· tarial service with xlnt po. 492-9136, 492-0076 New Lawns, lawn removal, 1_ SH di -• _7 ...... ~sNnNI ................ 21111 ••VIAstel ' ........ · ........ . , •-'-sitting .... •. AR Home Imp---·-. Al ~--· '-nd Typ..... . c...,.. ilill --....... "' .... UI ................ fflY•ITseATlfle. Det9dtWI •• tential. Can •how refign of • MALE &: FEMALE -.. , -.,:___ ..,._L '"''"~'::;; ~'!;,,,, renou.ling, 1..,........... • TheailJ 'L 'TJ...1491 =_..~ ..... ..-.... HNTAU , UMITMl.&L ................. .. . le n .... 1 .r•..,.., c.a ...,_..IUJ;> acape install • desl&ns. • pn r-.o-.xnu AZIAl,!lo .... ' '11-.L--t-L-.. \ ........ T SIPASSt. ft. ... .. investment Jn u .,_.. standing by to give )'OU the Will. &ive kJvite Catt to 'd U 1 Ed'• OeuUna Service No job ti::e mWl • . MaWlll· vmvt'ft,.,.., LASIOICM'sb19 ............... . year. best massage in the West. your child (3 It .ovr}. Nice REPAIR, Remodel It patios. ~J-1~· Yl'I oc. ap. CUpe111 -Upbolatery -Win-• I0-31a e U,.iUL ..................... -i:ui:-.f.~q"""'"' ......... : DONV FRANKLIN "-"-·--' •--J-,. home e"vl.,nmtnt. Let theSwedt do it. _,,...,, ,. __ ..,. __ ,.__,,..., ... _ telT& ...................... .JUll~Y••ICOi"-··-·· .. •• • ~ ....... --I~ ~... .. .~ -·· --"'17 ~ ·-~ -· l'LUMllNG llll'AlllS -......................... -•• __ ........... . REAL TOR 673-2222 A ~ntlemen. 10 AM·l2 AM, P lay m atea.Lunch-Snackl :rr-•....., .,._ 11'~ DAILY PILOT WANT ADS! =:I'= .... -.......... "'' ,_Mrr .... p;;;j"' ....... :. l~~~~"'!!!!!!~"'!!'!"":/ 7 daya. 17434 Beach Blvd, UniverJity Park area, WHATEVER you need, ~1CJ-S811Wlbt .!!' .• ~Tl Hiul'-·-Ir IllllalL ~ ........ .:As1·:::·;:.::·: .. := PAt.Nf..._.._ ......... :::; .. 1i:oFFEE SHOP XI n t H B Ph 847'187'.. ~ 'II find. tt yoa read r~ --•• "lW •-==....... .,, Nf'°' ...................... .. ' 1~~·~·.:;:~·~~-~:.. ......... .::;:~.:, .................. .:.~-~~::..::~::;:;~:.~·~;::~:;.::::::;.::a;:::.'lll•i:;;:T.~::;.;;;;-s:;;;1;;;: • .,,...,,.:._a · ........ , ..... , .. :::::::::::: ~-:.' .. '" ............ . Downtown S.A. Loe. Owner,!~ T.N.T. Lawn Service. .. -u.,.....n .................. PLUM&.... ,.._...,. • Must Sell, IMMED! Due ltl 'Garqe clean-ups, haultnc • lt•lr MVU:·uuuoiii ............... .., ""•toOM ................... . Illness. "GOOD CREDIT &. ! STA... RT I NG N. ow! lirht movill&'. 541-5163, 1--',-"' ~··:..:.;-.c-•• -.. ,-.SQ--FT"-'-' 1:;,=::i;r,.p;,iii;''.::::::::::: ?!!'-:.,",'wo'",":'., .... _ ........ . YOU'RE IN LJKE FLINT." 531-3'r.19 ~ lru..l'I ... • • IVldl• ..................... _ .. me; PUMP MIVJC ............ . OWNER: 541-3722, 543-5643 Frie Pl&n ·9el"Vlce, adck-rm, ff IAY. .: ...................... ...._ a .............. . YARD/Gar. Cleanup. IV.r t'OIM!rtil>nl, liceswed. it"'t..IUI~~ .................. = llAOto.,1.Mifi."j;L''.'.:'.:::::. LAUNDROMAT tor s a 1 e Remove trees, ivy, trash. ~ )'e&l'I in home bJds, Ph: =TnllAC9 .... -...... -::=utt ~~t::: . $5100 with tNms, gross ap.-.r Gnde, ~. 96S-11''5. ---.. •L MA• ........... = JC•-........ N .. ~ :-~.::-'~ n a Let us Help y OU Be a p ennx~!'inc_~er ·~~r.i~~VIN~ ... iiG-°iearaee~. ;;Rt;::; ...... :i;_;;;_;:;.,. .. :&le.~ 1~::~ .... ·~· ===-==. =~=-~~~.:~~~~::~~·~:~= F ..... = ... _-.-.=.~~ii: Polnl Must "II! 494-3182 ,· p h CLASSIFIED FHe .......... ..,._1!112.-~,;,::~.:::~~:;i.--.u-,...-----==l·=:;;;;milii=:iir . .-o·:::;:::::l:.....,.. cemo;:·;::::::::. earlymomat496-9042evts, u · p . HAULING$10ALOAD ~..,__.-.-..~ , .,.,..._ IS.&llOua _ .. .-~~ ........... _ . n c e l/cJe.. often htr talenta i D f!!'!':'&;c:ALLIY -; • .-... ., •• NIU Tlla lllWCI ......... ., Mo_ le LMn '320 se enn y I r ADS Up. Troe ...... c... dr............ ol--mi'oi ................. -............ ..;;..-·;,;;;·'· . . • -64&-2528. -· also c!Uldren'1 c1otbeo. Very ~~ . .'.'.':.'.',',',',',';"~ ~--°' .............. : 1 t TD L HAULING a CLEANUI' ,......bi.. Simple lhlits ~-'°""" ............ :ilii .,'::: ·······;,; ......... ... s oan l10. load * .541-5!\24 112 ..... -$10•. up. ;;F,,;~····:::::::::::::::::::: :IQiS a~i)'i{" .. l <;f INTERESI' 2nd TD Loan Tams based on equity. 642·2171 545-0611 Servin& Harbor area 21 yrs, Settler Mortg•go Co. 336 E, 17th Street LOANS $50,000 &: Up , Any Real Estate or Buslnes!. Mr. Dollum (303) 922--2305 no collect calls. .ANNOUNCEMENTS ond NOTICES Found (FrH Adil - S~fAIJ.. brown dog,--male with blue collar lound al 17th St. Alpha Beta. Will be at Orange County Animal Shelter. rit. POODLE: Rcddish·fP'CY, med·!Z. W/Rhlnestonc col· Jar • Oea. cullar. Vic: F. Vly. -1.tilHtone Prk Area. 113&-3346 FOUND: Dog, black &. 1'tilte, mixed breed. No col· lar. Vic. Fountain Valley SchOOI. 962-9714 FOUND Ju t Fri area <>I Riverside & Clay In C.'1. Tiny brown dog, mixed ter· rier. 548-0021 sr-,tALL (Poodle-type} white dog, nea collar. Vic 22nd & Coat.a Mesa Ave:, C.M. 64>-2753 •• 6 1.10 old male black It gn,y tiger k.it~n found wm night, Uth It lrvine, N.B. 642-6253 days, 548-S.)82 fl\'M, FOUND Mull blk-bm le w~t lore hair • ean • bush tail. Vlc: O.f. 55i'-3ll9 SET ol car keys on N. Cst Hwy. Lar· Sch. by Husk)' Boy Drive-ln. 494-174.9 WEUrtr&ined SpamJw bird bond u.irth M@Sa Verde ..-ea. C.M. Olll 54t-Xl28 FOUND ,turtle, Ne 1' po r..t Shores on PrmPe<:t. ...at'l2 F'QUND baby's 1hoc: Se1r·~ 5\i E. For left fool Aft 6 p1 m. 546-9390 TRADER'S PARADISE 5 f13..1849. ...."-y cm ................. In• 109 W&lnW9. -.......... ., 3 LI N E S TRASH It GU'qe cJean.up, 1 IANT.& AIU. lllstllTI .... ,., .. IDt .IOI ,WAllTSO. ._. ....... . d•-. 1•• a •--d. ~est. DRESSMAKING ;&lteratioftl. ceMTAL, :.a~ .. .,, ......... .-JOIWANTID, .;.;m..".' sMii. .. _ ~ ~;:·;.::i ~ &,$.·:~::~~:~~.:~! i!~!~i::~::::: hland 144'5167 Ug,M CA''"1:.&dl9 ft TMATalCA&. ......... , .. .,,.., HouNCIHnlrif ·•ns . ... ......... -... -~·C~DISE POii ll~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiil QUALITY You've .. _. • .................. -SALi AND TRAD 2 TIMES $ YOU SAVE MONEY • You Get The Most For J our Money $200 Yes, 3 L lnes-2 Times-Only __ , • No Item Over $50 • No Commercial, Flrrn1 • No Copy Chan ... e No Altlwevi1tJen1 ~ (If mo,. then OM lllm, tho .. mblnec'I totol cennot ox<Hd $50) . AND YOU CAN CHARGE IT! Let Us Help You ·~~ Penny-Pincher Llndtell Te J'lefte a.airiest ..... : M•rtk•1111li .. f•r Sil• I Tr•-'• Fo.rna.,,. tooo Offic• F1tr11ihlr• 1010 O#fic• Eq.,r,,.,.,., 1011 St.r• Equip111111! 1012 C1f•, Attt•11r•11I t014 •• , l111•iJ1fll•lll Ho•1•h•W C."41 Appll•11t•1 Arltit1111•• S•wi119 "'41chi1111 M111tktl l111tr111M11t IOI I 1010 1100 1110 1110 I I Ji ,;111ot I 0 191111 R..11;. '''"'h;.11 Hi·fi I St.r11 11 10 1100 .... 1110 1110 c.,,.,,., • l111<1ip111111t H1bt, s.,,n,. Sp1rti119 &.Ht ll11M11l•1a. St1pe1 MiKllllltffft CALI,; .... .. .. .... 1110 .... ASK YOUR -DAILY PILOT AD-VISOR FOR D·ETAILS 642-5678 TILEl1oon1trtpped•wued, carpet sham~ windcfw• cleaned. Qu.allty """"'"by professional janiton, ,..tu Char&e accepted. M6-I096, ·--------- __ ....._. ....____,.. ldSNll .................. l'VIM I wa<•...... ~1.-..nc SIL IS UN...,... .......... nva .................. . slter&Hom. Key Sly, 176.1 IUMMa ·anAU ............. =~= =."=9.3 ....... . Qran1'e Ave., CM. 645-1292 llNfAU "'oa1 """'MIMT .::::::::: . ,_ .. , .... -~ fUmlsMcl c,., .. ••nAUl ..... T ·····-.. Atteret....-.1 - -.,,_ on . ' ...,· •a• ••t'••trr ........... .. . ., .................... btOUllMOl.D eGODI Neat, accurate, 20 yean exp, COSTA,,. ...................... fl .. NU•• 1.&&.• ..... -.:::::::::: MIU Y•D• ................ fltl P\l•dltTUI• AUCTIOfl • n.-.-.1.1--Altsadons dllWHIT.alACM ................ -••NCll ' ....... . ""''.._......,.._. • ....... ts l•MTf 41• ,_ · , ............. .. ~~J to~~~ WIWPQllf,UIOllS .::::::::::.. :Twu"T::1...Cifi'sffi':::::::::::: .._...., 0 * _....._ WBTCl.IJI' ............... , ·-llihlSIC.&L" HllTUIUMIWT UMNUS~ PAU ........... = PW10S a OlltJMI ...... :::::: BAY I: Beach ,Jamtarial .• DRESSMAKING e ' ~,, ................... _, IADSO ... : ................... .. Carpets, windows, ftoct'I. '!°ftY ~ble .. L Mlii"'"" .. ""t11t 1"11.1\IUl .. r ,1 ................ . •-L C 'I .,, • .,.,..., ........... lfS.lll'llfrPIO .. ,.,. ... ,.,., •tc. ........ -D m,. c . ==Call===' :::D=iane==-==~~· = IALIOA .......................... ,..,. ll9COllHIS ........ . -..1¥11. IAY llLAldOI ., .............. .-CAMllAS 6 leulPMllY ..-.... LCM llLI • ., .. ............... .. MSIY IUPP\JIS ... ,,,,.,·.·.•.·, --"· ....... _ ~--.... 1c ·~ ........................... -·---WINDOWS .. .....,. .wl!ltll!d. • ~ .......-IMIT1 ... Tlll a1 .. c11 .. ---· ............ . nn, llrlpped, aled I: . __J flOUWTA• VALUT .:::::::::..,u it=rtt~•n .... -.. waxed. Fl'ff nt. 19'1·713f. • Ceramic Tile Work ar tlAl..HAC• .................... MISC. •.&MTID :·"'"""'"" day or ru,tit ii'l-3090 AUtertrc. R!u. Free ~==u:.r;·· .. ·········::' M.&Csttt1n't'. -·::::::::::·:: • ' ... __. ., ..... -aft f ~eves. -• ............ .., ~--·r···· ............... . WOULD You ~ ....,,.,.,,. .,.... ...__ a .............. notAH ..................... . ~ .. ..,. WllTMno1n1 ................ 4ltl IUtL.DlfMI MATlllALI ..... . I'll Clean Your llome far Tr" •~rvlce .,. wnay crrr .................... IWA" ..................... .. Bluo Chip Stam,.. -....,. ........................ -l'ETS •nd LIVESTDC ....., ............ ,...,. _ ....... ... -lolo'1··T_..""'°". !!!n! ........................ -ml"'"'""' ............. . ILL do .............. --~.:*:_:sc:.i!ll;:·.:;·:;::....;;* __ 1 ~1Wii':::::::::::::= .::::::::::::;;::::~::::: --tion ....:..u U.VN.&. Mledl\. .,,, •• ,,_ .. ,.,.. . ..................... , D'Wn ..... _,....-• _.. ---------1 MSU1d811 Y1m1t _,.,. __ ,;, .. t.ntt:JTKK ................... . aDtr 6 pm. ~1136 u~ .... ::: f.t::-:r."1-.aNe···· .. ·= CALlllOltNIA LM,._ Mea Cletninc Serviot ::.!.,...:.::::.:•••::..1"~--_:~ I C.&l'llt11A .. ·•tACN ea 1N1:s11011 ,. ............... .. . , , =t ftt:tdlT'i-4H1 $WlMMI ... HCM.I .......... .. ~·-ts, windows, ftoon, etc. U_,,."'~ry a llopolr .... •• .... ·-·•••·••••••'"· .... 'ATUOI ,.,,,,. .. ,,_,.,,,_,,,,. '-""l"" .......... ·-.............. .. ~ ........ . l ':,~~om:~ ~~1. l ~;:°"::::.'.:hom:::;:•:::· __ _;SC-c::.:'11112.:o: I r:ff :t:u: .:::::::::::::::·:= TRANs~iti i.'i'~::~ Larae jobs pre('d. Fut le. A~ U I 1 L.-' 10.at1 a Y.acstT1 ............ . Re .... 5:17--l!m , NOW'S THE . n urn lnee sa1L10At1 ................ .. ' ••• AL ...................... -POWU1•-c1u1s11s ........... . ,.,,.. MIU ................. ,., ............ , ..... , ......... .. MllA YllM ,,,, ••••••••••••. Jnl ..... T TIAILlltl ... , ......... . . ....... ll\OllTNC IN MY HOME IN C.Y. 11.z!br *-548-f9'70 * * IRONING * My Home, $1 Hr. Pick Up I: Del.iv. MS--~ ** mDNING "'1'' ...... or.-..,..... -.... - ··--...,..... .... TIME FOR QUICK CASH ' THIOUIH A IAILY?ILOT ' Wiil AD • 142'5111 ll"'°'f 1•act1 ............ Jill INT MA"'1't..asst• _ ..... . -~ .... MTI ......... .-s ..,., 1.AUSSC:MSW ......... .,, ' .................................... -.. . uip •.•. , .... .,,,.,,, =1'1LSP ................ .. SM PAIK ,.......... f llllVSCll ···~····"·-· ::-.T~·······•····"""'= _, m .......... , .. .. IMT ....,... ,,.,,,,........... NAT I ........ -.... . ~ ....... i ......... -...... " .............. . ~ -~····i. ............. -=' MOWt..a ............... . .. ,. --................. -1 rreaM• ., .. _ ...... .. - , ................ -a:· .................. . ~ ................ • Cl..,,,. ·~-:_. ......... , .... . • MAC1I ........... ..,..,_, ............ . 'fli&.aT _......... ... .... MOMn , ............. .. ..................... ...,.. ................... .. lm'llCll-=i····· ......... -atCTCLn. . .............. . ~ ......... ••····-IUPISC CAii ............ ., ............. : ..... act: .................. .. ......... -.... .11111 ~a.a ............ .. ~ ..................... MOT9ftle"'1ft ......... ~ ... . ~·-....... auto MllY1C8t ...... .,. •• ,. --......... .-.... -..-....... . _ ..................... , ................... -.. . ................... ft ....................... .. . .............. 1£ .................... .. .......... ·s ......... : .. -···-.. ·· ........... ···~.:.:..·· .... -.. , ............. ---• 11 .. ..sume.Shll<k> .... ___________ ..,-. _________ ,__...., ______ _. • Rite•, fOc a mile. Min. ~ mt'1. )I >it ""' aweo&.. I ~ ----------• I • , - I ! t • • -·~ • -~ V _. ·~··~l":;;''.'..'.:5";-:,;":;;•::;'°":;,".,;2:;;5:,, ;;19:;7;;0==,_,.=i..-.-;O .. AJ11L.,YrP"l"LO'llT!a", ~~~;;;~~==~-=-=· ~~~~;;:;;;~~==~~?~f~~~~~-~.IOIS & I MPLOYMINT .IOIS & IMPLOYM•NT JOBS & W~YMINT JOBS & EMl'LOYMliNT JOBS & IMP[OYMIN1' --Joli Wo-, Mon 79111 J1b1 Moo;. Wom. 7100 Jo1io Mon, w-7100 i;Scll;;;'°";;;;;1'";1;"~'1;rVctleft;;;;;;;;;7;;'°°;,j BARTENDER week.""' a Jobi Mor• WOllt. 7100 I• •11tL· IN E ar nlte. Lone bn Qt Otil CATALOGJNG. mode.II oeed· 1---------~ abitt ok. W/&5HJ8M . ~ !or "" ....... win~• ruLL w PART TIME NEEO 2 GIRLS SCHOOLS •~=-c...,--'---.,..-,.-1 linea. No exP!r· ftQ d. Earn up to $5. per hr Telephone~ litt ottice •'Ork. PACIF IC WILL ex~ prdenifW lA.G. loc., 83S-350l. nJU.ER BRUSH stS-5143 Good '.ftllv, Contact Mr. Ken. Day • Ni,tlt Classet tor unturn •Japt le util. SH1ER/ ,_.., , °' ...._ ..... 64S-t>68 COUNTER* CA c~• * GE N'L OFFIC E nedy "'t. !O AM l 3 PM ~ 11;:;::;:;=:;;:::,:;:=,:==i ...,,,.,. 1489 E, Warner, Santa Ana 610 E, 17th St., Santa AM II ! h> 3,>l, -t!w Fri. C&JI $451 JobWanNd, w ...... Mn Pen.nlncton. 833-(l(l)Q Work in beauti!uJ new N.B. il ' JNDIVJDUALl.ZED tvtori.111'. 7020 Dd 'sm, betwn. J..5 PM. oHice. Xln't co. _Have some personnalnewport. ottered by certified ea. CHARMING t • knowl~ge o1 flu &: cuua1-teacher. Gndea .f.ll, San DEPENDABLE1 attractivet '1 tractive , t • ratina:. Call Mitt &tty, Clemente/C&po area. Bill inlilll&ent ma~ types 7tl enerpt:W: 1lrl tor vi.let ·-il Abbo Po W.P.M., ~ Sfl, with Tranll. partUnc holtHt. 642-1224 557.fi.l,.M. Abip. t r-agency "Hutchinson 492-0031 btwn 4-6 2% )Tl. aa Jepl 1tt. It: CREOtT CASHIER aonnel Age~clly, ~ W.Awar. Seu LPTURE JNSrRUC· ··-·· .. ,,,_ •-aal ner, Sulte • , ..-nta na. P rofe111on.I Service TION. ~ ... modoll-1-m ~ llA., to re....... RrY Some expel'. Prel'd. Muarbe · .....,. ...... 1.14 M&-4586. 213· for the employer life. G1oria Pu 11 le y , ~iiss : . matutt. 40 hr ":'k. Top Top HAIR STY LIST and the applicant 644-287' 11,:;::::::::..,...,---=I alary " bendatt. IA:Wl!Qn ·w/tollowinr lull or p/tirne m Dov tir. N B EXP. tee. duitta emp ... l'tfl. ,Jewelera, Hwrti~ Ctntu, xper Xln't aalary com~ ~ ~.:0' · · MERCl:IA.NOIS~. ~R ottict, accts. pt,yable ke A: 7777 F.dtnaer Ave., H.B. ~ be~fita. Call f~ appJ. SALE AND TRADE rec., recpt., typ., 10 . y, Credit Mana .. r Tm. 544).5050 ext S2 Joeeph Ma&· NITE try cook, 11 .l over, IOOO 11c'='"::..:53&-45:::..=":.,..-~. -~-I $650 nln, equal opPor. employer. Chow Bell Reataurant, 2516 cF.;u.:.m;ol;otu.:.ro:..:.. ____ _ Dt.ywork. Exptnenced. Two yn retail aalea exp. Nat. Newport Blvd, CM ?i10VING mui;t sell ,va.Jnut References. OWn trana. Co Call Ann Weatclllf Per-*HA IR STYLIST ?11ALE Pt-time tire Jn1tallar 4~· hi fi cabinet $25, 2 836-57ti6 aft S IO~nel Age~, 2043 West· W/FOLLOWING Change tires&: 1hock1, Ref'I. Oa~ncl tables $7 each, AIDES -for convalescence, cliff Dr., N.8 . &45-2710 ** CALL 494-0064 * * Will train, medical benefits cocktail table $10, Spanilh elderly care' or family care. COASTAL AGENCY It insurance, apply Mark C. wrought 'Iron tireplaee Homemaken, 547~. HOMEWORKERS WANTED Bloome, 3005 Harbor Blvd., screen 31'' x 37" $10, and- Mii SAi Ga; ROC dra• 3 cl ooll . .., !bl: I I . ... 9Xl rug; i;z; \Vor mk: W/O tool: tooli NB. ~fOV l\1u~ ~' Jam pict clot! >Om Su' liag ,. .. A member of (Envelope Addressers). c M 6962 W Lincoln Ave ' irons $10, log baslc:et $5, _1 ________ ...:111 :J~l~b~':;:~~ll~lln~~~)N~~~;!;~OO!!'!lf-ISl,';nelllng & Snelling. Int:. Rum slam 1 e J f -ad· ~Ellk · . · ., bani boo-acreea-SS.'-·c,._~---' {J -rwortd'.-L-.rg•st-re sae enve ope . ~~~~.::::';:====~'1 -B~ Crescent NB. ACCTG Dep't cl.rk typist, 10 Proh11ional LA NGDON WORLD RECEPT-GirlFri, lglrl_oU, 642-362? RE~! -ruff ' Are You Letting Cash Slip . Through Your .Finger,s See If You Have Any --Of~lhese-things-A- ·DAILY PILOT WANT-AD Will Sell Fast! 1. ·-2. Gultor 3,· 1111y Crib 4. 11ootrlc Sow s.c-• 6.Wnhor 7.0vttiN..iMotor •. $-Sot 9. Couch 10. Clorlnot 11. ltlfrt ........ 12. Pickup Truck U . Sowi"I Mochine 14._ ... 15, Mochlno Tool1 16. Dlolwmhor 17. '"""' 11. Cabin CruiHr 19. Golf Cort 20 ... ,........, 21, Stomp Colloctlell 22. -Sot 23. Ploy ..... 24. hwll .. loll 25. w ..... Skis 26.F- 27. Sultcuo 21. Cleek 29. Bicycle •57. lloctrlc T,.ln 30. T-il•r SI. Kilton 31. lor SIMI• 59:""CIHllc Aute 32. Encyd.,...io. . ........ 6Q,.~ Tolilo 33. Vocuum c1 .... r 61. Motet cyclo 34. Tropicol Fioh 62. AccMtllon 35. Hot Rod Equipm't 63, Sk l1 36. FRo C1blnot 64. TV Sot 37. Golf Clubs 65. Workbench 31, Stwlint Sil ver 66. Dlo!Mnd Wotch 39. Vlctorion Ml•ror 67. GH<ort 40. llotlroom Sot 61. 1,..,.,. 41. Slido Proloc..,. 69. Cornplne Troller 42. LllWTI -70. Anltqw Pumltun 43. Pool T1lilo 71 . T.,. llocenlor 44. Tires 72. Soilboot 45. Plono 73. Sporn Cor 46. Fur Coot 74. Mottr-Box SPI• 47. DropH 75. lnboo..i Spo-ot 41. u,_, 76. Shoftun 49. Hone n. Sotltll• 50. Airpl... 71. Dort Gome s1 ;-0rwon· 79. Punchintl 1o1 S2. Ewcyclo . IO. lolly Corri•IO 53. Roro llook1 --il. Dr-. 54. Sid ... h 12. Rlffo- 55. Hilh Chl(r 13. Dook 56. Coln• \ 14. scua.i. O..r DAILY PILOT WANT-~D lie hii 1iecl into caih with • -- so ' . Don't Just Sit Therel • DIAL DIRICT * 642-5678. key add. elec typewriter. Employment S.rvice TRADERS. P:O. Box Muabll"~·."""hang. et~~.etiP<R~ ..::::.:=:. ___ ~~~1 A.,e 25-35 Apply 1141 2790 Harbor Bl CM 54C).G05S 1127-A21, Redondo Beach, am o.aNa, ve un.uC • FINE mapk!, Twn-bed .. incl: P)iacentl& CM 1-3·30 Harbor Blvd' at Adams Calif. 90278 very very at~ct, ~per sptT1, mattr, bed tbl. Lmp • · · sharp appear. WiJI consider tbl, ; 1tep...end tbl1, 35" rnd A SUM GYM Distr-belp elem COCO'S -REUBEN'S HOUSEKEEPER -Practical full or pt-time. \Vrite Box cof/tbl, 2 tbl lmps-w/cloth world's No. l exerciser & _COMPLEX -nurse. Mature lady, 11 PM 10036, S.A. 927ll. ah&des. 40" What-not rack, introduce exc!Ung, new to 1 AM. SAWYER HOME. ~ Misc fumah'c. Blonde con. SLIM GYl\f JET BATH. No 464: MacArthlH' Blvd. Ph: 646-ti'll6 RN & LYN sole Hortman 23" TV. 14x18 exp. Nee. Shirley Graham Newport Beach HOUSEKEEPER. c 0 0 k : Bound beige Acrilan crpt, 13 961-9425 or 646-4871 Over 40 for elderly widow , RILL TIME Vol. World Book Child Craft ATI'ENTION HOUSEWIVES INTERVIEWING MON-FRI on Balboa Isle. Room, board w/Cyclo teacher. Sat·SUn, Macllonald'1 of_ CM at 3J41 l Tf' s PM _ S25 a wk. 67&-Wl e New Facllitits 1l36 Pembroke, NB. 54S-«>81 J;arbor Blvd. ~ now hiring 548-0587 · k be the HSKPRS Emplyr pays fee. • Xln't Opportunity women lo YAll' lwn e A.M. BUSBOY e George Allen BylarE Agen-FURNrrt.JRE returned frcal hrs of J0:.30 AM to 2 PM. NO EXPER)ENCE NEXES-cy llJS.B E. 16th. S.A. Apply in ftar10n dilplay studies. modd homo. Ideal for women w/school SARY FULL TI?i1E PART 54'1-039S r-es, deccraton onoeli.tictt. &&".children. ~tarting pay TIME.' DA ·;s OR NiGHTS. ====='°""'---;;1 Spa.niab le Medtternnean. IU"'!:·~"'.!pe~'C,_h>-~ . .....,.~~3~,,_.lciiiiii'iiiii:7iiii~'iffiiiSE HOUSEKEEPER & '""'of HUNTINGTON BEACH R D FURNITURE A-1 TELEPHONE ·Soliciting c;ocKTAIL I STEAKHOUSE yr old child ln N.B. atta. CONVALESCENT Bl CM _ FUii time, no eJCPer, nee. WAITRESS Exper. Only. Full ctiaip, live-in. HOSPITAL 1144 Newport ., • • Immediate employment Wanted for • NEW OR· $90/wk. Must drive. Pre-fer every nlte 'Hl 9 1MO. ,*.~Blvd, Suite F PHANGE RESTAURANT. e agt-range 25-50. Ca 11 l8Bll Florida St. Wed., Sat. 6: Sun. 'W I -c;;;i&Meii 548-5Wl. -Laauna Beach:·Cal! ·betwn Mt;-2389· · cSii.llg"i.iuie) ..... 1WUiBed set Brand ne-.v AVIATION INSURANCE 2-6 PM, 494-7'100. HOUSEKEEPER -sitter, -~nt~to~ Be~h -Box spring & mattnues, SALES SECRETARY COILEGE students • must mature O\ristian woman, ~ head boards, Ira.mes. 2 Handling c Ii en t 1 and be neat, personable, over 18. periodic full chg w/car. RESTAURANT help, female, nii:ht tablea, l chest ff marketinC avia ti on ~ $2.25 an hr to start. Car• Needed 10 . 4 /13th, 2 part time, over 21. Ph. a.ft drawerl. matching hunt*o aurance. . must. J.,quna area. For in-children, ages 10 &: 1L Rers 1:30 56-1686. $150. A1k for Mr. Hutton Mrs. Bradley terview ca.II 49frl473 req'd. NB. 644-1969 l--,*'""'S"A"'L"A"'D,-.G"l"R""L-*.,.--1 ~""-:;:..176';:'=----~--1 PEACOCK INSURANCE CO. COOK, Male or Female. Day HOUSEKEEPER I COOK l\fust have good preearation King1z Bdrm Set 401 Clenneyre Laguna Bch ttlift. Apply in peraon, Fridays 1: Saturdays. Per· experience. Mon. thru Fri. Formal din. table * 4!H-1087 * lsadol'e'a,. 333 Ba)'lide Dr. manent. Lag. Bch. 494-srot 7-3:30. Call Mrs. Penning-3 Bar Stools SOCIAL Secretary and/~1,;.,N,,.B~·,c6-'l:J,.c.ll680...c.,_-,-,,--,, I * ICE CREAM GIRL • Ion 833.{)60() Ext 2037, betwn, Wrought Iron Hanginc Woman Fr.lday-OJmpani~. COOK female. Apply in U a.m. to 4 p.m., Mon. thru 2-5 PM. . Lampl7l4 -Versatile. Eqi.-MS."edi~. penion. Mea IAnes,-110.l Fri. Apply·2 PM...f PM dailf;-SAJ:ES---ivs-1r:-apipllaneeS Call 541- Llve-in ii desi~. Terry Superior Ave, C.M. 899 W. 19ttr st., C.M. . for reputable firm. Part NEW 2·pc Ja:e gold sectioml 615-3461 DELICATESSEN Man, must time/full time. Retail ex-$200, Beaut black lacquer BAR.\JAID wanted under 30, be dependable. Full time. per. deaireable. Good in-Oriental 5-pc bnn aet $125. ni1bt 1hift, A p p~y See ~rry. 495 E. 17th SL come potential. Write Box green 1ectional ,$00.; "Fl...UfE" 1880 ?ilonrov1a, C~1. M 2024, Daily Pilot, 2'lll W. ~2-45.l&. C?il.AaktorReese. DENTAL Aisii tant -BalboaBlvd.,N.B. SAC carved Spanish Exec chairside experience. Mcrn-I -•e"""'S"A"L'E""S""'R""'E"P,.e;--1 desk & library table, $375. Betty Bruce m:f:f t xec A genc y UD W. Cout Hwy., N.B. By appoint. ~ ings 9 to 12, 4 day wk. Be in buaine11 tor yourself. Quality 8' sofa, perl for 846--0617 No inveatment. Xlnt oppor-home or of!ice, $150 , ./ DENTAL RECEP-tunity for men or women w/ 71&-4542 eve or early ani. TIONIS'T. Exp required. IRVINE PERSONNEL exciting new Co. Full or part MAPLE bunk bed, mattress Jl,fon 1hru Fri. Age ~5. time. 54S.0131 9 am-6 pm, $25; TV cabinet $10; Used Call 673-2562 for interview SERVICES •AGEf\ICY ISALE-=="Eam,-,-"C"h"'•"';"',.,-t m=-a-=s I =-~~; lronln&: board SJ, appt. (Formerly Abililiea Unlim.) money part time. Sarah """"""=------.I TRISH HOPKINS Coventry hiring now. No in-DIVORCED man _mu • t DIVERS t d I ~ -; .. ~.... sacrifice new contemp. Jiv-tlB E. 11th (at Irvine) C.M. V"9 • no e · r •-= ........... ..,. * BEAUTY 4~ me;.:i;:~7v:._ tra:; 642-1470 For info PH: 347-6388. ;;:ms~~~+ •ttftlltlr1 OPERATORS -· ~l\ave £QQd healt,;:-not afraid SALE'S WE PAY HIGHEST PRICE! * .HAIRSTYtlSTS o1 hard Work. Tho.e aatiatac-For recorded Jnlonnation dial FOR ORIENTAL RUGS. w/clientele. Commbooth. to 65%, torally completing training JR. GIRL F RIDAY 545-4484 Call collect L.A. 213; pd. ·vac. Allo • . apace wlD be b1m1 to work on our Exper. not neceaa. Xln't op-SAVINGS AND LOAN 657-51'15 L HAIR .,.,..,... -fl8fj por. for unencumbered at-·,:,~~~=-~~-~ toren . """"'' ,,,,,....... boats with high pay. Inttt-BRANCH MANAGER. KIN~ ~ ~ BED.· =-. -"" 1D trl.Cf. OUteolnr gir) ace 21· ~ r >&JU Sw.i BEAUTICIAN w it h ex-views Wed, Thurs ~ Fri, 3, to leam construction bus-Savin11 and Loan Anocia· packaged frame. s 12 5 • perience a-following in H.B. am to1 1 pm, Hohda,y Inn, inesa. Handsome 1 girl ofc. tion, located tn Newport Worth $360, Usually bomt! Call 84Z-lll5 JB7 \\. Chapman Ave Or-_GcfS Ui!'tlfig salary w/lots-of· Beach-area,_.bas position -8U-6536. CASHIER. part-time, fer car ange-. fringe benefits avail. to right available Jor a \\'ell quaJi-li_IB_D_ITE __ RRAN __ EAN _____ S'_I -wash bwllness. *'DRIVERS * girl. Accuracy & neatness fi~ Savings and Loan •crushed velwt never uwd Call: ~ N E • an' absolute MUSf! Typing Branch Manager. $145· Matchlna:'lowaeat $95. CARRIER 0 XpefleftCe 40 \V.p.m, min imum. Use 10 Excellent potential and fringe ~7 N I ber:efil1. Minimum two years ---------1 Keltary • k':Y adder A have math in-B&Vinp /eacrow experience: DELUXE 7' Mediterranean BOYS M111t have dean C.Ufornia chnatlon •. Wlllln~ to red dresser, coat $550, sell $190. driving re&rd Applv learn & athNde most nnpor. F-:;iu!articular call Person-White/gold. lliO W. Wililon, WANTED YELLOW CAB i::o. tMt. Thi• job h" uruJm;tod ,.1, 1213) 923-5561. ,cCM::,;.,=-· -----I 186 E 161h St. fut~re for Some girl. Reply FRENCH Provincial canopy ...... DAILY PILOT Dana POlnt, San .luan C&plotnno .... Capi.ltranD Beach. Contact Mr. Seay at DAILY PILOT ~-M,.. in own handwriting to Daily *SECRETARY-Insurance- .....,.,... Pilot Box P-1023 22ll w. broker. Experienced. N.B. bed, double $40. Green EARN $50 WHkly Joe ' even-in&"·• work. Party plan, car nee. Eves W: 545-4445 DENTAL Receptionist Must have dental or medical ex- per. 30-45. 545-8395 aft 6. Bal~ B I v d., • Newport officer 644-1917 eves. couch $5. 646-3640 Beach. 92660. SERVICE STATION · \VAI..NUT Din'g taWe.-2 J, W. ROBINSON 'S -NEWPORT BEACH - San Clemente ~-• OESK·clerk, PBX, NCR, all 305 N. El Camtno nsu phuea front r1csk, exper., ATTENDANT, tull time' lea~. bullet, 5 chn, mechanical. Sharp man who Sl50. 84'7-f989 "-ant!I rood opportunity. COLONIAL fUrnitutt • 9' Smog license pref'd. Net1.t oouch, chair, swivel rocker, appearance nee. Apply 2590 'Z end tables. 968-0337 NewportBJvd.,C.l\1. MUST sell fur n iture! ll----'..,....::..:.::211:...., ___ I full time. Ben Brown'1 Motor Hotel Has an opening lor -EXPERIENCED -SERVICE STATION Condensing quarters Mini ATTENDANTS bike -Garage aaie 536-851! The DAILYi PILOT .ORANGE COAST'S laing arketplace 31106 S. Coast. S."L.aguna EXPERIMENTAL MACHINIST TV SALESMAN FuJ1 time. Apply Standard DINING rm set, white It S..alion, 24081 EJo Toro Rd, gol.d, 8 pea, xlnt cond. A Apply in pen.on 10.5 pm Laguna Hilla. real buy at $245. 673--05711. ldonday lhru Fridq SERVICE Station help full 3 DRAWER SOUO OAK Personnel Dept, time gra~yd. Pref. college DRESSER Wfl\fIRROR M111t be Tool I Die Journe.y-•2 Fashkln Isl., N.B. sludent. Richfield, 19th & * 961-3'54 * Equal Opportunity Employer man with mlnlmum 3 yea.rs ~===~_,,,..._.,,....,.,l ;~N~<0~·poiijrti",ic~.M~.i0nu3';;;;;;;i 5 PC Early American e:irperlence. 1'1usl be capable _~ r.: SERVICE Station salesman breakfast. Excellent coa-R. LICENS ED Med ica l d. · $50 •-111911 of fabricaUllJ preciaion pt time, exp. l&lary & it~ . '""'" . · D _._ L.abotatory Technologist, in ......_ pa.~. b . h comm., uniforms ..... ..::vron Excellent company benefita includirc pension plan, in- ~. si.clr le.Ve, etc. APPLY IN PERSON Sbur-Lok Corp, 1300 E. Nonnandy Pl., Santa Ana (1 blk N. of McFadden, ·~ blk. W, of Grand) Equal onortunitY employtt 3 EXPER MatuN Alesladies _.,_lnlood bu1inN1. Glw b9ckgnlund ~xper. Reply to Dalb' Pilot Box M 107,, C.M. EXPER. Dlahwasher Apply in penon, SUrf & Sirloin ~stauranl. 5930 Well Coa9t Hwy, N.B. private la . No nig ts or Adams/~fagnolia HS Office l'umlture IOJI wk. ends. Xlnt aa.lacy & frln~ benefits. Westminster e Telephont Workers• Call Mrs. Oeckft' 893-1321. No experience necessary. Refin'd 34xflO wood desb, '89.50 • Reftn'd ~ U'm rotary chain, $29.SO e We have the lupst aelection of uaed ottice bn in thb LOCAL Mgn W /.ales abil to oper new type car ,..,.ax. equip. Exp des/not nee. S.A. •Fash. Isl. 64Z-72Sl. Young men! Girls! House- v.1vta! run or par. time, earn $2 to ~ per hour. Ph: s.m.~t 1869 Newport Wvd, area. Suite F, Cl\1 P.1c f.1ahan Desk Full time charge. Xlnt rril'Jle TELEPHONE aolicitor, com· 1800 N~ Blvd. mission bas I 1. Disabled -====-======! LVN benefits, Bayview Convales--American Veteral't!I, 547-0615 ~ cent H1>1pitaJ, 205.'t ThuHn, Olffeo F.quipmont I011 CM. 642-3505 TELEP H 0 NE !IOl..icitlflr. l~,.-'----~=~--1 Prefer hlr;,.. 1but-illl. Call ELEC u-~~ $14 0 Management Trainee , ::: .. :: .. !187=3_-· ____ 1 """' 15li";.;."'h'i..t ""' 1 • $15 & Ill!. StnJshl cln SS. l>ynamk: Savl'ICI A Lou A~ 11:1e. la 8'!'1!kins collqe arad w/busine• major for their Jnafl&&'tment tra.Jning pn>- lf'&m. This position often a challenrinc I' rewarding ca- reer to the righlPf!Ol\I\, Call ~nonnel 213: 1169-05U. • TEWR SIS. 77-1' ~ ll"' !luares- tttlt !ixturn, tan .ii b' Part Ume. Hourly $TT.~ door-I SS tt, Iii'' BANK O' AM ERI CA P1<1• 11.., 30" x4'" ss. 115 E. Balboa Blvd. l 'xS' $2). Wood botts, Balbol cheap! 1882 Whittler, Unit V Equal opportunity f.mplO)'er l-=0=1,;, =64=2-3408======! I022 * TRJf\.U\fER OR UPHOLS-Gar ... Sale MASSEUSE-Exp'd. F IBE RGLAS S Ala0Tr1tlnee. • 147-7879 STERERtoworkonboatin. GIGANTIC ne\ahborhood Pttmane.nt opentna1 for ex-Mechanic teriors ~ :rvu ~: ~ sale, Sat Ii Sun. . ptt, fiberala: laminatora lo; Import Auto ~ AR'.ao~ MJ.. .2J'l6 S&nta Ana Aw., C.M. chopptr sun lamina.tors. Al-lofec:hanic . must be expen. RINA (114) 33'1..2501. USED dottq, tum, tl:lols, .. ' lnteniewin1 lor 2td al'i, 111 -~ J t h .... ,_noes TV, a~ etc!. '32 er .... ~. "" .... :.:;.:: ,,_,; TV t:;m'l work awtl. Cum&n., Cd.'4. S&t '"-•·-. Jeadman. GroYtizW co. -~ M.ny company _,_,,._...... • ~ duol'( ~IYRFP pfii. 1>M1f --UllJ"" '""" ..... u * GARAGE SALE * duct1 located in No. l.onl-1-='0==-.-· ===-I tnexpmenc:td. J..A.G. 111c. Sat a-SUn t-5 •M•) MEDICAL ASSISTANT 835-3501. . BcftCh atf&. Pttorle '-'"" E:<petienced In x.raya. fn--263 Costa MtM St., CM 636-9376. Puablm, Inc.. Yi1Art'R.ESSF.S. aper. t'i> • Y·Ro s c 3017 £. Lu Hf"rmanu, jectiong, blood work. aet-ups \\'Ork <11¥1 or niter. Mutt be . '"" ALI; M IS I Ir. EKG's, 817-:0t7 --· ..... ~ ... "·ach HOUM! * 900 \V, 19th St, C.M, * Compton, Ca. 90221, Equa v•~ ... ~..., o<:: n....r..., Emplo)'tr. MOTEL Desk Clerk tnn, flt Sfttpy Hollow Ln ., Fa.st reault1 ue Ji.lit• phone -.. ,... c.atJ 646-7"5 Lacuna Bch. 497·.1.tll8. ciJl away! eau in )"OUI' aa ~· $175 was "" R<a d>OI Can GAR l'Oll i;uil """ mU< .... FU I sppi boo I oc1.c 67~ BIV< SAT. R• . t rolh '"' w .. GAR Eve •loY furn Cho Apt 937 I '""' chai Sot """ CLO'. ho•u • s 5 p CdiY RUM Halt Kill: pm, LIKE 185, up1' tiqu l\fOV TV, mis• ~ .... sn.v .. 11 bab: Ion Ht SU GAR 324 Clo! COJ\1 '"" &S NEIC Sal• .. ~ FRI. ... , lain PAT Adu mis GAR 620! f,... GAR ble &n Ap1 HO' PR' ope • fro< .... UP $65. LGE ... hm = .. - ·-. .. • • , frli.r, S.,tlftlbtr 23, 1~~ DAJl.Y PILOT 39 Ml.~•NDISI POil -------•-TRA1"5f'ORTATION fillNSPOltflTION ' ~ANSPOftiTION 1 ~1 -MIRCHJ.NDISE FOil · MIRCHANDISI FOR SALi .AND TllADI MIRCHANDISI l'Oll ~,... FREE TO YOU -· ' S.ALE .AND TllADI S.ALI .AN01'1lADE-MERCH.ANDISI l'Oll SALi .ANO TllADE S.ALI .ANO TR.ADE ---&om & YKhtl --lttOtt•I• -Mollll~ f100 ·~ t;"'-1 o .. .,~ S•I• 8022 .AJ!f'll~nco0 • . lllO T1lovl11on l20S Ml-llonuuo w Mite. w...w w ~.!:..~;hi~ SCRAM-LETS Rent A Sailboat io x " Par.;:m111t._nt P. • f ----~ plne sen.Pl >. o the r J •!redwood nbena. Adlt R_OCK ___ -... -,.-.-... -,-1-,-11 *AN EASY ... FR.EE lift. Let wi •how )'O\I SALi LCE, clNn Ab&lont peari1. hand1,.-n.ft matttials. Pbo~ ANSWERS cat'-'!3, aleieps 4, fully equip. Pk. No peti. Newport Bdl - drav.'ttl S25: Ash d lo'i: Ub, W•lher & Dryer In your borne our ~aul The Golden Wavts, ~ 5484305 an 4:30 p.m. 9/26 ped, $30 per day, wkdyl;: $5500. ~2927 l ."':.-~ J chain $23: L;e rnd mt1p'.e LIKE NEW! rt)'lon Iha& It pile carpet at ~md Dra~9! ~:;ti!;· 4~:~1.9 BEAUTIFUL. large grey I: Olsmal -Llntr -llovel -per day wknds: $3)) pu ~AYSJDE Vfilw, 2 BR. 2 •. cotf~ tbl $25: Rock ma.pit Owntr: 821·l43l $3.97 a 413. yd, Phone ..,.,._-...tor rapny WYllY.....,.., white ma.le cat .. UlUeover 1 Forger-SMELLING Ltts0ni lncl. 9684840· Ba. Ideal adult spot. JW,950. desk m: M•ple. pie crust REF'RIGERA1'0RS • Large 962'.TtSl,,.. Sears Rotbuck A cl01inc out 2500 yant1. of EDG&R-trimrner wantea by yr. old. FamUy had to move Hippies a1c Pf'Ople who ~-44' JIOUSEBOAT avail for Owner. 615--1642 tbl SS: 2 roW11 of naugahyde, selection. $.ti, $.i5 I. Ui. Co. Adam$ at Magnolia. drapery fabric and made..up ne~ youna homeowners. out of state. Nds good home. p~ their dislike for con. Wknds or Weekly, Pf.nn ; 1 t rrey·1 red: Lamp.~ &: 646-7820. lt.B. drapul.ea. Matttial& frOm Price must be reaeon&ble. ~7803 9/26 fonnlty by dressing and moored. MB--Z4J4, 636-4034. Mini Bik•s 9175 1 . llhades: Wht •hag nip, 1 1 •LA'°"D'°'Y~K"•"nm"'oro"""-w'°•""•he"·"r;"'1"ik"e 1 e 21" RCA maple color TV -'l5c a yard al>d draperlea 54()...22'19 aft 5 pm. 3 LIVELY kittens 10 wka., SMELLING alike. . 9X'l2, lge md \\'ood braided new $100, U cu It 1968 Good oond. fl!O, Pvt ply. from SS __pair, Sale starts DELI CASE 4' to 6' pape.&,.tralnedJ a.150 all black 40 , Chris T S. Dbl cabin Bo.t Charter 903' TACO 2Z. ExccllC?nt COi'!• , n.ig:...2 ladden, l h\'O.JI~ }~~~ nfrig, ae ll Gall-~ • ?i.fondayforoneweekONLY. 67s.3375 mother cat, Ms.-0532. }.forn-sedan cruise~. Mat'IY Xtns. • -dilion. Evt:l')'thlng,,bout It ;' ~= Old wht aewlng mach: defrosting, like new S150. 3853 Birch St, Newport i,. ht.fore 12 or alt ~:00 Gd cond. :r.tuat ~I. Firm 32' Twln«ttW Chris Craft la A·L Even the IM'!l.t la •' \Vork bench for garage; Nu Lge steel clothes cabinet. HJ-Fi & Stereo 1210 Beach, Sf&.1431, adj. 10 Or· FREE TO YOU p.m. 9/26 $80(Jl).will (!61')' $1000 at Slpg 6 * Delux boat brand new. $95. 6"-:0511. ; ~/~pad~ 2J8'!.:cha~: $lO. 5(8..,~. ---R-TO--E----.-_-_, *J1le County Airport. ONLY 2 Jett-darling ter· 7'ii% to right pty. TI4-* 548-Z4M, 636-4034 * Mot I -:1 " • 1968 ~tODEL Ji)igidaire De· SlLVE N ate.~-...e * AUCTION * ALLERGY tn t'am. nd sd rter/poodle pups, female, 7 529-436.l Aft 6:30 SAT & all orcyc •• y.,,,,, I tools, pipes, dishes, garden IU Xe Dillhwasher. J\1oving • phonograph W I AM,. F:r.t bo-1, fenced ....ts for 3 wks old. 21111 8.1-'-·mpton d•v Sun. ht Stor•.. 9048 __ ....; ______ I ti tools. 1312 Cambridge Ln, t m. 962-8741 yi--Furniture "R;C J" ,,..,. ""' NB. M~. Fri/Sun. l0.5 niu.st sell! 5C&.9Tl3 alt 5:30--'l Un« uic · p!U:. Purebred spd fawn Circle, H.B:" 9/26 ~ , 1 1\tOVINa:biirage Sale -~'~"-•-•~y~S.~u_s""~·~-~-McINTOSH stereo pre-amp" &. Applle.tn! Chihuahua • yn, lovt.ble RHODEFIAN Rldgeback &. S•il•ts 9010 ~!~ .. s~ Jn Col!ta TH• I :~~ .. ~~:. •·:~,.c~'::";: "!~~s4~0'.;,~;,,W~~[;~ ~ ~"f':, ~~OW ~:;.:A~I{~~ ~=;n ~~~":,:;:·=.:.~·~I~:~~ ~~,•n S hephe~/~ ALL NEW 16' :.::,•~;~';'.~~If b~~ H()NDA lamps, toys. dishes. books. $30. 546-5TI2 G. E. stereo, walnut ' 2075% Newport, CM 646-86116 mos, all ahot.. 638-9536 9126 PLEASE! 2 darling kittens HOBIE CATS~ • !. pictures, childttns & ladles Avocado R•frig•retor AM/FM, pbono xlnt cond. Behind ~s Bldg, Mat'L SUPER, f&r..cut pedlcree who need homes Aircr•tt 9100 •'fRlall l..,_ clothes, small appliances, Xlnt .::ond. 645.1025 ~. 968-347S aft 5 -wknd1. STOP & SWAP male Collie, flff to lg. yard desperately! 832-5945 9/36 ALL COLORS UIMllWUl · some furniture, elc. Sat &. • .54U10l \_ or farm-type home. People FREE ~ S ru FREE DEMOS 210 Robertson conVt":ndon, \t ,..-IMCll .....,, ., SUn,10amto4pm,851$a.n.. AntiquH 1110 T•pe RKOrd•r• 8220 2073NewportBlvd c.tt m~tbe~tohu&elft-Ufe ~~~lc~~/26 Priced from $1195 Winter interest, -ha.ngered at 537~. 89J...7581 tiago Rd Cf\I (P.tesa del , Bld' Ma ) quiremenl!. Hippies prefer-• • · · Orange Co. 1250 hrs total, NEW-USED-SERV: Mar traciJ 540-3154. ANTIQUES • rop.e .bed $75, • &. 8 HOME tape deck (nect to :ony 1 . 1 . t;,. red, 64~2617 9/25 PETS •nd LIVESTOCK ~clrtg starts aoon! 300 &\!OH. 360 VHF, 2(M) _ • RE.i.'fODElJNG, Houseful of pine drop leaf tabfe $45, 4 w/speaken. $55. Rush . Usedturn·s=. ~frig' LANOLORD ~ 00 CATS _ __ ~AP-'N-EDS-~v:m_'_:AOE.-aingie....a.cceu.i...-1f-1'---~.,-c-I -':;:.: .'.:i':.'~~6';'',;,!,";: =::; ~~ '11s. Old _ _,,,_.,..,.._Robin,-·;:,~ !~; :,v~ :"~ :'.".::' f';;",:-V;.;,:">.~~ ·:7=~·~. go1:: ~~-c~~~"-.:!2244 ~r· mr .. ,,., ,.,., '69 YAMAHA j': $115· Late model G.E. Spanish OCC88lonal chair C•m•r•s & ' , playM-also black lon1 l&r, blk lep .lean, must \Vll.llhtr & tefrig + 500 S15. Small old sideboard~· Equipment &300 MOVING SALE. F urn.• haired mother w/Vt'ey large 11ell-leaving country, Aft Built for real sailors! Mobil• Homes t200 .e;:;. • I i us a b 1 e h s"h 1 d I 1 ems, old lamp base, 1nterestinz surfboard, tools, de c? '" irreen eyes. ~ 9/26 7•00 S49-21.63 Recently surwyed • well OT l·B r.io El>duro. 1,2)) ac.I , Reasonable. Also. 2 BSA \Vorld \Var One quilt $5. See MAM J)'" A C • 3 $115, items, golf clubl:, clotht!'( LOVABLE tan It. white mix-· ' · "Jound.-n.cplaceme11L va.lue t •••••••••. tual milea, tull Ughta A tn-,., chop-rs, all custm. 21B8 al huge garage sale Satur--Rolleimagic, $85, Mioolt.a-16 1pt. stove; % carat dla· t'<MJreed ale pup 6 tnOll *PARROT* UJ,000. Dacron aalla, THE MEADOWS 11tnm:ents, new tlrn, two t Can;:"n Dr, No. c. C.l\1. day lD-4. 611 Kinsg Place, $20, B&H slide proJ 300vi mond ring (never worn). m ' ti ' dbl yellow wf cage $60 Atomic lore, tathometer, ect. front lenders (stock, alumin- ·v-Newport Heights $20. 847-7049 Sept. 26th & 27th. 11.4 Op&J, HEbrkn. Loves ch dren. * 673-3fi61 * Ready to sail. M ust Cln the Irvin. um), detact .. pa.as, aut. i GARAGE SALE: S,tove, TV, .,._,..___ Island ~721 Nds. rd home w/fenced _..,_ ·11 trad f or•-11rOY•I) eUlll ll:': ROLLEIFLEX, Fl.5 Teuu, ncu....,.. · · yard • s m , breed . ll20 sa"' '"'--... w1 c or P~ ....... • ....,.. ro!l away bed, mens v.-cl Sewing ~chines 1120 excellent cond., $75. Da,ys LEAVING area sale· by 633-J25l 9128 Cats pcrty or what have you. Now renting 1pac•1 83&.3344 wkdlcys ~ .w:s suit, lrg desk, golf clubs, 546-&80, 536-1195 eves. owner! Ptush dbl deluxe ND gd ho-· 1-~ yd BEAUTIFUL S•a I p'o i nt Dys: 64i..2851, Eve': Mulli·Mlllion Dollar l weekends. • . coffee tbl. Cur1ains. drps & 1970 Slnger touclJ-0.matic, zig. furn Mobile Home on the ""'• ,..._.., , 962-0787. ?i.foblle HoTlle' Community much mo~. 536-3578 :ll592 zag, beaut. Makes buttoii S rt" ~~ l.IOO ..Bey, $1A,150 .• 67 & •62_ Cad adorable ~ & wht pug mix, Siame8e kittens, 8 wee~ * CORONADO 30 '* e 52-\i-acree of fun living--I•' Egret Ln .• HR Sal&. Sun. hohes, overeaat seams, blind pa 1"1 -• _ Coupe de Ville Reas"f ~ gcre\V tail, about 1~ lbs. old. $15. Call 642-0843 -Have a small boat now! e $300,IXXI rttreatlonaJ, SG- f' u R N I TU RE , s m a 11 hems, designs & etc. GOLF CLUBS ' cord ion orig $700.now $200. Adults or older I I r 1 1. BEAtrrlFUL SIAMESE kit· Use: it for the dwn payment cial & cultural center, full applia~. roll-a·way bed, WITH 673-31.52 btwn 1Qam.6 pm 893-6818 9128 ten -SlO, 3~S montM old. Nu l'Vlbl deal turned down. time in park service cea. boOks, loys, games, misc. \\'alnut cabinet. Guaran. $55 Fint Flight YARDAGE AU new fabrice. FREE firewood -4 ''Trees of 673-4187 -Yathts Roya.le Corp. ter.' \ odds and ends, Sat & Sun cash or am payments~ Used tMce. ~I set! Cost Cotton ~ts wool jeraey Heaven" JS' tall but only 6" e BURMESE KITTY 2912 \V. Coast Hwy, 645-0SlO e Daily 51nog • free ocean I 615-5400. 1723 E. Ocean 545-8238 $300. Will saoifice, ~49. AU: 64" 2 )'dll u' 56" bondeds 2 diameter, You cut & keep Reritttted, S3S * 645-0391 • 3 CORONAOO 27,s e breezes, aurroundtd by or. Blvd. Balboa * REPAIRS * for Ron, 537-SflO. yds' $3. Polyester sweater all the wood. 28J Flo\\ft' ALl. NEW! AIL LOADED! a.nae groves I: mountains ·' • SAT, Sept. 26. lQ.4 pm HUNTING bow, new bear knits 60" S3 yd. Sat-Sun. st, C.J\f. 54&-3548 9/25 Dogs 1125 Cruise & race! e 7 min !tom world's l~t I , Refrig-frl!ezer-chaif's..rug5-Clean, oil & adjust your Kodiak magnum 52".SS lb. lOAM-4PM 3116 Van Buren. BEAUTITIJL loving kitten Slips with boabi! shopping ·center (Fashion , -twin bed frame s. machine in your home. glove. arm guard, xtra. Ct.I cat spayed 11 moll. needs Mal• M•hogany Doxie Yachts Royale eorv. Island) --II· rollaway bed. child's de:!!k-···-SPECIAL &tring. g field tips 29 .. , 6 AM/Ff\1 Corvair Radio $7S, rsensitive lovi~ people. * 3 mos. * Registered * 2SU W. Coast Hwy, &4Ml81.0 •Championship lawn bowlo and misc. 5-18-1297. ll44 $3.95, all work fully gllar. bear 29 .. broadhtads, never Organ S37S, typewriter $1.5, Owner Ieav111K area. * AU Shots * $100 * •COLUMBIA 22 • ing green Westminster, CM. !">45-8238 ' used, $65. 646-5520. Faberwatt broiler $10, im-675--3492 9/26 IS4&-0142 . JJJ E, 17th St.. CM Good ht Boe.I •Small pets allowed • GARAGE SALE! Free Wine. SINGER '70 mdl zig-zag, etc. BROWNING 22 cal. lever ac· itatlon fur cape, new, ;15. FEMALE chihuahua dos IRISH SETI'ER PUPS Complete w/11ails $3300 Enjoy the above from . . l Everything goes • cheap ln console, guar. $38.75 or tion with Weaver adj. 3x lo 2060 Newport Ave Sp No. 2, likes adulta k olde r *Written euaranttt Trailer available $11 .50 per mo. stove • refrig A: rouse of sml pmnts. 213: -437-1142. 6x scope. Excelle.nt con-CM. 642-6973 dtlldren. 2 white male kit· Tfue training Yachts Royale Corl>. 14851 JeHrey Rd. • 1 .,: furn-hsehfd items. BS A dition. $80. 548-4987 aft 4 KING SJze Beaut)rreat bed, tens p &: mother ca I . •Show, pet & field stock 2912 w. Coast Hv.')', 64fHl810 (SA Fwy at Jeffrey Rd. Chopper. 2188 eanyun Dr., Muaic•I PM 10 moa old, in excellent t'!On. 892-1459 9/28 By appt only 642-5065 • 2n' Sloop • oUrampl , l Apt C, CM. 642-638 7 ln1trunMnt1 1125 SURFERS dition. Quiltell, extra firm 5 MIXED-BREED pupptee:, 1 HAJtD to find Toy Fox Ter-Wood keel boat, Sleeps 2. CALL COLLECT CUSTOM SPECIALTIES ~.I 937 W. \VJLSON, CM : Elec .,,·th T9" TANAKA SURFBOAR.D mattress, headboard Ii: Did bl ack, brown w/wh, tier pup p I ea, UKC Make offer. 837-7039 '11.4/531.8_105, 71415J0.2930 Motorcycle SaJvag Parta tor range, Fa.lir o..-en on top; ./YORK TRUMPET frame. Private party $200. brown w/bl.k. Shorthaired, 3 recistered. Soft It CUddly, 7l4/832.8515, 213/8fi0.5210 ,. t makes. S::...1ce., ' 1 chairs; barstools; !IOltener; case. Xlnt cond. $100. :~e in Hawaii, Like new 531-8637. ma I e,.s • 2 f e m a I ;,;a beautiful " miart. 54~2153. SllfiO. :!_DO 14 ·~J..an ~·-········ npaira-lt cstm work, -!~1' ., ~ Set of ':r,; Dormeyer elec ··~, -Ji46.~_ ,~-1 afl 6 ANTIQUES • furniture • ·!J62.::.M --* COCX·A·POO puppies, Triple .Wld• Corn.II '* 527-8913 * · &--' SELMt;R trump•!. pro-'~" M B Ibo 20'1" ·'KMI mixer. s c-uus. tcssional model. Cost $600, SURFBOARD -5' 11 ' • clothing 2 WHITE and 1 blk pt. small, only 3 ,in litter: .. ~5 • • ix-Hillcrest • Flamingo 1969 H•rley Dev1cbon ., CLOTIIING CS.16J. Misc. GARAGE SALE Siamese blue & green eyes, for blondes: $15 for black. 548-0532 P•-""""'"t e Universal Mo--•· l2S cc .. ~. can '•I sacrifice $150. 968-4737 custom made. Excellent 892-1811 d 495 --·--· c ....... J....., ~ · household, custom furn . Sa.t. conditkln. Perfect for the 611 Kinp Pl Newport Hts. 1 wb. 1 aya, Beaqtiful! 968-1 * ERICKSON 23 * Batrinp;n • ~ 531 •7294 rfter 6 PM aD day l::: & Sun. Sept 26 & 27, 9AM-1935 MARTIN guitar $175. .__. $2S .,~~ ...,77 IM Saturday 89T-5C80 ews. 9/28 e GERi'l Sho r thalred DELUXE BOAT Continental e Star Sat.._ Sun.~ 5 PM. (Roul 512 Begonia, Goya classical guitar $85. ..,.,ginner. · UTT'VJ • • • 6 Complet boat iJ1 .=::..:•c::.:::::., ___ .,...,=1 e BELLYBOARD . El CANDELABRA. He av Y FOUND bllc labndor vic1ruty Pointer AKC 39 champs! e Genen.l e H" crest e FOR sale or trade-1.96 7 Cdl\ 1 . Cues incl. 646-4574 black wrought Iron. s ft ot Laguna Canyon. ls at wkll guaranteed &lip. CHAPMAN Yamaha 305 Blg Dear 1:::: RU1\f~1AGE SALE -Nf'w • Trumpet. mute & case • Paipa. Good cond. S30 or wide, new, never used, very SPCA in Laguna Canyon * * * 548-8188 * * * Yachts ~e Corp. MOBILE HOMES l aind Halecrest C 1 u b, 3107 Cost $250, NOW S80 best offer. 675-l027 Spanish, IA price. at $35. •94-1512 9-28 GUNN Kennels. Wire Hair 2912 W. Coast Hwy, 64.5-0llO 12.131 Beach Blvd., G.G. ~bl.er. Xln 557...ao Killybrooke, C.1\1. 9 am to 6 Reconditioned * 642-3101 306 RIFLE, scope, clips, 40 64M687. BEAUTIFllL AKC Springtr Fox Terrier pups, 3 wk&. Z4' y AWL alpe: 415 / * n4/530.2930 * pm. Sat only. 5.57-7234 ----rounds ammo 7~ lb. 22" REMINGTON '5p1me! 1 yr, nds loving AKC, 3J champ. pedi&ree, sails I galley I hd I rad1o I HARLEY DavidBon '70, 35Dt'!c 1..c.,:,;,=--i-"""~=--=:.:fri:;::-. Pianos & Org•n• 1130 ban"el. not Army. 548-0230 r.-...bl• --~1.,. n-....__.. fa. m 11 Y le: I.fenced yd. -. 397.-•4 inbrd __ ,all race. & cruise '67 2""43 GrNt lake1 Sprint Jmmac. under m LIKE new frosl·u= re g, Calyp Z"Ul"U& IJ'I"""~· • rcl"U:<;l ~ _, ""''51 llill ""' ml, Musl ,ell $600Jotter. $85: sm refrig $65; 4 hi -bck SALE U.S. DIVERS so J t'!Ond. $25. Call CP.M.) 891-5480 9/26 POODLE. 3 mo·s, apricot eqpt/well ept Musl Set up tn'Adiilt Park 833-1.521 j l tiqucs. Sat&: sun. 492-mJ. PIANOS e ORflANS pac · new · ANTIQUE brau bed $?5 white, 2 all black. Mother Call 642.-0)57 16' CATAMARAN. Very fallt, carport & shed, w/trail sproc~t a: mbop ' ! • ' uphol din·g chairs, 90me al). ~la~~ & 72 ;:;,k = 644-2698. S UN ABLE kitteN 3 blk a: AKC, shots Ii wonn@d. $75. 499-2066 Complete w/1teps. a~ HONDA ~ambler 16 0 I: f\fOVJNG • 2 sewing maeh, Famous brands at tremen. Misc•ll•neous ---l600 Grandmother'• clock $'125. ~anx nd good homes. SHERRY'S Poodles • ~ complete w/traller. $593. AVAILABLE manual $325. 897 _ 7469 &ft 7 l TV, trumpet. pwr tn\)\\·er, doos savings! All withw"'' --------Olive couch $35. 132 E. 21st 828-5396, 836-'"93 9/25 dard puJlll, $25. 2 wht, 1 brn, 961 W.17th Sl, C.M. tMMEDIA~Y o5 pm : misc. 1421 Priscilla, N.B. exclusive Coast Music ar· END OF SUMMER CM 646-1D73 1 LEFT only need rood home Studs avail. 506-2848 BOSTON Whaler SquaU..S..11· Dealer: m.4> ;Jr,Jl-81 '70-icAWASAKt-JOOcc-trd ~f. . ~ 646-5U8 ranty. ~-----5"C[IE---.• . .,·i·-6 -·-fi .. #1 .. a: .... ,-am while We•-·-ner 1-rri00t1. Like ne\V, tuU i ORGANS from $250 '"' a~·.:.n. ...... pc .erv ...,.. l4Ll,f .-~ BEAUTIFUL ......... ""' CONTINENTAL by Cam· b<w, tine oond . • mo·s atW 1: SILVER pcs, V\V bus seats, PIANOS from $225 West Cout Surf Center "Octagon". Cert appr. a.t female kltten box trained! puppies, 6 wks, oo papen, equipment. $375. OR S-2608 bridge Manufacturer, 24x55, on . warr. $385. Owner, \ salt water aqua, hu tch, GRANDS fl'Om $69S 116 Main St., RB s 2 215. Se 11 $ 18 00. 646-1401 9125 $10 ea. 557-9359. 10' Gl•as S•llbo•t ~CU.tom Design. 67J..31W8 ; baby lt:ems, etc. 21202 Bren-Bank terms, Trade-ins NEW BOARDS: 714 :637-4825. LAST of litter darling &: 1 lt1ALE pug, registered Xlnt cond $195. 67&-0625 CHAPMAN '69 DIRT Hodaka XI t cond. i' ton Ln. H.B. Ope•IS,ndays'"S Han-n -oo UPRIGHT •-·-, also friendly 9 wk old little boy l2 'lboa• xi 1 ES • n I "" .... ·········••••• ~-~"· ,..._..,_, 11 1 Jamlly, no pa~rs. USED L • 58.1 ., n MOBILE HOM Acceaorles. 1 llUGE GARAGE SALE Daily tll 6 -Fri Iii 9 ~an Pacific • • • • • •• • $99.00 refrig. Oak chest, antique Pu PP Y • A m u 1 • $60 642-3019 cond, $400. "Cappg, ''. 213/ 1206 No. H•rbor, S.A. * 644-2987 * jl 611 Kings Pl . New po r I COAST MUSIC FCS ••••·••••••••••••• $75.00 dresger & stand, kltcben set 646-2719 9f28 AAOIEN, purebred German 587-TI71, eves 213/681-1972. 531-8105 . 1970 HONDA 350. 1500 miles. l Heigh ti; NE\\'PORT L: HARBOR Masters •••••••••••••• $50.00 &: misc. ~JM6 . NEED good homes for 1 t DEL REY - 24 --! 11).4 Saturday &U.28Sl Bellyboards •••••••••• $29.00 SURFBOARD· Greek T 6.. adorable 6 wk. old kittens, ~~":!:...4whlle ._thcYk du Trip'-Wide Corn.II Xlnt. $750. j Costa Mesa * SPOONS: do . . . J &. all blk MB-!lllJ or 836-4493. ........ """"".u' eYeS '"'w 8.Y9 Deep ~I, alp11 •. head, link. Continental • Paramount (213) S9'J.5227 I GARAGE Sall. e, SaD L &NSuBn, e HAMMOND organ· Ll22-48" •••••••••••••• $42 50 wn rail. M~~~M· l6 . 9/25 * 2 YR OLD MALE sr. Best offer. 644-0735 Barrington e Universal '68 BULTACO 2SO cc. Gd tor l' l24 Cata 1na r. · • / . ban. ._ .. · camera. New .n........ • • ARD AKC. ~-- / 'bd ~--J Oothes, furn., &r crafts. trans., w gwtar, JO. e'"' 54 •••••••••••••• $50.00 M-50 847.2393 FREE pqppies a 1"ttka old BERN . 25' Piver , ... IMU ... n w o . Flamingo e General street or dirt. r..Au.s, -. pl 1 1 Also ftverb $588, warranty, 60" •••••••••••••• $57.50 · • ceDent black al tan ~ed ~ Ca.11 eves 673-a229 $3,250, Lone Beach slip Broadmoor-e Star -540-5198. COMPLT hsthld ap ' oo s, dellv., lessons. Shoe ••• , ••• .-•••• $70.00 T~'70 ~-~I ~~! .1 _ _,_r "'.., ..'169 9/~ 31,S YR Old Purebred male avail, 714: 617-4825. H1llcrest e Cambrida:e l---19-TO_SU_Z~U-Kl~~!IO--I furn I. misc starts lOem Sal e CABLE New -41" console "' •'>•""' d1t1on "'""'J'u• ng luuu 1 t.V\,."11.c-· ..,....,.., ,._ st CHAPMAN ,,_, &. Sun 6642 Chele Cr HB ' Long John ••••••• ,.. ••• ~ .... .,,, 1 Ai.. E n the seat ls CUTE kitt • h one dif· blk Labrador. All &hota • BEAUT 52' 8-meter oop, only 200 miles. Exa!u.m piano, wal. w/bench &: del. Used boards.$1D-}Yp:Ma.te "' • ve. -11 ens eac . license 548-8265" $17,500. Terms. Slip T-31 MOBILE HOMES condition $l25. ~1'167 NEIGHBORHOOD ~ara.,~Le 6 only! List price $895, our lOc. Hang Ten T-ShirU $4.49 brand new .. $95. 644-05 . !~~~ .. Weaned &. tra19~ . Oceanside T141794-3645. 13'.l6 N. Harbor, S.A. 55 cc Honda Sale. Furn. & mlSC. ~ priee S699 • Kennington T.Shirt. $4.G. 8'x12' OUVE Karastan rug, ~ '"" HoraH 8l30 E * TI4/531-8105 * Sept. 26th. 3017 Babb, C.l\t: GOULD MUSIC CO. Sundeclc Corda; $5.99 • Swim 2 mo old. New SUS, .eD. tor KI'ITENS, 6 wka old, 2 white HOBIE & TRAIL R Red. Good conll. FRI.·SAT. 9 to 6, f'veryttilng SJnce 1911 Trunks $1.00 • Tank Tops $75. Desk 60" x34" $3.$. Obi males, dya: 642.-5070, eves HORSE A: Western Saddle Xlnt oond $UICI. 642-0900 Want To Llve In $70. 961-.fm' goes, 17874 08k SL, Foun-2045 No. Main, S.A. $1.9S • Dress T.Shirts $l.99 box 18l'ring $10. 546-2267 64U067 9/26 $350, 16 hands, part Ara· •70 VENTµRE 21. Perlt'Ct COSTA MESA 1966 BSA 650 cc.$475 tain Valley. * 54 7 ...()68). * Sat. 8:30 am-9 pm. sun 9-5. N.B. Temis aub charter BROWN A: white Fox Terrier hian. 847--6318 aft 5 &. cond, Many extras:, Sips 4, Local spaces av&ilable now! 2286,Elden Aw, C.M. PATIO Sale: Children & 11 WOW 11 SPINET PI an o. Excellent membership. $4 7 5 .+ to rood adult home. 9 )Tl wknds. Trlr. 847-361.7 If you are .serious about bur~ BSA CHOPPER: V~ clet.n. Adullll' clothing. Stove &r We're Having a condition. Recently tuned. transfer ftt. MJ.:Ml.3, old. 64Ml33 9/25 , Bay Geldirv, 9 yn. Gentle. COLUMBIA 22, Sell or lng a mobile home. • .Nows Reb!Vene. $100 or bst ofr. misc. 969 Oak. CM. 64 2-l307 0~~~0~~ ~:~~S Light walnut tlnl~h. $54A5. 545-ffit8 •·-·-wall YOU pitk it up. Dirt with Also ~64~~et'11• saddle ~::is_esj,:, ~~·J4~ the ~AV '°HARBOR 1..:64,:::hl.18c;;=''~~~-~--1 GARAGE Sale Sat/Sun. 11·3. lAdies dinner nna:. p-NEW prage ca 1 .. .,...,, !!Oil amendments added. MOBILE HOMES 1910 TC·90 Suzuki w/~umper 620',I Marigold. Refrig. with Two";,~~: o~:S :;;m $299 prailed at S950. Will 11tll for or floor. ·fx4'xl and 968-6554 9/26 Bo.ti & Y•chts 9000 Pow•r Cruinrs 9020 1425 Baker St. (at Harbor). carriers., o~ 500 mi. $300. freezet" $30 & much more~ \VARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO $645. Fur details call (TI4J 3·x4'x1'. 646-67ll ADORABLE jet blk male Costa Mesa 540-9470 642-2143 GARAGE Sale-7' sofa. mar· l8l9 N CM 642-8484 673-1140 8' CABOVER. rack for Jll&· kitten. We&ned It trained to WHY NO,T 24' CABIN Cruiser. Excellent 1970 24xtiO KEY West mobile '67 HONDA 305 Scrambler hie top, coffee tbl, clothing ~=·suNi>AY 356 A Pone.he bumper, Pur-up lnlcl<. Sturdy lt2el ~ MPld box. 536-t9l!IO 9/31 TAKE A CRUISE?? thepe. Will aalTlflce! Aa home Adult park. walk to Reblt, New battery, pip. &. misc. 401 E. 2ht St .. NB. AFTERNOONS lac Deli&ht! Never been dine. slruction, $35. 962-3886 3 BLK. male Jdttt'nt 8 wks For L•••• Or 1eu tn water S21XXJ. No ups beach' ~ts ok. 2 br, 2 ba, Immac cund $495, 54S6591. ~H~O~M=E~P"l~P"E'"""'o=R"G".A"N"" I t'd $75. Kenmore 2 IP. wash-LR. carpet 15 x 24, lhac 3 x old free to id home Charter or down&. 49J..399l!I alt 7:30 flmilY rm, lge nv nn, din '69 Honda Trail 90 n , $15, u la, 5'&M04 aft 29 head skls, No r e I co &lG-3705 9/25 LOW WINTER RATES! p.m. rm, bar, all bltna, oven. Like new, Extras $285 V•ry compact, easily install. 6 PM ' -~-I * .., -* • TeCO .,,.r FEMALE beaale faurif bi 40'\Vhee.lerCruiser:Sleep.i;S. ,/ SKJP.JAC 20': FLY· dlapoaa.I, dsllwahr, w ~ ....,..'"""' HOTPOJNT DELUXE ed,on1y$1750complete.See Fm.EW00Dtorsale.S47.50 BIG ......... ht frttier $35. P acific Sands area. Makeappl.NOW!OWNER: BRIDGE,PERFECl'COND. thruout,60'crptdpatio,8) •70 KAWASAKl 100 Green 1 t at Newport Organs, 1593 uy> '6 to PRTBL Dishwasher, m hlonrovla, NB. &15-lSlO crd, $21.50 % crd. Delv. I:: Twin bedspread $10. Serving 536-6715 9/25 Wkdays 539-8978 Eves I:: wJc. COND. . carport. Must see ·~ Streak Jr. Like new, C.aD open, wood top. 841-9954 atckd free. Day ot nite (1) earl SS. 646--0147 MALAMUTE mix, 9 mo. spay. ends: 827·1431. NB. 575m45 preclate! 536-2494 afler 5. 846-5775 . e PHILCO refrtg.freezer, BALDWIN Acrosorric spinet 688-QW6, Cl) '87-'1599. DIVAN A Setttt, fair cond. eel female dog needs: good l Fbi'iis barges, Da.t deck, 1966 Tolly Craft 36' 1bgJs Im· '67 2h4l Le C~ e 1966 H 0 ND A la> CC trost-frtt, coppertone, $200. ~~;~7894finish. Like' 196.:i DU~n dirt bike SJ008 h Dinette Mt &: washer, xlnt home,~ 9125 10'Xl5', full outbrd control, mac. 125fhr, Jully equip Set up In Adult Park Scrambler -like new mnd, 646-4219 aft J pm 11cuba diving ~t. $150; •• ..! t'!OOd. Call: 646-6218 SEALPOINT 2 )Tl 1mlale lP stows. Pftfect river $70'.)0. Wrl938, 64t-46&1 Complete w/atept, awninp. no dirt. $260, 968-4731 UPRIGHT FREEZER ii PIANO LeSIOns for the Taco cuatom muu bike$ './ RELAX-Y-CISOR. Heavy box tn.in!d SC1-0113 or b>uaeboat. n.tihC « pa.tty carport a: ihed. '69 HONDA 175 Scnmbiar, SSS. * * 646-5914 Beginnens: the modttn ap-962-9790 "'OOden desk I: swivel chair 336-4493 9123 boat. 1 w/al1m1. canopy, Sp11d Ski Boat1 9030 AV~LE 3000 mi's, Xlnt cond, $315. LGE frost·frtt ttfrig, $85; proach. * 546-6522 * e ~~ O~ ~:SK. Eves. 673--0776 , FREEdoc ·Mixedlhepberd =·or~;~~~: 18' KYDROSWtn' • tn-IMMEDIATELY * 645-1840 * apt az-retr!g $65. Like new, Upright Pf•no $lSO * 562529 * JUNIPER trees, 6' 6 over. lo aood bome wltb c:tllldttn. See btwn 9-5, Sat a: azn at brd/out 289 vs bait tank. Dealer: cn-0 S3l,.8105 · 197'0 YAMA~IA DT·l·C l;~im~m~•~c~·.;•~92--~2399~~-;;i~~~~~~9'2~-S~T4~l~;;~;~~~~l==;;:;:o l Y~ dig! $3,00 e-. Meta 5f9..2t'l& 9128 Advance Marine Tramport,' full evr trlr witlec winch, 1969 lJNIVERSAL 24X53, Enduro. XJnt t'!Ond. Dirt or Verde. ~ LONG hair kitW:m. 2 mot 2099 Placertle, CM new tt~a. A everyth!rw lerial No. lSJlJ, New~· s~. 644-1396 · 'Wft '* FURNITUR&-DISHES old. l Moller % Pwslan. l966 STARCRAFT J/O 22' el1t. $3,lSO. Selling to buy 1: ~~!v =: -1al '63 H0NDA·MAKE N~. CllO I (-.,-.t!17, STAR. GAZER " & MISC.* 613-1125. 9/25 Radio, bolt Wik, tandem 1._ boat. m-16$ alt 1'110 :WX60 SheralOn M•nor. GD. COND. LIKE $95. ~~.g,!',T---_,,,.a.AYLIO UNA Af'T: -4 pm '"""5l'lT FREE anal! corll-ac r ew traller w/brakea. Xlnt 11ki 5:30 pm llCJ'lal No 002, $U,900. * 968·6358 * .AlllS M: YowDoi1y.AcfMIJ'Cwicle M urr n rt1. e SLli\f-GYM Xlnt condition! willow tftes. You di.I A & ft~h boat. S2150. 547--6649 16' GLASSPA~, 5S HP Dealerl l7i4) 531-8105 2 TRAJL I1ondoa 90's $300 Ea. MA~· 11 V Accef'4l11.1,. tfi• ShJn. y oa: Jf~ 1,i price!, aU&htly used. haul. 833-1096 f /25 or 636--3176. Evinrude, Eltc starter .I: l Y~at Old 8411318 alt I I. IA n To drtftJp meaogs for Sotutdoy, , ~,. 141....:. * Evea aft. 4 546-3003 * 2 MALE ldttenl: pt. Si.a.melt', '* SO. Coest 18' inbrd controls, Trlr, All ac~111. 2 MODELS wknds. • 1 r.odwankCOI• I tdiugto...,... J<IRBY nccum ~ CTaY .-tth ll'Q eye11 . runabout Xlnt oond. Like new. wilt _sacrifice 1 SPACE LEFT! •.-.,-su~z-u-Kl-2SO=~SA~V~AGE=~.1 ofycuZG:SlocbtrthiV\. _.. offer, par, full price only 96J...5n9 9/26 Varnl11hed deck l Int. $1T~. $1200. Pvt pty 536-41ll In cool Costa ~lesa.'a LIKE NEW! $550. ~T~ ~=. , ~=--!1=.a. ~.II $.18.11 (nJl '37-UU 7 WK old Jlqppiei. Doxie A 6"TS-462J IMP lB'-160 hp, 1/0, 150 hn. delwc Greenleaf Park * 646-35-tS * · ~NAT• J'hRtlk D O., -"1=-#Or.If PHILOO COLOR 21 INOI Jl(IOd&e mix. Adorable! 23' OORSE'l'l'-OMut Cl.W'd Trtr. extras. Xlnt cond. 1750 Whltlicr Ave. 642-J~ 69' YAMAHA 125 MX. *'J11r :~ t~= ::,_ *TV UOO '* 1.1&"'8 9125 equipped. Xlntcond. $2300, 8'm.a7 dayli DlRT XTRA$. ~....... ~i~ ~t:':Cha ~:;, IMITTAIM '* 616-2541 '* LARGE d a •en port . 2 $4600 firm, 54&.~TIS &fG..0159 ews. 1968 Unlwrsal. 24X5l." eerial $375. 644-015C t:;;Q_NAr 11 :~ ~=-::~ ~-·.J,.· JAKE'S Contlnuowl SWQ CUlhions, ~ Oran,e, 01. I' FBRGLS di.nchy $100. 14' Marine Equip. toU No. lS.113, New $9900. 1999 1969 YAMAHA Enduro 1~ Y.(/111t1f1' tolMMI' ..a.~ 10~.a lfC.lfD!\ "f•lBU1-SeD·'IHdell7E. _646-9287 9/26 Jbrtll: tltiUty_boat _Ltrlr, ~~ew~.~~i CC·~.;..; $:DS. Good ~~..5. 11 ~ ,., ..._, ~:_,.. ,,..,.....;s..1 11th, CM &O-:i666 l CUTE black female kitten, $Zi0. 675-0406 PORTABLE ROf Bendix Sheraton Manor, $12,too.,_ ..... ...;.~··---~~~-1 ~~ Ji:::,. ~JC-7J~ .:n.71 ~ 1tf0VINGI S.C. 5 Sneck v~ houatbroken. ID p>d home. BAY Launch. inboard v.a, nav\calor oflO, I tn.111\ator Dealer. CTI4) $3.141.0S. '101\T·l Yamaha 360 Enduro CAMCll. '"°"'-"41'.. 7•YtH CAllbQllllM ding MachinK. Loe: lrvioe. 54f>.t675 913i with tn.Un>. S60D completl!. RDF beM.'Of'I broldCtllllt I: .l Xlnt cond. 700 mi's., Extras, WJl'~11 ::~i. :::-~~ :;,.: All llJ..1172 s WHITE -thdfJ ~ Otrffy Call: 64J..I030 -marine-bands. $50. ~65 N~ ! :Stra~apace $!25. StM&t2 HJUlfJ 11~ •'T• 77 0. ,_~.-. LIVING ROOM CHRS : c:alloct.135-4294 9/26 IJ ,T. BOAT USED3KWOnanaen.dind In choke N~tab=========I n!~J !.iii-== Si:.. TABLE&.APT. STOVE i: CUTE klttleN pt. Manx IOme Good oondltlon. $100 llO AC. 12 OC. Low hrs. MtM area .mut piuir. For Auto Service !::2!&.11> 21 ,_.. sic-i ~ ,,,,..,.. • MIV'tllM MISC. 5.1'o4t&5 ~no tall. fB...1983 9/31 54().388.1 aft 4:30 $500. 67S-UIO sale by private prtf. PbOne & P•rta ,. lllO Appli•nc•• .. I : I · 1 I I ' I ' 1 I • f. I Ari JU'!D •Ht!:. ~=-fi~.... ~·= TELEPHONE electronlc.MALE J>.ek.....,oo.. 'Wht. ''CAPTAIN'S GIG'' lo.t Slip MoorlM 9036 5'16-3783 CbUl1t. 'n'llnmdM!!!i E,.-a j~'' Silt ::cw.. 1 -~O::!tr.t sent"~ --9/JI '10. -n4~, -• · ,. n ;,a .... *'., MOB~P.: hatft«'"lttua"'1. l'll1Xt" aoo (i{ber1.===1f--1l--t'i n' 1· S.1-1 ~~ =~ N=.. $400, •crlllce S15 ..... ?37 FR.EE firewood lot:s • )'OU. JI' STARCRAIT, 115 Evin. e :r.t' Sldt tie,~· Pow. io clubhouse A pool.' Frplc. ... e s.a..tKU e -f !:~ ~:.,.-:;::;:, f10CD hi 1 l7i0 "haulc S<S-'letll 9/ll --ll.5 Hr.. Xlnf cond, or only. m.an , hcllll Motitlt Part. Spoce • ,64 VW 1,. $l 7J • AUe-J'J 2'flN ~--. =~ ,._ n M•c nery. tc. G~AN St.e~ pups, s ~ty equlp'd;: $2950. IJ.13..1149 83. 142-4781-* &«J..311! * wr', 11 J0>0n.lr 40Dwr't ...... ,,.. M..l. , , -., .. --•~ • .,. . ..,..,. 9/28 liSll ii d y w/thls 25• SIOE TIES • $2.60 per fl. Kit TroJ'-n )'JX$ Expatxlo VW E-i--, ft....-...1 ...::Jr -:~:::i. KOLEE TOOi I Cutter""""'™·_,_.., 1 a lNSlDETCES·lam.bOAl•I unfum,Adultwlc ....... _......_ 32.:.u.o • Gem /6\ AG~ ()Neuml ,.,~ Grindtr, like 'hew w/attach. BLUE Doral ottoman on oceaneotna: '62 cabin. Gny '* &12®7 * e 64iMU e \BJ C.11 557..rng c:outtn. 9M-'7SIS 9/28 m&rlne pv.r. 646--3t41' Sl.~.-.per tt:-'NB. ~2592 __ ...:..=='-'----,,..--------· 1 l-~-====-~~~~~~~~~~~~~:::..;:,;...:.;,;:.~~-. I ' ' J -' ..,. Frldu, S1ptrrnbtf 25. 1970 D v.11LY PILOT TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TONSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION \r IAUP '!. ·· ,.,..- BUI CK 1N COSTA MESA s,oc1a11111C 11"1Ullll==~-~~JAa;G~UE:AR:::!!!.... Opel 234 E. 17th ST. '68 CORVETTE FASTBACK 1970 DUNE . BUGGY '66 MERCEDES 230 SL •·1pt1cl, pow1r 1t11rin9, power ~1k11, power •iridow1, f1etory 1ir eorMlilioni119, Very low rnil11. -JWFM-9171 VVI wild wi ld color s ov•rsizad tires •nd reedy for the ro1d .1198.BNPI. . Cpt. Rotclsitr. Thi1 btt11tif111 t. own•• ttr htt ttditl tir11, AM/ FM r•dio, eutomtfie tr•nt111i1tion, power 1te1ri119, pow1r .. r1ke1 I 1ir _1;o_fld itio11 j_ng. $AVE $AVE Prestrge Cars at ,Sensible Prices BUICK CORNER WAGON CORNER :~~.~.~~,f.~ .. ,~!!,!~.~~.. 54995 Gr1•n with lft1tchin9 vinyl top, bl•clr c111folft int•rior. loc1lly bought •nd s1f'lic•d. fl57-IEJI; ~,~.~~~'~"~" .~:.~;,,.~. •·• 534 95 with bl1clr int•rior. rn•tchin9 vinyl roof, ch rom• •port ... h••h. Still ulld1r w•rr•n"', now r•duc.d t• ("410-AGI) :~! "~~~~~.;,.~~.~~~-~,! .. 53195 air col!Clltionln9 , Silv•r r;,.y, bl.cir roof, m1tch· i1111 lnl•rior. f•clory w1rr1nty avail1bl1. :~'·1~~.!~~~.~ .. ;... ..... ...... 52995 i119, f•clory 1ir conditio11in9, r•dio, h11i•r, custom •ign•I b•nch seat with vi11yl roof. IZSX-6'501: '62 BUICK -SKYLARK V/I, power 1l•1rin9, 1utorn1tic tr•_llu'l'liuii11. power wi11dow1, factory 1ir cot1ditioni119, I ow111r, v•ry v•ry low mil11. I HMf.]21 l $AVE '70 BUICK SPORTS WAGON DEMO 1//1, •uiol'l'ltli c tr1nsmi11ion, pow•r ll••ri119 , f1clory •i• co11diii onin9, 1:1]39) $AVE '70 LTD COUNTRY S9UIRE WAGON. Power 1t1erin9, pow•r br1lr11, f1clory 1ir conditioni119, 4 11et•r. sp•cial cu1tom i11!1rio r, showroom mod•I. s3995 '68 BUICK SPORT WAGON VI 1119i111, 1ulolfl1iic translftinion, radio. h11l1r, pow1r 1i••rin9 •nd pow1r br1Jlr11, Vit1YI inl1rior, power tail 11•1• wi11do ... , f1ctory 1ir con• "·;,,;,, Ft •• , .... IV"s3o9 s '68 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY WGN. V/I, 1ulolflalic tr1111mi11ion, f,.ctory 1ir conditioning, Arctic whit• with .... ,,.;, .,,,;,,, 92·995;1 .. ,. -- DIME·A·LINES-Daily Pilot's Weekend Bargain Manrtr-4116442·5678 • . T-RANSPORTATIOfl TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATIQN TRANSPORT-"TION --Tri1ller, Tri1vtf :...-: M25 lruclc1 . ~Imported Autos 9600 lmporlod Aulot t600 '68 NIMROD. Deluxe. Sips 6. Sto\/e, icebox, dill'r table. STRIKE POWER -DATSUN 16' CROWN travel trailer • 1970 GJ\fC Camper trucks. • $595. 548-o4156. We have a &OCJC' stock o( New ce aleepc 4. Wilh extra.a. fW!i. B~ now, bca~ th! pr!~ ~ MUUI - 96S-4737 raise. Also Camper con1bin. ' , ' ---------I atioo& and used Jrucks, "Leader In Tht Lear.b Cltlis't UNIVERSITY ZIMMERMAN Trucks 9500 '64 Chevy haU-ton, V-8, with Parkdale Camper w 11 h reki&erator &nd liove, spH1 OLDSMOBILE 2145 HARBOit BL VD. -10 '69 DATSUN WAGON rim, standard shUt, sleeps 2850 Harbor Blvd. • 4. License N77-l45. $1,695.00. Costa Mesa 544}.9'40 Overhead cain engine 4 JIM SI..EMONS IMPORTS, HARD to get '54 :"ord ~ ton gpeed radio tow mile~c 120 W. WARNER, SANTA P U Xlnt cond 1515 S ial' • I '· ., __ ...:.1:-' ANA. · · • ·• · pee tn enor. .:)Cl.uux.-.::. -545-7098. '(XTG51i6), Take trade or '67 Ford IL Ton p U """"•own wm nnance ... 72 • • Jeeps 9510 pty. Call fi.1~ury dlr, 540-3100 4 speed, 4 wheel drive, dlr. 4 WHEEL DRIVE or 494-7506 aft lll am. Cainper shell, etc, ~fust sell. 1963 Jeep Wagoneer '66 Datsun P .U, $1995 fuJJ price. Will finance. Automatic Wheel drive Special slake bed, radio, heat. (# V84652) Call 494.77~. power steering, air cond er. (SYM-563) 196!1 FORD, VS, automatic. BLUE CHIP AUTO SALES . $1095 FIAT CHECK THESE! '68 FIAT 124 SPORT COUPE 2 Door Hardtop, ~cyl.,. ( speed, Radio, Heater, Bucket Senta. All Flat extru! fXEP 183). Kelly BJUe Book $2'lJS. B.J .'s Sale Prtee OnJy $1795 '69 FIAT 124 SPYDER 214ri Harbor Blvd, CM l d trarwnission, power steer-* !)ID.-4392 * QUtO Sport t Positano yellow with black i.ng, power brakes, air corr top. Ali-1 / Flvf, competition ditioning with HI w ay 1967 CJ5 Jeep. New top 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. exhausts. (ZAW 506). Kelly Camper Cruiser. J ust the O\·erdrive, V6 eng. headers, S37-im Call Collect BluC Book $2900. B.J .'a Sale . -thing 1or-ttie-cycle-gn)up:-l'Oll--ba1;-1ack.-tow· barr ....---Price onr.------1----,, DI,, 540-9640 ., 540-;540 draw .. ,. X88 ""'''""· EN GUSH FO. RD s2295 '65 CHEVY IL T p U 1-, "'f..'f,;'";;hu~b'j;;;· l~220~.f"ii,"'':;"T.'·;;:j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.j l l 00 • •I "la Jeep. Xlnt cond. New top, . axe!. exhaust, tune.up , ALL NEW ENGLISH 6 cyl., stick. dlr. $1099 Full paint. $7'9:i or best offer. FORDSDD~~CALLIN srocxy '67 FIAT Price. (S71'475) Will take car 548-4391 •v...,•• in trade or finance privatel-'-"-'=*-J~EEo,,· P-*----REDUCED P"'ty. 5'16-4052.,.4"1-68ll. Complotoly rebuHI LARci':? ~ON 124 WAGON '64 Ford half-ton pickup 8 $1100 545.125.'i foot bed. V-8, standard sh 0 ift. '67 BRONCO XLNT COND 'i'O ~=rFRe OM $1;695:09. Lie. 910 69A. Jiti1 VS, Must seil below book SLEMONS IMPORTS, 120 * "'"'" * ROBINS FORD W. WARNER, SANTA ANA. !==========I 2060 Harbor Blvd. '69 o O o GE VAN R/H, Campers . 9520 C.osta P.1esa ~o 1olags, Big 6, 19,0CXI mi. J~;:'.:~-"';:j;-;-'r;:;:::::-' 1~~~~~~~~~ J Good <.'<Ind. Very reas. New '71 Datsun 499-3618 1600 OHC Pickup with cam~ FERRARI '63 FORD Econollne. Cherry er. Sal~ price srogg dlr.·1--------- cond. M\lst see to ap. (& 438273) Will take car in FERRARI · preciate. · Make offer. trade. Will finance private N.~ Im~ Ltd. Qr.. 536-4045 party. Call 5464052 or ~e Cowlb' • cmJ,y author- • '57 CHEV. P.U. 494-6811. ~~:-£RVICE-PARTS "' ton, xlnt cond $650 '68 VW Fre«lom Camper Ex-3100 W. Coot Hwy. * 673.2100 * tra Sharp! Loaded $~ Newport Beach Van-1969 Dodge Sportsman Mounted spare Sam Gt2-9405 · 540-1764 VB eng. 3J8cu in, auto trans, 548-1074 • Authorized Ferrari De~ air cond. new wide belted e '70 8' Overhead Camper tires. $2595. Ca.11646-7353 Sips 4 * Xlnl l'Ond FIAT 159 CHEVY Apache Truck SACR!FICE $900 -·-·---:-" 283. 3 spci. slick, gd. shape G44.659l aft 8:30 pm llJDBfl $575. 646-3545 '70 Camper Pop Top Tent ~ CHEVY PICKUP '56 GO. Nu-Warranty, 4000 m i. SHAPE $l9S. Needs Nu~wncr, lfurry! t t J d * 54~m; * 548-1240 GK 0 8por t ~-FoRD~ P.U. x:lnt cond. '66 vw-C:AMPER: Reblt Aulhor!Z@d Sales • Service 2417 Orange. c .M. Call motor Nu tires; tape deck &-DEMO SALE ._ 642-9825 speakers. 1970 Fiat 124 Sports Cpe. ...:.:::...::=-------$1850. EVES: ~ Radio heater special ex- • ,'66 CHEVROLET 1~~ T. '66 VW CUSTOM-BrnLT haust,' pin st;iping, radial 12 van._ Xlnt cond. New CAMPER. $1785. tires, :ow miles. eng. $189a. 644-6330 N.8. 673-6527 alt 4PM $2795 '57 <?IBVY % T. P.U. V-8; 2 '67 FORD Super Vall • 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. engux-s. $275. CaU 962--4596 automatic. Xlnf con d. 6 537-7777 Call Collect aft 6 & wknds. cyl, 1!> mileage. 673-5655. ~ '67 FORD F.conol.ine Air. lo 1969 VW CAMPER • THINK nl}'s, radio. bst cash ofr or $2800. 8'12-7257 "flAj ·trd. 646-2698 '70 CHEVY PICK-UP Dune Buggies 9525 1 sa 4 cyl.. 4 speed, healer. (\VXK 6101. Kelly Blue Book Slll5. B.J.'s Sale Price Only $795 '69 FIAT 124 SPORT COUPE -All \the goodies. Push button radio, Radial tires. All Fiat extras. (YRC 486). Kelly Blue Book $2ti00. B.J.'1 Sale Price Only ~ · s2195 '65 MERCEDES 230 SL COUPE Radio. heater, automatic, Radial tires. Immaculate. (NPZ 2711 Kelly Blue Book $3565. B.J .'s Sale Price Only $3395 BILL JONES B.J. SPORTSCAR . CENTER 2833 Harbor, C.M. II TON. XLNT COND. "'FRIEDlANDm'l * 968-1947 * Buggy Bodies • $75 &: up LR · 1:-'==:"':"':===""'::====:====:=====-;;=======================:.L===~=,;==·I Accessories-Part&Chassis Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 1~-.. r 'P.d AtJfo. 9600 16027 Valley View, Santa Fe 12751 IUCH (Hwy. Jfl 893-7566 • 537-6824 540-4491 - Dot Sing Says • • • e Ho Boyl Now you got Kiddies in school! e You ha~e time to come by a nd drive No. I fine car? e This is the place where all nice guys mettl- e We even give you a cup of coffee I IN ' SALES • SERVICE • PARTS MANAGEMENT• ADVERTISING CUSTOMER RELATIONS "AWA-RDED BY- NISSAN 'MOTOR . CORP.1 U.S.A. I Datsun Quality Dealer Award Springs 213)921-5555 NEW-USEO-SERV. VW Buggy -glass top, .good •--- - -, tires. $1500 invested, sell for - - ---- $1150 or best ofr. 675-7415 l;-:-::--=::-~=,.-,~- VW Du"" Buggy wHh '69 Fiat 124 Cpe riberglass body $ 8 O o. Exotic red with black vinyl 54o-3803 after 4: 30 PM bucket seats. Low miles, has '70 1.1EYERS TOWD, new had excellent care. Sacri- eng., gd tires, xtras., lie. fice! (XLY235) Take older Sac. $1095. 544-8034 car in trade. Will finance 1964 VW CHASSIS, ENG & private party. Call Pat dlr. TRANS FOR $350 aft 10 am 494-7506, 540-3100. *642--0443*' '67 Fiat Spider "850" Special. Lime green l l-lm---..._.--A-utol--.-9600--I paint, radio. heater. J u.st ....,..,_ like new. {VCT-091) AUSTIN HEALEY $l39s AUSTIN AMERICA auto sport ltd 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. 537.rm·1 Call Collect '69 Fiat, 850 Spider, ap. proximately 13,0CXI miles, Pirc Iii tires, Lie. 195 ADY. Sl.69ii.00. JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS , 120 W. WARNER, SANTA ANA. '70 Fiat Spider "850". J u.st 12,IXXI miles. lime green, radio. heater, all the extras! (3167) $1995 auto sport ltd 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. S37·ml Call Collect JAGUAR JAGUAR HEAD9UARTERS Sales, Service, Parts Immec?iate Delivl!t)' For Outstandin-. g-"-.. --.. J1rtuport jl1nports NEW FIAT 1970 850 SPYDER All colors lo choose from. $233.5 + Tax & Lie. The only authorized JAGUAR dealer in the enttni Harbor Are&. Compleb:i SALES A~hie-vement 18835 Beach -Blvd. Huntington Beach 842-7781 540-0442 - All models to choose. California Sport Cars 3100 ~-~ H 001 E. l sl, S.A. 542-8801 W, ....,.., .v,., N.B. ~ 5'0-1764 '67 FIAT 850 '6j AU5TIN Hea.ley MK III, ~· Brg \\.\lOd .dash, wi~ 4 speed. radial tires, dlr. "his, 4 sp J o dr, Jo m1 (TOC 558) $999 run price. Bst/off takes 548-5.189 Small do\.\·n. Will finance pri. * 1960 Sprite * vato (>IU1y. 540-4o;2 ., Best offer. 494-8629 494·6811· BMW Authorized Dir. '69 Flat 124 Sp:Jrt.s lo n1i '11, Xlnl oond. * """""' * SERVICE PARTS BAUER BUICK IN COSTA MESA 231 E. 11th SU..! 541-1765 '67 XKE 2+2 4 11pd., air. radk>,r"'t11bme wires. new Perelli!I. Yellow w/black Interior. S.2995. 53&-9866 Sales • Service e Parts Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 AU Models to Choose Froml ================= Service Monday 'tfil 7:00 PMl- Sat 'till Noon COAST .IMPORTS r,••-•••-·-~·•••., oronmg,cou,1y1..,,: I~ . ~ 1200 W. Pacific Coast-Hwy · F • t " . I "'""'oo • .,.,."' I 1 a -I DATSUN : How Does Fiat Do II for the Price? : '70 DATSUN I u•mn NIW 11•11m Nrw I I Door S<dao -$1199 IUD I 1970 150 1970 124 I ptice. C!OlAVA) .,, Will I SPORT COUPE SPORT ~OUPE take trade or fi~ prl-AM R1dio, ll:1tll1l Tir••· AM ~FM R d' ' d' I I ~-• •--I All Fi•t, EJl'fr11 AJ N_o E~· r .• 10 , • •• Vale party. ~1 ~or tr• Coit. a 29771 , .c,700 Tlr11, AU F11t-Equlp1111ftt. I 494.61111. I 1ctu1I tnlt11, 1 0127290 I DOT DATSUN I SALi '11LCE .... _ ..... OPEN DAILY . I $1B95 $299S I AND I SUNDAYS I ""' -....... ,_ ............. ,,.,.. ........... ....,.. __ I ~~= :::,; I Bin Jones' I w.mi .. .-a I B, I. SPORTSCAR CENTIR I '67 _DATSUN WAGON '"" ""'°~ cosr• M!SA "'·"fr I Radoo, •~•~lmlleal rue."'· I ~ ~( ·----if?Jl'MetU ... at.¥~ I - 2100 Ha1·bor Blvd. 645-0466 L~41#' · J '67 Datw11 R/H-Rd-lfOO --------------Tup condition, low ml. Slli5. 5~5-1~ • ' I c .. ----· ; . ' ' . . ' ' ' ' ' ' ' " ' !; Ii " ' • i I ! I j I ' ' ; . i. --- • L ' .... Friday, Septem~r 251 ·1970 DAIL.Y PILOt 4J rRANSl'ORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION . TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TJ!ANSPORTATIO~N~· "'"'r"'R~AT.N~SPO=iR"T"'A~T~tO""N.,--=r=RA"N"'S""P"'O"'~';TA"'T~i~ON-· impomd Autoa MOO l!'lportod A--Im~·~~-~ 1m~~uto1 MOO lmp0rtec1·c·~. 9600. Imported Autos .... ~ U'!d ~•rt . 9900 tmportod --VOUCSW~GEN JAGUAR MERCEDES .BENZ , ,.,,,,MGI '"ORSCHE ,-, P0"5CHE ,... TOYOTA --_tQYOTA .-lm-porlod--~~.-ffQO-I '61 P.ORSCHE '64 .PORSCHE 70 TOYOTA'S -,6-9-'T'"-O~Y-O-TA-1967 XKEl JQ&U&r_ coov. Im· mac. col)d! New top ' pa.int. 18,CXXI lJl.l. Askin& $3l.OO. Call. alt 4~ 532-3688. '62 XKE, wire whls, Rn{. Rblt e~. Xlnt cond, $1475. Sat l Sun. 545-2840 KARMANN GHIA '68 GHIA Radio. •VZZ 0861 $17l5 Harbour V.W. l87U BEACH BL. 842-4435 HUNTINGTON BEACl-l '63 VW GHIA '68 Me~e1 Bent 250 SL. hardtop and aoiftop, 4 speed, pov."tr ateermg mu.s t Re to apPrec.iate. Motor No. 10-00344]1 $5,595.00. JI flt SLEA10NS JMPORTS, 120 W. WARNER, SANTA ANA. Private party wants to buy '68-'69 28o SE coupe or convt. Reasonably priced! 548-.1936 ~ ........ MG ~ ~THINK ... ~ .. , ''FRIEDLANDER'l .. ~INTO TRADE IN'S IMPORT SALE '64 MGB, a~n: ~mi's both lops, -.1'ire v.•kla. MUst se-llt $1145. 544-a;s.9 CAIRIOLET" 356 SC COUPE In •lock. lmmedl•le del\"'>'· COROLLA Hrrdtop gleam.Ing .metallic Balboa blllfl', chrome \\'heels, '68 vw ·1 ' 'th ,_ __ _, radial tires, concour&e ~ ~ ••'rUis White with black Interior. IL ~er, WI Ullll~ new Jn. ditlon. Lie xoo~ . Seel '"'°'• ohromo wh"'~• n -5'309 ,,, Wo ~~-Uo, XWZ6S3 an dial .u..., AM/FM radlo, • 9 Ul•W•• . $1299 MORRIS' M()JlRJS Minor '59, cond, $75. Good. uo. '"1zl~99 CHICK lVERSON L•gun• &.•ch CHICK IVERSON Radio. rwAK 0»>- "•E• _ CHICK IVERSON 54~~1 ~oo ., 67 4~7~ cai Hl=3~~ VW $1588'. ~ ~-"'--'l'fi 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1-----,..----rosrA ITlniVIOITIAI 1970 HARBOR.BLVD. '67 Op.I Rally• ~30.I.' ""'· 66 or 51· . MESA '™ '-;;;;;-;cco-"",.,.A ,.,.,MES,...•..-...--'Harbou'r v.w. * 675.5,IM * S . 1 . . . COSTA MESA "61 ·Porsche Cabriolet 1600 • 1 ,70 T ·1 'M k II peoa racing ~peg, rad_io, 1970 HARBOR. BLVD. Super, nu clutch, mdials, '71 COROLLAS oyo • ar heater, radial tires, real nice $2000/orrcr .. 5'19-4024 HERE NOW Loaded • Factory air, aut<>-187U'BEACH BL. car! (XUI}.220) '60 PORSCHE C.briolet, l600 I ,,,,-.,===~~--I matle. JuJt over 2,000 miles. HUNTINGTON B .. ACH $1095 SUPf'I', wilh hard top, New '66 PORSCHE 912 4 spd \Vagons, 2 Drs, Coupes .,,. . ltd cngioe, new Clutch, new rebuilt eng. sacrifice $30IXI. Automatics & 4 Spel'ds Sacrifice! (G42BQO) Take NEW vw au·G altto Spo rt 5'15-4888 trade or gmalJ down. \Vill ' '70 V\V Dune Buggy, v~ry tlreli, new paint, AMmf, 1 '°'965,,..-.,"""',--.,""-,.----I DEAN . LEWIS finance priv pty. Call Sid $55 Bft' pl' -- sharp. Stk. •2511 •... $999 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. just like new, can be seen 1 lmmac lhnl· 1966 Harbor, C.M. &f&.930.1 dlr. aft 10 am ~ or • '1 • ll•W 537-7777 Call Collect at 2089 Harbor Blvd., or :~· ~-~~ty. Call ---~----·I 494-7506, '69 Opel Rall,.., yellow w/ '61 OPEL KADETTE 1>hone6e1982.9am 1o6pm Of' pm 50 BIIL MAXEY ====="·-=='I $147.lltown lnclUdo1 black Jnter1or, YRX i1J'919 Real nice shape, (VZU-Z79) po R s c H E 914 NE\V '63 Porsche SI, chnn whls, . TRIUMPH tax & , Jc. Optit End u11t 11AtH (HWY:>o .............................. -•... $ nletallic green/beige, a~ M.1/FM, Clean, $1925 'ITIOIYIOITIAI VW LEASING Convertible. Recent engine 893-7566 • 537-6824 . $995 pear. """"• Pirelli tires, * 962-9740 * , · AT --haw. hant to fiK .. ........_ NEW-USEO.SERV. -tu-~ ___ • -tu_,,,. __ • ... ,, 66 Triumph Spitfire, hardtop, ••• • I ...... ••• ""'" '69 Toyota Corolla, vrry ,.~ '"10fi0'r4 leather steer, 100 miles, 1969 Porsche 911-T 11811 BEACH BLVD. radio and heater, Lie. TFA CHICK IVERSON ·, del. Radio, heatc>r, 4 speed, $harp, XSS 874 ....... $1299 $4.100. Priv ply, Ca 11 Xlnt cond. l-753-0010 Hunt. •·ach 147 •555 i;.&, s 1. 095 . o o. Jlli'f j -etc~----~~~~~~~~~::;::-:::::;:-:;=:::;:;::---;;;::;-f'~l~OO~l=l<>~·~bo='~B~lv~d~, =•~601=-66~ h:i;67~ib~211!!!L2~or~~~l!!48b==l-===:;:;;:;;;;==::.J-1' ~ ~ SLE o VW -t • -·· -----ra-a-·mf-~ef·o.ft-ltw)';-llli Bell . 1\1 NS L.'1PORTS, 120 ·-n,-t-~--1 , ,. ' ' ' :· $1099 MG '69 Austin American \Vag-'58 Opel, needs engine v.·ork. '65 PORSCHE SC • Mint ~...... ;or.., TO. YOTA Co-~n ·.,· d" 'W. WXM'ER, SANTA ANA, lJ'POCO-~A. MESR-BtA,. • CHICK I ERSO Sales. Servic~. PU'tl on w/automaUc, XXB 750. ?i1AKE OFl'ER, See at 229 cond, lo mi, fact. air rond, ....,.," "'"" • !163 ...,~ · Y N Immediate Deli...,.,..,, .................................... $ Sierks, CM, afl 5 pm. .....~ "! 1 II Authorized Dealer Coupe. Stick shift 23,000 1 TR-4 soft top, hrd . tp, WE BUY VW BUSES 1 All Modell·-.. many ¥""-"·• "us se · Sales • Service e Parts ml Excellent cond. $1500. tonneau cover, overdrive. i vw . '68 0,,.1 Cpe. "afr" rond. PORSCHE l2!XXI. 213' ,,,.,!Bl Sonot Coupes In Stock 64S:.1821 '""' ' 1750· 541)..4713 alt 6· auto sport ltd i 549-3031 Ext, 66 or 67 \VWK 617 ................. $1399 ---------PORSCTIE 914· orange/black, Ora.,e Counly's NC\\-est Dir. '69 TOYOTA eo-n 2 D• VOLKSWAGEN I 1970 ~£ARBOR BLVD. am-fn1, appear, grp, Mich. •u a " 9625 Garden Grove Bl•d. J1rtttport 31111µ 0 rt s CO!ITA MESA ~· Co•tlna GT sh••p WJL '67 PORSCHE 912 tites. 2,000 mil ... $3.800. Pt'lv COAST IMPORTS Beige w/blk lntu. FM --------'1;.m7 Call <$"t' LOTUS 3100 W. CDut Hllr)', N.E. 1---------642-941li ~1764 '62 LOTUS Elite, xlnt. cond. Sell $2000 or trd for late 'b11 ?i1GB Yellow, Xlnt cond. V\V. 548-9509 or'64&-4896 Chrome wire \vh e e I s. 1-=========I Ai\f-Fi\1, tonn<'au $2700. 673-7".,58. MERCEDES BENZ Or<t n'.)e County's La• qe~t Selection New & U ~ed Mercedes Bent Jim Slemons Imps. Warne r & Marn St. Santa Ana 546-4114 MGA 1960, DRIVEN by s c h I teacher for 10 yrs. 63,COO orig mi's, good cond , leather/ '"'('II cared for nu lircs, ;GOO. 64&-2785 or 642-4910 ext 2&i. THE QUlCKt."R YOU CALL, THE QUICKER YOU SEIL "" , , .... 8 radio Must sell! $1750. I 301. _ ............................ $1199 Whlte with black interior. pty. Call 673-0012 Or 532-674 4M-M74 '67 VW BUCJ '67 VW 5qrbck, Xlnl eond._ A?il/FM, excepllonally good e 1962 PORSCHE sc . Xl'nt ~t ~r~~ County Inc. I ,68 Toyota Corona Coupe JI.lust sell, Best Otter, 1 '68 Opel \Vagon, good car. running. ~YG9115 cond, new paint, $1000. Pvt · acilic Cout Hwy. Radio. Clean. dlr, r.1w.1 sell, * 642-4635, 646-7836 •·· . 1 VT!' 798 $1299 s·~295 ""1316 642.-0406 • S4&4529 take over payments. · .................. ., ~•~''~· ~"~-=~=-=~ l -----'---·I M!l-273S w 111 finance. fTUU318). • '68 V\V-~ige, stick shift, CHICK IVERSON '68 PORSCHE 912. AM/FM. SIMCA 494-1744. '"h· Xlnt oorni. . '68 V\" Bu' g. vc.-v i;harn. d'ru TIME FOR ~--~----1111· .,. '370 ·v .,, l' lape_dcck, mag!) ,f,, ra_ t s.1_________ '70 V\V Campmohilc. Pop J . ~ XE\V 6?3 ................ $1399 VW Xlnt cond. S4•100. 64f>-:i789 ~67 SIMCA QUICK CASH lop, tent, all <'Quip. Euro-BUS '63. Valve job in May. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 1963 PORSCllE. 9000 mHl's • Dr., beater. (VDU>49)' pean delivtry price, never Needs body v;ork. $650. · '68 V\V Camper full camp-COSTA MESA on' engine. ~1any extras! ... 00 THROUGH A llC1!nsed. 548-7689 * 673-2529 * ing equip. XTK 562 $1699 --=-=-===-.,,,:--"' e '65 PORSCHE SC Good ro..iitlon. 548--0970 ""'----• __ .-...., DAILY PILOT '63 VW B"g· od,. ro..i. '66 VIV SQUAREBACK. Gd . . 67 Datsun Sdn. VHG 013. sunroof, tape, Clean!1 THE QUICKER YOU CAU.. '""""""9 ~ WANT AD 45,000 actual ml'11. 4.000 mi's Thru-out, ;100 Pvt p~: .......................... ,_ ......... $8991-==12950==*=*=54=0-=2667==<.!.:T=HE==Q=U=lCKER==Y=O=U=SELL=~;:"=OO=H="'=""'="=l=vd=,="=,..="=' =========!..:O"=""=w='="=··='='J,.=3='"'===~·='=z.o=m=======l 9900UsodC•" 9900 U$ed Cars '67 Fiat 850 Spyde:r. Lime Used Cart rdst. YAW 674. __ ... $1299 ------------------------- '67 l\·tGB Rdi;t. ZX\V 827. ' ................................ $1199 9900 Used Cars 9900UHd Can '900Used Cars :· New Cars 9800New Cars 9800 '65 VW Bug YRB 024. $1099 1971's I DEPTH! " . i; ' •, 11 ,I . ' • ·~w. COSTA MESA '64 V\V Bug FNB 467 $999 '63 ?t1G Reist. Ge t Sporty 043 BQD. .. .................. $899 HONDA 600 SEDAI Jl:l V\Y Dune_ Buggy, ready to go. HZK 829: ........ S~!}S '66 Austin Healey Rdst. ZKG 727. • ................... $1399 e AUi COOLl!D ,.ll:ONT fNGINf e lfllONT WHE EL ORI VI! e POWEil ASSISTED SEL"· AOJUSTINO ,.II.ONT DISC ell.AKES e MAXIMUM SPEED 7$ MPH e UP TO 40 MILES PER GAL LOH e lfOUR·PASSENGEll:, 2 DA. SEDAM '59 V\V Dune Buf!gy, roll bar k top: 311 BEW. $989 '62 VW Bug P \VD 089. $598 '152 V\V Bug PWD 088. $599 '65 Karmann Ghia YRB024. _ ................ -·-···-·-$1199 SUNSET FORD 5440 Gardei;t Grove Blyd. (213) Stl-5511 (714) ,,......,,. Plus Slit Nrw Cir PAHrllla11 Lt<ll Tr1n1. Tix & Lk- UNIVERSITY OIDSMOllU 2l50 HARIOl llVD. COSTA MESA $40.9640 THE SUN NEVER SETS on Oa..ssitied'$ actio n power. For an ad to se:ll around the clock, dial 64~. 9600 BE~E S~~lf T~NE OF NO BUMPS • • • NO GRINDS • • • IN oJN~~·~OUNTY ct+ 'rp • 1600'• e 2002 , BAYAIUAN MOTOR WORKS • 2500 e 2IOO BMW'1 do11't hit bum p1. l li•y flo•I o"•' !him. Th1t e 2100 CS "'''"'' 110 t11lli 9ri11din9 jo1tl11, S•• T&M Motors for e ALL COLORS e ALL MODELS e IMMEDIATE DELIVER th, Ire• bookl1t, "ll Re11on1 Why BMW it letter." Or 11k for the k•v , , , you'll g•I lh1 me11•9e. '6' PONTIAC 2 cir. H.T. R.1dio, li••ler. power 1l11rin9, 1 ulom1lit: lr1n1. !SRI .Jiil , Low low mil11g1. '67 YW CAMPER $2295 R.1dio, li11 t••· w1lk thru 111h, fully equipped i11cl11d· ing ice box, plu1 m111y, m1ny i rl1'11, Full y 111do1•d c.11:1111•. lmm•cul 1!1 condition. '61 TRIUMPH $1495 Spitfir1 M1C.t :f11d i1, h11I· 1•, 4-1p•1d, H1rdlop, wire wh1.h. 1mm1c1111te c.ord. !ZNJ-2t41 '61 YW • '68 YW R1d io, h11!1~, •wnroof, Reil Sh1rpl Jl1d io, h11!1r, "4-1p11d . n•"" lir11. !l1ek with rid lnterlo'r, {W IJ-027) PLUS A LAllOE SELECTION OF YW IUSES •• ALL COLORS Joe Berlottl'• T&M MOTORS 8081 GARD!N GROVE ILVD. - SA~ES OP!N SUNDAY PAR.TS, SI RYICI tUIS., THURS., llLL l tH ' 114-1214 IV1 lfll. I. ef leec911 ltJ-1111 A1 .... lw4 W. I s.n;fce ..... , . Fabulous Discounts on 1970's! FULL PRICE ~DOOR , HARDTOP $2465 4 '( ,, % FULL PRICE Of91HS6S31t SHOP WHILE SELECTIONS ARI FULLI I !·l:l l~J I~ I i[l 1-·l iJ l'J 11·1-i 3 el~~! iE • . '70 COUGAR '69 Cont. o .. r frM 1eltl •••I usH cor warranty coven both 2·Door H1rit., 2·DHrc, •. parts entl lebor for 100 tloys or 4,000 111ilt1 I v ••.•• ,.. """'~ ,..,.,., " V-1. ""'"· "°"'· lt<lffy 11• ..... 1 ....... ,. ... ''"';,,,. . ...._ ... _ ...... look for rile seol1on the windshield. It meon1 the u1ed -•l*o<lntio~ ..... - """'" .~ ..... ~ ...... .w! tor you buy ho 1 brand new tire1, battery, tpork plugs, ......................... ... ........................ ""'" 11 .... -~"' -.. ..... c:onde11$0r, ond poinh, ond ho1 been rttol'!di1ion1d to 53199 54199 po11 over 100 d iagnostic te11t for performance ond 1alety. Tro11ltle frH tlrivi111 ·ins11r1tl ot 110 extr• cost! • '68 Continental '69 MUSTANG $3266 MACH I V-1, ....it. Iron&.. loclOrY Ii' $2699 4-DOOR SUl-'N. V-1,-. lftM. lot· condilian""-po,. .. 1i-ing, POWtl"' 1ory air conditirilg. ii.OJ powtt, rodicl, (diic) brakt1, rodio, heottr. ,.;,;11-tl hlmtr, "llli!ewoll iw.1, ¥inyl roaf, !Wtl· rir11, lini.ct 911111, ..tiell ""''"-ZAH ldtlons. wheel c--. YUU437 ... '67 Continental $ '67 OLDS 98 2·DOOR CPl v.a, 1111111. 1ram~ kotiory •-v •.~•.-~-.~ $2066 ''"'"'"''";"' ''" ...... ...... 2299 coniili•ioning, full po-. roc'io. t-...ror, hlot«, whitewoll lif1t1, '"""' rool,""' whil~ tirlH, vinr! rool, lir!ltd gklu, Ill tlots. """"'cO'l'W\. WTU7'95 whHlcOYlls.Tlll'"I - '66 Continental '66 CHEVROLET . CAPRICl V-1, """°· 1ro111. lor.!ory or $1566 c~i•.•v •~·-.~~ $2166 condit\oll..,., pct-1i-inoj, '°,.... I"/ -condilianiftg, Ml ,..._., rodot. llr1k11. ,o ... 1r 11111, r1dio, lttar1r, ....... llOllitewal tirn. ......, """ whillwllt 1ir1t. 11ior1 IW(, Mt.d flus. wt1111 ~ VHN 15S witllll_,.V5M672 ·~5 Contin'ental $1'399 '65 MERCURY · · 4-DOOll: sewt. v.e, wi..'""""' roe-_ _. .. _,~ _ _,,,~, $999 flDrl' eir cm!di~ hill,._, rvdio. rionlr!g. ,o-~ ,..... llrlku. ...roo,. ....... ....._. tirlH, """' """' hlotw, ~ lim,. liMiM ..... -... ...,...~,Ml474 COMt. IGZ llOI ' c . . '64 Continental $1199 '65 CHRYSLER 4-llOOlt SEDAN. Y-1, tu11. ir-. IK· ·-··-·~----$999 "" .. unditiriit. ... ..-. l'lllit. ................ ,.....w...l'Odil. """'· """ ...... '"" .... ~ hlot• ............... """ ...... ....._-.. cnmo -s.TCT07' THEY'RE All HE RE! • Not]11st To Look At, But To Test . Drive -AndBuy! For The Big- gest Display See Ora nge County's ,, Largest Vol11111e Lincol11-J'i1erc11ry Dealer! • MARK Ill's • MONTEREYS • CONTINENTALS • MERCURYS • MARQUIS • COMETS • MONTEGOS • CAPRIS LEASE YOUR NEW 1971 TODAY 1971 COMET 2·DOOR .. $ MONTH 36 Mo. Closed End. Plus Tx & lie. LET OUR EXPERTS TAILOR YOUR LEASE TO YOUR NEEDS. ALL MAKES AND MODELS .•. NO LOWER RATES ANYWHERE! ' ' .I e l • ' 1- • . '· -· - DAILY PILOT ~ Frldoy, Stptombtr 25,-1970 '' ............. A ION T N T 0 TRANSPORTATIQN -.l'.RANSPORTATION ~NSP~~-T~...:: TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION '· TR~NSPOR"TATION fRANSPORTATION """'""'"_.;_;..;...;.;.c.;;.;.;...;,1-'-~~~~~1 ,..,,,,...,. --!Tl'°""" Autn _.---lmportod Autn ,...,.lmfM'"d Autn . ffOO I "m'-port=..;:od.;;...;.A.;.:u.;;lo..;:•--''600= ~lm~111~1~rt~od~-~!!__!960G~I ~lm~oo=•tod;:;;,:;"';:"~' .. ~-::;-=:.i:'m:::!;port:::od~Auios=·:__:9~IOO Autoo Wonlod -9700 _VOLKSWAGEN voLXS\(AGEN voU<5WAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLX5WAGEN vowWAGEN voLXSWAGEN voU<5WAGEN WE PAY CASH '63 ""\IUJ '58 YW '66 vw 'fiG. vw BUS: Rill; '63 YW 1119 Large -Selection '65 YW w n Orlgl~ -· finish with . G'!: ~18io ''!"'· 'MECHANIC SPECW; Of YW Campers, '66 vw --FOR YOUR-CAR IUG oontrullna r<d Interior. Ue 69 VW •• 000 ml _,_ Ue, OKCCU V Lt. cs . '~. · ~·1 "'""· $29t CUii, Kom..,., CONNELL "= :,;;. =· ~. Sedan vn$38 Down fastback Pvt';;· ~~ • CHICK IYERSON luses, New & Used 5 d CHEVROLET beautiful lace \\'Cl'k. YPU. $3M down, .: $29.78 for 24 '62 VW.f'&h, new battery &: VW lml'Mdiate Delivery e an 2828 Harbor Blvd. OOL mo•""· APR Is 21.5':4 total Radk>. tSVU 2161 pafot. Xlnt eond, S550. Allor 549-"'31 ""-.81 <r 61 CHICK IYERSON Costa M.,. 541\-ll!tll ~ ~~~ ~~:Sri38.$148, Total cash $1199 l~ ~~OCJ Squarebe.ck. Xlnl 1970 =:JZVD· -vw Ra$dllo,o ISB9W9062) ~i~P~~~R CHICK -1VERSO 6-HIGK IYERSON -"'"" """ •m Sarod""'1: 5"'-3031 Ext. 61! or n 11 ,.., eu 1s atra cJtA YW YW Way:Irvu.; SJ.l..2254 VW-NEW: ~.brakes , l970HARBORBLVD. aec usfll'!ll H b · paint, uphl, sunrool IM· COSTA MESA UER BUJeK r.&3031 E>l 61! or 61 a r 0 u r v w "66 VW Faslback, new U...., MAC. G,..t running eond BA ... 1: 8:R :~vo~e~ Harbour V.W. i~~~v~. 187ll ·eF.Acu BL. ~ :;: ~rond. Pvt ~ :.~~.vw~ f'~ .. :: .. ~~~~~~; •. '-;;io~~t-:H~rbour V.W. ema r:. E. 11 th St.sci-ms paint. eng:. Xlnt .coqd. 18711 BEACH BL., 842-4435 HUNTINGTON BEACH '68 ·VW BUG. Sunroof. tires, exhaust. Wht. w/blk er, one owner. Has all 1he 1B7ll BE"A:CFrBI.:-w ::.rm ······WE ·PAY·-T-OP· ····· ........ 1 Sacrifice for best cash olr HUNTINGTON BEACH WANTED ,63 vw Bus-Cherry cond Sharp! After 6:30. int. Veryt Clean. $1050. extras.<• 2l9S) HUNTINGTON B~OI CASH or trade. 646-8351. ' I'll pay top dolla .. for )'OU!' paneling thru-out. Tuck &. call 5364900 675-1084 $2295 •6t VW Camper • '65 V\V: XLNT COND. 162 YW lug VOLKSWAGEN toda.Y. Call roll int. Blg tires, chrome '68 V\V convt. Outstanding '68 KARMANN Gh.ia, air auto sport ltd Sundial -This is a ne\V "70 RECENT OVERHAUL. Radio, 4 speed, t'Xcellent con. and ask far Ron Pil>ehoL rims, nice paint job. Make cond. Best otter. 543-3458 or cond., radials, sterep, $1!195. camper unit. 1t has waler ~. * 536-2273 ditioTI. dlr. Jo'1ll priee $699. 549-3031 Ext. 66.67, 673-0900, offer. 962-9650 673-6830. 673-2312 __ 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. pressure. Ice box sink, AM/ "" .... l:ar. • truclm just call uS llJr tree. estimate. 1968 VW-Beige. Low mL, (8WM88U Small down. \Viii 'X VW Bus '68, 9-pus, lo '69 VW -Automatic stick '66 VW CAf.fPER, gd cond. * '68 vw Bug _ like newL 511-Tm Call CoUect FM'"" radio, just all the extras x n . St315. PVt pty. f.inanee-Pffi'ate_._ p a.r.t..,Y-_IJlLs, _new li!ti, $2395. shift. $1450 or best otter . $1800 or best offer. AM/FM $1400. VW CAMPER BUS and \roU.ld you believe only GROTH CHEVROLET 67>6498 afters pm 546-4052 or 494-001. * 54Pr-2698 * i tust Sell. 546--0050 * 5.36-4938 * * '62 VW. cheap! 557-7268 $905. 962-.2273 (YNZ-094) $2995 Ask ... Soi.. ......... IMMEDl·ATE DELIVERY _ON 1971's • NOT JUST 2 or 3 B·UJ-A 6000 SELECTION WE HAVE 1971:s FOR IMMEDIATE SALE or · LEASE Not Just 2 or 3, But A Good -Selection of Mar l< Ill's, Lincolns, Mercurys, Cougars, Moiftte~o" & The Fantastic Comet. I .Or If You Prefer ~ • • • • • Bargain; ,We Have Those Too. Over 50 To Choose From. . '. . .. ,., ..... _ INVOICE* ON ' WE ARE GOING TO CONTINUE OUR s70 OVER INVOICE ( ........... ,.~ '0 ' "".HANDLIN• ) ON ALL NEW '70 MERCURYS, COUGARS & MONTEG.OS BETTER IDEAS MAKE BETTER CARS ' Johnson-. son -0.000©®0.00 ©@~'iiD!ro ~~'ii&O.-• 1£\\00IK m: · 1~00©!!!100\'1 ·©®!!!I~&~ . . • 140·1630 COSTA MESA 2626 Hart.or Blvd. 642·0981 THREE GENER ATIONS IN THE :tVTOMOBll.E BVSI NESS THI OLDIST ESTAILISHlll "FACTO•Y DIHCr' UNCOUl·MUCU•Y DIALH IN OllANlil COUNTY • .. " • ., 91!11! -auto-s.pol'tcltd--::':.:=~:.,';".;_ , 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. 847-6087 Kl 9-.1131 537-Tm Call Collect WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS VOLVO Ir your ear is extra dean, set' us first. BAUER BUICK l.rU'UllU 234 E. 17th St. lH.. Costa Mesa 543-7765 'YOl.vftl ll\IPORTS WANTED U1 . Orange Cowlties m TOP S BUYER "FRIEDLANDER" B~ ~;.~· It Beach. Pb. 311..& 1:11M l a4(" (MWY, "1 893-7566 e 537-6824 PRIVATE party wants '69 NEW-USED-SERV. Ford or Chevy Stati'On ~W ·.;.:'-="':::;""'w~/~low~m~;~J-••_•_•_.1 ......_.......--_!4 2--0335. '59 VOLVO .68 ~.';1;,';~.0•· 613-2312 ·Radio;·heater,A.1peed,.excel .. ·=======;::;;of lent transportation car or A to Leasi- good second car. dlr. Full u ··• 9110 price $699. CNTL 924), Small ------- down Ww finance private party, 5464052 or '494-SllL VOLVO '70 Demo. • 1536 $2862 All M•kts-A.11 Models 1800 F Cpe for delivery,. Automobiles • TruCks . Overseas del Specialist. "Where Service Makes the Difference" _DEAN LEWIS 0rang, en •• N•WJ>O"I Beach 646-9303 4570 Campus Dr. TI4-541).38?; 9900UHd C111 9900 1969 CAMARO l dr. H.T. VI, factory air, turbo hydr.,,.•· tic, ale. Darlr 9t1y with Yi11yl top. IYOM 07]) 52895 . ... · 1970t.T.0. l dr. H.T. l a1ulifu. .old with 1al!d1lweod ,..;11yl top I-inlario . f actory air c ondi. ti111in9. fZl27765l 53895 1967 OLDSMOBILE l u11ury S1d111, Abundanoa of 1xlr11, Ex· ••plional car, IVHf5761' $2195 1969 GTO 4-SPEED ••.•utiful v.rc1 ••• 6r11n, powar 1hi1rirtt . I-powar .. iu;. br1•a1. I l ,000 1nil11 I-fie:• lory -warranty. 1714AFXl 52795 1967 GRAND PRIX f actory a ir c:ond itio11in9, ... inyl foll' I loaded with 111tra1. A b.auliful 9old, ITR.Hl771 $1895 1969 FIREBIRD CONY. Sp1rlrlin9 rid wilh blaclr c:u1!0"' fri,.,. pow1r 1l11ri11~ l factory air, !ZLH02ll 52795 1961 BONNEVILLE l "'· hardtop with air c:ond., pow1r win• dow1 , li9ht 9old body I 1¥11tchi119 i11lar• ior. IWXG6211 ~l2i95 1961 VALIANT 2 OR. Plyfftouth w/(u.torv air and auto. tra111• '"i11io11. li9~u1. (WVF-441 ) $1895 1970 MACH I Mu1!1119. low fflilai. A Roll1 P.oyc:1 tr1d1 '"· factory air, 9old with b11ct !01 1· AC!'ll $3495 196_9 FIREBIRD 350 Tur1te hytlra1111!1c, ll'•war 1t11rin9, off.. V1rd1re 611011 hardtop, l lc1n11 So, IXRS9941. 52595· CLOSID SUNDAYS ~RO Y CARVER ~ R01LS -: RO YCE . 2925 HAR WR ,BOULEVARD, <:OSTA ~11..\1\ 546·4 .... 4 " Ur - 1 "' Fc c m n m "' G .•.• 211 JO " 8 '68 -·-F)J p s c y -'' ,_ TR.\NSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION Friday, Srpte~iber 25, 1970 QAl~Y PILOT 43 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATIO T ANSPOK (AflON I TRANS _R ATION 9900 Used C1 fs ._. 9~00 Used <;1rs HOO ~~r~ __ _ 9900 "°° u • .a·c·~· Used C•r• 9900 U1ad C•r1 I ;;.;c------"-:.: 9900 Used C•rt t90CI Used Cars 9900 Used Cars FINE Transportaiton Cars . 'At · Stnsible P rices ·' • -----~---t CAMARO , BUICK CADILLAC CHEVROLET '67 'rtIVlERA. Jf you're look-1---'--r-----,... In< !or the 1,..i? Thi•;, It, '66 CID'O!>rw. El Don&· '6f CAMARO '64 CHEVY IMPALA Wk \\•/landau I.op + all ~II pwr, climate control, Radio, ~h e..a,J e.r. automatJc xtras, car of this qualil)I AM/F?tt stereo, ,cru.iie.-con. vs, 4 speed, alr conditlonifli;r. tr11ru;., a Ir conditioning. _C_O_N_TI_N_E_N-TA_L_ ---, ""FALCON -~ ~-EQRD 2~~.~~I~~ '61'0o9tlneotal·Lwcury at an tc0norn}' ptice. M•ke offer. 64""6173 '61 FORD Falcon V8, r&h, e11tomalic'1Rt11. Good cond. 5450.648-9880 TOP · ooulli ;.~~ ~tavcr!ck-Br;i.nrl ne 1v "'tll'•'ll. J~ ra!. Stick aluft. T.O.P. &12"'3;_!2 should have. l\t1111t See. Oyg .trol, tilt & tele, Bll!t't'lng (\VYB ..... 1 dlr. \\'ill take (HXZ-1031 &15-016G 833-0383 Nlte! 646-8".4·1 whl, gulde-matic, tvo'ilite :ru ------~=-121~ "'"241! CPr in trade or fln111ice pri-$895 CORVETTE'-2100 Harbor Bh·d. FORD ....,_ CLEAN USED CARS S(>e Andy Bro\vn THEODORE RO BINS FORD MERCURY FOR sale or lease -1968 Cougar Sale S2500, Only 13!\t' mi Lease $110/nlO, 24 mo. :W:1 mi, lease $170 / nm, 18 mo only. Day ?t&-.1140; nights 67~7317. \V. E. Gries~1eye1·. WE BUY CARS ~~ .. · -2100· ·Harbor Blvd. 645-().lliG IO LATE model cars, prir..'t?d to sell, Pvt pty, Call be~ 8 pm &14-&iO ' BUICK '64 BUICI( RIVIERA ~~8 ....... ..,..v or va1e party. 546-4052 or Extra cl<>an, '(ONX·287) l--C,0-65~c~•~o=1L~L~A~C~--1 494-6811. fll'UI __ --·A -SU-~---CORVE1~1'E '66 v" h; tr '69 COUNTRY Serlan sin $1295 I'll ----,=.-=---'~ '~ lai;thack • 415 hp, Xlnt 1."0rld -'61 Z 28 2 !'\() 81 <I Sl5-0-IG6 l\IU!it sell. p..11 plY. ii'IHS6! \~'11:n, radio, p.1 .. p.b, air ~------:'#WI-~--. Sed. 1'~ully equipped. 962-8.136 '100 Jla1• r v . cond. :-.:Int rond. fl\'l pty, '~ '~ (85162017) '66 Chevy Impala. P/S, '6'1 \'ETTf: F'B • Dark blue. 61\-2002. &16-7fll 2100 ll!n·bnr Blvd. 645-(1166 $f69S CHEVROLET R/11, A.C. good cond. Very JI.lint cond. S\000. •69 J'ORD Ranch W•gon. • 1965 BUICK Riviera-full ~ ~I ---'·--"'----_,cood"-c~"~"~·-'~':I--75_75_._~~ l===J=;="'=· =&1='=·66.'!=l=== I Aulo; fac air. p / s. 'fl{) /\1EflCURY, eng, runs ex~llent. Sl50. • 5'15-4314 * 2060 J-larbor Blvd. ;1!01\ TER£Y 4idr Hrdlp. Costa Mesa f'uJJ p\1r. Rons goocl, Beat 64UM>l0 , offrr ovt'r $200. 6?»104 '66 fAIRLAN£ Y/AGON -''5 Colo"y P"'k 81" Wg" JlO\\'<'r, air. XI n t &p-6-t5-0466 ,57 CHEVY e '68 EL CAl\llNO -Like COUGAR !"1rreo/radin. Xlut CGnd. Pe a r a n c e , be t t er _21_"'~"~·-""'=' _8_1'~"-· --= 4 Dr. ~·x-ll•nt -nd. (F\"I\'. nc~·, only 13,000 ml . 6rJ--0334 S21!SO. &37-4907 A . h 1 11 11._.,.,. ·-= c.-.... .... ...u ... 1 =-,,=~°'""'-,--~-utomatic, ""'\\'Ct 11IC.-l'i""', Jn e e an ca )'. DW· '70 CONVT-A/C, Ai\1 /Fi\!, days; 675-0679 f!\"t'S. 1---------·70 Jo'OR Coo '"' ... !' .P.. Air, Kelly wholeSfl\e prier. 000 \V. 19th St .. C.l'\I. 6-1~~ "000 I I '6651. •1967 COUGAR C"", 'clean. D u1ry Squire air rond, slc>rro tape; dlr. MUSTANG etc. -"•. m • x ru c:gnd. $495 _ e :65 .Cllf;VY ~rt -Van .,.... \Vagon LTD. Loilded. Xlnt (TA"( 21!11 Slfi99 run Ptil't'. '69 BUICK Rivie ra, full pwr After Se{ll 28 phone 714: camper, auto, air, clean. ~~ r!'~\~. 8~~1r;;ns, p~·r cond. ?lftfst-sell! 830-5-13-1 Will tak e car in-fra<Ic~oTrrn.1.·-. -----.---. -1 & air 1:ond, Nu til't'S, Pvt 962-6114 ~ ~ * 541-2407 * .60 FORD 6 cyl, Gd borly, ance private party. f>.l6-40JZ 66 ~lu~r.ang Convt'rt1hlt'. ply, must s{<tJ or I'i'turn 10 •59 CADILLAC i\iUST &ell .-'tir Chevy Novii. 1!167 COUGAR GT. Air-<:ond, !ires' & cni;-. M!!chn nical ly 0. 49 14~11 yello1v l\llh hh1ck lop, V-8, lt>asing Co. $3695. 5J6..65ll Nt>eds trans. Best Oller 2100 Harbor Blvd, 64~66 S& 327 4 pd lo l M t p/'lf, disc hrflk('s . Alli tilt ]l('rfcci. Alt 6:30 St7-5Jl? -· autou1.111!c. po11-er steerinl!', days, J41'.H1;)71 aft 6 pn1 962-4596 aft 6 k ~·knds. .57 CHEVY lilt eng. 11,1• II" ·to ~PP~~ll!. tri!l84j l~'~"~''g'"~·~· ~1~169:~-~"i"~·~•-;"~'°~~ 1 1i;..,~·~!tc~uJ;,<'·TfiR~''' s;Sc<I~'n;;ss-;;.a;;,... '68 G·afaxie 500 r11d10 a1Wf hearrr. $99:l.OO. • pd R bl! I t N 'I"! .,...... Uc. !?PL 313. JI ~! CADILLAC s . (' BS ov. " 1• • 1~1 Che~~· '"' -11~ Sta ll'"g, Pl·. l'/b, ··'·· SLt'MON" r•IPO 0 h I I I h ...i · "" ·~·~ ' ""' DODGE .. " .... t'ull power plus ait• 1·nnr!. tllr. . ' S 1 RTS, 120 CAM AR ~~ ~· ,d~w~~~t' ob!'. Phone 1$1tr 8:30 p.tn., , Xlnt cond. Sl•lj(). ·67l-4281 \Vil! take small dQ.\\'.IL \V. \VARNER, SANTA ANA . '68 RIVIERA • Beautiful "69CPEdeV,1nagn!licent! ,59 EL CAMINO MT-4291 , MS-T&24 '68 I>odre Sportsntan Van '66Fonl Cllston1.Nc>w brakes, finan c e. tVCD35J. Call 1970LESS11ian7000niiAlr.t.· CGnd. All xlras, 4 new tires. ''inyl top, s!crt'O, plush in-,64 MAt:IBU 32'1-C apd. J\Una 108", ain't cond. Poly tires, liL'CS, tunl.'-u p. S700, Call 4!).1-771.1. all i.:lras. Orig female ownrr SJj95. 642-5613 or 830-4091 tcr. loaded, S4895. 547-6469. Frelh pitnt, A·l ahlipt. ad. Nee(h body v.wk. MlHl CHRYSLER 1'1"•lfl• many xtras. 1ifust 5.11~97:i. .-..:. --lea.\·~ fCU'___LullcJtc. \\' ·-. ~- _. _ _Eo._RESULTS vou p..!l.....l&_ _'6:: CAD-_,;•~•;;';.· ,;°";r-Vc;;ill;;;'·"OiA;;~!'' f--·-·_C_m111·.MJ5-'-)-~..:"•:;,_l-',."l'-I im~;;..,· · -· ' ICJlnow! 673-7~ aft 4.;30. "•"'·"63'°"G~,1-a,""·ic...,4-""d-c.""v"s~. -,,~10, LINCOLN takl' oldc!_ V\\' Bug as part pend on, Call the Super. all JlO'.l'er, o m . y: ~n---1-.--t, 67-toO-CONV.-IT'S---WONDERrur.--111Y ;Good~' ~-t~•~•~>h-~, ;~-~~&l~~=t:::=;';-~§:'C.O,~;::-~;_· :..· 7-\;J>~•~•~t~~· ~~7~~7.f.sl'--'---1 Salesman .. Daily Pilot 833-3'185. SEE YOUR REALTOR" JMMAO: BRONZE BEAUTY many buy/; ln appllRnces '69 FAI RLANE, Pl.~ •. au10. ·GGCQ.~f:L·4 ·d;,·xlnt. cnnd. '66 l'l1us!ang, V8, dclux, v!nyl Classified &12-5678 -place For an ad to gell around FOR. YOUR BIG 11U:E , Air~ pwr ae1t11 dllC brk1, etc. you find in the Classified A/C, 3;;1 eu. in. Ne1\-flrcs. L1hr. 111r, ,·in. rp , an1 /f1n. tor, auto, _fl\\T, 1. O\vner, In """"=-=':"=·='="'="'='=l=t!=o=~~th~·:,;'~l0<~k,O:d;;l•~l~M2-'6~;';7~~:...:._;;:_;,~~::;,;~=~;;:;~=~N~EW~CO,;:.~M;,;E~RS~Kl~T=:!~*~S~l695~=*~=*=";;;~~335'~0:*~,;;A;;d•;,·,;C,;:h";;:::k,;t;;h'0::m~•~~w~!==k';;'":;'I~~;· ;"~1~19~:<l~.~6~7'-'lllRll~~=~l~l89~5~.~£~11~-2'~.\=.t~"~":0'~==I 1n1. nu !11'Cs, Xlnt collfl. • . $127i 67~3319 aft 6 or \\'knd~. _ YES SIR, iHH-Al:E-tS-ON RIGHT NOW at CONNELL CHEVROLET 1969 Chevrolet 4 Door Sedan. 350 co. in. Y8 en9ine, ll'-...-rt:I>.\. P.S., R&H .., auto., fact. a ir. Real nice 1 LR~,-:Z~jjl car. IXUH4081 HURRY!!! Be First On These 1970 Caprice 1969 Nova C o'upe. R.,1 -L,_a uto., P.S., P.B., vinyl -2 O'r. VI Coupe. R., H., pwr. sfrn9.- roof, 12,000 m iles-Nic:e. No Strike I owner car. Sold new here. IYWT- Price here. (AOY460 I 1591 ~·--$-3499 $2099 ~. TRANSPORTATION '65 CORVAIR Stick. Needs clutch, l P 19176 ) $499 '64 IMPALA CONY. $499 "-"'."."o.P •.• s ..... ".d·;···.'.".".' .•+.ro.o,;9;, .• 1.K•A•8•5•3•6•1 _..,___ ~~ :_.. !61 CORVAIR WAGON $299 ;;:· _., -~, Stick, radio. Runs good. "T -~~~--~~~~~--~~ '63 FALCON 2 DOOR $699 Strong ca r. (P2072A ) - CHECK THESE SALE PRICES! 1969 Impala C ustom Cpe. R., H., eutO., P.S., vinyl roof, remainin g fact. 9 uarantee I YYR058 I 1968 Caprice Coupe. Vinyl room, P.S., R., H., fact. a ir, low miles. 1121180) $2399 1967 Chevrolet 1965 Cheve lle Impala Coupe. 24,000 m iles. R., H 1, 2 D • I -R H "b .oor ....... u o., ,, ., o ne wner. a uto., P.S., air cond. Real choice car. I UOL543 I H,rc;. I NFV088 I 1966 Impala 1966 Ford b pa11. Wagon. VS , P.S., R., H ., aut o., Countrl Squire Wagon. b pass. P.S., air. IT G40ll factory a ir. ITEZ6181 $1192 $119 9 20 TRUCKS_.VANS-CAMPERS IN STOCK TO CHOQSE FROM 1969 FORD ¥< TON l!('avy duty. R., l·J., s tick. Like New. i!:l0275E1 1'61 CHEV: l/• TON PICKUP R!!.d io. heater, po\\'er steering, auto., air cond. t283563) 1968 FORD 'I• TON F25D '63 MERC~RY COLONY PARK WAGQN $599 With air, P.S., nice. I NYBlOO I YOU BET~ 4 "'heel drive, lock. hubs, 2 bN:ls-s l~I 1\·f'ldrrs bM and slakt-body-t:xtra i::as t11 nk, radio, 4 speed & nrar flC\V condition. 17798721 '66 r 11sthack 2+2 4-!ipd & Xlnt conrl . iS1200 or TRADE or OF'FER I * 540-41s1 * J!l!i5 l\IUSTA:\'G -6 eyl. I Stick. Xlnt cond. Vinyl top. S'!50 !akcs it. 547-7188; eves &\&-;i:zti,j e 'li!I l'\IACH I -Xln l oond, U!Kl<'r \VarrRnf.v. Be Io~· hook. P1·1 pir: fH l-1'1~ 196.i ~IUSTANG-260 VII, 3-spd stick, 1 owner. very good corn I. S7~i0.' 6-12~j34 OLDSMOBILE '6-1 ST:\R~'IRE: PO\\'ER. LO ;\-IL l ~l:\IAC. BAHGAIN! NB. * * 675-0745 PLYMOUTH- '67 PLYMOUTH I Club CPt'. Auto1na!ie trans .• t•adio. hcat<'r. fUZV-126) • $1295 ·' 1lt4wl4 ~ ·~100 llarbbr Rl\"d, lw.).M66 '68 SATELLITE WAGON Autnma1ir, po\\"t>r stcerir)i!. IZVJ-\ 1081 dlr. $1899 Eull l'nl·r. \\'ill take c:ir 1n trade or f1n;111ce pri\'ate party. ; .. i!i-10:i2 or 4'.11-6.~11 . '64 PLYMOUT H Auton1a!1 c rn111s., ne~· pa.inl lEDL.-741) ~741 ~~ 2100 Harbor Bl\'d. 6•15-0466 '70 Duster 310. Pc>rl. cond. i;()()[) 1ni, Goodyear polyglas lires, ~ srd. 494 6.122 e1'f!. PONTIAC PONTIAC '6'.I 2 Or, Catalina I lartltop, air-11/s, fl I h . SLl\'CI' grt'.Y -blk vinyl int. S21fl~1. OOf{..37;i1, !16S-3i1:;. '6~ GTO -Dk t;rcrn hody, blk vinyl Lop. chrn1 11·hls, kl ml. Vl'I")-' clt'11.n, SISOO. Jim, 612~ili31 ~!UST Sell 'Ki GTO, clean 1·hronie rims. new glas:. tiL't'S, make offer, 847-&147 aflc1· 6 p.111. '&i PON11AC T em pest Spor1s Cp 6 l')'I, reblt, 11vei·head can1, >..Int. cond. $.1H!.I orb~! ofr. !JG.11-74!11 1961 PO~TIAC Ten1 p e1t, runs ,1!17')1. ~700. !>-16·638:1 11flrr 6 '69 GTU r..'Onvl auto, P/S, (>DR. rlnt gla~s. con.~le. Sl~~iO. r-.lust s<'JI 54R--6.123. ·Frn--:1'JAC Tt>n1pest StR- li011 \\'~on, air. p/s, p/b, xlnt c11nd. $675. fi.12-4412 '6:i rontiac GTO, 389 cu In tri·/IOlll'l'. Xlnt con d , Loar!,..rt~ S1150, 510-8873 RAMBLER '65 RAMBLER Amhassador, Loadedt (ROV-15:.n. _:u V.OLKSWAGEtLBUG._ Good tra nsportation. !055HSA ) -S-499 I 64-~~~ill,~!o .~~~~~~~:~'.~~$1499 ;-~~~!;::::~:-:i:,~.~~i~~n~!E!;!lf,~UP $895 --- '61 CADILLAC CPE. DEVILLE s I 099 You heve to see this one. Nic e. Every- thin9 with a ir. 61 ,000'careful rnill!u. IJPB691 ) '60 CADILLAC CPE. DEVILLE A ir, strong car. Steal thi~ one. IJl<X900) 'U IQICK SKYLARK COUPE 53,000 miles. Strong dependabl• car. P.S .. "''"" R .. H. I 8EY979 I $599 $599 A11to., F1el. 1ir. IXCSl21l \Vcst\\'RY C8m1)1•r fnr lo\1', lov.• pritt'. Sl~ns-rour. has ~love.. ice..box. \\'Rlrr. '68 ~~.~~~~:~en Bug $1299 ~ ~~f.. ~~~v\v1'{~ .~~~."'"'' Sheu R1d io, H11l1r. Stick-Gu1r1"!11d eo"~-IVGJ4ll I (P35481 J I 64 ~"~~;~,~!!~, 4 ,,.,; R' H' "" W;,;,., N•• $1799 H11991r Or1n91 p~l11! -N11r new r11bber with white ¥in,I roof. S11r1 11 pretty 111<1 • r11I good one- 1961 FORD 1/J TON PICKUP NICI" truck & rral 1traii;ht. Slick, heater. radio. (643860) 2828 I HARBOR BLVD. 546-1203 .. ' .- ~~ 2100 Harbor Blv1r. &1;1--0466 '63 \V1ti.:-on, new e11g-paint- tires. XLNT COND. \Vkends & alt 5 968-4343 T·BIRD '68 T-BIRO. Oo'.1! 1\'hi!e. Im- mRc. conrl. Low careful mflt'RJ.:"I", Auto Irani. P/s, P/tlisc brakt'S. RI H . \Y/81\Vl tircs, Faciory air . tn1n1l"d We $2300. Fhian- clng avaU.-1!rlval'e party. ore 1}'f3) 63•1-4784 or 171-1) ~ '6'1 T·Binf, air, radio, pwr. lo mi's, motor xln1 O;Jnd, int~r. <'X!er n~w Mppearancc, ~fi..4()12 . lif"T.Bf'=R~O-Qi~,.-.-. ~.~-.-pw-.,, IOI\' mil. 1 Ol''nE'r, Sl.29.i. 4!l7-1\'!(I r>r 49l-71'2 VALIANT VALIANT ai r/eond. aurn. -t dr new tltt11 etc. fk,.I ()Iler, ~DIS or t 'tj -f..1.'W ~~~~:7!~"l TliESU0N-N~EVE-~R-SET_S_on"1 ~ . !j Dally Pllnt Clas~UIM T • • ' l ' • l ' • r l -· ' • --- • "' ·-·- ,.,., • ~ --·~ ·---EVERY NEW ~9.70 . ' ' IN :ouR ---- ., BIG STOCK . G NEW N.OW MODELS DISCOUNTED 6 J,O MOVE! --. DISTl.NCTIVE IYIRY NIW 1970 - -. JIUClll ·AND CAMPO IN STOCK NOW AT TOP =--c-MDllCOUNT _ 51oop W• Stlectlou t.n .._.,, ROBINS '. RELIAILl MUSTANG SALE --SEllES STAn CAR ·Sig A THEODORI ROBINS IXCLUSIVI IS •--from. '65 thru 70 -.ltls. C-htrdtepo, ion--·•nd 2 + 2Fllflltcb. Sonot with 4 ....._..,., 1l•·11r-- d1tianl"1 ....i.........,.. ll!Odtl1. • LOOK FOR THE DIAGMOSTIC CENTER SEAL ON THE WINDSHm! tDMnl: .1965 MUSTANG HARDTOP A11felfteti.,·rHie1 hee\ltr. ('Cl441) OUR PRICE $I 091 100% PARTS AND LAIOll· WARRANTY 4000 MILU OR 90---DAYS c.... ... ..U.ktll ,.,.. ............... I: I '" 4 ..... ff-. ,... eM. PLUS ...._ ........, -' -'-.,.._. All ,.,., wM ................. ~., 11 1•, -~-'6. 9 ~~~ . .!~1.~}.~~~,, .......... s2196 ALL OFFERS ~co~S_IDERED· -1n 'h'•11•11thiio11, pew'' ••••riftf, power t!lire ~rehs, TRADES ACCiP''l'I· D n Gt rtclio, ho•t•r, low MilHt•• IXSll•ll o--' "'"' ---'· . : · MUSTANG H~RDTOP s..99· 6: --. PA[D FOR 01· NOT- - • -. . -FORD - FOR -71 _ DON't_W_OR_RY ABO.UC .. ~ CHRISTMAS' llWI · - ASK AIOUT OUR :' . PINTo.MAYIRICx .. ·· · -. HOIJD;\Y PURCHASE"' PLAN! OVER 2 ACRES OF FINE TDDE INS TO CHOOSE FROM ... ~ tRucit~VANoCAMNl"" gu· .. Mtny to chOO.t from -'64.thru 70 ......,.._Y, .. tons It % tons standard, •utorn1tic, 4 ..... traftlll'I~ Some with air-Mn• ditionlno, ampen anti umper ...... · •· ... ·EXAM PU: .. ' ·1964 GMC PfCKiJP OUR PRICI $796 _•70 ~~~~-~.~.~.:.~!MPER · ·k29L1 •inlr.Llk•11tw. (11 097) . :~ V .,-7 ·-CHEVROLET MALIBu .51· 496 ~ " ' 2 d .. or H.T. V-1. 1uto., R&H, _, -.~- \ pow1, sl11ri,11g. (TYW91•) ~ · . ~ ~f--~.. 69 '1 Full f1ct. equi p., r11f io, he•ter, I ~ t f1ctory w1rr111ty 1¥1il•blo, IXXS3t7 1 ----------~--=--- 5;): '·64 PONTIAC CATALINA $896 '69 PONTIAC TEMPEST $199 l ~ -4 Z 1.6,-MUST ANG '2296 2 Dr. H.T. fully equipped Jncludin& ' ct m · ' · · ' air conditioning, very low miles. , Cu1to"" ''S", 1t111tl1rd 1hift, VI, l&H, · , .~,~ I .' ~;;;;H:;;··~ DR.. -' , 66 ~~T~~~ ~ 2f 6 ___ . ~-'-,-·'--=-='Y-,,-CS="..,.."·.,....,..-,:--:':-· --------~;;r 69 ~~~1'::'•"'·'""6•7°'""'" '1996 , r.~'.t.~;1~·~~~~ I 68 ~~,;~;~~~~:~~~~~~!2096 ;: ;ia _. • . J . '63 OLDS II 5 6 R11'111i..d1r of f1ctory w1n 111ty 1v1il1Dli, fV(WH267 ~ It _ ~ .. ~ -~ .. ~ I 69 cH •• H,,.,E. v,,,E,, L,,,u,,.., .,M,,,,A,, LIBU . ~39-6. . 4 D•. H.T. Faoto"' equippod. automati• . ~~';!~!i~0~n'dlti~~l~~e_e~~'y:~~0· '69 FORD GAL 500 ~596' ,65 FORD FAIRLANE $8. 9· 6. '· "· H.T. f,lt '°""· '"lo., ,;, <ood ., · l11clucli11t air co11cl. !ZXV3lll vinyl roof. !XXAS2•l 500 2 dr. H.T., V-8, automatic, ----:~::'::-C.:.:::::------_,:::...:::_::-= po""' .teerini-<PBH040) _ . _ , ' .• 65 , l=.QRD 1. TD $ _ . Fully eaulpr>td, automatic, · •1r·c••K1r1DJii6(~ · . 6 cyl. <WV1J724l • · , · ,.,. ' .. . FORD GALAXIE 500 -rdr.-H:T:-ft•dio, h11 t1r, •uto .. P.S.,- 1lr c.ortd. IZCJSl61 -s.m9!6 '62 eHm n ·WAIMIN · 6. · """""·!·A-.... ""•·~ ...... '"· 1196 . ""...,.~"'n"-"""''~··--,., : , ~' ~;,;T.,iJ ~ $1696 -, ~- __ , _ __,__PARTS-SERVICE 7 AM To 9 PM MON HOURS 7 AM To 6 PM TUE-FRI _ _,____, • . I _, .· • I PARTS DEPT. ONLY 8 AM to 6 PM .SATURDAYS ' . ., , I • --~~~~~--"-..~~....l.:.~--'--~---:.__,_-'---'--~-----'-~~~~·~·~~.....;.~~--~--------~"--:;_~·--...;;·'..-..... ; • '