HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-09-21 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa•
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MONDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 2r, :1970
YOl...&1. HO.'m. I tlritottl, M P&e11
Face _Grillina
Two Deputies
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Jailed_ in· Golf
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. SILHOUETTED BY FLAMES, FIREMEN -'BA:ri'~-al;.u'E.·'AFTER PLANE . PLUMMETED 'INTO -cAP°JSTJtANO. IEACH tAUNDROMA'I' C·ourse· Theft . • ' · ; , ' " '' ( I 1 ' , ~ J ' ' ' · ' 1-' , ' r ' , r . , ·..,. • • • . ' " ' ' .
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THE $ULLENBERGERS LOST EVERYTHING BUT THEIR 'NIGHTCLOTHES ALMOST EVERYTHING
In the Apirtment Behind th• S1v•Mor1 L11undry, • Scr1pe With O..th on • Chilly S.ptemlter Momina
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Mom~ Tot ·Safe in Crash
Capo Plane Wreck I nipact Thretv Them Tlv-.ough Wall
.-lty PAMELA HALLAN imped with~the l'W().inch will. 11 do her "We lost-'evecythml bul~o~u-r
Of tt1o1 0.11' ,.r111t 11111 memories · ht 1 .... I h The tiny baby lay cooing in her · n1g c O\Jn:;io n t e fire ,"' said Edith.
mother's protective a'rms. oblivious to all "I was standin« there and everything "Things like thal don 'l 'hil you until you
but the gentle race above her. seemed backward lo me."~ said. "My are standing In front ota mirror and you
Edith Sullenberger smfled at the •baby mother must hive heard me tcreaming. t 1 ••-do couldn't -t oriented to where the baby rea ile ·wial you n't nen ·own a.10-cent and pulled her closer. 11.. b .. "She's !he miracle," she said quieUy. was. When I· did, l 1f1bbed1her and .ran com ·
The baby wasn't sleeping in her usual out." Life is settling do'Nn for them now.
place Saturday when the plane crashed Her .mother, Mrs. Denna SUJlenberger, .They have moved a. a small 1partmenl
Into the lauiidromat which adjoined the said she woke up and 11w Edith standing near the one they IOst and· friends and
family's Gaplstrano Beach apartment. Uvough I.he walk "l cloee my.eyes today neighbors have been dropping In with
"Elizabeth wa s sleeping in her car· and I can still' tee' the burning timber sakes or food, money and clothing. -
riage, next to my bed, not in the cr4b It between me Ind lbe aky.'' she Wd. Their family dog is still al I.he
' the fool of the bed," said her mother. Some timbers had fallen aaoss her veterinarian In shock, but Edith and her
The impact of the explosion. -.·hich took 1egs. "L rew.mber pulliag· myae!L out JDOlher and the baby are coming out of
the life of the pilot, blew the baby's crib from undtr them ind .. dr1ging myself theirs and putting together the facts. ~
through the well. It also blew Edith out," sa id the mother. "You hear about is that Edith's mother, who worked at the
through . -gn>wn men doin§ things like that, bul not destroyed l1undrotnat, no longer has a
~lbankful it was a thin '!_aj1_1' said little old ladtes. -job,
Edith. --~--~· _ ~ .YOU do 1maz.ing th~ BQI the famlty 11 hopMul, more so now
Stre has no recolleclion of lhe blast She )'OU have to," added Edith. 'Tm U;_1U8l!y Uian--n1ey'vi" ever"""been lieCore. They're
remembers only hearing a boom and then a tenderfoot. but there I was w1lking 1ppnct•ttna 11ft beca-. on one chilly
being on her rcet outside the. wall. ""But barefoot over gJaas and splintered wood September morning I.bey nearly lasted
bruises and 1 cratches lea\'e a trace o fleh ·and never felt It." ~ death.
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Plane Crash . ·~~~.~¥.£k · . ~viejdCOJ!ipley.··· . --... _________ · · ····'l'wo···oru,.-·coonty·dtjlutj.·--·-···-·--LL-..Jlk:hard . ...JlrULaf ... the..Mmifra ....... __
I J<' Kill Jailed Sunday 11 -·1n .. 1~ department ..itt both .,.,,--· ipiUod fl }.' og · S ttmpted burglary of the Mlaslon -Viejo l"-'"le the Mission Viejo clu-lft the
Country Club, are out on bail t o d 1 y early morning hours by the club'• eo1f
h I Chi f and will be questioned about other pro. Roger Belanger.· · · Sc 00 •e burglaries in I.he area, sberUf'a depart-Belanger said he·was on his 'ny borne
menl inve!tiga~ said. and drove by where he aaw U. leOl'ity;
Deputy Fredenck B. Irvine, 40, of .La car parked. He saw two men iJllide. mew
Habra was captured Sw!day mominC lhey didn't have·a key and alter w1tchin1 By RICHARD P. NALL
Of Ult Diii¥' "llol Sl1ff
A sc1iool superintendent from Monarch
Bay,. was killed in the foggy early morn·
ing darkness Saturday when his light
plane crashed info a Capistrano Beach
laundromat. starting a fire and blowing a
mother in an adjacent apartment through
th e wall.
near Lake El!inore after officers said he for a few minutes, called the sheriff'a of·
had commandeered a sheriff's patrol car flee.
and f1ed. By the time deputies 1rrived the two
Deputy Arthur E. Duncan, 34, of Hun· men had left the clubhouae.
tington Beach, wu arrested in the Irvine was found iit the &olf eour&e
Mission Viejo area and svrendered maintenance Yard near ·the San J)iego
without inci~ent. FreeWsy. The deputkfs uked him to cet
Both men were "moonlighting" on their into the pttrol car· and returned-to the
Aulhorilies said the· pilot victim, Frank
J.taymond Add.is , 42 of 32631 Empress
Way, South Laguna, was en route to a
football game at Big Pine near Bishop.
He became .superintendent of the Big
Pine Unified School District in July.
off duty hours u 10C11r!ty parda for the (Seo DEl'UTIE8, Pop I) . ' . ·.
New Ceasefire Ordered
Witnesses said Addis' new plane, a ~each Bonanza V35 , took off in the fog at
about 5:40 a.m. from Capistrano Airport
circled the field once and crashed
through the rool of the Sav-More Laun·
dromat, 34241 Doheny Park Road in the
businW: district of Capistr'ano Beach.
In Bloody Jordan War
The explosive crash and devastating From Wire Servlcts
fire did an estimated $56,000 damage. A new ceaae-flre•order in the seesaw
The pl ane loss was probably ·about civil war In Jordan Was ordered by King
another $40,000. Hussein ·today,· as ·syrian Army tank
Authorities have no good clue yet as to •forces invaded the embattled nation for a
what might have caused the crash other second time since fighting broke out.
than poor visibility. Both-Addis and the The command to stop fighting was to
plane were incinerated in the fierce blaze be effective at 11 :15 a.m. (PDT), but the
,.,.hich dtstroyed not onJy the laundromat· Bituation in and around,the liberal Middle
and adjacent apartment bu_t badly East nation was deterioralln~y the
damaged the Blue Pelican restalll'ant hour. . ·
which had ·a common wall. President Nilon ordered para pen
Edith Sullenberger, 34, her Infant 11tatk>ned in Wtat Germanj onto 1 limited
daughter and mother, Donna Sull'n-alert in case iveilt.s make ev.cu1tion of
berger, 59, who managed the laundromat, the estimated 400 Americans In Jordan._
were alseep In their one bedroom .apart--including 31 hijacking ; bolltl:1es, -µn..
1ment lhat Is part of the laundromat perative. ·
building. A White House spokesman emphasized
The younger woman was b'flwn through• that no dire(t interve~tk!n ill •anUcip1~
.. the wall and onto gravel ·outslde bui aside. -a posture·lhe lsrae!J government open.
from neck burns was nOt seriously iir, ly crlticiied -but events were being
jured . She rush·ed inside and carried.out watched as· il\e)"'develop . ·
her-3'-n-week okt'--daughter.who-wn-Klng-Hua1eill's.'-ce&le-fire-oaieu...._wasL
injured. The infant Was alseep'. in a.' baby one· more' tn• I' aeries giv;en :during the
• carriage. H"1' empty crib ·was pushed. past three days and broken jn every c~.1
through the wsll by .the.explosion. , G<Wemments ·in I.he Middle Eaat, and
The younger Mrs. sUllenberjer retlirn· throughout the workl 1ppealed to both1
eel to Lbe apartment a nd llfted·11beam 'off aides to stop fi&htlna:. · •
of her mothtr's "P, &aid firemen, and Leiden on both sides -Kin& Hussein's~
helped Donna Sullriberpr,outslde. Royal Army chief's'. ·and Ute ,P,flrijlu'1 The senior Mrs, .suUenberatr suffered Soviet.~ P1aestine UberiUOn Anny
first and seeood degree leg burn11. -encouraaect 'their tl'ooPI in'.tlie bfoody.
Six engine s from the "' county fire battle. '
department and a snorkel (aerial) unit Jordani1n. military govemor Marlhal
baltled the flames for an hour and a half Habes Al-Majali gave the PLA trciops' a
before the fl!'! w1s.broui:ht under ~ 2~-hour uJUmatum , even •bile lhe·Ar•b
trol. • -states considered a summJl coofe:rence
Bill Minick, coroner's investig41tor, said on the •ar. -.
Addis left home a short while before the ''Everyone who.does not surrender 1J\d
crash and told his wife, Mary that he hand over tits weapom or who fires ort
plannea to-drive l08i8Plne. the armeiC1 forces 1ftfr-tbls ume-r4 p.m.-
He ipparently cf'lantecf his-mind and Jordln time) will be killed ,'' M1jali
took Ille plane •hleh i>e1Jle<I to co1tillllito dedltfld.
to his home on weekends. Tbe Capistrano "This iJ qte lut Wittilrtg to you ••• ••
Airport is uncontrolled. It ha~ no control Rldlo ·Amman announced lhat PLA
(ht CRASH, P11e I) IPrce . ol 1,000 men· inc!UdinC tlnil,
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moored CllJ and artillery conr!q 1heJr
advance hid poured into Jordan •t
Ramtha, on the border, 50 mileS .from
Amman.
Majali conaratuJaied his own 40tfi
~igadeJor ita valor in holding off the Jn..
vaders, who Syrian President Nureddin
Atassi hu denied moved into ,Jordan at au. . ,
"You are staiiding ataoe -a&ainst · a
mass, attack unleashed ,on you by 1be
nilers of Syri1, who could not hold out far
(See JORDAN, Pa1t i) .
Orure . Ceut
W!!•tMr
'--'Sunny skies •lttR:ltculonaJ Jmi---
clDoda ,lfon1 the ~-ll the fl(& .
ror Tuesday, •llh c.slal tempera-
tures in the 70's and inland read·
inp shoQting up to 90 degrees.
INSmB TODAY ·
Thr~t lighttr-tltan-dir aciuen-
tMrN'.• took off from Long Island
Sunday on n tramatlantic OM
balloon odys1e11. Wtnds Pf""ii,:
ting, the11 will rtaeh EKrope in
1U &o 16 ~. Sit aLorJI Page 5.
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I DAJlV PILOT -·· -r.. ---1.·S.,0-21..1970
f'ro111 P .. • l
JORDAN •..
two hours 1n the Golan Heigh ls n 1967,"
1.tajall said.
"Hold rast in the face or t~ ag-
grellOl'I. u fast as the steel of yoor
tanks," he elhorted. ·
VICTORIES CLAIMED
Guerrilla sources ln Bapdi.d and
Damascus proclaimed that Syr1an !f1..
vadeN -!.. moving in a two-pronged
maneuver toward lrbld -w e r e
mutilating Hussein'• Royal Army.
The )'Oung king has ~.000 troops
against the 32.000 guerrillas entren~
in northern Jordan and around the cap1lal
city of Amman. His 40lh Brigade faces up to ~00·
11.ussian-built tanks of two SyrLaD.
brigades wtlh ~ British Centurlan tanks.
American Secretary of State Willlal'l'I
p. Rogers urged tM Sov\etl to nerd•
their power over U\t Arabi to end lht
hostilities, which he branded \odl,y u if..
responsible and ca ble o( druUcally
broadening. · •
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Veto ~·«m c
-Unruh Hurls Tax
Bill Challenge
• • SACRAMENTO (AP ) -DemlJc?ll Je ..
Unruh challenged Gov. _Reagan• ioc1.ay to
put proJierty tU .refo rm before the
California Legislature during the veto·
session which opened today.
"Mr. Reagan. this Is your last op-
portunity to put up or shut up on property
tax reform," Unruh said in a statement
read to a news conference.
There was no immediate comment
from the Republican chief executive'a of-
fice, but Reagan earlier said he had no
intention of calling a special session of
the legislature during the annual vtto
• SSionc. -'------
Unruh and Reagan are baUllng for the
goVernorship in the Nov. 3 general elec-
tion '
The former Assembly spea ker quoted
Reagan as saying tw o years ago : ··if we
get bis plan - ''bad as it is" -since
.Carrell Is back on the job.
Unruh said he woulrl cancel h.ls entire
week~s campaign sch~dulc if Reagan
would put property tax reform before the
legislature this week. Only the governor
can put the legislature into special
session and decide what can be con·
sidered.
Lacking that .. it looked like an
unevenUul week in Sacramento as the
lawmakers went through the· routine of
the fourth such veto session.
~ -. ~ .-: _ can't deliver on ou r programs now, we
Collisions
Kill Seven
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"We call upon tht Syrian government
to end lmmedialely um .lnluv•ntion ·1n
Jordafi," he said. "And we ';U'ge all other
concerned governments to 1mpre55 upon
the governmerit of Syria the necessity of
withdrawing the forces which have in·
vaded Jordan."
-SUMMIT PROPOSED In-County
. oAi1..v ,11..oT Pf'lli. ,, a1c111,.. Kt11111t don 't deserve to be re--elected ."
CREWS CLEAN UP RUBBLE AFTER PLANE CRASH IN CAPISTRANO BEACH Unruh then said, "Here's hi s chance to -~ ---e-1~tiif~t-$ff:OOO·-------pl',ove-whether-he-meant-that-slatement."
Tunisian President Habib Bourgulba
proposed a summit conference ~r A~ab
states in Cairo to thrash out a Jordanian
sol ution, and aeveral, including Egypt.
had accepted. But Cairo sources said
Sunday the S)Tian Invasion · ended
chances for such a meeting.
Pilot C?i••· But Two wom.n,a..y ·~ Dog Escape; Dam•g• it m• • I The political sklnnlshing overshadowed
Fro111 Page 1
CRASH ...
C&iro took two positions on the confiict Sunday : tower or runway· lights and taking off,
-H1111ein should Intervene tm-said <>fficials, is pretty much a matter of
mediafely to ensure compUance with a pilot discrelion.
cease-fire plan worked out by Egyptian No one saw him enter his single-engine
President Gamel Abdel Nasser and plane but bis car was parked nearby.
reportedly accepted by the government Besides his widow, Addis is survived by
.and guerrilla forces. a teenage daughter, Sharon Ann , of the
-Iraq's ruling Baath party tricked the family home and a son, Frank R. JI, of
guerrillas into continuing to fight after San Diego. He had bee n an Orange Coun·
__ their.Jeaders_acceptecj th~ tru~. . l)' resident 10 years. The. official and public position of. ille .<F~un~,~,.°'1~,~,~rv,'i~ce=s~w~,-,~,·-,-,~h,-d~u~led~a~l~3
Nixon administration has been one of p.m. today at Peek Family Colonial
concern for more than 400 Americans, in--Funeral Home in Westminster with burial
eluding 48 out of 54 hos~ges held ~y . t.he in Westl'!1inster Memorial Park.
Palestinian guerrillas, with the possibility A resident of the crash area. Mrs.
-thaHoree-would-be-u1ed-iWl .was_ju~ -Yolanda Yital •. 25835..Dom.inga-Road ,-sai d-
ed nece3;881"Y to evacu~te them. she thought the explosion of the crash
was right in her front yard. She feared
PLANES ~ET , momentarily that it was a recurrence of
Extra Cl30 transports have been pos1-the earthquakes that had sflake n the area
tinned in Europe to carry the troo~s from several days earlier.
West Germany. The 82nd Airborne The crash explosfon broke·ou t windo"'S
Division, on alert ~t FL Bragg, N.C., of adjacent business buildings and lit·
relies on huge Cltl )el transports as Jlart lered the street with flam ing debris.
of-the 'l!-.S. strike reserve. . Firemen, however, were able to conrine
All this wa~ _billed as p~ecaul!onary by the blaze to lhe buildings immediately in-Pentagon off1t1als who sa id ther_e was no volved.
wid.esperad general ale~t: The intent .~e-Doheny volunteer fireman, Wendell
mams. only the posslb1hty of resew. g Hill, 34tl2 Camino Ca pistrano. was a few
Amer1can:i -thou ght ~ be. about 400 -blocks from the crash. He said he heard
gwept up in the Jo~n f~ghhn~. a low throb and a "thump" and then saw s~ th~ ~~~t b~~a_~rte;e 1~;~~ ~ !lames shoot~~ up from the laun dromat.
Amman went into the smashed streets. Al~an N .. Disiena , 20, Camp Pen.dle~on
d.....im.. · r e to find food for their Ma~1ne, s~id_ he heard the plane c1rchng
r....,il •. ' g sniper ir • and the engme go dead. He wa s hitch-am 1es h.k. b . 'ed hop . baskets ast the I ing near y. ....... _. 'They carr1 s Plfll J . in's· Federal Avialion Agency officials in·
<lead ~ wounded u King ill usse who vestigated the crash and said a b~~ ~~C:1i~1'j;~p::aT: ~ determi":alion of cause wou.ld be maQe by
sn:rS hidden i,n m~ues and on the the National TransportatJ?~ Sa f et y
ro0fa er luxury apartment hou.se1 were Board.
blaseld by cannon lite.
FINAL FIGHT
The fight for Amman and for the
throne is in Its final stages and has cost
more time and lives th.an the two-day
batUe the king's commanders had
forecast.
'Ibe pavements are littered '*'lh
cartridge ctses. Bulldinp everywhere
have the black holes of artillery hits.
Fires bum on the hillsides.
From the Intercontinental Hotel you
~Id see an armored car systematically
pounding a block of flats, floor by floor,
after a snipe r had been reported there.
The shells went Jn orange streaks low
across the valley and burst through the
living rooms:
A sniper near the British Embassy wa!'i
killed. A soldier and the army blew up
the building in which.he was hiding.
One sniper &ot a lucky shot through tne
embassy which put the transmitter tD
London out of action. The staff had lo
revert to Morse code until the generator
was repaired. A soldier standing near
journali&ta .,..ho went to the embassy dur-ina: the curfew liftin& was wounded by a
1niper bullet.
DAILY PILOT
N_,.. 1.-111 H..ttaott11 ... Ii
....... '"ell h11t.i1 w.iw,
~ ...... S-ChMlillM
C)tlAHGI: CO.UT PUt l..ISHING COM,.ANY
ll•\i11f N. We•4
l P111'""'! •"' "11bli1Mr
Jee~ I:. Cwrley
Ne"wport Man
Loses $3,485
'J;o 2 Thieves
Newport Beach police are continuing
thei r inv~stigatkln today of the robbe ry of
~ ~th Laguna man Saturday morning.
Richard L. Paul , 25. of 31'1111'-1ar Visla
Ave .. told officers he was robbed of $3 .485
in money and jewelry as he left a
Newport Beach bar at about 2 a.m.
· He said two suspects approached him
In the muni cipal parki ng lot located in
the 3200 block of Newport Boulevard. One
hit him in the moot;,, knock ing him to the
pavement and held him down.
The oiher suspect rifled Paurs pocke ts
and removed his watch and a diamond
.ring valued at $3,200.
Paul said he started to struggle against
the ann lock he was being held In, but his
assailant reportedly told him, "Don·t
hassle me, I have a gun."
The pair ucaped. running westbound
nn Finley ·street. Paul said be started to
follow them, but stopped when he heard a
motorcycle driving ,.way from the scene.
Jumbos
the opening of the session itself. The
Weekend Burglars Get
'$4,700 Loot in Newport
lawmakers came back to Sacramento for
their ch&nce to override any of Reagan's
vetoes of 77 bills passed lri the regular
197() session which ended Aug. 21.
Chances that they would were con-
sidered virtually nil.
However, some lawmakers, including
Unruh, were ired by Reagan's cut in a
special salary increase for California
Highway Patrolmen.
A series of weekend burglaries which:
netted theives about $4 ,700 in stolen goods
are being investigated toda y by Newport
Beach detectives. _ _
The burglaries took place in two
Baycrest homes, a boat docked in west
Newport and a Newport Heights home.
Policeman -Sliot
In San Diego;
Youths Sought
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A police officer
was shot twice in the stomach and once
jn the left knee today, and a search was
started for two youths believed armed
with the policeman's gun.
One. identified as a 19·year~ld youth
known to police, reportedly fled in a car.
He "'as described as armed and ex-
tremely dangerous.
The other apparently fled on foot in the
bru sh·covcred area leading to Tecolote
canyon.
"Theofliccr. Frank Wil son was wounded
after he spotted two youths stripping a
motorcycle and stopped to invest igate.
A strugg le preceded the shooting,
poli ce said. \Vil son cra wled bac k ·to hl11
squad car to radio "Emergency, I ha ve
been shot," said Wilson, 40.
Reagan OKs New
OiJ, Drill Ban
1 SACRA1'-1ENTO (UPI ) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan has signed a bil l designed to halt
the award of new offshore oil drilling
leases from Jl.lonterey Bay to the Oregon
Border.
The bill by Assemblyman William T.
Bagley tR·San Rafael). places a five-year
moratorium on lhe award of offshore and
submerged land oil leases in San Mateo.
San Francisco, Marin, Sonoma. Napa,
Alameda , Santa Clara, Del Norte, Solano
and Contra Costa counties.
The measure includes the San Fran·
cisco bay up to the Carq uinez Br idges.
The effect. combin~ with current stale
law, would be to halt the award of oil and
gas leas~ by the Stale Lands Com·
mission along the entire coast from
fl1onterey Bay ~o the Oregon state line.
Detecti ve Bill Speirs sald an lnvesUgatioR
is under way to deter'mine if the four
bur11laries are linked.
The first of the four was reported Fri·
day..by Mr.s. Phyllis.G. T.aylor, 55 of 1124
Santiago Drive. Officers said the burglars
eRtered the residence via the rear door
while she was out.
A GS-piece sterling silver set and a
television valued at $1,200 were reported .
missing.
Niles A. Laderer, 41 , reported the theft
of $1 ,500 worth. of radio equipment and
sporting good11 from his 22-foot cabin
cruiser wh!Ch is docked near 4401 W.
Coast Highway.
Suspects took the equipment out of the
cabin after removing the hi11ges from the
locked hatc h cover.
A television, a painting and six sets of
sterling silverware were taken from the
Newport Heigh ts home of Eloise HenliRe
Saturday.
Police said thieves apparently entered
the house at 230 Kings Place through a
window which openii;; onto the backya rd .
Mrs. Henline told investigators Ule
burglary was the fifth i'l as maRy years.
Sunday W. Gayle nlompson of 1954
Santiago Drive reported th.e loss of $1,3:1>
in s t e r e o equipment and a television
set. Police said the suspects entered the
home by a11 unknown means bef9fe mak·
ing off with Thompson's stereo system.
"That ought to be overriden," Unruh
said.
Reagan's tax bill failed to pass by one
vote Aug, 21, partly because one sup-
porter of the plan, Sen. Tom Carrell (D-
San-Fernando),was hospitalited and
couldn't vote.
Unruh said now is Reagan's chance to.
f'rom Pagel -. -
DEPUTIES •..
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clubhouse with them.
Once there, they said he menaced Sgt.
Jake Riviere wi th a pistol and com-
mandeered the patrol car and took off.
He drove back to the maintenance
yard. switChed to his own station wagon
and fled.
Responding to a ·general alarm,
Riverside deputy sheriffs spotted the sta.
tlon wagon on the · Ortega Highway
shortly. after 6 a.m. and pursued Irvine
down the grade into the Lake Elsinore
area.
When Irvine did not slop during the
pursuit, the Riverside deputies fired at
the fleeing r;ar flattening lhe rear tires.
Irvine then jumped out of the car and
held the Riverside officers at bay with a
revolver which he continually pointed at
his head, threatening suicide. -
He held them off for two hours before
giving Jn to pleas of his wife and fellow
Orange County deputies who had arrived
at the scene. Officers Raid.
Huntington Pot
Party, Nab 13
Lt. Russell Hawk of the Lake Elsinore
sheriff's substation said Irvine "never
_ .Jllade an aggressive move toward any of
our offi cers."
Police arrested 13 persons and con-
fiscated marijuana and dangerous drugs
worth $10,000 over the weekend after
smelling out a pot party in the northern
part of Huntihgtqn Beach.
Sgt. George Renek and Henry Hit-
chcock, both of the police department's
Special Enforcement Detail, took five
persons iRto custOOy at 6 p.m. Saturday
when they observed alleged suspicious
behavior at a house on Club House Road
and Nassau Drive. .
Afte r seizing two and a half pounds of ~
ma rijuana , · the officers then moved
through the Immediate area, arresting
several other persons on marijuana
posseSsion charges.
Four additional persons were taken into
custody on possession charges when in·
vestigating officers allegedl y traced 12
pound! of marijuana and several
thousand pills to a house on 5652 Edinger
Ave.
Duncan has been a deputy sheriff for
five years. He has recently served as a
Juvenile Hall bailiff and several months
ago was bailiff in the court of Superior
Judge William S. Lee .of Newport Beach.
Irvine 'has been a deputy for seven
years and has been recently serving as a
juvenile court bailiff.
Cause Tornadoes?
Seven persons died ov er the weekend in
Orange County as the result of traffic ac·
cidents, including two Orange Coast
residents.
The dead are:
Ralph B. Roth, 45, of 20732 Kel vin
Lane, Huntington Beach.
Linda J. Winslow, 20, of 2659 Orange
Ave., Costa Mesa.
Patricia i\leGuiness, 22, ol Sanla Ana.
George D. Hutley, 73, of Pleasanton,
CaliL
Frank L. Reynolds, 29, of Buena Parkl
Frank Clickner, 19, or Garden Grove.
James_£. Hulsey, 20, of-Cerritos.
Rot h died Sunday in Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital of lnjuries suffe red
Thursday when his car and a truck col·
lided at Victoria Street and Cany on
Drive in the west Cosla Mesa area.
Miss ·W-inslow" died-Saturday at-'Fustin-
Community Hospital. She was found un-
conscious in a flood control channel on
MacArthur Boulevard. north of the .
Orange County Airport Sept. 10. Her car
went out of control and 5he was t.hrown
into a· drainage ditch.
Mrs. McGuiness lea ped lo her death
Saturday night from the ~lain Stree(
overpass onto the Santa Ana Freeway,
landing on top of a northboµnd car. Her
head smashed into the wind shield .
Hutley died Sunday nig ht when his car
overturned after striking a dirt shoulder
on the San Diego Freeway near J unipero
Serra Road in San Juan Ca pistrano.
Reynolds died Frida y night in Lincoln
Community Hospital . Buena Park, as the
resul t of injuries suffered in a two-car
crash in Buena Park.
Clickner died Saturday in Hununglon
Intercommunity Hospital. He gas injured
last Wednesday in Ga rden Grove when
his motorcycle went out of control.
Hulsey was dead on arrival Sunday &t
St. Jude Hospital. Fullerton as the result
of injuries suffered in a Carbon Canyon
accident.
Ne utering Bill OK'd
SACRAMENTO (UPI ) - Gov. Ronald
Reagan Friday signed a bill requ iring
animal shelters and pounds to neuter or
spay cats under si x months old before
they can be given a"'ay or sold. Author of
the bill was Sen. John A. Nejedly (R-
Waln ut Creek ).
Yk l ,.,CllHl'I Ind GcM!'l l N.1"•ttr
1h111111 K1•wil
11•!!11" Smaller Planes Bei1ig Thro wn Out of Control by 747s
Tho11111 A. M111,hi"1
Mi1'119C.., 1"11•r
lti1h1.4 '· Nill
,...Ill Orefll!CI c-ty (Oi!lt
(lffk"
WASHINGTON (AP) -Owners and
Pilols of light aircraft are campaigning to
restrict flights of new jumbo jets which,
-government-tests-show, create-tornadn-
like winds that can spin smaller planes
out or control.
TcsU being completed by the Federal
Aviation Administration showed the
winds swirl off wingtips of the 747 and
C5A at speeds up to 90 miles an hour and
can trail behind the planes for miles.
o•tt..Y Pit.OT. -i111_ .... klt••'t.,'~.:= The FAA has ordered . a five-mile ...... PNM. 1'-,.,.... . flW UfliN k dl· .. ., 11t ..,..,1'9 .. 1-"""'"""" geparaUon at all times between the 11iant ......,!,,, 9::; .. ~J:""~*" .i111. tft jets and planes .,,·eighing less than 300.000 "':.-1 .-n-0r.,,.. c-1 ,,_hf>.,.. d l •·· . d I c:,__., ,.,..1.,.,. •ft!• , .. 11 "" """': poun s. t a-.. 1s con uct ng an cduca· .. ...,. ......... _, •Ht"-.,.Al .ia """' tJonal program t.o alert pilots of lighter
1o,y ,,,., c..w -· aircraft to lhe hatards of the winds -t••••• 1114J '4l-''11 called wakt turbulence or wingtip
c ........ ._... .. 641·"'' vortices. s-Cla::t11.': .• "• ._,.H,._1 The Alrplane Owners and Pil ots 1•••·-~· 4'1~ -Auoclatlon •1hich represents fliers or ~:=r;.~ ;:" ~.,...~'1 ,,.:=!."::: 1ht lH.000 'aircraft in Ule aeneral avla·
d 1w'-• · -"• • t•-'~-~ _UooJltld,..objttts to this approadr. _ -. =:.-.• .. •=::;r. "Tht jumbo jets must be rigidly con·
~ d•• _,.,. '"' '' ,.........,._-., fined, rl"ldJy renulatcd so everyone
.... c.'9 /Mtol, CA!if1t11111. $111*' '-A lYh lhe " 'I
t•trlll u • """"''"' :/. ,,_.,, u.• """"'"' ..,,.,w, w ere ey are, s11ys 1• ax "''''~ ... ,""',....._ • """""'' K1rant, vice president Of thfl AOPA.
t -
"They are lhe deadliest kind of aircrafl,
to cncouhter in the air. They conslitute a
clear and present danger.''
In a telegram lo congressmen, !he
A"Ol'Aa'!SO'aeclarea :
"\Ve are deeply concerned at the threat
which these behemoths of lhe ~ky appeBr
to-'be creati ng (or other travelers in the
air.
"Just as the government has seen lit lo
Impose lim itations on \he size Of trucks
and buses !or the safety of all on the
highways. perhaps it i~ lime to establfsh
simila r lim its on the size of aircraft to
preserve safely in the air."
TurbulCnce generated by the jumbo
jet.I has not been assigned as the cause of
any plane crash.
But rccord!i o( I.he Nat i ona l
Transportation safety Board shows "
cr1!hes between 1964 and 1969 in which
w11ke--t4.rbulence. generated b'y-smaller
jetliners was. the cause or a contributing
[actor. 'rwt nty persons died and S4 suf-
fered serious Injuries In these eras.hes.
Although 1111 planes cause wingtip
\•ortlces to iiomt. degr6e, FAA offlclal'
say the cilcnt of turbulence from the 747
I
passe nger plane and CSA cargo plane was
underrated.
··we were fully awate of wake
turbulence but we didn't know It's in-
l'Cl'l!lly." sayli-Rlcha·rd Sllff;-<tepaty-direc--·
tor of the FAA's flight standards service.
Flight tests showed that light aircrart
which penetrate the vortices within three
miles of the jumbo jets can be fore~ into
a sudden roll of 7~ degrees.
··1r they fly into it just right they could
go Into a spin and lose cOntrol of the
11ircraft,'' said Robert M1rtin, FAA·s
chief of rtgul1tlon and procedu res. "The
vortices are just like little tornadoes."
The FAA found tha t wingtip vortices
are most dangerous during takeoffs and
landings when large numbers of pltncs
are concenlrated In limited areas. But
they SAY th•t spacing several minutes
between flights 1llows crosswinds.lime to
brc1 k up the'"VQrtlccs.
The problem.JS not considered by the-
FAA t.o be as grtl\al high altltudt11
allhough lesa 1howed the vortices of-blg
jet.s do not quickly dissipate when formed
at 30.000 feet and abov~ \Vhere most
jetliners cruise.
•
-.
King• of the Surf
--::::::=-;;;;~
t
Bra d McCaull Oeft) of Newport Beach and Cork y Carroll of Dana
Point are all smlles after capturiilg thelWo t~Wards SUnday ln Lhe
21h annuaLU.S. Surlboard..Championsbips al liunUngto iLilcacb....Mc-
CauB won the meri's division, upsetting Carroll, whose overall per•
!ormance during the weekend brought him the Dulce KahanalJloku ,
Trophy as the be•l all-aro und surfer lor the lillh straight year.JS••
Sports, Page 25.)
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. EDIJ.J.ON
"· ·-
·--YOL 63, NO. 226, 3 SECTIONS, 34 ~AGES . . '
,
ORANGE COUNTY, .eAtlFIORNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 r., 1.970 ., ' -. ~ ~ . . ... 1 TEN CENTS
...... ·'-r
Jor·dan Worsens
,-
~·----·---=-::----:-.:........,-~i:;
Syrian Tanks Make New 'T~rust A~ross · Lines ..
From 'fire Services
·A .new cease-fire order in th~ seesaw
civil war in Jordan was ordered ·by King
HUS!ein today, as ·syrian Army tank
forrces 'invaded thi embattled nation for a '
JeCQnd time since fighting broke out.
The cqmmand to stop fighting )Vas to
be effeCtive·at 11:15 a:m~('PDT);-but"the ·
situation in and around the liberal Middle
East nation was deteriorating by the
hour. ·
President Nixon ordered paratroopers
stationed in West-Germany onto a limited
alert in case events make evacuation of
the estimated 400 ~deans In Jo'rdan -
iricludlng 38 hija_cking bbsiak¥ -im·
perative. ·
.A White House spok~man~emphaSized ·
that no direct intervention laiant,icipated :
-a posture the IsrM:li government open-.
ly criticized -btJt events , were being
'?tched as·~hey d~velop:--~.--
King Hussein 's cease-fire order was
one more in a ·series given during the
past three days and broken in every case.
:aovernments in ,the MiddJe East and
throughout the world ap~aled to both
sides to stop fighting.
(hie From Beach
_.
Leaders on' both sides-King Huiseln's ·Jordan time)... will; be killed,~' .. 'Majall
Royal Anny chieta, and tht guerrillas' declMed. · ·
Soviet-armed lfalestlne Liberation Army "Thi5 ls the \ut wamtng lo.you ••• "
-encouraged their-troops· In the bloody Radio Animan IDIIOWl<ld'111al PJ,.A
battle. . force of 5,000 men including tanks.
Jordanian ·mlli~. gov.emor . Mai-shat.· armored•cars and· artillel')' covering their
Habes-Al·Majali-gave-1he P~"iroops a 8 <lYailce ·had ._ pourect"':in10: J0rdap at
21h·hour ultimatum, even while the Arab Ramtha, on the border, 50 miles from
states considered a summit conference Amman.
on the war. . Majali . ..congratulated_.h!L_ own . 40th
"Everyone who does not surrender and Brigade for ils valor in holding off the in-
hand over his weapons or who fire!! on vaders, who -Syrian President Nureddin
the armed forces after thill tUne (4 p.m. (See JORDAN, Pa1e Z)' ·
Seal-Beach Council Eyes
Meadowlark
-Airport Row-
.County ~ep.uti~s · P . . , rostitut-ion.:-
Ring Cracked -' . ' ' .
The Meadowlark Airport controversy Is
expected to taKe off again tonight when
the Huntington Beach City Council meets.
Held in .Burglary' District attorney's investigator'!! and
the Seal Beach police today cracked what
they clajzn was a widespread pro.stjtution
ring with the arrest of four persons who -Two-groups are-expected-to-talk about ---·----___ ----
th. d I k · t' b I · · By JACK BROBACK e Mea ow ar s1tua ion, u no-one is · Of,... 0.111 Pli.t st•ff
preQicting what the city council will do Two Orange County deputy sheriff!!,
bo t ·t Jailed Sunday as suspects in an al-
a u l · . . tempted bUrglary of the Mission Viejo
Ken Haulk, leader of t~e Cituens Country Club, are out on baiJ. t o d a y
Against Increased Airport Hazards, a and will be questioned about other
aroup of homeowners surrounding 'the burgla_ries i? the are~, sheriff's depart-
MeSdowlark field said his people would ment investigators said.
' al ho to curb Deputy Frederick B. Irvine, 40, of La . present several propos .s on w Habra was captured Sunday morning
what they feel are certa111 dangers at the near Lake Elsinore after offiCers said he
airport. had commandeered a sheriff's patrol car
Tonight,, homeowner!! will' aSk the coun-and fled.
ell .to order remov.al of the: airfleld's·qight Deputy Arthur E. Dimcant 34, of Hun-. tington Beach, wal , arrested in the
lights which a spokesman for , the Mission Viejo are'a and 1urrendered
Califontia Aeronautics Board ·baa said ·without incident. . .
are unllfe. Both men were "mOiOnliPtl1'g" on their
Another report will be presented. by off duty ~ *' aec:urity guards for tbe , Mlsalon Viejo C:Ompany. -
Bob Dingwall, head of a fi-..:e-man com· Lt. Richird Drale oC the sbertff'1
mittee appointed by the ' city council to
dij,81-tmeot said both men were spotted
inside the Mission Viejo clubhouse in the
early morning hours by the club's golf
pro, Roger Belanger.
Belanger sai4·he was on his way· home
and drove by where he saw the &ecurity
car parked. He saw two men inside, knew
they didn 't have a key and after watching
for. a few minutes, called the sheriff's Of-
fice.
By the time deputies arrived the two
men· had left the clubhouSe.
.Jn:ine.wa! ·1ound !I~ golf,-""""
maintenance yard near ttie San Die10
Freeway. 11'e itepuU•,oW.illm lo~
into the p~trol i;:'ar and retur~ to the
clubho~. wi\h thetn. . . .
Once there, they said fit menaced Sgt.
Jake Riviere with a pistol and coin·
(See Dl!:fUTIEB., Pap I)
allegi!dl"fuSOO tlliR1'<1rarialeb&r 16 seal---. , , , . . Cl.AIL Y PU.CIT S,retf ll'IWll
Be~cli as headquarters Ior their •c· Ki .. ns· 'of the-Surf bv1ties. •--zr . · ·
Backed by Ahaheim police, the In-Brad· MCcaull (left) of Newport Beach arid Cork)" Carroll of Dan:i vest1~ators ended .a two-)Veek pro~· by Point are.all smiles .after capturing the two top awards ·sunday. in the
booking alleged ringleader George Lee 12th annual U.S. Surfboard Championships at, Huntington Beach. Mc·
Van Hor~e, 29, of Long ~ach,~ ch~rges caulf wo·n :the men's· division, upsetting Carroll, Whose ovei'all per· o~ conspiracy ~o ~ngage _1n pr_ost1tution.. f nnance during tlie weekendDrought-him the Duk"e Kalian·amoKu·
Also named in complaints filed today 1n ° · · · -u d urf f th filth' tr · bl (Sea West Orange CDunty Municipal. Court Trophy, a~. the best cw.·ar0:un s . er . or-e 1 _ wg year.
w:ere Brenda ·Joyce Higni\e, 24~ or .~pt!rts,.P@ge 25.) . ~
Bellflower, Leslie· Ruth Stother, · ~. of
Redondo Beach and 1Barbara eotllee, %3,
of \;µt'ilof. R ~ _..,..,1ed ,~,a~ lout
deleod=!>.wUMIO'(l'ligned !ltir IOdaY·
Jny·-' a .allep -.Ille ·~ _.,
memberl'••· roster of call) g~lr. 1'ho ·
· W.•e· supplled.-'"on ,dema!Mf to ·vll'loul
Orange O>unty and LOS' Angtlu:,CoUnty
locations. It ..-as indicated today that
there may be further arrests.
1tudy the airport controversy._
Dingwall !laid he would give a status
report on his committee work, but would
not recommend any council acti9n all yet.
A large number of hoµieowners have
complained to the city about the in-
1tallati6n this summer of night lights and
a ~foot runway extension at the
Meadowlark field.
Capo Beach P~ne Crash -
Kills Education Chwf
V.an Horne was arrested ·at· the Red
C8ndle bar-.. 'fM three women. were ar-
. rested in ·Anaheim.
Bribery RuJing
.Ag·ain Delaye~
'' sPoc1ai: I0,111e ·DAIL v; Pli,oT
NEWPORT; R.I. -In a. dramatic
turnabou~ Newport Beach sltip~r Bill
Fickir?s '1nu:epld today , waS Cl,eclAred
winner of the second America's Clip Race
s&ileifSundliy'when 'the New Yor'k Yacht
Club'!! race commit~ disquaWied Aus·
trlilia'1 winning Gretel n.
boats each being t to I. . The Auatrali8n boat fmiid!ed first' ln
Sunday's race by 1 little more than a
minute· -the first victory for the
challenger aince the original Gret.el. in
1962. '
The two 12-~ter boats · ra~ •ti.in
Tuesday over'the 24.3 mile course.
They said both items had increased the
hazard to homes around the area because
planes were approaching the field at a
lower level and flying low over nearby
power lines. ·
Initial complaints by the-, homeowners
caused the council to setup Dingwall 's
·committee, but in rece nt weeks the
homeowners have complained that the
committee is not moving fast enough.
Dingwall did h(!ve the runway ex-
tension painted to warn pilots not to land
on it, but homeowners say pilots use it
for landings anyway.
Dingwall has stated . any decisions his
· committee makes will be based on, "fact ,
and not emotion."
The airport study committee will meet
at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, in the city hall
administrative annex; with officials from
Southern California Edison Company to
discuss the power linet a r o u n d
Meadowlark.
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of tile Dellr '"'"' Steff A school superintendent from Monarch
Bay was killed in the foggy early morn-
ing darkness Saturday when his light
plane crashed into a Capistrano Beach
laundromat, starting a fire and blowing a
mother in an adjacent apartment through
the wall.
Authorities sai d the pilot victim, Frank
Raymond Addis, 42, of · 32631 Empress
Way, South Laguna, was en route to a
football game at Big Pine near Bishop.
He became superintendent of . the Big
Pine Unified School District in July. (
Witn.essea said Addis' new plane, a
Beach Bonania V3S, took off in the fog at
about 5:40 a.m. from Capistrano Airport,
circled the field once and crashed
through the roof of the Sav-More Laun~
dromat, 3'24.1 Doheny Park Road in the
Rel•ted Stories,
Photo, Pagil 3
A' ruling on. the guilt of innocence·of an
Ai'izona· land developer accused df the •t·
~mpted bribery of former ·Hunti~n
' ' ' ' Beach mayor Jack . Green was deJ~ed
businea district of Capistrano Beach. again tooay In Superior· Court.
The explosive craSh and devastating Judge James F. Judge deferred his
fire did an estimated $66,000 da!Tlsge. verdict on bribery charges filed against
Ttie plan e loss wall· probably about '"-William DeMy New, 66,.or Phoenix until
another $40,000. Oct. S.
Authorities have no good clue yet as to New Is accused of offering Green.'4,000
what might have caused the crash ·other in return for the ex-mayor's approval of
than poor visibility. Both Addis and the plane were incinerated in the fierce blaze a proposed zone change on valuable in--
which destroyed not only the laundromat dustrial land near Gothard Street ·and
ai:id adja~nt apartment but badly S)ater Avenue in Hunlington Beach.
dJ1.maged the Blue Pelican restaurant Green, on police instructions, taped his
which had a common wall. conversations with New while the rial
Edith Sullenberger, 34, her infant estate operator allegedly made offers .of daughter and mother, Donna Sullen.
berger, 59, who managed the laundromat, "campaign contributions1
' to the city of·
(See CRASH, P11e !) ficial .
-~~~~~~~~~~
· (Details Ind photos · of Sunday's r~ce
l)ld.DA!J.Y PILQT Bpaling Editor Almon
Loekabey's full account of the race action
appear . lojt~Y on the Boating Page, on
Page U.)
'Jbt.race committet uph~ld the .protest
of defeflder tntrtpid· that she~ha!t been..
fouled .when the two bcfats·colllded at the ·
startlng·gun Sunday.
The ruling gave Intrepid a 2·to 0 lead ln
the ·be~;Of·aev.en series Wtead of the
No :Protest Seen
In . Huntington
Uptown Project
Down~ property owners won't .at ..
This is the stcDr)d protest.
Both skipperi: made a protellt in the
opening race over 1 near collision at the
start~ Th~ protests were not allowed.
Jim H!rdyr Gretel Il's. skipper, said, ••t
don't Ht how thg_,fQYJ!:l_baye...reached._
--ihat·-ventict:-Buf I am not aurprtsed.
They want to keep the cup."
Then he .resumed tinkering 01 the hull
of the Australian yacht.
It was the first time a cup yacht that
finished leCOnd h~d won on a protest
aiilce "the U.S. defender·beat Valkytie m
of Britala in the series in 1895. ·Valkyrie
w·u ~lrly disqualified :tn ooe race.
Jaycees , Surfing
Contest Slated
Rnd 1 tonight's .Hlintlngtoo Beach . City Another surf meet la teheduled ln Hun-~unc:;il ip~li;n&•to oPPOU.tbe Top of thti ·_~inaton Beaeh,~this tiJ!!e~at .Bolsa Chi~
----·p1er-pian. . . , · BtateBeiCh -Siturday.
"There's no point in 'It:~'· said BOb Tet..-iit's the ~nual Los Alamlto&.-Rossmoor
, "'""',.... .......
SILHOUETTED BY FLAMES, FIREMIN IATTLE BLAZE AFTER. l'kAN~~~l~'W!STRANO llAtH LAUNDROMAT··
--~ l,, .. 1"' • ••
_)' -
ry, .chle!, 1pokeaman for the downto~ Jay~~s s'Urt~g, coot.est" for y00ths •eect
faction. our cue wu pretty well ~lved 12·18. The contest starts at a a.m. with
last Week. I think couitcilmen have made etch surfer ' riding, a seriei of three
th 'r ·mlnd• 11 ' 1 · • up et ·• · • waves. . · ,
Last ~week • the counclL.appr6,ved the 'Surfing will ttake .place. In front 'of 1tar~. of ~o~emnaUQ~ P, r o c ~ ~ d I n I 1 lifeguard ~wer 21 at Bolsa Chica. against · 14 acres· of downtown property t ~ · • '
which' wllf be turned I into a 1,878-space
parking 1o1: : · · · · "
Do9rr1town property owners had tr led "to . -
cohvincf ·~)\e· coUtN;i!': t9 1 ~t private '"'° .
ttrprile redeve10p the "area, but were-
unable to ~com~ly with 'council:, rt-
qUiremerit!J. ' .
"We don't think the ·requeats they made '
of us were: fair,; Terry,uid. '.'Bqt now· I ·
Ill"" we'U juJt'IO 'IO 'coui't.to,.. W6o ii'
right· or !fODC·" '
I_ ! ,
Sunny skila wllh,occasiona\11ow
c\ouda alon("the shore is the fare
fti: Tuelday,, with coastal tempera..
tW'ff in the 70'1 and inland read-• '' I -lnp ohooUn1 uP, lo IO degrees. Boy,.;ts,;-Set .on ·!ire . INSIQE TODAY
By G~g,:' Ji~dly',~url : • Thro• lighter·than-air ad.,.,..
CINCINNATI ! (UPI') -, A !~year-old lurcra look off from Long l1land
boy was lel'tously burned early SUnfaY . Sunda11 on a 1r(lnsatlontic 011$
when ·a groilp' of"~ l!ouaed ,his ~!loon ody;;,y .. W~·p<nnit·
· ~th·-•----b'-I ting, tM11 .will reach Europe in back and arms :w1 '11 uaum .. n:: 8 ue~ liz to l6-&u:1:St~ :1tor'-PMtt 5.
and 11t 11lrn afire. ,, • -·
Bruce Annstdld was In fair ~itkln ....... 11. '..t.... •
todi.Y at a hGlpt&ll and told police be and ~ u. ; :.:.1 ,_.. ..9: a rneitd wete-acCiised~of rocl:Urowinl" c.......-.,.,. .,.... c.... • by_a.1101.ollM>y1Un.t:NliaUQn:Jlie..boy~1" ~~m=. ~ =-~~ .: threw what was believed {o bt a type of ~ • .... ...,.. n,n
lfMNI '"' 6 ~ 11 glue at Anns'tUd and Jlflbtmatch to, ·==·-.: =: ': Jt. ~ad~i compattion ,hls 1sblrt, ...,_ 11 ..,._., ..... 1,.1,
off and rolled the teen11er , grm to hi ""'"" 11 ..,. ...,,. w
amotblr Ull flamea.· · · · J ~ •
-I ~.
..
. rol!L • P1U1r " -
Police:men,
•
:Firemen
Ask Raise s
By TERRY COVILLE
01 Ill• Deur r 1i.t Sti ff
Huntington Beach . policemen a n d
firemen "-'iii return to the city council
tonl&hl to iseek whal they thou&hi. they
"''ere getting last" week.-an 11 percent
pay increase plus Crringe benefits.
A y,·eek ago the coW'ICil ignored an
agreement reached between C i t y
Administrator Doyle Miller and police
and fire negotiators, instead grantine an
3croc1 th~ board 1.25 percent ply in-
-crease without mention of fringe benefits.
"We negotiated in _good faith with the
understanding that we were talking with
an agent of the city CQW'ICll," Officer Don
Jenltips, one of the police ne1otiator1,
said this morning.
_,
•
•
..
' War €rifts
~ Sunimit· re_~-~ing
' ·uf Arabs Called
I • • ~ CAIRO IAPI -Kings and prolidonts of
the Arab world have bee n sunfmoned to
Cairo for a summit confere"nce Tuesday
to seek an end to lhe civil war In Jordan
and to keep it from spreading into an in·
ternational conflict.
Radio Cairo said Monday all · Arab
leaders were coming excf;pf. Prelident ·
Ahmed Hassen el-Bakr of Iraq. The
Egyptians accused Iraq earlier in the da y
of upsetting a weekend cease-fire in
Jordan.
The broadcast said Kine Hussein or
Jordan and President Noureddin Atassi
of Syria had confinned their intenµons to
attend the meeting.: However, Rac:lio
Damascus later said Atassl would not at·
tend the conference, but would be In
Cairo. •
• The Damascus broadcast quoting
. '
The Cairo broadcast' s&ld Ya'slr Arafat.
leader of the overall gUeJTilla command
-the Palestine Liberation OrganJiation
....,.. also is expected to attend. · ·
If so, the meeting presumably woul{I
bring Hussein and Arafat together for the
first time since the fighting broke out .in
Jordan last Thursday. ..:rtie broadcast did not Say why Bakr
ol'lraq was not attending.
In its attack on Iraq earlier, Egypt
claimed that it created a mi.sun·
derstanding between the Jordans and the
Palestinians of the cease-fire Nasser pro-
posed on Saturday._
The authoritative newspaper Al Abram
of Caito said Arafat wa,s relying on Iraq's
Radio Ba&hdad to aMounce his observan-
ce of the cease-fire but that Baghdad fail·
ed to do so on the pretext that its broad·
casting equipment had broken down.
"We. are going'; tO bk that the
memoranda of agreement siiiied Dy~UI~~
and the city administrator be approved,"
Jenkins explained.
DAll.Y PILOT_SIJ!l.lll!.19
CREWS CLEAN UP RUBBLE AFTER PLANE CRASH IN CAPISTRANO BEACH
Piiot Dies, But Two Women, Biby ind Dog E1c1pe; D1m19e E1tlm1t9d 1t $96,000
-Syr-ia!s-Ministry of Infor-matlon·-said·
Atassi had already left for Cairo "to hold
urgent talks on means of stopping cur·
ren t atrocities against Lhe Palestinian
guerrillas in Jordan."
It said Atassl arranged to meet with
President Gama\ Abdel Nasser of Egypt,
Co!. Muammar Kadafi, chief of Lybia's
Revolutionary Council, and Maj . Gen.
Jaafar el !\umairi. leader ·Of Sudan's
military government.
Radio-Baghdad-..,pondod-to -Al
Ahram's version by broadcasting a denia1
by -ihe Central -eommittee of the
Palestine Liberation Organization that
Arafat had at any time accepted a cease·
fire in the civil war. Thal agteement called for an 11 per·
cent 'blanket pay boost, plus aucb other
benefits as'.
-Initiation-of an educational incentive
program by Jan. 1.
-More hazafd and filght pay for pilots
and abservora on the two police
helicopters.
-Higher pay !or motorcycle officers.
-Increased vacations to be 12 working
days for men with ftve years or Jess in
the deparhrient, 14 working days for
niembers with ~10 years, 16 wgrking
dajs-for men with 11·15 yean experience,
-and 20 y.:orking day1 for those with more
than 16 years on the deparbnent.
The.l.egal firm of_P~rker and Dally of
Pomona will represent the polictmen
before the council tonlgbt.
Firemen will also renew efforts to aatn
higher pay increases. They had reportm.
-~y -qr~d t_o-tncreases--rangtng-f rom-11
perce_nt to 13 percent, but also received
only 8.25 percent.
Miller took a neutral stand today on the
wage disputes. "At this stage I'm neutral.
I signed the memoranda of' agreement,
the council felt otherwise."
It was learned last week that police
had entered wage negotiations with a re-
quest for a 16 percent pay hike plus other
fringe benefits. But after talks with ad-
_JDinistrators the policemen bad agreed to
an· 11 percent increase and fringe benefits
as outlined in the memoranda.
H~tington Oil
' ' ' Di~pute Hearing
Dela y, Approved
Both sides in the Huntington Beach
shoreline dispute today agreed to a
further delay of a pretrial hearing in the
Supetior Court lawsuit filed by the city
agairiSt several oil companies and pro-
perty owners.
Judge Harmon G. Scoville set Oct. 7 a.s
lhe date on which he will hear objections
by attorneys for four oil companies
against the complaint filed last June 8.
The city Is seeking court approval of its
argument that nearly three miles of
prh,ately owned shoreline north of the
municipal pier should be open to the
public at all times.
The defendants state in their demurrer
that the city's action as outlined in the
lawsuit is "uncertain, ambiguous and
unintelligible.''
Arguments filed by the Huntington
Beach Co., Standard Oil Co. of California,
Huntington Pacific Corp. and Fluor·Hun·
tington include the contention that the ci·
ty has failed to adequately Identify
owners of ihoreline property.
City pl&ns include Vie creation of a
permanent puDlic recfeational easement
over the beactl and the barring of lls
owners from restriction of the shoreline
to private use.
DAILY PILOT
Q;jA/'ICf!i COA$f l'Utl.l~H1NG COMl".f,N'f
Robe;t N. w,,,
Prn'dftll 111<1 Pue»>t,....
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M1ili119 AJdr1u: P.O. loit 1•0, •26•1
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ltfllnl a11c11· '" ~o, .. r •v-, Cllll MIU: uo Wut Ill $1rcu N~i t1"1t11: 2'11 Wo t 111!161 1~1tv1rd
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..
•
Manson 'Liked Knives'
Tat,e Witness Testifies
F rom P .. e l
CRASH ...
were alseep in their one bedroom apart·
ment that is part of the laundromat
building.
The younger woman was blown through
Jordan has accused Syria of invading
northern Jorgan to help Palestinian guer·
rillas seekirfg to ou.st King Hussein's
government.
The broadcast accused Egypt of
distorting the facts '"in order to create a
rift among the Arab countries."
It said the Central Committee has
never left any doubt that it will "only
cease-firing when the regime or im·
perialist agents in Amman bas been
overthrown and replaced by a truly na.-
tional authority."
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Charles M.
Manion "liked knives better thin sun•."
a w:ilnea testllted at the Sharon Tate
de"fendants are charged with the murder
of Miss Tate and six others in Au,gu3t of
1969.
the waU and onto gravel outside but aside
from neck burns was not seriously io· From Pagel
murder-trial-today-. -'
Fonner motorcycle Piii leader Darmy
DeCarlo; .fn biJ fourth day as a pro-
secution wilnelil at the trial, iald Manaon
commanded complete attention from his
foUOwen at his Spahn movie ranch com·
miine in a rural area northwest of Los
An-geles ..
Their trial entered its 15th week today.
The stubby, mustachioed DeCarlo was
quizzed repeatedly by both the pro-
sec:ution and defense about his dr inking
jured. ·she rushed inSide and carried out
her 3 ~ week old daughter who was not
injured. The infant Was alseep in a baby
carriage. Her empty crib was pushed
through the wall by the explosion.
JORBA N CRISIS •.•
"Once,'' said DeCarlo, "a· couple of
broads interrupted hini' while he was
talking ••. he ·threw a bowl of rice at
them .•• he told them he didn't want to
be interrupted ••• th.at they a h o u I d
listen."
DeCarlo said thtre were few guns iat
the ranch before he cam~. bringing his
own collection, and he said of Manaon : ·
"He lited knives better than guns."
Manson, 35, and three young women co-
Valley Officials
Search for New . '
Resident Beauty
Fountain Valley officials are on the
lookoilt this wee.k for lovely young ladieS
to succeed Miss Rosemary Kelley as the
city'a queen for-1971.
The deadline for entering the Miss
Fountain Valley Pagean~ is midnl1ht
Saturday. The queeii will be chosen Oct.
18. .
Girls interested in the Miss Fountain
Valley· title mu,st meet these qualifica·
lions: •
-Mu.st not hive been a previous Ml.ss
Fountain Valley.
-Must be between the ages of )7 and
21.
~an't be married.
-Must be a resident of the city.
-Prepare a three minute talk or talent
presentation.
-Mu.st be available to represent Foun·
tain Valley throughout her reign at the
request or the chamber or commerce.
-Judging will be done in bathing suits
and formal gowns.
The Miss Fountain Valley Pageant i!I
sponsored by the chamber of commerce
and directed by the women'! division of
the chamber. Entry applications for t~e
event are available at the follow1ng six
locations : Fountain of Youth Beauty
Salon, Warner Avenue and Magnolia
Street: Bella Donna ·Beauty Salo~,
Magnolia and Edinger Avenue; Fountain
Vall<y LHirari: Fountain Valley Hl~h
School: Los Amigos High ·School, ll1d city
·ball, 10200 Slater Avenue.
· habits, criminal record and motivaUol)
for testifying. DeCarlo has said ~he aaw
Manson wllh a gun much likt:: one the
state says·was uaed-to·kiU-three-penons
at Misa Tate's mansion.
· The prosecution tried to show that
DeCarlo was not as "smashed" as he had
previously testi(ie4 at his Stay at the
ranch. However, the witnm .said under
cross-examination that he had indeed
testified he was drunk 99 percent of the
time he was there.
"My version of drunk is when I'm out
to lun~h on the gro~nd." ~aid DeCarlo.
Additionally, he reminded a defense at·
torney, .. I smoke weed too."
DeCarlo was asked his impressions of
the case's fifth defendant, Cha rles "Tex"
Watson, who ma~ a surprise ap~~~e
in court Friday. DeCarlo. wllo identified
Watson in 'court. said ••be lootled skin·
nler." 'Wa1s6n-was recently utradit.ed
from Tezas to atand triaL
Huntington Man
Dies Four Days
'
After Accident
A Huntington Beach man riding in a
small car rammed broadside by a
garbage truck at a Costa Me,sa in.
tersection died Sunday, four days alter
the collision.
Ralph B. Roth, ts. of ~732 Kelvin
Lane. succumbed at Costa Me s a
Memorial Hospital at 8:28 a.m., ac·
cording to the Orange County coroner's
office .
He and the driver of the car, James P.
Young, 38, of 21181 Miramar Lane, Hun·
tington Beach. were injured at 6: 10 a.m.
Thursday In the crash on Victoria Street
at Canyon Drive. Young was n.ot
hospitalized.
The Dewey's Rubbish Service truck
driven by Jesus Santini, 38, shoved
Young's small sedan across the in·
ter.sectlon and up an embankment.
Costa Meaa police are continWng their
investigation to determine w he t h e r
criminal char1es will be filed against
Santini, who allegedly did not stop as re--
quired.
Funeral services for Roth will be
Wednesday at 2 p.m. in calvary Church
of Santa Ana.
Atassi bas denied moved into Jordan at
all.
The younger Mrs. Sullenberger return-''You are standing alone against a
ed to the apartment and lifted a beam off_ mass attack __ unlea shed on you by the
of her mother's legs, s.aid firemen, and rulers of Syria, who could not hold out for
helped Donna Sullenberger-outside. two hours in the Golan Heights in 196'7,"
The senior Mrs. Sullenberger suffered Majali said.
first and second degree.leg burns. "Hold fast in the face of the ag-
Six engines from the• county fire gressors. as fast as the steel of your . tanks," he exhorted. department and a snorkel (aerial) unit
battled the flames for an hour and a half VICTORIES CLAIMED
before the fire was brought under con·
trol.
Bill Min ick. coroner's investigator, said
Addis left home a short while before the
crash and told his wife, Mary that he
planned to drive to Big rine.
He apparently ~hanged bis mind. and .
took the plane which he used to commute
ti> h(s home on weekends. The Capistrano
Airport is uncontrolled. It has no control
tower or runway lights and taking off
said officials: is pretty much a matter of
pilot discretion.
No one saw him enter his single-eng ine
plane but his car was parked nearby.
Besides his widow, Addis is survived by
a teenage dauahter, Sharon Ann, of the
family home and a son, Frank R. JI of
San Diego. He had been an Orange Coun·
ty resident 10 years.
Funeral services were scheduled at 3
p.m. today at Peek Family Colonial
Funeral Home in Westminster with burial
in Weslminster Meniorial Park.
A resident of the crash area. Mrs.
Guerrilla sources in Baghdad and
Damascus proclaimed that Syrian in-
vaders - movi ng in a two-pronged
maneuver toward lrbid -w e r e
mutilating Hussein's Royal Army.
The young king has 55,000 troops
against it.he 32,000 gueuillas entrenched
in northern Jordan and around the capital
city of Amman.
His 40th Brigade fa ces up to 100
Russian-built tanks of two Syrian
brigades with 50 British Centurian tanks .
American Secretary of State William
P. Rogers urged the Soviets-to exercise
their power over the Arabs to end the
hostilities, which he branded today as ir·
responsible and capable of drastically
broadening.
"We call upon the Syrian government
to end immediately this intervention in
J ordan," he said. "And we urge all other
concerned governments to impress upon
the government of Syria the necessity of
withdrawing the forces which have in·
vaded Jordan."
Yolanda Vital, 25835 Domingo Road, said smtl'itIT PROPOSED
she thought the explosion of the crash
was right in her .. ffont yard. She feared
momentarily that it ·-was a recurrence of
the eart.hquakes that had shaken the area
several days earlier.
The crash explosion broke out windows
of adjacent business buildings and ht.
te_red the street with flaming debris.
Firemen, however, were able to confine
the blaze to the buildings immediately in·
volved.
Doheny voluntee r fireman, Wendell
Hill, 3402 Camino Capistrano, was a few
blocks from the crash. He said he heard
a low throb and a "thump" and then saw
flames shooting up from the laundromat.
Allan N. Dlsiena, 20, Camp Pendleton
Marine, said he heard the plane circling
and the engine go dead . He was hitch--
hiking nearby.
Federal Aviation Agency officials in-
vestigated the crash and said a
determination or cause would be made by
the NaUooal Transportation S a f e t y
Board.
Tunisian President Habib Bourguiba
proposed a summit conference of Arab
states in Cairo to thrash out a Jordanian
solution. and several, including Egypt,
had accepted. But Cairo sources said
Sunday the Syrian invasion ended
chances for such a meeting.
Gairo took two positions on the conflict
Sunday:
-Hussei n should in le r v en e im·
mediately to ensure compliance with a
cease-fire plan worked out by Egyptian
President Gama! Abdel Nasser and
reportedly accepted by the government
and guerrilla forces.
-Iraq's ruling Baath party £ricked the
guerrilla~ into continuing to fight after
their leaders accepted the truce.
The official and public position 9'\the '
Nixon administration has been OM\ of
concern for more than 400 Americans, In-
cluding 48 out of M hostages held by the
Palestinian guerrillas, with the possibility
that force would be uaed if It Wit Judi·
ed rieeeasary to evacuate the_!?.:
Extra C130 transports have been posi·
tioned in Europe to carry tbe troops from
West Germany. The 82nd Airborne
Division, oD alert at Ft. Bragg, N.C . .-·
relies on huge C141 jet~tr:an.sports aa part
of the U.S. strike reserve.
All this was billed as precautionary by
Pentagon officials who said there was no
widesperad general alert. The intent re-
mains only the possibility ()f rescuinl
Americans -thought to be about 400 -
swept up in the Jordan fighting.
As the army briefly lifted its order to
shoot on sight ~fonday the women of
Amman went into the smashed street!,
dodging sniper fire. to find food for their
families.
They carried shopping baskets past the_
dead and wounded as King Husse in'J..
army ruthlessly hunted guerrillu who
had ignored cease-fire appeals.
Snipers hidden in mosques and on the
roofs of luxury apartment houses were
blaseld by cannon fire.
FINAL FIGHT
The right for Amman and for the
throne is in its final stages and has cost
more time and lives than the twCHiay
battle the king'! commanders had
forecast.
The pavements are littered with
cartridge cases. Buildings everywher1
have the black holes of artillery hits:
Fires bum on the hillsides.
From the Intercontinental Hotel you
could see an armored car systematically
pounding ~ block of £le.ts, floor by floor.
after a sruper had been reported there:
The shells went in orange !llreaks lo•
across the valley and burst through the
living rooms.
A sniper near the British Embassy was
killed .. A. sol~ier a!l~ the army blew up
the bu1Jd1ng In which he was hiding.
One sniper got a lucky shot through the
embassy which put the transmitter to
London out of. action. The staff had tn
revert to Morse code until the generator
was repaired. A, soldier standing near
journalists who· went to the embassy dur·
ing the curfew .!if Ung was wounded by a
sniper bullet.
The return fire was erra tic . A soldier
swung his jeep-mounted machine gun at
the hotel and put a burst through the
hotel lobby which scattered newsmen.
Photographtts have been told they will
be shot if they take pictures.
The problem of evacuating Westerners
from Amman is still difficult. Although
the army is holding the main airfield it is
within mortar range of guerrillas, who
.~e now fighting desperately Lor their
lives.
Ft'Olll P .. e l
DEPUTIES •••
Roth is survived by bis wife Palsy.
sons Michael, Greaory and Pete, a
daughter Deborah, plus 1 brother, mter
and hi! father. Ju1nhos Cause Tornadoes?
mandeered the patrol cir and .tool!: off.
.He dl-ove back ·to the maintenance
yard. switched to hi! own station w11on
Officers Raid S maller Planes Being Tliro ivn Out of Control by 747s
a":e~~ding to a general alarm, Huntington Pot WASHINGTON (AP) -Owners and "They are the de"adllest kind or 1ircraft
Riverside deJX!lY sheriffs spotted lJle ata· pilots of light aircra{t are campaigning to to encounter in the air. They constitute a
lion wagon on the 0rte111 Highway Party, Nab 13 restrict fll1hts or new jumbo jets which, clear and present danger." shorUy after 6 a.m. and pursued J.:vine In a telegram to congressmen, the down Lhe grade into the ..Lake Elsinore government tesls show, create tornado-AOPA also declared :
Police arrested 13 per!lOnt and co""" like winds that can spin smaller planes •·we are deeply concerned at the threat area. . th When Irvine did not stop during e fiscated marijuana and du aerous drugs out of control. y,·hich these behemoths or the sky appear
pursuit, the Riverside deputies fired at worth SI0,000 over the weekend after Tests being completed by the Federal to be creatin1 for other travelers in the
the fleeing cai:: flattening the rear tires. smelUn1 out• Pot part)' tn...tbe northtrD Aviation Administration showed the .air.
lrvine then jumped out of the car. and part of Hwitincton Beach. winds swirl off wingtips of the 747 and "Just as the govtrnment hu &een flt to
held the Riverside officers at bay with • Sit Georp Renek a Henry Hit-CSA at speed! up to 90 miles an hour and Impose limitations on lhe tile of trucks
revolver which he continually pointed at chcock both ol the pollee depU'tment'a can trail beblDd the: planes ror miles. and bosea for the sllety of all on the
his bead, thrtal<ning suicide. Specllj Enf-t D<1ai1 toot five '!be FAA has ordertd a Clv,.mile highways, perhaps It 1f.time lo aloblilh
He held them Gff for two boon before penons lato custody at ' 11.tii. s.turd., __ aeparalion at all times between the &iant slmJlar limits on the size of aircraft to
giving in to pleas of his wile and fello• when they oblerved allesed tU.Sp\cious jet.I and planes we:.lgbing less than 300,000 preserve safety in <the air.''
· Orange county deputies to bad arrived ~ behavior al 3 boute on Club Bou11 Ro.cl pounds. It also Is conductina an educa· Turbulence aene:rated by the jumbo
at the scene. , ud N111au Drive. tlonal lr'ticram to altrt plM>ts or Uchte:r jet.s his not been assl&ned 1s the cause of
•• ~.r~susse,.l!!awkuon olaatheid ~ E~= After seizing two and a half pounds of alrcra t to the baurda of the winds -any plane crasbds . of ·•-N 1 OC"ru _.. f marijuana. the Gffkren t..ben moftd. called "Wike turbulence or wingtip But recor u-..:: a t o n a l
made an aggressive move toward any 0 throulh the immedlate area, amtline vortice1 . Tra;nsportation Safety Botird thews •
our officers," • severil other perlOM on marijuana The Airplane Owners and Pilots crashes betwetn llM and ltll in which
Duncan has been a-deputy lheriff for io h AAoclatlon1 which representl fliers or wake turbulenct lfntrlted by ITMUer
five ~an. He .h~ recently ler.val. ed ~'-~ ~ 1d'cu~;~tonl~ taken into the 1n,ooo aircraft In the central avia--Jttll ners was the caR or a contributing
__Ju.verute.JWL.balliff-aad..ltv:e:r ~nu.. :1"-.1 ----he m. llon neld objec:tl to thl.s approlt:b. actor. Twtnlt ·per&onf"'lfltd ancf-54 tuf·
ago was bailiff In the 't"Ourt of Superior-cuswuy on posse on c f:' w 1 "The j~mbo· jets lTlll!t be riaid ly cori· fered 1trtous Injuries In the• &ashes.
Judge Wiiiiam -S. I.ft of. Newport Beach. vestlgalin1 offlctr~. alle1ed ~traced 1~ flned, rigidly regulattd so everyone Although aJI planes cause winaUp
Irvine ha& been a deputy for 1eve n .pounds of mariJua"a a seyera knows wl'tere theY are.'' ...says Mllx vortices to som~ degree, FAA offlclal!f
ytars and his been rtctnlly aervln& ·u 1 lhoosand pms to 1 house on 5W Edm&ct Karant, Viet president o( the AOPA. &i)' lhe extent of turbulence from the 747 juvenile court balllff. Ave.
J. '
• •
passenger plane ahd CSA cargo plane was
underraled.
"We were fully aware ·or wake
turbulence but we didn't know it's in·
tensitf," says Richard Slift, deputy direc-
tor or the FAA's flighl standards aervice.
Flight tesls showed that light aircraft
which Penetrate the vortices within thre1
miles of the jumbo jets can be forced Inti>
a 9Udden roll of 75 degrees.
"U they Uy into it Just right they could
10 Into a spin and kise control of tht
aircraft." aaid Robert Martin, FAA·1
chief of regulation and proceduru. 04The
•ortices art just like little tornadots."
'!be FAA found that win(ltip vorikes
an most dangerous duriJ>a ta-• and
landinp when large numbers ol planes
are concentrated ln limited areu. BuL
they ·say that spacing eeveral minuter
between fli&hts allows croSS'Winds Ume to
break up the vortices.
The problem b not considered by the
FAA 'lo>-1"! a!iT<of at ht1h afUtud.,
although tests showed the vortices of big
jets do not quickly dissipate when formed
at 30,000 Itel and above where most
Jetliners cruise.
.. ..
•
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but I
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and "S
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•
•
•
THE SU LLENBERGERS LOST EVERYTHING BUT THEIR NIGHTCLOTHES
In the Apartment Behi nd the Sev-More Laundry, • Scrape With Death on •
ALMOST EVERYTHI NG
Chilly September Morning
Tot Safe • ID Crash Mo1n~
Capo Plane ·Wreck Impact Thre w Them Through Wall
By PAMELA HALLAN
Of .. ci.tr PIW Steff
The tiny baby lay cooing in her
mother's protective arms, oblivious to all
but the gentle face above her.
Edith Sullenberger smiled at the baby
and pulled her closer.
"She's the miracle,'.'...she said quietly.
The baby wasn't sleeping in her usuaJ
place Saturday when the. plane crashed
into the laundromat which adjoined the
family's Capfslrano Beach apartment.
"Elizabeth was sleeping in her car-
riage, next to my bed, not in the crib at
the foot of the bed," said her mother.
The impact of the explosion, which took
the life of the pilot, blew the baby's crib
through the wall. It also blew Edith
through. ·
"I'm thankful IL was a thin wall," said
Edith.
She has no recollection of the blast. She
remembers on1y hearing a boom and then
bWig on her feet outside the wall. Bat
bruises and scratches leave a trace o fteh
Impact wOh the two-inch wall, as do her
memories.
"1 was standing there and everything
aeemed backward to me," she said. "My
mother must have heard me saeaming. I
couldn't get oriented to where the baby
was. When I did, J grabbed her and ran
out."
Her mother, Mrs. Donna Sullenberger.
said she v;oke up and saw Edith standing
through the wall. "I close my eyes today
Bnd I can still see the burning timber
between me and the sky," she said.
Some timbers had fallen across her
legs. "I remember pulling myse.U out
from under them and dragging myself
out," said the mother. "You hear about
grown men doing thlngs like that, but not
little old ladies."
·••1 guess you do amazfug things when
you have to," added Edith. "I'm usually
a tenderfoot, but there I was walking
barefoot over glass and splintered wood
and never felt it."
· "We lost everything but o u r
nightclothes 'l\n tht. fire," said Edith. ·~Things like lhat don't hit you until you
are standing· in front-of a mirror and you
realize.that you don't even own a 10-cenl
comb.'-
Life is settling dov.1l for them now.
They have moved lo a small apartment
near the one lhcy lost and friends and
neighbors . have been dropping in with
sakes of food, money and clothing. ·
Their family dog is still at the
veterinarian in shock, but Edith and her
rTiother and the baby are coming out of
theirs and putting together the. facts. One
is that Edith's mother, who worked at the
destroyed laundromat, no longer has a
job. ~
But the family is hopeful, more so now
than they've ever been..be{ore. 'Th~y.Se
appreciating life because on one chilly
September morning they nearly tasted
death.
Family's Pet Dog Back,
Singed, Shaken, But OK
Ru sty; who was apparently blown
through lbe wall along with his sleeping
mistress, has come home -dazed,
whiskerless and somewhat the worse for
wear but happy· to be found.
Rusly is the 7-year-old fam ily dog that
Mrs. Edith Sullenberger feared had
perished in lhe Saturday morning fire
caused by a plane crash.
?i.Trs. Sullenberger. of 34241 Doheny
Park Road, her mother, Donna and infant
daughter narrowly escaped the flaming
wreck.age of their one bedroom apart-
ment. The same-was true of Rusty, who
came with Mrs. Sullenberg from Ohio six
years ago.
She said today that Rusty was located
12 hours after the crash. "He was panting
and in shock and singed pretty badly and
he just laid in my arms," she said. Rusty
is lo be released from the veterinarian's
today.
Ru sty's life has been somewhat com-
pli cated lately. First it was the birth or a
new baby 31h: weeks ago. Up till then he
had been the center of altention.
And most recently; his early morning
snooze at the foot of Mrs. Sullenberger·s
bed was rudely interrupted by an ex-
plosion and fire. He doesn't seem to knpw
what to think about it all.
' ·r -. .
H DAil Y "LOT :J
,~'GalJoping Plans' Hit
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---..::.
Gr eedy De:v elopers.:Ruin'ing Rural A re~?-
• . I .....
This b Ult third in a DAILY P1TLOT
. series on subdivision developme.11t i"
Northern California ·recreational areas .
Which Asitmblyman. Leo McCarthy
once said. "art Jutly capable of be·
coming , mon!ttrs ..• " Just as the
Legi&Joturt wa! tiear 1 adjournmerit
thil t1ear, a major .ttibdivida pushed
through a biU that could h'cmt dented
CaJifONJiarU many f ishing ri(JhU. I t
was vetoed by GQVf!ntor Reagan. TM
vi1tD1 of a district attorney arc dis·
cussed in today's art-iclt.
. ,
The Land Game -•
(Northe,.. St11leJ · ·· . . .
Picture younelf In a 111111 A·frame
b e 1 J d e a Northern California
stream, away from 1nt01f and root
beer stands! And !1Jrnlng 'a lidy
pro!1t on lhe ~ yoo bouaJll! The
picture might not be u pretty as
it's.painted.
olftt lhe huge pmenlage ol r<luni 1"
such a .11n1U llme, on auch a small tn.
vesbnent. BecaUH: the promoter doau't
really invest evea the first third. ' . "A typical acheme Js thfl: lht
developer sends out scouts to buy up op-
tions on all the land needed, for rehlUvtly
small sums, offering the original cnmtr.
.if the project goes through, a better price
than he ever hoped for hls acrea1e. When
all the options are in, he can safely Divest
By ALBERT W. BATES in preliminary engineering, lhe drawinl
°' '" DellY ,. .. '"" strong, the Nevada Ootinty supervisors of maps, and tbe preparation of lqe col·
(Tbird la a !tries) . · simply modified lhe general plan to fit ored illustrations for the planni.n& com·
the needs· Of the promoters: mission. He can also borrow money fl'OJ?l YREKA, Callf. (Special) -llarold
Berliner, district attorMy ol Nevada Their rationale apparent)y hu been others who want to parUcipat.e in what is
Coqnty. a -·serva".:.;st and ou•-poi.. ... :. that subdivisions are. "good for business" very close to a sure thin_(.
·-· ~· ~ "'' and ~·they add ID lhe tax roll."~. don'.t foe of. a "a greedy handful of developers ~ .. c, "After a reasonable amouat of eipense ·11ed •· I •·ly _,_, b bother to check results elsewhere. U they and.time spen.t lell;•• the -mmunl· ..,., comm1 w comp Coe; un,~ ur an had, they i:night have found that -"'O .... ~,
developme11t of rural areas for short-generally .. overpriced subdlviaioo lots businessmen that there's a gold mine in
term gain," revealed what has happened result in foreclosures up to as much as it1 for , them if °!eY. will help conV~ the
in his own county in a11 article in the 100 percent in some instances. And where P annmg ~m1~00 and IU~llllfl of
inagazine California Tomorrow. Ex-buyers build and move in.-the ~·of~ be~f1t.s the d~e~t off~s. the,~--
cerpts: schools, fire and police services are such 3.r~a •. they ~n: ready_lO ~PPIY roft!iit Of-
" Nevada County Is but one of many that the taxpayers in the re!l olthe coun· ft~~al per~ss1'ons to go ahead.
California counties afflicted with gallop. ty must subsidize the subdivision By this time they have buttered up
ing subdivision, but it's as good an ex· residents. t
1
ocheallocal rural pre~s, put a 11urnber of
ample or the problems which accompany DA Berliner reveals how it all works: . people ~n the1~ payroll and .~t
the overcommitment of land as "recrea-"'Why do these 1 u .deve 10 p e d th_mlhgs are going their way. :n~e filings
tional' lots as any other coUAly in the developments' continue to grow" Because w1 the planning ~mm1s.s1on rely
6tate. they make great Sll.ms o! mon~y for lne strof!gly o.n !!Olored pictures, lea o~
"The county, -which has .elevations developer" · detail, and still leP on what the subd1·
ranging from about 1,000 feet in the " · . . vider is committing himself lo dO. He
foothills to the 7,000.foot level in alpine The. totaJ price of lots m one of these may suggest that the supervison author·
areas. is typical of all of California's promotions may rea~ $50 million, and ize financing the improvement money
recreation areas. After 20 years, its they can ~ sold out 1~ a year or two. by selling bonds issued by a P':lblic d.ja,.
population ls hardl~arger than it was Rep;resentative prom~Uonal develope~s lrlct. This will greally lessen the promo-
duriJ!:g the Gold RusH, and i• the last 20 have stated that of this ~um, one third lS ler's investment, because the lot owners
years it has not shared in California's spent for the land._engmee~ing, stre~,_will then pay these bonds off over the
J>Olill&Ut1;n tioom I o any appreciiliie--water-s-upply, sewers if requ~. country yelrs with no Cost at-an-to the developo
degree. . • clubs, lakes, etc. Another third is spe11t er."
" ... Enough lots have been approved o~ advertising and .11ales. This is far Berliner points out what happen• when
at this time to take care of more than higher than the ord1n~ry sales cost of opposition ·appears at either ·planning
three times the present population. It the real estate, but t~se .lob a~ harder to commission or supervisor Jevet-ud this
next five years 11how the same rate cf in-sell. · · The last third IS profit. reporter has just seen this responae in a
crease in Jots t he last five years have "And there aren't many venture11 which proposed Siskiyou County subdivision.
shown (about 225 percent per year), by The developer spreads the rumor that
the end of 1974 every square Inch of he is abandoning his plans. Or he goes
privately held-land ill Nevada County.will Po-Zi "e . Di "UT m back .to the local businessmen, claiming
have bee11 subdivided into suburban-style ..,_, ...., lhe de velopment is sUll a marginal opera-
Jots." tion, and IJ_ov~·strict r~uirements are
While subdivision lots proliferate, home Man· W itl• Gurt laid down, the whole thing_ wi11-bellii,..
building has remained constant at an a. a. doned in raver of anoUier tocaUon in
average of 233 houses per year ·In the en-another county to the benefit cf . the
tire county • J G d G merchants in that area.
Nevada County's board or supervisors, ·11, Ur e Jt fOV e Winning one advantage, !he developer
like such boards in many another county, can suddenly come alive and ramrod bil J
has played straight into the hands ol the Garden_.Grove palice shot _a man Sun-plans through the Board of Supervi90l"S.
developers by ignoring the county's day night who they allege had threatened Using The second approach. he can win
general pin and allowing su¥ivisions two officers with a revolver. merchant pressure, especially in the
anywhere and everywhere. The suspect, Garland G. Bryant, 47, of !!mailer counties where the skills to in-
When public objection began to grow 12426 Glenn St. has been booked in the vestigate ultimate consequences of tb1
Orange <;ounty Medic.al Ceilter : prisoa "development" do not exist.
ward charged with assault with intent to The developer ha.a not bought the land
Accident Victim
Robbed of Gems
CLEVELAND (UPI) -A thief readied
inside a wrecked aulo while accident vic-
t!Jns were still inside, grabbed a purse
containing $30,000 worlh of jewels and
raced away through a crowd of curious
onlookers.
Police said the daring theft occurred
Sunday near the heart of the Hough area.
Mrs. Clara Meisal, who suffered two
broken legs in the accident, told police
someone from the crowd opened the door
of the car and snatched her purse from
beside her. She said jewerly valued at
$30,000 was In the p~rse.
commit murder. er made any olher inv~ment until be
Police. RSP,>nded to a call cf 1'1fman has the official approvals. Once he"ha1
. with a · iun" ~t' Bryarit's home. ' I hose,, it's a simple matter to bolTOW' the
When two officers arrived-~at -the··-money he need! and time his actions .,
residence. they claim Bryant r1n out of lhat the lots go onto the official record
the garage and poµited .a gun at Officer after March 1, when lhe taxes would shift
Fred McLean. from open land to land approved for Jots.
McLean said he lold the suspect lo put and in time for the "prime selling: seasom
the gu n down four times but Bryant-only in laJe 'p.ri ng and early summer.
moved back into the garage' and kneeled As Berliner also poi nts out, Utt main.
down with the weapon still pointed at· the support for the whole liCheme comes
officer. from the Jack of state or locaJ law which
Officer Mark Thompson, who had mov-wou!d recognize the community's need
ed into a position alongside lhe garage, for intelligent land use. -11
saw Bryant cock the revolver. He fifed "Today," Berliner has written, "state
his s er v Ice revolver, shooting off and local goVernments proceed en the
Bryant's right thumb. premise that 1£ the developer can sell bis
As the bullet !truck the suspcct's hand Jots, even to obvious suckers, with no aae
his weapon went off but no one was in-In mind, there Is no public interest in
jure<t. preventing him .from doing~·" ·
El Rancho has the hottest price in town!
•
DOLLY MADISON'S
LUNCH BOX TREATS!
••••••••••••••••••••••
Never mind the price on the package. , • our pri,ce is tOc for these lovely f illed cakes tha.t tht kids enjoy AO very, very much I
Kellogg's Pop Tarts ............... 39e Quaker Oats .................. '. ......... 59•
Toaster pastry in a. variety of flavors! 11 oz. pkg. Start the morni~g right! Quick or Reg .... 42 oz:.
(i r a p e s .......... 1.T.~~~ ....•......•.... 15 ~
Plump and ripe ... bursting with flavor lbat makes them welcome at lunch time-or anytime!
Meal makers from the Butcher Shop !
Pork Chops ...... ~~.~ ........... 89~
So Jean and flavorful I T17. them fixed with Shake 'n' Bake for Pork .•• l 9c per pkg.
Stuffed Pork Chops ............. m DRESSING ...................... s1.09 ~
Ready f or the oven ••• all you need to do is bake them ••. and enjoy the fine flavor!
Turley Birds ................... : ....... 25:. Stewing Chickens .................. 4t·
Turkey' meat in a convenient Conn! )fin • .roz. ea. Big ones ... d to 6 lb .•.. for delicious frica..,!ecf
Superior Tamales .... : ......... Ar OUR DELICATESSEN : .... ~ ....... 4,,, 89C
Let one meal echo the romance o[ ?i'texlco.,. wiLh tamales in the spotlight! 8 or.each.
. .
Pricta in effect Mon., Tue1., Wtd.,
Sept. II, tz, 13. No 1alu to deal<rt.
•,
AUi.': s.11111 111<1 Hantio;ton Dr. ([I ll'ndlO Clllllr)
PASADEJIA:
320 Wiii Colllldo BIW.
.SOUlll l'ISADDIA:
f ,..,... ""'· ltonti•i\O!I Dr.
HUllTINGTON 8fACll:
Worner 1nd Al1onquin (Bol!dw•lk (•· :··\
NEWPORT WCH:
, 2727 N..,.rt BIW. Ind _=-::--2555 ·EalJlluH Dr. (Eatblull ~ll•it c.nllL
•
• •
1 -
American _1 Bofilhers .. Pour It
~--~~-·~~~~ .... on Reds ~·/
• Ft. Sill's Okla . range division
tows wrecked car bodies to its ar-
tillery target range and blows them
to bits: 11We purchase between 1,000
and 1,100 wrecked auto bodies from
wrecking dealers each year,'' says
Copt. Goy R. Wright Jr., opera-
tions officer for the range division.
Wright s3id the wrecks make #De
targets because they explode Into
a large ~btll when-a dlrect bit
is made. • Golwlel -r's 811! birthday
Th~sday cau·ght him unawares,
his daughter, Molu said. But the
nationally famous news broadcast-
er of former years zestfully ate a
piece of the· birthday cake served
at his home in Miami. Heatter gets
about house in a wheelchair after
fighting off an attack of double
pnewnonia during a six-week bos--
pital stay. His daughter said poor
eyesight interferes with bis keeir -
ing up wilb world events such as·
he used lo broadcast on the Mu-·
Russians l\ill!ke-Comebaek,
LandLunal6ontheMoon
-1ira1 Network ID!ti!· he retired In
1961.
.
MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet Union's
latest mOn probe, Luna 16, landed , a
rocket on the moon Sunday and trans-
mitted "excellent" test picblrel from the
Sea Gt Fertlllly 11111 "making lltudlea."
lure 1 prediction.
That was the ~n during the
Luns u mission, helped aloq by hints to
that eUect by Soviet space uperts. • Because of a traffic jam, Protl-
dont,Nbion has acquired eight new
neckties In Chicago. He jumped out
ol bll car when bis motorcade was
stalled In the Loop Thursday and
walked a block lo the Marshall
Field & Co. store. There he picked
out seven four-in-hand cravats and
1be Soviets did not announce the cle-
tsil.s of Luna 16'1 tasb, but a n!port from
the Weit German spoce
0
obe<rvatory at
Boclnnn said the craft traminitted "e•·
cellent" test pictures upon landing.
' one bow tie with .price tags totaling
around $70. It being presidential
-·tradition-that-the-chief-executive
carries no ready cash, an aide pick-
ed up the tab.
The soft-landing at 8:18 a.m. Sunday
marked a Soviet comeback from the
failure of Luna 15, which We.stern space
erperts sai<I crasootrurthe moon Iii JU1y,
1969, while racing Neil A. Armstrong's
Apollo 11 mission to the surface.
Man Sets Seff ·
Afire to Mar
Italy Ceremony
ROME (UP!) · -An · uilemployed
Neapolitan marred celebratiOns of the centena~ of Italian unity Sunday by
tcylng to burn himsell for the .thlnl time
in two months.
-
• Humorist S. J. Perelman, 66, best
known for bis sardonic commen-
tary on the American scene, says
he will move to London next month
permanently from New York. Call-
ing England "a far more fational
society .than our own," Perelman
said, "Today, the news in this
country is so filled with insanity
and violence that the newspapers,
from which I derive many of my
ideas, have scant room for the sort
of thing that turns me on." He said
Thursdoy he had sold the 91-acre
farm in Bucks County, Pa., which
he and nine other-inlaws, the late
Nathanael West, bought In 1932,
and ~tanned to move to London on
Oct, 21. Perelman, born In Brook-
lYn, has written 18 books. including
"Parlor, Bedlam and Bath,"
''Westward. Ha!'' and the recently
published "Baby, tt'1 Cold Inside."
Luna 16 also was the fint Soviet
spacecraft to touch down in the lunar
laridscape since Luna 13 in December,
1966.
That was the heyday of Soviet lunar ex-
ploration, when Russian moonshots were
coming four and five times a year and
America's prospects of winning the moon
race seemed dim.
The <>fficial Ta~ News Agency said
Luna.'1 earth controllers coued the craft
down gently by remote control of its
braking engines which set the silver
Sputnik down in stages like a jack in
reverse.
The agency pinpointed its landing spot
in selenographic coordinates as O degrees
41 minates south latitude and 56 degrees
18 minutes east longitude, "in the area of
the Sea <>f Fertility."
"Luna 16 has started making studies of
the moon's surface," it said.
There was no indication whether the
craft would attempt to scoop samples of
moon.soil and blast off again for earth.
Space sources in Moscow declined to ven·
About 30 persons quickly overpowered
the man and ·put <>ut the flamea . Docton
said he su[fer<d lint and second degree
bums on his bands.
The incident occurred on the white
marble steps of the Victor Emmanuel
Memorial on the Piazza Venezia minutes
before President Giuseppe Saragat ar-
rived to lay a wreath oo the tomb of
Italy's unknown soldier. The ceremony
was one of several marking the looth a~
niversary of the Italian annexation of
Rome.
Police Identified the man as Giorgio
7.occolella, 25, a father of six. They said
he doused himsell with gasoline near
Saragat's residell:e July 29 and again
Sept. 11, but wu atopped by police each
time before he could set himself on fire.
Police said 1.occolella said he wanted to
draw attention to hia unemployment, but
when <>fftclals found him a job with a
Naples construction company he did not
show up tor wort.
Hail, Wind Lash Northeast
Warm Weather Making Comeback in Most of Nation
c.ntoml•
'
I PI WlAfMI• f'OT<ICIST<!) ,..
Molt" aunnr .....,. Utitrt v1rLPl4
..... """' 911111 1Mml111 """'" '*""" lflt ... lttlY 10 te II ltflots 111 ....,_
ftdrf' MW r.-..t. Hiii\ toety N.
C.1ttl ~ ,,,. """" •
..... iflltflll ~hHW T-fl"MI
U .. II. '#.,_ ~1tuni 61,
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'"' .... ttnl _,.... "' "" GllflffV .._. ..... ". _, .. ,,...... '"*'
""9f'•llY """"' ...... """" _,,.,... ~lfw•l'I ~I,,,.._
-.... """""' '"' •IMll """" ..... "" .i.1 .. ll•ttl.
Hill lfllll MJl11'19 r1IM "'°""11tcl !ft
fllt '*1tlMtt •ITfl """*"..,_ ~
S .. f'ftl IM wt "'1tll~ wtndll "°'' ... Utt, .... -... es wi-tr1. A• aw c:1t1,., w1 .... w
MOMOAY ~!'ellfl'tt, Mid\,, llMfhl ~ lfldl " ~ l'l!tf! ............ t:IM1.M. J.1_,.::-::.''C:• Mm! tl)lll l)Wllkl SftW :liiifr ._ ••• •-"•• • 0/16"1.tll. 1 0,7 ~ """ '9llthln! sl.lft 1nd
TVllDAY muefl rt1 tl\t MIH!ttlllt>I V1!1t1 Ind
"'"' Mith ............ l ::i.1.m. ••• Thl/NlffWl-r• OCCillftd ll'O!l'I fl'lt Flftt low .............. ll;Jll,m, 0.J mklClll MIHIM"' ... V1llfY i. 1t1t llllW
1111' ·-t!• I .flt. .... f !fl l.m. Gr11t l tltM f'tllloll Wlffl I ftw 111 rM ""°" -. 111u ,,,.., t.1t-1.1Jt '""' 111:~""
71
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J
VOL 63, NO. 226, l SECTI ONS; 34 PA~ES ' . ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNtA ( •. ~NOAY,. SE~BB! 2t. 1970 ' :TEN -~
• • , ' '
' '
Jordan C ..
.. f ·ISIS. ·Worsens·
. .
From Wl:tt Strvieet
A new ce.iise-fire order' In the sUslw
clvi!·war in Jordan was ordered by King
Hus.seiii today, as Syrian. A(m~ 'tank
forces ·invaded the embattled nation for a
aeciind,tifl)e since fighting broke oot. ·TlJe command to stop fighling 'Was' to
be ·e~fecti.ve ·at 11:15 a.m. tPDT ) .• but· the '' sltuatidn~in and around the liberal Middle
East" nalion was deteriorating tiy the
hour.1 •
P;e!ident Nixon ordered paratroopers
slat10ned in West Germany onto a limited
alert in case even t.s make evacuation of
Council Eyes
Me adow lark
r
A irport Row~
.~Meadowlark Airport contnlversy is ,
expected to .take off again tonight' when
the Runtington Beach.Cit)' qo~i\ 'mttu.
Two groups are expected to talk about
the Meadowlark· situation, but ·no one is •
prediqing what the_:_!:ity council wi!L_~o
about it.
Ken Ha1:1lkr leader of the Citizens .
Against Increased Airport Hazards, a
group of homeowners su rrounding the
Meadowlark field , said his people would
pres'ent.several proposals on how to curb
"'hat they feel are certain dangers at the
airport.
Tonight.-homeowners will ask. the coun·
ell to order re moval of the airfield's· ni ght•
lights · which a . ~pokeSm11n for · the
Califucnia · Aeron~'uti,ca · Board ·baa said·
ire unsafe.
Another report will be presented. by
Bob Dingw11ll. head or a (ive-man-com·
mittee .appoialed by ~-city· council to
atudy·the ·air:pprt controvt!rsf.
Dingwall said he would give a ·status
report. on his comniittee ~ork, but Would
not reromn:iend any council action as yet.
A large number of homeowners have
complained to tt.e ci~y· about , the , in-
stallAtiOn this summer of nigh~ lights and
a · 300..ioot runway extension aL--the.
Meadowlark field.
They.said both items had increased the
hazard to homes around the area because
p\al)es were approaching the field at a
lower le vel and flying low over nearby
power Jines. .. .
Jnitial complainl'! by the homeowners
caused the council to setup Dingwa!J"s
committee, but in recent weeks the
homeowners have complained that the
commlttee·is·nnt--moving·fa!lt enough-, -
Dingwall did have the runway ex-
tension painted to Warn pilots not to land
on it. but homeowners say pilots use it
(or landi ngs anyway.
Dingwall h11s stated any decisions his
committee makes will be based on, "fact
and not em'otlon."
The ai rpqrt study committee.will meet
at 7:31.l p.n\.,,,.Thursday. in the city hall
administrative annex. with officials from
Southern· California Edison Company tn
discuss the power lines a r o u n d
Meadqwlark.
the e~~ted 408( Americans 0ln"Jo"rd~n -Lei"ders' on bolh sides-·~ Hussein's Jordan time)· ·will be
. includ,iiig; 3t;·hl~~cking ho!tag~ -im· •Royal Armf.".chJefs. and ".the guerrillas'. ·1 declared.
peratlve: , . Soviet-armed PalMtine WbefatlM Army "This is the last wanting to you .,, . "
· .A· W):ii_te Houae, spok~man emttba¥zed -· enCour'aged •their trOOpe in the bl~y" Radio· Amman. anftounced --that' PLA
that no direct in~en_tion is anticipated : batUe · lo-ol •,ooo men incl• .. u.... tanks, -a ~lure the liraeli 14rJemment· open· · · • ... ~ if UUUJA
ly cri(icitkd _ but eve11ls, were being ; Jordanian ·military 19~ei;:nor~ ~ars~!ll .... aopqred.cars and.•rtil!u.Y covering their
Watcbed 'as they llev~.. . -. -.Habes Al-Majali gave .the PLA troops a adVancr:-bi1l~~_rinto1JorClan-at--
1King HuSsein'' ctase-fire order · Was 21h·hour ultill"!atum, ·even' while "the Arab·: R.amtha,~:on the 'bO.rlier,. 50, miles 'ft:pm
one more if', a teries g_iV~n· during ... 'the • states considered a summit conference Amman.
past three days and broken U1 e'<!ecy <;ue. · on the war. Majali congratulated his own 40th
Government.1 if\ the ~e East arid · "Everyone who dOes JJ>t aurtepder and Brigade for its valor ini holdiflg 'off the in-
t~roughout ·the ~r~ <appealed to both hand over his weapons or who fires on vaders, who Syrian1 Pr"e:Sident Nureddin .
11det1 ·to slop fighting .. , the armed forces after this tliil.e' l4 p.m. (See JORDAN, P•&e·l) .. ~ ..
One From,, B eacla Seal ·Beach
.Coun~y De.p ttties
_H. _ ·-.. · · · .. Ring Cracked · e· ld· ·1· n Burgl~ar· y -Dl;trict .... , .. r-·· ·i·v~stlg•.'~" .nd · · the Seal Beach police today cracked .what
. · they-claim was· a widespread. proatilutidn
I : ~ , ring With• the a'rre;!J( dflf(lur Pf:rsbrts W~'
i • •By "JACK· BROBACK ~p1;r~ment said bo~ ·~n ·were . spotted allegedly used the ·R~ Cari<lle l)ir'\n:Se_al ·
01· ~ °""-~' ... lllH . 'd .. _ ... __ ,_ v· ' I b'-.. --. tli-. ~a~h ' as, he~dquarte'rs~ fGr · their -f_C· . . 'J';wo. Orange ColJnty 'deputy sh~. 1ns1 e 1:1ie ~Nn Je)Oic u 11111.lM: in. 11'1:'. tl vlt\es. , i •
jallcd~Subday as -sw:pe:cts .Jn-an-at· -early_mornt!ll hnw.l:..bL..tbe ·club's ·go!( tempted burglarY' ol the Mi.pr 'ViejG pro, Roge. r Belanger~ .. , . · Bticked ·by Anaheim-police,. the . in-Cou v.estigators ended a · two-week probe by ntry Club, are, qut on bail to d a Y · .Be:laoger said he. was on his wa y home booking · alleged ringleader George Lee and will be questioned. a boo. l. ' othe!' d ·d b he he h · -an .. rove y w re ,!Jaw t e 11ecur1ty Van Horne, 29, of Long.Beac.h, on charges burglaries in the area, sheriff's depart· · · ment investigators said. ·. · • car parked. He saw two men inside, knew of conspiracy to engage in prQStitution.
Deputy Fi-ederick B. Irvine, 40. of l.JI they ·didn'l have.a key and aflt.r watching .Also named in.complaint,s filed today in
Habra v.:as captured SUnday .morninc f?r a few min1,1tes, calle:d_the _1heriff's ·of.· West Or~n~e·. <;ounty Ml}J\ici,pal ' Court
near Lake Elsinore ,after officers· said he rice we~e Brenpa .Joyce..:...Ht~i~. '24, of
had com'mandeered, a ·sheriff's patrol car . e).. the time . deputies~ arriv~. the.· two·· d"enflower. Leslie, Ruth. ,StOthe~ •. 25,. of
' Pros titut ion ·
Kitifis :oJ .t tie ' surf ..
•' I '
Brad:oMeCault .(left) ·of N~wport Beach· aru1-eorky-Carroll ·of-Dana
Point ~re all smile~_after c8ptucing the two top a:;r.rards.Sunday in· th•
12th annual U.S. Surfboard Championships at Huntington Beach._Mc·
Caull won the men!s-division, upset(ing Carroll, whose overall J?'er·
formance .during the weekend ·brought him the Duke Kahanamoku
Trophy. as'lhe-b•sl all-around surfer !or the filth straight year. (See
Spotts, ~age 25.')
and fled. men ·had left lhe ·clul)hOuse. . _ 1 • Redondo Beacli ,nd .Barbara C<inlee, 13,
·DeputY-Arthur E. Duncan, 34, of H"un-lrvir:ie .was·,fo.und al "tlle ·golr -~se · of.1Certiios .. ~t ;i~ ex~tei;i :~l'fal'.all ·f~ur I .. ' ... d D· . I d w· ting~n Beach, was arrested in the · nia intenance yard ne~r the San• Qiego . dJ!fend~~ts will b:e arr'°.ignedJa\,Cr toda y. ntrepl , eA are mner. ~Wion Viejo area and surrendertd ~1reeway .. •1:H~ de~~~·as~edl him~to get , _ Investiif1~r~ il~l~ge ,t~e.-gl~\s' were · · · U • . . ' , . "
without incident.. · into the , patrol car-ind· returnm\ tn· the · ")embers ~f r a,. ·t'cts~ Of call, 'Iris who ·~ ~ ;. • ·.. , \ .) . . .
rBplh·men ·Wt_r'\ltl)"tl'KMMlight1ng" on their clolNtomt'"'With them~.i:) "11' • -, .~· '• -~;1~~M1 , '.IX'L-!demaOd . ~1 W~itjt(W ~~ ~1\ \."'. • t:"Y{, ;··~"\·:· 'q "'•' 1 off duty hours IS security cuarda for the Onee-1here, lhe.v laid lie ·menaCed "Sgt., dflln~e county ~nd-~s A'llgeles County I ·€ T b ' R Ii
l\liMion Viejo Com1>4t!y. Jake Riviere witja· ., ptltol end rom· lott tions. It was mdacat.ed tod•Y thll n ·· ' up ...... ra out U· ng · , Lt.· Richard Drake: of the sbertff's tSee DEPl.l'l'ID, Pip ZJ thet'e may be further arrests. ~ , "-'-· ·• -.---, - -_;._
Cap d Beach Plane Crash
Kills Educat ion Chief
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of .... Dtll'r ,Hilt '''"
A -school superintendent from Monarch
Bay w.as killed in the fnggy early morn-
ing darkness Saturday when his light
plane ,crashed intn .a Ca pistrano Beach
laundromat, starting a fire and blowing a
mother in-an-adjacenl.apattmt.nt through
the wall.
Authorities said the pilot victim, Frank
Raymond Addis. 42, of 32631 Empress
Way, South Laguna , was en route to a
football game at Big Pine near Bishop.
He' became superintendent of the Big
Pine Unified School District in July.
Witnesses said Addis' new plane, a
Beach Bonanza V35, took off in the fog at
aboot· 5:40 a.m. from Capistrano Airport1 ci rcled the field once and crashed
throogh the roof of the Sav·More Laun·
dromat, 34.241 Doheny Perk Road in the
R•l•ttd Storl t t,
Photo, P1,. l
business district of Capistrano Beach.
The explosive crash and de\1astating
fi re did an estimated $56,000 damage.
The -plane Jogs was probably about
another $40,000.
Authorities have no good clue yet as to
what might have caused the crash other
than poor visibility. Both Add is and tht.
plane were incinerated in the fierce blize
which destroyed not only the laundromat
and adjacent apartment but badly
damaged the Blue-Pefl&•flFJliliUNnt
which had a common wall.
Edith Sullenberger, 34, her infant
daughter and mother, Donna Sullen-
berger, 59, who managed the laundromat,
(See CRASH,.P11e l)
Van Horne was arrested .1t the_ Red · ~ .
Candle bar. 1'ie three women hre ar-·'
rtsted in Anaheim. Sped1J"lo tlte DAILY PILOT
BribeJ"y Ruling
Ag ain Dela yed
A rilling on the guilt or innocence of an
Arizona lan.d devel~pe:r accused of t~ •t·
tempted bribery of former . Huntington
Beach mayor Jack Green was delayed
again tGda y in Superior Court.
Judge James F. Judge d!ferred his
verdict on· bribe ry charges filed against
William Denny New , 66, of Phoenix until
Oct. 5.
New is accused of nffering Green $4,000
In return for the ex-mayor's approval of
a proposed zone charige on valuable in-
dlistrial land near Gothard Street and
Slater Avenue in Huntington Beach.
Green .. on police. ins:tructlonii, taped his
conversations with N~w while the real
estatt: operator allegedly made ofters or
"campaign contributions!'· to ·lhe city of.
ficial.
"'"""""' ~
NEWPORT, R.I. -In a dramatic
turnabout Newport Beach sklppef Bill
P'icker's ·'intrepid today was declared
winner or the second America '11 Cup Race
sallcd Sunda y.when· the New YOr.k Y.acht
Club's race committee .disqualified Aus:·
triilla 's winniilg Gri!tel II.· ·
·\Detail$ and ·j>hotos of Sunday'.s raCe
and DAILY PILOT Boating Editor Almon
Lockabey's full accounl of tlit 'race action
appear today on the Boating. Page~ on
P.age LJS.) · • • . .
• The race committee ·Upheld the protest
or defender Intrepid: that ahe' had been
foured when the'tw01boat.s collided at the
startirig gun~Sunda)'. •
TM ruling ga ve Intrepid a 2 to O lead·in
the--1:>ett:of·1even · 1efl.es instead of the
No P rotest Seen
In Hunting ton
Uptown P r oj ect
Dqwit.totffl PfOP!!rtY _!l~ers won't at·
I.end tonight's Hilntington Beach City
Council'mettii,1 to' oppose' the Top of the
Pier• plan J ·
"T1tere's no point in· l\,"·said Bob Tel'·
ry. chief spokesman for the downtow~
faction. "Our cue w,as pretty well solved
list week . J Uilftk. councilmen have made
up their minds .:'
Last week the: council approved the
start of' e&d'emna tion p r o c e e·d l n· g 1 ·
a111in~ -t4 . acres of .downtgwn . prnperty
whiCh will be turned into a 1;171-spac.e
parking lot. ' 1
Downtown property owners had tried t:>
convince the council. to, let prlv'ate en· ·
terpriH redevelop the area , but were
unable tO compJy witti,__ council re-
·quirements. ,
"We don '.l thlrik ~requests lheY•made
of us wert fair." Terry said. "But now l
gutas ·we'll"just ·ao ·to court to ·!d who is '
r!Chl or·wro,.."
I '
" I I l • ' I ; , ~Y, ~5; Se~;-_~n Fi~·
By.'.GB~; .B8~Iy~·~i
'C]N!:iNNAri (\JPW -'A ~S,\'!_or-old'
bby1war'i!rm!Y.burnSI early ~y1
"'hen· a ll""P ol , ~et/'· ~' N'' back and arms will! a Damrrilole gNe
and 1et him afire. ·• ; • , '
BNCe · Armsteid was ·tn r"lr ~cMdltiM1
lodoy ·•t. 11\flplla\ l!1d told po~he 'aiid'
•·friend Were 1ccuHcl,of.~rock..thrOwin&, ~IUll O(boyt. r,.,m11oUOll !fie boys
boats each being J. to ·1. · .
The iAustralian • boat fi!Ushed ·first In
Sunday's rape. by a HtUe more than •
minute -the • firs( . \tjctor.y for the
cha llenger. since the nriginal Grete.I in
1962. ' ' The two 12-meter boats . race again
Tuesday over. the 24.3 ,mile course.·
This is the. second prOtest.
·&(h skippers made .a protest ln ·the
opening race nver a near collision• at the
start. The protesL• were not allowed.
Jim Hardy, Gretel ti's skipper, satd, "I
don 't see how they could have re.ebed
that verdict. But I am riot surpflied.
They want to keep the cup.".
""Then he resumed tinkering·o:t the 'hull
of the AU.stralian yacht.
It was f.be first Ume a ·cup· yacht ·that
finished second had won On a pre>Ce!t
since the U.S. defender beat Valkyrie III
of·BritaiR in the Wies in 1815. V~kjrie
was simialrly disqualified in, one'race.
Jaycees S ur fing
Con test Slated · ·
' ' Another su rf meet h1 scheduled In' Htm•
tington Beach, lhis tlmt! at Bolu:Cbic1
State Beach, Saturday.
It's the annual Loi Alamitc.Roumoor
Jaycees surfing contest (or yoi.itba aged
12·18. The conlest starts at a a.m .. wttb
each surfer riding a series of three
wa ves.
Surfing will take place in frOnt of
lifeguard tower 21 at ~ls.a Chica.
, .' .. we.•t1'er ".' .. ,
Sunny skits with-occa!ioniJ• Jow
clouds along the.1ahore ia the• fart
f11r Tueaday, wttb coastal temper•
tures·fn the "70's·anct inland 'rUd~
ings &hooting up to 90 degrees. ,"
INSmE TOD-'Y
Thrte lighttr-thmwzir 'ad~· I ' ,, • hlt:<r• todk •ff from Lofla l•l<m<I
Sunday cm o transctto .. lic p boltoon~odl/Mt'1/. •Wtrad.s· P,rmit-
ti1'g. they wtU rtach-Etc'rQJ>e . tt& ~
1b:' to 16 days. Set .storv PQf1t 5. --CllKlll" U. -,_ -...... --·-
" I
' -,, • • • • -•
-. -. ................. --. IY'¥14 "rt:w D ------· .. -. -. .,_.. .... ,,.,.
SILHOUETTE D l ,Y F L~ES, Fl!llMEll IATTLE IL~E AFTER P~ANE PLl!MMETID INTO:CAPISTRANO i1A~k LAUNi>ROMA'I'.
. ·~WU beJiev!d to 'be'.a~l)'l>t ol'
• 1lue II Aimllead and lighted a ma\ctilo
" It. Anllltead 's oin\l>lriiOn -,Ills "1lrl'
q!I ~rolled.the 1<e11a1•r In the 1rus lo
1niotlitr the rlomea., . , •
·--·--... .._ " ........... ..,
' t ' .
..... ... -•• .· -t r --·---..
• I OAltV PILOT M
, Policemen,
Firemen
Ask Raises
By TERRY COVILLE
01 .. Dlltr ,.,. '""
Huntington Beach policemen • n d
firemen will return lo the city council
tonilbt lo ..,k what they thoqht they
were getlin& tut week -an 11 percent
pay !ncrea1< plua friql beneflll.
A week ago the COWICU lp>red an
agreement • reached between C.i t y
Administrator Doyle Miller and police
and fire ntgotiaton, lnltn4 &rutln& an
.icro:1 the board 1.21 percent PIY . In:
crease without mention of lrinie beneflll.
"We negotiated !n 1ood f1tth wlth the
undefltan.din& thlit we were t.alkinC with
an agent of the city councU,'' Officer Don
J enkina. one or the police neaoUaton,
iaid \His mornin&.
'. ,
,. r-
•
War C...-lsl• •
Summit Meeting
-1 ~
Of Arabs Called
CAIRO (AP ) -Kings and presidents of
lhe Arab world have been 1ummoned to
Cairo for a summit conference Tuesday
tn seek an end to the civil War 4n Jordan
and to keep it from spreading into an in·
ternational conflict. '
Radio Cairo said Monday all Ara b
leaders were com ing ucept President
Ahmed Hassen el-Bakr nf Iraq. The
Egyptians accused Iraq earlier In the da y
of upsetting a weekend cease-fire in
Jordan.
The broadcasl said King Hussein of
Jordan and President Noureddin Atassi
of Syria had confirmed their intentions to
attend ttie meeting. However, Radio
Da01ascus later said Atassi ~uld not at-
tend the conference, but wculd be in
Cairn. .
•
The Cairo broadcast said Ya51r Arafat1 leader or the overall guerrllla cammand
-I.be_ ~ales.tine Llberatlon Organiullon
-also ii e1pected tc attend. _
If so , the meeting presumably would
bring HUll<ln aod Arafat lo(ether for the
fir1t time since the fighting broke out In
Jordan last Thursda;y.
The ·broadcast did not say why B1kr
ct Iraq was oot attending.
In its attack on .1.raq earlier, Egypt
claimed that it created a misun·
derttanding betwttn the Jcrdans and the
PalesUnians of the ceue-fire Nauer pro-
posed on Saturday.
nle authori£ative newspaper Al Ahram
of Qairo said Arafat wu relytn1 on Iraq's
Rad'IO B1ghdad to announce his oblervan~
Ce of the cease-fire but that Ba&hdad fail-
ed to do so on the pretext that ils broad·
casting equipment had broken down .
----''-We-are ·-gotng-to-a1Jc--thlt--the-
rnemorand1 of apeement •i&ned by us • DAIL'f ,ILOT lttH ""'"
CREWS CLEAN UP RUBBLE AFTER PLANE 'CRASH IN CAPISTRANO BEACH
The Damasc us broadcast quoting
Syria's Min istry of Infor mation said
Atassl had already left for Cairtl "to hold
urgent talks on means or stopping cur·
rent atrocities against the Palestinian
guerrillas in Jordan."
Riidio Baghdad responded to Al
Ahram's version by broadcasting a denial
by the Central Commi ttee or the
Palestine Liberation Organization that
Arafat had at any time accepted a cease·
fire in the civil war.
and the city adtnlnistr1tor be approved,"
Jenkins explained.
-Thlt -agreenien( called for an 11 iier·
·cent blanket pay boOlt, pl111 IUCb other
benefits as:
-Initiation of u educational lncenlivt
program by 'Jan. I.
-More haurd and flight PIY for pilots
and obse.rvors on the two police
helicop161.
-ffiaher pay for motorcycle oUicen.
-ln<:reued VICltioltl to be 12 wortin&
daya for men with flve years or leu in
the department, 14 worktni daya ror
members wttb 1-10 yeara, I& wo:-kin&
days for-men wtth 11-15 yun u.perle.ict,
and 20 working days for U.. with more
than 16 yean on the department:
The legal firm of Parker and Dally of
Pomona will represent the poli~men
befor< the council tonight.
Firemen will also renew effort.a to 1aln
higher pay lnCrea1e1. They had reported-
ly agreed to increas'ea ranging from Jl
percent to 13 percent, but also received
cnly8.25 percent.
Miller took a neutral stand today on the
wage di,Jputes. "At this st.are I'm ntUlraL
J signed the memoranda of agreement.,
the council felt otherwlae."
Jt was. learned last week that police
had entered wage ne.goUationl with a re-
quest for a 16 percent pay hike plus other
fringe benefits. But after talks with ad-
ministrators the policemen bad agreed to
an 11 percent increase and fringe benefits
as outlined in the memoranda.
Huntington Oil
Dispute Hearing
Delay Approved
' Both 1ide1 in the Huntlnaton Belch
shoreline dispute today agreed to · 1
further delay of a pretrral hearing in the
Superior Court lawsuit filed by the city
against several oil companies and pro-
perty owners.
Judge Hannon G. Scoville set Oct. 7 as Uie ·date On WhK:h be will hear Objections
by attorneys for four oil comi>anit1
against the complaint filed list June I .
1 The city is lttkin& COl!/t 1pproval of it.t
argu,nent that nearly three miles of
privitt:Jy awned shoreline north of the
rnunicipal pier ihould be cpen to the
public al all tlmes.
The defendants st.a~ In their demurrer
that the city's action as cuttined in tne
lawsuit i! •·uncertain, ambisuous J.nd
unintelligible." .
Arguments filed by the Huntingltln
Beach Co., Standard Oil Co. of C1lilorni1,
Huntington Pacific Cor,. and Flucr-Hun·
tington include the contention that the ci·
ty has failed to adequately identify
owners of shoreline prOP,erty.
City plans Include the creation or a
permanent public recreational easement
over the beach and the barring of Its
owners from reatricUon of the 1boreUne
to private use.
DAILY PILOT
C)ll;it.l'IG!!i COAIT PUILli l'llNG C()MP,t."IT
••\i1rt N. 'W1t4
,, .. ltl.,.t -,UtlullMI'
J ,,i.; •· Cu1l1v
V•"' Pr .. ldtiol •"' ..,t r . .l't l "'-""""'
Tho ... 11 IC11wil
l:t llflr
11.0,..•1 A. fr,lv,,i.;~, ....,.,,,,i... f.1..,.r
Ah~ o;,~;~
wmt O••nte c:-1y IEdllor
' A11tort W. l•l•1
AuM..i.i. €dhtr
N•lllri .. t1t1 1.-11 OHil•
171?S ltt '~ l 1vl1wt rd
#o\1lli119 ,.,,,,, .. : ,,0 .••• 7t0, t 1•••
Otti•r Offlc ..
Ltlll"ll 111d'I: Ut .. w•ir ""-, '-'" MHtl no Wut 11¥ ,,.~ ..
If-I .. Kl'll 1f1J WHI 11(11111 l l'llkW• ..
'"' C""*"lf: .)Ill No"~ 11 Ct"'ltio •1itl
..
Piiot Dl11, But Two Women, Biby and Dot E1c1pe; D1m19e E1tim1t1d 1t $9',000
Manson 'Liked Knives'
Tate Witness Testifies _
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Chari., M.
M>naon "liked kniv .. better than ...... "
a wl~ testified at the Sharon Tate
mw-dtt trial today.
Former motorcycli aang leader Danny
DeCarlo, Jn hi!: fourth d1y 11 a pro-
secution witoeis at the trial, Wei Manson
commanded coniplete attenilon from his
follcwen at hill Spahn movie ranch com·
mune in a rur1l arta ncrthwest of Los
Angeles.
"Once.'' said DeCarlo, "a couple of
breads interrupted him while he was
talking .•. he threw a bowl of rice at
them .•• he told them he didn't want to
be inten-upted .•• that they 1 h o u 1 d
listen."
Deelrlo said there were few guns at
the ranch before. he came, bringing his
own collection, and he pld of Manson :
"He likedJmives better than guru:."
Manson, 35, and three young women co-
Valley Officials
Search for Ne ·w
Resident Beauty
Fountain Valley cfficials are on the
lookout this week for lovely young ladies
to aucceed Miss Rosemary Kelley as the
city's queen for 'l971.
The deadline for entering the Miu:
Fountain Valley Page1nt is midnight
saturd.1y. The queen will be choae n Oct.
18.
Girls interested in the Miu Fountain
Valley · title. muat. meeL tbtle .qualifica-
tions : ~ust not have been a previous Miss
Fountain Valier.
-Must be between the ages of 17 and
21.
-Can't be married.
-Must be a resident of Utt city.
-Prepare a three minute talk or talent
presentation.
-Must be available to represent Faun~
tain Valley throughout her reign at the
request of the chamber of commerce.
-Judging will be done in bathing sulta
and formal gowns.
The Miss Fountain Valley Pageant is
sponsored by the chamber of commerce_
and directed by the wcmen's division of
the chamber. Entry applications for the
event are aviilable al the fellowing ·11ix
locations: Fountain of Youth Beauty
Salon, Warner Avenue and Magnolia
Street: Bella Donna Beauty Salon,
Magnolia and Edinger Avenue ; Fount~in
Valley Library ; Founllln Valley H1.gh
School ; Los Amigos High School,, and city
hall, 10200 Sliter Avenue.
Fro• Pqe I
DEPUTIES •..
mandeered the patrol car and took off.
He drove back to the maintenance
yard, switched to his own slltio~ wa1cn
ond fled. ·
Responding to a general 1larm, ~
Riverside deputy 1heriff1; spotted the ala·
tlon wagcn on Qie Ortega Highway
shortly after 6 a.m. and pur11u~ lrvlnfl
down the grade into the Lake Elsinore
aret1 .
When lrvine did not stop during the
pursuit. the Riverside deputies fired at
the fleeing car flatten ing the re11>r tirts.
trvine. then jumped out of the car and
held the Rivenlde officers at bay with '
rex_oly_er which he: ~ntinu.ally ~lnted 1t
hll head. thrt•teninl auicide. ·
He held tbtm c(f for two houri before. itvina in to pleas of hll wife and fellcw
Oranc• eodnfy d<pUUa who had arrived ·
•l the IOfDt, Lt.. Ruutll Hawk or the Lake Elsinore
sherUfs subltatlon sald Irvine "Dever
made an aagreuive move. toward any of
our officers." . Duncan baa bttn a deputy •herlll for
IW. )'W'l~Ht baa .recently 1trved aa •
Juvenile Hall bailiff and-sive.ral montha
aao was bliliU in the court of Superinr
JUdtt Wllllll\I S. Let of N•Wl>Ol'I BHch.
trvlne his been a deputy for 1 e v e n
yt.111 and hat been recently serving as a
fuvenile court bailiff.
defendants !ll't charged with the murder
of Miss Tate and six othel'!"in August or
1969.
'Illeir trial entered its ISl..b week today.
The stubby. mustachioed OeCarlo was
quizzed repeatedly by both the pro-
secution and defense about his drinking
habits. criminal record and motivation
for testifying. Decarlo has said he saw
Manson with • gun much like one the
state uy_1 waa used tc kill three persons
al Misa Tate'a mansion.
The prosecution tried to show that
DeCarlo was not ai; •·smashed" as he had
previously testified at his stay at the
ranch. However, the witness said under
cross-examination that he had indeed
testified he was drunk 99 percent er the
time he was there.
"My verSion of-drunk is when T'm out
tn lunch on the ground," said ,Dec arlo.
Additionally, he remiflded 1 dcreMe at·
tomey, "I smoke weed too."
OeCarlo was asked his impressions or
the: case's fifth defendant, Charles "Tex"
Watson . whc made a surprise appearan«
in court Friday. DeCarlo, who identified.
Wat.son in court, said "hf! looked skin·
nier." Watson was recently extradited
from Te1a1 to stand trial.
Huntington; Man
Dies Four Days
After Accident
• A Huntington Beach man riding in "
·small car rammed -broadside by a
garbage truck at a. C.Osta Mesa in·
tersection died Sunday, four days after
the collision .
Ralph B. Roth, 45, of 2)732 Kelvin
Lane, succumbed at Costa Me s a
Memorial Hospital at 6:2.8 a.m., ac·
cOrdi ng lo the Orange County coroner's
office.
He and the driver cf the car, Jamf:ll P.
Young, 38, cf 21181 Mirama[_ Lane. Hun•
lington Beach, Were injured at 6: 10 a.m.
Thursday in the crash on Victoria Street
at Canyon Drive. Young was nnt
hospitalittd.
The Dew'ey's Rubbish Service truck
driven by Jesus Santini. 38, shoved
Young·s 5mall ·sedan across the in·
tersection and up an embankment.
Costa Mesa police are continuing their
investigation to determine w h e t h e r
criminal charges will be filed against
Santini, who allegedly did not stop as re-
quired .
Funeral service!i for Roth will be
Wednesday at 2 p.m. in Calvary Church
cf Sanll Ana .
Roth 11 survived by his wife Patsy,
sons Michael, Gregory a.nd Pete. 1
daughter Deborah, plus a brothtr, sister
and his father.
Officers Raid
Huntington Pot
Party, Nab 13 . .
Police arres~d 13 persona and COii·
flscated marijuana and~daagerous drugs
worth tl0,.,000 ovtr the weekend ll~r
snlellln& out a pot party in the northern
part of HunUngton Beach.
Sgt. Georp ll<oek and Henry Hi~
chcock. both or the police departmentt1
Special Enforcement Detlil, took flv1
pcraons lato custody al • J,..m. Slturday
when they obetrved alleged M!'icloua
behavior at :i house on Club ~ Road
and Nuuu Drive.
Aller stiling tJ<o and a hoJf poundJ of
marljuua, the officers then moved
through the immediate .aru, 1rrtstin&
scver1l other pert0n1 on marijuana
~ses..ton cha.r~. ..
Fo.ur addlUonar~ """' lilien l~lo
CUliody 'on poa•aion chatpt whtO JR•
vt1tlgatln& offlctrt illtgedly traced 12
pounds of mariju ana and ~veritl
thousand p\lls to a house. on ~ Edin;or
Ave.
From Page 1
CRASH ...
were alseep in their one bedroom apart-
ment that is part of the laundromat
building.
It said Atassi arranged lo meet with
President Gama] Abdel Nasser of Egypt,
Col. Muammar Kadafi, chie! of Lybla 's
Revolutionary Council. and Maj. Gen.
Jaafar cl Numairi. leader of Sudan's
military government
Jordan has accused Syria of invading
northern Jordan to help Pal estinian gucr·
rillas seekln& to oust King Hussein's
government.
The broadcast accused Egypt (Ir
distorting the fac~ "In order to create a
rift among the Arab countries."
It said the Central Committee has
never left any doubt that it will "only
cease-firing when the regime or im-
perialist agents in Amman ha1 been
overthrown and replaced by a truly na·
tional authority~"
The younger wcman was blown Lhrough
the wall and cnto gravel outalde but aside
from neck burns wu not seriously in-
jured. She rushed inside and carried out
her 31/z week cld daugh(er who was not
injured. rrhe infant Was alsecp in a baby
carriage. Her empty crib was pushed
through .the wait by the explosiori.
From Page 1
JORDAN .CRISIS ..•
The ycunger Mrs . Sullenberger return-
ed lo lhe apartment and lifted a beam off
n.f her mother 's legs, said firemen, and
helped Donna Sullenberger outside.
The· senior Mrs. Sullenberger suffered
first and second degree leg burns.
Six engines from the county fire
department and a snorkel (aerial) unit
battled the 11ames for an hour and 1 half
before the fire was brought under con-
·lrol.
Bill MjniCk, coroner"s investigator. said
Addis left home a short while before the
crash and told his wife, Mary that he
planned to drive to Big Pint.
He apparenUy changed his mind and
took. the plane which he used to commute
to hl.S home en weekends. The Capistrano
Airpcrt is uncontrolled. Jt has nn contrcl
to~er er. rurlwty li1hL'I and taking nrr,
sa1d cfflc1als, i.! pretty much a mailer o!
pi lot discretion.
NG one saw him enler his single.engine
plane but his ca r was parked nearby.
Besides his widow, Addis is sur vived by
a leenage daughter, Sharon Ann, of the
family home and 11 son. Frank R. JI or
San Diego. He had been an Orange Coun-
ty resident 10 yea rs.
f'unera l services were scheduled at 3
p.m. loday at Peek Family Colonial
~uneral ~ome in Westminster with burial
in Westminster l\.Icmorial Park.
A resident of the crash area, Mr~.
Yolanda Vital. 1$835 Domingo Road. said
sht. thought the explosion of the crash
was right ilt her frcnt yard. She feared
momentarily that it was a r!Cllrrence of
the t arthquakes that had s.haken the area
several days earlier.
The .crash explosion broke out windcws
nf adJacent business buildings and lit·
le.red the street with flaming debr is.
Firemen, howe ver. were able to confine
the blaze to the buildings immediately in·
volved.
Doheny volunteer fire man, Wendell
Hill. 3402 Camino Capistrano, was a few
blocks from thl'! crash. He said he heard
a low throb and· A "thump" and then saw
Hames shooting up from the laundromat. Al~an N .. Pisiena. 20, Cam p Pendleton
l\.far1ne, said he heard the plane circli ng
ilnd the engine go dead. He was hltch·
hiking nearby.
Federal Avia!lon Agency nff ici11ls in·
vestigated the crash and sailf a
determination of cau se would be made by
the National Transportation SI (et y
Board. -
Alassi has denied moved lntc Jordan at
all.
"You are standing alone against a
mass attack unleashed on you by the
rulers of SyriR. who could not hold oul for
two hours in the Gola n Heights in 1967,"
Majali sa id.
''Hold fast in the fa ce or the ag·
gressors, as fast as ttJe steel of your
tanks ," he exhorted.
VICTORIES CLA™EO
Guerrilla sources in Baghdad anrl
Damascus proclaimed that Syrian in·
vaders -moving in a two-pronied
maneuver toward lrbid -we re
mutilating Hussein's Royal Army.
The young king has 55,000 troops
against the 32,000 guerrillas entrenched
in northern Jordan and around the capital
city of Amman.
His 40lh Brigade faces up lo 100
Russian-built tanks of two Syrian
brigades with SO British Centurian tank.~.
American Secretary of State William
P. Rogers urged the Soviets tc exercise
!heir power over the Arabs to end the
hostilities, which he branded today as Ir·
responsible and capable of drastically
broadening.
··we call upon the Syrian government
lo end immediately this intervention in
Jordan ," he sa id. "And we urge all other
concerned governments to impre.!!.!I upon
the government of Syria the necessity or
withdrawing the forces y.•hich have in-
vaded .Jordan."
SUMMIT PROPOSED
Tunisian Presldenl Habib Bourguiba
proposed a summit conference of Arab
states in cairo tc thrash but a. Jordanian
solution. and several. Including Egypt.
had accepted. But Cairo iource1 :said
Sunday the Syrian invasion ended
chances for such 111 meeting.
Cairo took two positions on the conflict
Sunday :
-Hussein should l n I e r v e n e im-
media tely tn ensure compliance wlth a
cease-fire plan worked out by Egyptian
President Gamal Abdel Nasser 11nd
reportedly accepted by ~e government
and guerrilla forces. 1;
-Iraq 's ruling Baath p1rty tricked lhe
inicrrillas into continuing to fight after
their leaders accepted the truce.
The official and public position of the
Nixon administralion h11s been one of
concern for more than <lOll Amer icans. in·
cludini: 48 out of 54 hostages held by the
Palestinian guerrillas, with the possibility
that force would be ustd If Jt was judg.
ed necessary to evacuau them.
Extra C130 transports have been pcsi·
tioned in Europe to carry the troops from·
West· Germany. The 82nd Airborne
Division, on alert at Ft. Bragg, N.C .•
relies on huge Cl41 jet transport.a as part
of the U.S. strike reserve.
All this was billed as precautionary by
Pentagon officials who said there was no
widespe.rad general a!ert. The intent ..re-
mains only the possibility of rescuin1
Americans -thought to be about 400 -
11wept up in the Jor~an fighting.
As the army briefly lifted its order to
shoot on sight Monday the women ot
Amman went into the smashed streels,
dodging sniper fire, to find food for their
families.
They ca rried shopping baskets past the
dead and wounded as King Hussein'•
army rulhlessly hunted guerrillas who
had ignored cease·fire appeals.
Snipers hidden in mnsques and on the
roofs of luxury apartment houses were
blasetd by cannon fire .
FrNA'L ~_l~HT
The fight for Amman and for the
throne is in its final stage!! and has cMt
more time and lives tha.n the two-dav
battle the king·s commanders had
forecast.
The pavements sire littered with
cartridge cases. Buildings everywhert h~ve the black hnlet--nf artillery hlt1.
Fires burn on the hillsides.
From the lnterC?nlinental Hotel you
could see an armored car systematically
pcunding a block of flats, noor by noor
after 1 sniper had been reportl'!d therl'!~
The shells went in nrange streaks lnw
across the valley and burst through the
Jiving rooms.
A sniper near the British Embassy w1s
killed: . A sol~ier a~d the army blew up
the building Ill which he wa s hiding
One sniper .got a lucky shot through the
embassy which put the transmitter tn
London out or action. The lltaff had t.n
revert to Morse code until the generalor
was repaired. A soldier standing near
journalists who went lo the embassy dur·
ing the curfew lifting was wounded by 1 sniper bullet.
The return fire was erratic. A soldier
swung his aeep-mounted machine gun at
the hotel and put a burst through th 8
hotel lobby which scattered newsmen.
Photographers have been told they will
be shot if they take pi ctures.
The problem of evacuating Weslerner1
from Amman ill 6t ill difficull. All.hough
the army is hold ing the main "irfield it is
within mortar rMge of guerrillas, whn
are new fighting desperatel y for their
lives.
JoDthos Cause ~ornadoes~1
•
Smaller Planes Being Tlirown Oui of Con~rol by 747s
• '>'
WASHlNGTON'"-(AP) -Owners and "They are the deadliest kind or aircraft
pilots of llgh\ aircraft are campaigning tn to encounter In the air. They constitute•
p11sen1~r plane and C5A cargo plane was
undenited.
restrict fllghts·of new J1.1mbo jet."' which, clesir and.present dwnger."
•11overnmeni te11ta ahow, ere.ate tornado-In a telegram In conrressmen, the "' AOPA also rleclarM.1 :
"We ·were fully aware ct W(lkit
turbulence but wt dirin 't Jc:now lt't ln-
tenalty," siy1 Richa rd Sllff, deputy rllrec-
tor Of tM f AA '1 OlJ'ht 1tandard1 1ervlrf'. like winds that can 1pin 1m1ller plants "We are deeply concerned at the threa t
out cf control. which these behemolhl or the sky appear
Tests betna completed by the Fedtral to be creating for other travelers ln the
AvtaUon AdmlniltnUon shewed the air. •
winds awlrl ·oft wingtips or the 747 .11nd "Just 11s the gnj'ernmcrit has seen ni to
CSA at speeds up1to to miles an hour and impose limil.atloni on 'Ute ,.iic n( trucQ
can I.rail behlnd ~ pllnes for miles. • (Ind buses for the safely nf all on the
The FAA hu ordered 1 five-mile hl101ways, perhaps It Is lime. to e&tJblistr
1e111ratlon at 111 Umei between the giant ''ftimilar limils on lhe. size of alrtrlft tO
Jets and pllnes wtlahlng Jeu than 300,000 preserve saltly In the air."
pounds. lt alao 11 conducting an educ1· Turbultnce gc111rated by the jumbc:I
tlonal procram ta alert pilots ot lighter Jet.s bas not bten aulgntd as lhe cause ot
1lrttaft to the-hazards of. lhe winds ..:. Any plane crash.
calltd wake turbulence er -wiilgtip B~t r~rds t1f tht N a t l o n 1 t
vortices. Transportation Stiely Bolrd show1 18
The Alrpl1ne Owners and Pilols crashtl between 1964 ind INI In which
Asaoclatlon, which r~resents fl iers or wake turbulence generated by smaUer use 139,000 ll.rcratt trr-U\e general 1vl1· eltl!ftrs was the. cause or 1 contrlbullfll
tlcn field, cti]icta to lh1s approach. --r.aor:-twenty pe:rscns ~died 1riif S4&uf';
''The Jumbo jets must be rigidly con· fered ierloUs Injuries In theai cr1tht1.
fined. rigidly regulated so everyone Although· all planes clluse •lngtlp
knows whert they iarc.". 11'.ays f\.1ai; "ortlct?5 tn some degree. FAA ofllcials
Ka.ran t, vice president of the AOP.A. aay the t1tenl cf turbulence trom the 747
'
•
Flight tests shoWed that licht aircraft
which penetrate the vortices wlUlln three
milet of the jumbo jets can be forced Into
• sudden roll of 7S degrees.
"If they fiy lnto It just righJ they coulrf
Jn Into a spin and lose control of thti!
aircraft," &aid Rcbtrt Martin, FAA "!!
chJtf of rf:(UliUon and JWOCedUrta. "The
•ortlcn are Just llu 11111• tornadoes."
'"" FAA round tbll wlnctlp VortiCe8
•re ~ danlerou• durin1 llkeoffs and
Jandlnp' whtn lllrge numl>erl of plant8
ire concentrated In limited area!. But
they 11y th•t 1pacin1 several mlnuttr
between Oi1hts 1llows crosswtndl11mt to
breik up the vQrtictt.
Tiie problem h not considered by-ih
F Ali lo be H IP'tll 11 hllfi alUlud"'
altliougll tall -the vorlla!I or bl~ ~et, do not quickly ciissl p•te w,hen formed
•l 30,COJ lttt and above where most
jetliners cruise.
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; ~DITION 1
•
~OL. 63, NO. 226: 3 SECTIONS, 34 'fA~S QAAN~~ COihm, CAUFOANIA . . . ,,. MONDAY,SEPfEMBER i 1; lt70 TEN CENTS
'
TwoCouilty
Deputies
Arrested
By JACK BROBACI!:
. OflleO. .. ltUlfll.tl'
Two Orange COunty deputy aheriffs,
jailed Sunday u suspects in an at-
tempted burglary of the MWion Viejo
Country Club, are out on bail to d a y
and will be queitioned about ·other
bQrg!aries in the area, sberlU'1 depart-
ment investigat«s aid.
Deputy Frederick B. lriine,_ 40, of La
Habra was caJitw-ed Sunday morning
near Lake Elsinore after officers said he
had commandeered a sberiH's patrol car
and fled.
Deputy Arthur E. Duncan.--34,~of-Htm
tington Beach, was arrested in the
Mission Viejo area. and sunendered
without incident.
Both men were "moonlighting" on thtir
off duty hours as security guards for the
Mission Viejo Company.
Lt. Richard Drake of the aherilf'a
department said both men were spotted
inside the Mission Viejo clubhouse'in the
early morning hours by the club's 1olf
pro, Roger Belanger.
-Btlari1er aid---warm.-·btl way Mme
f and drove by where be uw the aecurity
car parked. He aaW tft men inside, knew
they didn't have 1 key and after watchinl
for 1 few minutes, called the aherifl'1 ol-
flce.
By. the time deputies arrived the two
men had left the clubhouse.
h"vine was found at the 1olf course
maintenance yard near the San Diego
Freeway. The deputJea asked him to get
into· the patrol car and returned to the
clubhome with them.
O.nce there, they said he menaced Sgt.
Jake ruviere with 1 pistol and com-
mandeered the patrol car and took off.
He drove back to the mainte1W1ce
yard, switched to his own ·1tation wagon
and fled.
Responding to a general alarm,
Riverside deputy sheriffs spotted the sta-
tion wagon on the Ortega Highway
shortly after 6 a.m. and pursued Irvine
d9wn the grade into the Lake Elsinore
area.
When Irvine did not stop during the
pursuit, the Riverside deputiea fired at
the fleeing car flattening the rear tires.
Irvine then jumped out of the car and
held the Riverside officers at bay with a
revolver which be continually pointed at
his head, threatening suicide.
He held them-off for two hours before
giving in to pleu of his wife and fellow
Orange County depuUea who had arrived
at the scene.
Lt. Ruaell Hawk of the Lake Elsinore
1heriff'1 aubatatlon Aid Irvine "never
made an aggressive move toward any · of
our officers."
Duncan has been a deputy 1heriff for
five years. He has recenUy eerved u a
Juvenile Hall1bailiff and several months
ago wu b&iliff in the court ol Superior
Judge William S. Lte cl Newport Beach.
Irvine has been a deputy fot 1 e v e n
years and has been recenily lttVlna: u a
Juvenile court bailiff. ; -'
Newport Man
Loses $3,485
To 2 Thieves
Newport -Police an contlnulna: their invatiplion today of tbt robbery of
1 South Llguna man Saturday mominc.
Richard L. Paul, 15, of 31711 Mar Vilt.a
Ave., tokt officers be wu robbed Of Q,415
in money and ~jewelry 11 he letl. a
Newport Beach tiar at about 2 1.m. ·
He said .twq suspects approached him
In the municipal parklrtg lot located in
ll1e 3200 blocli of Newport Boulevard. 0..
hit blm in the mouUt, knoci:in11tlm to the
pavement and held him dOwn.
The other suspect rifled Paul's PoCkets
and removed his watch and a diamond
ring valued at $3,200.
Paul said he started to.struagle against
the ann lock ht was being held In, but hli •
assailant reportedly told him, "Don't
tii:Silt me, I bavt a cun."
The pair -et-aped, ruming 1'utb>und
on Finley Street. Patil aald he tt.arted to
follow them , but 1top'ped when he he1rd a
motorcycle drivlna awa~ from U't ac:ne.
. an ••
. .
·---orse,n ·1n ...
••
·' -
Nixon Asks
Paratroops
--ne Alerted
From Wtri ServfeQ-.
A new cease· fire order 1n the · tMU.W
civil war in JOrdan was ordefed by Klh&
Hussein-today,. as Syrian Army tank
forces invaded lhe embatUed nation for a
aec.ond tirue'Since fighting brokt out.
The command ·to stop rlahtlng wa1 to
be erfective at 11 •15 a.m. <PDT), but !be
aituatlon in and around ll1e llbtral Mlddle
E~ · nation WU deterioratinl by . tbe
hour. . .
President Nixon ordered paratrooptrs
stationed in West Germany onto a limited
alert in case events make evacuation of
the estimated 400 Americans in Jordan -
lnc.Juding 38 hijacking hostages ....... im·
perative. •
A White House spokesman empbubed
that no direct intervention ill anticipated
-a posJure the Israeli government"open---
ly criticized -but evenll were beina
watched as they develop. .
King Hussein's cease-fire order wu
one more in a series given during. the
past three days and broken In every case.
SILHOUETTED BY FLAMES, FIREMEN BATTLE BLAZE-AFTER PLA!IE -PLUMMl'l'ED-INTO-CAPISTRANO BEACH LAUNDRO/,\AT Govunments in the Middle East. and
throughout ll1e world appealed to both
Newport Hunting
For Assistant ·
To City Manager
A. ful!·scale hunt for a new id..
ministrative assistant to· Nf:wp<>---rt-BeaCh
City Manager Harvey L. , Hurlburt is
being launched today.
The position was vacaU!d Friday when
Hurlburt appointed his administrative
aide, Philip F. Bettencourt, to the post of
assistant city manager.
He succeeds James P. DeChaine, who
Wednesda·y announced he will resign
October 14 to assume _the city
management of Belmont, a cily or 25,000
in the suburbs of San Francise<>.
DeChaine said th!! morning that ·
Newport Beach will place advertisements
In a number of profeslsonal journals for
the administrative a.ssislant's ·job, which
has a ply range of $12,420-$15,096.
He said the determination on the suc-
cessor's pay will be made based on the
qualifications and experience of the suc-
tt!Sful applicant.
OeChaine said the city hopes to have a
replacement within two months.
Bettencourt joined the city staff in
March. 1968, coming from a similar posi·
tion with the city of Seal Beach .
A graduate of Cal State Long Beactt
where he received his BA in public ad-
ministration, he is currenUy working for
his masters degree there while taking ad:
ditional courses at UCI.
Bettencourt and his wife, Pamela , have
two children, Sheryl, 5, and Ryan, 3. They
live in Huntington &each.
Man.Collapses, Dies
Before Appeals Unit
An Anaheim man collapsed and died
thil momllfi as he was speaking before
an assessments appeals board in the ·old
Orange County courthouse.
The coroner's office said Harvard' J.
Veith was dead of an apparent heart at-
tack updn arrival at Santa Ana Com-
munity HO.,pital. His age was unknown
late tltis morning but he was in bis late
50!. the coroner'• office aaid.
Capo B~uch Pla.JJe . C,rash .
Kilu Education ·chief ..
,
-By RICHARD-P~NALL°' • Dllllr 'lllf 1t1n
A school superintendent from Monirc.h
Bay was killed in the foggy early morn-
ing darkness Saturday when his light
plane crashed into a Capistrano Beach
laundromat, starting a fire and blowing a
.mother in· an adjactint apartment throu1h
the wall.
Authorities said the·piiot victim, Frank
Raymond Addis, U, of 32631 Empress
Way, South Laruna, was en' route to a
football game at Big Pine near Bishop.
He became superintendent of the Bl&
Pine Unified School District in July.
Witnesses said Addis'. new plane, a
Beach Bonanza V35, took o(f in the fog at
about 5:40 a.m. from Capistrano Airport,
circled the field once and crashed
through the roof of the Sav-More Laun-
dromat, 34241 Doheny Park Rnad in the
business district of Capistrano Beach.
The explosive crash and deVastatlng
fire did an estimated $56,000 damage.
The pla ne lo.5s was probably about
another ~.ooo. .
Authorities bave no good clue yet as to
what might have caused t.be crash other
Santa Ana Winds
Divert Airplanes
Santa Ana wind! this "m9ming brought
with them the usual change in flight pat.
terns at Orange County Airport.
Officials at the 1irport tower reported
that aircraft btgen takln1 off into · the
desert winds which blow · toward . lbe
southwest during the autumn months.
The flight pattern change aim means.
that airplanes come in over Newport
Beach on their l1nding ~pproa:hes.
The irregular winds p r e v a 11 in·
termittently throuahou{·the faU and fre-
quently into the late wl~r monthl.
Related St~rle1,
Photo, P•e•' 3 ...,_
then poOr ~isiblllty. Both Addis and the
plane were ineirierated in the fierce blaze
which deatroyed not only ·the laundromat
and adjacent apartment but badly
damaged the Blue , Pelican restaurant
which had· a common wall.
Edith Sullenberger, 34, her infant
daughter and mother. Donna Sullen-
berger, 59, who managed the laundromat,
were alseep in their one bedroom apart-
ment ·that is part of 'tl1e · 1aundromat
building. ·
· The younger woman was bloWn through
the.wall and i!nlo gravel outsi de but aside
from neck burns was not serioUsly in-
jured. She rushed inside and carri"ed out
·her 31h week old daughter who was not
injured. The infant was alsee p in a baby
carriage. Her empty crib was pushed
through the wall by the explosion.
The younger Mrs. Sullenberger return.
ed to the apartment a nd lifted a beam off
or her mother's legs, said. firemen, and
helped Donna Sullenberger 'outside.
The senior Mrs. Sullenberger suffered
first and second degree leg burns.
Six engines from the county fire
df:partme~t' and a snorkel (aerial) unit
battled the flames for an hour and a half
before the fire 'was broUght under con-
trol. ' · · ·
Bill M.ini~·coroner~s·tnveillgator, said ~ftdls lift home'• shOrt·whl~·btfore the
lllee CRAlll, Pap 11'
HU,Iburt. to Meeting
Newport Beach City Manager Harvey
L. Hurlburt will be In San Diego through,
We4ne1day night for the annual In·
:temational City ' Managers' Association
conferenct. The three -day eyent will
deal With a vartety of topics on rbuniclpal
admlniltraUoo.
..
Intrepid .Ruled ·Winne.r
·.
New . York Yacht Commi~e , Disqualifies Gtet,el
• , • l •• • •
Spedal lo Ille DAILY .PILOT or ·derender lnlttpid tllat w bod beep ~ Klppen· llllde: a . protest "in .ll1e
NEWPORT, R.1. -In a dramatic. toulett ,when the two bolll c~ at the opeains.NOI C?VV 1 near colliJion at the
turnabout, N"'Pofl Beacll aldppef Bill 1lartln1 ""' Sunday. , · . ·starl.1bo0...-i...,. DOI allowed. ·
flcker's Intrepid today WIS declered . Thi rWin& aavl Inlrqid a I lo 0 l!•d ln -Jim Hanly; Clrete.t ll's'at.ipper, uid~
winner of the second America's Cup Race the best-of«ven 1eries 4Mtaad Of -tbl doo't lee .how they eo.ild have ra
81iled Sonday when ll1e New York Yacht boall each beln& 1 to J. ' lhot venlicl But I am nol llllpriled,
Club's race co mmittee disqualified Aus· The Australian boat finished flnt II' They want .to keep ~,cup.~'
lralia's winning Gretel 11. Sunday's race by a little more t.lflan 1 . Then he ff!IUmed.~nkuillJ OI the hull
(De.tails and photos of Sunday's rsce mlhute -the first .vlttory fOc the1 of tbe Au1trallan ylcht. ·
and DAllTV<f'lLOT Boating Editor Almon-challenger-tlftco the orlflnol G-1---11 wot--llrst-llmt a.-c:11p-yac\>Uillt
Loc..k1bey'1 full account of the race action 1962. ~ -Unllbed RCODd J11d wtil..-on a ~t
1ppear today on the Boelin& Pa1e, on The two tJ..meler t.D,tl race •11Ja 1Jnce the U.S. defender beat V,alkyrie 'pt
Page 15.) Tuesday over the 24.3 mJle course, of Brit.ai• In the seriu in 1895. Valkyrlt
The r1 ct committee upheld the prolest This ls the second prot~. ,w,u 11.mJalrjy 4flquallfled ln one race.
• < • t •
County D~ths
.Total_,_Sevel!:._
Over Weekend
Seven persons died over the-weekend in
Orange County as the result of traffic 1c-
cidents. including two Orange Coast
residents.
. The dead are:
Ralph B. Roth, 45, of 20732 Kelvin
Lane, Huntil)gton Beach.
Llada J. Wtl1klw, 20, of 2659 Orqe
Ave., Costa Mesa .
Pa1*1a McGo.lneu, 22, 'of , SapLa Ana.
Georte Q. Hutley, 731 of Pleasa.nton,
Calif.
Frank L. Reynolds, 29, of Buena Park.
Frank ·Clickner, 19, of Garden Grove. ·
Jame• F. Hulsey, 20, of .cirritos.
Roth died Sunday in Costa Meu.
Memorial Hospital of injuries suffered
Thursday when his Car. and a truck col·
lided at V_ictoria Street and C a n 'I o n
Drive in the west Cosla Mesa area.
Miss Winslow died Saturday at Tustin
Community Hospital. She Was found un-
conscious in a flood control channel on
MaCArthur Boulevard,' north of the
Orange County Airport Sept. IO. Her car
went out of control and she was thrown
into a drainage ditc;h.
Mrs. McGuiness leaped to her death
Saturday night from the Main Street
overpa!S onto the Santa Ana freeway,
landing on top of a northbound car. Her
head smashed into the windshield.
Hutley 'died Sunday night wheii his car
overturned after striking a dirt shoulder
on the San Diego·Freeway near Junipero
Serra Road in San ·Juari Capistrano.
.Reynolds :d~d· Fr'iday .night ::in Llncoht
Community Hospital ,.Buena Park, 11 the
result of inJUnes suffer'ed in· a two-ear
crash In Buena Park.
Clickner died Saturday in Huntington
lntercommunlty Hoepilal. He gas Injured
la st Wednead.ay in Garden Grove when
his molorcycle went out 'or control. I ·
Hulsey was dead on arriv.al Sundafl ~t
St. Jude Hospital, Fullerton as •the result -
of lnjllries·suffered·ln a Carbon Canyon·
accident.
YMCA Recruiting
Indian Maidens · ·,
' ' .
Autumn red'uitment programs·· for,U•
Oranp• Couto ¥MCA :Indian · M-
Thunderclood-Federation 1et under way
today, CQIJtinuing ·throu&hout this week
• in the Har~r ,Area. 1 , ' ~
Hen iJ ,w liil of ,-Jinc p\lceo .. !11(
ll1e 7•3'. p·.ru . ...,;..,, aetardma lo · i..,
dian l\l~iden -Paul Doi!O!IY'
, M~~. BayyJew Eleme!Ury ~
Tueaday, Coiona del 'M8', ,r.;..,p
and Wilson elementar)': schools. , ,
Wedneoday, Harper, Eulbluff . ud
Mes~ Verde elementary .tchools!
Thursday, Harbor Vie1' Elementary
SchOOI. ' •
_A_ recrullmtnl __meeting for t h •
oPr,abontas. FtderaUon_ia IChedultd Oct.
11 at ll1e YMCA headqumm 13111
University Orivt, aocorcpna to 'Miao
Davkl Erickson, priDCUI .. ' ' .
> . .
Sidell to stop· fighting. . •
Leaders on both 1idt1 -Kini HusHin'1
Royal Army chiefs, ind the 1U•rrillD1
Soviet-armed Palestine Llbtratloo .Army
-tncoura1ed ~ir trCJOpt in the bloody
balUe.
Jordlnian....mililaz11.-govamor-Manhal
Hahet Al-Majalf pvt !ht Pl.A traopo a
2~-hour ultimatum. even while the' Arn
atates considered a 1wnmJt ·conference
on the war.
"Everyone who does not BUrrender and
hand .over his weapons or who rife1 on
the irmed forcta· after thl1 time' ( 4 p. m.
Jordan tJme) will be· .killed," Maj1U
declared.
"This is ~ last ·WamiDI t.o,you •• .''
. Radio· Amman allllOWlCed tbat . Pl.A
force of 5,000 men includin& tanb,
armored cars and artillery coverf9* their
advance had · poured into Jordan at
Ramtha, on th~ border, 50 mils from
Amman.
Majall contfatulated hl.s own 40th
Brigade for ita valor in holding off the in-
vaden, who Syrian Presideilt ~
Atassi has denied moved into Jordan ·at
all.
"You are standing alone against a
mass a~tack unleas~ on. you .by · ~
rulers of Syria, who could not bold oat for
two hours Jn the Golari Heights in tirT,'~
Majall said.
"Hold fast in the face of the II•
gresson:, u fast as the ttee.l of your
tanks," be uhorted.
Guerrilla sources in Balhdad and
Damal!ICUI proclaimed that Syrian in-
vaders -moving in a · tWO.pro:i>atd
maneuver toward Irbkt -w'e r •
mutilating Huaaein's Royal Anny; '
The young king has 56,000 tftlopt
aa:ainst ·the ·32,000 guerrillu entrenched
in northern Jordan m:faround the capital
city of Amman. ·. .
Hls 40llt Brtpdt fa'* up to IOG
RUAlan-butlt' tanks · of · tWo Syrian
brlpdea with IO Brllilh centurtu tanlls.
American Secfttary or State: wwi.m
p · Rofltrl ·urpd ll1e Sot Itta to Htn:ilt
ll1elr power ...,. ll1e Arabs lo aid the
boatlliU .. , which hO branded todly u Ir·
(See JORD"1!, Pap I)
0ru1e
•••tiler ' -
Sunny akles With occuionaJ ,.;.. '
clOUda alq Iha ..... is. Iha "" ,. ·for TIMmay, willl coutal lem~•
ture1 in tbt 7011.and inland rud-
inp 1hootinc up lo to clqreel.
INSmB TODAY r ThJ'.f:t !lohter-thcm-air . advn--1
.turers took •II from Lona ftlmjd ,
Sundau-on a tnlftlGtlmata: JJ111
'l>olloo• odlli•lf. wlodi ,.,,.11. ,
Uilg, tlaq wUJ rtoclr hroi>< 1'l
11% lo 18 dara. let •tort! PIJQf 5.
..... , ......... t c.....,... ' ...... • c ..... u.. ' .......... '1 C......... .... ...... c..tt' I c....... 11 • ., .......... .
.,..... lltltlr9 ' '""' ... .,._ ' ............... ....... ,_ • -nMlllM-
a11hwl:•: ::•" • ,....... • ,..... a.ta ....... • ""---" .......... ,,." Alltl ........ 11 ..,. -.. •
Testimony
On .Manson
~
~Resumes
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Charles M.
"Minson "liked knlv~ better than cuns, ..
• witness testified at the Sharon Tate
murder trial toda y.
Former motorcycle gang leader Danny
"l>eearlo, in hi.s fourth day as a ~
1secution witness at the trial, Aid Mamon
commanded complete atttnUon from his
followers at his Spahn movie raoch com-
mune in I rural area northweJt O( Loi
Angeles.
"Once," said DeCarlo, ·~a, couple of
'broads lnlmupte<( l!im_while he was
talking ••• be threw a bowl of rice at
them ••. he told them ht didii'I wanl to
be interiupted ••• thlt they s b o QI d
listen."
DeCarlo ·said there were few pns at
the ranch before he came, bringing his
own collection, and be said of Manson:
"He liked knives better than guns."
Marison, 35. and three young women co-
defe'ndants are charged with the murder
of Miss Tate and six others in August of
'1969 ..
Their trial entered its 15th week today.
The stubby, mlistachioed DeCarlo w11.
quizzed repeatedly by both the prG-
secution and defeiise about hLs drinking
habits, criminal record an~ motivaUon
for testifying, DeCarlo ha1 said he PW
Manson witli a gun much like one the
atate says was used · to !dll three Persons
at MisS Tate's mansion.
Tbe prooecuUon lr;.d to show lluit
Deear1o was not u "smashed" as he had
previously testified at his l!ltay at the
ranch. However, the witnw aald under
cross-ezamination that he bad indeed
testified he was drunk 99 percent of the
... time.he was there._ .
"My version of drunk Is when I'm out
to l\UlCh on the groiind," sald DeCarlo.
Additionally, he reminded a defense at-
torney. "I smoke weed too."
DeCarlo was asked his impressions of
the case's fifth defendant, Charles "Tez"
WatsQJI, who made a surprise appearance
in court Friday. DeCarlo, who identified
Watson in court, said "he looked skin·
nier." Watson was recenUy utradlted
from Tezas to stand trial.
'.
DAILY PILOT II'",...
;. . C.REWS ~LEAN UP RUBBLE AFTER PLANE CRASH IN CA'plSTRANO BEACH
Piiot Dies, But Two Women, Baby and Dog Escape; D1m111 E1tlm1ted at $96,000
Weekend Burglars Get
$4,700 Loot in Newport
A series of weekend J>uraiaries which
netted theives about $4,700 in stolen ioods
are being inves!Jiated today by Newport
Beach det«Uves:
'!be . buf11a<ies took place in two
Bayc:mt· bOm.es, a ~t docked in west
Newport and a Newport H•lihls home. ·
Detedlve Bill Speirs said an investJcatiOll
is under way to determine if the four
bur&taries are linked.
The first of the. four wal reported Fri-
day by Mrs. Phyllis G. Taylor, 55; of, 1124
SanUago Drive. Officers said the burglars
eRtered the residenCe via the rear door
while she was: out.
A ~piece sterling silver set and a
tele~on valued at $1,200 we re repor:ted
missing.
Niles A. Laderer, 41. reported the theft
of Jl,500 worth of radio equipment and
sport.U).g goods from his 2Z-foot cabln
cru1aei which ts docked llW' 4l0l w.
Coast Highway.·
Suspects took the equipment out of the
cabin aft.er removing the hiagea from the
locked hatch cover.
A televWon, a paint.inc and aiJ: aets 'ot
sterling silverware were taken from the
Newport Heights home of Eloiae Henlile
Saturday.
Pollet said thieves apparently entered
the house at 230 Kings Place through a
window which opens onto the backyard.
Mrs, Henline told investl&ators the
burglary was the fifth in as maay years.
Sunday W. Gayle 'Ibompson of 1954
Santiago Drive reported the loss of $1,330
in s t e r e o equipment and a television
set. Police said the suspects entered the
home by a"' u11known means before mak·
ing off with Thompson's stereo system.
CRASH ...
crash and told his wife, Mary that he
planned to drive to Big Pine. .
He appa-renUy changed his mind and
look the plane which he used to commute
to his home on weekends: The Capistr_aiio
Airport ls uncontrolled . It hu no control
towi;r or runway 1ight.s and taking off,
.. 1d officials, is pretty much a matt~of
pilot cµscretion. -
No one saw him enter his single-engine
plane but bis car was pal-ied nearby.
Besides his widow, Addis is survived by
a ,teenage daughter, Sharon Ann, of the
family home and a son, Frank R. II of
San Diego. He had been an Orange Coun-
ty resident 10 years.
Funeral services were scheduled at 3
p.m. today at Peek Family Colonial
Funeral Home in Wegtminsler with burial
in Westminster Memorial Park.
A resident of the crash area, J\.1rs.
Unruh Ch~enges Reagan Newport Center
Office Buildi.Qg
Work Under Way
Yolanda Vital. 25835 Domingo Road, said
she thought the explosion of the crash
was right in her front ya rd. She feared
momentarily that it was a recurrence of
the earthquakes that had shaken the area
several day-s earlier.
The crash explosion broke out windows
of adjacent bustnes1 builllngs and lit-
tered the street with ffaming debris.
Firemen, however, were able to confine
the blaze to the buildings Immediately in·
'" ·To Off er Ta~ Reform Bill volved. 1 •
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Democrat Jee
Unruh challenged Gov. Reagan today to
put property tax reform before the
Calif.omia Legislature during the veto
session Which opened today.
"Mr. Reagan, this is your 1aat op-
portunity to put up or shut up on property
taz reform," Unruh said in a atatement
read to a news conference.
There was no immediate comment
from the Republican chief executive'i of-
fice, but Reagin .earlier said be had no
intenlion of calling a special session of
the legislature during the annual veto
session.
Unruh and Reagan are battling for the
governorship in the NoV. 3 general elec·
tion .
The former Assembly speaker quoted
Reagan as saying two years ago: "If we
can't deliver on our programs now, we
Auto Wheels Stolen
A thief immobilized Jame.:s H. Brownell
Jr. Saturday. Brownell, of 381 Walnut Sl.,
Costa Me~. told police he left his house
and discovered his sports car sitting in
the driveway minus $350 worth of
magnesiwr. wheels and tires.
DAILY PILOT
" . ' Cll.4MGI COAST ,UaLISHING alrM"ANY
•
ftoiorl N. Woo4
Pnald"'I ..... PuDlltW
J•c• a. Cu r1•i
Vice ,.,_~, •nd ~•I MIMfll"
Tho1t1 11 *<••"ii
~.! ....
l ile1t1•1 A. Mu•p~i110
M-]lng Eflltl'
New,ett IMd Oflke
2111 W11t lelie•~••ul1"•''
M•lli11t Add11111 r.0.111 1175, t166J
Otller Offk:"
Clstl Ma.: Pl W•I II' 11ttot ~ lotd't: m ,_, ... ....,,. .. Jfttlnl"" htc:11: l1'1S lelCl'I .,.,.,.,,,.
S•e ~: al Nenll [I c.m~ ••I
OAILY ~ILOT, W!lll Wtlidl h. Clft'ltlolef Ille
H ... ,.~,-It ~lilrld f l llY -~ '-tl•V 111 1•Dtf•IC' Mii ... fer ~ ._..., N,w...., ... di. C•ll M9e, HIOfll.,... It·~ •nil '°11"'"111 Vilify, ............
rtollMI •tt:.a. Otll'llt' C..ut ~ C°"'N!IY ciri.rtll'lt •om ,,. 01 nn ._,
ll!Mt 1: ...... N_,... fOKfl. Oflil .. w.t ••v ~uw:. C..1!0 Meu. t•h•• •• c-n 41 •tz ... aat
c~w ...,, ...... .., '41·••n
CN.,.,...t, h ,.. ""'.... (. .... ! ,,_'9Ntlll Caoolll111y, Ho M"" .... HlvtlrlttleM.
tl[l•lt l INM!' Of &~II """""
m1T ..... ,, .... lltd~w!tN\111 ...-lei .....
m>NIM fft Olll'l"'ltlll °""'"""'•
$OCll'Of U.. P"'t.,. (11:11 11 Meweetf lttdl
' '"' '"" M-. C•Ult1t11l•. ~'91*" IW c.1rrlw U.• "*""''' DY mill lf.Jt ,...,.ffllrl mllhtry ...,, .. .,,,,.,, l.:M mMlll'Y, ' .
'
don't deserve to be re-elected."
Unruh then said, "Here's his chance to
prove whether he meant that statement.''
'Ille political skinnishlng overshadow~d
the opening of the session itseU. The ·
lawmakers came back to Sacramento for
their chance to override any of Reagan's
vetoes of 77 bills passed In the regular
1970 session which ended Aug. 21.
Chances that they would were con-
aidered virtual!)' nil.
However, some lawmakers, including
Unruh. were ired by Reagan's Ct.It in a
special salary increase for California
Highway Patrolmen.
"That ought to be overriden," Unruh
&aid.
Reagan's tax bill failed to pass by one
vote Aug. 21 , partly because one sup-
porter of the plan, Sen. Tom Carrell (0.
San Fernando), was hospitalized and
couldn't vote.
Unruh said now is Reagan's chance to
get his plan -"bad as it is" -since
Carrell is back on the job. \
Unruh said he would cancel his entit'e
week's campaign schedule if Reagan
would put property tax reform before the
legislature this week. Only the governor
can put the legislature into special
session and decide what can be con·
sidered.
Lacking . that, jt looked like an
unevtntful. wefk' in ·sacramento as the
Iawmakefs went 'through tht routine o(
the fourth' suCb veto aesslon.
Construction of a Sssri,ooo office .build·
lng at 567 San Nicholas Drive, the new·
est development in Newport Center in
Newport Beach, began this week.
Owned by E. O. Rodeffer of ZZ27 Pacific
Drive, the four-story structure will con-
tain a large number of leased officts.
A building permit issued for the office
ln August had a valuation of more than SO
percent of the total dollar value of all
permits issued by the city during the
month.
All told, 117 building permits with a
combined valuatio n of $1.082,339 were
is&ued by Newport Building Inspector
Oliver Grant last month.
The va\uatio"' for August was slightly
higher than Jul y. when slightly under St
millio"' in permits w~s issued, but con·
siderably lower than preceding months,
according to building department offi.
cials.
There were only three permits for new
homes issued during the month, the
largest of which was issued to Joseph T.
Deverian !or a $51,000 home at 1323 Anti-
gua Way.
Officials indicated that they expect
construction to pick up ill the near future,
however, pointing to a large volume of
plans pending with various city agencies.
Four permits were issued for duplexes
during August. two of them to Walter
Burgess for structures at 501 and 503
Marguerite Avenue. Each has a valuatioa
of 114,1100.
Doheny volunteer fireman, Wendell
Hill. 3402 Camino Capistrano, was a few
blocks from the crash. He said he heard
a low throb and a "thump" and then saw
flames shooting up from the laundromat.
Allan N. Disiena , 20, Camp Pendleton
Marine, said he heard the plane circling
and the engine go ~ad. He was hitch·
hilling nearby.
Federal Aviation Agency officials in-
vestigated the crash and said a
detemtinalion of cause would be made by
the National Transportation S a f e t y
Board.
Nellie Rimell
Dies at Age 89
Nellie RimeU , a longtime California
resident who lived on Balboa Island for
the past IO years. died Saturday at Hoag
Memorial Hospital. She was 89.
Services for Mrs. Rimell will be held
Wednesday at 11 a.m. at Pacific View
Chapel with Rev. William A. Driver of·
ficiating.
Mrs. Rimel! lived with her daughter,
Mrs. Elsie Thompson. 1804 S. Bayfront,
Newport Beach. Other survivors include
a son. Charles. of Redding: another
daughter. Mrs. Nellie White of Newport
Beach; five grandchildren ; to great·
grandchildren and t w o •great-great-
grandchlldren .
Jul11hos Cause Tornadoes?
S..m.aller Planes Being Thrown Out of Control by 747s
WASHINGTON (AP) -Owners and "They are the deadliest kind or aircraft
pilots of li&ht aircraft are campai&ning to lo encounter in lhe air. They consUtute a
restrict flights of new jumbo jets which, clear and present danger." Jn a telegram to congressmen, lhe government tests show, create tornado-AOPA also declared:
Hke wind~ that-can spin smaller planes "\Ve are deeply concerned at the threat
out ol control. wh ich these behemoths of the sky appear
Tests being completed by the Federal to be creating for other travelers in the
Aviation Administration showed the air.
winHs swirl off win,Ups of the 747 and "Just as the government has seen fit to
CM at speeds up lo to miles an hour and impose limitations on the size of trucks
can trail behind the planes for miles. and buses for the safety of all on the
The FAA has ordered · a five-mile highways. perhaps it is time lo establish
separation at all times between the giant similar limits on the size of aircraft to
jets and p11nee wei.1htng leu than 300,000 preserve safety In the iir ."
pound&. It alto Is conduct1n1 an tduca-Turbulence. a;enerated by the Jumbo
Uonal prOer1m to alert pilots or ligb~ets hwnot been assigned 11 the cause of
alt'Crlfr to-lift huardf of fhe windf'".:.... any plane crash.,----
called wake turbulence or winJtip But records of the N a t t o n a 1
vortices. C" Transportation S.-ftty Board shows 98
-The Airplane Owners and Pilols crashes belween 19&4 and tMt In wh ich
Auociation, which repreanll filers or wake turbulence generated by sm1\ler
the 139,000 f;ircralt In the Bneral avia· jellln"rs was the cause or a contribullng
tionJield, objtcts lo this approach~ f1etor. Twenty perSOM died and 54 suf·
"The jumbo jets must be r(Jidly con· rered serious Injuries Jn lhtse crashes.
fined, rigidly regulated so everyone Although 111 planes cause v.·ingtlp
knows where they are," says Mu vortices to Mme derree, P'AA.olftcfals
Kar ant, vice preSident of the AOP A: 61Y the utent of turbulence from the 747
'
passenger plane and CSA cargo plane was
underrated.
"\Ve were fully aware of v.•ake
turbulence but v.•e didn't know it's in·
tensity," says Richard SHff, depuly direc-
tor of the FAA 's flight standards service.
Flight tests showed that light aircraft
wh ich penetrate the vortices Within three
miles of the jumbo jets can be forced into
a sudden roll or 75 degrees.
''If they Oy into It just right they could
go into a spi n and lose control of the
aircraft," said Robert f\.tartin, FAA 's
chief of regulation and procedures. "The
vorticei are just llke little tornadoes.,,.
The FAA found that winstlP vortices
are most dangerous during takeoffs and
landings when large numbers of plan'es
are concentrated in Jimlted areas. But
they say that spacing several minutes
between flights allows crosswinds Ume to
break up tht vortlcts.
The problem Is not eonsldertd by the
FAA to be as great at blah aJ11tudes
although tests: showed the vo rtices of big
jets do not quickly dlssip11te "'"hen formed
at ,30,000 feet and above where most
Jetliners cruist. ~
•
..... _
War Cri ... 1--:--. .
/ « !.,. Sumµiit ·Meeting
Of Arabs Ca.ll~d
CAIRO (APi-Kings and presidents of
the Arab wor d have been summoned to
Cairo for a summit ~anference Tuesday
to seek an end to' the civil war ip Jordan
and to keep it from spreading ioto an in·
ternational conflict.
Radio Cairo said Monday all Arab
leaders v.·ere coming except President
Ahmed Hassen el-Bakr of Iraq. The
Egyptians accused Iraq earlier in the day
of upsetting a weekend cease-fire in
Jordan.
·The broadcast said King Hussein of
Jordan and President Noureddin Atassi
of Syria had confirmed their int tnliQns to
attend the meeting. However, Radio
Damascui later said Atassi would not at·
lend the conference, bl.it would be in
Cairo.
The Datn&9CUS broadcast quoting
Syria's Ministry of Information said
Atassi had already left for Cairo "lo hold
urgent talka on means of stopping cur·
rent a~lties against the Palestinian
guerrillas In Jordan.'' •
It said Atassi arranged to mee\ with
President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt ,
Col. Muammar Kadafi, chief of Lybia 's
Revolutionary Council, and Maj. Gen.
Jaafar el Numairi, leader of Sudan's
military government.
Jordan has accused Syria of invading
northern Jordan to help Palestinian guer·
rillas seeki'lg to oust King Hussein's
government:
.
The Cairo bro.adcast said 1YaSlr Arafat,
leader .of lh_e overall guemlla romm~nd
_ the Paleslin~ .Liberal~ Organization
-also is expected lo atte d, ~If so. the meeting pr umably wOuld
bring Husse in and Arafat together f6r l~
first lime since the fighting broke out 1n
Jordan last Thursday.
The broadcast did nol say why Bakr
of Iraq was not attending.
In Its attack on Iraq earlier, Egypl
claimed that it created a misun-
derstanding between the Jordans aqd the
Palestinians of the cease-fire Nasser pro-
posed on Saturday.
T.he authoritative newspaper Al Ahram
of Cairo said Arafat was relying on Iraq's
Radio Baghdad to announce his observ~n
ce of the cease-fire but that Baghdad fail·
ed to do so on the pretext that Its broad-
casting equipment had broken.down.
Radio Baghdad responded to At
Ahram's version by broadcasting a denial
by the Central Committee of the
-Palestine Liberation Organization that
Arafat had at any time accepted a cease-
fire in the civil war.
The broad cast ac cused Egypt of
distorting the fac ts "in order to cre~.te a
rift among the Arab coun trie s."
It said the CCntral Com mittee has
never left any doubt that it will ''only
cease-firing when the regime of im-
perialist agents in Amman has been
overthrown and f.epl~ced by a truly na-
lional authority."
From Pagel
JORDAN CRISIS ... ,
' responsible and capable-of drastically
broadening.
"We call upon the Syrian government
to end immediately this intervention in
Jordan," he aald. "And we urge all other
concerned governments to linpress upon
the government of Syria the necessity of
withdrawing U,e forces which have in·
vaded JordaJf."
SUMMIT PROPOSED
Tunisian President Habib Bourguiba
propose:.P a summit conference of Arab
states in Cairo to thrash out a Jordanian
sol ution , and several. including Egypt.
had accepted. But Cairo sources said
Sunday the Syrian invasion ended
chances for such a meeting.
Cairo took two positions on the conflict
Sunday:
-Hussein should i n t e r v e n e im-
mediately lo ensure compli anet" v.•ith a
cease-fire plan v.·otked out·'by Egyptian
President Gama! Abdel Nasser and
reportedly aceepfed by the go vernment
and guerrilla forces.
-Iraq's ruling Baath party tricked the
guerrillas into continuing to fight after
their leaders accepted the truce.
'T.he official and public _ position of the
Nixon administration has been one of
concern for more than 400 Americans, in-
cluding 48 out of 54 hostages held by the
Palestinian guerrillas, with the possibility
that force would be used if it was judg-
ed necessary to evacuate them .
Extra Cl30 transports have been posl·
tioned in Europe to carry the troops from
West Germany. The 82nd Airborne
Division , on alert at Ft. Bragg, N.C.,
relies on huge Cl41 jet transports as part
of the U.S. strike reserve.
All this was billed as .precautionary by
Pentagon officials who said there was no
widesperad general al~rt. The intent re-
mains only the possibility of rescuing
Americans -thought to be about 400 -
Kings of the ~urf
sv.·ept up in lhe Jordan fighting.
As the army briefly lifted its .order ~
shoot on sight lttonday the women 01
Amman went into the smashed streets.
dodging sniper fire , to find food for their
families. .
Th ey carried shopping baskets past the
dead and wounCCd is King Hussein 's
army ruthlessly hunted guerrillas who
had ignored cease-fire appeals.
Snipers hidden in mosques and on the
roofs of luxury apartment houses were
blasetd by cannon fire.
FINAL FIGHT
The fight for Amman and for the
throne is in its fina l stages and has cos!
more time and lives than the two-day
tlattle the king's commanders had
forecast.
The pavements are littered with
cartridge cases. Buildings everywhert
have the black hole s of artillery hits.
Fires burn on the hillsides.
Frcim the Intercontinental Hotel you
could see an armored car systematically
pounding a block of flats, floor by noor,
after a sniper had been reported there.
The shells wenl in orange streaks low
across the valley and burst through the
living rooms.
A sniper near the British Embassy was
killed. A soldier and the army blew up
the building in which he was hiding.
One sniper got a lucky shot lhrough the
embassy which put the transmilter to
London out of action . The staff had to
revert to !\1orse code until the generator
was repaired. A soldier standing near
journalists who went to the embassy dur·
ing the curfew· lifting was wounded by a
sniper bullet.
The return fire was erratic. A soldier
swung his jeep-mounted machine gun at
the hotel and put a burst through the
hotel lobby which scattered newsmen.
Photographers have been told they wi ll
be shot if they take pictures.
•. t-#. ~----==-:a DAIL 't ,ILOT $lift .......
Brad McCaull (lefl ) of Newport Beach and Corky Carroll o! Dana
Point a re al.I smiles aftcc. captur ing the two top awards Sunday In the
12th annual U.S. Surfboard Championships a t Huntington Beac:b . Mc:-
Caull won the men's division, upsetling Carroll . whos e overall per-
forn1ance during the v.•eekend brought him the Duke Kahanamoku
Trophy '' !he bes! all·around su rfer for"the fiClh str aight year: (See
Sports, Page 25.)
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YOL 63, NO. 22&, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ,., ~ ~ __ ..__
DAIL'r PILOT SI.ti ;..M
Gilt tor :an Old Pro
Longtime Orange· Coast College football booster Art McKenzie re-
ceives football autographed by varsity players and coaches from
COsta Mesa Chamber of Commerce President Gordon Martin during
halftime at OCC versus Golden West College game Saturday night.
It was Art McKenzie Night. The event ·honored the popular· Costa
Mesa City Manager, retiring after being sidelinetl by a cerebral
hemorrhage. City employes staged a luau for him Sunday night. -.
Intrepid Declared Winner
In Cup Turnabout Ruling.
·s~1I to tbe •DAILV PILOT
_NEW-PORT, R.t. -ln a dramatic
turnabout, Newport Beach skipper Bill
Flcker's Intrepid today "as declared
wiMer of the second America's Cup Race
1ailed Sunday when the New York Yacht
ciub's race committee disqualified Aua·
tralia's winning Gretel lI.
(Details ind photos of, Sunday's race
and DAILY PILOT Boating Editor AlmGn
Lockabey's full account of the race action
appear today on the Boating Pa1e, on
Page 15.)
The race committee upheld the protest
of delender Intrepid that she had been
fouled when the two boats collided at the
starting gun Sunday.
The ruling 1ave• Intrepid a J to 0 lead in
the best-of-seven series instead ot the
boats each being 1 to I.
The Austra1ian boat finished first in
Sunday's race by a little more than a
minute -the first victory for the
challenger since the original Gretel in 1962. .
Tht two . 12-meler boats race again
Tuesday over the 24.3 mile course.
This is the second protest.
Both skippers made a proltSt in the
opening race over a near collision at the
atart. The protests were nol allowed ..
Jim Hardy, Gretel Il's skipper, said, "I
don't see how ,they could have reached
that , verdiC.l. But I am not 1urprised.
They want to keep the cup."
Ora•1e <:oa1t
We•t•er
Sunny skits_~ with occasi<M:'l•I low
clouds akin& Ule shore ·is lhe ·fire
. (or Tuesday, Wjth coastal tempera·
tures-in lhe1 10;1 and inland read· ,
lnp lhootln1 up lo to d.,,....
lNSWE TODAY ' ' Th ree lighter·than·oir odven·
Wrtra took off from Long 11land
Su ndal/ on o tramoil.antic ga.s
· bOltoon odysseu. \Vtndl ptrmit.
tt ng1 they _ will r,eoch Europt in
six to 16 cta11s. Stt 1toru Poge 5.
... Ii"" u lllMtilltl • (•I ,.,.Ille ' _ .. " Cllfclllllt u~ ' ........ N""' ....
('"t"" •·M Orwt9 (..,,.ty • ,_. " ''"'Ill P'trltr n
DMfll Nottk• • -. .... -• '*" MMttw n-u ......... 1,. ... • T ..... ~ • l11tert.--i-" ,_,, • ·-· ft,,, -. -" ._..r....u.1t
AM L...,_ " ..... --...
Then he resumed tlnkerin1 o• the hull
of the Australian yacht.
It was the first time • cup yacht that
finished second had won on a protest
since the U.S. defender beat Valkyrie Ill
of Britaia in the series In 1895. Valkyrie
was simialrly disqualified. in_ one race.
Hlintington Man
Dies Four Days
After Accident
A Huntington Beach man riding in a
small car rammed broadside by a
garbage truck at a Costa Mesa in-
te rsection dled Sunday, four days ancr
the collision.
Ralph B. Roth, 45, of 20732 Kelvin
l.ane, succurribed at Costa Me s a
Memorial Hospital at 6:28 a.m., ac-
cOrding to ~ Orange County coroneri1 ·
office.
He and the driver of the car, James P.
'Young, 38, of 21181 Mir'amar Line, Hun·
tington Beach, Were injured .at 8:"10 a.m.
Thursday in the crash on Victoria Street ·
at Canyon Drive. Young was not
hospitalized. ,
The Dewey's Rubbish Se~v\ce truck
driven by ·Jesus Santini, 38, shoved
Young's small sedan across the in-
tersection ·and up an embankment.
Costa Mesa police are ~ontinuing their
Investigation to determine whether
criminal charges will be filed qainst
Santini, who allegedly did not 1top as re-
quired. . .
Funeral services. for, Roth • Will 'be ·
Wednesday at 2 p.m. in Calvary Chtircb ·
of SantLAna.
Roth is survived by· tus wife Patq, ·
sons Michael, Gregory and Pete, a .
diughter Deborih, plus a brother, siltei'
and his father. · ·
Uruguay Guerril~as
Stage Police Raids
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (Al') -The
Tuparmaros guerrillas aUacked seven
poUCe stations this mcrning, setting arnall.
fires with fire bombs and diabibutlng an.
tigovernmenl pamphlets. There wai
damage but no ooe was hurt, Police said.
The urban guerrillas painted black and
red s!Ofans on 0>e Station "alls. POlloe
described the atlacks u part ti( the cur-
rent guerrilla campal1n against the
govehunent ol President Jc:rge Pacheco
Areco.
-
ORANGE ~NTY. CALIPC?RNIA MONDAY,SEl'T!MIEl 2r. 1'10 . -TEN eENTS .-
.
Jordan Crisis W .. " ....
. orsens •
Q ' ~ .
Syrian Tanks, M~ke Neaj fhrmf AcroS$ Lines .. •
Fro• Wirt lervkiet
A new .ceaie-fl.re order in the· aeeuw
civil war ·tn Jordan wu.ofdered by Xinl
Hussein today, a!'! Syrian Anny tank
'forces invaded the embattled naUOn for1a
secoriil time since fi,ht:ing broke oul
1be command to stop fighting was to
be effective at 11 :15 a.m. (POT), but the
situation in and arounil the liberal Middle
East nation was deteriorating .,by thi"
hour.
President Nixon ordered paratroopers
stationed in. West Germany onto a limited
alert in case-events make evacuation· of
Witness Says
Manson Liked
Knives B ~t
LOS AN.GELES. (AP) -Charles M.
Manson "Uked knives better than guM,'' ·
a witness testified at the Sharon Tate
murder trial today.
Former motorcy~Je g.aqg lJ:.ad{r Pa11f!y
Deearlo, in his fourth day as a. pro-
• ' f •
tbe.e1tlmlled 400 ~ Jn Jordan -• Leaden on both sldes·-·\(Jnl H-'•
Jncludllll ·:II bJJICklq ·~ -'-Im· Roftl Ahny chiefs •. Ud ·~ perrillaa'
pehUve. . • SovioHrmed Palestine Llber&u!ri Anny
A White H-spokMman 1111pbaaiied ---~11ed"~" •-Jn,; •• b'-•y that .. direct Jnier..ntton.Ja illUcipaled -.,.--,_,,., ' -""!"
- a posture the Israeli Softmment flpen-'· bltt,le.
ly crittelzed ·-but eveotl nre beln& Jordulon military govemir ManJW
walched 11 they develop. H1liu Al·~~ pve )be PLA ln>opl·1
King, Husseut.s .~ase-fire .or<f!?r . ..,-as 2\2·.bour ulUmatum, even while the Arab
one more •in a 1eries given dur)ng the states considered a 1ummit conference
past three days and broken in every case. on the war.
Governments in the Middle Eut and "Everyone who doe.II not surrtnder and
throughout-the world appealed to both hand over hla weapons or who fires on
sid~ to stop.fia:hting. the armed forces alter this time (4 p.m.
One f'rona Beaela
. . .
J'.ordaJ!. :tii;rte) .. will be killed·~ Majall . ' ' ~ declared. .
·"Th.la is ·tM·1a1t waminglO You .•. "
·Radio Arrln1an announced, that PLA
force of 5,000 men inclilding tuka,
· annoced ·c~, and· artillery coverirla: tbe1r
advance had poured into Jordan at
Ramtha, ion lhe border,. 50 miles from
Amman. ·
Majali C{)ngratulated 1 hla ''own 40th
Brigade ·for'iis valor in holding Off the in-
vaders, who Syrian President Nureddln
(See JORDAN, Pase I)
Car -Dealer . .
Co1Jnty Depµties 4~ks Mesa· .
····n· · .. B .·u: ·r· g· ··1· a· ··r·· .. y-. : ~~~~,~=~~~~lo-Held·
By !ACK BROBACK bf-tlie Oillr ,., .. , •• ...,
. · · · · · · allow a.car dtaler to m.ove.inlo-a-
. · · tlal area adjace~ to his existing lot ls ...!.
among many Items on the Costa Meu. Ci· ,,.
Lt. Richard Drake of the sheriff's ty Council agenda tonight.
secution witness at the trial, said Manson Two Orange County deputy ahuiffs,
commanded complete att!ntlon from hls jailed -Sunday a:s 1uspecu in an at.
department said both men were spotted Res_ldents or the . Coll~ge Part, IUb-
inside the MIUion Viejo clubhouse 1n the divislon earlier registered stron1 ~
early-morning hours by the club's goll pr<Wal of lhe application-by~Nabln
followers at his Spahn movie ranch com-tempted burglary of the Mlaion Viejo
mune in a rural area northwest of Loi Country Club, are out on ball today
Angeles. · and ~ill be questioned . about . other
"Once,11 said DeCarlo, "a couple of burglaries in the area. sheriff's depart·
broads interrupted him while he was ment' investigators aa.id.
talking •.• he threw a bowl ·of ri~e at .Deputy Freder.ick B. Ir.vine, 40,. of. La
them ... he told them . he didn't want to Habra , was captured Sunday morninJ:
be interrupted , , •. that · they a b. o u I d near Lake Elsinore after officers uJd he
listen." had commandeered a abertff'a :patrol car
DeCarlo said there-Rete few· gwis · at · and 1Jed. · 1 r , , •
the .ranch before be-<aJIM!i1'-'-'•1 hla ·. ...... .... •-:ii.n. .i. .,,,.,..._ 11..ol flln>.
own 'C{)llection, and· be· sala ~ .. &IOn: ~ -&i~ 'w.f .... .rtelt.ed in -the
"He liked knives beUer,than gum.-'' . Mllaioft V1-jo ai:ea and-~1
Manson, 35, and three young womtn co-Without incident. ,
delMd.ontl are charged ,wJth u.e·mun1tr Bo1b men ....e •nioonnpuas" oo lbelr
of Miu Tale and 1ix others Jn Aujuat of off duly houn·M·ieeWily ~ for Ibo
1969. . Mllslon Viejo Q>mPlny.
Their trial entered its 15th week today.
pro, 'Roger Be.langer. Ca'i:lillac Inc., when the _applicaUon come
.Belanger aaid ~.was on his way home before the planning commission. ·
and drove by where he saw the security Owner Dick Nabers wants to purchase
car parked. He saw two men 'inside, knew three homes at 4M, 458 and -tM Prince-
they didn't bao,:e a key and .after watching ton O{ive, rern.ove them and expand his
for a few minutes, called .the 1berlff'1.of· agency at 2600 Harbor Blvd., down to·tbe
fict. · ' next. southerly corner.
By the time deputies arrived the two The plaTtnlng comfnission has tecom-
men 'bad Jeft'the clubboole. mended denial of the request, agreein& Jrvi\10, wu. joond ~( tbe l•ll ~ with OJll!O""hls lhal traffic and ojher !""' ~titrilnc:e Jard neat the &an ~ . blem1 could result from tht dealersftip'1
Fffeway. 'Ibe depuUa' uUd him to iet , ~-expa~~~
into -the-petrol-car-and Hturaed-to-tba_:_________nie_council also _Will ..be uked_tonlght ___ 1 ~ witb ,them. • to approve a te'fitative tract map on in-
tbt there, they ilUI lie mtnl<td s,t. duFIJJ land near the San Dieeo Jaa· 111.-. will!-• ~lltlll 111!'1 ....._,,... ... y. -
m1ndeered ~ patrol W Ud toot oil. The industrial . park conceived by
John.sofa and Mape Construction Cam~
~ stubby, mustacJpoed Deearlo wu
quiz.zed repeatedly by bolh the proo
(See MANSON, Pap I)
SF Fargo Bank
I.Owers Rates
Capo Beach Plane Crash
Kills Education Chwf
pany Of Anaheim was recommended for
tppr<Wal by a majority of plannin1 com-
missioners.
One critical concern erpressed by the
company is the future development of
Sunflower Avenue, which planning depart..
ment maps show crossing the arrowhead-
shaped parctl, with 15,000 to 20,000 cart
dolly. ·
.Planning Director William L. Dunn
briefed city councilmen and department
(See COUNCll., Pip I) SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Wells Fargo '
Bank innounced today 'lhat It is following
the lead of several large Eastern banlr..s
by lowering its prime interest rate from 8
to 71.h percent.
Ward C. Krebs, chairman of the bank's
credit policy committee, said the reduc-
tion, affecting the strongest com mercial
borrowers, will also mean reductions in
real estate rates in the near future and
later in installment lending.
Krebs said, "While loan demand con·
tinues on the strong side, nevertheless
fllher interest rates have m o v e d
downward sharply resulting in this
decision by the bank," which is eleventh
largest in the country.
Other large California banks -Bank of
America, United California Bank, Secutl·
ty National and Crocker • Citizens Na·
tional Bank -all said ·they were ·con~
.sidering lowering the prime rate.
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of tlle °""' P'I ... Stiff A school superlnttndent from Monardl
Bay WI!; killed in the fo1gy eai'ly morn-
ing darkness Sa~rday w~n ~is "Pt
plane crashed into a Capistrano Beach
laundromat, starting a fire and blowin1 a
mother in an adjacent apartment through
the wall.
Authorities said the pilot victim, Frank
Raymond Addis, 42, of 326.11 Emprtss
Way, SOuth Laguna, was en route to a
football game at Big Pine near Bishop.
He became superintendent of the Bl&
Pine Unified School District ln July.
Witnesses said Addis' new plane, a
Beach Bonanza V35, took off in the fog it
about 5:40 a.m. from Capistrano Airport,
circled the field ()OCe and crashed
tl;lrough the roof of the Sav·More i.aun·
dromat, 34241 [)()heny Park Road Jn the
businea·district of Capistrano Beach.
R•)atecl Sterlu,
P.hoto, ..... J
·nie explosive c'raah and devutating
fire did an . estimated '51',000 dimage.
The plane Joss. was -probably about
another $40,000.
·Authorities have no good clue yet as to .
what might have cau~ the crash other
than poor visibility. Both Addis and the
plane·were Incinerated in the fierce blaze
w_hich destroyed not only the laundromat
and adjacent aparlment · but badly
damaged the Blue Pelican restaurant
which bad a C{)mmon wall.
Edith SuUenberger, ~. her infant
daughter and mother. Donna Sullen-
berger, 59, who managed lhe" laundromat,
were alseep in their one bedroom apart-
ISee CRASH, P1p·.Z)
Santa. Ana Winds
Divert Airplanes
Santa Ana winds this morning brought
with them the usual change in Oiiht pat.-
terns at Orange County Airport. .
Officials at the airport tower reported
th'°t aircraft began tailing off iiltO the
desert winds which blow toward tbe
southwest during the autumn month!:.
The flight p8ttem change iilao means
that airplanes come In over Newport
Beach fln their landing approaches, ,
The irregular winds p r e v a Ill tn-
tennittenUy throughout the faU and ·fre.
quently inti! the. late winter montha. •
---,• ' ~ ~ ..............
SILHOUl!TTED IV 'lAMIS, FIRIMIN BAri:Li ILAZI-A'TIR;l!LlNli PLUMMITED INTO.CAl'ls;fONo BIACH LAUNDROMAT . . . . . . . . ' Ii
( •
I DAILY '1LOt c
• l'ro•, P,,.e I War Crids
COUNCIL .•• -S-Unt-mit_:_Me-etinu:--.: ------~ hf1da oa ~ project 1 wee.k •co and said
the developers fear I.hey catft complete
the pro]oet If lhi• happens.
"It wauld be wllortulllle," Dunn a .
plalned, lldcfln& the J-and Mapea
prope.fty would be lbe only true indu•Lrial
park In the ,area, U built as pla nned. -0£ Arabs Caltled
He said it would feature 1 satellite-type
stnJcture, affili1 ted with the Los Angeles ·
Museum of Science and I'ndustry, ind
containing continuously changing es--
hibil.'J.
Dunn said the industrial park wou ld
also ·be fl complem1;nt to the existing
Hyland Division of Travenol Labor1torles.
Inc., since it would 1150 be oriented
toward the medical field.
The Hyland facility specializes in
development of medical prodLict.oi derived
from whole blood , plasm• .and other
biochemical compounds.
Actual location ,of the proposed Johnson
and Mape industrial p1rk is north of the
San Diego Freeway aod south of what
wUl'eV~ntually b:e-,rd.acArthur Boulevard,
between Hyland Avenue and tbt Santa
Ana River.
City offieials decided at the atudy
session last week to further discuss the
eventual s.treet extension. to see what can
~ done.
CAIRO (AP) -Kings and presidents of The C.tiro broad.cast said Yasir Arafat,
the Arati world have been summoned to leader or Ule overall guSrrilla command
Gairo for a summit conference Tuesd11y -the Palestine Liberation Organiz.ation
to seek an end to Ow civil war in Jordan -also i.s expected to attfnd.
and to keep it from spreading into an In-If ao, the meeting presumably would
temetional conflict. bring Hussein and Arafat together (or ~e~
Radio Cairo said Monday all Arab {int time sinee the fightlna broke out m Jordan last Thursday. · • leaders were coming excer President The broadcast did not aay why Bakr
Ahmed Hassen el-Bakr o lr1q. The of Iraq was not attending.
Egyptians 1ccused Iraq earlier in the day In il.'J attack CJn Iraq earlier, Egypt
of .upseltinJ: ~• weekend cease-fire in claimed that it created a mlsun-
Jordan. derstanding between the Jordans and the T;e broadcast sald Kina: Hus_,ein of Palestinians of the cease-fire Nasser pro-
Joroan and President Noureddin Atassi pclJed op Saturday:
of Syria)111d confinned their intent.ions to The authoritative newspaper AJ Abram
attend the meeting. Howevei:, ~dio of Cairo said Arafat was relying on Iraq's
Damucua later 11id Atassi w9U)d not at-Radio Baghdad to ·anno11nce his obeervan-
tend the confereoce, but wOukl be in ce of the cease-fire but that Baghdad fail·
Cairo. ed tn do so an the prete:rt that its broad-
The Damascw: broadcast quoting casting equipment had broken down.
Syria's Ministry of Information aald Radio Baghdad re"sponded to Al
One solution would ht to curve the tr1f·
fie artery around-in--1-U-shape~and bae~
out of the p1rcel, which is to be dlvided
into _.ix separate lots, instead of routi1141 it
straight over the river.bed.
Atassi had already left for Cairo "to t\Old Ahram's version by broadcasting a denial
-urgeot--talk:s-on-means~ol-sto,,ping-cur~ -by-t Central--Committee_of_ the
rent al.rocities against the Palestinian Palestine Liberation Organization that ~ • . DAILY ,ILOT Ila# 'llef'I
FATHER AND SON SET SIGHTS ON CHANGING IMAGE OF SECOND OLDEST PROFESSION
Dom (left) and RObert Raciti Run 'Collateral Lending Buainess' In Cotta Mesa
. Bridging the river into adjacent Foun·
taln Valley will require conferences with
and eventual consen t by officials of that
cit y.
";'.nd ·that's tough," Dunn remarked
during the presentation.
A publ ic bearing is ai.> scheduled dur-
Pawn
• • IS a Dirty Word
Jng tonight 's meeting on formation of the
city's third underground utility district.
Encompassing Harbor Boulevard from
19th Street r~ Adams Avenue and along
Mesa Man Swaps Stuffed Owls for Cold Currency
the Jailer from Harbor Boulevard to By PATRICK BOYLE
Fairview Roa.d, the district would cost °' .,. Dlffr ,11., ..,,
little to the property owners involved. The only valua·ble Item DOm Raciti has
·Pttblic Works Ptrector George Mldsen recently refu!ed to loan money on is a
explained at the last council meeting that cow, and thfti only because "lt wouJd eat
most.lllility lines ,in the area involved are. up the' interest.~·
already built to provide under&rouod Raciti owns Costa Mesa Jewelry a°"'
urvice. -' Loan at 1838 Newport Blvd., and the
No new overhead utility installations, greying, middle-aged family man loans
however, would be allowed ii the diatrict JI.I.Oney in return for cq_llateral. But he
is. established. does not like to ~all his busiµess a 'pawn
A.. second-Public-hearing-has-been -------1JJ!>p,'.......an<LhLresenta _even more 'hOck
ICheduled for a rezoning petition by shop.'
Peoples Investment Corporation of Los As part Of an _.effort to change a
Angeles, to switch land at 630 Paularino stereotype in the public's mind, RaciU
Ave., from single family home and in-says that he is now in the collateral len-
stitutional and recreational use .to multi· ding business.
pie dwellings. ,ft.aciti Is not a shifty-eyed gaJ1gster-
The company seeks to build 1 large type working out o.f a dimly lit, skid·r~w
apartment complex aL that location. but hock shop. He thinks that the movies
the planning commission has recom· ha ve stereotyped this image of .a
meni:ied denial. pawnbroker on many people's minds, and
AcUng City Manager Fred Sorsabil he want.oi to change that image.
said today a proPQll} to .establish head-"We loa1 money to· people who can't -QUartenJQ[_the...BOys..C::lub.of-the--Harbor----~_t f.19~---ADY'H~H:.~he_aays,_''and_
Area-at TeWlnkle Pa~k will also be we are Just In business to make a living." disc~ and additional staff 51udy pio. He· may well be in the world's secoad
bably'.aulliorized.. · . oldest profess.io1, for pawnb(oking dates
Councilmen are also scheduled lo back' fo the inC!ent 'Bibjtoiiians. "fhe
-revieW-1-ttport by lhe traffic engineering business evo'lved to lts preSent sta8:e by.
firm of Williaitison and Schmid on pnr the Middle Ages, and .the first true
posed .solutions to street problems in the P8\¥llshops were established by the
vehicle-choked downtown area. authority of the Popes.
Anyone planning to go before the coun-., The • Ilali~ns called .their pawnshops
cil to discus!I matters not specifically -set moJ1ti ~e Pl,~ta," mean~g "mountains of
for ,public hearing or general review are compamon, and pledging valuables to
reminded of the newly adopted consent obtain needed money was a" es-celleot
caJendar format. method of funding without credit. .
A lirge number of items -generally . The New World may have ~ever been
letters or other official communications dlSCOvered by Colwnbus, had 1t not been
-are acted upon in one general motion, for .a pawnbroker, ~or Queen ~sabella ~f
but all are listed on the consent calendar Spam pawned her Jewels to fmance lus
agenda if rece.ived in time. voyage. . .
Mayor Robert M. Wilson, who initiated Pawnb~oku1g became ~pular 1n l~e
the time-saving procedure will give U.S. d~1ng the late 1800 s, and the in·
anyone who wishes a chance to address du!try is 11ow regulated by the individual
the council about Such it.ems: ~tate governments. There are established
Anyone who wishes to speak auring the rnterest r~~ that may be charged . but
final oral communications period is i.lsn · Dom Rac11J says that not all pawn .-1bops
limited to five minutes, unless granted fo!l.ow th~ rates. . .
additional time. There is a state organization now call-
ed the Collateral Loan Assn.,'' he savs,
From Page I
MANSON ...
"and the organiiation, of which I anl a
member, is trying to get all collateral
le11ding agencies to abide by the laws, but
some of them won't."
Raciti u.ys thal the interest ratei>
established by the state are reasonable,
aJKI µiey are no higher than th06e charg-
ed hy finance companies.
"The interest on. a SlOO loan is $2.50 a
month," he says, "which is 30 percent a
year.''
But a customer here has an ad'vantage
over going to a finance company or a
bank,'' he notes. "Here, they can get in-
stant money.-Tbey don't h'lve to fill out
forms and papers and answer a lot of
emb-arra·sstng questions.•
when a man brings an item to RaciU's
shop as collateral for 1 loan. the item is
appraised, often by Racili himseU or by
his son, Robert.
"The Joa n is determined considefing
the wholesale value o( the !tent'," Robert
says, "and the demalkt on the market.
We have to try to project seven months
ahead for the market value, because the
loiin is good for seve n months.•:
After the, seveJ1 month period has
elapsed, arul_tlie interest is t"!lli ~ewed
the shop may sell the item to anyone.
"An example of the market value drop-
ping," ~..adds, "if lW~ ~ ~
boards were replaced tiy s!lorf' ones as
the most popular. The Jong ones are
almost worthless now.
"We also ha ve to figure the percentage
for -guaranteeing the item," he says,
noting that all mercbandise ls guaran·
teed.
tor 30 days after it is purchased. Raciti
says that if the purchased item does not
work and the customer brings it back, he
will replace it, fix it, or give tbe mu bis
money back.
Raciti says that his business has in-
creased rece11tly because of the nation-
wide economic problems, and that he is
getting more upper-class customers than
he used to.
He also notes that the naUonal crime
problem has caused his business to in-
crease.
"We have people come Into the store
that are going on vacation for a while.''
he says. "They often bring in their
valuable Items, such as guns and jewelry,
and borrow the minimum amount. They
just want to leave the stuf r here for
safekeeping rather than ri!k a burglar
&tealing it while they are away."
Raciti says that "we have severaJ safe-
ty factors protecting the merchandise in
our possesston," lntluding safes, alarms
and some he won't divulge.
The merchandise in his possession is
'lAJ"ied. 0Re counter is stocked with
everything from a regulation Marine
Corps cap to a small box of ball bearings.
-Another counter;-this one glass-topped,
d!§pla}'.s several thousand dollars North
of new and used jewelry. He once loaned
money to a man who left his bridge of
gold teeth a! collateral.
"We have a lot of guns," note s Leonard
\Villiams, an employe, "and they are all
lest·fired by a gunsmith be.fore they go
on the shelf. JI the gu1 blows up, we can
always get anoliler gunsmith , but not
another customer."
'Raciti s.iys that he alSo ha s oc:casio1 to
loan money on stolen merchandise, and
he usually ~oes.
"lf TJuY• comes in wltb a guitar or
something else,"he says, "and 1 suspect
. that he stole it, I will tr9 to lend him as
little as possible. If he wiU take $5 or SlO,
I give it to him.
"I then report to the authorities that
!he guitar may have been stolen , and if
the owner turJ11s up. lie k usually glad to
pay the loan to get his guitar back. If he
wants to take me to court to get il back
without paying the money, I'll give it to
him and write it off as a loss."
Raciti says lhat abQut 80 perce11t of his
customers come back for their item and
rep;ty the loan , and the rest of the
merchandise: is sold.
"J had a man come in onC1!," he says,
"arid he pointed to a guitar saying lilat he
had brought it here two years before, I
checked my records, and he was right.
"Since it had once been his, I sold it to
him at less Iha.JI the market price. Six
months later: he brought it back to bor-
row more money, and I still have it."
From Pagel
CRASH ...
• ment that is part of the laundromat
building. secution and defense abou t his drinking
habits , criminal record and motivation
for testifying. DeCarlo has said he saw
Manson with a gun much like one the
l!itate says was used to kill three persons
at Miss Tate's mansion.
-..., DAILY PILOT
7 Orange Coul1tians Die.
In Weekend Cru· Accidents
The youngt?r woman wa! blown through
the wall and onto gravel outside but aside
from neck burns. was not seriously in-
jured. She rushed inside and carried out
her 3~ week old daughter who was not
injurtd. The Infant was alsee p in a baby
carriage. Her empty crib was pushed
through the wall by the explosion.
'
·,011 .u.fl COAIT ,.UaLISMING COM,.ANY
lekrt N. "'••'
J111i II.. Cur1•y
~ J'""~ ..... 0-tl MtMt.,
Th•Mtl A. Mur,h!nt
Mtntt1"' Efl'-'"
c ........ Of'ftct
JJO W11f ltf Str11!
... nr111 .Y4rt1U P.O •••• 1 llO, •1•2•
• • OtMt Offk•
~ 1t1c11: nn Wllf' .. 11111 ~ ... "'--._.,,~ m ,_, •-.
..... Ill $ I: •Mellt. 11111 fttcl'I IJIUIWI ...
191t QlfN!llt! .. Ntrffl II C....IN ... l
Seven pmons died over the weekend in
Oranp COWtty u Ille result of traffic ac-
cid<nll, lncludJlll two Oranc• Coast
resident&.
The 4e,ad are: ~
llalpli 8. Rodi, 45. cl 20732 Kelvin
Lane. Huntlncton Beach.
Llldl J, wtaalow, 20, of 26S9 Oran1e
AVe., Costa Mesa.
PaU1cll McGRl11:11, 22, Of Santa Arra.
Geerce D. Bltley, 73. of Pleasanton,
Calif.
·Fr:Hk L. Reynold1, %9, of Buena Park.
Fr.U CUcUer, 19, of Garden Grove.
James P'. HalH)', 20, of Cerritos.
Roth dlod SW>day in CCSta Mesa
Mmor1al ''iioopflal of injuri.. 1ullered
'l'hundi1 -_hll C..-and a truck CCI•
llded at Victoria Street •ad C 1 n y o n
Drive In the west Cotta Mesa arta.
Min w1m1 ... died Saturday at Tustin
COmmwllty lfcioPlti!:-slllt WU fowid un-
-In a llood coolrol channel on MacArth\lr Boulevard, "'!f1ll cl Ille
Orance-COUOl1 Alrpcrt Sept. 10. Her car
went out of control and 1111 was thrown
Into a dralnqe d!tch-
Mn. McG..-leapod to her dealh
Saturday nipt from Ille Main Sttott
--ooto tbe SaalLAoa n-ay. landfnl CIO top cl a ncrtllbound <ar. lier head 1111\Uhed Into tbe wtndobleld.
HUUty died Sunday nilht when hi• car
crrerturnod an.r •lrlkln,.-a dirt llloulder
on the San Oltgo Freeway near Junlpero
Serra Road In San Jua n Capistrano.
Roynolda died Frldly nllht In Lincoln
COmmwllty Holpllal, JIU<na Park, u the
result of injuries Suffered ln • two-car
crash in 'Buena Park.
Clickner died Saturday in Huntington
lnte:rcommunity Hospital. He gas injured
last Wednesday in Garden Grove when
his motorcycle went out of control.
Hulsey was deai:! on arrival Sunday at
St. Jude Hospital, Fullerton 1s the result
of injuries sulfered ln_a_.Carbon canyon
accldenL
YMCA Recruiti.tlg
Indian Maidens
The younger Mrs. Sullenberger return-
ed to 0¥ apartment and lifted a beam off
of ber mother's legs, said firemen, anif
helped Donna Sullenberger outside.
The senior Mrs. Sullenberger sul!ered
first and second degree leg burns.
'Si~ engine~ ;frofll the ,coUnty fire
department and a snorkef (aerial) unit
·battled the flames for an hour and 1 half
before the fire was brought· under con·
trol.
-8111 Minick, coroner's invtstigator, said
Addis left home a short while before the
cra!h and told hts wife, Mary th1t he
planned to drive to Big Pine.
He apparent]~ changed his mind and
took the plane which he used to commute
to his home on weekends. The Capistrano
_ Airport is uncontrolled. It has no control
tower or runway ligh~ and taking off,
Autumn recruitment Jlf'Olflml for the uld olflciab, Is pretty much a matter or
Orange COUt YMCA lndlan Maidena pilot dllcrtticn.
Thundercloud Federation ,et under •I)' No one llW him enter his si.ng!Hngine
today, cont.inuin& tbroupoUt: this weet plane but his car was parked nearby.
in the Harbor Are1 . Besides his '1dow, Addis Is survived by
Hero II the list of meet1111 placoa for a t.,.... doutJiter, Sharon Ann. cf the
the 7:30 p,m. sessions, accordinc to In-. family home and a eon, FrJnk R. n of
cllan Maldlin head Paul llcherty. San Dleao. He had been an Orance Coun·
Mooday, e.yv;ew Elea>entary Schoel. ty mtdent 10 years.
'I'Uadl7, Coroqa de! lt1r1 lJndbergh Funeral services were: acheduled at 3
and W'Uloil eltmentary schools. p.m. today at Peek Famlly COlonial
Wednnday, llarplr, Eutblull and Funeral Home In Westmlnmr wilh burial
Mesa Verde elenltniaey achco!s, In Werunlnater Memorlal Part.
Thursdty, Harbor View Elemtntary A r~dent of the craah area, ~frs.
School r • -Yoland1-Vltal1 W35-Dom1nao Road, said
A l'fCTilltment meet.inc for -t h e she thought tht explosion or the crlsh
oPcahontas Fedtr1tlon is schedul~ OcL w111 right tn her front y1 rd. She feared
17 1t the YrlfCA headquarters 2XIO momentarily that It was 11 r~rr!nce of
Vnive:rsil,f Drive, accordina to Mrs. the e1rUiqu11kes that had ahaken the area
David Encbon, princess. 1eve.ral daft earlier ..
guerrillas in Jordan." Arafat had at any time accepted a ceue-
It said Atassi arranged to meet with fire in the civil war .
President Gama! Abdel Nasser of Egypt, The broadcast accused Egypt of
CoJ . Muammar Kadafi, chief of Lybla'1 distorting the fa cts "in order to create a
Revolutionary Council, and Maj . Gen . r ift among the Arab countries."
Jaafar el Numairi, leader of Sudan's It said the Central Committee has
military government. never left any doubt that it will "only
Jordan has accused Syria of invading cease-firing when the reg ime of im·
northern JQrdan to help Palestinian guer· perialist agen~ 1n Amffian has been
rillas seeking to oust Kini Hussein's overthrown and rejaced by a truly na·
government. lion.al authority."
* FroM P .. e I
JORDAN CRISIS •••
At.as.si has denied moved into Jordan at that force would be used iI it wu judg.
all. 1 ~ ed necessary to evacuate them.
"You are standing,.a1one against a Extra Ct30 transports have been posi·
mw attack tmleubed on you by the tioned in Europe to carry the troops from
rulers of Syria, who could oot-bold out for West Germany. The 82nd Airborne
two-hours in tht.Golan Hel.ghts-ln1987 "-Division, on alert-at--Ft.-Bragg,-N.c .• _
Ma]ali said. , ' relies on huge C141 jet transports as part
"HOfd fut: in the face of the ag:.--or-the-u:s:-strlke-reserve. ·
gressors, as last as the steel of your All this was billed as precautionary by
tanks,'' he exhorted. Pentagon officials who said there was no
Guerrilla sources in Baghdad and widesperad general alert . The intent re.
Damascus proclaimed that Syrian in-mains only the possi bility of rescuing
vaders -moving in a tw<rpronged Americans -thought to be about 400 -
maneuver toward lrbid -w e r e swept up in the Jordan fi ghting.
mutilating Hussein's Royal Army. As the arm y briefly lifted its order to
The young king has 55,000 troops shool on sight MOnday the women o[
against the 32,000 guerrillas entrenched Amman went into the smashed streets,
in northern Jordan and around the capital dodging sniper fire , to find food for their
city of Amman. , , fa milies.
His 40th Brigade faces up to 100 They ca rried shopping baskets past the
Russian-built tanks of two Syrian dead and wounded as King Hussein·a
brigades with 50 British Centurian tanks. army rulhle5.11Y hun ted guerrillas who
American Secretary of State Willian'i had ignored C1!ase-fire appeals.
P. Rogers urged the Sovieb to exercise: Snipers hidden in mosques and on the
their power over the Arabs to end the roofs of luxury apartment houses Were·
hostilities, which he branded today as lr-blasetd by cannon fire.
responsible and capa ble of drastically FINAL FIGHT
broadening.
"We call upon the Syrian government
to end immediately this intervention in
Jordan," he said. "And we urge all other
concerned governm ents to impress upon
the government of Syria the necessity or
withdrawing the forces which have in-
vaded Jordan."
SlJMMIT PROPOSED
Tunisian President Habib Bourguiba
proposed a summit conference of Arab
states in Cairo to thrash out a Jordanian
solution, and several. including Egypt.
had accepted. But Cairo sources said
Sunday the Syfian invasion ended
chances for such a meeting.
Cairo took two positions on the conflict
Sunday:
-Hussein should Inte r v ene · im-
mediately lo ensure com pliance with a
cease-fire plan worked out by Egyptian
Presidenl Gama! Abde l Nasser and
reportedly accepted by the government
and guerrilla forces.
-Iraq's ruling Baalh party tricked the
guerrillas into continuing to fight after
their leaders accepted the truce.
The official and public position of the
Nixon administration has been one o{
concern for more than 400 Americans, in-
cluding 48 out of 54 hostagea held by the
Palestinian IU'ITWai, with lhe pcssibility
The fight for Amman and for the
throne is in its final stages and has cnst
more time and Jives than the two-day
battle the king's commanders had
forecast.
The pavements are littered with
cartridge case!. Buildings everywhere
have the black holes of arUlfery hits.
Fires burn on the hillsides.
From the Intercontinental Hotel you
could see an armored car systematically
pounding a block of flats, floor by floor,
after a sniper had been reported there.
The shells went in orange streaks low·
acros! the valley and burst through the
living rooms.
A sniper near the British Embassy w11s
killed .. A. sol~ier a_nd the army'blew up
the building Jn which he was hiding .-
One sniper got a lucky shot through the
embassy which pul the transmitter 10
London out of action. The staff had 10 revert to Morse code until the generator
wa! repaired. A sold ier standing near
journalists who went to the embassy dut·
ing the curfew lifti ng was wounded by a
sniper bullet.
The return fire was erratic. A soldier
swung his jeep.mounted machine gun at
the hotel and put a burst through the
.hotel lobby' whlch scattered newsmen.
Photographen have been told they will
be !hot if they take pictures.
Hot Off Press ·--
.City to Get History Books Tonight
Hot off the pre!ses. Initi al cop ies of the
city's official history book will be
presented lo the Costa Mesa City Council
tonight by iU proud chronologer.
Ed Miller. of 3257 Idaho Lane. will be
on hand at the 7:30 convening hour to
distribute the heavily illustrated book.
Y:hich -unlike the community lJ:
describe~ -was once wrapped in con-
troversy.
.. A Slice of Orange'' is the tiUe selected
through a contest that drew entries from
across the nation. the same lottery,
method by which Costa Mesa itself was
named years ago.
Miller himself chose "Goat Hill '' as the
original Utle, taken from the. Mesa ·s
monicker of depression years, when goats
tethered in front yarda provided famHles
wtlh mllk_
A debate that r1ged for days, involving
Miller, Ille councll and lht Ceola Mesa
Poseidon -Firing Sel
CAP-E KENNEDY, llla. IAPl -
Poseidon rocket carrying mock multiplt
Wlrheada WIS scheduled to be fired froTI,
the 1ubmarine USS Daniel Boone at sea
today at 11 a.m •
•
Historical Society. resulted because city
funds were to be allocated to help defr1y
expenses.
Miller managed lo keep his sense or
hum or lhroughout the htadline-grabbinj
ordeal, if not the colorful name: of his
book.
Services Slated
For Cleo Fuller
Cleo Ftiller, a longtime Costa Mesa
resident wbo moved from the area about
a year ago, died Friday at the Veterans
Hospitil in Reno , Nev. He was 73.
Services for Mr. Fuller wUl be held
Tuesitay at Bellvue l\tausoleum in On-
tario. Funeral arrangements are being
made'4ty Draper's Funeral Service of OJ:P
tario.
Mr. FUlttr Is 11.trVlved by hi! wife,
Nella, of Cottage, Grovt . Ore.; 1 daughter, Mrs. MaryneUe Otto and three 11andchlldren. .. ~ -
Mr. Fuller came to Costll Mesa from
Ontario In 1927 and wa1 employed 11 El
Toro l-1arine Base as a book.keeper prior
to bis retirement.
I
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VOL. 63, NO. 226, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES
\ • Ir .........·ras
' .
Deputies
Arrested
In Thefts .
By JACK BROBACK
OI tM 0.llY 'll•t Sl1H
'
Two Orange County deputy lheriffs,
jailed Sunday as suspects in an at-
tempted burglary of the Mission Viejo
Country Club, are out on bail t o d a y
and will be questioned about other.
burglaries in. the area. she.riff's depart-
ment investigators said.
Deputy Frederick B. Irvine, 40; of La
Habra was captured Sunday morning
near Lake Elsinore after officers said he
had commandeered a sheriff's patrol car
and fleet ·
-Deputy Afthur E. Duncan, 34, of Hun-
_tington .Beach, was arres_ted in the
Mission Viejo area and surrendered
•
without-incident ________ _
---· -., • •
-·
ORAN6E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA' MONDAY, S~PTEt.4BER' 2f, .1970
1 • -
s c (){)
• ~ " • •-• I ! ' ~ Ktifllt'J .............
TEN CENTS
ea.
'
. Capo Beach-
Pilot Hits
.
Laundromat
By RICllAllD P. NALL
~ ....... '*"'''" A school' superintendent from Monarch
Bay was killed in the foggy early morn-
ing' darkness Saturday when his light
plane crashed .into a Capistrano Beach
launctrotnat, starting a fire •1nd b)o~ a
mother in an adjacent apartment through
the Will.
Authorities said the pilot victim, Frant
Raymond ' Mills, C, ol 32631 Emprw
Way,. South •Laguna, was eri-route tQ__a
football game at Big Pine near Bishop.
He became • superintendent o( -the Big
Pine Unified School •District in JuJy.
Witnesael aaid Addis' new plane, a
&each·Bi.inanza V35, took off in the fog at
aboUt 1:40 a.m. from Capistrano Airport,
dn::led the field once and crashed
through the roof-of the-Sav .. More Laun~
dromat, 34241 Doheny Park Road in the
~usinw_d~rlct.oLCapistrano Beach.
The • erplosive crash 11\d devastiiting
Both -men wue "moonlighting" on thtlr
off duty hours' as aecuri.ty guards for the
M~lon Viejo Company.
Lt. Richard Drike of the sheriff's
! ' • • • • • • . • ' •
SILHOUETTED BY FLAMES, FIREMEN BATTLE BLAZE AFTER PLANE·PLU~ET.ED INT.O CAPISTRANO BEACH" LAUNDROMAT'.
fire did an estimated '5&;000 damage.
The pl~ne loss wa! . probably about
another M0,000. · · department said both men were spotted
inside the Miislon Viejo clubhouse in the
Wiy morning hours by \be club's golf
pro. Roger Belanger. ·
. Belanger said he wu on hia way home
and dro"e by where ·ht saw the Security
car parked. He saw two men Inside, knew
theY didn't have a key and after walchin.g
for a few minutes, called the sheriff'• of-
fice.
By the time deputies arrived the two
men~had left 'the clu'bhou!e.
Irvine was found at the golf · course·
maintenance yard near > the S.n-Diego
Freeway. The dePtJties asked him to get
into the patrol car and relumed to the
clubbou.se w1th them.
Qnce there,'. they slid he mena ced Sgt.
Jake Riviere with a pistol and com-
mandeered the patrol car and took off.
He drove back to the maintenance
yard, switched to his own station wagon
and fle<I.
Resporidilig to a general alarm,
Riverside deputy sheriffs spotted the sta-
tion . wagon on the Ortega Highway
ahortly after 6 a.m. and pursued Irvine
down the grade into the Lake Elsinore
area.
When Irvine did not stop during the
pursuit, the Riverside deputies fired at
the fleeing car flattening the rear tires.
Irvine then jumped out of tJ1e car and
held the Riverside officers at bay with a
revolver which he continually pointed at
his head, threatening suicide.
He held them off for two hours before
giving in to pleas" of his wife and fellow
Orange County deputies who had arrived
at ·the scene.
Lt. Russell Hawk of the Lake Elsinore
sheriff's substation said Irvine "never
made an·aggr:essive move toward any of
our offiCers."
Duncan has been a deputy sheriff for
five years .. He has receritly served as a
Juvenile Hall bailiff and se\leral months
ago was bailiff · in the court o! Superior
Judge William S. Lee of Newport Beach.
Rusty Returns
' Shocked, Singed
After Explosion
Ru'sfy ; who '•a1 ~P,P&ienUy bloWn
througli the walrlJOng with His sleeping
mist.._.. ... has come .home -dazed; -
... whiskerless and somewhat the worse for
wear but happy to ht· found.
Rusty Is the 7-year-old famliy dog that
Mrs. Edith Sullenberger feared had
perished in tM! Saturday morning fire
caused by a plane crash.
Mr.s. Sullenberger, of 34241 Doheny
Park Road, her mother , Donna and infant
daughter narrowly escaped the flaming
wrecka'ge of their one bedroom apart-
ment. The sarrfe. was true of Rusty, who
came with Mrs. Sullenberg froni Ohio six
years ago.
She said today that Rusty was located
12 hours after the crash. "He was panting
and in ·shock and singed pretty badly and
he just laid Jn my arms,'.' she said. Rusty
is to be released from the veterinarian's
toda:r:.
Rusty's life ha s been
plicated lately. First it ~as t birth of a
new baby 31Ai: weeks ago. Up till hen he
had been the center of attention.
And most recently, his eaily morning
1nooze at the foot of Mrs. Sullenberger's
bed was rudely interrupted by an f.X·
plosion and fire. He doesn't seem to know
what to think about it all.
New Cease-fire Ordered
In Bloody J ordnn War
From Wire fleivlca . A ne• ttase-firt order in the 1ee11w
cM! war in Jordln was ordered by King
Husetn'•toc1ay1 as Syr:ian Anny tank
forces invadtd the embatUed naUon for a
.....,.i time lllnce flgbtlnr broke out.
Tiie conunand to slop fllh\inl WU ,to
be efleetlve ot 11:15 a.m. (Pm). INl the
situation In and around tho liberal Mlddle
Eall n1tton .... -•ting by the
hour. --,.··
President Nlion ordered paralroopen
stationed hi Wat Gtrmany onto aJimlttd
alert in ca1e events make evacuation of.
tbe.,esttmated 400 Americans In Jordan -
Including 31 hljackiD( hoota... -Im·
J>tr11ttve.
A While Hoose spokesmin @mphuized
that no direct intervention is anticipated
-a posture the Israeli government open-
ly criUclzed -but events were being
watched IS &hey develop.
King Hussein's ceue-fire order w1s
one more in a series given during the
pa,lt three day1 and broken lrrtvery cue.
Governments In lh<Middlt Eliot and
throughout the world appealed to both
sides to stop fighting.
Leaders on both sides -King Huue.in'1
Ro)ool Army chiel1, and tht au<rrillu'
Soviet-anned 'Palestlnt Liberation Anny
-encouri1ed their troops In tlie bloody
battle.
Jordanian military pv'.emor Marshal
Habel. Al·Majali pve the PLA troops a
2'it-hour ulUmatum, even<Wlille the Arab
states COftltdered a unmit Conference
on the war.
"Everyone who does not surrender and
hand over his weapofts or. 1'tto fires_on
the armed-forcts after this time (4 P·1"·
Jordan lilll') wilt be killed," Majali
declared,
'"This 11111< Int •amlD( to you , •• "
,. Rlidlo Amman announced that PL.A
force of. S,OOll men incllldini 1'nu,..
a!'l'DOnd can and artillery co•erthc their
advance had poured into Jordan 1t
Ramtha, on the border, 50 miles from·
Amman .
Mljall congratulated his own 40tli
Brigode lor its valor In holding off the in-
vedm, wllo S)'Tlln l'nsldenl Nureddilt
Ataul bu deoild 1l10Ved Into Jordan 'at
111.
"Yoti art standlnc alooe 11ainst 1
mau attack Unleashed . on you by thf.
n&IOtl ol S)'fla, who could not hold oot for
(IJM JO~, Pop I)
I . -
... '.
. ' .
THE SULLENBERGER$ LOST El(ER')'THiNG BUii' THEIR .NIGHTCLOTHES -'AL.MOST, EVE~YTHINO·
In tho Aportrnenl llehlr\d .tho Stv·Mort Loundry,.1 Scrope With Dtath on· 1 Chilly Stptotnbtr Mo•nl111 .
. . ..
Tot Safe, , .
• ID • -: ' t • • • 1 • r.'
Capo Plane Wreck .lmpac~:Threw Thein :Thr.ough 'Wall . . . . ... ~.. --
BJ· PAMELA BAU.AN Utd she woli:e·u~a'"nd HW.Edith·ata11ding: from under them ·and. dragging· ~It
Authorities have no l;ood clue yet as to
what might have caused the cra&h other
th~n poor visibility. Both Addis ind the
plane were incinerated in lhe fierce blaze
which' 4estroyed not only the laundromat
and adjacent apartment but badly
danlaged the Blue Pelican· restaurant
. whl~h had a common wall .
,-Edith Sul.lenberger, 34, ....h.eL.lnfant
1 ~ daughter and mqtber~ Donna Sullen-
berl't!', $9, who m1naged the laundromat,
' ..ere a.beep in tbrit OM. bedroom ....
'rntn& that-is part. of the laundromat
buJldina.
-.-1be Younger womin Was b'own tlir001h
lhe wall a11d onto gravel outskte but aside
Crovi neck' burns was not seriously in-
jura::I. She rushed inside and carried oUt
her 31ii week old da\Jghter who was.not
injured. The infant was al.seep in a baby
carriage. Her empty crib was pu!bed
through the wall by the explosion. ·
The Younger Mrs. Sullenberger return·
ed to the apartment a nd lifted a beam off
or her mother's legs, said firemen, and
helped Donna Sullenberger outside.
The senior Mrs. Sullenberger suf(erfd
first and second degree leg burns.
SiJ engines from the county fire
department and a snorkel (aerlal)'unit
battleC:l the flames for an hour and a bal[
before the fire was brought under ·con-
lrol.
Bl.II Minick, coroner's investigator, saJd
Addis left home a short while before the
~rash' and told his wife, Mary that he
planned to drive to Big Pine.
He apparently changed his mind and
took. the plane lfh.ich he used to commute
to his home on weekends. The Capislrano
Afrport is uncontrolled . It has no conlrol
tower or runway lights and taking off
said officials, is pri:Uy much a matter·oi
pilot.discretion.
. No one saw him enter his. single-engine
plane .l)ut ~scar was ~ked nearby.
Besides his widow, Addis is survived by
a teenage dau1Hlel', Sharon Ann of the
family home ind a IOft, Frank ft. D of
San Diego. He had been 1n Orange Cowr
ty resident .IQ years. ·
Funeral services. wtre 1cbeduled at 3
p.m. today at Petk F1mily Colonial
Funeral Home In Westmirister with burial
in Westminiler Memorial Park.
A resident of the crash area, Mrs.
(See CR.\S)I, Pa10 I) °' • De11r '*'It.ff ''J • through· the.wail. "I do9e·niy1e:Yes today out," stld,.the,molhero"'You•hear·a~t·
The Uny baby lay coola( ~ 1hir and I can · llill ,.. the burning timber . grown men doing tlilngs like:tha(. bub.not ·
mother's ......t-Uve arm1, obltvioal ta Ill bttwee11 Irie and•the>1ky,I' Me'Uld. ( · . . . · · . but the ,e';;t'ieface above her. , Some tinibeni'" had fallen ,. 1Cross her li t le old ladieS.:'' 1
• • -: ~tli 5u1•--~r1--"eel.it Uie 1"-...... 1lega. "I remember •pUlltni "mtseff ·oot ·"I guess ,you.'dclamati~R:'lhings ;wf'en· DUJ 11;.1,..., ,.... •urn ,,..,, ' ha', ,,.. ~·· ~'.4.1.!.J ~_,,1,1. .,.1t, ,,_,._11,, and'"puUed her clolef." .. • 11 • you ve...., aQQal~um.n.1 ,..,m-~
"She's the mir1ele," she a.Id quietly. ,j a :tenderfool. ~~there· I was w~·
The baby, waon·t 11..,,i., 1n her ...,.1 ~oulh'. '·--:-t-..l . . bar<foot·over.~lisa apc1 ,1p~n~rec1 :~. place Saturda:X when lhe ~crashed 1i.· LSJ."rt::e ct;(J and never feJ Cit."r · , 1 ,
tnto 'the l.....m.nattwhk:b ld)oined .the : ~ • '. ' I'" •• '.~ ,· . , '''fie . ,lost ,' e.ver~thlng r ·~t· o'u r.
family's Capilllnno Bead! a,.-. O Fl · Cli · ' nightelQthes tind he Jir<," •lfid i!<t\tli.
'"EJlzabetli WU aleeping In her Cir• , ', n , ag : .a:.rg~s: ':Things like Ilia< don\t hit,y<JU •untjl' )'.OU•
riage, nea:t to my lted, mt br'the ~ •t , are ·st.tndin1 "ih1frontof'a-mirror'mll,,.u. ••-fool o1 ••·bed" -•.t ..__ _ _.1...... An 11-year~ld San·Ctrnnteiyvutti ••S" 1o1n: wn: • ._. ~ ,_._ • · realize that you don't even own a lo.cent The impact ol lh.-u~, wllloh tool< ~ li)I pollc< F{id~Y "" .,.plcion of ,
the I~• ol llle.pllot, bleW'the 1141r:• cttb ileao<:r,un1 the U.S. ·Qa1 ,after on olfkor comb.'"· • •
through the .w.u. It aim ~)FAth' Ultrted 1 that two Arderican'f''fllp ·had .Life is. aetijinr ,down' for ~mfnow •.
throucll· ... "'--_ ........... -u ·•~ ·-·-'"''"'-m· They have ,moved lo a small apartment ''l'm·\blnkful it ••·I thin "*81''.uJd. uin:"'"•' -'""""' .... ..., ... "111 near; lhe one they.' lost and (~ Ind·
Edith. , • ' ~ a.v.an .tbe ~IUl~t.Wfl;s .dljv.iq .. · , · nelghbors1 have,-been ~11nc~Wlth,
hhao "°''•••lloctionol the ~lut. She U. Roberl>l-1&1.d,Weftdell M~lhew, lll<cs ol.food, ..-y-and Ck>tlili!1.
--Giiiy bwblf a -and then UdaU •. Jll Aliod!Jn,. was. plclced· up' on Their · IOmlJy• 'dot! · Is 11111 ,al· liJO beln& on hlr feet oullide Ille ••U. Bot ~Ion ol • ~UD( ml'll"ry aed. veterinlrlll! lh shock,;but,lflltth' aod her,
bnda 1nd 1 cratches le1ve 1 lraoe o f\lh vetera•~• cod;e ,1eetloft1 , w~ dul wllh mother 1and 1the · ~by 1ar, 1 ~ 1outr«,
Impact wlih lbe -inch· wilt,·• do hlr de!litln1 a llq.,' . · , , tliein and potlinfl lotletlier the /kW.!Olle:
... -. . illMI' ,.W,llit-¥1<f ~· -ls thOl lidllh'•·....-. ··~·~~ .. "I wu llandtD( there and ev"71hioc iOii.Y-aiieeci to -·a.~tdlir1: delllr9yed .i.uncir-t, no riolP,''-1• aeemid -ud to me," Ille-· '"'Y • f~g Ullafl wJlh deflditr I 0 ... ' • ' • JOI?. , . , , ', ·
rnoUllr -""'bani_.... I , The ·)'OU\h, Wll • plcktd ·up by a· !!ot the lamil b illopolul.'ftll:! .mjlOW
cOaldn'l pt oriented to whore tbe •llU)o l)llroiuo at 'lwa ll!d Soutil Ola Vllta Uwl 'thOy've ever bftro bel<ltt. 'l'bti<'re'·
""'· When 1 did, l 1ra-her lllld ,..n Fridly .rim-. He"" -on his appnciaU.. Iii• beet.,. on""" cllil!Y' oot." · 'written promiae to a-in'court, Muonc September mornln( they nearly .Wted,
Her motlier, Mn. IJonnl.Sullenber...,, llfd, • · • · deotl1-
. ; •
1\'eatller ..
SUMY •kie,it with octuional low
clouds aionl Ille ll>n la the fate
for Tuesday,.with coartal-tempeia·
lures in the 70'i and inland read-
in1s shoolin1 up to IO dqroes.
INSIDE TODAY
..Thrtt Ughter-iliarwir od&e ...
turert took off from Lono l1lan4
Sunday on c · tran.rotlantic. gas
balloon od~ssey. Wtnd.i permit-
ting. the11 will reach Europe ;,,
siz to 16 da11s. See stor~ P09e 5.
...... II ._ ' _ .. ' ,_ .....
c:.lct. ' • 11 I IMltll ....... t -. ' . ............. ,-
1"9tritilMIMM • ,...._. U•U
-M A,"" ........ IP •
-
-' -. --.. ..... ~, ., .......... ..... · .. .............. -. -. -. ........... ,,." ..,.. ,.... ...
' r
f
= e~ .. Y PfLOT SC
· r ..... P .. eJ,.
JORDAN .. -!-
ti.o houri in the Golan HeiJbls in 1H7,"
Nl)all aald.
E ;
.
(;lenaente l11ue .
, Trailer--CPr-oj ect
"Hold lul in the lace or the •C·
..-•. u lul u the llMI of yaur
tanb,11 be exhorted.
VICl'ORIES CLAIMED
Guerrilla aources in Baghdad and
Damucus proclaimed that Syrian in·
v1der1 -moving in • lwo-pronied
maneuver toward Irbid -we r •
mutilating Hussein's Roya1 Army.
Back to Planner~
The you ng king has, 55,000 troops
a1atnst the 32,000 guerrillas entrenched
in northern Jordan and around the capital
city of AmmaTL
His 40th Brtc•de fices up to 100
Russian-built tanks of two Syrian
brleades with 50 Britilh Centurtan tanks.
'American Secretary of Stile Wllllam
P. Rogers urged the Soviets to etercise
their power over the Arabs lo end the · •
hostilities, which he branded today as ir·
responsible ~and capable-of drastically
broadening. .
"We call upon the Syrian a:overnment
to end Immediately this intervention in
Jordan," he said. "And We urge all other
conei!rned governments to impress upon
the government of Syria the necenity ol
withdrawing the forces which have in-
vaded Jordan."
SUMMIT PROPOSED I
A mobile home park proPosal that a:ot spokesman~for Lincoln.
bounced back to the planning commission • ,,,,... hey included wood treatment and
after a San Clement~ council spat last"""" simulated stucco for the-coaches rather
week will be up for the plaMefs -con· than conventional aluminum ·.siding.
siduation ag8in Wednesd8y. Covered carports wrrt to be •. re-
The commission had smiled on the Lin-qulrement and no aircondltlonen or
ooln Savings and Loan proposal for coolers perched on roof I.ops.
modernistic mobUe home development
near the Shorecllffs Golf Co u'r s e
uninhabited area.
The commission found the development
a CQmpatible land use because (If no con·
flict with existing,.,development and
...-..-'fec0q1ntended--it urtanimousJy -to tbe
coilnc.11. No detailed developmeOt slan-
d3rds were• set at tl)e time, pending I
council decision ol fhe condiUonll use
. petrnit. \
The council last week sent the matter
back to the commission for detailed
development standards so the entire
!!---kage·'C'Ould then-be---Welgiled by 'eoun·
OAIL't PILOT P'lllte 11¥ It-KHlllll'
cilmen.
Newport Man
Loses $3,485 _
To 2 Thieve~ .
Newport ~ police are continuing
their investigation today of the robbery of
a South Laguna man Saturday morning.
Tunisian President Habib :Bourauiba
propoeed a summit CMference of. Arab
states 1n Cairo to thrash out a Jordanian
solution, and severa1. including Egypt,
had accepted. But cairo sources said
Sunday the Syrian invulon ended
chances for such • meeting.
CO.UNTY AIDE KILLEFER TAKES IN VIEW FRDM SDUTH L.AGUNAN'S MASSIVE WAL~
Nur·,1redlM Point, W. I. C1in Wells Off Hla Personal Par1di1e With Help From County •
Councilman Wade Lower attempted
unsuccessfully last week to gain •pproval
'of the conditional use permit, with the
planning commiSsion to determine stan-
d3rds later. "I sat in and saw the plans
proposed by the developer and they "·ere
Richard L. PaUI, 25, (If 31711 Mar Vista
Ave., told Officers he-was-robbed of $3,485
in money and jewelry as he left a
Newport Beach bar at about 1 a.m.
He said two suspects approached him
in the municipal parking lot loca led in
the 3200 block of Newport Boulevard. One
hit him in the mout1', knocking him to the
pavement and held him do.wn.
Cairo took two positions on the conflict
Sunday:
-Hussein should l n t e T v en e im-
medl1tely to ensure compliance wltti a
cease-fire plan worked out by .Emtlan
President Gamal · Abdel Nuaer • and
reportedly accepted by the government
and guerrill• forces. • ~
-lraq'a ruling llHth party .tricbd. Iha
guerrillas into continuing to flabt after
their leaders accepted the truce.
The official and public position of Iha
Nixon admlriistrlltion baa been one of
concern for mort than 400 Americllll, Jn.
eluding 41 out of 54 holtagea held by Iha
Palestinian guerrjllas, with tbe pouiblllty.
that force would-be used -if. it-was judl-
ed necessary to evacuate them.
PLANES SET
Extra Cl30 transports have beeri posl-
• tioned in Europe to carry the troopa from
West Germany. The &2nd Airborne.
Division, on alert at Ft. Bragg, N.C.,
relies on huge C141 jet transportl u part
of the U.S: strike reserve.
All this wa.s billed as precautionary by
Pentagon officials who said thue was no
widesperad general alert. The intent re--
mains on]y the posSitiilify of rescuing
Americans -thought to be ~bout 400 -
..-wept up in the Jordan fighting.
As the army-briefiy-lifted-Jta--«der to
shoot on sight Monday the women or
Amrrfan went into the smashed strftts,
dodging sniper fire, to find food for their
(amllles. •
They carried shopping baskeU: JJ&Sl the_
dead and wounded as King Huueln's,
army ruthlessly hunted guerrillu who
had ignored cease-fire appeals.
Snipers hidden: in mosques and on the
roofs of luxury apartment hOUJes were
~lasetd by cannon fire.
FINAL· FIGHT
The fight for Amman and for the
throne is in its final stages and has cost
more time and lives than the twi>-day
batUe the king's commanden had
forecast.
The pavements are littered with
cartridge cases. Buildings everywhere
have the black holes (If artillery hits.
Fires burn on the hillsides.
From the Intercontinental Hotel you
could see an armored car systematically
pounding a block of fiats, floor by floor.
after a sniper had been reported there.
The shells went in orana:e streaks lo•
acroM the valley and btnt throu&h the
living rooms.
A sniper near the British Embusy l'IS
killed. A soldier and the :army blew up
the building in which he was hiding.
One aniper got a lucky shot through the
embassy which put 'the transmitter to
London out (If action. The staff had to
revert to Morse code until the gener1tor
was repaired. A soldier standinc near
joumalistl who Went to the embauy dur-
ing the curfew liftine wu wounded by a
sniper bulleL
'
DAILY PILOT • """" ......... ,.,.,.,. ,....,
c .... M... S. CJam111ta
OltAHGI COAST ,Ull,.ISHlHG COM,AN't
RePrf N. w.,4 ,"4.1 .... I ...,. ...... llJNir
J •• i.-•· c~·'•Y Vice ,,..1:...t , .... ~rtl M ......
lho11111 K•e.,il
l•ltw
Thew111 A. Mwr,til~•
M ........ f.i1 ...
llc~1'4 '· Nill 11111~ °""""' c-t~ ... 1., .......
(ti!• M-! UI Wed •tY $1t'tl'I
frl...,...I 9"(11: ltll W.I ..... , ... llWl'f ~ tl«ll 211,_, .........
Mlllltil!l*'I a.di: 1JIH MKtl ........ ,., ' ... " c-..1t: • ,..,.. at c .... • ... ,
Lagnna~s Berlin Wall impressive, he said.
Councilman .'J'hcimas O'Keefe opposed
the permit, charging it would be an act of
bad faith because opponents had not been
heard. An exchange of words followed.
The other suspect rined Paul's pockeL,-
and ·removed hi.s watch and a diamond
ring valued at $3,200.
County Officials OK Concrew 'Trespasser Block' . ' 'Having previously lost an earlier round
-the fate of all mobile home proposal s
Paul said he started to struggle agalh.st
the arm lock he was being held in, but his
assaMant reportedly told him, "Don't
hassle me, I have a gun ." ' • '· ,, By BARBARA XREIBICH limes actua:lly living ·iri the unfinished or • o.iir ,.,..., ,,.,, structure. ' ' •
A inusive concrete wall, extending Engineer R. E. Tebault, who desiinecf
oceanwai:d from the cliffs near Paradise and built the wall, said, "Hi (Cain) wn
Pol~t and reaching 1n imposing height of trying to protect his home from
24 feet at mean high tide line, was built trespassers. A bunch of hippies got in
under a variance Jssued by Orange once and set a fire in ·the living room ." ·
County May 12, county officials have COD-Tebault and the courily official$. aald
firmed. '-' the wall was not designed to serve any
Ttie wall, DOW drawing stai;tlett com-purpose but to protect the property.
ment f ro·m. south 'tl.acuna~"aeh~dweuen. -r.heFTIOlld=tbat::the::carea:::ia=entlrely
was built ~1·.an accesioey structure_ to .the .roc)ni_coaatli!1~ wl_!P ~-~~y beach that
new oceanlrOnt home of W .' J. CBln, 32225 might make the· wall questionable under
S. C'.east HighWay. ' new Supreme Court rullngs regarding
Applying for a variance to exceed the preservation of public beach access .
normal six-foot fence height limitation, Zoning Administrator Reed sai4 pr°"
the applicant stated that the wall was perty owners within 300 feel had received
"necessary lo protect my proper'ty from the usual notification of the variance
undesirables. I am about to occupy my hearing but only one had raised a ques-
new home on the beach and do not wish tion about the wall.
to find people (If the caliber we now find The attorney of a Three Arch Bay resi-
at the beach trespissin1 on my property." dent appeared to request detailed Jn.
County Zoning Administrator Raymond formation on the structure, but advi1ed
Reed, who heard the case and authorized Reed hls client was concerned onl)' with
the variance •. sald he was further advised the possibility that lt migtit disturb his
by.--the--encineer for-the applicant-that· --view.When-he leamed-1twou1d-not, Reed
treapasatrs bad caused constant trouble said, the protest was withdrawn.
during the collltructlon period. tearing However, since the wall has been built,
dOW:n lences and steps and-hsuling away Reed said he had received at least one
wood to build firel oo the beach and at complaint from a beach resident whD
Man Drops Dead
Playing Tennis
Milton Allen, 13-year Laguna Beach
resident and active member cf the
Laruna Beach Tennis Association , died
suddenly en Saturday after suffering a
heart ·attack while playing tennis at the
Irvine Bowl courts. He was 55.
Servi~ for Mr. Allen will be held at 2
p.m. Tuesday in McCormick Lagun ..
Beach Mortuary Chapel, followed bY
private bur ial. 1
A native C&lifornian, he had lived in
Laillfla Beach for 13 years and was a
service writer for Tommy A y r e I
Chevrolet.
Mr. Allen is survived by his widow,
Jean Rimsey Allen; a son. Terre.nee
Allen; a daughter, Mrs. Edward J.nuu, a
stepdaughter, Miss Ramsey Lee Riddell
and one srandson, all of Laguna Beach.
Aiao suiviving are his mother, Mrs.
Henry Rubins and a sister, Miss Florence
_ Rub¥is, both of Loa Anseles.
Reagan OKs New
Oil Drill Ban
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan has signed a bill designed to halt
the award or new offshore oil drilling
leases from Monterey Bay t.o the Orl!gon
Border.
~ bill by AMemblym&n William T.
Bigley <R-San R1fael ), places a five-year
moratorium on the award of offshore and
aubmerged land oil leases in San Mateo,
San Francisco, Marin, Sonoma, Napa,
Alameda , Santa Clara , Del tiorte, Solano
and Contra Costa counties.
The measure includes the San Fran·
clsco bay up to the Carquincz Bridges.
The effect, combined With current state
l1w, wouJd be to halt the award of oil arid
gas. leases by the State Lands Com·
mlaion iatong the entire coast from
Monterey Bly to the Oregon state line-.
Ap~rtment Rifled
In San Oemente
.A san Clemente resident told police
SUnday thlt • dayll&ht cat bur111r walk·
ed ofr with l2IO and other It.ms from hb
apartment. -.
Police said the victims -,,•ere Mark
Monahan, lflS L<lrl Bolu, Apt. A: Rene
H. Essex of lhe same tddress and
Leopold T. Richard , a C.mp Pendleton
Marine.
Police uid the thert occurred while one
ot the men w1s asleep In the apartmeri~
and\ the other twu were mrtht beach.
maintained abe had been in the habit cf
walking south around . the point to Thn;t
Arch Bay and could no longer <So fh111
with the wall e1:tending out to the water
line.
The Three Arch Bay Association , Reed
said, submitted a_letter in favor (If the
wall. stating it would be, "most beneficial
in establishing better security for the
area. The Caln,. property is immediately
adjacent to the northern boWldary .of
Three Arch Bay.
An cfficial at the County Building
Department said the wall "is not blocking
any beach because there isn't any beach
there."
The County Counsel's office took a dif·
ferenl view .
. "The question is· one or public access,
sand or no sand," said Deputy County
Counsel Thomas Conroy, a specialist in
matters of access and easements.
Conroy pointed out that the County
Counsel's Office wou1d look into the wall
matter only If litigation were initiated by
a citizen who clamed his right of a~
had been Jnfringed, or if instructed to do
so by the Board of Supervisors, as in Uie
Salt Creek Beach case.
"However," said Conroy, "A public
easement can be established anywhere
that people were accustomed to going
and did go, without interference. A
private easement also could be claimed
by an individual accustomed to crossing
lhe area now blocked."'
Conroy said he had not seen the wall,
but was familiar with the location and
noted that "The topography is very
unusual. He (Cain) may have had
justification for building such a wall. If
it's on private property and there are no
easements of any sort he probably has
such a right."
f'rotll P,age 1
CRASH •.. ..
Yola nda Vital. 2S83S Domingo Road, l!!aid
she thought the explosion of the crash
was right in her front ya rd. She feared
moment1rlly that It was a recurrence or
lhe earthquakes Iha! had shaken the area
1everal days earlier.
The crash explo.sion broke (IUl windows
of adjacent business buildings and Ill-.
tered the street with flaming debris.
Firemen, however, were able to confine
the blaze \o the buildings immediately in-
volved .
Doheny volunteer fireman, Wendell
Hill. 3402 Camino Capistrano. was 1 few
blocks from the crash. He said he heard
a low throb 11nd a ''thump" and then saw·
flames shooUng up from the l1undtomat.
AllaJ'I N. Dlslena, 20, Camp Pendleton
Mar;lne, s1ld he heard the pl1ne circling
•nd the engine 10 dead. He was hJtch-
hiklng nearby,
Feder1l Aviation Agency officials In-
vestigated the crash and said 1
determination of cause would be made by
the Nallonal TrlnSJ>Ortalion Sate t y
Beard. -
Noting that "problems" could arise if in recent months -Lincoln Savings and
all property owners started building such Loan presented the plaMing commission
walls, Conroy concluded it Is "a very a re.vised package early this month.
touchy area." It includes the concept oC a buffer of
Looking over the wall on the weekend modular homes forming the entire
The pair escaped, running westbound
on Finlf:y Street. Paul said he started t.o
follow th"em, but stopped when he heard a
motorcycle driving away from the .cene.
was John Killefer, executive assistant to perimeler of the park. More conventional
Fifth District Supervisor Alton E. Allen. mobile homes would be inside the p Ji Sh
KiUefer said he had received a phon'e perlf!!eler. . . 0 CCffi8ll Ot
call from an irate South Lagunan who Th.is. ~as the chief difference between
maintained the wall was blocking the the 1n1tla~ pr.opos.al ~t was passed on J C T\ • •
beach.a1J:1;he-way out-to-the-ocea . the-eounc1l:.l:!'ith-pl.!nt!1~1:co~ion...en:......_ -fi__--.;:,.all----Hle·gO--
" foWHL.thls wasn't qulte-true.-'-'-said_d_!?!'se~ent and de_nled by counc1lme~. _ _ '
Killefer "because for one thing there Covered carports were Wbe • .. re-y h S h
Jsn't a~y beach there. So far as I could quirements f.or the p'ark were described Olll S oug t
determine !he wall is entirely on private to plann~rs in th.e s~d go-aroun~ by
property -those properties all extend to Dana Point architect Riley Marquis, a
mean high tide line -and was built with
a legal permit. It's certainly one of the
most massive things I've ever seen, but
so long as it's legally built on private pro-
perty there's nothing for us to do about
it."
The two-toot-thick wall, 10 feet high
where it ii built into the cliff side, exteods
directl)'. seaward, me.@sud.ag 2j.Jg_ef Jn
height at. the waterline.
A 1ate in the wall was installed to
facilitata rlemoval cf sand from the boat
house are:a below.-the Cain residence,
engineer TebaUlt expJained. The struc-
ture itseU is built ovet lhe water on pU-
Inil•·
No Protest Seen
By Downtown '
Beach Merchants
A proposal to Increase building permit
fees in Laguna Beach has met with little
opposition from contractors, according to
Building and Planning Director Clyde Z.
Springe.
, Sprinae said he had received only two
comments on the fee boost plan, both
from electrical contractors v.·ho pointed
oot that raising the minimum permit
fee from S:2 to $10 would be unreasonable
if applied to very small jobs, like in-
stallation or adjustment or switches or
outlets.
"1 can Sympathize with someone who
doesn't want l.o add a $10 permit fee to
his charge for installing a 75<ent
switch," Springe said. Al his. suggestion,
the council agreed to let Springe and his
staff work out a solution to this problem
prior to initiation of the new fee schedule.
Mahle Winship
Services Tuesday
Services will be held al 2 p.m. Tuesday
in Sherrer -Laguna Beach Mortuary
Chapel for Mabel Winship, 209SO Laguna
Canyon Road , who died Saturday at her
home. She was 66.
A native of Kamloops, British Cplum-
bia. Canada, Mrs. Winship had lived in
Laguna Beach for 25' years.
She is survived by hef husband, Jlmes
M. Winship ; a brother. Lawrence Mallery
of Altadena, niece, June M. Williams of
La Canada; and by two nephews, William
G. Mallery of Monterey, CaliL and Bruce
E. Mallery of Dallas, Tex.
Dr . Dallas R. Turner will officiate at
the Tuesday services. to be followed by
entombment at Pacific View Memorial
Park.
Rapist Attempt ·
Foiled by Woman
A 24-year-old San Clemente waman
fought a would-be rapist early Sunday'
morning until her shrieks apparently
frightened him from her home.
Police Sgt. Frank Yergen said the
woman, who is single and works as a
market checke r. suffered cu la and
bruises in her struggle with the assailant.
She described the suspect as about 20
rind of either Oriental or Indian descent.
He was slight of build and was wearing a
sweater and white shirt.
Police said. the suspect slit a screen,
reached in an opened a window to enter
!he apartment at 5:08 a.m. Sunday.
• •• •
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A police officer
was shot twice in lhe stomach and one~
in the left knee today, and a search wa~
started for two youths believed armed,
with the policeman's gun.
One, identified as a 19-year·old youth
known to police, reportedly fled in a Car:
He was described as armed and ex-
tremely dangerous.
The other apparently fled on foot in the
brush-cov ered area leading to Tecolote
Canyon.
The officer, Frank Wilson was wounded
after he spotted two youths stripping a
motorcycle and stopped to investigate.
A struggle preceded the shoOting,
Police said. Wilson crawled back to hii
~quad car t.o radio "Emergency, I have
been shot," said Wilson, 40,
Riverside Boy Hurt
In Fall Down Cliff
A 12-year-old Riverside boy complained
of back pain but was not seriously injured
i11 a Sunday fall down a 40..foot cliff near
Calafla at the San Clemente State Park
beach .
Tom Castro was sent by ambulance tD
South Coast Community Hospital where
he wa s examined and released to his
mother, Johanna castro.
Neutering BilJ OK'd
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan Friday signed a bill .requiring
animal sbekers and pounds to l)euter or
spay cats under s.ix months old before
they can be given away or sold. Author ot
the bill was Sen . John A. Nejedly (R·
Walnut Cr~k). '
OAIL't P'll,OT fll" ~ CREWS CLEAN UP RUBBLE AFTER P LANI CllASH IN CAPISTR~Nq BEACH
Pllol 0 101, llut Two Women, Baby and Dog Eaeape; Dam.,. l1tlm11od'fot $",000
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-----~guaia Beaeb
j.? . • EDITION
:VOL 63, NO. 226, 3 SECTIONS, 34 P.,A&ES
• Ir
·Deputies
Arrested
In Thefts
By JACK !ROBACK
Of llltll PlllV 'H•I Iliff
Two Orange County deputy sherUfs,
jailed Sunday _as SU!pects in an at·
tempted burglary of the Mission Viejo
Country Club, are out on bail t o d a y •nd will' be questioned about other
bUrglaries in the area, 1beriff'1 depart-
ment investigators said.
Deputy Frederick B. Irvine, 40, of La
Habra was captured Sunday morning
near Lake Elsinore after officers said be
had commandeered a sheriff's patrol car
and Ded.
Deputy Arthur E. Duncan, 34, of Hun-
tington Beach, was arrested in the
·-Mission-Viejo:'-area-and-surrendered~
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
.
'MONDA>Y', 'SEPTEMBER 21', lf70 . . . • •
TOday'• Fl••I
N.Y. St.du
-
•
TEN CENTS
•
Capo Beach.
Pilot Hits
Laundromat
By RICHARD P. NAJ.L
01 ""' Deify ..... , lllff
A school superintendent from Monarch
Bay was killed in tbe foggy early morn-
ing darkness Sa!Lird"ay when hl!I Uaht
plane crashed into a Capistrano Beach
laundromat, starting a fire and blowing a
mother ln an adjacent apartment tbrougb
the wall. •.
A1,1thorities said the pilot victim, Frank
Raymond Addis, 42, of 32631 , Empress
Way, South Laguna, was en route to a
f09t~all game at Big Pine near Bishop.
He became superintendent of the Big
Pine Unified School District in July.
Witnesses iaid Addis' new plane, a
Beach Bonanza V35, took off in the toe •l
about 5:40 a.m. from Capistrano Airport,
circled the field once and crashed
through the roof of the Sav-More Laun-
I
. without incident. -·---. -
Both men were "moolilighting"l:ln their--
off duty hours as security guard! for the
Mission Viejo Company.
dromat, 34241 Doheny Par.k Road in .. tbe ___ .1 -business district of-Cipistrano Beacq.
Lt. Richard Drake of the 0 lheriff's
department said both men were spotted
inside the Mission Viejo clubhouse in the
early morning hours by the club's golf
pro, Roger Belanger.
Belanger said he was on his way home
and drove by where he saw the security
car parked. He saw two men inside, knew
they didn't have a key and after watching
for a. few_ iiiliiutii, canea the sheriff'• of·
fief:. I \
By the Ume deputies arrived the two
'men had left the clu~use.
~ we.s found at the golf course
maintenanCe yard near the San Diego
Freeway. The deputiea asked him to get
into the patrol car and returned to the
clubhou8e with them. ·
Once thei:e, they said he menaced. Sgt.
'1ake Riviere with a pistol and com·
mandeered the patrol Car and took off.
~e drove tiict-w the maintenance
yard, switched to bis oWn station wagon
and fled. •
Responding to a general alarm,
Riverside deputy sherj.ffs spotted the sta·
tion wagon on the Ortega Highway
shortly after 6 a.m. and pursued livine
down the grade into the Lake Elsinore
area.
When Jrvine did not· stop during the
pursuit, the Riverside deputies fired at
the fleeing car flaUening the rear tires.
Irvine then jumped out o( the car and
b'eld the Riverside officers at bay with a
revolver which he continually pointed at
bis bead, threatening suicide.
He held them off for two hours before
giving in to pleas of his wife and fellow
Orange County deputies who had arrived
at the scene.
Lt. Russell Hawk of the Lake Elsinore
sheriff's substation said Irvine "never
made an aggressive move toward any of
our officers."
Duncan has been a deputy ·sheriff for
five years. He haS recenlly served as a
Juyenile Hall bailiff and .everal months
age was bailiff ln the court of Superior
Judge William S. Lee of Newport Beach.
SILHOUETTED BY FLAMES, FIREMEN BATTLE BLAZE•AFTER-.PLANE Pl:UMMITED·IN.TO·CAPISTRANO·BEACH·LAUNDROMA1"
Rusty Returns
Shocked, Singed
After Explosio,n--c--,,,
' Rusty, who was . •PP:@I'ently blown
through the wall along wHh his ~ .
mistress,. has come ·~ -Med, -·
whiskerless tind somewhat the· Worse fo'r
wear but happy to· be fOund.·
Rusty is the 7-year-old family dog that
Mrs. Edith Sullenberger -feared .ha.d
perished i'n t)]e_Saturda)'. morning fire
caused by a plane crll!h. - -
Mrs. Sullenberger, of 34241 Doheiiy
·Park Road, her mother, Donna and infant
daughter narrowly esc8ped the flaming
wreckage of their one bedroom apart·
ment. The same was true of Rusty, who
came with Mrs. SUllenberg from Ohio·six
years ago.
She said t~ay that Rusty was located
12 hours after the crash. "He was panting
and in· shock and singed pretty badly 'and
he just laid In my arms," she said. Rusty .
is to be released from the veterinarian's
today.
Rusty's life has been somewhat com·
plicated la tely. First It was the birth of a
new baby 31/ii wE!tks ago. Up till then he
had been the center of attention.
. . And most recently, his early morp.ing
snooze at the foot of Mrs. Sullenberger's
bed was rudely interrupted by an ex·
plosion and fire. He doesn't aeem to know
what 'to ,think ·about U all..
THE SULLENBERGER$ LOST E.VERY:rHING BUT THEIR• NIGHTCLOTHES ·-ALMOST EVE.RY.THlftG
In tM Apertm•nl llehlocl tn. S.•·Mor• L•llocfry, • krepe With Dulh on •·Chilly S.pt•mlHor Mornl"I . .
New Cease-fire Or~red Mo1n~ T~t .-'S.afe in ·Cir11rs._ ..
-I . • 1 •
Capo Plane Wreck impact Threw · Tltkm; Through .Wall
In Bloody Jordan War
' From Wirt -Sovlel·armed Palestine Llbentlon Anny
-•ncOurlJed thOJr troops ·in th• bloody.
battle, \
By PAMELA llAlLAN said ahe woke up and saw Edith 8\anding .ffom Underr~ and drafting• rny11elf
or"" DelW , .... •i.H through the wall. "I close my eyes today out,'"1ald-the mother . ."''You heat·atnit
The Uny baby lay cooing in her and l CAI' stlU see the burn\ng timber groWn men 'do'ing things like.that, but not
mother's protective arms, oblivious to all between me and the sky," ihe said. lilt.le old iadtes." .
but the genUe fice abOve her. Some Umbers 'had fallen •~ her • . be
Edith Sullenberpr smiled at the baby leas. "I remember Pufilna •mysell out , l•1 guesa youtdo.amazing things w n
and pulled her doler. • • you have to,".added Edith" "I'M1·usually
The ex;pJoslve crastJ and devastating
fire did an estimated $58,000 damage.
The plane loss was probably about·
another $40,000.
Authorities have no good clue yet as tO
what might have caused the crash other
than poor visibilitY. Both Addis and the
plane were incinerated In the fierce blaze
which destroyed not only the laundromat
al)d adjacent apartment but badly
dami.ged the Blue Pellcan rt1laur.ant
,which had a common· will.
· l!dllil' ·sullenberaer, ·34, her lifanl
daughi.r and mother, Donna Sulien-
-'berjer, "19, who managed the laundromat.,
were abeep in their One bedi'oom apart.
mtnl !bat. ii port ol tbi . llundlOmal bulldlnj ••.
The y~nger woman was b.~ through
the wall a_nd Onto· gfav@I out.Pde ljijt~jsidi
from neck burns wu DOt seriously in-
jured. She rushed ins~ and carried'ou•
her ~I/ii week old .daughter who was not
Injured. The Infant was aJseep in a baby
carriage. Her empty crib was pushed
thi'ough the -wall by the explosion. :.--
The yOW)ger Mrs. SuJlenberger return.
ed to the apartment a nd lifted a beam off
o( her mother 'j regs, aakl firemen, and
belped,DoMa Sullenberger outside.
The tenlor Mrs'.· Sullenberger suffered
first and second degree leg bums .
s11 · engines from the county fire
department and i snorkel (aerial) unit ~{tied the flames for an hour and a half
before the fire wu brought under coo·
trol. · ·
Bill Minick, corOner's investigator, aald
Addia left home a short while before the
crash and told hJs wife, Mary that be
planned_ to drlve to Big Pine.
He apparently changed his mlnd and
look the plane which he used to commute
to tii1 'bome on weekends. The Capistrano
Airport Ui uncontrolled. Il haS nO control.
tower or runway lights and taklng off,:
1ald officials, is pretty much a matter of
pilot discretion.
No one saw him enter his single-en,ine
_pl!lne but his car was parked nearby.
Besides liiiWldow;-Addis-il-survlved_by
a teenage daughter, Sharon AM, of tbe
family home and a IOll. Frank R. n of
San Diego. He had been an Orana:e Coun·
ty re8klent 10 yun.
Funeral services were schedulJd. at 3
Jl.m. today at Peek Family Colonial
Funeral Home in Westminster with burial •
in Westminster Memorial Part.
A · resident or the crash area, Mn.
(See CRASH, Pip!)
0r .. ,.
•
..-t.-11ew cease-fire order in' '\be tet11w
civil war in Jordan.WU ordered by King
Hussein · today, as Syrian Anny tank
forces invaded the embattled nation for a
second time since figbling broke out.
Jonlan11n ·milltsry gov•-Manha!·
Habes.Al·Majall gave th• PLA lroopl •
21!-hour ·ultlmalu,; '"" wlin• the Ara~
stat• cons6dend • IUIDlllit confennce
on the -•ar.
"She'• I.be miracle," she said qWeUy. • a tenderfoot. but there 11 was ·Walking
·Tho baby ·-·1 "..,, .••• in ...,. usual . Yo· u·th Arr·es· ted b•refiiol ""'' ,1 ... and •Pli•teriij .iiiod -"• and never felt it." place Saturday ·when the plane crashid "We lost ev•..,,th;,.., but , 0 u r Wea.tiler
Th•! command IA> stop fightine wu• IA>
be: effecUve at 11 :15 a.m. (PDT), but the
sllulUon In and aroW1d the liberal Middle
East naUon was det'!rioralinl by the
hour. .
President Nixon ordered paratroope:n
st.alioned in West Germany onto a limited
alert in case events m11ke evacuation ol
the estimated 400 Americans in Jordan -
Including 31 hljackini· bostag,. -ilJl.
perative. . · -
A White Ho~ spokesman emphasized
that no direct tntervenUon b anticipated
-a posture the Israeli government open-
ly criticized -but events were 6ein&
•atched • they develop.
Kini ffuaein"• ceue-ftre order wu
one mora tn a series giv,en durln& lht
past three day• and broken In every ca1e.
GoYtrnment.s In the M1dd1e Eut and
tbnJqpoul tbe worlil •ppuled lo both
1ideo lo atop flgbtinl.
Leaders on both skies -l<lng Huueln'1
RoyaJ Army chief1, ltJd the perrillpl'
-
''Everyone, who does not lllhender and
-hand over bla wtapans or who fira oo
tbe a"""I for<s elter' tl!li llm• ( 4 p.m.
Jordan Umo) wUI be killed," Majoli
declared.
"nits ~ the last warning to you • , . "
Radio Amman announl"ld thlt Pl.A
force · <l 1,000 inen toc1ucn.,. tena,
armored can ucl• arWltry awll'lftl their
adVance bad poured. Into -et Ramtha, on tbe bonier, II mil• fmn
Amman.
Majali congr1\Ulaled bia :m 401b
Brigade lor its •alof In bolding off the II>
vadets, who Syrian Prelident Nureddin
Atssal hu denied moved inlo Jontsn et
all.
"You are ltlndtng •lone acalnst a
mass attack unleashed on you by the
1Uien ol Syrl1. who could not hold oot for
(flee JORDAN, Plfe I)
' -. .
lnlo the ~I which. edjofned tbe • _, ·~ •
family'• Cepillnllo -1partmenl ·. 0. n 'Flag ·Charg.es nlghlclothes In ·u... fire;"; Aid' Edllb. "EllDbe!h wu lleepln( In ,ber cat· "Things like lbat don't'hit you UilW you
riqt, next to my bed, ,not tn the. crib at · • 1 • , ' are standlrig in front of a 'mirror'and'you
tbe foot J tbe bed " •• u •-· -J•-.· .., 11-y .. •<lld. Sall, • •C.mula ~;,lb ·was U1 • 1t111U na ~. .,.... ~ J,,_ realize that you don 't even own a IG-cent
Tho Impact of the ~. Wblcll look .ertelUJ<f ·llf·pollce Frkley•on auaplcion 'of "'mb.'" .
the life of the pilot, ble1' the baby'• crib .delecratinl U. u:s. ,flag lfter.an offi1.'tr • -1., •
throuch the wall. It ·alao blew Edll.b ·asaerted 'ttiit•two 'Amerlcan · nap had Life--ts 1etUing down ·for .lhtin no•. lhrou&h · • · ' They have moved to a small apartment
''I'm ihantfuI It wu a thin wall," uid ; 'bffn cut •nd used 'u •llRtdw'~ l:fi near the ODe Uley loat and frienc?. 1Dif
Edith. . • , . ;"·Van <lie -!II •driving. . . neipbon haYe · been ~ Ill -
si.. bas no recollectlon of the bl111. 8bt • LI, llobert 1\1-laid Wendell Ma~ 1akcs of food, money ind clolblng.
. ..._,ben only heerln( e-.i ...... . liljiI]., 140 · Aifotk!o. wu picked up on ' 'tlieh'-' laritllf -· Ml• • .nu ' el ;tht
balll( di her feet ou-the Wiii. M ~· •· YlolaU.. mllltory · ~ ·ve1«1non•'ln ·aliOJ.bul •Eilldi ..,a Mi'
brulaeland 1cr-llon•"'8<0•n.il .~ .. ··.,,.. -•·'!rbic:h CiNJ ·~llb ·mother·aod .U...bally .. """'1i1r oil'!'f
1mpec1 1'1111 t11t -_111c11 wa11, u •'ii<' · <1o1oc1111 ., nu. . . . the1n and pu111ng "'8<ther !ho fo!:la. an. _ ~· • -· M810fl uJd u.·diltlict.1~·,·oaa 11 that:Edld1'1 rriothlr\·who'Worted at~
"f WU lleJldinl tbere lit! ~ loday qi:oed I'! looue I comploinl cbart-) ~ loundnJmll. '!" 1on&« bu I'
Me!lled backwanl lo me," Ille llid. "My Ing UdaU with de(oclnc e flq, . \ Job--' , . ,
mother ll)Ult baw helnl me«rMminc. I ·ni:e )"OUth w11 rpitbd up bf, a But tht family 11 liopeful ,~more IO now
couldn't pt orte11ted lo _....., lllby pell'olmu •t Rau. Ind 5oulb Oii Vlata thin they've ever ti<en before .• 'nloy'rt
wu. Wbeo I did, I ar•-lllr Ind na ·Friday o1-. Ho -releuOd.., !Iii eppredallng ·llie --on one cblU)'
oul.'' ·written iromi-.1o •Pll'U In CQlll'I, M-.September• -•lilr Ibey Nl'1 taate.I
Her mother, Mr1. Donni s~... uld. ... death. I • ; • f •
•
•
• • j t·
Sunny !Ides With occaslmal 10.
clouds along the ll>ore ii the If"'
for Tuesday, with coutal temper•
lures in the 70'1 and inland read·
ings lh00Un1 up to 90 de&fees.
INSWE TODA 'i'
Three lighter-than-air odllfn·
turer.s took off from Long Island
Sundo.u on a. transatlantic ga.a
·balloon ddussey. Wtnd! permit-• Uno. th•r will •-">&wipe ..,. .u to ·li ......... ,,....~ s. --
•
..
' ' .....
" • ' ' • D•D • " -
=-" --.. ·or-Ciiiity---., IYtwle ,.._ 11! --llMll ........ u -. -... --. ..... ..... ,,..,~-~ --..
.. • -
•
J! DAIL V PILOT SC
FNill P...,el
JORDAN..-<. =i~n Hei,hts in J\167,"
"ilold fast in the face of the •t·
... -.. u fut u the steel ol your
~ .. be uhorted.
VICTORIES CLAIMED
Guerrilla sources in Baghdad and
Dama!CU$ proclaimed that Syrian in-
vaders -movlng in a two-prof\led
maneuver toward lrbid -we r a
mutilating Hussein's Royal Army.
The young king has ~.000 troops
aa:ainst the 321000 guerrillas entrenched
in northern Jordan and around the e1pltal
city of Amman.
His 40th Brigade faces up to 100
Ru.uian-built tank! of two· Syrian
brigai:tes with iO British Centurlan tanks.
American Secretary of State William
P. Rogers urged the Soviets to exerci!lt
their power over the Arabs lo end the
hostilities, 't'lhich he branded today I.! ir·
responsible and capable of. .drastically
broadening.
"We call upon the Syrian gqvernment
to end immediately this inter.vent.ion ln
Jordan/' he:said. "And we uri:e all·other
concerned governments to impress upon
the government of Syria the necesaity of
withdrawing the forces wblcb have ln·
vaded Jordan."
' --•
--------
,,,. Cle tnerit e lss-ue
..
·T r ailer Proj·ect
'
Back to Planners
A mobile home park proposal that got
bounced back to the planning commission
aftera San Clemente council spat last
week will he up for the planners con·
sidei'ation again Wednesday.
The commission had smiled on the Lin·
C1'.lln Savings and Loan proposal for
modernistic mobile home development
near the Shorecliffs Golf C o u r s e
wiinha bited area.
The comm ission found the development
a compatible land use because of no con·
met with exisiing development and
recommended it. unanimously to, the·
-aiuncil. No detailed develoamient stan·
dards were. Set ·at ~J'timJ, .aendlng a
council decision of tbe ,. conditional use
pennit. ,
Tbe council last we'.tk sent the matter
back to the commission for detailed
development standards so the entire
package could then be weighed hy coun·
spokesman for Lincoln.
They included wood treatment and
simulated stucco for the coaches rather
than conventional aluminum <Jlding.
Covered carporfs wrre to be a re·
quirement and no airconditloner1 or
coolers perched on roof tops.
Ne -wport Ma·n
Loses $3,485
To-2 Thieves
Newport . Beach p(,Jice are continuing
their investigation today of the robbery <if
a South Laguna man Saturday morning.
SUM,VllT PROPOSED __ • ~ cilmen.
--DA1t.Y'P11.0T ...... -w-111ct1-1-KMM1r uncilman Wade -Lower attempted.
Richard L. Paul, 25, or 31711 Mar Vista
Ave., told officers he was robbed of $3,485
in money and jewelry . as he lelt a
ewporr-Beach·bar·at-about 2·a:m. 'TuniSian President Habib Bourguiba Pro~ a summit conference of Arib
states in Cairo to thrash out a Jordanian
solution, and several. inCJuding Egypt.-
had accepted. But Cairo 50~ces said
Sunday the Syrian invasion ended
chances for such a meeting.
Cairo took two positions on the conflict
Sunday: .
-'Hussein should i n t e r v e n e im-
mediately to ensure compliance wit~ a
cease-fire plan worked out by Egyptian
President Gamal Abdel Nauer and
reportedly accepted by the government
and guerrilla forces. -
-Iraq's ruling Baath party !ricked the
guerrillas into continuing to flgbt after
their leaden accepted the truce. -
1be official and public position of the
Nixon administration has been one of
concern for more than 400 Americans, in-
cluding 48 out of Sf hostages held by the
Palestinian gu<rrillas, with the possibility
that force would be uaed if it wa1 Judi·
__ ed neceS811)' to evacual!! them.
PtANES SET
E:rtra Cl30 tranJpOrts have been poai·
tioned in Europe to carry the troops from
West Germany. The tl2nd Airborne
Division, on alert at Ft. Bragg, N.C.,
relies on huge C141 jet transports u part
of the. U.S. strike reserve.
All this was billed u precautionary by
Pentagon officials who Aid there was no
widesperad general alert. The intent r!-
mains only the possi~tty of rescuin&
Americans -thou&ht ti> be about 400 -
nrept up in the Jordan fighting.
As .the army briefly lifted its order to shooi oil sight Monday the woinen of
Amman went into the smashed streets,
dodging ¢per fir<!, "' find [ood for their
!~;,.,.,fed sbopploi bukels P..t ~
dead -and wounded as Kiili Huueln'•
--army -ruthleuly huntea fuerrWu who
had tanored ceaae-ftre appeals.·
Snipers hidden in moeques an d ,on the
ri>ofs of ltmll'y -apartment boURa were
blasetd by caMon fire.
FINAL FIGIIT
The fi&ht for Amman and for the
throne is in its final stages and hu cost
more time and lives tha n tbe two-day
batUe the kin&'s .commander• had
forecast
The pavements are littered with
(:arlridge casts. Buildings everywhere
have the black holes of artillery hiti.
Fires bum on the hillsides.
From the Intercontinental Hotel you
could see an armored car1 systematically
pounding a block of flats, floor by noor,
af ter a sniper had been reported there.
The shells went In orange streaks low
across the valley and burst through the
living rooms.
A sniper near the British EmbaS!)' was
killed. A soldier and the army blew up
the building In which he was hiding.
One sniper eot a lucky shot through the
embassy which put the transmitter to
London out of actiori. ·The staff had to
revert to Morse code unW the generator"
was repaired. A soldier 1tandlng near
journalists who went to the embaay dur-
ing the curfew llftin& WIS wounded by a
a.niper bullet.
DAILY PILOT
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COUNTY AIDE KILLEFER TAKES IN V.!EW .FROM SOUTH LAGUNAN'S MASSIVE WALL unsuccessfully last week to gain approval
NMr P1rMllH Point, W. I. C1 ln .W1ll1 Off HJ1 Personal P1r1dl1e With Htlp From County of the conditional use permit, with the
' planning commission to determine stan-
dards later. "I sat in and saw the plans
Laguna~s Berlin Wall proposed by the developer and they we re
impressive, he sa id.
Councilman Thomas O'Keefe opposed
the permit, charg ing it would.be an act of
bad faith bec~se opponents had not betn
County Officials OK Concrete :rres~ser !Jlock' h·~~~::;:.~~=~~~~~~~~\\:;~;,,,d
"\ -Ule fate or all mobile home proposals
By BAR.BARA KREIBICB times actually living .in the unfinishtd Noting that "problems" could arise if in recent months -Lincoln Savings and
-ot • o.11r '""" Pitt atructure. all property owners started building such Loan presented the plarming commission
A massive concrete wall, eitendlna Enginee r R. E. Tebault, who desiped walls, Conroy concluded it ia "8 very a revised package early this month. .
oceanward from the cWfs near· Paradise and built the wait", ·said, "He (Caln) was touchy area." It includes the .conceet of a buffer. of
· Point and reaching an itnposing Might of tryina to protect hi! bot_rie from LogkinC over the wall on the weekend modular homes fonnmg the entire
2i feet at mean high tide line, was built trespassers. A buoch of hlJ>S;lfes got in was John Killefer, executive assistant to perimeter of the park. More conventional
under a variance Jasued. by Orange once and set a fire in the living room.'' Fifth District Supervisor Alton E. Allen. mobile homes would be inside the
County May 12, county offlcials have con-Tebault and tht county officials aatd Killefer said he had received a phone perimeter. 1
fiNned. the wall was not designed to serve any call from an irate South Lagunan who -This was the chief difference between
The wall, now drawing llartled com· purpose but to protect the property. maintained the wall was blocking the the initia~ pr~posal t~at was pa~d on
ment from South Laguna beach dwellers, They noted that the area is entirely beach all the way out to the ocean. the council with pl~nn1na commission en·
was-built-as-an accessory structure to the -rocky-coutline,with-no sandy-beach-that-''I-found thia-wasnit-quite true i • said ____,_dorsementand'.derued by_counc.Ume.n,_
new oceanfront home_of_WJ . ..Caln, 3222:5 __m!g!l.lm_ake the w~!l u~ti6nable under Killefer, "because for one thing there Co~ered carports were to be • . re-s. Coast Highway. new SupTeme ',Colirt rulings regarding isn't &ny beach there. So far as I could qu1re~ents f_or the park were described
Applying for a variance to exceed the preservation of public beach access. determine the wall is entirely on private to planne.rs in th.e sec~d go-aroun~ by
normal six·foot fence height limitation, Zoning Administrator Reed said pr<>-property -those properties all extend to Dana Point architect Riley Marquis, a
the applicant stated that the wall was perty owners within 300 feet had received mean high tide line -and was built with
"necessary to protect my property from the usual notification of the variance a legal permit. It's certainly ofieof the
undesirables. J am about to occupy my hearing but only one had raised a ques· . most massive things I've ever seen, but
new home on the beach 111d do not wish Udn about the wall. ao long as It's Je_gally built on private pro.
to find people of the caliber we now find The attorney of a 1bree Arch Bay resl-perty there's nothing for ~ to do about
at the beach trelpaaing on my property."-dent appeared to reque!t detailed In-it."
· County Zoning Administrator Raymond formation on the structure, but advised The two-root-thick wall. 10 feet high
Reed, who beard the case and authorized Reed his client· was concerned only with where it is built into the cliff side. exten ds
the variance, aaid he was further advised the possibility that It might disturb his directly seaward measuring 24. feet in
by the engineer for the applicant that vii;..wJ WheQ ~)earned it would JlOt. Reed ,heig~t a\j the w;a~rline. ~ bad caused co~nt trou~le said, tfie JJhl:dt wu.Withdrrwn\~ _... -A gati in tl1e wall ivas instilled' to
dUJ'U11 the con.IDucUon period, tearing However, SIJICe the wall has been built, facilitate removal of sand from the boat
down fencq; .and lteps and ha~llng away Reed s~id he had received at. least one house area below the Cain residence,
wood/lo 1buJJiJ f1rti ~ tbe, t>,icb ~ at complllnt from a bea~ resident who 4 engineer Tetilult eqiletnell. ~'Hle. "*11c·
Man Drops Dead
P~aying Tennis
Milton Allen, 13-year Luuna Beach
realdent and active memfler of the
~· Beach Tennis Auoclation, d1ed
suddtnly on Saturday after suffering a
heart attack while" playinc tennis at the
Irvine Bowl courts. He wu s:;.
Services for Mr. Allen will be held at 2
p.m ... Tuesday in McCormick L1111na
Belch Mortuary Chapel, followed by
private burial.
A Mlive Calilornlan, be had Um in
Laguna Beach for 13 years and wu a
service writer for Tommy A y re 1
Chevrolet.
Mr. Allen js survived by his widow,
Jean Ramsey Allen; a son, Terrence
Allen; a daughter, Mrs. Edward Anuu , a
stepdaughter, Miss Ramsey Lee Riddell
and one grand90n, all of Laguna Beach.
Also surviving are his mother, Mrs.
maintained •he bad beerf'in .the habit of ture itself ia ttullf over uW wa r on pil-walklng JOQU(' around .thi pomt to 1bree lngs -,
Arch Bay -iindrcould flO longer do this '
with the wall el:tending out to the water
line. -
The Three Arch Bay Association, Reed
said, submitted a letter in favor of the
wall, stating it would be, "most beneficial
In establishing better aecurity for the
area. The Caln property is immediately
adjacent to the northern boundary of
Three Arch Bay. ,
An official at the County Bulldlng
Department said the wall "is not blocking
any beach because there isn't any beach
there."
The County Counsel's office took • dif.
rerent view.
''Tbe question "is one of public acceu,
sand or no sand." said Deputy County
Counsel Thomas Conroy, a specialist in
matters of access and easements.
No Protest Seen
By Downtown
Beach Merchants
A proposal to increase building permit
fees ln Llguna Beach has met with little
opposition from contractors, accOrding to
Building and Planning Director Clyde Z.
Springe.
Springe sa id he had received only t~o
comments on the fee boost plan,, both
from electrical contractors who pointed
out that 'ra ising the .minimum permit
fee from $2 to $10 would be unreasonable
if applied to very smalf jobs, like in-
stallation or adjustment of switches or
outlets.
Mable Winship
Services Tuesday
Services will be held al 2 p.m. Tuesday
in Sheffer Laguna Beac.h Mortuary
Chapel *"" Mabel Winship , 20930 Laguna
Canyon Road , who died Saturday at her
home. She _was 66.
A na.tjv__1;~ •]lipi!oop<, British Colwn·
bta, Cajl~da, Mr1. Winship had lived.1 in
Laguna Beach for 25 years.
She is survive<l_ by her husband, James
M. Winship:· a brother, Lawrence Mallery
of Altadena , niece, June M. Williams of
La Canada ; and by two nephews, William
G. Mallery of Monterey, Calif. and Bruce
E. Mallery of Dallas, Tex.
Dr. Dallas R. Turner will officiate at
the Tuesday services. to be followed by
entombment at Pacific View Memorial
Park.
Rapist Attempt
•Foiled by.Woman
A 24-year-old San Clemente woman
fought a v.'Ould-be rapist early Sunday
morning until her sh rieks apparently
frightened him from her home.
Police Sgt. Frank Yc rgcn said the
woman, who is single and works as a
m1,1rket checker, suffered cuts and
bruises in her struggle with lhc assailant.
He said two suspects approached him
in the municipal parking lot located in
the 3200 block of Newport Boulevard . One
hit him in the mootlii ,ir.nocking him to the
pavement and held him down.
The other suspect rifled Paul's pockets
and removed hi.s ~atch and a diamond
ring valued at $3,200.
Paul said he started to st ruggle against
the arm lock he was being held in, but his
assailant reportedly told him, "Don't
hassle me, I have a gun."
The pair escaped, running weslbound
on Fin1ey Street. Paul said he started to
follow them . but stopped when he heard a
motorcycle driving away from lhe scene.
Policeman Shot
In San Diego;
Youths Sought
SAN DIEGO ('AP) -A police officer
was shot twice in the stomach and ·onct
in the left knee today, and a search was
started ·for two youths believed armed
with the policeman's gun.
One, identified as a 19-year-old youth
known to police, reportedly fled In a car.
He was -described as armed and e:r-
tremely dangerous.
The other apparently fled on foot il) the
brush-covered area leading tci Tecolote
Canyon. l _
The officer, Fran\ Wilson 'was wounded
after ·~ spotted two youths stripping 1
motoreyc~e and stopped to inveStigate.
A strilggle preceded the shooting,
·police said. WiisOn crawled back to his sq~d car to radio "Emfri:ency, I have
been shot," said Wilson, 40. . .
Riverside Boy Hurt
In Fall Down Cliff .
A 12-year-old Riverside boy complained
of back pain bu( was not seriously injured
in a Sunday fall down a 40-foot cliff near
Calafia .at the San Clemente St.ate Park
beach.
Tom Castro was sent by ambulance to
South Coast CommWlity Hoopital where
he was examined and released to •his
mother, Johanna Castro.
,Ne utering Bill OK'd
Henry Rubins and a sister, Miss Florence
Rubins, both of Los Angeles. ,
Conroy pointed out that the CoWlty
Counsel's Office would 1ook into the wall
matter only if litigation were initiated by
a citizen who clamed his right of access
had been infringed , or if instructed to do
ao by the Board of Supervisors, as in tbe
Salt Creek Beach case. "I can sympathize with someone who
doesn't want to add a $10 permit fee to
his charge for installing a 7kent
switch," Springe said. At his suggestion,
the council agreed to let Spi"ihge ind his
st.all work Out a solution to this problem
prior to initiation of the new-fee schedule.
She described the suspect as about 20 SACllAMENro (UPI) - Gov. Ronald
and of either Oriental or lndl&n descent. Reagan Friday signed a bill requiring
He was Slight o( build and was wearing a animal sllelters and paunds to neuter or
Reagan OKs New
Oil Drill Ban
SACRAMENTO lUPll -Gov. Ron.aid
Reagan has signed a bill designed to halt
the award of new offshore oll drilling
leases from Monterey Bay to the Ore1on
Border.
The bill by Assemblyman William T .
Bagley (R.san ~el), pl1Ct1 !l five-year
moratorium on the award of of!shore and
submerged land oil leases in San Mateo.
San Francisco, Marin, Soboma, Napa.
Alamedi, Santa Clara. Del Norte, Solano
and Contra Costa counties .
The measure includes the San Fran~
clsco bay up to the·Carquinez Bridges.
The etrect, combined with current state
l1w, woold be to halt the award of oil •nd
gas leases by the State Lands: Com-
mission along the entire eo11st from
ri,ionterey Bay to the Orqoa state line.
Apartment Rifled
In San Clemente
_ A Sin Clemente resident told police
SUnclay that a "dlyllibt cat burglar walk-
ed off wttb PIO and other lle!lll from hia
apartmm>t.
Pollet aajd the vtcthna were M1rk
J\laoahan, !Sii Los Bolil. Apt. A; Rene
H. Essex-()f the same addrcs,s and
Leopold T. Rfchml; a Camp Pendleton
"However," said Conroy, "A public
easement can be established anywhere
that people were accustomed to going
and did go,' wltboot interference. A
i>rlvate easement alsp could be claimed
liy an individlial accustomed to crossing
the area now blocked ."
Conroy said he had not seen the wall,
bu\ was familiar with ~e location and
noted that "The topogjaphy is very
unusual. He (Cain) may have had
jusJification for building such a wall. If
it's on private property and there are no
easements of any sort he probably has
1uch a righl''
From Page 1
CRASH •.• ...
Yolanda Vital. 2$83$ Domingo RGad, said
she thought the explosion of the crash
was right In her front yard. She feared
momentarily that it was -a recurrence of
the earthquakes that had shaken the area
several days earlier.
The crash ~rplosion broke out windows
of 1dj1cent business buildings ind lit·
tertd the 1treef'.with flaminc debris.
Firemen, however, were ab~ to confine
the blue to the buildings inunediately in-
volved .
Doheny volunteer fireman, We.nde.Q
Hill, H:rJ Clmlno Clpistrano, was 1 few
blocks from the crash. He said he htard
a low throb and a "thump" and· then saw
flames shooting up from UM laundromat.
Allan N. Dlsitna, 20. Clmp Pendleton
Marine. uld he heard the plane clrclln1
and the enline 1t1 de.ad. Ht WJll hltch-
hiking nearby. ·
sweater and .white shirt. spay cats under six months old before
Police said the suspect slit a screen, they can be ~vcn awaY rtr sold. Author of
reached in an opened a window. to enter the bill was Sen. Joh_n A. Ne.jedly (R-
the apartmeht at 5:08 a.m. SWlday. -walnut Crtek).
' •
(...,...19111, ltl'I, °''"" '"'' Pi.tll'*'lfll Ctm,_ny, H• -• 1~ l!Mtr1t:.it. <111 .. ill .fttttw W t"""hlef!l"'\I • _....,
""' K , ~" •ll""'I l(lllC\tl ,.,..
lftl'lklfl .. ~·' ·-· , Marine. •
Feder1l~Avlati90 Agency officials. in-
vestigated the crash and 11id a
dttermlnatlon of cause would be made bf
tht NaUonal Ttwportatlon S a f et y
Board.
it(-(\tM ,..Mtr Ml' M Ht•..,, klcfl
''' C9'1t ._ (11-.ilt. ll!Mtr:.t..,. 'II'
c1rr1tt U• ~' 'T ....i1 ••·• ....,•tr1 ---!"IUt&ry <1ntN119Mt It.• _..!My,
PoUce said tht theft occurred whllt one
d tht mtn was asleep in the apartmtllt
and the otbtr two l't'ere on the beach.
/
• DAILY 'ILO'flt9ft P••
CREWS CLEAN UP RU BBLE AFTER PLANE CRASH IN 'CAPISTRANO BEACH
Piiot 01••~ But Two Wo men, Ba by ind Dog E1c1pt; D1m1:9e l1tlm1ttd 1t $96,000
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---M"'!ftY, _, 21,-1970 L DAILY PILOT :J
Main Beach
R~port Set
For.Study
By Phil lnterl1ndl 'Galloping Plans' Hit
Further study and discussion of Plan-
ning Commissioner Thomas Johnston 's
extensive study on developmenl of 'the
Main Beach will be undertaken by the
Laguna Beach Planning Commission
tonigbt. •
The Johnston rePort, which examines a
variety or altei;nate poss.ibllities for
developing the $3 million beach property
and easing the financial burden of ac-
quisition, was presented to the com·
mission at a stu'!Y sessiOn last week.
...
Greed y Developers Ruining
. '
TM1 la lh< lhird In a DAILY ~ILOT
S£ries on subdiofsion dtvtlo~t in
Northern California recrtational oreas
which A.ssemblp&c1n Leo McCtwthu
once ·said, "are fult11· capable of be-
coming momters. • • " Just os the
Legislature was Mar ad;ournment
this 11ecir. a major subdivider pushed
through a bill tllot could hdve dtnied
Californians mony fishing rights. It was vetoed by GovtrnOr Reagan. The
views of o district attorney are dis·
cussed in todott's article,
By ALBERT W. BATES
The Land Game
Picture yourielf Ill a snug-A-Iran*
b e s I d e a Northern· Cafilonµ.'
stream, away from imog a.Gd root
beer stands? And turning a Udy
profit on the land )'Oii bough!? The
picture might not· be as pretty as
it's painted.
Rural Areas?
off er the buge percmlqe or rotum In
such a mall Ume, ca IUCb a 1rnall Jn..
vestment. Becallle the promoter doean'*
really invest eve• the fir1t third.
"A typical sche.one . is thil: the
develoi>f!r selld.s out 1ct11j.t.s to~blay up op-
Uons on all the land needed, for relatively
small siuns. olfering the ori,UW owner.
if the project goes lhroi.igh, a better price
Of t11e oa11r l'lltl stalf genera) pla1 and allowing
(Tblrd. ta a Serita) anywhere and everywhere,
_,. than he ever hoped for hi5 acrea1e. When
all the options are in, he can aafely invest
in preliminary engineering, th& drawing sil~ivisions of maps, and the preparation of large col·
When public objection began to trow
YREKA, Calif. (SpeclaJ) -Harold strong, the Nevada County supervilors
• Be~liner, district attorney of Nevada simply mQSljfied. the general plan to· fit
ored illustrations for the planning com-
rTiission. He can also borrow money from
olhers who want to participate Jn what is
very close to a sure thing.
It advocated, among olhef things, an
averall development plan that could be
put into effect in 19~ .or 1974. At the
study session commissioners discussed
the po~ibility of razing some of the ex-
isting structures, which are proving a tax
burden, and putting interim parking' in
their place.
Coitnty, • conservationist and OOtsPolten he ~s of .he promoters.
• 0 l~ of a "a ~ handfpl of ~VJ!_loJ>:ets _ ~Ir ~a~e ap~enUy has ~-
•committed to completetY unneeded urt>an that .:rubdi~ons are gooc_t for bUSlness
"After a reasonable amowit of expense
and-time-spennenmg--uie COriiiTiiiiiltj'i
businessmen that there's a gold mine in
it for . them il they will help convJnce the
planning commWlon and suj>ervi.aon of
the benefits the 'development' offer• the
area, they are ready to apply for thetr of.
ficial permissions to go ahead.
i:>tber items on the planners' lengthy
agenda tooight include:
-Second public hearing on an amend-
·ment to the sign ordinance regarding
location of pole signs.
_ -Application from Laguna Shores, 420
CJiff Drive, to use density permitted in C-
l zone on an R--3 portion of its split-zoned
property.
-Variance application from Harry
Howa rd to creat two lots of-less than 7()..
root width in the 2200 block of Temple
Hills Drive.
-Request for additional funds for plan.
ning draftsman.
-Request from Nora Paulene Reis, 355
Myrtle St., to continue second dwelling in_
R-2 zone without'rcquired off-street park-
ing.
-Temporary use permit for 20th Cen-
tury Fox to use the Cliff Drive-Marine
Avenue triangle for storage of vehicles
and equipment during location shooting
of a film, Oct. 7 to Nov. 6.
''I'm Afr•id to Go Out. I'm Afr•id I'll Viol•t• a
• City Ordln•nc• •• ,''
Preslllent Gets Choice
In Renaming of Street
The "guest of honor" of sorts over the
issue of changing the name of San
Clemente's Via de Frenle to Avenida del
Presidente wil b asked for his opinion
before the city decides on the new name.
President Nixon has bee.a asked to
comment on the mOve to change the name
of the freeway frontage road which leads
to the gates of his villa.
The action, agreed to by city coun-
cilmen recently, also will give the
Presidential staff time to decide Jf the
President would like to conduct a small,
name-changing ceremo;iy at the street-
the next time he visit.ll his West Coast
home.
. aJtd 0 they idd to the tax roll." They·don't developme11t of ruralJ areas for 1h0rt· bother to cnfck results el.9ewhere. u they
term gain," revealed what has happene(f had, they might bave found that
Jn his own county Jn '111 article in the generally overprictd subdivisjan lots
magazine California Tomorrow, ·Ex· result In foreclo.sures up to as much as
cerpt.s: JOO percent in some lnsta!US. And where
"~evi_da County b__bu.Lo_ne_o_f_many __ buyers ~!Id and ~ve in,_ the cost of
California counties aIOicted with gallop-schools;-fire·and'"JIC!lice-semces-are"auch
ing subdivision, but it's as good an ex-that the taxpayer_s !n the rest of the~~
ample of the problefl!! which accompany ty . must subsidize the subdlv1s1on
the overcommitment of land as "recrea· residents.
tional' lots as any other courity in the DA Berliner reveals how-il~a11 works:
litate. ' "Why do these 'uadeveloped
"The county,· which has elevations devek>pments' coatinue to grow? Because
ranging from about 1,000 feel in the they make great sums of money for lne
foothills to the '1,QOO..foot level Jn aJplne developer.
aeas, "'is, tyipcal of all of California's "The total price of lots in one of these
recreation areas. After 20 years, its promotions may reach $50 million, and
population ls hardly larger than it was they can be sold out in a year or two.
durh1g the Gold Rush, and i11 lhe last 20 Representative promotional developers
areas, is typical or all of CaWornia's tiave stated that or f,his sum, one third is
population boom to any appreciable spent for the land, engineering, streets,
degree. • • water supply, sewers if required, coW1try
" .•. Enough lots have been approved clubs, lakes, etc. Another third is spent
at this time to take care of more than on advertising and sales. This is far
three times the present population. If the higher than the ordinary sales cost of
next five Years show the same rate or in-real estate, but these lots are harder to
crease in lots the last five years have ... sell. .• The last third is profit.
shown (about~ percent per year), by "And there aren't many ventures which
the end of 1974 every square inch of
"By this time they have buttered up
the local rural ~press, put a 11umber--of
local people on their payroll and most
things are going their way. The filings
with the planning commission rely
strongly on co lored pictures, Je·ss-on
detail, and sUll less on what the subdi·
vider is committing himself to do . He
may suggest that the supervisors author·
ize financing the improvement money
by selling bonds is.rued by a pubUc dis-
trict. This will greatly le~n the promo-
ter's investment, because the lot owners
will then pay these bonds off over the
years with no cost at all to the develop-
er."
Berliner points out what happens when
opposition appears at either Planninl
commission or supervisor level-and this
reporter has just seen this response in a
proposed Siskiyou County subdivision.
The developer spreads the rumor that
he is abandoning his plans. Or he goes
back to the local businessmen, claiming The suggestion for the latest delay h1
lhe change came from Mayor Walter
J!:vans, who told councilme• he had "sent
a message hrough the back door" of the
White House to apprise Nixon's staff of
the plans.
privately heldJand ill N_evada Count)!' will
have bee11 subdivided into suburban-style
lots."
\\'hile subdivision Jots proliferate; home
building has remained constant at an
average of 233 houses per year in the en-
tire county •
t_he development is still marginal ope,....
P · ki. :-T\ .--. --t1on, and if over· strict requirements are ar Ile'. u1str1ct laid .down, he whole rhing will be aban-
u doned in favor of another location in
Ol.IL'Y PILOT SIMI l'Plet.
The frontage road's existing n a m e
translates to "Front street,"
If the signs were changed, the transla-
tion would be "Street of the President."
A city poll or residents aid property
owners along the road has proven
relatively inctl1elusive.
Nevada County's board of supervisors,
like such boards in many another county,
has playe~ straight into the hands of .the
developers by iporing the county"s
U.S. Funds for Greenbelt
Will Be Sought by Laguna
ject, but noted such help would be con-
tingent upon official ·expression of sup-
port from the city.
Initial Steps
OK'd in Laguna
First steps toward formation of a South
Coast · P a r k i n g District to se.rve
businesses in the Art Center area were
authorized by the ·Laguna Beach City
Council Wednesday.
Councilmen voted unanimously to in-
struct the 'city manager's office to in-
itiate a fea~ibilltY study and retain a con-
sulting engineer to determine land ac-
quisition and improvement eo&ts invoJvtd
in establishment of. a cily parking lot in
~e . 1400 block of-Glenneyre Street
between Mountain ROad and Cafliope
Street.
New Skipper ,,
Laguna Beach city councilmen voted
unafilmou.sly last Week to .authorize a
formal application for HUD (Housing and
llrban Develo(iment) open space funds to
help acquire the 45-acre Sycamore Hills
triangle in Laguna Canyon as part of the
proposed greenbeJt around the city.
Such expression, Dilley reiterated,
would in no way obligate the clty to p~
vide funds to match the HUD allocation.
This, he said, would be raised by the
committee over a four-year period. If the
suggested S4 million price of the triangle
remains £irnl, this would involve raising
$500,000 a year ror the four-year period.
The city will finance the initial stijdles
but cost would be considered part of the
ultimate assessment If an assessment
dis tr id ls formed . Annual 'bond payinent
for property owners benefitirig from the
district would be partially re<lmbursed
with 75 percent of the city's net revenue
from the parking Jot.
•
Jack Albade (right), newly elected skipper of the Laguna Beach
Chamber of Commerce Masters, discusses plans for new series of
Wednesday mor_ning b~eakfasts with his first mate, Graydon Oliver.
Breakfast meetings WJll resume Oct. 7 with a talk on "Progress af
City Hall" by Mayor Richard Goldberg.
James Dilley, secretary of the Citizens'
Committee for the Laguna Greenbelt,
presented letters from three lop HUD of-
ficials in Washington, D.C. containing
88.!W'ances of help in the greenbelt pro-
El Rancho has the hottest price in town!
DOLLY MADISON'S
-·lUNEff-BOX TREATS!
••••••••••••••••••••••
If the district is not formed, Initial
costs Will be paid by supporters ol the
project.
Never mind the price on the package ••• our price is 10c for these lovely filled cakes that the kids enjoy ao very, very much 1
Kellogg's Pop Tarts ............... 39* Quaker Oats ............................ 59*
Toaster pastry in a variety of flavors ! 11 oz. pkg. Start the morning right! Quick or Reg .•.• 42 oz.
G r a p e s ......... 1.T.~~~ ................ 15 ~
• Plump and ripe1 ••. bursting with flavor that makes them "'elcorne at lunch time-or anytime! -------
Meal miakers from the Butcher Shop!
Po r k C h o p s ...... ~~. ~ ........... 89~
Sq lean and !lavor!ull Try them fixed with Shake 'n' Bake for pork •• , J9c per pkJ.
Stuffed Pork Chops ............. m DRESSING ..................... $1.09 ~
Ready fCl" the oycn ; •• all you need to do I• bake thein ;-•• and enjoy-the fine flavor I
Tuitey Birds ........................... 25:. Stewing Chickens .................. 49'•
Turkey meat in a convenient !onnf Jilin. 4 oz. ea. Big ones, .. 4 to 6 lb •• ,. for dellcloua tricusee!
Superior ·ramales .............. Ar OOR De.icATESSEN .............. 4 • 89C
Let one meal echo tho romance o( Mexico .•. with llUnal .. in the •J>Otlight! 8 oz. each . •
-~---------'--
Pf'it ea in effect Mon., Tue11., Wed.,
Sept. tt, 12, is. No &ale& to deahr1 •
.•
I
. ..
another county to the benefit of lbe
merchants ir that area. ·
Winning one advantage, Ule dtveloper
can suddenly come alive and ramrod his
plans through the Board of Supervisors.
Usiryg the second approach, he can win
merchant pressure, especially in the
smaller counties where lhe skills to in-
vestigale ullimate consequences of the
"development" do not exist.
The developer has not bought .the land
or made any other lnvestmtnt unUI he
has the official approvals. One he hat
those, it's a simple ma.tter to borrow the
money pe ne:ed• ~d t;fme hll actions to
that th! lots go onto tbe officiaJ ncord
after March 1, when the taxes would shift
from open land to land approved for ,Jot.,
and In time for the prime sellinc 1e1SOD
in late spring and early summer.
As Berliner also points out, the main
support . for the whole scheme comes
from the lack or state or Jcical law which
would recognize the community's need
for lnte lligeM land use..
_"Today," Berliner has wrilteii, "state
and local governments proceed on the
premise that if the developer can sell hil
Jots, even to obvious suckers, with no use
in mind, there is no public intereat in
preventing him from doing so."
·-
I
DAILY PILOT -· Stp-21, 1970
American Bomh.ers Pour-, It on .Reds ·------'
SAIGON (AP) -Amerlcu worplana
alommed llundreda al 14111 of bombl lnlo
North. V-positions uouild two
artlllery buea In lhe nor1hern quorter al
Soulh VlelDam todoy IDd liept up rllds on enemy INJll)IJ routot In ,_ IDd
Clmbodla.
Kompooc 'n>om wu stalled fer lhe
olihlh day. 'lbe drl .. up 8""te I wu
hailed al Taing Kouk vWa,e, norlh al
Skoun, Sept. U by a powerlu North Vie•
IW!lele and Viet Cong f«ce thal lnfllcled
heavy louea on the C-mbodi•u.
reported one minor aklrmlah 15unday
when a Marine battalion clubed wltb
North Vietnamese ood Viet Cong troops
alon1Roule30 naor Pbum Tley, about 10
miles from Ibo Vietnamese border.
four oaemy 191cliers, csptured ftV< olhers North 'Vlelnamese and ei-eoq-
and ae.l&ed flVe ri.fles. Two marina were aanctuarles ,. between the Baaac and
killed. Mekong rivers. which.led into South Viet·
It wu not lmmedlately dlscloted. how nam's fertile Mekong Delta.
many Vietnamese troops were committed At Jut report, IS,500 South Vielnamele
tn the new drive aimed at destrO)'lng \rOOps were operatin1 in.tide Cambodia.
· American bombers begoo their third
ftek of concentrated raids around en-
bsttled Fire Bue O'Reilly, near lhe Lio-
Um bonier, where bub flihtlnc f1ued durtn& lhe put 34 ........ • .
Field reports from -said Iha ..
ln!otced Clmbodlan troopl milht Bel lhe
offemlve rolling apln 11 ony time.
Cambodian Premier Lon Nol flew to..
lhe front lines todoy IDd said be wu
pleutd with lhe acUom ot the 1overn-
ment troops IO far, ,;
lleodquarten aid lhe mulnes kllled
STORE HOUllS 10 A.M. le 10 PM. ..........
A sign in a i:estaurant window
gays : 0 Waitress wanted, wW mar-
ry if necessary." But owner L1w·
rence McGM 1ays the sign's noth·
ing but an eye.catcher. He's 47 and
happily married in Charlotte, N.C.
They olao atlocked North Vietnamese
posiUons ·tbrealei>lq Fire Bue Fulltr,
four mllea south of lhe demlliWlzed .....
South Vietnameae headquarters reported thlt more than 200 government
troops clubed with North Vietnamese
soldiers about 2'n miles IOUtheut of Fire
Bue o;jleilly, whlcb bis boeO besleled
.. =~=...~.=-= MONDAY aau BEE ,ed wheft lhelr CH3 ...cue hellcopltr.w11 TUESDAY .sQot down Aue. 13 over nortbeut
Th;i,~~s. Embassy in Bangkok imposed WEDNESDAY
a news blackout on the incident, .which '
It bas been a rough year for for lhe put "'° months. .
·ancber W. B. Whlteloy in Oakley, FUteen North Vletno.-aoldien
!• -•~ A-ell ~ ---Mlecl -were..repoNd...Jdlled. 'Ille flOWllDl!lll· uauv. c 81 ue owns a e ~ 11\d' they captured three-rifles -50
burned last spring. In July, some rounds ol roctet .. propellocf ~·~
of bis fall potato crop was lost b&-250 dynunlte blocu, and destroyed 15 ·
• never has bffn reported officially. The
loss of lhehelicoptu WU lhe first known a 11~ au .--. cue of an Amerlcao aircrlft being lhot •
~~ia: -U.S..-COmmood-.,,._,_,, -.-~
nounced ~icon troop slrenglh in Viel· . .
nam continued to drop u a result of ~:;;;;;;;,~~~~==i
cause of a ball storm. Then th• buntera. Fleld reports said one Soulh
week before harvest another fire v~tnameae IOld1er wu killed and one
destroyed his cellar at Oakley, lea-wounded.
President Nixon's foorth.<ound cutbsclc · ·
ving him no place to store his po-'lbe u.s. Ni Air Force said lta tacliw
tatoes. fighter-bombers new 18 aorti.es .in support
----of-the-South Vietnamese troopa at
Ft. Sill's Okla. range division
.tows wrecked car bodiea to its ar-
tillery target range and blows them
to bits. 11We purchase between 1,000
and 1,100 wrecked auto bodies from
wrecking dealers each year1" says
C1pt. Goy R. Wright Jr., opera-
t ions officer foi' the range division.
Wright said the wrecks make fine
targets because they explode into
a large fiieball when a direct bit
is.nm.de. • G1brl1I H11tter'1 Blst birthday
Thursday caught him unawares,
his daughter, M11d1 said. But the
nationally famous news broadcast-
er of former years zestfully ate a
O'Reilly durlni the 24-hour period ending
al 6 a.m. lod1Y. A aorUe la one fll&ht by
one plane.
Heavy Strategic Air Command 852
bombers new nine sorUes at points five
to nine miles aouthwest of the base, drop-
ping nearly 300 lons of bombl on North
Vietnamese staging and supply areas
that support the enemy forces around
O'Reilly.
Informed sources said U.S. bombers
flew up to.300 aortie> qalnst Norlh Vie~
nimese supply routes in Laos and Cam·
bodio during the put-34 hours.
Some cf the raids ·were along Cam·
bodia's Route a, which leads frcm Skoun,
40 miles north of Phnom Penh, to Korn·
pong Thom, 40 miles farther north.
A Cambodian ground operation aimed
al opening lhe · road from Skoun to
of 50,0GO men.
A ....tly military slrenglh CIWIUIW'J
reportod 315,500 American troopo In Viet·
nam as of last 'lhursday, a drop cf IOO
over the previous week.
Under-Nlxon!s fourth-phase withdrawal
plan, the authorized American strength
must be pared to 384,IMXI by Oct. 15.
Lt. Gen. Lee Sae Ho, commander of
South Korean forces .in South Vie~
told newsmen in Saigon there are no
plans for the withdrawal cf any of the
50,000 Koreu troops in Vietnam.
Meanwhile, a Sou.th Vietnamese naval
task force launched a major operaUon in
Cambodia along the Bassac River about
35 miles southeast of Phonom Penh, a
military spokesmen reported loday.
The operaUon, involving scores of pn-
boats and more than l,IMMI Vietnamese
marines, started Slturcby but wu DOI
disclosed until today for security reasons, he said. . ·
Informed sources said there bad been
little significant action to date.
South VJetnamese headqukrter1
piece of the 'blrtbday cake served R 1 M k c b k.
at bls·bome-~·Mlaml~Heatter-gets---· u·ss1ans-a -e-ome· . ac about house m a :w)JeeJchair after ' figbUng ofi an attack of double
pneumonia during a six-week hos-
pital stay. His daughter said poor L d L 16 h M . eyesight interferes with his keep-an una on t e oon Ing up with world events such. as
he used to broadcast on the Mu-
tual Network until he retlred .in
1981. • Because of a trafiic jiµn, Prosl-
dent Nixon bas acquired eight new
necktleo in Chicago. He jwnped out
of hiS car when his motorcade waa
stalled In. the Loop Thursday and
waited a block to the Marshall
~Id clo Co. -~ There be p!Cked
out seven tour-in-band cravats and
one bow tie with price tags totaling
around flll. It being presidential
tradition that the chief executive
carries no ready cash, an aide pick·
ed up the tab. •
MOSCOW' (UPI) -The Soviet Union'•
latest moo probe, Luna 16, landed a
rocket on the moon Sunday and trans.
milted "excellent" test pictures from the
Sea of 'Fertility and "mal<lni studies."
The Soviets did not ·announce the (ie. tall~ of LUna 1r1 taats: but a report from
lhe Well c.mw. apace observatory at
Bndnnp Aid tbl c:rift trammltted *'U·
cellent" test plcturel upon llndlng.
1be eoft..landing at 8:18 1.m. Sunday
marted a Soviet comeback from the
failure of Luna 15, which Western space
experts said crashed on the moon in JuJy;
19119, while racing Nell A. Armstrong's
Apollo 11 mission to the surface.
Luna II olao WU lhe first Soviet
spacecraft to tcuch dowu in tbt lunar
Humorist 5. J. Perelm1n, 66, best landscape since Luna 13 in December,
known for his sardonic comm.en-1966.
tary on the An)erican scene, says Thal was the heyday of Soviet IWllr ex.
he will move to London next month ploration, when Ruasian moonshots were
pennanently from New York. Call-comin_& !our and five ~es. a year and
ing England "a far more rational America a pros_pects uf wuuung the moon
society than our own," Perelman race teem~ dim. .
said, --'1Today, the news· in-this--Tb6 o~_Tus _!iews _Agency said
country is so filled wi\h insanity Lcma'a· earlh ~-coaxed lhe craft and violence that the newspapers do~ gently. by re~ote t'Onlrol o~ its " d · f ' braking engines which set the silver from which I enve many o my Sputnik down in stages like a jack in idea~. have scant room for, the sort reverse. I
of thing that turns me <>:n. He said The agency pinpointed its landing spot Thurs~y he bad sold the 91-~re tn selenographic coordinates as o degrees
fann m Bucks Co~ty, Pa., which fl minates south latitude and 56 degrees
he and nine other-inlaws, the late 11 minutes east longitude "in the area of
Nathanael 'West, bought in 1932, lhe Sea of Fertllily." '
and planned to move to London on "Luna 16 has started making studies of
Oct. 21. Perelman, bom 1n Brook· the moon's surface," it said.
lyn, has written 18 boOk&, includ.ln~ There was no indication whether the
"Parlor Bedlam . and Bath,' craft would attempt to scoop samples of
"Westwird Ha!'' and the recently moonsoil and blast off again for earth.
published. "Baby, It'a Cold Imide." Spm:e sources In Moscow declined to ven-
ture a predicUon.
Thal was the speculollon during lhe
Luna 15 mission, helped along by hlntl to
that effect by Soviet space experts.
Man Sets Self
Afire to Mar
Italy Ceremony
ROME (UP!) -An unemployed
Neapolitan marred celebrations of the
centenary of Italian unity Sunday by
trying to burn hlmaell lor lhe third time
in two monthl.
About 30 peraons quickJy overpowered ·
the man and put out the flames. Docton
said be suffered first and iecorid dearee
burns on his handa.
1be incident occurred on the white
marble stepa cf the Victor Emmanuel
Memorial en the Piazza Venezia minutes
before President Giuseppe Saragat ar-
rived to lay a wreath on the tomb of
Italy's unknown soldier., The ceremony
was one of several marking the tooth an-
niversary of the Italian annexation of
Rome.
Police identified the man as Giorgio
Zoccolella, 25, a father of six. They said
he douaed hilillelf with gasoline near
Saragat'1 resldell:e July 29 and again
Sept. 11, but wu stopped by police each
time before he could set himself on fire.
Police A.Id 7.occolella said he wanted to
draw attenUoo to hla unemployment, but
when omclall found him a job with a
N1ple1 construction company be did not
lhow up for wort.
Hail, Wind -Lash Northeast
Warm Weather Making Comeback in Most of Nation
C.ilfornl•
_ .. y
Sf«illCI 111"1 ........... 2iMl.'1l. 1,1 ~.., ••• "" 10il61""' '·' , TUllDAY
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f;apistra~o-
' . . VOL 63, NO. 226, 3 S.ECTIONS, 34 PAGES ,
I ' ' • ~ • Ir . , , . r
. ! l I • • I,
• . • ras Ir
. . . ' Depu~ies
' Arrested ----...
ln Thefts
, By. JA(]l 'BROBACK ot .. ...,,, ...... ff
,... oru;« c:ounty 'deputr lhOrirr.,
J.u<d Sanday 11 suspedil in an ·~ tmpted bw'glary of the Mluion Viejo
Country CJub, are Otll 'on bail today
and will -: be . questioned ·-othu ~ in. the area, ah¢frs depart.,·
11 '1Mtt.investig•tors aid:.' · , .
I ·Deputy FM!erick B,. lrvine,-4!),. of !'.it·
Habra was captureid Sunday ·morning
near Lake Elsinore after officers said be
· ~ commandeered a aberitr.1 ,patrol cai
an( fled. • . . .
Deputy Arthur E. Duncan, :14, of Hun-
tingtoiLBea.~.....xas~elkjl , in • the
Mission .Viejo area .. nc1 surrendered
without ~den . r
'
• '
ORANGE COUNTY, CALI~ MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 21; k~70 .. .. ..
~
s c 00
•
~ --•'oday'• ·l'blal ·-
•
TEN CENTS
ea
€apo -Beach·
Pilot Hiis
Laundromat
· By RICHARD P:NALL
Of .. 011tr 'Mlf Slaff
A school ·superintendent from.Monarch
Bay was killed In the foggy early tftorn-
lng· darkness Sa!tJrday w~en ·his ll&ht
plane crashed lnlo a Capistrano Beach
laundromat. starting a fire.and blowing a
mother in an adj1cent apartment throu&b
the waU . ·
. Authorities said the pik>t victim, Frink:
RayrhoM ~d<iii, 42; o{ 32&11 Empress:
Way, South Laguna, wa.s en route to a
football game at Big Pine near Bishop.
He· became superintendent o( the Bia:
Pine Unified School District in July. ,
· Witnesses said Addis' new plane, 1
Be•ch Bonanza V35, took off In the log at
l
·-,
abolit 5:4D. a.m. from Capi.!trano·Airport,
circled "ihe field once and crubed
-throUgh-the-roof-of-the--Sav-More-Lauin· ---1
dromat, 34241 Doheny P•rk Road in .tbl
business djstrict of Capistrano Beach. · Both men were "moonli&btint' on their
off dutyhoun "' IOCUl'lty 11\UidS I« the
. Millloi) YieJo C!>mP811J', · . · · i , .. .;.· j -'" ' • ' K.lllrf "'91911 ........ ·$-1~i!tciu&Tt1D ;;y FLAM'E.s;F1~EMEN'BATTLE ·aL.u1:AFTER Pi.AME i>LuMME:r.ED 1Nro cAP;srRANo aEACH LAuNi:>RoMJI.;.,.:.
The explosive crash and devastatin(
fire did an estimated PS,OllO damage.
Lt. Richard . Drake of the oherllf't
depaj-t,nerit' aaid bolh men were' spotted 10~;~ ~ion:v·J~jo clu~ in, th°e
arly -.Jlil'houn by the , club's &o!l
. . ~· .. ( . . . . ' . . ..
·-Bel ...... ,, ' pro, ~...-a-~. . 'Jel~·uid he .w1s:Clt his .way ,home
• ..... _.e·by·whfre :he ~·-~ ~ib" car~~-He sa~.t~,~ i.ns~e, kni;w
thef didri'fhave l ltty 'and afttr,WatChiftg
for a feW minutu,.caued~tht-tbfrlff'a ef .. ·.
fict'.;" ·• "1·1; t'·J' ~,':·,1·}~ ... '
. !If· !!le ~,iepu!t .. ·orrjyed' lh<· 1 ... ·
'
' """ hod ldt Ille di-~ . . " . ~~:~~ .... ·~:till .19,11 ..... m.........z · )'Vd ...,.. !Iii san Ple&O
1'r..W1y: '!'Iii 11ipdtiu Ulilcl:liliit-;:i.;·jet'
I into. the patrcil car and ~ .. to :tn.
clubhoule w.ith them. • · ·Once therf,.they said he meiiaced si;t.
Jake Etvlere with 'a· pi!t.ol : ~nd ,com-
zftandeered..Jbe patrGi car ar)d took off!
.He drove· bier tO the mliinienance
yard. 1witcbed to .hil .owh llition wagon
and Oed.. , _ .
RMponding to a 1eneral alarm,
Riverside deputy sheriffs spotted the sta-
tion , wagon on the Ortega ·Highway
~tly after S' a:m ... and pUrlued Irvine
down the grade into the Lake Elsinoni area: . . .
. When Irvine did ·not llllp during 1l1e
punuit, the Jliverlide deputia fired at
the •fleting..cat flattening the rear tires.
Irvine then jumped out of the car and,
htld the'Riverskfe officers· at bay with a
fevolver which he continuaUy pointed at
his,he8d, thr.eateniftg;suicide.
He ht1d them off for two hours before
fiv:ing in to pleas of his wife and fellow
OranJe County deput.iu w~ had arrived
at the 9Cene. .
Lt. Rusell Hawk of the Lake Elsinore
therlff:1 aubatation · said 1rvine "never
made an ·aar,easive move toward any of
cJJi .offtcers. ' ·
DYncan bu been a ·deputy sheriff f9f
\
five Y,tars. He h11 recently served as a
JuV'"ue Hill bailiff Ind several months
I q o-1 was' bailitf in the court of. Superior
Judi<. William S._Lee ol N•WP.Ort Beoch.
'· . ' .
r ·:, ~ ~ ~· ' ' Ri,,sty"Beturtts
. . . ! • s1Wrke1d, S'ing'ed ·
' ••••• p • • • '
&f~c i«Plo1i,Qft •. : .r ; • .1 • • • : \. , , •• • ,
~ty,· who was .-pparen~ly bknm ~ the ·wall ~alorfc with his sleeping
1111oit..I; !Iii . _. ....... -dazed,
-irfiiileilesa~ar\a 90mewhat h worse for "' ' wefr' b\lt ~appy to be found.
&sty .is thl. 7·yea.r-o:ld 'family dofl: that
Mrs .. Edith ' '.SUiienberger 'ftai-ed had
peritbed in· tfie1 .s.turday ·mqmm1. fire
cauaed· by. a pline clash. . . .
Mh» SUUen6erier, Of 34141 Doheny
Part Rbad, 'her·mOther, Donna and infant
dau1hter narrowly escaped the flaming
wreckage: o( their one bedroom apart-
ment.. The< sa.me was tnJe. of R~sty, who
came.with Mn ... SuUenberg from Ohio 1i:x
year1,igo.
She Nld today that Rusty WIS located
12 hours after the crash. ''He was panting
and in·shoCk and singed pretty badly ind
he just:lild in my arms," she said. Rusty
is to be released from the veterinarian's
today.
Rusty's life has been 50mewhal com·
plicated lately. First it was lhe•birth of a
new baby 31/a weeks ago. Up till then ht
had been the center of attention.
And most recently, his early morning
ll1007A! at the foot of Mrii. Sullenber1er's
bed was"; rudely interrupted by an U ·
plollion and fire, He doe~n't seem to kno"
wbot to• think about It all.
New Ce<Me-fire Ordered . ' 7 -
In Bloody ]or~u War
..
'
SoYltl-lit!nod Por..tln< Llberollon Army
-encouropd thelr 1rvops 1n the bloody -.-• Jordanian military governor Ma~hal
Haba Al·MtJall 11ve the PLA troops a
2~ ultimatum, even while the Arab
Mta 00.-tit zed .a ~t , conference
on tM ••~ .
"BftryGOe wh& doei not sumnder and
hond -.. er IU _...., ~ --nr .....
tho llr1llld to.tes oltlf thll .Um• i• 11.m. Jorilon' llnlo1 / WfU.''be · iilJed, "t~ Mojlll. decll1r..i."
"'iblo Is .the ~ kmtna to,..,..,.....~
llldto AmmM' lnllOUn\'<d U.l PU, ,_ " s.•. ..... lnclucltll& lonb,
armored cars and lr'tWsy 4lOffi tni their
odvonce hod .,...... ill~ J.....,, •t J\ollllbl .... 11oo .bor#: .. miles ,,_ -· MaJlll concr•lulolod hill. ••• 4llth llr:IP!!o lor Ill-~ill balding off the In-,....,, wtlo Syrian Praldont Nureddin
A-bu ......... nioftd Into Jordan II
all. ·•
"You "" lloncHnf lloM apinlt a m• ollotil< unleoshed on you by the ....., ol Syrto, whO could not hold out tor
, ... J9RDAN, P1 .. II ' . . .
THE SULLENBERGERS LOST EVERYiHING BUTT.HEIR . NIGHTCLOTHES -ALMOST. EVERYTHING'
Jn the Ap.rtm•nt a.hind the S•v~More Uundry, ·• Scr•pe With Dt•th on • Chilly S.pttmbtr Mornin9·
• Mom~ Toi · Safe ID Crash
Capo Plane Wreck Impact Threw Them Through Wall
By PAMELA BAU.AN said she woke up and saw Edith gtanding Of*'...,,,... ... " through the wall. "I close my eyes today
The ' Hfty blby • lay eoolng In her and l can still see the burning tJ,mber
mother's prolectlve· ann1, oblivious to all between me and'the sky." 1he said.
burl.he gentle race above her. Some.ltimbers had fallen aCTOSl! her
>Edith Sullenberpr .mliled it'·the boby leiJ. "I remember pUlltna -,.Y..U oul
lnd'pulled .... ----.. •
"Sbe'i tht m.irl:Cle," she said quieUy •
Tbe boby wasn't 1loopl0( in IMr llOUll
place Saturday when· the Plane a-ashed
into the latmdromat which adjoined tbti
family'• Caplltnno 11 .. c11 opulmenl.
"Ellzabeth WU sloeplnf ln her corc
riage, next to my bllll, not In•~ crib 1t
thelool of the ~," Nici.her molher.
Th:)mpacl ol lhe Hp]....,, Which took
lbe· itfe ol the piloti blew the boby'o crib
lhrll\l(h/tho will • .It •loo blew • l!clllb
tlltooih' .,I'm tlw\kfuJ il WU I thin wd, ""'akf
Edith. . --,.
She ha no tecollectlon of the bllO!. She
remembeni only hearing ~..,. Ind Ihm
betna on her feet ou~; ~ .,..n. Slit
brui1es and s cralches 1eM • l:ntee o heh
lmpt<I with thl t,.,,.lncb. ...U, ., do hlr -· "! .... otandln( !hire ... ~
llftmed btckwanl to, me,"• llkl ... My
mother O!Ulthavohunf mo-.,, I
couldn't 1e1 oriented to where lie boby
·was . Whtn I did, I grabbed hs and ran
out."
H•! mother. Mn. Donni Sullenber,...,
Youth Arrested
Pn Fl~g Charges
• An-l.l·ye1r-old San 'Ctmeate youth was
irresl~ ~ pclice;Friday on su.spicion of
deaetrating Ute-~u.s~1 nag after an :officer
1sletted ' that tWo .. Arrierican ·nags had
llet'n-cut and used-a~ window cWUins in
a van the ~pect·.wu,dlivin,1. . ·
. Lt . .Robert Muorhsak11Wendell M1tttew·
Udill,. j40• Al'°""1<' wao . Pi<~ed •up •Olli
~lclon -of • v!,Qla_Mng_ m\IU&ryt., atid·
vetera111 code ·1eetiop1.w1Ueh dell wilh.
defaclni I na1,.) .. ~ ,
• Muoa aaid tht1'istrlet1-alt.o('ney'11 offtce·
t(Jday wtied lO ,issue a cOmplalnt' cbarg-
lnl Udall with defacin1 I 11·1·
1be outh · was picked up by a
petrolmaR at Roll and South Ola Vista
Friday afternoon. He was released on his1
written proml.ae io appear Jn court, Maion
uld.
(l'Om under 1them 1 and dragging tnyself
Out ," said the mOLher. "You heat about
grown men dolng things lil<e'that, but not
fill.le old ladieii:" '
; "I gufiss you dO amazlrlg things when
you have 10.11 ad~ Edith. "I'm usually
a tenderfoot, but; there I was walking
barefoot over glas.5 and 11p!Jntered· wood
and never felt it."
"We lost -everything but our
nightclothes in UK. fire," , said Edith.
"Things like that dOn't hit you ·until you
are•standing in front of a milnriand,.J"OU
reaHR that you don 't even own a to.cent.
comb.0 • •
. Life Is settling down1Jor.1lhim iftow~
They have moved 'to ·a small apartment
near the one .Ui Jost and fflends arid
neighbors' have been dropping 1 ln ttr.tth
sakes o( food, money and clotPiing.
1 Their ··1amuy··dct 1 ls :~atHt ·1r. Git'
veteririar\an fn: il'IOck,f bdtJ E):thJ1 ·and ,her:
motlter iAd 'tht':t>alfy t'artftomffig:odb of\
theirs and putt~ together the .fads. one. I! that. Eclltlfs ·mother. who WOrked at tfte
destroyed .Jatindromat, no :longer · has 1·
job. I '
• But' the ramilyJISlh()f)efUI: mor:e 50 now
than they've ever been before. lbe~'re
appre<:litirig life because 'on orie dlllly
~tember mornlJll they nearly teited,
death, ~ ~. .1 •• '
\,
•
'
• The plane Joss was probably about
another $40,000.
Authorities have no good clue yet as tO
what might have caused the crash other
than poor visibility. Both Addis and _the
Pl ane were incinerated in the fiefce blaie
~hich destroyed not only the laundromat
and ,adjact:nl apartminl but badty
dlimage<I the Blue PeUcah reataurant
whi,ch had 1 ~mmon wall,
Ejtith Su!l•nberpr, :14, 1Jf' Infant
daughter and mother, •. Donna Sullen-
ber1er, 9 ; who managed· the laundromat, We.ti aJSeep in their' dne t>edroom 1pait~
ment thit b part. of the laubdtomal
bulldin(.
Tbe,younger woman was b'l>wn Ulroup
the wall .and onto 1ravel.outside_but asidt
from.. nee« burns was not seriously in.'"
jured. She .rustled Inside and carrled·oi.il
her 3'h week old ~aughter who was not .
Injured. The infant was alseep in a bl.by
carriage. Her empty crlb Wu pUshed
through the wall by the explosion. , '
The yOunger Mrs. SUiienberger rerum-
ed to lhe apartment a nd lifted a beam off
of her mother's legs, said firemen, and
helped Donna Sullenberger outside.
The senior Mrs . Sullenberger suffered
first and serond degree leg bums.
Six engineii from 1 the county fire
department and a snorkel (aerial) unit
battled the flames for an hour and a half
. befort the ~tre was brought under con-
trol:
Bill Minick, coroner's investigator, ·said
Addis left home a short while before the
crash and told his wife, Mary that be
pla nned to drive to Big Pine.
He apparently changed his mind .Qcl
· took the plane which he used to conimute
to his home on weekends. The Capistrano
Airpart is uncontrolled. It has no control
tower or runway lights and taking off.
uid officials, is pretty much a matter of
pilot discretion. i
. No one saw him enter his single.eqine
plane but bis car was parked nearby. ·
· Besides his widow, Addis is survived.by
a teenage daughter, Sharon Ann,"of' the
family home and a aon, Fruk R. JI of
San Diego. He~had beta an orange Coun-
ty re sident 10 yura.
Funer1l services were ICheduJed -1t S
p.m. tod4y at Peek Faniily Colonial
Funeral Home In Westminster wil.b burial
in Westmimter Memorial-Park.-.,
A resident of the crash Rrea! Mrs.
'
IS.. CllABH, P1 .. l)
1".e•tller.
1 SUMy skies with occasional · 1~
clOOO. along the ~ ia tbe fire ·
for 'I'Uesday, with coastal temper• "
lures Jn thre 70's and inland n:aO.
lngs sbooUn1 11J1 to IO des-.
INSmB TODAY
ThYu tighteY·thon-dir ad1¥1to
tur111. took oJJ Jrom Lofl{l laland
Sunday on a trnn.mtla71tic Oa.t
baJloon od111.s111. Wi:nd.! ptrmiC...
ting, they 'will reach. Europe .i1&
riJ: to1l6 dop1. Sn 1&or.w POQt 5.
... ""' 11 11 ...... • c.tl..... ' ...... • Clltdlllll U.. 1 ......... .._ W
ClntlttM ,._,. Or-.. c-t1 ' c... 11 ,,,.,.. """ • .,.... MIHtw ' ,_,. •• ~ ', ..............
........ "'" 6 T......... • IRl9rt11MMM If ,,..._. • ,,,.._. u-u .......... •
....... 11 __. ...... 17·1• .,. ........ ,, ...... .... ...
'
•
•
\ •
• I
~ DAILY l'ILOT St I
Fre• P .. el Clemente l11tte .. JORDAN ••• -
two hours In the Colan Hel&hts In 19117,"
• ?Ujafl uld. 1
-Trailer.--Proj-ect
"ll!lld last In the face of tht •&-
Sr-1. u 1111 ... pie ii.I of )'OW'
tanb," be emortell. ·
VICTORIES CLAIMED Back to Planners
Guerrilla soorets in Baghdad and
Damascus proclaimed that Syrian in-
v1ders -moving in,. a two-prona:ed
maneuver toward lrbid -w e r •
mutilating Hussein's RoyJl Army,
The young king has S5,000 troops
against the 32,000 guerrillas entrenched
in northern Jordan and atound the capital
city o.C Amman.
'
A mob!le home park proposal that got
bounced back to the planning commission
after a San Clemente council spat last
week will be up for the plaMers. con-
sideration again Wednesday.
1'he Commission had smiled on the Lin-
coln Savings and ~an propOsil .for
fnoder nistlc mobile home development
near the Shorecliffs Golf C o u r s e
spokesman for Lincoln.
They inCJuded wood treatment and
simulated stucco for the coaches Talber
than conventional aluminum sKUng.
Covered carports wrre lo be a re·
qulremen t and no aircondiUOner1 or
coolers perched on roof tops. His 40tb Brigade faces up to 100
Russian-built tanks of two Syrian
brig1des with 50 British Centurian tanks.
· American Secretary of State William
P . Rogers urged the Soviets to exercise
their power over lhe Arabs to end the
1 hostilities. which he branded today as Ir·
uninhabi ted ..... ~ Newpo... Man
The commission found the development I. ~
a compatible land use because of no co n-
res:POnsible and capable -a! drastically--;. ..... ~ ..... iii::s;::1 rn ct with existing development and /Loses $3 485
-recormnended it -unanimousJ.y-to_tbe_ ~-_ '·---
broadening. . •
"We call upon the Syrian ·government
to end immediately this ln~rvention in
Jordan,'' he said. "And we urge all other
c<>ncerned governments to impress upon
lhe government of Syria the necessity. or
withdrawing the forces which haye ln-
---vaded~Jordan.''
council. No· detailed development stan-
·dards. were set at -the time, pending a,
council decision of the conditional use
pennlt.
The council Jasl week ~nl the 111alter
back -to the commission {or detailed
development 'standards .so the entire
package could then be -weighed .by coun·
SUMMIT PROPOSED cilm~.
Tunisian President Habib Bourguiba • a.1Lv ":i..oT , .... "•1el\.I~ KH1111r Councilman Wade Lower attempted
proposed a summit ' conle,.nce of Arab COUNTY AIDE KILLEFER TAKES JN VIEW FROM SOUTH LAGUNAN 'S MASSIVE WALL · unsuccesslully last .week to gain approval
Stites in CairO to thrastrout •Jordanian Nur P~r.1dJ11 Point, W. I. C1in Walla Off His P1rson.1l .P1r1di11 Witt) H.tlp From County of the c0:nd.itiona! use perrni~ ... wl\b th~
solution. and several, including Egypt. planning commission to detierm1ne •slan-
had accepted. But Cairo sources said dards later ... I sat in and saw the plans
Sunday the Syrian Invasion ended w 11 proposed by the developer and they were
chances ror such a mee ting. L g ~ B 1• a impressive. he said. l j .
Cairo took two positions Oil the eonflict a .ona s er ID Councilman Thomas O'Keefe opJ!OSed
Sunday: . the perm it. charging it would be an act of
-Hussein should Intervene 1m-bad faith because opponents had not peen
medi•lely •o ••• u .. compli••" with • County Off: .. w.· ls OK Concre_te. 'Trespasser Block' heard. An exchange or word• 10119wed. ctase-fire plan worked out by Egyptian "-' Having previously lost an earlier round
President Gama! Abdel Nasser and -the fate or all mobile home proposals
reportedly accepted by the government BY. BARBARA KREIBICH times actually living in the unfinished Noting that "problems"'' could arise if in recfhT-months -Lincoln Savings and
and guerrilla forces. Of 111e DI!& '"u" stiff structure. all property owners started building such Loan presented the planning Cmnmission
-IJ:aq's ~ Baath. party ~icted the A ma ssive concrete wall, extending Engineer R. E. Tebault, who desl&ned ·walls, Conroy concluded it is •·a very a revised package early. this mOnth. , ~
gue_rrillas into conttmung to fight after oceaoward from the cliffs near Paradise and built the wall , said, "He {Cain) was touchy area." It incjlldes the concept of i buffer· or
their lea~rs accepted the truce. Point and r11aching an imposing height of trying to protect his h,ome fro,m Looking over the wall on the weekend modular homes fonning the 1 entire
.The officl~l. and .public position of the 24 fee~ at mean higltJide line, was built trespassers. A bunch of hippies got ln was John Killefer, executive assistanfto perimeter of the park. More convenUonal
N11.on adminllltration hu bee~ one . of under a variance ~ed by Orange once and set a fire in the living room." Fifth District Supervisor Alton E. Allen. mobile homes would' be inside the
col •ding~~ n;of ~4: Ame~r:;·: County May 12, county official.! have con-Tebault and the County officials satd Killefer said he ~d received a phope pcrlf!leter: -. . ·1
'
cu . ~ OU 0 • ges. . ill firmed. the wall. was not designed to serve any call from an irate South Lagunan Who Th.is. ~as the c~1er d1.fference between ---Pal~·guenillu,.with th:'·~ 1>:,~1;-mw-draw1ng-sta-rt1ea-corn~urpcise~ttoi>rotect·the-property~. ---maintained-the-wan-was blockinc-the---·thuru~J!Ql-PC.AIL~t_ w-1!_ ~~cf on
that force would be used If it was Judj: ment frDm South Laguna beach dwellers, They noted that the area is entirely beach all the way out1o ,the ocean. . the council with l>~nn1ng ~mll}ipn en·
ed necessary to evacuate. them. was built as an accessory structure to the rocky .coastline, with no sandy beach that · "I found this wasn.'t. quite true," salQ . do~ment and denied by. councl}riten.
PLANES SET new oceanfront home of W. I. Cain, 32225 might make the wall questionable under killefer, "because for oneJ thing ·there q,~ered carpar.ts ~er~ ~ lit •I . re-
EJ:tra Cl30 transports have been posi-S. Coast Highway. new Supreme Court rulings fegarding isn't any beach there. So far as J could qu1rement.s f.or the park Wer.e descnbed
tioned in Europe to carry the troops from Applying for a variance to exceed tbe preservation of public beach access. deter.mine the wall is ent_irety on .11:rivate to plann<:rs in th.e seco~d go-aroun? by
West Germany. The 82nd Airborne n~rmal six-foot fence height limitation, ZOning Administrator Reed said pro-property -those properties all exTend to Dana Po1nl archi tect Riley Marqws , a
Division on alert at Ft. Bragg, N.C., the· applicant stated that the wall was perty owners within 300 feet had received mean high tide line -and was built with relies~ huge Cl41 jet transports as part "necessary to protect my property from the usual notification of the variance a legal permit. It's certainly one of tbe
of the U.S. strike reserve. undesirables. I am about to occupy my hearing but only one had raised a ques· most massive lhings I've eyer .seen, but
All this wu billed as precautionary by new home on the beach and do not wish lion about the wall. so long as it's legally built on private p~
Pentagon officials who said there was no to find people of the _caliber we now find The attorney of a Three Arch B~y re~i· perty there's nothing for us to do about
.widesperad general alert. The intent re-atthebeachtrespaSSJngonmyproperty." dent appeared to request detailed Jn-.it .. "
tnains only the possibility or rescuing County Zoning Administrator Raymond formation on the structure, but advised The two-foot·th ick wall , 10 feet high
Americans -thought to be about 400 -Reed, who heard the case and authorized Reed his client was concerned. only with where it Is buil t into the cliffs ide, extends
swept up in the Jordan fighting. the variance, said he was further advised · the possibility ttiat it might disturb his directly seaward. measuring 24 feet in
As. the army brleDy. llfted its order to by the engineer for the applicant that view. When he learned it would not, Reed height at the waterline.
shoot on sight Monday the women of trespassers had clused constant trouble sai d, th~protest was .withdrawn. A ·gate in the wall was instalJed.Jto
Amman Went into the smaahed streets, during the cO!l.Struction period, tearing However, since J,he wall has been bu ilt. fa cilitate removal of·-83nd from th'e boat
dodging aniper fire, to find food for thelr d0wn fences and steps aOO hauling away Reed said he had received at least one house area below the Caln residence,
families. wood to build fires On the beach and at complaint from ~a beach resident w~o engineer Tebault explained. The struc·
They1carried shopping baskets past the maintained she had been In the habit ol ture itself ii built over the water on pil·
dead and wounded u King Hussein's walking south around the point to 'nlrtt ings.
army ruthlessly hunted guerrillu who M D D d Arch Bay and coold no longer do this
had ignored cease·firt appeals. an rops ea with the wall e1tending out to the water
Snipers hidden in mosques and on the line.
roofs-of luxury-aparhnent hotlles -were p1-• T • Three.Arch Bay Association, ~
blasetd by cannon fire . aymg . ennis said, submitted a letter in favor of the
FINAL nGHT wall, stating it would be, "most beneficial
The fight for Amman an d for the
throne is in its final stages and has cost
more time and lives than the two-day
battle lbe king's commanders had
forecast.
The pavements are littered with
cartridge cases. Buildings everywhere
have the black holes cf .artillery hits.
Fires bum on the hillsides.
From the Intercontinental Hotel you
coold see an armored car systemati cally
pounding a block of flats, floor by floor,
afler a sniper had been reported there.
The shells went in orange streaks low
across the valley and burst through the
living rooms.
A sniper near the British Embassy was
killed. A soldier and the army blew up
the building in which he was hiding.
One sniper got a lucky shot through the
embassy wh.ich put the transmitter to
London out of action. The staff had tD
revert to Morse axle until the generator·
was repaired. A soldier standing near
journaJists who went to the embassy dur-
ing the curfew lifting was wound~ by a
aniper bullet.
DAILY PILOT
... .,.,. ..... "'""""" ..... L .. , ..... ell ' f•••ftlf1 ,.....,
c ..... 111... S.. Ck:1 lie
C':llAHOl COAST "Ull..!SHl'4G C0M'AN'I"
••l>trf N. W ee4 ,,,, .. ff\, ''" """lilflW
J1ck •· Cu1l1v
Vl(t l"ru~a..,I t l'lll l'.Ftntrl l Min...,
lJ.1,,,11 Ket 'fil
etltfr
Th o"'tl A. M11•11llint
MMltlrlt IE:t•tO<'
Ricli1t4 '· Nill ""'" Or•• Col.Inly ••iiw
°""°' C-i!t MtM: lJf Wal lt'f l!rtel l<I~ ltld>: n il WHI l•lllol1 hulll'llt .. \.'""" at.Kii: m ,,_, ..,,_
Mi.ri1~ l.ffcll: 11t7i l•tell ·~
'"' '"""""": atS HOl111 lfl Ct lTllllt 11•1
DAILV .. JI.OT, wllll wlicll II ~ ""9
"'..,..''"'· i. ,....ltlld 11r1y ·~ k& •• ., lft ...,..11. (flllOflt ,.,. i....-l t.:tlt.
.. -1 lff<h, COi.it Mnt. Hll'l!ff!fllft
... tfl "'"' "-•"' "''"'Y· •ltflt wllll ,... ........ d lli9M. °'""'"' C.111 ~""'" ~ .. 1ni;.., ,Uftl~ ... ,, 1211 ...,,
ltltet I I ... .; Ht-I IMC.l'I, t r .. la Witt •• , ,,,..,, c.n•t .......
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fl\lu \ell .t CWl'l'JilJll -·
Milton Allen, 13-year Laguna Beach in establishing better security for the
resident and active member' of the area. The Caln property is immediately
Laguna Beach Tennis AssoCiation, died adjacent to the northern boundary of
suddenly on Saturday after suffering a Three Arch Bay.
heart attack while playing tennis at the An official at the County Building
Irvine Bowl courts. He was 55. Department said the wall "Is not blocking
Services for Mr. Allen will be held at 2 any beach because there isn't any beach
p.m. Tuesday in McCormick Laguna there."
Beach Mortuary Chapel, followed by The County Counsel's office took a dif·
private burial, ferent view.
A native Californian, he had lived in "The question is one of public access,
Laguna Beach for 13 years and was a _ sand or no sand," said Deputy County
service writer for Tommy A y r e s .Counsel Thomas Conroy, a specialist ln
Chevrolet. matters of access and easements.
Mr. Allen is survived by his widow, Conroy pointed out th at the County
Jean Ramsey Allen; a son, Terrence Counsel's Office would look into the wall
Allen: a daughter, Mrs. Edward Anuu, a matter only if litigation were initiated by
stepdaughter, Miss Ramsey Lee Riddell a citizen who clamed his right of access
and one grandson, all of Laguna Beach. had been infringed, or if instructed to do
Also surviving are his mother. Mrs. so by the Board of Supervisors, as in the
Henry Rubins and a sister, Miss F"lorence Sall Creek Beach case.
Rubins, both of Los Angeles. "However," said Conroy, "A public
Reagan OKs New
Oil D .. ill Ban
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald • Reagan has signed a bill designed to halt
the award of. new offshore oil drilling
leases from Monterty Bay to the Oregon
Border.
'The bill by Assemblyman William T.-
Bagley (R·San Rafael), places a five-year
moratorium on the award of orfshore and
submerged land oil leases in San Mateo,
San Francisco, Ji.1arin. Sonoma. Napa.
Alameda. Santa Clara. Del Norte, Solano
and Contra Collta counties.
The measure includes the San Fran·
cisco bay up to the carquinei Bridges.
The effect. combined with current stale
Jaw, would be to halt the award ol oil and
gas leases by the State Lands Com·
mission along the entire coast from
Monterey Bay to the Oregon state line.
Apartment Rifled
In San Oemente
A San Clemente resident told police
Sunday that a dayliaht cat burglar walk·
ed off with $380 and other Items from his
apartment..
Police 1ald the victims were Mark
Monahan, 1816 W Bolu, Apt. A: Rene
H. Eut1 of the same address and
Leopold T. Rlcll1rd. a Comp Pendleton
M1rlne.
easement can be established anywhere
that people were accustomed to going
and did go. without interference. A
private easement also could be claimed
by an individual accustomed to crossing
the area now blocked.''
Conroy said he had not see n the wa ll,
but was familiar with the location and
noted that "The topographY. is very
unusual. ire 1Cain) may ~ve had
justification for blli!ding such a wall. tr
it's on private property and there are no
easements of any sort he probably has
such a right. 0
From Pqe l
CRASH ... ..
Yolanda Vital. 25335 Domingo Road, said
she thooght th e explosion of the crash
~·as right in her front yard. She feared
momentarily that it wa s a reeurrence of
the earthquakes that had shaken the area
several days earlier.
The crash explosion bro'k e out windows
of adjacent business buildings and lit·
tered the street with flaming debris.
Firemen, however, were able to eonfine
the blaze to the buildings ,immediately in-
volved .
DohenY volunteer fireman, Wendell
Hiii, 3402 Camino Capistrano, was a few
blocks from the crash. He said l'le heard
1 low throb and a "thump" and then saw
,flames ghoollng up front the laundromat.
Allan N. Dlslcna, 20, Camp Pendleton
fl.1arl~; said he hurd the plane circling
ind lhe engine go dead. He was hitch·
hiking nearby.
No (>l'otest-Seen . .
By DowntoWll
Beach Merchanls
A proposal to increase building permit
fees in Laguna Beach has met with little
opposition from contractors, according to
Building and Plallfling Director Clyde Z.
Springe.
Springe said he had received only two
comments on the fee boost plan, both
from electrical contractors who pointed
out that raising the minimum permit
fee from $2 to $10 would be unreasonable
if applied to very small jobs, like in-
sLallation or adjusbnent or switches or
outlets.
"I can sympathize with' someone who
doesn·t want to add a $10 permit fee to
his charge for installing a 75-cent
switch," Springe said. Al his suggestion,
the council agreed to let Springe aild his
staff work out a solution to thi s problem
prior to Initiation of the ne w fee schedule.
-Mahle Winship'
Services Tuesday
Services will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday
In Sheffer Laguna -.l!'ach Mortuary
Chapel for Mabel Winship, 20930 Laguna
Canyon Road, who died Saturday at her
home. She was 66.
A native of Kamloops, British Colum-
bia, Canada , Mrs. Winshi p bad lived in
Laguna Beach for 25 years.
She is survived by her husband, Jam~
J\.1. \V inship; a brother, Lawrence Mallery
of Altadena , niece, June M. Williams of
La Ca nada ; and by two nephews , William
G. Mallery of Monterey, Calif. and Bruce
E. Mallery of Dallas. Tex.
Dr . Dallas R. Turner will officiate al
the Tuesday services. to be followed by
entombment at Pacific View Memorial
Park.
Rapist Attempt . -
F oileJ). by Woman
A 24-year-old San Clemente woman
fought a would-be rapist early Sunday
morning until her shrieks apparently
frightened hi m from her home.
Police Sgt. Frank Yergen sai d the
v.·oman. who is single and works as a
market checker. sufferer-cuts and
bruises in her struggle with the assailant.
She described the suspect as about 20
and of either Oriental or Ind ian descent.
He "'as slight of build and was wearing a
sweater and white shirl
Police said the suspect slit a screen,
reached in an opened a window to enter
the apartment at 5:03 a.m. Sunday.
To 2 Thieves
• Newport Bem:h police are continuing
their investigation today of the robbery of
a South Laguna man Saturday morning.
Richard L. Paul, 25, of 31711 Mar Vista
Ave:;-told orpcers he was-robbed of $3,485
in money and jewelry _,as he left a
Newport Beach bar at about 2 a.m.
He said two suspects approached him
in the municipal parking lot located in
the 3200 block of Newport Boulevard. One
hit him in the mouti., knocking him to the
pavement and he ld him down.
The other suspect t1ifled Paul's pockets
and removed hb watch and a diamond
ring valued at $.1,200.
Paul said he started to struggle agaillSl
the ann lock he was being _held in, but his
assailant reportedly told him, "Don't
ha ssle me, l have a gun.''
The pair escaped, running westbound
on Finley Street. Paul said he started to
follow them, but stopped when he heard a
motorcycle driving away from the scene.
Policeman Shot
Ins.an Diego;
Youths ~ought .
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A police officer
was shot twice in the stomach and Once,
in the left knee today, and a search was_·
started for two youths believed armed:
with the policeman's gun.
One, identified as a 19-year-old youth
known to police, reportedly fled. In a car.
He was desCribed as armed and ex·
tremely dangerous.
The other apparently fled on (ool in the
brush<evered area leading to Teeolote;
Canyon.
The offic;er, Frank Wilson was wounded·
after he spotted two youths stripping a
mo"'rcycle and stopped lo Investigate.
A struggle preceded the shooting,
police said. Wilson craw led back to hil
squad car lo radio ''Emergency, J bave.·
been shot," said Wilson, 40, -
Riverside Boy Hurt
In Fall Down Cliff
A 12-year-old Riverside boy co mplained
of back pain bul was not seriously injured
in a Sunday fall down a 40-foot cliff near
Calafia at the San Clemente State Park
lSeach.
Tom Castro was sent by ambulance to
South Coast Community Hospital where
he was examined and released to his
mother, Johanna Castro.
Neutering Bill OK'd
SACRAMEN1'0 LU PI ) ,_Gov. Ronald
Reagan Friday signed a bill requiring
animal sbel~rs and pqunds to neuter or
spay cats under si x months old before
they can be given away or sold. Author of
the bill was Sen. John A. Nejedly (R.
Walnut Creek).
...,., C. .. 11 •"'ff H lf I f ,,.....,, ....,.
-OlitM ..,,_ (...illtf'lll<I. L.ootui.i• ... tt,r'iw •.• ~! ., -11 ., • _ ....... ,
lllllltaff <1nt_r...,_ U.11 tnlflf!ll\'.
Police 11id the theft OttWTed while one
of the men w1s asleep in the apartment
and the other two •·ett Oi'l lbe. beach:
Fei!eral Avlatlon Agency officials In-
vestigated the crash and sald a
detennln11tlon of cause wou ld be made by
the NaUonaJ Transportatlon S a f e t y
Board.
DACL.Y "II.OT 1'9fl ~
CREWS CLEAN UP RUBBLE AFTER PLANE CRASH JN CAPISTRANO BIACH
Plktt Dt.1, But Two Women. B•by .tnd Dot l1e•,e; Dam.,. lttimetell .1t SM,DOO
I I. I I
• • •
I
DICK TIACY
JUDGE PARKER
H o PEFUL
rnAT TMEY
WILL !E "!LE
TO llfK~,..,E-.,..,,i".!1
CALL, JA.501.J
STALLS ,\5
WILLIE 1Ne..1srs
I ME ~VE MIM·
i SELF A FIX~
I l •; ... -o~,.,.
I j?«••o..( r ; 9-,.?1
PLAIN JANE
8 U1" ME'S E~Tl TLEOTO
ONE MORE WA,ftNltr.ICi,
TAl(E TME-MIKE.. CX)LL,
--~
By Tom K. Ryen
By Horold Le Doux
~~t~~R:~1 ~~L~:i'~:~o~~~i~ :t~:~oo~ HOW COME vou'li!:E I W,t.,S
GETTIN6 .ANTISEPTIC ALWAYS
1'Ll Of A SUDDEN? CAl!:EFU L !
VOU HOPHEAPS WOULD
,_ "'~11_,USE SEWEIZ WATER ,,,.
--WVOU H).C1-T0:! \.-.~
;-;>;.<( ·-j
..,,,.
"l-21 .
'BA;Jl<St''
PE !\K,NS
-------
By Frank Baqinski
Ll'L AINIJt
M ISLOOKU.J' FO'A
INl'ANTIN ,.,_.
ac>MNS.T!.'
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
™E srATEl~ l!UU-
6/JO S!'MJC5 Al.OllE
otJ T'HE ~UE;eE:D
Cl-IFF ... Gl)l.K'CI~
\HE HE!ro 1!1:1-0W -
1'4E WIOO "€1.ln.4
TOSSES HIS JoU,1)£
AS H•SG~,11.L~!l
E\leS SO!n'E\I 11-\E
PIST'AllT' H~IZOIJ ,..
By John Miles
!DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I
ACROSS . 45 Plac e
1 Fruit of grfal
wealth II M1 llgnant •8 Thinly
10 Fire ···· scatter rd 1-t Weslminste1 51 Condiment
15 Math 52 Most ratio 1f i10Qlli! I ii Having S• Having ' ' !ht ll"lt !ht most
scort r1lnl1U
17 18 ho1rs ~8 Rt ign
ol\olf 59 St<1 tt
18 NA Oor 6 l ····· o! " SEATO, t .g. rosrs ' 19 Almost: 112 "It's····
Prtfix To Ttll
20 Extrt mt ly 1 Lit "· 8 S.Amtr1c.an
pronounced 2 WOl'dS Ind ian
22 City in hJ Chin t st 9 Rtlaxt s·
Ortgon city 2 words
24 Has on 114 Nerve: 10 Unseals 211 Old I Comb. for m 11 Open to household li 5 Htmmt d in Vlf"N
thOl'P 61:i Editor 's 12 Supt1nahnal 27 Home less tonct1n spu11
~nim1 I 67 Group of IJ Famtd pro
2 words three go lier JG Ptrso11 21 N. Amt1.
Jl Conta1nt r DOWN military
32K ind ol iroup; ga le 1 Equal . bbr,
l7 Unit 111 Comb. for m 23 Airs
phys ics 2 Slack: 25 N11r1tivrs
38 Maturt Poe t. 27 In hope of
women J TOllth ma~ing R
CG Affirrna!tvt ag ainst pr ofit:
vote 4 Urban •··••·• lnrorm~I 41 Unpopul11 5 NOVI 28 Home in medic int . Scotia "Gone wUh
2 words city tht Wind"
~3 Went ~ Arll liclal 2~ Equips
11uickly lani u1ge 33 Certain
44 T1blt st rip 7 --0!0tos a beds
•
•
"
E 3 T ~
' " 10 21 7(J
)4 Argr nlint
limbtl 1rtt
J.5 Scanned
3& M a~e OV!I
38 Wtll· known
codt
39 Kind of
wie!I
42St ve1 r
distress
43 Worry wart
411 Sulhcient
47 Nav iga tion
111str11mt11\
48 B1awl
49 T<1ke I
b"'athtr
50 FatlqtJtd: . 2 words
53 Llbra1y itt m 55 Fancy ~as t
51:i Feminine
n;ime
S7Wal~td
Ii() Sensa1lonal
... ...
... " .
MISS PEACH
• /V'I A n..c.1 _., l"'111 ScN _,
ADVISER
llO M r ~ PVI SE ~NI>
II 6ETTE1'-Cif£ WILC Be -tou~s
'"
~ .»
STEVE OPER
... . ..
•
' f I
•
... . .. ... ... ". . .. ...
ly Mell
• /Y\ "°' flCIJll ,,.,., As 0 Al I • ·:I STR.ON6l.'I
..-.PVIS'E ..,,OU
ADVISEtl lOWIPli!'
TMA.T S'Ml"K.
po ~.r T AP\llfE ~.N.t> OJ:P VOUR.
FAC:.E".,,
~ &E"TTe"ll.. LIF"E W11.L i>t;
"'fOUJlr'
"" ..
ly Saunders and Overgard
-._r,o.,.,,-----:--:=:-.:-=-:-:--:"" THERE'! Alrr.' OL.O MEX'!CAN
PROVERB. wHrCl-I r JUfr MADE
P~NUTS
. ")... ;_,,.,
•
UP, ,t.'IKE< "ll fS EASIER TO
COOL .fHll1 WllH Tl-IE .
BREATH THAN TO ;'l'------;-
I
(HAMGE TME
MIND OF A
ML.llE ".'
' "
1
•
ly Charles M. Schulz
: •
\. . :1
..
..
•
i1ond1J, Septtmbtr 21 , 1970 DAIL V PILOT .!.I
By Al Capp
By Charles Barsattl
• f; ;:
"
.. :T..if PU~Pl~
S~At:OIJS OF ()(J.51<
EMfHASIZE 'Tf.IE. ~1ppµ!)G SHO!Jf..OER
MUSCf..ES ;.s.A-s •.
~"
THf STIANGE WOl:lD
MR.MUM-
'
By Roqer Bollen
...
. .. .. •''
DENNIS THE MENACE
. .
• • ~--"1111rf ,'
,. , I •' , I, •
1,Yif•'' ·" 11
lj I•''
'1JIO'JOO l(/()W'llW' ~ NIO HIS FATME!l LEFT
FOR A CMIPING VACA~ 111\S NalloilNG ? '
I
j.
•
... -· . ' ·:
••
"
..
. ..
-~ .
.·
OAILV 'ILOT
Pro1its
--Stowinu ~ e
Market?
' By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI)
s
The e c onom ic upturn
predicted for the SW>nd half
of -1970 bas been slow to ·
·develop. Would you like t0;
know what is holding It back?
·very well. The answer can
be found in the daily 'tock
market analyses that come
Out of Wall Str.eet. Here are a
lew typical excerpts:
" ..• Stock market hit ·wlth
another bout or pro!it taking
••• Prices opened higher and
continued to move ahead until
the afternoon session when
profit' taking took its toll .•.
?ttining shares turned lower in
prolit taking ••• "
Those gleanings rrom the
financial press make it ob-
vious that economic recovery
is being impeded by profit tak-
ing. lt seems that almost
every time Wall Street gets a
good rally going, the profit
takers move in 3'1ld stop it
cold.
The impression I get is that
\Vall Street is infested with
roving bands of profit takers
\\'ho lurk around the stock ex-
change ready to pounce upon
the first rally that comes
along.
It eould be. however. !hat
profit taking is the work of a
single highly organized gang.
Any day now, you might
pick up a paper and see a
headline like this : "Profit
Taking Ring Uncove red on
_ WaD St.reel." ___ _
In any event, it appears ce r-
tain that if the profit taking
rate rontinues to increase it
will become a major political
issue, perhaps with allegations
that the Nixon Administration
is "soft on profit takers."
With that in mind, I called
up a fellow I know who works
for the Securities and Ex-
change Commission and asked
him what measures coold be
taken to control the profit tak-
in g wave.
.. Getting tough with profit
takers makes a good sloga n,
but it isn't all that simple," he
said. "We've got to be careful
not to violate their con-
stitutional rights.
"Also bear in mind thal 90
percent of the profit m th is
country is taken by people who
are hooked on money and
resort to profit taking in order
to f~d their habits.
"lf'you could find some way
Ip ~money -out of circula-
tion. you would reduce profi t
taking. ~ut despite the federal
reserve board's tight money
campaign. the stuff is still
fairly plentifu l.
"And although the highest
incident of profit taking occurs
· in Big City fi nancial districts,
it has spread to the suburbs."
Okay. 1'11 agree the re isn 't
any easy solution. B u t
so mehow people must be
made to realize that profit
taking doesn't pay.
LEGAL NOTICE
LECOAL HOT1CE NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN lhti lhf fQllOWlno l~mJ ol lc11nc1or11vtd Pf'lllltrfy hive been l>eld IW lhf Police DeP•rlm!'n! of !l>e Cit¥ of Co!!a Mna l~r • t>trlod In r•cen ot n!MTY 1901 "•v1; Two Pl/Mlle b\~e1, one blue b!kt, O<'lo grffll blke. IWi! blWt1 color ""known, 1wo 1urtbNrd1 &ncl ont 111111 dKk. NOTICE IS FURTH ER GIVEN lhll II no owner IPOfl!l •nd prl>lftl his fl""ntrlhlP ot' !ht orooerl't ..,.l!Mln oev"" in d•Y• tollowrno "'• P11t1!1c•ll"" of !~ls NoHi;e. !he lilt• ll>ereto $1\111 VHI 111 !ht fl"der. II lhfre tit -· ..,. !11 !ht C\1¥ ol Co1t1 Mtw. 1" whlcll ca" !he P•OPer!y 1hll1 bl! IOld II PYD!lc llH:lion 11 • llmt and dllt lo Of 1n-.n<:ed. Dlled: SeP!tmtotr 11, 1'70
R. E. NETH CHIEF DF POLlCE PubllJhtd. D•IMI c .. ,, 0.11¥ Pllfll. Seo>tem0tr 21, 1t1a llOt-10
LEGAL NO'l'ICE
\
1971 Graiad Prix
Mo11e11'• Worda <;omplet.;_Ne~ ·York Stock List
How Much -~ew VO•IC ti.,1 . MMll•v·s cO!!Wltlt Ntw ·vorr. $1'0Cl l.xcl\tllft ,,ten;
~=-I HIM ..... c .... c':~l'lkf•1• 111 ui Jn ti: Cl t1~&::s$11::t1~d' 511.~ i ""1 •+5 . '1'"11 Jr".., n UM 1~1 U.-. l°1._ .,._tt A tl N -ll M ~,.. 1 Jl\lo "ll:i jll' -\lo~"'°"' J.Jt H ... -t• ~ P-t J UI• f'l'I t~l -14 ~rlodl .ICI t 1'\<t I... 11\\ + \
AbtOll& ,1(1 ,. Uli 131'1 l:W. -\'I 111111" JI ctNW 11 no 1,. '~ -"" ~'"'·' 11\d " R ,..,, ~ ••• ' •tlbl:Utl 1.10 n ~'3ft u:i. .,,. -1 :m:ti\ :•St s• "• •I'll ·~ +" OCA CttJ " '~ '"" l=-it ACF Ind J.-IO, J' .Oil '° ..0 .... lW'I c.-.f.r: 1 U !• It -W. Gemini C•P U 11~ IHli I + \ AUNC._..., l 12 l•i. 1~ 1• -l'I rir-11 ;5'1 ),j JI\~ 17 17 -1 .. Gtmlnln $ ' 11149 lli i:' ;.v. Ac:IN Mk! 1ll t •2~ •2\t n~ + \lo let JO 15t 21~ ,,,, 2'!'11 -141 G......011 ,_. :II :J'I • Ill -,,_
""' "" ,.. ,,. 1111. ')J 11«1 •\(i 13 6-IU +l\li Oen Cle 1.20 •1 Jl" JOl'I I -1\o
Enough
Debt is
Adm Es 1.2.. '2 Jt'ol 12\'t 121'1 -Iii ~II 2..«I ' 31'4 j' 11!-+ V. GA Trlll l._, lt j4loo SJ • ,. -... •• ... ,,,, .-.. •>• lfll u'1. + "' I , ,. 1.0 j'l't ,,,. ~ -\Ii a ... a•nc ·"' :io 1t. 11 lii" ..
AcldrK$ J • .t) 3,", "• -.~ ~.·. =·~ 1"° 1ft _! U i:· ~·711o Viii .... G·Oo~l .:nt • ll ~-tl r. '4 -t.. By SYLVIA PORTER ~~~!',·,• .... • • !' -' :it\ ... •• ·~ ·-::· ~ + ' ....,,,. u• •l av. •21'1 ... ,1 I F111 ·~ u • "-., Gell Dve .SOD lO "'"' ·• Ar.Irr Ct 11 "9 t<lii HO + 'l'I Fpf,. I 101 101 1~1 I• ~ l!IK 2.Mr l!W 11\lr Iii +'• H-M .. ·• Debt 11 Too ua-• • ....,•,_. ,, ....... ··• ·--+•• I '" 10 " ""' ,. .. -''''' ,..... u t11 ' • -·~ "" ~· fJI l:a Air Pi'Od''Jot. ti .,.. ~ r, .. + \lo I nSvc "t.20· " •l'olo ""~ .w, .. , -~ "Fch iJO IS 111 11• ·a -~· Debi f« You" Al PdJ' 1J t nl \H nJ + w. ' 111v .l4 •1J lt 1'"'° Ill\ -" H05t 11 t ~ -"•
• A~ Ill ~ ,;1 U\lo 1•l'i Uh -~ 1v1~ •,1*,t fl01 li~ Ji
0
,\!t i!\~ f .. :.tt.. ff l~ l.,"9 ~ -•I J.3vnumlnht ""~t I .i.:A AJ l1odlis111H •J •~• • •111 •••• , 1'!,~,,r,•n . , llo "J' t )t\!t ft"' ..... ,,w-D ,...,,_ .. , n \.I,... Alt .. Gtl 1.1t '.,114 lS\11 IS\\·'••• a' E~ j 2t m. 'HVt :tMlo +Iii ~nm~ Ji... :.::1k
r""e.ulon ol 1989-74 N'_r sonal •.~"'.!!:' " 1,., 16,. 1•llo -"" i. 011 ·• • 20tt 20 20,,. ~ ,,,.,,, .s..t s , 111 ·n fl.\! ..... l"..ll> " !""" .... ""'" .. 2' ,.. ll'fl Jm + "" 1 Hff l:.0 "' ~ it'~ .,., ~~ Ml1I PIS.JJ _ lo ~ nu •.• bankruptcies have been soar-!~~ 1;: 111 1n:"2;~1t~1.:"!_-,,_ Cltv lt H1tll i~ tt\li fflt ID!= n tnP<:tn\. .to ll t.R4 2S • -\•
• 1-• Alc651 lld U fl Ullo 16\lo 1'h + \t c1oro11 .• ,.,·,se:-2' lf\.'r 11!.'l lt\lo + «; PubUI l.6t 10$ 201' 2t 2f}t + It mg liuug with bu sine's At.iuJ.1 .:111r 12 H l'li :12111 ""'-" l:::ll'p Pl i"' , 101 1•1"1 i.·~ ... 11 ~:'f.':0 ll 1tv.· .Jn soi,:.;:,,
failures Lenders of all types Al"11 Cp .\Dl> " Mio m • . . HAF!il -.50 -j•• lt ""' -"" 911$!llnd .• •1 lJ 1m UVt -}• " Al"111..IAI tAI n JO "* 2t\'I +'lo HA Al.10 4' l\o\ 21i.. -"'° Tfl Et l .J2 ;)SI 71\lo i114 "•" -.. ,' report that collections have A1"11Lw pf J 11 ~ lt11o ~ + \ii .,, 1 G•• "' • ~•v. :n1' -"' r.ir1 Pf2.JO 1 :i1111 -.i. v. • ~--0_ .. def uJ Al19t Pw 1.3:2 it ~ 20..., 20"" -ii. u lSGI pll,lf ll ~ •Hll •l\lo -1\1, TtlFd:fl.?S l200 U\lo Uj\'li •jVt -\a Ul:1,.'VU1e very Sivw, a ts on AllledCll 1.20 16' 21\li 1"' 20 -\lo Cllct(ol 1..... 1111 11\lo 11V. 11~ -"' Tel 111.30 "'° It¥> , Vt 1 ~' + ,,
instalbnent debts have. In-=::1 .i:'~t ~ = -" zour•TI• uz.__~ ~ :atV..-.~ W"•~b-"1 1m l r\9 U" -'"
sed sh .. --1 . . A11i.ci Pd ·" n ,~ 14 11 -)lv. c:T1.!'1l~-~ • :1111. ::i. »u_y. Tite ':.,: 1n H.,. ff:w 21~ + :~ crea ... ..,.y, a r1stngA111ectS1r 11.«1 :ll 23\11 n.-nw-co111 ... 1 209 m 16 1s~ 1JW:-, .. f:51ar .11111 25 I 7" m .r.
f .''•••,, '" ''' n• I" >\o +• , .. , >I ,... I• '"" '"· '" -• -·1·•• .>.J ' ll '1 31 .,. ' percentage 0 young couples AHb'C111ii1t1 "' U\!t 1N , ... -\II Colo ~ pf 4 160 :;~ ::""' .(J +l ;-PK .tob 2'I J:itt SHi J2 ...
nd f ')' in the '· in Alf!MP(' lOI l 1'¥1 UV. l~ + W. Colt Ind I lt l•'A 11 U 1PK pfl.... 11 7'\lo 13 1'l ... a anu lff ivwer -Alcol l . .0 1111 53 .... S1'4 JIVi -"' llS I... J2~ ll" :)01.6. :JIM• 4 ~ ~~ I 1t~ !re :t ~ = :~ come brackm~ simply camot ::;~ J,o~-1: f~ f~ rf4w = -.. ?:~ •::, r'°' H ~ t~i ~ ~ lt -pfh 10 , 16"\:o ,~rt ,.,.. .... . meet their H-... pay-ls • ...,,_Es 1,10 s. ltl\ ""' 1 + \'t ... ,_.. 1 11 11 n .. . 11n1PC -1 lfli 13; 10111 ... . .,.,:"' • '"'-" • Arn Es pn.1111 , ni. 11 ) -+'"'Coll In "' I"' :ti :nV. ;ni,i, + v, lbr•lt Fiii 1J; ~-2~ 2~ = l:
the ~~ ~·t f ·1 Amr!H pl').SO '' IJ IO\li .. -, _, ColSOOft 1.1' .,, 2~ JS s•• + \II 1:0t1 llr 1 n Jl )O~ Jl +' }o overe .. ~an:u ~•<:1,1.1 anu y ANrFHtr )llJ •» J1~ so111 CombEn 1 » '" •1"' "'t. "'\'t-1.,. lllOS 1roc ,, :W\I& :ar. suYt ~
High-intensity single headlamps, a new vertica l bar grille and a two-level
-bumoer highli~ht tbe~froot of the-restyled 1971 Grand Prix~-The. -Iear _has a
elassic boat tail with new quarter panels, deck lid, bumper and taillights.
-Standard equirunent includes variable ratio power steering, po\ver front-disc
brakes a·nd a 400 cubic-inch V·B engine. The SJ package includes a 455 cublc-
A1J you alsci might suspect,...,,. H.u .Hr 1" ,,.,. »"' !?to+'"•• gt~: .!r tt1 141~ u~ /' -• 1!r~"1.f" u (J'll .:i .U\11. ..._ \,,
h If d f. ~ · h • AmAl¥11n .IO In lt:U lt!4 lt\li -Ioli Cll'lbE pt\ Jo s '2 41\'o •1 .... -1 ~n A!Mn IJ 1 fV. ~ -\oi as we e in-e arac-Am s.ictr 21 nv. 1n; 12'.li -\o'J comlSohi ·..., :Jt 21~ tov. 201.~ _, lenAI pfJ.1.s 4 s71\ 52'11 S21'1 ... , teristics Jn •a.'.. JI In •• a•e A!lrints 2.10 " :»Vt l1'Vi » +111 comwEd 2 ~ 12 JH't J.llil J.l'i'o -l't ltnAI of1,tJ l 2hli 21v. 27'4 -• • Uft; ""' D AmllOa I.to UJ JO'lt a ,. 2' -1'111 cm .... Ed Pt pf u IOI .... lOI\~ lOIYi + Vt lo!Ht Marin " . "'"' l~ 1~ -l'I bracket, more than"'Onei n four-An\_,,~•n. .21·_N,, t~ • .J'"---.,, .. ~ .. -"'"+ m .... e pt1,'7 U-21lli 21l'I 21v. .. , l110e _U11.,.o ,, _101't_1o:i. 10\o'J~\''. -· Pf .. :u'"' -i.i... c on " ss 11~• 1ra 1141 -oodrl<to 1.12 IOI lffi ~ ffl'I -1r. families ·1s now overeate~.iA.i Am Ce'" '511 11 •'14 •~ ~ -'"' °'""' · ,,, u 1 1t~ 1Jv. -v. ie•r .15 2.u 21 21:i;, ,,_.. -'• 1~·AClltln i."4 10 2P.1i 2m 2s-~ +1o1o Com111.1:scr •l •l~i ,~ Clh-l!.4 an1 tv".1~ lJ ,,,,__uv~.1•v.+•1r . ._ ""CJ every five Americans car,;ACrvSvg I.-1 I~ ,.~ lfl>' -l't ~=UM1111 ' 1] I'\' u 11 a (l\lldfilc lA 21 lO '"" 2'~ ...... AmCv1n 1.15 2'3 ~ 3111'.l.i llO" .. .,, l rlMI 304! 12 21~· 2:ri~ ll't + · v. rec.Co I.JO 151 30 ffii 'H ~-\'• ryfno installment debts two Am 0111111 1 ·J it 19 " + "" on ,• · _ ,, 1~ ' 15~1 151-. _ v. r1nb1 1.60 2• :Molt 26\lo '"" + '• D • AOl5t'rir1 .:JOe 16 2•1-1o '' 2• -v. anr1c " ov 1 . • Or•nclUn .llO ~s 2m ™~ !"' ~. .are reported having difficulty Am o..11VKt 6S 1r. 7"'t n·, + l't C011 Edl1 :/1.111 111 nv. ?l\'t 2 1• -Gr•nlt.C su 11 1<R• 1!»9 (l'h -'·• AOU1I pf.U. l ,,,. 111'1 1\1\ tl't-ConEd ls P ' l 16 7' 76 .... ~rinilevlle 1 2 15'.l lRi l~ -'" paying off. At leasl oae in 10 AmEIPw IM 321 2Sl't JAi 2•w. -v. coned11 .i • 61!~ S91'1 611lli +1v. r1n1w I.XI 100 .tSl.i uv. u l'a •... . , . Am Enkl lt 10 JO JO XI -!.4 Co..Food 1.111 '' l5h 3SI'• lS\(o -Yi r1v0<0 1.20 Ii 2ll'• m'I 22"" -I families IS behind in its Am Exp Incl 995 u I~ ,u +I ConFd pU,50 3 •• UVt Niii + \(o GI A&P 1.JO 27 27f• 21~i '"' = '•
d be . AOfllhU .50 •l 1' ll!o'I 1 V. -l't ConFrtlthl l l6 2•'N 2•'4 ''"" -14 GtNorlr l.l5o 1 12\lo U V. UV. .
h . . . AmHol$1 ,10 11 ID\• '~ •l't-,,., N1IG LU 's 21111. 21l" , .. ,., + \4 INN pj81 . .0 ' v; :ttv. 22~ ... ere JS tn a steep rise. A Hcime 1.611 1.u 611 "" s-~ + \Ii Cont PoWr 2 ,, :ti .n11o 3211o . ... • 1 w,,, Fini .,, "" 1~ 20111 -1"'
inch power plant. ,.
In High Gear payments, an t proportion AGn1n p11.1Q ,, 21~• ll'!li 2J'4o -111 c,,,. 1..11111111 JI ~ 1w. ~ -'411H9Ne1< 1.64 1 ji ~ .... "'¥1 + '•
And . Am HOSP .2( Jtl 31'N JOVi ~ -v. C011PW "" 5'I zm S9:W. Jt S9 -"' !WnU11ll ·'° ll 2 :n..-nVt -,,., Once again, a! YOU AmlnVHI .JO ,, 11.U 111'1 11\IJ + ""ContAlr 25,. lU 10lil 9'i ''"' -!Ji WUn PILP I It .... lt '"" + '• · h AMll!Cla 1.(11 141 3' 3''lli 3.5 -Iii · 112 .01/o Jt i. 3l1'il Vi !W.shln .SO IS 'I~ t t -~' m1g t guess, you can draw a Am Molon :m 1v. ~ _no ..... c,~',',1" 1~~ -, ,... Jh -:-. i 'rffllG!'i ,·U ,' "•'' "• " +"·,,· 'Je of . ANll~s 2.10 141 42\(o ~ 41 + V. Ol1 DP .... "' , • etr1Sn .. v 2S 2S\ 25\0o sad prof1 this debt-loaded Am PMto .n 1c1 1014 '"" ""' -""c,~' ~.', • 7'I lJ Joi 3' . -~ rwtoatnd 1 1J 1011 1114 '""" -,,.,
f 'J $ 'f' fJ ARI'S°" .llo ?4l 1111\.1 J1\.'0 511'1 -I ,,_p .., . J ll\lo 31111 ,..,. -Vi rotle-r ,tO U 21\li 22>of. ii -'• Pontiac Slwivs New Cars
Hy CARL CARSTENSEN
Pontjic Motor µivision bas
unveiitfl its newly restyled
1971 lineup and announced it
expected to sell 830,000 units
during the coming model year.
F". James McDonald. G~f
vice-president and Ponliac·s
general manager pointed out
that this would be a 24 percenl
increase over the 670,000 uni1'
the division wootd sell in /this
model year. He said he was
"optimistic" a b o u I lhe
forthcoming sales year for
many reasons, among them:
Owning.a_n AuJo_Tod~y
Costs 12 Cents a Mile
am1 y. petl ICa y: Am St1tl111 I l 11111 11\< 11\(o +Iii CICP Plll2.50 l 31 ll ll -"" rumtnnCo 1 JDS """ ljl• 1 \'J+1.•
The fa ·1 Is h ...... $1tio ·'° • It..:. " lt ..... ConlMl!!f .n .. ,..,. lW. 11 -"' llLIHld .«II! .. 2•v. 2 v. ? •..• -m1 y young, as A Sme11 1.'° lu "'• ts..., mo t "'cont 011 1.)0 2'1 '"" u!.4 2414 -•.i. 11M011 2.... 11 """ s. s.i _, Renewed customer con tha he AmlioA tr ~ •• """' u •J -v.con1011 p1 2 1 ~ ~ ~ .... 1111 011 1.so ,,, ™-:zsv. 25'.i -1•. --more n t a ve r a g e Am SIG f Jt »vi » :i.v. + "' cont ln 1 ' n Vi 22\o'r nv. ..... G1111 lltn•cn s: •to '"' •v. -11t rl.dence who'•" porn' •·• lowa1•· be f child nd the AmSld or..1s J " .. H .... Cont et .Ill 1'6 Hiii 11"' 22 -\lo G111111tes 01.10 J H utt 1:1·•• -•• "'1
u;1,1 WI num r o ren a ~terll ... 14' "°"' Jlllii ,,.,., -+. fonlrot °"" :111 d \\i •1 .i\11 -i.. ~"" J !P,JO s II'• 111'1 uv. + ,, Strong fourth'quarter sales ts oln . A ~ 1.1111 2• :io 'I> i.v. -'" -..ood ''° J ll ll\lo »Yo -1" 1!11" 1 ·" 1n 'lj;;' 1n• 21\(o -,,,, · paren are easy.g g, 1m-Am ""l>f .641 • 1'111 Ali I""' ..• , c;o.. un11 :SO 1 21"' K"• 7tY:t ..... 1 u •".n 1150 s1 S'f +111t -The addition of a new top-1 · bu Ai& T ""' 210.. '" 1 -.. c-•n 1 .., 1 10" :m·. »Iii + 111i 1111 u D1•..u 120 s J7..., sno, "'' pu s1ve yers: Am~T 2AO ••n .cs '°" ~ -11. ~r ,.R· 1 •1 1m 11v. u~ -\k 1n111nc1 .JO "l 1 11 1";, .... Of lh .. 1'~ luxury car the The h b nd · ·s1·ec1 Am .56 11 '"° t:u. ·~·· + "' ,,, '' 1 11 11 11 + \Ii 1iw :Jl"' li\! nv. n1;, -it~ -.. ..,-• • • -us a IS satl I A 1.25 1150 11 16\io' 11 +I/ii l•nd I XI 71 n-. .... """ + v. GllllW 0 .17 2 "114. C2~~ -l'o Grand Ville and a reslyl ed 'th h. · b b 1 the .1 . AW orllf 1," 11so u y, i•1J. 4\(o -v. _1_. 50ii 1• » »"" J1",i, -v. Gu11w o .1s , " s.s ... -\~
Grand Prt·•. WI IS )0 u WI e IS Ameron ·'° ll II ,, ... I"' -"" -!$It i 20 2• l•l'I 1"4 l•~· -"" G<.itton I"" 1) l!Ai ttt ff9 -.,., • d' 1· f'ed 'Jh h' AnMtH .-"" 12'!'w n~ , ... -"' -•·-• •. ' " ''" 21 »'-+"' u1 • Issa IS I WI, IS pay; AMF Inc ·'° ,,, 19.'o 151'1 Ul'I -"'c;;;.G'W 1.Sci. 7(1 l&I iu ,. +•Iii -n--
-A new Pontiae rompact -TV disproporUonately in-~~Kint°.s. 15 !'n~ ~~ ~P~+·!.4 ~:.°i':"~,,.:;2 1~ ~t: ,,~ ~ -;:~1 Hic11w11 1.1t1 , !:? :!\l··· JT"'+'~ car which will be unveiled ear-fl the 1 , b . Amoe• COl'O 1J2 111oo 11~; 11~·, -'° c ... 11.dut JO 15 "~ 14u. 1,~, _ · H1111t1ur1 l.M ll1~ ...... Jn. -••·
eel uenees coupes uymg Am11ed '·'° n 30'!.i )O"' :xiv. •..• cPc inn fJo ,, ,. 2,.,. 21v. _ H1mw11 .JS1 ,ft? i"' -I• ly next spring. , •.. expect dec•'s'oons ,., the a . r Am1~1 .22 s 1v. ,,,.. 111o + Cr.nt i 60ti 22 i.:u. lHli 34\lo _ \It H•mm P•P 1 •' ,. •• •,~ + }'
lo be called the Chieftan. It medium ~f communic~tio~ 0in =~oJ·": irg n,,. l~~ ~~ .! l',; l~~kr1".J 1! :m l17l: l ~:Z +"'; a:~:~, 'f f1!K m: tt.: ~ :: hould pele l'n I h e Anc<>ri>NSv 1 J IJ\4 IS UV. -.... ro111tHll\d I 10 21'-'> 2 h 11!0 + i~ H c ·so 11 11· ,,. 'l~ + 1 S com the family's life and they AlldC~ l .2CI ' l?\'t JI~ ll~ -'I.I ro....Col 1.011 6S l:IU ll\lo \l\~ -'ii H:~M 111,Jo ll ' : '\It 4 t'o + 1~
Chevrolet Nova and For:d don 't r.ead -anythi~, not even-:~~:~i~ li f$ i!~ i$ f1~ .~~,1~0f.~ 1tl-~fti ~f~ ,t.,._;:;:.} ~!~~f:'~n1' 1 1i..Jfa f~-.ilt;_: :t MaveriikSegrllen tS-of the d .1 • APL pt Cl.Oii • 1~ 14"' 16..., + * rn z pr'·'° t JO 51Vt STYI 5111> +1 her5Co CP t · 1 u~• 14•.i ,.,,., .•
lna-"el·l.nd w'oll .be welcomed a ai Y newspaper. . APL ,, 11.so 1 12v, 12v. 12v. _ "'~s coro . .ct 2' 11'!11 1~oa lSV. -.. H•rtSM•• IO 1 22i• ,,,,., 22v. _ '• ~ ·• Th ARASvc 106 llOI "" n •• .• , llClthY .611 6 1:\4 11,~, HIA -'l\H1rv A1 1'xi 11 11'4 16li1 16~-·• -e parent$ move more ArutiN .foe 1,7 ~ 1,lt ~ +~ ucthY 011.21 ' 1u~ 141'1 ,,, .. ····· Hew11 E• 1'12 1 1•1~ ?Jl'• 2si• _ '• by Pontiac dealers. often than most and think "~•l•N pf 2 1 32,,. :nv. 31," -v. cc",Ul~i~ .z:o JO i:i;o_ nv. 12u. -=-.lf.t Hivts ..i.11>. , 11 13,,. ll'!ll n~• + ·~
h h ... Ardl Oan I llM 33 • 11111! 3l + ~ ,._ . 5 l\,"' ]~, Jt. + \') HIZll!lfle 51 ,.. ' ' -,, "'All indications are tat t e their debt troubles are due to ArliPs~c 1.01 7t5 11"' uv. 11"' + -.E~n:;~ # ~: 12 11 ~ 12 " +·~HCA 1n0 1°" 1 110 ~ ''' + i• Sales Slump Whl'ch plagued lbe . Arl•llf OS .n 1&1 ' ~ ,,,., -""1 I Wr A I I 21 23lt ,, + ~ HKleMn .llr lG ]1'\li 76'4 ,,,,, + ••
1 · circumstances beyond their Armc:ll$1 lM J10 20\lo ''* 1t1 . . . ~f11r H 1 20 11 · HIO ,, 19i,r, t ,,., Heinz HJ l 13• l4"• 3l•r. 33'11 -·~ NEW YORK (AP ) -A or lease cars permit t 1~1r industry bottomed out earli er control (a cutback in the ~~~ol>fP1.}/ 17 "~" sJ~Vt Jf~'+iv. c~~~~,1.:o.., 2 2~·-. 2s 2sv. + 14 Her.,_,, C11r1 3\; 1i;: ,,'II 1:"" + :·~
report by the F e de r a I personal use by employes. this summer," McDonald said, k k In ol · b Arm1'Ck .eo 311 21~ nu. a:i. + · H 0-'°"' '° 611 -"" ~:~ ~"J, ·6f' 1~ "'" Hlti ,,"" + 'i
H . h Ad .. I t' N t 11 r them do •• 'Jh wor wee ' S! ]O • an ArmRIJb l,6tl ' 31 J2 )? -Helmr~P .20 lOJ ,.~. 1' lt'.:0 .... 1 g w ay m1n1s ra ion o a o '¥" w1 .. Barrin g long labor d1srup-automobile accident)· Aro corP .ter 10 ,, 16 ,, .:.:·;~ DlnRlvr .?So 21 '"• ,•,,, 11'o + •\ HemlsPh cao , • 3,~ 31~ _ '• •·1 th t lbe r e qual enthus•'asn• however · Arvin Ind 1 ' 21v. 20~ :iov. -1111 °'""' CP 1 2J 21 Ht. 21i• -"" Hemu..c: 1'ie s ,..., •\~ ,,,., .+ 10 Swi es a a Ve a g e • · tions, e CO n Om j C indicators -Neither husband nor Wife ::i.J lfr~ 110~ 21: 'l~ " .. '• -"Ii O..rl Ind .JCltl 106 ,!1~ HJ1¥1 l 1.1 ..... H.,.c ll'IC .'1~ t4 3' JI lll'~ + •; motorist spends 11.9 cents a It's just that the cost or polic-point toward a stronger fourth ,..911 DG , 20 11 ... -v. o.r1 Ind Df t n 4•.. ,. ..... H•shFd 1_10 ,, 2•v. """ 2Jv. -'• -1 d t ing employes in their personal asswnes clear responsibilily .t.std ho 1'.20 1 ~ ~to ~~:.:·\Ii g:~~~~ 1~ l:i-. :Jl: lli: + ~ Heuti1tin .111 .U ,,"' Jt ,.,,., ... ,..,
mi e to own an opera e an lives. merely to see that they quarter. Our products will ror managing the family's :ric1one~E11~ll •1,~ ~ ·~'¢. ~t'a +1 8'W°H~i'/a z 61 fln ~ i: ! ~ ~r;. PJ$,.: -" ~i~ z:,.~ ?:V. .:!: ~: automobile. properly position us to take f' and th 1 · 1 AttC 1 1>ts 11 ' " •• l' +i"" 0• 11p 1:.o ,1 11 21* ,1 .... _"' Hl~HPl•I 1 11 :1111> lT'l 2"' -'• A t d b the National didn't misuse the company f be inances, ey cer ain Y Att ldltld. 2 •10 ·:;.& s1 11o> -N 0ir",.,'b 74 1110 """' ""' 19\'t Hao.rt 1.Je ' :i. 2m :rm -''" 5 u Y Y car. would nol only be em· fu ll advantage o t new don't koow bow to reach 1-oint At1Rc11 1113.15 1100 o11v. " " -•11o DH"' co 7 6, 11~, JP• 1'1'•:.: ,4 H,,....row11 .911 1• 21•0 211~ :iri _ •• lndustria\ Conference Boa rd -00 I d th ed' ted Alt R1c11 Pl l 11 •• '° 90"1 1 0 1m , 1,, 1s 11~, 11~. 1~1i _·~Hof• Etedr" s -Alo '"" ''' ..
Oft•• manufactuiers who U'" barrass,·ng but ·-stly. m e year an e pr ic decisions on spending At1Rcll D1'2.IO N ., ... .., ,, =1~ 0:1J:1e 1·10 5• ?J 22.,, n +,,. Hc1;11v1"n n s•o l1~ '.IO'llo ~-1·~ ~ .,.. "'" uPswing in sales"'. he said. · "1111 CMm 1 '1 211rr 1•'• ''1• . ~111 .i.ir 'so 111 11,... 21.1tO 211, ... HolldA 1.IOh n i.1 -•6 .. -1 per-mile formulas to reim· As the chief executive of a .Enough, the profile is all too :l!Ur,c:t~1.st ,:~ ,,ru ,~:: 1~ ;·;~ 0111ec. 1n1' 1~ ~ ,f.;; 1i~t ! ~ =~'::e ':!: ,i 1"• 111't ,~,,.. ••••
burs. lhe;, employes {or use steelmaker says: ''il is our M-In describing the 1971 line fa miliar. And fo r th 0 ! e :~:=Pr':: I~ ~ ~14 ''" -"' &:~~~g Pi., 1 11'.'o int 17t1 -lli H .... ~1 l 3111 .. w.~ 'il~ ~~ :.;_ .• ~1c0onald said, •·we ha vr a 1 d · nd 't' 1 A11tom111 1nc1 1.., 51 •• 5,, ->9 oennvR11 .k .. , 10"" '\i 10~~ +1 Hocv Bl 1.10 ?3 is>~ 21•~ '''~ -'• of the ir personal cars shows tention lhat company-0wned (.'Ompletely new regular series a rea Y going u er, 1 ! oo Avco Cp ·'°"" 111 11i; 12V: 17~ ~ ~ 0tn110111nt 1 1~ 1l~ ti•:, n + "' H<Kt 11111 .~ ,. l~'-lo 3;:~ ~~ = ~;
that all bu_t 10 of them pa)'. less or company-leased cars are to late; even if they are bailed :~"i~ ~20 ff ~,j J~! f,,0 :..::._ ~~r P11 ~0
l lt :w Jr~ !1~ = ~~2lj' ~ """ ,,,,,, """ +1
than that figure. fie use<t fOr business J)llrposes ~ ~::;r00Hnggh lbewiBoth n~!':illeC,a!~:~n: out, the damage to their credit!~~ '~,i~ "2 J,U ~""' Mio -Iii B::sr.:1,.Z ~ 't i"m ?:'~ 1tv. -lt ~::9S:~" 1:;: ~ ~\(o 1f" ~~· + !~
True, the manufacturers only, but as a practical mat-rating "'.ill rem.ain and follow !='Piff1'.10 1J ~~~ t~~ ~·4 :.: §if\dJ' pf$~ 1'! ti~ JJ::~ tl: :_:.:~ ~~ =i~~ 1; ~-~" n~ =1,,, almost always pay parkMg ter. we do not place restric-new car at the top of the line; them quite possibly throughout Alie(. ou .131 52 14\\ 11\k u~ -~ o:'a1,sr~~. 11 ,.,,,, i:~ 16v. _"" HouJtLP 21.0 ,,5 "'""' 40 o111 -~
I ., the Grand Ville." the' 1. -B--ori1Fln•" .• s 11 " u + "Hev<INGs ·'° 1 '' " -" + '• and toll charges, which lhe tions on persona use. 1r 1ves. g•bck w XI 105 o*1tlntl 1.111 2t 3' 3S.\ii 3Wi + '"' HouGs pt\.so 31 •ra " " + ••
government estimates to The mosl c o n1 m on re· Built on a 1 126 ·i n c h But how do you prevent this B~i'°J\r ifs !s ttE J1~ ~rMi ='•.e 8!:r j'f:, 1 ~ ~;~ ~J'"' ~; ~.~ ~~~' 1:~ f11 ,,·i, ;l.t, ~1~ = ~;
atnount lo J.8 cenls a mile; but qu irement made for pe rsonal whee lbase, the luxury Grand from happening to you? ::1,0,, ",',~:JJ ~i,! M,, J:11 U11• +·~ g,~.~oll~ ·~ l~ 1~1 .... l~t: u~~ +·~ ~~=~1,~j~ 1; r.:: 7:1.1 u:.: ...
k h r · th Ville will be available as a two-o f' th II • " • 1 0 s1 11 01 bcld ib .o 61!"" 5'V1 60 ... Hu9'1 Hat .•o 1 11 n 11 -• that still doesn't ma e t e use o a co mpany car IS e ut o e coun ess words ::~~"~i'J5P 3f 11., 1,,. ,,•Iii ::::: oit i-io''.60 16 12" 12i~ 111~ _ 1>; HunK1vn .11 6 u H•I 1~ -·~
Jypical JO-cent reimbursement payment of a fixed per·mile door hard top. fou r · door written on this question of how Bk o1c11 1.J~ 1~ ~~;~ 21,i ,. +"·;;_ o,111n9hm....:'° 120 1••4 iJl'i ,,~, + '" ldahoPw 1.60 •• 17~~ 77'.11 '~ ~ ~· . h di d rt 'bl h d b . Bink q_f NY 1 1 ~ 451,., •S"· \; D SllfY ....... .. 112~ 16' 11114 -~· Id!~! Bii .60 ~s 6112\lc l~·· ~s .. •t cminljrPtlY fair: figure. The highest amount . ar op an .as a conve 1 e. muc et 1s too much debt, :11111 T,r 1.a.. ~·• ~,J 631.-. 63,h= 1, ogl1~~1 .~ ,J :m 1:~ ::~ .!_ ~ :ne~:nt':}l 26 ?I'll '"'" 21 + ...
Here 's why. The gov ernment mentioned was 9 ct!nts a mile, Joining the Grand Ville in l 've found three basic a:~:°C~ 1:ri' 1~ ~ lt~ ~ .... --1v. !,.Mr_ 1~ ss 23~ 231.~ 2l~ + \It 111 r.en P13.JO ~ ;;~ ~~!~ ~1, ~ !;
h I 2 5 t h I. h . . . 11a11c Inc '° 1 na" 11 '' ... ,L ,~-r .... '' 14"'i 17\io 11 ..• 111 POfltff 2.1t1 , •• ?r~ 11~ 7114 _ 14 estimate of car costs is based t e owest . cen s. t e big car me up are l e guid elines which seem most 11,16 Mri · 15 ll\'r. 1~ ,Clo\li = .. ~ 0omtM111 .• j(I s11,r, sa !6tt + 111 111 Pw P11.11 ,UrO ,,,1,, 16.,, 2,,,, ..
I h So . rt Bo 'JI Ca '·J· d J bl Beta Mt pf 1 l 15V. 15\'o uv. Doml'nd .f71 1' t P'I t'9 -I' ltl Pw pf2.04 •ll l'I'~ n~1i HU _ •• on a 10-year life span or t e me companies r e Po nnev1 e. "" 1na an a new va ua e. 81111 inc1 76 14v. 13,0 1,,, -, ,, 0onne11tt ·'' •1 16'11 U\I 16tt ... tmo CP Am ,.~ 30>1 '°'" :Y.t + ., I t" C 1· B h Th E 811111" "' -'' .... , Dorie co .32 l lSI~ 15 IS -" INA Co I.~ 1, veh;cle, with the greatest more comp ex arrangemen "· ata 1ng roug am. e x-Here they are for you to 8..nd!Lb :80 15 37W ~v. j~,. + :.:; Dorr 011"" , 10 tl.lo '"' -:i.. Jroccme C•0 •• l~ ~;~ ii... ,,, + ~·:
depreci ation in value taking One firm has no restrictions ecutive series is being discon-study and to memorize ,s1xfrL1b .10 lJt nv. 21.\lo 11~ _ ~ ~~~11CP i~ t~ ~ ll·~ ~~ .:.:.·:r.t /~i~~ii'~ 1• l'V. tt 71'\ + '•
I d. · flrl1111 1 2 l11~ 17 JI .....,.. ... m · ' 1'1"1! """ 71"'1 _ ~ lnclPtsPI.. 1.~ I 2• 2J11 74 . place during thr fi rst few on persona use not excee 1ng tinued. ( 1) Do not owe more than 20 11,•,•.•, ,•~.,'.-••, .. ~~.· ,."'~. ??,i; .+,·~ 00~::fr:i \:: 1n1 311,, 30 30l~ _ v. lndJll Har ·"' • ,,..., iii. ",1' + 'Ii 100 ') k blJ( be d 11 "' ' _... H Jori 1' 102 1~ \6l~ 16'.lo -\II l11'11Prilt1nd 1 " 31l'o l1 l 1~ -'~ years and almost none at the mi es a wee · yon In commenting on the new percent of yoor yearly arter-.~~o•-" ·.'e. M,, ?~ ?~~ ,'l.~ _-1:.: 0';'! •• ~d.to • 3.514 35"' n"" -•ll'llRd .. n .11 ' :i.i•. :i.i•• 3,i,,, t • .. th I I. ·1 ·1 · poses a toll of ~· ...,.. "" -" -... •• g ·-, ,, , 31>.1o 3Hli 31"11 -1n11n<1 sn 1 " ,,\-. 23•0 21:a -·~ end of the 10-year span. a 1m1 l 1m · Grand Prix . ~1cDonald said it tax income (not including your 11"9Cl!Ar .1so l6 11 10~ 11 + v. ~r P , " ,.v. """ 1t1v. _ IM'ICH'lt _29, ,,, •V. 'I t't."+ ·~ • '5 ts ·1 A the> 8etcoPel ..JO '' 11 1~ 11y, -'4io r .... l.ISCP ,,,.. ., lmllco 70b fl 16\< ll'l.I. l~ -•• But how many companies · cen a mie. no h<fs anallnew!rontandrear home mortgage however) BtlOell '·'° 1 u u 25 . g::=f~w 1·~ 'l U ~v. t0 "~.~1nJP1rc0..:1a 15 '6>11 """" 41"<-'~ ·t th · tar t manufacturer permits 3.000 • . '. 'Ben ~ M 11 lS l'l't w. ··· \ .ft·to 60 ,1 "'' .ul-. -'" 1n1erco 1.10 • '!IM. :\"-' 31•'" + '• perm1 ell" represen 1ves o end and it is more of a ·~true This means that 1f you earn t!!, 111ttr'COll 1) '"" 1\~ ••• -~ g:11~ fl!• n Jl''t ?S\I '™"" + t\ t111r11unc 1.111 .. ~ 2~ 11~ ,if,;.:.:.,,~ drive lO-year-01d· cars? 11ore mi les a year \\'ithou l cost. ex-classic" tha n ever be, fore. $800 a monlh in take·home ~r. ~~60t 6J in;, ·~ i.1\ -"'11t1Ponl :i no-"' 1'l'h. 11• 11•Y. -t~ 111M •.111 40 •1 :Jt 39\0 _ ••
l'k I he be . epl for the purchase or II ! 1116 2'"" ""' " +"' duPont 1tUSO i 65 """ '5 + •\ 1111 CllFNu~ ,. 6ll !'1• 60 +"" i e Y t y must trade 1 min c "I "all ,·ta classo'cal. luxury pay, or $'9,600 after taxes a 8::,r,,", .. t i o v. 'lll> o1~ -i-; duPonr ..n'so i ,,,. gr ,., -v. ra1F11 ' "fao ,,, 1Jv. n 23'4 -·~ h lh gasol'.ne but then ,.t beg;0 5 .. -157 .im """' 44'~ -1!.4 Bil Lt 1.641 st 21~ 211;, ?I'll .. . 1n1 H~rv 0 , •• , ,,.. ,.., +» every t ree years or so, us ' sport car and in 1971 we've year, your debt limit' would be 1= ~!J '13tV. llt\'t IJ9..., . 11<1L1 "'' , tilOO 27 ,,v, n•.o, -'I h11HC:,,1iue u~ ,..., ,w, if'h. + '" suffering far g1ea\er deprecia-charging. &el'lef 5912.so 11~ ~'jj, nl't 1lll +1 .,._ Ind 41 ll"i ior. 11 111 +ai-:"l 1~ ~1 10 J2 16'.~ 2S\lt ?6'4 -1~ T~ NICB figures 0 n embellished t h-e adjective about '21000. 11,ng...,1 261 '"' ~10 ~l't -·\.\ tw111Am .20i> E ;" ' ' -•,1, 1~1 Mlntr · 110 ),1•~ 101~ it\~ -'• ~!ie~n~e~t~st ;.2 ';!n~sn a ~~I: mileage rates are part of a ·classical' with a stylish front 12) Do not owe more than 10 t :tri' P~ :i!I :~ ::~ :~...:. \' E"rtPt; '° -, • 22;-n•• """ ~• 10 :~: :;"1~ i~ ~ ~v. :J"" ~ .... + :.: larger survey Of compan.V end and the Same great ride percent Of What your income :e~~11 Corp m 1~t 214 2\~ -\.'t F..t !fO C• .'ta 6 I"• l8h i~ + ~ /~j1 !.t:CiJf.SO 1~ l~ 3;"'-~rJ. ·:·.
estimate. More like S cents a characteristics thal the Grand could pay for within 12 to 24 8'fo Thrff 1:~ c ii~ 22 "~.:... · ~::1 ~~ ~1 1'ul ~\It .J'i! ,:"' = ~ Int s..11 1 . .on 26 19~• :Jlv. 38.,.. -'• mile. practices regarding flyi ng and lhs T k .t .. 1 a1&c1< ok .u se •Ni !J"" ~,Z 1 e.,, uni 1.«1 1 1111 11".o 11¥1 t '" '"' t"T 1.os 1t~ 1~ 1~v. 1~\~ :;:,\,
dr'·v,·ng t hat tends 10 suggest Prix has had since 1969." mon . o ma e ·1 sunp e, s111rJo11n ·" 11 14.\io """ ,,\II!).'\, i:1s1Ci:ot11k lR lJS ~ot ~t1 .. 6tVt -'"' 1111T&T•P';'o' " 11 MP~ 11 + ·~ Moreover, the government 1 h 1111u 1..~11g 1 q u1~ 1 1'~ 1t E11.,.,v1 1.40 " :io ,,.~ ""' -\~ 1rr '/ '·
r'·gu>es ,,, based on a car cos-that some manufactu rers n1ay P o n t i a c ' s intermediate et"! use 18 mont s , as an Block Hll .36 J1 6H• s9,,. '°"" :r ~" t:cMrn Mf .J2 '' '' '~v. ,_,..., -v. I"\.'!,& fN P~",~ 1n ~"" B!t I~\~ ! ::
I. be 'd J'f· d h average. Say your tak,.home .,,"~,,',"•' ,',·,10 211 '1" "°~' 40~ -v. Eck•"' J ·20 23 ~1'\ 27 2' •··· ,•, ~111 , :.a 11 .,, ,.,,. " ! •1 Th d f ha become ' b,·1 mo>e 1neup. lo 1 en 1 te as I e 21 1lV. 13v. 11.~ ... F111sonBri:t1 1 ' ,,,,, 'l"" ,,...., .. "· "''' •. -ting about $3,200. ousan s o vc ' · $800 1h · Th t 11oe1no ,, ~0 191 ,,,, 1-. ,,;--... FO&O .10 51 u~~ 1411, 1sut -"• 1n1 , JO•• ~ .... ,, 1• tl.ghtfo'sted of late. LeMans series. has new front pay ls a mon a · ,... (,--v. FIMusle .ct. 11~~ 41'! ··~ •'" . 1n1u111 Ml.32 13 1~ 1s'~ 1~·~ '• company representatives own 1 0 ·$80 1 ~·1 •25117 ise ~"" .S•'t •s,.. -h Fiie! Anoe 67 1 ,,... 6,,., -Vi tnlerP&ee 1 JI ?S\i ,, .... '"" -\• more expenso've models that "The airli nes induslry mav end s t y lin g . Intermediate gvesyoul percent or orBootM~~1 ·;. r! 1m ,:.,. ,nt +v.El Mem M•Q 6?t ln1 11 n !h -·~1n11rpeend l>fir 1 ,. 79 n +1 · l t t h T 37 debt repayments With this 11or~" 1 ii 19 21 ?l\~ 211 +· FIMM•• pl 1 ?ti 1~'1 1~·~ J."\ -·~ "'8~ ,., 1! 11~~ 11:" ~l;-·
also may be more expensive ~~;e f~~~:: t~r s~~ul~~~t~1::~! ~~~~s~ e~,::~ S~rt ;nd monthly sum, yo~ could pay ~~~~ ·1.l,l 1~ ~~~ ~;~ ~!~ t ~ ~1:.1:~:1G ir;it ;: 1~~ ,f,; ii'.t = :~ J~l:~:'i'!-.i :~ ,fl ~:~.: ~~~ ~~~ ;·:,: 10A0t""aanlye. rale, the survey service." the report states. GTO. off $1 ,500 over 18 months. ::,,~"1n2c~' n ~~ ff~ 1~.: :!: ~ E~~'EJ;i'l 1~ ff~· 1~ ::~~ !1~ :E!n:a ~:~ ,, ~ 1r.: ~ +·:·
shows thal 88 companies now because 145 oi 160 participants For 1!171 Pontiac will offer Your safe debt lim it would be l~i:.!~~1r2 . .J: ~ J11 ,,v. ,,~:.:·\lo ~::::~z:-1~ ~'° i~ ~~ ~~ ~~ +~• i:::~~: 'l~ :Jt'° 22~t, 1(,,.. 11111• -_;:·
l·n th•'s aspect of the su1vey 36 d•'ffe1enl m·•els compared between II 300 and $1 500 B'1'1 Ml' 1•20 111 .56'~ sp, !5t'> -" Fmoor11 i " ,, 76 ?• ,,. • '"" loto HC1111 .Joi •1 11 22\'t 121~ -·· pay 10 cents, but that seven '-"./ • ' · 11r111M" "'? • .,,, '°"' 41119 _,.., i0..,1~Mfn ;,ft n1 ,, '""l• "'" :. ·;~ 1TF. ''"" .111 40 w.. 1•>1i '~~ _,, have estab1'1shed c oa ch • lo 35 in the past model year. (3) Do not owe more than llrlt Pet ·'"' " •~ .,.. •·~ + "" i:.,. M pu,,. ~ 1'1.• '"' 1•1 ~ 11.'> 11<'1t co"' ?6• 17"11 lS•~ ~ -1'• pay as JiltJe as 8 Ceflts a mile, , . . Br Pet '"-'le S I'• I'• t>1 ... l'MI• Bl.IS ·'' 21 ll"i 111~ 111~ + l• ITT Sv o".JO 7 .. ., ta\~ "'' ••
One .ulf'.t pays 15 cents and economy or tourist as th e 1.icDoaald also to u c h e d one·th1rd of your dl!JCl'etionary 11...,. Hile ·'° 1t1 311~ J1•1o 31v. +"""'""tr.•• ,,.. • •1\$, ,,,, .,,, -,,, -J·K-. • _, lh . Bl'll.W'I 01 .60 I~ 21 1•'i 2J -1;, "'~fl ll'IC 1 10 • A l• l~Y, 1''" --.,
another Company reports it is preferred aceommodation. briefly on Pontiac's plans to income -meaning...... e in· 11t11nua 1.n 10 2Jio,, ,,.., "'" + ·~ EllW!ra .JO » l"' u 141.\ + "i' Jac~snAn ,1, 1si '" 1 1,, _ •• · h ha I ft fl llro,. .. Co 1 ,,., 6'~ 6"t + \\ •~e•I"' l.l'a ~' ,,.,, n v, "'' .... tt J9(1tAll ..r.40 n 1,, &"II 61, _,, considering a raise to ·that, F'irst-class air travel once bring out l e compact ne:rct come you ve e a er you 11wnslilrp .20 20 10\lt 10•\ '"'~ _ l• E1Mrllne .n. n lt\11 ,, "''• -~· J•ntre-1 w; 1 ll'• 131, 131, + '•
I . II h b S . h id f ba . eel 11-Sllcl 1 JO n 2P\ '"~ 27'• + -.,,.,.,1 c., ·" u "''\ :I'll'\ ~ + "' J~p.0nFd . °"" s• 10 N '' figure y,·as automat1ca Y c osen Y pr1ng. ave pa or your SIC ne s fln.Ht•"1t .la l'• i•io ,,., 16" _ ·~ Et~w1 012.«1 14 ~ J•V; .;.~ -"' J~Fd nt'Cl6P l ,,1 "" t \lo ·.: ...
Com.pano'es appear 1'0 he top management in some ctlm-''The new car . ' . will be of rood, clothing and sheller. R~E~o1·~ ~~ '::.~ 1f.".! '."~ -.~."1=1 ~ ~I ~ ~;:t ~ +1:: ~~::.~,· ·= ~ r~ v~ ',',,. ~1:,-11 c s 5),J. .., .. xCirllO 1.15 B 1•" 111\t 11Rli -h ~e · NOT1ct: TO c•1101ro•s •more liberal m their attitude panies. bot several firms distinetively Pontiac with a Once morke~.i.~ay you earn::= ,0 llf~611 Uf •u '!•t 5:u -::.~ F~~ ·~ ta! ~,; ~"-!j :: tt ~~w~~'1-! 1~ J;,, ·fi \' ~ _:11 ~
,0 T~E 11~~'Eor'n>R~""c'i:S Elon Ea rl toward the private use of CO{ll-reporting to l~ NICB now say split grille, featuring single $9,600 in ta 1::'"1111me pay a year 11~.:..!,n 1.·f: 11 ,.,. 1:i.i. • •.. l"•l~hC .JO M 21 • M\'t ,.,0 -IV. '1m '', .... in 1t1A "" 7t:>4 -""
th d 't th • f h dJ d d' • • nd d of ' 1•'.0, lll~ ]4'~ -\'i F1lr Hiii 1~ ~ 10\;i nlo fl' -"" Jim.,., pl ,61! 1' 35'~ ,,.~ lS _,, ~ikfrtlll 1n:i E•1>t1 M•t H11<1r11~. 11u11i1nc1 pany cars, the NICB study ey o not perm• e1r o -ea amps an a 1st1nct1ve a you spen an average ~11:•111w ·'° 1~ 1;:: i1 .. 1•1, -l'1trtnOn1 15 16 1s11. 16 _ i' ~.,;:,, 1.;; '; ~! ri:: ~SI.\.-,.,
•..c1 ""11"· TRANIFEROR : Pllriuon• to h I ricers to routinely choose the bumper. 11 will be offered in $200 a month for shelter, $1.llO e~R ~Tio • :t01' ,;;? Jl't -:Jt" Fals!tH ·1°" 15 ~• '" '"' ····· Jati111SV('. ·,,.. ... ~ "'~ l:•\ -'-I J.ctlOM 610'\ -1101 o1 me u~uO<"m s ows. About 85 perce nt o ,,. fl 1 Ind 1"' !II ,."' Jt Jt'--'•mllV Fl . .ci Ji lj~\ lJ u -1" JonLo.111 ·• 11 s1 50,,., ...,.. _..,. commerc1•• COOt, "°"' •rt 11tr9ttt' no1111eo · · Is th t most expe' nsive service. two and Joor-door mod!!ls on a a month for rood. $50 a month 11~~1Nor 1.n~ '" ''• "'"''"1 Inc ' 1 11 11 -v., ____ . ________ _ survey paruc1pan .a ewn 1 11"' 21v. m. .... it.r w111F1" ""t~ 1.t.'I ,.,~_1 1.
•iT:::::..;, Is •bo;.11 lo m1~t. tr111111r "\Yhile few executives ac-Ill-inch wheelbase. Overall for clothing. ·Your basic living~~.%'" ~ l~: 11'~ ,ru; :.:.:u ~1t'"t:1~ "·"' 2~ Ji~ sn~ 1il! :.:·;., '° Ill!! unur119nec1. Tr•"''''"· In t1u111, tua\ly lie this change to cur· length will a..., about 194 in· costs are tit<M a month or 11,~~~o,hs ·'° , r.."• '"'• • 1116 10'\\!t -.l"i f'tdclt" ·'° 111 31\lo 311\ n -'!
' ' ''
L ..,... """" • ....., n• .ff 1 II II ..... Ftdlr11 \JO a 2J~ m. }.Ill-• 111 01 lht m•lef' • s, w"" "· ""''".... I OOl'S Of OIL PAINTINGS 1ent econom 1'c cond•'io'ons." the 16 360 the Y C '""' " '' -·· -• dist or olllrr ln~enlllf'"r, 11\d '°"'""""' ' • over year. Our --FtdN~ .ff 112• $a'U 5Tu, 4 ='~
o4 11111 cer111n h1•11w1re. ~~.l!ru! WHOLUALI w,1A1•.,•iiHOiuc""ll"-tl""'r~e~~rt's'.r~la"l\e:tit_ .. ~a;f,nu~m'7,be~r;io~r:-i\l1'Ti~~r,!i;;iik,:.ii;.:e'{n~g~lnreilis. dlscretionarv income i s cablrl ,cp ,.79 ,!f ~.l~ :11"" ,.,,. ... F..:1P1c~"' " /!.' 1GVi 11 + '"' vooeb· k1111wt1 10 T!>.t 10l1ncl HMdw1rt OPINIO"TM th th t --n:: f~_.,,.. ..!..!'\-f Ill"...__._,.,._ -----•49-.-.,_lo' F P1c .11 ' ""' l •V. u!A , .. •nd SPOfll"ll Goodl Ill Df wl\ICI\ ls ~.... em say a new regu a· h c na emp as1z a a \ n ere 0 re ' .,.i.4i40:-Uy • fihn Miid .. n i,c. 11•6 llll -It FtdP•D I • ff m'" ff + ~ $5 d up I. . • · be bJ f . . ' ' . , , 1molltl.. ..& 2• 11i' U\'t 26i;o -af1, PtP !"· J i JQ 't ~ r. , ... . "' 210 M•""' """'u', 11111H 111•11d. 1 an 1<ri1s, or more stringent ap-Pontiacs will capa t o el· this guideline. your debt hmit •IT'IPSP 1.10 21 111-,,.,. ''"" _ y, Ftds1<1~ ·" 2 •'" 1 6\~ ... ,.. c-tv of or.,,,,. Ctll!Ofnle. II . f . I r· . u . I ded h'· f Cdn llnw .... ?2 1'6 I"' , .... -"' Ffdlr1l1 Irie • WI 5\1 ~ + •
/tlnrket
Symbols The presen1 n1mt or n•m•• •llCI 1•1t 1. 101H111•. SANTA,.,...., P Calton o existing rues. _ 1c1en y running on non-ea is $1,080 -or one-t ud o your ldr. Pee l,10 ' 6?\/fo , t. 'I"'_"' Fl'llOtotStr 1 .,, 3!\I 35111 "A ... .,
11u.i_., 1ddr11st1 o1 ,.,. Tra111t1rw and PHONI USo4IM havc been in efreet fo r less 9l t ne ular fuel withoul d' t' 1 I $3 2.n dP1c •nJ.10 11 62 •111 '~ Ffif Dtv co n N "" -,. Trt11sttrN •re 11 1ouowu 01A1..1u WANTID -OC a reg 1scre 1onary ncome o . w . •hl'llltd 1.10 1 14\'J 1•v. H•\ -14 1=,,,,, co ._111 • It~ la~ 11i.. ... ,, tRANSJ'EROR than a year... any significant loss I n Aoother way to j IJ d g e =~ •t.~' 'f ru~ ~;t ~~ !_U l'lbrr:,r,: I~ 3: = ,,~ ,,_. = ~ "'-"''"" .. ILi • .., ... ,,,.... ...
• -
....... ••• ... " ,",',,".,".",,,,,•.IS M•d..e I It 21 I y "''rformancea yourself Is again.st the average •tllslt .60 2' Ullo "''" tn. -.,.. ~11.rol I 46 ' n~ n... m:!li. -t .. "' m. lloct ma111:tt ~ .' .. ' •-"'"''''· ''' ••••-h.--------n s 5 ear ·-------""II t-• •ni C&Dll s t10 S6 1sv. u + "'Flft Ftd~~rn \n 17'1 i11. 1 -n; Iliff ""'"" .,. ll!!OffJdtL Anni... 11.1';;,. 1111nd. c1m. ·-* . for American famllies - and :~~~ l:: ~ ~:: H:: r.,:-+:. ~~,~~ ~! ~ :i~ ;i: ~"' =1U _...1,. twtr1 ., ""'"' ~ ,.,. T~AHSFEREE I t t c * ' * the avttage family now uses c:~1e~,5°' '~~ ~ .. s; s; ~ !,! F!~ .. c'lr: J;... n ti~ ;;"' :: !,tt ~Ill ltodl .,..,., c-lt.vliltflrle •tvto 11~1=~1c-:ii1.HClllllOI, Jl• °""~' •·11-nves men ourse LOCAL OLDS MAN "WINS about l5c out of ev~ry after·t&X i=~.w. ~= J f:¥. n~ rm ~~~'=~" . .Ii' '1 iM Pn n.... ! ll deflG, e-Gtc ....... "" In '"' Plut Heltn o. Ho11111111. '" °"""' 11.ibol E'UROPEAN TRIP $1 t repay various in-""..ck .• 11 ,,,, 2"~ lJ\' _ ~, lhr Ft .1.s. 1 10"' 1~ '°'"' -~ 1toc11 .,,.....,.. ~"'"' '' 1, .,..,.. ,_ 1.s1111111, C•ltt. . . ~""lr lJO 1n ,_.~ v·~ '"'_·~I' 1 ,,. ~' 10:: 1• If -;? ,fl'.._ 111 ~ .,.,.. m.. ~ 11S:: ~""' ttu;~i:: .... ":."":1::;:' =''= ORANGE COAST COLLEGE stallment debls. lf you add In ~c: Cp°":fl,lJ 2f ,r-,;" :l -"' i11111k~ ·1• M li"" ,m ,r.; t ,, Utll '111111 ... n4IVlftllll ., •411fr11111-
l'--I int 111.i. ,. 11, "' klll"'ll 1e 11w Don McGinnis, University AU. fb:d paymenll -for s::i;~~-J 111 ~ ::; 11u t :: i::1n1~ ~-ff 11•! fa "' #.': tfil _1"'-t1ot1 ....._ ~--., ,.... • t.r TreMt..l'tt. •r•: No Admission Ch1rge Oldsmobile m eo.,ta Mesa. home mor1g1ges or debt and >.""CO ·~ .JI 18' l\l\. )f'4i lS'-'I + Pit n .. 1 19\4 " \ti? + \( Wilt --l't--0..c'-9 ., .... .,.. ·-j . d ~ t h top . I'll! l'dY I fl~ t\ill tu.+ 16 Fl• --1.-.. II tt -~ ~-1\IMCll ......... W-"' t --· T ... hrlk .,,,..i., ~ .. 0t «tn._1•"11 01nc ~ o e r . taxes -tht proportion Is Zic ... Huci 1.• 11 ,,.., 21 fi""' + \' "'-'-'-' t ., ..,,, .,. "' -"" ----'' UNITao CALI'""''" IANll, ~ An ~11tro<l uttlero te tl.1 b11ic f1111<11in•nt1l1 of i"•11tin'il i11 Car. OJdsrtVlbite dtaler! a n d f the II "'101..1 1.~ II 'J tt1• -. -,_,I'll Stetl l ' 1t~l I"°' 1"'4. •• ·~., Nlf #th "''" •11 «tw!Wl.tlll'f lnl.•t oel Mtr otf~. )UI E•ll (Dell Hllll ..... y. 00111. Jfe'~'· l o1ult, 11'11t111I F"'"''· Go~·"'"''"' lo11d1, l11ild:hCJ out Q • ll'llll~S l.ll )l l!:! "'• l -Iii FlllorC• J.Jlll 21 mt tll'll 1H• -"'"""" •r•IOIMlfll'I .,,...,.. _...,.. .._ c~ Clfl ~,. CJIY ... N--I lff(ll, ' Le111 A111oi11:e111. l1tt•Ml•d-10 9i•e ,,.,,;,,1 ~roowl•d91 el managers together with lheir But averages art staUslical ~';.· .... E/.11 n'' fl>: rt: ~I :.:·~ ~r:r~ ~ft 11; ~\' ti: ~~Vt! I\ __ ,.kl_ ~t ~ ,.."'.!!"" .... n•-,,.....!': C-lf' fl' Of•-· C.1...,...11, Oft It llftr wt'· · U f k ~. '"· .1 h' 11'11 SW I.ti ~ ~\.\ ""\ .+ 1t FMC -CP .15 21• tl-'6 'Ir.' tt -W --..,,..,,, .,, ·-
At...__ '· ~-I trip to Parts. matches an averi.oe is U · "'1"Y •""' 11: lt;~ • ;~ = ~ 'o"'"'•lr .911 1 u1i s lS\\ -11o ll'a<* ~ ._, ......... .,, ..
°'= ~ ''· ''" l11v•1...,1.11h •"" •htt~ ••ch•nt• ep••atlo"'· vcs reccn Y or a Wet °'"''6 my'l~ and any fa.mi y \\' 1ch ""'SOY• .IO 1 "l• r. 1P.:! _" l'MC pU.ti , 11 JJ • _,""' r-o.nttM ., HM .,. ~ "-
-· -W"' • L O'BR YON ln1truc or • -• " a: ,, 204 " .. F0019 ca .., 1 "" "'' '"' · •. ~~!:.!!e.HOt"fllf ~. · ' Tht' dealer group slaytd at traordinarlly •non-average. So ;;.;:,:f-t. -5 to ,.. = -Ftot. Mill ' ui.. 1n, -,. ,,,. """'-'" a1t1 .. .,. "'_.~
flllbli'*""" ~a-c:...11 0111, "•iot. the 1 ~-·u'nt:ntal Hotel in he f d t 1 ".,...." " 11" I • IJ"' -"'~~i~ 2ll JO ~ ~ -~" tMl1trt1vt1111 ...._ a-11111 111 full .... -"' s.,.._.Mt 2.Jr4 '"'-'"'"" use t u n Im en I Ft Sii ... I • _,,.. l'i'ttMcKI 'u Ill ••• '" -•• tll~llN. ts-E:.--· •.. , '-'""'"" 21, If!' 11 ... ,. I' . h f "'1· s . he ' lllodbrll 'f!IC '11 '1~ ,.. ,T. + ., .. " I( . f .. ~ ·-••• fet S _..... _ w.....,,, J:lD t9 t:JO I'·"" ar1S as t C guests O gu1ue 1nes. ure, t 'I re con• htmWI "'°" .,& ,1, . + ,~ Wft"/ ·:: • ll ,,,_. r~ f14 _ iL ~"" ,_. •ttt "" llPll. ~£•.cllllt&o
Oldsmobile Division. The ~-eek servaUve bu t they're t0und-~:m.,sN~·2j_-111 ~·i ~~j ~ •. ~ 1ri1 ;:Ii w11 ,; 1 1 1r" 11 u -"'llllliefl. •r-~ rtttrt~ ~....,. ..,..,. FAIR
F_.11. f•ir, f•ch••I. lhe~•
th''' wer~h 'uolft up f1tlt1rs ht • .,,,,1;011 •11 U.t DAILY f'IL01
-.41Jerltl'tl•t• ~ty 4•V·
.. I
• I • i_
Merhlmf\...ktl.el In Paris Vi'aS won by McGinnis and If yo~ follow tht!m. you'll ~=11 ''Tr r; rt: ~ ~ +'lo "~=':, .. ~ '; 1'llt Rt: n:t -: ~ ,..,,~:...,-.. -~"'w~r=.. ...... Wlltlt
II 10 M.r11ett Ori,,. for hai•lnfi pla-d f'-t amo 1 k h h • h ~kirr MDI t 7'• :!1i' jit -u "'""'Su' .to n ..,. !l"' u ;; +i~ dll1r..... . ..,... ...... , rio-Nt_. '-"' 11<> ng 8 ways now W en OW' mUC lltllf~ ,,t e • -\lo f'r\ld!Cp 1.111 • •4 NI' M -'t fly d911"91'J wl-111 Mnkl'll ...... -__, Nt__. lffcll ' o npe ill c •rou of Old d bl I I ·• d b f """•ir011 ' ~' \i '" • ""-in .tel 111 '"' ' ill 11\i -"' . ~,~ .... ,_...,. • l' r v e p s e ! oo mu..,, e t or you. l>Oll'INY ~ 1 • ·~ .,..,, ~ :...·v, -G.-tt\Plt• ., """-,_...,.,"" 11111tt "''
ltttilttlf'lft "-t..cr.,. dealer& durJng a. live-moot (Copyi;lf!l lt7t, Fltld Eller.;. ~~ .'t~ 1't \\ ,. 21:1, !.:.i,f o.-.c C• ,c10 •s.i 21 ,1.,. 14,, _ ,~ '•'*: ~;,~ .... lft\lrl-11n 1111 ~ 8'11~ lnctntivt program. prii•• c ) ~"" °"ie ' .,.. •11-1 ~~ •1•t • GAf c"' ,,. 111 "" '•I"' 11"1 -•• ODl'll .... wb11et 11 1 • • l~Ollt I lCI 1't,t JI\\ ·~ --. GAF Pfl.10 Jt ,11 114 11\0 -loo..,_.-~ llll.
..
-. .
I .
j
Mond1.11 Stpttmber 21. 1971) SC
Monday's Closing
\
I
•
DAILV Pnor ~ .. '
l1" .:-
•
•• • ,1, .. -:: ~ . ., -... '" ~,, -~ ' , ~---· • • 10 't -• l I .. ~ "
Forecasting
The Course
On Economy
NE\V YORK (AP) -\Ve 11re
::ipproach1n~ once again tho
season of the year "hen
restless govemmenl ofhc1als
and businessmen attempt to
peer Into the future rind
detennme the fate of Uir
economy-which 1s sometimes
their fete also
•
•
• ,...._
' . .
-'
. Price• Effective
thru Tues., Sept. 22 nd
s~ars
'
Tire and Auto Center
Monday, Septembtf 21, 197Q
•
Over950
M~kesand
Models Available
More New Parts In Every
Remanufactured Complete Engine
•All NewWaterTube9 • AllN'ew Rod Bearings •All New Intake
e All N~ Roeker Shaft11 • AJI New llydr1ulic Lif1m AV1o11vN~ V 1 '-' .· • ewav1 e All NewTimiug Chajn1 •All New Buslunp Springs
• AUNewTimin,:Ceani •All New Stal GukelA •All New Pis1on1
•All New ?ol1in Burings • 1UJ NewExb1u11t Valves •All New ChfO.We TypeRinp
Au.STATE Car and Truck: Engines. Exchanges available for over 950
.makes aad·models remanufactured ro more exaeting standar<ls tl:tan used
in new cagines. Compare AllSTA1E Remanufactured Ensinc-f'JUalicy.
Espert lnatallation ATailable
-----------------~--------------,.., CLIP THIS COUPON. $ I
This Coupon Worth I
On Purchase of Any 6 or 8-I
Cylinder R:emanufac rured I
Complete Engine Installed. I
OneeCN1ponperea~omer I Offe.-E:11pittl 1.'122/70 T-9-2G-70 _____ .c.,;;; _____________ , _______ ..
-------------------------------· I I I I
I
I I ---------------~--------------~ .,·.:·. S~J1E ;!40!·:~~~\
·;;'OW The Purc hase !>f An9 ·
Remanufactured ·complete .
•
~ • 'I> • ,,. ' •• ,l.,: ... ,,
Automatic . Transmission
:INSTll.J.;ED •
'
NO lllDDEN
Extra Charges
--_J
-
""Core Exchange• .'
V" Transmission
completely
disass embled
and chemically
cleaned
~G·reatesl
percentage of
n ew replacement
part!! in the
industry ,'
EXRert
ftn•lallation
Available
r------------------------------1
I THIS COUPON WOR'f.H
On Purehase of
Any Remanufactured
CoinpJete Automalic
Transn1iss iQ1t l11 stalled
One COUJlOn Per cu,tomcr
()fTer expires 9/22/iO · T·9-:0.itl 1 --~---------------------------~
.-
Y nur Chni<"; l)rsi~r.:
6.95i:14 White,...\11
!'i.60i: 15 Bl1ekW11!11
i .15J.L4 Whitew11l1
J>assenger Tire
Guarantee
Ga1nt1&eed Ag1lnst: All tire
fa.ilu.rn from normal road hat·
lll'ds or defcas in material or
wnrkm.uuhip,
For How Lon«: For thr life o(
th<' original ll't'ad
Wh,t Se•~ Will Do: Ip ex·
change for 1he 1irC', replace it
charging for thC' J>roporrioo of
l"Urrem selling price plus Federal
Excise Tu that represenu ue.d
1.1std. Jlepair nail puoc11.1rc1 at no
char,ij:C'.
Gu1r1nteed Ag1lnst: Tread
wearo111
For How Long: The number
o( rnon1h1 specified.
What Stars Will Do: In cx-
chanJte for 1hc rire. replace it
chafgift,11; 1he current sellill.!;
.Price plus Federal E11dse Tu, l r-''t.--71
l<'ss the following· allowance:
)lon1hlr Guar•ntee AIJ0,.1nee
18 10 24
27 10 }9 •o
,
ms i1osT
OF THESE CARS: c......_ Bwcko, a..., n.
Co0tels, Corvaira. Mnat•np.
t·aJcons. Foreign C•r•
.-
93
PlwFed.E~c.T~:<.
'"' Vo11rOIJ Tire
YO UR CHOICE OF SIZES'
6.00xl3 Bl1ckwalla
6.50xl31'lackwall1
l 'i1t1 !Hr>~I or '1'111•,.1· l:af'lo~
A mb111M11don1, Hu i(lr.1. t:h1\·f .. ...Dodau.-
t'or1h. Plymouth•, R•mblen, Te1npPob ,
Stu.deb.Ir.en, T·Dird1, f .115· ..
l111ick<, C1<lill1r•, Chrr•lrn. Merrnl'}9.
OIJ$mubilu , l'unti1c•. \ ull••w•1en1
'"""'""·199 3 tif :"i~c• . l'!u• t~rt. t.••·. T1it
.\nil' n11r
l'll!l Tirr
l •i1s l\lu~I oCThe~e C•n:
Ruid••· Ch••Y'· Dodt~. ford!o J\lu•t•n•~· R1mbltr.. l'lymu11th1,
...... d~ll ..: ....
14-~ig ..
· l\u<J' our UldTir•
'four (:hoirr. 11f :O-it,;;:
li.9.i~l·I Hl..:J.,.all~
':',;1,;111•1 V>'loi1e-u~
':'.75~\·I Wl1i1 ..... -.11~ &~5xl4 Wloi1e,.·1U1
Yftn1' l :1u1it't! nfSiic:.:
8.85xll._'hitew1ll•
a.15xl5 1L'hi1ew1ll•
fl.4,5,.15 While .. ·11!•
3.lls,1,; '1i'hi1e .. ·allJ
'J.OO,.J5 '1i1hi1ew1ll1
48-Month Guarantee
A•kAbout ~;:Y;.•i•nl High Voltage Battery
Plana_
' <'Regular '27.99/
Trade-In Price
thousand oaks
AUTOMOTIVE CENTER
IS NOW OPEN!
Sean Thousand Oa ks ••• 14:) West \.illa ge Laue.
:Shop 9 a.m. until 6 p.m .••• ?itonday thru Saturday
•
S'tARS BATTERY GUARANTEE '
}:rec replacement 'vi thin 90 cl.tys of purchase if bat·
ery proves defective . .After 90 liars. '''C replace the;
bauc.ry, if dcfC(tivc, and char~e you only for rhe
period of ownership based on the regular price less
1rade-.in at the time of return, prorated over nun1bcr
o f months bf guar.tnt'ee. .
Fits 90% of
All American•
l\'lacfc 12-Volt
Sys te1u Cars. I
FREE Bauery ln•talla1io11
IUINA PAIUt TA ....... , lllo41M R MOHfl Ol"J.Jtl1 JONe llACH Ml 1.0121 l'OMOfrlA NA f •S111
...co .wt 1-4212
SOVfM COAlf "-AlA HO-»»
f1?11AMCI 142·1111 CAMMA PAIK a .. 0111 OUNDAU CH 1·1004, Cl ...... ,, 01.T .... C a IOfO Ml ... ,,,
COMPION ,_ '4111, .. 2-17•1 llOUTW'OOD MO f·IMI 01.AN01 .S1·t1• •
l~S.IOllUOt ANDCO. COVllA ,.._..11 INCIUW009 °" 1·2111 PAIUINA 6114111, Jllo4211
.... ~Mon. llll]l ht. t.ao A.M. ••tao P.M,, .. 111112 NMll re J P.M. · "Jall&!"ciloa Gu-d or Your-., leek",
'· I •
• ..
•
t SANTA ANA 10 7-a.371
'. IANTA n mtNOI "'4·101 1
IAN'A MONICA lie 4·•711
•
UPI.AND tll·1t27
VAWT PO .).1461, tl4·22M
VDMONf Pl. f ·lfll
.,
I . '
c
tc
a
0
s.
p
R
Cl
tary
"'"' just
Tl
Tes I
the
C<lnl
pre!
Wee
Tl
Rea
and
wilt ,.,.,
B' .. m
pee<
S<
higl
at~r
yea
are
R
exp
Joa
pro·
thal
pub
befc
H
ma'
it.er. --•co ..
had
nor
sch
/Tl<} -
Mood.,, S,pte~btf 21, 1970 s OAIL Y PILOT J
'Gallopin.g _ _.Plans' Hit
Greedy · De:velopers Ruining Rural Areas?
This is the tlilrd in o DAILY PILOT
' 1eries On subdil'Uion deuelopmtnt in
1Jorthern Californ·i4 recreatfcmal are(lS
which Assembtvman Leo McCartny
once said, .. are 'fully capt;ible of be·
Coming m()lJsters. • .~· JU.St as the
Legislature was near adjournment
this 11ear1 a ma1or subdtvider pushtd
through.a-tsilt )hat could have denied
Calif(1fni~s n1any fishing right.!. It
toa.1 vetoed by Governor Reagan, The
views of a district attorne11 are dif.
c11.ssed iR tOday's ar ticle.
By ALBERT W. BATES
Of 1t1t o.ily ..... , Sletf
(Tblrd in 1 Serle1)
YREKA, Calif. (Special) -Harold
Berliner, district attorney of Netada
Counly,_Jl_conserv_.alionLst and O}ltsiioken
foe of a "a greedy handful of developers
committed to completely unneeded urban
development cf rurai areas for abort·
term gain," revealed what has hapPened
in his own coonty in aJ111 article. Jn the
magazine--California -T()ffl()IT'()W. Ex-
cerpts:
Beacl1 A · D L · S ""ii•ff!----------------·----,~·~-N~e~vad~a~Co~u~n~ty~is but one of many CCeSS, o ... en11• ,,,,,,e Ca!Jomia counties alflicte<I With gallop.
One summer or beachgoers caused this fence to
topple and a huge path . to form between parking
areas along Pacific Coast Highway 3.nd the sands
of Doheny State Park Beach. Fence, erected to
chaMel ingress to the park through the toll stands,
also was built to keep pedestrians from the hazard~
ous Santa Fe Railroad tracks. But the crush of sum·
mer bathers soon ended the projec!'1 effectiveness .
San Joaqui1t'$
Pupils Boost
Reading Marks
Children in the San Joaquin Elemen·
tary School District are reading better,
according to the test scores which have
just been released.
The results of the Cooperative Reading
Test administered to first graders, and
the Stanford Reading Tests given .to se-
cond and third graders in May were
presented to the Board of Trustees .
Wednesday.
This is the first year the Cooperative
Reading Test has been given in the state
11nd there were no county or state scores
witll which to compare the San Joaquin
11ceres.
But children laking the test scon!d the
Mme or higher than the publisher'• ex.
pected score for their age groups.
Underground Utility Plan
Slated in San Clemente
Working drawings of 1 proposed un.
derground utility district for an area or
about 125 homes in the Pacesetter·
Hillcrest part of San Clemente will get
under way in coming days.
The commencement of the design of
the replacements to power poles Was
launehed recently with the city 's alloca·
lion of $50 000 from a special f40d set up
as _a utility conttjbution to underground
distrtts.
The utility · plan -which could
ultimately cost an average of $1,200 per
homeowner in the district -was sought
by the residents who petitioned for city
action on the plan.
The same group lost Its bid two years
ago to obtain money from the fund set up
by the State Public Utilities Commii6ion.
the city o( san Clemente will donate a
minor share of funM to finance the
building of street lights iri the affected
area.
Besides the individual cost or the im·
provement district, other costs to be
borne by the homeowners is modificatiOn
of input lines to individual homes. ·
Trenches with conduit will have to be
made on each lot to bring the current -
now delivered underground -to meters
at the houses.
Charfee and city staff will work toward
a solution to the relatively high cost oC
that part of tht project and see if the en-
tire job couJd be handled by one con-
tractor -a method which might bring
the cost down. '·
ing subdivision, but it's as good an ex·
ample of the problems which accompany
the overcommitment of land as "recrea·
tional' Jots as any other coUJ1ty in the
stale.
"The county, which has elevations
ranging from about 1,000 feet in the
foothills to the 7,000-foot level in a1plne
aeas, is tyipca l of all of California 's
recreation areas. After 20 years, its
population Is hardly larger lhan it was
duriRg the Gold Rush, and i11 the last 2()
areas, is typical of all of California's .
population boom to any appreciable
degree .. .
" ... Enough lots have been approved
at lhis. time to lake care of more than
three times the Rresent population. If the
next five ye-ars show tlte same rate of in·
crease in lots the last five years have
shown (about 225 percent per year ), by
lhe end of 1974 every square inch of
privately held land iR Nevad8 County will
have: bee11 subcllvlded into suburban.style
lots."
While subdivision lots proliferate, home
building has remained CQnstant ·at an
average of 233 houses per year in the en-
tire county .
Nevada County's board or supcrvisoL~,
like sµc h boards in many another county,
has played slraight into the hands of the
developers by igROring the county's
general plu and allcwing &ubdivisions
anywh'lre and everywhere.
Second 11nd third graders showed
higher scores than last year, scoring
above state and county 'medians for last
year. This year's state and county scores
are not yet available.
Ron Gray from Student Services, who
explained the test scores, said the San
Joaquin children have shown steady im·
provement in the last three years.
Southern California Edison pays money
into the fund each year and the cash i1
used to offset costs of the utility replace.
meof projects.
Ed Chaffee.' community leader and
spokesmen for the Pacesetter district
plans, said despite the stiff C(lsts, he
predicts the residents will agree to the
plan.
Police Approval Needed
For Ambulance Service
"\Vhat is significan t," said Gray, "Is
that we have come so close to the
publisher's expected scores. We've never
before done this."
He said in all cases San Joaquin eilher
mifClied or was within one to four test
_ items o{ the publishe1's expected raw
score~
"California children have traditionally
had difficulty measurjng up to national
norms; however, the 1970 saires in this
school'district indiCate we have for the
most part overcome that difficulty."
An original proposal by the ci ty in-
volved the donation of only $.17,000 trom
the utility account - a measure which
resulted in a 2 to 2 deadlock on the C(IUO·
cil and drew disfavor from Chaffey and
the homeowners.
But Councilman Thomas O'Keefe
returned from vacation two wee.ks afler
the deadlock vote and a change of mind
of the rest of council yielded a unanimous
action for the grea'ter amount.
If the district · wins offi:ial approval,
_,
An ambulance ~rvice planning to
operate in San Clemente, Laguna Beach
· and El Toro must await a police recom-
mendation in San Clemente before city
councilmen decide on I.he proposal.
The Gold Ambulance Service, Inc .•
which plans to enter into -competition in
San Clemente and El Toro with the ex·
isling La Paz service, this week asked
San Clemente counc ilmen for pennission
to open an office for one ambulance.
Wit h little discussion, Ronald Kaufman,
a spokesman for the service, learned that
a rcpcrt from Police Chief Clifford Mur-
ray would be needed -before the council .
would act.
Thii radi(l..dispatcbed service would
have its headquarters in Laguna Beach.
· "This might save the · city :~ a
month," Mayor Walter Evans said before '
recommending the police evaluation.
Evans alluded to .the expense San
Clemente incurs when La Paz am·
bulances are busy and fire vehicles are
used as a substitute ambulance.
El Rancho has the hottest price in town!
I DOLLY MADISON'S
LUNCH BOX TREATS!
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Kever mind the Price on the package , •• our price is lOc !or these lovely filled cakes that the kids enjoy eo very, very much I
Kellogg's Pop Tarts ........ Quaker Oats .. )............. . ...... 59¢
Start the morning rirl! Quick or Reg .... 42 o,,
~ ........ ;~~~~~ .......••....... ~ ...... ~-~~~
Toaster pastry in a variety of flavors! 11 oz. pkg.
Plump and ripe ••• bursting with flavor that makes t.hem welcome at lunch time-or anytimP.f ... --Meal makers from the Butcher Shop I
Pork Chops ...... ~E~.~ ........... 89~
The Land Game
(Northern St.le)
Picture yourself In 1 snug A·frame
b e s I d e a Northern California
stream, away from smog and root
beer stands? And turninc 1 Udy
prolit·on the land you boughtT The
picture might not be as pretty is
It's painted. . · ,
-When public objection be1an lo grow
strong, the Nevada County supervisors
slrriply modified the general plan to fit
he needs or he promoters.
• Their rationale ~pparenily. has _beeft
that subdiv\'lions are "good for b1.&&iness"
and "lhey a<ld to the tax roll." They don't
bother to check results elsewhere •. U they
had, they might have found t.bat
generally overpriced subdivision lots
result in foreclosures up to as much as
100 percent in some Instances. And 'where
_buyers build and move in, the cost of
schools, fire and police services are auch
that the taxpayers in the rest or the coun·
ty must subsidize the subdivision
residents.
DA Berliner reveals how it all works:
"Why do these 'uAdeveloped
developments' continue to grow? Because
they make great sums of money for the
developer.
''TJie ~tal price of lots in one ol these
promotions may reach $5() million, and
they can be sold out in a year or two.
Representative promotional developers
tiave stated that of this sum, one third is
spent for the land, engineering, streets,
water supply, sewers if required, country
clubs, lakes, etc. Another third is apeat
on advertising and sales. This is far
higher than the ordinary sales . cost of
Destroyed, Bluff
Due for Repah:s
. .
In San Clemente
r.al estate, oot U-loll are hanler to
sell .• , The Jul third ii profU.
"And there aren't many venture1 which
orrer the· buge percentage of return In
such a small time, on such a small in-
vestment. Because the promoter doesn't
really invest evea the first third.
"A typical scheme is thb:: tht
developer sends out scouts to buy, up op-
tions on all the land needed, for nlatively
small sums, ofrering the original owner,
if the project goes through, a better price
than he ever hoped for his acreage. When
all the options are in, he can safely invest.
Jn preliminary engineering, the drawing
ot maps, and the pre?iration af Jarge col·
ored ill ustrations for the planning com•
mission. He can also borrow money from
others who want to participate Jn what ii
very close to a sure thing.
"After a reasonable amowit of expen11
and time spent telling the community'•
busine!Smen that there's a gold mine in
it for them if they will help convince the
planniag commission and aupervisort of
the benefits _the: 'develop,nent' offers the
area, they are ready to apply for their o(.
ficlal permissions to go ahead.
"By this time they have buttered up
the local rural press, put a 'wnber of
local pe<>ple on their payroll and most
lhings are going their way. 'I1le filings
with the plaMing commission rely
strongly on colored picture!, less on
detail, and still less on what the subdi·
vider is committing himself to do. He
may suggest that the BUpervisors author·
lze financing the improvement money
by selling ·bonds· issued by a public dis-
trict. This wlll greatly les,,en the prom(,.
ter's Investment, because the lot ownen
will then· pay Ui(se-.,bonds off over the
years w\th no cost at all to \he develop-
er."
Berliner points out what happens wbtn
oppotfioo appears at either planning
commission or supervisor levt11--l.1Kl this
reporter has just teen thb: responae In a
proposed Sisvyou County subclivllloa.
The developer spreads the rumor thd
he is abandoning his plans. Or he pes
back to the local businessmen , claiming
the development is Btill marginll opera.
tion, and if over-strict requirements are
1 laid down, he whole lhiRi will be aban-
doned in favor of another locaUon in
another county to the benefit of the
merchants in that area.
Winning one advantage, the developer A major city-financed bluff restoration can suddenly come alive and ramrod his
job which will rebuild a portion of the plari.s through the Board of su~r;visOn.
crumbling palisades below San Using the sec1lnd approach , he can"win
Clemente's Colony Coves will start in merchant pressure, especially ln the
about a week. smaller counties where ·the skills to in·
·City Engineer Phil Peter said Uiat the veSt.igate ultiinate conseqUencea of tl:it
starting date might be late this week for "development" do not eiist.
the B.Q. Halloran Company; which won Tbe developer has not bought the land
tbe bid for the '2-f,180 job. or made any other· investment until i.
What the contractor will do, Peter ·ex· has the official 1pproval1. One he bu
plained, i1 gouge 1w8y all the wet, those, it's a simple matter to borrow the
unstable bluff material, then build a log mo1ey he needs and .time h~ actions ao
crib wall at the base of th~ 1lipping that the lots go onto the official record
bluffs. after March l, when lhe bus would ahif&
·After the foundation wall ls complete, from o~n land lo land. a~ved for
bulldozers will begin replacing the soil, ~d Jn tim.e for the prune seilln,a ae""''" _/
compacting u and _ When n0Ce11sary .:. -·If! late sprmg and earl.y~um.mer.
installing vent pipes into the walls. As Berliner also poin ts out, the main
. . mipport for the whole scheme comes Th.e pipes are d~sign~ to Cal'T)' ort from the lack of state or local Jaw which
st!ep1ng grou~ water which caused much would recognize the community's need
of the slumping. . . for inteliigellt lalid use. · · ·
The seepage, caused by watering , of ."Today," ~rliner has· written, ''liate
lawns and garden~-in ·t~e home.a above, and local governments proceed on ·the
has acted a~ a trigger m cracks on _the premise that if the developer can aell his
shale formation of the banks, Peter said. lots even to olwious suckers with no uae ~oisture made mud, which allowed in ~ind~ there is no publi~ interest in
huge.chunks or bluff to give way. preventing him .from doing so."
So lean and !lavorful 1 TTY, them fixed with Shake 'n' Bako for pork ... 19< per pkir. I
............. WITH-DRESSING-;;-; .................. $] .Q9_1b._
Price1 in effect Mon ., Tuel., lVed..,
Sept. 11, 1%, 18. No •a1'1 lo d«zlon.
. -.
Rr ady for the oven , •• all you n~ to do is b~ke them .... and enjoy the fine flavor!
Turiey Birds ........................... 25:~ Stewing Chidens .................. 49'· ·
Turkey meat in a convenient form I Min • .fi oz. u. Big ones , •.• 4 to 6 lb •••• for delicioua !ricasBce r
Superior Tamales ....... ::: .... Ar OOR DELICATESSEN ............... 4"' 89'
Let one meal tcho the romance of Mexico, , • with '\ama1 .. 1n the 1p0tlightl 8 oo. et.ch, --
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...,,·~ .. n.1m
·American Bombers Pow: .It
~ . on Reds
A sign In a reataurant window
says: •1Waitresa wanted, will mar·
ry if i;1eceasary." But owner L••
rena McGee 1ay1 the aign11 noth·
Ing but an.eye-catcher. He's 47 and
happily married In Charlotte, N.C. • It hea been a roogh year for
rancher _w. I. Whftoley In Olltley,
Idaho. A cellar he !>WU• .at Decle
burned wt spring. ·1n July, llOIDt
of hil fall potato crop was. loot !»-
cause _ of a hall atorm. Than . the
week before harvest another lire
deatroyod h!o cellar at Oakley, 1 ..
vtng ·him no place to &tore hil ~
ta toes.. •
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i.uGON (AP) --~ o!•m-' bundndo ol -ol bombo Into
-Ylolna.-)IOolUolla -two ll'lllllrl' buel In the northern ~ of
Soullt Vlelnam lodlJ-llld kept up rliU
• -oupplJ rout.. In 1-llld Cambodia.
·Am<rtcan bomben bepa lhllr third
-k ol -.led raidl .......i em-
baWed P'lre Bue O'Reilly, near the Lio-
u.. -· -·-flPlllil Oared d1lrial the pul H boun.
'l'be1 abD allacked llorlb -
poal-_...., Flr,e -Fuller,
four mlleo -of the demlUllrlled .....
Sot,IUt Yietnamut b e l d q u f. r t e r 1
npoi1od tllat _. -:ioo pemmenl
troopo clul>ed with North Vie-
eoldlen about Ill miles ooutbeul of Fin
Bia O'RIJlly, wblcb 1111 -beateced !or Ille put two -.
Fifteen Noni! Vielnl._ eoldien
...... ~ l!1led. 'Ille --troopo aid they coptured tine rifles, IO
round& ol ~ --llld 2IO dynunlle blocb, and -.Yee! II
bunkers. Field ~ eald -Soutb
-IOldierwuklll<dllld• -· 'll>e U.S. 'lib Air F...,. llld Ill lldlcal
~-!•lllllltlln~ o! the South ~ tloOpi 'at
O'llellly durln( the ff.hour period mdlllc
' K..._ 'l1iom wu ""1led for the
eilblll di)'. 'Jl>e drtva up Jloota I WU baited II T&Jnc Kaull vWap, north ol
Skow>, Stpl. JS by a powerful Nortll Vie~
nameoe llld Vlll Cooc f0rtt that lnlllded
huTJ -oa 111e ca-1-
Jl'leld ~ lroai -lllld Ille ... lnloroed C.mhodlu ~ mJpt &el the
ollwl,. rGllln& ipln· at any time.
Cambodlon "Pmnler Lon Nol new to
_Ille INol llMI 1odq and' Uld he WU
pleued with the -ol the pent--~IO (&r. E1oewben. n1lable -1a a .. ,,.,.
reported i.oir American airmen ..... ldll-
ed -tbolr CID rucue he~ wu lhot dOwn Aui. ~ over norlheul
'l'llalland.
The U.lh Emll1111 In Jlan&bt impol<d
a newa blackoUt on tbe incldalt, wbk:b
never bu been r<Porled olficlally, 'll>e
!Oii• of Ille hellcopler WU Ille flnt Jmowo
CUI ol ID American alr<faft beln& lbot
don in ,,,.ll•nd.
lo· ~ the U.S. Command .,,_
-American troop llreft&lb In Vie>-
nam CoaUnued to . drop U I mull ol
Preo!dent Nlaoo'a ·fourtHound cutback
ol-men.
A ...-i1 milllar!' llrn&lh MllD""'7
reporled a,IOt American ~ In Viet-
nam u ol wt Thursday, a drop ol IOll
_O\'llf.Jl!o,pml®a ~
Ft. Sill'• Okla. range dMiion at I a.m. foda1. A -11-11111>1 by
tows wrecked car bodlea to ita -u-~~-stratellc Air Command 1!52
Wlery target ringe and blows them bom-flew nine eor11 .. 11 potnla five
to bits. "We purcheae between 1,000 to·nlne mlleo IOUlhw"t o1 Ille bue, drop-
and ·1,100 wrecked auto bodlea from Pini -ly aoo tona or bcmibl on North
wrecking dealers each year," says VWntmefe ltalina and aupplJ areu
c.pt. Gay R. Wrltht Jr., opera-that oupport the eneny !orcea lnlllOd
tiom officer for the range dlvlalon. O'Reilly.
Wrlglit said the wrecks make fine · Inf~ IOUfC'8 lllld U.S. bomben
target& ·because they aplode Into ·flow :up to aoo lllrliP aalllllt North Vlei-
• 1arge fireball when a dirtct bit ..._ aupp1y rou1ea·1n i.-11111 cam-
Under Nt.on'1 four1h1>lwe withdrawal
plan, the authorlied Amel'lcan otren&lh
mull Ile pmd to 111,111111 by Od. II.
Lt. Gen. Lee Sae Ho, commander ol
South Korean !orces In South Vietnam,
told newsmen in Saigon there are no
plans for the withdrawal of any of tbe
I0,000 Korean troops In Vietnam.
Meuwlllle, a Soulh Vletnamele DIYll tut farce iaund>ed I major operlllon Jn
Cembodla aJona the Bassac: River about
35 miles -ol Phonom Ptah, a mllllary ....... reported today. .
1. nde: bodla dmiol the pu1·14 boon. 'll>e operattoq, In~ -ol -boats and more thu. 1,000 Vktn•met1
marlml, lllrled 'Saturday but wu DOI
dlaclooed unW today !or llCUril7 -• ··-·.....-. -. Olltrl,l HHlhlr'• 81at birthday
Thunday• caught him unawarea,
hll, daughter;-Malda said. But the
natiQnally famoua news broadcaat-
er-ol ·former .yean zeatfully ale a
piece ol ·Iii• blrtliilay-cake aervecl •
at h!o'home In Miami Heatter get&
abollt ihou"' In.a wheelchair after
fight!Jlg . off an attack of double
pneumoitla durlnf a o!J:-weet Jioa-
pltal. atay. m. daughter said poor
eyealgbJ Interfere& 'with bla keep-
ing up with wotld eVenls such as
he uiei! 1b bri>adCut cin 'the Mu-·
tual Network until · he retired In
1961. • .,
Because. of a traffic jam, l'rnf.
dint Nixon has acquired e!pt new
ndtla In Chicago. He jumped.out
of hil car wllen hil'motorcaclt. wu stalletl In the Loop Tblinday' and
walked a block to the Manha!!
Field "',Co. store. 'J1lera h• P!eked
out seven tour-In-hand cravat& and
one bow tie with price tags totaling
around flO. It being prealdenlial
tradition that the chief exeCutive
carries no reedy cuh.-an aide p1ct.
ed up the tab. • Humorist S. J. Ptrelmtn, 66: best
known for his sardonic c<>mmen-
tary on the American scene, .says
he will move to London nezt inonth
permanenUy from New Yorlt. Call·
ing England "a far more rational
society. than our own," Perelman
said, 11Today1 the news in . this
country is so filled with lnlianlty
and violence that the newspapers,
from which I derive many of my ·
ideas, have scant room for the sort
of thing that turns me on.'' He said.
Thursday he had sold the 91-acre
farm in Bucks County, Pa .• which
he and tµne other-tnlaws, the late
Nathanael West, bought In 1932,
and planned to move.to London on
Oct. 21. Perelman, bom In Brook-
lyn, has written 18 boob, lncludin~
''Parlor, Bedlam and Bath,'
c•westward Ha!" and the recently
published "Baby, 11'1 Cold Inside."
-ol the nlda ......... cam.
bodla'1 llouf6 .. --fnlm SkauD, 40 m11ea nar1ll o1 P11aom Pmb, to Kom-
ponf Thom, 40 ll)llea -north. A 'Cmnbodlon pmd operatioo aimed
at opellin& lbe road from ftoUD to
he Aid. .
Informed ooiJrcea Aid there bad been
Utile llplllcut -to elate. South Vietnameae b11dquarter1
Russians Make Comeback,
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LandLunal6ontheMoon •
MOSCOW (UPI) -'ll>e i!o'vlet Unlon'a
latell -probe, Luna If, landed a
· rocket on Ille ,,_ SUnday ud 1r-
mllled "escellmt'' lat pl<tws hill Iba
Sea ol Fertllll1 llld "maldnl _ ..
lure • jliedldloo.
11lat waa the opeculatldii-durlnc the
Luna II mlallon, helpod &illl!I I!)' Jllala to
that elfect by -_ _....
i!"o1=•~1o1"::-::·:;:~ Man Seu Self
the Weo!.Gennm ~ oblervakirJ 11
-.. Aid 111e crift tnmmllled .... Afire to Mar :
celleal" i.at plclln'el upon ludtiw
lkdy Ceremony 'Ille eoft.Jandlng al 1:11 a.m. SUnday
marked • Soriel comebact from the
failure o! Luna II, wblch Western space
•Jl)trla Ajd cruhe!l oo Ille moon In July, ROME (UPI) -An """'1ployed
1919,-'libllo racln& Nell A. Armllron&'a Neapolitan marred celebraliooa;.i the
I.Pollo JI mlulon to the surface. ceolenar)" of Italian unity Sunday by
Luna, II abD -the· flnt Sovld lcyJn& to bum hlmlell lor the third time
opacecnft to touch down In the lunar In two mcmlhe.
landscape since Luna 13 In December, About 30 per'IODI quickly overpow11ed
1'68. the man and put out the llamel. DoclOrl
'!bat wu the heyday ol So91et lunar ex. -Aid he llUffered lint and -deirio
ploritlon, when l!ualan moonshots wen burm cm his band&.
comln& four and five tlma a year and 'Ille lnddeal occurred on !he wblte
Amerb'a prospeda o! wlnnlnl the moon msrble aleJI! o! the Victor Emmanuel
rat"e seemed dim. Memorial oritlie Piuza Veonll minutes
The offlclal T.,. Newa Agency said before Pmldenl Gluoeppe Sar1g1t ar-
Luna'a earth controllen c:oued Ille cralt rived to lay a wreath on Ille tomb o!
down pnlly by remote cootrol of Its Italy'& un1mown lllldier. 'll>e mt1noo1
braking engines which set the silver wu one of RVtral marking the lOOtb an-
Sputnik down in stages like a jack in nlversary of the Italian annuaUon of
reverse. ~ Rome.
'Ille agency plnPoinled ill landing spot _ Police idenllfied the man IS' Glor&lo
In .elenognipbjc coordinates u 0 degrees 7.occolella, 25, a father of six. They said
41 mlnlles south latitude and 56 degrees he doooed hlmlell with 1uoline near
11 minutes east longitude, "in the area of Sanpt'1 realdell:e July 29 and again
the Sea of Fertility." Sept. 11, but wu 1topped by police each
11Luna 16 has started making studies of time before be could set himself on fire.
the moon's surface.'' it said. Police Aid 7.occolella said he wanted to
There was no indication whether the draw IUtation • bia unemployment. but
craft would allempt to ecoop umplea of when olllclaJa found biln a job with a
mooneoil and blast o~ 11ain !or earth. Naplta -company he did DOI Space oources In M-w declined to ven--&bow ap far ..wt.
Hail, Wind Lash Northeast
Warm Weather Making Comeback 'in Most of Nation
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-· ' HjiOllld one minor lldrmJah Sunclay
-• lllarlne batt1llon clalbed with
NCl'lb -and Viet Cooc troops alon& l\ou1e 311nearPhumTaey,1boul 10
mllel from the Vlel!wneoe border, -
four enemy 10ldiers, captund nve others
ud ltlaed five rilles. Two marines were
tilled.
It wu_ not lmmedlateJy disclosed how
many Vletname1e troops were committed
.tn the new drive aimed at destroying
North Vietnamese and -Viel Corti
sanctuaries between . the Bassac aDd -
Mekong rivers, whlch led into South Viet-
nam's fertile Me:kong Delta.
At last report, 13,500 South Vietnamese
troops were operating inside Cambodia • Iloldquarten lllld Ille marlnel tilled . -.
STORE HOURS 10 A.M. to 10 P.M.
c::m..-?
A_.. ..... ilU.P U r..•--~-IW ...... C--..'--."""'!""6 •
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2200 HARBOR BL VD C or ncc of w,1,on and Harbor COST A MES
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Ends-lier T ~ U.S. Trip
NEW YORK (AP ) -Israeli
Premier Goldi Meir new
homo today alter a porl1q ap-
peal to Amerk:aa Jews lo tu~
port P'OFlml of rtoancial aid
lor her country~
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•
Manday, Stpttmbtf· 21, 1970 DAILY Pllllf f •
:·.l.l~~ial -Rio~ Q~~~ed
. . .Why Do You
Shots, Tear .Gas . Eir.ed a.t. Negroes -~,-Havf A Poor . -.
'"rHlllODAU X, La. (UPI)-"• Uttl;lletll Wl>UAcl on'h;,:_called _;?.;~l p .Tblboclaux Vocabulary?
Police_ uaed ?BM and fired ' cheek'"duril)8_1helracees, but" police !"illn':'in tl)e peace.-·
waminC sllot.sJrlto.the air Sun-there were no otber injuries, . Harang. declared. a sta~ ol A noted.publilher In Chicago re.
day . night to disperse UIO polft ~t to the College civil ernergeocy • lm~ veals ii ·remarkably effective
. 8 9 p.m. to ~ a.m. curfew method for' building a workmc
Negroes when a car ftill of Inn n1~ht clu~. a!ter hearing Saturday foll°"<inl the flrat knowledge of over 2,000 power.
blacks· trlec:J "to charge the of-repqrts the · bu1ld1ng was on nl&ht of.street tltht.lng. • i> fut, upres.SIYe wordl qulckly
flctrs. police $aid.\ It marked fire ,. Mclaftcon said. When Thirty-eighi . perlOns wtre and easilX. •
"The only lhlnJ t h a '
. matches your outpouring of
love and devotion 1 .. Israel ls Auto 'f alk$ ~ ktye and ~votion of lht
uie third co'.nsecutive night of they got there, there was no arrested Saturday .night, most Peopie unable to e1press them·
racial trouble. fire , Melancon s a: i d . When of them for violating the selves ef~ectlvely . oft.en . ~
The lncldenl occ Jed near a gathered. curfew But police aaid the many business . and aoclal op.
At lei st 30 persons were at-night' Pa'Ssed quieUy. portunlties. ~rs who uae their
1sraeJ1 for you," s11o told • To Resume night i:lub Were street fighting rested in the [racas, most of The curfew was reduced to vocabulary unprqperly, subject
involvin1 ,150 blacks and them yJ)ung blacks. midnight .lo 4 ._.m. b e f Ore themselv~s to_ ridicule and c•~
dinner crowd ot 3,000 at the
New Yc:rt Hilton Hotel Sunday
whites broke out Friday. ' . MaJQr Warren Harang said tr6uble broie out Sunday others to misundentand what
· .Police Chief Earl Melancon Sheftff's deputies from six night. · · . they mean.
night. On Tuesday said one. white man suffered ·. parishes (counties) as well as Thibodaux JS located in We need a ~ vocabulary.
staa troopers and. polict from I..aP'ourche Parilh· in largely says _the. publisher, to undtr-
nearby Morgan City were FrenCh South L 0 11 1 s I a n a . stand more clea~ly w~t wt rtad "If we do not fight for our
,.... Vf'l ,...,..... lr<edom and for our safely, DETROIT (AP) -Top ol-
nobody else ~,. she said. ficials of the United Auto
.. We have seen loo many Uttle Workers returned to Delroit
Direc t Ballot
Eff.ort Vow.ec,l ·-1
. . and hear. to think With sreater
LIGHTER THAN AIR ADVENTURE UNDER WAY
Roel •nd Pemtl•, M•lcom W 'FrH Life' Solirint
a
people in other countries .-discover this bitter trulb too today ~ • prepare for a
late." / resumption of contract talks WAs'HINGToN (AP)
BUHoon Adventure Beg!ns
The $20-a-plate dinner was With: strikebound Ge n~e r a I Senate leaders looked ~y
sponsored by the -United Motors Corp. toward making another at·
Jllwiah Appel l and the Israel The negotiations are to tempt to force a vote on a con-
n--... ,_ ... -i ... uon.. -Another resume Tuesday, the start or st1·wuonal a-•-•-·nt lo i"unk
-...-"'11....-the second week of the strike. """...,,..><I 40,000 penons in · 19 other the ElectOral College in ravQr :
cities heard Mrs. Meir'• ·~ There have been ao national-of the direct ·election of
-peA IV Ii-clOsecl c-1 r c u 1 t level -•egotiat.ions -since OOn-..id c. · tracts t:i,tJween GM and the pre31 en~. . ,
EAST · HAMPTON, N. Y. paslure in this Long Island television. ; ~ UAW expired' at midnight 18St Democratic. 'Leader Mike
, I AP) -With champagne comm u n i t y the three The 72·ye•~~ 1 1 ~1 e 11 Monday and the strike by_ MaD1field had said a second
he f balloonists broke open •cham-lea~er, who arrived in. the 34-4,000 auto workers began. aUempt to end debate tod1y
toasts and p ers rom a pagne and christened their Uruted .states. ~ednesday for Leonard 'lloodcocli: .. pres.i-on lhe proposal would dep\!lld
thousand spectators. th'ree craft, "The Free Life." talks Wllh ~r.es1de!"t Ni~on.and dent of the UAW, told a na-on whether a -new attempt .
adventurers have set off in a Brighton. said he saw no other adm!rustration officials, tiooal television audience su11-would be more successful than
beautiful balloon on a 3,000-reason why the flight should appeared l~d as she SJ>:Oke. __ d;a~y~th~a~t~the!re;~is~"no=-·~q:ui~c~k_Ja~n~el~rort:_l:u:L~Tbur::od:•~y~, whi::·:cb~~~~~~~ mile flight to "somewhere in not succeed but declined to At one pomt she took time to settlement in view." failed.
Franct.'' predict where they might land. ext~nd the sympathy ol her
The attempt at the first ''We'll take an y inch of land na~ion ~ the people of
balloon crossing of the Allan-we ·can get," he said. oe,i,gbbor~ng ~ord~n. .
tic began at 1:40 p.m. Sunda y Jr sue<:essful. the flight will ~e situation 1;', Jordan 1~ a
and by the time dusk fell the eclipse the present balloon ~;rrible tragedy, she satd.
craft had noated east to the distance record of 1,896 miles The people of Israel feel ~or
vicinity of Boston. set by -an eight-fl)ln German the. people of Jordan, ~Ith
Making the flight are Rod team in 1914 as well aS mark their thousands or casualties.
Anderson, 32, a New York the first ma~ned transaUantic "111ey don't, fear u~; Now
commodities broker: his wife. balloon crossing. they fe~ a f~iendly . Ar,ab
television actress Pam e 1 a There have been severil country, she s~id, alluding to
Brown, 28: and Malcolm unsuccessful attempts at reports tha~ Sy~a. had entered
Brighton, 32. of Farnham. transatlantic balloon c~sing, t~e Jordanian. civil wa~~ ~e
England-, -a-n-aeronautical -beginrling ln-.1873rln-1968,-tw~__!>f. PalestuUa!i gs~ ~rd ._ _ engine~r and a ma t e u i: Canadians g~ 500 .mi!_es east mee~W;r ~r ~~~~~~ JewiS~
balloorust. of Nova Scolta, then ran out of 1 d th l h a "fl)'l"ng
Tb "d · J"I lb 12 ·d · ea er~ a se w s ey r1 e in a tr oo. Y· • win . ho l I' better" after her
foot fiberglass gondola swung The present flight is ex· lal~e ~h·~esi(ienl Nixon and
beneat the a O -f o o t -h i g h , peeled to take from 6 to 16 Se :1 f ~l William
helium-filled balloon that is a days. depending upon the · R ere ry 0 e
brilliant orarui:e topped by weather. For supplies, The ogers.
yellow and white stripes. Free Life carries bottles of
Hundreds of persons waited champagne and c o·g n a c .
through the night for the assorted food, a guitar. S1,i
scheduled ascent at dawn but pounds of books, survival
the lift~U was delayed lo packs. cameras, water, a
await favorable winds. portable toilet. sandbags and a
Before leaving from a cow life raft. '" •
'
Police Chiers Had It;
Quits Strife-torn City
U.S. Aides
Fear Latin
Red Bloc .
WASHINGTON (AP)
. ' . . . . .. . '
Enjoy the thrill
/Ji of an Old Faohloned
. LogRid&-
Knoll'• neweet
atlr.aetion.
11'1 Exeitinw !
clarity and logic, and to e:s:preM
ourselves more effectiv~ly whe11
we speak or write. A command
of words instills confidence i.n
one's ability to ~k convinc·
ingly and impress others. with
one's knowledg~ and u.nderstand-
ing.
To-acquaint-dhe readers ot
lhis paper with the easf·to-
follow rUIPs ·1or developing !.
large vocabulary, the publisherir
offer their entire ~ on 10
days fret trial. 'Send your name,
address, and tip code to:
Vocabulary Studies, 135 Dlversey
Parkway, Dept. :Jlj>9l9, Ckicego,
UL 60614. A postcard will do.
' CAIRO, Ill. (AP)
Asserting that the community
has been bllgh!ed by ''fear.
repression and economic pro-
blems," lhe 29-year-old police
chief or this racially troubled
city of 10,000 says he i! quil-
ting.
resignation would take effect.
Burke submitted his resign&·
tion Saturday night.-The city
has had three police chiefs in
I~ months.
American officials view the
Chile8.n election of Marxist
Salvador Allende as marking
the possible start of a large
Latin American Comn'iunist
bloc ol nations.
In addition to Chile. orficlals
mentioned Peru, ArgenUna
and Bolivia 1s candidates for
Communist domination.
~ a.~-Benz <Wer.l\lliles·
Of twiSffiig 6d roadS. ~ .
Roy Burke, who became
chief of the 17-man force
aboOt seven months ago. was
• incommunicado Sunday night
as scattered reports of gunfire
in both white and black
neighborhoods reached the
police station. There were no
reports of injury and no ar·
rests.
It was not known when the
Nixon Appeals . .
To Eclucalors
Burke fiaid he could uo
longer wor~ among citizens
who "advocate vi o 1 enc e,
hatred and animosity to their
fellow men.'' He came to
Cairo in February alter serv-
ing as police chief for two
years at Winthrop, Maine.
· "ln the 7 ~ moolha I've been
here, every day I prepare for
racial eonfrontatton." he said.
"This is lhe only city in the
world that's like that."
He blamed both whites and
blacks for contributing to Uie
frequent racial violence.
In his Jetter of resignation,
Burke praised Cairo police of.
WASHING'l'ON <AP) flcers for "withstanding
President Nixoa has senl a ·· bullelS, abuses, arsonists and
personal letter to nearly 1,000 nuls.''
college pres.idents and ad-But he criticized state of-
ministrators urging them to ficials for their "failure to
enforce "the rule or reason'" answer pleas for aid to law en-
rather tha" the "rule of force" forcement. '' At a recent City
on the nation's campuses. Council meeting Burke related
The letter, released b~ the that twice in recent weeks he
White House Sunday. includes had rad~ state police for ·
a CWY or a New York reinforcements as r a c i a I
University professor's recently tenkions rose, but was refused
lJUblished article which uses heJp, .
many of the same argumt11ts He said violen~ and tension
Nixon stated at Kansas State had brought the town '"near
University last Wednesday on economic bankruptcy .•. A lot
how to maintain campus of people are leaving and this
order. means a loss of taxes.
:Wild Spy Case
Missile Mailed to Moscow
DUS.SELDORF. Germany
(UPI) -Three West GennaM
went on trial today for steal-
ilg an Amer lea n -m • d t
Sidewinder missile aMI shii>
ping It lo Moscow by 1ir
freight
The bltarre spy case alleg·
ectly . took place lhe ni1ht o(
Oct. 2l, 1167, when the th""
men-cut lheir way into the
armory of the Neubu rg LuCt-
warfe Bast, removed the Side-
winder from the armory on •
wheelbarrow. and hauled it
.t\vay In lhelr auto.
knocked out lbe back wi•dow
ud let it stick through
covel'ed, only with a nig. No
one, i n c I u d i n 1 ittendants
where they stopped ·tor B&SO-
line, noticed.
The trio then dismantled the
rockeL jllnd sent it to M09COw
by air freight at a cost of
$83.81, accofdinl lo the in-
dictment.
An asSessment of Allende's
Impact on Latin affair• Clme
from a high American official
who briefed Midwestern
publishers, edlton and broad-
casters in Chicago. The White
House-0rgani:ied backgrounder
was presented Wednesday, bul
ground rules prevented re-
lease of what was said until
the weekend.
Not"once around the block fu light traffic!'
Although Presidenl Nixon
was involved in some brief·
ings, ~ we not on hand for
the Allende analysis. ·
Allende failed to get 1 clear
popular-vote majority in the
Chilean election, but his elec-
tion by the Chilean Congress,
with whom the decision rests,
was expected by the American
officials.
Over 1 ,periCld of years,
Allende will probably establish
a Communist government of
some sort ~reby bringing
Communism 1cross l h e
hemisphere from I s o I 1 t id
Cuba to a major inland nation,
accordinc to officials.
Passengers
Get Airport
Arms ,'Check
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
search tor we•PoM In the
hand luggago or passengen
boarding international nights
is undtr way at Washington.
Ne"!" York and Ne~ Orieans
and wil l be e1panded to 33
major U.S. airports by next
week.
The TreallUf)' Deportment
planned to 1dd 10 airport& to
the list today and the rest. next
week, a 1pokesm1n uld. The
program Is aimed a t
thwarting hijacking of
overseas fiigh1S.
"The new program will In-
clude instructiom to customs
Inspectors &o examine tht
hand baggage of outbound
passengers 1nd, whenever a~
W £ I UILD our automobiles to
perform under stress. To
take on roads that have pot·
holes for pavement and elbqws for .
curves.
1he kind of roads that can be
found in G'crmany's Black forest
where we test our cars.
But you can probably find a road ·
like that near you. And that's where
you should head if you really weint
·to find out what a Mercedes-Benz is
all about.
Yet, when you're try ins to squeeze
into a tight -parkins spot, you can
s pin the wheel around, lock·to-lock,
in three tums·eftorLlcssly.
American car provides four d isc-
brakes as standard...,..nd that's a two
passenger model, not 1 full-sized
sedan.
Our e.nsineCrs call this .'!progrcs: ..
· siveassistance."The moi-e ~t you ·£n,h.e: fragile u a._rock
need in I.hf; steerjna. the·(l'lote you , o_a"r overhead cam ensinc can
get. J;l~t wt;. don't qverdo it. You11 • · cr'tiik at RPM leVC:l5 that leave'com·
~e~11et the feeling that you're 1>Cfitots·noa1ins their valves in dis·
twirling a telephone dial instead of · ·belit!r.: .: .~
steering a car. ., Bearings are delicately niacfllned
• -to·wittiin ·4/10,000thl ' Of a n· inth .... Pis·
Four·dl~'btakes Ions and Connecting roi:ls a'rC pain·
T~·braklfi are built to give you a' St11.kii1gly miitched aOd tialiinCe<I.
lndepe.nde:nt suapen1lon controlled, atrai&ht stop instead of -An·d cacli· engine· is benc~·tested
You'll find our fully independent tha't ofhei-kind. Even When you stop f8r it Jcasf~ min~tes. ·: · .
racing-type suspension lets you ft-short from high speed (a nice way ·.: -. ~ <id"r·&:Driver ci1ims· that a Me~
nesse your way through those tricky to say "panic stop")., ccdes·Bcnz "will whistle across coun·
bends and switchbacks. We put rour massive disc brakes try at aver1ge speeds simply beyond
Not plow throu&h tbem: on every Mercedes-Benz. Standard 1hc !'Calm of comprehension for the
Our rear axle is articul1ted. It ·· eq~ipiO~nt. No Options .. Only one average American driver." ~
flexes so each rear w'heef can move
up and down independently o[ the
other-Aust as the; front wheels do.
Soats up the bumps and dampens
the bouncing.
' Taut steering
Our optional power steerins is.'
verypolitG.It lets-'youdrive. Jtdoesn'.t .
d rive you. It's i&aut and responsive,
without the usual inch or two, of
sloppy play .• You can feel the wbeelS
tractina, even.at high speeds. 1 ·,
• • ·t.
I
• " ... .,
I
•
•
~ M~rtcdtJ·l'lt": 11/(J SE. a .S·fN'lltl!pr,
flld•l,.i«ttd pt r/OrntfllU• JU.II.
.;·-~
••
•
•
Which docs_n'.t s¥1'J'rise µs ·~ alt.
We don't build ca.n for the. "aftr-
ase" American driver.
Ask your dealer for a test drive.
Judae !or yourself. ·
Newbrochuns
You can aet a brochure that will
give' you more details about Mcree-·
des-Benz 1utomobiles. Ju.at send 'tn ·
,
this coupon. · .
If you're plannin1· a European
trip. check the box. to see how much·
you can save with our ovencas de-
livery plan.
But the best thing you ~ do.;..:
visit oM· of our showrooms. Our '
representati"(C will be stad. .to tell
you about any of OW' sixteen. models.
'Andbe·i\aretotabdaattestdrlft. -
0.,....,.,. ,., ... ._ .... ,,, __ ---..
--· _....._. . r--------------·;
I ® .n ~l .mon1, Inc. I
120 W, W•rt1•r Av•,
I s."'' "''"' C1lif. 92 101 . I I ~ ,.__ MIMI -J"CN!' fltl1-c:o1or brocb1an 111 I I w MM::•• 11coa 8*0r cwi. · · I
I o na.. lndudc. • ~a.v GWde I ~ to Eut'OP'ml O.livay. I · · I IN.JM ····-·, •. I
I A1'14fu1 • · .&.
lc1<7 •,.;· "1
I Zip T~ "" .1. L--------.~-.---~..J
' . ' ...
I .
' .. I
' -.
..
' .
propriate, sus pected in -1•
divlduals will be 1tearched for lffi
instrument& of plr11cy or ., Sleinons Imports,, Inc. 120 W. Warner Avcnue,Santa_Ana.Gallfornia 921rt1PhCll\e:714-546411&' • ... _, . "' .. . ~ .. ..
•
Moordll\f to the. charges,
lbe tltne·foot missile was too loll..lo flt Ill the car IO they
Tht three w e r e one.ti~
Luftwaffe Starfi1hter pilot..
Wolf·Dietbard Knoppe, 3 4 .
i.rchitect PrBftz Ramminger.
39, and locksmith Josef
Unow:skl , 4t. 1lley wm ar·
rested 1 year after the ln·
cldenl allqedly took pllOO.
aabota1e," the departmentj ,
18ld. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
•
/J I • )
. -
-· ~
•
~
D&-0,Y PILOT Ja)ITORIAL PAGE'
•
Marine ." 'Cooperation
Marine Corps fame and much of its esprit de corps
reata on incomparable bravery in taking and holding
beaches In wartime against heavy odds ~ and at great
cost of life.
The corps is not noted for gi'f'ing up beaches, once
taken.
Nevertheless, tbe 1'1arinc Corps last week did just
that. Reluclantlr, yes, but it i'V• up to California pub-
lic use 3.5 mile~ of beachfront at Camp Pendleton.
largest milit&ry installation in the world. The lease will
be for 25 year>.
Originally the Alarines offered only 1.5 miles of
beach for a five-year period. But with some·27 miles of
beach under Camp Pendleton control, this' seemed a
niggardly com:ession -and also uneconomic in terms
of state investment in 'f>Ublic facilities at the high bluffs
ar~ of San Ono!re.
The stlrprise aMouncement of the wel come news,
after months of deadl°'k, came.at. an-embarrassing
time for the newly·seated Congressman from the dis·
trict, John G. Schmitz of Tustin.
Congreasman.Alpbonzo Bell-(R·Los Angeles),-~.hose__
.district 1acludes the crowded beaches from Malibu to
the Palos VerdeS Peninsula. played a particularly ac·
tive role in supporting efforts of the State Parks Divi·
sion to get _some Camp Pendleton beach for p\lblic use.
Schmitz, a Marine-rt.serve officer. had just issued cl
petulant blast at Bell, a veteran Congressman a nd fel·
low Republican. for "grandstanding interference" in the
affairs of Schmitz' district when the agreement was an·
nounced.
Sen. George Murphy, in helping the state-Marine Corps
negotiations...succeed.
_Mott was also high in his praise of the cooperati\je
atlitude of the Marine Cqrps, which had earlier been
reported as strained alid negative.
And Mott had further praise for Gov. Ronald
neagan and President Nixon who, along with Senator
Murphy, took a "keen interest" in the issue.
Now it's up to the Legislature to at>propriate the
funds needed to provide the water, sarutary facilities
and1access needed to ·give the public the run benefit Qf
a fine new strand of beach in a state becom!ng starved
for such recreational assets. ·
Leg Watchers Prevail
Women's Wear Daily, influential trade magazine
or the clothing industry, 'bas a young publisher who set
out this year to end the mini-skirt fashion and put
across the below-the.knee midi skirt. And induce a
bonanza for the women's clothiers.
. fH he California -Poll-is a-reliable--indicator;-t;be----1
publisher it; headed for a major setback -and a lot o(
women's wear stores for a financial bath. By large
majorities, California women and men opt for the mini.
The womeq are saying they either_won't buy any
fall clothes at all or will go where they need to go to
find 1he mini skirts and dresses they prefer.
State Parks Director \Villiam Penn Mott had words
of praise for the. behind-the.scenes work of Cal iforipa
For every one man who goes for the midi. the poll
found, eight others prefer the mini. And the women ap-
pear to still favor liberation of the leg, too. For the time
being, at least, it's sti ll the age of the leg watcher. The
next test comes when the weather gets colder. ~w come on, lady. How did you know I wiu a US 1ecurity manhalr
· Red .(;Jaine•~· Are. Supplging Arms
' '
Gue r r illas ' Secret Allies
WASHINGTON-In their efforts to re-
ipil< tbt Mlddle Eut crisis, the Pale1Un.
ian prri.DIS hive enlisted two powerful,
-aUiel -Red Cllilll ud lroq., ,.,.. Clineat,. .ac. •
Maryland's criminal laws Rt a $1,000
tine and a year in jail for "any willfully
false ... entry" on such·statements by a
candidate or his treasurer. More im·
portant, a conviction would bar Beall
from public office for foor years. conlillC to illtelll. eUort. M 111en\! hi the . Middle East -::.r~ha~: have aouahf. to whip Up the Aribs against 1,'HIS COLUMN has c o n c I u d e d ,
tbt iuerrlllas both ~rs\·· ·• ~ •. however,thatBiall1a9iolationwasmore
'"_,..., Ir-. Chi~ · ' °7' · ' . ·. '· • a sloppy dl.si-egard for M.af)'"~'s f1ir ...... ......, -FOOl'NOTE: President ~llOD has re· elecUon Jaws than an ac.tual intent to :°1y~deli'= je¢ed '· IU&leilloil lbat the .U.S. Jl"blish , delraud. Another copy oh .Ille form In
abipnentltotbePer. re<:onn81SSIPl'e photos proving that tht ··question bears an autiientic Beall
slan Gulf port of Bas-Egyptiana violatedJhe cease-fire. During aignature. ·
ra, Where the Ir· ~e 1•~CUban cri:8i&. 'the !J:S. backed up ; This authentic form waS Hied with
aqil have turned ~~ta"!~ Prb~ 'dmeasNmg showe c rel Maryland . authorities but · was tern·
them over to the PalesUnius. .,.~grat'""'· esa tnt axon, . ever' porarily lost. When Maryland;~tary
InteWaence reports allo claim that 1t " deaded. to keep the detalled evidence of of state demanded • COP}' of\1'ie filing,
1eut two ~ of Chinae artn$',. ~ violatklns~under wraps. BeaH's name was clUDl.!lily fated oo the
ban been fJOwn dlred.ly lnto ~ Jorda-In this way, he hoped to avoid a copy_ .
nlin capltal~of Amman, riglit Under King showdown with the Soviets and Egyptians
Hussein's nose, lo bolster the guerrillas that might have broken up the negotia-REACHED AT ms offioe in Cum-
in thtir clashes with Jordanian troops. lions. 'llte secret ~tos were fl_own ou.t to berland, Md .. Getry conctded thit Beall
San Clemente for his personal mspect1on. ·-was not in Cun1berland . when hit name
RADICAL PALESTINIAN leaden, i~
.eluding the Popular Front's George Hal>-.
b1tsh, have been reported meeting with
Chinese and Iraqui contacts in Bagdad,
the Iraqi capiLal. One report sugg'ests that
Lhe QUnese and Iraqis may ·even have
helped to plot the recent airplaae hi·
jackings.
The Chinese, apparently. are courting
Arab guerrillas in an attempl to . coun·
Leract Soviet influence with Arab
governments. Clearly, the Chinese would
like to thwart the Soviet-American peace
He remarked to inlimales afterward that was signed to the replacement roT,!· ''In
some of the pictures weren't.as clear-cut all probability, J signed his name," .said
as he had expected. Cretty. "I( I did sign it, it was with
REP. J. GLENN BEAU., JR., who is Bealfs approval."
challenging Joe Tydings for his Senate Beall, reached on Capitol Hill, sa id: "l
seat in P..1aryla nd, may be in trouble over may have said go ahead and sign ii."
a forged signature. · ' Both men insisted tbere was nothing
In 1968, Beall auth orized his trea.c;urer siniste r in the fakery. However, an
Gorman Getty, to forge his nanie on a~ authentic signature is required by law.
official campaign report Getty · s Footnote . Beall. like many con-
socretary, Angela Senkbeil, notarized the gressmen, has been using some of his
phony signature even though Beall was in government-paid staff to work on his
another cit,)' al the time. campaign.
'
Draft: Students Can Relax
WASHINGTON -. College students WI
safely relax 11 far as any changes being
m1de in drift dtfenne.nt this academic
year.
There ian't the remotea1. likelihood of
this Concress; Which e:.:pires at the-clOSt
of this election year, doing anything
about the hiCbl1" comoversial draft J1w.
'Mlat tennin1tes next June 30. But
legi11iUng on this dynamite.loaded issue
Is belnf left to the new Congress (112nd l
that convenes early in January.
Whit it is likely to do Is wholly con~
jtctunl. tt all depends oo the mak~p of
the new CongrtlS. the mood and temper
or the country. what the Nixon
Admtniatratioo will propose. and other
facton. ·
So college students are definitely
1ssured of unchanged draft deferment u........,.. UU. oc:ademic year.
Aft« that ~ls .. the lap o/ the gods.
PRESIDENT NIXON does h a v e
a11thoritr tmder tht existing act to hall
def«menl, for college studenls. But
there ii uUtrly no chance of his using the
power. If be dkin't invoke it before the
start of lbe academic year, he "'iii
--·W-
Mooday, ~!ember 21, ,1970
2'M edltorlol -of th< Doilf Pilot -lo m/orm and 1lim-"'4tc n'ildm btl prtrlflring 1hfr NtCIPIP""• opinions and com-
rnntary °" eoplci oJ inttrtsl
olld 1ignljaftce, bp providing a
/o""" /Of' Ille ti:prtulo.n of .. , ,_. oplft/Otu, and bv
prtmUiwQ t1ll dluimc ~lew,,.n.i. uf 1o1......i .... ,,,.,.
ond ~ "" lo!ll<I o/ th•
clap.
Robert "N. Wnd, Publi1be•
•
,-• , ' •
Allen-Gol48mith
' "
emphatically noc. do so now.
As far as this Congress is concerned.
what is in tQe works on the draft is 11
series of closed door hearings by the
House Anned Services subcommittee 1111
the draft, headed by Rep. F. Edward
J{ebert, D-La.
They are slated to-start Sept. 21. The
avowed purpose is to •·gather" C::ata and
iNormation for serious legislating next
year.
Only members of Congress and Pen·
tacon authorities dealing with military
manpower wiU be heard by the Hebert
committee. The panel is see king the
views aiia tecommendatiOM of fellow
legislators and Pentagon experts who
ha\•e specific "contributions" to make
regarding the draft.
ALL OTHERS arc bc.lng expressly ex-
cluded.
"Next year," said a committee
spokesman. "wide open hearings w\11 be
conducted. Thf. public as well as officials
will be heard. But those private hearings
arc for the bcncJit · of ~omn1illee
members. The hcaringl'i·are i he nature
of sound ings of official sc nli ·nt on the
draft and changes to bt 1nadc -lf an)'.
Quotes
Edvard H11mbro, Norway's cltie.f UN
delea:ate on Callfornil &our -"Rea l
peace means much more UJan 010
absence of force ... ii rneans conlldenct"
of collaborttlion for commorl aims In good
fatlh klr all nalloiy."
F.dmultd llurlbuU , Vi salia -"Violence
Comes trom lho~ who feel they hil vo
nothing' to osc, but \'iolcnce i:i sc.U·
defeating.-.-,
'l'hey are strictly preparatory lor lu\1-
sca\e proceedings next year.''
Still undecided is whether the su b-
commitl ce will make a public report on
ils upcoming closed door hearings.
Sen. John Stenn is, ()..Miss., chainnan of
the Senate Armed Servi«s Committee.
told this column he still hopes to hold
some hearings on the draft this year. But
he did not say when.
He also conceded the chances for .such
hearings are doubtful.
"I WANT TO HOLD hearings," said
Stennis. "but the Senate is so far behind
on urgent legislation that it is very ques·
tionable when we can rind the ti me for
hearings. It is extremely difficult to get
senators to attend such sessions under
conditions that now prevail. They just
have too many other more pressing mat·
ters to take care of."
Uppermost among these Is t h e
November 3 elect.ion. Until that is out or
the way, neither the House nor the Senate
is going to do anythlng about the draft.
And that means nothing will be done to
tamper In any way with defeunent for
collcgt students.
By Robtrt S. Allen
and Joba A. Goldsmith
Dear
Gloom y
.Cns:
In th< Mlddk East. neaou1n !el·
lo"'·s make strange politics.
-A. R. V.
T~l\ ftflil'9 .-.tlll<h "'"'rt' •'""' net
llH-tttl ;il. IMM • IPMI M ... llfft', S ...
l'lllf 119t -.,., " OltMI~ Gift. O.llf ''"'·
I
'Human
Nature.' ,
It's Called
fDuring his oocatiun, we are Te·
printing &eltclions Jrom Mr. Hanis'
latest collection of columm in book
form, "Leaving the Surface.")
• The Qne cliche 1 cannot btai: above all
others i.s that "human nature doesn't
change."" I am sure that is what one can-
nibal said to the other cannibal, y,·hen
some daring soul propoaed that they stop -
eating: people. ·
We use this cliche I! an e.z.cuse for not
r;naking ourselves
better, and the world
better. But we don 'L
really believe it. As
Professor John Platt
points out in his
book, "The Step lo
Man," all ou r vast
educational activities
would be absurd if
we actually though t
there was no possi-
bility of changing hum an nature.
THIS THING CALLED ' ' h u m a n
nature," as I conceive il, is like a
musical instrument -say, an organ.
Now, it cannot be changed, in the sense
that the range of notes is given, and we
cannot play the instrument outside that
range. But· the range of pdssibilitles is
large enough so that we can play a nearly
infinite number of melodi es. We can play
harmonies, and we can play dissonances.
We can soothe or deafen. We can play
war marches and love songs and lullabies
and hymns. How we use the instrument
depends largely upon social conditioning,
upon the kind of culturt' we grow up in. It
is not necessary to "change" human
nature in order to get sweeter melodies
out of the orgJR. It is only necessary to
change the aocial order so that more peo-
ple will have an incentive to press the
keys and push the pedals that make
melody, rather than discord.
WE HA VE WITWN us an enormous
range c:I poaibilities for behavior, unlike
.all other animals, which. can only behave
one way In any given situation. Education
is the \Y&y in which sobety selecl!l the
kinds of possibilities it wanU: to en·
courage in young people -but education.
to be effective, cannot be limited to the
schools. "'t must be the whole examplie
society gives to its YOWl& people,
Human nature will always contain
gladness and goedness. enmity and love.
destruction and production. In this se~nSe,
y.•e cannot change, we cannot eliminate,
the possibil ities of evil. But we cu place
a premium on lhe constructive, the
creative. and productive impulses of man
-by rewarding these Jmpulses, and
penalizing the sour notes.
IT IS A DIFFICULT task. and it will
nevtt ~ \\'holly successful , b11t we must
not blame our failUre so far on the fact
that "human nature doesn't change." We
know we can change it for the worse -
a!: some societies have done -and IO we
can change It for Ult better. OUr fint
s1ep is to agree upon what klnd cf people
\\•e want to have ; and, as in most ihinas,
the first step is half the distance.
Sage Remark -
n.1er Pal1c, TII., Tinin: "A s11c
remark printed in a local . . . bulle_tln
arouses deep thoughL ll said: 'A child
cannot read the Bible' 11 5Cbool, bul
It can be! read in iw-lloo.1 " ~
M u·rphy-~unne y ~
Close Party R ae ~
California's U.S. Senate race is a good,
old fashioned, close Wssk bet~·een · the
l\\'O m a j o r parties and the two major
ideologies -the so-called liberal and the
. moderate conservative. Tht George
Murphy, John Tunney type of contest, of
course, is being duplicated in many parts
of the nation.
In three states, however, there are
quite interesting three-way contests, in-
volving no major third parties, but very
much involving independent conservative
candidal.e$ running on their own against
organll.ed oppOsition. •
As Russell Kirk, nationally syndicated
poliUcal commentator, has written, it has
been a long time since "any 1ea.tleman
quite independent of the two big polJUcal
parties" has sat in the U.S. Senate. 'lbere
ha ve been the switclH>vers such a11 Morse
and Thunnond, but they still owe
allegianc~ to a national politic a I
organiiaUon,.~lbeil a new one for them.
And albeit 'they don't alwl)'.S take· too
\\'ell to the new harness.
.NOW, HOWEVER, as Kirk: points out,
~nator Harry .F. Byrd Jr. o[ Virginia,
Senator Thomas J. Dodd of Connecticut,
·and Jalnes Buckley of New York have
good fighting chances of defeating both
their Republican and Democratic op-
ponents, and winning tolo spots in the
Upper House.
Buckley is the only one or the thret
campaigning under a par\y label. It is tl1t:'
so-caned "little" Conservative Party in
New York, Two yurs ago, as practically
a politkal no-name, Buckley pulled a
million votes ih the raee for the Senate.
Today·he is far better knowil.
Buckley's opponents are Democratic
Representltive Richard ottin1er, an
' 111 ~,.,, . .,..;,,
ullni liberal; and incumbent Senator
Charles Goodell who tries to make Qt..
Unger look like a hard-shell ructionary.
The Buckley chances are iffy. He lacks
the bigrcampalgn fund and organization.
but a lot of dissatisfied Republicans and
conservative Democi-alll are becomln&
more and more interested1 and .they say
that quite an element in the blue collir
area is moving to him as the .only anti·
radical candidate.
BECAUSE T H E Virginia Democratic
Party has been taken over by the
Hberals, Harry Byrd didn't even try for
its nomination this year. The· magic of
the. family name ·u strong, and Byrd's
personal lollowing Is lmmeme: Ind not
so party-milidfa ·as it is loyal to him.
He.'s 1 good bet for a return ticket.
Senator Dodd dl~»llyrd did, ·.-i.1
to drop .Democratic party ties and run as
an ind,ependent. JU. Republican 111ct
DemocraUc opponentl are liberal and
ultra-liberal in that order. And the after
effects of his censurt by Senate col·
league.t do not aetm to have hurt him
with most of his constituents. Labor ltlll
love.t him, observers 11y.
If any of that men does win a Senate
seat he'll enjoy aome rare privUqea.
He'll be his own' Minority Ltadtr and
Whip, and he c111 aay what he. feela like
uying without fear ol reaction 1rom bis
party hierarchy.
A lot of mtn in politics would opt for
lhat.
CllJforaia Featve Strviet'
Owner Wasn't Negligent
A ruined, tumbledown old houae was a
sad sight, but children liked to play there.
One lhrow Tommy's -ball 1tove blib
into an open window. •
Tommy went throuih a broken door
after it, but on the second Ooor he trip.
ped ind fell out of the window.
Through his parents, Tommy sued,
claiming that the owners had been
ne(lifent ud lhouJd ban the old house
in safer condition. .:i · _ -
The city had 1lread1 toDdemned the
house, dtclarin' it a nui9nce, and IChed·
uled it for the iron ball.
HAD 'fllE OWNER been ne(IJpnt! H•
had Jocked the doors, botrded the win.
dow s, and checked it from Urne to timt.,
But younpters could and would break in.
No, the owner had not been nqlif"1I,
and Tommy could not recovtr damaees.
The owner had taken reasonable steps:
to keep thlldren out.
Had he left the place open and-UnfUlf'd..
ed and thus created a danaeroua trap,
the owner mi&h& Nve created 111 "at·
tractive nulsanct" for clUJdren. TbeD he
would have been liable. • °""'" who !mow that younplen tr ..
pw -lhtlr lllld DIUll IW rwonablt steps lo ... tlllt Ibey ue not llijinl.
'nley .need not "childproof" It. bu\ must
tee) Jt reuonably Ille.
NO O'llNElt 1illO knows ol tmpooers
can do thlll(J lnteotionall,y to injure them,
Ji.kt •ttinc IPriDI' iuna or traps.
On the other hlod, children have a leg11
duty to )ook out for lhtmselves. The older
the child, the more the law expects ol
him. •
For Instance, some younpt.ers went to
play In a big stable while the finner wu
away. 'l'bouih they bid IOIJldimes playod
Ihm Wbell· tbt farmer WU -. Ibey
hid never been allowed to when he wu
away.' On th is day a barn door fell off
Ju tTlcb Ind hurt the boys. Wiien they
SUtd, they found that 111 trespassers they
had no right to be on the land, Ind, tho
court Aid, the farmer had m 'duty lo pa~
them am.,... ·
Nole: C.UJornlo i.a.y,,, olfcr thfJ
column 10 ~ mo~ knoio about ottr
Jaaa1.
.-----,,---•• Gee ... e -------~
Dear Geor1e:
YOIB' Sidewoy1 Th11kt1Jr mlly
zends me. (Where, I'm not tore.)
How do you IOlve your Own Jll'Oo
blemll I cer1alnly would UM to
know the name ~ your
psychl1trl.!t •
BEFUDDLED
Dear B<£iiilalt<I:
~. J don't Ult a
Pl)'clliattlst -l tried one, but
ht would1't allow me en tbt couch.
I -t phmolollll H• 11111 pulhes
lho litlle bumpo on my head WIUI
evcrythln& -my acala.
"
•
•
' ..
•• ' .
f
I
1
..
.....
Monday, Stptep!Otr 21, 1970. • DAILV PILOT 7 -;-Sinatra Denies· ·
'U • Governor Signs Flo ck of .flills Casino Th1·eats
-. .
Medal of Honor
Winner Can Split
NO RODEO BRONC, after CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q.
buck.i111 off .a rider. ever ,;What doe,s it mean in a
charged said rider with intent h o s p i l a r w b e n t h e
to do bodily hann, I'm told. Is loodspeakers rep ea ted I Y
ttiat true~ ... OUR NAME broadcast the words 'Code
SACRAMEN'Jl!..,__ (UPI) -rise in the cost or living,•· said policemen and nremen killed --PALM SPRINGS (UPI) comic strip."
Senior ci~ receiving state ·Reagan when be signed the in the line of duty. Frank Sinatra, responding to Las Vegas authorities book-
Id •-th dl~"bled meuure Saturday. -By Assemblyman Eugene cb•""es he threatened a Las ed Waterman for wault with a u=ause ey are ._ The CHP pay hike bill by Chappie. setting admission -•
or on ve11 low inco...,mes will Assemblyman John F. Foran, priorities for undergraduate Vegas casino operator with a deadly weapon, then dropped
ret-eive a federal, $ 7 . Sl (D-San Francisco ). provided students at the state colleges vengeance by "tht mob.1' said the charges. Sinalra had been
moothly Social Security in-$4J million for 8 five percent and university. ,today , "I don'l make threats accused of starting a ruckus
crease under terms of 1 bill salary raise ·when it pas~d -By Assemblyman Charles and l'm not running for re-when he was refused credit at
signed by Gov. Ron a Id the legislature. . \Varren (0-1..os Angeles), pro. election." the casino and a request that
·Reagan. Reagan trimmed the ap-hibiting discrimination on the The singer has maintained stakes be raised from $8,000 to
.... The governor signed the tn· propriaUon to n.s millkln or a basis of sex . Chav' ez Asks ailence ·since the altercatkln at tt6~000 at the baccarat table.
crease, whieh had been vetoed three percent increase. The -By Sen. Gordon Cologne _ C~s Palact Casino Sept. 6 The singer also wa s accused
twice before under his ad-raises are on top or a five per· IR·lndio), appropriatJng $9.25 in which manager Sandford of grabbing Waterman by the
ministration. and Sunday also cent· pay hike granted state million for the State Air Waterman pulled a · gun on throat.
approved a $2.S million salary employes. including the CHP. Resources Board to study New Boycott him. Both George Franklin, Clark
hike for California Highway earlier this year. private and public air pollution ' tn an interview with United County, Nev., d.islrict at-
P<itrol officers. "I slncerely regret that our programs. CA!.EXJCO (AP) _ Cesar Presa JntemaUonal , Sinatra torney, and Sherilf Frank
GAME ~N reports the (irsl Blue'?" A. That's a sig nal But Vern Alexander, presi·. tight fiscal situation will not -By Sen, Donald Grunsky fl!aVes has asked 1 boycott of said, "As for the remarks at· Lamb expressed interest in
mother put to sleep wUh some patifnt ~is suffering a dent of the California ..\ssocia-permit an even largCr in-(R·Watsonville), making it a ~~w•y fod stores because it trlbuted to me relative to the tal king with Sinatra on his
't:hlorofonn during-cbildbirth seizure that might be fatal. tlon of Highway Patrolmen , crease at this lime," said 1nisdemeanor for anyone to' \'Glltinues lo sell nonunion, _m::.:.ob::•_they~~·r_e~•l,,rl_cl_;ly:.__ou_l.,..,.ol_,•-r_et_"_m_to_L_a_s_V_e.:g_as_. __ _
c·h r i s ten e d her baby Such signals vary, though. Hos. charged the three percent Reagan . i n te rr e r e with the tld-p~-ked lettuce. Clulvez says•· pitals al59 use "Dr. Heart," salary increase was not Alexancter said the CUP ministration of ju!tice by !here. will be 1 la~ -~·•en · ~ MwrU$erM~t "A .... •the" sia". , .W. ERE YOU h d ed to k the , ..... .,.. . ,....,. "Ninety nine" aiid in one in· enoug an vow as union would "press for over· parading or picketing in or T tin Rectal Jtc'-\
AWARE a drafted U.S. soldier s!-&nc.<e. "'Paging' .Thom as Legiilature for the full five ride act ion in thC Legislature near a courthouse. str.ike here to supJ>Ori~bis ' ormen g U .
"'ho .gets lhe ~1edal of Honor Gray." • percent raise tha~ was in-for the portion of the bill -By Assemblymen Ernest organiting campaign. ·C>fHemorrhoi·dalTisSUe8
luded · the bill It d b ) d Chavez, chairman of the can be discharged_ al his 0\11n ARGUrt1ENT CONTINUES c in as which was cut by the a . N. r.10 Jey (ft-Sanger. an Unit«! Farm Worke r i
reqiiest anyfime he ch'ooses'! over the veracity or that ori J{inally v.·eit to Reagan's ministration. Chappie pro11iding a S 5 O AFL-Pro tl Rell ed
LOVE AND WAR ,-A ~istorical report !hat French desk. "If necassary, we \Viii !lO lo million Cal-Vet .program for Organil.ing Committee mp Y ev \
•
. _ d :._fishermen_ oo_c.~ht an The senior citizen bill by the courts," he a .. d;;d•;ed:;.·~·~·\~V•;.-..:'c;e~teecra;;:n:;s,;o! .the Vietnam-war CIO, told a crowd of 700 here • ,.. .. , , l ---"..,,=l~n,r.ne~cuent, wl'io 1<1efi 00 enormo"s shar·k -ntao·n'",.n~g~the,._~,-~,~,~,~m~or:v ma t . E-. -tiave-done everyttfng we can an g1v1ng-tfienf first prlOfily Sunday the boyco tt w 8 s -ln --•:-ff dredl of -mnt.-L-:.__. tbiii'-
1 be r h " '"V necessary since Safe"•ay Of· • many C9IM r-... para_... -__,_ herse f ,as a. me~ r o t e headless body of ;rman dress· Tov.•nsend. ([)..Torrance), pro-to gain justifi ed pa y benerits. in enrolling in the $late en/-· r· . 1 . 0 kl d C 1.1 .d 11ve1prompt,tanpon.ryrel1ef to be true in~ cu-. In
'Vomen s L1berahon r-.1ove· cd in metal armor There's no vides that aid recipients get-.. vithout success." leges and university. heicia s in a an : a 1 .. sa\1 from aucb pUn and itchini fact, many doctora, them·
ment. _says our Love and ~rar argument. hoy,·ev~r. over the ting Social Security, a retire-Reagan also signed bills : -By Assemblyman . Robert t Y _would continue to se and actually belpa lhrink •Iv.,~ Pr~pol'Glion lffloe
man J!· ultra-.·conservat1ve. more reeent report 1 hat men! annuily or other income -By Assemblyman Mike . \Y. Cr o 1v n ()).A lameda ). nonu~1on_ le~tuce. ~of blmorrhoidal u. ,...,.1111,..w1 it for their fun ..
Because he frov.1ned on . a. another shark was round to will receive a net grant hike of Cullen ( D-Long Beach l. 1·x-nllovring state funds to be u~ He did not say v.•hen -med b ·'Ila tion • ilieL "D---tion H intment
coed's confession to I h'i !I contain an almost whole up to $7.50 per month on top of empting tuition fees at the to buy safety equipment for \\'Orkers '"'ould strike In the llM9 a& Y ~mme •. ~ ~· 0
d t lh h d of f lmper'.al Val ley to s·•pport the 1 T..ca by dodon an bun· or~.· epartmen at s e ma e reindeer. the Social Security increase state colleges and University Inca! law enforcement o · "
public love in a 24 · bed THE BULL Th e $4 per month authorized ,0'.'..r_c~a'.'.l:ifo:'.'.'."''.::.'..'.'.'°'.'..'_''.:'.h'.'.il'.'.'.d'..:"".:"~"f~_::fi:'.ce'.'.rs::.·:_ _______ :_U::f\:_VOC::...:':,:rg::a::n::i•::in!g..:c::•:::m::pa::::oig:::n::. ---------------------dormit.ery. C01ne on, our L. 0 ea rlier this year by the federal -and W. man is not ultra-con· Portuguese bullfight lasts 1 government. ~rvative. An Italian named mini "1 tels. And thek_IPI or~ug~e~,e The bill will be '"especially Pierto-Lando, the podesta of bu 1 ig Her never ·i s t e u · h I f ] t th' 1. h Thill you knew. But did yoo c p u a ts 1me w en Padua 400 years ago, behead-know how· the Portuguese many of our older citizens are
ed his 01vn ·natural son for f caught in a tight squeeic kissing a· girl in front of bullfighter gets the.._bull out 0 between fixed income and a
onlookers out in the · street. the ring when the"nnrig is over. He runs in six prelty No\v he.('Was u I tr a . con-cows. And lhe bull. a beat servative. ~ romantic, forgets his fresh TF YOU ARE . IORE than 3,9 humility. circles a <:00ple of yea rs old. you were born "d d bl before Samuel Briskman in-limes am1 s_t his a ora e co111s, and then they all boil vented pinkinit shears. · .THE out through the ne<!rcst hole in
FEMALE ISO~fNTACS out-the 1.,.nl\ like sophomores . 1at
number the male insomriiacs the ball.
by three to one. re.~earchres BR IDGE _ A correspondent
l!ay._ . ,AM AOVISEI) ot_•r "teport5 the y,•or\d"$ b es t
LanguaJ?e man erred 11•hen he female bridge player is a
gaJd a di filsl computer y,·as a beautih1I redhead n a med
fellow who counts on his l\1;iry Jane Farell of Beverly
fingers. Hills. Calif. That's plausible'.
Officers If vrl
In Gang Fi~hl
LOS ANGELES (AP I -
Two pol!ce officers 11•ho at-
lempted to break up a gang
fight bel\'leen aboul 3ll l.tex·.
ican-American youths were
treated for cuts and bruises
•fter they were ·pelted Y.'ith
rock! and bottles. authorili:!s
•Said.
Ifs generally understood that
redheads tend lo be the best
bridge players. i( properly
trained.
Y<Hlr ques tions and co1n-
r11cnts are we lcor11ed and
u;i/I be nsed uilicrever
possible iii "Checking Up."
Please ad.dress your 111ail to
L. /of. Boyd, McNauglit Syn-
di cate. I11c. in care of the
DAILY PILOT, Box 1875.
Ne111port Beach, Calif.,
92663
Lo s_t Bo y, 6,
Found Safe
SAN DIEGO I AP) -A 6-
year-old boy who refused to
answer searcher~ in Cleveland
National Forest as they com·
bed a heavily wooded area at
night says 'they taught me in
school not to talk t o
strangers."
Ru t by Sunday morning Carl
Eugene Brantley decided to
respond, ending the !~hour
search.
His parents. Mi . and ~1rs.
Harry W. Branlley of San
Dieg~, said Carl became lost
Saturday wfien he took v.·h:it
· he thought was a short cut to
lhe family 's campsite.
"I wasn't scared -not a
bit."' the cold and hungry tx>y
told sheriff's deputies who
foun1 tlim.
Call Collect
(714) 523-6511
and we'll send you a decorator, tree ..
Bringing up baby for pin money
Twor'piece pants sels
for infants. A-line tops
lor glrls, vests for
boys; gripper leg
closings. Mach ine
washable cotton
corduroy. Each,
222
'
I
Coltofl knit sleepers·wuh
non-skid plastic soles.
Solid colors; completely
rr.achine washable.
Sizes 1 to 4, 3 to 8.
• 199 Each
Sale ·$72
4-dr_.,. chest,
res.11.98
Sale$64
Crib, re1. 71.98
, .
' '
" • •.I-
®· • . '
Pre.folded, 21"35 lllch
medium weight gauze
diapers. High
absorbency; quick
drying. Fits all aizet.
2-577.
Sale $53
4-drawer chest,
res.62.98
Sale $39
Crib, res. 44.98
.. . .
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• •
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..
Docor11e nowl UM Penne1111me paymenl plan.
,
-
'Early .American' ensemble
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fi· Dresser and chest hove
laminated plastic tops;
double drop side crib has
4-positio!'I spring. stabilizer
bors, teething roils ••
'Spriftgtime' no¥elty flower
ensembl• in a vocado
enameled selected north·
e rn woods. Double drop
side C'fib hos rigidity
locks, 4-position spring,
teething rails •
104 coil Mottre11 with print
a" whito llack9rov11d.
. reg. 18. 98, NOW $1 S
104 colt "."•ttra11 -sl1•I
in1v_latlo• with cl"r plastic
cover. rog. 21 .98, NOW $11
• enne111 the fashion.place
~ U1Ul VAWE$ At lOU I locA&. PtHNEY STOW
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-,-----.....
•
_i __ _
•
I
l
•
•
. ' -.....~ bAn.Y PILOT
U.S. Se~
Stoc~pile
Removal
WASHINGTON IUPll -
111• llef-Departmenl baa
lnlormed Japan that I t
.. hopes" lite thb yr.ar to start
dlamantllng ita O .k i n a w a
chemical wupons 1toctpUe,
believed to include nerve 1u.
ud to ~ much of it on J-laland In the mld-
Pacllk.
A Pentagon spokesman aaid
Tlltlday that D e f e n 1 e
Secretary Melvin :R. Laird told
hil J 1 p 1 n e s e counterpart,
Yuubiro Naiwon<, during
weeklong talu whidl ended
Monday that U.S. military .. ol-
ficials were ''lllU ltudy!ng the
problem of removing the
chemical weapons from Okinawa.•• ·
But J..-ry W. Friedbeim,
Deputy Aalstant D e f e n 1 e
Secr<tary IOI" Public Allain,
said Laird alao told Nakuont·
that the, Pentagon "Hoped tp ...
start the movemont latar this Jtfoon Tad
yur or early next year" and
that "11 of noW Johnston Apollo 15 crewmen David Scott, Alfred Worden ind
ltlantl is the most likely James Irwin (from left) check over mocku-p of rov·
relocation site." er vehicle that they wJll use to explore the moon
•
.J
,_Ag~ew •out '~t Tone~ .. -. . ,
Songuiriter1 Reject Spiro's Clai1ns
NEW YORK (AP) -Rock said, "I would like to know But ii was poioted out that
music ~n nject bOth . wti.at he bases hi.! assumption Steppenwolf has also recorded
the tuqe and lbl IJrlea.of Vice on." "The Pusher" wtth lyrics con-
Prtlldeat Spft,Apew'1 daim.· 'Another JODI A,new men· demning heroin peddlers.
that toaw IOq'Wl'tten and. tloned WU "Eight Ml.I.es "We feel Ifs regrett able
filmmaktn encour119 dru1 High," by the Byrds. that Spiro Agnew continues to
u.. They •Y be'a too·fat out Ed Tickner. tht group's make' intemperate, i \ J. c o n.
dlttodlctbediffettnet. . manager, said, ''A lot o( sidered statements. He lumps
Jn 1 apeecb' to RtpubDcaii"s hullabaloo wu n ised over the drugs all together. The so-call·
In Lu VflU. Nev., m Mon-aong, but ii you listen to the ed Youth culture has con· · • lyric• y 'II see th · demned tht use of speed and •·v nl..... A_.w 1,1 id , ou e song is _,, ... ., ··~ about tlie -· • r· t t . l olher hard, dangerous drugs,,, .1.-......1---' .,;.,Iha __ being· .--Pa llS rip o d 1Uiia~ ~-""""' Ertiland as rock and roll Utley sai ·
"bralnwabtd'; into, a "drug stars. Tbe'e isn 't even a·,1y Agnew quoted disap-
cutture0 by rock ima.ic, subtlety .in that soog · ad· provingly from the lyrit:s or
boob, fllma and undtrlJ"OUfld vocatin~ use of OrUgs. "White Rabbit" by -Crace
ftitWl'Papel'I. He added t b a t Eight mlle.s high refers to how Slock of the J e f r ~ r s o n
many rock. IOftll present t~ high the airplane flies. · Airi)lane: "One pill makes yo u
Ult of drup In "1ucb an at• "Does 'Smoke Gets In Your larg er.and one pill makes you
tractlye Ditlt;-tbat r~·the-1.m-EyeS' ·aqvocate the us. of small. And th e ones that
. p~~ turnln& . on tobacco? That's how silly it mother gives you don't do
becomel ti»..Plblrll and even CQuld gt!:tJ.' ' !. an ything at aJI.''
the approved' tbiDg te'do."'; Some . complalritd t•b a t But' Miss Sloc k also wrote
• Somt roct "n' r o 11 ""A.mew ·clidn't ltcojnlle th11t words t? thC lune for a pu..blicl
authorities llkl IOme ol the rock groups have produced servict ''.r:adio announcement
90Di Ullu ~ rtfeTed to strong anti-hard dnlgs.:aongs. sponsored by 1'Do It Now," al
were eltbtt ~ i'1atary to AIJ'ltW m e n t Ion t! .tf Step-Cali!Ornia org anization design·
todi1'1 ~ ,pieapit_ or not pe\JW'Olrl· ':.Don't ,S,teP,:·' on the eel tp preve:nt drug abuse.
' !lecenu11y about d r a 11 . Gr111, Sain." This IOllg asks The alternate worW to
\" Othen uld Acnn' filled to the government not to outlaw "Whi~e Rabbit" were, ·:one
, ,
!
!
.. ,, '
QUEENIE
..
i ' ,.
"Yoo-hoQ! 1 h~e a _&ugg~-_get ~ dict ionary!''
MOBILE CHEST X·RAYI
Sr.c nsored by Sav-On Drug
Witt -..,, aYaitable ot • • ,
58ZZ [[UNGER
at 5PRING OA LE
MARINA VI LLAGE
HUNTI NGTON BIACH
~ept. Zl tt1111 Sept. 24
10111 ADAMS
at BROOKHURST
HUNTINGTON IEACH
Sept. ZS thru S.pt. 11
NOMINAL FEE $1 00 INCLUDES MAILING Japan has sought removal of ·surface. LawlCh II scheduled for next July.
the munitions-from Okinawa---------------~---
as one of the conditions under
diatinguilh between marijuana-marijuana, according to Bill pill makes you larger and one
and other drup1 an important Utley, president ci Reb Foster pill makes you small. but H1 dlltinction to· the fcunger Asaociate.s, the g r o u p ' s you shoot speed, you won ·1 get I
1eneraUon. personal management com· there at all, beca use you 'll be
Of the aongs that do rifer to,1 _po~n~Y·~-------_:d::•::•:d._" _______ .:====================: drugs, "Th< hJriory of popular!
which the Jsland would be
returned to Japanese control.
The United States seized it
during World War II.
Although the Army ha!
refused to Identify the kind Of
chemical weapons stored on
Okinawa on grounds they co~
stitute "part of lbe active
deterrent force," informed
Pentagon sources have said
the weapons contain nerve gas
and range from artillery 1hells
atockpile in West Gennany
maintained there under an
agreement between Washing-
ton and Bonn are &he only
chemical munitions that the
Anny has said it keeps oubkSe
the United States.
Enlistment.sSparking
End the Draft Hopes
mlllic is a rtflection of what
people are already into," said
Ben Fong-Torres, associate
editor of. Rollinc Stone, a rock
ma1azine.
A'.pew quot.ed a line from a
~· 1117 """· "I set high with. a little help from my
friends."
Friedhelm 11id Laird also
told Nakasone that some of
the weapons prtsently on
Okinawa .. would, no doubt, be
detoxHied and eliminated from
the stockpile at their ultimate
storage site" and "this would
of course require the con--
struction of a detoxtficaUon
faCltity" on Johnston Island.
Two such facWUes now art
under ""'8lruclion •t the
Rocky . Mountain ....... 11 In
Denver and II ,... npeetad
the plant on Johnston Uland
-id be aimiler.
In Tanzania
No Opposition
DAR ES SALAAM (AP) -
.WASHINGTON (UPI) -
,,,. chlllCOI !of ending the
drart and switching to an aJl-
volunteer army have been
boooted by Pmagon figures
showing young men continue
tO enlist voluntarily even after
they no longer are vulnerable
to being drafted.
Jn addition, the figures
revealed that i.ge numbers
of men below the lottery ap
or...19 are enllsUnc .... .111_to0n as
they are of ace. rather thin
waiting to take tbe1r chance in
the lottery.
If enli>lment. npr.. fer tl1o
...,t of thir ,.... lm"n out the
same u they did. during lie
first six months of the yeli'1 it
may mean that there art 11
meny genuine vohmtle'I a,
u.er. .,. --riped up
-they r,.,,...i they were aoJng to be thlled
inyway.
The loll<ry, whid! -lntD
effect this year, bu i*VtWed
tht first positive mean1 of
distinguishing true ·volunteers
from others.
The Assiltant D e f e n 1 •
Secretary for M 1 n pow.er,
Rater T. Kelley, to1d a Pen-
Ugon nf"IVI conference
Wednesday 11 percent of the
bottom third totaled 11,000 !or
the li:r months. Another 11,000
men too yoi.mg to have lottery
numben aJao decided to enli!t.
There were 10,000 llllia-from the kittary
pool. Ir jt is •urned that true
volunteen wtre in the same
proportion in the other two
third1 as they were in the bot·
tom third, aomewhat more
than bait ol Qae total would
hove enltotod ewn il there had
been mdraltJ1w.
"ft'• a catchy tune, but until
lt wu pointed out to me, 1
never , realized that t h e
'friends'~ were a 11 or .t e d
drugs," llld Apew.
Allen Klein, president of
ABKCO lndu1trie1, manage·
ment fir1' fOr the Be@tlea,
Father Grows
Pot for Son. Kelley said U-In the bot·
tom third ''certalnly un be .-ec1 1n1e vohmtaers." PITI'SBUllGH (UPI)
Tllo proporliona ..,. almost Louil C. C.tz, 41, dellco1-n
ftoctly h.-•·bed been "'"'''" wu ernated by de-~tclod on the bolts or an tecUfft ond cherpd With .. -growing nwijuene piuta In 11<1ler riudy of I,711 Air hia bockyanl. -,-
Fon:e ~ta In April and Arnipod _. • i-ol
early May. the peace iDil nl11ted.
The Air Ffl<'I' loomd SI per· 12,000 band, MW)t .,.,.
<enl ., the .ru-. ..... the rnmi-" 1111 .,..,.
1mn the lop or moil old..., -w. -In
vulnenble thlnl ., the loUery toucb -the "ii ·-:::::-: = 1:~ """~'=;iwihidliiiNllaii.i1111111ijiiiJ•i.lj.aii•
percenl fnlm lie bolt<m third.II
In · the overall study in-
cludinll ·111 en1tatmen1· OJ\d all
-·· Kelly said, the pro-portion ol en1-camfn&
fnlm the lop third ....
W-SI Olld SI _,t.
SEA'
SCMWN . . . .
411l.1Mlt .. C..111-Tanzania's only political party
today nom inated Pnsidmt
Julius Nyerere for rwlectlon
without opposition on Oct. 30. enllstmenta rrom the lottery Who C..res7 wi' H.AYE \.
ALL MODELS Nyerere became president
when Tanganyika became in-
dependent from Britain in 1961
and continued in the office
when it merged with Zanzibar
in 1964 to form Tanzania.
pool were from the bottom N• ...... _,,,., i11 th•
third -men with lottery num· w..W '''"·•Hut .,.., """111u·
btts over 140 who virtullij 111+, 11•• .,..,, ••MM•llitY 4•ily
were certlln of not biinc ..... ,.,., 4 .... It'• ttl• DAILY.
dr~ted. ~·~ILO~~==============~~~~~~~~~~!l The "11istments from thl1:
NOW!
Prie,es, Strikes Plague
Heath's Conservatives
LONDON (AP) -Edword
Heltb's CanlervaUves rode a
wave or promises to victory,
but caLIUontd the public not to
ezped any flashy "first 100
days." It ta now three months
Jater, and no cast1 of blinding
fireworks have betn attributed
to Britam:s new government.
Heath won power on a pro-
mlee to curb strikes and halt
the soaring COit or living. But
wildcat ltritel ceintlnue piqu-
ing the economy and many
housewives complain t h a t
prices are riling unchecked.
In addition a major con-
rrontaUon with or fan is e d
labor •ppeon to be lhoping up
over the CcmervaUve ad-
m.WstraUon'I commitment to
stop tnfiatlonory poy ....
tlementl and to bring tr1de
unloal under tilhtar public
control.
lnflallon ud unemployment
art at their hl&bett level 1inee
World War JI. These with In·
dustrial stagnation and labor
unrest, have undermined con-
fidence abroad in the mqtll or the pound starling. II baa
declined against the dollar on
v.•orld market.. since the ltlrt
or the election campalp' 1n
May.
l!Uq• ·~ demandJnc that the aovernment !ulflll Ila 11 ...
toraJ proml• to abolish 1n
employment tar atablllhed
by the prevlouo Lobortta
regime. ond to cvt lol•
generally. ~
Tax cull are at the core of ,
Tory economic Polley u Heath
put it to the voters. In cam-•
P"iln tpeeches be reuonad
t ha t industrial st1gn1Uon
must be. ended and ta:r aria
would provide the needed in-
centive. Slnce the electlon two
top ministers have reaffirmed
the electoral plodp but Tory
followen: are chafinl O¥tr the
delay.
e
T.V. TALENT HUNT
WI NllD AN ATTRACTIVE YOUNG LADY
WHO HAS AN INTERl!ST IN Tl!ACHtNO
-TO HOST AN EllUt'.ATKllW.
CHA.OREN'S TY SERIES
Beauty 8JJleti1
_from~:·
Prettr up forfall
·with a
HllllM! CUrtla 'Springtime' .
penn lncludlng lhampoo,
cut an~ 1tyte, 1Ql!I
'--Have your wig ol11MC1 lftCI
atyled at a special, 4.c
. '
_, ..
Our install-it-yo urself.
carpet sale
through Saturda on ly!
Snip-to-fit.."foam backing_.
~additional padding needed.
•
This week only! Hurry in1for big savings!
REG. 1,50 , •• NOW
s~~yd.
.,LEGION'" level
· loop tweed conlinu-
oua ftlmnent nylon
tor modem or pro·
Yinclel rooms. Foam
,,_,bock.
Available at t1-stores:
•
REG. 7.50 , • , NOW
6~~yd.
"SOFT TOUCH"'
ttiiek. luxuriant ny·
Ion shag for sleek
contemporary de·
cor. Tweed colo r-
ings, foam rubb er
back.
l\nne11
REG. 6.50 ••• NOW
5 ~0yd.
"SOLAR" stu rdy,
hard-wearing con-
hnuous fil ament ny·
Ion in sculptured
effect multi-leve l
loop. Foam rubb er
ba<;king.
. .
"s.lo'"
,
,..A!!!!lltl:lle.llfw"n 11-:JO YH I Of ... Clllai* I• PMl.,I HUllTINGTON BE/.CH0
------------:------,] ORANGE "THE CtTY"
CANOGA PARK
LAKEWOOD
C.'IRLSl't '0
~'01'IT~l i\1r
emu.~ 1
cc.·.r;c·, FULLERTO N
~·[ '.1FORT BEACH
...... ~.. · _ I ' r-, 1n~nt plan. Miii 11 YCMll CNANCI 10 •AIM llPllllMCI & NOif
YOlll OWM IMOW OM ftLOIMON. POl APPOIMTMINT CALL
LAllT MAmM llTWllN f A.M .• J P.M. .
642-5253
Nl!Wl'OltT CAlltEVISION
' I
•o•r•rew ..... NllWNIT IUOI ... ~ .... ~ , .... ......
.... ""'·..,.,,,. .. '""'· .... .
Ottlltt .,,,,. (lfy" ,,.....
I , -.
TORRANCE
~ .........
Ori•~· $4
M•rv L..
OM d1u•I
Mrl. M•
t.IM Ann
11tJIS !Pio) conirlt>Jll•
•e4rc11 16
s..rvlce1.
F1tnllV C
Mit11111 Al
IMKll. A
~u•vlved "°"• Terr w1rd An•
Lff Rldfl
Mn . Her
~ut.ln!. II
·on. Fiii!
Mt(ortnk
Cllllltl.
L111uM I
f r~"k !.
l•·I Or .•
~.... 1; •
I " F•1
~ l••I••
~d .. , ... ,
~·r. Tu•I
!~a. m~te
V T S1t
~UC\d~V.
, . .,u<tll t
o,,·ri1t C
r •y, Oort
fr~(O A~
•·•I Bet•
'·»fd bY
"'"q'"t'~
''"'' Btt
""' di , •·nd;n9
,,J.1111.
• "•V Jim
•~d Mrl.
• r .• San1
!cld. Bell
/.'ildrerl •
' .• (0'11
•,urvoved
Tu•tin!
neacn; I
"" neld • fll•~· " '''"~· '" rlorv. Bt
! ~<OY P;
~e•cll. o
Y.tdMO<ll
r t l-lu~ll
" lr•ter /!.
lJorectors
fl11o P
Maiorta,
<""1. If.
R<111ald ~
"'"'· Vl• '"'"" 9•• I 01 "ng
'•b<!rQtr
An~el••·
/ ",cCormi.
cnopel. I
<• Ni.ell
10111. Fa .... -..... k ;toult ,,
/"~orm~
•~ttors.
Nc11:0 Rh
l'•IOCt 1
~urvfved
'"O dau
"""'"°'" t•t•nd;
'>randcllll
nren. VI
tmm 10 .
rl Servi
ll••w Ch
[!river o
.-,.. 01 ..
~·ch1rrl
l~ne, ..
Nlfe, 811
Mitllaeli ..,,,. .... '
mother.
.. "'" llt ~~mllY ( .. ,u .,.1
1>01n Je• r ·•!~ M 1
V•~e(! bJ
I rl~; 51
•~1th.
•••• MtJ
en•~•.
Jo~n B. '
••In Val!
Walnrwlt
.,.,ugMer
V/ainwr!I
•.rt9M;
r Waln· .. right.
r·.1. Oil
;1~u. T1
Juae Ca
·~•onerd
13,c•ller1
ll~bel L.
t auun•
Da•e ot
t '""· JI 11111erv.
r ~hew1
• PM, ·
I h~<>el.
• ci1tln9.
1.e ... 0011
I \o•tuan
t .naa J
•1•1n;o
:~~t. II
• ...,. 811
r Rile~
' ''"'· 1" .,, ~nd
Alf); ur
'•rv•<e• . ... '" • •ticoatlr
'"'"''"' ~
427 •
8,
r..orn
Cos\.
110
M
I
li!
0
SI
La11
San
s
•
<
I
DAil y PILOT • I
~ Beach Sex Off ender
For the Record -
Death l\'efiees
!l>r!!CIOH.
PUff
nno P. Pull Aoe n ,ot 115 D ""tnld1
MaiMC•. Laoun• HUii. 0111! ol dNth.
<c1>1. it. surYIYed bY wife, Muriel; son.
rionald Pun, NewPQrl 8Hch; dau9hl9r,
,...... Vicki Bauer,. al Ml•sloo Vitia;
10'~" 9ran•""ltor1n1 bro!lltr. Victor Pu!1,
1 0, .on~elei; two 1111er1, Mr1, Soph11
<•hcr~er •n~ Mlss Etr1nor Pull, I.DI
""~eleo. Ro .. ry. 1onlllht. MOnd1v, I PM.
ncCormic~ L1uun1 lltACh MortUarv
(!'ID""I· 11.eQu!em M111, Tundav, Hi AM ,
•.1 Nlc!'IOlas Catllollc Chu•cll, l1auna
Hills. Fam!IY 1uooe1t• 1t.a11 w!1hln9 to
,,,.~1 memo•l•I contrlbutlont. p11a1e con·
1ri~u1e 10 the "merlc1ri Canter Socletv.
'"'ormitk L1uun1 Buch Moftu1rv, DI·
Marriage
Licenses
Tax Refund
Deadline se
SANTA ANA -The dNdllne
is Oct. 15 ror senior citiiml to
file claim ronns for a rtim-
blnement of a portion of their
19&9-70 property tu.es.
PORTER-TEHRANI, Rober! M .• 11, of To be eligible , .. ·-·-1•1'1 CQmmodor1. Apr. ~. HUl'lllf'41on .x'I~ &N ell •nd 0on1111 A.'. 1~. ot ua1 ,.., • p I Tu 0~1r1z $1 .. Wnlmln11er. VJUzens r 0 per Y o~~oL~~~.~;:s,51~5~,:., ,,,~ istance. clalm111ts must be
Pr1i.cm1 c .. 111 o1 •no w. P1rt. over 65 ye•-or age u d. J an. Pia~. Wnlmlns w. , ..., ,.
STIL.TNER-IROWN, M1r!oh1!1 .... "' ot I , 1970 ', must own and occupy 11 Emer11d Bay Ind Ann H., l6, of 632 c1111 or1v1, bDtll ot L•evl'lil their own home·, must have Be1ch. "~~e"'~.~;!o'f..1"'!u~~r~' ft its paid the property taxes on the
Carna!lon Ave., Coron1 d .. Mi r. home and must have l tctaJ SCHERER·8EN50N, John E., 21, ol
1001t s.n M1111.tt1 South G11, 1n<1 household income of le• thin Lind• s .. 111 of ilkl Sant• Mert1, M~~n~~L~:J...i~H. M.icolm o .. v. 01 $3,350 per year.
709$ Valmor•I Place and Barbara J.. Qualified indiv)duaJS may :Jes~. '26 su11se1 orive, DO!h °' Co•l• obtain claim forms from any
J~~.E1~.0:!:.~~·oi~~~T M:~ie"~ .. s~:: offk:e of the Franchile' Tu
o~·EENE·DELLUTAI, Jolln A .• 71, Board or by writing to Senior
1nd Jo.n~ D., 16, bcllh OI till C'"•• p t T w1,htn~"Av1 .• -Mtdw1v cu.,. li.a.cnl!I r o p e r Y ax
RIMELL 11~:f.,"~. pf.~.~INLa:U~1 tfi1 .... ~'· • .= ASstst.anct.-Pi). Box -15111,
!le11;, R\mell "o• H. ol !ll04 S. ll tvlronl, Jo.1n J., ::u. OI 1•201 O.OU•k LAM, S •-Cal" ••-l'•l!Xlll IJllnd. ~te of de1!h. Sep!. 1'. Tu,tln. 3CT81Deni.u, 1.1., ,,_,,
·urvived bv """· Charle•. ol Reddlno; '-::===========================,! INO dauohttn. Mr•. Nellie Whllt. oilr
1>1ewoorl; Mrs. El•le Tl>Om,....... ll1tbw
!•land; live trandchlldrt•ll ,..., great·
<>•andehifdr'1': lwo grell·ortll·t•lndchll·
<1ren. v11llatlon wlll bt IWtd Tutldavl
f·om 10 ,\M IO t PM. P1tlllc View ChlO·'
~• Serv!ce1, Wed<>e«ta,, 11 "M· P1cllic'
'"~"' Ch•<>l!I wilh Rev. Wiiiiam A1ron
O"ver olflclt rlno. llell llro.dw1., Mor!u·1
.,., OlrKIOrJ.
SULLIV"N
"«lllrd II. Sulllvtn. H•SO Van II'""'
l ~nl!, Huntlnglon lletCh. Survive.I bv
. ote, 811111! Jo; two 1on1, Alchtrct ~nd
l/,lchael; dlluilhler, Gall Troncoso; •-
i!tl!'n, Betty JOhnton and Ann Hotl•11
"'other, MrJ. Mvrll• Arm•lron11. S'rvlce1
"are held today. Mondav. 9 "M, Pl!l!'ll:
F~mllv Colonial Funeral Home. lnlerment
"'II be he!ct I" Frl•co, Te••I.
SWETT
l>ul h Je~n1>elle Swen. 21'0 Rul11e" Dr.,
r ··<1~ MeM. O~lr of de~th, Sepl. II . Sur·
~lvect by hu•b.IM. Harr., E . of cc .. ,
r. ~~J; 111ter, Mrs. Ethe! Abtir,,athv. Long !
~each. Priv•ll! •e•vlce~ were '/>f\d lo·
, ov. Mondav, 10 AM. 811!1 CO\I• Me11
c~ape!.
W"INWRIGHT
John II. Y4iinwrl11M. 9091 I.• Lina•. Foun·
"'" Valle.,. Survlvl'd b' wilt, M•r!on "· Wal nrwl11hr; ton, Peter J. W1lnwr!gn1;I ~•uglller1, l.eslle """ 111d M'LI• M.11 W1inwrh11\I; mother. Mrs. E. 8. Wlifn· •.roQ~t; t>roll>l!'rs, J•me1 E. 1/\d Thoma1 1 r Wainwrlohl; Aev. Do,..ld Geoie Waln·
.,,;gll!. 11. ... , ..... 1on111n1, M!ll'Wla.,, 1.JO
r~. Dilda• Brothl!<I (lla..-1. A.-.uttm l•~ss. Tue1day, ID·Jll AM, SS Simon 1!\d
Jode Ca!l'IOhc Church. lnltrmen1. ~ '·~ellllerd C:eme1erv. Oire<tfll bv Dold••
P.rothero M0tlu1nr, 1.n .ml.
WINSHIP l~abl!l l.0<il•e Wln\IOIP. AH 66. al 109JG
! aouna C1nvon 11.Qlld, L•iwna 81ach.
Oa•e of dN1h, Sl!<>l. !9. Survlvtd bv hus·
t i'\d. J1m11 Win11'10; brother. L•wrtr>CI!
i•Allerv. ol "lladen1; -nltc:e ~"" two
r ee~ews. Ser¥k<!S w!ll be he!d Tue1<:11v,
• PM, Sllt!ler L•ouna 8Htll Maf!uar.,
r!'IAotl, wl!h Or. Danas R. Turner, ol·
• oatlno. Prlva!I! ln1ermlftf. 11 follow I" •-~""°'' Beach. Shl!lfer L•11un1 lle1cll
11ot1uarv, Oire<lon. WINSLOW
• •ndt JaAn Winslow. Aot 20, ct l.S9·C
0•~not """·· Coile Me11. D•l• ol lltt1h. ~·ol. it. Sur¥1Ve<I by hu1blnct, Jack i
•on, Barry; .,,,...,11, Mr. 1nd Nlrl. John
~ Rile.,, 8•1-: brolt>er, Mlch11! LH;
, •Ter, Terrv Lffl ma1trn1I 911ndp1re"t1,
· r 8nd Mrs. "Ive H1r1Un11. MftH.IC~· ·~111; uncle. Mr. Altr..:I Har!lln9, Autd1.1 '~rvlct•, Wl!Clne•dAY ID "M· 8tll Broad·
, •v Chti>el, wi1h Rev. Wlnl•m "c!cn l • ro1c1atlno. ln!l!rmefll, P1<Ulc Valw M,,.
"a<lal P•tk. llt!I Br..-dwlY MOrlu1ry,
Oortctorl.
ARBUCKLE & SON
WestclUf Mortuary
427 E. 17th St., Cuta Mesa
.. MIU • BALTZ MORTIJARIF.S
Corona del i\lar OR 3-HSO
CosLa i\1esa 1\11 6-%4%4 • BELL BROADWAY
MORTIJARY
110 Broadway, Co11tl Men
LI 8-3433 • i\1cCORJ\OCK LAGU NA
HEACll i\IORTUARY
1795 Laguna Canyoa Rd.
Q4.Hl5 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery • i\fortuary
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Drlvt
Newport Btach, California
'44-!711 • PEEK FMOLY
COl.ONtAL FUNERAL
HOME
7801 Bol!I Ave.
\\'tstmlnsltr l9W5%S • SHEFFER MORTUARY
l.apna a.ei. " 4"-IPI
Snn Cltmoft 4twl00 • Si\11TflS' l\tORTUARV
6%7 i\taln SL
fluntln.J[tnn Beaclt , ___ !l!M539
LAST 5 DAYS
SUMMER SPECIAL!
Now ••• picture your child iii a
Personality Portrait by PenneJS!
3 595
are just
' thrH 5x7'• for the famlly
I rin g yow child In now and let our tcilented phote1
rapher c-;oph.lre that sparkling look foreo.wl CoM ht
while shopping ••• no appo'intment WWW'I••·"'"'
remember. you con tharv• it ot ..,..pl
,ULllllTC*
C)rfr'IOf!ft!r Cll!'ltr
~ floor, t7t·~)O
MUMnM8TON llAC"
HUl'll"""'" Clnfllr
N flOOf, "2·1'PTt
CJrll~ .. fllf CITY' tlt4"1
"'"""' .... , ......... ... ""'· .........
,
' {,
.•
••
11$9 and llil·and CanlleU -
hired to pursue those clalma
with workmen's c:ompeMlU<rl
aulhoritits .
Let's reduce together.
Your weiglit,olii' prices.
•
Sale49''
·•·'··"-$101 PN t1'ill aj.epexwcl" qcle.,
Pedoh,haMlle...i--lor
:i._,-; •. c ....... p1o...r
..... '°"""""'°"'
SaleS69
.... 79.99,M•• 1D,'P9 ..
YINM81ferltelt••••••.-
........ "ithot~H,. .. I • "'°'°'· 2 MClllClg9
-... 4"be~-
--..
'
Sale 99'' ' Reg.119.99,-$20
.Vita Master deluxe belt MOtM .. r.
Powerful '.4 HP unit hos a variable
ipeed control, 4" web'
belt. oll s.teel construction.
•
' Sale34"
.... 19.99, SAVI $5
llcpcfe eae .. IMr. Full
chain action drive, od-
juttable handlebar
and MOt.
UM Peo..,. llM ....,.,..1,1~; a:i ""1.of th~ store~i ,C'°!NOGA PAlK , . CARLS SAD , . DOWNEY 1 fUllERTON HUNTING'tOH
IU.CH LAUWOOO MOHTl:Wl HIWPOtT IU.CH OIAHG£ "THE CIT'r VlNTURA Shop Sundoy, too, 12 to.SP. M.I . ' . . . .
•""' ••
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-·~------·····----··~--~--~ --~---------
• ... •
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•
I
DAILY PILOT .. B·usines~men P;reparef or Re .cover_tl--~B_o_o_m--'---'
< '
Hasiy Exit
NEW YORK (AP) -Notes
on the -currtnt state of the
economy, specifically about
business at tht trossroads
betv.'een reeesslO n and
recovery, the te&SOftll nature
of the stock market 1ahd the
ei:tent of unempJoyment ~
-If you'vi wondered \VhY.
busine&Smen always , m u s t.
peer into the !ut\ll'e, you have
a good ·e1ample at hand.
beeause the prollts-10 to the
ones who accurately forecast
the next -and maybe im·
minent=.. ecooomic '"lW'n· ·
The specific. questions. now
f4cin1 au tYPes; of
businessmen ill this: Should
we stoct up now on loods to
' .
'
teU in 1nticipation ol buyinc
1tren1th in the nelt few
months? Or should we wait
until we're more certain!
The ~luaic lituation in-
voJvln1 this decision occurred
right aft.er World War II.
Some companies fore saw a
return '9 the depreased con.
diUona of the 1930s and so
retrenched. Others foresaw
the boom and had the coods to
sell.
Businessmen currently ap-
pear to have decided on an up-
turn, bec_ause in J;uly they ad-
ded nearly $170 billion to their
inventories, the b I 11 e i I
monthly gain or 1979.
But. there ls no areal
. .. '
amount ol evidence tbat they
expect the recovery to lead to
• boom. More like I' mild ad-
vance. Wiii the stock market
fal' with the autume Aeaves? It
often haa la UM put. Altbough .
quite often also the market
recoven -before winter, the
autumn· slide is • confirmed
cycle in the stock market.
In ' each of tbe recent bear
market years of 19811, 1916,
and 1969, stock! took. a prc.-
nounced dip during Se,Ptember
and october, althoulh In each
instance they recovered rather ·
quickly, and wi re' rlstng
before November.
After studying the four.
seasons ol the market, Wright
•
.. ,,.
' .
'lDvetf.ors' Serv~es commenfs how Investors Interpret the Human nature , lhat Is, rather
thin numbe n . lb.at Ip ordfr of repetitive· statistics.
reliabili ty, the autumn sll -"------iiiiiiii ranks 'f.lith the summer rally,
after lhe . yearend advance,
aod ilea~ of lbe 1prlll1 selloll.
Are such . cyc"°s m e r e
statistical aceidtnts? Hardly.
They result· either, from ,inass
tnUcipaUon o! ;JI u a l n e s s
change.& \hat re,ularly take
plice 9", moi"t KCUCateJy, ·
from how the public iDterpreta .
these changes. •
, Somt anal)'Sts ti th e
market, ·havin& seen now lhelr
i'~pth studies or tbe finan-
cial aspects ol compa~ies and
and the market filled to Jcr&
cast t he actual events. now
art studyin& more-closely
' -·.
. ..pt. 23·24-25-~27 Doily l ·P.M. to lOP.M.
·' ~unda10 .Stpt.27,_1ntd1~l"P.f./l.to7P.M. .
. a-111\ ........ c,1.a. AtHllllfll-.......... t I ......... ,
. ~ DMI' ,.,.. • .w.i..-SI.JS • CWl4tM _.., 11 ,,..
" .,
' I
Two sheep make their escape from trailer following
an accident near San Bernardino which killed 40
sheep. Holes \vere cut in trailer to free the trapped
.• SHOP SEAllS SUNbAYS 12 Noon to 5 P.M. • • • \lu11Ja~ th .. S•l•• t :ae .4.M.10 9:J,UP .. M.
animals. ·
'Peki11g Blasts USSR,
West Gerniany Pact
L0!\1DON tUPll -Peking. also accused litOSCQw of <:ill·
rekindling its feud \rith the !us.ion with the United States
Kremlin. has accused the in alleged appeasement taclics
Soviet Union or treachery in the Middle East.
because of its recent nonag-Viet Prem"ier Li Hsien-nien
gressio11 pact with W e s t at a banquet in honor or a
Germany. mission from the Palestine
The i\lao regime evidently guerrillas in Peking, recently
has tak en tirne to study the attacked the Middle East
<igreement before launching peace pla~ ~f U.S. Secretary
its· broadside againsr. the • ·of State Wilh am P. Rogers as
Soviets. whom Lhey officially "criminal scheme, plotted . by
charged with. "social im-one or two super powers,". In
perjalism". and ··collusion" apparen! refe rence to Russi a.
vl'i th the United States. In raCt. Peking ift its tum is
Behiod the move liesl>C1'-p~aying. . a c.e.o.r~dJ_n g lo
lng's opposition lo Kremlin d1plo~at1c .reports_, "an n-
policy on prin ciple . Bu t there cre~s1ngly 1mpo_rlan t r o 1 e
is a special fear that by con-behind_ the ac_tions or th.e
solidaling the front in Europe. Pa!e~l1ne gue rrtllas \\'horn it
the Soviets are strengthening off1c1ally b_acks as the. real
their posture in the Pa r East rep~ntatives o! the .move-
against China . men t . for the hbe ratton of
Ch. . . . d . h' . Palestine . . 1na 1s 101ne 1n t 1s view-Jn doing so. Peking is
po'.nt b~ not a few West E~ro-deliberately playing up the dif-
• pean d1p~omat_s who _belifve ferences between th e Soviel
the __ Krehm is seeking ~o and the Mao Tse-tung ha rd·
sohd1fy the EuropeaR front !" line . Peking fa vors all out
order to have a free hand _in militant tactics of liberation
!ht; e\;'.ent of trouble with movemenl.'i, against Russia 's
China. . more cautiou s tactics. Th~ t_nslilute for Strate~ic But by "'poachjng" 0 n
Studies 1n Londo_n has .earlier Russia's sphere of influence bi
reported the Soviet Union hn~ the Middle East. China is ex-
shifted nine divisi~ns to the timding ]ler challeng_e to the
Far Eastern front 1n the past Kremlin leadership in one of
12 months alone and doubled the. , key areas of Soviet •
her strength ther~ .h~ the past strategy.
'"'o y~eai:s to 30 d1v1s1ons. Significa11tly. Peking's latest
The Soviets h'1ve 1noved attacked on Russia's alleged
lroops and missiles i n to fraternization \\"ith We s l
r..!ongolla . close 1o China ·~ t-:.Crmeny appears to find an
precious nuclear >A•eapons in-echo also in some quarters of
stallation. Russ ia's own East European
Pektng caft ha vl' hard ly allies where ~ome anxie ty is
n1·erlooked these moves. kno"'" lo have been voiced by
Tn addition to attackin~ hardline rs over a possible sell-
Tiussia for her accord ":ith out of their interests il'I
\Ve!ll Cennally, Peking has Europe by the Kremlin .
Coun~il on TV
Town Sits In On Meetings
ELl.-\VOOD CITY. Pa .
(UPll Big thing ~
sometimes ·happen in small
I0'11ns and this w e s I t' r "
Pennsylvania c o m m u n i t .''
believes il has a big thing
gding for it.
Recently the borough coun-
c.i I began televising i t ~
meetings. and the idea has
proved extremely popular
11·ith the to1o1·n·s Jl.800 resi·
dents.
Stephen Rubino. 62. borough
council president. got the idea
that community r e 1 a t ion s
could be improved if the
meetings of the ID-member
council could be seen and
heard. He suggested the use ol
television and radio. and coun-
cil quickly adopted the idea.
About 18 cable television
companies bid for the ri ~ht 1(1
broadcast the sessions. A con-
1 ract was awarded to
Armstrong Utilities lnr.
Now the town 's citizens can
"sit -in" on the mo n I h I y
borough council m e e t i n 't s
without leaving their living
rooms.
''The citizens get first-hand
!nfonnation on v.rhat goes on
at the council meetings. Ru-
bino said. "They don't get dis-
torted versions of the ses·
sions."
Andrew Bodensky . an audin
visual director In the city's
.5(..t.ool system. s.ald televising
lht council metUngs "creates
a better rapport between the
co1nmunity •nd government.''.
'"The televlslon cmiver1ge
brings out into the open y,·hat
pnl•lics actually means and it
~hould mak~ for a better
g•Jl'f'rnmcnt." Bodensky said.
R .I. Schill , secretary of lhl'
chamber of Commerce. said
ttlcvising council s e s s i o n ~
"has helped create communitv
ir.tf!rest in probl ems that need
com munity help."
"It tives our citi zens an op-
portunity to see their in-
dividual council men in action
and cooperatin~ together for
overa ll community good," he
said.
"This is !ht' sl art or
MMnelhing bip: in Ellwood
City," Schill said. It makes for
better government• and gi ves
councilme" status. It lets the
people know their interests
are being considered .·•
Rubino. who was born here
and operates a grocery. docs '
not feel tmvised sessions in-
nuence the decisions ·of lhe
cnuncilmen or brings oot tile
'"ham" In them .
"So1ne of them did rt0t like
the ide11 or putting on makeup.
or anything lilie that ," he sa id .
"The cameras catch' us just
IUce we are.''
Radio sta~Lion \VEF~f. wh ich
bro:-dC3st4 the m o 11 I h I \'
seSslons. follov.•s up with i
"sound off'' progren1 In which
people call in and question the
l'Ollncilmen. The program has
proved very popular.
''The first meeling: lasted
about four hours. so T guess
yoo cou ld say this ls 1 big
thlng:.11 RubDl said.
·· Today'· Stocks Today
\
' "
. ' 2-Speed, 6-Cycle .Washer
Regul•r
·~49,9;;
• l::n~~mt »Oa L. f!)'Clt 1ivel effecli ve tetiuh~ rrom pre-tuaL. CeMpounJ..t
• \l&e norm11I , de1ic:ale, perm11ne111 111·es!.1er.ond rinse and pre-w1!h e)c:les
• rorcrlai n rini~hed lop! lid. tHb ; limed bleach 1nd fabric i Ofletttt di~pefti!tt
... )...!. •. ·
,. .1
"" '• .r
Soft-Heat Electric Dryer·
Hegul1r
'189.95
• ·'•ICHMlk r abrH: Mitter
• Soti heltl pt"e'tefll9 1t:or<:bi.ac and baked·ift 1''ri nL.1et
88.
• Wri nl.le t:••td l.eepg pert1t11nenl preee a•rwe•lt ··irtull1 ~
• .\dj•.:it•bJe ewd •f e)'tle 1i1 .. t
•
Sean February De re.....,d.Eaoy Payment Plan let• yon buy-wwith firot monthly paymetttinFelml..,..
-sears ..... -,. ·-· "'...... • --• 1·>91t
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--DAILY.PILOT I I
-N"e.teransi : Wido-w lose Benefits
W).SHlNGTON' (UPI ) -otheJWISiDe'-:Jl'~r...,e1.ample, 1 -cent oftne erliJ.ated men -i C· r~~urne kln-dOftit.w,--1 a w Cll'"ll--aot"s~1e~-~--,!11
;lgnew Not Agitated
V.ice President Spiro ~gnew disregards a curt suggestion after speaking in an
airport hang~r near Midland, Mich: as he \vound up hi s first campaign tour or
the fall election bat~l~-:-He·_shook"hands-,vith-supporters--at-an airport-rally and
and later .. ~ f~!'l~ ~a1 s1ng dinner in Gri,ind~apids, Mich. .. "•. ' .. -· •r , · > . J "
Colleges Mo,n,~tored
•
Col. X saw combat duty in l1'o aeraeant retiring at ige so tu1Jly sign llP for tbt widows • ~ automatic cover11t that through, servicemen already
wars, was wounded tw1ee, ind after 30 Yt:I(• service would. annuities. Derense departmeat.. civil .-rvants gi1. 1 in retirement will be olftred a
decGrated ·lot 'heroism~ three hive to pay ~43·77 a month to . records sb9w that only~ about A HoUs.. Armed Servlcts once-only opPortunity to bring assure biS wife of a continued . , · ' · times. income 'of $201 .81 1 mo'llttl· 100,000 of the, naliOn I 700,oot. ~nunltlte headed by Rep. thtir wives under lb pro-
' fle -retlred 'II the ·age or SO should she outlive ttim . But 1• retired tervl~ml!' are now•_l Ottl Pike (~NY:), has held, tection. Those relirin{il in the
after 30 years o( service. At civil 1erviC1! worker of Lht covered by, lh1s h)gh-cost op-t1Urtn1s ~ Uie biQ_tHR 122&) future would be covered
SS, he died oi a heart attack. same age •ncl length ,o( li~I. pro1ram. ~ and ls ex~ to recorDmend automa tically.
His widoW thought she.'d service would pay only $J4.2t A bill 1& now ~{j,I In lls enactment. Wbether \he ;=:::;:::;::;:::::::::::;====::::
continue receivtng check s a month to pr.ovlde hi& wife Congress -1blt wauld Temove l,egl!lation will be squeezed tn-Andy's Fo\t
fp>rn. the ·government f9r ~·-with the same protection. the'thrUt of dtalltulion in old , to the already-crowded agenda
portion or his retirement pay. ·Because the we,mium rates aae wtdch ~over ao maq)> ,,,.o{ this Concreasional session Ask any kid. "Ask Andy" Is fun.
But. she (ound herselr cut off are so hi4b, relatively fe w military_ wit~· SpaniOrtcl tiv ' de~ on how much support Set It Saturdays In the DAILY
without a cent. military men -about 20 per-Rep. thartes S. Gubler (~ It-attracts from lawmUers PILOT.
' Unfortur\ately, ttiara ilot I.I). _:•'.'_'·e~n'..l ol"'..'.lhe~o~Ui"'"''.'."'.:''..''"'od'.'..':10'._pe~":_:::Cal~il.:_1_),._· i".l~w<iuld"'·~~ll\'.: ... ~. m:W".'.'.'.Wl'~_;.INl...:_lbe::_.i:J>U:b:li~c.:.._~ __ ......!!:::========~ isolate~ case. ll happen~ everfl·
year to tl)ousands of widows ol
retired military men .... Their
husbands' dE:aths ti.rope! them
i1~to instant poverty.
Military retirees art lhe on-
ly career 'emp)oyes • of tliti u
federal goverrJnent whose
widov.•s do not automatica lly
receive. a survivor annully _
.based on the retired pa y the
husband was receivina al the
time of his death. ~
The w"idow of a retired civil
servant caotinues to receive 55
percent of, his retirement pay 1,
for the resl--0f hcr-life'---1
• ~ ' ' I • ,...! .,;.". ·' '7. _....,,,.. ' You Work ·te"s· s· , · 1ceepslhings t1eanerwi lliont · · ' · . effort; eHmitiates ~a th tub rings . .
You Save Money '
Soap and clolhin~ la st lo!'.8.e ~r ___ _
ll is wssible for a career
>ni1itary ·man to provit:I~ an-
nuity proteci:ion for his wife. ~
To do So, however, he rousl ,.
sign up before retirement for
the so-c alled fetired
serviceman's fa m i I y p!'O-
t~tion plan. Under: this jilan.
the•e,itire cost of whatever an-
nuit y he wishes to provide for
N: .... on i· t . p t s d 0 t Stud t his wife iS paid by the ....., lS ening OS S OUn U en S ""icema", in the rocm or
,..,.._., ...... Di~ Di1pt"t1 Fe-el fi"J8. t •
S,.itie Arttla~r •CJtaa
Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans '~ '' deductions fro1n his Jelire.. WA~TON (AP) _. On groups. The Department of 'boldma a peace vl11t:i · Thent pay. The go'ver~ment '
a spr·· -~ this·ye_y: Shortly Health. Educahon' .. c,t Welfa~'.:. '='·in that and eX~ry other ~kes oo coptribution. -:.'!;, .' ~fter .Si' troops move'd into .acted as a clearinli bOuse to J ~t. I didn't want to be in the · 1 Under the civil lttV~
Cambodia!, a young ~ was .make people _ava.ijable .Ani. ,po~}~on of standing up and go.Y'~rnment program,f~~ll e
stopped ii' he trie4:to enter · . "t--~ ·' ~vq lectures why the Cam-goven1 ment pays part 'ci("the
the cam~ or the ilnj.ersity YO&llll White House · ~ers i)odfan decision was made' or CMtt so that an annuity~
of Washington at Seattli... Jl)oved into the crowds lo 'dl!bating the situation . Thal g!Ven am ount is rar leu -~ ...
1 'f REE Estimates! Phone Sears Today!
.~~sears! ,,.~,,·:--.--
So. Cout Plaza, 333 Bris tol St.
Plloae 540-3333
A policeman, doing ..... fW.lY strike.up <¥>hve rsations. .. was not the purPQse. The perl!.ive lhan it w-o u I d
lo keep ~~rized 'peb°ple Soon aflerw'ard , the staff purpose was to gauge the in-l--,-•. ~1--------:-'-----'----~-----~-------------------------------
ofr the ciiln1inas during-·.the assistant!! aged t3 to 29 m3de tensit y of the situanon, the ". :. ,-!
nervou,, ·ti~'Clemanded the their tour of campuses. Like base people had tor t~fr ob-' ,: '·
man's ldentif,~ation., ij~·.ha~ , !'~inn's, lheir visits were large-jections. I was cord i a I I ~
none from OW! college -but ly Unannourice'd aild a n"V/ere greeted. -1 trieCI to convince
he had one tha t gave him en· informal-conducted in student everyone l Was there to
try into the White House. unions, cafeterias, dormitories listen." ·
"That cuts· no ice here." and on lawns. Later he walked into a
sajdi .the pollcenl8!1. But after -"It wasn't an attempt to sell meeting of an organization ac·
~Of?ll ichec}t.ing, .Chester: E. a p'rogrllm," says ~yeat~ ... tJ_v~!~-c~gageif in getting
Flriil, a rriember or the \Vhite old l staffet. ··nie-s:tudt!nt!'" '"'f'Ohbcil'-:.actiOIT.:i.Jl1~~ .com-
H~-. "kiddie corps" was ~ound olil that the\ Whjt(I m.u_!l!_l_l'.: .1
allowed in. House asSi~tants wyG ..teflt out ·~e .were abollt.six of us.
·The-minor iocident served to ·wer~ really bright yoUng P~ct 1 talked with thl!m aboyt the
illustrate a mission, perform-pie who wer.e i9_lllrested ·in • ~clivjij' t.Q.n the campus,; v.ohat
ed without fan fare, by eight talkUig to them.-A1>C(14e, P~:-:·, -ylans . ..t:~y "hi(~~~'W!1a~ ·t~ey
While House staffers on 27 col,:~__ple who W!!Ot out found the.:.. jJrough~ produced .J.be...iµler&)l_
legt campuses across the na· st'tfdentir were not a band of for the type or work they do.
lion in those troubled weeks. wild young revolutionaries. but Halfway through I said who
Their mission, °'as to find people concerned about 1 was. There was a degree of
out<lor President · Nixon what Jsaues." apology for having been as
really was going on ·and. if Each staffet1 visked lhrl!e strong as they . were about " "
possible, to tl!ll the ad· campuses; including -except sQJne of -their statements. Or
ministraUon's side. for Finn -the onl! they they took the --Other tack :
. It was. carry'ing one step graduated fri>m only a few 'Here is a cha~~ .to really tell
further an admirlistration olr years a10. Their report was the White House.\Otf."
'jective to dispel the notion summarized and brought to Others had .;aftni lar. ex·
~:'that the President is too the Presi'dent. periences. "Most .found that it ~ isol led to get the mQOd of . "It would be 'vrong to took a ha lf hou i; lot students
·, 1 young people. -1sola1e-Cambodia-:-Kent-State lo -gel-~he-hosti~t}Lout.-then _
,_.. During the presidenl.ial cam· and Jackson State as exclusive gtl to the meat· of thl! situa-
-~,~aign in 1968, Niloll had said. causes· of recent studen t tion," said one a~istant.
··-.' .. Far too few :bl . us rea lly diSC<Jntenl, although I he y One staffer said h c
_';· Hst~n to what "-'1ng. peoplt! sei;ve to '~tivate ma o y sometimes ta~~ this .aP-
\are saying. We.(~fend their mOd~.i~e suat~'t,. ·:, one part pro3ch : "l say K> .t~em, 1f I
, .Tight to speak ~p and to ol 1thi.'r.t~1d.-; .'i t:ould l~ke you t~' ~1~ule and
.. di~ent. we s'l!~e s e 1 f •• '"Many stUdtrts~~P.e'1" to we g~ into the ova~·cff1ce, and
:Tighteously at f our o w n accept uncrtircally · a:,.,.nutnber You sit down and:e.xprcss your
:tole'rance, and t~'we pay no 'of bizatre rumors -!d:'~~' ~s concern and speR-~em out I·
·•llenlion lo theiMnessage.". · I/I• ,.<lltt[liitrali £<J\d' .2.J. Then the J!i! •side n l . .1:. ~'.., .. ~(rad Wi\IJ the f, ~t~~ 'restates your ·~m and
\LISTENING .POS'!i' "t~i:;~l'~· J972 el . ~si , says 'he understafllt s' but there
•
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~ls ~ampa1gn ,f;OOPle set_ up \hat'"confirm ~if ~~~ii1ns is more . And he lists them 1-2-~ listening posts .,t .various or 'the g'avtl'l1fleJ1!'~ ~duP.t~ J, saying 'here I·tia ve the job
places -small "rding s~ ' l» 1• ·said aOOthi!i.. ,..c • and I must weigll betwten all
t.ians that invitee£~ public to . t r .t~' ' .~: these things. t go~io a iot of
express views. DEEPLY CONCE RN°!:D" .. · dirfere nt sources. and weigh
"We considertid.,-can:ying it 1Primarly. says. one starter, fot: and against certain things.
over to the Whit!! ,H~." ''wl! learned th at students \y'ould you understand that?''
says Herb 1i1e.m. Nixon's w~re deeply conc_erned ~~er ; "They invariably say they
.director, ot ootpmuaj~~ ~ ttie jssues. but in add1t1on would," he added.
"Bui· we discovl!red' the "Cost there was the second P,r<iblem
9)'et ·~· period of Yuf.t "8fll4 _-of CGi"¥JIUnication .. Jf i~·wasn'l SENIORS llELP
.r:_be quirt .expensive." for V1e~nam fnd ·Faf!t~la Senior staff ml!mbers also
) , Stnarttng·over criticism thal thtire still would• be: th}S pro-help in the communications ef·
. ~ went unhurd in bll!m.,. fort. It reaches to1he very lop
e1rl1er ~·~. the Another White House assis--people like John D. D.
Whitt louR arrqed during • laDt, 28 years old, walked up Ehrlichman. asslitant to lht
the Mai 9 peace gathering in Basco m Hill, •ft' his .• alma President for oOmes tic Af· w a 1 b"I n gt on . for ad-mater. the University of fair3 : ~~~.tfaldt.man, assis·
minilb'atiGQ officials to mtet Wisconsin. to ·chat with a tant to the i>res ident; ~t
with joung People in small Qua k er· offspring group Finch, • P re s'i dell i a J 1
1
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r. • • .. . ....
... . . ,. •• •
.,
counselor and Klein.
, "11 have b_lvited yourig peo-.
pie to their offices and hay!( .
gone to the campuses to
engage in the dialogut .
"Yoo. get the feeling ror
trends,'' say~ Klein. "A year
ago. people on campuses ftre
JTioi'~ f CO'f(l.tned with civil ~:. tlgitshlmn eeo1ogy:· Then you
could see it building to
ecology. The la st three times I •
•
went out I haven't been asked
anylhing on Litt econorry .
Y~"""few colleae students ~ to be lntl!re!ted in that.
tt'l1 are mostly concerned
w.~1 Vietnam, tht draft, the
tnOh'onme~. funds .for ed~a
n art: oJ i ( S latirs.
k>n rs a bu i ld i ng
nd result or the drive,
•IOllD says. "is to build 1an
· Mfenen ot what people t tt
talkl~&: '~~-.'~ •
ADVl,flT'!IMINT.
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t ·
...
8 .. . . . .
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stretch all aromid ;· .. • • • -that' s_J"ea1-sttetch t '
, .. .. ,,. . .
' f I ,~· .,.. ,l .~ ' ~h·~ ., . •lrc¢Jl~ n "'~. ..<""'1 ma for suJ>R:.knic !qps. The.streteb, t1110
. ..,..,., or nf!P,n or 110lyester and
", • nylo n. Thc'\sttipeo up 'n down for
,' older girls;' ll.'Ollnd:.Cor little girls.
'GoJ,.or<ued to mix with the .~
R._.•4.9'J 397 Girlo' Top<tOI' Puls
Size$ 7 to U -<1
a Mth
R.,,.:.•5,99·'Y.
Cbubby,._111.ilo 16'h 4.97u.
I I Jnle GirlA'
!'izes 3 co 6s ·
2.99 tope fl>r
3.49-'8
•
,1rctcli ·n Oare ••• they add up to
the gr<21est pants. Herc iQ our dou-
ble knit nylOll panlS that stretch two
ways. NaTY, brown, red or green.
rr••~,.ita1J1e . ·-
These t~; Maiafsi~n bea rs appear to have i("iri ~ot
e1ch other as they enga·ge in vocal tiff in Frank-
furt Zoo.
~~ 1u&~:r:'m"::: r~:-:-"':"-:-"] ............ ~ .. ··~·.;·~·.;.· .............. ~··~;~·~~-·;;..~ .. !!!!'!!!!'!!''!'!!~ ........ ~~'!!'~~ ...... ~~~~~~ .. -eoiiilO....Wrr-1 kel "f'Otl'et,\ lftON -•• ' -' •
li!llllNU!. PM Denture Ad• Seat. s' . ' - - -.... ,, -· ....... 11.1 ...... ·-· ,, ...... blll•• ·~ i. not. teld. 1'll.re'1 - -!' •~-. •1-"" _,; !;'.:,:,; ..___, .., r -.-• - -·-""-• ... •-·-..,,., °'"'" ••-••"""""77CMIJ,"Pl-Jt7 PIMR&· n.tn· ,_ •---,.• • • •1-"'' _ •• ·,, '· • ----·-· • .,. •• ~.-~... ~-·-to.1111 ·JuJ'llllballlli\•r. ... auolto blllltl. __ .,,..'" ,,_ ----;;._.,.;;.,___ -··--...... ,.,., ........ 11w f!ll.ft:iad•aU•l r•<11lar11. o.i • ._ __ co. --·· -• •-• _,,_ ... -111. .. ,,,1 ,. at-UllN&OOlllB..._ • .,. --·------AA••••a. .... u-...aaa. ., rs r t -, • ._,_,__... _
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-DAILY PILOT
Student Supporter•
Kansas Stale students rush to shake hands with President Nixon after a speech
in \vhich he said that American college s risk·losing public support unless they
curb violence by "destructive activists.". ·
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• SC< s ·-" 7N _. .. • •
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SHOP M!AIS ~~Y·l;S ~•I P.ll .• , , • ll•• t '' lilre letardli19:30A.M.zo9118 P.iii. .. . ..
•• •
A ::
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Sears
.
\ •
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SAVE16%!
. ~
·eoiton Gauze or
Birdseye Diapen
Lplar'2.99
YOURCHOICE •
$
Pkg a.
·for
--Bt'ftin-link-· Ki-rkpa-t-rick-ttrHead
G.U.iZE DIAPERS ••• Super a&
sorbenc heuywei,ghc conoa. Pat
drying. Comforrable for baby. Witli Chimp Federal Commissior•
Researched \VASHlNGTON IAP)
Miles W. Kirkpatrick is ·taki ng
NE\V HAVEN . Conn. (AP ) the reins of the Federal Trade
-A team of Yale University Commission exactly a yea r
scientists has implanted a two-afler a panel he headed con-
way radio link between the eluded the beleaguered agency
hrain of a chimpanzee and a must be reformed or 'abolish·
computer, enabling the brain ed.
to recei11e its own signals from Kirkpatrick, a fl?-year~ld
!he computer. Phil,.delphia "lawyer, was
The experiment raises the named by President Nixon last
possibility of establishing elee· month to beCome the fourth
·ironic communication from F'TC chairman in less than a
one brain to another. the year.
scientists said. lt also suggests His predecessor, Caspar W.
new ways of treating mental \Yeinberger. gave the oath to
and physical disorders, they !he new chairman. Weinberger resigned to become No. 2 man
said. · · in the tlew White House Office . 'J'he teani \\'8S led by Dr . Jose f\.1_ R. Delgado, 3 of Managemenl anl:I Budget.
neurophysicist at the Yale Weinberger repl.aced Paul Rand Dixon. who was demoted School of Medicine. He ·is 1' by Nixon after eight years a!I pi~r i.!I electrical brain chairman. Commissioner A.
stimu lation aOO • h as ex· Everett Macintyre has been
pcrimental\y induced anger· acling chairman s i ri c e pleasur~ and other emotions in Kirkpatrick's nomination Aug.
animals and humans. 11. making Kirkpatrick the
In the c bi m P an z e e ex-fourth ma n to head the agency
periment , e 1 e cl rode s inr · since January,
Kirkpatrick for anotbtr four
years.
Soon to end nine yea rs on
the commission is Philip
Elman . who recently called
for "radica l st r u ct u r a I
refor m" of the FTC.
In the year that has
separated Kirkpatrick's report
and his assumption of the
chairmanship, much h.ts hap.
pened to the much-criticized
agency.
Under Weinbtrger. the FTC
.went throu'h a top.lo-bottom
reorganization that insiders
say will streamli'tle the agen-
cy's work and put added
empha sis on consumer affairs.
Weinberge r also ·sought and
received early retlrement of
nearly a score of top agency
officials, a move reCom·
mended by Kirkpatrick's
study group.
In testimony during hear·
lngs on his confirmation by
the Senate. Kirkpatrick said
he would be "dedicated lo the
consumers' interests.·•
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..-:~\•.-... ' ' •. .r ........ ... ~ , ..... -.. '
Recelfta1
BJukel•
R.,.1.;1 IW•J.ft
...
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OceanDy~g
Says Seaman
planted in the animal's, head KirkpatFick, chairman ol the
picked up electrical brain American Bar Association's
waves wh.ich Were transmitted antitrust section in 1~9, ill
to a computer by a small best known as head of the 16-
receiver-transmitter atop itll member ABA panel that
head. roasted the FTC in a study
The computer retu rned a released Sept. IS, 1~. 3 }17
contr'ol signal to another part Characterizing the SO.year. Co·ustea U fti&,-.t ,_.
or the' brain th r o u g h the old regulatory agency. as in·
receiver. Once stimulated,, the effective and dissension-rid--,.., ... ...a ""8111.;. .,._...__,.,Jiwl,
h b . , a ....,.. W1saiaiic fA:,.. lldsle .tntllo1t· latter part of 1 e r~1n in· den. the report stated, "the MONTE CARLO (AP) _ ~'--1. Mac1ii11e w1sft· ..,.. ..... fi.,J·,~.
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BtRDSEYEDLU'ERS •.• HuYJ-
wei,ghc cotton i• abaorbent and
clwible. Siars soft wuhing ftr
.... hHig.
Infants' Cotton
Snapside Shiru
Ro1ulor 3 }37 .1 forSl.99
for
• MaclKM _.aa.bJe. eeuoo wialt .Md
•J.evea. fa11 d.011ble front fer atta
pre1ac1ion
• :\o-hind ske'e eonatruetin fer eo.-
fort aadfree ae:liow
• ~*wharn, 1m1lf er •edi•M lilft
ternally turned off the brain case for change is plain." "1'he oceans ar1 dyinf. The l'bH. h:lck., ...r
__ -"ac~u~·v=ity originally sensed by "1£ ch!"1ge dpes not occ~r. pollution is general." '-===;;;;~~=-:--:--====---~..::;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;::::::::::===========::=::°'.'.~'.::====:.....:==! the computer . t~e1~-w1H-be:'-rursuhstant~al--Thaf'SiM 'acp~p'"i~as~ia~J-o~!~J~,~-<·-.' -.
The scientists reported that purpose to be . served by its q11es Yves COusteau . back
the chimp. named ·Paddy, contin~ed existence : I he from 31/l years' exploration
changed moods often-al the essential wor~ to be done must and movie-making around !he
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computer's directlon--during then be carried on by other world
the I th year experiment but governnM!nlal Institutions,'' it "~re was 1 mountain of
returned lo normal when the said. talk about the llinking of the
computer was disconnected. Ironically. the one man on Torrey Ca nyon but the oil that
STARS
the fiv~member commission polluted the sea al the time
who most agrees with lhat was only I percent of the ~~C:~t:~err~~:~e~;~nw~~: norma l annual pollution." the Sydnty Om•rr ;, """ of tl.e
... orlfl'1 9re1t •1frolo9er1. Hi1
column ii on• of ihe DAILY
PILOT'S 9r••I f••lu1e1.
Dixon, whom the r , p 0 rt underwater ·explorer said .
recommended firing, will Bit '"People don't realize that all
across tht table f r 0 01 pollution goes to the seas. 'l'he ~=========:!__:::.:::__::.::__::::_.:_.::_:: earih is less polluted. It is
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Ainmo Drop •
South Vietnamese troops at Fire Su pport Base O'·
Reilly shoulder ammUn ition after a heJicopter sup·
ply drop, The helicOP-ler has not only come of age
in the Vielnan1 war, it has made the U.S. Anny the
'''orld'a third largest air force, ranking behind the
U.S. and Soviet air forces.
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washed Qy the rain whil'h car-
ries everything into tM ocean
\\•here life has din1inished by
40 percen t in 20 y~an1 .
Fish di5appcnr. Flora too."
Cousteau and hi~ crew
aboard the Calyp~ returned
Tuesday arter C<>vering more
than 155.000 mites. The ship
will remain in port 1wo weeks
before starting to look for the
best route ror a propo~
pipeline between Algeri a and
Sicily.
"An excees of fishing is also
pollution," Cou!ttau s • i d .
"The oceans are b e i n g
scraped. Eggs and larv ae are
disappearing. tn the past. the
sea renewed itselr. lt was a
complete cycle . BuL this
balanct was upset wllb the ·~
pearanee: or industrial civiliz.a·
lion. Shrimps are beinl ehased
rrom their holes by electric
shocks. Lobste r are being
sooghL In impoiSible places,
Coral ltseU is disappearing.
·Even In the Indian Ocean .
"But Cousteau said he had
hope. "Very strict aclion 1nullt
be taken ," he declared . "The
United Slates and the Soviet
Union are m a k i n g con-
siderable efforts in lhis direc.
lion.
4 Men Hold Up
Downcv Bank
00\VN~:y ,i;P1 1 -Four
qien. l\\'O carrying pins, rob·
brd the Downey breanch of
the Bank of Amtrica Wtd;
nesday and escaped with
S4.111.
One of 1hc men, armed with
a shotgun, took cn.~h froir
!hrrr teller's cages whil
another man carrying :
military type rifle held th•
civployes and 10 customers ar
b•y.
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Protect little · knees with
2-pc. creepalong sets
•
Sensational V alne
at Sean Low Price! .
ICll
for
$
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• Coa.• cordlll'Oy c~ i..., 1n1p erotch, filled bit>,
lodder-b.lck., adjnot1hle .......
dor1irapo
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_Four Repuhlican~:.Virwed . -
--~t\s_, Sucoos8or:~~o'•~eagan
··-' J • -• \ ~ ~ .... ~ -.
SACRAMENTO (AP) gressman a p po In I< d by
Four Callrornia R-epublicans ·Reagan to the !ltl'te's-No. -2 -job
already are emerging as when Robert H. Fincli resign-
p:iten\18} Candidates lb sue-~. . to join -the Nil~ ad· coot • ,Jtou\11 ..Reagan a s ~1rustr&tion. He has said he goV~tjiQrjrl~J97i .. _ :. . ,_inle~s to run for gov~or in
EaCli--Is attractive and 1974. ·"
youlh(ul, ~ith experience. jn . "T ~bly Spe,aker Robert
govertunent:and.politid. Each T .. Monagan, ~. crew~t
would providj!: major opposi-for~r basketball player and
ttoin>loc'. ~1\1-S t>ylhg· to •'athletic. director from Tracy In
wreSt lhe •cOntrol of the Ca~· the San Joaquin Valley.
Jtol from the GOP. -State Co!Voller Houston
Reagan, 59,til ftvored.. ~ the . ~I-Flournoy, 40, a former
opinio~ Jl!?lls to . .d.e f e,a t . political science te~er and Democrat~ Unruh Ws fall • assemblyman. He IS more
for a second term. He has said liberal in political outlook than
he W<Wki r~tire at ~ end of Rea&~· . "
eighl'Jeln in ~i;;'"' ,.i --' Los,. Angeles Dist. AUy.
The out.come -~the Nov. 3 ~elle .J.1.Younger, 52, seeking
electiOf'.I. ja.;,vit.al ~each of lhe election as state attorney
fatµ'~ o t e n ti a l\Rep~~li~q ge!!eral this year. Cl~ as a
gu~atorial candidates:: . moderate, Younger has a good
'Ftl:tY. a.re ~· , .' poytet: kfise and pub 11 c
-Lf. Oov. Ed Reintcke; 46, · teccgnitiOn.
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!I...,, S.ottmbtt 21 , 1'10 DAILY l'ILOT J:f • -----POW Appeal
. l Students Write to H a1ioi
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -"Your .,_,_But-11yla( "! 'll'rolAI
-11ency, I am writlna to · H-" are dittribUted. Mn.
L. T. Burm ol Wlchila F.U.,
Tex., paid '500 to have IOD,000
ol tbe buUom made.
Lelt.r boothl, manned by
volunteers, wtn!! Mt up In
shoPPlnc ceot.ra, In bualneu
lobbies, 1t churches, dvle
clubs, on campuses ud at
altpoN, lo pro-mveJoeu
and collect mail.
st. Peterabura. junior eollece
students at tbe Clearwater
campus have collected a signatures.
Teenqen in 1econdar1
schools wrote letters 1 1
En1ll1h home.w.ork
aaalpmento.
B0 sineuet have donated
envelopes. peldls and polters.
A total ol 1!0 1eUm ...,. col·
lected ill Tampa lilone on tho
first day, tht Red Crou said.
. People were asked to pay
their own postqe, 25 cents air
mail. Te1as millionaire Ross
Perot has agreed to get un-
mailed letters airborne to As.I.a
-
the Southern California con· Whoever succeeds Reagan, if communitieL.J'.UJL.._(IUt_of. __ ~___,.1 stamps and rnoney. S8id Dave
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Fletcher, ' campal&n
spokesman: "We're boptq to
do it all ourselves °" a c<m·
munity basis without pollU·
cians, go vernmeat or
millionaries. Just a lot of little
people doing the best ther.
can." ·
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W'e ,...ltltroclucecl the Dutter Sma~l enou9h ~
q • thC~transportatlon ; :.lor manewerablltty; 111
· -tlarpln In AmerJca, H dill ls.;· ~:..,.en!ulh .!.!'~~!!:&,
; :~ W buHt Duster to bC fi.' Duster's sm•ll enough·to slip into about1' of 11>1rtdng~
1·. _'_._.,. _ _. _____ ·_-' .• _I,:'"--,• fll._·enou...,_ •. _· . sk'ce. Yet ifs.big enough to give you atabllity on the . ........-S:~; f HIHILJ': •~• openhighway. •• ·-......... 4111_... a · . but ~1, enough" .... , . ll·tuisour unique torsion-bar tuspen1lon (for better '-, .,~!II" • - ' · handiingJ. And unibody construction-its 1tnmgth ' ... And It still ls.-como1e1e1ysurroundsvou .• ,.--.it!I ..... .-~ • . 4... <. So Duster can-handle stop-and.go cfty traffic 11
Small car lovers of America. your day has come. well as freeway trallic because it's the right size, it'I
You have more tires to kick, more doors to slam, therlght:,yeightand ithandles.r
more hoods to look under. more colors to choose from J ... 1
and more test drives 10 take tha n ever before. <I>'-""' Our small·enou1n· -~-~
Wh ich leaves us to convince you thaf Duster gives ! _bUt•blg•enOUgh Car liil A._ tfyou·raconaiCferlngbuying1nowam1llc:at,andyou you the most car for the money. That it's small enough, have certain options In mind to go 1tong with 11, ycu~
but big enough. And that, all in all, ifsthe ideal small car0, small•enoUgh•bUt• bl9•enou9h may find Duster the only 1111all car ttlll olfon them.I.
R " .,. __ .:,, f It ' ' I ,-,. Tl11<1 m tlllnga llke 1 Sterao C-tte TllOO Player, QCllll, ......... 0 eng ne, . I V·B 1nglno, vlnyt roof and -brakes that you just
., to. vc'o .. m···"o:.d~-..e mo-pas•-gers.· • ~_:Igeton-amallcara.Jliii __... · • ,., ..,,, Duster's standard eng ine is our rugged 198 cubic
· M~ o!. ~t to acc~ate r :~ in~thg:J;,"~~~~;.~r ;;:· :;1~:i~nd ~tittle• mor~ ,, Thi Diiiler~a story:
" '< .... ,.
,. '
, f, '.' '.'\ ,. . ' -. ~ -T See by' Today's
Want Ads
'~ ~ · ~· e. lfinf about a s~
Chestnut? wen tr~ and.
In ..,, ... health. ~-
e Sklpjack 3:1' Dying bridge,
N.B. Must ate to believe. It.
• Frolt frtt Philco, He does-
n't make anow 1n WW' "1ii;Zeit .. ~---·.J'li..-:0
•
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. .. . . .. .. " .. ..
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· ,, ,•.lllP'C lllllllC• . '/!.~ power tl)an other small cars' smaller engines.·· I' lo bl cmtlwcl
, •• ...i-, ... ~ • ~ ,a. ~~;_, Andthat'saperfectcombination... .\ ~ ,~ .. ·•on ,.r ee •
Most small ¢ars are four·passeng~r cars. A(¥:11~~~ op· t'---1 ~ No dou· bl~a~bOUt ltf .... ~r'is~th·•8'!!,.,f-or --ti·mes.•j you sit 1n some of the m, they feel like they were bUl!!,F. IUlll.., uu.1• _. 11,.
!or three·and-a-hall passengers. ~r-r-#" '"ft"-; ~ h 50 • Ov9r 175,000 Ouster buyel'I thOuQht IO lut year.
Du ster's a f ive:pas senger~car~ltl sea,t_fl~v·:t.. OU llC over Ai.. AndwelxpectmorepftheaamtkindOflUCClll_with'
comlorlably. -·-··· . ' I Co choose from when you the 1971 Duator, a I 7 a c •1£ 12 u a ·'
Besides c;afrying more up front, t;>vstercarr!~tnor• . ., D (.i ' Before you buy a 1m11f car, ~k 1t. our lmlll car.
In the trunk. You can styffA15.9 i:'uQj_c feel of sflill ioto . Order a uster, f ! Duolar. Buttt and ---~
11. (One of the new sniallt~rs hea about aMJcd as . , ,,,,b.r-. ~~ .. wtthlllrl--. ~ -··
much 1runk space) r l,,'·~~ ' ·· -· Thlnkol ii th is way It's a convenience to hive 1 lot of I: ·
•
1
:: • , ~conven iences to choose from. : . • ~ -
, • . .. l• .,,• -ctli'Ytl!H Corror11.on
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•
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DAILY PllOT
New _fo11stituents
I
' '
~ ,_
Clean Air Steps Prepared
. .
1975 Cars to Meet Antipollution Stanaards~-Or Else
WMBINGTON (UPI) -the 1dminlltration bu decided Hou.te Office ol Science and produce most lead additives,
'1'o lllllipollullaD drl .. -luded fuel mull remain Techlloleo 1gree •that /eod contend they shouldn't be
ctw1le a nnr automotive avaJJable for older cars. won't be' banned before the curtailed at all. Both firms say
ltatua IJDlbol for 1l7I modela: With atrvice stations car· late 19'19!1 despite the danger they have developed exhaust
-·•-""·"-•'•• IU II-"" _ rylng both kinds, how do you of foulln& cataly·sts. clean-up devices which work
i-. -~~ --~ insulate new cars from an oc-Ltld is the tradtilional oc· fine on leaded fuel and at least =....i ... Jeaded _ .... 11_ won't caskmal dole of I 1 a d e d ta.ne boolter for gUQllne. one major oil company says it ftir •-aasollne? Starting , with l~l n:iodels, ha~a device which isn't harm·
Can 1ccount for 1 n Detroit's ftcines will run on ed by small amounts of lead.
It may alll JXOIDPt • na-estimated 40 to·IO percent of ·row octane fuel requiring no Whether the ad· ~pollu~ :>;~;"1·,J: 111 air pollution, and straight lead. But officials estimate ministration's program works ~-.exhaust emission standards that in 1975, perhaps 12 million· or not, it will cost the con.-
lbmb,-at ~-ba~Fbliordy •M~ an generally conslcltred the pre-1971 high octane gw.Jlers sumer. General Motors says
Co. estimates at ,151 to ._vw' keystone of the clean air will alill be on lhe road. the same engine modifications
G_ ..... 11_ ...-. drive. Besides, officials . s a y • which adapt new can to low ~ pwDJll may be re-The 1975 standards proposed unleaded gasoline sometimes octane fuel cut performance
qulRd to dilclole the octane. by the Department of Health, causes a valve malfunction. some, and might give t~ • IOll lani IOUlht by Coo-Education and Welfare would Auto makers claim cars from motorist up to 5 percent less
111111er srou .. and oppoeed by reduce exhaust pollutants to a '.71 on are designed to prevent gas mileage. ·
the oil indUltry. Pumps car-fraction of their present level. 1t. Unleaded gasoline usually ~'~k~u :~tha~c! Privately, administration of· "It's jwit not feasible for the co.sis more anyway and the ...i;_; ~"'·'"ts a 0 d ficia)J -acknowledge the-s1an· administration to wipe out all -proposed tax on lead additives
..... r-1Ul6 dards could be a sham if lead-those cars," says Eric 0. is designed to equalize the
hazardous but tprays. ed gas isn't somehow kept out Stork, who handles auto price. The oil Industry has
President Nixon addresses reception for 140 persons Nixon later gave flag lapel pins to new citizens.
And if YOU caich a Rl'Vice of 1975 model cars. Every car emissio n control for HEW's served notice that the con-
Jtation man allppinc klded could pass production line National Air Pollution Con-sumer will be billed,' to, for
1UOUne: into your tank, you emission tests with flying col· trol Administration (NAPCA). the.cost of offering Jeitded and
mieht be ab~ lo sue him for on. But if a driver or service Ethyl Corp. and E. I. un leaded gasoline at the same
I.be of a new cata.lyat. station_ attendant picked... the DuPont De Nemours,~icE _ time.
'Ibtll are nne ol tht steps wrong pump even 1 time outJi";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;911
belrt1 considered by the Nixon of 100, the catalyst could be
who became natutal!utr'citizen.rin-Chicago;-Mrs-. -
'Islands in the Stream' Tells
Administratlon to 10lve a pro-ruined. The driver wouldn't . Smog warning blem which has rec<ivecl IClnl know il, but his <ar would
public attention d.urink the pour out pollutants much like
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A debate on the admlnlstra.tlon's an older model, even if fed a
first stage tmOI alert for Los proposed tax on lead 1uoline steady unleaded diet from
e JOB PRINTING
e PUBLICATIONS
e NEWSPAPERS
Life Style of Hemingway
Aaceles county wu declared add.iUve1. then on.
at 2:35 p.m. Wedneldly by the It is this: Accordin1 to auto The administration is urging
. Air Pollutlon Control Diltrict. makers, lt'lS models can meet Congresa to impose a tax on
It luted unW 4:10 p.m. The the proposed clean air stan-lead gasoline additives, and to
alert wu initiated when the dards only with exhaust-clean-give HEW authority to ban or
Qu11ity Printing ind Oapandabl• Saryic•
for more thin • qu1rtar of a c:antury •
PILOT PRINTING
NEW YORK (AP) -In
Ernest Hemingway's "Jslands
ih the Stream," a big novel
about the sea which was found
among his papen after his
death in 1961, the image of
Hemingway himself is easy to
find. '
Not that the novel is
autobiographicaJ in its plot,
but the main character ob-
viously has a life style that
comes close to the author's
OYln. And several incidents in
the book are developed out of
occurrences in Hemingway's
life.
The ~page noveli,_ which
was completed about 1952, will
be published by Scribners on
Oct. 6. It is in three parts, and
presumably the w r i t e r
originally conceived of them
as separate books. The prin·
cipal character in all three
parts is an American painter
named Thomas Hudson.
In the first part Hudson is
Jiving • lonely life in the
BiminJ Islands during the
1930'9, and receives a welcome
visit by his three sons -Tom,
by his first wile, and Dave and
And"'w, by his second wife.
Jn the second part the scene
is Havana during World War
JI. with Hu dson drowning his
sorrows over the death of
Tom, and in the final part
Hudson is using his fishing
boat to track down the surviv·
ing sailot'! of a German sub-
marine that had been sunk
near the Cuban keys.
Jn the gunfire which cOn-
ludes the book, Hudson is hi t
by three bullets.
The author's widow. Mary.
~aid recently in commenting
<1n the novef that "Thomas
Hudson does not die because I
asked Ernest not to kill him.
to give the guy a chance.
"He did that once before. He
was going to have Santiago die
jn 'The Old Man and the Sea '
and I sa id. 'No, he is too nice
a man, let him live.'
,;I felt Hudson as a
character is a charming and
s"'·eet -guy and E r n e s t
agreed." she continued. "He is
·wounded but there is a chance
that he will tteeive medical
attention and be saved."
She added that Hemingway
had planned to kill off H~son
"because it was a nice and
simple way to finish the.
book."
Jn his 1>iography o! Hem-
ingway, publiabed last year.
Carlos Baker recorded that at
Christmas Ume ln 1950 the
author announced that be had
approximately finished one of
his three "books" about the
sea. . . .
"His tentaUve titles were
'1be Sea When Young,' 'The
Sea When Absent,' and the
'Sea in Being,'" wrote Baker.
"He said rather mysterious-
ly that be had not touched The
Sea When Young since 1947,
and there is a strong presump-
tion that he was referring to
his cut-down version of the
abortive novel 'Garden of
Eden.'
"The one he had just finish-
ed was 'The Sea When
Absent,'" wrote Baker. "Its
hero was an American named
Tbomu Hudson. I n ap-
pearance. manner. a n d
personal history, he was clear·
Jy based on Ernest himself.
"His former wife, who ap-
peared prominently in the
story, was m11Ch like HadJey,
""hile their eldest IOl'I, whose
death the book recorded, bore
a superficial resemblance to
Bumby."
Baker's references were to
Hemingway's first w if e.
Hadley Richardson, and their
son John, whose nickname
was Bumby.
The third part of tht book i~
what Hemingway called the
"sea chase," a dramatic ac·
lion story full of suspense,
gunfire and death.
It is an echo of Hem·
ingway's tamer experiences as
a civilian yachtsman on an·
tisubmarjne patrol in Cuban
waters in 1942-1943.
The author had obtained
permission from the
American ambassador to Cuba
to use his 38-foot fishing vessel
"Pilar" as a Q-boat. hunting
for Naz.i submarines that were
preying on Allied shipping in
the Caribbean. His crew of
eight included Winston Guesl.
the A m e r I c a n millionaire
The Naked Ape·
Dr. Irvin S. Bernstein will teach course in Atlanta
using the bestseUer "Ttie Naked Ape" as the basis
for di1CU11ion of human origins. Dr. Bernstein and
orangulaD check o~ef the la.ti.
. -
ozone concentraUon I e Y e I ins catalysts, or perhaps regulate any fuel additive. But
sportsman, who was second In reached .52 parts per m.UUon thermal devices, which are offlclall of HEW, the White
command. In real life the of air in tut San Gabriel badly impaired by . even ooe House Council on Environmen-1211 wm U.LIOA ILYD,. HIWPOn IUCH-'4MJJ1 /
patrol!" or tht • ' P i I • r ' '. _v~al~l~•Y~·-_____ _:__:taU!ul=:::":_:le;:•~ded:'.,!1!!"="'1=:11J=ne'.:: . .!Bu:'.'.'..t _:W~.::!Qu:'.all~ty~and:'.:'._:lhe:..__:Wh'.'.'.'.'.ite~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ were uneventful. 1-
, 'lbe three narratives that
Hemingway was working on
gradually became four -the
Jast-one the tale of Santiago,
which developed into the short
novel "The Old Man and the
Sea," published in 1952.
Santiago's great fight with a
giant marlin is called to mind
in the first part o( "Islands in
the Stream," which contains a
griaphic 30-page: account of
young Dave's six-hour battle
with a giant broadbill. Hem-
ingway twice went big-game
fishing in the Bimini area in
the 1930's.
The Hudson-Hemingway Im·
age is furbished here and
there with some Jillie every-
day touches.
For example llemingway
frequented a Havana bar call-
ed lha Floridlta. So did
Hudson. Some ti ma sHem-
ingway drank a mixture ol lin
and coconut water, sometimes
I rozen daiquiris. So d I d
Hudson. "
Hemingway had a lot of cats
with odd names -such as
Boise and Friendless -and so
did Hudson.·
39 Coast
Students on
Honor List
Thirty nine Orange Coast
resident.s are among 719
students at Cal State Fullerton
to be naiTied to the Dean's List
for academic achievement for
the spring semester of 1970.
To qualify. student:. must
maintain a 3.S or better grade
point average in 12 or more
units of study.
The honor students aklng the
Orange Coast are :
Balboa -Robert A. Mathl.-
'°"· Corona del Mar -Barbara
A. P.Iawdsley and Robin M.
Rahe.
Costa Mesa -Robert ?.f.
Baker, James A. Carnett,
. Janet T. Cejka. Shirley A.
Hunter .• Linda K. Hyepock.
Carol J. Cleek, So Jung Lee,
Diane R. Perry and Susan L.
\Vebb.
El Ton> -Eileen R. Sprinl·
ger .
Founlain Valley -Lucia
Caballero and Grace M .
P.todglin.
Hunlin~oa-Beact. ---Keith
E. Arnold, Fredrica Bonnin,
Wilbur J . Brown, Kristine
Dillon and Wayne R. Gault.
Irvine -Janice L. Lan1ley,
Elizabeth L. Lyle, Stephen R.
Maillet and Norman A. Smith.
L.apha Btach -P.1ary J .
~turray and Barbara L .
Nelson. .
Laguna Hills -Emmale1m
P. Bigelow and "larylynn M.
Lo\\1er.
P.1ission Vieje -Glen P.
Vecchione.
Newport Beacll -Joel w.
Adams. Bel!!y J. Carl.Ion,
Norma n C. Fleming, Madtlon
P.1iller, Ted N. Ok t y ,
K~therlne A. Watson 111d Mar·
ja S. \Vicktr . .}
San Cle me~ "I!.: Ronald D.
Gould and Hubert A. r..tont.u.u .
Su Jaan C.plttnne
Richard A. Bodnar.
Meke • Sh1rp
Tr1de; Use
Oim•A-lin1s
•
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of no use to
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No one else can use this Master Charge. card except you.
Because no one can match the face on it. Except you. No one
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Gretel's Cup Victory Short '·Live~....-....Soat Disqualified_
BULLETIN
Tht New Yori( Yacht
Club's race committee to-
day upheld Jntrepid's pro-
tesi and disqualified G~etet
If. l1t1-repid was declared
the wititte1' of Sunday's
1·act . llere U Alr1ton Lock.-·
nhe.r{s account of the race,
filed prior .Lo the protest
dtc1sio11:
By ALMON LOCKABEY
D,t,ILY f'ILOT .. •11111 l"•!t.r NEWPORT, R.I. -The
America's Cup trembled on ilS
pedestal at New York Yacht
Club Sunday night to the
rollicking rhythm or "Wa ltzing
Mali lda,"
Gretel JI the Australian
challenger for the 119-year-old
pewter pitcher parlayed three
skipper!! to win the sec<1nd
race of the IOOth challenge for
the "auld mug," proving that
f'icker wasn't ·quicker -at
least on the tinal two legs of
the 24.3-mile course .
tto.t at 1:40 R.m. EDT and the
ncit 1ot under way at 2 p.m.
After the usual pre-start
pme ol. ring arowid the rosy,
boUi boat.1 were lufl.lng near
the tiblt end of the startin1
line a few seconds before the
starting signal. G r e t e 1 ' 1
etar1lng 11klpper, Mar t In
Vbffr, wat apparently hoping
to block Intrepid.
But u the gun fired . Ficker
hlrd@ned up 1ad shot through
to weather u Visser luffell
heH to lflind. Red flap ap.
pei rtd In the rigln1 of both
boats 1lmost simultaneously.
The Incident left Gretel almost
dead 1n the water as Intrepid
11ped aw1y with 1 clear
to the tender to remove Van weather berth.
Dyck by basket. A doctor wis By this time Jim Hardy had
also removed from the tender taken over the helm or Gretel
to atte"d Van Dyck on his way 11' He started a series of tacks
to the hospital . Jt wu later effectively covered by Ficker
reported that he was. treated Jlthough Hardy sterned .to
and released and would be in gain to weather and work
the cockpit next arc:.e. ahead on each tack .
A few minutes later Wallace Tben e1me what •ppeared
E. ''Toby" Tobin was placed-to be 1 fatal mist ake on
•
Gretel II won the match in a
dramalic come from behind
duel by one mi nute, JZ
seconds.
aboard Intrepid to take Van' Hardy's part. On the 29th tack u,.1 T•ie.MIM
-The drama of the race was
somewhat dulled by protest
flags flown by both yacht s a
few seconds after the starling
signal.
The protests will be heard by
the New York Yacht Club race
committee today. There will
be RO ra ce today. The third
race of the best four out of
seven se ries will be sailed,
Tuesday .
The dramatics st a rte d
before the racing yachts were
half way to the re ndezvous
point at the America's Cup
buoy. One of fntrepid 's
tenders was seen removing
Steve Van Dyck. Ficker's ace
tactician front the Intrepid. A
few.seC1'.lnds later radio signals
infol'med the fleet that Van
Dyck had been stung on the lip
by one of the hundreds of
yellow wasps th at swanned
around the docks an~ stayed
on some of the boats seve ral
miles at sea.
The wasp w~ on a soft
drink botlle that Vah Dyck
raised to his lips.
The next word was that Van
Dyck had suffered a serious
reaction to the sting and a
Coast Guard helicopter rushed
Dyck's place. . to port he expec ted Ficker to AFTER "t'OU, OOPS -:rntrepld (left) and Gretel_ II approach the America's THUMBS UP -Gretel II skipper Jim Hardy (back)
Hardly had-Qiis-ineldelt-cover.------Cup COlffl'rl1tte·e--bO"at-t'R-the left-picture, th'en coU1de seconds before the start of -a1_1d~MartiirVisser give-:the-thumbs up sign after d~
calmed down w~en the Coast But Ficker, spotting a the second race Sunday. "Gretel II suffered minor damage but went on to win feati ng Intrepid a nd tying the America's Cup race
Guard _cutter _Poin' Turner -freshening breeie ahead on the contest before being· disgualified th.is afternoon . series at one victory each.
on which this rt porter was the starboard tack and being 1-j;ijijii~jiijii~· ~· ijj~-ii~ijjjj· i' j;i-iijjiiijjiijiiijiiijiiijiiijiiijiiijiiijiiiiijiijiijiijiijijjiijiijiiijiijiijijjiijjijjjj;;;jjjiijiijiii;iiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiijj aboard -rushed toward the near the lay line , did not I -------
spectat?r fleet with sirnes follow. Afler 20 ~'Hardy ~ \ '
screaming. Word h_ad bee• realized his mistake and came rlashed that a mine was bee · floating on the fringes or the k to starboard at least s1:1
1,000-boat spectator neet. boat lengths astern.
The Turner and several Both yach~ ~ ooe more
Coast Guard 40-footers cleared tack to the Jar line and at the
the area until a retired Navy mark lntn:pkl: led by 47
underwater demolitiOfl officer seconds.
arrived on scene aboard a On the reaching leg Fidler
private vessel. Closer io-kept 1ntrepkf moving faster
spection proved that the and at the reaching mark had
ominous.looking object was a lncn!ased the lead to a com·
net buoy put out by Rhode fortlble one minute and nine
Island sound fis!;ierm en. seconds, Both boiriU executed
The next emergency to be pe-fect jibes 1t the mark but
announced was that a small Ficker continued to be quicker
boat had ca psized with seven and ,had increased the split to
perso"s aboard . It was one minute and forty two
reportedly an IS.foot outboard. seconds at th"e end or the
All were ~escued. . triangie.
Meanwhile postponr:nent s1g. On the second windward leg
nals had been fluttering from Hardy agai n got Gretel in the
the si~nal mas~ of ~e r~ce groove and at the fourth mark
committee boat incredible for had cul Jntrepid's lead to one
<lver an hour waiting for theh minute JZ !lecOrlds.
fitful southwesterly to fill in. It ~as on the d e a d
As the breeze increased to downwind run to the fifth
six knots course signals were mark that Dave Forbes took
hoisted aboard the ccmmittee over the helm of Gretel and
• . '
W@DMz\RK
ORIGINAIS
* * * * * * . made the dramatic move that
finally placed her ahead.
Gretel's crew lowered the spin-
naker pole and let the mast
sag forward , Halfway down
the leg Is was obvious she had
closed the gap. .
Aussies Flip
Cup Win Jubilance Reigns Then Forbes starting a jib-
ing duel, gathering speed on
each jibe, while Ficler could
only sail for the mark with his
pole squared away,
.Australlans aboard t he
Coast Guard press boats
"\VhoOpee" ye 11 e d lhe
telephoni st when asked what
they were saying d°"'n at the
posh Roy a I Sydney Yacht
Squadron about the win. nf
Gretel II in the second
America's Cup race.
There was no immediate
comment from the squadron's
secretary, Ivan Irwin", who
wa s not in the club premises,
but everyone else in Sydney
was talking about the Aussie
boat's triumph in the best--0f·
seven·series off Newport, R.I.
Thousand s of office workers
were late fo r work-uniible to
tear themselves away from
radio commentaries of the
race, wh ich finished at 8 :~
a.m., Eastern Australian time .
Hundreds of others packed
portable radios into brier
cases and caught the result
aboard trains and buses com·
mu iing cityward. · ·
The victory has boosted
Australian hopes fantastically
and Gretel is now being talked
<lf in pubs as an odds on
favorite to end America's 119·
year possession or l h e
America's Cup and its
yachting suprema cy.
Both Sydney evening tabloid
newspaper11" hailed the Victory
with a "Gretel Wirui" heading
in letters~ three, inches high.
They praised crewman Dave
Forbes, who took the wheel -
after Lhe third marker for the
vital leg running before the
wind, a department in which
Intrepid was pre viousl y
thought unbeatable.
Apa rt from boosting Gretel's
chancts of taking t h e
America's Cup, Australians
saw the victory as a· vio-
dicalion of the yacht's crew,
who blundered through the
first race when a man fell
overboard and tht> spinnaker
wrapped itself round the mast.
Th e Daily Mirror
editoriali zed :
"It's too early to break out
the champagne yet. But the
Australian challengers ·have
shown they. have pro-
fessionalism and expertise tO
beat the hotshot Americans.
"All Australia takes i~-hat
off today and wishes the men
of Gretel fai r winds."
There will be a howl that
could be heard right across
the Pacific if Intrepid-tonight
(Sydney time) i11 given the
race on the protest.
cheered and started singing
''Waltzing Matilda" 1!1 Gretel
11 passed Intrepid and slowly
increased the lead to 50
seconds at the fifth mark. It
then be<:ame a matter Of
whether Ficker could ¢ In·
trepid moving to wetther on
the final leg. He couldn't
despite a series of tacks In an
effort to shake off Gretel's
cover.
Pandemonium broke loose:
at the finish as Gretel Tl
became the second Australian
challenger to win a race in an
America's cup match.
Ficker was nearly an hour
late arriving 1t the post race
press conference. When Hardy
arrived, flanked by Sir Frank
Packer, head of the Australii.n .
sy ndicate, he was loudly
cheered by several· hundred
newsmen crowded into the
armory.
Hardy confinned that there
was contact during I he
starting line incident and that
Sunburn Oil Lures Bees
he left part of Gretel's bow on
Intrepid.
Hardy credited t h e lay
da ys last week with the im·
Bee stings are not at all un•
common 19 sailors in com·
petition: according to Bob
Allan. coach of the Southern
California "Little ·America'•
Cup" team.
Allan explained that most all
crew cembers use a special
white · sunburn lotion intended
to protect ~ againSt con·
tracting cancer <lf the fps .
Unfortunately, as Intrepid
ta ctician Steve Van Dyck
found out prior to yesterday's
America's Cup race, the •un·
burn stuff attracts bees.
· provement in the boat and his
crew. "It's like cramming for
an exam; the more time you
have to study lhe better grade
you will get," he sa:id.
~ Ficker offered no excuses
for his defeat. He sa:id Hardy
simply had his bolt moving
faster over most of the course.
Little Amerlea's Cop
Newport ~kippers Score
The Eastern sailing
establishment got its second
dose of Newport Beach ex·
ctllence this weekend.
ln .. the wake of Bill Ficker
winning the right to defend the
America's Cup. young
Newport Beach 1klppiers have
grabbed first ind third pltce11
in the "Lillie America's Cup''
races on Rhode Island Sollnd .
Lance McCabe, 20--year..old
son ot. l>r. and Mr11. John
McCabt.. 2596 Crest v I 1! w.
B")'!hores, piloted hill 30-(oot
Shields class boat to an easy
..,ictory over Bud Wolf of
1..archmont, N.V., Yacht Cluh.
Carl Reinhart of Newport
Harbor Yacht Club finished
third with 50 points. "-IcCabe,
winning one race and sailing
consistently in the others, had
earned 41~ points while Wolf
was a distant second with 48
points.
A tota I of IS Southern
California college s • 11 o r1
travel~ e1st for the ract. uo-
der coach Bob Allan.
Jack Jakowsky of Newport
Beach and Odin Braaa then of
Costa Mesa, all are student! at use. \ __
McCabe, a senior, last year
piloted J 1 ck Linkletter's
Esper cnterna e~asnaTh.i
Elper1nce In the Tranepec
race from Newport Beat h to
Honolulu. The two other local entries,
Pat Scruggs and Bill Wngtit.\;:::::::======::::;:~I
or the Newp()rl Harbor Yacht l Vllil'f 'I OD'f' SUM GYM ~:~f~~~~~sE .~~~= ~ ~A;:;;~:1n
al'KI the other for a "ncaN:ol· MDM• Dl:MONtr~•n~
lision. 111•fl nLEPtlONE VfALT
/\-1cCabe and his crew of "tLlti1. avw (714) l l t ·S771
-.
W,e can keep you sitting pretty
••. for years to come.
LikeJ he other quality th ings we 1111 ot J, H. Biggar, thHe
c:hairt are among-th1 finest o"H oround--and the "ame Wood·
mark provH it. The woy they desig" one, o chair is not ilnt a
chair, it's somethi"g Jise. Because when you iii on a Woodmark
you're not iust sitting pretty-you g•I thal soft and low treatment
• •• put together like old timet.,-On a frame lho.t just-won 't quit_
Super stars among chair1, you inight "1oy. They fit so easil y into
anywhere you wont to moke more comfortable. ler'1 repeat !hot
price again for you--just .S1A9.50 for one ... or you can double
yotlf pleasure for only $2B9.00. Now featured ot oll three of
our store1.
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Th ree Styles of Chairs ' . .
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149.50 each
289.00 pair
CHAIRS
IN PAIRS
PASADENA
POMONA SANT A ANA--MarlHlt-Eleventh
547-1621 -Santi Ana-Store Open Mond1y Eftnln91
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J• IWLY PILOT . lo'oodu, S.pl<mb" 21, 1970
Sweep luqles
Malaysian .Forces
Search for Reds
SIBU, Sarawak (AP) ._
Malaysian gQvernment forces,
UJln& descendants of Borneo ~ headhunlers as scouts, are .
sweeping thick jungle in a ma-
jor operation against Co"1-
munlst-led guerrillas menac-
ing this rich state.
An all-out push c a 11 e d
Operation Hot Pepper started
in August after terrorists near
the Indonesia border am-
bushed 16 Ibaft tribe scouts,
apraylng: their longboat with
automatic fire from both sides
of a narrow stream. Twelve
died, three suffered wound.s
l'!ld only one escaped unhurt.
The · government clamped
curfews on wide areas of
Sarawak as security forces
moved to rout out terrorists.
Hundreds o( suspects were de-
r tained but the terrain is far
_'\thicker than tha t.of lndochina
and heavy reinforcement has
brought only scattered con-
tact.
A protracted campaign
would hurt severely. More
ttian $66 million in pepper,
rubber and timber are shipped
annually through Sibu. Com-
merce has already slowed.
Families · under 2 4 . h o u r
curfew say they cannot eat or
tend their sick. One old couple,
weak with hunger, finally ven-
tured out lft'lder a Mal aysian
banner and a white flag.
Authorities formed .a com-
mittee to help hardship cases.
Sibu, a city of 40.000, is
ghostly at night with dusk-le.-
dawn curfews jn the mainly
Chinese residential area. By
day, soldiers roar by in Land
Rovers. Across the river, the
curfew is round-the~iock .
Government sources
eslimate the number of guer-
rillas at about 250 in Sa rawak,
with another 250 in Ind111r1esian
Borneo over the border. There
are as many "armed support"
members and thousand• ol
sympathizers. But officials ad-
mit counting is difficult since
only one or two dozen are seen
at·a time.
•No one is sure what the
1ueh'l1las want or who, if
anyMM!, is supplying them.
Many are remNints of leftillt
Chinese equipped and trained
by Sukarno ia.' Indonesia's
!963-65 • 'crus h 'Malaysia"
campaign.
'There is a diffuse Sarawak
C o m m u n i s t Organlz.ation
believed directed by a
disgrunUed politician. No clear
evidence connects it with the
M'alayan Communist party of ·
Chin Peng, which is active in
West Malaysia near the Thai
border.
"It's not a question of who
will win," said the.st.ate police
.commis_sjoner.---.Kh® ._Cl)_ong
Kong. "It's only· a qu"tion or
time. But it's so easy to cau$e
trouble .. , just an · inCident
here. an incident there."
Prime Minjster Tunku' Abdul
Rahman last month warned or
the danger, noting the poor
co mmunications. Some
villagers are a week's walk
from the nearest road or
waterway.
A g a i n s t the guerrillas,
reliable sources estimate the
governmet1t has IJ\Ore than
5.000 men , mixed units of
soldiers and armed police.
Than or Sea Dayak tribesmen
are recruited for tracking and
scouting. Many Ibans Jive in
longhouses decorated w i t h
heads of Japanese soldiers
taken in World War II.
They are the .o.n e • l i m e
"wildmen of Borneo" who now
farm rice and raise chickens.
Terrorist action is straining
delicate race relations in this
polyglot state, about a third
lban," a third Chinese and the
rest-Mala~ and mixed tribes.
Thief "'Disgusted">
Card Photos Rui1i His Game
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SAN DIEGO (UPI) -"Well ,
now you '\'e really done it!
Hot credit cards was my
game, and w Ith out a
photograph upon them, there
was no need for my name.
"J stole 'em and used 'em,
as if they were my own. For
anything I ever needed, a
credit card wa s shown.
''Man, it was so damn easy,
to use someone else's 'paper,'
but you really put a crimp in
my 'Hot Credit Card Caper'.
"Signatures I cou ld copy
okay, and the card spoke for
itself, but now thal you've put
the faces on, my game is on
the shelf."
"(SpoilsporU!)"
When United Stales Na·
tional Bank. with great fan-
fare and a large .advertising
campaign, recently announced_
Its credit cards would have
pictures on them, it expecte'd
a unanimously happy response
from a public always worried
about i tolen credil cards.
But from behind the bars ol
th e San Diego CollfllY Jail
came a ,Jetter from one de-
cidedly unhappy customer.
A prisoner awaiting trial for
credit card theft wrote the
poem above and directed it to
Bank President C. Arnholdt
Smith. '
He told Sm1th that berore
photos, the credit. card situa-
tion was_c.omgar.able to some-
one leaving keys in his
car-an open invitation.
The ex-card thief, whose
name was withheld pending
trial, also said, "Your move
not only protects · y ou r
customers and ~ yourself but
the thwarted thieves will be
grateful in the long run.
(Either that, or sorely
disguSted!)"
"P.P.S." The letter read.
''Consider me between the last
twe> parenthesis!"
sign up now for
Visual Girl '70
New, fun, exciting! Seven y.ieeks
of fa shion and beauty; It's May1--
Co's Visua l Girl '70 ••• a charm
course just for junior and senior
high gi rls. Register now in the
May Co Co-ed de partment. ~ 0.50
May Co So. Coast Plaza , Sept. 22
Junior Hi, 7:00 p.m.
Senior Hi, 8: is p.m.
MAVCO
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a tribute to two talents
.creating for perfectionists
We know that cost alone does not define
good design . Wit h this in mind, our fash-
ion experts have toured nea r and far, pr:'e·
selecting the most prophetic looks of twen·
ly designer talonts. The foc"s: you and
clothes thijt express you r individuality. Like
thi s pebbly lweed coatdress a nd window
pane check for. the well-bred woman. Here
now! Plu s, specid l designer showings
previewing what's to come; Plan -to come,
meet the creators, share the excitement. ·
a. zip front coatdress, by Preston Sm ith for
Pab, belted and .carved, wool and ·rayon
tweed in c hocolate, 6-16 78.00
b. two piece wool costume, by Zoltan
.Rakovsky for Mr. Charles. grey top, grey,
camel check skirt and sto le, 8-16100.00
may co forecast shop 20
see a spec ia l showing
of fall and holiday fashions
Meet designer Jeanne Campbell from Sport
W.h1rl, and de signer Davi .Hayes from Da
Greff at our Costa Mesa store, Wednesd ay,
September 23 ,2:00 p.m.
contemporary
creators
'
may co south coast plaza, san diego fwy . et bristol, coste mesa, 546·9321
shop monday thru seturday JO e.m. to 9:30 p.m., sundey noon 'til 5 P·ID·
, MAVCO
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Anothet:-Award· for f'he ~uke
Arriving for the reception which preceded the dinner and kic k-off of
the college's annual :capital fund drive are Andy Devine, master of.
ceremonies and Mrs. Devine. Another honor tiestowed on the honored
guest was a jOiht Assembly-Senate resolution attesting to \Vayne's out-
standing career and .his dedication to the principles of Americanism.
This was presented by Assemblyman Robert E. Badham.
Singled out by Chapman College to receive its first patron
a\vard o[ Aretas Megistas (Greek for most meritoi:ious
deeds) is J oh n Wayne, who said that he "arrived by. stage-
coach to the dais to receive this award that I can't even
pronounce." .~he pJ·aque waS presented b'y Vi ctor C. An-
dre\vS,_ chaiyman of the college board oi. trustees, during an
OAIL Y PILOT .l'tlMH lllf l'llj.ld: O'DMIMll
invitational black-tie reception and dinner Friday night in
the Balboa Bay Club: The Duke also ,received -two mounted
pistols, dating back more t~an 100 years, from the ~· E.
Wilkinson collection, and Mrs •. Wayne 'Vas presented with a
spray of yellow roses .· '"";"T""
Viewing the sun set from the dock before joining 300 gue sts during
the reception and dinner are (left) the college's aMual fund chair·
man and his wife, Mr. and Mrs . M. Keith Gaede with chairman ol.
the .college family division and a party host Robert Guggenheim
who is with bis fiancee, Mrs. Shirlee McMullen.
Mrs. Victor c. Andrew$ is joined by one of thC host cou ples", Judge and
Mrs. !J'hurmond Clafke. Also hosting the event Were Dr, and Mrs.
Arnold O. Beckman, Mr. and Mrs. J. Simon Fluor and Mr. and Mrs.
Clement L . Hirsch.
Rul~ of· Thumb Offered for Ptpe-smoki-n9-Exeet:Jfives~
DEAR ANN LANDERS: You've stated
your qpinion or clods who are forever
blowing ,smoke inlo the races of non-
smokers. llow do you feel al;>ouL ptpe
'ilTmkers? Do they annoy you also~' My
friend, a psychology major, claims pipe
sroOkers are a unique breed, and they
~w a definite personality pattern. She
c lhey are basically insecure and in
· of continuing rcassu rlltlce -the
tiiJ;lt of not h&ving been adequately lov.
ed t y their mothers. She calls a pipe the
'1qecutive nipple." \Viii you venture an
Qfllnlon on the subject? -SKEPTICAL
IN COLORADO SPRINGS
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ANN LANDER.S ~-
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DEAR SKEP: Pipe amokert de not 11·
noy me, In fact,, 1 Ond t~ aroma of most ' . bleltdll quite pleua.at. As for the alle1a.
lion th3t a pipe i!I "Ote exe'Culive nipple "
both my Freudian 11nd nonFreudla~
friends agree that a maa who must Uve
something in bis mouth several ltoura a
day, -be I\ a clgaretleJ a cigar or' pipe
It 111b1UtuUa1 tame lor bis thumb.
DiA~NN LANDERS : . I'm anolher.
.mother who-also had ~rotten luck" with a
coli cky·child who later was incorrigible in
i;chool, etc. Tbe poor woman is probably
gullt ridden and frantic. ~iaybe .J can
he!p her.
fliy son wu just is bad as hers, niaybe
worse. He, too, wu superenergetic, ~
controllable, im~le to handle. I had
to do tonlething bk.me he-was· making 1
a nervous wreck out or me and having a
tet;pble effect on our other children.
I went to my doctor for help. He
lallghingly said, "You have a very peppy
child on your hands," and gave me a
booklel on tllsctpllne. 1!1 desperation I
began to read everything J could (ind oh
hyperac tive childrea. What I learned COll-
vinced me that my son's hyperactivlly
was a medical problem and I wun't such
a lousy mother afler all.
r now knoW that hyperk.inetic children
have immature nerve endings within the
brain-which cause excessive a n d
misdirected activity. Tranquilizers can be
a great help. Pediatricians hiive also
discovered that some h y p e r k i n e-t i c
children are often highl y allergic. ln
many cases, after the allergies have betn
pinpointed and shots given, the tiyperac.
tivity has disappeared enUrely.
• J am not ruling out counseling .. Even
though the root problem is medical , the
penonallty problems must be dealt with .
Today I am confident that my son will
grow up to be a normal adult -'
something I didn't believe possible a few
years ago. -A THANKFUL MOTHEJ\
DEAR. ~tOTHER:, I have dls.cussH
byperkifttlc children In this columa 11
~veral occasion• and have repeattcU.1
.adVi1etl molbers of jet •prepelled
yonng1ter1 to bave them examined aid
tested 1 by a specialise. T1lt aathorltte1
with whom I C'OO!llllt say Ottre IS at
cllalC31 or laboratory evidence &hat t)e
nc.rv eocllqs ia hyptrktntUc clllldri•
art abDOrmal. Nor do lht11e dilldrc• tend
lo be mm ollt~tc.lb" o!M< clllldft1.
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Your Horoscope Tomorrow
"--Aquaritis:, Sign-t Yo.ur Go·af·
TUESDAY
SEPTEMBER 22
Bf SYDNEY OMAftft
Leo uUve~ doaid, wtaere
peulble, avoid W1.Jn1 be1vy
objeds. Tbe vlllner•ble pol•t
, for .J.,.eo 11 lbe b1ck. Aries 11
lllOdated wltll tu bead, 1Dd
muy n1Uve1 o.f dais 1111
elieti appelt to be frownln1.
1111 IDIDY CINI, &bey are tquln·
tbi1. Pisces ts related to tbe
fttt. Natives of 11111 1l1n can .
eftea be Hard complalal.1!11
Activities
Planned
abOut •·acllin& feel." Unusual offer comes you r
way. •
ARIEi (March 21-Aprll 19 ): GD11NI (May 21.June 2tl):
Accent on what you own. Aceent on f In 1 n c e s,
Secure JX>Ssesslons. Take no possesalons. You are able to
chances on others. Be there ,get what you need throu~IJ.
"in person." One you trust ls diplomatic approach. Avoid
not Infallible. Build on solid trying to force Issues. Time
ground for tutu re security . your moves. Profit Is In-
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): dicated.
You are on lhe move . Ideas CANCER (June Zl·July 22 ):
flow. Key is to follow through. Cycle high ; take in itiative.
Shake off recent lethargy. What was delayed begins roll-
Read and write -tak notes ing. Make most of contacts.
and get thoughts on papei:.:., . Keep hole card covered.
Sessions
To Begin
Means spring surprise at right
moment. You will know.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Your
ablllty to n1alntain a confi-
dence ls put to test. Oldef per·
sons may appear slow. but the
wisdom Is present . Do some
The fall program of crans hard llstenlng. Postpone direct
activities for adults sponsored action.
Fall activities ror the by the Costa Mesa Recreation VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221:
· SAGl'M'ARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Check matters
related lo estate, Laxes, debts.
You may be handling money
which belongs to someone
else. Be aware. Don't guess;
ascertain facts and proceed
accordingly.
CAPRICORN (pee .-~-Jan.
19): Spotlight on public rela-
tions, l::gal .iffairs. Re ad
between the lines ; study fine
print. Keep guard up ; don 't
lead with your chin.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): You may be required to
perform extra duties. Take
overtime request In stride. Be
sure your goal is in sight.
Don 'l try to do everything .at
once .
PISCES (F'eb. 19-March 20):
Change , travel'and variety arc
featu red. Nothing appears the
sa~. You haYe lo make some
adjustments. Do so with good
humor. Aid Indicated from
member of opposite sex.
Wednesday Morning Club of Department ..,111 get under You may end one relationship
Cotta Mesa begin at 10:45 way with registration Thurs-and begin ·another . You are
da y, Sept. 24, from 6 to 8 p.m. ,able to dellne your tastes. You
a.m. on Wedne!lday, Sept. 23• Friday and Saturday, Sept. 25 hear your own voice, dance to
in ttie Balboa Bay Club. aOO 26, ·rrom 9 a":'ni.Untnnoon-. -your-own-tane.-This--is1H -Lo--\""At:;es"ward Ho
The Battle of the Three flits. Reglttrations will be ac-the good . ''' 11
a fashion show demonstrating cepted in the Costa Mesa Civic LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 22):
the skirt length controversey. Center for classes J n Stress on business aUairs. Chapter Meets
candlemaklng, beg Inn 1 n g honor and achievement. Your will be presented. Members creative stitchery, macrame original approach i s ap--Daughters of the British
will model with the cam-and intermediate stitchery. prec.lated. No need to take a Empire , Wes l ward Ho
mentary delivered by t-.1rs. novel Christmas crafts and back seat. Adhere to prin-Chapter will gather at 12 :3{1 -·
Paul Kneiseler. Reservations art. ciples. Believe In yourselr. p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 24.
may be made with ?i.trs. Arden Fees range rrom SS to $12 SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 1: Or. Lydia Dean will ass ist
Mead at &42-8543. for the classes, which are Good luna r aspect coincides when ~1rs. J. W. Tatlam opens
The Globetrotter Section from five to eight weeks in with publicity, advertising and her Mission Viejo home for
length. publlshing. Submll long·range the luncheon meeting.
Lawy ers' Wives Serenade Newcomers plans a Latin Holiday of 5~ Further information Is plans. Build for future. Short TrQ.11sportatlon if necessary
ping and sightseeing in Ti-available at Lhe civic center, cuts now will not suffice. Acl will be provided by Mrs. Jack
juana on Oct. 7, while bridge 83._5303. .accordingly. Harold at 494-9518.
,A, Spanis h lhen1e has been ~cl el'tcd b~, Oran~e ('oun·
ty La\li•yers' \\'i\'CS for their •annual 1ne1nbership
coffee \1·hich \1·ill be ~ta~cd nt 10 a.n1. Thursday .
Sept. 24. in 1he \filla Park hon1e of ~.Jrs. \Villian1 /\.
Daughter)·. Officers 11 ill g reet new members, out-
Suit ed to Styles
line the ycar·s progr<in1 and explain the import-
ance of the Lc:;!a l Aid Society. In the mood to sere-
nade ne11•con1ers are (left lo right) the Mmes.
.Julian Cimbaluk . .John \\'. 1\nderson and John E.
Se idel.
players will meet at 10 a.m.·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_, Oct. 14 in the Shark Jsland ll
Yacht Club.
Ent hu siasts
Dancers 1n Whirl
Everyone's secret.s,
prcviOUJly lhought secure, will
be presented by the Orama
Section of the Monday Mom·
ing Club of Laguna Beach on
Oct. 12. The members will
meet at I , p.m. Jn the Laguna
Country Club.
A potluck suµper in llcislcr Folk Federallon. the groups Decorating
Park uShe rcd ln·a new year or n1cets at ·1·:30 p.m. each
aclivitics for thP Laguna \Ved~sday in the girls' 1ym 5 '
Beach Folk Dancers. fo r dancing and instruction. ess Ions
An evening or dance rollo1v· Beginning dance instruction
SEW YOUR OWN THING!
COMPLETE SKlRT LENGTHS
Wool• e Wool b!1nd1
• FANCIES
• PLA IDS
SEWING
KITS f'd the affr1ir in the Laguna ope ns each meeting followed p t d
-A n1cn1ber or lhl' California individual a:; sis lance. CONTAINS 11 MOST
\
1'e:1chers 11re brought in ror A session or i n Le r i or
" '· . .... various ethnic dance s. in-decorating classes will be con· NEEDED SEWING AIDS
• STRIPES
• CHECKS
• SOLIDS
-\ ~· ~ 8each ll iAh School girls' gy1n. by a program <lf dances and resen e
.Y"""'"' ys I ca . Irish. Hungarian, llalian and nessee.-a graduate 0 ( • FOl STUDENT • llGINNElt
~,.;r"', . ~ Ph · I <:luding Yugoslavian, Scottish. ducted by /I.tis! Ellie Hen-INCLUDING SCISSORS
r --1-l----·--~--------f"'1.o"'g .• an":'Loc--;,.-a~be-y~l.-5 -p-re-s~o·d~en~l-Ca:lw· """'-:,.st>!i.J;fil!lle:go,e,.J!a~ll--1-_ILllJ~l.llA!!U e,~u....,M~ST~R~l~SS,_--if.---~
DI. SQ b 1· 11· t 1· eS ' Long Beach and a consultant -1i1:1LU"'E~S"1Trt>O $3"&-YARD-\.~--~J.'lt~-v of the group which welcomes decorator. @ffi ne1v members and i:uests. be ed d
0
0
0
0 Cther officers are J\1 i s s Subjects to cover ur-0 i SC USSed Barbara Lewis. secretary ; ing the eight-week course in· R•t·
Miss Beth R 0 sen g a rd , elude selecting the right look, $4.fl V1 yd. 1an9
54"/50" wide
71370
Capucc i
The sensational s uit by Capucl'i thi:i seaso n is
tailored superbly with easy directions.
The jacket lines are slin1ming and the longer
le n·gth ap·pe·aJing over -.i ski rt that is split up the
center fr ont to the \Vaistband or di screetly zippcrec!J
1f you prefer.
r"'abric suggestions: l\\•eed, flannel, gabardine,
1nedium\l•eight "'Ool. 71370 cut ~l isses sizes 10·18.
Size 12 requires approx1111ately 3 5/B yards oC
54" fabric. This precut, preperforated Spadea De·
signer Pattern proiluces a better fi t.
Order 71370 : gi\'C size. nan1e . address and zip.
S2 postpaid . .'\ddress SP1\DE1\. Box N, fJcpt: CX·l5,
,\·li!(ord. N.J . 088~8.
NE\V OOOK : ·rornorro'~ '$ l..ook Today'.
Spade a's coll.ection of .\lidis a nd l\laxis -the l.on-
i;;uctte Book -~1 post paid.
Problems on Age nda
pa nel discuSs1on nn l'on1-
1nun1CJlion problems will br
the program lor thr nt·\I
meeting or South {' o •. 1 ,,. L
Parents \Vithout Pnrlncr ....
The i;csston 11 ill bl' l)rer:t'JL•d
by a 7 30 p.m cofrl!c hour
\\led ncsdriy. Sep!. 23, 1n Ben
Drown's reslaur anl , Sou I h
l..aguna .
r-.1odtt:tlor 11.·iJI be to.tr~ l..ur.
r:iin" Perkins. counselor 3nd
teacher of psychology al Snd-
rlleback J~igh Sthool. Santa
Ana. She ::ilso dirL'CLS con1·
munlcelion worksh " lor ~
1 SEA
SCHWIN
420 f. t7tll St., CHI• Mno
WE HAVE
All. MODELS
NOW!
\;1 Ana teachers and i~ \VOrk-
1 1r.i.: on ht:'r 111aster of arts
dcgrt'C' in human !x>havior. I
.\dull puncl members 1vl!l be 1 Or. E:rnanucl C' a I a in a r o .
(!•;1Lhcr f\f hunu1nit ies and
11\crnrv ('Otntnunicnllon 11 II
Lnguni1 llcac h Migh S<:hool : 1
:'ilrs'. Judi th Hichardson, socuil)
sludit'.s teacher, nnd ~Ir~
J1or.ul.11Y ._Erost. ll P \\' P
n1en1ber. Tel•n<1ger:i1 \\ill hc l
lrom Santn Ana.
All i;ingle p<Jrf'nts In the
South Co~st area arc invi tctl. j
WEIGHT®-
WATCHERS. •
Au organization llcvotcd lo
1h<' f!cvc)Qpn1l'nt of a rc sidcn·
11al-rchabilitation center for
the physically handicapped
'M'ill meet at 8 p.m. on
\\'l'dnesday, Sept. 23.
trea surer ; Bill \\I I tl 0 1 f. color, floor ·coverlng, wall and window treatment. room ar· teaching programs; Mrs. Sol ..rangemenl, furniture care and \Veiner. program and J\1rs: John Brand, f e d e r a t I 0 n seleclion, art principles and
delegate. Interested persons accessories.
may call Lock a bey al 644-8376. Classes begin today . Time of
the sessions are from 7 to 8:30
p.m. P.1ondays and Thursdays (:lass Mountnin Inn, Int·.
\\'ill gather in the Veteran~
t:hnritable Building. Santa
An11 to discuss the EssClll'C of
Hehabililation and th e Total
J'erson.
HB Auxi liary and day classes will be from 10:30 a.m. to noon and I to
American legion Auxiliary 2:30 p.m. Thursdays. They are
of Hunt i ngton Beach being presented by Sea rs,
Ph.vsically disabled adult.~
1·f11nµri~e the mernbership but
a!! those interested in 1he
nrcds or the disabled are in·
v1ted lo attend.
South Coast Plaza. g11thers in the American,-----------15
~lcmbers or the newly
organized "'heelchair basket·
ball team will be introdu ced.
Legion Hall at 1 :30 p.m. the
firsl Thursday of each month.
On the fourth Thursday
members may call P.1rs. Ame
Jensen, "6-2m, for locaUon
information.
<lt!I C1·owning Glory
beauty salons
~ . • FREE CONDITIONING
TREATMENT •.•
ith your next shampoo-set!
Our trcatn1ent improves texture. adds lustre and
shcett. Reg. $1.00' value no\v at no extra cost.
Mon .• Tues.·Wed.
SHAMPOO\ SET •nd TREATMENT $l.9S
HAIRCUT $1.50
r------, STYLIST PRICES ~ PRICE SLIGHTL y HIGHER PERM $20 Magic Curl $10.00
SALE! $15 Wonder Curl $7.50
Budget perm 1lw1y1 $5.95
Appolntm•nt1 W•lcome But
Not Alw1y1 Nec.•swryl
CflaiWNING GLORY
11..-,,.ttlY Clllfkl Ct!lllfttlJ
267 t. 17th ~T .. COSTA MISA SOUTH COAST PLAZA
P'HONE 541·ttlt rHONE 546·7116
Optn C~1n1n91' S1111dt ., Op111 E .. tni"f'
LtWtl LIVtl -Nt•I tt SNn
BE FREE ...
OF fACl"L H,t,IR
FOREVE ... LCT U5 SHO\V
YOU~HOW EASY fT 15
TO REMOVC-EXCESS HAIR
WITH MODERN
ELECTROLY51S,
MEDICALLY A~P .. OV£D •• ,
SAFE, FAST, GENTLC,
CONSULT W.fTH OUR
LICENSED TECHNI CIAN
IN OUR 8EMJTY SALON.
ROBINSON'S
NEWPORT
EACH EACH ---&
-WOOLS
WEAVER'S "K"
e PRINTS
e SOLIDS
P••ll'l•ntnl prtu, .111~•• ,.,,J1 iron
inq , or coune ifs .... ,hinl wt1ht·
lilt .
colorful d•1iqn1 !h•I ''" '"'• wit iof;d1.
fodrel polyo1te• •nd cotio,., ~~"/
"&" .. rd,.
COMPAlE AT Sl.91 YARD
.. YD·
& Su1r1NGS
a icrumptiou1 1election of
bulky we ave1, knit1, fla nnel1
• BONDED ACRYLIC PLA IDS
t•yon, cellor., ny lon, •crylic, flt~
• IMPORTED ITALIAN TWEEDS
• BONDED WOOL FLANNEL
•cr.,llc •nd wool
• BONDED KNIT JERSEYS
• WOOL FLANNEL-15 COLORS
• TWEED COORDINATES-Wool & Nylon---
54" to 60" wiclt~1
®@
AND
YD·
FOR NEW FALL FASHIONS
machine w•1h • •II cotton
44 .. /4S" widt~1
e PERKY PRINTS
e HI -LO WALE
e NO-WALE
e BIG WALE
for c•r CQilh
coonpl1t1 co1er 1t"9' in
i11 f:nt qutl:ty cord~rey
$1" yd.
$169 yd.
$198 yd.
$2" yd.
HOUSE OF FllBRIC---..
S.ertl Ceftt '1on -l ri&lol •I S•n Di190 fw.,.
CMf• Mft• -545·1116
ON.,.ef•lr M•ll -O•tn91tho1p1 i ncl Htrb••
f11Uerte1 -i26.2JJ4
H111er .,.,. -17th ti l rhtel
, .... A ....... ,J.1111
l~trte P1rll Ce11,., -L• Ptlon • t i Sl•11+e11
...... ''"' -126-6J23
H1111tl .. te11 Ce11ter -Et1:1191r •t ft••ch e1~d
H1111tlteftu leech -197·101)
Somt tolking, tomt h$ttni110 111d
1 riro0ram lht~ wor ~1. lM
,Fut IROCHU•r-uu. 13!·.SSOS ·--..
. -·
• • •
•
Admission Treasured
An "attic treasure'' is the admission to Uc charged by St. i\.1ary 's Episcopal
Churchwomen of I:.aguna Beach for their Victorian J1igh Tea. to take place
from 2 to 5 p.m . \\lednesday, Sept. 23, in the home or Mrs •. t\ndrC\V ~·lorthland .
The treasures \\•ill be offe red for sale d uring the annual rumma ge sale Oct. 7
and 8. Selecting their contributions'arc .l\Irs. Robert F. Schni tzer (foreground)
and Mrs. Ed \vin J, Cutting.
National Proiect Adopted
Joining the national Daughters of the /\ merican Rcvolutibn in el fo rts to save
our enviroruncnl t hroug h con servation are n1en1bcrs of the Col. \Villiarn Cabell
Chapter. During a meeting Wednesda:-', Sept. 23 , in the Balboa ho1ne of Mrs.
Guy Cherry Jr .. Paul \V. Corburn, \\1ell-kno\Vl1 naturalist and Ior1ner di rector oC
the Tucker Bird S<tnctuary in Mojeska Cany on. \Viii spc1Jk . Sig hting possible
projects of their own are (left to right ) ]\:Jrs. \Vill iam \-Vesl ey J ones and Mrs.
l\'L ~I. San1pson.
Hawaii an Residence
Awaits Newlyweds
GOP Women
Hear Leader
i\lrs. Joh n 8011;ler, firsl vice
prcsulcnt of the Southern
Div ision of F ed c rated
Hepublican \\'omerl. will ad·
dress the -Fountain Valley
i::roup tomorrow at JO a.m.
Lutheran Church of Lir
i\·laster. Cororni del J\1ar was
th e se tting \\'hen Danilda Jean
Kinz-:?r became the bride of
Robert Ed\l'in Babson of
Jlonol ulu .
The double ring ceremony in
U1c early after noon \I/ a s
solemnized by lh c It e v •
William R. Eller.
The bride is t.hc daushter of
MRS. ROBERT BABSON
Dou.bl• Ring Rite
J\lr. and J\lrs. 11. Gcorl!C
Kinzer of Santa Ana. Parent!>
.of !hr groom arc i\1r. and J\irs.
Edward Babson of Costu
J\tcsa.
J\1aid '(If honor was the
br ide's siste.r, 1\1i:;s, Donna
Kinzer.
Attendants were 1\tiss Carol
Oglesbee and 1\1rs. Deedee
~foody. Martha \\'hitc \Vas
flower girl at her uncle's wed-
riing while Thol\las Kinzer, the
bride's nephew, carried the
rings.
Traveling fron1 Ph!lenix, to
serve as best man was
Ed\\'ard . Young. Ushers \\'Cre
Barry Kinzer and Lawrence
White.
A graduate of Con>n:t del
The session wil l take place
in the Community Center.
A membership drive ts
under way. and all Republican
\\'Omen are invited to the
1nec tlng. ~~urthcr information
is avai lable by call ing Mrs.
George Scott . membership
chairman at 839-1675.
TOPS Mermdids
TOPS -~ierging J\lcrmaids
mce:l at 7:3{1 p.m. Cvery
Thursda y in Woodland School,
Costa f\.1esa.
t.lar High School. the bride li;;;;•·~~i~~~~il holds.a BA degree (ran UCI.
Her husband graduated from
Newport Harbor I-Ugh School
and Orarmc Coast Collc,:c.
They wl ll reside en I.he
ialand of Oahu, Hawaii.
, HAL AlllSCHll
Chorol Grou p HEARING AIDS
C111lo111 ""''' Am,1111c1llen Every ~fonday flt 7:30 p.m. HO s•i.t SMl!N
ITie:mber:; or 1h~ T'rospccllve 3409 ..E. COAST HWY.
Ahso Valley ~PlC'r of sweet CORONA DEL MAR
1
Adeline!; conve11~ in. Ml~lonl For .t.ppolf1t1M1f Vlo 0 Hlgh School. ____ ,_1s-_38_i_i __ _
•
'
Monday, Septrmbfr 21, 1~70 DAILV'P}LOT JI)
'
Yo.lu.nteerin§J
By SlJSAN S. STEVENS ta lives of the Chica&o Boys vchulteer wort by women. ever since I can remember," civil cfi¥lbedience and diuent.
CRJCAc0 cuPt ) _ The na-Clubs and tour the Adler 11Tberi"'art llO many exciting she said. "Now, as the She believes dlaent 11
Planetarium.. types of volunteer work. I find President's wife. I have a "necessary but violence .Is tion 's First Lady has urged u-. Nixon ...... -. what she that mo-women have more h to tr t d tr " Th lectl --•-• A · 1 1 , ... " .. ..,," '"' c ance ave more an y not. e ef ve maiauu of merican women ° accep called a "below·the-knee" free time now lnd that they to inspire other women 't' dLsaen h the challenge of volunteer aqua dreaa: a"" declined to r....t cbal to do 1 ,, beco i~ expressing . l, il.throug work and predicted that in the def'·-.1 '?di le".n"° Y.'"': it a len&e t, me .u1volved in volunteer congressmen -or letters to
mini-midi battle of a k i rt .. jic ~~ 1 ~w if• .. it•s 1 ...,. said. work." I ne Mpaper edit.ors, she con-
1 gths "W · to "I ~ave always volunteered, Mrs. Nixon also discussed eluded.
en , omen are gorng Jonguette," she said. •1Jt'1 sort I-:;;=::;;·===''==========================:: wear what they like." of compronµse , the length 111
Mrs. Pat_ Ni~<!" l?ei "! th~. 11~.e...NJ my .new_ thingi ao:J!l ..,-----· _.. SALE! second day of her visit to lhis length." • ·
Chicago as hostess to 85 news As· fOr the fashion con-I
v.-omen at an i n r o r m a I troversy over skirt lengths,
breakfast and 11.ews ({Jn-Mri. Nixon said . "[ think
ference. women are going to wear what
First stop on her planned ~ they like."
itinerary was a visit to the Mn. Nixon said one of her
Chicago Postal Academy. a chief acUvities as she ac-
school sponsored by the Post companies her husband on a
Office for school drop-outs. European trip later lhis month
She was to meel represen-will be the promotion of more
DGs to Form
Delta Gammas of Sou thern
IU.Ul'IJUL CLOTHIS • , •
°'1ly SllQl!tly UHCI
I Y ~If wlla c:1n't llNr IO bt ._ twkl In 11\fi ._.,... dres1.. lht'lr Lou -y..,,-O.lrt
Orange County are invited to a THI SECOND TIMI A.IQUND ..._ •· 171tl st., C:.11 M-formatiOR meeting of an alum-,._ __ •;;-;;;.';;'.;";.';.-,;..;'";;-.;;;; __ J,"j nae association to take place''
in the Mission Viejo home oC Make • . Sharp
Mrs. William P. llickey. Trade i Use
The session is planned for
tomorrow al 8 9.m. Oime~A·Lines
lei us copy your favorite
old family picture now
THIS WEEK ONLY!
' ;
only 3 33
5"7 size
(An~ l'icNN I• good coM1llfNI. II your
.pio;tu11 I• tt...-.i ft. eddil~I clwot~
fot flllOrl liOft IN JIOW .. le"91'lced, IOlll I _.
-lftJ3RC>ADWAY
892·3331 Ext. 283
Phafo9r1p~ St11c:lio, !1f Floor
'
be ·a friend~finder
and receive a
\
;I
have your friend open an account
at Newport National Bank
and do both of you
.. a favor ...
(OFFER FOR LIMITED TIME ONLY)
IT'S REWARDING AND FUN
TO BE A FINDER, ••
Find your friend (a relative will do•)·
and bring them to Newport National Bank!
AftE}r you have introdi.Jced your friend
to our New Account s girl and your friend
opens a new 5 *%Time Certificate of
Deposit Account for $10,000 for 60 months
or lon ger, we will give you , as the
"Friend· Finder," a FREE SONY COLOR TV
SET. Your friend will receive a FREE SONY
AM DESK RADIO for opening his new
accou nt, which pays a big 53/aO/o interest
compounded daily, paid quarterly or
FREE TO FINDER:
• '
...
•
longer at }tour option (the highest bank
interes t allowed by law for commercial banks).
Certificate may be used as collateral for loans.
You r SONY color tel evi sion set and your
1riend 's'SONY AM desk radio will be
SONY Trinitron .. 12" dia;onat screen. Autom1tic tdlor
control, greater brightness, sharper focus and
many other speci1l features. Easily mO¥ed
from room to room.
FREE
TO FRIEND·DEPOSITOR:
given immediately when the new account is
opened with cash, ca shiers check, tellers
check, or cert ified check. Oth'ii'r passbooks
brought in or sent in will be transferred free.
(Plea se allow other checks and pa ssbooks
t ime to clear befor.e claiming gifts.) 1 Accounts may be opened jointly, in trust
SONY AM Desk R•dlo with uniSJU•
for different individuals, or as
slide tunln1 and volume control for treater
~precision •nd brilliant performance. Be•utifully
finished in rich w11nUt. U)'I fl.It or tilts up. I custodian for minors. Prior to matur tY
no principal may be drawn. '
• NOt 1 member of your household.
3
4
% PERANNUM
0 COMPOUNDED
DAILY YIELDS
5.917%
PER ANNUM
' FREE SONY COLOR TV SETS AT ALL ' CONVENIENT omcES
Arp.rt oni. Miehe Ison 11 MKAltlnlt lll·ll ll ...... Offfcl .,J. If Ji""*" M:r.t t4 I
ttl!tct Part Office Nutwood 11 Commomn.mt l !l·l900 •..., ... Office H1 rbor et lni• 171·72t0
llptritr Olkt Superior at 1"11ctfltl1 641·9511 • D""'1fty Office £111 Ch""'"' at S11tt Colllp 17Ml40
' J WntdiH Offiu Wtltdllf II Dwtf 642·3111
Sell IPcll tflic1 l11$Ur1 W011d, S.11 Bead! 596·2111 • l.apll1 Hills Otllcl Leisure World, LP Ki1&13GJZlO
' •
...................
SPECIA~ INSTRUCTIONS IF OPENED BY MAii..
lttWl'OIT JllATIOIW. Uflll(
-
P1115t open mr Time Certificate of Deposit Account. (Acmullts '"" M
opened joinUr. in trust.for diffar1nt ii'ldi'lid1111S, or 11 custodian for 111inors. ~II 1a:ou m Ollt ntd br 111111 must hive lilts picked up at lht oflkl wt11rt
acoounl Is opened, by the friend-Finder whose 111nal1.trt'1ppe1rs b11oW.) Souy,
wt ull't ship it, Wt will llOCilJ friend·findw •llln lo pkt 11p 1iftl.
D<_.ofull """'--~-~~-~----U'I•• .. prinij ""'"''---,=------=,----=--City Stat. Ji~ s.o.t S.Wrily Mumbor· ______ Eodoood b $. ____ J
0 i10,ooo for 60 rnontlii, or lonltr. 0 P1ssbook enclosed
Slpature of Dlpolitor=====--------=---1Mu1l bl 1"d\ldM ror eildt K~nt)
n..,.. """------,=c"==------
'"" .. prlltU Add• .. •----,..:::-----,""_;, ___ ~---iC•ty St.Ii. 1111
Sotl•l -" .. ""'------------
flndtr'I ~~:~:. .............. . ••• • ••••••
..
r
•
_u OAllV PILOT MOlldilJ, S1pt1m~1r 21, lt70
TV DAILY LOG
M<>NU~Y
llmMl[lt 14
• llool S.11'111it•11 111 !111 Ho~u!''
MrOll !lilMfltllll i1 1ul1111' ll1t Cl~I
ti I ll inltrll b~illl avt• b•tllM ti
i11]1.11l1s It 1 1ou111 m111 W ht 11-
moy1ct lfom 1 c11 .,.,,_ lM J.
Ctb~. ZtlJN11,M111a. Judy Ptct stu.
• 1"1111• Ctrwtrtl 1u1sts.
D THf YOUNG LAWYERS
Q .. IC """"°' (Cl liOI II• * fOLLOWI FOOTBALL!
''"'" . ,,. D • (ll ._.. u.o. m tJ-01
Q TN Alltll lllft.. ~G) !IOI Schfl~· Ho"1111d 11111 to convert hl1 lllencts
1;l1• 1uu11 l11el11Q MlcktJ ..;,..,, I• MllMllVllJ l~inln1,
Ollt flr1lfli111.,, l \IU M1111, EO D ill (j) Ill NIC MtlldlJ M••le:
\Villi•m-, r11 CtlllM, Sci1111V Ch11 l11. (Cl ...... ,. (1tl•J01YI '63--EHza.
Q lfi) {j). NEMlllf Nfl Mt~· 1111~ 11,io1, Richard l yrton, Not t
dtf filitM f..W flt (!: ~1 4~ llllll) C.w1r41 JNn111 Shim.kus. A ne'er-~1-
Pil llt Y11• .lilt w,. tl1v11tnll l lOWllf will ,atl (l yrton) with 1 rep11t1hon
N Cltvtllnll. • 101 ,.oa1111 11c:h l1die:i. invtdes !ht
Q Aillltt & c..llt (Cl (JO) pi1y1'' •I a wulthy widowtd wom·
111 ,,:ho I"'' as a rtci11st 111 her GIT~ flill .... Ml CC) (lOJ O•tl M1d1f1111Man island.
ID PCOll. II T••• I Tllitl IC) .• n. h1tlti'ff (C) (61:1) "Tlcktl
(60) R~llafl W11n1r •n-Mt.l•th1 to Al11k1." Geratcline Br11tkt D1vid
ThlOllf llU. "Th• l1y al 1~1 Land" Whit•. TtlPI O'Connor 1utsl.
is !lit li1M tAllDdt. • UQM: rMnr SqYM (C) (JO)
fD WMl'I ... (C) llO) "ht1m1' Hw11• Dl!ll. In "fl1m. Out." thrill·
Advt11t~•· r1111." kitltf Amol-Wl•U (J•mes Be:it1 •n·
eii (() Cll flttlJll tCI (101 c11111l111 Pet. Sf!. Sim S1on1.
lllO..,,..l/Moll"!! IOt ,tlQJ ml NII"'"'~ (60) (R) "ll!diloh."
i?) IRlli11 (JOJ Guent1r Mack.
m Wi11p lt -"mllu1t (Cl (30) 11!1 Ollt...U/lil• (Cl (lO)
CI!) Tt1lr1 cit 111 Ut1ell11 (30) G) Nllldll (60)
.A:ZO ~ 00 Wul~tf (CJ M1r11 St1!es.
6:30 0 C111did CJ11n1 (JOJ
m ~ (!) flWGl'ib N1rti1n (30)
~:100 NBC Ne•1 (C) \30)
EID S(>tc1111n1 (CJ (301 .. Stop or Go
Ati Cxlll!riment 1n Gene!1ts." Or
Norton Zindtr of Rot\tltlle1 Univei.J
sJI~ in New Yotk City, demonstr1tes
how a mu!atian can bt clev~oped in the IJb ind how the 1enet1c 1e1lollns
1or the ch1n1e can bt cleteimlnecl. •
EE P1tttm tor li11in1 (30)
@II Nolitlua 34 (C) (601
m TIM Desert RtPorl (C) (30)
E'i) Quitrrmt J Olv1d1l1 (JOI
7:00 0 CBS [venin1 News (CJ (lDJ
0 m NBC Nttn !Cl (30)
(:J Wh1t'1 MJ lint (CJ (30)
m I lo•e luq ~JO)
ID Ira! the Dotk (C) (JOJ
!1:30
II TONtGHT'S BEST BET! * THE DORIS DAY SHOW!
6 ~ ([) Doris O.r (C) (30) Dofis
must ob11in the magazine rl1hls 10
• mililant feminist's book •hen the
aulhGI' (EIYi• Allman) iefuses to deal
111ith the men in the aUic:e. Jason
lvers is also featured.
(:J News (C) (JO)
ID rttrr Maun (60)
tl1) Muslt.ll1/P11tar's Dtsk (C) (JO)
ii!) Reviltl M11llitll (3Cl)
"45 0 tl1J ~ ri!l PIEMIUE 1't •-
lent f•CI (C) (30) '111t P1ouc11·
101." Joseph Drtke, 1111 dil!ric:I at-totnry of a aftlllll city afld 1 f!llfll·
ber of the 1¥Miclt1 llOPtl I• b•
elected 1av1rw If 1111 ICM• bW runnin1 on 111 anll·orlme pl1tform.
Drake lr1mes th• loul 11111111 Ill
passmian al h1rol11. e1pom tiim, ~ ((} Re;i11n/Relnt\1 Teu11 (C~) and mikes hucllinta. The 111l1&io11 fE CltauJ Otli&n 2000 (30! f irst of lhe Silent r11ui 11 to stop 1111
program in 1 fhrN pJrt wiies l'lllt underM1r1d lro111 11iRln1 l:Oftlrel of
exol01ts thou1hl5 of oulstandrni in •n American s.talehouu.
dust11al dtsiil\efS 10:00 6 (H: (j) C11tl lu11Mtt 111tw (C)
~ (_{) lluth If t anuciu111cu (C) (60) Cass E!holt and !tit Ptul HR 1uest.
EE) Ch11st the Livinr. Word (CJ (30)1 O m Hews (C) (60)
CD Simplemenl1 Maril (!>5) D Cill ti 1111 West (C) {JO)
1:05~ (6) Monday NDWll : .. l"rtwip·
t1on: Marder." Petti f 1lk. ! ED f11in1 l int (CJ (60) (RI "Tht
British Abor11on Act : r .. Yt111
Later." ' III Ncw111 (30)
7:30 O ~ {IJ Gunsma•c iCJ (611} '1t.e1 Noose." Ch1ractt1 1ctor lof!I 5keinlll
plays Garib.
. r:J m Rtd Skelton Sho• (C) \3GJ GI'i) l....Ci111111 Ar11ntin1 (2 hr)
Red 1s Introduced by Oean Marlm 10:15 0 CD lt£W SEASON T~t Diel Caw·
toniaht. ttl Sho• CCI (45) The popul1r host
O NYrD (C) (30) "W1Je finish " mows la lh11. lime ·111rlod on Mon·
Cuuls 111 Hobl!it Salv.a, A11n tib n-dlJS only clurrna lht Nfl season.
son, lnhe Riveu. ! 10:30 0 Triipl h1t1 (30)
0 Mill ion $ MHit: "T~t lid &J lfll Johns It ... (Cl (JO)
Seed" fdramaJ '56 -N1ncy Kellr, (d)(j)P.,.,, ..... (IOI
Patty McCormick. Henry lon1s · m T1uth or CanHquenus (CJ (30} a> Ml Ma"*'t (JO) m ~C9R£: !la@ •11111 ('1 (~ ll:OO.Ba CI>•N•ws (Cl
ru1 r1rt;11 11a11. ----1,..-tir-ActlH-(CJ
£E) TM r11.a CMf (30) "h1ntll D II,.._ (Cl
T1rb, Apple Style." 11 '"""'-I: ..,.._ Celt 111• 1
€Iil WKtM r1111 IC) t301 li111c;: (d11ma) '52-G11J Mtr·
elJ M11 fMtrtl 11111 t• Alltl (lO) ~~lh! ~~:r1.Wlnt1rs. Michatl lt1n11!1,
7:l5 a:l t11t101" 41 S.11111M1
l :OO r:JIDLaw,ti·h• (Cl tblll Dan Rlt~l11 1u .. 11 II a dlr·old ~bJ
1 P1uMi1n w1athtrman ind 1 uslcl '
ia~e i•leir'ftln. /'tewcomer1 Ann (Icier
~nd HlrYfJ JllOn l11n !ht CISI.
m Mewll: (C) '1111 JIM lh•"
(Tt1111a) '41-Moirt Sh11rtr, Anton
W1lbroak.
• Mtwit: "Tiii lldl1lt1 ••"1'"
(tOll'ltdJ) '51-0on M11111y, E. G.
M .. 111111, P1trit11 Smllh, C1rolrn
lan11. 0 Vi11ini1 Gr1h1111 Sllew (Cl (60)
Guests 11e Ann.M1r111t. John Gary
Irwin C. W1tuin, and Mr, & M11 Ro11;1r Mills. Ill) WMtd P11u tC) (RI
m111t11 t111 lruth (Cl (lOI 11:15D riJOO llJNIW1 iC)
jIJ Wll'ld l'r• !Cl (601 ll:lO •M (()MM t11t!i11 iC)
€Il) Tiit St1,, (C) (3DJ 8 Mftle: "Fl1n11a11 111" tmr1·
.:r.i l'tllfftallll tlOI tery) '53-l11ny Wri1~1. l 11bat1 ~ Peyton.
1:05 al) A~ui liq P1trn" (25) G llltwil: (C) ''Tiii l11w1ff1" (j d·
1:3D EJ Qi (j) lflft't LUIJ (Cl !)Cl) v1nlur1) '5S-G111111y P1tll, .loin m Dtvld f11tt Shew CCI (901 Collini. Sttph1n lord.
Vve111 Mlmi1u1. [1011.1 LIWI, An· U?J(il DIQ Clwlft (C) )(lhn CllU· .:~la ~h1th, A.ich little, R•D. lou1 v11t t1, '''" Falk. 1111 G1u1r•
Stokes ID OhiO ). 11 :4S D ia1 l6l ID 1tt11111, C1r•11 (Cl
(iJ £NC01t[ Cka1n1t (C) tlOJ ,J;ick Jerry l"il ~I 11 ho1t lhll wtlk. ~~bb, H;ir1y M1111n. In "lft• 911 Gu1111. Jof1nn11 R1y, Mull)'n Maye,
Sh111men1." f11cley ind Gannon l1nu Renllel.
starch for • 111101 who1e crashed'l2:301iJ U.Wi1; "T~e WtJWlld l irl" ~lane carried a 5h111mtn! of m1ri (d11m1) '67 -Marci• Htnderun,
1u1n1. Ptl11 lf1t•1r.
m ris11t1 fl•ilr t30) 1:00. ¥1Vie: ICI ''C11ibbu11M (ldven· e fNl1111 (601 tu,.) '52-John P1yne, Arlene Oalll.
ID i.111111 Ill Mll111i (C) ~30) 1:1•. D lhWI (C)
'
Fa1rtily Corn edy Misfires
:4-t-C osta.Mesa.£lar--house
Uy TO~t TITU~
ru tft• 0111y 111111 llltt
lt';; 1tl1no11t in1pos11ililo not to
enjoy "1flll! lmposlble Vear!,"
oven on \he third U1nc 11round,
b~t a f8W n1orf! l)l'fXluclion1
liku the one being sh1ged h}'
the C;ista ~1esa CI v i c
Playhoui!e and it won 't be dif-
fiuull at all .
'l'his is a neat lit tle fa1nily
In 11 part lhat Invites aho..e
stealins, Kevin Conroy as the
ilineranl arth;t Bartholomew
Smul.li project#' 1 fine comic
lma.i:e but fallit 1h&rt or the
role '& polential. Devid Pigman
is fine as an overeager suitor,
85 are Dennis Backstrom,
Terri Vitro and Cy n t h ia
Dini;er as other members ol
the daughter'& begch party
"THI! IMl"OfUILI VIAR$" cang.
A uim•av ti• e~i. FU:ner •nd Arrllu• llo~·ard ~!nlick strains a bit Ml"· 111r1r1111 by Pall famW!llnl. 1.p.01c11 al1t(l•• Rl•"•'o Ano•r1•"· to come up with the overly
•l•a• m•ll•t•• LOil wu-. .ound Ind suscerctible doctor, w hi I e n.nn~ hv llDfl lilbli. wr-nttd I\• lllt Cat.1.il-Ml.W Clvk Pl1v11<1u1e. "'illlY~ Rona d Gibb in hi& nrsl role ...... !ilUHl&YI 1~'1>1JQ~ Oct ' •• .... k f' I ' Camm~nl!V C•nl1r ~udl1or!um on 1n1 ma fS • a tne com C lffi· 0•~•';11• cow11w ~~.rgrou11<11. C0•1• ' pression as the high·Jl(}Wered M~•·· TME cAsT prouch Is blun~ and lackinc, In publisher.
Dr J1r' Kin~•IPY P•ul (.lld',.tll e·mpll\h u, and ho foil& tO onnly 1h ' 1 1n11~ l{lt19•I•• . . 01~!•1 M<t:1n111 " 1•1· ' ere IS a t e n d e 11 c y .
01,11.Y P1Lo1 it1n "~•!• ~~v 1t •1ti111v .•.... l••~· Tnom•• any particular punch to his in· particularly <1 m 0 n G the BR~AKING POIN! -Piiych iatl'ii t P~ul Coldwell uppllcs. <l l~ttlc .PfiYl'ho!ogy ~\~~'v 11:~;:i::.':r ···:::. ~~·1~ ~r:~~ nu1ncrable ~igh po I e n ti 11 I younger members of lhl! cast,
or 1f11i own on l(ev1n Conroy. \Vho1e friends try to rest ru1 u hun. u1 a sc:cnc rt e~•"' Me"''~ .... "P•u16'1c•v h1u.11h lines, losing many of toward impaue,1-and con·
f C ''( T I 'bl y > Q h I fl () 'd Miu H1n1fl'l•r .. .• BftlY Evtnl h , h -. rom osta i• es~'s" he mposs1 e e~rs.1 t ers (fro1n e ) urc av1 .,,,,.,...in•. .. .. cvn1~1• o•ne•• t etn \It t e pr~cess. tinu ing the dialogue ,\Yhen
Pign1an, -Paul ·Gr:aeey.----Donnis-Backstfo.1n-aqd .J'et-i:i.-VW-.r.o. ____ ._!;~_:.:.:.:.:.._::.:.: o....,.1~~~,1~_Mont.y Ourtmm. in twrJocul _ 1.!!ughte,b Bti~l_Ell!kes their llnes B•r1~01omew smut-Key In Conrov stage debut as the mother is impossJ lo to Delle 8 r if, --n' F1111h•• ' H~wud M1llck ' .il.roo111 Brl(h•• . Ron11a Glb1J quite p\east11g and cre11teii a Hope(ully, s ubs e q u c n t
fine charncter with all the pro-O!'rforn111nces will alleYiatc
come~y. cleverly enough Y.Til-per mannerisn1s nnd reac· this shortcoming.
len lhat the production should lions. However, her luck of n i c h a rd Andersen's al -
ba able \11 sucec~d without projection pre1cnts n1any of lractive, split-level sc l pro-
t;eally trying. Cert uinly it l~ her better linfS frum hitting vides a hon1ey atmosphere
runnier than at least two other the niark. and still acco mmodates th!!
comedies unveiled in this new Best among the sur1rorting "mo& scenes" which are quile Jr. Musicians Set First Me et 1'ue sdav -By T0~1 DARLEY'
01, l~t DtllV Pllfl llftf
Orange County's y ou n g
musicians are gelling the long
aWailecl opportunity to form
their own youth syrophony
orchestra.
And the wave of the hand
that seen1s destined to lead to
a wave of the baton is cominG
from Frieda Be li nlan te.
former conductor · of I h e
Orange County Philharmonic
Orchestra and a devoted
teacher or piano 1 an d cello to
many talented youngsters for
many year&.
What Mi&& Belinfante hopes
will be lhe nucleus of lhc
county'& fi r1t youth orchestra
wtt1 meet al 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
in the music room of Foothill
High School. located i!t Dodge
and New port boulevarda in
nort h Tustin. That occasion ,
~1iss -~nfante pretliCli, will
lead to lhe settlng or more
rehearsals and auditions and
the subsequent planning or two
Orange County concerts in th e
197ll-71 season.
~1iss Bell11fante, who h!!H
been associated 11·ith the
music departments of Orange
Coast College. UC Irvine,
Chap1nan College and SL
,Joseph College. sees nu
shortage of young talent in the
county.
Piaoo and J>lccolo, trumpet
Lido Players
Set 1'ryouts
Tryouts for the firs\ pro-
duction or the season, "Catch
fi.1e If Vou Can " by Jack
\Veinstock and Willie GUberL
will be held Wednesday even·
ing by the l.ido Isle Playeri.
and trombone . harp and horn
~ -she' wants thc1n all. All
those-atending auditions \\'ill
be given full and fair hearings.
she promlses, and her you\h
sy1nph9nY orchestra \'I i I I
reflect all iCCtiOnli or Orange
County · In its finill co1n-
position.
Its members wlll .be under
lhe dlrec tiion of a wdnu111 wh11
won a claim at an early age
~Y gain"1g first prize in the
International Masters Con-
ducli/lg Contest organized by
l~urope·s Dr. II er n1 an
Scherchen. She was the only
v.•oman i;on1petitor in the field
of 12 candidates. '
Sh went on froin that
bciUiant start to conduct the
Orchestre de la Suisse florn11n-
d11 of Genev1:1 and t he
A111sterdan1 J{11dio fiyn1phony
Orcheslta of llolh111d before
CCJllin& to America in 19-4.8 as
asSociate professor of n1usic:
arid assistanl conductor <it
UCLA.
"I've been in close 1oucl1
with youth lhroughout n1y
years in Orange County," ~1iss
Belinfantc said al her San1a
fnnnt·d orguniz;:ition h :i 1• r
already been screened by Miss
Bclinfanle during spring ;ind
su1nrncr adut1tions.
But prospecth•e tll('JTihers of
th e orchestra should not ;dlnll'
1hal friet 10 deter 1hcn1. ~liss
Bl'linfanle ~Lt'l'Ssed. She 1va11ts
1:ood young lnstrumcnla lists
from all areas of Or ::.ingc
County \)!ilh lhc aim of staf·
ring her young orcht•s!r;1 \.l'ith
the best tal ent available.
And. shll udds. her own CX·
pcrience in prh'c.!c :111rl public
n1u11ic 1rnini11g cOll\'Lnc:es her
that lhrrc i~ an abundancl' of
such t::.ilent frorn 11hich she
season cumhincd. players is Paul Graci:'~' as the \'!Cll performed by th c
And ii will , indeed. succet'd ~'oung Y.'riter \Vilh y,·hom P:ipa teenagers. The lighting Is well
<il Costa ~1esa. but niore on its collaborates on his book. appointed by R-011 Gibb , though
own merits thun on those of c i v e n a c·on1pan11ivelv one wonders why the actors
the ~ast which is presenting it. straight rolt<, he handles il y,•ai t until the .stage Is li t
Pali Tambe!lini's production is with solidity 11.nd restraint. before assu1ning their posi·
lrugile and uncvon , mark•'d, The younger daug hter \Vho lions.
a1 lf':ist 1111 opcnlnf.: night. hy dividcli her attenl1on llct11•een Four inure perfor nlanccs or n1issed l'UCS and snnr'led cl:1ssical 1nusit· and Fanny Hi ll '-The ltnpossi b!e Years" will
diulogur. I d -Th d Th~rc is 110 clear standout in is y,·c I one by Tracy omas. be present~. Fridays an
\hr casl, hut !hc h es t Onc of the better comic S:iturdayS 'through Oct. 3 in 1notnents of the play Is sup-the Com1nunity c.; en t e r
perfurnuin£·f' conics r r 0 in plied by Bet!/. F:vans as the aiid1l0rium of the Orange f)i·n i~r McCanles as t he jogr1inll gym cacher. Count y Fa1rnrounds. 1yp1Ci1l f?! tl!l!nugc duughtcr ,---·-------------•------
11•ho grows up in a hurry. Huv·
ing sc1~11 ll'hllt c·un· be dvnr.
11·Hh 1hii; role through im·
rro1>Cr intcrprclatinn. on c
parli(•ularly apprec1ales U1e
t:iHI draw hf'r young cnscn1blc. wurtnth and well ffintrolled
In ;u1y even1. she said. 111;1ny 4·uteness v.•hich Miiss ~1cCantes
or those ll !l!JliC<1nL-; \'.h!f arc 1ns!ills in her thuractef'.
not accepted for \l1c \'Olith Paul Calrlwc!I as th e harried
11y1nnh~ny nrche~1r;1 \1 il! l:t• psychialrit>l fallit·r never 4uite
11n1ncthutely t'onsulr•rcd f1'1' 1nukes lhe ~rude. Ills ap-
purticipn\1011 in " Sf'trindary -------·-·-
orchest ra 'l'ho:.!' n!ans. ~he NATmN.t.1. l'IFNl!RAL co11P011.o..t1o1 ~il~er:1~: will ;>1•hiC'\(' fruit 1onl Foc••x' ... ·soinH CDASl
~l:tr,•
I ~•ZA"'H•A,,_
••~ l'lll1G rr1-y 11 fhklol • 546·271 I
Ana studio. 'I'm dedicated lo JIOLLY\\'000 1l 'l'I 1
thr sincere belief !hat the Forrest 'fucker and Tony Bill
child \\'ho is busy with serious 11ill yucst slar 111 a ~f'fltl1!'1ll of 1
111usical pursui ts is !he child next s e ;1 so n '~ · Br:ickcn"s I
\Vhu does not becon1e involved \Yorl d" series at 20th Cc,11 ury-
in cri1ne anddelinqtlcncies." 1 __ ,,_.,,_,_, ---
~1any of Lhe youngs!crs -----
h ' . 'CORhUI Cl'1C ((1~$1 l+IGllWAY ~ 5111 ST.I sc L>duled to attend the first ! ti/)-.,.
three rehearsals of the nev.'ly l ~ . a~
Regi s ter
-S, A.
Tht Ptrltc! moYll on lht loy of
•urtinu IV Grt9 M1,Glll!YrlJ •nll
Jom ~rttpun,
Hfll) 0¥11-JMD WlE!t
Balboa Theater
{;>'. NOW AT ~,,
POPULA R
PRICES ! ' Ou~~ r.l. ' L!!J P.ll>~Vl~' llC1t\1rotQll' -
:1111-$:\~•J:I Simt Schiltlult Su"a•y
it' 5
pure
Gould
E-t\IOTT GOUlD PAULA P~ENTISS
GENEVIEVE V\1A1TE
Randy Keone of the liun-
tington Beach Playhouse will
direct the show, which calls
for a cast of five n1en and-iwo
women. The play is a comedy
t h-h f ( At !hf PIY1ti.'I, Nr .. jll!rl I Sl<ft mys ery w IC ea ures a P•nlnwi. 1•• •n• ,,31 ,,m. d•!IY
((\"II\~ 111'f ~ TMf:'ATfD ,:_;;,...:. t 673-6260
.MOVE
surprisin11 ''twist." -.1.•u111 12.Mr.
Auditions will be conductcd \l~~~~'~"~0~·~·~"~'~~~·~~~1 I at 7:30 p.m. al the Lido Isle
Clubhouse, 701 Via Lido Soud.
Newport Beach. where the }i(l}!ll l -DIQJ ~"' production will be presented
Nov. 17·21.
J i111111y • Star,;
Ja1ncs Stewart IYl\1 slar In
"Fools' Parade" al Columbl11
Pictures. j
Corona del Mar
2905 East Coa:;t Hwy. ALSO
"TAKE THE MONEY
AHDRUH"
I II
r-1 PALOMAR i.=,!OW.Oll PICfURf:S
r~•.f,\ 1Q1,~ 11• H"·•;)l(~
;;,.;;;-~~-,
'l'iniryL/JTW"r' ~!IQ)
l lE l.l)IJVl·H
ltlH A:\'o ·r111 .. H\l:·L:L:K
Henry f on~ -James Stewart
'" "CHEYENNE SOCIAL CLUB''
1:45. ft()) m ,.lMl[I[ TM • C..MRi\J llllhttlll lurd {C)
Mc L.lwrtf• (Cl (50) "ti lh111 Z:JO. ll1W1/liwt U1 nil ..,. (Cl
I ... -..... ' . ' . . . . . . . . . . . . I . .
NOW AT BOTH CINEMAS
GEORGE c. scon
KARL MALDEN
TU~~D AY
l;lO D "ll•"-11 hr Y~ (oamcdy) m "Yb f1Mt Aft111Wt1" (llGCU· m.nl1iy) '5'-AnM" /'t orbota.
J:OO B "lllt LIMiq CltiMfl• (d11m1)
'lJ-.Bob Burns, Susan H•)'W11•.
' . . ,. .
DAYTIME MOVlfS m "hi L1111 ~ (1M!llurt)
'17-Yltlet M1l111t, 011111 Dir&.
'
Z:DI • '1h Tl•e fir ..,._... (Olm• :
"11 '!I-Andy Grillith. Nit-Adams. :
4;)0 9 (CJ "At11atl If Md'" (myi· I :
tel)') '!16 -Df:vid lritn,
FALL
SCHEDULE
OPEN
• JOB PRINTING : Wednesday · Frida y
e PUBLICATIONS
e NEWSPAPERS
Ot.1•lity Pr intln9 •nd D•p•ndebl• S•rvic;1
fo r m6r• th1A • quarter ef • c1ntury.
f'ILOT rR l~l I lt,J<,
•
: 10 a,m.· 6 p.m.
1: I; I: •
Saturday · Sunday
9a .m.•7p:~.:..-~I
CLUSE D
Mondays & Tuesday~,
"""' .. ''''" '""-'"' JICI UMOll IUllY llllllS ' •B-Sum
TII luHll"IOWllt'lS
-ALSO--
CHARLTON HISTOM
GERALDINE CHAPLIN
"THE HAWAltANS"
·111EY CIUL ME.
MISTER 1111ssr
Eltloll
Gould
Doni1d
Suth1 rl1nd
RATED
GP
RATED "R"-.llh BIG WEIKI
.-< 1'1·1\S·ll .
Pluo--Cllnt F.n"t11ond In "KELL Y'S HEREOS"
.... .tit ........ ,. ~' .. '. -• . .. .
'
•
-
I
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
-· .--.-.
• MUn AND JEFF
~OPEFlll
THAT rnev
WILL BE A&LE
TO Trl A.(E THE
C.t.Ll,J .t.SON
STALLS AS
WILLIE !N515TS
~ HE GIVE HJM-J SELF A Axr
I
!
PLAIN JANE
9·Z /
' !, i?
ly Chesttr
ly Tom K. 1ly1n
S~E YA
SI R CHEEFY. ~A9'(j
JEFF, tlHUT T+lE
ENEl lNE OFF SO°™E
MAN CAN tlEi T+ll
CAR!
By Harold Le Doux
'7c=-:-::=~=~7::r-w'"'•"s,...., -"\EA1<4W\.llLE, ~A.VO~& TIA.CfO T~£ CJ.LL ,,..,.
AL.WA.VS LICE 'AR'J S!LElr.ITLY (ONVHUE ~ lWE MOiiie
I \\
MER£ I
C:.Ji q:y.
IUXK OF•
TME lr.IEXT
J lr.ITER5E:C.T10trl !
By Frank 8a1Jlnskl
!DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by ·;· •. POWER l
ACROSS 45 Plac'
l Fruit of 91ei1\
Wt ii Ith
b Mal1gnan1 48 Th inly
10 F ire ·-·· scattered
14 Wt~tminster 51 Condi111e n1 15 t.tath 52 Moil 1al io 1rar1quil
lb Ha v1119 54 Havln9
lhe sa111e lhe mo~t
score rainfall
17 18 holes 58 Rr l~n
of \oll 59 Slate
18 Nf!..Oor bl ..... or
SEATO , e.g. roses
19 Almost •z "II '~ · ··· Prtf1x To TPll
20 E~-lrt ll'ltly " bit"·
pronounc t d 1 WOl'dS
22 City in il Chines e
Oregon t ily
24 Has on 64 Ntrve ·
26 Did ii Comb. form
household li5 Ht mmtd in
chore lib Ed i\01'"
27 Ho melrss conc e1 n
an imal· b7 Group of
2 word ~ 1hree
)Q Prrson
31 COl'llainer OOWN
32Kindol
gait 1 Equa l:
37 Unit !11 ~ Comb. [Ol'fll
physics Z Bla"ck :
38 Mat ure Pot!.
womtn 3 Tt>uc.h
40 Affi1mat1 ve against
vote 4 Urbiln •····•·
41 Unpopul~r 5 NOVI
mtd ltint Scot ia
2 words ~3 Went
c lly
~ Artilit hl
quickly l~n~uHgt
~4 T1blt scrap 1 ·-olarosa
•
•
Salu1day's Puzzle Solved
' U II I 1 (
5 ( ,. s
10. 21 1711
8 S Anit tic111 34· Ar;tntiol'
Indian timber tree
' Rt la•es · 35 Scanned
2 words 3b Make OVt f
10 Unseats 38 Wtll·
llO~n to known
VltW code 12 Su1>ernatu1al 39 Kind or
spirit welt
13 Famed l)to 42 Sevtr t
goijer distress
21 N. l mtr. j] IWOfry wait
miht;iry 4• Suff1t J111t
i roup : 47 Navigation
bbr. inslrumt11\
21 Airs 48 Brawl
25 Na11ati~t ' 49 T11re 1
27 In hope of breather
makin g ;t SO Faligued•
profit· 2 woids
lt1f1Hni1! 53 Library il!lll
21 Holllt 111 55 Fancy CASI
"Gant wilh Sb F'minint
tht Wind" na mt 2q Equips 57 Walked
33 c,rtaln liO St11sa1 lo11;1 I
beds SllCCtSS
...
MISS f'EACH
• "'1Ali'"!-.,-,_.,,.ScN, -
ADVISER
pO AS T APlllfE ANI>
l\.llETTE1L Liff i.>JLL 1£ '"fOU~S'
:Ml ..
STIVE ROf'IR
...
T
I
' I
...
Y10,KJW, f'M K11rr10,t,
SulPRli EO )OU OOllT
'TI V TO T.-i LIC ~l! ourA
RID!lrrl' IN TME "8.-'J!O
lDOO~ 5T!Vi .I
TMllE 'S .AW OtD ,,;t:illAN
PRO\IEAS, \IJHICM T .JUST MACE U'1 Mltei; -1115 EASIEI TO
COOL (HILi WITH ll-IE
SlllATlol lHAM 70 <l'---''-'"r
f'EANUTS
~MAtr.161 'lME
MIMD OF A
MU.E"/
OR STA~
HOME .
a }
l
. "
Ll'L AINa
SALLY IANANAS
GORDO>
MOON MULLINS
<I oM ,~R·· I
HAV&N'T
"TIMS FOR
BRE~~FAST.
ANIMAL CRACKERS
llll! ST'AT!~ ... lll.JU.
6Ul ~A~O~ Al.Ol.lE
OIJ ~Ell~C> C~IFI" ... 6t»J<'t)I~
111! H!WO l!!l.Dll) •.
. MA/\CJA _,,.,, ..... lo .1
AOVISEit.
P• Al' T ~DVlfE "'N"
A &f'rr.k Ll,I'" ·\ltlrLt.. ~£
"/O&Jfl. f' ..
ly Mell
•
ly Charles M •. Schulz
.1
Cil ST~~
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.... -~y, St,ltlT!btf c2;.;l ._l;.;';..70 ____ _:::DA.::1:.l V~Pl::LO:::T~~J
• ly Al Ccipp ·
By Charl11 Barsotti
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.:11-11! PUl!P~e.
5HAte.\16 O~ DUOK
ew~As1z.e 111E
i1ppµAJ.i;; 6~LOEl1
MU6C~'!6 AS~~-. •.
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THf snM!IGt WOii.i • MR.MUM-
ly .Gus Arri~
By Ferd John5on
'$''
11'
By Roger Bollen
DENNIS THE MENACE
I
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I
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2.! OAILV PILO ~ s
Profits
Slowin a ,
Market?
By ~ICK WES1'
WASHINGTON (UP I)
The t ton om i c upturn
prediCtcd r~r the sucond half
Qf 1970 has been slQW to
develop. \Vould you like to
kno\v what is holding lt back?
Very \\-'ell . The answer can
be found Jn the daily stock
market ana lyses that come
out or Yialt StreeL 11cre are a
rcw typical excerpls:
•
Monday, StPttmbtr 21, 1'170
1971 Grand Prix
".° .. Stock rnarket hit \\'ilh
another bout of profit taking
... Prices opened higher and
continued lo move ahead until
the ~fternoon session when
p(ofit taking took its toll ...
'J\1ining sharCs turned lower in
profit taking ... " •
Those gleanings rrom the
...Jin.ancial presL.Dlak.e it .@..:.....
vious that ccono1nic recovery
is being impeded by profit lak·
ing. It seems that almost
every time Wall Street gets a
~ood ral!y going. the profit
takers move in and stop it
cold.
High-intensity single headJamps. a new vertical bar gr iUe and a two-level
bumoer highlight the front of the restyled 1971 Grand Prix. The rear h~s a
classic boat tail with new quarter panels, deck lid. bumper and taillights.
Standard equipment includes variable ratio pQ\ver steering, power front disc
bl'3keS'ai103'\00CUbic-incll-V·8 engine .• The-SJ pacKage incluQes a 4SS-CUblc·
inch power plant.
In High Gear
The impression I get is that
\Vall Street is infested with
roving bands of profit takers
"'ho lurk around the stock ex·
change ready to pounce upon
the first rally that comes
along.
Pontiac Shoivs New Cars
II could be . however. that
profit taking is the work of a
single highly organized gang .
Any <lay now. you might
pick up a paper and see a
headline like thi s: .. Profit
Taking Ring Uncovered on
\Vall Street."
In any e\•ent. ii appears· ce r-
lahl that if thr profit taking
·rate continues to increase it
,.,.jJI become a major political
issue, perhaps with allegations
t'hat the Nixon Administration
is "soft on profit takers."
\Vith that in mind , I called
up a fellow I know who works
for the Secu rities and Ex·
change Commission and asked
him what measures l'OUid be
taken to control the proHt tak·
ing wave.
"Gelling tough v"ith profit
takers makes a good slogan.
but it isn't all that simple," he
said. "We've got to be careful
not to violate their con-
stitutional rights.
''Also bear in mind that 90
pe rcent or the profit m this
country is taken by people who
are hqokcd on money and
resort to profi t taking in order
lo feed their habiL'i.
"If you could find some way
to keep money out or circula-
tion. you would reduce profit
taking. But despite the federal
reserve board's tight money
campaign, the stuff is still
fairly plentiful.
"And although the highest
fncidcnt of profit taking occu rs
in Big City financial districls,
it has spread to the suburbs."
Okay . I'll agree there isn't
any easy solution. B u t
somehow people must be
made lo realize that profit
taking docsn·1 pay.
LEGAL NOTICE
L'EGAL NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE N 1~a1 !llf lollowint !1em' ol lou"" o• s1veo l>lll"ttv h~~ be•n llfol<I t" !hi Polle• O•par1ment of me c11v cl Costa M111 !ar a P•rlOO in
f'Y(~U DI n!oetv (fO) davs· Two PU•PI• bl~rs, ont blue bl~1. one qreen bl•t. two blk~• color un•nown,
two 1urlboard~ arid ant ta" dtt-. NOllCE IS FUllTH(ll; GIVEN lh•I 11 no owMr ap.,_,., and 1>rovt1 hl1
cwne"hlp ot !llfo orOMtlV wl!hln wvrn 411 <1av1 loll0wl"9 lht PUbllc1tlon ol !Ms
Noller. ,,., llllt 1Mrr1o shall vHI In '"' ti"""'· 11 there ~ OM, ar In 1r.e c11, ol
(011• Mtw, In wh ich <•loll the P•OPerlv
s/\111 be Mild 11 p\ltlHc 1.,.;tlon 11 • time 11'<1 dale lo be •nnounc~
O.t@d: Sft>rembolr 11. 1q10
JI E. NElH (HIEF Qf POLICE Pulll!-Ot-Co.11 Dl llv Pllol.
Sr111rm~r ,1. 19111 ll'°'·10
LF.GAL NOT ICE
' By CARL CARSTENSEN
Pontiac Motor Division has
unveited its newly restyled
1971 lineup and announce<! it
expected to sell 830,000 units
during the coming model year.
F. James McDonald. GM
vice-president and Pontiac 's
general manager pointed out
that this would be a 24 J!ercent
increase over the 670.000 units
the division would sell in this
model year. lie said he '"''as
''oplimistic'' a b o u l the
forthcoming sales year for
many reasons, among the1n;
Owning an Auto Toda y
Costs 12 Cents a Mile
NEW\ YORK (AP) -A or lease cars permit thei r
report by·~ the Feder a l personal use by e1nployes.
11 i g h \\'a y Administration Not all of them do so with
states that the a v er a g e equal enthusias1n. ho'l)'ever.
motorist spends 11.9 cents a It's just that the co.-.t of polic-
mile to own and operate an ing cmploycs in thei r persooal
automobile. lives, merely to see that they '.
A study by the National didn't misuse th!.' 1:01npany
lndustrial Conference Board car, v.•outcl not unly be· t•in·
of 128 manufacturers who use barrassing but costlY'.
per-mile formulas to reim· As the chief executive or a
burse their employes for use steelmaker says: "ii is ou r i'fr ·
of their personal cars shows ten tion that c:o1npany-owned
that all but IO of them pay Jess or company-\eaSt.'tl cars are to
than that ligure. be used for business purposes
True, the manufacturers only, bu L a·s a practical 1nat-
almost always pay parking ter, we do nol place reslric·
and toll charges, which the lions on personal use."
government estimates to The most com m on re·
amount to 1.8 cents a mile, but quirement made for person<i!
that · still doesn't make the use of a compariy ca r is the
typ ical (().cent reimbursement payment of a fixed per-1nile
e1ninently fair . figure. 'I'hc highest an1ount
Here's why, The government menlioned was 9 cents a mile,
estimate of car cosL'i is based the lowest 2.5 cents.
on a IO-year lire span ror the Son1e companies re port
vehicle, with the greatest more complex <1rrangcments.
depreciation in value taking One firm has ·no restrictiOns
place during the first ~w on personal use not exceeding
yea rs an d almost none at the 100 miles a \\'l'ek. but beyond
end of the 10-year span. that limit it irnposes a toll of
But how many rompanies 5.5 cents a mile. Another
permit their representatives to manufacturer permits :J.000
drive !!}.year-old cars? ~1ore niiles a year \\•ilhool cost. ex-
likely they must trade them in cepl for lhe purchase of
every three years or so. thus gasoline, but then it begins
suffering far greater deprecia-l'harging.
lion cos t s t ha n th~ The NlCB figures o n
governmenrs 3.2 cents a mile mileage rates arc part of a
estimate. !\-lore like 5 cents a larger surve y of l'Olnpany
mile. pr<ictices regarding fl yi ng m1d
Moreover, the government driving that tends lo suggest
figures are based on a car cos· that some n1anufncturers ma y
ting about $3,200. Thousands of have beco1ne a bit 1norc
company representatives own tightf isted of late ~
n1ore expensive models that "The airlines industry 1nay
also may be more expensive have cause to speculate about
to operate~ the future of its first-cla ss
At any rate, , the survey service," the report states,
shows that 88 companies now because 145 ol 160 participants
pay 10 cents. but that seven in this aspect of the sur\·ey
pay as little as 8 cents a mile . have established cc a ch,
One outfit pays 15 cents and economy or touri st as the
another company reports it is preferred accon1m0dation.
considering a ra ise to that First-class air travel once
figure. was automatically chosen by
Companies appear to be top manageml"11t in some com-
HoT1CE TO c1.ED1To1.s more liberal in their attitude panics, but scvrra\ firrns
EK• ... ""· 111-lftS ' he NICB TO THE c11;Eo1ro1.s OF E1°" Earl toward Ure private use of com-reporting to t no"' say
Ham•111 and Em•t Ml• H11<1...,th. "1.ll"9nd pany ca rs. the NICB study they do no t permit their of · and wlfp, TlfANSF~OR : Purw anl lo [' · I h h sec11.,.,. 6105 and 6101 o• 111i' Unlt0<m shows. About 85 percent of tcers IO routine Y C OOSC t e
c~c1a1 COiie. you are llf'rM "°uu.o survey participants that' O\\'n most expensive ~rvice.
••-Wh'I f lr1n1!oeror h 1110UI lo make 1 tr1nsl1r _ , •· Le CW CXC<.'UtiVCS ac-
1o tM u'1Hnloned. lr1n1ter ... In bu!\, ._ tually lie this change to cur·
111 of the tn1terl1h, 1~oo>ll", .._,1'•n·"' 1,000'S OF OIL rAINTIN•S .,1 .. 0, ol!!er 1n~tO<"V, • ..., .ciulomenl rent economic conditions," !hf'
01 .,,.,., c1r111n Pll•<lwa•• 1nd 11>0r1lnt WHOLESALE WAllHOUSI report relates, "a n111nbcr of
9"\'01. t"°""" ,, r,,, 11••"" "a<"""''~ orrN TO THI ru1L1c h •!Id SPOt'flnt Goad1 a11 at wt11.:i. 11 ~'"' $ them say t a' ne"' rcgulti-
1\ 110 M1rl111 AV1n11e. 81lba1 lll•nd. ~ 5 Gftd up tiO'(IS, or more Stringent ap-CO.:.nl'f ol 0r1...-. C•llfornJ1, I · TM ••ne111 n•mr or n1mt1 a°'° 111t 11. t:OIMGl!R, S.t.NlA ANA p icallon of existing rules,
111111""' 1oor•1!H'1 01 '"' Tr•n11trot' •"" "tlONE 1U-46f1 -have been in effecl for less Tr1~1te"" I re 11 lcllOI•"' ~ O•ALEl.S WAlfTl!O t'
TllANSFERDR 1:===:::::=::::::::::::::::::::::==:i._~·1~ .. ~n~a~,~·c~·~r.~"~-----t Elon E1r1 HllO•ttn, 115 M1rlne
A....,.,., 8albOI !$Mind, Cant, \. I I 2 y Elfltl MH l'llO•e1n, 1u Mar1ne[1" ____ _. __ n t s I st ear _______ .,[
-'Y«tut, 8ilbol tlltl'ICI. C•MI. Tlf ... N5FEltEE
Alblrl I'. HOl!t""· 'U OllYx, 81lbo1
lll.tlld. c1r11
Mlfftll o HolMltld.. 'u Om< ... e1111M Investment Course
!Mand, CIOI. -·
All o,,..r i.v.1na1 ..,...,.. Mid l<ldrnsH
....0 II• lfl9 Tr-ier .. wJltufl llW' "''"'
.,..,.. Ill! Nit, M II• '' k-n IO Ille Trafl!lfff'ft, .,., .... Tfw Dull!. tr-lff Ii to f:llo COfl•tHM'llll\I
11 Ulfrl'l!O CALlflORNIA l•NI<. C-1
-.i ,.,,., omc.. 1111 £alf c .. 11 H~""''· COi'-1191 Mir. CflJ' 9' H ....... 1 8to\CJ'I. ,_,., ., °''""' Cllifof' .... , 111'1 Of •fief' Otioo.I •• 07'. 0.tH ~ 11, lt111
I lbM I' !40iltfl0
Mtif!o' 0 11Dfl9nl ,,_
i-voll"""" °"-(Ofil 0•11'1 "'lol·
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE
·No Admis1ion Ch•r91
At1 lfr1trod11clio11 to th• h11ic lund1111ent1h of i11v•1lit19 i11 Cor•
"•r•I• llocl1. Bo11cl1, Muh,r tl fvnch, Go••rt1"1•11I B011cl1, Bu.lclon9
j lo•11 .A.11oci•tio111. lntencl•cl lo t i"• pr1ctic1I ~110 .. lecl91 of
iflw•1lln111t1 •ncl 1tock .-.chah9• op•r11lon1.
WM. L. O 'BRYQN , Instructor
-Renewed customer con·
fidence which pointed towards
strong fourth quarter sales.
-The addition of a oew top-
of-the-line-luxury car ••. the
Grand Ville and a res tyled
Grand Prix,
-A new Pontiac compact
car which \\ill be un veiled ea r-
ly ne'l,t spring .•• , .expected
to be called the Chieftan. It
should compete in t h e
Chevrolet Nova and f'ord
Maverick segments of the
1narket and will be welcomed
by Ponliac dealers.
''All indications are that the
soles stump which plagued the
industry bottomed out earlier
this summer," McDonald said.
"Barring long labor disrup-
tions. econ om i c indicators
point toward a stronger fourth ..
quarter. Our products will
pro~rly position us \o take
foll advantage of the new
model year and the predicted
upswing in sales ... he said.
In describing the 1971 line
McDonald said. "wt have a
completely' new regular series
starting with . the Catalina
through the Bonneville, wit h a
new c<ir at the top of the line;
the Grand Ville."
Built on a 12G ·i nch
wheel base. the luxury Grand
Ville will De available as a two-
Jtoor hardtop. fo u r-door
fardlop and as a convertible.
Joining the Grand Ville in
the big car line up are the
Bonneville, Catalina and a new
Cat.aling Brougham. The Ex-
ecutive series is being discon-
1inued.
In co1nmenling on the new
c_;rand Prix. McDonald said it
has an all new-front and rear
end and it is more of a "true
classic" than ever before.
•·1 call it a classica l. luxury
sport car and in 1971 we·ve
embellished l he adjective
'classical' with a stylish front
end and the same great ride
characteristics that the Grand
J)rix has had since 1969 . .,
P o n t j a c ' s intermediate
lineup. to be identified as the
LeMans series. has new front
end s t y I i n g • In termediate
nameplates are the T-37.
LeMans, Lef\.1ans Sport and
GTO.
For 1971 Pontiac will offer
36 <lifferent models compared
to 3~ in the past model year.
~1CDonald also touched
brie!\y on Pontiac's plans lo
bring out the compact next
Spring.
.. The new car , • • will be
distinctively Pontiac with a
split grille, featuring single
headlamps and a distinctive
bumper. It \\'ill be otfered in
tv.•o and four-Ooor models on a
I I I-inch wheelbase. Ov~flll
length v.·ill be about I~ in·
ches," he said.
In turning to 1971 engines.
t1cDonald emphasized that all
Pontiavs will be capable or ef·
ficiently running on non-leaded
91-octane regular fuel without
any significant Joss J n
performance.
* * * LOCAL 01...0S l\1AN WINS
EUROPEAN TRIP
Don McGinnis. Univers ity
Oldsmoblle in Costa Mesa.
jolned 200 o I h e r lop
Oldsmobile dealers a n d
managers togttber \\'ith their
wives recently ror a wee.k·long
trip to Paris.
The dealer 1 '11>up stayed al
tht fll('_rcontinental llotel In s.t.mW 11. lf1' llu.N
FAIR
f., S ,,,ftlts -w....._,..,. 7:10 fo t:lO P•"'• Paris S!i the guests ·0 f Oldsmobile Division. The wtt.k hh'''""' kh•.. In Poris was won by McGinnis
F11I, f1l'r, ftch11\. llio11 2IO(I M•IMri Oitn for hoving placed (l~ amo11g
,..,. •• wonl1 ••f!I 11p fie.ton ht N••P•rf ....... 1'I competitive group or Olds l~·~·:H:•~,;~··~ .. ~·~':·~D~A~l~L~Y~'-'_'0_1 JJ~..;:;::..;~· :;::;:;:;~•:":':',.~'~"':.;,.:':.:"':~~'":":_ __ .,:==:.-.ll:~dt!!ilt;-Il...JIJJ.t'"" Jlve·montb •4rf9'j•I P•9• •'H'V id•f. _.,, "'4 &Rlc.'5 incentiv~ program.
. --..,.-~ -
-
/tlo119'• Worth
How Much .
Debt is
Enough
By SYLVIA PORTER.
How Mac~ Debt 11 Teo Muell
Debt for You?
As you might suspect, In this
recession of 1969-70' personal
bankruplcies have been soar-
ing along with bu siness
failures. Lenders of all types
report that collections have
become very s)ow, Oefaults on
installment debts have in-
creased sharply, a r1s111g
percentage of young couples
and famiUeS in the lower in-.
come brackets simply ~annot
meet their time payments.
'" ,. '
25 Years
Mrs. Louise Apple of
8071 Ellis Ave .• Hunt·
ington Beach, a traffic
supervisor in General
Telephone Coriipany's
Down·ey Division, com·
pleted her twenty-fifth
year of service with the
company this month.
Mrs. Apple began her
career at General Tel
a s an operator and ad-
vanced to her present
position in 1966.
As you also inight ~spect.
the off:rexte~ed credit family
has well def111ed charac·
teristics. In the 18 to 24 age
bracket, more than one in four
families is now overextended.
Of every fi ve Americans car-
rying installment debts, two
are reported having dJfficulty
paying off. At least one ·in 10 families is behind in Us ------------I
payments, and the proportion
here is in a steep rist.
And once again, as you
might guess, you can draw a
sad profile of this debt-loaded
family. Sptcifically:
-The family is young, has
more than· the a ve r a g e
number of children and the
parents are easy-going, im·
pulsive buyers;
-The husband is satisfied
wilh his job but the wife is
dissatisfied with his pay :
-TV disproporti~tely in-
fluences the couple's buying
decisioM, is the m a j o r
medium of communication in
the family's_ life , and they
don't read anything, not even
a daily newspaper:
-The parents move more
often than mC>St and think
their debt troubles att due to
circumstances beyond the.ir
control (a cutback in the
workweek, loss •of job, an
aµtomobile accidetit):
-Neither husbpnd nor wire
assumes clear ;esponslbility
for managing the family 's
finances, and they certainly
don 't know haw to reach joint
decisions on spending.
Enough , the profile is all loo
familiar. And for th o s e
already going under. it's too
late ;· even if they are bailed
out. the damage to their credit
rating will remain and follow
them quite J>O$ibly throughout
thei r lives.
But how do you prevent this
from happening· to you~
Out of the countless words
written on this question of how
much debt is too much debt.
T've found three ba sic
guidelines which seem most
valuable.
Here they are ror you lo
study and to memorize.
I I J Do not owe more than 20
percent or your yearly after-
tax income (not including your
home mortgage, however).
This means that if you earn
$800 a month in take-home
pay, or $9,600 after taxes a
year, your debt limit would be
about $2,000.
(2) Do not owe more than 10
percent of what your income
COjJJd pay for within 12 to 24
months. To make it simple.
let's use 18 months as an·
average. Say your take-home
pay is $800 a month. That
gives you 10 percent or $80 for
debt repayments. Willi this
monthly sum, you could pay
off $1 ,500 over 18 months.
Your safe debt limit would be
between $1,300 and $1,500.
(3) Do nol ~·e more than
one-thi rd of your discretionary
income -meaning of the in·
come you have left after you
have paid for your basic needs 11! food , clothing and -shelter .
Ont-e more, say you earn
$9,600 in takHlome pay a year
and you spend an average of
$200 a month for sheller, $280
a month for food , $50 a month
for clothing. Your basic living
costs are $530 a month , or
$6,300 oV<!r the year. Your
disc retionary income i s ,
th e r ef ore , $3,240. By
this guideline, your debt limit
is $1,080 -or one-third of your
discretionary income of $3,240.
Another way to j u d g e
yoursell ls against the average
for American families -and
the averag:t family now uses
about 15c out or every after-tax
SI _ to rtpay var\ous in-
stallment debts. lf you add ln
AU. fixd payments· -for
home mortgages or debt and
taxes -the prOportion is 23c
out or the $1.
But averagts arr statlslicaJ
myths and any family which
matches an average Is e•·
traordinarUy non-average. So
use tht fundamental
guidelines. Sure, they're con-
servative, but they're sound-
and If you follow them, you'll
always 'know when how much
debt i11 too much rlebt for you.
(Copyrl,:h1 1170, Field Enttr·
prises, m,c.>
Forecasting
The Course
On Economy
NEW YORK (AP ) -We are
approaching once again the
season of the year when
restless government ofljcials
and businessmen attempt to
peer into the future and
detennine the fate or the
economy-which is sometimes
their fate also.
Naturally, .it is a time of
equivocation. but p e r h a p s
understandably so, bec8.jlse
the economic signs a n d
portents themselves c a n ' t
seem to stay in their ap-
pointed places in the sky but
inste8d flutter about like the
northern lights.
In J uly, for example, the in·
dex of industrial activity,
which is the measure of the
output of mines, factories and
utilities, advanced 0.2 percent.
its first rise in four months. It
was welcomed as a very good
omen indeed.
Nixon administration of·
fi cials. for example. sa w in
this sign clear evidence that
the economy was preparing to
resume its expansion after a
near starvation diet of several
months.
The President's c h I c f
econom ic adviser. Pa u I
McCracken. r e I a I e d to
reporters thal there were "en-
couraging signs'' to be seen in
the economy and that fiscal
and monetary policy was pro·
ceeding on a "cautiously ex·
pansionist course."
But then came the August
industrial output statistics and
they were off again. not by
much, but in the view of op-
timists they should have
shown continued growth. lt's a
tough business. even for the
expert foreca sters.
Here is how some other
estee~d seers view the
somewhat cloudy skies:
The Econometric
Forecasting Unit at the
\\'harton school of Finance and
Commerce. L'1tiversity of
Pennsylvania, in its summer
newsletter: "The U . S .
economy has , turned around
and started to grow again."
The Wharton economists, in
making their estimate, suc-
cumbed to a weakness com·
mon to all forecasters and
made the assumption there
would nOC. be a national
automoti ve strike against a
major producer. Anticipating.
however. that their assump-
tion might be incorrect, they
stated that a major strike
would slow the expansion in '
the fourth quart~r but that it
would resume again in·l971 .
The B111k of Ame~ica, San
Fr:ancisco. in a ''Focus on the
U.S. Economy": "An early
look at 1971 suggests the year
ahead will be one of restless
resurgence. Although business
activity should move ahead at
a fa ster clip than in 1970, it
will be sluggish w h e n
rntasured against our full
employmest capability."
employment capability."
An unsettling aspect or the
8 of A forecast is for unem·
ployment in 1971 to average
5.S perrent and inOatJon ol 3.5
percent. compared with a 1970
uneinployment rate or 4.5 and
price increases at a rate or S
percent. The American consumer. RS
measured by the Survey
Research center at t h e
Univt.rslty of Mlchigan: "The
irlde• of consumer sentime:nt
rose to 77.1 tn the third
QU8rter or 1970 from 7$,4 in
the second quart tr.·• mtaning
consumers were a mite bit
more optimistic about the
cl'Onornic future •
...--·---~ .. ...---
THE -~N.EEDLE
• ...
..
IS MIGHTIER THAN .THE PEN ...
And t1it ma" toho
kno10s ;ust how to tum
tht phras• to get the
most out of tht barb U
DAILY PILOT column-
is t Sydntu HaTTis. Ht .
has beers called tht
modern -cfdy Ht n T v
A-ftncken . I f you'rt
ready for his use of tht :
~cid adje ctiv e and
t hought -provoking
pro.st to give you the
n'!edll!: .•• if you want'
to find something to
think about in what you
read ••• if you h.avt a
&l!:nsc of humor, you
belong with readers
who dtlight in ttUing
others what "S11d said"
in one of tht nation'•
most • q1Wted columns.
•
Some Sample Barbs
Recently Thrown
By Sydney Harris:
•one of the highest p.rd jobs In Americ•
con1i1t1 of 1t•nding up in front of • mic·
tophone, ••JNr1ting the eood record•
from th• bid on•• -ind pl•ying th•
b.t ones."
''lt'1 1ad but true that while alcoholics
ire the best argument for abstinence, s<>
many abstainers are equally e£fective ar-
eument for a little drink now and th1ri."
"Most of the 1o-c11led 'incompatibility' '"
marriage "1prin91 from the fict th•t to
most men, "x i1 an ·•ct; whil• to all
women, tt i1 •n emotion. And thl1 differ-
ence in tttitude can be bridged only by
love ...
"The sole difference bet'\\•een a 'dedlo.·
ted crwader' and a 'nosy reforJ!l~r· con.-
lists in our agreement or disagreement
with his objectives."
..,.he mo1t exploslve eombination In the
world c°"1i1t1 of sincerity •dded to
Ignorance."
.,
.. Whenever I am the recipient of an ex·
ces.sively hearty handshake, I 1;uspcct
J.lr. ?.luscles is tryirig to sell something,
hid1 tomething, or prove somethiJl&-"
I
,Check The Editorial
For This Signature
Page
It'll Help You Find The
Latest Q11otables Created By
' 'The Needler' For His Col-
umn, A Regular Feature of
the
DAILY PILOT
Your Hometown Dilly N1w1fNptr
~
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••
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I
e
s
withyour .
newspaperboy
today·.
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It will be good for both of you. It'll remind you that not all of today's
youth has gone to "pot" or somethin CJ worse. And It'll prove to him that
you appreciate the fact that h!I buys, sells, deRvers, kMps ~ords, col-
lech and tries to make a profit on his small buslness-o f t e n workin9
when his pHrs are playing .' He's quite a fellow, that youllCJ busln-n.
who deUvers your newspaper. Get acquainted with him and you'R· know
why we're .0 proud of him. We have 820 mqre like him dellvetlllCJ the
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14 OAlLY PILOT M~y, Stpt!mbH 21, 197Q
..i
r .Prices Ef(ecti••
tbro Tues., Sep 22nd
Sears
Tire and Auto Center
• ' . . · On The Purc hase
O~ Au.y 6 '!r 8
~vlindet"' •' , "' ,. emanufaclt1re d
Com1>lete En(!ine
lnstaU d:.
I •
' ·-·"
o ... r 950
M;1kes an1 I
.ModC!s Available
l\1ore New Parts In Every
Remanu:fact\lred Complete Engine
•All .\c\\' '\\'a1rrTuhr11
•All '.'itw R oc~t'rShart~
•~II NrwTimiog Chai ns
• AIJ NcwTimin,::Gcnf'1!
• .~Jl New JUa~n Bearings
• AJJ l\'t"' Rod Bearing,..
•.-\II i'ew llydr1ulic Lifters
• i\11 Newlh11•l1inp _
•/Ill !liew~a1 Gaskl!-16
•All New Exliau sl \alve&
•All ?'\ew Intake
\'a Ive~
•A11New \1alve
!'-iprinl'I
• .o\ll New Pirilons
• 4.11 New Chrome
'I ypeRi11gs
ALLSTATE Ci r and Truck Eng inC"S. Exchaogcs available for over 9~0
makes .and mcx:lels rcmanutacrured 10 more exacti ng scaodards than used
io new engines. Compare ALLS1"ATE Remanu(octured Engine Quality.
Expert Jni;tallation Available
------------------------------,--CLIPTHIS COUPON $ l
"l'ltis Cou1•011 "'ortl1 l'
On Pur<hase of Any 6 or 8-I
C ylinder Remanufac rured I
Co mplete Engine Installed. I
_ One~onpo,n perrn111o~r RI OfferJ::):pire:!-91:?'.!f,'n _ _T4'.m.10 I -----~------------------------~ ·-------------------------------,, !!J.~lonlhs or ~1.000 l\liles R,.n1an11r11c1ured Enilne GUA&\NTEE
lf anr part fa.ib du<' 10 Uni. on rruirnal or workm~ip ••• J1111n11M liDc~J.1• or 4,oon
rniln. .. hichc:nToa:u.r.. liD< .•. , .• ..;n rrpairor •t'f'l•r r••H r~nf clwJ,ce. pro¥idm. ""'1"1"'J
11rnke hn hr~ ~ornl<'J •·<ording r<> J1!»WH.,.. anilj,aie. Aftc-r 90 ..,_or -i,000 ollilP.J
and UJ> 10 24 momb.. or 14,000 mil""-•·h1ck .-.:roo:run fin.t, P>1m1 1t11d J..abor c:hlU"~ will he
pro-rarrd. bl9f"d upon 1ht" ~runrrge Ol 50.11.-anrttd motitb~ or 1mlcs, whicht•rr i1 ~
I .,
I I tqlte$Clltiq&~ recri"e<I. Prriodic .,.,.icr i• mi11lnrd m-icftp,ltWlrmutt io tlfeu. I
L11.11,..n1ttAppliatoP_..erC.Applicati-Only , -1-
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NO HIDDEN .
Extra Charges
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. .:.".-.-· .,,,,;. Go_~el:xel1onges J
-
}"" Tran51.nissi011 ·
completely
disassembled
and che1nically
cleaned
Y" Greatest
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i1e'v rc1>lacemeni.
' )lart! in the
in uStfy
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A'·ailable
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fit~ :\1 9~1 o['fl1~~e C111'!;:
(;11')"lolrr• J'IJn"'MJtlit
Uu;lir1 J'uoli":t
Fort;,tn Cir• '<>lk,•·•j!tril
Oldunubilu
-rassen.rcr Tire
{;uaranlct!
f;oaranteed Against: All titt
f~ilt1res from normal road haz.
ard' or derectJ in marerial or
.. -orkma1uhip.
F or How 1.ong: f or rh~ .Jife of
rhe oripnal rrra.I
ll'hal-Sr..111'1! ~'ill Do: lo ca·
1 hJn11:e fur the 11rc. ro:place H
ch.ire;Hl& for lhc pro110nioo of
cur~or15<'lling price plu' FrderJI
Excist Tu that represenn; 1read
used. Repa.ir n•il puocrurci al no
char~.
(iuar.anteed Ag.alnsi: Tread
""'C~rnut
For Jlow Loiig: 'fhc numlter
,,f n10 01h' specified.
Whal Sears V.'111 Do: Jn c11·
ch&n~e for 1he 11rr, r eplace it
l ha1gin1t the curren1 !iellln,g
price plus Federal E:uisc Tu.
less the foUowin& · allow;ince:
~lonll1ly611arM11leo Allo,.·ance
is 10 2<1 1or-.;,
27 10 3Y 20':0
40 2)~~
l'ITS ~IOST
OF THESE CARS:
Co1np1ct BOiclr.1. f~'hevy JT.
Cumr1~. Co"1ir1. Mutitangs.
}".aleons., Foreign~Car•
93
l'!u. r~d. r~c~T'"
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6 .SOx ll ~l•ck~·all"
•
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Am~do,... Buiek"' (:he"Y"' Dod~eJ.
l'orJJ, Plymoulh1. Ran1hlrn, Tt11111toh,
ti1udebalr.en, T-Birtl•. f-85'1. -----
f'il• ,llo•I ofThf"•'" C;1.-•:
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II.A~~ 15 'l'hi1e•·1ll-
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48-Month ·Guarantee
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I TIDS -COUPON WORTH l thousand oaks !\os. 43034112-4395-436643534390'
On Purchase o(
Any Remanufacturcd
Complete Automatic
Transmiss ion Installed
I . One Coupan Per Cu1tom~r I
I -I ~-' I l Offer expires 9/22/70 r.~.:m,;o I ------------------------------J
AUTOMOTIVE CENTER 1
IS N OW OPEN!
Se1n'5 Thousand Oaks ••• )45 West ''jllage Lnne
Shop 9 t1.1n. u·ntil 6 p.111 . , •• ~lond ny thru Saturday ,
SEARS BA'I'rERY GUARANTEE
Free replacement '"i1hin 90 days of purchase if bat•
cry proves defccti\'c, .After 90 days, we replace the
battery, if dcfccrivc, and charge _you o oly for the
~riod of ownershlp,based on the regular price less
trade-in at 1hc time of relurn, prorated over number
of months of guarantee.
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CANOCtA •Allt i•O ... , GUNDAU <N ~1004, Cl "-4611 OLTM"C A IOlO AN 1·5211
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Shop Nl9hh Mon. thru Jet, 9130 A.M. to 9130 P.M.1 Juncla:r 12 Noon to 5 P.M. ''Satl1fpctlon Guaranteed or Yovr Money hck'' ~ . ' ' . . ~
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IANifA MONICA IX 4'.t71 t
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-MOfldaY, Stptelllber 21, 1970 DAILY PILOT JS ,
Surfil!g -Crowll~ ~aptured-by Carr.oil, ~cCaull
Br-PHIL R08S
..... ~Ir , .. ., '''"
/t. definite Orange CoQt area 01vor
spiced up the llth annual United Stites
Sur{board Championships Saturd>y and
Sunday in Huntington Beacll.
Twenty-two-year-old Cork.y Carroll o(
na11a Point won the Duke Kahanamoku
Award as the "best all-around surfer for
the fifth straight time while !7·year-old
Brad McCaull, an Orange Coast Co~e
student who lives in Newport Shores, was
a surprUe winner in the all-important
men's division.
Carroll, last year's men's winner, WI$
the runnerup l;lehind McC&ull in that
category ·and the Dani. Point resident
Laver Win~;
Pancho Forfeits
Doubles Match
L05 ANGELES (AP ) -Top ...oed
Rod ,Laver advanced in singles but
Pancho Ganzalez and Jim Connors' didn't
ln doubles as the stonny Gonz.ale1
forfeited the match while disputing a
special rule in the Pacific Southwest
Open tennis tournament.
Gonzalez, of Malibu, and Connors of
Loi Angeles, won the first set over Tom
U!onard of Arcadia, and Marcelo Lari of
Mexico 6-4, and were behind in the se-
cond, 51, with Gon&Uez serving. It wu
announced at that t\me that if Gonr.alf!z
won his serve, the match would be decid·
ed by I nine-point tie breaker.
Goozalez claimed he had not been told
of the nine-point rule for Coubles, as op-
posed to the 12-point tie breaker in
singles, and stalked fram the court.
Laver, Corona del Mar, defeated Dick
Knight of Seattle, 6--4, 6-3, to advance to
the second round Sunday. Other first-
round victories were registered by Tom
Okkf:r of The Netherlands, C I a r k
Graebner of New York and Marty
Riessen of Evanston , Ill.
Gonz.alez, who'd been expecting the
same 12-point tiebreaker used in singles,
blew up. The 42-year~ld veteran snap-
ped, "The players should al least know,
the rules," and walked off the court,
forfeiting the match.
Gonzalez is .scheduled to play Mike
Machott of Belvedere, Calil.,·in a second·
round singles match today.
Tom Okker of The Netherlands and
Marty Riessen of Evanston, Ill., also won
in straight iets, and Clirk Qr!J,ebner of
New. York went three sets to beat
Au stralian Ray Kelbie.
Graebner'a wife Carole was also a
singles winner. topping Jill Schwikert of
... • enlwlcod hil overall •tandln& by placing
third in the one-mile open DJer paddk
competition behind ~ Bd.ch's Jack
Lincke ancj. 40-year-okl Kit Horn of
Fullerton.
Hom won the pier paddle race when
Lincke wiped out with about. SO yards to
go after hriving enjoyed the lead up to
that point.
Two other area contestanta managed to
break into the winners' circle as Les
William.! 31, of Dana Point was vic--
toriow: in the seniors' division and 18-
year~ld Dane Silzle of San Juan
Capistrano captured the juniors' com-
petition.
McCauU, a Newport Harbor High grad
•
who won the juniors' event ln 1969, ad··
niltted after hia win ln the men'• _raoe
lhl( he d1dn't have any particular
strategy or maneuver thll helped bim
gain the first place troptiy,
He said, "My surfing did it for me. 1'be
conditions out there were: pod 11~ so I
couldn'i gripe."
Asked U any one individual was the
man to beat in the men's derby McCaull
replied, "not realJy, because I was wor-
ried about everybody."
In addition to Carroll, McCaull upset
three other good su rfers by beating
Hermosa Beach's Mike Purpus (third),
Gerry Lopez of Hawaii (fourth ) and New
Jersey's Dennis Doyle (fifth ).
The eenUmental favorite of the crowd
of 141008 ontOokers at Sunday's finib:, lS.
year-old Hawaiian Mike Ho, was the win-
ner of the boya' division whUe Ty·Page. of
Hennou Bem:h walked off with honon in
the mlniJ' classification.
S11n Oiego11 Barry Ault took home first
place In the masters' divhdon.
Victor in the women's combat w11
Jericho Poppler of Long Beach.
ln the two team events, Hal Sachs and
Patty Young Crawford combined their
talents 'to win the mixed tandem com-
retitlon and a lifeguard duo of Mike
Buster and Roger Smith, representing
J.os Angeles County's Zuma Beach',
Las Vegas, Nev., in straight aels. But TEST PILOT -Dana POint's Corky C3rroll rides a normal one. is currenUy being experimented with
veteran Darlene Hard of Los Angeles atop his· uni;onventional. two-skeg board in Sun-by a well known Dana Point surfboard manufac·
dropped a 6--4, 3·S, 71 match to Linda d · • 12th aJ u .B s fboard Ch · h · t · Lewis of__falos Verdes,..Qllil_,_, who at "18~-ay s annu . ur amp1ons 1ps a turing firm.
11 half Miss Hard's age. Huntington Beach..--The board,-214-feet ihorter than _ _ __
Sports In Brief
Pele Mobbed by Fans;
Devlin Wim Golf Title
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Pele and Lima
1eored first-balf gOals Sunday as the
world's champibn soccer team, Sa1tos of
Brazil, downed Guadalajara, Mexic_o, 2-1
at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.
Th~ crowd of 24,432 faris was in l!n
uproar from the start, with more than
t ,000 pourh1g onto the field when Pele led
Santos out for pre-match introductions. It
took 35 minutes to clear the field .
Pele, scoring his l.095th lifetime 1oal,
had an outstanding game and was rushed
off the field with ni"e minutes left in the
match to avoid a possible mobbing by the
fans who began to rin1 the &idelinea a1
the second half be1an.
Pele'• score came i11 the 39th minute
and was a 22-yard boot which cleanly
beat Guadalajara goalie C a I d e r o n •
Caldt.rnn wound up making four saves in
the first half and six in the second.
Santos' winning mar1in came In the
42.nd minute when Pele'• runalng mate
Sherbert, Thomas
Earn Grid Honors
SAN FRANCISCO [AP) -Tbt P1<ilio-
.-I Confermce~divlded up ill defensive
player of the week bonqrs today between
end Jim Sherbert or Oregon State and
back Lklnel Thomas of Washi ngton State.
Executive director Thomas J . Hamilton
a.a.id Sherbert, • second ytaJ defensive
starter for the OSU Beaven, stood out in
the 21-14 victory oVer low• at Portland
Saturday with 14 Uickles and a major
role in hokUng Iowa to 138 net yards
gained on the ground.
Sherbert. 6-Z and 208 pounds, ls a junior
trom San Rafael, Calif. .
Thomas was an all -c onference
pe_rformer la11t )'flJ' and picked off three
Idaho pa.!$!& and returned a punt 63
yards for the go.head touchdown in the
Cougar:s' 44·1fi . vldOI')' over nel1hbor
Idaho Saturday.
Thomas, or Warren, Ohlo, Is 1 6-t, 185-
pound junior. --
Lima booted a similar 22-yard shot past
the Guadalajara goalie.
Guadalajara cut the margin to 2-t in
the 75th minute when outside left Gomez
headed in a lG-yard shot off a head pass
from Lopez. • PORTMARNOCK, Ire.land Bruce
Devlin, 32-year-old Australian golf star,
picked up a check for fSS,000 today and
said : "Well, that's ho~ lucky you can 1et
if you conquer the winds and the rain of
Ireland ."
Devlin won Ole prize money over
Portmarnock's 7,117·yard, par-72 course
by conquering, the • Winds from thre Irish
Sea.. and the rain that plagued the Alcan
•rGolfer of the year" Championship.
Bob Rosburg of Winthrop, Maine,
rinished'seeond wilh a score of --.seven
strokes behind Oev111: He collected
$15,000 for that effort. • SEA 17LE -Arthur Aahe. called Tom
. -
Gorman the. "most Improved player In
lhe United Stales" Sunday after troun-
cing the Seattllte 6-3, 6-4 in the finals of .
the $1,000 Seattle Tennis Invitational.
Ashe, the fir'9l wi11ner of the v.s. Opet
two years ago, aak:I, "Goorman should be
ranked no lower than fifth in the nation
this year -I'm IUJ'e he 'll be one of the
lour pla yers on the U.S. Davis Cup team
next year."
He predicted CU ff RJchey, Clark Graeb-
ner and Stan Smitb will join Gorman on
the squ•d. • --... COLUMBUS, Ohio -Vasily Afexeyev,
29, a Russian miner, claimed his rh-st
world super heavyweight welghtlifti11& ti·
Ue here Sund•y with a record lift in lhe
clean and Jerk of IOl .S_.P0Und1. ~
' ,,
1 ' . .. ·' . . , ·~ lb n I I ~ J) .... •• -· •
•
Ale.xeyev, competing in his lir1l Worl<L
WeighUilt1111 Championships. t 0 t •I• d SUSPENDED ANIMATION -Suzy and Jack Iverson display some
1,350.5 pound1 to outclass the rest of the of the teJents that enabled them to fini~h in second place in the mixed
field. 'He recorded hoisl5 ol ll:i.75 pounds tandem competition liuhday In the 12th annual U.S. Surfboard
In the prep and 374.7$ pouod1 Jn the 1nat· Championships al ·fluntington Beach. The lversons lost to the Hat
ch.oo hlo..way lo . .tbe_tiUt. ----·SachsJ!atty..Young_Crawlard..d.~o,
•
roared to a wln In the two-man dory
race.
. ,,.. latter pair had to aet out of their
dory and lf>rlnl the lut few yorda ln lhe
bead\ in order to edge another LA Coun-
ty learn.
Other area resident.I_ who garneffi!
hand-carved trophie11 for their collections
lncllMled Ray Kuni.e of Costa Mesa
{third, masters), John Van Ornum or
Newport Beach (ieoond, junio.rs ), San
Clemente's Randy Sleigh (third, jun·
ion), Wes Tli'onlu of San Clemente
(third, mixed tandem wiUI a La Habra's
Nancy Moort) and a Dana Point trio of·
Mike Cruickshank:, Mii.e Weed and Jeff
•
Hamilton, who swept to the second, thltd
and fourth spot.a in the minis' d1Vi1Jon.
Mets, Pirates Divide
Bucs Open ·2-game
Gap Over Chicago
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
Otte banner -amoag the many strung
out along lhe facades of jam·packed Shea
Stadium -told it like it was for the New
York Mets.
"Down, but Not Out!" was the brave
message.
Then Willie Stargell landed a ~fQPl
haymaker and the Pitt!burgh Pirates left
baseball's defending world champions
reeling on the. ropes in the National
League East Division countdown.
Lefthander Jerry Kooaman put the
stumbli1g Mets back on their feet in lhe
first game of Sullday's d00bleheader at
New York, Uiming the Pirates 4-1 with a
two-h.itter.
But Stargell's tape-measure homer lg·
... ....._. , L...... •11t I"~ •1e1 st I •i-•
" W9'1 L••I l"<I. 8lllllMll 1"11y
Plllltlu<Oh 12 · 1G .5Jt 10
CMc1go IO n .S16 1 10
Ntw Yo.Ii 7t 1• .Sii i'" ' .............. -At -1, M«tt..HI •, N-York I I AW.y l , SI. Louil.
Clliu99 -A.,.,..y 10, St, Lout' J, l"hUMlt l""'I• :t, Ntw Yottt ~.
N-Y""' -Al "°"11 '4, Clliuv01 Awty L l"lll!Hel .. lf, 1, Pltt1 ......... ),
nlted a four·run explosion in the 10th in·
ning of the nightcap, powering the
c:pvlsion leaders to a 9-5 victory that kept
the· third-pl&ce Mets 3'h. 1ames off the
pace with just nine to play .
"I'd like to think that this was probably
the biggest hit of my career," Stargell
aaid after his 31st homer of the season
helped open a two-game gap between the
Pirates and the run.er-up Chicago Cubs,
who blew-a M 'declsloa to pesky Mon~
treal.
"We 're still not out of it," Mets skipper
Gil Hodges maintaiined grimly after
l"ln SI U•GH NI W YO•K 1illo tflrlll .. ,.,.,
llJIA!l'M,d •Ill . IOOIG1rrl'tl,)b" fOI O
JOllC.J-,lf •Ill
Koosman 's brilliant efrort was virtually
nullified in the second game · as ·rom
Seaver faltered aRain and the Pirates
shrugged oft a late New York comeback.
"We still can win nine slraighL"
The Expos stunned lhe Cubs with a
four·run eighth inning rally ke~ by Ron
Fairly's disputed double.
Browns, Jets
Duel Tonight
In Cleveland
CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -Calling
New York Jet-1 quarterback Joe Namath
"fantastic," Cleveland Browns hread
coach Blanton Collier says that the Jel.s
"just might be the toughest" team his
• Browns face this season.
That could be a gross understatement,
but Collier will ha ve a chance to find out
how good the 1969 Super Bowl Champions
~ are when the learns clash here tonight in
On TV T oni ght
Channe l 7 a t 8
a nationally televised contest loaded with
firsts.
The 1ame will be first time the Browns
officially appear in the American Foot-
ball Conference.
It will be the firs meeting of the two
teams .
And It will be the first competition
between Jets coach Weeb Ewbank and
I
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c.oJUer·, both of whom were schook!d-in,--,lf
coaching under Paul Brown, who put
together the Cleveland football machine
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CHICAGO MONT••AL
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Timi -t :Dt. AlttNlllltt -12,171,
and now heads the Cincinnati Bengals.
Another former Brown, W a It e r
Michaels , who spent much of his pro-
fessional football career as a Cleveland
linebacker. also will be on hand . He built
the New-.. Yor.it defense and Is one ol
Namath's.biggest supporters.
The Jel.s will open with two rookie cor-
nerbacks -Earlie Thomas and Steve
Tannen. Collier seems to think the men
c11n do the defensive backfield jOb: And
Mi chaels also is high on the defensive.
un it
"Joe is such a fantasti c quarterback
that he brings our defensive people along
quickly,·• Michaels said. "When our
rookies have to practice against him on
pass coverage , they 're not only working
against the best quarterback, but he's got
more time to throw in practice than 11
quarterback would in the game. tf they
can cover against him, they can do it
against anybody."
Defense of the '60s
Good Enough ·for Vikings
MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL (AP) -The "Thi! will help our confidence ror the
Minnesot.a Vlkin1s never really gave the: remainder of the season. _One ... gllllle Kansas City Chiefs a chance Sunday to
show off their Football of the f'uture. doesn 't destroy• learn. It means we have
"1.gueu the defeMe of the 60s is still to work that much harder."
good enough," said Vikings Coach Bud Kansas City coach Hank Stram aaid
Grant alter Minnesota trounced the one must "give the credit where the
Chiefs 27-10 in .a National Football credit i! due. You can't score unless you
League opener and avenged their 2.1-7 have lhe ball. They played ball control
loss to the Oiiefs In the 197(1 Supe.r Bowl. and possession ball. but three mistakes
Grant and the Vikings to a man aaid were Lhe deciding factors in the game."
there was one bil reason fur the reversal Dawaon, the Chiefs qu1rterba:k, uJd
of the Super Bowl ICOre: and why Kamas he felt one f.ctor was: that.. the Vikinc1
City didn 't pl .to show off !Ome of Its had had mort time to prepare for the
cl•MY offtnses. Chiefs lhan they did in the Super Bowl
"If they would have gotten ahe:ad," clash.
111id linebacker Roy Winston, "they pro-"It's oo excuse, but they've had six or
bably would have tried more of their teve:n months to study our offensive
rault dau.le. We we.rt better prepared team ," Dawson aaJd. "We had .an ad-
this time and Kansas City was not vantage In the Super Bowl -they hadn't
-ronunate 10-pt .ahud.'' Hen our offen!le or our formations.''
The Vikings, overcoming the pinpoint The Vikings, on Paul Krausae'a 40-yard
passing or Len Dlw~. built up a 17·7 Interception return to· the Kansaa Olt¥--
halflime lead -Wlnlton scoring a .even in the fourth period, pulled away in
touchdcnm that 1ave the~ Ylklnp a lM the closln1 minutes after Dl•aon Md
lead in the S«'Ond pe.rlod. rallied the Chief11: within striking dbtance
J im Maraball had picked up a fumble by completing his flrst 12 passe:s.
and pitched It to Wlrston to combine for -The Vikings alao-10ok adv1nt1~ of
the 38-yard play. mistakes In a reversal o(their U-7 Super
"We were fortunate IO Jump Into lh11t Bowl eollapse last January, to bulld a 17·
lead," uid defensive llclclt Al1n Page, 1 halftime lead and then pulled aw11
I
"They weren't In tht drlvtr's stat this from tht, Chiefs In the closlna mlnutn of
Ume. That mikes a bl differenct. '' lht aame=·-----------~
'
• •
-~--.............. -.... -~~~-............. -----~~--~--......,....-::-.------..
• • . ---.
!I DAILY PI LOT Monday, S'tpttmbtr 21. 1970
Rustler Defense l hrhltles Orange ~oast, 13-0
•,
Golden West Intercepts
5 Orange. Coast. P(ls~~s .
By CJIAIG SHEFF
01 lttt DAllY' Plltf 51111
Orange Coast College football coach
Dick Tucker summed it up very aptly :
"They were not any better orfensively
than we expected. but th ey were much
tougher defensively than we had an-
ticipated."
He was referring to a rugged Golden
West College defensive unlt lhat was In-
strumental in the RusUer1' 13--0 victory
<1ver OCC in the titanic 1970 opener for
both teams at Le tlard StadlUm Saturday
night.
In a game.dominated by solid hitting , it
was the Rustler defense lhat held the up-
per hapd·in the final analysis.
Chief stars for Golden West were mid·
dle linebacker Tom Allanson and free
safety Tony Bonwell.
· Allanson'• pair of blind-side tackles on
OCC quarterback Gary Valbuena resulted
in fum.b~.wilh both eventually leading
to the two Golden West scores.
Bonwell not only picked off two Orange
Coast passes, but was constantly in on
tackles at the line of scrimmage.
With 4:35 left in the aame, Allanson aot
another shot at ValbU.ena and made the
most of it with teammate Dennis Ken.
ned y recovering the fumble at the OCC
IJ.yard stripe. .
Five ela)'s and two minutes later, Grif·
fith rolled-aro~d left end from one-yard
out for the score and Golden West had its
second victory in the five-game series.
The Rustlers' talented tailback Charlia
Buckland led all rushers in the game with
94 yards in 32 carries. Cornuke totaled
5S yards in 16 carries.
Griffith finislied with 10 completions in
27 attempts for 102_ yards.
Shackleford
Praises GWC
,
Defensive Unit
By HOWARD L. HANDY
Ot tM 01lty l'i .. I Stiff
FORCES FUMBLE -Ora ng e Coast College quarterback . Gary Val-
buen a (8) is hit fro m behind hy Golden \Ves t's Tom f\llanson {left),·
resulting in a fumble. Co rn e! Kraintz (85) recovered loose pigskin at
the 22-yard line , setting up first Rustler score in Golden \Yest'.11 13-0
victory Saturday night~
In all, the Ru.stler defensive secondary
picked off five passes with Greg Henry
John Carroll and Greg Newhouse gelling
{he other three. CXX:'s secondary had twn
interceptions with Bob Curry and Craig
Zaltosky pulling in the errant RusUer
throws.
H was the season opener and there
are eight more football games lo play
before a championship will be determined
but you'd never know it in the Golden
West College dressing room Saturday
night. Bucs Atte~pt
To Beef Up .
Passing Game
Orange Cnast College's football team
went back to the drawing board today,
attempting to beef up its · passing game
before Saturda y night's encounter at LA
HarbOr.
"We were disappnlnlerl in our passing
game tonight ," said OCC coach Dick
Tucker, following the Pirates' IJ.-0 loss to
Golden West. "We couldn't hit our
receivers when they were open."
OCC starter Gary Valbuena could only
hit on six of 2J pasaes for 46 yard!. Five
were intercepted. The No. 2 quarterback
Bill. Shedd completed four of five for 3t
yards. -' "The first game is usually tough foe a
The Rustlers got their first s c o r e
midway through the second quarter when
Allanson sel it up with a tooth-rattling
tackle of Valbuena, causing a fumble.
Valbuena was attempting a pass from
his own 28-yard line and didn't see the
rugged Allanson , a 212 pounder coming
from behind. As the CXX: freshman was
hit. the ball spurled loose with Rustler
defensive end Cor nel Kra intz falling on it
on the 22.
In four plays the Rustlers were on the
board,
A pass ffom qu arterback Steve Griffith
to fuuback Bob Cornuke neUed only !wet
·yards but Griffith came ril(ht b~ck with a
strike to flanker Don Hellon and the 13-
yard gain gave the Ru stlers a first down
at the seven.
After Griffith lost four yards. he came
right back with a pass in the end zone lo
freshman Kur\ Dedrick who made a fine
catch for the six-pointer. Frank Hanss
added the extra point.
Following the kickoff. the Pirates drove
from their own 41 to the Golden West 10,
. but Valbuena was then dumped for a five.
Yl!!rd Joss and a fourth down pass attempt
fell incomplete. It was OCC's deepest
, penetration.
After posting a rlecisive 13--0 victory
etver arch rival Orange Coast, the
Rustlers were ecstatic. The adrenalin
flowed" freel y and the players repeatedly
congratulated teammates.
Tom Allanson. middle linebacker on the
stubborn defensive unit that nol only held
the Pirates scoreless but set up both
touchdowns, perhaps said it best.
···vou don"\ know how hard we worked
for this game. We knew they wer:e going
to be a tough team to defeat and that It
was going to be an even game with the
breaks deciding it.
"I personally worked harder preparing
for this game than any other single game
in my life. Tom Coleman and Ruly Mem·
bri lla also played a grea t game on each
side of me."
Allanson was the man who set up both
Rustler touchdetwns as he sacked
quarterback Gary Valbuena . coming in
from behind and jarring the ball loose for
a teammate to reco ver on two occasions .
"Alllanson played an .M_nbeliev able
,l!Rme," coach Ray Shackl.rd said in
the h<lppy dress ing room. "He was very
noticeable on the front line.
. freshman , but Y.'e eventually will be all
right._"
· The second half turned into a kicking
di.lei between OCC's George Barnett and
Dedrick. Bamett booted the balJ six
time s in the second half with Dedrick
getting off seven kicks.
"I th [lU,!!ht our entire defensiv"e un it
played well.
Offensively we're a young team Bnd
will get better but you can't take
anything away from that Orange Coast
defensive lfne. They have a mighty fin e
defensive team. too. and they put a lot of
pressure on us."
GOOD PROTECT ION As Col den Vl est quar ter-
back Steve Griffith (12) gets set to thro,v. team-
mate Bob Co rnuke thro\vs fin e bl ock on Orange
Coa st's Bill Durkin (82)
night at Le Ba rd Stadium.
du ring action Saturday
Texas After No. I -· •
Jlro jans Stumble, Neb raska. Tie V nconvincing
Ry Assori;citcd l'rcs5
The Tex as Longhorns. slung by their
removal from No. I ranking in college
football \\"hile thcv were off I.he field,
argued s1rongly on. lhc field that they :-;till
belong at the lop -and lhey product'Cl
plenty or points in thei r f<l\'OL
The Longhorn!!, dropped to No. 2 behind
Qhi& St;ite in the Associated Press prr·
~ason poll , didn't take thr demotion
lightly, and responded \\'il h R 56-IS
"""'crusher on Cah fornia Saturd~y in their
19i0 season debut.
Southern Caliror11ia. howc,·er, did little
lo convince anyonr Iha! 11 show'rl kcrp ils
No. 3 rating when the hefll'ily.favorr.tl ·
Troj ans were tied b~1 ninth -rankc1t
Nebraska in Los Angeles Sa!urday night.
Southern Call·s stun1hh• 1vas the only
one among the Top Ten fl'nms as the rest
or then\ got by rather easily.
In the rest of the Top 'frn, No ~ Stan·
ford rolled ovt':r an J~ State 24,;3. No. 5
f\11ssissippi blasted ~1c1nph1<1 State 47·13
at night. No. 6 Notre [);1mr subdued
Northwest ern 35-1 4, r\o. 7 Prnn State
roult'd Na\'y 55-7, Nu. 6 ~lichigari
overcame Arizon1t ~·!I, and No. 10
1'hssou n ~lonntd past ~linnesota 34-12 .•
In lhe liCCOod 10,.Arkan~;\!I, No. 11 , Mal
Okl8h1Jm11 Srate 23·7: F\ririda. No-. I~.
bou nced r.11sssi.ssippl ~talc 3 4 • I 3 ;
Houston, N(I. 15. hainrMred Syracu~ -12·
J ~: \.\'est Virgin\.-, No. Ii. m11ulrd Rirh-
mond 4!1-10 : Ok b1hom11. 1\o IS. downf'd
WllCOfl!ttn 21·7, 11nd Ar11.on11 Stall', No. 20,
&l.Ormed Color11do StatL 38·9. '
UCf,,l-Pll I ibu rg /1
-Plil'SBURGll -'rht_PlU l'•nlhcr.s air.
parently ha\·c. round a quart• rba<.:k, bul 10
tel.A I! didn't nlllltC'r that 1nuth •
-John Hogtan ...MlphonW-(l ql#lrl~
playing in hlJ llrii:t varsity foot.ball game,
• '
tiOO a school record \\'ith 29 pa~s con1·
pletions in 47 attempts for 299 yards, b11t
the Panthers still lost 24-15 Saturday. It
\V&s ~Ir sixth straight loss to the
' Brui ns.
On the BrU ins' first !)lay front sc:.rim·
n1ag(', the J)anlhcrs fi ne m i d d 1.c
linebacker, R.'liph Cindrich. inju red his
left leg and was out for the game.
The Panthers took an 8-7 lead, then a
15-7 lead v.·hen Hogan threw a tou chdown
pas.!1 and seored himself fro1n1he four.
UCLA got a field goal \\'ith t-v.·o seconds
lert in lhe hal f by sophofllQrc Bruce
Barnes.
"ll was lhe fie.Id goal that gave them
n1otnentum." i;aid Pi1t coach Carl
De Pasq ua.
The Bruins score<! on thei r first se ries
in the second half. then converted a pa~s
for l\\'O points.
1'ht>y put the gan1c out of r(lach wl1h
11notht r touchdO\\'n a ft!\\' min utes later
when Panther running back Dtnnis F'er·
ri" fumbled and UC LA 's Frank Jones
tcl'Ol'cred on the Pill :)7.
Reggie Echols, who run." tt.e 100 in 9.fi.
uut maneu\'crcd Bryant Saller and grab·
bt'.'d a 3fi..yard pass to thft one, lhen ·
quar1erback Oe.11nls Durnmh drove O\'t':r
for the sc.'l)r,.
Slnnford·Snn Jo#<' SI.
STA~F'ORO. Calif. -Another r11.clrlc-8
Conference individual record belongs to
Jim Plunkett. NelCt com« lhc more
chalk>nging )Ob of h~ading Stanford to Its
fir~rac-a football tllle ...
Plun kett de.scrl~ himstlf illi ''pleased
and very proud" Saturrlay I\ r 1 e.r
t'.'sU1bll!hlng a career totfll offense rccort1
nf 5,$~· yatds_ In a 3•·3 \'ictory ovtr San
Jose State.
He had-00e-tn\K!Mown paii, 301 y:i.rds
passing and 20 running in the second
ou ting of his senior se ason.
Coach Joe McMullen of San Jose said,
''Plunkett is even belier than he was last
year. Me has mo re poise. He-knows when
to release the ball, and he doesn't do
anything foolish."
Thi Sta nford quarterback went 226
yards over the old total offense record,
held by Gary Bcban of UCLA. e\1en
before hitting the 1970 Pac--8 schedule.
That starts Saturday at Oregon.
One or the few Pac-8 records lhel
Plunkett doesn'\ hold is just a step awa y,
He threw his 3b'th touchdown pass Satur·
day, a 36-ya rder to former Golden West
Co\!egc Star, flan ker Randy Vataha. The
record is 37. \
Vataha had a big da y with five catches
for 145 yard s and a 63-yard punt return
that was 1vas1Cd v.•hen he lost the ball on
a fum ble on the San .Jose 13.
\\'\th nine games to do. Plunkett has a
good chance of topping the 111\-time major
college career total offense mark of 6,568
yards. Slevc Ramsey of North· Texas
Stale holds the record .
\t'n•h. Slale·ldnho
SPOKANE -Determined Washin~ton
Slate. guided by the pinpo int passing of
quarterback Jack Wigmore , Wiped out!ln
early ·Idaho \ead ... and .then explodedJ or.
fil'c second-half touchdowns lo record a
4~·16 victo r)' Saturday in an in·
tcrseclional footba ll game.
The triumph snapped a ten·game losing
streak Cor the Co ugars and. handed-the
V11nQ.Jl~ their sixl h consecutive setb&ck.
\\'igmore. A junior and former M&ter
11el star entered lh' game In the third
qual'tcr to re1irve starting signal-c111ler
Ty Paine and immediale:Jy unleashed an
;i"iAI bmn b Iha rlanktl'.--Brock..Aynsle)'
carried over for • touchdown,
The running game also did not fare
very well against a tough Goldf'-i West
de(ensive unit , totaling a net 1/6 yards.
"\Ve were ,not pleased, offensively, in
any department. Our hacks ran pretty
good, but v.·e obviou sly do not have
enough speed . We did get the guys loose
on occasion."
Tucker commented that G<>lden West
did not present any surprises.
"They had two guys that were about 80
percent of lhc1r defense." said Tucker in
referring to the play of Rustler free saf,.
ly Tony BOnwell and middle guard Tom
Allanson.
'"There was some gr eat football played
tonight," said the OCC coach, "obviously
no t by our offense, bu t by our defense.
The 'vholc defensive line play~ great."
Tucker would not single out individuals
llnlil reviewing the game films.
He also added that he didn't think the
Pirates would be down for lhis week's en·
counter with Harbor. "Heck, we've got
eight Aames to play. The season has just
started.''
OCC came away with just the usual
bumps and bruises with no major injuries
r!:'ported.
GAME STATISTICS
Firs! de-• r115hln9
Fl<J! llCwns P&SSl"!I F1'tl dOwns 1>1n1Ules Tol~I lirsr dltWtlt
Y1rds rusll!r19 Y~rds 1>1Hi"9
Y1rds losr
N!! y1rds 91lf'lold
Punls/Aver1g1 disti nct
Pe,..llla/Yl rcb ptnllllfd Fumbles/Fumbles loll
sure •1 0111rJ1rs
Gold~ Wnl 0 I
Ort nge (OIS1 O I
•USHIHG
Orf"'• C1111
kO " M1y•r " u
EDDelhrtrner " • ,,_ ' ' V1l~I • ,, ,,_ ' Cerw1t1 • To1111 • >M 01111 ... WHI
luck l~nd n ff
Cort1ukt " " Grlflltll • • l'llchl>ttk , • To!lll • >M
l'ASllNG
Ortntt (0111
OCC GW(
I • 10 • • • • 1) H
111'1 Ht to 101 " . lM 7lJ
1171.1 10/11.t
l l!J U/111
• l '" • •
" • • ' " " • • , • • ' ,,
• -1l . -.
•••• u
" _,,
••• ••• ..
"
" u ·" -1.J ,, .. " '" " "'· V&ll>l/en.t ,, • ' " ••• Shl!'tld ' ' • • ....
Tot1ls ~ " ' • ·"' 0.111 ... w .. ,
Grllf!!ll " " ' '" ·'"
Major League Standings
AJ\IER ICAN l.EAGUE
Baltimor«>
New York
Boston
Detroit
Cleveland
\Vashington
J\finnesota
Oakl11nd
Angel5,
Kansas City
J\1ilwa ukee
Chicago
East Of\•lslon
W L Pct. GB
D8 54 .64S -
86 67 .562 .iw 1217.
80 7l .523 18 ~~
76 76 .:;oo 22
74 79 .484 24'1
70 81 .464 2711
"'est Oivisloii ·'-
!12 60 .605
fl4 69 .f>49
80 72 .526
59 91 .393
59 !13 .3811
~, 96 .356
s~ .. 111~·· ••1ij111
fl•ltllflQ<f I. (ltYt!INI 0 Ml11nno!1 I, (l'llCAtll I l!IOS!~ I, WAtll! ... ton 1
New 'l't•l s, Detroll 1
Ml1W1uket 4, K•rt111 (ltt' l
Anttlt 4. 0811'111 l T,,,,., 01rM1
~''"u Otlek•o U·UI 11 a1tflmort (L-t 1, "· "''"'' Ktn\.11 (ltv (llool.•r t·U lfld ll ullt r •Ul '\I
Clllu,e tt4e!'tt" .. u •nd Wtt¥tr l·H, 2
c1ew1 .. 111 tNcOowrtt ,.lt l 11 lo1ro... lSllWrJ lJ.I!, ftll!'ll
W1"'1n1r... !0.-lfwMI 2 .. 1 It Nfw VO!'-fJ>t1.
•non 11-111, ""'"' A11'9h !Mu......, 1•1)1 ilt Ml .... t \lket !Kr'""M
ll-11) ... 11111
, Mrftllt!.011 {PflN J).111 11 Oe\l•noll (SIW 1 .. 1,
ft!fhl
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Dlvl1lon.
w L Pel. GB
Pittsburgh 82 70 .r.39
Chicago 80 72 .52! 2
New York ,. 74 .51& 3V.
SL Louis 72 81 .471 101'1
Philadelphia 711 83 .458 121'.
J\1ontreal 87 115 .441 15
West Division
Cincinnati 96 58 ... 623
Dodger1 83 69 .546 12
San Francisco 82 70 .'19 " Atlanta • 74 80 .481 22
J~ouston 72 80 .474 23
San Oie'o 59 IM .386 361'.
l~IMllY'I •n.lfl
NN Vort •s. l'll!llll.tr911 J.f, Jlld lllM ,,
'""""' Monlr•~I •• (Ilk -'
All""ll 11 , (IMIMl!l t
Phllldtkolll• 7, 51. Loul1 '· 10 f'lfllntt
T ...... ,._
Houston f1Ltt1"9•11\t >-l' It Cl11r.lllflftl 1Gullftl
).fl, " ... '
s.., Fr...c:bco 11Mrld"1 11";'11) 1! Oedltn l~ll•r , .. I. t1ltl'ol
Olllf ltmtS Kl\f6UIH .
DEAN LEW·IS
Shacklefo rd was asked if this, tile se·
cond vi ctory in five games over Orange
Coast. was as satisfying as the first one
two years ago.
"I would have to say that it is. I just
hope our defense continues to play as
Well as it did tonight and that our offense
gels better each game."
Shacklefo~d also praised his punier,
Kurt Dedrick for a job well done
especially on one occasion when the bal i
was snapped over his head and back to
the Ru sller 10 yard line where he fielded
it and ki~ked better than 40 yards upfield.
Defensive coach Don Rowe revealed
that the Rustler game plan was to put the
pressure on the young Orange Coast
quarterbacks,
"'It worked oul pretty well,'" he Said in
the understatement of the night.
Tony Bonwell. last year's starting
quarterback in all but the Orange Coast
game. played entirely on defen se against
the Pirates.
DEAN LEWIS
AUGUST SPt:CIALS
(TJ~rt')lol[!JIAJI
'71 COROLLAS
HERE NOW!
WAGONS, 2· •s. coum
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• 1967 1966 HARIOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
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Now Open Until t p.m. Monday NJght1 I I • Vtrr .... ~. 1vD1uu1 L-~O~ra!n~g~e~~~o~u~n~ty~·~s !;L!arg~es~i~a~n~d~M~o:s~1-~M~od!•~r~n~T~o2y~ol~•~•:•~d~-v~o~lrn:;n~e~ll~e:_r-;':::!..·::;--;:-:::-::-:-:S:2::-:-::-::-:-:::-::-:-:~~j·~--•
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DAILY PILOT PllfN • ., P'•frlcll O'~I
DAI\ Y PILOT_ 27:-
V oss' Pinch H ii Single
Gives Angels 4-2 V~ctory
OAKLAND (AP)
Finishing.second Isn't so bad,
but suffering the indigruly or
watching tbe:_penna.Di winner
sip 'iic«n'' champagne sort o[
rubs salt bl the wound. T!la~ could be the case
totilght as ·the Minnesota
* * * <•ll,OllNIA .. ' ' " . A~•·· lb • , ' • Go<laltt. t:f • • • ,
. Freto0~• ~ • • ' • A. Jcin"'°"' II • ' • ' SPlllC«,lb ' ' ' • ·-" ' • • • • AWftO!dl, pti • • • • vou." ' • ' ' GrlUI"" )ti > • ' A. Brown, c ' • • Jofll'tSl-.<>b • • • Cowen."" L • • Epn, " ' • • C. Wrlelll, 111 • • • OIJHll." • • • • Tott I ~ • • OA KLAND .. ' ' • CtmP!lll•. '' • • ' • Rl,ldl, II ' • , ,
F. AIOU, rf • • ' • Mlndltf, lb • • • • Btndo, ~ ' • ' • A. Jaekson, cl • ' ' ' _ Ounal\..$ --_} _ • ' • L....-11 ... ~ • o -o--
0. Green. 1b ' ' ' T~.Dn ' • • """~. ' • • Lll'ldbled, P • • • ftm.1'1111, ph ' • • Rol11'1d, p ' • • L«k"'' " • • • H<>1!~ • • Tol1I • ,
C1lllotnlt "' .. Oltiti.l'ld "' "'
Twins will have the bubbly on
ice whil e -opening a three·
game series wilh the Oakland
Athletics.
MiMesota's Sunday victory,
coupled with Oakland's 4-2 loss
to the California Angel,.
reduced' the Twins' magic
number to two. That means
any loss by the A's In th is
series clinches the western
division title of the American
League for Minnesota ,
The A's trail the Twins by
a~ games and are mere1y 3¥.i,
games ahead of !he third-place
Angels.
caJHornia kept its hope for
lhe runner.up spot alive .by
snapping lhe A's foW""-game
winning streak on run-scoring
singles by pinch-batter Bill
Voss and Doug GrlUln in the
ninth inning.
Clyde Wright, 21·11, with
relief help from Mel Queen in
the ninth, received cr!!dll for
the victory after the Angel's
cracked a 2·2 tie off A's
reliever Jim ROiand; 3-l, and
Bob Locker.
Alex Johnson, who~
the tie with a seventh inning:
homer,· started the winning
rally with a OOHUt single.
1411. INI n.., IClfl'A ... ..... ...... ,_ .... -, ...
' --
•
HELP ON THE WAY -Costa Mesa High's Pal Kalama (22) tips
the ball out o{ Katella's Rob Con rad's (81) reach and into the
waiting hands o[ Jon Marchiortatti for a key interception in Sal·
urday's tussle at Newpo rt llarbor l~igh. Despite three intercep--
tions Katella picked ~1esa's sec'ondary apart !or 200 yards,
Save! Foremost
·-GP tire closeout!
l. Dodgers,
Giants Vic
For 2nd
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Se·
cond place iR the National
League West is the lone prize
remaining for Los A•gelcs and
Ule ruMer-up b e r t h goes
squarely on the line tonight
y,•hen the Dodgers engage San
Francisco in the opener o( a·
three-game 15eries at Dodger
Stadium.
Pitc:bing the series opener
will be Joe Moeller, 7-8, for
Los Angeles against San Fra n-
cisco's Juan Marichal, 11-10.
The only things left for the
Dodgers are second place,
where they've been withoul ill·
terruption since June 22, and a
v.·inning season at Dodger
Stadium. They enhanced their
chances at both Sunday with a
four-hour, 13-minute, 14-inning
7-6 victory over Houston
before 28,614 Maury \Vills Day
fans.
The victory increased the
Dodgers' advantage over lhird
place San Francisco t_o a full
game \\'bile it left their home
record at 33-40.
lOi •NGELES .. ' ' " Wiiis, H • , ' • Jinllue, rt • • • KOKO· II , • • • w. oav!,, cf • ' ' ' W. P•rltcr. Ill • • • •
!.vdak\i, c ' • • • Tcrbor9. c • • • •
H~ll!i", pl'I • ' • Craw!orcl, Pr • ' ' ' Stl"'°"' ( ' ' • ' ·fluc~M!I'. II ' , ' ' Runell, rl ' • ' Lt!~•e. ?b ' ' ,
Gral>llrl(twlU. lb • ' ' ' Sutton. <> ' ' • • Mlk~el'°"· ~ ' • • ' GabtlelMl'l. Pf\ • • • 1 Brewer. p ' • ' Pa.clofek, P"I ' • • ' R. Ltmb, P • ' ' ' .. ' ' ' , ""'' Toi ti • 1 • 10 ,
Houi"»' .. "' ~' .. 01 -' .. "' '" .. 0, -7 Los A1"9tff'S H!iP-bt" Ol~ef' 51.ilton. 1-:IJ. ,,.._ ......
~
SAF&CC
ll~BURANCE
e HOME
fi AUTO
e BOAT
e LIFE
_Bob Paley
•nt:l Associat•s
'INSURA~CE
Phone 642-6500
414 E. 17th St.
•--COSTA MESA
' Mesa Deserves Better Fate
After Narrow 19:13 Loss
By ROGER CARLSON
01 the Dtil~ Pllol Slltf
Fate plays strange tricks in
prep football . Not funny, just
strange. Ask coach 1'fax f.tiller
of Costa Mesa High School's
varsity football team. He'll
verify it.
Lady luck. fate or what have
you plus a fired up bunch o[
Knights from Ka tcUa High did
in Miller's Mesans Saturday
night at Newport Harbor with
a narrow 19-13 decision before
3.000 fans.
The Mustangs <leserved a
better fate. However, in·
fraclions at the most in-
opportune time plus an Un·
believable assist from a pair
of defensive backs turned th e
issue inside ou t.
The final coup de grace
came with 5': 16 ·remaining in
the game as quarterback.
Steve Thomas of the invading
Knights reached back and
fired an ae ria l for tight end
Kevin Rafferty in the end zon e
from seven ya rds out.
Defenders Joe Arthur end
Steve Brov.•n had the ·play
covered but the ball just tip-
ped on outstretchcd.haruls._~an"'dL...lliha.,lf -and the Mustangs paid
plopped into Rafferty's lap as dearly for the mistakes.
he stood flat-footed in paydirt. The first error was a cl.ii;
The tally snapped a 13·all battle after Mesa had fought ping call whlle Kim Wolf was
back {or the equalizer earlier busy in the open headed for an
wtien Jim llohl blasled over apparent 29-yard touchdown
from seven yards out and Ben· run.
n_y Ricardo toed an automatic The infraction was ID-yards
PAT with 48 seconds spent in the final stanza. behind \\'olf. The other no-no
Ricardo turned in a spec· came later in the Iirst hall as
tacular effort, kicking a pait' W.slt again powered his way
of long di stance field goals in down to th e Knights' seven
the first half, !tole the ball yard line only to see his 11 ·
from the Katella quarterback, yard effort go for naughl averaged 43.2 yards on four
punts, and appeared to spear a because of a holding call.
key fumble -a play ruled Despite the handicaps. \\lolf
dea d by a quick Whistle. lurned in a good night's work.
Kateila scored on the next accumulating 106 yards net on
play with a 26-yard pass play 25 carries.
to halfback Howard Smith to Quarterback Joe Arthur. in
take a 13-6 lead. his first·evcr varsity en·
Ri cardo's field goal s counter. completed nine of 17
measured 43 and 25 yards and attempts for 77 yards, bu t also
gave the 1'1esans-a 6.0 lead receipted for three intercei>-
before il was wiped out by lions.
Kalella's Mike Barela on a \Vith. running back Kent
three-yard sweep v.•ith 1: 30 to Paul sidelined indefinite]\: v.•ith
go in the half. mononuelcosis, Hohl filicd in
Costa Mesa receipted for on-admirably but wa s used ti'par.
ly two penalties in the first ingly in the toting department.
GAME STATISTICS <M
Fi"t downs rusn;no •
r int dOW~I P8$Slnq •
F1r1: oown o~~!ll~• I
' ' • •
Pro Grid
Standings
N111tf1'11 c1nter11K1 Ettllnl OIYl•loft
DAiias
W•~n.n9ton
N, Y. Gl1nl1
sr .. Loul• Phlltdt1Plll•
W L T P'ct. "" P'A 1 0 0 l.OOll 11 1
0 , 0 .000 11 'M
• 1 0 .000 16 2•
010.000lll'
010 .000 -111
Chic.Ito
Mlnnewlt
°"'""' Grtefl BIV
Ctt11r1I DlvlilH
1101.0002'16
l 0 (J l .000 71 10
l 0 0 l ,000 "° 0
0 l 0 .lllll 0 .«)
Whltln Olvl1lon
Lo, llntitloo' I o o 1.lilOO 3' 1.1
" I u " ' "
-.111n" 1 o o 1.cm $tn frtnc:lico l 0 0 l.C.C.O NtW OrlelM 0 I 0 ,CIOCI
Amerktn CttlfwtnCt
1111"'" Pl¥111M
BtlHl'rW)r'f ......
N, Y. Jets Miami
Bulle~
1 • 0 1.000 ,, ,,
1 (J • 1.000 17 ,,
000 .000 1 0
0 1 0.000 1•21
0 1 0 .000 10 '' Ctn1rtl Dl¥1110n
Clnc:lnn1!1 Hou lion Cl!•1!1".i Pllllburgh
1 O O l.DCD 31 21 10 01 000 19 7
000.000 00
010.000119
Wtlltr" Dl¥!,l1n
"""~ St n Ol!'9D
Ktn•4• C!IY
o.~11r>e1
1 D D l.o;ID
010 .000
0 1D .. 000
O I D .000
l'rkl1r'• • ...,111
I> "
'' 11 ID JI
JI Jl
LDI Angtll~ .)I, ~I. Lill.Iii IJ
SillurtllY'I Rt111lh
Cfl•tlllCI ,,, N1w York Gl11111 11
SllncllY'I lltlUlll
-.u ... 11 l t. N•W Orlea"• J Otlltl U , fl"ll1Mlplli1 1 °""'"' J\, eu11110 10
O'lroll ..O, GrHn fl1Y G
Hou\lon 19, P!l"bur9'> 1 flm!on 11, Nlltml 1' Clnc:lnn•ll 31, 0t•1tl'ld 11
Stillmore 16, St" Oll'llCI " Mln....o!t 27, Ke""' (11¥ IG s,a,. Fr~...;;l.co Joi, Wtshlntton 11
111111111'• 01m1 Rustler Star Shines Total l<r11 downs • "1------------1 Y ~"ti< ru,11;,., l~J
111 LB Invitational Y~rd• 11•11ing n
Y•rds lost JI
llei vard', tBl,.ed l~r Pun!•/Av11 d•~tance ~l•l l
.. r-•oo
" I m
~ll1.l
5,,1 I <>e,.aUles/Yds ~n•li1ed 4158 fumole•/Fumble1 lost in "' Another week Of in· the elass AA junior varsity 5(1)1"1 bV Owtrltrs
\•ilationals and non-1C!ague bat· f.wo mile event in 11 :24 and ~':;~~1~e.a ~ ~ ! ! : \ill
lies nre in store for Orange pacing the Oilers lo second 1.,, 1anH1NG I Coast area prep and junior cost• M•••
college cross COW1try squads that division with 99 points. Arin.,, t~b :~· ;~ ~: I
after a mediocre showing in McKeon's alma ma i e r ,• Ho111 • iJ o J.1
!he Long Beach lnvitational ~Tater Dei. garnered runneru1J wouTo••I• ;; l!~ l~ ;·~I
?i1cet this past weekend. honors. in the A junior varsity K.a,te11~
The brightest spot for the ·classification with 57 markers. ~~"' ~ 1! ~ f:~ I
area harriers at Long Beach In this week 's invitationals, ~:~~~: '° .; 1~ ~-~
was Golden West's Terry Laguna Beach travels today to llr>0ea l 1 o 2.1 I
h1cKeon. who toured the four· the Canyon Crest Invitational ~:;;1~ ~ ,~ ! ·~-~
large schools category of the while Orangit"-COOst. Golde-1 lo1~•· P.-.ss:~o u 21 2.1 I
junior college races in a West and Saddleback college ca•" Mtt• .
d I k' ( run Saturday in the t<.10orpark ,. ~ ,111 .,, •ct I
e-0urse recor c oc ·mg 0 Tnvitational and Corona de! :::i"· •r : ~ 7~ :!:: I 2Q~~Keon, a Mater De i hfar hos~ Its own extrava-lota1, ~.,,u: ' 11 .lOO
~raduate and letterman from ganza, a so on Saturday. Thom11 i~ n 3 '°° ·'»I
last year's Golden West cros; ~ - - - -- -- - - , country and spike unit s, I •• 11
helped lhe R'l'llers lo a fourth YOUR FUTURE MAY BE WITH ~:~~onte~~th n;ishJ>Cli1~ts. lhi'.1 1 11
Valley aod Long !kach City I HONEY BAKED HAM 11 hed for top honors m Golden I
West's category with 83points1 · . I :~~·tscocewinsincross TOTAL COST $19,000 ••
Rob McNair of Huntington I 11, Beach was the only fortunate No perticYl er future pl1111? Th111 ... hy 1101 co1uid•r , p1 rt111nhip I
runner from the area in with Honey l1liod Him of C1 lifo1"i1. l~ 'l'••ri of 11,1cc111ful \I
F ~..IA , , • I op1r1tlo11 1pt1lt for th1m1ol¥t1. I r ...... y s prep races, v.·mning I
A1 • P1rtt1t r·M111191r of • Hon1v liked Htf!'I llor~ou will
I be 1Ju1r1iil1od t montlilv it1tOfl'lt 1nel 1 p11-cltltrmin.1d percent· 11 •"ii~ of tht ntl pro11tt pl11f lh• option to p1,1rch•1• 1ddiliot1•I , I
420 I . 17ttl St., Cotto MfM
un•tt. I
II I'll You •r• pro¥id1d • RY1lic Eerly Amtric1 11 "ore ft•lurl119 p1lt11I•
t~ proco1~1d, 1pir1I 1lic1d, hontv b1~1d h•m1, ~h.omtm•dt Gtr• I 'I '""'" 1•11••1J• 111cl Old World ch10111 of Whlth '!"OU will bt pttl l \I
I ow111r, Our tuptr"i 1ors •ill prowidt '!"OU wlth t p109""'" of op·
t r1!ton t nd 1d•trll1lt1; 111l1t•11tt, fh,t m1k11 lh it •11 u11u1u~I
------n
OMEGA
,
for a li1elim1 al p1ou~ posse1slon
Self-winding
accuracy
for ltlt '"'II wllo 1ffllt lftcll~ldllllil1 pl111 m1•I-1ec11,1cy. Worl,,_
l ll!IOUI Hll·Wlfllllng O!Mo• -mont w11'1d1 hHU Whil• tt"t wom.
s11l11I••• •l••I Cltl. s-j>otlC•
cind ft111d .................. ,SIS
wi111 c111fld1r •••••••••••••• m
WE HAVE I b111it1111 opportunity. Th111 ''' fwo 1.•c1ll1t1t loc1tiot11 t•eiltblt 1'
0 C I """ "~"-now ht rt t190 ou"l'f'.
1
$h11t11lnt Ctnhlr CIHlltl'
ALL MODELS · 2JOO Hlll'Mr Bl"-•ttch & 11i.~ , I If 'f'OU ttr1 el:toul VOll• lutu•t, ~19,000 h:lttt i11i't too ni•ch, 11 •• C11111Mn• H.,.ll"fflll attclt
H? Cell 01 •rife Mr. A, 1 11~1 Motu t11, Viet Pr11iclt11l, Stl11, 141' "'5 tft.JMI
with rugged 4 ply Polyester cord!
51Zl FID. TAX $16 65().13 •• •·• •••••••••••••••• 1.78
7()().13 •••••• •••••• •••••••• 1.96
C78-1.C ·-•••••••~••••••••• 2.17
560-15 ....................... 1.7S $19 E78-14 ••••••••...••..••••• 2.25
f78-14 ••••••..••.••••••••• , 2.44
f78-1S •.•••............... 2 .~o $21
G7S.1.C. ..................... 2.60
G78-1S •••••••...•••••.•••• 2.60
H78-1.C ••••••••••••···••••• 2.80 $25
H78-1 S ••••••••••••••••••• , 2.80
' 1-u .. 1,1 $28 900-1.5 ..................... 2.87
wwe. ... n. $3 llltOre
New low
battery prices
•
Penneys
1588
""" ·-· ... ~., .. '""''" av,. fi,. el'lloroes.
Don't bl e1ught lhoft
by eol11Y b11t1ry ftllure.
pow.,-lfP ftOWI I 'fllff ---·...,1411
Service
•
3DAYSONLY MON., TUE., WED.
v-rcltelw
• Wheel balance
• Brake adjustment your 99c choice
• WhNlpock ---
Yl!'S,yo• toll shop 12 to .S S.,,~oys. too, at Off'f of the .. ,.-ey Auto C•Mett:
BUENA PARK• CANOGA PARK CARlSiAO CHUlA VISTA DOWNEY flJUllTOM
HUNTINGTON IEACH MONTCV.llt NEWPOJT IEACH OlANGf "THE Cln-VtHTUtA
Use Pet1t1eys time S)Qyf!lent ploftl
·o.. .................. """_...... ......... No,\.&/I l;Ho111v a.~.d .... ,,,, 1l22 s. lroolth1.1r1l, An•htim, Celiforni• or Io,.. M111 .. Tlturs .. hi. 'til' "'"' __ _ [_ff_..__.
1
..l!lt.l!'··· ,, 1-111'1!1 ;;I
L r~-lo -M•1 ,, c~-,-,,~,-... -1------
- - - - - - - - -I ------I ' -
I
,
M D.\Jl y PILOT
Errors
~Hurt
t Diahlos
-
MOllday, Sfpt!m~, .21, 1970.
CypresS-NeXflOr Gaucho G1:'idders
t
By PJllL'ROSS , were ~1.'liaving dropped a rosterandmanyofthemare WhJpple waited until the The. other Gaucho
Of""' .., ~stiff -tlgtft , 3J12.8 decision to in OW' offensive line. fourth quarter to account for touchdown occurred on a 10-
Already a step ahead or la.st Southwestlrn. 11That line has ~me a long his six point grubstake in the yard, third period pass, frcm
season, Saddleback College Allhoug~ Saddleback went way in just three weeks and it Gauchos' lode. Hector to freshman Rick Ged-
head football cDach 'George ~~·ormed very wet! In the Th it· • · · b des wb.le the Spartans re'Jch· H rt . J i.;.... on to win the Desert Con· ,_ ... 12 _ e p ~r1v1ng sop omore ed paydirt on pass plays in the
fl-llltt/Ydl tNMllnd l /N
Fumblft/l"llf!lblel io.1 1/1 Iott M'...,,.....
Mlr1C•l1 1 I ' I
S1ddltblck 1 I 7
-·~ M.o1ull1
lllJSMtNe
Mlrl Cnt1
. ~· -·~ ,_ u "-»
lri 19-6
Setback
a man is , OQ""t'4 forward to ference and finish second in girne,'' he added. capped a 43-yard, four-play first and last periods.
By ARMAND HANSON tackling ~ypress College . fors1 'the state'sismall school JtWlor Qiieried abOot Ji~ Ip pre , drive, with 14 :09 left in tr.e ~ A !ID-yard field goal by ot,... o.1iw p1111 111tr the f~~ tun~ .S;l~day night college category (be h~p 4 ,Hartman 'no~ •. "he's really contes~. by powering into the "-Rothrock and a safety by
wnu1
\l\lll!Ot'
Mudd_ 51MhH Tt'l'lor
t<-n '11 •~• 1•112.0
' 0 • 0.0 111 -12.0
11 tO ·It ,,0
3102.0
l I 0 2.0
By JOHN C~
Of tfle DallY Plllt .....
I Olrich Bob Hivner Is looking it MISSKln Vi;eJO High. champion Yuba) art~7;.·\f\e ' ptcked,up on his.form and he end wne from (our ~ards out, Unebatker John FI etc her
forward to corrttUng some Saddleback s Gali.chos, who crushing defeat at the1\ha,nib , ;got some· good blocking. from off right tackle. (catching the spartan ~mistakes in his Million Vleio play all their borne games at of Southwestern, Har ftri·itJ\ ' ~~y Fletcher (the fullback), It was also his block on. a quarterback in the end zone),
Diabloe combat troop1 for this Mission Viejo, are exhibiting claims thete's no remedy .fol'. WOO is improved in that quarterback keeper by Chris ,both in the second quarter, ac-
Frlday night's game with gobs of optimism and even 'bOosting a .team's ego than an 'd13>arlment over last season." Hector wlllch provided the counted for the remainder of
Pacifica following a 20-0 J<m more anticip.ition (of Cypress) opening game \.\'in. Whipple, who aared one ot winners '!Ith their final TD on the Gaucho scoring.
to Saddleback Salurday in the aft~r turning tailback Toby ~ Talking 'to the DA IL Y the four Gauclios touchdowns, a two-yard play with 2:47 re-
Sanla Ana Bowl. W~1pple loose on the visiting • PILOT after his charges had ·galloped at will tllro!igb the malning. GAME STATisrtc:,
The Diablos held t he ?ttll'a\ Costa Spartans for a 3.'J.. steamrollered Mira C o s t a , ·Spartan defenses, grinding out Saddleback jumped to a 7~ F1,.1 downs nillllnt 20
Roadrunners even for the en-.... 13 opening game victory Hartman offered, "I'm very 199 yards on 34 carries for a edge on 3&-yard scoring strike ::~: =~·~:;:, t
tire first ball and appeared to-: Saturday night before 2,800 pleased with the performance .$.7 average. Am a :r: in g I y from Hector, starting his f!tst To1.111r$1 -1 n
have the upper hand midway partisan rooters. 1 for a first game effort: enough, the chunky (rt-1 1, 196) game at quarterback, 1o split ~=~ =~i= m
through the third quarter until Last year, after the season's "We have about 38 freshmen · tOnner 'I'uslin\prepper was not end Rick Day and Doug v1r11S 1o1i !
M< • ' ' • "' '" " ..
7/U.7 an intercepted pass by Sad· opening Contest, the GaucllOs out of about 53 people on the thrown for a single loss. ~throck'.s conversion. ~:n~~~1'!t.':'nc1 "21.J
dleback's Charlie Butler was -~~~~-,-~~.,--~~-'-~~~~-,-~~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~returned · ~ yards for a
touchdown to tum the tide of
ii":: the, g~.· \ ~ 1be first half aaw Mission
Viejo running 20 plays to ti
foi' Saddleback; with only five.
To1tll
Mtclor R. Fl1tchtr
Whh>PI•
"'" eos1nko . ..," Wlli.on
J. Flllcllef T011lt
Htdor
2 G ·11 -t.0 Laguna Beach Hlgb'1 foot· 53 ,,, ~ 3.J ball team went\back to the : !:: pracUce field today, preparing
o 2·7 for arch-rival San Clemente
S ... ltlli(k
" " ' " . '" , . ' . . ,
1 " ' . ., "'
0 •.•
.J •5·0 after the Artists dropped their • 2.0 • ~.o season opener to Lo.I Amigos,
1: !:: 19-6, at Garden Grov.e H i & h
Saturday nigkt. l'ASSINO Mir• c"'' H fl< •Ill YI Jc!
•JDJO.JllCI
722 11..tll
11 , 2 1i. .4n
Manny Loya, Chris Brannan
and Jim Lincoln provided the
scoring punch u the Lobos of SMdlelMdl
21 10 ' 1u .m Los Amigos gained their flnt
football victory in history. ·
Knudson
L<:iya opened the scoring
with a 52-yard burst over his
own .right tackle with 5:20 left
in the first period. Mike
Ramsey kicked the PAT ta
--Yards~ (6Uo_6.l ).Jeparatlna:Jh"--.
total first half y a r d a i e
V d £" -]£ give the Lobos a H ad-. -~D . S-bU -~lase·_ =---·= --~ -namseynau connec1.eu on a
.. ~1talistice.
And when Mission held the
! ' Roadrunners on the first
series of downs following the
second half kickoff, then
started a drive which saw
them produce 30 yards in six
plays, they appeared to have
momentum going for them.
But this suddenly changed
when Butler, the defensive
safety, intercepted a pass at
midfield and raced into the
end zone to change the com-
plexion of the game.
The failure of the conversion
attempt gave the Diablos new
; _. hei'pe. Aundre Holmes returned
the kickoff 18 yards, Joe Jones
~ gained seven yards on the first
play from scrimmage and it
looked , like the Di ablos were
going to get back into the
' game -but two unsuccessful
yJays forced a punt.
'saddleback drove to the
Diablo 26 on a 20-yard pa59
""-play as the third quarter end·
J ed and on the first play of the
fourth quarter. Devon Trahan,
the Roadrunners 9.7 sprinter
· scored on a perfectly executed
play which saw him circle
'right end for a touchdown to
•-make the score 12~.
Again the Diablos came
· back, putting together a nine-
play »-yard drive which -saw
•.· 'them penetrate 10 yards into
~ · Roadrunner territory only to
be forced to turn the ball over f.! on downs again.
~· Hivner commented after the ti game that he wu proud of his
team's hustle, proud of the ef·
-fort they made and added that
they would work on correcting
Mme early season errors this
~: week in practice. '"• GAME STATISTIC'
M • , ::~::.o;:::;:. : : Mesa Toe Blasts 1;,o•ig Field Goal
.. Flr'SI -fltntltln O O • ~ I
To1•1 •1"1 dDwn• 7 ' Benny rucardo·booted this 4~" ~ ard ield goal in the first quarter bobbling the ball. Ricardo add AA a 25-yarder, but to no avail. l\1esa 'V1rd1 rv..,11111 l:U lU "U.. ~ v.rm pa11n1 ' u lo give Costa 1'.1esa a 3-0 lea. ,~over Katella l1igh Saturday night lost, 1~13. ~:;~1~1•1n..i ,~ ,.; in non-league a~tion. Gary Kin g (55) holds after momentarily , \
Pvn111-. .... 111111nc1 •121.1 11J6 -----~-~---~--~------------~--------------------------~l:----P11111tlts/Yds. -ltlld 11~ 10/tS .,..._ furnblnJFumbl• lolt •11 2/1
-SOlnl ..., ONrfln
Famine ·
ROBINSON, Ill. !AP) -
George Knudson, leathery 33-
year~ld Canadian, sums up
his sensational, 11-hour, 4(1.
hole marathon agaiftst George
Archer to wiJll the $100,000
Robinson Open Goll Classic a.s
"breaking a seven -month
famine of bad golf."
With the second round rain-
ed out, the finale of the neat,
little tournament was packed
into a 36-hole Sunday over the
compact 35-36-71 C r awford
County C0Lu1try Club course,
steami ng in 90-degree
weather.
The gangling Archer, without
-victory since the 1969 Masters,
and gritty Knudson, who had
not won since taking the
Phoenix and Tucso11 opens in
succession in 1968, were In the
same threesome for the entire
day. And both were victory
hungry.
The third man was young
Bob Payne of Mt. Vernon, Ill.,
who had caddied on the
Crawford course prior to his
student days at SoutherR
seven-yard. pass for an ap-
parent Los Amigos touchdown-
on1y moments before. But an
interior lineman had jumped
-0ff side to nullify the play.
Through the remainder of
the first half, Laguna Beach
controlled most of the acUan
but was unable to find the
punch needed to get into..good
scoring position.
Two costly errors hurt the
Artist chances after th e
visitors had moved the ball
well. On one occasion, a
lateral pass was thrown over
the head of the intended
receiver. Jesse Sale recovered
for the LoOOs dn the Artist 22-
yard line.
Bart Tabor. who was. the
bright spot or the Laguna
defense all night, m::tde the se-
·cond of his three interceptions
to start the Artists on the way
to their 'onJy. score.
Starting on their own 33, the
visitors marched 67 'ya rds in
three plays, aided heavily by a
pass interference penalty call-
ed against the Lobos. Fisette
connected with Joe Lambert
on a pass to the Los Amigos
38-yard line.
Wiezbowski broke thrQl.!gh
the middle of the Lobo defense
to pick. up the. . .final-38-yards.
Fisette·s pass attempt for two
points w~s dropped, ending all
the scoring.
-Jllinois lfrtiversity. He hiis
never won an}'lhing, and
stayed in contention until
being wrecked with a closing 73 for 277. GAME ITATllTICI " A1eanwh.ile, Archer captured F1r,111ow"' n11h1n, 1
a three-stroke lead 0 v er Fl"'' downs """1~ J Flr'SI downi ..... tlllel 1 Knudso11 with a morniltg 68 for T9!11 11"1 c1o1rn1 11
202 while his tenacious op-Ytrds rvllllnt 11, Yards 1>111111>111 ,, ponent from Toronto had a 69. Yards 1011 u
Then Knudson caught fire. ~~n:s~'l'!.'~11':'r1e, 3~J.o
He.had si x birdies on the front P ... am"1vd1....,1 11ztd 11s
side starting th e last round on Fumoles/Fumbl" 11»1 ''' Scwt 11>'1' OV.t'fen putts of up to 20 feet and a 30-L•vur11 s .. c~ o o o
foot chip that went i11. His 29, Los Aml110S 1 ' • to Archer's fine 32 lied them u:!.":!11 at the 63-hole mark. tc' .,,
Krtudson finally went ahead ~~~:;.."'1 ;~ ~
with a two-foot birdie putt on 1Ce"1~, s 20
the 12th and remained that To1•11 LOI Am~-111
way until the rolling 17th. His LDY• 11 11t
" • • • • '" H
" ·~ 3117.0 .,.
"' ,_,
0-11
" ••• , u • • •• • • •• " "' , ...
Ml11loll Vl1lo 0 0 a 0 -II
SHdlllbtdl o O ' 11 -20
Holmn ,_
•USHINO
M..._ V .. le
!ell> '' JI ''' 15 ,, • • •
College
Grid Scores
.<;osta Mesa, Sea l(ings Bucs Win
Totu·name11t
second shot from a severe ~:U,...'!,...1 ~ ~
downhill lie left him short and R1rnwt 1 1
' ••• • '·' " ·2.0
he bogeyed as Archer parred To1'11 l'ASSl~o 17'
and the two were square. t..11•.1111 hid!
They parred th~ short 18th Frieue ~ ~ '~1 :i• .~
" "'
••
'
·-
•
•
..
0.Yll M•-Ah\lm161
62003.J
5 lJ ' 1.• 4 2105.2
1 1 • 1.0
Ttt1l1 31 l:M 12 •.l
S111dt1Hdl
tt 1:11, 1 S.I
• ·~ ' 1.0 ' n o •' ' 1 l ·l.O
' ' 0 2.0 3' ,.. • s.s
01vl1
l'ASStNO Mlt1lor1 'lltlo
,. p( phi ''
II l 1 ' Stddllltlck "' .nl
• ' 0 ., ,j(IO
JC, Prep
Grid Scores
Jvllllt C94'-
Gold9n WHI 1J, Or-Co.1! 0
~lltlKll :)!, Mlr1 CMll ll
lllv•nlcle "· (Ypr'MI • ,vn"19n n. L-llffdl 11
5.11! OlfH 11, I.A H1rDor U
a..kl'l"llltld 20. '-"'' ...... J Hlncodt 11, Santi ll1rtlerl 10
ComDlorl •l, P1'8!1eN 1J
LACC )1, Pl1rc1 llO
F'11VIO 11, 1!111 LA '
"'-lcllNI
S-• ll. l-11 • I.of ,lu•nl-It, l"""' lltlcl'I 6
'-ddl4Mct 20. Mln l1111 Vltlo G
~ Hlll1 JD, El 0«•00 t "•<Ilk• tr, C1nt"'91t 11 F11llw!Oll 2t, Lff Al1mllos ,,
Ktt.111 t,, COtt1 Ml'W U
S.vM M, L11 v .. 11 Cltlit 6
A~lm u . c1111•n 1
ll..tilndl JJ, L-l!Hdl Pait I
f.I ltMCl!o_r, s.1. P1111 •
o\
I -•
WEST
use 21. Ni!'tlt'nk• 21 UCLA 21, Pltt~ll<l•Oh 15
·Capture Polo · Tournaments Knudson ertding with a blister-Los Am1ws
Orange Coast c 0 11 e g e, 5 ing 63-and Archer with 66 for E!:.'" ~ ~ ~ ': ::
16-under totals of 268. 1ot111 10 ' , '' .a
\\'3ter polo l:!am defeated [~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;OOiiim;;;;;~~--.
three opponents to capture the ll R QU LITY ' NDdhern .. .i,.,.,.. » Cel Stale (LA,} 0
S•" Olt110 SI. 2J. North Tt~t$ S!. 0
S!l~fo<ll J.i. s ... J°'' SI. 3 W••hfMJ!wl 11, Mlchiv•n si. 16
WAJlll~!on S!. ~•. ldeho 16
Orange Coast area prcp.~from La Puente on Saturday.
UC Senle !l••bt•• 25, Frt>;no St, 10
Pttlllt f , Ctl St. ILBl 6
wa~r polo. outfi~s sharpened Defending CIF champion
their aq~a !lc ~ills. -0ver the Corona de! Mar, meanwhile. weekend 1n ;prC'parat1on for the .
!::11 S!llt (Fulle•ton) 31, (II Polv
(Pomo~) 0
three-day Jong A 1111 a he j m took charge of its own tou rney
Tournament. \Vhich r ~ n s .. ~nd thumped Newport Harbor,
Thuri;day,.-Friday and Satur-last ye8r's Clf runnerup, in Ort9<>" sr. 21, low• u
EAST
!11vlor 10. A•mv J
da y at Anahehn 11igh. the tiUe Ult by an 8-1 count.
T .... Dll 10, 81Kt"tll J Costa Mesa. a sleeping giant Costa Mesa's Musta'1gs so
Toledo 21. 8ut11!0 1
P-51. JS. NIY'I' 7
Rulgtr'S ~l. l1f1Ytttf 16
eos1on Col'-211. Vlll1110Y1 21
(Oltlll 2l. !IOS!oo't U. 21
c.,...,,..;:11no1 11. VtnT*'I o
MllHl cl'IYM/tt 21, M1lrw 0
in Irvine League palo circles, dominated the 16-team 1\1oore
looked wide awake in the tourney that they hogged five
111oore To~ament al Lonef of the 12 places on the all-
. Bcaetl's Bebnont Plaza Pool~. 1our11ey teM1.
SOUTM
Geor1!1 TKl'I 23. Flo<ldl SI. ll ct .... oon 21. V!'9iftl1 11
cS.pturing the team tille wi th a 1\iesa's Ron ?tfisiolek \vas
championship game. .1 2 -fl selected as the most valuable
sv;eep of a formidable grou p player in the three-day affair
Oull:e ll. Mtrvl.lnd 12 ICenluc:tv 1l , IC..,5'1 Sf, 3 Mt•lllell 11. Moor~ SI. 7
N. Ct •olllll If. N. Ct•oll..-51. 0 T""'.,."'" 71. 5MU 3 ~ wn1 v1r111"11 .,, ltlc""'Ond lo
Allboti'll n. klutl'lln> Ml1M11"1 14
.t:»olo Tom·ney to UCI
• Florid• :u, Ml$ttt'1"1 s1. u uic lrvt-•s '"tent·laden E. T ...... u .. St. 10, £. CarollM • ..... ... Fvrm•11 It, PresbYle•!an 1 Frosh.JV water polo team South Co•D!I"• U. Wt~e Fote5t 1 v111Mrbll1 "· c111~ o def~ated Golden \\'est. 10-3. Al•b•m• s1. v1ra1 ... 1. Tec11 11 ~then routed Riverside and TtWI, A&M 20, LSU II M1u11,1~01 ~1. Mr..,01111 s1. u Cypress in winnin}; lhe fifth
Tu11n• 11, Geor1i1 u aMua\ GWC t o urnam e nt
MiHourl 31, ~~~~~ 17 Saturday in the Rustler Pool.
Ohio u. "· 1t'111 s•. 1• ,.Jim Bradburn led the UCI g:\:'t!!:, '~1.1':\~:111 1 \'ictory over Golden \\lest with1
Pu•-u. Tcu o fou r goals. The Anteate r llUllOIS 20, 0.tfOll U f 11K1s ttdl 21. 1(,..,,., a yeltrli ngs took a 2-1 lea d a ter
Mklllt•" 20. A•lfOl'I• • t.he first qu8rter and enjoyed Nol•• Dlmti '.IS. t+of'lh~terri u Twt,. •· •d111t1 s1. 1T W.advantage at the hilf. A.t.1ris11 Jl. SJ, Wlctttlt St, 1'
WMlll'ft Mktilttn lS. BVU 11 non Lippoldt, fl a r r y Noah Ml-I «Onlol n. x1w1t>r 10111Dl 1 And· Howie. Johilson scored Cl1tCllll'11n ll. Dlvloll 7
M011•11'111 ». N11t1Mrn 1111i>o1, • goals for the Rusllt:rs.
SOUTHWEST tl 0 8 Ch 'f om J1ermSl8d's ,. .... ,, w. ce111or111t u Golden Wes team f\nish!!d se-Art1•""'' JS. Okll""'"• SI 7 • H.,,,., o, '"'I('" n · , ,., , con<! In the tourney. defeating
, Ille• rt. v~;1111;·s 'f Ril'US!do,-k, end Cypress,
,,If FPrCI ,I, wY-irtt ll J7-3. u1111 s1. u. ...n.i. Gr"" 11 In the C)•press \'ictory. Ross :=: !!: ~;!."":fi-:!:1' 10 ~lclntyre had five goa ls.
A"11111t s1. •· co1or.-.st. • (Olio.wed by Lippoldl \.\'Ith
Who Cares?
N1 ether 111w1p1p1r in th,
..,.orld c1 r1t 1boilt 'f'OtJt commu· 11ity lik1 'f'0111 coP11m11nltv dt ily
"'wtPlfl'I' •011, lt'1 tf11 DAILY
PllOll~-------1
three . Johnson and Roy Buell
tidded two and Paul Ros I,
Lance NorTis and S t t v e
h1eCoMaughey h&d one.
R~I paced the Rustlers'
\.\'ln over Riverside with three
goals.-
Golden 'Vest had \\'on all
four previous tournaments.
Riverside finished third (l·2l
while Cypress was fourth (0-
3).
The Rustlers return to ac-
tion Friday, hosting Fullerton
JC at 3:.3(). Saturday ' Golden
West will participate in the
Santa Barbara tournament,
beginning at 9 a.m.
Trojan Chili
J\Jeels Tuesday
The South Orange Counly
Trojan Club will hold Its fi rst
1970 meeting Tuesday night
{7) at Reuben's near the
Orange Counly Airpor1 .
The meeting will include
dinner. films of las1 week 's
tJSC.Alabama . football clBsh
a 1111d a talk by Nick Pappas,
!onner Trojan gfidder , and
wesent coordinator for all
Sou!htana Th>]3n t!Ulff.
after some slick s c 0 r Ing annual Bakersfield 'College DELTA SUPE A
games. toornament Saturday in Tires ~ost Less A sample or ?ifisiolck·s B:;ikcrsfiEild.
1alent was exhibited in the The Pirates of coach Jack ,,.,,,,,,c,,' ,•,',',',• ~·.~:.•, ~ .... n-~bli final contesl against L a
Puente RS the flmbidextrons Fullerton d c real e d San Pricn St•rt ot SZ1 .ts phn F.E.T.
ace fired .th rough six field Pernardino, 15-4_; S aj'J ta Fib1r9lt1' Wid1 0 ... 111 -Sup1r Pr1mium -
goals. Ba r b a r a, 11 ~8 ; and R1di1I -Sporh-S1nd !u99y-
?ifustang poloisls J\fike llc<ll. Bakersfield, 10-8. I!> I ill Si1•1 Tr11d1 Tir11
?11aU \Yaid e l ich, Bill In the San Bernardino \'ie-BE G'S DELTA TIRES 111cAneney and goalie J!od tory, Bart Heinsley and Chris
Ross joined Misiolek on lhe Gammon bl the way with 141 E. 17th St .• Costa Mesa • 645·2010 . all·tourney unit. three goals each while John u1auer, Gory Quinlan and Rod Bt11kAm1ric1rd lo,,e.it. lot. 15' leyJ Mtli1r Ch•r11 t.1esa coach Terry Bowen u JOOI WIST 17tll, SANTA ANA-141-6904
.,.,as ecstalic about Ross's shot Kenyon each had two. Johni;~;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;~ blocking techniques. Rl'Cg. Dave Bannon and Bill
De lluff complete d the OC'C "I'd say he probably blocks sroring with one goal each. vW BRAKE
SPECIAL about 75 percent of lhe shots
throu·n at him. 11c blocked six Tom \Varnecke and Blauer I h · f · paC('() the. OCC win over Santa pena ty s ots in our games in Barbara with five goals each the tourney," Bo..,,.cn said.
Cli U Hoo""r. polo boss or v.'hilc Reeg added one. "'" Tom Reeser and De Huff the Corona del ?liar Sea Kin~s . \\'ilh two and Recg and Doug
figures his charges arc ready Snyder (one).
to n1akc An<1ther strong thrust Santa Barbara fini shed sec-
to\.\·ard the CIF crown aft er ond in the tourney with 8 2-1
they dropped coac h Bill Bar-n'!<lrk follov"ed by Bakersfield
nelf5 Nc\vporters. B d' (0-31 11ooper says. "the te11n1 that ( l-Z) and San ernar 100 •
\Vin the CIF title.
RellM 4 Wheel1
M•chlnt 4 Druntt
0.1rh1ul 4 Wheel CyllMws ll,111 Mllf> UllCl!ldltllMI ...._.. INOT l'lto.AATIO)
$39.95
vW SHOCKS ................ $7.ts 1-ed
-.M)0,000 tnlle guaranteed (not pro-rated).
WE DO ALL FOREtGN CARS.
e DISC llAQ SPICIALITT 9
COSTA MESA STOii ONLT
Jltt H-.N.
14t-40U " MWUt
Or.ange Coast returns to &C-has won our tournament the lion Tuesday, meeting UCLA
last five year!!: has gone on to in the Bruin pool. 'rhe Pirates!
"In fact." he adds. "Sierra alSCI host their own tourney
\.\'as the only te;im cntert"d ln,1_~sa~t~u~rd:a~Y~·-------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
tho toumt'y this year th~t
\\•;-iitn't In the CIF playoffs Jn
1$~."
Sea King star G ilrl h
Bergeson was picked as lhe:
out.<ilnnding performer In !ht
f!l~hth Annual CtJrona event
after pumping 1hroUJ:ih , tour
goals In the dt:cidlng gan1e
a~almt Newport.
· Kurt 'Krumpholz (31 and
Tom Bou~hey (I ) "-'Crt' the
nth e r Corona polnt-J;ctters
while Scott Farr r threw in
the only score for the Tn1 s
\V hltticr finished third in the
team rnce In thl'i OTie-dav
tourney by tdqlTi p: F'ull nnn, S·
4, In anethcl' final round cklsh.
...
INSPECTED USBO TIRES
Big $
Selection
Most
Sizes -
Big savings
on slightly
used new car
takeoffs, too I
Costa Mesa Firestone Store -475 E. 17th St -646-2444
-HOU RS :-Mon. ·-Fri~l-aim.----to-7 pom.--S1t..,l -a1mo-.. -J-p.m•---' •
•
' ---,
•
!
•
••
Efe• Big Wia
Scott Confident
fu Pennsylvania
By U.OYD It. ROCHELLE Ses ltr has been a st3te
HARRISBURG, Pa. (UPI) senator ror IO years. He has
-The name of Sen. Hugh c harged Scott with
Scott tw become a household "grandstanding and taking un-
wotd in Pennsylvania because due credit" in announcing
of his nearly 30 years in awards of federal funds com-
Oxtgrtss. .ing into the state.
'11lere is a little alarm "My opponent would have
among the state's. Republican you believe he has dumped the
staJwarts that the pipe-smok-entire U.S! Treasury jnto the
Jng Scott, who is 69, can lose commonwealth," 5esler said.
M election. This year is no ei-Scott's staff has compiled a
ception. resume of his voting record
While a number o f during his 15 years as 1 coo.
Pennsylvania candidates for gressman and his 12 years or
atatewide office appear to be service in the" Senate, with
running scared, the venerable emphasis on What he has done
Scott iS not_ His suworters are for . Pennsylvania and · his
apprehensive only about over backing of civil rights legisla-
confidence. lion. ·
Scott will be 70 years old His office estimates that at
eigtit. days '!te: the Nov. 3 least 25 percent of the state's
electiolt and 1t IS well known voting blacks suported him in
____ that he would like lo win biV!L-1M4-kl-his-aecond-tenn-bid..ln•1t-·-------
his third-term Senate bid in that Year he bucked the
what may well be is swan song Democratic landslide in the
from Politics. state for former .President ~ sm~ victory for. the Lyndon B. John9on and was
Philadelphia . ~h~an lS .• ~ lone GOP winner for a
strong possibility SU'ICe his statewide office
Democratic oppoAent , Stale · . SCrl· W i 111 am G. Sesler. Scott ~as walked a tightrope
is reJatively u n k n 0 w n on ma1or issues ~e~ the
. statewide. Sesler 42 is from watchful eyes. of his ~1beral E · Pa ' ' and conservative constituents ~ odds are overwhelm-ln the state. He came out
tngly against Sesler getting eve.n. in the ~~ve;sy over
enough exposure among the President Nixon s first ~wo
f. illi · 1 ed 1 Supreme Cou rt nomma-1ve-m on . regis er vo ers tions--Opposing Judge Cle-
before election day to pose a nt F H esworth J nd
real threat to Scott, onetime ~ J d • Ca~ Id C r · a 11 GOP nation al chairman. or u ge · arro arswe ·
DJring his cam~ign, Scot l H o w e v e r , Scott told
has virtuaJly ignored Sesler. newsmen in a recent interview
. He bas maintained a rigorous that he "did a damn fool
campaign s ch e d u I e • ac-thing" in voting for Carswell
companied by his inevitable Referring to Carsweli's defeat
pipe (he has a collection of in Florida's GOP Senate
about 500f he flies t o primary, Scott said t h e
Pennsylvania on weekends and outlook for a. GOP victory in
in late afternoons during the that state had i m p r o v e d
week for s peaking "since we got rid of the racist
engagements, then back -to in the primary down ther~ ''
Washington. On intemationa1 a I f a i r s ,
Scott has walked on com ..
paratively safe ground . Heap-
G ds R •d proves of t.he Presidenrs Ullr t C overall Vietnam policy, while
favoring speedier U.S. Troop
w i thdraw al s and new Shotgun
On .Planes
_JiipJQmatic initiatives for an
immediate --ceasefire. -;-ue
defended the Presid~nl's Cam·
bodia operatiln, while making
clear his support waS! limited
LONDON (AP) -He wasn't to the at\aek on VJet Cong
tall and he wasn't lean and his sanctuaries.
eyes weren't icy blue but he The race for governor
said he wa1 pretty quick on between DemOCTat 1\1 i I to n
lhe draw as he rode shotgun Shapp, a wealthy Philadelphia
out of London for the U.S. industrialist, and Republican
on his 'third trip Jn three days. Lt. Gov. Raymond J .
And he leaned against an ex~ Broderick, an attorney, is
It door o( a crowded passenger rated i toss-up at this stage,
lounge in a pale yellow shirt due mainly to normal voter
and a grey suit and read his apathy.
morning paper and stubbed The overriding issue ts
out a cigarette. money.
A few feet away stood his Last year, relations bet wen
fellow shotgun. They did not Broderick and Gov. Raymond
~peak. In fact, the only thing P. Shafer cooled when the
the two men had in common candidate came out against
with those Western heroes who the governor's income tax
u.sed to ride all mean into plan.
town was that they didn't talk Broderic\: said no new taxes
much. wmdd be needed to round out
Which flight? None of your sweeping reorganization of
business. state government, tightening
"It's boring really," said the tax collections, cutting the
man in the yellow shirt who state payroll al least S
had dark Jines under his mud-percent, and overall tax
dy brown eyes. "You sit and reform.
you watch and you wait. Your Shapp favors an income tax
gun is close to hand but you only if the state's 6 percent
haven't really got I t c h Y sales tax v.:ere eliminated. He
fingers. I guess it's a job like also favors closing of loopholes
any other job. But, boy, it can in tax collections and overhaul
be tiring."
h . h h I led of the tax structure. . Eac time e. as rave The staR' is in a financial
tn the last few days he bas had morass because of the rnoun-
to go through the same "frisk-ting costs of government and
Ing" process as all the ot~er Inability of the politicall y passengers so as not to give
the antihijacker game away. divided legislature to come to
There was a quiet smile grips with the problem and
between him and the uniform-agrtt on new taxes or. as an
ed London bobby who looked altematWe, cut spending.
In his overnight bag _and ran After a year-long deadlock
his hands over his body and up the legislature passed a
and down his legs and arms. patchW'Cl'k of taxes, mainly on
He said softly to the busine.w, and stopgap a~
policeman : "I ,feel we know proprlations. based on current
each other well enough to ex· tax yields that enables the
change Christian names." state to operate only through
The shotgun riders are a next February at existing es·
strange mixture. Some are penditure levels.
quite young -lKll the majority 'nlst leaves a revenue gap
are upward of 35 and quite a of at least S300 million for the
Jot are in their 50s. remaining four months of the
lt seems the shotgun riders 197~71 fisca l year ending next
have been dawnr fom many • June 30-a problem that most
security forctS. Some of them likely will be dumped in the
trt attached to 1 big liquor laps of the next govemc.-and ~mpany. Some are . U.S. newly elected legislature.
C\lstoms MCUJ'ity men and
othen work for the FBl.
Al around 11 a.m. when a lot or transatlantic flights were on
the move, nearly a dozen of
the guards collected their. guns
from customs officeri at Lon-
' don's Heatttrow Airport 8nd
mate their silent way aboard.
One of them, on a TWA night
• where there is a choice of
Tnovies, said be wou1d prefer
watch "TeU Me That You
ve Me Junie Moon" rather
.. n Clint ~twood'1 "Ryan 's
Heroes''
And j~st to show how tiring -
the whole buslntss can be, the7 found a aholfun rider
---~Jl'"'P In the bocl<-sut oh Jet-1-t
while It wu wait.Ina: bttwetn
nlsbta.
Are You Letting Cash
Slip Through Your Fingers
See ~f-You-Have-Any-
Of These Things A
DAILY PILOT
WANT-AD
Will Sell Fast!
1. Stove 29. Bicycle S7. Eloctric Train
2. Gult1r 30. Typewriter 51, Kitten
3. Baby Crib 31. Bar Stool• 59. Clauic Aute
4. Electric Saw 32. Encyclopedia 60. CoffH Table
S. Camera 33. Vacuum Cle1ner 61. Motorcycl•
6. Washer ....-34. Tropical Fish 62. Accordion
7. Outboard Moto r 35. Hot Rod Equipm't 63. Ski1
I . Stereo Set 36. File Cabinet 64. TV Sot
9. Couch 37. Golf Clubl 65. Woricbonch
10. Cl1rinet 38. Ste~ling Silver 66. Diamond W•tch
1 T. Refrigerator 39. Victorian Mirror 67. Go-K•rl
12. Pickup Truck 40. Bedroom Set 68. Ironer
13. Sewing Mlichine 41. Slide Projector 69. Camping Trailer
14. Surfboard 42. Lawn Mower 70. Antique furniture
1 S. Mlchine Tools 43. f'ool Table 71 . Tape Recorder
16. Dishwasher 44. Tires 72. Sailboat
17. Puppy .is. Pi1no 73. Sports C•r
18. Cabin Cruiser 46 • .Fur Coit 74. Motlreu lox SPfl
19. Golf Cort 47. Drapes 75. Inboard SP'ffdboat
20. 81rometer 48. Linens 76. Shotgun
21 . Stamp Collection 49. Horse n . Soddle
22. Dinette S.t 50. Airpl1ne 71. 0.rt Game
23. Pl1y Pen SI. Or91n 79. Punchlnt ...
24. Bowling B•ll S2. Exercycle 10. Baby Carri••
2S. W1t1r Skis 53. Rare Books 11. Drums
26. FrH1er 54. Ski '8ooh 12. Rifle
27. Suitcase SS. High Ch1i1" 13. Delk
21. Clock S6. Coins 14. SCUBA Cher
DAILY PILOT WANT·'AD
be turned Into cash with a
These or •"Y other extra. things around the ho-
so
Don't Just Sit There!
DIAL DIRECT
42-5678
--
WANT
TO
CWll
UP
ON
YOUR
CWll
OUT?
FOR
•
Mondlir, Stptembtr 21, 191_9....,... DAILY PILOT 29
..-
BAILY PILOT
WA ·N :Afl
HOUSES FOR SAL I! HOUSES FOR SALE
0-rel 1000 O....r•I 1000
ARTIST STUDIO
+HOME
Looking (or t h e unusual?
This big 4 bednn 2 stOI')'
has 2200 sq ft and only 5
years ol.d. 1'11any extra incl
intereom arxt rlec bltillll
PLUS A STUDIO built at the
rear tba.t hu exposed beam
ceiling and enough room fol"
a painters gallery!! You'll
be amazed 11t what )IOU get
tor $41,950.
. ..
•
COATS
Warm, 11ingle story Sparil.o;b
home, •,~ block-from club-
hou11e & golf, sWimmillg le
termis, 4 bedml, f0t-mal din-
ing, lge family rm. The oN,y
n<!&r-Mw home available on
this street or custom built
hornf'll. Vacant. Prtced· by,
builder to .i;ell fast. $&9.950.
187'? Tahili QriW', Mesa
·Verde. .
1-
H
WALLACE
llEALTORS
--'5~16 ... 1141--FASJt --lflpen-Evenlnt•I-~-·-.i,1 -~-· . Newport HeiC)hts
FASTI $795. !t: .. ~.~n y"! ~'!:.
ACTION!
CALL
DAILY
PILOT
CLASS-
IFlm
DEPT.
D
-1
A
L
D
I
R
E c
T
--
6
4
2 -
Total cost to you to rnovr In. posi1 will bP re1urned to yolJ
Vacant, 4 bednn, 2 bath in full i( you're a vet. Jl'~
home w/dble car garage & k><.'8 tf'd jn the Nl!Wp01·t
cov patk> w/brick BBQ. Ex-Heights •rea or Newport
cellent Cot1ta Mesa location. Beach. A custom built home
YOU MUST HAVE 5 IN wilh loads ot extras. Call
FMtILY TO QUALlFY. ll0\11, ll won't last. Mfi-&660
Exclusive With: -Rlln.
N~port
at
Flir"itw 2629 Harbor, C.i\r.
646-1111
(1nytime}
-------
A RARE FIND
but we did II. A homP \Yith
rormal dining area & large
family 1m under $34,<0>.
Thit one i1 a jewel, decorat-
ed witb a.istom features
ttuwut, lnclWill&' quality
carpets. With SIDlO do1,1,·n
you can a!JSlne l'HA 6'/ ..
Joan, payable S'l41.s:J per mo.
including prin~: .. inl., 1axes
Ai: in!.
NEED 4 BEDROOMS?
Take over $18,400 GI Lou
with 6 annual ~rcentqe
rate and total PBYP!Cnt of
$151 .00. Owner "Will-can:1
2nd TD if necessary. HUGF:,
and T mean HUGE cul-Ot'4
sat• lol \\'ilh lrecl! and work
stied. Needs TEN_DER LOV-
lNG CAR.E. CALL!
Walker & Lee:
Real ton
2709 Harbor Blvd, at Adanli'I
r1~!}..949l Open 'til 9:00 PM
umE RANCH
Small hou11e on large lol I Ii&
PAlJL•WBftS' x3Cft!. ~&rate dbl. gara~r C.AalC.&.Bil and many trees on thill R-2 _ ••u•-:YJ!k level lot.-$24,900: with lO'J:O -"dOOTI, owner Will C"dJTY 1im
1003 Baker, C.~I. 5l6-5440 T.D. to 11(>\V loan. Call to-
,._,._,.__,.$1",6"7"'5"0"o"w"'-"N"-"-'"-"' 1 di, ''"'"7171·
PAYMENT '0 THE REAL
'"'\. ESTATrRS will buy lhl11 4 bt'droo1n, 2
bath home, N~a ti.xi~ up,
but toond and 10lid, Huge \;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;
cul~e-sac lot. Plenly of ac-
t:eM tor boat or trailer. Par4
tially built work 1hop, Siib-
ject to GI Loan o( $18,400
with payments of $189.00.
CALL! .,.
·walker & Lee
Realtors
2190 Harbor Blvd. at Adamll
545-0465 Open 'til 9 PM
15 UNITS
Ea!!ltside Co£ta Mesa • , . At-
tracti~ l and '! bedroom
apartments. \V 1 l king dis-
t~ to shopping. Income of
$33,600 and owner may
trade? Asking $250,000.
Colesworthy
& Co.
REAL'IOO
BAYCREST
GOOD BUY
f'ast occupancy! 4 Bedrm11,
large family room. Sunny
breaklasl. area. &'e !his now!
Jean Smith, Realtor
'646-3255
OCEANFRONT
Walk out door to one or t...,.
best swimming &. 1ur1ing
beaches -exc,lusive Cypres.oe
Shores cu~tom home ~beaut
iful' decor • e:lfquisile bath·
dressing rooms. $169,900 ·
Cr't ...... p 4.1' > _'S.::;: d 1111 I
Newport Beach Of'fi~e· LIDO WATERFRONT
l028 BayRide Drive APTS.-320 LIDO NORD 6'1""'49?.0 ~BE=A""'C"'H7=Dc.::U:;;P:,-L"'E"x--I NOW REDUCED:To $150,-.-Xlnt Terms
$», toO 6 Beautiful uni bi. 6 car
il Units: front house with
yard: upper ovt'r garage
with patio. Near the ocean
on 35th Street. Fee tdmple
It. alwaya rented . Owner
&nxious!
Clll: 673-3663 Eves. 673-80!!6
associated
BR OK EA S-R EAL TORS
1015 W Balboa '11J·J66J
:IO FT. FAMILY
ROOM $32,750
A beaufiAiJ home in • pres-
ti~ neigtiboibood. % baths,
huge recreation room ~ room
fur ~tion pool table.
Calhedral beamed ceilings -
bar 2 rcfrigcretor11. builtin
kitchen, banQUel sized dining
room. EJepnt fireplace.
5Kl-1720.
Tarboll
pragei: A: Utility.room wi1h
flO ft. fronting on excellent
awimrilli\g beach. Units art
newly fUrnl~hed.
Bill Grundy, RHltor
833 Dover Dr., N.B, 642--4620
MINl·RANCH
Small hou9@ on tarlg. lot
166~). Sepante dble. 11'·
~ and many trees on th\11
R-2 level lot. s:M,9;;(); will\
10% down, owner will cat'Ty
2nd T.O. lo new IOIUI. Call
today 646-nn.
THE REAL,' ~ ESTATLRS
Beautifully Planned
BRAND n4!w -Quality bit.
from courtyard pool, ~II·
ed fam rm, "'°" bar, frpte -to mnlOPn I.iv rm wf~
ttilU.. 4 br, 2 ha + pi!Att
New~rt Hetthts room. Master BR. Jlv nn~ln
Gretn tbun11lo ispeclaJ! Charm. nn It kitchen all on y· v.
ing home just ott C1ill Olive $108,900, Roy J. Ward, •
with loll or trees. plantK. 646-!YJO. •
shrub$. Ideal for couple or $600 DOW~
'lmllll f&mUY. Detached p.-Large three Bdmi. "
rqe, iJncJ plaster ~. lfl
Open Evtnlnp ,.. aanse. 1.8 x M o
'-1110 PATIO. Largo cham "-
-""""' fr need no:ar yard, LocaW
.. II~ ,...,. Grammor SC~I shOpplng, CaU tor
_ ............ f!!!!!!! .... •I M. M. LA -DE, II • ~ Eve!I, M8-.Jl&.l . * OCIAN .. RONT * * DUPLEX * TIRED ol ... , old fllrnl"""?
a.lboe Pettln.U'• It's really not that hard
$15,111 to rtpl,$ce. Ju•~ watcb tt.
\
I
I
j
Goor• Wllllamaon fumlturo ~ •= •--""'"""llultor -eoh>mns-lft-.!-tbe:-e!?'lo=oolfllil---i
6n.tlll ... 1564 E .. 1-Sc>:tlo ..
0$* llti!F9Jft!E d I r fO •
-.
* * * * * TAYLOR
A TOUCH OF SPANISH I
Beautiful view from this really sharp
"Lusk" home w/4. bdrms, family rm & for-
' ma! dining. PLUS lovely H&F pool. $62,500
YOU'VE ASKED FOR ITI
Almost new 3 &: f.am rm home near the ..
beach. Architect-designed with custom qual-
ity lhruout. Ocean vie\v from masterbdrm
suite. "Corona del r.1ar Charm" with an
ullra modern look. YOU OWN THE LAND!
"Our 25th Y e•r ''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 S•n Jo•quln H ills Ra.d
NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910
* * * * * * lDOD
• c= a e p •• .4. 0
..
oflnJa J~fe
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
16 Lind• lilt Drive
Corp. owned. 5 Br. 5 bath home facing Har-
bor Island. Jacuzzi & sauna. Comp. furn.
!or immed. occup. IV /dock no@,000
For Information on all lot.a: & homes
CALL : BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
133 ~1r Dr., Suitt 3, N.I. '42-4620
General
4 BEDROOMS
$28,500
Name your tr:rms • f'HA/V A
-NO OOWN or convt:ntion·
al. El!.cellent location, walk
to park, school11 & shopping.
Lots of used brick family
.room and heavy shiib roof.
Hurry -owner all"l'ady pur.
chased! Call S(!;.842t
M-1
DISTRESS SALE
\VU; sell a ll or part of 11
acres HI I.he comer of Fair-
view Rd. & Sunflower; ne.ar
new µ Timea Bid([. and
Voit Rubber.
Yes, You Do Qualify! * * * '* $37 ,500/ Acff
CASH
'
3 IEDRM/
FAMILY
Ranch type home on Kl.NC
SIZE 90xl05 lot, t'Ompletely
pai nt~. S:iOO Allowanct: tor
ne."' carpcta/dra iits. Owner
\\'ill fina nce. al 71~~ • $'1000
down , A11king
$29,500
Open Set/Sun 1-S
2292 Conyon Dr .. CM
' ~-DE l=l RO N
. 1 • • ...·.~· ••••
642-1771 Anytime
'I
NEW FHA LOAN CORONA PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH
EASY TO ASSUME
Bia• BR., ••mDy rm. bom• DEL MAR PRIVATE & SECLUDED
.. mov<-111 c:ond. Loveb> '"" SIX • PLEX ~T~~· w..i, n4ut paBR~ Six "'ell kepi 2 btdtoom units Past "TOOght iron ette cntey 1n ...,,., nn In ...,.... · t ncloled tr" k "11.arfd
liJhUul klt~h. w I ,.&inut on Bayside Dr., ~ to :!:rt~l'd to ic p1"0LD
ataJned cabinet .. wallpaper beach, only 10 years "'"'· I~ It. beaded shuttei.. Well Ind-Built In kltchen~ -prlva le WORLD OIA.ft!\.1 .. J lal_"gc
3cpd )'ti Don't ~Kelna: ~tios, and a tropica.J liCI· lx!nns •. ot 1nass1v~ Uv_1t11::
at 00 iowa St. open Sat. ting:. Ideal for the owner oc-roo.,.m w1•2t~ booz:ld~~ hJ'&o M .g "-A" -" CuP,?nt. Call 673-3550 ce. rt ......... t rootn. thrU on. 1 • ..,.,,_.. . ~-• Sliding glaRs to privatr:, en.
ON THE FAIRWAY closed patio. Few blocks to
Custom built, 4 bedrm, lam. beach. ?.fust IW!ll! Value
lly room. 2 bic fireplaces. packed at $28,600 w/FHA-
Tbll beautiful home over-VA terms, Call (714) 962·S59J
=~ .. Colt~'. MARVELQUS VIEW FOREST l OLSON
6%. ~loan. By own. ~l Bayside Dr. Beaut
er. 3036 Java Rd 5tM095. •halrf! rool 1.-sty. 3 Br. 4 be. Inc. Realt01'3
1 $63.500 ' waterfront home, xlnt awim-19131 Brookhunt Ave. Costa Mesa ' . mine beach, Newly redccor. Huntington Beach
Doll House ' BR, ' B•, 1onn.i dinl°", 1175.000 snoWN BY APPT.I•"'"""'"'"'~"'"""'""'
•h•K '"""" hup pool,.,_ Biii Grundy, RHl!or NEED ROOM $800 down l!d Jot, one block to Meaa 833 Dover Dr. N.B. M2-4620
CHILDRIN7
3 Bedrooms, 2 baths pl\iila.r'l'I·
ily room & 1arge deck. Built
on roomy corne.r lot. Parent.
al privacy with one level for _-
children, Walkifll dlstan .-
to school, $35,950
..AO tan
REAL ESTATE
1100 GJj!nneyre SI.
494-9473 549-0.116
* BEACH HOME * $34,600, Only 850 ft, to beach * Port11fin11 L•guna * New, view home -$64,500
PLACE REALTY 494-9704
BY owner, CUstom 3 br, 2
ba. Beams. 7'Ai%·$212 mo.
PITI 4~28 da, SJl..7449
eve.
--·-·· -----Verde goU course. Owner. ' TO BREATHE? An unbel!evable value at Quick sale. 30 Day S•n Ju•n
$21.600 ful l prier:. ll's a 3 posse.5sion. $42,500 st6-l&U. SHORECLIF,S Near Huntington Slate Beach C•plstr•no·
bedroon1 "'ith new carpel -"'=~:;::,~:.=:...::;:;= Morning Canycn Dr, CdM 3000 SQ FT
th roughou1. Large doubll' 2891 ~lubhou1e Rd. Most desirable fee land 3 Bedroo 2 .. : .. i -" a ACRE Estatel..and or Horse Profe.151onally Iandsca... horn 'Pri-" _ 000 m, .,..1 • auwY . . garage, Oversized lot. Quit •-il horn . hu"'.:. es. '-""" at _., • Room with Ji-..Jace formal Ranch, ·w/nlce view, adJ . . ....m y e pat)O a uor-Ex I · · h ·~.. '
r
REI
H -L•9 -J Bf
fk8(
<119': -·-S•n
:? Bit
NC --Dup ->
!lj:'.I !
\\"Oh
"'" i<."f'n
frplc
Own
RH
He
Gtn -
.~ E!t
i BR
•BR
Ha
Open Dai~ . $22 500 We havp an opening tor a n
experienced prof~'Jonal _ _ I _, mu or """'•n. t;x,.,,Jioo&t N .......
cftam1ng and move In. board 4 BR ,3 BA~· + c usi ve wll , dining area, huge living room other esrate parcels. $.li,000
546-8660. RJtn. 1~ . •. Y · , ,..._'ftlrflt 2SxSO" w/ no.ooo dn will re.lease 6 June_W.:~ . ..:_&04a:ts ~MAln'ltf:1 RUMPUS ROOM c_lear . bldg silt: tor 100% 328 -Afiso benefits!!! Call 545-1424 •t
Fairview
646-1111
(1nytime)
111·~· EiSiiy convmea· mto 4~&dd'r ..Jin&Dcing_.BJa,_49.l--.110Lor .. 1-----iTal
bedrooms l 2 bath! -4M-8lOO. AND
Newport Htlght1
<.'Omer of Beacon
1 short block from
Cliff Dr .
By lh·ner SJ6.SOO
SpacK>us 3 bedroom 2 bath,
living room with fireplace,
large dinljl&" area owrlook.
ing lovely secluded lanai,
carpeling. drapes, built·in
electric kitchen. Garage oU
alley "i th electric eYt' open.
e.r. Nicely landscaped. cor.
ner 101.
·646-4032 MS-144~
Picture a quiet cul-de-sac
street and cute little home
tucktd way back in between
40' frees. then add 20' side
yards for carden and play
area. Tben, with this coay
lf'eling add 2 r.xtra rooms
!o!" a iota.I of 5 bedrooms,
then all toeether you have
the neatest home paclcqe
we'vt' seen tor a long timf'.
No income-or credit qua)!.
fic8.tions.
Nichols ll!al Estate
Cameo ShoNs
Ocean view borne
Spa.ciou, enclosed pa.ti n
Fonnal dining room
paneled den with
brick Jireplatt
l bedrooms, including
huge mas~r suit1:
Owner moving out
ol the area
184.500
za,. 2
EXECUTIVE
A
2629 tlarbor, C.M.
NEWPORT
HEIGHTS
DUPLEX
1100
Newport -120D * SURE THING * ONLY 136,400 RENTALS .
_ _ _ _ _ _ Wa1ch your invesiment grow. Immediate Occup11ncy Houses Furnished
£:.a. :"Z"O L ~ 2" 4 Units on 2 R-2 Jots. Easy VA·FliA ilr ConventionaTI Rent11ls to Sh•r& 2005
BUD\;:llET VlcW financing. Jnwstigate this! RANCHO LA c;_.UES A
Blulls charminr l·bdrm. & MORGAN REALTY AYRES Homes Since 1905 GIRL 2-1, child 2 Yl'll· Share J
den, overlooking maj o r 67~2 67~59 MODELS AT bedrm C.M. home w/same.
greenbelt; maximum pri-BROOKHURST ilr ATLANTA $100 util incl. Lge fncd yard.
vacy. Perfect for single per. I 968-2929 • 968-1338, Pets OK. Any hour before
aon or couple. Vacant; like a.lboa Pinlnsulll 1300 11 a.m.·8 p.m. 10:30 A.\I, alter 7;30 PM
new eond. Near ahoppi111; ~150.
2 pools, dbl. garage, "lee. NOT BRAND NEW \c'V~OR~Kl:,::cN:cG_' -,-,~,.,-.~,-,~,-,-.,
opener. Bluff.! lowest cost -WEST BAY AVE. roommale to share 2 br apt.
126,-.>, OW'mi"I new 3 bdrm, 2 ba. BEACH-$19 950 w/"m" ',I ~k lo heh. Mediterranean style; Block 1 835-4804. ext J, N&ncy, da>r•.
from ocean & bay. Builder's Aft 6 59S-3804.
' home, top quality. Nol nt:\V, but only g yr5. DEPENDABLE ·work'g lady
"· 1185
Hon
I
Vact1
}'RJ
1en1.
-.k
*!
NEA
:'llO\
dra1
Hon
Macnab -Irvine -"'oL.~ .... New Tri-Pi.an iHel't~j+w..--.... ~ •• ~o'"" .,; ..
Bill Grundy, Ruiter young. Fantaslic value ncsU.. in S()'s non-smoker/drinker,
tw 83.l Dover Dr.: NB 6Q..4620 ed among Z-story bo?"es val. shr my: love.ly b om•. ./, 3
•1 l:~~:;;;~~~~~;;I ued at W,000. 3BRs, 2 full S45--l61B.· ·
' . • '.' i • J ' -r be.tbs Gourmet kit_wLl,atral L '-----( ong 24f4-Viit&Dil OTO ·tli:IOfill ·25r b/ins. Cloud 110tt shag car· 1iR""A""RE D1Y ' elq-tlft:-Ing Realty Cmpany
BAYFRONT
PIER & SLIP
STARTER HOME
$112
~ I ••ALTon • an income" located tn the Newport Beach 644-1133 pets. Just take ottr e.xisting waterfront home w/dock, Curr
toan with payments much ~~~ yrs, $150" mo.
chc,aper than rent. Better ""~~-..,,.--,.,.,-1
J usl listed • vt'ry attractiw
2 bedn;lom & den home. Un.
usual kitchen, canopied pa.
1io with buil t-in BBQ. Situ-
ated on quiet Newport hland
facing Balboa Coves. $96,000.
Shoo•n by app'I. only.
67S-321D 642-123!
SPANISH DUPLEX
NEW LO DOWN
Quality new· duplex. 2 bed·
rooll\ll each 11ide. Extra en-
trancel'I. Choose carpetg &.
drapes. Tile. roof. Max. de·
pred.ttion to Invest,, Call
66-0>JJ '
AIREST l OLSON
I tnc Rcal1or~ 2299 Harbor
I .MESA VERDE
FHA'· VA
$28,500
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath. all eltt·
Uic built-in kitchen, larp
lamily room on a coroer
lot wi th room for Boel 5tor-
a,,,oe. Assume low intere"'1
Joan. Sec Today? 546-2313.
0 THL RF;AI.
"'\,, E:STATLRS
PER MONTH
PAYS ALL
1'er, ju11t uaumeo the low
5V. % annual p1rcentqe rate
lo9n. 2 large bedrooms,
housewife's dream kitchen,
2 lull baths. Full p r I c e-
$16,500, Call qu ick! 54&-8640
Rltrs.
HO?.fE AND BUSINESS
Sharp 3 bedroom 2 bath
home plus work shop plus
1000 square foot building
with J phue electric. AU oa
a strategic corner M-1 lot.
SUbmlt terms or tradt',
$35,000 --
MATCH.AM REA.LT'{
15.5 Rochester
Costa Meaa 646--4837
Realtor11
"Dur 25th Year
In the H11rlaor Area"
673-4400
POOl
3 BEDROOMS
REDUCED $24SD.OO
WALK TO STORES
FHA I<· VA TERMS
3 huge bedrooms, 2 Juli baths,
formal dining room, )al'g"t'
brick fireplace. Only 7 years
old. 8¥t'I walk 10 Ull' park.
Offered at S2t,D50. Hurr)t!
546-8640 Rltn.
finest Eastslde area o.f Coeta l
Mesa. Featuring (]) 3 BR, QWSOJ'l
2 BA "ow"""' unW ' + (2) * CLEAN -SHARP ·* PRICE REDUCTION ONLY $32,500
hurry! Call <7141 962-5585. YOUNG working mother
FOREST l OLSON would lik• roomm•I< lo 2 BR rental units. See at Charm.in&: '= artistic ! br .f -~rooms, 3 baths, large
2J35 Tustin Ave., <.'Or Wood-home in _?M Ne•.-an!a d1nmg room. Huge TS ft . lo!. land Pl. or call 642-4905 .,... .......,.. Now "78 500 near Mariners Park. Beauti-" ' · Inc. Realtors e OPEN DAILY 1-5 e fully crptd living rm over-~ loWSOD JA. 19131 Brookhurst Ave,
'Til sold! Assumr: 6%.% VA looks lush garden & Jge cov. ~ Huntington Beach
loan. $148 Per mo. Reclecor. ered patio. Remodeled bath-3416 Via Lido 67~ PLAYHOUSE
3 Br. W/W cpts, dr-ps_ lm-rms & kilchcn. Open daily. ~•we Deliver'' FREEi !
med. posaeWon~ Only $22,. c -v ''• • bu d'-1 ,.,.
share apt. Call 'befr 4:30
p.m. or aft 10 p.m. 540-5549
NEED Roommate: For
Balboa Island home with
pier. 140 S. Bayfront.
CAREER \Voman to shart 3
Br house w/samt>, nr hwy,
N. Hntngtn Bch. 89."'t-3439 .,.. e .• "' Y 1'"-" ~ LARGE HOME In addition to this collag• 950. 1984 Fedt:ral Ave. Prlacllla L 646-1355 ( Rear yard? Every Inch ls Call: Patrick Wood, 5'15-2300 n, owrr 5 Bed.rm, fam ily rm., xlnl showpiece with LARGE fam-
concrete excr:pt for the pool. e "8ill H•ven; Realtor er). street to str.eel 45 ft. lot. ily area, wal!!!!t paneU_ng, -(7.,,.' ~ .. ~-N•wport Beach 2200
Thi' homt>? Jt'.oi a 3 bedrm. 2llJ E. CoaHI, Cd!\-t 673-.321l BEACH DUPLEX B~· app't only. gnug Fireplace, and modern
beauty-with-wall fO-"'alL+;;;;;;;;26;;29iiiH;;',.'"°;;',;·;;Cii.iiMm. ;;;;;ol ·""E , nm ~"Ol" OCEAN 2 $97.000 st,ep.saving k i t c h e n, lhe •* BA YSHORES *
everywhett, Financing? No I' ""WOW -WHAl-A-BtJY·t-BR -;;3BR ;;th lam ;m Owner may trade down l>r 3 children's playhouse: slay11. 3 Ahd 4 Bdrm., Jum. Sept to
pool }Oan, no problems. Take .Huge G•m• Room Only $22,950. lmmac, :I BR. PLUS 1 BR &: bi. iuest rm. Bdnn. _home in ~erTacet, C.ould use for motbf:r-in·la1v. June $300 per month
over 1st TD with $8()00. but 40 added-on room for bl &. home. O'size 2 car gar. $5,000 Xlnt condition Top area for CdM, with ocean vit\V. St:Uer anxious and iJs willing "C"' THOMAS. Realtor
the owner will help you with games No"' 2500 sq. n in this Down. Sel11:r w/cUT)' btJ.. living or renlli,g S5l.500 LIDO REAL TY INC. to pay part of Gt or FHA 224 W. Coast Hwy. 548-5627
that! Full pricP, $25,650. . low ra_mbling califomia at 17<>: S15G--per nwnth. CAl.L &. · 646 _ 2 414 337 Via Lido 613--7300 bu)'t'"r's <mts. FUU. PRICE 2 Br + den, wet bar, 2 Ba, 2
CO...TS ranch hOmf', cJow 10 Mesa Call: Patrick Wood 545-2300 9\!f, EXPANDABLE cozy com· $26,rJO. , tittpl, gat, laundry rm,
•
Verde C.OUntry Club with its • Bill H•ven. Rltr. • •• Mil ct J Br on I Jot Walke & lee patio. 9 mo. fl2S mo. «>91,1 • A. pools, lenni !I coorts etc, 211.1 E. Coast, Cd!\-1 b"73-3211..,. II_'.!-' g. sW1ny r 38th st, NB. WAlLACE Ope D . REALTY $.12,500, Ownr. 67S-26U. 1,<;;;:,~~""'~:--;:...,-·I REALTORS n . -erungs Seeinc ii Believing!, Nirar.Nir•port P••t o rrfc , Realtors OCEANFRONT Hse, 2 hr.
S(l-5110 l Bedroom, 1% Bath--2 car BY OWNER . Huntington 8e11ch 1400 7682 Edinger S225 mo. Winter lse. 3102 W.
........ ---·---
O-n Evenin~s -·--·garage. E nclosed patio. S C .-.. •• "'"Sl<O Oceantront. r-• --WE T LIFF AREA "' 900 -~~ 0' = DUPLEX e 962--4454 e UGE R~TY Wall to wall car Pe t. l I -rv. STEPS to ocean! $125, l BR
• ..,~~~~~"!!'!!"'" -•. CM ComplC'tely renced. FHA 4 br. rpl~, au bltns. ~v ~v • ·Overlook The Cit former Lge bedrooms, <1) each, near ·~..,~!"'~..,~..,~I assuinablr loan. s23,500 Full crptg sprinklers pool·s1zed Try 1 . . . Y 1 cottage. Pets, sgl!r. welcome. ~
downtown, C.M, Park. Wo-ANKLE DEEP Price. 877 Daii-eU st, yard_' Near all '5chools &: 0 imagine 8 q\llet cu · Blue Be•con * 645-0111
men's Boys ... Girl-. Club. SHAG CARPns Eastside Cost• Mesa 548-71 2lt \Vestclilf 5hopping Avail for de-sa_c street. La~e 2 slot)' ''Model Home" \\'INTER s Br, :z· Ba nr
.lnnesi force• ""· ASSU1'1E $22,300 FHA LOAN. ·m ed occ ' Spanish adobf> 'v1tlf J car Beach. S300 mo. 1 ,0 1 Moflt populai-].tf'sa Vt'rde 3 $190 fl1o. includes taxes. 1.GE. R·2 101 w/older boose, 1 m · g&ragf'. Enll'r home lhru 4 Lac'henmyer Rlty bedroom model.'! full ba1hs. r~reJ<.hly painted 3 Bdrms, Only S18,500. Owner/Bkr. 2 '>O~_L Y $31DrSOON 8 Spanish \vrought iron gale $27 ,500/Low Intl Seashort" Dr. 646-5813
CALL 646-3928 or 545-3483 Romanlil' brick fireplur:e. l If Baths on cholct' HARD· Eve!!. 675-lrol or 673-~ ... 124 Jgh land ' · • and c a r p e If' d courtyard, Irnmac l BR. Comer. 1.fany $185 at the Beach. 2 Br, l~ ..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,>! Covered patio, paradise i11 \VOOD FLOORS. 12' x 16' e EAST SIDE.J br, 3 garage. 642·15t.t or 642·9996 Beautiful 4 bcdrm home with extras! Best buy! ba. Child 0 .K.
NEED Man or woman real landscaping, large lot , dou. sunken Rumpus Room. Cor· $24,000. Easy tenna. By DOVER SHORES l fireplaces, lorml.I dinin&: HAFFDAL REALTY Blue Be11con 1i '45-0111
estate salesman -sales or ble garage. All ihi1 ror ner Jot. 2 i.;cpurate-yards. O\\'T\Cr, &IG-2985. SACRIFICE SALE of fabu· rm, family rm, and a black1===='14=2=-44Cl"==DS"===::;
rentals. ~.500. Jo'HA and VA terms. Priced to 11ell et only $26,500. Jous 4 -BR. 3 Ba. home-at leather dl'n, a perfect place I· Newport Shores mo "~ 2 BEDR. house, by owner, · Stepheri90n Realty See ii. ~ Rltrs. CALL TODA'{ Jo"'OR o& <.""lose 10 !!hoppin&: an d S77,500 land included. Will to unwind alter a Jong day. Fountain V11lley 1410
306 Marine 67>4000 TAI LS, school. 54()...9148 1 consider lease/option, Assume an l'Xisting CI Joan · -"·="---'-'-
CORONA HIGHLANDS Balboa Island M. M. LABORDE, Rltr. ===b=w="="="='·="'='==I at 6~t intcrcs1 and $282 Per 69/a Xlnt 4 BR. pl.us formal din ___ ;_;_-'----e Ii ACRE 3 br houap, zoned mo Assume nlA Joan. 3 Br, "2 :'~: e~~ ::i. :~1~~r: 2629'-_"'=Ha~"'°~'ec· =~~~C-~I. r:~~:a Real ·~:~:~67!6;6 ;; =;:'~::""'::E::'.::S::id:c•-:· ==::'::'"':::1::86: l:B::•::y:s::h:;o:;re::'----::=l:22S::;ll'. ~~~~·~:~~i:~Y ~';!:
4 BR 2~-i baths. I mOs leue,
$300 per mo.
\Vinton heal Estate 615-33Sl
Irvine Ter race
also 3 car gar&.gt'. \\!Xie 00 $22,750 WITH FHA 2 Hou.sPs on I lol S'll,000 -'""I blk bott I LOAN 4 ilOUSPs on 1 lot $46,oo:> ~~\UNC, open tie&med t6J..4471 ( -J 546.ltOJ ~~..., ~ 531.;~0 poo . 4 BR, ·3 ba. Bay .l. Ocatl
view. In Irv. Terr, $100 mo.
Bill Grundy Rltr. 642--462> .n.5~t~.OPEN-.>. EVES r, House• on I lo• S49.500 Mesa Del Mar 1105 ceilmg, 2 br. lg. lvs:. rm. ,.... . . . . ,~ Payment less than rcnl in· \ $36 000 6% 642-1905 TRULY ELEGANT 2407 E. Cout Hwy c\udc11 r:verythlng. Vet)' at· 4 BR. 2 Ba. home 528·950 ---------I f1'p c. ' ' S•nta Ana 1620
Opposltf' MacArthur Blvd. tractivf' homP near -1 \~ Oceanfronl 101 t~ $46,000 LEASE-OPTION w-1 I'll 1230 Over 2,800 sq. fl . ol iracious ~-mile) to beach! ll'l rt. dt't'p Laguna \\•kender, ,. es c 1 living in th i11 2·story, over-N.E. Santa AM , xtn. niCf' &
ID II\\ ·' Ill \I II
Ill. 11 1\ 1\1 .
' •'
Golfers I
You can'1 mlu this one · such
11 scttina; • along • beautiful
fa.i:way. Lovely one 11or,i
4 l.. f&mily w/din~ & (amt'
room* A ttal charmer.
Open Evcninl's
Ml•UID ---GEllEALTY -·~ ....
Partial Ocean Y'iew
011 t~ BluJ(s, WesWde,
Costa l\1esa, 3 Be.droom~.
dlninc rm., "HUGE" family
room. crpll't, drps, dble car
gan,ae;. quiet cul _de 4 P <'-
11treet. BeauUf.ul yard. $29.500
Wells-McC•rdle, Rltrs..
1810 Newport Blvd., C.f.I.
;j48.. 7'29 Evn: M4-06M
-Sea & Salls
Vlewtd trom lhi1 beautiful
CUJ1tom hoiTW' overlooking
Nt.wpurt.llarbor. 3 Be<l,toOm.
The
DAILi
PILOT
ORANGE
COAST'S
leading
dr:n ,l dining room. Under M k 1 pl'lced .. l62.000. ar etp ace · PETE BARRETT RL TY
TIRED of t.blt old tumlturt?
to rtplact. Josi watcll the
furoltura
co ilin,,. .... <:l&iiilli.n--
Stctlo"·
grounds -room ror pool. acre SlJ,OOO DECORATOR'S HOME ---1 sized 4 bedroom hbme with clean 3 BR, 2 ba & lam rm, $:axl-mo util pd. 2 Br hie. Nr.
Spacious bedroon1s, den, IUX· Hurry ~L;,1;0;;,,00'~~698 3 Bedrm. forn1al dinlng + WESTCUFF separate 2{J" 25 I!. Family ~~o sell . Bia 541-~ mrkt &: restaurant Adulb
uriou!I sha&: carpeting, drap-\1u·gp lamily room. $350 LEASE·O-ON Room, push· bulton kitchen I.:,=;.·:===== only, no pets. 673-8936
cs. Price reduced Sl,000 for •BEACH BARGAIN• (l.tonth including gardener. r-11 and UNCOUNTABLE EX---1===:;=====
lmml'diale sale. Vecanl -O\\'ncr bought another, quick R Large, 4 bedroon1, 3 bath on TRAS on a DOUBLE LOT. L11gun11 Be11ch 170$
move-right ln! 54().1720 !:&le nct>ded of rhis immar, 4 Jean Smith, ealtor HUGE lot with alley access. Assume-sutrje-ct 10 s~ gov-L-/S I F ·-L
Tarbell 2955 Harbor Br. homp I blk. to ocean. $360/flto. Lf'ue with pur· emme.n l loan and totaJ PAY· eile a • urni..-:ed * OIARMING 4. BR. or 3 BR
2300
Hurry . sil.950. Sub. trms. 646.3155 chasp option at S4S,9SO! menls o! S~2. SEE. L~vely Beach Condo Ir den. Bal Pen, Avail ~t-
BUSIEST mar ketplace in CAYWOOD REALTY -----'----lw lk & l w lk & l Avail Sept 15 for lease thru June. :z BR up1tairs, tum.
!own. Th< DAlLY PILOT 6:W6 \V. C°''' H"'.Y., NB a er ee a er ee J'"" or 1?n"'· 2 BR, 2 BA, 1.,:llOO:=:. ;;675-==1971===='1 541-1290 TIME FOR uppeor "'Ith living, dm1 ng, r·
Classified section. s a v " QUICK CASH 2M'J Weslclift l>r. Rei1.llors kitchen area~ main floor ov-l ido rile
( Fo.· RESULTS you can De-THROUGH A ~77tl 1"682 Edinger "rlooking . beautiful p ool.
2351
money, time · cfforl by pend on, Call the super-Open 'Iii 9:00 P~f 842A45'1 54().5140 l...a.rge rff'r port plus 1tor-
S a I es man. .Daily Pilot DAIL y PILOT SY"owner-l br, Jiv rm, din $ 1000 age It con1pJetc laundry fa-
3 BR. 3 be.. off·w11.ter home
Furnilhed -$-150 mo
Bl.II Grundy RJtr. ' 642-4820 1hopp in1
annehllir.
Jrom Ctassi · 642-5618 -place WANT AD rm + fa m\ly rm. 2 ba. New cilitic1, All bcaulitully Ir
d l.t charge it! fU$S & drapes. \Valk to all BELOW MARKET I completely !umlsht:d, linens,
schls & shop'g. $·l6,500. Assumt; G.I. lot1n. total china, etc. if desired. on)y 1 :.B:.•;:llioe:::c...::l•~le::nd.::;. _ _:2::355::
1000 Gener•I IDOD Gen.rel
$@~oU1A-lt£~S9
·
The Punle with the Built-In Chuckle.
Q l!.ftJrrC~o kiters of lho
four acrombled words be-
low 10 fDHll four si~ple vr0Jd1. I NAYVIT , _' I I I I I
I NI·S E C I'
• 11 I I I 1
• s r
I c E, E A p I f f · Overheard abour 0 play. I\ I I I • girl on the beoch: i'She con't
twim a 5troke, but 'he know s
I T E G S I D I oil !he -in town." 9·:11 t,.--,l,_.;"I ~1:....:rl :..,.l-i e c:-.., .. ,,,. .i.~k1. """"" -by l1fli11g In tho 111idng word
• • • • • • you dt:Ye~ ''°"' -.p No.. 3 be'ow,
lDOD ASSume IJ;e ~!.'/• Jot.n. monthfy $228. Submit down. 100 steps to private bl'ach. &12-88.19. 3 BR, 2 BA, r.ltt. kit., likt: TeMis court & .2nd PJOI al· \VJNTER Rental, Nrly new 3
nu crpts, drps, lge cov patio so on prope..ru wlth gorg. BJt.-2~1' ba, w/Pltio, tripe,
lb . k BBQ • Y a, ....... ""' "'5, SIM;23, Univenity P•rk 1237 'v ric · ~ Jandscapinc thru-()UL eves/wknd!I 67S....12'JS
I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;::, 847-8.107 E\-es: 968.1]78 Easy aeces. to IJ\lper mkt, 1,=.:;:;::.::=::...::::::=:_-
m &hopping, etc. $325 month, 2 BR's ea. <:harminc Cape
Tl.LE ROOF ~: 1 •!1 winier w~. IVUI considor Cod ns Ame°""' S250: • J: •• Cheer,v moder n l2T Large-g_arden & patios: sunk. •' 11 f,L • lease -purchase or outright
l'n ll\'1ni:-: tn1, Ue, lamily • • •...,.. • 1u1n sale. Adul~ only for ftnlal I ;;;Ai;m,,•;:'hy:::.;SI::,· :=.122:;:::~.::':::';11~'·=-= I
nn. 3 BR. A houSt> full ol purposes. Reis. 499-21.52 AM 1010 So. Bayrfont: 4 BR 3~i
".harm. Owntt wants acUon. Deluxe 4 Bedroom or 837-4791 anyUme. ha waterfront home • l Br ~l.500. flL\ Appraisal SJl,450 * LARGE }·AMILY HOr.tE ~ baG~ndy, 'rupt.trllo<. ..k.2 -e Red H ill Re•lty Asking s:ll,990. 1.lln. downM 1 4 BR, 3 BA, excl\Wve area. _,.,
Univ. Park. Ct'nler. ln<ine .FHA. O\.\'ner transl. UI • .i-A.-..__ 11eU! Call 847-8531. Li·w05 room w,i.:avy .... am Call anytin1" 833-0820 ceillna, Jlttplact:. Roomy
E11tbluff 1242 QfAL ESlAfl
MA~T
kitch«'n w/bn'&Xt.ut art'&.
Separ.ite dlnlrc room. Spac-
ious n1aster bedroom w/firt.
place. waJk-in cl09t:tf A:
SA VE S2500 thi~ wknd, UPPf'r ''0-,------4---•0CNn view. RtcreaUon room NeWl>Qrl Bay condo 4 BR. 3 VNER Desperate, l>r, 4 w/wet bar ott l&flt Anthony
ba. fom1al dln'g, ~t!I, drps,· ~· formal din rm, 25()0 111 fl pool, Private tennlt couMg,
bltn!! Like • ne"" $44 ooo 11. alL Sep lam rm. brick Opt~ Sat It sun, J~S. ey' on; lrplc, a.II elec . kit, priv•cy beach, panted 1att, Only
&14-4869 rear yard, A_gku,g SU.500 or $89.500.
• take. over ni~ low Int CJ LtNGO REAL ESTATE
L-e Be•ch 27115
RENT4LS/L!ASIS
fi"tntNISHED RENTALS
2 odrm. al Victoria Beach,
Exe. view, fh'l!plc, A ff!W
atepg to und. Le1.1t
1275 Mo
Chann studio, dtck w/oeean
vltw, octan •Ide of hWy _.t
\\"oodg C.OV~. Leue
SUS 1-fo.
---loan. C&ll 9&S-ll31 or lNVESntENTS ___ 1 Coron• def Ma r 1150 ~. 31125 cour t-hey, s. JAcuna
2 UNJTS.Lrt 2 BR home ...... NE\V Hom~ by ownt.r-l 499-1397
PiflSSJON REALTY 494-t1711 m So, Coast J1wy, wsuna
BEATtf'UL Cond e · """""'°"" 2 br, ' ho, trplc, pvt Madi, pool, etc.
350 mo. Larry CJoey wkdya:
114 /-5'4.i-6614 : S un'l
it4/499-31)28,
huae brand nf'W 2 Br l <ltn btks. trom btach. 2 Bdnn. I e $750/ DOWN e
•pt Cood lo<:. Good fine. By den, fully car-pr.led •nd Ptnnantnl Ocean view Jot.
owner,~ or $43-i!l.U. draJ!f"L $21,m a:1n ... dwn~ $S.900 f /P, AL4'ume bat on
Save )'OUt rnftMl! 5SW296. ' vtbtl~ JOl\ll.. Bkr. 417·12.lD
---1~-tod~ -Sell tomorrow! BY Own~ 2 BR 1..i:nh11t •• °" -49'M632 fl\.'f!~.
SCRAM·LETS ANSWIR IN CLASSIFICATION 7000
Fu t n.sullll "1th • Dally s.d f'J'>tl, rmt. SM lo.n, You aOn''l'" ner:a-=-a cun to
Pilot Clas.sttlcd Ad •. Olal $39 mo, Sl~,000 ti:rms. Draw Fail when you plaCt:
JtlrtcC MMIJI -NOW! 912-159-1. 11n <11d In !he DAJt..~ PILOT
l"BR:"flit" rtaiC, oc:ttn vu 3
bib to Cl'f"k'f!nt Bay. AvaU
Oct.June im. 49~3
•
*I ,\ppr
horr
'"" \VO
Hon
VER
VAC
l~rr
So.
"" '46-
*I
Chee
''" oko
Hor
\\'Al
old
BR,
'""' Coa ,.,.
$145-
Patit
Blu•
$150
pet,
Blu
Cos
~101'
bltr; ...
clu)
:>46-
, J
Ver
Rr/
.SJ!:·
pet~
3 B!
Jor
125( m .,
2651
$135,
yer
Blu
if
Ad<
183!
3 B
PA
S25!
3 Bl
"' ~le
2 Bf
mo IV• . , ....
Pb
e I
'" •'• ""' ...
BA\
2'1 "•' L<•
Nr
• 8
hltl
• Ro: 513
Uni -J"or
Pol
I ,,
..
'
RENTALS
Hou"' Furnl1hed
Loguno llooch V DS
2 BR, U~I'""" 3 Arch Bly
Seich privll,ge~. S 2 7 5 ,
<ffl&..223S'cr 499-3403 agent. ·-San Clem •nte 2710
COLONY covi:;
2 BR. 2 BA-ADULTS ONLY
NO PETS $225 492-360~
Duplexes Furn. 297S
NE\VPORT BEA<;:'ll
!3.J:'i E. 811.iboe, 1sl fir duplex
1vntr/yrly, J br, 2 ba, ba,y &.
ocean all xtras-~·1hr/dryr,
it't"nu1ker relrig, gani.gf',
frplc, saod showl'r, dshwshr.
O\vner 213-700-7173. .,.....
RENTALS
Houses Unfurnlshtcl
RENTALS RINTALS RIMTALS RINTALS
HouH• UllfurnlohM . Apll. PumlohM Apts. Puml-Apto. Unfumlohod -~. corona del Mar mo ·H..,ll!ltfOn ....., -Hunll"!"'!' llo..., -~· Mato 1110
J 11.R. L_lk.__townhou~:...
Pll!.k><' lft'. po~hj shag
carp., drai)es ~ • ?.fa.
lellSl'. 67~992 •
J BR, 2 ba" delux duplex,
frplc, garage, Iaurvtry, 90lt
\V&!t'r; $290 yrJy;-67·3'-Q98, ·-----Huntington Beech 3400
3 BR, 3 BA, din rm .. crpt1,
drps. 2000 sq ft, nr heh,
$300. Bkt. 811-8531, eves
96'-"65
THE HIGHLANDER
4•Scottlsb Treat"
16161 Porkslde Ln.
Mgr. 142-lKf
San .Diep ~!\"W)' to
Beach Blvd, 4 blk1
So. to Helt, w. on
Holt 1 blk.
* * * * El Puorto~ .. )lp11.'
* • * *
1-2 ........... """· Sl30 up lncl. utUIHt1
Al.o f\lm, Poo1 ~ ~atlon
atta. Quiet Envlrollment
Oll sttttt parklnr. No pell.
1959-1961 Maple Ave,
c..ia ......
Also Garqes tor rent
ORWNS, APTS.
-', 1,\-. Stp.-, 21, WO DAILY PILOT
RINTALs'· HNTAU _ ilNflLS I RIAL E STATE
_ ~ UllfumlshM Apt!: U ........ 1-• , Apts. ~nfurnldloil ~o_n_o_ro_l _,.... ___ 1 Newport llMch 520I C...... ., Mir 5250 hnto Ano 5620 llu•l""l•-Ronl ol
p;;:,.~Rl<;u-;.:;;:=;;;iii~:r-:;.:-.:,;;~;;_ 1 I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiiiiil-rCANiii1i Bf BEA j -
PoOI•. 1' h!nnlt Ctl, $750,000 .... ~
Spa. ,,.m 1175 to 145t). -
Bach. l er 2 Br. Alto 2 st)I •
Townhou1e1. Elec, kt, pri. ON TEl'C ACR.ES
pat. er bal Subtrn prk;, pot J • t lift. l'llm 6 UDfUnl
maid 56', cpt1.,drpl JU51.-N.-J'1rep1aces / prty. pt.tlal I
ct Fuhion .l1l at Jamboree Ploll. -r.-. O:iotDn Bkflt,
-San J0&quin Hiiis Rd. *» Sea Laae Cdll tu.2tiU
844-1900 tor leuin& 1.t'lfo. __ (lrfacArttmr iir. CbNt Hwy)
Sina\e Story
South Sea AtmCfphere.
28tdloom2Balha
C~ta k Drapes
Air Conditioned
------HARBOR BLVD rronl. l!tx3':"'
w/mtroom. 2UO J!arhor
Blvd. cl'4, UJO mo. )'W's
leue. 548-0183.
6 UNJTS EuWde Colta
?ittsa. 2 ,.BR. each, ~·
P9Ql .... GoOd rental tiu.
Pyi'imid Exchan1cr1.
67!5-8800,
Offlco Rontol 6070
ON THE BAY »
Enjoy watir!ront activity lo-7115 I. 707"1 ORCHID SUPER-DELUXE QUAUTY ~!her w/ the ipaciouantll 2 Bdmis., 2 balhl, with 1un. Private Patio& 1·2-3 room. up fc 3,000 1q.
of luxurious apt convenlenc. deck, '235. ALSO 3 Bdnn1., ft cUI~ 1uUes. Imm~d. cc.
lA QUINTA HERMOSA ADULTS ONLY " w/ the atmocphere of a 3 b6tha. Carpetod, draped. lloatcd Pool cupancy. Oran"' c n t y.
3 '-3 BR. Ava.11., Private P&· pvt. home. Let den, 2 BR. bit-Im .. Cov, g&rqe. 1325 Airport Irvine Ccmmtte. FoUnt•in V1lley 3410
"Modern Spanish" &, pool ·lndiv. laundry tac. 2 BA, trp~c &: lge wattrfront Mc.: min. l year lease. Plenty ot lawn Complex, adj. A!Ji>orter
VACANT 4 brt2 ba, F'rplc· 16211 Perkt ld• Ln. c:_~-~.,,. (Nr. Oranee Co. Airport; TuL patio, $650. 613-3414 &n.ao•• 0 Hotel &: Restauranl, bank1,
crplll/drps, bltins. $250/mo Mgr, 147-5441
1
.._. Un at 17th St; nr, Wt1tclltO. 2 Br, w1fUrn. Crpt&. drp&. jj':'iiiJ;i~"~~· ·Carport &r. Sl.ora&e San Diego & N'pt. Fwys.
lsr opt. 521Mi997. FURNISHED MODELS NOW OPEN patio, pool, bltns. Sl60. -·;·' 1 L& lUDOF..N Vlu.AGE UNCRO\YOED PARKING
4 BR/2 BA: Bltins, covered Lush landscaping, cabana, cov er,ed court· 17411\llUn, Co11a Mesa SeacllH Manor Apu, l525i!----------I GARDEN APTS LO\\'EST RATE.Ii\
patio S260/mc 1st I: last r:a~s.' sunken liWim't pools, BBQ S & fOUD· lif&r. Mn, Carwi. 642-4641 Placentia. ~54&-2682 a 1k NEWLY~ unr apt, upper 2500 South Sa.Ila Owner/mgr, 7172 D~~! Dr.,
Gene r1I 3000 642-2264. about cut discount 2 Br. 2 Ba, Jiv IE-din area, Santa Ana '*' ~1525 Rm. 8, Newport uc:au•.
"THE ULTIMATE IN' APTS" Like Living In .Your 1 ~.~B"A=Y"'F"'R"'O=N=T,-,_•.-1 '"ndock. Lowor '"' BR •!======== 833-3223 Court"' to B"""' -~ER. re~~>t!~i~_NP~. S32!>,_L_a_g_u_n_•_a _ .. _ch_~-3-7-05 1 BR's-From $150 2 BR's-From $175 OWN HOME.• I I liv nn <.'Ombo., bath, priv L11111 .. e Beech 5705 MEDICAL. DENTAL
i BA. h<>Use. (:d r.f 1295'-. Al.I util. incl. furn&. ~nfurn. Why pay S175 for an apt;. LUXURY Apt1. Stertl,nt patio1-2 car 1ar. Ne ~s. 1 ..... Suites avail, Best lccaHcn. * NE\V l ~R. JiOhtE * ===:;;:=;;;;:;:=,:..:;;=.==::;;:;;;:::::====I when: we can rent you one at $375. e 642°2202 blk rmm Ocean. Yr round Xlnt parking. Modern lacll· ·t BR den. Lag_ Bch. S650 S300 r>10NTll
1
-1..--.--tor Slto, 2 BR., newly dee, rental $325 mo. 548--4().12 ' OCEAN VIE\V Lr I tlies. Immediately avallablt,
Hal P inchin & Assoc. PLACE REALTY 494-970-t Co1t1 Me11 4100 Bel--crpt/drp encl patios, apac N•wport Heltht t 5210 LRG New Apts, 2 Br. 2 Ba, Bachelor, 1 A 2 BR aplJJ. BAYSHORE CENTER
Realtors FOR L~e 3 br. 2 ba. ocean . gmdg, 2'Poo11! Adults only. en ?i1arguerite, So. ct Hwy. Fum at unfurn.. Crpt.s, drps, 601 Dover Dr., N'pt Beach
675·4392 Anytim• vu. hse. $275 mo. 4M-2250, * SUNNY. * LOy-ELY Bayfrnt apt Patio 2283 Fountain Way E. (Har .. NICE 2 8 Pool Sundt<:k BIW, cpts, drps, porch. bltn1, patios, walkin g
l'ak• A-Da1"ly-D1"p <94->171. * ACRE$ -~,','.''',! 1175/m<>. .uu pd. bor. turn W. on Wi!lonl. B!tna, c115.' Adu!~, no pell: 1225. 540-7983. dollnce to town. 100 Clill •, 67S.40SO 0 ~ * . rly avail. 67H790 I''" 64, ~i "" _ 1-:7';::::=:;;:::====::1.Dr!?!:.,'"-Lq~':.· ,1!B~,h~.~·~94-':'S4~98'-
AND RELAX! 3 BR. 2 BA, 2 BR, 1 Ba. •ln&'le story ....... ~ ' .... rowo 1iid0 Ill• 5351 ADULTS ONLY -···errca..& Stove, rerrig, carpets, drap-San Clemente lJlO * .Motel·Apts~ * 2 BR. $250 _mo yrly. 315 E. garden" unit Sha& crpts, __________
1
u nhlm. 1tudlo f175 utll. lncl.1-~==-==,--.=-
"!!. POOL, Chlldren okay. Studio & 1 Bedroom•· Bay. BalbOa. lnq. Apt c . drps. dls.hWasber, pe.tlo, Irvin• 5238 (2) tu di t $135 tll DESK SPACE
1185/m". 3 Br.? Ba vu U2 San Diego LO~ RATES 673-lS2l er 5'&-7TII. beam ceiling, frplc, sep t.RG. BAY viEW. 3 BR, 2 ·nc1 rn •tuu°' 8
2" I R I " " , BACHE L 0 R'S APT· Adult •· i. 1170 BA. Cpts. d...._ Adults. y..i •• 1 · Ph co • Dwyer 1.3: 305 Ne. E Ce mi no •• Hom ... F inder s 645-2951 open Sun 3--6 pm Lease .$l90 D W k er Month ,. · cara&e. .s, ""·pe ' ·r-•v 437-6204 S C l t 548-0442. ay, ee Cmpltly Furn. S120 /,mo 26."il Elden. 537-0062 or NOW LEASING! le&Se.64Z--Oll07,67S-8592. -• on emen e
LANDLORDS!! e Color TV Air Cond. 1ncld utl. 6r~2825. 549-tl678 Mgr, Unit P . Vi ILK TO BEACH! 492-4420
Vacancy Problrms Ended Dana Point 3740 • Pool &: Phone Serv incl New, family and adults units Balboa ltlend 5355 Fmm $160. New 1 & 2 Br . . FREE supply of quaJilied, _________ e ?itaid Service avail 2 BR. Beachtront. Crpts, VILLA MESA APTS. w.ilh total recreation club -"-""'"--'==--= POOL. 2175 s. Coast Hv.'Y. DESK SPACE
I t t 1 • 1 Signal So. cf O.C. drps, resp. adults: only, no 2 BR, Priv patio. Htd pool. and pre-schOOI. 1. 2, Ir 3 LITILE BAL. ISL ,~ --497.t"'"
ll":nan s ac no cos 0 you. I BR., Ja ..... e liv rm. kit Fai ......... ,,nd, children, no pets. &U--0753· 2 car encl'd pr. Children ..... __ ,_ $150 N ~. G --"" -222 Forest Avenue J Ask for LEE or OLA • •a •a·~~ 1 I •••u.nn• uvm , r. a ........ en rand Canal, Waterfront. NEW Ocean side Apt!. with
832-6600 Stov._.. I re.frig, cptg I drps, 2316 Newport Blvd. NE \V LY DECORATED-1 "'elcome, no ~ts P tue pin;. golf, schools, Just Beat dock. 2~ BR, 2~ BA. -1. .. lrom SlOO month Laguna Beach
garage. $150. 496-3308. 548-975.5 Br .. nr ~chts • shop'g. $165 mo. i19 W. Wilson. 50Ulh of San Diego Fwy. en Unfurn. Avail Oct. l. $350/ P' •CE REALTY 494-9704 4,. 0 ,66 * SURF & SAND * =====:::::::::::::::= -A-.,.-.-ul~co_.c,A.:.;p.:"..;• '-.-,tra-cu~ .. -,-I $150/mo. Util pd. 6f>-58lO. 646-l.25l. CUlver Dr., Irvint. 8.13-3733. mo. yrly. Ne children or'I=~=======~ ~~
NEAT! 3 BR in Beach Atta. Condominium . 3950 Pool, Util paid, Garden YEARLY 2 Brms. 2 Ba, QUIET ADULT LJVlNG PARK WEST pell. 673-000'1 Rentilt Wented 5990 CORONA de.I MAR: 5
Stove, refrig. Carpet~ & living. Adults. n0 pets. lower duplex. SZl.0
1
• Fam 1 &: 2 BR. Shag crpts, bltm, APARTMENTS R?.1/SUITE
080
. Stcn
1
gGe nd~ .
drapes, SlSO. CALL NO\\'! SAN Sebastian manor, 1 BR-$150 pret. 320 Alvarado Pace. pool, beaut. Jndscpd, S150 Ii: Owned and Managed by Huntington Buch 5400 parking. 1 sq t. rou
Hom•Finde;rs 64~2951 Leisure \Vorld, New, many 1800 \Vallace Ave, C.l\f. 1 BR. Furn apt. Util's paid. $170 me. incl all util. Adultl The Irvine Compaey ~{· 2 Ba. Avail ~i
FOR RENT! I extras, lease Jcr 1 yr. $JS Per WHk & Up $125 mo Adults. No pets, 310 only, no pets. I~~~~~!'!:!".!:!".!:~ " FRESH-AIR ~7949. E. Balboa Blvd. Balboa. 2-11 Avocado St. M&--0979 1 · Walk 3 blkl to Beach!' RINTAL FINDERS FOR LEASE Lrg modem ..
4. 3 & 2BR11omes In Or·•==========IBachelor&lbr,TV&mald OCEANFRNT 4 Br ~NEW 2 BDRM. Bea m Beck 81y 5240 BeauL bl1 2 br, apll. w/w Froo To L1ndlords oceanviewOUice1 .. Shopl,
C ty R I.al •·rt 1' se.rv. avail. 450 Victoria, _,., ........ , -bl"'· · t ange oun · en s i;,... • Duplexes Unfurn. 3975 fll's i Wint~r lse Call ceilings, wood paneling. All I--'-'-------~rs, • · ...... txcep suitable-prof. or buslneu.
-"innMl23:50;--Furn·or-Un-=:;:.::;;:::::;:=;:=::::::=:-1 ~C~.>~1";::::";;;;~:;;==;;::7'i{m-<~ffi12~<."'::!!J!====1-m:-feature•.-il6S.-Adul~ .. VlEW: 2 BRl ~drps, refrig. $150 &: $15.5. l child · 645-0111 ·1999 s. Coast Hwy, Lagwa
furn. Ask for BONNI, -1 BR. furn. S14S Avail Oct 5. no pets. Calf now 64&-0073 bltlns, pciol. On trvine~~r..'.~vt~.l l~ok~~~No~-~.,..i~a~/pab~!::· .. =536-~l~'lll.~· 411W.lttll.C... M ... Bch. 494-9471. 832 7800 DELUXE 3 Br. 2 bath crp. s t * "' NN" n -l ~ I~~;;;::;=,_,-,.---,-'-"""'""''--'-=~,_,--,--• <!rps. frplc &: garage Also 2 BR unfurn, $145. Bilbo.I lsl•ncl 4355 * 387 w. Bay tree · $170/mo 6'J3..3690. ~ ..,..,;:kront8~an..1: 0 kt LUXURY New cUi~s. prime *MINI RANCH* NeuroJ:rtHeightsarea,close Avail Septl8.See'M11',Apt --HARBOR GREENS Nvtew IUI 2 ' rff. y UNG Wcr ng coup le Beach Blvd., air, epts, .. ~ .H. 1846 Placentia, NEARLY NEW l Br, 2 Ba, Eo~ Bluff '242 ev.1!1" d x Br., patlc, dt1lre1: 2 Br untu.m apt er "~ g IG shopping and schools. -~ STUDIO ·-•• • bl d ,~. N . drapes, etc. ,,.... or rm. ;\pprox. % acre 3 BR, 2 Bath C 11 f 6 54~ 0 .. 9-r...rn Bachel•r ._ 1 BR. all eleclldi: frplc, patiG, GARD.c.i, & , --~..-> tns, cpts, rps, u ...... ,.. r. house, crpta, drps, bltins, iultes. (2l3). 3S.i.-00li call
home. fenced l'artf. Bring a 8 ter pm J"o.;I a. "u v "" BBQ. Also -i Br. 3 Ba, Lse Bacb,. l , 2, 3BR1. from $ll0. • shopt1 &: pitr. $165 Adlta, fncd· yard, pvt garage, Ap. <.'Oilect
the children. '.1195/mo •. TtIIS RENTALS Exceptionally nice! Sept.June 638-8470. S39w8831. 2700 Pet.rlon Wa,y, CM. NEWPORT BEACH baby ok. s:J&..2131. prox. $135-.$150 me. Have 21.:=""====----
\VON 'T LAST!! • II F 1 !..-~ Belew rental value!' ,:;;;::=;:;::;:=::=:,;;=:;1 S4&03'lO V 'll G d A ti A.....,_......,, 646-4665 * NEWPORT "'p • urn•~ 2110 Newport Blvd, CM. -1 • rine • pta. 1 BR, refria:, bllnl, crpta. ca .... ,. _.....e. Beactrmodem/dlx ctncn:. Home-Finders 645-2951 Huntlngton.aeecfl 4400 NEW Lie 2 ..sR triplex, pvt pso, Four bedrooms with drps-,.pool, near beach, $Ul aft 6 &: wee:~enda. Costa
VERY CLEA?'i, like new and , _G_o_no_r_1_1 _____ 4000_ • NASSAU PaJm1 2 Br -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~r;.I patio, shag cpt.s & drps, bltn balconies above Ir: below. per me., adults, no pell. Mesa or Huntin(ton Beach Air/cond. Htd . Prlv, ~-
VACANT is this .1 bcdnn RENT FURNITURE apt. Furn & Unf. Pool, ping. • CHI range, encl pr. S 11' 5. Gracicu1 livtnc &: quiet sur-Tradtwinds Realty 841'--8511 area. 2400 W · Coast Hwy.
home in a new area near pong, BBQ, shady lawns: ON BEA • 54~7511 aft 6 er all day rounding;; for family with $115-1 er. RIO. Cpta, drpg; DAI LY PU.or reporter and •DELUXE air~nd office in
So. Cst Plau. $1.JO per me. 177 E . ..a2nd St. 642-3645 wlmds. children. Near Corona de:l kids, peti, ingls, itudenti ck. wife want to rent er lease Computer Center BI d t: ·
Familit"S only. Call Agenl * DJRF£1' TO TENANT AVAIL Oct. 5. Lge 1 Br. e Single apll lrom $165 BEAUT New 2 BR 4-plex ?olar Hi;h School. Fireplace, Blu. Btecon * 645-0111 1mall tu.rnlahed or wifurn. Crpls, drapes. Up to 3600 5q.
;)46-414L 24-Hr. De.livery turn. $145. POOi &. carport. e 2 BR Furn. From $285 apts. :Sltns, cpt,' pr iv, v.·et bar I: built-in kitchen bl lrl iahed house ln Laguna Can. ft. 646--74~ or 546-6080.
100% Purchase Option 1846 Placentia, Ste mgr No. e 2 BR unturn $260 patios. Xlnt E-&ide lee $180. appliances, ;I ~· adtn:, re I ·• ytin cr·other O.C, canyon-OWNTWN HNTG, BCH * Budget Saver * Complete 1 BR Apt'-' H. Carpet.s-drapes-dishwaahtt Adlts. See at 356 2 . 20th st. 1135 AMIGOS WA'i 144.2991 eryts, rps, ~· 110 ~111• area by December. 546-6380 Remodeled nlfice, 1 blk to
Check oul this 2 BR hOme! Low as S22/mo. heated pool.auna-tenrds Sl50 mo. 1 u t 1 • days ~1195 eves ocean, Lindborg Co. 536-2?'79 Fenced yard, patio, Kiddil'S 30-Day Minimum Newport BeeCh 4200 rec room-ocean .tewa LRG Airy 1 BR. w/w crpt'a:, Tradewind1 Realty 847-8511. ' · •-. itave, util tm. ntw e NEW DELUXE e e 1 BR. NEWI F'-·'·-. Single 1tudent Cmuaic maJorl NE\VPORT ottic~s crpt &: ot.~ ... SUS/mo. HURRY! * WIDE VARIETY .. tloHmple -....,.,,, u"'l'M"-"' ., J br .,_ •·· I•"'" d · f ~ naJ AN W T Li • paint. AdlU, no pt t s. 3 BR, 2 BA Apt fer lease. N Oce p tio Ad It. wan..,, uuu •-=er .. ,,.,. rps, ocean view, rom ...... Hom•Fi~ers 645-2951 CUSTOM FURNITURE in ~':w,,:~t :..ch• Stturity guardL $135/mo. 6f6.S373 Incl apac. master suite, din L~;Deo-:d ~ sls-:lS~ · atcd apt in CdM to CM area. Call owner ail 6, 675-4644.
\\'ALK to beach. large 2 yr -RENTAL OAKWOOD GARDEN FURN. &llD Avail. MODERN 2 Br, crpts, drp8. rm '-dbl prqe auto door • Call collect 213/691-5228 600-1200 Sq. n. Office. aJ1<>
old home in a nice area. 4 ·517 \V. 19th St., CM, 548-1481 APARTMENTS HUNTINGTON GE kitchen. e.nclc1ed opener avail. ~ A J\tc. $Bl~, 'c BR, CpU:, Drps, e LANDLORDS e 600 sq. It. store • .$00 & $1.SO.
BR. 3 BA, fcrmaJ dining, REMA!tKABLY bus. itts area Ins, anp. FREE RENTAL SERVICE CM 646-2130. rarnily rm, S325 ptr, mo. UNBELIEVABLY On 161h Street btwn PACIFIC garap, Tll!at • • FROM P65·• *Aft f pm, IC7-3m ti
Wall RI•-Irvine and Dowr Dr. • Adults. 120 E , 2)th. • -0 B """"" MU982 Coals &: ace "'" EXTRAORDINARILY 711 OCEAN AVE., H.B. *CLEAN 2 BR. l ~i BA MS Amfaot Way, NB TOWNH USE: 1 a : 962-44~ BEAUTIFUL (714) 6424170 (TI4l 536-1'87 STUDIO. Crptt, d rps. Manapd by Pool-blttna; D/W: patio IL Rooms for Rent 5995
2 lUffiISh'Cd Suites.
Coast Hwy, "NB, $125/mo.
Phone 645-2182
$11;..Redec 3 Br, 11/J Ba. Apt. Vil D'lsere Gerclen Aptt MESA MOTEi: Ole. open 10 am-6 pm DID.Y POOL. Werking ecu pie WILLIAM WALTERS CO. gar, 842-554!-53&-tl47
Patio. Chldrn/iingls ck. Puttin tufall le Manaaed by • ..., .._.96 PRIVATE VIEW :i2';B;iR.;'-i;;N:::,.,:=r,;;Oce::::a11:::-"<y'=rp1:o'.:'c 1---------COSTA l\feu.-"Ne\V oHloe,
Blue Beacon * 64~0111 s~. Ca ~. * $25 WEEK &: UP * I !~Wll.IJ;:!~"~'~W~AI;~~~ERS~~CXl~-;;l;~pre~t.'..d~.~$1~45~/!m~o~. ~~~~:· ~I -patio. C11tts~rpe:.Adulh1 • ..'.. }'fill.'l4LBe an111 al & bug.!. ground. 11~125/mo.
45, pool, rec. room.~bllliards, Kitchen, TV's maid servioe. \-3 er, 3 ba, crps, drps, bllt\11, 2 Bdrms., 2Dathl; <:1.rpefid LINDBOJ\G CO. 536-2ST9 happy too in tlils u~lilri -s.:12-2821 or &esl.OB n
$150 2 br hm at bch yrly. Tot, Heated Pool NEAR ,Huntington Harbour gar, yard, pool, Play art&. draped, blt·ins, dlshMhr. 11tudlc BR. Lots of pnv. +
pet. single OK. . BBQ's, Sauna. furn.-unlurn, 646-9681 New Trlplexes. Quiet area. $210/mo. 546-8393 aft 6. Upstairs. $115 Month,, Min. 1 BR Townhauae, JM?Ol, w/w full bome privil. w/pool. lnduJfri•I
60IO Blue Be ecoh * 645-0111 1 &: 2 Br. &1-Sln&les from \"ATERFRONT. Winter lse , _ 1 BR •·-and 3 BR. 1 r-•-.i..... 1 year leue. crpt, .drp1, bltb\I, wub-dry, Emp". lady er colle;e ;al $S5 Pr-rty $135. See It! 2000 Panone: •• .... &. • 1w·u, 1 BR. Un . .....t-~• .... t"'• • 0 patio, $140. 54s.J.019. 546-6740. -,--
Rd., 6tU670. Between Har. S225: yearly ins. upper, ('X· $175 and up, child/pet ok. heated pool. Children ck. >' . ln.&011 GORGEOUS 0 c ea n Vu: WORKING Or -ll·•• M•l. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I
bor&:N"1PCJ'l: .. 2 BlkN.l9th tra lge 2 br, 2 ba, frpl. elec (313) 59:Z...2623 -846-3559. See ].3i Monte Viata Ave, -. ...., .. ... D' Sal Costa Mes• C:...---3100
kit, FA, patic, d eck 2 BR. PooL Adul t s . C.\f -.... Deluxe 2 Br, refr $175le 1 Kltchen &. home priv. 1stress e -~?:S:· ~~di~h!'!h;,*<I~~~ ,....,From $28 Wk. overlooking water. Dock ex· ·Beaut/Quiet! Util incl l BR. unL $150/mc. Pool. Br $125. Bltns. 536-6720 $50/mo Ref. Morn. 5"-3909. Will sell all er part of 11
gar, M\V crptg, drps, Pools, tra. Adlts, no pets. 67!>--1062. $200/mo. 17676 C&meron, E1ec & wtr pd. Adlti, no Coron• del Mer 5250 2 BR, drps, encl, patio, l1un. * $15 per wttk-up w/klt· acres at the corner cf Falr-
rlubhousc, s215. A 11 , Luxury Slnglt Apts. Complete SAIL INN MOTEL. S42"612L ptli. l\feaa. Manor. 241 dry fac. Carpt, Adlta. $135. chen. $30 per week-up Apts. view Rd. & Sun!knver; near
:>!6-5..lSO. maid servi~, housewatt9 e WINTER RATES e API'S/Royal Ha.waiian. Wllaon Aw., CM. 54&-1'«15 * <X>ROUDO APTS. 2 Br. 1 847~92. MOTEL. 54~ new LA Til'nes Bhir. and
I LOVELY Condo.; Mesa linens, all ut.il, heatejl pool, Wkly er monthly er 3 day Poot rec. nn. T/M, 220 * DELUXE 1 I: 2 BR. • l~ BA., frplc, dbl car· 2 Bl.kl from beach. New 2 COILEGE Or working girl. Volt Rubber.
Verde Country Club area. 3 ~~s, restaurant, cock.. stay. Comer 28th &: Npt 12th st. or 21915fh St., H.B. Carden Apll. Bit-ins, prlv. port & lqe Pool $185 lrup. Br. Apt. Crpfl;, drpll, patio, Bal. Isl. Kit A 1V rm, tele. $37.500/ Acre
Br/21,; ba. pool, pVI. patio. Blvd. Adj Marina. BACHELOR. Util. Paid, p&tio, htated pool, frplc. 613-337! garage. Sl6S/mo. 968-31l2. $'70 mo I; up. 675-3613. CASH
$3ll mn. Leue. Adlls. Ne VILLAGE INN · OCEANFRONT 3 Br, l" ba, * NEAR OCEAN! * Adults. $145 me. 546-5163. 1 BR. ll\ blli: heh. w/w cpts:, 2 BR. crptl, drpl, bltn1, VERY Nice room fG r Ed Riddle ReaJtor
'pets. 673--6028. LaiUBiLBc~A IN~9'1·9'36 tip-top 1cond, ~ ~~:=· 1.JNDBORG Co. SJ6..2579 3 BEDROOM, 1% baths $160 drps, displ, pr. $165 me yr childttn ck. 1:.!!ou65p et I · employed man. ClCM in. 646-8811
3 BR. 3 ba. bo""' mi ideal cov pa· gar. • 2 BR ~·pl••. -•·-10 •~ ._ P'r mooth. Roy McCardle, lse. 3U M ara:uer l te . $130/mc. Call .,_. · r.oeta Mesa. 642-1920. Balboa 675-8740 fl) '174-7465, !139-1905. ..., " ........, ui..T1 "" '1729 673-0825. -·
fer in·law. ptls. kids ok, '!!!!'!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!"'!"""!''l l BR. 1 ba apt, Balboa. 1 blk downtwn, cpt.s, drpg &: 1tove Realtor 543-• Senti Anl 5620 Mot I T II Commerclel $2";)(1 me .. 54~15-13 * A BARGAIN * 1185 t10 pets, $145 me, 536-3507. $135 Fttsh patnt, i br, up-l BR. Crpts, drps, stove, _ _ t I, re er 1"""-'--""· -.,,-=-:::::=I . from b<aoh, no pei.. mo lrl 1150 1 t .,__ ' C rh 5"7 2 BR. neiv cpl'g _()rps, stovr. il 'd 968-lT9" stairs, pr, bltns, Nr 1hop'i re I · • ' a ,... me' OU . • City c,nt'r Block *
& relrig.,..,.. fncd yi'd. S175, FOR SURE! NEAT 1 BR. yrly lse, Uf pai · "' Legune Be1ch 4705 Harbor & Wilton, 548-8.151' + S35 dep. 630 Marliold, .VILLA MARSEILLIS 18,ll4 Sir. Ft. Commercial
2S5&-G ar':n~ Ave., c .r.t. private fenced patio, util in-Avail Oct. ht. d 5'>26.;9. BRAND NEW $6 NIGHT up. $30 wk/up. Jn Lido area. 100% Leased
eluded. $,UO I mo. CALL DELUXE 2 Br.. Westclifl LEASE $95. 1 br tmmac. 2 BR. New pa!nt, crptl, rps, 2 BR. 1 BA apt w/flrlv en-SPACIOUS SUNNY ACRES Motel 2379 Spendable & tax shelter
S135, E-side, l BR hsc. Bllns, QUICK! lee. Pool & bltns. Adult!. <lupl,x. Prefer mat ure bltns. ~/O, no pets. $140. 1~1 2 lld &-.... Bl • ~~ 15' · R 1 A kl SX G k 968-1455 ·trance. Avail OCt 1. rm • ...,..... Newp ort vd, YY1. •· enrn . .111 ng roa yard, sngl.111 o · HOl1) ... Find1rs 64S..2951 $210 mo -no lse. 642--6774. woman er couple. Ne pets. · $200/mc, iOO Narc!Mus. Adult Living 5f&s975S. Realonomlcs Corp.
Blue Beacon * 64>0111 Just for Single Adult1 OCEANFRONT-Deluxe J hr, -499-2233 er -499-3403 qent. LRG 2 BR unf. Cf'optl, drps, 675-1874. Furn. A · Unfum. ** WEEKLY Rate1. SEA Commercial Bkr. 675-liOO
Z BR, cpts, drps. bllns, SOUTH BAY CLUB 2 ba, lrplc, Avail 10/l Sl50 RENTALS bltns.Ncpeta.2!183Mendoi& 28R,l~BA.woodpanellng, Oflhwalher .-..coordlnat LARK MOTEL. 2Z01 e srORE Bldg Sor sale
Adulls only, no pets, $155. APARTMENTS mo yearly. 673-7053. -!~~'!:·,.!U!!;llfu~!!m~l~"'°"!!!!!.-..l :Drri' .. 'i54$.S4iiil''i.21f. ;;iii;;;<j"jii50: bltn1, rpts, drtll, trplc, ed appUallC9I • pJmh Iha& Newpcirf: Blvd, Costa Mesa. ~98 W. 19th St. Be!Ml
1839 "B" Wallace A\le. Newport Beech LRG 1 BR Adults, no pets. I 1 HR. All util pd. $150. $250/mo. &U-1687. carpet .. cboice ot 2 color Tcv.oers corner. 5t8--1168 qt.
3 BR, 2 Bath. COLLEGE 880 trvine Ave. Yearl,.v. 675-8592 0.neril 500I Adultr, infant ck. l Ol UPPER 3 BR 2 BA-3 adulll. IChemea • 2 b&thl • ata1J Ouetf Homtt 5"' FOR LEASE: Next to Hun.
PARK. Crpts, d r 11 Pe s • (livine and 16th1: or 642-0807 I ;;;=:;:::;~~~;:;::=;.L!.A~voc~ado~ . .:!S48-~7~4<~2~· =-;c::: NG pets $300. or fumlshed thonn .. mtrTored nrd· _ tington Harbour, 3200 :Ill· ft.
$255/mo. Call 54~2534. (714) 645-0550 ., OCEANF.f!9!;!fERl, 2REN, :1, r"' YEN DOME 2clooeB~. !d:.·. ,..Pool.,l.. ~ 83>23.'15 er &T>W:l. ~be.~ .... ~~~E PRJV. Room for Ambu latory _ru=' =,,,._=...,=·=====!
3 BR, 11: ba, cp!s, drps. 2 /)li.ARP-CLEAN-2BR. 4 BR's. l•u1~ • 4 BR. 2~ BA. Studio apl -111 """"'" • __.., lady .in lic'd gUf'St home, -
C'IU' garage, pe.tic • .$225. L",,rn It unfum. Hid pool ALS. 673-8088. IMMAADClJULLATTEandAPJ'S! pd, 1884 Monrovia. Ml-033&. Clean! 714 Goldenrod. bar , hua prtvate •noect <mta Mesa. Good food lndutt r iel Rentel 6090
i\lcSt. Verde, 545-6321. r " , . $1l>Nlce 2 Br. BIW, pra:, 1375/ l •~ 7573 patio , plulh Juu::&pbw • served family 1 t y It. ----_, __ froni Sl40. Adults. No pets. LGE, Llke new 3 br, 2 ba. FAMILY Sechon mo. yr H:. ~ • brick Bar-a..r.• , __ beat. M-1 SHOPS
2 BR. House. crpl!. drps, S14!J Teens OK 642-9520 bch dupltx-Sundeck, 1ar. fncd yard, HURRY! 3 BEDRM. 2 •· bl'-, -~ td poo'· .~! .. ; -•· 6*-3391. me. t Small baby. 2077 BONUS ARRANGEi'\lENT Close to lhoppf"I, Perk Blu. Beecan * '45-0111 ....., -.... r .. ..,..,. 1,;.::;,;:;;;;,,-==-=:: Costa Mesa nr 16th t: Po-CM Sept..June. $250 549-0844. * Spacious 3 BR's 2 ba drps, frplc. patio, lar&ae· JlOI So. lrl1t.I St ELDERLY Guests, CC<'&n mcna, 1350 to 2100 Ill ft. 3
Wallace, apt 6 · SAVE US Completely tum deluxe 2 br, * Swhn pool pul/green ' " LRG 2 '-3 BR, 2 BathL S:265 m-1835 • vU, lovely home i n phase power I: hr:at.
• 2br uni duplex • crpt & Cost e Mes• 4100 crptd. % blk to bch, i1ss * Frpl ?ndi~/lndry fac'la Frplc. blt·liw. crpU, drpa, MAR,GUERITE. So. cl H.y. (1.4 ~ ~..:.=·= ftua) Lquna Beach. 49T-l686. 645-0991, eves: 6'7Mi809.
drps, Quif!t elderly couple. & up, 548-2379 1145 °An1heim Ave. encl gar, pe.tlo, M&-lDM l Br. u". Adultt, no petl. PHONE; 517..a200 Mite. Rentals 5"' ?t1·1 SPACE w/0Uke1, lat
Phone !143-04:22 1 br .$1Zi, pool, 1pacious, &· .f LRG 1 BR: t'OSTA ;..LESA 60-2824 2 lge. br, new crpta:, 1',i ba. _Squafts•~:;;;:;,;;ont~y~,"64~,._;;:'1198~.=d.'!l!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!:~~·1 ~::.:..:._::.:. __ ~-~ rear door. 1250' & 2fi00', 1J40
3200 dulls. Ideal fOf' bache.lGl'S. Adults, no pets. Yearly. j ,...,~~!!!!!~~~'!!!!Pj bltns. encl patio a rar. Gd ; ·Legan St, C.~1. 646.(1681 _ '
Newport Bt•ch 1993 Chureh 548-963.l 642.(8Jl or 6T5-lfel FOR RENTIJ Joe. Ne pell. $159. 644-0962 5410Founteln Velley e GARAGE $25 me. l!tth & NE1V bldg., l.~ IG 2300 U.
e LIDO JSLE-i BR. 3 BA t BR turn, $150 incl util, --:2"B°'R"'"'Oco:--a-n"rro-n"1-. --11, l • 3 BR Apartments thru· EAST aide • 2 br, 1~~ ba, 1-'iijiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiil S.nta Ana, Coat& Mna, Nr Baker &: Fairview. 1 yr
ael'O!l'i Imm lennill c.rt. pool, gar, d~spcsal. Adul ts. Winter J..ea!ll! S215/mo. Clll Orange County, Ranging crpts, drpS, bltns, refri1., I ,;"'"'-~289"=· -:===-::=I lf'.'a.se. SUUivan, S.1S..:l176
playgrnd, rlubhoullf' 1., no pet!!. 642-2383. 5f3-49'l8 from $69.50 to $181.50, Furn pool. Ne pet!. M&-6610 5'~ 2~' ~;R c°o':';:o /FOR. FOR lse. 5300 sq. ft. prime ~!~';,,.S6JO mo. 673-1'•189 er ~1 l BR. all utll incl. $120 2 BR/2 BA: Lit er t..se. cpt. or Untum. Ask for JODI. ' 2 BR apt·bltns, crpts, drp9. RE : . m c 'flare h s e •pacc-.Jl/part
V<............,,, mo.ClearH!pdep.$30.2335. $225/mc or Sl1'5 /mo . 122·7'00 • Clean. Jnqui~ 1552-A . n ' fin..7356· lrvl. Ind, Mr Bullard
BAY VIEW·BWF.-S < BR. Elden. CM alt S pm. °""'" Ph' ns.mo. NEW O!LUXE l _IR Coriander, 516-52118. . "' REAL !STATE ~ • 2'~ ba IWT'lhsc. Fem an!a, * DELUXE LG l BR * 2 Ba. Blt·in ,.,_,~ dlhwhr, e LGE 2 BR STUDIO 1% ·General SM. SHOP OR STORAGE
rrpl, <'Pli~~· pool. q,,;,1, gar. adlts. ~rt Hgto. 4210 •hag crpls, drps, lll'I· Flom -BA APT. . ' :J. 1::=_. p,....._ -IN NB 165/MO,
Leut $375. · 2452 Elde.n, ~2768 S11'5, Nr. S, Ccut Plaza. •637~2943*. fa' •' ,.......,,,... • 'r * ~.. *
Newport Holglits 3210 * WKLY·Lov<ly apt. Bach DUPLEX. 1rs I Br. 1w'tt 1p<.1 .:.S4fl.""'lm.:.;.,,;..°'~S4s.~ml~=-=INEW D up I ox: 2 bt: OUl'I. tM DELUXE FOR r....-Ylttpmol 2a1ory
er cpl. Furn. Kitch. $,lj v•k New .,..,. crpta & drpg, AVAILABLE Now. 2 B~ 1'4 Crpt/drps, 1570 Orana:e FOURPLEXIS COm'I bkJc-M1, 3000 1q. fl
4 BR. 2 ba. 2 story liome.
bltns, crpl11, dm. $300. mo.
• Roy !\lcCardlt" R 1 t r , -=·
Unlwnlty Pork
1''cr Rernals in Unlvtnilb'
Part • Turtle Rock, Call:
-I : I• I, ·1 ·1 :1i1
. -I : 1'11II11 r
h t \Vc11tern Bank Bldf.
rve)'t:Uy Patk ·-
Doy .13).41 Dl Nigh ls
" up. ;.is.{)45L ftdec. Adulll only, no pets. baths, carpell, drape.1, $ltl0 Ave .. 54W572. MediW,..,..... Style l..uary (Only 2 le.rt) ln NB ~re\11!!1,
s:~ \VK. ltlotel Bunga.lowt, UlO )'tarly, ~TI65 owne-r, manth. 545-U24 Aa:t -.. --3 'Bedrm ownara unit pht1
,r., 6. APrS Ill wkl"P. WINTER R~&Spoclour 2 -. Newport llooch J~ 1 1 J --_ ,..... ISJ2...,,,, f'tnlal• 1n clto!te .Lots -6111 23~ N 1-~ S4" -· br · Adu! Coote Maso SIOOl~=-.n----"-1 I ;;,;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;~1 ru fl"''J)Ort B vu. O";l o;» , Pltio, C. ta. no -l BR/2 8~: Bltlns 6' D/Yf.. , A4alf Utlq: an•, Newport Beacb, ln-11
Furn 1 Br & llaehelOt "'"· ""'-VIEW ap~ dooe to bolJt ~ OK. '101 w. Bolboo hnllllerl 1 -I w ...., 10.210.11s.ooo Down. ~ Acrt $22,500
2110 Nowporl lllvd, CM CLEAN 1or2 BR. Adulll,... ........ 2 bt:. b<amed crillrc, Bl. YRLY Lio i=1mo. $75.000
l BR ~--.. II. Lrr kit IJ3>.$Lltl. 2421 ""'"· drpa. bl .... M2-«1!3. ,m.cm:;.,:::;;;.,,.,...,,==-c=oc • ,... P I RRON '42-1771 • --r pl t upper. newly ~. E. 16th St NB 64&-lBOl 1:-e ,,,..._..,. ~ • COrT\ ettly ~.
Miis Gnly. No pefl. ·nto~+ · · 2 BR O\.'triooks aolf course., 3 BR. 2 BAs unrurn. C'rp~.: Buol-· Rllllol A60 room jor 10 units, S500J
au k ~ec. 6U40H aft 5:-45 ,._, dol Mor 42JO $!» mo. $73 JoAnn St. Apt drpl, blJc to oc:tan. Yl!&rv : :::_ ': , ... _ down, owne.r ...uJ e&."7·hll-
\; c STS-2211 or &fG..667'1. 1cl:T3=:.· .:.m.nsc:,,:""'====· I •a-I C..-(2) M·lA Iott, Pft)dllt:Uon Pl. -&nee at 7%$'.
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A -
DAILY_llLOJ
WANT AD
.
FOR RI NT
FURN APT COM.
B•chtlor Briehl ll Airy. All
u •• Quiet! 675-5702, M0--2266
..... ~ blk-ui ccnn112' mo &:
up. Incl. uril.
~ Se•vtt-. Cd~f.
AVAIL. Oct, 1, Lilt• I ,Br, ** I BR. WATERFRONT· e .._.Coll!... Ntwt>Orl lla&1lt. 113-7010 or PERRON 642-1 771
""'"· drpt, bltna, or. Mli. BALBOA BAY CLtJB Al"l'. Nfl l!lallr A.... ..,._.,.. 1---............. -.,
no "'''· 11.1'. 64&-1162 l<OO mo. Call 541.2211 Did ,,.. ..., llllnlt Of ....,. * $16,IJ!I *
SPACIOUS 2 I 3 BR. Crpti, DUPLEX l BR. 2 BA. Crpts, Ins that White .Dephant lJ! hnlutlc buy A termJI
drp1. Cpl w/1 or 2 child. drps, blt-"lz-. S2SO/mo. )'ta? tht atUC .,, tmMtlitna YOU Top Porla.linll Lapna Lee.
OK. 6*-0627, ~ _fau<. .. --ean ..,!-Try-lllt-,,,,--~L.4C£-JtEALTY_.434,lllOI
THE QUIOlt:R YOU CAlJ... For an ad to .. 11 IJ'OWl4 l'U'ldiat column In t!w ~ THE QUICKER YOU CA.LL
n!E QUICKEi\ YOU a;u, th, doclt. dlol -ly Pllol Wam Ada. nil!: QUICKER YOU SELL ---,~---------' ..... -"~------~
\
;
,
' •
... ;
'
' l
·-
. .
..
•
I
•
• 31 DAA.Y~lOf MoodoJ, S.,ttmbt. 21, 1"70 '>-jiilliimlliii••••lml!•iil••~AAiNN1iN10UNCEMENTS -A 'IC -'IC -'IC_:_ ..*-: X 1iicl Nl!_TICES
' -ANNOUNCIMENTI S!_~VICE DIRICTORY SEftVICI DllllCTOllY JOIS & EMl'LOYMINT ~ & EMPLOYMI~ JOBS & IMPLOYMINT
.... NOTICES -G1rdonlftt -P11n11,,.. JnW1nhd, -.i.bs Min, Wom. 7100 Jobs Min, w ..... 7100
MOO Announci""ents 6410 • P1porh1ntlnt 61SO Women 70201--------
. • • *LANDSCAPING* -------1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;===;;I DUPLICATING
Found l'roo Ads)
-. -... _ ,..,.,
Wh1ddv1 Wont? Whoddy1 Got?
SPECtAl CLASSIFICATION FOR
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Special Rate
5 Lines -5 times -S bucks
•UlES -AD MVJT l,.CLUDI'
1-Wllll ..... UY1 .. Ir..._ S-Wlllt )'Mii ... llt '8 tr .... ,_VOUR 11MM W /w ... ,.... 4-J II-el 1111\'tttltlnt-
....... OTHtN• ,0. U.Lll -T•AOl5 o-.LYI
FOUND: Mlaloa ~ att•.
appx. M wks gtty -kitten
w/10me oms. wht ehtst &.
Pl"'"· Slightly lamt hack
1~. l.Jttu box t r n d , -· KEYS Found on beach vk .
bland Ir Balboa. Jnqulre
at front counter, Da~
Pilot. 2211 B&'boa, N.B.
SMALL Grey ~female mixed
breed, poulble Schnauzer &:
poodle. ~r. OCC, Fairview
& Adarm. 62n Ciubhol.lSC
Ave, NB
S.\1ALL Black &: w hf t~
shaggy female dog vie
LaPu Rd, Laguna Hills.
831)..7029 •
FOUND Prescrii)tion glasses
on Fair & Forest Lane, C!\I
54&-0921.
8 Units, iood rent.al area. I F~o~u=ND;,-,,~Y~n-<-,-ki~tt~•-•.-,-.-,-,.-x
$.'8,000 equity: ! n co n1 e 3 mos. "Adorable, tortoi5e
$13,500, For house, commer. shell &: v.•hile. 646-&9~ C.i\1.
clal or hone ranch,
O"'NER 675-Q59 SM. Sba.w t>'k t>OQdle. Commercial Income proper-543-€136.
CllURQf Choir a Inge r s New Lawns, lawn ~movaJ. HOUSES. dock.I, b 0 at s , 1 •
needrd, Opportunity f or l'COOY&lin&. AU phlMt land. fla1·pole1, a'l'lyt1n t XLN'T COOK MACHINE "'°''t. 6M-425:1 ,..,. lnotau " designs. .,.,,...... ".,.,. b 1 y OPERATOR
Lk'd ""'"-l2 ,.,. lo<. .... ""'''"'-For tree fllimal< Marvelous $414 to $511 -· mo. Cemetery Lots 6418 SJ&.1225. 6'&-9752. r·
AL·s GARDENING --N"°o""w"'.,.,.,•,-,..--Housekeeper eouNTAIN VALLEY
S1crlflcol !or Gantenlng "mnall lancl. *w~LLPcaUAP~MR "' • I rSCHOOL DISTRICT 4 cemetery Jots, Blue Spruct scapi.na: services call 54G.5l9I )'OU ac ru De-sitt1 I.Ive-In poeition for REQtlJREA!ENTS: Typlng 40
secdon, Harbor Rtst Afemor. Serving Newport. Cd?tl, Cos. 5A8-1444 646-1 _eld~rly lady or couple, Pre. Wpm, 2 yrs, experience with
lal Park, CaU 548.3075 la Mesa, Dover Shore.a, PROFESSIONAL Painters • fll!:r lo work in Costa P.1.esa, dupJicating machines. 1 yr.
_ WestcllU, Quality mater i a f s • Newport Beach or Co'?na general clerical exper.
SERVICE OIR!CTORY JAPANESE ·Gard e ne r workmanshl;. Beach refs. del Mar areas. Do nor drive, FOR TE.ST and, application
;-;-lttf '550 monthly rate, Gen. cleanup: SJS..1050 but have daUghter in law in information calJ Mn. \Vork·
!!,,•_ YI _!'I _ Reasonable, Fret e s t. LOWEST Prices! Highest Costa Me&a who will take me man at 84Ui651 ext. 22:) be-
RELIABLE High .liChool girl 642-2'239 -Quality!. Apts, tts'l & for ~ry shopping on Sat. t14-een 24:30 PP.1 only no
Yi'llnt5 baby 1 it ting af· AL'S Landacaplfic. Tree comm'I, 20 yrs exper. urda,ys. ?ii·ist have l~' '!I' 2 later than 9/22nO. '
lernoons & even in gs. removal. Yard remodeling, 646-4871or847-t128. (lll.)'1 off per "'eek. Prefu1 --,-,~~-;;=o-.--
Newport . Heights a re a'. ~ hauling, Jot cleanop. FALL 30 day s~ial! Inter. weekends off, if possible, as * DRIVERS *
642--0022. Repair sprnklen. 673-1166. &: Exter painting. Free est. 1 have a mobile home in No Experience
CHILD Care, my homc.,any GEN. C lea nup-Tree & Local rel'&. Llc'd A: Ins • .COStaMl;sa v•hlch l willneed
hours, Hot lunch, Lge fncd Sprinkler Serv. Rototil 1, Call Chuck, 64>-080'31 t~ care for from time ·to Necessary!
yard, M-McNaUy schJ, Will New lawns. Spraying. Reas. * PAPERHANGER * time. Please, call Mary Et-Mu11t have clean California
rransport. 1'-1.rs. Fudge, 646-5848. Recognized Authority tinger, 543-3814, anytime, driving record. Apply
548-3834. GARDENING SERVICE Prior Jnstructor 64&2449 B OOKKEEPING/secretar-YELLOW CAB CO.
tXPER M.othe.r nf St. John's Experie~ ,..lapanese • 1t1cAdams Painting Sen.-.. iaJ, parVtime job ~-anted. 18!.~-_ 1M6T~,:3t.
·&-Sonora schools w i 11 ~""' Inter. & Exler, Special ·rates 968-2018. vn;ui. '"""' ba~ysi~, my home, Ha\•e EXP. Japanese Gardener. on aptv646-3645 I ~~~~======:j·-----+----
ret: s. 546-!692. Gen, cleanup. Hauling trees. YOU SUPPLY nu; PAINT Jobs Men, Wom. 7100
HAfR. Stylist, manicuNI,
rnasseue fMnlc or Female) -
Experienced. Hair Hunten
Sa.Ion, Faah Isl. N .. B .
G«-2h-i. -.
HELP YOUR
HUSBAND
You can earn up to $12.50 In
an haul' taking orders from
your friends, neighbors and
relatives for Studio Girl'ir
beautiful Good Houtekeep.
ing approved WIGS,
WIG1$TS, FALLS a.nd cos-
metics!
Top profits. No territory
restrictions. Also seU wben
you v.'Of'k. Full lime or
spare houn. Sick line OK.
Phone: toll free rm.-621-4005.
or write STUDIO GIRL
liOlLYWOOD, Dept. NC·97,
11461 Hart St., No.
Holl)'\\'ood, Ca. 91605, for
full inlonnatlon and frtt·
samples by mail. No one•
will call on you. All replies
contidionlial, Phone today.
HOUSEKEEPER For 2 Br
Apt. 3 days wk, dinner meal
only. Gd \\•ages, Ow n
tra.Mp. 673--$115.
-By Ol\'ner. Nn'J'lt Bch duplex
ve.ry clost to ocean. Alv.·ays
ttnted. Trade $23,00> equily
for small oUiee bldg, N.8.
ar C.t.f. Principlet only.
2Wfi64.55r56 or :213/~7156
Will trade 2 BRn BA Horne
w/frplc drps, \V/W, Renl·
· e<t S250-L.B. for ·591.·10 Cad.
or Old '!,
835-7548
Have clear 2 br 2 ba Condo s. Orange Gr. Pasadena.
$42,000. \Vant duplx trlpl'(,
condo or ? Nwpt area RJ
\Va.rd Co. Rltrs 646-1550
HAVE nic<' 4 BR. 2~1 ba.
home, leased til Ju~. Eq.
$12,000. ~Vant dupi~;1smlr.
house or submit yOUl' idea.
01vnc r/bkr. 540-3862
f!'. free & clear; next to
Seil.rs. VaL $65,COJ. For
units, house or beach prop.
O\\'NER 6'5-6259
PALMDALE 3 ACRES
365' Sie1Ta Hwy ftg for more
remote hi·dese"rt acres, Pref
w/bldg w/access.
OWN ER 646-&S.iS
Resid'I Hill Top View 1 Ac.
hc!it Redlands Joe. for late
model .'.:ad or Confl or
down on income prop.
===::=:::=::=::::===. CHILD Care & roeals age 3 Maint. ya.rd 646--0619 $10 Per Average Room
Lost 6401 & . up. Near Pomona & EXP. J apanese Gardener. Free Est. 557~ e Ancient
----------\Yllso.n. Need own transp. Gen, cleanup. Haul ing trees. •Man"ner 646-I5-10 Maint. yard 646--0619. PAINTL'lG -Ext.-lnt. 18 yrs. m LOsr ~lack fluffy male exper. Ins. Lie, Free est.
poodle, y,·earing ted coUar & Llc'd Day care, 7 ant to 5:30 Complete Yard Care! Accoust. Ceilings. 968-'.-9126. !
bells. Ansv.·ers lo •·Bo pm 'Wkly. Hot meals. Har-JTh~ !>40-48.17 Now taking applications or
Jangles", Vic 19th & bor/Baker, !>16-1539. lSI' Class P ainting &-Paper part time, night shift .
Anaheim, C.M. Reward Ga.'"'dening: Land cleanups, Hanging, }~ree Est. Call
642-45!3. CHILD care my home Cd'.\1. ~prnklr sys roto-cement 5'15-345S.
close to Harbor View School work. C.D. y'ancey, 6'&-5860 SEPT !st, Sht'ep dog lype,
shaggy head &: legs, blk-&
gray w/wht &: tan, \Vhl tip
on tail, 4 yrs, male, "Troy",
Rwd! NB, 673-51131.
673-7247 COLLEGE Students, 3 yrs
. CLEAN UP SPECIALIST expl!r. No drinking. Bill or
* Dishwashers *
HOUSEKEEPER • Pn.ctlcal
nurse . ?t1atu~ lady, 11 P~t
Specialized job knowledge to 1 k\i. SAWYER HOME.
and experience related to 1 _:P..:h..:'..:"_:6-61o,c~!~6=---,-,,,-,;I
sales preferred. Reports to HOUSEKEEPER and child
V .P. of sales. A·l typing, care. Juli time of yr old child
5horthand and secretarial daily. Will need tet live in 2-
skiJls required. Must have nightA wkly & whe n parents
al least five years experi-. ti-ave!. Car provided. $90
wk. Call 6'14-2389
e EXECUTIVE
SECRETARY
• LOVING Care in my Ne\v fence & repair. odd Steve. 5'18--4549.
home -hot lunches, Iencl'd jobs. Reas. 548-6955
yard. Call 646-5151. Ov.'TIJ"/bkr., 833-3916 Yo'll.L babysit my C.l\t. home Lovely clear air for retire-LOST, Sm blk/wht n1ale b hr d " Call ~i y .• ayor\\'<>· mcnt or v.•knds in bi-desert '-"'age, wear'g choke chain 646-6218.
LAWN CARE
}"REE ESTIMATES
Call Verl, 8'17-5802
Plastering,
Re~ir
90 Acres, 20 free & clear,
zoned mobile home park. 1
i\li. ne1v Perris Dam & rec.
lake. Exchange 32% int. for
unil!i. Agent 675-0060,
area. Home & 6 acres. w/tags, flea collar, 646-4165 --~=~~~~--
$30,000 value. Trade for Jo-Ry,·d? CHI LD CARE Gardening Serv. By
J npanese American.
847-2944
* PATOl PLASTERING
All types. Free estimates
Call 5411--6825 ~---------Paularino Sehl Atta cal property. 494-4746 or Siamese cat, childs pet Fe-* S45--32'72 *
t91J.133l, male, front paws declawed, ==========-! =========-=
7 Unit M<'d. J\.1ed •. Dental
Cntr ln North HB. S28,000
per yr inc, Trade sn,ooo eq.
for new or late 3-6 unit, w/
OYi'!lef'I apt , 84&-3221
Trade $10,000 equity in view Strayed from Village 3. Univ, Cabinetmaking 6.S80 Genaral Services 6682 Plumbing
lots, Panorama Heights for ~c~ol~J=833-~3239-~~~--• HOM.' .REPAIRS
trust deeds or whllt of vaJ. BLACK beaded coin purse F ine Cabinets &. Shelving LOWEST RATES Plumbing-electrical. $7.50 Hr.
contalning rings. C.M. area. * 494. 0602 * i'Iot . \Vatcr servi~ and 642-2755 or 642-0506 ue !
Pat 83G-liMO Re\\'&l'd 546-lall Mr 1 • =========""I sprinkler systems 1nstallcsl
Commercial & Income prop..
~rty downtown ~guna.
Trade for. Recreational or
C.Ommercial properly.
FO!'lter & repaired. Cheapest rates D&AJNS Plugged? Drainina: 21~ Acres, view rancho, un. Carpentering 6590 in the county, Free quora-slov.·? Expertly cleaned $9.
dergrnd util, min from Ri v. AlL Black m ix ed-breed lions. Call 6414188 between 24 hr serv. 530-3&54.
erside, S13,500 w/$10,000 eq. male pupPy. "Cinder", vie CARPENTRY 9Afo.t-6PM t.londays-Fridays. 24 HR PLUMBING
Trade ~"'OR income, TD's or 31st St, N.B. GTa-7643 or MINOR REPAIRS. No Job & REMODELLING
* * 494-1652 * *' ??? Owner. bkr 547-6469. 675-640.l. Too Small. Cabinet in pr-RAIN gu tters Ins t a 11 ed. 557_9644 ages Ir o t h er cablr.ets. Rainy season here soon. BOAT: 31' Twi n eng, auto/
pilot, l'adio/ph. & 1\IORE
Top COf!d. Incl: Offshore
Balboaf mooring. Trade for
Inc-boat?! 673-2431, 494-2457
'69 Cpe de Ville, magnifi. SIAMESE, ~·en1, co co 545-ll7S Uno answer leave Free est. Reas! 968-2208 PLUMBING REPAIR
Ci!nt Drk cordoban match ears I tail, wh·t I body. $20 • · No job too small
vinyl top, stereo, Plush in-REWARD! 540-0037. msa: at 646-2312. IL O. LOCAL Girls Want To Clean • 642-3128 • I ~=~~--~--~ AndeNOD Apts. &. P riv, homes. Gd ter loaded! FOR income, FEM blk mixed lenicr, So. PLUMBING REPAIRS ' 69 ~--1 Consl', ---n•-. roo-ref's & very reas. rates! TD'11, or?'!'?. 547-611 Laguna. "Reefe r". No col-,...... ---..--.. ;
e Wll.J.. TRADE e
LIDO ISLE HOUSE
FOR TRUST DEEDS
fing, all home imprvmnt.s. 642-1224. , &: Install. 5'15-6688 Granada Hills 2 llly view Jar. Rv.·d. 586-0761 or 491J..3573 1-==:-.:;=-;::::-;:;:c:-No )oh too :i;m. Free est Remodeling, fence bldg., home, 2800 sq It, like new, Female black Lab w/collar & "'~"\"= -1-& 'I · Remodelinn & ......,.... UJ,7. pain 1ng ~en repairs. • $57,750 val. '4 Br, 3 Ba. lam l'"'s. H.B. "Cindy" Reward. ..,_ XI 1 f' 612 5471 _Repot'r
$15.000 EQ.
&12-6500, CVC'i • ti'TJ.7"89
..., Fine Custom \Voodv.·ork nxas. • n . re s. · . rm. For SMLR HME NB. or 846-9-1"6 6940
Cclfo.f, OWNR Ofc 644-4571 ~larine, Residential, Comm'! Ed's Cleaning Se1vice
GREEN Parrot \V I yl'llow Dave &15-00l4,. 548-4235 Carpets -Upholstery -\Vin-LESS TIIAN $9 SQ. FT.
* * * * * * head, 14", 1-funt. Beach REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS do\~·s Floor Care. 54f>..-O:l87
area. Call 842-2696 * CABINETS. Any :;ize job •
Free plan service, add-a-rm,
ga r. conversions. Licensed.
30 years in home bldg_ Ph:
962--0740
REAL ESrATE
General
6200
BUSINESS ind
FINANCIAL
Bu1lne1s
1--------Opportunities
10 AC. Parcels Tehachatia /iiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Acreage
l\.1ountain w I v i e w of
AnteloPe Valley. H1vy Fron-
tage. $1200 an AC. 714:
546-3.141
BUSINESS incl
Flli'ANCIAL
Business
Opportiunitie1 6300
WANT .JO UP
YOUR JNCOML
IMMEOIATEl Y?
I! you have a car and
can s pare 6 to 8 hours \\•cekly, you can enjoy ex·
AAA cellent extra income.
CANDY AND SNACK \Ve are expanding rapid-
SUPPL y Jy and need distributors to
WE E STABLISH ALL purchase and &ervice vend-ing machines.
ROUTES WE ESTABLJSH ROUTES !
(No 11elling involved) NO PERSONAL SALES
Pl $97" 00 CALLS ! an one ····• ....... ''' JUST SERVICING!
Plan 1wo '· • • · • • • • • $1625.00 l\'lACHINES DO
Plan lhttt ••••••••.• $3250.00 THE SELl.JNG!
Cash Requin?d. Ex«llent in. Vending is a vi$orous 4·
come for a few hours "-eek-billion plus recession proof
ly v.·ork. (Days & Evenings), business. Cash sales. No
Refilling and collecting mon.. credit r.l.sk.!5. Equipment works for you day and ey from coin operated dis-night and even while you
pensers in Newport Beach sleep.
and sumunding area. (Han-Earning!! can grow with
die!! 11ame brand candy and inve~tment starting as low
snacks.) For personal inter-as $600 to $1500. w,. 1raln, counsel, guidf! view in Newport Beach and help you g<'t llOini;:-. No
area, send name, address experience necessary. Easy,
and phone number f6 ft1ulti· enjoyable ,vork.
State Distrlbutin& Inc, 1681 Th is Is the age of vend·
We11t ~roadway, Anaheim, lnJ:: machines. We (Jrovide ~-111 ~ (n4l -. .,...,.. only quality equipment
, .. ~ ..... -,.·-.... • .... ..,,. ...... ~ ........ I plus t he finest line of
Personals 64-05
FREE!
HUNTINGTON BEACH
POWER SQUADRON'S
BASIC BOATING ·
COURSE
Huntington Beach
High Si:hool
Rooms 121 ·A 122
Starting S.pt. 14 and
each Mond•y throu9h
November
* FULLY LICENSED *
Renowned Hindu Spiritualist
Advice on all matters.
Love, t.1arriage, Business
Readings given 7 days a
werk, 9 AM • 9 PM
3ll N. El Camino Rea],
· San Clemente,
492-9136, 492·007ti
Single • WidO\\'ed • Di\-Orced * LIFE
i! t"XCiting if shared \Y/lhe
right one. Stop 1vasling
yours, \\1p have a smart
\l'ay. 5'17-6007. 24 hr, rtrord.
PALM READINGS
Cards & Sand Readings
ltclp in AU !\lallcrs
10. AM-10 PM, 7 days
213 • 697-92'12 La 11.:.bra
FULLY LICENSED 11 snack it,.ms. Get started
ACTIVE PARTNER now 1\•hile choice locations I \Vllnl lo buy sorne l't'al
avallablr. \Vrlte, giving estate lrom O\\'ner 3\\'flY
nflmc. addreSs, phone num-from tht' sn1og, otny place in
Mr and auffl cicnt refer-California. i\lll.)'hc any
enccs. ~ State, \\'rill' P.O. Bo:< 1052,
Costa l\leS11.
25 yrs expcr. 548-6113 Hauling 6730
R.EPAIR, Remodel & patios. "'NT La s · !-========== U!t thl' S"·edc do it . •·. · • \\'O e rv_ice. Sewing •960
49-t-7853 or 673--5417 <":iarage cle.an-up!· hau_:11ng &: --------
I~==========:· hghl moving, a48-:>8ti3 , EUROPEAN Fashion trained
Cement, Concrete 6600-i~"~'~-'~m~~--~~--i offers her talents i n · YA R D / Gar, c J eanup. d r essmaking, alterations,
CONCRETf, All 1ypes. free Remove trees, lvy , trash. also children's clothes. Very
est. Sawing, breaking, haul· Grade, backhoe, 962-8745. reaM>nablc. Simple shifts
ing, & .Skip~oading'>-Servicc JfA ULING $lO A LOAD Sl2 .'<:. up, skirts $10 & up.
& qua!Jty. 548-8668 Bob C!eari Up. Tree S<'rv, Gen. I ;;6':;-;-;3-71~84~'~· --.,==-==
1\lOfi.E Con~te patiu-for Pruning 6JS-2528, S.Jl.&143 QUALITY You"Ve always
Je:ss n:oney. Artistic setting. MOVING, Garage clean-up & wanteCi. Dressmaking --=-
Lie., CAii Max at 644--0687. lite hauling. Reasonable, alteratiol19. Key Say, 17ti3
F . 64_ 1602 Orange Ave., C.M. 64~1292. CEMENT \Vork of·all !dnds. ree cst1ma1es. a-.
"'--est. e Dres.smaki':i-Alterations ~ •= TRASH & Garage clean-up, 7 De · 636-0374 signed suit you. days. $10 a lOBd. Free est. Call Jo * 646-644ti * CONCRETE v.-ork: palios, Anylimr., 5'18-5031. '
drvway11, etc, L Ice n ~e d . Alterations -642-5845
Phillips Cement. 548-6380 Housecleaning 6735 Neat, accurate, 20 year .. e.xp.
DECORATIVE CO?\CltETE -. DRIVES • \VALKS. PATIO SO. ~mcr1can Lady oilers
CALL DON 64i.sa14 ~erv_ice lo ct:an houses,
-======'===='I 1r0ning, i;hopping. Exper. • 6620 cocktail parties. Business Contractors _____ ,1 people or families without
Tile, Ceran:.1c 6974
e CERAMIC Tile Work or
Plastering. Call aft i pm,
eves, 536-2426.
Tr• Service 6980 * THE REi\IODELERS * childl't'n. S20 clay. 49'4-7~
Fn>e rsls -JOO% financing behvn lPi\-1 & 6Pl'fJ. wkdys
Kilchens, ga r ages only! l--BO-B-'S_T_RE_E_SU_R_G_ER_Y_
carp o r rs Cl; mp I e I e BAY & Beach Janitorial is back ottering the same
Remodeling. Carpels, 1 ... lndows, floon, Flne Quallry Tree Service,
Quality Conlra<"lori; &12-300'.I etc. Res &. C om m c ' I , * 54C)..379S *
l\TY \VAY, quality hon'e 6'16-1461.
repa ir. \Valls. ctiling, floori; J~O~E~'~S-C~L~E=A=N-S~E=R~V,-. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
<'!<'. No joh too sn1all. \Ve do Everything-Res & Job Wanted, Men 7000
5-13-14!'14 Co1n111 . f"ree Est. 642-7551.
Additions * R<'n1odelinI: l<lesa Cleaning Service
Gt't"\1°k·k & Sons, Lie. CRl-pets, windO\\'S, Doors, etc.
673-tiOll * 5'19-2170 Res & Commc'I, 548-4lll
R00~1 Ad1tilions. l & 2 story Yo'OULD YOU BELIEVE
& cRr. eall Gt'fl. Contt'flctor I'll Clean Your Home for
for lo"·cst pritt 642-2988. Blue Chip Stamps.
ADDITIONS. L.T. Construe· B!M-6103
lion, 11ingle or :2 story.,, plans, \YINDOWS & walls \vashed.
est & lfl)'Outs. 8,17-1511. r1rs. stripped, sealed &
wa:o:ed. free est. 897-7834
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
Vanily -Sl'lCr -Peace -
Oi~st -DIVES
OVerheard about a playgirl
on the beach: "She can't
s1vim a !ltroke, but she knov.-'S
all the DIVES in town."
Management Ability, Func-
tion: Office Coordination .\
Public Relations. No llclling
req'd. Salary: S300 \\'k, + I
share of profitll. ?ilin cash
Investment rcq 'd; $15,000.
~~pet Cleaning 6625 day or night. ti7J.3090.
ALCOllOLtCS Anonymous . --;;;;;.;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 11 :=0=';:=='=====;.~-~-I DENT AL technician seeks • I • 67SS full/part time. Dr's oUice Phone 542--7:217 nr write to CARPET CLEANING r0tung
Appt only; ext 22, · prefeM't'd. R e l e renc «S
APPLY t N PERSON
2007 \V, Coast HV·'Y·· N.B.
Assistant
* •
*
LOOK
AT
THIS
* •
*
enre.
e SECRETARY
For Intemationaf Sales Dept.
Expert ty pist, heavy corns..
pondence, shorthand or die.
taphone. Muat be familiar
with general office routine.
Prefer multi-lingual experi-
z...; job opening~. full & part ence.
time, flexible hours. No exp.
nee. Age J.9.35, We train.
Start today.
Sl.50 per hr.
e SECRETARY
CaU 956-2870 ?t1r. Grant Offset Printing Dept. Type
A SLL\f GY M Distr-help dem
world's No. 1 exerciser &
introduce ell:citing, new
SLIM GYJ\1 J ET ·BATH. No
"xp. Nee. Shirley Graham
96S-!M25 or 6464871.
AUTOMOBILE MECHANIC,
Ml lim!' w/class A smog
license & own tools. Good
s tart J-a lary, many
benefit!!. 847-9270
A-1 TELEPHONE Soliciting
justified camera ready copy
on IBt.1 Executive. Pre.fer in-
hOuse newspaper experience,
maintain art flies. So m e
kno1vledge of offset printing.
APPLY
PERSONNEL DEPT.
L. M . C0x Mfg. Co.
1505 E . Warner, S.A.
546-2551
-Full lime, oo exper. nee. . . I mme dia!e employment. Equal opportunity employer
HOUSEWIFE for part time
factory work, 1625 Placen.
tia, Costa l\tesa.
HSKPRS Emplyr pay& fee
George Allen Byland Agen-
cy 106-B E. 16th. S.A .
547--0395.
HEY GALS
We need 10 sharp gab, fuU
or part timt, Age 19-30. No
exp. nee.
$3.10 per hr
Call Mr. Jensen 956-2871
HOTEL MAID. EXjJerienced.
part time • days, LIDO
SHORES HOTE~
. .
IRVlNE PERSONNEL
SERVICES"'AGENCY lP.69 Nev.•port Blvd, Suite F Executive Position
Costa J\.tcNa 548-5501. Licensed in R.E. Under 40 (Formerly Abilities U.nlim.) * BEAUTY years of age. Excellent eosi.
OPERATORS tion for right person. \Vrite: * HAIRSTYLISTS Daily Pilo1. Box M-1088, 2211
Loan Sec'y
Loan exper_ req'd + gd aee'y
skills. Lovely atmospbue·i~
N.B. w/cllentele. Comm, to 65%, W. Balboa Blvd., N.B. Give
pd. vac. AJ90 • booth space complete n>SUme. lf yu\l can
to rent. HAIR WEST 67J.4186 qualify, we will contact )'OU
for an immediate app'l. Secretary
BEAUTICIAN-High percen----,--,----,-1 Sharp attract. &:irt w/ad i;ec·y
tare. good working sur-ELECTRONIC countet' saleii-skills a, tome bckgrnd in
roundings. l -ollowing re.. man, male, vcpcr req'd, H, the lending 1ield. Beautiful.
qUired, 847-9164. w. \Vright Co., 1770 Newport Newport ofc's. CARRIER Blvd , C.M. • --FIBERGLASS lay·--~Exec. Soc Y BO YS . Well groomed. attract. girl up, sanding & de-w/gd mktng b<kgrnd, +ox-
WANTED ·1· ..... '" !he •loctroni< !i•ld. taJ lftfJ exper. Sec'y skills must be top&.
Apply in penon, · EDLER Underwriter
for the
DAILY PILOT
Dana Point, San Juan
Capistrano and
Capistrano Beach.
Contacl Mr. Sl'ay at
[I.fin, 1 yr exper. underwril-INDUSTRIES INC. Ing P'""n&I• hOmo owno'
S N B k auto Ins, Growing firm 2101 'Dove t., .. '""' potontl.i. ·
DAILY PILOT FULL or PART TIME
Earn up to $5. per hr
San Clemente otlice FULLER BRUSH 546-5745
305 N, El Camino Real 1r1tFRY' COOK**' Patt 492-4420 ;<;;;-;;:;o:;;--,,1:-:'.=-;-'.~7.=I time, Sat & Sun., also vaca· CARPET Cleaner Lead i\1an tion re.lief. Ask for \Vayne
Stea m l\lutr.r Carpet Rancho San Joaquin
Cleaner.!. 147 E. 17th, C.C. Golf Course
rear o( tuneup s hop 18021 Culver Road
643-1316. Newport Beach
*CASHIER/
COUNTER GIRL * **FRY COOK, days. Apply
in person, The Cottage Cof.
fee Shop, 562 \V, 19th St.,
C.M.
i to 3: 30, Mon thn.t Fri. Call
Mrs. Pennington, 833--0600
E>I 2037, b<twn. 2-5 PM. 1--G=E"N"'E=R=-A-=--=L--
COC~~M~E~~~'S OFFICE CLERK
4647 ?ttacArlhur Blvd.
Newport Beach
lNTERVTE\VTNG 1'10N-FR1
3 TO 5~PM
e A.M. BUSBOY e
NO EXPERIENCE NEC£S.
SARY. FULL Til\.fE, PART
TlJ\.iE. DAYS OR NIGHTS.
J\fiscell. duties; tiling,
running prints, lite typ.
ing. Call lndu~triaJ Rcla·
tions for appointment,
(714) 494-9401
TELONIC
NCR Opera1or
Must have NCR proof mach.
exper. for bank, aavina le
Joan or similiar.
Supervisor
\Vorking knov.·ledge of E DP
req'd. Tns. bckgrnd titlpful,
No typing or SH necess.
TRISH HOPKINS
488 E, 17th. Suite 224 C.M.
642·1470
J, C. PENNEY CO.
Fashion Island
Ha.s a full lime position avail-
able in the beauty salon,
e HAIRSTYLIST e
APPLY JN PERSON
24 Fashion Isl., N.B.
American Y achtint
Association
mMll
Ussery
Industries~ Inc.
l19f> Empire Central
Dept. 6715B
DallAS. Texas 75247. P.O. Box 1233 Costa l\lesa. Spc:l11ed areas hand cleaned \\'lLC. DO IRONING 499-1806
bclor.._. & aflf'r sha1npooing Sl.25/hr. Collep:e Park Area. ~-=-~-========I'** COUNTER.t\fAN , 18 yrs
10 R~Ul'l,' rc111oval of all pos-5.37-9705 Job Wanted, or o\•f'r. Contact r..fgr., INDUSTRIES Announcements 6410
Equal opportunity employer
JANITORS. Exp'd. Fu 11
1ime, nights. G le S :P.1aint.
Serv. 642-9871
LE"JTER shop mimeograph
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I for &ale or lea.se, sl11rl
busi ness, 675-6968 alt 6: JO
----~----FREE ~Lhle staini;_ For fast, guar-ffiONING rN MY ltOME Women 7020 ARBY'~ ROA!rr BEEF. Laguna Beach
Rntred Sl'rvicr. Call 646-8096. IN C.:\I. St.25/hr ·-------1 ~;-Edinger Ave., Hunt. Equal oppartunity employer
Risk C1plt1I Aveil * fl48-G970 * HIGH School Sr. desires part GENERAL Cl k · p.m. · DIA~IONU Carpet Cleaning lime job, f'lasses end at DELIVERY i\1AN _ )-oung, . erk 10 wor •n
$10,000/llllO.OOO
MEAT l\1rkl A DELI. Nest Back to School Special * IRONlNG * ttoon . have ow.n neat appearint:;, for job P~ucoon ControlOcpt,Re.
to Huntlnglon Harbour . .1200 Basic boating course 300' $15, f'ree Est ?.1y Home, St Hr. transpol'lallon ex I"· in \\•/growing corp_ l\fust hl\ve ~1rements: H.S. grad., typ. ~. ft. 2ll:592-2#1. obfle
1
rhcd 8to
1
bothe ppt1bllc Rrrn\1-.fni;tnll. &15"-.1~11. Pick Up & DcUv. 54~764~ salr~. \\'lntlo'v ·d r essi ng. s;rl driving 1'f'C. Apply: 2221 1ng ~ ~.Pm, 10 k .. ey ~
fft_(tr manufil.cturlng & ac· ,;;::::;:;;~.~-~-==='=== Y C a a ower STEA:\f .Jrt carpet c_J~anlng. L d I m pQnslblllty nf :.:!ore wh!I(' J.'alrvle''" C.l\I. mac & rtto mae11, .
live partlcipatlon. Write: P.O. Money to Loan 6320 Squadron. Sa i I as Ry c;1iirK11.re, nation • \\'Ide _!."~!?.~SI ~~ J\lanagcr on vacttlion, light I •o~E"N;;T~A~t--~"-"-=::;1-_ -=w~,~-,:-.-:t•=•o_I ~:~. ~",\"", for ;nte~~;! Box.10398, Santa Ana, 927U. __ ..;._;._______ \\'Cll as power boat· ll<'rviCl'. Free ~1t. ~ NEW ,; LA\VNS, re-seeding, office exp., have referct'IC'es. / 1 2 oen ""
1 t TD Loan 11i1g tau ght. Starting r oto-11\lnng. rcnovAUng, Call bf-1ween 8 11..m. 11nd 5 ~:i~ dir,tl":5try. exf~ 492-ll53 ?t1rs. Gonzale1. BECO~tE Self employ ed S 7 P"1111on., SepL 21, Carpet Laying & clean•llJ'I. 89 7-2417 or p.m. ~tonday lt\ru Friday x-ray 7'l..JS ct11l after Gpm
with a small tm.'tltn'lf:nt. a~ lNTtRESl' every Afonday n i t e Repair ~~ 816--0932. MG--G380. ~5--8.19.l.
~w 1~·~~n:;,~~ co~~ 2nd JD Loan ~t 3f~~~~-¢t,~eh'l CARPET LAYING !:!~sin• Ser ¥ic• 6115 N1~~$.'~1~1:e;=1'~7. D~~~ :r~~N~~ai:; GRANTS
SURPLUS area. H\gh profit I ITOOP Clnb.-720 \Vest Bay C.A. Pa.gt-6424070 Airflorti. Ht1rbors flC'f'. f.xp. lyping, llOtne prt'fd. M3-7014 Mn..rlta. QUI Paul 1.Ambech Terms ~ on ('(fully. Avenue. New p 0 r t Aey\vhert'. bkkpg "-s~r. ~1.
da.Y1 :2131860-6531. e v es 642-2171 SU-0611 Jl ca c.h. Brlng _hOl~ Brick, M asonry, natc5, ~Oc 1 mile. 1\lln, 20 EXP PracUcal nur~ with
213/2"'"3994. Serv1na llatbor arta 21 }71. book & p e n cl 1 first etc 6S60 nil'11, 2~ llr reni;'330-'24Q.I. -doctors' 11t1.~1. tr 11. In t n c
UNION OU CompaJ'I)' has S1ttler Mortgage Co. -. ---dl'.sire shon h~. prefer
...... _ .. ._ a h'-------lwoo 336 E. 17th Street nite. Any questions \\'ALl..Plttnt_r"'·Palio .. ori\'C• MAID SERVICE 6125 cldel'i.y Rea~ <191·360t
u.uw Q>•,..,.., call 673·1855. \V~ • S1dtWlllk."-L I c, ~ station Jocattd tn LOANS $50,0CKI " Up. Any &12-9s:i2 nlOM'l/Cl'f?, ---------
** D fSl-IW ASH.ER -
Graveyard shitt • .-Apply-ln Now Inter.vie.win g
person. The. Cotl-.ge Cotlee
Shop 562 \V. 19th SI., C.l\t. e Telephone Answerer ** DIVERS ** e C1shlor Tr1inoo
LICE NSED i\1ed ica l
Laboratory Tedinologist. in
private Jab. NO ilfgh~f 1 pi
Wlc. tnrls. 'xlnt Mlary A
fringe benellts, \Vestminster
Call l\1rs. Decke:r 893--13ZC----
LOCAL l\1grs \V /!!8..les abll to
oper fK'W type car wax:
equip. Exp des/not nee.
S.A. & Fa11h. 1~1. 642-721n. * LOTMAN * , for used cars, Apply
2100 Jtarbor, C.~L
LEGAL T)!AINEE
TO $500
Xll''I oppor. w/very f.IJ'IC
firm. Plee.3Ant working
<.'fJncl. Cd bencllts Call Mid
E1lr4Lbelh, 557-6122-:-· Abigail i-
Abbot Pl':t'.!Onnel Agency, 239 w. Warnt:!r, Sulte 2ll. Santa
A"', prime arc& of <:o&ta 1otep, Rea.I £state or Suslnt'u . FORCEl);-10 f'Xpand, T 11 E C & 5 J\IAJDS AVAIL. lm-
We ofler hlgtin;t profil Mr. Oollum t303\ 922--230$ 2ND T1 l\1E AROUND No. 2, ---6665 m1'(111t1ely. Re fe rence1.
potentlala. finest 1 ro up no collect ulls. '432 32nd S1., Will br QJM?n on Floors 642~9873 or &&2--987·1.
AlDE.."i -!or convalescence,
elderly cam or f11.n1 lly care.
Homt'mal(cn, :,.i1..Qi81.
4.i ?\fEN. Train to be abalont. Young lady, CXP'rienm:I
dh'f'MI. l\tust h!l:Vl' goo d pref P.tttd but mt ~~ M•n•gement A1soc.
h<'alth & v;·tUing to work. sary, Alll(lly In Pt"30n he-f'at'I mngmnt consull Qr en.
bentfitl, pakl ~I ?>londays to rteel\'e. clothes CARP£1' VINYL 'flLF. _
tralnlna: phui much mort. Mortg1tn, by appt_ Nf:\\' STORE UC CONTR-l'REE ESt. Painting,
Call oon J<oll• at Trust o..d• 6345 l!OURS wlll hf \M daily. '* ~7262 *. Paperh1nolnt 68.50
:n3/-a•1 or '714.tnUQU. Silt 1G-2. Alter•tlon.~ a M"' ------ . * PAPERHANGING Old fOU eYtt lhmk ot ,..,_. SEASONED f.eatureJor Yo!!~ -.dded con· Fumtture Re1tor.mg • PAtNTINO • 008-2425
1-thal wiuta Eleyh&nt tn ,10,000 '" TO, bal ~u~. "'"1'""'· sir..~•. & Roflnlshln• '675 •
k.atdc tot f!JP\Clblna )'OU t •-;. all due 10 yrs. on vtflw 111 )"OU id ln 1hc claWCied -· -• . fT'S WON'OEfifUL 1 b t
, ran _., T17 Uli""Tradtn ~ilalt>land, San'""Jilin-C11.p. SECTION! S>l'l'lt'OM s-1"'URNrruRE S1rtpptnr-l' ·m•ny-buyr in applianen
J'~ ltlOlumn In tht Dai· btrarM\ 15~ Durcount. likl' "'atch:nQ for It, 0 I a I rdln!&hing. ' )"OU find ln lhe Classified
17 Pilot Want Mk. $1106 or 49l -8100 &ti.5671 todayl •&tl-lni5• Adi. Chtck lhtm now!
I
EXPERIENCED DS.Y\\'Orktr
S2.25 hr, Rclere.Gees .t
llou~eanlng
HOUSEKEPPlNG
Experle,nced D<\Y\\"{)l"k.
&IG-23/m
'nM>te Mliafactorily complet-twn, 3.S pm. Aak for era qua! nie.n a ~wd
l"J tralnlna. Villl be hlrtd to ""MUte Cfant. cbllng, Pl'lll£' oaree.r il ~bl
\lo'l'.lrk on our boflt5. Inte:r-lncm potent. u usoe w/Jo.
\rle\\·11 7 dt,ys a "''eek at :202 lT~ Nt\VPORT 8l.VO. cal firm. ~fnamnt e.xp Col
Ho.wail Si., \Vilmlngton, 1 --.1.COSTA ~lESA lf'EC l ablU{)< to comm.....
OIHf, • catl' rlr('('t. w/exec rf.q'd . ~A~a'L"E~t~ .. -,~ly~l~o-,-,-.,,-,,0-,-,.-,w-I DRAPERY l\1FC. ~xpct. n .. I 6·1<1·1707, 1'fon-Thur, 1
baby,-·mothror .0--homt'. O tablcr 1~1ralnee 11.l -Btach fl;\·JR--styllsf-'J'he--&nut)' .JIJD:.12_noon Ol\ly ·-. ~
days lt1 Oct. L I v ct-I n. tlr11~ry 000 W, 17th st.. Perlnur 6M W. L'tt:tl st. C.M. 11-l'E SUN NF.:VER SE"1'S Gl1 1
642-2631'. C.\t, &i&-3900. &12-7241 « $-164\17. PUO! ClasslfJed ._
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M°"1<1c Stoltmbtt!l. l'l'IO ' OAllY "1LOT 3'--.
SAll AND" TllADI PITS and LIVllTOCI( TRAN.$i'OltT-AfJ..ON . TRANSPORTATION" .
MERCHANDISI POii i--DOg-.-,-·----1125-IHt Slip .Mooring fGU MelorcyclH 9* ~ · • OllS I IMPLOYMINT JOllS I EM~OYMINT JOBS I IMPLOYMINT ~~i~~7,i:!~/A~~!I
• Wora. 7100 Jobt--Min,~om. 7100 Jobi Mel_'.'I, Wem. 7100 -
Secretary
•. 1·or Designer!!, gd skills, co.
' · lhinka young.
Exec. Sec'y
;rhi~ i!; 10 director of finance.
:Acctng bckgrnd ht!lpluL \Veil
·' ~§tab, co. " .
Boat Mfgr
Dte bkkpng, 1 gi.rl ofc. Set
up & organiz,e ofc .
: . , Ant. Bkkpar
:: ~na ~·-Gd potential. ~ 1 ~o ·TrlAJ Bal. Will train on
: , ,pegboard.
" ' ReCeptioni1t
frnt. ofc. appear, Gd typis t.
_Over Zl,
' . ';· '
410 W. Coast Hwy.
... Newport ~·~ch
646-3939
'· · '-newpon. ~ personnel
agency .. 833 Dover Drive
Newport Beach
642.-3870
Exec. S•c'y
to $600
Work for dynamic prtsident
~i~arowing service co.
E:icec. Sec'y
to S600
tttrac:L well groomf'd wo-rn.,,, gd skills for school. ..
M•dic11.I Sec'y
.. $485
tn~tlrancP. a mu~t. Gd typing,
rm1 ofc, appear. for busy
speci ali:i;l. I ~··
Sec'y-Male
Salary Open ~·y/as!l:1 . to impor1rr, lile
"'SU,. typing, billing, Gd Y<'/
d!'t11il. Reliable . dependable.
Refs req'd.
A/R Clark
$450
Hvy , desk, proce!l!I: 11pril ica-
l,ioia.. stmts. Grl CQllector.
L09al Sac'y
$600
Exper, Gd typing, oo SH.
'.M9dlcel Tr•n crlber
, $400
••
NO;\\' Jnlt>rvicwln.it !or ·
e' A~.-istant Manager.
F11.111 ·rood ex-per, iw,r. Apply
In ·'fl('rson after Sept . 21st.
hetwn. ~11 AM or 1-6 PM.
M.i:o"1n1en·iewl ng Jor·
e Full & Part llm t he!p.
ExP.,rlElhf:e nnt nee.
'......},. & \V RESTAURANT.
2855 . J~arbor Blvd .. C.~f.
NURSING :
.RN or LVN. 11-1:30 shift,
.relltf. •
SUPERVISOR, RN or LVN.
h1\1?j(J tilfl .
;'J>J)ly: Park Lido Con-
'""Je!('f!nt Ctnltr, <16 6
, Y.'l<q:ship Rd .. N.8. &4~4
;N'ttnln&
·EXPER. AIDE 7·3:30
,.nltr. Apply Park Lldo. Con·
.,vele&Q!-nt ~nter, 466-1Jll·
.tblp n·r1 .• NB, &42-M'44.
PJ\nT limlt DMlgllOrt book·
·k~nR, t'f'C'S, paybl'11,
~ Clllh, n1u11I lypt. Mr.
• Powtta. f,46..7744._
~RADER'S-EARAtllSE ~ ilfte.~ tlmes-5 bucks
-.
H_ou1ehold Goecl1 8020 Pleoos-1r-q,..1n1 -llM Mltc•ll•neoua a60t -~ --,_ ~
rRISH SEfl1tft PUPS 'e 22' ide. df', Nt14'PQrt. Pow, -...... _..__...
HF.RMt::S ''3000" portable •Wrilft.nru.nntee 1¥ .,.. ... - - -Ill!
l)'IW!wrll tl", pcorlttt cond Sti. •fi'i;"te tralntn,----' f'C on • -.,. THINI -" '
2 dining tabll'.11, oUMt wtlnut •Sho~'. Pl!, f 4 field 1tock 1 m.61l1l ~ .-. ....... -..
& Danish ttak $75 ea.eh. -By appt-only ~ '-·-Ho~,.~ .....
642-:>00T. Yorluhlre Terrier ~-Homes , .. 1' ..,./ •
*Ai R Bkkpor $475
F.xpt"r, or1ly/bal11nce cu~lo.
mP-r 11.c:c ts I d'posit I collec.
lion~.
*Gen'I Ole. • $433
Diversified/typing,. phon~
lite bkkpg/Sn. Laguna are:11.
*Sec'y/p/lima $430 Approx, C h~ 11 flay/somr
li1e hkkpng/kno\.\.'ledge oil
p~on helpful. * Recept. $325 Sharp gal/frnt ofc poise/lite
typing/s.a.les abil ity.
500 Ne\vpor1 Cenlcr Dr., NB
Suire 200. By Appt, 644-4981
M U ST Sscr\ficr-Complf'lc
houseful of Spanish M('diter·
ranean furniture, Ca I I
!"l<\8-1784.
J\.fEDITERRAN EAN sofa, II',
Music•I
ln1trument1 1125
JAKE'S con•noo"' Swap puppl<• ·AKC e m-OSIS * .REPO * ' ''fRI~ M~t. Blly·Stll·Trtde 117 E. -
18rh, CM &12-!i6fifi Hor1e1 IUO '67 \.lNIVERSAL 24x60 1,,,. ORrf~l,'1 i ="'=''=::::i:::::===:::::ll.:::;--::1i::::~;"';:;:-;:; 2 BR, 2 bllh, lAn<l•<:lP«f. !31~4 e 8!t\."'6 Ml W tec:I 1610 Corn.I ipace -$.1!'i mo, lnel ln adult p;rk 175 ml'I ....... EW-USEO.S!RV _ sc, an _ tee~Jnr It cl~ninr. 2032'1~ CHAPMAN ~/ __ ,... •
LARGEFamily wooldUketa Acacla,,S,A.Hfts, MOBILE HOMES ~
buy a retr1i::er11..IQr. 3 ·HORSE " tandem tra.ller. 17 ~ ~l?.00 N.J:latliir, S.A,
.,...,"" hand '"°'°"'•bred. ... /11r1s.i1.s;oo '69 YAMAHA . • Mown, 64f>-l347 Qr &4~9918. _,,..,...-• .........._ -
FREE TO "YOU TRANSPORTATION~ 12331 """" Bl,d, GG
#" 714/;,.10-293() -.•••••.•••
"THE MEADOWS
9300
. . ' OT l·B 2:J.l Enduro. 1.200 ac.:
· tual milt's, lull lia~t11 It. Jn4
struments. new tires, f\\'O
front fender• (s lbck, ~umJ.n.
um>, detach; pass. seAI,
$600
833-3.144 \\'kdays, 642-0.fll ~ves
L wtekends.
9400
'425
Tr\lck• 9500
29.2 engine heater. de.luxe
cab, 1iber0glw tires with
8 loot cab over King of
Road Camper. Stove, .. rttrig.
erator, 20 gill. water tank,
natunJ wood \\i lh Iota of
roon1.
$3295 '
Serie.I 5814.f
UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE
2850 Har"tfr Blvd,'
Costa Me~. -'546.964?
• I.
crushed V(']ve! never u~ed NEVER USED f ender Super
S145; Matchlng0 loveseal $95. Reve rb. M11.ke offer P1t1, Generel llOO fERROCEMENT Hull; Jf-28
5.'I0-113.17 * 645-1324 * --~--------foMn, wired, ready to con· Van-1969 Oodg1! Sponsman
DOUBLE BED W/fRAJ\fE CLARINET 3561 A Por~he hum~_r, Purl . FOX, RARE, 7 mo, 1old col-cnite. Mu•t.•11. make offer. . . VII eng, 318cu In, auto tr11 ns, 1r Delight! Nevl!r • ..,.,n d na. Ia.r, blk legs & esn, musl ~·
& CAST!~~;.1$71:7 * G•n"°"d ,'°11 ~~~.'"',."·,, ~!~30-td $75. Kenmore 2 ap. wuh-M-11-leavlna: counll)', Aft eAL-~.7'-•'8~,-,~/~3~J~n7"~,.7,-:,-. ~C~l,-:•"'n: 2 BSA (boppers, 1 W/molded :~~,_~:95-.n~;ll ~~lled """ ,,.u... l!r, $15, as Is, 54&-1404 aft 7:30, !149-2163. FUUy eqpl. Aux/eng. Be.!lt tank, flake pa int, ex tended I ~~"-=,;.,-.;.:...c,,,~""'.:C.:-
BEAUT BLU/GRN WAL.NUT BUNDY child's c I a r l n e I , 6 Phf. Orftr Blw: S·5 833-1234, txt; chrome frn t !!nd ti sm '6 3 E C lJNOLTNEl-Cherry
Rattan lv'ng/rm set Ibis-Like new, stldom used. FIREWOOD for sale. S-17.SO Dogs 1125 ,:3n whrtls It lois of chrrn,. t:ood. Mus t stt to •P'
_l•~m~ps=.76'=67·~068~3...,....,..,...C"".1 $75. a40-6!M6 crd, $27.50 1, crd . Df'lv. & SI 1 b 1 Make offer 642-5387 p~i111e. -Make offer, ;:"'" BEAUTIFUL Bl•t k .. ...,ld 11' FEATifER • oop. r g II • • .. ~., ·'01' 2 ~0NCH -1-1•1 •l•P Old y I T bo stckd lree, Day or nile (1) • .,.. ,.,,.._. .1. r "r_, ri-uv ..... I a vo, rom no AKC n:g'd 2 yr old Gf'rman o/wd. must ttll. $1695 nr 1969 Harley D•vidson !S'"v"!bs""'t"!r•t"ut""'•""'"'""'""'"""i end lablrs. Excellent con-Xlnl l'Ond, 644'6048 1:o688--0846'-"·:--;:-c'71l-;);-6!-:7-:·7::599=·:::-c= Shepherd female, Must.sell. _mitke offer. 675-1393 or Mororcycle 115 cc $425. Call • '57·CHEV. P .U.
dilion. $20 e&ch. 4i7l--1882. TRUMPET with Caso SOFA Bed &-mattres!! $00. Call Jim:st"0:.3009 eves. 5.ll-5363 S.11-7294 rifer 6 PM all day ~-1on, Xlnt' cond $695
C d• -Philco Refrlg-Ba! o I r , Sa S • Eves; §13-21$6 1t USto IGftS Office Furniture 1010 X1nt cond, $75. 644,1593 Comp. !!el tncyclopedias • AKC POODLE PUPS Sm. COLUMBIA 22 SUX>P. Incl: . t le un. '50 GMC P.U. 413 Chrysler
$3 107 per hour SlOO. 968-3159. Many col'" ava.il. ~oving Ph<rl•d •, aallelly, Xl~t ~nr1!l;o"1"'•"T:--;B;;;lk::,-;.1;::oo"c"c-. °'M"•~to Auto/1rans, Oldet Yr. t'l'!a.r'
' Rt fin'd 34."'60 v.-'OOd de.'lk!!, Pleno1 & Organs 1130 ·.~,.~O~U~L-T~~W~~l~k--w11nt gd home.•. $25 l. up. ct o ie q u c Y Be1a. D f's er t Re ad y end .. fut. Mullt ~II .$300.
169.fiO .• Refin'd \\'OOd arm a er: 2 842-3.l6t or 8'46-5096. 1'26-2562. Chamber. Filtron etc. SAC! At 3 00 6<"&I FOUNTAIN VALLEY • l'A'l'IONO L'~ M•o-m•d< fur -·!.· I : pm, o-i .. I •·· 129 ~ e W ~ "" organ -..--. ''""' GUNN K•n-1•. WI-Holr e 2>' Sloop e $115. 830-2981 ·+. . SCHOOL DISTRICT ·ro Ary Cnatrll, ~...... e tr'" •/ ·1 •-· tc Ruis: 12 Tier curta.i111. ''"' '" · e ·~" f<'nrrl V8 1,',T Lo""•·~. have the largt1t M:letllon ..,,.,,, \\ gui ar, IX'f\10, ~ • S46-l•3S. .l'~ox Terrier pupa, 11 1•.'kll, Wood keel bolt, Sleepg 2. '69 DIRT }lodaka__. Xlnl cond. "" ... """
REQ1JJR EMENTS: Abil ity to of used olfice furn rn this Also reverb $588, warrant.)/. AJ<C, 3.1 champ. -pedigree, M'akt offer. 8.W-7039 Acceuorle11. !!tick: Good""CQnd. ,__.
perfonn heavy phyllic11t la· area. -dellv., leuon1.~ -SURFBOARD: Grttk 'J' 6". $200. AAT·2S4• 1k FLIPPER Nn. 4:2.l-Great ._ 6.f~·2M? * $425 673-21.W
hnr; 11v11 lh1h!r for r!av nr Me Mahan Dt~k • CABLE, New tll" ~e down t:all. Movie -proJ. k f k'd Red /wh'te d~k 1::c,-==---~--, '64 Corvitir Van. in xlnt cc>rld. ni11tht thih IS.hr d<',yi-4.hr pi~no. wal. w/bench It dtl. camera. ~ew Kodak M-1$, COCKER SPANIEL PUPS or 1 II, w 1 ' '69 XICll tnflrll" &. front S?!M>. ot be~t nffer,
nighri, . l800 Newport Blvd, 6 nnly! List price $895. our M-SO. 847·23'.1 Xlnt Temp. AJ<C Champ $2A.'i, 64:M>401. fOirks + mliio JM!rls. • 642,9873 FOR APPOINTMENT and rx:· MU450 price $699 DOUBLE ~ 4 .. loam rub. Ptd. Partl·colored females klboe 20' flJltcl KHI 54()..1769
;\m lnfor1n11 11nn, .all ,\Jr11. \\'ALNUT de~k 30 x 00 5 GOULD MUSIC CO. Mr. mettres!! $25. Q~ttn sizt Sl9-6084 ~-d\U 1970 HONDA 350. 1500 mile11. Cim.,.rs .• --.si
'
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•
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•
\Vorkm11n 111 (71-4) 842-6551, drll\\'f'r, like M\V $!29. Si~ 1911 &" f01tn1, extr11 firm mat~ RARO to find Toy Fox Ter· • Xlnt. $7~. 1 -• 2,0-4~~ r .M. --~~cl.-=~:~P;~i~l--1104~~T-::;n7.A ~)500. ri~r· J!Upplts, AKC Spe1d llcl 1Ht1-to)0 -(-11.1) .. 5!J2.5m New-•to Dift•v=1t"·'•----
*SYSTEMS ANALYST grou p, .'lea!.'! ~. i;id~ chair CANDE~BRA, . Ht" v y rtglllltN!'rl, Solt l Cuddl y, 14~ SKI BOAT w/4<J hp Twin * '70 NORTON Comman<l~ 1600 OHC, Pickup with eamp.·
$856 to Sl.09tl pe.r.. mo. Min . 3. and 2 lables-$50. ~8=..\508 -Betinner.s Organ Cl••• blsck wr0'1.1ght Iron. ~ ·rr bf'autlfuLLim1.rL S4f>..:USJ. Evlnnu:tt. Tl~ for !mil· Xlnt. cond . .Mu.st_ lt!J, i .mo ~r. "'""Sale price $2099-dlr.
)'"' lull lime p11 ld ,.xper, tn ----· --ENROLL NOW wid11. new. never u~, very l>urtbred Miniature. Poodles In.it. sleeps 4, elect. atl.rler, nr bf'11t offer. 546-4291 (• 6~) \Vill tAke cat In
rlectronlc!I, data p~i1i1tnit Office Equipment 1011 Cle~ll 111•r1ing Tut$., ~flL Spani.'lh, '.:1 price Al $3."1. 9 Wkll.$.'10 ru.nnlni lfJ'hts. A.gre111 run-1966 llONDA SCRAMBl.ER trade,, Will fiM~ pdva.te
or rtl11.1td fltld. t~lle .11ppli-2'lnd, '1 p,m, ·6 week$ courat 644-4687. ~ 646-9.iiO * nlng boat. $495. Ph: ~Jl .w,; cc. $350 or btst oller. Plll'IY· C.11 5fM052 or
c:11tinn hy 8l'p1 , 28. 5 n'clock tLt;CTR, CalCuL N ~ w Sl:2. HAMJ\tO_NO ~ ORCAN .POWER Mower, rtel lyJ>t. BEAUTIFUL W@lm1nlntr -~-·· ·• · -&42-1897 All 1:30 pm. 494·6811 ,
Pl\I Pe...-onne.I Dept., Room To1cal mod. B~l20t •. Apre ST~DIO~, ~'4 . }";. 0>8111 M.lf propelled. Ruos like pu.ppie1, 6 wk11, no pyr.r.11, M•rlne ~IClulp. .JOU '63 BULTACO 2M ct. Crl ror e:::-.·=1o"a"·"'0v,....or"'h-.. -.~c.m=---..,--I·
511 , Elf'ctrostat dry photocopler ~~iiJO. _oroOI' d e 1 Mllr. new $40. &14-4687. • $10 t>a, 5$7-9.159. INBOARD A.nd 0 u t b 0 a rd atl'l!f't or dirt. Extru, ,s:,w. Sips 4 ._ Xln~ rond
e CrrY Of' COSTA M£SA e mfld,. 171, J\.1usf atll, a/~ac. --,.-..,...,.~,--~-• FtJRNJTUR&-,OISHES e AKC Small Toy POOl;lles JI parts and acctuodtl Gu S40--6l!l8. SACR.JFJCE $000
77 F"air nr. 641-987t -• Baldwin Acrosonic & MISC. * wks, ~ m~I~, l femal!l $i'J lankl 10 velvtl Iran.~.' Con-PLANNING to mow? YO\l'll 6#6Ml 11ft 8:30 pm f7'1~l AA4-ri.t'i0 i°WA°NTED~ UJ('tl t R i\I $.'l!l:l: "PVfpfY: 548-7677 A}i': 4 Pm fi44-5177 '* * 968-J91;" !NII,, c11ble11, ~at11, I~ lind M •marln& number of rvw CAMPER: ""bll
DIAL dlrtct &12-5678. Chlll'J{l' ~lecirtc typewriler. PVt e Wf·ft'J'E b.llby grand piano, BICYCLES. T-:J..tO Apd, Nt.w • PURE BLOOD MALE '1rumen111, prof)!', hardwlJ"t'!, rurntsbln~ for )'Out home, n1otor Nu tires; t11pe dtek A:
JJ1) •il.Jb_en,_&iL.b.a_cit_anc! f::'p';ly'-':M:;:IY,;•c;G:;44;,-"6;,' ;;25:::· ·,..,== Baldwin-MLllLit,~11 __ ...,._~" ~.--Trade.Jn oJd blkt. l.ABRADOR.--I!UP.. windJhltJ&.-•lt:---Wlll Mll ..1u.t IP'Ul ~ ln todar'a ~pell.ker.s. _..:_ -
listen t11 the phone rinl! S.tunt..,. • DIME-A-LINES! $.175. ~~7-47 334 De.I Mar, C.M. 496.3713 -1137·lJ~ 1111 or PIJ'l. ~~. Cl.u•lfled Adt. ----= Sl8M. EVES: 675-..\~5
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,Tni15l!ORTAT10H , t w icitiTRlt _,. filN)l'Oll-TATION TllANSPOllTATION ~~TATI ON "l'.llANSl'OllTAtlON TllANl..OllTATION..::;, 'TllANSPOllTAi:_~o_!I_ TllANl..OllTATION
C.mporo , -im,...... A... '9'0I Imported AutM ~-Imported ...,._ -Imported Au~ -lmporitd AutM -Alitoa-Wanted f7DO U .... Cari -Utad Cara -
61 FORD Super V.ui
automatle. Xl.nt crcin d. I
C)i,'.lO·mllt>ap. ~.
Bt.ta:Y Bodie.1 • S75 & up
A.c&!S!lllrie:s:~I•
lfi02T Valley View,~s&.nta Fe
Spri11&1 2131921~. -
DUNE bUB1Y~'69, Sharpest in
town! pwr plus, ntvt'r in
dirt, SOOO' hii, make oUu.
548-1400. .
RAT r MIRCEDIS 11NZ -~AAI ·' VOLKl.WAGIN ·• VOLKS~~GEN
, A•lhori.,d Dealer '68' VW' '68 vw WE 'PAY CASH
FOR YOUR CAR Sales • Service e Pa!U ~
Sonet CouP" i11 Stock 0 NELL
...ia.-,,.rt 1ta: 0rac6Asr lll'oiis 0
1r. Squareback Sedan c~Jl.oLIT
Authorized 1 S&les • Strvict 2828 HU"bcr 8lvd.
DEMO s~_LE ,~. ~l $7:11":1c"!.t1.':.,1..: 100% Warran~· CWTF 171) N WE °;:y~p ~~
1970 . Fiat 124 SPotts Cpe. ..¥ $1788 1oo~f ~a.rran~. &ad ready FOR TOP USED CARS , R.ictio, heater, • speci•I -ex-· 642-04q& • 546-45}9 ~ It. tuliy ~ftdiUot1ed: (WAK-ll.')'OUI' car ii utra c&.a.
h• ... t, pin sulplng, radial . MG ~ TOYOTA 020J ...... -.. lint ··: ::::1.~.-BJvd. ·:.~=-=::::_:::::;:;:c;;::-i--::-..:::..:.:::.:.::.._,., Harbour V .W. $1599 O>ola ::i\~tt_~
F J l ,A /T
537-7777 Call Collocl • THINI -l.87l:(BEACH Bt:. 842-4435 ~ -"M&" oE_Mo _ HUNTINGTON nE•<;H · Harbour V .W. Aul• L ... i .... 19&4 V\V ~As'Sls; 'ENG & 9 THI-. .... TRA.~S.f.9.R $350 . . -·-· Ill '70 Corolla_. 382C '58 VW 18711 BEACH Bt. ,.,_..35
•642--0443*' • ' . ~flA .. r ·. \'FRI""" Hiii_., $1694 Orlginal _blaok finish with HUNTINGTON BEACH' , i;uumu'n rontnsting rod '""""· !Jc NEW VW BUG
rmpe,:t..i A __ '"°° •oaHIN ·& ..... """' ·~~'~''537.;;.: Gnv1$103. 8 Down >< $55.89 nr, _.......,.
9110
Aus.TIN 'HEALEY fllWIU\IW'll . NEW-VSED-SERV. Che'ck ""'dow I"' lllUllW -. . . . 1J7Jt llACM fHwy, H•. 8 OTHER DEMOS $38 down, a: $29.78 for 24 $147.71 Clown Includes All M•ke._..11 Moclal1
Au...iN ,A· .M.ERICA N.rw:mE·o.sr~ •• -Ulliiifllilllii ' AT BIG SAVINGS ~ 1110•""· APR" 21.5% total > 11 ""· · · DE-4N LEWIS ' inten"t. 1148, Total cub
Siles, ~1'u ~ HILLM ~ s!;J, Pan. 1966 Harbor, C.M'. 646-9303 price S738. ~~~ · AN -.. lmmediote ne-., . REPO.I CHICK IVERSON
r All Modolo • VW
t•Jf & (le . ()ptri" 'EM Aulomobiles • Trucks
VW LEASING "Where Seivice AT Makes the Difference'•
CHICK . IVERSON Or.ng, Co •• Nowpo'1 jleoch
4570 CampUs Or, 714-~ vw 1 ~~~~~~~-
CAMARG> FORD
TOP . DOLLAR
• tor
CLEAN USED CAllS
See Andy Brov.•n
THEOOOlll
,l!OBINS FORD
2060 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Me1a· --1967 Fai,rlane 4 Dr. Wapn.
Cru i &t'·O ·mati c dr,
·Economical lrg 6, Vf!ry <IO>W
,69 NOVA mile&. Xlnt cond. lcieaJ 2nd
2 oOOr S(<lan. Vinyl top, auto. car; Good t>no1.1gh. for ht
CA.r. Pri V. • party, 493-0081 matic, radio, healer. dlr. alt 6 Sal or Sun, V~r:y sharp. t'YCU43-4) Take I ~~.,CC~-',C,,..--=, I
small down will finanCt'. Call ·~ Galaxie 500 conv V-1,
494.7744. aut.om, pwr 1ttg, R.lH, Mint.
,57 CHEV ST' \\' bit $995. Private. 494-3415 • I"\• aa:. re-
'69 t'ng, new trans Oct '69. 4
chrin rrns. a11 new uphlstry
"&-crpls. 642-9157
·a; Chevy-New· 301 engine.
NeW radiator and n:_ew bi t·
tery. Many extra5-Ma.kP
offer. 557-4982 before 10:30
AM or after 8:3d PM. ·
MAVERICK
'70 Maverick-Branrl . n e ~ ~ .
tires, 1200 mi. Stick lhift;
T.0.P. 642-3812
' ' HlLLM,AN MANX 1958. $65.
See Aloha Trailer Park,
Wllsoh ~. Sp .. ~3; C~.· J1t'll1Pll l 1
'·'70 Toyot• Mark II · · ~9-3031 Ext. 66 orr 61 ~
Loaded • F~ctory air, auto. 1970 .. HARBOR BLVD, • 1970 HARBOR. BLVD, Used C•rt '900 1959 Chevy •tatlon ll:agon. MERCURY •· '
COSTA MESA Clean. $350. .
' '
t~t'\ll~'Lll t
!li11po11-:,
_ 3lfll W,.cOut HW,..; N.B.
&12-94(1 540-17"
1964":.\USTIN Healt>y Sprite.
G6od cond. ~. Ph. eves:
642-3109.
_matie..J.ust...Over 2.IXXI .miles.. _ -....£Q~
-Sacrificr! 1642BQ~) Take '69 vw s d
trod• or •mttll down. Will e ans 'I i \ 1 I ' I«-~ ' r . AUTOMOTIVE I =~~~~,!!84[l7-;!9J!l84~_;, e .'69 MONTEGO MX·!M ·t WE iov·vw aosEr --r '65 AL -h -o, • lac1atr;<roro!tra ' -· -1---'I . l d ' -• . IMP -A ~ PS, r & • R/H PIS :P/disc brla. auto sport t REFERRAL SERVICE Original owner. Make otrer. 34 ooO mi J~ac.; I.n 1. out .
* 1960 Sp6te *
Btst Offer, · 494-8629
BMw
Authori?M .J>!r,
Salt>s • Se.Mee • :Parts
All Model& tCJ Choose From
Senice J\.fonday 'till 7:00 PM
Sat 'till NOon
COAST IMPORTS
Of 'orange County Inc.
~ W •. :Pacific Coast· Hwy
642-0406 • 546-<52!1
. ..C.ORTIN_A
-_ ~AGUAR. atDO W. Coul H~ .• N.E. iinance priv pty, Cali Sid
HIP'&DftUARms "'-'"tii ""-''M. .di'. aft JO am 540-3100 ., s.~....i .. .,.,..,. from. $1750 962S Gard.n G'ove Blvd. . . Cttll 968-3!XJI. . 125oo. 548-7408
Gllll ,,. ---~494-7506, -with automatic (Y_C)::961__1_ Th@ revolutionary,WaY
The only autboriml JAGUAR MGA , . All are under either our 1964 vw u 1 -nd . 69 Toyota. Land Cruiser. 4 lOO% used car warranty or · /(Ce en Lv • to sell your automobilf'. ~~er.in #lJ ~tinl .Barborl---~~----...,•heel drive, warn hubs, . , , New vinyl interior, coco \Vtc have buyers waiting!
.... ~ 1!160, DRIVEN by s c h! radiO and heater, Lie. XWZ new car warranty. mat5, sun 1ack, Holla fog CALL NOW '42-4431 ~pletb teacher for 10 yrs, 63,000 408. S2.29 5 .00. JIM Ha· rbo ..... ur v w lites, elc, etc. MWll sell. WE BUY
SALES orig mi's, good c: on d, SLEMONS IMPORTS, 417 • • Make offer. Call 5<16-9710
SERVICE l~ther well cared for nu w. WARNER, SANTA ANA l87ll BEACH Bt. MZ-443S day~. 538-5567 after iPM. CARS
PARTS tires, $ti00. ~2785 or 540-2512. HUNTINGTON BEACH A~k for Wayne. ;IJU __ - -.
BAUER S42-49to ext 264· '70 Toyota Corona, 4 door,· 1 La Se'~ti '6.3 VW Bus-Cht>n:y cond, 1~ ~ BUICK 'POR·S·c· HE automatic. radio and heater, rge ~. on paneling thro-<1ut. Tuck " 2100 Harbor Blvd 645-0466
IN , Lie. 520 AGA. $1,895.00. JIM Of VW CalnlHlft roll int. Big titt.s. chrome ·
SLEMONS IMPORTS, 417 •. i:-· -r r:inis, nic.e paint. job. Make AMC COSTA MESI<• '64 PORSCHE w. WARNER, SANTA ANA Vans, Kombis, o"'" 962;9650. .
· ;134 E: )Ith s ... 1 356 sc COUPE 54"2512· · : . Buses, New & ·used ·so vw B ... s.mk•m"''·
stB-7765 Balboa blue, chrome wheels, '10 Toyo!& Co~na, 4 door, lmmedlat. Delivery 4000 mi Oil reblt '68 t>ng, Nu
radial tires,_con1:9urse cod-aulomat.1c, ra~10 &: heater , CHICK IVERSON tires, brks, panellVig, &
dltion Lit'" XOG99T 1 8.978 miles. Lie. 519 AGA, cpts, $1150. 548-1794. . '$.3099 $1,795.00. JIM SLEMONS vw I -.~,968~vw=~Sq~bc~k~-Good~-.,.-nd~. •
. I MPORTS. 417 W .
CHICK lv"'RSON WARNER, SANTA ANA. 549-3031 Ext, 96 or 61 4432'Saoob""' Way, bvine .
VW
C 541)..?512. 1970 HARBOR BLVD, 833-2254
'69 Corolla, 2 door, radio and COSTA MESA '68 VW BUG mll!t sell, going WHAT WOULD
531.nn c_an ~1
KARMANN GHL(
'68 GHIA
I.ATE. '66 Imp, Spt Cpe V8,
27,500 mi, air. Pfi/pb, 1 pr
ply owner '$1250. 67;;:.1380
'65 )mpala S. S. 2 Dr. P/.S,
P/8, S.1150: • ~ ..
. Call 833-3916
'6£ El Camino, Cl.ean, Runs
perfectly: 536-6146 Between
8 k 4 ..
'62 CHEV Biscayne wagon,
pfs. Re,liilble trans. $300
CCU!~. 548-8008 all 5
'66 ·Chevy Impala . P/S,
R/H·, A.C. good cond. Very
good care. 673-157J.
* 1959 Chevrolet • r & h,
automatic, VB. Very clean.
$11~ 54()..1877
1959 CHEV v.a
Runs good $125. 642·983f
CHRYSLER Fir.e_enaine nd. lilo% Wai:·
ran~. tVzm!&)
549-3031 Ext.Mor 67 heater, 4 speed. Lie. YXU '6/ANTED to Europe, £lean, exlras.. YOU DO IF ·.1970 HARBOR BLVD. ~n SJ.3$ or best offer. 536-1873. ;
676. Sl,295.00. JIM I'll pay top doUa" Jor YoU? e ,65 VW SEDAN • you had to compete with ~.--------
MUSTANG
MUST ANG '69 Mach 'r. 351,
V&, air, -4-spd , disclbrks
p.s.. posi, &tereo, &po!'t
deck. air &coop S 2 8 5 O~
6464455 ext 35, nitM>42·2886.
'66 Mustang, VS, delux. vinyl -
top, auto, pwr, l owner, IO '
mi, nu tires, Xlnt cond..
$1275. 675-3379 aft I or
\vknds.
'70 MACH I, low mile&, xli\f
condition & S yr warr11ntY.
Le av i ng country-MU8t-
SACRlf1CE. 548-178-4.'
'6.l MUST ANG 289
4 SPD, GOOD SHAPE
$1000 642-1528
OLDSMOBILE
,-
DO YQUR per.I! Use less
sp;u:_e on thf' frwy. lesg p.r;
f1,1me,1 for the smQi. · Sml
price will help you keep up
w/Your prop taxes :Prv pty
"68 Cortina dlx 4· dr. T or
details, 962--5315. $)7·55 .. l ~=~C~O~ST~A=M~ESA~,._,~01 sLEMONS IMPORTS. 417 VOLKSWAGEN .today Call e 646-7744 e GCenera1 ,.Motors, Ford, Ir. ,.56 Chrysler Newpo~t
'67 PORSCHE 912 w. WARNER, SANTA ANA, and ask for Ron p;i, hot 1-======·===I ""'~"· P/S-P/B. A•lo "''"·Ong
White with black interioi-. CALIF. 540-'2512. ~3031 -Ext. 66-67. -67~: I' Stop By & S.. Uni.sh. 4 dble Eagle g00.:15 .
AM/FM, exc<ptionally-' BJIL MAXEY '63 VW B119 VOLVO HARBOR -"548-:::,c,:12,c,76·=~=~~
running. WYG945 MECHANIC SPECIAL • AMERICAN '63 NEWPORT: P/S • ~· CHIC~4~J:.SON !T!OIY!OJT!AJ Llc$~~c~ ~ Americ:."~:~:' o,.i,, ~~ co_N°*•
DA'iSUN Harbour V;W.
~ --~~= ''Leader ln The Beadl Otill"
ZIMMERMAN
284.5 HAUCiR' IL VD.
54M411
'&9 DATSQll WAGON
Overhead_ cam · eqine, 4
at>Hd, ra'dfo, low mileage.
Special inmrior. Sacriti~.
(XTG-56j)). 1'ak°e tradir or
small down. Will finance pvt
pty. Call Maury dlr. 540-3100
or -494-7ii05 aft 10 am, ....
tB71J BEACH BL. 84z:4435
HUNTINGTON BEACH
'63 VW GHIA
Convertiblt>. Recent engine
overhaul, hard to find mr
del. Radio, hf:!lter, 4 apeetl,
etc. ./ '
$1099
CHICK IVERSON vw
549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67
1970 liARBOR BLVD.
. CX?S'fA .ME$A.'
'65 GHIA
' vW 1BQ1 BEACH BLVD. CHICK IYERSON .Si. 'VOLVO'
1970 HARBOR llLVD. .':':!: !".;:!: ..:.~~ vw ~ -
COSTA ME!A '69 Toyota Corooa Co•pe, 549-3031 Ext. 96 "' 61 "FRIEDLANDER" '61 PORSCHE automatic.radio and heater, 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
fa ctory air conditioning, cosi;A MESA 1~151 1 1.t.ctt t+iwv. ,., CABRIOLET Lie. ZDU 159, Sl.595.00 Jii\>t '68 VW, beigt', slick shift , 893-7566 • S37.,fj8U
Jtrl'rltop, i teaminc metallic SLEMONS IMPORTS, 417 R&H, kln·t· cond, $1.alO. NEW-USED-SERV.
silver with brand new in-\V. WAFER, SANTA ANA i'...._..""'="-'·=---,,-,,--~
• terior: chrome wheels, ra 540--2SI • '66 VW. New eng &. ttns. ......_...._---
Qi§! tires~ AWFM radiO, ' '68 Toyota Corona Coupe Good cond, s1.ooO. Or ~I VOLVO' Lie. WYW 215. take over payments. offer. 642-0186
$2199 S48-2'73B '64 Karmann Ghia, Xlnt '70 Demo. • 1536
CHICK IVERSON '68 Toyota """1<· Am/Fm, '°""· 1725 0, B•n olh<. $2'§0 _ _ _ ~ ~ 4 spd, xlnt cond. Lo mi's. 545-6519 or 962-1781.
Runs 1tt•t! Rebuilt engine. YW Orig owner Sl400. 673-5655 '68' .VW BUG Check our deals
1960 Har bor Blvd. • 64frfD>t
BUICK ---------'69 RIVIERA
Full power + air cond., vinyl
top, dlr. Loaded. 16.000 ac-
tual miles.· CXWY 554). Must
sell! Wi ll finance! 494.7744
• 1958 -BUICK
Good runninv. $125.
673-6434 ak. 3.
e '54 BUICK $125
New tires & brake.1, 644-2711 ---CADILLAC ·179 DA-TSUN MW tltt1, dlr. New braket1. 5$3031 ZXt, 66 or fi' '69 Toyota . Corona ~~pe, Automatil'! trans. AMfFM 1800 F Cpe for delivery,
. . <ZUR :&l Full Price $999. COSTA MESA · factory air condlhomng. radio, heater. 213: ~1662 Overseas del Speciali11t.
I . •·d -. . -full Take amall down, will fin-1970 HARBOit BLVD. automatic, radio & healer, ••5 VW DEAN LEWIS MOVlNG· To Haw•;•"· M"sl . Door"'"' an, used Slco:1:1 ance. Call 494-7744. ~====_,,-,-,-,-,:::I Llc. ZNB 242, $1 ,595.00 ,JIM "' " price. (601A.V•)-dlr~ · \Vill '60 PORSCHE Cabriolet, 1600 SLEMONS IMPORTS, <ll? IUG 1966 Harbor, C.M. 846-9303 Sa.ttifice 1967 Cadillac Sedan .~ ~de oi-finaiice pri· ~M.Ym GHIA convrt(fil super, with hard to p. New w. \\I ARNER, SANTA ANA, =========I deVille. full power; fact. air
yate JW:ty. Call 546-4052 or body, reb.lt eng, $500/oHer. engine, new clutch, new 54~2512. American mags, wide tires, Antiques, (lassies 9615 cond, paddtd iop. 11.ll op-~ .. · ~1088 tires, new paint, AM!FM,l;;=========I custom metallic paint w·'h _ _,_ _ _,__ _____ I lion~. wholesalt' Bluebook
'68 Datsun 510, -4 door, just 'like new, can be seen TRIUMPH beautiful lact work. YPO. ORIGINAL Corvette com· $2675, will take $2500. Call :.au~tic, ra.<:1!~ and heater, MERCEDES BENZ at 2089 Harbor Blvd., or __ 901, plelP k running. 2 tops. evps and weekends 536-4135.
Lie. WXN 999. Sl:095.00. phone 645-1982, 9am to 6pm ~verlll other customired =64="-='"='=•='="="-="="===t'69 CAD 4 Dr. sedan DeVille, JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS, '69 280 SE, 4 door aed. Full V\V to choose fmnr Aq ua firemisl: air, stereo,
417 w. ·wARNER, sANTA pwr, air cond., t'~ AUIU"90f, .. ro PORSCHE 911-T Coupe: CHICK IVERSON Autos W•nted 9700 tilt·lele, sentinel: 16.000 mi.
545-7473
COMET
'61 COMET
GOOD TRANSPORT A TI ON
f250. * 675-51.8.1 --~ CONTINENTAi:
'70 MARK lil
7· mos old. 2000 ml.
ONE owner 673-QJl~
COIVEUE
'64 VETl'E FB-'67 eng, P.olls
Royce. Cond. 4·SPr., 411 por1,
Desper111e, must ttll. $19!15.
Before 12, 613-2Sn. Scorpio
'66 CORVETTE, 4 spd .• new
radials; 317; yellow w/blk.
inl. Must sell, offer 675-3860
COUGAR
'68 Cougar, Pwr Steer.
Disc brakes. Aoto, Stereo
$1800 or Tradt' t'44-2788
DODGE
PLY .. OUTH
'66 Plymouth Sat.Utt..
2 Door Hanltop with btickt>t
seats, power steering and
brakes. Clean. Excellt>nt buy
Original owner. Price $1115.
Call 83742.19 El Toro, •..
'6~ RoJd· Runner, 383 ·
4-i;pd, mags A new .
tape deck. $2000 or bfft>-
Must ~ell . 842-5430 aft 6:
'69 BLUE CuUass. Must ,
Perfect cond. Mu11t~Mt t:
believe! S.2300 or• bellt ofl• ~
Call 8 am.-5 pm, MUfllO,; l
PONTIAC ii
1969 Pontiac Custom 4-di-j
pis, 11ir. leather. ln mi. TOJ!
cond. $2500. 547-7188: •vet
646-5265 aSk lot Al~rl. ~ i
ANA. 540--2512.. ~:!v,''partyM-r~B. ·,l'm«f."'nd•I ~?~quo·,.r.,k ~i~~v~p-tyM.a~r~;:.11· 7400 vw __ W_E_P..;A;._Y_T_O_P_.c,.cl Nt"W tires. $5100. 846-0130
TSUN -.. ' · · ..,...,v IMMACULATE '64 Cad .. DOT DA . s.u:o&41 or 644-4261 : • '65 PORSCHE SC 5-19-3031 Ext. fi6 or 61 CASH 6.1,000 mi's, n P\l'r, -Xlnt '68 Dodgt' Sportsmffn Van I 'M=u°'ST""'s.=11-,:"o;c-,G°'TO=-. -c.,.lo..-+J 'OPEN DAILY '61 2'20 SES: 4 Dr Sedan, Sunroof. tape, Clean!, 1970 HARBOR BLVD. cond. $1500 or hst ofr. SeP, 108".'xln't cond . Poly tire~. --L
AND nroof All red lea.ther/int $2950 ** 548-2667 1930 N Bl d c M n»•gs, many xtra~. Must chrome rims. new gl~ • llU • ' '65 VW Bus-Good co nd · ewport v ·• · · tire~. make offer, 147--6441
'65 PONTIAC 2 + 2. P/&, a~
cond, good paint k titt111
Cragar whls. rape deck -,
other extras. 646-8098.
SUNDAYS AM/FM $800. fl4&.22ll ""1 "1/reblt eng S1195. M2--0880 for used e.at1 le truclcs just '64 FLEETWOOD, 60 serie11. sell now! 673-7269 llft 4:30. affer 6 p.m. !
18835 Beacii .Btvd. 191• 962-.5490. RENAULT days, 642--11267 evP.R. call ua Jor free estimate, $1250 or wlll take smaller '66 DODGE VAN: R/H Xlnt
H •~--Be-~ -,c'=~=~~~~~ I I '68 LE MANS: Xlnt cond. · u:n ... '5""'' ...... , ls It time. to movt> up! Oieck : '6g RED vw 8 bl ck 1 GRQJH CH£YROL£T car & some ca!h, Call cond. Gd. rubber, SHJ50 842-mt or Y.0-0642 the Help Wantt'd section of '63 Renault, rhlt t>ng A trans, 1~~=~====0-ug-11 nt, . 646-8004 FIRM. 546-7820 Many xtrRs. • .
the DAILY PILOT nu bl'8kes k i;tPreo, $250 or r/h, good cond. Clean. Of. l .,_'-7~==~~-~ ========== $2195. 11t11t Aft 5: ~'i7·8825 '65 0.tsWI, 4 door station CLASSIFIED. best offer. 642-3139 fer. Be"fore'5, 549-3343, &fter .A!k for Salta Manq er ./ '69 CADILLAC S f! rl an =-.,,.,=----,--.,,.-:""
wq'pn. automatic, iadio and 1 =========:.!-=="========I 6. 499-3749. 18211 Beach Blvd.. Deville Lo ml; Michelin FORD '69 GTO convt auto, f!/jS,.
Mater. Lie.· OSE •51, I· British racing green wHhl,,68,;..~VW~--~~. --.-tires k 1111 xtras + Pvt PIY PDB. tint glass, conl!O.I .
$695:00! J IM SI.EMONS _JM. , lrnportecJ Autos 9600tm~rted Autos f600 !ectric overdrive Excellent · convt. Outstanding Huntina'tOa Beach • · '66 Galaxie conv, 11utom, puT $1950, Must tell. 548-612.1. )
PORTS. 417 W. WARNER. ~ond . .(XJV827) ·Sacrifice! 6007~,;.,!t'&t offer. 5434458 or &17-6081 JO 9-333l $489S. ~Ul5• strg, xlnt, Pvt pty, $995 or SANr~ 'WA .. 5t&i2Sl2. . 1 Small down or take trade. =~=,---:' ==~~-~ IMPORTS WANTED '6:! CAD 4 rlr. OeVHlt>. Air. best offer. 494-3415.
ENGUSH. FORD -
' AU. NEW l!:l<GUBH ' FORDS NoW llf'llroat -
DRASTJCALLY
REDUCID
'TO CLEAR
LARGE SELECl'!ON so' cilOOSE FllOM
· ' Thffclore '
ROBIN.S !=()RD -·-Blvd. Colt& Mils&. MUOIO
-· FIRIARI
"
Fl4T
.,,.._.._~24~
Exntie ndc WIO. bl.eek vinYf
buCkit 11tati. Low tdDM~ hll
had ext'flletit ~. Saat·
Voe! 'OO,Y23S) T>l<e older
car ln trade. Will finance
11rivate pcu~y. C!JI Pal ctlr.
alt 10 am f94·7506, 540-3100.
NEW l'IAT
1'70 150 SPYDEll
A11 colon to cllCIC* ft'on).
Ul3S + T.x A Llc.
AU modeis to 1:hoMe:.
CallfimilSport -cm -
llOJ E. 11~ S.A, '42-l!OI
l1
II.Hie'. ·11e1ttr, "''""'' 11tw '"'I•"~ di•. aJilO am 54().3100 $1800 or best offer. TOP I BUYER 833-3<18.'i.
'61 YW s1295 \Viii finance pvt. pty. Call '66 VW CAMPER, ·gd cond. Orange Countiet all ('IClwer, lo mi. Pvt Pty: 1964 Ford Galaxie. Clean,
,.,... 1110; wlMI l'td " ""' low mi. Au!o trans, P/&. • •tnf9riot. cw•J•7l ~ .. , or 494·7506. 1't 5.16-493a * BILL MAXEY TOY<YI'A v;~9 ~;E de IV :...'J?ag~ifichp~t? $595. 548-~7.
'64 TRlU:-OfPH SpiUlre • Xlnl rHE QUICKF;Jt ~OU CALL, l888l Beach Blvrl, y op, s e. no, p us in-'66 GALAXJE Cnvrt. Auto-$AVE ... ~. $750 o' ~,, oU•r na: QUJCKEll YOU SELL R .. J3each. Ph. 447.,.m, te.r, loaded, $4895. 547-6469. <.vuu ""'" PIS JIB. Pvt ply: $895 or
84.2-8300 aft 4:30 Ntw C•r• 9800 New Can 9IOO CAMARO bst ofr, Mu!}t sell. 57s.M06
1963 TR.f 50fl top, hnt tp , ljiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii '69 Fairlallt', P /s, auto, ... _
ll:tdlo. 11 .. 1 .. , Whl• -11 ••
low mllQlf. A·l '"''"· (SVY·I"!
'67 FORD CORTINA
5900 :~;:~!~~:::· ·~w COSTA MESA I;'.~~~Vsr·~:.~~~r~: -~:~\S~J.~~~;
~~ ·~"!: ·HONDA S:. ~~ ·--··-~'" G.t .-2 OOOr. llMlor h .. tlr,
1totf ...m.ll, Ne, l'ltMll'S.
1H ... 111Ko low lftll•.
, '67 YW
f! .. ltllrt flWL .... I, ,..,.. V.W. "tar, At! llllt•
lllttf'IM.
'HVW •eo1o. '*""• ...,,..., ll•I $1111'!11
''7 MAT
•
C• .. rMle. 11111., Gaof !lrtt. ltfll wltn ll!lt k lilutkfl
'""' 4lltY"*I
51395
~ !.!!... ..... $ 350 ,.._,.,, 111tr1 1n1rpl cwrz.c,"'---'--------.-'
PLUS-A ti.Ml llUC110M ~
YW 1U1B. ALL COLOIS
A\ITHORIZ£D
SALIS. ...SfJ\V1CE
IH .Bt!t'lottl!s
T&M MOTORS
. 1011 G.rd1n Grove llvd. ....._ ......
...... s..14" , .... "'"· tlll 1:00 'tl/i .. a. flf ..... ,.
• •
l ftilll
Great transportAtion bu,y,
(ASUi34)
$882
Harbour V.W.
187U BEACH BL., 842-4435
GTON BEAOi
'63 vw
bow mlle• 011 rebuill eflllnt,
new clutch, new brak~,
radio, perfect oonditiol'I. Can
be seen at 2089 Harbor
BJvit, or phone 645-1982, 9a.m
to 6prn
1967 vw
Mt, Xlnl. Cond.
S1195 673-Z5t4
M<i~ Huntlna:! Check. the
DATLY 'PILOT Open J-loute
-rnlurnn n-every--f'rlda.1-
Satti.rd,y.
• Allt COOl.10 l'ltOll!'t l!i•INI e l'ltOfllT W1tllL Dllt!VI e l"DWlll -AISISTIO Ill.fl•
AOJUITIN• l'ltONT OISC s 13 9 5 ._..l(ll '
e MAJllMUM S,l!D 7t MlllM
9 U, TO '9 MILH "Ill • ;;b~~ ........... .. ''°"" ~ 1111111 SI• Htw (If ,.,..,.,,,... I.tell Tr•M. Tn I I.le ....
UNIVERSITY
OLDIMOSIU
·ffAHOHtVD.
' ,
,
- ----""---
T-BIRD
e 1963 THUNDERBIRD'.
1't $500 * i47--0jl5
VALIANT
1966 VALIANT I e'yl.
automatic 4 door. 11irlco!Jd .
55.000 mi .. 3 new tires plu& _"
snow tires and spare part.!!
Best offer, mu~ t sell!
546-154!! nr ~f).6.1.14.
I
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