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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-09-22 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• 7 -. ~ • ' • • or .. u .ss .e1n s ._ ...... ,, • I ..... Gretel Loclaetl :TUESDAY. AFTE~NOON, SEPTEMBE~ 22, 1970 In Tight Cup Bace D~el • < VOL. ta. NO. m, 1 l•CTIMI, Y P'A••I \ • Santa Ana Winds Raise Fire T·hr,eat ' Firefighters On.Alert .PhOw Studio 4sks Buif Permit Orange County firemen-were placed on ltand-by alert today as hot,· dry Santa Ana winds swept in from the desert, Ca.using !. M?•~ing , temperatures in dry !:)rush areas of Inland and along the Orange Cont. · . Si'milar hot dry weather . is-predicted· for Wednesday_ The Santa Ana .w.ini:ls are expected to reach velocities near 40 miles per hour. · High fire hazards are exPe;cted In both hill y terrain and in Orange CoUnty's can-· yOils. The quickly rising -temperatures cause a sharp decrease in relative humidity, accor~iM to Deputy Chief Carl Downs of the county fl're department. The tem- peratUre at El Toro Marine Bast rose 18 de'grees In one hour this morning -from 62 degrees at 8 a.m. to 80 degrees at t a.m. ·An application · ·to .opl'ate a nude photographic studio open to the public will be considered by the Newport Buch City Council Monday night. Kitten Productions has 1pplied for 1 business license' to operate the studio, which will furnish nude models and cameras to photoeraph them, at 3848 Campus Drive. Miss Mary F. Wagner, 31, of Placentia, filed the application listing herself as the only ~rlnclpal of Kitten Productions. City Minager HarVey L. Hurlburt. said the applicaUon will be sent to COU11cll. rather than routinely approved by the Business Licence Oel>artment, ' ' b y reasons of the characteristics attendant this type of business." There are lndl~•tions lhe tjty may move to block operation of the studio. Sources said this morning an "emergency ordinance" designed to retulate such enterprises is currently being prepared by City Attorney Tully Seymour. ' . The city last -..eek en&cted a almlla.r "erpergepcy ontinance" dealinl with manage parlors, which have proven to be a police prot>lerii. Hurlbui-t explained that J>recent dty ordinances do not forbid tbi.a type ol business. "lf the business activity Is 1t1ch that the public health. safety and welfare might be affected," he said, "the C~y Council is the only authority of lbe city that may TUle on the 1pplic1tfons for a license. "Due to the fnformation· uncovered In the police inve.11tlgation11 about this type or busine~s enterprise and the amount of police attention which must bt devoted to thla type of ·activity, a.11 we;ll 111 the fre- quency ·with wh.iclt_lhey' are:fouhd to be in violation of state "JIW, · I am ~ mending that the City Council review the need. for the issuance of thiJ particular license," be said. ''The desert winds ha ve a tremendous Influence on the potential cf fire disaster," Downs warned. • Downs noted that the relative humidity usually drops to between eight and 10 percent, causing the brush in inland Orange County to -dry out and become easily, ignited. , I , " y· Mission Viejo Resident ' The U.S. Weather Bureau has not issued any small .craft warnings fer boaters along the Southern California Coast, and the seas are expected to re- main. calm. 1 · Ul'I T...,_.. snow dumped by an early·fall storm over the Rocky ~ts. Eastern slope of Rockies often experiences hot, drying winds after a snow storm. They are call· ed "Chinooks" and are similar to Santa Anas, Dies iµ Crippled Craft But the winds will have an effect on the aircraft taking off and landing at Orange County Airport. All aircraft are taking off toward the northeast -the opposite direction from their usual pattern: The reveise takeoff and landing pattern ts because the airplanes are designed to take off and land into the wind . The airport management has checked all private aircraft parked at the airporL to insure that they are tied down properly to avoid being lifted into the air by lhe eXpecled 35 knot winds. ' As ·the northeasterly wind began to build up speed this morning, it met the gouthwesterly sea breere. Both winds were blowing at about 10 knoll and the Orange Coonty Airport tower recorded.the wind blowing towards 1See WIND, Pa~ I) The Land Ganie \Vhile things were heating up along the Orange Coast and in Southern California generally' today, the folks back in Idaho Spring, Cofo., just west of Denver, were sloshing around in four inches of new ~ordan's Hussein Pleads For U.S., Russian Help . Intrepid, Gretel Duel ·in Third . ' Ra,ce for Cup Imprisoned in· a small aubmartne punctured while aalvagin& a sunken bolt, a Mi11sion Viejo man was dragged to hia death In 250 feet of water off Calallna I11land Mdnday, but his partner escaped. . The second man squirmed u;rough i · broken ~rthole and shot to th~ 11urf1Ce. rupturing his urdrums and. causln& hi":' to be stricken with bends. Dead iS Larry Headlee, 32, of 26881 Prtciados Drive, MiWon Viejo, whole 'body Was recovfred from thi mlrilatur1 11ub Nekton Beta by the aecond sub- Specl•I lo lhf DAIL y PILOT mer&ible craft involved in the salvare. WASHINGTON (UPI) -The White "safe and wfll ." Richard Slater, '40, of 3410 ,Seashore NEWPORT, R'J, -Newport Beach B h •-k •-House said today Jord an's King Hussein B t he Id h h d I te Inf rrnation Drive, Newport eac , was wi en "' tiad asked the United States. the Soviet. u . Ila e a ~ a o ikipper Bill Ficker forged tiis Intrepid to Ava lon Communlty Hospital for tre1t· "about M airliner hijacking, h08tages, In· a· brief' lead at the.a•-rt of today's third t f th be d and ~slble in'·rnal Uolon. Britain.and France for diplomatic h 1 "° men o e , n s ,..,.. 1e • eluding about 38 Americans, being e d • assistance to help restOre peace in his by the Palestinian guerrillas. He said America's Cup race In 1 see-.saw battle injuries. .mballled. -·nt~. Ith A 1 u • Gretel 11 Authorities said be was the third diver """ •J •·we have deep concern" for them . w us ra a 11 . · •t..-laU 1tricken Monday by u~ excruc n1 con. President Nixon's pr,ess ~~Lary, After Syrian armored unit! crossed the · Intrepid led l!!t the first or six marks by ditioa causing . nllrogen bubbles In 'the Ronald L. Ziegler. declined tn reveal Jordanian borderdurin.,..lbe weekend, the 4e seconds1 or· about six boat lengths. blood tr d 1 · · f ,._ Whether Hussel·n al-· had asked about " , s earn ue o nm1 rom un:i "" Un1ted States_ctiaracterized I~ as a'dltect Gretel II· had· taken a flve;len"'h lead f ~. -too m•k:kly possible U.S. armed intervention in his e• pressures o .uci::I': 'l"I • invasion and asked the Russians to u.se it the start but after 11 minutes fell The ether cases "ere untelated to lht army's battle with ruerrillas and Syrian thelr Influence with Syria to withdraw its behind . tragic sinking of the Nekton Bttl. · forces. · · fort"ts. The race got under way promptly at Spokesmen for the U.S. Coast GUard "Ille.. Uhil.ed.States g o.v_u _n_m e..n.t. · The-Stale-Departmenl---aaid-today_9;.10..a.m.....(EDTJ_'~----~--Searctr-and Rescue Office ln Lon1 &!ICh ( Narfhnn-Stt1le) together ""llh the other powers. received fl.1oscow had advised the United States Winds al lhe start were_ from .the said the Nekton Bet.a: In iden11cal 'craft 'a message from H'usseln regarding whal that it had been in touch with the Syrian southwest al _15 knots, a condilion con-ind the 100.foot vesaet Oil City were all Picture yourself in a 11nug A·fr11me assistance coo Id be Prov id e d aovemment. sidered by the expertJ as favorable to engaged In the O~ation. bes Ide a Northern California diplomatically," Ziegler lo\d newsmen. intrepid, --the Amvican defender ,in the Genefal OCeaOOgraphle company, 11111 stream. away from smog and root "We're concerned and we hope that the besl~·iieven race aeries. Ba5COR1 SL,, Irvine, was hired to MW a beer stands? And turn ing a tidy Ol.her powen are concerned as we are to MaJayaian Resiong Visibility was 1bout two miles in but sunken cabin crw.iler rrom tbe aeafioor profit on the land you bought? The: make every ~(19rt to acbieve the --e-and light fOg. olf Avalon. ~. • • picture might not be as pretty as withdrawal of Syrian forces from Jordan KUALA LUMPUR. Malaysia (UPI) _ Both· yachts stayed wtll clear of each -Investigators uld the t.,o small sub. it's painted. For the fourth In • ind cr.eate an almosphere in which the Tengku Abdul Rahm.an, founder of his other at the gun to avoid ~y repetition of marines we.re raising the boat under thtlr series of articles by DAILY PILOT conflict can be fl!!!Olved." nation IS years ago and Its prime the protests that have marred lbe. two own power, but when lt reached the Staff Writer, Al Bates OO• the prob-"The situatiOf, I~ still complicated, fluid-minis ter ever since, resigned Tuesday prevk>us feces. surface, turbulent sen cau..ed one line to, alone, thi Neldon !!<ta became fouled In ita own linet and a porthole•was niptured aa she was dragged into the cokl, blacll: depths. . One other diver suffered the bendl:and partial paralyai11 ,Monday .while rwurfac-- lng iafte.r I' 130-foot abalone dive off the island. Wutller Those hot desert wtnCts will warm things up aldng the Orange Clout tonight, but ahould cool off by Wednesd1y. Look: for tempera·· lures up to 7S aton, · the beaches and 9.1 in the leu temperate m. land regions. - ~SmB TODAY , "The R~ Hunt Df the· Su"" at the Lagtino MoKl&on Plarr- houa•_ l<ads off« hm!Jfl -k of l iving th.t"a'tt"r on the Orange Coaal. ,tmi.iaht. Ste Entertain- ment .. Jlaat 19~ ,._ . c ..... ..,. • -•H ,_ " (,.._.. ... .......... 1 t -' ........... _' lal¢llllal lt Pll!Mcil 1•11 -,. ~ ..... 1; -' = ..... l! --li er-C-" t ••l!N..... ,. -... ................. , -.. -.. -. ........ """ l)oll --.. • lem, turn to Pap II todft1. and 11lill terlous," tlqler said, lie said and handtd over the reins of le.aderahlp Intrepid . the United States ~efend~r. break iand the boat rolled over. ---•·-----------..t__JthC'J!~tc,!all!!!_!-A~m~er"i~cans~Uvlnj ln Amm.~a"n"w"'""'--""'=hl-~• younaer de ut Tun Abdi.LI Rau::;k·c.......:::h•::•:.:•:.:2:.:1"=0.;.;l•::•::.d .::ln;_t:;:he;;.;:,:o,e::.r:::l•::•·------'U"nt::.b::l::.•·=toc:h::o=ld_:lhe:::_w:;:•:;t•::r::lo~&!:&ed::..:h::.u::.lk_:u::p_,..._===========""---' ., • • 1 i .. . J DAILY Ji!LCIT s -. •• TutSday, Stpttmbfr 22, 1970 • l ,s:raelis Mo_ying Tanl(s ; . -- Police ProMtlR t Dynamite Fou~d I Near Cal State Egypt Warns U.S. A gainst Intervention -By Ullttd PN• latec11tlonal Large &ealt lsraeU tank movemenU were reported lodiy along the Jordanian border where Israeli military dispatcbei tn>Qrt~ the Jordanian anny retreatjng Sbuthward toward Amman in the fa ce of a Syrian tank onslaught. Guerrillas 1'Ported Jqrdan's air force In action. ..twith' the possibllty of American in- tfrvenflon' ihcre'5ing, Egypt warned the United Slltes against stepping in, saying tJtl.!i Wt:IUld threa ten world peace. Egyp- ijan lnfonnatton Minister Mohammed 1-lassanein Heikal said intervention would ~anger American lives even further. lcSyria is&ued a aimilar warning.' HeavY fighting i:eswned in Amman itself wilh failure of a cease-fire called by King Hussein and Heikal said the death toll there was over 10,fl90: Guerrilla Miurces admitted 8,000 deiid and Aid Chere were tens of tho.l¥ands wounded. .. U.S. military forcel were alerted to ~ove in to tr)! to uve the 400 Americans ln Jordan and the po6Sibility of in\erven· lion seamed very ·real. Israel also was repcrted prepared to act if It felt its security threatened -and a Syrian move southward from lrbid would bring Syrian tanks close to the Israeli border. lf U.S. military forces should intervene in Jordan to rescue Americans there, they would be hunting for about 400 persons, of whom about .JOO bold dual U.S . .Jordanian citizenship. The State Department lilts' about 40 American diplomats and foreign service staffers on duty at the embassy. They are repcrted huddled in interior room s of the building, which bu been hit by amall and medium arms fi re several times since the fighting broke out lasl Thursday. No injuries have been reported. The wives and children of the"se of· • ficials were evacuated 18.!t J une when the on-again, off-again fi&hting , between lcyalists and guerrillu began. Almost all of the Americans in Jordan live in or near Amman, a city of about 500,000 people built, like Rome, on seven hill&. Tbt.Statapepartment does riot.-know of A ~ Ii · · th rth y GEORGE LEIDAL wr1p...i and oean:hing the county for the any mer1cans v1ng 1n e no em Of •• DlllJ ,1i.1 l l•ff , r'" · th vehicle. cities of Ram a and lrbid, now occupied Discov•rv or 84 sticks or dynamite ln a • b f f S · -~ C&mpU!, officials were reluctant lo Y orces rom yr1a . fieJd near Cal State Fullerton l5 t. .. A1 .... H ·k I ., E · d __.... commenl on the dynamU.e flnd since 1'lt • et a sa1'l gypt was trying to sen a pplice today to believe radicals may now I to •----l · f · would be an acknowledgement or the pane """"""' .. " o rescue 100 oreign favor bombing oyer confronlaUon. _._.._ l pCllSibUlty they were int.ended for ule on co, ..... ...,.....,n s;• mostly American, trap-Capt. Fred v; .... , Fullerton -n- ped in ....... ...,....... the campus," a spokesman aaid.r 'Ibat the Intertontinental Hotel in the liaison to CSF told the DAILY PILOT, center of the citY. "It seems evident that the activists are possibility hasn't yet been determined. Their hotel has been hit repeatedly in turning to the hlt:ahd-ruij tactic and wJll Admitting that the college buildings arc the Jhowdown (ivil war between 'Hussein be bombing buildings rather than eripg-vulnerable to dynamiting; the spokesman and the· Palestinian guerrillas. ·Ylnegar.i'~ confrontations with police U'liJ noted the security force for the campus haC not been increased this year "even Hussein, faced with a battle for King's men are investigating , lhe though we enrolled more than 14 ,000 surv ival ·and deserted by many of his DIES AT LIDO ISLE HOME discovery or "low grade" dynamite students -an incf'ease of more than Arab B.Jlles, appealed JD. the United B•ldwln M. Baldwin ~~led Jast Wednesttay "by two long. 1,000 over la:it year." • statesn the Soviet Union, Britlin and halr,c:I young 'people" who King sai4 were Strategic areas.of the campus are not -oblerved by a transient. ' guarded and It Is not likely Fullerton France for help. But W a s h I n g t.o n The unnamed transient watched as the Police will be called to provide bomb di~patches sa1d,_'Presldent Nixon had not Noted. Yachtsman. . two hippie-types pull ed up in. a ,camper threat -protection. "It Is the atate•s yet decided on a course of action. van buried a package in the drainage ~responsibility to guard the .campus," the Israeli dispatches were subjected to jq... · ditch south west of the intersection of spokesman_ said. !!~edrruni!~o~ ~~~~ei:°~alrlwin-Bal~~Boulevard-and-Yorba~~-:-1$,~~'!:.~ i1!it~~'-"'-"i'c....--I~ movements Monday night and again to-On the ftansient's tip . Fullerton police One bomb threat, to a newspaper, led Candleliglit l{iller;Wif e r • • day . The reports said it was uncertain Succumbs at 66 unearthed the dynamite from the ~ite to the April 27 discovery of seven sticks whethe_r they w~re deploying for ~ible across the street from a campus parking of dyn amite in a men·s washroom in a action in Jordan. ~ -· lot: · corridor near the president's office. UPI correspondent Ohad . Cozani, from Baldwin M. Baldwin, one of Newport King sa id his men are check l n g Dr. L. Donald Shields, CSF vice presi· the seashore resort of Tiberi as on the Sea Harbor's mosl prominent yachtsmen, died leads from a northern Ca Ii for n i a dent, said the latest find could "presage a Plead Innocent to Murder q " Speclll lo lbe DAILY PILOT SAN .. DIEGO -Candlelight Killer Robert W. Liberty and the woman he wed ln a Colorado jail were scheduled for ar- raignment today in San Diego C.ounty S!Jperior Court on murder charges. C'llle former Westminster man and his bride. Kendall A. Liberty, were ex· traditecl from Colorado Springs last Saturday and pleaded imocen t to the murder counts Monday _1n_____mllJlirjVal court. Liberty and his wife, both 24 , are ac· cused of the June 7 torture·slaying of .Robert J. Irion . 53, in his San Diego !Pa.rimeht during a Ca Ii for n i a· to· Colnrado crime spree. The .vicUm -bui'ning candles nicker- t,ng ~ide his mutilated body -knew l.iberty "when both were. patients at Aviation ·Aides'-.. Will Hear Jet >. '.Noise Complaints , Jet aif:craft noise and ccmp..,int.s nf Tustin residents of low flying commercial J!lanes will be discussed Wednesday °11'1orning at a top drawer meeting of avia· Uon OfficUils at Orange County Airport. • Joining in the session will be Paul McAfee, air traffic control oUicial for the Federal Aviation Administra tion ; George Carver, Air Transport AssociatiDn ex- ecutive; Robert Manning, chief pilot for Hughes Air West. and Robert Bresnahan, tcunty aviation director. Irate homeowners in the Tustin area: l'leaded by David Killon, have charged that Air West planes fly below the legal height in their approach glide to the airport. They say that jets approaching the airport In dear weather use the Its <Instrument Landing System ) for prac- tice and fl y too low. . David King , a member of the Tustin protest grou"p. said Ulat according to FAA r.egulations an aircraft land ing on ILS must maintain an altitude of 330 feet for every mile distance from the runwa y. "That means." King argues, "that at 17th Street and Holt Avenu e. about six miles from th e airport the Air West jets should be 2,000 feet up. They are coming over at about 1,100 feet." McAfee says he doubts this statement. "\Vhen using Lhe !LS system. a pilot must maintain the correct height or he Is "'asting his time in practicing .for possi- ble ftlul weather." Maaning denies that Air West planes fly too low. "We follow FAA rules and procedures." DAILY PILOT -~···· 1Af•M .... dl H•im.,tM .... ,. •• ,.,. v.n.., I C .... Mne -... -tllt"""t.CO"ST ~Slf'SMl"G C.OM PA"Y Ro'D•rl N! W.-4 P•uldeM •1141 ""'1- J1t• R. C11rl•v \lk• Prit.'""1 ttlf Clu>trtl M• ..... tf' 1h"'"•' KH wil ...... Tito""•• A. M•tplti"'• M..,...... ECiler l ic••ri '· Ntll SW.Pl Or-Ca.lftly E•lltf Off'~" -(Mlt ~' Ull WtJ! 11•Y Sli HI ~; IUU" Ull -I l11N1 loulcvt"'' 1.lfuN le«~ ntJ'Of'UI ... _ Mllflll"'le<> ... cft • Hiii 11•Kl'I l wll,.•rd 1111 (lt1n•1ue: • MW!ll l l Ct l"llNI ll:NI of Galilee, could report only that dust at his Lido Isle home Monday at I a.m. newspaper in which the dynamite waa series of guerrilla tactics ~ahead for us Atascadero state H~ital for the clouds rising on the east bank of the following a lingering illness. He was 66. this year, or, it could be harassment, or . criminally insane four years ago. J ordan River marked the passage of There. will be no funeral services. His even subterfuge." . Liberty, who also faces a Huntington Jordanian anny convoys rolling south. body will be cremated and the ashes N k E h • f "At this Ume," King said, "proximity S:Uch murder charge, was declared in· • On Mondsy, the Jordanian army had placed In the family crypt at San Fran-ewar X·C ie to tht campus is the only link between sane followin3 the 1966 candlelight killing moved northward to Irbid, Jordan's se-cisco, the dyna mite and CSF. of the woman with whom be lived in cond city nestled 'in 2,000 foot moontaJns Mr. Baldwin, a retired real estate Gets Ten Years "However, we have no doubt that there WestminsW. 45 miles north of Amman and only 11 developer, Jeave.s his widow ·MaruJa and are students at Cal State of lhe type who A 17.year-old Long Beach boy ls the miles e1tSt of the cease-fire line. six children. might resort to bombing buildings. So the key San Diego prosecution witness and he Meanwhile, Arab leade rs m'et in Although he was an heir to the Lucky 0Jt 64 Counts dynamite likely will prove to have some allegedly watched Irion's murder after emergency session today to seek ways to Baldwin estate, Mr. Baldwin always was affiliation with a campus group." being forced to drive a young man and end the war in Jordan. But three of the proud of amassing his own fortune with King noled ther:Jynamite found was or woman to-San.Diego key figures were .missing .. and the his real estate developments and in-TRENTON. N.J. CAP) -.rormer the type used by-'far01ers to blast stumps. --------Baghdad-based-guernlla-rad10-told-the vestmentS.-He was president bf" the co r--Newar-k Mayor Hugh-J .. Ad~nwo~ was .l.l!f-someone-wanted-10--destroy a Llberty·s family told police they were others "to go back to your palaces poration that built and developed Baldwin sentenced today to 10 years m federal building," King said, "they'd probably aJso held hostage in their Westminster bec~~se .rou ..• oo longer make the Hills Village in Los Angeles County. prison and fined $25,000 on his conviction use a higher grade explosive." home earlier on the day Irion was dec1s1ons. Baldwin got his first taste of yachling for extortion and conspiracy. CSF was wracked with police-student slain, while the young froi'ner mental pa-A ..A... .A: competition when he sailed a Newporter Addonizio has already said he would confrontations last spring following a tient allegedly waited to kill his step-H H w 40 ketch in a Newport.to Ensenada race. appeal his conviction on 63 counts of ex· Feb~ 9. appearance o( Gov. Ronald father. Later he bought the 72.foot yawl Esca-torting money from contract.on doing Reagan on the campus. He is charged with murder and flight to Guerrillas Try pade from James Y, Camp and set out business w\lh the city and on one count or avoid prosecution in connection with the on a worldwide campaign that took the conspiracy. He could have received up to March 12 shooting death of a former Newport Harbor Yacht Club burgee lo all 20 years1 and a $10,000 One on each or the roommate, Thomas Astorina, 25, in Hun· For Arab State poinlS of the world. He was first to finish 64 counts. tington Beach. in many of the top long distance yacht The sentence was imposed by U.S. Liberty was released from Atascadero races, and with Escapade won the District C.ourt Judge George H. Barlow State Hospital on Sept. 15, tH9 after six Jn North Jordan Transatlantic race and the Miami to who called the scheme "a frightening court·appointed psychiatrists agrted he Jamaica race among others. alliance between criminal' elements and had regained his sanity and he has never It was while ra cing in the Southern public officials." served any prison Ume. LONDON (UP I) -Arab guerrillas con-Ocean Racing conf,erence in Florida that Barlow rejected a plea for leniency by Orange County Superior Court Judge trolling the northern papt o( Jordan may he heard that the 73-foot yawl Northern Add onizio's attorney, Be r n a rd ·"Hell- Robert Gardner reluctanUy signed the· establish there, with Syrian backing. an Lighl was for sail. fie ~ught the yacht ring, and said "a conspiracy of this order freeing Liberty, who last June ''independent Palestine slate," as • for a rejXrted $250,000, renamed it magnitude would never haw: succeeded pleaded I n n o c e n t by reaa:on cf in· nucleus for a hoped for greater Palestine, Audacious and contioued his worldwide without the active participation of q,e sanity to kidnaping, robbery and assault diplomatic sources said 19day. campaign.. mayor." in C.Olorsdo. The move, U successful, would split em· After purchasing Audacious, Baldwin Barlow called the entire &eheme "a He aod the redhead he later married, batUed Jordan into two and make it donated Escapade to the University of crime of monumental proportions, the plus a 11.year.olcf Okla homa rilna way virtually unviable. A 1 rea d Y the Miami, and when he retired from active enorm ity of which can scarcely be im- were captured out.side C.Olorado Springs Hashemite kingdom Is heavily dependent yacht racing a few years ago he.donated agin~.'' following a high-speed chase and gunfight on outside financial contributions from Audacious to the University bf Southern Also sentenced with Addonizio were with a lone city detective. other Arab naUons and We 5 t e r n California. three of his codefendants. Former Public governments. · he d f th N Normal Man Kept In State Hospital First 31 Years RENO (UPI) -A cli nical psychologist at the Nevada State Hospital has reveal- ed how a man with nonnal intelligenCe was kept in mental institutions for the first 31 years or his life. Dr. Robert McQueen, who is also a University of Nevada-Reno professor, said the man's case came to light when he was transferred to the Nevada State Hospital abcut 10 years ago from an out. of-state private institution which was going out of business. The details we re revealed by McQueen in the Sept. 12 issue of Saturday Review. The man's unwed moU!er became preg. nanl as a young girl, and then was. asked by another man -the son of a banker - to marry her. In an effort to keep the birth of the child from him, she ~·ent to have the baby delivered by a doctor she had heard of. At the same time 8 "Palestine" He was t onor o e ewport Works: Director Anthony LaMorle got lil enclave, dominated by the Palestine Harbor Yachl Club trophy for the years. and a $10,000 fine, reputed uq... guerrillas, would-alter the power setup on Newport t;o Santa Barbara race. In this derWQr)d figure Joseph Biancone got 10 Israel's border which Israeli authorities year's America's Cu p campaign-he was a years and a $25,000 fine, and another may find strategically and militarily contributor to the Vali ant syndicate, reputed mObster, Ralph Vicaro, received unacceptable, the sources said. Besides his interest in yachting 12 years and a $10,000 fine. The setting up of lhi!:. semblance of a •Baldwin was an avid art collector. He The sentencing of Philip Gordon, a guerrilla-<:1'.lntrolled Palestine state would, owned one of the largest known col· former city corporation cowuel, was in the view of diplomatic infonnants, l!il lecti~s of the works of Toulouse postponed until a presentence report but end the remaining hopes for 8 Middle Laulrec. Before his death he set up the could be' prepared by the federal p~ East peace setUement. Baldwin Art Foundation which will be ad· batlon department. The sources said latest developments ministered ~y hi s widow: . All the defendants except Vlcaro were seem to point to such designs on the part The family has suggested memorial freed on $25 ooo bail pending their ap- of the eilremist guerrillas who would donations to Hoag Memorial Hospital. peals. ' then use the area as a base for ccntinued Vicaro's bail was revoked because of pressures on the remainder of Jordan his past criminal record . and Israel. -From Page 1 Addonizio told newsmen after the pro- lsraeli leaders have said repeatedly in WIND ceedings, "I've become accustomed to the past they will not tolerate a change in • : ~ the worst. I had hoped for the best." Ask· the political structure of Jordan in which ed what he would do now, he said. "I'm Syria or Iraq, Jet alone both , would have the east -in from the ocean. But the going to try to find a job." He said he had a major say. windsoc k a few hundred yards across the nothing definite in mind. The current rumblings in Tel Aviv sug. runway recorded the wind blowing the The appeaJ procedures could take up to gested today that Israel military leaders opposite direction -in from the d!5ert. two years. and pcliticians are taking no chances and apparenUy are readying for emergency mcves. Israel was understood lo have prepared contingency plans for such eventualities. the sources said. Syria's move at the weekend into Jordan could well trigger Israeli action, unless there is a speedy pullback, they added. SERVICE • • • Off ice Burglar Takes Copier A burglar who entered an office building through an unlocked window over the weeke nd made off with business equipment valued at $7,450, Laguna Beach police ~eport. A Xerox copying machine worth $5,500 was among the items removed from five desks: tn a three-room office suite oc· eupied by Desert Minerals Inc. at 1891 S • Coast Highway. Also listed as missing were three typewriters, an adding machine and two dlctaphones, police said. The burglary was disCovered Monday morning by an employe' of the firm who said the offices had been closed since L- p.m. Friday. Police said the burglar apparentl y entered by sliding open a window in the rear of the twt:rstory building. $270 in Cash, Radios Taken in Mesa Store Someone who may have carried the cash register key looted one clerks' ata· lion at a Cost.a Mesa department store of cash and radios worth $Z70, police were: told Monday. Cary A. Cu1ver. of the May Company. 333.1 Bristol St.. told investigators he had no clues to who ma y. have taken the money and two portable radiO!. ' This doctor told the girl he would place the child up for adoption , but then later told the girl the child was mentally defec- tive and-had to remain In the doctor's home !Or mental defectives . Policemen Guilty In Sex Orgy With Te en Girl How much is· it worth? Through this ruse. the doctor milked the now well-to-do woman for monthly payments for three decades. The mother, all this time afraid that her husband would discover the truth, sneaked the money out of her household acccunts . But when her &On was transferred to the Nevada State Hospital, tests were made~ It was found' that he had never been given any schooling, b u t nevertheless had learned to read and had 1 large vocabulary. · The hospital staff prepared the man for tht out.side world, and McQueen aald he has for some Lime been out of Nevada, his whereabouts unknown. The psytbologist said he learned the entire story by visiting the man's mother and finally convincing her to e1plain whll bid blppentd. Costa Mesa Firm Clipped l>y Theft A lblcl who cllpp<d oul • sccllon or chain !Ink !'""' looted • Colla Mesa electrical equipment )'ard of mo In cop- RCr wlrt, the company "management told police Monday. William G. Neumann. of £.S.D. Elec- trical Supplle1, 2004 Charle St., aaid numerous r.ps ol t.ht valuable material Wert J..uJed,twlJI from tile ii(e. -. • FREEHOLD. N.J. (UPI) -Six ol seven Long Branch police accused of con· ducting an orgy with the teen-aged daughter of an area minister pleaded guilty Monda y to reduced charges. The lilt originally were charged with fornication, conspiracy to c o m m I t rornic11tion. open lewdness and con· tributina to the delinq uency of a minor, lmlead, they admitted to misconduct In of rice. Monmouth County Judg@ Patrick J. McGann will sentence them Oct. 30. They face a maximum J>'Oalty of three years tn jail and a $-1 .000 Uni. _ The prosecution charged that on the nighl of May 18 the seven pcllcemen and two firemen. who have been separated from the case and face a separatt. trial, held a sex party In the · West End Firehouse: at Long Branch. They charge Patrolman Augustus Anfuso found the &irl and contacted lhe others. Those awai ting se ntt ncing are: Anfuso. Patrolmen Pa trick Conte. James Sciallo and Willlam 8onfrote and Detectives Joseph Miller and Gregory Boba. Trial continued Monday for Patrolman RObert Ciratlano. -- ' In the carpet busi ness sometim es its worth EVERYTHING! Hardly • day goes by that we don't gel • call regarding another company's poor installa· tion. Occasionally the da mage resu lting from poorly sewn sea ms or taped seam s is' not Teptir· obi.. -· • Then the value of tho investment looks pale indeed ! '\ Why pay $300.00 or $1600.00 for corpel!ng ond gamble with the insl•ll1 tion7 W1m1int1in111 of our own crews, 111 taught the ONLY w~y to install carpeting -the 111GHT way ! The 9r1•test majority of our business ls rt ferr1I. There js a r11son ! ALDEN'S SANTAANA.OUMI TUSTIN Cel,,, ALDIN'S CARPns • DRAPES , 166J ffacantla AYt. llD HILL CAIPITS & DlAPlllD 1 tl74 ,,...., , ..... Celff, u .. JJ44 COST A MISA 64MIJI • ( ' • 7 ' • 7 - • Hn.ntington. Beaeh VOL 63 , NO. 227, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ~ --ORANI* C,OUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, SEPT~MBEI\ 22, ·1970 TEN CENTS Safety Workers Say No -Huritingtpn Police~n, Firemen Reject Pay Offer By TERRY COVILLE C>f Ille D911»' .... ll•ff Huntington Beach Policemen a n d firemen Monday night formally rejected an 8.25 percent pay increase offered a week ago by the city' cooncil. Followlni the ·rejection and -a verbal scathing of the council by attorneys for both groups, councilmen rescinded all pay and fringe benefit actions in order to leave the door open for further talks. Spokesmen for the fitemen and policemen indicated further talb were Re~idents Say 'Lights Out' At Meadowlark The Meadowlark Airport controversy took another flight Monday -night. -where it will land nobody knows. THE INTREPID: HAS SHE MET HER•MATCH? The Huntington Beach City Council spent another hour listening to the debate which fl ared.up a month ago between home owners and pilots When Meadowlark added 300 feet to its runway America'• Cup Defender Seils on lntf.epidly ·Ficker Ahead-Slightly . ' an~ put in night lights. · This time homeowners made one plea -take out the night lights. Their request was based on a state- menHWo weeks ago by a spokesman for the California Aeronautics Board wbo said night flying is unsafe a t Meadowlark. As Weather Deteriorates Special to tb~DAIL Y PILOT NEWPORT,, RJ. -Newport Beach skipper Bill Ficker aboard Intrepid held to a slight lead over Australia's Gretel 11 at the fourth mark ~ today as weather began to deteriorate in the third America·s Cup race. The yachts were racing in a deepening tog with the vislbilily less than one mile. At the third mark. Ficker and his America{! defender had increased her lead to S6 seconds and was about 250 yards ahead of the challenging Aussie boat. There was very little action. Winds remained southwesterly at around 12 knots. Intrepid led at the first oT six marks by 46 seconds, or about six boat lengths. Gretel 11 -had taken a five-length lead at the start but after 18 minutes fell behind . The race got under way promptly at 9: 10 a.m. (PDT). Winds at the start were from the southwest at 15 knots, a condition con· sidered by the experts as favorable lo Intrepid, the American defendt:r in the best-of-seven race series. Visibility was about two miles in haze and light fog. Both yachts stayed well clear of each other al the gun to avoid any repetition of the protests that have marred the two Park Will Honor Medal Winner · Chris Carr. the 56-year-old World War Il Congressiona l ?.tedal of Honor winner who died In Huntington Beach last week, will have a pa~k named In his honor . City Councilmen Monday approved !>-2 a suggestion by Counc.llman Jack Green that the park on the corner of Springdale Street and Heil Avenue be named in the Arm y veteran·s honor. "It will be les1 aafe ~if you tfkt.QUt.ihe previous rfces. night lights -and you can't stop the ~ Intrepid, the "United States defender, of the field at night," Bob Dinpl.ll, held has a 2 to O lead. In the series. of a fi~e-man airport study 'committee The two boats were about 100 yards appointed by lhe council, said. over the line oiind. Gretel II appeared to But councilmen went ahtad and havt:; moved a tr'ttle ahead into a 12-14 ordered the city staff to take all possible knot iOUthwesterly. _l'ltep_! to .elimioate night flyin( _at Meadowlark until Dingwall's committee finished its study of the situation. Huntington Sets $10-Per-Vnit Apartment Tax Al Banick, president of the 17.000.mem- ber Orange County Apartment Owners Association, made a last ditch plea Mon· day night to stop a new apartment tax in Huntington Beach but he failed. On a 5-2 vote, the council read into law a new business license ordinance which will charge apartment owners $10...per· unit each yea r for a cit.y business license. Banick's plea swayed only one coun· cilman -Mrs. Norma Gibbs, who decid· ed to vote in favor of the new tax after hearing Banick's arguments against it. The apartment leader's basic position was that the per-unit tax placed an unfair burden on apartment owners and residents, which did not apply to homeowners or commercial interests. "There are more than 3,000 empty tinits in this city now," Banick told the council. "The new tax wilt raise rents and empty more units." His figures, however, were disputed by Roger Slates, a realtor and chairman of the city planning commission. "By counting inactive Edison Company meters. we found only l,297 vacancies in the city," Slates countered. "And 617 of those were new aparVnents, not yet rented." "It's , legally unenforceable," City A·t. torney 'Don Bonfa, said, "but it's fine if you just-.want to show your intentiol) to help the homeowners."· Bonfa explained the Federal Aviation Agency allows night flying on unlighted fields and is the only authority. In a fit of anger, Dingwall offered his resignation as head of .the airport study committee. The homeowners applauded. However, no one on the council ac· cepted his resignation. "If you want us to do the job you ha ve lo back us," Dingwall angrily scolded the council. "If not we'll quit." Homeowners have criticized Dingwall's committee for not reaching al) airport solution more rapidly. Dingwall has tountered that his committee will not make decisions based on "emotion, but on fa ct. It takes time to gather these facts." Dingwall's committee is meet Ing Thursday night ·in the administrative an- nex of city hall with officials from Southern CBlifornia Edison, CAB and the FAA to discuss nearby power poles. He said several facts should be cleared up at that meeting. "We hope. to have 1 recommendation for the council in the near future." Councilmen asked Gingwall to ~turn next Monday night with mort information and some recommendations on what la do about the runway extension and the night lights. . Councilmen themselves were split over what action to take with Mn. Nonna Gibbs and Jack Green calling for im· mediate action to close the runw1y ex- tension because it was illegally installed. (No use variance was requested for it.) The proposal to curb night flying was a compromise worked out by Co_uncilmqn Al Coen. ~lei! and called for blnding arbitration increue for fjremen. on the wq:e dispute. . Lut week the city council !pored tbt "I don"t aee whit could be ac-memoranda and granted the 1.26 percent i:ompllshed by further m e e·t in gs , '' pay increase to both grOup1 and t.q the Cl· Jerome G: C.Olton, couilse.I for the ty Employ~s,. Auociation. . firemen, told the council. "Meetlng!have_ J n ¥_(haJ coun~ilm.en admit~Moqday already taken place. Why not meet with night was a hasty action, they also forgot your administrators to find out why they • to agree last week to. fringe benefits re- thought our wage requests were fair." quested by policemen and firemen .. -Both groups had signed memoranda of That was corrected Monday, however, agrtement with City AdD).inistrator Doyle when the council voted to• approve.all the Miiier which called for 1n 11 percent pay requested · trlnte benefita. This · action boost for policemen and a 11-13 percent however, wu wiped 'off the board when ' the eoancll decided to rt.open"" all "'1ary considerations. But att~rneys for the police and fire aS80Ciltions -made it clear they were not interested in further talk!. C _,Attom_ey MichaelJL...N~k!. _r.-.J.Mll="'!;'---1 tirig tbe polictmen, said, "If tM coUDclJ can be criticized for anything it Is for 11· norance-and Jack of concern. If you dO. not understand the government code we cannot solve tbt problem now." He was referring to the belief IJ:tlOllS IS.. PAY llIKl!'.8, P ... 1) l~raelis Moving Tanks Egypt -Warns V.S. Against lnt,ervention \ . By Unl\ed Ptt11 Interaatlonal toll there wu over 10,000. Guerrilla huddled in interionooms-of the buUdtnt. Large iCale Israeli tank movements sources admitted ·8,000 dead , and uid which hu beto hit by small and mediwq. were repbrted today along the Jordanian there were tens of tho111ands wounded. arms fire several times since the filhtinc border. where Israeli military di.Patches U.S. military forces were alerted to broke out last Thursday, No ,lftjurlea hive reported the Jordanian army retreating move In to try to save the 400 American1 been reported. southward toward Amman in the face of in Jordan and the posaibillty or interven-The wives and. children of thete of. a Syrian tank onslaught. Guerrillas lion sef.med very real. Israel also was ficials were evacuated lut June w~n the reported Jordan's air force in action. reported prepared to act if it felt ib oo-ag11in, off-again fighting between With the poSsiblity of American • in-securitY lhreateoed -and a Syrian move loyalists and guerrillas began. tervention increasing, Egypt warned the southward from lrbid would bring Syrian Almost all of~the Americans in Jordan United States against stepping in, saying tanks clo.9e to the lsraell border. · live in or near Amman, a city or •bout this would threaten world peace. Egyp-If U.S. military forces should intervene 500,000 people built, like Rome , on seven tian Information Minister Mohammed in Jordan to rescue Americans tbie.re, hills. Hassanein Heikal said intervention would thty would be hunting for about 400 The State Department does not know rJ. ·endanger American.lives even further. p;rsons, of whom about 100 hold dual any Americans living in ~ northern · Syria iuued a similar warning. U.S . .Jordaniln citizenship. The SLa.te cilits Of Ramlba and IrbMI, now occupied lleaq fiahllDI reaumed In ~111 •t\lpartp\MI ~sis· lboul 4& ~ 1111' f°""" fnlarSlfia. --fllluri'9f I --iY :illpiaaiala ud ro,...i..r.a lllfM'.l!I llelbJ said !'.gypt WU trJinl to -I "KD!a illluOili ·aa1 Htillal:oaJll llihlatil duty II ~ ombuoy. n.r-~ ( ... JOIWAN, Pa&o 11 . Hunti~gton Vice .Sqund -.. -·- Busts Prostitution Ring Vice-squad officers from the Hun- tington ~ch Poll~ Department ~aid to- day they, cracked an alleged prostitutk>n ring in the city over the w~kend. Arrested following the investigation in· volving a local apartment house was Richard H. Ingham, 47, a photographer. He w~s arrested on s111picion of con- spiring and soliciting to commit prosti. tution, procuring a female and operating a house of prostitution. Also ta ken into custody as his alleged accomplice was Geraldine R. Gannon , 22, a model . who was arrested for suspicion of pro~tuUon. conspiracy to commit pro- stitution and being 1 mident of a house 3 to Represent Beach at ULI A ·three-man deleg8.tion has. been authorized to represent Huntingto_n Beach at the Urban Land InsUtuie Conference Oct. 4-9 In Scottadale, Ariz. The Urbln Land lnstitute was responsi- ble for most of the economic studies con· cemlng the downtown area involved in the city's Top of the Pier plan. Several topics ~mini redevelopment will be discussed 1t the conference. Monday night, city councilmen okayed expenses for planning c om m i s s i o.n Chairman Roger Slates and city planner Richard H1rlow to att,nd four days ot the conlertnce, while eur Bach. city development coordinator, was authorized to attend special sessions Oct. 4 and 7. . I of ill fame •. Bo\h were rel used on ball following arraignment" at Wert Orange County Court. That ':.house," according to police Lt. Bert Ekstrom, wu Ingbam's rtsldence at 4902 B-10 Heil Ave. •hlch was al . legedly used as a headquarters for customer contacts. Ekstrom aa id he and three other undercover officers were Jed to the cou· pie through a local newspaper ad which purportedly offered m ode I 1 to photographers. Posing as \ensmen wanting to hire s0me models for a golf publication seek· ing some models for a photo layout the of. ficers approached Ingham. The officers claim they negotiated for a "package deal," costing. $147 .50, iqd then arrested Ingham and Miu Gannon at the apartment. Later tnat evening, undercover ofliCer Ed Williams arrtsted a 34-year old woman on suspicion of soliciting in a separate· 1nVestlg1llon. He uid Delores M. Carallar of Q18 Acacia Ave., HWltingt.oft Beach, was circulating in 1 local barroom. offering hei services to patrons. She 1lso wal released on ball . Police said the 1rrests were not con. nected to arrests in Seal Beach oVer the weekend involving an alltged prostitution ring. Paxson Funeral Rites Slated ·Regional Cycle Park Endorsed By Huntington A rtsolution urging the County Board of Sypervilors to develop regional motorcycle parks received' lll)anllnoul ap. proval from the Huntington Belch City Council Monday. The statement calls for the establiJh.. ment of off-road ridlna parks "on an emergency b1sis" If n e c es s • r Y, especially in the Lot Coyotes, Santa Ana River and Ortega region!. As its 'foundation it .cited the d ty'1 ordinlnce prohibiting the use or dirt riding on unimproved property and that "il appears that the public desires to in- creaae the sarety aspects of this reeraa lion and diminish the undesirable ecological erfecll." Although. the city currently ls m1kinc , plans to establish its own minibike rtdina area ii) a gravel pit on Gothard Street and Talbert ·Avenue, .the resoluUon poinfs out th.al the major recreational lnterestl for the cycling 1port are region1l In nature, especially In reprd to lar1tr machines. "Even belore the city council adopted Its off-rood probibilioa In June 1t1 fl members of the cltJ Recreation and Parkl ~nt and motorcycle en- thuolalls (lad been looking ot IUilable locations for .• public trail park. Weatller City AUorney Don Bonfa was in· structed to write a resolution noting the naming of th e park for Carr, for presen- tation to the hero's family. Councilmen Al Coen and Mrs. Norma Gibbs agreed the man was deserving of honor, but opposed the park naming because it would break the cily's prn- cedure .for selecting park names -cur-. renUy a controversial subject under study by the city council. "But counting only Edison hookups doesn't take into consideration master meters ""hlch might serve 400 apartment units," Banick ;irgued. "There are only two master meters In all of Huntington Beach and both or those projects are 100 percent full," Slates replied. Swim Pool Row Funeral services will be held Wed- nesday for Leroy P1xson, a 50-year rest. dent of Auntillgton Beach, who died .Sun· day at Hoag Memorial Hospital. Mr. Pauon, who was 80 years old, wu a retired employe of Si1ntl Oil company in Huntington Beach. Thole hot deaert winds will warm things up.along the Orange ~"tonight, but ollGolkl cool oft by Wednelday. LoK for tempera- turu up to 75 along the tieachel and t3 in tht Im temperate in- land rtgiOlll. . . The Land Ganie (Northern St11leJ Picturt youraelf In a srug A-frame b e 1 I d e a Northern California stream, aw1y from smog and root beer 1tand1? And turnlna a tidy profit on the land you bought 1 The picture might not be as pretty 1s it's J)linted. For the fourth In a series of 1rUclcs by DAlL Y PILOT Starr Writer, Al Bates on the prob- lem, turn to Page 11 tod•Y· George McCracken and Ted Bartlett were the only friends Banick found on the council as they oppo~ the incµ.ased apartment fees. As he left the council chambers. Banick threatened to &end letters to all apart· ment residents in the city telling them why their rept.5_ went_ u.P and what 'hap- pencd at the council meeting. Mayor Donald Shipley called him out of order and said, "We don't need any political speeches hlre." ' l\1alaysian Resigns Huntington Man Vows Court Fight During his lengthy resldence ln the . beach city. he WU I mtmber of lhl loc1l Maaonlc IA>dge and WU ... ol Ille (lrlt In error al.nee the pool fence could hot be Sc®t Masters of Huntmcton Beach'• Boy set blclc r1r enouch trom tht pro~rty ~:t 1~ ~is IOl\I, William R. PUIOD line, accordlnc ·to lhe bulldiftl · depar.t-ol·Hun0nlf4n lleoCll,and om.t.K: PD. A ba.tlle CUJrently bein& w11ed o¥er a swimming pool by a HunUngt.on Beach couple and the people at clty hall may wind up before 1 judge. • "That was the sober appra!&al today of Ernest Sherwood, the not·s~proud ownei: of a $7 ,000 mi!take that wu to have been a 11wimmiflj pool. 6 "I guess it wUI wind up ln lhe courts.'' uld Sherwood who bll -o:ntacted an at- torney to see what c1a'be done about that Ill-foot pit in hi1front,.ni1nom CUily Sark Drive. • menl\ • 9Clll of LOI Anpltt: a daqhttr,1 JluUI._ AlthQqh Ille oily h'!l,llfttd•to fW up PoxlOO oi i..s A11t1•la: llsllr$, MIUCI the hole and put lftt yard bade Into 'NrMt, Hazel Black. aild Viola -· all ihlpe, Sherwood -end> this Isn't ·"' lndlano, and two 1raodchll'!""· • enough ind eithtr wanu hJs po6I. or hlt Investment back. "My husband IJ pretty disgusted at the moment," 1ald Mrs. He1lher Sherwood. "I think we've been given a ~d de1l by the city." • India I . Flood Kills 75 INSmE TODA.Y "The Roual Hvnt of the Su.n" at th~Lcg1'nc MoultorJ Ptov- ho.,c:-ltado off• htatlll .... ~ of ' thrlng theat•r on tM Orange ~Ocll& tonight. Stt Enterlm•' mint, P40< 19. -' -" ~, ..... II ~, ....... . --' .,...... ,.,,., II ._.,. , .. ,. . ........... " -" -" -.. ...... ...... , .. ,. --.. KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia !UPI ) - Tengku Abdul Rahman, founder of his nallon 13 years ago and Its prime mlnlsta tver since, mlgned Tuesday and handed over ~ relna of le1dershlp 1+--f;;;,;;;;;;,..;;;;..;;;;;;.-"'""Wi>""'"'")· -1o hl~younger d<puty, Tun Abdul Raiak. The big hole w" dul Au1. II by a Costa Mesa pool contractor, just one day after the Sherwoods hid recel'1ed a clt.J building permit for their pool. Unfortunately the permit Wit IJ'lnted T)Je Sherwooda tried to petition for 1 variance with the city's· Board Of 'Zoniq Adjuatments to allow the pool lalt -• but their rtqutll WU iumed lfown, HYDERABAD, India CAP) -seftnty· five perllO!ll m feared lo 111 .. drowned hero whtn lhe lllvtr.Musl bunt 111 buu oiler tomntlol rain, police Aid today. .,.,,. f1ooila nip! ·1w1y -9 of· - llooday. ·1 ., ' , ' . " • I DAILY "Lor H -, ~ la Seal Beacla ... ,.,_ Chief Denies . . ' 'Smokescreen'· By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Ot flle ~11'1' ll'li.t Sltlt Seal Beach Police Chief Lee Case denied Mooday, that he was part of a con· 1plracy to --criate a smokescreen oVer covert city hall activities by initiating the ~license hearing against the Marina _Palace. Grilled for more than two hours on the· 'witness stand by Attorney Russell W. Bledsoe, defense attorney for dance ball "°perator William RQbertson, Case Jald the allegations are "defamltory, slander· ous and libelous." Responding to Bledsoe's question about 1 whether he knew so~etbing about a $100 million high rise project whlch is alleged- i;IY the center of the conspiraCy, Case said he was falsely accused. Cast, who had been acting as ijie pro. -seeutor--in the proceeding against Robertson and the Marina Palace, took tithe stand himself Friday. The_tntlre · Monday afternoon session was taken up .by Bled!oe's cross-examination of the chief. • Queried extensiveJy by Bledsoe about Jill conversations with former City '..Mana1er Let Risner In coMection with " ' From Pagel ~JORDAN ... plane to Amman to rescue 100 foreign •urrespondents, mostly American. trap- . ped .in the Intercontinental Hotel in the tc:enter of the city, t-Their hotel has been. hit repeatedly in the showdown-civil war between Hu.asein ,and the Palestinian ruerrillas. '; Huuein, . faced with a battle for iurviv1I ind deserted by many of his ~Arab -allies, appealed . ,to the United ,J;tatesn the Soviet Union, Britain and France for help. But Was h i n 1ton vdilPltcbe:s 111d President Nixon had not ::ret decided on.1 course of action. ;:.i Israeli dispa~lies we~ &Ut>jected t.o in- tense military censorship, but reports reached l.A)ndon o( largescale tank movements Monday night and again to- day. The reports said it was uncertain whet.her they were deploying for possible 1ction tn Jordan. UPI correspondent Ohad Goiani. from the seashore resort of Tiberlas on the Sea of GllU... 'muld ·report only lhlt dttst clouds rising on the east bank of the Jordan._ River marked the passage1 of J ordan1jlll army convoYs rolling_south. On Monday, the Jordanian army hid moved northwa~ to Irbld, Jordan's se- .Cond city nestled in-2:000 foot mountains ~ miles north of Amman and only 18 ~miles east of the cease-fire line. · · Meanwhile. Arab leaders met ln emer1ency session today to seek ways to end the war in Jordan. But three ot the '.key figure!! were missing and the /Baghdad-based guerrilla radio told the :othe.rl "to 10 back· to your palaces •be.cause you , •• no lona:er miie lhe 'decision&." :Indian Guides ,Set Valley Meet Children Who · want to be Indians -at least part-time -should gather ·with 'their p1rents at 7:30 p.m., Thursday in the amphitheater of Fountain Valley High "School. Leaders of the YMCA Indian Guide and ·JndJan Maiden pro1rams will explain 'their activities to interesled youngsters ·lnd their parents. . Both 1roups are open to children in kin· Jtergaften t~rough third grade. Each pro- ;gram offers father-son or mother· ,daughter activities based on American Indian lore. Costumes and the $tudy of Indian ieustoms are a major part of the Indian Gulde and Indian Malden groups. DAILY PILOT OU.Heil COAIT PUl l,.laHING COMP.lHl" Jtob1•f N. W11cl I t . Pr"ldltll '"d l"wo .. 11'1_.. Jedi; R. c~1!1v Vitt Prflld111l '"" i;;t .i.>f'l1 M~"•ttr Eallar lhoMlt A, M wrp~i111 MINllio'!f f•- Al111 Oir~l11 W.I O••"" c-11 lal1or A llt1rt W, l1l11 AuOC!l1t l!d,101 M111ti11t tt1 11~111 Offlc1 17175 l11t~ l1wl1v1rcl Mallr111 Mclreu: P.O. 111 7tD, fJ.41 Otlllr Offlt:" l1 ..... e 11c11· n2 ~ortor AWflllf. C.111 .V..U: :no Wu! 8t'f l••r., )1..-1 kKJ'I: :011 Wttl l11M1 l Ot.>ltVI .. &111 CMtMflll : ~ No rlll el C1m1N fl .. I ll\I hearing, the Chief said he had only talked with Risner on three or four oc- c1sions. He testified that Risner had never ask· ed him to prosecute the Case and ad- mitted that he really didn't know how he became· the prosecutor. "I just ended up with presentin& his in- rormation but I never did volunteer to be the prosecutor," said Case, adding that he felt "like a fish out of water" when ·act in& as an attorney. Alsq disclosed during the hearing WU I COm'plaint by Rober:tson to Chief Case Charging 'one of the prosecution witnesses with selling liquor to niinori. The man was ldenUfied as reserve of· ficer Anthony Piazza who is employed as a liquor store clerk. He had testified earlier about his undercover work at the Marina Palace. · The chief said he had forwarded Robertson's complaint to'Lt. Al Chafe for 1ctlon but admitted that no file had be.en made up as of yet. Bledsoe then char1ed that the police department did not investigate the alleg- ed charge with the "same zeal" as the complaints against the dance hall and that. Oiere ajipeared to be a discrepancy about the way it handled its cases. Case said he contacted the Alcoholic Beverage Control Bureau about the of- ficer's alleged wrongdoing , add ing that an investigation either has or will be con- ducted b)' that a1ency. Trial Delayed; Victim's Status Still Critical A sa~agely beaten barttnder'a con- tinued critical cond!Uon led a Superior Court judge Monday to delay what cquld be .the. .murder h1al of a Westmln!f.er man suspected-of being his assailant. Judge William F. Speirs ordered Gerald R. Caron, 29. of 14941 Newland St., to re tum to his courtroom Oct. 26. He denied a motion for reduction or bat! to release on his own recognitance and ordered Caron returned to Oran1e County Jail. Caron ~ aCCUled of beating unemployed barkeep Douglas Ray Snider, 37, Ga NI en Grove, to the point that doe- to rs at Palm Harbor Hospital desP.a.ired 'or his life. Caron was admittod to Uie hospital July l and he remaini today in the intensive care unlt and ote critical Ii.SL Caron was arrested on-t at date and charged with being onelol two men who hammered Snyder into unconsclouancSli. Charges ·of assault with Intent to commit ,murdi!f were also filed against Joseph F. Auger, 38, of 14082 Shirley St., Westminster. District a t "o r n e y ' s investi1alors, satisfied now that Auger look no part in the beating, have dropped those char1es. Officers said the beating of Snyder took place in the Blackbird Street and Garden Grove Boulevard section of Garden Grove. They have declined to slate what they believe to be the reason for the , alleged assault. Beach Council OKs Temporary Horse Stables..._ The Huntington Beach City Council put out the welcome sign Monday night for horses. Councilmen supported earlier planning commission approval for a temporary stable for some 190 horses on property north of Ernest Avenue, near Golden West Street. Surrounding property o w n e r 11 , represented by attorney_ George Shibata, opposed the horse stables on the grounds they would prevent Industrial develop- ment of the area. "There are stalls for 190 horses adding up to 350 square feet for each horse. we allow more room for chickens," Shibata toid the council. "My people want to develop their land for industry, but not next to 1 horse stable," Shibata 1ald. Bill Williams, who Is co-applicant for the stables, told councilmen his stables would be all metal with the cleanest most modem facillUes possible. "This is only a temporary use. based on the llkellhood that the Coastal Freeway will cut acrosS the property," Williams said, The council refused to grant a vartance for the stables on an indefinite basis - limiting it to a rtve year period, with the possibility of renewal in July, 1975. 8 Reported Missing 900. Feet Down Mine fl.tANILA (AP) -Eight miners were reported missing today afl(!r a mudslide aealtd off an au1lH1ry tunnel!bout 900 feet underaround at • copper mlne In Toledo. Cebu. A company spokesman said rescue teams: were tfYinc to rtacb the miners In ain auxiliary tuMcl running olf • m11n tunncl. l!t...sald five m_ttt wl?re~lleved trapped at •bout t3S feet and thret more were believed to be 1t 875 ffft.. \, • • :.,-- ! DAILY PILOT l l•H Plltl9 . Firefighte~s 1 ' r -On-Alert In· County Orange County firemen were placed on stand-by alert today as hot, Ciry Santa Ana winds swept in from the desert, causing soaring temperatures in dry brush areas of inland and along the Orange Coast. , Similar hot dry weather is predicted for Wednesday. The Santa Ana winds are expected to ~each velocities near.JO.miles per hour. High fire haiards are expected In both hilly terrain and in Orange Count)''• can- yons. · The quickly rising temperatures cause a sharp decrease in relative humidity, accord in'g to Deputy Chief Carl Downs of the county fire department. The tern· perature at El Toro Marine Base rose IB degrees in one hour this morning -from 62 degrees at 8 a.m. to 80 degrees_at 9 a.m. "The desert winds have a tremendous Influence on the potential of fire dJsaster," Downs warned. • Reader on the Beach Downs noted that the relative humidity usually drops to between ·eight and 10 percent, causing the brush in inland Oiange County to dry .out and become easily ignited. As Santa Ana \\•inds heat up the Orange Coast, Drew Whiting, a South Laguna resident. enjoys sun , sea and splitude at Aliso Beach. "Where have all the beacngoers gone," the photographer asked Mr. Whiting, who was cooling it with a good book, "Why, back to school," he replied with a knowing smile. 'Now it's my turn to enjoy the beach." The U.S. Weather Bureau has not issued any small craft warnings for: boaters along !he Southern California Coast, and the seas are expected to re- main calm. From Pagel PAY HIKES. •• I representatives or the police and fire that when they signed agreements with Miller it was the same as the council agreeing to salaries. At thia point Councilman Al Coen, an attorney, criticized Nezin for chewing aum while addreSliing the council . "You wouldn't do' th.at in court. Please ahow us the same respect." "It's medicinal gum, I ·have a sore throat," Nezin replied. "Now if I may continue?' And he did. "If you do not now use the lines of communlcation open to you then there is no reason to complain if other methods of communications are used." Nez.in did not clarify whether he was referring to a strike. work slowdowns or what, but did say there was no reason for Hunµngton Beach, •·to become a Santa ..._.. ... 11n Diego." CoUncllwoman Norma Glbba asked fiep!l why he was chastiziog the council W'tien it hed just taken action lo admit possible ertor last week · by rescinding l•st: week 's actions. ...:.1.!PPN!Cille.your ~!ateme9ts,'' Neiin answefii(I. "But t·m not convinced the other six councilmen feel the same as you." Colton. speaking for the firemen, called for binding arbitration when he said. •·rm not here to bargain or negotiate. I'm here only to tell you on behalf of fire.men we reject your salary proposal." He ·then-suggested-bypassing:-rnediation as a waste of time and said. "let's 10 straight to binding arbitration.'' Councilmen. Jn rescinding their earlier p·ay actions, said last week's moves were made under an air of confusion and that perhaps more study ought to be given the salary proposals. Policemen and firemen have taken the position that all the study necessary was accomplished in negotiations with Miller. They had originally asked for a 16 per. cent pay boost, but dropped their request to 11 percent after negotiations with Miller. The pay raises noted in Miller·s memoranda of agreement were reported· ly d~ided on after the city conducted a salary survey of 10 cities comparable to Huntington Beach. Representatives of policemen and firemen left the meeting clearly unhappy. but councilmen were surprised later in the evening lo learn they had also upset the city Employes ,Association. which represents all cmployes other than pO!ice and firemen . Darrell Smith. a spokesman for the city emploY,es, asked the council to rclnstale their 8.25 pe rcent pay raise. because city employes were happy with it. "We're afraid no\v that lf you renegotiate with firemen and policemen you may grant them higher raises and make it up by lowering ours." . Councilmen, howeve r, refused I o reinstate the pay raise for anyone , then called an executive session for 6 p.m., Wednesday. at the Sheraton-Beach Inn to discuss the entlrt matter. Beach Citizens Seek Park Land City Purchase Homeowners In the Franciscan Foun- tains Tract of Huntington Beach want the city to buy 6.8 acres of land at Golden West Street and Slater Avenue for the proposed central park. ftfonday night they appealed lo the council to buy or lease the land to pre- vent a commercial development. City sl!l ff members, however. told the council that, if the IA.nd is purchased It will wtsken park runds to such a point that tbe other 200 acres of the central park could not be developed for severa l years. Estimated price or the 6.9 acrts is $200.000 to ~.ooo. ' City st.ttff members -·ere ordered to ~ru>.ral5'11' of _the land to determine Its actual value and repor back 'lo lht council. Nucleqr Plants Studied By Water Control Board By PAMELA HALLAN Of 11141 Dllllf ,llltt Stiff The Southern California Regional Wa ter Quality Control Board, San Diego Region, took a hard look Monday at ex- cavation requirments for two more T)Uclear generating plants near San Onorre. Before construction on the two 1,140 megawatt plants can begin, the board placed stringent requirements on the disposal of material gleaned from ex· cavations necessary lo prepare the two sites for construction. The 'San Diego GaS and Eltc\ti(l Com- pany and the Southefll, Calilornla Edison Company have es~ that tw~D\lllion 3 . Councilmen Demand Audit Of Cit y Books Three. members of the...S~al Beach City Council Monday requested a complete audit of the city books spanning the past three years and a direct comparison with the normal city audit. The re.view was demanded by Coun· cilman Conway J. Fuhrman, target of a recall campaign, midway th r o u g h another stormy council session. It was approved by Mayor Morton Baum and Councilman Thomas Hogard with Councilmen Lloyd Gummere and Ha r.old Holden casting the "no" votes. The audit will be conducted by Reynolds and Associates and will be sub- mitted to the city council In addition to the normal city audit by Diehl , Evans and Company. Earlier this year the council considered a similar full-scale audit but rejected their p!ans because of the expense in- volved. cubic yards of surface teITace material and 650,000 cubic yards of underlying San Mateo formation materjal will be e1- cavated. The terrace material is composed of silt, clay and fine lo coarse sands with layers of cobbles and boulders while the San Mateo is 0 dense, fine to coarse sand wi th pods of terrace material. The board accepted the recom- mendations of their executive director, Dennis O'Leary and voted unanimously to · prohibit the deposit of terrace material in the Pacific Ocean. The two utility companies had already made arrangements to deposit th.is material on land at selected sites within Camp Pendleton. ' -Pods ·or -silty, clay material greater tha'n one foot in thickness in the San Mateo Formation must also be deposited with the terrace material. The board is allowing the disposal of the San Mateo sand along the beach in the near.shore zone to replenish sand that wears away through erosion. The utility companies also plan to ex- cavate on the ocean floor to construct four 18-fool diameter coiiduils for the cooling water intake and discha rge system . These conduits would be buried beneath the ocean floor, extending between 2.600 and 3.400 feet offshore. Excess sand from this operation was to be deposited ori the seaward side of the terminal structures, but the committee voted to recommend placing t h i s· material In ttie nearshore zone so it too can help replenish beaches. 9 The staff reported that San Mateo sand had been deposited along the beach in H164. when the site of the present San Onofre plant was prepared. They reported th1t no adverse effects to marine life oecurred at that time. The board also approved a monitoring system for the excavation projects, to make sure the requirements are carried out. SERVICE • • • But the winds will have an effect on the aircraft taking off and landing at Orange County ' Airport. All altcraft are taking off toward the northeast -the opposite direction from their usual pattern. The reverse takeoff and landing pattern ls because the ai rplanes are designed to take off and land into Uie wind. The airport management has checked all private aircraft parked at the airport to iruure that they are tied down properly to avoid being lifted into the air by the expected 35 knot winds. As the northeasterly wind began to build up speed .this morning, it .met the southv•estcrly sea breeze. Both winds were blowing at about 10 knots and the Orange County Airport \oy,·er recorded the \Vind blowing towards !he east -in from the ocean. But the windsock a few hundred yards across the runway recorded the wind blowing the opposite direction -in from the desert. Bras Touch Off Battle in Store A petite Garden Grove woman accused <Jf trying to turn in four Cross Your Heart brand brassieres for $32 she never paid for them fought of( a pair o( Costa Mesa store security guards Monda y night. White Front security men Robert Bearden and Joseph· Elmore con!ronted the alleged shoplifter in the store at 3088 Bristol St.. during the exchange. "She immediately began flailing her arms." said Detec tive George Webster. adding that Bearden and Elmore backed off out oJ range bul finally seized the allegedly stolen lingerie. . "The bras in conflict were placed In evidence," added Detective Webster. who said investigation continues today to determine whether the woman will be Ir· rested. Ma la ria on Increase ATLANTA. Ga. (AP) -A total of 3,908 cases of malaria in the United States and Puerto :Wco was reported in 1969, an In- crease o1 1,196 cases over the previous year, the Center for Disease Control says. How much is it \\-~th? In the carpe t business sometimes its worth EVERYTH ING! Ha rdly a day 9011 by that wo don't get • call re garding anoth er company's poor installa- tion. Occesionolly tho d1ma9e '"ultin g fr om poorly sewn seams or ta ped seems is not r1p1ir· obit. Then the volue of th o investme nt lools polo ind11dl • • Why p1y $300.00 or $I 500.00 for carp1lin9 end ga mble with the inst1 ll1tion? We maintain •11 of our own crews , ell t1u9ht tho ON LY w1y lo insti ll corpeting -tho RIGHT way I Thi gr11test mejority of our business 1s roforrol. The,. is Ii reason! ALDEN'S SANTA.......... CARPETS • DRAPES TUSTIN Cell ••• uo" .!',~'~,,.,. 1663 Placentia A Ye. a oum on COSTA MESA 1117f lnl-. T•ft .. c.IH. ---..... __ .. _ ... _ ...... -........ ---..---~·6!16.4131 < ' • I I • -TutSday, Stpttmb!f 22. 1970 H DAILY ~ILOT ~ Jord~n Asks ·Help _f :rom~,~ig Powers 64 Counts Hugh Addonizio Gets l 0 Years ., TRENTOflt, N.J. !AP ) -Former-Vicaro's bail \\'IS revoked be<.ausc 1 -:- Newark Ma yor lfugh J . Addonizio was his past criminal record. sentenced today to 10 years in federal AddonWo told newsmen after t11t: pro- ceedings, "I've become accwtomed I' prison and fined $25,000 on his conviction the v•orst. I had hoped for the best.·• Ask- for extortion and conspiracy. ed what he would do oow, he said, "I'm Addonizio h_as already said he would going to try to find a job.".He said he hat: ap~al his conviction on 63 counts of ex-oothing definite in mind. torting money from contractors doing The appeal procedures could lake up le business with lhe city and on one count of t"·o years. conspiracy. He could have received up to ~--20-years...and.a~SlO,ooo...tinum..e,ch.Af..Lb1ee __ ~~----~ 6\:un~~lence was imposed by U.S. Liberty Pair District Court Judge George H. Barlow \\'ho called the scheme "a frightening A • alliance between criminal elemenls and rraignment public officials." Barlow rejected a plea for leniency by Addonizio'll attorney·, Bern a rd HelJ. s l d T d ring, and ,aid "a coospiracy ol this ate 0 ll)' magnitude would never have succeeded without the active parlicipalion of the mayor." Barlow called the entire scheme "a crime of monumental proport,ions, the enonnity of '"hich can scarcely be im· agined." , Also sentenced with Addonizio were three of his codefendants. Former Public Works Director Anthony LaMorte got 111 years and a $10,000 fine, reputed un- derworld figure Joseph Biancone got 10 years and a $25,000 fine. and another reputed mobster, Ralph Vicaro, recci.ved 12 years and a $10,000 fine. The sentencing of Philip Gordon, a former city corporation counsel, was postponed until a presentence report could be p·repared by the federal pro- bation department. All the defendants except Vicaro \V_ere freed' on $25.000 bail pending their ap- peals. 10-cent Holdup Means 3 Years LITTLE ROCK , Ark. (AP) -A three-year prison sentence against a teen.age boy for a Hkent rob- bery was affirmed Monday by the Arkansas Supreme Court. \Villiam Young Radcliff of Lillie Rock, who was 17 when the robbe ry occurred last year. had appealed his conviction from Pulaski County Circuit Court. "It is ·lmmatcrial of \vhal value the thing taken is," the high court said. "A penny as well as a pound thus forcibly extorted makes it rob- bery." Rad cliff allegedly took 1he dime at gunpoint fr om another youth after a high school football game. Special lo the DAILY PIWT SAN 01Eco -Candlelight Killer Robert \V. Liberty and the woman he wed in a Colorado jail were scheduled for ar- raignment today in San Diego County Superior Court on murder charges. The former Wesuninster man and his bride, Kendall A. Liberty, were ex- tradited from Colorado Springs last Saturday and pleaded innocent to the murder coWlts Monday in municipal court. Liberty and his wife, both 24, are ac· cused of the June 7 torture-slaying of Robert J. Irion, 53. in his San Diego apartment during a Ca Ii fo rn i a :-to· Colorado -crime spree. The victim -burning candles flicker· ing beside his mutilated body -knew Liberty when both were patients at Atascadero State Hospital · for the criminally insane four years ago. Liberty, who also faces a ltuntington Beach murder charge. was declared in· sane following the 1966 candlelight killing of the woman with whom he lived in \'iestminster. A 11.year-0\d Long Beach boy Is the key San Diego prosecution witness and he allegedly watched lrion's murder after being forced to drive a young man and woman to San Diego. Liberty's family told police they were also held hostage in their Westminster home earlier on the day Irion was slain, while the young fromer mental pa· tient allegedly waited to kill his step- father. He is chargeclwith_murder and flight to avoid prosecution in connection with ll'M: ~1arch 12 shooting death or a former roommate, Thomas Astorina, 25, in Hun· tington Beach. Liberty was released from Atascadero St.ate Hospital on Sept. 15, 1969 after six court-appointed psychiatrists agreed he had regained his sanity and he has never served any prison time. 'New Bomb Peril Dynamite F ou11.d Near Cal State By GEORGE LEIDAL Of Ille 01llr .. 1111 S11!1 Discovery of 84 slick:s or dynamite in a field near cal Stale Fullerton is leading police today to believe radicals may no\\' ravor bombing over confrontation. Capt Fred King. Fullerton police liaison to CSF told the DAILY PILOT. "It seems evident that the acUvists are turning to the hit·and-run tactic and will be bombing buildings rather than engag- ing in con{rontations with police this year." King 's men are investigating the discovery or ''low grade" dynamite buried last Wednesday "by t·wo long- haired young people" y.•ho King said were observed by a transient. The unnamed transient watched as the two hippie.types pulled up in a camper \'an buried a package in the drainage ditch south west of the intersection or State College Boulevard and Yorba Linda Avenue. On lhe transicnt's tip. 'Fullerton pollce unearthed the dynamite from the site a.cross the street from a campus parking lot. King said his men are checking leads from a northern C ti I I f o r n I a newspaper in which the dynamite was wrapped and searching the county for the vehicle. Campus o{ficials were reluctant to comment on the dynamlle flnd since "it y.·ould be an acknowledgement of the posSibility they were ifitended. for use on the campus,·· a sJ)blCesman &iid. That possibility hasn't yet been detmnlned. AdmJttlng that the coll ege buildlnp •re wlner•ble to dynam iting, the spokesman noted the stc:Urity force r.r the ca_mpus had not been increased this year "even though "·e enroll~ more than 14.000 sludents -an Increase ol ...more than 1.00@ over lAsl year:" Strategic arca!I of the campwi are not guarded and It ii not likely Fullerton !Jolice. will be called to provide bomb threat protection. •·1t I J the state's responsibilit y to gu&J11 tht campus, '1 the spokesman aald. ~ ' CSF has received no bomb threat! this year but experienced several last year. One bomb threat, to a newspaper, Jed to the April 27 discovery or seven stick s of dynamite in a men's washroom in a corridor near the president ·s office. Dr. L. Donald Shields, CSF vice presi· dent, said the latest firKI CQuld "presage a series of guerrilla tactics ahead for us this year, or, it CQUld be harassment, or even subterfuge." "At this time,'' King said, "proximity to UJe campus is the only link between the dynamite and CSF. "However, We have no doubt that there are students at Cal State of the type who might resort to bombing buildings. So the dynamite likely will1 prove to have some afriliation with a campus group." King noted the dynamite found wall: of the type used by farmers to blast slumps. "If someone wanted to destroy a building," King said, "they 'd probably use a higher grade explosive." CSF '"''as wracked with police-student C<lnfrontations last spring following a Feb. · 9 appearance of Gov. Ronald Reagan on the campus. Arrests or scores of militants followed the Feb. 9 disturbance through lhe close , of the school year ln June. • Many students drew jail aentencet for their part in campus unrest. Further, continuing di9Ciptinary hearings held by the a;F administration hllwe resulted ln thfrexpulsion oC at least two students and sutpension ol aeveral more. Strict llmltaUons of the use of campus facililJta for demoMtraUon.s or rallles wtre laid down by the •dminlatralicwl over summer and included a bin on use of the inside of any campus buUdlng. Takeover of the UtUe Thtalfr by ttudtnt strike forces last year wa1 the center of much criticism of the Jdministratlon . Laltr, an unused temporary bu\ldlnl granted to strtkers was destroyed fn a '30,000 pre-dawn blaie following a con· servative community organization's rally in the cOllece ifmnasium. " Colorado Cool \Vhile things \Vere heating up along the Orange Coast and in Southern California generaJiy today, the folks back in Idaho Spring, Colo., just west of Denver, were sloshing around in four inches of ne'v snow dumped by .an early fall storm over the Rocky Mts. Eastern 5Jope of Rockies often experiences hot, drying winds after a snow storm. They are call- ed "Chinooks" and are similar to Santa Anas. King Seeks Diplomatic Peace Aid WASHINGTON IUPC) -The Wblt1 House said today Jordan'• King 11..tn had asked the United States, the Soviet Union, Britain and France for dlplomadc assistana to help restore peace in hit embattled counlr)'. President Ni.Jon's preu aecretary, Ron.aid L. Ziegler. deClined to reveal "'hether Hussein also had asked about possible U.S. armed intervention in· hJI anny's battle witl(guerrlllas and Syrian forces. "The United States g o v e r n men t • together with the other powera, received a message from Hussein regarding what assistance could be prov Ide d diplomatically," Ziegler told newsmen. "We're concerned and we hope that the other powers are concerned as we are to make everv effort to achieve the withdrawal Or Syrian forces from Jordan and create an atmosphere in which the conflict can be resolved." '·The situatiot. is still complicated, fluid and ,·snlr seriow," Ziegler said. He Aid. that all Americans living in Amman were "safe and weu... 1 G1·etel II Win Nullified Policemen Guilty In Sex Orgy Witli Teen Girl But he said he had no late information about 54 airliner hijacking hostqes, in- cluding about 38 Americans, belna: be!d by the Palestinian guerrillas. He aaicl ""Y.·e have deep concern" for them. After Syrian armored units crosaed the Jordanian border during the weekend, the United States characterized Jt as a direct invasion and asked ·the Russians to uee their-influence with Syria to withdraw its forces. In _Am·erica's Cup Race By ALMON ~KABEY •AILY ,ILOT 1 .. 11111 lfl .. r NEWPORT, R.I. -Cheers lurned ·to tears in Aussieland ttfonday. Gretel !l 's .magnificenl victory over Intrepid in the second race for the Amefica's Cup was nullified . By a dis· qualification for a breach of the rules after starting. As was to .he expected, it was a held day for what the late Ev Morris call· ed, "baseball writ- ers in sneaers" who are convinced that the New York Yacht Club is composed o( I bunch of wealthy, prejudiced crooks "'ho are determin-- ed to keep the • FREEHOLD, N.J. (UPI) -Six of seveH Long Branch police accused of con- ducting an orgy \Yith the teen-aged daughter of an area minister pleaded guilty ~1onday to reduced charges. The six originally were charged lYtlh fornication, conspiracy to comm i l fornication, open lewdness and con. ltibutlng to the delinquency of a minor. Instead, they admitted to misconduct in ofrice. f.1onmoo th County Judge Patrick J. McGann will sentence lhem Oct. 30. They face ll maximum penalty of three years The State Department said today fl.loscow had advised the United States that it had been ,in touch with the syr;,.n government. ft * * Guerrillas Try For Arab State In Nor.tli Jordan in jail and a $1,000 fine. LONDON (UPI) -Arab guerrillas eon- The prosecution charged that on the trolling the northern part of Jordan may night of May 18 the seven policemen and establish there. with Syrian backing, an two firemen, who have been separated ''independent Palestine state," e: a from the case and face a separate trial. nucleus for a hoped for greater Palestine, held a sex party in the West End diplomatic sources said today. Firehouse at Long Branch. They charge The move·, if suceessful, would split em· Patrolman Augustus Anfuso found the battled Jordan into two and make it sacred old mug in this country at what· ever C06t. 11/tost of these chaps don·t eyen know the intricacies of a yacht race, much less the n1\es that govern this. They are the guys who think all umpires are blind and prejudiced against the home team. --i:trt-and~contacted the others.;-----virtually~unviable:--A l·r -e·a·d·y-·the--1 ... Those awaiting sentencing are: Anfuso, Hashemite kingdom is heavily dependent First off, let me explain that I am nol prejudiced. I am one of those thousands of Americans who would like to see ..some other c'OUntry win the America's Cup. Especially Australia, becau:se. I have never betn there. But no one who has ever raced yachts relishes the thought of having one coun-- try or another -or one individual or another win a race by deliberate al· templs to foul. · That'5 what Martin Visser~ starting helmsman on Gretel II appears to be doing. He has tried it twice . The first time the race committee bent over backwards to be fair and threw out both Protests. The c;econd titne, there was con- tact and the committee had nn choice but to decide the issue on the rules. Here ls what happened : Visser made a valiant attempt to block Bill Ficker from crossing the .starting line to 'windward between Gretel and the cOmmittee boat. He deliberately set a trap by luffing head·tD-wind near the line. but not close enough to the committee boat. His plan was to luff up and block Ficker or force him lo come about and pasll astern. All this was legal had it worked. But Ficker was qUicker. He saw an opening wide enough to drive Intrepid through. And with a full head of steam he drove for it. Visser tried to luff up further, even to the point of almost bringing his boat over onto port tack. By this time !"icker had established an overlap and the gun sounded. Suddenly, one rule superseded another. After the gu n, Visser had an obligation to bear off and sail a full-and-by course for the mll(k. He didn't. He continued to luff heaQ..to-wind to lhe point where Gretel II struck Intrepid. just aft of the chain. plates. The Point of contact by this time may difference. The gun had aound· ed. For the benefil of sea lawyer!, Gretel II protested under rul.., 37.t, 37.2 and 40 which provide for ! windward yacht to keep ~leir qf a leeward yacht before the gun aounds. It involves the anti-barging rule. But as all racing sklopers know , barging is not Illegal 1£ you do not. interfere with 11 close· hauled jacht rlgfit-of-way. lntrtpid had room to tl't through and did to the point that she e9:tab!lshed an overlap. She was clo3C-bauled and well on her way whtn the gun 50unded. But Visser appeartd to be: lnltnl on fouling Intrepid out. lfe continued his l'ufr after tbe gun lO the point where contact was made. Jn the opinion or many ex· perlt -both American 1Jld Australian - 11 was a case of Visser not knowlna the EXPLAINS CUP RULING Intrepid Skipper Ficker rules, or being so intent on one that he forgot what came next. Ficker protested under rule 42J t E) which states that after the gun, the leeward yacht has an obligation not lo deprive a windward yacht from passing on the required side or the committee boat once an overlap is established. To the credit of many knowledgeable Asusie · observers who witnessed the in- cident. they agreed that Gretel II should have been disqualified Jong before the committee reached its decision , This reporter witnessed the incident from a nearby Coast Guard prefiS . bOat and predicted that Gretel would be dis· qualified. Pitiful part of it all was that Gretel IT y.·ould have won the race by an even greater margin than she did if ViMer had not beeil so Intent on winning in tile pro- test room. Once Jim Hardy took over the helm. he out!ailed Ficker on every leg of the course except two reaching legs. Even Ficker admits that the Aussies have a good boat in Gretel II and that she is well sailed on the course. Another thing ~hat should be pointed out lo Visser and hi." Aussie compatriots i' that Ficker is very knowledgeable on the t11lc1 of yacht racing and is an ag. gresslve sailor. He Is not about to lost the cup by forcing his way through an open· ing that doesn't exist. Naturally, there are many bitter Aussie' here, particularly Martin Visser who say1 loud and clear and sometimes rudely that he doesn 't agree with the racts presenttd -although he agrees that the contact was made after the starting gun. But there are others: Sir Frank Packer : "It was a hometown decision, but it.ls not to be forg°'ten. We are going out to win the next lour." The female reporter: '1We are not bit· lt:r. We now know we have a boat capable of wlMing the cup. We won that ract, despite the protest." And there art many others here. both American and Australian, who feel that the Aussies may have the. boat and the crew to take the cup down undtr. But It will only happen it Gretel's crew ~alls to win on the courst and observe all of the rules. .._ 'l'hl1 reporter's conclusion. The tom. mlttec was depd right. There. co1ild hsvc been no _..other: nchl:!ljon..-.ed on the ram obse""'d and pre1enled. , Patrolmen Patrick Conte, James Sciallo on outside financial contribuUona from and William Bonfrote and Detectives , other Arab nations and Western Jo~eph Miller and Gregory Boba. governments. Trial continued ftlonday for Patrolman At the same time a ''Palestine'" Robert Graziano. enclave, domina"ted by the Palestine Normal Man Kept In State Hospital First 31 Years RENO (UPI) -A clinical psychologist at the Nevada State llospltal ha' rev·ea l- ed how a man wJth normal intellige'nc:e was kept in mental institutions for the first 31 years or hi1 life. Dr. Robert fl.fcQueen . _who b1 also a Universit,y of Nevada-Reno professor, said the man's case came to light when he was lranliferred to the Nevada State Hospital about 10 years ago from an out.- of-state private institution which was going out of busine.53. The detail!! were revealed by l\fcQuetn in the Sept. 12 i5Sue of Saturday Review. The man's unwed mother became preg- nant as a young girl, and then was asked by another man -the son of a banker - to marry her. In an effort to keep the birth of the child from him, she wenl to have the baby deli vered by a doctor she had heard of. .. Veterans Given 'New Lease' For Exemptions Orange County Veterans who were denied property tax txemptions on their homes got a new "lealle on life" today. County Asses.!Or Andrew J. Hinshaw sajd that a law enacted by the Legislature and signed by the governor last week set an Oct. 2 deadline for vets to apply for homeowner& exempUon claims. He said tht homeowners claim forms h11ve been malled· to some 3$0 veterans who were denied their veterans ex- emptioh. ''These vets were notified of their ex· emption deni•I In July." Hinshaw said. ."Most. former servicemen l'iled for the homeowners exemption last year ,,-hen they n1ed1Gr the $1,000 vets ,exemption. so our malling ts tnrge:ted at those veteran• who did not previously Ule for the f751.l homeowners exemption.'' guerrillas, woWd alter the power setup on Israel's border which Israeli authorlUet may find strategically and militarily unaceeptable, the sources said. The setting up of the semblance or a guerrilla-controlled Palestine state would. in the view of diplomatic informants, all but end the remaining hopes for a Middle East peace settlement. · The sources s3id latest developmenta seem to point to such designs on the part of the extremist guerrillas who woultl then use the area as a base for CQntlnued pressures on the remainder of Jordan and Israel. lsraeu· leaders have said repeatedly in the past they will not tolerate a chan1e in the political structwe of Jordan in which Syri11 or Iraq, let alone both, would have. a major say. The current rumblings In Tel Aviv SUI· gested today that Israel military leaders and politicians are taking no chancea and apparently are readying for emera:eney. moves. IsraeJ waa understood to have prepared contingency plans for such eventualities. the sources said. Syria's move at the weekend into Jordan could well trigger Israeli action , unle.ss there is a 1peedy pullback, they added. Girls Stage Panty Raids . MILWAUKEE. Wis. (UPI) Two Marquette Unive r sity donnitories were largel.s Monday of a panty raid with a twist. The girls did the raiding. some 200 coeds !tarted out from O'Donnell Hall, a w om en's dormitory, for a planned raid on McCormick Hall ·all a reprisal for a raid staged Sunday n!lht by_ McCormick men on O'Donnell 'lbe aUempt fizzled, however, when some McCormick men got wind or the raid and infiltrated the gtrl1' line. . About 30 or the girl• then decided on an alternate target -Schroeder Hall. a dorm housing IOO men. They marched around the back of S c h r o e d e r Jlall. chanting "Schroeder ain't got nothln'" and then werit 11round to the rront ~'here: they were chara:ed by about 30 male 1ludeJtt1. - t~ .., .. Delly , .. ,..., " A 1965 Cadillac limousine that one belong to actress Judy Garland iSbeing auctioned. off by Nova Uni· versity, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Bids may be submitted by· telephone or mail:As much u half Of the pur· chase price may be tax deduct· ible, a univ~rsity spokesman said. · He said the previous owne.rship of the car has been documented. The university hopes to equip its new television studios with , proceeds from the auction, the spokesman •aid. --· • A crew of firemen WCI dfa- patched Friday tn Port.smouth, Va. to rescue a cat from a tree. Mi.s.rion accom.plisMd, the c"a.t was released. As the fire truck st.art.ed back to the station, it ran ovtr the cat. • • - la l'qosleeG. Tito An-nounces ---- He Will Re-sign BELGRADE (AP) President Tito hu orulowtied !hot he will olep down •fter nillDI Yuplavlo !or 15 yun ond tum the country'• eovemmeot over to a collective leadership. Tito, 71, did not lndicote Mondoy wbot his poaltiOo wouJd be but JI WU believed in Belgrade, the natiOn's capital, that he would r.maJn beod of. the C«nmun131 V~et Leader Ky Starts Trip To Paris, U.S. party ond would run the new pretldium, •t leut tll Ill lnltiol pbue. Further detoJls 1VU be UlllOWICOCl lolu, Tito a.ild. "I un quite loD1 In thJa pool ond I would like to hove ..-pouibllitlea to · work on 80l'De other projectl," be uld in •speech MC)lldoy In ~. the countey's Oe<XllJd Wgeot city. - • Tito, who broke from Moocow Jn I .. •nd WU llAIJllOd pmideDl for Ille Jn 1911, Aid r.organizatioa of the oountey's Com- munist government was. necellU)' to preserve Yugoalavia11 unity. He 11ve DO ·Umetable for the cJWtgeover. But be Aid speculation on who might 1ll:Ceed bim could provoke a criais, aDd that to avoid tt, governmental restructurlnc • a 1 .-wy. He explained !hot he Initiated the change becaUle "lf eomeone elle did, H would Sook u if they wanted to remove SAIGON (UPI) -Vice President and me.0 Mrs. Nguyen Cao Ky of South Vietnam Tito Aid be would be replaced by o left for the Paris peace talks and the presidium thlt would be "• fonn of col- Unlted States Tuesday with every m.: lective president of Yugoslavia." The diCation that he planned to fu1flll a speak-body would consist of representatives ing engagement at a right-wing rally in from the country's six republics and tts Washington on Ocl 3. main social and political organlZIUons, Ky and hia wile, Ma1, boarded a including the Communist party. regularly scheduled commercial AJr Viet.. Tito was a partiJan leader against the nam flight for Taipei and Tokyo at g close ties with the Soviet Union im- a.m., where they were expected to mediately following the war. But in 1948 • U,I T1 .. ,i;o11' F,... WU. Servkes Communi$t troopi who have stalled the government's first· m•jor offensive lash- ed out at heavily reinforced cambodian forces ~ two shelling attacks today, the military command reported. A spokesman said the Caqibodian troops, estimated at about I,~ men, were pressing against light oppoiition in- to positions to-try lo envelop_the C..AI:!'· rn1,mist strongpoint at Taing Kaut, 47 miles north or Phnom Penh. 1 An esUmated 2,000 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong are in the village. "nMI enemy force has halted the government operation for nine days. The spokesman in Phn<tm reob Aid villagers in the battle zone ha~e reported that some Communists were,pulling ode of Taing Kauk. He said tntellieence reports indicate that the enemy may have decided to fall back to more easily defendable po.sitions. The spokesman said five soldlm and two civilians were wounded in the two shelling attacks. Premier Lon Nol visited the Taing Kauk area Monday, then went on to Kompong Thom to visit troops at that provincial capital 80 miles north of Phnom Penh. The government's offensive is aimed at reopening the area between Skoun and Kompong Thom. Republicans raised nearly $200,· 000 Saturday in a fund-raising ex· periment called the "Grand Old Party" at a 400-acre ·farm on the western outskirts of suburban Creve Coeur near St. Louis. A1*>ut . 6,000 tickets were sold at $25 each for . the extravaganza, which fea- tured performances by singer Tony Martin and screen personalities Dale Robertson and Jane RU1Hll. Available . to party.goers were President Nixon wristwatches for $15 and Spiro Agnew watches for ,~,~· change to an international flight to Paris. his country became the· first Soviet Ky's office maintained that they did not aatellite to break away. have details on the flight beyond Tokyo. The United States wu pleased by the CAMBODIAN GIRL SOLDIER RESTS DURING FIGHTING Seema Stunned As She S..1 Bodies of Slain Friends The Cambodian command a 1 so reported four attacks in the past two days in the Phnom Penh area. It ap- peared that none or the attacks dislodged. A surprise figure at the colorful sendoff break and provided Tito's 1ovemment ceremony at Tan Son Nhut Air Base was with morellian $1 billion in assistance of government soldiers from their posiUons. U.S. ambassador Ellsworth Bunker. The various kinds. In later years Yugoslavia's U.S. State Department had· ~~Vised Ky relations with Moscow and Washington not to make the trip to the United State! alternately wanned and cooled. for his own safety and because of the in-Tito's announcement wu not expected 'PermissiveEducators'Hit The spokesman said the government now has enough troops to maintain the pressure in its drive up Highway a to Kompong Thom and to deal wilb enemy pressure anywhere else in the country. · fluence his trip might have on the U.S. to affect President Nixon's planned visit Congressional elections. to Yugoslavia next week. However, any Asked why he came to the ceremonies, U.S. intervention in the Jordanian civil Bunker chuckled and said, "No com•. war could force cancelllltion of the trip m.ent." Later, tie said, "I am here at the because of Tito's close ties with Arab invitaUon of the Vietnamese ForeJin leaders. By Agnew in Hot TV Clash The Cambo<lian high ':""'l"ond Monday replaced the commander of a govern- ,ment task force which has been encirloed. for a week by Communist' troops north 4lf Phnom Penh. South Vietnamese troope Mini~try~" . NEW YORK (AP) -Vice President • Meanwhile, speculation cont,inued that Spiro 'I_;. Agnew, debating with a student Bry'•n County Oklo ••••• ,·11 Joo Ky would reach Paris but would not con-Female Panthers ho lied h' f . I ~ tinue on to the United States becauee of w ca tm a precurser o v10 ence, Brimmage is still sheriff today, the adverse reacUon. has laid the blame for campus thanks to the flip of a coin. Brim-"He might find that the Paris talks re-J 2 D . disturbances on the "permissive .. at- mage was challenged in the Sept. quire that he remain longer in Paris," Ump. epUtf..eS titude" of college administrators. 15 primary by 0 . W. Highfill, and us offic' 1s ·d • . ia w . Agnew's colorful rhetoric was s'""led unofficial vote totals showed Brim-M be f tit d. 1 fle .,. th . b 22 2 any mem rs 0 e IP omaUc corpt In Ja:z Scuf out as • cause of college unrest by mage e wmner Y votes, ,· and President Nguyen Van Thieu's ai ~3 to__b~!h ~ighfill asked for a re-cabinet turned out to bid Ky and his wife Richard Silverman, student body presi- count, and the tabuiatlOn iDDiS-farewell. He·ihoot tiand! with all o1 them NEW ORLEANS (UPI) ..... _Three dent at the University of Washington, lrict Court showed Friday the out-and reviewed a color guard before female Black Pantbera arrested with 11 who was ·one of four-I t uQ e n-t-s come was a tit .. The men agreed· board.inc the plane: male Putben after a lhootout. with participating in a taped televi.aion debate to tllp a coin, with the winner be-Bunker's. surprise appearance may police last week jumped ·two deputi•· with the vice president Monday night. c~ming sheriff and the loser, un· have been related to his anger over Viet.· During the 00.rninute discussion on the dersherifi. An attorney threw the namese language newspaper articles Monday,biUqoaeseverelyand.::ratcb-David Frost Sbow,.to be seen in most coin in the air, HigbfiH called it whic repoNd the United Stato plaoned Ing.the other. • c1u.. Friday, Agnew ond the four heads. He is Bryan County's new t.o back 'Ibieu for re-elecUon in 1971 and District Attorney Jlm GarriMNt bad ae-shidenU frequently disagreed over the undersberiff. vie~ Ky u suitable only for the vice cepted murdtr charges qainlt the .causes of atudent violence. • presidency. Bunter has denied the women and 10 of the men evller in the Silverman .charged that Agnew was reports. 1' ! "one of the greatest precursers of _W_omen ~seng~rs at the near· Ky reported to the nation via television day. One of the Panthen was • JUYenlle violence our country has ever seen." by Meldretb-ana "Metoourn station-Sunday nltht tbat·be intended-to-go to-the-and-eould-not-be-charpd. The_vice P.resident re~lied : "To use me have complained because the United States "for the good of Vietnam." Orleans Pariah Sheriff Louis Heyd said as a bete nOir for the violence that-~ ladies' room has been rented to a the scuffle broke out u Elaine Youna, 22, existed in this country because of the private firm in Gambridge, Eng·· wu being taken back to her cell after a -diqusting and permissive aWlude of the -land. The women are directed to Luna Returnin•· g visit with her lawyer. people in command of the college cam- the men's room while a porter "She along with two other black puses ts one of the most ridiculous stands guard outside. Rex Emery, females, jumped Deputy Sheriff .~oeeph charges I have ever heard." a local councillor, said, "with its After Success siwu ond started to bot on blm, Heyd .The exchange became healed when continental-style mixed lavatory sa!~· . Silverman brought up the ~Ung deaths Meldritb will go down in histo for Deputy Sheriff James Amiker went ~ of four Kent State Unlverslly students being the first British railwa ry ta Jn Moon Landm' g Sparks' asaistance and helped h~ gain during a confrontation with National • Y s . • control and put the females bock m the a.,.,ismen. lion to turn European.~hen we JOlil cell. Sparks was sent to Charity Hospital Agnew, citing the burning or the the common market. MOSCOW (AP)_ An unmanned Soviet with a severe bite on his back and university's ROTc building, the harass- • rocket carrying a cargo of moon rocks abrasions. Amlker was scratched." ment of firemen and the chanting of Sen. Edward Muskie ·appeared. sped toward earth today for an expected Heyd said none of~ women was in· obsceniUes as extenuating factors, said- witb Democratic gubernatorial touchdown sometime Thursday. jured. All three -Miu· Young. Leah he nevertheless deplored the tlllings. candidate Jess Unruh .at a news The Russians scored an advance in Hodges, 18, and Catherine Bourns, 19, "It is most unfortunate, as it appear• nf space exploration Monday mOming by were char&ed with uuult and battery. now that the National Guard over· co erence Friday in Los Angeles launching the rocket off the lunar surface reacted," be said. and was asked if he was California from the unmanned Luna 16 apace ata-Without further elaboration, Agnew Democrats' answer to Vico Pr••i· lion. · Fortunes of War Pay 11id the pr'6ident of Kent Stale had dent Spiro T. Agnew, who cam· Moscow's papers splashed the event to. blamed the killings on the "human debris paigned here last week for state day. DAMASCUS (UPI) -At Syria's border dumped on him by the Ohio free ad· Republicans. "I don't think there "'See, we're not '° far behind the with Leblnon, ,a pretty IJirl of tbe Arab missions program." Is such an answer. I-don't think Americans," one Ruuian remarked. guerrilla organlJ.aUon Al Saiqah stands The vice president alao came in for we want such an answer,'' Muskie The C.Ommunlst party newspaper Prav· asking travelers for a IO-cent donaUon. • laughingly told reporters. The da said: "The wunanned. mission ii IUf.... 'lboae who give '" a receipt written Maine Democrat was the 1968 ficiently reliable and safe •.• Its cost is in Arabie. Tr1n1lated, the receipt reveal.I Democratic candidate for the office much lower than that of .encUn& manned the donor ii entitled to free entry to a Atnew holds. flights to the moon." gambling casino in Damascus. Wild Storms Roam Nation Lightning Kills Illinois Man; Snow Hits Some States c_.,., '4IM'( 1'00t'I'. Lr.flt Vlltllblf wllld• 11lellt •llCI "*'111'"" "'°"'' bec:on'llflt -"'"' ... " l1wtll ... ·~ hliil•Y 1ne w..,,,....,_ H'911 '°"" n . C.0.tlll ,.,.,,,.,..111r-. ··-,,_ • ,. 1•. lnltlld ,..,_,11,1'" r1nn fr0111 16 19 U. Wt!« IMIHr'ttuft "· B••· ,,...,... Tures WIOMtlOAY ,Im """" .•.•••••• 11"il0 1.m; I.I ,.Jnt ... .. ......... 11• '·"'· ~.· v.s. s ... -... Wlld 111111\Rntonnt l'Mlt'IM fM c"'" tr11 ••m " tllt 1111looo "'IV todl'I' 1ttwr ""111:111'111 M1vy l.:11 fffftlM 11111 klillflt •I IMtt 9"41 """ MotldlY lllfM, Gtrt ldl MHll11n. vkt lll'tlldtrll •et I tit'* 111 ArllMllln Htltllf9, lft., -• kllltd """'" lltflln/l'lt llrv<k "" "" CIMilf'IO .,...., fie ..... t l1Ylnt1 wllt'I trltrMh. TI\'" tlhlr mlflllltrt of thl foll,_ _. 1111""" fliy thl Mlt. TWI """ 'ONf't 11rlf\dltld lfl l tllt re111perei .... Al_..11«_ Alllnt. ..-... 1i.111 Bl""lrU lo•M ''"" '"'le•" CIMlnn1H C'-llM -.. o.trolt Elilftltl l"011 Wortll ,_ H1r..,1 H-41111 ...... Ktn-C/ty ............ l•"""'" ........... Mll'll'MM MlnM100U1 tt"OrlNM -v .. 0.ll•lllll ..... ,llOlllMI• ""lllfflll"'ll ,lttMll,..,, ·-· "'°'1flftd lllM l lUff ... 61tr•mt11ft 11 ..... 11 Siii L1k1 Cltv ''" Dllft Sin ,fll'lf.lKI iln11 llrllotrl Ml ....... fll"M. .... 11 n .11 .. " .. .. '1 41 .1• " .. " " ,, '' ,llt " " ., ., .., fl .. II JI .. " .... .. " . " " " ... ., ,, " . .. " .. " ... ~ n I :: " " : « n "' ·" .... .... " .. .... .... .. ,, ~· II " : !: .• " .. ..... criUcism from Eva Jefferson, Northwestern· University. reported killing 5-t Communista southeast 21• of or the Cambodian capital. -- She said he gave the impression that he thought .students were ''people from another planet that have been put here to · blow up buildings." "Maybe this is your goal -to isolate people," Miss Jefferson added. The othfr student participants were Gregory Craig, 25~ of the Yale Law School, and Steve Bright, 21, of the University of Kentucky. Police Jail 21 In W ashingtnn Youth Outbreak Military spokesmen said heavy fighting flared between South V I et n am ei e regional forces and a Communist unit near highway one about 60 mile.a southeast of Phnom Penh Monday. The South Vietnamese reported losing one man killed and two wounded ln the clash near the province capital of Svay Rieng just oul81de the Parrot's Beak set· tion of Cambodia. The South Vietnamese were supported by t.actical air strikes and artillery and reported capturirig Ilrge amounts of munitions and medical equip- ment. A South Vietnamese spokesman In Saigon said South Vietnamese forces with air and artillary support killed 5-t Nor~ Vietnamese'· and -v1et Cong troops in a newly launched amphibious operation into Cambodia centered along the Bame end Mekong rivers 35 to 50 miles southeast of Phnom Penh . One South Vietnamese was -WASHINGTON-(UPJ-) .---At-least-!t---killed and-two wounded,....._----- persons were a~sted Monday night and Headquarter$ said the four-day-old early Tuesday m an outbreak of ~k operation did not change the number of throwing and minor looting along South Vietnamese troops now in Cam· ~rthw~st 14th ~treet; the area hardest bodia, about 13,SOO because the 1,500 hit dun~ Wahington a August, 1968 riot. marines and several hundred militiamen No jnJurles were reported tn the-involved had already been in Cambodia disturbance which Police Chief Jerry on other operations that were closed out Willon aaid began alter police attempted • to make a narcotiet: arrest at the New Amsterdam Hotel. Police said those arrested were charg. ed with disorderly conduct. Special riot. equipped police were sent into the area after bands of youth! some shirtless In the muggy 76-degree weather, began rov- ing streets, tolling rocks at windows and cars. Tear gas canisters were shot to break up some of the groups of young people who were taunting and harassing police from side streets. Pol.k:e said 11 stores were broken into. and two -a drug store and a shoe store -were extensively looted. One Feared Drowned As Kayak Capsizes MENDOCINO IU1'1) -A kayak capsized after being swept from the Big River's mouth onto the Pacific Ocean and one of its occupants is missing and presumed drowned. The victim was identified Monday as Jim Ogl e, 19, a resident of Antioch ranch, a nearby Hippie commune. Philip Stevens, 14, swam from the kayak lo a rock and was rescutd. ...... """ •••• $;11 .Jll'I. • .• 'ltOl'ld .... • •• ·-· 121~ ··"'· ... SUll .... •~•I 1.m, leh 11111 111.1t1. . Mftll -ll:M1.ll'I. ""t:a111.m. Mlcfllt111 en ""' c"'1c... lhwllfl\t ..,,"' •lt'ldl Gt .,. " u "'"• lfl llovr" Ct .. lttif rllllr l"lott Mllbllf. Tilf¥ W-rtK\lld IW ell'lff MllOn, TM '*"'° t lM ltYlf"lwfTIH 1 twf\llft •l•M ., Midway Al•illOfl I nf ftlltf "'"",_ .... ,....,....,.. "'"" -.,M TflerrMI W111!11!1~ " ... .... .. 17 ·~ .. .... VICE PRESIDENT AGNEW RAPS WITH STUDENT LEADERS FROM NATION 'S COLLEGES-· ''DavJd Fre1t Show'' Debate L,e.clt to Cht~I•• tnd Counter°'h•rg11 by Both Sides II ' ' ' • ' .I I ] • .. t• • b A f• I I· } t • • I I , ! I I .._.. .... _. ' • : .FOnniain Valley TodaY'• Fl•al VOL 63, NO. 227, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES THE INTREPID, HAS SHE MET HER MATCH? Americ•.'t Cup Defender S1il1 on Intrepidly Ficker Aliead-Siightly • As Weather Deteriorates Special to tbe DAILY-PILOT NEWPORT, R.J. -Newport Beach skipper Bill Ficker aboud Intrepid held to a slight lead over Australla'11 Gretel JI at the fourth mark today as weather began to deteriorate ·in the third America's cup race. The yachts-were racing in a deepening fog .with lhe visibility less than one mile. 1-t--~·Lthe thiui.....mark Ficker and his American de£~nder had increased er lead to 56 seoonds and was about 250 yafds ahead or lhe chall~glng Aussie boat. There was very little action. Winds remained southwesterly at around 12 knots. Intrepid led at lhe first of six marks by 46 seconds, or about six boat lengths. Gretel 11 had taken a five-length lead 1.1t the start but after 18 minules fell behind. The race got under way promptly at 9: 10 a.m. (PDT). Winds at the start were from the southwest at 15 knots, a condition con· sidered by the experts as favorable to Intrepid, the American defender in the best-of-seven race series. Visibility was ahoul two miles in haze and light fog. · Both yachts stayed well clear of each .other at-the gun to avoid any repetition of the protests that have marred the two Park Will Honor Medal Winner Chris Carr, the ~year-old" World War 11 Congressional Medal of Honor \finner who died In Huntington Beach last week, ·will have a park named in his honor. City Counc ilmen Monday BP.proved ~2 a suggestion by Councilman Jack Green that the park on the corner of Springdale Street and Heil Avenue be named in the Army veteran·s honor. City Attorney Don Bonla was in· structed to write a resolution nollng the naming of the park for Carr, for presen- tation to the hcro·s famil y. Councilmen Al Coen and Mrs. Norma Gibbs agreed the man was deservi ng of honor, but opposed the park naming because It would break the city's pro- cedure fo.r selecting park names -cur· rtntly 1 controversial subject under study by thf: city council. The Land Ganie ' . (IV•rthe,... St11le) Picture yourself In a snug A·frame t b e s I d e a Northern C11ifornla litream. away from smog and root beer stands? And turning a tidy pr<llll on the l,tnd you bought! The plcturt might not be as pretty u ifs painted. for the fourth ln a teries of artlclca by DAILY PILOT Staff Writtr, Al Bates on the prob- lem, tum to Page 12 today. I previous races. Intrepid, the United States defender, has a 2 to O lead in the series. The two boats were about 100 yards over the line and Gretel I_I appeared to have moved a little ahead into a 12-14 knot southwesterly. Huntington Sets $10-Per-Unit Apartment Tax Al Banick, president of the 17.000-mem· ber Orange County Apartm~nt Owners Association, made a last ditch plea Mon· day night to stop a new apartment tax in Huntington Beach but he failed . On a 5-2 1vote, the council read into law a new business license ordinance which will charge apartment owners SIO-per- unit each year for a city business license. Banick's plea swayed only one coun· cilman -Mrs. Norma Gibbs, who decid- ed to vote in favor of the new ta1 aft.er hearing Banick's arguments against it. The apartment leader's basic position wa s that the per-unit tax placed an unfair burden on apartment owners and res idents, wh ich did not apply to homeowners or commercial interests. "'There are more than 3,000 empty units iri this city now,'' :Sa iii ck told the council. "The new .tax will raise rents and empty more units." His figures, however, were d_is~ted by Roger Slates, a realtor and chairman of the city plan nin g commiss\On. · "By counting inactive Edison Company meters we found only 1.297 vacancies in tli"e city," Slates countered. "And 617 of those were new apartments, not yet rented." "But counting only Edison hookups doesn't take into consideration master meters which might serve 400 apartment units," Banick argued. "There are only two mas ter meters in 1111 of Huntington Beach andJ:ioth of those projects are 100 percent full," Slates replied. Georg! Ml'Cracken and Ted Bartlett - were th\ only friends Bani~ folind on the counCU as they oppos~ I.he increased apartment fees. - As he left the council chambers. Banick threatened to send letters to all apart- ment residents in the city telling lhem why their rent! went up 811d what hap- pened at the council meeting. • Mayor Don11ld Shipley called him out or order and said, "We don't need any poUticaJ speeches here." Malaysian Resigns --KUALA LUMPUR, Mala ysia (UPI) - Tengku Abdul Rahman, founder of his nation l:t-years ago and its prime minisLer e ... er since. rc11igned Tuesday and hande~ over the reln1 of leadtrshlp to hJJ younger deputy, Tun Abdul Rauk. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . , . • TUESDAY •. ~~PTE~BE~ 22, :197~ !'EN CENTS .. Safety · Workers ~ - Say No ·Huntington Po~iceme._n, Firenie~ Reject Pay Offer > I ' -• '• ' • ·~ • •'• -' • • ·By TERRY COVILLE useltu and called for binding arbitration increase !Or· f~remen. the · council decided to rt0pen all salary °' • ..._ , .... ,ltttf • ~ the wait dispute. ~ Last Wetk the.city coµnciJ lltlorecf the coraiderations. Huntington Beach policemen 1 n d "l don't 1ee what could be 'IC-memorinda and gfanttd the t.Z percent But 1.ttorneys £or the police and fire firemen Monday night formally rejected . complilhed •by further meet ln 11 , •' pay increase to both groupe Ind to the Cl· auoclations made it clear they were not an 1.25 percent PIY incrtase offered a Jec:ome G~ Colton,. oiinse1 for the tf 'EmPlo:Yees' ·Asldclit.ioa. 1. • interested ln further-talks. week ago by the city ~ll. firemen, told the couocil. "Meetlnga ,have In what counciJmen admitted Monday Attorney Micfi11el W. Nezln, repre~ Follo'wing the rejection and 1 verbal already t.lten place. Why not meet with night was 1 hastf action. thty,allo forgot Ung the policemen, said, "U the ·councll scathing of Ute ctiuncil by lttorneys for .your 1dministr1ton to find out why they to agree last week to. fringe benefit& re-can be crltlcized·for anything it la for lg: both groUps, councilmen rescinded all thought our wage request! were fair." qUested by pollcetnen and firemen. norance and lack of concern. It Y.OU.. do pay and fringe benefit actions in order to Both iroui>s b.d 1igned memoranda of That was corrected Monday, however, not understand the government code we leave the door open for further talks. agreement with City Adininistr_Jtor Doyle when the council voted to approve aU the cannot llOlve the problem now." Spokesmen for the firemen and Miller which called for an 11 tfucent pay requested fringe benefitl. This ·action He was referring to the belief among policemen indloated further talks were boost for policemen and 1 11-13 percent howe\'er, was wiped off the board when (See PAY HIXU, Paae I) Residents Say 'Lights Out' ·At MeadowlarR -~ Egypi-Warns V.S-;-AgainSt lnwrven-tion-- • The Meadowlark Airport controversy took another n·ight Monday night. Where it will land nobody knows. By UnJted Prt11 lntern1Uonal Large scale Israeli tank moVements were reported today along the Jordanian border where Israeli military dispatches reported the Jordanian army retreating &outhward toward Amman in the face or a Syrian" tank onslaught. Guerrillu reported Jordan's air force In action. toll there was O\'er 10,000. Guerrilla huddled in interior rooms of the building, sources admitted 1,000 dead and uk!.--which has been hit by small and medium thert were tens of thousands wounded. . •rm• fire several times sinct the fightin& The Huntington Be~ity Council spent another hour 1istenlng to the debate which flared-up a month ago between-home owners and pilots when Meadowlar~ added 300 feet to its runway U.S. military forces wert alerted to broke out Jut Thursday. No injurlea have move i'n to try to save the 400 Americans been reported. in Jordan and the posslblllty of inttrven-The wives ind children of ~hete of4 lion seemed very real. Israel also Wh ficlals were e ... acuated last June when the reported prepared to act jf it felt ita on-again, off-again fighting between and put in-night lights. With the . possiblity of American in- tervention ·Increasing, Egypt warned the United States: against stepping in, saying lfiiS would-tlii'eaten world peace. Egyp- tian Information Minister Mohammed Hassanein Heikal said Intervention would endaflger American lives even further. security threatened -and a Syrlan move loyali.sls and guerrillas begin. soulhwafd from lrbld ~ould bril\g Syriirl AJmost all of tfie-Amerlcans In Jordan This time ... homeowners made one plea -take ou~ the night lights. tanks close to-the Israeli bo~r. . 1 live in· or near A_mman, a city of about Their request was based on a state- ment two weeks ago by a spokesman for the Calitornia Aeronautics Board who said night flying is unsafe a t -lf-U.S. military forces lhouki-lnte~oe 500,000 people built,Jiie Rome,_on teYeD __ in Jordan to rescue Amerk:ID! . there, hills . they would be hunting for, about 400 The State .Department does not know of persons, of whom about 100 hold dual any. "-merica~s living ln tbf: northern h-ieadowlark. Syria Issued a 1imilar warning. U.S.-Jordanlan ciliienship. The ~late cities or Ramtha and lrb\d; now occupied Department Usts· •bout: 49· Amtrk:an by forcea from Syria. "It will be less safe il you take out lhi night llghta -and you can't stop the Ull: of the field at night," ~b Dingwill, head of a five-lnan airport study committee appofuted by the council, said. Heavy · fightln1 resumed ln Amman ,itaelf w!tbJ.i•w:e ol a .. ,-..~ .. ..W ~y KlftfH~jll Ilic! Heikil Alt~:ildlb l!if>lomata.and 1orei.n,1erviq :llfttm.oo H~lkal aald Ec7PI wu tryln( to am! a 4aey_1&Jlllt1111buop, . ..,,., • •,!l"I ... ' (Bet J~, .... I) But C9Uncilmen went ahead and ordered the city staff to take all pos.!llble steps to eliminate night flying a' Meadowlark until Dingwall's committee Huntington Vice SqUaf!, finishf:d its study of tbf: •ituation. B n . . R . "It's legally unenforceable.''. City At, ---U·St-S-F--r-~stttutzo,n inn torney Don Bonfa , said, "but it's fine 1f U . ~ you just want to show your intention to . : help tHeliOineowners." -~ th I"·-~ ball Bonfa explained the Federal Av\ation Vice-squad officers from the Hun-or Ill .fame. ~ were rt etlHQ on Agency allows ni1ht flying on unlighted tington Beach Police Department •a.id to-follow1ng arra1gnmerit at Weit Or1n1e fields and ls the only authority. day they cracked In alleged pr011titulion ~~ ~urt. ,, ding lb \let Lt I~ a ~t of anger. Dingwall. offered his ring in the city over the weekend. Bert EkstroU:.' w:~bam's ';;,ldenc~ .res1gn~hon as head of the airport study Arrested following the investigation ln-at 4902 B-10 Heil A\'e. which was al. committee. 1'!1e homeowners· appla~ded'. volvlng a local apartment house was Jegedly used as a headquarters far However, no one on the council ac-Richard H. Ingham, 47, i photographer. customer contacts. cepted his resignation. He was arrested on suspk:ion Of con· Ekstrom said he and 'three. other "If you want us to do the job you ha ... e spiring and soliclUnc lo commit prostf. undercover officers were Jed to the .cou· to back us," Dingwall angrily scolded the tution, procuring 1 female and operalin1 pie through 1 local newspaper ad which council. "If not we'll quit." , a house of prostitution. pur~ly .. offered mode I 1 to Homeowners have criticized Dingwall's Also taken into custody all hls: alleged photogra'phers. committee for not reaching an airport accomplice was Geraldine R. Gannon , 22, Posing as lensmen wanting to hire solution more rapidly. Dingwall has a model. who was arrested for auspicion some models for a golf publication seek· countered that his committee will not of prostitu\ion, conspiracy to commit pro-1n1 some models for a·pboto'layout the of. make decisions based on "emotion, but atitution and being a resident of 1 house ficers approached Ingham. on fact. It takes time to gather these The officers claim they negotiated for 1 facts ." ''pack.age deal," costing $147.50, and then Dingwall'• committee is m •• t i n I 3 to Represent arrested Ingham and Miss ·Gannon at the Thursday night in lhe administrative an-apartment. nex of city hall wilh officials from Later th)t evening, underCover officer Southern California Edison, CAB and the B h t UL} Ed Williams arrested a 34-year old FAA to discuss nearby power poles. eac 8 woman on suspicion of solicitln& in a •re said several facts should be cleared separate Investigation. up· at that meeting. "We hope to have a A three-man delegation has been He said Delores M. Carallar of 8911 recommendation for the council in the authorized to represent Huntington Acacia Ave., Hwitlngton Beach. waa near future." Beach at the Urban Land Institute circulating in a local barroom, offering Councilmen asked Dingwall to return Conference Oct. 4-9 in Scottstiale, Ariz. her services to patrons. She alao wu next Monday night \\'ith more information The Urban Land Institute was responsi. released on ball. and some recommendations on what to ble for mO.!t of the economic studies con· Police 1ald the amsts wert not con- do about the runwli' extension and the cemlng the downtown area involved ln nected to arrests in Seal Beach over the, night lights. the city'! Top of the Pter plan. Several weekend involving an alleged pro&tlfuUon Councilmen themselves were tplit over topic& concerning l'!denlopment will be ring, what action to take with Mrs. Norma discussed at ·the conferenu. Gibbs and Jack Green calling for Im· Mondey night, city councilmen okayed mediate action to close the runway ex· expenses for · planning· com m I a 1 I o n tension because It was illegally installed. Chairman Roger Slates and city planner (No use variance was requested for It.} Richard Harlow to attend £our days of The proposal to curb night flying was 1 the conference, while Bill Bach, city comprom~ worked out by Councllmqn development coordinator, was 1ulhoriz.ed Al Coen. J to attend special sessions Oct. 4 and 7. Huntington Man Vows Court Fight A battle currently being waged oi.:er a swimming pool by a HunUngton Btach couple and the people 1t city hall may wind up before 1 judge. Th.at was the sober appraisal tod"y of- Ernest Sherwood, the not-sc>-ptood owner of a $7 ,000 mistake th11t w11 to have been a 1wimm.i~ pool. "I guw It will wind ui. ln lbe courU,'' sahNiherwood .mo his contacted~ an at .. tomey to ate whit can bl done about that JO.loot pil In bla 'fro11t yard aUOllZ Cutty Sark Drive. The bic bole".•• dug Aus: • by • Costa M.,. pool -IC\°' .J"l'I one day 1fter the Sher"WOldl· hid l'tc:f'l\'td 1 clf11 building perml! for dieto ·polll• ~ -, Unfortunately the permit was sranltd' in error aince .the pool fence could not be set :ba k far eoouah from the property line, accordin& to tlie-bulldinl depart· ·ment: · AJU\ouih the city has llf.ed to fill up ' UJe . bole and put the yard hick into shape, Sherwood .contends thia is~;~ enough ind either want.s his pool or ms Investment back. . "My husband Is pretty·dlstusled 1t the moment," 11id Mra. He·1ther Sherwood. !'l~thlnk we've been li..,eo.a.bad deal by -the city." · < • '!11< ~rwoods tried to petllloirlorl ,varlonc:e,•llb the city'! Jlou'd of Zonllll. .Adl.IJ!!llMllU to allow the, l>OOl~~t.week wt t:h<ir requett iru turnia' d • . ' P~xson Funeral . Rites Slated Funeral services wlll be hekl Wed- nesday for Leroy Paxson, 1 ~ytar rui. dent of Huntington Beach, w~ died Sun· day at Hoag Memorial' Hosplta , Mr. P11aon, who was ID years old, wa1 1 rttired employe of SJgnal Oil Company in Huntlngton Beach. During his len1thy reaidence ln the ·be1cb city, he wu a member of the local 'Masonic Lodge and w11 one of the first Seoul Mattera of HunUnfl.Gn &uch'a Boy Scout Troop I. He Je11ve1.his 10ns, Willl1m R. Paxaon ol 'HunU-S...ch alicl Omar M. Pu· '°" ol Loo Anjelft; •"4-uihtor. Ruth - PU""1 of Lot .A/ll'llo; !IJI .. , Maud Tumor, Ha,.~Blac~>tnd·Vlola -·all of Indiana, and,t1'0 lf•n~d,r'O,.. , lndi~ Fl~ Kills . 75 Regioi;ial Cycle Park Endorsed By Huntington A ,.,.Jution urging the' County lloard of Supervisors to develop regional motorcycle p11rks receiVed unanimous ap- J)l'O\'al from tbe Huntington Bhch Clty Council Monday. The statemeqt calls for the establiJb.. ment of off-road riding parks "on ID emergency b1sl!" if n e c es s 1ry 1 especially In the Los Coyotes, Santa Ana Ri\'er and Ortega regions. A3 its foundation It cited the city'• ordinance prohibiUng the use · of dirt riding on ·unimproved prof!!rlY and that "it appears that the public desires to in· crease lhe safetY aspects of this recrea- tion. and diminish the undeslr1blt ecologica1 effects." Al~h the city curren~y i~ m1kln1 plans to establish ill own minibike r1dio1 area in a gravel pit> on Gothar_d Street and Talbert Avenue, the resolution paints out that the major recreaUonal Interests for the cy~Ung ~port are region11I in nature, especially in regard tO larger machines. Even, before. the city councl1 adopted Its off-road prohlbitioil ln June st a f f members of the city Recreation ind Parka Department and motorcycle tn- thualuts-had be<n-looklng ac aultabiL - locations .for a public trail park. 0r .. ,. Weedier Thoae hot d.,.rl winds wlll warm thinp up along the Oranae Cout tonight, oor lhould c:oo1 o11 by Wednetday. Look for tempera· tW'!I up to 71 along the tieachtt and 13 In , the 1eu lemperot. In- land """"'· INSIDE TODAY .. The Royal-Hunt of the Sun" at the Laguna Moulton PW11- houi• l<..S..ofl o htoll'/I, tattk-of living theater on the Orange Coo.st ,Wnig}lt: Sec Entertain.- meat, Pao• l9.. • • -- ' ..... • • • I DAil V PILOT M 1.-,, Soot..,. n, 1910 • - la Seol Beach -Ghief Denies Firefighters : ' . On Alert l 'Smokescreen~-1n County By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI OI tM CNotlr 'llM lttff Seal Beach Police Chief Lee Case 'denled Monday lh1t he was part of a con· 1pirac1. to create a gmokescreen over coveri city hall activities by initiating the. license hearing against the Marina "Palace. Grilled for more than lwo hours on the ~·itnes.'! stand by Attorney Russell W. , Bledsoe, defense a.ttorney for dance hall operator William Robertson, Case aaid : the allegltions are "defamHory, slander-· ous and libelous." Responding to BledsOe's question about , whether he knew something about a $100 , ~million li.igh rise project which is alleged- ;~~~:s~~i:i o!8t::u=.piracy, Case said ' · Cue, who ~ad been acting as the pr~ SecutOr in Uie proceeding apinst ,Robertson and the Marina Palace, took 1the 6tand .himself Friday. The entire ,Monday afternoon session was taken up ,by Bledsoe'• cross-examination of the chief. ~ Queried extensively by Bledsoe about bis conversaUons wittl former City ~Manager Lee Risner in connection with From Page I 'JORDAN •.. • plane to Amman to rescue 100 foreign the hearin1, the Chief sald he had only talked, with Risner on three or four OC· casions. He testified that Risner had never ask· ed him to prGSecute the Case and ad· mitted that he really didn't know ho't-he became the prosecutor. "I just ended up w'ith presenting hls in- tonnation but I never did volunteer to be the prosecutor," said Case, adding that he felt ''like a fish out of water" when acting as an attorney. . Also disclosed during the Dearing wu a complaint by Robertson to Chief Case charging one of the prosecution witnesses with selling liquor to minors. The man was JdepUfied ·as l'elerve of· ficer Anthony Piazza who ii employed as a_JiqUor store clerk. He had testified earlier about his undercover work at the Marina Palace. ThecbiitSaid he had forwliaed Robertson's complaint to Lt. Al Chafe for acUan bul admitted that no file had been made up as of yet. Bledsoe then charged that the police departmeot did not investigate the alleg· ed charge with the "same zeal" as the complainta against the dance hall and th1t there appeared to be I discrepancy about the way it handled its cases. Case53id tie cont8ctOOthe -AICohOlic Beverage Control Bureau about the of· ricer's alleged wrongdoing. 1dding that an inve1UgaUon'either hu.or will be CQn· ducted by that a1ency. Reader on the Beach As Santa Ana winds heat up the Orange Coast, Drew Whiting, a South Laguna resident, enjoys sun, sea and solitude at Aliso Beach. "\Vhere have all --the 1>eac·hi:crers·-gone, ''-the-photographer~asked-Mr-. - . ' Whiting, who was cooling it with a good book , "Why, back to school," he replied with a knowing smile. 'Now it's my turn to enjoy the beach." Frain Page I Nuclear Plants Studied Orange County firemen were placed on stand-by alert today as hot, dry Sanla Ana winds swept in from the desert, causing soaring temp@atures in dry brush areas or inland and along the Orange Coast. Similar hot dry weather is predicted for Wednesday, The Santa Ana winds are expected to reach velocities neu: 40 miles per hour. High fire hazards are expected in both hilly terrain and In Orange County', oan. yons. The quickly rising temperatures cause a sharp d~crease in relative hwnldity, according to Deputy Chief Carl Downs of : the count)'. fire department. The tem- _perature ai El Toro Marine Base rose 18 degrees in one hour this morning -from 62 degrees at I a.m, to 80 degrees at 9 _ a.m. · ' --"The desert winds___ha,~ a tremendous influence on the potelitlal-ol-lire- disaster," Downs warned. 1Jowns noted that the relative humidity usua lly drops to betWeen eight and 10 percent, causing the brush in inland Orange County to dry out and become easily ignited. The U.S. Weather Bureau has not issued any small craft warnings for. boaters-a,long-~the--.Southem_ California Coast, and the seas are expected to re- main calm. But the winds will have an effect on the aircraft taking oll and landing at Orange County Airport. correspondents.-mosUy_American, trap-____,.,, -• _ l D 1 _ d ped in the Intercontinental Hotel in the-.l rill em ye ; ,center of the city. _ PAY HIKES. •• representatives of the police and fire that when they signed agreements with Miller It was the same as the council agreeing to, sall!-fies. _By Water Control Board All aircraft are taking off toward the northeast -the opposite direction from their usual pattern. . Their hotel has been hit repeatedly in V •. • ' S Tu; showdown civil war betwe~ ·Hu,..in ictim S tatus and the P&lestinian guerrillas. · The reVerse takeoff and landing pattem- iS because tlle airplanes are designed to take off and land inlo the wind. ·: H.in, · faced with a battle for S ill C • • al :11U?Vival and deserted by many of . b~ t ritic 'Arab ·allies, appealed to the Uruted 'Statesn the Soviet Union, Britain and 'France ·for help. But W a s b i n g to n dis~tches said President Nixon had not ";et de~ded on a COU}'R of .action. At this point Councilman Al Coen. an attorney, aiticized Nezin for chewing By PAMELA HALLAN gum while addressing the council. "You 01,,.. D11tr ,r.., '"" eublc yards of surface terrace material and 650,000 euhlc yards of underlying San Mateo formatian material will be · ex· The airport management has checked all private aircraft parked at the airj>ort to insure that they are tied down properly to avoid being lifted into the air by the expected 35 knot winds. : Israeli dispatches were subjected to in~ 'tense military censorWtip, but reports reached London of largescale tank movements Monday night and again ~ day. The reports said it was uncertain whether they were deploying for posaible action 'in Jordan. UPI correspondent Ohad Gozanl, from the•seashore resort of Tiberias on the Sea of Gaillff, could n:p<rt onJy that du st clouds rising on the east bank of the J ordan River marked the passage of Jordanian anny convoys rolling south. On1 Mooda}', the 'Jordanian army ' had moved northward to Irbid, Jordan's se- jcond city nestled in 2,000 fpot mountains . 45 JJlfles north of' Amman · and only 18 )nites e.ast of tbe ceaae-fire line. Meanwhile, Arab leaders met in emergency session today to _seek ways to end the war in Jordan, E:ut three of the key figures were missing and the ,Baghdad·based .guerrilla radio told the '.others "to go back to your palaces 'because you ... no longer make the 'decisions." ' ;Indian Guides , ·Set Valley Me.et • Children who want to be Indians -at tleast part·time -should gather with their parents at 7:30 p.m .• Thursday in the amphitheater of Fountain Valley High ~hool. • Leaders or the YMCA Indian Guide and 1ndian Maiden programs will explain 'their activities to interested young,ters .and their parents. Both groups are open to children In kin· ;dergarten through third grade. Each pro- .:gram offers father-son or mother- ·daughter activities based on American Qndian Jore. Costumes and the study of Indian ·customs are a major part of the Indian 'Gulde and Indian Maiden groups. • I I t i I I I I I i I DAILY PILOT OllANC.E COAST PUl~l~l'llMG COMl"ol.N'f lolt•ft N. Weed ,.,."Id""' .... ,..,.,,,,.... J1ck l . Curloy Vie• 1"..-,Nl9tll •fld 1;9, .. ,.,1 Mll'lltfr Th•"'•• Kievit Eo;,.... T~e,.,11 A. Mur,hi"' Ml "lll"f (Dtftlr J.l1n Olr~i~ Wcof o •• ,.., C-1v £~11or • ....lb•rt W. 1111, AnKO.lf [~\!or HIWtl .. ..,. leecll Office ~. 17175 •••th •• ,,1, •••• M1ili111 Addr1u: P.O. lo• 790, 91641 O•r Offlqt A savagely beaten bartender's con· tinued critical condiUon led 1 Superior Court judge Monday to delay what could be. the-murder trial of a Westminster man suspected of being his assailant J.udge William F. Speirs-ordered Gerald R. Caron, 29, of 14941 Newland 'St., to return to his courtroom Oct. 2:6. He denied a motion for reduction of bail to release on his own recognizance and ordered Caron returned to Orange County Jail. Caron is accused of be a t i n I unemployed barkeepl>ouglas Ray Snider. 37, Garden Grove, to the point that doe. tors at Palm Harbor Hospital despaired or his life. caron w111 ·admitted to the hospital July l Ind he remaiM today in the intensive care unit and on the critical list. Caron was arrested on that date and charged with being one of two men who hammered Snyder inta unconsciousness. Charges of assault with Intent to comm!\ murder were also filed against Joseph F. Auger, 38, of 14082 Shirley St ., Westminster. District a t to r n e y ' 15 investigators, gatlsfied now that Auger took no part in the beating, have dropped those charges. Offfceri said the beating of Snyder took place in the Blackbird Street and Garden Grove Boulevard section of Garden GroVe. They have declined to state what they believe to be the reason for the alleged assault. Beach Council wouldn't do that in court. Please show us The Southern .California Regional the same respect." Waler Quality Control Board, San Diego "It's medicina~ gum, I have a sore Region, took a hard look Monday at ex· throat," Nezin replied, "Now if l may continue." ·cavatlon requirements for two more And he did. "If you do not now use the nuclear generating plants near San lines of communication open to you then Onofre. there is nO reason tp complain if other Before construction on the two 1,140 methods of .communic·at1ons are used." megawatt plants can begin, the board Nezin did not clarify whether he was placed stringent requirements on the referring to a strike, v;ork slowdowns or disposal of material gleaned from ex· what, but did say there was no ttason for cavations necessary to prepare the two cavated. The terrace material is composed of silt, clay and fine to coarse sands with layers of cobbles ·and boulders while the San Mateo Is dense, fine to coarse sand with pods of terrace material. The board accepted the recom· mendations. of their executive director, Dennis O'Leary and voted unanimously to prohibit the deposit of terrace material in the Pacific Ocean. Huntington Beach, "to become a Santa sites for construction. Barbara or San Diego." The San Diego Gas and Electric Com-The two utility co Ill panics had already CapnCUw.oman Norma Gibbs asked pany and the Southetn Cillfomla ~n made arrangements to deposit th is Nezin why he was chastizing the council Company have estimated tha~ iwo mlffion ~aterial on land at selected sites within ..,.~ iL had just taken action to admit "" , • Camp Pendleton. passlbfe errar last week by rescinding last week's actions. Pods of silty, clay material greater "I appreciate your statemenlS'," NP,Jin 3 Councilmen ._ than one foot~ in thickness In the San aruwered. "But J'm nat convinced the .~ ~ateo Formatian must also be·deposited other six councilmen feel the same as ·-' with the terrace material. you."' Demand Audit The b<fard is allowing th e disposal of Colton, speaking for the firemen. caJled the San Mateo sand along the beach in for binding arbitration when he said, the nearshore zone to replenistl sand that ''I'm not here to bargain or negotiate. 0£ City Books wears away through erosion. I'm here only to tell you on behalf of The utility companies also plan to ex- firemen we reject your salary proposal." cavate on the ocean floor to construct He then suggested bypassing mediation Three members of the Seal Beach City four 18-foot diameter conduits for the as a Waste of time and said. "let'a go Council Monday requested 8 complete cooling water in take and discharge 1traight to· binding arbitration." audit of the city book5 spaMing the past system. These conduits would be buried Counellmen, in ttseinding-thelr earlier three years and a direct comparison with beneath the ocean floor, extending t. "d f t k' · the normal city audit. pay ac ions, sa1 as wee s moves were between· 2,600 and 3,400 feet offshore. d d · of nf · d th t The review was demanded by Coun-ma e un er an air co us1on an a Excess sand from this """ration was to ha I d gbt t be · th cilman Conway J. Fuhrman, target of a vr~ per ps more Ii u Y ou o given e be deposited on the seaward side of the salary proposals. recall campaign, midway th r 0 ugh terminal structures. but the committee P If d I. h t k th another stormy council session. o cemen an 1remen IJVe a en e voled to recommend placing t h i s . ., th t all lh tudy nee It was approved by Mayor Morton pos1i..ion a e s essary was material in the nearshore zone so it too Om I. hed · g "a"ons wi·th M"lfer Baum and CoUncilman Thomas Hogard ace Pis in ne o ... "' ' · 1 can help repleru"sh beaches. . Th h d · · II k d 1 16 with Counci men Lloyd Gummere and ey a or1g1na Y as e or a per. The staff reported that San Mateo sand cent pay boost, but dropped their request Harold Holden casting the "no" votes. to 11 percent after negotiations with The audit will be conducted by had been deposited along the beach in Miller. Reynolds and Associates and will bt sub-1964, when the site of the present San As lhe northeasterly wind began ta buil d up speed this morning, it met the southwesterly sea breeze. Both wi nds were blowing at about 10 knots and the Orange County Airport tower recorded the wind bTowing towards the east -in from the ocean. But the ·windsock a few hun6lred yards across the runwa y recorded the wind blowing the opposite direction -in from the desert. Bras Touch Off Battle in Store A petite Garden Grove woman accused of tryi ng to turn in foui:. Cross YQu r Hea~tt­ brand brassieres for $32 she never paid for lheni fought off a pa ir of Costa Mesa store security guards Monday night. White Front security men Robert Bearden and Jo'scph Elmore confronted the alleged shoplifter in the store at 3088 · Bristol St., dur ing the exchange. "She immediately began flailing her arms." said Detective George Webster, adding that Bearden and Elmore backed off out of range but finally seized the allegedly stolen lingerie. "The bras in confl ict were placed in evidence ," added Detective Webster, who said investigation continues today to determine whether the woman will be ar· rested. l\Ialaria on Increase OKs Temporary Horse Sui.b"les The pay raises noted in Miller 's milted ta the city council in addition to Onofre plant was prepared. tnemoranda of agreement were reported· the normal city audit by Diehl, Evans They repo~ted that no adverse effect! ATLANTA. Ga. (AP) -A total of 3,808 Iy decided on after the city conducted a and Company. -lo marine life occurred at that time. cases of malaria in the Unil.ed States and salary survey of 10 cities comparable to Earlier this year the council considered The board also approved a monitoring Puerto RiC<> was reported in 1969, an in- Huntington Beach. a similar full·scale audit but rejected system for the excavation projects, to crease of 1.196 cases over the pre vious R · f 1· · d their plans because of the expense in· make sure the requirements are carried year, the Center for Disease Control . The Huntington Beach City Council put cpresentatJvcs o po icemen an valved. out the welcome sign Manday night for firemen left the meeting clearly unhappy, 11===============ou=t=. =============='='Y='=· ===========:; horses. but councilmen were surprised later in Councilmen supported earlier plaMing the evening to learn they had also upset commission approval for a temporary the city Employcs Association, whic h stable for some 190 horses on property represents all employes other than police and firemen. north of Ernest Avenue, near Golden Darrell Smith. a spokesman for the city West Street. employes, asked the council to reinstate Surrounding propertY own~ rs • their a.25 percent P8Y'raise. because city represented by attorney George Shibata, employes were happy with it. opposed the horse stables on the grounds "We're afraid now thal if you tlley would prevent industrial develop-r enegotiate-with firemen and policemen ment of the area. yOu may grant them higher raises and "There are stalls for 190 horses adding make It up by lowering ours." up to 350 square feet for each horse. We Councilmen, however. refused Io allow more room for chickens," Shibata reinstate the pay raise for anyone. then told the council. called an execuUve session for 8 p.m .. "My people wanl lo develop their land Wednesday, at the Sheraton.Beach Inn to for industry, but not next to a horse discuss the entire matter. stable," Shibata said. Bill \Vi\liams; who is co-applicant for the stables, told councllmen his stable! v.·ould he all metal with the cleanest most modern facilities possible. "This is only a temporary use, based on the likelihood tl\al the Coastal Freeway will cut acro53 the property," Williams said. Beach Citizens Se.ek Park Land SERVICE • • • How much ·is it \\-11rth?- ' - In the carpet business sometime$ its worth EVERYTHING! . -• Hardly a day goes by that w1 don't g~t 1 cell re9ordin9 another compony's poor install•· ti on. Why p•y $300.00 or $1500.00 for carpeting ond gemb l1 with tho installation 1 -We m1intoin all of our own crews, all t1u9ht· tha ONLY w1y to install carpeting -the RIGHT way I lht greatest m1jority of our business is referr1I. • ,-I I LttllN .lt1dl1 ni F1tflt ;;......,"", c.111 M•••: .UO WQI ••t srrcct frlt•'l•tl 141U11 nn Wnt l•IMt l wtcv11'tl '"' c1'1M'!te: • Heflll r 1 c,,.,1,.. 111: .. 1 The. council refused to grant 1 variance Jor the stable! on an indefinite basis - llmiling it to I frve YW' period, with the possibility or renewal In July, 1976. City Purchase Homeowners in the Franciscan Foun- tains Tract of Huntington Beach want the city to buy 6,8 a~es of land at Golden West Street 1nd Slater Avenue far the pn>paoed central park., - occ .. ionally the damage result ing from poorly sewn seams or taped seams is not repair .. 1ble. Then the value of th1 investment looks p1l1 There is 1 re1sonl I I I I I I I I I I I I f I -~ '· I ' - 8 Reported MisBing 900 Feet Down Mine ~1ANtLA (AP) -Eight miners were reported missing today 1fter a mudslide sealed ofr an auxililry tunnel about 900 feet underground at a copper mine In Toledo, Cebu. · A company spokesman u ld rescue teams were tryinJ to reach the miners in an auxiliary tunnel runnin& off 1 maln tunntr. H ald"'ftve men wtt e believed tripped at about 935 fttl and three moN were believed to be 1t !75 feel. ~ Monday nigh~ they appealed to the council to buy or lease the land to.pre- vent a commerciaJ development. C\ty staff members. however, told the council that, if the land ·Is purchased lt v.•111 weaken J>'rk funds to such 1 point tllat the other 200 acres of the central park c:ould not be developed Cor SC!veral )!tars. Estimated price of the 6.8 acres is 1200,000 to 141JO,OOO. City staff members "·ere ordcrtd ln -geek appraisa'IJ of the l!'nd t.o dettr-mlne- lt.s actual v1lue aod report baci to the council. 1-, lndttdl " , ) IAHtl AN4. OIAN•I TUSTIN C .. I ,,. ALDIN'1 llD MIU CAl"11 I DIAPlllD 11J74 ,,..,.., Tnttit, c.n#. -Pa.Jl44- f ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 l'lactntia Avt. COSTA MESA 646-4838 I VI ] WI ho re .. • re ~ U1 th til H• er lb Ki I •1 hi Q u •• " fl, In " Ir I o• la SI g, ol ti " p: " u fr It fl b , 1 , p n ~ ~ F c • I c b ti b I ' ( ( l _, • - Ne rt Beaeh - ' VOL 63, NO. 227, 2 S!CTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, '1970 • • • IC er-UIC er Ill -' Israelis Moving Tanks ·1 . -~ --~~·--.-~-..---.-----Egypt Warns U.S. Against lnter1?ention By U1Ued Pre11 htera1Uoul Large 8C8le Israeli tank movements were reported today along the Jordanian border where Israeli military dispatches reported the Jordanian army retreating southward toward Amman in the face of a Syrian tank onslaught. Guerrillas reported Jordan's air force in action. • Wittt the possiblity· of American in- tervention increasing, Egypt warned the United States against stepping in, saying this would threaten world peace. Egyp- tian Information Minister Mohammed Hassanein Heikal said intervention would endanger Americari lives even further. Syria issued a similar warning. ·. Heavy fighting resumed in Amman Itself with failure of a cease-fire called by King Hussein and Heikal llid the death Destroys Homes toll thert was over 10,000. Guerrilla sources admitted 1,000 dead and said thert were tens o( thouunds wounded. U.S. military forces Wert alerted to move In to try to save the 400 Americans in Jordan and the possibility of interven· tion seemed very real. Israel also was reported prepared to act if it felt its security threatened -and a Syrian move llOUthward from Irbid would bring Syriari tanks close to the Israeli border. If U.S. military forces should intervene in Jordan to rescue Americans there, they wou1d be hunting for about 400 persons,· of whom about 100 hold dual U.S . .Jordanian citizenship. The State Department lists about 40 American diplomaUl and foreign service 1taffers on duty at the embauy. They are reported ·Winds P~sh-Brush Fire Through East SF Hills ·- OAKLAND (UPI) -J. rali•IJ'"' fire ra1ed through the hills eut San P'ranclscb Bay today, dntroyfnt a num- ber of homes and tndanaerinl many more . Strong winds pushed sheets of name I.Ip to 200 feet high through dry grass: and brush in a swank residential area of the Oakland-Berkeley Hills , not far from the University or California campu s. Fire units from Oakland, Berkeley and other communities battled desperately to save houses, and some residents fled the flames . The State Division of Forestry brought In five planes to drop fire fighting chemi· cals along the ridge in an effort to con· trol the flames , which were burning along I wide front. A thick cloud of heavy smoke billowed over the hills and spread out over Oak· land and ·p~rtli -of· San· Francisco· Bay. Pilots flying over the fire area said they saw many homes burning. John Stanley Smith said the fire was withi n 200 yards of his home and had already destroyed three nearby homes. "Houses and trees are burning. Volun- teers are trying to save places," a photog- rapher reported from the scene. Another photographer said he saw one home saved when firemen and volunteers fought off the flames surrounding il. The Oakland Fire Department called In off-duty men to help control the blaze. Unusually strong· winds were blowing the flames toward the University of Cali· fornia campus. a state school for the blind, and the Claremont Hotel, a BerKe. Aviation Ai.des Will Hear Jet Noise Complaints Jei aircraft noise and complaints of Tustin residents of low flying coinmerclal planes will be discussed Wednesday morning at a top drawer meeting of avia- tion officials at Orange C.Ounty Airport. Joll'ling ln the session will be Paul P.1cAfee, air traffic control official for the Federal Aviation Administration ; George Carver, Air Transport• Ass6ciation ex- ecutive ; Robert Manning, chief pilot for Hughes Air West. and Robert Bresnahan, county avi1Uon di(ector. Irate homeoWners in the Tustin 1re1, headed by David Killon, have charged that AJr West planes fly below the legal height in their appro.ch 1Ude to the airport. The Land Ganie ley lapdmark. llut there Wf.• _po igt~ iate 'threat to these places. Residents throughout the hill area we:t· hoaiDi do•n their roofs, ·Aid tc0rt! of young people jOined in thl effort ol rtsi- dents to beat down the rllmes. "I don't know where lh09e young men and women came from, but' they're won- derful,'.~ said a wo_man whose hou~ had been saved when the names .got within 25 yards. - The Henry J. Kaiser Elementary School was evacuated. * * * Firemen Alerted To Stand Ready For Wind Blazes Orange County firemen were placed on stand-by alert today as hot, dry Santa Ana winds swept in from the desert, causing soaring temperature! in dry brush areas of inland and along the Orange Coast. Similar hot dry weather is predicted for Wednesday. The Santa Ana winds are expected to reach velocities near 40 miles per hour. High fire hazards are expected in both hilly terrain and in Orange County's can- yons. The quickly rising temperatures _cause a sharp decrease in relative humidity, accorrling to Deputy Chief Carl Downs of the county fire department. The tem - perature at El Toro Marine Base rose 18 degrees in one hour this morning -from 62 Qe'grees at 8 a.m. to 80 degrees at 9 a.m. "The desert winds have • tremendous_ lnUuence on the potential of fire disaster," Downs warned. Downs noted that the relative humidity usually drops to between eight aM 10 percent, causing the brush In inland Orange County to dry out and become easily ignited. The U.S. Weather Bureau has not Issued a-ny small craft warnings for boaters along the Southern California Coast, and the seas are expected lo re- main calm. But the winds will have an effect on l)'le aircraft taking off and landing at orange County Airport. AU aircraft are taking of[ toward the northeast -the opposite direction from tfttir u.al..paUem. - The reverse. takeoff and landing pattern b beaau the airplanes are designed to take off d land Into the wind. - Th porrmanagement has checked all private aircraft parked at the airport to insure that they are tied down properly ID avoid being lifted Into the alr by the Uj>etled 3S knot windl. As the northeasterly wind began to buiJd up speed thlt momine, it met the 10Uthwnterly sea bretze. huddled in interior rooms of the building, which haa been hit by small and medium arms fire several times since the fi1hting broke out last Thursday. No injuries have been reported . The wives and children of these of- ficia1s were evacuated la.st .June.'!.~ the. on-again, off-again fighting between l9yalisls and guerrillas began. Almost all of the Americlll.'I In Jordan live In or near Amman, a_ city of about 500,000 people bu.ill, like Rome, on seven hills. The State ~partment does not know or ·any ·':\mericans !iving in the northern citiea of Ramtha and lrbid, now.occupied by forces from .Syria. • Heikal said Egypt was trying to )send a (See JORDAN, Pap~). . . Newport Man Escapes Suh Disaster Imprisoned in a small 11.1bmarine p,unctured whi~e salvra~~§ .. f sunkn ~t, a M\sllon Viejo man 't'a' dragpa to hfl_ death In 250 feet of water off Catalina I6land Monday, but his partner escaped. INTREPID UNDER SAIL:. HEADING FOR A SWEEP? · 1970 Am1rlc•'1 Cup R•c11 Most Hotly Cont11ted Ever ;.. ij., , The second man squirmed through a broken Porthole and shot lo the surface, rupturing hi1 eardrums and cau,!Jng him to be stricken with bends. Aiigry Australian~ flehate Dead is Larry H.eadlee, 32, Of 26892 Preciadoa Drive, Mission~Viejo,_ whQP body was recovered from the miniature sub Nekton Beta by the second sub- mersible craft involved in the salvage. -Gretel's Disqualification Richard Slater, 40, of 3410 Seashore Drive, Newport Beach, was taken ·to Avalon Community Hospital for treat- ment of the bends and possible internal injuries. Authorities said he was the third diver stricken Monday by the excruciating con- dition causing nitrogen bubble!'. In Ure · bl oodstream due to rising from the pressures o( deep seas too quickly.· The other cases were unrelated to the · tragic sinking of the Nekton Beta. Spokesmen for the U.S. C.Oast Guard Search and Rescue Office in Long Beach said the Nekton Bei.a, an identical craft and the 100-foot vessel Oil City were all engaged in the operation. General Oceanographic Company, 17911 Bascom St., Irvine, was hired to haul a sunken cabin cruiser from the seanoor off AvRlon. · Investigators said the two small sub- marines were raising the.boat under their own power, but when it reached the surface, turbulent seas caused one line to break and the boat rolled over. Unable to hold the watetlogged hulk up alone, the Nekton Beta became fouled in Its own lines and a parthole was ruptured as she was dragged into the cold, black depµis . One other diver suffered the bends and partial paralysis Monday while rMUrfac- lng after a 130-foot abalone dive off the Island. · SYDNEY, .Australia (AP) -Angry Aussies talked all 'day about Gret~'s dis- qu.alification in the America's Cup race, then went early to bed. Many were plan ning lo get up in the early hours to hear broadcasts on third heat of the America's Cup, which starts at 2:10 a.m., Sydney time, OA .Wednesday. .ln.t_ei:est .V1 this yachUng classic is eve!}' greater than ever after the protest by American defender lntr.epid was upheld. Most top Australian yachtsmen ap- pear to take the attitude that If the New York Yacht Club says Gretel 11 broke the rules, then Gretel II did jusrthat and was correctly disqualified. ·But very few Australians are top yachtsmen and ,)lery few know the com- plex rules of yachting. However, had you heard today 's talk on the rules by the armchair authorities of Gretel's home port you would have thought there were thousands of experts. But the man in the street and the women in the laundry and the boy and girl at school all talked about "those cheating sons of bachelors" in Newport. They were saying "we was robbed . , .It stinks .•. what else can you expect ..• remember Phar Lap?" Everybody of course "remembers'' Phar Lap. the champion A u s s i e racehorse who went to the United States in eai'ly 19309, swept all before him, then died suddenly. Even schoolboys today will tell you that of cour1e the Yanks got at Nude Negative? Photo Studio Asks Buff Permit An application to operate 1 nude The city last week enacted 1 similar photographic studio open to the public "emergency ordinance'' dealing with will be .considered by the Newport Beach mauage par,lors, which have proven to City Council Monda.y night. Kitten Productions bas applied for a bt a police problem. busineM license to OP.Crate the studio, H,url"1rt e,xp,lained that prei:ent city which will furnish nude models and ordinances do not forbid this type of . cameraa to photograph them, at 3841 business. · • Campus Drive. ''If' the bulikss activity ls such that Miss Mary F. Wagner, 31, otPl1centi1, the publk: bulth, safety .and weHare filed lbe applicaUon lilting herself a1 the mlcht;~ affHted,1' he: said, 0 the City only principal or Kitten Productions. , Council Is the only authority of I.he city City Manaaer Harvey L. H~ said that may rule on the appllcaUon1 {or a the appHcaUon will bt leftt to council, • Uctnte. ratbe• than routtnely opjlrvYed by the "Due to U.. 1nrorma1ton •ncovtred ln Almon loclr1b1y'.s •F'*'"t of 'the foul ', Pa91 3. Phar Lap. , . Now what are the Aussies back home going to do about the America's Cup this time? The Sydney Sun in a hall serious jocular "we was robbed" ed.itorlaJ , sua- gested three altemaUves: -Come home right away. -Ram Intrepid harder, then come h'ome. -Sail like the devil. fl.1ost Australians want the Gretel boys to do the latter. Experts. said Gretel should keep away from Intrepid at the start llO there could be no possible ground for protest. Sydney Sun wri ter Lou d'Alpuget In Newport suggested t h e r e should be ind ependenl mo vies of the start and finis h and of the yachts in the running to help determine p:-Jtests. One Sydney "authority" on yachting wa s saying today_ Austra1ia would have been 3 to 0 tonight if: -Gretel had oot had a crewman fall overboard and fouled up a spiMaker ln the first race. -The second race had ..ot been called off when Gretel was gettina Into a win· ning posltio". -Gretel had not been disqualified in Sunday's race. Many of the landlubbers he~ are con- vinced Gretel ls the faster boat anc:l'wlll yet win four races in the best~f-seven aeries for the /.merica's Cup. "And if we do win," said one, "we'll see to It they never get it back." Bombing Threat Called at CSF An anonymous man. telephoned Cal State Fullerton at 9: 15 a.m... todly .warn- ing that bombs had been plactd in three "main bu.ildlnis" on the campus. See tarUer story, pa,e .3. · •. Fullerton police and ,firtrntn. with cam- pus ,secµrlty pollce aearched and found no bombl, 1 Camp.is spbkeaman llid. 'Mle threit "'.lls the Hrlt rteel; this year ·1nd follows in the wike of di vtry l•!t week of dynamite bw'i«I Off the campus. No cla&sel nre 4j1rupt.ed today. Business Licence t>eplr'tqM!nt, ''by the P>ll~ inve1tlg•tiona 1botJt WI· type reuons of tht chartc:teratka atttndant. or~ t{lterprjae and the amount.of M J • R • ~ .. ·~. - N.Y. Steeb ·TEN CENTS • I Americans Score 3rd SpecW to the PAIL y PILO'I' NEWPORT. R.I . -Newport Beach skipper Bill Ficker and hiJ defender In· trepid today won a nip-and-tuck batUe with Australia~a GrttelJL!or_JIJ_s~third~· ~--·• vi~tory in defense of the America '1 CuJ). Intrepid now needs Only one more vie- tory to assure America retaining the old pewter mug symbolic of aupremacy iD international yacht ·racing. One more victory would assure a tweep for Ficker and Intrepid . · The next race will be staged Thursday, with a layoff Wedne~y, requested by the challenger. The American defender, akippered by Biii Ficker, overtook Gretel II after the Australian had taken a fiye-length lead shortly after the start and moved to ttre front by 46 seconds at the first mark. The distance between the two boats scarcely · varied as .they jousted. Intrepid ~y 1 minute 16 seconds as the yachts rounded the iilth mark for home. The Aussie cttallenger clearly had her work cut out for her but in an earlier trial she had beat Intrepid on a simi~ lar ~ndward leg by 1 minute, M set· onds. Weather had deteriorated as the two. yachts reached the fourth mark, The yachts were r11cin1 in a deepeninC fog with the v\Jibillty less than one mile. • At the third mark, Ficker and hll Amtttcan defender had Jncrealtd her lead to 56 seconds and was about 250 yards, ahead of the challenging Aussie bo;lt. There was v"ery little aetlorr. Winds remained southwesterly at around l2 knots. Intrepid led at the··first of six marks by 46 seconds, or about six boat len gths. Gretel lt had taken a five-length lead at the start but after 18 minutes fell behind. The race got under way promptly at 9:10 1.m. (POT). . Winds at the start were from the 110uthwest at 15 knots, a condition CO!\'" sldered by the experts as favorable to Intrepid , the American defender in the best-of-seven race series. Visibility was about two miles in haz.e and light fpg. , Both yachts stayed wtll clear of each other at lhe gun to avoid any repetition of the protests that have marred the two previous races. The two boatl were about too yard1 over the line and Gretel lI appeared to hayt moved a little ahead Into a 12-14. knot southwesterly. Crossbow Arrow Hits Wife; Marine Held SAN DIEGO (AP) - A Marine h" been charged with attempted murder of his wife by crossbow. The foot-long arrow hit C.Ora Moon, 21, Jn the fact but waa removed at university hospital. Mrs. Moon was listed In satisfactory condition today. Pfc. Jerry Daniel Moon. 20, Wal arrested early Sunday in a "telephone booth where he called Police. Wea titer Those hot .desert winds will warm things up along the Orange Coast tonight, but 1~ould cool off try Wednesday. took'for tempera- tures· up to 7$ •Iona the beac.hes · arid 93 In the less temper•te in-taOd rigions. · INSIDE TODA\' "The Royal Hunt of the Sun" at Cht Laguna Moulton. Play· ltou.u leo.ds-off a heavy wttk.of liliing thtaitr on thfl'· Orange Coost tonight. St e Entertafn· mnt, Page 19.1 Cellfwftlt ' .... ... • Clledlllt \H> ' -" Cltnl,._. ... ..,..,, ..... .. ,_, .. ·--.. ,_ .. • .. • (Nari,._. Style) Picture your.elf In a SllUI A-frame b e 1 I d e a Nortbem Ca.lifomla 1tream, away from smog and root beer 1ta.nd1? And turning a Ody profit on the land you bought? The picture might not be as pretty •s il 's palnt~. For the fourth in a eeries oC ttLicles by DAILY PILOT Staff Writer, Al Bates on the prob. lem, turn to Page, 11 today. Both winds wer& btowln1 11 about 10 knol3 and the °'"""' Coonty Airport tqwu recorded the wind blowing towards !he east -in from the ocean. But the windsock 1 le• hundred y1rd11 across the runway recm-ded Ute wind blowir\I tht oppo1ite~U01L In ltOl!I the 4~·- thlJ type or .buaJMu." police 1ttentton which must be devoted to a ays1an es1gns There ire lndl<atlooo the <ttr may this type or 1ctlvtty, •• welt " tilt rre-Kt!ALA LUMPUR. ~Mllaysl1 (UPI) ..,_ move to blodt ep1r1tlcin of ~ 11Udlo. _ quency with W"hlch the)' are found to be In Tenglru Abdul Rahman, founder of his --.. _ .............. °'=:' C-'¥ I .. -.. ,_ 1 .. ,. • SMdl .._.... 1•11 Sources Aid thil momlni an "emer.aenc1 violation of state law, L am recom-naUon 13 year1 aao and lta prime ordinance" designed to n:pl~te au~ mll>ding thJt the City Council revJew the mkllster ever since, fesipe<t Tuelday enlerpri!t!S is currenUy beiJll prepared Mtd.for ·t.bt bluance ol. this ,parUcular and handed over the relnl of leadenhip _by City Attorney l\ally.S.,-• .;. • • ti"!hff,'.' 1!t.11id.~. ~ toJ!ll l'91!!!1er ~ty, Tlln M><l\!LRauk. '"""''._. " ·--" ·-'"" -" -" -• ... .._ .. ._,, ..... ,~,, ~"~' -·-.. -. • I I ' • • --·-. .. ~ • . I IWLY PILOT M T"!ollJ, -bil ZZ, 1'111 . --• Ca~p -P_elldletOn _ Urg~d . (o i-Jet -A.irport Site By !. PETER KRIEG .................. - 11....ort lloodJ ... ,moved b:mallJ to Ille tllOI ilJe oranct COunty Airport • .,.,. aultanta give due consideration to Camp Pendleton as an '1ternate site for South Coast public jet aviation facilities. In • ieUer to Wi!Sey' and llam, Newport Beach's airport consuJtanl.\, Philip F. Bettencourt, administrative assistant to the ~ity man~ger, asked that the city's recommendahon be f o r w a r d e d im· medJately to the C'Ollnty consult.ants, the Ralph li-1. P&r1Ms Company. Pha1t n1 of Uie Parsons rep(jrt on the future of the Orange County Airport is d'u. for 1SUbmisaioo to the County Board ol SupO(vbars Sept. 31> ind the city Willia -.., ·u....,..ible l"' of c..a., ~ Included lo IL •· , 1n .a l<itM' lo A. 'fl. Coini>oill, vi. prtllldenl of Wllaey, ad Ham. Joi. -did not """ ~ to the three and one-half mile stretCh of beach!ron~ reoenUy, turned <1ver to the •late by the U.S. Marin< Corps. He rtferi'ed only to the 195-aqUi.re mile base in norlhern San Diego County .saying: "The city council is of the opinion that urban devtlopment may have ~ssed too far to permit development of a new jet Capable airport wholly with.In the cor- porate limits of Oranae Count)! without Cote Chief'• View :Route Petiti0n Move-:Assailed- By JOANNE REYNOLDS "You cannot dele&ate respoosibility to ot"" DlllW' .... , s11tt a city council without authority," he aaid. Charles Currey, president of the New-Currey said he' felt the freeway' agree- port Harbor Chamber of Commerce, Mon. menL referendum Is a poor idea because day came out. strongly against a referen--there is no practic~J way t~ disseminate durh petition designed t resci d f the lar~e amount of technical data. in- I r e~ut t ta1 envlrqoment.11 ln· compaliblUty r Pbue U'll tho p.,_ reparl ,,...._ -~--~ tbe.praont· lldllly ll 1'"N Beadl. Tllo County of su...,.-bu -ed an October 13 public hearing on thil tection ot the ... port. BettenCOW't asked -that Wilsey and Ham's communications with Parsons "urge (Parsons) to give serJous con- sideration to the Pendleton site. "From oUr lMpectiO(I of the Parsons Compaby contract/' he said, "we are uniblt to determine If a new metroport site must be within Orange County." Bettencourt cited past city council ·~· ,.ooluU... -11111111!q • the ""' o I hDdlotan; clem<nilrltll!c'llW In-In tho lldllty.11 not ""'. Ht tbeJi qUOJed cOmmenll made ln an urllor stucty by WiDlam !. Ptrein and • --In July, 11111. "A number of ridge and vaUey sites at Camp Pendleton have been t:i:amilled," the Pereira· 11tudy taid, "and lhere ar, potential locations ll'here t h e Jn- ternaUonal airport could be developed with 'sufflcil!ntterrain clearance for ap.. proachts and departures over the ocean. "Most of these sites would have minimum Interference with ei:latint Marine Corpll facilities, and·il Is believed that an opUmum site could be found ao that buffer aones could be uaed fot lftilltary ,tralDbla ldlvlUet, ' 1:. ... , The Pereiro nport atreiaed ll>at Iii> other land: area ln Southern catlfornia can offer tbe terrain, open. land, orient.atioo to the 1ea and overall relaUonsbl_ps to future urban developments: "Jt 11 believed that Southern California region u well as the na~onal interests -will be-~ ter·vtd '1ry utilizing a portion of the great laod resource at Camp Pendleton tor development of a major In· terna.tional airport as propoied," Pereira &aid. The subsequent P a r 1 o n 1 recom· mendation1 have tooched off a battle rcyaJ within the county over the future . of the only county-owned airport. • Conterv.uoniats ~and b o In e o w n·e r 1 • within eersbot of the facility, as Well as entlre communities, such as Newport ~ch, Costa Meu and Tu s t i n , vellemently oppose ·.any more ex- pansion. Ln fact, they are strongly urging curtailment of many operations there, aPd as in the letter from Bettencourt. are urging establishment or a new f~cillty 11> handle au jet ·operations. The airport currently has three com· mercial airlines using it, Golden West, Air Califor.nia and Air West. Another, Holiday Air lines, i s petitioning the Public Utlities Commission to start scheduled flights. •Petty Politi~s ~ Hit Mesa Street Named After Executive Retitl.ed A move to re-tiUe a bloci:·tong street and Uwa. erase· the-name of an OU!led corpor.a.te ei:ecutiv~ from in front of the -firm.ls Jrvlne--Industrial~mplei: plant was approved Monday by the Costa Mesa City Council. One councilman, however, criticized the petty politics of the fnaneuver and made an unsuccessful countermove to give Jt yet another name Frawley Drive, which serves Technicolor Corporation, wi!I henceforth be named Ka lmus Drive. the unei:pected controversy when he sug. &ested the atreet be named Ogden Drive, in honor of an early local settler. -"Ogden was ;a_costa_Me.sa_ p_ionttr._a_ cement contractor, and he had a lot of drive," St. Clair declare;. ~ He offered a motion ~name the street for Ogden, but was reminded the specific name change had been requested by the company itself, which was annexed into Costa Mesa. A new motion to go ahead and tename Frawley Drive Kalmus Drive was~offered -with a stipulation that city officials Jin_d__!_~r streeUo~ for the late Mr. Ogden--and passed by a 3 to 2 vote. St. Clair was militant and Hammet~ sided with him. "I don 't like the name Kalmus," Ham· mett remarked for the record. --o n a. r~e-volved 1n a route agreement to a lar&e way route-agreement-ma.de -by~the-c1ty-!5i'ldy-of-voterc-··--.-- councij and the .~late Division of High-DirectOrs appl'Qved a meas'ure to fur.. __ O.neilm.Lcbairman o( the board Pat Frawley was squeezed out" lna recent stockholders' squabble, so the company now wanta to honor Dr. Herbert T. Kalmus, who invented Color film 5.1 years Councilma'h Jack Hammett had second- ed lhe motion, which St. Clair then amen- ded to merely send the request back to ·tne city planntng-department-for-further study. Councilman St. Cla ir said longtime Costa Mcsari Miss Jeri Ogden, of 206fl Orange Ave., "'hOse forebears settled the mesa has been campaigning for a fitting memorial to the family. He discovered today, however, that it "'as her grandfather who was named Char)es Ogden. while he actually h.ad her great grandfather. Robert Boyd. in mind . ways. _ . . ther study ·1he matter In the directors' Speaking_at the luncheon meet1n~ of the executive committee before takin& an of. chamber directors, Currey ma4e 1t clear ficlal stance on the jssue that he was expressing a personal opini~ In explaining hls dJsllke of the referen- and not Jpeak1ng for the chamber·or dJ· clum.proposed by the Fr~way Fighters, re~tors.. . Currey said he disapprover of referen- 1 believe, as a lawyer and a reside~t dums as a means of enacting legislation. of Newport Beach. that to take the dec1· "Referendums in aeneral are a poor s1on .relative ~o the freeway awal". from way to do businesa. If you don't like th<. the city council would be a bad mistake. way elected officials are doing their jcb, then recall them or elect different onet Jn the next election. "t"'re also setting a bad precedent !n t t iss~s that are difficult to resolve 1n future could be taken from the council. Where do you stop?· DIES AT LIDO ISLE HOME Boldwl n M. Boldwln Noted Yachtsman Baldwin BaldWin Holiday Airline Expansion Plea . Offered to P UC "I feel a referendum is not any solution to the problem and may bf impoain1 trt-S · h t 66 mendous road bloc a to Jtg eoluUon," / llCCUID 8 8 A petition by Holiday Airlines to extend Its air serv•ce routes-· to Orange County and San Diego is pending today before the state Public Utilities Commiss ion -(PUC) with no hearing date set as yti. The airline, which currently serves Los Angeles, San Francisco, Oakland aod Lake Tahoe, is seeking two flights a daf into and out of Orange Counly Airwr\: The airline proposes .direct service from Orai1ge County to San Diego and Laite Tahoe. . • ' In its petition, filed Sept. 4. Holiday cites growth of Southern California and its subsequent need for more air transportation as the basis for it! re- quest. The Newport Beach City Council has · directed its staff to prepare a resolution oppoiihg the request to be adopted at the Sept. 28 council meeting. Currently, three commercial airlines, Golden West, Air West and Air California. are authorized to fly out of the county airport. The proposed initial flights by Holiday would be during the daytime hours. Huge Forest F ire In Portugal Doused h10NTAGUA, Portugal {AP) -Hun· dreds of firemen. soldiers and forest rangers put out a forest fire early today that had carved oot a path of destruction with damage estimated at over St million. The fire , one of the biggesl ever in Portugal, started Sunday in a densely forested area of pines · and eucalpytus trees. lt appeared extinguished Monday bul shorUy_ afterwards flared into life again .. No ·one has been reported injured. DAILY PILOT CllAlrfGIE COAST .. Ul\.llMllrlG C0M"ANY -·~•rf N. w,, .. ,.rallltirlf •lld ~ltlwf' J•c.k i.;. C111l•v Yiu Pre.Id.,,! •NI GM1ttl M•~'fllf'- Tk•11111 ic,,.,;i Currey said. · John Macnab, fonner cbaml>er presl· dent agreed wilh Currey. "llte merits or demerits of the freeway-Issue dOn't have anythlng to Ito with the Jong range prob- lem posed by usini a referendum in this case. · "It Is a most dangerous situation fM' an issue like . this to go to a vote of the pub\Jc because of the pret'edent it sets up. t don't think we ~ould dilute the author· ~ \)! the city cowicil unduly," ~ said. Employes Save Choking Woman. In Restaurant - A Seal Beach woman was released ti> da y from Hoag Memorial Hospital after nearly choking to death in a Newport Beach restaurant Monday night. Anna Payne McEntee, 70, of 13381 El Dorado Dr., was dining alone at the Chari House, 1600 W. Coast Highway, at about 6:46 p.m. when she collapsed ·m her chair. Bill Parker. assistant manager of the restaurant, said employes David Cole, Dennis Webb, Doug Cole, Sonja Bergman and Paul Ryon administer-ed first aid to the woman who had stopped breathing. A physician, Dr. William C. Bryce. of San Gabriel. who walked into the restaurant as the five were administering first aid, took over the re~e operation until the arrival of fire department rescue units. Dr. Bryce's preliminary diagnosis was Ulat Mrs. McEnlef: had Mlffered a stroke, but reports from Hoag Hospital indicate the woman was choking on a piece· of meat · l\falaria on Increase ATLANTA, Ga. (AP~ A total ol 3,806 cases of malaria In the United St.ates and Puerto Rico was reported in 1H9, an in- crease of 1.196 cases over the previous year, the Center for Disease Control says. Baldwin M.-Baldwin, one of Newport Harbor's most prominent yachtsmen, died a£ his Lido Isle home Monday-at I a.m. following a 1ingering illness. He waa 66. There will be no funeral services. His body will be crtmated and the ashes placed in the family ciypt at San Fran· cilco, Mr. Baldwin, a retired real estate ~ loper, leaves his wklo\" M1n1ja and hil,,i~ •(" ' .""J c ..,._en. Although he was an heir to the Lucky Baldwin estate, Mr. Baldwin always was proud of amassing his own lortune with his rea1 estate developments and in-- vestments. H~ was erbident ol the cor· poration that t;uilt and developed Baldwin Hills Village in J,.os Angeles County. · Baldwin got his first taste of yachting competition when he &ailed a Newporter 40 ketch in a Newport to Ensenada race. • Later he bought the 72-foot 'yawl. Esca- pa4e lrom James Y. Camp and set out Oft a WorldWide• campaign that took the Newport Harbor Yacht CJub burgee to all points of the world. He was first to finish in many of the top long distance yacht races, and wlth Escapade won the Transatlantic race and the Miami to Jamaica race among others. It was while racing in the Southern Ocean Racing conference in Florida that he heard that the 73-foot yawl Northern Light was for sail. He bought the yacht for a reported $250,000, renamed it Audacious ,n.rcontinued his worldwide campaign. After purchasing Audacious, :Qaldwin donated Escapade to the University of Miami, and when he retired from active yacht racing a few years ago he donated Audacious to the University of Southern Californ ia, He was lhe donor of the Newport Harbor Yacht Club trophy for the Newport to Santa Barbara race. ln this year's America's Cup campaign he was a contributor to the: Valiant syndicate. Besides his interest in yachling Baldwin was an avid art collector. He owned one of the largest known col- lectims or the works of Toulouse Lautrec. Berore his death he set up the Baldwin Art Foundation which will be ad- ministered by his widow. The ramily has suggested memorial donations to Hoag Memorial Hospital. ago. ' Councilman William L. St. Clair caused . The maneuver failed by a 4 to I vote. ''The street's too short lo be named for a Costa Mesa pioneer anyway," observed Councllmlll Alvin L. Pinkley. Nuclear Plan~ Studied By Water Control Board By PAMELA HAUAN Of ... DlllY l'lllt ... ,, The Southern California :Regional Water Quality Control Board, San Diego Region, took a hard look Monday at ex· cavation requirements for two more nuclear 1enerating Plants near San Onofre. ' Before constructi.on,rGD-ill' .tltp 1~40 megawatt plants ·tait begin, tht.board placed stringent req~ents on ihe disposal or material ~ ~-­ cavatlona necessary to prep&re the two sile!I for construction. The San Diego Gas and Eleetrk: Com- pany and the Southern California. Edison Company have estimated that two·mllllon cubic yards of surface terrace material and 650,000 cubtc yards of underlying San Mateo fonna.tion material will be el· cavated. The terrace material is compoeed or silt, clay and fine to coarse sands with layers of cobbles and boulders while the 8 . Reported Missing 900 Feet Down Mine MANILA (AP) -Eight miner1 were reported missing today after a mudslide sealed off an au1lliary tunnel about 900 feet underground at a copper mine in Toledo, Cebu. A company spoRsman said rescue teams were trying to reach the miners in an auxiliary tunnel running off a main tunnel. He said five men were believed trapped at about 935 feet and three mort were believed to be at 875 feet. San Mateo is dense, fine lo coarse sand with poda of terrace ma.tefial. The board . accepted the recom- mendations oC their executive direclor, Den nis O'Leary and voted unanimously to .prohibit the deposit of terrace material in the Pacific Ocean. The two utility companies had already made arrangements lo deposit this material on land at selected site! within Ca.mp Pendleton. Pods or silty, clay material greater than d foot' in thickness ln the ·Sin Mateo Fonna.tion must also be deposit!<!: with the terrace material. The board is-allowing the disposal of lhe San Mateo sand along the beach In the nearshore wne to replen~h sand that wears away through erosion. The utility co mpanies also plan to ex- cavate on the ocean floor to construct four 18-foot diameter conduits for the cooling water intake and discharge system. These conduits would be buried beneath the ocean noor' extending between 2,600 and 3,400 feet offshore. -Excess sand from this operation was to be deposited on the seaward 1lde of the terminal structures, but the committee voted to recommend placing t h i 1 material in the nearshore zone so it too can help replenish beaches. The staff reported that San Mateo sand had been deposited along the beach in 1964, when the 1ite of the present San Ono(re plant was prepared. They reported that no ldverse effects to marine life occurred at that time. The board also approved a monitoring system for the excavation projects, to make aure the requirements are carried out. SERVICE • • • "It went back fatther than I realized," he explained. From Pafii I JORDA N ..• plane to Amman to rescue 100 foreign correspondents, mostly American, trap- ·ped in the Intercontinental Hotel in lhe center of the city. Their hotel has been hit repeatedly In the showdown civil war between.Jiusseio and -the Palestinian guerrillas. Hussein, fa ced with a battle fOr surVival and deserted by many of his Arab allies, appealed to the United Statesn the Soviet Union, Britain and France f9r help. But Washington dispatches said President Nixo.n had no~ yet decided on a course of action. Israeli disp~tches were subjected to in· tense military censorship, but repo~ reached London of largescate tank movemenl.s M~day night and again to, day. The reports said it was uncertain whether they were deploy ing for possible action in Jordan. UPI correspondent--Ohad Gozani,-from the seashore resort of Tiberias on the Sea of Galilee, could report on~y that dus\ clouds rising on t~e east bank of the .Jordan River marked the passage of Jordanian army convoys rolling south. On Monday, the Jordanian army had moved northward to lrbid, Jordan's se- cond city nestled in 2,000 foot mountains 45 miles north of Amman and only 18 miles east of the cease.fire line. · Hollywood Descends On Old Prison Town MOUNDSVILLE, W. VA. (UPI) - Hollywood came to A-1oundsville this week . Actor James Stewart and George Kennedy, and dozens of technicians, stand·i1's. stuntmen and antique cars de- scended on the mountain town to film "Fool's Parade.'' The film crew said the city was selected because the Moundsville penitentiary re- quires no retou ching to simulate the 1930s. How much is it worth? In the carpet business sometimes its worth EVERYTHING! Tko1111t •A. Mui~~·~• MaMtifte Ellllt Restaurant Retain§<Name Hu dly o day 9 .. s by thll wo don't got o c1U re9ardin9 another compa ny's poor instaOa· tiort. W!.y pay $300.00 or $1500.00 fo r carpeting and 9omble with tho instolletion7 We maintain 111 of our own crews, 111 tau9ht !ht ONLY wey to instell car peting -the 'RIGHT wey l lf~ .... 111 Offlc• JJI I W•1t l11l111 l•11l•¥1rd ... m111 ~''"': ,,0.1 •• 1111, t2,,, _...._ C .... M-.~ Sii w.t II'( Strat u.u-._,,, 211 !'well ·-~..a.cri: uan,_,, ,.,...,,,. 1111 tlffllMtl: m Nwlll I.I""""-.__. D'orl.T t>ll.GT. wl1ll -.ai: " ~ 91'11 H.-•""H' It ~ ••ftt' .. ,.,,, kfoo. ,..., lfl •n•tt Wl1llMI "" \.llfOIM IM(ll, He~ ltldl, C.11 -.-, tf\11\lfrlll ... kc~ Mii l<Olll'lltlll Vtltq', ..... w!!ll -tTt'-"1 d lr'-. 0--ll!M C.Mf .. ~lslllflt \:""'""" ~'"''1"1 """'' ••• ,, 2t11 ""'"' l1IW• it:W , Ht...,.,1 ... di, ..W UI Wftl It'( •1t11"., C..N Mftt, • t11.,~••• cn •I' ••2 .. 311 c ......... , ....... 64l-16rt ~. , ................ c.ttf ~ ~· ,.. -..... ... .......... ••tleo-111 ~., ., ··-~" ~ ""' .............. ""'"""' ...... t ..... ......... " Ul>fl'liN -· ........ llln .......... i. II ,,,......, kJdl ..... c-t• ..... C..liflWllM • .SlliKr..,. w -ftlP'Nt U -• ~-., ....i1 U-A ...,,., ~ ••llMI-LtAlll """"""'· Despite Singer's Protest Entertainer Jose Feliciano bu learned that Feliciano'• Restaurant in Newport Beach will continue to be known by that title untU at lea.st Dec. 1 despite his ob-. Jtctlons In Superior Court. Judge Rob<rt !. Cottman made, thal ruling Monday in a teries of orders d..,lgned to put the tan1led affairs of the Newport Beach faclllty in an order that will permlt court trlltl of the issue raised by the blind guitari!I. Judge Corfman named sam Pomerani of New York a1 reeeiver.Jn the Newport property at 1617· Westcliff Or Ive. Pomeranz will receive $15,000 and $1 ,DI 1 month for bls control of the operation now taken over by Roberta ·Unlimited of Las Vega$ .. f'ellciano1nadc the-troubled affairs of f'ellciano'a public when he filed a lawl\llt 1etk1ng the removal of Gene and Carol_ Rondondo as directors of Newport South Bay Inc., the corporate title of the restaurant. Feliciano demanded $160,000 I n damages and contended that the Ron-- dondoa and fellow defendant Charles S. Dreyer had never lived up to the agree- ment made. bttween all parties, His com- plaint included charge! that )htrons of the restaurant were hustled and that the defendants had withdrawn lar&e salarle5 from the operation. He accused Rondondo, 43, of 1501 E. Cornwall Lane, Newport Beach and Ort)~er. 3J';" of 1645 Sunset Rldie Drtve, ~a Stach, of dlvertlng liquor sup- pliis from Fellclano's for thttr own use and ptrl()nal profit. Both men were In- dicated by the Oran1e County Grand Jury on those charger. Occesionelly tho do,,,.90 rosu~ing from pOor+y sewn seams or taped 111ms is not r1p1ir· n., m orrol. 9r11test m1jority of our business is oblo. ' TMre is • rHson! Then the vo"'° of the i"vostment looks pole indoocll IANTA AMA, OIAMN Till ftM-Cell • , , Al.MN~ U O HILL C.41"1'1 & DU.PlllD 1U74 h't4le. T ...... c.lf . 1 Ua.JJ44 I ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. .. COSTA MESA . 646-4838 ' j ' I I - to de fao J A Q tt • h a b g A ~ r c y ~ h a I I ' • ( • I I I ' I ' I I 1 I -. • •• I --· ' VO L 63 , NO. 227, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES -• - ORANGE COUNTY; CAUF-ORNI~ • --. . .. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER i 2. 1970 . . ' TEN CENTS Mesa Gives Aw~y 'Pooped Out' Fire Pumper r ! " -A 1945-Seagraves fire truck which has dwindled in value to a mere $250 ls·Mex- Je<>bound today, after a Costa Mesa City Council debate Afonday on how to get the best public relations mileage out of the goodwill gesture. The ~tered . ..aut pu~per will be given to the sister city of Brea, which Is Lagos de More.nos, a city of 35,000 persons not far from Guadalajara . · Several methods ot disposing of the veteran vehicle were considered before the t to 1 vote, on which Councilman William L. St. Clair dissented. "I don't see why in tlfe world we should give our old fire engine to Brea to give to it..s sister ci ty," observed St. Clair, a slrong campaigner to get Co!ta Mesa its own Mexican sister city. Acting City Manaaer Fred Sorsabal was the one who asked council approval to declare the truck surplus equipment INTREPID UNDER SAIL : HEADING FOR A SWEEP? 1970 Amer ic•'1 Cup R•c11 Most Hotly Contested Ever Angry Australians Debate -' Gr~tel' s "Qisqualif ication SYDNEY, Australia (AP ) -Angry Aussies l:''.:cd all day About Gretel's dis- qualification in the America's Cup race, then went early to bed. l\1any were planning to get up in the early hours to hear broadcasts on third heat of the America's Cup, which starts at 2: 10 a.m., Sydney time,°" Wednesday. Interest iR this yachting classic is even greater than ever after the protest by American defender Intrepid was upheld. Most top Australian yachtsmen a?\ pear to take the altitude that if the New York Yacht Club says Gretel II broke the rule s, then Gretel II did just that and was correctly disqualified. .. But very few Australians are top yachlsmen and very few know the com· plex rules of yachling . However, had You heard today's talk on lhe rules by the armchair authorities of Gretel's home port you would ha ve thought there were thousands of experts. But the man in the slreet and the women ift the laundry and the boy and . girl at school all talked about "those cheating sons or bachelors" in Newport. They were saying "we was robbed .. .it stinks .• , what else can ,you expect ••• remember Phar Lap?" E\•erybody of course "remembers" Phar Lap, the champion Au s s I e racehorse who went to the United States in early 1930s, swepl all before him, then died siJddenly'. Even ~choo)boys today will , tell you lhat ol course the Yank! got al Phar Lllp. Now what are the Aussies back home going to do about the America's Cup this time? The Sydney Sun In a hall serious The Land Ga me (Noi'lllern St11l e) Picture yourtelr in 1 snug A·fr•me b e 1 l d e a Northern California !itrea m. away from smog and root beer stands? And turning a tidy profit on the land you bought? The picture might not be as pretty •s It's painiecl. For the fourth in a -series of arlieles by DAlLV PILOT Staff Writer. Al Bates on the prob- lem, turn to Page 12 today. Almon Lockeb ey'i 1 ac:c:ount of 'tho foul', Pago 3. jocular "we was robbed" edltorlal, sug. gested three alternatives: -Come home right away. -Ram l11trepid harder, then come home. -Sail like the de vil. Most Australians want the Gretel boys to do the latter. Experts said Gretel should keep away from Intrepid at the start so there could be no possible ground for protest. Sydney Sun writer U>u d'A\pugel In NewJ)Ort suggested there should be Independent movies of lhe start and finish and of the yachts in the running to help determine prJtests. One Sydney "authority" on yachting was saying today Australia "'·ould have been 3 to 0 tonight if: -Gretel had not had a crewman fall overboard and fouled up a spinnaker in lhe first race. -The second ra ce had Ml been called off when Gretel was getting into a ·win· ning posilioA. ' • -Gretel had not been disqualified in Sunday's race. Many of the landlubbers here are con- vinced Gretel ls the fa ster boat and wlll yet win four races in the best-of.seven series for the .'.merica 's Cup. ''And if we do win,'' said one, "we'll see to It they never get it back." Bombing Threa.t Ca.Ued at CSF An anonymous man telephoned Cal S1'te Fullerton at •~IS a.m. today warn. Ina that bomb$ had bctn placed in three "m1dn buildings" on the ca mpus. See tar lier ttory, ptge S. Fullerton police and firtmen with cam. pus security police.searched and found no bombs, 11 campus spokesman said. The threat was the flr.t r1telved this year and follows in the w.tke of discovery last week of dynamite burled Just OU the carn.pua:. No claS1t.1 •ere disrupted today. I and don1te it to the~firemen of Lagoa de More.nos, ' "We're embarrassed to use ii," obsuv. ed one fireman today. St. Clair distributed copies of his own proposal for disgosing of the l!M5 Seagraves south of the border, which would make it a.community-wide event. "Our surplus fire engine affords Costa Mesa an excelelnt opportunity' to fMl.er international good will, gain good publici· ty amLllave IODlt pd clellil f\I!\," 11¢ ariued. · He suggested aolicltina Haled bids with 1 '250 niinimum price from ccisti' Meu service clubl -prefer1blY those with in- ternational affiliati'pns -·l.na let Utem. 1ive 1t 1w1y. , , "Thele strVice clubs cOOld have fUn picklni out a reCiplent for the fin eng.ine," he contindtd enthualulically. "They could invite a delq alioa up.be.re ------- for luqch to accept afKI theq ft ~ ~ down there to help dellver It," St. Clair added. . "With some though!~ ·Wcirt, we could have a ball with tha( otd ·fiiti:encirie and maybe open up IORle~fri~p J!Mltb' of the. border," he conctuded1. . · · No mention was made of Colla Mesa's historic resolution forwarded to Prtside.nt Nixon 11 months. ago supetUnc America buy· Baja CalUornla ai the 51st 1tate. _ St. Cl~ was over.ruled on the final vote, however, and Cooncilman Jack Hammet t 'reveaied la.ter he had\ a prefetence for a· different Medcan com- munity that should· lle enriched_ by one 1145 Seagraves puml)\!r. (. ,... Inquirjes reVeal~. hawever, that it would aeem an empty act of international frienl:iship to give a fire truci to a town that can 't supply the necessary water. Egypt Issues Warning - Israeli Tanks Reported Along Jordanian Border -------·-By United Press lntenatfonal Large scale Israeli tank mOVements were reported today a1ong the Jordanian border where Israeli military dispatches reported the Jordanian army retreating southward toward ~an in tht !ace of a Syrian tank onslaught. Guerrillas reporred Jordan's air force in action. With the possiblity of American in- tervention increasing, Egypt warned the United States 1gainsl stepping in, uying this would threaten world peace. Egyp- tian Information Minister Mphammed Hassanein Heikll said intervention wou1d endanger American lives even further. Syria' iasu~ 1 'similar wimifti.' Heavy fighting ruumed in Amman itself with failure-or a cease-fire called by King Hussein and Helkal said lhe dea:th toll there -was over 10,000. Gue:rrilla sources admitted 1,000 dead and aaid there were tens of thousands wounded. U.S. military forces were alerted to move in to try to 11ve the 400 Americana In Jordan and the possibility of In,.,...,. lion aeeined very real. Israel allo •• "feported prepared to act If it felt·· lb Security Uriatened·-and a Syri&h move aoulhward from lrbld woukl brine Syrian tanks close to the Israeli border. If U.S. military forcea should lntervem in Jordan to rescue Anlericans there, they would tie hunting for about 40D persons," of whom aboUt 100 hOlCI dull U.S . .Jordanian cltittnship. The State Departmf:nt lists about 40 Ame~ diplomats and foreign service statfen on duty at the embusy. They are reported huddled in interior rooms of ilie buildini, which has been hit by small and medium arms fire several times since the fi.&btine broke out Iut Thunday. No injuries have been reported. The wives and children of lhese of· ficialt were ev1CU1ted J..,t June whet the on-.qaln, off.again fighting betw een (See JORDAN, Pap I) •Petty P-olities' g ,i& Dismembered Baby Remai:iis Me~a Street Named After Executive Retitled .- . t,'.l!l'ol'!. Iii ~ l bloclt.k.na ftrHI ~ th~•, ~~-·tiji' name 9' .,n ousted R · 'd t'f'ed b th 1· . 4 ~te 1recutivl frorn-{n front ef. thl: emallls 1 en 1 1 . Y e prosecu ion ffuri's Irvine Induab'lal Compler plant as the butchered body of J.montJHld · was approved Mondaf by the Costa Meu Cytnlti@ Slocum were c:Usplayed today .to City €ouncil. · • ' a Superior Court jury as the murder trial On&.J councilman, however, criticized of the infant's father entered its second the petty politics of the maneuver and • made an W)IUccessful countennov~ to day· give'{! yet another name. Dr .. Richard I. Fukomoto, the Anaheim Frawley Drive, which s e r v e s pa\h<>logist who perfonned an autopsy on Technieolor Corporation, will henceforth what is alleged to be the dismembered ' litO:ffit! KJlf:~bi. ~·~ Frawley wu 1QUel!&ed out. ln a. rtemJt_ stockholdei:t' 1qua~le, ltl ~ ~ND>'. now wanu to honor Dr. Herblrt-T. Kalmua, who iii.vented color film 53 y1ar1 ago. • Councilman. William L. St. CJair caUJed the iwexPl;lcte<J. controve.r1Y when l)e Sl!I · aested the stree(be named Ogden Drtve, in honor of In early local aettler. "Ogden wu a Costa Mesa pioneer, a ~ ,contraela', ·w hf boil a-lat of drive," St. Clair declai'ed. He oHefed a motion to ii.ame the 1trfft for <>lien, but wu reminded the lpeCHic name change had been requested by the company it.!elt, which was annued into Coata Mesa . ... Counc!!man Jack H~"J_mett ~d second· ei:t the motion, Which St. Clair then amen- ded to merely send the reqyest back to (See FRACAS, P11e Z) child, identified the several portions of the body for Chief Deputy District At- torney James Eiiright. Pictures of the re- mains were flashed onto a screen in the darkened courtroom of Judge Kenneth Williams. Firemen .AiertOO-De stroys-"Bomes Enright limited his questioning to the slate of decay of the child's body and unsuccessfull y sought an estimate of the time of death from the pathologist. The witness was not asked to speculate on the cause of death. Dr. Wesley G. Slocum watched the slides inte ntly as Enright questioned hl1 \\'itness and made notes of the question and answer session from Lime to time . The former Costa Mesa resident was booked last March 21 for the murder of his daughter. The prosecution contends that the 4.> year-old surgeon killed the infant, but· chered her body and placed the several · carefully wrapped portions in the family freezer. The partially decomposed remains were discovered by moving. men si:t months ago as they hauled the appliance from Costa Mesa to their Santa Ana warehouse. Employe·s of the firm testified Monday that they made the gris- ly discovery after detectina a strong odor emanating Crom the freezer. Enright expects to place Mrs. Marian Slocum on the witness stand l•ter today. Employes Save Cl1oking Woman In Res taurant A Seal BeaCh woman was r~lea&ed to- day from Hoag Mernoria1 Hos~ital after nearly choking to death In a -Newport Beach restaurant Monday nlght. Anna Payne McEntee, 70, of 13311 El Dorado Or., was dining alone at the Chart House, 1600 W. Coast Highway, at about 6:4S p.m. when ahe coUaP!lf:d .ln her chair. - Bill Parker, a!Slstant manager of the restaurant. said employet Oayid Cole, Dennis. Webb, Doug Cole, 5oujJ Bergman •nd Paul Ryon administered flrlt aid to the worruon who had. •topped breathing. A physician, Dr. Wfillam C, llr)u1 ol San Gabriel, who walkocl Into the reslaurant 111 the five '"" admJnbterlng first aid, took ovtt the rncue .oper1tion unlll the arrival of fii"e dlpartmtnt rescue unil3. / Dr. Bryce 11 preliminary diagnosis w·11s that Mrs. McEnttt llod oulfered a alnlke, but "\>"™ from Hoes iloopital indlcal< the women was cbokln&• C11 1 1 ~ or meat. -- To Stand Ready For Wind Blazes Orange County firtmen were placed Ofl stand-by alert today as· hot, dry Santa Ana winds swept in Crom the desert, causing soaring temperatures in dry brush areas of inland and along the Orange eoaSt. Similar hot dry weather Is predicted for Wednesday. The Santa Ana winds are expec~d to reach velocities near to miles per hour. High fire haiard1 are expected In both hilly terrain and in Oranae County's can. yon1. The quickly rising tmiperatures cause a sharp decrease in relative humidity, according to Dtputy Chief Carl Downs of the county fire department. The ttm· perature at El Toro Maripe Bue rose 111 degrees in one hour this morning -frOin 62 degrea at a a.m. to IO degrees at t a.m. "The desert winds have a tremendous lnflui nce on the potential of fire • disaste~," Downs wamed. Downs noted that the relative humidity usually drops lo between eight and 10 percent, causing the brush in inland Orange County to dry GUt and become easily ignited. The U.S. Weather Burea.u has not tssued an y small Craft warnings for boaters along the Southern California c.oast, and the seas are expected to re- main calm . . Eld the winds will have an effect on the airC:raft tak~g off and laodin&. at Orange County Airport. All aircraft are la~ng o[f toward the northeoat ....: thLopposlte -lion from lhetr·usual pattern. The reverse takeoff find landinJ pattern. Is because the airplanes are deslpied toi lake ,oil and land Into the wlnd .. Tiie> alrplrt ma.,._..,, hll chec)ed allprlvate aircraft pa-a~tho al.,,..t to'lnslidthat thtY are tied down, ...-1y to avoid helot mind Into the air by tho n1>0ded 35 !mot winds. As the northeuterlJI .wind bqan to build up speed tllb mominl, It met tho southwesterly •• breeze. Both wind1 were blowln& •l &boo! 10 tmou Incl the Oranp County Atlfjorl tnwer rt<:orded the •iod bkJwlni '9W•rda thl u1t -In from the ocean. But the wtndaoct • few bundr9d yardl acrON the runwl)' r-Ille '1nd blowlnc the !IJl>oalte dlrictlooi -iflnlm iloe ....... -~ Winds Push Brush Fite ThroughEmt SF Hills OAKLAND (UPI) - A rqing sras1 fire raged through the hills east of San , Francisco Bay today, destroying a num· ber of homes and endangering many more. Strong winds pushed sheets of flame ' up to 200 feet high through dry irasi and brush In a swank resldenUal area of tPe Oakland-Berkeley Hi lls, not fa r from the University of California campus. Fire units from Oakland, Berkeley and other cornmuniti.es battled desperately to save houses. and some residents fl!d the flames . The State Division of Forestry brought in five planes to drop fire (lghUng Chemi- cal s along the ridge in an effort t~ con-- trof the names, 1¥hich were bumtni ·alonr . a wide fron t: ""' A thlt k cloud of heavy 11moke billowed over the hills and spread out over Oak· land and partl ol San Francisco Bay. • Pilols flying over the fi re area ukf they i1aw many homes burning. John Stanley Smith sald the lire wq withi n 200 yards of his home and had already destroyed three nearby horn~. AHouses and lttts are burning. Volun. teer1 are try in, to 11ve pl.aces," 1 photo1-· Bras Touch Off Battle in Store A petite Garden Grove .woman aCCUled ol trying to turn in f~r Crosa Your Heart brand bruaieres for '32 she never paid for theni r..pt·off a pair of Colla - ll<n -=!ty•parda ~y.nJCl>t. White P)i>nl -1.11 . -· -Bearden and J.,.ph Elmon co11111.,i..t the •ll<eed aboplifler In the atort at DI lll'iotol St. during the uchanp. "Sile Immediately beJan Oafling her inns," ukl Detec:tive George Webster, adding that -and El'"""' bacRd off out or r-but finally •lied tho· aJlecedly ·~ lloprle. "The brat· In conlllct. ...,. pl..... In evidence," added OttecUvt Webeter, Who .. Id lnvoatlptloo ""'tiouoa ~ Iii cletennlno wlieUlor 1111 -will be ., rellfod .• rapher reported from the scene. Another photographer said he saw one home saved when firemen ·and volunteers fouittt off the Oames surrounding It. The Oakland Fire bepartmtnt ci.Ued Jn off.duty men to help control the blue. Unusually strong winds were blowing the flames toward the Un.ivtr!ity of Cali. fornla campus, a state school for the blind, and the Claremont Hotel, a Berke- ley landmark. But there was no lmmed-- iate threet to these places. Residents throughout the hill area were hoalai down their roofs, and scores ·ot young people joined in the eCfort of resi- denta to•beat·down the names. "I don't know w~ere those young men and women came from, but they're won. derful," said a woman whose house had been saved when the names got within 25 ylrds. · The Henry J. Xai11:r Elementary School wa1 evacuated. Oruge Coa1C Wead1er . ~ hot dl!l;Crt wlnd1 will warm things up along the. Orange Coast tonight, bu t' should cool olf by ~ednttday. Lo!>k for tempera· lures up to 75 along lhe be1ehe1 and 93 Jn the less temperate lft.. land reiJom. INSIDE TODJ\Y "The RoUfll Hunt of th.t Sul\" at tJtt Laguna Novlton .Pla1t 1lou1t JmdJ off o "~ 10tek of living theate,. on the Oranae Coctt tonight, Stt Entntain- mrnt, PaQt 19. c.llMla I CAICl!lflllU. t < .. ..,..., ""' ...... " <,__., u --. -. ............... .... ,..._, " ,.._. 1•11 ......... • It .............. 'I -·- ·~ - _.,. -....... , .... '' --.. --' ., ........... ,, ........ , .. ,. ........... ~ .. ==-" " -. --·-1a.1• .......... .. --------- I DAll.Y l'ILOT • --c T'i'*J, ,......... II, 1910 >". ~ -_,.,..,,,.. -~llto -Dealer's P~aJor Zone Change R~jected A -' by e ato deller to f«s• abMd with CUlll""Adil --JidlD I Ill> llao oCllnllt ~--··1-­-eloqJ ·llarbol< J!OWeolfd WU iefUiea Mondey by the Calta Mele Qty Cow\cil. 'lbe 4 to 1 vote with Vice Mayor Willard T. Jordan diasenting WU I trlwnpei t0i College Part a r e 1 homeownen·who packed Into city C01111cll chambers for the 90--mlnute hearln&. A parade of .lboae opposed to the reion- lne requf115t by ·Cadillac dealer Qi~ Nabers sgoke, but the exhaustive ma· jorlcy viewpoint was offeftd by Jooeph Groskl, of 2583 Fordham Drive. Groolcl warned i:ezontni. of lhree R-1 Iola Jnwlved COOlld let • dl)'·wide) . dent. ~ • NUen --I dluli on Iola II 4M, ts ..iif Pr1iicoloo llr!ft ,_ JI.I tt ~ -.; a eoadltklll ee wllk:h lllelr Ille ~ blllpd. He alrel,cly bu purclwed the Charles Bolton property at '54 Princeton Drive, the corMt lot openln& onto Harbor Boulevar6, It waa revealed. ''Ttlat's nlct1 now Mr. Nabers can Jive close toJ his' bu.!!ness, 1' qWpped a sym- pathetic Councilman wtlllam L. St. Clair, drawin1 a borst " laughter. Groski ,wenr on to cttticize trlffic, noise 1enerated by Naben' qency, pottntlaUy Route Peiition_ M.ov-e -Assailed- By JOANNE REYNOLDS ., .. hllll'*'Sleff Charles Currf:y, president of the New. port Harbor Chamber ol Commerce, Mon. day came out stton11y 111inst 1 ref'mn- dum petition designed to rescind a free- way route agreement made by the city councU and the state Division of Hig~ ways. •Speal!in1 at the luncheon meeting of the chamber directors, Currey made jt clear that he ••s expressing a pencna.l opiniQil """ '!OI 1peakiq for .the chamber or di· ncton. 0 1 believe, Ii a lawyer and a. reaJdtnt Newport Man Escapes Suh Disaster; 1 Dies Imprisoned in a small submarine punctured while salva1ln1 a sunken boe.t. a Mission Viejo man was dragged to hts death In 250 fett of weter oH Catalina Island Monday,'but hiS partner escaped. The second man squirmed throuah a broken por:thole and ahot to lhe sµrfa~e, rupturi!J llii dl'drums.and. auaia& hid. to be stnat'en with bends. Dead is Larry Headlee, 32:, of 2"' Pree!~ l!'l~e; MINlae. Viejo, wti91f body''tv-a•· recove'Ted tfofu 'die mini.WA sub Nekton Beta hy the second· aub- merslble cr1ft involved fn the salv1p. Richard Slater, 40, of 3410 Sea!bor:e Drive, Newport 'Bfich, wu taken to Avalon Community Hospital for trtat- ment of the bends and po!slble internal injuries. Authorities said he was the Uiird diver -1lricken"Monday_by_tbe_excn.1ciatingS_!!n- dilion causing nitrogen bubbles in Uie bloodslream due to rising from the pressures of deep seas too qu ickly. The other cues were unrelated to the tragic alakin1 of the Nekion Beta. Spokesmen for the U.S. Coast Guard Search and Rescue Office in Long Beach said the Nekton Beta, an identical craft and the· 100-foot vessel Oil City were all en1a1ed .lft the operation. General Oceanographic Company, 17111 Bascom St.t Irvine, was hired to haul a· sunken cabm cruiser from the seafloor off Avalon. . Investi1ators said the two small sub- marines were raising the boil undei; the ir awn power, but when lt reached the l5W'f1ce, turbulent seas caused ooe li ne to bi'eak and the boat rolled aver. ·Unable to hold the waterlogged hul k up alone, the Nekton Bet• became fouled in its own lines and a parthole w1s ruptured as she was dragged Into the cald, black depths. One other diver suffered the bends and perti.11 paralysis Monday whUe rwurfac- in1 after a !JO.foot abalone dive off the island. ' DAILY PILOT Ol:•N61 (l)AS'I' ill'U.Lll HING COMlll'AN't l•kt+ N. w •• 4 111'1"11"-'1 •"' '""'l"'- J1c• l , Curl•¥ V~e l'Ji'lif ... I 1MI GtM/'11 M1~111r Th1 1'1'1 1i K11wll f:lli.r n'"''' A. Mur11ht~1 M-elflt Ill .... c ......... OHie.• JJ D W11f It'll St111I M•ili11t A4"'''" ,,0.111 11•0. t2•2' .s-~ .......... ._..l 2t11 '"'' ...... , """'""•'41 u.uM '-'ti ttt ...... , ·-.... II 4 1 IMO!: 11171 kadl ... ._,., ... C_..l -* Nll"lll I I """"" ••t \ of Newport Beach, that to take the decl- 1lon relative· to 'tbt freeway away fmm thf: city council would be a bad mistake. "You caMot ,de~ate responsibility to a city council withoUt authori ty," he said. Currey said he felt the freeway agree- ment referendum is a poor idea because there is no practical way to disseminate the large amount of technical data in- volved in' a route aareement to a large body of voters. Directors -approved a measure to fur- ther studJ' the matter in the directors' executive committee before takin& an of. ficlal stance on the hlsue. Jn ezplainlng his dislike of the referen- dum .P.fOPORd by the Freeway Fichter•, CUrrey said he dlupprovea of rtferen- dums 11 a means r:l enactin.l le&ialatJon: "Referendums in 1eneral are a poor way to do bulintu. U you don't like the way elected officials are doing their job, then recall them or elect different ones in the nezt election. "You're also setting a bad precedent in that issues that are difficult to resol ve in the future could_be taken from the council. Where do you stop? "I feel a referendum is not any 10lution to the problem and may be imposing tre- mendous road bloc kl to its solution," Currey said. John Macnab. former chamber presi- dent agreed with Currey. "The merits or demerits of the freeway issue doe~t ·hlve anythiRJ to do with the long range prob- lem posed by usinc a referendum in this case. "It ls a mos1 dangerous situation far an lsM 'like th11 to 101· to a vote d the pub1ic because of the precedent It .sets up. I don 't trunk we should dilute the author· ity of the city council unduly," be said. Parsons Report Sta~d :Weighed By CofC Group A 1llnd on the controveralal Parsons report supportjn1 Orange County Airport ei:pansion may be forthcoming Wed- nesday night when the Coi;ta Mesa Avia- tion Committee convenes to review Jt •&a.in .. City Councilman Jack Hammett remin· ded colleagues or the 7:30 p.m. session in council chambers Monday night, saying a group of etperts will be there to answer questions. "We may be able to make a recom· menda tion to this council ," said Ham· mett. a veteran flier and member of the com mittee. Hammett also said a peek at the 1inat version of the Phase JI section 9f the Parsons Report ma y be offered com- mitteemen to guide th e.ir deliberations. The Costa Mesa Chamber of Com· merce Aviation Committee has con· sidered the issues in two separ1t.e meeUnes without coming to agreement on a atand. Hammett said Dan Emory, president.of. the Airport Nolle Ab1tement Comrriittee, Orange County Avlalkln Dlrectm Robert Bresnahan and uecuUves Of both Air West and Air Calffornla wW be a! the Wedneaday ~eetina. Mayor Selected On Ecology Uni~ A National League of Cities' c.ommtttee on Environmtntal Qual ity promoUon 'has been givtn t.o Costa Mesa Mayor Robert M. Wilson, who is now • member or its steerln& committee. The appointment •as made by Boulder, Colo.: Mayor Robert Knecht, who is com· mitt.ee cbaitmln • Knecht and NaUonal Lea111< of CU.. Ei:ecuUve Vice President uked Wilson to attend an Oct. -7 steering eomrn.Jttee in ctUca10 to review pl•N for • Decembu -· -'!be llVllJ> will Jlr'JlllO ma!ttlal Jar the annuol -U.S.~ Ccqrta of Cllifl--on Dec. 1 In AUa nta, Ga., invohJn& all or. flcial members. Bomb Threat Arrest PORTLAND, Oro. (UPI) -The FBI haa ltTUled a lt-yell'Old Weot Gtrman au!O mechanic and cllltftd tltl11 wtth the r1n10m bomb thre1t 111inlt a· Western Alrllne1 jet last month. The 1Nl]>tCI w11 JdenUlled by the FBI Monday a1 Gaea Toni Johan ... Spiewak. a cltbtn or West G1nnany. I cll6linib& property vaJuts and other faC9 ton, some w!tl!ooit dl!iCt bearln& on the ..... 'l'Glll .-U-, ~ "°"""Wit 10 'Nabers' !!mt, ott.red a Nbuttat to the various crlt!clama by citizens and find· lfl&S prepared by the cily planning de- partment. "l'll make this brief , gentlemen," said Shoemaker. .. We think we have some Points, too," he added. "Colle~e Park should have a buffer &90e. It will eventually-be rezon· d • . e . Shoemaker challenged planning technl- clana' opinlans that rezoning at this stage · -'• would be prematW'e. He lllo replied to .. alle1atton tiy -nelibb« tbat can were beflll 11<6ed at Naben' Cadillac for a Chevrolet dealer. h'J'baee are loaners.'' said Shoemaker. Nabers himstU u id bis business has been so suettSSful he has created some ill·regard among other area dealers and is trying to keep pace with strong rival ries. ~ "I realized .at the outset this was a 'sticky wicket•,1• Nabers continued , earnestly explaining that he wants the finest Cadillac agency in the entire coun· ty of 1.4•million souls. ••J've been instructed by my manufac- tw-er to crui. a total Cldillac at- moapbere," be coatJnued. BW Doota, of 117 l>rincotoo Drive, told (OWlCUmen noise and traffic probleri\.s are critical in Collele Park, where the Bolton corner property has' had three out- of~ntrol cars careen into the front yard. Jack Abbott, of 464 Priraton Drive, another nptiating to sel~ ridiculed one ar1ument'"againa\ Nabers' public address system'noise. ' "The decibel rating Is higher from Harbor Boulevard and neighborhood dogs than Nabers' agency," charged Abbott, offering to bring a ooisemeter to his house and prove it. "f have-lilt>ned IO both riclts and both .,. -and lelltlmllo," --..ec1 ·CoomctlmaD Alvin L. Pinkley, movflll for denial. "This is no time to break into the 11·1 tone. We would be derelict in our duty," said Councilman Will iam L. SL Clair. "I find tome of the reaso ning .odd," urrtered Vice • Mayor Jordan, an architect. "l'm in favor of good develo p- ment. Now is the lime to start develop- menl of this properly." Mayor Wilson agreed with the ma- jority, saying he couldn't vote for the UN'le change either, Pendleton Jet Site? • Newport Asks Study for Air Facility: By L. PETER KRIEG Phase II of the Parsons report recom-He then quoted comments made in an >------01 "" DllllY-f'i• 111H•-----mended-major-expanslon-ef-0\e--prfleiit---earlier study-by-William .L. E.ereira and DIES AT LIDO ISLE HOME Bi1ldwin M. Bi1ldwin Noted Yachtsman Baldwin Baldwin Succumbs at 66 Baldwin M. Baldwin, one of Newport Harbor's most prominent yachtsm~. died at his Lido Isle home Monday af I a.m. following a lingering illness. He was 66. There will be no funeral serv ices. His body will be crem ated and the ashes placed in the family crypt at San Fraa-Ciico.t •• -• ' Mr. Baldwin, a relired real estate d~lf?per, 1eaves hi5 widow Maruja and sj.i chlldi-en. , ~ '. Although he was an hei r to the Lucky Blklwin estate, Mr. Baldwin always was pi'oud or amassing his own fortune with his real eslate developments: and in· vestments. He was president ot the cor· poration that built and developed Baldwin Hills Village in Los Angeles County. Baldwin got his first taste or yachting campetition when he sailed LNewpod.t:.r 40 ketch in a Newport to Ensenada race. Later he· bought the 72-foot yawl Esca- pade from James Y. Camp and set out on a. WOrldwlde canipaign that took the Newport Harbor Yacht Club buriet to all point! of the world. He was first to finish in many of the top long distance yacht races, and with Escapade won the Transatlantic race and the Miami to Jamaica race 1lfll9ng others. It was while racing in the Southern Ocean Racing conference in Florida that he heard that the 73-foot yawl Northern Light was for sail. He bought the yacht for a reported $200,000, renamed It Audacious and continued his' worldwide campaign. .Afte r purchasing Audacious, Baldwin donate,d Escapade to the University of Mia~ and when he retired from act ive yacht racing a few years ago he donated Audacious to the University of Southern Californ ia. He was the donor of 1he Newport Harbor Yacht Club trophy for the Newport to Santa Barbara race. In this year's America's CUp campaign he was a contributor to the Valiant syndicate. Besides his Interest in yacht ing Baldwin was an svid art collector. He owned one of the largest known col- lections of the works of 'Toulouse Lautrec. Before his death he set up th e Baldwin Art Founda tion which will be ad- ministered by his widow. The fam ily has suggested memorial donations to Hoag Memorial Hospital. From Pagel FRACAS I •• the city planning department for further st udy. . The maneuver failed by a 4 to l vote. 1'The street's too short to be named for a Costa Mesa. pione<:r anyway," observed Councilman Alvin L. Pinkley. A new motion to go ahead and rename Frawley Drive Kal mus Drive was offered -with 1 stipulation tha t city officials find I proper street to name for the late t.fr. Qaden-and passed by a 3 to 2 vote. -st. Clair was mlUtanl and Hammett sided with. him, "1 don't like the name Kalmus," Ham· melt remarked for the record. Councilman St. Clair seid longtime C.OSta ~tesan Miss Jeri Ogden, af 2066 Orange A'le., whose forebears settl!d the mesa has been cam paigning for a fi ttln1 memorial to the family. He di!covemt today, however. that !t- was fitr gr11ndfatht1' "ilo w1s named Charles Ogden, while he AChii\Jy hid Mr great grandfather. Robert Boyd, In mtnd . "It wtnt back farlher than l realized.'' he explained. Newport Beach ~s moved rormally to facility just north of Newport Beach. The Associ ates in J uly, 1968. ask tha t the Orange County Airport con· County Board of Supervisors has schedul-"A number of ridge and valley sites at sulta nts give due consideration to Cam p ed an October 13 public hearing on this Camp Pendleton have been examined," Pendleton as an alternate site for South section of the report. the Pereira study said, "and there are Coast public jet aviation racililies. Betlencaurt asked that Wilsey •-nd potential locations whe re the In- In a Jetter to Wilsey and Ham. Newport Ham's communications with Parsons ternational airport could be developed Beach's ai rport consultants, Philip F. "urge (Parsons ) to gi ve serious con· with sufficient terrain clearance for ap- Bette ncaurt, administrati ve assistant to sideration to the Pendleton site. proaches and departures over the ocean. the city manager, asked thal the ci ty's "Fro m our inspection of the Parsons "Most of these sites would have recommendation be f 0 r w a rd e d im· -~ompany conlract," he said, "we are minim um interfe rence with ei:istlng medi ately to the county consulla nts , the unable to determine if a new metroport Marine Corps facilities, and it is believed Ralph M. Parsons Company. .;isite must be wittpn Orange County." that an optimum site could be fouod so . Phase Ill of the Parsons report on the Bettencourt cited past city council that buffer zones could be used for future of the Orange County Airport is resolutions suggesting the use~o f military training activities."· due for submiss ion to the County Board Pend1eton, demon.stratina: that interest in The Pereira report slressed that ~- of Supervisors Sept. 30 and the city wants the facility Is not new. other land area in Southern California can stud ies of the possible use of Camp offer the terrain, open land, orientation to Pendleton intluded in it. the sea and overall relationships to future In a letter to A. W. Compson, vice Front Pqe 1 urban developments. president of Wilsey and Ham, Bet· "It is believed that Southern California tencourt did not re fer specifically to the JORDAN region as well as the national interests three and one-half mile stretch of • • • will be best served by utilizing a portion beachfront recently turned over to the of the great land resource at Camp state by the U.S. Marine. Corps. loyalists and guerrillas began. Pendleton for development of a major in- He referred only to the 195-square mile Almost all of the Americans in Jordan ternational airport as proposed," Pereira base in northern San Diego County live in or near :Anunan1 a city of about said. saying: 500,000 people built, like Rome, on !even The sMbsequent parson 5 recom- '·The city council is or the opinion that hills. mendations have touched off a batt!e urban development may have progressed The State Department does not know of royal within the county over the future too far to permit development of a ne'w any Americans living in the northern of the onl y county-owned airport. jet capable airport wholly withln the ca r-cities of Ramtha and lrbid, now occupied Conservationists and h o me o wners porate limits of Orange County without by forces from Syria. within earshot of the fa cility, as well as r es u It i n g env i r o n m enta.I in· Heikal said Egypt was trying to send 8 entire communities, such as Newport compatibility. plane t&Amman to rescue 100 foreign Beach, Costa Mesa and Tustin, correspondent!, mostly Ameri~an, tra~ vehemently ()ppose any more er- * * * Holiday Airline. Expansion Pl~ .. • Offered to PUC A petition by Holiday Airlines to extend its air service routes to Orange County and San Diego is pending loday be'fore the state Public Utilit ies t;ommission (PUC) wilh no hearing date set as yet. The airline, which cul'rently serves Los Angeles, San Francisco, Oakland and Lake Tahoe, is seeking two flights a day intc; and out of Orange County Airport. The airline proposes direct service from Orange County to San Diego and Lake Tahoe. In its pe tition, filed Sept. 4, Holiday · cites growth of Southern California and ilS subseque nt need for more air tran sportation as the basis for its re- quest. The Newpo rt Beach City Council has directed Its sta rr to prepare a resolulion opposing the request to be adopted at the Sept. 28 council meeting. Currently, three commercial airlines, Golden Wes t, Air West and Air California. are authorized to fly out of the county airport . The proposed initial flights by Holiday would. be during the daytime hours. ped in the Intercontinental Hotel in the pansion. In fact, they are strongly urgin1 center of the city. , curtailment of many operations there . Their hotel has been hit repeated ly in and as in the letter from Bettencourt, are: the showdown civil war between .Hussein ureing establishment of a new facility to and the Palestinian guerrillas. handle all jet operations: Hussein, faced with a battle tor The air~rt currently has three com- survival and deserted by many of' 'hls mercll!ll au:lines using it, Golden West~ Arib all ies, apJ,ealed to the Unlted Air California and Air _ West. Another. Statesn the Sovlet Union, Britain and Holiday Air lines, is petltionin1 the France for help. But W a s h i n g t o n Public Utlities Commission · to start dispatches aa1d P('esident Nixon had-not scheduled flights. yet decided on~a course of action. • Israeli dlspatche'S were subjected to in· tense military censorship, but reports reached Lonqpn of largescale tall1c movements Monday njght and again to- .• day~The-reports said-it-was uncertain_ whether they were deploying for possible action in Jordan. UPI correspondtnl Ohad Goza ni, from the seashore resort of Tiberias on the Sea of Galilee, could report only that dust clouds rising on the east bank of the Jordan Rive r marked the passage of Jordanian army convoys rolling south. On Monday, the Jordanian army had moved northward to Irbid, Jordan 's se- cond city nestled in· 2.oOO foot mountains 45 miles north of Amman and only 18 miles east of the cease-fire line. Meanwhile. Arab leaders met in eme rge ncy session toda y to seek ways to end the ·war in Jordan . £ut three of the key figures ~·ere missi ng and the Baghdad-based guerrilla rad io told the others "to go back to your pa laces because you .•. no longer make the decisions.·• Aviation Aides Will-Hear-} et . Noise Complaints Jet .aircraft noise and complaints of Tustin residents of low flying co~ercial planes will be di scussed Wednesday morning at a top drawer meeting of avia· tion officials at Orange County Airport. Joining in the session will be Paul McAfet, air traffic control official for the Federal Aviation Administration; George Carver, Air Transport Association er· ecutive : Robert Manning, chief pilot for Hughes Air West. and Robert Bresnahan, county aviation director. Irate homoowners in the Tustin are1. headed by David Killon, have charged that Air West planes fl y below the legit height in• their approach glide to the 11irport. SERVICE • • • How much is it worth? In the carpet business sometimes it1 worth EVERYTHING! Hardly a day goes by that wt don 't get a call regarding •noth1r company's poor install•· tion. \ Oct1Sionally tho damage resulting !tom poorly sewn seems or taped seams is not repair· able. Then tho value of tho investment looks pale indeed I Why pay $300.00 or $1500.00 for carpeting and gamble with Iha installation? We maintain all of our own crews, all tau9ht tha ONLY way to install tarpaling -Iha RIGHT w•y! Tho _groatest majority of our business i1 referral. There is a r1i110nl ALDEN'S SANTA ANA, OU.Mel TUSTIN C4ll ••• CARPETS e . DRAPES 16'3 l't.centhi .... • ALD•'.S UI MIU. C.U"11 I DU.Plllft 1UJ4 htfme. , ...... c.tlf, 111·111" COST A MISA 64MIJI I • < I ' f < I • • b • • • r b l II ti H • It K le .. u n le ti ~ ,, " ti le u p u D <I d' h • • b ho fl .. la II SI hi •• c. b. p "' p "' u • " A s F -• Sadlllebaek ' . EDITION N.Y. Steek• ....... VOL 63, NO. 227, 2 SECTIONS, 26 Pl)G;ES I • Tl:IESDAY, SEPTEMBER', 22',' 1970 . . ORANGE COUNTY, 'CALOOl\NIA . . ... TEN CENTS ' • • • • • Ie 0 an 1es 1n 1ve Bla:e Ha:ard Firemen ~eady . For Hot Winds Orange County firemen were placed on stand-by alert today as hot, dry Santa Ana winds swept in from the desert, causing soaring temperatures in dry brush.:_ areas of inland and along the Orange Coast. Similar hot dry "'eather is predicted for Wednesday. The Sant.a Ana winds are expected to reach velocities near 40 miles per hour. High fire hazards are e:zpected in both Israelis Move Tanks Along 1 7 ·Jordan Border By U•lted Press Iniernalional Large scale Israeli tank movements were reported today along the Jordanian border where Israeli military dispatches reported the Jordanian anny retrea~ng gouthward toward Amman in the face of 1 Syrian tank onslaught. Guerrillas reported Jordan's air force In action. With the possiblity of American in- tervention increasing , Egypt warned the United States against stepping in, saying this would threaten world peace. Egyp- tian Jnfonnation -Minister Mohammed Hassanein Heikal said intervention would endanger American lives even furthe V Syria issued a similar warning. Heavy fighting-resumed-in-Amman itself with failure of a cease.fire called by King Hussein and Heikal said the death toll there was over 10,000. Guerrilla BOurces admitted 8.000 dead and said there were tens of thousands wounded. hilly terrain and in Orange County's can. yons. The quickly rising temper~tures cause a sharp decrease in relative humidity, according to Deputy Chief Carl Downs of the county fire department. The tem- perature at El Toro Marine Base rose 18 degrees in one hour this morning -from 62 degrees at 8 a.m. to 80 degrees at '9 a.m. "The desert winds have 1 tremendous lnnuence on the potential of Ure disaster," Downs warned. Downs noted that the relative humldity usually drops to betwe€n eight and 10 percent, causing the brush in inland Orange -county to dry out and become easily ignited . The U.S. Weather Bureau has not Issued any small craft warnings for boaters along the Southern California Coast, and the seas are e1pected to re- main calm. a.it the winds w'lll have an effect on the aircraft taking off anil land ing at Orange Qiunty Airport. All aircraft are taking off toward the northeast -the opposite direction from their usual pattern. The reverse takeoff and landing pa ttern is because the airplanes are designed to take off and land into the wind. The airport management has checked all pri\'ate aircraft parked at the airport lo insure tha t-they-are-tied downiiroperly to avoid being lifted into the air by the expected 35 knot winds. · As the northeasterly wind began to build up speed this morning, it met the southwesterly sea breeze. ' Ul'IT ....... Colorado Cool While things wer..e heating· uP along the o·range snow 41\umped by an earl=all.st-Orm over the Rocky ·Coast and in SQuth~rn Calilor~ generally today; ~M;la. i;;~terg.sl~· qi· kies on.n ex~rieqcea,.; the folk1 hick, ·f,11 Jdil)lo Spr;IJ!l,'-Co11./jilll 'wo1t. al hot, dffli!f wln4li al!ir a -storm<Thi!'>are' "'1J'r-· Denver, -were sloshing a~ inJour ~-«new eel ''Chiftoo_ks'' an~ are similar to Senta Anas . ~--""--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Planners Study Main Beach Development bguna-Be!'!.ch planalnt commiu.ionel-1 agreed Monday night that a move should be made to take over Main Beach pro- perties that -are proving a financial burden to the city, possibly razing the old structures and replacing them with • Nuclear Plants ·S.tudfud By Water Control !Joard By PAMELA RAU.AN Of tM DellY l'lllt lttff mendations of their executive ·director, Dennis O'Leary and voted un1nimous\y to prOOibit the deposit of terrace material In the Pacific Ocean. Other Flees Undersea Tragedy Imprisoned in 1 small submarine punctured while Salvaging a sunken boat, a Mission Viejo man Wal dragged to hi.I death in 250 fe,:t_or water off Cata.li.Da Island Monday, but his partner esc~ped. The second ~an squirmed through a broken porthole and shot to the surface. rupturing.his eardrums and cauiing him to be stricken with bends. · · riead is Larry Headlee, 32, of 26892 Precia"do.s Drive, Mission Viejo, whose body was recovered from the miniature sub Nekton Beta by the second 11.11>-- mersibl~ craft involved in the salvage. · Richa~d Slater, 40, ~or 3410 Se~sbore Drive, Newport Beach, was taken to Avalon Communlty Hospital for treat· ment of the bends and possible internal injuries. Authorities said he was the third diver stricken Monday by the excruciating COD- dition causing nitrogen bubbles in the bloodstream due to rising from the pre~41es of deep seas too qui ckly. The other cases were unrelated to the tragic sinkini of the Nekton Beta. SRPUsmen for 'the U.S. Coast Guard Selrch.ancfRescue Office in Long Beach said the Nekton Beta, an idenUcal craft .and the 100.foot vessel OU City were all engi·ged'in the operation. · · General Oceanographic Company, 17911 Basconl. St., Irvine, was hired to haul a sunken cabin cruiser from the Hlfioor , off Avalon. Investigators slid the two email sub- marines were raising the boat under their own pqwer, but when Jt reached the aurface, turbulent seas caused one line to jrreak a,...ndJheJmt.rblled.overT------ Unable to hold the waterlogged hulk up alone, the Nekton Beta became fouled in Jts own lines and a porthole was ruptured as she wa1 dragged into the cold, black depths. U.S. military forces were alerted to move in to try to save the 400 Americans In Jordan and the possibility of int.erven- tion seemed very real. Israel also was reported prepared to act if it felt il!I gecurity threatened -and a Syria n move gouthward from lrbid would bring Syrian tanks close to the Israeli borde r. Both wind s were blowing at about 10 knots and the Orange c.Mnty Airport tower recorded the wind blowing towards the east -in from the ocean. But the windsock a few hundred yards across the runwa'y recorded the wind blowing lhe opposite direction -in from the desert. . parking areas. The Southefti. California Regional Water Quality Control Board, San Diego Region, took 1 hard look Monday at ex- cavation requ irements for two more nuclear generating plants near San Onofre. • The two uWity . companies bad already made arrangements to deposit thll material on land at leJected sites within Camp Pendleton. One other diver suffered the bends and partial paralysis Monday while re-surfac- ing after 1 130-foot abalone dive off the Island. If U.S. military forces should intervene Jn Jorda n to rescue Americans there, they would be hunting for about 400 persons, of whom about 100 hold dual U.S . .Jordanian citizenship. The State Department lists about 40 American diplomats and foreign service staffers on duty at the embassy. They are rep<>~ed huddled in interior rooms of the bu1ld1ng, which has been hit by small and medium anns fi re several limes since the !ighling broke out last Thursday . NO injuries have been reported. The wives anc! children of these of· ficials were evacuated last June when the on-again off-again fighting between loyalisls 'and guerrillas began. Almost all of the Americans in Jordan live in or near Amman, a cit'y of about 500,000 people built, like Rome, on seven hills. The State Department does not know of any Americans living in the northern cities of Ramtha and Jrbid , now occupied by forces from Syria. - Heikal said Egypt was trying to send a pla ne to Amman to rescue 100 foreign correspondents, mostly American, trap. ped in the Intercontinental Hotel in the center or the city. · Their hotel has been hit repeatedly in the showdown civil war between Hussein and the Palestinian guerrillas. Hussein, faced with a batUe for ' survival and deserted by many of his Arab allies, appealed to the Uni led Statean the Soviet Union, Britain and France for hel p. But Wash i ngton !See JORDAN, P11e Z) ,. The Land Ganie (Norlhel'll S111le) • • Picture yourself In 1 snug A-frame b·e s Ide a Northern -California slream, away from smog and r?Ol beer 1tanda? And turning • tidy profit on the l•nd you bought? The picture might l'IOt ht as pretty as it's painted . For I.he fourth in a series of arllcles by DAILY PILOT Staff Wrlt~r, Al Bates on the prob-~(m, turn to Page f2 today. -,_.._ ~- Municipal Bond' Sale Suggested To Aid Hospital San Clemente's long quest for a hospital took a new turn Monday night in the form of a proposal that the._ city sell mu nicipal bonds to finance construction at the existing grade site. • The City Council, with only three mem- bers, present, seemed somewhat chilly to the proposal of C. T. DeCincts, whose Van1 Nuys-based firm was to have built the long-de.layed hospital near the civic center. A!ayor Walter Evans suggested thal DeCinces spell the proposal out in writing and return It In time for consideration at lilt Oct...,_ regular me:eting. ln the wake of continuing aelays at lhe civic center site, Evans and other com- munity leaders have thrown their support recently to A Chapman General Hospital. The Chapman group is seeking a switch In endorsement by the Orange County Health Planning_ Association. T h • association had in itially backed the DeCinces group. -p;;z;;e men Guilty In Sex Or.gy FREEHOLD, N.J. !UPI) -Six of geven Long Branch police accused of COD- ducting an orgy with the teer»gtd daughter ol an area minister pleaded guilty Monday to reduced charges. The slx originally were charged with fornication, conspiracy to c om m t t fornication, open lewdness and con-_ tributing to the-delinquency of 1 minor'. Instead, they 1dmitted to misconduct 1n office. . Monmouth Cou nty Judge Patrick J. _McGann will sentence them Oct. 30. They _ fa ce i maximum penalty or three yur1 ln jail and a ,1,000 fine. • Commissioners instructed city plapner Al Autry to write the city council recom· mending J11vesligation of such a move with regard to fi ve properties which, ac- cording to commission chairman William Lambourne, are "not carrying their own weigh t." The properties in question, he said, are eilher leased at a rental insufficient to cover taxes the city must pay on them, or are behind in their rent. Lambourne said he referred specifically to the fi ve properties on El Paseo betweePI the boardwalk parking lot and Togo'a sandwich shop. Lambourne said a recommendation from the planning commission would be in order so the city COJJDcil could give adequate notice . to lessees of the pro- perties. Commissioner Carl Joh11so11 wondered if it might not be possible to re-negotiate more favorable le·ases sayin&, "The art galleries are colorful additions to the ci- ty. I hate to see them go." Commissi oner Robert Hasti ngs replied , "We can't afford to support them." Jt_was agi-eed to call the problem (ti the council's attention for ~sible official ac· tion. Before construction on the two 1,140 megawatt plants can begin, the board placed stringent requirements on the disposal of material gleaned from ex· cavations necessary to prepare the two 11,ites for construction. The San Diego Gas and Electric Co m- pany and the Southern California Edison Company have estimated lhat two million cubic yards of surface terrace material and 650,000 cubic yards of underlying San Mateo formation material will be ex- cavated. i:tie terrace material Is composed of silt, clay and fine to coarse 1ands with layers of cobbles and boulders while the San Mateo is dense , fine to coarse sand with pods of terrace material. The board acc;epted lhe recom· Hijacker Identified ' PIITSBURGH (UPI) -The FBI Mon- day liientified the youth who hijack~ an Allegheny Airlines 'jet to CUba Saturday as Richard Du1yne Witt, 19, of Pitl<buigh. The FBI said Will had be<n living with ' relatives since his early discharge from the Marine Corps in J une. He ii a. blgh school dropout. Pods of Silty, clay mat~ial1 greater than one foot In thickness ln the San Mateo Formation must al.so be deposited with the terract material. The board is allowing the disposal o( the San Mateo sand along the t>each in the nearshore zone to replenish sand that wears away through erosion. The utility companies also plan to ex- cavate on the ocean floor to construct four 18·foot diameter conduits for the cooling water intake and discharge system. These conduits would be buried beneath the ocean floor, extending between 2,500 and 3,400 feet oUshore. Excess sand from this operation was to be deposited on the seaward side of the terminal structures, but the com!lllttee voted to recommend placing t h i s material in the nearshore zone ao it too can help ·replenish beaches. The staff reported that San Mateo sand had been deposited along the beach in . 1964, wheh the site of th! presert~ San Onofre plant was prepared. They reported that no adverse effecta to marine life occurred ·at that ume .. The board also .approved 1 monitoring ayste m for the excavation projects, to make sure the requirements are carried out. ' Planners Deny Request • 20th CentUry Fox /Yixed in Laguna Location Site By BARBARA KREIBICH Of .... O.llW' ,,.., '''" A location manager for 20th Century Fox Films Monday nl&ht ~eard the Laguna Beach Planning Commission deny his request to use the Cllff Drive- Marine Drive triangle for storage of equipment ._nc1 feeding of cast and crew during -thootin& of 1 feature film Oct. 1· Nov. 6. Request for ue of the vacant property had been made at an earlier planning commission meetlng by location manager Cene Fioramonle, who Is 6etUnc up 1 IShooting tchedule for the film 0 Marria«e ol a YllU!ll • Stockbroker" which will ·1c1ture 1 number of &cenes at Shaw's C:ive. The y_ote to deny use of the trlanate was unanimous. • After the meetifig 1 b em u s e d Floramonte commmted, ·"WhY. we film in expensive reiklenli1l 1reas HQ.Bel Air all tlle.tlin.e'.:. in P.ll'il they, even ·n· up the Louvre for uae ••• " 1 At (hat time It WIS decided that pro-- perty owners. in the residential area 1houki be Id.vised of the request. Finy-seven notices were sent out, the co mmission was 1dvised. Fi ve ,letters of protest and two oral protes[S were heard 1t Monday's meeting. · Four Marine Drive re1tdenta wrote to · prote$l ... ol tile lot-by" tile fllm aim-' pany under a.ny clrtwnltlnces. Or. Nonnan Nixon, IOI$ Marine Drive. ex• pressed the view that making of a film in Lt~ lffch COl.lld be an '1ln~rt1 and con1lructlve." experience. but aought · auurance that l.~hou~ pollct .... .,.,. 1peclal fire precautions, ,tdequ~i, unita~ ijon ·and posllng Of a 'damqe band -.Id b< required by Iii< clty. Jim Kerins, •1137 M1rine Drtve, 1124- fe.tr resident, nottdlhill Jil'OP-trlies Jn:the _ area ire valued at h ,000.a 1l"Olti foot M<(; uld he did not r .. 1 the! .. ~-ohould be subjected to "a lot ,of toiltb pUed ep and a lot or cookini: goinlJ on." Kerins noted thiit in ·21 years as 1 Los Angelts pollcemen he had obaerYtd many rm;ivle localion.t a.nd "l knO'fr what a mas· they make.'' ~ ' ... F1or1monte said the space, about Olle- thlrd of the lol. would be uHd for storaae of camtra and eoutid trucks, U1hting equipment, pai•enger cars and ponibly 1 but. -·~·-- Food would be prepared It 'lnother 15" !llOVIEII, PaJe I)' ., • . ' Office Burglar Takes Copier A burglar who entered an office building through an unlocked, window over the weekend made off with buJlnes1 equipment valued at $7 ,450, Lagqna .. Beach police report. · ' A Xerox co pying machine worth $5,51» wu among the Items removed from five • desks in a three-room office suite oc- cupied by Desert Minerals Inc. at 18111 S. Coast Highway. Also listed as missi ng were three typewriters, an adding machine and two dictlphones. police said. The burglary wu discovered Monday morning by an employe of the Urm who said the offices hid beeD cioled sinU I p.m. Fi"iday. Police said the bur1lar 1pparently ent~ed by slidirig open 1 window ill the rear .. Qf the twQ...atory build.in&. Orute We•t•er 1'ho9e hot desert winds wW warm things up 1long the Orange C-Out tonight, but lhould cool off by Wedneacl1y. Look for temper1- tlltes up to 75 along the beaches and 93 In the 1 leu temperate ln· land regions. INSID& TOD,\\' ··'Tht Royal Hunt of the Sun" d.t ··uic Laguna Moadton P.14'1· k.,... ltadi off o htc"!I we•k of liuing t.lltaU'r on tht OronQC Coo.it tonight. Sec En.tcr£4in· mcnt. Page .19. -. -.. --.. .... _, '""" ... --. . ....... ,..,.. 11 ..,,, , .. ,. S'8ct: ,.._.... ,..11 TaMi. 19 -.. -. __. ...... ,.,. --.. I OAll.V l'ILOT SC Panel • ' By RICHARD P. NAU. .... ...,, .. ..., Tbe Sa Clement.e Part. and Rtctu· tion COmmisslon Monday was unanimous Jn Its vote against splitUng equally with Capistrano Unified School Dlslr.ict the $15G,000 cost of a new swimming pj)OI. Commission discussion of the problem ... tferred to U by the City Council seemed tO leave Ow door open for some different pnt sharing formula . • Said CommiS!lloner Donna Wilkinson, who signed the petition (or a high school pool, "I cannot see why tht city should pay half the cost for a pool in the stcand "largest school district (111 area) in 'California. "1 could not in cood con.science recom- "Libert~Pair -- - Rejects mend . payilla on• haU the c..i of a d~trict pool: I think -the city, for f!S,000 could refurbish ill (mwllclpill) pool or bulld Jtl own." 'l . The ocbool, w111ch liad.boell.iMO pool -peUtionl aigned by -more t6an 1,000 persons, suggested the city split the cost and the district .would maintain lhe pool. Jt was estimated -tti.11 would cost the district $25,000 annually. The city main· lains the municipal pool for about $1$,000 annually. about 16,000 of which ii recovered in revenue fr om pool use. The Cily Council referred the matter to the commission for a rte0mmendatlon, although the recommendation ii not bin- ding on the council. : Commissioner Ellie Mears . said, "I ElToro Area 'rtall.r.e we need a new pool. It would ~ foolilh to pol mon money into Ille cilJ pool. ' • ~ "I lhlnk1here sboufd be a jolril ""tore but the per<entqto aie wron&· ; .maybe one-third (from tM city). That'• just an Initial feelin8:." Mrs. Ron Wilson , 220 Allegre, repreten•, ting the San Clemente Aquatic AssocJa. tlon, said that children must be taken W Camp Pendleton in the summer for OOJll· petitlve swimming because of the d~ mand for the municipal pool. She said action should be taken before the municipal pool, built In 1930, bas to be writte n off. "It's not going to last too much longer," she·predicted. Mrs. WilU-aald the school district '-........ ~Arraign~!1t County to Hear ·slated TodnJ-~.... - ~ SANs~;~I~ ~ D~~e~~ Killer LOR e 'Robert W. Liberty and the woman he wed - Changes in a Colorado jail were scheduleW for ar- . raignment today in San Diego County A aeries of proposed zone changes in · .. ,Superior Court on murder charges. tbe El Toro area 'will be considered, 1• 1be former \\'estminster man and his again by the Orange County Board of •bride, Kendall A. Liberty, were ex· ~adited frum €oiorado-8prings-lait-"S'lupe.::,rvc;boc=rsc:,:W:,:edn:;:•~sd:::•:c;Y;;·~=- ,Saturday and pleaded innocent to the 'Ibe bOard Jast week approved tliree murder counls Monday in municipal chqes but deferrid act,iOn on seven courL others because of opposition registered Liberty and his wife. both 24, are ac-by 1 homeowners group. cused or the June 7 torture.slaying of They have some arguments on the othef aide' of the question. Hall told the supervisors, "We just sit here paying taxes. We have waited 14 month! for a decision and these delays are costliifliS·money.'" Further complicating the picture is a lawsuit filed by the Aliso homeowners group to block gener1J plan changes. - Cost ~plit :for Pool. . renlfl out to tha lllaalon Viejo Ind El Toro arua ,and covara llua Pomt and Sad Juq C.pl1traoo: « · . She alli! a pool II the high school would be largely for tbi.'me of students at the hich ICboo1 .me:, water polo pract1ct begins in September and use i$ con· Unuous through the acbool year. Commiliion Chairman Jack Berges •aid he tllougM a pool at the high school woufd be used 90 percent by the high ~I. Commissioner DuWayne Lidke, uid, "the city bas to reserve some time for t the populaet. Th«e could be a con-· fUct in the two tyj>es of utilization." Mrs. Mean aaid , "I would like to know What the school district does with the IG- cent tu that ia supposed to go to the I 10-cent Holdup Means 3 Years LITl'IJ!: ROCK, Ark. (AP) -A ' three-year prison sentence ag!init a teen-age bey for a 10-ctnt rob- bery was affirmed Monday by the Arkansas Supreme Court. William You ng Radcliff of Little Rock, wbo was 17 when the robbery occurred last :year, had appealed his convictio n from Pulaski County Circuit Court. "It Is immaterial of what value the thing taken Is," the high court said. "A penny as well as a pound thus forcibly e1torted makes it rob- bery." -Radcliff allege111Ytook tfie dime at gunpoint from another youth after a hlgh school football game. romm(Jnlty wvlco fllnd. II I! loot aloni the way tomewbert, It doelli't benefit the city recrealiOD-wiee." -- She sala the school district is using eight quonset buts for classrooms and talking about a $150,000 pool She noted also that the school district bad provided all the swimming lessons "for us." Mrs. Wilson said becauae o! tQe d~ptb of the old mwiicipal pool, no instructlon is offered to children under the age of first graders. Sbe said that SO percent of the national drownings are children not .Yet in fint grade and spoke 'of the pro- liferation of bo~ pools andi need for ;wimming instruclim fo,r tots. Berges suggested that small park pools f lllllin& .in depth from f wo to four feet ~olic:e Prolring· are needed and would be cheaper to COD- aln.icl ( 1 ~ Arlie Walmnan, clty..dltector 9-(;!ibl!o works. said the coSt of a swimming pool at P.fission Viejo HIP School was"'about 1135,000. He said of the municipal pool, "I don't agree that it's In such bad shape, The filter designed to last 15 years has gofie 40 but it's still going. I think it's a great pool myself." Mrs. Wilkinson said she felt il the school district made better use of com- munity service funds it would have the money for a pool and mentioned $225,000 1pent on a football stadium in tbe past. The commission turned thumbs down on a S0.$0 pool split. Dynamite ·Found Nea!r Cal State 'By GEORGE LEIDAL ot tM o.lb' ,1111 11111 Discovery of 84 stick.:s pr dynamite in a field near Cal State Fullerton is leading police today to believe radicals may now favor bombing ovfr confrontation. though we .enrolled more than 14,000 students -an increase of more than 1,000 over last year." Strategic areas of the campus are not guarded and it Is not likely Fullerton Police will be called to provide bomb threat protection. "It is the state's reS!XJnsibility to guard the campus," the spokesman s.aid. ntot>ert J. lr.R>n, 5.'J, In his San Diego George Hammond, chairman of the apartment during a C a J I {or n i a • t o .. Aliso Ho~wners Associfon, charged Colo(a<to crime spree. that the proposed rezones-amount to a 'lbe victim -burning candles flicker· "drastic change" in the El Toro general Ing beside his mutilated body -knew plan. drafted in 1961. Ficker AheaCI-Slightly Capt. Fred King, Fullerton police liaison to CSF told the DAILY PILOT, "Jt seems evident that the activists are turning to the hit-and-run tactic and will be bombing buildings rather than engag· ing-in confrontations with police this year." 'King's men . are investigating I.he discovery of "low grade" dynamite buried last Wednesday "by two long. haired young people" who King said were CSF has received no bomb threats this year but experienced several last year. One bomb threat, to a newspaper, led to the April 27 discovery of seven sticks: of dynamite in a men's washroom in a corridor near the president's office. Liberty when botb were patients at "If you approve these changes they will Atascadero State Hospital for the approximately . triple the · population criminally insane four years ago. density of El Toro as outlined in the ;~ Liberty, who also faces a Huntington 1eneral plan," Hammond contended. _Beach murder charge, wa! declared in- &ane foUowmir the 1966 candleliaht killing The 1961 general plan predicted an --a -a eventual mu:imum population of 35,000, r of the woman with whom he lived in he argued. !I. We!trnlttster. The revised plan, which is being ., A 17·year-old Long Beach boy is the shepherded through the supervisors by JO key San Ditgo pros~ution witness and he the county planning department, would 1 allegedly watched Irlon's murder after show a population of 90,000, the ~being forced to drive a yOWlg man and homeowners leader charged. woman to San Diego. Wediiesday the debated seven will be Liberty's family told -police they were up for further argument. ~also held hostage in thei?-Westminster Three of the seven were the specific .'home earlier on the day Irion was targets of Hammond last week. They . 1;\ain, while the young fromer mental pa· "''ou1d have taken 90 aCTe9 out of tient allegedly waited tO kill. his step-agricultural iones and into high density father . residential categories. He is charged with murder and flight to Applica nts for the changes are Thomas avoid prosecution in coMection with the Hall, owner of 53 acres located north and ,March 12 .shooting death of a former east of El Toro and Trabuco roads; 1 roommate, Thomas Astorina, 25, in Hun-Trans Columbia Investments, owners of 'tington Beach. 11.5 acres at Second and C~erry streels; Liberty was released from AtascaderD and Richard Beamish and Ron Diggins, _.S!ate_!:los~~~et._1~: 1969 after six owners of lS acres at Lemon and Front court·appomted psychiatr1SfS agreea:-he streets.- 1had regained his sanity and he has never .,,r;erved any prison time. Orange County Superior Court Judge ·,Robert Gardner reluctantly signed the .order freeing Liberty. who last June pleaded I n n o c e n t by reason of in- sanity to kidnaping, robbery and assault • tn Colorado. He and the redhead he later married, lpJus a 11.year-old Oklahoma runaway "'ere captured outside Colorado Springs following a high·speed chase and gunfight ~·ilh a lone city detective. 8 Reported l\lissing 900 Feet Down !\'line ?tfANILA (AP) -Eight miners were reported missing today after a mudslide sealed off an auxiliary tunnel about 900 fee t underground at a copper mine in Toledo, Cebu. - A company spokesman. said .rescue team,, were trying to reach lhe miners in ~n auxiliary tuMel running off a main tunnel. He said five men were believed trapped at about 93S feet and three more we.re believed to be at 875 feet. DAILY PILOT N_.,Nt I••• L9p ..... ," C-t9 MIN lt•h•tl N. w,., l'rcllffo\I~ l'l,lblillll ... J•t.•' R. C111r.., Viet l'rt~.Olnl tnO CO.-tt l Mt ...... lho"'•• 11: .... a l!dllOI' • 11talii•1 A. Mur111"i11• M....,t,. ldH., ·1t:ch114 '· Nill "°"""' o,.,. c-1, ltltltr """" C.» Mtwt lJO Wt11 lt"f S!fftl ......,1,•-11: Dll Wt11 ''*"' lkvlew,.. .. .,.... ... «-: m ......,, ,,_ .,._..,.,,.,.. 9-fri; nt 1J .. Id! ,...,_,. 1M ""-'t: ,al ..,,t'I lt C1ml11t 11:.i New Viejo Plant May Be Polluting Creek at Aliso Mission Viejo's Burroughs plant may be in danger of polluting Aliso Creek. That's the opinion of the staff of the California Regional Water Quality Con· trol Board for the San Diego Region, which recommended correction of the problem. During a meeting Monday in San Juan Capistrano the board voted unanimously to prohibit Burroughs from discharging effluent into the Aliso watershed since the Moulton-Niguel Water District has provided a community sewer which can acco mmodate the discharge. Ken Jvansen, represenling the Bur- roughs plant, stated that the company would be agreeable to the proposal. The plant is proposing to discharge 72.000 gallons per day of cooling water brines which contain approximately 1500 parts per million of total disolved solids. The resolution proposes to prG!.ect the ground and surface waters of the Aliso area for pr~ent and future beneficial uses which include. but are not limited to, stock watering and agricultural purposes. It also prtvents nuisa nces outlined in the California Water Code. .From P8fJI! I JORDAN ... dispatches uid President NiJon bad not yet decided on a course of acfion. Israeli dispatches v.·ere subjetted to in- tense military ctnsorship, but reports reached London of largescale tank movemenb Monday night and again t°" day. The reports $aid It was uncertain "''hether thc.y were deploying for po.ssible action In Jordan. · UPI corrtspondent Ohad Goilnl, from the seashore ret0rt of' Tlberi11 on the Sta of Galiltt1 could ttport only that dust cloudA ri!lng on the e11st bank of the Jordan River marked the p&s11ge of Jordanlan army oonvoy1 rolllnc south. Oo Monday, the Jordanian trmi had moved nortbward lo lrbld. Jordan's ae- cond city nestled In 2,000 tool,moont1Jn1 4S mil" north ol Amman and ooly 11 mlJes east of the cease•lire line. Munwhllt, Arab leaders met ln tmergenty R'Mion today to 1ttk ways to t nd the~ war ln Jordan . .Cut three of 1he Key figures tre-mlsstng-and-the B"8hd•d·based guerrilla radio told lb< others "lo go back to your· -palaces becaiuse you ••• no Jonaer make the decisions.'' • ) A.s Weather Deteriorates observed by ~ transienL ~ Dr. L. Donald Shields, CSF vice presi· dent. said the latest find could "presage a Series of guerrilla tactics ahead for us this year, or, It could be harassment, or Spedal to Ille DAILY PILOT NEW.PORT, R.I. -Newport Beach skipper Bill Ficker aboard Intrepid held to a slight lead over Australia's Gretel II at the fourth mark today as weather began to deteriorate in the third America's Cup race. The yachts were racing in a deepening fog with the visibility less than one mile. At the third mark, Ficker and his ,Amefican defender had increased ber lead to $6 seconds and was about 250 yards ahead of the challenging Aussie boal There was very little action. Winds remained southwesterly at around 12 knots. lntrepid led at the first of six marks by 46 seconds, or about six boat lengths. Gretel II had taken a five-length lead at the start but after 18 minutes fell behindo The race got under way promptly at 9: 10 a.m. (PDT). Winds at the start were from the southwest at 15 knols, a condition con· sidered by the experts u favor able to lnlrepid, the American defender in the best-of-seven race series. Visibility was about two miles in haze .From Page I MOVIES .•. location, he said, and 'brought to the site in enclosed vans to be served to the cast and crew. l\fobile toilet facilitie s in trailers would 'be provided. He estimated a crew of about 70 persons and a cast of $0 to 60 would be working on the film, from 7 a.m. to dark the first week, from later in the morning until about 10 p.m. the second week and a(.:l in in the daytime the third week. Actual shooting would take about 12 days, Fioramonte said. Commissioner Carl Johnson wondered If the public would be denied access to the beach at Shaw's Cove during filming. Fioramonte replied, "As in any filming we would try to have only the people In the sce ne on the beach during shooting, but onlookers are always welcome." He said security and fire precautions would be undertaken by I.he company, Johnson Sl!id it sounded li ke a good deal of disturbance for the city and property owners with little to·show In return. Fioramonte said the company would 1'try not to be a nuisance." He noted that It has been getting increasingly difficult to make pictUrl!S in Southern Callfornia, but some slates, notably New Mexico, go out or their way lo attract · film com- panies, feeling the publicity is to their ad- vantage. Commiss\on~r James Schmitz said he felt granting of the ptrm\I would be "o~ning a whole can of worms Jn R residtntlal zone.'' The presence of mo're , than 100 people. he said, could be "a tremendous disturbance." Schmitz sa id be thought use of the bC!ae:h was finf! but suggested the company find something other than "lht heart o! a ~1 zone " for storace and feeding the crew. Chairman William Lambourne ton· eluded, "I reel U is not Jn the best in- terest of the community to disrupt the resldcntt of the area In this manner -It would onlf be • deUimtnt to the area." BoJnh Threat Ar-rest PORTLAND. Ort. JUPI) -The FBI h11is arrested a 29-ycar~ld Wtst Germ1111 auto mechanic and chargtd him with the ransom bomb threat •galnst...a "Western Airlines jet last monlh. The suspect was ldtl!Ufied by the f81 Monday u ' Goett' Toni Johannes Spiewak. a citizen oi West Gtrmany. and light fog. Both yachts stayed well clear of each other at the gun to avoid any repetition of the protests that have marred the two previous races, Intrepid, the United Slates defender, has a-2 to 0 lead in the series. 'J,"ne two boatl w_ere about 100 yards over the line and Gretel ll appeared to have moved a little ahead into a 12-14 knot southwesterly. , Normal Man Kept In State Hospital First -31 Years RENO (UPI) - A clinical psychologist at the Nevada State Hospital has reveal- ed how • man with normal intelligence was kept in mental institutions for the first 31 years of his life. Dr. Robert McQueen, who is also a University of Nevada-Reno professor, 11aid the man's case came to light when he was transferred to the Nevada Slate Hospital about 10 years ago from an out- of-state private institution which was going out of business. The details were revealed by McQueen in the Sept. 12 issue of Saturday Review. The man·s unwed mother became preg- nant as a young girl, and then was asked by another man -the son of a banker - lo marry her. In an effort to keep the birth of the child" from him , she went tD have the baby delivered by a doctor she had heard of. The unnamed-transient watched as the two hippie-types pulled up in a cam.P'r van buried a package in the drainage ditch south west of the intersection of State College Boulevard and Yorba Linda Avenue. On the transient's lip, Fullerton police 1.Jnearthed the dynamite from the site across the street from a campus parking lot. King said his men are c h ecking leads from ~ northern C a I i f o r n i 8: newspaper in Which the dynamite was wrapped and searching the county for the vehicle. , Campus officials were reluctaat to comment on the dynamite find since "it would be an acknowledgement of the possibility they were intended for use on the campus," a spokesman said . That possibility hasn't yet been defermined. Admitting that the college buildings art vulnerable to dynamiting, the spokesman noted the security force for the campus had not been increased this year "even Man, 71, Arrested On Morals Rap A 7l·year-old Sati Clemente man was arrested Monday on morals charges in- volving children under the age of 14. The suspect, ~nald Buckley, of 1402 Ca4.le Toledo was arrested on a warrant. He is accused of fjve separite counts of lewd and lascivious conduct that detec- tives said span a period of a year. Buckley, who police said is married and a retired technician, was to be arraigned in municipal court today. Bail has been set at $12,500, Det. Ardon Saunders, who with Sgt. Frank Yerger investigated the cases, said they involve three separate childr en and different dates. even subterfuge ." " "At this time." King said, "proximity to the campus is the only link between the dynamite and CSF.' "However, we have no doubt that there are students at Cal State of the type who might resort to bombing buiidings. So the llynamite likely will prove to have some affiliation with a campus group." King noted the dynamite found was o[ lhe type used by farmers to blast stumps. "If soineone wanted to destroy a building," King said, "they'd probably use a higher grade explosive." CSF was wracked with police-student confrontations last spring following a Feb. 9 appearance of Gov. Ronald Reagan on the campus. Bras Touch Off Battle in Store A petite Garden Grove woman accused of trying to t.urn in four Cross Your Heart brand brassieres for $32 she never paid for them fought off a pair of Costa Mesa store security guards Monday_night. White Front security men Robert Bearden and Joseph Elmore confronted the alleged shoplifte r in the store at 3088 Bristol St., during the exchange. "She immediately began flailing her arms,'' said Detective George Webster. adding that Bearden and Elmore backed off out of ra nge but finally seized the allegedly stolen lingerie. "The bras in conflict were placed In evidence," added Detective Webster, who said investigation continues today to determine whether the woman will be ar· rested. SERVICE • • • How much is it worth? In t~e carpet business sometimes its worth EVERYTHING! Hardly a day goes by that wo don 't gel o c.,11 regarding another co mpany's poor insta lla· tion. Occasiona lly the damage resuttin9 ~rom poorlY, HWn seams or taped seams is not rep1ir· abla. • Then tht valuo of th~ investment !ooh polo ind.-dl Why pay $300.00 or $1500.00 for carpoling ind 9amblo with tho installa'tion7 Wt maintain 111 of our own C1'8ws, all taught the ONLY way lo install carpeting -tho RIGHT W!XI Tht greatest majority of our bu,iness 1s referral . There is • r11i1sonl IT!,;17, I ~· ..., r1 I ~--;.~ • iu 1~1~ 01111.- ALDEN'S - , j ' 1 -·-· ... ~ -L_ ---.~ ---;-..... --•.• ' .. SANTA AMA. OUM•t TUSTIN c•, .. ALDIN'S Ill HILL CAIN'TI '-D•A,111n _,,,,. tm.e. flll'ta; CeHf, ., ...... CARPETS e ·DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COST A MESA 646-4131 ,, I I 1 I ( sla An ca• brt Or. ! for ex1 pe1 l I 1 J W< bo re .. • re t~ U1 th tii H' er 10 K to " It Jr In ll " " " II It ti p t r d d h • a t h f ' I• • t '· • • -'- . L.agu11~ Be .. e~ Today!• Ftn•I N.Y. Steeb .E,DITI ON -. VQL. 63, NO. 227, 2 SECTIONS,' 26 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, SEPTEMIER:22< 1970 ' . j TEN CENTS •• • • an 1es 1n u ·1ve Bla:e Ha:ard Firemen Ready For Hot Winds Orange County firemen were placed on stand-by alert today as hot, dry Santa Ana winds swept in from the desert, causing soaring temperatures in dry brush areas of inland and along the Orange Coast. Similar hot dry weather is predicted for Wednesday. The Santa Ana winds a·re expected to reach velocities near 40 miles per hour. High fire hazards are expected in both Israelis Move Tanks Along Jordan Border By United Prtss lnttnational Large scale Israeli tank movements were reported today along the Jordanian border where Israeli military dispatches reported the Jordanian army retreating southward toward Amman in the !act of a Syrian tank onslaugfil. Guerrillas reported Jordan's air force In action. With. th.e possiblity of American ifl'· tervention increasing, Egypt warned the United S.tates against stepping in, saying this would threateri world peace. Egyp- tian Information Minister Mohammed Hassanein Heikal said intervention would endanger_ American lives even furth.er. Syria issued a similar warning. He.avy fighting resumed in Amman itself with failure of a cease-fire called by King Hussein and Heikal said the death toll there was o.ver 10,000. Guerrilla sources admitted 8,000 dead and said there were tens of thousands wounded. U.S. 'military forces were alerted to move in to tcy to save the 400 Americam in Jordan and the possibility of interven- tion seemed very real. Israel also was reported prepared to act If it felt its security threatened -and a Syrian move gouthward from Irbid would bring Syrian tanks close to the Israeli border. If U.S. military forces should intervene In Jordan to rescue Americans there, they would be hunting for about 400 persons, of whom about 100 hold dual U.S . ..Jordanian citizenship. The State Department .lists about 40 American diplomats and foreign service staffers on duty at the embassy. They are reported huddled in interior rooms of the building, which has been hit by small and medium arms fire several times since the fighting. broke out last Thursday. No injuries have been reported . The wives and children of these of· ficials were evacuated last June when the on·Bgain, off-again fighting between loyalists and gu_errillas began. Almost all of the Americans Jn Jordan 1;ve in or near Amman, a city of about :')(),000 people built, Uke Rome, on seven hills. __ · The State Department does not know of any Americans living in the north.em cities of Ramtha and Irbid, now occupied by forces from Syria. Heikal said Egypt was trying to send a plane to Amman to rescue 100· foreign correspondents, mostly American, trap- ped in the lnlercontinental Hotel in the center of the city. Their hotel has been hit repeatedly in the showdown civil war between Husseln ail'd the Palestinian guerrillas. Hussein, faced with a batlle f~r survival and deseijed by many of his Arab allies, appealed to the United Statesn the Soviet Union, Britain and ' France for help. But Washington (Ste JORDAN, Page t) The Land Ganie (Norlherit Style) Picture yourself In 1 snug A-frame b e s I d e a Northern Californit1 stream, av.·ay from smog and root beer stands? And turning a tidy profit on lhe land yoo bol.l1ht ? The picture might not be at ptttty as It's peinled . For the founh in a series of articles by DAILY PILOT Staff Writer, Al Bales on the prob- lem , turn to Pag_e~ today. , I hilly terrain and in Orange County's can. yons. , The quickly rising temperatures cause a sharp decrease in relative humidity, according to Deputy Chief Carl Downs of the county fire department. The tern· pera.fure at El Toro Marine Base rose 18 degrees in one hour this morning -from 62 degrees at 8 a.m. to so. degrees at 9 a.m. "i:tie desert winds have a tremendous influence on the potential of fire disaster," Downs warned. Downs noted that the relative humidity usually drops to between eight and 10 percent, causing the brush in inland Orange County to dry out and become easily ignited. The U.S. Weather Bureau has not issued any small craft warnings for boaters along the Southern Californi a Coast, and ·the seas are expected to re· main calm. But the winds will have an effect on the aircraft taking off and landing at Orange County· Airport. All . aircraft are taking off toward the northeast -the opposite ·direction from their usua l pattern. The reverse takeoff and landing pattern is because the airplanes are designed to take off and land into the wind. Th.e airport management has checked all private a.ircraft parked at the airport to Insure that they are tied down properly to avoid being lifted into the air by the expected 35 knot winds. , As the northeasterly wind began to build up speed this morning, it met the southwesterly sea breeze. Both winds were blowing at about 10 knots and the Orange County Airport tower recorded the wind blowing towards the east -in from the ocean. But the windsock a few hundred yards across the rui;iway recorded the wind blowing the opposite direction -in from the desert. Municipa~ Bond Sale Suggested To Aid Hospital San Clemente's long quest for a hospital took a new turn Monday night In the form of a proposal that the city sell municipal bonds to finance construction at the existing grade site. The City Council. with only three mem· hers present, seemed somewhat chilly to the proposal of C. T. Decinces, whose Van Nuys-based firm was to bave built the long-delayed hospital near the civic center. Mayor Walter Evans suggested tl\lt DeCinces spell the proposal out in writing and return it in time for mnsideralion_.,t the Oct. 7 regular meeting. In the wake of continuing delays at the civic center site, Evans and other com· munity leaders have thrown their support recently to a Chapman General Hospital. The Chapman group is seeking a switch In endorsement by the Orange County Health Planning Association. T h e association had initially backed the Deeinces group. Policemen Guilty /11, Sex Orgy FREEHOLD, N.J. (UPI) -Six of seven Long'llranch police accused of Coll· dueling an orgy with lhe teen-aged daughter of an area mlf\ister pleaded guilty Monday to ~uced charges. The s~ originally were charged with fomlcatlon, consplrilcy to comm It fornlcation, open Jewdntss and con· tributing to the delinquency of 1 minor. Instead, they admitted to misconduct in office. Monmouth County Judge P1trlck J. McGann will sentence them Oct. 30. 'ntey fa~t a maximum J)tnllt of thrtt Jear1 In jai1 and I: fl,000 rlne. - . . r " I. : .. .. ... .... ~·· ...!.. • Ul'ITtl ..... Colorado Cool Otl1er Flees Undersea Tragedy ·Imprisoned in a small submarine punctured while salvaging 1 aunken boat, a Mission Viejo man was dragged. tp his death in 250 feel of water off Catalina Island Monday , but his partner escaped. The seco'nd man squirmed through a broken porthole and shot to the surface. rupturing his eardrums and causing him to be stricken with bends. Dead is Larry Headlee, 32, of ism Preciados Drive, Mission Viejo, whose body was recovered from the miniature sub Nekton Beta by the second aub- mersible craft involved in the ~lvage. Richard Slater, 40, of 3410 Seashore . Drive, Newport Beach, waa ta.ken to Avalon Community Hospital for treat· ment of the bends and possible internal injuries. ·Authorities said he was the third diver stricken Monday by the excruciating cq~ dition causing nitrogen bubbles in the bloodstream due to rising from the pressures of deep seas too quickly. While things ~ere heating up along the .Orange Coast and in Southern California fienerally today, the folks .back fo. fdabo Spnpg,:colo., just..w.,I pf Denver, w1r1~1lo1b.ing ~-tn foUr'lncl!:tf.of Bew1 snow dumped by an early.fall storm over .the ,~y The other cues were unrelated to the Mta. Ea~tern .slope .of Rockies often e~per1ences > tiaglc sinking of the Nekton Beta. · , Th • ',...11.. Spokesmen for the U.S: Coast Guard 4ot~ ., C winda after t sno\V storm. :i•>;.•rt..,..,.."" ·!1<1Tcb and Rescue Ofllce In Lon( Beach ed · , 1J!~ks'·' and are. simll;ar to Sinla ,:td\a'1. T ~ ·•ltd the Nekton. Beta. an ldJntscaJ craft Planners Study Main Beach Development · Laguna Beich planning commlaaiooers agreed Monday night that a move should be made to take over Main Beach pro-- perties that are proving a financial burden to the city, possibly razing the old structures and replaeln1 them with. parking areas. · Commi~loners instructed city pla.Mel' Al Autry to write the city council recom· mending investigation of such 1 move with regard to five properties which, ac· cording to commission chairman William Lambourne, are "not carryin1 their-own weight." The properties in question , he said, are either leased at a rental Insufficient to cover taxes the city must pay on them, or are behind in their rent. Lambourne said he referred specifically to the five properties on El Paseo between the boardwalk parking lot and Togo's sandwich shop. Lambourne said a recommendation from the planning commlssion would be in order so the city council could give adequate notice to lesaees of the pro-- perties. · Commissioner Carl JohnsoR wondered if it might not be possible to re-negotiate more favorable leases aaying, "The 1rt galleries are colorful addllions to the cl· ty. P hate to see them go." Commissioner Robert Hastings replied, ".We can't afford-to support them." It was agreed to call lbe problem to the council's attention for possible official IC· lion. " Nuclear Plants · Studied· By Water Control Board By PAMELA HAU.\N ot 1t1e b.nr , .. ,, "'" 1, The Southern California Regional Water Quality Control Board, San Diego Rei!on, took a hard look Monttay at ex- cavation requirements for two more 'huclear generating plant.s near San Onofre. Before construction on the two 1,140 megawatt plants can begin, the board placed stringi!nt requirements on the disposal of . material gleaned from ex· cavations necessary to prepare the two sites for construction . The San Diego Gas and Electric Com· pan y and the Southern California Edison Company have estimated that two million cubic yards of surface terrace material and 650,000 cubic yardl,pf underlying San Mateo formation material will be ex· cavated. The terrace material is co mposed of slit, clay and fine to coarse sands with. layers of cobbles and boulders while the San Mateo is dense, fine to coarse sand with pods of terrace material. The board accepted the ree-0m· Hijacker Identified Pl'M'SBURGH !UPI) -The FBI Mon· day identified the youth who hijacked an Allegheny Airlines jet to Cuba Saturday as Richard Duayne Witt, 19, of r.1111burgb. The FBI uid WilL had been uvlng with relatives since hil early discharge from the Marine Corpi in June. He ii a blah 1chool dropout. mendations . of thelr executive .director, Dennis O'Leary and voted unanimously to _prohibit the deposit of terrace material in the Pacific Ocean. The two utility companies had already made arrangements to deposit ·this material on land at selected sites within Camp Pendleton. Pods of silty, clay material greater than one foot In thickness in the San Mateo Formation must also be deposited with the terrace material. The board Is allowing the disposal of the San Mateo sand along the beach in the nearshore zone to replenish sand that wears away through erosion. The utility companies also plan to ex- cavate on the ocean f1oor to mnstruct four 18-foot diameter conduit.. for the cooling water Intake and discharge system . These conduits would be buried beneath. Uie ocean floor, extending between 2,600 and 3,400 feet offshore. Excess sand from this operation was to be deposited on the staward side of the terminal structures, but the committee voted to recommend placing th i s material in the nearshore zone so it too can help ~eplenlsh beaches. The staff reported that San Mateo sand had been .deposited along the beach in 1964, when the site of · the present ,5¥ Onofre plant was prepared. , They reported that no adverse effects to marine life occur(td at that time. The board also approved 1 monitoru11 system for the excavation projects, to make sure the requirements .are carritd out. Planners Deny Bequest and the 100..foot vessel Oil Cib' were all tnpged in the operation. General Oceanographic Company, 17911 Bascom St., Irvine, wis hired to haul e sunken cabin cruiser from the seafioor off Avalon . Investigators said the two small sub· marines were raising the boat under their own power, but when it' reached the surface, turbulent seas caused one line to break-and the boat rolled over. U'!able to hold the waterlogged hulk up alone, the Nekton Beta became fouled in ita own UneJ and a porthole was ruptuttd 11!1 she wu dra&ged into the cold, black depths. One other diver suffered the bends and partial paralysis Monday while re-surfac· in1 after a !JO.foot abalone dive off the bland.' Office Burglar Takes Copier A burglar who entered an office building' through an unlocked window over the weekend made off with buslness equipment valued at $7 ,450, Laguna Beach police report. A Xerox copying machine worth '5,500 was among the items removed from.five desks In a three.room office aulte OC· cupled by Desert Minerals Inc. at 1191 S. Coast Highway. Also listed as miMing were three typewriters, an adding machine. and two diotaphonl!s. pollc£ said. The burglary was discovered Monday morning by an employe of the firm wbO . said the offices had been closed since I p.m. Friday. Police aaid tl'le burglar appirently entered by cilldlng open. a window in the re.r of the two-story building. . We•tller 20tli Centur.y Fox Nixed in Laguna Location · Sit,e Thoee hot d!sert winds wm warm things up along the Orarige "°"t tonight, but should cool oft by Wednesday. Look for tempera· lures up to 75 along the beache1 and 13 in the leas temperate in-- land rtcions. By BARBARA KREIBICH ot lfle D911Y ''"" Ill" A IOC'atlon mana1~r for 20th. Century ' Fox Films Monday night heard hie Laguna Beach Planning Cammisslon deny hls request. Jo use the Cliff Orive- M1rlne-Orlve trl.-ngtt_ (or storage of equipment and feeding· of cait and crew during shooting of a future film Oct. 1· Nov,&. Request for use ol the v1cant proptrty had been made at an wlltt planning commission tnettlnc by klc1tkm mana1er Gene Floromonte, who lo ..Wna up • shooting ochedule I« tlll fllm "Morrloge of • Youn1 Stockbronr" wlllch •Ill featu~ a number ot• anti al Shlw'1• Cov.e. The vote to deny UH or the trlanale was unanimous. i Alter the meeting a b em u s e d P'IQramonte conimented, "Why we film in · expenslv~ reside~tial areas Jltt Bel Air all th, iime .• ~ In Patia they even ope1l . '•t..'...Lo f " '4P u~ .. uvre or. use •. . . ' · Al that time,'lt was· decided . that pro- perty o~~· In the__i:eltdentill area should be advl.sed of the request. Fifty.seven, notices were sent out, the commission waa 1dvised. Five letters of protest and two oral pro\e1la: were beard at Monday'• meeting, · Four ,Marine Drive residenla: wrote to proteet use or the lot by the film com. pony Ulidii Oll)'~S. Dr. Norman Nixon. IOIS Marine Drive, t1· preaed the view that miking of a film in Laguna Beach could be an "Interesting 1nd conatrucUve'' experience, buJ soughl 11uuronce-1llot 21-hourpollce covenip, - speclalfire precautions .. adequa~ SllJ_l , lion and posting of a da"maae bond wouid be reqq.i~ed'by the city. 1 · t . ·• Jim Kerins, 1137 M~rin~ J?rl._. ' 2'- year raldenl, no/ed tp.\l pr~1 la !lie • · area are valued 1t $2,00o 1 fron( foot and ..: 1ald he did · ~feel lQe. mld1111a lhoujd ·be subjected to "a )ot of toilet.a plltdi up and a lot of cooking goln( on." , Kerins noted that In 1.8 years 11 a,Los INSWB TODAY "The RoJ1QZ Httnt of Che Sun .... , at Che tao•na Moulton Ptav- ho1Ut_i.aa.. Qff • htovII .,,.~ •I living thtoter on the Orono• l;'oa.si Wn.fght. See Entertoin- ment, Page 19. Angeles pofictrnan he had ot.rved many C6IHwftle movie locaUOM and "l know whit 1 mess ClltdlM u11 · lhey make." ~!:.."::" Fioramonte SBld lhe space, about ~ =-:.... • I "'" " " I third of'\lle lot, would ~ used for ll0<•p - of camera 1nd S®nd trvck1, U1ht1n1 •~ ""' • ·~ " equlproent, pauenaer cars and poeslbJy a , .... , , .. ,, bu -" !, I -. A• L,...,_ 14 -. -" ~., ..... .. NIHIMf ..... a.f - °'911e1C~ t '"'* ,..,. " '-"' . ...,. ... ......... ,, ·-" == -': ~ ..... ,.,, --.. Food.Jould be prePJred .•t-1notber , ~ L..-' -'=!llti"MOVIES,..Po ... ll---L-----~--_J •• I I ~Ally PILOT SC Panel By lllCBARD P. NAU. ........ ,... .. 'l1le llu Clement. Porks and 11ecr ... Uon Commisi1oo Monday was unanimOus 1n its vole· •ga1nst spUtUng equally with Capistrano Unified School District the $150,000 cost of a new swimming pool . Commisslpn discussion of the problem referred to It by llle Cit)' Council seeflled to lea ve the. door open for some diUereii.t cost sharing formula . Said Canlmissioner DoMa Wilkinson, who signed the ~Utioa for a high school pool, "I cannot see why U. cily sboald J>llY half the cost Jor a pool in UM: second lartest. school dlslrlct (in area) in camomla. - ;.l could notJn' iOO:d conscience recom· ~~~erty Pair ~ejects mend paying one half tbe cost of a dlllrici pool. I lblnk the ell)' for 171,111111 could ...turbl!h Ill (murilclpll) pool ot . buttd its own." • · '!lie ochool, which bad beta g111en pool petiUODI lllped bJ more ll>an 1.0110 persom:, suuested the clty split the cO!t and the district would maintain the pool. lt was esUmated this would cost the district $25,000 aMually. The city mlln· tain11 lhe municipal pool for about $15,000 annually, aboul $6,000 or which ii recovered in revenue from pool use. The City COU11cil referred the matler to the cornmislian for .a recommeadtUon, alt~tr1he rec:omrnendaUonJs_ not bln· ding on the cowlclt. Com'.miasioner El1je Mears said, 01 EIToro Area • • • • .~ 50-50 Cost Spljt for I reallr.e"wt need a new pool. lt would be r1111ea out lo tl>e Mlasion Viejo and El loollah IO pi1I mor. 9""'"Y Into the cit¥ Toro areu and coven Dlllll Point llld pool. , San Juan Capbtrano. '1 l tbin.11 thtl'9 tbouJd bt I jolnt•vtntura .SJie aU5 I pool at the high SC~! would but Ille --~ wrooa. , .mi1be be largely for Ille .,. of sludenla al the one.third (from the city). That's just an high school lince water polo practice- inlUal feeling .'" ~ begins in Sept.ember and use is con··. Mrs . .ROn Wilson, 220 Allegre, represen-linUOU3 through the school year. ting the San Clemente AquaUc Associa-Commls!lon Chairman Jack Berges tion, said that children must be taken to said he thought a pool at the high school C,mp Pendleton in the summer for com· would be used 90 percent by the high peLitive swimming because of the de-school. Commissioner DuWayne Lidke, mand for the municipal pool. said, "the city has to,rtserve some time She said action sbould be taken before for the populace. TheJ;e could be a con· the municipal pool, l19Ut in 1930, has to be flict in the two types of utilization." written off. "It's not going to Jast too Mn. Mears said. "l would like to know much longer," she preditted. .. what the school di.strict does with the 10- Mn. Wilkinson said the school district cent tai that is 1upposed to go to the ' communJly service fund . It Js lost along the way oomewbere. II doall1 benelll lhe city recreaUon-wlse." She said tbe-.....scbool district Is using eight quonset hut& ·ror <;.lassrooms and talking about a. ll!0,000 pool. She noted also that the school district had provided all the swimming lessons "for us.•• Mrs. Wilson said because of the depth of tht old municipal pool , no instruction is offered to children under the age of first graders. She said that 60 percent of the national drownings are children not yet in first grade and ·spoke of the pro- liferation of home: pools and need for swimming instruction fgr tots. Berges suggested that small park pools ranalni Jn deplb from two IO Iilur feel <I Police Probing are needed and would be ctie1per to D· ltl'Uctl. .,....,: , Arlie Watenrwi. clly dirtc!O< ol pubUc work!, said the cost of...a Swimming pool at Mlss.lon~Viejo HJah· School was abou t 113;,000. • He said of the municipal pool, "I don't agree that it's .in such bad shape. The filter designed tc last 15 years has gone 40 bui It'• still going. J think it's a great pool myself." Mrs. Wilkinson'. said she felt if the school district made better use of cmn· munlly service funds it ,would have the money for a pool and mentioned f225,000 spent on a football stadium in the-past. The commission turned thumbs down on a 50-5<1 pool split. Arraignment County to -Hear Slawd 'loday-SANs~:~~~: D:~.~n:,>T Kll-1,-r --~on e-Gli~-n-ges 10-cent l{()ldup Means 3 Years LITn.E ROCK, Ark. (AP) -~' three-year prison sentence agalnsl 1 teen-age boy for a IO.Cent rob- bery waa affirmed Mon~ay by the Arkansas Supreme Court. Dynamite Found "" Near Cal State Robert W. Liberty and the woman he wed in a Colorado jail were scheduled for ar· raignmcnt 'today in San Diego County Superior Court on mur~r charges. · The former WesUninster man and his bride, Kendall A. Liberty, were ex- tradite{! from Colorado Springs last Saturday and pleaded innocent to the murder COWlts Monday in municlpaJ court. Liberty and his w1fe. both 24, are ae- cuSed of the June 7 torture-sla)'ing af Robei;t J. Irion, SJ, in his San Diego apartment during a Ca Ii for n i a.\o .. Colorado crime spree. The victim -burning: candles nicker- ing beside his mutilated body -knew Liberty when both Wtre patients at Atascadero Stale Hospital for the criminally insane four years ago. Liberty, ·Who al59 faces a Huntington Beach murder charge, was declared in· sane following the 1966 candlelight killing of the woman with whom be lived in· Westminster. A 17-year"°ld Long Beach boy is the key San Diego prosecution witness and be aUegedly watched Irion's murder after being forced to drive a young man and woman to San Diego. Liberty's family told police they were also held hostage in their We!tminster home earlier On the day "Irion was statn:· while the young fromer mental 'Jla· tient allegedly waited to kill hls atep. father. i He is charged with murder and flight to avoid prosecution in coMection with the March 12 shooting death of a former roommate, Thomas Astorina, 25, in Hun· tington Beach. Liberty was released from Atascadero State Hospital on Sept. 15, 1969 after six court-appointed psychiatri sts agreed he had regained his sanity and he has never served any prison time. Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert Gardner reluctantly signed the order freeing Liberty. who last June pleaded I n n o c e n t by reason of in- sanity to kidnaping, robbery and assault in Colorado. He and the redhead he later married, plus a 17-year"°ld Oklahoma runaway were captured outside Colorado Springs following a high-speed chase and gunfight with a lone city detective. 8 Reported Missing 900 Feet DownJiinc ~tANILA (AP} -Eight miners were reported missing today after a mudslide sealed off an auxilia ry tunnel about 900 feet underground at a copper mine in Toledo, Cebu. A company spokesman said rescue teams were trying to reach the miners in an auxiliary tunnel r;unning off a main tWlllel. He said live men were believed trapped at about 935 feet and three more were belleved to be at 375 feet. DAILY PILOT .....,.,, ...... ............ O.U.NGE C:OAIT P\llLllHING '-OMl"A/llY l.1b1rt N. w,,4 l"rto.11•1 ·~· l"ltltll1,.., J ,c\ It. Cv,11., Viti l"r11:0911t •nf Gtnttl( M..,.,.t lho111•1 K11¥il l!fllW n.011111 "'· "'"'"hiftl Mllllf",ltt l!f!!1r 11 ;,Jr.,rd '· Nill ""1k Or•"" (_1, Efllll' Offl<• C:.111 Mn1; Jlt Wtll II\' l lf•I ~ ••• (II, ftll "'"' ..... , ...,_,.. UOllM lllKll! m l'-1 A-lol\Mll!Otl911 ... Cfl: IN1J ltJCk l ao!..-1"' 1111 (ltfl'*llt) -Hlf1l'I ll (-WI 11.i ... .,.., "'"°'· ~ .,~ .. Ulll6l11tf lllt ~ II -~llMof ftlly -.1 S- 411\' ... _,. ... dlliow. -........ k::tlli. .N....,.I kldl, °"'ti Ill-. M .. tl••t llft IMCfl M.41 ,_fllill V1P..,, 111!11 wfllil 1• , .. ilrlll tollll..... °'""' C1... -...111111nO C..,_!t'I' ,.-lml"I jlllflll trt II 2211 Wt>! ::-~;,,:~·(!,~w~•Kll. tr.cl lit ~nl _t.1., •••• 17141 6•J..t;tJ1 a...w_. u..titl"' ••1.1•n S.. C ....... Aff bc-J~I to11,a.a1 4tJ-4tH ~1, 1•11. O••lllff. CWlt l"11tllt11l~t c:-rrt, JN -11.,_ R1wtr1•-cd~ -""" I' 1--1~11 ....... f'll'I • .....-Wd -.illflWt '°"\Ill ...... """ .... "' QifYF!tlll -· A series of proposed zone cban1ea in Ute El Toro area will be com:idered, apin by the Prange County Board of Supervisors Wednesd11:y. The board last week 1pproved three changes but defe~ action on seven others because of opposltiOJI registu!d by a hOmeownen group. They have some arguments on the other side of the queaUon. , Hall told the supervisors, "We just sit Mre paying taxes. We have waited 14 months for a decision and these delays are costing us money." Further compllcating the picture is a lawsuit filed by the Aliso hp,meowoer1 group to block 1eneraJ plan cblJlles. _William Young Radcliff al Li~tle Rock, who was 17 when tbe robbery occurred last year, had appealed his canvicUon from Pulaski County Cireuit Court. "It Is Immaterial of what value the thing: taken is," the high C<>urt said. "A penny as well as a pou nd thus forcibly extorted makes it rob- bery." Radcliff allegedly took the dime ' at 1unpolnt from another youth after a high school football game. By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 lhl Diiiy Pll1t 1111! Discovery of 84 stick3 or dynarO'ite in a field near Cal State Fullerton is lead ing police today to believe radicals may now fa vor bombing over confrontation. though we enrolled more than 14,000 students -an increase of more than 1,000 over last year." Strategic areas of the campus are not guarded and it is not likely Fullerton Police will be called to provide bomb threat protection. '·It is the state's responsibility to guard the campus," the spokesman sa id. George Hammond, chairman of the Ali.so Homeowners Auocllllion, char1ed that the proposed rezones amount to a "'drastic change'' in the El Toro general plan, drafted in 1961. Ficker Aheaa-Slightly r' Capt. Fred King, Fullerton poliri! liaison to CSF told the DAILY PlLOT, "It seems evident that the acUvists are turning 10 the hit-and-run tactic and will be bombing buildings rather than engag- ing in confrontations with police this year." King's men are investigating the discovery of "low grade" dynamite buried last Wednesday "by two long. haired young people" who King said were abserved by a transient. CSF has received no bomb threats this year but experienced several last year. One bomb threat, to a newspaper, led to the April 27 discovery of seyen slicks of dynamite in a men 's washroom' in a corridor near the president's office. "If you approve these changes they will approximately triple the 'population density of El Toro as outlined in the general plan,'' Hammond contended. As Weather Deteriorates Dr. L. Donald Shields, CSF vice presi .. dent, said the latest find could "presage a series of guerrilla tactics ahead for us this year, or, it could be harassment, or even subterfuge." The 1961 general plan predicted an eventual muimwn popul1tion of 35,000, Speclal to Ute DAILY PILOT he a~. NEWPORT, R.I. -Newport Beach The revised plan, which is being skipper Bill Ficker aboard Jnt.rtpid held aftepherde<l througli the wpervisors by to a slight lead aver Australia's Gretel JI the county planning department, would at the fourth mark today as weather show a population of 90,000, the began to deteriorate in the third homeowners leader charged. America's Cup race. Wednesday the debated seven will be The yacht.s were racing in a deepening up for further argument. fog with the visibility less than one mile. Three of the se\'.en were the specjJic J At the third mark, Ficker and hi3 targets af Hammond last week. Tfier-"' Am'i!rican defender had increased her would have taken 90 acres out of lead to 56 seC011ds and was about 250 agricult~ral zones and into high deruity yards ahead of the challengini Aussie residential categories. boat. ' . Applicant.S 'for the changes are Thomas There was very HtUe action. Hall , owner of 53 acres located north and Winds remained southwesterly at east of El Toro _and Trabuco roads ; around 12 knot.s. Trans C.Olumbia Investments, owners a( Intrepid led at the first of six marks by 11.5 acres at Second and Cherry streets; 46 seconds, or about' six boat lengths. and Richard Beamish and Ron Diggins, Gretel ti had taken a five-length lead awners of 15 acres at Lemon and Front at the start but after 18 minutes fell street.a. behind. New Viejo Plant May Be Polluting Creek at Aliso l\.1ission Viejo's Burrough& plant may be In denier of polluting AUso Creek. That's the opinion of the staff of the California Regional Water Quality Con· trol Board for the San Diego Region, which recommended correction of the problem . During a tneeting l\-1onda)' in San Juan Capistrano the board voted unanimously lo prohibit Burroughs from discharging effiuent into the Aliso watershed since the ~foulton-Niguel Water District has provided a community sewer which can accommodate the discharge. Ken Jvansen, representing the Bur- roughs plant, stated that the company would be agreeable to the proposal. The plant is proposing to discharge 72,000 gallons per da)' of cooling water brines which contain approximalely 1500 parts per million of total dlsolved solids. The resolution proposes to protect the ground and surface waters of the Aliso area for present and future beneficial uses which include, but are not limited to, stock watering and agricultural purposes. It also prevents nuisance«·OUltlned in tbe California Water Code. From Page 1 JORDAN ... dispatches said ,President Nlroo. had not yet decided o.n a course of action. Israeli dispatches were sQbjected to in· tense military censorship, but reports reached London of large.scale tank movements Monday night and again to- day. The repCJrts said it v•as uncerta in whelher they were: deploying ror possible action in Jordan. UPl correspondent Ohad GowU. from the seashore resort of T!.berlas on the Sea of Galilee, could report only that dust clouds rising on the east bank af the Jordan River marked the pUS1ge of Jordanian army convoys rolling aoulh. On Monday, the Jordanian army had moved northward to lrbid, Jordan's te· cond city nrstled in 2.000 foot mount1.ln1 45 miles north of Amman and only 18 miles ea of t5e ceaie=rirt lltie. The race got under way promptly it 9: 10 a.m. f PDT). Winds at the start were Crom the southwest at 15 knots, a condition con· side~d by the experts as favorable to Intrepid, the American defender in the best-of-seven race series. Visibility was about two miles in hue From Page 1 MOVIES •.. Jocation, he said, and trought to the site In enclosed vans to be served to the cast and crew. Mobile toilet fa cilities in trailers would be provided. He estimated a crew of about 70 persons and a cast of SO to 60 would be working on the film, from 7 a.m. to dark the first week, from later in the morning until about 10 p.m. the second week and again in the daytime the third week. Actual shooting would take about 12 days, Fioramonte said . Commissioner Carl J ohnson wondered If the public would be denied access to the beach at Shaw's Cove during filming . Fioramonte replied, "As in any filming we would try to have only the people in the scene on the beach during shooting, but onlookers are always welcome." He sald security and fire precautions would be undertaken by the company . Jo~nson said It sounded li ke a good deal of disturbance for the city and property awners with little to 1how in return. Fioramonte said the company would 1'try not to be a nuisance." He noted that lt has been gettin1 Increasingly difficult to make pictures in Southern California, but some states, notably New Mexico, go out of their way to attract film com· panies, feeling the publicity is to their ad- vantage . Commissioner James Schmitt said he felt granting of the permit would be "opening a whole can of worms in a residential zone." The presence of more th11n 100 people, he said. could be "a tremendous disturbance. "~hmltz said he lhOUiht use of the beach was fine but suggested the company fi nd something other than "the heart of a R·l zone'' for storaa:e and feeding the crtw. . Chairman William Lambourne con· eluded, "I feel lt ls not in the best In- terest of the ccmmunlty to disrupt -"the reslde nls of the lrta In this m1nner -it would only be a detriment to the 1rea." Bo1nh Threat Arrest Meanwhile. Arab le3dert met In PORTLAND. Ore. (UPI)·-Ttie FBI emergency session tod1y to &eek w1ys to h•s 1rrested a 29-ytar..ald Wtst. German end the war In Jordan. Cut thret of the auto mechanic and ch1rged him with the ke.,y flcure• we:re mlnlng and lhe raMOm bomb thrtal against a Westtrn - and lighl fog. Both yachts stayed well clear of each other at the gun to avoid any repetition of the protests that have marred the two previous races. Intrepid, the United States defender, has a 2 to 0 lead in the series. The. two boats were about 100 yards over the line and Gretel II appeared to ha ve moved a litUe ahead into a 12·14 knot southwesterly. Normal Man Kept In State Hospital First 31 Years RENO (UPI) -A clinical psychologist at the Nevada State Hospital has reveal· ed how a man with normal intelligence was kept in mental institutions for the first 31 years of his life. Dr. Robert McQueen, who is also 1 University of Nevada-Reno professor, said the man's case came to light when he was transferred to the Nevada State Hospital about IO years ago from an out- of-state pr ivate inst¥ution which was going out of ·business. The details were revealed by McQueen in the Sept. 12 issue of Satu rday Review. The man 's unw~ m9thcr became preg. nant as a young girl, and then was asked by another man -the son of a banker - to marry her. In an effort to kee p the birth of the child from him , she went to have the baby delivered by a doctor she had heard of. The unnamed transient watched as the two hippie-types pulled up in a camper van buried a package in the drainage ditch south west of the intersection af State College Boulevard and Yorba l:.ill<!,a Avenue. On the transicnl's tip, Fullerton police unearthed the dynamite from the site across the street lrom a campus parking lot. King said his men are che c k i ng leads from a norther.n C a I i f o r n i a newspaper in which the dynamite was wrapped and searching the county for the vehicle. Campus officials were reluctapt to C<>mment on 'the dynamite find sin&! "it would be an acknowledgement of the possibility they were intended for use on the ca mpus," a spokesman said. That possibility hasn't yet been determined. Admltting that the college buildings are vulnerable to dynamiting, the spokesman noted the security force for the cainpus had not been increased this year "even ' . ' Man, 71, Arrested On Morals Rap A 71-year-old San Clemente man was arrested Monday on morals charges in· volving children under the age of 14. The suspect, Donald Buckley, of 1402 Calle Toledo was arrested on a warrant. He is accused of five separate counts of lewd and lascivious conduct that detec- tives said span a period of a year. Buckley, who police said is married and a ret ired technician, was to be arraigned in municipal court today. Ball has been set at $12,500. Del. Ardon Sa unders, who with Sgt. Frank Yerger illvestigated the· cases, said they Involve three separate children an d different dates. SERVICE • • • "At this time,'1 King sa id, "proximity to the campus is the only link between the dynamite and CSF. - "However, Y:e have no doubt that there are students at Ca l State of the type who might resort to bombing buildings. So the dynamite likely will prove to have some affiliation with a campus group." King noted the dynamite found was 0£ the type used by farmers to blast stumps. "lf someone wanted to destroy a building." King said, "they'd probably use a higher grade explosive." CSF was wracked with police-st udent CQnfrontatiO!lS last spring f01Jowing a Feb. 9 appearance ol Gov. Ronald Reagan on the campus. Bras Touch Off Battle in Store A petite Garden Grove woman accused of trying to turn in four Cross Your Heart brand brassieres for $32 she never paid for them fought off a pair of Costa Mesa store security guards l\-1onday night. White Front security men Robert Bear'den and Joseph Elmore confronted the alleged shopllfter in the store at 3088 Bristol St .. during the exchange. "She immediately began flail ing her- arms," said Delective George Webster. adding that Bearden and Elmore backed off out of range but finally seized the allegedly stolen lingerie. "The bras in conflict were placed in evidence.'' added Detective Webster, who said investigation continues today to determine whether the woman will be ar· rested. -How much is it worth? In the carpet business sometimes its worth EYERYTHING! Hard ly a d•y goes by th•I wo don't 9et • cell r1gtrdin9 tnother company's poor insttlle- tion. Occasionally the dtmage resultin9 from poorlY, Hwn 111ms or taped seems is not repair .. 1blo. Tht~ the volut of lht lnvo•lmont loob pale lndotdl Why ~ay $300.00 or $1500.00 for corpetin9 ond g•mblo with tho insl1ll1tion7 We maintein tll of 'our own crews, all taught tho ONLY w•y lo insl•O c•rpeling -the RIGHT w1yl The 9r1atest majority of our business is r1ferrtl. Thero ;, • ...,.son! -- ALDEN'S SANTA ANA, OUNal tUITIN CalJ , , , ALHN'I CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Plecentla -Aff. Ill HILL-CAlm"I I HAPlllD IU74 ....... T ..... CaAf. !:r"~~l:;.~:' ~~ Bachdad·based gutrrllla radio IOkl lhe Alrff"'s )cl last month. The SUS~ was _ olhers ..'.'.!!> iO back Ill your p~l~t;e• fdenUfied b the rBI Monday 11 Gotlz bectust you ••• nolongtr mu-. 1he -Tonl Johannes Spiewok, I cftliin or-west '"':" u ... JJM COSTA MUA 646-4131 c:1rrilr U • -..fJllY1 11 -'' IUt ....-i1t1 1t11111.,., ..... e .. ».• ~. ,., . ' dect.slOCll." Germany. . I \ ' I ·- l 1. ~ ti H Cl q• pl T M It " j j , I gr I " ac Ct Ci wi lk Se t~ Nt wi au Ar tho Su lo F< pit tho J2. I Be fa> fol 'P "1 lho wi So I A A ( •h< ap t \.\'o 1 Wh ·~ the 1 Ro foe Ro De. 1 Se1 An 1 or SIU pct lcY COi 1 wh gr~ po! an< drt del A de1 On< ne: 1 "' re~ blo E .,st del i1p nor f1fh 1 loU j ----//-· -.,,._------~-~-c_ ______ _ , Tutsd,y, Stpltmbtt 22, 1970· -L f OAJLY lJLOT 3 '>- Undergfoun-d U·tiliti-es Hearing-Se Panel Deadlocks Lot Development Ruling Pending · N.Laguna Residents Solicited Prope;rty owners in a north _!..agUna Beach area proposed for the city's next utilities underground project' will be ask- ed to express their views of the project in a special meeting iil city hall at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 8. By BARBARA KREIBICH Of lht O•ilr ,;191 $111! Aller deadlocking on a 2 to 2 vote. Laguna Beach planning commissioners h,{onday night decided lo try again at their next meeting to respond to Harry Howard's • request for a variance tO create lots of less than miniffium re- Quired width on his Temple Hills Drive property. Absence of the fifth commissioner. Thomas Johnston, produced the tied vote ?tfonday:' Seeking to develop l.7 acres of land in the 2290 block of Temple Hills Drive with fieven building lots on a cul-de-sac , the Heisler Park Lawn Bowl Tourney Site Laguna's Heisler Park hnvn bowling greens will be the scene of much of the action when some 200 lawn bowlers from across the nation converge on Soulhern California next week for the Southern California-Lawn Bowling Festival. First of three big events in the Festival will find '18 mixed -doubles teams in ac- tion , beginning at IO a.m . Wednesday, Sept. 30, on Laguna's two greens and on the single greens in Santa Ana and Newport Beach. Men's doubles will open Friday, Oct. 2, with at I.east 46 teams competing. Following these events, held under the auspices of the Southwest Division of the American Lawn Bowling Association, there will be an awards brunch at 11 a.m. Sunday, Oct. 4, in the Hotel Laguna. In addition to the doubles tournament! In Orange County. the Lawn Bowling Festival will include the U.S. cham- pionships at Laguna Hills, Oct. 5·10 and the Disney f\.1asters at Beverly Hills, Oct. 12-17. Proudly noting that the Laguna Lawn Bowlirlg Club's long-awaited clubhouse facility, dedicateQ Sept. J-1, will be ready for the national bowling event. a gpokesman for the Heis ler group said. ''The Festival is the greatest boost for the game ever held in this country and will bring national star lawnmen to the Southland." .. Pregnant Women Advised Against Aspirin Usage CHICAGO (AP) -Pregnant women shou ld avoid taking aspirin as the time approaches when they are to gh•e birth, t"'O doctors advised Monday. They found that the babies of mothers "'ho took this household drug were more apt to develop bleeding problems than those or mothers who did not take it. The doctors, \Ve rner A. Bleyer and Robcrl T. Breckenridge, studied the ef· feels of aspirin at the Uni versity of Rochester N.Y. School of Medicine and Dentistry. They reported their findings in lhe Sept. 21 issue of the Journal of the Amef.ican Medical Association. They wrote that "despite the stimulus nr the thalidmoide catastrophe" few studies have been undertaken of the period just before birtq and "therefore few adverse dn1g reactions have been un- covered.'' Their study included 14 ncwbpms ~·hose mothers had taken more than 0.3 grams of aspirin in pure form or in com· pounds during the week prior to delivery 3nd 17 whose mothers had not taken U1e drug in a~, JQrin within three weeks of delivery. Among the 14, three cases of bleeding developed, and among the 17 there was one. No baby died or had Jong-term ill· ness. ' The study found two potentially ad- verse drug errects in the first group. related to a reduction in the ability of the blood to clot. Bleyer and Breckenridge noled that 11sludies in normAI adults have demonstrated that a Single, sma ll dose or ispiffii"-can caUS~ • tllood clotting ab- nonn'alities for as long as seven days ~fter it is taken. They said aspirin -induced reduction in \ottlng ability may be clinically relev· ant. partlculaf ly during d.I t ti c u I t deliverits or In the presence of diseases 1Uecling bloow flow, iuch as hemophilia. Until the clinical sign ificance of these findings is further evaluated, aspirin and other anti·inrlammatory agents known to .alltcl · blood coaigulalion "should be 1voiiled when bor is-.imminenl· u tho: •dded. I applicant sought perl'l'lission to have less than the required 71)..feet minimum width on two of the lots and less than the minimum 80-foot depth o.n one lot. CommlssiQners noted that ·au the -lots far exceed overall minimun1 area re- quirement of 6,000 sqliare feet, one h;v. ing 10, 700 square feet and another more than 11.000. However, commissioner Carl Johnson said. he wasJ1ot satisfied_the_proposed _ subdivision was the best that rouJd be made. "I feel they rould meet the width and depth requirements if they did not try to carve out so many lots," Johnson said. ''The width and depth requirements \\'Cre put in the ordinance for a purpose and overcompliance in one respect (area ) does not justify U1Jdcrcon1p!iance in another." Reader 01a the Beach DAILY PILOT Stiff Pltti. P l a n n i.n g Commissioner Robert - Hastings told Lhe commission ~onday night 'that v.·o rk. on tbe first district, the Cliff Drive -area adjacent to Heisler Park, is scheduled to start in a month. Three locations, Mystic Hills, the downtown area and Emerald Terr~ce.. Hastings said, had been ronsidered for -!!~ n__extundergromidjng_~rojec~,~wt~lh=lh~•~--icm latter regarded as most suitable. Properties in the district, if fanned, v•ould be those on Dunnegan Place, Dartmoor Street, Hillcrest Drive, San Joaquin Street, one block of North Coast Highway, Crescent Drive, McKnight Drive and th e area immediately adjacent to Eme rald Bay. Emerald Bay, he noted . is planning to underground all its utilities in the ad- jacent area. A spokesman for Howard said that careful engineering study of the property had resulted in the arrangement as prese9ted. "It's the only \vay to get the road in and the water out," he said . "Not a scheme to get more lots." Commissioner James Schmitz said he would not object to the odd-shaped lots, noting. "It would be a pretty boring little town if all the lots ronformed exactly to width and depth requirements." As Santa Ana \vinds heat up the Orange Coast, Drew Whiting. a South Laguna resident, enjoys su1'. sea and solitude at Aliso Beach. "Where have all the beachgoers gone." the photographer asKed tw11'. \Vhiting. who was cooling it with a good book , "Why, back to school," he replied with a knowing smile. 'Now it's my turn to enjoy the beach." If sufficient property owners appear to favor the undergrounding proposal at the Oct. 8 meeting, petitions will be circulated to seek support of owners of 60 percent ot the properties involved, as required to in- iliate a district. Representatives of the utilities com· panies will attend the meeting to answer questio,ns, Hastings said, and a preli~ inary cost estimate will be provided. Two letters were read pr'otesting the planned subdivision and t"·o area residents appeared in person to protest. citing ·existing traffic problems' on Temple Hills Drive and the fact that most properties in the area are expensive homes situated on oversized lots. Owners said they feared a lowering or property values. County Group Gets Funding For Laiv Studies Ji1dge Refuses to Order "l\°s mostly lo find out whether or not the owners· want-such ·a-district," Uit - commissioner said. "If they do, the Plan· • ning Commission can recommend its formation to the City Council." Teacher's Reinstatement Last Rites Held For Otto Puff Johnson anQ rommissioner Robert Hastings voted to deny the variance, with Schmitz and chairman William Lam· bourne supporting it. Veterans Given 'New Lease' For Exemptions Orange County Veterans who were denied property tax exemptions on their homes got a new "lease on life" today. Orange County's Criminal Justice Council has received a $57.000 grant which will be used to. finance the group 's stud y of the rounty·s criminal justice system. Executive Secretary Keith Concannon said. the funds, mainly from state and .federal coffers, will be used by the 2J. member group to probe the depth and ef· fccliveness of Orange County 's systems of la\v enforcemeiit 8.nd any possible reorganizalion of that system. Merhbers of the council are drawn_ from Orange County's cities and law en- forcement agiincies. b lstrict Attor.ney Cecil Hicks is chairman Of a group that includes police chiefs, Superior Court and ~1unicipal Colirt judges and several heads of county departments in its mem- bership. A Superior Court judge has refu sed to order the ,Laguna Beach Unified School District to rehire a probationary teacher ,1·ho was accused, amon g other charges. of fai.ling to fo1\ow regulations and crilici7.ing sch'ool district policy. Judge fiarmon G. Scoville ruled that Donna Lynde has· stated insufficient grounds for sue~ an action in. the Writ of mandate filed in Superior Court, He gave Miss Lynde's lawyers 30 days to amend their _petition. Miss Lynde, 21 , . of 740 Browncroft Road, Laguna Beach,-filed· her .Superior Court complaint after a hearing Into her dismissal by a State Office of Administrative Procedures he a r Ing bpard. That .hearing broadly upheld the findihgs of the school district. l'\1iss Lynde claimed in her mandamus action that she did not get a fair trial before the state group and was not given an opportunity to study the transcript of those prcicCedings. The former Laguna Beach 'High School teacher also alleged that the sch·oo1 district had unfairly interpreted the s(ate board's findings as being fully in support of the decision to fire her. Miss Lynde \vas employed as a pro- bationary teacher bY the district from September, 1968 to last ·June 30. Other chaf'ges-~filed against her prior to her· dismissal included the· assertion that she exercised poor judgment, failed to ensure that · classrooms were 'kept neat and orderly and tha~ she ·slept during school' h<>urs. Rosary was recited ~1onday night. in ~1cCormick Laguna Beach Mortuary Ch~pel for OttO P. Puff, 7150 Avenida ,_fajorca. Laguna ilills, v:ho died Satur· day at Soul)! Coast Community Hospital. He was 72. Requiem mass for Mr. Puff was celebrated today in St. Nicholas Catholic Church , Laguna Hills, follov.·ed by burial in Ascension Cemetery, El To~o. titr .,._Pu!L is survived-by .hl,s widow, l'\furiel ; a son. Ronald Puff .of Newport Beach; daughter, Mrs. Vicki Bauer .ot Mi~ion Viejo ai:id. three grandchildren. Also surviving are.a brother, Victor Puff and two sisters, Mrs. Sophia Seberger and Miss. Eleanor Puff of Los Angelef. ' County : Assessor Andrew .J. llinshaw said that a law enacted by the Legislature and signed hr.. the governor last week set an Oct. 2 de8'diine for vets to apply for homeowners , exemption claims. He said the homeowners claim forms have been mailed to some 3,500 veterans \vho ~·ere denied ·their veterans ex- emption. Concannon received the grant with the comment that "the funds are urgently needed to finar.ce a study that is long overdue." f\.1ucp of the work stemmin~ from the grant will. he said, be carried out by a council committee. Law enforcement in Oran_ge County currently costs its tairpayers $50 million, Concannon said. That rost will rise in 1974-75 to an estimated $100 millioil, he predicted. "Studies on the lines of the one we are about to undertake may well enable us to cut that figure ronsiderably," he said. Highway Patrol Bitter As Reagan Cuts Pay Hike A native of St. Cloud, Minn., Mr. Puff, an investment broker, had Uved in California for 50 years and in Laiuna Hills for the past four years. Memorial donations may be made to the AmeriCan Cancer Society. Laguna Will Host Mrs. John Tunney ''These vets were notified of their ex· emptlon denial in July," Hinshaw said. "Most former servicemen filed for the homeowners exemption last year when they filed for the $1,000 vets exeffiption, so our mailing is targeted at those veterans \vho did not previously fil e for the $75() homeowners ex.emption." Art Student Suing Over SpiUed Coffee An art school student V.'hO allegedly rece ived a burning impression from a session at the Laguna Beach School of Art and Design has sued that facility for $50,000. James Patrick Shaw charges the school with negligence leading to 1he spilling of a coffee pot which struck him as it fell. He filed this action in Orange County Superior Court. Council Studies Ten1ris Problem Laguna's tennis court shorlage and v.•hat can be done abou t ii will be the topic of discussion al a Wednesday night City Council study session with members of the-Laguna Beach Tennis Association. The study was postponed from an earlier date when the tennis group ad· .. vised the city, it had a number of prcr posa ls to make and would require a full study session to review them. Following the 7:30 p.m. meeting, the council will go into executive (closed) session to examine applications for the vacant city manager position. SA CRAMENTO (AP) -With nl· niost half of the me mbers absent, the Assembly fell fo.r short today 0 11· qn il'litiat roll ca/.l to override Gov. Rea· 001t's $1.67 million c!Lt in .~alaru hikes for the California 1-lighway Patrol. The f irst vote was 33.7 and Assem .. blyrrurii Jess Uuruh (D·l nglewood) 1vl!o sought the override. held the roll open b~ on effort to pick 11p addi· tional votes. He 11eeded 54 to ove r· r ide the veto. SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Reagan 's reduction of a Highway Patrol pay raise \Vas termed a· slap ln j!te face for patrol members ~onday by Vern Alexander. president of the California Association of Highway Patrolmen. "The administration.. slapped the California Highway Patrol in the face. \Vhy? For shedding our blood In pro- tection of the citizens ol California? For responding effectively and efficiently in Midis _ 3 Luncheons Away Long Look in Dresses 'Will Be In' Say Desig1ie·rs LOS ANGELES <UPI) -By mid-A panel of fashion experts including lengths were going to be spring fashio n October, women of Am~rica are going to TraVilla, George Wasserberger, president new s. be suffering from embarrassed lc:neu. -of Mark Cross+Shoe Manufacturers; Peg They were also coat suizs with belted "We're onJy three luncheons away from Zwecker, of the Chicago Dally News; and coats ending just above the knee worn complete acceptance of the longer Bettina Jaynes, a sport.swear designer, over matching canvas slacks, lengths," said high fashion designer agreed the lengths were-going to gel White Stag .introduced terrycloth-jump William Travilla at the California longer and that it wasn't such a bad suits and pant suits they promised Fashion Creator.!1 aMual prtM week at -lhina. WJU.lldn't bag or sag asjerry used to do. lhe Sheraton-Universal+Hotel here. -"i'uhlon is-change," .\Vasserbearg-er~~~re was m~ltiog 01agen_ta i.." At the finit fall luncheon, the woman said. + backless jump suit In terry worn with a who wants to matte a stand ls going to But rport.swear de signers. w h o cov~rup 11afari jacket.' wear last ytar's dress and she 's going to presented their collections for ~pring They also resurrected the old clam d\g. look tacky. But she 1W0n't feel tacky 1971, weren't limlting themselves to one ger pants ":lt.h • new name, sand dig-' because sbe11 used to \be short lengths. Jcngtlt gers. The Wide legged pants are cut off "At the second luncheon, when $be ~s They showed pl.aysuits with short just below the knee. the new look on-fM-women ,_she!s going shorts. shifts way above the koee. Interna.tionale set showed what they to feel tackY. " he. uid. • wra}>around skirts at I.he knee, midi vts1$ called pants 11uits for outdoors and pants "She's nOt gofng to .shOW Up at the third over pants, jump suits and foll , floor· sets for iQdoors. - luncheon btcayse. she.1s gotng to be out length, at home skirts -and pants, For evening, Alex-COlemtn bad black shopping. By Octobtt ~very woman it: pents, panls. vtlvet midi vesls over wide...Jegged pants r iot demonstrations and student unre st stiuations?" said ·Alexander. }fe was critical of Reagan for reducing from $4.l rilillion to $2 .5 mlllion money tabbed for a patrol pay hike. The patrol pay bill, by Asserrblyman John Francis Foran !D-San Francisco), would have i;iven members an additional fi ve· percent raise atop the fi ve ·percent boost granted most state employes. The governor cut it back lo three percent at.op the five. Reagan said, "The people of California take tremendous pride in their highway patrol'' and e~pressed "regret that ?ur tight fiscal situation" would not permit a larger pay hike. Mrs. John Tunney· will be guest of honor at the. Lagu na Beach Democratic Club's traditional fall champagne pot luck dinner Sept. 28. The 7 p.m. affair will be held in the home of Maybelle Pettit. and Martha Newman ·at 380 Moss St., where Mrs. Tunney will conduct a press conference prior to the dinner. Members and guests may make reservations by calling the new DemocratiC carilpalgn headquarters, 1550 S. Coast Highway, 494-4208, between lit a.m. and 5 p.m. Former Air Fo1·ce General Gets Anti-hijack Position WASflJNGTON (AP) -A retired Air "It Is time to get tough," nid Davis, Force genera l Lurned big-city-police boss who will supervise airport and airborne "'as name~ f\.1onday lo head the -. Secu rity forces recruited from various government1s campaign against air ~deral agencies. His pay will be between pirates. $33,000 and $36,000. In addition, the Nixon administration Davi! said be .believei the most .d'· . ~ective answer for air piracies is lo ~ announced it will insure ~merican air vent hijackers from boarding atrllnen. carriers against damage and loss President Nl1on has asktd Congress toP· resulting (rom war risks such as lhe re. $28 mllUon to recruit a 2,500-m•n·aeeurity cent hijackings by Palestinian com-force to cope with hijackings. mandos. TransportaUo_n 5ecretary John A • .Yolpe "Commercial insurance wu not be,ing Will begin writing war-risk insurance offered at a reasonable rate," It said. because commercial ntes b a v e Lt. Gen. Benjamin 0. Davis, 57; new skyrocketed aince th&.del\fUCl.ion 0( four direclor of Civil AvlaUOn 5ecurijyj sa,,1...,.-airliom-ln-U.. ~Eut It 1 Jou of wlfl monUis or even Years Del'Ore air ovu $50 million. piracies can be reduced to, an irreducible The increne in commercial rates to 11 min imum. much as tl.50 per flOO vllue. Volpe Aid, The former di~tor oJ the Cleveland could mean a premium jump from ft· police and fire department11 to I d million to ovtr fll million for 1t 1eaat Olli newsmen he is a 11trang~r to the air hi-American ~trier.- jacking 11.eld and "essenth11ly I dOn't ha" The tecretary sakt authority for the much lo say 11Jnce I just anlved. '' govemrnen11iu:ur1nce Is iSOntalntd tn tht But Davis, the highest r•nking bl1ck tn 1958-li'ederal Aviation Admlnlstratlon act. the armed services at his retirement Jn Nixon's plan to fund the aertal panl -- going to be buying new clo(hes ot else '1Pants are selling like absolutely , and Jong-sleeved white. satin blouses. The the's goint-lo have-embarrueed kneesr. cre7.y,u 1tld Al Gitron·of White Stag, who ~me4ook-wa!I ~ ~n in 11ucho TravUJa said. • : said blazers over pants and skirts or •II pants. 1m. endorsed the~ mm lq put armed force lhl'O"IJh lncnued tam on air guards aboard airliner&. The risks of passengers was oppoeed. M~ by ~ •irborne ahootouta •-worth liking, he the Civll-Aeronaulin-Bom! llnd-1hr.-- said. airlines. ' , • I~ II\' .. De1tr ,_ llM'JJ A 1116.1 Cadllla~ limousine that one belong to actress Judy Garl11nd is being auctioned off by Nova Uni· verslty, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Bids may be submitted by telephone or mail. As much as half of the pur .. chase price may be tax deduct· ible, a university spokesm~ said. He said the previous ownership of th~ car bas been documebled. The university hopes to equip its n.ew television studios with proceeds from the auction, the spokesman &aid. • A. crew of firemen was dil· \.>atched Fridal/ ift Porttmouth, Va. to rescue a. cat from a tree. Mission accompliahed, the cat was released. As the jUe truck 1tar~d back to the station, it ran over the cat. • Republicans raised nearly '200, .. 00Q Saturday in a fund.raising ex· periment called the "Grand Old Party" at a 400-acre farm on the westel'Jl outskirts of suburban Creve Coeur near St. Louis. About 6,000 tickets were sold al $25 each for the extrav'aganza, which fea· tured performances by singer Tony _Mt_rtin and screen _personalities Dale Robertson and J ane RusH ll. Available to party-goers were Pra1ident Nixon wristwatches for $15 and Spiro Agnew watches for $12.50. • Bryan County Okla. Sheriff J oo Brim m-ve is still sheriff today, thanks to the flip of a coin. Brim- mage was challenged in the Sept. 15 primary by 0 . W. Highfill, and unofficial vote totals showed Brim- mage the winner by 22 votes, 2,- 993 lo 2,971. Highfill asked for a re- count, and the tabuJation in Dis- trict Court showed Friday the out- come was a tie. 'The men agreed lo flip a coizt, with the winner be- coming sheriff and the loser, un- dersheriff. An attorney threw the coin in the air, Highfill -called it heads. He is Bryan County's new undersheriff. • Women passengers at the near- by Meldrelh and Melbourn station have complained because the ladies' room has been rented to a private firm in Cambridge, Eng- land. The women are directed to the men's room while a porter stands guard outside. Rex Emery# a local councillor, said, "with its continental-style mixed lavatory, Meldrith will go down in history for being the first British railway sta- tion to turn European when we join the common market." • .s.n. Edward ~uskie appeared with Democratic gubernatorial candidate Je11 Unrvh at a news conference Friday in Los Angeles and was asked if he was California Democrats' answer to Vice Presl .. dent Spiro T. Agnew, who cam- paigned here last week for state Republicans. 0 1 don't think there Is such an answer. I don't think we want such an answer," Muskie laughingly told reporters. The Maine Demoerat was the 1968 Democratic candidate for the office Agnew bolds. ' -..... -, . -- Ti to Announces He \Vil' Resign BELGRADE (AP) -President Tllo has aJlllOUli:ed that be will slap down alter niilDc Yugoelavla for 15 yem and turn the cowiley'1 governmeol over lo a collectlve leadenhip. • Tito, 'II. did not Indicate Monday what ru., position would be but JI WU believed in Belgrade, the nation's capllal, that he would remaiD bead of the COlnmunill Viet Leader Ky Starts Trip • party and would nm the new pruldhmi, at least in Ill initial plwe. l Further QetaU1 will be ant.ou.nced later, Tito said. "I am quite 1o11i in lblJ pool llld I would Uke to have more poaibillliel to work on IOIDe other projectl," be uld in a speech Mondly in Zqreb, the country'• -larpat city. -Ttto, who broke from Moscow in 1941 llld wu named Pftlldent for Ille ID 1163, said reoflanlzatlon of the country'• com. munlst eovernment WU lieCeSUl'y to preterve YUfO!lavia'1 unity. He 11ve no timetable for the cban(eover. But he said apeculalloo on who might mxeed him could provoke a crlals, aad that to avoid it, governmental restructurina w 1 1 T P . us neceuary. He explained that he inlllaled the 0 arIS, • • cban(e becaUIO "If IOl!leOne eiae did, It _· _ .. would look u if ~Y wanted to remove SA!GO!r(UPI) V!Cn'i<lldenl iNr liie." . r- Mrs. Nguyen eaO Ky oi South Vletnam Tito uid he would be replaced by a left for the Paris peace talb and tbe preaidlym that would be "a form of col- United States TUe.sday with every in-Jective prtlident of Yugoslavia." Tbe dicaUon that be planned to fuUill a speak-body would consist . of ~tatlve1 ing engagement at a right-wing nlly in from the country'• six republics and Its Washington on Oct. 3. main oocW llld political orgulzalionl, Ky and bis wile, Mal, boarded a including the Communill party. . regularly scheduled commercial Air Viet-Tito wu a partisan leader against the nam flight for Taipei and Tokyo at 9 close lies with the Soviet Union lm- a.m., where they were expected t o mediately following the war. ~ut in 1MI change to an internailonal flight to Paris. his country became the tint Soviet Ky's office maintained that they did not satellite to break away. have details on the flight beyond Tokyo. The United States was pleased by the A surprise figure at the colorful sendoff break and provided Tito's government ceremony at Tan Son Nhut Air Base was with more than $1 billion in assistance of U.S. ambassador Ellsworth Bunker. The various kinds. In later years Yug011avia'1 U.S. State Department bad advised Ky relations with Moscow and Wubington not to make the trip to the United StateS alternately wanned and cooled. for his own safety and becauSe of the in· Tito's announcement was not expected fluence bis trip might have on the U.S. to affect President Nixon's pl~ visit Congressional elections. to Yugoslavia next week. However, any Asked why he came to the ceremonies U.S. intervention in the Jordanian civil Bunker chuckled and said, "No com: war could force cancellation of the trip ment." Later, he 1aid, "I am here at the because of Tito's close ties with Arab invitation of the Vietnamese Foreign leaders. Ministry." - Meanwhile, !peCU!alion continued that Ky w~ reach Paris but would not con- tinue on to the United States because of. the adverse reaction. "He might find that the Paris talks re- quire that he remain longer in Paris '' U.S. officials Slid. ' Many members of the diplomatic corps and President Nguyen Van Thieu'• cabinet turned out to bid Ky and his wife farewell. He shook hand! with all ol. them and reviewed a color guard before boarding the plane. Bunker's surprise appearance may hav~ been related to his anger over Viet- namese language newspaper articles whic report..i the United States planned to back 'Ibleu for re-election in 1971 and viewed Ky u suitable only for the vice presidency. Bunker h11 denied the reports. i i t Ky reported to the naUon via television Sunday night ll!at he intended lo go lo I.be United Slates "for lhe good of Vietnam." Luna Returning After Success In Moon Landing MOSCOW (AJ>) -An unmanned Soviet rocket carrying a cargo of moon rocks sped toward earth today for an expected. touchdown someUme Thursday. The Russians scored an advance in space exploration Monday morning by launching the rocket off the lunar IW'face from the unmanned Luna 16 spa.ce sta· tlon. Moscow's papers apluhed the event to- day. , "See, we're not so far behind the Americans," one Rll8Sian remarked. The Communist party newspaper Prav. da said: "The unmanned million ls suf- ficiently reliable and safe ... Itl colt is much lower than that of .endln& minned Dights to the moon." F emcile Panthers Ju mp 2 Dep uties In Jail Scu ffle NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -Three female Black Panthers arrested with 11 male Panthers aft.er a lhootout with police last wtek jumped two deputies Monday, biting one ,.....1y and o:ralcl> ing the other. Dislrlcl Attorney Jim Garrison bid ae-' cepted murder charges against the women and 10 of the men earlier ln the day. One of the Panthers was a juvenile and could not be charged. Orleans Parillh Sheriff Louis Heyd 1aid the scuffle broke out as Elaine Young, 22, was being taken back to her cell after a visit with her lawyer. "She aionC with two other black females, jumped Deputy Sheriff Jooeph Sparks and started to beat o~," Heyd said. "Deputy Sheriff James Amiker went to Sparks' uslstance and helped him 1ain control and put the females back In I.be cell. Sparks was sent to Charity Hospital with a severe bite on his back and abruions. Amlter wu IC!'atched.'' Heyd uid none of the women was In- jured. All three -Mia Young,.Leah Hodies, JI, and Catherine Bourns, 11, _. char1ecl wllh waull llld heller)'. Fortunes of War Pav • DAMASCUS (UPI) -At Syria's border with Lebanon, a preUy girl of the Arab guerrilla organization Al Saiqah stands asking travelers for a 6().eent donaUon. Those who give get a receipt wrltteri in Arabic. Tran1lated, the receipt reveals the donor is entitled to free entry to a gambling culno in Damascus. Wild Storms Roam Nation Lightning Kills Illinois Man; Snow Hits Some S.tates '9tlVIEW Of 0sA WUT'Mll ..... FOlll:CUT TO f:Ot A.M. [ST • ·a· ... TeapercCures "-ro...---.--_.;!O c ...... luM1 ...,..,. llt'll Vlfll"9 w1"61 f11911! 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Reds Shell· Reinforced From Wire Stniee1 Communist troops who have 1talled the government's first major of!ensl\re laslr ed out at heavily reinforced Cambodian forces in two shelling attacks today, the military command reported. A spokesman said the Carribodltn troops, estimated at about 1,000 men, were pressing against light opposition ln- to_positi.Ons to try to envelop the eam- munist strongpoint at Taing Kauk, 47 miles north of Phnom Penh. An estimated 2,000 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong. are in the village. The enemy force has halted the government operation for nine days. The spokesman in Phnom Penh sa.ld villagers-in the battle r.one have reported that some Communists were pulling out of Taing Kauk. He said intelligence reports indicate that the enemy may have decided to fall back to more easily defendable positions. The spokesman said nve-Soldiers and two civilians were wounded in the two shelling attacks. Premier Lon Nol visited the Taing Kauk area Monday, then went on to Kompong Thom to visit troops at that provincial capital 80 miles north of Phnom Penh. The government's offensive is aimed at reopening the area between Skoun and Kompong Thom. ' U,I T•lt, ... tt The cambodian command a I 1 o reported four attacks in the past two da ys in the Phnom Penh area. It ap- peared that none of the attacks dislodged government soldiers from their positions. The s~kesman said the government now has enough troops to maintain the pressure in its drive up Highway 6 t() Kompong Thom and to deal with enemy pressure anywhere else in the country. · CAMBODIAN GIRL SOLOIER RESTS OU RING FIGH TING SHms Stunn..:I As She Sees Bodies of Slai n Friends • 'Permissive Educators'Hit By.Agne w in Hot TV Clash The Cambodian high command Monday replaced~the-commander of a govern- ment task force which has been encirlced for a week by Communist troops north of Phnom Penh. South Vietnamese troops reported killing 54 Communists southeast of the Cambodian capital. l'!EW YORK (AP) -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, debating with ·a student who called him a precurser of violence, has laid the blame for c a m p u s disturbances on the "permissive at- titude" of college administrators. Agnew's Colorful rhetoric was singled out as a cause of C<11lege unrest by Richard Silverman, student body presi· dent at the University of. Washington, who was one of four students participating in a taped television debate with the vice president Monday nighL OurDlg the 90-minute discussion on the David Frost Show, to be seen in most cities Friday, Agnew and the four students frequeilUy disagreed over the causes of 1tudent violence. 'SilVerman charged that Agnew was "one of the greatest precursers of violence our country has ever seen." The vice pre1ldent replleff: "To use me as a bete noir for the violence that has: uisted in this country because of the disgusting and permissive attitude of tbe people In command of the college cam- puses is one of the mo s t ridiculous charges I have ever heard." 'Ibe exchange became heated when Silverman brought up the shooting deaths of four Kent State University students during a confrontation with National Guardsmen. Alnew, citing the burning of the un1Veraity's ROTC building, the harass- ment of firemen and the chanting of oblcenlties as extenuating factors, said he nevertheless deplored the killings. "It is most unfortunate, as It appears now that the National Guard over- reacted." be said. Witht>ut further elaboration, Agnew said the president of Kent State had blamed the killings on the "human debris dumped on him by the Obi() free ad- missions program." The vice president also came in for • criticism from Eva Jefferson, 21, of Northwestern University. She said he gave the.impression that he thought students were "people from another planet that have been put here to blow up buildings." "Maybe this iJ your goal -to Isolate people," Miss Jefferson added. The other student participants were Gregory Craig, 25, of the Yale Law School, and Steve Bright, 21, of the University of Kentucky. Police Jail 21 In Washington Youth Outbreak WASHINGTON-(UPI) -Xt>easf 21 persons were arrested Monday night and ell'ly Tuesday in. an outbreak of m:k throwing and minor looting along northwest 14th Street, the area hardest hit during Washington's August, 1968 riot. No injuries were reported in the disturbance which Police Chief Jerry Wilson said began after police attempted to make. e narrotics arrest at the New Amsterdam Hotel. Military spokesmen said heavy fighting flared between South V i e t n a m e 1 e regional forces and a Communist-unit near highway one about IO miles "°utheast of Phnom Penh Monday. The South Vietnamese reported losing one man killed and two wounded in the clash near ttie province capital of Svay Rieng just outside the Parrot's Beak sec- tion of Cambodia. The South Vietnamese were supported by tactical air strikes and artillery and reported capturing large amounts of munitions and medical equi~ ment. A South Vietnamese spokesman tn Saigon said South Vietnamese forces with air and artillary support killed 54 Nortli Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops in a new1y-lailnched-amphlblous·operatton tnto - Cambodia centered along the Bassac and Mekong rivers 35 to 50 miles southeast of Phnom Penh. One South Vietnamese was killed anH-tWo wounded. ~ Headquarters said the four-day-old operation did not change the number of South Vietnamese troops now in Cam- bodia, about 13,500 because the l 500 marines and several hundred militiamen Involved had already been in Cambodia on other operations that were closed out. One Feared Drowned Ari Kayak Capsizes . Police said those arrested were charg- ed with disorderly conduct. Special riot· equipped police were sent into the area after bands of youthJ, some shirtless in the muggy 76-degree weather, began rov. MENDOCINO (UPI) - A kayak" ing streets, tossing rocks at windows and capsized after being swept from the Big cars. River's mouth onto the Pacific Octan and Tear gu canisters were shot to break t.. one of its occupants is missing and- up some of the groups of young people presum ed drowned . who w~re taunting an~ hara.ssing police .The victim was identified Monday as from side streets. Polite said 11 stores Jim Ogle, 19, a resident of AnUoch ranch were broken into, and two - a drug store a nearby H.ippie commune. Philip and a shoe store -were extensively Stevens, 14, swam from the kayak to a looted. rock and was rescued. v1cE ~RESIDENT AGNEW RAPS WITH STUDEN'I' LIAOERs EROM NATION'S coLLEa'Es'""'" David Frest Show" Debate lHds to Ch !,"t•• and Counter.charges bt Bott. Sides , - • -> I , , I SU A! ca br Or loo ex pe ] 1 J W< bo re so a re ,., U1 th tit "' en fir Ki lo .. th m in t ii " .. " ,, In ti; po u D di d• h• • • b b Ii a le II • h • < b f < f < l I • I • • I , j j l I • San Clemente Capistrano VOL 63, NO. 227, 2 SECTIO NS, 26 PAGES • EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 , '1970 • • an Ies In Firemen Read For Hot Winds Orange County firemen were placed on 11tand-by alert today as hot, dry Santa Ana winds swept in from the desert, causing soaring temperatures in dry brush areas l:>f inland and along the Orange Coast. Similar hot dry weather is predicled for Wednesday. The Santa Ana winds are expected to reach velocities near 40 miles per hour. High fire hazards are ezpecl.ed in both Israelis Mo ve Tanks Along Jordrui. Border By United Presa . ·International Large scale Israeli tank movemenls were reported today along the Jordanian border where Israeli military dispatches reported the Jord!nian army retreating southward toward Amman in the face o( a ..Syrian tank onsl8ught. Guerrillas reported Jotdan's air !Orce in action. With the possiblity of American In- tervention increasing, E&YPt warned the United States against stepping in, sayi ng this would_ttirtaten W_ID'ld peace. Egyp- tian lnformilion Minisftr ·Mohammed Hassa nei n Heikal said inlervenlion woold endanger American lives even further. hilly terrain and in Orange County's ca~ yons. The quickly rising temperatures cause a sharp decrease in relative humidity, according to Deputy Chief Carl Downs of the county fire department The tern· perature at El Toro Marine Base ro~ 18 degrees in one hour this 111omlng -from 62 degrees at 8 a.m. to 80 degrees at t a.m. "The desert winds have a tremendolll!I tnnuence on the potential of fire disaster," Downs warned . Downs noted that the relaUve humidity usually drops to betw_een eight and 10 percent, causing the brustt In inland Orange County to dry out and become easily ignited. The U.S. Weather Bureau has not Issued any small craft warnings for boaters along ' the Southern California Coast, and the seas are e.1pected to re- main calm. But the winds will ha ve an effect on the aircraft taking off and landing a•Orange County Airport. All aircraft are laking off toward the northeast. -the opposite direction from their usual pattern. ~ The reverse takeoff and landing pattern is because the' airplanes are designed lo take off and land Into the wind. "' I "<'*'· ' . I Colorado Cool While th ings ~ere heating up alorig the Orange Coast and in Southern California generally today, the folks back in Idaho Spring, Colo., just west of Denver, were sloshing around in four inches of new ' Planners Study UP'I Tt ........ snow dumped by an early fall storm over the Rocky Mts. Eastern .slope of Rockies often experiences hot, drying winds after a snow storm. They are call· ed "Chinooks" and are similar to Santa. Anas .. · Main Beach -Development By W ater~Gontrol Boord N.Y. Steeb TEN CENTS ·• Ive { Other Flees Undersea Tragedy Imprisoned in a small submarine punciured while salvaging a l!Wli:m boat. a Mission Viejo man was dragged to hit death in 25CI ftet of wate'r off 'Catalina Island Monday, but his partner escaped. The second man squirmed '. throu1h ·a broken porthole Ind shot to th_e surfact:, rupturing his eardrums and causlnc him lo ht: stricken with benda. Dead Is Larry Headlee, 32, of 28891 Preciados Drive, Mission Viejo, whose body was recovered from the miniature sub Nekton. Beta by the second sub- mersible-craft involved in the salvage. Rlcbard Slater, 40, of 3'10 Seashore Drive, Newport Beach, was · takr:n to Avalon Community Hospital for treat- ment of . the t>ends and possible lnt.erital injuries. Atithorilies said he was the third· diver stricken Monday by the excruciating con- dition causing nitrogen bubbles in the bloodstre11m dut: to rising from tbe pressures of deep seas too quickly. The other cases were unrelated to the tragic sinking of the Nekton Beta. Spokesmen for the U.S. Coast Guard Search and Rescue Office in Lon1 Beach . aaid' the Nekton Beta, an idenftcal craft and the fOO.foot vr:ssel Oil City were aU engB1t:d in the operation. · C.neral Oa\rmoarophlc Com(>al!Y, 1'11111 Bascom St., lrvtne, n11 hired to haul a tunken ·cabin cruiser From the se:afloor · otf •Avalon.• Investigators. said the 1wo sm11I sub- marine!! were raia.in1 the boat under their' own power, but' when Jt reached the surface, turbulent seas caused one line to break and the boat rolled over. - l Syria issued a similar warning. Heavy:-lighting---resumeUUm_m___1Ln Itself with failure or a Cease-fire.called by King Hussein and Hei.kal said the death toll there was over 10,000. Guerrilla 10urces admi tted 3.000 dead and said there were tens of thousands wounded. The airport ma·nagement bas checKed ell private aircraft parked al the airport to insure that thet_are tied down properly to avoid being lifted Into the air bY the expected 35 knot winds. Laguna Be~ch plaruUng ci>mmlss.ionus agreed Morurayliight 1liit a move 1hoold be made to take. over Main Beach pro- perties that are p~oving a financial burden to the city, pc)ssibly razin1 tht: old structures ind replacing them with parking areas. By PAMELA ffAL!.ANr-- Ot Ille O.llY P'll" '"" -mr:ndetlons --{)( their-txecutive-director, Dennis O'Leary and voted unanimously to prohibit the deposit ol terrace material in Unable to hold the waterlog1ed hulk up alone,...lbe...Nekton-Beta-became fouled.-iD•---11 i~ own llnes and a porthole was ruptured U.S. military forces were alerted to move in to try to save the 400 Americans in Jordan and the possibility of interven- tion seenied very real. Israel also was reporl.ed prepared to act if It felt its 11ecurity threatened -and a Syrian move southward from lrbid would bring Syrian tanks close to the Israeli border. If U .s. military forces should intervene In Jordan to rescue Americans there, they would be hunting for about 400 persons. of whom about 100 hold dual U.S . .Jordanian citizenship. The State Department lists about 40 American diplomat! and foreign service starters on duty at the embassy. They are reported huddled in interior rooms of the bUilding, which has been hit by small and medium arms fire seve ral times since the fightinit broke out last Thursday . No injuries have been reported. The wives and children of these of· flcials were evacuated last June v.•hen the on-again, off-again fighting between loyaUl!ts and guerrillas began. Almost all of the Americans in Jordan live in or near Amman, a city of about 500.000 people built, like Rome, on seven hills. The State Department does not know of anv Americans living in the northern cilies of Ramtha and Irbid, now occupied by forces from Syria. HeikAI said Egypt was trying to send a plane to Amman to rescue 100 foreign correspondents, mostly American. trap- ped in the Intercontinental Hotel In the center of the city. 1 • Their hotel has been hit repeat.edly in the showdown civil war between Hussein and thr: Palestinian guerrillas. Hussein, faced with a battle for survival and deserted by many of his Arab allies. appealeQ to the United Statesn the Soviet Union. Britain and Franct for help. But Washington I (Sff JORDAN, Page I I The Land Cante (Nerth!'MI St.le ) Picture yourae:lf In a snu1 A-frame b e s I d e A N9rfhem Caltrornla slream. away from smog and root beer stlnds? And turning 1 tic!) profit on the land you bOughl? The pictur~ might not be 11 prcllf as it's painted. For the fourth In a serlcs <i 1rlicles by DAILY PILOT Staff Wrltt.r, Al Bates on lht. prob- lem, ·turn to E:a.ge 11 toda.y. • l As the northeasterly wind .began to build up speed this moming, it met the southwesterly sea breeze. Both winds were blowing at about 10 knots and the Orange County Airport tower recorded the wind blowing towards the east -in ·~om the ocean . But the wi ndsock a few hundred yards across the runway recorded the wind blowin1 the opposjte direction -in from the deurt. Municipal Bond Sale Suggested To Aid Hospital San Clemente's long quest for a hospital took a new turn Monday night in the form of a propoµI U1at the city sell municipal .bonds to finance construction at the existing grade site. The City Council. with only three mem· hers present, seemed somewhat chilly to the proposal of C. T. DeClnces, wlme Van Nuys-based firm was to have built the long-delayed hospital near the civic center. !\1ayor Walter Evans suggested that DeCinct;s spell the proposal out In writing and return il In time for consideration 1t the Oct. 7 regular meeting. Commissioners Instructed city plaaner Al Autry to write the city council recom- mending h1vestigation of such 'a move with reg11rd to five properties whi ch. ac· cording to commission chairman William Lambourne, afr: "not carryina lhLlr own weight." The properties in question, he said, are eilher leased &t a rental insufficient to cover laxes the city must pay on them , or arr: beh ind In their rent. Lambourne sa id he referred specifically to the five properties on El Pa.sec between the . boardwalk parking lot and TC.go's sandwich shop. Lambourne said a recommendation from tht: pl8J'\ning commission would be in order so the city cOOncil could 1ive adequate notice to lessees of the pro- perlir:s. Commissioner Carl Joh11so1 wondered If it might not be possible to re-nqolialr: more favorable leases saying, "The art gallerlr:s ire colorful additions to the ci· ty. I hale. to see them go.". Commissioner Robert Hastings replied, "We can't afford to support them.'' It w1s agreed to call !fie problem to the council's attention for possible official ac· lion. The Southern California Regionil Water Quality Control Beard, San Diego Region, took A hard look Monday at er· cavation requirements · for two more nuclear generating plants near San Onofre. Before construction on the two 1,140 megawatt plants can begin, the board placed striflgent requirements on the disposa l of material 1leaned from ex· caVa'ti'ons' necessary to ·prepare the two sites for construction. The San Oir:go Gas and Electric Com· pany and the Southern California Edison Cpmpany tiave estimated that two million cubic yards ·of surface terr&ce materitil and 650,000 cubic yArds of'underlyi ng San Mateo formitlbn material will be ex- cavatr:d. The terrace material l!I composed of silt, clay and fine to coarse sands with layers of cobbl~, and boulders while the San Mateo is dense, rtne: to coarse sand wllh pods of terrace m&terial. The board accepted the recom- ·Hijacker lde~tified PITTsBURGH I UPll -The FBI Mon· day idenlified the youth who hijACked an Alle1heny. Airll~ jet to Cuba Saturday a!I Richard . DuaYot Witt, 19, of Pittsburgh. The FBI 1aid Witt had been living with rtl1tives since hl11 early discharge from'the Marine Coips in June. He ii 1 bJch roehool dropoul the Pacific Ocean. ' The two utility c(impanies had already made arrangements to deposit , this materi1l en land at selectt:d sites within Cam p Pendleton. Pods of silty. clay material greater then one foot In thic kness in Lbe San Matec Formation must also be deposited with the terrace material. " The board is aUowing the dirposal of the San Mateo sand along the beach in the nearshore zone to replenish .sand that wears away through erosion . The utility companies al.sc plan to ex· cavate on the ocean floor to construct four 18-foot diameter conduits for Ute cooling water lntakt: and dl1t::hir1e system . These conduits would be'buried beneath the ocean ' noor. eJtendln1 between 2,600 and 3,400 ·feet offshore. Exces's sand from this operatiop w11s·lo be deposited on the seaward side of thr: tennintl structu res, but the committee voted to recorrlmend placing th ·i:s material In the nearshore ione l!C it too can help replenish beaches. The staff reported that San Mateil And had been deposited along the beach In IBM. when the silt: of the 'present San •Onofre plant was preparecl." 1 They reported that no·''adverse effecb to mArlne life occurred at that time . The board 111.sc ·approved a ntt'.lnitoring syste m for the eJcavation project.!, to make sure lht: requirement& arr: carried cut. · • as .she was dragged into the: cold, black depths . One other diver suffered the bends and partial para,lysis Monday whilt: re-surfac- ing after a 130-foot abalone dive cff the island. Office Burglar Takes Copier A burglar who entered an office 1 buil,ding through an unlocked window over the weekend rntde off with businesg equipment valued IL '7,450, Laguna Bt:ach police report. A XerO'I' copyin1 machine worth $5,500 . was arno.ng the items removed from five desks -in a thrte-room office suite oe. cupled by Desert MinerAl.5 Inc. at 11111 S. Coast Highway. Also listed as missing were three typewriters, an addin1 machine and two dictaphones. police said. The bur11ary was discovered Monday morning by ·1n t:mpk>ye: of the firm who said the offices hid been closed since 5 p.nf. Frida)'. Police said U,e bµrglar apparenUy entered by sliding open_ a window in the tur of the two-atory b_uildl ng., 0r .... In the wake of continuing delays at the civic center sile, Evans and other com· munity leaders have thrown their support recently to a Chapman General Hospital. The Chapman group Is seeking a switch in endorsement by the Orange County Health Planning ASM>Clation. T h e associallon had Initially backed the DeCinces group. Planne .. s Deny Reqites·-, lt'Ndler 'Mloae ht;it desert winds wlll warm tbingl!,up along the Ora np Coast tonight, but should cool off by Wednesday. Look for tt:mpe:i'a· titres up to n along the-be.Che• and 93 in the le.ss' temperate in- land regions. 2oih Centur.,y .Fo~ .Nixed in Lag una Locat ion -8ite · Police men Guilty In Sex Orgy By BARBARA. KREIBICH °' -...,. """ ..... A loc1lkm manager for :a.Ith Century Fox F-ilms Monday night hea!'d the Laguna Beach Planning CommlsslOn FREEHOLD. N.J. CUPJ) -SiJ ot deny his request to use the Cliff Orl'fe- seven Long Branch police. accused or con-Marl~ Driv_e trlanaJe_Jor storaae of ducting an orgy with tht: ·tt:en-aged equipment and feedin'g of cast and crew daughter of &n area ministr:r pleaded during sh00Un1 ol a felture film Oct.1 7· guilty Monday to rr:duced char1es. Nov. 6. The six originally were charged trith Request (or uae of the VICIOt prope§1.Y , ~~:~: ;:~~ ca'n.Jm ~· ~=onm:!0~1 :; =!: ~~~=:~ 1 tributing to the-llr:llnquency of 11 minor. Gene Fk>ramcnte, who ls Mltin1 up • Jniite•d , they admitted to misconduct in shooting xhedule for tM film "M1rritfc office. --. --.of a Younc stocktnktrn whk:h will Monmouth Coon~y Judie-Pa lr lck J. feature a number of teener at Shaw's McGann will ~nle• I.hem Oct. XI. They C.Ove. Alter lhe meeting a bemused special fire precaul.ions,.adequa'"te ~ltl~ Fioramonte commented, "Why we film in lion apd posti.ng of a damqe bond would e:Jpenaive.resldenU1I arw lib Bel Air be requ ired by the city. . all . thr: time: -• · in Paris ~y r:ven open Jlm Kerins, 1137 Merine ~lvt:, a J4. up the Lou~e f~r Ult. . . . . ye&r resident,' noted that pr,QperUes in Ult :·rhe Roucl Hunt fJ/ the Sun" · At that _wne. ~t twas decided that pr~ area are valued it '2'.000 a front foot .ml ·at the Laguna Moulton Ptav- perty oner& an the rukleolial ~said he...did,not f~J_the r'esidenLs •lhould houie ~adl off a heavy Wf!•k of ·•.IJ<mld !JO advised o1 Iii< requ, .. t. , ho subjecled. to '"• )ot q1 wllels plltil up ltvinrthraur on th• Omngc Pifty-seven ·notices were st:nt out, Uk amf• lnfd coolt'1n~·g'oing·on." ' Coa.si tO"liQht. Ste EJt&tr-taln· commiuion_ was ad.vised. Five letters of Kerlna noted thit In 28 years 111 a Us mt-ht,'7'C0'1 -f9: INSWB TOD.4.Y Jr'Of,~t •l\d two oral prot.e5t.s were-hear.d -Ang!lea pal~1n he had obleryed ft'ln'y ca• • 1l MOndaj!1 meeting. 'movle11oc11flon1 and ''I koow what I rnfu <--. ""' • F:our Marine Drive resldent..s wrote to Uie.y make." .. • -~ ·~ proleit Use of. the' lot ~Y-the fihn com· ' Fioramonte 11ld \he spaee, about one:-c._.. u pan)' under ·any circumstanct&. Dr.--'third of the lot, would be used for star•le ~ =-Mifteft ; "NOi'rrian_Nlloa. 1• Mlrine Drivt.. ex-'of carne:r1 ~ gnd_t~~qa _ ~:=':".::: ,; .pressed the view that makl'nc of a..fllm in equipment, paissencer cara and possibly 1 ,__ ; .. 11 Laguna Be-.ch Cf)Uld be 11! "tnterestlng bus. , ::.-:::.,.. ;: -. -.. ..,....., ..... It ................ --. S'lffta 1'w1W II ._. l .. UI ........... ,,11 -.. -" -. ........ ....... u.u ..... ..... " i face a m11lmum penalty ol thrtt yur1 The volt to deny use of the trian&I• In jall end 1 •t,000 nne. -w•• un1nlmou1. ~ ind co"'tnx:tlve" e•perlence •• but soulh,l l'OOCI woUld be pre.pa:ttd ' ai anothtr ~ ue-.' ....,..111¢1 _UJot ff.hour poU~ c:ovorlli~· !Set lllOVIU~1'1 ... U _ ,-'-------------' I • I ~ . I - I DAILY PILOT SC Panel By RICHARD P. NALL .... ...,,......, '1111 Su cio-te Paru ud Reciu· Uon Commillion Monday was unanimo1:!s in its vote aaainst spUUlng equally wilh Capistrano Unified School District the SI50,000 cost of a new swimming pool. C.Ommission discussion of the problem Jeferred to It by tbe.City COuncll seemed to leave lhe door open for some di!fer~t ~ sharing formqla . .t· Said Commissioner Donna Wilkinson. •\fho signed the ptuuoii for a lllgh school '),oot, "I cannot su why the city should pey ball the cost for • pool In the second ~rcest school distric( (ln arei.) In 'J:t)ifornla. "1 could not in &ood conscience rec:om· ~ Jn Liberty Pair _Reje Cts mend J>IYinl ..,. hall the COii of a dlltrlcl pool. I think the clly for SIS.GOO couldt.ilurbllh Us (lllUllldpal) P""1 or build II• own.• ,,,. llChool. which had be<D Jlven pool potltlons •I&ned by more then 1,000 persons, suggested the city split the cost and tbe district would maintain the pool. It was estimated this would cost the district $25,000 annually. 1)e city main· talns the municipal pool for about $15,000 annually, about '6,000 of which. is recovered in revenue from pool use. The City Council referred the matter ta the commission for a recommendation, although the recommendation ls. not bin- ding on the council. Commisaiotl.er Ellie Mears &aid, "l El Toro Area reaU. we -a ,_ pool. II would be loolilb to put ....... -Into the clt)' pool • ' »t rhlnk tllert -d be I jotlll vtnture but the percentages are wrong .•. maybe one.thlrd (from the city). That's' Just an initial feeling." Mrs. Ron Wilson. 220 Allegre, represen- ting the San Clemente Aquatic Associa- tion, said that"children-must be taken to Camp Pendleton in the summer for com- petitive swimming because of the de- mand for the municipal pool. She said action should be taken before the munkipil pool, built in 1930, bas to be written off. "It's not going tg~ last too much longer," she predicted. Mrs. Wilkinson Pld the school district I ,·Cost Split rllllll out to the Mlislon VlejQ and El Toro areas and coven Dana Point and San J ... Caplllraao. She lllld a pool at the hiCh school would -be la(iely for the uae of atudenU at the hJgh IChool @nee water polo practice begins in September and use is con- tinuous through the school year. Commission Cha'irman Jac!C Berges said fie Ufot&Jht a JX>c)I at Theli'igh schOOI would be uSed tO percent by the high school. Commilsionet DuWayne Lidke, said. "the city has to reserve some time for the populace. There could be a con- flict in the two types of utilization." Mrs. Meal'I said, "I would like to know wblt the scbool district does with the lG- ceiit tu that ia supposed to go to the commun.lty service fund .• It Is lost alon& the ·way 10J11ewhere, It doesll'I benefil lb< city recrealioft.wlle." She said the school district ts using eight-quonset huts for classrooms and talking about a $150,000 pool. She noted also that the school district had provided all the swimming lessons "for us." Mrs. Wilson said because of the depth of the old municipal pool, no Instruction is offered tc children uoder the age or first graders. She said that 60 percent of the national drownings are children not yet in first grade and spoke ef the pro- liferation-of home pools alld need for swimming instruction for tots. Berges suggest.ed that small park poo!Ji ranginc in depth frQm two to four feet Pol~e Probing • Pool" • are needed and would be cheaper to COD· IU'Uct. • Arllfl Watennla, City director ol public works, said the cost of a 1wimming pool at Mission Viejo Hieb school was about 1135,000, He said of the municipal pool , "I don't agree that it's in such bad shape. The filter d~igned to last 15 years has gQM 40 but it's still going. I Lhink it's a great pool myself.'' Mrs. Wilkinson said she felt If the school di strict made better use of com· munlty service funds it would have the money for a pool and mentioned $225,000 spent on a football stadium in the past. The commission turned thumbs down on a ~I spilt. ~~ ~raign~nt ]lated Toda)· '-"· - Special to the DAILY ,PILOT SAN DIEGO -Candlelight Killer -'.&bert.W. Liberty and the woman he wed County ~o Hear Z-one Cli-anges --- 10-cent HoWup M etins 3 Years LITILE ROCK, Art. (AP) -A three-year prison sentence against a teen-age bOy for a 10-cent rob- --bery-was alfirmed Monday .by the- Arkansu Supreme Coiirt. William Young-Radcliff of Lillie Rock, who was 17 when the robbery occurred last year, had appealed .his conviction from Pulaski County Circuit Court. Dynamite Found -Neai:-Cal State in a Colorado jail were scheduled for ar- nraignment today in San Diego County ,_6uperior Court on murder charge!!. tn 1'le former Westminster man and his .-bride, Kendall A. Llberty, were e1- •ttadited from Colorado Sj)rings last :;Saturday and pleaded innocent tc the murder counts Monday in municipal court. Liberty and his wife, both 24. are ac- . cused of the June. 7 torture·slaying of e:;R.obert J. Irion, 53, in his San Diego apartment during a Cali lorn i a.to. Colorado crime spree. , The victim -burniJlg candles flicker· lng beside his mutilated body -knew Liberty When both ~ere patients at Atascadero_ Slate :H:ospital for the criminally insane four years ago. __. Liberty, who also faces a Huntington .. Beach murder charge, was declared in· sane following the 1986 candlelight killing ~.of the woman with whom he lived in .·,,Westminster. •· A 17-year-old Long Beach boy is the ;'key San Diego prosecution witness and he .. •aueged!y watc~ Irion's murder .after ~being forced to drive a young man and woman to San Diego. • Liberty's family told police they were .. also held hostage in their Westminster '"home earlier on the day Irion was ·;1otain, wJi.lle the young fromer mental pa- ~ bent . allegedly waited to kill his gtep- • father. He is charged with murder and fiight lo ~avoid prosecution in connection with the March 11 .shoot.Ing death of a former ~roommate, Thomas Astcrina, 25, in Hun- 'tinglon Beach. Liberty was released from Alascadero : Slate Hospital on Sept. 15, 1969 alter six • court-aJ!P<linted psychiatrists agreed he • had regained his sanity and he bas never A aeries or proposed :.one cha.nae.a ln the El Toro area will be COMidered, again by the Orange County Board of Supervisors Wednesday. The board last week approved three chances but deferrtd action on seven others because of opposition regiatered by a 'homeowners group. George Hammond, chainnan of the Aliso Homeowners Auoclation, charged that the propoaed rezones amount tc a .. drasti~ change" in the El Toro general plan. diafted in 1961. "If you approve these changes they will .approximately triple the population density of El Toro as outlined in the general plan," Hammond contended . The 1961 general plan· predicted an eventual maximwn pOpulation of 35,000, he •rgued. 'Mle .revised plan, which Is being 1hepherded through the supervisors by the county planning department, would show a population of 90,000, the homeQwners leader charged. Wednesday the debated seven will be up for further argument. Three of the seven were the specific targets of Hammond last week. They would have • taken 90 acres out of agricu1tural zones and into high density residential categories. Applicants for the changes are Thomas Hall, owner of S3 acres located north and east of El Toro · and Trabuco roads: Trans Columbia Jnvestments, owneni of 11.S acres at Secon~and Cherry streets; and Richard Beanilsh and Ron Diggins, own~rs ·of 15 acres at Lemon and Front streets. • liel'Ved .any ~rison time. Orange i:ouiity S-U]ierlor court Judge-Ne·.,.-V1"e1' 0 Plant-... Robert Gardner reluctantly signed the • •T .,.order freeing Liberty, who last June pl••ded i •• o c e "t by r"'°" or in· May Be Pollutm· g saruty to kidnapmg, robbery and a~ault :ln Colorado. He and the redhead he later married. C k t Ali 'plus a 17-year-old Oklahoma runaway ree 8 SO were captured outside ·eo1orado Springs following a high-speed chase and gunfighl with a lone city detective. :8 Reported Missing 900 Feet Down Mine MANILA (AP) -Eight miners were reported missing today after a mudslide sealed off an auxiliary lunnel aboul 900 feet underground at a copper mine in Tolodo , Cebu .. A: company spokesman said rescue ·teams were trying to rea ch the miners in an auxiliary tuMel running off a main tunnel. He said live men were believed tripped al 1bout 935 feel and three more were believed to If! at 875 feet. DAILY PILOT llobort N, Weed '"'llMM .,.. "'WI'•'*' Jeck l . Cu,fey VICI ~tJ:-t ..... '-t'•I MtNttt lh1111 1t Kee•!I •4Uw 1\0,..•1 A. Mor,hi~• M .... lftl ltl• l lclter4 '· N•JI '°"'" o....,. (OUlll' Eallor ....... Closll Mar. Jlt WCI! I•• l tr•I "'"""'I •11cfl: 1711 WHI •tloo! NulfW,., L~ IMdll Jtl l'-1 Avlflllt "411111"'91"" IN(!I; V•1' at1t~ •Ntov•rf 1t11 ci-11: -.S Ntll'ttl E1 Ct"'IN 11 .. 1 Mission Viejo's Burroughs pla nt may be in danger of polluting Aliso Creek. That's the opinion of the staff of the California Regional Water Quality Con· trol Board for the San Diego Region, which recommended correction of the problem•. During a meeting Monday in San Juan Capistrano the board voted unanimously lo prohibit Burroughs from discharging effluent into the Aliso watershed since the Moulton-Niguel Water District has provided a community sewer which can accommodate the discharge. Ken Ivansen. representing the Bur- roul[hs plant, stated that the company would be agreeable to the proposal. The plant "is proposing to discharge 72.000 gallons per day of cooling water . brines which contain approximately 1$00 parts per million of total disolved solids. The resolution proposes to protect the ground and surface waters of the Aliso arft for present and future beneficial uses which include, but are not limited to, stock watering ind agricultural purposes. It also prevents nuisances outlined in the Cllifornia Water Code. FNM rage 1 JORDAN ... dispatches said President NiJ:on had not yet decided on a course of action. Israeli dispatches wert subjected to -in· te.nse mUltary censorship, but reports reached London of largescale tank movements: Monday night and again to. d~y. The reporb said it was uncertain whether they wtre deploying for pouible 1cUon in Jordan. UPl corrcspo~ent Ohad Gozani . from Uie seashore retort of Tlberias on the Sea or Calijce, could r<par1 only lhlt d"'' w.1lv •ii.Or,"""" ••lol "~ ·""' clouJ· ris·ll\" ·on the east bank or "e ............ Iii "91"11H fllly --..__ UOJ "0 Ut ~ .. , 111 _,.., .. ,r,_ -L.....,. ~"'· Jordan River n\ltked the ins.sage of ...... , hecl'I, C"" M-. "\1111""10~ --.i "'• ,_ • .,, "'"''· ·•~ •• 1111 -Jordanian anny convo~s rolling JOUth. ""'°"1 "''"'"'''· °'-'" c.,,, ~-"" Oo Monday, 0 •• Jord1.n.ian armv had c;......,... ... """"1 ,i1M• ... at DI! ... . UI.:; ~-~ ••111111 •rvt .. ,,.""""' ~ .,.,,, • ""'' moved northward. to JrbMI, Jordan 1 ~ a.,·'""'· Ch1e MtM. cond city nestled In Z,000 foot mountains- ,.....,.... J11.41 '41 ... J.ll 4S miles north ot Amman and only 18 cs .. ~ .,,..,01111 '41·"71 miles east of UM:: ctase-fire line. s. c· •• •• ...,.., '0 111 Meanwhile, Arab leaden met In .t1r.,a1ss ~'!-,:::;:::;::-·1-,._,,,mergency -eeseton-today to seek way1 C:..,.,..t, '"" Or•• CM•I ""*1"'/llf d •• j J •·' ••• thr of ••• ~. ,.. .... 1 1tor~ 111'1>""-en u1e war n unian. wwl ee uJC 1•ilw .. 1 -'-': •. •<Mr!~· 11"'1" key llgutes w_ere misting and the :'.!-.K., -=:. .;::.,~· ..-1ei ,.,. 811ghdad-bascd guerrilla radio .-told the ,._. ~i.1r""'"" ..if..-.• •-1 ••-"' olhers "to so back to )'.OUt~lactll •r• C." IMtA, C..I ........ "'9Kr"-'i. 9' 1.aa-1 th ,.,..,.., u.• .....,,.,.,, w -'* N • -"'"' ~use YoU ••• DO ou1u e e ,,,._,., ..._..,,.. "-" fMmlltr. decisions.'" • They have some arguments on the other side of the question. . Hall told the supervisors. ''We just sit here paying taxes. We have waited 14 month! for a decision and these delays are costing us money." Further complicating the picture is a lawsuit filed by the Aliso homeowner1 group to block general plan changes. "It is immaterial of what value the thing tali:en' is," the high court said. "A peMy as well as a pound thus forcibl y extorted ma kes it rob- bery." Radcliff allegedly took the dime 1t gunpoint from another youth after a high ~chool football game. By GEORGE LEIDAL Of 1M Deity l"Uot lflll Discovery of 84 stick:!! or dynamite in a field near Cal State Fullerton is leading police today tb believe radicals may now fa vor bombing over confrontation. though we enrolled more than 14.000 stud ents -an increase of more lhan 1,000 over last year.'' Strategic areas of the campus are not guarded and it i:i not likely Fullerton Polief: will be called to provide bomb threat protection. •·It i s the state's responsibility to guard the campus," the !pokes man said. Ficker Ahead-Slightly As Weather Deteriorates , Capt. Fred King, Fullerton police liaison to CSF told the DAILY PILOT, "It seems evident that the acuvists are turning tc the hit-and-run tactic and will be bombing buildings rather than engag- ing in confrontations with police this year.'' King 's men ar~ invesligating the disoovery of "low grade" dynamite buried last Wednesday "by twn Jong- haired young people" who King said were observed by a transient. CSF has received no bomb threats this year but experienced several last year. One bomb threat, to a newspaper. Jed to the April 27 discovery of seven sticks of dyn amite in a men's washroom i_n a corridor near the president's office. Dr. L. Donald Shields, CSF vice presi~ dent, said the latest find could "presage a series of guerrilla tactics ahead for us this year, or, it could be harassment, or even subterfu ge." Special to the DAILY PILOT NEWPORT. R.I. -Newport Beach skipper Bill Ficker aboard Intrepid held tn a slight lead over Australia's Gretel II at the fourth mark today as weather began to deteriorate in the third America 's Cup race. The yachts were raci ng in a deepening fog with the visibility Jess than one mile. At the third mark, Ficker and his American defender had increased her lead to 56 seconds and was about 250 yards ahead of the challenging Aussie boat. There was very litUe action. . Winds remained southwesterly at around 12 knots. Intrepid led at the first of si1 marks by 46 seconds, or about six boat lengths. Gretel JI had taken a five-length lead at -the 'start but after 18 minutes fell behind . The race got under way promptly al 9:10 a.m. (POT). Wind! at the-start-were from the southwest at 15 knots, a condition con· sidered by the experts as favorable Lo Intrepid , the American defender in the best-of-seven race series. Visibility was about two miles in haze From Page 1 MOVIES ..• ·· location, he said, and 'brought to the site in enclosed vans lo be served to the cast and crew. Mobile toilet fa cilities in trailers would be provided . He estimated a crew of about 70 persons and a cast of SO lo 60 would be working on the film , from 7 a.m. to dark the fi rst week, from later in the morni ng unt il about 10 p.m. the second week and sgain jn the daytime the third week. Actual shooting would take about 12 days, Fioramonte said. Commissioner Car l John!on wondered If the public would be denied access to the beach at Shaw's Cove during filming . F'ioramonte replied, "As in any film ing we would try to have only the people in the scene on the beach during shooting, but onlookers are always welcome." He said security and fire precautions would be undertaken by the company. Johnson said it sounded like a good deal or disturbance for the city and property owners with little to show in return. Fioramonte said the company would ''t,Y not to be a nuisance." He noted that It has been getting Increasingly difficult to make pic tures In Southern California. but some states, notably New Mexico. gn out of thei r way to attract !llm com- panies, feeling the publicity is to their ad- vantage. Commissioner James Schmlt;r, said he felt granling of the permit would be "opening a whole can of worms in a residential zone." The prese~ of more than 100 people. he said,' could be "a tremendous distu rbance." Schmit:i sald he thought use of the beach was fine but 1uggested the company Und someth ing other than "the heart of a R·l zone" for 1tora1e and feeding the ~rtw. Cha irman William Lambourne con. eluded, "I reel It 11 not in the btst in· terest of the community to di$rupt thfl ' retidenu of the area In this manner -it would only be a detriment to the area." Bomb Threat Arrest PORTLAND. Ore. (Ul'I) -The FBI .. has 1m1ttd a 29-yu~-old W~t German auto mechanic and charied hlm with Ole ransom bomb threat against a Western AJrUne1 ,Jet last ·Jllonffi. TM su..pect wai ldtotllie<l by the FBI Monday @< Goe~ Toni Johannes S-plewok, a clttzen of West. Germany. and light fog. Both yachts stayed well clear of each .o~her at the gun to avoid any repetition of the protests that have marred the two previous races. Intrepid, the United States defender, has a 2 to 0 lead in the series. 'Ille two boats were about 100 yards over the line and Gretel II appeared to have moved a little ahead into a 12·1~ knot southwesterly.- Normal Man Kept In Slate Hospital First 31 Years ,\ . RENO' (UPI) --A-clinicaJ-psychologlst at the Ne.vada State Hospital bas reveal- ed how a man with normal intelligence was kept in ment~I institutions for the first 3l years of his life. Dr. Robert McQueen. who ill also a University of Nevada-Reno professor, said the man's case came to light when he was transferred to the Nevada State Hospital about 10 years ago from an out- of-state pri vate institution which was going out of business. The details were revealed by f.1cQueen in the Sept. 12 issue of Saturday Review. The man's unwed mother became preg. nant as a young girl. and then was asked by another man -the son of a banker - to marry her. In an effort to keep the birth of the child from him, she went tn have the baby delivered by a doctor she had heard of. · The unn amed transient watched as the two hippie-types pulled tip in a camper van buried a package in the drainage ditch south west of the intersection of State College Boulevard and Yorba Linda Avenue. On the transient"s tip, Fullerton police unearthed the dynamite from the site across the street from a campus parking lot. King said his men are che c k i ng leads from a northern Ca liforn i a 11ewspaper in which the dynamite was wrapped and searching the county for the vehicle.- Campus officials were reluctant to comment on the dynamite find since "i t would be an acknowledgement of the possibility they were intended for use on the campus." a spokesman said. That possibility hasn't yet been determined. Admitting that the college buildings are vulnerable to dynamiting, the spokesman noted the sec urity force for the campus had not been increased this year •·even Man, 71, Arrested On Morals Rap A 71-year-old San Clement.e man was arres~d Monday on morals charges in- volving children under the age of 14. 'l'he suspect, Donald Buckley, of 1402 Calle Toledo wa s arres~d on a warrant. He is accused of five separate co'unts of lewd and lascivious conduct that detec- tives said span a pe riod or a year. Buckley, who police said is married and a retired technician, was to be arraigned In municipal court today. Bail has been set at $12.500. Det. Ardon Saunders, who with Sgt. Frank Yerger invilltigated the cases, said th ey involve three separate children and different dates. SERVICE • • • "At this time," King said. "proximity tc the campus is the only link between the dynamite and CSF. "However, we have no doubt that there are students at Ca l Slate of the type who might resort to bombing buildings. So the dynamite likely will prove to have some affiliation with a campus group." King noted the dynamite found was of the type used by farmers to blast slumps. "If someone wanted to destroy a building ." King said, "they'd probably use a higher grade explosive." CSF was wracked with pol_jce-student confrontations last spring following a Feb. 9 appearance of Gov. Ronald Reagan on the campus. Bras Touch Off Battle in Store A petite·Garden"GroveW"OmaniccusecJ or trying to turn in four Cross You r Heart brand brassieres for $32 she never paid for them fought off a pair of Costa Mesa store security g{Jards Monday night. White Front security men RotM!rt Bearden and Joseph Elmore confronted the alleged shoplifter in the store at 3088 Bristol St.. during the exchange. "She immediftely began flailing her arms:" said Bt!tective George Webster, adding that Bearden and Elmore backed off out of r~nge but rinally seb:ed the allegedly stolen lingerie. "The bras in conflict were placed in evidence," added Detective Webster , who said investigation continues today to determine whether the woman will be ar- rested. How-much is it worth? In the carpet Dusine1s sometimes its worth EVERYTHING! Hardly a day goe• by that wa don't get a call regarding another company's poor in1tana. ti on. Occasionally the damage resufting from poor~ sewn seems or taped seams is not repa ir· able. Then the value of the investmant looks pe la indeadl Why pay $300.00 or $1500.00 for carpeting and gamble with the instelletion7 We mainte in all of our own crews , ell taught the ONLY wey to in•tall carpetin g -the 'RIGHT way! The greatest majority of our business is raferral. · There is a r-.sonl .aANJAAMA.~1 TVITIN c:.11,,, -~lOIN'I - llD HILL CAI"" It DU.NllU CARPETS DRAPES 1663 Placelltla Av•. • COSTA MESA 646°4838 I _j 1 IJ74 '"'-· , ...... c.Rf. ua.2144 i I r ,] - ,_ kltwm 1t1r "' ~~. Wittler ltll • ··~ $1:11 • Sunrl't .. ~. ...... ,,_ roleftt, "''" AM.' .,,,. \ ...... .. ~. ,_ Mu/lltr knrl\ M. '' 1l1ttn Vllll• wll[ a (ft;J1t "'"'" """" Lyle " ·~· Co Co 11 N r J : .... t . . ...... ' - • T11ndQ', Stpttmbtr 22, 141170 ollL Y PILOT 8 UC Papers May Sue Regents '· REACT Unit For the Record ----------UniPress to Research School News.paper Dos ana Don'ts Host -Fe.ed At SAP~ ARBUCllE ~ SON Wait.cliff Mortu1r1 err E. 171b 8l, Cotta M,.. -• BALTZ MORTUARIES °"""" del Mar OR Ml• Colla Mesa Ml f.1411 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 Brtadny, Costa Mea U"3m Marriage Licenses Would removing 99% of the pollen , in the air help your allergy? Ailc ___ oHooty• wel Eoctroolc Air c-... It ,.,..... .. up to ts•J. of .. "• .,....... lrrltefth p • I ' I • • lhr0uth. Pollens, househo ld dust , smoke- • Honeywell Electronic A i r Cleaner catc.h~1 all kinds of it· ritants. All si1•1, too. In feet, it traps particl1s 10 smell it would tak• 7000 of them to stretch •cross th i1 dot I.II • McCORMICK LAGUNA .a-+.-_,,· eMlll-MORTUAll¥'----lil---- A Honeywell Air Cl14in•r is no ------~•mrl~tl.r?jtl"r;-'Dat Clli ki-r---1715 'Lapla Canyo. Rd. --• PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARll C<m_, e Morlalt1 aee Pad~~-Drive Newport ileoeb. Ctlllonla -• tories have shown it doa1 pro· .,.;4, relief. T elk to your doctor about it. Thin, talk to u1. 'HE HTIMATIS-NO OILl•ATION TO PUlCHASI ax:s~~-1-P-ACIEICJIEAJING CO.~ w .. 11111J1ottr -AIR CONDmONING SPECIALISTS • SREFFER MORTUARY Coll Us foi Prompt Service •11d Repelr Workme~Close Chapman Ave. Chapman Avenue between Crawford Canyon Road and Santiago Canyon Road has been closed to traffic unlil next January. The road has been closed to reconstruct and widen lhal portion of Chapman Avenue. Motorists traveling to lrvhl e Park. are advised to take an alternate' route. SANTA ANA ~--'tbe-Radio Emergency AcUvated .. Citiuns Team (REACT) of Orange County will hoJd its aMual pancake brtakfut Oct. 1 l from I a.m. to 1 p.m. at Memorial Park in Santa Ana. REACT Is a national organiiatlon sponsored b y General Moton R e s e a r c h Laboratories to p r o m o t e highway safety through the use of two-way citluns band radios. _ The pancake breakfast is held annually to raise funda to help support REACT ac- tivities. REACT provides com· munication services for the Soap Box Derby, the Costa Mesa Fish Fry, the tops and Cowboys Horse Show and other commun ity events. Cost of the preakfast Ls $1 per person. Enjoy the thrill " of an Old.Faohioned LogRide- Knott's newe1t attraction. It's Exciting? HAMS • • . So Good It Wiii Haunt You 'Til It's Gone" Our lltm1 ar• It>• lln•1I corn-lld low1 PClrktri -Our llow ll•t" curi ng nw!hod, rul WIKon1!n hlck0<y trod •ppltwood 1molcl"11 I. :JO.. l'IOur ov"' twikll\O l'IOnly 'n 1plc1 9111• ••• u"IQlil In •II Ille -1c1. So c1111c~ '"" •~!ltl"ll -lu1t wouldn't know flew fo lmpn1 .... 11111 prlldu<:I -·v1 bffn m1~1"' tw .M vur1. Splrtl 1lktd foe, lrDrn top to bo!tolft IO 11111 H tll clt1KllDll ..... 11orm Ille• CIA DI fl!N\'111 Hlorlltu.ly. Carnpltl•IV bf;ktod lf'lll •HclY '° Ml'\ll'· Onl•r 'fOUI" .._... •1kld Kim tocllJ", tnd tclV9!11Ur, In hltn-joyl'rlifril ....... ti M-fol"ftl, N (Funds invested by October 15th earn from October 1st.) % with quarterly lnte1'81t action No long-term requirements. $5.000 Full-Paid l"'9Stment Certlflcatas earn 6" per year, ~ check at the end of eech -quarter on -held lo end of qumler. with dally Int_. ectlon Paid on any amount. Pmbook'lllftft-.. Offtrt""'°""t"'"'5~" per-flomd8yin<lll9i:I to day wlthclrftn. lnlellll CNCllled ...i compoand9d quarterty. Plus 54 Yurs of Sound Management A hatt century of p.-. management e..,.,-. a perfoct record of regular lnlt111111 peymenll, -In exceao of $150 million, and tho protoctlYe Hquldlty of ahort-lenn loona-all combine to Mfeguard your flmdo. Morris Plan 80 OFFICES TMROUGHOUT CALIFORNIA For intereat whh acUon, phone or v/511 your Morr /a ·Plan office: ....... -~ 111-1111 luO -· • --1.A.•llllA-.-Cll U•llNA HR.U=NJ0·---11--1-~~ Nowpotl I 1th -J700 Nowporl llvi ~ 67l·l700 SMm"'' WI RTUARY 117 Malo It. Raadqlao---494.9745 837·2000 . _ga_s air· conditi~nlng_ 2171 L11•11 c.p. Riii. -~···· .... ~ . -· . . . 1 I • . • I ! -.: • • • { { • • ! ' ; • t I • ... I ' l I , • JO DAILY !'!LOT SC Tuesday, SrpttmMr 22, 1970"" V our "/tloney's Worth Monday Holiday T1·ip Boon OVER THE COUNTER By SYLVIA PORTER Ill only 100 days from now Llk ' Monday Holiday law 11, ill finally go Into effect 1n the US And then Wuhlngton s birthday will fall on the third Monday Jn February -or on Feb 15th m lj?l tnstead of the %Znd and thus this v.1Il btcome a three day "'eekend m1n1 vae:allon ~femor1al Day will fall not on ~fay 30 but on May 31 the 1ast Mond•y In May -and this too will bt 1 three-day m1n1 vacation Columbus Day y,1\1 not only become a national holiday for the first time but 1t will be celebrated on the second Mon- day m October or Oct 11th instead of the 12th Veterans Day will in 1971 fall on Oct 23tll the fourth htonday in October instead or the traditional Nov 11th And Labor Day of course will be as always the f1rsl Monday In September or the 6th and part of a three-day holiday As a result you the vast ma1or1ty or U S employes will get a guaranteed m1n1mum of five three day \\eekends next year In 71 Christmas will fall on a Saturday and Independence Day July 4th will fall on a Sunday But tn view of the 1m portance of these holidays and the relentleM hberahzat1on of employers lime-off policies m1lhons of employes will get one or two Jong weekends sur Two Men Join Newport Firm Two Orange Coast residents have JOtned the Newport Beach firm of Grubb and Ellis Kent Doohttle of South Laguna and H Scott t11cCartney Ill of Huntington Beach have both taken posts with the regional real estate firm Doohtlle ts an 1ndustr1al spec1ahst and has spent 15 \ears 1s aerospace marketmg management McCartney will co v e r Orange County for the companv s ne\\ ly expanded retail department w h 1 c h handles all real estate needs of retail companies a n d shopping center developers LEGAL NOTICE """ C!•Tll'ICATE 01' •vtlN115l l'ICTITIOUI NAME Tl'.t 1111der$'9ned do cert fl' ht Is con dox l.,. 1 bu1lfltn 11 llll $0 Br 1lol Un I Ill CCII/I MtSI C1 llorn I lllldt Ille Ile Ill 0111 firm tilmt DI' ART .-.LA CARTf 1nd 11111 11ld llrm 11 comt>Oted DI' ht IDtlowln1 HrtOl'll,. .. ...,.. l'Mll'lltl I" tu Ind 11!1ct~ of '" Clt"ce II II "' .,.... Gtr11d 1..ICldllrCI 111 VI Ou o N9WllO•I &tech C1 ~o nl• • , ,., J1tkion 101 VII D Ion NewPO llle1ch Cl lo ni1 Oiled Sl'l>ltmber u 1"0 RUtY Jackson Ger11d Uctcli.rd Sl1t1 of C1!1lciml1 O•l"tt Coun"' On Ste! ll lt'IO btlore me 1 NDl•rv ~ubl c 111 1nd fOf 511Cl St1t1 H r:iontllv 11>H1red' Gffl1d l..ldd 1 d 11'111 RI f"I' J1d r.""' k"°"'" to> mt lo bt thf' o>e to"' "'""" n1mt! 1 e 1ub1c• bto<I 1<1 th• within '" trum1nl elld ect now 1110td !hfY ex f'CU "Cl lh1 1a~ !OFFIC Al.. SEALl Mll'V I( Mf'n v Ne!•l'V Pubt c -(1 lo "• P 11(1011 OlllCI ~ O '""' Cou11 v Mv Ctmml'11on E11> " Nov !• nn Fublhhtd OrtllOI CH !I D• v P lo s .. tmbt u n ?t 1no o ctot>t 6 1910 Uff.70 LEGAL NOTICE ..... !1'J NOTICE TO Clt:DITOIS St.IPEllOI COU•T 01' THI! $TATE 01' C41..1,0RNIA FOi TNS COUNTY OF O•ANGE NI ...... ,. 1!11111 Gt AUGUSTA K WEDGE Deo;111ff NOTICE 1$ HE•l!llY G VEN to I'll crtd lo.., DI tl>t 1b0~ ri11nt<I Cleo:tdtnt 11111 1 1111rson1 h1v no cl1frn1 1111n,1 hf 111<! llKtoenl 1rt rtQulrld lo ! 1 l\em "' 111 thf n1K..U.rY vovcM<"S In tht o!llc t el 1119 clerk of ltlt lb0¥f imtlt tel c<ll,lrl Of 111 ,,,Hftf 11'.tm w 111 Ille fltCfil<I v "'OUCht I I lllt urtOertilf"" II !flt otllct ol !htr •II~ COOKSEY SCHUMACHER CO\.EMAN MINYAIO 11'111 HOWARD lSS Tciwn 1nd COltllll'l' Rotd Or11191 C.1lllortill '2"9 which k '"' 11l1ce 111 bllJ ""''el 1111 undeu1pllftl " 111 me!lw1 H 111n 119 kl ''"' ••It t ol 1e Cl llKldlnl with n lour mo<1 ht 11ter he r 11 r>11b!le111o" cl 11111 ftOllc• 011~ A1111111t 2t 1'10 F nt N1tloMI lltn• tf Ori"" CounlY llv MlcllMt P 01~l111f AU 111111 Tr\ltl Oflktr E1.ttutor el Ille W II ti 1"9 I~ M!Md d9cftl"" COO«SllY SCcNUMACNllllt COLIMAN MINTA•O IMI NOWA•O 11l T .... llMI Cwnlt'Y lul Or•!lll CalllHlllt tU&ll Ttl M7.J1'1 A19-n ltt' E•MlllH Publl$hN Or1nt1 Cetf! DI ' P let l•ttrnbitr 1 L u " ""' nut I'll LEGAL ~OTICE rounding these holidays as \\CIJ Add the poss1b1hty Of 1 four day Thanksgiving weekend and you have a total or tight long weekends ne1t year And on top ot all thl!I some com panles create more long "tekends by g1v1ng emptoyes as hclldays the Monday arter Easter Sunday Good Friday Christmas eve New Year s Eve and floating holidays as well Technically the new law a~ phes only to U S Government employes but the states have scrambled Lo conform and all but a handrul have passed Monday holiday laws 1n the past two years Although for years the J\.1on- day holiday proposal was de- nounced by cr1bcs a s socialist propaganda ' the overwhelming maJ9rlly o f employes and employers now favor 1t -on the ground!! that dangling mid week holidays sharply reduce productivity on the days before and after the hohday - What will this mean lo our economy 1n general and in d1v1dual indu s trie s 1n parbcular" It surely will be a powerful stimulus to the $40 btlhon-plus travel industry since you can go to a lot more places 1n three days lhan 1n two Simply turning Washington s birthday into a three-day weekend will mean add1llonal m1lhons of dollars to the skt industry It w1U be an enormous boost lo the enll re $150 billion Jr.1surt indust ry -and head 11 straight for an unparalleled l250 b1U1on by 1971 Today the leisute Industry spans services ranging lrom hotels motels and restaurants !fl: J&:.~n:'fJ ,::G°"""~ to re s orts cru1&t.s fr>d, 1'=:.11H~D·~~...,, campgrounds and horse races 1/tH·~tt=~~mc! ~::~1 ofi Jt •lso Includes leisure equip-~'!~11t11'"ir1111~ ":i.ir~'n' ment ranging from home ,..~1'fr:rc •r1 ::: ,:1111111 ci n1ov1e cameras to swlmm1ng ::,D.1:., "J " ~ ~~JW pools bowhng balls ii n d • m I' wll~ll lf\e$1 CIU. IDW Meurll ~ COl.llo:l Ill Clrlll gardening tools It covers Mv• _. 1r1n111 ""'MCI Ce tell or 11 Sl'C recreallonal vehicles as widely 1111d fbJcll 11"r Aire" ~ iffier "*'rktll klMllc: separated as boats a1rpla :11111.e th1ough 1..11,vr ki bo lllll tllf d•• P'rlcH RI Ell s doos campers ski lo ""'' tnct~ eo•t• b t I t!fll m11kuP 111m 1cyc es And et :s not un ::::r,1KC10w11 or com ~"'" deresllmalc b o o k s and ~~" .:=111 111:: records ~~~ .. ~or5 1c1 cvc Th I I II be 'ID tM 1ol':.l U\.O I..~ e avi' a so WI a major , ts 1roc ~v; "• ,_ en st1mu u tO themtlltl blllfon ~18 ~';"~l~ i'~Mr~ dollar do-It yoorseJf Industry 'VM CP f f U rfftl Ml ,_t. n :S\• 6 GtnH RE Y.htch embraces everything ~'1,mi1.e ', J,lt G,:.v: ~n from home repairs t(l ga rden \ r 1ndu\ J ~• uerd c11 \ rbrn F lilh 11-'ll u f Int 1ng and car l1nker1ng ~:=.ts H : fl~ Y «In And It will improve employ l!tU"i..l'l(l 1~1! ,;tl :=:• ,~ ~~~~d In 1:11 r~ere!~~::i~~V~~ i!~ec1~¥: !~ r~ i:)~ tourism :::::a11ecusn 1l~ i?v. H:l:.,..E" hbe h AEIUbl'43~ 1970 as en a was out so ""' E•P •9 ''v. HO!'~.,. R" far as long weekends are con-:"'c;r~~n '9M: ;:,v. =~ fn1 cerned Every single national A Medlcci i.~ u~ uc-Ml Am Tely 1~r 16h Hud pp hohday except Labor Day and Anhtu~ 11 70v. n Hut G~s Anken 11 I I '• Hu,.t p Christmas will have fallen Arc1 1r,c1 '"" s!Ai Hv• 1 CP Arden M I ~· rill Int either In midweek Or On a ~ e1e;;...p1 ;if '1~ r.::d• A!h weekend So a mm1mum of Ar II" H 2fV. »i~ 1nc1•~.~, A Ykll • ~ lhd r.i....,I five long \\eekends next year A1wcc bell 2•1• '1 l>e-co 0 I Aut11 Sc ''> 5\~ rifr1 d is a p easu re lo anticipate B•frd A J\.s >V.1n1 cci~t B•kt nv. 1n.. And now that we ve put the Bftl P• 111 4 4 ; ~I 1 " l\1onday Holiday firmly on our ::~~.,P ~;~~I~: ~ hooks how ai..~··t moving Ba'Vless u u 4 "' Sy pf uvu BNCl'll'll 1~\lo 2S nll!ll! Thanksgiving to the fourth 8•'' 1' t 11 "' 1•\li onk'1 eelm llld 5 6 1 SaUI t ~tonday 1n November and 1:1~ t':b :lo,:, ~~\:. Ja.:-" lndependenct Da y to the first : .~"S: J ., J"" ,:~rnw~1 f..1onday 1n July' If f 1 v e 1s e '''"' JI'> J"• ~::::::v" !II<-HI 21 2t good \\'OUldn t seven be bet B11C111t1 El ~ ,,~ th 'd5 !lo I Btr ""• '" '~"-'!! Pit ter" fl<><>the c 12\'J u 1tftl1~ s BDDl AH U ll\11 "'~151 pf 8C'I CID 1V. I ltilVI 8•knk1 n 31 • l ~-11''1t• Gin End of War No Cure C~'~ $~~ 1:~ 1;~ '<:i~T 8 u111 Be 17 171~ ll'e ~ l!utkev ,1, 1 .. , 1>w<1 !lunn CP ~. 5 ~ l(Wff " 1511'""° S 21V. ~ VtVI F It C:IC Le•• • \ tl.lo ll't"' r ... For l1iflatior1ar)· Ills I,.,, W Sv 1J tt\'J lf•Yll PC ll'llCD •V. 16~ I( M 11' C1Mn M 63 U II'"'' !:I C1nnM 8 f_j 611 ltrk I"~ C•nr1d J Jh ll'n•o Vol Caci M Pt 161.0 11 • l(r• •I• Cu> Sow 8 II~ LMC 0•1 fllD lntA 1la J ~nrt '" The Bank of Ameri c a management does not think that Lhe eurre il 1nflat1onary economy could be cured by an end lo the Vietnam war or by the end of the coming year In a recently released report entitled Focus on the U S Economy An early Look al 1971 the \\Orld s largest bank predicted lha L unempl oymeot \\Ill be higher and prices \j,lll continue to rise Any foresttable sh1fl rrnm a warti me lo a peacetime economy will not return us to a t8m1har period of el'onom1c slac:k and easy money the report sa id Costly social needs r1s1ng perfonnance expcctatiu.1s and the 1nflallonary bias of 40 years of groY.th-onentcd n:i t1onal economic policies and Jeg1slat1on all mean that the American economy will con t1nue to face chra111c problems of 1nflat1on and 1nterm1Ucnt credit stringency ' the report continued Bank ol America economists predicted that unemployment m 1971 "11! average about S 5 Telon1c lnc. !\loves Fac1hty ln a conllnuu1g move to centralize and consohdate 11s lac1ht1cs 'l'elonic Industries Inc of Laguna Beach began mo11ng its 30 000 square foot production fac1hty located 1n Beech Grove Indiana to Laguna Beach recenlly The move 1s anhc1pated to be co mpleted bv October 1st The move will mean an oppo rtunit y igr new emp l oyment 1n the neighborhood of 50 emplo~ ees Teloruc industries 1s 11 manufacturer of Sweep Signal Generators for the gencr:il laborator y and r:icho p r o duct1on manufacturers and of a complete line of micro\\ ave fUters "- 1 OWS 0, OIL PAINTINGS WHOLISAU WAllHOUll OPIN TD THI PUILIC $5 and up 1•1t L IOIMOI• SANTA ANA ,MON•~ OU.Liili WANTEO I' aPTCh ~' J I.and lh! percent compared lo a 4 5 per 1, a... 1 ~ ~nf! 'kd cent average 1n 1970 TI1ey c!:~l~ 8p l~ J~•t:r:; M predicted that pnceS WOUid =~ r:.. :l~ 1~~ L:..ltffvr~~~ rise aboul 3 5 percent next r.:''C.Ps tt"'" lm ~ ;"' year compared with a 1970 In ~~:~·~ r: I·~ t..;:r.: I flat10n rate Of five percent c~: L~: r• ;,;; :!,' ft~ The problem I o o m 1 n g E~·· e u~: s~h 5}~, lt.i:ie11..,~, ahead ts how lo sust.a1n a slow ~~r 1\ ~r 1~~ l~ ~:' ~~1 •v rate of price increases \\h1le f11r1c1eM " 1f ~ 1j~ ~:::-" ~, fully em plo y i ng our cil ~ ~~ ~;.'~~ ~:-Mf.. resources the report added c iv n ,. 1~ 1~,.. ""'"" G ( ar• Mf 1~ l~" M !'ltCll"" The report emphasized that E1r;.0;:,.~, , ~1:~•u. L~ news e~ents \\OUld play a key c non o • • • ""c!'lu~ row C<> J 14>1 •~c "l role 1n spu rring economic u~ ~:"~' p:,. J 64Ut.:~ ~111 truns or dips co~m ~ ~i l ~M• Id n r o n~ F 1 " "{I ~ c 1 A"Y subst:in(n1I piete of CDIDn s 1•Vi 1, M c1 t• l'"omct ~'I • Mlclw r.T good ne\\ s especially about cam •' " ,~v; Mo 1 G•• om~• ~M &iVt': the \\Br in Soulheast As ia or """ T•• .,,. ' ., """ .i:1ctt :.."'" ~ ti> ~ 11.:o Mt'd ~c the reduction of social unrest om P<v uu 4 11 ·~ Mohwk ,., :.:omP In 4 ' l Monf Co and \'JOlence or improvement r.::::: in';; ~ ! : 1 Monrn P-in the management or govern-cmp t ll'C .1, J"' ~; : , Ir, td rom~ lV.l'{jj MIOf'T.I, ment 1sea a airs cou r.on Roe~ ~~;, 2• M t "" touch off a sign1hc11nt upsurge ?:: ~~ ~: ~~~ ~~i(h,. ~~ 1n confuJence the report ~:;:''s l 1; 1!~.:::i~"R'E • noted t:D1m v~ 9 o "'"" l e rtwtrd 141.. 1~"' ~cc trllf Th b k d h r.,,, Met • • Iller~" C e an s report sa1 t e rreftt M11 ' ••Nat 11 nd Us Id t od t l'"r&I Cn ,...,_,,."I C3t R cou expec m era e r utc11 R s: , ~ r.icmo rD progress r.1 reducing inflation B~~,L~; ! ' i i N~ ri1J next year becau se 1nd1v1dual nA" ~ M '') 1n N~ L n~ ft n., ~" ' ..,~ /\/'~ct attempts lo increase pro-0~ ~ G~n '~ 1~~ ..,8 .. ne•~n P ' '"!JM S"<:R du cl1v1ty have begun to pay ~:~ s J.~ ,; • ,: ' "1~1 ~~~ v off rll!"n In ~1. ~ ~i'n sc'f ne~ b Aq ,_ ffi The bank s management ex ri..111 In "• ~v. "1Jm~1~ ~Yl I"~ ~·" "V. peels corporate profits after ne1 r nt u • ,~ ~ :l', : l"Jol:! 8 , •• ltt taxes to rise four percent 1n A.-. ~"' " .. 11 ~~~ R~~ D~i' F l>l < 'o 1971 after a J970 dechne of 6 a n •m Cr u ~ u ~~.· 00 ! , l'>K troc l!o ''-percent rom 1969 nf\o1r cM , , r.iw tl8tC n,,.-tel ~,,,NWPv State and loca l goYernment nn dsn L •v. o ~~cl ~"" ~pe1d1ng almost C1!rta1nly will ~ e JO~ ~h. ~;.': ...,~ ~ w~1 b h b DrfW "I 11/J l ,,D S~"" continue to c am pc.red y oun~ln 0 ll 1,v. Drmat11 h I II Dunrori 1~ 1s1~ nn.,. ..-,. rc\enue s ort a s t.axpayer 1'7. "•Int 11 ., 1,~,, "' "'" rc1olts and generally adverse ~::,teSll .... ;~ ~p~('•/ .. 1 bond market cond1t1ons the Fe..., \•" 1m "'" ,p~~11, ', l<"dU<: v1 ~. '1\ ~ u n report said "! " 'I 11 ~ 11'1o :~(, '•,• F"ft Sv ., I'~ ICD 0 The pers1slent trend of JO ~1.i';; ,.et ~ ~~ ;:~D 0 percent yearly gai ns in stale E' r.iuc ..,. in•",~~ Y H' F cte11v 1 0 '' au er, and local spending established :rr;.m5 .. , ~« ~1~ ~:;', 'M during the S1ihcs is likely to "I 0111 "' '' Poe,·" d I l ht =t Mlldut • •11 P1 n•" ec 1ne o six to c1g percent "'"'"A 01 1!141 '' 1 P1 Gt. v 19 0 d ' " h .. ,,......, C 14 ,._ P~"" P1c in 1 an I 11 I ~ report Fn••• "' 1!-) ,,.. P~ W• "" d Fnn!J II • • '~ PflrDI t auue "nllool•f ,.. .,~ P"Rd~ ril The report noted that after ::i 1c'/-;i i~·~ 1 ~h :::i,•,~u!I ii period of increased con ~~1• t:!c:~ r~ ~: ~0~~:'~11C su mer saving induced bi sue l ~ .. ,, T1k • • ' Pro cc.i 1 ~,,,1ne i ~ •'• PtO'I ..,,,,. gloon1y C\'l'lts as decho1ng Flhd •v 11• ,, Pr~d Mn Fnwht •~ • PubS N: s!Ock prices and r 1 SI n g "" eost • c ..:i PuD s NC u n e mployment consumers :iga1n seem to be planning to reopen their pocketbooks But the rcpori concluded bv painting a gloomy picture of the ~car ahead Desp1tc the g:ilns h1 con sumer spending ind res1dcn ha\ construction the report said overall real gro\\th In lhe end of 1971 probably will be s\ugJtish because of dcchning business c a p 1 t a I spending smaller rises 1n st:lte tti'ld loc(l.I go.,,ernn1ent and reduced f~cra l defense spending Davey Gets Exec Post The appointment of John B Investment Course ORANGE COAST COLLEGE ""' 1111roduc1 '"' te tl-1 \etc: f11ntl 1"'•"'''l1 er 1n .. 11t n9 "' Co1 pct•••• 1toc~1 l end• M11tv1I F~nd• Ge•efftll'l1nt lo~d1 111 Id n., I Loa" Auec11t '"' l"ltl'lded te 1 "• p111t c1! •newled'c cl "'"11t111tnh 1,.,J 1tock orchA"9' op1r1t o~" WM L OBRYON In structor -... l•htt St,.tt..._, 2Jrlll ,., S 111'ff-b -Wlfill119till9" 1 JO '• t JO 11 M M•1h1on kfteol 2100 Merlfftt Drl" N•w11ort heclil ••l•ter -' !:Ito l.M.t~re • <.:o utracl Comple)e-Ne,v York Stock List i'llnrket Sy11abols 'If, • " :lt11~ • -· 1 s{t•t '.-~I"= !i :1' Wt l _. .. )ll Web .... li C,,M l• 0.( 11 ,_ """' '' !Mi~ J(I Will: JI ll•n ,,.~ !! r.i'I u .... MKA"F )Ob M.c:DvnlG' JD Mecke Co l o M-=vAH 1 Mtd Fd 1 lfe M fd So Gtr M:.t;cCM 6 O ..., Wit lJO Mii v l:n ::r llO MAPCO 110 MAPC Ph U M1r1r1>n 1 6CI M-M ;Marcor 01 A,J """'""'"! 111 Ml'Ml<I I 'fl ~:t:::L,,oll Me""u" .,,. Mt rrlott IOI MartM'<I l.1 0 MartlnM I 10 Mr11 C:~o fllO M'-""11t /1 M•neY F 1 IM&ttYF In I M '\ 0 MtCll60 i.uvt JW so M1V 19 I 10 MCA nc I.Cl McCord 1 XIII McC ON 110 ""~"'" b M !d C:<> M nO fQ Mc EG' l •O M~Hl I IOt Mc'GH oil 10 Md;•tt Don Mclnly , 1 ""l''" '°' M( eulh t0o MtHell l't MQO Coro I jMe1<1 <>141 llO IMted ollU.IO MEI («P MPIVSt!<>e IS Ml!m«P• (;" Merc•n~ 1 tO Mettk 1• Merl'd II> I )(I Me .. Prt IQ Mu ., "" '° MQ.lllll .57• M911 Mell 2 MOM Melromd ~ MPtEG' OIJto !MGIC Inv 10 Ml(f>G•1U1 Mkl> Tubf 1 IMl,r<>Clo JOf/ MldCnTel II M;cr51)Utl ff Mid 0 I! 1 fQ Mklwlt 0 l M lfllO 1 70 Ml! fl r1d 60 MlollMM 1 IS MlnnPLI I 10 MunCp JlS Mltslllv lll Mo PKA,J MP (;em I 60 MoPubS IOb MobllO I 1 .0 Moh•KO 110 M-C11 Mo!wbcl 1 '61 MoYb 111250 Mont rcl> IO MGllOllm I'd "'""" .. MO.. oEQ llO MOl'lsan 1 IO MOii/DUi I 11 MonrPw 1641 MllOr Mc(;or MorgtnJ 2 •D M""aeSl>o 70 M« Nat" 10 h\dl111"111• llO =:r,~':~ 1 ~ MK IM "II Mllfltlf!OW l M11tr#IY 110 Murphy In<! Mur'lll!Oll 60 Mur..0 flfJ 20 MurrvOI> 60 • Tuesday's Oos· Swek Leaders MOST SllAJIES Tund<1, S.pttmbft 2Z 19711 ~P_r!ees-Complete New York Stock ExchQDge List ..... --· 1111111111 .... 11111111111111 ... 1111111111 ........ llllll'"'f C..,_1N1t11L_< .... <llli·' I 1•Vt M1"> i.u, '· ,,. "' ... ..,, ~ ....... » ' P't ~-\t • I• 15'11 14\t Uto. -flt 101 ~ )I .... t \1 -s- ~orda1l Situation ,~~f. ~~~ Brings Stock Dip "''Iii~ ~ t::•-11 T•tl a...; AO :i 1 1" 1i" -» T•k oHN 110 ,,, I.~ l~ "" ... '" NEW YORK (UPI) s k th h T• It¥ • ..,, l t\'o 1\'I 1\\ -11 -lOC S took It OD e C lft T•lleY1 r a 1 ,,., it' ~"" tf1 1 ~ again Tue sday amid fear of possible US interven~ l:='J.~· '~ J..~ ~"' ~" ! ~ t1on in Jordan Trad1ng was moderately active l!:~ .. 0 1: ' ,, .. 1)'4 jllit -~ Th Wh te H ed K H I h Tlll;llrolUWI (;p ., , ~ 1 e 1 ouse announc 1ng usse n as T1k•ron • ,\ ~t! S:t~ tt? -~ asked .the United Stales the Soviet Union Britain i!!5f,:~j! J) ,1•t., j"' •1 "'".:-1. and France for d1plomat1c help 1n restoring peace i=~.~:•15 ,, ,,.., ,.,,. -'"' to Jordan But there was no !1rm won! on whether ',•nnero 1.J1 '° l'-JV. ~· ~ •Mte 1"~ .~ 11 .. ,;:z 1;:: :t-t. Hussein had also so ught American m1htary assist '•••to '° 1: l~\.'I a~ ~\'t _,\lo ance l::s:.~ /: 1.J ~Jv. ~ ~I'"'+~ Shortlv before the close the Dow Jones Indus-l:!&l,,.1~~1'°)11 I .)6\\ M\lr .Ml, _ -rf Tt•ttt 1,,., 10 1• .uw .u """" _,14 trial Average was oCl about 4 1/2 points at 747 40 ,, •• 11 ... 1 "'° ,, '"" '"' ,..., + "' Abo BOO I T••O IG1 Ill 11 Sf'e 5"' 1"' ut issues pointed ower while 486 gained '••PLo ~ 1 I ~ , ff• Ulll IN s. J•~ »~, ]1 -f A turnover or around 12 000 000 shares compar-, .. ,""' ~ lU 1 '"" 114 + \i ed lh 12 "" IJOO h ded M d Tea""" pfJ OI n u~ ''11:i 1.~ + ,, WI '"'"' s are s tra on ay r.w, " 11t1 .o 1"0 u :t~ !t~=~ -Closin g prices include AT&T ti_oft3/8 B...e:•h f~ .. '0, •• , .. Jl'-21'11 nl'o -"" Cit!!.. Thom I~ :0 1n 20" 1'"" 10 -~ St 22 1/2 up 1/8 Chrysler 26 1/8 off 3/4 Dupont rtiornJw 6J• ~ ~\1 !..~ :h :1!.. 118 1/2 off l 1/4 Ford 49 1/4 o!C 3/8 Gen El 81 up f"'c'!:~, ff •U-hJ:S:i..is:i..+~ 5/8 G M ff l i1 1• ~ u ,, -... en otors 71 3/4 o 5/8 and BM 273 1/4 no ..... M • .. ,',) m: ll14 llt"' :+ t off 2 1/4 i\=~: ~ 1 Ht: r~ rit? = ~1 ~~,...,~ .. ··~·~·~··10!••!"•!"•,..,1111111011111111 .... 1i·1~k~.~ IO.ie 21• "tt U..,, 16(• 1;!! P•t~11I~ ' no '"" 1~ Soult! c 1 20 • ""' ''"" n 111 + 1o Tob!nP1t1 •e ~ fl°" fl:Z fi!Z + \Ii ::~~ •• ~fl fi I ~ 31 l l SOulnG~ l PO >>'• ttll• r." ?!"" _ ,, :::~: 11: ' )61' :u • :Ult + ~ SIP.,,.,.... .. ... II• '-}?, •,.t.-= :: ~111~:: l = ,. ,.... ~ ;;_,. -;:; Toolltoll oOlt 7J S ..... I\~ -!!dPr\ICI of 10 f U lt-lt + ~ So\lll>rn Ay ] 59 $l SIOA. JI" \Ii Trent Ce fO 16 ll '> 50¥9 $1 11.+\ 11nW1L1 lolO 1 f1 '°",_,_,\,$tu Ry pf 1 f "" lJ'h IJv.'.::14 Tr1ntUn 110 JI llOV.. 7''-1; ~ + "' l''"r•~ 60 J] 1•~ l \1 ,.., -I Swl4 rm JTI • u:i.. lf""-~ -\.t TrtM W A,!, ll U lla M-l4o tS -~ !errfll IO IS'llo IS'-< l~ + l<o S~1r PS 'fl 15 1 '6 11 11i,. -.... lrnWA,lr Bf 1 l U ...... '°''" -'Iii l """" I IO II l• ll'4 ll ~ -'-S~ert1nt Oo 2t 1 t~ ••• -Iii TrnWF n 41)t S fO :J.IV. 39 -;. 1uK. of 10 t :i.. l• >• ' !""•J::A "--•• 0 •< S t tl,I, \I I> \f \11 _ •~ •••>"•• '' -~w ...,. ""' " • -• Tr•n•m•t 5 1 .. ~ -~ 191-~ l~ """' + tlo Pit 00 I ,,,_ f\11 '"' Tr•ni.con 10 1610l-llf~J(2mll"\+ }1:~111 ~ •" ""' 1o1 1' Sllet"t\' Hu 1 St"'"-ov. '2"'-T •nsc:n i.,w 20 17~ 11 11.\. _ ""!t....wi r ao IS ~I .. ~I~ Ulli 1;1. S~rt\'A so. ~ f;1-. tr' ti.::+~ Tr•ntll on 11 .... • .u .u• + v. SI<*• vu1c , i: 11 i!'.t ?tv. + :Z ~r.:'.~110P, u 1n, ll't 11 .. -\ ,','!:!!.'!,",,•, l 11"" ,, .. 111,j, llOl!f\IC DI I 130 1l ll lJ $<111• tD IOI ~ 11'6 ?!\It 11.. w•,... 10 1~ nv. 11 .. -1, -w lllQ 11 J( l31\ J( + ... Sq.,blll!I ISO J( '°'" '°"' '°""-TIC<lftl 101 ll I !~ t l"""'(onl l6 0 10 10 -lo Sau!btl& pl l ll 11 .01'1 II~ _ v, Tr C<lft Pl! $0 I 1l ll \J lo tor•rl!lrd SO X 1•.. 1l~ 1~ + .,., SI• IYM! 1 _, I ttu. 11111. lt"-1 Tr,.,.. no! C 1JI '"'-1f • 11 • -'"lh.KltWort~ '' n v, » jl l srar1nG'J 160 33 111t •l'n oh TJIW l..c 1 ., lJ .. 111. ll ~ tu WO< DfBS l uv. lllh l~• ~,., s da d pl] so 110 .... "'" I'/ .. -•• TllW o•• '° I 15 . 15 2.Slo -I "'w pl,t,1"" • m.. Jt>o ~ -.. SIBrP•lnl l6 JI l'~ j11o n~ -... TllW p. ,j(I 1 !• ll..., I• + .. ubu l>Co t.I 105 15v. 1•"' lfllo + \ s d !nr J•b 1 l~ fll't u"' -i Tucfn r.11.: n SO 11 '1 11 SubPoo 160 11 "It 11\<o 11 "' lh S!d IColtmen H I 1l0 I -•'W"" C..,t l ?l o n 1"1 SuCeJI 1(1 •• 1• 16 1' :+1 SIOCtl?IO ll\ '5"" IS •5">-~•Twltr Coro I Jl 1"2l;i ,, .. --. 5~..C~"" 10 J 111.11 I•.., ltVt -I'> S1'01Hncl j lO lJ:I 4"o .. "'° + "" 2'1 1t 2SI'> It ~ I'> Sun 0 I lb 13' -16 ••'< ua. -'1 j!OllNJ ~ JU 6)\;o •11 61 l 1\oo 1~ 111 -1oos .... 01 01!15 ,.? JS ... lS ~ ""' -.. IOOIOll 110 1. .. ...."' •s. Jilil SI 26"' 2•111 1•:i.. Sunbffm IO -:io ... lt9' 20 -""llOOl'I llf IS l 00 u~ J2\IJ un t "'UA,L ·~ ' •• SC Engineer Heads Water LabOratory Charles G GuMerson 1. civil engineer wllh more than 20 yurs of experience 111 water pollution control pro- blems has been Appointed head of the Stanford Rescarth Institute 1 sanita ry engine.tr· ing laboratory Jn lrvu'4! Gunnerson an J r v l n e resident returned to Callfomla from Cincinnati. Ohio where he served w11h the US Public Health Service •s deputy director of reseArc.h and development 1n t h e Bureau or SOlld W a s l e Management Pnor to hi! Public Health Service job be w11s senior engineer with the C111lfom1a De~ oLWate2r ~Re~sou='tc"~''cc-~----.-1 The-sarutiry eng1neermg laboratory which open in June Is devoted largely to research into problems or water treatment and aolld W8$lt technoJogy 'Who C.res7 Ne "';tj;';,--;;;wt,t"' 1• th.1 w1rld cer11 ebP11t ye11r C.111'111'111 '"ty I b \llllf tOl!ll'lllllt\I ... tly ,., .. ,,.., , .. 1tt It 1 1h1 DAILY PILOT -- • -• JI DAILY P!loT-Tund.ty, -StpLembfr 22,-1970 ' -- DA Warns Buyers of ~~ec,reational'· i~nd 1·~-,-:-·-:....-.. LllG-~~-!L-;-:--~-·~-~-~-~:-:.-~.:-.-... -. ,:·:~;;;..;.:.~;:::·.~. Condi.Kllfll • IMJllMll •I 104 N....,_, cOllCIU(tlnt t b1151"tll 11 tlot W. Oc:ttn 111\0d., C.11 MK!o, C1lltor11!1, und., ttlti Ff'Ont, N,_1 IH<ll, C1illtr11ll. IH'lffl" I)' ALBERT W. BATES ''The most obvious is thi ·1nvfftn'lehli." points out, but tbe Cirsl in· good and bad developments. pa.y out for the lot buyer. They 111:1111011s "'"' 119 ..... o1 cOAlT •UCTION r~ 11c1111ou1 """' " • rn • of 04 .... DeWr 'lift 1 H -~ -\ I t t•-~ r ... t h -1.---~ ,_,. •'-•t "f'-t ~U~l arW IMI "Id fir"' 11 COlll-.cl ol "S..llOlll-" ol N1_. 1nd I ht I .. a1leged opportUnity-ror recrea. In.support of this statement, vest.or s tbedeve oper, no ·~ v,ange .....,..n Y u 10me a • .., UU1W1n.z.&1 1ui. u.. u;, ,,.. 1o1111w1ne--. w11tw ... ,.... 1n tull .. " 11,,,, 11 cllfftPOMd ., 1t111 1o1-1n:t (F-In 1 S<rie1) lion designed to appe3i to B•rline.r cit" an extensi'• lot. buyer. oustandinoJy good ones. But in investor" ' lllld •ltc•"' rftllllnl:• tt '' loUowi· "'-...,. ~ 111 '.!!!! •11111 ~ M..,. · st""*' J. M<Nttll, sm lllv1• o1 ,....~. •1,1 1, lollowa: YREKA, Cilif. {Special) Jand·starv.ed , pej>pJe ·whq !"ant ~u.~vey by the office of the Lake of tht Pines is an et· central &nd northern (Next: The Case 01 ~":.""A!:r;1. f;;:11, c1111. Li~!' .. s.11n,, 1:~~'C-. 11JO w. Mtrle111 Became of his bokt ex"""'s of to es ca p,e ·the : ;city en· state .atto.hiey general, of ample. Developers bought the Caliromla virgin lands ·are 1 . . s. J. Mc:N1111 ....,,...., P. oiPu1o, "1~ 1••h 11,, .ut. ,........ · •· · h' h th 11·ve L ke of '" p· t Sl'I t 1 nd f he t 1176 30 being cut up for speculation Callmlgos Subdivision n STATE OF CA.L1FoRNIA., N·lt1, ,,,.w-i 1111c11. c1. the methods and· motives of v1ronmenw 1n w re ey • a •u1e mes, a . .r o a rom ranc rs a . ORANGE couNTY: _ ,_Y ,, o.1._ s.w1 Arr0whNd Aw., C.ll·rorni·a•s big -rporalw' n Along with thiS. the buyer is Boise CascaAe development in per acre in September, 1966. and "investments" that can't Siskiyou County) on A-' JI, 1M1. MIO!'•""'• Not1rv 1-. P•rk.. c.. "'61' • '" • N _, ' •;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~IPlllllk In n lot Mkl Stet•, -'°"'""' Dlt.a 5.fllt. 1•, 1t10 ·IAnd developel'1; Nevada Coon-sometimes promised 'privacy evaua County. It was found While this was high for the1; _ .. ., s'"'*' J, M(N••'""-to -N111 11.. 11111''"' ty District Attorney Harold and guardt!d roads, anCl lhe in-that Within three years, 42 la'nd, which had been on the :~";'i~1191o ~1"'1~1,11= ~ -=~ f: ~ii::: Berliner is anathema to the ference from this is usually families lost•their lots through tax rolls at .$88.20 per ac,re. HARBOR REFORM tckl'CIW1"""9d 1111 •~"'"'" ""' .. """ St•t• o1 c1111orn11. D••11t• cou"i.,: I " I I '\I f 1' · nd · {OFFICIAL Sl!A1.l °'1 S.•t, 14, 1910, befoN me.• Nott..., "recreational" subdivision pro-c ear -nunor ty peop e w1 orec osures ·a nine more they l:IOld it in'the nex,!_year or J"""' L, N•'"" Pt.1Dlk 1n ..... "'' w!d s1 .... .,.,..,,,.11y ,.__ not be a,jlowed to wander refinanced: There were only 27 so for prices ra_nging from TEMPLE Not•rl' Putilic:. eo11110tn!1 •lli>f••td Ntll II. Int••'"• Htnnt P, ~';'~:.....R· lrom his com· about. transactions c I ass e d as about $36,ooo~·cre down to . :;-~::_"~~~ 1n ~IP':,~::~· O:: k:,!a :'.~ '~ I nd f t•·-· · I Sii 000 f I at MY c°"""rulOI\ E•Pl•H ...-,lfltd •a !hf wllt!I~ ln1tr11tl'lflllf W prehensive coverage or the "Usually a go1f · course is resa es, a o 11\,.~ on Y • per acre or e&'l · Au•. 1•. 1t1~ •ck-*'" 1t11Y vtcutH !ht s1ine. -·"....... 1•0 an arlt'cle for ~, part of the·deal, and water for three Jot Q.Wners made a pro. tractive par c e Is . The Anitounc•• '""1111\ed °'•"" c .. " 0.11., P11o1. coFF1c1AL SE.ALI •~»" '" f ._ $ttll.,,,..... I, I, 1~ J1, ltl't 1633-IO RtllA H, CANETTt magazine, California Tomor. swimming, boating a n d · it. 1 ue ' other 24 transactions developers were indeed lhe No•1ry Public, c11uam11 I t th · · I "f' · " -1.EGAL NOTICE Prl"tl.,.I Oflk1 In row, have been _given in fishing. A numbe;r of other were :osses o e or1g1na 1rst 1nvestors. HIGH HOLY DAY SERVICES o •• ,,., CO>UnlV " previous inst.allmenfs of · this gimmicks make owning a Jot buyers. In tlleir pit.ch to .aiunty •Ali,.., ::1.cr:;';'~;;1m E•Pl•n series. Today's installment seem atlractive, even if no In his capaCity as Nevada governing bodies, developers (Sept. 30-0ct. 1) (Oet. f.10) ,~~~:f1~.roc~~=~11~•\"• "ubusl'llld o ...... Cot•• D•1"' P11o1, quotes Berliner on how the building is planned for many County district at tor A e y , commonly a~rt homes in ' sTAT• of' CALIFORNIA FoR ~-be<' '1-22 ' " •nd ~1·~ I T ._ h Id I THI' COUNTY Of' ORANG& subdivision lot buyer gets years and the site is three Ber Iner .sent a questionnaire their subdivisions will b7e Be· o SM1 • • N•. A..uiu • l!_urt . hours from home. to '. all. J.,a~e or the Pines lot cond homes,. with little or no C C c!~:~:.i . .i HAROLD JOHN sisK, LEqAL NOTICE "Promotlonal--development-•·'l'hc secood-pu1Hs~to·those-buy£rs . .Ia.st ARriLJ!y ih;\t • demand · oo t\le county for. NEWPORT HARBOR LUTHERAN HUR ff •once " ""'°' .,,., " ~ ,., .. , . I ... _ ... __ -r e m t h d held -.J......I ~ .... . B l C•llllltars at th1 ·-· n•mtd doctdtr!I NOTICI! TO c•t:OITOll$ ad~s ng uuows out 1.1u~ loa,king for a n~ place for lf!i. •. OS owners a _.,,..., auU ..,,.,.,r serv1ees, u 791 Dov•r Dr., Newport ~ech n..1 1n __,, t..vil\9 ci.ims •••'"'' 1111 ·slH>t:•uo11. cou•T OI" Tltl .kinds of bait," Berliner Writes. retirement. Although this is theo· lots for two .or three in Lake· of Lthe Pines, more wld 0tc_.,1 .,., r.-iulrld ta 11" 11\tm, STAT• o" CALll"DllNIA ll'Oll Th f, I h RABBI BERNAR'D 'KING with 11\e .,,.c~rY WIUChetl. In 11111 olfkt THIE COUNTY 01' OllAlfOI! seldom featured in the ad· years., e 1rst severil , Ult' than a~thjrdrof the hou~ now . ilf ""clerk a1 1111 .-.., ..,u11ec1 '°"'''or N•. A•MJ FRAN~S LAUNDRY fluff & fold Spocl•I ELECTRIC BLANKETS - $1.50 916 N. Cutt Hwy., L8911na 494-7980 verlisirig, .the pull ls felt, and qred . replies, although in· built are occupied by CANTOR ·AR·IE SCHICK.LER ~~,,'..,":,":., :=-~~;~·~~11911 '.:~S:~ ..,~111f1 a• JOHN L, IC~~WFF, OK!•s- many buy with Ule hope they'll ~mplete, _showed widespread permanent resident&, and of al Mr 111orn..,.,: MITCHELL HAllT & NOTICE rs HEREBY GIVEN ta 1~ d l d I I •---who · nd 1o bu'ld 6tl TICKETS & IN FORMATION 67S.n30 llltlSCO, 6U Clvlc C1nle• O•lve West, credl!ori ,of the illclve ntft'l.cl dKeCltfll be able to build ' aftd retire by 1scouragemen , an c ear Y tr...,_ 1nte 1 , _ su111 ns. S.nt• A111, c1u1. t11111, which 1, "'•' ,11 ".._,1 hiy1,.. c1a1"'1 1911n11 "'9 the time the lot is paid for. revea_~ why tht Jots_ were percent indicate they intend toj~;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l rtw PIK• " bu•IM.s af 1111 •1r1cl1tsl•ned In u ld 0«..:tfflt ••• teQlll•ld 1a 11 .. """'' h d •II tn1tl.,., Nrlll<tl"I ta 11\e ttl1t1 al .. kl wllll llW nrcnwrv vaudlet1, 111 ""' omc. "But by far the greatest poor investments, e sa1 . build their main homes on the c1tc.-.1. within 1ow mon1n, ,,,.,. 1111 a111111 c1tt11a111\e•bovt111tttr.cr court, or lure is that ol 'invi!SfmCnt' ASki?a if, knowing whatihey property~-B ~?::':.!~ ~, ':'.~ ri_:•k•. ~~~ 1~~;~:~":1 ;e:;,~: potential. By working this had learned in the interim, Berliner calls this 4l snare --BJ L-E-THlJLJ(j:ff-TS VERNA lt."A 115"---"M~er•Tlti'mPVr.WAt:H:tt;-we1Hs'fOCM , · d Admlnl1lr11tl• al 1119 Ell1lt MANIOtt & ICING, INC., «IQ Saufh 11,ver• angle, salesmen ire -able to they would buy again at the anri a delusion. The eveloper DISCl~LINI is 111 impa.+1nt Bibl1 princi· a• th!! •toov• 111mtd Cltcedlnl IY or1Y1, sun• 305, eev ... iv 1-i1111, talk ordinar1·1y sens i b 1 e price they paid, two-thirds is in fact planning a new city pl1, IH1b. 12 :5-11 I. A child who ••b111 MITCHELL HA.11.T & a11.1sco c~111am11 to1n, which 11 ''"' 11lac~ af .UST b ,. , f , II b I iu Civic Cini« DrlYt Wnt bmfntu ot 11\e undet1l1tlld In 111 m1tter1 families into commit ti n g said 'tnef would not. More in a location for his own • ancipl illta. 1 not, "' wi r• ' 5ull• ns Ht11lnl1111 ta """ e,tatt ~ 1•ld Hc~t. h be f' 't need' JI the 1g1i11 •ncl tg1in tfld will 1aon bt b1yand Slnll ,.111, C1ll!onil1 nn1 wllt!ln !eur months tfler 1111 flt1! pUbllu· themselves to making huge th.an alf had their lots up (or ne it, a ('I Y 1ng a P•••nt•I gu id•rt<i. o+h•n, 1 pauibl.J th• r11: uwm !lart ot lh ls naticr. •-·00 r· I )Jut 85 t r th normal se vices and more AnarrteYt .., A.t1m1~111t11f11 0.1..:1 s ... 1emt1e• 11. 1•'9 payment.3 over a per1 o sa e, percen o em • r , LAW I will h••• ta di1cipli n• him. p,,,. P111111,litd O••nGe co~•• D•ll'I Pue1. EMMA KASSOFF. many years. In truth, these fell. they would not get a fair than likely to bec;ome a real tnl d • ., PERMISSIVENESS !i n1l1td of d;,. S•atem1>1r 1. 1. \5, n, 100 u16'1t1 E•ec111r1r cf 1h1 w111 lots are, as a rule, very poor return on their investment. burden on all the taxpayers of ciplin1l i1 th , gr11+••' thr11 t ta au1 WALZI!~. '~~~~"ioC~~ecr deefden t. ~""""""""""""""""""~""""""""""""~_'~'._'.'.'.:::_:'~'..'.:""'~~>'_I~ The disillusioned lot buyers the county. n•+ion. LEGAL NOTICE MANION a IC•NG, 1Nc. All¥trt~t J 11----~---------ld S. &ewrly DriYI, Sul!e lf'J Revolutl·oni"zes' , Cited broken promises, disap-Southern California bas both Gael, 1110, mu1I 111•ci11 di1ciplint whin rtbtlli art octU•I. OthtF• SUl'll!•IOll COUaT 01" THI! &otv1r1Y Hilh, Ctllfwlll• "211 pointmeiit in recreational wi11, h1 would Clllt bting God! Wh111 Ad1m r1btll1il, God STAT• 0,' CALIFOllNIA '011 Ttl: UIJI ,7 .. 7JU ,n .... 1 TH• CO NTY OF Oil.ANG• A!ltrntrl fer EJKUtriJ features, ·fa c i JI t j es and could 1101 logic1llv withhold di1cipJ;.,,,v · •clia11: H1 HA.0 lo 1 1t1e N~ ~~11·~ c1:;,:T1~N1111 1 i>ull!lll>td 0 ,,,... ca.1r O•ll'f' l'I'"' D W • maint~nance. Most of all they ''''' •9•in1I lhel 1tb1llia11 ar c1111 b•ing Goel. Thi1 principl• .. ~Ion bv 'R':r.EY LYNN ~ .. N<oe11:'r. 5'111. n, ,., Oct.'· ll, 1f10 17'7·70 Cfl{ISI e ax an u 11 y Ta: MARVIN RAY SANDERSON. LEGAL NOTICE enture ear.Ing· 'd red t d 1-i·t ;, well u11d.111ooil. AdoJ1Jln• 51-•••nt. . rales,,eXce$SiVe. If God i1 ta b1 Gad thraugl'laul Eternity, h1 moil ••t1ci11 di1d-llY ..,.,... at this Court. vou ••• he!'ebYl-------------- M lb h "bo h ' plin1 in tht htr11fttr. Saul1 wha rtbtl 191in1t Gad an ••rth cltod la '"''' btlor1 1111 Jlldllf &All l1tol Tht Marat lhin1 to havirl1 1our tect 1u1n1 from bruisin1. You llUIJ ore an a11 ug t as lrt--P•eskll"' In o-.rtmeril t ot tl!t •bovi! -n Leeth i1 pomible now wit.h 1 bite harder, chew bell.tr, e•t mort vestment bl · l II !"ill fttl God'1 di1cipli11••v •c+ian lhroughaul 1l1rn ily, !M11t. tnrillld Court on Oec""'lll'r 11, lf70, 11 NOTICE TO CJl•DITOllS 5Ul'1Elll01l CO!JllT 01" TH• STATE OF CALll"OJINIA. l'O• THI COUNTY 01' OJI.ANG• pl11tk cuam diKOYetY that 1ctu-naturally. ' U Vlr ua Y no 25:4 1, 2 Co r. 5:10). Ob1di1nc• fa Goll in th is lif,· will gu1rd ';U a'clack 1.m."' tn.t 11•v. tn.n •nd al ly hold• both "upper•" ind F1xooi>NT may h•lp you , .... ~k resale market exists today -· I 1 ,. · 1· • f , 'II ' ll!trt to •Nlw c1~ .... If 1nv ""u hive, whv "' fc be .....-' II 'lh the t h t9t•fllf unp 1•1tn a"C'P •n1 fltr111 ttr Illa Wt mt•n •ppin111 11'11 pe!IUOfl ol RILEY LYNN 5.AHDERS lowers" 11 never be ore possible. more dearl,, mott •l tlitt. eseec1a y WI -ava 8(1C e in lh1 1l1rn1I lift. J11~1 •tid, "H1 th1I btli1,..1th 1nil•i1 b•pli1~d for Ille ldCN>tlon al CLINTON OWHITE Ne. -'""719 lt'1 a Tt¥olution1ry di1covcry' Thc1pee11l pencil·pointdi1pen1tr Of htavt'ly promo'~ new ihtll bt itvtd-", Mk, lli:I•. Hivi YOU '''''J thi, <omm•nd-SANDEii.SON Ind TERE S-' RAYLENE Ellttt of THOMAS R. llUTTEll 1IJG hlled FIXOl>fl~, fDI' daily home lct1 you 1pot F1Jt00f'.NT with .,..... I.CU " SANDERSON, YO<lr ft'llnctr tOll Ind knnwn •1· THOMAS RENA.I.ID R\JTTEll, 11111:. tU.S. Pat. fl.003.968) With ci1ioo ... whi:re nffded ! developments m1nt1 Will •YOU rtbtl tg1in•I God bv r1fu1ing la bt b1ptii'1J, d ulhr, -.,,1e1 ""' ti. a••nlllcl OecuSld. FlllOOU;T man1 ' '-I"'' w--r•n Qo• •pplittlio-m•y l••I for ' ' ff '' ' I' t' ' t t 'ly7 V"I C' c f C' ·I 1 e ' • NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo the ""'"'... -" '"llle-firsl investor makes ina tu •• ancop •n1 •uo119nou • ern1 "' urcn o '"' D1Jtd: ........ •,· ,","iou.. crecrn .... 1 af ll>f •ba'le """" llecl!dfflt may u t, 1pt1k, l1u1h. with little hours. Denturet that lit are eutn· -211-W:-WttJon-Sl:;-601f1-Mt1t.--Gtlilorni•,-ind 11f _111 ·•n i•t-U----· · ~ "" 1.,,.1 11 ... ,_ •t ... "-•orryofdenturescominclooee. ti1I to he1 llh. See your dentitt the most" is a !llogan much clirk~--• -lllKS«l5 .... v ..... c nu.•u .... t,. .... \ flllOOENT formg illJ\ cl11tic mem-re1ularly.Gel.t11y,l().11aeF1llOCIENT • you lo b1 b•pfl,1d. Phant : 541·5711, 646-576], By JANET L SCHREINER uld Ille"""! ire rec111lted ta lilt !Fiim, -~lir~~~~~i>~ot~h~"~"'~'~""';'!'~h~i>~·~,.~~~klO~'!'~'"~'~'~A:d~h~•:.,~·=•~C~r:•:•:m:_:•~<~•~t~I J~used~~~b~y~s~u;hd~iv~i:s~inn~:sa!le~s~m~e~nJ. ~~~~!~~~~!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~' oe .... iv c~rt. · with tllll ntc:nwrv _,,.rs, In lhe ollic:• I.. d -• . h I "-·~A"•'··• True enough, as Berli'ner WALLACI &llOWN & CllA1N cf the clerk ot lhe •bov• entn1cc1 court,.,.. o .1 1 an .... ew1111-e Pl pro-...... "& ...,..,,...,. A ff-rs ~1 L.lw to are51n1 them, with lhe n.c:esury $1111 11 Div .. &11Ud'nt1 YDUChen, lo the ~ndtr1l11ned ,, ,~. affic:• IU ~ ... Orlv• I of ~II t110fnt'l'I: DURYEA, CARPENTE R New_.i &Nd! c 111.,,,lt & BARNES, llY ERNEST j , SCHA.G, JR., T.i· (7141 uuin. St0-7til •ID MKArtlll/r 811111,, P. o. Ba• 1716 A.tt.irlll'lt ttr Peni111on« Htwll0'1 Betdi, C1lfl. fUIJ, which Is the Publl1hl!CI Orin91 CHI! DlllY Piiot 1>lact ol r,u,,1r1eto al !he Uf'df'rll1n.ed lr1 tll Sftl!tl'l'll>lr 1 1 u n ltXI 1672.71i m111tr1 P«lll~ll'llll to 11'11 nt1!• cf wld ' ' ' ' dKede<it. wllll•n leur monlh1 1tt., t"4I \ fl"t 11111111c1111an of lh!s no1lc1. O•tcd A.1111111 21, 1t7G LEGAL NOTICE J. Ed11r Tl'IOmSGn Rl!lllt T"4U'4 E•Ku!or of ll>t Wilt al NOTICI! TO CllEQUQ!$ IN ·-n1med dKtdtnt SUPl!AIO• COU•T OF T DMfl!A, CltllPeNTtll a-aaiiiifl'.'--"11---- • Just ~dial the distant Ar~a Gode plus 555-1212* and we'll give · you the numoer of any listed telephorre·with"a-different:A-rea-@i>8afic~·­ Code thaIJ..yours . .Anywhere in the continental U.S .. or Canada "Ia IOale c:mimunitieo it m11 be-•HY to DW "1" ~the Ana Code.lf in doubt, pleaaa check the front P8i81 of your.phone booJr., L -_, STA.TI 01' CALIFOltNIA l'Oa IY: lllNll!ST J. SCHAG, Jll. TH• COUNTY OF O•ANG• 4Sll MtcAnhtr &1¥11. Ne. A"6eU I', O. 9a• 1716 Esl1tt ot AOllEll.T PAUL GOii.DON, Nl'WPOrt &11<1!, C11i!, tlUJ lite knawn ti PAUL GOllDON tnd II Tth HT•"" ROllEllT P. GOii.DOH, OICHIM. -AfUf'ntr .. tor E•Kvf« NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to !he "111111-Ota"lt C1111I Dt llY ~llDl, crldlt<>rl cf !he •bclve Mmed llec~I 5"l11ni.t 1, 1, U 72, 1fXI 1621--70 !tie! •U HtSOll1 h1v1 ... cl1lm1 •••IMI Ille ' ukl dKIOfnl ••• re<111lted II fill "''"" LEG.\L NonCE wllll , ... ntCllWl'Y YOl/Clllrl, In 1111 ollic:I cf lhl <l«k ol !I'll lboY• entl!IM court, a• la Pf•'lfll '"""· wllll !ht llKHSllY t211t voucheri, lo 1h1 11ndersitned 11 IM office llt intt ot her t llotnont, J, JA50N GAL£, 1S49 NOTICE 0" PU•L~C SAL• Ptl<ll Vtrde• Orlvt w,,,, P•!ol v .. d.5 TO WHOM IT MAY CONC.EllN: Eslll••· C1lltom11. whic:h II 1111 PllCR Of Nalkt_l•-butbv-lll"ttn-llltl "" ~· 111111...,,s " , ... llnck'tilvnect 1 .. •II Mllfl'fS limber 11, ,,,., ti 10:1)11 A.M. I llub!lc ~lnl119 la !ht nt1!1 ot ukl dKeclffll, wle win bf held tt Coun1rv Club SIO'"'' wflt!lftfr>Ur .....n1'W-tfl.,~lh1 lliil U101 MlllOll Sr,, Wntmfn1!1r, Calif, lo pUblktllan af lhl1 nolict. VII for ct1h The lol!owlnt coH11t!ral, lo Dt1cd A.11ou1r 11, 1t70 w!I: Allee Vlr9lni1 Gordon '61 Chev, ID NO. 13'111Z!~1.J60, Admlnls!r1trlx ol !he tslate al llc..,11 UVP sg, lhr tbclvi r11med dec;..itnt said i;allttrrel belt!ll tielCI lo 1ecur1 I n J. JASON GA.LI: ob!l•tllon 1r!sl1111 under 1 •fl•ll I,._ 1Mt Ptlol Veokl Orlv1 Wnl stt llml!nl J«urlty-"'""''"' !~lllantl Ptlol V....,, lsllles, C•lll1r11J. wit conlt1ctl held bl' Gtnttitl Nootor1 Toi; C11J) """"" •"4 J7Mn1 AtCftlltllC:f Ca•PO••tlon IS l«ll•MI Ptrtv. An......., ICH' Admlni1tr11tl~ Stfd PUlllic: u lt 11 ttl be c0f>d11<!..:I IC• Publl•l'llcl Ot•nH CotH 01lly Piiot, cordlnt to !ht! 11ws tJi/ thr Stttt al Sfl>ltml>lr 1, 1, 15, 22, 1910 16H·111 C1!llornl1. Gt~r•tl Motoro Accet>t1nc1 Cal'l><>ttllon resrr~~• 11111 rl1M lo tlld •I 1 _____ L_E_G_A_L_N_OT __ IC_E ___ , '~~.,:•':o111tr••I is praently 1,0,~ '"° m•Y bf U!M 11 1J701 Mlllot1 II., Wt1trnl~1ttr. C•lil, GENERAL MOTOR S ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION 7tlO W. Wttdlow II.Cl .. Lon~ Eleac~, Ctlll. !'OICll A, F, llr,wlty , Publllhed Or~nOt Cotst Oa lly Piie!, ~P!fmller n , 1'10 17olll-XI LEGAL NOTICE ' • ------------------~---,;-=---------·-------~------ - Nixon Picks -Anti-hijack Director WASHINGTON (AP) - A retired Air Ji'orce gene.i:lljyrned big-city police boss was qamed Monday to head the government'& campaign against air pirates. In addition, the Nixon administration announced it \v ill insure American air carriers against dan1age and Joss tes~lng from 1var risks such as the -re- cent hijackings by Palestinian com· rnandos. ' "Commercial insurance was not being o~fered at a re~sonable rate," ·it said. Lt. Gen. Benjamin 0 . Davis, 57, m'lf director of Civil Aviation Security. said it will be months or even years before air piracies can be repuced to an irreducible minimum. The fonner director of the Cleveland . . s 'ftlo•t i·•• ·.Favor Clubhouse Plans Du.e Approval? - San Clerpente plaMing commissioners \\1edoe.sday are expected to give the nod o( approval to plan.s for the new Con\. munily Clubhouse. In a 'study session lasl week, com- missioners seemed generally In favor of the new community facility which &,, ex· peeled to cost more than $200,000. The 10,000..square·fett &tructure would replace the old Spanish style structure gutted by fire early this year. The new clubhouse also is to be in the Spani.sh motiff. Currently a committee of city officials is acting as liason between civic groups Viejo Elks and arthitecta on specifieet in ~ nt'lf _ f aclllty. One controversy over the clubhoulli concerns proposed relocaHon of the shuf. fleboard courts from the clubhouae pro- perty to Plaza Park. The Adult Recreation Association np. poses the re1ocation proposal of the City, Parks and Recreation Commission. Planning Commissioners are required to make a recommendation on any UR of. public property in the city. In other business, commisaioners: -Expect to hear prowsats from c; Carson Rasmussen regarding aceeu lo about 200 acres of property near the municipal golf course from L 1 1 Baullsmos, a partially developed publie street between the sixth and seventb fairways that now deadends. ' ---police-and fire_ depar.lments _t ol d newsmen he is a stranger to the air hi· jacking field and "essentially I don't have much to say since I just arrived." l 11stallation Set Saturday -Will cdnsider suggested council revisions of a proposed ordinance ai~ at regulating the parking of trailenr, boats, disabled cars, buses or airplane parts in residential areas to protect eslhetics for other residents. t But. Davis, the highest ranking black in the anned services at his retirement in 1969, endorsed the move to put armed guards aboard airliners. The risks of airborne shootouts are worth taking, he said. "ll ts time to get tough,'' said Davis, ~·ho will supervise airport and airborne security forces recruited from various federal agencies. His pay will be between $33,000 and 136,000. Davis said he believes the most ef· fective answer for air piracies is to pre- DAll.Y ,11.0l Sllff P'Mt. Diablo Girls Cheer Like The Devil ~1ission Viejo High School cheerleaders practice one of many routines to be used in whipping up spirits during faU gridiron wars on school athletic field. Diablos' cheerleaders include (from left} J\1ary Jane Hill , Gail Thorsen, on top of the s itua~ tion, Feager Coe, Lynn Exrer and Panny Schaeff(!r. vent hijackers from boarding airliners. ,;~:;~:\~~~.~~ ~'.~~~~~~'~; Pregnant Women Highway p atro_l Bitter - force to cope with hijackings. ~ransportalion Sa:retary John A. Voll>€ Advised Ag"ainst will begin writing \\'&r·risk insurance A R c p H •k because commercial rates have ~ s eagan z•ts ay l e •kyrock•••d since the destruction of rour Aspirin U seage . ., · airliners in the Middle East at a loss of over '50 million. _ · CHICAGO (AP) _ Pregnant \\'omen The increase in commercial rates lo as should avoid taking aspirin as the lime SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Re_agan's members Monday hy Vern Alexander. much as $1.50 per '100 value, Volpe said, reduction of a H.igh'il'~Y Patrol pay raise president of the Califomia Association of COuid mean a premium jump from 11 approaches when they are to give bi~lh, "''as termed a slap in the face for palrol J~ighway Patrolmen. Formal institution of the new Mission Viejo Elks LOOge is scheduled at 2 p.m. Saturday in !\lission Viejo High School. Dignitaries (ram the California·Hawail Elks Association will gather to participate in the ceremonies, including presentation of the charter of the Lodge, No. 2444, initiation of 200 members and installation of officers. Two receptions will follow the official rites, one at the Golden Bull In El Toro for Grand Lodge and Mission Viejo Elks officers and their wives, the other at the f\1ission Viejo Inn for all Ellts and their ladies. Dr. Edward Bloxom, past dlst~ict depu- ty exalted ruler of the Orange Coast District, has persona lly conducted the organization of the new Elks Lodge, with other past district deputies Oscar Studheidt, Orange,; Dr.· Robert G. Robb, Carden Grove; and Jay Walker, Newport J-larbor. Present District Deputy Charles A. Booth and state vice president Jack V. Benton will assist in incorporation of lhe lodge. -Will consider a recommendaUoo froln the parking coinmission Ulat the zonlrir ordinance be amended so !hat flve.foOt setbacks for "in-Ute.bank" parking whera there is a slope problem be increased to IS-feet setback lo provide more parking area. Capo Bay Group_~ Ask Admission To United Fund The six mijor charitable organlzaUons ot the Capistrano Bay area have a'pplled !gr admission to the new United F.und. Roy Garbarine of San Clemente,' fund president, ·said he has received letters of request from . Boys Club of the South Coast, Boy Scouts of America, Bir Brothers of Orange County, Girl Scouts nr Orange County, Interfaith Servlcemeii·1 n1illion to over $16 million for at least one two doctors advised lltonday. ,__ __ American..car.riec... ____ --,--.,.----'Clle~yJouod....thaUhe...ba.lmu~~o~th~e~"'----------------, "The ad111inistration slapped the The secretary said authorit y for the Vi'ho took this household drug were more Ad A S • Calttom1:rlirglfw:ty-Pattol-rn-the-fa·c . The following recently elected officers oLLodge.No .. 2444 vdll~be-installed--during­ lhe Satutday ceremonies: Center and Red Cross of America. ---'J'he-charitles-willbt-a-etept~;-Gif'6i~. --• ri!lf said, contingent no Internal Revenue Service certification that they are tax exempt charitable organizations, and upon-the willinjJness of their boards to ' t · · ta· d · the ge1tcy Utt Why? Fcir shedding our blood in pro-governmen insurance 1s con 1ne m apt to del'elop bleeding problems than 1958 Federal Aviation Administration act. those of mothers who did not take it. lecti".>n of the citizens of California? For Nixon's plan to fund the aerial guard The doctors, "'erner A. Bl.eyer and Agat"ltSt Capo. respondirig effectively and efficiently in force thPOugh increased taxes on air riot .demonstrations and student unrest P••sengers Vi'as opposed ~tonday by both Robert T. Breckenridge, studied the ef· ..., stiualions?" said Alexander. the Civil Aeronautics Board and the fccts of aspiriO al the University bf S · { M d airHoes. -Rocftester N.Y. School of Medicine and et Or _OJ"f, ay He was critical of Reagan for reducing ber ' •· H w from $4.1 million to $2.5 million money Jn testimony ore '"" ouse ays Dentistry. _ .and Means Committee Secor D. Browne, They reported their findings in the A long·sfanding batlle between the city labQ.ed for a patrol pay hike.' CAB chairman said his agency believes . • of Sa n Juan Capistrano and arr ad· The palrol pay bill, by Assemblyman Sept. 21 issue of the Journal of the · the costs should be borne by the govern. verlising agency is again destined for the John Francis Foran (D-S3n Francisco), ment rather than by the airlines or their American Medical Association. 1vould h3ve given memt>ers an additional courtroom with the filing of a lawsuit passengers. They wrote that "despite the slimulu!i naming the city as defendants. five percent raise atop the five perct:nt s. G. Tipton, president of the· Alr of the thalidmoide catastrophe'' few boost granted most slate employes. The \..-Superior Court Judge Harmon G. t ·1 •· k to th t to Transport Association, told tnc com· studies have been undertaken or th e governor cu ·1 I.MC ree percen -a P I th. k r th · Scoville set Sept. 28 as the date on which lhe f' e mittee " can in ° no 0 er case 11' period just before birth and "therefore~ iv : Yt'hich a citizen bas been asked lo pay he w'iil hear Mission 0 u t door Reagan said, "The peOple of California special taxe s for the prota:tion of his few adverse drug reaclions have been un· lncorporated's argument that the city L, take tremendous pride in their highway government." CO\'ered.'' unlawfully attempting to remove a home patrol" and expressed "regret that our Bul Volpe said passengers should pay Their study included 14 ne"•bom~ advertising billboard on the south end of light fiscal situation" v;ould not permit a Donald E. Robinson, exalted ruler: John Devereaux, leading knight: Frank Wheeler, loyal Knight: Edward Mag1.1ire, lecturing knight; Robert R u a i e , secretary: \Valier Casella, treasurer; !\fichacl Booth, one.year trustee; Porter Clark,' two-year trustee; Dolan W. C:inger, lhree:-year trustee ; Henry Solak, four-year trustee; Henry B:allard, ri ve- year lru~tee; Clifford Shetley, esquire; John McDowell, chaplain: Henry Kraft, inn ter guard : Edward llartdorn, tiler; and Fred Rusk. organist. Mario V etromile · Rosary Slatecl •··ause "Here we 're going to be pro-\\·hose mothers had taken more than 0.3 toi"n. larger pay hike: v= f · • Rosary will be recited at a o'clock to--tecting one group of our people _riding ~n gramnds odf a~pirit~ in pu~e o.rm tor ~nrcom· The Fullerton firm claims that an-Alexander sajd "prai~e ·• alone cannot night for Mario Vearomile, 303 Avenida 8 particular mode of transportation· • · pou s urmg e wee prior 0 e ivery sustain superior Jaw enforcement.. . San Pablo, San Clemente. NixOn proposes increasing the head tax and t.t \\'hose mothers had not taken the nexation four years ago by the city of the "Pl)licemen also w'ant homes, autos, Mr. Vetromile died Frklay In South accept responsibility in the United Fund drive, · · . ReqUiremert of partl~ipalion in the fund drive is a new poliry of t~e board, as is the stipulation that local Charitie9· will receive prefereiice m· dispensation ol funds, Garbarine s11id. The United Fund organization is corto dueling ·a survey to detenn.ine the num:. ber of Camp, Pendleton and El Toro mil• itary and civiJian personnel Uvin( in the Capist rano Bay area· f~om San Clemente through Mission-Viejo· and Laguna Nlguel.---:- Base personnel who have no children ot. school age may assist the fund by calUl'lg '192-5078 to add their names to the survey. !i!jt. . . Deductions for charitable conlribution1 are made auton.iatically from basf; per~ soonel salaries at .their request. The · mDney now goes to United ·Funda in other areas. on international trips from $3 to S5 and drug Ill any fonn within three weeks of property on which the 'billboard stands is the necessities of life: and the sei::ure Laguna. The rosary will be in the chapel boosting the 8 percent tax on domestic delivery. not sufficient grounds for the city council feeHng of a stabl~ place in the com· of Lesneski l\.1ortuary of San Clemente. EcJie, Male lo Split fares to a•h percent. · Among the 14. lhree cases of .bleedlngr to order its removal. munity." he ~id. A requiem ma·S'S will be held at 9 a.m. Adult Recreation Open in Clemente Evening recreation for adults begin1' !\tonday at San Clemente High School and wi! continue throughout the school year. ri1en may participate in supervised ac. til'ities ~uch as basketball, volleyball and others on Mondays and \\'ednesdays from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. in the high school gymnasium. A "slim and trim" program for wo. men will be held Thursdays from 7:30 p.m. lo 9:30 p.m. in the high school gym- nasium. There is no charge or pre-registration required for the activities. sponsored by lhe Capistrano Unified School District's recreation department. rle1·e1ope<1. and among the 17 there \\'as And the plaintiffs ask in their com-The CHP ranks 47lh .statewide in pay, Tuesday at Our Lady of Fatima Catholic JTOLLY\VOOD (UPI) -Actress Edie one. No baby died or had long-term ill-1 .nl th t ., .1 b d Alexander sai'd, adding that 1.n n'ot s_itua· Church, 105 La Esperanza. Adams and her _ husband, !\-1arty Mll:S_.'"~ p a1 a c1 y counc1 men e prevente ,, Mr. Vetromile is su rvived by his widow, photographer, have jointly aMOU~ ness. from carrying out their alleged threat of tjons patrolmen· work with higher-paid Marie of the famil y home and a son Dr. they are seperating. The oouple, m~ The study found two potentially ad· ~ local Jaw enforcement oa1·cers. th •-r • Id d fl t · th f' 1 removing tbe offending billboard and that Gerard A. Vetromile of San Clemente. in 1964 arid · e paren\.:I o a ..-year-o verse rug e ec s in e irs group, "The harassmcnl, 1'nsults, rocks and f te t ·11 be · A · C 'd the I for di related lo a reducUon in the ability of the they also be ordered ,no,f to inter(ere with n rmen w1 in scens1on em· son, sai re-were no Pans • • blood to Clot. th I t .. 1 1 1 th .11 . d bullets hurt our officers, loo." he 11aid. etety, El Toro. vorce. ' · e e ec r1c1 y supp y o e 1 ummate ----------------'--------------------------- Bleye r and Breckenridge noted that sign. ''studies in normal adults ha v e Mission Outdoor also wants damages at demonstrated that a si ngle, small dose of the rate of $.100 a month from ~farch I, aspirin" can cause blood clotting ab-1969, for alleged city interference with nonnalities for as long as seven days lhe billboard. The conlroversial sign after it is taken. adverlises Camino .Capistrano homes on They said aspi rin·induced redu ction irl its north side and Thundefbird homes on lotting abillty may be clinlcally relev-the aide facing south. ant. particularly during d i f f I c u I l Court records indicate that earlier cJty deliveries or in !he presence of diseases action against Mission Outdoor resulted affecting bioow flow ; such as hemophilia. in a judgment for the city and levying of Until the clinical significance of these fines against the advertising firm. findings is further evaluated, aspirin and The billboard was erected in May, 1966 other anti·inflammatory agents known lo \\'hen the surrounding area was recogniz.. affect blood coagulation "should be ed as unincorporated county territory. avoided when labor is imminent," lhey The land was annexed by the city on Aug. added. I, 1966. Midis 3 Luncheons Away Long Look iii Dresses 'Will Be Iii' Say Designers LOS ANGELES CUPll -By mid- October, women of America are going to be suffering from embarrassed knees. "\\'e're only three luncheons away from complete acceptance of tht longer lengths," said high fashion designer 'Villlam Travllla at the Caliloml.a fo'ashion Creator's annual prtu weft at the Sberatan:Univusal Hotel be.rt: __ "At the. first ran luncheon. the woman .,.ho wants t(). make a stand Is going to Y:ear last year·s drus and she's going to Jook tecky. But the won't feel tacky be<:11use she's used to the short iengths. "At the second luncheon, when she tetl !.ht new look on the women, she"s goini tlrfeel tae.ky," he said. '·She's.not going to show up at the third Juncbeon because she.'1 going to be ou\ 111hopping. By October e.very woman la going to be buying new clothts or else 1;he"11 going to have embflrraued knees," Travilla said. A panel of fashion experts Including Travilla, George Wasser berger, president of Mark Cross Shoe Manufacturers : Peg Zwecker, of the Chicago Daily News ; and Bettina. Jaynes, a sportswear designer, agreed the lengths were going lo get JOnger and that it wasn't such a bad 1111!!1!. ~ashion..oi& change," W•ssttbtarger oid . But spartswear designer&, w h o prtstnled thtir collections · for tprlng 1971 , weren't UmiUna thcmselvea lo one lel\llth. They lhowtd playsuit!! with !ihort shorts shifts way abi>ve the kflee, wrapM'OUfld skirt.a a( the knee, midi vests over panl,, jump 1uiu and full, noor· len.g1h, at home skirts -and pants, pants, pants. ''Pants •~ aelling like ahsolutely trazy.'' said Al Citron of White Stag, Vi'ho iald bla2ers over pants and skirts of all lengths were going to be spflng fashion news. They \\'ere also coat suiz.s with belted coats ending just. above the knee worn over matching canvas slacks. White Stag Introduced terrycloth jump sult.s and pant sui!s they promiJCd wouldn 't bag or sag as terry used to do. There-was a smashing magenta backless Jump suil in terry wom with • coverup safari jacket. They aJso mumcted the old clam di,g. rer pants with a new name, sand dig· gers. The wide legged panb art cut oCf just below the knee. lntemauonaae_ set s~-whlt they called pants suits for outdoors and pant! sets for indoors. · For evening, Alex Qlltman had black velvet midi vests ovtr wide legged p1nt,;i and long·sleeved whl~ satin blouse,. The 111me look ~·•s 1lso shown in gaucho pants. ' " Boosting Chicken Dlaaer San Clemente Junior Varsif.y cheerleaders Nancy Calhoun <left) and ~anet Gibton expect n1embers ol !.he Triton Booster Club wiO have something to • slick to lheir ribs Friday when San Clement• High • fakes on Laguna Beach In the season's first horn• football game. Club will hold its annual pre-gamo dinner from S:30 p.m. lo 7:30 p.m. in Triton Cent.I', Game tickets can be purchased at the dinner. .. -- ' -DAll.Y l'ILOT I cc.n.i• ~ .. Dl.ir ,... """ A 1965 Cadillac limousine that on~ belong to actress Judy Gerl•ncl is J>eing auctioned oil by Nova Uni· vefsity. Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Bids may be submitted by telepbooe or mail._ As mucb ·u half Of the pur· chase price may be tax deduct· ible, a university spokesman said. He, said' the previous ownership of tht; car has been documented. The university hopes to equip its new television studios with proceeds from the auction, the spokesman said. · • : ' A crew of firerMn wai dis- Patched Frid.a11 tn Portsmouth, }la. to rescue a cat from a tree. t 1 '7'1ission accomplishtd, the cat ~ released. A& the fire truck 'tarted back to the itation, it fan over the cat. ' • In Vugo1lam. Tito Announces He Will Resign BELGRADE (AP) -Pmldent Tito has annourEed that he will 1tep down after ruling Yugoslavia for 25 ye11rs and turn the country's government over to a collective leadership. Tito, 71, did not Indicate Monday wbat his position would be but it w11rbelieved in Belgrade, the nation'• capl~. !hot !10 would romain bead of the _.Commun!Jt Viet Leader Ky Starts Trip To Paris, U.S. --SAIGON -iUP.I) -ice Preaideot_and Mrs. Nguyen Cao Ky of South Vietnam left for the Paris peace talks and the United States 'l\Jesday with every in- dication that he plaMed to fulfill a speak- ing engaJement at a right·wing rally in Washington on Oct. 3. party and would run'1tbe new presidium, at leaat in lb lniUal phue. - Further delalls will be announced Inter, Tito sald. "I am quite long In thlJ post and I would like to ha,. more -1blliliel. to work on eome other projects," be aaid in • •!*Ch Moodoy In Zlgreb, the country'• second largest city. ' Tito, who broke tram Moscow in !Ml and wu named president for life in 1913, sald rooraanilatton of the country'• eom. mun)lt aovemment WU neoeaary to praerve Yugoslavia's unity. He gave no time!aJ>le for the c:Jwiieover. But be said speculation on who mijibl -him could provoke a crills, and that to avoid it, governmental restructuring w a 1 neceaaary. He explained that he initiated the change becauee "if tomeone else did, it would look u U they wanted to remove me."'--,,.---,-,--~----'--Tlto said he would be replaced by a presidium that would be "a fonn of col· lectlve president of Yugoslavia." The body would consist of repreaentatives from the coUnt.ry's six republics and ita main social and political orglllizaUoD!, including the Communist party. UlltT .......... Republicans raised nearly $200,· OOQ Saturday in a fund-raising ex· periment called the "Grand Old Party" at a 400-acre farm on th• western outskirts of. suburban Creve Coeur near-St. Louis. About 6,000 tickets were sold at $25 each for the extravaganza, which fea- tured performances by singer.Tony Martin and screen personalities Dale Robert1on and Jane RU11ell. Available to party-goers were Pre1lclent Nixon wristwatches for $15 and Spiro Agnew watcbes for $12.50. Ky and bis wife, Mai, boarded a regularly scheduled commercial Air Viet- nam flight for Taipei and Tokyo at I a.m., where they were expected t o change to an international flight to Paris. Ky's office maintained that they did not have details on tbe flight beyond Tokyo. Tito was a partisan leader against the close ties with the Soviet Union im· mediately following the war. But in 1948 his country became the first Soviet satellite to break away. The United States was pleased by the break and provided Tito's government with more than fl billion in assistance of various kinds. In later years Yugoslavia'• relations with Moscow and Washington alternately wanned and cooled. CAMBODIAN GIRL SOLDIER RESTS DURING FIGHTING S..ma Stumed As She Sees Bodies of Slain Friends A surprise figure at the colorful sendolf ceremony at Tan Son Nhut Air Base was U.S. ambasydor Ellsworth Bunker. The U.S. State Department had advised Ky not to make the trip to the United States for his own safety and because of the in- fluence his trip might have on the U.S. Congressional elections. 'Permissive Educators'Hit Asked why he came to the ceremonies, Bunker chuckled and said, "No com· ment." Later, he said, 1'! am here at the jnvitation of the Vietnamese Forel1n Ministry." Tito's announcement wu not expected to affect President Nixon'• planned visit to Yugoslavia next week. However, apy U.S. intervention in the Jordanian civil war could force cancellation of the trip because of Tito's close ties with Arab leaders. By Agnew in Hot TV Clash • Bryo" County Oklo. Sheriff Joo Brimm .. • is still sheriff today, thanks to the flip of a coin. Brim- __ age was cball~ged in the Sept. 15 primary by O. ~ltilillll, aifd unofficial vote totals showed Brim:. mage the winner by 22 votes, 2,- 993 to 2,971. Higbfill asked for a re- count, and the tabulaUon in Dis- trict Court sbowed Friday the out· come was a tie. The men agreed to Oip a coin,. with the winner be- coming sberiU and the loser. un .. dersberiff. An attorney threw the coin in the air, Highfill called it ·heads. He is Bryafl County's new undersheriU. • Women passengers at the near- by-Meldreth and-Melbourn station have complained because the ladies' room' has been rented to a private firm in Cambridge, Eng· land. The women are ditected to the men's room while a porter gtands guard outside. Rex Emery, a local councillor, said, "with its continental-style mixed lavatory, Me1drith will go down in history for being the first British railway sta- tion to tum European when we join the common market.'' • San. Edward ·Muskie appeared with Democratic gubernatorial candidate Jeaa Unruh at a news conference Friday in Los Angeles and was asked if he was California Democrats' answer to Vice Pr11i· dent Spiro T. Agnew, who cam- paigned here last week for state Republicans. "I don't· think there Is such an answer. I don't think we want such an answer," Muskie laughingly told reporters. The Maine Democrat was the 1968 Democratic candidate for the office Agnew bolds. MeeilWhile, speculation continued that Ky would nach.Paris but would not (!On-· tinue on to the United States because of the adverse reaction. ''He might find that the Paris talks: ~ g!Ure thar..he..runain long~in Pari.1," U.S. officials said. Many members of the diplomatic corps and President Nguyen Van Thieu's cabinet turned out to bid Ky and his wife farewell. He shook hands with all of lhem and reviewed a ct1lor guard before boarding the plane. Bunker's surprise appearaDCe may have been related to his anger over Viet· namese language newspaper articles wbic reported the United Slates planned to back Thieu for re-election in 1971 and viewed Ky u suitable only for the vice presidency. Bunker has denied the reports. ·1 Ky reported to the nation via television Sunday-dight-that-he intended to go·to the Unite4 States "for th'e cood of Vietnam." Luna Returning After Success In Moon Landing MOSCOW (AP) -An unmanned Soviet rocket carrying a cargo of moon rocks sped toward earth today for an expected touchdown sometime Thursday. The Russians scored an advance tn space exploration Monday morning by launching the rocket off the lunar surface from the unmanned Luna 16 space •ta· lion. Moscow 's papers splashed the event to- day. · "See, we're not so far behind the Americans," one Russian remarked. The Communist party newspaper Prav- da said: "The unmanned mission ii suf- ficienUy reliable and aafe .•. Ill cost is much lower than that of aeodJni manned flicbll to the moon." Female Panthers lumJ! 2_Deputies ~ - In Jail Scuffle NEW YORK (AP) -Viet President Spiro T. Agnew, debating with a student who called him a precurser of violence, has laid the blame for c a m p u s disturbances on the "permissive at- titude" of college administrators. Agnew's colorful rhetoric Was singled out as a cause <>f college unrest by Richard Silverman, student body presi· NEW ORLEANS (UPI) _ Three dent at the University of Washington, female Black Panthers arrested with 11 who was one of four students male Panthen after a shoot.out with participating in a taped television debate police Jut week jumJ!ed two depuUe.s with ~ vice president Monday night. Monday, bi•• .. one seftrely and acratch-Durmg the to-minute discussion on the "6l'6 David Frost Show, to be seen in most ing the <>ther. c!Ues Friday, Agnew and the four District Attorney Jim Garrison had ac-students freqUenUy disagreed over the cepted murder charges against the causes of student violence. · women and 10 of the men earlier in the Silverman ch'arged that Agnew was day. One or the Panthen was a juvenile "one <>f the greatest precursers of violence our country has ever seen." and.could not be_cbJrged. _ ~--The vice president rep,!ied: ''To use me Orleans Parish Sheriff Louis Heyd said as a bete noir for the vi01ence l liat has - the scuffle broke out as Elaine Young:, 22, existed in this ct1untry because of the was being taken back to her cell after a disgusting and permissive attitude <>f the visit with her lawyer. people in command of the college cam- "She along with two other black p.19es is one of the m <> s t ridiculous females,' jumped Deputy Sberlff Joseph charges I have ever heard." Sparks and started to beat on him," Heyd The exchange became healed when said. Silverman brought up the shooting deaths "Deputy Sheriff James Amiker went to of four Kent State University student.s Sparks' assistance apd helped him gain during a confrontation with National control and put the females back in the Guardsmen. cell. Sparks was sent to Charity Hospi'8.I Agnew, citing the burning of the with a severe bite M his back and university's ROTC building, the harass· abrasions. Amlker was scratched." ment of firemen and the chanting of Heyd said none of the women was in· obscenities as extenuating factors, said jured. All three -Miss Young, Leah he nevertheless deplored the killings. Hodges, 18, and Catherine Bourns, 11, "It Is most unfortunate, as it appears were charged with assault and battery. now that the National Guard over· Fortunes of War Pav , DAMASCUS (UPI) -At Syria's border with Lebanon, a pretty girl of the Arab cuenilla organliation Al Salqah stands asking travelers for;a 60-cent donaUon. Those who give gtl a receipt written .in Arabic. Translated, the receipt reveals the donor b entitled lo free entry to a pmbllng culno In Damalcua. reacted," he aaid. Without further el§boration, Agnew said the presfdent of Kent State had blamed the killings on the ''hum an debris dumped on him by the Ohio free ad· missions program.'' The vice president also came in for Wild Storms Roam Nation ' Lightning Kills lllirwis Man; Snow Hits Some States .....,,... ... ,, li:nott 11'1 .,,.. ••• _., .,. w ........... """ ....... n. ~ '""""lvftt ''"" frtll'I • .. ,., llllitM ....;.,..""" ,.,... """' M '9 ... Wttw ""'"""°"'"' ''' WIOfllllMY , lillf'al 111111 .. : ......... ll:JO•·'"· 1.1 v.s. s .... _.,, wri. """'""'ttt'IN ,..,,,.,. ""' CM> tt11 ,.,,. f1' ""' "'""' ..... ., ,..,." '""° lllfllct!M ,......., .••• -... '"' ktlllN ti lftlf t11t l'!lffl ..,...,. nltM. Oettld MllllMn. vlni ~llM!lt of I llitf\11 Ito ... rllnthlfl Htltl'lll. Ill,. will klllM """" 11t11r111111 1trw• ,,.,. ,.11 cturM wt.rt fie w11 1!t't'IM wl!ll "ltnd1. TllP'M tiller lftftl'IM" et IM fOllftoll'lt Wtff ffUflntlf Ill' IN bofl. re111pert1t11".f!• "'" ~ '""" Altiuo1u-1J11 es jt Alltnll t7 n .lt ll1k1r1t11ld " II lll&m1rck .. 41 lolM M .Q ,1, lotto!> II jil) Clllu9o n 14 ClnclMHI f4 11 ... (1-ll'nd ., " De!lv.r ,, '' .11 Dtlrell rl 4S £11rfl(1 U fl For! Wortll to 11 """"° 12 SJ ....... .. " ~lu • 12 H9Uttoll " n .. llClllMI City 17 7• l .. v.... a1 " LotA""let 1' 61 Mltl'!ll lttcfl M n .M MllwlVkM h n ,05 Ml11Mtll9llt n .65 .Of NewOrlMM n 11 .... Yl!Wtt a .. OMllM N 41 OfMN n " .ti ,, .. 1111_. ts +I "'l~lllt " '2 ,lttllll,lrtll ., .. '"'""1• •s " "°'111/idl .. 11 ... llulf .. -- lttnO ,, "' $-c:rtmt!'lll ti Sol SI. loul1 to 14 Siii L•kt Cll't' 60 ~41 M Siii OlfH 11 11 S.11 PrtnclK• 11 '1 criticism from Eva Jefferson, 21, of NOrthwestern University. She said he gave the lth°presslon t.!;iat he thought students were "people from another planet that have been put here to blow up buildings." '-'Maybe thi! is your goal -to isolate people," Miss Jefferson added. .The other student participants were Gregory Craig, 25, of the Yale Law School, and Steve Bright, 21, of .the University of Kentucky. Police .Jail 21 In Washington ·youth Outbreak WASHINGTOIUUEl) -ALleasL 21 persons were arrested Monday night and early Tuesday in an outbreak of rock throwing and minor looting along northwest 14th Street, the area hardest hit during Washington's August, 1968 riot . No injuries were re~ in the d15turbance whi ch Police Chief Jerry Wilson said began after police attempted to make a narcotics arrest at the New Amsterdam .Hotel. Police said those arrested were charg- ed with disorderly conduct. Special riot- equipped police were sent into the area after bands of youths some shirtless in the muggy 76-degree weather, began rov- ing streets, tossing rocks at windows and cars. Tear gas canisters were shot to break up some of the groups of young people who were taunling and harassing police from side streets. Poll:e said 11 stores were broken into, and two -a drug store and a shoe store -were extenaively looted. . Reds Shell~,,. ,..,,,--. ~ R-emforced Cambodians "' From Wire Servf«t Communist troops who have stalled the government 's first major offensive lash- ed out at heavll~ reinforced Cambodi•n forces ln two shelling attack.! todfly, the military command reported. A spokesman said the Cambodian troops, estimated at about 6,000 men, were J)ressit).g against light opposition in- to positions to try to envelop the Cam- rounist stroitgpoint at Taing Kauk, 4.7 miles north of Phnom Penh. An estimated 2,000 North Vietnameae and Viet Cong are in the village. The enemy force has halted lhe government operatiop for nine days. The spokesman in Phnom Pefl)t said villagers 'in the battle zone have reported that some Communists were pulling ou• of Taing Kau.k. He said intelligence reports indicate that the enemy ma)' have decided to fall back to more easily defendable positions. -The-spokesman said five soldiers and two civilians were wounded in the two shelling attacks. Premier Lon Nol visited the Taing Kauk area Monday, then went <>n to Kompong Thom to visit troops al that provincial capital 80 mUes north <>f Phnom Penh. The government's offensive is aimed at reopening the area between Skoun and Kompong Thom. The Cambodian command a 1 so reported four attacks in the past two days in the Phnom Penh area. It a~ peered that none of the attacks dislodged government soldiers from their positions. The spokesman said the government now has enough troops to maintain the pressure in its drive up Highway I lo Kompong Thorn and to deal with enemy pressure anywhere else in the country. The Cambodian high cormnand Monday replaced the commander of a govern- ment task force which has been encirl~ for ~ week by Communist troops north of Phnom Perih. South Vietnamese troops reported killing M Communists southeast <>f lhe Cambodian capital. Military spokesmen said heavy lighting Oared between South V i e t n a rn e s e regional forces and. a Communist unit near highway one about 90 miles southeast of Phnom Penh Monday. . Tb.e__So.ulJ>...Yjetnamese _reported losing <>ne man killed and two wounded In the clash near the province capital of Svay Rieng just outside the f>arrot 's Beak sec- _Jion of Cambodia. The South Vietnamese were supported by tactical airstrikes and artillery and r~rted capturing large amounts of murutions and medical equip- ment. A South Vietnamese spokesman In Saigon said South Vietnamese forces with air and artillary SUPPort killed 54 Nortli Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops ln a newly launched amphibious <>peration into Cambodia centered along the Bassac and Mekong rivers 35 to 50 miles southeast of r1~~om Penh. One South Vietnamese was xrued..and...two_wounded. \Headquarters said the four-da:Y-ctd operation did not change the number of South Vietnamese troops now in cam. bodia, about 13,500 because the 1 SOO marines and several hundred militi~en involved had already been in Cambodia on other operations that were closed out. One Fea~ed Drowned As Kayak Capsizes , MENDOCINO (UPI) - A kayak capsized after being swept from the Big River's mouth ont<> the Pacific Ocean and one of its occupants is missing and presumed drowned. The victim was identified Monday as Jim Ogle, 19, a resident of Antioch ranch a nearby Hippie commune. Philip Stevens. 11. swam from the kayak to a rock and was rescued. 1111"1 1ow .............. 7:tl 1.m. a.t l«ond hlfll ........... l ;llf,11'1, •.• lkD1141 '°"' ......... -. tt:,. •""· •.• 1!.i11 .,_ 1:41 t.11'1. htJ f;IO 11.l'n, Motll -aM U:lt t.f'I\. ltlft.Jli»....,,,... ' •. Twe """ """ 1t•1ltCltd Ill Ltkl MldllNll olf tfllo CllluM ll'llttllne W~ Wll'Mll Ill Uf ~ JJ ll'jli_. 111 hovr • CIM1rtd !Mir l .. too! Mllbotl. Tlltf _. ftttvtd llW O!M~ M!IOft. Tll4 *'°""' 1IM tvtrfllrntd f JlrlYl lt 1111111 11 Mldw1r Afr-' trwf ttUH _ ... tr-.-l'MI -li'OllL ''"'' a., .. ,. " .. S..tTll tt ,. SIMl!t1,.. U 17 Thtrrottl 100 .. W1t11111tlOl'I N .. VICE PRESIDENT AGNEW RAPS WITH STUDENT (EADER$ FROM NATION'S COLLEGES·- ' ''D1vld Fre<st Show'' Deb•t• lead& to Charges ind Counter-charges by Both Sid11 ' -•• , • T~, Stpt.embtr n, 1970 DAILY PILOT • <". Balloon Trio-Lost" .Death Rap Threat Told .. Family Member Accuses Lawyer ' At Sea LOS ANGELES (AP) -The chief prosecutor in the Sharon Tate murder trial hu been ac- NEW YORK (AP) -Tl!O-U. cused ol-lhrealining a S. Cout~tlll'd ~ member of Q\arles Manson's air force . today in .. •hippie-type clan with the death searcb or three balloonlata peRalty after alleging she and ~-""ed down In -··• A"--olhers tried lo kill a slate ui:uev '""6"' wu.-witness with LSD. tic 1eas some 500 miles The accusaUQJll were made southeast of St. John's, Nfld. in an affidavit filed Monday The three, two men and a against prosecutor Vincent T. ........ ;.ere last heard from -Schools Shut Bugliosl. In it, Mamon'• at-torney, Irving Kanarek, asked al 7:05 p.m. Monday when · that Bugllosl be cited for con· they radioed: "Six hundred B n· d tempt. The judge took the feet· and descending. Signing y ISOr ers mailer uoder study. orf. Will try contact after Ian· Out or court, defense al· ding." In Louisiana lorney Paul Fllzgerald said. No further messqes were Bugliosi had complained to the trial judge that members of received, !eaving Jp doubt the HOUMA, La. (AP) -Racial the nomadic "family" had fate of the crew which was ir.t-disorders closed four schools tried to kill 9 I • ye a r . o j d tempting the first transaUan· id this southeast Louisiana Barbara Hoyt !Ith a : huge tic dossing in a balloon. town Monday, and officials overdose of LSD. . Three Coast Guard cutters took emergency steps to pre· Fitzgerald told newsmen were ordered to the scene. The vent rurther outbreaks. , Bugliosi alleged that Manson cutter Dallas arrived in the G "fam•"ly" mem•··s l"-d Miu ov. John McKeithen uc.i ..... Indian A dvocate area at 1:30 a.m. EDT and declared Terrebonne Parish Jloyt to Honolulu, charging the ------l~OD a~aearch. E1pected (ro1nty) iit 3Stati of emei'gen-plane-fare-to-a-credit-card ladlans are "in" this year but it does them little later were the Duane and the cy, empowering local officials from "someone who dropped good, says Sen. Fred R. Hanis (~kla.). He Was Jngham. to impose a 10 p.m. curfew out or society and gave il to speaking before the Senate Subcommittee on Jndian In Halilai, N.S .• Canadian and restrict other activity. them." ~s. Though people are dressing like them and Air-Sea Rescue Service Of· Disorders broke out Mon-Bugliosi said they gave her rushing to~do good for them, the Indians have seen ficials reported that a long· day when blacks and whites a hamburger spiked with to few results Harri's ,. boo ti t b"I h' b uld range patrol aircraft was began fighting at South Ter· capsules or LSD, which he' . · s sngwouswicwo being ·dis p a t c h e dlrom II emphasIZe the human side of Indian problems. G-•wood. rebonne High School. One stu· ca ed a near lethal dose. McNamara Asks Drive • Toward Birth Control • ~..... dent was expelled after the ln· Later, he said, she was round The huge orange balloon. cident. wandering incoherent in an christened "the free life," Two other schools' were clos. alley and was hospitalized. He lifted of£ from a Long lsland ed as preventive measures said she is recovering in cow pasture Sunday afternoon. arter some shoving a n d Honolulu and will testify for Aboard were Rod Anderson, pushing In the hallways. th e stale . 32, a New York commodities Meanwhile Terrebonne High Kanarek said Bugliosi e1· broker; his wife. Pamela School was ordered closed for changed words last Friday Brown, 28, a television ac· another day. with petite, blonde Sandra tress, and Malcolm Brighlon, ..:;;=::...==------='-"=::...====.o. 32, of Farnham, England, an aeronautical engineer. . , Good, 27, a pro 1 Pe ct Ive Of the accuutions can-have you behlnd btr1 It tt'a defense witness, who ha1 been ce~g MlM Hoyt, Miii Good tbe lat thtna 1 do." ' camping outslde the Hall ot uld: 0 1t's ao absurd and Buallost i.uect a utement Justice for five days. outrqeoua ud eooty, J knew uylJll: "Molt ot the affldavlt Jn an a ff i d a v i t ac-· ablolutely noUuna; ab o a t ii falle. Witb ~ to those companying Kanarek'• re-Barbera Hoyt." limited partlom. that are tive. quest, Mils Good said Bualiosl In her affadivit, ahe accuaed U all ol the faeta • • . ftrt1 Buglloal ol 11y!ng·. "I'm -•·· •--it --'• ~ ~--•-~• caned her obscene names and .~.... .,llnt'u Wuwu uc auwJW&Uw • lo set you and I'm -•·· lo 1tt c•--· ••·t my ---O acalled her of commJtUng av..,. .,..,. w.m ·-r-·-· ·. you fOOd and see lhlt you 1et wu e1ceedlngly mild tHider acts of sexual perversion with the death penalty. I'm going to the clmunstances." Manson. \r====:;;:::==:;:::;:::,;::;:==~~~====: Miss Good said at bu post on the sidewalk late Monday "I'm going to slay here unUI Charlie gets out of jail." G 0 L F Manson, 35, is on trial with three women rollowers, chlr1· ed with murdering Miss Tlte and six others in Au1Ust !Ill. HUNTINGTON llACH COUNTRY -CLUB "' FAIR 779 17th St., /lllfttl""°" leach . 536·2412 PERMANENT WEEKEND $TARTING TIMES NOW AVAILABLE .~ . '" Ftlf, ftir, f•ct11•I. Ttie1t three word1 11111'1 up f•cton ii. oper•flon '" th• DAILY r lLOl .ditorit l p•t • •••ry city. ORllN FE!S $2.50 SAT. & SUN. $4.00 'u iiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiii~" NOW -IN HUNTINGTON BEACH De Earl~ DISCOUNT PLUMllNG HEATING & Alll CONDITIONING "Hom• 8i1s• For Do.It~ Your1elfen'' 24 Hr. Emer9ency Service 18423 IEACH ILVD. 847-9641 • Ceilin9 • Wall • And Slab1 leak• Our Specialty • Weter Heaten • Drain & Sewer Cleanin9 o.~ 20% DISCOUNT ON ANY PURCHASE OR SERVICI WITH :nus AD ':l n ~-COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) -World Bank President Robert . S. McNamara urged Monday the prevention of the births or a billion babies by the year 2000 to brake the world papulation u ploaion. McNamara told the opening ,session of the annual meetb1g of the b81llc and International Monetary Fund that a massive birth control drive should be mounted Jo meet the popula· lion problem. He also said rich countries should shift more resources into foreig• aid. In the early stages of the flight the baUoonlsts main- tained an altitude of from 3,000 to 6,000 feet and all ap- peared well . _,, .o Jane Fonda At Trial Of Panther The· ronner U.S. defense secretary, who forecast the gap belween the rich and the poor nations would continue wideaing. said birth reduction ol a billion would cut the population growth rate to one percent a year. "The most Imperative issue NEW YORK CAP) for the loRg term is pGpu lation Actress Jane Fonda showed up planning," he warned. The balloon used b o t h helium, iri an inner sac, and hot air; supplied by a propane gas heater, for its lift. Trouble began after the balloonists reported Monday that they had abandoned the heating system, making ~m dependent solely on the helium to stay up. At the last report the ball oon had run into a severe cold front and rainstonn that combined to cause it to lose alUlude. at the Black Panther . trial McNamara rapped tight· Monday and said ft had done ftsted attitudes to aid for so because "black militants developing countries. He said ahould not be i!olated from tlle world's current level or B societ .. military expenditure of $180 ig Banks "It·!· import.ant that white billion a year had gct1e people g0 to these trials," stie "beyond the p o i n t of added. dimllinishi,ng :etuherns.d"dcd th Cut Prime Wearing black slacks, white was rag1c, a . at blouse and a n embroidered rich couRtri«!s. hestitate ~o . keep on spending even their Loan R le v~ she s119:ke wllh newsmen _presenL$7 billion annitally uo •• ,___ 3 during a rece:w. m ~1 Of aid tG prevent "lethal revoiii- 13 Panthers, including two ti on." women, on charges ol al· After demonstrations Sun- lei:nJ>ted murder and con-day by militants who hurled gp1racy. slolles and Molotov cocktails "I want to fmd out what's at police cars to protest the going on," she sakl. "I want to World Bank and IMF meeting. see there is at least an al· police with dogs · threw a tempt at a fair trial." security cordon round the hall If .,.., •re not uslRt Answer- Int Se"lce, You .,. .,., get· tint •II •f your c•lls. TE LEPHONE ANSWl llNG IUll AU 835-7777 for Monday's opening. About 2.0CM> demonstrators, mostly in their teens or early 20s. marched to the meeting hall Monday wit h shoots of: "HaRg PtfcNamara!" About 600 police protected t h e bullding. Check tho p rices et - • The Depl Stores • The 5 an d 10-cenl Stores • The Discount Stores Then come in and save at our store. ......................... ,,.... ... f'9W ...,.,, ,,....... - THE THINKER F"RAME SHOP 333 E. 17th St., Cost• Mo,. (llfillM lflt9mltMMI P•nuke HOUM) NEW YORK (AP) -Four o( the nation's seven Jargest banks have cut their prime in- terest rates in the latest round of reductions. The cuts in the prime rate tO 7~ percent from a percent was triggered Monday by Morgan Guaranty Trust C.O. of New York, the nation's fifth largest bank. By the end of the: business day more than 40 banks, both big and small, had cut lhe rate they charge their biggest and most creditworthy customers. Among the big banks tHat rollowed were Bank 0 f America of San Francisco, the world's largest bank; Chase Manhattan, the nation's third largest bank, and Chemical Bank, the nation's s I 1th largest (.Jlase Manhattan and Chemical Bank are head· quartered In New York. A spokesman for t h e · Federal Reserve Bank of New York said that "directly and immediately there would be litUe effeq on consumers." us llS llmll& Ill• PSA ltongl lllOllnd wlMlro.,.. ..._With :'" Nf .. 160 n/ghlS a day Ind -II< lo .... t, " Ill ...... we'reWill>lnmsyl88dl.AndPSAVatcar -::f_- I &-,,_tlll_we_oll ~ 11111)1 21• .-Valoar -· )'DU .... I t•~•• you--~OY!lfHertz i. ... 111 1 encl""° 181es. bued on..._ mile· PSA -ID ... ego. Air yourself out Call your travel l'"SJ'MI 11111.... ogont or PSA. 2nd llqw Jrom 11o 1111. a lift • -- We go fishing a lot at Edison. Our favorite, spot is the · Pacific Ocean-just off our nuclear power plant at San Onofre. What we're rehlly fishing for are ecological facts. During several years of operation of the San Onofre plant, we have cooled the c:oodensen.with sea waicr. What has been the result .Pf~ pnictjce? N'meteen surveys at San Onofre have re*aled no adva:se elfects OD the marine environment from the warm water rcleued. Tbescstudieswcrec:on· ducted by Marine Advisen, Inc., of Solana Beach, and are on file " with the San Diego Regional Water. Quality Control Board (which is un· der jurisdiction of the State Resources Agency). Nuclear power plants are a depen d- able source of low-cost power for our customen-and a clean source of power, too. Although a nuclear powerplanrsuch·as San Onofre ii a source of some radioactivity-it is far below the limits allowed. Standards set by the Federal Radiation Council are rigidly enforced by tho Atomic Energy ' CommUsion. Man hu learned to control radia- tion so well that you could live nen door to a nuclear powa: plant Sidi. as San Onofre for 20 ,ars before receiving 11 much r.ma.. lion aa frotn a single chat x-1a7. ~the environment-the land, the air, the sea-ii of great importance to Ediaon. And ft 119 -confident that nuclear power plants can help us do it E • .. ' • ' •• .l ,.:.· : ·: ,, ' i . .. , ., .. ~ II ,, ' . . , .. "' ,. ' -• 'l ' . -•• -~ ! • " I ' • • - • • • DARV PROT EDITORIAL P tlGE \ Def using· the Campus· -~ ''Those who resort to lhe rule of force have .19 place --on 1 college campus." •· So wrote President Nix.on Sunday iii a personal message to nearly 1,000 eoUege_presidents and adminis· trators telling them it is their responsibilit-y to enforce a rule of reason on the natid'n's campuses. , H1s action followed by only four days a warnjng against violenCe, terror and arbitrary djsregard for the rights . of other _persons -a message aimed primarily at college stuaents. · A week earlier, UCLA Chancellor Charles E. ).1oung asked his faculty to !ind ways to keep p<>lilics out of the university this fall and at the same tune issued broad guidelines of professional conduct for professors. This had been precedejl by a'ction on a broader scale involving the nine-campus UC system. The Asse m· bly of the UC Academic Senate voted to investigate means of determining professional misconduct by uni· -versity faciiliy members.· · • Tl}e 51-member assembly, representing some 7,000 faculty members in the 'total system. approved a res· olution that recognized what it called ". _ . the need for academic self-discipline in' the interests of academic freedom.'" •Enforcement of such guidelines is certainly a move in the right direction, and long overdue. But it is no panacea. There remains that small minority of hard core revolutionaries dedicated to destroying the ".~ys· tern" while having; nothing constructive to put in ila place. The fact is -as it always has been -the only truly . eUective power·to ke~p our colleges from being destroy. ed is Jn the hands ~f the faculty and students. They ue the primary victims of the guerrillas. Th'ey are the only force in position to unmask the ·guerrillas and drive them out of the college community. A university is not a fortress. It is an especially difficult institution to. protect against viole nce and dis·. ruption if it is to rerilain a center of free thinking and free le~rning. But protected it must be, at all costs. for as the Pres ident said , "The university is a precious national asset, a place in American society wher.e the rule of reason and not the rule of force must prevail.'' Lon g Hair Psychology ..... ·' All of these moves -and others on lesser campuses It appears school board members in various.Orange -----arouna-th--e.':""~ta:te _ ·nect"lrdegree-oHntrospectimrb,~y----"c,.oun..ty d.istcic:ts___wb..o_hnUeeuxp'!re~slrsm~· ~g;'s~u~clesc~o~n;;;·----t~;if!il,'!i~~ cern about boys' long· hair and strict dress C odes for faculty and administr'iltors. There is less argument both sexes might beoefit from a refresher course in -· , against suppression of academic freedom and more emphasis on the responsibilities that go with that free· psychology. d It took a court ruling to relax rules against Jong omPresident Nixon cited a recently published article hair at Saddleback College, for example. But one by by Dr. Sidney Ho6k, Ne\v York University philosophy one, high schools )lave started getting out of the dress pi-ofessor, based on his statement before the President's regulation busin6s. other than for 1natters of sanita· Commission on Campus Unrest. lion, safety and basic' morality, and have turned that In essence, the Hook guidelines for dealing with the job back to the parents, where it belongs. problem are quite like those laid do\vo by UCLA's Chan-Observers note that. in general. where dress celJor Young. They set fprth a process which, a~ 'loung codes have been relaxed, the youngsters no longer· have put it, ".sho.uld minimize un\vitting ·abuses. provide incentive to defy the "establishment." They have be· protection for the right of students and set forth a clear come more cleanly and acceptably groomed on their basis for determining future viOlations." O\\'n. ' 'What will you giue! me to get .)'Our lady friend //ack7 · Double Standard Diamond Jini Had Sto1nach. Of a Glutton Congressman Warns State Depart~t -About ·children, (During liis vacation. 1ve are re· printin g selections from i\fr. Harris' la.te.sl collection of colu.mn.s iit boo1' form, .. LeaVing ~he Surface.") We're all aware of the itoubl e standard about sex. but few are aware of the even more pervasive double standard about children. I thought of this the other day. while listening to a man talking about the .. shiftless" young people in the slums. This min, 1 happened to know, has a &On who is laey and not overly bright. Yet)te has 8 respon. sible and welJ..payini job with a firm own- ed by i friend of his fa ther's. The lad was about to flunk out of school, and-waa giv en special tutoring over the summer. He fi11ally got his diploma from a third-rate prep school and managed to enter a fourth-rate col· lege, where he barely squeezed through. He has had all the advantages a young person could have -in parents. home en· vironment, counseling, financial support, special schools and camps and tutors. Yet, with all this -help . his job is still largely a matter of nepotism. Left to himself, he would sink. NOW THIS IS unfortunate, but no disgrace. He is simply not a very energetic or mentally gifted person. But his deficiencies are skilllully camouflag· ed by his pro tective environment. While this is an extreme example, it is by no means an unusual case of y,•hat happens among the more affluent, when their sons rind it difficult to cope with the competitive world , Everything possible is done to lift thCm up lo the level of the lamily 's expectations. Bui we have a double standard about other people's children -especially if they come from the disadvantaged classes. If they lack parental supervision, have a poor , home environment, no counse ling . inferior schools, and not much motivation for success -we still expect. them to make ii on their own . or \\'e condemn them for "shiftlessness." IF' THE CHILDREN of the privileged were throw n into 1he same cultural cesspool. there is no earthly reason to believe they y,·ould rlo an y better; in fact , even with their advantages, many slill rind it hard to make good marks and meet the world head-on. It is a tough race today, even y,•ith all the help available. •· Whal is remarkable about the slums is not that so many fall, but that so many rise. That even a minority is able to sur- mount U1e nearly-killing environment is a tribute to human tena city and courage and talent. The ones who make it have to be twice as good as anyone else; and how many of our children could we say that or~ Things a' columnist might never know 1J he didn't open his mail : "'ha tever happened to Mom·s good old homl! cooking? Near ly 30 percent ·of all food consumed in the United States is no\v eaten in restaurants or snack bars, an increase of 5 percent in five years. Lo. ·the nonvanishing lndiaii: The Navajo, largest of -the America n lnd ia\1 ·nations. ha s jumped in population from an estimated 15.000 in 1868 lo 125,000 today. But 24 percent of 3.500 reservation . famllies studied had no visible means of " ""'*"' . " 1 .... ' Hal ,BoyJe support and the mean income for a fam ily of sii: wa.& $45 a week. Thal's about as mean as you can get. T\\'O OF HISTORY'S famous gluttons were King Louis XJV of France and Diamond Jim Brady, the American bon vivant. For dinner the French monarch Often had three soups, five entrees, three fowl, two fi sh and several vegetable dishes -then topped it all off with some hard-boiled eggs. As for Diamond J im, at his death he had a stomach six times the size of that of a n-0rmal man. Where are the worJd's largest and longest rivers? Not on land, but i·n the oceans. For ex.ample, off the Florida coast the Gulf Stream pours a flood of two billion Ions Qf_ water a day. Off Nova Scotia, this sa me river of warm water spreads lo a width of about 250 miles. Punishment by Hindsight Quotable Notables : "He who slings mud generally loses ground." -Adlai Stevenson. FACTS THAT LEAVE you breathless : During the building of the great Egyptian pyramids 9 terns of gold were spent to buy onions for the workers. Suppose. you discover that. in your commwiity. there is no law against smashing street lights. And suppose you go out and smash a dozen or two. And 6UppoK that the city fathers. in sudden alarm, pass a Jaw forbidding such behavior. Could you then be punished . under lhe new Jaw. for lhe lights you have already smashed? ,No -not even If you knew all along that you were doing something wron g. Punishment-by-hindsight is forbidden in Article One of the Consti tution, v.•hich says that "'no ex post facto law shall be passed." No act. legal when com- mitted, may be made punishable af- terward by pinning a criminal label on it. This applies not only to creatlng new crimes but allO to increasing the penalty on uistinl crimes. For example: A STATE legislature. decreed that con· victed murderers. while awaiting ex· ecutlon, "'®Id be kept in oolllary con- finemoL Bdt a court ruled that the extra penalty, the soil~ confiiiemcnt, could not be lmPoeed'Upon •ny murderer whose crimt had •lready beeo committed. On tbe..otber band, a law cas.lng. the pwi.iahment. rmy c:onstituUonaJly 1ppl7 ~--811 Ge orge ---1 Our Gto<ge: I say the.. iovttnment has no rteht to take ta~ from my pay and r Ny J ara 1oJng to retuse ID pay lbtM!! What do you aay1 TIRED OP SOCIALISM! Dear Tired: I uy: By.,B)'<. <Why ltl Utlle problems ruln your day! Send them to Geora• •nd ruin llil day.) )• • Law .in Action • • Larger animals generally tend to live longer than smaller animals. but siie is 'in itself nol a direct criterion of longevity. The average mouse lasts onlv three years. but ;i queen ant may live 10 to the past. 'n1us. lawmakers could re-19. Whales and elephants are rea dy for duC"e the deat h pena lly to life imprisOO-·the final gasp at 50. man -ready or not nlenl and apply !he change to murders ' -y,·e11 rs out about 70. only fi ve yc11rs committed y,·hJJe the death penalty was longer than the 65-year life span Or the still on the books. · h11t ibu t. ~oreover, the ex post facto rule applies \\'orst pun nf the yea r: ''A California lo criminal penalties only. It does not housewife .was arranging a bo"•I or protect you from assorted unpJea~ant ane mones in her living room. !·fer ~uencea, other than c r I m i n a 1 husband added a bunch of ferns. plucked penalties. that may be based on your past from his ga rden, \Vhen she snatched her misconduct. flo"·ers out of the bowl. leaving only the frms. he asked her 1'1'hy she dld it. •·Bccau:se."' she replied. "with fronds llkc yours. v.'ho nC<'ds anem ones?" IN ONE CASE an ex-convict who had served 10 years in jail wanted to practice medicine. But, acwrding to a state law. no one who had been convicted of a felony could do so. "This law Is unconstitutional." the "'11n charged in a cou rt lest. "True. I com- mitted a felony. But l .h11.ve already S«>:rv· ed my sentence for th~t. To prevent me now from pl'actlcing medicine would be to add an extra punishment. and that is ex PoSt facto.'1 However. lht court upheld Ille Ill"''. saying the legisla,ture was not impvsing a punishment bul merely sl!lting standards for the practice of medicine. The judge 18id: "Tht physician Is one whose rtlatlons to life and ~callh are most inllmate. Character Is 9!J 1tnponant 11 quatifll'atlon a.1 knowledge. lf a stile may requlrc good char1eter as a condition of lhf!: prac- tice of medicine. It may rightfully determJoe whal &hall be the evidcnctj of lhat character." A.ft. A"ltrtcan 801 As.tociotloll public 1e.orvu:1 Jtatur, bu \ViU Ber· nard. YOUTH ~tUST BE srrved : By 1980 lhe number or Americans bclween 18 and 24 \\•lll "reach nearly 30 million. The glu m prospect for those of us v.·ho are oldl!r : \Ve"ll not only be unable to whip them - y,·t'll be too old to join them. What dOC!J it lf!ke to gel a ton of pigtails? Well, to start with -3,400 hogs. \Yorth re1nembering : "One crunese restaurant serves all the food you con eat for 1 dollar -but gives }'OU only one chopstlclt." -Anlold H. Glasow. Now hear this : Some computer center!!, warns the National Bul'f'aw of Standards, - hA\'e become so noisy thal they cause human programmtrs to make errors a11d in some casei tnnict ptrmanent Maring damage. Sh-h-h-b. you machines! QUICKI£ lNFOR~IATI ON: Birds ha ve a paorly developed ffnse or smtll. A cric ket m1ly an inch tong citn be he.a.rd for almost a mile. Vichyssoisr: isn't a F'rtnch but an Amerle1n soup. \\'e now spice our meils with l.500 tons of pepper a month. (, Red Emissaries Unwelcome WASHINGTON -The Stale Depart- ment is headed for stormy congressional reaction if it grants entry to the U.S. lo emissaries of the. Communist regimes of North Vietnam, North Korea and East Germany to participate, in the observance of the 25th anniversary of the United Nations in ·New York-in Oclobcr . Congress would be certain to crack down vehemenUy against such a move. That's the. blunt warning of Rep. \Yilliam Bray, Ind ., third -ranking Republican member of the powerful House Armed Services Committee and a leader in the. inner councils of his party in that chamber. In a forceful letter to Secretary ol State Rogers, Bray declared : "I DO NOT BELi.EVE the American people are of a mood to see our country ssrve as host on this occasion for representativss of these countries. I believe. the American people are owed · prompt and solid assurance that this will not take place." Bray slated he had been advised the three Communist-ruled countries plan to seek visas for delegations to attend the U.N. anniversary. He called Rogers' at- tention lo the fact that under agreements between the U.S. and the U.N., represen- tatives of non-member countries can ef\er the U.S. only by perrnissioo of this country. In oUler words, it would be solely up to the State-Department to issUe such visas. -"f cBflnot sec." Bray wrote Rogers, ''how the interests of world peace could possibly be served by granting this permission if it is sought. I can see no reason what.soever why ·they should be allowed to come fnto this country." BRAY, A VIGOROUS supporter ol the President's Vietnam policy, sharply assailed the U.N. itself.. He singled out Secretary GeneraJ U Thant as biased -and critical . "The U.N., Hsetf," said Bra~ ... has long ago passed from being an objective. body. Moscow recently stated that the. attitude ol Secretary General U Thant on .Vietnam was quite in accord with So'·iet thinking. This in. itsel f indicates that the 25th arihiversary observances might possibly be turned into an anli-U.S. forum , as far as Lhe Vietnam situation is concerned." (.entering his fire specifically on North Vietnam. North Korea aod E a·s t Germany, Bray cited outstanding in· stances of their aggressioo aOd terrorism as reasons for barring them f:run the · U.S. "EAST GERMANY'S' ·contribution lG world peace and stability," he noted, "is the Berlin Wall and I.be bodies aloog that wall of those who h:ave tri~ to escape. North Kocea~s .eizuu and...'.in- humane treatment of the Pueblo. crew, plus the shooting down of the unarmed reconnaissance plane and its -Constant belligerence and th.reals towards South Kc:rea, scarcely commend it as a valuable member of a world organization devoted to peaee. And North Vietnam's record of wanton aggression agaiMt its neighbors is still beiorwriUen with more thanlorty thousand Americans dead as a ~suit. . "I can See no reason wbat:soever to Jet th; homeland ol Ulese men play host to J their killers. Nor would their parents, widows and ~ans loOk kindly and tolerantly upon it." Bray directly asked Rogers what the State Department plans to do abGut this matter. The implication was strongly clear in Bray's inquiry that the State. 0e·part· ment would be in for serious trouble. in Congress if it grants aGmittance to the three ' co·mmunist regimes to attend the U.N. anniversary events. By Robert S. A.Den ..d Jolm A. Goldsmillr The D:uty of Government ' The California chablis was cold and good, the sun was scorching.on the porch, the smoked turkey was good, the sight of the lake through the sequoias was good , the lalk was good. Suddenly a newspa perman turned to me and asked, ''What's your politics?" The question st artled me. It had been a Jong time since any. one, myself included, had shown any in ter. est in my politics, if any. l used to have an ans"'er for th a I question which was vaguely responsive t aild vaguely a cop out. "I'm Tammany Hall Democrat, with "' strong anarchical tendencies." This wasn"t about to satisfy my quesliqner. who Is a tough-minded felloW. I thought for a while : but couldn't come . up \vith anything roo~ satisfactory. Finally : "Tell you what I'll do. I'll write a column about It, and see U I have any politics.-· OBVIOUSLY, I HAVE. Politics is our view of our government. There can hardly be anyone anywhere who does not have some views on this subject. U you Dear Gloomy Gtis: Teddy nnedy gripe$ abou t tht · armed forces helping out.In World Shooting-Championship ln POOenix but he think.I It's fine to ha ve 3S Coa~l Guard cutters and four Navy destroyers at the ~rfca's Cup races, -J. !.. "'" ... ,.,.. ~ ,......,. "'""" ... -Mflh' ,., .. " IN Ntw"•"· ,_, -,.. -" ..... , .... Dlllr il'iltil- Charles !\fcCahe • , toes. "'hich is funny because it has a meaning, and one might even say a political significance. "For the whole theory of authoritarian government is summed up in the. dislike taxes, you're being pretty damned statement thal Pubble.s are happier political. If you love, or can't stand the. without their toes." s~ght of Mr. Nixon, you're in politics up So, in !he kind of government I like to your armpits. (wh ich is. roughly, the kind we have), 1 Since l'm against all orthodoxies -i.e., seem to get back to the word servant. organized bodies of received opinion -l IF WE HAVE ANY duty al all as never go for tilt straight ticket, and cannot be called either Democrat, or political animals, it i.s to. keep those Republi can or Farmer Laborite. damned politicians in their indentured status. When they were elected, they On the wider mound of conservative vs. signed a contract with thtj r electorate to liberal or radical, I am surely on the lib-govern them as well as they knew bow, raJ-side. I truly believe that government on pain of eviction next lime around. is best whi ch governs least. Especially do The.re's a helluva Jot of democracy In• J feel this in the matter of human six-cent stamp and • piece or writing behavior. Government should concern paper. Mr. Nixon may not read it. but itself with the way J>t'.OPle. act only when SOMEBODY will. The mere fact that you theft and assault are involved. have your eye. on the t a.seals 1cts as a LORD MELBOURNE put it perfectly : _ useful inhibiting force to ~i.r .thMt fGr "The whole duty of go\lernment is to Ai\>owe.r. The~e are. few pobbc1ans alive prevent crime and preserve. contracts." who wouldn t deprive all of us of all our . . . 1 . rights if they thought they could gel away As. for poht1~1ans. my eehngs are with it. Good government ii preventing ambivalent. L1kf ~~m as people, the from getting awiy wtt:h iL So U>ere. generally, and dislike thf:m as m government functionarie s. More important., I recognize their necessity. So loni as a na tion is composed of public servants '(and I insist on that.Jut word) who are skilled in the arts of compromise, which ls what politic. Is .. Why i man should choose a life where he hir to be a trimmer, I do not know; but I'm graterul there art Uto6e who do. I prerer to avert my ey~i white Ult compromise is being made : but I am glad 10 bohold the resull Tyranny bu it. Points. It la not, howevtr, In the same league 1$ reprueotaUve government. I GO Al.ONG WITH George Orwtlra Pobbre Theory: • "While the Pobble was lh Lhe w1ter, amne unidentified. creatures came and ale hi8 toes off.. and wbtn he cot home his aW'll n:marked : , . • ' "It's a fact that tht whOle world knows, that Pobblu arc happier wllbout their ( ' -~-- Tuesday, September 22. l~O The 1ditorfal pag1 of tll1 DoUw Pilot sttkl co inform and 1tl'"" ulatc nader1 bt1 prtsmtfng thU ntwspoptr's opirdom and tom- IM'Tllo.f'f on toptu· o/ •nkrtst and lignlJiC4nc1, bl/ provldliig o for.um Jor the uprtuion o/ our rendtrs' opinion.s, and bt1 presenting lht cUvcr1t t:iew- pointi oJ 'nfOnMd 061cr.veri ond J?Oke1lfttft cm topics o/ tht dof .. Robert N. \V .. d, Publlshtr ., ' I ...,,.---"'-------~;__ .. ____ _ •. ---. • ' • PIKU lfflCTIYI WIDllUDAT T-l•M TUISDAT SEPTEMBER 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, & 29 OPEN DAILY 10:00 am to 9fm . sur.DAY 10:00 am to7:00 pm 4STAR .$SPECIALS ARE EXTRA SAVINGS MADE POSSIBLE IY SPECIAL · PURCHASES FROM THE MANUFACTURER ANO PASSfD ON TO YOU! ' ·- ' . -- GROUND . •••• USDA CHOICE e BO NE IN RUMP ROAST USDA CHOICE.• LARGE EYE STANDING 87 c . Rib Roast . lb. FARMER JOHN e PICNI C STYLE _ PORK 47c ROAST lb. ,,,, FARMER JOHN e FAMILY PACK e SLICED I!'·,' PORKLOIN·97c CHOPS lb. FARMER JOHN. a.oz . PACKAGE . 27c LINK SAUSAGE USDA CHOICE e BONE IN ROUND 85 STEAK . iii. USDA CHOICE e FIRST CUT HUCIL--A A-c---- -STEAK-. •7Jb. USDA GRADE A e WHOLE BODY FRYING 31 CHICKEN lb. • Tlftsdif.' Sept1mber 22,-1,70 OAfl Y P'llC 7i ~·······-~--~·-····-· --·····~·. . ' -HIN-'IURKl:YS (~:,h ;;~;~., .. , 45 lb. BEST BUY e BROWN ON-iONS 5 POUND BAG .... 48 C -GARDEN FRESH e GREE~ CABBAGE #siuiiil • • JUICY • RED • WHOLE WATERMELON , SALTED IN THE SHEtt e BULK PEANUTS POUND POUND POUND 7c . 7c 5c . ' 39 ~.· POUND , • : NEWI DRY fALL fLOWllS AT DISCOUNT fllllUS ' ! . • STRAW lf'.LOWIRS ' l • STARFLOW.RS - • DRllD WHIAT • SIA 'OAIS • RABBIT POOT YOUR CHOICI.: 68C' - OTHER fAll ITEMS ALSO AVAILABLE: CALIFORNIA OAIC LEAVES, !iJCALYPTVS. ARTICHOKE PUFF KITS AT DISCOUN-T PRICES! -, i j ' • • DAILY PILOT Shakespeai·e Was His Own Ghost get fat and fuzsy. That's a guess •.• Q. "What was the first song Bing Crosby ever recorded?" A. Something call· ed "I'Ye Got tbt Girl." Just 44 years qo. Ynu aay JOU never heard It? Neither have I. PDIOllAL NOl'IONS - No paiaJ.er' wal !flf satisfied \rtlb hil 1eM-portrllt ... NEVltlJ MET a trombone player I didn't lite . . . A WOllAN WHO -~ family photoe in ber Uv111g room -1!y II a &ood cook •.. however. Was no demand for MOST BEAU'l1P1JL of the ---more...-Our-Love...and-War....man_(emlnjne.dr1111aJ1 the sari ol LOVE AND WAR -History records the case of an ar- fcctionate 1eotleman w h o always liked to sleep with hla wile'• head OI bis ann. Un. rOrtunately, u hit wife went to sleep, to did ·bi.I ann. Therefore, he prevl!W up;. a bedding m1ke1 to manufao. tu.re a mattreq with a 1peclat groove in it wbe'.rela' be coukl comfortably fit hlo arm. Only 09e of thete lzucinaUvt ·ma tr tresses waa tiver turned out, thinks that's sad. -India ••• A PENNED DOG THE A VERA GE National always bark& louder than a Football League player stays dog tumed 1~. i• the game four years, seven AGED ACROBAT -Next months ... DID I TELL YOU time your granddad complains lhe name "Henry" means he is •o longer as sure-footed "boss at home"1 . . . IT'S as once he was, remind him of AGAINST THE LAW to carry the great Ivy Baldwin. What a sleeping bag on a New York endurance! At the age of 82, City subway. Mr. Baldwin stretched a Q5.. OPEN QUF..sTION -What's foot wire over South BouJder the difference between a Cuyon at Eldorado Springs, clairvoya11t and a psychic? Colo., and walked across. A M 0 N G SUICIDES na-True, he did not matdi his tionwide, just about one in 10 similar perfonnance 41 years now is between the ages of 11 earlier, at which time he stood and 24. Such a proportlo• in on his head in the middle. But that aee bracket is hiiber as old Sam Johnson aaid about than it used to be. A lot ~r the dancing dog, the wonder is ... llllAKE.VEAllll ~ tlie not that he did It anperfeetlv, ~in his "Hmiiloi." lie alto but thlt be cDd M at all. 'nllt11 acted as paymaster for this riPt;, at • a. theatrical t r o u p 1 • Our RAP.ID &EPL Y -Y ls, sir, '•rcuace Man ura t1m'1 why ,im.e out ol IOur bolpitalized even today we say of Pl:Jday • U.S. IOktien in VletDlm are it 's when "the lhoit Waiki." lick. not wounded. CUSl'OllER SBRVICll:-Q. y . ~--_, "Why, pray: do tbole ptD pro-· OUf' quta~ GHU com .. ducers stuff cotton In the tops ~ti are .wtlcomed and of aspiri1 bottles~" A. t. To wtU be uatd in CHECK~NG keep the aspirin from rattling UP whtrevtT possible. arounr!_ and ~ up during Please address :uouT LetteTs shipmenl 2. To abs or &--to-L.Jf. ~Old, P. O. Boz moistll!_9 so the upiria WOll't 1875, NttopOf't Beach, Cali/, Unruh Emphasizes Gap . Separating Rich, Poor Rival Asks Mrs.Priest Fund Probe SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Attorney General 'Jbomas C. Lynch has been asked by Milton G. Gordon, Democratic candtdate for treasurer. to in- vestigate the campaign fund railing-practices of incumbent Ivy Baker Priest. -GordOn told newsmen that "several" California bankers had received a cadipaign solicitation Jetter from Arthur J. Dolan, Mrs. Prie s t 's Northern California campaign chairman, soliciting funds. "1 am concerned t h a t California bankers are being forced to make campaign con- tributions to the treasurer by veiled threats that the state wiU withdraw its funds from the m." said Gordon. Mrs. Priest, former U.S. treasurer during the E I ledlower administration, prutousJy l<rmed !lie charge ••ricfk:ulous." e ,_....._.Y.___lllENT HUN!__ ' wa NEED AN AnRACTIVE YOUNG LADY WHO HAS AN INTEREST IN TEACHING TD HOST AN Elllll'.A TIDNAL CHIUIEN'S TV SERIES a-w • •••., , ... YMn Of Aii ,_ 9 TOW: aweC1 fO ... UNlllMCI I HOIT TOlll OWW lllOW OM ............ .ut'OUffMINf CALL LAllT llAITM _._ t A.Loi P& .a.au NllWPORT CAILEVISION • . ' . '1st Sliot ' Killed Salazar' Soledad 7 All Plead Not Guilty 7 .. ·- '~EENIE . ' -. ·.: . , ' DIAMONDS AND ESTATE' JEWELRY PURC HA SED Soutl! Co1af Pl111 l1illol 11 the San Oi190 Fwy, Co1+• '°'''' s•0-9066 HAPPINESS IS SHOPPING AT COA-ST SUPER MARKET • QE.,,,,I __ •BEER •WINE • FRESH LOCAL l'RODUCE ~r~~ .... t~ -·-cOASrSU~ ""~ Sl4T&41oi""r•-~ OUR OWN CUSTOM BUTCHER SHOP '-hri .. M_,.lltl' ttp clrleke99'41tftf· YOUR ORDER PREPARED WHILE YOU WATCH lltON,-MT-t N lt»-s ... ., t .. I I . J. By Phil lnt•rlancli Miffed at Reagan ' Republican Breaks Ranks, •· Attacks. LA Sehool Veto . . / ... ' so~ .... " ~ONG IEA<H CaliforniaColle9e Ofcom merce :t:t~·:::.?'!="'""···- • l ... a...•, CelifenlM 90811 ENROLL NOW· FALL TERM: September 28, 1970 TELEPHONE: 436-9767 er 435-5367 "DAY OR EVENING CLASSES" . I TWO-TEAR COURSES OllE· YEAl COUlSfS J ltliffH Ali•illdtf.fiM ""~ •• AaellMillt ""-.-. -~ "1tSuiftt. s1..., • .,1Uc Mttlictl Tn111Kriptif11isl Cltfit.I f l!ill-Ch.rtt IMU..,iitt K.-,,-li ar.Ji-.p 0.1•1 a.Hnau klM.ts :ShertlttH 1d T,,i11t 0.11t.I Auidi"t CGr ... ,, AIC Slltrth11141 l.,•I SKr.t•rilll ' ..., ... S.Crellri.! s., .... .. (G•ett M AK st.tii.111), .ho11ior Acc-lillt ' GREAT SAVINGS ON ALL GR£EN TAGGED MERCHANDISE DURING GENERA·L 'S GREEN TAG ~TIRE SALE! -TlllE ncs .•. f11st c~,_.,,.,.., ae~· so stop in fodayg~~de\lehry green tagged !ire ··~. c eek these .1 • fantastic 2for $5995 U~~~c!f~ES ASlOWAS 95 70·SEAIES WHITE LINE "OA WH/Tf-L"7ER DOORBIJSTER ~,f.f!.{.CIALS! Tire h11 II tire llltds G ...,i"Qsi ••• •t Prle11 1"'11· ~If '"OIJI l"iticM ...... • ..._.. n.-. COS$1""_, rincM II.,....,.. .. ..._. dllpl~ lt'9 0.C... .... .,.. 5• • • -AYUY O~==L OINIRAL nRE Tiii SIRYICI HS W. lfit.. C-M-UMI ._,, lo .. na4. ll•llotlao -h -1711 141 IDH M7~H --'-----.:...--•••Etolt.ILia TNI •• , WDllTW IMifh 1'*'91 TGWll TO MT . . I - ' c , I • c H c • H c • c F J • • 4 ' y ~ I ! I \ ' ' l l '" In!! .... •• ... ... '"' ... .. ... "" " " '"' ... .... Lo •• '" M. ,,, .,. ., " ,. .. " .. WIDllllSDAY C~•1 MfM.Qr ..... Lkim Club, 0011'1, 2' e, 171h S! .. t c ,.,, Mew, 1 •·r.· l lu, llme u11m1lltr1 C 1111 1 K1,i.n•1 Rn11ur1nt, Sottr. Coe1 ,.,.,., <••\ ,,,.,..., 1 '·'"· M1111llnt on Nell E•cl\1119-• \lub, S1!11'1ton..l1a<h Ill"• Hun 11 n I on 8Hd1 • .-,, (11111 MUI ltot1ry Club, '°''' Mn1 Golf Incl Counlry Club, C01!1 MtH, -W111mlMt1r l!.l(ttl"'" Club, H'PeMl'I' IM. 1...,1 Bff(ft I t"'<! .. weslmlna1w, -· . Cost1 Mew Ollllmlst Cklb, Co.11 Mau Golf •J'ld <:ountrv Club, 1701 Ge.II Count Ori"', COlll MUI, _,, fOWIMlll V1lllY Exe~ Clltl. ., ..... <.llU'. 11111 INdl 81vd,. Hlllllifltlon 9-11,. Z:lS ,,m, Dissolt1tions 01 Marriage -r."ry.i,~~&l~ .:.•IP" '"/'°"· Joll'.l 1Nl'f!:er1 Clvci1 G• 1-11. llMI Pllrldl. Jr. Ind P1lrkl1 AM Gr.nl1.~r1 H. Ind P~ Hall, ~ L. t nd ll1ndol~f11G. Prl!CMid, Jimmy R l r.d lat"tnet H ~TY, C1rol LM 1"'3 Cri.r Edwlril r Alie• f,· erMI LU!htr vld ;,;, Ctrol"' M. •rid Cblr n E. DIN• ohll R. •llCI Bltlv H. "='" ltl'I A.rdell 1 r.d Jack S""'-Cr• IL °'-• J. Wrl Y 111111 Kl M. P1r , MonW1 J. 1nd John De1n ·-~bi. Norma J. I nd J1cll E. l•rt ~0 .. 111111....,· MlrY lllCI " ·:r.· •!T :k Sl!H, oblrt . 11111 Vlrofnll A. n, 1111 11\d Wlllllm J, 1on, Jll'ltl Ind Robert A.. T n, P11111ne FIY 1nd H1rold LtrCl'I' ' Col"" I!.. I nd E¥•r•lt L. ~ C1!v!n JOh11 I nd 81 l'I' IC1v H~lllQI. Ll!l'i N. Ind A.llet Mlldrlcl A In. L1nl 1rle 11111 Rld11rd 1Ctnnt11'1 ~ P!Mll, C1 v 0. 11111 DDaulu J. u ·lk, JM11111tt1 s.lnoi Tirrv L. 'lr1m1. Ceryn lltin •l'ICI Olftnl1 Wllll1m Molley, ldl E. I nd EdW1rd A. L P'1trton, .Andv 0. Ind K-111 . Mllllr, Jolwl Georot Ind Jonnl Uiu H-rd, J1nel Mlcldltlon 11111 11ruc1 W•rnin W11Mllr,.M1rll'l1 L. I nd Etr'.1rdEA. X'1~~::~~..:~~.r1;ci,J·~=i' t11'i:-1,-lt"i~T"1.,, .~ ~J:efr. J. lni.rtll .... mblir II Ortl~, H1l111 I nd Joh11n-.; HUtklbl, Jec:o111Une T. 1nd Ttiom•1 A. JtffW1, Ron11r i nd Jos.eo11 P. ""'~Erne! E. J!,lnd EIO~ '· ~ti-Wl k1lllte.i '""' Htnrv Ito ult. rnttl G. Ind OotolhY 1•1M '"'"' B•f11Y Col•n 111C1 ri.odor• Clifford II Drl'litr. Judv a. 11\d John w . ., .. _ , H_ge:ktrlan. RRKcl H. · 1 ,..., I ·-. W90d, KtrrY A"""" 1nd TllOmlS R1!11h Hl1191, N~Ltt Ind H1rold R. T•el ,_ '"•lld GrM«Y L!-ti Tr , vni A. 111d Mlr'oi T !l'Mln, VI I G-1f>d $h1rofvri 1111111 Htrr..,1, Ank!nlo 111d lur M1rl1 FJl:""oa, Mlrlt H. 11111 Rolllrt Fri,.. Murlltw. Roblrt H1rrv ind 0ir1111n1 Arri11f1 • Yf~!d. Gltnne Mlrl• I nd Roller! Bride!· t.1 Fonlltl:. SU11n A Ind oauo111 "· C1hnl. Jtlntne P,,vlll1 il\d Roblrl ~:ii:'.11ct~r• xllll Oon•ld Wt rrtn auttlna. Cvrilll!t Alt xfs end JOll LID• J:rUJ1 Slnln Lv11n tnd WllU•m ltld< Trtfll~"'°"''' ErYI" tnd Pllrltll Ann r: lll•'· NlflC\I 1.R:JMI MtJvlri 0e, 1ro1lr1z. SUNn 1 Joti11nv a M •rroll, Glrt ld L. 11111 Vlr1lnl1 c..,.. Od 01lor1n.. C!1Jr1 lltrtnlce l l'ld R~tr.,r N1ncv K. 111d RobmHS. StMo. ow~1~Af'1.l!'Wrs,·, !:nllr9d s:.T.imw HOOYfl'", Sut P-Mid Pi\111111 Lynn MllYl'llll'", JIC"""ll"\ t nd Pl!ltllM M. cr,.r11" 'l/lrtlnll hlrlt'f I nd Robort w1~=111, Lorllt1 Mlratret 1nd l llUt ,.s~ Lind• s111 11111 Jtck a. Clll"IO!lt Cl\llrvl l . 1rid M!Cl'IHI J. Siii, J11'1'1" :Jul 1nd ODii Lorrt!ne "fii!'ll' An111 . 111d Fri~~· " Mc n , Rotl! F. 11'111 ""'""' •· Mll tr, hvlrl'I I nd Gtorff latw bONN•LLV Wlll!1m Ollflnelly. Servle11 ptf'ldl11t 11 Btll BrOldwlV Morlu•rv. HIOGS (;r1c1 Ann1 Hl1a1. IJ9tl Thulldtrblrd Dr., St11 Bt1ch. Otlt of d11th, Sloltrnbtr 20. surv!\lld b'I hu1bend. Frederick G. Hl1111 llllllhttr. Aud!'IV J. Rl'lo1dfl, of NllWPOrt a11<h1 111u1h!1r. Ritt Mlt Cobb1, Pico Rtv.r11 tMI 10 1r1nckh!lclrtfl. R~rv •~ 1'1111'11, TutMll"f, I PM, OlldlY llralhlrs Cl'l-1. RICIUltm Miu, Wtdflftdty, 10 AM. Holv F•mllv Ctlt!Dtle Churcll, Ltl- I Ul'O World, $111 BffCll. lnltrlM"I, GoeCll Sl'IOPl'ltnl C..,,.tt rv. OlldtV •rolhtn MOI'· tu.rY, IMl·nn, Dlrtctor1. PAXSON LtrDV 11x1011. Att ... ol SO! llth St., Hunllntlon lt1cl'I. 0111 of t:IHlll, 5.sot. 20. Survl'ttd by 1on1. Wllt11m It. ""' Omtr M . P11111111t dluthllr, RuTh PtlllO!'l1 lllrtt 1llt1n. N\lud Turntr, H11tl l l1ct 1nd Vtol1 RHlll tw6 1r11nckhl!drtn. St rvlCI• wm bt htld Wedt\ti.t:llV. ii AM, Flrll Chrl1tlln Church of Hunlln1ton BffCl'I. lnltnnlnf, W111mln11tr Mtm0rl1I Ptrll.. Smlllll N\orl\lll'\'. Olr.C:IMI. WARNE It Lylt T. Wtrl>I(. kl'vlctl Ptfldllll ti 1111 BrllldWIV MorlutrY. ARBVC&LI!: • SON W-UllM-uy 11'1 E. 1?111 St, Com Me11 -• BALTZ MORTUARIES C.Ona del Mar OR S.NIO Cotta Maa Ml Mal • Bl!:LL BROADWAY MORTUARY lll llraodway, Com Mell, u i.l4U • McCORMIClt LAGUNA BEACB MORTUARY 1711 LqmUI Cuyoo Rd. -· • • PACIFIC Y1EW .... EMORIAL PARK Cemelery • l\lwWuy a..,.i 1111 Ptclfte View Drift N...,.n 11nc•. Cllllonla -• 'EE!t FAMILY COIAlNIAL "fillilERll-HOMB 7111 Bol11 Ave. w-1" awas • • SHEFFER MORTUARY ,_.._ •tAI Sn a.m .. to --• • SMITJ!<' MnRTUARY In Mll1 IM. Rand1irtoa Beedi - I May • Would removing 99% of the -pollen in the air help your allergy? ...... -doctor -• HHoy• wtl llectr0tdc Air CIMller. ft '"""" up to ts•t. of .. tll• ......... lrritantt p • I I I• • ...... h. Pollens, household dust , smok._ • Honeywell Electrc1nic A i r Cleener cetc.hes ell kin ds of ir• ritents. All sizes, too. In feet, it tri1p1 particles so smell it would take 7000 of them to stretch across thi1 dot I.I I _1 A Honeywell Air Cleener is no cure for allergits, but c••• his. tori11 heve shown it does pro· 'tl'ide relief. Telk to your doctor ebout it. Then, talk te us. FIR HTIMA TIS-NO 011.l•A TION TO PUlCHASI PACIFIC-HltT1NG-co. • AIR CONDmONING S1'ECIAUSTS Cal Us for l'r0m;t ·s.,,,ice ·and Repair Ll9UllA .... CH -' eUllA HILU-YWO 4M·9741 137-2000--gas air condltlooing I, j • I • Sue Regents D"AILV PILOT l) -REACT Unit .-Host Feed At SA Park SANTA ANA -The -Radio - Emergency Actlv1ted Citizens Team (REACT) of ~ange County will hOJd Ill annual pancake breakfast Oct. 11 ,......lrofu 9 a.m. to l p.m. at Memorial Park in Santa Ana. Workmen Close REACT is a n1t1o·nal organliation sponsored b y General Motors R e s e _1 r c h Laboratories to p r o m o t e highway safety through the use .of two-way cltfuns band Chaprnan Ave. radios. .. The pancake breakfast is held annually to raise funds to help support REACT ac· tivities. REACT provides com· munication services for the Soap Box Derby, the Costa Mesa P'1sh Fry, the Cope: and Copoys Horse Show and other comm unity event!. Cost of the breakfast is $1 En)oy ihetlii'ill of an Old Fa1ltionod Log Rid- attraction. It's Exciting! HAMS ' . • So Goad It Will Haunt You 'Til It's Gone" 011r hams 1r1 the !lne1t corn.fed 1ow1 pork1r1 -011r l lOW dry turll>Q metl'lot:I, r11I Wllc0tu!n hlCkory •1111 ·1ppltWIXMI ,..,.Ina t. JD. nour 11v1n bekl"9 l'lon1y 'n ~Diet gl11e '" unlQUI In tll !ht World. ~ dtlklou1 tilt:! 111P1tlJJ1111 w1 luil wouldn't know now to 1'""'9VI 1ftl1 prOt:luct _ • .,, bl111 mtk11111 for :M Yt'rl. SP4r1r 1lleMI klo, ,,_ loeo ho bettom IO 11111 H ell dtltcllbit unltarm 1tk1 ctn be r-""111 tttarll111!v. Complt11ly bated 111C1 re<idV lo 11rv•: Ordlr your Honty l1kld H•m ~y, 11'111 lclvtnlure It! IM""IOYl'l'l9nl 'f'OU'll -fOrVll . tfiAIL STOllS • -lJ ... ••t CeoffHlth.,..,, C•-NrM.-.tJ ..... -- 1m I. lrookhur1t, Antheim 05-2461 I N (Funds Invested by October 15th earn from October 1st.) % ' with quarterty lriter.t action No long-term requirements. $5.ooo Fun-Paid IJWMtment C.rtlflcates earn 6% per year, paid by checl< ot !he end of each cmenclar'quarter on cetllft- c:atea hold to end ol qu.11er. with dally lnteflllt action Paid on__any al!!Q_unt. Pasabook Thnft Accounm of any amotJnt earn 51\~ per year from day lnvnted lo day wtthdrown. lntltllt credited and COll1POllllcfed quarterly. Plus 54 Years of Sound Management A half century of proven management experience, a perfect record of regular lnlereot payments, -In exceao of $1SO million, and tl1e proteolive llquldJty ol short·tenn loana-all combine to safeguerd yourlundL Morrie Plan hlle 81weye met on demlnd _, ,.quilt for wlthdl'llWIL Your funde ere lmmedlat9ly .. 11able. -Mo~ris Rian 80 OFFICES TliROUOHOUT CALIFORNIA For lnterNt with 11cUon, phone or via/I your Morr/1 Plan office: Nowpo -Jooeh _ !700 N•w!'"<i llvd. -67l·l 700 l ' l ' ' ' ' • ' ' ., • • ' • . I I ~ - ~, ,/ DAILY '1lDT s Tmdl7 Srptfftlbtr 22 1970 /tlo11q's Worth Monday !!oli ay T1~ip Boon . By SYLVIA PORTER ln only 100 days from now the ' Monday Hobday' law will rlnally go into effect In the US And then Washlngtora s birthday "111 ran on lhe Jh1rd li1onday hi February -or on f eb l~th 1n 1971 instead or the 22nd and thus this \\111 become a three day weekend m1ru vaca tion Memorial Day Will r::in not on P.fay 30 but on ~1ay 31 the last P.1onday 1n May -and this too will be a three-day m1n1 vecat1on Columbu.s Day will not on!) become-a national hollctay fo .. !ht first lime but 1t will be celebrated on the second ~fon­ day 1n October or Oct 11th instead of ihe 12th Veterans Day will Jn 1971 fall on Oct 25th the fourth ~fonday 1n October instead of the trad1t1onal Nov 11th -~-And LaboF-.. Day, of cou rse. v. •JI be as always the first Monday 1n September or the Gth and part of a three-day holiday As a result you the vasl ma)Ol'1ty of US emp!oyis Y.111 get a gua ranteed munmum of five three+day weekends next year In 71 Christmas v.111 fall on 1 Saturday and Independence Day July 4th will fall on a Sunday But 1n view of the 1m portance of these 1iobdays and the relentless liberalization of employers lime-off pohc1es m1Jhons or employes "'ill get one or two long weekends sur Two Meo Join Newport Firm Tv.o Orange Coast residents have 101ned the Newport Beach f1nn of Grubb and Elhs Kent Doolittle of South Laguna_ and ll S c o t t ~fcCartney III of Huntington Beach have both taken ~ts Y.lth the regional real estate fann Doobtlle 1s an industrial spec1ahst and has spent IS ~ears 1s aerospace marltetrng management htcCartney will c o v e r Orange County for the company s nev. Iv cx.panded retail department w h 1 ch handles all real estate needs of retai l companies a n d shopping center developers LEGAL NOTICE .,..,. Cel.Tl,ICATE Of" lli'S1NIS$ , ICTITIOUS NAME 'Tl>t yndl!rlltned da cer1lf1 ~t t con 11'1Cll"9 I bul tleU 11 Jll) So 8 h!o Uni! lll Cot11 Mn• c11 lorn • u!>dt• 111e lie 1 llOU'I firm n1mt ol A.RT A.LA. Cit.RTE ~"" 11>11 11!d 11rm ls coml>llH(I or ll>t li>llowln• pttion1 wnost n1mt1 In lu I '""' .. Itel ol rt•llltnct II •• li>llowt Ger1111 Lkl1ll1rd 111 V 1 Qullo N~rt l!le1cl'I C1lttornl1 Rllt~ Jtcluon :Kil VII Ol!11t1 NtWDOl'I R~1c1> C•lllo n\1 O.ted Sellllember \f 111~ 11.11 .... Jltluon Grr1tll Uddllrd $1f te al C1Jlfornlt Or1noe COl/ntt Ofl ~I I.& 1t10 before mt I Not1,., Public In 1NI !or MIO Si.It ""''°"5 ly 1011•~red Ger1111 Liddl1 d ind Riiey J•ckoon known !o me lo lit Ille 1>e ~~M ~ n1me1 t rt 111bK•!bf1! l<I IP\( w II\ n lni rvn-ent 1nd 1cknow1tdted llley ex •co" 1~ 11~ !OFFIC A.L 5EA.LI MtrY K Mtnry Nolt rv PuD c -Cl llorn • Pt nclPt OlllCt In o tn<lt Counh M1 Carnmlnloll Ea1I ts NOY 1l lt11 PuDI 1l>ed Or11191 CN 11 Ot y p lol \ tmbsr 1S H 7' tl'lll Otlot>9 • 1970 Uft.10 LEGAL NOTICE SA.It t1tt NOTICI' TO Cll'OJ'TOl.I SU .. 1!1101 COUIT 0' TNI STATa 011' CALlll'OINIA. FOi 'THI COUNTT OF OIA.NGI ......... I'll E1t111 o1 A.UGUST" K WCDGE. o-,•W'f ~ OTICE IS MEREST G VEN lo ti\! c tllUor1 of 11141 1bovl ntmed dec:edtnl tl\1! 111 M r10f>S lltyln9 cl1lm1 191 n11 11'>! 11kl tl«:ed~t 1rt rt<tulr!'ll lo I I 11\tm ""'"' me r>tetHlf1 YOUClltrl In Ille oUk:t ol Ille dt k o1 IM 1t>Ove e11llHell c-1 "' lo lll'ls.tnl ll>fm wltll 11141 fll'C~Wt ~i.. !ti fM 11n11tu lgnecl ti ll'lt tlltlct of lhfi• 1Hor.,.v1 C 0 0 IC 5 E Y SCHUMACHER COLEMAN MINYARD Incl HOWARO ISS 'T-n • ...., Count,., Ro.id OrtMt C1lllOl'l'll1 tt6't Wlolch Is 11\t oltct OI t>vtlnt1\• of lllt Ul'Ctt•11fned In 111 matters 1>11r11lnlnt lo tf>I "'',. el wlll llK~I within lour "'Cl"ll'IS l lltr rl'lt 11m oub lctllon of 1111, 1111flc1 01!Rll A.U111t! ?J lt10 Fl•ll N1llon1I lltnll; t! Ori"" Covn!Y 8¥ MlcllMI P 0.~ll!\11 >.nbttnt 'Tn111 Ol!lcer E~ec11•9" ol 11141 W II ol 111« lboVt ....... .., dteld'"' COOIC:SIT KMUMA.CHElt COLEMAM MllolY#ril.0 1MI "41W"l.O 1lS , .... IMI (_I,., ltH. o,..,.., c111..,.111 ""' Tf'\1 JU.flt! ,.,,.,.rwn .., e•oocvltof "ublllfttd 0tll09" Ct11! 0• ly '° IOI i(.ottn'IM< I J I!. 22 Jt1Q 167' 10 rounding ~ell these holidays 1s Add the pos$lbibty of a four day Tha.nksgtvlng weekend and you have a total of eight long weekends ne1t year And on top of all this some CQm pan1es create more long weekends by giving employes ns holidays the Monday art er Easter Sunday Good Friday Christmas e~e New Year s Eve and • noahng holidays as well Teclm1cally the new law ap. phes only to U S Government employes but the states have sc rambled to conform, and all but a handful have passed ~tonday holiday laws 1n the past two years Although for years the t.1on- day holiday proposal was de- nounced by critics a s soc1ahsl propaganda the overwhelming maJonty o f employes and employe rs now favor 1t -on the grounds that dangling mid week holidays sharply reduce productjv1ty on the days before and after the holiday What will lh1s mean lo our economy 1n general and 1n d1 v1dual indus tri es 10 particular' It surely \'Ill! be a powerful stimulus lo the $40 b1lhon plus tra vel industry since you can go lo a lot more places in three-days than tn two Simply turning Washington s brrthday into a three-day weekend will mean add1llonal m1lhons of dollars to the ski industry It will be an enormous boost to the entire $150 b1lhon End of War No Cure The Bank of Ameri ca management does not think that the current Jnfla t1onary economy could be cur~ by an end to the Vietnam war or by the end of th~ commg year In a recently released report entitled ' Focus on the U S Economy An early Look at 1971 the world s largest bank predi cted that unemployment will be higher and prices "Ill continue to rise Any foreseeable shift rron1 a wartime to a peacetime economy will not return us lo a fam1llar period of economic slack and easy money the report said Costly social needs rising performance expectations and lhc 1nflat1onary bias of 40 years or growth oriented na t1onal economic policies and Jcg1slahon all mean that lhe American economy will con t1nue to face chro.nc problems of 1nflat1on and 1nterm1ttent credit st ringency the report conhnued Bank of America economists pr edicted that unemployme nt r1 1971 v.111 average about 5 :i .... Telouic Inc. Moves Facility In a conhnumg move to centralize and consol1dale its fac1ht1es Telon1c Industries Inc of Laguna Beach began moving its 30 000 square foot production rac1hty located 1n Beech Grove Indiana lo Laguna Beac h recently The move 1s anhc1paled to be Cilmpleted b'I October Isl The mo\c v;1!1 mean :ln opportun1l y for new emplo y m ent 1n the neighborhood of ~ employees Telon 1c Industries 1s a manufacturer of Sv.eep Signal Generators for the gener:il l aboratory and radio pro duct1on manufacture1 s and or a comJ)lete lme of microwave filters 1 0001 OP OIL PAINTIN•S WHOLISALI WAIEHOUSI OPIN to THI PUILIC $5 and up • - • OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List. 'Market l I ' j: J< '~ " ,. ~: ,, ,, ,, " ,. ,, "' ,, ~· ,, "' "' ,, ~ ,, " "' •• ~ " " " r. " " " ,, "' "' ll ~ t: t: u t: t: " ~ ,, ti ~: bl uo " " " ~h '" t~ ~t '" "' " ,. " " " " '" " ,, " '" " t:. " " " CV " "o Mo MO Mo MO M• "" ~ ... Mo Mo :l: "" M• Ml M• ., M• M• "' M• M• M• ... •• •• •• .. ... :l: •• ., ., "' M< ~ .. ~ M< •• "" M• "" .. "" .. "' .. M< M M< MO Mo ::. ~ :t "' .. .. .. "' .. MO ~ MO "' :ll M' MO M M• M' M ::ii M .. .. M .. M .. M .. ~ M M M M :l M M M M M M M M ~ N ~ ~ N ~ N • • N • • • • ' ~ Lac: G•• 1 .0 L•mi.n~ I t:ne Brv '5 !W ltlt1 6' L._rrobSI lSD L•1rSt1a !-0 tt•rS.. pl2 H t•Ka DI • tt1sO Dl2 '° tl .. WY $1)(1 LtedsNCH' 511 '~. t""·· e th \111 ' t~mn 1 I ...,,, ""' 60 ~~~1f: )j: LFC FlntMI LFE Corp LbOF d ?AO tlbOF ol• 15 bb M<N l Ll.,_ IVCO 20 LlbrlV Ln le Lb•Ln ollll lloo M• 2 511 Llllo•m• o!7 ~1G~•e1P'~ !t l tKlnNI 1 Ill Linc NII pl l tlno TV llD 11111 "" :111 t"' JV P JS lone Coro t!TfOl'llnd 50t tton OIC pf t llPl'I DI 111 oo;k~ Ak t-The lJ Ofl(ln " .21o t-SCtm 1 LoneSGt 11• LIL pl 1$15 lortl CCH'P l• l•nd 1 .., Loul1GE 1 ll ~°" N•~ 411 tr;:::'d'"'-"'° Lwck Y SI 90b llld ow 1 Oii tllli:U S I I um• le LVO Corp lYktVn1 & LykV1 oil 511 --------------· - J I SfJl:ltmbtr Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List • Stocks Decline; Trading Active NEW YORK (UPI) -Stocks declined across a broad front today despite a Durry of demand at the outset stemming from a reduct ion In the pnme interest rate by a leading New York bank Trading was moderately active StortJy before the final bell the Do'w Jones Jn du str1al Average of 30 selected blue chips was oft 6 02 at 752 47 Of the I 595 Issues on the tape de- clines outscored advances 804 to 515 Turnover of around 12 500 000 shares was down from 15 900 000 shares traded Fnday Closing prices in cluded Am T&T 44 3/8 off 1/4 Beth St 22 3/8 even Chrysler 26 7/8 off 1/8 Du Pont 119 3'4 off 1/4 Ford 49 5/8 off 3/8 Gen El 80 3/8 up 1/4 Gen Motors 72 3/8 off 1/8 and IBM 275 1/2 off 4 3/4 ., . ~ k • .. " ~ "' ' " " ,, ' • " • " "' ~ ,~ " " ~ "' • • m: ll. ti"' ... '"' "" ... "" '"' ,,. " JI~ m• '" '" "'' "' " ". ' .. "" "'' ... ~~ •• ~ .. ••• UAL Inc l UAL of ol) UA~CO I 10 • 1'110 OAILY PILOT Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List • \ I • On Economy NEW YORK (AP ) -We ere approaching once agam the season of the year when restless government off1c1els and businessmen etlempt ta peer into the future 11M determine the fate of the economy-which is someUmes tbei.r fate also Naturally ll IS a time I){ equivocation but per h n p 111 understandably sn because the economic slgrq a n d portenl3 themselves c a n t aeem to 1tay 111 their sp- potnted places 1n the sky but instead flutter about like the northern light! 1n JUiy, for e1emple the In dell: or industrial act1v1ty. which 1s the measure of the output or mines factories and utilities advanced O 2 percent lb first rute tn four months It wu welcomed u a very good omen .indeed Nixon 1dm1n1slralion or f1c1als for example l'iaw in Uus sign clear evidence lhitt the economy wall preparing to rf:!Nme its exp11n,1on after a near l\arv1Uon diet of IM!.veral -Iha The President s ch I e f economic tdvlstr P a u I McCrlc'ktn rt I I I e d to rtpOrttn that there were en ....... "" -... be. se<n In the economy and 1b1t nxal and monetary policy was pro- ceeding on • CIUUolL\ly Hi4 pansionlst course ' But U>tn came tht Aupst lndw:t.rial oufput staUstlca and they were off •lain not by much bul 'fn the vfew of o~ limist.s they should have shown continued growth tt 1 • tou1h buslne'ss~ even lot the expert forecastera. - J ' ,_ __ _ -JJ DAtlY PILOT Tllfsdty, Stpternbfr 22, 1970 ~ , ' ~ - DA Warns Buy,t:_r.s -of •Recreational':Land 1 -"-.,,.;:~.;i;-.~:-,.~~·'--.. " .. ~;;;;;:~:: ... Tlw lolndtr•ltnld 0qn c:wtlf'I IW I• The lllldl'119..., de ctttltr lt>eY 1r1 condUc::tlnt I byil-., 246 Ntw-1 COl'lllU<lllltl I MIMll .. Jlal w. Octtn ly .U.SERT W. BA.TES "The moet obvious 11 the cw • °"" ,._. •• -aue·gect-OJ)pOrtgnlt)""for ncrea- (FCMU111 la 1 Serles ) tion des!gned to appeal to YREKA, Cali!. lS pttlaJ) _ land-starved people who want Because of hia bol_d exposes of to e s C a P .e the city en· tht m ethods and motivei of vlrMm ents in whic h they live. Califomia's big corpot.ation Along with this, the buyer is land developers, Neva d a Coun-sometimes promised 'privacy' ty District Attorne y Harokt a nd.jua«l!!d ~oad.s, ~nd the in- Berliner 18 anathemii·~to the . rerence fro.m ~IS ts usual!Y "recreational'' subdivision pro-clear -minority people will m oters. not be allowed to wander Excerpts from his com · a bou t. prehensive coverage of U!_e "Usually a golf course Is sub ject in an article for the part of the d eal, and water for m agazine, California Tomor- swimming, boa'ting a n d row, have been given in fishing . A number of othe r p revious ins tallments of this gimmicks make owning a lot series: Today's installment seem attractive , even if no quotes Berliner on· how the building is planned for m a ny subdivision lot buyer gets years and the site is three hurt. hours from home. "Promotional de velopment "The second pull is to those advertising throws out three looking for a nice place for kinds ol ba it," Berliner writes. retirement. Although this is FRAN'S LAUNDRY ,. Fl11ff & Fold Spe~lal ELECTRIC BLANK~S $1.50 91 6 N. Coast Hwy .. Lagun1 494-7980 seldom featured in the a d· ve rtising, the pull is felt, and many buy with ttle hope they'll be able to build and retire by the time t he Jot i& paid for. "But by far the greatest lure is that of 'inves tment' _rotential. By working thj s angle , sa le smen are able to talk ordinarily se n s i b I e families into c o m I1J i t t i n g themselves to making huge paym ents over a period of m any years. In trut h, these lots are, as a r ule, very poor Adv.rtlw.....,I Revolutionizes · Denture Wearing The 11t1rut thlnr to havinr your -n teeth it po11ible now •ith a pla1tk a ra111 dbcovrry th1t actu-1 lly hold• bolh "ur,prr1 .. and "low•n" •• nevrr be Of• powiblr. lt'1 a re.Yo!utionary ditco very u l\ed F1 xo1n:~. for daily home uar. (U.S. Pal. 13,00:),988)· With FIXOOENT many denture. wearen may tll. speak, laugh. with little worry of denturet cominr \OMt. F1xOOl!NT form1 111 el11tic mem· br111e. that htlpr; 1b!IOrb the lhock of bititl1 lfld che.w1n1-helP1 pro- • tKt ii;:u1n1 fr0tn brui,lnr. You may bite harder, chew better, e1t mor• n1tural!y. F1xoorNT may htlp you tPNk more. clearly. br more l l ettt. The. gptt1al pencil-point di1pen1tt l~t~ you 1pot FIXOOE~ with pr.- ""OCI • , , ll'htrt nttm.d . One a pplication m l )' l11l ror hour1. Derltures th1t lit 11re. es~n· ti~I to health. See your dentist res utu ly. Get easy. to-u• FrxootNT Denture Adhe11 ve Cream at all drut counten. I ' ...... C•lf Mtw, Ct lllornla, ""*'" lht Front, Nt-1 l tf<fl, C1tll°""'!1, \ll'oftr nvestment.s." points out, but the first in· good and bad developments. pay out for the lot buyer. They 11c1111ou1 '""' ....... o1 c OAsT 1.ucT10N ,~. 1ktt11out """ "• "', o1 In support of this statement, vestor iii the developer, rwt the Oranp Cllunty has some are 00nanzu -ror lhat "flrlt ~Y~Eio!'::_ ":.~ :!:.!1 ~~ ~s:incr;:~;, :!m~ i:."Cl1o1:!i~ Be rliner cites a n extensive Jot buyer. oustandingly good ones. B ut in investor." . _ 11111ma.,r1~1 11 ••fol-.: "r-. w110M1 "'""' 111 11.ou 1.,. .i.e .. , ''"""'"' J. McN1ilt>, 5223 11:tv1r o1 r•''*"« 1r1 •• tol1Dw1: s urvey by the office of the Lake of the P ines Is an ex-c entral and n·o-T·t h·e-r-n 1 A-. N-1 1-..:11, c111f, N111 R. 1.,.,.,.., 1tJO w. Markl•'I Cal '! I · • I ~.i~ (Next : '!1le Cast o 011• """"" 11, "" L111t. ~11t1 .-.111. c1. state ·attorney genera.I, of am ple. Developers bought the .1 orn a vtrgtn ail\Q are s. J. McN11011 1-ffn,., "· 01p111o. "" 1•111 11 .. A•t. Lake of the Pines , 1 1,944-!0t land from ranchers at •11'76.30 being cul u p for s J)eculation ' Calim igos SUbdlvlslon i n sTATE oF CALIFORN IA, N·1~•. N1wll(lrl 111K11. c1. . ""' OltANGl COUNTV' Sornw J. Dlll!Of'I, WI A"owhtld Aw1 .. Boise Ca scade deve lopme nt in per acre tn September, 1966. and "inve stments" that can 't S iskiyou County) 011 Awin1 31, 111'0. before..,., 1 Noi•,., 11uet11 P1r\. c1. '°',., N d Co I f nd f lh ":;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l"~1, 111 Incl tor w kl s1111, P<l!'IOlllll)o 0.1..i ~1. u, 1'111 eva a unly, t was ou While th.is was high or 1!1 .,...," Stffhtrl J. Mc.Ni sh kllawn to me N111 R. 1,,,.,.,., that w 1'th1'n three y ars '2 I d h' h h " bee n the .... '° ·• tM --w11oM .,._ '' Hen,..,"· 01Pu1e e ' 'I an I w IC a . n 0 wtttc:rlb.o to , ... wllflln ln1trv,.,.,,, I r.cl SOllnY J. 01111111 fa milies los t the ir lots through tax r olls at ,$88.20 per acr e, HARBOR REFORM ll'kl\OW11dMd"' •••a1rtct 111t um•. S1~1ec ot c1111or1111. o •• .,., c_,.,, f I nd • . h (0F.F1CIAL SEAL) . "" Sffl. 1(, nm, btlo•• 11'!1, • Hot•rv orec osures a nine more they sold lt In t e next year or J .. n.,. L N11'°" Pubuc in '•net 1or 111c1 Sti tt. "r'°"'"Y refinanced. There were only 27 so for prices r anging from TEMP. LE ""°''"'Public· c1111ern!1 •a1>e1rtd N111 11. ,.,., • ..,, H1nrv "· PrJnc:IN I' Off!t• In OIPlllo, 111C1 Sonnv J. o.uen mow .. 10 "'' tra_nsactions c I a s s e d as about $36,000 per acre down to 0r1ii9t cC11Jn1v 10 .,. '"' ,.,1<1111 whOH "lf"•1 1ra resales, and or these only $!2,00ll per acre ,for les5 at-Mv comm1s11an E•alrn 1ui..crlbed le •fie w11111n tn1tru...,.,.1· 1'16 ' Aut . 1,, 191( •c•-ltdM !hr, ••.CUltd IN II'"!· three lot owners made a pret-tractive p a t c,els . The Announces Pu11t1111t11 0r1-co.st 0111v P1101, !Ol'F1C1AL$EALJ 58 ttmblr 1, •• 15. n. ltro 1'33-70 RIE flA H. CA+tfTTI fit. The other 24 transactions developers were indeed the wo11,., Public, c11111rt1i. wer e losses to the original "first, iu.vestors.""' HIGH -H •. OL Y· DAY SERVICES t.EGAL NOTICE ~~~":o':'t:!~ 111 buyers. In their pitch to county MY comm1u1on E~plr• a AI 1"t SHI. U, 1tn In his capacity .a s Nevada governing bodiis, de. velopers (Sept. -0ct. l ) (Oct. 9-lO ) t10T•C• To c1101To•s Pllbll...,. or1111• CN•' 01nv J1J1o1, -IUJllllOI COUIT 01' THl Sfoptembft' U, 21, 1' t rod Ocfobl!r I, County dis lric t a t t o rn e y, commonly assert homes ln STAT• ol' cAL11'01N1A FOR ,,,& 1J1D1.10 rliner sent a q uestionnaire their subdivisions will be se-To be held at TH• co~:..r:.:::,,o1ANG• to all Lake o f ihe P ines lot cood homes, with little or no Ell•'• "' HARoLo JOHN s1sK, LEGAL NOTICE buye rs last April. By that demand on the county for NEWPORT HARBOR LUTHERAN· CHURCH "::'~~~; ,.: ""'" c.v'" ,. '"' """ time, m ost owners had held school a nd other services. But 791 D D •-crtdlrori 11 r11t ,-., ~med tS1C.tden1 _NoT1c1: TO CRlOITO•s over r., frr(ewport D!IACh !ti.I 111 ...,.i(ift.--iiivlM c111msmin~t""" Sl.lfllil tOlt COURT OJI TNl their Jots for two or three in Lake oe. the Pi.nes, more · . · Hid Ncedlftt •<• ,_,ir..i 10 1111 1t11m. JTATll!' oF cAL11'011111A 1'01. . years. The first sev .. ral hun-than a th1·~.01 •<-houses now RABBI BERNARD KING wltll ii. necnHrv -..c:Mf's. 1" 11111111a THI couN TY OI' ORAMO• i;: ru uie , OI the cl<l!r• of Ille 1bov1 entltled court, or IHI. A .. ,., dred replies, although in· Quilt are occ. upied • b y CANTOR A' RIE sc' HICK.LED 10 ,,....,, '"""' wl!ll Ille necnw,., IEllllf ol JOHN L. KA SSOFF, Dttlll- 1 . 1' Y'CIUClllN, to ttll Und~llned II lhll oftk:I fd, . compete, showed w;despr ead pennanent reside.nu , and of of IWr 11!11<neyi: MITCHELL HAl!T & NOTICE 15 HIE REflY GIV!H f9 tt>e d'·cou • _, ad learly th ho .. t nd t bu'\d "" TICKETS & INFORMATION 67• --lllSC:O. IU Civic Cini"' D<IYI Wnl, c:re<!llO'I ol , ... '"°"' ... mid dtc.,.,,, ~ rag n)._., , , . n C ose W In e O I • vu ;tof ~ 511111 m. s.. .. r, An1, C11!1. 12~1. wnk:h 11 !hi! 111 P>P'lOll• h•~lnv c111m1 11111111 !hi revcalf!!f \lo'hy the' lots w ere perCi!fll indic ate they Intend to'J:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l 'hl PIK• o1 bu1tnH1ot1h11111c1.,..1,""" 111 111d decea.n1 ••• r1<1ulr..i 10 1111 '"""· 'poor Inve s tments. he Sal'd. bui'ld the'• m ai'n homes on the 111 m1!!11'1 ...,.11lnl119 IO mt n l1t1 ot llld wu11 1111 necnury vouchers. In th1 ottlci u dtcldlftl. wl1ttl11 four monlll1 l fllr thl of !111 ci.r• ot lhl 11Hw1 l"lllled COllrl 11• A f · h he properly. · tlrsl P11bllc1tiofl of lhl1 no11t1. 111 pre1~nt 1~. wnh 1111 11ec11;,.r., s ked i , knowing W at t Y BIBLE THOLJG fJTS D•lld A1111u1t 21. 1•10 vooch•" to lht und1r1l1ntd 11 !hi ottlct hJ!!LJeJm~ in the inter im , Be rliner c alls this a snare VIEllNA !LA 11s1t at ner 1uor11ev1, WALZE R, W1Etw1r oc1C. they wou,ld buy again at the and-a delusion. The deVe oper ---u1S-c1r fill ii 1 ~porf;n1 l ibl1 pri11ei---!i~i:e111t~~~-~~111;:~:~ ~N~1~.~·"$1"~, 1~;· «:;~i;-~~~1;:- price they paid, t\lo'O-lhirds is-in fact pla nning a new city pl1, I H1b, 12:5·1 I I. A child who r1b1h MITCH•LL HART & IRl5CO c1n1ornl1 90717. wMch 1, 1111 •l•c'. ol .UST b d. · 1· d II • II b I 611 Clvk: C11111r OrlYI W111 t>us!neu nr 1111 11ndt,.lgfltd 111 11! ma tt1r'I said t hey would not. More in a location for . his own 1 ""P '"' • not, 11• wi ri 1 lull• tu ---Pf'rta1n1n1 le '"" 111•1<! or 11ld d1cet1•n1, tha n hair had their lots up for benefit, a city needing all the 191in ind 1g1i11 ... cl will soon b1 b1.,encl i•,~"u~";.'~~·11tor111 Jl111 w11,","',~ '.'!",', ~.~,,,1,•.1 11t1r 1111 11r1t Pvbllc•· p1r1nt11 9 uicl1nc1. Oth1r1. l pouiblv th1 ,..... '" ·~ sale, but 85 percent of them norm a l services , and m ore LAW! II ' At1C11'111~1 tor Adm1n111r1trl• c.1eo seatemhl• 11. 1t1a I wi n1v1 lo di1cipliri1 him. Pr11 • Publ!lhed 0ri n91 COlil OlllV Pllot, EMMA ICASSOFF. felt they would not ge t a fair than likely to become a rea 1nt 'c/1v PE R.MISS1VENESS !i111l1 •cl o f cl•1· S11>tembtr 1, 1. 15, n. 1•10 u2•10 E•ec111•1• o1 the w111 r e turn on their investment. burden on all the taxpayers of c:ipli n1 ) is th1 9r11l11t thr11t to IHlr WALl lE;', 1::;l!~::fi~~".'td d«K1e111· The disillusioned lot buyers the county. nitiori. LEGAL NOTICE MANION & KtNG, INC. Cited broken promises, disap-Southern California has both Geel, •110, must 1•1rc:i11 di1cip1i111 when r1b1llio11 oc:curi. O th1r· SUl'l!R~I. COUIT 01' THI!' ::.:~":;.~~ ~~~::'~".::, pointment in recrea tional;liiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiij"iiiipiiiiill wi11, h1 we11l cl ,1,,1 b,;.,9 G oel! Whi n Aclilfl ri billid, (ii.oil STATI! OI' CALll'OIHIA FOR Tel: uu1 '14-73(4 tn.4411 Id I II ,. Id I THI! COUNTY 01' 01.ANGI' Atltrf\l!YI lor E•tclllrl• features. r a c i 11 t i es a nd cou not 09ic1 v wilnno di1cip i111ry 1c:tio11. H1 HAD lo NI. AO.Nit CIT ... TIOJt Publllhed Ot1"1e '°"'' D1ltv I'll~! m aintenance. Mo;;t of all they r••c:I 19•in11 lh•t r1b1llion o r c:1111 b1ing Goel. Thi1 principl1 In lhl Mi u• ot rhe p.i;i;.,., lor Seot. n. ,., 0c1. 1. n, 1•10 1141.11 ;, W (l!ll un01r.1loocl. :::::: s~:..!~~: LYNN SANDERS, conside red tax a nd utility To: MARVI N RAY s.-.NOIERSOw. LEG AL NOTICE r a tes excessive. H G oel ;, to b1 Goel lhrou9houl E-t•rnity, h1 must ••••c:i11 cli1ci· fl y orOlr o1 thl• Court, You ''' hlrm1 _____________ _ ti1o re tha n half bought as in· plin1 in the h•••~h•r. So11l1 who r1 b1I 1g•;.,,, God on ••rth ~1;;:kl1,:; 1111:ri..=i : 0/~ ~=~= I AI nat vestment , but vir tually no will f11I God'1 di1c:iplin1rv 1c:li on throu9hout 1t1r11it.,, !Mitt. 1t11tlt1tc1 court Oii Dfttmber 11, 1910, a! NOTICE TO Cll!OtTORI 25:41, 2 Cor. 5:1 01. 0btdit nc:1 lo G od in thii Jif1 will 9111,cf t:IJ o'docl1 •.m. ef !Mt day, then Ind SUl'l!JllOR COUI T OP TH• r esale m a rket e 'l.Sls tnday , •• ,, ,0 ,-. <oo•-, '' oov v~• ~ ... ,, w~v ST•TE 01' C•Lll'OltNIA 1'01. -19•in1I 11npl1•1111t di1ciplin1 h••11ft1r •nd will m1111 h1ppi111n '"" I '"' - ' ,_ '"'" "' THI' COUNTV 01' OIANSI! .s~1·a11y w1'th the a valanche 11 1 d ' .... peltlon of RILE':' LVNN SANDERS ' .... -i---i11 lh1 1!1rn1 i I , J 11u1 t1i , 'H1 that b1li1v1lh 111d i1 b1pfi1~cl /or the 1doi>tio11 of CLINTON OWH ITE 1· ,., Of h!avily promoted 1h1ll b1 11v1cl-", Mt 16:16 . H1v1 YOU ob1,1cl thi1 commi nd· SANOEltSOH 1nd TEllES.-. .ltAVLENE Eitirt of THOM.AS II. RUTTIER l l!IO SAN DERSON YWr minor nd •nown I I THOMAS llENAUO RUTTEll:, d evell'V'tm cnl'!. m1rit1 Will YOU r1b'1I •g•in1t God b., r<1fu1i119 lo b•'b1pli11d, ' SOii 1 l>Ke•Hd "Y d II d' · I L L dtutnlir. shelil d r>Ol bl 11ranlH. NOTICE tS HEIEflY GIVEN t th "The fi'rst 1·nvcslor makes •n 1u •• •1c•p in• tnrou9no11t ''''"itv7 Visit Chu rth of Chri it. ~tad : AU11. 21, u10. ,.., , ,,.. •• " • • ,17 W W'I SI C I M C l'I · d I . w E Sf JOH,.,_ er 1or1 o 1 .... vt Mm dlCtldMI th I" · I h . 1 •On ·• 01 I 111, • • o•n••, 111 11 UI ,111<1!• ,.c,,· lh~t 11! Pl!•S0111 ltavlnv clalm1 1111ln11 !h• e m os ts a S ogan muc vou lo b1 b1ptii1cL Phon1: 548-5711, 6 46·576), 8; JANET L. SCHREINER 1ald dtcldMr ire rt<tulred to 1111 1111m. used by subdivision salesm en. [~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! OeDU!v Clerk wltll 1111 necl'Sl•rv wQ\ICher1, 111 !h• ofllc1 Tru e enough , as Berliner WALLACE. I ROWN & CRAIN 11 111e cier1r. ot 111e 1bO•t entllltd cour1, nr A!ICll'""I I I Ltw lo pr1i.enl lhem, w!!h the ntcesu rv Suitt lt DOv.,. 1ul1~lnt •011Cll1r1, to !hi ur.clf!rtll Mcl II llw! olllc1 IU DOYll' OriYI ot his il!Qrnev•: OU ll YEA, CAll PIENTER NtwMrt lelet!, Ctllll!'~ll & l!IARNIES, 8 V EllNIE 5f J. 5CHAG, JR., Ttl· (7U) 4'Ul77 m 7HS 6 2.5 M1c.-.rthur l!llvd., P, 0 . 1!101 11M Alt9,.,...1 fer l"ttlilonlr Nl!'WPOrl l!llKll. Calif. '7WJ, which 11 tM Pub!IJ.hed Oranite Co.st 0 •11'1 Pilot Pl.Kl of IM.lneu OI 1~1 undl rll9f"ed 111 111 SMottmbtr 1 I u H 1t10 1622.xi m11!1rs pert1!nln9 to lhl n !111 OI u l!f ' ' · ' ckcede11r, wllllln four months 11!ff !tll !In! ""bllclllOll ot thl1 110llt1. ltd U!..J.t10 J, Ed11r TiiomSOll fl:llttifo -- T .. 1WI E•Kutor or !he Wiii of HOT ICI TO CRIEO ITOl5 1he aboYt n1mad decedent SUPl!RIOR-COURf 01'-THI! ~ OUI Yl!A, CAll'l!:JfTEI S-.AINI! I TATI 01' CALIFOIMIA 1'01 I Y: ERNEST J, SCHAG, JJI, THI( COUNT V OF OltANGI: IUS M1cArlll11r l lvd. -Nt. A-66111' I'. O. llctr 11 .. E1tll<1 of RD81E.ltT PAUL GOllOON, NtwiOi'f l 11tlt, C•lll. t2"1" 1l10 known 11 PAUL GOll OON I nd 11 Tll: 'H1-9- R0 fllERT P. GOROOH, Oecused. All'"""'' llr Ertc11tor NOTICE IS HE REl!IV GIVIE N lo the P11blill'ted Or111q1 COili 0111'1 creditors ot 1111 100•1 ,........, dKHefll Se!>ltmber !. I. 1S JJ, 1'111 11111 •II persons h1vl11q clt im• 1111IMf the u ld dtcldlftl 1r1 r9<!11lr.., to lilt them, with !ht neceuorv vouchers, Jfl tl>e ottlce ot tlle cl"'k ot 1111 1boYt 1n1l!led '"""' or LEGAL NOTICE t& Prnt11r tllem, wllll 1n1 nectsw,., '71G4 wouch•ri, !o 1111 11llclt!rsl9llecl 11 lne otlkt • 1°"1 ol ll1r ettorrli!v. J. JASON GALE. 15.la NOTICI: OF l"U&L IC -SAL• P1!01 Verdel, Orlv1 W11!, Palot Vt tdes TO WHOM IT MAV CONCE ll:N : f lll!H, C1ll10rn11, which ls)hl pl1c1 OI No!lce Is htrtbv tlWf.11. lh1t on St!>· bv1ll\IH of lhl und1r1l911ed in 111 rn111rrs !1mt>er lt, 1'10, al 10:01" A,M, 1 Pllbllt pert1ln!119 lo lh• 111111 ol u lcl decedtnl, wlP wltl bt held II Counrrv Club Stor11~. within tou-r mo11th1 11t1r !he lltll 13101 MlllOll SI .. W11tmln1rer, Cali f, ta p11Dlic111011 ol !hi• 110llct. sell tor C••ll 1n1 lollowlnt «ll1!er1t, f9 1>1tld Avg111t tt, 1910 wit: Allee Vlrtlnla Gordon '61 en,., 10 NO. 136171ZU7360, Admlrilllrtlrl• OI Ille tslalt of llcrnw UYP 5114 !hi 1bov1 n1med clKedtnl 11lcl coll1!rt11 I btl111 l\~ld to SK11r1 111 J, JASON COALI obll9all011 'fttltfng uR(ler I rell!I ln· lJ:ft_e.1111.Y"'ff' O_rtvt..Wl.l.l__ tlal!m•nt M"Curlly a~r~rnent (cO!)dj~J fl11tt1 v"'"'' IE1t1ln , c1111on111 -Ult c011!•~cll neld hv General Mo!nrs - Tiit C211) MW11H tlld l1S·'n1 ACCfDlll'ICe COrPOrlll!lll 11 secu•ed P&rlY. """'"'V tor Admlftlllrllrl• ~•Id 1111bllc 1111 11 •o be cOlldudH 1c· Publ!lllH Or1nt a CCHtst 01ilv Pila!, cordlno to Ille l1w1 o! Ille $!1!t of Sffllft'+Dlr I, I, IS, 11, 1910-1'2ol-10 C1J1torn!1. Gtntr1I Molor1 Acuot1nc:1 Con>er"lon rewr¥11 the rl1ht lo bid 11 l --~-LE_G_A_L_N_OT __ I_C_E ____ 1 1"~11;11~~1111u11 11 pre~11lly 1to•ed '"" ma~ bl! lffn 1! Jl701 Mll hw'I It., HOTICE 0, TRUSTEE'S SALi! W11lml111ttr. C•lll, r .s. ""· ,. ,,,. GEH!;RAL MOTORS On Tlle'\da1, Oclober U, 1970 11 11:00 ACC£Pf1NC£ CORPORATION A.M .. PFS Corpor1tlllfl as duly IPPOifllftl 200 W. W•rdlow Id., Tru1t1<1 u"""r ind PUrt111n1 to Deed of L0/19 1!1,1clt. Cilll. llOIOI Tr111t d•ttd Oecember 1, 1967 '•«uled by' A. F. llri wi.., Gllel K1w1nggl\ 1nd S111d•1 Kava...,n, Publlthftl 0•~"91 COii! O.lty fl'llel, llulbllld •nd wife Ind rKor-DK«!lbtr ~p!ernbtr 17, lf1D 1PolG.JID I, 1967 11 In.Ill'. No. lllol In Book a..56 Plff 161 of 01t1c111 Records In '"" Olfk:e of 111t LEGAL NOT!C~ CO\HllY R1eorc1tr of 0•1"91 Coufllv ~ C1lilor11l1, 'NILL SELL AT PUflLIC Auc'.1 ---~~---------flON TO HIGHEST 8 10DIER FDR CASH MOTICll!' TO CRl!tllTOIS (01y1Dl1 11 tlmt o1 1111 In tawt111 money IUl'EllOI COUIT 01' TNt ol !Ill U11/lfd $!1tn) ti Ille IMX'lll !fran!l STATE OF CALtl'OltN IA FOR 1<1l•1nct lo lh1 old COll"IY courlll0<;M, l'OO THE COUNTV 01' OIANGI! l!l!ock, Wet! '""· Sinl1 A111. Ctlltornli 111 Nt . A.UJM rltnt, ll!lt and l"ttrtsl COllVtYt<:I !o tnd Etlllt ot JOHN C. O'LAUGHLIN, """' ll<l!ld by 11 1111C11r uld Det<:I of Truit Dtte1»<1. 1n Ill• 1>raoertv 11!11~!1d In 11kl Counrr NOTICE rs Hf l!IEflV GIVEN !o !hf Ind 51a1f' dei.c rlbed as: Crtdl!or1 ol the •tio•e n1mtd dtndent Loi 1'l of Tr1ct Nn. ?12?, is ihown on 11111 111 Jlfl'IOfll h8Vlfl& tl1lm1 •t81nll I~ I m 10 recorded In 8aok 116, Pf lt• l to said dKMenr 1r1 re<1ulred le 1111 !!>em, If lnclu1lv1 of Mli.cell8neous Mep1, wfl h !fie necenarv voucherl In lh• offlct records or seld Orantt coun!v. of !ht Cll'l'k ol lhl 1bovt et111Hed COUfl. or C1Hlornle. to pr1s1nt them, wllh' thl r\Kltll rV Stld 11,1111 will bf mad~. bul wl!hou l v011Ch.,.1, lo tlltt 11nd1rsl"'ed 11 c:lo coven~"r or w~rr1nty, t•oress or fmaliH . WALSWORTH, 5EIOEL & CR.I.IL, 1611 rt111rdln1 tl!l1, POSltHlon, or en· W111c11n Orl\111!, SU!le 2(tt, p.i~wPOtt et1ch, c11mbr1nc11. lo PIY !l>e ~tm81ni"' prln. C11Uornl1 ~. which 11 if'le pl1t1 of cl""I 1um ot the nolf teeureo bv said b\11!11tst ol the Ylldtrsltflftt In 111 m1h1rt Deed of Trust, with lnltr~I '' In sakl 1>er!1lfll11t to the e1t1t1 Of tald dKldtnl, llOlt provldl!d, 1<tv1ncf3. ii 1nv, undf• the wlthi11 !Our monlfl1 etter 1111 fir" ltrm1 of u ld Oeed of Tr11st. IHs. Charoft aub!lcetlofl el lhl1 nofk:1. llld t•Pflnl<!:s of Ill!' Tr111IH and of 11\e Ol!ed.AU11ul! :!j, U111 lr111il crwted bY 11ld 01"" of Trust, H11et A. O'LIUOhlln Tht """""k:ll tY u"""'• Hid Otfd of ElrKutrlr ot the Will ot frusl, bY ""'loOfl ol • tn1ch or ~1111 111 lM 1bov1 n•mld decllltnt Ille oblltlllortS !Kl.If'"' I h •rt b 1 , WAUWOl.fH, SllOl!L a Clt AIL hlrllofor1 t•t cult<:I I F'MI dellvl'!'t<:I to th• 1111 WHICllH Or1vt uncll!r11t l'lf'd I wrllle<1 Oect1r1tlon o1 NtwHrl l tW, Ct l"'-11 nut 0.-ltllll Ind 0-rid tor Slit!. al'ld -ltlen T•" (TIO '47"4 .. notk:e ot.brHCh •lld ol •ltellon 10 c1ui.e Atllt....,s fir l"lfeclllrllf IM Ullder1l1ned to sell llh:I praoerlv lo Put>llSll.O D<tnM C111sl Dl llV Piiot, 11!11ty 11ld obll111ie..,. a'!d lllf"'•O~r. on Seellf'llber 1, I, u, n. 1'111 16ll-111 LEGAL NOTICE J1111tt II. 1t10, 1111 11nderil'I""" caused u kl 110llce OI l)reech 1"<1 ot tlecllllfl to bt l'K'OrOld I" booli: t)U Pllt 210, al Uld O!fk:l1t RKll<'dS. l"FS CtrOOf'atlon CASI HO. fl·1ff11 11 Slid frUllt!f, •AR Hff !Iv T. O. SIRV1CE COMPANY, CERTll'ICATl 0, COll'OJIATION •O• l ffnl TRANSACTION 01' IUSll>l•Sl UNDll fly Jtmtl A. Atckllr(lm, ,ICTITIOUS NAMI Viet. Prei!lle<'I Tf1 ! UNDERSIGNEO COJIPORA~ION Ui') dot$ htrftY ctr!llY lhll It !1 c-.ictlr>I! 1 Publllhld Orl"lll Ce,,1' Ot!lv Pilol. bvtlntu loca1td 1t 1"81 5ttt1 S!rtef, S1P1.,mbtr 12, " •l'ld Oc!obfr 11, 1970 5outn Giie. C1f!forn11, •nod 11 l2J Norlll 17.._10 8r01dw1,, 511111 An1, C11!lornl1. undi!r 1----,.,,,.,---,---~-"'"'l'h• lk:lllleus trrm fllmt el ANAHEIM LEGAL NOTICE SECU RITY PATltOL •Fiii lllll ••Id 11 ..... 11 comoosed of 111<1! fo!low lng (lrllorllfen, wnOJ.e 1tr!ncl111I Pll CI er bu1l11<111 I• •• fl·11l'll to11ow1: C•RTIPICATI' 01' COll:l"OIATIOJt PACIFIC OETECTIVE l!IUIEAU ANO POlt: TIAJliSACflOH 0, a UllNISS P .. l .ltOL IMC .. Mii S!l!t Jtret t, $0Ulll UNO•it GAit, Ctlllotnl•. l'ICTITIOVS HAM• WITN£55 Ill lllnd ~II 11th dlr I( TkE UNOEllSIGNIEO CORPOll.-.TION I U1111f, 1•1~. dofl llpreb' Ctrlllv lh•I rt !1 Cond11Clln1 • (COllPOltATf SEALI butilltM In 11\t SI•!• ol (1IUor11!1, Couflly PACIFIC OET£Cf!Vli: AUREAV ol 0!'1t11e 111 the Cll'I ot Nt!WMrl fltKll AHD PAT ll:OL. INC, 11 •1 0.W.r Otlv1 llncler !ht fl(:!l!iou, R. E1rl S~" fl"" nffl'll el GSC: COMMEl\CIAL & IN· Prft1denl OlJSTl lAL flAOPEIT!ES. INC, 1nd 11111 STAT! Ot< CALIFORNIA 11111 firm 11 ~ ot 1111 lollowl119 COUNTV 01' ORANGE, 11 cor-•llort. WlloM Prlnc:JN I 1!1<1 ot On lhll 1Hh div of A1.11111t. 1910 l!lfer<I! llutlllf$S fl II leltow1: -MlrY I(, Guillll I NPll rY J1Ut.l1t ff! GREAT SOV Tk WE ST CDR·•nd lot Mid County •lld Stile, rnli:tllll ..ORATION.--520 A-H E11t, Ari-lll<l!r•lll..dlllv-commlulonlill ..., _.,, l"llOl't• Tarr1f!I C......,IY, Tt~fl Hl'IOIWnY IPMlrfd •. E.-.RL .!.HEIEl" ... H 0..IM : .S..t~ U, 1•11 known lo rnt IO N Thi Prftlffnl of ttlo(I! !SEA.LI coroor•tieo tlllt IJllCUIM '"' wtlhh1 Glt EAT SOUTHWEST COlt:POll:ATION lflltrllmenl Oii Def'llU 01 thl ,..._lliefl J, .-.11o11 AllW !~till llllntel, •nd IC~-~ 10 ""' A11l1t~fll S«.rt l1ry 1'!11 IUC~ COl'-lllort !•KlllM tllf 11"'-SfAT! OF TEXAS. 111 Wil~H WhlrNI. I Pie"" l\ltrtv"l9 aft C-ty ti '••r..,1 """ 11....i 11111 1fll1911 "'" etflcl1I t11 I tM Just dial the. distant A -ea Code pl~ 555-1212* and ' w· e'll gi.'ve N~,..,~~::;or 1;~·~~t;:ie:!. ~I~ !~r .. :~ , .. , In 1111• c .... Ulct!t llrll ..., • .t:l,.(: lle1"IOl'l<lll~ •-••Pl! J, 111011 AIM.IP·-COFFICll L SE ALJ @ el "'' te be l'ltti AHl1!11"' S.Crell!f'Y ol 1111 Mt,., K, Gull)tf votfthe number of any listed telepho ne with a different Area ~"· ·PacifiicTelephone_. ~E:~::~:.':~:!1~E:6~;,: , ~~:l1.:~1~:: J _ ~ _ 1111r we.II COl' .. r11ron IHtVfN lM -111etr."lr.1.,,-ll.--' ''---~= C()d than -A-h e i'n th t.. 4-.... ,l·T-s c d ISEALI _ WITTMAN .i.NrJ SCHMIOT e yours. fill. yw er · e con menwu u . . or ana a. """1' w... IHI """"'I""'·'"",. Nat~,.., Puti11c 111 tnd lor u ld Nrw111rt llKll, C1lllorlllt ,..... Coun1v i nd St•t•. r111 ..... nn •In 80ID8 CC)!!•1 nwnitiea it may be necee11ry to D'ial "1 "-before dialing the Area Coda. Uin doubt, please ch~ the front pqes 0 £ your phone book. l'ub•l,httt 0i.~::~~5' 0111y Pnm At~=:~ o~•~" ~"'1 0111y ,.l!ot. ~-~--------~-~-----------~-----------~-~----------------~---------~-~~-~~---,----~--~:._1•:~:::.1 ~':'~·:":·~°':::.1 ~':..:'1:·~1:••::__ __ :"~"'::::'° ~,.,,, ... 1. L JS, 11. 1•~ uu.~ I ' • -- ' I ' . • • -----.---- , • • • -Fas~ion an Art Form • Fig _ure Flattery Outlined- By Softly-shaped Separates .-- A blue sweater knit mid elf vest button•'--------over ~ shadow-.strkMd cotton broad-cletR shirt and matdllnt knit ...,11. on JNnf1. Deborah understands sportswear, as well she should being the A11- American girl she is. Her fall col- lection is in groups of in- terchangeable separates that nat- ter the figure with body-conscious silheuettes. Deborah doesn't get hung up on lengths and includes them ·all in her groups. Her blue sweater knits h a v e a longer-than-m!':i-<:alf card igan sweater vest that can be worn over matching knit miniskirt or slip-on straight leg pants. The tank top vest is very narrow exposing a lot of shou lder and sleeve on a blue shadow stripe shirt worn with the separates. A shorter version of the vest is also included 1topphi1 just belOw the hip bones. Another part of this group is a pair ol knickers that Deborah con- c'elves very much like her pants ..• with elasticb.ed waists and legs. These are shown with a carriage print cotton over-shirt that looks best when belted. Another group in grey flannel has 1 western influence with gaucho pants and battle jackel. l::ach Is trimmed with white top stitching; lhe gaucho panl.s top-stitched on the waistband and front and rear jean.type pockets. The jacket is a little longer than W"aistlength, hiding the topstitching 1>r1 the panll, making a neat, clean erfect· Witb this outfit she shows a black pin dotted colton peasant· shirt with matching cowboy -. handkerchief scarf. Sbr skirt! lhe.·length issue with a miniskirt, three inches above knee, and grey flannel jeans. • One, or Deborah's' strong point• is her ahlrts. Most are from the wild west In denim cotton with top-stitched. yokes. Some have epaulet.s on the shoulders and either pull over or button cLear down the front. . -,,,.,. 1111J9::1-pra1r10 ~hlrt In 11everal \l"eralon. Debora h's collection is part or Penney's Youn I International O..igner Collection. ... I .Clothing .. Mirrors Life Styl.e By MARIAN CHRISTY wabts and looking like slave girls fror! Intellectualism ii swooping 1nt0 another culture? rash.ion. TRADITION BROKEN Brainy designers s om e t I mes Simply this : The young have broRti pigeonholed. 88 the Fashion Thinkers _ with tradition. They've uncterscored their are linking current r.any fashion trends to Withdrawal from IOciety" by thel.r dotbel. sociological explosions. They've ~hisked away Estattlllbrneat slandards by wearing funny geblJll. Girll Most-often-heard statement is that strut along In gypsy clothes, peala!lt fashion is a dynamic art fonn that gear, Arabi c djellabaM. It's COltUrnti-y, reflects the way the world is progressing not fashion. or transgressing. Fashion is as dramatic 8 slice of life as Beatles mu sic or Andy Y\l"es and Dior's Paris designer, Marc Bohan, are yOung and .erN!rgep.c types ' Wa rhol paintings that extol Campbell 1 sou p cans or Marilyn Monroe. who freq4ent Le"ft Barut boutiques. and . bar!J where students from pOints arOund ."Fashion" has become synonymous the world -also descend in droves. with "life style." -Yvis and Bohan hive absorbed t'he And clothes are a clever tool by which scene and translated the ,aia:hta into peop)e express their most i n n e r fashion. __ i_deo_lo-'g'-ie_s_w_i_th~o_u1_u_1_1e_r_in~g_a_w_o_r_d. ___ ~ .. opnotch:New-York-hat-tlesigner-Frant:--+--• For example: Why is the fashion world Olive, who createt the headgear for Geof· I 1 I Unisex fasfiions refled a new kind of thinking among the young. Small checks (above left) and . large checks are by Sir Bonser of Rome. p ' continuously conjuring up versions of the frey Beene's collection, sees the dub. controversial unisex look'!' Designers toward funny gear as a weird way fA' frankly admit that it's ail unmistakable fulfilling the need to live for today. Pe0- reflection of a new kind of thinking pie clutch crumbs of gaiety by wearing among the young. clothes that amuse. It's like getting a lit- Unisex visually spells a desire to look tie ha-ha out of a drab existence. alike. Olive's theory: "Fashion thinkers tend SOCIAL WAR Unisex also means that a man dilutes his masculinity a little and the woman .SICrifil'tS a quota Of her fem inJty. Why? Because the young pursue "peace" wiUi an undisgu1sed lust and look upon "the battle of the sexes" as a social war belonging to Daddy and Mommy -not them. When critics of this contemporary fashio n neutralization spit forth their con- tempt for this blurring of the sexes designer~ reto rt that clothes do not a man or woman make. Fashion, they say, communicates a new kind of social psychology -and has n o t h i n g whatever to do with sexual deviation. Dr. Ruben R. Pottash, an assistant pro- fessor of clinical ·psyctliatry i n Philadelphia, ~s fa shio n as a kind o( convincing escape hatch: "If you decorate yourself in a certain way, you can believe that you are what you have decorated yourself to be." There's another 'fa scinating dimension to the fashion revolution. Why have designers put women in clothes that can ooly be categorized as amusing regalia? Why do fashion geniuses like Yves Saint Laurent invade Rita Hayworth movies of the 409 for funny-bulky coats with pad- ded shoulders? Why does Christia n Dior bring out the harem girls In glittery pantaloons with cold metal chaim dripping from their ' to divide time as before the A-bomb and after the A-bomb. Before Hiroshima peo- ple were quite sensible about clothes. , Traditional elegaJlce reigned supreme • But since that horrible destruction a feel- ing of hopelessness has set in gradually. Fun clothes are a deaperate inner ex- pression of just that -fun ." Why have Victoria_n clothes hit I.he · Rome-Paris couture scene with such vigor? - WOMEN SCARED Couturiers believe that women are scared silly of "emancipation" in all its ramifications. · There 's Lalk that the Pill, which almost erases the -~ibiHty of -un~ pregnancies, encourage$ sexual play outside of marriage. But-thal neeting relationships canJlot replace the security or marriage. Millions of si>-cal\ed ';liberated" females ire terrified at lhe onslaug ht of new problems that pop up from the new freedom at their fingertips. Whatever the causes and effects, fashion is improvising. There's much less of a dictatorial altitude on the part. ol designers. Instead we're beginning lo see designers compromising with-the public as popular' i"ues are interpreted via clothes. Fashion is. after all , one ol. the charms and pleasures of life. Jt has mereJy put its thinking cap on. Titti Brugnoli'• high-ntcktc( dress (left) ond feminine enstmblt reflect the return to Victoritn stylts by. womM who• are 0 1fr1icl. 0~ lj I Juniors Kick Off Year au • . . -• Fa .mily fed Up -With Dinner _...- DEAR ANN LANDE~y gl-ipe is giving me nervous 'ndlgestion. The ki~s an bothered by 1t, too. Maybe you can come uP wllh a solution. Everything runs like clockwor~nd our house. My husband is a ..11ut about scheduling. (Herb used to be a Master Sergeant). Well. dinner at our place i1 at g p.m. sharp. You can set your watch by bewildered dad who needs a level-headed it. So every night, promptly at .•:05, the woman's point of view. telephone rings. It's my mother-in-Jaw. Recently I moved my family from Herb talks (or I should 11y listens) for at Richmond, Va., to Southern California. least 15 mlnutes--«>metimes 20. Jn fact, At we wen packing to leave Virginia I he had a· long cord put on the: phone so he happened to walk through my 16-year-old can talk to her from the dinner table. He daughter's bedroom. She was in th~ pro. cradles the phone between his ear and cess of dressing and was-wearing only a shoulder and say1, "Yes, ·M•. No, Ma. pa ir of panties and • bra. My daughter No foolin'. Ma ." She tells him all the: was very embarrassed and immediately family garbage (he could care less ) and grabbed her kimoM. I wu pleased with reads him parts of letters rrom relatives her modesty. as well as items rrom the church bulletin. . Three months later this same girl Now and then she starts to read him a walked into our living room while gues~ letter from your column. When she does were present. She was wearing a bikini this he $1ys, "J saw it, Ma." which eximed half of her bottom. If she • I have asked Hefb a dozen times to had leaned over she'd have been 9S per. pleue ask his m"Other to call a half hour cent naked. later. He says, "I wouldn't hurt her for l later asked my daughter for an ex. the world." In Uie meantime every night planation o( her sudden absence of wear 1 World W1r I ba~inl 1alt. Heave• ferbld. Bat you do Uve the r11bt '° eI·. pect yoar l~year..W daa1ll&ier to wear c:'°lhe1 Jn the 1Mb1 room ....! 11nles1, of C'HilV, tb•t'1 Rere tbe •wttnmlq pool 11, wblc:h In C.Ufor1l1 It DOt anbeard of. DEAR ANN LANDERS: What 00.. a 22-year-0Jd, slightly overweight, but meticulous girl do about a kind, con- siderate. faithful boyfriend whose idea of a compliment is u follows , "You sweat less thin any fat girl l know." - FRANKLY NETILED DEAR NE.I: Acetpt Ute fact Uiat ylMlr boyfriend 11 no poet and teUle for kindness, coa1kl.eraU01 and Udellty. You could do worse. ~any glrt1 who write to me lliave. our dinner is ln~pted. The kids and l modesty. She said, "It's just a mat~er of <;QNFIDENTIAL TO AFRAID Oil hate it. What's the answer? -A GRIPE fash ion. Bikinis are in. Everybody's Y.E.: Yau need counseling. GET IT!!!!! FROM GUAM --_ ~i'!g_them." Is this change in her que DEAR GRlPER: Tbe answer 11 ao ob-to peer pressu re, or tlleWislflOM ac·---:'Drt:nkta,..-may-be .. In" to-1be-ldd1-yoa - "'°u1 I'm aurpriled yoa haven't tbo111ht cepted, or geography -or what? -run wlUI -but It can put you •10ut'' for of JI. Whit's IO aacred about I p.m.? Get POP-EYED keeps. Yoa c1n cool It and atay popular. the sbort cord btiek on the telephone and DEAR POP: You c:annol carry her Reid "Booze and You for Teena(er1 re1chedule c:ltoW for l:ZO. back '9 01' Virrinny -where, In· Only.I' Send 35 cents In coin and a Jong, cide11lally, l~year-olds aJao ire wearinc 1elf-addreued, 1\amped envelope with bWaiJ -nor c:aa you ln1l1t tb1l tbe glrl your request In care of tbe Dally Pilot. DEAR ANN LANDERS : Tbis is from a Members to Toast Group's New Name A continuing group with a riew name will host a buffet dinner and wine-tasting party on SunQay, Sept. 27, in the Costa Mesa home of Mr. and M'rs. Les Van Dyke. Course Offered On Counseling A two...<lay course on counseling will be offered for parents and-those engaged in work with youth needing help by' the American Institule of Family Relations, Los -Angeles on Friday. Sept. 25, a111d Salur· day, Sept. 26. Popenoe, founder of the tn. stitute, and a faculty of live experts. Dr. James C. D ob s on • cCrtified psychologisl a n d author ot ''Dare to Discipline," wilt discuss Five Ways to Motivate Youth and You Must Maintain Discipline Attractions Presented Corning attractions for the new year wlll ht presented at 10 a.m. on Thursday, Sept. 14, for the League of Women Voters of Huntington Beach. The song and drama routine will Illustrate upcoming ae- tivJUes and issues to be studied this year when the group has its first aener&t meeting in the Community Methodist Church. Represent1tives from the high school and thf: citizeM' steering comm ittee w 11 1 present the propo6ed tax over· ride for the area and offer suggestions to the league on how to help pass it. John Holiday, deputy direc:~ tor ol ttie community action council, will discuu the Hun- tington B e a c h Community Center. A salad luncheon will follow . October --- Date Set Oct. 10 has been selected for the wedding of Sheila Kay McDaniel of Westminster and David Frank Fisher o f l<emville, · ·-~ The announcement of their engagement was made by Mr. a"nd Mrs. J. B. McDaniel, parents of the bride-elect. Miss McDAniel is a graduate of West minster High &hoot and now attends a beauty col· lege. Her fiance, son or Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fisher of Albu- querque. N.~f.. is a graduate' of Kern Valley High &hool. The pair will exchange thei r \\'eddi ng VOWS in t h e Weslmin ster Four s quar e Churth. Kickirlg off a new Club year with a pot luck dinner \vill be members o! the La· I, guna B:each Ju!1ior Woman's Club. The event wilJ take place at 7 p.m. Thurs· ~day. sept~4. In .the La~una ~ederal S_a:v.ings building, .A..t.1his time_possible I P.hilanthrop1c proJects will be di scussed. Getting the ball rolling are (left to ---',-1r1ght-) the-Mmes. Kenneth Erickson, Robert-Johnson and Louis La.Bonta. Formerly the Costa Mesa Conftnittee of the Orange Cownty Philharmonic Society, it was renamed Todas Las Ciudades Commit·._ tee because of its expansion to include women from Huntington Beach, Newport Beach and Fountain Valley. Husbands will be guests at the 7:30 p.nl. affair, according to Mrs. Van Dyke, chair· man. -------- The seminar, tilled Helping Parent! to Help Youth. will be conducted by Dr. Pa u I Education Handicaps Discussed -But ·How? Dr. Robert S. Hicks, a former school administrator, will speak on...Outside Help to Vows Recited In Scotland \Vhich-You-are-Entitlcd, -and a Mrs .. Jean Tietz DeSanders panel of youths will discuss of Rancho Santa Fe, former ly What-We Think of-You;-of Corona de! Mar, married t· Horoscope ~1embers will gather al 10 a.m. on Thu rs· day. Oct. 8, 'in the Huntington Beach home- of Mrs. Michael Brick for the first meeting of the season. Posters to announce auditions for the annual music festival in November will be made during the meeting. -I ' Concluding will be Dr. Fred Kurt Burger of Los Angeles Weissman of the USC School during ceremonies performed of Pharmacy whose top ic will at Berwick upon Tweed, be How to Deal With Drug Scotland. Afterward they Virgo:· Go Places Summer Reports Fill Junior Ebell Agenda Abuse. honeymooned in Europe. 'The director of special All participants will be given The newlyweds will make education for Orange County the Taylor.Johnson Tern-thei r home in Rancho Santa schools will be the featured perament Analysis and an in-Fe and Los An geles where speaker when the Providence terpretation of their score. Burger is a faculty member of Speech and Hearing Clinic The session will begin at 4 Los Angeles City :college and Parents Club-meets at 8 p.m. p.m. Friday and conclude at 4 the University of Southern tomorrow in the -Children's p.m. Saturday. The institule Californ ia, School of Medicine. Hospital auditorium , orange. may be contacted at (21J ) 465-rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;OOiii WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 23 By SYDNEY OMA.RR ARIES (March 21·~pril 19 ): Concentrate on basics. Get ideas across by illustrating them. Factual ma terial serves as ally. -Me i n d er"! n g statements, pompous reflec- : tions cause others to lose con- : fidence. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Emphasis on short journey, specia l messages Ir om relatives. Straighten o u t domestic problems. Do so via diplomacy. GEMINI (May 21-June 201: Protect valuables. Some would like .lo part you f r o m possessions. Be 6Ure you get mone y 's worth. Be discriminating. Review earn· £.Vl•v ·ioo'f• SLIM GYM ~ L()ll.t.OlfEMl!Zl I' IN 2 WfUll flll MOM[ DIEMONlf~.t.TIOH llll s -TELEPHONE WAl1' A. ILllll GY'I (7l4) 1Jt•J77J ing potential -and savings program. CANCER (June 21.JulY 221: Strive to push through unique program. You will get backing from those in auth ori ty. But you must •take first step. If you wait loo long opportunity will evaporate. LEO (July ~Aug. 221 : You may fee l somewhat confined. Key is to look beyond the im· mediate. Be aware of how far you can go -if you apply yourself. VIRGO {Aug. 2.1-Sept. 22): Welcome opportunity lo meet people. Accent on social ac- tivi ty. Go pla ces. Make con· tacts wh ich will be valuable in near futu re. Express opi. nions. Higblight sincerity and humor. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 I: You may receive offer which entails greater responsibility but opportunities also multi· ply. Dea l with one who can make room for you at top. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Fine for writing, creating advertising progr am. In personal arCa. d e v e Io p philosophy wh ich fits current "THIS $640 WURLITZER PIANO IS YOURS FOR $449 'IACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL. NIW SHIPlllNTI a1IUILT . GRANDI I>. T Giii>. T Sl>." ... S ORGANS .-Saw. On fl.., MM• MODEL.Jll.7 _WURLITZER RENT J:L RETURNS llLL NIW POR 5140 UNCH IJf 1na WallicbsMusic City SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MUI>. ,HONI 5~0-J165 HOURli Mell. thn1 S.t. 10.11 O,.n Su"4•J' NMn te S pm t, l • situation or dilemma . Strive for greater versatility. SAGITTARIUS iNov. 22-- 'Dec. 21): Take speciAI care In handling f inan cia l ar· rugemenls. One close lo you should be made aware -of bank Reports on summer ac- balance. budgel requirements. tivities will fill the agenda CAPRICORN (Dec_ 22-Jan. when the Newport Beach 19)·: If-single, question of-mar· Junior Ebells gather-for the riage could arise. If married. firsl meeting of the club year a renewed understanding of at IO a.m. on Thursday, Sepl. mate is indicated. Best to play 24, in the clubhouse. low key. ~any around you are The luncheon theme ts San ultrasens1tive. Di •--the 1. 1 1 !"-AQUARIUS (Jan. 2&-Feb. ego LNV, 1rs sop on 1RO 18): Obtain hint f f 0 m • Pat_hway to Progress, the Capricorn message. Improve main theme chosen . by Mrs. relations w i t h associates Eugene Kovach, president. co workers. Remember receni Reports will be-given by the heallh resolutions. Avoid ex· education, youth, fine arts and tremes. You gain through ways and mean6 chairmen, mod erate approach. directed by Mrs. James PISCES (Feb. IS.March 20 ): Murar, first vice president. Accent on children, sctlbols. Projects completed by the affairs of heart and In• education committee for "the vestments. Aura of adventure new Eastbluff Elementary pre v a i Is . Enthusiastic ap-School, headed by Mrs. Larry proach helps shake off recent Thayer include ma i 11 n g emotional setback. parent-student handbooks, a ln 11no °"' mare •bout vauri.elf i nd ~11rol(lllv, "'"'' Svonev Om1tr'1 JO. luncheon for new teachers, p19e llool!lrl, lllt Tr11I~ About · I •--~-' .t..11r111o1tv. sefld birllld1t1 1n11 so <•~'l materia s u.n uroc: primary In OM1rr Saot l@I. Tiit 0.t.ILV "ILOT. grades school, the Youth Employment Service· and efforts with the Youth Problem Center in Costa Mesa-. The C hildren 's Art Workshop which took place in August will be discussed by Mrs. Dan McSweeney, fine arts chairm an. Reporting the upcoming Wine Stud y and Art Exhibit ·anq November Bouti· quc will be Mrs. A. L. Hasting! and Larry Mitche ll , ways and means chairman and co-- cha irman . Miss' Evelyn Ericson will SI JI. IEAUTIFUL CLOTHES , • , deli ver a talk on Educational;=========== on1v st10M1v uuc1 M ' Sh IY 911l -t•n't bur "' i.. IMn Problems of the Handicapped a11:e a arp lwlct In"'' umt d•n•. Ch'kl Th lat nd I I T d Tl\tlr LOH -Your G1lrl 1 • e s us a pans o ra e; Ute the clinic will be discus.!lCd by THE SICOND TIME AROUND 4"M E. lllh SI., C1111 Mnt o,.. II I• J -i12.1 .. 1 Sr. Margaret Anne Jnmann. Dime·A-lines SPM'S:-executi ve curectoror ~~~~~~~ the clinic. f Plans 'continue for the an- nual spaghetti dinner on Oct. 25 in the Holy Family Church hail, Orange , Tickets are available from Arthur Ross, 544-6809. Proceeds from the last dinner were used to renovate the clinic play yard.I set up a new library and purchase play equipment. CHILDREN'S THEATRE GUILD CRIATIVI DRAMA WORKSHOPS NOW ENROLLING CLASSES BEGIN SEPT. 22nd (13 WMk Session) 15 II NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA STUDENTS -lit thru 6th 9r1lll1 -112 7th thru High Schul-S15 FOR INFORMATION 548·4711 Autumn Song Performed Soprano Carol Shick or1F=i~i~i~~:;;;::::;~=:;;::;:;;;1 Autumn Song will theme the fir st meeting of the Orange County Branch, Na ti on a I League of American Pen Women, Inc. at noon tomor· row in the Regency Room, Grind Hote l, Anaheim. Fullerton will present all repertoire of opera and show ~ tunes for the organization of professional women engaged in literary, artistic 1 n d musical endea vors. Sow 12.0. Grtfld Ctntr1I Sttlioll, Ntw ' R' h -• B hi I 'II Yort , N ..... 10011. Mrs. IC lru ec e WI discuss the new Parent-Kidl--------------0-.-,-ho--llN-r_d_w_a_l_k_" Association formed for the Exhibit Opens Open lo the public the seventh annual Bonsai Exhibit will lake place from·noon to 10 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 26, and from noon to 9 p.m. on SundAy. The event will take place at lhe. Orange County Bukkyo Kai, Anaheim. It is sponsored by the Orange County Bonsai Sociely. Secretaries At 6:30 p.m. every second Thursday women of Bahia C h apte r of National Secretaries' As soc i a ti on International assemble In dif· ferent locations to attend meetings. Mrs. Lloyd Fleming al 673.fi360 may be telephoned for additional J.n formation. SEMI -ANNUAL •• •·. ' ii!& . -....... Th• Sale You Have IHn ·Waitlnt For DISCOUNTS FROM 20 TO 50°/o on ROBES -SLIPS -BRAS DRESSES -SHIFTS -GOWNS BRIEFS -SLIPPERS -PEIGNOIRS 360-370 s. II -s.Je-Muchandlsi..Final (Nit Hwy., Lt9U'l,I Phon• 494--439:r ' .. I leach, '26!1 Hantlagton Harbour THE RED BALLOON LTD. --- ···~· .... NEW ... HA NG TEN STRIPES & SOLfDS SIZE S 8 to 16 *''W'··· . - -Y IH! mo1t-clell9htfall" un111ual children'• shop In lhe 1011thla11d 16877 ALGONQUfN ST. Huntington Beat"il r _ I (714) 848-1866 0 OMEGA THE DIAMOND CUTS Classic Omega ladies' watches in marquise, round or oval 14 karat yellow gold fijled cases with matching bracelets. From lop : $95. S97.50. $97.50 Cll•rt• Ace-Ii IRVll .. .t.-ic ........ " • l 111t.t. .... ttc1.-•llf M11M!" (ll1rtt; ,_, SLAVICK'S ---.-~- ~··-~Jc'"t.lf'rs Sinrr 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT ae ... CH-644-1380 Opoo Moodoy o"4 ffldoy ••tll t :JO l [• . . • ' ' r ~ • • • • • - • -. I Tutsday, Stpltmbtr 22, 11170 DAILY PILOf /J DICK lRACY ' lly Ches,., 0 Gould U'L AINER ly Al--CGpp, TUMILEWEEDS WHAT'S 1H IS!' STANDING AilOOT 117!.E ~f;N 1Hi:RE ARE ANi NUM~Ell OF WORTHWHILE THl/lt;S '«llJ ctUO llE tt!ING?! HOW ~l!E 't'OU !I --MUn-AND JEFF-~ MUTI",WHAT CAUSES ALL T+lE AIR POLLUTION? It;;;,;;;< ::.:,,;;-.=.:v r -1 . JUDGE PARKER By Tom K. Ryan Sfl01'l'ING pSL I. 5111AIGHi PINS ;l.. MOPELLING Cl.AY 3. VOOJJOO INS'ffilt110N J'l()OKL~T · By Al Smith STOP AIR POLLUTION ' EXHAUST IP!; PLUGS ,1.50 By Harold Le Doux WILLIE, LISTEN 'TO ME! I OOlrtr WANT TO 60 &ACK'. ON TI-US STUFF~ I ~Mt5E I 'LL NOf MAKE ANOTHE~ PHONE CALL WITMOtJT VOi.iii: PE!i:Ml5SION ! ~ PLAIN JANE j DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by. A. POWER I ACROS S 1 Hil S Safe-c:ra ckrr ' A.bod' of the dea d 14 Fut ure: 2 •·ords 15 Jai --·- lb Kind of dram;i!ic 5peech 17 "-··· Rhythm'" 2 words l& Cloy 19 Singh~ SIPP in a proctss 20 -·· Stcord: Can. htro inr 22 Vtrl unc ran p1acts 24 LUi i! 2!t Unplrasant loot 27 Flock 29 Football play rr JO US gov!rnnit nl agrncy: Abbr . 33 Ski slop! l'!Qllipm!nl: 2 words J7Flyhigh 38 Uadt of ' ctr lain .,,·ood 39 Door ••· •O Greenland s t tllemtnl •l Dry ~2 Civil rltlrns• !X!ttisr s _ 2 WOfd~ 4-Number ~5 Storage conla inr r 4b Parlor ~7 Skul l cavity 49 Single issur or "period ical 53 Wisdoms ; 2 words 57 Britf and pithy 58 Pre-lslam•c Arabi an goddess 59 Piirt of speech !tl Rodents !t2 Po litical subdivision ft) Orser! fratu1r !t4 Bacchanals' wild cry !tS,Four-baggrr !tit Mr. M11bach ft7 Division or a bus inrss: Ab br. DO WN 1 )It ns ovrr a fence 2 Canada's hil;ihtst mountain 3 Ap11rox- im ately 4 Scared to death ' . ' ' " S G~h ft King o lsratl 1 St0tms 8 Fishing vessel 2 words 9 Chopptd "' 10 John Jacob ·•·•· 11 TV part 12 Brink 13 Obst rv t s 21 Oak trer sourer 23 Widr·angle Of \t!tpholo 25 l tllrr 28 Gradually reducir19 in lore, JO Umpirt 's decision 31 Uttling placr 32 War god 33 Garment 10/22/70 J4 Tortoisr 's cpponenl 35 Rtlated 1fi Oislanl 37 Glramrd fa intly ~o F ls h 42 Vit i I 43 Put on 45 Acrid 47 Ray 48 Rex ···: "rro l'olfe's creata ;o Oaunlltss 51 Hinder legally 52 Change 1n a!l jtl5 tmenl 53 Hit hard 54 Singin11 voic! 55 Sllrnt ppr son· ln101mal Sit lndulgt in ouk1001 spOrt !tO Rectnt: P1tfi• " l • r: ' • 7 ·~ -" '" " " "' " • " ... " '" • N ~ " ~ ff •• • --,. r; 2' ~ JO JI .. ~ :1 ,,, .. " I · .. " ,., "4-.4S lil" ' < ' M ·g .. ~ .. -I " " M M -~-" " .. ' .. ' " l'O ~ 61. ' I' \. By Frank Baginski JANE! 1...,."--;-'-1 PERKINS ~-' MISS PEACH I 'M GC~O YOU'RE' l"i 1..0VE WITH ME, ,l.R.T f!UI<.. STEVE ROPER ..... --.... ..... llBl!ll!l!lmt•~ YMV·~W··ACTUALLV-~ /ot5PfN5E USTED.' ···f'i.CUSE ME, CABALLERO! HAVE l THE liOMOR Of=" SPEAKING lO ONE OF THE BRAVE Mftol l'y'HO WILL DRIVE IM 11-tE -sAJ10 1000·? PEANUTS - IM JUST lN' CHARGE OF TWO 'YCLES THAT ARE ENTEflED. t'M THE TUNER ! ' ' ' • FEELFO'~'f 1HEY'S aASJCALL'I IJRY!'.'-THASS · TH'ACIOTEST.'.' SAU Y IANANAS GORDO MOON MUUINS ANIMAL CRACKERS TE~L. ME, HOW PIP I,. _.CL. BE<OIN ? .. I• 1UE1..1.., oo oiJ. Ml5TE~ ... DOIJ•r HO-DB~Cl<I MAICE !JOUR w n .. E COMMEl.if Arour ~ HAii? ! ... BY John Miles By Men W!.L.L TME IZ:E WAS TM1S M.t\Gil'C.AL.J. ~VS'TICAL.. MOMENT WMl!.N .I ouDDENL."V RlfAL.rZ.l!D l. COUL..D STAND TM'E . SJCil-1T OF '/OU'. •• 1f/.r \' · .. ~, ...... ~ -By Saunders and Overgard· Will )(JU GIVE MY F"IEtiJD ANQ ~E Tl-tE PL EASURE OF BUYIWG DRINKS FOR YOU AMO T '?'"\. BEAUTIFUL LADY? ,,,.., -" SURE.' I GUESS ·,.IF IT'S Ot<AY WITH YOU, ROS ITA·? By Charles M. Schulz_ • . - ., fHf STIANGE WOILO MR.MUM L fOLL"t ME, AN'~U.. .i.. e>E. n-i' FUST HOO.MIN toEAA TO SEE. WHAT AM SEEN!.'~~, By Charles lanotti By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson BUT ~EN I WAS GOING "T!lf'OUGH THE ii> l>el/OCl/ING Dool>, I CHANGED MY MIN!> Al-'D 'TUl>NED Al>OUND "TO L.E,AYE".')}~=:;~ "..-..)"{) • • ... By Roger BoUen \IJl<E~ TO !' ... DENNIS THE MENACE . ~ '·lL -.. .. .. .. • ' : . . ~ • ... ( ' s=-=:=====~~~~~~au~s~sz:--:-'."~"'"7.7.~:-;-::==-::~~~ ---...... ~ .. --·-·~ 4... .. -If-" .... "r .. -· -----...._ ... --~·' ............... _.,.._, .. --------- -. I . . ' II DAJl.Y PILOT Tutsdo1!~. Stpltmber 22, 197-• ~ . Offlci~;Is Take .. Glamor Q·ut of .Browns· Victory _µ . ~ I CLEVELAND (AP) -Joe Namath and an cauialP!·~ p;J,footlall lo ·~ I~ winning the National Football League Leroy Kelly were supposed to be the of-a~ • .:tni· diiecl cpmpeUtbi wibt opener. The m01t damaging penalties -fen&iva..,IW'I fQr: railliDoa of televisioa replar)):~ ,programming thlt were usmed ataJnat the Jets. · viewers iA the JnaulW'&J game of, pro olfered:-Etilbetla Tayl~ Ri~Burton "'They were laded With 1S WtacUons football"a prime time telecasts. Bu~ the and,1.utile Bmt. -. ~ for 161 :tards -a club retoict-that>~ guys who movtd Ute ball the best were AO. e.tim"ated S5 rniJlion viewt{St in-vlously bothered coach Weeb Ewbank. ~ guys ln the .striped shirts. cl~ ..m1ny women supposedly tuning But, despite prodding, the roly-poly coach .1be guys in the striped stllrL,, -the of. in Uil.~ine on with pro football for tllil o{ the· Jets refused to put any blame on nCfating crew beaded by Nonn Schacter ~ tlqit, rWere eiJ)ed.ed to be drawn by the officials. , . -moved the ball so well that they thl 1wMr of the spectacle the lpl>rt bas ,'\Don't put words in my mouth," PJ•yed a key role in Cleveland's 31·21 vie· ~::..but they may not have been im· E.wbank said. "You're trying to pllt ttjry over the New York Jels and may p~ by the spectacle the game w'ords in my mouth. We had tome •ad· have played a key role in the lmporlant' beCime. Vf:rsities, but we met a fine team and got ratings battle again!t Lii, Dick and Lucy. In iU1 21 penalties were called with a licked. We ctin't do what we did" and.fl· for tht: flnt game uf the heralded tor.al '"cit za yards marked off -11}.0r• peel to Win." i Monday ni1ht Rries on-ABC TV launched thla tbe fa'rdaie gained by the Browns in What the Jeta did was amass 455 Y"'t Sp~ct.ato-r~~S, Decks Hewitt ' . . :~ fter FirstRoundNetMatch OAKLAND A'S ROOKIE NO-HIT HURLER VIDA BLUE. Earns $2,000 Bontas ·Blue's Outlook Brighter After Pitcl1ing N o-hitte1· OAKLAND (AP) .:-A few months ago, Zt-year-old Vida Blue of the Oakland Athletics was th inking seriously aboat quitting baseball. He wasn't pitching and figured he was ~asting his time sitting on the bench. "I felt I was ready to pitch In the ma· !ors, but I was sent back to the minors,'' :le said. .; Blue:s outlook is much brighter today '.ftter he pHt'bed a nohitter Mond ay night :1o defeat the ~1innesota Twins 6-0 -just 'ja days after he was recalled, from the .'1inors. , I'; He earned a $2,000 bonus from club 4wner Charles O. Finley, who telephoned '.Crom LaPorte, Ind., to congratulate him. t: Blue needed only 114 pitch~. about 90 ~petci:nt of them fa'it balls, to subdue the ;fwins. "l_just humped ba ck and threw fie smoke," Blue said of his fast ball. ~• He pitc:hfllf a one-hitter 1gainst the Cib' Royals Sept. 11. He losl a no-ter~ln that game wben~Pat Kelly sing!· ~ in the eighth inning. t• "I started th inking about the no-hiller iu. time in the filth inning," Blue said. 'ffte runs we got in the eighth innine ;tt e tc0reboard and saw we were ahead ·,e.o. I slirted te lling my brain 'no-hitter, ~tter. ~hitter.' " ;: In base ball tradition, none of Blue's jor contr ibutor both to the victory and the no-hitter. He hit a triple and home run, drove in three runs and scored two. He also took a hit away from George Mil\f'.rwald, the Minnesota catcher, with a leaping catch in the fifth inn ing. "I didn't think I could get to the ball, but I jumped as high as I could, and did," Campy said. The only other chance the Twins had · for a hit came on\a hard grounder to the left of third baseman Sal Dando in ttie eighth inning. · ''It hit rily glove, and then dropped out," Sando said. "I look a chance, and threw the ball anyway." Manager John McNa i;nara of Oakland didn't sa.y a word to Blue d\lfing the game. "What coulcl I Say?" McNamara asked . "The best lhing I could do was leave the kid alone. He knew what he "'as doin1,,::__ LOS ANGELES. (AP) Alvin Hay· mona fields a question as deft ly and quickly as he does a football. Emerson·-Brops Match to f.onnors; Gonzalez Wins LOS ANGELE.S (AP) -Bob Hewitt, Soath Africa 's leading tennis pro, has beeR eliminated from the Pacific Southwest Open championships in a verbally heated match, then knocked into a hospital by a 7~year-old spectator. Wit11esses said Hewitt, 30, went to the Los Angeles Tennis Club locker rOom shortly alter losing his first-round match Monday when the spectator struck him "two or three times from behind'' on the head. Hewitt, who had lapsed into semi-con- sctousness 01111 the locker room noor, .was taken to St. Vincent's Hospital where 'X rays showed no fracture. He was ad- mitted to the hospital for about two days of observation for a slight concussion~ The spectator was identified as a long- time member of the tennis club. He was not held and police were not caUed, of- ficials said. "Naturally, I was provoked," the man said later at his home. He said -his at· torney advised against further comment. The umpire of the match between Hewitt and Mexico's Joaquin Loyo-:M.ayo said he had to reprimand •iewitt for US· ing "bad language" and for "delaying tactics.'' The umpire said the spectator had to be escorted rrom the ~ during the match after ex.changing i11sults with H~witt. He and Hewitt also argued at courtside at the conclusion of the match as, the umpire said, Hewitt asked for names of three li nesmen with whom he had disputed calls. -Loyo-.Mayo won.Jhe.match, 7-2, 3-6, 6-3. Hewitt, an independent pro who moved from his 1111ative Australia to South Africa in 1964, has a hist ory of incidents ranging up to a 1969 locker room brawl with BrltiSh pro Roger Taylor at ttle Berlin Open. ' Monday's locker room incident oc- curred after 18-year-old Jim Connors of Santa ~1onica. upset foqrth -sceded Roy Emerson, Australia"s two-time Wim ble- don champion. 7-6, 6-7. 6-4. Arthur Ashe of Gum Springs, Va., defeated Pancho &!gura, Beverly Hills, Calif., 6-4, 7-6: Pancho Gonzalez, A1alibu, Calif., over ~like l\1achette , Belvedere, Calif., 7·5, 6-4; Charles Pasarell, Puerto Rico, 6-2, 6-4 over S\reden's Torbln Ulrich, and Stan Smith, P as a den a beat Ala!! Stone, Au stralia, 6-3, 7-6. Also advancing to the second round were Andres Gimeno of Spain, Ronald lfolmberg of New York and Ismael El Shafei of Egypt. ;; SC ST ARTERS CLAIM INJ URIES LOS ANGELES fAP ) -Three starters may be on the sidelines for Southern ca\ifornia Saturday when the Trojans meet the Joy;·a Hawke.yes in Iowa City. Coach John McKay said ~1onday that tailback Clarence Davis and defensive tackles Tody Smith and J<Jhn Vella were injured in Saturday night's 21·21 tie against Nebraska. 1· Davis has a bruised hitt: Smith, sprain- ed ankle, and Vella, bi'uised knee and pinched nerve:- The Trojans went through a 90-m inute noncontact practice in sweai clothes Monday afterJW>On. there," he told the writers. "1£ you don't gel the blocks. you can 't get to tbe other end of the field." Haymond, at fi.Ceet end 190, com· mented in answer tQ a qu estion: i:mates meutioned the no-hitter dur· &6e game. The most excited Oakland er wal--4-cttcber Gri""Tmlce, also a -;fl<>kie"'11o·coqlll~Y-pmei for lllu• ~t oe. Nomet in tbt American Auocia· ;ton this ....,_ • Honored as tlie proftl'ssional Player-of· the· Week by the Southern California FOotball-w~uers,_the_o kick re_ty_!Jl. specialist o( the, Los Angeles Rams was asked how fast he can run . ".E.verytimt.__T put my ~nds on the football, I th.ink I can go all the way. I. feel I'm qulck and tha t a rew guys l'\·e left on the ground feel I'm quick. I don 't think one man can put me down , . , although It has been done.'' ··"I didn't even talk to him," Tenact :!aid. "I Josi called the pltcht!s. We talked E'bout the hitters before the game and lded that Klllebmr'wu the tDughe•I , a use he can hit the li8U ID f•r." f Killebrew WA! tfie only bl9mlnner far Oie ,._Ina. He walked on 1 J..l pitch ill the tourth Inning. j "It wu a curve ball," Tenece gaid , "I'm not goina to seooocf.SUt.11 myself because of the w1 lk. That w1s the pttcb We hid to throw to him." .shortltop Bert Campeeris "' 1 lna.- • "f reaUY dorf't know. 'Fast enough, I guess." fri college at Southern Uni v rsit)l, ht had run the IOO-yar1l dash in 9 ... 8 Sfeol]is, yet l!aymond" crtdlts quickness more · than pur. speed -piu> the R1mo·bleck Ing -for his SUcteSS. Against St. Louis last Friday night In a 34-13 victory, Haymond contributed a 98- yard kieko(f return for, a touchdown. He had three other runbacks of kickoffs, 1vtt'qing a~s )'i rd s. -'"FhtN were some dam good blocks {)Ul ' .. captain of the special tean1s -those playing on other units I.flan the regulac. (ensive end defensi units-Jla.ymond- said that on hi.I kick returns. "I saw our fellows go after them (Cardinals) in a vicious type of way. 'Mlat's what we did la:st year_, and that's whet we . on the Special teams will do Ibis ye11r." UCLA tailback Arthur Sims won the 1w1rd as the university Player-of·the- of~vely, 299 .. Namath <Olllpleled 19 Cleveland · by taking the leCOlld hall of 32 passes. But amonc the penalties kickoff 96 yards for a touchdown, the Jets were three for pass interference three closed again with a toucbdown before for holding and one for piling on plus. Paul Crane's piling on penalty con· ArJ there.. were three lnterceptions oL trlbuted.__ to a Clevellnd drive that Namath passes, a fwnbJe by running resulted in Don Cockroft'• 26-yard field back Matt--Snell and a-miatake· in judg· goal. ment by return specialist Mike BatUe. The penalties stopped at that point, and Pass interference penalties by Jin'I U\e Jets iook il the rest .of the way. Snell Hudson and rook.le Steve Tannen in the fumbled on the seven-yard line to kill one first quarter enabled the Browns to score drive but Namath 1tW closed the gap to their. Second touchdown for a H--0 lead. 24-21, with a 33-yard touchdown pus to Then, after the Jeta made it 14-7, holding George Sauer. penalties and an interception again Then the Jets got another opportunity helped lhe Browm. when Cleveland was forced to punt. Bat- After Homer Jones made It 21-7 Ue, however, failed to grab the punt on the N!W York !O. II bounced past him and he was downed at the four, where Namath tried to get somelhin& 1tarted. One completion brought the ball to the ll. bul & ~ w~nt into_the ~ of linebacker Mike Andrews, who iitumiil 15 yards for the. final touchdown.as a de- jected Namath stood 4i the five-yard Unl, hll head bowed, before the ear·apliWng noile or a record as,793 fans. BatUe'1 !allure tD catch the ball on the punt all but put the, final touches on the Jets' chances, leaving them backed against the wall as it dld. But he ex· plained his decision by saying, ••1 thought the ball, was: going out of bounds." CLEVELAND'S HOMER JONES RETURNS KICKOFF 96-YARDS FOR TOUCHDOWN. Indian s Move To 3rd; SC Drops. to 7th By The Associated Press Ohio State's Buckeyes, still awaiting their 1970 debut , continue as the No. 1 major college football team in the nation but the Texas Longhorns have served notice of their intention to claim and keep the top spot. Ohio State drew 14 first-place votes and 645 points in this week's Associated Press poll wbilg_ Texas, 56-15 winner over Californ ia in its opener last Saturday, closed to within 13 points of Ohio Slate and outdrew the Buckeyes in first-place votes with 16. Stanford ripped San Jose State 34-3 and moved from fourth to third, Penn Slate advanced from seventh to fou rth after trouncing Navy 55-7 and Mississippi re- mained fifth after mauling Melnpbis State. 47-13. Notre Dame, 35-14 conqueror of Northwestfrn, held on to sixth, while Southern California, No. 3 the previous week, found itself in seventh after a 21 ·21 tie with Nebraska which "mOvcd from ninth to eighth. • ri.1issouri. which crushed Minnesota 34- 12, advanced from ninth lo eighth while Michigan fell from eighth to 10th after stru ggli ng pas t Ari zona 20-9. The Second 10, in order, are Houston, Arkansas, Florida , Oklahoma, UC LA, West Virginia. Tennessee, Colorado, Georgia Tech and Air Force. W·L-T P'tlnl1 1. Ohio Staie (h ) O·O 6d 1. Tox11 {H) 1.0 631 l. StanlOrll (11 2.0 •72 I, Pmn St1to 111 1.0 '-5l 5, Mi»lH jl)t)l (I) 1.0 4:10 '· N<11re 0.me 1.0 lllt 1, Southt!m C111fornl1 (21 1.0.1 361 I. Nfbr•1kl 1•0-1 J0.- 9. MIHOOti 2•0 17• 10. Mlchloan (1\ l·O 156 11. Hoo1ton l·O 161 \l, Ark1ns1J 1-1 llJ ll, FicJrid1 2.0 rt II, Olllel'IOml 2.(1 lo6 H. UCLA 1.0 $.1 I•. Wiii Vlrglnl1 1.t XI 11. l'""',." 1.0 lJ 11. Colora<kl 1.0 11 10, GN1'9!1 T«h 2·0 2l 20. Air Fortt 2·0 11 OthetJ •«elvlno YC1te1, t!Ulld 1llltltbel!c1lly: A!1b•UT\I, Arlronl Sllt1, Au&urn, K.,,l1Kty, loulJl-lllt Sr1tt •• Nortt1 C1rolln1, Punlut, ~111 Di.tgo Slatt. $0ult! CtroliM, Tu11 A&M, Tula Tod!, Tol«IJ:I. Utth, W11hl1191t11. Marlehal Bas a Pain Dodgers Se11d Foster Against Giants Tonight LOS ANGELES (AP) -San Fran- cisco's· Juan Maricha\ said he had a pain in his side. As _ for the Los Angeles Dodgers, Marichal is a pain elsewhere. Marichal hurled his first shutout of the year Monday night, beating Los Angeles, 7--0, as the_Giants moved.into a tie fore- concl place in the National League West. !l's the first time since June 22 the Dodgers haven't had the runner-up spot all to themselves. While il was Marichal's first whitewash of 1970, it was hardly his first triumph over the Dodgers. He's beaten them 34 limes in 47 lifetime decisions Including ni ne times in the last two seasons. Los Angeles will try to square the three-game series tonight, sending Alan Foster. 9-13, against the Giants' Ron Bryant. 5-6, in the second game of the set .. "Every pitch was working tonight," Marichal said after his 12th victory in 22 decisions in 1970. "MosUy it was the screwball and fast ball, though. "But I still had trouble with my side. It hurt all night." Mari cha l crashed into Cincinnati 's Johnny Bench Sept. 2 and Marichal has complained or a bruised side ever since. All the Dodgers managed were six singles and two threats while Willie ~lays led the Giants' 12-hit barrage with two si ngles and his 628th career homer, good for four RBis. Ken Henderson drove in San Fran· cisco's first run in the first inning, then Mays hit a twcrrun homer to highlight the Giants' three-run third . Willie McCovey doubled home a run in the fifth and then Mays singled home two more in the sixth. The Dodgers mana ged two t h r e a t s against Marichal in the first and ninth in· nings but little in between. Maury Wills and Manny Mota got in- field singles in the first inning, pla cing ' . u . out to stymie that bid. And In the ninth the Dodgers loaded the bases on singles by Mota and Parker and a walk to J~ Ferguson. But Jim Lefebvre grounded t.0' fdcCovey for the third out. ~ Angels Get Right Bounce Thi s Ti1ne, 7-61 • ) MILWAUKEE (AP) -The way Ru ss Snyder scores it against himself, it wasn't the California Angels' fault altogether that they beat Milwaukee 7-6 Monday night. Brewer Snyder inadvertently helped Angel Jay Johnstone hoist a two-run· homer over the fence, pa d d I n g California's lead and offsetting. Milwaukee home runs-including two by·, Tommy Harper. "I fouled up," Snyder said as he . pondered the one-run victory margi14 Johnstone 's two RBis, and ~1ilwaukee's' slump to· I lh games behind fourth.place Kansas City in the league 's West '"\Division. Milwaukee look a 3-2 lead on Phil Roof's three.run homer in the fourth frame off Tom Murphy. ... Lew Krau~. whom the Angels tappid : for two runs in th e fourth on singles by Roger Repoz and Joe Azcue, kept' California under control in the fifth and sixth. Then Repoz led off the seventh with 11 • single, and pinch hitter Johnstone laced a drive to right field . where Snyder was · stationed after appearing an Inning · earlier as a pinch runner. . .. Snyder went up the wall after the bii ll ' and twisted toward it, but it bouncfd " from his glove into homer territory. One out later, Murphy planted a homer Id re1ree, and ca led S-3. Week after rushing for 126 yards on 18 * * * . CALJl"o•NIA MILWAUKll .rrtil carries including a SJ .yard touchdown A1omar, 2b •: I : ':' H••Mr, "' ~·; 1 2 jaunt against Pittsburgh as the Bruins "'" l"llANC tKO LOS ANO•Lll Gofl••ltt. d s 0 I • H-ett'I. lt $ • l • .. r ltrM .. ,.r91 l"r90(llJ, II 'J' I D.Mty, (f J •• won 24-15. IOfllh, rf s 1 I 0 Wlll!I. •• J 0 1 • A,"°""'°", II I I J D "~•Of, II • I ' • S• • h ~ h I st f F1*11ft. 21:1 5 ! 2 I c;.,.,..,, 3111 I I I 0 Sllfll(tl', lb J I O O Fr-, p1t I o o I l11lS1 a-senior, es """"'" ur mo o M1.,., c1 ' 2 > • ""'''· rt • o ' o "-" rt • 1 J J eu"'•· r1 1 0 1 1 tile pasliwo seasons,.._,__ F011tr, 11 1 • o • w.D.tvra, d • • 1 o Afc~. c ' o 1 1 Sn)l'ller, rt 1 0 1,, Co h T P .. nth 'd .,1~°'--Mceo...y,--111-1-1 I I yt,Pl~tf. lb-4 I 1 ·O-JCl'lml0"9, 111'1 I 1 I 1 B,Sf!'l!l!'I, rt 1 I -i_ ac ommy r ro sa1 o 1-11e Htnc1er1°"' 11 • • 1 1 H•ll••· c ' o • • E1111, c 1 o o o Ptn•. H 1 1 J ~ P 'to.• .. r•h 0 "W d'd 'I k Dl1t1, c J I 0 0 Fttlll/loOll, ' 0 I 0 0 Gr!Ulft, Jb • O a a •ooi, c , 1 , I 1 .... uu" "ame, e I n me e as Hu1, lb J 1 2 1 Llllt11vr1. 21:1 • o 1 1 TJo\u•plw. • s 1 ' 1 Kut11t~. 711 1 1 ~·•' man y offensive mistakes as we did in our c.111t1Mr. a ' • • • eurt...,., 11 1 o o o LI 1toe11t. • 1 o 1 o Kr•m•. D 1 0 1 ,. r b \.fllltt, U 4 I I 0 Gr1btrtri"WIU.aJ I 1 I l .flll!w, II 0 0 0 I Elb~r111. t o o e I irsl game, ut many more deft.nsively." M1rlct111 11 • 1 1 • Motlllr' P 1 o 1 1 0111 • Coach John McKay of Southern · Pac:~. pit 1 o o • 011,"'~ • : ~ : :; St~ P I I I 0 TOtf!o M 111 1 Tot1t1 l6 6 t • Californ ia. commenllng on the 21·2 l tre Houott, P • o o o c111k!m1t ooo 200 m _ 1 ,. 'th N b k 'd "I I 51111111111, pit 1 •• 0 Mllwt"*" 000 )Oii IOI -• w1 e ras a , sa1 n fcncra we Nlr'ma"-, o e e • I! -"•" DP -MllW•lllt" 1, Loa _ cia. ~ didn't.play.very ••ell InJhe •. fi.rst half. the lot•tt 11 'u 1 T.i.1t n • ' • lerfti. s. Ml1W•u11" t ta -au"'-19 _ 1.,_ ""'llC~ t&t---Olt ....__.,-Hit !toot OJI, """" ..... fln,--T, M"'111'rf ft~ derense bordered on being atrcx:ious. I Ln A11tt1• ooo ooo ooe -• · H••PI• 2 l "l· 11 -"· Joh-, "~""· , .,. , did •1 1 r 1• .. DI' -"" ,.,.llCllc:• 1. i.os ... ,..1a '· 1.0B ~.,.. n even reeogn u some o ,. -sin l'r111eit(O t. L• 1ontt1n " ta -Mcc-v. This week. the Rams play at Bufralo on Hit -M•.,., 1•>· Sunday, UCLA plays ho s I to Northwestern on Saturday nll!ht 1t the Coliseum and tht Trojans of USC-meet Iowa at Jowa City In an afltmoon game . IP'MltlllllSO .Mt1IChtl /W,1"111 ' 6 0 0 I t M!ltllt l fl,1.f) i • 4 ' ) ,J Slw9Mnton t,112 l ) J I I MWOl'I tJ JJ I 0 I I I N.,_11 1 11011 Ill -H1li.... flint -1:ll. Atttl"<lltllCI -14,•11. ll'Hl l llllls6 ' T .Mur_.,y 1¥/,IJ.llJ 6 1 I ' t 6' ~ 1 ltft.otfll I 2 t 2 I ~ £.Flil'lt<' 1 0 o o O 10 Kr•vsM (L.IJ.11) -' II , ' 1 ~ Ell1_.lfl l !J 1 0 I O 1 ' 0.lntr l·VJ I 0 I 0 I HIP -llV T, M\ll'lll'rf IHttDtrl. WP -T Myrplty, Time -1:16, AtfWtn« -•Ml. ' • . -, • I ! I F 1 .r hec 'hec st ! he1 I de! •lg tvio mi 1el• in ing nei p,. wh 1 cla I Da thl he; C;I PK fr( r~ r; .. J~ Hl °' bo 11i• ,.. r1 ' --M: th ra " ml ... " • • ' "J ------~--------=--~ • ------~-- Tuesday, St,ttmber 22. llflO~ DAILY PILOT J J! _Coast -t\rea Players of Week RE ED .ioHNSON Corona del Mer GARTH WISE Huntington Beach MIKE EASTERLING Newport Harbor BENNY RICARDO Costa_ MHa · MIKE WIEZBOWSKI Laguna Beach RAY CANNAVO San Clemente • JEFF CARTER Editon ~ BOB MERRITT Maril)ll ED CALL Univarsity BOB KAISER Estancia KIRK HARRIS Wa1tmin1ter BOB WALKER Fountain V1llay GREG SCIARROTTA Ml11ioft Vi•i•. MD, Colonists Share No. 1 f Spot in .Count)' Maler Oei and Anaheim. I pair of im· pressive winner! in the first week of·prep football action. share the first spot in the DAILY PILOT'S oUicial weekly list of top Orange County teams. Coach Bob WOods' Mater Dei crew ri_p. ped a good Santa Ana team. 28-7, while Anaheim took advantage of ChafCey, 25.a. Orange Coast area teams to make the iop 10 include Edison, Wesbninslcr and Huntington Beach while Estancia also received vote!. Edison's 20--0 romp over host SL John Bosco catapulted the Irvine LeagUe con- tenders into fourth place w hi I• Westminl!ter hung on to sixth foUowini Hs 2U loss to potent Lake~d. Frazier Signs To Meet Foster Trans.ition Easy for Rugg er Huntington beach earned a spot in the lineup at 10th place followini its 14-4 deeision of La Habra. ORANGE COVNTV TOP ti Plact Team Pt~ I. ttie) h1ater Oei (1..(1) ~ Anaheim ti-OJ :13 DETROIT tAP) -Joe f raiicr, h~avyweight boxing king, and light· heavyweighl champion Bob Foster were Ntl today to begin training for a 15-round heavyweight title fight he re Nov. !8. Estancia Gridder Acco1nplished Rugby Player :t Servile (1..(1) :'17 4. Edi5on fl--01 21 !i. Garden Grove tl..0.J 11 Frazier. who is to make !he first defense of the title he won in June, 19b9. it\gned for the. title match with l''ostcr ~londay. "The Jive gate will be over half a million dollars and with closed circuit 1elevision rights. the total take should be tn the $2 million area." said former boi· ing referee Lou Handler, head oi the ney,·Jy fonned Twenty-first Century P:romotions, Inc .. of Detroit, the group \Vhich is staging fights at the Cobo arena . The fight contract carrie~ no rcmalch claust. ~1ichigan Boxing Commi•io'lller Chuck T>avey did not rule out the poS.'ilbility lhat 11te winner of the bout might defend the heavyweight .crO'o\'ll in Detro it again<:.! ~$Sius Clay, former heavyweight ch~1~· t>ion "'ho recently got the green hg nl from a New York federal judge tn re.surne his boxing career afte; !iCVt:ral !·1ar1 of Ii · · By PHIL ROSS 01 thf 01ltr l'li.t Sl11f In all probability. 18-year-old Howard Bennett would be able to start his own travel bureau with all the road maps and travel stickers he has accumulated. Bennett. a nalive of the Republic or South Africa who is currently attendi'lllg Estancia High as an American Fie.Id Service foreign exchange student,. has journeyed all over his native land along \\'ilh separate sojourns to Zambia , Rhodesia, Mozambique and his current lrip t_o the U.S. ~ In addition ·10 the many trips he has taken. Bennelf is an accomplished rugby pla)'er tor ruggerl for his home school fMertizburg College i11 PietermcriUburg. Natal. South Africa) and is a member of coach Phil Brown's varsity footba ll squad at Estancia. Bennett finds the transition from ruaby (called rootball ,...outside the U.S.) to American football a comple~ and \vorlhwhile one. "YQU see, lwo years ago we had this chap at my school in South Africa who \V8S an American exchange student fro m Chicago." Bennetl. relates. San Clemente Is picked over Lagunfl action ror a .700 pereenLagc. _ ))tac ·by three points and Newpof\ __._ Anoll'iCr Cldse c olrl es l~ ITntls Harbor is a (our-point choice lo dump \\'estminstcr picked by three ov.er in- O:lsla ~1esa ln a' couple of Friday night vading Long Beach Poly. bflckyard football scuffles which hi~hlight ~t...1l.:~.a~r.~,.,": ~, • I t" b th AIL Y p~..., ~1•1• ctll!• CO'Of'~do h' ' Ifie weekly se ec ions Y e . Noir1 o. .... _ ~"'' """'lft 111¥ n ,.ILOT rt t Ir · th" week's r ·1gskln use o"'' •ow• bY 1a Spo S S a In IS UCl .. aw• Nortllw•ll!rn 1rt 10 •1.1o ~··•·11U•J '"" Air Fort' b'f ' 1·~eroo. o ...... COl'1 Gl<tt LA H•rtleor ..... ' South TorrarK.'t \ViJI be favored over ~ .,.,.e;t.o(~ -.c.y_pr"lf\. 1~ · -MerinLb11 one.. point rrlday night \vhtn foii-,:0!~;,o~~ a,~~\,, ' h Ci'..,, MVt • Deo ~tr LO'l'oll D'I' ~ lh11h\'O tea s coTild C-vvl'tti Toro--r~OM"'~:;rr Coll.I"'''!". · idi G1rct•11 G~r iJv•lf~l~ V•! ~1 bd rallCe High School .gr ron. i \11 C•jmc-"·' ~~· •wM 81•r11 v J This will be the closest g:in'~ on the !:~~1~~' ;z.":' ,::;fiJ""~1• , ''llrrl according to lM ~llaff ex perts. who f~'!!:.., ~..!''l!n913".,~i ... 0~ Mt b~ 1 miMed (ive and had one tie In ti rs I wee k ~1!;1'1:!.""~~t.''!J!.f:i ~filo ~ ... 't 11.nd the11 suggested that I give American footba.11 a try. "When the coach over here 1 Brown) sa1v my application for the American F'ield Service and noticed my size tS..11, 190 ), he wrote to me and asked if I'd like to try out for Esta111cia's team . "Thi! is only the fourth week I've played the sport with pads on and ii ·~ been only about a month I've been prac· ticing it all together," he adds. The South Africa11 has been workin« out with the Eagles at tailback on offense and linebacker on defense. Oddly t:ftOugh. the linebacker spot is the most related American positio n to eighth mAn. the assignment Bennett usually had in rugby back home. Bennett notes, "in addilio11 to eighth man. 1 played some at front rank or prop, v.•hich is the rugby equivalent or a guard in football. "I find the hardest pa-rt of le<1rnin~ American football ill Ute blocking :i nd lackling, which i!' entire!)' diftcrent in each sport. " In rugby, [or illStance. you don 't \\'c.ar your shoulders while football coachc!I over here encourage you to tackle more '"'ith your head tha11 with y o u r shoulders,'' adds Berinett. There is also a difference, Bennett claims, in tht forms or substitution and lhe style or defense of the two sports. ___:''[her'" ar:~no subaUlutions-in-ruaby like you have in ·football ,'' Bennett say!, 11dding, .. aid when you 'rt in a defensive PoSiU011 in rugby you can make your move i n s l a n t I y without somelhJnr like the offside penalty in football." He continue!, "you have to have more 3tam ina in rugby too, 'since you art 111\.\'a)'l! moving and because of the no- 11ubstltullofl rule." The tow-headed exchange :1tudenl., '.\'ho hits to finish lix months on a .compulsory military obllaatlon when he returns to South Africa , could be 1 factor with 11Is toC" in t0.me elf &stanclll's iamc:ii later in the season. He claim~. •· 1 can kick the ball either !ltraight or in the soccer slyle. Jl's just a maUer or lime in gelling usea to the Am.erican ball and de ve loping some sort of couistency." 6. Westminster (0.1) 17 7. su'nny Hills (1..(1) 1:> II. Orange (J..(I) 11 9. Rancho Alamito~ (10..0l 9 10. Huntington Beach 11..(ll ) Other.~: Fullerton 4, Estancia l . Brea 2, Sono ra 2. Major League Standings A.,1ERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGVE Ea1t Divlslo• East DiVl!loa w L Pel. GB w L Pel. GB Baltimore 119 S< .6<7 Pittsburgh .. 70 .5.111 Nt:w York 117 67 .565 12•,; Chicago ., 72 .525 ' Boston 81 7.1 .526 111,1 New York 79 74 .516 3'' ,, Detroit 76 77 . .o\97 23 St. Loula 72 II .471 10~ Cleveland ,. ., .<31 15~l Philadelphia 70 13 .<51 12~Z Washington 70 .. .461 21;, hfontreal 17 I.I .14l ts Wel!t Division Weil Dtvllkll Minnesota 92 61 .6-01 Cincinnati " 51 .'21 Oakland I.I 69 .SS: 7 ~~ Doqers 13 70 .542 " Angels It 72 .529 11 San Francisco ll 70 .512 13 l<ansa~ City 6-0 92 .395 :'11 ljj Atlanta 71 ., .411 22~) J\Uhvaukee 59 91 .m :t2 Houston 72 11 .471 ,, Chicago S< 97 .351 M1Mllf"'t ll:twll1 37 San Dieio 59 ti .:JM 37 8011111 1. Cle~elllld I Mffttl•f"'• ll:1t11ll1 B1lllrnore ~. Dt!rou• 3, 1J lnf!l1>•I Cl"l:ll'll\111 2, H.usllll • ... DEAN LEWIS 1f66 HARIOR ILVD., COSTA MESA .... ,303 Service, Ports, & locly $Mp Now Open Until • p.m. Mondoy Ni1hts I I. Orange County'11 l.ar gest and ~tost Modern Toynll and Vol•o Dt.1lcr Monarchs •• Rated 7th In CIF Poll "' Lakewood and Bishop A1111I clomillll!Ai1 the CIF AAAA pr~p arid rankin&I follow ing the first round of action Jut weekmd. Coach John Ford's Lakewood ere~ re<:eived six first place volel while ~ Angelus League power Bbhop ~ grabbed the other seven first placi votu.., Orange Coast area power Mater Del,· fresh from 1 21-7 wallopinl ol rlYal Sul• Ana, is rated seventh best, Lwo poiatl ouf of fifth place. Orange ~nty is also represented by Anaheim {third) while Weslmioster aaia Servite picked up points, bul lallellr--lti make the .top 10. ~ The AAA classification has three Orange Cout>-ty ieams in lhe top live Jnd lour other conUoa:enls tt:ceived votes. Irvine League , power Edisoa &arnered 19 points. good lot a tie for J2th while Garden Grove (second), Orange (third) •nd FOothlll (fifth) made tbe tliti,,. list following impressive wins. ~ • Other team! receiving voles from Orange County in the AAA rankings werr. Sunny Hills. Rancho Alamitos ar.d 'Fullerton. AAAA Place Team Pis. 1. Lakewood (1..(1) 13) 2. Bishop Amat ! l..(1,1 12' 3. Anaheim (1--0) • 4. El Rancho t l-0) II 5. \Vest Torrance t l-0) 64 5. Redlands tl--0) 63 7. ~1ater Dei tl-0} 62 8. Pasadena (1..0) 34 9. Santa Barbara tl--OJ :» 10. (Tit) St. Paul (0.1) 24. Blair (0.1) 24 Others: Long Beach \Vilson. tl-9) 17, \YhiUie.r tl-0} •. \Vestminster CO;ll" 5, Burbank (1-0) 4, Centennial (1-0) 1 Nolt• Dame (1--0) and ScrviU (1..(1) 2 eiich, IOljO Oak.s \ 1.0 ) and Arroyo (l-0) I each. AAA 1. Bonita (1-0) 13* 2. Garden·Grove ll:O) la :i. Orange (1-0) as. 4. Bellflower (1-0J 4:i. S. Foothill (J-01 '3 •. Lompoc 11-01 ,. 7. Rolling Hilb tt-0) 02 I . Crespi (l..(IJ r.t !l. Cabrilb> (1..0) 2.1 10. Glendora (1-0) 27 Others: Claremont t 1--0) 22, Edison and Lasuen (1..(1) It each, Sunny Hills (1--0) 1~ l~a Puente {1..(1) 13. Rancho Alamitos Cl~ OJ and Fullerton (1..(1) 10 each, Torrance and Excelsior (I.OJ 7 ea:ch. AA t. Temple Ci ty ~ 1--0J 100 2. ~furphy tl--0) 75 3. South Pasadena (I.fl / 72 '4. Bar.stow (1.0) II 5. Nogales (J-0) ll' ... 6. Sonora (l..(IJ la. 7. 1'.fayfalr (l..(IJ l5 8. Royal Oak (1..(IJ JL 9. San Marino (0-1) 20 10. La Mirada (I.OJ . It Others: Workman (l..(IJ and Hemet fl· 0 1 JI each, El Segundo (1.0) I~ Northview (().I) 13, Central (1:0) J2, ~ Riverside 11=0). Damien 10-1) and Neff (1--0) ll each , ~forcno Valley (I-OJ JO. Curtis Replaces • Penhall at .QB BERKELEY (AP) -Ray WUl><y, coach ot the California Bears, said Mon. day that senior Steve Curtis has moved into the No. I quarterback spot. Westminster's Dav• Penhall. another ~nior, started the first two games (or. the Bears. Curtil! took over in the tee0nd, hair or Saturday's game al Texas and. finally got the offense moving. It was much too late, o( course. In th~ 56-1$ loss. DEAN LEWIS AU•UIT SPICIALS tl10t@TIA] '71 COROLLAS HERE NOW! WA•OMI. I• II. COUf'll AUTOMATICS & 44f'llH AIO.WM ....... .._. M.tt lt--HHm ,....,_ L-4 en•,,. c.,... VOLVO DIMO $2862 1336 IH7 TOYOTA CORONA .SID. ., ... , .... ,.. ,,.... ........ 'IW? C--. l¥011;t1'J $11f5 • \ . ' ' . -·-~ l~ I r _··-~4 •• 'J• DAILY PILOT Tutsday, S1ptembtr 22, 1970 .. . ....... . Jf Players of Week TONY BONWELL Golden Weit BOB CURRY Pr•ne• Coa1t HQw to Find W!!J To Football Tilts Anaheim Stadium -North of Santa Ana Freeway to Stale College Blvd. tumoU. North on State College, stadium located on righl jnorth of Orange Drive-In Theatre ). Banning High -JOI E. Nicolet SL. Banning. North on Newport Free"·ay lo Ri verside Free\\·ay . Proceed north on Riverside Freeway, then east on San Bernardino Freeway to Banning. Brea High -803 E. Birch St., Brea. Go norlh on Newport Freeway, then west on Riverside Freeway to Orange Free· way. Turn north to Imperial. Left on Imperial to State Col· lege. Right on State Cillege to Birch. Left on Birch. El "'Moden1 High (Kelly Stadium ) -3920 Spring SL, Orange. North on Newport Freeway to Chapman Aye. turn· off. Go east on Chapman. then left on Prospect to stop sign (Spring St.) and turn right. Garden Grove High -11271 Stanford Ave .. Garden Grove. North on Harbor Blvd., west on Garden Grove Blvd., right on Ninth St., west on Slanford. Hunting1on Beach IUgh (Sbeue Field) -191JS· 1'-1ain SI., Huntington Beach. From Beach Blvd. -'west on Adams lo Atain St., north on ~fnitt St. Laguna Beaeb Higll (Guyer Field ) -625 Park Ave., La· gun a Beach. From San Diego Freeway. proceed south on La· guna Canyon Road to Pacific Coast Highway . Le ft on Coast Highway, left on F'orest. right on ,Gleneyre, left on Park Ave . La Habra High -801 West Rose Ave .. La Habra. From Huntington Beach -North on Beach Bl vd .. turn right on Whittier Blvd .• school on right. (Whittier Blvd. about two miles-past Imperial Highway.) From Tustin area -North on Newport Freeway, west on Ri verside Freeway lo Harbor Blvd. North on Harbor j left on Whittier Blvd . La Palma Sladium -La Palma and Harbor Blvd .. Ana · heim. From Huntington Beach -Westminster area: North 011 Harbor Blvd. Lo La Pa lma. From Costa ~1esa -Tustin area : North on Newport Freeway, west on Riverside Freeway to Lemon Ave. turnoff. South on Lemon lo the stadium. Mission Viejo Hi&h ·-25025 Chrisanta Drive .. Mission Viejo. South on San Diego Freeway to La Paz turnoff. Left on La Paz, right at first slop sign. ~11. San Antonio CoUege -Walnut. North on 605 to Pomo- na Freeway. East on Pomona Freeway (through City or In· dustry) to Water St.. turnoff. North on Water St.', to Valley Blvd. Tu"rn right and proceed north·east to Grand Ave. Left on Grand Ave. to the college. Newport Harbor (Davidson Field) -600 Irvine Ave., Ne"" 1 porl Beach. South on Newport Blvd. to 17th St. in Costa Mesa. Turn left and proceed east ori 17th to Irvine Ave., rig ht on Irvine. Orange Coast College (LeBard Stadium ) -2701 Fairview Road, Costa r..tesa. From Harbor Blvd. in Costa Mesa, prtr c.:eed easl on Adam s to Fairview. RamOlla High -North on Ri verside Freeway to Ada ms turnoff in Riverside. Left on Adams, right on l\1agnolia Ave. School on J~t at 767S Magnalia Ave. Saa Clemente ltig h -700 Avenida Pico, San Clemente . Souttl on San Diego Freeway, take Ave nida Pico turnoff. Left al stop sign to school. Saala Ana 80\\'I -8th and Flower. Santa Ana. St adium located on 8th Sl. (Civic Center Drive), west of ~1ain St., casl of Bristol. SenUael Field (lnclewood Higbl -231 So. Grevillca Ave., Tngle"·ood. Norttl on San Diego Freeway to Manchester /\\'r . in Inglewood . Proceed <'asl on Manchester (about one mile J 10 Grevlllea, right on Grevi\lea. South Torrance High -4801 Pacific Coast 11igh>1•3)'. Tor· ranee. Take San Diego Freewa y to Harbo r Freeway. Proceed soulh on Harbor Freeway to Pacific Coast Highway and go west on Pacific Coast Highway. Tustin High -1171 Laguna Road. Tustin. From San Diego Freeway take Newport Blvd. turnoff (about one-half mile east of Newport Freeway!. North on Newport Blvd. lo first signal \Laguna Road) and turn right. -. -· - Westen 1U11t (Hu del Stadium ) -501 So. \Veste rn Ave., Anaheim. North on Beach Blvd., left on Ball Road. right on Western. We1tmi1sttr JU11t -14325 Goldcn"'est Ave .. \\'cslminster. North an San Diego Free"·ay to Golden,ve sl Ave. turnoff. north "' Goldenwest. School on left. Westminster Ma11 1st Pickeroo W i1111e1· A new dty. · • sharp single rormer look third place hono~ family ahowine and a female by missing the point total by breakthrough highlight the 153 tlo 312 for ~1arcia). first week of competition in Right behind fi.1aiCia. in fifth __ _,1,,he second an11ual DAILY and 1i:cth places. "'ere hus· rtwt Pigskin p1CJCeroo. baod"TODY. an ex.use fOOt bDll We 1 t m In ster's George star. and son Brttt. The latter Broderick becomes the first l<A'O, also With 17 correct picks. citizen of his city to capture "'ere 337 and 387 points off the I.he. top tpot in the Plckeroo. proper totti l. Brodtrick cuessed 17 or 19 The remainder or !he people aarnes carrectly (one 11me -in lhe1 op 10 had 16 correct ~--tbLlfebruka-USC contest -guesses and thet w_ire : ~likt­ ,...lted tn a 21-Jl fiel 100 'Spragucl Cm: a r-.rcsa1. lJani I mluN tht point total of $88 Barazsu <Huntlnitton Bench \, by jult four to edge llun· Scot! 11cnrntln (Cos111 1i1f!:sal tln1ton Buch's Charles \Vhite, and Dick Lawrence (f\1c\vporl who also go! 17 rlJht but mi!ls: Beach ). ed the correct point total by Six othrr conlt':Stant.s "'ho 62. scored 18 points we re ~The ft.male breakthrOll&h eliminated from tht top 10 by finds Carol Boice (Coata use of !he Pickcroo he· ~ftSa) and 1itarcia Thurlow breakt.r .systt:m. fMW kJft Viejo) in the tor JO, Entry blapks for the second merking the first t m e \\•eek contc!lt "'111 be prlntt!d membera of the fa.Ir se1 have today and Wcdncsdr,r In the AJ'P'.'lared there during the DAILY PILOT 1fit~ dc adllne firs t •ee.k of comprelitlon.. for mailing or brin3in1 them Carol and Mardi each h11d lo the Cos11 1ifcsa office •I S 17 correct gueS$CJ. but lht . p.m. Thursday. ~ ' TOBY WHIPPLE Saddl•back Alan1itos RacinO' ~ Res11lts Mtnd1y, S..I. 11, H it Cl•r tft• 1'111 l'lltST llACI!. lOO •trd1. 2 ye1r oldl. Clt lmfn11. PUrH 12100. Oel Top Glrl \H1rdln1! 15.IO 1.20 l .MI Gtl\111 HO.I !Dr .... tr) IJ,60 7.60 Tr11e GrlJ fPtrntrl J.• Tlmt: .:ZO.f/10. Scrtlclltd -ltn~t1 (re•'· Mt,..,tltf, B1rro11 lld, Trl1h'1 t1 rrt<1. Sl!CONO ltACI!. '°° Y••OI. 3 ~etr old1. Clolmlne. Purse $'l100. Fllt1hl 10f (Wt1i.an) J,lO l.10 7,'4 Ll!tlo LtOV 11to1r (Cro1b y) 3.IO l ,Dll G1!1 Go Min (WU10!!) l.20 Timi: .:ZO.S/10. Scr•Khtd -011r De(.l1ion, The (°"nl, Cl111' lltockfl. t1 NIGHTL'f OOUI LE. lt-Dtl T.,. Glr! & 4 • "111111 I"' 11!-16l.41, THlltD lllACI". 170 •1rd1, l Veit e1dl •nd u1>. Cltlmln•. Pu"& 5)400. 100 l oo ltockel !Ll111!1ml S.IO l .11! '·6!\ T~p E111!1 (HardlnllJ J.40 J.60 lrtl ll.l"" l "•'lt) l .OQ Time: .•6·l/IC $crt1cl>ftl -Dtbbv'1 llttaue•t. l'OUltTH ltACIE. 5" \'Ard•. 3 Y!l t old• 1nil u11. Allow"tMe• P11•1t t7'°°. RDCk• Botch Htnk !P19el Mldw1v D1ndv"l'w111onl I< Gain' Man CB1nk•I Time: .11·6110. No scr1tch11. 11 611 6.111 l .'1J J.111 l .OC ••• Fll'TH ltACE. lOD v••d\. 1 v•1r Old• •nd up . .1.11ow~nce1. Pu .. • \lSOO. Adml•al !ltd (C•r001•l 'l,00 J.40 J.IO To11 Deck Jm!e !V/tlson) 7.tO J.lC l'lr1t Olvl CD'"••rl ,,00 Time: -'O-l,110. Scrt tcht<I -Cwnt C11r1n. Miu Ptr r Ba•. SIXTH It.ICE. JSO v••~\. 3 venr oldl ~nd u11 . .t,11cw•nc•1. Puri• '1IOO. 1lr1d Le11 CW•il·On) )J.40 116111.0Q Rebel Cn•rllt (~h•ll•ml J.IO l."'1 T1"91r e1r !.td,l•I l IO Time: .11-1110, 5c•1tctled -Outtn For fl 0 1¥. IJ EKACTA. 1 • lttd Lon & J • ltttHI Ch1rll1, Pl l-HU.SI. SEVENTH ltl<Ct:. ~ v1rds. ' ~•1r old!. AllOWlllCOI. Thi Ct111t!1!lt11. Pur>t tu.ooo. Ch1rQtr IRf /.ld1lr) V1n11Q111 \H1rt) lnd'f .l.~1•11 IWtl!onl Time: .76-1 110. 10.lO '·"' l . .IO l .lD 7.llO "~ £1GHTH •ACE. 110 Ytr!ll. ' Ytlr old• and uo. lnvftlllontl. TM Mtr• !Mn. Purit !15,000. !lull lf••!u~ CW1tton! S.olD J.60 7.•0 t";tbbv"~ aov tltnbl1110n1 t .00 l .611 F1oulr'5 Trotk fH1r<1ln1l 1.•0 Time: ."5·'/10. Ne"' Tr•c~ Re<:o•ll. Scrt!C~fll -St,,., ltlvtr Win. NINTH ltACE. JSO v••d•. l vt•t old\ Ind llP. (ltlmln1. "Uflt 11000. C1 illorni1 Smo9 (Cro•bvf '-00 3.00 7.60 t;IDCk•f lnlun (Wlllon1 l .«I J,4(1 {)on P11oblo ILlp/'11ml J lCI Time: .11 !li t. No 1er11ch11. 1J f:XACT,1 , l · Ctlltornlt Smot I n . 1t1Ckt1 lnlun, 11ld ill.ff, Double Bill Schedul ell A double feature is on lap Satur<la)' night at Orange County l nter nati o nal llace,vay. Included in l!•c twin spill arc injected. fuel burning allereds and BB gas supcrc11arge d cars. Qualify ing la~ls fro1n 2 to 6:30 p.n1. with the eight quickest dri vers· in each field ~quaring off in the fi rst of six rounds of eliminations at 8 p.1n. Al'laheim's D3ve Rttbe <'l'I a nationa l re c<Jrd for funn•1 cRr~ du ring the National Hot Rod Association W n r 1 ti Cham· pionship series 111":-ils S:\h1rday ni,11hl at OC IH . The form e r llunlin~1on Beach resident sped 10 a 6.99· sccood cloc kini::: lo better thr 7.19 elapijtll · carller In !!'IP vear "" Ed ri1~ul\ough of Forest (;rO\'t'. Ort. RichArd 1'1..,"lCn\an nf Whit• tirr won the funny cAr eliminator '>r~c kc.1 in John 'fi.l azmanian·~ BArrac:uda . . E ·ta uc ia Grid Boosters ~feet F'llms of Estancia High's 30· O l'OOt of Tustin rrlctay night will be tue hfghlig hl of tonight's Est?ncl11 HI g h boosters club meeting at Costa i'.tesa Golf And Cou1)lry Club. Actl\•lty begins at 7:30 \\'ith roach Phil Bro"" sehcdul~ to mment on hi11 !c am 's s~f\OOl of the Ti lltr~. .. ~ ..................... .-...... , .. . -_ ... ..-~-···---~--.-.. .. ·-~ . .. ~--- MV. Polo 8-3 Victo1~y ~arina, ·Newport Harbor / T eam Loses. Notched • Harriers Def eat Opponents By Comets To Western Daryl Onken belted a three- run h0µ1er in the first iMlng and d.rove In a pair of runs in the second· to lead the Costa Mesa Comets to an 1-3 victory over the Los Angeles Hawks Jl TeWinkle Park Sunday: Onken's five RBI was a single game seasonal high for the Comet nine that compleies the summer season with. a hon\e game at Te.Winkle Sun- day at 1:30. Mike Pherri• was the win- niJ1g pitcher with Rick Griagi absent and in school ip. Pasadena. fherrin worked.-J. 3 innings but was nick~d (or 13 base hits. ' -Marina came within an eyelash of sweeping La Puente in a dual cross country meet and Newport Harbor edged Fullerton to get the season un· der way over the weelft!nd. Laguna Beach participated in the Canyon Crest Invita. lional meet In Riverside but no team scores were kept In the four divisions f o r freshmen, sophomores, juniors and seniors-_ Leading the Artists In each divis1on were Frank Vining. 15th in the freshman category: Josh Brigtlt, t2th · Jn the sophomore race: Joe Prickett, 13th in the junior race; and Rick Smilh, Z2nd in the senior competition. Dave Lockman was the in· dividual winner as Marina top- pled La Puente, 1 7 • 4 4. Lockman set a school record of 10:08 for the Viking course and was followed across the finish line by teammates Robert Brickner (10:20), Bob Phillips (10:31) and Ken Martyn (10:35). Mart)'n is a sophomore as is seventh place finisher Preston Cam pbell who was clocked In Baseball's ·Top Ten •r TIM A1-1&1N P'ttH NATIONAi. LEAGVI: Dick Robbins O[ the J1aWkS l11ftl °" IOO II Wit. "l•Ytr Clu• G Al It N ,cl I I• AMl"ltlCAN Ll".ICUE C1r!y, Ari IH "'67 ll 17T ..lU was oor·for· 1ve at the plate ,.1 .. .,... ciu• o .11 11: ., ,... c1,,....,,,,, P•" ,°' 40s 65 14 .m . d ' Lh ' Lh . . A.Jollllsolo,Ctl 1"'6 Sit 1' 111 HJ e Willltml Cl\1 151"' 1:M 196 m an In e n1n 1n1,1ng con· Y1ltr11m1-r. 1111 uJ s..o 111 1n :no Hieto:m1n, C111 139 .. , ,, 157 :.n., nccted on_a-fher.rin.. fast balL Ollvt, Min "' m 11 itt .J11 Torr•. si. L ... i. u2 .sa1 "1•7 .HT -""''lclo, .c111--1,l4'J--M...112..lU-51ru111ll lttl .f'QJJ JI' •lf as 1'CI .n• to drill it over the deepest spot Mun1011. N'f .11' 430 ~ n7 .J07 To1111, c1~ ·1is 5'!"To1~iiif :t1• . Fo111. Cl• no'~ o 1• .lll7 ltose. c111 ''' ''' ''' '" ''' or the centerf1eld fenre after It. sm1111, ''" uo"' '°' 111 .:io. w. P•rt.•r. LA lSJ 51, 11:1 11, :,,, l•ll"ing Lh Com•L h I h F. ltobln.on, lt1 17! 454 ll n1 .JO"• Perei. Cln l.SI 540 lOJ 111 ,JI• ... e '"" ur er e C•t••, NY l~ S67 ,, ,,, .:in was going to belt such .11 pitch p;,.;•111· Kc 13'1102 s1 uo .m Html ltflfll HDll'lt 1twn1 l tneh , Clnc!nntll, lJ; I . Willl1m1, Chlc1110. d ; P1r11. Clnc-ln111tl, 31; H, Atron, All•n!t, J7; McCovtv. 5tn Fri,.. c!1co, 36. out of the park . "· How•nt. w11h1 ... 1on, •1: K111,. brtw. Ml...,.Jo11. ~1; Y111rr.m11t l. lo•· Ion. 4(1;. J, "owtl1. ltlllmort. lJ; T, C0<11tlilro. eo11on, :n. COSTA Ml!SA U ) ••rhrbl !:nnlmehtm, 11-D •, j j •, 1n1. d ktn,lb •1 25 Htll4-d. lb-t i l 1 D Melntosh. lb l l l o FtrrtO,H lOO I Retd,rt •O OI ~lmctblll, c 0 0 0 • llmort .lb l OID l>errln. g..lf l 1 1 D Tot1l1 ll I 10 I Sew• '' l11nln\' Htwk1 000 ODO 21-i llH 0 I! Com•!• m 1~ eo~_. 10 l llun1 l tltH In F. How1rd. W11hln11ton, Ul, J, l'OW• 111. lttllmort, 111; Klll1br1w, Min,,.. oot1. 111; T.Conl1U1ro. lo•ton, llMI Oll•t• Ml11ntao!1, 11)2. l'llChiRt 11 Dt<lllettl Cu1t11r, e1Ulmort, JJ-1, .1'1; MC· "''"'· &1111....,,.,. 1l·•· .n•: Pt!mtr. 81111,,....1, 10-10 •• U1; McOowtll, CttY9• 11nd, 20-10, .u11 J. "Ptrrv, Mlnnuoi., 1.).1', .iU7. ftu111 l1tttc In le11Ch, Clncinn1!1, lfl; Pe•er, Cl,.. cll\llllf, 128: I . WUll1m1, Cl1Jc110, 1261 MtCOY.,., Sin F•1ncl1to. 12(1; H. Alro'I, .t!I•"''· nr. Plldlln1 14 Dtdtlellt Slmpl<lft, Clndnn1!1, U-3, .Hl; Glb-•on, 31. l.Ollll. 7'1 .... "6; Nolin. Cl11o c!11111U. ,,., .. JOI ; W1lk1r, l'l!llllur11h, "·'· .100; H1>1rn1r, ,hll1dth1hlt1 f•J, ·'"· Rancho CllUomta DftBBDAY In 1955 when Pai.. Verdes wu an hour's drite from the Cit ic: Center, there were plenty of unimproTed Iola there for $500, 1 and ~·ed lots went for $2500. That · land has since been appreciatinc at $1000 a )'Ur-and choice 'riew Iota hlYe rcine from $1J.OO to ~5,000! ' a..!:=:-____.. _ __] •&llllLUD 1911 ~ .. ~ Rancho California is heading inlo ils aoarinf Seient.~s. lt olfera inTesl· TOD' AW ment opporturubes. on eTery Kale, •& ~ life styles to eYery taste. lbere is bulk acreqe anilable. There are S.. I ac:re citrus and atoeado estates. at Glen Oak Hills. And M .. dowView has spacious homt1ites of 'll to t JA """ cuh priced u low 11 $5950 with streets ud 11ilities alreadi patd for. ' . . . . . .. .. _a.,n n•ouow RaDcht Calif.mti'a srnth his Mt. ...... pia-d b7 Kaioer, A-...., !he - - liahteoed: priD<iplea .i Niue.ad land ••• for -1t1bJI! nalization ef ~--petentialL They are a11Tentl1 .,... .. , S?t million • ..,..., ... -~ oddod le $ZS nOllioa .Ji.,d, -' lhwo. l..eN ialo thia .,,..tunitJ ...... --Tiii••·····~ 10:51. John Neilson In el&hlh place wu timed In 11 :01 and freshman Gary Blun1e had a mark of ll:lt. ~1isslon Viejo dropped a •2 decision to Western High ln a water polo match ....Monday aftern09n in the losers' pool. The Marina junior \•arsity won by a 21-39 score with Dan Cadra the individu;ill \1·inner in 11'11. Newport Harbor's J oh n Holcomb placed second to a , Fullerton runner in 10:50 while Rick Fleming of NewpOrt was third in 10:52. Other Newport finishers in the varsity race included Craig Clark (11:10), fifth : Dave Cross (11 :%5), seventh;· and Lee Batson (11 :56), loth. Newport shaded Fullerton by a 27·21 score. • John League and Randy Dlxon each scored for the Diablos to avtrl a shutout in the first or three game! scheduled this week. Wednesday afternoon coach Doug Burt·takes his squad to Laguna peach and Friday the Diablos entertain f.1om. ingside~in another practice en- counter. Western forfeited both the Bee and Cee competition to ~fission Viejo Monday for lack of a full team. Pilot . Pigskin -P/ClfEROO- Co • Sponsored by Voit And ' The DAILY PILOT BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT In Cash For Each Week's First Place Winner Voit Footballs each we_ek le• pigskin prophet. Pley the DAILY PILOT Piekeroo gem• for w••kly pri1:e1. Winn•r ••ch w1e k rec•ives $1 0 ca•h end 1 Voit Collegiate f1totb1ll !suggested retail pric•, .9.95 l. Nin• runner-u p Pick eroo piekers 1110 ••ch get a Voit Coll•gi1te footb1 ll. Wi tch fo r this player's form each we•k in the DAILY PILOT Sports S•cfion. Ci rcl• t h• t11ms you think will win in the list of 20 f 11m 1 and send in th• player's form or r111on1ble f1e1imile. Then watc h t he DAILY PILOT 1port1 pages for ••ch w••k's list of 10 winn ers. RULES I. Submll ll!i• ""''" bl•n~ or .• r111on•bl1 t•(Jlmlle lo tnllr th• con1.,1. 2. S.nd to: Pll.DT PIGSKIN "l(J(EllOO CONTEST, lporls OC'Plrln'141n!. "· D. IOX 1540. (OS!t M111, Ct. ~62•. 3. Only on1 entry per perion e1cn w...:. 4. Entries must be dejJvertd !bY m•lt or In perstnl ~ OAILY PILOT off!Q by 5 p.m. Th11ri.c11y. t. AM,_ Voll tnd DAIL'f ''LOT tmpleyJ tnd !Mir lmmetlltlt lltnltl81 1"11 11\glblt IO en1t r. 4. TI E lllEAl(Ellt must be lilltd In or entry 11 woid. 1, In c11t ol Ile tor llr,i pl~cf, dupllcatt mercl!tndlH prl1t' will bt 1w1rdtd Ind winners will equally 11!1r1 111 !ht $10 ttlh prl11. 1. W\1111tr• who pl&tt In Int too lO more" tl!111 o.-c1 d11rlna !ht cont~! "~Vt lht OPtior1. af~ lilt flrtl wln, of 1~ch1nalng !ht volt loOtbtll lor 1not111r QutlUy Voit proelutl GI e<1111vt!tnt vtlue, 1•················••1 • ENTRY BL.4.NK • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Circle tff111~ yo1 thl11k will witt thl1 Wfflt'1 t•mn '"'""'""' ii -··' ... ll1te4l Rams vs Buffalo Florida vs Alabama Penn State vs Colorado Purdue vs Notre Dame USC vs Iowa Air Force vs Missouri OCC vs LA Harbor Cypress vs Saddleback Colle9e Mt. SAC vs· Golden West . ~· Paul vs Huntin9tan Beach Mater Dei Costa Mesa vs Loyola • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • vs Newport • • • • Fountain Valley vs Garden Grove • • ;. • • • • La9una vs · San Clemente Bueno Park vs Estancia .. "': •• '• • • I I l :Ol • l :zt l :JO 7:00 7:.JCI J:55 l;llD 1:05 ' l :K • * - . I Rancho California-Kaiser Aelna ·, 95,000~acre malter·planned com· munity for inYellment, homeaites, recreation buaineu horae ranches and arricu hn-11 l re•t t• 'fe lopment of it1 kind in the nat ion. ys So. Iorranc.._ _ __,•~------­ A wtahh of infwm1tiee and a thrte JMntlt mi.riptieft 10 tM Rane.he C.lifemia Ntwa. ffiataric1I anealolu. Pt.,nu r.,.rta. Plans. PM:turu. N• atrin11. Nt .Wi111ien. Ju.a ill eut ind mil. T t : Btt 822 , R1.MM C.1jfemil, 4120 c..,.... o.;,.e Ne.,.n Bueh, C.. 92UO Santa Ana vs Corona del Mar Edlsan vs Santiago • • • • • • • • • • • • • LB Poly vs Westminster • Pacifica vs Mission Viejo -- • Tl! aftf Al(lft -My OUtJ\ en "'. tottt nvtl'l .. f ef IMll!ll\ KOnid 111 Ill • 20 lfll'lt$ lllltd 1llo¥1 It .. , • • NA MI • • ADDllU • • Cln • zt• • • ................. • • PMONI SO •· • • •• • • • '• • • • . . • ~:::::k::::::=:-~~-::::::---:~~;;-~~~-'~~~~~~~~~~~.1L.:'~•:..:•:.!•:.:•~·~·:..:•~•:_:•~·~·:..:•:.!•:.:•~·~·:..:•:.!•:.:•~·~~ • ·~ '1 • • ' -...,......... .. .. ~ .................... ~···· ~· . .. . . . . . ' . ... . . . ' .. ... ------ - TV DAILY LOG TUESDAY 111tst, BllCll 0..M tlod to, .:..t1k $!IF. SEmMIER •:oo 9 lia ._ (C) (60) J1rry Dunphy. 8 INIC ........ IC) (60) ti Tiit Alletl SMw (C) .. (90) Tenta· ltvely &ehtdu!~ ruests Include Shel- ley Winters, Milt llamen, K1rrn Vil· tntine, Mr. Blackwell, l G. Mir· "1111, Francine G11y. D Iii O'Cledl: Mowil: "Tiit bet" (dr1mt) '56-Paul Newm111, Wen· dell Corey, W1ltt1 Pid1eon, Edmond O'Bri111, Allnt Francis, lie M1Nin. D AllMtl & c..u. (C) (30) mTH ,_ (C) (311) Q) tt T•n 1 Tllltf (C) (60) Rob· ut W1p11 ... II likes One lo KllOW Ont." Q%I ()) Sllf" Trtk (Cl (60) ED WW's lln (C) (30) "Potomac Adventu1e, Part II.'' 9 (l) CIS ~ (C) (JO) fil) Ou!JMdl/M111iul1 (C) (30) ' CE lntrict 130) D ID ClJ Ill! lollo (C) (30) "1111f Put Sltk." Jiifl•.1r ptqulll ~ tllt' flu •nd well·me1nl111 ll'i•ndl. Cat· u r Romero 1ppu11 11 lu11111 Hen· dtr10n, Lur1111 Tuttle as H111n1ll V11by and Steplllnie .limn 11 Kim. D @(lll!INEW ,,_Alt Mo.ii ti tk Vhel&: CC> ...... ._,Ill Aillul Al"•" (suspe1111) '70-An· l~Ol'lf Ptn.ins, Julie Klrris, •n li•ckelt. m Dtvid rmi: aow 1C) <so) Me Guthrie. m Drllllfl <C1 <301 Don ou~biAs 1uests in "The l !d M." fD I lflCLi\) McQuW 11 Pi .... (30) Port 00n.ld McQv.tid ltlb with Robtrt Cflittuttr, ...... mana1er ~ ~tio11 WQl.ll, Erle, Pe11nsylv1ma. m r.-. r .. Wy 130) m Li c.nltit9dal ''°, '''"Dlll @ !llntT __ , ("?} "Tiie lptrm fk'" (SPJ lillMI) '65-Micflael Cline.' Mild-manlMl'ld army S«&ullt Klny P1l111t1 is pressed Into seMce bJ'British ln- lelligenc1 to retur11 • tcilnlill wM Is llfin1 held behind the ll'Dft Cw· lain. 0 ~ fll!itifllt (C) 60) ID felony Squd (C) (30) •A Penny a;, lslt~s ill the Sun (C) (JO) Game, 1 Two·Bit Mufdtr." ail TNb de In Estrtnn (30) tI) NET Festini (t) (60) "a..t/lo- (i) News h• lhe Roulld (CJ (30) ~en: The [mperor." Pilnl• lirMI Mike Rollens, Glo111 Greer, P•fti .loll•nnesen petforll'IS a.thown'• Beebf. '"Unpe101" Conc•rto with Erich Lelnsdorf and the Bosta11 Sym- 1:20 Q)@ W11tflef (C) Mlr&t SfilK. phony Orchtst11. 1:30 0 Ctndid C.1M1"1 (JO) l!i) Olltnldi/flll (t) (30) m Q!J rn r-nte Mdl• (30) m Netacu (60) @@NBC Nifhtly """ {C) (30) 9:301)'3 (j)T1 .... W* LM (C) fDT .. po (30) "Obpoub1llly.~ A (30) When a lon(-htlrtd )'OUnt photorr1plllc essiy on the dispos· philosophy profmor (Mithaet Blod- able natu re at m1n's belon1in1s. 1ett) laku Ali3on 0. • ....,ctdt date In 1111 coul'llry, Gr1ndpl Pru· m l'lttn '" liwb11 (30) ilt lollows--as an 11nlnrit9d dltp- 11> Notkin l4 (C) (60) eront. ml TM Dlllrt 11p1f1 (C) (JO) 0 Nns (C) (30) Bnl11 Wt rd, CD ..... r ~a <30J ID Perrr MaH 160) G) AIC E'911illf ,.,_ (C) (JO) eID Mnicllh/,_,.• W (t') (301 1:00 II CIS Enain1 News (C) (JO) ID Mnie1 r &tnlll (C) (30) Watter Ctonktte. IO:OD 1J IUIX1' ltf*tl (t) (JO) "Mmr CJ m lllC Ni11rttJ N.:.S (C) (30) To Heir the Wind.· David Brinkley, Fri nk McGee, John 0 m""" (Cl (60) Ctianctllor. 0 @(}) Ql flfW SIA9I Mar- 0 Wlllt's Mr lb? ('C) (30) tlJl W1lbr. M.D. (C) (60) "A Very m 1 lofl tier cJO) !~~~ =·~:i~·:m=~ Q) 1111 .. Qedl (t) (30) wmplttn a diet dmia( tbe tUm· mer ,ac;atiOQ ind IOOll beeo!Ms an (i1) Cl) I lM Ucr {30) active IMl!lbtl of lht sdloOl's @ !I) hdtd (C) (30) u~in1in1 set. fD Y1111 1• Hultll {30) _Rlclllrd 0 C.11 tf Ille Wiil (C) (30) Hitllem1n and Diane demonst11te ED Speailatioe (C) (60) "tlra1 •~ercises to dmlop lon1·hfe 11e~i· Abuse ind lilt llw." hntl 1um1 bility. include SIM Rush, dinicel psrchol- ~ ([l Trd" Conaq•llca (CJ tf:i'~ and di1ector of ~ Fr11 Chn1c; D1. LaWfenct l. Friedman, fil) Cllrist tlM llvin& Wofd (C) (30) M.D., psychoanalyst and ltlthor; l!lll SillJllfltellfl MIN (55) ind Judge Jmy Paeht, rtpmtlll- (l) Tll8t l:il1 (C) (30) in1 Ille law. 7:.JG II a(() IMl1y Hillbillies (C) ~ (j) CBS Nns 11.,oft (C) (30) (30) Phil Silms CUesls 111 Part II ~ Nowll (30) ;.1;,009~ ~!Od~ (C) (00) ~Festini ...... (60) Guests ar1 1>111 Blocker, Leslie U1· ll:dl'llCBS "-' ~ (C) f30} vms and Tommy Roe. Elaine ..loyi;e. •·How Pucetul tht P•llful Alomr• Bob Wllli1111:1 Mid his d11g. Louie. O Jwil&lll i.. (30) al!CI rr1M; Welker 111 fe1tu~ re1· ulars. ID l~I JoW .... (C) (JO) a""" <t> (30) ~ oo ... _, <t> <"> 0 (jj) (I) a) NEW SWON Nod di Mi Mllllr9 (30) ~ (C} (liO) "The Loni Roul, CJ'i) "419' Tm ,... (lO') Kome." Pel• aa:kltnltlly hits and 11 _ ~ 1J m ft'\ fins (t) eritiCllly injufes a JOUAI "fllOl'llln .\RI -, !;Iii.IOU • while chtsing a bu11!1ry SUSjJllCt in 0 Cu YOI Tep Dis! (C) (30) his cir. An janette Comer auests 1s QTlltltrt 9: (C) "'lllct ..... Billie Fletcher, with Lou Antonio Is (mystery) '54-Ginetr RollRr Va• Cl~ Heflin, Gene rfll"MY, li.:>rp Ritt. O MilliM $ Movie: "Hitlrr" (dn· Wilen an npirinl ifllWllJt, tryinl 1111) '62---Richlld B1~hart, M1111 lo crash Broadway shoW-bullneu, Emo. is mysterlOusly muNSend, •. Ottec-ai Daaltl looDt (C) (60l Cyiil '""' finds fou~ MJSp«ts: ilaoltnl Otlennti ruests in "Tht D1d Man 1ctren, her timid ~usbafld, . dn- arld the Cave." p~a!e producer, tns pnwnment f.D 1lle Ter net Cl'llll' Dp (15(1) .. An 0,'itonr. ~ .... (lnys· Kol.Ir With ~Kt Sennett." tery) '.(l ·-Dani Alld11ws. Willer (19 Selecttd Flh11 (C) (JO) Brenn1111. · OJ Mn fllll1t CJlll 11 AnlOf (JO) m Mowie: "Cry T..P• t"""1) 7:515 al) Clllltl011 dt sepn1191 '59-John Saon. Lindi Ciyslll. l ·DO 1J Qt! m CrMll Atr11 (C) (30) (ill I]) ""1 Maso11 • Lisi Dou1f1s pl111s 1 "com1111 out Ci!! (j) flews (Cl • pertf' for litlle Lori Baker so she 11:150@@ m"rn (Cl can flteet 111 th• chlld1en ol Hoo\: . 1rvitl1. Victori1 Meytrink plays 11:301J 13@ MtlY Cnffil (C) lori. 0 M0¥1e: "lhr w .. Se Yt1111(' 0 Viraini• 1irah1111 Silo'# (C) (60) (dr•m•) '55-Raymond Burr. TenT1tjytly scheduled JUtllts in. 0 ~ (]) tlf) Ole• Ca•elt (C) elude Terts1 GrtYllS, N1rtetle Fab· M•~im11i111 Schell, 811t1a11 Hershey, 1ay, Rrchard Pryor, Mr. Blackwell, l llom1s Murton, Thomu Brown. M11J Peacock. 11:.(5 O lil@m >oinftJ CMllMI (C) m f• Tell Ille f1ut• {C) (30) Jerry L IWiS subs IS l\o$L Glll!ll'. II!) fell hlpet 1119iillUlllMln (C) , rr1nkie Mlon, JacqutliMI Suunn, (JO) ' London LH. m..-,_, 1<1 <JO> 112<0 1lll rn ""' ._ <<> •·115 m R1t11oleodil (55) 1Z:lo m ... "1ac1Lln41 ., ,... .... · • (western) '57-$1ex Re1SOfl. l :H I ·00 6 Mewl•· "Ht... Dttn" (dll· 9 HEE HAW-SUCK OWENS . rna) '5.( 0 -GlenR Ford. * ROY CLARK STAR ON IJ •-<ti HAPPIEST SHOW on TV m .... , ... "'"' --fJ QI (i) Kee M.. (t) (60) Str1nfl«,,. 'flRflf !rJ lhlilflt" Ind Chli\ey JiTide and .Je1nn;e C. R1lty "Tiit CIM ~ sw,.• WFDt~E~DAI DAmME MOVIES 1:• D (C) •51iirts Alley" (rom•~l '52 ....:.c.stlllr Will!1ms. Bl•!}' SUl11"1>1n. t:ll D "tied MIP," (mysttrrl '4"-• Qf11111 Wtll•1, Akim lam11olf, 1'11ncy ' Culld. , •• (t) "Tiit Old °'" Heult'" (can'ltdJI '63-lom PIH!Ofl, Robwt Mm1ey, .llntt Scott. ---m ''Tiit LldJ W111b Mink" (com· 1dy) 'Sl -['It Arden. Dennis O'KMft. 1;00-&1 "A MtdlJ tw ...,.. (tolllllf.J) •i5--Art1110 Ot Cordew•. 1 .... c.rn11 K1ish, Oorottry lamolJf. H1)"1111d, .(:JO fl "l1M btMt" (.u'f4n11t) '51- Robtrt Mltet111m, Robert R)'l11, Lb beth Stoll e JOB .PRINTING • e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS Qu•lity Printin9 and Oep1nd•bl1 S1r¥ie1 for ~ore th•n • quarter of • century. PILOT PRINTING 1211 WIST IALIOA ILYD., NlWPO•T llACH -142-4)21 • • ------ Tutsd,Y, ~pttrnbef' 22:, 1970 DAILV PILOT JI) ... 'Royal Hunt' Opens at Laguna Tonight By TOM TITUS CH .... Otltr 'Ml>! INff A costumed exiravagania at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse leads otr the newest com- inunity theater fare along the Ora1ge Coast this week, while two other playhouses mount light comedies and a fourth revives and. embellishes a previous musical revue. In all, nine productiQllS will be on the boards in.Ora11ge County th.is week as ~97().. 71 live theater season hits its 1'tride in only its third week o( activity. One of the biggest shows or the year, making its debut tonight at Lagu1a, is "The ROyal Hunt of the Sun," Peter Shaffer's historical drama of Pilarro's conquest of 'the Peruvian Incas. Mat Reitz. formerly with South Coast Repertory, ls directing the sprawling producU011. _ ()n Thur_sday,_!h~' ClemenfeConununity Th'.eater lifts the curtain on its season with Orange County's first look at "Love and Kisses ." Tony Brandt, one of the area's most prolific din!etors, is staging the domestic comedy. Hunlingto11 Beach's new Nif. ty Theater changes its pro- gram Friday opening pre view performances of "Son o{ Nifty Revue," a followup to the popular satirical show staged earlier at the downtown playhouse. And the Sa11ta Ana Community Players get lheir new season off and nmni1'g with the county . premiere of Woody Allen 's "Don't Drink the Water." ComJNeUng the \ a r & e ducUons eonUnue t h e. I r LagunR cast are Dave Am· engagements on Ora11ge Coast broae. Darlene Han s en . sta1es lhla weekend, with one, Sharle.ne Miller, Kim Bates. "Bell. Book and Candle'' by Julie Haas, Pa ul L ync h , the Westminster Community William J;:arl, Helen Kearney , Theater, giving Its final two Jean Gallo, Lea.lie Brarunan. performances. Loreltz Ponzuric. Lou Lee Rolinda Orlow and Glen Gerry and Sue .Stillma•. Eckenroth play the leading Playhouse technical director roles i11 the John Van Druten Jim Stewart has designed the comedy, with Ralph Orlow, sets and Wiiliam Barbe is cos· Alice Reich and John Phillips tume designer. Perfonnances completing the cast. Judie will be given Tue s d a "Y s Car\' directs the production. through Saturdays at the Two last performances of playhou.5e, 606 Laguna Canyon "Beh, Book and Candle'' will Road, with ticket orders being be 1iven Friday and Saturday taken at 4944743. at the F~ey S c ho o I * auditorium, Edwards at Trask "Love and Kisses" at San In Westmimt.er. Call 897-1164 Clemente is a generation gap for reservations. comedy ce11terlng around a * youq man who. marrit?s his "The Boys in the Band'' * girl friend on the day ol his cootinues on an ambitious A spiritual duel between the high school graduation. Wednesday • through . Sunday cruel but courageous Spanish Clark Farrell heads the c~st sctiedule at South C o a s t general and the king of the as the stock~roker f~ther, with Repertory in Costa Mesa Jaca--empire-<1ver~ ho00ro-the--MJ..rk..~8!'Jl1ng.playmgJhe '?8-.under-the-direction-of-John sanctity of treaties alld given and Dtkki Par~hurn the child Fen:aj:ea. Michael Douglass. words provides the conflict for bri~e. Others in the cast are David Emmes, Ron Christie "The Royal Hunt of the Sun," Jeri An Per s on . Karen and Jim B es are the font opening tonight for four weeks Jacobson, Gene Applegett a11d . ~x . d r at the Laguna M o u I t o n Norma n Rudolph. . rup~ e comic ~ama. l Playhouse. The comedy will play for i::c1v:r111ances are given a Michael Owens will portray four weeks, Thursdays the Third Step Tbe~ter, 1827 Pizarro and Darrel K Wilson through Saturdays, at the Newport Blvd., 1n . _the is cast as th t · rul Csbrillo Playhouse. 2 o 2 downtown a.rta. The number Atahuallpa in e thencaShaff:~ Avellida Cabrillo in S an for rese:vations Is 646-136'.J. drama. Other major .JPles will Clemente. Reservations are Also in Costa Mesa 1s a be filled by nioma.f'""Bradac, being taken at the box office, ~ conve~tional co~edy, Joe Wilson, Jolu1. Ruggles. 49'2-0465. ~ ~possible Years. ell- Marvin Torrez, Jim Speirs ud * termg its second of t h r e e Richard Wood. A handful of other local pro-weekends for the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse. Pali Tam - bellini is directing. Warms Chilly-Bowl Paul Caldwell, Deni se Mt'Canless', Monty Durham, TraCy Thomas and Paul Gracey head the cast of the generation gap co m e d y . Performances are Fridays and Saturdays at the Community Center auditorium on the . I Beethoiven Concert Grand DAILY ,ILOT Steff ..... BEWITCHED -Hell hath no fury like a witch scorned, as John Phillips finds out from Rolinda Orlow in this scene from the \Vestminster Commun· ity ~eate! production of "Bell, Book and Candle," closing Fnday and Saturday nights. ' j features Ron Albert.sen. Carol three-weekend run for the Faulstick and Martin H. Irvine Community Theater Fuchs. Thursday through Saturday at Completing tile cast are Bill Corooa del Mar High School's Williams, Bill Moreland, Arv id little theater. Malnaa, Walter Allen and Ron Gordon Yeaton directs the Filian. The show goes on comic murder m}"tery, with Fridays and Saturdays at the Sally Brown and Richard Dow Bam, 2110 Main St., Hun·-taking the principel roles. JI!!'· tington Beach, and reserva. ry and Nancy Leland. Garry lions are being taken at ~-Aldrich, Beatrice Teaford and 8861. Jim Marshall complete the The French comedy ''A Shot cast. Call 833-0793 for reserva· ift the Dark" continues its lions. By TOM BARLEY 01 ~ Oellr '"" '''" distinguished summer p~ lt was a personal triumph gram tor the able Wagner and it was Orange County Fairgrounds,,---------------------- with tickets available by call· ·ing 834-5303. · * Heading .into its third of rive One can only assume that disappointing box o ff i c e returns during the 1970 sum· mer season led Hollywood Bowl's management to stage a concert as late as Sept. 19 in defiance of the apparent unwritten code in t he Southland that all open air at- tractions must end by Labor Day. 'Ille piece de resistan~ was, a pity that they couldn't have of course, B" e e th o v e n • s , got him on the stage a little magnificent Ninth Symphony, earlier ror hi s due share or that massive and tremen· that flne ovation. A lot of work dously impressive choral work went into this memorable which appears so rarely on Ninth and it all carried that our concert ' programs. NO impeccable Wagner touch. need to wonder about that; it Pianist Lorin Hollander Wa5 i:s a score and choral concept that limits itself to top flight in fine form for the Beethoven ensembles and groups by its Concerto No. 2 which opened very structure. the program a1thougb we weekends at the Huntington Beach Playhouse -is "once · More, With. Feeling," a com edy centering around the sym- phony music business. Tom Titus directs the show, which A snappy evenin g chi.II notwithstanding, thoae happy organiurs must have been considerably wanned by the response or the delighted onlookers who turned out in force to brave a raw evening and i!!njoy an all-Beethoven concert that was, in our opi· nion, just about the best thing we've had at the Bowl in what has been an unusually Allard Set For-Recital This superb work was in would have preferred a JitUe killed d ha sha~r approach to a s an competent nd.s somewhat carelessly handled Satunlay night · Director Roger Wagner's first movrment -scored Los Angeles Master Chorale allegro con brio. followed conductor z u b i n He was at his lirilllant best Mehta's sterling work in the in the ro11Si.ng ronde-mollo first three i n s t r u m e n t a I allegro that closes this glit· movements of this Beethoven terlng concerto and he would jewel with a rousing finale be the first to concede that he that r e f I e c t e d an in· owed much of Ills triumph to tcrpretation and-delivery that -~me flne.Jiaision work....hy is not always present in this Mehta. A trine subdued during demanding symphony. the balance of the program, Led by four gifted principals Mehta reserved his best work -soprano Ella Lee, contralto with the baton for the piano Cannen Tejada, t e n o r ~rto and the result was a Christopher Bell and bass triumph for Hollander and a Irvine Master Chorale direc· Paul Plishka -and backed by hard working orchestra. tor Maurice Allard a n d aD inspired Los An g e I e s This fine concert provided a soprano Darrellyn Melilli will Pbilannonic Orchestra, the fitting end to a season that has be featured in recital Sept. 26 chorale drew every rich tone been, in our opinion -and when Allard is honored by tile and nuan~ from what this based on offerings of classical F~ Support Committee writer has always considered mwic only -the best in the cJ. the chorale at .a dinner to be one of Beethoven's most Bowl's recent history. Jt scheduled for 7 p.m. in the''ilii.oiiyoiiusiiiiscoiiiiriieiis.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili;;a;;u;;gur;;;;s;;we;;;;ll;;f;;or;;;;l'7;;;;1.;;;;;;;;;;;;ill Newpcrter Inn's Ca rou s e 111 ,it's pure Gould Room. "EXCELLENf' ._... -All proceeds from the din-ELLIOTT GOUlO ner will be given to th< "SUPERB" PAUIA PRENTISS chorale. Social hour is from 7 GENEVIEVE WAITE p.m. with dinner at 8 p.m., the .MOVE Allard-Mellini recital froin 9 to 9:30 p.m .and 'dancing from 10 p.m. Allard's work as director of the chorale and the UCI Chorus prompted Foundation members to arrange the celebrity dinner. The UCI ~ fessor recently received a SJ,600 grant from the Ingram MerrOI Foundation In New York and will appear in COO· €ert AlJril 15 at that city's Lin- coln Center. T ... ...,.., _.. .. IM 19' 9f Mffllol '1 o,... MtcOHlhnr 1111111 Jim .. ,._,,. ... HILO 0Yll-2ND Wiii Balboa Theater At Ille P'1YIMM. "'"""' a.-dl ........... 7:• .. f ;• 1.111. Mltr -A_,lh U.Jt. PMOM• '1,_.. AUO CLINT IAITWOOD DON SUTHDLAND ,. Kelly<; lteroes BARGAIN-- MATINEE EVERY WIDNISDAY AT I PM. NII llPIDHMINTS MATINR PtUCI ADULTS ~~1.00 _., ·- .. -· 11!!1'1• - ALSO PLAYING 11EW "DOU Y"' SHOWTIMISll -.aTTlftPllDATMl&l .. UT.&111.111141111111&1 .... HF.LO OVER FOR ANOTHER '&'EEK PAMYISIOH ' T£CHNICOl.OR"' '~=l!!I• ll<iry Fonda • James Stewart '" "&HEYE.HE SOCIAL ClUI" NOW AT BOTH. CINEMAS · GEORGE C. SCOTT KARL: MALDEN Bwbi•Q ' ~·---5'al19'ICI Fl A CJearPlf""~ --· -v\1911 ................... ,....Ot ... a.o.,-...e. .. ~ llanlmd ,._TONY CUITIS ht "YOU CAN'T WIN 'EM ALL" Ell Iott Gould RATED "R"-Sth BIG WIEICI > ., • 11 I ' I 1. I'. 1· , ' ' I. . ~ .. ' HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOii SALE 1..;:Got=W:::":.::•::.' ----~·ooo=:.::G;.: ... =••;.:•::.• ____ ..:•::000:: Gener•I 1000 * *' * * * * • TAYLOR A TOUCH OF SPANISH! Bealitilul view Crom this really sharp ·"Lµs_k" 'home w/4 bdrms, family rm &. fof .. ma! dining.,PLUS lovely H&F pool. $62,500 S'OU'VE ASKED FOR Ill Almost ·, n_ew: 3 & tam rril. home near. the , efinJa J~£ PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES · 52 Linda Isl• Dr. Cust 6 BR ., study, 5 bath home w/3 frplcs., circular stairway, decorator selected carp. & drapes.' Sho\vn by appt. .......... $210,000 For compl•t• inform•tion on all_other homn & lots, call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 133 Dov•r Dr •• Suite 3, N.B. .642""620 HOUSES 'FOR SA_LE Eastside Special! Lovely 3 bedrm home near downtown Costa Mesa with a charming aJr abo:ut It that "i ll really strike your fan- cy! It has carpets & drapes lhat are LIKE NEW and it'a built ove_r han:lwOO:I Doon, Enclosed garage. dillhwasl\. er, loads of cabinets 100, Lovely yards with TREES • TREES and it's only $23,950! Assum~ 5% 1~ fl!A !llan & payments LE S S TilAN RENT!! HOUSES l'OR SALi! OWNER DESPERATE Sell this sharp 4 bedroom HOUSES FOR SALE --1000 BAYCREST GOOD BUY MESA DEL MAR home. CuJ. • • de-sac setting with lots of trees. GJ's no money down Fas~ occupancy! 4 Bedrms, "Rller will also pay closing ia.r'Ke famUy room. Sunny CO!its''. Stop your waiting. break(ast ~a. See this now: No MONEY NEE o E o Jean Smith Realtor HERE! Appraisal and price ' $31, 750. CAU.r 646-3255 HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES l'Oll· SALi ~I• M_H• llOO l;N;•;w;;po;rt;;H;e;lgh;;;t.;;;12;1;;,0I e OPEN DAILY 1-5 e y 'TU '°Id! As><um• 6~ % VA OPEN DAIL loan, $148 Per mo. Redecor. 515 TUSTIN AVE . ! Br. W/W cpa, drps, tfn. Owr'lf!r'1 have moved to new mat. posseiSion! Only $22,· home! See this beaut 3 bed. 950. 1984 Federal Ave. rm, 1% ba~h. large famil)' Call: Patrick Wood, 545-2300 room .w/u&ed brick frplc, e Bill H•v•n, Realtor crpls, drps, hanh""OOd fl rs, 211J E . Coll.st, CdM 673-32ll shake roof, dble pt, alle)' Seeing ilJ Believing! access, room for boat or Walker & Lee 3 Bedroom. 1% Batb-2 car cam~r. Move-in condition! garage. Enclosed patio. Fasteserow! Bestotfinance. Wall 10 wall tarpet . Lachenmyer Rlty. Completely fefleed. FHA CALL 646-3928 or 54.>MSJ OCEANFRONT assumable loan. $23,500 Full1.::.=..._; _______ I R•alto" Prioe. 877 o..-... n st. · 7790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams Walk out door to one of the 1-• 54• ~-. ,54;;,8-"11"28:".;;:;-::T.;'.<;;;-;:::;;; l !!B!•!lh~o'.'.r!"~--~~ Deach. ArCti1tect-deSigiled. With custom qual- ity thruout .. Ocean view irom master bdrm suite: "Corona . del Mar Charm" with an uttra ,m~ern look, YOU OWN THE LAND! . ..........., Open 'ti! 9:00 PM best swimming & surfing iJ:oE R·2 lot w/older house. . ''Our 25th Year'' ~_c..:o_· ____ _:..;.;.; _ lOOO &. 3 Bedroom 2 Bath _Shores cuslOm home -beaut-~11 ti"J:>.~i or 673-9'11!> ceiling, 2 br. I&; .. tvg. rm. General 1000 Generel •. COATS SAVE $1600 beaches -exclusive Cypress Onl . Sl8 500 Owner/Bkr. OIAR?i.tfNG, open beamed WESLEY .N. TAYLOR CO., "ealton WALLACE Located in a great Cost~ ifut decor • exquisite bath-· frplc. $34i,IXXI 6% &U-1005 "' Open Da'lv Yes, You Do Qua lify! REALTORS Mesa area just north of Bak· dressing rooms. $169,000 •EAST SIDE-3 hr, 3garage.1;;=:==:=:=::;::=,J 2111 San Joaquin Hiiia Road .111 s22 500 -546-4l•t-er/ Pick up the phone right __ Q , I $24,IXXI. Ea~ terms. By Westcliff 1238 ,NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 . (Op E • ) now because it's been ~~~c:1W'~d~ ..,..,~..,=~~,~~ owner, 646- 2985 · -----·---.,·I --~-1 * * * * *.--..... -1---,J'8-AliS8---t::~"' _ _,f<-:-____ t:;;;;;;;;;;;;.,•iin;;!!viie!On!Oon~1,.•...,mduced SZ450 -appraisl'd al --.:= i ' I ' 2 BEDR. house, by owner, BY Owner-? hr, !iv rm, din -l; ~-,.,,,..,,--~I . »--0 •~ shoppi.•~ -~.. rm + family rm. 2 ba. New.,. ___ _ . w.~. vw ... , W> ri<Jrfo' ----~ -•="n~") Piclure a quiet cuJ-de-sac DOLL HOUSE 050 school 54~9148 rugs & drapes, na.,. u a.1 • •I I I ' ~ I --Newport Heig~ts s24• • Save Sl600 • Fire· · hi & ho • $46 500 Gener•I '1000 Gener .. •:.•c_ ___ __:l:;:OOO:; corner of Beacon street and cute little home place. built-i ns. rverything. LIDO WATERFRONT • 1,1: ACRE 3 br house, zoned ·~ss~me i:e Ps~5% 1~: '-;;=======;;; -lucked way back in betv.•een Hurry. 54&.8660 Rltrs. APTS.-320 LIDO NORD R-4. E. Sidr. 64" ""~. I• 675-3000 J short block from 40' trees, then add ~· side EX CL US IV E only with $31500 49<5186 ~ THE BOURBONS' HOME Bea.utiful shag thruoul, dee· orator .wall ·~.vering & tile entry way. Immaculate thruout. BluJls homesite in l\tesa Verde w i I h some vi~'. Owner transferred and anxious to movf!. Lisi· ed at Sll.500 With FHA and VA .financing available. IJNIVUI: tl()RH __ .,....,. , t'f'J E. Cont Hwy_. c:--. Pll ... f, Cfli(, $26 500 .. ' Cliff ·Or. yards for garden and play SOUnl COAST REALTORS. NOW REDUCED TO · ~ \Ve don'! boast aboul your area. Then, with this cozy Delightful and charming 2 $150,000-Xlnt Terms st>rvit~ exaopt . 1. we've By Owl'll'.'r $36,:,00 feeling add 2 extra room~ bedrm • ll wonderful start· 6 Beautiful unit1i. 6 car been serving lhe Harbor Spacious l bedroom 2 bath, fo~ a total of 5 bedrooms, er or retirement home, Fan-r 629 H rbo' C garages &: utility room with ---------University Park Mes• D•I Mar 1105 - 1237 !rea 71 years. 2: A high per-living room with firepla ce, then all logether you have tastically landscaped. im· __ • ~-'~'-·~·M_. --1 80 ft. fronting on eXcelltnt centage of our clients have large dining area overlook· the neatest home package maculate interior. Pleasant M•sa Verft swimming beach, UniU are LEASE-OPTION NEW LISTING Popular "Cambridge" model. 3 Bedrms, 2 baths on one level + NE\V shag carpet. ing & beauttl'ully planted atrium. Owner trans(., iri:i.. med. occupancy! S31,500. · been referred by people who ing lovely secluded lanai. we'vl" M't'n for a long tinie. covered patio & excellent Jo-$28,500 newly furnished. have done business with us carpeting, drapes, built-in No income or credit quali-cation. You won't bt>lieve it l Bedrooms, 2 Baths Bill Grundy, R•altor DECORATOR'S HOME 3 Bedrm, Jormal dining + large family room. S.150 l\1onth including gardener. befot·e. clcclric kitchen. Garage off fications. for $25.000. Call 545-8424. Built-ins 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-4631 CdM CHARM alley with eleclric eye open-N" h J R J E lat Double Car Garage BEACHSIOE! DUPLEX! 2 er. Nicely landscaped cor-IC 0 s ea s e Corner Lot R ). nt'r lot Partial Ocean View Jean Smith, Realtor e Red Hill RHlty Un iv, Park Center, Irvine Call Anytime 83J.-0820 B ., spac. 1'" rm. w/frpl .. &ili-4032 S48-l<f44 S46-9Sll FHA or VA TERMS huge kitch., brldsl. bat, sun. Ca ll ny patio PLUS ' 1-BR. apt .. I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= 5-46-2313 incl. sundeck, Obi. garage I• w/parking for 4 add!'!. cars. Both units profess. decoral. c>d. Only $54,500. On the Blufls, ·Westside, ~l2SS Costa Mesa. 3 Bedrooms, =========·\;==~~~~~;;;;! 67~3000 OPEN EVES 2407 E. Coast Hwy. Opposite l\facArthur Blvd'. fij II\\ ,\ IU . 11'11 Ill II I\ 1\1'. I ~, ' , ' '• l ' BRING YOUR BATHING SUIT!! 8nd enjoy 1 hi s beautiful Caineo Shores Ot:ean view home Spaciou" enclosed patio :ronnal dining room pallC'led den "'ith brick f.ireplace J bedrooms, including huge master suite Owner moving out of the area $84.500 \\·rought iron enclosed heal. Realto~ STARTER HOME $112 PER MONTH PAYS ALL Yes, just assume the low 5* 1'> 3nnual percentage rate kwln. 2 large bedroorm, hou!e>A'ife's dn'am kilchen, 2 full baths. Full p r i c e Sl ti,500. Call quick! 546-8640 Rltrs. Governm•nt Reposs•ssion Just released . act fast! Spac- ious· 4 bedrm 2 bath, new paint. hardv•ood flobrs, bllns, dble garage, G<lv't will sell for $24,900 with Sl250 do"'" lo anyone, For details call 540-1151 ''°TH E REAL ,~ ESTATERS ' . dining rm .. "HUGE" larnily M v d 1110 c ...... _._d_el M•r .1~ room, crpts, dl"pS, dble car es• er • garage, quiet cul -de -sac NEW FHA LOAN UNEXCELLED VIEW --,,-c=-""'=""'cc'--1 st.reel. Beautiful yard. $29.500 A CAREFUL Wells-McCardle, Rl1'5. EASY TO ASSUME o! H..-bo, & ""''n. Atll'. BUYER 'S DREAM g N c M Big 4 BR., family nn. home split level home on R-3, 5100 . 1 IO ewport Blvd., · · in move-in cond. Lovely shag sq. ft, lot. Ideal for 4 Apt. One bedrooin livable cottage S48-TI29 Eve,;: 644-0684 caryet.ing, Walnut paneling unils. ·$200,!KXl. 2501 Ocean in Newport Heighlson.a ~x $l2,JSO WITH FHA in fam , rm.&: 4th BR. De-Blvd., CdM . By appt only, lz:1 foot .lot . Rt'nt or hve 1n . -LOAN __._ !,ightful kit~h. w I "·alnut Bill Grundy, R•altor this until you art' ready to stained cabine1s: y,•allpaper 83.1 Dover Dr., NB 642='4620 build your dream home. Best Paynlent Jess ~han rent In-&: beaded shutters. Well lnd-1 "'"""\""\"~~~~!!!!!!•I localion in the Heights for dudes everything, Very al· scpd. yd, Don't miss see~ng * 4 UNITS * $19950 Call !or showing tracdve home near -(,~ at 1841 Iowa St. 546-4063 Lois of polr.ntial. 4 Units tin 54&-2313 mile) lo beach! 135 It, deep · grounds -room for pool. ON THE FAIRWAY 2 R-2 101.oi. Ea..oiy financing. Spacious bedrooms, den. IUX· Custom built, 4 bedrm. lam. * BARGAIN * 1-Q THE REAL \"\.. ESTATERS ' I ' ' j ' urio~ shag carpeting, dra~ ily room, 2 big fireplaces. Lovely 2 BR. home on tt-2 es. Price reduceOSl.000 for This beautiful borne over· lot. Lnw $30's. ed pool. Large patio & lawn "Our 25th Y•ar ---~~~~~ 4~rm, 21bath Ken for your other ou!door activ. _Jn..tha l:l•rbor.~~L':.' -jiiiiii~262!J~~H::;•;;"'°~'-O:C~.~M~. iiiiii o 1 Jlill1 1IOiffe"1Jtf" a11e-• i\les -I overlookl'd by 7. -n ner location. Big boat en1ry WIFE • SAVING kilchen & 673•4400 -=~~==~""=! immedia1e salr. Vacant -looks the 17th fairway ol MORGAN REAL TV 30 FT. FAMILY move right in! 540-1720 Mesa Verde Goll Course. 673-6642 67s.64S9 ROOM-$32,750 Tar bell 2955 Harbor 6* assumable loin. By 0wi: SHORECLIFFS 3 BEDRMl FAMILY and storage ;a.rea. Large P8· family room. Immaculale 2 tio and bltn BBQ surround-s1ory !Jome On BANJO street ed by block wall fencing. In Newport Beach. 4 large The exisling 5:W. % '°:8" bedrooms & J baths. Best or tran8ff:JTable to anyone with all .•. only $48.000. ". sii~able dov.71 payrilenl . BLUFFS BAY VIEW A luxurious 3 bedroom 21 ~ b a th t,URNISHED home \.\-'ith di!Cofati:Jr CUSIOOl furn. i.~h ings quality drapes 11.nd LUSH ' :;hai; ~arpel. Th.iii home has never be.en per. manc>n1ly occupied a n d would milk,. an idea] resi. dence for the most qUality conscious purchaser. Macnab-Irvine Realty Company BAYCREST ChvnC"r must sell beaUtiful 5 bedroom, .4~ bath, 2-slory home. l\tawelous floor plan for family .Jiving, r·ormal dining room. family room \\•ith \WI bar. Wonderful kitchen, I a r g e Rdjoining breaklafit area . 4,COO sq. ft. Ranch 1YJ)e home on KlNG SIZE 90x105 lot, completely painted. $500 Allowanre for new carpets/drapes, (hvner v.·ill fil'lltIICe at 7~% . $4000 down. Asking A beautiful home in a pres· er. 3036 Java Rd, 540-4095. 1ige neighborhood. 2 baths. Huge Game Room ~163::;;.500=o·~'.,-.,--,~~-I r..forning Canyon Dr, CdM :r.tost desirable ftt land homes. PriCed at $65,00l. Eilclusive with,· huge recreation room -room 40' added-on room Jor hm &. 5 BR, l BA, formal dining, for regulation ~ table. gameti Now 2500 sq. n in this shag carpets, huge pool siz· Cattiedral beamed ceilings -low rambling California I'd lot, one block lo ~1esa bar 2 refrigerators, builtin ntnch home, close to Mesa Venle goll course. Owner. MW-"""' ·:~~t~s:~~:~~1:-eo1esworthy kitchen, banquet sized dining Verde Country Club with its Quick sale. 30 Day CoRa1rJ·M.urnNj'1 roo m. Elegant fireplace. pools, tennis courts elc. -.!'°~'~"~'~'~io~n.~14~2.~500~54~&-~3&1~·~2.[;:;:~::::':"~':.'"W~i-===:!:!·lj ri-10.17"20. Open Evenings 2891 Clubhouse Rd. 2 UNITS..Lrg 2 BR home, + Tarbell 2955 Harbor Professionally landscaped, huge brand new 2 Br & den $29,500 •. now vacant. Newport •• Fairview 646-8811 BEACH . BEAUTY W-rth 6* % Loan Sharp 2 yr old home .with 3 bedrooms fireplace bltns, gttat kitChen and ~ large liveable patio. YOU Cll,11 take O\'er. thi.s VA loan on this pl'Opttty, $189 per mo pays "'· $~.!JOO. • CO~TS WALLACE REALTORS Op.n E v•nints • 962-4454 • FIXER UPPER Here's the chance you've.been waitiii.&. for. Spacious three Bdrms one and % bath tiome, 0 with electric buil1 in kitchen and dining room. Double garage and large Jtnef:d y~. The home need.~ mme ce~nt io.'Ork. paincing and carpetircg. A S S U M E LARGE 5% % F .H.A. LOAN .Wrl"H L 0 W MONTllLY P~YP.u:NTS. f\i.11 prict only $25.«X>. The bargain you.'vc bttft waitin& for! -ACT NOW!. ,. Co •. REALTOR Newport-Beach Office 1028 Bayside Drive . &Th-4930 CHOICE NEWPORT HTS. CorMr Location Grandiose View or ~a & Bay. Step out onto qb8.inl patio front huge Jiving room v.·ilh open beam ceiling and great fireplacr. Simple and rus- ric 1v.·o s1ory-4 bdrm. home "'ilh unique lop deek, sur. rounded by beautiful trees -peach, nectarine, tanger- ine, t'lC. r;r~1 time on mar· ket -own the land -im· mediate pos.wssion -$55,000 Excellent lerms -belier hurry, -646-7171 1-0 THE REAL \~ ESTATERS $60.1XMJ Call 673-8550 '-0 THE REAL \~ ESTATERS SPANISH DUPLEX NEW LO DOWN Quahty new duple>:. 2 bf>d. rooms each side. Extra en- trances. Choose carpets & drapes. Tile rool. Max. d~ preciation lo inveslon. Call &l>o30J FOREST E. OLSON Sharp 3 bedroom 1 2 bath GE REALTY board. 4 BR, 3 BA family + owner. 673-6904 or ~798.1. ['PERRON ~ ..... ~-'"'"'· .. HOME AND BUSINESS &=':....., family home, patio, shuffle. apt. Good Joe. Good tine. By home plus ~wk shop plus Mlle~l--.r.M fonnal dining. 2 frplcs .. 1000 square foot buildingq,...,""""""~~~~., I June Ward, Bkr. 642-4816 Balboa; P•nln_1ul1 llQI Pool-sized yard, Price re· 642-1 n1 Anytime duce<! 10 $89,800 on fee land. J ,...,..,..,..,..,;.,..,..,,. 67S-J210 642-1235 EXECUTIVE RANCH TYPE This lovely near new home. 4 li;:e bdrms + lam. rm + formal dining. 3-car garage. 'Yard s<>parpte from pool area -bt'autiluJ healed pool -Park ,\: schools close by. Just $69.950 -To inspect phone 646-7171. ·-a THE REAL ,~ ESTATERS ,' ,,., 3 Bedroom, 2 both $100 down to anybody Pay . your closing costs and n1ove into i.his 3 bedroom 2 ba1h charmer. In Costa Mesa and ready lo be lived in. Don't mis~ ii. Get there first. 546-8660. Rltrs. 2629 Harbor. C.~1. with 3 phase electric. All on MINI RANCH REPUBLIC tri-level 3 BR + a ,,,..,~, "°""' M-1 Joi. . " d 2 f I Lg I W 8 W rl ~E>· en, rp c. l' am rm, • •Y •t• ront Submit terms or trade. Small house on large lot Din rm. F'rnt & rear patios Beautiful, newly redec. 4 BR $35,000 166x3({il. Septrate dble. ga-Crear w/fire pill $46.900. + bonus room Patio-dee~ MATCHAM REALTY rage and many tJ-ees on this 642-7364 bePCh·pier & slip, $175,000. • la.5 Rochester R-2 level lot. SN .950: with Bill Grundy, R•altor Co.~ta l\iesa 646-48~7 10% down. owner will carry 2-4620 ~-~~_,-=-,-~-I 2nd T.O. lo new loan. Call _N•wpo __ rt Be•ch 1200 gr Dowr Dr., N.B. 64 Pereyda Real Estate Buys 2 Houses on 1 lot $22,000 today 646-nn. _ .-. __ 4Houseson1 Jol $46,000 ~1 _L_ld_o_h_l• _____ l_35_\1 5 Houses on 1 lot $49,500 horn 28 950 Bluffs chRrm ing I-bdrm. & 4 BR. 2 Ba. e s . Law so .... Oceanfront lot $46.000 d"n, O\lerlooking m 8 j or 1 A , ·-· "--•, .. ,, greenbel!; maximum pri· PRICE R N ";:;;na w ......... '• .,. s13,ooo vRcy. Perfect for single per. EDUCTIO ALL 10-Hi DOWN VIEW ~n or couple Vacant· l ike 4 _Bedrooms, 3 baths, large $34,950 Hurry -call agt. 546-1698 From the jetty, Catalina, Pl!n. new cond. N~ar sho~ping ; dining room. Huie ?S ft. lot. 2 pools, dbl. garage, elec. Now $78,500. PARTY PALACE eBEACH BARGAIN• insula and all the \\'a~ down lhe Harbor. The boating ac-opener. Bluffs lowest cost • howaal> lowson jlL 2!l'x25' added PARTY ROOl\f Owner bought another, quick $2',500. ---'<aR . Golfers! h tivit.ies and su nsebi are spec. ~ . Jne. Reallors 2299 Harbor You can't miss this one· such opening In a 32' SPARK-sale needed of I is immac. 4 lacular! One of a kind Jot 3416 Via Lido 675-4562 ........................... ; 1 11 setting . along a betlutilul LING POOL. Beautifully Br. home. 1 blk. to ocean. above China Cove. $57.000. "W• D•llver" Green•;:~ s:pe<'~~f~ ~-4 & family w/dining & game home complete with FIRE-CAYWOOD REAL TY PETE BARRITT RLTY r LARGE HOME N t H • ht fair'\\'a)'. Lovt'ly Orlf.' story decorated 4 bedroom, 2 bath Hurry • $33,950, Sub. trms. &st ~· rooms. A reel charmer. PLACE. built.ins and near-6306 W. Coast Hwy., NB 5 Bedrm, family rm., xlnt No DOWN Ing home just oU CliU Drive .-...., 1 --1 •• f I n.-Ev-ina~ new Shag r~-ting. Seller 541-1290 LJ12.5-na t• s .... ~ 0 Su=: ..., t. O!. with lot~ o( lrees, plants. VJ'<'" ~·--....... t""' -"""' " 8 'I I NO COSTS #irubt. Ideal for couple or will pay points for your VA *OCEANFRONT* • ~~app 0sri°Ooo AnENTION VETS srTiall family. Detached ga· &~·u:... or 1'"HA Loan! * DUPLEX * h1utlfully P11nn.d-2414 Vista Ori Oro Owne ' .... , G-E.RE•"JV Walker & Lee Balboa Peninsul• BRAND new -Quality° bit Newport Beach 644-1133 r mRy trad.e down for 3 Seller will pay everything for · "'.. l ~~~~~~~~~I Bdrm. home 1n TerTaces. I • •• t ~ Open Evening$ MllM•....-.c& $15,000 from courtyard pool. paneJI. Cdl\f, with ocean view. any veer.an, &nu yoo ge " ed lam rm, wel bar, frplc - bedrooms, 2 full baths, din-~ sa sue 2043 We stcliff Dr. Georg• Williamson lo sunken llv rm w/vaulted BEACH DUPLEX LIDO REAL TY INC.' !. ..._ . TRADER'S PARADISE S 646-7711 Realtor 337 Via Lido 61'1"AA Ing area. l&rgc 1ving room. .....~..... ceiling. 4 br, 2 ba + pwdr ONE LOT fROri.f OC 2 ~ .llN plu~ 8 large 101 on 1he tree OlU~~~~llJ; "l:'i""=~=;=ti=m="=.S=b"='="'==:;.!'-:=O="="='l=ll='='=OO=P=~'==~6~7;;3-~4~3;:50:=,,;64~S-~1~564~~E~v~e~s~.I room . Masler BR, liv rm. din BR & 3 BR ~ith f~f.m EXPANDABLE cozy com· C(lvered ~stside of Co&!a ""'l~~~:"'!'~~..,1'I Gener•I lOOO G9Mr•I rm & kitchen all on View, PLUS 1 BR & ba guest rm. P!"cl. 3 Br, en lg. sunny !tit. l\1esa. Full price ·$27,000. .;;.;;;;;:;..;;;c._ ___ __:.:::::i; ~::.:.. ____ _:.:::::__::=:~~----.!1~000~ I !~·.~.Roy J. Ward, Rltr. Xlnt condition. Top area for $52.500. Ownr. fi/:>-2&13. catl now. 54""640 RI":'. 2 UNITS $36,500 " -~ l.i.iiiiii ... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii living or renting, $51,500. Huntington Be•ch 1a 2629 Harbor. C.M. -2 Bdrm. houae wl~P. yard: unit over garage; good ren!- a] area. Close to shoppine: & beach. ~lA-il&t-trs· DUPLEX "''A~i.',;,"" PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH ~EALTY . "'" ........... 0 "'" PRIVATE & SECLUDED Call: 673-366.1 613-8086 Eves. ass ociate d M. M . LA BORDE, Rltr. HOUSE IS DIRTY The Puzzle with the Built-In Chuckle · O lteorRWtge ~tiers of the Lge bedrooms, (1) each, IM'Rr dcwntown, C.M, Park. WG- men·s Boys & Girls Club~ , Illnesi1 forces sale. Lachenmyer Rlty BY OWNER A WESTCLIFF AREA P1t11t wrooght iron ga.tt e~ 6*0565 Eves. 642·7438 but seller has agreed to pay MESA VERDE jl,000 ol yoor "°'"· HUGP. 2 story with 5 bedrooms with 9ROKERs-qeAt TORS :015 W Bol bcc •7J.]66 ) fOIJr tcr0mbled WOl'ds be. low to form lour simplti worGs. PATCES CALL 646-3928 or 54f>.341U 4 br, lrplc, all bltns, w/\<J into enclosed brick J!ill&m crptg, sprinklers, pool-sized courtyard to gorgeous "OLD • --J-4eOlJINJ'JtL1,J.1,l.IL.j_....._.,__><ls..alwL<W-.l DRIVE Elee. built • Ins lot Mom. NEWPORT HEIGHTS DUPLEX l -'"b·4"-f~J\j\-'t-----+NE~ED~..!M~"'~o'h°!we!!o!!m~an~,..!,'~1.J-i>::•~nl:!;·~N:ear all school! & WORLD 01ARM". 3 l&JV-~ estale es or e1c1H"ifi0Pp1ng, va Cl' bdrmx. + 111.8ssWe-~:----- rentaJ1. imm"f!d occ. room witti cozy brick fitt. • • Scrtt.ned • In PAtio. GJ and A cheerful stttilljt tor a hap. :t'HA terms av3-llable also. P>' hOmr ln this beautitully CALL! appointed 3 .~room 2~. w 1 k · & L ..... home w)Jh •It""' """'· a er ee ln'11. 90 x 120 ft, Jot with large CO\"erecf f"llio for ihe tunlly. 5~ % aoen ayailable to IM quallfltd ~· Prier SC.!l!iO. Coll 546-2313. a '1.i _·. ,\L '""\.. ' ' • " ' 1..::-i \ ~alton; 2700' Harbor Blvd, af Ada.ms $4s-&4!11 Open 'Iii 9:00 PM LEGAL ROBBERY ,_ - 2 bOO. N , Garages, room tor tn\ller and boat. N~iy dteo orated inside and oul_ Near llarbor Ill, $29,500, Phone &16-7171 lo lnspe<:t, '-0 TH E REAL ·~ f:ST.~TERS • StepheMOn Realty ONL y $ll,SOO place. 12' brealdast room. Di Marine fi75.4000 2U4 Highland Dr, N.8. Sliding glah to private,~ Balboll Island 642-1611 or 642-99!16 clo8ed patio. Few bloclti.fo BEST VALUE LOT DOVER· SHORES beach. l\tust se:ll! Value N packed at $28,600 wlFHb• rwport Heights SACRJFl~E SALE of fabu· VA terms. Dill (714) 962-559$ Terms Available lnu' 4 BR. 3 Ba, home 111 • Jean Smllh "'"' 646-325.; $17,500 l•M iod"d•d. WUJ fOREST -l OLSON · consider lr:a1"/option. co.1.-.. 1100 Owner 548-~ New Trl-l'lexes TIME FOR $57'.!0l- Lu'go, b<au11t.i "hom .. with UICK CASH an income" knted ln the ""';i Easw•• .,.., ot °"'• 'THROUGH A h!e!IA. Fe11.1urlri1 (1) 3 BR; 2 BA "Owners unil" + (21 DAILY PILOT 2 BR n?nt11..l 11nlta, ~ at 21J.15..l:llSl1n Ave.,""" "'-.i--1'1/ANT-A land Pl . or cAll 642-4905 \ ' Inc, Rcallill"ll 19131 Bmn'khurst Avt, llW1tiQll1on Beach D•IUJ'• 4 hdroom f'llA Apprw i3UJl.450 A. kin;: J,10,990. Min, down n{A, Owner tr&nt(, Must sell! CAii &4T-8.'l31. l?Ei\l ES[All MA~I - ... . . TUtsday, Sepltmbtr 22, ·1970 DAJLY l'ILOT Zl !!_OUSES FOR SALE HOUHS FOR SALE RENTALS Aph. '""''"'"" RINTALS Aph. furnlthod RINTALS Apls. '""''"'"" RENTALS Aph. Unfumlthod . RINTALS RENTALS lleuMi fuml,,,.. Housoo UnfumllMd Huntl...... loKh 1400 Or•nte 1635 --~ HU?!!l!!I'-" llHdl -Hunti ............ -Coot• MeH 5100 Irvine NEED ROOM TO BREATHE? Near lh,1nllng1on Slate Beacb ,3000 SO.-F:r. S Bedroom, 2 baths, family Room with fireplace, formal dlninc are11., b_u~ Iivq room 25x50' RUMPUS ROOM Easily converted into 4 add'!. bedrooms &: 2 bath.II - ONLY $36,400 Immediate Occupancy VA.fllA & ConvenUona.1 RANCHO LA CUESTA A~ Homes Since 1905 ·MODELS AT BROOKl-:IURST & ATLANTA 968-2929 • 91J8.1338, ll a.m.-8 p.m. 5 REASONS WHY I ~ auumable 5~ 7• ICll.n ./ Ra.-enUy redec 3 bedrm """" . l -1..ovely, sparkling pool I Priced 1t only $28.950 I Owner will help you aa. sume hla llW'I, l! )'OU are shorl on cll$b, PAllLoWBHS CABJIAllil a&A•TT -~ Newport Shorn 2220 ~rel 3000 1 _0_ .. _-_,._,._1 ____ ..,...~. • BR 211 baths.. mos I ..... $130 SHARI" 2 BR DruT rtlllUITIJRE $300 per mo. "1ftl rUM Winton Real Estate m.sJ!l SPACIOUS • 6 Y!'I NEW .• -·---1to~ I rtfria: avt1ll,~Fenot<t, Irvine TeM'•ce -DU J>'.~,__lara&t· T0--------1 DAY!! < BR, S ba. Bay & OcMo Home-finders 64S.2'51 vN. In Irv. Terr. $700 mo.I========= Bill Gnmdy ru.~. 60.-Ceot1 Mey '----- • DIRECT TO TENANT 2 .. H:r. Deliwry -roo~ PurcbaWOpttm Complete 1 BR Apt .. Low u si:vmo. 30-D~ Minimum * wtDE VARIET"L S.lboa 2300 I BR """"'· ""'" .,,frig, CUSTOM. FURNITURE --, -util pd, S125. * • • R'ENTAL ~~!-~,~~ co~e_: ne:wly 1 RM house, ~to~. refr!, 517 w. 19th st., CM, 548-3481 ''"~·• cu. ~1 view. partly furn. Utll pd, Slw. ...,.,. .... D' ..... ·y THE HIGHWlllEL 11Scottiab Treat" -f6161 P•rkll<lo Ln. Mir. 142.-lfff San ntero hw1 to Bea.eh Blvd, .f. blka So. to Holt. W. on Holt 1 b1k. • CLEAN 2 BR. !!! . BA NOW LEASING! I STUDIO. Crpts, drp1. • POOL. Worldnc co u pie New, famlly and adults units J pre£d.-SU5/..mo~6*:M -wi~ ............. ,.11119•,1.;.~•-...f'-1 3 Br, 3 ba, ow. d>W, ~-"" p~I. " ~ u +-~--11-1 gar, )'ant, Pool, PllY atta. bdnnJ from $150. Nr, a,,.,-p.; $210/m<>. ""'393 &ft 6. Pinr, sol~ ..-: JUI! 1 BR. unr. Crpll, ru,., touth ot San Diqo J'w)t. on heated pool, Chlldr1:n ok. CUiver Dr,, Itvtnt. m-3133.. s.e 126 ""'"' vi.ta Aw, PARK WIST CM APARTMENTS Ownodard..._..,. The INloo eom..,,,._ - 1093 Baker, C.M, 546-5'40 Walk to drugstore, bank &: Owner. 548-'680 . ~ '!!!!~~~!!!!!'~~~ market 11' block ( r 0 m MONT. Condo. 3 BR, lti Ba, Ex~:iirL y ----------•. !:_e~• a .. ch 1705 beach. 108 A-., &lboe btt,,., incl dish..,,hr, dbl• BEAUTIFUL LA QUINTA HERMOSA • DELUXE 1 • 2 BR. B•ck _!.oy 52t0 t BR. unf. $150/mo. Pool. Elec ~ wtr pd. Adlll, no peta. Mesa M•nor. :Ml Wllaon Ave, CM. 543-7405 ---'----1 * c;.llARMING 4 BR or 3 BR gar, new crptg, drps, Pool11, y I D'i G r4en a_.· "Modern Spanlshu Garden Apt11. ffit..,IJW, prtv. VIEW: 2 BR/ crptsldrps, 0 Lease/Sale Furnished &: den. Bal Pen. Avail Sept· clubhouse, $215. Agt. • Mre • ......-•• "'r"<>" patio, heated pool, frplc. bl . 1 0 Yrvine A Lovely Beach Condo June. 2 BR upstairs, furn. 546-S581J. Putting raeen, 'fl'aterfall I 16211 Perk1IH Ln. • Adultll. $145 mo.~. Sl~~ ~. ~ J Ye. Avail Sept 15 for lease Ulru $300. li?>l9TI I LOVELY Condo., Mesa. .. ~~~1' ~-everywheftbnu • .....1.' Mgr. 147.5441 -3 BEDROOM, ltl bath& $liiO ...__ J I 2 R 2 BA ~ ~. '" ·-·--~ FURNISHEO MODELS NOW OPEN ·11 R M~ -------une or onger. B , · , Lido Isle 2351 Verde Country Club at'l!ll. 3 BBQis, Sau~. furn.-untum, per mont .• oy ~, - $l OOO upper with living, dining, Br/21h: ba . pool, pvt patio. 1 1 2 Br. al9o Sin&ln fnlm Lush landscaping, cabana, cove~ed court:_ Realtor 548-TJ29. l!ett llvff 5242 kitchen areas n111.in Door ov· 3 BR. 3 ba. off-water home $.113 mo. Lease. Adlts, No S13S. See It! 2000 Paraona Y8:rds, sunken swim'& pools, BBQ I &: fOWF Sl35 fmh pals:it, 2 br, u~ _..,..._, _____ _ TOTAL DOWN erlooking beauti(u1 pool. Furnlshed -$450 nio pets. 673-6028. Rd., 64U670, Between Har· tams . •ta\1'1,P,,_bltns, Nr shop'g NEWPORT ll!ACH No GIMMICKS Large 2 car port plus stor-Bill Grundy Rltr. 642-4620 AVAIL now, 3 br, 2 ba, bltns, bor & NeWJl')rl. 2'8lk N.19lh ''THE UL TIM.ATE IN APTS'' Harbor I: Wilson. ~1 age & complete laundry fa-ts d f l patio ,,.""""'""""""""""'"' I BR's-From •150 2 BR's-From S175 VIII• Grenff• Apts. I I I •ilo·t0·,,, All beo"tifulty & BAYFRNT, 5 hr. 3 ba $1000 cp • rps, rpc, cvo, • 1• • 2 BR. New paint, crpta:, drp&. ·~~. Four bedrooms with 0 assume• ow governmen ... .. mo winter. Ken Brit. n.e. Costa Mesa area, szs. ,,....,From $28 Wk. All util. incl. Furn & Unfurn. 40 .- loan on this sharp 3 bed· completely fumished, linens, tingham, Rltr. 675--0l23 incl lawn care 644-1.385. ====.;,:::,;:=:=:==;:";::=:-;:-=:-"·====;:';:I bltns ~/O, no pets. S1 · balconies above &; below. room btinga.low.: ~to de r n china, etc, if dt.'sired. Only !========= 1 ,-------~--o-Lwi:ury Single Apts .. Complete' N • •-ch 4_ O•fta Point 4740 9&8-l4.». . Gradout livinc_ I quiet aur- b Ill In !cit h F'IRE 100 t t · t be h 2 BR. w/w · crptg, dl.spsl, m"'d ~ .. rvi-, Joousew·-• _...,.,, __ ._. ,_ _ NEW Duplex: 2brCrptld'1", rou-''--·tor tam••·· witq u • c en,· •· s CJ>S 0 priva e ac · Balboa Island 2355 gar., 2 l'hildttn max, no ""' """ '"" _.. ·------·-~ ~ PLACE, covered P.11.tio 11.nd Tennis court & 2nd pool al· bk linens, all util. healed pool, DELUXE 2 Br., Weslclin Joe. SINGLE, heated pool, TV, $160 /mo. 1570 Orange Avt.. childrftl. Near Corona Ml MORE, Seller flexible~ get so on property with gorg-;;;;ER Rental, Nrly new 3 ~~135• Own r / r ; bil,~~ards, restaurant, cock-Pool & bltns. Teenager ok. maid 2 blks from heh $35. 543·8.572, Kt 2.7279. Mar ftich School. Fireplace, out your quick pen before eous landscaping thru-out. Blt-2% ba , w/patio, lrlpc, , ta..,, $210 mo no lse 6CU2'14 wk/Si35. mo. 34tit Coast 2 BR/l~) BA TOWNHOUSE Viet bar I: built-ln kltcbel'l it's gone. $24.000 FU LL Easy aC<.-es.~ to .super mkt, & garage. dys 9-5, ~0-8623. LOVELY 4 ,SR. 1\1. ha, ~u VILLAGE INN -· · Hwy, Dana Pt. 0-pts., drps., bll·ln, patio, appliances, PRICE. shopping, elc, $325 inonlh, eves/wknds 6~1238 · drp.sil& <1 .. Pt1.s, closebto "'"1 Pg, Laguna Beach 494.9436 ~ ~~NTTERl, ~ & pool. 546-631M. 835 AMTGOS WAY 5"-2991 , W ~k & L winter b~si~ Will consider 2 BR' · Ava or e ore. BALBOA INN '· . R~TALS '" er ee ... ~. s ea chann1ng c.-~'~"6 A'. = ~· LRG ' BR ""'· Crp·-·. drps.1 'iHiiiiN=iiiiwiiii=iH f---.!.:I ---1--U ---lease._pur-chase·or-outr.ight. --coo--215....!..A"iifEthyit siQ." -~ Batoo.-----<rn;SY«:l ~ "-'-~· -tl.Uhtumldttcl tns. 0 pefi:-~7Et" EW-DEloU~E-• sale. Adults only forrenla.I Cheery modern i2T 3 BR, 3 ba, bonus rm 1cleal l.,!!!!"!'!!!!~!!\'!'!!\'!''!"!!!!!" LGE, Llke new 3 br, 2 ba, -2 -Dr., 545-5'21. 3 BR, 2 BA. Apt fM Jeue. Realtors 7682 Edinger 842-4455 or 540-5140 NOT BRANO NEW BEACll-$19,950 Not new, but only 8 yrs. young. F'anta.stic value nestl- ed among 2-11!ory hon1es val· ued at $35,000. 3 BR's, 2 full baths, Gourmet kit. y,•/latest b/in.11. Cloud soft .shag car- pets. Just take over existing Joan with payments much cheaper than rent. Better hurry! Call (714 ) 962-5.585. FOREST l OLSON Inc, Realtors 19131 Brookhurst Ave, Huntington Beach PLAYHOUSE F~EEll purposes, Heb. 4~2152 AM ·Amethyst, $225, Adlts. for in-law, .pets. kids ok, Just for Single Adults ~h duple~-.....,.Sunt!,ec!~~ gar. Gener•I -I 1 BR, AU uW pd. •iso. Incl spac, mutl!r .Wte, din or 837-0791 anytime. 1010 So. Bayrfont: 4 BR 3~ $250 mo. ~l.M3 SOUTH BAY CLUB .xpt..JUllf! _.., s.1~. Adulta, infant ok. ~01 rm I dbl prqe, auto clom' * LARGE FAMILY HOME ha waterlront home & 2 Br 2 BR, new cpl'g-d~. stove APARTMENTS Y LRG I BR. VENDOME Avocado. ~g...7442, opener avail_. Pool 6 Rec. 4 BR. 3 BA, exclusive area. 1 ha garage apt. Dock. & refrig. Lrg loot ynl. $175. Newport Beech Adults, no pets. Yearly. area, Living room iv/heavy beam Bill Grundy,.RJtr. 642--4620 2658-G Orange Ave,. C.M. 880 lrvine Ave. 642-0807 or 67~.? IMl\IACULATE APfSI 2 BR. 2 Ba. Pool. Lrg e FROM $265 e ttiling, fireplace. Roomy $135, &side, 1 BR h.-.e. Bltns, (Irvine and 161h) 2 BR Oceanfront. ADULT and closet~. Adul ts, no peb!.~l 865 Am.I~ Way, NB kitchen y,•/brealdast area. yard, sngls ok. (714) 645-0550 \Vinter Lease $215/mo. FAMILY Section pd , l.8M r..1onmvla. MS-· Ma.nqed by Separate dining room. Spac. Laguna Be•ch 2705 Blue Beacon* 645-0111 SHARP.CLEAN-2 BR 548-4928 Close to shopping, Perk $135-Nice 2 Br. Bltn1, garg, \VILLIAM WALTERS 00. ious master bedroom w/fire. RENTALS/LEASES 3 BR. 2 Bath. COLI.EGE f"urn & unfum. Htd pool 2 BR/2 BA: Lse or LM opt. * Spacious 3 BR"a, 2 ba fncd yard, HURRY! PRIVATE VIEW place, walk.in closets & FURNISHED RENTALS PARK. Crpts, drape•' lrom $140. Adult,;, No ptts. S2'25/mo or SI 7 5 /m o. * Swim pool, puVgreen Blue Beacon * 64W111 2 Bdrnu., 2 bathl; carpeted ocean view. Recreation room 2 odnn. al Victorla Beach. $255/mo. Ca ll 549-2534. Teen~ OK 642-9520 C.t-.1. Owner: Ph: 675-8200. * Frpl, lndiv/lndty fac'la I LRG 2 & 3 BR, 2 Baths. draped, bit-ins, dlahwshr. w/wet bar oU large Anthony Exe. view, lirepJc. A few 3 BR, 11,. ba, cpl.Ii, dfPi(. 2 BONUS ARRANGE:..tENT l eo=m°"p'°'Jo'°'"°"'J-y°'f"'"m-,d"ol"W<-,-.2-.::br, 1145 An•helm Ave. Frplc. blt-lnll, crpt.s, drps, Upstain. S23S Month, Min. =~h..Pri~e!te":e~~~Y steps to sand. Lease car garage, palio, ·s225. IBIS \\'EEK •• , SAVE SSS crpld . %; hlk to bch. Wintrr COSTA ;,;ESA 6C2-2824 encl gar, palio. 546-1034 1 ~ar lease. $275 Mo ~tef.... Verde. ~5-6328. SHARP-.cLEAN-2BR lse. $15.5 & tip, !l48-2.179 EAST .side • 2 br, 1~ ba, 6JS.&OSI o LlNG0 REAL ESTATE . stu io, ?eek w oce11.11 2 BR. HouFoe, cri>ls, rirps, $14.'i -..-S89 500 Charm d' / · Fum & unfurn. Htd pool • -ts, drps, bltns, retrig., -' ' . .... INVESTMENTS view, ocean s1rie of hWy at mo. 1 Small baby. 2077 ~~~ Sb~·:i~~ No pets. Newport Hgts, 4210 832-7800 pool. No pels. 646-fi610 32325 Coasl Hwy, S, Laguna Woods ~ve, Lease Wallace 11.pt 6 CJ\1. BONUS ARRANGEMENT 2 BR apt-bltni;, crpbl, drps. 1----------1 <199-1397 Sl.35 t'.to. • """"°''b-~·.,,.c,...,,,---=,.-;& CLEAN 1 or 2 BR. Adulta, no $115. 1 Bedroom. All utilitie! Oean. Inquire 15 5 2-A MISSION .REALTY. 494~731 ~ r ;;i ,du~dexl -~;:~le ____ s_AV_E_m____ pels Lrg kit Sl.3&-$150 2421 paid. Coriander, 546-5268. Coron• ... , Mer -5251 CHILDREN? 9&5 $<>. :00.St Hwy, t.iwna pi;:~ M~~ er y . E. i6Ut St. Na.~ TELE· TREND • LGE 2 BR STUDIO 1~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiial 3Bedrooms,2bathsplusfam. BEATIF'UL Condo-Costa Mesa 4100 FORRENTll. BA -APT-:----·--- ily room & large deck. Built oceanfront. 2 br. 2 be, 3 BR VaCAnt. Nice yard. -------C d I M 4250 1 2 A th •637-2943• on roomv corner lot. Parent-lrplc, f>\'l beach, pool, elc. Famlly only. $225/mo Agt. * L 0 LIT A GARDENS • oron• e ar ' & 3 BR partments ru-1°""'°'.,.....;o.::c-.;=7"'-:-;,-B;;:: · ••= m"., -~ CJ-•y wkdys·. Ask lor Don, 830-6060 ~ -·-ly lg<. 1 b' & nurse..... O E out Orange County. Ranging AVAi~ Oct. 1, La~ 1 r, alprivacywithonelevelfor ~ u ........ ,,. uu u.1..... .,,. F RR NT fro ~so 118850 F t d 'bJ--A"''" Paneling, bHns, terrace m ~· lo · . urn crp 11, rps, ui;,, gar . ._ children. Walking distance ·714 /5 47·661.t; Sun :---------FURN APT CDM. 0,untoom.Ask lor JODI. no -ts. l135. 646-1762 714/499-3028 patio. 12.192 W. Edinger, tir ..--to school. $35,$0, ~~~.,..--·---~~ Mesa Verde 3110 ?..ot:ly's. 8J9-o959 Bachel<?r Bright Ir. -i\iry, All 832-7800 sPACIOUS 2 & 3 BR. Crpts, 3 BR&: Fam, water, !rash I: ·----'-----1-c'""'=,.,.-"'"",,..-===-I u~ Quiet! 67~5752, 540-2'266 NEW DELUXE l BR drP!ll Cpl w/l or 2 child. gan:lencr, North end, .1'~ TRI-LEVEL 3 BR+ ~n, 2 Acapulco Apl8, attractive, * ~~ blk 10 ocean Sl25·mo & blks to bch, Ref Req'd, No f~plC', Lge him rm: Om rm, Pool, Util paid, Garden 2 Ba. Bit-In range, dshwhr, OK. 646-0627. 642-6344• pets, S225 mo/y,•in!er. 1-213-f·rnl & rear patios {f'.".'ar living. Adult s, 1lO pets. up. incl. util. shRg crpts, drp1, garg. From -------;._ h 696-1371 w/f.ire piO $365 mo incl 1 BR-$1.!iO ZiOO Scaview, Cd:..i . $175. Nr. S. Coast Plaz.a. Newport ._ac 'oc=EA=Nc-fro,--n.,.t"'home--. .,,=e=n-. ,,,11_,•c::""='~='c.· "'='-_7:;"4c..___ 1800 Wallace Ave, C.M. BACHELOR Rpt . stove. 54~1973 or 545-2321 PARK NE\VPORT -Catt 5200 1190 Glenneyn SI. .... Q, c:.r """ . ~ ON TEN AC1tES t•2BR.Furn•~ tireplaea I pri'f. ,_._ J ,,_ ,._, .Omtnnllld.; 900 Sta tane, OBI '""2111 (MacArthur nr. ea.at Hwyl fos & 101'11 ORCHID In addilion lo thi!I cottage showpiece ~·llh LARGE fam- ily area, "'alfiut paneling. snug Fireplace, and modern step.saving k i t c h e n, lhe child;-en',, playhouse stays. Could use for mother·in·law. Seller anxious and is willing to pay part ol GI or FHA buyer's costs. FULL PRICE $26,73'.), 494-9473 549-0316 * BEACH HOME * $34,600. Only 8."l() fl. to beach W k .. U relrig., for man close to ~A°"V"A"JLA,-;-;B"LE"°"'N"o=w"."'2"B;;;R".""'1"'11 1-liVlf o""lkg the water. 7 Ba. Avail. Nov. 1-April I. $25 Per ff p shopng. 673-4616. ""'" ~thke Realty 494·2858 Newport Beech 3200 Bachelor & 1 br, TV & maid hath.11, carpeltl, drapes, $100 pooh1, 7 tennis cts, ~.~ serv. avail; -450---Victoria, -8 ..... IL--,.""" month. 545-8424 A&t. Spa. Fl'!Jm Sl15 , lo ~· 2 Bdnns .• 2 baths w;th sun-,1----f deck, $235. AJ.N) 3 em=m.~ 3 BR, I Ba redec, ocean vu .3 e LIDO ISLE-4 BR, 3 BA C ~t a ---Ba.ch. 1 or 2 Br. Also 2 lfY blks to Crescent Bay. Avail fro t · • 1 · · ---------1 ~ El kl ri '"'-I.June 1225. 4'" ""''" across m enrns .. r, LOVELY Baylmt apt. Patio C--• ... ,. 5100 Townuuuse.s, ec, • ' p , 3 baths. Carpeted, draped, blt·lns. Cov. garage. Mo.: min. 1 year lease. Walker & Lee ·Rea ltors 7682 Edinger 342-445.~ or 540-514(} * Portafina Laguna * New, view home • $64,500 PLACE REAL TY 494-9704 BY owner, Custom 3 br, 2 ba Beam11 7 ~"k·S212 mo. pfrr 494--0428 da. 832-7449 ~ ~ I grnd I bhouse & 1 BR. furn. $145 Avail Oct 5. '"' m. t -•-• '"b'-P""" pot Pay • cu · Winter $115/mo. utl pd, pa · "" ......, .,.. u " .,.., beach. S650 mo. 673-7489 or Also 2 BR unfurn, Sl45. Y 1 .1 673-6""" maid ser, cpts, drPI Just t'l. 17s.&oS1 o &I~ Avail Sept 18. See ?lo1gr, Apt gar. r Y 11.vai · ""' * * * • of Fuhion Ial at Jamboref ! ' D~plexes Furn. 2975 '-=-======,...,.= H, 1846 Pla-nlia. 2 BR 1250 I 315 E ·Rd --• 18AY V1EW-BLUFFS 4 BR, -C....---"-----' mo yr y, . El Puerto Mete Apts. & &tn Joaquin Hills, ' I .... NE\VPORT BEACH' 21,~ ba twnhse. F'am area, Fum Bachelor &: 1 BR. _.aa,y, Balboa, Jnq. Apt C. * * * , * 644-1900 lor leatdnt lnfO. 1355 E. Balboa, lsl fi r duplex 1-1. ·optg, d'P'• ..,,...,J. Ex tionall . ' 673-1521 or 543-7771. ON THE BAY NEWLY redec unf apt. upper I 3 .,. ... ...,.,, cep Y nice. 1·2 Bedroom Apt1. 2 Br. 2-ea-, 11v----•1n-·-wntrtyr y, br, 2 ha, bay & • --~ .. •~75 ..... n"""· Below rental value! % BR. Beachfmnl. Crpts, II'" · J'J" E · I J-t o·,,i1.. to. • ...... .., eve. FHA BUYERS al ....,~ ...., ,..,........__, ..... up 1ncJ. u 1 1Ue.s llJOY \\'II. e ..... n ac •• ..., sundeck. LoMt 1-Bft 6 ocean I xrra~wshr/dryr, !====·===== 2110 "Newport Blvd, CM. drps, resp. adult11 ooly, no Also furn. Pool &. Recreation gether w/ the spaclotl.llnru 11 ho ~~th RENTALS Hou1e1 Furnished LOOK AT-THIS icemaker relri.it garage N H 1-'-t 3210 childrf:n, no pets. 644--075.1. ,_ v rm corn ., -. , priv ·' ' ewport • ""' I e NASSAU Palms 2 Br area. Quiet Environment of lux:urioua apL conven ... nc-patio, 2 car gar. No .i--1 Generel 1006 frplc, .sand .shoy,·er, dshwshr.1--~--~---!!pt. Furn A: ·unr. Pool, ping· NEWLY DECORATED-1 Off .~treet parking, No petll. es w/ the atm~here of a blk from ocean. Yr~ SHlO 00\VN Plus $650 at close of e11crow moves you into this 1uper sharp 4 bednn rancher w/2 baths, w/w crptg, cust drps ::I-encl patio wi'JQIL~f tall shade. $24.000 Full price, GI no cash down or take over the low int. VA Joan • 1otal pymnts. $811 per mo. Agent. Home-Finders 968-1931 ---------RENTALS 4 BR, 2 ha, 2 slory home, pong, BBQ, shady lawns. Br .. nr beaches & shop'g. 1959-1961 M11.ele Ave. pvt hnme. Lt;e den, 2 BR, rental $325 mo. 548-W2 e ---Housn Unfurnished ~~s, c~~ie: ~·,~:: 177 E. 22nd St. 642-3645 SISO/mo. Util pd. 67S.-S810. Costa Mesa 2 BA, frplc & lge waterfront l BR Crp!JI drps l10w 0 ~neral 3000 5"8-7729. SUNNY.• crpt'd 2 BR Apt. YEARLY 2 Brms, 2 Ba, Also Garages for rent patio, $650, m.8414 re~. USO. :iBt .l b.t me'~ 832-780 ~--'-'"-----....:. Sl6S. Marrif'd cpl only, in· Jo"'·er duplex . $210. Fam 2 Br. unrurn. Crpt., drps, + $35 dep, 630 MarlPd. 200. 3 BR. + Family room. .DECORATOR'S home 3 BR, University Park 32:37 fant _ok. 183-C Del Mar. pref. 320 Alvarado £lace. ORLEANS APJS patio, pool. Mtns. Str.O.. 5:45-a. · Fenced yard, bltns, crptis, lormal dining + large lam· -c.M. BAYFRONT • Seaclitt-~ .Apts, .~ LRG .New Apt.I.. 2 Br, 2-Ba, drps'f~ttaE~T<IRc~~on ok. ily kitchen. Including gard· For Rentals in University AVAIL CH:t. 5. Lge 1 Br. l br. $~~ter, ad!ta. ADULTS ONLY-P=tia;d-= -on MlrglJl'rite, ID. of Hwy. ener $350 Mo. Park&: TurtJe Rock, Call: furn. $145. Pool & carport. -2 .l 3 BR. Avail. Private pa. • · our Bltns, epta, drpi. pctth. • 1846 Placentia, See mgr No. 1 BR. Furn apt, Util 's paid. lk., pool ·indiv •• laundry lac. e IAYFRONT • $250, 543-7983. New 2 & 3 Beclnn ap!s. H. St25 mo Adullll. No pet11. 310 (Nr.Orange Co. Airport; Tu11-LUxu•y a ....... Starting u-P~P-ER~-,~B-R-,~BA-_.-..,-.. -,.-.1 832 7800 1110 & 1280. Eastsid• E Balboo Bl·" Balboa ~ ..,.._. $ 1000 " 1 br $125, pool, spaciou.~. a· · vu. · tin at 17th St; nr, Westcliff). •t $375. e '42-22~ No pets $300. or fumllbed BELOW MARKET'. $115. 2 Bdrm Duplex. Veran· 5 "-• 3 8 .__ dulls. Ideal lor bachelors. OCF.ANFRNT 4 Br $2.10 .2 BA U 1 Crp" '-i'83>-'='235.;"":.0-~",;c'_,6,_7"'832'-",0:.:'~-°""'rm.. a '"'me, so~e 1993 ~ h "''9633 util'll incl. Winter lse. Call 1741 Tustin, "-ta ~feu. 3 BR, • n urn. • 1~ An GI loan total da, Carpets, drapes, All utU view. Newport Height!!. .., .. urc ....,.. 673-4724. """ drps, blk to ocean. Yearly 4 BR. 21'11 BA. Studio apt. , moU:~ s22s~ Submit down., pd, 100 yards to bel!ch. JeAn Smith, Rltr. 1 BR fum, Sl50 incl utl l, 1'1gr. Mn. Canon. 642-4641 $275. 673-m. Clean! TI4 Gol denrod . 3 BR. 2 BA, P.iec kit., like TELE· TREND 646-3255 lst Western Bank Bldg. pool. gar. di:oiposal. Adults, Balboil Island 4355 2 BR. 2 ba. w.alk to bnch, $.175/mo. yr l.11e. 540-7573. nu crpts, drps Jge cov patio University Park no pebl. 642-2383. ----Like Living In Your l!hopl!:. Frplc. S23S mo yrly. 3 BEDRM, 2 ba., bltns, c:rptt w/brick BBQ.' 'Rentals to Share 2005 t) D11y 833-0101 Nigtits 1 BR. pool Ulil pd. Adults, no NEARLY NEW 3 Br. 2 Ba, OWN HOME .• I I MS-0897 wkdys. No pets. drps, frplc, _patio, prage. 847-8507 Eves: 968-1178 · 832 7800 l"'""""""""""""""~~I pets. Nr .shpg. Sl40/mo. all elec/kit: lrplc, patio, Why pay $175 for an apt?·** 1 BR.~WATERFRON'T·i ~'-26;~".~6~,,,_==~---- :. ... lll!!l'lrf:~rrJI 25 YR Old female student • 3 BR, 2 Ba. tnhou.se ··-· $350 MS-3348 or 675-1650. BBQ. Also 4 Br. 3 Ba, lAe when We c.an rent you one BALBOA BAY CLUB APf. MARGUERITE. So. oi Hwy. ;z,r-... i' ~king tor mature, easy fireplace, dra(lf'i;, all util. pd. 2 Bdrms., 1 bath . , .... $280 Quiet, gar. adlls. crpVdrp, encl patios, 11pac1._;,;:==-='-"·'""'==:o".': Squam only. 642--7898. · m j f: ._, {Orange Co;u;t Col leg e ) $135. 1 Bedroom, fenCt'd Yard, 3 BR, 2 Ba. tnhouse • · • • S340 * DELUXE LG t BR * Sept.June 638-3470, 53S-8831. for $140, 2 BR., ~wly dee, $400 mo. Call 548-22ll 1 Br. unl. Adults, ,_, pets. ' , • ,_._J ..... going roommate & apt nr TELE·TREND • Red Hill Realty 2452 Elden, ~2768 Huntington Beach 4400 gnxb: • 2 Pools! Adults only.I N-port Hei9 hts 52101 -i==o:=:=:====::=,..,,- •• • WI.TY school before Oct 1. Penny, Univ. Park Cen!cr, Irvine 2283 }fountain Way E, CHar-oc..;•:..;;.w:_. __ ..:..__._ __ B•IL--5300 eves 646--0814 LOVELY 3 BR home wllh a $70 & up. 1 & 2 BR Traileni. 1· - $18,00i Full Price . lgc yard. w or I~ w/opl Call Anytime 833-0820 Adults onty. no pets. 133 E. ON BEACH I, bor, turn W, on Wi1110n), NICE 2 Br. Pool. Sur.deck. --------'~ 3 Bedroom 2 bath 00 x 100 \VORKING gjrl desires to buy. Big patio & encl gar. ---16th St. 642--1:?65 VILLA MESA APTS, BUN, C/D. Adults, no pets. OCEANFRNT dupl~ 1 Br. f~nttd lot, dble ga'.rage, cov. roommate to, share 2 br apt. SlOO per mo. Call Coats & Coron• del Mer 3250 I ~~==_,,-c,-,c-;-;::c 2 BR, Priv paUo, Hid_ pool. SlbO 6-ii.tml, 642-8006 lower. Fresh paint, $250 )Too W/••m• ' blk to bch • BEAUT. Bach le 1 Br. • s · I t fro $165 ly. 673-5729 ered patio elec bllin ranre ..... · ':s ' Wallace 546-41•11 -ing e ap 11 m 2 car encl'd rar. Children ==========! & " "'" ;,_1, & d'''""'!i, 835-4804. ext 3, Nancy, days, I =~--,-,~.,,.--,=-13 BR. 2 Ba. lownhou!lf!; apt. $29.:io wkly & up. e 2 BR Furn. From $285 1 , TIME FOR • .... ,.... ... ,..... T k A D "I D• ha · II 54&--04·1 welcome, m pet.II P f!ase. P11.yme~ls less lhan rent. Aft 6 598-3804. a e GI y 1p patio, lge. porch; ,ll g Furn., 1nc ut . ::i. e 2 BR unfurn $260 Sl6[; mo, 719 W. WUson. _ . SlSOO, Down. SHARE my elegant AND RELAX! 3 BR, 2 BA, carp., drapes. $275 Mo. Furn 1 Br & Bachelor Carpet;s-drape!!-dishwasher 646-l2.'il. 9UICK CASH · waterlronr home w/dock. stove, retrig, C8.J1K'ts, drap. lease. 675-5992 2110 Newport Blvd, CM heated pool-aauna-tennil J\fan. 3()..60 yrs, $150 mo. l'll, POOL. Chlldren okay. 3 BR. 2 ba. 2-lltory, kar. rec room-ocean riews ALL new paint, 111: 2 br. 675-4111 . S185/mo. Yard. Rent beautiful home Newport Beach 4200 pe.tfos-.ample ~. duplex. Crptll, drps. bltns. THROUGH A illJge ReJI EstJtE l' Lido Isle 5351 LRG. BAY VIEW, 3 BR, 2 BA. Cpts, drpa. Adults .. Yrly leue. 642--0IKl7, 675-1592. H F'nd "'2951 1-1 ~ t:=:: "-"--......... -··•s. bMm ~iling1, ~&r. View of YOUNG workin'g mother O't'• I ers -..-approx "''" mo. "''.r"""''· ~ .... ,.., ._.... 11 ~1 1~ DAILY l"ILOT BelbN lslerMll 5•,. woold like roomm•" I• 1 BR B I $95 A New W•y To Live FURN. al» Avail goll '"'""'· ~ mo. "' - Shatt .... Call heir ~"' 'I . un•a ow . Huntington BHch-3400 In Newport lle1ch-HUNTINGTON .,,.. D" M>-Oll63 °' LITTLE IAL. ISL '62-4471 ( ::::1546-llOJ Fountain Valley 1410 p.m. or Rft 10 p.ri1. 54()...5549 • OAKWOOD GARDEN 646-ll6G. WANT AD on Grand Canll, Waletfrorll CAREER Woman to share 3 CHOICE LOCATION! Stove, 3 BR. 3 BA, din rm., crpts, APARTMENTS PACIFIC QUI ET ADULT LIVING • Boat dock. 2% BR, J1i) BA. Bonus Room! refrig yard garage. HUR-drps, 2000 11<1 11• nr bch, o 16th Street bt 1 • 2 BR. si/ag crp!.11 ISl:tnll F sullll Call ''The Unfurn. Avail Oct. t. _, 2 Br house w/Mme, nr frv.·y, RY w'oN'T ."Sf•.•. l300. _Bkr. 847-8531, evl!'! n wn 711 OCEAN AVE .. H.B. 1 be 1 Ind· ...... 'siso & ror ut re . • --.Could be family room or N. Hntngtn Bch. 893-3439 ...,, Irvine .and Dover Dr. (n4) 5.16-1487 JIOO • au · ""t"-'. Hot Line" Dally Pilot mo. yrly. No chlldrul « bedrooms! PLUS 3 BR. 2 BR. Hom•Finder1 64S.2951 96U36.5 (714) 642-1170 Otc. optn 10 am-6 pm Dail1 $170 mo. Jncl all uW. Adults O.uslfled petl, 673.o:ITl APPROXS4500DOWN.•LOW --·------LANOLORDSll ••10 ES OTE M.a'"'......i by only, no pe111. 1..::========:i:..;;========::-I INTEREST! Won't la.st! Costa M:o•::•::.• ___ 2100 Vacancy Problems Endedl 'F-'ou=nc;l•::l;.;n_V;.;•::11;.;•.:.Y __ ~-' M A M l WllJ.JAM''WALTERS CO. 241 AVOCAdo St. 646--0919 Fount•ln Valley HAFFDAL REAL TY --utilities }'REE .supply of qualified VACANT 4 br/2 ba. Frplc--* S25 \\<EEK It: UP * NEW~~;·G~BD~RM;-~B~•~a~m~,~~:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~i 142-4405 F1JRNISJ-IED 1 br, tenants al no C'O!!I to you. crpts/drps, bltins. $250/mo Kitchen, TV'a maid MS'Vioe. NEAR ltuntinrton HarboUr ~lllnpj wood panefuw, All 6•/. paid , Sl35~ll. Ask for LEE ~r Qt.A l!!e opt. 526-6997. l{~ated Pool New Triplnes. Quiet Uft, rec IN.tuaWI. $165. Adults., Amime FHA loan. 3 Br, 2 832-6600 4 BR/2 BA: Bltin,;, covered 646-9681 Lrg 1 BR furn and 3 Bfl, no pets. Call now 646--0073 bf. Bltns, 1rp1e. Nicely Ind -* SAND 'N SEA patio. S260/mo ].!It & last. SAIL INN AlOTEL 11'75 11nd ~P. chlld/pet ok. * L W· Bay s1treet *S scpd yd. ~nlcrcd w/ .a IR-Newpo'!_~~ 2200 642--2'b>4. e \VINTER RATES (213) 592-3623 -~ H4UOR fi EEN goon style blk bouom pool. S:axl SHARP! 3 + RUt.fPUS. I========= Wkly or monthly or 3 day 2 BR. Pool. Ad u It 1 , CiA.llDEN I mioto APTS $31,9".:JO. Ews. 531-557(), * BAYSHORES * 2 baths, w/w crpl~. fen<."Cd, Lagunt leach 3705 Blay. Comer 28th I Npt • BeauVQuiet! Ulil t nc I Wh, 1 1 3 BR'a t.rom WO ----j;i.;;:;~i:'ri':;:">:iiiiii;;r'.:i.µ.3 ~A;:nd~< ~Bd~nn~ ., furn. Sept. to ~ kids 1 1.s fine. VA-·~~?~:P.B~l•:d~. :Ad~j~M~OU'~in~•~· ~E~·li'~~~/mo~.~1~767'~~c.m~-i~'·8211111!~p.~;..~..,.~~W~· ~ ~C.~M~:+-BY OWNER • Edhlg\'t A uoo rm011 CANT MOVE TOD --+-N-Ew+Bf\7-HG I Euclid, IW'iUmt F'HA loan. "C" THOMAS, Realtor • ' $300 MONTI:I LG. 1 BR: t· ns, patK> • . s2.soo down, SISO/mo. 3 br 224 \V. Coast l·fwy. 548-W Hom•Flncfers 645-2951 PLACE REALTY f94..9704 Btw. Bay & Beach. Yrly. or e API'S/Ro)ial Hawaiian. µtG 2. BR Triplex. Crptt; plus den. 6.17--0768 eves. 2 Br + den, 'A'tl bar, 2 Bil. 2 FOR RENTI I ' "-Inter, Adults lrn-6781 a.ft. Poot rec. rm. F/M. 2'lO drps, garage, p 11 io . 4. 3 & 2 BR Jtomes in Or-S.n Clement• 3710 ='-=•m=. ===-=-=-...,,,,..,--12th St. or 219 lSth St .• H.B. S145/also rum $165. firep!, gar, ~ndry ~ ange County. Rentals start· -OCEANF'RON'I' 3 Br, 1% ba, 1 BR. Medallion Condo. All ~11167. Sant• An• ____ 162t ;::St~;:,· S mo. lng at $123.50. Fum or Un-~~BA~ 112 f;~~~ tip-top t.conrl, -~ cpts, d:, bltns., refrig., t'hC~o, IBEA="'"UT=-N"e_w.....,2:-:8"R,...,,+"p"°I•"'x I N.E. Sanl11. Ann, xtra nice & =SfE=P~S'"'-1o-..,,-,-.-,""'$"12S=-, "'"1""'B"'R turn. Alik fnrfBONNI. ~~ "'A~n pm colll'77pal-7~ai:r. '"'3" ~~ wn r. pool, quiet. SSllJ. 6 • apt1. Bltns, cpl, pr t v . dean 3 BR. 2 b9 k tam· Fl"· cOtt(lgt, Pel!I, 1'gls Y.'f!l(.'()me. __ _,.,:132~.:'· ~800~=~~ 1.:~===· =====,,... :=,...,-=-~·',.,",.-:~.,,.-"""--:= BAC:IELOR. Utll. Paid. pat.lol. Xlnt E-flide: Joe: $180. prl«d to "11· Bia ;<l-0050 Bluo Beacon* ""'8111 * MINI RANCH * Concl.;;;lnlum l9SO •,:; l,.~~.",';,~,:U~: *NEAR OCEAN! * >dlla. S<o at350 E. 20th $l ;43-J4ll0. -~ LJNllllORG co.·-llAOQ'Jllll, • --\VlNJ'ER 5 Br, 2 Ba nr Approx.jf. •Cl'f! 3 BR, 2 ~lh SAN Sebastlan manor, yrly lse, UW paid, 968--l793. FURN. l Br. apt nr bilech, refric, •til Ptld. S l 2 5. TIME . FOR Beach. $300 mo. 7201 home, fenced yard. Bnng Lel.lllf'e World Ntt ln,\fi.)' Avail Oct. 111t. $115. rum. Bahcdor ... • M a tut. actulta. no pell:. Seuhore Dr. 646-5811 lhll chll_dren. SUS/mo. THIS extra.• leue' for '1 yr. 'OCEAN==rn"."'o"'NT="'2'"""er"",""'1:-::ba,-hc::h $100. 536--1454 ~ -CjlUICK CASH-OCEANFRONT · Wlnltt ~ WON'T LAST!' sao-"4a "''" -" ,.uo. ~-1 '2~e=R""-~--'-. .., ... -.,,...,.bctt.,....,• I 11Jt;;;;;G-:AlrJ;;:::.,1•B•R.-:w::;1:::w-:crp=t:;:'•~.I n10. 2 Bdr. 3102 W. ~ !H~-~!:!F~lnd~•!!':!'~64~S.~2'!5~ll I".:"'=:===:=:===: * 67~1M7 • downtwn, cpts. dri>t • 1tove ct,.,._ atow, utD rm, neW • THROJIGH A front. Re&llor. m-:4350 Sl~c 3 Bt, l \f, Ba. Apt, Duplexes Unfvm. '975 ~ocr.=:A'"'NFRO==NT=-"o.,'"'°1""-,-.,,=br, no pe13, $1.U mo. 6:J6..3.YJ7, paint. Ad\ts, no pt ti . ......._ . ~ $1S5 at the Beach. 2 BT, 1~ Patio. Chldrn/snals ok. . 2 bj, frplc. AvaU 10/1 $350 $135/mo 6f6.8373 DAILY l'ILOT ba Child O.K Bluo lle•con * 64S.Oll1 DELUXE 3 lk 2 bath ttp. mo .yoarty. 673-'JOS3. Fo. RESUL'IS""'""' o..1,.·==·,...;;:-=::-=cl . 64 rlrp!!. frplc & a I r ~I I! :-;;"'""'"""";:--""',,...--..,.,.,., pend on. Call the 5uJIC1'" MODERN 2 Br, crpt&,.-drps,.. BlueBeecon* S.0111,. Sl~2brhmatbchyrly.Tot, Ncwportll!.ighl.llllI'tS,elMe LRG 1 BR Adulla, m peti. Saleaman .. Da.111 Pilot GE kltchfln, enclo sed -!--WMn A . .._ __ 1 ~~uc~ 1i:;.·~:c:-*'4S-Ollt ~u'!ri~~1~pma~~11. Yearty,::S-~ ~~=11-plaCI ~~~·UJne;~~·· $14~. • I .. , . '"' l&J--J ..... Adult UWi& l'llnllbed &.,IJ~ • ow ..... ·--.,.,.....,.,,,,. •a-.t-........ Gal .... ..... _,. __ I t ' 1 • • ., , . . - •• -. • . .. • • -I ---• • • ------~---~---' --_,,. -----~----------Ill--· • -- f • __ '. ------' .... SO YOUR llTlLE RID WAGON ~ -'>--~ - --- IS -REALLY DRAGGINf - --·---- l\LL llLL. BILL -·. - .. 81!.L • ADD HORSEPOWER TO THE FAMILY BUDGET '• ,. i • You can handle those bills. All you need are the dol· lars you'll 9et for all the still-good, but· nobody· uses· ·them items you'll find all over the house. Make a list of them today and decide to turn those unwanted ar· ticles into extra cash. It won't cost you • • • it'll pay you. . 'And you'll be surprised at how fast you can sell iust about anything with a DAIL~ PILOT'""tlassified ad. Try it today. Every day is a good day to use DAILY PILOT WANT ADS (And You Can Charge T em • p 642-567 -· -·-I " ' I ' ~' I • --- w HI DIJ YDI ... DI• n.. HO ... COil Mii' ... COLI ... ... H U ... ... HY ... -"''' "" UN11 lllVI IACI ..... " ' lltYI co•• '"' IALI ... LINI 1--1-V -1. t.10( IALI "'" •UN ,OU! 11.IJ SUMI OU LON+ LA•• OllAI OUT OUT 11 IT At . .. MIDI '"'" SAl1r ... rus· ••• ... U LV ... LAO LAO "" "" ... ... CAI'! ... "'' ... IUVI NOU , .. '"' "' RE I ... ... , ... ... ... COL '" ... ... .. y .. , ... ""' ... '" ... " , .. , .. '" HT .. ~ '" •u• .. , ... LOii ... ... ...! "" ... , ... '" LA• Ml: ... ... "' ... ... ... , .. OUI RI ... '" •• •• ,., .. .. "' ... • ·•. 1-----------------------------.-.....;:........-.-~,R!NTALS Apia. Unlurnllhtd \" Tut1d1Y. Stpttmbor 22.°1970 DAILV PILOT f3 RINTALS RINTALS RIAL" EST.ATE I ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS Aph. '!!!_lv2!_rlt_td__ Apt .. ~~furnlohtd Genorol and NOTICES • end _N_o_T_1c_1_s ____ 1 l'hollfl Are Open 8:00 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. -~ -t-to NO.Sn Seturd•y· --etond Sundoy Huntln9ton a..ch 5400 H ... t1ng1on llffch S4llO Rent•I• Wonted S9'0 Oiil.._11on111 '8it, .___ 6410 An-•menl• 6410 -.µ-BR, refric. bUn&. cvpts. _,; mESIJ.AfR_ _ ~~~.~~~~1~/ii_iiiiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiil~t-- drps;j)OOI, ntar~bea·tlr.1130 'W&lk 3 blka~to Beiehl -~"'="" -~ --per m<t;o·adulu.-no~pel9-. -B~aut. big 2 br. apts. w/w, RINT A:L--flND!RS ft. olfl~e~l!f1J~..,oc- Trade"'dnds Realty 84745!1 crpts, drps, bltns ex~pt E T L ncll d Cl.\~. Oran1e C n I Y· • DIAL DIRECT ..• 642-5678 ms.1 Br. RIO Cp~ dipa· &:11lrl•. 1150 A I~ I child ~ .... ~,,1.11 or • ~ .. : •• Irv.inedj. Comm=Alrporter kid " I. u<1' .,; ok:"-NQ: irta:Wpets. 53&-lnL __.....,.. · WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUi'UY DIAL FREE 540-1220 BIU: '&.~!:,'*· ''~1~'1 NEAR O<WiiiOOt. 0ce•"-•nw.r"'-c-11-1101er ~ "'"•urani, baw, :-:...._ San D!eto &. N'pt, f'wyt. • 2 n_,_ bl 1..1-view sundecK:o.. Smoi;frec. UNCROWDED PARKING Sen-Clemente: 492-44'20 Hunt1n9ton BNch: 540-1220 La9un1 Beach: 494·9466 ~11•· IM, l'eu1.5,. Ne"·er dlx 2 Br., patio, *A NEW SERVICE* crptl, drp1, adulta, no pet.a. bi'"S' ts d Ind Nr Propt>rty 1.fana1ement LOWEST RATES $150---=--mo ncJ u ti·I ~· • cp ' !PS, ry. · nuL :n.12 OueanLDr Tradewhidi Realty 847-85U• shops & pier. $165 Adlta, bf STEPHEN'!t'"F KAYE-"' \V mar. , " Houn-Re9ulations-Deadlines l"'=""""'='=-'o--'-'~'-"~·1 baby ok. 536-2131. Ca..11 645-0122 Rm. 8, Newpart Beach. Sl2a: l BR. Duple~ Fe~, w-A-L~K-t-o-,,.,-.. -h-.-2-B_R_+_re_ar_ 1 25~-~Y-R~O-LO~-•• -mal~-.-,-lud~•-nt 8.13-3223 Cou~sy to Broktrs Chi~ Ptt OK. New pa.int. JHltio, mod kit, bltns, $175 t Orange Ow;t Co 11 e g e) DESK SPACE 111015: Mvertlaen shukl ct.ck tlMlr ad1 tlally eM .....,.. lmmedletely erron 181;,i; Beach Blvd . &r>7431 mo., 1st& last + $50 retul}-looking Ior mature, easy .,. mlacl...,.lc•tlefta. THE DAILY PILOT au-..m•• l .. t.llhy t.r errors ~Ir te • 1 BR. NE\V! Fireplace. d11ble cleaning depciit . going roommate&. apt nr 222 Forest Avenus the ••tent ., ""ll•hi"I the HwertlMment cw.-.ctly _. time. Near Ocean. Patio. Adults. 96&-1931 er 962-6677. school before Oct. 1 Penny, Laguna Beech DIADLINI POI COPY AND KILLS : 5:30 P.M. the d•y Were ,ubllcatie" 1.1c-.t U t-{DBORG CO. 536-2579 GORGEOUS ~an VU· eve:; 646-0814 fM.9466 , forMenday l lllltlon when dMdlln• It 5•t-..rday, 12 noen. ' $125, 2 BR, Cpts, Drps, DelU..,.e 2 Br, -reflia-t17s°. e LANDLORDS e YOU MUST HAVI IC:ILL NUMllft!t WMft kllllnt •n ad he•uM _, ""lck mulh Bl~nsAt~~rage. 841 3727 * ~,. 2 Br. bltna l t-45. FREE R~NTAL SERVICE' Ille ..,,. te m•k.• • record et th• kill numNr glw•n y•u by y•ur ad t•k•r .; pm. · I-~--"°--------Broker 534-6982 vwtflcaitlen., yeur call ' 2 BR. l~ ha Condo. lliO mo. RENTALS 1..,, effort la IMll• t• kill er c•rr•ct • ntw ad th.at ha1 Men erderM, ht we call-~~~lairmont Ln., H.B. Apts. Unfurnished Mt f'Nlr•ftfM te llllo M -..ntll th• ad has 1ppurN In tM ,.,.,. I='°'""~·=~-~-~~ . · TC\VNHOUSE: I B R: S1nte AM 5620 DIMl·A~LINI Alls eN 1tr1ctly ca•h In Hvanc• by mall •r at any •ne of our offic"' Pool-bltiru;: D/W: patio &: --···---- NO ,...... orderi. gar. 8~2-5541 -536-4147 . The DA~~__!ILOT NMrVes the ri1ht t• clauify, Hit, cennr or refu•• any aclvtr· 2 BR. Near Ocean Frplc t_,...,,t. 1ndl t• chenge ib r•tH end ntulatlons without ,,1., n•tlcL patio. Crpt~. drps. A.dulls. ' Mall AdtlrMI: hx 1175, New,.rt IHch, Callfemla LINDBORG CO. 536-2579 CLl.SSIFIED COUNTlltS ar• loc•tecl 11 followa: COSTA MESA 330 W. BAY NEWPORT BEACH 2211 W. BALBOA HUNTINGTON BEACH LAGUNA BEACH 1787S BEACH BLVD. 222 FOREST AVE. SAN CLEMENTE -30S N. El CAMINO REAL ,., 1 BR Townhouse, pool, W/W cr,>t, drps, bltln11, \\'ash-dry, patio, $140. 545-1019. 2 BR, crpts, drps, bltn11, children ok. No p e ts , $130/mo. call 536-1165. CAN'T BE BEAT Single Story South Sea AlmC$phe~ ' 3 Bedroom 2 Baths Carpets & Drapes Air Conditioned Ptiv11.te Patios Heated Pool Rooms for Rent S99S YOU'LL Be 11nug as a bUS" &. happy too in this upstairs 11tudlo BR. Lois of prlv. + full home privil. w/pool. Emp. lady or college pl '85 546-6i40. \\'ORKlNG Or collqe girl. Kitchen & home pr iv . $50/mo Ref. MGm. ~3909. * J:lS per \\'ttk·UP -.y/klt• · chen.ft')O JX'r \l'ttk-up Apts. MOTEL. 548-9~ CCU.EGE Or wcrk.lng girl. Bal. Isl. Kit & TV rm, tele. $70 mo &. up. 675-3613. LOVELY master bedroom, ~frig, J>OOI, ~Mi~ 1-2 ~18 Coast Hwy &: Beach CORONA DEL 1-IAR Ground fir-deluxe priv of· fiefs. Priv bathli. PJkg Sl25/mo. Utll pd. Also ! nn Su.lie: 2 ba. Owner 67l--6757 CORONA del r>IAR: 5 RM/SUITE. Storage & parking, 1080 1q f t. Ground floor. 2 Ba. Avail Oct 5. $325 6r:>-5851 FOR LEASE Lrg mcdern • ocean view Ollice1 • Shops, suilable-prvf. or busines.<1, im s. Co&At Hwy, 1..ecuna Bch, 494-Mn. LUXURY New olliC1!s. prime Beach Blyd., air, cpl a, <!_ra_pes, elc. U or 6 rn1. suites. (213) 394-0015 call collect. * NE \VPOR T Beach-mcdern/d))c of1ice11. Air/con::I. Hid. Priv. ha. 2400 W. Coast Hwy. Daily Pilot Classified CLASSIFIED INDEX llDST lllYS! i~tS,. Plenty of lawn Carport &: Slor1..1:e e DELUXE alr-cond office In Motels, Treller _S997_ -computer -Cenler s Id E. Courts Crpts, drapes. Up to 3600 sq. HOUSES FOR SALE HIDDEN VILLAGE GARDEN APTS 2500 Scuth Salta Santa Ana * ~1525 -------ft. Sl&-7425 or MS-6080. RENTALS CA•l"l'NTllUHG' ""' A CIMl:N1', C:....cr... .... OINlllAL . 1.. pts. Furnished CHILO CAiii!, Lk9"'MI '411 *~ ~JrE~tea.1 ~~~ DWNTWN HNTG. BCH COSTA MeU. llM GINl•AL. ... COMT•ACTOllS "l't Ne"1>0rt !3lvd, CoRta Mesa. Remodeled cUitt, 1 blk tG ocean. Lindberg Co. SJ&.2579 COSTA Ml!IA •111 ··~,. .. -. r1 ••""Hll UH :::: ::~0:.t.• ::: Mt!SA v111:01 1111 "'"""T LAYING a •ll"At• u21 Guoat Hom•• 5991 COLLIOI PAll1( 1llJ HEWP'Cll:T •l'ACH ._ OllAl'lillE~ -c -------JllWl'Oll:T ll'U:H 1MI NIWl"Oll:T "llOHTI "11• DEMCLITION .. ,, VILLA MARSEILLES -·-MIW•Ol:T HEIGHTS ltll HIWPOltT s"o111s •1tt n•••T•HCJ s11:v1ce u n BRAND NEW PRIV. P.oom tor Ambulatory aALeOA CO'nl ltlf Wl!STCLll'I" 4nt :lt;~~LL AL '6• lady in lic'd eue1t home,. 111•wP01:T s1toa1s itn uN1v1•11n PA1t11: .. ~ •'• ' " ' .._ SPACIOUS "-·ta .,.,._ ~--• food tAYCRlsT im u.ck aaY .... ut MEN 11:1NTAU '* A .....,,. ., _ uuuu NEWPORT offlcc11 cr pt & drp.,, ocean view, from l75. Call owner aft 6, &r:i-4644, For weia:ht reducing proiram to establish ~tatistics for rapid pennanent wei11:ht loss, ct>nducted ~ <@alifiecl physical culturists. Mu st-De a mlrilmum of 20 POUiiCI& over- 'veighi,_ have lransportaUon and not cur-rently under doctor's care. All inquiries com·· pletely confidential. · ASK FOR MISS POWELL -SS7·5414 --------------BUSINESS end FINANCIAL 8u1fM11 Op~r.,Jnitles AAA 63CIO CANOY ANO SNACK -SUPPLY Found (Fr•• Ada) 6400 FOUND: Mls!!.iofl Dr area, appx. 6-8 "'ks° gtty kitten "'/son1e ornt;. 'A'ht chest It. pa"·s. Slightly Jamg ba<:k lei:. Litter box t r n d. 546-8550. WE ESTABLISH ALL FOUND: Beaullfully marked ROUTES Siamese cat, de c I awed , CNG selling involverll hoU.~ pet, Vic. Wilson st., Pl .' •• 00 f>.18-7961 or. Ms:.60U. an one • • • • • •• •• •• . 1;.i. I "===-"'c'-~',--- Plan -two ••••······ $1625.00 GER.i,1AN shepherd puppy Plan thtte .......... ;3250.00 app. 5 mo. <ild. Seem11 -.w:ll- Caah Requif't'd. Excellent In-trained, very: friend ly and come fer a few hcurs week-lovini;:. 548-8697. FOUND: dog, lem&le, black. Very fri~ndly, wear'ing flea cellar. Vic. Cerone de! i far. 673--0383. I I~ ly 'A·ork. (Days & Evenings). "Rdilling and cOllccling mon. ey ·from coin GperatM dis- pensers in Newport Beach and aurrounding area. (Han. dies name brand candy and sn!lcks.) For pcn;onal inter. view in Newport Beach area, 11end name, address and phcne number to l\.fulli- State Distributin1, Inc. 1681 \Vest Broad""BY. Anaheim, ca11r. 92802 cnt1 778-5060. lost 6401 LOS1': Locket "'11.td1 e n ~ t{l"Ogl'ain ribbon in 1.fesa '{I Theatre. 1884 Newpor t \i: Pasad«?na, Cal. ACTIVE PARTNER Blvrl.; ~turn le theatfto or ·1· C"'llCr 3!KI N. Garfield, SEPT 1st, Sheep doi type, :; ~haggy head & legs, blk k :t jlTay w/wht & tan. \Vht tip ::I r.tanagement Ability. Fune-on tail . 4 yrs. male, ''Troy". Ucn: Office Coordination k R\\·d! NB, 673-503L !?. Public RelatiGns. No selling : , 'd Sal ·~ wk + LOST: PatTOt, g r een •.-l"fl!q , ary:~. k •• IAYSHOltll 11U S:AST aLU•• 42tt ••NCllll• .... l & 2 Bdrm. pt1. servM family sty le.. oov11: sMC111s .1g! coRoHa ort. ,..... us. ,','°°••"•<• ,, ""' Adult Llvfnt 6-16-3391 •• 600-1200 Sq. ft. Offltt. a1~ 600 sq. fl. stare. S90 & $150. C~t 646-2130. ••• 'CL'••--'"' ••1.aoA-.,. JI .• •111:s,_1tt. .,,. .A •• o.•••••••••• • •• IAY ISLAfltDI •lSI l'URfltlTUllE •ISTOll:tN• -·Fum •• .,..Untum·. 1 ~~=~-~----2 FUi'nl!M<rStiitc!!. LIDO ISLE 1111 a ll:l'l'INISHIHO Mn L _1 ___ 11 __ , ELDERLY Guests, ocean Coa n o· share of profits. Min cash "·/som~ red mar ings : 1 ln\·~~l ~re.5lct.-.J.!_5.000!. cito~~i: \\'hittler ~ 19th ~~==>I Appt only; ext 72, -' :J- Americ1n Yachting r.tALE German Shepherd, •l Association 2\~ Yr! Gld; lo!t vie Newport ~ 6734411 ,t· Baker, c.r.t. '9/20. ;f ~!l-~l er 54&-0144. ~I '.( l UHIVlllllT'I' PAllK IU7 •AltOA ISU.NO tU$ GAll:DINING "" Dfthwajher ............... VUL-UU..... view, lovely home i n at Hwy, NB . .,u.:a/mo. ::1~.·~~:.. ~I:: :g~~~'l~~d:.~~:~H = :::~~NAO~ :~:c~~CGIS :: ::~~~us::: 1~La=gu=n=a=!k~a=<~h=·="='=-!=t;86=·= 1--~P~ho~n_a_64_>_21_82~-- ll T... 12.. SIAL •EACH .ue GLASS. T .... ~-' .. ~-tall OFFICE, CGrona del ?.far -lllVINI Tl1t••ci LoMO aEACH I 4'" 011:11 · HUMI ,,. ... ~..,mea • .,,. • • Misc. Rentel1 5"' crpts. dri>s, panel i nc . 1'0 OllANGI!'. COUNTY •111 OUN IHOI" ''1' sbawen • m1n'oNd. ward-outside entry. 5,15--3868. aAL•OA l"IHUISUU""""•····,,.. w.-sTMIHSTlll: ~n HAULING .,. _ .. •l!•CoM •AY im M1ow•,Y ctn ... ,, "ous•C.LIAN•N• •ru In;: 1n ki.tcbe:i • breakfa~ For auto or itorage, Costa Commerciil 60l5 iZ:~~= ~~~11:""'• ~:: GAllDIN 01:ov1 4'11 "'Al.TH Cl.UIS 4nt A_ robe doon • 1Ddirect u .. "'t. SINGLE. •ocio..d Ear .. a. LINDA ISLI lJN SANTA ANA "li11 INTlll:toll OICOl:ATIH• •nl bat • bn-. ---te fenoed N.esa. $20 me. Broker __ -_,,y_H:~!fp_ list SANTA A.HA HllGHJf .... IHCOMI TAX lftt .._. r•••• "'00 IRI· fJff 1'_UITtft ...,... Jl:Oft._OrM~lc, __ ,,,.,_~~-_patio__.._pJusb ]'IDUJCl.pilnc • l>IZ-4-422 * City Center Block * Risk c•pit1I Av1il sr5.ooo/ttoo,tm Bl.ACK beaded coin JHJnll! n)nlaining rinp. c .ri.t . area. Re"·11rd M6-38U ?.tr s . f>'Mtf'r '.t ' •ALtOA 1sLAHD ,us cc4sT•L •1" lll:ONlflto --l1'J ---brick ~B=Q'S:-Jiiii-beil:" e GARAGE IZ:i mo. f9tli & =]8~134 Sci: Ft--€cmmttclal-MUNTIHOTOH elAC.N ,... 1.ACJUHA l •ACH 416 IH~l.ILATIHO '"' I Lido 10091 Le Rd HUNTIHOTON H .. .lllOU• u .. LAGUNA NICUtL .,., 1MIUllAHCE •n• 5 ed pools • lanal Sa.nta Ana, Costa Mesa. n area. 0 a -~-1 SL\.\tESE,--Fem, -<:O<lO- Prefcr manufacturing & ac· ears I ta il, "'hi I body. $20 live particlpatiGn. \Vrile P.O. REWARD! 546-0037. -i:- irouNTAIN VAU.l'Y 141, M1ss10H v1s'o 41111 1HvEsT1GATIHG. 09fttt1.,. ''" JlOI So. Bristol St. 642-42S9. Spendable & tax shelt'r • !I.al. aucM ,.,. SAN CLEMeHTt' •111 'ANITOlllAL ''" 15'. R t Afikinc SX Gross IUNl•T ••ACM loffl SAN 'UAH UP'ISTllAMO •n.s JEWELl:Y ltl!,Allt. 11c. .-('ii Ml. N. of So, Coa...-t Plua) LARGE enek>!ted garqe for · · e urn. Box 10398, Santa Ana, 927ll. l 'w"'sr=:'c..=,m=,.,-,s~h~,~.~.~.~,,,.,,·,1 £ OAltolN GltoVE 141s CAl"ISTllAHG aeAcH •1• UHDSCA,.tNo u11 Sent• Ane CM Realooomics Corp: male. hlk &. tan. vie <Asta &42-8075. l LONI ••ACM 15*' tr•N• ~DINT •r• t.OCl(SM1TH '"' PHO_N_ e ·. 557-1200 •Cal!Magl ""~~ ~!~ K-~1art. . Commercial Bkr. 675-61001---~~~-~-~ LAKIWOOO IJM Tllll"LE X, .ic. ... MAID Slll:VIC:E ··-··-·.,'-·• ilJJ ~ ......... ...,,,. BEC0l\1E Self employed & Oll:ANGI COUNTY , ... COHOCMINIUM ·-MASONIT. lll!Ck 11• • STORE Bldg for aale "·ith a small investmenL , FEl\I b\k mixed tenier, So. j: OUT oir COUNTY ,.., HOTELf' ....... ·-··-··---· 4'll MOVING & STORAGI! ..... REAL ESYATE 686-698 \V. 19th St. Bethel Grow with Union Oil Co_ in STANTON lUI ~ l"AIMTINCJ, S'9111 61Q ~-~~~~ _ B __ ._._c_h ___ s_7_05 enera TC'lvers comer. 548-1768 &&I, the HU n l j n g IC n Bch '''' Apts. Unfurnished ,. ... ,1cs "'" _ -~---" •- OUT o• STAT£ '''' R"NTALS ,.AIMTING, ,.,.,..,.,nein• iue 5 G I . Lagun11 .. '"RCf'fer''. NG col-1. lar. R1rd. 586-0761 or 4!J9.3513 " =~~~~N~~~: '"' GtNEllAL Hit •HOTOCllA,.MT "'' . 1 Bdrn1, liv rm, bath & kitch· Income ProD1rty 6000 }"OR LEASE: Nexl to Hun-area. High prout "" group SANTA ANA ,,,. CCSTA MESA JI .. l'LASTr••H .. •ttch, ..... ,... I lrl tington Harbour, 3200 Ml· IL benelits. Call Paul Lambach SANTA AJ\IA HGTS Ml!SA Vl!l:OE .,,, ~LUMllllfG "" en w stove&. re c. Adul ts 2 CN> ..... days 213/116()...6.).11, eves Oll:ANG5 . ::;: NIWl"Oll:T •••cH SMI ,.l!T GllOOMIN• .,.. onl y, No pets. $160. SCRAM-LETS -=''~';~=~;-==· ===== Female black Lab w/collar & ii 1;1gs. lf.B. "Cindy" Reward. .. fUITIN 11 .. HEWl"OIT Nl tOMTS S211 =~:·::~c:l'IN• :\~ J\JARSHALL & ROPP -1-='=lJ=/;'4~4-3994~::,C·~---~ 84fi..9-lol6 :• . 11101:TH TVSTIN t'4s NIWPOll:T sNc•ES sm l"UM,. si•vlc:I ,,,. I 211 Ocean_ La'"•na Beach fndustrlil Rent1J 6090 UNION Oil Company has GREEN PlllTOt \V I yellow ANAHllM 11M WESTCLll'F !•.11 •ooFING •'• . .~ ANSWERS ---·~·· ·--available a high-volume head, 14". Jlunt. Beach ULYlll:AOO CANYCN 1ffJ UMIYl!ISITT ~All.: 5211 l.ADIC, .. , .. ,,., Ile. ,,,. 4!).t..1021 ' M-1 SHOPS area. Call 842-2696 HAVASU LAKE 1•1s 11v1NE s1• ••Moo•L•No ,. llll"Alll 6140 service .slation located in I========== I LAGUNA HILLS ,, .. IACK IAY 52 .. ll:ll:MOOILIHO. ll:rttHI NI ,,. OCEAN VIEW • ·Lrij: CGsta Mesa nr 16th " Po-prime ~a of Qlsla. Mesa. LAGUNA !'fACH 11°' KAST ILU"" 1111 SQI..,. Illa'"" "'' Bachelor, 1 & 2 BR apts. Aspect -Raven -Event -mona. 1350 to 2100 .,. ft. 3 1~ " P1r1onels 6405 UGUH• HtGUl!l. 1111 co11:GNA DEL MAR sH• SIWlNO '"' Memoir-NOSE or a MAN R.. We cffer h "'"'st pro .. t MISllCN VllJO 17'1 OALOOA I HI s•WINO MACHIN• •••AlllS m l Furn or unfurn..Crpts, drpa, p ha II e~ power & heat. potentials, fines t grou p . s•H CLIMIMTI! 1111 •AY isuHos sm s••T1c TMIU. s.ww., •tr. '~ F bltns, patios, w a I k i n C A weddlnir ts a ceremony 645-0991, eve11: 6fi.6809. benefits, paid management ' SAN 'UAN CA,.ISTllAMO 172S LIDO ISLI SUI TAILOltlNG '"' distance to tO\\TI. 100 Oill 'A·here II. ring b: plact'd en the I""""""""'"'"-==-:--= CA~llTltAHO aEACM 17>0 HUNTINGTON ll'•C" 540I rll.MITI CCNT•01. ffn f f and l\f-1 SPACE w/atrlces, lge training plus much .more. OANA l'CIHT 1141 Jl'OUNTAIH VAL LIV JOI TILL c ... ntk ltM Dr .• Lag. Bch. 494-S49S Inger G a "'Oman rear door. 1250' & 2600'. U40 Call Don Ko 11 s at CICIANSIOI IJH ••LIO• ISLAND SHS TILi. "'"""" • ..WrtM '"' through the NOSE of a ?.1AN. 7141772-«63. SAN DllOO tns SEAL •••CH MH Tl:IE Sl•VICE ,,.. ADULTS ONLY Logan St, C.1'1. 646-0681 213/860-&)31 or * FULLY LICENSED + Renowned Hindu Spilituallat 5 Advice en all matters. •1v1•s101 COUNTY , .. LON• llt:ACH ''" TILIVISIDN, • ._.,., lie. ''1.1 Unfurn, studio $175 util. Incl. DELUXE e RESTAURANT, Dan a Hous1s TO 11 MOV•D ,,.. OIAHGf: couNTT s111 u,.Hot.ST1:11:Y "" ,21 furn studios at $IL util FOURPLEXES NEW bldg .. 1368 to 2300 Jt, DU,LIX•I •o• SA\,~ 1t11 WESTMINITEll Sl11 WINOOW CLIEANINO --~. "" incl. Ph coll. D~er 213: (Qn)y 2 left) early morn or 496-0012 eves, ... ,. .... TNllNTS 1'011 SAL• 1'11 MIOWAY CITY "" 437-62().1. J Bednn owneni unit plus lease. Sullivan, 548-2176 Love. Marriage, Business Readings gl\'en 7 days a week, 9 AM • 9 PM 312 N. El Camino Real, San Clemente, .· ., CONDOMINIUM ,.,, OARDIEM 011ov1 u1t Wl!LDHIO '"s I Nr Baker &. Fairview, 1 yr Point. l\1ust sell! 494-8182 RENTAL.. ~~~! ::: "11t;HTS ~: JOBS & EMPLOYMENT V:2 BLK TO BEACH I C3J 2 bedrm renlal!! in choice FOR lsc • 5300 sq. ft . prime r.1EAT J\lrkt & DELI. Next ~ TUSTIN J,.. ,o. WANTID, MM ,... N rt Be h I wa r e h s e ipAce·all/pa.rt. to Huntington Harbour. 3200 Hou ... Furn.,.h-..1 COASTAL ,,.. Joa WAMTl!D, w-mt From $160. New 1 & 2 Br. area, fll e,1wo"°s1s -'0o'. n-lrvl-,.. Mr B··"-~ sq. fl .. 213:592-2444. ~ LACUNA at:ACM 5Jlt Joa w•.HTEt>. PooL. 2175 s. c.c&st H....... come.,., WU wn ...... ........ . W l&IU 1===""====== LACJUHA NI OUE L 11tl MfiN & WDMIH . 1'H -_, '$7.S ODQ• • 546-8001 ~~·-""~'~',.'"'·'"·~-~~"~-1 ., Single • \Vldowed • Divorced GINl•,IL laNTALS TO SHAii• COSTA MISA 2tlJ S .. .H CLllMENTE SJll JO• .... ,. ....... ,toN "°' PERRON 642-1771 Sl\1. SHOP OR STORAGE Money to Loan Men&Women MIU. DIL MAit MllA YlltOI! COLLIGI .. AltK NIWttOltT II.I.CH NIWl'OltT HOTS. NIWPOllT IHOltlS IAYlltOlllS tt11 MISSIOH vi1Jo Jne scHCDLs & 1NsT•UCT1cM JMlll E 499-3929 or 497-1630 • :i: ~:=ifi'::,,g•:~;:"o ~~~ ;~~,~~~NOISE FOR n. · N~~. ~m 11~f~ :~i11wlth ==========I 1~ ~s.r::IM*O: ,11, ~:~t::.1~~ !!: SALE AND TRADE PftACE REALTY 494--970-1 Bu1lne11 R1nt1I '860 . f 2 ti• COHDCMINtUM ''" iru•N•TUll:I .... • }'OR U:ase-F1reproo 1tory 111• lllt:NTALS WANTlt:D '"' oirirlCI irut1NITU•1 llH Rentlll Winted 5990 HARBOR BLVD front. 19x3i Com'I hld1-l\fl, 3000 sq. ft. 1st TD Loan 8% INTEREsr Everyone's looking fer the right one. \Ve have a way. ·! 547-6667 24 hr. record. Sc call Us & begin to llw! ., DOVlll SM.OltU WISTCl ll'I' UNIVlllSITY l'AltlC lllVINI 1111 l:OOM • IOAllD st•• ••••• IOUIPMINT 'n lT Bl d C'I S200 mo •ar"• I====""'====== m7 YOUNG Worki"• <o "ple v • "". · Y MOTELS, Tl:A ll.111 COUltTS S"J CAll'I:, l:aSTAUlf,.HT .. It •-. .. I coo ~• tnt •ocMS FO• 1t1111T m s 0Fir1c1 1ciu1•M1NT ••1 D w/restroom. ruo Harbor in NB 96~ eves., 2nd TD Loan * MASSAGE * ·: IACIC IAY IA.IT ILUl'I' 'El ''"' nit GUEST HOM•S .... IAll llOUl~MENT MIJ desires: 2 Sr unlurn apt or.,,.·-·~"~-=~,,_=·~~·=,,--;:= Lots 6100 nn"• MISC. ltl!NTAl.I lttt MOUSl"OLO OCKIOS .. 21 d bl . .., UNITS ~--1 ... ,_ ta I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, Lt: .,, house, crpts. rps, Urus, c.u s1 ....,s 11 n .. RE"AL ESTATE, :~~fT•u:: AUCTION etu fncd yard, pvt garage, Ap-r.tesa. 2 BR. r.ach, Nice 22 OO ;~~ Gener1I •"•t.1.t.Hc11 •1• prox. $1 35-llSO mo. Have 2 pool. Good rental area. ~ Acre $ ,5 Trrms baled en eqnlty. 642·2171 545-0611 Serving Harbol area 21 yrs. Settler Mortgege Co. SAUN,\ • WHIRLPOOL ·~ Lovely girls. Plush facilities. J Open 7 days, noon-midnight. 2930 \V. Cea.st Hwy., Newport :· tltYIHI TlltllACI COllOHA DEL MAI IALIOA IAY ISLANDS LI DO llLE IALIOA ISLIMO HUNTINOTOM l lACH l'OUNTAIN YALUV llAL II.I.CH D"l!!'llTY '* .. ,.TIOUIS 1111 p "d E h 21(J INc,••,•,,•,· ••••• TY ttSt Sl:WIHG MACHINll 111t l'llll .\ loy poodle, 646-466:i yrllml xc ancors. ;~ ;~ •. \~E• •At11(S ..SJ MUSICAL INSTll.IMIHf 11U aft 6 & weekends. Costa 675-8800. Level, completely fenced, '"' •USIHISS RENTAL .... ,IAHC!i & OllGAHS llll 6 Mesa Or' liuntington Beach ==========I room for 10 unit~. ~-m1 Olfll'ICE lll NTAL .. 71 llAOIO tMI ?DJ IHDUSTlltAL ,.110,.11TY "" r1L1vrs10N tte area. Office Rentel 6070 dGwn, owner wiU carry b-1- , ... COMMlllCIAL "" Hl·l'I & STl!ll:IO "" DAILY Pl' --porl•r --· ance at 7%% •. llHTAl. .... T ... ,.. llCGllDIRI '"' I.All .... AllU MEDfCAL DENTAL . :~ L':,~~STlllAL • 1, .. tAMlllAI a 1au1l"MINT tMt wife want to rent or lease .. PERRON 642·1771 UM t1•HCHIS 4™ HOl•Y sul'l'LIM ... •niaU furnished or unf\lrl}-Suites avail. Br.st location. !!!!!"!"~~~~~!!!!" .. " 4171 ,,.Ol:TIH• OOODI llSlt XI "'~' '!od I II 336 E. 17th Street LOANS $50,000 & Up. Any Real Estate or Buslne!s. Mr. Dollum 1303) 922-230a no collect calls. Beach. 5'18-3608 PALM REAOINGS Cards & Sand Readirigs Help in All Mattmi 10 AM·lO PM, 7 days 213 • 697-9272 La H:bra F'ULLY LICENSED . l l • LONe I I.I.CH OltAHOI COUNTY 1,1.NTA AHA #fSTMIMITll MIDWAY CITY IAWTA ANA HlleHTI COASTAL ::; ~==A:~llMOll:I' ,,., MISCELLAHl!OUS .... yen er other 0 .C. canyon itieir. Immediately available. tG bulld Apl's. Mort111e1, Trust DHd1 '"' CITIUS CJllOVIS ''" llMDCULAllS. SCOl'll •»• 4 i~hed house in Laguna Can-nt V'U" ng. n ern ae • • WANTED-LUrS T'1• 1:rso11T ,..O,llllTT •115 M11C. WANTID Mtl .... .,A~ rn..... BAYSHORE CENTER CASH "" OllANGI! co. l"ltOrl!llTV 1,., MACHIHl!ll:Y, l tc. ,,.. area by December. ~v Do D N" a .. h SEASONED ,, .. OUT DI' STAT• ,.11 1 0:· ,,.. ~~:11•::. :;: rlays, 536-1195 t'!vts. 601 vcr r., Pl uo.:ac Write details to: Daily Pilot 634S ALCOl-tOLICS Anonymoug , Phone 542-7217 er write ID ' P.O. Box 1233 Costa Mesa. LAGUNA •IAC" l.&OUNA NleUIL MISSION VllJO SAM CLIMJNTll I~ 'UAN CAl"llTll:ANO CAl"ISTIAHO alACH DANA POINT lt!VlllllDI COUNTY VACATION ll:IHTAl.S COHOOMINIUM OU,.LIXll •Ull:Jt. t1ft MOUNTAIN .. 01111 ' •. •,:•, aun.DINO MATlll:IALI .... WA .. """'D am. bachelor or 1 ,_ .... 0 Box r.1.nw, 2211 w. Balboa $10.000 hit TD, bal $3.5,000, ,,., SUIO!lllSION LAND ''' "" ,, • ..,. • « ,_" ""~ NB 9% all due 10 )'n. on view 21• lll!AL rlTATI JlllVICI 1211 SW 2 br apt reUred gent. Don't "' -"· . . estate l&nd, San Juan Ca~ t 71• t1.e. 1:11:cH•Moi !!!! PETS and LIVESTOCK .sm~: drink, no pets. JS5 WI'; i L& * $16,ISO * 1·11rano_ ~"''• Dl"""''nt Bkr. JMJ R. t:. WANTID .l"ITS. GINll:AL -. ~ 11 ""v" _ Announc•ments 6410 CllURCH Choir sinij:era n~dcd. Opportunity tor liOloi~I. 644-123.> !: BUSINE5~ •nd CATI ..,. max. 673--0803. E Fantastic buy & terms! 49l-J706 or 494--8100 tHf FifilANCIAL ooos .u , Single student (music ma.)or) DESK SPAC Top Portallna Laguna Loe. ANNOUNCEMENTS "'" •usiHtss w.t.NTIO ,,. HD•1•1 me wants l br furn hse er insul. 305 No. El Camino Reil PLACE REAL1Y 494.9704 "" ,,.,,, •• ,,, _ ... _ •Jlt LtVUTOCk .. S Cl t and NOTICES •11 "' ,,.,... •NIA •·1•'ING • ated apt In Cd~f to CM area. an •m•n e THE SUN NEVER SETS on. -;.;::_:c:.:.:.:.o~c:._---•us1N11ss ol"l"Ol:TUNtYlllS .,.. CALIFO~ -.; .--Cemetery Lots 6411 INVESTMENT WANTID tJU HUlllll:llS .. 11 Call cc llect 213/691-5228 492-f.t20 Pllct Clusifitd Found (Free Ads) MONEY TO LDf,Jll '"' SWtMMIHO IP'OOU .... 5 6400 RENTALS l"E"llSClllAL l.O•NS •m P'ATIOS rtll ,.W~LllY LOAMS &lit •WNINOS Im HouMS Unfurnished coLLATEl:AL LOAMS .,,, v...cATIClNs m11 ltl•L ISTATe LeANI UW •IHll:AL *' MOl:TOAOllS, TrWll Clltf1 ''4) TRANSPORTATION COSTA MllA llM MONIY WAHTll> •Ut aoATS a YACHTS '"' MISA oa1. MA• J,•,•,•, ANNOUNCEMENTS SAILIOATI .... 6 MllSA YlllOt l"OWlll: CllUISllS "" COLLIGE ,.Alll ,','"u ind NOTICES Sl"llO-IM"• 1o•n "• NIWP'D•T IEACH .. Alll i4lt •DAT Tll:AILl•s ·~n •','w"',0oo,TT ,•.G0T001. S n,,!! r:~o ( 1" ... , IO~T MAIN'TINANCI *,..' •• ~r..S ._ .OAT LAVNCHlfll• --1~ ...... ·~ ...... ~.~.~.7,----!!'~ •• -1 .l .. T"S I Mii tOAT SLll", MOO•tNe NM WISTCLl"F ... ,, •UNE•ALS t41J eo.tT SeltVIC.11 .. 7 UHIVllll:llTY ••llK J' ,.AIO oalTUAltT MU IOAT l:ENTAL5 ..,, 1llVINI 12# l•ICTO• ••I• aOAT CHA•Tll: "11 IACll aAT tttt l'UfrlEltAL O I flllHIHO eO-"TI .... IA,JT ILUl'P'-no "LO•ISTS :~! ao.t.T MOVl~O "41 II TIN IN• CAIO 01' TMANltt lOAT ITOllAO• ,... '.vi •• TEltllACI >t'9 IN MIMOll:IAM toflf IOOTI WAMTIQ -...,. Cl'MITfllY LOtl .. 11 - co•ONA OIL M.lill ;;;; C.l:MfTll:T Clt'f'JITS Mlt !L~~=~ .. ~ISICNS ~= 8 IALOOA JJSI CllfMATOatlll ...,,_ MOM• "" IAY Ill.AMOS ,., MtMo•••L JIA•lt"S Ull MOiile s LIDO llLI ~ MOTOlt HOMll "11 IALeu llu.HI> J1'f -AUCTIONS --MIJ -.1CTCtlS ~ ""' NeWflOl:T WIST Jill AVIATION SlllVICa ••» l'LICTltlC u•t nte 1UNTINGTON •••C." -Mft !~v:ltL•frlS,.OllT•TtoM ..... MINI •1x1t .. " nn "".Tl.-........ MOTO•CYCLll nM "NT•~;"V'ALLI V J'1 I AUTO TltAHl~llT.lTIOlll _.., MO'Yo•~CaDtl!l:S ll•L ••ACM Jt!I Ll:OAL NDTIC•S '4M AUTO s11:v1ca:s. f'Alln ::1~········"! ~:::-.".~-re r.: S'E1'~~iCE DIRECTORY" TAltUA~~.~~~ ... ~l~OUI~. = Olt~·· co\,ltfn Mil ACCOUHTllll• "" Tl:AILlt:l:S. V11l1Tf , .. SAfllTA ANA Mlt AN$"1111'et11NO SllVICI 4MS TltUCttS ... w•STM llllTU MU A~"ll .. lffl ll:t .. a1•1o. _.,.. ''11 Jl'.,.I tSll MIOWA'f' CttY Mii .. 111'11.Allt"• .... C.lM,.11:1 ft'll IAlllTa AMA MllOKT1 il)ll AS,.H •LT, 0111 .Stf CAMJlllt ••NTAU tm CD ... TaL net AltCHtTICTUltAI. tlltVICI ilJ:I DUHi •UHIU tlll LA•Wf!IA OIACll-. Jiii AUID llf".llll) MM IMJIOITtO •\lfOI ... L.lOUN,\ flil lCJUl l m1 AUTO, SMI It" .. , .... llf:. ''"' lf'D•T CAltS flllt MllltoN Vl•JO ,,. ~ .. arurt l"G •'" ANTIOUes. CLASSICS ,.,. 111111 CLIMlllllTf' Jr1f .OAT MAINTIN•lfC.I 1SSt •ACI CA•S, ROOS 14n •Afll ~VAN CA,ISTll&ND l1U lllCI(. MASOl'lllY, IT&. • •stt AUTO IVINTS Ml ;,1 , 1(111 ............ ,.. JUf IUllNllS s·111:v1ta1 .,.,, &UTOS W&MT-•• '"' ., .. N ... l"OtHT JI-aun.oeas .,,. HIW CAlll ... .,..,,.DOMINl\IM Jh. CATllllN• •••••••·-~-·••• till '.UTO l.IA11H• "It tU,\IJl•S Ufll'U*N. "'9 t .-•1H•1/rlll.lklNO .wt '1111> CAaS 1M SAYB £ASH? • • KEYS Found on beach vie. Island Ir Balboa. Inquift at front couuter, Daily Pilot, 2211 Ba'boa, N.~. FOUND: set of key11 on th(' jetty al Coronii dcl !\tar. tdentify 644-4070 aft 5:00 546--0747. S1crlfic1! 4 ~nlell!:ry loll, BlUe Spruce section, Ha1'bor Rest Memor- ial Park, Call 548-3075 SERVICE OIRECTORY e LOVING Care in my shaggy female doc vie 1 ~=~~~------r lAPai: Rd, Laiuna Hills. RELIABLE mother wants to 830-7029. babysit. Bcthind \Voodland IN Algcnqu in, 1-1.ll., blond Sehl. 548-3988. male poodle. diamond stone \VILL b&bysll my c .r.t. homit collar, 846-4600. by hr., day er wk. Call S.'tALL fa1vn co la red 1 ,,6~'6:-62=~1~'·~=~~-,,.~~ 01lhUAhW\ vtc:. Hunt1n1ton MOTitER will babysit, Vk: Cente.r. Owner Identity aex Ncwl1nd &. Wamer. HB. &12-456-1. • 847.(}J.'>J nnytime * BLK and wbt rabbit in Back Af'TER schOol care; nl)' B&y. Sunday night. home, College Park. nr 5 ~ school bus 1top. ~.lfi9:i Bl.ACK male cat found Jn. CHILO CARE \'IC of Springdale A Warntt, Paularino Sehl Aftt H.8. 84Z-li63. _.. 5"&W212 * SET of ~. Vie. ~llmar CHILD care. my home. .t. (In t.ucilles' C .~I . Fenced p l•y e r ee . ~$.-2832 uk for Llnda. Re11K1neble. &fG..~ You don't nttd A gun to BABYSITTING in my home. • Draw F'aat whtt:n )OU place Fe.nct!d yard &. RtfC!f'Cllt'ta . 1n td_tn 1he .OAl.L.'X' P.u..oT c.:-.1. a~a. ~ -- . ' 14 ~V PI LOT . , Tutodi1, S.PI_, 2!, 1910 . .4lililliiiiiiiiiiiliilll• .. !l@iiliilll!ll•lli!~-~~SiiEJVllVICI DlltlCTORY SlllVICI DlRICTORY JOIS & !MPLOYMINT JOBS & IMPLOYMENT a * * * * G;;.,,,.._. ---P•lntlrit, Joloo Mon, Wom. 7100 :;;;,·-Miln, Wom. l lto JOBS & EM,LOYMENT JOBS & EMPLO'J'.~ I~~~~ IMP~OY~ Jobi Mon, Wom. 7100 Jobo Mon, Wom! 7100 Jo~n. w-. 7100 P•porho"ll"I 6l50 _ • AL'S GAll0£Nl1'4G HOUSES · ABLE Lad)> lo c1re for new b Gardeninc A ARWI la1'4. ' ~. b 0' l • • baby, mothl>.r-~• home. 10 --· Whoddyo wont? wn•aav• Gil? SPECIAL ~LASS1'1CATION FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Spoc)•l R•to 5 L inel'-5 times -S bucks ltU\.lt -A.D MUIT IHCl.UDI: • 1-Wfltf '" ..... .. ...... ,_...... .,..., ..... ill ,,.,., ~YOtJllt ..... _.,., HI-4-S lillft ef 81fffFTIMftl,. ~OTI INO •Oft SAi.i -TllAOll ON\.YI ~MrriceacaH fla1polea, anytln1 days in Oct. C'lva-ln, ic-.1.-Nftoport CdM-C:O.. C\'fr'Ythlna reuo n ll lJ I y ,,, ? 26.lt ----. • "::F~--paln~.----nr--rre.r-estlml:1ie · t.t Mna.--J>om-4~~•• 64M'r~. -,,ccro-0ep·t drlr typtsr.10 WostdlH, No '"~~ key add. elec type\\'riter. JAPANESE Gardener, *WALLPAPER* A.it ~ Apply 1741 monthly rate, Gen. cl~nup. 'Vhen )1lU call "Mac" Plaeorntia, Ci\t 1·3:30 =bl" rre. • • 1 · 543-1444 646-Jm e And•nt EXP. Japanese Cardener PROFESSIONAL P~nters • ... ?dariner Ge t II ' Qua.lily matertala • l!--C eanup, Hau na.tieea. v.'Ol'kma'nshtp:-Bc!:a"ch~t$:'"1-----------I ?i1a1nt. yard 64&-0619 535--l050 Now taking applicaliona for EXP. -Japanese Gardener. LO\VEsr Prjces! Highe~t part time, nl&ht ahlft • Ce:n, cleanup. Hauling trees. QI 111 , A ts res'! &. , .:,,"::';;;'•.::t..:.•::•"'~646--06::.:..='9::.. __ 1 1 • ~,· ..! '.,.., * Dishwashers * 1• comm . ~ e1• cxper. Gardening: Land cleanuPfl, 64G-48T1 or 841-'1128. sprnklr syil, ro(O..cement FALL 30 day special! Inter. APPLY IN PERSON l\'Ork. C.D. Yancey, 646-5860 . &: Exler painting. Free est. 2607 \V. Coast. Hwy., N.B. JAPANESE Garden in r LocaJ ref's. Llc'd &: Ins. Assistant To Pl•ce Your Trader's P•redlso Ad. Serv)ce. Neat y.·ork. Ckllnup Call Chuck, M:>-0809. .. LOOK PHONE 642~71 yd. ma,;ot. 968-2303 * PAPERHANGER * * * \\'ill trade % BM BA IJome Lovely clear air fur-retire-R01'CYI'lWNG, T'rl!fos and Recognized Authority y.·/frplc, drp11, \V/\V. Rent.. mentor wknds in hi.desert shrubs removed, new lawM. Prior Jmtructor 646.2449 • AT • GENERAL~c;;tFiCE_. ---SEW'"G. rowrr maehlne ./ D t: NT-A L RECEP· r...... · DI ·-·~ Fil ~fAN to usial mr ol local u• uvuu 1YP111.1. c .. I"' .... .,., • openton, £\':per, ~ ~. TIONISJ'. Exp requln!d. tng, Beach atta, Call Lor-appl\llJICe •tore. Neat •P. steady i\·ork. 111\'lmw'f:ar. ~1on lhru ~'rl. Age 23-45. a.i~;-~2710 \Vtsldltf Pt:r-Pf'&fl.JIC1!.. •l96-Zl83 ~tr ' 4001 "F" Birch. NB. Nt Call 6TJ..Zi6% lot-interview. -,onneJ·.a-ncy, 200 "'eatclltJ \Vr!Pt §.JO am onl)I. "" --, 1 ·~-o.c:-A""""· •PP ·~ Dr., N.B. A.ECJIANJC-E.xp!d, O\\.Tid-'s=b_;.;;;,o,,;._ __ ~~-1 DISH\VASHER • •m GEN'L OFFICE toob. Xlnt opp'ty for riPit U 1t1tute rt1taurant in CdM. 6 n\gh1s, man. Rlchfield, 19th k Custocfians 5 pm-1 am. Call 613-7722. 2 Wotk In be:Ouw new N.B. Newport, Cl\J. pm-3 pm ortic·e. Xln't co. 114,.e aome l\tEDICAL ASSISTANT $3.107 per hour *.. DIS 1-1 WASH &R • kno\vledge of Jire I; casua.l-E>c~enced in X-ray1, In· 1 Graveyard 11hlll. Apply in t;· rating, Call Miss Betty, jectlons, blood work. set-ups FOUNTAIN VALLEY w.mn. 'Dlc....Colla&e Coffee 5.51-6122. Abigail Abbot Per. & EKG's, 847-2547 SCHOOL DISTRICT Shop 562 W. 19th St, C.M.-aonnel Aiency, 230 w. Wat" MEDICAL RECE·PT:-REQUIRE!\tENTS: Ability to DIVERS ner. Suitt 2ll, Santa. Ana. $400 perforn1 hea''Y physical !11.· •• · GENERAL Cl•rk 10 •·ork In Nk:e N.B. olc'11, pleasant bor: 11vailabll" fl)r day or a men & ~·omen to train to /4 h be Abalone dlVU'S . l\lmt Production Conlrol Dept. Re. 1Yorklng <-'Ond, Need expcr. night shill 18·hr day · r d Cail l\flss E!i.zabclh, 557-6122. night!. h11.vc good hC'alth, not afraid quh-ements: 11.S. ara ., I)'~· Abia;ail A)>bot Personnel f'OR APPOINTMENT arwt e);· of hard 1-.·ork. ~ sati~c-Ing 50-60 wpm, 10 key add. Agency, 230 \V. \Varner, am information. call i\1rs. torally completin(: training mach & ditto mach. Good 5 . 211 Sa A \\'Ol'kman at '714) 842-66.11, wW be hired to Y.'Ol'k on our itarting salary + lrin;e uite · nta na. ' S ..,...... 2 to 4:30 P.i\f. boats Y.ith high pay, Inter-benefits. Call for interview lt10Kl'S I LAND R~1AU. vlc11•s \\led, Thurs & Fri, 10 4.92-1153 Mrs. Gonzales. RANT, taking applications STATIONERY C I e: r k. .0 am to 7 pm, Holiday Inn, for \\'aitresses, ?.Ion thru F'ri, Hrs., S da.y11. no eves. Apply 31JT \V. Chapman Ave, Or· bchYn, 2 P i\t & 4 Pi\1, 1400 in person. Costa Pt1esa ~ta- ange. Palisades Rd., C.M. Please Uoncrs. 270 E. 17th St .. C.i\!. ed $25()..L.B. For '59/'10 Cad. are!-. Home & 6 acres. ~ eat, 5'18-l092. 1\lcAdams Painting Serv. or Old's. $30,000 value. Trade for lo-CLEAN UP SPECIALISf Inter.&: Exler. Special rates * THIS * ** DIVERS** ~T.>48 cal property, 4944746 or New fence &. repair. odd on ~ta 646-36() 4:> ?.tEN . Train lo be aha.lo~ GRANTS ask for t.1arion K~all. STEAKHOUSE \VAITRESS SURPLUS oJ MOTEL MAID E.'P'" Only. "M"d for . -NE\V ORPHANAG E HAVE · 4 BR 2,1 ba 199-1331. jobs. Reas. 548-6955 ' ., . b . full & divers. Musi have good rnce , , • YOU SUPPLY THE PAJNT ...,, JO _ o~n1ng1, · part borne. leased til June. Eq. • : Trade $10.000 equity in view LAWN C.4..RE $10 i>er Average Room time, flexible hours. No exp. health &: willing to \VOrl<. •• pl 1 p H 'gh f r~-••tislactori:ty rompl•I· $u,IXXI. \Vant du ex, smlr. ot.'l, anorama e1 ts or }"'REE ESTL,tATES F?tt Ell. • 5a7-8638 nee. Age lS.~. \Ve train. •ovae"'" "-"-· b · Id I t deed wM.t f aJ Call v~ 84! "'......, ing training, will be hired TO 1~ or su m1t yoUr ea, nLS s or o v · "'T" "°"'° PAINTING_ Ext.-lnt. 18 ..,,... Start today. O•..:...r/bkr, 540-3862 ue ! e1•-13 50 -r h~ \.\'Ork on our boats. Inter-·~ Gardenlt1"" Serv. By exper. Ins. Lie. 1'ree •sl. " 1·~ '· • 7 d k ~2 Pat 83().6(MO • G VH!IVS ays a Y.'tt at &<1 Ja""""K American. A-·st. Ceili"'"', 968-9126. Call 95&-2870 t.1r. rant ..-·~ .... ....,.. .... ~ Hawaii St., \\'ilm ington, ~ Actu, 3J htt & clear. Now Interviewing Part or lull tin1c. REsrAURANT. e t.aruna Call 4,94-9436_ Beach CaJI betwn. U PM, NEED 2 GIRLS 494-Ziilo • STUDENT, live-in mothers helper. 3 sch! age childm 545-4873 alt 6 , ioned mobile honle park. 1 l>U. new Perris Dam & rec. lake, Exchange 32% int for u.nil.'i. A.gent 675-6060. 2\!i Acres, view rancho, un. 847-2944 A1TENTION HOUSE\VIVES Calif. . de'?nd utll, min from Riv. Complete Y•rd C•rel Pl•sterlng, P•fch, i\tacOonald's ol CM al 31·11 r.rside, $13,500 W/$10.000 eq. JIM 5404837 Repilir "80 };arbor Blvd. is no1v hiring DISHWASHER • Part time 'J'l•adc FUR income, TD's or y.·omen lo work bctivn the student to \\'Ork afternoons ?!? 0\vner. bk:r 547-6469. ;.,.: l •-I 6611-* PATCH PLASTERING. nrs of t0:30 AM to 2 PM. &: eveninp. InquiI'f!: THE e Telephone Answerer • C•shier Tr•inee Young lady, expcriencro preferttd but not neces- sary, Apply in person hr.· twn. 3.5 pm. Ask for !\like Grant. Telephone &. Lite office \\"Ork. Good pay, Contact l\1r. Ken- nedy bcL 10 Ai\! & 3 Pl\f 1489 E, 'Varner, Santa Ana NURSING: RN Ol' LVN, ll-7:J0 shift, relief. *SYSTEMS ANALYST $856 lo $1;094 per nto. Mil\.: yrs full time paid e>.-per, in electronic~. data p1'0CCssit11 or rtlated field. File appli- cation by Sept. 28, 5 o'clock Pi\1 Personnel Dept., Room 511. 7 Unit f.1f'd. 1.ted • Dental Cntr in North HB. $28,000 per )T inc, Trade $71,000 eq. for new or late J.6 unit, \\•/ O\\'l'lel'S apt. 846-3221 Commercial &. Income prop.. ~rty 1'10wntown Laguflll. Trade for Recreational 01· Commercial proper!)'. • * 4!U-1652 ** BOAT: Jr 'T'win eng, auto/ pilot, radio/ph, &. 1.fORE Top cond. Incl: Offshore Balboa mooring. Trade for Inc-boat 7! 673-2431. 4M·2457 ""'ner• -rv Ct• JI F ti t Id l l I """' tlEAD ..SAGEL, 30;) i\1arine, ,69 Cpe de Ville, magnifi. A lypcs. ree es ma cs ea or v .. on1en \V sc Balboa Island cent Ork cordoban. match LOWEST RATES Call 54Q...682j age chiltlL"en. Starting pay $l.6,j ~r hr. 5'1~99-13 DRAPERY 1'tFG, exper. vin)'I top, stereo, plush in. I-lot water servi<."es and Plumbt'n .1.-tabler &: trainee al Beach 17j(I NE\YPORT BLVD. COST A t.IF..5A SUPERVISOR. n N or LVN, 11-1:30 shift. Apply: Park Lido Con- valescent Ce-nter, '166 Flagship Rd ., N.B. 6·12-8044 • CITY or COSTA l\1£SA • !er loaded! FUR income, sprinkler syslems installed I -7¥ AUT0:\10BILE l\1ECHANIC, TD" """ "'·176469 full time w/cllis.~ A sn10"• Drapery 900 \V. 17th St., . Th ;;:--1 s, o~ ·.l ··.; · &. rtpaired. Cheapest rates HOJ\I' REPAIRS Cl\'f. 6~6-3909. HAIR Stylist e g,.:au Y Nursing 77 Fair Dr. license It. o"·o_ tools. Good Parlour6.>:>\V.19th St, C.~1. EXPER AIDE 7 3 30 17t4f 864-j,J;)() Granada Hilln 2 ~ty ~w in the county. F1-ee quota· Plwnbing.ele.:trd:al. $1.50 Hr. 1 t a·r t s 8 1 a r y, ma n y ,:C---wi·R·l-VERS * ' · : home, 2800 stt ft, like new, lions. Call 644-4188 betw~n 642-2Tal or 64W5Q6 benefits. 847.9110 ~ II 6'12-7241 or 5-~9.ill. shift. Apply Park Lido Con· eTtltphone Worker1e s;;1,150 val. 4 Br, 3 Bit, fam 9Al\f-6P?.f Mondays-Fridays. DRAINS Plugged? Draining A-l TELEPHONE Soliciting No Experience HAJR Stylisl, n\a.nicurist, valescent Center, 466 flag-No experi<'nce ncct'SSBI')'. rm. For ~?.1LR HM.E NB. or RAIN gutters t n st a 11 e d , slow? Expertly elea.ned $9. masseuse f?;l;Je or Female) _•h_ip'-Rd-"'"~N_B~. -"-'~'°'c...'~· _ Young m<'n! Girls! HOllSe· Cd~t. O\VNR Ofe 644-4571 Rainy seuon here 1100n. 24 hr !lerv. 530-385-1. J !~'e '!:r:i~ noe:':O~:n~: Necessary! Expe!'ii?nced. Hair Hunters PHOTOGRAPHER Wanted \rives! Full or part time, VJew estates Br. 5000 llQ. ft. Frtt est. Reas! 968-2208 24 llR PLlL\IBING 1~9 Newport Blvd, SUite F i\1ust have clean California Salon, Fash Jsl. N · B · by International ti Im earn $2 10 $4 per hOUr. Ph: FDR. lam, nn. Like new. Remodeling, fence bldg., &. REi\10DELLING COsta i\1esa ~1. drivi ng record. Apply c64<-::.:.~'=!51:.::.,· ==~~~~ maken;, top salaiy. Fashion 548-;:,:)0l, 1869 Ne1vport Blvd, Trd $70,000 eq tor Res. lots, painling & gen'! repairs. 5.,;7-9644 YELLOW CAB CO. HOUSEKEEPER For 2· Br bkgrnd. pref'd. 8J5.-3.j(f}, Suite F, Cl\1 Smlr Res. CdP.t Hi. 645-0303 Reas. Xlnl. rel's. 642-5471. PLUi\fBING REPAIR BABYSITI'ER, _N'pt. · Bch., 186 E 16th St. Apt. J dayl.lvk, dinner nJeal Pl' Time dish\\·a.sOer &. clean TELEPHONE s0licitor, eom· ForcstE Olsonincrealtors -exper; part ltnte idn ex-Costa P.fesa only. Gdl"'\\·ages. Q,vn up man. Poss. full time. m•'•••'on basis. Disabled e WILL TRADE e · SECRETARIAL SER.VICE No job too small chaw,:e for btt re ucing I~=,,_-,-.,.-~=~=~ tr 673-871.a LIDO ISLE HOUSE '64 CAD CONV. Full po\\·er. Typing, SH, dictph. e 642-3128 e program + income . DESK elerk, PBX, NCR, all ansp. . Ask for Cher, ~>3726, 10401 American Veterans. 547--051.S FOR TRUST DEEDS all exlras. XLNT cond, $975 Thesis, gen'!, 673-1498 PLUMBING REPAIRS 642--36.10 phases Iron! rlesk, e_.\':per., HOUSEKEEPER. Practical .. ~~,a~r~ne ... r.~>"V""----iiii * TRJMl\1ER OR UPHOJ.S. 115 000 ~Q 1 r 1 1 co Al full lime. nurse. \\Iature lady, ti Pi\1 1 . , "' . va . or a er upe, so, Ed's Cleaning Servk-e I.: Install. 5'15-li688 BABYSITTER needed -to 7 A:O.l. SA\VYER HOME. RECEPTIONIST STERER to \\'Ork on boat n. ==--ii1Z~;"evc!'l-::6'13-'14S!l--1-b:!aut:-st--buUY,-&ame val .. Calllt'f.s _ -UPhol~tery _\Vin-=-12 mo ol d girl. ~ur home Ben Brov•n's l\iotor llotcJ Ph: 64&-6716 • TO $4SO leriors & canvas covers. I 4!llj.?500 eves d }'Joo c~-"''" tuo1 R od II lo wkdys 9 am I pm 31106 S. Coast. S. Laguna p., .• ,, ~b. Iring, benefits. 8 Units; good renta area. · -· . O\\.'S r """'· .n<1"Vt0 em • "I ' -· HOUSE\VlFE for part time Atllact. \\'ell groomed gil'I ~ " ~v $38.000 equil)': inc 0 111 e 12 Units, Palm Spnngs; 6 -Rep•ir 6940 lrvine/Cl\1 aI'f!a. 586-0GM Executive Position LAKE ARRO\VHEAD MA· d ~-ha f d H Ii 6730 Licensed in ·R'.E, Und•r <O factory \\'Ork, l62.'i Placcn-for hvy 608 board, lilt typ. RINA (1141 331-'2.:iol. $13,500. For house, commcr. yn:. ol . UJ>.C nge or U· •u ng -..-BABYSlTl'ER days, o"•n tia, Costa il1esa. ing helpful. cial or horse ranch. plex or home,· beach area. _ LESS THAN_ ;9 SQ. r 1. trans .. Kent & H8rbor Blvri years of age. Excellent posi. Newport TV Comm'! work avail. OWNER 675-6259 Rich Irwin. Pyramid Ex-'J'.N.T. Lawn Se rv Ice .. Free plan se~ce, ad~-a-nn; area. 642--2470, evc11 :l.11-8167 tion for right person. \Vrile: HOUSEKEEPER, full tinie, I ' Possi bility for small parts if changon;. 675-6060 . Garage clean-up~. hauling & gar. con~rs1on.s. Licensed. * BEAUTY Daily PilOt, Bo.x 1'-1-1088, 2211 Jive in, child catt. wme Personne Agency 'need 1 GA 1 ~c:m:erc::' ~~ar,me ::=i;~ Deli htful triple:<, xlnt in-light moving, 54 8 · 58 6 3, 30 years tn home bldg, Pb: . OPERATORS \\', Balboa Blvd., N.B. Give English speaking, ti das~y.·k. 133 Dover Dr., N.B. ~~7_1 • • • • nc. Sear!, Val, $65,000. Fot' un. ~ beaut Cone!. Adult oc 531-3729 962--0140 * HAIRSTYLISTS com~h?te resu~c. If you can Day •199-2'211, Eve 493-32j4, -642-3170 *~VAITRESS -W-11'd. Apply --hta"' hOUi!le or-be"ft~tfl)rop ~~ed. \Vill-trarle-for -3-br Y..AR D.J G a_r · Cleanup -r • -69!0--w-/cllentelt':-Comm-10 tl.i~.--1!!:1~~1fy':" \\' \Vl_ll contai;t Y.OU J1SKP.RS_._EmpJyr R.@)'.:S Jee RECEP'T.;;Girl-F'r!:-1-mrt-otr. ----6url &:-.Sirloin. 5B30--'V..- ' • Ol'"~R 67,,, ""~" · ... 10 "'" 000 'Ir H~-is P..emove trees, h.,.. trash.. ~•wing pd Al .._:_1h . ror an 1mn1ed1ate app t. George-Allen Byla'nd Agen-e.• N B ,., .. "" ~ ,...,n\e .,...,.,, . " . -~ G ba 962-87 . --. . vac. so • .,..... space . 16 h SA i\fust be young, energetic & 1 ~C='="'='=H='~'~~-~· .;_.,·-·---,·I ~>1:>-842>1 So. Cst Rltrs. radc. ckhoe, 4J. EUROPEAN Fashion trlined to rent. HAIR \VEST 673-4186 ELECTRONIC counteM sales-cy. l~·B E. t ' · • ambi tious, have te-n·ific PR. YOUKG i\tan, factory \\'Ol'k, \Viii sell. or trade 2 yr old whiff' elec dryer, xlnt eond, ~s dryer of equal val-u.e. ' . What cio YOU bave '°trade? i\IOVING, Garage clean.up & offe1'1i hc.r tal ents in BEAUTICIAN-High pcrccn. ntan, male. expc.r req'd. H. c"':::.'--0~39='=· ----~-very \'ery attract supe1· small ni~r. .52.10 Hr. to List It he"' _ in Orangt 1,i,te ha~ling. R6',~"',60"'2blc. d r essn1aking, a.ltcl'alions, tag<'. good workine: sur· \\'. \\'right Co., ino Ne1vpot1 HEY GALS sharp appear. \V ill consider start. :>~5-7101 ask for Bob. Cbunty's tan:e:iit·ttad trad-rtt estimates. ,. . also cbildrf!n's clothes. Very roundings. Follo\\·ing re--"-'-'-"·~·-C_»_I_. ------\Ve need 10 sharp gals, full rull or pt-timl". \\'rile Box 1603 \V. Alton, Sant11: Ana - q post-11'1 make a deal. HAULING $10 A LOAD reasonable. Simple shifts quired. S.17-916'1. (,t· pirt time. 1\ge lS-::0. No 1 ~';"';26;·~'=·=A=. =";'="=·--~-Clean Up. Tree Serv. Gen. $12 & up, skirt.'i $10 k up. -RE~ URA"T k 10 * * * * ~ .. ,·"g "" ~~. "4' °"13 673-1849. • EXECUTIVE c"P· nee. .,,~A ,, i1"0r ·, :30- Call 968-3100 aft ~:30 Schools·lnstruction 7600 * * .-. """ <.l'fU""'-M<I J' .:i"'OV' Betty Bruce $3.10 per hr 2:30. a dys a 1\·k, no 1vknds, ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!~!!'!!!!!'!~!fl!~l lfAUUNG, l\fovlng, Yard QUALr':Y You-ve .al\\·ays m f1 SECRETARY Ideal !01· hous e w i v cs ITS YOUR MOVE INDUSTRY CAREERS. J• Cleanup Reas raleti Insur. wanteta. Dressmaking -• [...) Call i\lr. Jensen 9j6..2871 ~·/children, No exper. nee. • SERVICE DIRE.CTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY ed &: refs R~b . 491.ioss alterations. Key Say. 1763 t.1.1 xec Specialized job kno\vJr.dge HOTEL l\IAID. Experienced. 1 _C_d_"~· _6_1,.._1_60 ____ _ 8'iby11ttl"1 · 1 . Orange Ave., CJtt. 64~1292. .A. and c\'.periencc related to pru1 tiine · days. LIDO '5.50 Cement, Concrete '600 TRASH & Garage c ean-up, 7 e D '·'n Allera•;. · aet'CU SHORES HOTEL 67" 0""". .:.;;;,;c.;c;;;_ ______ I days. $10 a load. Free est. res~maiu g-. .....,m;; d ~ (/ sales preferred. Rcpor1s to ~ RESTAURANT help, female, pa·rt time, over 21. Ph. alt 1:30 5'1j...J686. AIRLINE & TRA YEL 1---·-· -----*CONCRETE work : patio.~ Anytime 548-50.11 Designed lo suit you. V.P. or sales. A-1 typing, ABLE H. h ~1 ·I Li d ' . Call Jo* 6~6-6446 'In IV Coast H•ru ,N 8 I h -" -" 'aJ RELI 1J:: 5e11U11 g1r dn:"'ays,etc. i;_ense . HAULING&CLEANUP -='~o::;:,O:~=,;;.=-=--'' . e1 .. • • s 1ort auu II.nu secretar1 wants baby s i t t i n a: a.f. Ph11llps Cement. 548-&SO $JO a load * 548_1092 e· DRESSMAKING • By appoint. &16-3939 11k;Jls required. Must -have temoons le. eve n l n g A • .DECORATIVE CONCRETE Very Reasonable at least live yt'!lrs experi· -Ne\\-port-1-telgl1ts-a-r -e a-; DRIVES • \IJALKS • PATIO. Housecle~nin~ 6735 Call: Diane · 548-6619 CAR wash help wanted -top Mz-oo'll. CALL DON, 641:-8514 -• Alter•tlons -642·5145 \\'ages. Apply in person. 150 CHILD Care, my home, any houn, Hot lunch. Lge fncd yard, Nr ?ifcNally !!Chi. \Vill tran5pol't. ?\trs. r~ u d i e , 54&-31G1. WILL babysit for infants & loddlcl'l!i in my home, Vic; Harbor & Victoria. Day or ni~ 548-7123 BABYSmlNG, rny home. Lge fe-n<:ed yard, playmate. Any age. l\taeArthut & Main area. 5;;7-7963 · Ne1vporl Cenier Dr., N.B. " 20 SO. ~n1crican Lady oUen N..:at, aecurate, 20 year~ exp. --CARRIER·-Contr•Cf0!_1 litt"VJ<.1? to clean houses. I=='==="=='===" * THE REi\lODELERS * h"Oni~, shop.ping. E~pcr. Tiie, Cer•mic 6974 BOYS Ftt ests • 100% financing cocktail parties. Business K·t' he _....age people or familie11 \v\thout • CERAMIC Tile \Vork or c ~ ~ Pn:,r 1 s g C, m P i5 et e children. $20 day. '49.t-7480 PlaJttering. Call alt 5 pm, WANTED R __ _,_,. bet\\'n lPi\1 &: 6Pl\1. \\'kdys CVC'S, 536-2426. l:TIIUl.lt:JJng, nJ I Quality Contractors &tz..3660 ° Y · -6911 l\IY WAY, quality home BAY & JA:ach Janitorial TrH Service repair. \Valls. ceiling, floors Carpets, \\'lndo\vs, ~· BOB'S TREE SURGERY rte. No job too small. etc. Res & C 0 mm c 1 · is back offering the same 543-1494 64&-l4<ll . 1'~ine Quality Tree Servieor. Additions * Remodeling JOE'S CLEAN SERV. * 540-3798 11t for 11\c DAILY PILOT Dana Point, San Juan Capistrano and Capistrano Beach. Conta.:t l\lr. Seay lll ence. • SECRETARY For Internalional Sales Dept. Expert l)'pist, heavy corres. pondencc, shorthand or die. laphone . l\fust be familiar \\'ith general offitt t'Outine, Prelc1· multi-lingual cxperi- f'.nCf', • SECRETARY " .. . . SALES~fAN Position avail, ollice job. Sl8,000. IX'r yr. l\fust have l yr. of direct sales bkgrnd. Ages ~3J. 83J-3j01. SALE-Ea1·n Ch r ist m 8s money parl time. Sarah Coventry hh'ing now. No in- e OPERATIONS AGENT e TICKET SALES e RESERVATIONS e AIR FREIGHT .CARGO e COi\ll\IUNICATIONS e TRAVEL AGENT Airline Schools P•i:ific 610 E .-17th, S•nt• Ana 54U59' IRVINE PERSONNEL ""· 00 •e1. F,.., ""'"""•· t'or info PH: 847-6388. Piano lessons in your SERVl(ESll'AGENCY 1SA_L_E_S.-,-,,-,h-Sl'-im-·".i;"'ym'-. ,-.,. hom•. Exper. T•acher. {t-ormerly Abilities Unlim.) TRISH HOPKINS 488 E. 171h. Suite 224 C.M. 642-1470 • ICE Cream Girl -Exp'd 11 am to 4 pm, Mon thru f'ri. c1:tn earn \Vhat you're Call 548-2094, 5-8Pi\t \\"Orth! Call Mary Lou Good, ~M~E~R~C~H"A=N"D'°'IS"'E.,F"O'°R;;-1 968-2416 or J43-8329· SALE AND TRADE SALES ---IOOO t"or recorded information dial Furniture 545-44Sii ----------1 $650 CHILD Care It meals age 3 & up, Near Pomona &: Wilron. Need own b'aMp. &tfi..15-10 Gerwick & Sons, Lie. \Ve do Everything·R:! &. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT 673-GMl * ~9-217tl Comm. Free Esl, 642-l:>.il. --- ROO:'li Additions. 1 & 2 story i\Jesa Cleaning Service Job Wentecf, Men 7000 DAILY PILOT San Clemcnle otliee ::OJ N. El Camino Real 49244., Ollset P rinting Dcpl. Type Apply 2 pm 4 pm daily. 899 juslified camera ready l..'OPY 1 _w...::.l~91="~'~'="=C~-'~'=· ~=-- on IB i\1 E.xecuUve. Prefer in. J. C. PENNEY CO. Credit M•n•ger Trainee Salary, T"·o years retail sales exp, Nalional Compnay. Call Ann, &15-2770, \Vestcliff Per- iionnet Agency, 2043 \Vesl· FURNm.JRE returned trom display studies, model hom- e!, decorators cancellation. Spanish & 1'1editerranean R D FURNITURE Llc'd Day eare. 1 .am to 5:30 pm. wkly. Hot n1eal5, Har· bor/Baker. MS.1539. & g11r. call ~e-n. C:Ontractor Carpel!, windOY.'~· floons: etc. DENTAL t.echnician seeks fOr lo\\·est price 642--2988. Res & Commc 1· 5.i8-4Jll fu\l/parl time. Dr's office ADDITIONS, L.T. Construe-WOULD YOU BELIEVE prefel'l'Cd. References tion, single or 2 story, plans. 1'11 Clc:>an Your Home for 4!)9..1806 ~ M•intenenceWs est. & layouts. 841-lSU. Blue Chip Stamps. ="··"·======= GEN'L remodeling &: main\. ss.l-6l03 Job W1ntod, BOAT CARPENTER No job too 11 mall . WlNDO\VS & \Valls \\.·ashed. Women 7020 &16-:>219 Lic'd/insured. 6421767. t~lrs, 11lr\pped, sealed &: ---------'-= I==========' I ~=;=::=:=:==="==:':I "·axed, Free est. 891-78.34 HIGH School Sr. riesire~ part Brick, M•sonry, Carpet Cle•ning 6615 day or night. 673-3090. time job, classes end at 6560 ------noon. have own 1-~ot=.:;<________ Ironing 6755 transporiation, ~ x. p. in BLOCK wall·Planters-Pal\os. Drive\\'a)'S • Sidev,.alkll. Lie. MZ-98.>2 mom/eve. CARPET CLEANING sales. Y.indow dressing, Spotted areas hand cleaned \\'ILL 00 IRONING responsibility or s1ore while before It. after shampooing $l .2Jlhr. Coll~ge Park Area. ~tanager on vacation, light to assure removal of aU pos-5.,;7-9'7ro office e."p., have rererences. sible 11tains, For fast, guar· iRONJ~G tN ?.tY 110i\fE Cs.II bet"'·een 8 11..m. and 5 C•binefm•king_~ antffd service, call 646-8006. IN C.l\I. $1.2:>/hr p.m. '.'11onda)' thru f'ri<lay .. .>i&-6970 * ~"6-6380. DIAi\tOND Carpet Cleaning • IRONING * 1,,7,.~ru=R~E~-.~,-p-,-,-.-.-.-1-, Back to School Special '.\ty llome, Sl Hr. ~·01nan \\'/Clr-rl..ing exp. i:o========= 000' $1S. Free Est. Pk k Up & Deliv. :;.J:>-164~ some lite bkping, also ~Ing '590 Rerair·lnstall. &ia-1317, c~hier. Prer. Corona tlel Fine Cabinets &. Shch•ing * 494.0607 * CATALOGING models need· eel for designers 1vlnter 1\1)('5. No <'XJM'I'. req'd, 1.A.G. Inc .. 8JS..3j(}J. .. CASHT ER / COUNTER GIRJ . * -7 to 3:30. i\1on thru tTi. Call l\lrs Penning ton. 83.~0600 E.\':t '2031, bel11'n. 2--5 Pi\1. COASTAL AGENCY A member of Snr.lling &: Snelling Inc. The World's~gest Profession E mploymen rvict 7i90 H.arbor Bl, "Cl\1 540-6005 Harbor Blvd. ::i.t Adams C OCO'S. REUBEN'S- -COMPLEX - ·16,li 1\1acArlhUI' Elvd. house ncY.'Spaptr expc.rienct, niaintain art files. S o m e knowledge of offset printing. APPLY PJ:.:nSONNEL DEPT- L. M. Cox Mfg. Co. 1505 E . Werner, S.A. 54'-2551 Equal opportunity cmployf'.t FIBERGLASS lay· up, sanding & de· tailing exper. Apply in person, EDLER INDUSTRIES INC. 2101 Dove St., N.B. CARPENTRY STEAl\t J!t carpet. cleani~. L•nclsc•plnt 6110 i\ ar area. 67~ MINOR REPAIRS. No Job By ClarKarc, nation • "':1~ NE\V LA\VNS,-~lr\i NEAT. dependable alltacth·c f1.ll..L or PART Tll\IB Too Small. cabinet la l&I'> sentitt. Fre~ est. 642~->?· r o t o . tlllnrtg. rcnovatln;: . in 31l's. t"ull lime.general of. JNTERVIE:\Yli\t~ i\tON-fnT t-'Ul..i'~~ u~~~~ pe~74:J Ne11·port Brach - •• ther cablntta. l 891 2411 flee. Exp. typing, some 3 Tr ;1 Pi\1 s61115.. Uno annrtt let.ve C•rpet L•Ylnt l ~-=· -or bkkpg &: Sii. :N&-0641. ••FR\' COOK*.. Part llllS 9.t '*2312. IL 0. R•pelr , ~!' . ·. . AIDES -for convaJcscencc. e A.M . BUSBOY • llml'. &!.~ l Sun .. al~ ''aca· Andenon CARPET LAYING ~~~e Service~ 6115 elderly care ol'_lamily care. NO EXPt:n it::NCE NECt:.<;. tlo1~:~~f! ~~ r~~~~nc. ~ •• , ~ Jr '""'~II-. roo-o•2-10 A' 1 II bo Ho1nem1keni., :'141--6681. $ARY, t-ULl. TltilF., PAR1: t-'ci.shion Island Ha!\ JI full time position avau.1 0c~·ll~ff_.,,D_,"-=N...::.8~. ---- able in the beau1y salon. SARAH Coventry n c e rl s 1144 Newport Bl., C.M. every nite 'ttl 9 \Vr.d., Sat. & Sun, 'til f Kingsz: Bdrm Set Formal din. table • HAIRSTYLIST • APPLY lN Pi':RSON 24 Fashion Tsl .. N.B. Equal oppo1tu1~ity employer J ANITORS. Exp'd. Fu 11 time, nights. C &c S ?.faint. Serv. SU.98i3. LICENSED :i\te d ical Laboratory Tcehnologisl. in private lab. No nights or y.·k. ends. Xlnt !!&lacy '-' rringe bcnelits. \Vcstmin~1cr Call i\lrs. Decker 893-1371. LOCAL :i\tgrs \\'/sales abil to oper new type car y.·ax. equip. E.."p des/not nee. S.A. &: Fuh. Isl. MZ.7281. * LOTMAN * for used ears. Apply 2100 HP.rbot'. C.:i\l. LEGAL TRAINEE TO $5GO ladies for Christma!'i season No invc:itment. No exp. 83i>-2:>8.1, or :>47-1627. .i Bar S1ools \Vrought h"On Hanging Lamp c.11 541-1114 Savings and Loan Associa-1 ~=--~~-~~~ lion, localed in Ne\\1>0rt SAC can1cd Spanish Exec Beach area, has position desk &: library table, $37'J. Quali!y R' sofa, pert fttr available for a Y.'ell quali· honlP or oUiet', $15 0 , lied Savin~ and Lo• n ~2 eve or <'arlY am. Branch JI.tanager. SAVINGS AND LOAN BRANCH MANAGER Excellent potential and fringe OLIVE grttn sof1t (m~ berefits.. 1.linimum f\l'O years into bed I. &: matching e!Wr, saving11/cscrow experience good fnunl', sprlng:i;: nNed ne1v covers, $13 lakes both. requi~d. .~ ··'"l For pa11icular c11ll Person· nr""" ' 111!1, (213) 923-:i56l. RED couch. gd sprngs SI:>. Lrg. blu<' vinyl rockng ehr $10. kit. tbl y.•Jxtra leaf forn1 ica tp. xlnt. cond $10. i\.fisc. items. £46-7803 SECOND COOK wanted ror ho1ne for Sr. Citizens. 4!»-94:>8 SECRETARY • rifEDICAL DIVORCED nian mu 1 t Cardiolo;gy, days, run lime. sacrifice lll'w ronlt'mp. Jiv. Persoftnel Dept. Hoag Hosp. ing rn1 sPI + aecesit0cy Ne11•p1. Bch. llcn1s, j !S-18-13 )..'11"l oppor. \v/vcry lint' SECRETARY • r.IEOICAL DBL box :.pii ngs, nia1ire. li1·01. Plr-a511nt 1\·orking Tutnol' regish')'. days. t'ull xlnt. i\1ahg rrarni:. <lresgr-r k - ' -""ns , _...,..~ u;1, C.A, Pagf' ·• ·£v · 1rpAnolyw5, ._·-~. "' llOUSEuEEPtNG t. I f.oll CO\lfS(' Jina, all home imprvrnnts. ur.u n Tli\1E, DA»'S OR NI ,J·TS. 11!021 CUIVC'r Rn;id No j® too sm. Free est. ..E. · • 6640 natP.I!, 40c a mile. i\lln. 20 L.~P<!1icnefit Day\\·ork * • COUNTER:'!IAN. 18 yrs Nei"port ikll<'h ---r~~~·;;::;;;;~;~ m1 A. :l-1 t.lt • • 0() • ~-ICJAN S II "'b• RBY'S ROA-BEEF, +" ~ ·~' lo.: JI\, oayi;, ~PP•Y rond. Gd bcnc!Hs. Call ~lhJ!S lime. Personn('I Dept. Hoag chf'sl $1Cl0/i\'ill llrp. 646-l!m Elio.beth. 5;;1-6122. A::'.;"'iiO"t;'~'°~'~P~· ~N~.,~,.p~t~, ~B<:r.ih.;;;;;mm<+ff·..;.6~1>-:;,;;t:>t~9m;•l~t~5~p~m~.,,,.dtf~;.J..--'-bhlll Pc.i110nnel .tgono,,.. ".., ~ ~ftY!! :-""" r-ft , nn .. HEST PRICES Fine Custom Woodwork £.....,....,,,. · m<1 I" ' ---HOUSECLEANL'IG $2.23 hr. A ,.,, " ' in pcn!On, Tht: Cotlac-e Cof· Marine. ReaidenU&I . Comm'! ~!!~~~ & repairs . MAID SERVICE 6125 Reference..' & tran.,porta· ~q.E Edin;cr ,\ve .. ltunt. lc-t Shop. 562 '"· 19th st., Daw ~. 54M233 ~ lion. 6-12--0238 .... ~.. c ;\! REPAIRS* ALTERATJONS -1..1.1.r l.OCAL GI.tis \\'Jnt To Clean========== 1cD=ENT=,=-,,-L--A-,,-,-. -.-.,-,-.,-,_. -'--"-·-G=E=N~E=R~A'"""L--* CABINETS. AftY site job Floor• -Ap1s. &. Priv. home11. C.d Jobs Men. Wom. 7100 \\'/min. 2 year. e xp. 23,,. a:;per. 54S--6713 --rct'r; " \1'r)' ttas. rates! -4--h11ndl"i1 dr.nti11try, r 111 OFFICE CLERIC CA~ ~:isr 012-!221. Accounting Clerk ,_,., 22-3> o'11 '"" 6pm ~~s-,~it paUoi. LIC * s.iG.1l'62 1r 'C & S P.1AJDS AVAIL. Im· Expericn~ clerk Tll"Nle(f by ~·)..839;j. Gt-i'ISJ er 673-5417 -==,:;=:=:=:::===I ~~~til)I. ~e~4• n ct 1 · hArbor arcl m•ni1f11r1 11rl~ 1 ~D~E~N=T=A~L--.-,-,-1-,-,-,-,-1-- Ge...,.int 6'IO • or ' firm. Some tYPini; antf filing chainkJe cx11trlence. l\lorn- ,, __ ,,.~---. .1....-• ttquln!d. I 9 12 < d• k ........_..,, _.....,. -AL'S t.andscapi..... Tr fl e P•pertl•ntlng 6150 ~~ to · Y w • .... 8-16--0611 CONCR£'1'£. All typn. ntt removal. Yard ttmodellnt. P•lnfiftl, If you ckslrt this \.\'Ork. ~end ~-u ha I T I h II lot cl DD\'TAL ASSISTANT, I'}(. est. &a•'lnr. --..rw. u · ru 1 11.1.1 na. . eanup . .lST ct p d A: Pll"" .a leuer 1e.llin~ about )'our. -~e~.:..1. _ M:hool tralncd inr I: Skl"'°'dlng. Service Rrp&lr l!fll'Tlklen. ~1166. . l'l~S .8l n ni,: . , ... r ttll bll.c~1'00nd and "·hat 1=i' ..... ~~ v• -' D.-~~bob Hnnglnc: Fn:e Est Call ' ' pttf'r1. 5,ig.iOT.C '& QUa.111,,-, GEN. Cleanup-Tre& Ii. ·i~llb.'I . • you'd like to do, 1-'""'""-'"-'------ MQRE-Concrdt_.._JllJj(J for Sprlnkl('r Sl'rv. flo 1o1 It I .1.,:,'=' .:.,;:;·:.,.~~--~-I IC. morlf't. At1iaUc tellll'IS· New I.a•"'-Spr&yi~ fl~••· C'Ol..LEG~ ~~tnl., 3, Y1'll i\IAtl. TO : Uc.. aJJ Mo •I &44-0llT. ~S. e.xpe:r. No dr1nklnJ. BUI or Ptnionncl J\111n11;:er Df'pl . B 1_:;;;,;;;;.;;;:::;;:.,:,;:.;olli:-';'ki':h•:i: GAJtD;.Nlr<G ~VICE ~IOl"c •J!-'S<D. ~ p,Q, Box 1488 CDIDtf 1'ld . Ex1>trtt:nt.:ied .Tapnttt * PAPERHANGING Nc.,~M R<-11•:-h. GaHf. !l?GCil rr. ..&. us-o:JT4 ~ 5-1\.0228 &· PAt~'TING. • !J6S.:?12.~ ~qu•I f)f')'lOrlunity "lllf)IO~l"r ., t Save )'Ohr money! Call tod'Y • Sell tomorfl')w! F1~I rt5Ult$ with I Dlllly Pilol Chi 't.!l.\fled Alt .. OttJ direct 6tz...567S -?'lO\V? • • . - i\hst'f'll, dulies; f1\1n;i;, running prlnl\11, lilt typ. I~. Cl!.11 lndt1~1ri1J Rt'.la· lion~ for appointm\"nl , 1714) 494-,.01 1ELONIC INDUSTRIES L•gun• Be•ch 1'~1111~1 ttpflOM11nlly r mplfl>'Pr -. . \V. \Varner, Suite 2ll, Santa bl'okcr. Experienced. N.B. FOR OR[ENTAL RUGS. Ana. oltittr 644-1911 e\'f'j:, Call ~llcct L.A. 2tl'; M•n•gtment A1soc.. Secret•ry 6.>7-jJ7;; Nat'! mngmnt eonslilt Co, off. Eni!'. Bl;j'it. No SH. Good ty p. 'KI~N"·e-sz""'"~B~f.~.D~:-..,l'~irm-,-;d[,,t. "~ <IUAI men a t'el\'ard ing. Call Lon\l'lf', &l>:lTIO, packaged framr. $.:..+2 , chllng, pr11~ carter ,. hi \rc1tcJiff Peraonool Agency, \\f011h $2Ci0. Usually . ! lnc1n potcnl. •~ 11~ w~ 2043 \\'estelllr Dr., N.B, 8-12·6ii6. ' r:aJ finn . l\lngnint exp, tOI· •SECRETARY-Part time'. COU01 &.· n1111chln~ ch,alr, lci;e & abilhy to comn1unl-Typing k accountln; C.>.:· corr"' lablr. ;! end ta~ ca1e f'ffcct. W/tXCC rcq'.d. pe·r \t n c e ne cess ary. Gooct cond. $$0. ~25&} 71~ I 614·1101. ~ton-Thur, 7 67>1}1l :)ll~i ..., am-12 noon only. .3. SERVICE STATION MEDITERRANEAN '°'" r. Pt·llme tire in1t•ller ATTENDANTS r.n.ished \l"hTI, never u.'led Change tire~ & JlhOCk!I, Rcf'I. t'ull lime. Apply Standt1.rd -~lP~~~,h1tch1n: IOl'eacat S![j, \\!i\1 trnin, n1f'dic11.I btnelil!I S:i..tlon, 21081 El To1'0 nd, ~ & ln~UrAntt'. 11.ppl:y 1\1i.rk c. L3~n· i nllt-. BF.,\trr OLliiGRN \\'Al.NUT Bloom<', lOO.i lt1u'bor Blvd., R•tt•o l•"n 'I SJ!;T:.VICE Station Attend. ~ ':: rm -'cl t.., • C.r.1. ~ \\'. Ll11COln A\·e., l• 615-•• \\'lln!C'd. Xlnl, ,;a\11 .... , • mri,, ·""""' 8ui?n1t Park. '-' f.'011101 . .'.11lllll W'Ork nile full ., 12' :; !>lttt SECTJON- MA-SSEUSl!·Exp'd <1r p1tln1~. \\'.1u:IP Johnl'On ' Al.., Of A, A1 110 1r~h1t"r. 847·iSi!) CIH!\l'On, :IO IS Ot-brol, C.'.\t. J7:, • • ~1-1-::?J® ·-. MEil• $ALI -furn -MUST "'""" -bike-- Ollie -JWin 169.~ rol.ol' hHe ol w "" w.;:u;; m•w SwiV room groui and : -Ollie ELEC r ... , El" mod. 042-9 ;wAJ "'" pty () G•r• REMC lurn Quas S175; wash "" .. .. chop1 C&ny GARA draw chr. '°"' '""" tion, GARA di net S..n. :N.B. c:: Appl -1 ' : y REF 1h'ttz Gran Iii 5. REFF -se1ec .... , 2 Dr bolto 53"6 • p 1lmsl· 641H RCA ' "''' -- A nth •SS.O Kon· Best Sewt ~ 1970 s .'ll!'~. Mle! ,hem Waln1 'Ca!lh JM_5-S •* I Cl• m• '$3.9; . L-TOY• 1nevc :PF/ . . •()ff -Mui In - c • \fA~ 1!19 ._ i 1 QI Tl DJ ., . ., ~ Tilll Jt'1 "' ... ""' Soc MERCHANDISI l'Oll SALi AND TllADI - • ---MlllCHANDlSI FOii SALi AND TllADI . . ,• ..... 'sALI AND TllADE 1-------TRA:NSPORTATIOI! MIRCHANDlSI POii~ FREE TO YOU:-:· S.llboots 9010 1'11-·• O~ons llu. Mlscell•MOU• MOO 2 KrrrENs to 1 home· rray • ·• ~ • . ~ .... , • blaek • wht. ALL NEW 16' rLn.l"Ll'V'I MUST -Rll furiiltu ri! SALE ' KrNO Siu &autyl'e1t bed, P.~r !Ji rea;. Siam~. Furniture IOOO ' f",,""' •. '!!~·ua,...n·~ ~1'1"' _·Pl'NOS. o·no•u• 10 ."'°'°''·1'""""'11 "1 "'"" "''°"' ''"'. '11" 5130· HOBIE CATS 10 ._. ... ., -....,.._,, · ~ ~ ~ ~ lhon. QuU ed, extra tirm 67>J558;-6'~ll --bet~ __,,...~ 1:•~ WJ~_at -ma1m:st:-M-adbol.rd It' ,0-"I r ~ -9/24 ALL COLORS- Off&ct l"umlture IOlO dou1 uvln&:11! All '{itb our tranw!-Prlvate party $200. -FREE DEMOS excluaJve Coast ti.tuslc w~ ~l~7. PITS Ind LIVESTOCK Prletd froin S1196. \Vinlt:r Rdin'd · Mxso wood desb, ranly, 356 A Pone~· bumpq, Pur· Pets General llOO Racin11; starts soon! $69.50 e Retin'd wood arm QRGANS l.rom S2SO Ur Delight! Neverbff:ndlng. ' CAP'N 'EDS f1tWy chairs, $29.50 e We PIANOS from S22:'.i ed $15. Kenl)'l()re 2 SP. wuh. FOX, RARE, 1 mo, ,old Cl'll• have the la1"1e1t selection GRANDS from $695 er, Sl5, as la:. Ms.8404 aft Jar, blk legs A: e&N, ~iut 2200 W. Cit. Hwy. NB 645-2244 o1 used office tum tn this B11nk terms, Trade·ins-6 PM. .ell-leaving country. Aft FERROCEMENT Hull· lt-2!1 area. ' Opea Sundaya 12·5 7:30, MS-2163. fqnn. wired, ready l~ con· THIHI -HONDA- Ill "FRIEDLAllER" ''"' lllACM (NW'Y· •• 537-6824 • 893-15ti6 NEW-USED-SE RV. n.nn..n.i'I FBRARI Me Mahan Deskb_ Daily tll 6 -t"'ri Lil 9 CANDELi.ABRA, Hea vy J crete. Must &ell , make olfer. ,69 YAMAHA 1800 N~= mvn.-NE~~~l ~MH~~;OR ~~i.:.~~h;~?~t ~~ Cats 1 U20 ~. . ·~~~:;r~;n~;~~lnl cond. ~ .. 'lW.:12 ............ \\IALNUT de&k 30 x 60 5 Costa Mesa * 642-2fGl 4 SIAMESE kil!t:ns, 6 1,1•ks • DT l·B 250 Enduro. l ,200 ae. 642-9Ft7l .... lal~ • 1H••MG~• drawer, like new S129. •HAMMOND organ -Ll2'2· 6444687' nld w/Jong hair, SlO ea. Power Cruisers 9020 IUAI miles, lull lights & in-1----------1 FtRE.'WOOD for sale. $47.511 -~ ~--•• t t It.If. Swivel 1chai_r S31. ReC ceptlon Atr1ans., w/gulb !~ banjo, et~. crd, $27.SO ~ crd. Delv. k 64&-8402 24' CABIN Cruilll'r. ExC't'll('nt s1u·\ur.1entd11, nt'W lkil'f'111• l~:O Jeeps •9510 GU 0 apOr , ID :room umiture. orner 90 re-ver ....,.., warranty, stckd frtt. Day or nlte (l) shape. Will ucri!iCf'! As ront en C'rsltloc ,11.um1n· Authorlte<l SaJrs e SerVice group, seals 4, side chair de.llv., lessons. 688-0846, (1) 687-7599. Dog 112..S set» in wat"r Sm:t. No ups uml, dcta(•h, pass. l<"at, '52 MILITARY Jeep -IO\.\' & DEMO, SALE lnral""" ,....._. and 2 tables $50. 543-5503 e CABLE, New 41" console ============:1 -·~·------".;;;; or do\.\'n&. 4~3996 afl 7:30 $600 roll bars, ne\.\' lop. $9.!JO, 1726 1970 "t"iat 124 Sporta Cpce. rft WLA"VUI piano, waJ. w/bench It d@l. Misc. W•ntecl 1610 ffilSH SETTER PUPS p.m. 838-3.'44 14•kdays, 642-0U.1 e\ICs Labrador, C.M. 54;)...2822 Ftadio, ht'1 ter, special e.x· Office Equipment IOl 1 :.:yl6! ~t pritt i895, our *Written guuanttt I.. \.\"~kcnds. ~ --baust, pin striping, radial .... GOULD MUSIC CO. EDGER·trimmer wanted by * F'ree training Speed-Ski Boats 9030 C•mper1 9520 tlreR , :ow miles. ELECTR Calcul. New T05Caf iTiod. BC-1201. Apec Electroatal dry photocopier mod. 171. Must sell, a/sac. 642:-9873. *WANTED: used I 8 1'.1 Selectric typewriter, Pvt ply only. 644-5625. · new youn& homeo~rs. +Show, pet It fie.Id slcx:k , $2795 Since 1911 PriCf' must hf-reuonable. By appt only 642-506.; 1s· Gt.A~PAR., as HP New 70 Datsun 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. 204~ N~7~1i":_.S.A. 546--2279 11.lt :>pm. HARD 10 find Toy ·Fox Ter-EvtnrtJde. Elec glarter &. lliOO OHC, Pickup 'with camp. 5.37·Tm Call Coll~t LARGE Family would like to rier pup p I es UKC C1;1ntrols. Trlr. All at..-ress. er. Sale price S2099 dlr. • - -______. Betinner1.0rg1n Class buy a fefrigerator . ret:iste red Soft 11:' Cuddlv Likit new, will sacrifice (9 67798\ Will take car In ..--..---- - Cius startlnt Tues .• Sept. DELI C1'SE 4• to 6' BEAtrrIFUL Black a: gold 14' SKI BOAT v.•/40 hp Twin party. call 546-4052 or •flAj 22nd, 1 p.m. 6 week! course 615-3375 AKC rei;:'d 2 yr old German Evinrude, rig~ for !roll· 494-6811. IU ENROLL NOW 645--0a)7 beautiful ii srfi11.rt. 54>215J: S1200. Pvt ply 631Hi511 trade. Will :finance privatr. e THINK $12. HAMMOND ORGAN Shepherd female. Must sell. ing, slite~!I 4, ele~t. 11larter , • .10 8, Overhf.'11.d Camper I ' I02l STUDIOS, 28.54 E. Coast FREE TO YOU Call Jim: 540-3009 ves. running lights. A great run. Sips 4 * X!nt cond ''FRIEDLANDER'' G•rage Sele Hwy., CoroM de I Mar. MOVING ~. Must find good ning boat. S4S5. Ph: 962-3..-,l 3 1970 llonda 100, perf~t. onlr SACRJ1'~1Cf~ Sm ~DELING:-HOuiefill ilf ti73-8930. ·SUPER.----flr~ fledigrtt --home-for-we 1-i...-t-nrhi·e· M---:· · -E-. 9035 -J6H~1h-5--11f'M~di!'\ . ::6591·11.tt-8~ pn1 t»• •••cw fKWT. stl 893-75fi6 • 531..-U NEW-USED-SlftV; . ............ J~l'\llP Lll I JI 111 p ~li I , furn at nJ.odest prict!I, Incl • WHITE baby grand piano, male rollle~ free to lg. yr.rd female Af~an Hound. AKC. •r1n• ~uip. slN'e!, $.~25. 1~70 H~nda 90. ,66 VW CAMPER: RebU Quasar color TV '69 modf'I Baldwin. Must sell. or farm-IY_P'; home. People Good w/ch1ldren. 64~927-INBOARD And o u l b oa rd ~rh~·!, 165 nu, T~a1l ~Ca.I'S,. n1o!or Nu tires; taPe deck & '69 MGB YeU,ow. Xlnl Cond. $175: Late model G.E. t175. 536-4747 must be Wllltn~ 1~ h!UISf'I re-e GERM Shor Iha i 'r ed parts and 11.cces.soric&. Gas dirt. or sl~rct, $295. 19iO Sil· speakers. ~ Chrome \.\'ire whee I,. 111.0 llACH lHwr. Jtl 893·7566 • 531~24 NEW-USED-SE RV. washer &. l'f!frig + 500 qulrenients. Hippit!'s pttfer· Pointer AKC 39 champs! 6 tanks to velvet tl"an.~. Con-zu.k1 ~· like nc1_1', only 190 $1850. EVES: 67>5.';45 At.!-FM, tonneau $ 2 7 o O, us ab I 1! h sh J d items. Television 1205 red. 64>2611 9/24 wks trols, cables, seats, In-n11, 1ra1l 1:ears d~r~ or s_mei 'O. :,;=:~=:-5;.;0:=::,:-;;v1::0:-_·l ;-,6,9,.-0f;;.::;:.,1•zi:4oC'"-::-;: 673--7358. Reasonable. Alao, 2 BSA ...c...;.....;..=----'-LANDL?RD Say no CATS • * * 548.8188 * * * s~me_n1s, props, hR.~dware, S2!1:">. ijond~ 50 ~11n1.Tra1J $90 :7uto~~~ Xlni' e 0 n d, 6 . lat ,. ~ __ _ rhoppers, All custm. 2188 SEARS color TV. Am&Zing must give away. ].fl uffy kil-e AKC POODLE PUPS Sm. v.'uxlshit-lds, f'!r.._ \Y tU se!I Call &16-7D3 P\1 ply. c 1 lo milca e. 673-5&55. Exotic red v.1th blA~k vinyl MGA Canyon Dr, Nn. C, C.M. price reduct ions on lell!I 1 gry 2 !llr1ped very MAny colors a vail r.ioving all or part. 549-05.JO. Y' g bucket 5eatll. Low miles, ha_s GARAGE Sale: 2 Chests of warel'lbuSf! le the floor play'ful-also black .l on11; t d ho sis&. -D B • 9525 had excellent c11.rr.. Sacn·l----ccc---- drawers, bkcase, de.sk & models. f ully guaran!ttd. haired molher w/very large 84w~~J1 0, 8":!5~. up. Bo•i' Slip Mooring 9036 une uggies fice! IXLY235) T_llke. older 1960. DRIVEN by s c:.hl 54• ~·2 9 ~ ~ ~= In •-d w 11 f teacher lnr JO yrs, 63,COD chr, mirror, bdside lbl, Reduction up to S150. Phone green eye1. .,....,.,,. /6u Buggy Bodiell. $75 & up car u• e. 1 1nance couch,&. other ml.sc. items. 962-TI81. Sean Roebuck k ADORABLE 6 wks. old kit· GUNN Kennels, Wire Hair • 22'Side tie, Nev.•port. Pow-ACet'!'lsories-Pa.rls-Chassis privalf" party. Call Pal dlr, ~e~~herm~ll ~~~:in~~ SUnday thru Sat. 414 Carna· Co., Adams al M11.11nolia, fens. all black. male and Fnx Tenie.r pups, 8 ·wk.,, er only. 160Z1 Valley Vie .... •, Sanla Fe alt 10 Rm 494·7506. 54(}l100, HB 9 "'AKC, 3.1 champ, pedigree, 67l-6741 tires. $600. 64fr.278S or lion, CdM. 613-405...,. · female. To qualifit-d homes S'200. 897_2844 Springs 213/921-..~ NEW F IAT 642-4910 ext 264. GARAGE sale: Sofa , cha in, WEGivetopprice1foreolor o n l y. 548-0813 or Bo R I DUNEbug'°''69,Sharper;tin 1970150SPYOER --~ --- dinette set, much mi1c. Silt, T.V. whethe'r working or 836-4493 9/22 Purebred,., Miniature Poodles •t ent• 1 town! pwr plu1, never In All colors to choose from. PORSCHE ·sun. 9 to 4, .f612 Seashore, not. Call for ext. 557--4292. 4 Krrl'ENS, grey v.·/hlue * 9~\W * ..;;-HoLJSEBOAT avail for fli rt. 5000 mi, make olfer. $2335 +Tax & Lie. ~N.B. 675-8089 eye.s. Lovable little hut. Wkndll or \\1eeki)'. Penn 548-1400. All models to choor;e. , Hi.Fl & Stereo 8210 !erb11.lls to good home1. BEAU'ry'.FUL Weim11.raner moored. 54,11...243.4, 636-40."W . l!l&t vw CHASSIS, ENG .& C•liforni• Sport Cers !-. 1100 -~ 96&-3262 9/24 puppies, r; wks, M~·papers, rerm1rs & c~lm work. TRANS Jo'OR t'\50 • 901 E. 1st, S.A, 542-8801 i,A..;p"p'-l_la_n_<_•_•_____ $000 Robert11 Professional 3 FEMALES 11.nd J male rah-SlO ea, 557-93.'>9. Boat Ch•rt~r 9039 * 517.8913 * •642--0443* ---, 1 ....-AN· EASY Tape. Re~rder ModeL.t~ hit +-lg.-cage-.ll2.-\\r,_.1_ MALE pui;,_regi!il~red . , __ .. .. _ 196! Har_l~_D•vidson __ , ..._ ·-JAGUAR W •• her & Dryer Like Nt-w, $200. 64j-1398 Wilson, trailer No. 17, OM. family, no papers. l2 1'11·fn-11crew Cfir1:r1 Crall r-.1iilfircyclc 25 ('C $125, Call Imported Autos y6QO --·-·--·-_ LIKE NEWI AIRLINE STEREO ~/24 S60 642-3019 Sips 6 * Delux boal a.11-iztJ4 r ltcr 6 PM all day JAGUAR Owner: 327.1431 "'(ilh AM-FM tuner SIOO 6 COMBINATION Lah, • AKC Small Toy Poodles 8 * MS-2434• 536-40M * Snt k' Sun. . . AUSTIN HEALEY 772-3838 before 4PM cocker & Gnldf'n RPI. pup5, wk1, 2 male, 1 female $50 M b'I H 9200 2 BSA Choppers, l w/mold('d HEADQUAR~RS REF-RJ'GERATOR wlth ·--Free toa:d homes. 548-1758. ** 96S-3925 ..-.!__!_! omes lank. flake painl, ex1cnd('d AUSTIN 'AMERICA Thc-onlyauthortzed.JAGUAR itreezer, S50. Sn 1111 219 C•meras & 9/24 e PURE BLOOD MA.LE .... •••• •••• chr'Ome frnl end & sm dealPr in the entire Harbor Grant, Apt B, NB. 547-8820 ~--------• \vhCels & Jots of chrni. Sales, Service, Parts · 5 Equipment 1300 ONLY 2 lef1! &ut black kit· LABRADOR PUPS THE MEADOWS lm.medlate Delivery Area. Ill · · -=::.:.!:·.:.::::;:__....:= . 4~3n3 _ 837.7425 h-lakr ollcr. 6•12-5.~7. All Mod•!• ties• w/wht nose11 & paw!I. """° REFRIGERATORS -Large ROLJ..EIFLEX. F3.S Tessar, ..i •. ·.....i 67~.cA~A .L: I (In the Irvine '70 1\A\VASAKI lOOrr. trR.il _1 tl ~ .,. & _ 11 1 nd t7S 0 \Veanr.:"-.... _!ra1 .... y . ~<>:1 -Yor.k..,Ure_Ter:.r er __ • ) •-···· r·--;o ... ---·-·ttlt -sett on. ~;--...., ...,.,. exce en co .. -. -ays -&It. 3• 9124 puppies AKC • 67!>-054S orange groves ,...,,;:;, 11K' con,., ·• mos s 64&-7820. 546-6380. 536-1195 eves. Now renting spaces on \1·:uT. $385. Ov.•ner. 2 Dr. Refrig, w/separate botlom free7.e r, S75. 53.q...(,016. 826-7784. -~--·--11~ YR old ma.le red H 1130 •rut .,,.,,. Doll 673-304R S Good 8500 Dachshunrl, frtt lo good Oriti " t1-1 ion ar ======-=::--::= J'O~ll s home. CaU~968-3lOO Afl "------'-.-I Mohile llome Community 'fill DIRT llodaka, Xlnt concl, J!rtl11JOll ~\in port,, 5:30 9/24 Corra_! sp11.ce · S.~ mo. incl e 521,~ acre!! of fun living Acccssorir11. feed1~g &: cleaning. 20322111 ·e -s.100000 Tt!ct't'alion:..I, •m-* 5+1.291l7 • 3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. WE'VE got lo find a homf'. Acac1a,.,.S. A. Hgts. ci~ultural crn1cr full 1970 HONDA 350. 1500 milits . &rl-s.i~ 540-17&4 Complet1;; SALES SERVICr- PARTS BAUER BUICK IN COSTA MESA e Pl-flLCO relrig-fret-zer , 1fl'OSt-lree, cnppertone, $200. 646-4219 11.lt 3 pm SURFBOARD -s· J 1 • • custom made. Exr.ellPnt condition. ?.!rfecl lor the beginner. $25. 644-ffi77. &oaut. greyt~-bro\.\·n fluffy PORT TION · k · S * kittit>s, 11.eaned & trained. TRANS A Ume, in par service cen· Xlnt. $750. * 1960 prite 234 E. 17th Street LUGER 9 I h. 673 ,.,. 1 3 9124 ter. t2131 5!!2-5m 1 '"' ,.29 548-7765 RCA Whirlpool washer (good AhapeJ $50. -nim, ma c ing ...,...,., at .. • Boet1 & Y~chtsJ 9000 • Daily :i;mog -free ocean -=-c'-==~~--c-Bei;t of er. .,,...,.., =-~==~=~=...,.. number5. Xlnt cond. Incl 7 Terrier/Poodle mixed pu-b d h * '70 NORTON Comm11nd~1 ==========l '62 J AGUAR XKE -W ire 646-95.'"iO comp'.ete accessories, $150. " WHY NOT n'('Zes, surroun ed Y or-Xlnt oonrl. Z..tust sell, $1200 BMW "·his, r&h, mtth nice cond. 54&-043& eves. pies, 6 wks old. Nited Ji(ood TAKE A CRUISE?? ange groves k moun!aln1 or best offer 546-4297 Silver gray. SIJ511. 67j...5989. homes. 21lll Binghamplon e 7 min from world·s largest '·==· ==·=,--,-.,..-,,., * 2 Surfboards-Good cond. Circle, H.B. 9/2'l For ·Lease Or shopping center (1'~a.shion 650 TRIUMPH' Choppe r, ?ver Autho ri1.ed Dir. 191j7 XKE Jaguar conv. lm- •SS.OOO OrientRI Rug-Royal Make offer . DO You like orange nuffy Charter Jslandl S900 lnvesrrrl. Rebu1ll, Sales e Service e Par1s m11:c. cond! New top <\. Antiques 1110 Kerman l2x2.1. Will take ===C.-l~I ~"-.... ~-"--~ kittens? We have 5 al.so LOW WINTER RATES! e Championship lawn bowl-11<1criricc SfiJO. OR 3-76.17 All Models to Choose From P11int. 18,000 m i. l\sking Best Oller. * ti73-5822. SURFBOARD -7'5"' Russe.II. a~rable calico 2 cute gray 40' Wheeler Cruiser: Sleeps 8. in~ green · 1966 1-IONDA SCRAMBLER Servi('e Mo~~y 'till 7:00 PM S,1100. Call aft 4:.l!l 5.U-36811. 1,;==c; .• "o. ~=====I i year old. tiger'f 6 wkll old nd gd Make appt. NOW! OWNER: e Small pell allowed 305 l'C. $3.'"JO or best oiler. Sat hi! Noon se .. 1n9·M1chln11 1120 .$50,_. ____ _..;;-c;5'c;Ul4~. 6. --...... ,., 91.22. -Wkdaya-"'9-8978 Ev .. ·&-Wk--Enjoy-the·•hove-trom-.... ,.,7 All 7,,..,,m. ·co AST IMPORTS KARMANN GHIA 1::.::;;c;;:..c...;_____ VE~'t healthy female kilten ehds: 827-1431. $81 .SO per mo. ·sf\ BULTACO 250 cc. Grt for Of Orange County lnc. , · 1970 Singer touch-n.matic, ~ig-Miscelleneoua 8600 J~j-:. ~o. black &. while 1966 STARCRAJol 110 22·. 1~8.'il Jeffrey JUI. 111rcet nr dirt. Exlras. $a9::i. l200 \\'. Pacific Cna:i;t Hwy 63 VW GHIA .7.<U:' beaut. 'Makes button '--'-'-'-;.;..:::;..:=::_-_;.....; longhair. Housebrol<en, r11.is-Rarlio, bait lank, 1andem (SA lo'wy at Jeffrey Rd. 51()...5J9S. 642-0406. e 546-4529 Conver1ibl~. Recent engine 'h01Cs, overca11! seams, blind FINEST e-d by affectionate childN'n. trail('r w/brakrs. Xlnt ski offramp) --1970 SUZUKI !M) o~rhaul, hard to find mo- .hems, desi11:n~ & etc. COLLECTORS ITEMS 642-1159 9124 &. Ii.sh boal. $1950. 547-6649 CALL COLLECT only 200 niiles. Excellent CORTINA rif'I, Radio, healer, 4 speed, WITH Name ltll 1 SWEET. a.HecUonAle orange · or 536-.,176. 714/5.11-8105, 714/5.10-2!130 ron<lition S.12i">. 64S.-1767 etc. WalnuLcabincl. Guaran. $.').'; By Appointment Only &. white male cat. Can't * SO. Coast 18' inbrd 714/83l-8585, 21318fi0·5210 80 YAr-TAHA. DirL Knob le,;. :~~or mi payments~ C•ll LoR•yne keep dueto child'salleriies. runabout. Xtnt con d . •••••••••• $150 Newpor1 Be.ach 64&6701 54&-6TI8 9/24 Varni1hed dttk I: int. SI T;iO. . I W'd C II • • Call M7-6749 * * ' * REPAIRS * BEAUTIFUL II wks. old 675-462.1 -Tripe I e ornt DESK-Massive c arved Hillttt'i;l e Flamingo '70 KAWASAKI 00 TR I Clean, oil & adjust you r Medit. 43" x 81". Overhang orange str iped kitr('ns to 2.1' DORSETT-Coast Guard Pararnounl • UniverMl w/ht'hnet, warranl"y, Hard- , machine> in your home. corbal supported. ~latching qualified homes. ~11~ equipped. Xlnt co~. Ban'ington e Broadmoor ly u11f'd, $300. 646-5:568 SPECIAL lib/tbl S500. 8' Blufgm --~----~~ $4600 finn. 548-'sns Continental e SIRr '$3.9;J, all wnrk fully gUar. plaid quality gofa. $1 50 firm. PUPPIES: Mot her 'xlnt. 8' FBRGlS dint:hy $100. )4' . Ge~eral • Hillcrest r 54~82311 _7~71H_54~2~·===~-~· I watchdog, father · La.brador fbrgl1 utility boat &: trlr, CHAPMAN IL--'-c,~--co-.,.. * AUCTION * hl"k w/whil< mackl""'. 12'>0. 67>-041>1 MOBILE HOMES TOYOTA Knitting t.fllCh. 54<J.-!M2 9/24 .neVcr used, Y, pr ic e . I"ine f"'urniture BAY Uiunch. inboard V·!I, 12331 Beach Blvri. G.G. :PFAFF sewing Mach, Bsl &. · FOUR Gray and black with lrailt-r, S600 complete. * 714/5.10-2930' * · App\lanr.es striped kittens, two wi th Call; 642-8030 Auto Service & Parts '60 V\Y RUS trans rebuilt, $.'ill. C11.ll 673-4162 9400 axle, 'ofr' 546--953R. Auctions Friday, 7:30 p.tn. four \.\'hile millcng, 921 Not. "CAPTAIN'S GIG" Triple Wide Cornell G. E. stereo, w al nu I, Windy's Auction Barn tingham Rd, NB 9122 Continental • Paramount VW Chassi.~. Transmissions, IAA-1/FM. phnoo xlnt ·cond. $1400, 714/846-:\527 Barringlon e Univrrsal :inrl others. 1200 ,,.,a 347-11 5 kndll 2075Y, Newport, CM 64&.8686 HOR$E manure &. 11having -.. -Flamingo e General e 6'12--044,1 e : ·.,.,.,.... :i ll · -w · &hind Tony's Bldg. Ma t"I. mix Dys !14:t-9918 Eves S•ilboat1 9010 B-•dm...-e '''' ==- '/'' ·-e '64 VW Eng $175 e M · t I dbl kl ~6' CUSTOM KETCH * !iii!J..il 18 * Ins truments 1125 pressure pain po • 1 WK. old ~ Lab and Hus e CHAPMAN '68 Cortina GT 1600 cnginf'. 4 5peed, rad.lo. (YNB!l48J ta" BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Roarl Sap Juan CapislrRM R37-4800/ 49J-•[H I I 499-226 l 'G!t CORTINA G.T. $1750 call Jeff al 962.1200 $1099 CHICK IVERSON vw 349--34l.1l Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. C'OSTA MESA MEgCEDES BENZ '69. 280 SE, 4 door sed. F•uJL pwr, a ir cond., elec sunroof, priv pArly. Priced lor quick sale. Mr. Brandl. Days only 833--0941 or 644--4261. DATSUN '61 2>J SEB1 • D• Sedan. ------·-1unrool. All red le.a ther/inL Ai\1/FM S800. 54g...22u ext 191, 962-5490. '70 TarCJa 911 'T' Demo! Exact1y M2 mil•s.. 4 speed, · AM/FM, chrome v.'httl!t. . -BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road San Juan C11.pist:rano R.17-4800/49:\-4511/ 49S-2'lfil Hr rdtop, gleaming. metallic &.ilVf'r, with brand new in- terior, chrome wheela, ra- dial tires, . AM/FM radio, Lie. WYW 215. $2199 CHICK IVERSON vw 549-3031 ~t. &fi or 87 COSTA MESA 1 197(1 HARBOR. BLVD. '63 PORSCHE 'S' cou pe. Agean Blue fiiti.h. AM/rM. (JGE"972l BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road San Ju111n Capistrano 837-4800/49i-45lV499-2261 '60 PORSCHE Cabriol@t, 1600 super, with hard top . .New engine,· new clutch, new tires, new paint, AM/FM, jusl like new. can be seen at 2089 Harbor mvd., or pJlone 1;45-1982 •. 9am I~ "6pr'n '67 Targa 911 2!1,000 mlle1. 5 speed, mags, AMIF'M. IVGP424) BILL YATES ' VOLKSWAGEN 32851 Valle Road. San Juan Capistrano 837-4800/493.-45111499-2261. '70 PORSCHE 911-T Coupe: s spd It Many Xtn1.s. 'l41lr m i. Pvt pty •. 673--0693 .. '-usr'cal NEW 7 gal Van~co air 548-3219 Hillcr"est e Dimhridge e boses & 1 roller coall'r, cost puppies to goon homr. Built fo r re.al sailors! MOBILE HOMES VW Engine, Good Cond. au. M11UN ..,.. CLARINET $500 Sacrifice S200. 846-2628 847-7307 alt. 5:00 p.m. 9/24 Rt'cently 5urveyed & well • 642-0443 • lmpo· rtecl Autos 9'00 Imported A"'°' t600 21]/$92 1821 found, Replacement vafue 1206 N. llllrhor, S.A. 1~:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~-~.1 Good condition, ('Riii! c0c.'~·-c·'C-'-·.,:..~·~~--I FREE to good home German * 714/531-8105 * -----"Leaaer in TM Lear.b Cititl"ll a nd all $4(1, 549-0.130 • ADUL T Wa lke r : Shepherd mix«! puppirs. S2lJ.OOO . .q11.u_o.11 .. -sails:.l --=~=-.,.,......,--'·T--.-l --T I 9425 N YW s1295 . A1orrlic for'!!. fathomele.r, eel. \Vant To Livf' In r•1 er, rave ZIMMERMA '61 '" ~. RUMPET with Co•e M•~morl< 1"' "'"" 2 Call ort 5. "'7-~6 9/24 •. 1 2 T' · J;} "'£' Rl!Ady to Mil. M ust COSTA MESA OR ILVD 1ta<11o, '""''· "-il>Hd, new l", .. --. -.. d. 175. 644.JfJ96 Rugs: 1 ier curtains. FREE w--' k body to • "" ·r· Ill d 1 '68 Nl1'.tROD. Deluxe:, Sips 6. 2145 HARB • tl•n . ll•t~ •lfh l'ftl .11 L"" """IA~" """ uu 11acr1 ice w Ira f! or p~ Local i;patt11 11v11.ilablr, rwiv.•! .... 6.•lO 1t111•1ot, 1w11.on1 r -·"-~_,_.~_. ------1 Falron & odds & end~. 2174 pe-rty or what have. yoU. 1r you al'f' scrioul! aboul huy. ~:.P·~~~~: din'g lable, ~ p\ Niftos & Org•n-s 1130 8Y!,?°r:JF~,o~;~~~. 6.i VPEaRc~icLO; ~\iE.AABLplE ... ~·~~-'.'"Id ~7.642-2851, Eves : ii~! allmm .. oh,~r~ ... ~me ... Now'g '68 l'IELD, & STREAM '69 DATSUN WAGON '67 VW CAMPA $·AVE ·. 11 WOW If camera. New KGdak M-16, ~ '"' ~· v ,.,.... TRAILER SI PS 7 1tec11o, .,..,.,, .... '~"' Hflta, "'11Y · · red & 11·hi le male kitten. 24· Islander, l'.G. Aux. BAY HARBOR · ~ · · • · 4 1C1ulPPtd lno:t\111.,_ IC• bei. ~ <M11y -"Y ' \VJ!.'r'I! Havini;: a i\1-50. ~7-239.1 """A778_ 9124 II H' O LE HOMES SS!lS. * * !)l!s.rol4 (Nerh('ad cam eni;:h~. ,,., •••. Fully 1no:1otld c1i.. .... 1mm11cu1••• ' IVHALE OF A SALF. ...,,,.., g11. ey, "· + many >ilrs. M Bl . cond11io... COLEMAN Mobile home Rips. 4 red. SflOO 10 sli95 1425 8,,,, St. (Rt llarhorl sprrrl, nuiio, low ml!eAge. on PIANOS Ir. ORGAN!\ heoter 30.000 BTU $50 FREE 10 goon home, lrg Trucks 9500 Speci11.I interior. Sacrifice. '66 YW ~ _, G"• •" ••·ph"--' make offer, sl ip 11.vAil. <::·:·!::•:..:::'• ':'.'"';;''==:-.:;"""':::'."::.7:::0 i---;;;;:;;;--;:;;;;.;;---d -T \\'O manu11.I org_ AO.'! tmm $299 A·oho' T 'a,. 1 •' P" "· maie " m " ~,., ~"" "" ~ (XTG5661 . T11ke tra e or 111..i1o. llHtv, '""II• w1ll1, .. .. ti "'"-.. 91~ "1 .. 3" .. t. 5022 w• •Y" " 1970 GMC · ... Pia~ from $179 642-284 1. gen r • ...,.,.."""" 66 * REPO * amall down . Will finance pvt tow ml!e1,.. A·1 1h•11t. 0 i ..:.::,.=:;,,..~~~---213--33.)-9974 eves. d S4CJ.3lOO csvy-1"1 WARD'S BALDWIN STlJD,I TACO ~. Ex-lle·I -."· 3 YARDS good IDp go]I, You ,67 UNIVERSAL 24 .,,. pty. Call t.1auiy Ir, ,, &<> "8' 66 ._.. " '·"''" h 1 ·~ -·" 9 2A 26' SOLING '69 Olympic cl. xvu c.l\L' 1 10 ~,-.,,-::-:-::c-===-----,;;-:::;;:;:--:=-:= " 11819 l'l~~~'·s~~DA'l -o'I f~t~~l. E~~nthl.';!. a:a~t Ii~ ~~:~,~~~~Ian kltte.n.sj'; ~t~':t ~~~~ ~~~,!:;s ~~ 2rnB~u1~ :::::$~~~~aped. 1500 PICKUP 0:707DATSnUN ~~.-!°.!~It~~.·~!. ; St'.09. . s .. ' ~-=· ;;,•;,F""l F.;.Rc:N;;OO=,.;;.N_,s.,..,,,. I hrand new .. $95. 64~577. ks old, 847-18ti3. 9 24 brokers. 112 \V. Coast H11•y, CHAPMAN ·-' '"""*•· '"· ""d1ra. . ~I e ,STUDIOPIAN0$125 SURFBOARD -5' 11'' MESEManxkillens.Oth. N.B . 548-5.551. MOBILE HOMES WITH CAMPER' 4DoorSed11n,u&Cld SlJ9!l fulJ •H·,.utes. nmu... • -• Bloor! Wood * MR-4976 cus1om made. Excellent el'll too. 49'1·6608 9/22 37. SLOO 1~ N 11 llo SA price. (601.AVA) dlr. WU! " • s~ &<'"'•7 ~ •~ b i·~ · I • "lh vat• o••ty. Call 546->1052 Ol' F•llll.ttk (lWL..,.I. • Uprr'•hl Plano $150 co ton. e.i·iec. -'or IJ<'."g n-f"REE Fem•I• ~ to _ _, verted 6 mete•. W•ll main· 714/fl.11-8105 291 enstine heater, dt>luxe .-' , !)62.574 1 ner, ''" ~"1 • ho m e w/chlldren , 1111lned &: In excellent con· ca, i.,,,rgaii.,• llrP.s Vn ,...... N1•v,w.co10r,Al1 lll•ck r I • ndl I P _ 1 , ~ 1 AUXILIARY P con· M1<J • 11r r, '· ' lake b'•de or finA.nce prl· '67 YW $9«JS • F1JRNrt'URE-DISHES M9-2471t. 9/22 dlUon. Ca11 646-0261 or 12131 12331 Be111 ch Rlvd, GG 8 foot cab over King of 494-61111. lntrtlol. 0111'~ :S:ll~~-==~~&~M}l~SC~•~~::;;:~'!:~[.ff:~~~~~~~>~'>:HJ8116~~~}l'S';;;;:;r;·h;;i]~1lf~f."~4~;;:~..,~-2!1~.~3C~~dO'~R~ .. ~d~C.~m~""~'~·:st~o~v•t,·:''~fli~·!~~:::J~~~~~:S.Ul!l_l~~'ii1rw;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:~i1jii:fiiijiii.-::lb::::-::;::::;d ti-: pm . bc:!autlful, mix-brt'td pur>-SAILBO~TS: 12' Sidney hull Kit Tmj11.n 20X~"i F:xpAndO erll or, ga · "'a er OPEN DAILY ·n n-YW TIME FOR 2 BAR. 11tools $10 ea. 21" plea 846-2900 9/22 A sai19, 12' Snnwhird hull & unfurn. Adult pllfk natural v.·ood with lots of fAND :;:1io..::-,r• •Vllf'Mf. • RCA cabinet TV S60 ph KlTI'Y Cats moving must AAils, both boat& -Jor $\~. * 642-0.i07 * rdCm. SUNDAYS QUICK CAS, H :~1:~r1ge. CAbinf':ll. wall ~~ :~7~;71my petA9~ 77~1~~:-,.:R Sloop. frbgls Bicycle• ms $3295 ~~u::~ r!1:cdh THROUGH' A ;;-~~~· 4'x4'xl and J'x4'xl'. COUCJI And cMir and ainale ~;'~ ~~!~. se~l75.-~:5 ~~ Dt"QPPER bikl' ;t.1pccd. rii~ ~rlr.1 5874<1 . '-"-::=142.lJX1==='='=5'= .... =12=='11 1 o-'='-'"'~· ~--.,---,,-., m!lllttS!I. 549-003 9/22 SJ I~~ br&kes. kmjt e.xlrnderl forks. UNIVERSITY ... LT""" 501 oyloo .. .,,. .. 50 Pr Colllo '"'"'""to -~~~~~~~~l~Lg;'~'~"'~w~$511~-J.,...,~5~1M~.= OLDSMOBILE ENGLISH FORD DA IL y PILOT ~~~,.;;."' aood oond. 185 home. ,.._7304 9122 <;OLUMBIA 22 SLOOP. ln<:ll ::::.:_:::::::~---=-ee l.DOUBLE util i!Y: buif)--(On-Phe-'~-",,a:Rllell)'. Xlnlt koolnd; Mini B ikt l 9275 "-ta"'M'°e·~arbor ~l~;,._u. WANT AD e SUM"-CYM Xlnt c6n<tltfon! crelt. You haul. 64M!M0'9/22 ,.>\...., ae qu c Y. 1-,.,--------.......,, "" ;tt\;;JU'N , . \, prit~. ~llihtly uACd, 82&'~2. TACO 22. Exctlltn! ron-'63 ECUNOtlNE-Chcrry 111 Ews aft. ~ !Jol&.3093 * Jo'UN healthy puPJ)lts 111.b mix e 20' Sloop e tlUlon. Everythhia: about II t'Ond. Mu!! stt lo A~ . '~• &42 •5178 E: eoH~~~~~I ~ 2:~r:sble blk female kit~~= M~~(~=.1 boat, 51~-~ ~~jl;~;~e~ 1~~~;f, l.• ~;: ~fake 0 11 er ' * &4S2Gl.f * 6 wka old 643--7169 9/Zt * TLIPPER. No • .f2J...Crea{ .'.10 TACO ?tftnl Bike. 3 hp VAn-1969 Ood~e Sportsman. ni"ED of Iha! old f\tmltum1 JAKE·s Continuous Swap OOUBLE bed, 6 4 6-!i 6 3 2. for ktd1. Rerl w/wti!te deck, "'Brlgp. 9 inonth guArantee VR rng, 318cu In, RUio trans, 11'1 .ttally not that hArd M~t. Buy.SC.II-Trade UT E. fi4fr1492 9/24 $28.'i. 645-MOI. S!li. 675-0870, 11ir conrl. 1W'w W"'(' bclted m N'place. Just WAlch lhe 18th, CM 642·56fi6 3 DARLING hlk klttt:nl, 6 LIDO 14 •2'63 Motorcycr.. 9300 f\1'('1, $2M5, CRI] 646-7353 funrtiort 1A :~tar;:: -.,c;,,,,RA"'et.~E"°"s.~u"'"n"•-~~..,,~ho,-at wks nld. 64M402 9/24 Sll:iiJ. &M·.2601 ........... J ~HEV. P .U. columl1I n us bl!h, like new. SIOO. mt Ql.JJCKE.lt YOU CALL, lalbpa 20' fixed K•I 1"6 IS11to 00 cc $475 \ii 1,0n, Xlnl eond S69S S.Ction. Q62..n61 THE QUICKER YOU SEU. 545-0532 2286 Elden.A\•t, C.M, •• .. 6U.21.66 .. ---'C:..:.=-~--'·-----'--'-- I 1 I I • • ALL NEW ENGLISH FORDS NOW IN STOCK DR.AS'MCAU.Y REDUCED TO CLEAR LAllGE SELt:enOll \'O ClfflOSE FROM Theodore ROBINS FORD 206IJ 11arlxl Blvd, "Costa t'lll MMIHO 'H IMW 1600 .. ,,..., ft<lilll ...... i.. --lllK ...... ~ rMll. 1119flr, l\IW r9Cli.I fl ..... L.ew, 1.-,,,. ...... ~J ,l'iDll -~2195: 'PLUS A LARGE SEL,CTION OI' . VW iUSIS, ALL COLOllS • ~~~~~~~~-----1 oe Berlettl'• T&M MOTORS IOl1 Gor<l111 0,... II .... IA.LO OPIN iUlllNT rAITS. SOYl~·­TMUU. nU. 1:11 fM•Jll4 rtn •· L. .. ,...., .lt14UJ ... --· , I f'!"!,..,..""':'!''!"'l":'""""!~l!"'.~"l":'"'"~!l"'I'"'!':'.:".".:'·'". 'l; •• ~,n, "·"· Tl""'!"'"· ~ ..... :<.~. ·c,'F::". ':;, .".!'". T. ,,,r .. -n .... ;;:,,.,., ~.~.r. '1' •• "r. 4 ~· ..• -:. • ~ • ... ,..,., ... _.., ; . ......... .. . , ... ~ . ..... ... . . ,.... -..,. --.-....... ... . ... , . ~. . ,. • •• --' ..... . •• TUfldq, StPl""llfr 22, 1970 l TRANSPOltTATIOlf -TIANS'°RTATION -TIANSl'OITATION -. TIANIPOWTATION'~ TIANSPOITATION - -""" Ciro ;> -u.-C1r0 -u...i c... -:U::...i::.;C::•::."::...--= VOLKSWAGEN . wt PAY CASH IUICK .CHEVROLET DODGE MU~TANG PONTIAC . _ -'64 POHCHI -=--..-sc-c-.~ ...,.,,. ..... -........ -:iirlt.--dltloo. Lie. XOG98I :!!FN .vw _au~ -ma VOJI ... a -'flO BUICK"'"""" '"ll ,,.,. '61 Blsc~YNE ·• .~ .......... v,., ·u MUSTANG '14 mEYllL--- $55.11 Ill --· =l -:111111-"-&lL.amd. Nu ... o...bt. ·~aulmll& • _l~ ! xJn t cood.J'lll>..tJm, Vt. A ... cRadio, n .. ttt P.Sc+-.--pr. Li -Ptl'.rii115t----.e:1J or return to power 1tttrlna, radkl, beat-n-.agsll • ~ ,..!!n1•1·,_~13t, (SRG 587) ' run PoWf:r + 11ir cond. dtr • CONNELL Jeu~ Co. $3695. 5.Yt-651! er tVFC437) · a now . '11•.r•~ a ....... $... IUJH 5591 Immaculate con. $3099 CHICK IVDSON 54S.30ll Ext. a; or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD, CX>OfAMES/. '69 911 ·s· Demo! 5700 actual miles. 5 speed_ trart5., mq wheels, AM/FM, Special factory *pPf!d· Y~ with black inh!rior. C•30122tt $147.71 down Incl ... 1 .. a Lie. °""" l'nd VW LE.Ull<iG . AT -CHIGK-lllERSG Vw U70 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA British ndnr """" wll.h WE BUY VW BUSES .1..,tric "'"'""· Excoliont auto sport ltd cond, {XJV827J Sacrifice! CHEVROLET ~ ~71 aft• pm ' SI" '66 DODGE VAN' R/H Xlnt BILL YATES dition! Mull ..i~ will tin. BILL oond, Gd. nibber, l1AIO . '"""'· 494,774' , c:! ~ :_~ . CADILLAC YATES FIRM. ,....,.,. VOLKSWAGEN PDNTIAc ... ' Or. eaii11" ...Y!E PAY Tdl> DOILAR MOVING Tn Hawaii! M"'t VOLKSWAGEN _.,,..,,. _ 32852 Voll• Road Ha':'.'.'°~·-'""J'f';,_.!:1;~; ~961-1.liitWiC·seaii· --~vane ROA t:.VfY'· --Sa;n-Jua:n·captma ..,~~ ...... ..__, It'""" car .. extra clea1I, d•Ville. lull ....... fact, •Jr San JU<n CapiJttam '65 FO. RD LTD '31-<800/4~5111499-2'61 1239<1. 968-37~ ~ UI first. .-cOnd. padd@d top, all op-837-4800/~1/49!1-2261 MUSTANG '69 Ma h I 3.ll 1969 Pontiac Cu&tom 4-dr, BAUER EtnCK tion~. wholesale Bluebook ,66 CAPRICE 4 Door Hardtop, VS, auto., VS. air 4-!pd ~itc)brlai' p/1,,.lr:"leather, lo ml. Top 234 E. 17th St. $2675, wW take $2500. Call . power 1teeripg, vinyl top, i-a. ' ' . ' Cl)l'ia. $2500. 547-7188: eYa Colta Mesa 5'8-?'765 eves and weekend•""'" ~...... dlo. IPKV=-1 p.i,. po11\, itereo, •port ""'646--5265 ••"-Jor Albf:rt .._,........, """ deck, air 1coop· S 2'&~0-:' · · .....,. · · ' WE PAY TOP 'If '69 CADILLAC Se d • n •door hardtop.)Ull power & $599 6464435 ext 3S nite-W-2886. '65 PONTIAC 2 + 2. Pis. air CASH. O.vill• Lo ml; Mld,.iin air, dlr. IWBJ 586> Small BILL y ATES ' ' · oon<J. tood ,..int • ""''· til't's Ir &lJ xtru +,Pvt pty, down . Will finance. $7744 Cr-.pr whls, tape deek ~ l4895:963-l1JS. '67 . CAMARO VOLKSWAGEN °""' e.iru._....-. '6: CAD 4 dr, OeVille. Afr, 32852 Valle Rold MUST Sell '66 GTO, df!an . •• •I ' •• BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN Small down or take trade. 9625 Garden Gro\'e Blvd. Will finance pvt, pty, Call 537-7777 Call C.Ollec:t ?.1al11)' dlr. afilO am 540-3100 '63 VW Bus-Cherey cond, or 494-7506. paneling lhnl~U!. Tuck " =========I roll in!. Big tires, chrome VOLKSWAGEN rims, nice paint job. Make offer, 962-9650. for Uled Qft A: tnacb just call ua for free estimate. a11 powe r, lo mi. Pvt ~: V8, automatic, radio, healer, San Juan Capistrano chrol'(le rims. new rl•• o•• •uoo: power st~ring. (XWY562) .,_ ake ·"·• ••7 ,._ 11 ,~. 83i-4800/493-45ll/4!&226t .... ca. m ~lif-l""'• " .......... GROTH CHEVROLET = vo1i. !!Dad. '58 VW • ,,.. vw. Sqbcl<-Good cond. 83~~.~~4~ Original blacL finish with 4432 SandbUl'I \\'ay, Irvine. Aak U: ·~ ~ conttastin& ml interior. Lie 833-22..">4 HWttinltoa Beach '6.7 PORSIHE 912 GBVTIO. . •. '65 vw SEDAN ... ,...... Kl ""3331' Whita _with black interiot'. Sli Down • 646-7744 ·• IMPORTS WANTED J.M/F}of. e>i:ceptionally rood SYii down, ...:: $29.78 tor 24 '65 VW Oranp Countlel l'UlUI1rc. wYG!M5 month!!. APR is 21.5% total _ BUG TOP S BUTER . '$4295 interest. $148, Total cash BILL MAXEY TOYOTA '69 CPE de V, magnificent! \'inyl top, stereo, phuh i~ ter, lo&ded, $4895. 547""469. CAMARO $1299 after .6 p.l'IJ,. · 11 BILL YA TES TOP llOLIAR . . . VOLKSWAGEN -1ot ·""52 Voll< .Road _ Cll'AN USED CARS San J\.Jan-Capistram See· Andy Brown 837-4800/493-4511/499-2'i61 TMEODORE 2 Door Hardtop V8, Auto., "" Chery·N•w Jll ""'""· ROllNS FORD R&ll, ·P .S. LOndau Top, New radiator and new bat-3lEiO Harbor Blvd. Bucket Seats fA506M1)' tery: Mlllly extras-Make C<Hita Mesa '69 BLUE Cullass. Must Sell! $1199 RAMILER ·'68 REBEL I l' ' ! oUer. 557-4982 before 10:30 642-0010 ·Pe~ect cond. Must see to BILL YATES ~~~·'1!"!'!"~'!;'!1'°kJPrJM~.'==,.hiiii::;'i)iii;;'i~~;;;;:;;~;1,be~h~"~"' ~2300~~or:.,be~.i:,;o~H!.!•:i,.r.I -, 1-; -FORD-L""l'D"'9--pa•r wgn. Y.0 1-vsw·*'GE..._ 1959 Ch<vy ll•twn w•~. ~-•l · nd 20 000 'Call 8 am~ pm, 64>8500. -· "" ;.. · n -;-:-- CHICK..:lllERSQN.. cP''H'"1'crisK .. ~VER· SON Am•rican .m•••. "''• °"'~· lB8lll Beach Bl""· ----+ 1 tom_metallic...paln~_ -Ho Beach. h.-847.f5!lli VW VW beautiful lacti work. YPU. r -.~·· ,..w pwr, &Jr, u er , Cle".!1;.,~1,; "'l !l"~ mi. Prrf!ci, S25S5. Pvt.I---------.~Valle Road , ,, i*&.S~:Z: ~ ~.;"' h, :!,!:.360 'wkdya, 846-3222 PLYMOUTH &1~~~:~i;:_';i 901 '68 CONT'L 2 Dr. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 549-3031 Ext, 66 or 67 . Se~eral other customlud Have tnde. COSTA ME.SA VW to c"~-frOni 673-2312 '70 911 'T' DrmG. 3400 actua.J mileg, 5 speed trans., AM/FM, mag wheels, emeraJd green with black interk>r. r•10U66), 1910 HARBOR BLVD. ·~ COSTA MESA CHICK IVERSON '63 vw VW Auto Leasing · Low miles on rebuilt engine, · 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 new clutch, new brakes, ·1970 HARBOR BLVD. radK>, perfect condition. Can Original owner. Make offer. "'66""GO'ol;:M-;-i,"rn"""',.-·-•"'"1,,.om,,...., p:c..,.-1-,66-P-ly_m_ov_th_S_o_t_o_ll_it-o l ------~---I '68 SS, 396 auto., AM!FM,1_c_o11_96S-390 __ ,_. ___ ·_ ltrg, xlnt, Pvt pty, $?95 or 2 Door~ard!op with buckrt T·llRD discs, vinyl, co n • o I e, bei1t oUer. 494-3415. seals, powl'r slee.rlng and gauges, air ahocks. SI750. CHRYSLIR '66 GALAXIE Cnvrl. Auto-brakes. Clean. Excellent buy '10 T·BIRD, Xlnt cond, 213: 592-2418 P/S JIB. Pvt ply: $895 or Original own~r. Price ,s79s: ·°'aier's lo book or leaee BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN be seen at 2089 Harbor '64 VW Xln't Canel Bl••."' pho"" 645-1982, ...,'l==.,J="':";:,·="""',;:"'='== CHEVROLET to 6pm Large Selection VOLVO All A~:~:r.;'~1~1' . '66 MALIBU '56 ~er Newport,,"'_.:.','';:':,,· ':;:'::"'c.'..:".:.l.;l.;:67>M06-'--:':;~l ;Cal;:::;i,..:83::l:,.4~239;::..;E::l:_T.:coro~.~-I take. ovtr. Eve: 675-3443 11 PIS-PIB. Auto trans. Orig '69 Fairlane, P (s, auto, '69 Road Runner, 383 eng, 1..;·d~a"-y'=.,....,.~=====-" finish. 4. dble Eagl.e ~15 A/C, 351 cu In. New tires. 4-spd, mags & new tires, e 1963 THUNDERBIRD ·' 548-1716. Must sell Sl950. 673-8088 ta~ deck. $2000 or best olr. * $500 * 32852 Valle Road San Juan CaPistram &17 4800/493.-4511/ 499-226:1 e '65 PORSCHE SC -Sunroof, tape, Clean! S2950 * * 548-2667 Of YW C 1 - -... ..._ • "Whire Service Automa1ic, V8, power aleer- . Gmperl, ......... - -Makes the Dillerence" ing, radio, heater. (FFP(l76) Vans, Kombis, ~ THllll °"""''co .. N•wport Beach $1099 Buses, New & Lisecl 'VOL.YO: ""Camp•• 0 " 11"541).3825 BILL YATES '&3 ·NEWPORT: P/S • P/B. '66 Galaxie 500 conv v.a. Must sell . 842-5430 aft 6:30. 847~515 GD. COND. autom, Pwr strr. R&H, :dnt. e . GOOD WORK CAR Full ;po~r. Run& JOOCf, $450. * * 545-7473 $995. Private. 494-3415 '57 Ply, SlOO * 644-0148 · $115. 64&-4644 COMET PONnAC VAUANT " RENAULT '62 DAUPHINE. good cond .. nu tire&, eng fixed, ·$150 or best offer. M8-6317. lmmldi1to Dollvo"' unc1 c .. , 9900 VOLKSWAGEN MERCURY CHIC_KvwlVERSON "FRIEDIANDER" 32852 Vall• Roa<i '61 COME:l' '65 c Ii , '68 LE MANS' Xlnt cond. w;;;--VALIANT • cyl. I' AUTOMOTIVE San Juan Capistrano GOOD TRANSPORTATION . ai lente • Ma~y xtras. aUtomatiC ,-doar;-alrfcond t• 549.3031 Ext. Qi or 67 .1=7~c9 1S.,7~ 837-4800/493-4511/499-2261 $250. * 675-S~ __ 2 DoorHan::Uop. V8, 11utom11t. $Zl 9a. ** Ali S: 5.57-8825 55,000 ml., 3 neW tires plus I 1970 HARBOR BLVD, NEW·USED·SERV. REFERRAL SERVICE '66 CHEV II 2 dr, H.T, 6 cyl. ic, power steering. dlJ'.: {PAS-'69 GTO convt auto, PIS. : S/'IOW tjres t.J1!1. s~re parts ~ COSTA MESA Au1n, good cond. $595. CONTINENTAL: 4851 Must sell. Will finance. PDB, tint glass. -conl§OJ!; -Best oHer, mu 1 t tell! ' -~AAB --,;';';'::-;""==='---1-----=-=-::I 646-456.l 671-7413. 4M-7744 . $1930, Must set! 548-6123. 546-1548 or 646-&34. . WANTED ..,.._,...._---. Thf! revolutionary way I'll d ll VOLVO to sell your automobile. LATE '66 Imp. Spt Cpe V8, •70 MARK IlI e ·59 MONTEGO MX-351 4 e '59 PONTIAC -as is, betsl '6 1 VALIANT.automatic, pay top o a-fM: )'OU1' Z1 500 I ir P'/pb 1 _. 'T mos old 2000 ml Dr _ Fae/air, auto/tnlns, offer. r&r.h. Xlnl runnina: cond, $275 , Authorized Dealer VO' -'AGEN fod•v, Call \\'I! have buyers waiting! • m • 8 • • .,. • • ~" ~ pl·~ owner $1250 675-1380 ONE owner 673-6813 R/H, PIS • P/disc brks. 545-6244 aft 5 pm firm. 962-8556. Sales e Service e Parts and ask for Ron Pincho'. •10 Demo. • 1536 CALL NOW 642-4431 3 • ' -:;;;;.,,,=~~;;~i,:i'L'iy'':'::'::= 6.5 1 ~S S 2 D PIS --34,000 mi lmmac. In It Out. o;.!:~i:.:~~~kDlr. -="~ ... ~~;·~~~';w~.-~ .. ~-"~1~:-~~·:1-:~~$2862=~ ~~~Y--.P/B~l11"1 .. ~_..".. -· -COIVETTE=:t~l~2500~~~ ..... ~-~~~~~1;u~nc1~ .. ~C~·;";;;;;;~9900~~U~ncl;t;-~C.~·$;;;·;.;;~"~--~lr COAST IMPORTS MECHANIC SPF,CL\l; :,"!!~ .,:io~~~l~ jju __ .... ..,., " .. -,,El-~-'m-1'.-!'JJ..-. -~~-'!-,_-R-u-., '66 CORVETIE, 4 •pd .. "'w MUSTANG Lie. OKC6l2 DEAN LEWIS '"""""" '~ perfeclly, 536-6746 Between radials: 327: yE"llow v.•lblk . . of Orange County Inc. $2'9 646-9303 2100 Harbor Blvrl. 645-0466 8 ·& 4_ Int. Musi sell, oiler 675-3860 '66 Mustang, V8, delux, vinyl 1200 \\I, Pacific Coast Hwy, CHIC" IVERSON l98tJ Harbor, C.M. '6(] CORVETl'E. 2 tops top, auto, pwr, 1 owner. Jo 64Z-0406 e 546-4529 ft '59 VOLVO. RR E 8 U IL T '6ll CHEV Biscayne V.'agon, .,.,,. A I 14= mi, nu tireJI:, :Xlnl cond. VW BUICK p/s, Reliable trans. $300 ....,. u 0 ' ,;, S127S. 67~3379 aft 6 or TOYOTA ENG*IN~~l~l.900 * ·cash. ~ aft 5 646-4jfi,1, 671-7413 wknds. 5C9-303t Ext, 66 or 6"I l9SI BUICK '66 Chevy Impala. PIS, COUGAR' '6.l MUSTANG 289 U7o=~VD. Antiques, Cl•ulct '615 Good runni:r; $125. R/H, A.C. goort cond. Very f SfD, .GOOD .SHAPE REPO! , CLASSIC '57 T·Bird, both 67~34 a 'l. good cart. 57:i.-757S. 1967 COUGAR GT. Air-rond, 1---•-tt_XXl_64_2-_15_28 __ ...=, 68 BUG, Pl:'~ pty, Im.mac tops. Stick. e '54 BUICK $125 1959 CHEV V-1 . p/s, disc bmkes. Adj, till Try popular Dime-a-Llnff '70 Toyota Mark 11 Loaded • :ractocy Air, au~ mati~ Juat over 2.000 miler. cond, lo mt_!:_ R/H, tape Sacrifice $850. 675-0406 Ne\;' tires & brakes. 644-2711 Runs good $125. 642-983.f sleerizw, $1695. 644-2450 Pbone 642-5678 •• charie 'em. ded<, pu!WI out rear win·l:Z==============~========;:;:::o;:o;!..,:;:;;;:=='=:"'=====:..:.:;:;;:;:;:::;::,::=:;:=~============;;==~ dows, $l295, 536-ll29 New C1r1 -""-'~-'-~--".;.;,.;-'----~-:.:. Sacrifice! f642BQD l Take '69 RED VW Bug-black int, trade or small down. Will -r"/h, goOd-eond.-Clean. 01- finance prlv ply, QUI -Sid --fer. Before~5;"549:3343;-e:tte-r · dlr, aft 10 am 5f0.3100 or 6, 499--3749. 494-7""'. '· .. ~vw=-"'-""-t~.,,,-.,-... -,-,-,,. · cond.. Bfft offer. 54J...8458 or [T!OIY!OJT!AJ 1 ,,,,.,~-.-":="~=~E"'R._gd_cond-. '71 COROLLAS SlJIXJ or best otter. HERE NOW * 536-4938 * \Vagons, 2 Ors, Coupe1 '69 VW -Aumtatic stick Automatics & 4 Speeds shift, $1450 or belt otter. DEAN LEWIS Mull S.U . ......,,, 1966 Harbor, C.M. '68 VW, beige, stick shift, .R&H, xln't cond, $1200. BIIL MAXEY 1~ ...... ""'='',..:."·----.66 VW. New eng. & tires. ITIOIYIOITIAJ _:;oo"_",.,'.,".,,~7.~,....,·, .. ,,",,,·000,.,,,.,,0r=be-" 11U1 lll!ACH BLVD. '67 v.w. ONE OWNER Hunt. 'Beach ·147.asu Low mileage! Extras! l mt N. ot Out Hwy, 01i Bda "-CttM;;c;.,-9"7"12.,-'-;',;54,;.,~7-34~­ '69 TOYOTA Corona 2 Dr. '62 VW Van $495. '38 Ford Bei&:e w/blk inter. f~l P .U. $300 or !;>est. 536-4578 radio Must sell! $1750. ,,,"'-'-;'~· ===~---4!K-8874 '68 KARMANN GhlR, Rir TRIUMPH , ,68 Toynta Corona eou-cond .. radials, stereo, S1995. .. ~ 671-2312 take over payments. ~2738 '&I Karmann Ghia, Xl nt !===========I cond. S72S or Best oHer. M;,...&;19 or 962-1782. 1963 TR-( IOft top, hrd tp, tonneau covf!r, overdrive. $750. st0-4713 aft 6. VW CAMPER BUS S995. 962-2273 nn: SUN-NEVER SETS on Daily Pilot ctassitie'd 9IOO New Cars UNIVERSITY GUIMHIU <OSTAW•- JAGUAR 234 E •. 17th ST. COSTA M!SA JAGUAR 2+2 1970 DUNE BUGGY '66 MERCEDES 230 SL low '""''''' I ow11•• b11u+v with 011lv 22,000 '"il11 , Chrom1 "';,, "'ht1l1, r1dio. h11t1r, 1ulo1'1'11ti1; tr1M'"i11io11, Ju1t imm1cul1t1. \SYWIOll VW wild wil d colors oversized tires •ncl re•dy for the rood .1198.BNP I. Cp1. Ro1dst1r, Thi1 b11utiful 1. ow111r ctr h11 rtditl t ir11, AM / FM r1dio, 1utom1tic tr1111mi11io11, pow1r 1teeri119, pow1r br1k11 & 1ir co"ditio11ifl9. $3295 Prestige Cars at Sensible Prices :~. ~~~e!~~ .. ~~ ..... , .;, .... , $2195· · '"ill unco11dilion1I p•wtr tr1i11 '"•rr111tv. While '"/ble,k .. ;11yl roof. Ont 1w111r. IZUOIOl • :~?.. ~!.~t~~I~~,~~~ .. ~~~: .. $2895 to r11 1lv be1ie¥1 ii. Full pow1r, 111(.. h11il r1•t I r1cli11i1111 pin, 1,111, 1ulo., 1ir co11il., etc,. '''' V1ry low '"ile19e. IYWS61J ) ~~~~:~~~:~~!.~.~~~~ $3995 J11ied or, thowroo'" '"od1I, :~~.,~~~~~"' ~~~ .. ~?.~: .. $3095 ~l!!U!:J.l.lf•1rf1t9"111tl pow1r br1k11, .,;11yl i11!1rior, power t1il 91t1 '"J11ilow, f1cl1ry eir coriditi111i119. f l1wl11t. IVHfl I J) ' :~~. ~~!.~~~~-.. ~~!~.~"''" '1395 l'ow1r 1l•erl119 l br1~11, 1ir ce11d ., low '"lle•t•• I •wrte1. 109,AS-I - I . • \ SAVE Periorman~e Cars '65 Riviera GS Full pow1r, f1ctorv 1ir 11-011tliti111i111), ,i.,,,,,, '"h11!t. l1u1r lu!,k W1rr111teecl. IPIY1 t41 '69 .Buick GS 400 VI, 1ulo,,.1ti(., r1tllo, hetler, f1, .. ,., 1ir, lull pow1r, teu t+i111 10,000 l'l'lil e1. U11der fectorv '"'"'11ty, 141 OASll '69 Torino GT 2 Or, f11ilt.iclo:. VI, 1utom1tic, r1cllo, h11t1r, pow1r 1le1ri11! l br1k11, f1ct1ry 1ir, f11t1ry '"•rt111ty 1w11, IXWAttll I $1595 \' $3595 ~2545 .. 1969 CAMARO l dr. H.T. \II, l•,l&rv 1ir. turDo 0h,,tl1111'11 • ti(., etc, D•rk 9rey wiffi Yi11yl to,. !YOM 012) $2895 1970 G.T.O. t d•. M.T. le1utiful 9old-.with 11Ml1!w&M "i11y! te, l ittteri•r. F1cf11ry •ir ••11di· fio11i119, 1%1177•1 1 $3895 1970 LE MANS SPORT 4 dr. H.T. l~ceiw1 I• eri;;-i11,lu'· illt f1ctorv t ir, power wi!!dow1, 1tere• AM.FM. 11J720tl $4095 1969 GTD 4-SPEED le111tiful V1rdero &reel!, ''w•r 1t.1rint I power di1c. lir1k•1. I ),000 tnilet I fie-, tory w1rr111ty. I 714AFXI $2795 1967 GRAND PRIX ,.1cfory 1ir c0Mitie11i11t. "i11yl to, I lordeil with erfrti. A lt11utiful teld. IT~H377l $1895 1969 FIREBIRD CONV. Sp•rkli119 rtd With bl•ck (.u1to111 frltfl. pow1r 1t1eri119 & f1ctory t ir, IZLHO!ll $2795 1961 BONNEVILLE 2 d1. h1riltop with 1ir 'e!ttl .. pewer wi11- dow1, li9ht told body I 1111tchi119 inter• lor. IWXG•tll - $2495 1970 LE MANS ! d•. Sport H,T. le1ulifu l ;,.ory witli ltl•c• ,.;11.vl top, f1ct11ry 1ir ce11dit io11i119. It IJ: 2t l l . $3695 1970 ·GRAND PRIX Strroe r1tli-. "¥i11yl to,, ·f1ctory elr-1 - 011ly 5.000 milet 011 thi1 lifht 9•ee11 per· 101111 c•r. A11 •11:c1ptio111I buv f017·1fJ:I~ " I IX~Stt41 r 1 $4695 1969 flREBiRD 350 T11r81 hydr1m1fic, ..._power 1teeri11t, e .. , \lerd1to &r1e11 h1rftop. l ic1n11 No. IXkStt4). $2595 Cl.OUI SUNIATS ~R.OY CARVER ~ROLLS -ROYCE • ' ' " ' " 2925 HARBOR 80ULEVAIW, COSTA Mi;SA 546-4444 \ I 17 .. ' , " !J go ::: Sy Sy joi G1 ... At ' A1 ilt fo Vt ··In • " ki bl In H n al "' p n it H n • l • 11 I ' I l 1