HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-09-29 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa•
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Vietorious SI, • Fieler Vows·· . .
To· ·nelend A~~riea 9s Cup AtJain·
READY.FOR ANOTHER GO
·C:UD ·Skiaper Ficker
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All Under· ~Control
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·1973 Cup
Race Seen
Flames Peril San ·Diego·'·
, Ir . DAILY PILOT
By Ficlcer
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -Victorious
skii)per Bill Ficker ~f Intrepid agreed 1o-
day &o take the helm of a new cup
·defender ·u. the u:s. defends tbe historic -. ./ .
Amedca'.1CUp,qaiQin11'11.
r~~llL~lbat tii1lill ,.., s 21st ....
..ootlll·defemi! ofthe ~ lropby 8J>o
"""""" . ..,_i 1o form I .... • 11)'11-
dicate..' '
Fl!'br and his crew·d!'f,.l..t arei.1 n
of Australia f.l in a seriei' tlmt' ended
Monday'IO mllel off this yachting center.
ALMON LOCKAIEY'S' ACCOUNT
OF0 RACE ON PAGE 12 TODAY
The U.S •. has not lost the cup since it
was first won by the schooner America in
England in 1851.
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* * * 10' * * *
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TUESDAY, AFTERNOON, SEPT.EMBER 29,. 1970
.~~ .• gyfttjans :Mourn
' ' ' ' ' ' I • • ' . . ' .
Death ·of Nasser ' . . . . .
CAIRO (UPI) -EfYPtians pound intO
Caln> toClay by train, by llus-and .. loot
to mourn the death of President Gama)
Abdel Nauer wboae death frwn a heart
attack Monday thrutened new chaos for
a Middle East uncertain of lhe present
and fearful of the future.
day funeral. An official Statemelit caDed
Nasser "an outstandlnc JOO of the Arab
people" and a "great friend bf the ~
Unloo." It said Russian aid -W am-
tintoe. ·
Ficker, 42, a Newport Beach architect.
was credited· with a major share of this
:year's victory, skippering the ·3-year1ld
Intrepid, which was,also defender against
another challenge from Australia in 1967.
The new syndicate is to be beaded by
WilijaM. J. Strawbrldje of Philadelphia
and ~· Briggs Dalzell and J . Burr
Bartram Jr., long associated with New
York Yacht Club acUviUes ..
. ) :; • _ .. ' l , ,~.,~,.
FIREMAN WATCHES FLAMES RACE UP'HILl:S!DE 40 MILES EAST OF{SAN DIEGO
Cellfornia'1 Southernmost County ·EXperlencn· Want Br11.1h Fli'• ·1n Stet•'•.'Hfifory
· N-r, $2, lay In alatejn.lbO .impoolng
Republican Palace in the heart df Cairo
whilt·bundreds of thousands miUed about
~ hopelul ol a tut look at the gray-
ing colond who w.as the. idol or the Arab
masses and whose death could bring the
Middle Eaat once more to w8r. ·
The Soviet Union, with more at stake in
Egypt than pefhaps any 'other naUon, an-
noUJ'l.'ed it was sending Premier Ale:1el
N. Kosygin to Cairo today for the Thurs-
PN!Sident Ni:1on cancelled · a lhow,-of ..
force exhibit.ion by lhe U.S. 6th Fleet tG
avoi4 rousing further anU-Americaa fed-
inga ill thiJ naUon caught up in an eino-
tlonal upheaval Egyptianl BO WAJ'J" of
Israel that a ina:1imwn alert was called
by 'military leaders along the Suez Canal
cease-Dre line. .
How Nasser's 'death would affect Nix-
on'•. European tour was not certa\n but
his • vlsJt to Yugosloavia . was set fOf!
WedneSday and arrangements may hive
tO be changed. ~t TitO, an '*
comrade of ·Nasset's, was expected to Dy The three were major members of the
1'10 Intrepid syndicate which was
diaso)Ved today. I
Members of the new syndicate did not
Cities Can Join
County Auctions
aay whether they plan to build a new 12-Orange County ciUes and special
meter boat. However, they did announce 'districts will now be able to join with the
that Intrepid is to be towed baclt to Min-
neford Yach~ Yard, City Island, N.Y., county in sale of &urplus vehlclet and
and that she will be made available if other equipment.
needed as a future trial horse. County Purchasing Agent Nathan A. Presumably, a decllipn on wbe~r to
build a new boat wlll await cliallenges for Oterry spomiored tbe !Upf:rvisor-ap.
the America's Cup. Under New Yorlt pro'l8d program after receiving inquiries
Yacht Club rules challenges must 1 be from several cities.
forthcoming within 30 days of Monday's Previously only county-owned vehicles
final 1~0.race. Norrrially, act_u~l racing ·. and other surplus could be sold at is condUcted only once every tJitee years. . , ~ . · auc-
It is known that another American syn-t1ons held by the purehas1ng department.
dicate made up of Southern Callfomla Cities held their own surplus salea,
Costa Mesa Mystery
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Cliff .Death Probed
Circun)stances s u r r o u n d I n g the
mystery death of a man who apparenUy
drove h1s car through Vista Park and
over aa embankment on the west side of
Costa Meia were being probed today. 1
11le victim was found Monday night,
280 yards from the spot wheno his car
was impounded hours earlier, by hikers
. walking along .the Santa Ana River chan-
nel.
He was identified as Robert· S. Miller,
36, or 11111 Sertate st., "'1lch II not far
from ·where the car and body wtre found.
Lt. Tom ·Durha~ said the vttikJe waa
spotlad · Mpnday ·morolng . by Officer
Harlan Pauley, al:ioat halfway down the
embankment below · Vllta ' ~art, which
overlooks HunUilgtOn Beach.
' -I • "The car didn't 1ppear to· have been
Dying Winds Aid
• I '' ....
Firemen Fight;
8 :Wse Lives
to Cairo for · the funeral; the YligoaJav
cabinet met today to discuss Ule lltua.
tlon. . • · 1
· Ni:1on hiinseli Wai nOt exPecteci to p~to ~n;i but .it ...... belieVed he might 9end
Secnotary of Sta)e Wllf!aln P'. 8-1, · ·
now with· him· in the MedlterraMan. ·
Egypt, Syris and Jordan declared I .. '
day officlal ,period of mourning and lhe
Arab world whlcla~ bid met Hauer so
-many times in NDIDl~dtrence• td
n...i • ." • ..: winds arid -A1Ctec1 rain ·.·show-. discqss oper1tlona a.-. I s r a e I u,..... ,... pre~ lb .. nd Hi klnillt lad . ........,
.... today biOusht liOpe "to 1irefighl<f' ••• bact io·tatro for ·• final ...... n.
By ARTllVR R. VINSEL
Of .. Dlltf' Pltlt SNff
ha,_· hr-five 11aya, In· bell,1 blttjln1 · a vfoe· · Pmlc!ent Anwar El liaaal"...,
rilulli-front holocaust whose sc~s will (Sei.'EGYPT,,~ I) '
today brought hope 1o firefighters <x·
Or .. fe yacbt.smen is being organized with the
annouuc&d· purpose of backing an all-West
Caul defender of the America's Cup,
flOllfbl1 1111113.
It -11111 ~ wll<ther' Ficker would
lake Ille helm ol Ille Eastern oyndicate
yacht, or the new boat planned by the
West Coast group.
Last H~jacking
Hos~g~s Free.·.
Arson Suspected ill .Series
Of Devastatmg Area .Fifes
rolled or·anytbing,'{.llid Lt. ~ .. .Id-.
ding It WU lmpoallded 1o awid ' the '
posslblllty ol dllldi'en playini ..-It. .
He said Miller WU l1lted II the:
registered ...;.,. and that' a can ... bia
wife shed no light on the cue, but ihe
believed 11er hulbaDd ·bad laaad 11 1o ti
haulted by live dlys in htll,.jlatUina a
!f!ullt·r-1 holocuut 'whose scan 'trill
otlll be ,... by your grea~grandchildttn,
1'00 years fiom DOW.
The """' ol Orel -!ncludlng one In
San DMao Counly con<eded tO be Iha ,.onr. in 1 recorded California history -
1ia .. ., br klllecf.etpf-and """"
ed-lncaleuJable damage. .
F-at· .., 1oday tO 1171 mlllloo and
friend. Caw..ia wu declared a dlluter area,
Weadler
' That patchy IOI and low .clouds
Will be back 1o -the .,.... w~, "*'"""with mercury readings dipping back into the 70'1
on the tbore and up to as further
inland. Orange County had some good news
and some bad news on the fire fronr t~
day.
The good news was that the nres which
have blackened 4,000 acres in tbe county
are all under control.
and El Toro area Is the subject ol in-"The car appeared lo,hl" -..-i.. =~~;.,..i: "!..=
tensive investigaUon, Trotter said. through the park. which la in the lJIO Joans.
Friday, the <lay Ille .El Toro !ire block ol Victoria s~. and tbeo down tlli Durin& the !lv'11ay alqe in six coun. INSIDE TODAY
started, witnesses aaw a 1maJI fire and tilll, ,. the lieutenant added. ties, the fight againat. names bu included people running from it, Ute fire official the newest. in tecbnoloo -from an Tht death of EaVDr1 Na11tr
reported. They tried 1o stop the person! No !urthOr action wu tam and the omphlblou ·1anUr·p1-that -"P 1e ... r tile A.rob 100Tld bcrr/t o/
who started the fire but failed. vehicle wU reJ!aSed to Mn. Miner, who: 111water -to bocbta ud. bare bamls. > a leader. For on in-<Ui>th Zook
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I
GENEVA (UPI)-. The lnterns-
llooal Cmmmlttee ol the Rod Cn>a
~ lolllpt Ille ..... iJtin(
sis airline boslages held by
Pllt!tine guen111u have .... ·been
freed' and are all safe. AU are
Americans.
The bad news is that arson ls suspected
in 15 io 20 of the fires w~cti raged over
the last weeWxt, includin& the 51»-_acrc.
El Toro blaze. ,
"We loulld a device then! wlllcll could atll1 dldn!l llllow the ..--ol bot' 5ome firemen bava llept ool7. o.., ot tile li/e o/ this controwrftal
bav&b<eo ""'1 to.llll:Uklire" Ttol~buiboOcL · boun in'the 'lillole llft days. --....--l-'o:~:.:::';-"~·"~'-' P,.,•,;.g'-.'·::::· -""'c....,~~I--.+ Aid. • ..... _ ,,,._._ •'"-----r-Eftn~ ehllftrhrlpect-a•• IM"'9ef n ,__. 'Ille 3,000.acrt 'J'rabuco CaOJmrfire is ., ll~I jult a little af1er ~a w11(bpdJ the San Diieo County moantiin village of g'"'"'19 1 Mewla tt
A Red Croa statement said news
of lhe release of the hosta1ea was
sent to·iJadquarters in O.....{by
the International Red Cross deleg1-
Uon in Amman.
There were no immediate su~
plementary details.
Wally 'I'!'oUer, chief of the Oran1e
COunty Fire P.t.el'lenUOa Bureau, said
two teams are probing the embers
searching for clues to arson. 0 'Ihe leads
are slim but we hope we are making
IOOle headway," the.chief said.
The El TCl'O area blue which broke out
Jast Friday and burned over 500 acres
threatening homes In the Lake Forest
• •
also under lnve.UptlOn u to CIUle. was found," aid-Lt. Dl.rblm~ .llddlng. Julian, pound!Jt4 . f1amn wtth aacbr =:::. "" ..,! =::.. ~"" :_:
All dly M...,., lire team1 patrolled that ·invenlgatlon intO the c&llN of.death btanbta and oboVeb, tt... ~ out •-" .,_ • .._ •
· the ac:orcbed mountain a r e a 1 _n:-_was sW1 in· procma. the spll'b. · =:--',.... 1
: = ,...,.. ,.,;:
Ungui!blnc IUD sm.oi~ tr burning . ''The hnifv Wal 280 yardl from th. '1It ... the moll amiilDC tlUiic I've = p... : ~:..... ...... ·~ brush and trees. ,, --~ , ...... _ , -~.. tftl' 1et11,11' Aki a flreflchter from -.111 1 1 1• n.e.n ..
. O'Neill Park, which-was ttnatened by car, Lt. Durham aa!d. .... t 1 •-!I • Monterey. ••1 thoallt tt waa the. :."',::.. 1•:: w.-. 4
the Tracuco blaze will be closed until quarter of a mile,. He had to walk an Volunteer fin Deoartment. until• J uw "" UMtn 11 :::"':.;..""" ,,.~
Friday, county ouicilil stated. down to the drainage ditch.'' (h rma!, Papi I) Meme.e "'--'
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( ' ·I r {
{" lllll V PILOT -I
PNa P .. e l
FIRES ...
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Precautionary • ••
Ille ladloo Ind lddl."
lie -one i>rtliOUiiriils -tflht1-.....--l
dlld, %$ teriouSly Injured and 500 treated
for eye irritation -summoned from u
hr u Montua aod even out of Ca.IUomia
prllons .. belp. .
The situation uaed somewhat today
with higher humidity. Je.,.nlng winds
ud rorecast rains. but tht possibility t1f
pyromaniacs setUng ntw fires continueg
to be a menace.
~veral persons have been arrested on
1uspicion of arson.
Ironically, ne1t Sunday is thf beginning
of National Fire Prevention Week.
E:1pert.s In the field or natural ecology,
meanwhile, warned of a new horror when
winter storms strike the fire-ravaged
areas -especially in San Diego County
-unless they are quickly re-Sttded.
''The east part of the county could
become a horror of floods and mudslides
if we don't get grass in and growing,''
said James Secrist, of the State
Conservation Department.
Pine sroves, thick brush' and wmae
trees were consumed along the ~mile
path of the football•ptd fir< whicb
b~ 200,000 acres.
"Thia i.s undoubl.edly the worst fire I've
sHn in my career," remar:ked Arlei1 B.
cartwlilh~ of the Stele Div11lon of
fottltry.
To the south, meanwhile, three brush
fires erupted, amost encircling Ensenada,
where 200 Mexican soldiers were sum·
moned to batUe names, including one
6,IJOO..acre fire .
A •mall army of firefighters on fronta
throughout Caliloniia -"htrt 62,000
acres of brush and timber have been
destroyed In tht -ui alone -1enerally
WU &linlng the upper band todly.
"We're in pretty pod shape," uid a
sup«vilory forestry official of the Loo
Anaelea County allulUoo.
Five Dtvision of. Forestry employes:
W'1'f: killed Monday night when an
Alouette mode] helicopter ferrying them
to the Eut Fork ol lhe San Gabriel River
cruhed.
No e1uae wu lmmediately delermintd
and identities at the victims in the
Bicbota Canyon era.sh were withheld.
Tbe toll in_ human and other misery ii
lmpoaible to calculate.
Newball , rancher Dennis Stonecypher
wotcl!ed Ind 1r.tenec1 u the leaplroggina
names need tJvouch hll property, killing
IO percent of bil Uvealock.
"It hit the toc lbed. 111111 fttt Jona Ind :io
feet wide, and there wu one terrible din
•• the pigs ICl'WDed -all 200 of them -
but at least it was fast/' said
Stonecypher.
"The lambs ran between two sheds and
half af them' got killed. Some ran with
their wool an fire."
"We found them dead all across the
range," he continued. "Or what used to
be range."
Los Angeles and San Diego counties
1lone suUered 666 structures
destroyed, inclli:l.ina: 490 homes. and
331,000 acres -an 1re1 hall the 1iu of
-llllnd -l1y cbarrtd by Ila
Dames.
Fire fighters began to breathe mor.e
euily about a 200,(M)J.acre fire haJted
Slmday at the outskirts of aeveraJ San
Ditgo IUblU"bs. "But winds htlptd another
major blaze flare up Monday night and
race over 10,000 acres of a heavily wood·
ed area, drawing within 10 miles of the
main fire. A beat wave that reached 100 delrees wu expected to continue.
The Southern Ca11fornia fires also are
giving the first plane ever designed
1pedfk:ally to batUe forest blazes its in·
ltial bl& teal
The twin.engine amphibian, the CI,215
"esiped and manufactured by Canadair
Ltd., dropped more than 400 tons Of
waters 'on fire.II in the Malibu area far tbt
IOCOllCl ltralgbt d1y Monday.
Wheelchair Wheeled
Out •.. Permanently?
A vehicle theft In whJcb tbe criminal
has a lhrte-month head sllrt was
reported to Cast.I Mesa pOJice Monday,
but they figure he still may not have gat·
ten too far.
Dan Wadsack af Seals Ambulance and
SiCkroom Supplies. SM Center St., told in·
vestigators the auspect rented a $31%
wheelchair June 22 and hasn 't been Setii
since.
DAILY PILOT
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By Uali.11 Prtu lalerulloul
Israeli and Egyptian troops along the
Suez canal were reported on fuU alert to-
day u a precaution against a possible
flareup in fighting following the death of
Egyptian President Gama! Abdel Nasser.
Na incidents were reported . however.
Soon after Nasser 's dealh was
reported, Egypt announced Its men along
the canal had been placed on a "max·
imum alert." The Israeli newspaper
Maariv N!ported today that Israeli troops
also had been alerted against any
surprbe·Egyptian attleks. -....
on Suez
lloth KJna n .... 1n and the_ Al F1llh
guerrilla organiuUon issued lllttmenta
on the death of Nautr, whoa Jut
diplomatic effort was to negotllta a
peace between the warring partN!:a.
Husaeln said "the lut efforts of the
great deceased w e r e to minister the
v.·ounds af bis nation inflicted by the
Jordan trag'edy. But the woundl of
Jordan ind the wound& of his nation
throUlh his loss are beyond any cure and
beyond any consolation."
The AJ Fatah statement • a 1 d
''Palestine ls very unfortunate. It has lost
a fighter in the forefront of fighters. ; ."
Something to Chew On
The well-informed newspaper said
Isrileli military men do not e1pect the
canal front to Oare up anew in the next
few days but they do n6t exclude loca1it·
ed skirmishes initiated by local Egyptian
com~anders in friard positions.
Before Nasser's death was aMounctd.,
the guerrilla radio had broadca.st rejec:-
tions of some parts of the l._poi.nt piace
package that ended the civil war.
However, guerrilla leader Vasser Arafat
went on the radio to defend acceptance al
the overall packlge, saying it wu "to
save our people from shelling, hunger.
thirst and disease."
It isn't exactly wlenerschn.itzel, but ''Schultzie,"
doesn't mind. It just takes a bit of planning or a
dog her size to attack a beef leg of that size, that's
~· Schultzie, a dachshund owned by Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Wessler ol Fountain Valley, discovered the
bone Monday. When last heard from, she was still
gnawing on it. It was clear the U.S. Middle East peace
offensive wu dead for the time being.
White House officials uld NaUtt's death
was expected to shelve the peace plan
perhaps for months to come. And, in Tel
Aviv, the Israeli cabinet met Jn urgent
session to consider the new situatian. Sen~te Refuses to Halt From Pqe 1
EGYPT ... Jn Jardan, Nasser in death may have
achieved what he had sought throughout
his life - a measure of brotherhood and
Also still in doubt was the whereabout.a
of six Americans taken hostage during
the hijacking af three airliners three
wee!U aga.
The six had been reported lo have been
released in Amman . but a statement In
Washlniton by the State Department in-
dicated they had not been Jet go. Depart.
ment apotesman John F. King ukf· the
U.S. Embasay in Amman bad not been
able to cohfirm reports the ail had been
turned aver to tbe Egyptian embusy,
ceeded Nasser as pres1c:ent under the sense of unity between fMoo armies which
Egyptien constitution but it appeared only last week were locked in civil war.
certain a major power struggle would Both sides halted their inflammatory Electoral Reform Debate
W.ASHINGTON (UPI) -Tht Senate
refused to halt Southern·led debate today
and left probably dead for this year ~
proposed constitutional amendment to
provltie direct popular e.lection of the
president.
The vale waa 5.1 to 34 in favor of shut-
ting aff debate -five votes short of the
twc>-thirds majarity necessary of those
voting.
'Jbe second consecutive defeat for sup-
,,orters of the amendment wu dealt by
Dixie Democrats and s m a 11 • • ta t e
Republicans who combined to reject a
motion for cloture or a 1ag on debate.
A large number of absentees con·
trlbuted to the outcome today.
The amendment which the House of
Representatives averwhelmingly approv.
ed last year an a 339-70 vote appeared
1talled for good until next year.
Southerners and some Republicans
from smaller states have been fighting
the proposal since Sepl 8. While not a
filibuster in the classic tense. the effort
had the same effect -no vote on the
proposal.
· AbKnt today were Sens. Karl E. Mundt
(~.D.), Margaret Chaae Smith (R-
Malne), 1nd dtorae Alken (R-Vt.). Mundt
was ill, Aiken \\'as recuperating from
minor surgery and Mrs. Smith had an ap-
pointment with her doctors. Aiken and
Mn. Smith voted to cut off debate last
time.
Six senator& Were in Europe : stns.
Bridge Leaper
Lands on Boat
Near Lido Isle
Newport police and Harbor Patrolmen
today are seeking a boy who jumped 20
feet off the Lido Isle bridge and landed
on a passing boat.
"I imagine he has major internal In·
juries." said Sgt. Harry Wright of the
Harbor Patrol.
Wright said !ht department received at
call at 1:30 p.m. from the cabin cruiser
Vera-T that there had been an accident
at the bridge.
The unidentified you!!\ apparently
jumped off just as an outboard piloted by
M. Ranney of Carona del Mar passed
underneath. The boy landed across the
vessel's bow.
"Ron ney heard the sirens from our
boals coming to the scene and took his
boat to shore. The jumper, with the aid af
four companions, managed to get up and
run away from the scene," Wright ex·
plained.
Aside from the injuries incurred by the
youth. about $100 damage was done lo the
2G-foot boat.
'"This is a classic reasan for the city
ordinance against jumping olf bay
bridges,'' Wright commented.
Jn another medlcal aid,, Harbor
Patrolmen rescued a · Lynwood man,
Ray Ragas, 61, off a 17-foot cabin cruiser
after he nearly, severed his right index
finger on an an chor chain.
Hagos was taken off the boat near the
BalbOt Yacht Club and transported to the
department dock and then tc> Haog
Memorial Ho,,pltal for emergency trea~
"""'·
Another Chief
Sought in Grove
Garden Grove is looking for a new
police chief for the second time in three
ytar1.
George Te.ilsch rtslgned e1rlie.r this
month to &come heaa or Seatt11·s L.250-
man forct. Clpt. Laurence Marshall is
cum:nUy acttna cbief. ·
The Jut lime Garden Grove went
through the lengthy selection process,
Tltlsch was hlrtd to succeed Charle!!
Michalie:s who had resl1~ to be.come
Fountain Valley's first police chief •
Oct. 16 is the deadllne for 1pplicaUons
ror the post and atledlon is e1pecttd to
take at leut two montM.
' ' '
Mlke Gravel (0.Alaska), :ft.a 1 JI h
Yarborough ([).Tex.), Stephen M. Young
(J)..Ohio), and Henry Bellmon (R-Okla .),
all for C\!tting aff debate and Jahn
Sparkman • (O.Ala .), and B. Everett
Jardan (0.N.C.). against.
Several senators also were in their
home states campaigning for the
November electians.
Proponents af election 11 e Io r m ,
regardless of the absentee count, had lo
switch several senators who refused to
vate far cloture on the previous try.
Under the present system, each state Is
allotted electoral votes equal to its
representation in Cangreu. For e1ample,
if a state has eJ&ht representatives and
two aenators, it has 10 electoral vates. A
presidential candidate winning t h e
popular vote Jn a slate. receives all or
that state's e.leetoral votes.
If oo candidate gets a majority of the
electaral vote, \he elecUon ia decided in
lhe House of Representativu, with each
state having one vote.
The prt;posed amendment, already
adopted 339 to 70 by the House, would
abolish electoral voling. The candidate
receiving the most popular votes na·
ti on wide would be the winner, U he gets
at least 40 percent ol the total vote. lf net
candidate got that percentage, a runoff
election between the top iwo would decide
the winner.
Nurse to Stand
Tria~ in Death
Of Woman, 84
bro.adcasts and mourned as one. develop for his sucxessor. The fear if!, All indications were that peace efforts
some J)lrt.s of the world was that hot· would have lo pause until Egypt selects a
blooded young army officers might take new leader. Nasser was so popular and
over with the prospeCt of endless war. powerful there is oo logical successor, no
Sadat himself is considered a leftist foe ane to conduct peace negotiations with the lsraelis.
of Israel. White House afficials. who declined to
One fact remained : There Is no heir be Identified. told a pool of newsmen
apparent, no man af stature lo assume aboard the USS Saratoga today they
his role as leader of the Arab world. His believed a new leader will first have to
death could bring further woes to Israel, emerge In Egypt after a period of col· lective leadership, and that after con. for he made fiery speeches but he urged solidating hi! power, the new leader will
moderation and accepted the concept of a not be able to begin a new regime by
negotiated peace. making peace with Israel.
Nasser's death came as a major blow In Amman, thouaands of Jordanian
to the Ni1an administration for he was citizens and Palestinian refugees con--
the one leader considered a stabilizing in-verged on the Egyptian embaasy to offer
"We pledge our continuing and
unremitting tfforb: for the release of the
remaining six Americans now being held
against their will ," King said. "We call
upon those holding these passengers to
release them immediately."
County Deputies
Plead Innocence
In Grand Theft fluence iii the Middle East. It could mean their condolences. Both the Jardanians
the end (){ the American peace initiative and the Palestinians wept at the news T Or -·hi"ch led Nasser •-agree to a -•ay nd h ltd di wo ange Caunty Sheriff's deputies .... w .iru a s ou , "He 'ed for us," the Middle a d of b 1 · · cease.fire -the end or a moderate in-East News Agency reported. ccuse urg ar1zing the Mission Viejo
fluenCe and the. pos~lble rise of Jeftwing C:Ountry Club today pleaded innocent in
Arab militants. Santa Ana Municipal C.OUrt to charges of grand theft and burglary.
There was apprehension at the United Burglars Spend Judge Eugene G. Langhauser ardered Nations where diplomats expressed con-Arthur E. Duncan, 34 of 4942 Maui Cir·
cem aver the selection al his possible cle, Huntington Beach' and Frederick B.
successor. By law the national assembly B W k d Irvine, 40, of La Habra to face domina~d by Nasser's Arab Socialist US V1 ee ell preliminary hearing Nov. 6. Bath men
Union must name a successor within IO ,J t are free on bail.
days. A d N Bath forine.r deputies had to brave the Grief ln the Arab world was universal l•Ollll . ewport glare of television lighting and the
-even Jn Iraq w~re Nasser was equally inte nse glares of several former
popular wlUI the masses but not with the Two commercial 1 burglaries were colleagues as they entered and le.ft Judge
ruling Baathist Party men. He had dlf· reported Monday in Newport Beach alter Langhauser's criminal ca I ender
ficulty with the Sy:rians, too, but Syrian a weekend that uw four residential and courtroom.
head (){state Noureddin Al·Alassi said in office burglaries which amounted to a Irvine refused to discuss lhe case and
a statement "the Arab nation lost a great f7.250 loss. left hurridly with his attarney. Duncan
fighter and courageous leader who spent One burglary was at c 0 c 0 • 1 hesitated, began to speak to newiimen
all his ltfe fighting to realize the a:oals af Restaurant, 4647 MacArthur Boulevard and then was ordered by his lawyer not
the Arab masses." where an undetermined amaunt was to comment on the issue.
In Beirut, Lebanese youths venting liken from a cigarttle vending machine. Both men were arrested inside the golf
their grief set up roadblocks on major The second was at the Dollar-A-Day shop of the Mission Viejo C:Ountry Club
routes leading to the city and cut the Rent-A.Car at 4570 Birth St., where last Sept. 20 after the susplcialis golf pro
road to Beirut Airport In an apparent ef. thieves made. off with '900 in cash. saw them on the premises and called
fort to force the nation to a standstill in The C.oco's burglary was reported at sheriffs officers.
mourning. The city of Tripoli began a 5:45 a.m. when the maintenance man, Investiga tors allege stolen golfing
general strike ta express its sarrow. Dale ' Hanna, 2% af Huntingtan Beach, equipment and several' cases of liquor
The day in Beirut was punctuated by discovered a window to the restaurant were found in the security vehicle used
riDe shots in the air -a traditional Arab had been broken out. by the two men to patrol the area as
expression of mourning. On the outskirts Police apeculate the suspect used a security guards for the Mission Viejo
of the city ane group of Palestinian com· brick to break the window and climbed in Company.
mandos fired deafening bursts of mortar, and aut of the restaurant thraugh the Duncan surrendered when confronted
A former nurse who was named in a rocket and machinegun fire. hole. by sheriff's officers but Irvine took over
d Rifle-carrying Lebanese gendarmes The thief gained entry to the car rent.al a patrol car at gunpoint and led officers
mur er complaint following the death or patrolled the streets of Beirut to prevent agency by breaking a window next ta the an a wild chase that ended in Riverside
an elderl y waman patient in an Orange further destruction by pr o • N a s s e. r door and reaching thraugh the hole to C:Ounty after Irvine threatened for more
sanitarium has been ordered ta face trial demonstrators. Guards at the American open the door. than two hours to commit suicide.
on lesser charges Nov. 18 in Orange Embassy went an alert for a possible at· Newport Beach Detective Tom Shearn Riverside County authorities may add
Caunty Superior C:Ourt. tack by emotional crowds. People wept 1aid evidence gathered so far does not In· charges of assault with a deadly weapon.
Judge James F. Judge set that date for 1jio;;pe;;n;;l;;y.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;d;;i;;ca;;te;;;;lh;;e;;cr;;;;im;;es;;;;ar;;;;e ;;li;;nk;;td;;;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;to;;;;lho;;;;";;;;a;;lr;;eo;;d;i;y;;f;;ac;;td;;;;b~y;;l;;rv;;ln;;e;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;,
Mrs. Pattl Chernik. 56, after reviewing 11
the Orange C:Ounty Grand Jury in-
dictment of the defendant. 1The panel
refused lo endar~e murder charges
originally preferred against "Mrs. Chernik
and indicted her on a count of in-
voluntary manslaughter.
Mrs. Chemik, also known as Jeananne
Balch and J. Patricia Best, was ex·
lradited f_rom Oregon alter investigati on
ol the death on Nov. 9. 1966, of Mrs.
A1argaret Tagliabue, an 84-year-old
widow \\'ho was confined to Leonard's
Sal)ilarium in Orange.
A coroner's 1utopsy revealed lhal Mrs.
TagUabue died from peritonilia caused tiy
puncture wounds or her urinary bladder.
Jt was alleged that Mrs. Chernik infl icted
those ~·ounds with a sharp instrument.
Traf fie Radar
Tu Be Boosted
Tr1fflc: officers ol the Huntington
Beach Police De~ent plAn to use a
heavy concentration of radar at critical
points throughout the city now lhal,-
schools have opened aaain.
Radar units will be staUontd on Main
-srreot.lnalan"ipolfs ;&;venuci. G0lder1Weel
Street, Balsa Ollca Road and 1t all
i;chool croasings where s)ieedlng occurs.,
according to U . Paul Darden, com-
mander of the tratUc...division.
"We wUI continue the use of r1dar until
the problem doesn't e.1i.1l any more,"
11id Darden. "If we could get the
t'IXlpe:ratlon of motnristl It wou!d be lov~
ly. We would r1lher slow tbe people down
Truth
or Consequences?
Sometimes tho truth hurls! W1 hov1 lost on occasion1l 1ol1 liy not tolling o customer who!
ho wonlod to h11r.
Wo might point out !hit o cu1tomor "would be bottor off to p1y e littl1 moro for our ruD-
ber p1ddin9 !hon buy 1 ch11por, mushy p1d tho! fHls liko you oro w1lkin9 on balloons. Thi "bol·
loon" pad hurts the carpet backing, c1uses stretching, and ruins1 seems. Also, this p1dding
often fl1ttens out ofter 1 while.
Addition1lly, wo might toll you th1t some corp1! fibors oro moro procticol ~hon others. Ii.
fiber th1t works in one texture, might "bomb" in 1nother.
Foel frH to coll for odvico. All of our soles peoplo h1v1 hoi:I od1nsiv1 uporienco in tho 11rv•
ice •nd of this business -ind 1fter in -the most import1nt thin9 1 we c1n offer, that l'\O else
does , is service!
~.. ~~1r11 · L··'." i Jl~!fO'l l I!_
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C.1•• ,.,, ••
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IANTA ANA, OU.M•I
TYmN Call ,.,
AL.llN"I
llt HILL CAaNT'I
I DU.NllU
1117• .,.., ,...., Catlf,
111414'
CARPETS e DRAPES
.1663 l'lac1ntla Aft.
COSTA MESA
646-4131
than &ive them tickets." , ._ _________________________________________ _.
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'
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I
117
-
Dn":tington Beaeh
EDIII O N
vo 1:: 63, NO. 233, 3 SECTION S, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
rson us ecte
' Claao• Feared
• .
Egyptian~ Mourn
Death of Nasser
CAIRO (UPI) -Egyptians poured into
Cliro today by train, by bus and on root
to mourn the death of President Gamal
, Abdel Nasser whose death from a heart
attack Monday threatened new chaos for
a Middle East uncertain or the present
and fearful' of the future.
· Nasser, 52, 18¥ in state in the imposing
Republican Palace in the heart of Cairo
while hundreds of thousands milled about
outside hopeful of a last look at the gray.
ing colonel who was the idol of the Arab
masses and whose death could bring the
Middle East once more to war.
The Soviet Union, with more at stake in
Egypt than perhaps any other nation, an-
nowxed it was sending Premier Alexei
N. Kosygin to Cairo today for the Thurs-
day funeral. An official statement called
Nasser "an outstanding son of the Arab
peOpie" and a "great friend of the Soviet
Union." It said Russian aid would con·
tinpe.
President Nixon cancelled a show-of.
force exhibition by the U.S. 6th Fleet to
avoid rousing further anti-American fee l-
. ings in this nation caught up in an emo-
tional upheaval. Egyptians so wary of
Israel that a maximum alert was called
by military leaders along the Suez Canal'
cease-fire line.
Softaetlaing to Claew On
It isn't exacUy wienerschnitze1, but "Schultzie,"
doesn't mind. It just takes a bit of planning for ,a
dog her size to attack a beef leg of that size, that's
all. Schultzie, a dachshund owned by Mr. and Mrs.
:TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1970
-· Ill
DAILY l'ILOT l'IMll1 1tr LN l'IY•
Gerald Wessler of Fountain Valley, discovered the
boQe Monday. When last heard from, she was still
gnawing on it:..
;/ _ ...
How Nasser's death would affect Nix·
on's European tour was not certain but
his visit to Yugos1oavia was set for
Wednesday and arrangements may have
to be changed. President Tito, an old
comrade of Nasser's, was expected to (ly
to Cairo for the fUoeral ; the Yugoslav
cabinet met today to discuM the situa·
Don.
Nixon himieU was not expected to eo to ·
Cairo. but it was believed be might send
Sectt!My of Stai. William P. Rog<r•,
now with him in the Mediterranean.
Drive to Gather
Goods for. Fire ·
Victims Start.ed
Beach Council Adopts P~y
Increase· for Employes
READY FOR ANOTHER GO
Cup Sklpptr Ficker
Fick~r Ag rees
To Be Skipper
In 1973 Race
NEWPORT. RJ. (AP) -Victorious
skipper Bill Ficker of Intrepid agreed tG-
day to take the helm of a J¥!W cup
defender if the U.S. defends the historic
America's Cup again in 1m.
Several members of Ute syndicate that
backed Intrepid Jn this year's 21st suc--
cessful de!ense of the yachting trophy an-
nounced agreement to form a new syn-
dicate.
Ficker and his crew defeated Gretel II
of Australia 4-1 in a series that ended
Monday 10 miles off this yachting center,
ALMON LOC K.ABEY'S ACCOUNT
OF RACE ON PAGE 12 TOD AY
The U.S. has not lmt the cup since it
was first 'o\'On by the schooller America 1n
England In 1151.
F~. U, a Newport Beach arohitecl,
wu_credllod \!LUI a major share of lhil
year's victory, Kippering the 3-year-old
Intrepid, which was alJo defendtr against
anolher challenge from Australia in 1967.
The ntW syndicate is to be headed by
WUIW!t J. Slrawbrldge of Pbiladelpbla
and s. Briggs Dalzell and J. Burr
Bartram Jr., long associaled with New
York Yacht Club actlYlties.
The three were major members of the
1970 tnlre:pid syndicate which was
disaolved today.
( • ..
Egypt, Syria and Jordan declared a 40-
day official period of mourning and the
Atab world which had met Nasser so
many times in si.nnmitc onferences to
discuss operations against I s r a e I
prepared to send its kings and presidents
back to cairo for a final farewell.
Vice President Anwar El Sadat suc-
ceeded Nasser as presiaent under the
Egyptiaq constitution but it appeared
certain a major power struggle woulf!f,
develop for his S'UtftSIOr. The fear in
some parts of the world was that hot-
blooded young army officers might take
over with the prospect of endless war.
Sadat himself is considered a leftist foe
of Israel
One fact remained: There is no heir
apparent, no man of stature to assume
his role as leader of the Arab world. His
death could bring further woes to ISrael,
for he made fiery speeches but he urged
moderation and accepted the concept of a
negotiated peace.
Nasser's death came as a major blow
to the Nixon administration for he was
the one leader considered a sla billzing in·
· fluence in the Middle East. It could mean
the end of the American peace initiative
which led Nasser to agree to a 9(kl.ay
cease-fire -the end of a moderate in-
fluence and the possible rise of leftwing
Arab militants.
l'I'bere was apprehension at the United
Nations where diplomats expressed con-
cern over the selection of his possible
successor. By law the national assembly
dominated by Nasser's Arab Socialist
Union must name a successor within IO
days.
Huntington Boy
Killed as Auto
Runs Into Truck
An 18-year old Huntington Beach youth
was one of three persons killed late Sun·
day when their car slammed into the
rear end of a cattle truck parked on
Interstate IO, Indio Police reported today.
Killed iMta.nUy by the impact was
Sleven L. Grimsley, 51$2 Heil Ave. who
was a passenger in the car driven by his
friend, ~ J..ee Newton, 2.8, Downey.
Newton's wife, Delora, 29, abo died in the
accident while tM couple's JO-year old
ste~ugbt.er Diane Wells was flown to
Loma Linda Hospital by Highway Patrol
helicopter, She was reported in critical
QOndltlon ••
Traffic Jmoesllgatan Aid the -occurrtd about 11 p.m. whe.n Newton ap-
panntly fell u1eep behind the wheel and
struck the cattle tnlck at about 45 miles
per hour. Officers said the truck was
legally parked.
Funeral services for Grimsley are pend.
Ing at Westmlmter Memorial Park. He
ls survived by his parenis, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Grbna)ey, of Huntington Be•ch,
two sisten, a brother and h I s
graodpuents.
'
Food, clothing or other items needed by
victims of the several fires .burning
Southern California can be dropped off at
Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach
high schools and all fire staUOns in Hun-
tington Beach.
Studt!nts at Fount8in Valley High are
collecting food and clothing at the nurse's
office. Several volunteers will also can-
vass local neighborhoods asking for food
and clothing for fire victims.
The drive at all loca~ons will continue
at least through Friday. For further in-
formation on the Fountain Valley effort
phone Neal Archer at his home, 968-2784.
Huntington Beach High students will
also be knocking on doors in an effort to
collect articles for victims of the several
fires. Residents may also bring clothing
or food to the administrative offices of
the school.
lnspettor Vic Subia or the Huntington
Beach Fire Department said food,
clothing or other donations can be taken
to any of the city's fire stations.
Members o! the Firemen's Women's
Auxiliary will collect the items from the
fire stations and give them out where
they are most needed.
The women's auxiliary drive ls headed
by Mrs. Ellen Lacey.
Similar collection points have also been
set up in Seal Beach by the Senior
Citizens Protective League of Leisure
World and the Seal Beach Council for
Environmental Concern.
The two Seal Beach collection centers
are at McGaugb School, Seal Beach
Boulevard and Boise Avenue, and near
the st. Andrews gate in the Leisurt World
shopping center.
By ALAN DIRKIN
01 lllt ~II' l'l•t Slt ff
The Huntington Beach . City Council
Monday nJght adopted 8 pay plan giving
an 8.25 percent Jncrease to nearly all city
employes despite a warning from City At.
tomey Don Bonfa that he considered it
invalid.
The councilmen cut off Bonfa after he
had read only two pages of an eight-page
memorandum in which he cited "many
errors" made in 'the barg8.ining process
aod claimed the council's resolution on
salary schedules could be overturned by
the courts. ·
·nae council unanimously backed a mo-
tion by Councilriian Jack Green that -
"since Bonfa is personally involve'd" -
Herbert Moss, a labor relations attorney,
be instructed to review Bonfa's opinion
and report back to the Oct. 19 council
meeting .
Bonfa interjected to say that it was
also his recommendation that a labor
relat\ons aUorney review proceedings
leading to the adoption of the pay
schedule.
Underscoring the Iciness at the meeting
was the knowledge that the council had
rejected raises for the city attorney,
public works director, and city clerk.
The council has also cut increases for
the city administrator, building director,
parks and recreation director aOO plan-
ning director. down from 8.25 percent to
s.s percent ·
Meanwhile, some progress was in··
dicated in the dispute with the city's
Fires at Glan~e
Here is a brief glance at the locations, extent of control and known de-
struction caused by 56 separate brush and timber fires throu1hout C.tlifornia.
SAN DIEGO COUNTY -The worst autumn fire in California history
was nearing containment after charring '200,000 acres, while four smaller
blazes in Uie same area destroyed 15,000 acres.
SAN GABRIEL CANYON -Firemen gained the upper hand due to
dying winds, but five were killed Monday night when their helicopter crashed
en route to the 4,000-acre blaze.
MAUBU -The devastating fire here, whicp merged at one point with
the 'Newhall blue, Was diininlshing after firemen gained tbe upper b.Md, but
to,000 acres have been burned o~r ~
SAN Bl!ilNAilJilNO COUNTY -Flames lieked •ovtr 7,0flO acftl In
· Meyer's Canyon; but d1'0fll\bli Santa Ana wkxll· gave.I_"""'*'·• lnU. ·
SAN LUl8 oiilro·CXJIJHrv-A ~-·G( bn idll nNt ...... 'lwas unc1ercon1ro1.n..1,ooo_nn1_ · ·
~·~ -Bunlw In 1bo Mlll>Oi'wwn wmo.; Creel """
S.lmaa ~•llaet*lli~ coait,,the nn•m1"orned more ·lbn11.0i!t
acrff and tJlroat;ia I otand Calilomla r"1woods. H!Jilrwtj I remllno °""'
but buardous due to .... nicks cracked off cllffa by the beat IWnbllng to
the pavement.. • r •
KERN COIJl\'l'Y '-r1re1b.e. W•r< holding OJI Oii a 12,!iOO·•<re brush fire
sautheasi ot. 1-Bamsfield, with almoit all ila 45-mile perimeter encm:Jed by
nttfighten. A .eCond fire near Red MOtintaln hu ravaged 17,oob ams ti
timberland. •
MARIPOSA COUNTY 1 A smaller Jire Was , COJ'ltalned Monday night
after buming 1,820 acres, but names deslroyed power lines eliminatina: elec-
trical service to Mariposa and Yosemite National Part.
pollce and firemen over the salary
revisions. .
These safety groups were unhappy with
U)e 8.25 percent hike, the police having
setUed on 11 percent raise Jn bargaining
With CUy Administrator Do}ile Miller and
the firemen on increases from 11 percent
to 13.S percent.
Monday nJght Miller told the council, i•u the council will authorir.e me to meet
and confer further with the negotiating
teams of the police and firemen,
particularly In the area of ei:tucational in-
centives, I have reason to believe that
perhaps we can come back with full
agreement."
The basis of Bonfa's .objection to the
adoption of the pay plan was. he said,.
that the steps had not followed a recent
state public employes law called the
Miles-Milia.s-Brown Act.
He objected to the council's rejection of
memoranda of . agreement signed by the
city administrator and representatives of
emp!Oye associations and calling for 11
percent incri:ases.
"The basic premise Is . that the ad-
ministrator shall prepare a plan and it
shall be approved by the council," lkinfa
argued. "If the council does not approve
of it, the council cannot change it but
must refer the plan back ·to the' city· ad·
mlnistrator for resubml!Slon.''
Bonfa added, "The city council cannot
evaluate performance. It must rely on
the . city, •dminl.strator or the personnel
officer.
The city attorney claimed that the
''meet in good faith" princtple of the Jaw
required that an opportunity must be
(flee SALARIES, Pip I)
U.S. Funds Asked
Fo r Mil e Square
Oranse County will apply for a grant of
'64,900 in state park bond money to finan·
ce im.proVements at Mlle S q u a r e
Regional Part 1n Fountain Valley.
Parts Dlrector .. Kenneth .Sampaon said
a storage building and bicycle trails will
be comtructed 'fn the southeut area .of the
regional park which la beilll built around
!be Marloe • Corpe • bellcoptor 'ltaimng
fJc!ld. ' , . I
--Nido Ille esthftalod·C<ISI of Ille • lob ll $74,SIO. ,,,.......,,upects lo.pa7 .-.eao. Thi ..-o.i wvuld ..,.... the -
School Board Mee.ts
For Special Session
Trustees. or the Hi.lnllngton Beach
Union Hilb Scbool Diltrict will meet in
special session tonight In the Marina
High School cafei.rla.
Purpote or the 7:30 ,p.m. aeslion ll to
discuss the hl1h school's educational pro-
gram. 'Ille meeUnc Is open to !be pubUc.
·~-
N.Y. Steek.8
TEN COOS
azes
Brush Fires
In County
Controlled
Orange County had some good newt
and some bad news on the fire front to-
day.
'fhe good news was that the fires whlcli
have blackened 4,000 acres in the COUDlf.
are all under control.
The bad news is that arson Ls su.pected
In IS to 20 of the fires which raged over
the last weekend, iocludinJ; the 500-acre
El Toro blaze.
Wally Trotter, chief of the Oranp
County Fire Presvention Bureau, aid
two teams are probing the embers
searching ror clues to arson. "The leads
are slim but we , hope we are making
some headway," the chief said.
The El Toro area blaze which broke out
last Friday and burned over 500 acres
threatening homes in the Lake Forest
and El Toro area 'is the subject of in·
tensive investigation, Trotter said.
Friday, the day the El Toro fire
started, witnesses saw a small fire and
people running from it, the fire offlclal
reported. They tried to stop the person.t
who started the fire but failed.
"We found a device there which CGUld
ha ve been used to start the fire," Trotter.
said.
The 3,000.acre Trabuco Canyon fire II
also· under investigation as to cause.
All day Mooclay f1te teams patrolled
the scorched mountain a r e a r ex-·
tingulshing sun smoldering or burning
brush and trees.
O'Neill Park, which was threatened bl
the Tracuco blaze, will be closed until
Friday, county ofi1claJa stated.
Recall Backers
Claim 7,000
Signed Papers
Proponents of a recall against Seal
Beach City Councilman Conway J.
Fuhrman today Said they have collected
about 7 ,000 signatures on a recall petition
they are planning to forward to the city
clerk for verification. ·
Members of the Save Our City (SOC)'
group had earlier collected more than
l,600 verified signatures but a ruling
from City Attorney James BentJOD said
that number was insufficient.
By Jaw, 25 percent of the registered
voters must sign a recall petition before
a new election can be set. SOC officials
thought they needed only 25 percent of
the signatures from Fuhrman's coun-
c\lmanic district, but . Bentson's ruling
called for 25 percent of the registered
voters from the entire city.
"The new petition contains the namet
of 45 percent of the registered voters in
the entire city," said SOC member Mrs.
Richard Smith. She said there are about
15.000 registered voters in the city.
Fuhrman, a veteran councilman, was
served with recall papers last July after
he collaborated with two other coun-
cilmen to fire City Manager ~ Risner.
The other two coundlmen who sided
with him, Mayor Morton A. Baum and
Thomas Hogard, have been threatened
with recall. 'Ibey must be in office for a
period of 90 daya before recall p
ceedings can be Jn!Uated against 16em.
Bolb took olOce la!t Jul
Coast
Weadaer
That patchy fog and low <loud•
will be back to haunt the coast
W~nesday morning, with mercury
readings dipping blck into the 70'1
on the shore and up to as further
Inland.
INSm E TODAY
The d<otll of Eavof1 •Nau<r
ltavu the Arab world btr1ft of
a lfad.cr. For an in-depth look
at the Ufe of thi.! controversial
figure, .ttt Pagt 8, --. Mt¥1tt ,,
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I DAil y PllDT H
Apartment.
Controls
Proposed
Huntington Beach may put out a less
conspicuous welcome mat to-apartment
developers .....
Alter hearing a report crilical of s~me
apa rtment complexes in the cily, lhe city
council Monday night ordertd 'the Master
Plan of Land Use revised as part of a
-move to control the number o I
apartments In the city.
I
The council ordered the Mas ter Plan
review after being told that the present
map no longer Is accurate.
··we should re-do the map so people
can see it at least reflects what in fact
eiisLs ln '\he city," said Roger Slates,
chairman of the plaMing cmmmission, in
pointing out the number of non-con·
forming uses.
The council instructed the planning
commission to review its requirements
for . apartments to incorporate ap-
pearance standards and also asked City
Administrator Doyle Miller to prepare
mflthocl.S by which the council can study
gllals and objectives for the city.
The action followed a presentation to
the council by the Multi ple family Zon·
ing Committee , made up of plaMing
commissioners Slates. Henry Duke. Ed
Kerins , and Robert Brown, H e r k
McDonald. Mrs. Connie Baue r and Mrs.
Carol Morris.
Slides were shown of apartment com·
pleXes along Warner Aven ue and com·
mittee. members criticized minimum Rl·
backs and limited green space.
The' committee reported that the city
presently has 9,000 apartm'ents but the
fig\ire could climb to 50,000 uniU in a few
years "if we continue to build according
to our present zoning regulations and
standards." ·
"Our population will ronsist of 142.000
apartm~t dwellers compared lo 128,000
11ingle family home residents," Slates
w8.med in the report.
Slates said the committee's findings
were iiot a condemnation of apartments
but reflected a view that there may be
too many apartments in certaln areas.
He called for the city to set population
goals and to give oQjectives on where
apartments should be, how many the city
needs and the quality required.
Councilman George M c C r a c k e n
\\"Ondered how the owner of property ton-
ed mutliple residential could be told that
its use is being changed.
Councilman Jack Green suggested that
the council could reduce the density of
apartment zones. .
The council instructed the committee to
'tiork with the planning cmmmlssion lo
1tudy · "1Jith1edlitely" · error! in 'Uie
master plan and male revisions.
Burglary Talk
Set for Chamber
Sgt. James Mahan of the Hunting1Dn
Beach Police Department will tell local
businessmen how to prevent burglaries
and other crimes during a meeting
tonight in the Cham~r of commerce con•
ference room, 18582 Beach Blvd.
The 7:30 p.m. meeting will open the
chamber's monthly Small Busin"ess
Seminars program concerning various
aspeC:ti of starting and rUMing a
business.
Sgt. Mahan will talk about burglaries,
shoplifting, robberies. bad checks and
fires.' The seminar is free to chamber
members. It costs $1 for non-members.
,,.
Novelist a Student
DETROIT (AP) -Myrta Dreyer. who
9t'as born in 1884 and wrote a novel en·
titled "Beckoning Hands" published 40
years· ago, has enrolled .as .a freshman at
Wayne State University. Mrs. Dreyer is
taking creative wr iting to polish her skills
in hopes of resuming a writing ca reer.
She said she was nearing completion of
a mystery novel.
DAILY PILOT
oa.U.Gt COAST PU1t.l~•U'4G COMP.&N'I'
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OAILY PILOT l latf ...,_19
'Near Park
Planners -study
Beach Air Strip
An air strip that could replace
Meadowlark Airport Is being studied by
city planners for lhe central industrial
area of Huntington Beach. ·
The concept calls for the airport to run
north·south from Talbert Avenue to Ellis
Avenue, east of Gothard Street and ex·
lending to the Southern Paci fic Railroad
track.
Planning Dlreclor Kenneth Reynolds
told city councilmen ?i.1onday night that it
would be within three quarte rs of a mUe
of the Central Park.
"Preliminary feasibility studies at this
point indicate it would be a replacement
for Meajiowlark," Reynolds said.
The planning director said that the 75-
acre area had been studied as a possible
airport site for nearly a year and asked,
the c<luncil to appoilit "two or three
members" to form a committee to m~t
with the Planning Commission Airport
Committee. •
option to renew.
The Meadowlark Airport has drawn
criticism recentl y because of the in·
stallation of night lights and an extension
of the runway.
The council·appointed citizens com·
mittee is studying these problems and is
to report back to the coun cil with recom·
mendations Oct. 5.
Republicans
Hike Cou11ty
Vote Margin
Voter registra tio n in Orange County
has reached an all time high and
Republicans con tinue to increase their
lead ove r Democrats.
THIS IS WHAT HOMEOWNERS SAW AS BREA CANYON FIRE APPROACHED DIAMOND BAR
Fire Ev1ntu1lly R11ched Bick of Ridge ln For eground. View 11 W11t Tow1rd L1 H1br1 H1ighta
The council declined to name a council
committee. Instead tpey aSsigned the job
to the recently appointed citizens com·
mittee which is studying conditions at
Meadowlark Airport.
The two committees were 1hslructed to
work together and arrange a joint study
session with the Cfluncil on the matter.
Voters eligible to ca£t ballots In the
Nov. 3 general election total 612,006.
Fire Spares Residents Few details of the proposal were given
h1onday night. In reply to a question by
Councilman Norma Gibbs, Reynolds said
he was not prepared to answer how
"quic kly feasible" the airport could be.
"I ~·ou\d prefer to submit a complete
package la ter ," Reynolds explained. "We
are at the study point at 'Present. We are
not ready for hefl'ings but for direction."
Since last June the total of eligible
voters in the county has increased by
more than 56,000. Of the new eligibles,
the Republicans signed up 2fl,OOO and the
Democrats 24,200.
In the past two years the GOP has in-
creased its superiority from 63,000 to
almost 84,000.
Diamond Bar Dwellers Thank 'Firemen, Winds In the 34th Congressional District
where Rep. Richard T. Hanna ([)..
Westminster ) is again bat t 11 n g
Republican William J. Teague of Ga rden
Grove. the Democratic edge has decreas-
ed .
.
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of 1tN1 Olll'f' '"" ST•lf
Orange County's Diamond Bar
residents were thankful today f0r the
persistence of firefighters and the fickle
Santa Ana winds.
After a 30.hour fire watch from hilllops
in central Diamond Bar overlooking the
Brea Canyon fi re that blackened nearly
4.000 acres of Los Angeles County and
more than 200 ac res of Orange County
nort h of Brea, 13,000 residents could
relax.
Only occasional puffs of smoke were
evident today amidst the charred knolls
\\'est of Brea Canyon road .
That road and the cut being made
through the canyon ror the Orange
Freeway to Diamond Bar from Fullerton
three times from Sunday afternoon lo
Monday noon was the scene of fire
fighters' stand against the brushland
blaze.
Three times flames licked brush across
the road from 200 houses in the
southernmos t part of Diamond Bar, just
across the Orange County line.
FIRE MOVED
·Ironically. the fi re whi ch is believed to
have started in the hill of La Habra
·From Page I
SALARIES ...
given the employe associations to modify
the recommeMations, if modification is
required.
"One side cannot unilaterally change a
contract," he said. •·AU it can do Is make
a counter effer to th e contract. None of
this occurred in this case."
Councilman Al Coen said he could not
see how the resolution was llJegal simply
because the memoranda of agreement no
longer exjsted.
Jn .addition to deciding to hire the labor
relations attorney lo review Bonfa's opl·
nion. the council also instructed the city
administrator to continue negoliations
with the police and fir emen's associa·
lions.
heights, in Orange County on Sunday,
moved out of the county doing most of its
damage in Los Angeles county.
For the most part, firemen successfully
limited the blaz.e to unpopulated areas ln
the La Puente Hills, but feared west
winds would push the flames over Brea
Canyon Road into the 6.000 brush and
tree studded acres that surrouad the four
~villages" of Diamond Bar.
l 'Diamond Bar residents usually boast
1,abolft the refreshing v.·est winds which
da ily barrel up Brea Canyon pushing
'smog away from their homes that com·
mand views of historic 2QO..year-old
walnut trees. Mount Baldy to the north
and, on the few clear days, Catalina and
the ocean to the Southwest.
But. as the Santa Ana winds fanned the
fast moving fire Sunday and again on
Monday, that beloved brttze took on a
new character. Firemen blamed the west
\rind for bringing the fire to threate n the
master-pla nned acreage.
A Los Angeles County fireman said
Monday morning, two overnight "stind!i "
against the fire at Brea Canyon Road had
been successful. <me further ''run'' of the
fire toward the rciad proved minor. and
the winds which had abetted the flames
rush, turned the fire again st itself.
SKIES BLACKENED
While residents viewed flames over
nearby ridges for more than 20 hours. the
most spectacular blackening of the skies
came after the bulk of the blaze was out.
About 4 p.m. Monday, a lesser blaze
erupted south of Colima Road in Ha·
cienda Heights just east of Wh ittier.
while the winds again bleVi toward Dia·
mond bar. For more than an hour,
billowing smoke blackened the sky. elot·
ting out the sun. and joining many miles
to the east with clouds of smoke from a
Barge Ca nal Halted
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -Secretary of the
Interor Wa lter J. Hickel has signed a
petition seeking a temporary halt to con·
struction of the controversial Cross Flor,
irla Barge Canal.
Citizen Committee Asks
Okay for Tax Override
Schoolmen and members of the
Citizens Committee for Better High
Schools r.tonda y lau nched a campa ign
urging voters to approve a 69-cenl tax
override for the Huntington Beach Union
High School District Nov . 3.
Unanimously elkiorsed by ihe fi ve.
member board of trustees. the tax hike
v.·ould in crease the general purpose tax
rate to $2.08 for a period of three years
beginning July 1, 1971.
Failure of the measure would force the
district lo operate at the legislative
minimum "Ooor" ~f ~ cents. causing a
reduction of nearly 40 percent In district
income. according to administrators.
"\lle're probably the biggest business
that Huntington Stach has In it.s are:.."
5aid Classifi(!d Personnel Director Will
Otto. "'We're getting new customers •ll
the time but with us growth is a li•bilily.
"'e don't make any money on the new
customers."
Otto explained t1!11t 1he district, which
provides e:ciUcatk>n ror youngsters living
In Seal Bach. Sunset Beach. Founl3ln
-Valley, Westmlnstu and Hunting ton
Beach, has not re'.celved 1n inCM?~st In
the general operalir\c; La.x al.nee 1964. Our·
ing th1t time enrollment has jumped 68
ptrctnt, from 9.2$0 to 15,313 1tduentr.
Recent fiscal problems have resulled In
approximatt'ly SI mlllioo worth of cuts in
th! current l)rogram. Some teaching and
admJnistraUve poalllons have b e e n
tliminated ; clw 1l1t.1 hf ve gone up and
many students art now on an optional
five-period day.
Reversion of the tax rate to its BS-cent
base vrould mean even further cuts , ac ..
cording to schoo\ 111dminlstrators. Tt could
mean a half day for students . elimination
of bus services, no more interschool
athletics and even bigger classes.
Board Chairman 1'1atthew \\'eyuker
said he felt ct rlain that voters would res·
pond positi vely ln the election. "The true
need v.·!ll certainly be shO\\'n this time,"
he sa id .
The only opposition to the measure hR!I •
come in the form of a ballot arJ:ument by
the Council on Sensible Taxation (COSTI.
ll is .signed by Claire Kelly, chairman. It
challenges the district to live v.·ithin Ill
income. and citts recent Increases in the
district's assessed valuation.
·•Considering the increased nassess.-
ment. demand for the tax rate Increase is
sneer economic stupidity:· the argument
stilts. The increase. B)COtdlng to school
officials, is 12.1 perctDt.
Trustee Ralph Bauer, co-chairman of
the citizens Committee for Better High
Schools. said his group b now seek.Ing the
tndorsernenl of local_ city councils, school
dlstrlcls. PTA·s and chambers of com·
mcrce to ad\•anct tht cause of the r.lcc-
Uon.
They also plan (l) provide bum per
gtlcktr.11 for those supportJng the measure
and plan (o leave information urg ing lb
paasage. on evuy door in the city.
(
new fire at Fontana.
Evacuation rumors flew aga in as the
sky filled with smoke, and ash once more
rained dow n on homes.
But a tour of the fire area disclosed
flames had been controlled. Hacienda
Heights resident! were seen leading
horses back into the blackened hills from
a green tree lined residential sanctuary
across Colima Road.
Friends in neighboring towns told tales
of the repeated horrors of the previous
night's blaze. Swimming pool filters
cculdn't handle the ash that dropped
from the skies. Most hillside homes from
Rowland Heights lo Diamond Bar
escaped damage, though brush sur·
rou nding them was blackened.
One horse farm along Brea Canyon
Cutoff lost a barn and smallish cabin.
REFINERY ESCAPES
A Nike missile site and , a Shell Oil
refinery hidden in the hills · above Brea
escaped the flames. though at least one
oil storage tank exploded Sunday af~ ...
ternoon. \_ ·
As that omrnous cloud darkened the
.!iky, a fire walcher·s reunion began again
at the end of Acacia Hill drive in mid·
Diamond Bar.
Husbands who had lefl for work in the
morning had been called home by anx·
ious wives, some as early as !109fl. Other!
who stayed to wet down roofs and wa tch
the fire fighters outwit the flames,
reported the day·s events.
All were glad their picturesque scenery
had been saved, thankful their anxieties
were unfounded, and concerned for those
around them who still faced the fire
threats.
But none removed the hoses they 'd
readied on roofs, or the sprinklers they'd
spiked into cedar shake shingles .
\Vith the coating or falling ash and
tangle of garden hoses lying about, some
homes gave the impression of a war
wne. except that all had been spared the
bombed-out look of homes in other fire·
ravaged areas.
By nine Monday evening. Diamond Bar
v.•a5 quiet, the streets were empty and
most homes darkened.
If supported, the airport would have a
2,000-foot runway and may be limited to
propeller driven planes. Its main function
would be to serve industrial needs but
there may be some recreational nying.
Park planners and architects are
known to be apprehensive about the pro-
posal. They are concerned over its pro-
ximity to the 147-acre Central Park and
the noise and dust factors.
Though the site would be similar in size
to Meadowlark. which covers 80 acres
and has a 2.300-foOt runway, the operator
of the private airport. John Turner. has
vowed tha t Meadowlark will not close.
Turner has revealed that his lease has
another four years to run but he ha s an
Cheaper , Lunches
Made Easier
Trustees of th e Huntington Beach City
School District have eased the re-
quiremenU this year for studenU lo
receive free or cheaper lunches.
Trustees changed the system after new
eligibility guldelines were drafted by the
state Department of Education.
Now. dilldren from famil ies with gross
monthly incomes of $210 for two persons,
$260 for three. $310 for four. $358 for five
or meel.S standards for larger familie·s are
elii;:ible for free lunches .
Families with slightly higher incomes
may apply for lunches for their children
at a reduced rate . Full informa\ion is.
available in the district ofrices.
Applications for the free and redu~
lunch rates are .available at all six
district schools. No names of families ap-
plying will be released.
Five Doctors Worked
BEI Rtrr. Lebanon (AP) -The five
doctors who treated Egyptian President
Gama! Abdel Nasser for his fatal heart
attack Monday night spent 15 minutes
trying to get his heart beating again the
Cairo ne'NSpaper Al Ahram reported to-
day.
In the district which includes part of
Los Angeles County. the Democratic
m•rgin is 24~72 compared lo 25,617 two
years ago.
Mosl Orange Coast communities con,
tlnue to show heavy Republican leanings.
Huntington Beach figures are GOP
24,641 to 21.126 ; Fountain Valley, 6,522 to
5,276; Seal Beach, J0,066 to 6,324.
Only Westminster and Los Alami tos are
in the Democratic camp. Westminster
shows Democrats leading 12,450 to 9,949.
Los Alamitos is 2,049 tci 1,775.
Both Orange Coast supervisorial
districts show GOP majorities . The Fifth
District (Costa Mesa, Newport and
Laguna and the unincorporated areas to
the east and south of the coast) is 79,648
lo 38,708.
The Second District .<Huntington Beach,
\Vestminster, pa rt of Garden Grove, Seal
Beach· and. Los Alamitos) is 56,977 to
54,913.
Marines Facing
Court in Laguna
Two Camp Pendleton Marines accused
of shOOting a l9-year-0ld Lagunan are to
be arraigned irt Superior Court Oct. 9 on
charges of robbery and assault with in·
tent to commit murder.
The two, Kerineth Ray Starks , 19. and
Virgil L. MCCoy, 20, are accused of
shooting Lawrence Michael Bornman, 19
of 47S N. Coast Highw ay on June 'll.
Bornman underwent surgery f o r
removal of a bullet from his armpit.
Judge Richard Hamilton dismissed ad·
ditional kidnaping charga against the
pair during a four-day preliminary et·
ami nilion in municipal court.
Witnesses during the hearing testified
to seeiag men struggleing in the back seat
of a four-docfr sedan. Bornman had told
police he escaped from the car when it
stopped at Myrtle Street and Pacific
Coast Highway.
Truth
or Consequences?
Somefim" the truth hurts! We h•ve lost •n occasion•! wle oy not teDing • customer wh•t
he w1 nted to heer.
We might point out lh•I • customer wo uld lie lietter off to pey • little more for our ru b-
ber podding th•n buy • che•per. mushy p•d lh•t feels lilt you ere w•lling on b•lloons. The "b•I·
loon " ped hurts the carpet backing , cau ses str1tehin9 , ind ruins seams. Also , this p.tddin9
often flattens out after a while.
Additioo•fty , we might ten you the! some c•rpet fi b.rs ,,.. more prectical thon otliers. A
filitr !hot -Is in one texture, might "bomb" in ....+lier .
F..r 1,.. lo can for •dvict. An of -soles poopJ. "''"' heil nltnsive experience in tlie SMY•
ict end ol this busineu -ond •lier •I -the most W.~•nt thin g we con olier, th at no tlst
does, is service!
••
__ .ALDEN'S
SANTA ANA. OlANM
TUSTIN Ctlr , , •
ALDIN'S
llD HILL CAINTS a HA,.llU
1 tJ1i Int-. T.t .. c.lf.
• 121.JJ«
CARPETS e DRAPES
I 663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646·4138
•
• 1
\
-
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I
b 4!<! ne ""' ' ·7
T\/t!dlf, StPlt""" iq, 1970 H OAIL Y PILOT :J
Finally Get Upper Hand
Full Alert · Blazes Controlled
Decla1·ed As Winds Lessen
In Midea st
By United Press lnleraaOoaal
Israeli and Egyptian troops· along lhe
Suez C8n;il were reported on full alert lo-
<lay as a precaution against a possible
Oareup in fighting following the death of
Egyptian President Gama! Abdel Nuser.
No Incidents were reported, however.
Soon after Nasser's death w a s
reported, Egypt announced its men along
the canal llad been placed on a "max·
lm~m alert." The Israeli newspaper
Pt1aariv reported today that Israeli troops
also had been alerted against any
surprise Egyptian attacks. ..J
The well-informed newspaper said
lsraeli military men do not expect the
canal front to flare up anew in the next
f<'w days bu't they do not exclude localiz·
cd skirmishes init iated by loca l Egyptian
commanders in for\1·ard positions.
It was clear the U.S. Middle East peace
offensive was dead for the time being.
\Vhite House officials said Nasser's death
\\'BS expecte;:! to shelve the peace plan
perhaps for months to come. And, in Tel
Aviv, the Israeli cabinet met in urgent
1cssion to consider the new situation.
In Jordan, Nasser in death may have
achieved what he had sought throughout
his life - a measure of brotherhood and
sense of unity between tw<1 armies which
only last week \\'ere locked in civil war.
Both sidtis halted their inflammatory
broadcasts and mourned as oue.
All indications were that peace efforts
\vould have to pause until Egypt selects a
ne1v ·1eader, Nasser was so popular and
po\\'erfuJ there is no logical successor, no
one to conduct peace negotiations with
the Israelis.
White House officials, who declined to
be identified. told a pool of newsmen
aboard the USS Saratoga today they
believed a new leader will first have ·to
emerge in Egypt after a period of col·
leclive leadership. and that after oon·
f;Olidating his power, the new leader will
no! be able to begin a new regime by
making peace with Israel.
In Amman. thousands of Jordanian
C'itiz.cns and Palestinian refugees con-
\•crged on the Egyptian embassy to offer
lheir mndolences. Both the Jordanian.1
and the Palestinians wept at the news ·
and shouted, "He died for us," the f\.1iddle
East News Agency reported.
Both King Hussein and the Al Falah
guerrilla organization issued statements
on the death of Nasser, whose last
diplomatic effort was to negotiate a
peace between the warrjng parties.
Hussein said "the last efforUI of the.
great deceased w e r e to minister the
,,·ounds of his nation inflicted by the
. Jor:dan tragedy. But the wounds or
Jordan and the wounds of bis nation
through his l<m are beyond any cure and
beyond any consolation."
The Al Fatah statl!ment s a i d
•·Palestine is yery unfortunate. It has lost
11 fighter in the forefront of fighters. , . "
Before Nasser's death was announced.
lhe guerrilla radio had broadcast rejec-
tions of some parts of the 14-polnt peace
package that ended the civil war.
However. guerrilla leader Vasser Arafat
\1·ent on the radio to defend acceptance of
the overall package. saying it was ''lo
~ave our people from shelling, hunger,
lhirst and disease."
Also still in doubt was the w~ere<1boul1 nr six American., taken hostage during
lhe hijacking of lhree airliners three
1recks ago.
PVC Okays Joint
Firwrtce Request
UPI Ttltll~tt.
FIREMAN WATCHES FLAMES RACE UP HILL SI DE 40 MILES EAST OF SAN DIEGO
C•lifornl•'• Southernmost County Experie nces Wo rst Brush Fire in St1te's History
Nurse to Stand
Trial in Death
Of Woman 84 ' A former nurse who was named in a
murder complaint following the death of
an elderly woman patient in an Orange
sanitarium has been ordered to face trial
on lesser charges Nov. 18 in Orange
County Superior Court.
Judge James F. Judge set that date for
f\1rs. Patti Chernik, 56, after reviewing
the Orange County Grand Jury in·
dictment of the defendant. The panel
refused lo endorse murder cha rges
originally preferred against Pttrs. Chcrnik
and indicted her on a count or in·
volu ntary manslaughter.
ft1rs . Chernik, also kno"'n as .leananne
Balch and J. Patricia Best. was ex-
tradited from Oregon after investigation
of the death on Nov. 9. 1966, of ft.1rs.
Marg~et Tagliabue. an 84-year~ld
widow Who was confined to Leonard's
Sanitarium in Orange.
A ct1roncr's autopsy revealed that Mr~.
Tagliabue died from peritonitis caused Jy
puncture wounds of her urinary bladder.
It was alleged that Mrs. Chernik inflicted
thoSe '\ounds with a sharp instrument.
Marine Ser geant
To Face Court
A 32-year~1J Camp Pendleton training
instructor with decorations for Vietnam
ct1mbat will face a speci al courtmartial
on an unrevealed date for alleged
maJtreatment of several recruits.
\Vhile ?1-farine spokesmen declined to
specify the nature of the charge:i. against
Staff Sgt. Charles Dabbs, they said none
o[ the three Marine trainees "'8S injured
in the asserted incidents which occurred
last August.
Sgt. Dabbs. \\'ho entered th!'! Corps in
1957. \Vas relieved of his duties several
\reeks ago as a training officer with the
2nd Infantry Training Battalion. 2nd
Infantry Training Regiment at the huge
base.
Last Hija cking
' ' Hostages Fre e
Senate Refu ses to Halt
_Electoral Reform Debate
\VASHINGTON (UPl) -The Senate
refused to halt Southern-led debate today
and left probably dead for this year a
proposed constitutional amendment to
provide direct popular election or the
president.
The vote was 5.1 to 34 in favor of shut-
ting off debate -five votes short of the
l\\'O-thirds majority necessary nf those
\'Oting .
The second consecutive defeat ror sup-
rorters of tht amendmen1 was dealt hy
Dixie Democrats and s ma 11 · s I ate
Sc ott ·Declar es
.Wa r Settlement
Now 'In Sight'
\VASHINGTON (U PI) --Se n ale
Republican leader Hugh Scott said today
a peace settlement in Vietnam was "in
sight ."
}Je predicted that President Nixon may
announce a speed-up •of' U.S. troop
"'ithdrawals in a mid·October address to
Republicans who con1bined to reject a
motion for cloture or a gag on debate.
A large number of absentees con·
tribuled to the outcome today.
The amendment which the House of
Representatives .overwhelmingly approv.
cd last year on a 339-70 vote appeared
stalled for good until next year.
Southerners and some Republicans
from smaller states have been fighting
rhe proposal since Sept. 8. \Vhile oot a
filibuster in lhc classic sense. the effort
had the same .effect . -no \'Pote on the
proposal.
A:bsent today were Sens. Karl E. l\.lunrlt
tR-S.D.), ~fargarel Chase Smith IR·
Tl-1ainel, and Georgt Aiken (R-Vt:). Mundt
was ill, Aiken was · recuperating from
minor surgery and Mrs. Smith had an ap-
pointment with her doctors. Aiken and
Ptlrs. Smith voted to cut off debate last
time.
Six senators were in Europe: Sens .
Mike Gravel ([).Alaska), Ra-Ip h
Yarborough (D-Tex.), Stephen M. Young
(D-Ohio), ttnd Henry Bellmon (R·Okla.),
all for cutting off debate and John
Sparkman fD-Ala. ), and B. Everett
Jordan (D·N.C.), against.
Several senators also "·ere in their
home states campaigning for the
November elections.
the nation. Proponents of election r e f o r m ,
Scott made public excerpts of a speech regardless or the absentee munt, had to
he plans to make tonight in Harrisburg, switch several senators v.•ho refused to
Pa. vote for clotu re on the previous try.
The excerpts did not contain ;i specific .~ Under tpe present system, each slate is allolted electoral votes equal to '"its forecast of an end to the war. but Scott's representation in Congress. For example,
office in releasing portions or the speech
~airi Scott "predicted an honorable and
final eod lo the ct1nflict in Vietnam 11'as
'i n sisht .' "
The press release said Scott Y:ould also
predict that Nixon "could very poss ibl y
be announcing <1 fur ther accelerated
schedule of troop withdrawals."
Scott said he had not consulted with the
White House about the speech and was
basing it on a '"personal hunch -a
personal opinion."
He added that "the de-esca1atirlg war
in Vietnam is rapidly becoming obsolete
as an issue in the fall election campaigns
around the nation."
if a stale has eight representatives and
l\\'O senators, it has 10 electoral vote:i;. A
presidential candidate winning l he
popular vote in a state. receives all of
that state's elec toral votes.
rr no candidate gets a majority of the
electoral vote. the election is decided in
lhe House of Representatives. with each.
stale having one vote.
The proposed amendment. already
adopted 339 to 70 by the House, would
;ibolish electoi-al voting. T~ candidate
receiving the most popular votes na·
lion wide would be the winner, if he gets
at least 40 percent 0£ the total vote. If no
• candidate. got that perC1!ntage, a runoff
election between tbt top two would decide
the winner.
Hy ARTl\VR R. VINSEL
01 tftt Otilr fllltf Sleft
Dying winds and predicted rain show·
ers today brought hope to firefighters ex-
hausted by five days in hell, baWin& a
mu19.front holocuast whose scars will
still be seen by your great-grandchildren,
100 years from oow.
.The. series of fires -including one in
San Diego Countr conceded to be . the
worst in recorded California hiat<ry -
have so far killed eight penons and caus-
ed almost incalculable damage.
Estimates ran today to •t75 mWlon and
California was declared a dbast.er 1rea,
thus qualifying thousands of homeles~
victim·s for low·interest · government
loans.
During the five-day siege in six coun-
ties, the fight against flames haS included
lhe newest in technology -from an
amphibious tanker plane that sucks up
seawater -tu buckets and bare hands.
Some firemen have slept only fivt
hours in the whole five days.
Even women and children helped save
the San Diego County mountain village of
JuJian, pounding flames with sacks.
blankets and shovels, then stomping out
the sparks.
"ft was the most amazing thine I've
f!ver seen," said a firefighter from
l\.1onterey. "I thought it was the
Volunteer Fire Department until J saw
the~ladies .and .kids.!:
He was one of thousands -eight now
dead, 25 seriously injured and 500 treated
for eye irritation -summoned from as
far as l\.fontana and even out of California
prisons to help.
The situation eased somewhat today
1\•ith higher humidity, lessening winds
and for~ast rains, but the possibility or
pyromaniacs setting new fires continued
to be a menace.
Several persons have been arrested on
suspicion of arson.
Ironically. next Sunday is the. beginning
of Nati<lnal Fire Prevention ·Week. ·
Experts in the field of natu ral ecology,
meanwhile . warned of a new horror when
winter storms st rike the fire-ravaged
areas -especially in San Diego County
-unless they are quickly re·sCeded.
"The cast part of the county could
become a horror or floods and mudslide~
if we don't get grass in and growing."
said James Secrist, or the State
Conservation Department.
Pine groves, thick brush and sumac
trees were consumed along the 6tJ..mile
path of the footba ll·shaped fire \l.'llich
burned 200,000 acres.
''This ls undoubtedly the worst fire I've
seen in my caree:r," remarked 'Arlen B .
Cartwright, of the State Division of
Forestry.
To the south, meanWhile, three brush
fires erupted, alllO.'!lt encircling Eruenada,
Brig Escapees
'
Nabbed by Police
A pair of alleged rugitives from the
Camp Pendleton brig losl their short few
hours of freedom in San Clemente Mon·
clay night because of curious detective!!
on routine patrol.
Police said the two escaped marint.
convicts were <1rrested on the El Camino
Real onramp of the San Diego Free\vay
shortly before 10 p.m. by two detectives .
Officers said the men were questioned
about poMibly bein1 absent without
leave.
Subsequent checks revealed that the
pair, Bobby Tyrone Griffith, 20, and
Rickie Glen Gordon, 17, had assertedly
fled the brlg earlier in lht evening.
The two Marines were returned to
military authorities.
where 200 Mexican &0ldlera wue 1um·
montd to l>attle fhimes, includ.Jna ooe •
5,~cre. fire.
A small anny of firefighters on fronts
throughout California -"'here 52,000 '"
acres of brush and timber have been
destroyed in the north alone -1enerally
was gaining the upper hand today.
''We're in pretty good shape," Mid a
supervisory forestry official of the Los
Angeles County situation. .
Fivi Division of Forestry employts
"'ert killed Mooday night when an
AJouette model helicopter ferrying them
to the E4st Fork of the San Gabriel River
crashed.
No cause. 'was immediately determined
and identities of the victims in the •
BiCbota. Canyon crash were withheld.
The toll in human and other mlser.f b
impossible to calculate.
Newhall rancher Dennis Stonecypher
\\'atched and listened as the leapfroging
flames raced through his property, killina
to perce{lt of his livestock.
··Jt hit the log shed, 600 feet long and 30
feet wide. and there wu one terribh!. din
as the pigs screamed -all 200 of them -
but at liast it was fast," aaid
Stonecypher.
';The lambs ran between two sheds and
half of ~ got killed. Some ran with
their wool on fire."
"We found them dead all acrosa the
range." he continued. "Or what used tn
be ra·nge ."
Los Ange!Cll and San Diego counties
alone suffered 666 structur e,11 destrOy~_ig~J~g~.!~. _f!l?.me~i-.• ~~d A ..
336,000 acres -an area nalf the i!lb:e of
Rhode Island - lay charred by the
flames. ·
Fire fighters began to breathe more
easily .about a 200.0QO.aCre fire. halted
Sunday 2f. the outskirts of several San
Diego auburbi!I. But winch helped another
major blaze nare up Pt1'onday night and ;
race over 10,000 acres of a heavily wood· -.
ed area, drawing within 10 miles of the
main fire. A heat wave that rear.bed 100
degrets was eiptcted to q:>ntinue.
The Southern california fires also are
J!:i\iing the first plane 'ever deSigned
specifically lo battle forest blazes its in·
itial big test. ·
The twin-engine amphibian . the Cl..215 t
designed and manufactured by Canada.if
Ltd.. dropped more than 400 tons of ,.
,.,.aters on fires in the Malibu area for the J.
sect1nd straight diy Mooday.
Santa Ana Man 's !
Trial for Theft
Site Changed
' Grand theft charges against a Santa ~
Ana mai:i who authorities allege posed as ,
an attorney during a $5,000 banking ·
operation have been transferred from ·
\Vestminster Municipal Court to Santa
Ana MunicipaJ Court.
Russell Eugene o·eampo, 25, has bef.n 3 nrdered to appear Oct. 19 in Santa Ana to
;ins"·er charges of grand theft and
\\.'riling check!! without sUfficient funds.
District attorney's investigators Ar· ,,
rested O'Ca mpo Sept . IS after in·
vestigatinn of his role in moves by a
group of Orange County residents in·
terested in forming 1 Mexican-American
bank .
It is alleged that O'Campo established ~ holding company i.1 the name of San·
tiago de Santana Inc., filed the corporate
name with the secretary of state. and aet
up a trust account for lhe holdin1 com-
pany.
Investigators allege O'Campo then sent
letters to two doctors asking that pro-.,
mised contributions to the project N
made. out in his name. He allegedly
assured both phyaiclam thlt he wu an
attorney and wu quallfiod ·to preside
over the 1ffairs of the· Infant corporation.
The California Public Utllitiei!I Com·
mission has approved a finaaclng pro.
posal requested ;jointly by Southern
California Edison and San Diego Gas and
Electric.
GENEVA !UPI) -The Interna-
tional Cmmmittee of the Red Cross
announced tonigilt the remaining
six airline hostages held by
Palestine guerrillas have been
freed and are all safe. All are
Americans.
''The fact is," Scott declared. "that lhc
present administration has b e e n
eminently successful in winding dO\Vfl the
,.,.ar and in assuring the American J>CQple
thal American involvement in this tragic
venture is quickly coming to an end.·•
5 PIECE DINING SET .•
The two utility companies applied to
the commission for permission to borrow
J:35.S million from European banks. The
C'ompanid plan to purcha se l\vo nuclear
~team turbine generators for expansion or the San Onofre Nuclear Generating
Pl:inl.
Since the companies arc public utilitlr.~.
lhl'ir business trsnsactions must all be
approved by the commission.
A Red Cr~ statement said news
of the release of the hostages "·a~
sent to headquarters in Geneva by
the Inte rnational Red Cross delega-
tion in Amman.
There W<'re no immed iate .~up
plr.mentary d<'lails.
Scoll's address is scheduled al the
Pennsylvania Council of Repub lican
\\1omen ·s convention at the Penn Harris
fl.iotor Inn in Harrisburg. He told
reporters he might m~ke som,c ch3nges
in the lext.
Judge Sets Hearing Date
Accused Deputies Plead N ot <;uuty in Gran.d Tlieft
T,.., Orange County Sheriff's deput"5 colleagues as they enttred and left Judge equipment and several cases of liquor
accused of burglarizing the Miu;ion V1ejo Langbauser·a crimin1l ca I ender Y»ere found in the security vehicle used
Cotldl.ry Club tbda"y pleaded Innocent in eoortroom. by the two men to patrol the area as
Santi Ana Municipal Court. to t.har1es of Jrvine refused to dhcuss the caH and security· iuar<b: ror the Mission Viejo
gr.and lh('_fl and burglary. left hurridly ~·ith his altorMJ'. Duncan Company.
Judge: Eugene., G. Langhauser ordered hesitated, began to speak to newsmen Duncan surrendered when confronted
ArthUr E. Duncan. 34, of 4!H2 Maui ~ir• and then was ordered by his lawyer not by .sheriffs officers but lr\•inc took over --'--;<c;lei£unling~on Beach and Frederick 'B-...... to (:2.mrru:,nt on the issue, · _ a patrol car at gunpoint and Jed officers
rv ~. 40, of La llabra to race _BoJ.h men 't\.'t.re arrested Inside the Rolf on a wild chase that ended In Riverside
prellmlnary ™7arlng Nov. 6. Bot~ mtn shop or the Mission Viejo C>untry Club County after IrYine lhreatentd for more
art free on bail. . last Sept. 20 after the s~plclous golf pro than two hour$ to commit suicide.
Bolb (ormcr depullc.1. ha~ tn brave the saw. t~em on the. premises and called Hlverside County authorities ma y ;add ,::lar~ af televiston hght1ng and t.ht • sheriffs orfletr1. charges or assault wilh -deadly weapon
"f!Ually lntrnse 1JBrC1S of 1evrral tormtr -Jnvcstig1itQrs 11llt~ge stolen golflng lo those already ractd b; rrvine .
1. •
All •1W111el tftd bMulil~I '
,,..,, 111e1 f"""• • u,.,.i, •~Ire •ioll !Iott d1elu •fli • le1Jw.4 "Nt...,.,._
,.,, Qioiit1 "°"' ...... ft t•Oh, IMllltltt IJ" lfff.
.$pt1W. OH r,,.;lfl,
$219.IS
VAIUI
I
1
·--"""'--
' '
-+-·
'
.f DAILY l'ILOT Tut$day, Stptembfto 29, 1'170
U.S. Copter
Gunsl1ips
Rout Red s
•
SAIGON (UPI) -Relicoplen of th•
U.S. lOtat Airborne Division attacked a
patrol in mountains west of Da Nang and
kiUed 29 Commuolsls after calling in air
5trikes, the U.S. comm1nd sald today.
CommurUquea from Phnom Penh said
fighting In Cambodia wu at a low point
with the onJ.y action reporf a batUe In
which South Vietnamese forces killed 21
Viet Cong and North Vietnamese 7.5 miles
northeast of the capital
-
A $1.7 million jail under con·
:struction in Goshen, Ind. is eight
inches wider than the available
land. Elkhart County officials
said e planner apparently forgot
the old jail would not be demolish·
ed until the new one was finished
next door. Work on the new jail
has been limited to excavation.
The U.S. command in Saigon said the
lOlst Airborne Division aerial gunships
v•ere on rouUne patrol on the border
between Thua 'lllien and Quang Nam pro-
vinces when they spotted a commwilst
foree 40 miles west of Da Nang Monday.
PRESIDENT NIXON MEETS POPE PAUL AT THI! VATICAN
NlnHay Dlplomotk: Tour llotlna In Italy • Teacher Chr is Meux, 24, has
Greatness Flawed landed his first local theater role
-he will play a body lying flat on
his face on stage for two hours
in ¥exborougb, England. • Hardly had an all-out Coast
Guard search 'or a missin g 31·
foot trimaran begun, when it was
called of! Tuesday. It turned out
that the trimaran had been safely
moored in Kahului Harbor on the
isla.ryl of l\1aui for two days. The
t.wo .men aboard the boat out of
Sausalito, Calif., failed to notify
anybody they had arrived.
The helicopters opened fiN! with rockets
and machine guns and called in help from
American jet fighter-bombers. T h e
gunships killed 17 Communist troo1>3 and
sa id the jets killed 12 more. There were
no U.S. casualties in the fighting.
In two lesser clashes in the Mekong
Delta Monday, South Vietnamese troops
killed 14 Viet Cong. There were no
government casualties.
U.S. B52 bombers dropped up to 300
tons of bombs within 15 miles of artillery
Base O'Reilly, 12 miles east of Laos and
26 miles west of Hue in raids Monday
reported no new fighting around the
besieged South Vietnamese fire base.
Nasser Blinded by.Power
Say U.S. Editorialists
•
ij Drtss /01 CP Air Sttwardt11ts tJ is aoina midi in. Vancouv1:r. B.C.
A spokesman says the t1ew out.
L f its are part of an "executive
i'.1 jet" promotion to att·ract Cana-
' dian businessmen. "We tldnk
girl-watching is important," he
--said.-"So you cover then• up."
1 lat!Unted one man at an in/or·
mal 'PCJrty to introduce the niidis.
:.i Air travelr:rs will havt their first
· view-or 1tonview-of the steward-
1 J essts in their midis Sept. 21.
f,..~ .... r:k~. ·~ • Charles W1lcruk, a trainee al the
Ft. Wolters helicopter base near
Mineral Wells, came to Dallas to
recover his car which had been
iitolen then found by police aban·
doned on a freeway. However, dur·
ing the night between the police
notification and his arrivaJ, some·
one cut a bole in the fence of the
policy pound and made off with the
1959 sports car again. • \Veddings are felv and far
between in J ackpot City near the
Neva<tia·ldaho 1ine because there
aren't any churches here. But
Catherine Black, a card dealer,
and John Strang, a bartender, were
\\•ed at the clu b \vhere they work.
The Rev. Robert Cook came up
from Elko 120 miles a\vay to
perlorm the ceremony. He arrived
90 minutes late because he en~
countered road construction. AP"
propriately for the setting, the
centerpiece on the gift table was a
money tree. Although the city has
110 churches, it has c h u r ch
i.ervices. They are held in a Jawr
dromat. • The eight-year reign oC the
B•1tl11 as the top pop group in the
judgment or British fans has en-
ded. Named to succeed them
\Vednesday in a poll by the· Melody
'tl·Iaker, Britain's leading music
newspaper. was the four·man
British rock band Loci Zeppelin.
'rhe Beatles \vere s e co n d •
. .\merica's Bob Dvlan held his posi·
iton as best male singer and Cana·
dlan folk artist Joni Mitchell \Vas
adjudged the best of her se:""C, sue~
ceeding America's J1ni1 Jopkin,
who dropped to third.
Viet Cong guerrillas unleashed more
artillery attacks on civilian population
centers in Vietnam Mooday, the South
Vietnamese command said today.
Ten rounds of mortar fire struck the
district capital of Dien Khanh, 188 miles
northeast of Saigon in the central
highlands. Two civilians were killed and
six others wounded.
The mortar attack followed three. shell·
ings of civilian areas nearly 15 hours
earlitr-at Hue and south«>{ Saigon. Those
attacks killed two civilians and wounded
six.
The South Vietnamese command said
government cavalrymen rode armored
cars and tanks into a battle 75 miles
northeast of Phnom Penh near the town
of Krek Monday. In addition to killing 21
Viet Cong and North Vietnamese, they
captured 16 weapons. Tht South Vlei·
namesc surrered six dead and 14 wound·
ed.
* * '* U.S. Announces
Ne w Troop Cut
In Vietnam War
SAIGON (AP) -The United States has
turned over another big combat base to
the South Vietnamese army and bas
withdrawn four more units from battle to
reduce American strength in Indochina
by another 2,565 men, it was announced
todsy.
Military spokesmen sa id the An Hoa
combat base, about 20 miles southwest of
Da Nang, has been given to the South
Vietnamese Slst Infantry Regiment It
\vas the 57th American installation turned
over to the Vietnamese in a little more
than a year.
The U.S. Command announced that
three units of the 1st Marine Division and
an Army artillery battalion have been
pulled out of action.
Witne8s Testifies He
Pulled Off Holdup
PtTJ'SBUP.GH (UPI) -A murder
suspect, brought into court from the
county jail to testify for a friend , sud-
denly announced that he -not the defen-
dant -staged an $80,000 bank holdup.
The defense witnesa, Peter Biaglarelli,
25. told the court Monday he gave about
S30.000 of the loot to the defendant.
Richard E. Hinkel, 33. to keep for him
alter the robbery July 24, 19611.
By Ualtecl Pre11 IDtel'llatioaal
American newspapers commenting in
editorials today described Gamal Abdel
Nasser as a man whose greatness: as a
leader was flawed by errors of judgment
and ambition.
The New York Times called him a
"tragic and spectacular failure." 'I1le
Atlanta Constitution called him a man of
';vision and patriotism," but in the next
sentence said, "but that vision was nar·
row, restricted to the Arab world, willing
to risk nuclear war between the
superpowers Rtwia and the United
States, to further his dream ."
Most papers agreed there was no way
to accurately forecast what Nasser's sud·
den death will mean to the Arab world
and the Mideast tinderbox.
The Daily News in New York observed:
"We'll have to be excused from shed·
ding any tears, genuine or crocodile, over
the death yesterday of Gama! Abdel
Nasser, 52, longtime chieftian of Egypt.
which he grandiosely rechristened the
United Arab Republic. It is a fact,
though, that Mr. Nasser was gathered to
his reward at an inconvenient time with
regard to the general situation in the
l\1iddle East •..
The Daily News said, "Nasser wa:ii
mortgaged lo Soviet Russia, which has
any number of technicians in the UAR."
The New York Times said, "bis ex·
traordinary rapport with the Arab
masses, his gift for rhetoric, his daring
and his_personal charm gave the Egyp-
tian leader a position ol strength among
the Arabs and on the world stage that
might have been used to great advantage
for his people and for the peace of the
world. But bli nded by his own ambitions,
he vaslly overreached himself, led. his
country into a series of disastrous wars
and accomplished little of permanennt
value either for his fellow-Egyptians or
his fellow-Arabs."
"He loved power," said the Los
Angeles Times. "In its pursuit he
squandered the resources or h i s
leadership and his cauntry on wars and
subversion, until in the end he had
mortgaged his land to a new band of
foreigners who held him more and more
in their debt and control. For now all that
ca n be safely said is that with Nasser's
death the course of history in the Middle
East has been altered, though in ways no
one can yet fully perceive."
The Atlanta Constitution commented:
';His death robs the Arab nations of one
leader among them who dreamed of bet·
ter things for all his people. Only the
ruture can tell what this means for those
people and for the people Nasser inspired
them to hate, the Jsraelis."
The Baltimore Sun said, "bis dream in·
eluded a new Egyptian well-being, a rais·
ing of his country out of its miserable
past. The symbol of this was the Aswan
Dam. But here also nothing came to fnii·
lion during his lifetime : the beginnings
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only had been made. Jusl how the Middle
Eastern situation will be changed by
Nasser's death is impossible to foresee.
That il will be changed profoundly is cer·
taln." •
The Los Angeles Times said the death
''removes an immense figure from the
v.·orld stage.
" •.• al death be was struggling to im-
pose a degree Clf order over a disparate
Arab world; engaged in the intense
diplomatic maneuver -some would say
manipulation -with the principal powers
of the world; and locked still in a deadly
conruct with t.he one country of his region
"''ith which he had least come to terms -
lsrael .... resolution of all these depend
to a very great extent on Nasser.
" .•• that is why it is a futile exercise
at this point to forecast wit h any degree
or certainty what will follow."
* * * Sadat to Assume
Nassel''s Duties
For Two Months
BEIRUT (AP) -One of Gamal Abdel
Nasser's most loyal followers will be
Egypt's leader for the next 60 days.
Vice President Anwar Sadat, one o! the
"Free Officers" who joined Nasser in
1952 to overthrow King Farouk. took over
Monday as interim head of state under
the provisions or Egypt's 1964 constitu-
tion.
No one knows who will eventually
emerge as Nasser 's successor.
Within 60 days, the 360-member Na·
tional Assembly is required to nominate a
new president by a t\vo-thirds majority.
According to the constitution, the new
president's term would be five years.
Nasser was elected president for life
following his b r i e f resignation a r t e r
Egypt's dtfeat by Israel in the 1967 war.
Diplomats in Paris said todsy that
Sadat is not likely to emerge as Nasser's
final successor. One Egyptian official
mentioned the possibility of a bid for
power by Ali Sabry, the pro-Moscow head
of the Arab Socialist Union. But a
\Yestem official commented : "Nobody is
going to know what's happening until
somebody reads the will."
Of all the o[ficers who helped Nasser
launch his revolution, only two survive in
power-Sadat, 52, and Hussein Shafei, 51,
who has little popular support. Both are
members of the Supreme Executive
Committee of the Arab Socialist Union,
the only authorized political organization
in Egypt.
Sadat was one of four vice presidents
named by Nasser in 1964. They were all
removed following the 1967 war, but
Sadat remained as president of the Na·
tional Assembly. -.
Sadat, brought up in a devout P.1oslem
family and known as an Arabic scholar,
\Vas graduated from Egypt's military
academy in 1938.
British authorities arrested him in 1941
nn charges or helping an Egyptian
general escape to Nazi-.Oermany. He was
imprisoned for lW'O years before escap-
ing, but was arrested again in 1946 and
accused of attempting to assassinate
Amin Othman, then finance minister. He
\vas acquitted, became a reporter for ll
caJro newspaper, and left that job in 1949
to rejoin the army.
After the coup against Jo~arouk, Nasser
appointed Sadat to a succession of key
posts. In 1953, he "'as a nlember ol a
tribunal created to try politicians of the
old regime. A year later, he \\'as on the
People's Court hearing the cue of
Musllm Brotherhood members accused of
trying to assassinate Nasser in Alex·
andrla.
P olice Return P ants,
Too Baggy in Seat
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (lil'I) -Ont
hll!ldttd state policemen st:nl their
uniforni troustrs back to the manufactu·
rcr because they v.·ere baggy In tbe seat.
Embarrassed officials at the Howard
Uniform Co. In Baltimore announted they
had rtrcd a quality control Inspector.
They also said state troopers In. other
states had requested extra rooLn In their
lrOUSC!ra to accommodate bulky bOOk.'I of
tlckt:ll. Bui, \Vt:st Virginia slate police
prefer lhe sllm-llltlng mood look, spokes·
nien buo Hid.
Nkon Trip
Death of Nasser
Lessens Impact
~
ABOARD TllE USS SARATOGA (UPI)
-Much of the purpose and impact of
Preaident Nixon's Mediterranean tour
was diminished by the d .. tb of E1ypUan
President Gama! Abdel N-r.
Nixon called the Egyptian leader's
death a "tragic loss" and canceled air
and sea exercises that ,had betn schedul·
ed. today to show the power and flexibility
of the U.S. Ith Fleet, however. He was
scheduled to go to Naples later in lhe
day.
Nixon's eight-day trip began with a
warm.and enthusiastic reception in Rome
and a visit with 26 freed American
airliner hostages, but Nasser's death
abruptly imposed a more somber tone on
the tour.
Of Immediate concern to Nixon was
who will represent the United State11 at
Nasser's funeral. White House aides
refused to speculate whether NiJ:on
himself would 101 but tended to
discourage such talk by observing the
United States and the United Arab
Republic ha ve not had diplomatic rela-
tions since the 1987 Arab-Israeli war.
There was speculation among Nixon's
aides that Secretary of State William P.
Rogers would be Sent. Rogers is traveling
with Nixon.
Most activitiea on Nixon's program re-
mained unchanged. Although he might be
forced to reschedule his trip to
Yugoslavia Wednesday. President Tito
was expected to fiy to Cairo for Nasser's
funeral Thursday.
Nixon was notified of Nasser's <teath
?i.tonday night. In a one paragraph state-
ment, the President sald:
"The world has lost an outstanding
leader who tirelessly and devotedly serv·
ed the ca uses of bis countrymen and the
Arab world. This tragic-loss requires that •
all naUons, and particularly those in the
Middle East, renew their efforts to calm
passions, reach for mutual un derstanding
* * * Mrs. Nixon Sets
Her Acti,vities
Wliile iii Rome.
ROME (UPI) -While President Nixon
visited the 6th Fleet today, first lady Pat
Nixon planned her own separate round of
activities including a coffee reception and
news conference for some 50 local
newswomen and a visit to Rome's version
of Boys' Town.
After her arrival Jn the Italian capital,
?i.1rs. Nixon stayed in the background to
Jet the President take the spotlight.
She appeared thrilled Monday with her
visit to the Vatican when she had a
private audience with Pope Paul VI.
The Nixons invited several Roman
Catholic members of their staff to join
them. Among them were Fina and
Manolo Sanchez. the Nixons' maid and
valet. ·
r~ina , dressed in black., kissed the
Pope's hand twice. Tears streamed down
her face. Nixon introduced the couple,
once refugees from CUba, to the PoPt as
being like members of the family.
Much attention has been centered on
?\1rs. Nixon's spectacular t r a v e 1
\vard.robe, including eight designer even-
ing gowns.
At Boys Town of Rome this afternoon,
"1rs. Nixon was to meet the mayor, lPr
year~ld Gino Spano, a Canadian. The
first lady also was to meet Monsignor
Carroll·Abbing, founder and president of
Boys Town of Italy.
In the evening, she was scheduled to
motor to the national union for the fight
against illiteracy. There she was to meet
the adult sludents and faculty and watch
a film, "the alphabet is not el'lougb."
and bulld lasting peace."
Nixon's day Monday Included warm
and prolonged talks \\·ith Italian J_eaders
and Pope Paul VI and a surprise 30 ..
minute greeting for 28 Americans passing
through Rome en route home after tllree
v.·eeks captivity as prisoners of Arab
guerrillas in Jordan.
Most pleasing to the president was a
spontaneous pro-N ixon demonstration by
thousands of Romans who chanted "Ric·
cardo.' Ric-cardo (Richard, Richard )''
and tried to mob him as his motorcade
left the Vatican.
There was street fighting, but Nixon
did not see It. Police detained 474 y'ouths,
most of them Communists or anarchists,
who hurled rocks and shouted anti-Nixori
slogans in parts of central Rome. ,
White House Press Secretary Rona ld T~.
Ziegler told newsmen Nixon was tremen-
dously encouraged by the welcome of
Italians.
One of the purposes of Nixon's trip was
to try to get Yugoslavia and Spain to use
their friendship with Nasser to get peac11
talks moving agaln al the United Nations.
-t: * *
Nixon . Cancels
Navy E xercises
Over Nasse1·
ABOARD THE USS SARATOGA (UPI)
-President Nixon told the U.S. 6th fleet
today it had helped keep the J ordanian
crisis from erupting in a wider war, but
he silenced its mighty firepower beca~e
of the Arab-world"!· loss of Gamel-Abdel
Nasser.
Soon after awakening, the President
conferred at sea with Secretary of State
William P. Rogers and Defense Secretary
Melv.in R. Laird about lhe implications
of the Egyptian president's death for the
Middle East and the dormant Arab-
lsraeli peace talks.
Nixon was not expected to interrupt the
schedule of the European tour to attend
Nasser's funeral in Cairo Thursd ay -
Rogers may represent the United State•
-but changes were likely in his plans to
visit Yugoslavia that day. President
Jooep Broz Tito will be in Cairo for the
funeral.
With today's planned alr and sea ex·
crcises canceled, the President stood on
the deck s on this huge carrier off Naples
and told the 25,000 officers and men of
the naval armada by radio that they "·ere
indispensable for peace in the ~Iediter•
ranean.
"Power £or peace," Nixon declared.
The Jordanian crisis has eased, he
noted, and "the most important. In·
dispensable reason was the fact that \\'e
were ready."
';The fact that \Ve did not have lo use It
is most satisfying.·•
The President made no mention nf
Nasser's death or the uncertainty it had
injected into the complex power struggle
v:ithin the Arab world whlch Cairo had
stabili zed so often under Nasser 's
moderating influence.
Store Off icial Ri gs
Booby Traps in Shop
MORGANTOWN, IV, Va. (UPI) -
\Vhen the Propst 1i1achi~ry Co. is closed,
signs in the windows proclaim the shop is
wired to explosives that will be touched
off if doors or windows are disturbed.
The general manager of the firm, Louis
Hamrock, for 12 years an Army ex·
plosives expert \Vilh the Green Beret!i,
set up booby traps after th ieves l~st week
made off with $2,000 in equipment.
Hostages Return
'Tha nk God for A1nerica,' Says Ont\:
NEW YORK (UPI) -When Jeffrey
Newton, 16, of New York City stepped off
the specially-chartered Trans World
Airlines jet Monday night after sptnding
22 days as a hostage in Jordan, he
observed, "litUe things like hot food and
soft mattressea ire taken for granted in
this country.''
Newton. a student at Y e s h i v a
University High School, was one of 33
ho.stages of the Sept. 6 multiple hi-
jackings to Jordan \Vbo returned to Ken·
nedy Airport. They had a 12-hour (light
from Rome, where they met briefly with
President Nixon .
Newton was one of 32 hostages reltued
by Palestinian guerrillas on Saturday. Six
of the hostages were taken lo Rome
earlier from Nicosia, Cyprus. All \\·ere
reunited in Rome Monday, with one
hostage r<turnlng to hi• home In Paris.
The host.gu wen! joined by Mrs. Russtll
1itorria and her infant son who hid been
released several days before. She ls the
"''ire of the copilot of tht! TWA jell Iner hi·
jacked to the desert oot.slde.,Amman.
Six olhtr h<>!lages hive been unac-
colJllted for.
Mort than 200 relaUves met the
returnees In a special reception while an
esllmated 1,000 friends met them In cor•
rldors snd public waiting rooms. "layor
John V. Lindsay wu on hand along with
pushing and sho't'ing newsmen trying to
put microphones in front of the hos tages.
f.f.itchell ?\t@ltze.r of Orlando. FIA., Mid
he under$t.ood the guerrillas and that
thty bad taugbt him a les30n:
"Thank God for what we have here In
America ."
Capt. Carroll D. \Voods. pilot of the hi-
jacked T\VA jet, who spent his 521id
birthday in captivity, was met by his wUe
and said he had been treated ''fairly and
humanely. It was not tht best experience
I ever had," he said. •·t wciuldn 't reeom·
mind it more than once in a lifetime ."
But when llSked ll he'd fiy to the Pitld ·
die East again, he 11aid: "J don't know
v"hy not.·•
David Raab. 17, of Trenton. N.J .• wns
met by his mother ~nd hugged vigorous·
Jy. He said he wanted to "take a shower
and eat." Mn. Raab sa id, '11 ordered him
three steaks.''
This v.·as a specttil reunion for tht
Raabs. Mrs. Raab and her four other
children bad been hijacked with David lo
the Jordanian desert, but Ibey were
released Sepl 14. David, a Yeshiva
Universi ty student. v.·as held.
"For a whUe 1 thought I had Jost my
,,.,·hole !amlly," said Dilvid'1 father. Rabbi
1i1enuchen Raab.
Hundreds of Yeshiva Un l v er s 11 y
students carrying sisns greeted lb&.
rctumets. "Near Mizrathi welcomes
home David Raab and Foozle Chesler
from a relaxing vae11tion overseas," one
sign read.
"I want to get a blg bottle or l'Ol'lt
beer," said Fran Chesler. 19. 11 Ye~hiva
student. .. It's nice to be back Cor R.a1h
Hoshanah,'' the Jewish Mw year I.hat
begins at si.mdown \Vcdncsday. .
'
7
-•
•
Fo1111ia.i11 Valley
' EDITION
VO~.' 63, NO. 233 , 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE CCUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY;SEPTEM8ER 29, '1970 <
• us I Ill
Chos Feared
Egyptians Mourn
'
Death of Nasser
CAIRO (UPI) -Egyptians poured into
Cairo today by train, by bus and on root
to mourn the death of President Gama!
Abdel Nasser whose death from a heart
attack Monday threatened new chaos for
a Middle East uncertain of the present
and fearful of the future.
Nauer, 52, lay in state in the imposing
Reptibllcan Palace in the heart of Cairo
READY FOR ANOTHER GO
Cup Skipper Ficker
F,icker Agrees
To Be Skipper
• In 1973 Race
NEWPORT, R.t. (AP) -Victoriouis
skipper Bill Ficker of lntrepid agreed 19-
da)r to lake the helm of a new. C\IP
defender if the U.S. defends the historic
America's Cup again in 1m.
~eral members of the syndicate that
baCked Intrepid in this year's 21st sue·
Cf9{ul defense of ~e yachting trophy an·
nowaced agreement to form ~ new· syTI··
dicate.
ftcker and his crew deh?iiited Gretel IT
of'!Australia 4-1 in a series that ended
Monday 10 miles off this yachting center.
A~MON LOCKABEY'S ACCOUNT
OF RACE ON. PAGE 12 TODAY
The U.S. has not lost the cup since it
was first won by the schooner America in
Eacland in 1851.
Ficker, 42, a Newport Beach archited,
was credited with a major share of thlJ
ye1r's victory. akippering the 3-year--0ld
Intrepid. which was also defender against
anottfer challenge from Australia in 1967.
The now syndleat< is to be headed by
Wmiam I . Strawbridge of Philadelphia
and S. Briggs Dahell and J, Burr
Bartram Jr.1 long asaociated with New
York Yacht Club activities.
The three were major memben of the
1970 Intrepid 1yndicate whlch \li'&S
diJaolved today.
( !
while hundreds o/ thousands milled about
outside hopeful of a last loo k at the gray-
ing colonel who was the idol of the Arab
masses and whose death coold bring the
Middle East once more to war.
The Soviet Union, with more at stake in
Egypt than perhaps any other nation, an-
nourx:ed it was sending Premier Alexei
N. Kosygin lo Cairo today for lhe Thurs·
da,y funeral. An official statement called
Nasser "an outstanding son of the Arab
people" and a ''great friend of the Soviet
Union.'' It said Russian aid would con-
tinue-: --· . -
President Nixon cancelled a show-of-
force exhibition by the U.S. 6th Fleet to
avoid rousing further anti-American reel·
ings in Otis nation caught up in an eme>-
tional upheaval. Egyptians so wary of
Israel that .a maximum alert was called
by military leaders along the Suez canal
cease-fire line.
How Nasser's death would affect Nix!
on's European tour was not certain but
his visit to Yugosloavia was set for
Wednesday and arrangements may ha ve
to be changed. President Tito, an old
comrade of Nasser's, was ei:pected to fly
to Cairo for the funeral ; the YugO!lav
cabinet met today to discuss the situa·
tion.
Nixon himself was not expected to go to-
cairo but jt was believed he might send
Secretary o( State William P, Rogers, riW with him in the Mediterranean.
Egypt, Syria and Jonlan declared a ~
day official period of mourning and the
Arab world which had met Nasser so
many times ' in summitc onferences to
discuss operations against I s r a e I
prepared to send its kings and presidents
back to Cairo for a final farewell .
Vice President Anwar El Sadat suc-
ceeded Nasser as pres1aent under the
Egyptian constitution but it appeared
certain a major power struggle would
develop for his successor. The fear in
some parts of the world was that hot-
blooded young army officers might take
over with the prospect of endless war.
Sadat himseU is considered a leftist foe
of b:rael.
One fact remained: There is no heir
apparent, no man of stature to assume
his role as leader of the Arab world. His
death could bring further woes to Israel,
for be made !lery speeches but he urged
moderation and accepted the concept of a
negotiated peace.
, Nasser's death came as a major blow
to the Nixon administration for he was
the one leader considered a stabilizing in·
fluence in the Middle East. It could mean
the end of the American peace initiative
which led Nasser to agree to a 90-day
cease-Ure -the end of a moderate in-
fluence and the possible rise of leftwing
Arab militants. ·
There was apprehension at the United
Nations where diplomats expressed con-.
cem over the se lection of his possible
successor. By law the national assembly
dominated by Nasser's Arab Socialist
Union must name a successor within 60
days.
Huntington Boy
Killed as Auto
Runs Into Truck
An 18-year old Huntington Beach youth
was one of three persons killed late Sun-
day when their car slammed Into the
rear end of a cattle truck parked on
Interstate 10, Indio Police reported today.
Killed lnstanUy by the Impact was .
Steven L. Grimsley, 51S2 Heil Ave. wbl>
was a passenger in the car driven by his
friend, Larry Lee Newton, 28, Downey.
New.ton's wife, Delora, 29, also died in the
accident while the couple's 1G-year old
step-daughter Diane Wells was flown to
Loma Linda Hospital by Highway Patrol
helicopter. She was reported in ttlUcal
condition.
Traffic investigators said the collision
occurred about ll p.m. when Newton ap.
parently !ell asleep behind the wheel and
struck the cattle truck at about 45 miles
per hour. Ofricen said the lruck was
legally parked.
Funeral services for Grimsley ire pen<C
tng at Wtstmin~tv MemorlaJ Park. He
is survived by hlS 'parenta, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Grimsley, of Hun\lngton Beach,
two sbtm, a brother and h i 11
grandpwents.
Something to Chew On
It isn't exactly wienerschnitzel, but "Schultzie,"
doesn't mind. It just takes a bit of planning for a
dog her size to attack a beef leg of that size, that's
all. Schultzie, a dachshund owned by Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald \Vessler of Fountain Valley, discovered the
bone Monday. \\1hen last heard from, she was still
gnawing on it.
Drive to Gather
Goods for Fire
Beach Council Adopts. Pay
'
' :-~"'!·' !' Victims-..St.arted
· · ' -'..,.• ·v. 1 .. I '"'·I ' · I • 'l;I ,,,•t,•• mcrease"l-O~mp oyes . '
Food, clothing or other items needed by
victims of the several fires bunµng
Southern California can be dropped. off at
Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach
high schools and all fire stations in Hun--
tington Beach. •
Students at Fountain VaUey High are
collecting food and clothing at the nurse's
office. SeVeral volunteers wW also can--
vass local neighborhoOOs asking for food
and clothing for fire victims.
The drive at all loca.tions will continue
at least through Friday. For further in-
formation on i.he Fountain Valley effort
phone Neal Ar'cher at his home, 968-2784.
Huntington Beach High students will
also be knocking on doors in an effort to
collect articles for victims of the seVeral
fires . Residents may alSo bring clothing
or food to the adminisfr'atlve' offices of
the school. ·
Inspector Vic Sutiia of 'the Huntington
Beach Fire Department said food,
· clothing or other donatiOns can be taken
to any of the city's fire stations.
Members of the Firemen's Women's
Auxiliary will collect the items from the
fire staUons and give thein out where
they are most needed.
The women's auxiliary drive is headed
by Mrs. Ellen Lacey.
Similar collection points have also been
set up in Seal Beach by the Senior
Citizens Protective League of Leisure
World and the Seal Beach Council for
Environmental Concern.
The two Seal Beach collection centers
are at McGaugh School, Seal Beach
Boulevard and Bolsa Avenue, and near
the St. Andrews gate in the LeUl:ure World
shopping center.
' ' . By ALA!i DffiKIN .
Of llM Dll!Y P'lllf Sr.rt
The Hilntington Beach ' City Council
Monday nigh! adopted a pay plan giving
an 8.25 percent increase to neatly all city
employes despite a warning from City At..
torney Don Bonfa that he considered it
invalid.
The councilmen cut off Bonfa after he
had read only two pages Or an eight-page
memorandum in which he · ci~d "many
errors~· made in ' the barg8.ining. process
and claimed · the council 's resolution on
salary schedules COllld be' overturned by
U1e courts.
' The cooncll unanimowly backed. a ~
lion by Councilman Jack Green th~t -
"since Bonfa is pe rsonally involved" -
Herbert Moss, a labor relations attorney,
be instructed to review Bonfa's opinion
and report back to the Oct. 19 council
meeting. J
Borifa interjected to say that It was
also his recommendation that a ·1abor
relations ai19mey review proceedings
leading 'lo the adoption of the pay
schedule.
Underscoring the iciness at the meeting
was the knowledge lhal the council had
rejected raises for t~ city attorney,
public works diredor, and city clerk.
The council has also cut increases for
the city administrator, building director,
parks and recreation director and plan-
ning director down from 8.25 percent to
5.5 percent. .
Meanwhile, some progress was in-
dicated in the dispute with the city's
Fires at Glan~e
Here is j} • briel gluce at the locations, extent of control and knoWn de-
struction caused by ~ separate brush and Umber fires throughout Califomla.
SAN DIEGO COUNTY -The worst autumn fll'e in Callfornia history
was nearing CO(ltainment after charring 200,000 acres, while four. smaller
blar.es in the same area d~troyed 15,000 acres. · ..,,.
SAN GABRIEL CANYON -Firemen gained the upper hand due to
dying winds, but five were killed Mtinday nisht when their helicopter crashed
en route to tbe 4,000.ac:te blaze.
MAUBU -The devast.ating fire here, which merged at one point with
the Newhall blue, was diminishing after firemen gained the upper hand, but
40,000 acres have been burned over.
SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY -Flames licked over 7,000 acree: in
Meyer's Canyon, but dropping ·Santa Ana winds gave firemen a break.
SAN LUlS OBISPO (:OUNTY-A bla,. north <ii here aild near llig!Jway
1 was under control after 1,000 acres were. char.red.
MOl'TEl'.EY roUNTY -Burning in the hlDs between Willow C...t one!
Salmon er.et .., the pidunoque CO&ll, the lire bu btirned more thuJJ1090
acres and threatens a stand of California redwoods. Highway 1 rtma.IDI open
'but h1zardous duo to larp rocks cracked oil cliffs by Ille heat tumblinl to
the pavement. ' '
KERN CVUlm' -l'lrtlines "'" hqldlng up CX1 I 12,IOO;lcrt .I>-0,. IOUlhealt oi BUenlield, with almoSt all lb U.mlle perimet.,. .nclrcled by nr.llPf<n, A -°"' near Red Moonlaln bas r•Vlled IT,Ol!O ICtH of
Uml>irland. ,
-MARIPOSA roUNTY -A mtlller IJre was. COflla)ned Monday qighl
after burning J,820 icres, but flames de.<1troJC(f peywer lines eliminating e)ec.
trlcal service to Mariposa and Yosemite N1Uoaal Park. '
• ' •
police and firemen Over the salary
revisions.
These safety groups were, unhappy·wlth
the ·a.25 ·percent hike, tl;ie po!ice having
settled on 11 percent. raise in barg1lnipg
with City Admlnistl-ator 0o·y1e Miller and
the firemen on increases from 11 percent
to 13.5 percent.
Monday night Miller told the council,
"If the council wiU authorize ine "tO meet
and confe r• further with the negotiating
teams or the police and firemen,
pllrticularly in the area of educatlona·I In-
centives, I have reason to believe that
perhaps we can come back with full
agreemeilt." · ·
The 'basis of Bonfa'S· objectiOn to the
·adoption of ~ pay plan was. lle said,
lhat the steps had not followed a recent
state ubliC ' employes' law. c~lled the
Miles-ilias-Brown Act.
He ob cted to uncil 's rejectipn of
?Tlemoran ot a eement signed by the
city a r 8nd represen\a~ives' of
einploye associations 'and callin·g for 11
percint increases. .
"The basic premise is . that the ad-
rninistrator shall" prepaie a· plan and it
shall be approved by ?te ~cil," BOnfa
argued. "If the council does not approve
of it, the council cannoi change it but
must refer· the plan back ·to the city ad-
ministrator for resubmisaion. ''
Bonfa added, "The city council cannot
evaluate performance. It must rely on
the city administrator or the personnel
offJcer. ·
The city attorney claimed that the
"meet in good faith" prinCiple of the law
required that an opportunity must be
(See SALARIES, Pqe I)
U.S. Funds Asked
For Mile Square
Orange County will apply ror a gr1nt of
$64,900 in state pa~k.bond money to finan-
ce improveinenta at Mile Square
Regional Park in Fountiln Valley.
Parb Director K"'neth Sampson said
a atorage building and bicycle trails will
be constructed in tht: 90lf\heut area of the
regional park which is betng built around
the Marine • Corpil helicopter tnlnina:
field. · •
SampSOn said the estimated cost ol the ·
job ts 174.500.'The county· expects to pay
lt,IOO. The grant ""'Id cover the rest.
School Board Meets
For S~cial Ses~ion
Truitia of the HunUngton BN<h
Union Hllh School Dlatri<I will meet ' In
special sess!IXI tonight In the Mor!D1
High SclJool cafeteria.
Purpose of Ille 7•30 p.m. session Is to
discuss the hi1h 11Chool'• educational ero-
aram. The meellnfl Is open to the public.
]•
I
N.Y. Stoelul
TEN CENTS
azes
Brush Fires
In County
Controlled
Orange Counly had some good news
and some bad news on the fire front to-
day.
The good news waS that th~ fires whlcll
have ,blackened 4,000 acres in the countr,
are all under control. .
The bad news is that anon is suspected '-1
in 15 to 20 or the fires which raged over \
the last weekend , including the 500-acre
El Toro blaze. 1 Wally ·Trotter, chier of the: Orange
County Fire Preavention Bureau, said
two ~ams are probing the embers
searching for clues to arson. "The leads
are slim but we hope we are making
aome headw~y," the chief said.
The El Toro area blaze which broke out
last Friday and burned over 500 acres
threatening homes in the Lake Forest
and El Toro area is the subject of in-
tensive investigation, Trotter said.
Friday, the day the El Toro fire
started, Vfilnesses saw a small fire and
people running from it, the fire official
reported. They tried to stop the persons
who started the fire but failed.
"We found a device there which could
have been used to start the fire," Trotter
Said.
The 3,000..acre Trabuco Canyon fire is
also under Investigation as to cause.
All day Monday fire teams i:-troDt:d
ttle scorched mountain a r e a • e:s:~
tingulshlng still. amolderin( or burnlnC
brul,h and trets.
O'Neill ~ark, whICh was threatened by
the Tracuco blaze, will be closed until
Friday, cowity officlala stated.
Recall Backers
Claim 7,000
Signed Papers
Proponents of a recall against Seal
Beach City Co.uncllman Conway J.
Fuhrman today said they have collected
about 7 ,000 signatures on a recall pet!tion
they are planning to forward to the city:
clerk for verification.
Members ol the Save Our Clly (SOC)
group had eariier collttted more than
1,600 verified signatures but a ruling
from City Attorney · James Bentson uid
that number Was insufficient.
By Jaw, 25 percent of the registered
voters must stgn a recall petition before
a new election can be set. SOC orflcials
thought they needed only 25 percent of
the signatures from Fuhrman's coun-
cllmanic di.strid, but Bentson's ruling
called for 25 percent of . the registered
voters from the entire city.
"The new petitkm contains the names
of 45 percent of the registered voters Ill
the entire city,'' aa.ld SOC member Mrs.
Richard Smith. She said there art about
15,000 registered voten in the city.
Fuhnnan, a veteran councilman, was
served with recall papers last July after
he collaborated with two other C<lun--
cilmen to flre City Manager Lee Risner.
Tht other two councilmen who sided
with him, Mayor Morton A. Bawn and
'lbomas Hogan!, have been threa1'"ed
with recall. They must be In om"' for a
period Ot IO days ·before recall pro.
ceedings cart be iniUated against them.
Both took olllce last Jul •
Cout
Weatller·
Thal patchy fog ud low clouds
will be back lo haunl the coast
WednHday rnomJna, with mercury
re-p dipping bact into Ille 70'•
on the shore and op to as further
Inland.
INSWE TODA V
The dnth. of Earn>t'1 Nt1Sser
!eaves Uu Arab world bereft o/
a IN<itr. For °" in-depth look
ot the life of this ccmtrover.ricJ
figure, Ht Paae I. -" cetlflnl.. , ~VO I c........ .." c-.c. • ,. -.. --. -. ....., .........
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I DAIL v PILOT H
Apartment
Controls
Proposed
Huntington Beach may put oul .a leM
conspicuous welcoJlle mat to• apartment
developen;. •
After hearing a report critical or gome
apartment complexes in the city , lhe city
cmmcil Monday ni&ht ordered the Master
Plan of Land Ute revlaed u put of a
move to control the number o f
apartments jn the city.
The council ardered the Master Pb1n
teview af!er be.Ing lold that the present
map no longer ls accurate.
"We should re-do the map ~ peopl(._
can see it at lea.st reflects what in fact
exists in the city," 1ald Roger Slates,
chairman of the planning cmmmission, in
pointing out the number of non-con-
fonning uses.
The council instructed the planning
commission to review its requirement!:
for apartments to Incorporate. ap•
pearance standards and also asked City
Administrator Doyle Miller to prepare
methods by which tht. council ca n study
goals and objectives for the city.
The action followed a presentation to
the council by the Mulliple Family Zon·
ing Committee, made up of planning
commissioners Slate:i;, Henry Duke. Ed
Kerins, and Robert Brown, H e r k
McDonald. Mrs. Connie Bauer and Mrs.
Carol Morris.
, Slides were shown cf apartmenl com-
plexes aiong Warner Avenue and com·
mittet memben criticized minimum set-
backs and limited Crttn space.
The committee reported that the city
presently has 9,000 apartments but the
figure could climb to 50.000 units in a few
years "If we continue to build according
to cur present zoning regulations and
gtandards."
"Our population will consist of 142.000
apartment dweller!!'. compar~ to 128.000
gingle family home residenb," Slates
warned in the report.
Slates said the commlttee'1 findings
were not 11 condemnation o( apartment.!!'
but reflec!.ed a view that there may be
too many apartmenb in certain areas.
He called for the city tn set population
goals and to give objectives on where
apartments should be, how many the city
needs an.d the quality required. ,,..
Councilman George M c C r a c k e n
wondered how the owner of property zon·
ed mutliple. res.idential could be tcld that
its use is being changed.
Councilman Jack Green suggested that
the council could reduce the densit y of
ap.artment zones.
The council instructed lhe committee lo
1C'orlc \lo'lth the · pl.anning cmmmission tc
study "immediately'' errors in the
master plan and make revillions.
Burglary Talk
Set for Chamber
Sgt. James Mahar of the Huntingtcn '
Beach Police Department will tell local
businessmen how ID prevenl burglaries
and other crimes dur ing 11 meeling
tonight in the chamber of commerce con-
ference room . 18582 Beach Blvd.
The 7:30 p.m. meeting will open the
chamber's monthl y Small Businw
Seminars program concerning various
aspects of !ilarling and running .a
business.
Sgt. Mahan will talk about burglaries.
shoplifting, robber ies. bad checks and
fires . The seminar Is frtt In chamber
members. It cost& $1 for non·members.
Novelist a Stud ent
DETROIT (AP) -Myrta Dreyer. who
was boi'n In 18114 end wrote a novel en·
titled "Beckoning Hands'' publiM!ed 40
yeara 11go, has enrolled as a freshman at
Wayne State Universily. ~1rs. Dreyer is
taking creative writing to polish her skills
in hopes of resuming a writing career.
She said 1he was nearing completion of
a mystery nove l.
DAILY PILOT
OIU.Nlil COASt PUllb oll'I(; co~u·~H'I'
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1 7 87~ 1,,,~ lovl•,.•rd
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l•J ''"' (Ol!f Iii""· Tel•~" C1141 64J.4JJI
FroM Wet~ C .. I 141·1211
Cl••1flo4 ~ti .. 641·1,71
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THIS IS WHAT HOMEOWNERS SAW AS BREA CANYON FIRE APPROACHEO DIAMOND BAR
Fire Evtntuelly Retched Beck of Ridge in Foreground. View Is Weit Toward La Hebra H1ight1
Fire Spares Residents
Diamond Bar Dwellers Thank Firemen, Winds
By GEORGE LEJDAL
Of ltict O.llJ l"li.f Iliff
Orange County'a Di a mon d B 1 r
. resiaent.! were thankflil-tOdiiy for u;e
persistence of firefighters and the fickle
Santa Ana winds.
After a :in.hour fire watch from hilltcps
in central Diamond Bar overlooking the
Brea Canyon fire thal blackened nearly
4,000 acres of Lo!! Angele.$, County and
more than 20U acres nf Orange County
north of Brea, 13.000 resident.! could
reta:ii:.
On ly occasional puffs nr i;moke v.·ere
evident. today amidst the charr!d knolls
\lo"est of Brea Canyon road.
That road and the cut being made
through the canyon for the Orange
Freeway tn Diamond Bar from Fullerton
lhree limes from Sunday af ternoon In
Monday noon was the scene of fire
fighters' stand agninst the brushland
blaze.
Three ti mes flames llcked brush acroM
lhe road from 200 houses in the
southernmost part rif· Dia.mood Bai', just
across the Orange Coun!y line.
FIRE MOVED
Ironically, the fire which is believed lo
have litarted in the hill of La Habra
Fron• Pag~ 1
SALARIES ...
given the emp\nye nssociations 00 modify
the recommerx:lations, if modification is
required.
"One side cannot unilaterally change a
contract ," he gaid. "All it can do is make
a. counter erfer to the contract. None of
this occurred in this case."
Councilman Al Olen said he could not
sre how the resolution was illegal wlmply
because the memoranda of agree.ment no
longer e,;isted.
In addition to decidin~ to hire the labor
relations attorney lo review Bonfa·s opl·
nion. the council also instructed the city
::idministratnr to continue negotia.tions
\\•ith the police and fire.men's associa·
lions.
heighU, in Orange County on Sunday,
moved out of the county dOing most of lb
~amag~ in ~~ Arig~J~ county. _
For the most part, firemen successfully
limited the blaze to unpopulat!d areas in
the La Puente Hills, but feared west
winds would push !he flames over Brea
Canyon Road into the 6,000 brush and
tree studded acres that surround I.he four
•·villages" of Diamond Bar.
Diamond Bar residents usually boasl
ahout the refreshing west winds which
daily barrel up Brea Canyon pushing
smog away from their homes that com-
mand views of histcric 200.year-olrl
wa lnut trees, Mount Baldy to the north
and , on the few clear days, Catalina and
the ocean to the Southwest.
But. 11s the Santa Ana >M'inds fanned the
fast moving fire Sunday and again on
Monday, that beloved breeze took on 11
new character. Firemen blamed the west
wind fnr bringing the fire to threaten the
master-planned acreage.
A Los Angeles Counly fireman sai d
1itonrlay morning. two overnight "stands"
11gainsl the fjre at, Brea Canyon Road harl
been successful. One further "run" nf the
fire toward the road proved minor. and
the winds which had abetted the flames
ru!h, turned the fire against it.self.
SK lES BLACKENED
Wh ile residenls viewed flames over
nearby ridges for more than 20 hours. the
most spectacular blackening nf the skies
came after the bulk of the blaze was out.
About 4 p.m. Monday, a lesser blaze
erupted south of Colima Road in Ha·
cienda Heights just east nf Whittier,
while the winds again blew toward Dia-
mond bar. F'or more than an hour,
billowing smoke blackened the sky, elo t-
ting out the sun. and joining many miles
to lhe east with clouds of smoke from a
Barge Canal Hailed
TA~1PA. Fla . IAPl -Secretary of thP
lnteror Walter J. Hi ckel has signed •
petition aeeking a temporary hall to con·
struction of the controve rsial CroS"S Flor·
ida Barge Canal.
new fire at rontana.
Evacuation rumors flew again as the
sky filled with smoke, and ash once more
rained down ·on homes.
Bul a tour of the fire area disclosed
flames had been controlled. Hacienda
Heights residents were seen leading
horses back into the blackened hills from
a green tree lined residential sanctuary
across Colima Road .
Friends in neighboring towns told tales
of the repeated horrors nf the previous
nighl's hlaze. Swimming pool filters
cculdn'l handle the ash that dropped
from the skies. Most hillside homes rrom
Rowland ·· HeighL~ 1.0 Diamond Bar
escaped damage. though brush sur-
rounding them was blackened.
One horse farm along Brea Canyon
CutoH lost a barn ;ind smallish cabin.
REFINERY ESCA PES
A Nike missile site and a Shell Oil .
refinery hidden in the hills above Brea
escaped the flames. though al least one
nil storage tank exploded Sunday af-
lernoon. ·
As thal omiMus cloud darkened the
l'lky. a fire wa tcher's reunion began again
t1l the end of Aca~a Hill dri ve in mid·
Di11mond Bar.
Husbands who had left for work in the
n1orning had been called home by anx-
lnus wives. some as early as noon . Others
who stayed to wet down roofs and watch
!he fire fighle rs outwit the f\ames ,
reported the day '5 events.
All were glad their picluresque sce nery
had been saved, thankful their anxieties
were unfounded, and C<lncerned for those
around them who still faced the fire
threats.
But none removed the hnS<!s they·d
readied on roofs, or the sprinklers they"d
spiked into cedar shake shingles.
With the roaling of falling ash and
tangle of garrlen hoM'!s lying about, some
homes ga ve the impressio n of A war
1,one. ex~pt tha~ all had been !'lpared the
bomberl-out look or homes in other fire·
ravaged area.~.
By nine Monday evening. Oi11mond B11r
v.•a.11 quiet. the street11 were empty and
most homes riarkened.
•
l
Near Park
. ~
P .lanners Stu
An a· rip that could replace
M la rk Airport is being 1tudi!d by
ly planners fnr the central industrial
area o( Huntington Beach.
The concept c11!! fnr the airporl. lo run
north·south lrom Talbert Avenue tc Ellis
Avenue. east or Gothard Street and ex·
tending to the Southern Pacific Railroad
track.
Planning Directer Kennelh Reynolds
told city councilmen Monday night that. it
would be within thrH: quarters of a mile
of the Central Park.
''Preliminary feasibility sludies at lh is
point indicate it would be a replacement
for Meadowlark ,''·Reynolds said.
The planning director said that the 7a-
acre area had been studied as a possible
airport site for nearly a year and ask!d
the council to appoint "two or three
members'' tc form a committee to meet
with the Planni ng Commission Airport
Commi ttee.
The council declined to name a council
committee. Instead they assigned the job
to the recenlly appointed citizens com·
milLee which is studying conditions at
Meadowlark Airport.
The two committees we.re instructed tn
work logether al'ld arrange a joint !tudy
liession with the council on the matter.
few de.tail! of the propos1l were given
Monday night . In reply to 1 question by
Councilman Norma Gibbs. Reynolds said
he was not prepared to answer how
"quickly feasible" the airport could be.
··1 would prefer to submit a complete
package later.'' Reynold! e.xplained. "We
are at the study point at.present. We are
not ready for hearings but for directlon."
If supported, the airport would have a
2,00l}.foot runw1y and may be limited to
propeller driven planes. Its main function
would be to serve industrial needs but
then~ may be some recreational.fl)!iflg.
Park pla nners and architec ts are
known to be apprehensive 11bout the prn-
po!al. They are concerned over its pro-
xim ity to the 147-acre Central Park and
the noise and dust factors .
Though the site would be similar in size
to Meadowlark , which covers 80 acre.o;
11nd has a 2.300-foot runway, the operator
nf the pri vale 11irport. John Turner, has
vowed that Meadowlark will not close.
Turner has revealed thal his lease has
another four year! to run but he has an
Cheaper. Lunches
Made Easier
Trustees of the Huntington Beach City
School District have eased the re·
quiremenl.3 thia year for atudents to
receive free or cheaper lunches.
Trustees changed the 1ystem after new
f!ligibili ty guidelines were drafted by the
state Department of Education.
Now, children from families with gross
monthly incomes of $210 for two person!,
S260 for three. $310 for four, $358 for five
or meets st11ndarrls for larger families are
eligible for free lunches.
Families with slightly higher incomes
may appl y for lunches for their children
al a reduced rate. Full information is
available in the district offi ei!s.
Applications for the free and reduced
lunch rates are available al .all six
rt istrict schools. No n.11mes of f.amilies ap-
plying will be released.
Five Doctors Worked
BEIRLIT. Lebanon fAPJ -The fi vP.
doctors who treated EgypU11.n PresidP.nt
Gama! Abdel Nasser for his fatal heart
attack Monday night spent 15 minutes
trying to get his heart beating 1gain. the
C11iiro newtpaper Al Ahram reported to-
day.
Strip
option to renew.
The Meadowlark Airj"IOrt has drawn
criticis m recently because of the In·
stallation of nighl lights and an e1tension
of the runway.
The council·appoin,t.ed citizem com·
mittee is 'studying theae Problems and is
to report back t.o the council wltb re.com·
mendalions Oct. 5.
Republicans
·Hike Cou11ty
Vote Marg·in
Vot.er registration in Orange County
has reached an all . time ttig h and
Republicans continue to increase their
lead nver Democrats.
Voters eligible tn cast ballots in the
Nov. 3 general election total 612,006.
Since last June the total of eligible
voters in the county has increased by
more than 56,000. Of the new' eligi bles,
the Republicans signed up 28,000 and the
Democrats 24,200. ·
In the past two years the GOP has In·
creased its superiority from 63,000 to
almost 84,000. ·
In the 34th Congressi onal District
where Rep. Richarri T. Hanna (0-
Westm instei:) is aga in bat t 11 n g
Republican William J. Teague of Garden
Grove , lhe Democratic edge has decrea's·
ed.
In the district. which includes part of
J.,'os Ange1es County; the Democratic
margin ia 24,272 compared to 25,617 two
years ago.
Mosl Orange Coast communities con-
tinue ln show heavy Republican leanings.
Huntington Beach figures are GOP
24,641 to 21,126; Fountain Valley, 6,522 to
5,276: Seal Beach, 10.066 to 6,324.
Only Westminster and Los Alamito~ are
in the Democrati c camp. Westminster
shows Democrats leading 12,450 to 9,949.
Los Alamitos is 2,049 to 1,775.
Both Orange C o a s t supervlsoria1
districts show GOP majorities. The Fifth
District (Costa Me5a, Newport and
Laguna and the unincorporated areas tn
lhe·east and south of the coast) is 79,548
In 38,706.
The Second Dislrict <Huntingtcn Beach,
\Veatminster. part of Garden Grove. Seal
Beach and Los Alamitos) is Sfi,977 to
5-4,913.
Marines Facing
:, Court in Laguna
Two Camp Pendleton Marine:a accused
of shooting a 19-year-old L.agunan are to
be arraigned in Superior Court Oct. 9 on
charges of robbery and assault with in·
tent to commit murder.
The two, KeMelh Ray Starks, 19, and
Virgil L. McCoy, 20. are accus~ of
shooting Lawrence Michael Bornman, 19
<lf 475 N. Coast Highway on June 27.
Bornman underwen t .surgery for·
removal of a bullet from his armpit.
Judge Richard Hamilton dis missed ad-dition~! 'kidnaping ~harges against the
pair during a four-day preliminary es·
amination in municipal court.
Witnesses during the hearing testified
tn seei ng men struggleing in the back seat
of a four-door sCdan. Bornman had told
police he escaped from the car when it
stopped at Myrtle Street and Pacific
Coast Highway.
..
Citizen Comrnittee Asks
Okay for Tax Override
' Schoolmen find members of !he '
Citizens Cnmmlttee fnr Better High
Schooli; 1i1onda.y launched a c11mpaign
urgin; voters tn approve a 69-ccnt tax
nverrlde: for the Huntington Beach Union
Hl~h School District Nov. 3 .
unanimously ell:lnrscd by the five.
member bo11rd of trustees. the tax hike
\l'OUld lncrrase the general purpo." tax
rate to $2.08 for a period of three yeara
beginning July I, 1971.
·failure o( the mcsisure would force the
district to operal~ at Ill~ Jegl!latlve
minimum "floor '' of R5 ctnU. causiniz a
reduction of ne11rly 40 percent in riistrlet
income. according t('I administrators.
•'We'rf> probably the biJ{gcst buslnus
lhtit Huntington Beach h11s In 11.t area."
s.11id Cl.115.,ifitd Prrsonnt.1 Director Wiii
Otto. "\\le·re ~cttinii: new customers all
the time buL with us arowih i" 11 l111blllty.
We don't make ainy ·money on the new
customers."
Otto e_a:plaintri that the dii;trlct , "'hlch
providts ~duc11tinn for youngsltrs Jiving
in St8l Beach. ~un!et Be11ch. f'ount11,in
VaUty, Wc stmin5tcr and Hl.lntington
8eAch, ha& not received an increase In
lhe Jle.neral operating tax. sinc.e 19&t Our·
ing that time enrollment has jumped 68
perceni. from 9.250 to 1~1313 atduents.
Recent fi~al pt()blcm! h.tve resulted In
approx imately $1 milllnn worth of cuts In
!ht current program. some tcac.hln• 11nrt
admln!strativg pos.lllons have b e e n
t llmlnated; cla!! sizes have gone up and
many :i;ludent.s 11rro now nn 11n optional
five-period day.
Revers ion of the tas r11te to ila 85-cent
base would mean even furt her culs, ac·
cordinjl to school 1dminh1tratnr8. lt cnul~
me11n A h11lf day for student'!, eliminAtinn
of bus services, no more interschonl
alhlellcs and even bigger classes.
Soard Chairman Matthew \Vcyuker
5airi he felt certain that vnlers would res·
pond positivrly in the election . ''The true
need will certainly be sho"''n this time,"
he said:
The only opposilion In the mr11sure h~s
('()me in the form of a ballot argument by
the Cnuncil nn Sensible T11~alinn (COST'.
It is signed by C11lre Kelly. ch11irm11n, It
challengc5 the district to live wllhtn iL~
inrome . .and ciles recent ioc.reases in the
district's 11~essed valu.111inn.
"Ccmidering the incre11Sf'd re.as.'lf'~·
mt:nt, demand for the t!x rate incre1u i11
~IK-t!r ~conomlc stupidity.'' the 11rgume:nt
states. The Increase, 11coordlng to .school
officials, is 11.8 percent.
Trustee Rtdph Bauer. ~hairman nf
tht citizens Committee for Belter )U11:h
Schools. said his group is now sttking the
cn®~mcrit of local city councils. school
dislrk:U, PTA 's ind chambers of com·
merce to 1dvance the cause of the elec·
Hon.
'l"hey 31.so plan In provide bumpe.r
1tlcke:r~ fnr thost supporting the me.asure
1t.nd plAn 10 lttive tnform11tion urging its
P~•I• on evtry door In the city.
" '
Truth
• or Consequences?
Som.tim" tlie !nit~ hur+.! We hove lost en occ:a.;.,n1l sale oy not tolling e cut!omot w!.1t
h1 wonted lo hetr.
Wo might point out th e! 1 cvriom~r would b. b.ttor off to p•y 1 tittl• moro fo r our rub-
ber padding then buy 1 chetper, mushy p•d tho! 1 .. ls lilo you are we~ing on b•lloons. The "bol-
loon '1 ptd hurts the carpet b.c.king , ctUlll str•tch~. end ruinl sHmi. Also , this ptddi"9
o~en flattens out after a while.
Additionefty, we might ten you th1t some urpot fib.r-s ore mote proc:ticol thon others. A
fiber th1t works in on• texture , might "bomb" in .nother .
F"I free to ctn for edvice. An of our ,.i,, people h'eve h.d extensive experience in tlie 5erv·
;c:. end of thiJ buJintJl -er'ld efter 11 -the most import•'nt thin9 we c.an off1r1 that l'IO tilt
dC*1 is swviul
,__ALDEN'S
UNTA AMA, OU.MM
TUSTIN C... •••
Al.MN'S
110 Hill tAlrm '1u"a1n 11174 .......... , ....... Caito
IJlolJ44
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia A.,.,
COsTA MESA
646-4131
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EDITION
Y,Ol. 63, NO. 233 , 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, tA1JFORNtA -
-
Victorious Ficker 'Ready to Win It
R&ADY FOR ANDTHIR GO
·' CU!' Sklpji4r 'Flekor
Bill ·Ficker Day
Set in Newport,
California Too
·A joint city of Newpo<t Beach and
Newport Harbor Chamber ol. Commerce
salute to the man who Thursday became
the city's premiere yachtsman will take
place Sunday.
William P. Ficker will be auspiciously
honored upon his triumphant return home
from his duel with Australia's Gretel II
off Rhode Island Sound.
Sunday will be . Bill Ficker Day in
Newport. and Governor Reagan is ex·
pected to proclaim it Bill Ficker Day in
all Of California.. ·
1be man who successfuDy defended the
America's CUp, yachting's top ln-
tenialional racing event, ·is due back Sun-
day and will be ceremoniously welcomed
at Los Angeles International Airport at
1:30 p.m. by at.delegation beaded by Vice
Mayor Howa~d Rogers.
A bus ride back to Newport Beach will
be followed by a boat parade around
~ewport Harbor, with Ficker aboard the
COiumbia, a past Cup defender.
Fonnal ceremonies are also planned
outside City Hall. A number ol presen·
tlUons, including resolul.ioM from the
.. state Senate and the city council, will be
given to Ficker.
Additional details for the celebration
art stlij being prepared, accord\ng to
Jack Barnett. e1ecutive director of the
Qllmber.
The delegation traveling to t.he airport
will inclu~e the commodores of all area
yacht clubs, COu:nty -Supervisor Alton
Allen, City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburl
and a represenU.tive of the state of
California, in addition to Vice Mayor
Rogers. •
The group intends to have a banner
flying 1t the airstrip signifying the ac-
complishment bf Ficker and his crew.
The city councll Monday night voted a
$300 appropriation to cover expenses for
the day, to be administered by a com-
=.lld!d·by WUliam· L. 0.'Bl')'Oll' o!
I
Wheelchair Wheeled
Out ••. Permanently? '
A vehicle thefl in whieh the criminal
hu a Lbrte-month head start was
reported to Coltl. Mesa police Monday,
but they figure he l)il!_may not have go~
ten too far.
Din Wadsact of Seal's Ambulance and
6ickroom SUppli .. , 5.1$ C..ter St, told Jn.
mtigaton the 1uapect rented 1 '312
wbeelchalr June 22" and hasn't been seeo .._
NEWPORT, R.!. (AP) -Victorio"-'
skipper BUI Ficker of Intrepid agreed to-
day to take the helm of a new cup
defender ll the U.S. defends the historic
America's Cup again in 1973.
Several members of. the syndicate that
backed Intrepid in this . ~·1· 21st. soo-
cessful defense of the yachting troPby an-
nounced agreement to form a new 1yn-
dicate.
Ficker and his crew defeated Gretel II
of Australia 4-1 In a· terles that e~ed
Monday 10 mila off this yachting cent<r.
The U.S. haa not kill the cup llince ft
was lint woo by the acboaoer America In
Eqlan4 In 1161.
Ficker, 4i, a Newport Buch ardllt.cl. .
WU credited wfill a major lhare of this
year's victory, l1dpperlnc tlie S.,.....id
Intrepid, wbJdl WU allo defender .. -another cballenge from Auttralla in 1111.
The ne• l)'lldlcale II to be beaded by
William J. Strawbridge of Philadelphia
and S. BrJas Dabell and J. Burr
Bartram Jr., lollC asaoclated with New
ALMON LOCKABEY'S ACCOUNT
01' RACE ON PAGE 12 'TODAY
Yori< Yldll Clab act1vitlel.
'!be three were major members of tbe
19?0 !nlnpid l)"lldlcate wblcb was
dillol\'ed today.
M<mbers al the ne• syndicate did not
Fires Controlled
Arson Suspected. in County Blazes
Orange County had !Orne good news searching for clues to anon. "Ttle leads "We found a dtvlce 1'l!rt which could
have been used to start the fire," Trotter and some bad news on the fire front to-are slim but we hope we are, making
day. tome headwey," the chief said.
The good news was that the fires which The El Toro area blaze which broke out said. ·
The 3,000.acre Trabueo Canyon fire is
also under investigation as .to cause.
have blackened 4,000 acru in the county last Friday and burned over 500 acres
are all under control. threa tening homes in the Lake Forest
The bad news is that arson is suspected and El Toro area-is the .subject of in·
Jn 15 to 20 Of tlie fires which raged over tensive investigation, Trotter said. All day Monday fire teams patrolled
the scorched mountain · a r e a s ex·
tingulshing still smoldering or burning
brush and trees.
tile last weekend, iiiCll.iding the 500-acre · ·· · ""Ffiday, the ·· day the El Toro· ·fire
El Toro blaze. started, witnessts saw· a small fire and
Wally ~tter, chie~ of the Orange people running from it, the fire official
County Fire Presvention Bureau, said reported. They tried to stop the persom O'Neill Park, which was threatened b~
the Tricuco blaze, will be closed until
Friday, county officials stated. two teams are probing the embers who started the fire but failed.
Transit Needs
Study Called
'Too Broad'
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of .... Dallr '"" l'laff
An ouUine recommending how Newport
Beach should proceed jn-conducting its
, planned "transporta tio n needs study" was
sent back for refinement by the City QJu.n.
cil Monday night.
The eight-page "study of a study" de--....
tailing the procedures that should be fol-
lowed in evaluating fut~ transportation
needs was too broad in scope. council
membert said.
The potential cost of the report, esti4
mated as high as $100,IXIO, drew con-
cerned comments from council members
also.
Councilman Donald Mcinnis sa id that
too many alternatives were included in
the scope and.a study geared along these
things "would only tell us we have a
problem."
He said,. "We already know that.''
In its outline, the Public Works Depart·
ment has proposed hiring consultants who
would "collect and analyze the fa cts, de·
fine the problems, and prepare a report.'"
A Citizens' Advisory Committee and a
Technical Coordination Committee would
work wtth the consultant at each stage o[
preparation of the report.
The specifications has recommended
the scope of the study consider alterna4
lives which 0 will describe other modes
of trarisportation reasonably capable of
supplementing or supplanting the prlvatet
automobile."
But the part that distressed the council
said, "Possible alternative highway con-
nections will also be considered such as
(I) with and without the coast freeway ;
(2) with and without north-south freeway
connections to the Coast Highway and
Coast Freeway.
"Evalualion of these freeway and high·
way alternatives and their roulings will
be a prime study effort."
Mcinnis called this "too broad" and
said it "tries to be all things to au peo-
ple.''
He said the scope should "identify the
problems" and offer ways to solve them.
(See NEWPORT, Pace !)
Fires at Glanre
Here Is a brief &Janco at the locations, eatenl of control and koown de-
struction cauaed by 51 1eparate brUsh and Umber fim throughout Callfonlia.
SAN_ DIEGO COUNTY -The worst 1utumn •fire in California ·history
was nearing: ccntainment after charrini 200;000 1cres, while four smaller
bi.azes in the '!'!'!":art•~ !'•GOO l\"'rJ , , ,ft , .. ',
1 SAN GABIUEL .CANYON -l'irt~n · plbed tbe 1 ~ &ana di.le to
dying winj11i -but live were tilled Monday llilbt """°· their helicopt<r c;ashed en route to the 4,0Clt).acre blue. '
MALIBU -The deVastattni fire here, which mercect at one point with"
the Newhall blar.ie, was diminWUnc after firemen gained the upper hand, but
40,000 acres have been burned OYer.
SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY -Flamet licked over '7,000 acres in
Meyer's Canyon, but droppiq: Santa Ana winds gave firemen 1 break.
SAN LUIS OBISPO COUNTY-A blue north of here and near l!Jghway
l·was under control after C,000 acres w.ere charred.
MONTEREY COVN1'Y -Bumfllg in the bills bet-n Willow Creek and Sainion Creek oo the pidureoque coast, the fJrO hU burned mare tJwi U 000
acres and threatens a stand of CalifomJa redwoods. Wghway I remalDI oPen
but hazardous due to large rocks cracked off cliHs by the heat tumbllng to
tbe pavetnei:it. · · ·
.ltERN COUNTY -Fittunes wett holding up on a 32,500-icre brush fire
southeast of Bakersfield, with almost an its ts-mile perimeter encircled by
firefighters. A second fire near Red Mountain has ravaged 17,000 acres of
timberland. ·
MARIPOSA COUNTY -A smaller fitt WU coriWned Moncl>jr nil)>t
after burning l,820 acres, but flames destroyed power lines elimlnatinc elec·
trical service to Mariposa and Yoaemite N1Uonal Park.
City Threatens to Halt
Contract with Oil Firm
Newport Beach City Councilmen Mon.
day night threatened to break off their
contract with West Newport oil well con4
tractor Robert Armstrong unJess he
moves immediately to imtall electric
motors on his Well pumps.
'lbe council directed City Attorney
Tully Seymour to contact Armstrong,
head of the Armstrong Petroleum Com-
pany, today to order the installation of
the new motors or else be considered in
default of his contract.
Council menbera, some of them
angered, Pointed out that Armstrong had
vowed to replace existing guoline
engines with the quieter electric motor•
more than a montb ago.
Donald Mcinnis, councilman from the
West N~rt area, blasted Armstrong
and called the wells a .nuiaance .and a
health hazard.
Pointing to Armslrong's promise to
corr,ct tbe problem, Mdnnis said the
council "accepted hb staiternent in good
ftith," I '
He said now, however, ••nie people
have reached the end of their en.
durance."
He recommended that if the ne1f'
(!lee OIL, Pap I)
Co.uncil Pirezones Tract
Newport Wants Annexation of 356-acre Lo.cation
A 356-acre tract ol land north or Harbor
View HUis that Newport Beach wants to
1nnex wat prezoned by the City Council
Monday 11 it learned a 9Chool district
boundary hassle may never be resolved.
The city proceeded with the prezoning
but Indicated it mi&ht not anne:1 the pr<>-
perty without a aoiuUon to the boundary
dispute.
Dr. Wlliani • 0.Mlncblm, superin-
tendent of lbe Newport-Mesa Unified
School District. told the couocll that there
Is iRnmmei!latE"'prospect for resolution.
The tract, Section Ill « the Harbor
View Hills projec(. ls divided almcst
evenly by the Newport~Mesa and the San
Joaquin Elementary and Tu stin Union
Hich School Distrlcta. •
I
The Planning Commllllfon baa .recom-
mended that the property not be annued
unUl the boundary Unet are moved 10 all
the land falls within the Newport·Mesa
District.
Dr. CUnninflham aald he haa dllcuued
the matter with the other diatrtr:t ad-
minlstraton, and w d it II Jllrely minor
boundary adjustments cou1c1 be'mac1e.
He aald they could euUr be ""'1ched to
fl\Alre they correspond to streets 10
that fndivtdQal homes are not divided by
d!strl<t line•. .
He 1Jid slluatlons like this Jn the past
have resulted in cblldrtn ln one bedroom
going to a different school than their
brothers or sisters Jn another bedroom.
The property Is part of 'u lnlao C-
paftJ Hplanned eammunity" .-Ith l tchool
1ite included In the muter plan, in what
11 the San Joo.,,r..Twltln dlltrlct -· City officials ponied aut tbel II tbe
~ are lift aJooe, tlJere could be no a,.raace that ICbool .-oukl. ever be
liullt, ""'llilllf in the need to bus pupill.
, Thoy noted that ll the dtltrlct lines are
changed, and the ICbool 11 in tho
Newport.Mesa diltrkt. men .,........
could be brwght to bear to 1et tho school
built.
Dr. Cunningham .. plained !hat the
relucWIC< al the other cllltrleta to de-
annes the property is due to hard leeilng1
over similar previous dkitiona. He did
(See ANNEX,., ... I)
·?
say whether they plan to build a new 12-
meter boat. Howe'ver, they did announce
. that Intrepid Is to be tow<d back to Min-
neford Yacht Yard, City Island, N.Y.,
and that lhe will be tmade available if
needed ... future trial bone.
Presumably, a declaloo Oii whejber ·to
build' a new boat will await cballengw for
the America's Cup. Under Ne.-York
Yacht Club rules · cbal*'ies must be
forthcoming within ID daya .of Monday's
UPIT .......
~-""' .. "9!" Don Engdalti, 37,:Santa Rosa,
trudges. along Imperial Beach
near San Diego on qis way to
.Ilia gol!) at . Calllornia·Muico
bonier. Engdahl, a newspaper
reporter, is completing a con-
servationists walk along· 1;200
miles of Pacific lhoreline .. See
story, Page 7.
Bridge Leap.er
Lan.ls on Boat .
Near Lido Isle
Newport police· and Harbor Patr'olmen
today are seeking a boy who jumped 20
feet off the Li.do Isle bridge "nd landed
on a passing boat. 1
"! lmaline be haa major Jnternal in-
juries," said Sgt. H1rry Wright of tbe
Harbor Patrol.
Wright said the department ..... 1ved at
call at 1:30 p.m. from the cabin cruiser
Vera·T that there had been an accident
at the bridge.
The unidentified youth 1pparenUy
jumped off ju.st as an outlioard piloted by
M. Ron~y of Corona del . Mar passed
undemeatb. The .boy landed across the
veuel's bow.
0 Ronney beard the sirens from our
boais oomlng to the acene and toot hil
boat lo shore. 'lbe.Jwnper. with the aid of
four companions, ·managed lo g:et up and
run any from tbe scene," Wtigbt u 4
plained.
All.de from the Injuries incurred by the
youth, about 1100 damage was done lo tho
JO.foot boat
1''l'bil la a claalc realOll for the city
ordinance agailllt Jumping off bay
bridges," Wright commented.
In another medfcal aid, Harbor
Patrolmen -a Lynwood man, Ray Rap, It, off a 17-fool cabin crul!er
afl<r he nearly 1evered hil right index
finger on an anchor chain.
Rap wu teiren·ofl the boat near the
Balbor Y ac:fJt Club and tr..._uct to the
department dock and thl!n to Haog
Memorial Hoopltal for .......,,.,, ,tmt-riienl. .
To Visit Pendleton
The Navy'• SUrpoo GGmaJ will pay •.
visit to the Camp P-Naval ,Hoopltal Wednnday.
Flying up from the NClrtll loland Naval
Air Stotion, Vice Adm. Goorge M. ~vis
will tour faeilitiea at the hospital, tJ\tn
•ilit wlttl the commanding olficm and
their llall. Adm. Davis will remain
dYttnigllt on the ba,. .before relUT\linl
bis tour al Weil Coal! Naval bolplW..
;
•
Teday's· Flnal
TEN CENTS
Again'
final 1970 race. Normally, actual raclnc
is conducted only once eYery three yean.
It ii !mown that another American syn.
dicate made up of Southern Californta
y~ is being organized with the
announced purpose of backing an ~Wed
O>ast defender of the America's Cup,
poaibly in. Im.
It was not clear whether Ficker 1fOuld
take the helm of the Eastern 1yndica&e
yacht, or the new boat planned by the
Wea! Coast group.
Egyptians
Mourning
A·rab Chie .f
CAµIO (UPI) -Egyptians pour«! Into
Cairo today by train, by bus and on foot
to mourn ·the death of President Gama!
Abdel Nasser whose death from a heart
attack Monday threatened new chaos for
a Middle East uncertain of the preaent.
and.fearful of the Mure.
Na~ser, 52, lay in state In the imposing
Republican Palace in the heart of Cairo
while htmdrtds of thoUlands milled •bout
outside hopeful of a last look at the gray ..
ing colonel who was the idol of the Arab
niules and wbooe death coold brinfl the
Middle East oooe more to war.
The Soviet Union, with more at state in
Egypt than perhaps any other nation, an.
· n'lurred It was sending Premier AleJ;ei
N. Kosygin to Cairo f.od4y for the Thurs..
day funeral . Ari official Statement called
Nasse:r "an ou~~ 10D of the Arab
people" .and a "great ,frie nd of the Soviet ·
Uniop." It .said Russian aid wuld coo-
·Unue.
Pres!<ifnt NixOn cancelled 1 show-of'.
force exhlbltlon by the U.S. 6th Fleet to
•void rousiitl further lnli·American reeJ..
ings ln"thll naUon caUBflt up in ' an emo-
tional upheaval Egyptjans so wary of
Israel that a maximum alert wu called
by military leaden along the Sue1 Canal
cease-ft.re line.
Ho1' Nauer's death would affed Nit•
on's European tour wu not certain. but
hia visit to Yugosklavla wu set for
Wednesday and arrangements may have
to be ch1nged. Pres.ident Tito, an ·old
comrad~ of Nauer's, was expected to Oy
to Cairo for the funeral ; the Yugosla¥
cabinet met today to discuss the silua.-
tlon.
N'zon himself was not expected to go to
Cairo but it was believed he might .erut
Secretary of State William P. Ropr11 now with him in U>e Mediterranean.
Egypt, Syria and Jordan declared a 40-
day official period of mourning and thi'
Arab world which had met Nasser •
many times in sununltc onferences to
discuss operations 1gainst J 1 r a e I
prepared to oend ill kings and president.
back to Cairo for a final farewell.
Vice President Anwar El Sadat suc-
ceeded NaSser u prestdent under the
Egyptian constltution but it appeared
certain a major power struggie would
develop for · his succeuor. The feu in
some parts of the world was .. that hot4
blooded young army ofncers might take
over with the prospect of endless war.
Sadat himaeU ii cona6dered a leftist foe
of Israel.
One fact 1U1aloed: 1bere is no heir
1pparent, no man of stature to assume
his role as leader of .the Arab world. His
death could bring further woes to Israel.
for he made fiery speeches but be urpd
moderation and accepted the coocept of a
negotiated peace. ·
Weadler
That patchy for and tow clouds
will be back to haunt the coaat
Wednesday momin1, with mercury
readinp d!ppin{! beck into the 70'1
on the shoie and up to as further
Inland.
INSmB TODAY
Thi death of Emt0t's NtU1er
'1tcwt1 the A.ro.b world bereft ·of
a Uadtr. for an in4eoth loolc
at the Ifft of thi3 controwrliol
J(Oure, aee Paoe 8 .
=" : ............ ,, --.. --. lrtwlt ,...... 1t '""' ,..1. '""" ......... '"" T......,_ It ""-.l'-" I t w-. ._... .... 1,.1• --..
Hearing Sei
For Four .. -.-·,··· Hospit~s · ·'
Propoaals lor four ...health Ja cilitles wiU
be reviewed al. a he&l'ln& by_ the ~~;r~ ·
htns.lve Health P\1nning Assoc1abon I
facilities comnilttee tonight at 7 o'clock ln Cost Meu City Council Chambers.
The committee will consider a proposal
by the UC Irvine College of Med.icbie lo
build a 350-bed 1eneral botpit.1 .scbool .
Construction on the project l.s &chedule~
to begin in July 1973.
Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, will be
requestin an a<tdiUon ol 80 beds to ·the
es:istinc. 9t bed facility .
• lSl·bed convalese!nl hospital, Foun--
t.aftlbleau Nursing Center, will propose
the: use of IO <>f the beds for long-term
psychiatric care.
Beverly Manor· Sanitarium, Orange, ls
seeking to chan~ts total number of
beds from 150"10 142 and aMlgn 78 of
thole to the care of aJeohoJics with ·the
remaining 64 beds forlong tmn psychia-
tric ca~.
The facilities committee has the power
to approve or deny the requests, accord-
ing to state law. Without committee 1p.
proval, state licenses will not be granted.
From PCfe I
ANNEX •..
not elaborate.
The council Monday night se nt the mat-
ter or .. rormal annuation back to the
Planning Commi.ssion for atudy at· ita
Thursday night meeting. •
Dr, Cun11ingbam also pointed out lhat.
tn effect, any one of the three IChool
district boards of trustees could veto any_
boun~ change. ,
He said that none of the administrators .
have taken the matter to,their respective
board&, -however. He did not explain why
this hid not been done.
Wilson Monday night stressed to the
councU that refusing t9 annex the pro-
perty would not help solve the problem.
Planned in . the huge development are
approximately 8UO homes, 250 apartments
and a neighborhood shopping center. The
property is horseshoe-shaped and wraps
around the P1cific View Memorial P.ark.
It is bOunded by the realigned
MacArthur Boulevard .on the West. Ford
Road on the North and San Joaquin Hills
Road on the south.
'The apartl"J'lent developmenta ~uld be
located in lht southeast and extreme up-
per point. of the project: The &hopping
comph;x , ls planned adjacent to the
apartinents ·to the norUIJ · · •
lrvinf: Company apokesmen ha.ve
eatim1ted the tol41 co.st of development.
at more than '50 million. ' " ·
Car Rams Pole;
Dana. Man Hurt
A Dalli Point min ls scheduled to be
nleased today ftom · Hoag Memorial
Hospital afttar his car hit a traffic signal
pole in Newport Beach early Monday.
morning.. ·
Polite said Dennis B. Buckner, 21 of '
2S371 Yacht Drive received facial lace.ra-
tions and a foot injury when the car he
was driving collided with a pole at the in·
tersection of East Co1st IDghway and
Newport Center Drive.
BuCkner told officers he was traveling
eastbound on the highway when he lost
control of his car. The skidding auto ap-
paftntly missed two light standards
before hlttinc the signal light pole.
Five Doctors Worked
BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) -The five
doctors who treated Egyptian President
G8m1l Abdel Nasser fo r his fatal hear\
attack Monday night spent 15 minutes
trying to get his heart beating again. the
Cairo 'newspaper Al Ahr am reported to-
day.
DAILY PILOT
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DelUIUne Advanced • ,
Boys Glun Time
Limir-Eit~nd·ed
A pressure decislon they didn't want to
make was avoided by Newt10rt Beach
City Council members Monday n I g h t
when t.he Irvine Foun~atlon a.greed _to
an extension to the time limit on ils
$80,000 grant to the Harbor Area Boys
Club.
The foundation had established an Oct.
1 deadline for the club to find an app~ov·
ed site for the proposed n:w bulld1ng,
but said Monday afternoon it would ex·
tend that de;idline to October 12.
The city council will act that date nn
' anting pe,rmission to the Boys' Club fa build Its facility at East;bluff Piu:k,
rather than 1t the Balboa ~, the 11~
recommended by the park, beach an . . I receration c.omm1ss1on. 1
. Boys' Club officials did a'1 about face
at the meeting, after orifU!all~ vot~ng
unanimously in favor of \)le .pier s1~e.
they asked that lhe Eastb\uf( site be ~v-
en top priority. • . The delay will give the ,PBR Commis-
sion time to conduct its scheduled Oct.
that are not available In the older, es-
tabli!'ihed areas.
A 11econd reason for the delay aouaht
by the city in its decision is to clear ~
a technicality in the deed granted to the
city by the Irvine Company for East·
bluff Park. '
A restriction in the document provides
tna l only a libr11ry or a community cen-
ter could be erected on the property,
However. a company representative.
Mi chael L. Manahan. community affairs
manager, said he did not think there
would be any prnblem in obtaining com·
pany approval for the clubh0t1;5e on the
property.
A number of members of the Bluffs
Association board of directors attending
the meeting, while initially espreuing
hesitance over the use, later said they
would support the project in their area.
They had expressed concern. over iL~
compatibility with the area .and the po.
tentiaJ 1raffic problems.
THIS IS ·WHAT HOMEOWNERS SAW AS BREA CANYON FIRE APPROACHED DIAMOND BAR
Fire Eventuelly R11ched Back of Ridge In Foreground. View 11 Witt Toward L1 H1br1 H1ight1
6 public hearing. I . ' ,_
The commission, at a special mceU~g
last week. had reCommended the pen1n-
11iula locatk)n as a first choice and , the
Eastbluff Park site a; 'an alternative.
They were assured by club offlcials
that older piembers, those 16 to 18 years
old who d,rive cars, only use the facili-
ties ir'rt~larly, such as for dances: at night. '
Fire Spares Residents
Willara lordR.n. 11 me'mber of the Boys'
Club board or directors. appeared at
Monday night's session and explained
that the board had not been aware of
the t vailability of tht Eastbluff property
when it took il! vote.
Republicans
Hike County
Vote Margin Diamond Bar Dwellers . Thank Firemen, Winds
Jordan 11\so pointed out that if New·
port Beach cou ld not agree on a site soon,
the city of Costa Mesa had offered prop-
ertv at TeWinkle Park.
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of "" Deity ,.,., ll•lf
Orange County's D i 1 m o n d 8 1 r
residents we.re thankful today for the
persistence of firefighters and the fickle
Santa Ana winds.
After a :JO.hour fire watch from hilltops
m·central Diamond Bar overlooking the
Brea Canyon fire that blackened nearly
4.000'.acres of 1..A>S Angeles County and
mOre than 200 acres of Orange County
noH.h of Brea, 13,000 residents could rel8!t~... ·
Only occasional puffs of smoke were
evident today amidst the cha,rred knolls
west of Brea Canyon road.
That road and the cut being made
through the canyon -for the Orange
Freeway to Diamond Bar from Fullerton
three times from Sunday afternoon to
Monday noon was the scene of fire
fighterJ' stand against the bruahland
blaze.
Three times names Jicked bruah across
the · road frorn · 200 houses in the
sou~emmost ~rt of Diamond Bar, just
across the Orange County line.
FIRE MOVED
Ironically, the fire which is believed tQ
have stai:;ted in the hill of La Habra
hei'ghts, in Orange County on Sunday,
moved out of the county doing most of its
da!'llage in Los ~geles county.
For the most part, firemen successfully
limited tQe Qlaze to unpopulated areas in
the La P~nte Hills, but feared west
winds would push the flames over Brea
Canyon Road into the 61000 brush and
tree studded 1cre.s that surround the four
•·villages" of Diamond Bar.
Diamond Bar residents: usually boast
about the refreshing west winm which
daily barrel up Brea Canyon pushing
smog away from their homes that com-
ma'nd views of historic 200-year~ld
walnut trees. Mount Baldy to the north
and, on the few clear days, Catalina and
the ocean to the Southwest.
But. as i.he Santa Ana winds fanned the
fast moving fire Sunday and again on
Monday, that beloved breeze too k on A
new character. Firemen blamed the weat
wind for bringing the fire to threaten the
master-planned acreage.
A Los Angeles County fireman said
Monday morning, two overnight ·~alands"
against the fire at Brea canyon Road had
been successful. One further "run" of the
fire toward the road proved minor, and
the winds which had abetted the flames
rush, turned the fire against itself.
SKIES BLACKENED
While residents viewed flames over
nearby ridges for more than 20 hours. the
most spectacular blackening of the skies
came after the bulk of the blaze. was out.
About 4 p.m. Monday, a lesser blaze
erupted south of C.Olima Road in Ha-
cienda Heights just east of Whittie r,
while the winds again blew toward Dia-
mond bar. For more than an hou r.
billowing smoke blackened lhe sky, blot-
ting out the sun, and joining many mllea
to the east with clouds of smoke from a
new fire at Fontana.
Evacuation rumors flew again as the
sky filled with smoke, and ash once more
Newport Backs
Denial of Flights
For Holiday Line
A resolution asking the Public Utilities
Commission to deny an application by
Holiday Airline.a for flight.! in and out of
Orange County Airport was 1dopted Mon-
day by the Newport Beach City t?ouncil.
The airline is seeking two n1ghU a
day as stopovers between South Lake
Tahoe and San Diego.
In its resolution the ca u n c 11 said.
"Noise levels produced by existing op-
erations at Orange County Airport ha ve
cau~ substantial impairment or resi-
dential property values in the section of
the city undtrlying the flight path."
The resolution points out that S27 mil·
lion in damage claims have been filed
against the county as a result.
ln addition, the resolution noles I.hat
ex isting terminal facilities at the air-
port are "totally inadequate.''
From Page I
NEWPORT TRAFFIC •••
Vice Mayor How11.rd Rogers also Ciln-
vinced •e coun cil the report should also
be geared 10 short-range answers. also :
he said that in addition to offering solu.
lions !or 1990, answers for the city in 1975
should .be included.
The council also discussed the pos!i-
bility of hal(ing at least preliminary In·
formation availa)>le should there be a
referendum to resci nd the freeway agre@-
menL
Coun cilman Carl Kymla said. "People
going to the polls should have the benefit
or thls study, or a portion of it."
A ci tizens• group is currently ctrc11·
lating petition~ 10 force a re!erendum 10
f(l'rce the cou ncil to rescind Its 1greement
with the Slate Oivislon of Highways on
the route for the future Paci(i~ Coast
Fretway east from Bayside Drive to the
Corona dcl Mar city limit.
1'1ayor Ed Hirth said he fett ,the "pur·
pose or the study is to sol,,e our trans--
porlation problems" and l!illd its timir,j
in relation to a rt.ferendum lhould be
secondary.
The •·study of lhe study" ha1 first been
proposed, and in fact. first btgun by
Hirth last month as the city discussed
possiblt alttrnativt1 to the propc»ed
C03stal freeway.
Tht. freew.ay hlls mtt at.rong oppositlon
In Ne!"port Stach because Its propoat<I
rMt . wh ile inland alona most of South-
ern Callfornla. cuts abruptly to the cn1st..
Une as it enters the city from the north·
wen, then veers away after Jt leaves to
the southeast.
An effort by Assemblyman Robert 8'd·
ham CR·Newport Beach) 10 kill the. New·
port Stach secUon of tht, hJgh"lY by
le1i1latlon died in Sen1tt committee.
Plans for the petition drive to r!SClnd
the agreement were started even while
the bill was still active.
In the specifications fo r the consullant's
study, staff members pointed out that
much of the "raW da ta'' is already known
and would not have to be collected again,
thereby saving considerable expense.
Newport Beach had spent S40.000 two
years ago for a comprehensive study of
Balboa Peninsula traffic.
The study specifications also stress that
envi ronmental considerations should be
weighed heavily in any recommendations.
Factors \hat should be included. ac-
cording to the speclticalions, include
noise, fumes and odors, lritffic accident
. ha1.ard, and propert y acquis ition.
O!hcr consideralions include street
'4'idths. serback -0r homes, possible loss
or p\11.v areas, "Pedestrian safety. disrup-
tion of 8Chool &oundMies, proputy val.
ucs. reduces cslhelics, views, ecological
mMine disturbance. landscape scarring.
"splitting" of neighborhoods ind close
1ssociation of undesirable land uaes.
Special conaidcratlons: the rePort should
deal with lnclude the advantages and dis-
advan taaes of the proposed coastil free-
wa y, changes in arterial 1trttt S)'!ltm
necewry to mttt projected traffic de-
mand! without freeways and communily
and ~nelghborhc»d Impacts of any rtcom-
mended changes in the arterial street sys-
tem -without trteways.
In addition, tPeclal auentJon would bf
J:ive n 10 the responsi bilities tor costs nf
changes. and tM effect of 1 freeway on
chy at.reel traffic.
The "f1.ctor1 to bre considered'• incl the
"a~clal .consider1tlons" all met with
council a1reement.
ra ined down on homes.
But a tou r of the fire area disclosed
names had been controlled. Hacienda
Heights residents: were seen · leading
horses' back Into the blackened hills from
a green tree lined residenti8 J sanctuary
acrosa Collma Road .
Friends in neighboring towns told tales
of the repeated horrors cf the previous
night's blaze. Swimming pool filte rs
cculdn 't handle the ash that dropped
from the skies. Most hillside homes from • Rowland Heighta to Diamond Bar
escaped damage, though brush sur-
rounding them was blackened.
One horse farm along Brea Canyon
Cutoff lost a barn and amallilh cabin.
REFINE RY ESCAPES
A Nike missile site and a Shell Oil
refinery hidden in the hills above Brea
escaped the flames, thoUih 1t least one
oil storage lank exploded Sunday af.
ternoon. ,_ "-t : •
As that ominous cloud darkened the
sky, a fire watche r's reunion began again
at the end of Acacia Hill drive in mid·
Diamond Bar.
Husba nds who had left for work in the
morning had been called home b.v anx-
ious wives. some as early as noon. Others
who stayed to wet down roofs and watch
the fi re fighters outwit the names,
reported the day's event. ...
All were glad I.heir picturesque scenery
had been saved, thankful their anxieties
were unfounded. and conce rned for those
around them who still faced the fire
threats.
But none removed the hoses they'd
readied on roofs, or the sprinklers they'd
spiked into ceda r shake shingles.
With the coating of falling ash and
tangle of· garden hoses lying about, some
homes gave the Impression ()f a war
zone. except that all had been spared the
bombed-out look of homes in other fire-
ravaged areas.
By nine. Monday evening. Diamond Bar
was quiet. lhe streets were empty and
most homes da rkened .
fr. He said it has many advanla«es. In-
~ eluding cost savings on con!trUction and
parking areas and said that there would
be no uncertainty about the outcome of
a referendum.
A ~ity-wide '"°~ .. would ·be required,
under charter provision, before any pub-
licly-owned oceanfront property could be
developed by 1 private enterprise.
·PBR Commission members had voted
unanimously on the pier site, however.
A. C. Cameron. Jr., a PBR.board mem-
ber. explai ned the reason inR" behind the
commission's recommendation of the
pier site.
He said there is simply i;nuch more
of a need for ii there than in any other
section of the city.
"The need, for the children, was the
ke y to our vote.'' he a.aid.
He pointed out that the newer residen·
tial developments in Newport Beach do
provide m 1 n y recreational amenities
From Pq,. I
OIL .. .'
motors were not Installed within 48 hour s
that Armstrong 's contrtct shouJd be
terminated or at least tha t he be ordered
to stop drilling.
Armstron1 operates city-owned oil
wells juat north of the , Pacific C.oast
Highway' near the Santa Ana River. He
was not present at Monday'I council
session. ·
Mcinnis first brought up public com-
plaints about the noise at a council
meeting August 10 and aaid that rioise
measurements taken showed the sound
level to be above the level of nornial
human tole rance.
Mcinnis lit into Armstrong after
Donald Beckley, president of the West
Newport Homeowners As:ocialion. had
pointed out that Armstrong.hid not even
made an attempt to put mufners on the
gasoline engines in the interim before ob-
taining the electric motors.
Councilman Lindsley Parsons joined
the criticism, argu ing that A r~slrong
could obtain electric motors for far ltss
than he had claimed they would cost him.
Voter registra tion in Orange County
has reached an all time hlgh and
Republicans continu~ to increase their
lead o.ver----oemocrats.
vo1ers -eligible to cast ballots in the
Nov. 3 general election total 612,006.
Since last Juhe the total of eligible
voters in the county has increased by
more than 56,000. Of the new eligibles,
the Republicans signed up 28,000 and th e
Democrats 24,200.
ln the past two years the GOP has in-
creased its superiority from 63,000 to
almost ~.000. ., _
In the 34th Congressional District
where Rep. Richard T. Hanna . (0-
Westminster) is again bat t I! n g
Re publican William J . Teague of Garden
Grove, the. Democratic edge has decreas-
ed.
In the district which includes part of
Los Angeles County, the Democratic
margin is 24,m cOmpared to 25,617 two
years ago.
Most Orange Coast communities con-
tinue to show heavy Republican leanings.
Huntington Beach figures are GOP
24.641 to 21,126; Fountain Valley, 6,522 to
5,276: Seal Beach. 10,066 to 6,324.
Only Westminster and Los Alamitos are
in the Democratic camp. Westminster
shows Democrats leading 12,450 to 9,!H9.
Los Alamitos is 2,049 to 1,775.
Both Orange Co a st supervisorial
districts show. GOP majorities. The Fifth
Di.strict (Costa Mesa, Newport 1nd
Laguna and .the unincorporated arell.S to
the east and south of the coast) is 79,646
to 38.708.
The Second District (Huntington Buch.
Westminster. part of Garden Grove, Seal
Beach and Los Alamitos) is 56,977 to
54,913.
Barge Canal Halted
TAMPA. Fla. (AP) -Secretary of the
Interor Walter J. Hickel haa signed 1
petition seeking a temporary halt to con-
str.1.1.ction . or the cont roversial Cron Flor·
ida Barge Canal.
Truth
or Consequences?
Sometimes tlie Irv!~ li<irts! We ~ave lost an occasiooel sale l:iy not t.llin9 • oust...,...wt..I
Ii. wanted to h.ar.
We might point out that a customer would be better off to pay a tittle more for our ,.i;.
bor padding than buy 1 cheaper , '"'"hy pod th1t fffls t.ke you are w11\in9 on b•lloons. The "b•~
loon'' ?Id hurts th1 c:arpet bic:king, cau1ts stretchi"9, and ruins sHms. Also , this peclOiftt
okon fl•ttens out •ker 1 while.
Additionony, we might ton you thet some ctrpo~ fibers •re l!IOl'9 practic•I Ilion otliers_)i
fiber lh•I -u in ono lutur•, might "bomb" in-tlw.
Feel free lo call for tdvico. Aft of otW ..les people lioYt haG erlenso\.e exporienC9 in tlie -
le• end of this buoin•u -•nd ofter •I -tfto most illlpori.tnt thing we can offer, th•! no M.·
Goel, is service!
UNTA ANA, OUN•I
TUITIN C...,,,
ALDlfrf-S
ftD HILL CAINft
& DU,.llD
11)74 1"4111, ,..,.., c.lf.
IJl-)144
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 rlacentla A ye. .
COSTA MUA '4~1
"
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,. -t;osta Mesa
EDITION
. * .....
I .
~OC 63, NO. 233, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES .ORANGE CO\/NTY, CAU~RN~ TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER. 29, 1970 TEN CENTS
Fires Controlled
Arson Suspected in County Blazes
' DAILY "ILOT Steff'°""''
·THIS IS WHAT HOMEOWNERS SAW AS BREA CANYON FIRE APPROACHED OIAMOND BAR
-""··-Fire··Enntually R••~ed Back of~·Rkf9-··in Foreground. View Is West Toward La Habra Heights
Residents Thank
Fickle Winds,
Homes Spared
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of ""' Dtillr "'"' Stllff
Orange County's Diamond Bar
resident! were thankful today (or the
persistence of fi~efigbters and tbe fickle
Santa Ana wind!. ·
After a 30-bour fire watcb'frqm hilltops
In cenfrat Diamond Bar ove'rlookq tbe
Brea Canyon-fire that blolckened nearly ' 4,000 acres of Los Angeles Couhty and .
more• than 200 acres of Orange1 County
north of Brea, ~000 residerit! could
relax. ·
Only occasional puffs -of smoke were
evident .today amidst the charred knolls.
west of Brea canyon road.
-That road and the ~t being made
through the. canyon 'for ~ Orange
Freeway to Diamond Bar from Fullerton
three times from Sunday afternoon to
Monday noon was · the scene: of fire;
fighters' stand against the brushland
blaze.
· Three times flames licked brush across
tbe road from 200 houses in the
southernmost part of Dilmond Bar, just
acrosa · the Orange County line. I I' . .
FIRE MOVED
IroniCally, the fire which is believed to
have started in the hill of La Habra heights, in Orange County on Sunday, ·
moved out of the county doing most of its
damage in Los Angeles county.
For the most part, firemen successfully
limited the blaze to unJiopulated areas in
the La Puente Hills, but feared west
winds W-Ould push the flames over Brea
Canyon Road into the 6,000 brush and
tree studded acres that surroUnd the four
J•villages" of Diamond Bar.
Diamond Bar residents usually boast
about the refreshing west winds which
daily bprel up Brea Canyon pushing
1mog away from their homes that com·
mand views of historic 200-year~ld
Mrs. Slocum on Stand
Defense Questions Wife
-' . .
In Mesa Baby Murder ·
'
By TQM, BARLEY
Of,lttt,Dalb' l'llit Stiff
· Marian Slocum's logg experieqce as . a
si.lrgical nurse was closely questioned in
Superior Court.today as defense attorney
Michael Gerbosi took up the cross ex-
amination of the estranged wife 0£ Dr.
Wesley G. Slocum.
Gerbosi grilled Mrs. Slocum on her
specific relationship with patients who
suffered brain damage apparently com-
parable to that sustained by 3-monUl-0ld
Cynthia Slocum in the wee~ before her
death on Feb. lS, 1964.
Slocum is accused of beating the infant
t'ct the point ''l"lt it lapsed into.a coma
and died ar result of extensive brain
injuries. ft 11osi today concentrated
his attack !rs. Slocum's ability to
recognize a1-~iagnose the type of brain
damage allegedly suffered by the infant.
Gerbosi took over from Chief Deputy
District Attorney James Enright after
Mrs. Slocum told the prosecutor Ulat her
surgeon husband began a program of
beatings and abuse shortly after she
brought baby Cynthia to the coUple's
Costa Mesa home from Hoag Memorial
Hospital.
That abuse, she said, included sus--
tained beatings about the head and body,
the use of a three.inch needle for spinal
Ulps on the tiny infant and Slocum's
repeated kicking of the child's bii.sket
while the infant was in it. ·
She testified that her husband drew
"bloody fiuid" from the ~hild on a number
of occasions and she told Enright that she
had never seen, in her many years of' ex~
perience in a major New York ho-spital,
any physician use such a Jong needle'on a
baby.
She also told E_!lfight that Slocum
threatened her on Dll1W oCca,siO?tstwhile
he was abusing the child' and warned.her
that itie woiild be•tited a a aOOJmplice
if she instigated bis Prosetution.
Mrs. Slocum testified that when'the In-
fant died her husband wraJ'Ped the baby
in a blanket rand' Jeft·the house with ·the
comment that he was going' to bis (!Ilia!.
The prosecution ~leges 'that · he
dismembered the Child · duriiig his
absence and brought the sevf!:al ·portions
of the infant back to~ the horrie in a
number of paper. bags. . · ·
What are alleged1tG'be the'rtmains of
Cynthia , Slocum were. discovered .in the
[~mily freezer six months agG when mov.
1ng . men shipped tll.e' ·appliance 'from
Costa Mesa to their Santa Ana· warehouse.
Clerk Bruised;
• Robbed by, Thief
A Costa Mesa clerk jumped by a
strongarm robber at South Coast Plaza
lost $100 in cash and other valuables -
including her River Grove, lll., police
matron badge -Monday night.
Mrs. Bella Schocke, 46, also sulfered
scrapes and bruises when dragged 20 feet
down the pavement near the east entry of
the center at 3333 S. Bristol St., police
said. ,
The victim told investigators she and
two co-workers had just left the building
when she was attacked by the robber, in
his early 20s and wearing an off.white
golfing cap.
wl_inut trees, Mowit Baldy to ,the north N B k' an~, on the few clear days, Catalina and ewport ac s
tile ocean to the Southwest.
He finally wrested the handbag aw1ty
from her and jumped into a car an ac-
complice drove right up to the sc;ene.
Orange County had some good news
•nd some bad.news on the fire front"to-
day,
The good news-was that th8·fires which
have blackened 4,000 acres in lhe couaty
are all under control.
The bad news is that arsor1> is suspected
in 15 to 20 of the fires which raged. over
the last !!eekend, including the 500-acre
El Toro blaze.
Wally Trotter, chief of the Oral'Jge
County Fire Presvention Bureau, said
two teams are probing the embers
Egyptians
Mourn Death
Of Nasser
CAIRO (UPI) -Egyptians poured into
Cairo today by train, by bus and bn foo.t
to mourn the Qeath of President Carnal
Abdel Nasser whose death from a heart
attack Monday threatened new chaos for
a Middle ·East uncertain of the present
and fearful of the future.
Nasser, 52, lay in state in the imposing
Republican Palaa! in the heart of Cairo
while hundreds of thousands milled about
outside bopefUl of a last ~k at !he gray-
ing colonel who was the idol ·of the Arab
masses 8nd -whose deith t'Otlld bting the
Middle,Eut.mce.more to ,war . .._
1be Soviet Union, with more at'5take·in
Egypt than perhaps any ~r nat;ipn,.an-.
DOU~·it WS.S 'SOtdin& fn:mier Alenl
N .. K•syJi!l.-lo ~today ljt·il'e ~ dly rimer~ An lil!lcii!l ~·.cllloil
Nasser "an outstlwdmg .son of the Arq
people" an4:I it "great friend Of the'SOviet
Union." It. said . Russian. aid '·l'(Oukl cOn-
tinue. ' ·, .,.1 , . ·.
~idegt N,ilon · c~lled . a shOw-of·
force exhibition by the U.S. 6(h ·F.leet to
avoid rousing fur1her anti·American feel~
ings in Ulil nation caught up in an emo-
tional upheaval. Egyptians 90 wary of
Israel th,at a maximum·a,Jert was· caUed
by military leaders along the Suez Canal
cease-fire line.
How Nasser!s death would affect Nix:
on's European tour was not certain but
his visit to · Yugosloavia was set for
Wtdnesdaf aild arrangements may haye
to. be changed. President Tito, an old
comrade of' Nasser's, was expeCted to Oy
to Cairo for the funera.1; ~e Yug~~~v
cabinet met today to discuss the lltu&-
tion.
Nixon himself was nOt. ~·to. go to
Cairo but it was beUevel:i he might send
Secretary of State William P. Rogers,
now with him in the Mediterranean ..
Egypt, Syria and Jordan declared a 4CJ.
day official period of mourning and the
Arab world which had met Nasser so
many times in surnmitc .onferences to
discuss operations against I s r a e I
prepared to send· its kings and presidenta
back to Cairo for a final farewell.
Vice President Anwar El Sadat suc-
ceeded Nasser as ·preS1aent under tbe
Egyptian constitution but it appeared
certain a major power struggle would
develop for his suO!eSIOr. The fear in
some parts or the world was that hot·
blooded young anhy officers might take
over with the prospect ·of endless war.
Sadat himJell is considered a leftist foe
of Israel.
One fact remained: There ts no heir
(See EGYPr, Pqe I)
Fires at Glan~e
But, as the Santa Ana winds fanned the De , } f FJi h lost. moving . lire Sunday and again on fil8 0 g ts
Monday, tbat beloved breeze took on a
new character. Firemen blamed the west
wind for bringing the fire to threaten the For Holiday Line
master-planned acreag~. Here IS a brief· glance at the locations, utent ol control and known cfe.
A I.Os. Angeles County fireman said A resolution asking the Public Utilities sttuclion caused· by 56 separate brush and timber firea throughol,lt California.
Monday morning, ·two overnight "j\ands" Commission to deny an application by SAN . DIEGO COUNTY ...:. The worst autumn Ore in California history
against .lhe fife at Bria Canyon Road had Holiday Airlines for nights in and out or was nearing containment after charring 200,000 acres, while four smaller
been successful. One furtfler "run" 9f the Orange County Airport was adopted Mon· blazes in the same area destroyed 15,000 acres.
fire ·toward the road proved minor, and day by the Newp,cirt Beach City Council, SAN GABRIEL CANYON _ FirerTie11 gained the upper hand due to'
tbe winds which had abetted the Oames The airline js seeking two. flights a ·dying winds, but five were killed Monday night wPen their helicopter crashed nlSh,-,t~ed tbe'fire qainit ltseV. day ;is stopoVerS between South Lake en route to,the 41000-acre blaze. • , "'
Tah6e and San Diego: SKIES BLACKENED In its i'esoluUOn the· c 0 u n c 11 salif, MAIJBU -The devastating lire here, which merged .at one point with
While residents viewed names over ''Noise levels ~roduced by existing op. the Newhall blare, was dlmini.shlng after firemen gained the upper hand, but
nearby ridges for more than 20 hours, the eratioris at Orange County A'irport have 40,000 acres have been b\lrned over, ·
most ~cul1r'blackenll!g of the 1klts caused substantial impairment of resi. SAN BERNARDINO OOUNTY -Flames licked over 7,000 acres in
came after the bulk of the blaze was out. dential property values in the section of Meyer's Canron1 but dropying Santa Ana winds gave firemen a break.
About 4 p.m. Monday, a lesser blaze the city underlying the flight path." SAN LUIS OBISPO COUNTY-A blai.e north of here end near Highway
erupted south of Colima Road in Ha· The resolution Points out that $27 mif. 1 was under control after 6,000 acres were charred.
clenda Heights just east of Whittier, lion in damage claims have been filed MONTEREY COUNTY _Burning in the bills between Willow Cretk and
while lthe wJods again, blew toward Dia· against the county as 8 result. Salmon Creek on tbt ~ue cotst, the firt has burned more than ~.GOit
mond• bar. For more than an , h<ur, In addition, the resolution notes that . acres and threlllf:m a ltlDd Of CalifOmia rtdwoods. JDghway 1 f'e1Mlnl.open
blllo...i. .... smote blJICkened the sky, blOt· existing terminat facilities at the.. air· but hazar"-~ .a... to ,.,_ rocts cracked oil cwr1 ..., the beat tum .... -to ...... · • ·1 """ ... ere '1tota11 ... ina"-uale." --_....., -"'J -.. ting out tJie sun, and jo1rung many rru es rv• • &J ,..... Ute pavement.
to the eut with clouds of smoke from a • · · KERN COUNTY -Ftnlines were holdi~up on a n,soo.acre brush fire new tire at Fclltana. u ...... ol nclrcled Evacuation rumors. flew again as the Barge Canal Baited' souu~ Boken!i<ld, •Ith almost all' its mile perimeter e bl'
sky ti\ted with smoke. and ash once more flttfighten. A second fire near Red Mountain has ravaged 1'7,GOI amt al. Umberland. rained down on homes-. . TAMPA. Fla. (AP) -Seeretary of the ·
searChing rOr clues to. arson. "The ·1eada
¥e slim but We hGpe we are makinl
some headway," the chief said.
The El Toro area blaze which-broke out
last Friday and burned over 500 acrts
threatening homes in the Lake Forest
.ind El Toro area is the subject of' Jn-
tensive investigatiqn, Trotter said. ,
Friday, the day the El Toro . fire
started, witnesses saw a small fire and
people runiiing from it, the fire otficiil
reported. The'y tried to •slop the persons
who started the fire but fi.iled.
Body Found
11We foUnd a device Uiere which eouJd
have &een used to stirt the fire," Trottlr
aald.
The 3,000.acre Trabuco Canyon fire "
1a1s0 under investigation as to ctp1e.
AU day Monday fire teama peitrolltd
Uie ecorcbed mount.tin a re a 1 U•
tiniutshing still smolderm, ... l!nrnlni
brulh and lrtes.
O'NeUI Park, which was threatened by
the Tracuco blaze, will be clbled until
Friday, county ofiiciala stated.
Mystery D.eath
Probed in 'Mesa --' . . .
Circumstana!s s u r r o u n d J n g the
mystery death of a man who appartnUy
drove his car through Vista Park arid
over an embankment on the west side of
'Costa Me5a were being probed today. ·
The victim WU found Monday hight
280 yards from the ' spot where his ' cal-
was impounded hours earlier~ by hikers
wal~g aloni: the Santa ~na River; clwt-
nel. 1
He ·wu idenU!ied as RObOrt s: Miller,
:M, •al M ·Seo8te Si., .which is 'oot:lar
from wlier< the car and bcicfy ..m l<iuhd.
Lt. Tom l/urtumpa\d the velilcle"WU
lipotfed,. MOOday momiiig tiy Ol!l"r Harlan PaµIey, abOut )lalfwaY. dOwn· the
.... ......,. ·lieloy ·~·!;'ark.' .Wlddi
overloob HuntinPlnn Be'ac~. · · · · · • ..,,. ciir<iran•f~ · -to lia.e biiln
rolie4 Ot 'Wtbil1c;'~ l'.':[t .. ~. -.i-
dlng 'It .... ill)PoQncfed'. lo aVoid 'Ibo
ponibilJly bl chJldren 'playiJ!g aroUnd i~
He aald Milter waa listed u the
registered . .o~ and that· a call to hil
wile iihed no light on thO cue, but llie
believed her husband had loi.ned. it to a
friend.
"The car appeared to have been driven
through the park, which is in the 1200
block_ of Victoria St:, and tblD down ,tbe
hill," the lieutenant added.
No further action was takfti and the
ve}licle was released. to ·Mrs. Miller, who
sWI didn't kJ>ow, the whereabouts of bet
h~bapd.,
"Then just a lltUe arte.r dark the body
was found," said Lt. Durhan\, adding
that investigalion into the cause of deatb
was still in ;Pf(!gl'NS. ·
"The body was 280 yards from the
car:," ~t. Durham laid. ''11-t's ~ly a
quarter of a mile. He Mad to walk on
down to the drainage ditch."
·Mesa Planners Endorse ' . . . -. . .
:,Varying City_ Permits
Perm.its reQulrei! for a watermelon
M:and, a massage ~rlor, a pie sQop and a
pi8nb aeaaemy -not under one roof -wer~ given favoriible ' recommendations
Monday ,by the Costa . Mesa Planning
COrnmission. ,
The proposals go next to the city coun.
cil for a final decision.
Action was delayed Monday on several
agenda items including expinsion of
Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital from 99 to
180 beds.
A public hearing on the compsny's
muter plan amendment' involving 30,752
square feet of new facilities was set for
Oct. 12.
Herman Marguelieux finally won aJ>-
proval of a conditional use pennit for his
melon and produce stand at 1854 ~ewport
Blvd., on a 4 to 1 vote, with Com·
missioner H. J. "Jimmy" Wood dlsaen-
ting. .
Wood said when the hearing was con.
tinued two weeks.ago that MargueUeu'•
wi~nclosed market, located in a
former sefvice station, is no asset to
downtown Costa Mesa's image.
A zone exception permit requealed by
Ronald E. Slarkman, for a sauna·
massage parlor at 1813 Newpc>rt Blvd., in
a commercial zone, also wu recom·
mended for council' approval.
Originally ocheduled for public hearing
two wets ago, then delayed for further
study, a rezoning peUUon and conditional
use pemµt, required for the pie shop were
recommended for council approval.
1be vote was unanimous for Garden
Square Factors Inc .•. Garden• Grove, to
rezooe reaidential, land II 1173 Irvine
Ave., to commerdal designation.
A ,Yum Yum Tree restaurant featuring
oale and pickup of whole pie• Is plaMed
for that l!)Cation by Far West Servicta:
Inc., WO.l!ay1ido Drive, Corona del Mar.
The commluion also voted unantmout-
ly for renew~ of Merle Valdez's zone ex·
Wheelchair Wheeled
Out •.• Pe~anently? ·
A vehicle theft In which the criminal
has · a three-month · head •tart , wu
repoited to Costa M.,. pol1Ce Mond&y,'
but they ficurt he tlil1 moy not hive 10~
ten too for. "
ception permit, allowing him to teach
piano in his home at 2450 College Drive.
~ · ide~tical permit for aootber home
occupation · oooducted by Thelma G.
Pierson, 182 21st St., allowing · beauty
par!Gr work on the premises was recom-
mended for council approval.
William H. Keeler, also received 1
favorable recommendation for ruS boat,
trailer and camper storaR:e Jot at 521
Center St.
Zone exception permit! for a service
station sign ~t would exceed the' mu·
!mum alioWable under city ordinance,
and a pre9Chool and daf "nursery Jn a
duplex zqne were .cooUnued,
Commissioners ~t Oct. 22 as the hear-
ing date !or. partnen &ee C. Logan and
Kathleen Callahan to operate the achool
for up to 20 chpldren at 2070 Maple St.,
fi ve days each w~.
Nobody repreaenting Mob 11 Oi I
Corporation was ~t for the beuinl
on the 11(1.(oot Mobil aipr -35 feet It the
legal limit -at Harbor Boulevard ...i
the San Diego Freeway.
The matter will be p!aced on the com-
mission's'~ agendl.
'I ·Coan
Wea.tllw
Thlt palchy ,.. and ""' clouda
will .be back to 11111111 t11e' coul
Wodnelday momlng, with mercury
readlnp dipping back Into the lO'a
on the lhore and up to as further
inland.
INSmE TODA.Y
The death of l:mn>t'1 Na.,.,.
ltovt1 tht Arob world btrtft of
"a leodtr, Fbr an in-dtpth. loo" I
at tht Ufe o/ lhil controWrsiOl
Jigurr, set Pa.ot 8, -.. (111""91e 1 a. ..... ' Clm""" •U
-u c....... 1J
DHltt, ........ • -' • ...,...p .... '
-' -.. --" ......... ,.... ....
or.... °"""" ' ,.,.,,. ..... ,.._ . '""' ... ,. .... Mf""'9 ,..,, -" Bu ~<!Lthe lire aroa d•~osecL..ll\leror W'!lter_J. l:lickeLnas.sl(ned ••-•~ MARIPOSA COVNTY -A smaller lire was contained Monday night ·•-~~n-'ame""°s'"·hid--been con~ Jfac1encII petition seeking a temporary halt to con· .:ttcr"burntng 1,820"1Cres;1>lit"'name. destroyed power lines ellmlnattng elec-·
Helshts residtnts were seen leadinc struction or the controversial Cross Flor-trical service to Mariposa and Ya1emite Nadonal Ptrt.
Don Wadlack of Seal's Ambulance aiid
Stc"""'1n SUpPU..1 535 Center St., told )11-
wtllpton the suspeet mited 1 '312
wheelcbatr JUDe '2 and buo't been Heo lllnce. . .
..... ......., 1• ,.,,....,. ,, P...,. 1._n
=-~::.,. ~; -. ........._ .... 1)14 ..,.. ...... .,
(lite RQUEL, ~ Z) tia Barge Canal. ' · --MlntlM u....'
( c \ . .
•
I
' \
•
•
I DAILY PILOT c .--'
Victorious FiCker~ ~'Rea~y t-o Win It _.Again',
~\\'PORT. R.I. (AP ) -Vl<lorioua
•. UlJIJl'f l!Ul .FJckw of Intrepid qrOld to-
day -io ta.U ~t.M · helm of a new c:Up
dolondtr lf the' U,S. delencl. ilie hllllirlc
Amtrica't.CUp opln In 1173.
Several men,.ber! or the 1Jynd.Jc1t.e. that
backed lntrepid In this year's 21st suc-
cessful deferl1Je or t!'ie yachting troph'y an-
n9unc;~. agreement to fol'S'I a new aYn-
diCate. ·
, Ficker and his crew defeated GreLel 11
ol AUJlrolll f.I In 1 w!es tbet endtd
M~ 11 Dllleo off tb11 Jocllli!!l C111lol'.
'l1le U.S. hU not loot Ille cup llnct II •
wu·ftnl -!,y tbe odlooner Americo 1n
Englond in 1161.
Ficker, 42, a Newport Beach architect,
was credited with a major share of' thil
year'a victory, aldppering the 3-yeir-old
JntrepJd, which was allo defender a1atnat
another challenge from Australia in 1967.
The new syndicate i.a to be beaded by
Deadline Advanced
READY FOR ANOTHER GD
Cup Sktpper Ficker
Bill Ficker Day
Set in Newport,
California Too
A joinl city of Newporl Beach and
Ney,·port Harbor Chamber of Commerce
&a lute to the man who Thursday became
the city's premiere yachtsman will take .
place 'Sunday.
\\'illiam P. Ficker will bt auspiciously
honored upon hlg trium phant re tui-0 hor:n~
from his duel with Australia's Gretel II
off Rhocle Jsl11nd Sound.
Sunday will be Bill r ickcr Day in
Newport, ~nd Governor Re11gan is e~
pected to proclai m it Bill Ficker Day 1n
all of California.
The mari who successfu.Jly defended the
America's Cup, yachting's fop in-
ternational racing evrnt. is due back Sun·
day and will be ceremoniously welcomed
at Los Angelei; Internationa l Airport al
1:3(1 p.m, by a delegat ion headed by Vice
Mayor Howard Roger5. .
A bus ride back to Newport Beach vnll
be followed by a boa t parade. around
Newport Harbor, wilh Ficker aboafd the.
Columbia. a past Cu p defender.
Formal ceremonie5 art> also planned
outside City Hall. A number of pr~51!-n·
tations. includin~ resolutions from the
sta1e Se na te and the city council, will be
giv~n lo Ficker.
Adrlilional det11ils for the celebration
are still being prepared. 11cct:>rding 10
Jack Barnett , executive director of the
Chamber·.
The dele gation tra veling In the airport
will include the commodores nl all area
yaCht clu.bs. County ~upervisor · Alt on
Allen , City Manager Harvey L .. Hurlburt.
and a: representative or the stalt. of
Califomia, in 11dd itio n lo Vice Mayor
Roge rs.
The groo p in1ends tn h11ve 11 banner
flyir\.g at the 11\rstrip signifying the ac-
comPlishmenl by Ficker and his crev•.
DAILY PILOT
OltAHG£ tOASf "Ul lllMING tOlol,A"IY
keh••I N. w •• d
"'""'"'' .... 'llblrtMf
Jo~~ II:. Cw1ley
T~a ... •1 K1e..il
!t<!e•
C•tf9 1119" O'flll1
J JO Wt1I l1y Slr1•I
M1ili11t Allit111: ,,0 , l er 1160, •1616 1
()~ Offlt M
........_,, ... ('lllJ nu Wu• 1•11111• •tii'••••f
'-"""• •t.c~· 1'1 ,~t ..... ~""
HloW'l""9tllfl kttfl• INIJ •uc~ 1.w1,.,.1•!1 la<!,._,., ., lff'1~ ,, , .... ~ ... 1
I
Boys ·Club Time
Limit Extended
A pressure decision they didn't want to
ma.ke ~as avoi<led by Newport Beach
City Council membe rs Monday n I g h l
when the Irvine Foundation agreed In
an extension to the time limit on it., S?ii.ooo grant to tht Harbor Area Boys
Club.
The foundatio n had established an Oct.
1 deadline for the club lo find an apprDV·
ed site for the propmied new buil dinR.,
but said Monday allemoon it would ex-
tend th2~ deadline to October 12.
The"city council will iict that date on
granting -permission to the Boys' Club
t.o build its facility al Eastbluff Park,
rather than at the Balboa Pier, the sile
recommended by the park. beach and
rec:e ration commission.
Boys• Club officials did an about r~cf!
at the meeting. after originally voting
unanimously in favor of thf! pier sitf!,
they asked that the Eastbluff !lite be giv-
en1op priority. .
·The delay will give the PBR Commis-
sion ti me to conduct its scheduled Oct.
6 public hearing. ;
The commissi011, at 1 special meeting
last week, had recommended the penin-
sula location as a first choice and the
Eastbluff Park site as an altern1live .
Willard Jordan, a mr:mber of the Boys'
Club board of directors, appeared at
MG'nday ·night's session a n d es:plained
that the board had not betn aware of
the availability of the Eastbluff property
when it took its vote.
Jordan also pointed out that U NeW-
port Beach could not agree on a site soon.
the city. of Costa Mesa had offerr:d prop-
ertv at Te.Winkle Park.
He said it hal'I many 1tdv11nta11es , in-
cluding cost savµtg5 on oonstructiog and
parking areas 11nd i;.ajd that there would
be flll uncertainly about the outcome of
a . referendum . ·
A city·wide vote woold be required,
under charter provision. beforp any pub-
licly-owned oceanfront property could be
d~velope~· b:V a privale enterprise .
PBR Commission member!'i h11d voted
unanimously on lhe pier ~ite. howe ver.
'A. C. Cameron . Jr .. a PBR board mem-ber. explained the reasoninlf behind the
commission 's recommendation or the
pier site.
He sa' · ~ i~ simply much more
of a nee• · there than in any other
gectkln c~ "ily.
"The nf'. for the child ren, w11s the
key to our vole." he said .
He pointed out that the newer reaiden-
liitl developments in Newport Beach dn
provide ma n y recreational amenities
that are not available in the older es-tablished areas. '
A second rE"ason for the del ay ~ught
by the city in its decision ls lo clear up
a technicality in the deed granted tn the
i:ity by the Irvine Company for East-
bJu ff Pa rk.
A restriction irr the documenl prnvide!I
lhat only a Jibrar.v or a community cen-
ter cou ld be erttted nn Uie property,
Hnwever, a company representative.
Michael L. ~anahan .. community affairs
manager, sa id he did not think there
would be any problem in obta ining com-
p11ny approval ror the clubhouse On the properly.
A ~un:iber of members of the Bluff~ Assoc1all~n board. of d!r~tors attending
the . meeti ng, while lnttiRlly expressin)f
hes tlance over the use, later sRid they
would support the project in the ir area.
They had t'xpressed concern over Its
Another Chief
Sought in Grove
~arden Grove 1~ looking for a new
JIOhct chler for the secnnd Ume in three' i)'ears.
Geor~' Tell!!ir.h rei1igned ea rlier this
month to: becn~e held nf Seattle's 1.250-
man forct. Capt. lAure.nce Marshall is
currenUy actlng chief.
1'he la~! time Garden Grove went
thmugh the lengthy selection p~ss
Tielsch wa~ hired In su~d Charle~
Mlth8Ues wM had resigned tn become
Fount1in V111ty·~ fim police chler.
Oct . 16 is the deadline for appllcaUons
for J.M. posl and M?leclion is expected to
lake at least IWO months.
No~e lis t a Student
DETROIT (AP) -Myno Dreytr. who
•·•s barn in 1884 and wrote 1 novel e.n·
lllltd "B<ck<>nlng Hands" publilh!i! lO
yur.1 a~o. his en.rolled as 1 freshman Al
Wayne St.ate Unlver<y. Mrs. Dre.yer i.!I
t1klna creative wrlUni to polish htt 1klll1
in ho~ of resuming a writlllf career.
She u:ld aht wa1 nearing completion of
• mystery oovel.
<
compatibility with the area and the po-
tential traffic problems.
They were a.uured by club nfficials
that older membui, those HI to l& years
old who drive cars. only use tbr: facili-
ties irregularly, such as for dances at
night.
Republicans
Hike County
Vote Margin
Voter registration in Orange Cpunty
has reached an all time higli and
Republicans continue to increase their
Jead over Democrats.
Voter!! eligible IB ca!t ballots in the
Nov. l general e lection total 512,008.
Since laat June the total of eligible
voters in the county has increased by
more than 56,000, Of the new eligibles,
the Republicans signed up 28,000 and the
Democrata 24,200.
Jn the past lwo years the GOP has in-
creased its superiority from 6.1,000 lo
almost 84,000.
' the 34th Congressional District
where Rep. Richard T. Hanna fl}.
Westm!nster) is aga in b a t t I i n I
Republican William J . Teague of G1rden
Grove, the Democratic edge has decreas-
ed.
In the ~district which include!! pa rt nf
Lns Angeles County. lhe Democra tic
margin is 24,272 compared to 25,817 two
year!! agn.
Most Orange Cnast communities con-
ti nue to show he11vy Republican· leaning.•.
Huntington Beach figures are GOP
24,641 to 21,12R; Founlain Valley, 6,522 to
5.2711 : Seal Beach, 10,065 to 1,324 .
·Only Westminster and Los AlamitM are
in the Democratic camp: Westminate:r
shows Democrats leading 12,"50 to 9,149.
Los Alamitos is 2,049 to 1,775.
Bnth Orange C o a s t 11upervisorial
districts show GOP majorities. The Fiflh
District (Costa Mesa, Newport and
Laguna and the unincorporated are•~ tn
the east and south of the coast) is 79,645
In 38,7611.
The Second District <Huntington Beach,
Westminster. pa.rt of Garden Grove . Seal
Beach and Los Alamitos) is $6,977 to
54,913.
Former Coast
Man Receives
Jail Sentence
A former Newport Beach m111 who
f11ces Orange Coun ty Superior Court se~tencing on manslaughter chargu
stemming from lhe death of hi!! !ltepson
wall ordered by a San Bernardino Coonty
Superior Court jut'lge Monday to serve up
to 10 years in state prison for the abuse
ol his three-month-old natural son.
Judge Henry M. Busch set that term
for Michael Leroy Shear, 24, formerly nf
2327 Marga ret St .. and nnw of Ontarkl.
after studying a diagnostic report com·
piled 11.t the state's Otino faeility.
Tha t report, u id .Judge Busch, co m·
pelled him to commit Shear to pri~n on
charges nf lnnicting corporal punis hment
on a child. Shea r had e1rlier pleaded
guilty to two counts.
Shear was 11rrested 1fter doctors •I an
Ontario hospital drew the attention nr
polict. t.o injuries suffered by little Eric
Shear. The child is still receiving hosplt1I
treatment for injuries suff ered in 1 series
of btalings.
Shear is scheduled lo apptar Oct. I
before OrMge County Supe.rlor Court
Judgt James F .• Judge ror sentencing on
charges redu~ from the orll:ln1l
murder complaint to i n v o 1 u n t a r y
mans laughter.
Shear admitted he was responsible for
injuries 1uffer'ed. by thla two.yu r-old
1tepson, Patr:lck Tudor. at the Margartt
Slr~t address: May 11, 1961. The little
boy died tn lhe bathtub in clrcumstanc~
that led Newport Beach polict to prt!lll
their inqWrlts into tht incident.
lt was 1t..-fint thought thal injuries on
the. child's body were inflicted by firemen
who unsuCCW1futly Iou1ht to revive the
drowned child.
J udge Judge will h1 v Judge Busch'•
report and the m ull.!I of !he atudy com-
piled by Chino olficlals before him Oct. a.
Wll!Wn J. Str111br141o ol Philadelphio
Ind s. BrilP . Dl1loll Ind J .......
1llrlnnl Jr., 1..,. .-.w ~111 New
ALMON LOCKAllY'S ACCOUNT
01' RI.Cl ON PAGE 12 TODAY
York Y•cht Club aetlvitte:i; •
The three Were m1jor members of the
1970 Intrepid 1yndlcate which was
dluolvtd lndoy.
Members ol the new syndlcole did not
aay wbf:lher they plan to bulldtr-new lZ.
. moter bolll. -· the!' did ...,....
ll>ot lnU.pld II ,. be '°""' bodt .. Min-
ne.ford Yacht Yant, City Island, N. Y ..
and that she wlll be made available; i(
needed as 1 future trial hors!.·
Presumably, • decision on whether to
build a new boat will await challenge., for
the ~America'a CUp. Under New York
Yacht Club rules ch1ll~n1ps mwt be
!orlhcomin& wlth!Jl 30 doys ol Mondoy'1
SEQUEL TO FIRE ...
ho!'1eS bock iftlo the blocke ntd hilla ln>m
a sreen trf!f! lined residential aanctuary
acl'Oll Collin.a Rold. t
Friends In nelshboring towns told ta.lea
of the repeated horrors ol tht p,-evious
nlsht'1 blaze. SwlmmJ.ni pool ',fitter.
couldn't handle the ash that dropped
from I.he akiea. Most hillside' home.a from
Rowland Hei1ht.1 to Diamond Bar
escaped d1m11e. though brush aur~
rounding them w11 blackened.
One horse farm alMI Brea Canyon
Cutoff lo.st a barn and smallish c1bln.
REFINERY ESCAPES
A Nike missile site and a Shell Oil
refinery hidden in the hills above Brei
t.!tc1ped the fb.mes, thoulh al least one
oil 1torage tank exploded. Sunday af-
ternoon.
As that ominou!I cloud darkened the
sky, a lire watcher'• reunion began again
at the e.nd of Acacia Hill drive in mid-
DiaR.ond Bu .
Husbands who hid left for work in the
morning had been called home by ans:-
inua wives , 1ome as early as noon. Others
who stayed to wet down roof's and wR lch
tht. fire fighlr:rs outwit the flames,
reported the day·1 evenU.
All were glad their pictu resque scenery
had been s;i verl, thankful their anxiet ies
we re unfounded. and concerned for those .
11round them who still fa ced the fire
threats.
But none removed the hoscs they'd
readied on roofs, nr the aprinklers lhey'd
spiked into cedar shake shi ngles.
Police Seeking
Newport Market
Holdup Suspect
Newport Beach police today i re ~k
ine the lone gunman who held up a west
Newport market Monday morning.
The robbery waa the second in thru
days. Th~ first occured early Saturday
mDrning \1. the Travelodge Motel in
Newport.
Police uid 1118 wall takt n from· the Stnp
and Go Markel, M60 W. Coaat Highw1y
by 1 min who was. described as beini;::
about :tO years old, sis: feet, two inche.~
I.All and weighln1 225 pounds. The suspec;t
had dark , medium length hair and
sideburns.
The suspect apparently enl.ered thP.
small !'It.ore 11t 1boul 11 :30 a.m. 11nd
brnwsed throua:h the greeting card
display, pnlice s1id.
He chatted with owner Rnbert Barker.
2.'i. of Anaheim, until !ht store was empty
of customer11.
At that point he pulled a bag from his
rear panl, pocket ind tog,,ed it nn the
counter t.op, demanding that Barker fill it
with money.
B1rker told investigators the man also
iiulled up his shirt tail, revaaling what
appeared lo bf. the h11ndle of a revnlver.
With the eo1tin1 of f1lfln1 uh and
tan&le of garden holes lylnc about, .ome
homes 11ve the impression ol a war
mne, except that 1\1 haid been •pared the
bombed-out look of hornet in other fire-
ravaaed ire.as.
By nine Monday evenln1, Diamond Bar
was quiet, the 1treeta were empty and
most homes darkened.
Frot11 Pqe 1
EGYPT .. •
apparent, no man of atature to ~wne
his .. rnle u leader of the Arab world. His
death l!fluld bring further woes t.o -Israel,
for ·~ made fiery ~peeche.J bul he urged
moderation and accepted the conce pt of a
negotiated pe1ce.
Ni ue.r's death came as a major blow
to the Nixon administration for he was
the one leader considered 1 stabllizin1 i.fl-
nuence in lhe Middle East. tl could mein
the end of the Americ.1n peace initiative
which led Nasser to agree to a l!klay
cease-fire -the end of A moderate in-
fluence and the possibli rise of·Jeftwi ng
Arab milltant.s.
There was apprehension RI the. United
Nations where diploma ta ei:pressed con-
cern over the selection of his possible
su ccessor. By Jaw the national as11embly
dominated hy Nas!<er's Arab Sociali st
Union must name a succe11sor withi n 60
d1ys .
Grief in the Ara b wnrld was unive rsal
-even in Iraq where Na!!ser wa~
popul ar with the masses but not with the
ruling Baathist Party men. He had dif-
ficulty with the Syrians, too. but Syri1n
head of state Noureddin Al-At111si said in
.11 sta tement "the Arab nation lost a great
fighter and courageous leader whn !!pen t
all his life fighting to realiu the goals of
the Arab m11sses."
In Beirut, Le banese youth s ventin~
thei r grief se t up roadblocks on. major
routes leading to the city and cut th e
road to Beirut Airport in an apparttit ef-
fort to force the n1tion to a standstill in
mourning. The city of Tripoli began a
1eneral strike to expres,; Its sorrow.
The day in Beirut WI ! punctuated by
rifle shots in the air -a traditional Arab
expression of mourning. On the ou tskirts
nf the city one grou p of Palestinian com-
mandos fired dea fening burst'! of morl ar,
rocket pnd machine.gun fi re.
Rifle-carrying Lebanese gendarmes
ptitrolled the stretts of Beirut tn ,prevent
further destruction by pro · N a s ~er
demonstralors. Gua rtl!! at the Amer icAn
Embassy went on alert fnr a po11slble at·
tack by emotional crowds. People wept
openly.
An irony of Na s!ler·s death was that he
had just brought Jordan's King Hussein
ilnd guerrilla Je1der Yaser Arafat
IC>gelher in Cairo and forged an agree-
ment to end the civil war there, When
friends reminded him nf 1 previous. and
ne ver announced, heart 11lt1ck he replied,
"Men, women al'ld children are dyin g in
Jordan : We are jn 11 race with death ."
And with his death both Amman rJ1dio
and the Palestinian guerrilla radio in
Oamascus 11topped their charges and
countercharges to bro1dcasl readings
from the Kora n, 1 11ign of mourn ing for
the de11d,
Truth··
final 1970 race. Normally, actual racing
ia condl.lCf.ed only ooce every thrM ye.an •
lt is known that another Amtrlcan 1yn·
dic1te 1TU1de \ip ur Southern Callfo1'1't1•
yRc.htsmen 'i:J 'being(Orga.nized with the
•nnounced pUrpose ot barking an alt-West
GQ;_ast defender of the Amer-ica's Cup,
possibly in IQ73.
It 'oras not clea r whether ricker would
take 1.he helm of the Eastern l!yndicate
yacht. or the new,. boat planned by the
Weat Co.a:St (l'OUp.
...
;For Four
H~spitals
Proposa ls fo r four health facllltlet will
be-reviewed at 11 hearing by the Compre·
he nsive Health Planning As11ociat1on's
fa cilities committee tonight al 7 1'J·clock
in Cast Mesa ~ity Council Cha mber!!,
The cQmmitl.ee wi11 consider a propo8al
by the UC Irvine College of Medicine to
build a 350-bed general hospital school.
Construction on the project is scheduled
lo begin in Jilly 1973.
Cost8 Mesa Memorial Hospital. will be
requestin an addition of RO beda to the
existi ng 99 bed facility.
A 152-bed convalescent hospital , Foun-
tainbleau Nursing Center, will Jropose
the use of 80 of the beds for long-term
piychiatric care.
Btverly Manor Sanilarlum, Orange, 1.~
Reeking to change its total numbet of
beds from 150 to 142 iind assign 78 nf
those to the care of alcoholics with the
remaihil'lg 6~ beds forlong term psychia-
tric CRre.
The facilities cnmmi ttee has the power
to ;ipprove nr deny the reque~ls. accord-
ing to st;i te law. Without committee ap-
proval, state licenses will not be granted.
Car Rams Pole;
Dana. Man Hurt
A Dana Pn int man is scheduled lo bP
released today ffom Hnag Memorial
Hospital 11.ftter his car hit 1 traffic signal
pole in Newport Beach early Monday
morning.
Police said l)cnnis B. Buckner. 21 ot
~7 1 Yacht Drive received faci;:i\ Jacera·
li ons and a root injury when the car hf!
was driving coll ided with 11 pole at the in·
1ersection of East Coast Highway and
Newport Center Drive.
Buckner tnld officers he wR!'i traveling
eastbound on th e highway when he lo,11t
control of his ca:r. The skidd ing ;i utn ap-
parently mi ssed two light standards
before hitting Uie signal light pole.
Cities Can Join
County Auctions ·
Or ange County cities 11nd 8peclal
districts will nn~· be. able lo join with the
county in sale of surplus vehicles and
other equ ipment
County Pu rchasi ng A~cnl Nathan A.
Cherry .spnnsored the supervt~r-ap
proved program afl.er receiving inquiriu
/rom several citie~.
.Previou!!ly oi;il y county.(lwned vehicles
and other ~urplus could he M:ild a:t JIUc·
tilii:is held by the purchasing dt.partment.
Cities held thei r ·nwn !!Urplus sa le!!. ·
or Consequences?
s-t;.,.. tlio trutli hurts! w. i;.., lost '" occ:aionol .. r. 6y riot t.li119 • cualornltt ""''
ho wo..+ed to I.Mr. •
W 1 might poi•! out th.I 1 custoo. would be better Off to pey • r.ttle more for our ru!;.
btf poddi•g 1111• b'!'f • che1per. mu.hy pod !hot IMk tile you or• wo~i•g o• bolloo•s. TM "bal-
looti" ped hum the <orpet bocli•g, • ..,,.. rlrelching, ...d ruiM sMmL AIM>, ti.is pocldi119
o+t.n 11.tt.m out 1flor • whilo.
Additi..,1Ay, .,.. mi9ht ton you lhot ·-corpot libort '"' ,.,.;.. · !>1'1Cl icol tlio" otliort. A
filler lhot ~ i• ""' l1rlur1, might "bomb" i• -++w. •
F..I fr.. to un '"' oclvico.' Aft of..,,. .. i.. people ,.,.. ho(! n1..;.i .. n periO!!<I in llio llrV•
'ice o..d of ti.is business -o..d ofter ol -the mort importont thi•g wo con off or, ti.II no olM Oo.s. it • .,.,a1 .. ·
r-~~ ... ~ .. ~.·.·.·.·.·ou~· .. -,~ ...
• -1'VlnN C•.,,
A.LtlN'S
nt HILL CAINTI
& DUNltlB
1074 1"""9.T ..... c•.
Ul•Jl44
ALDEN'S·
CARPETS e DRAPEs
166J Plocelltla Ave.
COSTA MESA
'4MIJI
-
17
17
I
I r
Saddlebaek . . .
' '
voe. "3, NO. 233, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAIJF()RNIA :TUESDAY, SEm;MBER 29, 1970 ' '
rson us
Egyptians
Mourning
Arab Chwf
CAIRO (UPI) -Egyptians poured into
Cairo today by train, by bus and on foot
to mourn the death of President Gamal
Abdel Nasser whose death from a heart
attack Monday threatened new chaos for
a Middle East uncertain of the present
and fearful of the future.
Nasser, 52, Jay in state in the imposing
Republican Palace in the heart of Cairo
while hundreds of thousands milled about
outside hopeful of a last look at the gray-
ing colonel who was the idol· of the Arab
masses arid whose death could bring the
Middle East once more to war.
The Soviet Union, with more at stake in
Egypt than perhaps any other nation , an.
nourr:ed it was sending Premier Alexei
N. Kosygin to Cairo today for the Thurs-
day funeral. An official statement called
Nasser "an outstanding son of the Arab
people'' and a "great friend of the Soviet
Union." It said Russian aid would con-
tinue.
President Nixon cancelled a show-of.
force exhibition by the U.S. 6th Fleet to
avoid rousing further anti-American feel-
ings in this nation caught up in an emo-
tional upbeavaL Egyptiam so wary of
Israel that a maximum alert was called
by military leaden along the SUez Canal
cease-llre line.
How Nasser's death would affect Nix-
on'• European tour was not certain but
his visit to Xuaosloavia was set for
Wednesday and arrangements may have
to be changed. Presideot Tito, an old
comrade of Nasser's, was ezpected to Oy
to Cairo for the funeral; the YugoslaV'
cabinet met today to discuss the si(u.
tion.
Nixon himself was not expected to go to
Cairo but it was believed he might send
Secretary of State William P. Rogers,
now with him in the Mediterranean.
Egypt, Syria and Jordan declared a 40-
day official period of mourning and the
Arab world which had met Nasser so
many times in summitc onlerences to
discuss operations against I s r a e I
prepared to aend its tings and presidents
back to cairo for a final farewell
Vice President Anwar El Sadat SUC•
ceeded Nasser as presiaent Wlder the
Egyptian constitution but it appeared
certain a major power struggle would
develop for his sua:essor. The fear in
some parts of the world was that hot-
blooded young anny officers might take
over with the prospect of endless war.
Sadat bimseU ia considered a leftist foe
of Israel.
One ·fact remained : There is no heir
a'.pparent, no man· of stature to assume
(See EGYPT, Pase %)
Cyclist Injured
In Crash, Skid
A late-evening ride on a motorcycle
reSuJted in injuries to a ti-year old san
Clemente man Monday after his cycle
swerved into a parked car, Oipped onto
its aide and skidded for 33 feet down the
roadway.
Police said Sam Michael Barrile of 142
Loma Lane was injured at 8:11 p.m. in
the 200 block of Calle Santa Barbara.
Barrile swerved Into a car owned by H.
N. Abelsen of 220 Santa Barbara.
Police said the man, who suffered
abrasions and·posaible head injuries, was
taken unconsc:IOUI to South Coast Com-
munity Hospital. -•
•
Be&C!hing Goal
Don Engdalh, 37, Santa Rosa,
trudges along Imperial Beach
near San Diego on his way to .
his goal at California-Mexico
border •. Engdahl, a newspaper
reporter, is completing a con-
servationists walk along 1,200_
miles otPacific shoreline. See
story, ~age 7.
Tot Takes Pills
In San Clemente
Race With Death
As firemen grimly worked to keep him
awake, a 2-year~ld San CJemente toddler
was rushed to South C.Oast Hospital in
South Laguna Monday afternoon after
swallowing a large amount of h i s
mother's tranqaili:zers.
And the swift emergency treatment by
San Clemente firemen was succe5.'lfu1 for
young John A. Badaracco of 238 Calle
Aragon. The baby. who apparently
swaUowed a large amount of the pills
sometime near 2 p.m., soon went into
convulsions.
His mother, Nancy Durkin, phoned for
help through the city's new 911 emer·
gency line.
Firemen said the baby had lapsed into
unconsciousness before they arrived, but
inhalation and other techniques brought
him awake again.
The measures were continued as the
boy was taken to the hospital in a fire
department station wagon. At South
Coast, aides said the baby's stomach was
pumped and the boy was recovering.
Five Doctors Worked
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -The five
doctors who treated Egyptian President
Gama1 Abdel Nasser for his fatal heart
attaCk Monday night spent 15 m'.inutes
~: !:J,~1;! ~~:~n~e~~:~ ~:
day.
When the efforts proved unsuccessful
they ·burst into. tears and, air present at
Nasser's 'bedside then knew th1rtbe pres.
ident had pa!!Jed ·away, the report, quoted
by Cairo Radio, said.
Showers
Predicted
In Hot State
By ARTllUR R. VINSEL
OI 1111 De1tY '"" SNltf ,
Dying winds and predicted rain show-
ers today brought hope to firefighters ex-
hausted by five days in heU, battling a
muJtl.front bolocuast whose scars will
still be ...., by your great-grandclllldmi,
100 years from now,
Tbe series of fires -including one in
San Diego County conceded to be the
worst in recorded . California history -
have 110 far killed eight per90n.5 and caU!-
ed almost incalculable damage.
Estimates ran today to $175 million and
California was declared a disaster area,
thus 'qualifying thou.sands of homeless
victims for ~ow-interest government
loans.
During the five-day siege in six coun-
ties, the fight qainst·n&mes has Included
the newest in technology -from an
amphibious tanker pllne. -that sucks up
seawater -to bucteta and bare hands.
Some firemen have slept ooly five
hours in the whole five days.
Even women and childrm helped aave
the San Diego Counly moonla!n Tillage ol
Julian, pounding names with sacb,
blankets and ·~ ~· sfnmpl"' oul the sparks. . •
"It w~ the IDOll amazing tllint I' ..
ever seen," aaii:l a firefighter from
Monterey. -MI ~ it was the
Vohmteer Fire ~t amW I saw
the ladies and kids.''
He-was one of tboasandll -elgllt no1'
dead, 25 Wioualy Injured and 500 treated
for eye frritation -summoned from as
far as Montana and even out of Calllon'rla
prisoQll to help. '
The situation eased somewhat today
with higher humidity, i-ning winds
and forecast ralnll, but the possibility of
pyromaniacs setting new fires continued
to be a menace.
Several pel'90DS have been arrested on
suspicion of arson.
Ironically, next Sunday is the beginning
of National Fire Prevention Weei:.
EJ:perts in the field of natural ecology,
meanwhile, warned of a new horror when
winter storms strike the fire-ravaged
areas -especially in San Diego County
-unless they are quickly re-seeded.
"The east part of the. county could
become a horror of floods· and mudslides
if we don't get grass in and growing,"
(See FIRES, Pqe I)
Brig Escapees
Nabbed by Police
A pair of alleged fUiiUves from the
Camp Pendl-brig lost !heir short few
hours of freedom in San Clemente Mon-
day night because of curious detectives
on routine patrol.
Police said the two escaped marine
convicts were arrested on the El Camino
Real onramp of the San Diego Freeway
shortly before 10 p.m. by two detectives.
Officen·said tbe men were questioned
about possibly being a-t without
leave.
Subsequent checks revealed that the
pair, Bobby Tyrone Griffith, 20, and
Rickie Glen Gordon~ 17.'.bad auertecUy
Oed the brig earlier in the evening.
The two Marines were r<tumed to
milllary aulborilies. · ,
-
• ID
Fires at Glan~e
Here ls a brief glance at the locatlons, extent of control and known de-
struction cauaed by S separate brush and timber fires thrOugbout C¥ifornia.
SAN DIEGO COUNTY -The worst autumn fire in Ca llfornla history
was nearlnc containment after charring 200,000 acres, while four smaller
blazes in the same area destroyed 15,000 acres.
SAN GABRIEL CANYON -Firemen gained the upper hand due to
dying winds, but five were killed Monday night when their helicopter crashed
en route to the 4,000-acre blue.
MAIJBU -The devaatatlng fire here, which merged at one point with
the Newhall blue, was diminishing after firemen 'gained the upper hand, but
t0,000 acres have been burned over.
~AN B,FRNARDINO ,COlJNTY -Flames licked over 7,000 acres in
Meyer s C8Q100, but dropping Santa Ana winds gave firemen a break.
SAN LUIS OBISPO COUNTY-A blaze north of here and near Highway
1 was under control after IS,000 acres were charred.
MONTEREY COUNTY -Burning in the hills between Willow Creek and
Salmon Creek on the picturesque coast, the fire has burned more than 12,000
acres and threatens a stand of California redwoods. Highway 1 remains open
but hazardous due to large rocks cracked off cliffs by 1he heat tumbling to
the pavement.
KERN COUNTY -Firelines were holding up on a 32,500-acre brush fire
southeast of BakerSrield, with almost all its 45-mile perimeter encircled by
!~fighters. A second fire near Red Mountain has ravaged 17,000 acres of
timberland . ·
MARIPOSA COUNTY -A smaller fire was contained Monday night
after bum~g 1,820 acres, but flames destroyed1 power lines eliminating elec-
trical service to Mariposa and Yosemite National Park.
Laguna Firemen Watch
Brush-covered Canyo11s
With Southern California in tinderboJ: The fire chief cautioned adult.I to be
cqodlUon and J1M?b of it ~; Laguna careful Gt their. backyard barbecuel land
9'0ch firemen and polle<! are-keepln& a an)'lb!ni else that ml#JI sport a<fU.: !lo
• •-l70'°'"' the brusb -c& urged them to caulion tlijlr cblldren allo
)'Ol1I and perimeter of the town. -about fire safety, particularly durin& the
•'The grau and brush are so dry It's current dry, low humidity period.
almost like powder, .. said Fire Chief LaUmer said that Laguna's three fir•
James Latimer today. stations will serve as collection points for
Latimer said firemen are conducting a persons wilhlng to contribute to the -hon;
regular fire ~trol in Laguna Canyon, up dreds in Southern California who have
B I u e bi rd C a n y o n Drive, the Cou.n. Jost their homes and possessions. '
tryman Estates area and other fire-He said items needed for the flre vie.-
hazard locations. Patrollng police offiCers Urns include clothing bedding and non.
are assisting in this, said Latimer, perishable food staple's.
Saddleback Trustee
Blasts Press Charges
By PAMELA RAil.AN
Of "'9 D•lfJ ~ll•t lt•tf
Hans Vogel, president of the Sad·
dleback College board of trustees, blasted
the press Monday for what he termed
unwarranted charges of wasting the tax-
payers money.
The issue came up when the board was
Wonned that the Orange County
counsel's office had asked for an ex-
pedited appeal · on :the dr'ess code con-
tfoversy in the Ninth Circuit U.S. Court
of Appeal.
0 'nle board had been criticized for
spending the taxpayers' .funds on this
ciise," said Vogel. "But"in .fact, the board
h8a spent only l500 with . 1175 for the
services: of the county counsel. Generally
it's the attorney's fees that are costly,
isn't that right?" he asked, smiling at
board member Michael <Xlllins, an at-
torney. '
"The point ls the county cowmel is on
the payroll for us. lt is an expenditure
that ls not as expensive as many would
envision," he said.
. Vogel sakl he aiao wanted, to reiterate
why they were pursuing the case. He said
the board ls now appealing to the same
three-man body that ruled in lheir favor
in April .
He sal~ in February Judge Harry
Ferguson of the U.S. District Court plac-
ed restraining orders allowing five
students to enroll at Saddleback despite
their violations of the dress code. Since
that time, the Mission Viejo Junior
college has not enforced the dress code.
"We appealed to remove th i s
restraining order am were auceessful.
Judge Ferguson was told. he s1Jiu1d not
have Wued the restraining order because
the case of individuals was weak," Saia
Vogel.
"~ three-man court of ·appeals
bl'Ollght It back to the judge and he ruled
a:galnst UI." Vogel said he didn't think it
Wtfair to now bring the appeal b8ck to
the three-man court that orilinally ruled
ror them.
Vogel stated that the issue ii not hair
or anything else relating to the dress
code. 'It ls who runs'the local 1Chools, the
fOderal judges or il1e locll board.
Spokesmen there said Barrile was
re~d after emergency treatment.
Last Hijacking
Hostages Free
Judge Sets H:earing Date Youth Football
' .
Prograni Set Up
The t.aiuna Beach Recrutlon Depart.
A d D • Plead N G iJ, • G nd Thef ment Is sponsoring a Oag football pro-~CUSe eputr.es . ot U ty r.n ra t iiram for boy• ·1n the third lbroUgb 1ath
grades. GENEVA (UPI) -The lnterna-
Uonal Cmmmlttee of !ho Red Cross Two Orange County Sheriff'• deputies
IZUl(JllTICed tonight the nmalnlng IO<ll>ed of burglartzing the Mlsalon Viejo
tix airline hoo!lallff held by Counlr)' Club today pl,.ded Innocent In
Palenlne perrillas have been Santa Ana MunicipalCourt to dw:g,. ol
freed and are all 11fe. All are grand theft •nd burJl!ry.
Americans, Juclgo Eugene G. Lln&ha-ordered
A Red Croa llltement aald new1 Arthur E. Duncan; $1, ol tta'Maui Cir-
o( the release of the hostages was cle, Huntington Beach and Ffeclerlck B.
tent to headquarters ln Geneva bf --liWie, 40, orta Ha6ra to face
the lnt.ent1Uonal Red E:ross delega.. preliminary hearing Nov. 6. Both men
µon in Amman. are tree on bail.
There were no Immediate IUJ>'" Both former deputies had to brave the
plement.Jry details. glare of television lighting and the
equally lnteme 1Iares ol Kveral lonner
collel(Uel 11 they entered and left Judge
LanghaU1er'1 criDilnal -c 1J1 n de r -Irvine -to -Ille -and left barTldly with hJa lllarney. Dunclll
healllled, bepn. to ~ to ..........
and then .... -bJ 1111 lowyer not
to commeni "" Ille -Both-lllOll ---lnsldi !ho golf shop of the Mlsolon Viejo Counlr)' Club
last Stpl. 20 after the uplcloul JOI! pro
saw them on the pmnilel and called
aherJfl'1 omcers.
lnvutlptor1 Ill•• lfolen 10Hln1
equipment Ind 1 .. erol cues of llqUCll' ' RA!glairltlon of ~ll)'trl wtll cl ... Frk
were fOUDd In the IOCW!ty veblcle uoecl . day and the boys will be or11111l!ed Into.
by the two men to patrol the .area u teams during the week of Oct. 5-1, with
security (lllrda for the MJalon Vlijo ~~~~-"':i1/'"be ~: Company. "t'6 ..... ..,.. •-
Oulleln tumndered when coofninted ell '&t .Allao, El Mom> and ·Top ol the
by lherlll'I olficen liUI Irvine toot: over World Elementiry Schools. AU games
a patrol car o< gunpoint and led oltlcers li'\11 be played Iller llChool ond will end,
on 1 wild dlue that ended In Riverside before the fillll ldlool bul leavri the
County 1lter Irvine lhrea~ more -ochool l!OIJ!lda each dljo. ,
thAn two houri to commit l!Ulclde. Enlr)' fonnl 1"")' be obtolned 1t lht
Riverside County 1utborltla may .odd elemenjory ochool1 or from the Recre1·
ch1rie1 of ..,.ult with a deadly we1p0n lion Department 11 175 N. , Coa1t .
to tho11 already foced by Irvine. Hlpway.
.,, . .. '
. N.Y. Steelu ·
' TEN CENTS
azes
Brush Fires
In County
Controlled
Orange County had some good news
and some bad news on the flre front to-
day.
The good news was that the fires whlcti
ha ve blackened 4,000 acres in the count.Y,
are all. under contro~)
The bad news is that arson is suspected
in 15 to 20 of the fires which raged over
the last weekend, including the 500-acre
El Toro blaze.
Wally Trotter, chief of the Orange
County Fire Presvention Bureau, a.aid
two teams are probing .the ember1
searching for clues to arson. "The leads
are slim but We hope we are making
some headway," the chief 1aid.
The El Toro area blaze which broke out
last Friday and burned over 500 acres
threatening .homes in the Lale Forht
and El Toro area is the subject of in-
tensive investigation, Trotter said.
' . Friday, the day the El Toro · flre1 started, witnesses &aw a small fire and ·
people running from it, the fire official
reported. They tried to stop the persons
who started the lire but failed.
"We found a devlce there which could
have been used' to .,tart the fire," Trotter
said.
The 3,000-acre Trabuco Canyon flre ts
also under invesUgaUon as to cause.
All day Monday fire teams patrolled
the scorched mountain a r e a s ex-
Jlt» llNlidwltc· or tianUn1 ' ' .
O'Ne!U Park; \fhlclo ,... -b1
the Tr1cuCo blaze will be cloeed until
Friday, count)' oafcials ltated.
Marines Facing
~urt i_n Laguna
Shooting Charge
Two Camp Pendleton Marines accused
of shooting a lf.year-0ld Lagunan are to
be arraigned in Superior Court Oct. 9 on
chargea of robbery and assault with in·
tent to commit murder.
The two, KeMeth Ray Starks, 19 and
Virgil L. McCoy, 20, are accused of
shooting Lawrence Michael Bornman, 19
of 475 N. c.oast Highway on June 11.
Bornman underwent surgery t o r
removal of a bullet from bis armpit.
Judge Richard Hamilton dismissed ad-
ditional kidnaping charges against the
pair during a four-day preliminary ex·
amillJl.tion in municipal court.
Witnesses during .the hearing testified.
to seeing men struggleing In the back seat'
of a four-door sedan. Bornman had told
police he escaped from the car when It
stopped at Myrtle Street and Pacific
Coast Highway. The Marines were ar-
rested later at a San Clemente road
block.
Barge Canal Halted
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -Secretary of the
lnteror Walter J. Hickel has signed a
petition seeking a temporary halt to con-
strucµon of the controversial Croa Flor-
ida Barge Canal.
· l\'e•tlter
' That patchy fog and low cloud•
will be back to haunt the cout
Wednesday morning, with mercury
readings dipping back into the '1'0'1
on the shore and up lo 85 further
inland.
lNSmE TODAY
The dtath of £0V1J&'s Nasser
Ztaoei the Arab worJd bfreft of
a tcadtr, For an in-dcpt1' too le:
at the life of lilts controvcrsicl
figure; Jf!C Page a. I
. i f l
'
· I
I
I OA.ILY PI LOT SC TutKlolf, SfpttmW 2', 1970
Road Pregram
Laguna Street
Planning Told
By BAJlBAllA KREIBJCH
Ot "'-D•lly PllM 11•11
Examining plans tor an amendment to
~guna 's precise plan of 11rterial streeU
Monday evening, planning commiS$ioners
learned that the Cam.Pus Drive extension
through Boat Canyon probably is 10 years
awar,, but extension of AIL.a Laguna
Bou evard from Top or the World tn Arch
Beach Heights may be undertaken in the
latter part of 1971.
Both arterials are part of the county's
tong.range road planning program and
commissioners were asked to approve
plans for those segments that will be
Jocat~·within Laguna's city limil.l'i.
Riddle Field, home of Laguna's Little
League. seems likely to be a casualcy o(
the Campus Dri\'e extension. but plan-
ners recommended that, if the field could
nol be saved, it should be relocated 'A'hen
the road is put in.
Commission Chairman William Lam·
bourne noted that when Riddle Field v.·as
put in. the possibility of a future road in
the area already was known. The
decision. Lambourne said, was to use the
field as long as possible and relocate it in
I.he event of road construction.
Commissioner Robert Hastings also ex -
pressed corl(ern that the extension of
Hillcrest Drive .across Boat Canyon
should be preserved.
Irv Berman of the city engineering
department said it is the intention of the
State r5iVision of Highways to keep
Hillcrest Drive open. He also said that a
Campus Drive interchange with the
future inland freeway is included in state
highway plans.
The plan for Campus Drive, as
presented to the commission, shows a
·single roadway extending toward ~ast
Highway to approximately the location of
Riddle FieJd. at whi ch point it would
divide into two branches. one on either
side of the paved &at Canyon shopping
center. taking northbound and south·
bound tr8ffic to the highway.
In re sponse to a query from Com·
missioner Carl Johnson. City Planner Al
Autry said that approval of the •eneral
precise plan fo~ the Campus ?r1~e e~
tension was being sought at Uns time tn
order to preserve right-of-way and avert
costly developments in the path of the
future road.
Detailed engineering had not been com·
From Page I
EGYPT ...
his rnle as leader of Ille ·Ar~b world. His
death could bring further woes tn Israe.I,
fo r he made fiery speeches but be urged
moderation and accepted the concept of a
negotiated peace. .
Nasser's death .came as a maJor blow
to the Nixon administration for he was
the one leader considered a stabilizing in ·
fluence in the Middle East. It could mean
the enO of the American peace initia!ive
which led Nasser to agree to a 91}.day
cease-fire -the end of 11. moderate in·
f\uenct and the possible rise of leflwing
Arab militants .
There was apprehension al the United
Nations where diplomats expressed con -
cern over lhe selection of his possible
successor. By !aw the national ai!!lembly
dominated by Nasser's Arab Socialisl
Union must name a succtssor 'A'ithin 60
da ys.
Grier in the Arab world was uni\'ersal
-even in Iraq where Nasser was
popd\ar with the masses but not with l~e
ruling Baathist Party men. He had d1f·
ficully vdth the Syrians. too, bul Syrian
head of state Noureddin Al-Atassi said in
a stalement ,;the Arab nation lost a great
fighter and courageous leader who spent
all his life fighting to realize the goals of
the Arab masses ."
In Beirut , Lebanese youths ventin g
their grief sel up roadblocks on majnr
routes ~eading to the city and cut the
road to Beirut Airport In an apparent ef·
fort to force the nation In a standstill in
mourning. The city of Tripoli began a
general strike to express its S(lrrow.
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pleted. Autry u.ld, and the plan would bt
subject to some re\'ision prior to actual
construction which probably wou ld not
take pl1ce for 10 years.
With the recommendation lhal Riddle
Field be retained or relocated, and that
Hillcrest Drive be kept .eperf, the plan
was recommended for approval by the
City Council.
Extension or Alla Laguna Boulevard
across the l'idge lo Arch Beach Heighl.5 is
a much more immediale project , plan·
ners learned.
An engineer fnr the Orange County
Rnad Department said it has been
scheduled for 1970-1 and it is hoped ccin-
~truction can be undertaken between
August and November of 1971.
Hastings noted that the need for l'I con-
nection between the two hi 11 top
developments has been pointed up by the
recent tires and the Alta Laguna ex·
tension is "very necessary."
Acting city manager Joseph Sweany
nnted lhat lhe Laguna Beach County
Water District intends lo put a water
main along the new segment of Alt.a
Laguna , which would facilitate fire.
fighting operations in the hill areas.
The project was unanimously recom·
mended for city approval.
Hotline Open
In Clemente
For Problems
A new telephone-counseling service or-
fering the chance to dJal 492-82.1.5 for help
has been opened by a group of San
Clemente volunteers.
The new service. which will offer he.Ip
fnr problems ra nging from drugs, un-
wantted pregnancy, suicide and venerea I
disease. is the creation of San Cleinente
businessman Bud Scheele, who said the
volunteers will man phones at a new
center for six hours each evening, !hen
will be available through an exchange the
resl of each day.
The first-ever hotline service for San
Clemente will be on an anonymous basis
if callers re.quest it and will include chan-
neling legitimate problems to public
agencies and individuals who specialize in
specific problems.
Scheele said if the program i11 1ue-
cusful -and 60 rtlore volunteers can be
found -• personal counseling service
mighl be. implemented with the plan.
Jf the counselors become reality, two
more rooms near a present 011e-roo,m of·
fice would be added to accommodate
private counseling.
The usual number of crank or er·
roneous calls are expected u the pro-
gram is launched, Scheele 1dmitted,
"because we assume some people just
want to see if we're for real."
'fhe insurance and real estate brnker
said the grou p of volunteers also expect
calls ranging from advice to lovelorn to
automotive repair problems at first.
For the legitimate caller with a grip-
ping problem , howe ver, Scheele promised
valid attempts to help. include channeling
specific cases to appropriate experta for
altempls for solution.
The limes for the call service will be.
from 4 to 10 p.m. weeknights: calls com·
ing in at other times will be transferred
to volunteers who will be on stand-by du·
ly.
The volunlerrs are a cross-section of
citiiens, Scheele explained , and include
housewives, studenLs , members of the
clergy, teachers, businessmen and a.
psychologist.
Car Rams Pole;
Dana. Man Hurt •
A Dan• Point man is scheduled W bf.
rdeased today from Hoag Memorial
Hospital 11rtter his car hit 111 traffic signal
pole in Newl;M)rt Beach early Monday
morning. r
Police said Dennis B. Ruckne..r. 21 of
25371 Yacht Drive received facial lacera-
tions and a root injury when the car he
was driving collidtd with a. pole at tht in·
te.rsectinn of East Co.asl High·way and
Newport Center Drive.
Buckner told offlctrs he was tra vt?ling
eastbound on the highw11y when he lost
contrnl of his r:11r. The skidding auto ap-
parently missed two light standards
before hitting lhe signal light pole.
Citizens Discuss
Atom Plant Site
'
READY FOR ANOTHER GO
Cup Skipper Ficker
Ficker Agrees
To Be Skipper
' In 1973 Race
NEWPORT. RJ. (AP) -Victorious
skipper Bill Ficker of Intrepid agreed t~
day to take the helm of a new cup
defender if the U.S. defends the historic
Amerlca·s Cup aga in in 1973.
Several members of the synd icate thal
backed Intrepid in this yea.r's 21st suc-
cessful defense nf the yachting trophy an·
nounced agreement to fonn a new syn-
dicate.
Ficker and his crew defeated Gretel J[
of Aust ralia 4-1 in a series that ended
Monday 10 miles off this yachting center.
ALMON LOCKABEY'S ACCOUNT
OF RACE ON PAGE 12 TODAY
The U.S. has not lost the cup since it
was first won by the schooner America in
England in 1851.
Ficker. 42. a Newport Beach architect,
was credited with a major share of this
year's victory. skippering the 3-year-<1ld
Intrepid, which was also defender against
another challenge from Australia in 1967.
The new syndicate is to be headed by
William J . Strawbridge of Philadelphia
and S. Briggs Dalzell and .J. Burr
Bartram Jr .. long associated with New
'York Yacht Club activities.
The three were major members of the
1~70 Intrepid syndicate which was
dissolved today .
Members of the new syndicate did nnt
say wheth er they plan lo build a new 12·
meter boat. However, they did announce
1hat Intrepid Is to be towed ba ck to Min-
neforQ Yacht Yard, City Island , N.Y .•
and that she will be made available if
needed as a future trial horse.
Presumably. a decision on whether lo
build a new boat will await challenge.~ fnr
the Amer ica 's Cup. Unde r New York
Yacht Club ru les cha ll enges must be
forthcoming within 30 days of Monday 's
final 1970 ract'. Normall y. act ual racing
is conducted nnly once every three years.
It i.s known that another American syn.
dicate made up of Southern California
yachtsmen is being organized with lhe
announced purpose of backing an au.west
Coast defender o( the America 's Cup,
possibly in 1!73. ,
ll was not clear 'A'hether Ficker would
IRke the helm of the Eastern synd icate
~·acht. or the new boat plaMed by the
West Coast group.
Trustees OK
Building Pl~ns
For Saddleback
Saddleback College. l.ru!llrts hRvt 1p.
proved schematic plans for their first
pe.rmllnent buildings, a $4 I million
i;cie:nce·math complex 11nri a $3.7 mHlion
Ubrary-c lassroom complex.
Plans for the .science.math facility v.•ill
Atomic plant site propGSal!I will bt be submitted tn the 1;tale tx!fore
di~usstd by partnU, teachars and Thursd1y'5 deadlinr , In an all empt lt'I nb-
&.tudenU tonig~t In San Clemente: High !~in mal ching funds from 1he suite for
School'S first meeting or the new Parent· conr;truction. Tht li br11ry-cla.55roo m (()m·
Teacher.Student Association. plex was turned down for fund~ from the
~1rs. Eugene Koster. president. said the Junior co11r.ge con3tructlon fund And will
11uclear J;enerator issue wlU bf: In· be built from thr. Saddleback bol'!d fund .
lroduced fn the business meeUng 1l 7:31)--In 11 presentation befor~ 1he board
p.m. In Triton Ctntllr. Monday, spokesmen for Ramberg and
Proeram orlhe. t\r('tlfng lJ a pr~tn· ~t,owry, 1rcbltetlJ, !ll'lowed how-tl'ie
ta.lion by stude..nt.r of tbe hum.tnlties buildings wllf be !le;w:lble enOtJgh to adapt
classes. ror future use .•
~trs. Koster said the meeting and a The llbrtry building I~ schtduled for
potluck dinner preceding It are open to complt'tion ~n 1972 and the A(Jt!nce·m•lh
AU p11rents , leather! and stude.nl.\, buUdlng In 1913. But both four·story high
~hclhrr or not they tla\'t held mem-buildings arc desi~ntd to ac«immodate
bcrship In PTA. the 10,000 s1t1~f!nls projected f r 1980. -
i
1
Sign Troubles ~e§§en,/'
" -Nine of 34 Facilities Still Have Problems
out or 34 bottJ, motel and aparlment
faclllUee in l..1.gW\1'1 R·2 and R-3 ( multl·
pie resld¥tlaJ) zones, only nine still are
having sign problems, l.aguria Beach
planning commlssiOners learned Monday
night as lhey moved to ease some of
l.hese difficullies.
In the R-2 zone. cith planner Al Autry
explained. the sign ordlnantt permits on-
ly one·half square Coot of sign space for a
property. Thls, commenlFd chairman
Wl\ll1m Lambourne, "borders on the
ridiculous" for an establishment seeking
to identify lt!elf.
The nnly permissible procedure for the
city staU at presen~. u.id Autry, is to
order larger signs removed entirely,
which leaves the Caclllty '.111th no Iden·
tlf icaUon.
He suggested that three square feet nr
~ign area would be acceptable and the
commissioenrs agreed. It was proposed
tn write this change into the overall
revision of the city zoning ordinance
which will be coming up for public hear.
ings and City C0t1ncil approval ln about a
month.
Jn lhe R-3 wne, the maximum sign
area per ·property . is 12 squa re feet, but
this is Ct>nsider!d insufficient by aome of
the larger facilities which pay bed tax
comparable to thal paid by motels and
hotels in commercial zones where larger
signs are permltled.
The problem in the residential zones,
Autry explained , is that many apartment
faciUtie11 have developed into holel·motel
use over the years and , under new ionln&
ordinances. are classified as leg1d, non·
cnnlorming uses. Though permitted to
c0ntinue in operation, they nevertheless
arr. subject to the signing restrictions
now applied in the zone.
Since only a hand~! or properties ar_e
confronted with these sign problems, 11
appeated ln be the consensus of the plan·
ners lhat they shoul~ be handled on an in-
dividual basis through the variance pro-
cedure.
Laguna Corrimissioners
Study Parking Pwm
An amendmtnl to the sig n ordinance
for the whole ione, it was pointed out.
rould result tn a proliferation of lar.11e
!i1gns in areas principally zoned for resi-
dential use.
From Pagel
FIRES ...
!ia.id Jame!'i Secrist. or the State
Conservation Department Detailed plans and cost estimates for
two large parking structures in downto"·n
Laguna Beach were examined by plan-
ning commissioners during their Monday
night study session.
Plans for a five level structure on the
Site of the existing municipal lot on Glen.
neyre Street at Laguna Avenue and a
four-level structure on Mermaid Street
were prepared by Conrad Associates,
archittecl.5 and plannen specializing in
parking structures.
The Glenneyre structure, with 405
parking spaces, would cost an estimated
S791,845, planners were told, while the
-tSO.space Mermaid structure would cost
approximately $807 ,085.
'fhe city already owns the Glenneyrt
site and much of the Mermaid structure
would be built over city-ow ned street pro.
perty, though land along !he adjacent
hillside , now occupied by private homes,
would have to be acquired .
Planning comm1ss1oner Robe r t
Hastings, who has been working on the
parking strutcure. proposals, has sug·
Rested th1L the project! be undertaken
Under a lease-back agreement, with a
development firm handling design and
Color Carnival
This Weekend
In Capo Area
Artist.'! and craftsmen in the Capistrano
Bay area this week fini shed off their
worlu in time for ll tw~ay Carnival of
Cnlor sponsored this weekend by the
Capistrano Beach Chamber of Com·
merce.
The event. !'iel for Saturday and Sunday
in Capistr11no Beach PlaUI, featured SOO
art works at last yea(s function.
Chamber volunteers predicted a new
record this year. •
Persons willing to exhibit in the show
are asked to bring their works Saturday
morning. select a display area. beneath.
the covered sidewalk, then register.
Members of the chamber will staff the
registration table starting at 8 a.m. Ex·
hibition and sales spa.ce is offered on a
basis of first-come, first-served .
Stands, easels or tables musl be
furnished by· exhibitors themselves.
The displays will be from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. both days.
Among the evenls will be a drawing for
a William Cox acrylic painting of a
Hawaiian seascape.
The JO-percent nf !'ialtr;, plus S2.50
recreation fee by the exhibitors help pa y
for chamber-sponsored projects. The
public i:o; welcomt. free.
const~tlon ' and revenue from meters
going toward lease payments.
Cnmmissioners were shown a series of
slides illustrating parking structure pro-
blems and solutions by a representalive
of the Van Nuys finn which has installed
multi-level parking facilities Ill Los
Angeles International Airport and in ma·
jor cities throughout the west.
The plans will be referred' to the City
Council for further study.
Tunney's Wife
Presents ,Talk
In Laguna Beach
Meike Tunney. auractive wife nf
Demorcatie Senatoria l candidate John
Tunney, was featured speaker .at the buf-
fet dinner of the Laguna Beach
Democratic Club Monday night .
Rep. Tunney. who represenl.l'i Imperial
and Riversidt Counties. is attempting to
unseat Sen . George Murphy iR-Calif.). in
the November general election.
A native of the Netherlands, Mrs. 'Tun-
ney mr.I her husband while both were
gr11duale students in Internationa l Law Al
the University of Remedigin in Holland.
They have three children .
Mentioning the amount nr every U.S.
tax dollar spent abroad, Mrs. Tunney
said her husband. if elected, wou ld work
to see that a larger amount was spent nn
U.S. problems sueh as pollution, cnn-
servation, education. medical care and
elimination of poverty .
Underscoring the numbers of space in·
dustry scientific • pe rsonnel that are
unemployed. she said the.v are desperate-
ly needed in industry ;ind laboratories lo
keep 1jle U.S. ahead o! Lh..eJ..est of the
world in scientific projects and ad·
\'11.ncement.
Of "'elfare. she said her husband·s posl·
lion was to provide jobs to ease the
welfare caseloads and provide self·
respect for the workers .
She said Tunney felt thal empl oyment
should be so general that only those in·
capacitated by age nr illness should
receive public assistance.
She said Tunney feels that withdrawal
from Vietnam should be as rapid as
possible. The candidate's wife said. he
feels that immediate withdrawal is im·
possible due to transportation shortage
and need lo protect the last troops lo
leave.
She sa.id Tunney was opposed to the
war from the beginning and felt U.S.
troop withdrawal could be made in less
than a yea r. 'fhe buffet was al the home
or Maybelle Pettit. 380 Moss ::it.
Pine gro\'es. thick hrush and sumac
trees were consumed along the 61).mile
path of the football ·shaped fire .,. .. hic h
burned 200.000 acrer;.
"This is undoubtedl v the worst fire I've
seen in my ca reer.'' ·remarked Arlen B.
Cartwright, of the State Division of
Foreslry.
To the south. meanwhile, three br ush
fires erupted , amosl r.ncircling Ensenada,
where 200 Mexica n soldiers were sum·
moned to battle flames, including one
5,000-acre fire. A small army of firefighters on front&
throughout California -where fi2.000
acres of brush 11.nd timber have been
destroyed in the north alnne -generally
'A'as gaining the upper hand today.
"We're in pretty good shape," said I
.!>Upervisory forestry official of the Loll
Angeles County situation.
Five Division or For~try employes
were killed Monday night when an
Alouetle model helicopter ferrying them
In the East Fork of the San Gabritl River
crashed.
No ca use was immediately determined
and identities of the victims in the...
Bi ctv>ta Canynn crash v.'ere withheld.
The toll in human and other misery is
impossible to calculate.
Newhall rancher Dennis Stonecypher
watched and listened as the leapfrogging
flames raced th rough his property, killing
90 percent of his livestock.
..It hit the log shed. 600 fee t long and :\0
reet wide . 11.nd there "'BS nne terrible din
as the pigs screamed -all 200 of them -
hut at least il v.·as fast," said
Stonecypher .
"The Jambs ran between two sheds and
half o{ them got killed . Some ran v.·ith
!heir wool on fire ."
"We found them dead all across lhf!
range," he continued . "Or whal used to
be range ."
Los Angr.les and San Diegn counlit!-'
alone suffe red 666 st r u cl u re"
destroyed , including '190 homes. and
33fi.OOO acres -an area half the size or
Rhode 1sland -lay charred by the
flames.
Fire fighters began to bre11the more
easily about a 200,000-acre fire halted
Sunday al the outskirts of seve ral San
Diego suburbs. But winds helped another
ma jor blaie flare up Monday night and
race over 10,000 acres of 11. hea vil y wood·
td are a, drawing within 10 miles of the
main fire. A heat wave that reached 100
degrees was expected l.o continue.
The Southern California fires alsn are
.civing the first plane ever designed
specifically to battle forest blaies its in·
, itial big test.
The twin-engine amphibian, the CL-215
designed and manufactured by Canadair
Ltd .. dropped more than 400 tnns ot
waters on fires in the Malibu area for the
second str11:ight day Monday.
Truth
or Consequences?
~,,,.. tlie !Mh hurls! We h..e lost en occesionel sole liy no! ltlling .-ca1!011• ..i;.1
he weoled to hoer.
We mlglit po in! out the! • cvslo-~ be b.tter off to poy e tittle mono for °"' ....&
bor pedO.ng ti.on boy • ch.eper .• '""'liy pod the! i.ok lilte you ere well<ing on btlloon<. Tho "bej.
loon " pod hum the cerpel boc:l<ing, causoi melching, end rvins ·~-Ako, !+.is peclding
often !1.ltens out oftor • while.
AdO.ti.,.elly, wo might ten you lh•I , ..... c~ rn;.., ... -piec:fi<:el tlion oflion.. A
fl>er !hot -ts in one lerluro , might "bomb" in 1...t+.er.
Feel f..., lo c.n for odvico. :..n of our wles people ~· ha<l erl9"sive experi.nce in I~• ...,..
ice end oi this busineu -•nd tfter •D -the most imPQrl•nt thin9 we eari offer, tfttt no eke
, -. . I oon, rs SCM"VICe •
•
__ ALDEN'S
U .NtA AfllA, OU.NM
TUSTIN C-" •• ,
ALHH'S
DI MIU CA.1"'1
I DlAl"ll:ID , ,,,. , ....... ,..._ c..lf.
••t·l.)44
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia A,,.,
COSTA MESA
646-4131
•
7
•
I
l
7
Laguna Beaeh _
. EDITION
YOC. ~3. NO. 233, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNfY, CALIFORNIA JUESOAY, SEPJEMBER 29, I 970
• ' rson us Ill
Egyptians
Mourning
Arab Chief
CAIRO (UPI) -EIYJ>tians pound inf4
Cairo today by train, by bus and on foot
to moUm the death of President Gamal
Abdel Nuser whose death from a heart
attack Monday threatened new chaos for
a Middle East uncertain of tbe pre.sen&
and fearful of the future.
Nasser, S2, lay in state in the imposing
Republican Palace in the heart of calro
while hundreds of thousands milled about
outside hopeful of a last look at the gray ..
ing colonel who was the idol cf the Arab
m~es and whose death could bring the
Middle ·East once more to war.
The Soviet Union, with more at stake in
Egypt than perhaps any other nation, an-
nourud it was sending Premier A1exei
N. Kosygin to Cairo today for the Thuf'S<o
day funeral . An official statement called
Nasser ''an outstanding son of the Arab
people" and a "great friend of the Soviet
Union." It said Russian aid would con-
tinue.
President Nixon cancelled a sbow~r ..
force exhibition by the U.S. 6th Fleet to
avoid rousing further anti-American feel-
ings in this nation caught up in an emo-
tional upheavaL Egyptians so wary of
Israel that a maximum alert was called
by military leaden along the Sue>: Canal
cease-fire pne.
How Nuaer's death would affect Ni%4
on's European tour was not certain but
his visit to Yugosloavia wis set for
Wednesday and arrangements may have
lo be changed. Presidenf Tif4, an old
comrade of Nasser's. was expected to ny
to Cairo for the funeral; the Yugoslav
cabinet met today to discuss the situa4
tion.
Nixon himself was not expected to go to
Cairo but it was believed he might send
Secretary of Sta~ William P. Rogtrs,
now with him in the Mediterranean.
Egypt, Syria and Jordan declared a 40-
day official period of mourning and the
'Arab world which had met Nasser so
many times in smnmite onferences to
discuss operations against I s r a e 1
prepared to send its kings and presidents
back to Cairo for a final farewell.
Vice President Anwar El Sadat suc-
ceeded Nasser as prestaent under the
Egyptian constitution but it appeared
ei!rlain a major power struggle would
develop for his su<reSSOr. The fear In
some parts of the world was that hot-
blooded young anny officers might take
over with the prospect of endless war.
Sadat himseU is considered a leftist foe
of Israel.
One fact remained: There ls no heir
apparent, no man of stature to assume
(Set EGYPT, Pa1e %)
Cyclist Injured
In Crash, Skid
A late-evening ride on a motorcycle
resulted in injuries to a 48-year old San
Clemente man Monday after his cycle
swerved Into a parked car, Oipped onto
its side and skidded for 33 feet down tht
roadway.
Police said Sam Michael Barrile of 141
Loma Lane was injured al 8:11 p.m. in
the 200 block or Calle Santa Barbara.
Barrile swerved into a car owned by H.
N. Abelsen of 220 Santa Barbara.
Police said the man, who suffered
abrasions and possible head injuries, was
taken unconscious to South Coast Com-
munity Hospital.
Spokesmen there said Barrile wa1
released after emergency treatment.
Last Hijackiiig
Hostages Free
GENEVA (UPI) -The Interna-
tional Cmmmittee Of the Red cross
announced tonipt the remaining
six alrlint hostage. held by
PalesUne guentllas have been
freed ind are all Hfe. All are
Americins. A Red Cross statement said news
-of the release-of lhe hostagn waa
sent lo htadque.rten In Genev11 by
the International Red CrwJ dele11·
lion In Amman. -
•
There were no Immediate sup-
plementary'details.
' f
'
\ll"IT ..........
Keachi,.. Goal
Don Engdalh, 37, Santa tlosa,
trudges along Imperial Beach
near San Diego on his way to
his , goal at Califoraja~Mexico
border. Engda1U, ~ newspaper
.reporter, is coinpleting a con-
servationists walk along 1,200
miles of Pacific shoreline. See
story, ~age 7.
Tot Takes Pills
In San Clemente
Race With Death
As firemen grimly worked to keep him
awake, a 2·year-old San Clemente toddler
was rushed to South Coast Hospital in
South Laguna Monday afternoon after
swallowing a large amount of h i s
mother's tranquilizers.
And the swift emergency treatment by
San Clemente firemen was successful for
young John A. Badaracco o{ 2.18 Calle
Aragon. The baby, who apparenUy
swallowed a large amount of the pills
sometime near 2 p.m.1 soon went into
convulsions.
His mother, Nancy Durkin, phoned for
help through the city's new 911 emer·
geney line.
Showers
Predicted
In Hot State
By ARTBUR R. VINSEL
ot IN ci.1tr Pl .. I It.ti
Dying winds and prediclA!d rain show·
en today brought hope to firefighters ex·
hausted by five days in hell, battling a
multi-front holocuast whose scars will
still be seen by your great-grandchildren,
100 years from now.
1be leries of fires -,including one in
San Diea:o County conceded to be the
worst in recorded California history -
have so far killed eigbt persons 'and caus.
ed ahnost incalculable damage.
Estimates ran today lo f175 million and
California was declared a disaster area,
thus qualifying thousands of homeless
victims for low-irlterest government
loans.
During the five-day siege in six coun·
ties, the fight apimt flames has included
the newest in &edmology -from an
.amphibious tanker plane that sucks up
1eawater -to bucteb and bare bands.
Some firemen have alept only five
hours in the whole five days.
Even women and children helped save
the San Diego Counfy mountain village ol
Julian, poundiQJI • Dimes wUh -..
blanket. .... ~ -""""""' OJtl the sparks.·
"Jt WU the moot omazliig th\ng !'Ye
ever seen.•• aaid a firefighter Crom
Monlere7. "! tllought it WU the
Volunteer Fire-Department ·until I uw
the ladies and kids.~' ·
He wu one of thousand! -eight now
dead, 25 seriously injured and .500 treated
for eye lrritaUon -summoned from as
far as Montana and even out of California
prisons to help.
The situation eased eomewhat today
with higher humidity, Iwenlng winds
and forecast rains, but the possibility of
pyromaniacs setting new fires continued
to be a menace.
Several persons have been arrested on
suspicion of arson.
Ironically, nest Sunday Is the begiMing
of National Fire Prevention Week.
Experts in the field of natural ecology,
meanwhile, warned of a new horror when
winter storms strike~ the fire-ravaged
areas -especially inJ_San Diego County
-unless they are ~Ckly re-seeded.
''The east part of the county could
become a horror of floods and mud11ides
if we don't get grasa in and growing,"
(See FIRl!3, P• I)
Firemen said the baby had lapsed Into B • Esc
unconsciousness before they arrived, but ng apees
inhalation and other recbniques brought
him awake again. , ,,. \. bbed b p Ji The measures were cont~u~ as ~e l, a y 0 ce boy was taken to the hospital tn a fire
deparbnent s~tion wagfn· At South A pair of alleged fugitives from the
Coast, aides said the baby s stolll:ach was Camp Pendleton brig lost their short few
pumped and the boy was recovermg. hours of freedom in San Clemente Mon·
Five Doctors Worked
BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) -The five•
doctors who treated Egyptian President
Gamal Abdel Nasser for his fatal heart
attack Monday night spent 15 minutes
trying to get his heart beating again the
Cairo newspaper Al Ahram reported to-
day.
When the efforts proved unsuccessful
they burst into tears and all present at
Nasser's bedside then knew that the pres.
ident had passed away, the report, quoted
by Cairo Radio, said.
day night because of curious detectives
on routine patrol.
Police said the two !scaped marine
. convicts were arrested on the El Camino
Real onramp of the San Diego Freeway
shorUy before 10 p.m. by two detectives.
Officers said the men were questioned
about .possibly being oblent without
leave.
Subsequent checks revealed that the
pair, Bobby Tyrone Grtffith, :in, ond
Rickie Glen Gordon, 17, had auerted.ly
fled the brig earlier in the evening.
The two Marinel were returned lo
military authorities.
Fires at Glanee
Here la a brief &Janee at· the locations, extent, of control and known-de-
st:uct.loa cauaed by 5' 1eparate brush and timber fires throughout CalifomiL
SAN DIEGO COVNTY -The worst autumn fire in California history
was nearing contalnment after charring 200,000 acres, while four smaller
blazes in the same area destroyed 15,000 acres.
SAN GABRIEL CANYON -Firemen gained the upper hand due to
dying winds, but five w~re killed Monday night when their helicopter crashed
en route to the 4,000-acre blaze.
MAIJBU -The devastating fire here, which merged at one point with
the Newhall blaze, was diminishing after firemen gained the upper band, but
40,000 acres have been b~ over.
SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY -Flames licked over 7,CMXI acres In
Meyer's Canyon, but dropping Santa Ana winds gave firemen a break".
SAN LUIS OBISPO COUNTY-A blaze north of pere and near Highway
1 was under control after a,ooo acres were charred.
A-IONTEREy COUNTY -Burning in the hills between Willow. Creek and
Salmon Creek on the picturesque coast, the fire has burned mor.e than 12,000
acres ~ threattna a st.and of California redwoods. Highway 1 remains open
but hazardous due to large rocks cracked off cliffs by the heat tumbling to
the pavement.
KERN COUNTY -Firelines were holding up on a 32,500-acre brush fire
southeast of Bakersfield, with almost all Its 45-mile perimeter encircled by
firefighters. A second lire near Red Mountain has ravaged 17,000 acres of
timberland. ·
MARIPOSA COUNTY - A smaller fire was contained Monday night
after burning 1,820 acre s, but flames destroyed power lines eliminating elec·
trical service to Mariposa and Yosemite National Park.
Laguna Firemen Watch
Brush-covered Canyo11s
With lloltbern Calllornil In -. ~lion ml DlllCh ol it burned, Laglina
Beach firemen and police are keeping a
wa~ eye on the brush COYertd can-
yons and perjmeter of the town. -
"The grass and brush are so dry It's
almost like powder,'' ,Wd . Fire .Cblel
James Latimer today.
.Latimer said firemen are ~nducling a
regular fire patrol in Laguna Canyon, u'p
Bluebird Ca nyonDrive,theCoun-
tryman Estates area and other fire·
hazard locations. PatroJing police officers
ar.e_aulstin1_in this, uid Latlmer.
The ri .. title! blilloned -lo be careful of their backyar:d barbecues and
•nythlng ebe that might opark a· m.. He
lirged them 14 caution their chlldRn lloo
about fire safety, Jiarticularly dui'ii!i ee
curient dry, low humidity period.
Litimer said that Llsuna's three fire
stations will serve as collecUon points for
~rsons wishing to contribute to the hun-
dreds in Southern CaHfornia who have
Jost their homes and possessions.
He said Items needed for ·the fire vlc-
t1ms include clothina:, bedding aDd non-perl!bable f_ood staples.
Saddleback Trustee
Blasts Press Charges
By PAMELA HALLAN
ot !tie IMllr l"lllt llltl
Hans Vogel, president of the Sad·
dleback COiiege board of trustees, blasted
the press Monday for what be termed
unwarranle<j charges of wasting the tu·
payers money.
The issue came up when the board WIS
Informed that the Orana:e County
counsel's office bad asked for an ex·
pedited appeal on the dress code con-
troversy in the Ninth Circuit U.S. Court
o( Appeal.
"The board had been criticized for
spending the taxpayers' runds on this
case," said Vogel. "But In fact, the board
has spent only $500 with $175 for the
services of the county counsel. Generally
it's the attorney's fees that are costly,
Isn't that right?" he asked, smiling at
board member Michael Collins, an at·
torney.
"The point is the county counsel is on
the payroll ror us. It is an expeoditlJl'&
that is not as expensive as many would
envision," he said.
Vogel sakt be al8o wanted to reiterate
why they were pursuing the case. He said
the board Is now appealing to the same
three-man -body that ruled in their favor
in April. '
He said in February Judge Harry
Ferguson of the U.S. Dlstrlcl Court plac-
ed restraining orders allowing five
students lo enroll at Saddleback despite
their violations of the dress code. Since
that time, the Mission Viejo Junior
college has not enforced the dress code.
"We appealed to remove t h i 1
restraining order and were successrul.
Judge Ferguson was told be should not
have issued lhe restraining order because
the case of lndividuala WIS weak," said
Voa:el.
"The three-man court of appeaJs
brought it back 14 the judge and be-ruled
against us." Vogel said he didn't tbJnl< it
unfair to now bring the appeal back to
the three-man court that originally ruled
for I.hem.
Vogel 1tated that the Issue .b not hair
nr anything else relating to the dress
code. Jl b who runs the local schools, the
federal judieo or the local board.
J .udge Sets · Hearing Date Youth Football
Program Set Up
The Laguna Beach RecttitJon Dep.rt.
Accused Deputies Plead Not ·Guilty in GramI ·Theft =~~~=ru; grades.
Two Orarige County Sherlfrs deputies
acxu.1ed of. burglarizing the Mission Viejo
CoQntry Club today pleaded innocent n
Santa Ana MunJcipal Court to cbarg~s of
grand theft and burglory.
Jtldge Eugene G. Langhluter ordered
Arthur E. Duncan, 34, of 4942 Maul Cir·
cle, HunUngton Beach and Fndtrlck B.
Irvine. IQ._ of La lltbra 14 face
preliminary hearing Nov. I. Both meo
are free on bail.
Both fonntt dtputl" had 14 brave the
glare of televiskm lighting and the
equally Intense 11ar .. ol ••er&I former
,
collequea 11 they entered and left Judie
LanghaUll!l''I criminal c 1 l en d e r
coartroom .•
Irvine re!Uled lo -the cue ond left burrldly with hlo 1Uorne7. Duncan
hesitated, bepn lo opealt lo ..,.._
and then Wll ordered by bil ltwy<r r.ot
lo comment .. the illue.
Both men ...,. UTeltecl lmlde the golf
shop ol the Mlsllon Viejo Country Cllib
last Sept. 20 lf1er the upldom golf pro
saw them on the pnmJoes and called
aberlff'• offictrt.
Invntlpton ·aDep o1olon &allinl
equipment and oevwol ...., of liquor lleg~tratlon of p!Aym will clooe Fri·
were found In the security vehicle Uled day and the boys·will be organized lnf4
by the t .. meri 14 polr<ll the ""' u teams during the -k ol Oct. H , with
security pardl far the Mlalon Viejo team proctlc:eS ocheduled rar the follow·
Company. Ing -k. Seporate tequeo will be form-
Duncan mrendered when confronted ed it Albo, "EI Morro l\)d Top ol the
by" sherlll'• officen but Irvine took over World Elementary · Scliools. All gama·
a patrol car at gunpoint ond led olfl""1 will be pllyed aft6 Khoo! and will end
on a wild chase that ended Jn Riverside before the final school b1&1 leaves lhe
County ofter Irvine thrHteoed foe more -llChool groundo ~ day.
thin two boura lo commlt 'sultlde. Entry fOl'IDI may be obtained it the
RIY<l'llde County autborltleo may odd elemerltart ocliooll or fl'Om the 11ec ... a.
chorg ... of 1111\111 with I deailly WelP'll, tlon ~t 11 17S N. -COul
to t1i<1K al!~ I-by Irvine. Rlghwoy.
J
Today's Flaal
N.Y. St.oeb
TEN CENTS
azes·
Brush Fires
In County
Controlled
Orange County had some good news
and some bad news on the fire front to.
day.
The good news was that the fires wbicli
have black~ 4,000 acres in the countY,
are all under control.
The bad news Is that arson ii suspected
In 15 tb 20 of the fires which raged over
the last weekend, including the ·500-acre
El Toro blue.
Wally · Tiouer, chief of the Orange
County Fire Presvenlion Bureau, said
two teams are probing the ember1
searching for cluea: to anon. '"l'be leads
are slim but we hope we are making
some headway," the chief said.
The El Toro area blaze which broke out
last Friday and burned over 500 acres
threatening homes in the Lake Forest
and El Toro area is the subject of in·
tensive investigation, Trotter said.
Friday, the day the El Toro fire
started, witnesses saw a small fire and
people running from it, the fire ofUcial
reported. They tried lo stop the persons
who started the fire but failed. _
"We found a deilce there wbfch could
have been used lo start the fire," Troll.tr
said.
The 3,00Q.acre Trabuco Canyon fire ts
also under invesUgaUon as to cause.
All day Monday fire teams patrolled,
the 1eorched mountain a r e a s ex·
tlnguiJhing still smoldering-or burninC
brush ind trees.
O'Neill Park, wbJcb w11 threatened bf
the Tracuco blaze, will be cloaed untll
Fr!doy, COWlty official1 stated.
Marines Facing
Court in Laguna
Shooting Charge
Two Camp Pend.let.on Marines accused
of shooting a It.year-old Lagunan are to
be arraJkned in Superior Court Oct. 9 on
charges of robbery and assault with in·
tent to comm.it murder.
The two, Kenneth Ray Starks, 19, and
Virgil L. McCoy, 20, are accused of
shooting Lawrence Michael Bornman, ti
of 475 N. Coa!it Highway on June 7:7.
Bornman tunderwent surgery f o r
removal of a bullet from hiS armpit.
Judge Richard Hamilton dismissed ad4
dit!onal kldnapi!lg charges against the
pair during a four-day preliminary es·
aminaUon in municipal court.
Witnesses during the hearing testified
to seei ng men strugglelna: in the back seat
of a four-door sedan. Bornman had told
police he escaped from the car when It
stopped at Myrtle Street and Pacific
Coast Highway. The Marines were ar·
rested later at a San Clemente road
block.
Barge Canal Halted
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -secretary of the
Interor Walter J. Hickel has signed a
petition seeking a temporary halt to ci>n•
struction of thQ controversial Cross Flor·
idil Bara:e Canal. , .... •
Oraalfe Coa1&
'ft'ealher
Th.It patchy fog and law clouds
will be back to haunt the coast
Wed...Jay morning, with 10e1<U!Y
readJngs dipping back Into tbe 70's
on the shore and up to a further
inland.
INSIDE TOD~Y
The dtath of EaJIJ)t'1 Nwtr
ltawt the Arab world btrtf& of
o ltadtr. For an in-dtt>th look
at tht lift of thU controversial
figure, see· Page B.
:::::-,,... 'J
QIMlllll9 "" , c1 ... 1,... """ C-ln II C,..._., II °""' ...... ' --' ~, .....
••llrl•l•t•I It .._ "''' -.. """ L--.n 11 -.,.-. Llctlllft '
'
I·
-
ll! ;DAILY PILOt SC
Road Progratn •
_,
-Laguna Street
Planning Told · -
By BARBARA KREmICH
OI lflt Dtllr ,llfl Si.If
Examining plans for an a1nendment to
Lacuna's precise plan of arterial streelt
Monday evening , planning commissioner!\
learned that the Campus Drive extension
through Boat Canyon probably is 10 years
away, but extens.ion of Alta Laguna
Boulevard from Top of the World to Arch
Beach Heights may be undertaken in the
latter part of 1971.
Beth arl.erials are part cf the county's
long.range road planning program and
commissioners were asked to approve
plans for those segments that will be
located within Laguna 's city limits.
Riddle Field, home of Laguna's LittJe
League, seems likely to be a casualty of
the Campus Drive extension, but plan·
ners recommended that, if the field could
not be saved, It should be relocated when
the road is put In.
Commission Chairman William Lam·
bourne noted that when Riddle Field was
put in, the possibility of a futu~oad in
the area already was known. The
dec ision, Lambourne sald, was to use the
field as long as possible and relocate it in
lhe event of road construction.
Commissioner Robert Hastings also ex·
pressed concern that the es.tension of
Hillcrest Drive across Boat CanyoD
should be preserved.
Irv Berman of the city engineering
department said It is the Intention cf the
State Division cf Highways le keep
Hillcrest Drive open. He also said that a
CampUs Drive interchange with the ·
future inland freeway ls included in state
hlghway plans.
The ·plan fer Campus Drive, as
presented to the aimmission, shows a
&in1te roadway exlending tcward Coa.st
Highway to apprcximately the location of
Riddle Field. at which point ii would
divide into two branches. one on either
:side of the paved Boat Canyon shopping
center, taking northbound and south·
bound traffic to the hig hway.
In response to a query from Com·
missioner Carl Johnson, City Planner Al
Autry said that approval of the ~eneral
precise plan for the Campus ~r1~e e~·
tension was being sought at this time in
order to preserve fight-of-way and avert
costly developments in the path of the
future road.
De.tailed engineering had not bef.n c.om-
From Pqe 1
EGYPT ...
bis role as leader of the Arab world. His
death Could bring further woes to I'srael,
for he made fiery speeches but he urged
moderation and accepted the roncept of a
negotiated peace. .
Nasser's death came AS a maJor blow
to the Nixon administration for he was
the one leader consldered a stabilizing in·
fluence In the Middle ~ast. It could mean
the end of the Amer ican peace initiative
which led Nasser to agree to a 9<klay
cease-fire -the end of a moderate in·
fluence and the possible rise of leftwl ng
Arab militant!.
There was apprehension at the United
Nations where diplomats expressed con-
cern over the selection of his possible
successor. By law the national assembly
dominated by Nasser's Arab Sociali!t
Union must name a successor wilhi.n 60
days.
Grief in the Arab world was unive rsal
-even in lraq where Nasser was
popular with the masses but not with the
ruling Baathist Party men. He had dif-
ficulty with the Syrians. too. but Syrian
head of state Noureddin Al-Atassi said in
a statement "the Arab nation lost a great
fighter and courageous leader who spent
all his life fighting to realize the goals o(
the Arab masses ."
ln Beirut, Lebanese youths venting
their grief set up roadblocks on major
routes leading to the city and cut the
road to· Beirut Airport in an apparent ef·
fort to force the nation to a standstill in
mourning. The city of Tripoli be1an a
general strike to express It! sorrow.
DAllY PllOT
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(ttll Mn.ti .J)O WUI ••Y l trtll
trr11..,...1 lttCll: nu Wttl atlM't ..._,,_,.
ut..,... ..,(111 m 'efM' •-"II"''"'""' 6ttcll: 11111 •••<II 14'uttvt,. 1111 tlfmtlllet • lffrlll El C-• ••I
L
pleted. Autry' said, and the plan would be
subject to some revisio n prior lo 1ctual
construction which probably would not
take place for 10 years.
With the rt(ommendation that Riddle
Field be retained or relocated, and that
Hillcrest Orlve be kept open, the plen
was recommended for approval by the
City C.Ouncil,
Extension ol Alta Liguna Boulevard
acro.ss the ridge to Arch Beach Heights i!
a much more immediate project, plan-
ne rs learned.
An engineer for the Orat111e County
Road Department said it has been
scheduled for 1970.1 and it is hoped con·
struction can be undertaken between
August and November of 1171.
Hastings noted that the need for a con·
nection between the two h i J I t o p
development! h11 been pointed up by the
recent fi res and the Alta Laguna ei:·
tension Is "very necessary."
Acting city manager Joseph Sweany
noted that the Laguna Beach County
Wa ter District intends to put a water
main along the new segment of Alta
Laguna, which would fa cilit ate fire-
fighting operation& in the hill areas.
The project WI! unanimously recom-
mended for city approval.
Hotl~ne Open
In Clemente
For Problems
A new telephone-counseling service of·
fering the chance to dial 492.fl2SS for help
has been opened by a group cf San
Clemente volunteers.
The new service, which will offer help
for problems rangi ng from drugs, un·
wantted pregnancy, suicide and venerea l
di sease, is the creation of San Clemente
bu sinessman Bud Scheele, who said the
vo/untee'rs will man phones at a new
center for six hours each evening, then
will be available throug h an exchange the
rest of each day.
The first-ever hotline service for San
Clemente will be on an anonymous basis
if cal lers request it and will inc.Jude chan-
neling legitimate problems to public
agencies and individuals who 1peciaJlze in
specific problems.
Scheele said if the program is suc-
cessful -and 60 more volunteers can be
fotlnd -• personal counseling service
might be Implemented with the plan.
lf the counselors become reality, two
more rooms ne.ar a present one-room of-
fice would be added to 1caimmodate
pr ivate counseling.
The usual number or crank or er·
roneous calls are expected as the pro-
gram is launched, Scheele admitted,
"'because we assume some people just
want to see if we 're for real ."
The insurance and real estate broker
said the group of volunteers also expect
calls ranging from advice to lovelorn to
automotive repair problems at first.
For the legitimate caller with 1 grip-
ping problem, however, Scheele promised
valid attempts to help, include channeling
specific cases to appropri1te eipertg for
attempts for solutiC¥l.
The times for the call service ll'ill be
from 4 to 10 p.m. weeknights: calls com-
ing in at other times will be transferred
to volunteers who will be on stand-by du·
ty.
The volunteers are a cross.section of
citizens. Scheele explained, and include
housewives, 1tudents. member! of the
clergy, teachers, businessmen and 1.
psycholo1ist.
Car Rams Pole;
'
Dana, Man Hurt
A Dana Point man is scheduled to be
released today from Hoag Memorial
Hospital aftter his car hit a trafflc signal
pole in Newport Beach early Monday
morning.
Police said De Mis B. Buck:nu . 21 or
25371 Yacht Drive received faci1l lactra-
t1ons and a foot injury when the car he
was driving collided with a pole at the In·
tersectlon of East Coast Highway and
Newport Center Drive.
Buckner '9ld off icers he was traveling
eastbound on the highway when he lost
conlrol of his car. The skidding auto ap-
parently missed two light standards
before hitting the signal light pole.
Citizens Discuss
Atom Plant Site
Atomic plant •ite proponls will bt
dlscu.ued by parents, ttachers and
students tonight in San Clemente Hlah
School's first meetini of lhe new Parent-
-Teacher.Student A&SOClation.
~frs. Eugene Koster. ptc!ldent. said lhe
nuclear generator Issue will be In-
troduced In the business meetln& at 7:311
p.m. in Triton center.
Prograrii of the evening Is a presen·
talion by 1tudtnta of the bumaNties
dasses.
Ptlrs. Koster satd the. meeting •nd •
potluck dlnntr prectdin& It are open to
all parenta. \eachers and stUdenta.
whether or not they havt h~d mun·
bership tn PTA.
I
I READY FOR ANOTHER GO
Cup Skipper Ficker
Ficker Agrees
To Be Skipper
In 1973 Race
NEWPORT, RJ. r AP) -Victorious
skipper Bill Ficker of Intrepid agreed to-
day to take the helm of a new cup
defender if the U.S. defends the historic
America's Cup again in 1973.
Several members of the syndicate that
backed Intrepid in this year's 21st suc-
cessful defense of the yacbting trophy an·
nounced agreement to form a new syn·
dicale.
Ficker and his crew defeated Gretel It
of Australia 4-l in a series that ended
Monday 10 miles off this yachting center.
. . . .
ALMON LOCKABEY'S ACCOUNT
OF RACE ON PAGE 12 TODAY ·
The U.S. has not lost the cup since it
wu first won by the schooner America in
England in 1851.
Ficker. 42, a Newport Beach architect,
was credited with a major share of this
year's victory, skippering the 3-year-0Jd
Intrepid, which was also defender aga inst
another challenge froi'n Australia in 1967.
The new !yndicate is to be headed by
William J . St rawbridge of Philadelphia
and S. Briggs Dalzell and J. Burr
Bartram Jr., long associated with New
York Yacht Club activities.
The three were major members of the
1970 Intrepid syndicate which was
dissol ved toda y.
f\.1embers of lhe new syndicale did nol
say whether they plan to build a new 12·
meter boat. However. they did announce
that lnlrepid Is to be towed back to Min·
neford Yacht Yard, City Island, N.Y .•
and that she will be made av<!-ilable i!
needed as a future trlal horsei
Presumably, a decision on whether to
build a new boat will a"•ait challenges for
the America's Cup. Under New York
Yacht Club rules challenges musl be
forthcoming within 30 days of Monday's
final 1970 race. Normally, actual racing
is ainducted only once every three years.
lt is known that another American syn-
dicate made up of Southern California
yacht8men is being organized with the
announced pu~ of backing an all-West
Coast defender of the America's Cup,
possi bly in 1973.
It was not clear 'A'bether Ficker would·
take the helm of tbe Eastern syndicate
yacht, or the new boat plaMed by the
West Coast group. •
Trustees .OK
Building Plans
For Saddleback
Saddlebacll: College trustees have ap.
proved schematic plans for their first
permanent buildings, a $4.1 million
stlenct-math complex and a $3.7 million
library-classroom complex.
Plans for tht science·math facility will
ht submitted to the state before
Thursday's deadline. in an attempt to~
tain matching funds from the 1late for
construction. The library-classroom com-
plex was turned down for funds from the
Jun ior collegr construction f\lnd and v.·iU
be built from the Saddleb1ck bond fund.
In 11 presentat!on btfort lhl'l board
Monday, spokesmen for Ramberg and
Lowry, architects. showed how the
buildings w\11 bt· flexible enough to adapt
for fllture ust.
The library building Is .cheduled for
complellon ln 1971 and I.he scien~·msth
bulldin& ln 1973. But bOth rour·story hi1h
buildings art designed to 1ccommod1te
the 10.000 students projected for t98CI.
™>!-
•
Sign Troubles Lessen ~
Nine of 34 Facilities Still Have Problems
out of 34 ho~, motel and apartment
facllltltt In IAJun&'a II-! and M (multi-
ple residential) zones, only nine still are
ha vinl 'algn problema,i C..guna Beach
planning commlsslooers learned Monday
night as they moved to ease some or
these diHiculties.
In the R·2 zone. cith planner Al Autry
explained. the sign ordina nce permits on-
ly one-half square foot o( sign space for a
property. Thls, commented chairman
William Lambourne, ''borders on the
ridiculous" for an e.stabliatunent seeking
to identify It.elf. • ,
The only permissible procedure for the
cily staff at present, P.id Autry, is to
order larger slgns removed entirely, ·
which leaves the racillty with no Iden·
tUlcation.
He suggested that three square feet of
siin area would be acceptable and the
eommi11sioenr~· agreed. lt was proposed
to write thJS change Into the overall
revisiOn of the city ionlng ordinance
which will be coming up for public hear-
ings and City CounciJ approval ln about a
month.
In the R·3 zone, the maximum sign
area per property is 12 square feet, but
this is corisldered insuffi.cient by some oJ.
the larger facUIUes which pay bed tax
'comparable to that paid by mot.els and
hotels in comrnercial..iooes where larger
Laguna Commissioners
Study Parking Plans
Delailed plans and cost estimates for
two large parking structures in downtown
Laguna Beach were examined by plan·
ning commiss ioners during their Monday
night study session.
Plans for a five level structure on the
.site of the existing municipal lot on Glen·
ncyre Street at Laguna Avenue and a
four-level structure <>n Mermaid Street
were prepared by Conrad Associates,
architlects and planners specializing in
parking structures.
The Glenoeyre structure, with 405
parking sps:es, would cost an e!timated
$791.845, planners were told, while the
450-space Mermaid structure would rost
approi:imately $807 ,085.
The, city already <>wns the Glenneyre
site and much of the Mermaid structure
,,,.outd be built over city-owned street pro-
perty, though land along the adjacent
hillside, now Occupied by private homes,
would have to be acquired.
Planning aimmissioner R o b e r t
Hastings, who has been working on the
parking st rutcure proposals, has sug-
gested that the projects be um:fertaken
under a lease-back agreement, with a
development firm handlin& design and
Color Carnival
This Weekend
In Capo Area
' ' . \ . Artists 111d criftsmen iri'the Capistrano
Bay area this week fmis'hed off their
works in time for a two-day Camiva1 cf
Color sponsored this weekend by the
'Ca pistrano Beach Chamber of COm·
merce.
The event, set for Saturday and Sunday
in Capistrano Be.::h Plaza , featured 500
art works at last year's fur;iction.
Chamber volunteers pred icted a new
record this year.
Persons willing to exhibit in the show
are asked to bring their works Saturday
morning, select a display area beneath
the rove red sidewalk, then register.
Members of the. chamber will staff the:
regislralion table starting at 8 a.m. Ex-
hibition and sales space is offered on a
basis of first-come , first-served.
Stands, easels or tables must be
furnished by exhibitors themselves.
The displays will be from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. both da ys.
Among the events will be a drawing for
a William Cox acrylic painting of a
Hawaiian &eascape.
The HI-percent of sale!, plus $2.:;(I
recreation fee by the exhibitors help pay
for chamber-sponsored projects. The
public is welcome free. ·
constru:llon and revenue (rom meters
going toward lease payments. .
Commissioners were shown a series o[
slides Illustrating parking structure pro-
blems and soluti ons by a represe ntative
of the Van Nuys firm which has installed
multi-level parking facilities al Los
Angeles International Airport and in ma·
jor cities throughout the west.
The plans will be referred to the City
Council for further 5tudy.
Tunney's Wife
Presents ,Talk
In Laguna Beach
~teike Tunney, attractive wife of
Demorcatic Senatorial candidate John
Tunney, was featured· speaker at the buf·
fet dinner of the Laguna Beach
Democratic Club Monday night.
Rep. Tunney, who represents Imperial
and Riverside C<>unties, is atte mpting to
unseat Sen,.George Murphy (R-Calil.), in
the November general election.
A native of the Netherlands, Mrs. Tun-
ney met ~er husband while both were
graduate students in International Law at
the University of Remedigin in Holland.
They have three child ren.
P.1entioning the amount of every U.S.
tax dollar spent abroad. Mrs. Tunney
said her fi usband. If elected, would work
lo see that1a laf'¥er Amount wa~ spent 'on
U.S. problems such as pollution. con·
servation, education. medical care and
eliml nation Or poverty.
Underscoring lhe number!! of space in·
dustry scientific personnel that are
unemployed, she sa id they are desperi.le-
ly needed in industry and laboratories to
keep the U.S. ahead of the rest of the -
world in scientific projects and ad·
vanl'!ement.
or welfare, she said her husband's posi·
lion was to provide jobs to ea se the
welfare caseloads and provide self·
respect for the workers.
She said Tunney felt that employment
should be so general that only those in·
capacitated by age ~r Ulness should
receive public assistance.
She said Tunney feels that withdrawal
from Vietnam should be as rapid as
possible. The candidate's wife said he
feels that Immediate withdrawal is im·
possible due to transportation shortage
and need to protect the last troops to
leave.
She said Tunney was opposed to the
war from the beginning and fel t U.S.
troop withdrawal aiuld be made in less
than a year. The buffet was at the home
of Maybelle. Pettit, 380 Mm;s St.
Truth
,. ' 1ignl are ~rmiUed. _
The problem in the residential zones,
Autry explained, is that many apartment
facilities have developed Into hotel·motel
use over the years and . under new zonint
<>rdinances. are classified as legal, non·
conforming uses. Though permitted to
continue in operation, they nevertheleSl!
are subject to the signing restrictions
now applied in the zone.
Since only a handful of properties are
ainfronted with these sign problems, it
appeared to be the conStnsus of the plan-
ners that they·should be handled on an In-
dividual basis through the variance pro-
cedure.
An amendment to the sign ordinance
ror the whole zone. it "'as pointed out.
could result in a proliferation of larg.e
signs in areas principally toned for res!·
dential use.
From Pqe 1
FIRES ...
said James Secrist, or the State
Conservation bepartmenl.
Pine groves, thick brush and sumac
trees were consumed along !he 6U-mile
path or lhe football-shaped fire .which
burned 200.000 acres.
"This is undoubtedly the worst fire I've
seen in my career ,'' ren1arkcd Arlen B.
Cartwright, of the State .Division of
Forestry.
To the south, meanwhile, three brush
fires erupted. amost encircling En:senada,
where 200 Mexican soldiers were sum·
moned to batUe names, including one
5,00l}.acre fire.
A small army of firefighters on fronts
throughout California -where 62.000
acres of brush and timber have been
destroye<;I in the north alone -generally
"'as gaining the upper hand today.
"We're jn pretty good shape," said a
supervisory forestry official of the Los
Angeles County situation.
Five Division of Forestry employes
were killed Monday night when an
Alouette model helicopter ferrying them
to the East Fork of the Sari Gabriel Ri ver
crashed.
No cause was immediately determined
;i,nd identities of the victims in the
Bichota Canyon crash were withheld.
The toll in human and other misery Is
impossible to calculate.
Newhall rancher Denn is Stonecypher
watched and listened as the leapfrogging
flarhes raced through his properly, killing
90 percent of his livestock.
"It hit the log shed, 600 feet long and 30
feet wide, and there was one terrible din
as the pig·s screamed -all 200 of them -
but at' least it was fast," said
Stonecypher.
"The·Jambs ran between two sheds and
half or them got killed. Some ran with
their "''001 on fire."
"We found them dead all across the
range;" he continued. "Or what used tQ.
be range."
Los Angeles and San Diego counties
alone suffered 666 structures
destroyed, including 490 homes. and
336,000 acres -.an area.half the size of
Rhode Island - lay charred by the
flames.
Fire fi ghters· began to breathe more
easily about a 200,()()1).acre fire halted
Sunday at the outskirts of several San
Diego suburDs. But -winds: helped another
major blaz.e nare up Monday night and
race over 10,000 acres of a heavily wood·
ed area. drawing within 10 mile! of the
main fire. A heat wave that reached 100
degrees was expected to continue.
The Southern California fires also are
giving the first plane ever designed
specifically to batUe forest blazes its in·
ilia! big test.
The twin-engine amphibian, the Cl,..215
designed and manufactured by Canadair
Ltd .. dropped more than 400 tons of
waters on fires in the Malibu area for lhe
se<:Ond straight day Monday.
or Con:sequences?
Sometimes the trvth hurts! Wo havo lo.+ en oceo•ionol sole J;y oo! teli"9 o -1oi1• wliof
he wonted to heor.
Wo might point out thol o cu.tomor would be bolter off lo P"Y • riltle more for our ...i;.
bor p<tdding !hon buy o ehooper, """hy pod thol feels lil:o you ore wollting 0. bolloon .. Tho "bo~
loon" pod hu.+s the cerpel badiing, <OUtOS str1tchi11CJ, end nilM ,...,,._ Also, this podding
often Rotten, out aflor o whlle.
Additi-ly, wo mi9ht toll you that some c.-pof fi1*. .,. ,_.. pta:licol !Mn «liw,..A
flier th.rwub in.,,. tutt.n. might "bomb" in-11,.,. •
Foel free to eon for .<Ivie.. An of our ..Jes people li.n hod nt-ive nperieftco in tlie ...,..
ieo ond of thii bWnen -end afttr 10 -the most importonl thing we ..., offer, that no else
does, is aervic:e!
SANTA ANA, OIAMll
TUSTIN C6'1 •• • AtllN'I
Ill Hll,L CAIPITS
'DU11111S
1074 ..... T .... c.11,,
111·1)44
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4131
Fincl1 Backs
Nixon Bill
h1California
/
By GEORGE SKELTON
Ul'.f 1wr1ev C~ltl
SACRAMENTO -Former Lt . Gov.
Robert H. F.inch returned to the state
capitol tor the first time in nearly two
years Monday and emph~tically de-
fended President Nixon's welfare refoml
plan against attacks from Gov. Roriald
Reagan.
F'inch, now a coungelor to President
Nixon. held a joint ne"'s conference w·ith
Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke-the former
Congressman Reagan appointed t o
replace him.
Reinecke said ''I'd r.ather just avoid ''
taking a stand on Nixon's controversial
program "Because it is very c:om·
plicaled" and none of my areas of
responsibility get into welfare.·•
But pressed by newsmen, Reinecke
said ''I will support the Governor."
Reagan sinct" r.tay has vehemently op-
posed the $4.1 billion Nixon plan, charg-
ing "it contains the seeds of a new
federal bureaucracy.'' In a capitol new11
c:onference last Tuesday. !he Governor
~aid the proposal \vould "simply expand
and add to'' the current welfare •·mess.''
Finch said Reagan's characterization of
the Nixon plan was "a bad misnomer.''
The presidential counselor contended
lhe plan contains "powerful \Yorking in-
centives." He added the present aid to
families with dependant children pro-
grams are "simply intolerable'' beeause
there is a "wide disparity" in benefits
from state to state.
Finch was the chief drafter of Nixon's
plan when he was Secretary of }lealth,
Education and Welfare, a post he held for
17 months until June.
The welfare plan has passed the House
and now is in the Senate Finance Com-
mittee. Among other things, it would pro-
vide a $1 ,600 annual guaranteed income
for a family of four, and require able-
bodied recipients to accept work or
retraining.
Reagan has constantly said he was not
opposed to the "original concept" of the
President's plan, but objected to the bill
as passed by the House.
finch countered the house made only
"rather modest" changes in the bill. He
equipped that I-louse Wa ys and l\1e~
Chairman Wilbur Mills. 0-Ark .. 1vhOS«
committee rev iewed the plan. hardly is
"a wild-eyed radical."
The former li eutenant governor said
the plan now is ''whip-sawed between the
ultra liberals who want to Christmas tree
it. to death and the conservatives \Vho
agree that the present program is preetty
bad but haven't anything to offer
themselves."
He said chances of tbe Senate passing
the bill after the November elections are
"slightly better than w.so. n
Karate Oasses
To Start Soon
In Laguna Beach
The Laguna Beach Recreation Depart·
ment is sponsoring a karate class for
persons interested in learning sell
defense.
Classes will be held Mondays at 10 a,m.
for adults and Saturdays at 2 p.m. for
youngsters and adult~. The fee is 18 per
month.
All students who train in the class for
at least t"·o months will be eligible for
promotional examination leading to a
black belt recognized by the Japan
Karate Association and its worldwide af·
filiates.
The melhod taughl by instructor Dave
Rearwin is also recognized by the
, association. Students will learn correct
technique for maximum speed. power,
and mental and physical concentration.
Students may register for the claS! at
the recreation department office at 175
N. Coast Hlgbway. Further information
may be obtained from the office at 494-
1124 eit. 45.
--ly l'hll lnt.rll!)lll
i
"Of course, you understand 'old ,La9un1 charm c1n m11n.'no Yiew,
in nffd of rep1ln, ind 1 driYew1y th1t woukl t1ke 1 gen1ut to get
in and out of' .... "
, 4 Water Recall Targets
React Calmly to Action
By P•TRICK BOYLE
Of tlMi DIHr '"" 11.tt
The recall campaign set in motion
Monday against four of lhe five members
of the board of directors of the South
Coast County Water District has brought
little reaction from the recall targets.
Tht four dlrtctors are Robert B.
Malone, Thomas ff. Brooks, Gerald S.
Pell and Ted J, O'Connell. Backera of the
Pat Not Backer
Of Any St1ikes;
Sees Other Ways
ROJ\1E (APl -Pat Nixon said today
!'ihe dotsn't believe in strikes or any \I.ind,.
including the one for women's liberation.
"There are other ways to accomplish
this," she said.
Remaining in Rome while her husband
was with .lt!e U.S. 6th Fleet, Mrs. Nix-
on had coffee with ladies of the Italian
press and· talked about everything from
fashions to bullfights.
She said she had "the feeling of almost
awe" Monday in meeting Pope Paul Vi
"because he has great power throughout
the world. I am always in awe or popes."
Mrs. Nixon reiterated that she is for
equal rights and equal pay for equal
v.·ork. As for the women 's liberation
movement, she said "there is a lot of
good in this," but some of the fringes
"are hurting ·the cause."
As for Italian fashions , Mrs. Nixon
said, "They are very tieauliful, but I take
pride in ~earing American fashions."
She told the Italians that spaghetti is
her favorite dish and that she cooks it
herself with meat sauce. When asked how
long she boils her pasta, she promptly
replied, "Eight minutes ... 1 make goo1
spaghetti ."
Asked her opinion of the "y~th revolf '
back home, she replied, "l think it's such
a minority -it gets far too much play:·
As for the bullfights, Mrs. Nixon said it
was a good experience to see one. but. as
far as liking lhem·-"not too much."
Laguna's Greenbelt
TV Discussion Set
The proposed Laguna Greenbelt will be
amoog topics of discussion on a ielevi.siOn
Special on eriviromnettal p r o b 1 e ms
Wednesday. .
~ ~Representatives of the Citizens Com-
mittee for the Laguna Greenbelt h1Y1
been 'invited to parUclpate in tht pro-
gram to be presented by Ben Hunter on
KTI'V Channel II at 11 :1$ a.m.
recall are not seeking remo~al of the fifth
board member, Dr. Anthony Qrlandella.
nie recall action was Set in mot'°p _by
a homeowners group in the Dana Point
area known as the. South Co1st Citizens
for Responsible Water District Manage-
ment. The recall move allegedly stems
from a recent SO percent hike in water
rates put into effect by the board.
One of the board members, Gerald S.
Pell, thi'nks that the rate hike is· just an
excuse to hold a recall election.
''The reason," Pell said, "is a personal
vendetta by one person who Is dl!gruntl·
ed about the new board president."
Thomas H. Brooks was elected board
president in November of 1969.
;'You try to do your civic duty," Pell
added concerning his pasition on the
board, "and all you do is get kicked for
it.:•
Another board m·ember, who didn 't
·want to be identified , sai~ the recall
move was being backed by a south coun·
ty resident who had had his water turned
ofr for not paying his water bill. '
"I don't see where theY. (the recall
backers) have any case at all)" the board
member said. He conceded that the SO
percent rate hike may have been too sud-·
den but that the district's' own rate! had bee~ raised by the Metidpolitan Water
District. He said the r~ in water cost
had to be passed along to the individual
homeowners .
The four board members were mailed
a "Notice of Intention to Recall" and the
notice was placed for legal advertiitn1 in
the columns of local newspapers. · .
tn tile notK:e, the recall backers ac-
cused the four board membeNi of falling
to respond to co'mplaints of water ~s
in addition to the "unjustified $0 percent
water rate increase."·
Dr. Orlandella, the fifth board member
\\'ho is nol 1 target or the recall cam-
paign. opposed original proposals for a
100 percent rate increase· and also at-
tempted to persuade the board to restudy
the increase.
The four board members have 14 da ys
to respond publicly to the reca ll com·
mittee's charges. Thirty days f~om the
first notice or recall intent, the com·
miltee may begin circulating petitions
<\mong the registered voters of the
district.
Signatures of 10 percent of the elec-
torate are necessary to initiate a recall
election. If the required numb.er of
signatures ls verified, the board of the
"'aler district must set an election in not
less than 80 days nor more than 125 days
to give candidates an opportunity to file
for the. vacanciea.
Laguna Realtors
To Attend Parley
'Define CSF Regulations'
Says Count)' G1·and Jury
Eleven members or the ~guna Beach
Board of Realtors will be altendlng the
<\nnual convention or the California Real
Estate Board Oct. 3 to I ;it the San Fran·
Cisco Hilton Hot.el.
Both Gov . Ronald Reagan and his op-
ponent Jesse Unruh are scheduled to ad-
d{ess the convention.
Laguna Beach residents attending the
event are Board President Georgia Gill.
Louise and Robert Turner , Lloyd and
Madeleine P.1ilne. Martha Ray, Donald
Ward, William Harcum, Joe Horn, John
Gilbert and Pat Bae~.
Campus rules 1t Cal State Fullerton
should bt more clearly defined to both
studenta and faculty but college ad-
ministrators musl not hesitate \o call on
pollet power when faced by student
violence. the Or1nae County Grand Jury
Warned Monday. In a report prompted by 1 stud,y of re-
cent disturbanca al the north county
campus the lnvestig1tlve panel urged the
!Choo!'• raauty to "form tbe first line of
defense, • .empowertd by an ad·
ministration with the ~ponslbility of
maintain\ng order through peaeeable
persuasive means."
Tbe Grand Jury also suggested that a
hearing oflicer be appointed to preside
(IYer inquiries into student infractions.
Violence. the report noted. could v.·cll be
eliminated or cut down by careful distri~utlon o( college rulC" to students.
f~culty, local police, parents and Orange
Coonty newspl'lpers.
t I
The Grand Jury urged the Fullerton
administratiOn to encourage recom-
mendations from student body officers
and faculty groups regardinl student .
discipline.
"But tht administration alone should
be directly responsible for adoption and
imp\emen~tlon or such policies," the
report added.
"EducaUonal iMtituUons are o u r
greatest hope as places of free Inquiry
for the solution of aociety'a problems and
legitfmate disse:nt and debate of c:on--,
tn:1verslal Issue:. is to be expected," tbt
crand jury report noted.
"Ho11+·ever, at Cal State Fullerton a
small gf'Q\lp of disstnters violaled not on-
ly principles they claim to espouse but
also the ri&ht.s of other members of the
3Cadcmlc community," lt sUltes. •
"The w:e ol force or violence to. obtain
change will not work and 1 civillied
society will not toleratt this lYJ>fi or 1C•
Hon1 ·•the Grand Jury declared.
I
There will be a variety of educational
conferences on many specialized real
est.ate subjeds held darJng the sit-day
event, according to board president Gtll.
Navy Surgeon Chief
To Visit .Pendleton
The Navy's SUrgeon General will JMY a
.visit to the Camp Pendleton Naval
Hotpiul Wednesday.
Flying up from tht North Island N.1v~I
Air Station, Viet Adm. Geor1e M. Davis
\'\'Ill tour facilities 'at the holpitll. then
visit with the. commanding orfictrl and
their •laff. Adm. Davis will remain
n\·crni"ht on the. base before resuminl
his lour of \\1e~l Coast Naval hospitals.
"
L DAILY PILDY :f·
' iaguna Decision Set
-Ci!y_,Mqnager Hopefuls to be Pared
1.aguna Beach council~will meet in
executive 1Wion Wtdneldly in an effGrt
to distill the top contenders for the clty
manager pos1 -down from UU'te to fJve
persons.
Councilman Roy Holm aaid the council
has received 1bout 106-apollcations to fill
the job vacated lut month by James D.
Wheaton.
Council parinl lw whittled th~ down
Republicans
Hike Cou11ty
Vote Marg·i11 .
Voter regislration in Orange County
has reached an 111 time h~gh .and
Republicans continue to increase their
lead over Democrats.
Voters eligible to ca!l ballots in the
Nov. 3 general election total 612,006.
SinCe last June .the Iota! of eligible
voters in the county has increased by
more than 56,000. Of lhe new eUgibles.
the Republicans signed up 28,000 and the
De~rats 24,200.
In the pa3t two yea rs the GOP has in-
creased its su~riority from 63,000 to
almost M,000.
In the 34th Congre~siona1 District
~'here Rep. Richard T. Hanna (D-
Westminster) is again bat t Ii n g
Republican William J. Te.ag\J'e of Garden
Grove, lhe Democratic edge has decreas-
ed.
In the district which includes part of
Los Angeles County, the Democratic
nlargin is 24,272 compared lo 2$,617 two
years ago.
Most Orange Coast communities con-
tinue to show heavy Republican leanings.
Huntington Beach figures are GOP
24,MI to 21,126; Fountain Valley, l ,52Z to
$,276; Seal Beach, 10,066 to 6,324.
Only Westminster and Los Alamitos are
in the Democratic camp. Westminster
shows Democrats leading 12,4SO to 9,949.
Los Alamitos is 2,049 to 1,ns.
Both Orange C o a st supervisorial
districts show GOP majorities. The Fifth
District (Cosla Mesa. Newport and
Laguna and the Unincorporated areas tn
the east .end south of the coast) is 79.fi46
to 33,708. · ·
The Second District (Huntington Beach,
'Vestminster. part of Garden Grove. Seal
Beach and Los Alamitos> is 56.977 to
54.913. .
CofC R~suming
Morning Meets
Breakfast meelings ol lhe Laguna
Beach Chamber oi Commerce will
resume Oct. 7 at 7:45 a.m. in the Sea
Terrace dining room of Hotel Uguna.
The breakfasts, which are open to the
public, are held every Wednesday except
durin1 the summer.
At the upcoming meeting, a movie titl-
ed. "The Incredible Yoya1e of Mark
O'Gulliver" will be shown. The subject of
the humorous fllm ls "unnecessary
government intervention in the Jives and
affairs or all of us."
The co.st of the breakf1st ls $2.~ and
reservations may be made by calling the
Chamber of Commerce office at 494-1018.
to about the top 15 to 11 applicants, said
Holm. Those applicants still in contention
iifler ~ Wednesday session, he said, will
probably be invited down individually for
Interview by the councU .
Holm said he was well pleased by the
caliber of the applicants generally. He
ildcled, "Of all the candidates, -probably
Rbo\Jt 75 percent are from CWprnia
which I regard as obviously being a plus
in that they ~·ouJd Mive a good worktnc
understanding ol the California coda.
They woukt be learning a new city but
noLa..Ae.w state.''
.Given council agreement Wednesday on
who are the best qualified three to five
applicanta, aaid Holm, he hopes the in·
terview process might start lhe followinr ;
weekend. ~
OAll.Y ,ti.OT If.ti"""'
Gaareho Girls
Saddleback College cheerl~aders are ready to ride herd on Gaucho
football fans thi s season. Keeping spirits bright are (from lt;ft) Linda
Huber, Kathy Shower, Cathy Mackin, Hilary Huston and Carolyn
Jensen.
State Fire Units l11tact
Despite Cut, Aide Says
SACRAMENTO (UPI\ -Cut.< In the
Reagan Administration budget of lhe
California Division ol Forestry have not
hurt the state's firefighting efforts, ac-
ting state forester Le1vis !\1oran s.aid
Atonday.
Moran said that Conservation Director
.James Stearns had ordered no cul!'i in
fire crews and to "hold the firefighlin&
capability of the div ision."
But he said that orders for new• fire
lrucks to replace l>yeat-old models were
being held up.
"Wt've had a problem," he said of the
!rucks. "Our replacement schedule hasn't
been right up to snuff."
more difficult to find men who would re·
main at the mountain camps without
cscapint:
He said the number or inmates had
been cut by about JO or 40 from a
slate"·ide tolal of 2,700, and that by next
lire seasOn it would be trimmed by 190.
He said it would mean a drop of 19 CDF
foremen at the camps, which are staffed
\1•ith one foreman for each 10 men.
The division usually buys 30 fire trUcb
a year at $20,000 each to replace outdated
vehicles about I~ years old.
Laguna Will Join
Coastal Tour
f\.1elvin Pompino. Deputy S t a t e
Forester. saiit the Division's budget for
the 196~1970 fiscal yea r ended last June
30 was p.bout $42 million . The Reagan
Administration added about $1 million Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce
'
'
from that amount In its recom-President Bernard Syfan has announced .
Esme Sandford
Services Held
mendatiions for 1970-1971. he said, and tha t the Laguna Chamber will participate '
the legislature then cut about $1.4 million. in a coastal tour to be conducted by the ·
for a total of about S41.6 million, $400,000 Or~ge County Coast Assoc iation In its ' less than last year.
Moran said that after the current fire cJf~rts to further a scenic impro'Vement .
5eason ends some smaller firefighting project.
Funeral services were held today for units will be consolidated into larger The tour will leave Fashion Island.
Esme T. Sandford, a Laguna Hills resi· ones. Newport ~each, at 8 a.m .. Oct. 22, return.
dent who died Saturday at Beverly Manor The CDf einploys about 2,500 year-ing at 4:30 p.m. after covering the coast ,
Convalescent Hospital. She was 65. round firelighters and 1.000 seasonal from Seal Beach to San Clemente.
The Rev. Canon Stuart officiated at the men, mostly students. Tickets at $8, which includes lunch ·at
5ervkts for Mrs. Sandford at Sheffer He said manpower was being cul at the Victory Hugo, are available at· the •
t.1ortuary Chapel. Private intennenl several Northern California conservation Chamber of Commerce. 280 Park Ave.
followed services. camps, which are run jointly by the "'The tour is op;en to everyone,'' Syfan •
Mrs. Sandford, 898 Ronda Sevilla, ts division of forestry and the department of said, "and "'e hope there will be great in·
survived by her husband, Richard : a corrections. The reductions are being terest in this effort to make these 40
sister, Margaret Barton 1hd a brother, made for "reasons or security," Moran miles a truly sce nic and outstanding
Andy Park, both of Vancouver. 8 .C_. ___ •_•_id_._•_dd_i_n::g_th_a_1_t_he_1i._1e __ wa_•_f_ind_in_g_i_t _s_t_re_tc_h_of_h_ig_h_w_a_y_.'_' ___ . __ _
\
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4 DAil V PILOT T11tldlr, Seottmbtt 2'. 1970 .
U.S. Copte1·
Gunships
Rout Reds
•
SAIGON !UPI) -Helicopters ol lhe
U.S. 101st Airborne Division attacked a
patrol in mountains west of Da Nang and
killed 29 Communists after calling in air
strikes, the U.S. command said today.
Communiques trom Phnom Penh said
fighting in Cambodia was at a low point
with the only act.ion report a battle in
which South Vietnamese forces ktlled 21
Viet Cong and North Vietnamese 75 mUu
northeast of the capital.
A $1.7 million Jail under con-
struction in Goshen, lnd. is eight
incbea wider than the available
land. Elkhart County officials
said the planner apparently forgot
the old jail would not be demolish·
ed unW the new one was finished
next door. Work on the new jail
has been limited to excavation.
The U.S. command in Saigon said the
101st Airborne Division aerial gunships
were on routine patrol on the border
between Thua Thlen and Quang Nam pro-
vinces when they spotted a commWlist
force 40 miles west of Da Nana: Monday.
PRESIDENT NIXON MEETS POPE PAUL AT THE VATICAN
Nine-day Diplomatic Tour 899in1 in Italy • Teacher Chrl1 Meux, 24, has
landed his first local theater TOie
-be will play a body lying flat on
his face on stage for two hours in Mexborougb, England.
The belicoptez'3 opened fire with rocketi
and machine 1uns and called in help from
American jet fighter-bombera. Thoe
gunships killed 17 C.Ommunlst troop1 and
said the jets killed 12 JJ)hre •. '.I'here were
uo U.S. casuallieJ in the !lghtlng.
Greatness Flawed
• Hardly bad an all-out Coast
Guard search for a missing 31·
foot trimaran begun, when it was
called oil Tuesdl\)'. It turned out
that the trimaran had bee~ safel y
moored tn Kahului Harbor on the
island of Maui for two days. The
two men aboard the boat out of
Sausalito, Calif., failed to notify
anybody they bad arrived.
Jn two lesser clashes in the Mekong
Delta Monday, South Vietnamese troops
killed 14 Viet Cong. There were no
government casualties.
U.S. BS2 bomben dropped up lo 300
tons of bombs within 15 miles Of artillery
Base O'Reilly, 12 miles east of Laos and
26 miles west of Hue in raids Monday
reported no new fighting aiound the
besieged South Vietnam... lite base.
Nasser Blinded by Power.
Say U.S. Editorialists
• Viet Cong guerrillas unleashed more
artill~ attacks on civilian population ~ten. in Vietnam Monday, the South
Vietnamese command said today.
Dress for CP Air Stewardesses Ten rounds of mortar fire atruck the
•f b goino midi In Vancouver, B.C. district capital vf Dien Khanh, 111 miles
A spolc.tsman 1ays the ntw out-northeast of Salgca in the central
.~ fita ore part of an "ezecutive highlands. Two civiliana were killed and
~ ;et'" promotion to attract Cana. six others wounded.
dton businessmen. "We think 'l11e mortar attack: followed three shell-gi~l-toatching is important," he !ngs of civilian areas nearly 15 hours
smd. ~so you cover them. up;"-·.,. ····earlier at Hue and south of Saigon. Those
lamented 01ie mnn at an in/or-~ attacks killed twG civilians and wounded
mal party tv i11 1roduce the midis. ... six. J A it travelers will have their first ' The South Vietnamese comma nd said
( 1 view-or nonview-of the steward-I government cavalrymen rode armored
esses in their midis Sept. 21. cars and tanks into a battle 75 miles
northeast of Phnom Penh near the town L:~:.:;,ll!::::'.!:'<:-::. ~ "7"!!"!I' : ' • e-; of Krek Monday. Jn addition to killing 21 e Viet Cong and North Vietname se, they
Ch•rles W•lcruk, a trainee at the
Ft. Wolters helicopter base near
1'1ineral Wells, came to Dallas to
r ecover his car which had been
stolen then found by police aban·
doned on a freeway. Ho\vever, dur-
ing the night bet\\·een the police
notification and his arrival, some·
one cut a hole in the fence of the
policy pound and made off with the
1959 sports car again. • Weddings are few and far
between in Jackpot City near the·
Nevada-Idaho line because there
aren't any churches here. But
Catherine Black, a card dealer,
and John Stran9, a bartender, were
\ved at the club where they \\'Ork.
The Rev. Robert Cook came up
from Elko 120 miles away to
perform the ceremony. He arrived
90 minutes late because he en-
countered road construction. Ap-
propriately for the setting, the
centerpiece on the gift table was a
money tree. Although the city has
no churches, it has c h u r c h
services. They are held in a laun--
dromat. • The eight-year reign oi the
Beatles as the top pop group in the
judgment of British !ans has en·
ded. Named to succeed them
\Vednesday in a poll by the Melody
l\faker. Britain's leading music
ne\vspap~r. \vas the four-man
British rock band led Zeppelin.
The Beatles 'vere s e c o n d •
. .\merica's Bob Dylan held his posi-
iton as best male singer and Cana-
dian folk artist Joni Mitchell was
adjudged U.e best of her sex. suc·
ceeding America's Jenia Jopkln,
who dropped to third.
captured 16 weapons. The South Viet-
namese suffered six dead and 14 wound·
ed.
* * * U.S. A1inounces .
New Troop Cut
In Viet1iam War
SAJGON (AP) -The United States has
turned over another big combat base to
the South Vietnamese army and has
lvilhdrawn four more units from battle to
reduce American strength in Indochina
by another 2,565 men, it was announced
todsy.
Military spokesmen said the An Hoa
combat base, about 20 miles southwest of
Da Nang, has been given to the South
Vietnamese Slst Infantry Regiment. It
\Vas the S7th American installation turned
over to the Vietnamese in • Little more
than a year.
The U.S. Command announced that
three units of the Ist Marine Division and
an Army artillery battalion have been
pulled out of action.
Witness Testifies He
~ulled Off Holdup
PlTI'SBURGH (UPI) - A murder
suspect, brought into court from the
county jail to testify for a friend. sud-
denly announced that he -not the defen·
dant -staged an $80,000 bank holdup.
The defense witness, Peter Blaglarelll.
25. told the court Monday he gave about
S30,000 of the loot to the defendant.
Richard E. Hinkel, 33. to keep for him
after the robbery July 21. 196t.
By United Preu lllterutional
American newspapers commenting in
edil.oriala today described GamaJ Abdel
'Nasser as a man whose greatness as a
leader was flawed by errors of judgment
and ambitloo.
The New York Times called him a
"'tragic and s~acular failW'e ." The
Atlanta Constitution called him a man of
•'vision and patriotism," but in the next
~tence aid, "but that vis.ion was nar·
row, restricted to' the Arab world, willing
to risk: nuclear war between lhe
superpowers Russia and the United
States, to further his dream."
Most papers agreed there was no way
to accurately forecast what Nasser's sud·
den death will mean to the Arab world
and the Mideast tinderbox.
The Daily News in New York observed:
"We'll have to be excused from shed·
ding any tears, genuine or crocodile, over
the death yesterday of Gama! Abdel
Nasser, 52, longtime chieltian of Egypt,
which he grandiosely rechristened the
United Arab Republic. It is a fact,
though, that Mr. Nasser was gathered to
his reward at an inconvenient lime with
regard to the general situation in the
?\fiddle East •.•
The Daily News said, "Nasser was
mortgaged to Soviet Russia, which has
any number ()f technicians in the UAR."
The New York Times said, "his ex-
traordinary rapport with the Arab
masses, his gift for rhetoric. his daring
and his personal charm gave the Egyp-
tian leader a position of strength aJ11()ng
the Arabs and on the world stage that
might have been used to greattadvantage
for his people and for the'peace of the
world . But blinded by his own ambitions,
he vastly overreached himself, led his
country Into a series of disastrous wars
and accomplished little ()f permanennt
value either for his fellow-Egyptians or
his fellow-Arabs."
"He loved power," said the Los
Angeles Times. "In 11! pursuit he
~quandered the re90urces of h i s
leadership and his country on wan and
subversion, until in the end he had
mortgaged his land to a new band of
fol"f:igners who held him more and more
in their debt and control. For now all that
can be safely said is that with Nasser's
death the course ()[ history in the Middle
East has been altered, though in ways no
one can yet fully perceive."
The Atlanta COnstitution ci:lmmented :
''His death robs the Arab nations of one
leader among them who dreamed of bet·
ter things for atl his people. Only the
future can tell what this means for those
people and for the people Nasser inspired
them to hate, the Israelis."
The Baltimore Sun said. "his dream in·
eluded a new Egyptian lllell·being, a rais-
ing of his country out of Its miserable
past. The symbol of this was the Aswan
Dam. But here also nothing came to frui·
lion during bis lifetime; tht beginnings
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only had been made. Just how the Middle
Eastern situation will be changed by
Nasser's death is impossible tG foresee.
That it will be changed profoundly is cer·
lain."
The Los Angeles Times said the death
"removes an immense figure Crom the
world stage.
" .. , at death he was struggling to im.
pose a degree of order over a disparate
Arab world; engaged in the intense
dip)omatic maneuver -some would say
manipulation -with the ,principal powers
of the world; and locked still in a deadly conflict.wiUi.~~ .OIJC.~'!i;itry of hi~region with which he had least come to terms -
Israel •• ,. resolution· of all these depend
tG a very great extent on Nasser.
·• •.. that is why it is a futile exercise
at this point to forecast with any degree
of certainty what will follo\v:"
* * * Sadat to Assume
Nasse1·'s Duties
For Tlvo Months
BEIRUT (AP) -One of Gamal Abdel
Nauer's most loyal followers will be
Egypt's leader for the next 60 days.
Vice President Anwar Sadat, one of the
.. Free Officers" who joined Nasser in
, 1952 to overthrow King Farouk. took ov~r
Monday as interim head of state under
the provisions or Egypt's 1964 constilu-
tion.
No one knows who will eventually
emerge as Nasser's successor.
Within 60 days, the J60.member Na·
tional Assembly is required to nominate a
new president by a two-thirds majority.
According to the constitution, the new
presiden t's term would be five years.
Nasser was elected president for life
following his brief resignation after
Egypt's defeat by Israel in the 1967 war.
Diplomats in Paris said today that
Sadat is not like1y to emerge as Nasser's
final succe~or. One Egyptian ()fficial
menti()ned the possibility of a bid for
power by AU Sabry. the pro-~1oscow head
of the Arab Socialist Union. But a
\Vestern official commented: "Nobody is
going to know what's happening until
somebody reads the will.''
or all the officers who helped Nasser
l~unch his revolution, only two survive in
power-Sadat, 52, and Hussein Shafei, 5l,
\Vho has little popular support. &th are
members of the Supreme Executive
Commiltce or the Arab Socialist Union,
the only authorized political organization
in Egypt.
Sadat was one of four vice presidents
named by Nasser in 1964. They were all
removed following. the 1967 war, but
Sadat remained as president of the Na·
tional Assembly.
Sadat, brought up in a devout Moslem
family and known as an Arabic scholar,
was graduated from Egypt's military
academy in 1938.
British authorities arrested him in 1941
()TI charges of helping an Egyptian
general escape to Nati Germany. He was
imprisoned for two years before escap-
jng, but was arrested again in 1946 and
accused of attempting to assaMinate
Amin Othman, then fin ance minister. He
,.,,as acquitted, became a reporter for a
Calro newspaper, and left that job in 1949
to rejoin the anny.
After the coup against Fatouk, Nasser
appointed SadaL to a succession of key
posts. Jn J953, he was a member or a
tribunal created to try politicians o[ the
()id reginie. A year later, he was on the
People's Court hearing the case of
fltuslim Brotherhood members accused of
trying to as.sassinate Nasser in Alex-
andria.
Police Retnrn •Pants,
Too Baggy in Seat ,
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UP!l -One
hundred state policemen stnt 1htlr
unl(orm trousers back to the manutac1u.
rer becau!etJ,hey .,..'tl't baggy In the seal
Embarrassed oHlel.als at ~ Howard
UnUorm Co. In Baltimore announced they
had tired a quality control Inspector.
'l'hcy also said state troopers In other
states had requested extra room In their
1rouser5 to accommodate bulky books of
ticket.I. But West Virgin~ state police
prt'.fer the slim·llttln~ mood look, spokes·
men here said.
--
Nixon Trip _J
'Death of Nasser
Lessens Impact
f.,j
ABOARD THE USS SARATOGA !UPI)
-Much of the purpose and impact of
President Nixon 's Mediterranean tour
WU diminished by the death ol EgypUUI
President Gamal Abdel Nasser.
Nixon called the Egyptian leader's
death · a "tragic Joas" and canceled air
and sea exerci5CS that had been ached ul·
ed today to show the power and flexibility
of the U.S. 6th Fleet, however. He was
scheduled to go lo Naples later in the
day.
Nixon's eight-day trip began with a
v.·arm and enthusiastic reception in Rome
and a visit with 26 freed American
airliner hostages, but Nasser's death
abruptly imposed a more somber tone on
the tour.
Of immediate concern to Nixon was
who will represe nt the United States at
Nasser's funeral. V.lhile llouse aides
refused to ~peculate whether Nixon
himself would go, but tended to
discourage such talk by observing the
United States and the United Arab
Republic have not had diplomatic rela·
tioos since the 1967 Arab-Israeli war. '
There was speculation among Nixon's
aides that Secretary of State \\'~lian1 P.
Rogers would be sent. Rogers is traveling
with Nixon.
Most activities on Nixon's program re-
mained unchanged. Although he might be
forced to reschedule his trip to
Yugoslavia Wednesday. President Tito
was expected to fly to Cairo for Nasser's
funeral Thursday.
Nixon was notified of Nasser's death
:r.fonday night. In a one paragraph state-
ment, the President said ;
''The world has lost an outstanding
leader who tirelessly and devotedly serv·
cd the causes of his countrymen and the
Arab world. This tragic IO!s requires that
all nations. and particularly those in the
Middle East, renew their efforts to cahn
passions, reach for mutual understanding
* * * Mrs. Nixon Sets
Her Activities
Wliile in Rome
ROME (UPI) -While President Nixon
\•isited the 6th Fleet today, first lady Pat
Nixon planned her ()WO separate round of
activities including a coUee reception and
new:t conference for some 50 Joeal
newswomen and a visit to Rome's version
of Boys' Town.
After her arrival in the Italian capital.
h1rs. Nixon stayed in the background to
Jet the President take the spotlight.
She appeared thrllled Monday with her
visit to the Vatican when she had a
private audience with Pope Paul VJ.
The Nixons invited several Roman
Catholic members of their staff to join
them. Among them were Fina and
Manolo S!nchez, the Nixons' maid and
valet.
Fina. dreSsed in black, kissed the
Pope's hand twice. Tears streamed down
her face. Nixon introduced the couple.
once refugees from Cuba, to the Pope as
being like members of the family.
Much attention has been centered on
:r.trs. Ntxon 's spectacular tr ave I
wardrobe, including eight designer even-
ing gowns.
At Boys Town of Rome this afternoon,
:P.1rs. Nixon was to meet the mayor, J~
year-old Gino Spano, a Canadian. The
first lady also was to meet Monsignor
Carroll-Abbing, founder and president of
Boys Town of Italy.
In the evening, she was scheduled to
motor to the national union for the fight
against illiteracy. There she was to meet
the adult students and faculty and watch
a film. "the alphabet is not enough."
and build lasting peace.''
Nixon 's day Monday included warm
and prolonged talks v:lth Italian leaders
and Pope Paul VI and a surprise SO.
minute greetl.ng for 26 Americans passing
through Rome en route home after three
weeks captivity as prisoners of Arab
guerrillas in Jordan.
Most pleasing to the president was a
spontaneous pro-Nixon demonstration by
thowands of Romans wno chanted "Ric·
canio,' Rie-carclo (Richard, .Richard)"
and tried to mob him as his motorcade
left th.e Vatican.
There was street fighting, but Nixon
·did not see it. Police detained 474 youths,
most of them Communists or anarchists,
who hurled rocks and shouted anti-Nixon
sl ogans in parts of central Rome .
White House Press Secretary Ronald L',
Ziegler told newsmen Nixon was tremen·
dously encouraged by the welcome of
Italians.
bne of the purposes of Nixon's trip waJ
to try to get Yugoslavia and Spain to use
their friendship with Nasser-to get peace
talks moving again at the United Nations.
* * * Nixon. Cancels
Navy Exercises
Over Nasser
ABOARD THE USS SARATOGA (UPI)
-President Nixon told the U.S. 6th fleet
today it had helped keep the Jordanian
crisis from erupting in a wider war, but
he silenced its mighty firepower because
of the·.Vab world's loss OfGameJ·Abdel
Nasser.
Soon after awakening, the President
conferred at sea with Secretary of State
\Villiam P. Rogers and Defense Secretary
J\1elvin R. Laird about the implications
of the Egyptian ,president's death for the
~fiddle East and the dormant Arab-
Israeli peace talks.
Nixon was not expected to interrupt the
schedule of the European tour to attend
Nas!er's funeral in Cairo Thursday -
Rogers may represent the United State1
-but changes were likely in his plans to
visit Yugoslavia that day. President
Josep Broz Tito will be in Cairo for the
funeral.
With today's planned air and sea ex·
ercises canceled, the President stood on
the decks on this huge carrier off Napte~
and told the 25,000 officers and men of
the naval annada by radio that they were
indispensable for peace In the Meditcr·
ranean.
~'Power for peace.'' Nixon declared.
The Jordanian crisis has eased, he
noted. and "the most important. tn·
dispensable reason was the fact that we
\\'ere ready."
"The fact that we did not have to use it
is most satisfying."
The President made no mention or
Nasser's death or the uncertainty it had
injected into the complex power struggle
\vithin the Arab \\'orld v.•hich Cairo had
stabilized so often under Nasser's
moderating influence.
Store Official Rigs
Booby Traps in Shop
MORGANTOWN. W. Va. (UPI) -
When the Propst Machinery Co. is closed,
signs in the windows proclaim the shop is
\vired to explosives that will be louched
()ff if doors or windolvs are disturbed.
The general manager of the firm . Lou!~
Hamrock, for 12 years an A~my ex-
plosives expert with the Green Berets,
set up booby traps after thieves last week
made off \vith $2,000 in equipment.
Hostages Return
'Thank .God for A1nerica,' Says One
• NE\V YORK (UPI l -\Vhcn Jeffrey
Newton. 16, of Nt'.v York City stepped off
the specially-<:hartered Trans World
Airlines jet Monday night after spending
22 days as a hostage in Jordan, he
observed. "liUlc things like hot food and
soft mattresses are.taken (or granted in
this country."
Newton, a student at Y e a b I v a
University High School, was one of 33
hostages or lhe Sept. 6 multi ple hi •
jackings to JGrdan who returned to Ken-
nedy Airport. They had 1 12-hour Oight
from Rome, where they n1et brie£Iy v.·ilh
President Nixon.
Newton WQ one of 32 hostages releastd
by Palestinian guerrlllas on Saturdey. Sil
cf the hostages were itken to Rome
earlier from Nicosia, Cyprus. All were
reunited in Rome P.1onday, with one
hostage returning to his hclme ln Paris.
The hostages were joined by Mrs. Russtll
Morris and her infant son who had been
released several d1ys before. She is the
\\'lfe ol the copilot of the T\YA jetllnu hi·
jacked to the desert out.side Amman.
Six other hostages have been unac-
counted for.
More thnn 200 rtlatlvtJ met lht
returnees In a special rtecptlon wbll(' an
t'stlmaled 1.000 rrlends met them In cor-
ridors ::ind public wRlling rooms. ~,a.yor
John v. Lindsay v.·as on hand along with
pushing and shoving newsmtn trying to
put microphones In front of the hoslages.
J\1itche11 f\1eltzer o( Orlando. 1'~\a., said
11c understood !he guerrillas and that
tbcy had taUibl him a lesson:
"Thank God tor \\•hat we have here In
America."
Capl Carroll D. Woods. pUot of the hi-
jacked TWA jet. who spent his 52nd
birthday in captivity. was met by his wife
and said he had been treated "fairly and
humanely. It was not the best experience
I ever had.'' he said. "t wouldn't recom·
mend ft more than once ln a lifetime."
But when asked if he'd fly to the Mid·
die East again, he said: "I don't know
,,:hy not."
David Raab. 17, of Trenton. N,J .. was
met by his mother ai:ict hugged vJgorou1-
ly. He said he wanted to "take 1 shower
and eaL" Mrs. Raab said, "I ordered him
three steaks."
'J'his was a special reunion for the
Ra abs. Mrs. Raab and her four other·
children had been hijacked with David lo
the Jordanian desert. but they were
released Sept. 14. David. a Yeshiva.
University student. was held.
"For a while l lhou&ht l had losl my
who)(' family," said David's father, Rabbl
1'-fenuchen Raab.
Hundreds of YMhlva Un \versll J
student.s cart')llng signs greeted tbl
returnees. "Near ?iflzrachl welcomes
home David Raab and Foozlc Chesler
from a relaxlng vacation overseas," ofle
siJO read.
"I v.·11nt to gel a big botlle of root
beer,'' said Fran Chesler, 19. a Yeshiva
student. "It's nice to be back tor Rosh
Hoshanah," the Jewi!h new )'tar lb at
~gins at sun®wn Wednesd•.Y·
•
7
7
San ClemeD.te . .
f;apistrano EDITJON
YOC. '61, NO. 233, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, ~"FORNIA :TUE$0A Y, SEl'JiMIER 29, 1970
'
rson us
Egyptians
Mourning
Arab Chief
CAIRO (UPI) -Egyptians poured into
Cairo today by train, by bus and on foot
to mourn the death of President Gamal
Abdel Nasser whose death from a heart
attack Monday threatened new chaos for
a Middle East wx:ertain of the present
and fearful of the future. ,
Nasser, 52, lay In state in the imposing
Republican Palace in the heart of calro
while hundredl of thoU!IDds milled about
outside hopeful of a last look at the gray-
ing colonel who was the idol of the Arab
masses and whose death could bring the
Middle East once more to WJr.
The Soviet Union, with more at stake in
Egypt than-perhaps-anrot!Jer-nation;-an.
nourced it was sending Premier Alexei
N. Kosygin to Cairo today for tlte Thurs..
day funeral. An official statement called
Nasser "an out.N.nding son of the Arab
people" and a "great friend of the Soviet
Union.'' It said Ru.ssian aid would con·
linue.
President Nixon cancelled a show-of·
foroe ·ubil>ition by the U.S. 6th Fleet to
avoid 'rousing further anti-American feel-
ings in this nation caught up in an emo-
tional upheaval Egyptians 90 wary of
Israel that a maximum alert was called
by military leaders along the Suez canal
cease-fire line.
How Nasser's death would affect Nix·
on's European tour wu not certain but
·his .,llit to Yueoaloevla wu Rl for
Wectoeecla) and ur..,-. PllY have
to be c:haiiged. Presicllnl Tllo, an old
comrade of Nasaer's, was expected to fly
to Cairo for the funeral; the Yugoslav
cabinet met today to discuM the situa·
lion.
Nixon himself was not expected to go to
Cairo but it was believed he might send
Secretary of State WDUam P. Rogers,
pow with him in the Mediterranean.
Egypt, Syria and Jordan declared a 46-
day official period. of mourning and the
Arab world which had met Nasser so
many times in summitc onferences to
discuss operations against I s r a e I
prepared to send its kings and presidents
back to Cairo for a final farewell.
Vice President Anwar El Sadat suc-
ceeded Nasser as prestaent under the
Egyptian constitution but it appeared
certain a major power struggle would
develop for his suCl:t$SOr. The fear in
some parts of the world was that hot·
blooded young anny officers might take
over with the prospect of endless war.
Sadat himself ls considered a leftist foe
of Israel.
One fact remained : There is no heir
apparent, no man of stature to assume
(See EGYPT, Page Z)
Cyclist Injured
In Crash, Skid •
A late-evening ride on a motoicycle
resulted in injuries to a 48-year old San
Clemente man Monday after his cycle
swerved into a parked car, flipped onto
its side and skidded for 33 feet down the
roadway.
Police said Sam Michael Barrile of 142
Lonta Lane was injured at 8:11 p.m. in
the 200 block of Calle Santa Barbara.
Barrile swerved into a car owned by H.
N. Abeben of 210 Santa Barbara.
Police said the man, who suffered
abrasions and possible head injuries, was
taken unconscious to South Coa.sl em.
munlty Hospital.
,.., U'IT .......
Reulaillfl Goal
Don Engdalh, 37, Santa Rosa,
trudges along Imperial Beach
near San Diego on his way to
his goal at California~Mexico
border. Engdahl, a newspaper npol'IF, Is compleling a con-
servationists walk along 1,•
miles of Pacific shoreline. Ste
&tory, ~age 7.
Tot Takes Pills
In San Clemente
Race With Death
As firemen grimly worked to keep him
awake , a 2-year~d San'Clemente toddler
was rushed. to South Coast Hospital in
South Laguna Monday afternoon after
swallowing a large amount of b i 1
mother's tranquilizers.
And the swift emergency treatment by
· San Clemente firemen was successful for
young John A. Badaracco of 238 Calle
Aragon. The baby, who appartntly
swallowed a large amount of the pills
sometime near 2 p.m., soon went into
convulsions.
His mother, Nancy Durkin, phoned for
help through the city's new 911 emer-
gency line.
Firemen said the baby had lapsed into
unconsciousness before they arrived, but
inhalation and other techniques brought
him awake again.
The measures were continued as the
boy was taken to the hospital in a fire
department station wagon. At South
Coast, aides said the baby's stomach wu
pumped and the boy was recovering.
Five Doctors Worked
BE!Rtrr. Lebanon (AP) -The five
doctors who treated Egyptian President
Gamal Abdel Nasser for.his fatal ·heart
altack Monday night spent 15 minutes
~g to get his heart beating again. the
Cairo newspaper Al Ahram reported t~
day.
When the efforts proved unsucceaful
they burst into tears and all present at
Nasser's bedside then knew that the pru.
ident had passed away, the report, quoted
by eairo Radio, said.
Showers
Predicted
In Hot State
By ARmuR R. VINSEL
Of ... Dellr ...... '""
Dying winds and predicted rain show-
ers today brought hope to f.ire[lghten ex·
hausted by fivt days in hell, battlinl a
multi-froDt bolocuast whole scars will
still be ~ by your gi<a~grandchlldun,
100 ye.an from now.
The 'ieries ct lira -Including one in
San Diego Cowlty cooceded to be the
worst in recorded California history -
have so far killed eight ·penons and cam.
ed almost incalculable ctan\qe.
EaUmates ran l<>day to 1175 million and
California wu declared a diluter area,
thu!._qiialUylng thousands ol homeless
vict.ims for Iow·interest government
loaiu.
During the fiv«!ay siege in six coun-
ties, the fight against fiamea bu included
the newest in technology -from an
amphibious tanker plane that sucks up
1eawater -to buckets and bare bands.
Some firtmen have alept Clllly ftvt
hours in the whole five days.
Even women and children l>elpod aaV.
the San Diego Cowlty mountain vlllqe ol
Julian, pounding ,flames wlth aacb.,
blam..ts and abonll; 1lloG ,.a ... eu1 the sparb. . . .. . . .
"It •• tbl.Jllllt.:aaw••q tbla( .he erer ...._ .. 11114 a ~ .,.
Monterey, "l ~~ 11 -the
Vnlmrteer Jl'lrt ~ mW I '°" the 1adiel and kids."
'He waa one of --qbi Jil
dead, 25 seriously Injured and lGO ll'uted
for eye irritation -aumn1oned fnm ai
far as Montana and even out of Clllfornla ·
prisons to· help.
The 'situation eased somewhat today
w.ith , higl!!or bumidj!y, ~ ~
and lor<cast rains, tiat the poa!bllliy ol
pyromaniacs settiDg new fires cohUnued
to be a menace.
Several peraoM have been arreat.ed on
sµspicion of arson.
Ironically; next Sundoy ls the beginlllnl
of National Fire Prevention Week.
Experts in the field ol natural eonlolY,
meanwhile, warned cl a new horror when
winter storms strike the fire.ra,.,ed
areas -especially in San Diego County
-unless they an quickly re-aeeded.
"The east part of the county could
become a horrOr of fioods and mudslides
if we don't get graaa in and growing,"
(See FlllES, Pip I)
Brig Escapees
Nabbed by Police
A pair Bl alleged fu«IUves from the
Camp·Penclleton brig lost their short few
houri Bl freedom in San Clemente Moo-
day ni1ht because or c:urioul detect!va
on routine patrol.
Police said the two eocaped marine
convict.II were arrested on the El Camino
Real onramp of the San Diego Freew1y
shortly before 10 p.m. by two detecttves.
Ofllcen aald the men ""'" ~
about possibly being 1baeot lrithout
leave.
Subsequent cbecb r<VUled that the
pair, Bobby Tyrone Grtlllth, :IO, and
Rickie Glen Gordon, 17, bad mutedly
fied the brig earlier In the <Vtninc.
The two MarlhH ...,. returned to
military authorltlea.
• Ill
Fires at Glan~e
Here is a brief glance It the locations, e1tent of control and known de-
atructloa. c:auaed by 51 ltPIJ'llte bruab and limber fires throughout Calilornia.
SAN DIEGO COUNTY -The worst autumn fire in California history
wu near Inc . containment after c:harring 200,000 acres, while four smaller
b1un in the aame atta destroYed 15,CKKI acres.
SAN GABRIEL CANYON -Firemen gained the upper hand due to
dylnc windl, but five were tilled Monday night when their helicopter crashed en route to the f,O(IO.ac:re blue. -
MALIBU -The devutating fire here, which merged at one point with
the Newhall bla1e, w.-, dlminiahb'll after firemen gained the upper hand, but
f0,000 ac:rea have been burned over.
~AN BERNARDINO COUNTY -Flames licked over 7 ,000 acres in
Meyers Canyui, but droppin& Santa Ana winds gave firemen a break .
SAN LUii OBISPO COUNTY-A blaz.e north or here and near Highway
l wu under control after 1,000 ac:res were charred.
MONTEREY COUN'J'Y -Burning in the hills between Willow Creek and
Salmon Creek on the picturtlque coast, the fire has burned more than 12,000
acrea and thrutena a lland of California redwoods. Hl1hway 1 remains open
but hazardoua due to large rocks cracked off cliffs by the heat tumbling to
the pavement.
KERN COUNTY -Firelines wtre holding up on a 32,500-acre brush fire
southeast of Bakersfield, with almOll all its 45-mile perimeter encircled by
flrefighten. A tecond fire near Red Mountain bu ravaged 17 000 acres of
Umberland, I -
MARIPOSA COUNTY -A smaller fire wU COfltained Monday night
after bumlng 1,820 acres, but names destroyed power lines eliminating elec-
trical servi« to Maripola and Yoeemlte National Park.
_Laguna Firemen Watch
Brush-covered Canyons
With Southern California In tlnderboi
......... IDll·lllUoll of 1i 1••k1"··-a;;.. llreilllD abil pollci .an ..,--:.-; ... _...,.-·...-111oi·-----~., ... ....,.
"'Jbe """ ..r -... io dry It'• alnlOlt no ;tiitdli,"'. ialf '.Fire .Clliol James I..Umer today. ·
'aumer aald firemen are conductinf •
re(utar lire po1ro1 ·1n ta,.... Canyon, up
B J.u e·b 1.r d• Canyon Drive, theCou~ ~man Esllta area and otJier fire..
ha11rit locatlonl. P1b'olln1 police offic:efl
are asaiatinl In' this, Hid Wtimer.
'
c!Mn::,:::':~=~ ~
anythll!l ela that mJ&bl,-k 1 fire. He
Ulled iiiem to CIUtloo their children aJlo -nr. ,aaletJ, porllcularlJ 4uilq Ibo eumnt dry, low tiliJnldHy period,
Lltlmtt lal4 that uguna's three Ore
ltatiolll will ,.... aa collection points for
p<raons wishing to contribute lo the hun-
dredl ln Southern Callfornla who have
lost' Uielr homes and pos1esslons.
·He said Items needed for the fire vie·
t.lms include clothln1, bedding and non·
perishable food staples.
Saddleback Trustee
Blasts Press Charges
ByP~BAU.AN
Of "" ... ,. """ ""'
Hens Vogel, pruident Bl the Sad·
dleback College bolid Bl trumes, blasted
the preu Monday !or what be termed
unwarranted charges of wuting the tax·
poyers money.
The Issue came up when the board wu
Wonned that the Orange Cowlty
counsel's office had asked for an ex·
pedlted appeal on the drell code con-
ti'nveny in the Ninth Clrallt U.S. Court
o[ Appeal.
"The board bad beeo crlticiZed for
apendinl the wpoyers' funcll on this .
c:ue," uld V01el. "But in feet, the board
haa spent only l1ClO lrith ll7S !"' the
aervicel Bl the county coanoel. Generally
jt's the attorney's fees that are costly,
lln't that right?" h> ubd, •milinl at
board m<mber Michael Collins, an at·
tomey.
"The point lo the counly -I ls on
the poyroll !or 111. It la an. expenditure
that is not u erpenalve u many would
envlslon," he said.
Vogel aUI he allo wani.d to reiteratl
why they were purauing the case. He said
the board is now appealing to the same
three-man body that ruled in their favor
in April.
He said ln February Judge Harry
Ferguson ol. the U.S. District Court plac--
ed restraining orders allowing five
students to enroll at Saddleback despite
their vlolatlons of the dress c:ode. Since
that lime; the Miulon Viejo Junior
college has not enforced the dress code.
"We appealed to remove t b i s
restraining order alll were successful.
Judge Ftrguaon wu told he should not
have luued the restraining order because
the caae of individuals was weak," said
Vogel.
''1be thret·man court of appeals
brollght lt back to the judge and he rui.d
a1atnst UI." Vogel said he didn't think it
unfair to now bring the appeal baclr. to
the three-llllll coort that originally ruled
for them ..
Voeel ltai.d that the Issue ii not hair
or anythlng else relating to the dress
code. Jt is who runs the local schoola, the
federal judges or the local board.
Si>okesmen there said Barrile was
released after emergency treatment.
Last Hijacki1ig
'Hostages Free
Jud·ge Sets Hearing Date
. Youth Football
Program Set Up
The uguna Beach Recreation Depart.
ment 11 s..-Jnl 1 Dag foOtbalJ (ll'Oo
gram for boya In llie thlr~ throuP alxth
aradel. .
GENEVA (UP!) -The Interna-
tional Cmmmittee ol. the Red Cross
1nnouoct<L looi&ht the remaining
1ix airline holtagts held by
Palestine guerrillas have beeo
frted and are all safe. All are
Amtrieans.
A Red Cross statement said news
of the release of the boltages was
tent to headqu1rttr1 In Genev1 by
thr: Intermitlonal Red Cross de'ega·
rtion In Amman.
There were no immedilte sup-
plementary, dttalls.
1-
Accused Deputies Plead Not Guilty
Two Orange Cowlty Sb<rlfl'a deputies
ICCUJed Of burglarizing the Mluion Viejo
Cowitry Club today pltailed Innocent in
Santa Ana Municipal Court to cbar&a ol
grand theft and bur1Jary.
Judge Eugene, G. Langu-onler<d
Art.bur E. Duncan, S4, of 4M1 Maul Cir·
clc, HanUngton Beach and Fr<derick Bi
lrvine, 4G, of W Habra to face
preliminary hearlng Nov. I. Both men
are free on bail. ,
Both former deputies had to braVe the
glare Bl televlslOn lighting and the
equally intense glares of aeveraJ former
colleagues u tbey mlanicl and loll Judp
LanghaUM"'a crimlDlll cal 1 D d tr -lrYtno -to -1111 .... ml
left -z.-:.lb 1111 _.,, -hesitated, to ipllt ID MWWIWlli
and then wu ~ bJ i. 11..,.. DOI
to commmt oa the tllae.
Both men wm ormted losldl the 1oll
shop Bl the Mlsllon Vltjo Countq Club
last SepL :IO Iller tJ1e tOlplcloas aolf pro
aaw them on the ~ ...r called _
1herlU11 officm. r.-1r1ton allep stolon plllnf
in Grand ·Theft
-
. Ragiltr•tlon ol players will clooe Fri-
day and the boya w@l be orpnu.d Into
teams durtnl the -k Of Oct. H, .!rith . tOam prictka _..., !or the follow.
inC wok. sepantf lequa. wtll be !arm-
ed at AtilO, El Mom and Top ol '1"'
World Eltmentar, Schonts. All gamea
wW be played l!t« achool and wW Olld ·
before the linal ochool boa leav,. the
-_. uch ·daJ. Enlrf ,fcnm •PllY be obtained II the
elem1111aty adloola or from the Recrea-
tion Doportllllll& It 175 N. Coll(
Hlchway,
• .
'I •
Tetlay's Flllal
N.Y. St.eb .
JEN CENTS
I
azes
•
Brush Fires
In County
Controlled
Orange County had some good news
and some bad news on the fire front to-
day.
The good news was that the fires which
have blackened. 4,000 acres in the county
are all under control.
The bad news is that arson Is suspected
in 15 to 20 of the fires which raged over
the last weekend, including the 500-acre
El Toro bl.a2:e.
Wally Trotter, chief of the Orange
County Fire Presventlon Bureau, said
two teams are probing the embers
searching for clues ta arson. "The leads
are slim but we hope we are makin«i
some headway," the chief said.
The El Toro area blaze which broke out
last Friday and burned over 500 acre9
threatening homes in the Lake Forest
and El Toro area is the subject of i~
tensive investigation, Trotter said.
Friday, the day the El Toro fire
started, witnesses saw a small fire and
people running from it, the fire official
reported . They tried to stop the person1
who started the. fire but failed.
"We found a device there which rou1d
have been used to start the fire " Troller said. '
The 3,QOl).acre Trabuco Canyon fire is
also under investigation as to cause.
All day Monday flre teams patrolled
the scorched mountain •re as ex~
Unguishing still smoldering or burnin&
brush and trees.
O'NtilJ Part, wttc:b wu thrtatened by
the Tracuco ~rlda"/2f be closed until Friday, county stated.
Marines Facing
Court in Laguna
Shooting Charge
Two Camp Pendleton Marines accused
of shooting a 19-year<ild Lagunan are to
be arraigned in Superior Court Oct. 9 on
charges of robbery and assault with in·
tent to commit murder.
The two, Kenneth Ray Starks 19 and
Virgil L. McCoy, 20, are ac~ed of
shooting, Lawrence Mk:bael Bornman, 19
of 475 N. Coast Highway on June 'll.
Bornman underwent surgery f o r
removal of a bullet from his armpit.
Judge Richant Hamilton dismissed ad-
ditional kidnaping charges agolnst the
pair during a four-day preliminary ex·
amination in municipal court.
Witnesses during the hearing testified
to seeing men struggleing in the back seat
of a four-door sedan. Bornman had told
police he escaped from the car when it
stopped at Myrtle Street and Pacific
Coast Highway. The Marines were ar·
rested later at a San Clemente road
block.
Barge Canal Halted
TAMPA, Fla . (AP ) -Secretary of the
Interor Wal ter J. Hickel has signed a
petition seeking · a temporary halt to con..
strucUon of the controversial Croa Flor·
ida Barge Canal. ·
Oruge
Weatlaer
Tbat patchy fog · and low cloud•
will be back to haunt the coast
. Wednesday morning, with mercury
readings dipping back Into the 70's
on the shore and up to M fu rther
inland.
INSIDE TODAY
Tht dtath of EDJ10&'1 Ncastr
Jeaue1 the Arab world bereft of
a leccUr. For on in-depth look °'' Ute life o/ thb controVff.tial
figure, see Page 8.
...,.._ 11
Cllll!ntll' r _ .. '
CltMlfltlll -.w
"""" u -u
Dedl """"' ' -' ..... i.1, .... • ......... _., 1• ,.,_ ,.,n -.. Mii ""'*" ,. Mi!TlllM 1.'""-t
I
•
-§L @ > a e t t > .. > a e j l J;;; I 21 a _ _; > a • • -
:II Dl!LY PI LOT sc--,
R.oail Progl'ana
Laguna Street
Planning Told
By BARBARA KRE!B!Cll
Of Ille 0•1"" Pllfl tl•tf
Examining plans for an amendment ID
Laguna·1 precise plan of arterial streets
Mond1y evening, planning commissioners
learned thal the Campus Drive extension
throu&h Boat C.nyon probably is 10 years
ow•r.· but utension or Alta Laguna ~ evard from Top of the World 1o Areh
Beach Heights may be undertaken in tht
latter part of 1971.
Both arterials are part of the county's
Jong.range road planning program and
commissioners were asked to approve
plans for th0$e sei;ment.s that will be
located within Laguna's city limit.ii.
Riddle Field. home of Laguna's Little
League. seems. likely to be a casualty of
the Ca1npus Drive extension, but plan-
ners recommended that. if the field could ·
not be saved, it should be relocated whe!'
the road ti;: put in.
Commission Cha irman William Lam-
bourne noted that when Riddle Field was
pul in. the possibility of a future road in
the area already was known. The
decision. Lambourne said, was to use the
field as Jong as possible and relocate ii in
the event of road construction.
Commissioner Robert Hastin gs also eJ·
pressed concern that the extension or
Hillcrest Drive across Boat Canyon
&hould be preserved.
Irv Berman or the city engineering
department said it is the intention of the
State Division of Highway& to keep
Hillcrest Drive open. He also said that a
Campus Drive Interchange with I.he
future inland freeway is included in ltate
highwa y plans.
The plan for Campus Drive. as
presented to the. commission, shows a
&Ingle .roadway ex.tending toward ~ast
Highway to approximately the location or
Riddle field , at which point it would
divide int.o two branches, one on either
11ide of tbe paved Boat Canyon shopping
center, la.king northbound and aouth·
bound traffic to the highway.
In response le> a query from Com-
missioner Ca rl Johnson, City Planner Al
Autry said that approval of the general
prttise plan for the Campus !'ri~e e~·
tension was being sought at this lime 1n
order to preserve right-of-way and avert
costl y de velopments in the path of the
future road.
Detailed engineering had not been com·
From Pqe I
EGYPT ...
hi1 role as leader of the1 Arab world . Hi1
death could bring further woes to \lrael,
for he made fiery 1peeches but ht ura:ed
moderation and accepled 01'; concept of a
negotiated peace.
Nasser's death came as a major blow
to the Nixon administration for he was
the one leader considered a 1tabilizlng in·
fluence in the Middle East. It could mean
the end of the American peace initiative
which led Nasser to 11ree to a 90-d•Y
cease-fire -the end of a moderate in·
fluence and the po6Sible rise of leftwina:
Arab militant!.
There was apprehension at the United
N1tion& where diplomat& expressed con·
cern over the selection of his possible
~uccessor. By law the national assembly
dominated by Nasser's Arab Socialist
Union must name a successor within 60
d1ys.
Grief in the Arab world was universal
-even in Iraq where Nasser was
popular with the masses but not with tl'ia
ruling Baathist Party men: He had dlf·
ficulty with the Syrians, too. but Syrian
head of state Nou reddin. A1-Atassi said In
a atatement "the Arab nation lost a Feat
lipter and courageous leader who spent
all his life fighting to realiu the goals of
lhe Arab ma&Ses."
In Beirut, Lebanese youths ventin&
their grief set up roadblocks on major
routes leading to lhe eily and cut the
rQlld to Beirut Airport in lVI apparent ef·
fort to force the n1lion to' a standstill in
mourning. The city of Tripoli began a
general strike to exp ress ilS sorro~·.
DAILY PILOT
....,_,. le.clill Hlt9tl•• .... II
' l.9pN ... clll fe•eNi• ,....., c ... M-S• Ckn ,,,.
Ou.HG£ COAST' l"Ua\.tl"4JNG ~,ANY •••••t N. w.,4 l"•lllCll"! t f\f "uOll ll>tf'
J•t~ '· Cu•le~
Vite •r11 Q•"' •"' Gt<"trll Min ..... lh.,..,, "••·ii ....
lfl1tr
l lto,..•• A. M ur,hi~t
""'"""" lllli...
•ich•" '· Nill $9\11~ O••-c-1r s•H•
ce1t• M-1 m wut ••t $1'11ft
........ , ltlCll! lfll Wiii et1"\ hulll'Hl'lll
U-t t .. Clll nt l't1t•I A-Ill
... \,to, ........ •wt": "'" •••<fl ............ a..11 C~tfl JOI Hertll II CM!IM l•I
. ' ' • '•
pleted . Autry $aid. and the plan would be
aubject to some revlston prior tn actual
construction which probably would not
t.ake place for 10 yea rs.
With the recommendation that Riddle
Field be rel.lined or relocated, and that
Hilkrest Drive be kept open, the pla n
was reeommended for approval by the
City Council.
Extension or Alta Lagu na Boulevard
across the ridge to Arch Beach Heights is
a much more immediate project , plan·
ners learned. •
An engineer for the Orange County
Road Department said it ha s been
scheduled for 197().1 and it is hoped con·
struction ca n be undertaken between
August and November ol 1971.
Hasting! noted th1t the n~ for a con-
nection between the two h 111 top
development! has been pointed up by the
recent fires and the Alta Laguna ex ..
tension is "very necessary."
Acting city manager Joseph Sweany
noted that the Laguna Beach County
Water District intends to put a water
main along the new segment of Alta
Laguna, which would facilitate fire-
fighting operations in the hill are.as.
The project wu unanimously recom-
mended for city approval.
Hotline Open
In Clemente
For Problems
A new telephone-counseling service of-
fering the chance lo dial 492-82M for help
has been opened by a eroup o! San
Clemente vo lunteers.
The new service, which will offer he lp
for problems ra nging from drugs, un·
wantted pregnancy, suicide and venereal
disease, is the creation of San Clemente
businessman Bud Scheele, who said the
volunteers will man phones at a new
center for six hours each evening. lhen
will be available through an exchange tbe
rest of each day.
The first-ever hotline se rvice for San
Clemente will be on an anonymous basis
if callers request it and will include chan-
neling legitimate problems to public
agencies and individuals who specialiie in
specific problems.
Scheele said If the program is auC.
cessful -and 60 more volunteer1 can be
fqupd -a personal counseling suvice
rnight be lmplemtnt~ with the plan.
lf the counselors become reality, two
more rooms near a present one-room of·
fice would be added to accommodate
private counseling.
The usual number or crank or er·
roneous calls are expected u the pro-
gram is launched, Scheele admitted,
"because we assume some people just
want lO see if we're for real.''
The insurance and real estate broker
said the group of volunteers also expect
calls ranging from advice to lovelorn to
automotive repair problems at flrat..
For the legitimate caller wit h a grip-
ping problem . however. Scheele promised
valid attempts to help, include channeling
specific cases to appropriate experts for
attempts for solution.
The times for the call service will be
from 4 to 10 p.m. weeknights; calls com-
ing in at other times will be transferred
to volunteers who will be on 1tand-by du-
ty.
The volunteers an a cross-section of
cilizens, Scheele explained , and Include
hOusewives, atud enta. members of the
clergy. te1chers, businessmen .and a
psychologist.
Car Rams Pole;
Dana. Man Hm·t
A Dana Point man Is scheduled to be
released today from Hoag Memorial
Hospital aftter his cir hit a traffic 1ignal
pole in Newpo~t Beach early Monday
niornlng.
Police said Dennis 8. Buckner. 11 of
2S37l )'acht Drive received facial lacer•·
lions and a fOQt injury when the car he
was driving collided with a pole 11t the in-
lersec1ion of Eas1 Cc&.!t Highway and
Newport Center Drive.
Buckner told officers he w1s traveling
lc!astbound on the highway when he. 10.!lt
control of his car. The skidding auto ap-
parently mls!ed l\\-n light standards
before hittina the signal light pole.
Citizens Discuss
Atom Plant Site
Alomir plant 1itt pro posals will be
d\scu!11ed by p11rent1, teachers and
1ludcnl3 tonight in San Clemen1e Ktgh
School's firs! meetirya of the new Parent·
Teacher.Student Adoci1rion .
Mrs. Eugene Koster . pruident , ••id the
nuclt1r gener1tor issue w111 be In-
troduced in the business meeting 1t 7:))
p.m. In Triton Center.
Program of the evening is 1 pruen·
talion by 1tudenu of the' bum111ltie1
classes.
·,\frs, Kmter uld the metlirti and 1
pot.luck dinner precediTll it 1rt: OPftl tn
1111 patents, le.1chtrs 1od students.
v.1htl.her or nol they haVt btld mem-
bermip In PT A.
'
' -
~ ~
Sign Trouhle_s: Less~n
Nine of 34 Facilities Still Have Problems
order larger signs removed entirely,
which leaves the f1cUlty with no Jden·
llflcation. ·
1ij:na arc permitted. out of 34 hotel, motel and apartment
f11cWtie1 In La.SUJ'l'I J\.2 ind R-3 (mulli·
pie residential ) ~es:, only nine still are
· having 1l&1J .. PfObtema:, Laguna Beach
'< plannlOj' commiJaiooer1 lwned Monday
night as they moved to ease some o!
these difficulties.
He suggested ulal three squa re feel of
sign area would be acceptable and the
tommissioenrs agreed . It was proposed
to write this change into the overall
revision of the city :r.oning ordinance
which will be coming up for public hear-
ings and City Council approval in about a
month.
The problem in the residential zones,
Autry.explained , is that many apartment
facilities have developed into hotel-motel
use over the years and, under new Zoning
ordinance!, are classified 11s legal, non·
conforming usCs. Though permiHe~ to
continue in operation. they ne_yerthetess-
are subject to the signing restrictions
now applied in the ione. I
READY FOR ANOTHER GO
Cup Skipper Ficker
Ficker Agrees
.To ~e Skipper
In 1973 Race
NEWPORT. R.I. (AP) -Victorious
skipper Bill Ficker of Intrepid agreed le>
day to take the helm of a new cup
defender If the U.S. defends the historic
America 's Cup again in 1973.
Several members of the syndicate that
backed Intrepid in this yea r's 21,.;l suc-
cessful defense of the yachting trophy an-
nounced agreement to form a new syn·
dicale.
Ficker and his crew defeated Gretel II
of Australia 4-1 in a series that ended
Monday 10 mil es ofl this yachting center.
ALMON LOCKABEY'S ACCOUNT
OF RACE ON PAGE 12 TODAY
The U.S. has not lost the cup since it
\Yas first won by the schooner America in
England in 18SL
Ficker. 42, a Newport Beach architect,
v.•as credited with a major share of this
year"s victory. skippering the 3-year-old
Jntrepid. ~·hich was also defender against
another challenge from Australi a in 1967.
The new sy ndicate Is to be htaded by
Willia m J. Strawbridge of Philadelphia
· and S. Briggs Dalzell and J. Burr
Bartram Jr., long associated witb New
York 'Ya cht Cl ub activitie s.
The three v.•ere major members of the
1970 Intrepid syndicate which was
di ssolved today. .
~1embers or the new syndicate did not
say whethe r tl1ey plan to build a new 12·
meter boat. However, they did announce
that Intrepid is to be towed back lO Min·
ne ford Yacht Yard . City Island. N.V,,
and that she will be made available if
needed as a future trial horse.
Presumably. a dttlsion on whether to
build a new boat will a"·ail challenges for
the America's Cup. Under New York
Yacht Club rules challenges must be
forthcoming within 30 days of t.1onday's
final 1970 race. Normally, actual racing
is conducted only ollCe every three years.
· It is known that another American syn-
dicate made up or South<!rn California
yachtsmen is being organized with the
announced purpose of backing .an all-West
Coast defender of the America's Cup,
possibly In 11173.
It "'as not clear whether Fic ker would
lake the hel m of the Eastern .syndicate
yach1. .,,. the ne"· boat plaMed by !ht
West Coast iroup.
Trustees 01(
Building Plans
For Saddleback
Saddleback College trustl'c~ h11ve ap-
prn\·ed schtmatic pla ns for their first
pt>rmanent buildings, 1 $..4 I million
sclenee·math et>mpiex and a $3.T mUlion
libn1r_y-clas.sroom complex.
Plans fo r lhe 5cfcnce·math raeilily wltl
be itubmit1 ed to lhe st.alt before
Thursd.ny'1 deadline. in an attempl to ob-
tain matching runds from the state for
construction. The library-classroom com·
plex w1s turned down for funds from the
junior colle1e eoostn.n:Uon fund and will
be built from the; Saddleback bond fund .
In a prese:ntation before the board
~lond.ay, spokesmen for Ramber1 ind
Lowry,. architects. showed how the
buildings will be f\e1ltilt '-nou1h to adapt
for future; use.
The library building Is scheduled for
complelion ln 1972 a..nd the 1eienee.-math
bulldln1 in 1973. But both four·story hiah
buildings are designed to accommodate
Lhe 10,000 atu1r.nts projected for 1980.
• '
In the R·2 zone, ci th planner Al Autry
explained. the sign ordinance permits on·
Jy one-half aqu1re fool of sign space for a
property. 'Thie, commented chairman
William Llmbourne, •·borders M the
ridiculous" for an establilhment setkin&
to identify .ltatlf.
Tbe only permissible procedure for the
city staff at prettnt, uJd Autry, is to
tn the R-3 :r.one . the maximum sign
area per property is 12 square ftc\, but
thle is considered insufficient by some of
the larger facilities which pay bed tax
comparable to that paid by motels and
hotels in commercial zones where larger
Since only a handful ol pro~rtles are
confronted with these sign prob"lems. it
appear~ to bt the consensu.!I of the plan·
ners that they should be handled on an in-
dividual bails through the variance pro-
cedure.
Laguna Commissioners
An amendment to the sign ordinance
for the whole zone. it was pointed out.
could result in a proliferation of large
signs in areas principally zoned for resi-
dential use.
.... From Page I
Study Parking Pkins FIRES ...
Detailed plans and cost tstlma tes for
two l1rge parking structure• in downtow n
t.aguna Beach were examined by plan·
ning commissioners during their Monday
night study session .
Plans for a five level structure on the
~ile of the existing municipal lot on Glen·
neyre Street at Laguna Avenue and a
four-!tvel structure on Mermaid Street
were prepared by Conrad Associates, '
archlttects and pla nners 1pecializlng in
pa rking atructures.
The Glenneyre .structure, with 4-0S
parki ng spaces. would cost an estimated
$791,845, planners were told, while the
<!~space Mermaid structure would cost
approximately $807,085.
The city already own11 the Glenneyre
site and much of the Mermaid structure
would be built over city-owned street pro-
perty, though land al ong the adjacent
hillside, now occupied by private homes,
would have to be acquired.
Planning commissioner Robert
Hastings, who has been working on the
parking strutcure proposals, has sug -
gested that the projects be undertaken und~r a lease-back agreement. with a
development firm handling design and
Color Carnival
This Weekend
In Capo Area
Artists and craftsmen in the Cap istrano
Bay area this week finished off their
works in time for a two-day Carnival of
Color si>Onsored this weekend by the
Capistrano Beach Chamber of Com-
merce.
The event . set for Saturday and Sunday
in Capistrano Bea:h Plaza. featured 500
art works at last ye ar's funclio n.
Cham ber volu nteers predicted 11 new
record this year.
Person! willing to exhibit in the show
are asked to bring their works Salurd.ay
morning. select a displa y area beneath
the covered sidewa lk, then register.
Members of the chamber will staff the
registration table starling at 8 1.m. Ex-
hibilion and sales space Is offered on a
basis nf first-come, first-served.
Stands. easels or tables must be
furnished by exhibitors themselves.
The displays will be h'om 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. bolh days.
Among the eve nts will be 1 draw ing for
a Wiiiiam Cox acrylic painting of a
Hawaiia n seascape.
The 10..percent or sale!. plus $2.511
recreation ftt by the txhJbilors htlp pay
for chamber-sponsored projects. The
public is welcome free .
construction and revenue from meters
going toward lease payments.
Commissioners were shown a series of
5lides lllualratlng parking structure pro-
blems and solutions by a representative
of the Van Nuys fi rm wh ich has installed
multi-level parking facilities at Los
Angeles International Airport and in ma-
jor cities throughout the west.
The plans will be referred to the City
Council for further study.
Tunney's Wife
Presents .Talk
111 Laguna Beach
Meike TuMey. attrlctive wife of
Demorcatie Senatorial candidate John
Tunn ey, was featured speaker at the buf.
fel dinner of tl'ie Laguna Beach
Democratic Club Monday night.
Rep. Tunney, who represent! Imperial
and Riverside Counties, is attempting to
unseat Sen. George Murphy IR-Calif.J, in
the November ge neral election.
A native of th e Netherlands, Mrs. Tun-
ney met her husband while both were
graduate studenl.s in International Law at
lhe University of Remedigin in Holland.
They have three children.
Mentioning the amount of every U.S.
tax doller spent abroat:I . Mrs . Tunne y
sa id her husband. if elected, would work
lo see that a larger amount wa.!I spent on
U.S. problems such as pollution, eon·
servation, education. medical care and
elimilla1ion of poverty.
Underscoring the numbers or space in·
dustry scientific personnel that are
unemployed. she said they are desperate-
ly needed in industry and laboratories !o
keep the U.S. ahead of the rest of the
world in scientific projects and ad·
va ncemcnl . or welfare, she said her husband's posi·
lion was to provide jobs to ease the
welfare caseloads and provide zelf·
respect for the workers.
She said Tunney felt that employment
should be so general that only those in·
capa citated by age or illness should
receive public assistance.
She said Tunney feels that withdrawal
from Vietnam should be as ra pid AS
porisible. The candidate's "'ife said he
feels that immediate withdrawal is im·
possible due to transportation shortage
and need to prolect the last troops to
Je;ive.
She said Tunnty was opposed lo the
v.•ar from the beginning and felt U.S.
troop withdrawal could be made in less
th An a year. The buffet was at the home
of ~1aybclle Pettit, :iao Moss St.
said James Secrist. of the State
Conservation Department.
Pine groves. thick brush and sumac
trees were consumed along the 60-mile
path of the football-shaped fire which
bu rned 200,000 acres.
"This is undoubte<llv the \\'Orsi fire I've
seen in my career." "remarked Arlen 8.
Cartwright. of the State · Divis ion or
Forestry.
To the !iOuth. meanwhile. three brush
fires erupted. amost encircling Ensenada.
where 200 Mexican soldiers were sum-
moned to balllt names, including one
5,000-acre fire.
A small army of firefighte rs on fronl.5'
lhroughout California -where 62,000
acres of brush and timber have been
destroyed in the north alone -generally
was gaining the upper hand today.
"We're in pretty good shape." said a
supervisory {preslry official of the Los
Angeles Counl.y situation.
Five Division of Forestry employes
were killed Monday night when an
Alouette model helicopter ferrying them
to lhe Easl f ork of the San Gabriel River
crashed.
No cause was immediatel y dete rmined
and id entities of the victims in the
Bichota Canyon crash "'ere w~thhe\d.
The toll in human and other misery is
impossible to calculate.
Newhall rancher Dennis Stonecypher
watched and listened as the leapfrogging
fl ames racOO through l'iis property, killing
90 percent of bis livestock.
"It hit the log shed, 600 feet long and '.ln
feet wide. And the re "'as one terrible din
as the pigs screamed -all ~00 of them -
bat at least it was fast ," said
Stonecypher.
"The Jambs ran between two sheds and
half of them got killed. Some ran with
tbeir wool on fire ."
"We fdund them dead all across the
range," he continued. "Or what used to
be range."
Los Angeles and San Diego counties
alone suffered 666 s t ructures
des troyed, incl ud ing 490 homes. and
336.000 acres -an area half the size of
Rhode Island -lay charred by the
flames.
Fire fi ghters beg8n lo breathe more;
easily about a 200.000-acre fire ha lted
Sunday at the outskirts of seve ral San
Oiego suburb!. But winds helped another
major blaze nare up Monday night and
race over 10,000 acres of a hea vily wood·
cd area. drawing within 10 miles of the
main fire. A heat wave that reached 100
deRrees was expected to continue.
The Southern California fires a!sn are
J?iving the first plane ever designed
i;pecifically to battle forest blazes its in·
itial big lest.
The twin-engine amphihian, the CL-215
designed and manufactured by Canada ir
Ltd., dropped more than 400 Ions of
waters on fires in the Malibu area for the
second straight da y Monday.
Truth •
or Consequences?
Sometimes ti.. tMj, hum! We Ii ... lost on occasion.I sale oy not !elli"9 • C>Jrtoi1• w!.ot
he wonted to hoar.
We miqht point out fMt I QJSI-would De Detter off lo pr( I nttle more for OJft' nd;.
ber podding +!win buy • oh .. ~r, musl.y pod the+ fMk ~. you are wa~iog on balloon .. The "bol-
loon" pod hum tho c1rpol b.cJiing, ...... st.etching, ind ruiM SMmL Ako , lftis poddincJ
often flottens out oftw 1 w!.ile.
Addition.Ry , we might ton you th1t some corpel foD.11 ore ...,.. pradicol tlitn ollion.. A
flier 1111+ -ts in OM texture, might "bomb" in ....tiler.
Feel 1r.., lo c1n for odvico. An of our ,.i., people lion h1CI trleosivo nperiooco in ti;. ...,..
ice er.d oi th is bUJiness -end 1ft1r en -the m01t importent thing we can offer, that no el ..
does, is sarvicol
I
__ ALD·EN'S
IANfA ANA, OIAN•t
TUSTIN C .... , •
ALHN'I
llD HILL CAl"11 a ••Am1a I U74 IM•, , ...... c..lff.
., •• JJ44
CARPETS e DRAPES.
1663 Plocentla Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
•
..
•
•
·-·
For · tlie· Record
Meetings
TUlSDAV
•1to1erv C~o> ~ '!i;''-'''°°"' lrvl11t CMlf I,., tf,11 'lll E. CO.'f H!Qhwitv, «Ofla oe Mff, •:lll ~"'· Cl1M .N I'""""·'-°>1111>. "~,, ~ t .. 111rv l11b, ~~'· '"'·"· •:'5" •.m. '"' t~ To.sr.:•slt'I ~b, IOI ~tlfwev, t:T· 1,:g, 1Pr:~. Co.11
Hu11llnol0!0. lucll Elks Lodiclt. l<llOll lOfH CltcHI, Hu11tr111110t1 8eac11, J:lO ~Cly tor ttw P•esetV•!lon •nd Enc:our1~••1t11I ol 8 1 r be r s ~ o "
Qworeel Sln1ln1 If! Amerk•, Mew.ort
H1r11or O..p11r. eou-P•rll Sl;l\GOI, '* NDlfl ~' C'\\t' M.ui, • o.m. l ,0 .Q,M, M-NI, l Sf, 4lS E. llfll t.tr .. I. C:0.11 MH1, t :U p.m,
SCl!ol!ll C~$1 A(l\Vt 21).)) c1ub. VUl•oa ll'lfl, 12' M1r!ne Btlbcwl slll!d, 1:1'1
..
TueJday, Stpttmbtt 2'. 197D DAit V l'!lDT • ;,
Housing Scarce UCI Stadium -Taxed at SANTA ANA -A paymtnt 11ie dty of Anaheim bas
of S243,501 in protested ta1es protested the possessory In·
By PATRICK 80\'LE
Ot 1111 0111)' ''"' llllf
lltVLNE -Many of the
young freshmen enrolling al
UC Irvine this fall had to
leave one valuable item at
home wtien they graduated
from high school -the yellow
school bus.
The old college student
adage tha1 says "If you don 't
have a car, you're out," ap-
plies doybly to UCI students -
you're out of the social life
cind out in the boondocks.
It may be 1nany years
before the commercial area
adjacent to the campus ex·
pands. much to the in·
convenience of UC! students.
Tile lxation of !he ca1npus -
more than a mile fro1n even
the nearest gas station -
makes it difficult for students
without transportation to go to
a movie or to a department
store. It makes il almost im·
possible for them to live off
campus, even if they can a[.
ford to.
this ,yea"rJ bccause of the ln-apartments Just for the su1n·
crease ln the uumber of nter and lhen ask !he tenanUi
to move out when school student.s and by the lack of started to make roo1n for the
off-campus. u n i v e r s It y · students.
rtgulated facilities. So ff 0 using Direct.
on Anaheim Stadium has been
says. "The student should Imp(>unded by Orm1ge eounty terest t•lC levied by County
move frotn a residence hall to Auditor.controller V J ct or Assessor Andrew Hin.shaw and
an apartment and even to a lleim. the case la still 1fl ....... the courts:
house wiih' group of other 1;::====================::;· students as he progresses
During the 1969-70 school or Phillips i~ looking for
year, UC l had a housing another place to house the
:tgreement with the owner of overflow ot students who want
an apartment house in Santa to li ve in the residence halls.
Ana Heights. The university Meanwhile, he has appealed to
::.greed to maintain a certain University Park homeowners
level of occupancy in lhe "'ilh " spare room to rent to
apartments by assigning UC! students for the school year.
students to live there. The U 11 i v e r s i t y Pa rk
OFF CAl\fPUS Apartments are also accepting
Stude nts wno eoold not get stadents.
space in the campus residence "Our problem is unique at
halls were housed in th e orr. UCI because we are in a new
campus apartments. The UC! community," Phillips says .
}loosing Office provided a "We are hoping that as the Ci·
staff of resident counselors to ty or Irvine develops, places
live at Uie apartments. The will be built ror student,
transportation problem was f•H.:ulty and staff in coopera·
solved by the apartment owner, lion with lhe campus."
through his higher education."
''There is also a danger <>f
overbuilding residence halls."
he notes. ''such was donf' at
UCLA and UC Riverside
y,•here not enough recognition
was given to a variety of liv-
ing styles.
"If a contractor wants to
build spaet!s to hoose 2,000
students and "''c encourage
him without telling him our
construction plans. we would
be wrong ," he says.
"The housin g problem at
UC! can only be solved by a
close coordination between the
campus i nd all o! the com·
niunlties surrounding the cam·
pus," he adds.
who provided a shuttle bus to Phill ips says new dorms willlp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ll
carry the students the three not be complete until 1973. but If .,. • .,. "' llSl1tt A•••l•t
miles to campus. he 'does not want tc> have Jenice, Ye' •• "°' tettl'"J eil
The housing agreement was enoogh residence halls for all et'°'' colls..
not reaffirmed for the 1970..71 the students. . TlLErHONE
year at the request of the "I sec a validity in exposing ANSWE•tNG 1u11:uu
J
I See by Today's
Want Ads
• Looklnt for a cozy col·
tage? Here's an exception-
1Uy clean, furnished ~bed
room facing the ocean.
Only S150 per n1onlh,
• Need a pan lin1e Job? 2.s
P .~I. 5 days a week. Work
at an lcf' cream store.
e '65 Dodge Dari GT Is the
car for yuu. 4 .11peed, 773
t;U inch, 23.J tl.P, R/H,
buckej seati, run1 excel-
lent. $750,
Marriage
Lit!etises apartment house owner. lfe 11 student to different kinds of 935.7777
6,008 EXPECTEU , ;;;~sa~i~d~h~e~c~ou~l~d~n~o~t ~fi~IJ~t~he~v~a~c~a~n~t ~Ji~v~in~g~s~it~u~,t~io~n~si;.';;' ~P~h~i~l~l~l~P~•~:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;; ~fort than 6.000 students are Ii
expected at UCI when cla~es
start Oct. 5 and almost 4,000
Dea th Not.Ice$
DAVIS
Ht!tft C. O•vl>. 71«-D AOlldl Gr1,..~.
L•ouna HHh. D•le of death. SePI, 21.
5urvlved bv two son1, 01,k, of 81-.tow:
C1rro!I C. Davi!. Euo.,,t, Or190n; d11111h·
!us; JMir l'idl01'",-W1->1"' NtMY Mc•
l<etver, Manll1t1111 l!Ndll I-brolheri.
John Clifford. Lltonler, P•nnsvN1n!1:
Charle• CJU!ord, Clndnnerl: 1i1ler, \/Ir·
olnl1 keller, Ohio; •nd ''"'" erandchll-
dren, Serylcet will be htld Tnursd1y,
O!;tobtr 1. 11 A.M, Slbel-Woltord Funtrtl
tiorne, loM E. M1l1> St., Lltonler, Ptn1>IYI·
"lnla. ln•ermen!, Valley c...,,,,,.,, Llton·
1or. Famltv 1ur.1ttl• triost wishln• to
make memorlal contrlb\<!lon•, p!ea..e con·
lrlblile lo !ht American C1nctr Society o!
o•~nqe County. Shelter l.tlUrnt Beach
Mortutr~. Olr...:tor1.
GAY HOR
Clllln•d Jootph Gaynor, Ate ~I; r11l<11nl
01 8tlmonl, Callf(lrnl1. D1!1 ot dtt!~.
$~pl. n. Survived bY bro!htr, Jtmet It,
Gtvnor, ol L19un1 Hloueli three nfflhtwl
t nd one nlect, AMulem Mt ts w11 ~el•·
brtted MOf\d.ly, f AM, It St. C1rtlil"lne
C•lt>ollc Churc~. L1oun1 B11ch. McCor·
mlck Laouna Be-men Morll<arv, Dlr...:tor1, MOHTEJAHO
Joa<1 uln J. Montrllaf\O. 7Sd W1!1hln9lon
Ave .. Hunllntton Betch, Survlvlttl 11'1 wilt,
ho11tl; IWO ... uenter1, ADM E. Pr10o.
Ctrmen 11.oull1n -brori...r arid ''''" 1li!lft Jn Mtilco; 1ev"' 1r•Mlchlld....,
1nd one 1r111-tr1ndchlld. R011ry, Wea·
ntMllY, 7:30 PM. PNlt F1mllv COlot1l1I
Funeral Home. Aeciui.,.. M.iH, TllursO.v,
t AM, SS SlrMn a. Jude CathGllc Churcll.
H11nlin11ton fleech. Peek F.,,,lly Colonl1I
Funeral Hom•• Dlre"ori,
ARBUCKLE & SON
\Yestcilff Mortuary
4%7 E. 17lh St., Costa Mesa • BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del l\.1ur .... OR 3.9450
Costa l\1esa . . . .... mi 6-%U4 • BELL BROADWAY
l\10RTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa t.tesa u 8-3433 • l\lcCORt.UCK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1795 Laguna Canyon Rod.
494-9415 • PAC IFIC VIEW
l\1El\10RlAL PARK
Cemetery .l\1or1
Chapel
3$00 Pacific View Drive
r\ewport Beach, California
644.-Z'I OO • PEEK FAl\llLY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOl\.1E
7801 Bolsa Ave.
'Vestminster ... 193-35!5 • SJlEFFER MO RTUARY
Llguna Beach ....... 494-1535
San Clemente ....... 492-8100 • St.tlTllS' l\tORTUARY
627 !\faia St.
lh1nlingtoo Beach
536-6$39
Dissolutio11s
OfMar1•ia9e
of them will have to live in an
apartment or house away
from campus.
\Vith the completion of the
new student residence halls,
there is roon1 for J ,200 un-
dergraduate students in ~1esa
Court. The 351 apartments at
Verano Place house about 900
students, many or them mar-
ried or graduate stu dents. The
waiting lis t of students wan-
ting to Jive in Verano Place is
F1N11.1. o EcREES measured in years .
l!nl9Ad S.•1tm1Mr I 'fh 900 d h 1. Cgle, M~rlal M1r,e~1 and o.rrell e 3, stu cnls \\' O 1ve
Frs~::'."'o. ... •d 8nc1 Pt1yuo, A . off can1pus h a v e ac·
:~~~:; ~:~~~e l~~e,:.ineR'~~lZ .. r~~: co1nmodations ranging from
?~~~· G.i::t.c:,,en ~~~1•Ml1.;'3"YG'f:o, luxurious honies overlooking
Ho~::·~i11110 Land Shelvi G. the sea in Laguna Be<ic~ to
Aentro. ·Monllc• Ev• •net SidMY 1.1· ··the back seat of a -car .1n a Verl . Stn11 .. rc1ec~.,.. <:111r1o1tt A. •rid G1r¥ campus parking lot. EdW1rd Goff, June M'1t1e '1rld G8ry Chlr~I Dier, Robft-1 I<. ind Edilh Lor1ln•
Pendtror11!, BeUv Join Ind Jtmot Alcherd Andenon. ShlrOfl M. Ind J059Qh P.. 8rloos, Helen R. 1rld /IUUrlco Alen.rd HiOIH, Frank 1rld MlflloJ'lne Ll!llY
Bv .... , Jr .• ldl Mlt 1nd Wl•dOftl Trloo, l.Ol'r1lne M. trld Hervey 8 . Hawkll RQberl Jlmts and Jonet Ellen Duodt f , Grealdlne and Ao<lnev Ge"' Morton, Ingrid 11.. Ind Thon'l'lt M.
Doll1rhldt:, Jov 1.. tnd Thom11 M. S.ckMm, AGrllld L. trld Gl~s Evelyn 8ess, Karen SUI 1nd S!l!Yt Wiiiiam
Be11011, Giii E. and Charltl W, Farcio, Joi.eoh and A0tffl'llrle O'Brlt n, l.Ol'nl E.tncl David E. Ptltl'f'IOfl, P1trk lt M. •rid Ltrrv C. U1 BIH Dorl Re<lmoci Ind Eow1rd L. M1tlll. P1trlci1 M. and Wiiiiam J, MlrShll, AUll\I , 1nd C:lvdl A. Henr'll J1mes. Thon't•s 1net Lut•llt
DeM~i:. Lorrllllf G. t nd lolvd E. Dlckon.en. Shirley A. Ind Jtm ... D, 1<nder..,.,, O.vld H, nd ShPrry l . Klein. R1ndl It. Ind John M. Lll14orcl, S1nclrt B . .trld Dllfofd W Slt m1n, GIYlol'd'. M•rlin •"" Ha.tint
IHT•llLOCUTORY OECRElS Enlered S•llm"' • Sml!ll. Berl)t•d l.erov arid J1c<1utllne
Thom11C1n. P1lrlcl1 C. t l'ld Gtoree
Wlllltm Add!1, ktnne1h 5. arid Sl'le<'ry Sue
Nelson, Jtnfl M1rlt Ind MICl\ftl
L/~~.'~1n1ee Row1n1 and Ctr10I Htonl!I, Ell11beth J, tl!CI Wllllam M
Still. Betty Lee arid J1me1 Frederick ltvl!l. Htlene Jovce 1nd K~nnelll D.utscl'I, Victor Tl-al'ld Cherlflne Orr. Dealt I. and Vlrdlt H,
H111l1r. Adele B. arid Roberl Henrr
Bf'\llnl. Lorr1l11t P.. lfld Ted w. Dawe, 81111 1rld Frederick Kevs, Roti.n C. 11>11 Mlrlhl H • Hl!lktlt, 1Clr11in l<nne 1nd D1vid
1'0URISTS RENT
~l oot of the apartments and
hon1es that are ren ted to
tourists during lhc summer
monlhs are occupied b y
st udent s during the school
year. Hundreds of students
live on the Balboa Peninsula,
in beachfront hotnes, pa ying
about $250 a month for a four
bedroom apartment. The
houses on Balboa Island rent
to students for about $200 for a
three bedroom house.
Students 1vho live in any of
the beach areas of the Orange
Coast can onl y rent the house
or apartment for a nine-month
period and they always ha ve
to move out in the summer, or
pa y sumn1er rates. Students
who cannot affor·d to Jive at
the beach or want to rent for
an entire year usually live in
Costa Mesa or in the Santa
Ana Heights.
c1';1~:•:;,;or11 Ann '"" Mtr•lt Lt NOT EASY c.~~:n ,P1u! oou111111nd PllYl!ls oeen According to UCI Housing
cana11er1. Josff>h s. ~"" Je~""' o, Director Ji1n Phillips, it is not l.eiGMon, C1rot "· trld 01vid
Moss. s11rv Ann arid s1c1ntv easy for a student to find a Burton, Srhllt E. arid H..-schel o .
"°"'"''Na""' Jt•n 8"" wayne Arr11ur place to live, especially one F!tlwr, Allee 8. lrld Marlon L. Sr. h th d l ff d Jennings 1.e RcY M•~ '"" P11v1111 Ann l al e stu en can a or . Ktstllr ..... Oon;rthv E . .tnd Mlcllltl J,
Tolllt.on, G1ry C. •rid Marie S.
Fi.tcl\ef', Ht'"' J. '"" Rtv L. S<W"en..,.,, Oall\I M•Y and ,,..,,,.,., Meynard
Da,,.tn-1, Shirley 1". and Edw•fd R. , ..
Hive,, Melodie Joyce I nd Mur<av ,,_
Putvel'. C1roiYll I Ind Jerry G Julltn, J1n!1 ICIJ Ind rt 1cn.ra Frtnkf!~ Mdrllntt, Martin arid E ~per11>1~
Slew111, C1rol Lee tl'IO Wavne M!tchell Delner, Lllllt MIY ttid Wllll1m Thom11 klrkltr.d, Florenc:r M. Ind J~ck IC.
Lano, Ekll'IOI' E. 1"" Donald M. M1rlln, Biiie Ind Chtrltt R. l'IN•L OECREES t::ntorea St~tember (
Yeom1n. Charles E, 1tld Ver• E. lnqtrso!t, J1ntU Ann 1nd w 1m1m ,_,
Do\lk, De1nn1 Mtr\I arid lloYd R~rl
Wrty, Mlrtll P. •rid Geor911 FullH, Llrldt M1r1e arid John Mlchclel Pepo, C1ror ""n 1nd Mlchtet John M11ettkY, Shlrltv J. 1MI Morr!1
Perretr•, 011"' Kehclultnl 1MI M1lvl11 "'"" Mm .... c-1111orvn Y. ind JOlln Cllnlon HelHll, Lois A, •rid WtUact E.
"~McF1rl•""· Wllll1m H. 1nd Julia G. H1c-lem1n. R""•ld E ~nd Ina Carollne kenncK!v, ld• Mtr+. 1rld ~!chard G•!I Willetf"ton, e .... 1vn J. 1rld Llovd E.
OotJon, Dl:tlorn l.oui.e •rid Dout ltt "~ McH1uthlot1. Wiiiiam H119h aMI Joan M1r91rer
Ctlllscn, S1ndr1 F. lrld JllfT'eS M.
Hamlin, Donna '"" Jtmrl' Stl<k, Don,... L 1rld Gtf"•k:I C 8tJ, Jlldllh A..n Ind Elrlen Elmtf"
Lenl'nl. M1r91ret 1rld G•rY Erwin, Joan F. Ind Wllll1m E .
1!111..-N StlllfTI"' I M1dl1on, Mlch1el C. tnd Jlnlte K•Y Dye, Myr,.. Je1n 1rld Don11<1 D111nt Tt>lll!hen. c11nv 1.\l'nn 111C1 t11om11
~·""' Sor•-· De!t!,.. "· arid Steve W. Do'll!I', Mt,., A, Ind Rlcll.J!'ll IC. M1rsh11l, Aaliert L, trld Ellttblt~ E
Jtf"nlt en, J1sque1Jne lrld Nill v1c1t .. 1, Jlf"rJ J. 1rld led Hartce Sl>fflt1, Min' Anne l rld John Sl1nley PhUllM. c1 ... 11ttte Lucille •rid E1rl
"We have students coming
through the door all the time
in search or a place to live,"
Phillips says. "They are not as
desperate now as they were
earlier in the summer, but
there are still many students
in need or housing."
Phillips says that lhe hous-
ing problem is CQmpounded
OUTSTANDING
OPPORTUNITY
In Your Sp•re Tim e
1'10 SELLING
GU,,RAHTEED II.ND SECUR ED
II.rt I"'~ int '""" lor ~· -cl• dtvole I ltw hltl.lfl • •-ti hi1 ,,.,. u..,., ev911ln9s 1r w1ttr1Ms,
11 e1rn immer:111111. hifh, 111r1
ctsh Wtt-ly dtllvtring ret•d•fl
onlv lo e1l1bll1l>tll, IOc:~I. prlmt
Ptllll ....... wt c1mplfl1tly Ill UP
,.... yttV.
E•t•l!lion•I ••"'1"9S <•• be r111111 ii r111 lrt !he ollCllvodUfll
wt sltlr who c•• "9in """' wllh • modlil cttll 11'1...stmt'llt ctl· ltctln; ~1111, sec1rf'lll 1M 111~,..
........ C..11 c.lltd '°' .,..,. .... lrrlfl'Yllw Mr, H1n1y, (Jll) IT ,.,.n "' wrfl• OAll.Y PILOT ... ,,.,.
NOW! LUMBLEAU SCHOOLS NOW!
REAL EST A TE CLASSES
On SATURDAYS!
FOR YOUR CONVEN IENCE AND ACCOMMODA -
T ION, REAL ESTATE LICENSE TRAINING CLASSES
FOR BROKER OR SALESMAN WILL BE HELD ON SAT-
U RDAY MORNINGS FROM 9:30 A.M. T O 12:.30 P.M. I N
OU R SANTA ANA SCHOOL ST AR TING SAT., OCT. J .
1970,
for Information Or Brochure, Call JEl· 1012
3132 W.J7th Street, Santa Ana, Calif.
Jamts ill. DeCol, lct/UN!r
•
1970 AMERICA 'S CUP RACE
NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK
PROUDLY SALUTES ITS DIRECTOR
BILL FICKER
AND HIS OUTSTANDING CREW
OF THE INTREPID
FOR BRINGING HONOR AND ACCLAIM
TO THE UNITED STATES AND
TO THE CITY OF NEWPORT BEACH
•
•
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•
I •
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• •
I
l l '
I
1
t 1
l
~f ~~ .. ~£~~,g~w-:-·~':"":"~~".?"'!'~:"'!!"~~------"'::"!':-:-~"'!"':~--~~~--:-~~-:r-~~-~~~---,-,....,-____.,,....,_~~~-~~ (' • • • • • .. • • ..... ..::-0 ~
' ---J• DAILV !'!1M p
~
¥Dair lfloneu's lt'ortla OVER THE COUNTER
'(,he Real-Retu1·n 011 Bonds . ..,_., ..... _ ........... .._ " -·-""'' .... "-...... l'ricl9& ..... IMIWI r.1111 II' MIAIU• fll.,....,.. .. c:etftMLtlilfl
By SYLVIA PORT)':R
QUESTION· If you ooy ,
high-grade corporet1on bond
c11rr y1ng a coupon or say a:r...
pe.rc.e.nt al a priee..ol $l..O®. per
SI 000 bond what 1s likely Iv
be 'our REAL ' rate of
return 1n each of the next JO
)cars or s o"
ANS\VEH Probabl~ around
4'1 per~ent a year
'VHY" Becaust ,., must
redut'C! the stated <.'Oupon in
tcrest rate of 8~4 percent you
v.111 •ecelve each year b\ the
rate of annual lnf!a11on l1kelv
during each or lhe next 10
years This annual rate of 1n
flat1on v.ell may turn out 10
A1e1age 4 percent -so \Our
8~ percent beconies a re al '
•"....! percenl
Jn even simple r wo1d$ say
you start col!eebng nllw $875
1ntere:st a }ear on ti 510 000
purchase of bonds But your
S87a '~ill not bu\ as 1na11v
goods and ser' lef!S on Sept 2f1
1971 a s on Sept 25 1970 nor
as many 1n late 19'12 a s 1n 1971
and so on J ust as you 1nust
\1ew }our salary 1nco1ne both
111 actual dollar terms and real
le i rns I with the 1mpal t ()f
price hikes el1m1nated I so you
t 000 • OF Oil PAINTINGS
WHOLESALE WAREHOUSE
OPEN TO THE PUILIC
lilt
$5 11Nd 11p
l f:DINGIEft SANTA PHONE IJS-460I •••
NASD ll1tita91 for Mondey , Stptern.ber 21, 1970
mu.!!1 \ icw your ~ercsL ln-goal is capital ga1r1J ""' Ahtcu~ 1~•
boll I l -Oolla T d , d t'l'I '"*' mf~:D Ir II come 1n 1 :; r1u -~r o ay s coupons on 1xe ·In· , .. ,.~ .. 1"(. 11, '4kM "'-ACF ina ,~
and real lerms come securtlles do offer you a -AcmeC-1••• 1 """ N.fiW YOltl(. CA'I Eris Tte IJ'.l,o l'U l'1KI Wt 6.\11 f'• ll•lll Sir ID in; llcnv Mk.I '9 IS TlllS BAO' Against the , .. ,tv~aa-e" -meaning a -111 ,......,i... •1c1 F• c.u n. m 111oi11 40 ~"' 1r1w c• 11•,, ~ ~.~.·,,,,12~ ., l l'MI ltkM -'• F1b Tiii • • •\i PllR°Z DI )6 '° C f~ 1: "" "' "'
back.ground of rccc.nt nioncy decent al return after wl~ ~~\.,~:P~~r. ~r~I!': ,; • 1;lZ ,r:1011w 1!J: l~ l:T::' lo .~: 5b :=-r:.1
1
1 "°
I I I I I•· off I f I 111011 GI' SK11rltle1 Flngrh! 1 1 tto lnlrrtn ' 'II 5r\l T1mo~ ,.. 119 1111""tl' • 4 \1s Or) ,1 return rn re.a terms 1ng ou ·~ ec o annua l)t•ltf•i inc ••e Fit 1.,,, •1.,. "'"' tr ,..K 11\, It\, !'""' li\\i 1•~· 11e1n1 1 "' '
I • j ... ~It lrllllK F11G II•• 6l!o J~ ._ .-,I'll 2\J J\lo tYkw W 42"°' .. l\a11lrr1 Co or as rnuth a~ 4J, percent a pr ce ncrease.f 11ono ••• '"" ,.51 wFin 3>-• 3., •ud Min :n •11" 111c111 s-• I\' •T1ttn inc ft1ffll lntwr Flk;k 11! IJ P1111S NM 11h lfli' TV C-I 1 ill Air P1110 2Clb ,\e;;ir wouldn t be bad 111 all 1t These returns do offer lively d111er 11r u 11 GI' "_ne,, 3,, l'• Pu11 s NC 10" 'Ht T•-n• 111. ""' .-.1r ~ '°"
1P11n111lm•te1f 1 Forsi 011 ut. """ :11D1111r :"' 1 +e~v~s 17"" 2l , ~. 1G1~11~~~
v.ould in fact appear vci y co1npeUt1on for stocks As I ~.uf!,w"1'h ~:=: ~~m~rni ,:v. ~~i p11'.;:..., "" n'4 'iii'"' ,., 2., 2, •l•.V.• 1n11,.
good And your r ecil return ha\e written repeatedly since~":.. bffn[•••cu""O. ~oi:i c I• Jl.. ;w.:-c'·~ 1~1, 1~\t rl~~ ~~ !i~ ~~ :1~~l~ ~
IOkl lb di lnt1r ' l 1 ' §r::r 6V! 1 11fn GI •Vt l ·U Ak;1n.t.111 110 COUid bccOmC even fatter If WC t;lr]y summer, these rates Of dll•lt< .,..,kit& ~~~'!. r,. if' IMll CM lt11 1111 T,1c CllCI ,,','' 0j,f Alc11$11nc1 Ho dllnH ll1<Mh F I T Syst 5 S\ rncnl G " .., A,le•ndro )0,
n)a1111ge 10 coming years to return plac l! bc>nds com · rot lh~~·y 1~l= F::: ~ ~\lo ~~: :~11P"'2 IJ lii; l~= ~ 'it )Ii l\lleQ Cp 10.
pull do"n oor annu11I rate of fort.ably in the elass1ficat1on of ~et~J:-11 ,";'•r~ &!~Ji"" 1~ 11~ ::!.!c~ [~ ~~· 1
1ru. '~~:1,Pd ~"" 3! !::=t~: ~~
h
"'IHlon. C.~ Svc lJ,\ llh ll1ym Cp 130!.i 311 TrllDl<.1 31 ltl\ Al/ft Pw l .J!
lnflat10n tO a tolerable rate Of growl SecUrll les MA Ent l•l 1 G 111~11 l 2\'> lhc0q Eq ~!?!Iii T,Yl«I,_ Fd ll o f>~ ~1,0•111Kh 1 l'll Ml (Off ]\II t\o G Kll\tlk; J lo JU RI! Ctt'd ,..., ,,. ..,nlr.._ )\lo •Vo '" ICIMnl -3 percent ag:nn lhgh grade bonds do offer AFJ.Pr •·~· U.li G LelS\lf ll• • RIOdr Pu 15 jll'I un uium 21 nv. Al1c1M111 Ub AIO 1.,c t 10 Gltl Ell I~; f\'o Rltev Sta 71 4 Ull McGll J.,,. 411, A!l!..:1 Pel "
The above l'Xplcuns the w1de ~Olllhl" and safelo most an. AITS tnc s•1 sh Geo1e1 1•4 ~, Raid E• 111. 21 us Bkno1 71l e'I\ AHledStr 1 '°
" " I' ASG INI 2 • J''i GHten "· II\ ltab!n M 20 22 us E'nv,1 n Jl AUltO SI pt • popularlly o ( hxed JnC'Qme 1 1 Ill f lo .-.SG o1 I• 1~ Gli"en U'-t n R1111e1Dn '" s us S1111•r '° d y, AllldS\111 is,. pea 1ng om ions o 1nves rs AVM ,. , , •u Giq511 w uv. ll\<J Rav ca5t 11• '" us T•~L m. l• •111, c1111m securities among big and httle r h k k Abfr1t 111 5,., • Glob Rub 11, J R"" sio. '''"nu u11 PenP 11 21i; Al-PC >oo
h a tcr l e sloe 1nar cl crash Acmt El ,,,.. •-. Gold cyc I•\, 15 Rv•11 ko d'· 46'" u"h Sld •t• 11• •1c°' 11:1 investors l ese da~s And I\ All si. 114 1,~ Goee1 LS l'IO a11o Kiie• 31, •\· urn tnd n Vi 2f •m•tS111 1 '°
I r d I r ()f 1969-70 ... ,, Intl!.-ll· 3'11 GodWY c 2 2\1 c•nt11 E JC\ 4 V•I LO 1\~ 7111 AMBAC 5C Jus 11es your cons1 erat on o "'"'n " 11~ 11~ G,•llh c11 .,. 10 4 ju M .t, •'• v1rw:1 S• 1s~1 16\11 "mu E1 1211
high grade bonds _ ISSued bv To say the least there IS no A,~ 11 ll~ 4 Gr11111 Sc 11v. 11v. fi ,',.at• u. 21,,. v1trr011 ' •\.\ ,.,.., E• p11 611
I r bo d Th .....,.,11 i >o •"'-r GIA Mlq lJV, 37 M4 • W1ch 11111 211 • ~ .-,.., 11tsl 21'
the US Government F e deral s 1ortage o n s e verv •1ca11e ""' s" Gr-n Mt 1,. ,, '°' s,o.,, ~. ~. wM5w P 111. 1•!¥i Ame11 o11.50 J Allco lnd U I~ ""' " cr1-Ii " 2G 1ln BO 11 17i,:, AAlrF!ltr IO
Age ncies. states cities cor volume of new offenngs will Alm e tv J., l" 8~~~ rtP~ 1~ 1:r" c• 1110 ... ,:1; ,;~? w1,~r.,.d• 1\• :~ ""' 1.1r11n 10
porations -for a portion of place a floor under interest :J:..,tdG~ ~.,.. ,1" 2~.wrn, ,1 .. • '~s:r;r~~ •• •~ ...,,sn NG 1v, u~~ •mB~kt 05e Amid~ JV. V. ....,., n , .... S Stns1tn lvt I W11h RE t•, t \li ABr1n01 2 1G
your 1nvestmen1 funds rates 1n the 1970s """' euSll 11,,., 1~ Gu11 1111 n~ iv.Ii:' Gr11 N ,,, w .. 1, ,,-. ,,•~ ~~~~ i~ " El lab J~ •li ~y,_ s 1~-li ,:u "' I.Ill ., • .,, •ll't wtbb Ill RI '" ...... Cem •SD I Cannot recall 3 period A MedTlc11 11\1 II H:::;:r 111 n• l• Smj~OllM r~ Jr: ::ll'~"M 11 11"'11 A Clllln 1 '°
\\hen investor attention Ln 1he .-.m ••v 16 1•11t H ' ;r p '" t!• ArnCyan 1 lJ
bond rnarkets has been so _i'fa1·1'11e Ct)lll'•e :~~· 1~ ':¥: ':~ H~r,"c: '~~ ;\r1 it. ~af \i': ~tl :t1~·1~to ~~~ r~ :~lst~~~t 1~! ll "' Arc1 Ind 1'• S" Hiil« In! l1 i •'~ r:N~ ~el IJ>, 1411 l<'lln PllD 9 ~ 1011 ""' Ou•IVe~I
keen or persis tent 'V1th 1n Arden M ''• •~ "c!i:""" 11 ' 11' w E1s P '"'' u 11111 wn ' , ,.._ .-.oua1 p1 '"" "•dtn pl ,0 32 H "' EP JI 37 w ~c 4 1 J Y/IK PL 1!'• 20llo .-.mEIPw I"
terest rat~ hovering JUSI t.1anne Cpl Robert D l.'1< MDP i.to 1•\1 ~= ~~iii L,'; II':~~ "" JOh r111w E \\ ~ ""' Enlc• 1.
belo11 the h ghest le,els on ~','.,at,, H ::Ill~'>, llV. Jori• rt1 Uh IJv, td lt'o• 70\~ 21 wr1t1nr w 2'1'-?l'> Am £~11 Ind M:.irshall, husband or the 'Howrd GI T 1 1 Sltn HPO l'll '°""Y•dn~ E (\• al~ AEklrni plAI
more than a centuri T would fo•me• M oss Kathleen R Ascc 80' :u .... 1'"' Howm tn 111. "'• .-Genin• so Auro Sci We 6V, l-l11Ck "1 ••• I , AGnln !>1110
expect this from 1nsl tlut1onal Sloopo or 15"'' Lo Salle Lane B•l•d ... , l . J~ HU<I PP ~n .. 11~ -pg;; a:e::was AmHoist l'O I ~ " B•ktr 1111 11 H G 11 13' A Home lllO
investors I hey' re pro Huntington Beach completed B11 P1!nt '• .,.i HtJ"'i'si ~· , ' ,,: ,, HotrH! ,,. l
f I k ll11 ln P •lo 5\~ Hvtn Cp :?Cl, 20, Am Ho511 1' ess1ona s and now their way c areer planning c o u r s e a1um•t ~' Jl Hv•n 1n1 1, a , •m1nv.i1 sc
<1round the bond markeis B"l B•vlen Hl't u11 Hv0e .-.1h J ' l ' MUTUAL "Me1c1x '•o J\1anne Corps Base, Camp B""'"' 1•1', 15~, image sv , , , , .-.Me1C1• 11•,
lhe cur1os1tu is JUSI as ln elv Pendlelon B•11• 111' I• 11 1nc1 Gt. 16'• 11 , .-.m Mato•~ ; " llflm tn<I s • Ind Nucl 75!.. M • AN•tG•• 1 IG
an1ong 1nd1v1duals I \VOUld ;:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:;I 1111<~ "' .a •1 lflex~a o 11~. tl'o ,.,.., Pnota 11 B1!t ltb ~ •• ln/<4ro J 1 31, .-.Re•Ov llt
also expect the concern from a111111>1 w e•~ • tnr cont , ,~, Am s.eu11111 1
we<1lth} elderly 1nd1v1duaJs STARS :I~"'~°" :M:'t 3i~ :~:''::w~ ~(;;' FUNDS :"'sm5e~:111:g
'
he" ''' seeking '" ass"red '''''' Om•rr ,. on• of th1 Blick Hr 18 '> '914 1n1 M11!!ll 11 • n1• ""'So.\" Jo 1 l!Og1t1 El J:ft 1U \"1 1v1 n i,, 23\t Am 51d 1
high income But the c uriosity wo1ld o qr••' ••h 11log1r1 H11 BGll lie• 11. IH n1 Sv 111 IJ u 1. Am5ro 111o 1s column 11 ant of th. DAILY eooine C ll IJlh ln!1P.>1 I I .-.m Sttf'il •I 1~ JUSl as d1scern1b!e a mong Boaz AH 15i, 16\, 1on1c1 1n, "" ~ -r. 1. Sj.1111, 1 "° DEALERS WANTED t ,... PILOT S II'''' f11lu,11 Bol C1~ 1 •I r. 3oUtll 21 771, "-AS119 pl.-,2•~ -===============.'...._-~v~oo'.'.'.n~g'._!pco~~p~le:_:w~ho~se~~p~r~o~m~a:ry!._~===,,;=========='J 11'1nt1 In ~'~' Jl1• J1co111 F ~i. •'• AmSu1 pf "' , 10tkJ St• 19 lt~ JaQuln C .i, 1\.o ltfll•m'Nr H Inv Gui<! '" J"AT&T wl """Ar I t •~Jim Wll 1•0 '" Inv lndk 16l ,6JAml&T 160
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Jlancho California
~~mr.~~~1
Rancho Ul1fotn1a" l1km1111 place amon1
the treat l1nd 1nYe1lment .,,portunrtiu
111 Meadow View c1mmun1tr ol 1/Z to
J.l/4 acre homes1tei, cash prtcM lrCNrl
$S,9SO, 11 a manelous place fw 1r..,.1n1
money du11n1 the 70 • Roads, water and
power are 1n and paid for, and ownerdup
StClucle1 acceas lo 800-acre V1il Lake, 1uc
of the $Z.ZS,OOO clubhoutt and 1t1ble1, and
shared ownu1h1p .,f 3&0 1crt.1 of natural
meadow and parkland
BSDBDAY
llWPOIT UPPU 111, 1910
In 1950, when most people still
called it Balboa, Newport Beach
was a 1ammer resort with a per-
manent population of 6,500. And
house Joh which then 1old for
$800 to $1000 are now worth
$20,000 to $25,ooo'!
m= • , -,.TO•OBBOW
. ' ~ ,. . .. -.......
Rancho Cal1forn1a-Ka1ser Aetna'1
95,000·acre master·planned co m•
munll7 for 1nve1tmenl , homes1te11
reueahon, business, horie ranche1
and a1riculture-1s the largest de·
'ftM>pmtnl of 111 kind 10 the nahon.
Rancho C&hlom1a, P.O 8o1 ISlS,
Newport Buch , C&lifom11 92'6G
R•rtcho Cal1fom~'• growth has Men m•lltr•
plumed br K1.11tt Aetn&, uS1nf thl! mci1l tn
li1hleMd pr1nc1ple1 •f Dalanttd land 1.11e for
ttaWe ralilabon of ru.1irnum ,.tenb1l1 Tuer
ate (Ul'Ttntlr ependmr $20 m11l1on on 1mpro,e·
menli, added lo $?S rmllMn 1l1u.d7 ~t lhtr" Loo• int• th11 opportunitr no'w
g.z.::,,
-----<°"9>--· ----
Comt down lo the V1a1tors lnf01mallon
Center on the Plaia at Ranc.hoCal1forn1a.
lnformal1on Pre•iewa A1a11tan c.e.
T turt The Plaza also off era dehi htful
shopp1n1 and d1n1ng, p1cn1c.k1n1 under
I~ oaks, colorful enlerta1nmenl~ And
Rantho Cal1fom1a has horae1 to ride,
boat1 for 1ail1n1 on Vail Lake, and l
beautiful golf courtt.
A weahh or 1nformahen aM I lhtH month .W1cr1ph0fl I• tht.
R..n<.ho Cahl&m1a Newi. Hi1lorK.J 1M'Cdtte1 Prave1s rtporlJ. Pl1ni.
P 1dure1. No 1lr111.11 Nt tbl111hon Ju1t--fill out and mail
To Rancho Cal1f0Jn11 P 0 801 I >lS
Newport Bt1dt, Cahlorn11 92060
iN.1111t
I . '
11•11!.11 I t lt • IJb J1me1 F l2\~ 31 ;o NEW YORK CAP) lllYH BOI 10 I~ JI JJ Am'Wlks St Buckey 6>1 J\j; JtmsOv loi1 11 ~\ -T"" folklwl\'f.: QUO-lnve•laflo Gro~p AWWSPt I U ll11n" C11 '" ;S~ Jiiiy Fd1 JI\ •~·'•lion• •UODl..:I 11(. 105 r>ctl J 91 •?• "w Pftr f;s flurnup S n~, ;t1; Jnn1n Pd 2'1~ ll:io lht N1tlo11a! l\HOC Miit I" 9 11 .-,m Zlnt CIC le11 I II~ K•l5f'r St u •S a!l011 of SKll•!llei Ptoot Jn • Qj .-.meron iO
Cit W Sv 12t1 11 'o K1l1S1 11f !I 11 Dflll'I Inc ••e Stock 16 '7 11 tO A""'lek "-
Camca 1, 16l< K11v1r ,, :io /::S.llf'ltes :~;n~~ s.1.cr '" •JI it.MF inc 90 ClllOll M U I') M Kt1t Gin ?lo Jlo covld hivt bffll Vit Pv 12' I IJ .-.m1ac IO Ct MM II ••1? """ KtYSm l , .... Mid {IJ;d) or baugll1 Inv rt11n • °' 4 u ... MP Int Sii •nrtd 2'!1. J\'o Kt•r T t 911 ( kecll M-•V 11tt1 111• lll 2' ""'""" Corp C1111 Mlqt 16'• 111• Ktllen l Jtt II l id ..... IVY 'iS i iJ ""'''"° 1 •U C111 Sow f''o • Keirwo 7:z>, ?l" A11tron 1 11 1 n J Hnc.ock • 91 1 Jl Am111 :»
'
C10 ln1.-. l~o JlO Ke11tf E 11 11~ Admlra\tv Fund• Jolln$1n llil 11'3 Antcond 11'0 • 1pTc11 l )Io Kevt "'" 1'\t> ,. GrWlll .s fll I., KtvllOM FVl'IOI .-.nc11 Hoc:k 1 ~•r< Oe~ 10 101 > Kev• Cu• 1l U trw:am l U • 01 .-,PllUll I 00 I ~ AncorpNSY 1 •rt• Ill 7•· 1:U ICeYll PC 11 I\· lrlJUt J O] TIO Cus Bl 110411 AndCltt 1211 C1rtr Go 11'•11\1Kl11g lnl ''• JhAdvll•I •II 511 Cus 8111«1100 ... PICl'le-Cp ~s ~•.WC NG ''· IOV. Klng1 El • • •• Alfll11 1d I si '01 Cu• II• , II • Jt ApcoOlt l i11 ::•1!! Cl" l'• 2111 Kirk C:p • • 1, Alu I rt • II • 61 ~~~ ~~ ~ ~ ~ ': A=L Car~
C•nttX 11 • 11'• IC.t•ISlt 1 o J>Jo Alt Am F 6• 1a Cui St H 69 11 ., :pt :; fi 1,~' =·" VPS ,.., 11·~ LM CO.I 11t 1 All1lllt t s.i 10a Cll• 57 90~ flJ "II" Svc i'ii1 Clllr"tl 1 • 110 L•nca In 1• 1 ll14 19111 FO tSI 10.1 C11< Sl 1 SI 1 1' A•<•O>" ,., Ch1'1 0 9 , • , l•nd lies 1 , 5 .-,""'" 52' J.15 ' ' 1 >> 10 •• • cnm Lt• ' • ·~· L .. \f Wd •'• 1 • ...... llUJ ~· no .... • ... Arc111N Ip 1 Chet tno s , .s:i, Llr>On l't :!-It .-,.,, Ovl" f J6102l Polar lOt lll ArCll 01n I C:he~ UI I 11~> u•~ Lirwn M U>o t&V.. I.mfr E•Or~1 Knltkb 6 •1 1 Ill .-.rl>PSvc I 01 CI I " C h 160 1 31 Knit~ GI 119 1 6~ .-.r11nsO$ 11J
'
n •&t .14 Sol LeldV Ld 11 • 2'1 i:i'mr Ill l l6 le~ Gr•~ 119 I 51 Arm,o$t I 60 nr1\I s I&! lOt lth Co.It 11• ,,., Le• rt1tn ll 6l 1Cftl .-.rmto PIJIO oor,111 111 •s 100 Lt•s11 G 11\, i,.,_. ~nv•r1 •, f1 • 10 Liiie••• s 1s s 11 Arm011r 1 1, C• IOl!I i ' 1'~ I.owl• BF 12 '> IJ"1 Ol!C I it Lift Sllr 110 J 15 ArmitCk l'J Cit!/ MIQ 11 o 11't Linc Mii 111 I O "K,> > "10J • ,. Lilt ln11 6 1' 6 12 .-.rmAub t 40 Clllr u.-. tt.ni.;Lobl1w ... l\t,,, QY • -l ine NII ••• t6'.-, c1111 u 11 u , 13,1 Lall cov 1. JI• Am Gt1n l~ f~~ LIM J '6 J 11 A~.ncorg0 910 (llvln Mt li 151 ,LcHI E1tn 1• 15 :m ~111 195 1 69 Loami! S•vles "'JtlrdOU \iO Cl•rk Ml !9' 10 ~ L•ncn C 111, ti • m u CanDd J.O l• l• 3-1 .-,,loll B•tw c1ivto" ,,• 1 Nwid GEi 1J.11 J.mNG•& 25• 111 c101t t11911.-,11d OG 1711 Cll11t Mt• I ! • ~Ml• Riiy !F. 4\• A~~~ 10~~5 I.. Mui n •• 11 .. Aslod SllCI I '°
Cilnlon O I , S 'o ~ll~rt .-, "t•' "' Grwtn t JI 10 IO Lui~ 11•0 10 11 II 11 A1dl•1" Ola CIDw (p 16 11 '"' • • 1' lncme 111 I 91 M~<l"I In I 11 I 11 "thloM Ind Coeur O ~ 6\, Menl" M l ' l FO I~• T n I 16 M~nh n l •l •I• ll11ClvEI l J.o COll•r Ca IJ ti Mino• C To 1 , V•nl Jl '~l?Qlo M,,~, Fd •ll l06J .-.11 Rltn!d l Cafem E " J Mt• M!f ll'o IJ '1AooHD Fd I 61 Ill Man G!n TO 11 ll 51 AllRcn pt] IS
Colhn1 F I : 17 ~ :··arc!: l;!: i: ; .-.uoc.11 1 tl I ,. ~:::, Tr ll •I 14 u .-.u R en O! )
lDIOll Str '"• 15'.>o M111 lP 11 11 , 4r,1"Dft '?o • •l Mallloro ~ r. : ~ ~\:Re~ Pl1 IO
c:::C't 1, :'• l\llM•~ 0 II 11 ,"'l..,,'iio-:nl:.1 SJ~Mtrld FO !1911JQ•.-,ti!~ c":.'; I
Cam G8' :1 'll g. ~~l(f H '~. 2!~: Fund II 'II '., ~~ .. ~~ 1: ~it!; .-.ro Inc °" Com T•l 10•, ~11., Mtd Ml• n n S!ock 5 n • 1S MOOdv 1 11 63 1111 11,uro11 Proo Com Hllh I '> ' Mtd!rn 1'. J7 Sci CD • 00 • 35 MIF Fd l n I l9 Y!Otn!n Ind
lom ''' 11 o ll'oMetld In 11 11.::~rr: 1fJl 1f~ MIF Gin •1l s1o:~:c~hW '~O ,.-. • 41, MiCll<I C• t>o I '• Se~~ Knl IS• 1 S<I M11US Gv In 14 10 JI Avery PO lOQ ma m I , f , Mldltt ? 1 ?1, Mu OmG ·~ In..-, ...... Cm~ Inn o!o 11 Mldw Gr 1J 18 !h•k Gin 1 611 611 Mu Oml" t 1110 l)f Av,.•t In .wo
',"'P Tet 5t1 st: M1111 G•• :ioW J1 .f::,:;-11:o fjJ :# M111 Sh" llU IJ .J<I .~~~~d"1l 1~ omr•s J ~ J t Miss VIG IS IS ~ I $ 'OO >lo Miii T•!I 1 91 1 97 All OOO I Cen lloc:k "'',. M(I rtscn 1'1 ) Dl\Dn 1 NEA Mui t ll t JJ ~C 1 ! Contrld 1 1 1~ Miid Sci s , 1 B:ion"o" / /.8 1: f~ Nar ltd • 07 '07 (Miran I\ t 'll Mollwk If 15 '> II\. BrOld SI ll l! II 2t Nal lnvll I IO 132 8aOck W ~ C-t l 11'. 11' 1 Mllrlf Col l>o I BllllocM Cilvln Nat Se-cu• S•r 881(t0 IT 1J Corp S J•o J>o Monm P~ It n :i,o llullek 12 n ll f:I llal•n '65 10 SJ l•ll GE 1 I) Cosm Yr 9 , 10 Mr>0re P I • f Ctndn II 4' 70 72 Bond • II 1 22 81IG plB• SO C,wfrO t•~• ISlo Mr>0re S 11 11 ~/ Oivld lll JIG Ol~kl 37' lot 81n;Pn1 15P Cr11 Mal ~. t •1 Mlllt TrA ll t91' NllW 5 '11 JO 1J ~;w,inll. I l!J. 10,.11 81n9P 111 l Cretl Mn 1 lb Ml1Tf WI •h 4l o NY Vnl U6'11" I t ... .., fll'ISIP pfl 75 Crn1 Co '91..1. ~o Molth M J , 6\Jo s M fd , Jf 111 ncom •.Joi • ,. Ill Df Cal 1 l• Ctulch R Y"ll • .tZ MDI Club 11:W IJ'h ~1 Fd I" I M STock J 1J I ftl Bink ol NY I Cv.or1l C I ~ f Muelle• I f "tP11mr I ID I 71 H~ Gtln I '11 f 'l Bani< Tr 11• O•n~ l~I 6 ,~ MutRI E1 !\ 3 ·,1111 lov l'1 )2' Nhlw Ce! •51 19' BlrbOI I \JI 01n1v 111 1 , 9 '~ M1et l f. 11 , 21 ~ nl sn. 10 H 11 l• Ne11w f:d II ll 11 U eo'tl CR 15 O•ll Des S{. 1,, N C trni ~ 1 t'o ctinnlfl!I Fllndl New1 \'110 I! 50 1~ SI fllilt Inc to
011• Gen ~o 301, ~·~~·· :i 1:1 l~ 11111n 1ol•1l30 ~r<"t.0f1,9 1~'A',~ B111c Pl 1 so Olltrn P 1 1 )>1 N•, "', I ,,• Cam S1 I .. 16) Not1llt Ul•lll6 llH•s Mly D1vl1 FO I 411 mp • ' Gtwth • 16 • 91 OcnaOll 'll 6 11 llleJ Ml pf I
0•Y Mir IF1 16 . NII F.•111 •s 16 ' 1nc11m ··~ '"' Om.oa 593 to} 1th Ind Deco• In l\o 6>; Nat Gll.O 16 I II Soetl t" I •f !OO Fd lUO IJ JJ llathln plJ SO O~klb ... Q 3, Jl~.N•t lib 11, 11,•c1>~1e Gt Bas 101 FO 111 flf 8111schLb M O•lftl Int 9 t:i., N1ll Med If • 20 • C•a 1 6 IS I I) Onf. WmS IJ 01 ll Ql llo~trlob 10 o~T~K Ch s '>i"~Nll Pet '• ,,, F11nd IGlo 111 •Ntl llSolllS• B•vYkC19 50 011 cinT 151, 131 N11 s,,cR ! ~ • F•nl u 15 nn oaaenh '" 1 so lle1r!nt1 1 Del lllr If It~' NII Snow • 1 • $hrnd 9 69 10.59 Po AIM t 15 IQ .2j 8ell Fd• I O .-, ' NII SUvr • • ' SDeCI I IO I Sl IT' S 9 J IO OI Beat F<11 pl ' ev m u 1, l't• NEn GI: U'• !S'o en 1 15 ll 11 ::io K • ll•ck Dtwey £ J • 4lo NJ NatG u , 16 cofo'i:f.1 P•c1 Fnd I 15 7 11 llKt 'Br" j.i 0 •m Cr 16 , 17 Nlchsn F JO 11 Ei1uiv 1 56 l It P111t Rev • 84 T 41 llt«h <k JO
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Ocean Series
Scheduled
At UC Irvine
Dr We~ley Marx author of
The fr111I Ocean w 111
coordina te 11 lecture series on
environmenta l pollulion at liC
Irvine during the fall quar ter
The s.cr1e~ wh ich w r 11
feature industry I e 11 d e r 1
sclcntlsts proressors a n d
lcgls lato rs will cr1 l1c;illy e1
plore an a11trnati\e to coo
venllon11I w1stl': manaacmf!nt
The lechntcal and sor:11l
lculblUIJI of recycling .,.,,.
m1lerl1ls will be covcrtd
The cl11~~ w1JJ meet on 11
C4lnsecullve Mondttys begin
n1n1 Oct !I from 1 p.m lo 9 30
p m and on Dec. 5 for a flt.Id
trip from 9 aim to i p m The
fet Is $4$
Further Information mav be
obt111ned from the UCI ·Et
lens1on otnce at 133-Mtt
-
•
.l! DAILY PILOT T,Hday, Stottmber 2'1. 1970
Ficker Jteally. ,Quicker; I.ntrepi.d Cha.mp
'
MOMENT OF TRIUMPH FOR CUP CHAMP
lnterpid Crotses Finilfl Line Well Ahead of Gretel
By ALMON LOCKAB.EY
o.t.U .. Y l'ILOT ... , .... •Mtw
NEWPORT R. I. -II'• all
over.
Bill Ficker ls the first
Westerner to ever defend the
America's Cup.
'Ibe 42-year old Newport
Beach architect did it by
outsaillng Jim Hardy of the
Australian challenger Grett;!
JI in the final race of the best
t our out of seven series. it wasn't an easy task.
Hardy actually got the start
over Ficker and forced him to
tack away first to clear his
wind. But when the two boats
converged again, they were
about even and Hardy tacked
under Intrepid.
ahead, but not~
without s o m e
v e r y anxious
moments. Intre-
pid was ahead
by 44 seconds
at the f irs t
mark, but on
two ensuing
legs \Hardy
had sailed Gre-
tel ll within two boat lengths
of him.
"I didn't think we had it won
until I heard that finish gun,"
said Ficker as he stood wet
and shivering on the deck of
Intrepid after the traditional
dunking of the victorious skip-
per.
By all standards it was the
closest America's Cup series
in the 119.year history of the
event.
The final scoreboard doesn't
tell the story.
Gretel II actually beat
British, Germans Interested
' N ? Who ll Challenge . ~ ext ...
lntl'epld llCl'Oll1I lhe finish Uno
in two raeea, but wu dis-
~ In .... Despite lhe
deCllion Australians " 111
always claim they won two
races in the aeries. inJt:ead of ooe.
• The final -· for Intrepid was 4 to 1.
lt WU the teeond COO-
secu~ve seriel win for the a.
meter Intrepid which also
defeated the Australian
challen&er Dame Pattie in
four straight races.
But the real cheers were for
Ficker and his young crew,
the youngest ever to defend an
America's CUp.
Ficker lived up to the
facetious motto hung on him
early in the trials. "Flcker is
Quicker," and to his own
pbilooophy that organization
and preparedn~ are the things that win ya t races.
In the one rac he lost,
Ficker himself made a
J!listake -fa.iliDg to cover his
~t.
You can bet he was not
about to make the same error
Mooclay,
He mat.ched Hardy tack-for-
tack, even when it appeared
that intrepid was l o 1 l n g
ground oo the tacks -whlch
at tlmts she was, especially
when I.he wind went light.
Flicker even was not out-foxed
when Hardy pulled a false
tact on the final windward
leg. Both boab went head to
wind simulalaneously and then
fell away.
'Ibere was no doubt that the
Australiam · this year bad
come up with a boat equally
as fast -especially downwind
1n light airs-as anything the
American designen h a v e
come up with. Even in
moderate to strong airs, the
Australian-made sails s e e m -
ed to stand up equally as well
as Intrepid's.
Ficker had nothing but
praise for the way Hardy and
· hi& qew sailed the boat. Said
he:
"It was a close series that
could have gone either way. It
was certainly more fun than
previous America's Cup series
where the outcome was a
walkaway each day.
Pair Set Sail on Raft
"It la lhe greatest lhrill ol
my IUNo._be able to defend
the America's CUp,ll Ftcter
conUnued, "especially in such
e.ieellent competition as that
furnished by lhe Australians."
AJ tntrepk! crossed the
'finish line 1:44 ahead of Gretel
II, the first chorus that went ..
up was the customary tMee
cheers for the loser. ' 'lbe.
Australians returned t b e
sahale in kind.
Then from Intrepid'• deck
came lhe raucous chorw: "Al
Lockabey Go Home."
This was in response to the
motto I had given FJcker
before the race, "Please Bill,
Send Me Home."
As the two yachts wett tow·
ed back to port thousands of
automobiles and spectators
lined the shores of Nar-
ragansett Bay and joined the
din by sounding their horns
from shore.
Pandemonium broke out as
Intrepid came alongside her
dock at Newport Shipyard.
Within seconds, Ficker was in
the water, but he managed to
take his entire crew with him.
As Commodore Clayton Ew-
ing and members of Intrepid's
syndicate stepped aboard they
also found themselves in the
VICTOR AND VANQUISHED BOTH CELEBRATE
Gretel Skipper H•rdy Gets FICker'1 Ch•mP•IM
Aussies Glum
Really Didn't Expect Win
chilly waters. SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -Th e Sydney Sun's
HONOLULU (AP} -A man California in a 16-foot sailboat So as far as the 1970 Australians disappointedly Lou d'Alpuget and Bob Ross
and a woman have set sail for but was turned back by a America's, Cup series is con-shrugged off Grelel's defeat said the "winning margin was cemed, there is no tomorrow. San Francisco in a yeUow rub-storm. It will all happen here again which ended the challenge no reflection of the closeness
her life raft named "Shark three years from now ~ith from Down Under for the of the race."
Bait." either Australia or some other America 's Cup. 'They said the deciding fac-R. ecord Set h 11 Bea Benham, 22, and Ronald country as a c a enger. Though many Australians tors was Intrepid skipper Bill
Rumors floated around here tall sh Id ho " ·1 d f ulll Souze, "8, hope to become the NEW MARTINSVILLE, W. Monday that 8. Canadian and still believe the y ou Ficker, w sai e a a ess
first to cross the 2,800 miles of Va. (AP) _ w i 11 a rd s. Gennan syndicate were look· read 3-2 and oot the decisive 4-race in fluky conditioJUJ."
Pacific Ocean in such a small Wilson of Wilmington, Del., ing th ings over. And surely, 1 in favor of Intrepid, there is The Sydney Daily Mim>l''s
craft. set 8 world record for 145 Australia and France will be a grudging acceptance of the Bruce Stannar9-Said: "Gretel
Before leaving, tile couple . back for another try. American victory. was magnificent in defeat. No cubic mch hydroplanes Sunday p · k 'd It th filled the l~foot raft with tc er sat a er e race "Following th~ second race challenger in the history ol wit6 an average speed of that be knew for certain an
lly SID MOODY the 24.3-miJe course here. The
enough· food and water to last 98.547 miles per hour on two east coast syndicate was disqualification of G r e t e I • this 119-year-old quest for
~re ~~ two months. The one kilometer runs at the 31st already planning 8 new 12-nobody really held out much yachting's supreme trophy bas
$500 life raft is the same type New Martinsville Regatta. meter, -and blnted that hope of-Jim Hardy being able sailed as well as Gretel today.
used by airlines, Souze said. Ted Panarteos of Detroit set Intrepid might be back for her to pull it off," said a She deserved to win but luck
shifted, it would be our saving w. R. Wood, who works with another world record on the third try: newsdealer. ran out."
grace," said Ficker," but all Ohio River with an average And then there is the west A u s tr a I i a n newsmen Though Gretel was defeated,
gift of the wind gods and the that passed through our minds Souze at 8 local paint finn, speed of 127.931 m.p.h, over coast syndicate that already reported from Newport, RJ., Australians feel she proved a
NEWPORT, R.I. -lt was steady hand of helmsman Bill Th sd , ,, said Monday that Squze tried the kilometer course in the has the wheels turning for a that the fifth race was the major point -that the
AU.C:lllecl I'-Wrilft'
another breeze for the United Ficker took charge as the w~~t ~fo:l~:a~~rt, there ,_in_l.966 __ t_•_sail_·_1_ro_m_J_ap_a_n_to __ 22S_cr;_h_y_d_ro_p_la_ne_c_1_ass_. ___ ne_w_1_w_e1_v_e_. _______ m_os_t_e_x_c_illn_· _g_th_i_• _ce_•_tu_rr_·_. __ A_m_ec_ic_•_•_•_•_ce_no_t_in_vmc_· _ib_Ie_.
States in the America's Cup sk.inbald Californian bested was a last chapter in Gretel·-
yachting classic. , • and the Australia's Jim Hardy at his II's disqualification that cost
question is: who'll be making own game on a wild 4.5-mile her a triumph in the second
waves as challengers in the homestretch. race. 'Ibe NYYC race com-
mittee delivered a note to both future? But it was, oh, so close. boats saying that a second er-After Intrepid beat back Gretel II took a brief early fort by the Aussies to reopen
Australia's Gretel II by one le ad, lost it promptly again the disqualification had been
minute and 44 sel'Onds, or and trailed by 44, 43, and 39 turned down.
roughly 10 boat lengths, Mon-seconds at the 'first three Sir Frank then messaged
day to take the best-of·seven marks. But getting help from from aboard his tender, Pearl
a fading northwesterly wind Necklace, that be was drop-
serles four races to one, that had dropped to seven ping the matter.
speculation turned to the pro-knots. Gretel D, once 10 "I was dam glid" 118.id
bable 1973 challenger for the lengths astern, was suddenly Devereux B 8 r k e r III,
Cup which has never left even. Hardy could h a v e chairman of the committee. "I
America. shaken Ficker's hand, but he hope any animosity from this
A spokesman for the Gretel oouldn't get the vital overlap in years to come will fade into
D assured the New York as Fici(-er rode past ·him. the background."
Yacht Club, the Cup's govern-"He sailed a great race, Bill
ing body, that Australia would Ficker;• Hardy said later. Some yachtsmen think the
come back for another crack "I'm not at all bitter. I've had committee is ruJing on pro.
at the treasured Il~year-old a lot of seconds. This is tests under its own regulations
trophy. another, but it's the most and involving a boat raced by
The French, who challenged disa ppointing one. its own members but Hardy
for the first time this year and • "l don't feel Gretel II has didn't agree:
lost in the preliminaries to been sailed to her optimum "I wouldn 't take this out of
Gretel, were expected to be yet. 1 feel I've let Sir Frank the club's hands. It's part of
back under pen magnate Packer (head of the Gretel Jl the whole Cup tradition. I
Baron Marcel Bich. syndicate) and Alan Payne think they made their decision
British yachtsman Eric (her designer) down." with a lot of integrity."
Maxwell also is interested and He shouldn't. No foreign He added he thought the
a West German group has skipper ever ratUed the Cup overlap rule involved in the
reportedly been watching the on its shelf as much as Hardy. cOllision that disqualified
race with interest. The yacht "I feel we were provided Gretel II was ambiguous.
club has 90 days to announce with a good boat-as good as "But if we were good
participants for 1973. Ficker's,'' Hardy said and no enough on this occasion we
Monday's final race was one argued with him. would have won in spite of this
nose·to-nose two thirds around ··1 thought when the wind inter:pretation," he said.
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Finch· Baclis
Nnon Bill
In California
By GEORGE SKELTON
Ul'I •llfllllll (~let
SACR.'\~tENTO -Former LI . Gov.
Robert H. i-~inch returned to the state
l:apitol for the first time in nearly two
ye'ars ~tonday and emphatically de-
fcrided President Nixon's ·welfare reform
tilan agairist attacks lrom Gov. Ronald
Reagan.
Finch. no'v a twnselor to President
Nixon. held a joint ne\vs conference with
J,t.' Gov. Ed Reinecke-the former
Congressman Reagan appointed to
replace him:
Rein~cke said ''I'd rather just avoid"
taking a stand on Nixon's controversial
program "Because it is very com-
plicated" ·and none of my areas or
J"esponsibility get into \velfare."
Bui pressed by OC\\'Smen .. Reinecke
said '·J will support the Governor."
Reagan since i\rlay has vehemenUy op-
posed the $4.1 billion Nixon plan, charg-
ing "it contains the seeds of a new
federal bureaucracy." In a capitol new:c
conrerence last Tuesday. the Governor
said the proposal would "si mply expand
and add to'' the current \velfare ··mess."
Finch said Reagan 's characterization of
!he Nixon plan \vas ·•a bad misnomer."
The presidential counselor contended
!he plan contains .. powerful \vorking in·
cenlives." He added the present aid to
families ~th. dependant children pro-
j'.lrams are "simply intolerable" because
there is a 1·\\'ide disparity" in benefil5
from state to slate.
f'inch \Vas the chief drafter of Nixon·s
fllan· when he \1•as Secretary of Health.
Education and \Velfare. a post he held for
17 months until June.
The welfare plan has passed the House
rind no1v is in the Senate Finance Com·
mittee. Among other things. it would pro-
vide a $1.600 annual guaranteed income
for a familv of four , and require able·
bodied recipients to accept 1vork or
retraining.
Reagan has constantly said he was not
opposed to the "original concept" of the
President's plan, but objected to the bill
01s passed by the House.
Finch countered the house made only
"rather modest"' changes in the bill. He
«"quipped that House \Vays and blcans
Chairman Wilbur fliiHs. D-Ark .. \l'hose
<.'Ommittee reviewed the plan. hardl y is
"'a wild-eyed radical."
The former liebtenant governor said
fhe plan no\Y is "whip-sav;ed between the
ultra liberals who want to Christmas tree
it to death and the conservatives who
agree that the PrfSeiit Pfo'gram is-p'reetly
bad bul haven't anything lo of!Cr
themselves.·•
He said chances of the Senate passing
the. bill after the November elections are
''slightly better lhan so.ao."
PQC Oka ys Joint
Finance Request
The California Public Utilities Com·
mission has approved a financing pr1>
posal requested jointly by Southern
California Edison and San Diego G11s and
Electric.
The two utility companies applied to
the commission for permission to borrow
$35.5 million from European banks. The
companies plan to purchase two nuclear
steam turbine generators for expansion
nf the San Onofre Nuclear Generating
Pinnt.
Since the c:ompanies are public utilities.
their business transactions · must ap be
•pproved by the commission .
Hospital's Mo111ent of T1·1itli
On Oct. 13 County Co mprehensive tlealth Plan·
ni'ng Board \vi ll meet in San Clemente to detern1inc
if this proposed -but stalled-for·years -hospital
development should retain official li cen sing sane·
lion. Stiff competition is forecasl from Chapntan
Gencral 1-lospital group of Orange \\1hich also seeks
to build a hospital in San Clen1ente. This \Veed·
chocked site \Vas leveled for construction by C. T.
De Cinces about two years ago. ll has ·remained
idle since.
Marine Sergeant
Faces Court
In Maltreatment
A 32-year-old Camp Pendleton training
instructor with decorations for Victna1n
combat \l'ill (ace a special courtmartial
on an unrevealed date for alleged
maltreabnent of several recruits.
\\lhile fl1arine spokesmen declined lo
specify the nature of the ch<1rges against
Staff Sgt. Charles Dabbs, they said none
of the three l\1arine trainees 11·as injured
in the asserted incidents "•hich occurred
last August.
Sgt Dabbs. who entered the Corps in
1957. was relieved of his duties sevcr:il
"·eeks ago as a training officer with !he
2nd Inran try Training Battalion. 2nd
Tnfantry Training Regiment at the huge
base.
Preliminary investigation of the allega-
tions against the sergeant led to the order
for a trial by Ll. Col. I.. H. Hardee. com·
manding officer o£ Dabbs' battalion.
The sergeant has. spent . two tours of
combat duty in Vietnam -the first from
September or 1966 to December or the
following year. then from February 1!)68
until September of the same year.
Al Camp Pendleton he had served as a
troop leader since last September of last
yea r.
Among the sergeant's decorations i11
the Navy Achievemcn~1cdal with a
Combat'V for service in Southeast Asia .
Navy Surgeon Chi ef
To Visit Pendleton
The Navy's Surgeon General "'ill pay a
visit to the Camp Pendleton Naval
Hospital Wednesda y. .,,,
Flying up from lhe North Island Naval
Air Station. Vice Adm. George ~1. Dav is
11·ill tour facilities at the hospital. lhen
visit with the commanding officers and
their staff. Adm. Da\'is will rem<i in
overnight on the base before resu1ning
his tour of West Coast Nava! hospitals.
'Defi11e CSF Regulations'
Says Cot111ty G1·a11{l Ju1·y
Can1pus rules at Cal State Fullerton
should be more clearly denned to both
students and faculty bul college ad-
ministrators must nol hesitate lo call 011
poli ce po1.,er when faced by student
viol ence. the Orange County Grand Jury
11·arned f\1onday.
In a report prompted by a study of re·
cent disturbances al the north county
campus the investigalive panel urged the
school's faculty to '·form the first line or
defense. .cmpcl\vcrcd by an ad·
miniStralion wi th the responsibility nf
mainlainins: order through peaceable
Hospital Donor
Meriwether Adds
Tha1ik_y ou Gift
A Leisure World resident who recently
made a $500.000 donation to the new Sad·
dleback Community Hospital building
fund has dipped into hi s private art col·
lcction to honor the man who arranged
the banquet at "'hich the handsome dona·
lion 1vas announced. •
1!.:. R. \·Jeriwether, the donor. selected a
l'are silver Chinese waler pipe as this
thank-you gift to Ted Cate who arranged
lhe banquet and television program dur·
ing which th e building fund was launched
with f\1eriwethcr's half million dollar gift
ror a gerontology center al the proposed
hospital.
The pipe, fl.1eriwether said, came into
his hands in J934 when he and his wife
were forced to nee Peking as the
Japanese armies advanced. As they lert,
their hosts. Chinese General Chen and his
\l'ifc, handed thetn the unusual pipe,
believed to be severa l centurigs old.
i\'lerhvether praised Cate. a former
advertising man noy,· living in Leisure
\\'orld, for his skill in successfully
hiunching lhc communit y project.
persuasive means."
The Grand Jury also sugse.sted that a
hea ring officer be appointed to preside
over inquiries into student infractions.
Violence, the report noted, could well be
eliminated or cut down by careful
distribution of college rules to students,
faculty, local police, parents and Orange
County newspapers.
The Grand Jury urged the Fullerton
adn1inistration to encourage reeom-
mendations from student body officers
and fa culty groups regarding student
discipline.
''But the administration alone should
be directly responsible for adoption and
hnplementation of such policies," tile
report added.
··Educational institutions are o u r
greatest hope as places of free inquiry
for the solution of society's problems and
lcgilimale dissent and debate of con-
troversial issues is to be expected," the
grand jury report noted.---
"However, at Cal State Fullerton a
small group of di!Senlers violated not on·
ly principles they claim to espouse but
also the rights of other members of the
academic community," it states.
•·The use of force or violence to obtain
change will not work and a civilized
soc iety will not tolerate this type O( BC·
lion,•· the Grand Jury declared.
El CamiI10 Club
Picks New Chief
Bob Victor has been elected president
of the El Camino Te~is . C1ub in San
Clemente. •
Other officers selected for the n e w
sea.!iQn are Bob Limberg, vice president;
Ellie t.1ear. secretary; Ema Estep,
lreasurer and Sid McMichael, club
representative and publicity ~hainnan.
The club \viii play a mixed doubles
round robin at the San Cleme nte High
School courts Oct. JO. \Vinners will be
give trophies and feted at a gathering at
Shakcy·s.
Ladies Day games will be held Oct. 5 at
the San Luis Rey and Del Mar Avenue
cou rts. The morning games will be
followed by luncheon.
The club is planning group tennis
lessons for children and adults. Directors
may be contacted to make arrangements.
Non-members may participate on a
space-available basis.
•
•
s DA.IL Y PILOT :J
Need TN1clcs --'
Fpresti;-y Budget
Cut -No Problem
• I
SACRA"MENTO (UPI) -Cut. In Ille
Reagan \ Administration. budGet or the
Calif9'1lia Division of Forestry have nQt
hurt the state's. firefighting efforts, ac-
ting state forester ·Lewis Moran ·said
Monday. .
Moran said that Conservation Director,
James Stearns had ordered no cuts in
fire crews and lo "hold the ·firefighting
capability of the division.''
But he said that orders for new fire
trucks to replace l>year-okl models \\'ere
being held up.
"\Ve've had a problem," he said o£ the
trucks. "Our replacement gchedule hasn't
been right up to snuff.''
fliel vin Pompino. Deputy Slate
l-'orester. said the Division's budget for
the 1969-1970 fiscal year ended last June
30 .,.,,as about $42 million. The Reagan
Administration added about $1 million
from lhat amount in its recom·
mendaliions for 1970-1971, he said, and
the legislature th~n cut about $1.4 million.
for a tota l of about $41.6 mlllion, $400,000
less than last year.
Moran said that after the current fire
season ends some smaller firefighting
units will be consolidated into larger
ones.
The CDF' employs about 2.500 yc~r·
round firefighters and 1.500 seasonal
men, mostly students.
He said manpo"·er was being cut at
several Northern California conservation
Planners OK New
Golf Parking Lot
San Clemente planning commissioners
have recommended that the operators of
a miniature · golf course be allowed to
pave a nearby city lot for parking.··
The parking for the course at Calle
Valle aod North El Camino Real would
be public but would serve the course
because o( its proximity.
The request to pave the lot was put to
the c:ommlssion last week by Dan Russie.
The city-owned property is part of Bonita
Canyon P11rk. localed near the Boys'
Club. The park master plan desii;natCll
the parcel for a parking use.
City officials estimated the cost of pav-
ing would be $2.&00 to $3,000. Planning
commissioners recommended thnt a time
limit be established for the public park·
ing use in the tvent the city later decides
lo put the land to other use.
Gaticho Girls
' . . camps, which are run jointly by the
division of forestry and the department o(
corrections. The reductions are being
made for "reasons of security," Moran t
said adding that the state was finding it mor~ difficult to find men who would re-)
main at , the mountain camps without
escapini::. .J
He said the nu1nber ·or inmates had •'
been cul by .about 30 or 40 from a /
state\\•ide t'Olal of 2.700, and that by next
fire season it would be trimmed by 190.
He said it would mean a drop of 19 CDF f
foremen at the camps, which are staffed 1
"'ith one foreman for each 10 men.
The division usually buys 30 fire trucks
a year at $20.000 each to replace outdated
vehicles about 15 years old.
San Cle11iente
Majo1· Center
To Open Soo1i '
Grading is under 1vay on San
Clemente's first niajor shopping center
and b'arrin g unf oreseen setbacks com· •·
plelion is e){pccted-by spring.
This was the estimate today of t.1axwell
Starkman & Associates architects for the
JO-acre project on the ocean side of the
frf'C\\'ay at Camino de Estrella . ~
No dollar figure has been set on the
multi-million dollar project but it vdll in·
elude a major Grant's department store
of abOut 100.000 :iQUare feet.
The store. will sell soft goods and aboul
cvervlhing else except food. said the.
architects.
Gei1e Schulte. city planning director,
said the Grant's will also contain a ,.
restaurant. a beauty shop, a nursery and ·\
an automotive center. •·.
Schulle· said there will be a chain super
market, a bank. a chain restaurant a~d
three shop buildings to be leased. He said .:
!here will be parking for 655 cars. The .~
developer and owner is \Vagner Construc-
tion Company of Beverly Hills.
Schulte said the developers \Vill build ~ .~
new street. Vera Cruz. from Camino de
Estrella the length of the property. Later
it will continue through the Palisades
area. he said, and hook into Camino .•
Capistrano.
"
"
Saddleback College cheerleaders are ready to ride herd on Gaucho
football fans this season. Keeping spirits bright are <f.ro1n left) Linda
Huber, Kathy Sho,ver, Cathy Mackin, .Hilary IiustoA and Carolyn
Jensen.
5 PIECE DINING SE T
•
A11 •11u1uel •111!1 •e1v1ll1tl
t•ou~ 1llo1 leahtlr• -4 <•••~ti. ·.
Chatsworth Rtiins
Residents returrr to their burned-out homes near
Chal.s\YO\_th to sift through charred ruins for \\/hat
valuables and keepsakes the.y r.an find. l''rom the
air, this block or once bcauliful homes looked like
UPI Tt..,,..,.
London after the blitz. While the se bomcowne,s
faced tbe task of rebuilding-, others \verc iig'hUng
to save their homes r1·o m the disastrous series or
rlrcs sLlll raging in Southern CaUJotnia .
•~lro llith IN<k dttin 11~~ a ltJ•u•I' "Nt•t•.M•1" 1.,,. Choi" II••• -••11 11at1. lndvdt.1 IJ ~ lta!,
s,.111111 O.k f111itlt.
Silt.fl
VAlUI S 16 9 ~MPLETE
......... ...,_ .... ,
•
4 DAILY PILOT
ICIMflllll ft .. IMMr .... lflm
---
U.S. Copter,
Gunships
Rout Reds
SAIGON (UPI) ""' Helicopters of the
U.S. !Olat Ab-borne Dlvlaloo ~ttaclled a
patrol ·in mountains west of Da Nana: and
killed 29 Communlata after calllns in air
strikes, the U.S. command sa1tt tod1y.
Communiques from Phnom Penh 11id
fighting in Cambodll was at a low point
with the only action report 1 betue in
wtrlch South Vietnamese fortes killed 21
Viet Cong and North Vietnamese 75 miles
northeast of the capital.
A $!. 7 mUllon Jail under con-
1lruction in Goshen, lnd. ts eight
inches widet'" than the available
land. Elkhart County officials
•aid the planner apparently forgot
tho old jail would not be demolish-
ed until the new one was finished
next door. Wort: on the new jail
has been limited to e.icavation.
'?be U.S. command in Saigon said the
101st Airborne DivWon aerial gwuhips
were on routine patrol on the border
between Tbua '11lien and Quang Nam pro-
vinces when they spotted a communiSt
force .0 miles west of Da Nang Monday.
PRESIDENT NIXON MEETS POPE PAUL AT THE VATICAN
Nl...tay Dlplomotlc T..,r htlnl in Italy • Teacher Chris Meux~ 24, has
Greatness Flawed
•.
landed his first local theater role
-he will play a body lying flat on
his face on stage for two houri
in Moxborough, England. • Hardly had an all-out Coast
The helicopters apened fire with rockets
and machine guns and called in help from
American jet fighter-bombers. T h e
gunships kill<d 17 Communist troops and
said the jets killed 12 more. There were
no U.S. casualties in the fighting.
In two lesser clashes in the Mekong
Delta Monday, South Vietnamese troops
killed 14 Viet Cong. There were no
government casualties.
Nasser Blinded by Power
Guard search for a missing 31·
foot trimaran begun, 'vhen it was
called off Tuesday. lt turned out
that the trimaran had been safely
moored tn Kahului Harbor on the
island of Maui for two days. The
two men aboard the boat out of
Sausalito, Calif.. failed to notify
anybody they l!Bd arrived.
U.S. B52 bombers dropped up to 300
tons of bombs within 15 miles of artillery
Base O'Reilly, 12 miles east of Laos and
26 miles west of Hue in raid! Monday
reported no new fighting around the
besieged South Vietnamese fire base.
Say U.S. Editorialists
• •'.llllD!IO .......................... ~ " •• Dress /or CP Air Stewardesses
i& going mfdi tn Va ncouver, B.C.
C! A. ipokesman says the new out·
fits are pcTt of an "e.ucutive
;et., promotion to attract Cana·
dia n businessmen. "We think
I Qfrf•1Q(ltC/ting is important," he
said. "So you cover them up,"
~ lam.ented one man at an in/or·
mal 'fXlTtJI to tntroduce the midil.
;
Air travelers will have their first
view-or nonview·of the stewarrt-
esses in their midis Sept. 21.
• Ch•rle1 W•fcruk, a trainee at the
Ft. Wolters helicopter base near
1\lineral Wells, came to Dallas to
recover his car which had been
~tolen then found by police aban·
doned on a freeway. However, dur-
ing the night between the police
notification ·and hi s arrival, some·
cne cut a hole in the fence of the.
policy pound and made off wilb the
1959 sports car again. • WeddinJ• are few and far
between m Jackpot City near !be
Nevada-Idaho line because there
aren't any churches here. But
C•therJne Bl•c~ a card dealer,
and John Str•ng, a bartender, were
\ved at the club where they work.
The Rov.-Robert Cook came up
from Elko 120 miles away to
perform the ceremony. He arrived
90 minutes late because he en·
countered road constructi6n. Ap-
propriately for the setting, the
centerpiece on the gift table was a
money tree. Although the city has no churches, it has c h u r c h
iervices. They are held in a laun-
dromat. • The eight-year reign of the
Beatln as the top pop group in the
judgment of British fans bas en·
ded. Named to succeed them
\Vednesday in a poll by the Melody
?\!faker, Britain's leading music
newspaper. was the four-man
Brlti•h rock band Lod Zeppelin.
'fhe Beatles were s e c o n d •
America'.s lob Dvl•n held his posi-
iton as be&t male singer and Cana-
dian folk artist Joni Mftchtll was
adjudged the best of her sex, suc-
ceeding America's: Janis Jopkin,
who dropped lo third.
Viet Cong guerrillas unleashed more
artillery attacks on civilian population
centers in Vietnam Monday, the Sooth
:Vietnamese command said today.
Ten rounds of mortar fire struck the
district capital of Dien Khanh, 186 miles
northeast of Saigon in the central
highlands. Two civilians were killed and
six others wounded.
The mortar attack followed three shell-
ings or civilian areas nearly 15 hours
earlier at Hue and south of Saigon. Those
attacks killed two civUiam and wounded
~ix.
The SouUt Vietnamese command said
government cavalrymen rode annored
cars and tanks into a battle 75 mJks
northeast of Phnom Penh near the town
of Krek Monday. In addition to killing 21
Viet Cong and North Vietnamese, they
ca'Ptured 16 weapons. The SOuth· Viet-
namese sufrered six dead and 14 wound-
ed.
* * * U.S. Announ.ces
Ne·w Troop Cut
In Vietnam War
SAIGON (AP) -The Unit.cl Slates has
turned over another big combat base. to
the South Vietnamete army and has
withdrawn four more units from batUe to
reduce American strength in Indochina
by another 2,565 men, it was announced
todsy.
Military spokesmen said the An Hoa
combat base, about 20 miles southwest of
Da Nang, has been given to the South
Vietname.se 5lst Infantry Regiment. I~
was the 57th American installation turned
over to the Vietnamese. in a little more
than a year.
The U.S. Command announced that
three units of the lat Marine. Division and
an Army artillery battalion. have been
pulled out or action.
Witness Testifies He
Pulled Off Holdup
PI'M'SBURCH (UPI) -A murder .
suspect, brought into court from the
county jail to testify for a friend , sud-
denly announctd that be -not the defen-
dant -staged an '80,000 bank holdup.
The defense witness, Peter Biaglarelll,
2,;, told the court Monday he. gave about
$30,000 of the loot to the dolendanl.
Richard E. Hinkel, 33, to keep for him
after the robbery July 241 1969.
By United Press lnternaUoaal
American newspapers commenting in
editorials today described Gama! Abdel
Nasser as a man whose greatness as a
leader was flawed by errors of judgment
and ambition.
The New York Times called him a
"tragic and spectacular failure." The
Atlanta Constitution called him a man of
"vision and patriotbm," but in the next
sentence said, "but that vision wall nar-
row, restricted to the Arab world, willing
to risk nuclear war between the
superpowers Russia and the United
Stales, to further bis dream."
MO!t papers agreed there was no way
to accurately forecast what Nasser's sud·
den death will mean to the Arab world
and the Mideist tinderbox.
The Daily News in New York observed:
"We'll have to be excused from shed-
ding any tears, genuine or crocodile, over
the death yesterday of Gamal Abdel
Nasser, 52, longtime chieftian of Egypt,
which he grandiosely rechristened the
United Arab Republic. It is a fact.
though, that Mr. Nasser was gathered to
his reward at an inconvenient lime with
regard to the general situation in the
Middle East , ..
The Daily News said, "Nasser was
mortgaged to Soviet Russia, Which bas
any number of technicians in the UAR."
The New York Times said~ "his ex-
traordinary rapport with the Arab
maues, bil gift for rhetoric, bis daring
and his personal charm gave the Egyp-
U1n leader a {IOSiUOn of strength among
the "Arabs and on the world stage that
might have been used to great advantage
for his people and for the peace of the
world. But blinded by his own ambitions,
he vasUy overreached himselC, led his
country into a series of disastrous wars
and accomplished litUe or permanennt
value either for his fellow-Egyptians ·or
his fellow-Arabs."
"He loved power," said the Los
Angeles Times. "In its pursuit ·he
squandered the resources of h i s
leadership and his country on wars and
subversion, until in the end he had
mortgaged his land to a new band of
foreigners who he1d him more and more
in their debt and control. For now all that
can be safely said is that with Nasser 's
death the course of history in the Middle
Ea.st has been altered, though in ways no
one can yet fully perceive."
The AU an ta Constitution commented :
''His death robs the Arab nations of enc
leader among them who dreamed of bet-
ter things for all his people. Only the
future can tell what this means for those
people and for the people Nasser inspired
them to bate. the Israelis."
The Baltimore Sun said, "his drea1n in-
cluded a new Egyptian well-being, a rals·
ing of his country out of its miserable
past. The symbol of this was the Aswan
Dam. But here also nothing came to fru i-
tion during bis liretime; the beginnings
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only had been made. Just bow the Middle
.Eastern situation will be changed by
Nasser's death is impossible to foresee.
That it will be changed profoundly is cer-
tain."
The Los Angeles Times said the. death
"removes an immense figure from the
world stage.
·• .•. at death he was strugglin.g lo im-
pose a degree of order over a disparate
Arab world; engaged in the intense
diplomatic maneuver -some would say
manipulation -with the principal powers
of the world; and locked still in a deadly
conflict with the one country of his region
with which he had least come to terms -
Israel .... resolution of all these depend
Lo a very great extent on Nasser.
'' ... that is why it is a futile exercise
at this point to forecast with any degree
of certainty what will follow."
* * * Sadat to Assume
Nasser's Duties .
For Two Months
BElRUT (AP) -One of Gama! Abdel
Nasser's most loya l followers will be.
Egypt's leader for the next 60 days.
Vice President Anwar Sadat, one of the
"Eree Officers" who joined Nasser in
1952 to overthrow King Farouk. took over
Monday as interim head of state under
the provisions of Egypt's 1964 constitu-
tion. No one knows who will eventually
emerge as Nasser's successor.
Within 60 days, the 361)..member Na-
tional ASfe:mblY. is required to nominate a
new president by a two-thirds majority.
According to the constitution, the new
president's term \l.'ould be fi ve y&rs.
Nassef was elected president for life
following his b r i e f resignation a f t e r
Egypt's defeat by Israel in the 1967 war.
Diplomats in Paris said today that
Sadat is not likely to emerge as Nasser's
final successor. One Egyptian official
mentioned the possibility of a bid for
power by Ali Sabry. the pro-Moscow head
or the Arab Socialist Union. But a
Western official commented: "Nobody is
going to know what's happening until
somebody reads the will."
Of all the ofUcers who helped Nasser
launch his revolution , only two survive in
power-Sadat, 52, and Hussein Sha!ei, 51,
·who has little popular support. Both are
members of the Supreme Executive
Committee of the Arab Socialist Union,
the only authorized political organization
in Egypt.
Sadat was one cf four vice presidents
named by Nasser in 1964.. They wert all
removed followinf} the 1967 war, but
Sadat remained as president of the Na-
tional Assembly.
Sadat, brought up in a devout Mosle.m
ramily and known as an Arabic acholar,
\\'IS graduated from Egypt's military
academy in 1938.
British authorities arrested him in IHI
on charges of helping an Egyptian
general escape to Nazi Germany. He was
imprisoned for two years before escap-
ing, but was arrested again in 1946 and
accused of attempting to assassinate
Amin Othman, then finance minister. He
"'as acquitted, became a reporter for a
Cairo newspaper, and left that job in 1949
to rejoin the army.
After the coup agai~t Farouk, Nasser
appointed Sadat to a succession of key
posts. In 1953, he was a member of •
tribunal created to lrY. politicians or the
old regime.. A year later, be was on the
People's Court hearing the case of
Muslim Brolhe:rhood members accused of
trying to assusinate Nasser in Ale.1-
1ndrlll.
Police Return Pants,
Too Baggy in Seat
CHARLESTON, W.Va . (UPI) -one
hundred state policemen sent their
uniform trousers back to the manufactu-
rer because they v.-ere baggy in the seaL
Embarrassed oUicials at the Howard
Uniform Co. in Baltimore announced they
h•d ltred a quality eo11trol in!)ltCtor.
They also 11ld ktatc troopers In other
states had requested extra room in their
lromcrs to accommodate bulky book.\ or
tickets, Du( \Vc$l Virginia state pallco
prel~r Ille sUm·fitting mood look, spoics--
nl~ here said.
k
l\'boa Trip
Death of Nasser
I
Lessens Impact
[,i
ABOARD THE USS SAM TOGA (UPI)
-Much ol the pul"JI09t and Impact ol
President .Nlmn's Mediterranean tour
waa diminished by the death o1 EgypUln
President Gama! Abdel Nauer.
Nixon called the Egyptian leader's
death a "tragic loss" and canceled air
and sea exercises that had been scbedUl-
ed today to show the power and litxtblllty
of the U.S. 6th Fleet, however. He was
sclleduled to go to Naples Jater 1n tbt
day.
NiJ:on's el&ht-dly trip began with a
wann and enthusiastic recepUon in Rome
and a visit with 21 freed American
airliner hostages, but Nauer's delth
abruptly imposed 1 more somber tone on
the tour.
Of immediate concern to Nlxon was
who will represent 'tht United States at
Nasser's funeral. White House aides
refused to speculate whether NlJ;on
himself would go, but tended to
discourage such talk by observing the
United States and the United Arab
Republic have not had diplomatic rela-
tions since the 1967 Arab-lsrat.li war.
There was speculation among Nixon's
aides that Secretary of State William P.
Rogers would be sent. Rogers is travelinl
with Nixon.
~tost activities on Nixon's program re-
mained unchanged. Although be might be
forced to reschedu1e his trip to
Yugoslavia Wednesday. President Tito
was txpected to fly to Cairo for Nasser's
funeral Thursday.
Nixon was notified of Nasser's death
ri.1onday night. Jn a one paragraph state-
ment, the President said: ,
"The world has lost an ouUitand inJ
leader who tirelessly and devotedly serv-
ed the causes of his countrymen and the
Arab world. This tragic loss requires that
all nations, and particularly those in the
Middle. East, renew their efforts to calm
passions, reach for mutual understanding
* * * Mrs. Nixon Sets
Her Activities
While in Rome
ROME (UPI ) -While President Nixon
visited the 6th Fleet today, first lady Pat
Nixon planned her own se.pvate round of
activities including • coffee reception and
news conference for some 50 local
newswmnen and a visit to Rome's version
of Boys' Town.
After her.arrival in the Italian capital,
Mrs. Ni1on stayed in the background to
Jet the President take the spoUight.
She appeared thrilled Monday wJth her
visit to the Vatican when she had a
private audience with Pope Paul VI.
The Nixons invited several Roman
Catholic members of their staff to join
them. Among them were Fina and
Manolo Sanchez, the Nlxons' maid and
va let.
Fina, dressed in black, kissed the
Pope·s hand twice, Tears streamed down
her face. Nixon introduced the couple,
once refugees from Cuba, to the Pope as
being like members Of the family.
Much attention has been centered on
Mrs. Nixon's spectacular travel
wardrobe, including eight designer even·
ing gowns.
At Boys Town of Rome this afternoon,
~1rs. Nixon was to meet the mayor, 18-
year~ld Gino Spano, a Canadian. The
first lady also was lo meet Monsignor
Carroll·Abbing, founder and president of
Boys Town of Italy.
fn the evening, she was scheduled to
motor to the national union for the fight
against illiteracy. There she was to meet
the adult students and faculty and watch
a film, "the alphabet is not enouah."
and build lutiol peace."
Nixon'• day Monday included warm
and prolonged talkl with llallan leadlrl
and PoPe Paul VI and a ourprlae IO. '
m!nutt greeting lor 16 Americana palllns
through Rome en route home aft.er three
weeks captivity as priloners of Arab
guerrillas in Jordan. ,
Most pleasing to the president wa11 •
spontaneous ~Nl1.on demonstraUOn by
thousands of Romans who chanted "Ric-
cardo,' Rie<ardo (Richard, Richard)"
and tried to mob him as his motorcade
left the Vatican.
1bere was strtet fighting. but Ni10n
did not see it. Pollet detained f7f youihs,
most ol them Cormnwtists or anarclllltl,
who hurled rocks and abouted anti-Nilon
slogans in parts of central Rome.
White House Press Secrttary Ronald t ..
Ziegler told newsmen Nixon was tremen•
dously encouraged by the welcome of
Italians.
One of the purposes of Nixon's trip was
, to try ~ get Yugoslavia and Spain to use
their friendship with Nasser to get peace
talks moving again at the United Nations_.
* * * Nixon . Cancels
Navy Exercises
Over Nasser
ABOARD THE USS SARATOGA (UPI)
-P.reside.nt Nixon told the U.S. 6th fleet
today it had helped keep the Jordanian
crisis from erupting in a wider war, but
he silenced its mighty fire.po\\'er because'
of the Arab world'• loss of Gamel Abdel
Nasser.
Soon after awakening, the President
conferred at sea with Secretary of State
\\'illiam_P. Rogers and Defense Secretary
i1elvln R. Laird about the implicatkml
of the Egyptian president's death for the
ri.tiddle East and the dormant Ar1b-
Israeli peace talks.
Nixon was not expected to intem1pt the
schedule of the European tour to attend
Nasser's funeral in Cairo Thursday -
Rogers may represent the United States
-but changes were likely in bis plans to
visit Yugoslavia that day. President
Josep Broz Tito wil l be in Cairo for the
funeral .
\Vith today's planned air and sea e1-
ercises canceled, the President stood on
the decks on this hl!le carrier off Naples
and told the 2!5;oeo officers and ~men of
the naval armada by radio that they were
indispensable for peace in the Mediter-
ranean.
"Power for peace," Nixon declared.
The Jordanian crisis has eased, he
noted, and "the most important, to--
dispensable reason was the fact that we.
"'ere ready.".
"The fact that we did not have to use It
is most satisfying."
The President made no mention of
Nasser's deat h or the unttrtainty it had
injected into the complex power struggle
v.'ithin the Arab world which Cairo had
stabilized so oft~ under Nasser's
moderatinr influence.
Store Official Rigs
Booby Traps in Shop
MORGANTOWN. W. Va. (UPI) -
When the Propst Machinery Co. ia cloeed,
signs in the wiMows proclaim the shop is
wired to explosives that will be touched
off if doors or windows are disturbed.
The general manager of the firm, Louis
Hamrock, for 12 years an Army ei:·
plosives expert with the Green Berets.
set up booby traps after thieves last week
made. off with $2,000 in equipment.
Hostages Return
'Thank God for Arnerica,' Says One
NEW YORK (UPI) -When Jel!rey
Newton, 16, of New York City stepped off
the "Opeclally-charlered Trana World
Airlines jet Monday ni,ht after spending
22 days as a hoetage in Jordan, he
observed, "litUe things like hot food and
soft mattresses are taken for granted in
this country.''
Newton, a 1tudent at Y e s h i v a
tJnivenity High Schoo~ was one of 3.1
hostages ol the Sept. 6 multiple hi-
jackings to Jordan who returned to Ken-
nedy Airport. They had a 12-hour 011ht
from Rome, where they met brieDy with
President Nillon.
N-wu one of 32 hoolafea rolwed
by P>latinlan guerrillas on Saturday. Sill
of the hoolagea wm laten to Rome
earlier from Nicolla. CyPl'US. All were
reunited ln Rome Mondly, with one
hostage returning to hi.I home in P1ris.
The hostages were joined by Mn. Russon
Atorris and btr Infant son who had been
releued aeveral days be.fore. She is the
wile or the copilot or the TWA jeOlner hi·
jacked to the dtae.rt outside Amman.
Sis othtr hoell.ges have been unac-
counted for. More than 200 relaUvell met tht
returnees In 1 special ~pUon whne an
estimated t,000 friends met them In cor-
ridors and public walling rooms. Mayor
John V. Lindsay was on hand along with
pushing and shoving newsmen trying to
pul mlcrophona In Iron! of the hoslal••· ~fitchcll Meltzer of Orlando, F111 .• said
he understood the gue.rrllh1s and that
they had laU&bl him a lwon:
.. Thant God for what we have here In •-ti " M~•CI·
<;apt. tarroll D. wooc1a. pilot or the hi-
jacked TWA jet. who spent hil 52nd
birthday in captivity, was met by bil wife
and said be had betn treated "fairly and
humanely. It was not the bnt uperlenc•
I ever had," he said. •·I wouldn't recom·
mend it more than once In a lifetime."
But when asked II he'd Oy lo the Mid·
die East again, be aaid: "l don' know
why not."
David Ra1b, 17, of Trenton, N.J.1 wat
met by hla mothtr and huged Vi&Cll"OUlo
ly. He Aid he want.er lo .. lab a 111o-
and eaL" Mn. Raab said. ··1 ordered blm
three steaks."
Tbis ..-as 1 special reunion for the
Rnba. Mn. Raab aod her lour other
children had been hijaclled with David lo
tht Jordanian destrt, but they were
rtiealed Sept. 14. David, a Yeshiva
Unlvenlty stoden~ "" held.
'Tor a while I thought 1 had Jost my
whole family ," said Dlvkt'1 father, Rabbl
MtnuchenRaab.
Hundreds Of Yesblv11 ·Un Ive r s 1 t y
1Wdtnta 1 cm'Yin& slam &reeled u.
rttumets. "Near Mizracbi welcomes
)lome David Raab and Fooilo Chaler
from a rtluin& vacalioa OftrleU," one
!Jgn read. ·
"I want 10 set a big botUe of root
bttr," said Fran C>esitr, Jt. 1 Ytshiva
student. "It's nk:e to be back for Rosh
• Hoshanah," the Jcy:ish new year that
begins at '11!ldown Wednesday.
•
•
By PhD lnfelfancli
"It certainly doesn't corner: very well. does it!"
Kent State Mourners
Endorse Non-violence
KENT. Ohio (Al -Bur n·
ing mc1noria l candles and
"'hal they said were draft
cards in a cold nighl rain,
Kent State University students
have launched their new
school year with applause for
nonvioleflt pOtiUcs.
Some 5,000 of the school's
2.l,000 students took part in the
Monday flight service i n
memory of the four students
killed at Kent May 4 during a
confrontaUon with Ohio Na·
Uonal Guardsmen.
After the service, several
hundred of the 5,000 filed
through rain to the scene of
the shootings and s t o o d
beneath umbrellas w i t h
cancUes while cards were
:.i!med.
"Do not let your grief end in
mourning," said the Rev,
Ralph David Abernathy, presi-
dent of the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference, who
drew repeated standing ova· ·
tions in a speech at the
Pilot Dies
Aher Crask
WALLA WALLA, Wash,
(UPI) -Wilber H. Garbe Jr.,.
of Touchet, Wash. was elec·
trocuted after he stepped on a
power line Monday night,
momettts after he had surviv-
ed the crash landiilg of a light
aircraft he was piloting.
· However Garbe's sJx.year·
flld son, Greg~ escaped from
the accident unharmed.
Witnesses said the two
seater aircraft Garbe and his
son were traveling in crash-
Janded in a field aear Lowden,
seven miles west of here, after
hitting a tree and a power line
in a landing approach.
Garbe, 29, stepped out or the
crashed p I an e, apparently
unharmed, only to step on the
fallen power line. His son.
Greg, suffered a cut toe but
was otherWise u11injured.'
memorial ser vice.
"Be thankful for the ideals
of those who have given theh•
li ves for decency, freedom and
peace," Aber11.athy said.
"It is the state -the
gcverrunent-which is violent
in America, not the masses of
people who defend and protest
•.. The way to overcome this
violence is not through
violence."
"I'm glad to see that some-
cne is realizing that non-
violence is the cnly way to
make it," said Den Kahler, 20,
of East Ca11ton, who is still un-
der treatment for partial
paralysis caused by a wound
he suffered May 4.
Kahler, wearing a peace
dove armband and speaking at
the service from a wheelchair,
said, "J don 't hate the Na·
tional Guardsmen who shot
me. I don't disagree with the
people who sent them there.
l'm just glad I'm alive."
Sam Davis
Has Had It
SEATrLE, Wash. (UPI) -
Sammy Davis Jr. says he'll
quit show busine~ for good -
except for pcissibly one live
perfcrmance a year.
Davis, hospitalized 1 a s t
month in Las Vegas for
pneumonia and exhaustion,
told u audience here Sunday
he is going to leave the field
he has worked in for 41 of his
44 years "and put myself back
together. Mentally and
physically, I've had it."
His illness caused him to
cancel two weeks of a schedul-
ed five.week cross-country
tour, which ended here.
Davis said hP. would like to
direct and perhaps do the one
show a year, possibly on tele.
vision, "but, man, that's it."
"Hi-C' Ads
• Attacked
ByFfC
WASlllN\lTON (UPI)
"ffi.C'• made with real fruit
and. it'• bl8h In vltamin C,''
aays the ....-dal. Not ao,
aays the F-Trade Com-
mlalon. "lt'a called the sensi·
ble drink!" 11ys the ditty. Try
orange juice, ta.YI the Pre.
Not only are the ads
milleading, the rrc said in a
propcieed conseqt order Mo~
day, but the "Hi·C" trade
name itself deceives the
public.
The agency proposed Lha t
the trade name be dropped,
the nutritiOnal-based a d s
abandoned and th e company
banned - for one. year -
from making nut r It i ona I
claims for ether nonfruit pro-
ducts unless the ads pro-
minently ~oae the "Hi·C"
atory aa told by the FTC.
"Hl·C" is made by the Coca·
Cola Co. which f\OW can sign
the proposed ,, m-e" order.
agreeing to its terms with no
acknowledgement ()f guilt, or
contest it before an FTC hear·
ing examiner. The examiner's
ruling would be reviewed by
the agency's f iv e com-
missioners. ....
The · FTC said Coca-Cola
advertises "Hi-C'• as
nutritious, high in Vitamin C
and suitable for use by
children with meals a n d
snacks. ln fact. the agency
said, the drink falls· short of
such claims. "Milk and citrus
fruit JU1ces are m or e
suitable," the FTC said.
"Said drink is nOt a
beverage that can accurately
be termed 'the sensible drink!
nutritionally and economically.
as a source of Vitamin C," the
FTC said of "Hi·C."
"Orange juce is more semi·
ble nutriUonally because it
contains significanUY more
Vitamin C in the same quan-
tity. Orange juice is more
sensible economically because
it is often less expensive as a
source of Vitamin C," it said.
Sea Hijack
Suspect's
Hearing Set.
SEA'ITLE (UPI) -The
Canadian accused in the wild
case involving a robbery, a
sailboat hijacking and kid·
naping gets a chance to in-
dicate today whether he will
go willingly to Canada to fac:e
multiple charges er entangle
the proceedings in legal red
tape.
The youth, identified by the
Royal Canadian Mou n t e d
Police as Berkhard Bateman,
19, of Ontario Province, faced
an extradition bearing here
this afternoon.
He has been held on '6.000
bail on charges of kidnaping.
U.S. cfficials say they will
drop the charges if the blond
youth agrees to waive the
formal extradition proceedings
and return ·to Canada.
Bateman sun-eitdered to the
U.S. Coast: Guard Friday
bringing the curtain down 011
what became a biiarre in-
ternatloDal movie-style chue.
Workers Needed
Marine Pvt. Cllarlel M.
Olbon, IOD ot Mr. and Mrs.
Jamea w: Olborn of 1492L
Purdy, Midway City, Is aerv-
ing. with Marine Air Control
Group 38, Third Marine
Aircraft W"mg, Twenty.nine
Palml.
Ba~k Into Fire
· Si.ster Dies for Others
BEA'ITY, ore. (UPI) -As
memben of the Shaker
religious sect, the Crane fami-
ly left a candle burning in
their home at au times.
The custom may have caus-
ed a raging fire Monday that
destroyed their home and left
four of lhe.ir grandchildren
dead.
Paula, 12, eldest child of Mr.
and Mrs. Jimmy Godawa,
escaped the flames but dashed
back into the blazing house in
a vain effort to rescue Iler
sister and two brothers.
Paula died in the attempt.
Her body and that of her
bi'other, Prestane James, I,
and sister, Gina, e, were found
in an upstairs bedroom where
they had been sleeping.
''
The body of another sister,
Leah, 5, has not been
reeov<Ted,
Three other; persons wer.
sleeping in a down 1 ta irs
bedroom . when the flames
broke out, but they escaped.
Mr. and Mrs: DeUord Crane,
grandparents ct the dead
children and owners of the
home, fled ttie fire, the
grandfather on crutches. A
neighbor'• child, Identified on·
ly as Kirk, also escaped.
Fire trucb were sent to this
tiny community from Klamath
Falls, 48 miles away. But by
the time they arrived, flames
engulfed the heme.
Klamath Coonty Sherill J.
1.f. Britton said lt appeared
the buming candle touched off
the fire.
, .
•
Tutsdf)', September 29, 1970 DAIL V PILOT S
\Vltne81f Tells Threat Jet No~
Ban Fails Manso~ Death Brag ·Bared
LOS ANGELES .(AP) -A
Superior COurt judge bJs
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
Palllllllllian-l>orn aelf·styltd
cowboy actor 11y1 he heard
Cbvles Manson boall of being
a killer tllortly after U\t
Sharon Tate murders, and
leafed he bad been tagged as
Manson's next victim.
"He grabbed me and put a
knife on my throat and be
said, 'You son cf bitch, don't
you know I'm the one that's
doing all these killings!' "
The witness, testifying at
the Tate murder trial Monday,
was Juan Flynn, 25. who said
he Uved with Manson's hippie·
style clan at the Spahn movie
ranch for two years, working
as a manure sh veler.
Flynn said the· conversation
came up as be was starting to
eat lunch in a kitchen at the
ranch tv.·o days after the Tate
slayings. He didn't say why
Mansop ma,de the statement
or held.the lmlCe to h~ Lhroa~
but said, "I thought he was
jull boasting."
r1ynn said Manson. eve~
tually put the knife on the
table and aaid, "You kill me."
When Flynn hulsted he didn't
want to kill Manson, he said
the shaggyhalred clan leader
told him to "go down to tbe
creek and make love to his
girls.''
Flynn said he declined, fear-
ing he'd contract a venereal
disease.
Manson, 35, and t h r e e
women followers are on trial
on murder-conspiracy charges
in the August 1969 slayings of
Miss Tate and six ethers.
Flynn was the first witness lo
say he heard Manson admit to
the kllllngs.
The rangy, 6-foot-S Flynn
said he wasn't scared by the
diminuUve 5-foot-7 Manson at
first. But when Manson pack·
ed up his troupe In late sum-
meT and headed for remote
Death Valley, said Flynn,
.. You could feel aomething in
the air. Something was hap-
pening."
"Every time I walked
around a corner, tha' always
many times they could do me get some •.• pigs.·• rtfused to issue an order aim~
ln." The.n, he said, she drove off
I h 'M nd Lh ed at decreasing jet noise at At one j)oint, he ltid, w l anson a e same
Manton told him "what would group of persons the 1 state Loi A n g e 1e1 International
happtn to me if I wouldn't -says went on a murder foray Airport.
come along with hm •.. I that ended in the slaylng~ ol Judge Martin Katz denie4
would be hanging on a tree Leno and nosemary LaBltn-Monday a prellminary tn--and evuylxfly would come caj,• a night 11rter the kl~llngs of
back and stab knives into Miss late and four vls1~or1. junction &aught by the llate
me." Flynn said that 1n the and the City or IN:lewood, aite
S tu Id Fl h months before the slaylngs ct the airport. t • sa ynn, e was ~1onson spoke of starting a -luctant to leave The order would have ban-,., ' black·white race war and "(liked it there," he shrug· v.·ould tell his family , "The en-ned especially nciisy planes,
1ed, and said cf Manson : "I Jy way I'm going to show the 1imited night fUgh!s and thought that he was right In freight landings, re q u I r-ed everything he did and said." black man and the pl1s is to preferential use cf run Ways
S m 111 n g a c r o s s th e go down there and kill a whale distant from homes and made
courtrOom at the bearded, bunch of these ·'· pigs." planes land at a steeper angle
scoWHng Manson, Flynn said, He said Manson was sym· to keep them high above
"t don't hate him ." pathetic lo blacks and wanted residential areas. Much cf Flynn~ testimony! them to kill whites to "balance1 __________ _ · s · h what the whlte man had done -in pan1s -acce~ted English to the black ... The state, en -w:as accom~n1ed by ~rm-l the ether hand, has said
waving and facial contortions. Manson wanted both blacks
He showed how defendant d h" d. · ed Lh Susan Atkins, 2.1 , one night in a~ w ites e~a ic~t ~o at ~ugust 1969. wrapped herself ~~rid.Ian might inherit the
Jn a black cape a~ swept ~t On ,cf wxamlnatlon by ~: door of a ~r~.iler; He said defense · at t orney Paul
announced. We re gonna Fitzgerald, Flynn conceded
Nude Coed's
Body Found
REDLANDS (UPI) -An
autopsy has been crdered on
University cf Redlands coed
whose nude body w a s
discovered in an orange grove
Monday.
Authorities said the body cf
Lois Jean Reicher, 21 . Long
Beach was discovered by a
lhat he frequently abandoned
his ranch job to pursue a
career as a bit player in
western movies. ·He said he
was on location in Utah in the
summer of 1969' ind couldn't
remember just when he left or
returned to the commune. He
said he also liked lo go cfI and
live alone In the woods above
the ranch -sometimes for
weeks at a time, but he
couldn't remember dates.
Pacific Quake
studen~ search teani in the BERKELEY (UPI) _ The
grov~ JUSt east flf the e&mpu! ' University of C a I i lo r n i a
tennm courts., . . . lieismographjc station record-
'11te cororier s ~Hice sa!d. tlle ed a Southwest Pacific earth·
cnly appare~t sign cf tnJury quake some 5,700 miles from
was a bruise on her left here Monday night. A
templ.e. . spokesman said Jt registered
Po11ce refu~ ~ discuss the 6.5 on the Richter scale.
case saying 1t nugbt hamper.i";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m;\ their tnvestlgaUon. However ,II
Miss Reicber had been listed
as' a missing person Monday
altemoon. She was last seen
on the campus at about 9 p.m.
Sunday.
. '
". <;; -,_ .... , . ·.'\~ .·
~ ... ..;;.
., ~<
• •. "I , lJ> I • I I>
Wershow
Real Estate
Auction
lllB
(2,394,122 Sq. Ft.)
Spectacular, lmpl'Md
MARINA-ORIENTED
PROPERTY • .....
Tt be.,,_.-._ 4 91Ntller Ill T ....
PMCP.#1-lf.ID ... PL llJ:14 Acfll)
111pmed Oelln front Prol*fl,
lllSll.#Z-111,lll ... PL (l.Ol2 AcNI) Improved RIUlltloMI Propertr,
.-a&. '*1-m.m .._ "' ('.le0Ac111)
l11prMCI °""'front,,..,,,
nxn. #4-t,m,411 ... PL (4(1,91)6~)
lmprovtd Mulllpl• lhrtllin(
' Atcrllttonal Proplrtr.
POn:NTIAL PltOPl1ITY POI·
HIGH-RISE AflT'S. TRAILD
PARKS. 10Ff1CES. GOLF COURSE, ·E1'C. ADJOINING
OCEANSIDEIOATHM90lt.
WlftO, ... Ol.<tCllOllM_,.
a.lll'ITllST.INCRll'.
Dll..11.8
ll)jlP.lL
1be coroner said none o! her
clothing has been found. seemed to be the 1ubiect, how ;=;:=====.II DIAMONDS
AND
... cu.
Strike Ban
Left Intact
SAN FRANCISCO CUP!) -
KIDS
LIKE
-UNCLE LEN
caJHomla's Supreme Coar! '"=====::::==:::== has rtfuled to hear an appeal -
from a ruling that in gentral
pubUc employes have no right
to strike,
Left standing by Lhe nillng
on Monday was a deciaton by
the State C'.ourt cf Appeal tn a
strike threatened against the
city of San Diego by 200 of its
nUllty department and eoo of
lts public worlcs department
employes.
A ~ppreme Court judge had
refused to issue an lnj~ion
against the walkout, hclding
that city employes do have a
right to strike.
The city then won ln the
state court of appeals and the
Supreme C.ourt upheld that ac-
tion.
EST ATE JEWELRY
PURCHASED
___ , __
-.1Wersholf ...
~~ .... ,.
• Ill 11.tA llfA
LOI AlllllD. Cllll'. -(IU)l334041 c.11.-.-.,., ..........
,
• '
•·
/ --
~y )-U..O'f EDITORIAL PAGE
. ::?'
LegislJiture
M4ny Southern .Callfomian1. have understagda,bl~
been lured by promOters,of "recfeatlol'\31" 1ubdivi1lop.1
in rural areas of northern C1lifomia. N'ow there la
mounting pressure to exercise regional1 or statewide
control of land use tO put brakes on the proliferation of
1ubdlvislons without regard to need or the permanent
dam.ate they do to pastoral and wilderness areas -or
the losses to buyers and later higher tax costs to local
residents.
The DAILY PILOT last week completed pubiica·
tion of a five-part series of articles on the subject. The
1eries focused on Nevada and Siskiyou counties as typi·
cal examples of widespread land commitment keyed to
quick and large profits for developers -with the.little
''investor" and 1oca1 taxpayefs holding the bag in the
end.
Other newspapers. magazines and radio-TV s.tations
up and down the Pacific Coast are a1so telling the. in-
1ide story of the "recreational second home" business
as practiced by some large corporation developers. As
a result, the over-all public ·interest is beginning te
emerge. The old idea that a lind owner should be free
to do as he pleases with his property, regardless of the
effect on the rest of the community, has had to yield
to orderly zoning and planning.
But in most rural areas, zoning and plaMing don't
exist. And so subdividers have had few obstacles to
overcome at the COWlty government level. Often they
have had the active support of such officials, harboring
as most of them do the notion that the subdivisions will
be good for local business and the tax base.
~ The situation has become. so threatening to the
natural assets of large parts of : California (and to the
.money assets of misled· investors) that it's time to ap-
ply a measure of control through the Legislature.
Jt makes no sense that the State Department of
Real Estate has the power to protect Californians from
Should Act
gougiJ\i by i>ut-of·state land developers but norie lo do
the same within the· state. ·
The whole "recreational subdivision" problem
should be under inllnsive interim study by lht IP~
priate. committee or committees of the Lesislaturo -
now,' so that apprgprlall action c111 be tlten in ' the
1971 'session. -#
Busing Not the Answer
Rhetoric on the subject of. public education in an
increasingly complex, emotional -and often contused
-society seems to have· yielded a few conclusions oi:i
which most Americans might agree to wit:
Segregated schools resUit in a lower quality educ•
lion for minority students, whether black, brown or
yellow .
Bringing minority children into predominantly Cau·
casian. schools is an upgrading experience for them.
They gain incentive, learn more and faster, become
be~ter citizens. Ergo, integration, to the extent possible,
is good for the whole society,
-But bringing about such integration by mean• or
massive busing seems to be not ravored either by ma·
jority or minority parents. By and large, they appear to
favor some adaptation of the neighborhood school con·
cept and they believe the cost of massive busing mi,ht
better be spent on upgrading the·quality of education
in minority schools.
Carefully researched and planned busing programs
and some thoughtful redrawing of school boundaries
can actiieve better minority-majority balances in some
a:ituations without emotional and social upheaval and
without penalizing the ·youngsters. .
But improving the quality o{ education in all schools,
including especially those · dominated by minority
groups, should be the priority goal.
·-7 / ...
AAINMAKE RS
. -
:War Only
Perpetuates
Bestiality
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Irony: Militant• Helped Create Atmosphere
In 1917, the year 1 was bom, we went to
war against Germany for the first time.
One of the Allies was the terrible
"militarism" of the Kaiser. And the
worst symptom of this militarism, we
aid, was the fact that Germapy had
compulsory conscription. Young boys
were drafte.d apinst their will into the
Kaiser's army, even before a war wu
dtclaitd.
NOW, ·se YEARS LATER. we ut
enppd""ia In unde-
clared war in V1et· ...-m. We have a IY~
.lem of campulaory
cOmcr:lption, a n d
have bad it ever
since Selective Serv·
ice was set up in
World War lI, a
quarter-century ago.
And nearly every.
body hett tak.. it
for cranted. We may differ and argue
about the form of the draft, but almoa:t
all Americans agret that compulsory con..
seription is a necessity in today's •ld.
We beat them, but the Kaiser's militarism.
hu eventually won. We have become
what we wtnt to war against our ·erierJlY
for being.
And this is the grea( indictment of war
as an institution. It reduces rveryone t.o
the lowest com.mon denominator of
tnqnanjty. It makes tht victora 'almost in-
distlnllllishabieln>m th< vanquished.
ONE WAR, AND one generation , after
we had fought the Kaiser. we fought
Hitler's Germany. We were appalled
"1len the Nazis bombed Coventry llld
Weil, pro football hu finally made
it aa America's preriiier spcrting
attraction -complete with prima
doonas on the field and a 1ooge-
the-fan attitude in the front office.
F. A. N.
Tr.It '""" rtftldl .......... 'IJnl,. ""
~, w "' "" _.,,,,,. 1111111
,_ "91 "'" .. 9'-7 ... D1t1r 1'tllt.
Rotterdam, undefended citles, killinl tens
of-thoulmdl of civlllans -men, women,
and chlldmi. l'hf NaziJ aid they were
doin1 it as an act of humanity -tor it
woukl bring the war to an end aooner. We
rejected thia honible hypocrisy, and con·
demned the Nuis as bestial barbarians •
Then, not m'Uch later, we bombed the
undefended cities of Hiroshima and
N'agasaki, tilling tens of thou.sands of
civiliana--·men, womtn.and children. We
said we were doin1 it Is an act of
humanity -for It would bring the war
afabwt Japan to an end sooner. And we
did not, and do not, call oune:lvn bestial
bl,rbariana.
• NOW, ONE WAR and 'one generation
later, we are burnin1 peasants in Viet-
nam, destroyln1 village& and devastating
the countryside -because our enemy is
forcing us to behave in this frightful
fashion. We say we .hive no choice; we
must fight fire with fire.
Wheft: do we stand now, compared to
that day in 1917 when we first went to
war lo "make the world safe for
democracy"? If the Kaiser had won,
would It have been any worse? Indeed, it
was because the Kaiser Jost that Nazism
was able to ta kt root in Germ1ny. Does
war do anything but ~rpet.ua.t.e itself, in
more hideous fonn, a generaUon later?
Bill Saroyan's New Book
There b aome continuity in this qa
after all. Returning from a holiday I
find a new boot · by .William Saroyan.
••o.ys of Life and Death and Escape
to tbt Moon." 1 have been finding such
1IJ11Ce 1134, novels, story collection~.
IMIDOirt, plays -41 titles, accordln&
to a fly-leaf, by thiJ Chekhov from
Frano, includln1 forcotten ones like
"111ree Timtl. Three," "Not Dyina:" and
••1Atien fi'orD 74 Rue Tait.bout."
,,._ 11 more material from 74 Rue
Talt.bGut. Saroyan's Paris add re 1 s,
jom'nal mbies, and later joumaJ entries
tnm Fresno, a record of his enth year.
JtuckltberrY Finn IO? Saroyan is the
fUnn>' kid leaping over h)'drants on hi.I
w1y to LongfeUow Junior High inow .-·INm eld r.-), the Bicycl< Rider
In ~ly HJib, Jim Dandy, Weslty
Jocklon. 1be Datins Youns Man oo
tJie '111111 Tr&pe>e.
r IDP TBIN1UNG (If myself as a
\"fl'J' )'OUl'lC man," he writes, ··111d lhen
I not only remember that I am no
l1Xlt tbill(, f notlet that I 1m not
• : • 1llttn I •II 1 kJd Iii I did
.... "' op ind ... Pllnniq .... not
ftf!i ery. althoqh 1 did hive in mind
NdinC c:ertalii ·achie•-1&. ·I didn't
TllllQ( 1boo!t dljinc, I DID."
SO. a portnJ\ of the artlll II 1 rf P<
..-1fO w•ldtlnc people IO lo th• moon. on teltvislon. In the OW dayr
._,...,.hid boon 10th<-. "Yoo
c:ouldn 't just at.and thtrt."
"Diy1 of Life Jtnd Dmh and !lclpe
lo the M ... " II 1ood, not srut Soroyan.
l
1 A story caned j'Ttle Pomegranate
Trees" is great Saroyan, and you c:Gu.Jd
pick others out of those mlllion1 of
words.) Here there are sad notes. the
day Steinbeck died, and S 1 r o y 1 n
1'tlTlen'lberlng coming out ·of the back
room of Gf'lber, Lllletthil's bookstore
on Sutter street, John 33, Bill 27, •nd
John telling h Im, "l'vr just finished
a tract, not really a novel at alt, calted
'The Grapes of Wr1th.' "
But tt wasn't In 1934, Bill, as you
would rte all if you· put your mind to
It. The ages 33 and 27 would be okay
for that year, but "Tht Gripes of Wr1th''
was published in 1939, the year you
publlshtd "Peace, I l .. , Wonderful,"
remember?
ANYWAY, th< thougM Is thtre : •nd
other thoughts, on the death of Thom11
Merton, in Bangkok, by electrocution,
a !hort in a hotel electric fan, and
a1&1n. on Tallulah Blnkhead. "Ont thinks
ot ctrtaln people 11 bein1 too ali~
to d1e. 11
one •it•. Uke the newsboy who once
ran up L 1treet, F'runo, "holler1nt
"DtmJllOy WinJ ! o.m,...y Knocks Olit
Willard!'' Wtll, this year Pel.ft" Pan
ls offlclaUy •: JJke him , Saroyan is
forever 1Dl1I: A.Ii). -
WUUuollep1
'
Conditions Right for FBI Expansion
WASHINGTON -President NiJ:on
cfxile a politic moment to propose a 15
percent increase ia FBI personnel to act
against campus · revolutionaries, air
pirates and other malefactoi1. Wtth both
Teddy Kennedy and
Ed Muskie running
for cover on campus
revolt, and Hubert
Humphrey rediscov.
ering law and order,
condiliOl'll are ready.
made for the kind of
expansion J. Edgar
Hoover desires ~
fore turning over the
FBI to to his succes--
aor.
lt la irorDe ,that thole who: have hated
the FBI most -the milllant campua in-
ttllectuab -should have helped lo
create the conditions fGr the. expanllion of
both Its Personnel and authority. They
have done to by flagrant violati~ of the
authorities, and thus will have placed
themselves In the aame category as bank
robbel'B so far as their uposure. to the
FBI "ls concerned.
. IN ANOTHER TIME such a l1rge ex-
pansion of the FBI -by 1,000 1peciaJ
agenta -woul.d have bet:n mnsidft"td.bY.
the permi.lsive bU!Tlllnitari1ns of the, U.S.
Senate u 'the conclualve act in the
establishment of a police state. Hoovu
hlmaeU a "staunch opponent ol a national
police force . might have had ,qualms
about such an expansion.
But the Nixon administration has sens·
ed \hat all manifestations of violence'. on
the ca1npu9'1, in the streets, Oft airpl1nes
have aroused a pOlitical reaction of ma-
jor proportions crosa:mc party line.I and
leaving in· hopeless confusion a 11
opoiogists, including those on presid,.tioi
commlsaions, whether on crime. violence
or campus revolt.
It was no accident that . two of the
President's speech writers ba"ve bttn
articulatina: t~is reaction. There are three
of them and two, particularly, have been
specia1izing for many month.!, by trial
and error, in definine in terms Cl?mmonly
aCceptable to the learned and the
unlearned the horror of the 1verage
citilep over conditions that threaten his
lifr. property, tranquility, and inner con-
vlcti6ns. Agnew, with their help, is begin-
. ning to find the acceptable formulations
of thought, free of the far-right allitera·
tions and e1aggeratlon1 which hava
damaged bis put utterances.
THE . POUTICAL CONDITIONS art
thus all in order : Public oUtrage on a
wide llC8Je. A definable remedy. An im·
pending congressional election.
Several points ought lo be made clearer
on the President's proposals. First, he
has reversed him3elf on federal in-
tervention on the campuses: thert have
been too many bombings and too much
destruction of property.
Secondly, he is limiting the jurisdiction
of the FBI, or at least that is his in·
tention. The FBl is not to be authorized
to forestall violence on the campuses, but
to act on· its own initiative arter bomhirigs
and terroristic acts haw taken place.
This is ~bably unrealistic ift View of the
FBl's alnady extensive inquifies int.O
campus-connected revolutionary activity.
lf. the FBI knows In advance or im·
pending terroristic acts, it will probably
oct. too.
But there ls no justifiable reason for
believing that the Federal Bureau of
Invtl!ltigation ls now to be used to
penetra~ and destroy the radical left in
the colleges and univmlties u 1 political
movement.
TRIS WILL BE SAID ·in flaming
rhetoric, of course, is it was when
Hoover was authorized to act against
Communist subversion. The FBI did act
with suceess, and contrary to tht
cultivated fiction that Hoover was engag·
ed in political repression, No true com-
parison can be made between the FBfs
action against Communist subversion and
espionage In the 1940s and 1950s and the
Senate investigation headed by Joseph R.
fifcCarthy.
When all that is said there are resoun·
ding political overtones to President Nix·
on's proposals. He has made them in ;i.d-
vance of the report of his commission on
campw unrest which gave full bearing
and overblown credence lo the academic
pretense that his policies bore a
responsibility for bombings and terrorism
and· they · would not cease until ht bad
changed his policies.·
NO DOUBT EXISTS at the upper level
of the NiXon aiiministralion that a. vast
majority will reject. that sophistry and
rejoice that the FBI is being given in-
dependent jurisdicUon in cases of campus
violence.
The FBI . under Hoover h a 1
demonstrated that it knows how to ex·
ercise restraint. and to draw a distinction
· between peaceable political expression
and violent political act. It is the violence
with which the FBI must be carefully
concerned and not the political ex-
pression. however repugnant the latter
might be to NiJon and Hoover.
Challenge to Unequal School Funds
WASHINGTON -tn their efforts to
help the nation's troubled school.s, thf!
separate branches of the f e d e r a I
government sometimes seem lo be
working at cross purposes.
The confusion goe1 beyond the current
controversy over . busing students to
achieve racia1 balance. A wholly di(ferent
queStion is •l issue in a court cast which
involves the local Dist.rid of Columbia
!Chools.
The ca~ has national impcrtance
bec:au5e aimilar legal efforts are to be
pressed elsewhere -efforts which
challenge unequal sum1 spe nt " n
diffe rent schools in the ume school
di!tricl
In 1967, Federal Appeals Court Judge J,
Skelly Wright told the D.C. School Board
ttlat it must not dl!Criminatt "on the
basis of racial or ECONOMIC status" in
lhe operation of the mostly bl.ck
Washington IChools. Thal aeemed IOgical,
since Wright foupd that proportionately
more money was being 1pe11:l on the
tchools in predominantly white D.C.
suburbs than in the lMer city scboola.
NOW WlltGRT IS being pressed by a
militapt • black,· former school board
member Julius Ho~. to put ttf:th in his
--B1 Geo1'9e---.
Dear Geor1e:
Teena1er1 these days don't know
the value of a dollar. Kow can 110
about t'achin& my ttt:n11e ION lht
value of 1 dollar? POP
Dear Pop:
WHAT?? 0on·i you dare teach
kids the Vllut ol I dollar. Wt•re ·In
enouJh trouble now. w I th
aUowantta. and wt'll be rvlned Ir
they evtr find tht v 1Jue of a dollar
-t2t cents).
(Send your moot confidential J>l'Oo
b).,,,. lo Geo<(e. although yoo
really cen't trust the big blab-
bennouth.)
1967 ruling. Wright bas determined that
tht board is mu spending more money in
the "richest and whitest" parts of town.
He has ordered the "board to say why it
ahould not be required. to equalize next
year's per acbool expenditum wilhin a
five percent variation.
That, ·too, tounds logical enough •. but
wait a' minute ! Since 19&4 Congress has
been passinc l•ws, and presidents tiave
been signing laws, which prOvide for:
spending more: money on schools with
lar1e num~rs of children from ' tow
Income families.
"Tha:t is th& thrust of the popular Head
Start. 'Pf'OIJ'lm. It is the central doctrine
of the Elementary and Secondary
Education Ad thlt aChool boards should
favor 1ehool1 Which terve neighborhoods
of low "economic status."
EQUA1JZA110N Is an old concept in
educ1tion. Many states •Id local school
boards under complex fonnulas wh ich
give more ftnanci1I help to those distrlcta
which have .feirtr economic resoun:e.s.
~fore and mort, however. educators
are trying to meet individual educational
needs -the needs of the individual.
student. Equ1IJ.u.tion. u a concept.,
makes· leM and less sense as the focui
narrows towarda the Individual student..
A state may try to compenaate itt poor
counttu. A county may want to spend
"equal" IWl\I In Ila seven! districts. In a
particular school, howe\l'tr, th•
equallz.atlon concept 11 likely to run up
•g•iMt the partitular netdl of that
achool 's 1tudtnt.s.
ln aome x hools the needs of many
Individual students may be for unwiually
expensive program8. For example, a
voc1tional or tr• course in which 12 to
15 youngsttr1 spend two hours rach day
with •n instructor, may mett an
educaUonal nted for ma,,y 1tudenta in
inner ciUes. Thole COW'ltl are tlpt0$.lvt,
however. So are cour~s which seek to
compensate for unrewardln1 h o m e
backgrounds.
TJUS IS THE irony or Wright 's original
ruling and his new demand for
equali:r.ation. The studenb! he wants to
help need a little discrimination. They
ire going to need programs in their
schocils which •re MORE expensive tlul n
those in the·suburbs. They may be hurt,
not helped, .by a court precedent "'·hich
suggests that •II !Chools in a district
lhould ·be ·equally financed, within a five
percent variation. ·
In fact many educator& believe that in-
ner city schools must soon be aided with
a massive infusion Of funds, wholly
discriminatory, which beggars (and
reverses). the di~paritles criticized by
Judge Wright.
In his rect:nl ·order, Judge Wright
directed the 0.C. !Chool board to le.II him
why it lhould not institute a five percent
equaliution formula for the (current)
1'11 fiscal year. Evrn if that is read to
limit dur•lion of the plan, the Judge 's
equaliz.aUon proposal makes little sense.
TH£ TROUBLE IS that what Is
dii;proPorlionately costly In a few.
mostly white, suburban schools in the
District lg not what would be best (or the
Inner city schools. Teaching 11 the mmit
expensive part of any IChool'a costs.
SUburban schools hen. as elsewher.,
bave ·many teachers wtio ha Ye taught a
Quotes
Clut Kerr, f...aier UC pre:1htenl -
"TM Mly way to run a democracy Is
t.Jlrouch pe.rsuuloc of one's fellow
citittns, and that takes time."
Na1ey Hid. Tana11a -"If •snent
majority' lmplle1 'polltica l
nonlnvoJvtment, and •,·ocal' mean!
destructJve involvement. nelthtr can be
tolerated. We should all ht among a
•reaponslbly involved' majority."
couple of generations of affluent, highly
motivated youngsters in the same
classroom. They get top pay under
senjority-oriented teacher pay se1Je5,
Transfer of those tea chers, however.
would not be the best eduC.ational
prescription for inner city schools. They
are Jess likely to "tum on" inner city
yopngsters than their lower paid col-
leagues who ha ve focused recently on
urban education in the teachers' colleges.
IT WOULD BE nice if, as Judge Wright
suggests, the school board could equalize
the per school costs by adding ·more
teachers, more aides and more equip-
ment in inner city schools. That suggesLs.
howevt!r, that..there is a money tree from
which the O.C. achoo! board can msgi-
cally finance a very large increase in it~
anftual budgtL No school board anywhere
has found that money trtt.
Neither as a Jong-range precedent nor
1s a short term expedient does Judge
Wright seem to offer much practica1 hell)
with his equalization plan, That micbt be
becawe he Is a judge , trained in the 1aw
and not in adminbtering a school system.
By Robert S.. "Alie"
•od J.U A. Goldlmitll
i
---W-I
Tuesday, September 29, 1970
Tiit editorial page of the Doi!11
Pilot lttk& io inform a11d .stim-
1datc rtodtr.s by prtstnting thl1
newspaper's oviniUM and com·
me:1tWry on topic1 o/ · inttrtst
and 1lgn i/icanct, by providing a 1
forum fo r th.t tzprtssimt o/
our readers' opinions, and bu
presenting tht divtrst vitU>-
pohus of iriform.td ob1ervtr
ond 1poktsn1en 011 topi~ of tht do.. .
Robert N. Weed . Publisher
I
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/, DAILY •ILOT 7
Redwood Trees Threatened in Northern Fires
•
_.... 4 • •
e southeast of Bakersfield, across Cali!Ornia Highway 1. 80milessouth orMonterey. Hunter· ett ml l llary
m'ho es wert evacuated cuttin11 off lbat Pacific Coast 1 "le · the da thlt bl reserviltion , 1 ·~·.~ army
By Ual&ed Prfl:s Jateraatieai:
A series of brush and timber
blazes which have b&acke.oed
more than 12,000 acres in
Northern California crackled
on today despite a amall army
ol fin fighters.
Monday u ·eU.-as tele~on e ~ r 111 y, aze maneuvtr area . w~
and radio tr --n.s mitt in g'o ;;;"';;";;''=for=hou=rs=M;;o;;n;;d;;ay=so;;m;;'==mov==ed=;;'as;;;;tw;;a;;rd=;;t;;o;;w=a;;r;;d=;;w;;as;;;parl;;;;;;;•f;;the;;;;;;;";;;';;"';;;";;;;R;;;""';;;;h;. ': facilities. 1
Gol~en Gate Leap
.Achieves 70 MPH
'
ldATRIMONIAL RE-
SEARCHERS say t h e I r
1erwthy studies indicate col·
legiate afhletic directors ap.
pear to be Lhe most happily
married men. Least happily
married: they say·, seem to be
oil field workers. • . YOUNG
LADY, IF those eyelashes are
you.r own, It took about three ,
week! for each 0( them to
grow in, and maybe another
six months for each to fall out.
Such are the fancy facts.
GRUB -The survey takers
say those three foods the
American is most apt to detest
are brains. kidneys and but·
termilk? Don't understand
that. If properly produced,
buttennilk is dandy. Brains
aren't too bad when scrambled
with eggs for breakfast. As for
kidneys, tht way to preoare
them is boil the ... that is,
cook them well. More gourmet
data upcoming. Watch for it.
IF YOU HAVE a biblica l
scholar in the family, ask said
expert.. which came fi rst. the
day or the niglit. .. QU1CK.
HOW r.tANY locks on your
car? Five is avera1:e for late
on shale whe11 ever.ything
skidded down and minnhnrv
skidded .dOw and ragged gran-
ite. that Uppe tbiJljs up, God's
red muCt Qd' den\ocratic dust And baU the rotten logs in an-
cient Idaho, berore it ·w a s
.dont, as I said, so many of
them died. Seventeen for ev-
ery single mile or it, in fact.
CUSTOMER ll!RVICE -Q,.
".What's yoorAWtd OI the kill-
ing of deer by. hunters. sir!·'
A. Take not s.t~d whatsoever
on that matter, madam. Can
"only report I can't do it myself ·
without feeling peculia r ... Q.
''If I jumped off the Golden
Gate Bridge, how fast would I
be going bf the time I hit the
water?" A. Little better than
70 mph.
l\tR. T. HEE is-op for
nomination as h o n o r a r y
member of the Proper job
Club Inasmuch as he was .once
in I.he employ c( the tale Walt
Disney as a galil'. writer .
RESEARCHERS af I h e
University of Michigan claim
their studies of girls who
gtaduated :therefrom indicate
Welfare
Defended
~y F,~~.~~h
SACRAMENTO !UPI ) -
Robert H. Flndf says Gov.
Ronald Reagan is using "a
bad misnomer" when be
desc'rlbes President Nixon's
$4.1 billion welfare reform
, plan as· potentially just a "big·
. ger mess.''
Finch, a tjlief . 'clrafter of
Nixon's plan, ,returned to the
Stale Caplt'ol Moriday for the
first time since · ~signing
nearly · two years ago as
lieutenant governor to .become
secr:etary of hea1th, education
and welfare.
Finch, now a counselor to
the President, paid a nostalgic
visit to his old office then held
a joint news conference wi
Lt. Gov . Ed Rtinecke. the older a woman gets, the
less interested she is in music.
HERE'S to Sheilah Mvili -
clink! Approached in the
--models. : .ANOTHER THING .
you could do with one billion
pennies is pave a road 40 feet
y.·ide and 1,850 miles long. . Waters of Southern Rhodesia
by a crocodile, she bit the
beast, but it got away, and
that's the world news to this
hour .
Reinecke told newsmen "I'd .
rather just avoid" taking a
stand on Nixo n's controversial
program "because it is '!'.ery ·
complicated" and "none of my
areas of responsibility get into
welfare."
mE OREGON TRAIL -
The old wagon trains rolled
over the Oregon Trail , and
rolled and rolled . And before
it was· done . that refugee
clutch of citizens toward the
sunset , toward dusk to their
despair, they prayed, through
dogwood and horsemanure,
tamarack and brOken harness.
11nd all the savage flowers
that .bloomed in tseir noses,
But pressed for his positio n,
Reinecke said, "I will support
Your questions and com· t~e governor."
111ent.s art welc0111ed and Reagan vehemently opposes
will be us ed in CHECKING the plan , charging "It contains
UP Wherever possible'. the seeds or a new federal
P/,ease address your letters · bureaucracy.'' He contends it
tQ L. M. Boyd; P".O. Box · would "simply e-xpand and aQd
1875, Newport Beach. lo'' the curr.ent we 1 fare
"mess.''
Finch said "thafs a bad
Murphy Denies RePort
He Will Resign Early
misnomer." He insisted the
proposal, now stalled in the
Senate Finance Committet.
contains "powerful workilll
incentives." He also said the
ptesent welfare system is
"simply intolerable" because
It leaves "a wide disparity" iii SACRAMENTO IUPll -
U.S. Sen. George t.1urphy says
it 's "ridiculous"1 kl speculate .
that he will resign if re-:elected .
sc Gov. Ronald Reagan can ht
appoi.rned to his Senate seat.
Murphy raised the subject
himself Monday night at a $50
per plate campaign fund
raising dinner.
Republican senator probably b r .._ -'-le
Id I "tw · ene1Ls ,nom•-,tostate. wou .sen;~ on Y o .0r The plan.· among othti ~ year.s of a ~ SU.· • things, would provide a $1,MO
year term1 . annual guaranteed tncome IM
Murphy . ~ure<;J his aup-· a fatnily of" four-and require .~rte~ _it was ~ly ~n· able-bodied recipients 'to a~
unag1nat1ve story that U he cepf work or retrainiq.
woo re-election he would step
down, Reagan would resign
and the new· govel'nor -Lt. Gov~ ·Ed :{leinecke -·would
appoint Reagan as ·senator.
"Imagine such nonsense.
. -
Hike Ends
For Ecology
Two ol the widely separated
fires burned to national forests
as firemen were ,hampered by
blgh~temperatures, _ to w
humidity and win<b. ·
Jn Sequoii National Forest.
the State Division of FoN!stry
estimal.ed a 30,000.acre bla ze
s u r r o unded Breckenridge
Mountain. ·
In W Padres Natio n a I
Forest in M.,onterey C.OUOty ,. a
12.000.acrt .fir.:e threateDed.the
southernmost · 1 t a n d of
=alifomia Redwoods.
Because of the Breckenridge
Just 20 miles north •or at nrt. another blaze burned
over fllote th•n 19,000 acres In
the Red Mountain area . ·
Arrayed against the fires
were~ 800 .men_ at .JAs....Eadres
Forest. 450 · at BreckeRridge
Mountain and l.SOO at Red
Mountain.
Most of l\tariposa Count
and Yosemite Nalional Park
losl electrical power Monday
wheo smoky carbon from a
1,500-acre fire. ruined a po't'·er
transmission line. Emergency
generators w.ere used in some
parts; of the park.
The Lus ·Padres fire s~epl
SPllAL SLICED
WHOLI 01 HALP
/
HAMS
... Jo Gwll It Will
. H1111t r,. -711 It's Gtit
~Ouf ~Ifni 1•1' 1111 1i11n1 tor11-ltd 1ow1 por1<tr1 -Our 1law •rv
• ,c:urlnt melhlld. r..i Wltc-"' lllt.~ory. '"" 1pplt\000d 1mo111nt 6
30-llour Ofl!I bilIJr\f l'lonty 'n 1poc1 glllt t•t unlq1>1 In 111 ""
world, So fflltl!wt 1116 IHellfl119 wt hlf~ WMJld11'1 _,,,,w how 10
ltnprll\l1 ltlll Df''OChK I .,.,.,_.. """' milc(119 for 34 yu ... Sp!rll 1llt.llll ~. from lop It b(lt!Om .o llltt ttcll dtltcllDlt 1111llorm 1llt.1 ct11 .
bl •tmovtCI tllorlln11y'. Cllft'l9le .. ly btktCI tlld rHdy !fl ""'*· O•dfl' 1ouf' .._Y 8•ktd Him 10C111, 11\d 14......,1wr1 II\ 119,...lo,.
m90t 'l'OU'll nM( tor,ttt.
• lnAIL STOllS
11" l91t C:... M .. w.y, c.,... Ml Mer -61.S·fHI
12215.~.·...a.i• •>1·24•1
.
• Security Pacific .Ba~k. /
gwes your-money~a f1ght1ng
chance·. ·
With this.
The 5l4l• Growth Passbook
Account.
' Growth. It was designed to
help your money grow; to
offer an assured income
on yqur invcstment-
·safely, with the
highest !Cg.I
-inierest rates
a bank is allowed to pay on a plan 2 to 5 years. Open your account
·like this. with a· minimum dc.pos1to!$SOO; ·
Convenience. The Sl1 % · then add to it anytime with deposits
G rowth Passbook Account gives of $100 or more. You select the
you the convenience of a passbook maturity date -anywhere fr om .
with the high yield of ce rtifi cates 2 to 5 years on each deposit.
of deposit. ff you ,vish, your money Of course, you must ·leave your
can enjoy the full 5~{% annual prin cipal with us until maturity.
interest, compounded quarterl y, for F lexibility. We think our Growth
up to 5 years-instead of the Passbook Account is th e so undest,
usual 2.You may choose to collect most flexible passbo<!k plan you'll
the interest quarterly, or if. fi nd. But even more important. ·
you'd·rather, you may have it answers a lot of nagging questions
this quarterly interest . . about where to put yout m<lnc·y-
deposited in your checking ... and·get the most out of it.
account automaticall )'·.. . . . .
Jt's~upJoyou. :., , . SECURrrYPAClflC BAN1C • The 68·year-old incumberi t
apparenl ly was resposdlng lo
the recent contention or his
Democ ratic opponent, Rep.
John ·v. Tunney, ·wh om he is
batlling in a mock-end-neck
race for re-election.
Tunney asserted that the
likelihood of Rii~gari replaci~g
~1urphy is "much more than a
rumor," and insisted the
It's ridiculous, . some of ·the
statements that are made. I
wooldn'I dignify them with an
answer.'.'· Murphy said. "Those-
wbo make them know better.
They should, . be · ashamed oJ
themselves.~·
SAN YSIDRO (AP) -Dan -
En•dahl , 37. has completed •
1,208-mile hike down ., the
California coast i• 1 bid to.
draw aUention to problems Of · .· . ~ 'j'' ·: ..
2nd Bomb
Blast Rips
LA Scl1ool
Reagan has professed no
public interest in serving in
the Senate and has said he
"fully intends" to serve out a
full four.year tenn a s
·Governor if re-elected in
November .
LA Panthers
Sned for Rent
ecology . ·
''I'm very glad 1 did it,'' he
said Monday at the Me:ricu
border.
"The situation is a .Jot more
fragile than people h a v t
suspected. We're in trouble,
and I only hope we can do
something about il."
Engdah l was greeted at the
border shortly after noo• by
\Vllliam Kortum, pre sident of
Californians for Acquisitio1 of
Access to the Coast
-NOW . IN HUNTINGTON BEACH
l'lle£arl._
Dl :.O\;OUNT Pl\J1.1llNG
HIATING I Allt CONDITIONING
"Hom• I••• For
Oo./t Your1elfer1" •
18423
IEACH ILVD.
847-9641
24 Hr. Emergency Service
• Ceiling • Wall -And Slabs l.eek1 Our Sp-;,cielty
• Water Heaters • Drain & Sewer, Cleaning
20"/, DISCOUNT ON ANY PURCHASE OR SE~VICI WITH THIS AD
\
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'
• ' ' ..
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8 DAil V PILOT .
Nasser~s Death Rohs Arabs of a Leader
By WIWAM L RY AN ,, __
For Arabs and perblps for
all who are direc:Uy concerned
with the dangerous Middle
East crisis, Gamba.I Abdel
Nasser's death probab!y could
not have come at a more dir-
ficult time.
To the Arabs it 1neans loss
of the only reel leader, they
knew for many years. even
though his authority had been
on the wane in recent months
in the backwash or critical
developments.
Desperately in need of some
heroic figure to cl ing to, many
y:ho consider themselves Arab
nationalists and fighters for
•·liberation" art going to feel
lost. It can mean new frustra·
lion. new confusion a n d
perhaps even more violeoce
in a currently violent Arab
world.
UP'IT• ......
...W -Ibo lnmuinll Im-cent of Ille vote.
--ol Ibo Eaptlan By thla time Ibero bad been
m.aMeS. 1U comb1oed to bring 1 number of crilU to clinfront
the l>pportunlt)' about. KIIii the nvoluUcoary rqlme. Ono
FU'O&li, tbe obeee and in· of the toucbtR wu 1 IUdden
competent r u I er, wu lll'lell 1ttlck Jn 1115 on the
overthrown. EiYPl1lll-occup Gaa Strip.
The Free Ollicm pro-EcYptlln -once qoJn cWmed a peawltdt by a ftfelmm.illated.Na11er'1
nvolutlonary council. fut)' lllmld qalmt Ille Weal
The olfi ~•-• G He had ,been teek1nc 111111 cera pa.;acu en. from the United States for Mohammed Na1utb, a aoldlen' IOldler, to be Ille protocllon oplnat j1llt IUCh •
prime mlnUter. He become a thine. Now be turned to the
popalar hen> ovemlihl Communist bloc, ind N111er
Crowds followed emJwbere beg111 to &el Soviet bloc""""·
after ·~ ,_.... . lie -to be pmbllng -•-,,-p r 1 me that the cold war could be
milllster with' tbe curly iron· uoed to bil prollt, that be coold
gray hair, llld foogbt for lhe play Eut qalolt WOii llld 1t
privilege of toucbfng h i 5 the ume time free the Arabs
'•jacket. from Western influence while
Ll1TLE KNOWN keeping Communist influence
Nasser was little known at out. Thus be boldly acctpted
that time. Thole aware of him Communist economic and
regarded hlm u a shy man technical be1p, proclaimed •
who would shun the limelight policy of "positive neutraHty"
while working night and day and kept his home-grown
on social and poliUcal aspects Communists under tight rein.
of the revolution. Sometimes ltSI COUP
NASSER VISITED RUSSIA, PREMIER KOSYGIN THIS PAST JUNE
He W•1 Traeted for Dlabet11 Durinv Trip but Apparently Recovered
be worked 21) hours I day, Nasser •naineered h I I while be continued to live in a rreatest ~p'O in July 1961 revolutionists in Yemen with nounced the rulers of Saudi among those v.·ho still lived in
modest bungalow with bis wife when he nationalized the Sues troopl against the deposed Arabia. appalling squalor along the
and five chi1drea -daupters C1nal. 'Ibis thrust toward the royalilts. He lllpported Arab Nasser had many supporters Nile.
Hoda and Mona and 110n11 jugular vein of Britain and revolutionary elements in who wanted him to turn in-Nasser always considered
KbaJed, Abdel Hamid and Western Europe touehed off many other areas of the Arab ward to curing Egypt's deep himself lucky, and many
Hakim Amer, the latter nam-the biggest world crisis since world. He made pacts with economic woes and turn away agreed .. He ran in lo
ed for the man who would be the Korean War. Europe Arab leaden ellewhere only to from milita ry adventures. But catastrophe after caslrophe
his minister Clf war -the depended 00 the canal for denounce them when they Nasser was calling all the and always managed to come
. aame man who would one day delivery of Arlb and Middle refu.sed to do his bidding. He shots. out on top. He was, he often
1 be accased of plotting to Eut on for ttl industrial life, quarreled bitterly for a time "! have given the Egyptian said. a fatalist, like many
overthrow El Rais. and the canal wu of vut with Jordan's King Hussein people dignity," Nasser once Arabs.
Despite Nasser's re cen t
troubles with his followers,
there is no Arab on the horizon
\\'ho can take his place. The
whole Arab world is in the
process of upheaval because of
a civil war in Jordon. Nasser
had found himseU in a dilem-
ma. He was. in a sense, on the
sa me side as the beleaguered
young kin g o( Jordan. Husse\.n
in that he fell negotiations
were possible to ease the over-
all Midd1e East crises. Yet he
must have been tom in the
other direction by t h e
knowledge that his stand was
alienating him from Arab ac-
tivists whose organizations
Y.'ere pledged to war to the
death against Israel.
MOST POWERFUL ARAB LEADER
Nasser Looks Picture of Hulth in 1'67 Photo
At first Nasser had no strategic importance., and publicly called for told a visitor. "I believe in Gdq_ and
Cabinet rank at alL He bore Nasser went abroad in l9Slt;;H;;;;;us;;1e1;;·;;11'ii1iioiiv.rth;;;;;;;;;;"';;w;;.;;H;;;;;e;;d;; .. ;;;;;;;;;;B;;u;;t;;t;;he;;r;;e;;w;;a;;s;;;;;litiitliiciidiiig;i;n;;it;iy;;;;;d;;e;;s;;liniiyii,'ii'iisiiaiiidiiNiiaiisiiseiirii. ;;;;;;;;;;,
only the title of general for hi! first look at 1 majorU
secretary of the Liberation world power, and chose to
Nasser's figure as a leader
or the Arabs had been such
that not even disaster could
permanently tarnish it in the
past. He had led his adoring
followers to defeat after
defeat. yet - such is the logic
of the Arab world -hit pass-
ing can only mean profound
shock for the Arab cause.
There seems to be n o
charismatic leader on the
horizon who can fill the
vacuum.
dreamed of being that hero.
perhaps of uniting a world of
JOO million Arabs, perhaps
even uniting the world's hun-
dreds of millions of Moslems.
He saw Eg.ypt as at the center
of two vast geographica l
circles -the Arab world and
Africa -and thus in pos.ition
to play a major role in the
development of the world'!
politics. tt was not to be, not
in his liletime, and pezhaps
not in many lifetime.
EL RAIS Instead of rising to glory.
He was to many an Arab un-Egypt in June 1967, found
disputed El Rais, the cbJef, hersel! plunged into despair.
the boss. His name could be For Nasser. who had seemed
translated, r 0 u g h 1 y , as to many an Arab the fein-camalion of the 12th century "James, servant ol the vie-Arabian hero, Saladin, it was
tor.'' but his role was more the low point of his career as
often of 5ef'Vant of the con-the leading spokesman for
quered. bdo In his stormy career he . Ara m.
mounted plots and weathered Jn six days or lightning war,
plots agaimt him. He was Israel had knocked out
thrice humiliated ·in wars with :W~ ~ •s::=::
his most hated enemies, the Rusaill&built air force was
lsraelies. He opened EllYJ>I and much of the Arab East to wiped out on ttie ground in tht
first hours of the war. Hil Soviet political and military penetration. He saw Egypt poorly trained army luted on-
reduced to the brink of ly about four of tht six
cronomic and military ruin. catastrophic days. By the time
But for millions or Arabs a cease-fire took effect, Israeli soldiers faced him acroa the there was only one leader and -
only one Nasser. After him. Suez Canal. and probably
the prospect could be for could have driven euily into
chaos in Egypt and~ in the Cairo itself.
Arab wo rld, more disunity In an emotional 1dclrels to
tha n ever. the nation, Nasser IMOUDCed
"Arab unity'' was Nassers his resignation •• president.
dream, but it remained only a He would, he said, step down "completely and forever.'' dream. Jn his book, "Egypt's
Liberation," he had written: Two years later he would say
"For some reason it seems that he bad meant evuy word
that within the Arab circle of it and bad been prepared to
there is a role Wandering go -but in 1967 his rubber·
aimlessly in searcb Of a hero." stamp National Ass em b I y
As a Young officer he quickly rejected his resign•
SUCCEEDS NASSER
Vice President Sad•t
• tion and demanded that he
keep the helm of a ship of
state.
NASSER llETUllNS
Hysterical Egyptians poured
into the streets to shout his
name and demand his return.
And he returned.
But from then on the rule of
the United Arab Republic was
an even more difficult pro-
position for him to handle,
even with his virtual one-man
dictatorship over it. There
were plots against him. One of
his closest frienda, Field
Marsh411 Abdel Hakim Amer,
was arrested in September
1967, along with 50 other of·
flcers, accused of plotting the
downfall of El Rais. Sbonzy,
afterward Cairo lllDOWICed
that Amer was dead, 1 sucide
by poison.~
Low in spirits, Nasser began
frequently to be afnicted by
minor aliments'; Wluenu for
BIBLE THOUGHTS
a while, a bad leg in·
flammation, other troubles !or
which he was treated from
lime lo time by Soviet
specialists. Each time he fell
ill or was away for treatment,
there were rumors of more
plots and attempted coups
against him.
Nasser was born Jan. 15,
1918, in 1 litUe village in Up-
per Egypt. His father, Abdel
Nasser Husain, was a postal
clerk who eventually would
become postmaster in Alex·
andria and live Wllil 1969; be
died at 75.
Young Nasser, one of four
brothers, was reared at lower·
middle clan levels, but Uti!!I
was enough to afford him a
fair education. At 8, Abdel wu
.senl to Cairo for 1eh0o1ing. ln
the same year his mother
died. Eight years later he
finished his secondary school
education and at 17 he was up
to hll neck in violence against
the British who ruled the SUez
Canal zone.
MILITilY TEACHER
After a hitch u teacher in
Egypt'1 military co 11 e I e.
Nasser W<ni to Ille Army Slaff
College, but be ...,... loal light
of bis plot or contact with the
ploti.rs.
When the Pa!tltine war
between the Arabi llld Jl.v1el
broke out in ltM, Nuser
resigned bil commllalon llld
volllllt.ered for the fighting.
The resignation was rejected.
Rt.king court.martial, Nuaer
Ignored the rejection IDd went
to Palestine anyway, and
there his wrath against the
royal court incrused. He saw
the inciedible incompetence of
the Egyptian army, i t 1
miterably poor arms and
equipment, the shameful i&·
norance o( the Egyptian com-
mand. He and his fellow of·
ficers were enraged.
At one point Nasser was in a
unit trapped under Israeli
shell fire in the Faluja pocket
in Palestine. He was wounded
in the right :shoulder. And it
was ~ that moment that his
"Frtt Officers Movement"
began to take lhlpe. Back in
Cairo after the Arlb humillta-
tiosl Nasser carefully picked
his men. By his own accowit,
be tated the loyalty of elCb
and awaited hi!!I opportunity.
The corrupllon ol EcYPtilll
politics, the bloody clashes
with Brllllh lroopo In the
Rally, which was the party of visit the Soviet Union. Before
the revolution. To tboae who he went he was careful to
watched him in a c t ion , assure others that his still wu
however, it was cleer thlt he a policy of "positive neutrlli·
was a man of mighty in-· ty.'' fiuence, who told Naguib what to do. • Nauer by now had growu so
The olution proclaimed big in Arab eyes, that Syria,
noble afubitlona. The lowly cbroolcllly ruled by u-ble
fellaheen, El)'Pt'• downtrod-and often violent regimes,
den peasants,. were to iet 1 sued for union with Egypt.
break for the flrlt time lince Nas1tr agreed, and the two
the days ol the Pbaraolls. The joined to become the United
re1ime cracked down on Arab Republic . But the mar--
pashas and landlords, limited riage couldn't last. As Nauer
land holdinga to 200 icres, put it, neitber's politicians had
redistributed farmland, built a known the other's, and they
model new province u 1 pilot were unprepared for the con-
for tht future, promised boos-sequence. The-union came
ing and clean water, education apart in 1961.
and sanitation, things the In the interim. Nasser had
fallaheen had n e v er ei-· treated the world to another
perienced. attack of nerves in the deep
all-Arab crisis of 1958. His and
ASWAN DAM Syria's pressure upon litUe
1bt regime planned boldly Lebanon touched of( • cha.in or
for • new Aswan High Dam events which culminated in a
which would brine an abun-U.S. troop landing on
dance of water and electric Lebanele shores, bloody
power to ,the Nile van~. the revolution in Iraq, tense near~
IOUrCe Clf Egypt'• life. revoluUon in Jordan and
Nauer, howner, bt11n po)iUcalcrisisinSaudiAnlbia.
driftlna towud -In Once 1gain tbe two big powers
world poliUcs. Hll radio, eaJJ. were glowering at one another
ed the Voice of tbt Arlbl, menacingly because of the
be1an makinc infllmmatory Middle East and Nasser's role
bn>1dcutl to !lortb Afrl<a for Jn it.
revolution qlinlt the Jl'rencb., Meanwhile, at home. Nasser
to Bliek Africa fOr m'OluUc:n fleed eompelling domesUc
against the Britlah. And problems. The attempt to in-
Naaaer olowly bepn JDOVinC dmUllllze Egypt had ploced
in on Naguib. him on a financial tightrope.
The prime minister, who ap-No longer, We!!ltun observers
peared to outaidert to be both felt, was Nasser in any con.
idellist IDd bumanitarlan, d1tion to confront I !!I r 1 e I
called for democratizlUon all militarily. On tht contrary,
aJ6ng the line. Nuser finally Nasser had so managed things
had enough. that Arab once again fighting
Jn November 19$4, Nasser Arab and plotting against
pushed Nqutb out of the war Arab.
and placed him under house Nasser backed republican
amat. Nuaer himseH too:l~~~~~~~~~~ll the pnmlenbip and became
Egypt'• ruler in name 11 well
u In !Id. The IU(led I-foot
soldier, still ooly S& yon old,
WIS rapid1y becominl ID Arab
world hero.
NEW CONSTlTIJTJON
Jn January 1115, Nuaer ~
claimed a new constitution,
and 11% monthl later, in the
regime'• lint elecUoo, he wu
cbolen )lftSidtnl with ti per-
SUM GYlf.
&Oii A Dllltl ltd
'"' 1 wr1•
"" ,__ ....
TILaRONI WALT .... , ...... 71
llT'S DE FRDllY
lf you have nt!W neighbors
or know of anyone moving
to our un, plft.e tell us
so that "''e ml1 extend a
friendll' welcome l.nll help ................. ...-....
lnlhelrnewwrround'-
Se. Cast Vlsltar
4'W51' --lldlr Vlsltar
64Ml74
' Choose One of the Many
Coast & Southern Federal
Offices to Serve You:
*MMIOPflCS:•&•LaaNlfllll• .. 1•1 t -·-..---.... LA. ... ,.
L.A.Cl¥IOCW(a1M&INJD!1&4• ..... 1•
PLAYING
Only on Cablevision
REPEAT PERFORMANCE-By Popular Demand
Charlie Chaplin in "The Gold Rush:'
!IEWPORT: Through Fri. at 9 PM; also Sat., Sun. at 6 PM.
MISSION VUO: Mon, Wed, Fri. at 9 PM.
STARTING MONDAY, OCT. 5
''THE GENERAL"
Local
.:.channel 3
~Cablevision
Call 642·3260 Stirring Bu1t1r Ka1to"
"There's More To See On Cable TV!"
INSTALLATION $14.95 MONTHLY SERVICE $6.50
Coast & Southern Federal
Offers You These
Highest Prevailing Rates:
C°"'°UJIDED DALY AND PAID QUARTERLY.•
5.009fo-5.13o/•
P-. No Minimum.
' ' I
I
'
•
FOIG-IVENISS! "-for1i"'' •11 •11r ~ .....
•1 •• fo •t i•• 011• d•htert", Matt. •:12.
ONLY 11 we for9i•a tho1• •h• •ffeMI "''
•ill Wt h1 for9i••1t OU" offo11101. lat ''
lie •• God i1, SLOW TO AN'iE• tfl4
QUICK TO FORGIVE, Matt. 1141, N•h.
'11 1. Jttu1 l•id """' 1houl4 fo,t l"• •1t• P'''•" 4'0 ti,,,t1l IM.tt, 11:11). H••
•"YOllf 1in11td tt•:n1t yo" 490 ti"'tl7 S ... ch • 011• 1ho11ld ht...,owr
GOOD FRIEND .lttr 4'0 c•''' of fort i•111111. Abt•h•"' lh1col11
i•icl •fl1r ,1,ctio11, thet h• ""ould ELIMINATE hit e11t"'i•1, by
MAKING THi:M HIS FR IENDS. Art YOU •119ry •t t11yo11e? Rt·
pl•c• thl1 1119•• ... ;th LOVE 111d 11t Chn1t'1 .,.,, 1ucct1tl; •·-
0.,tro"'' t•il ... :th 9ooJ", lto1t1. 12 121, Thi1 worltl NEEDS for•
t i•tllffl.
• ........... mtt1e n 1 Olmr• (71'1., __
IAlll'A W LOM mLlftCI: .. I •ICY:
1I05 N. Miiin ... (71'1 Mf..-T
5.259/o-5.399/o I
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God's LOYE for 1'11111 prol'lptH Him to provid1 • wty of Iott:.,,.
nett fo • M111·1 1i1u. THAT w1y ft J11111. Ht 11id, "-I ""' the
WAY, the flu th 111cl the lif-", J11. 14:•. 011 the cro11, Ht 1e ld, "~1th.,, forg i•t the11t; lor lhty kno• 1101 wh i t thty do"1tl.
JJ:J4). Sttphw11. the flttt Chri1tlt e mtrto,r, tdiotd th• 11"'•
tho119ht •• ht 111d, "-Lord, l1y 1111 thr1 1i11 to thtir chor91",
wh"' lit •ti 1to11td .. dtallt Dy <11'1 t llt'Y 1t1ob. l.4.ct1 7:•01. Are
YOU aDlt lo 11h1'•it thi1 tpirit of 'or9l .. 111•111 h w11 whilt ••
w1r• UNWOltTHY of fer9lYt11111 flttl 601if1 GRAC E"" prt•l4t4 r., II: "1111 Gtcl '"""'',,cl1lh Hit f,.,, tow1rJ 1n, i11 th1t, whH1
w1 .,.,,, y1t SINNERS, Ch1itl ditd for u1", lto111. ~:I. VISIT fh t
Ch11rc:h of Chri1t 111d tlucfy FORGIVENESS •ilh u1 lro111 God'1
word. tht l tllEi 117 W. Wiho11 St., Cetle M•ta, C1 l:f.
T-n , C"-el t , s..4eys, 7:.11 A.M.
irlANTA llOMCA: 711 Wftlf\11'1 lhd. •.S.07 ..
1\IAN PIDRO; 10th& Padftc• ISM341
•WllTCOVllA: EaltlandShopplng ctr •• 3314201
1tPNIOIWIAcnTa .. 1tY•....,.lhd.•m.1171
.. TMV:JIA:11711 Y..,.loulminl•MMl1(
1tLOtll llACH:'"' I locwt •437-7411 ·----•-111,. ..., __ ,_"'"'
Wiii• S2,500 bollnco In""" UV1ng1
-~you -otlglblo to become
a memtaer. SUbltlnttal uving1 are
.. llllbltwhln IXlfdl•lng llW'IY items
lnollidlnO..-.IUmitura,
.,....,, •• ., flwlilry.Plutm.ny ____ _,., _.._it......,_
--~ ---~··
A COAST
' AND SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS
I
'·--------
Thf'M Monltl Certificate; No Mini mum.
5.7591o·5.92°1•
o .. voor Ctrtlllcalo; $1.000 Minimum.
6.009/o-6.189/o
TJ"l;"YMf c..tfflcall; SS~OOl!Mlnlmum.
• Efflctfrt Annwil fll'lt,,,,.
. • INSURANCE TO $20,000
I
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" ' • ,, • " < " • • • • • F
' DAILY PILDT • ' •
UCI Stadium Taud _ _. 0--
For the Record
By PA'l'IUCK BOYLt; , lhl! year because Of the In-apartments Jusl for the sum. says. "The student should
elJrl.\'...,tl.3:lltl'tF: "R'··,~l"''~"1'· ot '" oeur Pw.t '11" 'crease iD-tbe number of mer and then ask-the tenanl.5 move from a residence hall to
SANTA ANA -A payment -or l2tl.l0t Iii pr< .. sted 19
on Anaheim Stadlum~hls been
impounded by Orange County
Auditor-Controller V I c t o r
llelm.
Tbe tlt~--ol Alllhelm has
prol<5ted the posleSIOry In-
terest tax levied by County
Al8essor Andrew.~" and
the case. is still in the coura. Meetings ~ ~·" J.ionl,l t::.:ili ;, n11 lRVINE _ ?i1any of the studerits and by I.he la ck of to move out when school an apartment and even to a ~~f'tf;~'°'u~H'~t,~Jr1 l 'r,:::°' young freshmen enrolling at otf-<:ampus, u n Ivers it ". ,•.ta,urteddeots'.o make roo1n for the house with • &l'QUP of olher1;=====================;;
-• • ,, ~ , 1 students as he progresses sil~·n~.. · "' · ""' UC lrvine this fall had to re-•'ated facilitie.s. So H . 0.
.Marriage
.Licenses
MAltlUAGI!: ll~NSll lllUID IN OltANI COUNTY I T, 11 "'•Nlt'l'-McNe se ... _ J11T11"1 T .• 40, 01 101 Sunbrloht urlvt, Diamond II•• •1111 knt, 3', of 115 l:tlh $1., SUI sJ1"ra:.~TUAltT, ltlndllf C., 11 ol 13:171 Elluobelh W1v. T11ttln 11M1 k if'l'l-Mrtv A,., 11, of :U1G Adonl1, Minion
V!tJo. Sl!PT. 11
IAKER-IUltNS.·John A., 21 ,of Ovtr
1rE!ffrY ROlld. C1nforl, Co~. trw:I yn 11 A.1 n, of t422 C.Ylon1 Ire t . Hun l1111i1n t11ch D"Y!!_·aAUER, ffv1n W.~ 11, 1nd th';~=-1t· • .=':: !f.~Po~{."' 01
ltOA·Z OINO, MIJ'\Ull L.. ti, of 150oll 8roakhu.tst 51.. W1slml111ter 8fld Connoelo 5_, II. of 111 Sheffltld Sl:.1. 5anl9 AM. l(INultEO.lltowtlf, H•roi!i 1J, 11111 S..lldr• L., 21, kith ol lf1 21st St.,
A N·POMEllOY, M!chMI W., n. of W•lnut St 111d M/rtt'll J., :ta, 1f !, ......
k1 11 St. 111 Olll MtS8. p f!.R».N-MY"i1ct!'! JUMI ~;• 22, ~ lh11atr1. (0$11 Mtu ..... OIM•I
Death l\Totlees
DAVIS
Htltn e . DIV~. 21'4-0 Rol'ld1 Gr1n1d1,
l.llUM Hills. Dtlt -' detllh, Sept. 2'.
Survived bY two SOllll, 01,~. ol •••1IOW;
C1rroll C. O.vl1, Eut-. OrQOA; dtuth-
ltrs. Joen Fisher. w1-1Jn, Niner M<•
KHVtr. M1ntwll1n IHChl two brother&,
John Clifford, l.!1«1l1r, P1nn1v1v1nl1;
Ch1rl" Cllfford, Clnclnn1tl1 1l1t.r. YI•·
1lnll 1C1ll1r, otila1 tl'ld 1ev1n 1r1nckhll·
t1r1111. S.rvltt5 wllt bf lltld Tll\lrlffy,
Octobff" 1, 11 AM. Slbtl-Wollofd F11ner1I
H-. IU E. M1!n SI,, l.lllOllltr, 1"1n111rl·
v1nl.t. '"''-'· Ylllrf Ctfl\ltffv, Lltor>-ltr. F1mllY ·-~ lllOM wish'"" 10 mtkt ....-Ml CtW1lrlbullan1, plHM ton•
trlllvtt' to !ht Amtrlctn CIMtf' SoellfY of
Or1n11 County. Sllttftr l."une IHdl
MOrtu11'Y, Olnictor1. OATNOlt
Clifford JO$Hll G1ynor, All 41 ; r11ldent
or Btlrnont, C1llfo.rnl1, 0111 of d•'1h,
Stol. n. survived tw ~rothtr, J1mQ R.
G1yf\Ot', ot L.Mun• Nl1llll; tllree n1111!1W1
•nd -nlt ct. R"'-'11'111 M111 w11 Ctle·
brl!ed Mandly, t AM, ti SI. Ctllltrl,,. Ctlt>Olk Chllrch, Lltunt Sffdl. McCor-
m!elt L11une 8Hcl'I Morh.lt!l'. Ol<KI011. MOMTl!,AMO
Jo.11uln J. Ml!nletltnt. 7542 W1!.hlnt1on
Avt., Hun!ln9ton ... cit. Survlwd IW wlft,
l10Ml1 two cJ.tuth19rt. ROH I!. Pr1do.
C1rmtn A1u.1Mri -~ •lllt felll' 1!11trs In MlldCOI -.... ndclllldnn
tnd -1'911 ..... llMdllld. R.....,, W.O-netel1Y, 1:ll PM. 1"1111 F91T!llY CCllolllll
Fu...,.11 Ho1M. 11:-ltm Mta. Tl'lvrlOIY,
t AM. SS S!mllrra Jude Clttholle-Churdt,
l+llMlllltorl a-.cf\. ,. .. F1ml1Y Colonlll FuMAI Heme, Olrector1.
ARBUCKLE & SON
We1tcllff Mortaary
U1 E. 17tlil St., Collli MeP • BALTZ MOllTIJARIES
Corona del Mar .•.. OR 3·NSI
Cotta Mc11 •....... mi l.t4Z4 • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Broadway, C..&11 Men. u Ul33 • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH ·MORTUARY
1115 Laguna ca.yoa llGd.
tllf.Kli • • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery .ft.fOl1
Qapel
S5IO P1cUic Vie" Drtve .
Newport Beacll, California
"4-%7111 • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
11tl BolP Ave.
westmlDder .... 113-35U • SHEFFER MORTUARY
Lasu• Belcll ....... cM-tus
SU Clemeal< ....... OWlM • SMITHS' MORTUARY
G'7 Mohl SI.
H1t111t1ngtft Beacll
53H53t
oi:r~. W : ~ ... at. •I'd, cm::~ .... o u s 1 n g ll'ecl· through his hlgher edUcation." ~· . ()olM!i leave one valuable item at Ouring_....tbe f90-70 liChool or Phillips is looking for "There Is also a danger of ~°rl'hi '0r1v~wu..:-o"!, home when I.hey gradua\ed year. ~ucJ had a housing another place to house the overbuildinc residence halls," ~ ~ ,_,, :Ave., "°"' 0 from high school -the yellow agreement. wil.lt the owner of overnow of studentJ who want he notes, "such was done at H!lnt:m:'l~fl; l!:ir1 G., "·~ .uo achool Ws. an apartment house in Santa to Jive In the residence hall!. UCLA and UC R1'vers1·de G51iJ='~~ ~.i;r~·~g·'· ij!c~ 'lbe old college student Ana Heights. 1be university Meanwhile, he has ap ..... led to
1 ;~1N~·F iil.'"•if:,i::-i "it.::.."' d' • in t<--where not enough recognition
INC" ,.~ J., n. -~ adage lhat says "If you don't agree to .mamta a certain University Park homeowners was given to a variety of liv-
-' • '-W..T.1' have a car, you're out," ap-level of occupancy in the with a spare room to rent to ing styles. w!~'~l:~~~R~;1 E:: ..{-• J~ plies doubly ta UCl students -ipartments by assigning UCJ students for the school year. "If a Contractor wanlS to
Pklr.' con1 "~"' 1.:.-... you're out of the social life students to live there. The University Park build spaces to house z,ooo
HbreOVNE. Rlchlrd F .. 211 ., ue and out in the boondocks. OFF c·~us Apartments are also accepting students and we encourage ~'J!! SI . l!WlltWOOll C.i I, 1/MI ~YU ~.r;·~~ir-~i~:~~2 Cir...iitown Jt may be many years Students who could not get students. him without telling him our
tc;_SPln..ieNSEN. J•""" ~ .. 1'~ •nd before the commercial area space in the campus residence "Our problem is unlqut at construction plans, wt' would 11:~~~1~..:.._k0'!i~: :,~:" .. ,.;.:.. s;;: adjacent to the campus es-halls Were housed in the off. UC! because we are in a new 'be wrong," he says.
1111 ~E&·11rtl1. •ftd Nif~J "·· ,.. Df pands, much to the in-campus apartments. The UCI community," Phillips says. "The housing problem al G6~1 ... htfxs~:er:1n g~:,~~~ u w ho ha he c· UCI I be I ed b ~"" n both et sin "'iT $t.. convenience of CI students. Housing Office provided a " e are ping t I as t I· can on y so v y a scHu~'1&f.T..,&,'r."·Jo1111 s. 20, •1'111 The location ol the campus -staff of resident counselors to ty of Irvine develops. places close coordination between the "t.'r.n Lu.!~ Miii ., m•l '-'-"· more than a mile from even live at the apartments. The y,·ill be built for student. campus and all of the com-v.t'Jtf~wA'n-scHMtoT, ~CJitr1e1 ~ the nearest gas station -transportation problem was faculty and staff in cooper a-munitie~ surrounding the ca'rn· l'i'Ji 'l.\..'\r.';11';1fr~•&,f.,., ~ makes it difficult for students solved by the apartment owner, lion with the campus." pus," he adds. s-li"Cl~'Al~ERT[ •M~lot ic .• ?.SJ without transportation to go to who provided a shuttle bus to Phillips says new dorms will';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= QI HJ 1111vr1 W111t -etch •na . I ti 011::r, .. n. 1:. 6092 At 1 0r1~, a movie or to ~ departm~nt carry the students the three not be comp ete until 1973. but If ,.. _ Ml; m1,. ..._ .... .. JJaf'9"3!W'"azm:. eur~ ·~ .•• ,1 store. It makes 1t almost 1m-mlles lo campus. he does not want to have s.mc.. '" -Mt .-m .... , •rci &~1r.~ ..... w. i.ot11 °' 159 'u ible for them to live-off The housing agreement was enough residence halls for all ef ,.., c ..... oi.ATH~ACICL~. DMlld c .. 25. t nd poss ij b I l ff'--· f the 1-11 the l d ls TILIPHONI P1m11e A .. ·s; both ., '* OC••n campus, even t ey can a -no re.a u111CU or ;:rnr· s u en . ... :~~;-~~l]' ~~~Mk:llffl "~ "°· ford to. year at the request of the "I see a validity in exposing ANSWlllN• IUllAU
~~.~·~~.:, ·•1,1~~1h 0' 20M apartment house owner. He 111 student to different k.inds of 835-7777 F~tXfR5p,.e,: H~n~{1111~1\,~t1111·,~ f,OOI EXPECTED said he could not fill the vacant living sitliations," Phi 111 p s
Donnt L .. lf, or u1• G1r11 s1., More tha n 6,000 students arel;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Anil!lltm. s•PT. u led UCI he cl It PFLUEGER-tetv•u. st•ofttn. , •. 01 expec at w n asses
112 lOlh St. N._, 11•dl 111111 11111 start Oct S and alm-t 4 000 ~~ "t' ol 71• Shttlmtr. Collt Mttt. ' "" • RETNO OS. MENDELSON, Dlvlcl IC.. of them will have to live in an 'JO. o""' O•ford Drive •I'd J111k:t L~ 2<1, of 1n11 ..t.N1ttr l.111e. "°"' '' apartment or house away H.!J.llll~IOA 811ch. lTn..E UNNINGHAMN. Dtvld "·· Crom campus. 11. o :10'1 VoclllY SI .• G1rdoln G'""' ~i." ,:,~r~ ~ •. 11. 01 1..-n Peoa With the completion of the
,. ... v~oR-RJ1~ERT. l•• A .• M, or 21s• new student residence halls, rJi ~~ 1J:hc• .. i~ •. p':'1h ':.1 ~-f: there is room for 1,200 un-Hk'R~S..MURPHV. J01toh fl •• "· ol dergraduale students in Mesa 114-tl W1tlmUM!wr, Gtr-G•OYt Ind N1ncv 1: .• 11. of 1212 20t11 s1.. Court. The 351 apartments at wn1m1m11r. Verano Place house about too
students, many of" them mar·
ried or gi:.aduate students. The
waiting list of students wan-
ting to live in Verano Place is
measured in years.
Dissolutions
Of Marriage
The 3,900 studenlS who live
of r campu s h a v e ac-
commodations ranging from
luxurious (homes overlooking
the sea in Laguna Beach to
the back seat of a car in a
campus parking lot.
TOURISTS RENT
Most of the apartmenlS and
homes that are rented to
tourists during the summer
months are occupied b y
students during the school
year. Hundreds of students
live on the Balboa Peninsula,
in beachfront homes, paying
about $250 a month for a four
bedroom apartment. T h e
houses on Balboa Island rent
to students for about $200 for a
three bedroom house.
Students who Jive in any of
the beach areas of the Orange
Coast can only rent tl\l! house
or apartment for a nine-month
· period-and -they always have
to move out in the summer, or
pay summer rates. Students
who cannot afford to live al
the beach or want to rent for
an entire year usually Jive in
Costa Mesa or in the Santa
Ana Heights .
NOT EASY
According to UCI Housing
. Director Jim Phillips, it is not
easy for a student to find a
place to live, especially one
that the student can afford.
,..,
•
1970 AMERICA'S GUP. RACE
\
"We have students coming
through the door all the time
in search of a place to live,"
Phillips says. "They are not as
desperate now as they were
earlier in the summer, but
there are still many students
Jn need of housing." NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK
Phillips says that the boos·
ing problem is compounded
OUTSTANDING
Ol'l'OITUNITY
larn Eztr• Hlth C•th
In T.w s,.,.. Time
lolO S•lLllolG
•UARANTllD AND 1•cu11t••
An ,.. '911 -II fer 111 Wiie' CM ...,. ...... hwn .... ., 1111 ... ,. tfPM, ._,_ tr ....... &.
.... ,. 111111M111iai1. """· .. ,,. cllll WMklr "''-lllf ,..,..,.
_,, .. lll1tltllMll, *-'· prllne rttlM ....... we -•llllllf If! .. .......
•~CfllltllMI lll'lllfop CM ... ,_,. M ,.... lrt IM IMIY ... 1
-.... Wiit Clfl illltiR -•llfl I ........ , Cllll lllwa~ Cll-ltc!lllf "91111, -urflll 1MI tutr-
........ C.11 UllKI Mr fMll'"llllll
ll!Mrvlew Mr. tt.rwy, fJIJ) ST 1.ffn tr wril9 D..t.ll T PtlDT ... ,_
PROUDLY SALUTES ITS DIRECTOR
BILL FICKER
AND HIS OUTSTANDING CREW
OF THE INTREPID
...
•
NOW! LUMBLEAU SCHOOLS NOW! FOR· BRINGING HONOR AND ACCLAIM
REAL ESTA TE CLASSES
On SATURDAYS!
FOR YOUR' CONVENIENCE AND ACCOMMODA·
TION, REAL ESTATE LICENSE TRAINING CLASSES
FQR BROKER OR SALESMAN WILL BE HELD ON SAT-
URDAY MORNINGS FROM 9:30 A.M. TO 12:30 P.M. IN
01JR SANTA /\~A SCHOOL. STARTING SAT., OCT.],
1970.
For Information Or Brochure, Call JE1· 1012
3132 W. 17th Street, Santa Ana, Calif.
J""'" ill. DtCot, Ltcl11rtr
..
I
"
TO THE UNITED STATES AND
TO THE CITY OF NEWPORT BEACH
-
•
I
I See by T00ay's
Want Ads
• Loolrinr for a cozy eol·
tact! Here'• an exception-
ally clt>an, furniabt'd 2 bed.
room facing tht ocean.
Only $150 per month.
e Need a pan timt' job! U
P .~t 5 daya 11: Wttk. Work
at an ~ cream atore.
e '65 Dodie Dart CT is the
car for you_ 4 •Jlffd, 213
cu inch. 235 H.P. R/H,
bucket Mall, runs excel-
lent, $750.
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l
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• '
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~ I i ~
' ' < ~
' ' ·t ' • ' l
i ' •
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J. OA!l Y PllOT $ T\IHd«y, Stpltmbtt ~. 1~70
l'our Jtlo11e1'• Worth -The Real Retu-1·11-oil Bonds
By SYLVIA PORTER
QUESTION: U Y"' b,y '
lli1h-gr1de corporation bond
carrying a coupon or, say, a:i•
percent al• price of $1,000 per
411000 bond, wbiit is likely to
be your-!'REAL'' rate or
return in each oI the next 10
)·cars or so?
ANSWER : Probably around
<1:i4 ptretnt a year.
WHY! Because you must
rtduct the slated coupon in·
I ere st, rate of 8~~ percent yOl.l
"''ill _recelve each year by the
rate or annual infl ation Ukcly
during each of the next 10
.rears. This annual rate or in-
flation well may turn out to
:l\'erage 4 percent -so your
a~t. peret:nt becomes a .. rea l"
4:~ pel'cent.
In C\'en simpler words. say
you start coUectiitg .now $875
Interest a year on a $10,000
purcha~ of bOnds. But your
$875 will not buy as many
goods and services on Sept. 25.
1971, as on Sept. 25, 1970, nor
as 1nany In late 1972 as in 1971
and so on. 'Just as you must
view your salary income both
In act ual dollar terms and real
te rms (with the impact or
price hikes eliminated ) so you
•
Rmcho Callfomla
W.EJ~·!~~l:r;Yi.Jl!~M~~l"~J_AC
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., ti. SUS.MO,...._ ... _. ...W... _.
._.. .,,_.-, ti 38t acrec ti •hnl
_ .... '"' ,..nt..d.
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Ranchi Cafifornie-Kaioer Aetne'•
95,0M·acre m1ster-pl1nned COllll•
mmitr for inTestment, htmeaite1,
NCl'Uhon, huaine11, hortt ranches
... a,ri<u)hn-il the larsut de·
1allf••nt N itt UMI ie tht natt. .
.-~ r.o. 1c1135, ....,.. ._.. c.r•••.,.
DftBBDI!
llWIWT IPPD-tNI
la 1950, w•eil aoat people .till
called it Balboa, Newport Beac•
wu a saaaer resort wit• a per.
maaeal popalalioa tf &,SOI. A1~
•oue lob w'icli lliea sold fer
$800 to $1010 are aow wort•
$Zf,OOO lo $25,000!
,,_.,. c.w...;.•, ............ -· ,.._..,~A-..,lloe-
li1ht..U: ,riMiplH ef Mla1Ke4 ....... lw
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g.. ... .
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lnf•rmation. Pre•iews. A11i1t1ac1. r-·· n.. Plua .1 ....... oltliihlhd
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Rancho Ca~fenia he'a hoto1t1 hi ride,
beoll fer uiJini ., Vail Lake,. 1111i a .......,.,.._
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Sy111bols
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1'70 DAILY Pl\OT
Complem Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
SI H Net
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Scheduled
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J% DAllY "lOT
flcker .Really Qu~cker; Intrepid Champ
J ' • •
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Vl'IT .......
By AUION 1.0CUBEY
°""ILl' P~ ........... NEWPORT R. I. -It's Ill
over.
Bill Ficku Is Ille lint
w.....,,.. "' .... doleacl Ille America's Cllp.
The 42-year old Newport
Beach .-did ll by
oulsslling Jim BardJ .. Ille
Auslnlian cboDomeor Gretel
JI in tbt final race of the belt
four out of RYen series.
Jt wasn't-an easy tut.
Hanly actually IOI the llarl
over Ficker and forced him to
tack away fint to clear bis
wind. But when the two boats
converged again. they were
about even and Hardy tacUd
Wlder Intrepid. ·
ahead. but not
without s o m e
very an.Uous
moments. Intre-
pid was ahead
by44 si!oonds
at the first
mark, but on
twoeg_[uiog
legs Hardy
had sailed Gre-
1'1 ll within two -lmlths
of him.
"I didn't think wt had it won
until I beard that linisb gun."
said Ficker as be stood wet
and Wvering on the deck of
]ntrepid after the traditional
dunking or the victorious skip-
per.
By all standards ·it was the
clo9e:St America's CUp series
in the lit.year hi!tory of the
evenl
' lnlnpld -Ille -line lie 11111tdled Hardy tack-for-in two ncea, but wu di. tack. even when il appeared
qualified in one. DelpM.e the that Intrepid was I o 1 in g
derision AaastnUam w I I I ground oo tbe tacks -which
alWQS claim lbeJ' won two at times she wu, esi>eciaJly
nct1 Jn the leries instead of when the wind went light
one. Flicker even was not out-foxed 'l'lie lhll1 aw. for lnlftpid wben BardJ pulled a false
WU 4 to 1. tack OD the final windward
II ..., Ille -c:0n-leg. Both boals -bead lo secullve lerios win for Ille U. wind simulataneously and then
meter lnlttpid wh1cb alao fell 'away, .
defea&ed tbe A u 1 t r a I i a n '111ere was no doubt that the
cN11eacer Dame Pattie in Australi..am this year bid
four stra:igbt races. come up with a boat equally
But the real cbeen were for as fast -especially downwind
Ficker and his young crew, in light airs-as anything the
the youngest evu to defend an American designen b a v e
.America's Cup. come -up with. Even in
Ficker lived up to the mode.rate to strong airs, tbe
facetioUI motto bung on hiin Australian-made sails s e e m •
early in the trials. 0 Ficbr is ed td'stand up equally u well
Quieter," and to hia own as Intttpid's.
philolOpby that organiution , Ficker bad nothing but
and preparedDea are the praise for the way Hardy and
thinp that win. yacht races. his crew sailed the boat. Said
ID the one race be lost, be:
Ficker bimself made a "It was a close series that
mistake -failing to cover his could have gone either way. It
oppontDL was certalnly more fun than
Yoa can bet be wu not previous America's CUp series
about to make the same error where the outcome was a
Moodly. walkaway each day.
Pair Set Sail on Raft
HONOLULU (AP) -A man
al'ld a woman have set sail for
San Fnnciseo in a yellow ru~
her life raft named "Shark
Bait."
Bea Benham, 2Z, and Ronald
California in a 16-foot sailboat
but was turned back by a
storm.
Record Set
MOMENT OF TRIUMPH FOR CUP CHAMP
lnterpid Crosse.s Finilh Line Well Ahe..t of Gretel
The final scoreboard doesn't
1'll the story,
Gretel II actually heal
Souu, 21, hope lo become the NEW MARTINSVILLE, W.
fint to cross the 2,800 miles of Va. (AP) -W 111 a rd s:
Brldsh, Germans Interested
Pacific Ocean in .such a small Wilson ol Wilmington, Del.,
crafL set a world record for 145
Before lelving, the couple cubic inch hydroplanes Sunday
filled tbe 10..foot raft with with an average speed of
enough food and water to last 98.547 miles per hour on two
more than two months. The one kilometer runs at the 31st
$500 life raft is the same type New Martinsville. Regatta. Wlw'll Challenge Next?
By SID MOODY
A..u.tlif ,.,... Wrllft'
used ,by airlines, Souze said. · Ted Panarteos of Detroit set
the 24.S.mile course here. The $ifted, it would be our saving W.R. Wood, who worts with another world rectird on the " "d F. k " bul II Ohio River with an aver110-e gift of the wind goch and the grace, sa1 1c er, a Souze at a k>cal paint firm, -that passed ••-·gh ---1...1-speed ol 127.931 m.p.b. over NEWPORT, R.I. -It was s•·-dy •--• of helrns-•n Bill =~ -"~ id M-•-Iha! ~ ••• tried KG muiu .,_ was Thursday's race." &a UUU1-f ~---the kilometer course in the
..
"It is Ille aru1'1Uhrill GI
my life to be able to defend
the America'• Cup," Ficker
coolinued, "especially lo oach
ucellent competition u that
furnished by tbe Australians ...
Aa Jnlrepld c:r.....i the
flnilll lloe 1:44 lhead of Gretel n, the lint cbonls t11a1 went
up-waa-llle CllllmWy 1hree
cheers for the looer, The
AustraJians ,returned t he
salute · 1n kind.
Then from lnlttpid's deck
came the raucous chorus : "Al
Lockabey Go Home."
This was lo respoq.w to the
motfO I had given Ficker
before the race, "Please Bill.
Send Me Home."
. As the two yachts were tow·
ed back to port thousands of
automobiles and spectators
lined the shores of ' Nar-
ragansett Bay and jo~ the
din by sounding their horns
from shore.
Pandemonium broke out as
Intrepid came alonsside bet
dock at Newport Shipyanl .
Within secoods, Ficker was in
the water, but he managed to
take his entire crew with him.
Aa Commodore Claytoo Ew-,
Ing and members of lntrepid's
syndicate stepped aboard they
also found themselves in the
chilly waters.
So as far as the 1970
America's CUp series is cor.
cemed, there i.s no tomorrow.
It will all happen here again
three years from now with
either Australia or some other
country as a challenger.
Rwnon: floated around here
Monday that a Canadian and
German syndicate were look-
ing things over. And surely,
Australia and France will be
back for another try,
Ficker said after the race
that be knew for certain an
east coast syndicate was
already planning a new 12r-
meter, and hinted t h a t
Intrepid might be back for her
lhird try.
And then there is Uie west
coast syndicate that already
has the wheels turning for a
new twelve.
VICTOR AND VANQUISHED BOTH CELEBRATE
Gretel Skipper Hardy Gets Fick1r's Chl"'Patnl
Aussies Glum
Really Didn't Expect Win
SYDNEY, Australia (AP ) -
A u s tralians disappointedly
shrugged off Gretel's defeat
. which ended the challenge
from Down Under for the
America's Cup.
Though many Australians
.sun believe the tally should
read 3-2 and not the decisive 4-
1 in favor of Intrepid, there is
a grudging acceptance of the
American victory.
"Following the second race
disqualification of G re t e I 9
nobody really held out mu ch
hope of Jim Hardy being able
to pull it off," said a
newsdealer.
Australian newsmen
reported from Newport, R.I.,
that the fifth race was the
most exciting this century.
The Sydney Su n's
Lou d'Alpuget ·and Bob R0&s
said the "winning margin was
no reflection of the closeness
of the race."
They said the deciding fac·
tors was Intrepid skipper Bill
Ficker, who "sailed a faulUess
race in fluky conditions."
The Sydney Daily Mirror's
Bruce Stannard said: "Gretel
was magnificent in defeal No
challenger in the history ol
this 119--y.ear-old quest for
yachting's supreme tropbJ bas
sailed as well as Gretel today.
She deserved to win but luck
ran ouL"
Though Gretel was defeated,
Australians feel she proved a
major point -that the
Americans are not invincible. another breeze for the United Ficker &ook charge as the Just before the start, there in 1961 to Ail from Japan to 225 cc hydroplane class.
Slates in the America's Cup skinbeld CaJifornian bested was a last chapter in Gretelt------------------------------------------------------
yachting classic ..• and the Australia's Jim Hardy at his Il's disqualification that cost
questioo is: who'll be malting own game on a wild 4.S.mile her a triumph in the second
waves as challengers in tbe homestretch. race. 1be NYYC race com-
mittee delivered a note to both future? But it was, oh. so close. boats saying that a second ef·
After Intrepid beat back Gretel iJ took a brief early fort by the Aussies to reopen
Australia's Gretel II by one lead, lost it prompUy again the disqua)ification had been
minute and 44 seconds, or and trailed by 4t, 43, and 39 turned down.
rooghly JO boat lengths, Mon· seconds at the first three Sir Frank then messaged
day to take the belt-of-seven marks. But getting help from from aboard his tender, Pearl
a lading northw.slerly wind Nedtl..,., Iha! 1te wu m.,_ series four races to one, that bad 4Ropped to seven ping the matter.
speculation turned to the pro-knots, Gretel n, once 10 "I was dam glad'' said
bable 1'13 cballeoger for the lengths astem, was suddenly Devereuz: B a r k e r UI,
Cup wb1ch has never left even. Hardy could h a v _e chai.rm.8.n or the com.rnJttee. "I
America. , shaken Ficker's hand, but he hope any animosity fiom this
A spokesman for the Gretel couldn't get the vital overlap in years to come will fade into
Il assured the New York: as Fic ker rode past hlm. the background."
Yacht Club, the Cup's govern· "He sailed a great race, Bill
ing body, that Australia would Ficker," Hardy said later. Soine yachtsmen think the
come back for another crack "I'm not at all bitter. I've had committee is ruling on pro-
at the treasured 119-year~d a lot of secorK!s. This is tests under its own regulations
trophy. . another, but it's the most and involving a boat raced by
The French, who challenged disappointing one. its own members but Hardy
th. and didn't agree: for-the first time 1S year "I den 't feel Gretel 11 has
Jost in the prelimin8ries to been sailed to her optimum '"I wooldn't take this out of
Gretel, were expected to be yet. I feel I've let Sir Frank lht club's hands. It's part of
back under pen magnate Packer (head of the Gretel II the· whole Cup tradition. I
Baron Marcel Bich. syndicate) and Alan Payne th.ink they made their decision
British yachtsman Eric (her designer) down." with a lot of integrity."
Maxwell abo is interested and He shouldn't. No foreign He added he thought the
a West Gennan group has skipper ever rattled the Cup overlap rule involved in the
reportedly been. watching the on its shelf as much as Hardy. collision that disqualified
race with interest. 1be yacht "I feel we were provided Gretel U was ambiguous.
club has 90 days to announce with a good boat-as good as "But if we were good
participants for 1973. Ficker's," Hardy said and no enough on this occasion we
Monday's final race was one argued with him. would have won in spite of this
nose-tcrnose two thirds around "I thought when the wind interpretation," he said.
Let Us
Wrap It Up
For You
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•
'··An a·dvocate, of the midi,
'.Chester Weinberg credits
youths for his realism
in design. This brown
suede midi appliqued
v,jith silk print
iJ part of the "Now"
collection of the Coty
award-winning designer; ..... -~-.. --.,
~men
.,...... .. , hr .. "" ... 11
Luis Estevez, ••ifMr for S.•
D•rling shows two concepts
for bt•chit••·r M'Xt spring. A
whit• midriff cordod suit (loh l
1how1 less girl than the brown
llrotch -volvtl bl~klnl.
•
Coty Wi nr--n __ e ___ r .--ires of Put-ons •
'
•
--Kids
By MAl\IAN CHRlllTY ,
NEW YORK -Wondering why the cur.
rent batch of midis is such serious
business? Designers who create the
clothes marching on the 1970 scene
glorify the kids for inspiring the new,
grave moods.
Chester Weinberg, • Seventh Avenue
designer who is not yet 40 and clinging to
remnants of youth, mai,es the point with
which many top American designers
agree:
"Fashion is an art form . It's a renec-
tion of the turmoil, conflict and
dangerous disenchantment with whlcfl the
young wrest!e."
Weinberg, who along with Bill Blass
and Kasper, received a cqveted Coty
Award here last week, has a collection
called "Now" and it's sober. As the name
implies, it's also very much a slice of th'
times. "Now," instrumental iu winning
Weinberg his C.Oty, is filled with one·piece
sweater dresses and. unadorned slit.front
corduroy chemises that say, "Down with
hemlines and frou.frou and up with
seriousness."
ONSLAUGHT OF SUBDUED CHIC
This onslaught of subdued chic is the
result of three Weinberg run·ins with the
young. The long·haired deslgner1 imo
presslonable and sensitive, last season
decided to learn what makes the young
run -so he ran with them.
First he skied with students from St.
Michael's College in Burlington, Vt.
''They didn'l give a damn for the chalets
and the $500 suede apres ski suits worn
by the bum;Ue6. They shut themselves ou•
from Establishment by taking to the
slopes in faded blue jeans and bulky
sweaters. They made me rethink the
realm of honesty and directness." ·
Every month during the academic year
Weinberg flies to Chicago to give fashion
lectures in the basement of the C.bicago
Art Institute. Students assiduously pjck
his brain on the subject ot fashion as a
life style and hound him to find out how
the phoniness of couture dress can be
1Ubstituted with something better.
Parsons School of Design, which ls the
designer's alma mater, has Weinberg
give an award called the Gold Thimble to
the most·promising student of the year,
STRUGGLING STUDENT
Nonnan NoreU. who once ,gave the
lame ••ard to Weinberg-as a strug •
gling student, criticized him for using In-
expensive fabric for bis entry. It really
hurt. Weinbef'g had no cash and the emp-
ty pocketbook bothered tiim. Besides, he
really-liked the material and bis psyche
was bnllsed.
1be Now Weinberg says: 111 gave the
111811 award lo a ·girl wile made bet-entry
ftoin. fit:cent gingham from the .Five ti:
~ 'l1le young know it isn't the snob-
bery ol a label or the plush quality of a
fabric that makes a fashion. It's the
mood, the spirit, the look."
All these heated reactions are amusing,
coming.from We inberg. A few years ago
he waa one of the champions of the so-
LOS ~GELES (UPI) '--Not as many
women are going to take off their clothes
1n public next swnmer.
Although Catalina was showing more
girl and less suit in its designs for tpriog
1970, most of the beachwear manufac-
turers were keeping. the customer
covered up.
Cole of California told fashion editors
attending the California fashion creators.
annual press week here that nakedness
was no longer news, and it wu returning
to a more down to earth, realistic ap-
proach to swimwear.
Although every desiper bod a selection
of_ bikinis, there was a general trend back
to the one-piece sd. with some ewn ad-
ding short or long aleeves. There were
lots of suits with f!ouncy skirts for
women with lea than perfect figures.
And most of the suits came with very
covered up accessories to wrap the swim-
mer from head to toe when she climbs
out of the surf.
After all, if women really drop their
hems to mi<k:alf this wlnler they may
feel somewhat shy about baring their
bodies on the beach WJXt summer.
Suits came with coordinated caftans.
oolde length beach coats, tuoicl, fringed
ponchos which doubled as skirts and
ankle-length Wlll'I'·
Many of the wraps were fancy enough
to use as hostess costumes.
1bere were tome new fabrics for nrlm
gear -panne velvet, an acetate ~
bination which lookl like suede and
cloUH>lc~YillyUor aJe:atber effect.
lilis Esteve&, designing a new collec-
tion for Sea Darling, showed a leather-
look blkini topped witb a moU>rcycle
jacket trimmed with gold stubs.
Sea F1shion of California had a three-,._"lt--plm-wede vest !el with a bikini worn
under the cowboy style vest.
Catalina had a sleek cotton backed
vinyl wet.look bikini with a ihort aUclrer
to wear over it.
Sandcastle 8howed l lnJUP ol
nautically inspired lllits topped with
Inspire Realism t
Welnberi11 f•shlons •re simple
and sobor. A slim block jorMy
chemise is tied with en em--
broidorod bolt (abovo), whllo
the c_ut panne velvwt shift
(right) is •n exemple of play•
ed-d~n chic.
called BeaiJtlful People. Soclety-prooe,
best-dr~ types -like Mrs. Carter
Burden and the fashionable Fords -
faithfully wore his clothes and boosted his
image.
"The major voices in the world today
belong to the young," says Wei.aber&.
noor-length ,.._through voDe mukoots.
Bill --Blau Swimwear, for u..e wtlb
better than average figures, featured a
king sleeved maillot suit butloned up the
front with sliver buttons, kipped with a
long 'l(rap skirt in polyester jersey.
Cole showed body sculpture-suill -
sleek ind 1imple body bugging suita Jn
10fl knil and supple jerseys,_
Eliubeth Stewart bad a IE!IJ water
velvet with boucle terry jersey, one piece
droped and Hlhed !Ults, with laces
crossinJ up the very bare back.
•
"Glvtnchy'1 angora sweater for $.m ls .
one of yester$18y's status symbols. It's
not relevant ttld1y."
His Now c611ection is less expensive
than the couture line and, like Yves Saint
Laurent's collection is very geared to
boutique dressing. The kids also have
•
been telling , Weinberg that they like
muslin because it's cheap and wears lib
iron.
Weinberg ·ls experimenting with the
idea in shirtdresses for the summer 1971
collection: "The fabri c is earthy and
real. I'm tired of put-ons."
A more covered up
approach to sunning
is offered in thia
multipiece set -•
halter top .auit with
long pants end helter
tunic:.
•
•
-... -~ . ...:;.. .... ~ ...... ---• • ... • -
J4 DAILY PILOT
Library Shelves L'ure
Busy Little Bookworm
•
Let His Bad Deeds Do Him In
• DEAR ANN LANDERS : When 1 read
youf reply to the woman whose: husband
has been having a three-year affair, l
thought for a moment this was 1'30 and
Kathleen Norris was still alive.
ANN I.ANDERS
r .
Bouncy, blonde, blue-eyed
Kathy Truesdell -6-going-on-
7 -likes animals, TV, playing
~·ilh dolls in her playhouse, +
'\:lancing ind b8t1>n·twlrllng
lessons.
She also likes lo read.
'She likes to read so well that
she emerged the champion in
1he Huntington Beach library 's
summer reading program by
gobbling up more than 150
books in seven weeks: an
a\'erage of almost 24 books
per week . each ranging
between 60 and 100 pages.
The "chosen" chikl of Mr.
and Mrs. Louis Truesdell of
Hunlingtoo Beach, Kathy will
enter first grade at Agnes L.
Smith School this month.
''She seems to most enjoy
books which range around the
third grade level." says Mrs.
Ann Hamill, chi Id re n' I
librarian.
•·Actually -including her
own books -she read well
over 200," said her molher,
who takes Kathy to the library
at least once and sometimes
three times a week where the
youngster will check out 10
books at a time .
LINDA VERNON
Jun• Brid•
Students
To Marry
Sorority sisters , of Linda
Vernon learned of her engage-
ment to Michael O'Gara when
a candle was pas!ed In the
Alpha Phi house at UCLA.
The news also was an4
nounced by Mr. and Mrs.
Richard C. Ve rnon of Newport
Beach. parents of the bride-to--
be.
Sb you believe a mother should cover
up for the ral, protect him even though
he doesn't deserve it, eh ? The kids wil l
th ink, when they get older, that their
mother has class, will they?
Your definition of class-"grace under
pressure'' -killed me. How do you like
my definition: Grace under pressure is
Her Serene Highness, the Princess of
'Monaco, wearing her 1955 girdle.
Sorry, but I think you're all wet. When
a man cheats, I 1te: no reason why his
"'ife should proteet him from the kids.
That particular mother signed herself
''Ostrich Whose Children Have Good
Vision." lf thelr vision is Mally good
they're probably looking ahead 10 years
wondering which one of them will be
eleeted to support Mom , when Dad
deekles to dump her. -NO CLASS B\Jil'
GOOD VISION
DEAR NO CLA'SS : You mis1t'.1 the
poiat, Bri1bt Eye1. Even kids who have
severe myopl1 will 1ee after awhile that -
their dad 11 behavln1 11.ke a 1kun.k. No oae
will bave lo draw them a dlairam. I uy
let the (&l)''I deed• do him lo. Why 1bo11ld
Mom demean berselr by talking 1glln1t 1
him? Anll·speuae dJ1lope, by tither
mother or father. always ls aelf-defe1tta1
artd It encourage1 the kids to dtoole
1ide1, It can al1& produce alcer11 migraine and other unpleanntneu.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I'm a travel-
ing man who reads your articles in
several newspapers arou nd .the country.
I've seen about 10 dirte rent pictures of
you and I wonder whal you REALL '{look
like -or do you actually exist.
In some pictures you appear to be an
average housewife of about ·15. Then
again, l've seen pictures that are much
younger looking -you might even uy
downright sexy. The Detroit Free Press
carries a picture that makes you look like
an old bal. Long Island Newsday and the
\Yashington Post used to print' your pic-
lure but they slopped. Is ii because you
have fallen apart and they don't want the
public to know? My sister who lives In
San Francisco says they ha ve neve r
printed your picture because you are a
man.
The Sun-Times in Chicago ha s !he best
pictures of all, and they change them
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
around a Jot. I wou ld like to aak the
louowina questions:
I I) How old are you'!
.._, {2) ls the picture that appears In the
San Bernardino paper ;ii recent one? Has
it been touched up a lot'!
(3) Why don't you send all the
newspapc!rS you r latest ~to: Will the
real Ann Landers please stand up? -A
PEOPLE WATCHER
DEAR WATCHER: (I) J •a• a on J1-
ly 4. (Z) I don't know wblc lri picture Ille
San Bernardino &ii.-Telecram 11 1•l•1 •r
If they ire ''loucb lng ll up." nit paper
Is very mucb on the ball, '' I'd ••cer
they are uslot the latest. (3) I HAVE
sent all the papers a reeenl picture bal
Mme of tkm prefer to UK the old ones.
"The Bride's Guide," Ann Landers'
booklet, answers some of !he most fre·
quently asked questions about weddings.
To rec"eive your copy or th is com-
prehensive guide . write tn Ann Litnders,
in care of the DAILY PILOT, enclosing a
long. self·addressC'd, stamped envelope
and 3S cents in coin.
'CHAMPION READER'
Kathy Truesdell
· Neither of the Truesdells,
'vho adopted Kathy when she
was 4 days old, are en--
thusiastic readers. M r s.
Truesdell started reading to
the child when she was a
small baby because it alwayJ
seemed to quiet her. she said.
By the time Kathy was 4, her
mother thought she w a s
memorizing books until she
would try new ones and
discovered the little girl did
know the words.
Miss Vernon and her fiance
both are graduates of Newport
Harbor High School and
Orange Coast College and at-
tend UCLA. She was a 1966
Chiklren's H~ Societ y
debutante.
Aries: Be Versatile, Alert
Huntington Beech Rites The benedict-elect. son of
Mr. and Mrs. V. L. O'Gara of
Hemet, i.s a design major at
WEDNESDAY
SEPTEMBER 30
By SYDNEY OMARR
Ellen Evans Marries UCLA. .
They will exchange vows
June 19 during a garden
ceremony in Newport BeaCh.
Once you convince a Gemini
man of your loya lty, you prac-
tically own him. A woman
wantin1 a man born under Ibis
zodiacal sign need only prove
aht 11 dedicated to his we.Ha.re.
From then on I t will be
smooth sledding. Famous men
bern .under Gemini Include
Tony CurtJs, Joe Namath and
Dean Martin.
Ellen Kay EvaM, daughter
of Mrs. Jack H. Pike of Fourr
tain Va lley; became the bride
of Anthonv Richa rd Wallace.
son of Mi-s. R. M. Sage ol
Garden Grove.
'Jbe double ring ctremony
"'as conducted by the Rev.
James DeLange in the Faith
Lutheran Church, Huntington
Beach.
~frs. Michael Mahaffey at-
tended as matron of honor,
and bridesmaids were the
t.1isses Pattie P a J e r mo,
Georgia Marshall, Debbie Dif·
fie and Penny Marshman. Lisa
Britt 'A'as her cousin's flower 1
girl.
MRS. WALL/ICE J
Rtctfes-votts
Mrs. Truesdell taught Kathy
the alphabet by using a record
with corresponding books and
by g r a p h I c illustrations
whenever possible.
Coin Topic
Selected While in Mrs. Richard
Dyer's kindergarten class
Kathy often read to the other Coins as a hobby and for in-
children. If her mother is vestment will be discussed
baby-sitting , she entertains before the Business and
her small visitors by reading Professional Women's Club of
them stories. Newport Harbor on Thursday,
"Sometimes I read lo my Oct. 1.
dolls but they all fall down," Air Force Lt. Col. Franklin
complained Kathy. Frickey, (ret) will speak on
An Old Salt and His Treasures
ln spite of all her reading, during the 7:15 p.m. dinner Ka~y does have time for meeting in the Mesa Verde
many othet activjlles intjuding Country Club.
her dancing and baton twir~n,g The fa ctors affecting value.
lessons. sources and profit potential of
''The busier J can keep her, coins will be included in the
the less trouble she· can get in--ta lk.
to," laugh! lier mother. Reservations are available
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Allies and opponents seem to
change roles. Nothing is apt to
be cul-and-dr ied. Necessary to
be versatile, alert. A friend
could be a foe -and vice
\'ersa. Some day!
TAURUS (April 20-May 2{1):
More exciting work. career
possibllities a re indicated.
Those 'A'ith ability to change
things become concerned with
you. Have facts ava ilable.
Stick to ground rules.
GEMINl (May 21-June 20:
Attending as best man was
Charles Fraher Jr., ahd usher·
ing guests to their seats were
Greg Highberg. Larry Duke,
Ed Rooney and Rich Felts.
Ring bearer was Kip Gould
cousi n of the birde.
' The bride, a Fountain Valley
lfigh School graduate. earned
the title of Miss Fountain
Valley in 1968 and was first
runner-up in the M i s s
California-World contest in
1969.
School, attended Orange Coast
College and plai'ls to continue
as a drama major at
Cali fornia Slate College at
Fullerton. He also is studying
with Mme. Isolde Cepparo of
the Loi; Angeles Nationa l
Ope ra Co.
One thing the Truesdells by calling Mrs. Lilla Scally al
never have lo worry about is 549-3530 or t.1rs. Lo u is e
losing Kalhy while shopping : Johnson at 545-69f>6.
"All we have lo do is go to the
book sectio n," explained her
father . "We know she'll be
there." Wine 'n Song
Top Evening
Unusual events occur in-
volving children, romance.
crea tive endeavors. Featured
is change, travel and plenty of
variety. You r kind . of time!
P..lake contacts ; go places and
do things.
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Question of how mu ch to in--
vest in home repairs,
purchases seem to dominate.
Strive for more: "'harmony: Her husband is 11: gradual~
of Huntington Beach High
Torana Exhibit
The newly..\u!S will reside in
Costa Mesa. Training
Sessions
Beginning · Graphics Steal Show Mn. Roy Ramsey v;ill open
her untitled contecrayon print, her Westminster home for an Three graphic 9.'orks have
been chosen as winners in the
ninth annua l painting exhibll
sponsored by Torana A r t
League.
"Automatic Transm ission,''
by Mrs. Will\am Lyons of
Corona del Mar , was first
place winner. Second place
was gi ven to Laguna Beach
artiet Miu Irene Ashley for
Two Events .
Calendared
Miss Helen Richards.
Laguna Beach artist who has
won awards for design In
stitchery, will g I v e i.
demonll.rllion for members of
the Three Arch Bay Women's
Auociation Thursday, Oct. I.
The ll a.m. meetitlg In the
1"hrte Arch Bay cl ubhouse, to
whlch membe rs and guests
art invited, will I n c I u d e
ttire.tunents served by the
MIMI. James C. Shla, Robert
Morrill, L<soel Ven1bles and
Milll Anni o.M11h.
n>e following Tuesday Mi~
Edna Steams Dayton "·ill bflin 1 1ttle1 o( four book
rtvinn. Comlng for htr se-
cond Beaton. ghe will be
fe9t~ lft tht e/ubt\ouse al ·
9:46 a . .m. Tickets will be
available at the .door.
.Open House
Sunlhln< Commun f ly
Nunery School will stage an.._
open houH tomorrow from I
to 3 p.rn . in the Prcsbytcrit1n
C/'!urch or the Covenant, Costa
Meu. Partnt.I of children 3
)'Uri, 9 months an0 older are
•·ck:orM-
' .
informational meeling on the and third place was awa rded Pavlov-Lamaze method 0 f to Mrs. Jack Hall of Santa
Ana for her "Mystic ," a mix· ~h~~~i~t~, i :rhn~~i~ou~Y Pl;~~
cd graphic print. h sd Honorable mentions went to League al 8 p.m. on T ur ay,
the Mmes. Charles Eaton, Oc1. 1~eries of six training
LG!e Thistlethwaitc, Lee classes will begin. designed
Hooper. Thomas Hom and for a woman in the last two
Aileen Worthley and Charles months of her prejnancy. B~~r was Mrs. Gail Scott, lnformation may be receiv·
assistant curator of modern ed by calling Mrs. Ramsey al
art for the Los Angeles County·=;;89~2i;·;2722;iiii.;ii~iii;;ii~iii;;;iij[I Art Muse um. 1,
The works are on display
through Saturday. Oct. 3, in
Bullock's, Fashion Square.
Potpourri
Assembled
1.,
HAIRSTYLING
hy the •rea't
TOP STYLISTS!
MANICURES
A rummage sale and bar.aarl\r--,-1-,,-.-.-1-w-o_o_•_•_•_•_-.lr l
have been planll$!(l b Y cosMnrcs
members of the Laguna Beach lJl---------Jll American Legion Auxiliary for
Thursday and Friday, Oct. I
and 2, in the Laguna Legion
Hall. . ~.
From 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
both days.a variety of new a.nd
usable articles will be offered .
along with sandwiches, donuts
and coffee.
Assisting Mrs. Della Stalhr,
dlsirman, are the Mmes. O.
\Y. Price, Jean Bell. Ann Lam-
bcrs and "1iss L i ll i An
NeisMm. ·president ..
Anyo~ wishing tn don11 te
Items ma y call 1'-1rs. Le.s
Chatham . 491-1219.
Sweet Adelines
mafAe~
WIG I BEAUTY
SALON
549.3446
250·D Int 17tll St,_
MILLGIU:N sou .. tl
COSlA MISA
Harborlltes Chapter, Sweet
"Ad:lincs con venes every 1\1on• •
da y ai a p.m. ror program1 in l
Catltge Park SChool , Costa
P.fe.'Ja. Loo.__,... ____ ._.""'
An evening of Wine. Women
and Song or Music to Taste
\Vine By will lake place from
7:30 to 9 p.m. on Thursday,
Oct. I.
Sponsored by the Harbor
Area Fair Housing Council,
the second annual wine-tasting
evenl will be In the Costa
Mesa Golf and Country Club.
Senior Citizens
Com mun i I y Recreation
Center at Orange County
Fairgrounds is the scene or
activity when Costa Mesa
Senior Citizens meet at 11
a.m. every Tuesday.
Include family members n
decisions. Stress comfort and
secure feeling .
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22.): Fine
to grab at opportunity, but be
sure legal papers are in order.
Means check details. Don't
rush off in all directions at
once. Gel promises in writ-
ing. This saves time, money ,
embarrassment. ·
VIRGO tAug. 23-Sept. 22):
Displa y willingness to handle
responsibility. Money is in-
VOl\'Cd. Some around you may
appear supersensitive. Respect
seniority, but also stand up for
you r own rights.
LIBRA I Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
You are especially dynamic.
ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
s.,t .......... Ort. 7 ..
WORLD FAMOUS
n1rmc1~=~ Enjoy the hickory smoked
flavor of lhis exclua.lve,
all-beef summer 11u111a.
R11. 1.99 lb. ll.71 Jl
101 additi onal discounl oa
purchase or whole BUP STICK.
mu: BbfflI\ n.Etm OR JW:SE
Both or the•• cha"" 1rt 111tural,
ltml-toft ind a cbH1t l•••r'1 dellaht.
Ptr(tct for 1n1 tccasloal
Re1. I .st lb. 111 Jl
HORSERADISH SAUCE 39 -~·"' .. '"'"~ol..---... _...-c -......... -.... • ... i.. ....
fliCbtJ t•!!!r· '-"'"".......... -loiill (out 'Pim
You rid yourself of deadwood .
There is new deal which
favors you. Cycle is one of
sudden action. quick change
and a chance to pounce on op-
portunity.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
There are restrictions. But
most are ror your ultimate
welfare. Don't attempt lo buck
the odds. Ride with the tide. A
secret is exposed. You gain.
Great ally is patience. Be con-
fident!
SAGITTARIUS fNov. 22·
Dec. 21 ): Friends respond in
what could be termed ec-
centric manner. Your own
desires are unusual. You could
become involved in bizarre
situation. Children figure pro-
minently . Keep ideas young.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19). One who has means ex-
presses willingness lo invest.
Make contacts. Publicize and
advertise. Get out of rut. You
gain if yol1 lead the wa y. Don't
permit pride to bloc k pro-
gre!I~. Accept!
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb.
18 ): Your ow n desi res come
closer to reality. Push ahead,
Co ntact persons at a ,distance ..
Read and v.•rite. Spread In-
fluence. Ally efforlJI with
Libra individual. Express feel-
ings in diplomatic manner.
PISCES (Feb. I 9. M 1 r c h
20): Ask plenty of questions.
More answers than you might
imagine are available. Give
full play lo intellectual curiosi-
ty. Provocative situation coulct
develop unless you a r 1
careful.
Saa~ Rat 611111.
For a good niuh1t's T•"' .......... ., th ..... ., • .-F-sleep at a Urea S11ly qu11ity-tirm, comfort.tilt, clnblt ,_,.
91ltl Fe1rurire hundreds of tempered -4 colk tar
value Pn·ce S4Q95 ::::.::::-..:·~': .... "':'::~ 1n wtii11 thil t!Wmtndous -..·11 mu •It p;ioid.
tir.";. °'*"' Sizt 90xl!IO"' 211ieoe • *1aa
-. pc. King Sin 7tx80'' 3-pltot wt. ,, ...
F>om Yn.i TUDrwrt it'sPostrftpftlic rUM.:.
s.1y f'ultunpocl~-com_ r,,_;, "" -
t ~~ ht 1 dm b't' itlelf. P'romim Ml'IO momi"ll bldctche from "91ping on'I
• too-toft mettt ... '. O..igntd in ~Ion with ltll:ling orthopedic ~ .._. ... __ ,,,,,.,,.....$8995
-__ •.JC.MlorM*'
Co•I• Me••'• Oldest IJo'"e-owned l''urnllure ~lore
1865 HARBOR
BLVD.
Downtown Costa Mesa
Phone 548·5131
,
-
r
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
KIN I HAVE
MY l1S"1Y
JO~ £!>\CK?
MUTI AND JEFF
SAY. Wl-IATS THAT GUY
THINK HE'S 001 GOUT
'THERE IN
THE
STl<EET?
JUDGE PARKER
POtil'T SMOOT
••• I 'M COMING
~:
PLAIN JANE
•
'
,HES RIDING
A BICYCLE .'
GET Tl-IAT NUT OUT
OF THERE! HE'S
DISRUPTING TRAFFIC.I
FIWP Tl-iE: UUM ME H"D~ IT MUST 6E ..._.t' · !;_ ~
JM nlE HOU SE~ '"
PERKINS
. . , DAILY CRossWOlii> ... by •.• POWER I
ACROSS
1 F arw
build~
5 l ot!: z word s
10 Bfoo k
l ~ llh1st'1'
s tro•e
15 1919 .riti:Si<al
coittdr
lb l iss M:lit•S
17 "No-·"
l ~ Smalt
w11Jlt1
20 Go °" ant 's •ay
21 Mos t
tttr'WOl'IS
23 Incisor ~ ....
b~llSp ids
21. E!ldin'J
"sed •1tl1 act and opl
27 E-wt'rgrttn.
2 •ords
3{1 Sttno's
oiCC!'SSOrf 34 "Ha-wt lllfrcy .... • ":
2 words
JS.0Ut111oded 37 Atlif!"t i111011
1111 s\rt't'l
s ign
)I U1u1sual
4~ Notch
45 C.an1ent • 7 Hat111oo~s 1etations
50 Erclamation
ol disgust
51 French
loo!
delicacy
52 Did an
editing ioh
5~ Da11protd
bD Test
bl Killd or hO'!lh
b4 Ope-ra sl ~r
b5 Frigh ten
bb t.l .lM 's 11am'
!t7 Brrt ish
•eapOfl
&S U1w1l:11 1'tf
!tq Sound ·
of bod~
DOWN
l Fish
Z Imp. Order of
Oaugllleri.
or the
E111p1re:
Abhr.
) Quan1 111
of suqa1
4 Drugs
5 •An I I
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We Stunk Out th~-1'-tace , Moans COits Boss
BALTIMORE (AP) -The Baltimcn
Qiltl bad suffered wone defeats, but
oone aeemed quite 10 humlliating.
Even the rabkl BaJtimlre !ans were
•trwnin& out of Memorial Sbdiu\n k>oC
before the world champion Kansas City
Chiefs administered 1 ff..24 pasting Mon-
day night.
"We stun\ out the place in the first
halJ,P said Baltimore'& rookie head
coach. Don McCafferty. "That includes
all philes of the game -cffense.
defense, the 1peclal teams .•. and even
the coaching."
Wife Pleads
For Nelsen
To Retire
C.LEVELAND: Ohio (AP) -The w~e
of injured Cleveland Browns' quarterback
Bill Nelsen said Monday that she wanted
her husband to retire.
Nelsen suffered a sprained right knee
in Sunday's loas to the San Ffancisco
49en. but is e~cted to return to action
later in the sea1011. Rookie Don Gault, a
cab squad member for tWo years. is ex·
pected to start Saturday night when the
iln>JNllS 00.t Pitljl>urgh.
"I don't want him to play football
anymore." Susan Nelsen said of her bus·
band; who has had all cartilage in bolh
knees removed in !our previous opera-
Uo~.
"He knows how I feel," Mrs. Nelsen
continued. "I've talked to him about it.
I'd like to be a normal housewife.
'1'd like to settle down to the business
of life." she said. "I no longer get
gooeebumps before a game or get a thrill
when aomebody asks Bill for bis
auingrapb:.
The first hllf ended with the Chiefs on
top Sl-7 and they increased the bulge to
41-10 before Baltimore added ·two mean':
ingleM fourth quarter t.oucbdowna.
The Colts were stomped _lG-2'1 back in
1950, but that was their inaugural 1tason
in the National Football League. Even a
57-0 loss to the Chicago Bears In 1982
didn't seem to carry the same sting as
the walloping by ihe Chiefs.
The time was ripe for a good showing
by Baltimore. After posting the best
record in the NFL during the past 12
years, 112-41-4, the Colts were one of.
t
.......--
three old llUll'd teams shifted to the
American Conference under lhe realign..
ment.
Jn ~lr first borne game against a
team from the old American football
League, the Colb were taking on the
Super Bowl champs. The Chiefs had lost
their 1970 opener to Minnesota the week
before . andJ!altlmore had beaten them in
an exhlb1Uon l7;:J.
The Chiefs exploded. They were tricky,
elusive and oploeive on offense and run-
ning back kickl. They were devutaling
on detense. '
b ets Outfielder Hit by Throw
"We're champions and we reacted to
last week's loss," said Kansas City coach
Haok Stram, IJ')'lng to take everything tn
stride. Jt wasn't that easy to explain the
thruhtng. ·
Quarterback "Lenny DaW10n or the
Chiefs picked apart the Colts' defense for
nine pass completions in 12 attempta for
152 yards and four touchdowns. Frank
Pitta caught three pasaes for 62 yards
and two TDs.
Place kicker Jan Stenerud booted three
field goals and scored 14 points.
Safety Johnny RobinlOa grabbed three
•
Ul'I Tt """"' "Maybe it's maturity. You go from the
rah-rah of college football with little porn
porns and suddenly that spirit is gone
from thiJ. It becomes a serious cut-throat
business and pro football loses its thrill .
"The 'hate' and the 'kill' of pro football
are unsettling things. I'm very emotional
and sensitive and these things bother me.
After eight years in pro football , I'm
thotoughly drained of emotion,"
Leroy Stanton, New York Mets outfielder, is
examined. by team doctor and coach Edd ie Yost
(left) after he was struck in the neck by ball, while
sliding into third base during action with the Chi·
cago Cubs Monday. Stanton left the field under his
own power, but remained out of the game for ob--
servation. The Mets won , 6-3.
She added that their families in
California also wish Bill Would quit foot.
ball . 1'\Vheri he was hurt, thef called and
uid maybe thiS would bring Us home,''
she said. _. --
rrothro, Royal Pondering
)_
She said she wants something of value
lo cling to when her husband's footbal l
days end and is anxious for him to belln
hi.9 perma nent career. _ -·'
"Waiting for the inevitable is unset·
!Ung." she said, "It's like waiting for the
hatchet.''
Test of Unbeaten ·Powers
A similar injury forced Nelsen to miss
half a season when he was with the
Pittsburgh Steelers.
"If there's anybod y on our club who
can play with injuries. ifs Bill,'' team
ph¥sician Dr. Vic Ippolito said Monday.
•·We're going to do eve rything under
the sun to get him back this year. We
drained some rluid from his knee .and
now the cure is rest."
Behind Gault, a 24-year-old Hofstra Co\leg~ product, is first-round draft
choice Mike Phipjls from Purdue. Team
officials say that Gaull's experience with
the cab squad is the big reason he is get-
ting _the nod over Phipps, who is a
stronger passer.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -"! don't look
for cl\allenges, I look for opportunities
and I don 't think the one coming up is a
very good one," UCLA coach Tommy
Prothro told the Southern California
Football Writers on Monday.
For what Prothro and his Bruins fa ce
is Texas in a battle of undefeated football
teams. And th e Longhorns have whipped
California $6-15 and Texas Tech 35-13.
UCLA hasn 't allowed a second half
score in victories over Oregon State,
Pittsburgh and Northwestern and won
them all with rallies, th e latest a 12-7
verdi ct over the Wildcats of the Big 10.
"I hope all our games are close," com-
mented Prothro , "because when they
aren't close, we'll be in trouble."
close scores, while Texas whacked
California, 56-15, and defeated Texas
Tech 3.S-13 after leading at halftime onl y
14-13.
';They have good athleles who make
the big plays. They do what it takes to
win," he said of UCLA. He cited a fourth-
and-eight touchdown pass for 53 yards to
win the Northwestern game in the fi nal
three minutes.
Royal mentioned that Texas will have
t~·o new starters against UCLA, with
sophomore Dan Terwelp, 205, taking over
for David Arledge, 178, at defensive end .
and ~pound Dery l Comer replacing
Tommy Woodard, 10, al offensive tight
end.
Undefeated
Ohio State,
Texa~ 1-2
Comer and Woodard are both· con-
sidered top athletes by the Longhorn Prothro indicated that against the
Longhorns, who are fa vored by three
touchdowns, his club may try something
different, saying, "In this type of sltua-,
tions we might work on things that could
win for us or kill us."
Then he added :
"J have more hope we can do well
defensi vely than I have that we can do
well offensively. I don:t think I've ever
11een a better college football team than
Texas."
Ghio State, Texas and Stanford re-Texas coach Darrel Roya\ srinned
tained the first three places todAy In the when asked what he ~·ould do if Texas
Aseociated Press college football poll \\'ere made a ZO..point favorite over
while Colorado and Air Force joined the UCLA.
Top .Ten following impressive victories "You wouldn't want to wager, would
over Penn State and Missouri, which you?" Royal 'asked.
were knocked out. He meant that the point spread would
Colorado's 41-13 rout of Penn Stale, be way too much. even though Texas is
which hadn 't Jost in 31 games and had No. 2 in the nation and winners of 22 W<f~ 23 iri ·a row, boosted the Buffaloes straigh~ games. the longest winning
fnfn 18th to eight and dropped the Nit-streak 1n colle~e football .. lallV Lions from fourth lo 16th. the big-Asked what 1mpres~ hun most about
gel decline. UCLA, Royal told his re~l~r ';~k~y
Air Force climbed from 20th to 10th via ne~~ confe~cn.~e Monday It ~as the1r
a &t.14 rout of Missouri while the T'F'ger ab1hty to ~1n.
nirith a week ago barely stayed i e The Bruins ha ve'beaten Oregon State,
Top Twenty twlth ~ ranking of 20t Pitts burgh and Northwestern by fairly
Ohio State opened its season with a 56-
13 walloping of Texas A&M and received
25 of the 41 first-place votes cast by a
P.J,nel of sports writers and bro11dcasters
and 1 total or 782 poinl$.
Stanford remained in third pla~ by
rallying In the second. half. to defeat
Oregon 33-10. Np&rt Dame-climbed from
alith to 't0urthJn the wake of a 46-4 rout
of Purdue and Southern Cal rose from
a.t'ltDVI to· fifth aner trounc:ing_low1 by
the smne score. ·
Dodgers, Padres
Do Battle Tonight
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The San Diego
Padres take on the spoiler role again
tonight, hoping to scutlle the lmi Angeles
Dodgers' final drive for the.-aecond year
Jn a row.
coaching staff, and both are recovering
from knee injuries. Royal said Comer
blocked a •ttle stronger" against Tech.
He also said he was concerned about
linebacker Slan Mauldin, whose leg and
ankle were stiff after the Tech game.
Out for the rest of the season will be
sub defensive end Bill Rutherford, who
will ha ve an operation on his dislocated
shoulder.
Roya l said Texas' second-half
tou chdown drives of 79, 71 end 72 yards
<1gainst Tc~ were solid, ,;something you
can sin k your teeth into."
He said the Longhorns outgained lhe
Red Raiders 274 yards to 57 yards in the
second half afler "losing their poise" in
the fi rst half by fumbling on a couple of
promising drives.
The Padres swept .aJour·game series In san Diego last September and demolished
the Dodgers ' We.slern Division tlUe
hopes. Now Los Ange.Jes ls trying to
nvertake second-pla ce San Francisco with
the Giants ahf11d by a hall gamt.. A Fe1v 1fords of Wisdot1t
just •:yards alter his lhree 1-beblnd
the llne were subtracted.
Morrall, clumped four tlmel for 43 .
yards, -up with llOO yards Ml oo
17 !OP le and had lhree scorlni -·
of Kanau Clty11 flvt lnteroepticm, 11et-
Ung up 10 P.O!Pta with hla nmbacb of 14
and 'II yardi. He olao -eel 1 ~
after 1'UDll.inC 41 yards with a Colt
fumble.
The mauive Chiefs abo craabed
through to toss John Unltu and Earl
Morrall a total of leVen timea for 73
yards in losses.
• Ed Hinton caught II Baltimore paae.s for
190 yards and one TO. . •
Unltu, who didn't play the last 35
minule.. undoubtedly had the worst day
of his 15-year storied career. He hid Uve
completion,, in 15 atttmpts for a net of
McCafferty claimed Unitas was remov·
ed ooly because he had reinjured a knee ••
and tbe Colta already trailed 2U when
the move wu made. But be added that
be wasn't --certain or Unitu' •t.artinl
stat111 for next week.
Against Cincinna ti
Pirates Rate Edge
With Mound Staff
PITl'SBURGH (AP) -ClncinnaU and
Pittsburgh are both known. for their of-
fensive weapons. But when the National
League playoffs open this weekend at
Three Rivers Sladlum, pitching should be
the key.
Pittsburgh's pitching has sudden1Y
blossomed after mid-season Injuries hit
the" staff.
During the last 117 games, Pirate
pitchen have allowed only 40 runs -35
earned -for an earned-run average of
2.30. The opposition bu been held to one
or less runs in six game! and has scored
more than three runs in just three of
them.
The Reds, on the other hand, have won
eight of their last 10 gariles, but have not
had one complete game.
Gary Nolan, 18-7, recenUy the steadiest
pitcher for the Reds, will start against
the Pirates• Dock Ellis,. lS-10, who won
Sunday's game against New York Uiat
clinched the title for Pltbburgh.
Jim Merritt of the Reds, who was hit
on the e]bow three weeks ago and had
been sidelined, pitched three innings last
week.
If he Is healthy he ls expected to start
the second game againlt Luke Walker.
The lefthander has become the "reliable
one'' of the Pirate pitching corps. He is
15-fi. Merritt, with a 20-12 record, is the
first ~game winner Cincinnati bas bad
since 191$. o
The Reds are a better slugging club
than the Pirates but the two teams are
nearly even in battin1 percentage. The
Pirates att hitting .269, the Reds .271.
Reds catcher Johnny Bench ls batting
.294, hU"ileague-Iiiding 45 ho~ runs ·.
and 147 runs batted in, also tops in the
league.
Pete Rose leads the Reds in batting
with a .318 average and Tony Perez is
hitting .316 with 40 home runs and 129
RBis.
Roberto Clemente, who will miss the
St. Louis series this week to undergo
more back treatment in Pittsburgh,
should be ready for the playoffs.
He'a not eligible for the batting title
this year because he has too few times at
bat -but hi! average is .3$0.
Manny Sanguillen, the Pirate catcher.
is batting .326, third in the league. Willie
Stargell, AJ Oliver and Bob Robertson are
the RBI leaders on the Pirates. Star1ell
has 85. Oliver 82 and Robertson 81.
Both clubs will rely on their bullpens.
The Pirates have Dave Giusti with a t-3
record and 26 saves.
Jim ''Mudcat" Grant, who won two of
the three games agalnst the Mets over
the weekend. is not eligible for either the
playoffs or the World Serles, since he was
Ul'lf~
'
acqu~ed from Oailland after the SOpt. l
deadline.
Wayne Granger, w:ith a 6-5 record and
a 2.71 ERA and Clay Carroll, M and a
2.65 ERA, are the Reds' bullpen stand-
ools.
Wayne Simp50n, a CincinnaU rookie
who has a 14-3 record, will not see actlon
in the playoffs due to an arm lnjW'}'.
The last time the Pirates won a Utle
was in 1980 when they took tbe World
Series. The Reds last took tbe-peDD&Dt in
1961.
Agase Slams
Refs; Lakers
Face Alciitdor
CHICAGO -Coach Alex Ague ol
Northwestern had a beef Monday about '
the Pacific 8 officiating crew that worked
the football game at UCLA Saturday
night.
Northwestern Jed moat of the 1ame on·
Jy to lose 12-7. Ague would not putltlcly
criticize the officiating other than the of·
ficials' demand that Northwestern
quarterback Maurie Daigneau change his
helmet.
"This wu one bad thing," said Ague.
"Dr. Steve Reid, our team physician, has
been conducting tests on helmets for
years in aii attempt to improve them. He
has a recording instrument in them
which -regi!ters on a remote control
device the Impact of blows and things
like that:
"Oaigneau was wearing a wired helrnet
and officials thought he was getting
signall from the bench. Even after Reid
explained what he was doing, they still
wouldn't let. Dalgneau come into the
game wearing that helmet. .
"These experiments have been gomg on
10 years and through 100 games, and this
ii the first time an incident like this has
happened. I guess all you can say ls that
the officials held back progress." • INGLEWOOD -The Los Angeles
Lakers, 0-2 in their National Buketball
Association preaea.900 openers in Hawaii,
meet Lew Alcindor and the Milwaukee
Bucks tonight at the Forum.
It will be the second game of a
doubleheader, following an exhibition
match starting al 7 p.m. between San
Francisco and San Diego. • Southern California's tailback Clarence
Davis. who gained 151 yardS in 17 carries
at Jowa in a 48-0 Trojan victory, wa
named the university Player<if-the-Week
by SoCal writers.
Coach John McKay of USC commented,
"1 think Clarence Davis is a tremendoui
football player. He came to USC follow·
ing two great runners Mike Garrett and
O. J . Simpson and through no fault of hi
has not received much acclaim.
"Davis can run , block and is a fine pass
receiver. I think ht is most worthy of Otis
honor and of being an All·American."
McKay said his quarterback Jimmy
Jones should be able to play against
Oregon State at the Los Angeles
Coliseum on Saturday. He sutrered a
dislocated thumb in the rout. • DETROIT -Four professional football
players with the Cincinnati Bengals
reported their wallets, c o n ta I n t n g
numerous credit cards and a tolal of $115
in cash, were stolen from their unk>ckfJCf
lockers at Tiger Stadium, Dttroit police
reported Monday.
They said the w1llet8 were taken dur·
ln1 Sunday's National Football Leque
game in which Cincinnati Jost to Detroit,
38-3. • BERKELEY -The to1>oeeded players,
·led by Clllr Richey ol San Angelo, Tex ..
have knocked oll Orn-round chall..,.,1
in the Pacific Coast International Tenni1 1
Open.
Richey, 1ttded No. 1, defeated Mlkt
Machette ol Belvedere, C.l~.. 7-t, &.a, .
Monday and third-ranked Dennis Rallton,
beat Ken Stuart., Seal Buch, 6-1, f-.2.
In opening the final 1970 series. San
Diego al110 Is aiming al its 11ea~n at·
tendanct record of e13,327_ Home crowd•
In the Padrts' 1econd year tbl&I eoll,308
1olng into the last three c•mes.
For1ner Angels pitching coach l\1arv Grissom
(left), novJ with the A1innesota Twins, shows pitch·
•r Bert Blyleven of Garden Grove the proper grip
for a slider as Twins prepare for their upcoming
series with the Baltimore Orjoles for the American
League pc11nant.
Clark Ctatbner of New York, seeded
firth. defeated Mfke Kreisa of Log
Angeles, 6-4, 7-4, and the tourn11ment'1
lop-ranked foreign entry, sixth-seeded'-"
Jan Koeles of Czechoslovakia, tumf!d
back New York's Steve Turner, 8-3, 7~.
I
I
t
I
I • I
' '
By CRAIG SHEFF
Of MM ~Uy 'II" <$Miff
Estancia High has never had a winner
In varsity football, but at the rate the
Eagles are going Utls season, thtte is lit·
tie doubt that fact will be categorized as
history.
After two games or the 197t grid cam-
paign, coach Phil Brown's club bas total·
ed 79 points, defeating Tustin (36-0) and
Buena Park (49-6).
The 49 points scored last week was a
school record, wiping out the old mark of
38 lallied last year against Santa Ana
Valley.
The record ror most points scored in a
season is 131 ('68) and the Eagles appear
v.•ell on their way to eclipsing that mark.
\\'hy the sudden upsurge!
"The kids and the staff have been
y,·orking eight months at one goal-to y,•in
football games," says Brown.
"P.lus we have a lot of starting kids
back from Iasi year. They are more
mature, a lot tougher and they Cilme to
pla y football ."
Btdwn is not surprised about the
Estancia turn for the better.
··we anticipated that we'd be an im-
•
Tutsda:t. Stpttmbtr 21J, 11170 DAILY PILOT Jf
~Play: E-stancia's I( MD Fo.;s : ey ~-. --lin · Sli proved rootball team. M far as scorin
that many points, no I didn't anticipate
it."
Quarterback Curt Thomu and halfba ck
Jim Schulli have played key roles in
helping the Eagles to tpeir t"v lopsided
victories.
Thomaa,1 I~pound senior. has passed
for 346 yards in the two games, com-
pleting 13 of 21 aerials while playing in
just three quarters of both games. Fi ve
or the tosses have gone for toucbdo\'ms.
"CUrt has improved a great deal as a
passer. Hi! improvement tw been Vi his
..-
ability to throw tbt ball to an open
receiver," siys BroWn.
Schultz: has rushed for 2S3 yards lo 31
carries for an average of 7 .0. Last week
against Buena Park he gained 111 yards
\Vhile playing a little over a half. Schultz
is a lfO.pound junior.
The Eagle defense has cerlainly n'ot
taken a back seal to the offense.
In the two games, Estancia has allowed
just 120 net yarcb on the ground and
another 100 passing.
That Hiii-yard figure is misleading,
however, 1lnce Buena Park's lone ~-age PS
pletion last week, wu a 77-yard
touchdown play against the Eagles' se-
oond unit.
How far can Eslahcia go?
"\Ve1re going to play them week by
week. We're not looldllg any further than
Edison this Friday. They have a much
better team than either team we've
played so rar, of course.
';The way we look at it now. the team
that makes the fewest mistakes will win.
It should be a \'ery high-pitched game."
add! Brown.
After Loss
By ROGER CARLSON ,
., .... DtllW '"" "'" •
Lakewood Hlgh's football team hu
been known u • Wlit that has alwaya bid
the ability to jell quickly at the ou~ of
1 campaign and the. Lancers • proVed It
with a 28-& romp over Westminster in
their opener.
'Orange Coast Area Prep Football Stars of Week ·
However, a 12·7 loss to Los Angeles Ci·
ty power Gardena has dampened the
Lancers' image somewhat as they 1ird
for their battle with Angelus Leaaue
power Mater Dei Thursday night at Santa
Ana Bowl.
KARL KILLEFER
Corona del Mir
JIM SOLTIS
Fountain V1ll1y
AUNORE HOLMES
Mission Vie jo
Undefeated
UCI Mauls
Polo Foe. 25-5 ,
UC Irvine's undefeated '"'atcr polo
learn (+o) "'armed up for lhe Northern
California Championship tournament at
Foothill College with a 25·5 victory over
!n· outclassed San Fernando Valley Sta te
College team in the Anteater pool before
11 standing room only crowd fl1onday
night. . .
A total of II players dented the scoring
column as coach Ed Newland played
every member of the varsity squad.;:
Jim Bradburn paced the scoring wi
si1 goals Jol1011.·ed closely by Mike 1'1
\\'Ith five.
The Anteater first unit scored 10 goals
In the first quarter and came back brieny
in the fina l stanza for its only action .
Martin played only in lhe first q~arter.
Other scoring by the Anteaters in.eluded
three each for Me~ Philpott and Jim
fltcOonald . ty,·o by Tim Harrillon ; and one
each by Ferdy Massimino, Dale Hahn.
Bob Searles, -Jack Dickman, Bob
~icCleI!an and Bruce Black.
\Vlth freshman orientation programs
taking P:lace on the campus and with t~e
111ddcd interest of a UCl tournament v1~
tory over UCLA last \\·eckend , all seals 1n
tl:te stands y,·ere taken as y,·cll as most
itiiifd1ng room areas al the Anteater pool.
Sixteen of the top junior collcqe, college
nnd club' teams In the state will compete
ln · 100 foothill evenl this v.•cckend in·
rludlng the Oc~n1.i. team thRt \\'00 the
National AAU title this summer.
JIM MILLER
Coste Mese
STEVE DUVAL •
Huntington Beech
BILL WHITFORD
Newport Harbor
MARK DeHUFF
E~ison
GARY IRVIN
legun• Be1ch
TOM MORRIS
Sen Clement•
Top Laivn Bowlers Vie
In Laguna Tournament
}landicaps do not deter lawn bowling
enthusiasts and the Southern California
Lawn Bowling Festival at Laguna Beach
which begins Wednesday and runs
through Sunday will be no exception to
the rule .
Competition in the event will be in mix-
ed doubles through Friday and men's
doubles through Sunday on the Laguna
greens overlooking the Pacific Ocean.
The site is located only seven miles from
Laguna Hills. site of the United States
Pickei·oo Victor
Another strong family showing pa~
the second week of the OAlLY PILOT
Pigskin Pickeroo.
The Walton famil y of Costa ?\1esa. led
by top prize \vlnner Diane Walton, cap-
-ttured four or the first ten places. ·-
Diane had 11 correct guesses out of 2t
but outnodded Roy 8etr (CoN fl1esa \,
Chris Broderick (Westminster) and Mrs.
John Peret (Dana Pointl for top hbnors
with i closer point total, using the
P.ickcroo Tie Breaker S)iStem.
Diane was 139 points off the correct
lotal of 789 \\"hile the !alter trio had dif·
rereoce.s of 189, 282 and 332.
Cosa !\1esa's Terry Ciolli £36 points
on;. Dfl\/kl Walton (139), Gerald Welton
f 1~9 l. Stc\/e \\1alton (l:t9), Joe Sparago
1162) and Nc1vport Beach's ritark McCar·
cllt 11sr1 OCC\lpie<l the fifth through 10th
I ·~ irt lh<l ~Cf(lnd ll'ei!k,
ALBA champion games Oct, 4·9.
Hugh Folkins was national singles
r'lamplon in 195%. He entered 1•i'ith
brother Dick and another member of the
Los Angele!! club to win the national
triples title in 1950 and again in 1954.
Hugh an9 Dick v.·on the California
doubles trophy in 1950, 1952, and 1954. .
Unfortunately, Hugh was stricken with
polio and lost the use of his arms and
movement in his left leg was Impaired.
His love for Uie game of bowls y,•as so
great he vowed to continue bowling. He
had a U·shaped attachment fitted to lhe
front or his right shoe.
He lines up his bowl within this at·
tachmenl, takes t short step forward
with his bad leg and sends the bowl roll·
ing on its way. Many bowlers, through
physicatty sound, cannot match his 'skill
with a foot.
Another man wllh very limited eye•
sight is Will Smith. Well ovtr !Kl years
old, Will continues to participale in his
favortte game of bowls.
His partners give hin1 an lndicaUOO of
tile distance and also guide. him by ad•
vising i( his i;oy,•I is too stiort, too long,
too wide and on which side il stops.
With this advice, plus Jong years of ex·
perience, \\rill gi ves a \'ery fine actOUOt
of himseK· In competition.
These are but two or th~ many com·
petilors to been seen In action this week
in the Southern California Open Doubles
1our11f1mcnl with the Uiguns Beach cluD
co-sponiOT'lng lhe event with Newport
•h•rbor and Santa Ana.
•
CURT THOMAS
Est1ncia
, JOE VENTIMIGLIA
Marin•
TOM WALKER
Un iversity
OCC Lo ses Two
Orange Coast College lootbal\ players
Ken Eppelheimer and Bill Durkin will be
sidelined an estimated four lo six weeks
each because or injuries suffered in the
LA Hrirbor game last Saturday.
Eppclhcimer. a halfback and the
Pirates' leading rusher, suffered a
broken rib while Durkin . a defeiuive end,
sustained a broken hand.
DCC quarterback Gary Valbucna suf·
tcrcd a hip pointer in the LA larobr tilt
and is doubtful for f'rklay night's game
with Cypress.
,
CHUCK . WINKLES
We1tmin1t1r
JIM JOHNSbN
. Meter Dei
• Jolatason Slips
Coach John Ford of the fl.toore Lea1Ut
Lancers explains the assumption thusly
concerning his team's apparent mid·
season form at tht outset:
"I think we might tend to be • Jlittlt
more open in our thinking with • wide
open game plan at t_M.1tart o( ~he year.
A lot of teams stay pretty cloie to the
basics at the .start." t
Despite his team 's loss to a non-CIF SS
team (Gardena) the Lancers dropped t.o
seventh in the CIF poll after holdinl tht
No. I position following t h • i r
Westminster triumph.
Mater Dei rates as the No. S outfit ind
Ford's crew hopes to use lht ?lfonarths
as a stepping stone back to the top.
·'\Ve've seen Mater Dei twice and the y
look ve ry good. It's the best ~later Dei
team I've see n in quite a while.
"It's hard to find any one particular
thing that we have to stop. (Bob )
Haupert is an e1~1lent quarterback and
Don Roy and Rocky Sim!*ln give them
good overall balance," aays Ford.
One of Ford's chief weapons 1t ti I •
disposal is his own son, qua'rterback John
T. Ford, a left banded senior.
Ho,vever, the senior Ford is dubious ot
trying to take advantage of t.1.lter Dei'•
pass defense.
··1 saw their game with Santa An1 ind
although they let Santa Ana have the lit-
tle look ins, I didn't see anythin1 els•
going for long gainers.
"It's hard to beat people if that's the
on1y thing you can get. They put a 1ood
rush on you and don't let you have the
long ones. Their pa!.S defense looked pre\..
ty strong to me," added Ford.
Ford is ,also apprehensive about Mater
Dei's impressive two-game win alrlnl.
"They've got two good ones behind them
now and that helps their confidence."
Lakewood's only change from th•
Gardena clash is at right end \vhere
F'loyd Heaton will be replactd by Din
Bresnahan (>II, 117) "after lhe fJ>nnc r
sustained an injured hand .
The leading ball carrier for Lakewood
I! Mike Owens. 1 ~LO, 175-piOUnd tailback
who runs behind the strong blockinl ol
junior John Arce (5-10, 115) •
Wright Seeking ·No. 22;
• •
Murphy Holds · Off Sox
"I kno..,-It's the lasl week of the season
but \ve've still gol to give the fans a
show," Ca1irornia Angel manager Lefty
Phillips was remarking Monday night.
So Tom fl1urphy gave them one · for six
Innings at least. Then Bill Melton and the
Chicago White Sox took their tum.
Murphy threw a perfect game for 5 l/J
Innings, had a no-hitter through six and
then gave up three quick runs in the
seventh but the Angels hung on to cla im
a 4·3 triumph.
Tonight, Clyde \Vrlght puts in his final
elailn to comeback-of-the-year honors
when he seeks his 22nd victQry. Wright,
~·ho \von only one while losing eight in
1969, y,•ill be opposed by Chicago's Billy
Wynne , 1·3.
Alex Johnson had one hit in four swings
and fell into a tie for the American
League batting lead with Boston's idlt
Carl Yastrzemski. Both are at .32&.
Murphy, completing his second full
season in the majors, believes lhat with
good fortune he can match Wright's suc-
cess next year.
"J.'ve thought a lot about Clyde this
year." he admitted.
"He is what you call a winner with his
attitude and dedication. I feel I've learn·
ed a lot this year and if 1 can put It to UH
next aeason I might be able to win 20."
"1urphy Improved his vict(!J'y count by
six over last year.
"I know my control was better and t
think my concentration improved, too, ..
he said.
"They tell me I'm still a younc (2$) pro-
apecl and not a suspect so I feel confident
about my future ."
flturphy had permitted only a 1ixth In-
ning walk to Rich Morales when
Chicago's Jose Ortir launched the
seventh inning by getting aboard on ••
error by Angel ahorlstop Sandy Alomar.
Then Tommy McCraw s h atter ed
1'.1urphy's dream of a no-hitter with •
single to center before Melton unloaded
his 32nd homer to shatter the shutout eel
make it a tight game.
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JC Players of Week
808 BOSANKO
S1ddltb1ck
CRAIG IALTOSKY
Or1n91 CHst
ANOY VOl!ONO
Ooldert West
,.
D•!)l.•-p~llOf Ja._·~·-----~---'-"'-'d-"''"'-Septrrn.btt 29, llf7~ ...
~A,,. Grid Stats
__ E-agles Dominate
Rushi.I1g, Passii1g
Estancia High School's sud-
den rise to football pro-
minence is reflected in thll
DAILY PILOT'S first release
of official Orange Coast area
1:rid stats.
The Eagles, who have ri~
ped Tustin and Buena Park by
30-0 and 49-6 scores, have the
IOp passer (yardage and per·
centage) in Curt Thoma11
~ilile mate J im Schultz is se-
cond In the rushing dtpart-
ment "'ith 253 ya rds for a
sc-ven-yard average.
Thomas has accumulated
346 yards on 13 completions -
a .619 percentage.
t.1arina's Joe Ventimiglia
leads in the rushing depart·
ment With a'n imposing 16.6
yards per carry average and
he holds a lead of over 100
yards total over Schultz.
Huntington Beach Hi'gh':;
Gart h Wise is third in total
yardage V.'ith 225 yards, good
tor a 9.0 average.
~1ater Dei's Bob Hauperl
leads in scoring with 26 poin1 s.
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J, Win IHuntl1>0lon 75 J I o.o -t. J!ov IM1r1r 0111 JI u •.I s. Morrl• (Slln Clemente> » 150 s.o •. C111n1vo (SC) 32 147 •.6 1. CtU t0n!vt'111y 2l US 1.l
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Whipple
Tops JC
Grid Stats
r saddleback College tailback
I Toby Whipple is c{( to a fast
start, according t.o area jwiior
L. college football stJtistics com-
piled by the DAILY PILOT.
Whipple has ~bed for 351
l'ards in 66 carries for an
average of 5.3 yards per try in
the Gauchos' two victories.
Golden West's Ch a r Ii e
Buckland ranks second with
235 yards in 62 carries (3.7).
Top passer (number of com·
t pletions) is Golden West's
j Steve Griffith with 14 in 37 at-
tempts for 132 ya rds. Sad·
dleback's Bob Bosanko has hit
1 on eight of 15 for 172 yards
and Orange Coast's Bill Shedd
is 12 for 23 (132 yards ).
Saddleback's Rick Geddes is
the leading receiver \vith
seven catches good for 12.8
yards and one touchdown.
Whipple, Buckland and Sad-
dleback's Rick Day are tied
for the scoring lead with 12
points each.
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Cornuke
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Ex-Rustler
Aids lla,vaii
LONG BEACH -Howard
Gay hit Roger Parkman, a
former .Qoldtn West player.
with a 30-yard touchdown pass
with 2:35 left and Hawaii ad·
ded a safety on the final play
as the unbeaten Rainbows
came from behind to beat C411 '~:C-State (Long Beach ), 23-14,
11 yo ,., "'' " Saturday night.
1Vll11•1• _ .... ....... ---.. '"""" _ ...
"--
--~-~ i~~ :-~With the 49era WadJ4-13.
• • • >11 • l{awail drO\'e 71 yards in 13
r l l • ~ : pl1y1 for lhe scote that cave
; : : s • the Rainbows a 3-4 record.
' • • • 0, Al the gun so unded , .~: ... ,_. li 10 defensive tackle Levi Stanley
~ ': ~ ;: ~ tAcktd Long Beach Stale
11 • t 1n 1 quarterback Randy Drake In
"tctt•lllt the end tone for tht R1inbows' "' ,.. .. C-f'OOt'. , "' 1 flna l tv.·o points.
v1111 .. i. ' .. 1 Jlawail held a 13·7 lead at ::, ~ '! : halftime en touchdow11 rum of
J. F1t1dwr '· 11 • six i·nd four yards by Rocky 1ar11111 w111t:tiw n. cur ,,. •oi'I-Pamplin. rte.II I, OIOCtl 11 '"" ~rtUtJ.
• . . .• .. • . . ... ~ . . " .. _ ..... ~. .. --......... • u t ze
-• -
Mate1· Dei, Ediso11 Mentioned ,., .. - -....
Diahlos,
Lions Fall
In Polo
\\'estminster and f\1issio n
Viejo High water polo fortune~
aren't raring as well as their
coastal counterparts but both
will leap into action Thursday
in opening round games in the
Estancia tournament.
Westminster's Lions drop-
Ped a 1>3 decision to Garden
Grove fo.tonday in the losers'
pool.
f\1is sion Viejo's J;>iablos were
losing to hos t Arcadia by a 12·
4 margin al the Same time.
For coach Gerry f\.1annion ·s
Lions. Rob Jlaber. Art Lillis
and Kelly Barthel each scored
a single goal.
Mission Viejo's scoring wa s
done by Randy Dixon and
Steve Lyle. each with a pair of
goals.
The Westminster j u n i o r
varsity dropped an 1, I -4
decision with Ed Statham
scoring three times and Bob
Young once.
The Garden Gr ov e
freshman-sophomore t ea m
made it a clean s1veep with an
11 ·1 victory. Doug Brandtman
scored the lone Lion tally.
Most or the area sc hools "'"ill
be participating in the Estan ·
cia event that begins Thursday
and runs through Satu rday.
Edison Favored by 5
In Key Grid Contest
Undefeated Edison and
Estancia High School football
teams clash this weekend in
lrvine U:ague opening action
with the host C h a r ger s
favored by 5 points· tiver the
Estancia Eagles.
In Sunset League action.
i1arina is favored by 7 over
\Vestern: Westminster by 8
ever Santa Ana ; Loara by 5
Vikes Run
To Victory
Marina won its first Sunsel
League dual cross country
meet of the 1970 Season Fri·
day as the Vikings swept past
!he visit ing \Vestern Pioneers,
15-47.
The Vi kings hogged the first
five places with undefeated
Dave Lockman winning in
10:25.
Lockman was trailed by
teammates Bob B r i c k n e r
t 10:31 J. Bob Phillips (10:391.
Ken 1'1artyn 110:43) and
Preston Campbell (10 :58 1.
Marina's John Neil son and
Gary Blume v.·cre seventh and
ninth.
The Vikings captured the
junior varsity race. 15-41. with
.Jay Rodgers clocking 11 :36 to
take-individual honors.
over Huntington Beach: and
Anaheim by 12 over Newport
llarbor.
On the junior college front.
Orange Coast is favored by 6
over Cypress and Golden West
by 10 over Santa Ana . Sad-
dleback dra\vs a bye.
In the television college
game of the week Saturday,
Mississippi is favored over
Alabama by 1 with· Kentucky
picked over Auburn by 2 in
another close one.
USC's Trojans are picked
vver Oregon State by 11 ; Tex-
as is tabbed to wallop UCLA
by 20; and the Rams are
favored over the Chargers by
!I in games involving area col-
lege and professional teams.
DAILY PILOT experts have
picked 14 winners each week
\vilh one tie giving them a 28·
11-1 record for the su!!IOl1 or a
. 718 average.
.-.1111\elm ovtr NtWPDtl HtrbOr bJ 11
Mt rlnt awr Wtsttrn llJ 1
Wt1lmlr.l1r ovroJ•nll ""' llv I ~-r,:1 :V:'E I' r. '::'f " , •r1nee O'ltr U .neon v1t1o 1w n \I lit Park O\ll r San CletneMt bv l Bannln<i ov..-Unlv1r1l1v ~ 6 Loart ovtr Hunt111a1on 8euh bv S Carl>n• de! Mtr aver Stnlt A111
Vtllew bl • Fau111111 v111ev ovtt Los .-.11ml!ns b• • Neff over l.rount lletch lw 11
Ort""" Cot•• avlr CvarU• bY ' Golden we,1 over Sa"te Ana b• ta J!tms over C~•r11ers bv ' i~~-~~'O.~~s,:irb. 11 S1•"'°'" over Purdut bv ll
Motrt O.me over MIU!iolJI Slttt H " MIHIJJ1DQI av1r Ai.oblma bv 1 G1orel1 Tet~ ovtr C1em'f.Ofl bv ' ~:n;~~~t. 0ov::. "11"1~r~,~ 1
'Ttn111UH o~er ,.rmv bv i o,._., over W11hlna1an Stitt b• l Olllo S!t!e ov1r Dull.1 bv U
Amo11g CIF F oothall Powe1·s
A pair or Or11nge Coast area
prep football .tearrus have
made the top 10 list of their
classification in the second
week or the CIF Soulhern Sec-
tion poll.
1'1ater Dei moved up two
notches in the AAAA ratings,
U 12, Excelsior !2-0), San
Marcos (1·1) and La Puenle
(1-0) 11 each, Rancho
Alamitos (2--0) 9, Lasuen (l·I) a, Covina (2-0} 7, Kennedy (1-
1) and Santa Maria (2-0) 6
each, Estancia (2·0) and
Pomona (2-0) 5 each.
AA
Others: El Segundo (l-0) ta, '"
1'1ayfair (1-1) 27, San Mfrino (~1-1) 23, Damien (1-1) and
fo.1Valesle (l·lJ 10 each,
Moreno Valley (2-0) I, Sa~1 dleback (Z-0) 7, Sonora (1-11
and La Canada (1-1) 5 each.
after rolling over Loyola last Place Team rts
week, 33-14. The 1'1onarchs are I. Temple City (2-0 J 178
Gaucho Grid
Boosters ]\feel
now fifth. They'll me e t 2. 1'1urphy (2--0) 135
seventh rated Lakewood · 3. Barstow (2--0) 135 Saddleback College's booster
'rhursday night at the Santa 4. Royal Oak (2-0) 87 club ·will hold its first meeting
Ana Bowl. 5. Nogales (2-0) 80 cf the year tonight at I in
Ed. • d I d d 6· La Mirada (2-0l 68 room K-2 on the Gaucho cam· ison s un e eate an 7. South Pasadena (l·I) 60
un3Cored on Ch a r g er s 8. Neff Ct-<l) 51 pus: Films of Saddleback's IS:
garnered their first-ever rank-9. Ce ntral (2-0} 40 8 victory over Cypress will be
ing In the elite list following,,;;;i'O;;·.;Hiiem<iiiii0'.;(2-000ili;;;,..,..,...;3i;l..i'iihoiiwiinii.,..,..,.. ....... ,....,"'i their Z'l-0 rout of Santiago. 11
{Edison's 28 points earned
the Chargers a tie for ninth
place, along with Sunny Hillis.
The Chargers are up
against surprisingly strong
Estancia Friday night in an .
1
Irvine League crucial. Estan-
cia garnered five points in the
poll con du c ted by 17
newspapers .
Lakewood dropped from its
No. J ranking after losing to
Los Angeles City p o w e r
Gardena, 12-7.
Bishop Amat takes over the
first spot following t he
Landers' 28-12 decision ever
No. I (AAA) Bonita.
Place Team Pis
I. Bishop Ama t (2·0) 169
2. Anaheim (2-0 ) 168
3. El Rancho (2-0) 112
4. \Vest Torrance (2.(1) JOI
5. Mater Dei lZ.0) 84
6. Pasadena (Z.0) 70
7. Lakewood (l ·I) 66
8. Santa Barbara <2-0) 44
9. St. Paul (1-1) 32
10. Wilson (2-0) 30
Others: Blair (1-J) 27, Whit·
tier (2-0) 17, Redlands (l·l} 14,
Arcadia (2-0) 7, Pioneer (U )
and Burbank (Z.O) 4, 1000 Oaks
(~) 3.
' AAA Place Team Pts
1. Bonita (1-1) 152
2. Garden Grove (2-0) 127
3. Bellflower (2·0) 112
4. Cttspi t2·1) 67
5. Rolling Hills (2.(IJ 66
6. Glendora (2-0) 6.1
7. Cabrillo (2-0) 41
8. Orange (1-0·1) 34
9. {Tie) Edison t2·0) 28
Sunny Hills (2-0) 28
Others: Foothill (1-1) 21,
Fullerton (2-0) 18, Lompoc (I-
Monarchs, .
Colony Tie·
In Grid Poll
?..tater Dei and Anahe im re-
main tied for first place in· the
official Tap 10 listing cf
Orange Cou nty prep football
teams 11;s selected by the DAI-
LY PILOT.
Edison High's undefeated
Chargers moved up one notch
while Westminster and Hun-
tington Beach fell out of the
ranklna:s following last week's
losses.
Estancia stormed into a tie
fQr fUth place with Fullerton
following its 49-6 rout of
Freeway League team Buena
Park.
TO• 11 l"lltt 1'tam 1'!11.
l. !Tic\ Ma ler Dtl (1.0) J~ An1hclm !?.0) '' l £Ol$Otl (7-0) JO
•. Gt rdtn Grov! U.O! 1# 5 !Tl~! f 1tt{ICla U·OI It Full..-1111' 0.0! lt
1. Jl1ftd'la ,.1 •• 1,D$ <1•1 "I I. Su11nv tlll $ ( ·Ol t '· Stddltbtck 12·01 7 10. Lotrt 41-0.11 6 OtMr$: Mewoorl H1rbor !!-al t fld M1rl111 (1.1) $ tlCh, S.t~ltt 11·11 1.
Pilot Pigskin
PICKEROO
Co • Sponsored by
Voit
And The
DAILY PILOT
BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT
s10
10
In Cash Far Each Week's
First Place Winner
Voit Footballs each wffk
B• a pigskin proph•t. Play th• DAILY PILOT Pick•roo
gam• for w••kly priz•s. Winn•r •ach w••k r•c•iv•1
$1 0 cash and a Voit Co11•giat• football lsugge1ted
r•t•il price, $9.95 1. Nin• runn•r-up Pick•roo pick•rt
also each get a Voit Coll•gjat• football.
Watch for this pl•yer's form ••ch week in th• DAILY
PILOT Sports Stction. Circle the •••ms you think will
win in the list of 20 teams and send in th• playtr'1
form or reasonablt facsimile. Then watch the DAILY.
PILOT sports pages for each week's list of 10 winners.
RULES
1, S11bnllt this fftfN bft"k er I rNSOMblt !1>almll0! to enltf !flt corrttst.
2. Sttllll lo: PILOT PIG$1(1M PlCKEJ!OO CONTEST, Sportt ~rlment.
P. 0. IOX 1seo, Coslt M1s1, Cl. 926.U.
l . Orltv -'"',.., per ptrson ••en-·
4. Entrln m11tl be d•Uvt red lbt INlll ilf' hi pt"°"') to DAILY "ILOT ulflm
~ S p.m. Th11l"Sdlr.
f. AMF Voll aflCI D"ILY PILOT tmPloVe, tnd lllt!r lmn*litto t11n!Jlll
r.ol ellgllllt kl tnttr.
'·TIE ll~f,.l(E• must bt lilied In Dr t nlr1' Is va;d,
1. 111 ctst el 111 for tlrsl piece. duplk:tlt ""'rd'l9ridise l'rlin will bt
awtrdtd tnd wiM•rt will equ.a11f lflt rt llr !IM 110 ttJh prlu .
I . Wftintri Who pl1ct In tllt lap lD mor1 !hi~ once durlnt 1'111 CSWlt.st lllrv.
!ht option. 1Uer !ht flr1I win. ol 1xch111ging llW: Voll fOOlbtll for lf'IOll!ti'
ov•lllV Volt prOdlKI DI taulv1l1nf vt!ve.
1 • ••••••••••••••• •-• • 1
• • • • • • • • • • • • •
I\
EIVTIU' BLANK
Clrcl• ... _ Y•• tttl•ll: will w4a tWs ..... , ,._
1""'-,.._ II MC ... ,_ ...... ,
Anaheim at Newport Harttor
' Western at Marina
Westminster at Santa Ana
Costo Mesa at Ma9nolia
Estancia at Edison
• •
DEAN LEWIS
SIPT!Mlllll SPECIALS Major League Standings • • • • • • • • • • • •
Oron9e at Mission Viejo
Villa 1 Park at San Clemente
University at Bannin9
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Pittsburgh
Ne'" York
Chicago
St. Loub~
I Philadelphid
i\lontrea/
Cincinnati
East Division
IY L
87 72
82 77
" 77 75 84
72 86
71 88
)Yest Olviston
101 59
86 73
85 73
San f'rancisco
Pct.
. 547
.516
.516
.472
.456
• 447
GR
5
' 12
\4 1 ~
16
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Raltimorr
Nev.· York
Boston
Detroit
Cleveland
\Vashingt on
East Division
W L
UH 54
92 68
8S 74
17 82
75 84
70 88
Pel.
.658
.575
.533
.484
.472
.443
.604
.547
.522
• 40.'J
GB
ll
19 2rn
29~ir
34
[!][O)ryJ~l"l~I
'71 COROLLAS
HERE NOW!
HuntinlJfon Beach at Loara
SA Valley at Corona del Mar
Los ' Alamitos at Fauntain Valley
La9una at N_eff
Cypress at Oran9e Coast
: • Santa Ana at Golden West
• • •
Char9ers at Rams
.
Dod1ers
Houston
Atlanta
San Diego
i6 83
75 8$
62 97
.631
.541
.533
.478
.469
.390
14 1 ~
1;
24 ~~
26 Ja n
ri.1.inne scta
Oakland
An1els
Kansas City
Milwaukee
Chicago
\Vest Oh•lslon
96 63
87 72
83 76
64 95
64 95
56 1~1
• 40.'J
.3S2
9
13 :n :n
40
All 0.. M ...... St.a
.,, .. f'-Mlla .....,_
UCLA at Texas
OreCJOn State at use
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
••
,,..,..,,., """'"' H•w Yor1t 1, Cl'llctoo 3. II IM"'9s
HeUlllH> ). $tt1 FrantitU I
Q111' 1111'11• KhedVltcl.
T .. tt 't 01""'
CllltttD fl"tPHI 11·,J tt ~tw YDr~ (~001m•t1
11·11. "Ith!
MDnln•l (Jl fn-a n.111 '' •1tut11tltll!1 r~rt f-U I. nlthl
1'111.Wrtilt fWt lill' 1!°' ............ 11-tfl al SI.
Loo.Iii IGttllotl tuJ, nltht
Stt1 F1111Clta1 t•tllfrffl' 1·11 t i HeulfOll (W!l-
"11 10.0, ""hi
Alt.Ml (M<Oueofft WI ,, CIM lllMll 1c1on11111r ... ,. """' . ~'1 IVl "U •11 11 S." Oofft (Jlebtl'U
''"'· fl}lltl
Men!!•''' •1\11111 Ml11r"i.ol1 1, ltt M$<15 Cll• 0
"""' 1, Chk:l1'0 l Oni1' ,_, tc:ftHulf'll.
Ted•''' OtrnH , M!lwM" !Morrh •·l ) t i 0t~11fld [H11Mtr 17. 1'1, nltM ~
Chit•.•• (WvnM l·ll I I '"''" (Wrltlll 11•11), nl•M
ICtn~H C1fY fF;11r.-11t t.Jl 11 Mlt1t1t!le!t
(l"l rr'f t•Ul
C""'eltnd lHltttn ID•JI 4t tk.trolt (l,tll<J'! 1•
U!. lllfhl -I wttlllnttOfl f,teltm.*'I 1·11 ttld lltOW" 1·2. flt
l:!tnMn J·IO! II ltl!llf\!l!t !C.!!et!!r t!:_I t nG l'l'tol!b\11 1
J.JJ, J. lw:i•"lthl l MtOl' Yort lltt!nt l·l l II lloslon (tiff' .. ,,,
nl•h' I
DEAN LEW·IS
1966 HARIOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303
Service, P•rts, & Body Shep
Now Opon Until I p.m. Monday Nt9hts I I
Orange County's Larges\ and Most Modern Toyota and Vol <o Dealer
-·
'~..,...!:'_.:::!~C.~N:h~•:n:-;::;c~,~...,::: .. . .....
VOLVO
DIMO
$2862
1:1.1<!
1967
TOYOTA CORONA SED. •1". tttiiltff T1911•ml1•11!1. \I"' tlllll. jVD•l11I
$1195
••
• • • • • • • •
Purdue at Stanford
Notre Dame at Mich. Stat•
Alabama at Mississippi
• TJe 1•1.o..1t&:J1 -Mf """' on tn• •
I tlllfMtr af """" llWftd lft> t H • 20 tflMJ "llf'd t beft it •• ,., .... · ...................... . • . .. ......
• • ADDllSS
•
•. • • • • • CITT ZIP • • •
• PNO"I Sil • • r••••••••••••••••••••
:
!
• -
• • •
•
• -
c e a • • $ • • • • ¥ ¥ 4 S Si S • 4 I U 0 • •
TUESDAY
SEnOIDEit 29
,, .... -(C) (60)""' .......
D W 111 cnM (C) (60)
8 Tiii -.. (C) (90) Ttntl·
tivt t\ltllb llltlude Vilce E6w1tds,
WoadJ Weodbvry, Geotp Jtuel,
1oMie SomllllfJ •nd °"'"' H1H.
D 111 O'a.d: Mtwit: "HltrJ 11.u ....... n..-(l~tnlurt) sa -
Stew1rt 'G11npr, B1rbu1 Rush, An·
lhony steel.
&I hi s.lft IC) (30) .. Shipment
. to lllrvt!' S1111rt IPtflds s forl unt
of CONTROL'S 1t01117 for wronr
•-trylnc to filld •ref pl1ns.
.•mn.~(C}(J01
I!) ft , ... I lJllitf (t) (60) "/.
Ci11 el Rtd Tur11ill'." I
I 1£1 'ftlt't New (30) "Sp0m 1nd
11'11 Proftsaor, Part 2." The basic
elements of b1Mttb1ll dertn1t ire
• ditcuued.
ll!l-/M_,, (C) [3~ ,•-(JO)
m-"""'"'<ci [30)
al Tllh ie Ill t'.Jtnlla (30)
'
&J ... II be laeN (C) (lOJ
Mille RolltM, Glorit Gr11r, P1t11 Seebt. •
l:ll CJ Cndid C... (lO)
GI 1\t flri111 •111 (C) (30) ~The
Conwent." Si!lfer Bertrillt fSa111
fltld) CO!lfounds Ioctl 11mblers and·
·---(C) <'-'! TOlliihfs ,_ 11 Mn. -. Ellltt.
lbe ttWC ar• ~ h'Oll .._
\'Ille, bN, .._ Hllodt If 1.0·
lni !ht me1nl111 ol r1elel 4bcrlm-
1111tion 111'11 Ul/JN coMdtflblt
cont1oversy,
m" ''" "' '"" <'> <'o/ IE fult ,..,.. 1.i..-.1 (C)
(30)
i?l""""'"'"""(C)(30)
l:«i r:I:) Ril ..... il: {SS)
1:30
IJ "HEE HAW" SA·LUTEI * HAPPIEST SHOW on TV GUEST RAY CHARL!S
11 Htt Ha. (t) (60} R17 Ch1rl11
ind Lynn Andtrson 111tsl.
a o oo m t1111e tC) (JO) ·ti1111
Boi/I lost~
o @mm.,._,,,..
.... (C) "'fUPI: ~-(tuSpll'lle)
'70-Jimet fttt'lcilCllS, L• Gl'lnf,
Sc.ott M11\owe, Andrew Prine, TiV.1
SlulinL ltllie Nitlwll.
m hvi4 fmt Slln (Cl (90)
Geo111 Kirby, Jose Ftmr, J11na
Dickey, ~rold O.~id, Wl!lil Moffit,
Ad1m Wadt.
CD Drq11t <t> (30) "llie Gambler."
m Cllic'I' fntlnl (C) (lO) "Cr•irt
Robbin," J'Ollftl ain1er-COIJIPOlff,
perf1111111 llfilinel compo&itloN i.
folk. ll09, jiu, blues •!Id roct
ill) Fi¥« f1111J (30)
e> LI '"'1d'!t I • (617)
!:oo a i;i oo m • ,....., """=
(C) "'S..1 F1111Cbn ltlbrlltilN/
Airpert" (drlml) '7~11 Joh11111n,
Ptmell Robtrts, Clw G11l119r, h tll
Brk~tlt
11""' -(q ""' • m...., -<ci (30)
1 tl\9 vilitl111 bisho, with llw 1bilit)i
of ti ft)'. I
I fill T .... (30) .._. I 1!1•·,.,~ <·,., mm•-!Cl <60! ..._ --a Sztll: One M111'1 Triumph.• A (IMN'-
1 cm WW.. J4 fC) (60) lr•il of the ltte.-OOllOl.ldof '-" m 1111 '-t lll*t (C) (30) Szell 1t work Is ht flhtNllll hil
mJ ~ ' Dlvidtll (JO) orchtslr1 ill G11hm&' .. Ac.Mtmlc
re1ti'l1l" 0-erture ind Bttlhovtn'•
• &) AIC ~ill ,..., (C> (JO) fift h Srmpho11y. lrrin1 li:olodi11 1111-
1:111 II CIS &M1111 Jlns (C) (lO) rates.
' Wthw Crriita. ill) o.tr.8/fh (C) (JO)
am nc - -tcJ (30) IE_ <60!
Drrld Brillklq, frank McGet, Jolin t:JO tJ QI Ci) Tt .._ Wilt LM (C)
t Clllnctllor. J (30) M1ry All• Motii., 1uats.
CJ Mllh ., U.T ft) (30) fJ ..._ (t) (30) Bider W11d.
GI Im(}) I lM tar f30) @ '"" Mnea (60)
QJ INt Ille~ (C) (30) iil) M-..le/Pator'1 DIR (C) (30)
@ @ lmdleil (C) (30) @I) Mlllicl r btrlllu (C) (30)
r ft! fop !or HNIUi (30) 10:00119 (j) 60 Mi1.it1 (C) (60)
Ill) ClllW Ult liwifll Wltl'd (C) (JO) II m""" (C) (60)
&) lmph•lll'lll llllril (~S) lill ~ ~ 0 ut.t '""llll1'tu1 '#...,., Ill.I.
(ln.t Ci1 (C) (30) (C) {60) "Tile W«th oft Mt11.~ A
1:J089(1)a..t, Hllbllils (C)\ w1ll-k110WA attorMJ rtlu• tD 111111
l j30) Cta-11111 saiilty Sllefw (Phill dowrt from 111 im.portlnl cut tftlf
' Sillfn) cmti._ to dupe the Qam-Or. W.rbJ 1tlls llilft M II•• Mnli-
1, petts J11 W.stliftlton. D.C. by ltllina nil di1e111. lery lllmlll IUftb. ~ 11,_ Hie C.pllol, W13hillflon lllonu-01111 Slilt (C) (60) "The 11111 I Wt:o Llllld l ._. " m,,,.. (C) 1617) Yllllillist £udb
Sh1pero. pi1nist Lilli•n Sttub# aM
ctllist l1wr1nc. Lisser,
t• ""nt, Lincoln Men'll:lrill, tht Zoo Ind ""'"'"
the PlllftlOll.
a@ @ mDHKll'&llb:(t)(60)
Chucll Connors, The Lennon Sisters
1111f MK Drtis 11JU1. m 11ove11 1301
8 Jft'PO (C) (30) "1.111: Port ol mJ f~ ...._ (60J
C.11." t..ris Zorich •lld' Alic. Spink lO:lD@ lill Will liltwS (C) (SO)
,...._ @DllliMlllCre(JO)
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rlnt tndlqen. Ills lif1 bJ jolnln1 I
-,.dmn1 arouP to find OCJt whit's
troutilinl 1 )'Ollnf wom1n wtio jumps
•ilh the rroup. lane Bradbury
1u11h.
0 MllliM $ MDN: (C) ..,,,_ .. ,.
(WMl:ll't) '54-Burt U11tast1r, Je1n
Pliers. A bitter b1ttl1 ensues bf.
tw1ttt tl11 lndi1r11 and ttte U.S.
Cnlll)'.
11 Ct• '" 1., nw CCJ (lOJ
0 n.tre 9: "T• DIJs II Tllftft"
(1dYenl11r1) '58-Stlftln1 Heyde11.
m '" DM't Sir (C) Tom Kennedr hosts. ROM M1ril. Abby Olltall,
Mich1tl Llndoll lt'ld Richtfd Chim·
btrl1in 111est.
m ... "Dirt ........ (dr1m1)
'44--Merlt CX>tron, fr1ncflol Tone.
lill m""" •-
1 m Tl"llll • C.Dllf••* (C) (30) EEi ~ (C) .. A l:omirutiol
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' aJDlllW ._ (C) (60) '1ll• Q"l(I) .... (C) t Pntt lrft'.-1st.el Boone, lhl Cher-.
... Qiiel'I tOn Ind I So:l"ish Jl:JOIJQt (J)Mtn&rll'il(C)
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i.... 11ttl•1 tnd Indians. 0 Mtvit: "'MN ,,_ Ctin" (16-
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"Code of tilt SU." Rod l• Rocque1 Youna. Benllllt Cerf, A'ltf'iD H1n1-
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: who ii tr1nsftlrmtd into • loc.atl m Mtrit: "T\il All'Y ..... (dfl·
11111. I m•l '58--M:honp Pftina.
CD SMdlell r•• (CJ (30) t.t:OO @ (])Diel CMlt (C)
I .... f .... lllot 11 Allltr (30) J!:lDIDMu* "'f~ ........ (.t-~urt) '54-Kirtlr $r1nt,
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I• 8 ft CIJ lrt11t Acrtl CC) (JO)
f OllYlr •nd UM Hlvt1 ilrisll 1tt1n·
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08-(C) ,,159 ___ (C)
t'" l!.'.l:!ri .... ":'·..l~'.'!: risf'llllll ... 111111 """' YlctDri•
M.,.rlM: ,...,L
' DAYTIME MOVIES •
'\tplNI., ................ .
.. • • • . .
-
Tutsd.f, Stpttmbtr 2'. 1970 ,.... . ntsh, uu.r1ty ___-_ • AU.rd, MeUlll
' 'W arer'-Conielly Master Chorale
Excelknt Show, In Fine Recital
By TOM TlTtJS
Of Ille O.llr f"llfl St.II
All too Infrequently 11 com-
mu11ity theater is that Tart
production in which the three
basic elements _of fine comedy
-script, acting and direction
-mesh as equally strong in-
terlocking components. When
such is the case, it is a joyous
occasion for the playgoer.
One such joyous occasion
ca11 be found these days "'°·I.he
Long Beach Co mmul ity
Playhouse where W o o d y
Allen's "Don 't Drink the
Water" is given exemplary
treatment by director Elaine
Hennan and one of the most
top notch , .splendidly ba lanced
casts this reviewer has yet
witnessed at this attractive
horseshoe theater.
The play itself is laughter
piled upon laughter i n
breakneck fashion, w i t h
Allen's zaJti11ess in evidence
throughout. Miss Hennan 's
staging allows for this wild
physical humor, double takes
and praUalls, yet is lightly
Costa Mesa
Tryouts Set
For 'Opal'
The Costa h-1esa C i v i c
Playhouse will bold tryouts for
its second production of the
1970-71 season, John Patrick's
"Everybody Loves Opal," on
Wednesday and Thurs da y
evenings of this week.
The comedy about an elder-
ly lady who foils a series of at-
tempts on her life will be
directed by Pali Tambellini.
Two men and rour women are
required for the cast.
.Readings will be held al g
p.m. both nighls in the Com-
munity Recreation Center on
the Orange Co unty
F air grounds. "Everybody
Loves Opal" will be presented
Nov. 2:0-21, 27-2.8 and Dec. 4-5.
* * * Huntington
Auditioning
For 'Angels'
Open· readings for "My
Three Angels ," the second
production of the season at the
Huntington Beach Playhouse
will be held Saturday and S~
da y at 1 p.m.
constructed to Insure constant
forward movement.
The ootlandish possibiUties ,
inherent in the plot -a New
Jersey caterer and his famll.Y
hiding in the embassy of an
lro11 Curtail country from
Corrununist police who think
them spies -are embossed by
riotious dialogue and a n
equally hilarious r om a n t I c
subplot. In short. it is Al all
the way.
Sam Brandon, w h o s e
portrayals Cl! v a r i o u s
harangued and b a r a s s e d
fathers have reaped laughter
in Westminster and other local
theaters, ls at bis best in the
typical yet superbly done role
of the caterer whose plight is
the culmination of a European
vacatio11 he describes as
"three weeks of uninlerruoted
diarrhea.'' Equally solid is
Esther Drake as his badgering
wife ("(irst no movie on the
plane and now this").
Most impressive of the cast
is Rkk Hemming as the junior
diplom4t with all thumbs and
two left feet whose bumbling
sets up the situation -his is
comedic timing on its highest
plane. Am Parvaresh wrings
more than lier share of the
laughter from the role of the
Standing Pat
Richard Dow gives his wife (played by Nancy
Leland ) an affectionate· pat as · he shoos her out of
his office in this scene from "A Shot in the Dark,"
the Irvine Community Theater comedy resuming
Thursday for three final days at the Corona de!
Mar High School theater.
Hum.ane Group Rates
Movies on Animals
caterer's daughter, refusing lo By GENE HANDSAKER 1·1tl h f · · t settle for a bland, throwaway was 1 e c ance o Hl.JUry o the horses." character, which it could easi-HOLLYWOOD (AP) -The involved, said Melniker, are
ly become. American Hwnane Associat.ion foreign produce rs and a few
By TOt.I BARLEY In a swift transition that Is not
ot 11ee D.ii1 PW s1att always seen in the concert
We tend to link Maurice All· artist Mis.. Melllli, ootbing
ant uniquely with the Irvlne loath, gave us a bouncy, pleas· ~faster Chorale and i( this is ing "Nlgbt and Day" mere
conferring some grave injus-moments after delighting u~
tice on ~ gifted UC Irvine with sweet lyricis m Of her
II "Summertime." professor we can only ruefu y
conclude that he is partly to Sot it went throughout the
blame for allowing h I s concert with both artists roun·
tremendous work with his ding off a highly successful
choral group to hide his other recital with a medley of songs
considerable talents. that further served to stress
And we were reminded just their adaptability.
how considerable they are . Both would wish to pay
Saturda y night at a recital tribute lo their gifted ac-
lhat was organized -very companist and so would we.
capably and successfully by Pianist Ramona Gebhart was
Cora Peggy Wallace and her faultless throughout the recital
chorale storm troopers -to and she made her own very
rai.se funds for the struggling telling mark with a splendid
ense mble. The plea91.1re ol the solo rend ition of Gershwin's
financial achievement was "Rhapsody in Blue."
considerably heightened by a It is a pity that organiza-
concert Jn wh.icll baritone All· lions of the caliber of the
ard was joined by that distin-Irvine Master Chorale must
guished .soprano, Darrellyn resort to scratching a n d
r-.1ellili. scrabbling for funds that
B o t h artists tackled a should be immediately made
wide range of vocal offerings available to them. A fine con-
in their Newporter Inn ap-cert by three. gifted artists
pe a ra nee and each did,however,helpto salvethe
d e monstrated praiseworthy wound always created in th bt
versatility and a thoroughly critic by the ezistence of such
relaxed approach to a needless: circumstances.
repertoil'f: that was effecti ve 1==::::=::::=-==cc:=
as it was charming. I ;-ij~11~hV) Allard bridged the gap from I J
the more demanding "Aupre.s
de ma Blonde" to popdom.'s
"Raindrops Keep FalUng on
My Head" with complete ease
Patrick Dempsey does dou-plans to start rating foreign-Americans _ "when they get
ble duty as the narrator and made movies "acceptable" or ootside the United States,
refugee priest who dabbles. •·unacceptable" next month, outside our jurisdiction." Dutclt Watch
though not too well, in magi c. depending en whether animals In several pictures made
His scene with Miss Drake in in them have bee n treated outside the United States AMSTERDA1't (UPI ) -The
a strait jacket is a highlight of cruelly. animals were killed, Melniker Dutch bought 25 million mo-
tbe night. A particular target is the so-added. lion picture theater tickets in
A strong performance as a called running W, used to trip "We cannot tolerate actually 1969. The nation 's 434 cinemas
Communist secret policeman a gallopi11g horse into a spec-killing animals for the sake or showed 2,500 movies from 32
is ~liven:<f by q1eno Sterling, tacular fall, Harold Melniker, entertainme1.t," he said . "We coontries. 'Ille Dutch treasury
while Denis 'Iboioas is .solid in director of the associatlons's say an animal's life is entitled earned $3.J million from the
the-role of anf tnjury-prone Hollywood office, said Thurs-to, respect." -~ta~x~o~n..'.mo~v~ie~t~ic~k:'.:e<s~.:_ __ .!!~~~~~~~~~~
diplomat Jerry Herbener has da y. Melniker said lists of accept.I·
some good moments as a -fnvlsible wires linking a able and unacceptable films
temperamentaJ chef. while horse's legs a~ an off-camera will be issued periodically from
Bill Brown is a bit Tess ef· stake send him head over the association's Denver head-
fectivt as the ambassador heels, and sometimes he ge~s quarters and Hollywood office,
with eolitical ambitions. a b~ke11 leg or nee_!, said but "we hope the abu ses over-
Rounding out a well cho!!en M~lniker. . . seas will sop so we can dis.
cast are Andy Cleary as a tip.. The pra~uce was qu1le'ilfci0En~ti~nu~e~t~he~p~ro~g~raim~."~ill piing sulta Martha Knowles com~on until 1940 whe~ ~he . n... American Humane Assoc1at1on ~t. ._ .. ...._ CUNH>iWmOO
as his veiled wife. Pat came to Holl ywood and work-Foe ·x'· -... n ....... Herbener as the ~'!'bassy ed out an agreement with pro.. -_.1 secretary, James Livingston ducers to supervise animal ac-..u.aa .. n w
and Luciana Fos-ett as a pair lion," he added. "One of the ._..,~ • .,... • ....,.
of party gueSts and Joe Lea as COnditions ~as absolute pro-~ R~ gua~. ,, hibltion of the nmnlng W.
Don t Drink the Wat~ "Now it's bell!&" used In
has to be one of the funni est some pictures produced in the
plays you'll see all seasoo. It last year or so in Spain, Italy
continues for four m o.r ~ and Yugoslavia. On the screen
weekends at the playhouse, it's obvio~$-Some producers
502l ·E. Anaheim Ave., in Long have said quite frankly they
Beach. did it because they felt there
·~'\trf
t111m
~· 67)-6261
Coron• dll Mir nos East c-r H
ONLY ONE
SHOWING
EACH EVENING
Starting at 7:15 p.m.
I move
it's
pure
Gould
,.._,,,_
EttlOTT GOUtD
PAUIA PRENTISS GENEVIEVE WAITE
.MOVE . David Maiville, who two
years ago directed "Barefoot
in the Park" for the playhouse
and is currently staging "The
Diary of Anne Frank" for the
new En.w:mble Theater will
direct the comedy by Sa~ and
Bella Spewach.
Roles to be case are arel~=~==~==~~§F~§:~~~::::~==::11 eight men, ranging from lateli
teens o.!...early twenti es to mid·
die age,> and three female
roles in the same age bracket.
Tryouts will be held at the OPIN ~arn, 21 10 Main SI., Hun-6.:\1
t1ngton Beach, where the com-:.!i ':.,.":., ..
edy will open Nov. 20 for a,!'-------..,;;
five-weekend ~ Further in-
fonnali<>n may b< acquired by
calling •3151.
lfido
......,... NolOI -... -.. ......_, ........ _OI _._.
ENDS TONIGHT ... ,..,....
"DARKER THAN
AMBER" ... ...........
"A MAN CALLEO
• ~ow INDS TUUDAY.
FllllNl'S I.WAID
WINNIN• MASUl,llCI
"JULIET OF.
THE SPIRITS"
IN COLOI e AUO
UlW--
•
ENDS TONIGHT -·-"CHISUM" .... ""' , ........ "KELLY'S HEROES"
$TAIT$ WIDNUDAY
LAST WEEKS
GEORGE c. scon
KARL MALDEN
!ffi2 ' [1!
2nd FHtvre At Cl....,. w .. 1
Rod T•f°' -"Dorkor Thon Amber"
ENTIRE PROGRAM RATED ~G• -IT'S FOR IVER'YIODY I .,.no,, A c~ti!~,,,,._ :.=' ;~ ----iiiiiiii---
. rt n '"t ¥/ffl • rtt\'.
.NEWPORT. ··. ( ....
~µ, l·· Hlf '° •
.,l;. ___________________ ;11 HORSE"
STAITS WIDNUNY
Elliott
Gould
Don1ld
Sutltorl.wl
' J
• ' ·' I
• '
• JOB PRINTING
• • PUBLICATIO"NS
• NEWSPAPERS
Quelity Printin9 end Oependeble Sert'ice
for more thW 1 querier of 1 century.
PIL OT PRINTING
: h11 wm IAl.IOA ILYO .. NIWPOIT RACH -MJ.0!1
Mdlt Crowley's
"n.'.-~
---Ttt~ .. -~rda.nui::4.
' "The
Landlor;d"
&
''The
Hawaiians"
a.Jin'~ SllDIUYMMMm
'TWO MaU:S R>IL
SISIERMM' m A IJWM:~ l'ICTUll'I: -
BARGAIN MATINEE
EVIRY WED. I P.M.
Pill •mnHMlflm
ADULTS 11.IO
~~
RATED
GI'
PLUS
Clint'"""'°" -Don1ld
..
"KELL Y'S HEROES•
•
-·-
..
\
..._,--
·-
....... t•• .......... .
AYRES BUILT HOMES
(since 1905)
IRVINE AREA
<YOU OWN THE LAND)
THE RANCH--UNIT 4
22 HOMES SOLD-flRST 4 WEEKS
4 to 7 BEDROOMS
2 to 4 BATHS
includes all builtins, c•rP.ti"J, form•I
dining rooms, family rooms, fireplaces,
underground utilities and many other
quality features.
WALK TO
SAINT JOHNS
3 larl\I! ~. t fl.Ill baths,
dinin& room. Paradise in
landscaping, .covered lanai.
A bara:ain at $23,SOO.OO. Low
down payment. Hurry on
thh1 one. 5f6.888:I Rltr,
--
Harbor Est•••• ' '
Spacious 3 bdrm, dinl.ne i1n
(added on den) 114 bath
home with fireplace. Forced
air heat, kitchen ~ ~
duded. Needa ttdeoon.tina:
and ca.,,etina. Well land-
ICl.ped, front Ir rear patiol,
LoCated on end of cul*sac
St HERE IS A SLEEPER •
CALL TODAY.
M. M. LABORDE, Rltr.
I ---"".....,""',.,.,-"°'=· c_._M_. --1 646-0555 Eves. 573-6116
51/4°/o
4 a.drooms
Owner desperatl!, ttduef!d
price $26.500, large rooma, 2
baths, entry hall, din~
room, brick barbeque in pa-
tio. MG-1720
Tarbell 2955 H•rbor
mE QUICKER YOU CALL,
'ME QUICKER YOU SEU
Senta An• Heights
Owner will aell FHA or VA.
3 BR, 2 Ba, 20d> livin& nn.
+ lge dining nn., bltns, dble
gar., near UCl or trade for
lara:e 4 Bedrooms • $25,000.
Lachenmyer Rlty
Call 6f6.39'l8 or M5-M83
540-1151
Horse of a Different Color
Any c.olor horse will fit on this lh acre
rancho including new corrals and work area
Fruit trees & sharp"2 bedroom & family roo~
home with lovely big front yard. Listed at
$39,900. Call 540-1151.
Gov't Repossession
First time offered, large--3-bedroom. 2 bath
in quiet location. Spacious fa mily room, bltn
kitchen, fire place, dble garage. Full price
$24.950. Down payment only $1250. Call 540·
1151.
Help Help
-• •.
1000 General 1000
FLOWER LOVERS
BUILTI You'll ~delighted with this
• FLO\.\'ER of fl home, on
FLOWER STREET in Costa
Mesa. Its PETAL SOFT-
NESS will pleas e your
Jo'LOWER CHILDREN in a
"''ay that only kids can ex-
plain. 3 Lovely bedrrnl, re·
cenUy ttdecorated interior; i!iililil; I kits of trees and an fltA
loan at 5% interest. All for
123.950. NEAR HUNTINGTON STATE BEACH
(A 5 BEDROOM
HOME FOR UNDER
$36,000 AND
10°/o DOWN)
JCJa,.. COATS
-~ WALtACI!!
REALTORS
-546-4141-
(0pen Evenings)
675-3000 PR·ICES START AT $30,440 Genor•I 1000 Gonor•I 1000
Select Your New Ayres Built Home ;;;,;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1
~Must sell this 5 bedrm· family room home.
Owner anxious, has moved East. Make offer.
Call 540-1151.
FHA T enM
Includes 3 full baths (sunken tub in master
bedroom), formal dining room, family room
with wet bar & fireplace, all bltns, bftsic car·
peting, 3 car garage, concrete driveway,
shake roof and clean ocean air !or your ram·
ily's he:illh.
The number to call whether
buying. selling or leasing.
WESTCLIFF
Exceptional value! 3 BR. &
fam. rm. home. Liberal
terms A11sunie Jge. 51A%
loan. Owner w/carry. some
paper. $48,500
During The Customizing Stage
Choice of •II Models and Ext.riors-
S.lect Your Lot Loc•tion Now
SEE MODELS AT
SANTA ANA FREEWAY & JEFFREY ROAD
S•les office open from 11 •m to 7 pm d•lly
838-5136 838-5120
-------------
1000
oflnJa Jd/e
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
52 Linda Isle Dr.
Cust 6 BR·., study, 5 bath home w/3 frplcs.,
circular stairway, decorator seJ ected carp.
& drapes. Shown by ~ppt. .......... $210,000
E~cellent terms & loans now •v•il•ble
CALL : BILL GRUNDY; REAL TOR
133 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620
General 1000 General 1---------1000
GROWING
PAINS
See this 5 bedroom gem. Yes,
" 5 for only $1.00 total down.
Seil('t will pay all, costs for
any veteran, 2 full bath!,
larae lot. Whal a Buy on the
Eut side of Costa . Mesa.
Full price $27,000.00. ~
Rllr.
-!arr..,W-
2629 Harbor, c.r.t
No Down to Vets
Larie 3 bedroom + 20x20
rumpUI room. Nev.•ly painted
inside & out, block walled
OCEAN FRONT
Palatial hOme with
large ocean front lawn
in exclusive Cameo Shores
5 Bedroom.!I, 6 balhs
Pool!1lde famlly room
Viewside dining room
Paneled den with be.r
Private pool l:. patio
S'32.000
Realtors
"Our 25th Year
In the Harbor Ar••''
673-4400
rear yard, hardv.·ood Ooors. -::::===== HurTY on this one? FHA •
terms, also VA appraised at
$2"',600.
•.
~----
PEl=ll=IDN
-_, 0 ~T-TY Y'f• T
642-1771 Anytime
LIDO WATERFRONT
APTS.-320 LIDO NORD
NOW REDUCED TD
$150,~Xlnt Terms
G Beautiful units. 6 car
p.rages &. utility room with
80 ft. fronting on excellent
swimming beach, Units are
newly furnished.
Bill Grundy, Re1ltor
EASY.SIDE
4 Br. Very neat adult qccu-
p:ed home, cement drive-
way, beauti(uJ paneled fam·
ily room, Close to schools.
1'ltA/VA financing Is only
$1250 dOwn • , • No down lDr
Vet&. W,jth these terms lt.
price of $29,500 she won't
last!
Nichols Real Estate
546-9521 •I 1~"·1H.1,
833 Dover Dr., N.B, 64~ =:::=:======
$17,950 FULL PRICE
for this 3 bedroom. 2 bath
wilh large patio, built-ins,
large FAMILY ROOM, and
tau shade trees. Hurry be·
lore il's gone!
Walker & Lee
Realtors
7682 Edinger·
8'2-4455 ..,..,40
Peninsula Point
l Bedrm col1age with lire-
r.tainlenance .... place.
)'ard, double gatagt'. Near
txcellent swimmini. $38.95C
613-386.1 67l-8086 eVeS.
associated
e.-•11' ER!">-Rf Al TORS
:Ol', W 6glboa •JJ.Jb!_'.;
eBl!ACH BARGAIN•
Owod -· -· quldc Ille needed ot '"" lmmle ... Br ~ 1 blk. '° ocea.n. u.;,.,. . s.\1.9"1. Sub .......
CAYWOOD llUI. TY
-W. 0... H.,-.., NB
5612'1
$23,950
Local
Fourplex
Deluxe unita with an lncorne
of $565. a month. Needs a
li1Ue paint I-Catt.
547,950
ExcluslVt with:
Newport
•t
F1irvlew
646-1111 .
C1nytime)
LONG ON
CHILDREN?
Short on Clish?
5 hu~ bedroom11, family
room, forrnal dinine room.
tf"f'mendous corner lot, 2300
aq, ft. of Mesa Verde's bes!,
Whal a buy al $42,500, Vac-
-ant a,.J ready, !)46.8640. Rltr.
THE REAL
ESTATERS
EASTSIDE LITTLE JEWEL
Jt sparkles with cleanliness, has new kitch·
en. new bathroom, new carpets and drapes
plus a beautifully lan<4;caped y a,r d and
patio -Perfect for youn~ couple or retir·
ed. -$24,500 -See anytime .•• 646-7171
EASTSIDE
Rustic 2 bedroom a:nd den p l u s family
room home on a big corner lot with room
for that boat or trailer. Lots of wood panel·
jng, large birch fireplace over size double
car garage. There's much more. Please call
for showing, 546-2313.
CORONA DEL MAR
con AGE-BY -THE-SEA
A sm all 2 bedroom famil y room home. Just
a block to the ocean with an ocean view.
Only $47,500. Call quick. 673-8550.
WIFE PLEASER
Read this ad completely and consider this
five bedroom home on a quiet tree lined
street in Newport Beach for $44,950. This
charmer has a secluded living room, spacious
family room, and a modern ~unny kitchen.
Now for the way of life: the back yard (it's
171 fee t across the back) has a fantastic
patio, lanai, a lawn. a la\vn volleyball area,
and 1 pool. You must see this before you
buy, Call 546·2313
THE
TWINKLING LIGHTS
wilt fascinate you. The fresh ocean breeze
will refresh you, and the spacious well-en·
gi neered floor plan will please you. 4 Bed·
rooms, 2lh baths. walnut cabinets, tinted
glass and red brick patio, $57 .500. A Lusk
Harbor View Hills View home. Call 673·8550
ASSUME A $24,500,
7'12 °/o FHA LOAN
On this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home in beautiful
Costa Mesa. Large pool size back yard with
boat or trailer access. Only $6.300 down and
low monthly payments. Call now .......•
Just listed. 546-2313.
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
FIXER-UPPER
2 Bedrooms + 1 Bedroom rental -$240
per month income -needs cleaning & paint·
ing. -$22.500. Try 10 % down. -Call now.
646-7171.
MODEL HOME CONDITION!
Beautifully done and only 11 months new.
A roomy 2 bedroom. den and dininJ? room
home on an elevated corner lo~ in Newport
Beach. Only $43,500 (including the land)
with outstanding terms. Call 673·8550.
DOLL HOUSE ~PPEARANCE,
LOW PRICE AND TERMS
or this sharp 3 Bedroom home will please
you. PLUS tile kitchen. l 1h baths & com·
pletely fenced front and rear yards. Only
$23,950 FHA and VA terms. Vacant and
available. Drive by 2216 Meyer Place and
tell us what you think. 673·8550
NEWPORT IEACH COSTA MESA
Decorators delight -buy this extra sharp
resale with 3 bedrooms and family room. En·
joy a covered patio and separate play yard.
Convenient to schools and shopping. Just list·
ed -hurry! Full price $27,950. Call 540-1151.
9uality Built
2000 Sq. ft., 4 bedroom, family room, dining
room, oversized family kitchen with elec
bltns. Located on quiet street near park and
schools. Owner moved and must sell. Shake
roof, decorator block wall, sprink1ers, green-
house and large redwood dee~. Just reduced
to $36,950. Call 540-1151.
2918 Bristol St., Costo Mesa
540-1151
-------
General 1000Gonor•I 1000
* * * * * * TAYLOR
LIDO LDVEL Y I
Wonderful open feeling in this 3 & den
functional home w/large sunny patio. Low
interest rate on assumable loan. $69,500
NIGHT AND DAY I
This is the one! Blu~ sky makes it clear that
this 4 bdrm home will look as good in the
still of the night. $49,950
''Our 25th Year"
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 S•n Jo•quin Hills Ro•d
NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910
**'****
1 · BRING YOUR
BATHING SUIT!! , Sunshine
1000
Special
3 Bedroom, 2 bath home with
Immediate Occupancy NEWPORT HEIGHTS
Vtry shllrp 3 BR. 2 ba. home
on lge. corner lot. Quick pas.
sess. Price reduced to $33,500
(Some Models)
VA or FHA & Conventional Financing
RANCHO !A CUESTA
OPEN EVENINGS
2407 E. Coast Hwy.
Opposite MacArthur Blvd.
AYRES lfOMES SINCE 1905 MODELS AT BROOKHURST & ATLANTA
HUNTINGTON BEACH
{J 11 I\ ,\ Ill II II
lll .. 111 \ I \I'. 968-2929 e 968-l ll8, 11 A.M . lo 8 P.M.
Open Daily
328 AHso
1000
f'. . ' .
MESA VERDE
CUSTOM
Get In The Swim Beautilul trtt-lined cul.de.
In lh is "'Cather • beat the sAf: area near country club.
Adult occupied 4 bedroom heat le buy this sparkling
pool Mme in "Cambridge beauty "-'ith 3 baths, Immae-
u]ate thru-out. Manicured ~tales". Really beautifuJ,
fre:i1h1y redecorated .-:c adult-dichondra lawn with lots of Newport Heighb h '" <· ba ky nl I Be occupied Asking only $34 950 s ru . -xy C a pa.
1 '°h rnerbol aeon w/high FHA loan· ' tio wi!h waterfall and pond. s ort , ock from · This place is fantastic. Let's
Cliff Dr. O L Th. 0 trade up your equity.
By Owner $36.500 At o~ly ;:e mo ~~/op~:n lo Wa Iker & Lee S~~ious 3 bedi:oom. 2 bath, buy at just $28:950. Striking
living ~m Wlth f1rcplace, b'Opical yard surrounding Realtors !~rge dining area ovcrloo~· inviting pool. Lush new shag 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
g lo_vely secluded l~n~i, carpets thruout. 4. & Family. 54· 9491 O 'til 9·00 PM carpehng, drapes, bu11t.1n :>-pen ·
electric kitchen. Garage olf Sales People Needed E.astside Cott.a ·Mes•
alley with electric eye open. ASSUME $22,300 FHA LOAN,
t'r. Nicely landscaped cor-$190 Mo. includes taxes.
ner lot. &S.CS·S880 Freshly painted 3 Bdrms, 646-40.~2 548-14.4.4 MWcinlnthMll 11,i Baths on choice HARD-
GE REALTY WOOD FLOORS. 12' x 16'
Alllmal.....,,CM sunken Rumpus Room. Cor·
ncr Jot. 2 separate yard5. $21,000 and no
down payment
You can buy this nice home
even ii you don't have a VA
eligibility. 3 BR, huge trees,
only 2 blks to shopp"g. ~
portunity for the investment
buyer.
Nichols Real Estate
546-9521
• J 11. NICHOi~
GI NO DOWN Priced to sell at only $26,500.
CALL TODAY FOR DE-
T All.S. Low Down to Others M. ~-LABORDE, R1tr. 646-05.» Eves. 646-4.579
4 f\1iles to ocean, absentee Lu xury and Ou•lity
owner mu~l sell . Lovely 3 Thi;, Dover Shores Ivan Wells
bedroom, 2 bath home with home with View has 3180 sq.
a large patio w/bltn BBQ. rt of living i...rea. 4 Bedrms,
Corner lot ~ith room for a 3~ BA, panelled fam rm w/
boat or tra1le!. \Valk to all lrplc & wet bar. High beam.
schools. $27.950. ed ceiling living rm .• "coun-
& Sparkling s\\1imming pool.
and !"njoy lhi!'I beautiful
wrought iron enclot.ed heat-
ed pool. Large plltio le la\\'n
for your other outdoor activ-
l!ies -all overlooked by
WlFE • SAVING kitchen &:
family room. Immaculate 2
story home on quiet ClJL.
DE-SAC in Newport Beach.
4 large bedrooms & 3 baths.
Best of all .•. only $48,000,
covered enclosed patio, Bi& I!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
S19,000 Gov't loan c:an be as-GREAT AREA
•
COATS try" kit w/brkfst area.
WALLACE S108,900. Roy J. Ward, Real-
REAL TORS tor, 646-1550, open da.ily.
Colesworthy
& Co.
REALTOR
Newport Beach Office
1028 Bayside Drive
6754930
FIXER UPPER
Hett'• the chanee you've been
waiting for. Spacious three
Bdnns, one and ~ bath
home, with elKtric built in
kitchen and dining room.
Double garage and large
fenced yard. '.fhe home needs
BOme cement woric pr1inting
and cupeti11&. A S S U M E
LARGE 5'4 % F.H.A. LOAN wrm LOW r..tONTHLY
PAYr>i1ENTS. Full price only
sumed by anyone. Payments 3 bedroom, 2~ baths, dbl. Open Eveningi PRIVACY • WESTCLIFF
are $181 a month 1or every-garage • LO'l'S or DEEP • 962-4454 • 4 Bedroom, dining room, fam-
thing. Full price PILE CARPETS and match· ~::;;;;:::·;;, ily room • custom built $24,500 Ing drapes. J\1odern gas around serene patio, 3 car
built-ins, Two story home! '\il:f.Y~•.i•O: 1,95'""'.ooo'. + large "-'Orkroom. Newport
•t
Fairview
646-1111
l•nytime)
HORSE LOVERS'
PARADISE
Y ti', horse property here In
Costa Mesa. Huge one half
acre lot. large 3 bedroom
ranch house, formal dining
room. family room. What a
buy at $25.750.00. Low • low
down. This won"I last.
5'16-8640. Rlln:.
All this for $21,900 PRICE. ..~--· .,,.111 submit your 1e.rn111 . Seller PETE BARRm
'viU listen.
W I k & L Really 642-5200 a er ee SPECIAL SPANISH
4 Bedrm, formal dining rm REPOSSESSIONS Real to~
2790 Harbor Blvd. al Adams
545-0165 Open 'til 9 Pt.f
Needs Fixing •
Like paint, yard \\-Ork &
.. TLC'', 5 Br's, dining & farn.
ily room. Quiet bac:k bay
area. Offered at $34,750, but
your oUer may buy it.
Sales People Needed
&5"·5110 ---GEllEALTY -·-,ti&
and huge game room au on Sparkling clean homes, ~me
one floor! Quaint courtyard newly painted & carpeled. 2,
entrY. low maint yard&. cust 3, 4 & 5 bdrms, Some with
construction thruout. lmmac-pools. FHA-VA conv. terms.
ulateilome,_near-golf course. from Sl7,000 to $40,000.
Owner anxious at $54,950. Collins &. Watts Int'.
8843 Adams Ave. 962-5523
FHA TERMS
3 Bednn. 1 % bath, crpts, === drps. ep;l~ patiO, . ~blr.:
GOSH-AIN'T IT garage. :All in A-1 cond1110n. TREES 'fREE.51 $24.~.
. PURTY? Wells-Mc:C•rdie Rftrs.
125.000. The bargain you've 1---=,.,,=·:.."="='.::""::':...· c=·=":..· --1 LOTS OF LOT """ wo;1;ng for! -ACT Now, Es1ate Sale Ch'""""'~'"'"~"'''" ih;,
Paris .In the .Sp~ng haM't 1810 Newport BJvd., C.M.
anything . on .this four-bed 548_7729 Eves: 544.0634
room Ca.hforn1a n1odern, Ir1 .,.~""!!!~""!:""!:"!'~""I
has improved from ils orig.I' 2 ON A LOT
inal slate be)'Ol'ld your fond·
est dreams. Al $31 ,95() you One large 3 bedrm &: OJ1f!
roulfl n o t duplicate this Jaf'Re 2 bedrm on lot that's
J\lesa del Mar beauly. 72:<175, in excellent condition M. M. LA BORDE, Rltr. 3 bedroom st~l. 2 run bA!hs.
646-0SS."i Eves. 642-7438 ( Oceanhnt) brit:ht and modern kitchen,
READY
FDR A BARGAIN ?
OWNER MUST SACRIFICE
this ntarlJ new 4 BR, home
located Jn one of Corona de.I
Mar's moat exclush1e 111.n!!l.S,
A mmt 81!\1! al only $62,900.
~
ColdMl. lllli!mr
\au_th Coast
OPEN HOUSE --"'-_.......... _.._i Mon .• \\led, • Fri, 3 to 5,
l»-0700 2430· -i~li Fe.rnll'!llf, O>rMf M:I
clean and neat throughout.
HUif' 57 x 13.5 lot. Steal Ill
$23.950.00 No down vets.
MG-8660 Ritn.
2629 Ha.rbor. C.i\f.
DANA POINT
INCOME HOMES
"-;:;;;;;:;;:;;,I . IOl!I ol lrtts & shnihs. Rr.-P.AtJL.Wlh'i duced from $37,500 to $34,500 .
C:ilXA.BAlf Owner Ill muat te:ll! Glen
a &.J.TT Queen, l:lerita&e Real ~tale
540-llSt.
Macnab-Irvine
Realty O:impany SEE YOUR REALTOR
HARBOR VIEW HOME FOR YOUR BIG FREE
Beautifully la.nfll!Cll.ped, dcc-1-::=N:E\:•:CO:M::ERS=:K:IT==
orated A: lushly carpeted 41·
IJedroom hOmt' J!IU!I lam C family room, 2~ bath,, 2 ost1 Mn• 1100
fireplaces. approx, 2300 1111.1---------
ft. i\1a.fl)' extras,. Owners WILL SELL
4 ...... ..,.. l'em. Rm.
Palos Vimlet stone breplace
ls mqtlllkellt, •ntry h&ll, run dlninc room;-2 bathJ.
built.ft. no do'Ait. ~)12}
T •rt.ell 1'55 H•rbor
2629 Harbor, C.M. 1700 Newpor+ llvd, 2790 H•rbor Blvd.
We1t1My Income Hornet •44•7171 54•·ll I l Weit 1kle Costa ~1e!lollo 3 brd-
WILL SELL
GI DR FHA
Mar DYplex, 2 bedrooms
each, South ol Hwy, Near
shopping A beach, F.~f..Tar·
bell. Al!k for Naomi 540-rno.
* dtE'ANFRDNT *
New 1:ri-plex $66.500. Jo'abulous
occlln view. One, 3 bedroom:
bWQ, 2 b:cdnn;Jarae. deluxe
uniJa, AIM> lll!'Wn other new
1 10 4 unit bldgs. Ul,950 to
$69,500. See 33792 Copper
Lantern. Builder &U-4905, busine~ nece!~ilatts leaving GI OR FHA
area, SM.500. \\'e~r side 't:CMta Mu. 3 bed-
Say )'OU .., It In tt..
DAILY P!LO'r!
1'RIPL!:X · 1>7.:;oo CORONA DEl MAR INVESTMENTS """"' • lr<1hl> "''""" with
Beat .Easlskie Cos1a r>il~ Jo. ))2 t-4•rguirif• 2714 H1rbor l lvd ., pa~lrw and cupetin& In
don. "lfome11 ~·Ith a.n 1,.. •71-1550 Suite 201 , Cost• Mist livfna room.~HAS very la~ ('Ome". Xl35 Tu.sun rror. 546 231 L tenc@d yard perfecl lor child· W~10·" Pl•-1. eu;ld•r • 9 --~ 2 ~ ~-11 \IU\I JIU '"" . l't1'1 &Ill.I pt'!tl, $ 1,.JW, .....
642--4905. -~nlng1 a n d "·ttkcnd.s. Experience Eliminates Experiment 6atur'day·DIME-A-Ul'IESl1 &.,~.;.,~~~~~~~~~--~~~~·-~673"6S:,:::::..,· ~~~~~
*DUPLEX*
B•lboa Penln1UI•
$15,000
George Will i1mson
Re•ltor
673-4JSO 645-15'4 EvH.
Beginner's Bart•ln 642-1235 61>3210 rooma . freshly painted with
$16,500 F.P. 5~S9 A$1!un1abl•. ~~r.o!!'":'~~~~~I paneling and carpeting tn Rent fOf' $11.2 PITI \lhlle Ofo·~·1o; for ltaM", -1 J14iv living rom. lla.<11 vtl')' larp
hide. equity in 2 Br. 10~'0-0Uiee11, m:pt room, air ftll'ICed yard perfect for cblfd.
house. Rltr. &t.5-1070, &12-5140 ~-Ample prk'g. Xlnt klc. rrn t1nd peti. Ul,500. Call
l•chenmyer Re•ltor e\•enlnc.s a n d weekend.I,
SaturdQ" • DfME..A·LINES! 646-3928 or $4.5-343.\ fi7).6.l68. ~~~~_:..;;..:..;:.;1 ....c:..::::::::.~~~~
'
-~~••~1"""£1~0~•"'!'1~1~.~•~•....,.•--.:"'!•""'~"~·~•-•~·~--•~""""e~•""'~"""''•'t""'~·P&~e,...;•:wll"!t-??"1&"'!'-~1~-••"'" ... '''""" .. __ .,.,,..,, __ ,,.~--~':!~""""'•-~1~• ... •~•~~~-~~,..,,~..,..,.,,~.~·-• ... •~•--·~~~~~
•
-
r "
TJtsday, Stpltmbtr 29, 1970 -alil V rrLOT
, .. H,..o_u_s1"".s_,o_R'"-'"'-'-l~l'--ll'-H-'-O.;;.US;;..;l:o.;S..;F..;O""R'-'$"-A"'L;:;l _,,H"O;,;U"'_S=-ES'-'-PO.-.R_-_SA,..L-:E-:::--' .. H;;..;O.;;.U.;;.SE;;.;S;...F;...O;..;ll;;..S;;.;A_;;;L;;:Ec..." RENTALS -RINTALS • RINTALS RENT L • -•c Houses FuN1lshod H-Unlund....., Hoines Unfumlshod ~ fumlshod Aptt. ,....,,.....,
Cosio -· 1100 Unlvorolt\< Pork 1217 Hunllr leoch 1400 Son Clo"'""h 1710
HOUSES fOR SALE l Sl'ORY tttidt..,. 4 BR, l lllolboo lsllnd 2W 0-tol .-Unlnrslt\< Pork 3237 H .... lnvtGn looci. -6400 Huntl ........... -
• OPIN DAILY 1.5 • SEE US • • • PICTllRESlllJE SETTlllG lull Al hoU baihl, pvt ao-1010 SO . ..,..,...., 4 BR. Sii •
'Til ~l-MMDne-"49'-VA. !:.• • h te&t!!ion ot ~ C@l.I lo heh. Magntftctnt ba. watutront hofne Ii: 2 Br.
loan. s1<a "''mo. Red""" oama-io ..i.1;;-u.1,.,. PRIVATE & S-ECLUDm tow;-186;!!00:-o.,..,, n•1 '"'· -'"'· Docl<, sru . . 132-7800
3 Br, W/W cplll,.drpa, Jm. Park It 1'urUe Rock . Per. 871-8300, .f92..21U by •PRt.-· C:rundy, RJtr. 642-4620 <f BR. 2 Bath. $225 •• ~
l OR• 4 BR Townhte, on
Greenbelt . Best _of
P.!wT)'thirir. Jm; 4 3 4 1
SMdburi Wy. 83.1-005.3. , ~a Quin/a .JJ.ermo:Ja
med po111euioni Only $22 . haPfl we ha.ve the right one .. .,,,.. ....
950 1984 Federal Av • tor YOU~ · Yront yard privacy behind S•n Ju.n t 11guna ... Ch 2705 yard. Patio, double Pl'*lt. trvJM 3231 Casual estate living. Enter La Quinta Heflio Call; Patrick Wood ~2300 brick pillared ten~. "Old C1pl1tr1no . lnS bulll•ll'll, dn11>t1,. peta: & ---------1 mosa's lush &reen atmosphere· & stroll tre•
• 8111 Haven, Realtor World'. charm. R?mantic ...... Le•M/S..le l'umllhed cb1l~n ok, Carner lot, BR.AND NEW Home. ad· lined walk ways to your apt.
2111 E Cout CdM 673-3211 muter bedroom JW,te with 5 ACRE estate I.and or hone Lovely le•ch Condo 1.-.-:T_E_L_E"c=-T_R_E:-N:-D---:· I jolni~ Orange Grove, 3 ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED
· ' bath, ~•ide Uvlng room. ranch, w/nice view, adJ , AvaU 5ept JS for ltue thnt * leot The HllGt * Br/2 Ba, lrplc, D/\V, I BR. Unf. $150 -FWn. SllO
E-Side Tripi6: 2 BR.'s each. 12' breakfast room, slldin&: other Htate pucels, $35,000 June orJonatr. 2 BR, 2 BA, crplgJdrpa, landscaped &: 2 BR. Unf. $175 -Furn. S210 aarages, lnccl yards. lrcome glass 10 private enclosed pa. w/$10,000 dn will release upper with livlnr. dining, BY SWIM?.UNC DAILY. Neat fe nced, U9S/mo. c "11
$405 per mo. Principals lat Wetlern Bank Blda:. tio. Minutes to beach. Value deal' bldg site lar 1001'/t kitc~n areas main noor ov. 2 BR, i 1ove, rebig, fenced 213/M2-7~37 or 714/83i...5792 3 Sp.ac. fir. plans, decor. furnisbiJ:l&I: live
only , By Owner. $38,500 or Unlve1"sity Park packed willt terms to sell financing. Bkr. 493-1706 or erlooking beautiful poo l. patio + POOL! $130/mo. .withi n romantic setting w/fun or privacy. ~~~~.,". P .Jn CM area. D•y 13~101 N!thtt qUick. HW'T')I! Diii.i '114 494-8100-Large 2 car rort plu!I •tor· Horn•Finder1 MS.2951 Corona del M.r 3250 Terraced pool, · pri. sunken gas BBQ's w/ ~~ seculded se1ling compl. w/Ramada & Foun-982.sss.5. Dena Point i740 age & complete: laundry la· LANDLORDSI I AVOCADO Sl • 2 hr. 2 ba, tain.
1.EASE/Opfon 3 Br., 2 Ba.. fORES-T l OLSON dllll••-AU .... uttlully • VaCMcy Prob! End..i xlnt home. l..rJ rooms, easy Owner LHving Ar•• · NEW C\l!llom re 1 id en ce completely tumished, linens, FREE iupply e::;-qualified t.m. bram1, patio&. Adults. * Color co-ord. ~it w"/ in dlr•ct ll9htin9.
care yard. Net1r shop'g a: ~lust sell quickly' 4 BR 2~ $.~.950 • one mUe from new china, elc, U de&lre:d. Only tenant1 at no cost to you. Lease:. $250, 642-1216 *• OB tlvxe ran9• & ovens *c'' 1ila9 crpt9 •
.chool3. ~ option. be., 2 trplci. J~mac. ~ncl. Inc. ~altDra Harbor entrance:. 3.; ii 11 fl)') steps to private beach. Aak for LEE or OLA 2 BR. frplc, attach iar. l&e onvs sto r•9• sp•c • + ov. carport ~7823. Prof~s. landscaped, $32,900 19131 BrookhW"!lt Avt. Aurelio Blvd. 642-4905. Tennis court &: 2nd pool al· 132"'600 patio, Adulh, no pet$, Very * Sculptured m•rble pullm1n & til t b•ths
LGE. R·2 ~t w/older house. e Red-Hill Re•lty l~=H~u~n~ti~,,.,,~~n~Be~ac~h~:-1 :;:=<;-"'-<:;--';···"··'"· ====;:;;: so on property with gorg· ::i::lilii.,-,.:--"il'ii:::O:-· I ,":::':;"~·!$2~15.~67::;!H;:;523:::__,,_-* Ele9•nt rtcr••tion room.
Only $18.500 owner/Bkr. Univ. Park Center, Irvine NOT eD•llo NEW Condominium 1950 eous laOOsct1ping thru-out. * KING SIZE * 3 BR, 2 ba. 2·story, 2-car. FURNISHED .MODELS OPEN DAIL y Eves. 67;....aool or 673-9215. Cali Anytime 833--0820 Mn Easy acct!• to 1uper mkt, SHARP 3 BR + Rumpus Yard. "R!!nt braullful home Blk from Huntington Cente r, San Diego j ;3:-BiiiRRiho;;mm.o<on;;E600ix:-wjjij'•l1i001c.l!",;;~;;;;,;;,;;~~;,;,; ... ,i SHOCKING~ $IS,500. large 2 shopping, etc, J.125 month, Room + 2 Balhs. Stow, app1'0x $275/mo. STJ..5&55. Frwy .• Goldenwest ColleRe.
$20,000 F. P. Jmmed. poss. BY Owner, 3 BR + BEACH -$19,950 bedroom, ;_~1 th wit h cozyl winter ~sis. Will consider fenced yard. Kiddie! & pels Bolboo lsloncl 3-355 San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. ou.
21131 0 L--fireplace. LCD est terms, aw l "---••· hi range. enormous ui.mu11. tm ea5e.purcnaaeorouuig ok.$200/mo.MOVETOOAY~ Beach 3 blks. to Holt; W, on Holt to .,.
COLLEGE Pk. 3 BR, 1'4 to·.iinhse. on greenbe:lt, has Not new, but only 8 yrs. ~·"·d:;t~oa~~~t::~ &ale. Aduils cnly. Refs. Home-F inders '45-2951 3 OR 4 BR., furn. or unf. LaQuinta Hermosa 714: 847-5441
BA. Owner. 282 Princeton be!t of everythlng. ~ 4341 un11n0', Fantastic value: nestl. 4~2152 AM or 837-079l any· FOR RENTI I \Vinter or ""arly Sandbu w 833--00.i3 ..---... "STARTER" or retirement · ..--Or, $29,900. 545-3260 · rg ay, ed among 2-story home1 val· lime. .., ! • 2 BR Home• In Or· ,673-l:n'.l Island Realty __ _ 'I liv\ni with all tterea~:ons ., .,. ued at $35,000. 3 BR'i, 2 fu, and exterior maintenance REN'rALS ange Cnunty. Rentals 1tart. 2 BR/2 ~ & den, Yr lse. Coi t• M••• 4100 B•lbN 4300 : M••• Verda 1110 Coro·na del Mar 1250 baths. Gourmet kit. with Ic.L . 1 ded w 't 1 t call L.ge. 4 bdrm. & den,. wl1h ing at $l2350 Furn or Un ~1iddle age cpl $250/mo . l-;~-:;;~c;-;:;;;;;:;;;;--1---,,-------es! builtins. Cloud soft car-~:, ~ · on as • aohuium, u n fur n i shed furn Aak r~r BoNNI · 138 Topu. 67J..-O~. ' CclOMPLETE Furn, Ve r y BACHEWR. U t 11 pct 1
ON THE FAIRWAY .,...... 67S ]OOQ pets. Just take over existing I 1 home. 3 baths. 2 fireplaces. ' 132 7800 · _ _ ean 1 or 2 Br. apt. w/ gar $75/mo. Bach Man pre.ter-i
Custom built, 4 bednn. fam. · • ~ loan with payments much L•rwln Rea ty • nc. Exe. ocean vu. 1 yr, least at • Huntington Ba•ch MOO 6: patio, Until June 15. J'f'd, Private be a c b ! I
Uy room, 2 big fireplaces. \''e don't boast about our ser. cheaper than rent. Better 1 ==96l=-6=-9U~_•_n~y_t_im_•__ $475 MONTI·! * Bar'C)Clin Hunt,tn ~ ···-6~2562, 9-4; aft 4:SO, 67:\.-6790. I
This beautiful home over. vice except · 1. "''e've been hurry? Call (7141 962-5585. RENTALS FURN ISHED RENTALS CHECK oui this LARGE 2 2 br du ;plev.w/w crpts, drplli, ~1974, STI-B "'oodland, 1 BR. Furn apt. Util's pa!d.
Jooks the J7th fairway ol serving the Harbor area 21 FOREST l OLSON Houses Furttiahed 1 bdnn. apt. at Woods Cove, Bi·., 2 Bath, stovt>, fenced fenced back yard, gar new t--~=-~-=-· l $125 mo Adults. No pets, 3101
Mesa Verde Goll -Course. years. 2. A high percentage ~. patio; 150 yds. to d S.!50/ p11.in1, blr.n kit. No pe1J:, $150 * LOLITA GARDENS E. Balboa Blvd. Balboa.
6•,, u:sum&.b'-loan. By own. of our ,.lient, h•ve heen --G j 2000 •-h Com I t I !u · b patio. crpts, rps. mo. 842 1~~ • -1 u:: " ,.. enera ...,ac . Pee Y rnia • Hom•Findera 645-2951 • .. .,., ...... ve y 1 & 2 BR. Paneling,
er. 3036 Java Rd. 5404095. !erred by people who have Inc. Realtors ed. · 2 BR. 1'.'ear Park, y,·atl to bltns, !errace patio. Or Unf. Lido Isle 4351 1
$63,500. done business with us be-19131 Brookhurst Ave. WATERFRONT $1~ MO. LEASE • \!o'all, drpt;, no pets Oean. Gai; &: wtr pd, 12192 W,
DIVORCE SALE Jore Huntington Beach PJ'ER & FLOAT 2 bdrms., fireplace, exc. t"or &l>fll, (tl3J ·J.1S..'1882 Edlnger, nr Harbor. 320 Nord BeaC'h Apll. tmn.
675.."IOOO OPEN EVES. SOLD OUT' 3 Bedrm., :Z bath, formal din. ocean view, a few slepg tu 8]2 7800 11.f11'r 6PM. ~ Garage. ,l br t.m-$250,
Spacious 4 bedrm & family 2407 E. Coast Hwy. • ing rn1. fireplace. w/w the sand at Victoria Beach, • .;;;~~;:,=====ll$i22551p>;;~w;;;;kk:&i'UU.-I bachelor $200. Avail rmw. 3 bath home on lge corner Opposite MacArthur Blvd. crpts, and furnished com· $2'25 MO. LEASE $l80 · 3 BR. Fenced yard. Pll.· •r " P w i n t e r rates. 642-4097,
Jot. OwrlE'rs say sell NOW? NEED LISTINGS BADLY plete. Obie gar. Leai;e (Inly. Lge. studio apt., de-ck ,v/ tio. Double garage, Srove, Fountain V•lley 3410 Bachelor&: 1 hr, TV & maid 5J5...fi69S
Submit offers _ Asklng 6 Houses Sold in 2 Days R -' ocean view, located at Woods carpets, drapes. Good fam· 3 BR 2 B serv. avail. 450 Victoria,'=-===·======! S500 per mo. ea.itOI' .1 ho , A, fam rm, frplc, c ~1' · 1 ·
$42,950 1.1ANY 'BUYERS WAITING! 642·4~. Cove. Very close to the 1Y mt'. bHns, dsh\!o'f>hr, fncri y11.rd.t --~--~---=-
PE RRON 642·1n:I 847..8507 e 431-3769 e 642-0427 beach. -.,.,,,-T,,E°"L"E""'·,,T_R7E_N,,D==· i S235 mo. Tradewinds Rity l'urn Bachelor & I BR. $150 • BEACH 11.rea. 2 Br. $135 MO. LEASE fBR. 2 BA Condo. all bltns. 841-SSll Exceptiona.lly nice! BAYFRONT Duplex: 3 BR/
5 BR, 3 BA, formal dining, Duplex. Elec & WU' pd. MISSION RLTY. Ph 49f.m31 Close to schools & shoppg. Below rental value! lower, 4 BR I upper, Sandy
shag carpets. huge pool siz·liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Fam.B'!icer. ~ 985 so. Coast Hwy., Laruna Pool & rec facilities. $220 L•gun• Be•ch 3705 ruo Newport Blvd, CM. beach, NR, Villa&'e. Eves.
ed lot, one block to Mesa MARVELOUS VIEW ~~~~==~'.::~ 3 BR • Fom, water, trash & mo. Avail 1£1..1-70 C a-t I,---------e NASMU Palms 2 Br , ~'"13-~"2!l9=~=~~~-=--Verde golf course. Owner. . $100 Ulil pd Ba h 1 "" , · , : Qui'ck sale. 30 0 a Y :ml Bayside Dr. Beaut. • • c e or. gardener, North end, 1-~ Heritage RE ~1151 ~ BR, 2 BA, fireplace. yard, apt. Furn & Unf, Pool, ping· NEARLY NE\V 3 llr, 2 Ba.
p.:issession. $42 500 546-3642 shake roof l·sty. 3 Br. 4 ha. $11,SOO OCEANFRONT. blki; to bch, Ref Req'd, No $140. 3 BR in 4·plex. Yard. buillins. $285.· 499~133 1 , pong, BBQ, shady lawns. all elec/kil: trplc, patio,
t""===--· --~--t waterfront home :xlnt swim. 3 Bedroom 2 bath, 60x100 lot, _ _:B::•~~::;'•:.r;_-,c'34-698_:c_=''-~• 1 pet!I. $225 mo/winter. 1·213-R/0 & refrig. Family ok. 4!W-4746. In E. 22nrl St. 642--·3645 BBQ. Also 4 Br. 3 Ba. ~
REPUBLIC b'i·level 3 BR + ming beach. Ne~Jy redecor. elec bltn range & oven, Era. $130 • UTIL pd. Nr ocean. 2 ~13n Broker. 534-6980 $90 & up. Nice 1 &. 2 Br. Sept.June 638-3170, 539-8831.
de_n, 2 frplc, l&e fam rm_ , $175,000 SHOWN BY APPT. tor disposal in sink, wall to Br Ou lex Child ok D I U f 39 5 ·f d I -• G D Y t. .._ . P · · OCEAN front home, 3 BR, 2 $165-Util pd. 2 Br. """--lf'x. up e xes n urn. 7 tra1 en. A u 1,. o ... y. no 1 BR, Apt. w/kitchen. ar. in rm, m rear pa,,.,.. Bill Grundy, Roolt ... • wall crp.,, drpo, forced air Broker 534-6980 ••• ., 132 \V Wil ... ~11 ' "·'ho& ( /f. -I .,..., """ -· Ba. Avail. Nov, l·April l. OCEANFRONT. Children ok. pets. · son .....,...,., avail. 1271,, Ruby, PB> rear w ire pit .,...,,,""". 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 6424Ql heat, fenced, landscaped, · 642--7364 $1-10 -UTIL pd. Bacrie!Or apt. Bethke Realty 494-2858 Broker 534.6980. DELUXE 3 Br. 2 bath crp. or 642-126.i l!!land. 1-,;:~;;_;======,l•~'l'l'~~~~~~!P lll Avail now. Broker. $175. Clellfl 2 BR rotlage, =========I drJ>ll'. lrplc & gara g e AVAIL OcL 5. Lge 1 Br.1-==========I
New rt Be•ch 1200 HARBOR VIEW * 534-6980 * close to to\\'ll & heach. Cost• Mes• 3100 Newport Heights area, close fum. $145. Pool &. carport. Huntington h•ch 4400
po 4 BR., 2'" ba. ~alnut paneled 962-4471 ( :;::,) 546-1103 * * 494-9323 * * lo shopping anrf schools. 1846 Placentia, See mgr No. COUNT THE fam. rm.: din. rm., frplc. Rentll1 to Sh•re 2005 i =R~E-N~T-A~L.:;S;c;,;:::.. ___ ,4 IBR, 2 BA W/W cpls. Callafler6pmM5-8395. II.
Anxiou9 out of town owner! RARE OPPORTUNITY Custom drps. Bit-ins. Floor l==°'=~.,:--------1--,,,====,-==-IC)ATS $65.500 Big 2 story, 3 bednn +den. GIRL 24, child 2 yrs share 3 Hou1e1 Unfurnished to ceiling stone frplc, Lge RENTALS BEAUTT.Jo-ULLY FURN. ON ·BEACH!
· GI BR CM -me w/,.me 1 --• ~ S250 Aplt. Fumlshod _ 2 Br, bet1m ceil, htd pool. Fabulous NE\VPORT HAR· MAL."P'Olt Priced under appra1581. • ' '"' · erK...,.,. yan• m 0 · 1--'-----'--e Single apts from $165
BOR VIE\V fron1 th• .. •P••---.,N ~ or FHA buyers • the owner Low rent. Lge tncd yard . Gonorol 3000 Security & Cleaning depo6it G I adlls, no pets. $155. 64;:_~ • 2 BR Furn. From -.., ~ • .1 he! t Pets OK. Any hour 646-8150. $300 213· 835-7319 ener• 4000 BONUS ARRANGEMc..1~ •. -
ious 3 bedroom home. Wood-IJi·lll w1 I P pal yEyour COM• -t --·• ~~· ~--~----'---------l BR, Trailer House $115 ""r • 2 BR unfut.n $260 burning an I c K FIRE· The Rea state ar YOUNG business man •'""-'5 3 BR. l"amily rm. w/frplc, , -.,... Ct1rpets-drapes-&hwuher
PLACE, ch!'!l'ry kitchen, 2 GREAT VIEWI Call 847-8531 roommale for 4 b~. Balboa bltn~. lrg gar. w/\vork RENT fURNIJUR£ mo incl'~ utll . $60 depos. heated pool.gauna.tennil
baths and ALLEY ACCESS Of harbor & ottan, Attr. split R d d 52000 Island home w/p1er. $150. bench &. storage eahineti;, req'd. !';18-4779 rec room-ocean ~
for your boa1 or trailer. A level home on R-3 5100 sq. e uce 67!)...5388. RENTAL FINDERS gan:lerx>r & wtr Incl. No, * DIRECT TO TENANT l BR. pool Ulil pd. Adults, no pa.Uos-ample parldna.,
"t.1illion Dollar View" for fl . lot. Ideal for 4 apt. units. , SHARE my Cdm hnme JX"IS. $l75. l~t & la~t + 24-Hr. Delivery ~ts. Nr shpg. $140/mo. Security guards.
s:m.500! . $200.000. 2501 Ocean Blvd., Owner1 Lois/Your Gain w/employed lady 2 5· 3 S. * Homes depos. 548-9509, 646-4896 100% Purchase Option 5-iS-3348 or 6Th-l650. FURN. also Avail.
W lk & L CdM. By app'I. only. Lovely 4 bedroom \Vilh many 67J...2564 aft 5Pt.1 *Apartments LEASE/Option 3 Br., l ha., Complete 1 BR Apt as ATIRAC. Furn. Studio. $120/ HUNTINGTON a er ee Call: 6424620 extras. HURRY~ 1.fURRY! ROOMMATE WANTED! xlnt home. Lrg rooms. easy Low as $2".Z/mo. mo .• Adults only, oo pe:ls. ~Hl \Vel';lcliU Dr. Bill Grundy, Re•ltor HAFFDAL REALTY -FEM., COM AREA. * Roommates care yard. Near shop'11: & 30-Day Minimum 213.'i E:ldcn. St-e l\1~. Apt , 6. PACIRC
6'6-Titl , *· . DUJI, _LE)( * 842-4405 * 67~1182 * CALL 645..()111 ~it. S,.._$500 opt~n. * WIDE VAR!El'Y NlCE 1 Bo'. Dplx. Qu;et, Sep. -
Open 'Iii 9:00 Pr.1 Loguno Bo-och 1705 SHARE my waterlro31>60nt home for inform•tion on tfies• ~-~-=---~ CUSTOM FURNITURE by gai-ages. Adults over 30.
7
.U Of7~~ ~~H.B. -=-='-=~~===.,--ITwo l ·Bdnns, Terrific Joe., 1 d k ,1 n ~ 'I bl RENT"LS 4.Br, 2 ha., $210 ml'l, Avall RENTAL No pets. 548-1021. Of lJl __ • -•· ~BEACH DUPLEX Walk to everything! North CUSTOM w$!50 mooc_-,7~ ~33'1 ..-·~· •v•i • • "" '' .-Oct. l . lst. list & $50 clean-e. open ........, pm~ -====~=====-l$1JO . E. aide 2 BR Duplex, 517 W. 19th St., CM. &tS-3481 l BR. $125. Pool. Spec. Managed by ONE LOT FROM OCEAN 2 of J-li.,..•ay. · -Range &. oven. Pafio, Ing depQSit. Located 301 I •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml Adull11. Ideal t o r Bachelor. wn1JAM WALTERS a>.
BR "' 3 BR \!o'ith lam rm. MORGAN REAL TY DESIGN Newport a..c:h 2200 $150. Studenl11 l BR cottage Hamtlton St. Call owner """From $35 Wk. 1993 Church. Cl\I. 54~963.1. l!!!!!!!!!!""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!"'!!PI
PLUS I BR&. Ba guest rm. 673-6642 675-6459 3 Bedroom 2 bath home Jn· w/ all utiJ pd. Stv/retrig. ~."'8--82SJ~LO=v=~=l.)'~~Cn~odo~.~M~ ... -LuxurySingleApts.Complele * 1 Br. furn Apt. Qu!tt 2 BR. Pool, Ad ul ta .
Xlnt condition. Top area for IMMED. POSSES. ,;de & oul cuslomizcd . ele· 6210 w. Oceanfront $185 • Huri)i on thl11 3 BR, l maid service hoUllewares .Adults. No pefiil'. 691-A VIC· Beaut/Quiet! UW I nc I
l t-"l 500 3 BR 1 •-BA h St ; 1 I Verde Country Club area . 3 • 1 -'-,..... cAa "'!'" SDJ/mo 17676 Cameron. !iv ng or ren 1ng . .., . Move right in. ,,.., =ntly, Brick patio & cedar Lrg 3 Br. 2 Ba. upper apt. me. v re r g, B 2 I linens, all util, heated pool, Oi "'' ....,.,, .,........., ""· 84.,121• • ''' 2•1• .. -··bl + tra e·· f 111 r. ~ Ba. Pool, pvt. patio. *"'9 CALL (!) · uvu e gar, ex rm .. siding. Double carved doors, $275 mo. urn. or w con-CALL 994.7577 $.113 mo. Ll"ase. Adul!s, 110 billiards, reslaurant. cock-Bo h 4_
'
frpl, 1'"/A heat. Ocean side cork pllnt>llng, qua"'"" tile & sider unfurnished. Winter pet•. 67, =28 taih. Newport •c """' 1 BR. refrig, bltna, •crptg, • _._ f h" Tak I k •. , al u•1093 knd for information on the1• ,,....,,., d f ~-~ ~IO .. ..,...., o 1way. ea 00 · massive stone fireplace. Se-rent · ~ or w s VILLAGE INN A Now Woy To Live rp.s, poo • near-""•...,. R EALTY MORGAN REALTY . RE-i213J•-1709 1v1il1ble RENTALS ••• 2 BR. Gar. Patio. Crpts, ,,._, Be h <"'"'3' -rmo adul'-nope"
Nt•r Ne,..port Po11 orri~e 673-6642 67~59 ~~~DgJ;;p~,~-ng. CA1.fE:-Shores _ deluxe, $1J5. Walk to ocean. Furn 1 drps, $loveJrehifit. Quiet .._. .. "BAL~cOA INN.,,, . .,.. OAinKWNo
00
wpoDrGt ABoRo,c,!!N ihdewi~s r:~ty 847-8su
BY OWNER BR apt. Singleg ok, trop ical .telling for adults :De.
WESTCLIFF AREA ~t~u;~~ B~~. J~ ~!'. ~ ;e;~y&d~~~~5r':. ~:j $130 . Nice 1 BR Condo. Pool. only. l blk to shops. Balboa 675-S74D APARTMENTS A~~~~s.1~1!. :·~
4 br. lrplc, bltns, crpt.s, drps, din rm + fan1ily tn\, 2 ba. .,_,,/TO/an, Nov t. Adultl! only. 675-5698 Encl. patio, Singles ok. $169/mo. 646-4430. REMARKABLY On l6rh Slreet btwn St. or 219151.h St, H.B.
sprinklers, pool . sized yard. New rugs & drapes. \Valk lo 3 br on Penln. 2-<:ar gar. $210. $150 . 2 BR furn front duplex. MONTICELLO -At tr a c UNBELIEVABLY Jrvine and Dover Dr, Util .
Nr schools. You own land. all schools & shop'g. $46.SOO. REAL ESTATE 675150091 5 10 6 pm, 219 J4th Fenced yard. Tols ok, furn/unf 3 br. 2 ba tv.'llhM.', EXTRAORDINARILY (714) 642-8170 ~c:J:~ROCEANra:·
VACANT. By ov.·nl'r. 642-8839. 1190 Glenneyre St. S22S • 3 + Fam nn hse. 2 BR. Bii.ioony, patio, pool $250. BEAUTIFUL BA YCLIFF MOTEL LINDBORG CO. ~2579
ONLY $38 500 St. bltns, 1rg yrd, Kld1ii/pct1. 968-2647. d A , I REMODELED Home + 494.9473 549-0316 O S FREEi V•I D1i1ereGar en pf$* LOW WEEKLY RATES*
L•gun• S.<1ch C705 642-1611 nr 642-9996 large brand ne __ w apt_ -Good_ • $750 DOWN • Newport Shores mo LANOL RD 3 Br. 11~ Ba. cpht, drpi:, 2 Putting green, .,..·aterfall & Kitchen 1V's maid service car gar, patio. $210. Mesa a h ' • -DUPLEX 4 Br. Up, 2 Br tncome, !emf!('_ financing. Permanent Ocean view lot, R-ALS Verde . 31ll SUmatra Pl. itream. owers eve~ ere, Heated Pool. KITCHEN apartment.. avail.
Down. 3 carport, new crpt. By Owrier. 6 7 3-6 9o4 · $5,950 F/P. Assume bal. on 4 BR 2is baths, 9 mos lease, ~ 1 4:,· pool, rec. room, billiards, 646-3265 Weekly, monthly rates. Heat· ,
Neatly furn. 200' to beach. 548-7983. existing loan, Bier. 497.1210 $.100 per mo. WE HAVE THEM S45-632S. BBQ'~. Sauna, furn .. unlurn,1--..=-,,===::--·I
Sacrifice, owner ( 7 14 ) or 494-6632 eveii. Winton Real Estate 67~3.'Ul 4 BR, Exec home • ~, ... $325 64&-8021. or l713l '199-3516 1 & 2 Br, also Single11 from • ~~; ~:y fi.,i.~~CJ{ :1 r;o1·be tro:i~;\~nten, 538-1400 B•lboa Peninsul• 1300 1.::,-.:;~~""''::'-==:--::-__ ..._, __ ¥ _ 3 BR. lg bonus rm , ..• $775 LOVELY 5 Br home for sale, $135, See it! 2000 Pa!"Mlns Del · 1 $37 50 oc 0 ac ·
• • TI1e Hidden House * B Ibo 2300 4 BR, ~lesa del Ma.r •.•• $265 trade OT' rent in C.1\t. Rd., 64z.8670. Between liar· uxe .rooms rom " Studio $145 Incl util. Builder'• Attention $18.500. To"'oed gardens, a • l9th wk Mtud ser cntl bkfst TV 2 BR 1-1 -Coat1 & w.11.c. Rltrs •• 2br unt duplex. crpt" bor&Newport-2BlkN. . . • . . w "Y ..... 2 R·2 lotll $12,000 e11. Possible W B W t f t patios, sunl"OOm, 1 BR. -----~-·----~~-';;.--,---,..-..--Monthly rates. 6i~1841 New ocean side unf Sl85
sp!il. ~'pl. Heights. R1tr. Bea;tiful~~wl~ :,:c~~.BR1~'-.c94--c..;73cc29c..;b.._y~10~•m_l_"o--'7P~P_,t. COZY cottage Ex. ____ 96_2_-44_54 ____ t ~:· ~~~derly couple. Just for SlngleCAdulBt1 2 Bedl"OOm tu.rnlshed fnl)bile PLACE REALTY 494-97M
&&1070. 642·5140. + bonu.~ room. Patio-deck· BY owncr. Custom 3 hr, 2 ceptionally clean, furn. 2 br. e ne SOUTH BAY LU Home. $150/mo. Elderly RENTALS
Newport Heights 1210 bcP t h·pier & slip. $175.000. ba. &ams. 7 ~,%·$212 mo. r7~~ ocean. $150 mo. 832-7800 2P.~R~a~~ ~~~~ind':.' ~~~ ~:!poR~~:!!!~ BAYSIDE VILLAGE. l213J Apt1. Unfumleh .. 8111 Gr undy, Re•ltor PITL 494-0428 da, 832--i449 24S4763, eve PENINSULA 2 Story: 3 Br/2 231·1'' Avocado. 548-1405 8&l Irvine Ave. l Gonorol •-BIG BARGAIN 1;83'~·~0o;;;;;'~er~D~'~-·~N~-~8_~64~2-462tl!!!:l~'.,Ql-~n;~~;;;J.)~ $125. 2 BR. fenced yard.l ~=-,~-----=~--o-(I-' ·-• lfihl COMPLETELY Furn deuxe -Ba t •--Nr BAY 3 BR Vacant. Nice y11.nt. 1-v1ne 1111u I , EXQUISITE hidea\!o•ay, 1 BR, • crt>. -woClO:JS, • Pallo. StOVf', carpell, drps. 64' •550 2 Br. crpls. 1.~ blk to bch.1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 Nearly new 4 BR & 2 Ba. liv rm, gan:lens. $18,5P(l. -Family. $245/mo. 871-9467 Children/pelf! ok. Family only. $225/mo AgL 1714) ~ Winlf':r lse, $15.5 &: up, (714J 1 ~
Beautiful decor. Lge kitchen Lido Isle 1351 .o!94-7329 bet 10 am: aft 4 TELE-TREND Ask for Don, 830-6060 llOLIDAY PLAZA. 619-4822.
with t1tl bltns. Frplc of Ital· Tue, Wed Th, Sat, Sun, day, Lido Is la 2351 $1BO 3BR Elec rangr New DELUXE Spacious 1 BRfOC,'-,,:,E~A°'N,:,F~R~O=NT~~.~b~2~ba,-f • ---Co.~ta Mesa furn trlr .• $115 ... · 1 -f d• __ _.. ~ · ~ -r. i~ marbl~. Chandeliers, ~gt' LARGE HOME . * $32,500 * BAYl"RNT, 5 br, 3 ba $1000 2 BR home ldds/pel11 OK $100 ~~· ~96~e ence ,. ... u. furn apt $13.5. 2 BR + den $250; 1 hr, 1 b11. $160. Both
hVlng &: din Ml\ overlooking S Bcdrm, family rm., xlnt Sharp l BR secluded w/ mo wlntt>r. Ke n Brit· 3 BR fncd for kid!/peta, $1.o!5 $165· lleated pool. Ample have crpts, drps. frplc.
w,. r ·-· S 0 s .. ..,... 0 · view Pl••e Rily 494.9704 u~ ... i.nm, Rltr. G7a.-0123 4 BR lrid & -t $180 · r am rm, ~· • .o-£»'1 ~IO h&f rvval A beautiful ~I •-t 45 fl I 1 ' · 3 B + f 1600 rt parldng. No chlld1'E!n·no 96" ~.' t
ho f On' m 000 t · ._...... · 1 ,~I ••• • •• pt d bl "'' pets. 1965 Pon101la, CM. i=-<=="°"c,-;-,.,--,,-,:-:-me ()!' Y ..,.,,, • B;· ll 'I on Y· 1~='=-'--0,---,-,-.-~ Io--°"":--.-,,,-,,,-,=:::-;=~ 3 BR horse ranch ••. , $195 er s, ace"" 6.15-<'ltttll, cov50 pauu, DELUXE $paciou~ 2 or:\ hr.
CALL _0 646 _141, , 197000 3 UNITS, vv.·. nr heh, trees, 3 BR. 3 Ba. oU-v.·attt b.lme So r -* SINGW * • ill 4 BR -1. ocean brttie $250 · 0 · · · l'l'plc. bltns. 1 Blk to ucean 9 • ' ~--r may mi.de down for 3 patios. nice. furn. 10% dn. Fumiahed • $450 Mo. B ,,.... """-3570 _'t.,A•• .,,Bd .. '"'-. horn• in Te!Tate$, O....•ner. $52,500. 494-4925 Grundy Rltr. 642-4620 STAR.LET 776-7130 2 Br. 1 Bll. crplls, drps, gar .. B11ct:elor Apt. Utilit\ell pairl. or bll.y. uo,po-
"'" ...... .... Compl . fenced. $150, CaJI $105 / mo. THIS \\'ON'T TOP Ocoeantront loc. 2 Br.
· ll [AL1_;Y · Cdl\f \\'ith ocean view. G I 2000Go I 2000 ~---rol 2000 673-2918. LAST•. Wntr lease. Resp, Atudenls Neir ,Nt wpar1 r111 o rrift L ID,O REAL TY INC. "!"~no~r!o!_ ___ ~=~~n::•::•.!0::._ ___ _:::::::.__~::::::.::~---..:::::.1 ========== 1.-Hom•Flnders 645-2951 v,..-elcome. $215/mo. 543-4928
Newport Shores 1220 111· Via ·Lido 673-7300 Mes• Verde 3110
LrKE new 3 BR. 2 ba. bltns, Huntington BHch 1400 trplc, open beam ceilings, 1 ________ _
club lacll, Walk to bcb. "A1EREDITll GARDENS"
$32,500. 213/457-i398 eves. E.-<·modt>l home. tri·level, 4
bedrm, 3 ha, sep family rm.
B•yahores 1225 fonn111 dininit rm. Nearll'
ICh'=•rm"•","ng-'-2'"0r-.-,.-,-1-;v-;n-g-,-m·. f ml sq, f1, nf prestige living.
frftle. Pvt bt!ache~. 6%, Plclurtsqoe winding 1ta lr
case and entry hall. Ideal 1 .;134;:·::;9>1;:·:";;~:::1;;"":::,====1 . -1 1: !or enr er1a1n1ng a r a e
Weatcllff 1230 gn:itlps. Immaculate, profes.
l----------1 •lonal decor and Jandscap.
BY Ch\'neN br, llv rm, ifin frtf. AJ!k in(I: $45,000, t11.1bmll
rm + family rm. 2 ba. New terms.
n.igi; & drape•. WAik to all L•rwin Rea lty, Inc.
1ehl1 A .OOp'1. $"6.500. 961-6911 •nytirne
Assume lie S.5~ }oan, FOR SALE by OWNER
642--8839. BEAUT. 4 br/3 ht!. 2200 sq
Unlverdty P•rk 1227 fl. fuhion Shores home. 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;~~;I owrklokl~ park. N r : ...._I• _ . GiesJtr Jr Hi_ A1k t ng OWNER TRANSF. s.w.;-,oo w/GI '6~ Avail.
?>1ust sell fJ1stl A smllll down 962-T406 aft 5pm .
Jll.)'I. wlll buy this 3 BR. 2 ~ TOTAL DOWN to ta.k1'
hA. to~"nholi51" on 1.Jevet. w/ c"·er Ct loan DesinJ:ilP. Port
new •haa cptc .. be~utlfully Lkkl trBct ·In Huntln1;ton
pllJlted alrium. Minimum Beach. Short walk to besch
ca.re lnMcpf, Ir 11'11.t of Prl· and 11a1e. ptl'k. Nice 4 btd-
vaey. 1'\111 prlce $3l,500, rm 2 bAlh onl.y l \~ yrs old.
• Rod Hill Roolty .-.>Ing ~''"""-
Univ, Park Ct:nter, 1Nine LJrwin Re•lty, Inc.
C.11 Anyrim• t!3l-08al 962-69U onytlmo
S@\\~M.!"""~t.~s·
The Pun/• with th .. Built.fir Chuclfe
... UNSCRAM81.E lfTIEIS I V fOJI' ,t,NS'N£S ' 111 -11111
SCRAM·UTS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 7000
TRI-LEVEL 3 BR + den, 2
frptc, Lge lam rm, Dirt nn.
Frnt & rear patios (rear
w/flre pit) $.16.l mo Incl
1ardener. 642-7364
Newport Be•ch
e THE BLUITS 3 BR, 1 ~~
BA, pool11.. Avt1il Oct 15th
$295 mo. 644-2432 ----Nowpori lfelghls 2210
~ -f -·BR, 2 ~I 2 liory home,
bltns, crpts, d~, $300. mo.
, Roy M'cCardle., RI t r ,
"8-7729.
3 BR. Arlisf1 home
in> mo + dep. °'lld
It. pet ok. 64.2-4291
University P 1rk 3237 -DON'T DELAYI
CALL US TODAYI
3 BR, 2 Bt., tnt19U1e • , , • $340
2 BR. l bo. "°""" ...... l2liO
• Rod Hiii Roolty
Univ. Pa.rk Center. lrvtne
-Ctll Anytlme 833-0ll2ll
VACANT, IMMACULATE
l BR, 2 be, 1'1.m rm, Julllard
mod~I. SlM. 6f.4...0735
Costa M•••
1 BR. duplex. 1 hlk. ocean.
4100 $150 Yrly., uUI. paid.
--------3711 w. Balboa 642-1212 e BEAUT. Bach & 1 Br. LARGE 1 Bdrm. Near
apt. $29.50 wkly & up. Ocean. $150 mo.YEARLY.
t·um., inc utll. M6-0451 Stu<Mnts ok, 6Tl-8088
$145--Spac l bt, nlei>, clean. •t 8R prap apt, $125. l
qu~L Util pd, Pttlo. 21'113 $dult.
Charle St. ~268. C..11 11v1t1, 673'MO'J
-
VEN DOME
ImlACULATE API'S!
ADULT and
FAMILY Section
Close to shopping, Pork
• Spaclou.s 3 BR'.•, 2 ha.
• Swim pool. puvgree_n * Frpl0 Indiv/lndry fac'lt
1145 Anoholm Ave.
COSTA joiESA 642·204
FOR RENTll
1, 2 &: 3 BR Apartment1 dltu·
out Orange County, Rancin&:
from $69.50 to $188.ro. Furn
or Unhtrn, Ask for JODL
Q2,7100
NEW DELUXE 2 IR
2 Ba. Blt·in-range, dshwhr,
•heg crpts, drp11, gq. From
$.l'.75, Nr. S, Coa11t Plua.
546-mJ or 545-2321
5100
JIU • 2 br, 1111ttair1, Wtr-.
crfttl. dros, ndecon.led. No
peu:, nr ahop'I · MMJ.'\T
•
CS RINTALI RlNTALS · RENT,Ai.I RINTALS RIAL ESTATE IWSINISS 011t1 l.2!!!~U!:!!•!?!"'!!!'!!!•~!!!·~-~-1 Apts. Unlu"'I"'"" ...:..:.Apts.=c.U;:;rifumlthod=.;:;;:=-f-A-"p'-"IL;;..;;U.;.;nfurn=,;;.llh;:;ood;;;;_ Apia. Unlurnishool 0.~rol FINANCIAL ""'-· ' "'.!"" ==;;;_ ___ 1;;..;=;:;:==-"---l,c;.:;"°'~·.---t.i~"lim:'J_IOO'-l,;.c~ .. t.'•~-u';~·;i~;;;;;51:po-1 ;Coronoiiii~ii .. iiiiiiMo~r-'52JO;iiii~liL~~:-'~-;;:'u;·~·~·dt';;;:; S7G5 -.11, Troller Office -•I 1171 lwlnas _ ~ • ,
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFllD INDEX · · ~ Courts "'7 "---'-·-1·~~ nBlrlllt &m. Lib Ll•lnt In Your lJ!dl;n.11• ..... bath'.t,klteh--* NEWPOR'l' ..,.,....,_ ·-QIO
UaLUUW ~"' 'W--........ OWN HOME ••• I I en w/1~ 4 fttric. Adi.Lita ** WEEKI.;"( Rates:'°"~SEA Bncb-modem/dlx ottlce11. OOFJ'EE SHOP: Xlot
ADULTS ONLY Why_.., $175 for'" •pt?· ~-only, No ..... ~-LARK MOTEL. 2:01 Air/cond. Hfd. Priv. ba. Downtown S.A. Loe. Owner. DIAL Dl.RBCT
2
ll
3
BR. Avail. Private pa. whelf we can rtnt )'OU one Q., _.... MARSHALL A' RO~ Newport 31vd, Cocto Meca. 2400 W. Cout Hwy: MUJt Sell, IMMEO! Due to ,., rut lltenk9 aMI l.,.rt AlllltaM:e
& _, ..tndiv. la\mdry tac. for l140. 2 BIL, newly dee, 211 0cean1.~'-Biaeb . ~· ·eDELUXE &rr:cor;a ottice ill lllneu. "GOOD CREDIT 11"------... -~~~~----:~\ ~
CNr' &;",.p Co. Airport TUI. crpVdrp, encl pe.Uos, apac ON TDf ACftES «"-1021 Guest Httrnet ·5991 Comp,iter Center BI d c, YOU'RE IN Lll:CE FLINT." HOUSES FOi SALi ' Ml)C. •ENTAL• "" ~
tin. at l?da St; nr. wtstdia). grnch. 2 ~! Adulll only. 1 4 :I BR. hm A Vntunl Y, ILK TO BEACH I PRIV ~ aemi-prlv rooms in (:rpls, drapes, Up to 3600 aq. ROEWSNTER: 5U.J722, 5G56t3 C:,~~··:::::::::;;;;:;:::ri: 0:;,.?.~ATI,
_,,.. 2283 Founwn Way E. Clfar. FiteplaOill I prfv, patsct J From $160. New 1 A 2 Br. He'd runt home for am· ft 646--7425 or 546-$)8(). • Au RAN T . Cash .... HL ................ u• ••CO.I PIUWlllT'I' .......... ..
!"
~--" ~ Mosa bor turn W, on Wilson). Pl:Ua. T9Jl:da.C))ntnt1 Bkflt. POO' 2175 S Cout H...., bu! to ,_ 'tl 100 SQ ....,.. ...._. __ n.-=--needed! SUbmit· bid. ~-USA v•ab• ,, •• -.......... u•• 1u11HU111"110f'Ell1'Y .,. l , ..... n • ...,_.., •
900
Sea "" • ~,,. a ryaen..,.-c1 i:en11. Lgt · ·r •. •Tun"' v""'-.,. tl H , .. _ .. CGL.Lt:" P&aK ............. ,tnl TllAILEllll f'AAltl 4«1 Mo'. Mn. canon. 642-46f1 1 BR. unt Sl50hno. Pool. Lane, OBI IH-2tru 499-3929 or 497-1630 yard a: patio, good food, ape.Ce. Good N.B. Joct.tion tu:~ a rbo r «iPPnf1. lllWll'ffT ••ACM ........... J• aus111111 llJllTAL ........... ....
Elee &: wtr pd. Adlts, no <MacArthur nr. o.lt H~J OCEAN VIEW • , -1 BR con-.. =a1 .~-.~-. CM $225 mo. 646-3434. 6-2151 ~82 491;.5789. ,,.,.,.., 111 .. JllTI .......... 1111 o••ic1 ••1111TAL .............. ,. Miaa ...... ,.~,,. "'-'"'~"' • ,.,... ' MLIOA COVIS .,,.,.,. .... 1111 lllDUSTlllAL PllllOPl•TV .... .-J8=RAN="'=o"""N~e~w'."":":::l:' .. ~e-:;2c-;8~R; I pela. eaa Manor. 241 LRG .. A •· 2 "" 2 na apts. Fum « unfUm. Crpts, area. Avail by. Oct lst -·~~""'':;:::;;:--:::0:".c-:o-,-,,-COFFEE SbOiJ xJnt toc "''v•c'°••"s' lllOllS ........... ,•m• t OMMllCIAl . , ............ .. oeu. Wilton Aw CM 5@.-7405 .new PIA ~ SU-522S _. ,., · ' '' llA T ..................... · 1nu1TIJAL. •1JfTAL .. ..,. triplex .,u. Private patiol, • • on M.ariuer·ie' So oi H ' drps, blt.i111, patlor. walking NEWPORT otticet crpt & pnce A Irma. Ask. $10,000 =i:::&aiS ................ :: LOTS ,. ............... :::: .. ::".
dlaC crpts. drps, bltns, Newport n--ch
5200
mtm cpu/ · ... .....: porwych.. distance to town. 100 Clltf PRIV rm for ambulatory drps, ocean view, fi'oQ?. $75. \.P=LA=C=E=:RE=:AJ;::T::Y:::::::::'i::H-$1=:;:°':i""c"'•• ............... ,,. 1tAHc11u ...................... •U• '""' ......... ·---. . ... r . Dr , ·-·na Bch -· ·-'-dy ! l'cd Call -~ 6 -~.. ...II.Oft MIOMU.NDi··:::::::.ms:· CITIUI oaovu ............. ftn -... -. Xlnt ~""" !Nf.;, $250 ""'"" _,,. .. ~.. • "~:ro .. n 1 euest heme awner ...... v•oJ"""'ftl'l'I. .c:a1A01 • .,.. .~ ..... ~ .,._,'10.l. "· • Mo-.. Loon ____.."" .i111v1111TT PAitK ........... 1,!.! u.Ki .u .. tcii:I '::::;:::::.:::.., S1Th. Adults. 353 Woodland PARK NEWPORT care , • . NEW Ocean aide ap(s. Costa mesa. Good food OFFICE, Corona del Mar_ ..... .-_ .. ..---•• 1av111• ...................... -1t•S01tT PllOf'llltT'I' . ., ....... ..
Place: toeu TUltin A 20l.h) free livr ovri""' the water. 7 LG~ 3 br, 3 ha, cpts, drps, w1pod. $69.50 Montli served family style,~ crpt.. d-Pane I i ne . 1 1·1 L ucK UY ........ -....... ., .. ,,.. oaA.NOI co. r•Of'•ITY ..... .., 005. "6 patio sundeek., 2-car 1ar · .,.... st' 0. ~11.U'I' ................... ~= OUT OLI ITaTI P•Of'.·-...... ..
642--4 poolt, 7 tennis cts $7».000 blk ;_m •·• no ,_1 V:. PLACE REALTY 49f....9704 BI:J>ERLY -Gueats, ocean OUtslde entl)'. 545-3868. an • .,. Ml ...outtTAIM a 011111 .......... M
N
2 BR 2 BA. Spa From S175 $450 uv ui.:u, '""'• • -1• I I home i 1•v111• TlllUC9 ~ ........... 1 IUIDIVIJIOll I.AND ., ....... .dll N~~ ~ts. ~pes A Bach. 1 or 2 Br. AJ~ 2 stY I.st, $290 mo. 548-4042. San ClelMnfe 5710 ~ i::ci 497-1686. :n Industrial _.-•~ INTERESl' ~::: ::~.:st~":::::::::~:: t~,rc~i'-:·~~·.~~ .. :::::: =:: ~v~~~~Pris:: ~~Su~~·p:.:g, ';!t ~~.2 ::h:s:nrr;1~· ~ 2 BR.,-glove, cpts, drp&, sun-Misc. Rentals 59" Property '°'° 2nd TD~ Loan F.:oc;~~ ·::':':':':':":':':.:':'.:'::::ie ~usr~i~; ~~d ......... .....
Coast Plaza. s 175/ mo. maid acr. epts, drps Ju&t N. hwy. No pets. $235 mo yrly. deck, garage, ~;, bile from N. w. Corner of 16th &: ......i.._ "--~ -~t.. ~';.\~:.~J:".D,,;c;r ··:::::::~=: flNANCl_Al
54>1636. of Fashion Isl at Jamboree llD~) Iris, 67~fi359 ocean. No pets, p.6.5. Check ** sroRAGE GARAGES Pomooa, M·l. l 40x 14 0. .. __ ,lllJ -OD ""'-.,.. HUNTINGTON HAit.OU& ••... 14'1 IUllNISI -•"'°llTUNIT11J .. ..
VILLA MESA APTS.
&: San Joaquin. Hill. s Rd. $250 DUPLEX. 3 BR/2.BA. front apt 231 Aragon, San $25/mo. ~uced $12,500 for quick '42-2171 545-06J1 l1MDA tkl ~-: IUSINllS WANTID ... , ....... AU
Cl call -• •-1 64•-t'! • Se-"'-n--bor 21 fOUHTAIN VAl.L•T .......... '1 lllVISTMINT O"""""'"" ... ~II
2
BR, Priv patio. Hid pool 644-1900 for leumg info. CID. patio, No ehkfrn..No emeote or ~ • -...~ un 1 " pm. aale. $8000 Down. v..on ~ y..,. ~-area yn. llAL. ae.t.tN ................. 1411 INV.EITMfNT WAHT•D ...... ~u
2
car encl'd ear. Children 3 BR. 2 BA. Unfum. Crpts, Pets Agni: GTf>..4930 or REAL ESTATE Vibert Rltr. 54&--0588 06 S1ttler Mortf• Co. ;!~s::11•::~: .. :::·;;·;:.:::::·.~~ ;i::::~ t3,.",:',·;;;;;;;::::!:
.... •-, no .,-pleue! drpl_. blk to ocean, Yearly 675-4847 Rentals W1nted 5990 Gineril 673-6534 ,336 E. 17th Street LONG 111.c11 ........ -········'• JliWILllllY LO.t.111 ............. mo 'l'.:i'-'-'"... "" ._,.KIWOOD : ......... ,.,.,. .... 1»1 COL.L.ATlllAl. L.0.1.llt ......... .nl
$l6S mo. 719 w: WillOn. $27;,. 673-8088. BACHELOR, patio. $160 incl. DAILY PIWt reporter and ANNOUNCEMENTS >llAHGI couNTY ............. 1• 11uL. ISTATI LOANS ........ ..,...
646-1251. 2 & 3 BR $170 up, Crpts, util's. 514 F ernl eat .. wife want to rent or lease Income ProNrty 6000 Commerciil 60l5 1.,d NOTICES g~J :: ~~~~~.::·::::::::.:: .. =: :g::r~~~Tl~.~.::::::!
NEW
2 BDRM. Beam drps, bltns, wuh .'= dry 642-6766, 675-6044 amall furnished or unlur~ $UOOO e STORE Bldg tor sale ITAllT<* ·· .................. :•~i ANNOUNCEMENTS
ceilings, wood panelinc. All space, garage •. paUO, No 4 BR. 2% BA. Studio apL ished houae in Laguna Can.. Wostbiy ln~ome Homos ~ W. 19th St. Bethel Found (Fl'ff Ads) 6400 =~::,°':~"'~~~: .:::::::;::::::::,:" ind NOTICES
U-' .... sm chil·--ok Cl • 71< G Id d yon t•-oc --·~· T ·~1-SANTA AMA .................... \Ut FOUND t• ·-· -rec features, $161i. 1Wwts, • """-'' • ean. -o en r o • or o ucr · . _...,,¥ Private 3 BR residence + t<l owers comer . .-r •uo agt. FEMALE Kitten. app. 3 SAMTA AN\ MaT1 ............. 1oe "" - .......... . · Call ·--·-·~ 4217 n--· Rd ••1-/mo yr I•• •ffi7·73 --b ~-mber ••• -•• •••••• 1us I.OST .......................... ..ill no pets. riow V'9U""W1<J • ~. .......... • .., ;, • ...... .-r :> • ... "a Y u=.-.:: • '1'to"WOV 2 bedrm apls, Est. gross lnduilro'ol Ronlol mos., .orange & white, flea runtM :::::::::::::::::::: .. ::1644 l"lllSONALS .................. •
... 387 w. Bay Street. '* 2 Br. untum. Crpts, d-HUGE Older l BR. Steps to days, MS.1195 eves. mon•'"'y •-me $1010. 356 E. 6090 collar. nr Crown Valle MOITN TUSTIN ............... l"I ANNOUHCIMENn ............ "" .,.... uu "'"'" "-hool Y a.HANllM l'51 •lllllTHI ................ -, •• .,.'411
patio, pool, bl.tn&. $160. China Cove. CID, SIR. WANT YEARLY I.SE: Sm. 20th Si:, Costa Mesa, Build· NEW .A;. • Lquna Nlguel.11LVlllAD<i 'cJ.NYON ':::::::::1w FUlllllllALS .................. .-iii
HAU OR GREENS •---»H M•-Ap" 1525 $1~ 6~ ~ ·-•-•·-So ! · 64 bldg., 1368 to 2300 ft, 495-4582 U.OUNA MILLS 11'1 ll"AID OllTUlltY .............. '41i • ~ --"" 1:>. ,,,...,....,.. ...u...... 1uio:-• o pier, er 2·4905. N Bak & F · · · ................ PUNlllllAL. 01111CT0U ....... '414 p•--ntla. .. ,_~-k '--·' r er WJ'Vlew, 1 yr ;:c-:;:.,.--,-.---=---llAGUMA IUCh ............... 1n1 PLDOISTS "'' G.n~ • STUDlO ._.... ~ . "'" -... a 8 2 B" No o! Hwy, Frplc, Bal.boa Peni.1111iua. Mature-Also Triplexei; -•~1.~ I Iii Black male cat w/flea collar LAGUNA HIOU.El ........ -.. 1111 ........... ,., ..... •· IU\Ul'.ol, • 11.r .. ~~ about our d1scounL ... " I N hldr .., .JIN ease. Su ·van, 548-2176 MIUION VIEIO t7• CAllllO Of TMANICI ............... ,. Bach, I, 2. 3 BR'•. tram sno. Jresbly painted, Avail now, re a~ cp. 0 c n or e(2) M-1 A LOTS found vie Capi!lrano Bch lAN CLEMl!NTI! ............ 1711 IN MtMOIUiM , .................. ,,
2100
-~ W•v ,. u 2 BR. 2 BA., apt deluxe High "'1n. 675-3299 pets. 642-6301 Lois 6100 496-5834 SAN JUAN CAPISTIAND ....... ,ra Cl!MIT••T Lon ............. Mii rs: ..... --· .....-.. ........ Production' Place, Newport c,.;_.;._ ______ _::,:~ CAPISTRANO IUCH 173e CIMITlllT CltYP"Tt ............ It 5t6-4J3'lO on bluU w/, bay view. Avail WORKING couple desire l Beach. 673-7070, 642-2645 -CHILDS Pair of rescr· r DANA POINT 17 .. ~IMl!TlltY CllTll"Tt -.... ,, ... ,. '"Oct " • .,..,5 _._,,.,only B IL--•300 b I t d Ix I • WANTED wrs p Ip !On OCEANSIDE ,, .... lllMATOllll••s ......•......•.. ...,. ..... ·.,. .. , • .t\IJL • I -~ r. urn ap or up n · glasses found nr: Ne rt ...................... ~l!MDllA1. PAllCs ........... .c11
DELUXE omdo-3° br. 2 ba,
drsp. wJw crpts. dshwshr,
patio, $210 unt Nr elemen.
tary tchool s thnt college, 3
pools. 8J3...369f
...... 7•• Domingo Dr NB H CL Bch area to bu•'ld Apt'• wpo SAN DllGO ....... _., ..•..••.. lJJJ AUCTIONS ... • ..., ., . , or u . · Pier. 642--0176. ltlVt:ltSIDI COUN'l'Y .......•. llOI ··· ··· ............. . Apt 3. 644-2698, 645-1260 OCEANFRNT d~plex 2 Br. $150 Ma."'( Ref's. ca 11 CASH NOUSl!S TO Ii MOVED ...... ltot lVIATIOlt SlllVICI .......... .w
• BAYFRONT • 1,.y ... 6r7.3-5~h -•nt, $250 --Collect t11•'1 4<'1987 w ' FOUND 1 small -le CONDOMIHIUM .... , .......... ltSI l~:vT~Ni•'D··,··T···T· ,. ............. ..us ... ,
'"'" ~· J• ,,..... Butlno11 R•t•I 6060 nte detailg lo: Daily Pilot Mesa Verile area c 11 & DUll"llXIS FOil SALE ........ 1'15 AUTO TllANIPOllTATION ' ......... .
LUXURY
A-•• Stort1'n11 H.B. artist wants 1VOrklng Box M-2004, 2211 W. Balboa Identify 545-1758 . a 'R'E'N"'TMAONLTSI fOl IAL.I .... I,.. L.IGAL NOTICES ''' ..... :::::Mlf ....... • -/220 v fQ1' ·c HARBOR BLVD front. 19x-3i' Blvd, N.B. ' . GlllMAN & TUTOlllll• ....... ....
at $375. e 642·2202 Lido Isle 5351 area w cerami wlrestroom. 2110 Harbor I:========= BLK Pup or sm. dog. Vic: HouMS Fumlthed SERVICE DIRECTORY oven. Garage, sm apt, Blvd CM •200 ' A * THE·SEVILLE NEARLY new oceanfronl: LRG. BAY VIEW. 3 BR, 2 whatever? 54~2270 Days, • . .... mo. year&,:..:C~r~·~·~·~·=-----.:':200:::: Hart>or Hi Sehl -Sat nite llNlllAL ........................ ACCOUNTING .............. ,, .. .,..
2 Br. l'ii Ba W/prg. $1!». ~Pt. fuxury apt, 4 BA. Cpts. drps. Adults. Yrly 536-3708 eves/wknds lease. S48-07B3. For Acreage in Orange Co. S48-5l6l. ~=~~A'i:1~% ~~~~.:::::::;;;: :~:~.~~~/ :::::~ ·;.'iitt· .. :m
Adults .. crptJ • drpa • fncd br, 4 be., fl1>1cs & decks. 642-0807, 675-8592. WORKING couple desire 1 C~!to: ;,~ata"Meo,.r. re18~! 211 Small white female dog found :~~ ~=~D':'~.:::::::::::.:·:~: :ii:A~~,:'1~t ·:::::::::::::·:::: •-' w/patio Wtr pd 2619 $00'.l/mo. 548-8077 b t d ix J o..Ull ~ SIRftfa' ... falt near Nassau & Wibon CM COL.LIGE l'AIK .............. 1111 AUTO, 5-1 111111. ~ stc. UM ;.·L· .. Santa Ai.a Ave. 636-<uo. '"""~~~"""'--,--r . turn ap or up n Newport Blvcl. -u 541J..1825 • . . N•Wll"DllT IEACM ............ 220I lAIYSlnlN• ............... ... NR. BAY, Ocean, lbopng, B1lboe lsl1nd 5355 N.B. or Hunt. Bch area. HEwroitT HOTS ..... "; ......... 2211 •OAT MA•~•NANC• ........ tDI
* OIDER DUPLEX* chahnel area. 3 Br. 2 ba, ----------1 $150 M•x, Ref's. C .•11 600-l200 Sq. ft. Office. also l-::==C=a~ll=64=2-6560=:;;::;:==::: FOUND Brown shaggy dog. ::~~--TE:"~·-~~.:::::::::: .. : =~1~:i:":::::;·,r:.::::::·=
I BDRM
-LOST. s·~-" crpt., drps, appl's, ear. Yrly UPPER 2 BR, den' Collect lTI4)' 454-1987 600 sq. ft. store. $90 &: S!SO. I~ Young fem Vic· Newport DOVlll IHOllEI ............... ZltJ lUU.Dllll ................... ."741 ---·~
6
= •
727
tt•-trpl CM 646-2130 R E Want·• 6240 · · w11TcL1,, . . ............. UM <ATl!IUNG ................ _ ,11, refri&. E.l181h St. S85l!;J10· ~....,. ........ crp ..... .,.. c. ~a r, WANT YEARLY LSE; Sm. • • • -Blvd & Mesa Dr. 673-5748 UNIVlllSITY PAltlC ........... m7 CAllJIETMAICIN• ...
8th
St Call disp.>sa..I. $260 yrly, -1nclds unfum hse-So. o! pier, TO . . fltVINIE ........................ IDI CAllll"!:MTllfMG ............. .... E. 1 eves: ull 675~ '"17 Offo'co Ronlol ••70 Buy from. o_wner, small FOUND blk male w/wht IACK •AT ................... ,,.. CIMl!NT, c.i.cr11•·::::::;:::::""
· ~ · BaJ•-Penon· sul•. Mature--'-··· t:Ast •LUFP -·· CHILD ••• l .~673-88:::;:::::11~.-------flrvine 5238 ......,. ----------1 uuuse in CdM to remodel. feet cat Wearing collar .................. -1• u-..f ........ 6111
l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j iii;;;;;i;;;;t;;;;&;;d;' 1· bl pl No chldrn or SUPE C h 7 4 Balboa •'31th St 61 El T•,. 2244 coNT11ACT01ts ............... ...
Q
UIET ADULT LIVING 2 re ,la ~ c . R-DELUXE QUALITY as . 1 /~10. . 5-3547 lltVINI TEllllllACI! ........... nu CAltll"fT CLEANING .......... ..as
BR. .Sha&: crpts, bltnt, pool, Huntir.ston B1•ch 5400 pe's. 64i-ti301 1.z,3 room, up to 3,000 sq. I iia•uJ.sii1~N~E~;;s;s~.::nc1::;'---· I :::::::::::::=======Ii:~~:: ~~-~.~~ .. :::::::::::: ~::::~.~YIHO ~.~PAIR = ~ut,•~~."-mo,incl NOW LEASING! -AD Agency VP, single 40 ft office suites. Immed. oc.. FINANCIAL Lost 6401LIDO15LI · ................... mt OIMOL.1T1011 ··::;:: ... :::::: .. ::..,. _.. .......... .,.... ..... .., SPACIOUS --~r new ---~ 1 b t u.Y 1su.NDS ................. use D1tAPT1110 s111vte• .... -.... ..,, an til. Adults only no pet& N~. family and adults units • &.-n mg • 1ocnno 1 br um se or ap . cupancy. Orange C n t y. •AL.IOA 111.AJllD ............ ms 1L.1CT1tlCAL ................. .....
u • . with IDW recreation club crpts, drps, bltns, gar NB./ CdM. Bua ph. 541-3122 Airport Irvine Commerc. Busln••• wsr: Black Afghan Hound: HUNTINGTON llACH ......... JW IQUfll"M•MT ••MTAU ....... UM
241 Avocado St. .646-0979 w/auto dr. ehel p&tio or Mr. Cala.maras. Complex. adj. Airporter 63 .. _. Fem. Vic: Harbor & Vic-~~~~".A~:c~~~~.~~.::::::::·:::! =f~~• .. ::···· ................ ::::
LRG 2 BR Triplex. Crpll, and pre.school. "l, 2• & 3 balcony. Nr beach. 2 br. 2 Hotel & Restaurant ....... i.... l:::O~p~po::::r~f~u~n~lt~i·:•:__.:::'.~uu toria, CM. Possibly hit by a LONG lUCM .................. 1.SOI PUltNACE ai·;A····~'iik.".::·:.we
·-. ---. pat I 0. bdmll from $150. Nr. shop-ha '""'IC '-17j• 2 br 2 be. WANTED sm. bachelor or 1 .. ._......., _....... car REW ARD• Or will oaAHOI COUNTY ............. 260ll PUllNITUlt• lllEIT0•1•-"' t-·--~ ... ;...,. ...-.Jf scboo'-Just ....... "f ' ' ' br apt retired gent Don't San Diego & N'pt, Fwy11, IUill • . • SANTAANA .................... un &lllPIMISNIN• tm $1~5/altlo turn $165. r-·e, ... v • u.. frplc, $180. 3 br 'studio, 21h: • . • • b'NCRO replace wl~gistered AKC Wl!STMlfrlSTl!ll ................ 2612 OAllD.ElllHG "" 541-"1867 !IOUth of San Diego Fwy. on ha, '-le: S22S. 64&--084!, smoke, drink, no pets. $85 WDED PARKING WANTED! I Afghan puppy 64~8fi62 MIDWAY CITY ................. 2611 GINlltAL s1itViciri' .::::::::..., • Cul Dr Irvine 8J3.3733 ..... max 673--0800 LOWEST RATES PART TIME . . SANTA ANA MllGlfTI ........ mo GaAOIMO. DISCING .............. 1
NOW AIL REOEC. 2 BR. ver ., . . 642-0093 or 642-3615 ~~·,.:,.~""'·==~~-1~--/mgr 2172DuP ntDr Relo'able pe-·-!o• lh•'s a-a WSf! Vic Harbor A.-.. f~o"u',',',, .. ,,. ,·················~ ou.ss ·· · ·· ................. MN PARK WEST • LANDLORDS • VWIJO;;I" • 0 .. ........ • ... ....... ..... . ................. GJtEEN THUMI ,,. New cpts, d:rps, paint: hid 2 Bedrm, bltns, refrig., Rm. 8, Newport Beach. to restock candy & snack ac-Boy's Club. Center St. Boy's lAGUllA NtGUEt. ............. 2111 Gu11 SHOI" , .. ::::::;:::::::;,11,
pool.
o.dl'" no pets. ma. APARTMENTS ....... ts, drps, adults, no pets. FREE RENT.AL SERVICE .............. Court••Y 10 Brokers 20" blu-bik(' Nobby tire ~ISSION VIEJO ........ -.... uoe· NEALTH CL.UIS .............. •m -Owned and Managed by ..... Broke 534-6982 ~......., counll! in commercial and . • ;.t.N CLEMENTE .............. 2'11 HAULING '"° 642-9520 $150 mo incl u l i I. r ED EN factory loe'.ltions furnished frnt I bk Lie No. 20588 SAM JUAN CAPISTllANO ....•. 2ru HOUSECLu.N1iri0'"" .......... ,7U
BONUS ARRANGEMENT The Irvint Company TradewindS Realty 841-8511. RESPONSIBLE couple w/3 M ICAL • D TAL Reward' 546-3208 CAPISTRAMO IEACM ... -.... 27JI IHTl!lllllOR D•cD11ATiNCi':::;:,n1 Suites avail,. Best location. by our company. We are a · · OANA ll"OIHT ..............•. tu• 111coM1 TAX .................. u41
2 aa ......... drpe, r.klve & NEAR Huntington Harbour children desires l-4 br older Xlnt par"'--. Mod-lacil-nation-wide co. rated .10 LOST: Black & Decker RIVE1ts1ce COUNTY ........ ,... 11to1r1. en..imu1111, 11c:. ........ '7M _, ~·-ho In H B ••• 1059 ...... '6 ..... v1.cATtoH 11EHTALS ......... ,,.. 1110N111• •ns refril. Will Unfl.lrn, no kids E1st Bluff $242 New Triplexes. Quiel area. me · · ..._. Hies. Immediately available. Dunn &:. Bradstttct. Excel· Impact wrench (in box SUMMllt lllllHTAL.S ......... :n11 INSULAT1NO'.':::::::::::::::::·., ..
or -.... -bnfum or $.165 =.:.;...:c;:.;.;_ ___ =;.: Lrg, 1 BR. furn. and 3 BR. ' BAYSHORE CENTER lent un' medoa' le --·'income wlsocke<ts) Vic· w Vic CONDOMINIUM ................ me INSURANCE ................•.. '171 ~--R fo R t 5995 ._...,. · · · • DUll"L.•1111!"1 FUlltc. ............ 2'71 INVESTIGATINir.. Dlllclfn uu f\rn. M&-9685 aft Spm. $150 and up. Will furn. child/ ooms r en 601 Dover Dr., N'pt Beach-for 4 to g brs. weekly work toria. Reward! 2166 Myran RENTALS 11.1o11To•1AL. ................ :::'"'
2 BR. 1\9 BA Duplex_ Bltns. ~l~::~:n~d~E~~H•· pet ok, (213) 592-2623 ·BEAUTIFUL room, close to 6_ '"" 0 {days or eves). You may ex· Dr, CM 00-7o33. Housn Unfurnished t:::lc"A~1~fA.'~.~~.::::::::
Was her J d rye J'. Nice '"¥' c846-355;::.='~·-;:;:;:::;-;-.,-;;o:---I occ. Kitchen & laundry >' ,....,_ pand to "full" time later LOST In Newport Shores o•HIEltAL -.................... -~1~":~1t't-.................. ... ·--D 11 $350. Four bedrooms with ---"th fi . Area· 8 Id r~ COSTA MIEIA .................. 11• MASO ICE ··-··-··-··., ~"'· .-arre • baJ . bGv ~· FRESH·AIR privilege•. Fotted air heat, --,..... WI our nanctng if you . moo , '-A""rman Ml!U. Dl!L MAii: ........••..•. '1• 1r11tv,11t1CK ............ ... ~ conies a e &: below. Walk 3 blks to Beach! large yard, Te I e vi a ion desire. No experience neces-Shorthair F\Jinter: Silver Ml!SA v111D1 ................ 1111 ::;",::1i: :Tou•• · ........ ....
* CLEAN 2 BR, 1% BA Gracious living 4 quiet sur· Beaut. big 2 br, apts. w/w available $20 a week, stu-L0~EL=UXE=.~~ow=· .. -.,~sw~·te1--or sary, We will train. w/blk spots & blk head & ~~::1.,T'"1":,.~1i''.'.:·:::::: .. :~ rA1NT1MO: s~.~.~.:;:::::=
STUDIO
~ d roundi~ for famil)' with ....... ts, drps, bltns except dent only! ~3634 .~1.. by mo/-··--r. $1750 TOTAL ears. REWARD! 548-4738 NEWll"OltT HGHTS ............. 1211 :~~~01 ····················-··-...... .,...., rpa .• chiklttn. Near Corona del ~... ·<& v• ""'6" 1 ~~==~~----'-1NEWP011T INOlES .......... 1121 0911All"NY ...........•. MJt pOOJ... Workina-couple rctrig. $150 & $155. 1 child NEWLY dee. f'Um rm. Cl'pt/drps, paneling, air CASH REQUIRED **GERMAN Shorthair IATSMOlllS .......... : ...... ms Pl.AST•ll•NG.P•fdl. ........ ....
-t'd. SJ,~/mo. 646-0496. Mar High School. Fireplace, ok. No sngl.!/pets. 536-lID. oomm. bath. Costa Mesa. cond, Furn if desired. Walk For more information write: Pointer male wllong tail. ~~~~Lrr,,o••.~.:::::::;:::::::: ~~~M:.l:~ilifi""'"""'·· .. ·= ... ~ wet bat. &: built·in kitchen s f'OOL s11tv1 NEWLY DEC-2 Br w/gar. el BR. NEW! Fireplace. Student pref. $55 1mo. to QC Airf'Orl. <Ile per fl. ''Distributor Division #23", Black gray&: wht wired UJlllVEll ITT •AlllC ........... m1 CE ................ ,.
$13). I>itpl, Wtr pd. 2176 i:~~ WAY
644
.
2991
Near Ocean. Patio. Adult!. 642-85XJ \i40-n51 P
91
.;>,:, Bo! x 17d39, Covina, Calif. ~!l~r7:33 Lost in N. B . i•,•c,'T=~ •• ,·vu· ;:,:::::::::::::::::::·=-=~:1:-;::::1~~.:::::::::::=.,,..•
"C" Placentia Ave. LJNDBORG CO. 536-2579 LGE Bdrm w/pvt bath, , ..... nclu ephone number . ..._....., · .................. . .................... . DESK SPACE 1.;~::..::=:::e!:::::c.:::::::::; I o;-n;:~-:---.:c:;:--;o:;;:::--:-1 '' Tl,. lt.. RADIO .......... ltc. .......... ... 6.1&-112> "~. 2 BR. Cpt., Drp•, ,Mesa Verde area. Pref work AAA 2 Dogs. Irish Setter & lllVIHIE TlllllACE ............ 12($ REMOOEL.ING & kELIAllt .,. . • NEW DELUXE • •-0 N I Co I COllllONA DEL. MAii ........... -•t:MODl!L.ING. ICITCHINS ····'"' * DELUXE 1 & 2 BR. Bltns, Garage. lady, semi-PYl entrance. 305 o. E mino ._R•• GET IN ON THE Labrador-w/ German IALIDA .................... »11 sc11sot.s SHAIPIN .......... •m
Garden Apt!. Blt-ins, ))riv. 3 BR., 2 BA Apt for lca:s:e. *Aft 4 pm, 847-3727 * 54S-2654. Son Clament• Panty Hose Boom Shepherd markings males IAY ISLANDS ............ -... wt IEWIJllG ...................... ·""'
.. tiO
.• ·-ted pool, -1c. Ind spac. muter suite, din ........ ··-REWARD Day 4~546-1· "'"o""I! .. -.......... ,_ .... 1m :=~~~C·T~~r.··-· •• ,... ... ,._•-·~ ••tt 2 BR. Near Ocean. Frplc, COLLEGE or working girl. ,_.,........,....., · • IALI A 151.AllO ....... ..nu .. fflJ
Adu! $1
•< rn ~63 rm a: dbl p.rage auto door Eve 494-7890 NIWPOltT WIST ·-···· ..•.. 1J7J TAILOalN• .................... .,,. bl. ..., mo ............ ~ · . • patio. Crpls, dl'ps. Adults. Bal. Isl. Kit & TV rm, tele. CORONA DEL MAR 1 ~==--------IHUHTIHGTON •ucH ........ J.IOI rEitMITE co11Tao1. .......... ,,n
1165-QU!ET •
• ·-de!·-· 2 opener avail. Pool • Rec. LINDBORG co. """' 2579 $70 mo&: up. 67>3613 -Prestige Vending SUBSTANTIAL reward -2 HUNTlllGrOM HAltlOU• ..... WI TtL.lf, Clnflllc ············-· .. "74 __..... .... area =_:::;:::::;:.:;o:...::;;,,~-=-:;::,,-17"';;""~'"';;;;""::::::-o:: Ground Or-deluxe priv of ,..._ 6 MILLION . old . POUNTAIN VAL.LEY .....•.. Mll TILi, L.IMlwlll .. ~ ...... .,,. br l'L ba. GE k'tche 'l • I · vvo:r pa1rol hose yr male Tnsh Setter & 8 I.EAL ••ACM ..... :: ........ MSI Tltll! sa1tv1cl! .............. .,.
• 71 I n, • FROM $265. 2 BR. l Ba. Crpts. ·drps, FURNISHED room tor fices. Priv baths. Prkg are sold DAILY. Make it mo old male German GAltDIN Gll:OVI .............. :1411 TELIVISllON, llQlltt, •tc. ···""
car garage. Adults. 240 E. 865 Amigos Way, NB btlns, 1 blk to beacll. rent, Costa Mesa. $1251mo. Util pd. AJso 5 rm easy for this vasl market to Shorthair Pointer C M L.011• 11AcH ................ ·-~~~~~~~lllT ............... ,.,,,. 16th Pl. 54&-6(32, u ...... ~ by $145/mo. 842-40&> ~1801 Suite; 2 ba. Owner613-6757 . . . OllANGI! CGUNTY ............. ,... . ,_., .· -............ ,,, ....... _.... find you with our new pe.nty area 615-8350 SANTA ANA .................... »II WINDOW CLl"AMINO .......... ·"'7
MODERN 2 Br, crpts, drpl, WU.IJA?.f WALTERS CO. GORGEOUS Ocean VU: S LEEPING room !or DESK SPACE hose vendors that vend a I 's=1~AM="=E~SE,,,...:.:,B;:l-ue-po~i~n-t -1,-m-.I :~J~"':~.,.~~~: .:::::::::::::::::1: 1~':-~~,~~L~YMENT
GE ldtclien, enclosed PRIVATE VIEW Deluxe 2 Br, rerrig $175. employed lady. Nice area. 222 Forest Avenuo high quality pair of panty needs medication. V ic. IANTAAHAHEIGNTt ......... -. JOIWAMTiO:w.Mii·:::;:;::: garage, near buL $145. Lrg 2 Br. bltns $1-45. 642-5001 543-0300 h I $1 00 w I COASTAL ................. l7'1 JOll WANTED
120
E 20th 2 Bdrms 2 baths-carpeted ose or . . e supp y Monte Vista & Santa Ana, LAGUNA ll!ACH .............. ms Miii a WOMi!M ,_
Adults. · ' draped, .. bit-ins, 'dishwshr. s.J6..€120 * .$15 per week-up wlkit· Laguna .Beach high • traffic: • count loca-C~t. Reward! 642-7604:-LAGUNA NICllUIL ............. am SCHOOU a 1N1TitUCiiOii''.'.'.'.1
AN apt like a home! 2-3 Br'1. Upstairs. $235 :r.lonth. ?-4in.
5620
chen. S30 per week-up Apts. 4.,9466 lions • You service the ac-LOST . s~:'~t~:~~JTol! .. ~··-':":.::· .. = Jo• PllEll"AUTION ........... ,:: We have it! Oote to ocean! Soni• Anl """ k -pure white cat, 1,~ SAM JUAN CAPIST•ANO 1m THUTltlCAL ................ ,,..
&4>2550 1 year lease. 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;li'~'O~TE~L.~54~8-~9~755;-;;;,;;;;;;;;;: counts and ta e the money Persian, area Harbor View CAPISTRANO ll!ACM ····-···*'• MERCHANDISE FOR
NR. NEW 2 Br. 111' Ba, .. -VILLA MARSEILLES ftfrig, pool, tennis 1_2 Avail. 2043 WestcliU Dr. NB. $3,440 or $6,880, secured by 644-0028 ~i~~~~~~·~':F'Uitiri.''.'.'.":.:·: .. m: l'UllllNITURI! .................. ...
1,.:,~;;;,=~~-~~~1 >' 675-6050 0 I• WVELY master bedroom, Prestige Ofc Suite· to lhe bank. If you have Hills. Cd?~. Reward . OANA POINT .................. 1141 SALE AND TRADE
cpt/drp, stv/dahwhr, gar. -•P 1 LK BRAND NEW j$-85l8 Coast Hwy.& Beach 560 sq IL Newly crpled, pan-inventory and equipment and IUMMllt lllllllTAL.S .......... mt OFFICE PUIHlflTUlllll ........ 111i ~ W, Wilson. 642-7958 DU eled & n~inted. $290 mo. I ki f cell t RENTAL:. OFPICl EO•ll"MINT ......... 1111 •w SPACI 5 ROOM FOR RENT:-Private .. ~ ar.:> oo ng or an ex en DON'T JUST MSH for STDlllll IQUlll"Ml!HT .......... •H
$
125-c-c 1 br, new w/w TNHSE 2 b 2., b bl 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. ~nee. In Cd', t . 11,1gr. 645-2820. income. call for full de-furnis"; .. _ for your ho Apts. Furnl1hed CAFE, 111sTAU1tANT ......... 11u .....,.. • r, 71 a, tns, o:uu-... ., .1 Carm' • iu.115.,, me, Ol!Nll'L -IAll EQUIPMINT .• ;-....... 1111 --• d Ut'l pd Qu' t I I . ncl 7"" Ad I LI I o~tcE STORE N' I ta1 s. Mr. 1n10 714: .,nd -t b . tod ' .. . ···-········••.. HOUSEHOLD GOODS ... .... .,..,111; rps. I . 1e . rpc. pallo, e gar. ;;.., ut vng •675-8114 • rr ' nr. p . -ll ~-a UJ8 ln aysCOSTA.Mf!A .................. •1• GAltAGISAL.E .......... .
Xl13 Charle St. 642-3268. Am ... · 'Way """"" F "u Iv Bch. Post OUice &. =·=·=·="="'~0='='="~'=532-54==77~.=::.'._=Cl="'==ified:;~A;d~"====:;iMllSA '1lllOI!: ·-······· ....... •n• l'UltlllrUltlE 1.uc"T .................
2
• urn. n m. * Room wfbeaut!M view 1; Greyhound depot. l2x27, STh :::;g:; =:t::n ·:::::::::::i: .,,PL1A1r1c•s .......... ::::::·::::
LRG 2 Br, crpta, drp111, bllns, Corona dol Mar 5250 Dflhwa!her_. c:okr coordinat. blk tu ocean. $20 wk & up. f\to, lse. Grahftm ReaJty NEWll"ORT sHOltl!S ........... 4211 :::rJ1~~l~ACMiNii ........ -•• ·,""
1·2 children ok. Nr sc:hls &: ed a~• plush !hag 2500 Seaview, CdM. 646-2414 . NO MATTER NISTCLIFF ·· · ............ 4ne MUSICAL 1N1T1tUMiNT ........ lit
shopg. $.145. 962-1545 7•• & 7071L ORCHID carpet• cbotce of 2 color ewANTED.· '·dy to rent I ==~~=~---:--UH~~·:"V ll"AlllC ........... 0J1 P11.11D1&011•AN1 ...... ~;: -" .. ·-tall ~ FOR LEASE Lrg modern . IA A .................... ,C2 .. ll:ADIO ........... . 3 BEDROOM, 1%. balm ;160 1ehemet • 2 t .... s nn w/kilchen priv & U""' of EAST •L.UFf dct .......................... n .. 2 Bdrm!., 2 bath.~. with sun-shOWers • mlrrored ward· ho Balboa 1 I 548--8619 ocean view Ottices. Shops, COROllA DEL M.&1i·::;::::;;::4rn ~'LEv11toN .......... 1 ........ 11"
per month.~ McCardle, deck, $235. ALSO 3 Bdnns., -be •-• lndtreet "••b• me. s e. · su'otabl-pro! or bus'1nes1 w H AT ',','v'01•~ 'Nos··············· .. ···"'° .. · ,...-:~ ·-~~i-.•Do,,., .............. !!!! ReaJtcr 5@..:,,..,,, •v UUU<:t &a;; .. .,-' • 1 "'" ........... , ••••• 4 CAMEllAI a IEQUIPMfjif '-·-1,0~=--:--:=:---:,----.,.·I 3 baths. Carpeted. draped. ing 1Q kitchen • breakfast $7i & $55 furn room. Hnll; 1999 s . Coast Hwy, Lagw1a LIDO ISLI ................. , .• 4151 MO••Y SUl'll"t.t•• .... ...
LARGE 1 BR. Carpet, bit-ins. Cov. garage. $325 bar • tiuge private tenc:ed Beach. ~real for_ Student. 1 Bfh. 494--9471. ~t~~~:o~~M•DEACH·:::::: .. ·: 111"01tTIHG oooos ::::::::::::::
drapes. Patio. No pets. sm. Mo.: min. 1 year lease. patlo -p!u•b la,noacapl-• blk lo pier. 642-8520 LUXURY New olfices, pn'm• •,ouHTAINCVAL.L.IT ....... ::: .. 11 ~·1~r.~t:::oi~o11"e1 .... _ ...... _ 548-«fl9 aft 4 -li<g EAL •t:A H ...... , ........... 44M MISC WANT& ............ .
'
-•u• 0 ....,aa.n--an•, •·-bea' -Beach Blvd a•·-op•-.. oNG ••AcH ................. 4IOI MACN.INOOY D ................ lflt >' #~'9 .,.._ Ql:U~....... . ....... .. R & Bo d 5996 ., ., ..... :)llA.flGI COUNTY ................. • ltc.. ............. 111 N!! D~!_1t_X-,
15
2 7t)Br.~ __ td pool.a A lanai. oom Ir dnpn:, etc. 24 or 6 rm. tA1to111 •1111ov• .............. .wit i~:.'AEG"t: ....................... 1111
... _ •-'""" ............. -ggjp 1La 3101 So "rls~I St suites. 1213> 0"' -15 call IT IS w1sTM•NtT11t 4'11 u , ······················•111
A
... -
12
KI ,_-• D 1"' • HOME For elderly, 1..:~ .._ ...,.......,.. ~IDWAT c1T"' ................ ,.,, a 1L.01 • MATlllAlS ....... 91'• ve. _...... , ., .. ,,,,. l'li N 1 So.~-----) "''-5"' "" u • ................ tWAl'I \7911:1-.o ....,..,...c--cheerful sunwndings. C)) ect. ' • • • JANTAAMA., ................... I .... PETs '"nc1"·•L"'1'v"E''s'T"'oc"··1791K
.... e!mE lltudio. 2 br, 1% be.. MARGUERITE So. or Hwy. Soni• ·--• -I . . t 2 FURNISHED !ti i SANTA AMA NllOMTS -...... ~.... I ~ _... ....,ve y OC('an view, pMva e o ce su te11, nt1TIN .............................. ll'ats ,GEN••"'-.. -
CJ'P(I, drps, bltn&, dshwshr, l Br. uni. Adults, no pela. PHONE: 557-8200 rooms. Fo r information 2j(I sq. ft. $125/mo, Coast f:~"'..AAL.li'·····"""····· .. ···4111 tATS ............. :::: .. ::.;;::;:.., ~~encl~~ ... ~-~66-~2939~~==:.'..~Squares~~:,,ont~y~,~64~2-~7'98~.=:d~~:ol!!:ol!!:ol!!:ol!!!'.!!!!'.!!!!'.!!!:1.i-;;; ·~-::::=====J;'!~"~"'~!;~·~~t~~~·~~~·~~~~ I "'" .............. 4JU DOGI ···•········· ............. 11111 :i~;i. "J• .. ., , ~ U.OUNA NIGUIL. ........ _ ... 47'1 NOltllES .... , ................. '.• -- -y 0 u c AN MllSION VllJO --··---4111 ~IVISTOCIC ~ ....
5410Fountain Vall•y ::: f~::~~~sTRANo ....... !~ CALIFORNIA .. LivtNG
•
l & % lledroo1110-% Ball»
Adoll Livbo1
Fl1r1lilllotl & Unlurnlsbed .......... ·-c...-. .,.,_,...
•Cl-'C.-• ._..Col ....
1585-A-
t:-!'.lJ ·~ "M~ ~.l?~
CAll"llTllAHO 'llEACN 41• frlUltSlllES ................ "1t OANA f'OIJllT .................. 4J4t ~WIMMINe ll"OOL.I ••· ........ .... fltlf'LIX. 11C. ................ 4,.. ATIOI .. , •··• ., , , , .......... Hl) C:OJllDOMINIUM ............. .,.IHI a.WNIJlll)I ...... , . , ... , , , ,., ., "" MOTIL.I ....... ·-··-··--;:;-; •1' VACATIONS .. ...
RENTALS TRANSPORTATION
SELL IT
WITH A
DAILY PILOT AJ:tl. Unfurnished t..°it~O:J'"CMTI ....... ) ..... ..
leN AL ... : ................. -,OWllt CRUiiQS ·::::::.::::::: COSTA MISA .................. Jla SPtlO-CKI ao"a.T ,_
M•SA V•1tDI ................. Jlll IOAT TlAIL.1111 ... :::::::::::-w A N T A D W•Wf'OllT llACM ............ 1111 IOAT MAlllTIWAMCI -NIWl'OllT MllOHTS ....... , .. Ull •OAT U.UMCffllllf9 , ::··-··,_. .... lllWf'O~T !!!!Ra.I ., ......... me MAllfNt IOUlll" •.. ::.: .. ::::·:,_
For Fist SorYic1 &
Expert A"istonco
DIAL _
642-5678
DIRECT
ftlTCl;tl'P , ........ ,. ....... JUI -IOAT Sl.IP,-MOOJttll•-f11N UNIVlltllT'r 'AltllC .......•... JU7 •OAT S•llVICIS , ::::·0"11117 IACKIAY ·•••• .. ,, ...... ,.,,a.II SOAT llHTAL.1 ••• " ····,.. IAST •L.111"1" , ................ '241 IOAT CMAIT•a :::::::::.:::::: ... COllOJllA DaL MAI ••••• ,.,,,.,s:Hf l'llMINO •OATS ,.,., .• , ....... flllli ML.IOA . • ....... , ....... .,.t»t IOAT MOVl... = aAT ISi.ANDi ................. "541 aOAT fJOitA•t ·::::;::::::•:: LIDO llLI .................... Ill! aoATI WANTIO , , ,. -IAL.•OA ISLlHO .............. WI llJICll:Al"T ... :::.::: .: .. ·,.. HUNTIMGTOll •UCN , ...... ,.5411 Lil YIN• ll,SGllll • ••·tlil ,QUMTAt• VAL.Lav _., .... -•• Mii Motllt HOMll .. :::::::::· ......
IUL. •IACH ·••·••••••••"•· .. MR MOTOll HOMU .... -••• ''"tr11 I.ONO llACM .• ,, ................. •ICYCL.11 ....... :·".'tm
:::::: ~~~~ ............. MOt IL.lCTlttC CAlS •.• :: •. ::.::::,.. W•ST INST .............. ,.11 MINI SIKeS ............. ,,,., tSn M . la .......... .,. ._Mii MOTO•CYCL•I ...... .,,,,, , -MIOWA.T CnT .............. ,..M16 MOTOlllllCOOTlll • 'llf l&llTA MM ..................... AUTD llllVICtl & iiA·m····· .... SANTA AKA M•l•MTS ............ AUTO T00U a IQUlf'. ,;· .. Mlt IUITlll ...... , ..................... fllAlltllll, TllAV•L •• ... .. ~:t,1,j',." al,i,(ii ............. ,.11'1 Tlt.t,H.l•to '"91ffr • .'.'.'.'.','.'.','.'.'.f4tl LAO UNA llflOUl:L. .............. Sl• CAMLllllS '" ...•• , ............ tat SAN CL.I.Ma '' ............ sm TllllCllU ....................... ...
ll.H JUAN c:•rsT.U:iitO':::::·fr:: ~~~l1.t "11:rtit1.U"'""''••·• CA,ISTllllANO alA.CM J7M DUHi •UHllS =
DANA Pl>fNt . , ........... JUt IMf'OllTID AUTOI ........... -f1t 1PL.lll, tit. . ............ IM lll"Ollllf CA•S ....... ., .• ,.~·NII ~c:r.~;H.:.i:.llD .. ,. ........ me a.~TICIUI,, CL.AltlCS -.... ;;,,.,. It ........... ,,.,. It Cl CA I. ltOD-' .......... , ta1 ~gg:s7:o,,::"T .......... ;;:: :u~gs~::re. ................. 21 ~IOfElS, Tltll<ILltll COOltTS m1 N~W CAltS I ............ .,,,. GUEST HCIM IS . ··•·-••••••••··•• J"' a.UTC l.S:&llll• ......... ., ... t111
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-• -TLtlM!j), Stplember 29, 1970
• SlltVlCI DIRECTORY 1·s_1_a_v_1c_E_D_l_R,..ICT_o_1t_Y_, SERVIC~ DlltlCTOltY .IOIS & IMl'LOY T LOY I Joas" P'LOY T
-Molntwna_6S11 Gonorol Sorv!C.1 "'1 Plo1torl01, l"otch, '-•• Mer.. w-7100 Jo•• Mon, w-7100 Joo Mo!!, w-. 71111
IQAT CARPENTER SECRETARl'AL SERVICE Ropolr -llABYS!Tl'EI!. • "'llable. !:ARN l50 -····tor.--.. <
_. Tbosl&.'rypJnc. .... 11!;.L"illctph.m.ia * PATCH Pl.UI'EIUNG Weekdlyl ·a 10me wkndt ....... , wo~"f::!.. plan", l".&P.• PBX Anl\i!.'trlne Suvb. l'.x. • ~ .. ~-Y .. .., .. ..,. ~ ·par. p~rtn"ed. P'Ull tm.. All~·· Fret Htimat.11 '-'.u """· Miff' M&-e270 nee, Ewa M: SlS-4445.. Hunt. Scb. Ut'I !35-1111.
C1blnetm•1c1,. '5IO -"iEd!:d'i'oOCa;; .. ~.iiitno.-'Si"""1<oltVi;;;--t:::'. Cill ~ or 141S-m9. 3 C'V'ftt'ft u ... ..-.. .: •••••• ~, ~ilW'.'i. ..... w....... ........... .,Pt.no ptl1r:;.r .. ,,..
Fine Cabinets • Shelvlna Caroet. -u_ .... -WI•· Pl b .. k T II ... ,... (o """' in load work tho I .....
* 494 0602 * dowa F10or Care. 5t$-OU1 um Int "" n I er,.. butlneN. Give backfround P!.ne hr --"d.
* * *
=====·=====IRAIN -·tten tn1talled DRAIN , bcent Blnlc 1)Utt exper. npor. Reply to n.11y Pilot ,..., Raµt.y •'"•uon hft"e '°°O: al · S Plua:Pd ' Drainlltl Nin. 1 )IT. Stwp • attract. Box M 1074 c M.,. _;64'"6::H;:::::l2:..,.~~-~-I
Ci1,,...rlftl 6590 Free est. Reu! 961-221'.18 ow! ~ de&Dld $9. • like people ™• won't ' · · Pt-tinM tlt'e lntteher ~ 24 hr aerv. 5.»-3854. tut Beach uft Start S400 EXPER. DW\wuher Apply Chance t1rtt ol thocks, rt.r1. f
CAltPINT Remodellnc, fence bids., HOME REPAIRS Call, Gem WhJtf ~ . In J)ttlOn. Surf & Sirloin Wlll in rntcU benetl
RY palntlnc & ren'l repain. Plumblnc-electrical. ST.SO Hr. COASTAL AGENCY • Restaurant. 5930 Weit Cout le w':~. apple~ Marie g_
MDfOR REPAJRS. Ho Job Rat. Xlnt m •1. "2..stn. 00,.2755 or 642-0506 2790 Harbor-·Bl., CM '"'H-;;wy;;·;;;N,.:·="·':-:--,,.,~-
Wheddyi1 Went? Wh..tdye Gett Too hsl1L Cabtnlt in SU-~LOCAL1V';i';:'';;i&lr~li°"wan;;;;i;to;-;;to:-cl:i,:: .. :: i-_:2<~H;.;R~PL~UM~B:;'IN~G--1 Other fitt/tht Jobs avaJI, EXPER. MN. ttatiun at. ~':m• ~ = Blvd.,
SPECIAL CLASSllllCATION 'OR :::i: J t b • r ce.blnttl. apts & priv. homes, Gd ref's l REMOOEUJNG tendant, full time. Apply In 8~~ Park.· n Av..,
NATURAL IORN SWAPPIRS mll ~t =-=-ff.-~ 1: reu. ratt'I! M2-1224 M7-9Mt BARMAID wanted under 30, penon. 2906 Harbor Blvd., $pecli1I Rete -,==;;;;,,F;,,,=:--fnl&ht 1bttt. Apply Coat& Me1a. 646-MM PLUMBING le beatln1
5 Linet -5 times -S bucks ;iiAndenoo~~i-..,--==o-o-f H•ull"I •no PLUMBING REPAIR "Fl.AME" 1S90 Monrovia, * EXP. WAITR.ESSF.S: 11trvicemen. Good pottndel,
'1-WMf llltLll -AD MlllT Ma.UH REPAIRS * ALT!;RA· No job too amall CM. AU b' belt. PREFER OVER 21. lots of hours. Call ~1151, ~ "-,..,.... .._......C.,.. "....., TIONS * CABlljETS. Arr:t T.N.T. LaW?I Service . e 6C-3llll e cau S36-U&6 tor •PPt. Mr. SchWttr, ,_You•.:l'._~=._':.-=:--w.a-t.:oL Ot1L;'1 ..... ,, 1 me job _,..,,.... Ganie cl~. haullnc & PLUMBING REPAIRS Beuy Bruot 1'•1t1tELL'S ~
J-= Z~)"l'Sexptt.548-fnl lllbt movinc. 548·5163, .. Inatall. ~ m 6 ~ RN • LYN
To Ploco Your Trodor'I Porodli. Ad · '531~-3129~:;:.,.--..:.::=l::=="======I RESTA"RANT •
PHONE 642.J671 &AllH:;"~~ve'""nto. YARD/Gar. peanup. R.-llOI A ~ i66 K(IC ~ -Hunt1Di1:n Beaoh--FULL-TIMI
2 BDRM. house on 5 SC'l!!nlc Two (2) lit class Airline Free Eat. 536-1059 Remove trffi, fvy, truh. R•Pi1lr ff40 A (Brook.hunt & Adam.a)
"'''• 4 ml from Palm n.,. Tic'-'· r-._ ...... , In The REPAIR, "·mod I Grade, backhoe, 982-3745. gene'! IntervlewinJ Tue1, le: Wed., ......, ,._,..,. w ._..,. .. here ac e & patiOI. LESS THAN $9 SQ, FT. Oct, 6 & 7, 10 am to 6 pm
ert. $25.000. valUe, clear. World & Return. Value $1000 Let the Swede do ft MOVING, Gan.p clean.up l Trade for beach ~ity or ea, Trade FOR car, condo, 494-7853 or 673-5417 lite hauling. Reasonable. Free plan aervice, adck·nn, 410 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. FULL or PART TIME
ht, trust deed. '92 ~~. TD ' -1 1 ~ -==:;::;::=:=;:;~=::I Free estlmate1. 645-1602. gar. convtnA>m, Llcenffd. By appoint, &16--3939 Earn up to $5. per hr -.uuv •• .... r, e c. u•<P-•6UV 30 years in home blda. Ph: FULLER BRUSH 5f6..5745
3000 Acres, Boxelder Coun-Have 10 dJxe. apt. units in Cement, Concrete '600 TRASH A G11tbqe clean-up, 962--01'40
ty, Utah, rrazingland $75 7days.$IOaload.Freee1t.f-:========:IBROASTEJt.Counttr 1trl . OEN'L OllFICI!
prr acre. Trade ror Orange ~~m:,iu~:h CONCRETE, All types, Free Anytime, 548-5031 . Roofing 6950 !':!;_~n l 'P~~art n g $450 .
Co. property. submit. Wally )r Newport, Lee Ptteyda, est Sawtnc, bttaldJw, haul· HAUIJNG $10 A LOAD or over" :i ':B !~ ~ Work in beautiful new N.9 .
f.1cCoy 675-0116. RW.tor 546-1698, •9f..St88. in&:. I: Sidploadlnc. Service Clean Up, Tree Serv. Ge.'1. BEFORE YoU buy, call•, T. Brouter • SU E Bal~ oftlcto. Xln 't co. Have some &: quality, 5'8-8668 Bob Prunill& 646-2528, 543-8'.H.3 Guy Roofin1 C.o, Recover • · knowledp ol tire &: cuual-
10 or 20 aett1 nr bi1 lake & 2 Br. Gue1t Ne, potential I :CEMENT;:i;;-i;;;:;;i;-Wi;;:,O<k~o'i-!:..all;;:;:~;..,.,~--.1 U•ULING & CLE •NUP epec. 66-271], S43-9590 Blvd, BaU~oa. t · ratinc. Cail Mils .Betty,
river. Fiahlnr, hunting &: commercial. SUnland Ta· au..... ""' . "" BOYS & GIRLS s"s7-6122. Abla:ail Abbot Per-
camptng, Btwn Lovelock ·1c bunp,.bMlth area. $10,000 Free eat. 636.0314 SlO a load ~ 5t8-5924 S.wlni "60 Earn $$$ takin1 orden for ICWlel Aa:ency, 230 w. war-
Winemucca. Nev. Nr hwy 40 ~.Want land or mobile bm, ..._ Christmas lrffA from your ner Suite 211 Santa Ant
e New FaeUlt1e1 e Xln't Opportunity
Apply in person
HUNTINOTON llACH!I
CONVALISCINT
HOSPITAL
;
·. I ~ 50. Trade for ctll';""camper, M&-7234 or 213: 353-f800. DECORATIVE CONCRETE Housecleanlna 673$__ EUROPEAN Fuhlon tralned l:riends A: relatives. Call MR. GENERAL~ OFFICE .
'-hse w/pool or ! 540-233.1 Will trade 16' 50 hp boat DRIVES • WALKS • PATIO oHers her t.alentt In CHRil STMASW TREtloE, 546-95ll Mall work, l\lln1. typing. ~
U Acres, :r.oned M·l with re-w/trailer, etc. 'tor toed IOl. CAIL DON, &U-8514 d reumaJtlna, alterations, or more orma n, f~ paid by Co. Call Loraine, Reuben E. lee
F
I
~
E
D
,
6
4
leases trom $331M lit TD. ld pool table, * CONCRETE work: pe.tioll, TD...E floors stripped • waxed, abo chlldru'• clothes. Very CASHIER. part-time, fDr car MS-2770 Westclirt Personnel
rr S85M eq for big boat, Call ~lTT or 846-UYI, divwaya, etc. L i ce n ted. carpet 1hampooed, window1 reuonable. ~pl• ibllts wash bwlneu. Agency, 20-tJ Wrstclill Dr.,
residential Income or ? Ed ask for Tony, Phllllpg Cement. 548-6380 cleaned, Quallty JUVlce by $12 &: up, lkirta $10 • up. Call: .644-4450 N.B IAIIO fee jobi)
Riddle Inc. 646-8811 WAIKIKI, HAWAII. Beaut. MORE Concrete patio for profnlionaJ janiton. lttaster 673-1849. CARRIER :
tu Jess money. Arti1tic aettin&. Charge acceptrd, 646-8096: QU .. ~"""" *HA IR STYLIST MALE 16 Aerts Grant1 Pass, Ore. view apt., comp!. rn . Li __ ,, 1Uo1• 1. You·ve a.lway1 W/FOLLOWING
House&: barn, 1uitable 1ub-many extras. $19,000 eq. c., \;&U Max at 6'4·06B7 wanted. Dreumaldnr BOYS **CALL 494-0064 **
iiv, S35M. Eq. S23M. Trade Trade for N.B. or Laluna C HOUSE OF CLEAN t.lteratioru1. Key Say, 1763 :or So. CaJif. Mary Reynolds Bch. prop. Realtor 646-0732. ontrectort 6620 Orance Aff., CM. 64.5-1292 WANTED HOMEWORKERS WANTED ~1366. 536-3m. 160 acr me le: cir ne11t In-DOES EVERYTHING Alteretions _ '4i..5145 R <,Envelope ~ddresse1nl. * THE REMODELERS * Comm'l le RH. Cleaning N _ •-lhe 11.s slam~. t e f ·ad-$1000 SLATE POOL TABLE iio.Wllltrade allorpart, 642 Ltl!l24 eat,accunte,•yean~. W£ d re11ed envelope.
Now lnt.rvlewl119
-NlliHT-
DISHW ASHIRS
DAY Ir NITI
BUSIOYS . regulation size, like new \'al $250 ac. for clear boat, ~~~~ -i:ia~ a~ -VO DRESSMAKING DAILY PILOT LANG D 0 N W 0 R L D
WIU.. TRADE FOR prope
5
rty
57
•
9700
NB
0
or499? :....... car p 0 rt • Cc; mp l e t e BA y & Beach Janitorial LOW RATES Dana Point, San Juan TRADERS. P.O. Bo x *. •PPLY .*. Equity in Boat. ....wu Remodeling. Call Lucy, 673-5213 Capistrano and 1127-A21, Redondo Beach. ""
675-2151 • 646-3434 1" pieces 4' x 8' x %"vinyl Quality Contractors 642-3660 ~~~ ~~~~n!1~7'. e DRESSMAKING e Capistrano Beach. 1,.;:C;;,al=il~. ,:,'°;.;",,;!==~--151 E, COAST HWY.
Will trade 3 txinn, 2 ba coated & nat plywood 4' x MY WAY, quality home 646-14Ul. Very Reasonable Contact Mr. Seay at HOUSECLEANING ~i day a NEWPORT BEACH l
home, xlnt cond, San CJ~ 6' picture rrarne, 2 antique repair, Walls, ceiling, floors WINOOWS &: walll washed. Call: Diane 548-6619 DAILY PILOT 'A'k, N.W. Cotta Mesa.
mente, near beach. $12,(0), :in, misc for boat, older etc. No job too small. Firs, atri~. sealed &: San Clemente office 546-2l60 RESTAURANT HILP
!QUity for units or ??? E.L.-camper, trlr or ? 548-8952 54~149' waxed. Free est. 897.7834 Tiie, Ceremlc 6'74 305 N, El Camino Real HOUSEKEEPER -Mature COOtc: MALE or -
Risley Reallor 492.-6643. :restline mountain home Additions * Remodellne day er night. fi73.3090. 1---------"92-4420 v.'Oman , live-In, lor man le 2 II EMAL I! I
Will trade equity in '69 Ex· '5500 equity, $10.000 balance. Gerwlclc a: Sens Lie. WOULD YOU BELIEVE • Ceramic Tile Work or 1-C~O~A=sT=A7L~A"G~E~N~C~Y-girls in C.M. Span I 5 h Hallan food exp, !
plorer 25' motor home, like ror machine 1hop equip. 673-6041 * '549-2170 I'll Clean Your Home for Plastertna. Rea•. Frff A member ol prefettred. Call 646-043 2 WAITRESS :
new, FOR late model 22' ment, press brake or T ROOM Addltionl. la: 2 story mue Chip Stamps. est. 536-2426 aft 6 PM effs, Sn@lllng°"i: SneWrw Inc, btwn Sam-3pm DISHWASHER II
travel ttir.;46. ··::..:==-------·) & gar. call Gen. eon-ctor ..... 103 Th W Id' L HOUSEKEEPER, co6k: Ap.,ly In pel'SOn: Swlls Oi• ... .... -"" T •-I 69IO e or 1 •r9HI Ov ~ 1 Id rl ' * ~ • 8 Units, good rental area. for lov.-e1t price 6t2-2988. Mesa Cleantna Service rH -rv ce Profo11lonol er ..., or e e Y wi<'low lei 414 N. Newport Bl; NB.
• Ol'I BaJ.boa Isle. Rcom, ix.rd J Trade S4500, 26' Trimerran $38,000 ~ity: i n c ome GEN'L remod.ellng & malnl C&rpets, windows, Ooon:, etc. •--.-_.,-,-T-roo--5-u-rg_o_ry_ Employment Service S25 a wk. 67:;..1191 SALE • Earn Chrisbnu
sallboe.t, alps 4, FOR: a $13.500. For house, commer. No job too am a 11 . Rea &: Commc'I. 548-tlll PUil' 2790 Harbor m, CM 54().6055 money part time. SUD!
,"n"m""y'Jotort 1n''eb1·gu;Be\d ~~.cabin cial oOrWNboEneR r:;~2sg cL;k:='d;/,;I""''="="'°=· :61'>8=:;183;::::,==13 WOMEN to do cleaning. 0 5 * "°'3'!981!MPLOY* Harbor Blvd, at Adami H= A~:nplfyl:,:r5Age~: Covet ottydltirl ~wtr. ~~,
"' .J"U "":" La~ Jobs pref'd. Fast & ~ & MINT CATALOGING modela need· cy 106-B E. 16th, S.A. ;~~ '1n7o p~; 847.6388 a ....... -t 545-3182 Commereial Income proper-Cerp41t Cle•nlng 6625 Re-as,. 557"'8920 ed tor d I In 547--0395
Have Lagupa Beach vtew ty, free &: clear: next to 1---------========='I Job Wi1nted, Min 7000 es anen w t~IC.:,~=.;;;===-,.....-~ • Sales-lull or part time, ·~ 000 F l~~~-----~~~S: I;;;:;:;::-:=':--:;--::;::;::-:::: lines. No ex per. rtq d. HOUSEKEEPER & care nl t m••e or l•male, lor les•~I lot. Trade ror mobile home Sears. Val • ..,.,, · or un· DIAMOND Carpet Oeanlna: _ron ng l.A.G. lnc., 835-3501. yr old child in N.B. area. , .. ~ .... .,~ ~
or :i to 4 unitl. Its, house or beach prop, Back to School Special IRONING IN MY HOME Pl' Time effs + wknds, any * CASHIE1V Full charse, 11 ve. in, -.,-,,.-.,. .... ·.,..,.,...--,..-I
Fortin Co., Realton OWNER fi75.6259 300' $lS. Free Est. IN C.M. $125/hr work, no 1elllnc. CalU. C'OUNTERGIRL * $90/wk. Mu1t drive, Prefer *SALAD GIRL* lTil~ Fe•lcllH, NB 642-5000 '70 27' Beautiful Holiday Ml). Rera.ir-lnstall. M>l3l7. * 548-6970 * :;Dri=.""'==Li<==""'=;;';;";;·==IT to 3:30, Mon thni Fri. Call age nrce ~50. Ca 11 hiust have &ood preparation
s BR, 3 ba, lge encl patio, tor home, Hu everything. SI'EAM Jet carpet cleanina. --*-~rn°"o"N°"IN""°Gc-*c--Job Winted, Mrs. Pelininiton, 833-0600 644-2389 @x~lence.. f.Ton . thru Fri.
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Mesa del Mar. Eq $6000 Trade tor Orange County By Cla.rKare, nation -wide My Home, $l Hr. Women 7020 Ext 2037, betwn. i-s PM. H SEK EE p ER: Mature 7-3:30. Call Mrs. Pennlna·
1• FOR Wialler 3 or 4 BR w/ propertY. 645-2005 or Stt Lot servlC'I!!. Free est. 642-4055. Pick Up .k Oellv. 545-7641 Child Care \\<Oman. Live-in, provide ton 833.o&OO Ext 2037, bttwn,
pool, !"y :~1 • ~a~:::i:!:s=:.1:·1. C•rpet Leylna &
6626
L•ndscfiplne ~-·~ 6110 PT/ Sec'y with fine PR rap-N.:!e~a~~:;;on ~n:~ ~~~ s:.:e~· Cook-child ":"~"':"rM"N"G"S,...,A"'N.,D.-:L"OA=~N~I j_ 2
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5
40 to 80 Acres, Whlskytown/ tey, Ore. 40 A pa.reel @ S400 Repi1lr port. Attractive .k cultured. ~U63 '"'===~~,---I BRANCH MANAGER
Shasta Lake area. Sports-per acre. Trade $l4,600 ~I· NEW LAWNS, l'Heedln&, A 11 u m e re 1ponlibiHty. HOUSEWORK, f1rl want.cl Sa·~ .... 9 and Loan AaOcla·
C •RPl!T L•YING ro to·~· renovattna, Detail-minded. Ex. rer.. e CHEF. Prime rib or Mon 4 Thur Afternoons, ... .., nensParadi.se . .Eq.toflOOO. ty for boat, cars, diamond "" "" clean-up, 897_2 ,17 OI' Sf&.8437. chef't helper, t:xp.r. 3:15/6:15, 64th SI., NB. tion, located in N"'1J(ll"t '
Want sm, hse, cabin, hse-ring•, antique1 or 1 673-080:1 C=·::.A::.. ;_P;::ll,;•E'PER'i,....:&42-:.=2070::::::: J .""""!!'!~"!____ I ;~:t:~:~~::-~·1C:OC~*~~~~Jj~*iiff-/;!"5""89:.;::~-llli--.. • I Beach area, has pos!Uon M 54 .. 1366 ~-· NEED a secretary? Cheerful ·"-bl f u -·-"~ boat; eyer, eve. Delightful triplex, xlnt in-EXPERT ~·· ·-& dillpnt worker w/4 yrs COCO'S .. REUBEN'S av ...... e or a we ., .......
Recreation • S. Lake Tahoe come, beaut cond. Adult oc. CARPET INSTALLATION Lln{ouslne Service 6115 exp. tn typing .l shorthand. _ COMPLEX _ fied Savin11 and Lo a D
\l I . ts cupled. WW trade for 3 BR le REPAIR. 646-4191. ··-·. 494-8.ll.t aft S Branch Ma.nq:er, ,, acre, a I improvemen • home to $30,000, Mr. Harris -·· ·---Airports, Harben Excellent )!IOlentlal and frlnre
incl sewers. SZXlO Eq., 7% So Cst Rl E lectrfcel 6640 Anywhere. GIRL Friday potltion • "': MacArthur Blvd. be1:efils. Minimum two ye4rt
loan, Trd for local RE or '!' 545.8424 · • trs. ------Ratel, 40c a mile. Min. 20 ~fer 1mall ottlce. Exp'd, Newport Beach --1av1npletcr0w ~
JackHammondBkr540-1151 D-• .-tDupln: 3or4BR. ··-·--l' 24hr 0"""MU reliable ....,.,_ woman . -""H 1 ELECTRICIAN S-·" inM m '· resv . ...,.,......,... "'""' .... ~ .. --.. INTERVIEWING MON-I MZUlred,
OWNER. Granada HUl1 2
stY view home, like new,
$57,750 val. 4 Br. 3 Ba. fam,
rm. For Duplex NB or CdM.
Xlnt ome or ncome . · iuau ~-r-• --""""~ ·r n F · l call ~ Trad.~-TD1orlndu1trial rrWntenanec l repa irs. SERVICE •-•1~,,,;.,~;;....,~-~---I 3Tfl5PM or part1cuar r-n· •w 548-5203 MAID ..u AID£S -fOT' convalescence, nel, (ll3) 923-51.
Or ??? • ===:;,====-=='I elderly care or family care. 5 C I! RY Call oves 673-5299 --• .,,. C ~ S MAIDS AVAIL. Im· Homemaken, '"-<681. e A.M. BUSBOY e IRVJNE PERSONNEL E R TA . 6 1 -OHice 644-45n.
_ _:::::..:.::::..::==:...-!Floors --mediately. Reference•.l:=========INO EXPERIENCE NECES-CCD\ll Call Loraine, 645-2"0, West·
a> A=s, "°"Ible mobile ------.. ---) 642-9873 or 642-987~ Jo.. -· W-7100 'wtY. FULL TIME, PAllT ..uv1CES•AGENCY oHH Person"'J Agency,'°"
:1 7
8
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
842-5878
What do )'OU bave to ttW T
List It beN -lo OralWI
Cowlty'I larpst read trad-
lna pool -........ & deal.
* * *
home park iite, Hemet CARPET VlNYL TD..E LOCAL Girl wPfl to cltan TIME. DA1'S OR NIGHTS. (Formerly Abllltiea Unllm.) We1tclltf Dr .. N.B.
Want R-2 to R-4 lot vie. Or· UC CONTR. FREE EST. apt! & priv. home1. Gd re1'1 OOCKTAIL I -·~ouSE * S ECRETAAY·I~ anae County. Pyramid E:c-* 541).7262 * ,, .. ., .1 ... u $15,CJCll)425,0Xl/yr Man 1 "'c..IUVl changon,675-8800 .l reas.rates!o;ru--.. Completely new Famil y WAITRESS Expet. Only. S•le1 hcr•tery broktt. Experienced. N.B.
Achievement Procram. Wanted tor • NEW OR. SH 90, type 60. Prefer ma·i-'-"~k=er;,.,,614~·~19"1=7,;."-':;:':,,· ~-I
6121 Flrtt time Southfrn Cal. PHANGE RESTAURANT, e ture girl w/l&J.e1 A: manu. SERVICE STATION
Ho E al Wri te Mr, ~te KuykencWI, lAauna Bttch. Call bltwn. facturlng bcklrnd. ATTENDANT, tull ti me,
AL'S GAIIDEN'ING * . M m ntenance, alao p 0 •-• • p .~ -h I al -·-
* GordonlOI "80 Melntenence * * ---------
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ond NOTICES
painting • odd jobl • • ou;oi; 10606 s.nta AN.. ~ M, .,...,.,....,, mec an c ........ ., man wM
tar Gudentnc. small land-. l·APT=i-. "M"'--'"·"= .. ~-=M"-::.:...11-'-"--"c=oo"""K---1 TRISH HOPKINS ...,, .. rood -n!ty. ANNOUNCEMENTS
ond NOTICES
""P1 .... _ .. __ ,. .,~,. ~-Re:aaonable. 847-3457 ... • ......... ... .... .._ II l'd N .. ,. .,.... ... , .. _......,. """""-1.4111 Send complete re1Ume to Part time nlcb.ta. 13 &: over ._ E, 17th (at Irvine) C.M. .snOI" t'f:llle Prt · M.t
"lO ~ ... N~ ~A~ Pelntl,.,-Daily Pilot, Box M 1025, for Carl'~ Jr, Apply at l5SO 642-1470 awearance nee. Appl,y 2SIO
-Westclltt .,.,..,...,., Peperh•nglng "50 2211 W. Ba.lboa Blvd, N.B. Adami Blvd., C.M, Mana&··l•••B!!!"!'!!!!'l-!1!1!1 1_;;N~ewport~~Bl~vd~ .. =C'".M;:·:;:::o".C:I
MISSJNG From vie WU.On & + ASTROLOGY CLASSES . ACCI'G Dep't clrk typllt, 10 er, Gay Plnhelrlt. LVN UR.VICE Station Mittman
Maple St, C.M. black cat NOW FORMING. CALL JAPANESE Gard ener, HOUSES, docks, boats, key add. elec typewriter. COOK.Maleorf'erealt,DtyFuUfuneciw'je.Xlntfrl.nae pt time, :CP· a.I~
Lost '401 Announc•ments =---_..:,.;:..;
w/clear flea co 11 a r . TilE SUN SIGN 675-666L monthly rate, Gen. cleanup. fl a 1poIe11 , e. n y t In r Aae 25-35 Apply 11t1 ahlft Apply in ptnOn benetlta. Ba,yvift Convalu. ~ .. ~mm, .• ,Mulln noonnslla 'He
646-2677. Aft 5: 675-:1140, 673.-7743 * ~~ble. Free e 1 t . everything re uon ab I y Placentia, CM 1·3:30 1Md0rt·1, 333 BQ:lldt nr'. cent HospUal, 2155 Thurin,) ;o-==:--'--,=-,--,-1
QUHUAHUA, male, tan. painted. For free estimate ASSEMBLERS Needed , N.B. 67J..2680 CM. IJ42.3505 SEWING machine ..txper tn-
Vic: 19th & Pomone., CM. Legel Notfc_,t 6450 ~!v~~e~~ 646-9752. = ~ Ex'f~~ S~ppl C60K 1ftiliie. Appiy in MAN Wanted fW euly !::1 ::.~ ~ ~~:
646-8473eves. 83>2361da)'fl. ---------Truh baullna, Jot cleanup. FALL 30 day special! Inter, • · · Y ptt90n, Mt aa Lane•, 1703 mornlnr new1paper
LOST: Llttl@ blk &: wht dog. [ Will not be responsible ror Repair sprnklm. 673-ll66. l Exler painting. Frff es.I. Melcaol Co., 175 C, W. 15th Sui)erklr Avt, C.M. delivery, to homes in NI.I. • Sociel S.C...t•ry
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Nwpt &: !Iarbor B 1 v d , any debts other than my Local ref'L Llc'd Ir Ina. St., N.B. . ./ DENTAL REC!:P· Min, SDI/mo Must haw OWnnan ol the Board IHkl
own. Raymond E. Macias. HONORATO I. Smith, expert Call Chuck, &45--0809. ATI'ENTION HOUSEWIVES TIONI-~-_._.. d.pendable car .t: be well rroomed and auracUve , Reward! 962-1129 t-~~~-~.o-~--t lawn serlve. For free est· ""----•~· ~·· ....,.., ~. ,,~..., .. LA""---.ecre••-· J5.f5 tale ltd I -I WHITE Hoond doc with SERVICE DIRECTORY Call 147...JOI, 536-455.1aft5 r' INT. or EXTERIOR Mac1AP1-..ut ot CM at 3IU Mon thN Fri A&'e 21-45. reua...... ~unn&l2-UOO ... ,,-• n n /
brown spol.!i. 9 mo. old NB PM PAINl'lNG. Loe. Rel. JM. }:arbor Bl~':" hir:lns Call 613-2912 ix intervilw Ma-ement Trainee !°'t;:~fl~ ~tlons. •
area67>!1116. Babyslttlnt USO GEN. C leanup.Tree & MED Service, Flft ;:n:;:lO AM totw;'.;:, appl ••• a!nt.Ex:ter:lvetnv.i~
SIAl\fESE, Fem, co co OfILD Care for mothtn Sprinkler Serv. Ro to l 111 , estimates. 646--0210 Ideal far womt1~~f~hool * DRIYIRS * Dynamic Savina l Loan~ cenltates appUcant to be
ears / tall, wht / body. $20 w'ho have to work & don't New lawn1. Sprayinc. Rea. PAINTING -Ext.-tnt. 18 yn. ap children. s ......... PfJ' No •-erlence aoc. It 1eeldnr colleae and unencumbered. Executive
REWARD! 546-0037. want to leave their children 64&-5848. exper. Ins, Lie. Free e1t. $1.65 per hi'. 545-9943 ~ w/buatneu major for their aecntarlat aldlll requlr9d.
2 MALE Doberman just anywhere. w a I k Ing ROTOTILLJNG, ·Trees and Accoust. Ceilings. 958-9128· AT T ENT I 0 N I Youn 1 N1Ce11C1ryl management trahtlnr pro-Salary open, Phone 01' wrltie
P in1Chers, Need medication, distance 1o fQmona I: shnlb1 removed, new lawna. PAINTING, nea.t &: reliable. houa@wlle to work in loa Muat ha.v• cle.n OOUorNa JT&m, This potiUon offtrl a Mr. John Murphy, IOI lJnda
l
;,ll;;•;:wa;:n!:=:' =-====== l~W;,:";;"~":;O<:hool:::,::=:•:,·,:646-8662::;=:=~-Free est. 548-5924 Call John for free est cream 1ton U P.M .• 5 dq drivtns record. APPIY challenat111 4 rewardln, ca· tale Or., NB. S'J5.&323, CHILD Care Lawn Can $11 a mo. Mow 646-4871 or M7....WS w@ek. Phone 67J..9696 From YILLOW CAI CO. rttr to the rl&ht P*f'IOn. Call $7JO
Person1ls '405 houn, Hot iu~h.ix;:· f~ 4 fdge. l'ree est on flower No Wa1dna ll AM to 2 PM. us E Illth St Ptr101mel 213: Ml-0512, &lpervt.:.r Trainee. Fte paJd
* FULLY LICENSED * yard. Hr McNally sc.hl. Will beds A clearup. M7-M02. * WALLPAPER * AVIATION INSURANCE Com M.. MGR. Tn..lnee, fUll time, "7 Compe.ny. Desrtt Butl· Renow~ Hindu Splrituali•t transport, M.n , Fu d 1 e, Japanf!R Oard@ner, Exp, When )'OU call "Mac" SALES SECRETARY DENTAL Rece~lt Must over 21. Apply Me 'N' Dk ne11 Manqtmtnt, MatTltd.
Advice on all matter•. 548-3834 General Cle.nup. Haullna 548-1444 6f6...lnl Handling cl I en t 1 •nd have dental or medical ex• Pizzl flO E 17th c M CAl90 fee JObs). Call Ann •
Love, Marrlagp, Business Llc'd Day care. 7 am to 5: 30 • 546-189' • IMMEDIATE Est. on quality marltettnc av 1 • t tun I.ft.. per »45 545--1395 alt I ' · ; ' ' 6'5-2770 Wt!stclitt Ptl'IOl'lnel
Readln&• ilven 7 days a pm wkly. Hot meals. Har-e Gardentnr tel'Viee.We.kly inter It exter ptjntlnc. Apta, turanCt. BndMy · r' D~AL iifr ' MASSEUSl-lxp'd. A,fncy, *3 WHtclW Dr.,
week, 9 AM . 9 PM bar/Balcfr, 5f6.1539. &: monthly rates. Brian, Mme1 <R" Ju•t a room. Jack, PEA~l'l.INSUltANO: co. ORnt:O EXP. 0HLY1 Allo Trainee. * 847•1179 N.B,
312 N. El Camino ~Real, WlLL babyait my c .M. home 6f6.90Zl or 642--0255 8371925. 8M-389!li «n Glenneyn IAaunt Bch ** MJ.7775 ** Mechanic TELEPHONE IOUeltor, mm·
_ _ San Cl.!_mente, __ by ~r.. d1¥ or wk, Call GAIIDENJNG SERVICE PAINTING • Inter. l Exter. '* 494-1087 * Import Auto mlulon b ts l 1. Dlllbled
492-9136, •~ ~8 --Exptrleneed Japanne-. State a: City Lk. Alk tor: .SOCIAL SIC!Ntazy a:zxl/cr !NGINI Mtchanl_c • mutt be eX11ftb Amf!rlcan V•tera.nl. M7-0ll5
IAYB
tAIH!
e MAil .t FEMALE WILL babyglt, my home. 1 548-0228 Bill. 643--0238 Woman l'ridQ.Qompe.rilon. LATHE MACHINllT enced, wl I b refertnco. TELEPHONE: IOUclfuw.
standlna by to give you ttM! child -3 yni or older. Mesa EXP. Japaneae Gardener. * PAPERHANGER * Veraatile. E:)cp. MS. tdllinc. M11.11y eompan1 bentfttl. Call Prefer h1rin& ibut.tns. Call
beilt massaa:e in the Weal. de! Mar area. 54s-t991 Gen, cleanup. Haulin, tren. Recognized Aulborily Uve-ln U dftlred. Terey Exper. In clote iolerance Doua $40..Met, 642--91113
Separatt Sauna'• tor ladles RELIABLE motM:r untt: 10 Maint. yard 646-0619. Pr1or I111tnlctor 646-2449 675--3-t&I •hort run ~ tnvolvlns MEOtANtCS I: Helper. tor =rn=u"'c"K.-::Or1=ve"ro,,--&""'H"'•°'lpo---,ro1
It genUemen. 10 AM·12 AM. btbysll. Behind Woodland GARDENING ... '~_.,,,,,_ EXPERT pe.tnttnc • Interior BAB y SITTER Wanted: cutlnp w/abUlty to maM ll'Uddl'C co. AppQo ln person tor truckina co. Apply 111 7 days. 17434 Beach Blvd, • """... .,.._ _u_.,,_ •tuPI ptnon .... 1 .. 1343 1.-..... 7 7379 Sehl, 54&-3988. liw Prunlnc·Trlmmtnr &: a Exterior. hee nttmatn. n.clued RIU9-penon for · only, 13U Lopn St, C.M. v<..,,-, -· -·
I u:~: ~ -Metkuk>Ua It OlILD care In my home. Remvati._ ~aft$ 8 a. J Paindnc $G7"2, ~~~M!''!.:_us~ f Hr. De_y MfI>tCAL ASmsrANT ~M.Conlm'I wor1c avail,
Dependable Girl for APT Fenced bk yd, warm meals. JAPANESE Ga t den l n I * PAPI RHAN ING pr&«bOol llftlleny nne. 45 Hr. Wk. El:ptrielN!td In x....,.., ~ PouibUi1)' tor Im.all puta U
CLEANING. &t2--1224 50c hr. 642-0829 Servk:e. Neat work..o.nup A PAINTING. * aX15 -Monte V1sta an&, C.M. .ltc6 ~G.' b~ ~T •t-upt lnex'Pfrlenced. l.A.G. !nc.
ALCOHOLICS Anll""1"U' MOTHER will hobyllt 1 yd, main!. 96&-2303 M<Adamt Palnt!n& Sm>. Mi-026. PltO'iT SHAlllNO -'' n•·-83$.3lOL
..-Phone 50-7211 or write to 1mall cblld, wkly, My home CLEAN UP SPECIALIST Inter. I: £:der, Special rt.tu BABYsrJ.na • i6fiYtll'&lkt MOTH EI\' S helper , "w"A~IT"RE=SSE=S.,--ex-po-r-.-1-01
P.O. Box mJ Costa Mesa. Mesa Verde area. 5t6-2>82 N~e~ I: npair. odd on apts. M&-36f5 .-chool mia. 3:i'.l to 5 pm, :.J. C. CARTER CO. Mon/Fri, 4-.lpm, own tran1, work da.y1 or nltea. Must be e LOVING cue, my bome. · u . 54&-6955 YOU SUPPI..Y THE PAINT Mon thru Fri, or ""°tn, 1 •7l W 1-St t $1 hr + $2 wk trawl ex-O\'ft' 21. Apply, Beath "°'*
Annovneernenh '410 Me• del MRr am.. Compi.te Yanl Cerel S10 Pft' Avtr'al' Room etiUd ok. 5f8..'l't!ti0 c C:..a"M... NI penae, ~771 btwrl 6 I: Inn, 619 Sletpy Hollow Ln.,
---------JIM S4<J..483! Free Eal. llllT-8631 BABYSITtEii NEEDED (714) 541 1421 I p.m, LlcUna -<91.UJI.
'CHURCH Cbolr $l n1et1 CHILO w-e, my home. JAPANESE GARDENER FOR )'()Ur palntln& nttdJ l fl'om 4prn « 7 pm to 1:1$ NTTE try cook, ti A: over, WAl"Tl'tESSWanted,0vft'2L
mtded, ~ty for Fe need p 1 a y area . l TIME OK t'f!paln from floors to doon. am. In m,y home, at fiOc/br. l:clual opporNntty emplnyw ChOw Bell Re1i.urant, ~76 Apply in peno11. Pfaza Hut.
tolobt. 644-4255. ltra11>nable. 6f6.3l1ll,5 *547-S&M* call Paul M7-74M 591 Knowell Pl, CM. Ntw'l'Cri 8Ivd, CM mTI Brookftunt, lfB.
•
• •
,.,, ... .,.. ... ..,,~,...,,,...,.,....,;:.;,;,;,;;;.:~~~:";;;:~~~t;;:::;:;;;;;~,;;;;~~i;;~=;;;;:;:;:;:;;;:~,:-~ .--::-:------1i:;:-:o:;::;;~;:;;;;:;~::;;,::.,:::-;;-.;;-;;=:;-::;;;-:;:c~;-:-:--:-:-.;~-;-:;-:;-7,;::"";-::;::~:-;:~;;"".::;:::;::=:;::;;=--=-•••••r•~,....~, • / . ... .
• • j
. i4 dllLY PILOT T-. S~ 29, 1910
JOIS &. IMPLOYMAN'i MERCHAJ>ID1SI PiS'R MIRCHANDISI POR TRANSPOR ATION T TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TllANSPORTATIDN TRANSPDRTATIDN ''~' M.r., Vt-7100 SALE AND TRADE SALl-.AND nADI FREE TO YOO
~ are loOld-tor Tln ...... fl Appll•ncet 1100 ,...ltceUaneout MOO OWNER lAaving state, mmt
lloot1 & Yochto -Mobllo Hamee f200 Mi ni, lllku
SCRAM·LETS 1
"'•=.:=r?1=11=1?!"'"'":1.-1.1=m:i=
9500 imported Autos --9275 Trudc1
... ,.-v-find Saving tEme tor beioved
lf...-YoU "11rnt to .~ tfiole· * AN EASY BEAUT. custom Made hlde--pet. Ylll: .,juJl ~bl .l drtams o>me trui!:, \.\'ti v.·UI Wa Mer & Dryer •·bed Sl75. l\tclnlolh 30, '"''hite pq: ml.x u I.bl. screw mow iou .... llow. Phone LIKE NEWI tltclntosh 60. 1-lcinl~ ~· tail, Adullr or oldtr girlJ. ANSWERS $514187 bt-..,, noon & 7 pm Owncr: 827•1431 Dux ,redioer chair .S'iJ. 893-6818 10/1
I REFRIGERATORS • Uir.,e Teakwood game . d In I n; SADDEST lookina baHet Dlsm11.I -Llncr -•rovcl -
SYoul "I ~n selecllon. $35, $1S & $.).5. lable $6.), Antlqvel v.·ood aml hound e~r. mele!>, tia11 •II Fot'&er -SMELLING
• •ry ..,....n &16-1820. chair $3j, Ant que Q~n shots & lie. lA'wt>• kids, nds Hlppie:1 are people who t!!(•
Gd 5ec'y Skills AMt" !able $30. \\'hlte It yard and 2 cute kittens tl6 preu their cllsll~ lor cOtl· Rl;hl am 10 busy Import GE Hotpolnt refrij;:, <.."Op-gold antique end tables $30. .
exec. Oppor for gro~·lh, pertone-ST 5, 'VILL Beaut. \\'hlte & &'l>lt.1 table 33rd SI .. N.B. 9129 formlty by dreulng i'nd u~ t BARGAIN. lamp~ $35, Blonde human ND Loving home, fncd yd, SMELLJNG alike.
, ... wpor * ~8-Sl05 * hair wig $63. Head standard for· lovable friendly sm. bd l,:;;8900F;;ac=LSi-;;8oaC:-;lO;•l"hs<=b:-:l-, :i;;"·'"·,
Per•onnel Agency J968 MODEL 1'' r 11 1 d at re 11kls $10, l'o1ea's lealher 1ki Ian & '11.'hite male-pup 6 tasl, deep..V hull, 250 hp,
123 Dover Dr.1 N.B. Deluxe Dishwasher, ~1oving boot5, size 13 $40, 'Vomen's Jn06, l{sebrk love:s children. 100 hrs. Sips 6. H & C pry!!.
.. 2.Jl70 must ao:lll 548-9713 aft 5:ll · ski bool1. size 8 $33. 3 l-6J3...3Z5l, 836--4493 10/1 \\'~ler, shower, ra.dio/tele., \!!~~~~~~~~~1 ~al=l~dcca"yc.OS.c;:l/.::SU="c.· ____ 1 bicyclc1; glassware ; dishes, FREE to qua!. home, fncd. 135 gaJ gas, dual batlertes,
School,..lnstructlon 7600 KEN~tORE .auto washer, imn·s clothes {largel, misc yd. Beaut. Spased tan & bl. front rall 00\'f'n, prop&ne
late model, xlnt cond, 8 cy· 1-".::'m=•·,,:6:;;73-5303:,,=:;:._°'::_4.::97;..·.:!3::;....'I G. Shepherd I YI'. Gd. n::frig, slove & oven, bllte
clc $00. 546-8672, 847-8115 SALE w/chTidren. All shots. 213: pump, blower, head holding trS YOUR MOVE
1 INDUSTRY CAREERS
596-0397 9/29 tank w/elec pump, elec
Muslc•I Custom Draperies BLK " \Vbite male boarder ~~~~~·H:i~ H!=:
AIRLINE & TRAVEL
ln1trument1 1125 Decoralor draper:v \.\'Ol'kroom Collie all shots, gd watch
closing out 2500 yards of dog. and gd with children 12 PT. BOAT
~YORK TRUr-.fPET with drapel'y fabri c and macle·UP ~9617 1011 Good condlOon. $100
e OPERATIONS AGENT case. Xlntr:_~tOO. draperies. Materials from ONLY 1 lett 8 wk old all blk =-=~5'0-=3803=~·="~'~'~30~--I e TICKET SALES 75c a yard and draperie5 female kitten *' Siamese 19' STARCRAFT, 115 Evin.
•RESERVATIONS FLUTE iv/leather case. from $5 pair, Sale starts beautiful & afiect. Boit rude. 11.5 Ht"l. Xlnt cond.
e AIR FREIGHT-CARGO Like nev,., beautiful tone. l\1onday for one v.·eek ONLY. trained 557-4'i36 10/1 Fully equlp'd, $2950. 833-1149
e COP.t~IUNICATIONS Artlt'y Deluxe $125. 646-1136 385.l Bin::h St, Newport SHEPHERD mix puppy 3 e TRAVEL AGENT FENDER SUPER Beach. S46-l43l .. adj. to Or-mos , 98 % housebroken. 9010
Airline School1 P•cific ReVerb. Xlnt cond. ange Cot·nty Airport. 836-44!13 9/29 ---------·I s.11.,..11
610 E. 17th, Sant• Ana 6IB-4m aft 6PllI BALBOA BAY CLUB 54~96 e Lomonte Clorlftot £'#\BERSHIP
& ·~ 642 •:.<=.• (# ... ,,. °'''"' movin .. must P No ' -fo ~n-. case, _.,. ........,.. -... IA ....:SSOOS r """' -==~'====-·I ~ell family membenhip at
"', rs. Xlnh't ~~:;~._ l\todern Ll'~O!!~. TllR30U. MP~T :.•46 big discount, $600 + $850
pproac · ~O'"" ~ ~ transfer ''l· ToLal $1450.
MERCHANDISE FOR w·---Regular cl.f> memberships
SALE AND TRADE Pianos & Organs ll30 now selling for SX;JIXI. Call
SALE 5483396 ''"' ~ Furniture 8000 HOTDo"'IJNT Refrig I». P" PIANOS e ORGANS ,v
ALLERGIC: Beautiful cat,
must go fa11L Tortoise color
about l~i )TS old.
540-3471 9/29
BEAUTIFUL 8 wk o l d
orange stripe male kittent
to gd homes 548--0813 or
836-4493 10/1
ALL NEW 16'
HOBIE CATS
ALL COLORS
FREE DEMOS
Priced from $11!1). Winter
Racing starts soon!
CAP'N EDS
2200 W. Cst. flwy. NB 64S.2244
NOW
OPEN!
NOW RENTING
Spaces in Brand
NEW 6 *
Mobile Home Park
DATSUN TACO 22 -~POWER ... ~. --Mini· bike In perfect concUUon.
1 owner and tlawlelit. New We ha\•e a IOOl. •tock ol Ne"'' ~
IM'at, pc1·fttl tJl"t'I. nevu 1970 GMC Campr<r truck&. _. MJIUI -
wrecked and oil chaflltd Buy now, bt•t the price ...
reg\llarly. 3 hi) Briaa & raise. Also camper combl.n.
Stratten en;lne. $95. cau aUonl and used o-uckli. "Leader in Tbit !Aach Odel"
6"'°'77• UNIVERSITY ZIMMERMAN
2145 HARllOR llLVD.
OLDSMOBILE -10
l!l6!1 DATSUN Wagon, Air
2SlO Harbor Bl\•d.
Cn&ta l\fcsa 540.!l&IO
1968 FORD 1''250. 390 V8, '1
wbeel dri~ \Vilh a Y.'t.ldert
-eond, trg motor. Take over
balance. 548-586.1.
ENGLISH FbiD'"
diamond pJate ltttl bed &I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.!
slake body aod also locking ALL NEW ENGlJSH
hubs. 4 speed. 65 gal. gas FORDS NOW IN STOCK
lank, radio, lop cond!th.>n DRASTICAI.J.Y
IN IRVL~E thru out. Call used car dept. REDUCED
ORANGE GROVES ~ 546-1213. Connell Chevrolet, TO CLEAR
Jeffrey Offramp -Costa r-.1c&a, !\Tention this ad LARGE SELECTION
of Santa Ana i'N'Y. THfNI after you hav~ la ken 'i'O CHOOSE FROM
:-S2J,S ac1·cs of fun Jiv· HONDA delivery and get a cash re-1ng. , fund of $100. Theodore
-1\lulli·milllon $ mobile -1,.~ .. ~""'~-vy"'ha~"~ ... -.-. ~v~~-. -w~ithl ROBINS FORD
homf' community. •. 'fRIEN 'HD~ Parkdale Camper w I I h 2060 Harbor Blvd. ""7Full time in park IH'r· DJLA U\ v1<..-e cenler. ·refrigerator and stove. split Costa ?tlesa 642-0010
--Continuous smOi: free rim, 11tandard shift. sleepsl"!!~~~~~~~~I oct'an breezes. 4-. License NTI-34:i. Sl,69:'1.oo.1~
-Surrounded by moun· JIM SLEMONS n.lPORTS, FERRA.RI
tains &. .orange groves. 120 '"· \VARNER. SANTA ----------7 minutes from world's ANA. FERRAJtl
largest shoppinf center. iiiii;jjj;;;;M;;;~:;:~,l;'.jif'r;;d'!,flf,;;;-Jjlif N ~g~~h~0Th~~'F~aturcs '67 Ford Yi Ton P.U. ~~ ~-1!ztt!
Championship Law n iztd dealtt. Bowling Green,. Free car 4 speed, .( whc?cl drive, dlr. SALES..SERVICE=.PARTS
Wash. Put ting Green. Camper shell, etc. JI.lust sell. 3100 W. Cout HWJ.
Croquet Court, under-Sl995 full price, Will finance. 642 ~ewport Beach ~:ed S~~:~= p:r (# V84652) Call 494-7744. A~thoriz.cd Ferrari~
FURNITURE retumed from Famous: brands at tremen. rotary n10\.\-er $25, dresser &:
d'-pl•• srudi•s, m~·I hom. · · n1i11'0r $20, port. &e\\'ing ia ....., """"' ..... dolls savings! All with our
ND Gd homes for beautifu.I 7
wk Did kittens variety of
colon male & f emale
548--0813 836-4493 . 10/l
S\\•lm P.ool, Billiards'. 1900 FORD. V8, automatic
32' CUSTOM KETCH Game Room, Assembly CUSTOM SPECIALTIES Jransmlssion, JXliver steer-FIAT Built for real sailors! Room, Boat & Trailer M t 1 •-• Part for 1ng, po\ve1· brakes, air con-, _____ _ es, decorators cancellation. exclusive Coast ?tluslc War-machine $20. 20 g 8 1
Spanish 1: Medltert'anean aquarium-fish: tilter & PART Siamese, part Storage Area. Lovely 0 orcyc e .-.vage s ditioning \Vi th H i way 1 · ·~-· -Recently surveyed &:. well Courtyard, t makes. Service, C .
R D FURNITURE rangff.GANS from :1r10 Fis~~i:ie ~b6 ~:i:snm
1144 Newport Bl., C.M. PIANOS from $225 buUet $10. l maple captains
Persian, {whitel, 6 mos old;
1 gm e~, 1 blue; female.
546-2191 9/29
found. Replacement valiJe -small pets allllllwed. repairs & cstm work. Camper l'\nser. Just the gnrr.w.fl
$20,IOJ. Dacron aails, -Tmagine all this from * a2'7-8913 * thing for lhfl cycle group.ruj
Al '·c~-fathomet•r t $81 .50 -r month ~Aiiii:E:<iS~i.;;"'1iO,;i>;;;;\,~Dl~r:O. -~~-~~·~·~""'-~354~-~o=I - -om lun::, .. • CC • r-HARLEY Davidson '70, 350cc 3 Adorable healthy all blk Ready to sail. ?o.1u st 14851 Jeffrey Road, Irvine s · 1 d 2000 t t ltd short hair male kittens 1 sacrifice will trade for pro-CALL COLLECT print. mmac, un er Jeeps 9510 au 0 8pOr
every nile 'Ill 9 GRANDS from $69:; bar stool $20. 892-1459.
Wed., Sat. & Su n. 'til 6 Bank terms, Trade-ins
'liVrNBed set. Brand ne :.. Opea SuMays 12-5
Bo:c spring & mattresses. Daily HI 6-Fri ti! 9
head boU'ds, fram!'s. 2 COAST MUSIC
night tables. 1 chest 14 NE\VPORT '-.. HARBOR.
drawer), matching lamp5. Costa f.fesa * 642-28ill
$150 Ask tor JI.Ir. Hutton If WOW t J
54S-Ti&:> '''e're Having 11
kingsz: Bdrm S.t ,,'HALE OF A SALE
Formal din. table on PIANOS & ORGANS
3 Bar Stools Two manual organs trom $299
\Vrought Iron Hanging Plano!! from $179
Lamp \\'ARD'S BALD\VIN STIJDJO
C•ll 541-1784 1819 Newport, C.l'if. 642-8484
NEW 2-pc lge gold sectional OPEN' SUNDAY ~S200. Beaut bla!=k lacquer -=.;A::F_:"f;E:::R:;:N;OO;;:N;S==
Oriental 5-pe bnn set $125, SCHOOL TL.'dE SPECIALS
green 11ectiona l $60. Hammond org1;1n v.·/Leslle
642-4j58. $995, Kimba.11 Baby Grand,
SAC car\'ed Spanish Exec beaut finish, 'this "'eek 1>nly
TACO 22 k ---" t · ho mi, ll1ust &ell SGOO/offer. . w . '"'""' oving mes perty or what have you. 714-832-8585 714-530-2930 1133-1521 Authorized Sales • Servlce
i\Tini-bike in perfect condilion. 836-4493 548-0!13 10/1 Dys: 642-2851. Eves: 2l3-860-5210 ?l4-5Jl-8l05 · 1961 ~5 Jpep -New top, DEMO SALE
1 ovmer and flawleu. New 2 KOOKY kittens need a 962--0787. '67 Ka\\'allaki 3.Xl A7 40 overdrive, V6 eng, headers, l970 }'iat 124 S rt C
seat, perfect tires, never home desperately. Before 10 I~=-="-------Triple Wide Cornell horsepower a real 'po"·cr' roll bar, tack, row bar, Radio h 1 po ~ pe. v. kcd and oil chan"ed 675 FIRSI' $ll50 offered gels 22' Hillcrest • Flamin"'o ride 1\00 h B · dra\v bar 488 s· trac · ea er, special cx-TCC e. & aft 5:30. 5-3558; btwn 10 Cutter Rig. 3 new dac. sails. " · · cas · l'U(:e · po I-' hausl pin !!lrip;,g radial regulal'ly, 3 hp Briggs & & 5, 644-5411. 9/30 'Paramount e Univcrsul 51!H-17B. \Varn hubs. $Z200. 642-2143 . '-. ·
5 . $95.. Call cabin, moll:lr. bat'y, Ir. ex. Baii•inglon • Broaclmoor tires, .01v mile:-:. tratlen engine. · PART Si a mes e, part life ve5U, clock, paint, etc. 19i0 Bultaco Sherpa S-12:> cc, * JEEP * . $2795
644--0S'n. Persian, (\vhitel, 6 nlOS old: 6T;)-1846. Continental • Star Special pipe, f i Itron. ComplctC!ly rebutlt 962.5 Garden Grove Blvd * AUCTION * l grn eye, l blue; female. • 20• S:oop • GcneC~:p~~~t Re11·orked i;hocks. Never $1100 M5-125..l 537-m7 Call Coll~
546-2191 9/29 \Vood k I ~ St ' I ~"'!""~~--~~·~6Cl'73-~·'.!·527~·':.· ~~1========== l.l'VVV'U Fine Furniture ee """'t, ee1>5 -· MOBILE HOMES C 9520
A I. .; l\to old bl•ck & while l\1ako ofl•r. 837-703~ BSA CHOPPER: Very clean. ampers & pp 1antt11 " .. lT..31 Beach Blvd. G.G. I
Auction11 Friday, 7:30 p.m. spayed female cat ro Balbo• 20' fixed Keel * 714/530-2930.* ~~~n~iJig!.:!.. :~0°. 1c'.· New '71 Datsun
W• d • A I" B l'l'sponsible homC!. 893-2867. ~ 0 ,.532 -·.,.v 1n y s uc ion a rn 1011 .'4o-v · C.\f 1600 OHC, Pickup with camp. 2075~i Newport, CM 646-8686. -,-R-A-G-5.-. ~,,-m-at~.--.,,.~,,.'.'000"..'.I ;umsO.Eeio"L-,-· >12;-;,.::-ui»oo.=,:-. -;,;;;;;Int '67 20x43 Great L•ke• 'iO KA\VASAKI JOOcc trail er. Sale price S:m9 dlr,
Be.hind Tony's Bldg. ~fat'I. blk & tan gel "'ilh kids, conrl. $400. "Capp:i:;," 213/ Sft up In Adult Park boss, fine cond 4 mo's •till I* 438273) Will take car in
MAKE OFFER 642-9695. 1011 587·TI7t . .-vc:o: 213/681-1972. Complete w/.steps. awnings, on \\'arr. s38.l. Owner, trade, \Vi ii linan~ private
Carpeling from apartnu•nt. 2 2 \WITTE SiameFoC, 1 blk pt. •COLU1'1BIA 26' 1969 !lla1·k c~~IJ~ss~~d. 673-.",()48 part)". Call 546-4%2 or
h"l>room •inks, O""ra class-•·-11 '62 Honda 300 Super J~awk.o ~49-1:.;.;-68_:,l~t·:.....,==~~~ ,~ Siame!ie kitten 7 ""''" l!\1MEDIATELY 1'
•
THINK
"FIAi
' IR
"FRIEDLANDER"
13750 tUCH t Hrr. Jtl
8!13-7566 • 537-6824
NEW-USEO-SERV.
desk &: library table, SJ7:i,
Quality 8' sofa, perf lor
home or offiCl', $1 j Q.
7iS-4:l-12 e\•e or eariy am.
\VE PAY HIGHEST PRICES
FOR ORIENTAL RUGS.
Call rollect L.A. 213 :
ictd albums,. olher mlscel-89., 0001 or o"" 44n,, 9130 , __ •:..ca=:llc..:.":.:''::'·:..64=2--'t',O:i.:..'l_•_ Comp ne1v wiring, ignition. '66 V\V CAi\tPER: Rebll GOULD !11USIC CO. "'"°"" ...,.,... "" 1 • J)(oaler: !714) 5,'11-811);) N ··' I" . 1°~ N · deck Janeous. Call after 6:30, * .18.7 .. SLOOP ~~~~~~~~~~ e ...... s Im I !I g · ~. ffiQlor, ew I ires : tape Siner 1911 CUTE Kittenis, part Persian, 613-0198 & akc l.l"l.Pl.rU"g
6.17-5175
8' t;0fa. nc\'t'r used, quilted
noral. ~cotchgnardcd . $125.
i\lalching Jo,·cscal SiJ.
530-63.17
RING-57. BED: Firm. still
-packaged franic. S I 2 5 .
\Vorth $260. Usually ho-nC!!
.842-la%.
J\IUSf !5E'll furnllUre !
Conrien11inh quarlers i\tini
bike -Garage sale j,36..8Jl8
557.7407. \\I/TRAILER . . . spe . rs.
201J *N~~~· ;./\. 9' WALNUT steroo cabinet ~~~68;~ good h o ~o~i 541l-U:l0 540-11 23 CONTINENTAL by Cam-1970 HONDA 3Zill. Jj{)lj miles. $1TJO EVES: 6i~jj1j '69 f" 124 C
-S50: RCA deluxe port bridge ll1anufacturer, 24x55, Xlnt. Si50. • '70 8' Overhead Camncr lat pe
HOME PIPE ORGAN dshwshr $lOO: 6, blue/green BEAUTIFUL red Irish Setter DEL Rl!:Y 24 CUstom Design. <213) 592-52'27 Sips .( * Xlnt ccrnd Exotic red with black vinyl
Very conlpact, easily install· brocacle hide-a-bed .sofa male, 2~i yr:i:; old, needs Dcf!p keel. sips 4. head, !link, CHAPMAN ,68 BULTACO 250 ec. Gd for SACRIFICE $900 IJucke! seats. Low miles, has ~. ooly lli50 complete. See good home. :-.19-1038 9/2'J Best oflt'r. 644-0735 MOBILE HOMES 159.l • ., •~1 aft g,30 pm had excellent cart'. Sacri· '" 1125,• sleepina ft ..... , & cots. street or d;•t Ex-.. ·'=='~====;;,:=='I ar Nc,vport Organs, 1593 546-7725 M ... .._~ KITTENS Variety of colors HOBIE & TRAILER 1206 No. Harbor, S.A. 540-5!98. "· """· '1; fice! (XLY.235) Take older
r.ronrovia, NB. 64!")-1530 =""'==,..,.-~.,.,,-,·I & age11 8?.6-4193 or Xlnt cond $1200. 642-0900 531·8105 ..:..C'-"::;::,---~--IDune Buggies 9525 car in trade. Will finance CANDELABRA. He av Y 54~13 1011 r -~~~~----1970 Yamaha m private party. CaU Pat dlr.
CAN'T Play it! Like new black wrought Iron. 5 It COLUMBIA 22, Sell or Triple Wide Cornell 800 ml, "'/extraN. 1968 DUNE BUGGY. Roll aft lO am 494-7506. 540.31oo.
\Vurlit icr organ. model -tlOO v.-idc, new, never used, very BEAUTIF11L Au i; tr a Ii an Lease. ~a interest 6'12--0803 Continental • Paramount $450, 54Ej..TI2j bar, radio, vw enginr., Ex---==~~~-"'-I
BP S35Q. 644--0232 dys, Spanish, ~i price al $35. Sheplerd Collie 5 m011 old, 9am-5pm, 644-2159 aft 8 pm. Barrington e Universal .59 NORTON 650 twin, ex· tremely y;eU done and in NEW FIAT 5-18-1~36 eves. 64-1-4687. hsbrk, female, 544-416910/3 Flamingo • General cellent <..'Ondition, 5450 . excellent mechanical con-1970 8SO SPYDER
BALD\VIN Acroso.nlc spi~t .::.::::. R;;;E~M~l~N~G=T"ON=--I •,.,...s0iam=,=,.o-·;:k;,;;u::,"':::-;;t2;;-)-:m::a1:'Ce: I Maflni'" Equip. 9035 Broadmoor • Star 540-6147 dition. Call Used car dept. Alt colors to choose from.
E_iano._rosewood finish. Like J'ortable IY . ...,wriler. Perfect fl) all / blk, <lJ ii.H /grey !----''---'-----Hillciest •·Cambridge 546-1203. Connell Qevrolct, $2335 +Tu &<lilw •
"""' $:>ill. 673-4'89~ ..... nd. J2;i.r;:-tat I {P,l\f.) 644-5967 10/1 HERCULES Nighl marine CHAPMAN 'G6 160 HONDA Costa Mesa. If you buy the All models to'9f*:lse • .... ., engine transmission 165 HP. MOBILE HOMES NEEDS S01\1E WORK car ancl take de.livery, men-California Sport C•rs Uprigh::.;~~ $150 o644-~~""'-='·-,.-,.-=-,= PETS •nd LIVESTOCK Perfect cond. ~242 or 1206 N, Harbor, S.A. $175. 673-3721 tion this ad and get $.Jl cash 001 E. lst, S..A. 542-8801
===,,;;::;::, ... o:-=-:::: ~ ~:;o.:~e:n=~;:: Pets, G9fter•I UGO .":c:..>-001==6· ____ ~-· I --~*~7_14~/531~-8100.:...:,_-~*--~ YAJ\lAHA 5~ Bi~ ~ar1.:."'='="""=:.· --~----1
I
Off.;.,;c.;.lc:..•:.....,F_u_m_lt_u_r• __ IO_lO Television -~~ ed 175. Kenmore 2 sp. wash-· SEA King eleetric fishing \Vant To Live In ::m~~~3 .-ml. nt V'\V Off-road rail. full cage, -FOX, RARE, 1 mo, gold col· motor. $45. 1743 E. Rose COSTA MESA · llL-15 tires. '67 trans, rblt
Re(ln'd 34:'1."60 "·ood desks, FREE gill. Let us show .)'OU , er, $15, as is. 548-8404 aft Jar, blk lC!gs & ears. muisl Ave. Apt 5. Orange 633-7326. ~al i;paces available now! '70 Yamha MX l&Top shape eng, legal, 'iO tags, Baja 4 speed, radial tires dlr.
'67 FIAT 850
169, .50 e Relin'd \Vood ann in '·"'"r home our beaut.6 -~P;;M;.·=,,,--,,,=c::-""-: sell-leaving country. Aft $~50. '70 Kawasaki 100 trail proven. S750/oUer. l\tust (TQC 558) "000 ftlll 'price . .r"~ .": Ji you are serious about buy. ~,,.,
rotary chairs. $29.50 e \Ve nylon shag A pile carpet at ALU1\11NUJ\1 Awning 10' x l,;7:;''°=· =":=>-,::'=:'63:=. ==== Boat Slip Mooring 9036 ing a mobile home .•. Now's S375. 0\vner 673-3048 sell. 832-7249. Smiyl do1vn. \Vil! finance pri.
have the la~t r;election $3.97 a sq, yd. Phone 20'. Perfect condition . lhctimetosee '66Suzuki 80cc V\V Dune Buggy w i th vale party. 5464052 or
of uaed office turn in this 96Z..TI81. Sean Roebuck & Scrolled po&ts. Sac. '80. C1t1 ll20 -.. -0-•• -,-lip-1.,.-40-.-,.~w-,-,-bo<-t. BAY HARBOR Good cond. Rigged tor dirt. fiberglass body ssoo .1.,,'94--68==1=1·======d
area. Co. Adams at Magnolia, c84:.:.:..7_..,..=:::·---~~~-I----------BALBOA PENINSULA .• MOBILE HOMES $125. 673-2399 540-3803after4:30P~t 1·
J\fc Mahan Desk :-t.6. ldustrlal parking saJe. Work BLUE-EYED part Persian HILLMAN
1800 N•wport Blvd. 21 .. RCA color TV. Sl 25. 21.. kittehs, Ti~ $5, TOOmas.1,;6,;:73-6=::,:790:;:,·====== 1425 Baker. Sl (at Harborl 1969 Harley Davidson 12a cc I --• A ~A" o•4' tables storage cabinets etc. black and white $?.SO F1utfy ta Ml!9 54()..9470 $350 Like new. lrm~po~~:!!~~u~los'!!, _ _!9600~~1;;;~;;;;;;;,::;;-;:;:;-::;:
l1'1M"O'O""' B & W. TV $25. 150?~ E. 645-0991. 1618 Ohms Way. n--t R t I 9031 531 7294 ... '59 Hillman Convt. Good con-l.!ith, Cl\f 543--652'1. black Tigress Slit. Box UCM1 en • s 1970 24x&I KEY West mobile =,.....,~,.;..~·~~~"""I AUSTIN HEALEY dition, SEO
Office Equipment 80111 =========== _c:..'~'-:....., __ ~~,,.,--,-1 trained, '"''t'aned, house kit· I---------home. Adult park, walk to 1970 Honda 450 1< 3. disk l---------*Call &42-6327, *
Cameras & ~!. HP pump & tiller for teM. 'l weeks old. 546-3634 Rent A Sailboat beach. Pets ok. 2 hr, 2 ha, brake-, brand ne.w condition. AUSTI N AMERICA 1=========1
RE:'-1. Ele-ct. 'Typewriter, Equipment l300 swim pool $50, 2 minibikes familY rm, lge liv rm, di n Pvt. Pty, -494-5668. "98" Calculator. "93" Adder S25 ~a. 1~ Dodge Dart wgn Dogs 1825 Cal ,25. sleeps 4, fully eql!iP-rm. bar, all bltns, ovvi, Sale11, Service, Parts JAGUAR
& "73" hand Adder 492--0139. $550. 962-3139 ped, S30 Pl!r day, '•11kdys; SolO disposal, dsh'l\'shr, w I w Auto Service Immediate-Delivery
Fairchild 8 mm ind movie 1 ...::..e::.;,,RAl;.._:,LR~O~AD-=-=n"ES~=.-SILKY TERRIER PUPS per day wknds; UX> per wk. thrn-out, 60' crptd patio, 60' & Perts '400 All Models JAGUAR
Gar-.• S•le
GAR.AGE Sale-RCA console
TV $20: 2 arm chairs S.'> ea.
S' bamboo sola & n1atching
chairs SJ5. Shag cat"pet
55. 1 f'nd t a h I e $3.50.
'Vestinghouse self . delrosl
refrlg, $75, 4-bumer range
ll. ovt"n "'/grill & broiler
$.i(l. Kitchen :sci $ 1 0,
kin g slze b ed S20 .
Quee!Hlized bed $'20. twin
bed SIO, 2 che:o;t or dra\.\·ers
$10 & $.). r.E drytt $20.
\Vhlrlpool "·ashtr $ 4 0,
Garage full of i;mall hems
Ind lge v.·()Oden cage~. com·
plete i;et ol '67 Calif. la'v
bookl. much more. J\take of·
fe.r. 2188 CBn.)'On Or. Apt C.
CM
GJVE-A\11i.)'l A~h tablf' ll. 3
chain S1S; Oe1;k $15: 1 v.·hl,
J plnk table la.mp S3 c:a; Ash
e:nd table v.·/drawt'r Sol : 2
IHther safari chairg SJ ea:
Wroughl iron divider $5.
~
camera. proj. & misc f'(JUip. J...foo l lengths l\1/Fem. Quality broeding, Lesson!! incl. 968-4840, carport_ llfust see to ap-
SiOO VB.I, $200. Eves 557-9271 49_1-728() healthy &: ale.rt. i\l. for 4-r HOUSEBOAT avail for l"°P="~c_;a"le"'!"'536-=2"4~9-I-,-~=~ 1vw Chaissi!I, Transmissions, Stud Sf!rvice. 646-7335 ROU..ElFLEX, F3.5 Tessar, e SLl"°f.CYM Xlnt condition! \Vknd.~ or Weekly. Perm 1969 UNIVERSAL 24:<5.1, and othen,
excellent cond .. ~?.i Days Mele M•hogeny Doxie moottd. 5-18-2434. 636-4034 serial No. 15313, Nev.• 19900. • 642-M43 •
J1rtup o rt
1l111pon,;
HEAD9UARTERS
The only authorized JAGUAR
dealer Jn the entire Harbor i,; price, slightly used. 3 . 5'l6-6380, .536-1195 eves. * Eves aft. -4 54&3003 * * mos. * Reg1slered * 9039 1969 Genera1 24X51, serial e '64 VW Eng $175 e * AU Sho1:i:; * SlOO * Boat Charter No. 6277, New $9900. * 540-3118 • 3180 w. Coat Hwy., N.8. .Complcl1.:
Sporting Goods US~~~~~D~ sr :x.R:;. 646-0142 • 333 E. 17th St .. CM 1---------1970 24X60 Sheraton i\1anor, VW Engine, Good Cond. &t!-9441i 540-l76f SALES
AttL
1500
G e GERM Shorthalred 32' Twin-W'f:w Chris CraJt serial No. 602, $12,900. e 2-0443 e SERVIClE BRO\\o'NIN 22 cal. lever &.C· ===*=*=96=2-<5=="=*=*== I Pointer AKC 39 champs? 6 Sips 6 * Delu.'I( boat Dealrr: (114l 53l-810j 64 '6.l AUSTIN Healey MK lit,
!Ion 1vllh \\Peaver adj. 3x to -~--wks 1 :::•~5"~S~·>;";,:';,· ~636-4=='"==*== I =;=:;;;;;::;;;;:;:;:::;::;;;;:;;:;;:; ?.000, Brg Wood dash, v.ire PARTS 6x scopt". Excellent con-Misc, Wanted 8610 * * * M8'3lS8 * * * 1: : 2 MOOELS Tr•ller, Tr•v•I 9425 ""his, 4 ilp I o'dr. lo mi BAUER
ditlon. sso. 5-18-4987 aft 4 ------... Bst/oU takes 5'18-5.189 BUICK Pi\f ---* 'TOY FOX TERRlER Boat Storage ~ 1 SPACE LEFTI
LGE, clean AbaJone pearls. PUPPIES. UKC. Tiny Cham· I----------I 1n cool Costa l\tesa's '69 Travel 'l'rlr, 17' used * 1960 Sprite * IN
SURFERS The Golden wa~li. 16 . J' .. '"'11 & m BOAT St•-"" ,.. r •• ,, dclux Greenleaf Park twice. Toilet • sho\.\-er -\\'/ COSTA MESA' 7'9" TANAKA SURFBOARD Pr\ncef.S SL, SauWilo, Ca. ~~2l5ltne5, _., *"'' . .....,.... .....,.. heater . rcfrig -stove & gdt:":=':=''=•=fJr.=.r=. ==='=':•;8629:
niade in Hawaii, Like new 9-1965 Phone 415/332-1019 -~~-=-"~=====~I !-t esa, 8X per fl. 1750 'Vbittler Ave, 642-1300 oven. Slp:ot 4. CaU 642-1264: .I' 234 E. l7th Street
$50, LARGE FA>'\ULY would like ?.tlNlATURE SCHNAUZER Watcr/clrc incl. Spar bldg ?.forn, BMW 54S-Tl65
67:i-8917 alt 6 •PUPS AKC * c':""'::=•;'•=•=;]:O. 54=;.8=14=8=== 1 1~ Universal 2tX53. 11erial I o.'"°""'"'"=;-;;;:=:J.;;;:;:cl----.C...;.;. ___ ,-;;,;-;;'°"',.:c:..:.::::.. _ _,,_ to buy a refrigttator. AFT 5 pm. Gi;N097 ·• No. 15.113. New $9900, 1!169 SAC! J6~'' KIT Tra,·el Trlr. A tho ·.~ 01
1 ~7 XKF: ,Jaguar conv, Jm.. 1· 6" CARl.ANELl. ===*=*=&15-000"""='=*=*== ~~==-'-----,.--, General 2001. serial No. Elec/gas retrig. l\tonomatic Sal •" s."•:u •'P· ... m~c. condl New lop '
1utfbotni:I , nice riding s;;o or -·"-1 • 'l\tAU: pug, registered Mobile Hom•• 9200 6277• Ne\Y 59,000, 1970 24x 51 toilet. Used onct'. 1521 eis l'VK!e a.-.11 paint. 18,tm ml. Aslrirc
Best oHer, 310 \V, Avocado, M•chlnery, Etc. 1700 family, no papen. ' -;:::;:::::::;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;:; Sheraton i\fanol', $12,900. Newport Ci\t 642-2841 All 1'1odcls to Choose J.'rom s:noo. Call aft 4:30 53'-368S.
Apt !), C.\I $60 6·12-3019 : Dcalrr. ITI 4l S3l-8l05. ' ' · Service lllonday 'till 'l:OO Pl\1
SCUBA GEAll KOLEE Tool & Cut tor MINIATURE POODLE PUPS iil:[?fja!?\!JtJl !l!F.l --~-~---1 '68 NL'1ROD. 0"'".x~. SIP• 6' SRI 'Lill Nooo KARMANN GHIA
PaKI over $l)), Grinder, like new "·/atlacb. Black * 5 '"'·eeks NQW OPENI N~m:! ~ d:7sira1:1~::..c! ~~.e,54~~~: din i table. COAST IMPORTSl--,--------1
Sam.tice! $17S, !lm.41!13 ~c,,·a1=1:=s;:·i:7.m;='===== I •5J6-712j * Now Rtntlng Sf)llct~ in in chOice Newport-Costa 16. CRO\VN tra\iel traile.r • Of Orange County fnc. 63 VW GHIA ·
U.S. OIV1?r scuba tl\nk, I mo 31i ~Old Pu.re-bred male lirand NC\v16*p**k *** l\1eu lttta adult park. ;·or slei'!ps -4. \Vith extras. $foaj. 1200 \V. Pacific Coast HW.)' Convtrtihlc. RCCt'nt engine
(lid, w/back Pl\Ck, boot. FREE TO YOU blk Labrador. All sbols & ~~b;;vrn~ sale by private prty. Phone 968-4i37 642-0406 • 546-4529 o\'erhaul, hard to find mo-
Uke Mw $70. 962-8462 license. !"»4S.826j ORANGE GROVES a.~6-3i83 dcl, Radio, heater, .f speed,
SURFBOARD 7, llansen. 3 WELL-BEJ~AVED kil~tns: l\lALTESE-Ch. sirecl Adult -52~i Acres of fun Hv-l'o"N.,...°"B"'E"A"'CH""",-,w"'i"'Pool,-.-..,.& Truck• tSOO DATSUN ete.
GARAGE SALE! Frff \Vine. $1~ 11"1, ne,•er used, 2 tabbya. 1 black&: white, 2 male's, 2&4 lb t:K-autie!I.. 2 lb. inb'.. . laundry. l7x3.1. 2 br/ba $1099
Ewl')'thlng eon · cht11.p ttmovable gkeg, ekirw $95. m A I ei;, l ft m 11. I e. stud JICJ'V~. 54~2100. -1'.·lulli·mlllion m(lb1le liv'g rm, kitchen. din'"' rm SUN W
stow • rerrig l h>ufit ot .~0 ,..,,,.1 968-S307 9129 1 -'~=~=:...:,~.:;_-home community. • '65 CHEVY 1'-z TORP U '69 DAT AGON CHICK IVERSON ---1~~111d -,._ SA.1.~~==~~·=====I AKC SootU"1 Turicn, -run 1lmc ;n perk ,,,,. & 2 car cemeot ddvc. !4500 ll • •
1i.u-• ... ...-I~ -1 WK---ObD •m•U mixed ffl"mrHer;-10~ ol"'.-'-+-\11l't'Chlter. or ba1 olr. Pvt.~. 615--0331 VW ~· 21Slt Canyon Dr., Mltctll•neou• l600 bl'O\\'n & blk &: !luf:fy p.1p-* 83Z-ST1$ '* _ Continuous !!lino¥ fret 6 ey\., 81\ck, dlr. $109!) FUil Ovl:lrl'M!ad cam cnitnc, " Apt C. CM. 64Z-S38T pit• 67J.-0161 10/l b l\10B1LE houtt resale 2\b.:"3. Prict. ($27475) 'Viii take cat IQ>etd, radio, low mlltage. !">i9-303t Ext ti6 or 67
• FURNMURE-DISHES SURFBOARD: Gmk 7' 6", Cl.TT'E little Germ An rRANSPORTAT ION -~~nd~t!<by moun· 1% ha., :.! BR. compl. in trade or finance private Speci•I lntuior. Sactillct. 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
It ~USC. •• d!m•n rail. l\fO\•lf: proJ, &. Sht'phr-rd puppy, 6 "'k old Boats & Y•c.hts 9000 taln1 & <>range rrovCA. setup, C!\t adll p&rk. Sll.:!00 party. 546-4052 or ~!H-6811, {}.'TG$6), Ttkc trade or COSTA M~A
1:.VERYDAY! Aft .. p.m. c.amtra. New Kodak i 1-1S. male. Gil-0086 lO/l -7 minutes from world'.1 tenns. 6l.)...2881 ,63 FORD Econolinf'", Che:ITY Amall down, \Vi]J finurtcr pvt I-========= I
644-Sl77 Al·OO. 847·2393 2 Ftmale Jong Mir kiUens, WHY NOT ~~~(';'~1th~~Pf~1~~d)~f'n· Kil Tro.)an 20X55 Ex.panda c0n<L Must see lo BP-pty. Call J\taul')' dlt, S.tO.JJOO LOTUS
El.EC atow, lronr:r. \\•heel molhr<r 1: Persian TAKE A CRUISE?? ,...,Check The1eF1atur es unfuni. Adult park prttlate. Make of.fer. or 494-7506 Aftl01lm. ---------1 i :";:!W~:::"'::;"'::-::· ;_ ___ 1;_1_IO chair, I~" kiln, mold k 67l-3I2S 1011 For LeaM Oc Championship Uwn Bowl· • &tZ.0007 * 5.16f0~5 DOT DATSUN '62 l.OTU1' Ellie. xlnt. cond.
'th bk>cb I more. 20.321 S.W. Ch•rle r ln;: Green, ~CU Wuh, BAYSIDE Villegr_, l BR. 2 St.II S2000 nr !rd for late RE t•n 1 GE RATOR ,_, Birch. •··•· A•• Hg•-2 ~lale puppies 10 v.·ka old "'tt· C 0<oo""l n. i•-• ad .. 't·-• 110,•=. '70 CHEVY PICK·UP OPEN DAILY VI" ·•• a~ trttie:r, $50. Se't •I 219 .,.._.,,.. '"' "'" ~ t0/1 LOW WINTER RATES! C!iA':'5u~~f Shutlie-(}:nf;.675-11642....-.. ,_ "'TON. XLNT CONO.. AND • ,.-.;,~nr ~
Grant, A.P4 8. NB 5474820 JliKE'S Continuous s~·.ap BEAUT1FULSiM1eMkllle.n. 40''Vhttler0ui&cr: Sleeps!. board. encl0$td Therapcu· ..;.=~~~=~--• 96&-1!»7 • SUNDAYS
ti1 5 • IHttL Buy&ll·Tr~ 117 E. 3,,. mo old. fiTl-4JS7 cclO/l ?ttakc 11ppt, N0\\.'1 O'VNER: tic Pool, Swim Pool, Bii· "/'O 3.:D HONDA * '55 ClfEVY P.U, Reblt 18835 l?.eatb Blvd.
1_ .. .., U' dttplrttze. .l~8~1h;·.':"'-;;"!..64~1'-:;0066~=c:--.< l;.;F.""';i,;c;;-7,;f;;;;;;;"::;;= \Vkda.v11 a:!S-8978 t:,.-Ves It \\'k· Hards. Cami'.! Room. As.. SCRAMBLER.. EX. CONO eng, Nu. tin:•, radio It. Huntl-ton ~a<'h
... ,,. • ., .. Sl.50. 80 GAt.. AQUARIIDI •• all .,AEPHERD. ,Lab fern. pup. ends: 82'7-1431. sTr•m,bllY "s°""'' SoeAt & ==,.*.,*="='"=7486==*=*== lurnbrr rack. $-17.l. &J&..9523 142.nii.or 5'!0.0442 -~ ~-. ~· gl•u. filfa, elt'. r.omplete pic11, 6 Wlt1 old. 968-.~ 9129 :=-:--,..-..,,,--,.-~-~ a er torag:e rta. -· --~-w• IT Bo!too Whaler 1<11 & 6 Lovoly Courtyard. HARD lo .,1 '5' 7ord I!. too 70 DATSUN SIOO. 494~15'~ I OLD falh~ntd baby~ hp, Xtr" t11nb, bllit i,nk. -~mall pclll a\101vcd. Motor Homes t215 P.U. Xlnt. cond., $57;5. ~ HOTPOtNT DELUXl"~
PRTBL Oiah"'·a1her, lrnt
open, v.'O'Jd lop. 3~i'-99J.I
• PllTt.a> l"!frlc·£rffltf',
frt:llt·fl'f!lt. mppmone. $200.
~ntalll pm
l\IOVT?\C! Sac. l Fn11ck Ven. 6~6-Q28 :i/u dt'\:k, nll. cover. lrlr, l':ltt--Imajl1ne All this from ~5--7098. 4 Door Sf'd11n. uttd s1799 run
dlng M11cblM.s. Loe: lnd~. f'REE Al1ol'llble to)' size pup-tl\)nlc f<Jlllp. $2::ill0. 642-10-l!f. 1485f8}~7?re';rR:~~t}'nrtnt 'fill Explorer 2~· motor honu?, 15 it time 1o n!O\'W! upi Check price. f601AVA) dlr, \\11U
833-1172 p!('!I, &li-..~7 9/29 BAY Launch, in~rd V·S. CAU. COu.ECT llkt nu. \\'ill t:0n!i'ld ln!tl tbe 1-lclp \\'11nl"<I Gttlion ol t11ke tr11rte t1r ftn.11.n<"C prl-
flS * $~1M• GYM6~ r:~~~~~a97: C1.tl~: ~~$600 C'.00\plete. ~~tia1?:mg ~1=~~ ~~· trav ltlr tor tQ. ~~SSJ~AJ,~Y PILOT c~;:.;lo6!:.;tc::r-:.:I:..·"'-· _ea_1_1_'4_M002_._•r
• . .
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPO~TATJON Tl\ANSPORTATION
r:·'---"-":;.'.;''°~::.•;;ut:;.ot:;:._;;.96::;00 Imported Aut1J1 MOrJ lmp6rted Autot ---lmpilrted A utii HOO
MG TQYOTA VOLKSWA4"N • VOLKSWAGEN
........... '6BYW
S. THINIC !TIOJYIOITIAI a...-s.lectloll AUTO MATIC "M ... 6''. '71 CORO'Ll'As -Of VW Campen, Black with bl11..ck Jnrt"rio r,
HERE NOW Vons, l(ombis, ,conomy 1peda.l, \\'ill fin.
\y B N
"
U -...1 anc.e ,private party. Lie. ''FRl""LA .. DER" •••""· ' on, eo,,,., UMS, ew ,.,. XEU-22<. UI n '""matlc. •' s,...i, lm.,...lete 0.11 .. ry . $1499. ·~~'~';,'.;<il i,.;s~~~ cl,fN!~,,., CHICKYWIVERSON CHICK IVERSON
' NIW-USEO-SERV. B YW ·~ Ill. MAXEY ~~:;;i;rt18s\'.'~ 54~""' E" 66 or"
TRANSPORTATION
Autos W •nttcl f1'DI
•
WE PAY CASH
FOR YOUR CAR
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd.
C:O.ta Mesa ~l200
WE PAY TOP CASH ITIOIY COSTA MESA 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
Sales, Se~.i. PttUIQITIAJ '.~ .VW Bu.Cherry cond . .,-=c-CO=ST-;A=M_ESAocc-=~ I :i ~to~·e:r:,~
lmmodlate Delivery, llNI BEACH BLVD. ',...,u.,. thN-oo. t. 'l'u<k • * '6' V\Y ""• • Hke .,.w, GROTH CHEVROLET II i Bl tin: h A!l.1/Jo'~1 $1400. ' All Modell Hunt, Beach 147-ISSS f'!> nt. 1 . ~· c !'Olm! * '62 V\lt. cheap! ~'>7-7268
J1rluµort
Jl111µ011 s
Jml N.ofCout Hwy.on Bcll r0~s,. ~ .... ~nt JOb. Make
'" --VW CAMPER BUS '70 Toyota Mark 11 . .,.. -:_,,.,· --• "· Ex $995. 962-2273 Load · """' .-~om ..... mper -~-d • Jo"actory air, •.uh> tra Sharp! Loaded $2950 I XI nd
mat•?·. Just over 2.000 miles. ~tountt'd 1 Pare. Sam ·~"~~Y~~S:a~ • · nl co ·
3100 W, Cout Hwy• N.E. Sacrifice! {642BQD) Take 548-1074 * 64241t93 *
542-941Ii ~().t7S4 lrade or small down "rilll-.c-;;;,;-=:-==;-::=: l--~~;._:;__:.:.,.._~-
ll11ance priv pry, ca·ll Sid '68 'V'IV Bug, AM/Fl\f radio '65 VW Bug w/goodies
'69 MGB l'ello\\', Xlnt cond. dlr aft 10 am 540-3100 or & many rxtras. MUST * &42-22SO blwn 7 & 9 pm *
Chrome wil'e \\'he.f!l loO , 494~7'i06 SELL! $1400 or &st offer.
.Ati.t-F°M , tonneau S 2iOO. l=:'.:::';'.;::::'.:':'7::':=:=1~"~&-0~132'.:·~·~~----i VOLVO '">-'""· VOLKSWAGEN '61 YW 1------
I ~=-------Color me green. Economy 1---------'.64 VW · specJal, will fi nance pri\'ate
'64 MGB, Clean, lo mi's both GI party, MFG 969.
MGB
lops, "'ire whls. l\tusl sell! eoaming wbile, 11.i th red in-$4SO
$1145, 544-2689 itorior, can finanee private
PORSCHE
, '64 PORSCHE
356 SC COUPE
-Balboa blue, chrome \.\'herls,
rAd ial tires, concourse ron-
-dition. Lie. XOG9!l7
..,.,. L''· """EJ CHICK IVERSON $799 YW
CHICK IVERSON S<s.3031 E•t. 66 ••" vw 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
,. cosT• MESA '67 VW Bug
Ll'U'l.nftl
THINI
'VOLVO' -'"FRIEDLANDER"
1J1M llAC .. tltWY, "I
89J.7S66 • 537-682.f
NEW·USEO.SERV.
~
VOLVO
Ask for Sales l\1anasu
l82ll Bttch Blvd,
HunUnrton Beach
&47-6081 K1 9.3331
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR
FOR TOP USED CARS
If your car ls extra clean,
&el! us first.
BAUER BUICK
234 E . 17th St.
Costa l\tesa 548--71&5
Auto Leasing 9110
All Meke1-All Modol1
Automobiles -Trucks
"\Vhere Service
J\fakes the Difference"
Orange Co .• Ne\.\•port Bf'ach
4570 Campus Dr. 714-540-lS25
0A1L v Pl Lor u , r
TRANSPORTATION P II
UMd C1rs 9900 UHCI C•r1 ------""-,,. --BU IC K-CHMQLET DODGE MERCURY
J96l-8lJ1CK ~IVIERA.ff'Oll •gs CHEVY Bl.AZER '65 DODCE Dirt GT, Hpd, 'fiO MERCURY, 1!111,
flO'llltt, air. KOl'loous be.Ice t0.000 mllf!I. J-lu 4 whffl 273 cu in. 23S HP, R/H, axctll•nt, $150.
C9.r with beige lntr:r. •Jow drlVt", VI, turbo n,y. blldlet teatl, Rul'll Xlnt * 545-4314 *
milu, outstand~ car you drama1k , c ti 1 Io m aport f7SO 6t1-6'l9S '65 Montclair Ur vinyl Jn'
should see. Call u.W<t car c.b lhl~ seat. \\'ar~n l'·10=--;0od=g=e-,Chal=.-1,"o .. ,.,.,r.~!U"ll Air cond, ps/pb, new tlta.
dPpt. 546-1303 Con nell hubt, radio, pov.'fr 1te11t1ng pwr.aircond.3-5: ~. WJ0.962-31'21
Chevrole1, Cost11. Me••. Ir brakes, air llft 1ho(.·la! ext 222 Eve: ~2538. !=========!
f'l.iention tl\k' ad aftt'r )'OU front k rtar. Llke hrandl=============
ha\'e t11ken delivery of the Dew. Call u~ed car Dept.
car and v.•e wUI relund )'00 546-17.(13. Connell Chevrolet, FORD
~l_IOO.,-,,<~uh"='."'°~~~~~l ~C..:;;'l~a;M~o;.M~.~ll~"~">~·c==-"'·--;;;::-;;;;;::;:;;;---
• )96S §UICK Ri\'iera-full 1965 CHEVY Nova. 11.000 m l . JOP DOLLAR
power, 11.lr. X l n ! ilfl" oo line, bon!d and bala~
pearance, bf'!tl'r 292.4spetdlran1 . .P.tl11ytx·
m e c ha n I c a 11 y , $1600. tras, Excr.llent cond. S.1000.
644-13.'>I ~21)),!
==c===1=".===1 •• 65 CHEVY Sporl Van AD LLAC campe:r, auto, air, clean. -* &-41-2407 *
tor
CLEAN USED CARS
Stt Andy Brown
THEODOR I
ROBINS FORD
L~ CADILLAC Seil an· '57 CHEVY 301 ell(. w/4.
DeVillf'. UnUSUAI c ar spd, Reblt last Nov. Mq1,
\\'f4:l.OOO h.JnNl miles, Like chrm rims, ne"' clulch, gd
bomd oow ;"""''· E.x-body."'"' ... 1325/b" olr.''•6=6-FA~l=R"=N=E~w=A~G~O~N <'ellent condition, a\r, full 557-4292 • ..,.,
JXlll'<'r rquipn1l.'n\, Call usOO* --.-,,~C-he_v_y_w_ago_o--,.-,.~b-, 1 .
car cicp1 , 546-1203, Connell llC'.W tiN:&. _ Automatic, power atttring,
Cht>vmlf't, Costa i\, es a . S275. 51!>-8129 11 ir cond, llereo tape, dlr.
i\lrnuon this ad after you (TAY 279) Sl6.J9 }\JI! Priei!.
MUSTANG
'li6 Fastl>Ack ,,.,
~spd & Xlnt coM .
$1200 or TRADE or OFFER * 5'11)..41117 *
66 Mu1rang 6 cy\ ... uro new
blry " radiator rd titts
must sell $900 675-7550.
OLDSMOBILE .
'64 ST ARf'JRE: POWl:R, LO
Ml. IMMAC. BARGAJN!
NB. * * 67s.;G74S
PLYMOUTH
'68 SATELLITE wiifiN
have heen delivered t~ car CHRYSLER Will ta~ car In lradl! or fin.
and get 11 cash refund of ~-Ance private parly. 546-4052 Automatic. pnwcr 1lttrin1,
SIOO, ,67 300 CONV. o• -49-~11, (ZVK 108) dlr. $1899 Full
'70 CON~-A/C, A:\11 FM.
e1c. 5.~ n1i, xlnl co.nd.
Aftrr Sept 28 phone 714:
962~4
'68 EL DORADO, 32.000
111i's, All pn"·rr. Like new.
~~-~~~~I Price. Will take car In trade!
1r.1MAC BRONZE BEAUTY '68 Gala~ie 500 or finance pri\'llle parfy. Z'r·s~;~ W.ats, :1~~~~el~ t'ull pov.·er plus air oond. dlr. 5't6-4052 or .C94-Sllll.
=~=======I \Viii lake small down or ROADRUNNER -'68 New
CORVAIR ( i nan c e. CVCD35), Ca.JI paint, cusl Int, 11uto, 383,
494-7744. p/,, S\600. ~106
PONTIAC Call '.'157-9349 J\!ONZA '62, ,.built motor, '69 FORD Ranch WagGn.
-=~~~~~~-I new clutch, body and In-Auto; lac air P/S -
'62 CAD 4-clr DeVille 1crior g«ld cond.: $325 or 81<'~/rad~. Xlnl cond. '---------
Air, all po\.\'er. lo tni. be.st ofler. 892-7291, 14271 Sac. S2750. A.17-4907. 1 • P °"3 •" '67 Tempesl 2 Dr. CU1klm vi ply .,...,... ·I ,, \Vebhcr, \\'f'stmins!er. '69 COUNTRY Sed11n Stn Sport Coupe. Auto, pis.
$3099
'CHICK IVERSON vw
11'1 VW Campmo~1!e .• Pop Radio. Cte11.n. dlr. Must se11,
lop, fl'n1 '. all eq~1p. Eu1u-\I' i I l finance. (TUU318). JWan dc>l1v<'ry price, nev<'r 494_7744 licensed. 548-7689 ,o·~=~· ~~~-~-
• ,68 we.· . k . VW·NEW: Eng. brake,;,
'70 Demo. • 1536
$2862
$200 + !11ke 11vC'r p11.vn1f'n1s '61 Corvair, gOOd cond. Radio, \\'gn, radio, p.1., p.h, a ir p/b, 40.000 ml. Xlnt eond .
on '6.) C11d Con\'!. All P"'r, healer,· SJOO. 673-3604. ask cond. xlnl cood. pvt ply, $1.2!'(1. 543-9597.
Used Cars 9900 =X='="',,ro=. ,,""=·,,"'=',,·'='="=·=== for Dorothy. 644-2902, 646-7721 PONTIAC '69 2 Dr. Catalina I---------co=R~V~A~t=R-'c.,=,-= ..... -.7"11-,c-,,c.lc.10;;;--;,_=o=n=o,.-,C'°o""""try,..,--;Sq=,1~re }lardrop, air-p/1, p I b.
\ 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA 1'1ES/.
'60 PORSCHE Cabriolet, 1600
super, with harrl top. New
l!ngine, new clutch, new
tirt:!fi, new paint, AM!FM,
just like Ill'\\', can he seen
al 2089 Jf11.rbor Blvd., or
phone 64~1982, 9am to Spm
~ PORSCHE Con\'l ID)
WNW eng. NU: hrAkes-
ciutch-chrome/ whls. $600.
&l&-2885
e 1962 PORSCHt: SC • X1nt
cond. ne"· paint. $1900. Pvt
ply, 642-1 316
'61 Porsche Cabriolet HiOO
Suf)l!r. nu clutch, radiAls,
$2000/o!fer. 54~024
I 1969 Pors;che 911· T
Xlnt cond. l-i :i3.IJ010
'64 PORSCHE. rrh uilr
l!nginc, xlnt cood. 1\1usl srll
$2495 or best offer. 642-0019.
'63 PORSCHE
COUPE
Harittop. i:1eaminJ':' mr1alhc
sll\'er, "'i!h hranrl new in·
terior, chrome 1vhrrls, ra-
dial tirrs, All1 /Fl\1 radio,
Lie, PXW982.
$2399
CHICK IVERSON vw --
549-30.11 Exl. 66 or Ji7
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA 1\IESA
SAAB
Aulhorizcd Dcalrr
Sales e Ser\'icc • Parts So"'' Couprs in Stock
Orange County'!'! Nrv1rst Dlr.
COAST IMPORTS
o l Ora11.1:c County Inc.
1200 \V. Pacific Cna.1t Hwy.
642-04-06 • 54fi.4.il!9
SPRITE
1966 SPRITE
. $700 -R46.17T:I
TOYOTA
* '69 CORONA-2 DR. XLNT
Cond-Lo lift, Aulo, Air .
SJ750. P\'1 Pt y: 673-3751.
'69 O:>rona 2 dr. hrdtp, beii;:P
~hHt. 15.:ioo mr~ Cll'An &
r.conomicnl. S1495. 54~2538.
New C•r•
· 1ge, sllc 5h•ll. paint, uphl, sunroof. li\1·
r&h, Xlnt cond. MAC Gr!'at running cond
$.1175. 6-1&.4~70 $.'i75.. * * 5.'l&-1729
'63 YW Bug ·66 "" CAMPER, "" "'""· MEOIAN1C SPECIAL $1800 or best otter.
Lie. OKC..612 * 53&-4938 *
$299 '66 V'i\' Fastback-$ROO.
CHICK IVERSON 1000 °""°"h Lo, N.B.
6-12-4749 aft 7 vw '66 VW SQUAREBACK. Gd.
549-30.tt Ext, 66 or 67 Thru. out. $1100. Pvt ply:
1970 !?ARBOR BLVD. 642--0178
~~~C~DST~A~M=ES~A~~ ·=68~K~A~R~M~AN~N~~G~h~l,-,--,-air·
WE BUY VW BUSES cond .• radials, stereo, $19'J5.
l d 673-2312 <tuto sport t 1~N""EW~~vw'"·;:-;;:BU'"G..-
962.'> Garden Grove Bh:d. ,
;17.m7 Call Coif.qt $55.89 pr. month
'6R 'V'IV Fastback -Clean,
r.tch. J\1ust sell . $1375 or best
offer. 673-TI36
'65 YW
BUG
$147.71 down lnc;ludes
t1x & Lie. Open End
VW LEASING
AT
CHICK IVERSON
1800 r· CPI! for deli\'<'ry.
O\'ers<'a!I d<'I Specialist.
DEAN LEWIS
19&6 Harbor, C.~f. &iS.930.1
'59 VOLVO
FOR sale or lease • 1968
Cougar Sale S2500. Only 13M
ml Lease $!JO/mo, 24 mo.
1969 Lincoln Continrntal •
llM mi, lea!C<' S170 I mo, 18
mo only. ()11.y r>16-4440:
niJ:'hts 675-7377, \\'. E.
Griesn1eyer. Radio, hca1<'r, 4 speed, excel. ---C.O;-~=~--
Jeot transportation car or WE BUY
J:oor:I secont' car. dlr. Full CARS
price $699. {NTL 924). Small ,,., ____ •• #JU_,,,, __ •
down "'ill finance pri\'ate '~ ,,,,,.,,.,,,.
CAMARO hrakl's. Radio. Heater $T;i0. Wagon LTD. Loaded. Xlnt SUvrr gtty -blk vinyl int.
'69 CAMARO
5."17-3350. col\d .. Must ~ell! 830-5434 S2395. 968-JTh!'i. 968-3775.
CORVETIE
1966 COUNTRY Sedan 9 pass '68 GTO. Ok grttn body, blk
Sla Wag. P/1, P/b, 11.lr. vinyl top, chrm whls, lo ml. ---------1 Xlnl cond. $1450, 673-4281 Very clean. $1MXI. Jim. V~. 4 spt"Cri , air oonditioninlil'. ·64 VE'ITE t~B -Dark blue .. 69 FAIRLANE, P/1., auro, 642-fi631 {\\'YB 942• dlr. \Viii !Ake ,,. t •• 11-="'"--,,""c-,-,-,,=-1 . in COuu. .....,. A/C, 351 cu. In. Ne\\' lires. LYKE new '62 TempHI win. ~:~e in Ya~~;. or~~; p~\; ==;J:l;m:. ="='=""'='===l,0,"::"::"..:"':::';'.:1:_:17:::"'::.·;:,·':.:'"""":::::::__ 1 new tires. eu::. Must sell lhla 494~11~ '66 Ford Custom . Nr.w brAke1., Wf'f'k $3?5. 646-5.112 e\'ell. " COUGAR ,;,,,, '""'""P. 1700. c.u '69 LE MANS 6-CYL
'iu C11.n1aro ~1~75 11-. * * M" -~lo apprcciale S29;,o 160i~' '67 COUGAR GT $179.i I=·==·=·===,--,== ~· ~
Balhoo Blvd. 67>-0235. Air, p/.s, disc brakes. Aft par1y, :'>-164052 or 494..6811. 2100 Harbor Blvd. 645-0466 ========= 6pm 959 Tillrr \Vay. Cdl\1. LINCOLN T·BIRD
'58 VOivo run• gd
$\Of' • • • 540-[12'11 BUICK
Antiques, Classics 9615 1---------'Si RIVIERA: NU polyglar;s,
1936 Dodge Coul)t' $21XKl invt. air. F/P, ;,2,000 mi.
g~k Sl ,500,21752 Pacif. C.H. $2700. * 5'164-415
'=H"B=Sp""?=A='='=' ,,'·====1·611 RIVIERA -Beau1iful I · cone\. All xtn.s. 4 ne\\' lircs.
9700 $3595. 642-5613 or 830-4091 Autos Wanted
IMPORTS WANTED '67 RIVIERA : NU polyglass,
Oranp Counties air, F/P, 52,000 mi.
CHEVROLET
'61 Che\'y con\'rrt-new top,
rear \\'indow &. bonnel. $225
or l>Ht oHer. Good lrans.
218& Can}'Jn Dr. Apt C. Cl\f.
SEE YOUR REAL.TOR }·on YOUR BIG FRl!:E
NE\VC01\1f~RS KIT
----·······---DODGE '66 CONT'L 4 rlr, xlnt. cond.
-----~---I Lthr, air, vjn, tp., am/(m. $189.i. 644-2859 aft 7 '69 DODGE RT
'66 T-BIRD Conv., •ir, pwr,
low mil. l owner, $12t5.
497-1850 or 494-7192
FULL PO\YER +factory air, U1ecl Cart 9900 UIMI Cars
21,000 carefully drlv11:n miles.1p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_1
Musi JiQu ldatr immediate-
ly. i.~r S2677 buy~. •10<19.
CHICK IVERSON vw 1969 CAMARO
American mags wide tires,
custom metallli: pa.Int w 'h
beautiful lacl! work. YPO.
001.
VW TOP S BUYER $2700. * 54&-1475
'60 CHEV. Nomad 11111.lion
wagon: air. g()()d tires. $150.
5'1&-lli.!)11; 4!H-~188 ~A!l·30~1 Ext. ~ nr 67
l!liO HARROR BLVD.
1 dr. H.T. VI, f•c+orv •ir, htrbo hydr1..,1-
lic, •le. Dirk 'l ''V with •i11yl top. !YOM
0711
SeVt'l'Al other customized
V\V to choose fron1
CHICK IVERSON vw
54r..3031 Ext. 66 or 67
19i0 HARBOR BLVD.
Radio, 4 spe<'d, excellent con.
dition. <llr. 1-"ull price $699.
IB\VM881) Sm11.IJ down. Will
finance private pa r ty,
546-4052 or 494..61111.
WANTED
I'll pay 1op dolla-for your
VOLKSWAGEN today. Call
and ask for Ron Pinchol.
54!1-3031 Ext. 66-67' 673-0'nl.
'64 V\V Deluxe Bu.s Nrw
paint, rnl{. Xlnt eond.
Sacrifice for best cash nfr
or trade. 646-83.il.
1968 V\V.Rel.R:e. Low mi ..
Xlnl ('()nrl. $1373. Pvt ply.
67;).64!)K al1cr 8 pm
;-6!1 V\V con\'t. Oulslanrlin_i:
<-'Onrl . Best otft>r. 543-8458 or
67:'\-68.10.
• V'i\I Bu~ '68, !I-pass,
mi'5, nt'\\' tires, S329a • * :i>IS-2698 '*
'59 vw
Good running. Desi offer!
• 642-517'2 •
'69 VW CAMPER: Xlnt eond.
r.tany Xtrv:. ?.faki Offer. * * 8-12-725i ...
'61 V\V ;
Rbll eni;::, new fires, $i95
• :i,;7_3059 •
'61 CHEVY ~3 eu in. No bfl<'k mo HARBOR BLVD. BILL MA.'<EY TOYOTA '67 RIVIERA: NU p:il ygla55,
COSTA MESA l8ll8l Beach Blv". air, F/P, 52,000 mi. "'indo1v. &st oflf'r. 310 \\'.
V\Y--.~u=s~~-~"'-b~l-l ~.~ ... -. 'H. Bl!ach. Pb. 347.S S2700. * s.15.4475 AW>Cll)do, Apl P. afrl'r 3 P~1
"Campe-riZf!d.'' Good tires.
STI5. 536-1144 "Have! a Nice
Day"
t(1Au111i
'68 CONT'L 2 Dr.
Hlive trade,
673-2312
+ 'M BUICK e
GOOD TRANSPORTATION
$95. * * &12-!IR77
'liO CijEV. Nomad J1t11tion
wagon: air. good tire1. $1 ;,().
5'16-1698: 4!14-5<188
I~ DoclJ,;:e Coronet 440, 2 Dr.
V 41 auto, pl~. Landau top.
Air-oond. Low mileagr-,
BEAUTU·~UL CAR! $1950.
968-2803.
BUICK1NCOSTA MESA
SptCllllzi1( 11(!allll ..,,-~· JAGUAR --• !il!' 4 .£>Pel #
234 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA
*SNEAK PREVIEW*
INTRODUCING
''A NEW SET OF VALUES''
$2895
1970 G.T.O.
1 dr, M.T. l••u+if11I 9o!d with 1•11cl1lwo&d
•i11yl felt I i11l•rior, F•clory
tie11 i119, 1l1177•SI
$3895
1967 MUSTANG 1 + 1
1•0 111t .. r1cl ie, h••'•'· pew•r 1t•11. E•·
11ptie111lly 11ic• 1, . ..,;1,.,, c1rl ITXT•411
$1995
1969 GTO 4°SPEEO'
l1111tif11l V•rd1r1 Gr1111, 1t1w1r 1f•1ri11t
I-pew1r di1c 911~•1. I l,000 "'il11 I f11•
fel"t w1rr111tv. 1714AFXI
$2795
1961 CHEV. MALllU
U11b1li1•1bly b••uliful, I lic• w/\l1c• i11·
l1rior. VI , 4ule1t11tic, pew1r 1t1•rint , low •
..,;1,,. fVIZ7441
S2195
1969 FIREllRO CONY.
Sp1rklin t •1d with bl1c• cu1!01t1 tri"',
pew•r 1l1•ri11'1 I-f1clery 1ir, IZLH02ll
$2795
1970 OLDS CUTLASS
F1cl. 1ir, pow11 1t11r., '''''' l1p1, IJ•Hlll•
l1r 4·11t11J, 1p1rklint red w/hl1~k .,;11yl
top & hue••• •••'•· !*t•l211.)
S3295
IOW ,,. COSTA MESA
HONDA s::.
1971
.. RIVIERA •
ELECTRA
•SKYLARK
• 'LE SABRE
1961 VALIANT 1 OR.
Plv..,111th w/f•cle1y 1ir '"d 1ute. tr1111·
111 iu l111, Llthf hl~1. IWVM•Sl
$1895
1969 PLYMOUTH GTX
011lv 14,000 f!'I!. &114 with hrew11 tee I
i11l1rier, h11c••t 111h, 11dl1, htr .. I'''*"''
1t•11. 440 V.t . !YU41111
• All COOllO 'lfO"T ........ e l'•OMT WMlll. 0111'11 e ll'OWI• AJlllTl.D 511.~
AOIUtTllfO l'•OfllT OltC s 13 9 5 •11•11.1• e M,\JtlMUM Jl'lllD 11 Ml'M e V' TD • •11.11 Pia • r.~~~ ........ :' ...
llOAN , .... 11M lflW C•r ,,..._,llitll llUI Trttt, T1• & Lktllll
OUtlMOllU
• :WO 11.lUDl'll~. COSTA JlllUA 540-9640
• CENTURION• J
TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY
September 29th and 30th
-. •
S2B95
1969 CHIV. MALIBU 396 ---r'''· .,,, -~1 .... •l11yl ..... ,,.,~1111, ,.,.
l•w ••tlr;,,, CZICF&t71
$3195
C&.OllD IYMIAYI
/WiJl ROY CAR VE R
~ROLLS -ROYCE
2921 HAklOR BOULEVARD. CDSTA MESA
S•fi·••••
•
I,..
'
• I
• •
,.. . ...
•
· OUNGE COUNTY'S
' '
~RGUT PONTIAC DEALER
. I'
annour:i.ces /th~-room.i.es·r,
, smoot_hest, most _ lu-xurlous
Pontiac ever.
A tr,ue luxury car
The first Grand Ville.
NOBODY DAS MORE 1971 PONTIACS!
' .
197·1 Grand Prix.
simply beautiful. ·· -
------
So's our deal · on one.
"'SELLING • SERVICING • SATISFYING"'
PONTIAC PEOPLE
ALONG THE SOUTH COAST
COSTA MESA NEWPORT BEACH
HUNTINGTON BEACH ·CORONA DEL MAR
FOUNTAIN VALLEY IRVINE
'
WE PERFORM ALL PONTIAC WARRANTY WORK REGARDLESS
OF WHERE YOU ORIGINALLY PURCHASED YOUR PONTIAC •••
e SHOWROOM HOURS e
Mond•y thru S.tu~d•y, 9 A.M. to 10 P.M. Sund•y 10 A.M. to 7 P.M.
''Service First''
.
Great engine. -
•
Great reputation.
Great deal.
'71 GTO .' ,,_
'
..
Pure Pontiacl
13600 Beach Blvd .. Westminster (Beach Blvd. ot Gorden Grove Fwy.) · Coll 892-6651 or 636-2500
• , •/
17