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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-10-05 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• ,.. ' . I. ) 17 .. " . " ! -. I • ,1 , • ~. ' l • • 1 • MONDAY. AFTERNOON, OCTOBE.R r;, :19l0 . ' . "9L. ... ~ ...... ~;. ·~·· ' " ' ' - !' I I , I • .• '. . . ~ ~ • • . .. • ' - ' J : Nix~on Returns ' .. ' : ·-J . ---. __ ..-,.-..,-_ .~ , • , · 1 ~ • r I • ' . ' --· DAf.Y PILOT,_.., llt' .... ,.,.. ·cup SKIPPER :io icKl!it.'l((sPCil>IDS TO WELL WISHERS DURING•WATIR-NI PARADE 'With Pot Dousr•n ·•t 'colui\lbiil'. Hllm, lnlropld Cr.Wmiln'Goo~p -Twiet' (Rl"'tl ..,.. Mn. Twiet A • ~ • • , . • • Off Duty Cop Turns Rt1bbet NEW YORK (AP) _: .A• fransit patrolman, hidden in a change booth at a Brooklyn subway station, .. shot a holdup man today, oOly to dlscoVer ~ muked bandit -the ,---+--f!'!J!lro!ml!!l!!!!&n~,ho had replaced an bour fore. p11uc.-sara. · [ ' Palrolmao Raymond Campbell wu on duty in the token booth • when Lmasked man stuck h1s gun lhrouih lhe window 8nd demanded money. As lhe cashier. Mn. Dorothy McDonald, push<d the bills throuCb, • Campbell 'fired once, police said, bitting the gunman ln I.he abdomtr.. . . Wll<n they tool< hiJ matk' .ir: Mn. Mc:Dooald ~ him u potrolmoa Raymood Tbompooo, 21, who hid Wn tlith her just on hour before tbaL He· wa1 still wurtna: the blue milform shJrt he wure on his I a.m. shift. II< bad 111«1 his terYlce eevolyer in the ltickup, police talcf. He was taken to Cumberland ffo'l'ftal In terlous condition. \ ~---...---• • . . .. " ~• '' • , · 1 ol• I f' ~rinsun·· • . J .. ., • •• • . . • •••• • . ' I •· I • • .. ' ·. . . . ' ' - E4J•~~£-_ I ' ..... t ' • • i-'«"'"-"· , • ~ :; ... ,;,. 1 .. ,- ) : Plans TilR ' ·}~era~v~~· . -. ' -.. -$ T: I ·~ -"":'""T:"-P e~~e:-Qids • ' ' ~ .. 1 • t DAILY PILOT s • Monday, Octobtr S, 1970 . ..em ·r.,el HERO FICKER RET URNS • • • ... gratulatlon fi'om Gov. ROnald wis read -by--:Assembl)'11"11n Ba~am. .. • Co um6!1-under low wllh hunare60r - pleasure craft bringing up the rear and 1warming-around the boat of honor. A resolution introduced In the St•te L -E~es; ToU- -leaclies 13 The parade was made up of everything t..ealalature oommeodin1 Ficker for; blBw from small catboats similar to lhe one the -llrst West Coilt yachtsman to defend- ·.Clammy rot. -'lnd-hlihtr . t-----'lNJntdJtrcrept acrou-flre«arred areu of · ~californla over the weekend as rtremen declared the last in a tw1>week ~s of blazes contained. '~'Ille death toll, mean\lo·hile, rose to 13 far the disaster period with the discovery of three charred bodies during mopup operations in San Diego <:ounty'1 Mount Laaun• ru-.. •.coroner's depuUes aUempting to iden- tiff tbe remains found near the com· . mmilty' of ·.ramui tbeot bed tttey-were-- Me:rican national! sneaking into the URited Slates. · : 'They were apparently caught ln the 2fl0,000 acre fire -largest in Californla , ---"his"". tory -aome tlme before It wu flnally ·-rontiine<!'""Fitaar . ·Authorities aurveylng the destrucUon from Monterey to San Diego predicted it "ill hit perhaps $180 million, with more ~n 1,000 structures destroyed. · IA cold coaalal fog over the weekend was credited with helping firemen finally contain a stubborn Umber fire northwest of San Simeon that damaged erdwOl'.K!3 and threatened famed Hearst Castle. Ficker learned to sail when he was a the Cup was read by O'Bryon. . youngster of eiaht. to buzzing ou,,lboii;;•rdo;;.'-;;-'.'::f~~·o the ane3,6c;.n!Y D c mese nITTo suchlaVISH -pow Board of Supervisors was rea y obn yachts as Frank Muller's Mojo. Kille!er. exec.ut_iy~ assistant to the Most of-the craft In the parade were chairm.auUM board. --colorfWIY "Cti'esstd" for the occulOil llfd Jack Barnett, executive manager of t}\e kept up a din of horns, bells, whistles and Newport Beach Chamber of Ccimmerce, cherry-bombs reminiscent of the celebr1-of which Ficker is a director, pre.aented ti.Qn lo NewPQrt, R.I. w.heo Ficker P.Dd his him with a framed membership ca~d; crew were towed triumphantly back to port after defeating (he Australian Tom Keevil.~Jtor of lhe DAILY challenger Gretel II in the best four-of-PILOT, presented F~cker 'With plaque seven series that assured the CUp's con-replica of what he facetiously referred to tinued residerce in this counlry _ at as '·Page One of the paper's first Sunday edition." least for another three years. The "hero.. tag was hung on Ficker The parade disbanded in the, North Lido v.'hen he sl~d off the plane by his 1r-ChanneLadjacentJD .the Balboa .Bay_Club and the Ardell Marina and Ficker and hjg year--010 daug -terneon who pinned a ted family were escorted to City Hali in a lapel button on his jacket with the single land parade. word "hero." Master of ceremonies of {he festivities In his response to the community at City Hall .was Willi.am O'Byron who in-tribute Ficker admitted "for once I am lroduced official!: who were to join in at J_l.Q_ss for___M!J"~.~· _ tributes to the returning hero. "The reception here is even more tI· The ceremonies were opened with an citing than defending the America's invocation by Fr. Paul Martin of San Cup," he continued. "I hadn't realized the Juan Capistrano, a longtime friend of the intense interest in a sporting event of this nature." . Fic.ker. family. Mayor Ed Hirth read the first of ma"ny He expressed his appreciation-to the proclamations and resolutions In which members of Newport Harbor Yacht Club, he proclaimed Sul"lciay as ''Bill Ficker of which he is a past commodore, and Da y" in Newport Beach and the week of Balboa Yacht Club. and other yachting ,. OAIL Y l'ILOT S!tff PtMtto1 ~The names blackened 44.000 acres of Los Padres Natklnal Forest before being lli>dued by firemen •. FICKER AND FAMILY MOVE PAST NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL BAND AT CITY HALL M1yor Ed Hirth (left) Escorts Deon, 11, Barbara and Bill F icker During Ceremonies Oct. 4 to 9 as "Bili Ficker Week." Said groups in the area for the moral support Mayor Hirth : accorded him during the long summer of "This is an historical day in Newport trials and the actual Cup defense. Beach and we are real happy to welcome '•ft was particularly gratifying to Jook - from the C.Olumbia during the parade and One ·Northern California blaze swept through a ltand of 11ant rtdwoodl eo an. cient that they were growtna: before a\rilt was born. but dama1e wu ali&bt bicause they are fir~l Lebanese Officers Freed the man who has brought honor to our see my old friend Bob Rollins who first commun ity." taught me to sail here on Newport Mayor Hirth then presented a giant Harbor," Ficker said. replica of the "key to the city'' to Ficker Ficker's greatest tribute was reserved and crewman George Twist. Twist for his wife_Barbara "who has been pa· responded that all of the summer's hard tient with me during some 20 years of ~ork was justified by the "recognition we sailing," and for his father . Peter, "who are getting at home." t · r t ilbo I " A letter of commendation an-.-.. P.!l _l'!l.e_rn ~y ..!fS ~-8 .:.---u .. vi.. Other members of the family sharing in the tribute to Ficker were his two Outlaw Party Members Seize. Pair at Airport BEIRUT (UPI) -A planeload of Lebanese Baathist Party members who had been figh_ting alonside the Palestinisn ---gUefrilla.S in-Jordan seized two Lebanese Army officers at Beirut Airport and held them hostage for 15 hours before releas- ing lhem today. UPITt ...... DISRUPTS TRIAL AGAIN DefW1nt Minton From Pqe l MANSON •.. wben they refused to subside they too 1''tre taken from the courtoom. Manson had entered the room quietly arid listened to the brief tesUmony of one minor witness when he suddenly erupted. "'Are you going to use this courtroom to kiD me?" be suddenly demanded of J lklge Older. Older told him to keep quiet or be would be removed. "The minute I aee you are 1olng to ii1l me, you know what I'm goin& to do," Manson said. . "What att you going to do?" Older a.sk- ed angrily. 1tarln1 dowil at the bearded hippie cult le.ader. "Mr. Manson, I'm. eoinl to have you removed if you do not 1top," the judge said. "I'm-going to have·you removed if you don't stop," ManMn 1aJd. "J have a UtUe aystem of my own." At that, Manson sprang from his seat and literally dived across the table toward the u· e's bench. DAILY PILOT ·--H--~ .._. PMltel• ,....,. C-.;M"f s..c ....... oJtAliiGI CO-'ST l'UILlSHIHG COMl'ANY Rot,,,.. N. w,,.i l'r•klent tl'ld l'Ullll11'1tf' Jeck R, Curl1y Vitt ~lltenl lftCI GIMrtl MtMtr Thtll'IJ t(,, .. ;1 EOll!lr Thomti A. Murphi111 M-1111'19 EOl!O• Rich1 rtl '· Nill IOI/It! Or111V1 County EOllOI' COlllt M-t DO W•I ••Y Streit Htwr>ort IMdl: nn Wat &tlllot lou11wnf La1un1 aMdl: m ,_, ,.,,..,"' M1111t"'9ten llilldl: 11'7S lllC.h •oult vlf'd M11 Cit'mt!!lt: JDS ~ II Ct..,1..e llMI The Baathist Party has been ouUawed in Lebanon since December, 1963, becauseit-had sided -wJth Syria during Syrian-Lebanese Arrf!y_ border clashes earlier that Yeai, and became It had strong ties with extremist Baathlst elements in Syria and.Iraq. The plane was an Iraqi Airlines DC6 eharterfod by the 42 Lebanese BaUhists a~d. and \tie_ ~anese 'J'e~e trying to return to Lebanon when th~ crisis rfared Sunday night. An lmmtgraUon official ,,ref~ them permission to leave the plane and they seized two army officers who boai-ded the plane to talk with them. The army surrounded the plane and Beirut Airport was closed temporarily. Security sources at the airport said several Arab ambassadors were called in to help in the negotiations to free C.01. Ahmed Hamdan, liaison offictr between the army and Palestinian guerrillas, and an army lieutenant from the airport security detail. Today's was the second such incident ln six days. , On the night of Sept\ 30, the. eve of the funeral of Egyptian -President Gamal Abdel Nasser, Lebanese P r e a I d e n t Suleiman Franjieb was preparing to lead the Beirut delegation to Cairo but drop- ped out abruptly. Official sources said at the time he changed bia plans because of security reasons. • On the day Nauer WI.I burled, Fran- Parents of Dead Baby Arrested Extradition proceedings were under way today in Reno to return a young Orange County couple charged wllh murder following investigatio'! into the death of their baby · daughter last Memorial Day. Donald Dees, 22. and his wife Katherine, 21. who formerly lived in San- ta Ana and Midway City, are In custody al the Washoe County Jail, held without bail. Cornplainl3 dlarging 1hem with the death of ·Donna Dees, 11 months, were issued last week by Orange County District Attorney Cecil Hicks to clima1 a lengthy investigation. , His investiptors said little Donna was hospitalized twice, first in April and again in May, dying May 31 of Injuries later attrlbutecl. by police to a beating. Her parenls were arrested Sunday In the small eommunity of Sparks by Nevad1 authorities. · -From PGffe l NIXON •.. generation of peace." He vowed to work for peace, but said the United States would not shirk Ila responsibility to itse.11 or friendly natlons. Jn Dublin, protesters broke through pol ice cordons and spattered Nixon'• limousine with three eggs as he drove to Dublin CasUt for a state luncheon. After a courtesy call on the 17-year-old lrish President, Nll"on drove to the casUe to cordial waves from Oublintrs. A·beavy police guard bad removed pl1card beareNI wtll before the NI.ton motor<:ade arrived. But just as his llmouslne approacM:d the casUr. a mldd1wgcd man. a air! In~ raincoat and a man In a sweater, bunt through and tossed eggs at the car. It was the only Incident of !Ls kind In the final days of Nbron '• tour. jieh pre~ed over an emergency cabinet ment had been reached between the 'B' Lif , p d sisters, Angela and Sue, both of Newport meeting that lasted nearly all day. army aOO the Palestinians to end the 1g l repare Beach. Outiiide, there were wild outbUNJl3 of guerrilla state which has existed In North Ficker also expressed his appreciation ·fihooting -which-killed-J7-.pe.rsons-and-in-----Jordan-since end..ot.tha.nine-day.s...of..civ. F--01· E Ul'!O r Mane·U vet!.-_fo-P-at-Doogan.--OWner-Of-the-12-meter jured more than 150. war. Columbia, who gave him his first taste of The shooting ostensibly was part of At a meeting $unday in Irbid a com· FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) -The 12·meter sailing by assigning him co-skip. first of Jl,400 combat.ready U.S. Army per in the 1967 CUp trials. Arab mourning for Nasser. mittee of Arab nations policing the truce troops arived in Frankfurt today to begin "When you've got friends like Pat you Political sources said the politiCal arranged a p~out of guerrillas un~e.r a test of the "Big l-lft" concept and don't rieed many othen," Ficker aaJd. tension stemmed from. the landing a.t terms of the CaU"o Pact ending the civil maneuvers near the Czechoslovak border. Two Harbor Area high school bands Beirut airpOrt the previous night of an war. ~ At the same tin:ie. 100,000 Communist provided musie for the festive welcom· JraqLmilit.ary aircraft. carrying 40 armed lrDid.-the second biggest city in Jordan troops are carrying out the largest ing. On board the Pavilion Queen was the members of the Baghdad-based Baath with a population of about 56,000 was maneuver in the history of the Warsaw Corona de! Mar High School band, and Party. These also were Lebanese and 15 taken over by guerrWu alort1-witb other~ Pact... between the Welt German border the Newport Harbor High School band of them managed lo enter the city In an northern towns ln the civil war. and West Berlin. took over for the welcoming at City Hall. lraqi embassy vehicle. The other 25 were taken to the Syr.ian border. Political sources ·said the Baal.hists had fought alongstie the guerrillas. but-could not. return through-Syria without risking arrest since Syria opposes the Baghdad wing of the Baath Party. The Al Falah guerrilla gr o u P. , meanwhile said Jordanian artillery and tanks shelled a north Jordanian town to- day Jn a new outbreak of fighting. A spokesman said King Hussein's army began shelling the town of Harima, 11 miles northeast of Irbld, in the , early hours with tanks, artillery a n·d machlneguns and then tried to enter the town. Tile army was me t by Palestinian guerrillas on the outskirts and the two sides were still fighting ai 2 p.m., the spokesman said. The flareup came only hours after of· flcials in Amman announced an agree- From PGffe l JANIS •.• Francisco. but was staying in Hollywood while recording an album for C.Olumbla Record Company with her new group. Friends almost unwilling to accept the death of the high-spirited singer who thrilled audiences with her top hitJ said she had seemed happy in recent weeks. She made an electrifying ap- pear~ce when performing live with her long hai'r shaking her uninhibited mov enl$, and her husky,-shoUting style singing. f\.fost of the time she wore no bra. "She 'tore the guts out of songs," a critic once said of her singing. Miss Joplin drank "southern comfort" by the quart ~nd fans would brin' her bottles et her concerts. "I always used to get drunk on stage • but now I don't need it,'' she rtcently said. "Some.Limes I drink and sometimes I don't. I ,1:an get high just on the music." Her singing was hea vily influenced by Negro performers and she listed as the most influential Olis Redding and Bessie , Smith. She told an interviewer once of her 11tyle: "It's all feeling, When I'm singing J 'm not thinking." Among the songs for which she was best ,knowo: are "Maybe," "Work Me. Lord,1' "LltUe .Girl Blue." "One Good Man." "Try," "Kozmie Blues." "I Need · a Man to Love," "Turtle Blues," and ';Piece of My Heart." Miss Joplin let her long brown-blonde hair rail uncombed and often wore floppy hal,, beads. bell-bottom_ slacks and hippie-like clothing. She said she was not a hippie but a beatnik: "Beltniks believe things aren't going to get any better and SBJ the hell with it,.stay stoned and have a good time," 11he once explained. Miss Joplin said she had a frustrated. and unhappy childhood. in her home town or Port Arthur, Tet., ruMing away from home at 17. She worked at such jobs as keypunch operating, eventually setlling In San Francisco. Miss Joplln skyrocketed lo rune ,. Ille walllng, gro1nlng vocalilt with Big Brother and the Holding Company at the 19117 Monterey Pop Festival. There,, !he WI! ai:c\il\med for her vcnilon of "Ball and Chaln." Sometlme Sunday, she slipped out of her own. I • WITH · ACTION (Fa ifs llis e ii e II ' ' I I ' •• 17 1 ,'s? ... llliNltlt I SS 3 •Ill llD NNI IE!' ulC lllU ___ .,.. __ ., '*"'* ... _,.,..., : k • a• 1 I Jt Uk 1•1 1£1, • • -'" , I :Ii +y %-•1122 ._ Plldcm..,•••~P• to::&"I •11 • .,,., · -4llli"'*'sw-c111a , 1 tom,•. 6 2 9 tllaecad 10N4JUWICl&d qumlll1J. Plus 54 Y ... d Sumd ll•"Gll I lilt Ahdc:eltayofpn-.11' 1g1 1~-111 w: .. a perlect-ofnigoUrt ... .., 1 ·-· ....... of $1111-.. lllCI .. ~-....,of Ital tr ~unl:ln1~ ta ,,_....._ Marrll Pim Im al : a;c as ti• i tor•btlla:iui y_. ..... _, I j_,J114&1El ; =, , II ta ;a ·Morris Plan N1wport l1ach -1700 Newport llvd. -•71-1700 • ; • ' ' . I I I I i I • --.. I ' , . I •, I I . . -~L -63, lif().1Y8-;-1 SECTIONS;'°"JO P;t.Gts--. . . ·, . ' . • ---- . - an~on • ---' ' I, I At Meadowlllrk . . f --.. ... ~-I Airplane• '.Snip~· I \ l Street Lights By TERRY COVIl.LE OI Ille Delly flliet SMoff A light pll'1e clipped the street light · wires near Meadowlark Airport Sunday afternoon, knocking a street lamp onto a car: p8rked .on Heil Avenq,e and nar~ . rowly avoiding: a crash on the runway •. The 9ilo~ r'JlOrledly a flight lnstruc· tor from a · TottaDCe airport,-brou&lrt bis €esna--11Z-to a bumpy land I~ ~ -· the runway, the wire dragging , behind. No one was injured. It was the fourth lime nearby wires ha:ve been clipped since midsummer. The crash further jgrljted the feud be- 1---+ tween homeowners and airport-users over the airport's safety, a battle ex- pected to cimtinue at tonight's meeting of the Huntington Beach City Council. w~'nt down_, but he pulled It up an d landed." The most damage was c·amed lo the car hit by the street lamp. That car w.as .-owned by Ken Haulk, 5331 Heil Av,'e., One of ,the ·bo~rs. leading . complaint.& ag_ainst the airport's safety factors. 1 ~r: . -· ~Haii\k:&..pup, .ll<sideob..Apim~ Alr· port Hazards (RAAH), are eapected to press :their requeStJ ·for · elimlna\,ion ·of a .3QO.foot runway extension at .tonight's city council meeUng. "We were Jue on this one" said Haillk, w o 1ves direct y in e au,iort. "At least· we didn't. have hot wires coming down." Eyewitnesses to the accident said the , _j pilo~ Joe Dezso of . r,Janhattoo ll<ach,_ Several weeks ago a plane . knocked some nearby power liQEis into Ha'ulk's _backy:ard_s.wimming ~pool. -~ "niis was a classic case of · p 11 o t ·error " Bob . Dingwall, heiiid of· a Citj- zeh's' airport study cOmmittee,. !;aid this morning. -· - . . . cime in low ·and apparently probably f never saw the wires. - "He must-have been a dam g o o d pilot to-avoid a complete crash," John 1 Jackson, 5301 Heil Ave.. a witness, said: "When he bit the wires his nose ···Def cn~e R~ts ,Ii 'Palace Case In Seal Beac1i By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of Ille 0.H'f' Plltl Slillf Defense attorney Russell W. Bled11oe unexpectedly rested his case Friday, closing out five weeks of testimony in the liei!nse hearing over the Seal Beach Marina Palace. For the past week, the Los Angeles Jawyer had been trying to establish that misconduct allegations agaln.9t the teen- age dance ball and ib: owner, William L. Robertson, were poHUcal),y' motivated. Dinr,all has ·been under · fire ·rro!" the -hoinoowners for. his contention thit the runway extension -put in during the sUmmer -and newly iMtalled night lights, increased the airport's.IO!ety •. m~~uabur~ *" ~~.!~ .'.i!i.~pe; .. .r 1iid ~ the -t llibl lil!fl to "1'1v• 111o. alllr pr<blem. - the five-men llt'p;it llUdy -mitlff is scbeiiuled to meet at 7:30 o'clock to- pighl Jo reecb arement 6n further r~ Oiillntndatlonl' tb · ta1<e to the council later.In th<.ev~nlng. · . '.Homeowners belor\ging to RAAH havt asked the City •Council ,.tf> close the 300- foot . extension and permanenUy ·atop the night lights. Haulk is leader of RAAH and also a member of DingwaU's airport stu~y cominittee, liul has' rar;ely llfeed w~th Ding\v@ll on the:commlttee'1 ~· The street, wire which was clipped 111.S abolit ~ feet•above "the ground. lllnlwall said the· pilot shOUkl have ·been ~t 150 feet up at 1hat point to· approach 1be runway. ~ . · . Jackson;--himlelf·a pilot, aaw.tbe crtsh from his fI"9I!! yard. · l Central to hi.a case was hil allegation " a conspiracy by three top city officials to bring charges ag,inst the Marina Palace to divert the attention of the city's residents from a $100 million real estate deal which would create high-rise, high~ density buildings along the waterfront. The three officials -former City Manager Lee Risner, Police Chief Lee Case and current City Manager Dennis Courtemarche -have repeatedly denied any plaru to use the city council hearing for any other purpose than to restore "'Ille ·plane ·came-ln· low, c1111ght -tlio street wires with hj., wheel.and mappe4 the wire off at each pole. The plane's nose turned downward, but the pilot brought it back up for a bumpy landing,"" Jackson said. Residents on Heil Avenue came out of their home& as IOOD u they heard the noise. t . , ' , I (See PALACE, Pase Z) 'iMy daughter and a friend were play. Ing in the front yard when it happened" Jackaon aafd. "They ducked because lMJ thought 1he wire would whiplash, but It didn't." Rock Idol Janis Joplin (( ' Dies; Drugs Indicated From Wire Service. Janis JopUn, the gravel -voiced rock blues 1inger who ran away from Port Arthur, Texas 10 years ago and still kept on running, even after 1he overtook fame and fortune, is dead. The 27-year-old star of rockdo1J1 gave It all she had, and in the end It was her life.· "Maybe I won't last as Jong u other singers," she Once told an Interviewer who asked If she walln't afraid her bard dririking aDd merciless driving paca might cut her career short. "But I think iou can destroy your now by worrying abOOt tomorrow .•. ~y the Hell with It. Stay 1toned and have 1 good lime." Miss Joplin was found dead ln her Hollywood apartment Sunday night by guitarist John Cool<e, of hB recenUy formed Janb Joplin Full Tilt Boogie rock group. An autopsy was ordered to dttermlne the cause of death, estimated at U hours before, but Sgt. Ed Sanehez. of the Hollywood Police Departmen~ ,.id abo had a long 1trlng of two to 16-day-Old needlemarkt on her arm, covered by pancake makeup. • No drugs were found In the room were the nJiblg!lwn-clad alnger toy betwee (Set JANIS, P11• II • .., ... , ......... l!OUND .DIAD IN HOLL YW00D Sinter Jeni• Joplin, 27 , ···-.. . T8tlay'• Flaal N.V. Sioelm ~DA'/', OCTOIEl· 1, 1970 ~--· --.. • • , I IR .......... our -, ' ~ :fnreatens Tate Judge From Wlre Servlei!s cnarles· Manson 1unged 1cros1 the council table tt the jud&e In the Sbaroa Tate murder. trill today, . scre1min1 "Someoiie should cut your head off." 'He was PoWJCed OI) by a bailiff, wrttfi.. ed In the .iloor and baJL-canled .from cour~ . . . . .. . The -tfny 3>year-old de!endent "'"t ~f--"h~~-Ori_ ihe noor in 'front ~ t.be iU:dJe's be~ch .. and had ~ ~ lUbdl!ed by t!iree deputies who · led him bm the C9lJ.rti'OClf!1 ,with his arms twisted -behind his ~ck. ' • , I Uf'I ,.,_....., . "DISf!.l,IPTS TRIA~ AGAIN DMend11nt M11nMn , 8u11<1"i0<..Court Judp ClwtlesJLOlder>---.,--,---,--;--------,1 .. an or.lglnal member of the Flying Tigers Ar.ab· s" . A" cc" u'.sed' betOre ~orid war II, calmly. noted tQat the defendant had j'umped in the !1.irection of the bench and ordered th,t-the Tecord Of Slaughter. ing so renect th.It fact. · · • ·The outburii. 'came ifltr Manson iiid Is·r'a-el·_:pao-t three Women c»<ttfendants-Were led into "~ _ <Oiii'l!or !lie~ "Of a dilaye4 ,,iorntifg ~ Altom~• . said the jdd~ wu : TEL T VIV (up1) -= IsiaeJ accused liYiBI -them another 1chance ' u,. behave Egypt today of mUrdering an' Israeli pilot ~~u:.-~~ ~~-~ -cap\ured west of the Suei Canal four , · · , · I.bi i 1 • " ' 1 days befoie 'the Alig,; 7 Middle Ea.a "l'llo,Weldinli.' .at. ilw'1\Y.·~·~ r. then ,q "di."......,. MW!iii "''"-·lij· ' -aaa...ir_e, "trylnf:to. cover It up. -~' ...,..,. · _,... • The ,gOverwnenL released the tell of a the Jude• aac1 nuns..,._ blmlel! ...-111o • • • • . . . .• = , S.ble:1 ~ --. . · ~ · compfalot filed Sept:21 with the lilt.erna- -.,,,...~--1 llhl-.r-·..... tlooal Red erosa pri>Uitlrtg the"'illlnlellj t;blntlni led~ llaadi 1iil~. an'd~~umarie". tfeatment ~·Lt, -they Hluoeil· to oullslde they too Moobe Goldwasser as a prlaoner bl I +. 1 t DAll.Y ;ILOTr.IMilt,_., were taten· from the courtoom. Egypl Goldwasser and another· hradl MaMOn bad entered the room qliielly· pilot bailed out of their two.seat plane and listened lo the bl'ief taltbhoiiy of one over Efgptian terz:itory Auj:. 3, ihe mlnol'-wltneu when be~ 'enlpted,· Israeli:' !laid, and were reported by Ca~ -A NEW 'QUEIN IS PICKED FOR FOUNTAIN llAl.~EY " , Crown PHMa From R..,mery Ktllty (llltJ to Llod• .Ana.rM!I "Are you lohtl to Ute tbls CQl.lrtroOm to to have been captured ili ·good condition F oui:itain Valley Bea~ty Takes City, Que.en PQ~t ·· till me?:' be -auddeoJy d.ernanded of with .onJy &light injuries. Tlreir plctiird: Judie Old"'.· · were carried in the Egyptian press. Older. tQ1d him t0 keep quiet. or. he The Red ~ross relayed word ,~ Would be retnoved. Ciiro Aug.' 5 that Goldwasser had wea . "nie minhte I tee you ire goin&: to kin the.day before due to what the Ei)'ptianl me • .you lo)bw What I'm IOin& lo 'do," described as heart failure, the result of a MlnlOli Aid.' · · . nervOUJ breakdown. . ."Wbatare.ypugolngto.do1"Qlderaak-· .. u. death. did oCcur u a result of' ed angrily, staring down at the beardtd cardiac arrest preceded by nervqu1 Ifuwla· Anderion, -19, a new resident, will step inlo th~ role of Miss Foimtain Valley-Oct:.·:.: at~ .the::-cltj.'J lMuil Halloween barbecue. Rosemary Ktlley, the city 's »year-old reigliiqfqueen, will, hand over her crown onittropby that day lo1he only girl·ln the city with enough nerve to enter the con- test this year. "I• entered this contest to meet other gir\! my age," Unda explained. "But It didn't quite work out." Lindi, a pretty new resident ot only two weeks, was awarded the title by the Chamber of Commerce when the deadline for entering passed and no other girls 1tewed forward . Linda is the daughter ol Mr. and Mrs. Gordon L. Anderson , now residents of U Gardenia Ave. Mr. Anderaon is in the u .s. Cout.Gliard. "My b..-r Larry brought home an application in the ccntest and I filled it out," Linda said. She once served as a member of the 1even..girl court in the Miss Coca-COia Pa1eant in Washington, D.C. and rode in the Cherry BlolllOm Parade. Jn Washington. IJnda worked for llie office of emergency preparedness. She is currently jobless In Foun~in Valley. "I understand the emergency office will have a temporary office In Los Angelp ,to handle the aftermalb of tbe ' flret. I may work there for awhile," Lin- da aald. ,8lle ~ also -ted ts a fishlon model. ~ llotemary Kelley, lll< retil'ing~n. Is ,_,,,..,. .. 1t·ca1 State Fullerton, ma· Jonas Jn education. · "~'d like to teach 1n thLI a'rea," R01emary, who will graduate ln June. aald.'+ . "It has been a good year as queen. I've .ttally enjo)'fd it;" she adde:I . . Rolemary rteeiVed high honors In Belfast, Irijand, thil summer when she wu received by the Lord Mayor and her story wu written in the city'• three newspapers. Rotemary was-born in 'Belfast and dl4n'.t·Jtave--unUI the age or five . Her father, Tom Kelley, used to work in the treasurer'• olfice of tht Belfast city hall. Fountain Valley's reigning queen won lier lint bcsaty cont<st ""'"' Ibo ••!" lured the UUe of Holiday Prlnceu at tht age of four near 'Belfast. · · · 1 • • bJp[rit cult I~ider. breakdown, there is no doubt that the ... Mr. Mant0n, I'm 1<1ing· to have you nervous breakdown which caused the . ·."fl wai won4tttuJ in IroW"Everyooe '~·s so· iriendlf ," &,,emuy,ay1o;·ber · trip; re-.d JI foil do oot stpp," Ille Judie 4e.th was brought abdut by cruel and fn. 8'id. · -' -· · human acts of the UAR (Uitited Arab "I'm go Inc to have you removed if you R·ewblic) authorities,"· the Israeli com- .cton't 1top," Manson ·aaid. "I have a little plaint said., ·Her Founiain Va lley reign will ·Of· frcially·end·when 1he gives the trophy to Unda, ·Oct. 24 at FoUtitain ·Valley Hlah School. 1y1tem of my own." "The Egyptians lnfiicted bodily. injuries At that, Manson sprang from hls seat as a reault of which bis death was and literally dived across the tal:ile brought about," ·the Advocate General of toward the judge's bench. the Israeli Army, Col. Zvl Hada, told 1 Conference -Told of Need For Oce~~graphy Unit By JOANNE REYNOLDS wu the lack· of aw.krdlud , taicbor OI .. pally ,.... ..... educltion ·~ the field. , . The ~ee'd .. fOr . ~ ~. na. Or. ·:waruil Yasso, an ~ag<israphlc U9fJwl.de oceal)OitlPhY p_iOi:rlni.1111 im· 1tclkclai flrom Columbia: UnivlflllJ,-uid- portant ·as the .8'a around ui. the AmeriCaft Soc1't1 for <>ceanogrlPbY. That Wu the theme this. weetefid .of a a Hwaton-baied· non profit or1an1JaUon, · three-day national coitference on marihe Utia ye_ar.., wW conduct a natioftwide itudy sciencea in education at Catalina~ of emtinc JH'Oll'•ma in elerneittary and Sponsored jointly.by the Orqe County aecond!ltY acllooill as well u colle1et and Department of Education, Cal State ·un1v;r11tits.. · ' 1• , Fullerton and USC, the three-4ay 111eet :"The IOCiety hopes to ~iln wort on dr,ew.150 educators and scientista from 12 basic cuniculums that can be offered at coastal ltates, Canada, Mexico •. France 'the three ltvels once we know what ii and Thailand. , belnc done currenUy," he~-1'We also The conference covered the problems Dian 111 1i:Credltation ' P,i'tiaram for col· of•pollutlon·, the economic feasibUity of leges ·offeriq oceanotraphy reducatioa 1oCean flOor mining and fish farming and ptocrams. ' · • ' ' ' •Job potft!Urt-for oceanograpby 'ltlldenb, ·~ atatus· ;,, ..._apliy' hi .tho · Nine 1peakers, inclulng Coqreloman sdloofr-lilnl ..en;,, 14 bf ae· olllfloot ol Richard , Hanna -(fl.Anahiim). and b!OloO ot ,..,..al IC~ and ill ,Newpo<t Beacb 1\llbir ."\Yea!~,,,...., cfependeot on ll)< teadlet'• abillUes," be IJ'titerated U.Z ·beed , to' start 'wbttlelale uid. · • • . oceanography education. progr111111 u Conference d~tot RGll l:Jnsky, who ill aoon ·u poalble. -• · · the bead . of_ Orance C o u n t y .-1 Clndr, Don Walsh'. one or'tbe·,... woo oeeaeocn(l(iio , pn11r1m, aald tjie.,'""" took a ...mtlarlne to. a ""'1td deptll al fer<nce waa· atarted line yem qo to 35;olil !i!et In ttllO, "undmcorecl 'the po\nt: &ive Squtbern Calliom\a educalon 1 "A ..,;,m M tnn-u«t·a ,....-.. cflance, lo tJrft'D& ... ldoa• Ind ajr tlieJr ,will~.,;;~ to, 1lart -,to ....i-·111o prol>leml. 1 ·-..-· • • children .of tho lmpartanet ol 11!" -i.i· · "Since then n ')'11 arOWll lo the point octan to ,their OOW.}b'y aod ... where we bavt P.Pl• trom 'almolt ·in vlrt:>nment. ·• , the coutal Ratel and 1 fiW fon'-8 coun-~ Walsh llllWlded Ibo· theme of the ·-trltt portldpilJ4 Our PfOllllm now tn- fci'ence, when he ~ that the ocean cludel repraentaUvet ot Ute. ft d·e·r a l preaenla 1 lf'llt ~ I« -· lectototun ad -tratlOn,.~:NIV!' peoce~aoi:ei>I ol natlolll •• and~. . • · , '· · togetber.lbr the benefii ol oil people la• ",\od"...,y year,, we. find that,.. are very1 real· ~bUt\y, but ft•wlU need doing 1. lltUe more, that tbe problima ' edUClllC! people to cany·GUt.11111'-IL" have',_ 1 tittlt blp .andl lhal the J OQe of the ~ U)Jrlll,ell b1 · need lot fficatlon In the fleltl la> 1 Uttlt • tdUcltOr1 dUriil.i rtbe werlmbop 11111m1. sreater,11 LlmllJ'a.kt. ---... _ • . . , ) . ('. news conference. Goldwasser's body, he si.id, was not returned to Israel until four weeks after his death and was badJy decomposed, not having been ·kept refrigerated. Al1 in- ternal organs had been removed, 8nd the body muUlaled and strips of i;kln had been rerrioved from arOund · the.wrlats. "The Egyptians inflicted injuries 9n the body and afterward tried to erase the algm," Hadar said. The hraeli complaint demanded the Egyptian government bring to trial the ~sons responsible on charge of "gave" vlo1atiQlll of the Gthiva COnventioo. -l~wu described by hraell offlclaill the otnogest complaint ·yet filed against alleged Em>tlah mistreatment o f priJooen. 1be hraelia liat 12 persons now captive in Egypt, seYen of them aircraft creWmen. · 0r .. ,. C.u& ' . I . . )llue Monday will extend Into , TUaday with low clouds and drizzle in the offing, sinking U.. high tem·perature to 17 JOC:ally and down to 71 further Inland. INSiDE TODAY. . " A1Ur itrvina totru pre1fdcftt 1ince PDR. the vreafdcntioC vachJ-1 -now calltd Tricia and _ Julie -a.re ui> for 1t1:Le. Stt Boating, Pag~ 20. :..rtt. ,: (ii........ • Cflecll-.~u. 1 ............. u ·-·-u --. Dl'l'tl'tt$ t . ...... ", ..... ' ........... , ,, , .... _ ',.,, -.. NI• L..,.. 11 -" .......... ~--... __ OrM.-c..i" • 9"fh Jl•M ltldt Mlft.tta 1•1• ,.......... ,, TIIHlwn 17 \lf9tlfiltr • .._..,... , .... _..Ntw\ N ' ' . .> . • J DAJL Y PILOT H UCI .Canipus --Bustling; School Open , . • ~·thy tar ,· ----~.BlnerlJ · -;1~usttn~~- . . ; , Re .sident ·Killed.· - --- -~The dark early·momint walk-of an ~killed-him. #' Claaes be&an today at UC Irvine witn- more-.than 6,000 stQdent.a: and 450 faculty on campus. -11.year~ld Tustin-rest hOme tt'sldent-Pollce-tentattvely labeled the death- I ! I Two.building complexes nearing com· pletion this week were partly opened for • cla.ues today but construction apparatus provided a marked contrast to the neatly trimqled landscaping around o I d e r building! on the si:a:-year old campus. ended violently thi' morning when a of Everett Clemons of lhe T.usUn Ha· car careened across the sidewalk and cienda Rest home 1 felony ttlt • ruo. Fro• Pqe 1 JANIS .... the bed and dres!ing table. They were¥ seeking the car 1nc;I driver today. · Tustin police Sgt. -Ed Lobos uld Clemons' body wat' discovered at 7:05 thi s morning by a Woman · walking htr dog. It was in a parking lot at 115 Main St. next to a hardware store. The nine-story engineering building wil1 home the school of engineering, the new department of social ecology, the educa· __ _,__ __ tional opportunity program, and audio visuiJ services-:-----"Only..:tequ.ila1 vodka-and wine~· said one policeman. • . Tbe· coroner's ol£ice e.atimattd t b.1 t death ~urred four to six.hours earlier. An autopsy was scheduled I.Oday. I I I ~l ' i I ' l ' ' ' • • I I I i I The four-story computer 1Citnoes building houses the department of in- for:maUon, the graduate school of ad- miniltraUon and,. the public policy rese.NC.lLYn!J u we.!J ~ y.e. UCI com· pule facility. Elevators in the nine.story engineering t.Qwer .have yet to be Jnstallt.d, delaying U5e. of cllurooms on the upper noora, a 1pokuman aid. The tw~}?ulld!ng complex . cost '6.2 million and 'was financed by 1 1986 bond isie and matching Department. of Health, EducaUon and Welfare funds • ~Among features the $3 million fine aru vlUage offers the university are a 425- geat studio theatre, a 240-seat concert hall, an experimental drama laboratory, art and sculpture studios workshops ·and ajtlleries and inuslc rthearsal facilities. ~Portions of that nine-building am <fnter have yet to be completed although !pis in most Jact.ure facilities were in- ltalled over the weekend. ; Amolll !he alud<nts attending oponing day claSsts ·were 2,100 new students", either fliihmen or trarafera. ~About 850 graduate and 575 medical l(udents have enrolled this year, a &Pokesman said. Exact e n r o 11 m e n t t f«urei will not be ready for another 10 r------"5dll;:>!;s' due to the aMUal confusion of giiffation-. ---! An observer who has viewed the Jttvious five opening days of classe.s lf>ted this year that increased tralfic and ~bers of people on c3mpu.s was more ~vioUs than in prevlt:w years. l ' ' I [ • J ' t I • h r • < • a I :ct.ut year, UCI~enr011ed 5,000 students oJ which 3,600 were undergraduates. ConUnulng problems at the growing ~pus are the ahortage·of student hous.- 16g, parking and th• lad< of owby shops Ud services. ' ' I Frot11 P .. e l P AtAl:E -. ~ : jder al the·danee hall. M part of his caae, Bled.9oe called foor the city's five councilmen to the stand Friday to tie up his conspiracy th~. When he announced Friday night that he would rtst the case, he took many hearing watchers by surpr.lse since no direct evidence of the conspiracy had been' offered. The charges against the Marina Palace inClud~ general lack of supervision, which according to the testimony of several undercover officers reached their climax in heavy petting and dru& use among teenagers. CHief Case himself acted as prosecutor during the lengthy hearing, aJded by Lt. Al Chafe. oBth are expected to cMfront Bledsoe again at 1 :30 p.m. Tuesday when closing argumenls will be offered to the city council. 1 A decision on what is to he done with Robert.son's business license is not ex- pected until Wednesday when the city council i.5 scheduled te> deliberate on tne issue. During an earlier hearing last August before City M an a g er Dennis Courtemarclle, Robertson was found in violation or the city's·dance hall rules and wu placed on two weeks suspension and • year of probation. The matter was opened again by Robertson who requested, and was granted. a new hearing be.fore the city council. DAILY PILOT OllAHOI CO.UT ,UILtlHIHri COM,ANY Rehert N. WeM ,r•ldt•ll emll '*II'*' Jeck R. Curley Vite P'retlllllll •nd CJtflfl'"el M'1'11flr Th11111•1 kee .. il 1!0111• Tiie"'•I A. Murph!11t M1n111111 !llher Ali" Oir~i11 W•I Or11111 (our>l'f Edl!OI' Alhert W. f11t11 Anocl•M Edl!M H1111tl llffM a.-li Offlct 17115 l eech l11ul1v1rd M1ili11t Aidr1111 l".O. 101 1•0, ,2641 0 ..... Offlc• t.1gun1 ll11c11: m J1r111 .i.v..,~ Cfllll M-; ~-W•I 11'1 Sl'ftl H.....,.,, IMCll: nn W•t ltlbll '°"''""',.. ... " Clt-11: W Nerti! Il l C..m!11t lllMI I ( .. !IAIL1 •1lOl ,~tic Iii~ Al•~ Dlr~lfl DRIVERS AND MECHANICS MAKE LAST·M INUT E ADJUSTMENTS PRIOR TO TRIALS Indy II W•tn't, But Hunti ngton Beach Or ang• Cr•t• Derby W•1 Still a Lot of Fun Car Derby Winner Told Downhill Racers Vie for Huntington Race Title Miss Joplin lived in Larkspur, near San Francisco, but was staying in Hollywood wJiile recording an album for C.Olwnbia Record Company with her new group. Friends almost unwilling to accept the death of the h.igh-spirlted singer who thrilled audiences with her top hit!: said she had seemed happy in recent weeks. She made an electrifying ap-- pearance when performing live with her Jong hair shaking her uninhibited mov em ents. and her husky, shouting style or singing. r.1ost of the time she wore flo bra. "She tore ttie guts out of songs," a critic once said or her singing. · Miss Joplin drank "sou(hern comfort" by the qu art and fa ns would bring her bottles at her concer4i. Four Make Semis In Merit Grants Lobos said the hit-run victim ,..suJar. ly took early morning walks. He aid the man normally dressed and cartd tor himseH and "was ln pretty good shape for 81." The body had head Injuries, a broken right arm, a broken right leg and other injuries. Lobos said the viclim had ap- parently been knocked about 15 feet by the car. Lobos said it appeared that the driver of the cjr lost control, went ove r the curb and yien kept going. Pair to Seek .Trustee Seat An airline pilot and a dentist will duh Nov. 3 in an election to fill the vacant Some of the contraptions w e r e Both Henninger and Hoover will featured sports car roll bars. trustee seat on the board of the Hun- makeshln. Others were sophisticated. represent Huntington Beach in the Jon Duston, 8, was awarded a tape Four juniors from Westminster High tington Beeb Ciey (elementary) Schooi But they all entertained the SO spec· Southern Ca1ifornia finals Oct. 11 in Tor· recorder for the most original entry. Sc~~ . have . been se_Jected as District. tators who watched them roll down a 200-ranee. Special ce.rtlficates were awarded to the semd1nah_sts in ~h.e National ?yter1t They'll be seeking the seat vacated Iut ant-traclrin-the-ifuntington--Beal!h---'~e-race-br~ght--out-aome weird-eon-iop-flve-ttnlsherir1n-all·three-dlvision . - -Scholarsh1p_co.m tlt1on. -__ sprlne.-by...RogeLAnderson_when..he WIL Orange Crate Derby Saturday. trapt1ons," said Jack Brandt of the The results · They are John S. G~assbaugh, Dale A. elected to the Oran1e County Board of The time trials and racing lasted all Jaycees. "Some just competed for the ' Ryder, Wayne R. Valm and Edmund T. Education. · day as the sponsors, the Huntington fun of it a,nd others took it seriously." Divl!lon A (ages l3-lS) 1· Jon Hen· Watts, all or whom are eligible to com· Don Bravender is the dentist. He lives Beach Jaycee!, conducted speed tests of Each car ~as we li:hed to make sure it nlnger, 2· Larry Hoover, 3· Robin Pocock, pete for full-four year scholarships to the at 18700 Main St. with his wife Joanna the 52 entries. did not exceed 250 pounds, including the 4· Mark Baker,·5.-Chris Prelitz. college of their . choice during finals and four offspring David, 18; Karen, 13: By the end of the day, t3-year-0ld Jon "driver. Division B (ages IO.l2) 1· Cbarles scheduled later t~1s.year. . . Alan, 10, and Gary, 7. Henninger, 5332 Glenroy Drive, Hun· "Weight was an obvious advantage," Hoover, 2· Divid-Fa-nning, 3· Tim POcock,' 'J'.hose who received commendations for Louis DaHarb is a pilot for United tington ,Beach, emerged as the winner. Brandt commented "It took three guys to 4· Steve Pettyjohn , 5. Mike Cummings. "-their scores on th e National Merit Test Aiilines. He lives at 20841 Shell Harbor He took first in Division A competition lift some of the cars. One boy had a duf· • Divis.ion C (ages 8-9) 1· Shelly Brower, but did not score high enough to enter the Circle. near Petersen School with hi1- for l3-tr.-year--0lds and then beat the fie bag full of bricks underneath his car. 2. Cam Cubbison, 3. Tom CUmmings, 4. finals are Kevin P. Anderson, Bruce-N. \\'ife, Margaret and three sons, Drew, t ; Dlvi.siOn B winner Charles Binner, a1ed The vehicles themselves were im-Diane Bennett, 5· Larry Murphy. Kroyer and Janet Matsul. Bryan, 7, and Sqott, 4. 11, in a ipeclal runoff_ aginative with all manner of household Henninger's time in the runoff over the and garden equipMt being COnverted dow~ track on Slater Avenue west of into a racing machine. One car was built (ipthar~ Streel,.)Yu.28 .. 2 ~nds. out ~ a rotary tavm mower. Another NeWport Gives·· Bill Ficker, Hero's Welcome · ~n 'Day' By ALMON LOCKABEY OAIL 'f .. llOT .. I tine l" .. r Bill Ficker, the first West Coast skip. Per to defend the America's Cup, in· ternational yachting's most hallowed prize, came home Sunday to a hero's welcome. It was "Bill Ficker Day" in Newport Beach from the moment the 42-year old sailor-architect stepped off an Air California plane al Orange County Airport where he was greeted by his fami ly, a host of city and county officials and representatives of the area's nine yacht clubs. Ficker came to Newport direclly from, Sail-Francisco where he had attended th e Sl. Francis Yacht Club's Tinsley Island Stag Cruise, annual gathering of lhe most prominent yachtsmen of the \Vest and East coasts . But the airport reception was only a prelude to a gala communitywide celeb ration climaxed by a colorful boat parade. followed by an ho ur of accolade!! and resolutions from city, county and state officials. The missive boat parade fanned in front of the Balboa Yacht Club and the adjoining Orange County Harbor District offices where Ficker and his wile and daua:ht.er. and one · of his crewmen, George Twist, boarded Pal Dougan's 12- meter Columbia on whi:h Ficker first became afDided with America's Cup fever in 19157. He was co-helmsman on Columbia in the 19&7 Cup trial s In which Columbia was runner-up to Intrepid, the yacht on which Ficker defended the Cup this year. The parade was headed by a Harbor Department fireboa t, followed by the P,avilion Queen excursion boat which was j~-packed wlt.h civic and yachting of· ficials. Behind the Pa vil ion Queen came Columbia . under tow with hundreds oI pltasure craft bringing up the rear arid Nude All ·Over, He Gave Girls The ()nee · Ove r He wu 1tandlng oo the corntr wat- chinf au th• 1lrls 1<> by. . ,\nd altbou&h he hailed them wtth a claa~ilc ·•Hey!" the two 13-ytar~ld misses pedaling their bicycles 1long Hunflngton Beach's tashionable Boardwalk Drive Saturday mornln.a favored him with only OU look. He was nude except for a palr of wire· rimmed 1pec:t.acles. Police ere lnveslira~ ' '· &warming around th! boat of honor. The parade was made up of everything from small catboats similar to the one Ficker learned to sail when he was a youngster of eight, to buzzing outboards to chinese junks to such lavish power yachts as Frank Muller's Mojo. Mosl of the craft in the parade were colorfu lly "dressed" for the occasion and kept up a din of horns, bells. whistles and cherry.bombs reminiscent of the celebra· tion in Newport, R.I. whef'\ Ficker and his crew were toWed triumphantly baCk to port after defeating the A.ustr alian challenger Gretel 11 in the best four-of. seven series that assu red the Cup's con. tinued resideoce in lhis country -at least for anothe r three years. Th.e.parac!e disbanded in the North l.ic!o Channel adjacent to the Balboa Bay Club and the Arde ll Mari na and·Ficker and his family were escorted to City Hall in 1 land parade. Master of cerem onies or the festivities at City Hall was Willia m O'Byron who in·. troduced officials who were to join in tributes to the returning hero. The ceremonies were opened with an invocation by Fr. Paul Martin of San Juan Capistrano, a longtime friend of the Ficker family . r.1ayor Ed Hirth read the first o( many proclamations and resolutions in which he proclaimed Surlda y as "Biii Ficker Day" in Newport Beach an d tne week of Oct 4 to 9 as "Bill Ficker Week." Said ~fayor Hirth: '1This is a historic day in Newport Beach and we are real h11ppy to "·elcome the . rp~n who has br ought honor to our cornm11,1ity." Mayor Hirth then presented a ~iant repfica of 'the "key to the city" lo Ficker and crewman George Twist. Twist responded that all of the summer's hard Y.:ork "''as justified by the "recogn ition we are getting at home." Broadway Hails State's Wonders A 12-day celebtaUon f'8turing tho wonders or Calilornia was launched this morning by the Broadway departme.{lt 51.ore with ceremonies it th e store and a brtaldut at the Irvine Coast Country Club . ' Sevt.ral local dlgnataries, including Dr. Daniel Aldrich, chanctllor of UCI and Newport Beach City C9uncilman ~tard Croul. and top .store offlcl•lr ._.ere prestnl for the kick-off. Entitled. "Discovery: California," the promotion will Include fbe appearances or r;everA1 W!ll·known wtllert at the store'• Southern cauromla outJe ta. I WITH ACTION with dally inleralt ICticm Pald·ananr•aomtoP• l4:t!11z•.-: · ol"'f•-een51'%por--dlyb111 ~ to day ~ --..-IDCI _.red ~. P1111 S4 Years of Sound Management A half century of pr-. ---*"" • perfect record ol reg.lar ...... ---kl excess of $1 50 mllllon. ard lie f)ltA9Cllwe flquldlty ol lli>lll ..... loc. lilcombiaetowf-4-- • Morris ·Plan Ill) Oi'IQB 'llll:IUalOii CIUlmlA For lnterost wttb aOlioll, pOOitt Of l'fal 'f0l/l "'1trl8 Plan off/co: N•wpor+ l1•cft -J700 N1wport l tvcf. -673-3700 ' I ' ' I • .. .... ,, "' "' 0 :!o. ' J I L ""' ' I ,j' I f ' 'I 1: ' . . . ' f . ~I ... .. • . r.1ond1y, Octobtr 5, 14J70 H DAILY PILOT :J • Nixon's J o~~ney E~nds P~esid£nt to Report on V ie~nam Peac e Bids J?UBLIN CUPll -_.rr.idet>I NiIOn goal was to give the world 11<>melhlng II limoo>ine with three eu• as he drove r. flew home today, tnding-a-1t.'OQO:omile -has-not-had 111' thh century -.... fUU 4 Dublin-Castle for a state luncheon. European odyssey with a promise at the gtineraUon of peace." After a ~y call on the 17-year-old ~graveslte 9f hll~lrish-for-ebear&.to strive e vowed-to work for-peace,-but-uid------lrish--President;Nixon-dnwe-to the c..u.,--_.., for ·"a full generation of peace" in ·the the United States would not. shirk Its to cordial waves from Dubllnen:. A bea~ world. _ _ _ ___ ~ res~osibillty to Itself or frl~y_naUons. police ~rd had ~moyed Pl!card His topcoat still --aamp fro1t1 a sudden Tn Dublin, protesters brok:e thrOU,gh liearers well 15efore tlle Ntxcn mot.ore.de· dowripour-ln ttie lusll green meadOws of pOltCe cordons ani! iPaltertd NliOD s arr!Vea. County Kildare, Nixon bade rareJ¥tll to New York-born President Eamon de Valera of Ireland and Prime Minister Jack Lynch and4headed for Washington ~board his jet liner. Air Force One. Black Youths:Shoot Four • His visit to Ireland marred only by weekend anti-Vietnam demonstrations in Dublnn, Nl1:on stressed throughout bis nine-day tour the U.S. commitment to strength. in -the Mediteriai;>ean and renew· «i_ej/J>[lo_J<LJruJ!io.J.Jle&olialJ>!J<l, Uement 0£ the Arab-Israeli" conflict White Boys in Michigan 11 The Presfdent also · plans , to addrw Americans .J9metlme this week on ~w U.S. peace lnitiaUves in Vietnam, whtch . he discussed Sunday with his"bargafi;iin'g d • L • ----team at the P..ari! talks. Grease Ltg •• ting On his way to a round ol lirial con· fei:ences with Irish officials and a state · Fun and games at third annual Mis~i<:>n Viejo Days ion of this event, it was difficult lo tell who was luncheon at Dublin Castle befoi-e' flying thi s. past weekend in~lude~ .a trad1t.1on~l grease.d dirtier -the pi gs or the kids. There \Vere a lot of home the President motored 'ET miles pig chase. A potpourri of c1v1c organ1zat1ons band· laughs and a tear or l\vo. · past cheering,· nag-waving crowds and ed together to stage the fall frolic. At the conclus· \dedicated a memorial marker in i. cow _:::_~::::::::_::_::~;:_::::.:_::.::_:::.::::.:::._:::._::::.:_:_::::.:_______________________ pasture at Timahoe that contains the re- .Lebanese Officers Freed Seize Pair at Airport mains of his Quaker Milhou s ancestors: ''The greatest contribution I could make in office would be to bring peace to the world," he told a chilled crowd of 400 persons. Noting that his mother. Hannah f\tilhous. was a pacifist, Nixon said hl.s PONTIAC; Mlcl1. (UP!) - A group of black.youths shot and wounded four white y0W1gsters, one seriously .. near PonUac Central High School today, Polk< said. ' Ronald Catswdl was.in-aerioua 1c:on~ diUon al Pontiac General Hospital with multiple wounds apparently from a reyolver, a hospital spokesman uld. He said Carswell was shot In the abdomen and suffered a possible "glancing~bcllltt wound" on the head. The hospital said three other youths, all 17, were in fair condition. They were Jdentifled as John Little, Gary Moore and Edward Omens. One black youth \11as reportedly being questioned and police said they were searching. ror others. Officers said they had descriptions of several of the youths Outlaw Party Members PVC Begins Hearings BEIRUT (UPI) -A planeload of elements in Syria and Iraq. lo help in the negotiations lo ft.ee Cot. Lebanese Baatbist Party members who The plane was an Iraqi Airlines DC6 Ahmed Hamdan, liaison officer between had been fighting alongside. the Palestin chartered by the 42 Lebanese Batthists the army and Palestinian guerrillas, and On NuclearGenerators tan glierrlllas in Jordan seized two Le-aboard, and the Lebanese were trying to an army lieutenant from the airport banese Army officers at Beirut Airport return k1 Lebanon when the crisis flared security detail. and held them hostage for 15 hours be· Sunday nighL An immigration official Today's was the second such incident in fore releasing them today. refused them permission to leave the six days. The Baathist Party has been ouUawed plane and they seized two arm)'. offjfers On the night of Sept. 30, the eve of the . tn Lebanon since Deceniber, 1963, v.•ho boarded the plane to talk with them. funeral of Egyptian President Gamal In hearings estimated to last at least the generating process. • because it had sided with Syria during The army surrounded the plan~ and Abdel Nasser, Lebanese President two days, the Public Utilities Commission Jn the past years of use or the San. -syt'!an-te.ban-ese" Army 1lorder clashes-Beirut-A:irportwas·ciosed-temr,x>rar1Jy;-. -SlllCiMa'ff"Franjli!h-wa:~reparing-ro-lead-today-began-accepttng-evidence-brthe-Onofre-plant, extensive monlfoflnT tias~ earlier that year, and because .. it had Security sources at the airport sa!d the Beirut delegation to Cai~o but drop.. proposed $47-~lllion expansion of nuclear taken place at regular intervals. atrong ties with extremist Baathist several Arab ambassadors were called m ped out abrupUy. Official sotirces said at power generators at San Onofre. Thus far the Sa n Diego area Regional the time he changed his plans because or Amid local opposilion which rallied Water Quality Control Board has found Wet Weather Curtails Two-week State Blazes Clammy fog. shO\o\'ers and higher humidity crept across-.fire-scarred areas of Californ,l& -over the weekend · as firemen declared the last in a two-week series of blazes contained. The death toll, m~a while. rose to 13 for the disaster peri with the discovery of three charred ies during mopup operations in San Diego County's Mount Laguna fire. Coroner's deputies attempting lo iden- tify the remains found near the com· munity of Jamul theorized they were I ~1exican nationals sneaking into the United States. They were apparently caught in the 200,000 acre fire -largest in California history -some ·time before it v.'as finally contained Friday. Authorities surveying the destruction from Monterey to San Diego predicted it will hit perhaps $180 million. with more than 1,000 structures destroyed. A cold coastal fog over the \11cekcnd 'was credited with helping firemen finally contain a stUbbom timber fire northwest of San Simeon that damaged erdwoods and threatened famed Hearst Castle. The names blackened 44,000 acres of Los Padres National Forest before being subdued by firemen. One Northern California blaze swept through a stand of giant redwoods so an· cient that they were growing before Christ was born, but damage was slight because they are fire-resistant. Hot spots still flared up tod ay ln the ~1alibu Canyon areas or Los Angeles County, while v.·eary firefighters con· tinued erforts to extinguish the Lytle Creek blaze in San Bernardino County. Once victually under control, Santa Ana \\inds whipped it up again last Thurs- day. sending clouds of smoke boiling over the Orange Coast and blackening a total of 44,000 acres inland. :;ecurily reasons. 011er the weekend. the P,UC will bear no problems . with the warm -exhaust On the day Nasser was buried, Fran· testimony o~ t~e a~plication by the v.•ater which ~rges back into the sea jich prestdl!d over an emergency cabinet Southe_rn Cahfornta Ediso.n Gompany and about a half·mlle seaward of the nuclear meeting lhat lasted nearly all day . Sa~ Dieg.o Gas and Electric Company to reactor . Outside there ·were wild outbursts of build f\\1n nuclear reactors -each of About 350,000 gallons per minute il!l us-~hooting '>''hich killed 17 persons and in· them twice the size of the.existing atom ic ed by_lhe San Ooo[re f~Cility. jured more than ISO. plant o~ the coa_stal. location. . The tv.·o new .units proposed for a site The shooting ostensibly was part of ThC"'f\rst ~ssion in the hear1.ngs bega~ n~arby would increase that amount of Arab mourning ror Nasser. at 11 a.m. in San Clemente city counc!l discharge to a__n@.ve~age o( Iiv~timeUhe Political sources said the political chambers. amount CWTenUy discharged around the tension stemmed from the landing at Preliminary estimates by some sources clock. . Beirut airport the previous night of an have placed the length of the hearings at Other 11~ of vast importance l~~e ·Iraqi military aircraft' carrying 40 armed two days, but opposition to the plans h~arlngs will be the degree of rad1a~on members of the Baghdad-based Baath could extend lhal time. d1schar~~ by the nuclear reactors mto Party. These also were Lebanese and 15 Thermal pollution will be Cl'le al. several .}he t!JviromnenL .! , i;-~ "'" ~ of them managed to enter the city in an major j.ssues covered in the hearings, and ~e aiscfiarge. ~puted thro~h an I · b hi r The ther 25 were utility speakers are expected to cite the Intricate formula, 1s strictly monitored raqt cm assy v~ c e. o clean bill of health granted thus far to the through a program administertd lhrough taken ~ the Syrian ~der. . existing nuclear plant which uses cool sea the Atomic Energy Commission. Pollhcal sources said the. Baath1sts had water, then pumps it out to sea 10 Hearings before that agency, which has fought alongside the fl!err1~Jas but .co~ld degrees hotter after the brine is used ·to the role of ultimate approval for nuc lear not retu:n throu~h Syria without r1Sk1ng condense the steam back into water for plants, are expected to take place ai:rest stnce Syria opposes the Baghdad sometime early next year. wing of the Baath Party. . Utility spokesmen say that at least five The Al F~lah gll';TTllia _gr 0 up. Fer ry Sinks; 12 Di_e years are needed belore lhe first of the mean\\·hile said Jordanian art11lery and two new reactors would be operational. tank~ shelled a north Jor~anl~n town to-LISBON (AP) -At least 12 Mozam· The second plant Js planned to start day 1n a new outb~eak.of f1ghhn~.. bicans \\'ere drowned early today when a operation a year after the first one. A spokesn:ian said King Hussein. s a~y ferry sank off Beira harbor, in Mozam· Financing for the proposed huge power began shelling the town of Har1ma. 11 bique, East Africa, the Lusitania News complex: will come from a British bank- miles northeast or Irbid. in the early Agency reported. The boat had 56 persons :ng syridieate. As proposed, the new sta· hours with tanks, artillery and aboard v.'hen it hit a,sandbar•two miles Uons ••ould be built on 83 acres or bluff- machineguns and then tried lo enter the off the coast and sank. Reports ' rrom top immediately aouth of the present town. Beira said the death toll may rise. · · reactor. El.Rancho has the .hottest price in town! FARMER JOHN 1h LB. PKG. .... •,• ....... . You know the quahly ... eMlern pork with lhe ""estcrn flavor ... ·nov:, take note of El Rancho'~ low \ow price ! 'You'll love the sausage f or breakfast .•• and the price for the sa vings you'll recognize at El Rancho! Beef Liver YOUMC! 79 ~ Sliced Bacon Tender and mild flavored for more pleas ure: El ~a ncho's ,own .•. \\·ilh distincti,,e goodness! Super specials fo r early bird shoppers! Apple Cider . .. .. . . . .. . . .. . . .. . .. . . . . . . . 59¢ Tree Top ... hAJf.galloo l ... from \Vasliington Beef-a-Mato Juice ................ 39' N@w ; .. and delicious .•• from-)lolt's ! Quart. Table Syrup ................ : .. : ........ 69e Sliced American ................ 3 FOR '1 Vermont Maid ••. 24 oz. bottle! Save lOc. Burger shaped ••• from Fisher! 6 oz. packages. \\'ho fired the shots. Police said all o{ the: boys who wer~. shot were in their high teens and · were " resumed" to be student.. at the bJ&h· school. · Police said the shooting OCCIU'ttd about 10:06 a.m. EST when a group of 1iz to eight white you~ congregated at a street corner and ,.. "larger group or. black youths came out and got into a discussion with them." "There was conversation for a few moments and then the blacks pulled out guns and atarted shooting," police said. Off Duty Cop Turris Robber _NEW_ YORK (AP) -A trimlt 0 patrolman, hidden Jn a change booth at a Brooklyn subway station, ' ~ shot a holdup man today, orily to discover the masked bandit was the E~~::~~ ~!~~pla~ _an hour --• Patrolman Ri;i.ymond Camf>bell • was on duty in the token booth when a masked ma n stuck his gun through the window and demanded money. As the cashier, Mrs. Dorothy McDonald, pushed the bllls through, Campbell fired once, ·. police said, hitting the gunman in the abdome... • \Vhen they took his ma!!k orr. 1'.1rs. McDonald recognized him as patrolman Raymond ThOmpson , 29, who had been with her just an hour before that. He was still wearing lhe blue uniform shirt he wore. on his 8 a.m. shift. He had used hil service revolver in the stickup, police said. He was taken to Cumberland Hospital In Rrlous condition. 'Big Lift' Prepared For Europe Maneuver FRANKFURT. Germany (AP) -The., first of 11.400 combat-ready U.S. Army troops a11ived in Frankfurt today to be-· gin a test of the "Big Lift" concept and maneuvers near the Czechoslovak border. At the same time, 100,000 Communist troops are carrying out the largest maneuver in the history of the Warsaw Pact between the West German border :- and West Ber.Jii1. Priui u. •fleet M..._, ,...,., w.11.. O<i S, 6, 7. No •a/U to dcaler1. ADDIA: - Supe r Shopper Produce Valu e! Pink Grapefruit ... -..... 5 '•r $1 Ruby Red ••• ripe and juicy ••• with distincti••c flavor Ui.at makes-for a bette breakfaat: _ • I S-1 lld lluolia.• Dr. ((I ..... Ctalor) l'ASAD£llA: 320 wat Colorado Slid. SOUTH l'ASAD£llA: Jr-I 1nd·Huntin&t<>o Dr. '11UllT1NGTOll BEACH: W•• 111d Alioncruin (i!olldlnll< Ctn~r) NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 N._i BIYd. an4 2155 ·£Jsr_blull D<. (Entblull Vill•a• Contu) • J l =r L .I ' ' • Moodu,~ 5, 1'170 I (;owp Attempt -:--=---'-Bolivia-Rocked- _BY-Army Revolt LA -PAZ, Bolivia (AP) --Ret.W.1 control of two imporlall;t regiments and the air force, Bolivian President Alfredo Ovando Candia apparenUy weathered an attempt by the army chlef or staff to overthrow him Sunday, a week after his mWt.ary regime's first anniversary. "I want neither war nor bloodshed, but l am here to rule the destiny of. the na· tion," the president told a crowd Sunday night from the balcony of the presldenUal palace. He had returned to La Paz from SaYita Cruz, 350 miles away. ·viet Cong -Hit--F1meral '• I -Procession -. • I -SAIGON (UPI) -Viet Cong -~ WJed 27 peim tn i ltrles of attaW on a flineral procession, a restauran---ra.lid a private home in the Saigon area. Fighting flared today along two o! Cambodia'• major highway1. • Guerrillas thre'f' a grenade lnto a line of mourners at a funeral 35 miles o0uthwest o! sa;gon !ale Saturday nigbl The explosion killed 12 peno111 and .....,. ded UL Colly, reputedly the world's ?st· est snail, died at the age of 4 in Hover, England. Owner Chris Hucl- a,n, 15, said, "'[ don't think captiv .. ity agreed with her." The funeral was to_be held today in Hudson's gardenJLH2R!!. England._l'.;!l_ll beat a host of international chaJ .. ·tenders last May to win the World Saail Cbam,pionshi~ at Folkeston, England. The creature covered two feeU1i-the reconl·sbatering time of lhree minute.. Tiiere was no repiit:Of-SboOUng by-- Sunday nigh~ but Maj. Ruben Sanchez, commander of the Colorado Rtgim:ent guardktg the palace, said the rebe1s had Moll ol the dead and Injured '"°" regliiiW-iotte-and -popular ( ..... militiamen who were burying ooe o1 their comrades slain in battle. Terrarllta Sunday night st! of( a bomb tn a restaurant near the Thu Due diJtrld: toWn eii;ht miles riOrth of Saigon, South Vietnamese military spokesmen said. • Typist Gl..,y• Broomhall, 21 , got two fingers thoroughly stuck in her typewriter keyboanl Thursday in Dudley England. Six Firemen, with a ladder truck and tender, plus seven factory workers, four office girls and the office manager struggled for 30 minutes to free her -in vain. Finally a typewriter mechanic did the job. • Honey, a 1().monUrold beagle in Loughton, England has a keen ap- petite for banknotes. Her owner,- Mrs. Gertrude Cl•rk, who has lost $38.40 to the dog, said, "I hide my m.onJ!:Y, but she noses it out." • RETURNS IN TIME President Ci11ndl1 to give up uncondi.Uonally or "there will be no aolutlon but to fijht," His soldiers were posted on the balconies and at the windows of the palace with orders to &boot if threatened, officera said. Three of Ovando'• ministers met in military headquarters wjth Gen. Rogelio Miranda, the rebel leader, and reported that "it seems they are going to sur· render." Miranda made no comment. Miranda demanded Ovando'.s resign&· t!On in an early morning broadcast over the army's radio station, charging that the Ovando government "has frustrated the hopes of the people and the armed forces and has not interpreted correctly the aims of the nation." Tb'e chief of staff told a news con- ference he would turn over the govern- ment to a junta, which would call elec- tions by August 1972. The government order~ a state of emergency. S. VIETNAMESE SOLDIER FINDS MOMEN'f FOR PRAYER . Fire Base'O'Rtllly Shrine Made of Coke Can, Shell Crate Cambodia Votes · to End ltS Status of Monarchy · Six cfviliarui:, a policeman and thrte goJdiers were killed and five penons wounded. · Five civili~ns were killed and two others wounded early today when Viet Cong fired a 840 rocket-propelled grenade and threw a hand grenade into a house 20 miles west of Saigon. Informed U.S. military sources said Sunday Adm. John S. McCain Jr., U.S. Pacific Commander, is discussing the PHNOM PENH (UPI) -The Cam· emergency law declared shorUy after the possibility of increasing American air bodian National Assembly today voted outbreak of the war in March and ex· strikes over Cambodia . unanimously to declare the country a tended for six months in September. McCain has been in Phnom Penh since republic on Friday, legally ending 24 Ung 1.-tung said the official declaration Saturday meeting.with Premier Lan Nol years of limited monarchy. ceremony would probably take place an and .other Cambodian officials. The date of the declaration, Oct. 9, i! hour before Cheng Heng's departure. Milflary spokesmen said heavy figb.Ung the day Chief of State Cheng Heng leaves Under the old constitutional monarchy broke out early today on Highway 6 and Phnom Penh for the United Nationsl of deposed Prince Norodom Sihanouk, Highway 4, two of Cambodia's main General Assembly session in New York. ultimate power rested with the monarchy roads . Assemblyman Ung Mung, who heads and not with the national assembly. Route 4 coMecl! Phnom Penh with the the committee to draw up a new con4 nation's only deepwater,,ort at Kompong Sh<lfi<ld, England Steel PT°' ducts, 1119nufacturtri of cuUerv 11nd auto parts, b so .short of lo- bor-it-har-Dffercd-cmployei-a- $24 ta:r.·/Tee bonus . for every fritM they can bring i'n to work. Armed groups of pro-Ovando peasants were reported marching on La Paz and . Cochabamba, 140 miles t.o the southeast. The government mobiliz.ed its forces, and the air force said it would "send planes stitution for Cambodia. said after the all· Police Academy Hit Som and Highway ~ runs north from 'morning session that the assembly woilld Phnom Penh . also vote soon on a new nag and a new B Women Liberation Air strikes were called in to Bupport national-anthem<c. --------~=.;-~~===== -- --ground-forcu...near Sre Klang, 6CLmiles • Jack NollOll of suburban Olivette, Mo: fouiid his lawn churned up by alltomobile tires when he returned from a recent trip. When Nelson got home after work Thursday, he found the damage largely repaired and a note on his front door, which 1aiil: ,-1Dear Sir." uwe are sorry we ran over your lawn. We came today and raked it up the best we could. We won't do it anymore." The note bore two signatures, which-· were not di!closed. • A former trick moto';Cycie rider who thrilled audiences throughout the world for 20 years bas passed her automobile driving test in Hert· lord, England on the 20th try. Mrs. Doris Smith, 54, who already had driven 30,000 miles before she won her license, said, "These tests were more nerve-wracking than the wall of death ever was." • Dudley, England zoo. keepers Nicholas Ordinans and Geraldine Bateman were married 'Thursday. Ordinans announced that their guest of honor at the ceremony was a 1&.foot python, with this eXplana· tion: ''Karl the pytbdn has always been a favorite of ours and we wanted him around on the big day.' • A letter lo Indiana Ku Klux Klansmen from Grand Dragon Wil- liam N. Chaney has called for "100 percent participation .. in a walk Saturday afternoon through the courthouse 15quare of New Castle, 30 miles east of Indlaoapolis. "Cold weather will soon be here and we again will have to go indoors," Chaney wrote. "Come on out and enjoy these outdoor activities." __ o_yer_ll'1Ile;d forces headquarters" i ,. necessary. Jets buzzed La Paz and the Toledo Regiment, the army's largest and best-armed military unit based about 25 miles from La Paz, threw:. its mechanized armor behind Ovando. COU)' COMMANDER General Mlrand• Ovando's cabinet ministers we re reported divided-between Miranda and the president, a general who took power Sept. 26, 1969, in a coup that ousted President Luis Adolfo Siles Salinas. Thirty-three retired military officers, including two former presidents, called for Ovando's resignation on the eve of the regime's first B'l'lniversary. 'Ibey, too, wanted to replace him with a junta which would set up elections. At· least siJ' persons were killed last ._ ~ in antigovernment disturbances by llllldenl_aod labor groups. P ..... t. W<rll moblllud in support ol Ovando. Laird Tours Greek Base lnFenceMending JourneYi ATIIENS (UPI) -Delense Secretary Melvin R. Laird toured a U.S. Air Force base today, winding up a Greet visit seen by diplomatic sources as appeasement for President Nilon'a failure to vi.sit this North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) ally. HiJ om ltop Is ID be Malta. 'Diplomatic sources saw Laird's visit to Turkey and Greece as an attempt to ap. pease the two countries for being omitted from President Nixon's tour of Europe. Laird described his visit to both NATO allies as ''part of the Presidenl's tour of the Mediterranean area ." His visit followed by a few days resumption of full U.S. military aid to the military-backed government of Greece. Laird discussed the aid and NATO pro- blems in talks with Greek officials in- cluding Premier George Papedopoulos1 who is also defeme minister. His talks were marred but not In- terrupted by a bomb blast in a downtown park minutes after he appeared there to lay a wreath. "The old friendship between Greece ar1d America has been cloudless and steadily undisturbed," Papadopoulos said in a toast at a banquet Saturday night. "Our President and our United States government realize the importance of the strategic location of this nation," Laird said. _ He also stressed the need for NAT 0 strength. "If we are going to have an era of peace, another decade of peace in Europe aa we have had these last two decades under the principles of the NATO alllBJEe, it is important for us to main. tain and to ~build the strength ot thlJ crut alliance," Lalrd Aid. Cold Front Blankets East West Warm, Dry But Canadian Cold Air Muss Seen Temperatures ... Kftll 1.lw l"rK, • • • M1rv IU!Wthw tMIY. lltlll V1rllblt ..,llldl nltflt 1J'ld IMnllM ~ MIC'"" lllt -'-""' I tw IS t!Wb Ill 1ftitn10DN 9*'1 _,,. T"lllndl)', Hit1'1 M•'I 72. TIJllDA'I' ll'lttt h1" """'''"' UiM t.m. 11.t ,,,,, low ............ f !ll •·"'· 0.1 ._ .,.. 4!J0 I A 1111 4111 •·""- ,M-. a1111 11 :1t1.m. kif f1:.S,..111. V.S. S11•-r11 Ory, Qftl~tbl'f ••l"ll't -..11w """' ""IW IM fir _, tMIY 11,,.,.,. t aid 1Jr m1u trem Ceftldt IS tUldM .. ·~ • lllfl'lklt If -tytf "" llO'in...t. tonltflt. Tht Mlltnl MCIOI'" of ttHI 11111(111 , .. IMllllllll 1111 Ille clllll"I •'-· r•"9ltlt "*'1" 111 n. • mom Ntw 1rw1M111 ft flOt'ltttnl ll'ltt1't. k •ttlr9d ffetl .... """'' .... "'• llrwllf!Cll Of""' 1 ... 1.,.., TM a.Ml C1Mlll1n ,....,. w1M - • MM Mrtlleftl WY°"'llll 11'1 ftnltlll •lld nM.llllnl lflowtt• I n foMtltd Ill tvrn lo ,......, t i IO"Wtr tlt¥t!I0111. · Trtv•ltrl w11n!nt11 1r1 In 1Fltcl IOI' Mlf of Ille Coftlll!'flll l Olvlft tlld 1"- 1N1Ulll•1"1 .,.. ,..... _, of "* •l'lldt. ' ,, -. AIM~•r- Anc11Dr1;1 At11nt1 a.kt~Otld 8ll!Fl1rct .. ,H lo5!0fl 9rownsvlllt Clllclto Cl11C\11netl Dlolver Des Mlll!WI ..... F1lrtNlnlo;• Fort WOt'lll ,_ ··-HOllOl11h1 K1nu1 Cll'I LtlYtMl l.OIAl'lttltl Mlom< "'""*"""' N•OrlMnt -· ... Pttortll l"llnt ....... Otl•'*"' '"" ...... Pno •'*'t ·-· l"llhtl\lrtll '"°"' ..... •••Id Cll't' ltld tlVft ·-SIUlmtOIM S.lt L•k•CllY $1n Olfto $1n ,.r1MltCO s..ni. . , ... _ Ttltnn1l Wtt11l"1ton " .. " " " .. " " .. ~ " ... " " " " .. .. " " " .. " .. .. .. " " " .. .. " n " " " " " .. ., n .. .. " " .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ")" " " .... .. _,. .. " .. " " .. " ., .. .. .. " " " " " " " " ,, .. .. .. ., f .01 T .. ·" .. Ung Mung said the Constitution, which COLUMB.US , Ohio (UPI ) -Women are southwest of th~ capital. . Is expected to give Cambodia a liberating the police academy here. Four Camt>:001~n tr.oops were killed '!Id parliamentary system of government The Municipal Civil Service Com-I 4 wounded . 1n fighting with. communist rather than a presidential system, is not mission informed Safety Director James troops OJI H1g~way 6 at a ~int .s2 miles yet in finli.I form. Hughes f-ecenUy that the next 64 persoris north of Phnom Penh. Two Viet Cong . Despite the declaration, Cambodia will j!Jigi!>le to be.. appointed to the academy bodies were found a~ the scene, the Cam· remain at least until April, 1971, under are women. bodian command said. • Visit our Laguna Beach office for a free caricature of yourself or anyone in your family. Any day, Oct.5th thru 9th, between the hours of10 and 3. So come in, open or add to your savings account today, as little as $1. .The experienced plac1 ••• th1 proteulonal place sine• 1824 PLIJS Free llafe DepllitlloxfR auwm holllaa ef $%,580 er mere. PLUS 5% to 7'/2% interest ud savings inwed t. $%0,000 by 111 agency el the federal government. LAGUNA BEACH: 292 South Coast Highway /Telephone 494-9:481 BRENTWOOO 11601 Wl1Mlir11 at San Vlce.nte LAGUNA IEACH 292South Coast Hlahw1y LYNWOOD (Home Office) lll70t.on1_11ou1_ HORTll~ll!GI 9036 Resed• Blvd.at Nordhoff 'ONTARIO s21 North Eucnd Avenu e SAN aERNARDINO l!Wl!I Ent Htplond SAN DIEGO 1170 !th Avtnue 1t B Street WUTAftCADIA 1200 s. Baldwin at Ob1rteR01d WILSHIREoAl,V- 2033-llvd.,l.ooAnaol• WOODLA"D H!LLI 23325 Mulholland Ot1w atV1\leyClrcl1 ltoad (I Cimino Shopplnc Centw ·' I ' ' 1 J1 I f ~1 I r ' I , ,. 'I ! \, \ --------·-·-·-~ ·-~~ ·1----.,__,_---~------··--------------:--------------------_,, ...... .,....,...,,.. • - • • , JOOEAN HASTINGS, 642-4321' MMHt, Oc..._ S. U11 M ,.,. IJ --V-afl-e-~M-trte-~s~. -. Share Weal -·tn California's 49er days have arrived again with the discovery of a Nifty,. Gifty Bargain Bonanza in the city of Fountain Valley. The prospectors, members of Las Brizas del Mar Auxiliary of the Children's Home Society of California, have struck it rich and will share the ·wealth on Saturday, Oct. 10. Fello\v 49ers are invit~ to prospect in the home of Mrs. Ron Garland from 1 to 5 p.m. for a gold mine of hand-\Vf'Ought, member·mined items. Included will be crocheted ponchos, candles that look like fresh vegetables, decoupage renderings, patchwork skirts, bean bag frogs, tree ornaments, mushroom baskets and other items. According to Mrs.' ~O;hn McClane, president and chi ef assayer oC the group, the remaining -items-will be transported. to a claims office at the Fountain Va11ey Halloween.Barbecue Celebration Saturday, Oct. 24. A pack4 mule load of Christmas card· books will be available both days, according to the sales chairman, Mrs. Ronald Thomas. Members of the auxiliary will take time from fund-raising activities during the week of Oct.· it-17 4which officially has been proclaimed CHS week in Costa ~1esa by Maypr Robert E. Wilson. Mrs. Clyde Story, second vice president of the Fountain Valley group, will be' present alon g with other members in the Mesa Verde Library to --'etYJ>...t:eU:eshments_arui._di.sll'.ib.ute...)>.l'.Wl~llll!ining the pur.l"!is,.e._s _,an,,,,,,d __ ,..._~,.., --'""--.....:. goals of CHS. \.d "-)/Ji • The society, which now is the largest privately.supported .adoption agency in the world, has more than 240 auxilaries throughout the state. It was founded in 1891 by Dr. and Mrs. John A. Townsend and bas arranged more than 34,000 adopUons. · . • Anyone wishing further information on the bazaar,_society or agen~y may call Mrs. :ri.tcClane,-962~373;-or-Mrs. Joan Ponn, 962-4385. NUGGETS UNCOVERED -A gold mineof hand-crafted bazaar items will be brought-forth in Fountain Valley Saturday, Oct. 10, by members _of Las Brizas del Mar AtQc:iliary of Childreq's Home Society~Uncovering the nuggets for the ~ifty,~Gifty -Bargain Bonan- za arc Oe!t to right), the Mmes. Ron Garland. John Pujol and Ed· wa rd Lavelle. Christma~· cards will be available-as well during the 1 to 5 p.m. e.vent. ; ' : Partygoers Needn 't Stew Over Hard Times •• ~With everyone trying to economize these days, the .home management committee of the Fountain Val- ~ey Women's Club decided to stage a get-together that would cost little or nothing. Hobo attire is the , order of dress and those attending are asked to .. supply a dish for the Hard Times potluck dinner to take place Monday, Oct. 12, ~in the Civic Center. Preparing a tantalizing concoction are (left to right) the Mmes. Gerald Wessler, Dave .Heffner and Wal· lace Short. • Crafty Sessions Designed by Jun ior Women Arts and Crafts classes including figure draping, · straw flowers. papier mache and decoupage will be offered for four consecutive Wednesdays in the Huntington Beach \Voman's Clubhouse. Sponsored by the Junior Women , classes will· be from 8to10:30 p.m. starting Oct. 7. Preparing some of the mater· ials for the sessions are (left to right) Mrs. William Biss and Mrs. Cody Taylor, chairman of arts and crafts. A fee of $1 per lesson will be charged. • '.Friend Knuckles Down Wh .en Crackling Sound Snaps Nerves I tDEAR ANN LANDERS: No earth-rock- idg' pfublem, this one, but J'd like an answer. Maybe you can get to it in a day V(he6 all the major "-'oeS of the world h1Ji1i: been solved. • .. 1 crack my knuckles. A close friend in- si.!ts that knuckle cracking damages lhe jo~useJ arthritis and \\'eakens the li~!Jn_lhe_UngetS. Any Jruth in the lions? Check your knuckle ex· and let me know. -SNAP, LE. PQP R.POP : The only damage done by k -1, cracking 111 lo the ll!!lC!ner wbo Is tnflited by It. The sound 1ends so me up the wau aed I'll bet your friend is ,,. ng them. !>EAR-ANN LAIIDERS : What can bt ANN LANDERS done aboul a supposedly grown up man (riitl1e1"or·thiee lilflld;J who gives the whole family the belOw-zero silent trea~ ment because thi 17·year-old boy had a minor motorcycle accident? By "minor" I mean less than $35 worth of damage -which the boy is paying for hlmset1.~Nobody was injured, no laws broken. The kid ran Into a post. Since the 8ccident, my husband refuses to eat with-the (amily. He also refuses to sleep with me. CHe's taken to Ute rouch.) When~ iJ s1>9:ken to, he doesn't answer. He has bid mean-: spells ·before but nothing like this. As I write lhls letter he is goini into his rourth day of silence. What can we do? -BABY IT'S COLD INSIDE DEAR BABY: Jport him -all you would any , slllki»g, pouting cblld. His beha\'lor ls potsly immature. He doesn't kDow how to deal 'Wltb his anger so he Is taking it out 01 tbo&e. closest to him. hi time lte'll thaw out and utter • few words. Whee be does. be pleasant and make no reference to bis childlsb.ncss. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I was in- terested in the Jetter about the child who was a compulsive rountcr. He had to put on his pajamas frontwards, l hen backward,,, three times every ni~t. He also had to count his piggy bank money twice before he went to bed. I had the same childhood problem. t was posse.ssed with a terrible. fear that something awful . would-hap pin to l]l Y mother If I didn 1l repeat certain acts tsuch as checking to see if all the dresst!r drawers were closed and goi{lg to the closet to sec if all my shoes were tined u11 perfecUy). I was a slave ·io lhe routine because I loved my moU1cr and believed I was protecting her against harm by performing these acts. A1y heart hu 0 rl for the mother who • wrote to you. She said she was sure her son nel'ded pro!mional help but her hus.. band would not pay ror it. The boy's falher Insisted that. the. kid ''cul out the non:iense and straighten himself around." Fortunately l worked my way out of the problem in "my early teens through sheer will power. I told myself over and ove r that I must not repeat those strange , rituals because they had nothing to do \Yith my mother. I realize now l\ow desperately I needed therapy. l~ow lucky 1 was thal I aol well without it. f\1ost peo- ple can't. -I UNDERSTAND • DEAR W: I was stagiered by the number orrudcrs wbo wrote lo say ll>cy. too, understand because they bad suf .. fered from · tbe same uncontrillable behavioral patterns. !\1ost. people wlto \\-Tote· said · they received professioaal help. You were indeed lucky. PareQl9 wb& recognize cOmpol1lve countlag ud repetitive habit! In their children should· take them to a doctor for' evaluaUon. ADll the earller, the better. Unsure or yourself on dates? What's right? What's y,•rong? Should you'f Shouldn't you ? Send for Ann Landcrs1 booklet •1Dating Dos and Don'tlt,"'encl09o ing wilh your request 35 cents In coln and a long, self.addressed. !!tamped envelope in care of the DAILY PILOT. • • I : a Mondi)', OctOb<t S, 1'70 Horoscope E_Qfl"lmittee Mem bers . Focus on Sho w Plans TUESDAY cillaUon. Means &Ive a little in mlstakes. 'Ibe very nnt , , OCTOBER 6 order to receive m u c b . minute should become the A group of 'all chi~ and DO Jndlana' Mwage will be clear. first minute of the rest of your has had a busy summer l•aallzlnJ planl for By SYDNEY OMARR LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): life. ~is ce:s~E>ut ie-s Eonflict + I 'I • • the third annual F orum IntemaUoml Hone Five of tM lf'tltat Ide. Avold extravagance. You can-AQUAJl~S (Jan. 26-Feb. ___ sJw! bolng_gjy_ea to bJ!!!!I\... th.:ii!Y of Hope _ __lbtl_ta_grace._l h.eJ llP.JL..nol really..bey.aHllC!ian.Jt will II): Some WI!~ m~n w~ll may Wednesd~yJ Oct:'?. UfrOugliS ay, OCt:-U: world hist.or)' were also be gtven willinglY.'e~spentting 10:0 much~ + 1•1-i-- I ~ ~ -I-• \ i ' • ' ~ ' t I t • ,._ ' ' ~ I ' ' ' Uf'IT........i• Tric ia Manages Well-wis hers !I Holding a bright blue balloon, Tricia Nixon manages a tight smile as the ~ limp hand of a well-wisher is thrust at her. The president's elder daughter ~ was in Atlanta to open the Southeastern Fair. ~ _To wn and Go wn Group ~ • ,..__~I·--l"t:-rt-E·v·ent s-Sketch·ed ,: ~ A melange of meetings, ex- : cursions and work sessions ~.' has been ·assembled !o.r the UCI Town and Gown Art ~ Inte!est Group during the ~ commg ·year. ~ Members will gather in the "' Corona del Mar home of Mrs. ~ Frank Gaines for the first --t general meeling,-Lhe.med from. ~ Bonsai to Tie Dye, where ~ plans will be made for an Art Fair in the fall of 1971 to pro. vide scholarshi ps for UCI students. Bus trips have been ar- ranged to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art for the Art and Technology Show, La Cienega art galleries and the Pasadena Art Museum for California De.sign XJ. Mrs. Robert Dubin will display and discuss h e r English monumental brass rubbings during a December meeting, and in February Mrs. Murray Krieger will· lead "'"1 tour to the lithography studio in the new UCI Fine Arts Village. The May meeting; will take place in the patio o[ the Rex: Brandt home, where the artist and his wlfe will display and describe their art works. ·i; Cere-,,;o~y Performed Workshops will-continue thrOUgh llie' summer J rr preparation for the art fair. . Serving . as chairman of Qie group is Mrs. B.N. Desenberg •. Other officers are the Mmes. Lyman Porter, vice chairman ; Ernest Verre, treasw-e.r; Jack Van E d e n , corresponding secretary and Philip Maurer, recording secretary. •• ~ Anne Richardson S t e e I e William S, Buettner ot Santa •• ~ became tbe bride of Greg Alan Monica. : Buettner, both o[ La Jolla, A graduate of Katharine Bran.son School, Ross, the new Mrs. Buettner attended the University of Ca Ii f orn I a, Berkeley and Irvin\ cam- puses. '.: during a single ring. rile in f Coronado. Chairmen are the Mmes. ... The bride is the daughter or Lloyd Dellnis, fair: Dubin, p1.1bJicity, apd Phillip Shipp and Newton Wayne, hospitali- ty. ' " Mr. and Mrs. Richard Steele of Newport Beach. Parents of ~ the benedict are Mr. and Mrs. He_r _husband is a graduate of San Diego State College. I ' ~ Ci;pwmng Glory h.ean~ salons FREE CONDITIONING i T R EATMENT w ith your next shamp oo and set Famous KR10 conditioner means healthier lovelier hair Pene· trates hair to add protein! Now free with our fabul~us fall ' coiffures. Mon• Tues . Wed SHAM P OO, SET and CONDITIONER '2" ., so HAIRCUT FROSTING SPECIAL Slteale I llttl• auntlght lnlo y01Jr he ir with thlt man- ple11lng bright look , 12 75 Mon • Tuos e Wed C1~owning Glory 1 formrrly C.price Cnfflul"Cll I SOUTH COAST PLAZA 267 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA Lower Level-Next toi $Pars , ..... 546·7186 ....... 541·'91t Open Ew.nlno 01Jt'n Evcnln~ A-SundJ.y W,orlring as a .!!~ on all fund.-rab:ing a 1 t r 0101 e r 1 : Nleolaa1 thusiasUcally. But you must · some comparative shopping. events,~e w:ome; ,head~Dy ~· T. ~mku•, Galileo GalQel.!. open yOursilf _ to the ex-You deserve to get money's BUchanan "'Blatliton ·Sr.1 made 1evml ln-TYCbo Btihe, JoPuea Kepler perience Stop trying to force worth. Study Scorpio-mes.sage • noyations in the whit.tie ball and 11.Dlpled and baac New«m. issues. · You can learn now by doing. the ball menu during a lunch'""!· VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): PISCES (Feb. f9-March 20): Hosting a summer cocktail party to ~ (March 21-April .19): You may be in too much of·a Som~ ~reaks in :etattonshlp.s honor the Diamond Hone Shoe members Procedural change may be a hurry to revise and transform. a~e mdi~ated. Duties may~ were the M. Ketth Gaedes of Laguna Beach. necessity. What was taken for Obtain hint from· Le 0 n1ct ~1th ~r;ional deSU'es. Gaede is chairman of the Diamond H9rse granted requires a new look. message. Check details. Be Key is to firush ~hat ~ou Shoe and Mrs. Gaede is a member ol the Be perceptive ; detect trends thorough. Accent on bow well st.art. Those ".'hoar~ unpattent women's steering committee. and cycle.s. Avoid extremes. you succeed in building 8 solid may be showing their true col- Obtain needed rest -and base. ors . privacy. IF TODAY IS Y 0 UR '-----------------.J._-'TAUllUS-(Aprll lf.Mly I0)1· UBRA (SepL 23-0ct. 22): Give logic equal time with -Postpone journey, if posSible:-::!n~~!i:uv:i~~e-j:zi= Appo intments Wanted Wit h Den tal Wives Prospective and c h a rte r me mbers of the Women's Auxiliary to the Orange Coun- ty Dental Society will be honored during a champagne membership luncheon o n tomorrow. Mrs. Herbert Stroscheln, a charter member, will host the event in her Santa Ana home with· Mrs. Guilbert Strollchein, membership chairman, h<adiog lunch<on·plans. The auxillary's puppet show, which is presented to schools throughout the county, will be given for the prospective members and its p as t scheduJe of fund-raising events for scholanhlps, a dental clinic and speakers panel will be described. Am)ouncement will be made of the Halloween toothbrush ki ts being presented to the Albert Sitton borne, the toothbrushes (or the Head Start program. and the firet general meet.in& of the year on Wedneoday, Oct. 14. · Mrs. Robert Hauck o f Newport Beach will. host the Oct. 14: event where guest speaker will be Burton Morae, an astrologer. • The auDJJary bolted a sum- mer round-up in the borne of Dr. IDd Mn. James R. Wilson, Anaheim for all new dentists in the county and their wives to acquaint them with the a111Uiary aod its purpooes. emotkm. Obtain 1 re 11 er-Avoid writing letters in anger. U ba•---. AvoI• 0 u tb u r 5 t, Be diplomatic jn dealings with pe ing. You appreciate -la· -~ • 'ghbo J t' o I ury, beauty. Often you are too which call for later apologies. ne1 rs, re a 1ves. ne c ose ne--0 f sell-control can to yOIJ expresses frustration. sey nsitive for Your own good. •·-tlm SCORPIO (Oct. 23.. Nov. 21): ou are maturing to point save-money, e and em-Not-...wise to mix money and -where wise choices . w I J 1 barraament. Act accordingly. friendship. Key is to be a cool, replace reek.leas abandon. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): calculating investigator. You--::--::--.,-------Hold off on Jong-term com· milment. Check with expert: deserve more than promises. Play waiting game. Seek delay Make sure you are not being if pressed. Time to finish what led into fool's paradise. is on current a1enda. SAGITrARtUS (Nov. 22- CANCER (June 21-July 22): Dec. 21): Some u nu s u a I New approach could i olve demands are made. Overcome employment dilemma. 1 n temptation to rebel. This is per100al area, you must make not the time. lt is appropiiate first atep to w a rd recoo-for you to perform duties, to add to prestige. Cooperate in special project. Id II CAPRit'ORN (Dec. 22-Jan. Gui• Se S 19): AJd comes from . _ unorthodox source. Be a will· fng listener. Avoid brooding. Stop berating yo~sell for past "Why do I gain weight? I never sit down ~ to ea t." · ----' WEIGHT• WATCHERS. • Somt t11king, some listtnlng ind 1 progr1m tb•t workS. TM ~ 2flEE l lOCHUU...CAl.l IU-5505 Treasures From Tea . FOR T'HE FilRST TIME! Treasure• uncovered during EXPERT CLEANERS & LAUNDRY Nuptial Vows Rec ited . . -~t_...,.,.BUt>-->fea sponaored by SI. Mii')''• Epi>copal OlurcJi of Laguna Beach wUl be on sale Wed- nesday and 'lbunday, Oct. 7 and I, in the Guild Hall. OF FERS PICK-UP & DELIVERY For Al' Your l 1undry & Ory Cleaning Needs! In Wayfarers' Chapel In addition to unusual !terns, silver, china, glass and art wWks, tbe two-day sale will feature a <ller1 Comer stock· ed with kitcben Items and a Craft Shop of yarns and craft supp!i.,. T1"' sale will include the popular bouUque with 1muaial lU Mlnlmuml I DRAPES CLEANED & ;AN FOLDED SPICIAL u.ns TO_APAITMENT Ii MOTEL OWNllS • LADIES & MEN'S ALTERATIONS • , • FITTED IN YOUR HOME Wayf a t:e r s ' Chapel, Portuguese Bend was the set- ting for ...the double r~ ceremony linking Caryn Sue Sllelo< -of .. Long .. Bead! ·and·· Michael-E. Moen-·or Hun. tlngtoo Bead!. ---and--tee! _ ~, linem Ind m~·· and women's clothin&· EXPERT ClEANfiS f LAUNDRY The-Rev. CilVln Turley directed the ww-exdwmge for the da!J8ht<r of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Shelor of Dodge City, Kan., and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford P. Moen of Hun- tington Beach. Given. in marriage by her father, the bride wfA attended by her sister-in-law. Mrs. Ron Shelor. Candlellghters were Nina and Danny Moen, sister and brother ()( the i- bridegroom. Atte~g ·as best man was "I&>~-...,.,.~ •!!'~!a Shelor, while ushers were Jim Klink and Andy Vlrsnieks. After a honeymoon trip to Yosemite, the newlyweds will reside in Huntington Beach. MRS. M. E. MOEN Yoaemit• Honeymoon -Mesa Ri te in Offing ' Mr. and f\frs. Richard W. Routley of Santa Ana have an- nounced the engagement or their daughter, Sharyl Eileen Routley to Johie Lee Davis, son of Mr. an-J Mrs. Harley Davis or Costa Mesa. The couple will exchange \>OWS Oct. 23 in the Prince of Peace Lutheran Church, Costa lolesa. Miss Rput1ey is a graduate of Coota Mesa High School IDd at1ends Orqe eo...t eou., .. Her fiance ht a graduate of OMHS IDd 0CC and now f.s studying at Callfomia St.ite eon.,. at Long Beach. Both are business administration majors. Rebekeli Lodge Triple IJnk Club of Mesa Rebekah Loci&• hos meetings the fourth Mondays at I p.m. in. varlbus loca.UoM. Mn. Douglu Mora:an at Ml-1131 may 1"' cllled for additional information. AVCO PER8DNN•I. BBRVIC•a Alll!NCY GEN. OFFICE I. SALES .. IJlO Jot> wlworltty. F•mlllar Wl!ll at- tic• ,,..cnlnt!.? Ckc11lonal a.1••·. Sound OfOll? II can bf. I'••· Call Mtry Llo\14. 5ECltfTAltV ............. , •• t.a No l/Ht WDrt:''" intwlor dK, ll•ld• • lots cf phorMs, llUblk nniKt. Hur- ry lnl f ... Ctll AM ltllSHIL ltECOltDS CLElll( .......... tlOt No NI*", nMdld. Gl'loll t llPIY; tof pin.on wM c1n -k w11ltt!1 t-. Me<'ll IMrwlM, l'llf, DrO. mtl""•· F"" wr1 Joen C11ttll. MANA~EMENt lllAINEE .• klt flr(t{IW\f "°""'tltl • ca"""4tl! ... ed '*"'°" with -t l lltoO't, E•· Wlltnc• t>OI 11K.. FH. Call llultl - CLE Jll(-FINE JEWELJl'I" •• Sl2f C111rmlr19 lndlwiltl.lll n..-ltd IO 9!'ffl ciiste....,. In llVlll 1••. Bklld. In tin• l•w•lry s•ln ,.. .... F••, Clll N•Ml' C.ri.otl. COLLECTION CLEIUC , ... ,. SSOI St1rl c•rttr W/flTllHllc CO. Nowt If you .... ~It. •mlJlfk>lle: .. .,. .... ""'· '" et11«111ns. , .... 11» '" !Obs. C•ll N1nt;y Glr~ LOAN llltOCESSOlt .......... S.OS Jlll'tlp ,, !lllt ™"" ... """ .. '-"' wr111 1fll• fllrl ~nvl Thty lnlrl. l'M. C•ll l!Mt!I It"'"'- TllNEE. PEJl.IOHNliL CLIC, S11S '114111 INI, 1w rr1lf'4f: l"'ln.n wllfl Wiii.ii:'-11...... "'"'"He ootY-1 Frw. AIM '" ..... Mlrlt Tltlnltf'. 2323 N. BROADWAY ~NTA ANA (W1tl1 "'""""* a!d1.1 Doon will be opm from I a.m. mrtll 5 p.m. en Wed- neiday and from I a.m. until noonon'Ilmnday. 333 E. 17th St. -Costa Mot.I -646-5110 IWllM .... ,_... H ... I RO Bl NSO.N'S> • '' T HE GEMt!l'i'cuT , TW O LOOKS FOR THE: BiST OF TWO WOl'ILOS , lttE:PfNG l"Aet WJT:-1 TODAY'S WOMAN AHO ~A~FASHION1 SHORT . -CHOUGH FOR EASY-c:ARE DAYTIME FASH-ION1 11LONG ENOUGH .. FOR DREIS-U~ l:VEHIHG HAIRDOS, INDJVIDUAt..l.V S1'YLE> AND SHAPED TO FLATTER YOUR BEST FEATURES . !5.00, GEMINI CONTOUR PERM, AT 1 S.00. lN OUR-BEAUTY SALOM, DOH'T EHV'1 KAtR""""" LOVELINESS••• DUO\' rt! COMSUl.T ou1t kllft' IXPERT IN PERMANENT HAIR lttMCVA&.. FROSTIHGSPECIAt.! INCLUDING SHAMPOO AND ' SET. REG. 30.oo VAt.UE , NOW ONLY 19 .90. ' ' ROBINSONS NEVvroRT • FASH ION ISi.AND • 644·2800 • - i i 1 • l " '-. . '· .. ' \ 1 . ' . . ' I I r . I I , .... , :·1, • 1 I . ~ ,. ' I I I I : I I l I I " ' -I • I l ,, I • • I ' r I : I . ! VOL. 63. NO. 238, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ·•. ·, -. • ' ' . .. . - ·.na·c l ~o~ --• .. •• . . . . . -.. -----~ ---'!:o·- ..... , •-· :1·u--. ~ ' -. . --... " . ... . .. I ; ~ ., ... -··---·· ============-~~=-,.~.~~~·~=·=·-===:-:::::~~======~~~~~-~~~-~~-:eri1rteatlit. I -·At-Jf~lc~JC . " I . . ' . • • , ' ~ ' I . . ' . • , ' • I · .. 1:\irplari~:~~~'.P~~:.-. , •, .~ I . . . .. , , , , .,, J J . . ' ' . . ' ·~ . ·s11-·e.e.t ·-.ii;~ht~: .'.-·:: · .. ~ .. · ' " . I !-' ' ' ! ,.. . .. .. ' . . By TERRY COVILCE Wt?J1l.' dO~n/ .but be J!Ulted '. it up,' ~n·d · . ' Of-... DMIY 1"11•1 St..ff } nd~'' · ' ·· " 1 f ' ' A light plane -'c~pped ~-street light· 8 The 0 JnOM damage ~was ~a~ed · to .:tbe w~ near ~adOwlm;k ·Airport_ Sunday Cilf. ',Kit by the ;s&eet lamp. That ca,t afternoon, knockinc a street lamp onto . . ked u-:i d wa!.o\vned ,by Ken· Ha•lk;.·Sl?l. Hlll · a c;ar par on~ Avenu,e an nar·. A"-:,·dife 'of ,tti.ei,'Jiomeownm, , .. l~_in,. rowly avnirtln.-a crash on 'the runway. l::t , -T'lie-jill~lfa n·1g6t instruc· -coP!ptainUi-.:agajnst:-the airportls1 sarety b....,.,n., factM!. · . -· • · ' · tor f~om 1a Torrance airport, '""&'~t .... • -• 1 • . • , • ~ ~ in 1'1 · a bumpy , l{aodiqg ,oo · Hau_lll/s lfOUP.1ResideQts .Agalrist .Air4 • the runway, •1¥ wire drqging ~bind. pert Ha,anb (RAAH). are up<cted ·to No one, wl$ .hf~ ---:-----pftft: thetr'!ttqudt!....for! ellminl'?on-dl' It was 'the fourth tirile nearby, wires . ·•~:lfl.l-f0Qt1 run,qy extension at tonight's have · bten· ,cJipped · l1llCI: J9id!umQJe'f. clty1-council1 meeting. r . ' . '(tb-re"<iiens/ "" _. :~ L' " ; . _._ . ' "' . . ' . . . . . . . · _,fate-Judge - . . . . . - From Wire .Servkea ·Ch.arleS MansOn ··1unted across the council table" at tht judge Jn the Sharon Tate· murder . trial today , .1ete1mln1 •·SomeMe should cut your head off." ~ WU pounced on by a ~ilui, Wresu- ed ·to the floor and half-carried from ~urt. . . . . , ._. ~ _,_ - The· tiAy *year-()Jd .defendant went · hurtim1 'on' Ute floor in 'tnini Of the judge's bench .and had. to ~ subdued by . .. . ' ' .., ' -ttir«--deputles-who led him from the CQUrtfOQR!; .with his arms .twisted ~ his b;ack. -' • I ' '. i •• •#>. • ~·' • -..-~· ... -I . • ! t "r-;--,_._.~., ~ .• 1 J ·u· · ·r ··· .. -• • -I :,.L; •, l' .... '\ I J t I " . . ' . . ' '' ; ' I '' • I ,. The ·Cr&:sh further ignlt.ed tbe feud be-: "We· were ·lucky on 'this ·Qnel"· siid · t~ homeowners. and Uport uten . Ha'ulk, ,·wbO · nVes dfrectly M!h~ the _ _ (lV.et4tht_.aitporCs..afety.,_a_battle.,..,~.a~t...JeUt.:..We_didn'.l-bave-->.,._- pec~ ·to continue, at ·tooight'a meeting wires 1a>ming dOwn." · .....:. · ·. &iperior Court Judge Oha:rles H. Older, "'! orl&inal.member.of the ·Flying Tl · :,,a:Ta. ·b~~..f.C·,C· •.·~ ·-d·~·~'----1 ..._,.....l>efmwOil. ar· , t:a4nly ,noted .that 71 '3 ]£1 "'"'~' •. /l ' ' of ·the Huntington •Belch City CoiJncU .. · ·several weeks a_go 'a plane kilodt"" ~Eyewi~. to '\he accident said,'.tbe . some .nearby ·ipower lines into ·~ulk'• ' pilot, Joe Dezao o( . Manhattan .Befch, . bacJC}'ard swimming pool. · c:Une in ·Jdw ' and rapparently protiiblY ·"This 'wis'a classic case of pllo·t never-aa.w--tht wiles. ei'ror;" Bob Diilgwall, he8d -'-of-a Citi- :"He musl have ·been .a dam •g.ood un's airport 'studY cOmmlttee~ said this piJor to .a void ... a complete qash;". John ~ tnom'lng. -· . ' -' Jr.ck.son, 5301 Heil Ave., a witness, Dingwall bas ·been under fire fiyM 1ald. "When be hit the wires his ,nose thi: OOirieOwne'rs for bis cOriten(iOri tliit -~. . the defendant had jumped in the dir~km · · • or u.. ·i.;.cb and ordered ·lhal the recora o. f · Slaug' h.·te. .r.in_.g· · "-teflJ'i:t that racL . 'I1w: outburst came after ¥anaon and I z· Pil' "==~ t11ree1roin'en i:Cl'def...iUta .wereied'lnto .'srae i · · :o:IT. ' -cOurt~f.or .. lhe'-start.of-• ddiyed .mornln1 . --~ · . , 1~._:_Attom~s l&id , the judgf. wu TEL AVIV (UPI) -·Israel ·accused &i•lnr them · another thanc:e ·10 behave Egypt today of murderiilg an israeli i)uOt ~ ~~::m~: •eet captured west of the Suez Canal four -. ,,. • -· . RI c J -, days_befDr~-1ht;-Aui:. : T..:.Midiue ~ The""'defendanL! aat qUlcny-for a _few . . . the runway extension -put in during the summer. -and .newly lnltalled night ligh$J .. ~re11s,~tlie a~rt's s~e.ty .. Dingwall!'s committee has recommend-ed:-ulffli!~g'tl!e"pbm' 1.....-~ · · tlle-Street ·ngtit lines-to .. solve ·"t1te·urety-·- ' aeconds, then MitlSOn shoUttd in!.ults at cease-fire, then trymg to ~~er, 1l up .. the-judio..aod Ouoc·himlllf IClta the o'The,.goverJlPltjll/~ ~·tep .of • . ···la~-,~-··-·· . -· . ' . . complaint filed ·Sepl.'18'1illh th< !Jiterna-.....• By RUDI-NIE07JEl.SXI !Of .. Dr9"r Pu.t Stlltf Defense attorney Russell W. Bledsoe llne~ctedJy rested his cast Friday, closing out .fift weeks ol testimoJ1y in the lie..,. he!hig over the Seal Be.acll Marina P.atace. For the past wetk. the 'Los -Angele5 -Jawyer-had.ibM!Wcying. to 'establish. th al misooflduct.allegations agaiQ.rt the teen- age dance hall and 1t.s owner, William L. Robertlon;-were politically motivated. ·ce-nlfaf tO Iii! ci!t! was his allega'lion of a conspiracy bx three top city ofJtcials to bring charges-ai&inst the Marina Palace to divert the attention of the city's residents from a $100 million ..real estate deal which would create high-rise, high· · density buildings along the .waterfront. 'fbe three ,officials -former City ~~~ 1:rr~~~~~iy P~!:g~~~: Courtemarche -have repeatedly denied any plans to use the city council, hearing for any other purpose than to restore . (See PALACE, Pqe 2) pn>blem .-.. . _ .. l.-~. . . '. 'lbe'.li~•m*""' ,..-i;...'111• tne>t at 't:311..,'doct "" • night to' reach ~ ml fUfUlt< ~ -~ to ' take to the coimci1 later tn'tlle ....... , -•.• ' Ho_,. bekJn11nC to &MH line uked .... City-Cowldl to cjole the 300-. fo0t ·ex~ion and ~tly •s&op the night lights. " ' . Haulk Ui leader or RAAH and also I ~ merUber of Dingwall'• airport stu~ committee. bpt ha1 rarely QJ'ttd with Dingwall on \he committee's Jll'Oll'U'I· The street wire which WI! ·clipped sits about '6 feet above the ground. Dinpall said the pilot s&uld hav~ been·about '.ISO feet up -at ·thal point to appn>ech ~the runw.ay. ; · . . Jackson, hirilself ·a p,Uot,,saw the .aastt from bis.front yli:d .. o .. • • . i "Thcr plane ca~· in low, caught •lhe street wires ·with his wheel_and. snapped . the wire off at ·each pole~. 'lbe plane's nose turned downward, but the· .. ~lot brought it J>ack up· for a bumpy landing," Jackson said, . Resldentl ·On Heil Avenue c.me .. out or their homes as soiOn u .they heard tbe noise. "My•daughter and a friend were play- ing in 'the Jroitt yard ·when it happened'' Ja~son eaid. "They · ducked becauSe they thought tbe ~wire · W91lld ·~plash, but it 'didn'L.'1 Rock Idol Janis Joplin -- "Dies; Drugs· InW,~ated '. .. -. F"'m Wire Servm Janis .Joplin. the gravel · voiced rock blues singer who ran away from ~Port Arthur, Tes.as 10 year1 ~o·a~ still~ on. runhing', ,even aft.er lhe ovei:lQok fame ~une,bdead . .,, . ·• · ~ 2'1-!'ear-o asw.Oli'O<,kdOm"gav< II · 111 lhe haci;)nd,in the ...t It wu'her life. "Maybe I won'\ last as Icing u other singers.;' she once\l.Dtd ·an itl~iewer who asked if she wasn't afraid her hard drinking and merciless driving pact mljbt cut her career lhDrt. · . "But !'think.you can destroy your "°" by. worrying about '°'"""'°"'· .. Say the Hell with It. ·S_tay stoned and have a good time.'' ·Mias Jopljn was found dead in ·her Hollywood apartment SUnday 41ighl by gii;larlst Jolln Oloke, ol her r«onUy formed Janll Joplin Full Tilt~ rock group. ~w41if...,..,.,_.~cn.s-~-!'i;~4 f.. tlriliiM!i\~Dil1-ai;f"iftMW'' treatment.1w:aitMlLt. , ___ .riltD!!I-1o .....,..u.,, 1oo . MO.he · Go111waiiir-.. 4 a ·iirlilii\<r~1n '.·~:from the eour1oon1, ~ Goldw, ...... ,;rid 'inolhet' Ilraell 'M*-hid enlered tlli room ""1<111· pilot 1belled iiut. of their· i...HUI plane u.f.~ lo the briel, tt.tlniorii' ol one oV.. 'Eygpllan territ'o/i! ' Aug' ".I, the miil*·wtmal:when be IUddenlf erupMd. IsTidls said, and wtre n!J>Qrled liy-Cairo "Are you sofng to -thJs """""°"' to to· have· been capliired iri gOOcl cprldttlon ' ' kill "me?'.', he .~~Illy deJJta64ed of with only sllgbl injuries .. rtlelr~PJc~ JIJ!lgt Older. · ' were carr~ed ln the EgyptJan,press.: ' F ountnin V allf!y ·Bed-µty Olde!' told him ,.. k,.p· quiet .or I>< Tho Red ~ relay,ed )"prgj .from """1d·be-nmoved. · ea1ro Aug. s .that Go!dwdoer '.had died -.,™ mirntte I see yoU are &ciing' to till the day befo~e due, to what the F;gyptiua m:e, you' knOW what I'm ioina: to do," dE9Cl'lbed IS heart failure; the result of a ' ' ' ' ' Takes City , Qi;teen Post Man.on liid. . · n~ous breakdown. . . , "What are you going to do?" Older ask-"If . death did occur u a result of Lklda Anderilon, 19, a new resident, Will step· into the role of Miss Fountain va:ney~ OCt.'-24..:...at the city's. annual Halloween barbecu~ age or four nelr Belfast. ed anll'll1·, 'it.Iring-down at 'the 'bearded cardiac arrest p~ecede<{ , by , nervous rupP,1e· leader: breakdo.wn, there ra no . dOubt ~t the ·"Mr. ' anaori I'm going to have you nervQUS breakdown whlch caused the removed; lf"yo01 do not 1top," ~ jlldge death was brouk?lt aboUt'by c~el and, in4 . ' ' . '. "It was wonderful in Ireland. Everyoi:ie w,as so friendly," ~~fy .~ys of~ trif!.. Hid'. · human·:acl! of the. UAR '(Unl™l Arab •'J•m goinf to have you removed if' you ReJ?lfbll~~ .authorities," ,the Isrffli com· don't·ato;,""Manaon said. "fhavc a little plmt aaid., · , ROsemary Kelley ,.the city's 16=year-old .. reigliing queen, will hand over her crown and trophy lhat.day to the only girl in the .-·Her· Fountain 'VslltY ~ rel}!n ·Will' ·or. ficiaUy end ·when. site gives u.e· trophy lo Linda, Oct. 24 t1t Fbuntain Valley. Hi1h ··iysferif ofJnY own." -· · · "~Egyptians in~cted .. bodilf-ln~ies :At· thal, Mansi>n sprang from his seat as a result of which ti1s death wu and literally dived across the table brought.about ," the Advoeate General of . city. With enough ne?:\le to enter. th' con· test .tbil year. School. ,·;-1·· ~Warii the judge'• bench. the lsraFll Army•. Col. Zvi Hada,' tqld a ne.w;s ,c,Rn~r.ene,e., . . _ .. "r entered OW: cOntest to meet other girls my age," Linda:--u:plained. "But it didn'~ quite work out.•~, Unda, a pretty· new resi<Wlt of only two wee.b, Wu awarded .the tille by tfte Chamber of .commerce when the deadline for entering pasised a:nd no other &iris step~ forward. 1 f.mda is',the-.da'Ughlei-of Mr.·and Mrs. Conference Told of Need f9r Qc~a~Qgraphy ·Un,it .. 1 ', • , ' • , • • I I • 'By JOANNE·REV~ ' ,.., ,tl)e iack. of ·s~ed ' t1acller , .. o'!'-~'!" """·',.,, : 1 r · educaUon in·ytr:"'ld; ' \ · -Gordon 'L. Anderson, now · residc~ts of tSll tGardenia Ave.·Mr. Anderson lis in the U.S. CGost Gullrd. . The 'n~ f6r a s~ardJr.ed, 'na-0Dr. w'atten Yasio,. an' ecunograplUc lt.i~Wid"e oce8I?OVa~Y ~iJ'.!l· is· u Im· · geolQILst from C:Olumbla. University~ 11~. pqrlant 1u the sea around •m. • 1 ttlt AmuJcan Society lor Oc61Dogr,aphy, "MY ·~er Larey brought home an .~t .w8! t~~.the'mc~,""1~;~r a , a Houston~baled :nOn profit or&~tion, application' In the contest and I fi~ed ft'· ·tht'ee-day national confere~. ·on m~rine thls year, will1C9f1ch:tct a natJoit~e ~d).'. oul," Linda sa,ilf, ' scienees ~ ~uca~on at ~;auna ,at~., of e1lstlng progr•ms ~ el~tl?'nt;ao' 'nd . She once served as a member ·df the g..rii--A'JO· ffiUy,"--the QriraP OJ.mty secondary ICboois IS well II colleges and ' aevfin.girl court in the Miss Coca-Cola ne~i;~'i or ~Uoni · Cat · -Stlte · w\i~itJeS.' ', . • . · P&l'!ant•in Washlfll\bn, D,C.·and r'1e Jn FWlclrton ' and USC, 'the · thte~IY··l'flfft ''The aoclety hopes .to begin wol'k on the~(.:herrY Blossom' Pacade. . ,drew 150 educators and scientists from 12 ' bistc curricUluma thlt can"'¥ Offei-ed It , In• W. Uhlrigton, Linda . worked f" lhe ·colillliil ftalei, Canida,' llleiim,: !'tllict thO three levalo once W. mo• . wblif la office'« emergeooy preparedness. She is and-ThailinH. ' ' • : . I r I , • •' btini acne curHnt!y,"'he MNl~''We alio currently Jobi ... In Fountain Valley. ,,.e· c..i.;ene. "'"'•rill · . ~~ pliil ., ~-trigram ·tOr '<;ol· "t understand ~e emergency Office •of ~ftulicri, the' eainointC rtasl&ilttf ,of 1e1e1 offerinC OCHRotrapby education w~l~have a temP,Ol'•fY· office in· Los oCea'n noor mlnifig •'wt filh;farihifttand J>l"OlfmtS'. ' ' ! • . • , t •••. Anr'.les . to handle the· aftermatll'-ol the jOl)"pottnUal for oceanGll'lli>hJ ·ltDdeill. · ..,,'i'ht •.iia~ .Gr oc!anotrapHy ! in 'the ' ' firet:'. .t •lil•y work there ' for ·awtrile, '' Lln· · Nine speaken · inclutng ~ adtioili •ndw· .eenis: to,.ba -an offi&ot Of da said. 'She baa also workid u .... a friahion -'Richard RIM;-' (D-Anabelm)' and . biology or general tdence . and ts mod fl. ·-' • • · · Newport • Beach author Wesley ,,Man:, dependent on the teacher '• abilities," he Rosemary J5elley, the:'J'etiring QU¥n, ls rei,teratca the need . to start' wholesale ukl. ' , · · now a.senior at CAI State Fullerton1 ma-oceanography educ!l.U.C?R. 1'1'9FUM as Conference din:ctor ROn Linsky, who is jorlng In education. !' soon as possible.. ,' · tht bead of Oran1e C O·U n t y' 1 ''l:d like to teach . In this area ,·• Cmdr. Don Walsh, one of'the me., who . oceanogn;phy &rrolJ'aTJL, • .saldt tbe .con- ~mary., Who Will graduate in June, took a submarine to a J'em'd ~· o/ {ereilee: WU-litatted un., 1"r3' llO to oatd. 35;00il fe.( in tlliO, .~M tht:i\Otnl: 11.. Southern Ca!Uamta edilcaton a ''Uhas been a good year as queein. l"vt ''A ·group ·a lftdue9!Uil,·ai1'yela:·tumers • chance ,to ucHpie, k!e8J ml a~. their ' reaijy eojoyed' it;'' she ad4ect . . will have to 1~rt now ~ qon$ce ;~ : problems. · · . . • ~osemary · received hlgh honors • In cti,ildren or th; !mpOrlance 0( the ~W(fld "Since then we've grown to the point . Be1fhlt Jrela.nd, this summer when she ocean · tQ t,b e il' COU'!"f ahd m-whtte wephave 4*fllt; from ahnoet ·111 · was received by the Lord Mayor anCI her vitonmel'll." • '. · • · · · 1 fbe coutal states and a few 19(ttp coun-1 •tOCll was wrltlen in th< city's ,thr" "' W'I'~ oovnded lhe. theme-ol 4lle <On. trlta •Jlllllclpolilfl. ow· -am now 11>- newspapers. · ,feten~. ~en he noted tl11l,1the1oc:t.an · cludea,rell'Nen\ativM of the ,federal 1 G91dwUSer;s. body, he al.id, ·WU"not rcturntd .to hrael until four 1"':eeki ~ · his deith and WU badly dei:ompoafp.. not h"vinl .befsl kept refi'lgcraled.' AU· in-ttf"~ ·0tg~s baJS.been' re~ov~Lin~ tM ~ ll>UUlOlelkand . lliil"',,ol, ljcfu;».ad bem·f~edfrOnl afoond me wriSts.~ ".file E£yptians inflicted uiJUries in the body iild' iftttwifd frliil ... erue -... •ies-" lla~ar taid.. , • • ·· · ~·ne 1ira111 con\plainl demanded the Emu..n , 10.eslunebl. 'bring ·to 'trial 111e W90M•r.espmlihle on chars:e of "ll'aW" vlblallons of thtl .Gmev..'Coiwtntion. 'lt WN dtacliltcd;by Isrltll officiall·U;le 1 .. otfong..t complaint• ·!"el" filed · agaiNt ~eged ~an .. mlatr~trrietit. 1 o i pr-ilOMl'S. 1be !JlratJ.ts t list 12 persons now ca,ptlVe ~. ~· • .even. of Own atrcrafl, creMnen. · : 1 ' . ' . . " 1· . 0r .... I .-" . ' ; ' I 1 ' ' • ~lue 11'_, wlU ·e-· in!" , • Tuuday with, , low: clouds and. drlDie In the oiling, oinking_ the hlah' temperatute to 17 locally and do'.'" lo. 71 furUler inj~· . INSIDE TOD~Y .,;, • • ' I • •· .Afl<r 11m llg ,""fll•P"tridPlt , sim,. FDR.. th~ ,' prr;k!e~tjaf ucicht.s -noW CCIJled .Tricia ond • . , J~ ;-ar~ up Jor ' s'olc .. S1• ' Bocling, Paoe 20. ' ·. ' 1 ' I I I t ' • "' ...,.. . •, .--·· ..... ...,.. • • AMI u...rt 11 ~ .. "' , ,.. '""" .... . 'An aU\opsy was ordered to determine the cauae of d~tJl, estimated at U, houn !><loft, bul Sgt. Ed Sanchez, of the Hollywood· Rolice De~tment said she had a ·long •trinll .o( • twq. to 'i4<1ay-old ~aru on her arm; covered by paDC;Jike mateup. Rosemary was born in Belfa sL and (pr~'hta a ·great ~°»u.:t for· ;wor~ ]$'tllltturt Ind admlob'adon,-the, Navy . .• didn't Jeive until the age o! flve.j Her pcp.ce .. "The .conceot 'of,'~ wptldlC ¢"a'nd j,...,., , 1 • • falber, Tom Kelley, used, to work lil the ,totetbtt for thie 6eDtftt. of all,~ II a ''Altd -.Veey xm • .,e,fnt tbll 'flli-an c ........ -.•• 1 ~' " ,.........,._ ...... -. t-lft I D ..,-·;•ft .. ' c~ u .,_. -...., t•Jlt • drup were found in tbe-room were the ,n.lgbtgowft:.c:lad tinier lay betwee• ", (See JANIS, P11e J) • • FOUNI;> D~AQ IN !;IPl,L~D $1ngor Jani• Joplin, 17 • • treasurer'• ollice ol the !!<Ha.I dty'hall. ~eJY,real, poulbUll)', but '"'.ww . -~ dofitc a lltllt more, that the prpble!no.- Founllin VaUey'1 reianlng que<n won -led people1ourry out~'wan." , ltlva 10f!M a llllli """" and !hat tha her first buuty colilolt wll<n !he cap-One of the ~ .e~ by noed for edU<allon In the lleld la ,a llltlo . tured Ute title of HoUday Princes& al tha 0 td\lcltor1 .diitllt& ,tie ~Ubop· aelalilno, p:eater,• Linllly·lald. . . . ........ ~,~ ~ ,,. 1 DI-... • ~ •. ,, • ................. '' ....... l •'. l •....,...1111111111 ·u .._.,, ..... ,,.. · ,.,... ,..,, ......... , • • ; ' a I DAIL v "Lor ' H UCICainpu s ~- ~stling;-=­ School Open- Cla111e1 beaan lodly •I Uc Irvine with m0<0 \111111 fJllO 1tudenta and 4f>O.Uculty _m _gmpys. - Two building complue!'I nearins com· pletlon this week were p.11rtly opened for claaes today but construction apparatus p~ 1 mar~ed COf!lr.ut 19 the ne_atly trimmei:1 land!caplni arouna o 1 Cle,- buildlnJ.! an the si.1~ye1r old campus. Tba rune-story encfneerinc bulldina: will hoUM the 5ehool of en&ineerlnJ, the nelf department of !OCial ecology, the educa- tional opportunity program, and audio visual services. The -four-story computer sciencei- buildinc bouse1 the department of Jn- formatio..,, the rraduatc ~I of ad- miniltration and · the public polic)' ~~h. unit q well as the UCI com- puw lacllllr. • -EltVlton In the nlne-itory enjifiiering tower have yet to be lutalJed, delaylnc w:e o·f clauroonu on the upper tkiort, a spokesman uld. _The two.bulldlnc complex COil .11.2 fl!illlon and wu financed by 1 11188 bond inue and matchlnc Department nf Health, Education and Welfare funds. -¥"- • Bit b~ Car • I . - --l . , ~-. lde;cl-.y=-l'=li stin - . OAILl P ILOl l"llek h •1-• Dlrtlol · -Resid ~'nt Kill~·d ·-----~---.... The dark early-morn1n1 walk or an 111-yur-old Tustin-rest 11.ome-rtsldent eifdtit. vialently this morning when a car careened acl'Oi! the sidewilk and From Page 1 JANIS ... kllled him. Pollet te.nJjtlV!ly labeled the diath oC "EVifett-cremons ol 1lie Tustin .Ha· clenda Rest home 1 felony hit . run. They were .. king the car ind driver today. · . TulUn pollca Sst. Ed Lobos " nld Clemons' body wp diacovered at 7:06 this morninl 'by a woman walking htr the bed and dr~ing table. dog . It was in a parking lot at l!S Main "Only tequila, vodka and wtne," said St. next to a hardwa re store. • --oneTpolkeman.---. ---"The__mmoet~1_Qffice_ea.Um1lMfJ.h a l MW Joplin lived in Larkspur, near San death occurre<I four to si:a: hours earlier. Francisco. but was staying in Hollywood An autopsy was acheduled tod1y. wh ile record ing an album for C.Olumbia Lobos 1afd the hlt:run vlctiin regu]ar~ Record Company with her new gr~p. ly took early momin1: walks. He uid FrienV lmO!I unwilling to accept the !he man normally dreS&ed 11nd carM death or the high-spirited aingtr who thrilled au.c1Jence11 wilh her top hlta said for himsdr and ·"was Jn pretty 1ood 11he had 1eeined happy in recent 11hape for 11.'* week!'!. She made ftn electrifying ap-The body had head injuries. 11 broken pearancr: when performing live with her right arm. a. broken right leg and other long hair shaking her uninhibitelf injuries. 1.A>bos sajd the victim had 11 .... movements. and her husky, shouting ..-- sly le of singing. MO!t of the time she parently been knocked about 16 feet Amfln&'felturtl the as mllllon fine aN . vm.,e ·ntfm the unlvertlty are • 4~ stat atudlo the•trt, a 240-seat concert · hall. an elperlmental drama laboratory , art and sculpture atudioa workshops and galleries and music rthearsal f~ciliUes. ,.Portion• of that nlne-buildlnJ art.I ~ter hive yet to be completed althoUJh atata in m•t lct.ure facllJUes were in- atalled over the ..U.end. -~Amo"ftl the atudentl attending eptning day clUH• were 2,100 new 1tudenl!, dther freshmen or tr1n1ftra:. rAbout-ll!O -sradu•te -.nci 575 medico! DR IVERS AND MECHANICS MAKE LAST-MINUT E ADJUSTMENTS PRIOR TO TRIALS IMy It W11n't, But Huntington leach Orant• Crate De rby W11 St ill 1 Lot of-Fun wore no bra. by the car. Lobofl said it appeared that "She tore !he guL'\ oul of song!I," a the driver of the car lo!lt control, went critic once sAirl or her si nging. over the curb and then kept going. • Miss Joplin drank "southern co mfort" Car Derby Winner Told by the quart .11nd rans would bring her bottles at her concerti. F our Make Semis In Merit Grants Pair to Seek Trustee Seat Downhill Race rs Vie for Huntington Race .Title An airlint pilot and 1 denti3t will c1uh Nov. i in an election to fill the 'Yacant studenta have enrolled this year, 11. Some or lhe contraptions w e r e 3P0kesm1n uld. Exact 1 n r o J l m e n t makeshift. Othus were sophisticated. figures will Mt be ready for another 10 But they all entertained the 50 spec· . • d~ys, due kl the aMUll confusion o( t.ators who watched them roll down a 200- ~gistration. yard track in the Huntington Besch i--,~--. ;'.n-obae~r who bas--'Yiewed--t~Orange-Grate-Oerby Saturday.--- Previous five opening day1 of cl1ue1 The time trials and racing lasted all noted this ye.11r that Increased traffic and d.11y as the !'lponsors, the Huntington number•-nf people on campUA was mnre Beach Jaycees, conducted speed tests of obviOUl -than in previous yurt. the 52 entries. 'Lalt year, UCI enrolled 5,000 students By the end or the day, 13-year-<1ld Jon nl:-wbich ·3;600, were_ urtdercr•®'te!. Henn_in1er, = Glenroy. Drive, Hun- .A:flntiriuing lJl"Oblema-at the -&rewing. tington Beach, emtraed as lhe winner. campus are the 1hortag1· nf student hous-He took first .in Division A competition in&. parki111 and the lack of nurby sbopi for 13-15-fear~lds and then beat the and aervicea:. ~ Division B winner Charles Binner, 11ed 11. in a apecial runoff . J'rot11 P .. e l_ PALACE ••. Henrtln.IU.:1 time.in the runoff over the downhill track oo Slater Avenue west of Gothard Street wu 28.2 seconds. , Both Henninger and Hoover will featured 1porll car roll bars. trustee seat on the bo11rd of the Hun- repreunt Huntington Beach in the Jon Ou!ton, 1, wis awllrded 1 tape Four Junior• frnm Westmin"ter High tington Bech Ciey teleme.ntary ) School Southern Callfornia finals Ocl. Jl in Tor· recorder for the most original entry. School have been ulected as District. ranee. Special certificates were 11warded to the semifinalist!-' in the Natlnnal Merit They 'll be seeking the seal v11cated ta11t "The race brought oul some weird con-top five finishers in all three divisiont. Schol.11nhip competition. spring by Roger Ander!!Ofl when he was trapliOflll,!!-taid-Jack--BrandL-of-..._ __ ;The-resutt.s·. • _ They are John S. Grassbaugh, Dale A.~. --''"'l~o;ted_t.o__thLQr_allie.S&u.nty_JlQ_ard...of _ Jaye--"Some i"u•t -mpe'·' for the Ryder, Wayne R. Valhi 11nd Edmund T. Education. """· • .. ., i.cu Division A (111nes ll·I ~) I. Jnn Hen-fun nr It and others •-k 1·1 ser1"ously " " Watts, all or whom are ellnible to com· Don Bravender I• the ~ent1'st. He llv" ""' · nln•er, 2. Larry H_oover, 3. Robin Pocock, • " Each car was we1"ghed •· make sure 1·t e pete for full-four year scholarships to the 11\ 1•100 Ma1"n St. with hl1 wife Joann• • w 4. Mark Baker, $. Chris Prelltz. 0 did not e.1ceed 2SO pounds, lnc~uding the college of their choice durina final! and four offspring David, 18; Karen, 13; driver. Division B (ages 10-12 ) 1. Charles scheduled later this year. Alan, 10, and Gary, 7. ''Weight-was an nbvious -advantage," Hgnv,r, 2. 011vld Fanning, 3_. Tim f~k. Those. who received commendatinri1. for Louis DaHarb is a pilol for -United Brandt commented "lt took three guys to 4. Sleve'Pettyjohn, 5. Mike Cumrillngs. thtir scores on the NatiCtnal Merit Test Airlines. He lives at 20841 ~II Harbor lift some nf the cars. One boy had a dul· Division C (ages 8·9) 1. Shelly Brower. but tl id not score high enough to enter the Circle, near Petersen School with his fl e ba 1 It of br"ick d eath hi 2. Cam Cubbison. 3. Tom Cummings, 4. finals are Kevin P. Anderson, Bruce N. wife, Margaret 11nd three ..... ,, n-w. t ·. g u 1 un em scar. Diane Bennett, s: Larry Murphy. ~· •• The vehicles themselves were '.im-Kroyer and Jahel M1t!ui. Bryan , 7, and Scott, 4. aginative with all maMet of holl!!hold ;--------'---''--'------=-..:..:..:..:__::::.:_:_:=:::... _____ __::::_:::::..:.:_:::._:::::::._:::::_ ___ _ and 11.rden eg\lii:iment being converted into· a racing machine. One car was built out of a rotary lawn mower. Aftot.hu ' -- Clfder •t. the d"""' ~an~ Al pa.rt ol his cate, Bledlot called four ol the city's flve councilmen to the 1tand Friday l.o tie up hil oonspirJCY theory. When he announced Friday nisht that ht would rest the case, he took many ht:arinf watcher• by aurpr!Je !ince no direct evidence of the coasplracy had been offered. Newport Give s Bill Ficker, Hero 's Welcome in 'Day' The charges 11alnsl the Marini Palac1 ~udt aener1l l1ck al supervision, which accord.Jn1 to the .testimony of aeveral undercover offlcera reached their climax in heavy pettin& and dru1 UJe amonc teel\lgers. Chier Case: himself acted as prosecutor during the lengthy hearing, aided by Lt. Al Chafe. aBth are e.1pected to confront Bledloe again at 1 ::Kl p.m. Tue!day when clodn& ltlW'l't"t.l will be offered to the city council. · A decialon on what ts lo be done with :Robertson's busines! Ucr:Me is not e1- peetf.d until Wednesday when tht city council 11 scheduled to deliberate on the issue. During an earlier hearing last August before ctty M a n a I er Dennis Courtemarche, Jttlberbon w11 found in violation of the clty'a dance hall rules a.nd wu placed nn two weeka 1uspeMion and a yur of probation. The matter was opened 1.1ain by Jlobertaon whft requeated. and was granted, a ntw hearin1 before tht city cruncil. DAILY PILOT CUMGE COAlt l"Ull.ISMING COMl"it.HY lehert N. We•4 "''"!Mn' ...... J>uMl1Mr J1tt l. C11rl1v Vici Jlre11ctlii1 l td -•I Ni•Mltr The"'•' 1Ct1l'i l -/ Et+ttr n. • ..,,, A. Mur,.hi"' M..-lllJlnO t.dt>or ' W•I Otl110f C-ty Et 1!1r Alh1rt W. 11111 Auoclalt E•!I.,. H1tltt .......... Offlu 11175 .. •Ch l111l1v1•d M1ili111 AJJr1)11 ,.0 . 111 1•0. •2•~1 --l.••-1MC111 m '""'''' ·-~ Gel19 M"I; ii& WNf If\' S"tN.i N~ ... ell: ttn W.t l•lllW '°"'*'.,."ll a.111 °""""'' JM Nerlll 1:1 C11"~ .... , ' By ALMON LOCltABP!Y DAILY l"ILOT 1•111111 111 .. f • :Bill Ficker, the first West C'.o11t alcip.. per to defend the America's Cup, ln- ternaUonal yachting's mO!t hallowed prize, came home Sunday to a hero's· welcome. · ll was "Bill Ficker D1y " in Newport Beach frnm the moment tht 42-year old sailor-architect atepped off an · Air California plane at Orarige County Airport where he was gr~ted by his family, a host nf city and county officials and representatives cf the area's nine yacht clubs. · Ficker came to Newport directly from San Francisco where he had attended the St. Francis Yacht Club's Tinsley Island Stag Cruise. annual gathering of the most prominent yachlllmen nr the West and East coast.-:. Rut the airport receptinn was nnly a prelude to a gala communitywide celebration climaxed by .11 colorful boat parade. fnllowed by an hour or accolade!! and resolutions frnm city, county and &tate officlals. The mas.sive boa t parade formed in Irnnl of the Balboa Yacht Club end the acl,joininl Oran1e County Harboi" Dit~rict offices where Ficker and his wife and daughter, and one nf hl11 crtwmen, Geor11e Twist, &oarded Pat Dougan's ti. meter Columbia en whkh Ficker fir!lt became afflicted with Americ1'1 Cup fever In 19&7. He wu co-helmsman on Columbla In lht 19'7 Cup tria.11 ln which Columbia w.11!1 runner-up to Intrepid, the y1cbl on which Ficker defended t.t'ie. Cup this year, The parad1 wu headed by a Harbnr Department flrtbolt.. followed by tha Pavilion ~een excursinn boll which was jam.packed with civic and y1chtin1 of· fici1ls. Behind I.he Psvillon Queetl' cam!! Columbia under tow with hundrtdt of pleuure crar~ brlnainc up the rtar and 1warming around the boat of honor. The parade was made up nf everything from small catboats similar lo the one Ficker learned to s.11il when he wall a yoongster of eight, to, buzzing outboards to chinese junks I.fl such lavish power yachl!I as Frank Muller'll Mojo. Most of the craft in the parade were c<llorfully "dressed" for the oct:ru;ion a.nd kept up a din of hflrns. bells. whistle! and cherry-bombs reminiscent o( the celebt•· lion in Newport, Jt.J. when Ficker and his crew we~ towed trlumph1nUy back to port. after defeating the Australian challen1t:r Gretel fl in the best four-cf· seven series that .usured the Cup's con· tinued residence in thi!I rountry -al least for another three years. The pa rade disbanded in lhe North L1del Channel adjacent to the Balboa Bay Club and the Ardell Marina and Ficker and. his family were q.corted to City Hall in a la nd parade. Master nf ceremoniC! of the festivities 11t City Hiill WAS Wi lliam O'Byron who in· troduced officials who were to join in tributes to the retuminl hero. The. ceremon ies were opened with an · In vocation by Fr. Paul Martin Of San Juan Capistrano, a lonatime friend of the Ficker fam ily. Mayo r Ed Hirlh read the first ()( ma.ny proclamations and resolutions in which he proclaimed Sund1y as .. 'Bill Ficker Day" in Ne1¥porl Beach 1!'1d the week nf Oct. 4 kl I as "Bill Fick.er Week." Said Mayor Hirth: "This iA a historic day in Newport Beach and we ire real happy t.o welcome the man who has brought hcnor to our community." Mayl'lr Hirth then presented 1 e:ianl replica of tht "key to lhe cily" lo Ficker ~ncl crewman Georae Twi st. Twist _ re.spo!'lded thal 1111 of the i ummer 's hint work wa:i; ju:i;tified by the "recognition we are aettina at home." Br oadwa y Hails State's Wonder s Nude All Over, He Gave Girls The Once Over A 12-day ttlebr1lion leaturi111 the -.. wonders of California was launched this \ morning by the Broadway department 1tort •Ith cttemonie!I 1tl the 11ore and • bretkfast at the Irv ine C.oast t:ountry Club. He w11 atanding on the comer wat- chin1 au th< flr!J '°by. And allllough he ha iled thorn with • cl.au~ "Hey!" the two 13·yt1r-old mluet pedaling their bieycle11 •tnni Huntington Beach'~ l1shion•ble 8:/iid'<!llt DrJve S1~rd1y motnJna f1vor im wUh only ..,. look. He wu nu~ e1Ct!pt for 1 pi.Jr of wire.· rim.med lptd.IC:IM . Pol.ice are inv6ti11ll,... Several local dignatarlcs, lntludin1 Dr. Dan it! Aldrich, chancellor or I/Cl ond Newport Beach City Council man Rkhard CrouJ, ' and top 1ttw ottlclalJ, wer present. for the kfck-<1ff. EntitJed, "DiSC('lvery : Callfomi1,'" the promotion will Include tht 1ppearanCi'.& o( PreYlral well·known writ.era at the 1tore '1 • 5nuthtrn CaUfornla ou.Uets. WITH ACTION (F91dsinu11tecl bJOctatl1r'llllb 1 11flom ~rr'll&J ' \, • q ...,, 5 LJ!ltdla . lfo?ailG I :a114±-D..-Fa11-Pllcl •. a l! sot c.· ' -rJ' pw .,.. lllld .., I ...... d_ ' • Q 111 • 11• . •JO '1tttD11D°lelf J Iii , with daffy lnterelt lldlon Plldcnan,allOIWILP !'oA11 •-aa ol S"f 8MotW ..,. S1t" ,,.,,_. .._., 11111 s sac ct to 6ltf 4Rll 3 , ' 3 • 1W•f I l 1-·4 Mi a.itded qaorllr1J. Plal 54 Y1111 of Scund M1111gM1111t A hol! _..,cl.-, i i_..,.~-• per1'clt r.:ad of NQ1111r •1111611 pc;a:adl. .._IR --d $180.-.. ond .. Pl-...., ol . lbc:ltl l!I I ll:OltilltD ! fi g J)Wf t- llloiallPllll._ ' ,.lllltatd':: :11r_:1:•:•:•:,.:4:•:1~1t forWllladi~ zlYG91 * .. II 111»21 I b6t Morris Plan S><OIO B 111 '.16Wlii cit..;e '1 Fot llllatwl ldb~ pc 7 1 Or *" 'fCS Mollfa Plan office :' ,Nowperl Such = 1700 Nowperl ll•d. -17l.l100 ' ' • I I r ,I d ,f ,- • ... , ·I • I ': I. ~1 ... .. . . ~ ·---"'-r- .. --~ • -VO • 63, NO. 138,~3 SECTION , 301'>:GES ' ' ,> • • r· ' • " . ' ' . , • • . . -t ~ ••• . .. -. • ~.:.' . -·--.,---_--,_-'_.. ____ -r- S~ippel-:'·: Eicke.r ~ReiurJIS<--== ' ' ·. ... ; ' . . ' . -... ; : . . M3nsonGoes Wild . .... -'---_..____ . --~ . . ' .. ~cu:it 'Leader T~reatf~s Tate .. Jutlge '. : I I ! ' , ' .. --'~ w1r, lervlcel CG1..1rtr9:0m with his arms twisted behli1d gi~inl them,_ ~ chance ~ behav; 'Charles Maneon 1 lunged · aeross the his back. · . folJO\fiol their ejection twice llllt week council table _af thi jiiiitt 'in the· Sharon .Su~or Court Judge Charles JI. Ol4et. tOr singiDI and sboutirirr in Court Tate ... murder trial . today, &Creaming II'.! original m~ber of the Flying Tigers --e ''Someone a'boWd. cUt ~head off." before World War II, calmly noted that Th,e ~efendant& aat quieUy tor· 1 few ·ue was' poUnc'ed on by ·a liaUiff, wrestl· the defendant had jumped in the dir.ec:tion seconds, then J(mson lhoQted ,Jnltllta: at _ed.Ja.tbe.Jl00<.C•.111L halk mied..lrom.-'>Uhe.,bench and ·•rdW<Llhat.tbe~iudi<-aocl..OU111..Jiimoell_..,.... lbe.---'.J cotJrl . · ' . 80 reflect that fact. table. · · · -· · ~ · · DAttY L'!~·O,T_L'.......,_,ifM ,..,,;. . CUP SKIP~Ej J'l~K-ER:!l.!ilPON_i:is ."1'0 WEL'L W!SHE,ill_l>URING WATERBORNE PAR.tiDi ·With Pat · ~an at ~ol.~b'i.a Htlfn, ··Intrepid Crewman Georg~ Twiit (Right)'. and ·Mt1~1 Tw11t~, ~ tiny 3&-year-old .defendan~ -w~ Th.e <M:Jtburst came after Manson ~ The three girl codefendanta · becan htJrtlmg on . lh,e floor m fropl of the three women co-defendants ·were·led mto chan\fng tome phraae about "killing " and ju.d,e_'s be~C.h~and ~d to~ l!Jbdued. by ~'fO~ ~-liar:~~.~ delay~ ip~g when they refused to subside tbe)'·too three deputies who led ·tiirii fro~. the Sfll8ton. Atttii'ney1 aa1d the-Judge wu . (Set MANSON, hit I) ' -=---=~ NewNewp0rt HospiiJd~Set~ =--,_ ' ' Norton 'Siillon . ' • • -• ¥ -' . c J(}r·ftT4!~.ilt; . . . ~.~.' .~Ag~n B~asts · ~e:.:t1: _ :_ ·:·:· ·--· ·-" . . ' . ·-----t I : , DAU.Y P'ILOT Staff·"""'5 FICKER .AND FAMILY MOVE PAST NEWPORT HARBOR ljlGH.SCHOOL .J!AND.AT CITY HALL · M•yor Ed Hirth ·(loft). Ellcorta.P-, 11, f•rlMor' .•nd ·Biii' Ficker Duri~g C.romoniH j ~ • '> I Q ,I ' Newport-Poliee Che~k .3 .Major · liirili:.·ftsks for A"ttion " -:~ . . • ' ' City Burgiari~. ., On ·BU:y, ·Bridg~ Traffic . " Newport Beach investigators "today are , following l~ds on ·~~ .m~or burglar-Soft-pedafu:tg ipe city's c~nt rree-· ies which occurred in tfiei! city over lhe way feud," Newport· Beach-Mayor Ed weekend. • · • • • Hirth ~.lday .wrote. the ~le Division of The largest w~ reported Sat~~y at· • ijjghwgiys asking torl' ,fast lacti<?IJ· on ~. the home of~Willi~ S. Lark, 46,· of 1310 1growing €raf(k= probtepi\~ted byJ"'tE E. Balboa Blvd. present Back Bay Bridge. . He to Id police thieves removed 10 Hirth, :tollQWing: a City Council direc- pieoes or jewelry from th~ l}laster bed-.live, wro4e·Haig ~y~an,.ctUe.f ~g~r room which are vajue~ at $5,310. ~t. of District. 7, asking1tibat a ne1', br}dge Bill Speirs said preliminary re,porfs in-be gtven high priority' on·tbe lilt ~up- dicate Lark has been the victim of pre-, ·coming state' projects. --·· vious burglaries. · · Howard E. Chase, 46, of 435 And St. Saturday reported thi loss of $2,300 worth · · or power tools from his unlocked gatage. He told pp lice he was gOne on a 'busiilesS ' trip from1 Sept. 21 io Friday, but did nol- notlce the")Jleft uittil Saturday. · Speirs said they are trying to track two large air compressors whlt.h we~e slso reported stolen Saturday from tOe Newpcrt Center Car Wash. The. two machines, _!alu at $1 ,500 were set in crates.along the west wall or tJie building. Speirs said the machines weigh about 300 pounds each, '-'90 it would probably require more than one man and 1 truck to move them." " . Father, ~ailed . In Death of Soil . ' A S.year.;,ld boy ls .dead ond hl! :alep. rat.her is' in Orange County Jalt charged wtlh felony manslaughter. and drunken driving as the result of a Saturday ac· cident in Santa Ana. Killed was Fr.ink· RemlJo. of Plt.o Rivera. HelC In jail pending airalgnmeht today is .R ob e r t H. Richards of Los Angeles. ·J Hirth skirted ·any direct reference to the controversy over the • route , of the proposed, .P~cific Coast Freeway, sug- gestfug-c1the new bridge · bt deslgried in-. depend ently o£ any freeway, It faction in NewJ)Ort Beath t.s cur· rently circulating petitions attempting to force a referendum on· 'rescinding I.he tx.isting agreement on a section of the planned freeway through the eastern end of the city. . ln his letter, Hirth.. pointed out that anolher· top .Highway Division official h&d 'lihown city officials "some v~. iD- teres4n1 df;Signs and modeb1 of ,a new bridge at th1s Jocauon." ., 1 • He said, "We would ·~ mo. Ing what could be done IA> • &.de, sign which would be · , . JiMSe." 'dep,endent of any fretway.' ~ I Hirth also asked lbl&'rthe .U.te tlictude In ony 00.lgn w¢•iiolution IA> lile·lq- creas1ng eongesUon, Ill 'fhe interiiCu'en, 91 the Pacific Coast-lll""'•Y ..,;d Dover Drive '1ln any desJgn work." : Tile intersection is only a lhort .dlt- tance west or the bridge. ,. ... · ...... ~ ~ Tiie Ne1!fl0it-c;lominunilJ, lf<ip~1 flit m•lit lacillt1l al.' ~ . it06, ml!llon Jrvme Medical Center to be built near UCI; will . be" open ·m '111f; Qftlcials .. of the Newport CQmmUaity Hpspita.l Foi.indation aald 'to- day. · . The, hqspi.la),. Which ini~~a~y. 1f!i,ll ba~t" approximately 250 beds, 1s d!Stgned to compliment the ·propoaed .UCI teacJtinf · hotpital Jr"1ould adjoin. 1 Plans for ·the major rnedJcal facility were' developed'"in cooperatiOn, with ~th UCI a1fi~als and officia1J. of_ Hoat Me- mprial Hotpital ·in · NeWport .Be~ch', lfoag. A<llniniltr!ltor Willll;Rl R. Had10n wa'id this ·rilorninl .that th~ ne,w~ fahllity will serve a need in thlt. section of tht cOwity. ' ' ' ' The medical center will .be. built .on 150 acres' of property It tliilntmicUOft Of MacArthur Boule vard 1 and Univerillty Drive west of the UCI campus. Or. Gerald B. SinyJqn o~ ~ewport.Btach, vice president of the new found1Uon, d• clined to state· specifically where funds for the project would originate. but said they will bt from private and public foondatiom. . . . He 11ld there is no -public sohc1tation expected. . .u: ' '• ,., 'I '"' .. ,., ,•)' ,· " u, .... , ....... ' . ~ . . . ' FOUND !>EAD IN ·HO~l'\<WOOD <iSf~fJil'l!f :.kipll11, 27 · ' . . " . ,. Singing Idol Janis .Joplin Found Dead In addition to Dr. Sinykin. oµier mu· clals of the foundation are Dr. Hugh J . Plumb, Jr., who Is presid~nt; Dr. J1mes G. Kidd, Jr ... secretary and Dr. J~hn L. From »'le~ ~lea Pay1s;.treasurer. ' · · · state Senator DeMis E. Carpenter 11 Janis Joplin, the gravel· voiced rock legal· couiisel for· the-organiziUon. · · bluea · 1inger who 'r an away , ft'om: Port Officials •streSled" that tbt medical' ten.-Arthur, Texa'1 10 Years ago IJ1d. still k~pt ler will by no ' means be In dtlnpeUUoo ' • f · with the UCI .holpital, which· pined:·~ on. running,. eve,n._~ter sl!e1 overtOO:k, ame . proval for a 350-bed facility from t:Jle and fortune,.il dead. , camprtl!e~ l:ltallb ·Plannlnl /;al0c1a. The 27·year .. ld' itar or rotkdoiil gave' It Uon lut week. · · · · · all ahe had, and in the end it was her life. Carpenter last week Wdicated the two . . facilities wouJd likely 1rran1e a working ''M•ybe I won't laat as Jong 11 other relaUonship ancfhinted that aom~y .the . singeN," ahe once told an intervlewer entire boapital-univeraity complu m.ilht wflo asked if. me wasn'~ afraid btl-bard be merged to some degree. . . drjnktni and ni-cU~· · dr)vtrig: Pact The medfc'al center, itsell, !n· addition ~ to the new ·holpital, would incll,tde clinics, migbt cut -her career short. researCb 1nd convalescent facill~Y. med-"But I think you can destroy your nG1!f' ically relateCJ industries and prlv~te mtd-by. lfi'.OlTYlng aboUt' to~. , :Saf ,lhfl ical 'olflcel, .Dr. Slnykln .. Id. · H~ with If. Slay s!Qned and.have.a gQod ··time .• ;. ·· w.· ·.illia~ s.· D~Vis,... Mlaa Joplin WU found dead .Iii her Hollywood •par)ment Supday l\lght by . Se .... ,.;·cies Sia£-.l. , • pl1arl!I: !J#ln· Co9k~. or her rec:e.n•ll' .. •~ 1A:lU lorm.ed Jania Jop)lit Full TUI Boogie rock group. •• .. ROlary will be.' reci te4 tonight It I. An autopsy was o~dered to deterrruoe o'clock al Our Lady Qlleen.O( Anlt!J lb or de lb tlm led l 11 ho Catholic Church for, William s .. DJVls, • ...... a ' .. a I ur• u.s. Maifne:c:orpo pilot who"~ killed before, •bot:~ Ed ·~,., ,!lie Sept. II Jn Vietnam. . . , Holl>"'!""' Pol1co ll<partmenl, aafd sfle ;:~ ... Dilvlo, 14, a reoident ot Corona de! bad '"' loq. .alrlnif of> two· IA> 1....,.y.q,ld J11ar,-wa&>°""ani1iit'!llldkl110•-· neecflemarb on her' arm,·-·by \ion ljl · ,NmLprilvince. wt>en .bit: . piOQkf·.mwup: , . , • . . . jiijri~m\7,~•lllcf· · · , · · , · l;l · <o'l!»'..irt ·J~a; i .dau(ll., lio•dtucl. were fOUQd lo ·tbe .fOOl!l·'!'ert ter..Ht i:·~ta,' Mt. and Mt1. Fran-, ~ nJPtcown-clad 1lnger ,la)' between. ~ J •is -" of r-• oMf Mar· oil-the bed.and drelalng lable. , , . c.. • ~ ~ I 9't """"'/'.,.l ~ '' , fl~uJla odka nd ' ''' ill tel:'I,· Mn.~ Weber, ff ·W8~,.. ·~ ·~ ,.Y_ .... , a WI~, II C.J ., iiiONra:Janlce !l,..hall, M•dl· Oll6.. • . -· Wilconaln.. ,~-. M!Je Joplm llved In Larkapur; ... , s.n Requlepl MUI wlll be reclled Tuef-FranC!oco, liul was 1tiylng In Hollywood day, .11 a.m. •l· Our Wily Queen or whll• recordlng an album f<r COO!nil>I• ~1eb. · · 111 .. JANIB, Pqe ll • , . By GEilit!lE_u:iDAI.: , I ., ............... ' ' -1 ' ' UC.Rqent.Norton Sf1DCX1<tocfa).qaia cr!UciJed the Irvine Compuy,_ Ud. hill fellow rtgentl tor "inm.triml.Dat& ~ nina-".OI the .IJ'vihe cainpW., ~ -;--_--· Jn 1 a Los An&e1'5 preaa conference Si- mon · charged the .Irvine Company. with •l?andOnmel'lt. o1 11 JulY, 22;,' 1980. Master plan for the campus that Included incor· porltion of a 10;000.acre city. · • : ·Wlth filing of incorporation for a.53,()g).: acre cit): Silpon sai~ p.e ~rvine Compa,ny Js guilty Of a "lrrnponmble and iJtci>a. eeivabJe act." _ · Char'ling,com.plicity ·on the part of on. lvenity regents· lie say;. have failed to halt the v~olation of the ten-year-old agreement, .Simon said future investiga- tion may "ahoCt the public." ......._ He declined to nam·e names. Simon contends that the Irvine Com~ pany's 13,000-acre plah i's the result of the land de-.:e.lopers being presse.d "by the J~9 tax •refo"Jl act." He charged them with havipg ( l<Jobbied through Senator George 'Murphy to stop that 'part . of :the 1c:t" which ( he ·said motiv attti them io seek "a'~r1er 'city ·than was agreed ·to." . NOIJng that the UC! owned acreage.ls t•a:m~le" for university purpoie11, SimM' expreiied concern that the awltch in plant) would create slWM in sutrounding· cltiea including Tustin,. saDta Ana, Orange· and· Newport ~eac;h. He said the UC .site &e.tJ 1~'"1 S.O!'lmitl~ In 1960 h.ad .clloaen Iz:• vine becaUlii or Ila 1,000.acre ,gift tO 'tho' - uriiversftY and ·the avaUabillty" of 93,()(WJi • v1r .. n acrta arotild Jt lie laid the unlve.afly«aireed to tht 10,000 ·.a~e ci»" 'to preveni, alUIJl: ~~lQP" ment adjacent ·to the· new ·tampi,11 fUclf as his been eWeri!nCitf ai Btl:keley and Santa Barbara. . . ·. . • Jkaide1 =Clzi.ng ·IrVine· Company u Simon cha . 'ihat' unlvtr1lty i'qea~· h.ad nerlecfed "'lll•• the lllJ.acre addlilon . !See SJMoN, Pap I) Oro•~·· : :.·CoMt .. ' .. I TllB~;y M=y ;::.: = <frizzle In the offing, a!nkln1 the high temperature· to f11ocally and down to n further Jnland. . INSIDE ' TOD,\Y ' ' ' I ' . ' • r r l I ~All v PILOT N Mond.,, OctoW 5, 1'7i 8,000 Student. -lasses. -Begun . .. Today for BCI ' • -Claues bea:an today It UC Irvine with da,y=claales Wert tJOO MW student., more than 8;000-studtnt.S and 450 faculty ~ eiifier freshmen ·ar tr&n11fe:rS. on campus. About 850 graduate and 575 medical Two buildinl complexes ntarln& com. 1tudtnta have enrolled thia ye1r, 1 11pokeaman 1aid. Euct e n r o 11 m 1 n t pl•Uon lhla -k were ptrtly epentd for fi1Ure1 will not be re1<1y tor SDOlbar 10 classeJ today bat coastrueUon apparatua days, due to the AiuiuaJ confUsion of provlded 1 marked contrast to the neaUy regl.stration. trimmed landscaping .around 0 I d e r Ah observer who has viewed the buildings on the six-year old campus. previous. five o~ni!'I days of cluses The nme.11tory engineerin& bulldinJ wtll ·noted thu ye1r that increased traffic ud • ' . Hearing• .Tace•da11 · ... · • £ l;)lj~~~riteatflr- -,_Closing · Siudj~d • • • I Public hearings oo proposed ~es ln Tbe commission two months· ago b!id closing hour• for th~ city's beicliea and a -pro·pqsed a unUorm mldnf&hl clollnt11our site for a Harbor Area Boys' Club facility r~t' all bt:acbe1"1hat was rejected.,bf the . city council. ~ · will be conducted by the Newpo:rt Beach """ Bo , Cl b . kin ... 1 h d "· ,. CO .. ue ys u usaee g a&wi;-ora Par~ . .Beac es _an n.ccrea. ion ,m· '· Newpor,t Bea~-branch o.n cjty pi'Opttty. ~n Tuesdl.y al ,7:~ p.m. ln City -lnitiaJty, &~· organizatton h~~ght Hall. property11ei r tht Balboa pie r but last week indicated ·it would prefer land In Eastbluff Park. house tht _achooJ of enetDeering, the new n~bera of people on .campus wa. more department...of-aecial-eeolot)l,-tbt~ea obvlOl.I~ .ln prtVlOUI Yurt_:_. __ tional opportunity ptOlflm, and audl.;--Liii year' ucr.nrouea 5;atl0 itllftll~ Apathy Hit Thr: PBR Commission, bowe't'et, has recommended to the city council that thr: club be giOen the-ute of the pier...-1lte because the need for-a-recrealitmal'ficiU· ty, according to that 1geney, ii. far greater on the pr:nlnsula. vlsual services. of which 3,800 were undersraduates. The four-atory computer sciences Continuing probleml: at the arowtnc building_ botJJea the department of m. CIJl!pul .,. the Jbortace of atudent "°"" fonn•tion, the graduate l!Chool of ad. Jlli, parldng and Ille lid< •f nwby lbopo ministration and-the public---policy and aervtces~ ~.arch unit u well as the UCI com· puter facility. Elevators in the n1ne-1tory r:n.gineerinc low.er ~ve yet to bt .lnatalltd. delly!.n1 use of classrooms on the upper floors , a spokesman 1aid. The two.building complex , cost $6.2 rnillio~ and was financed by a 19&6 bond issue and matc:hinc Department of Health, Educauon and Wellare funds. Among ft1ture.s the $3 mtrnon fine arts village olfen the university are a 425-- seal studio theatre, a 240-seat concert hall, an r:xperimental drama laboratory, art and sculpture studios work.shops and gallerit!.! and music rehearsal facili~e.s. 'P.ortions of that nine-bu_ilding arts center have yr:t to ~ completed although w ts in most llE'ture facWUes were in- 1talled over the weekend. . Ainong tluulud<nl.!· allending_o""'1n& From P .. e l were taken from the court.oom . Manion had entered the room quieUy and listened to the brief testimony of ooe niloor witntai wlien he suddenly erupted. ''.'.AR you IOini to ... this courtroom to kill rne_?" he. suddenly demanded of Judge Olaer. · bider told him to keep quiet or he would be removed. "'The mlnute:J see you M'~ going to kill mt, you know what J'm going to do," Manson said. "Wha~ are)_'~ _soing to do!" Older uk- ~ angrijy, st¥irl1.down a1 the bearded hippie cult leader.. :·Mr. MlftlOn, 1·m-1oln1 to have Yoll removed if you_ do not stop," tbt judae Aid. "J'm iOing to.have ,YOU removed if you don't slop," Manson alfd:"'I llave a Utile system of my own." At that, Mansan sprang from h,lg se1t .and literally dJved across the table toward the judge's bench. Before the explosive action today by Mai;ison, the state "hid hoped to put on the witness stand a woman who blew open i.he Tate murder case &ft.er talking to codefendant SU!&ll Alkins in a woman's jail. Virginia Graham told authorities after Miss Atldns allegedl~ confided thr: .wtird • gtory whUe both wue being held ln jall on other chargr:g in November 1969, three months after the mass &layings. From Pqe l JANlS ... Record Company with htr new aroup. Friends almost unwilling to accept the dr:atb of the high-spirited singer .-ho thrilled audiences with her top hits said ghe had aetmed happy in rect.nt weeks. She made an electrifying ap- pearance when performing Uve with her Jong ha ir ahaking her uninhibited movements. and htr husky, shouting style of singing. Most of the Ume llhe wore no bra. . . DAILY PILOT OltANC.E COAST l'UaL1SH!NG COMl'AkV ll:ob~rt N. w,M flrtllcltnt •1141 flVCltltlltf' J1ell: R. Curl1y Thoma• Ka•ril Edl!ll" Themet A. M ur11hi111 M1n10lnt l!!dl!er l . Pettr Kr1i9 Nt\lllOlrf leldl '11~ Edl!et N..,.,. .... Offlc. 2211 Weit l1lr.t1 l•ultwar'll Mailin9 A~hlr••u ,,0 . I•• 111S, 92•6J OtWO- co.1a M .. l ;i.lo Wed l1y &"-' .._..""" t.": m , .... , "'NII.II MUltllfltlen leidl' 1117J l.IKll leu!..,•P'll a.11 ClttMntt: lOS N9'fll l!t Ct ntlne 1t .. 1 DAll,.Y ~!LOT, wltll ._..kt! It cemlll'llt Ille M .... Pr9t. It put,tl!iMll di lly ••C~ 5- dt'I' 1!11-.... '•~ Wit..,,. fftr Llllll'll IMC"• H•~ IMctl, C•t• M••• H1.11ttfnl:"" lffdl _. fWl!ttln Vt lley, •lotle wlfll ,... .... IDllllll .. ,........ °'.,.. (.Nit ~111111'11 ~ ,,lnllfll tll1ttl ..... 2'11 W•I 141111M ltwill., N.....,.-t lllefl. tflC D W•t l 1y Streit, C..11 Mftl, t.e41rr f714l 642-4121 Cl..i ...... .M••lilllt '42·UJI (ff'l'l'lf~t. '"°-Oftfltt Cotti l'll&llt"t"' c..,,.,.~-. ,... -,w-.. mw111n...- f!fi10tlif1 ..,,,..., " H Wl'llst-'-lllftWI-_.., "' ,~ "''.....,. '*"r ,,.,.. ntlM!till ef ~ ........ ~ tll" •Nill MW '•t MtwtMt, atltfl 1<111 C-11 M-, Cttlftf'flllo, llMc•letletl W U N'ler U.li -llltyl t Y .... 11 11 ti ._flllVI ... im.,., lllfrttlftli!On .. 11..u "'°"'"'"" Irvine Company Def ends Plan After Attacks Irvine Company offlciala 11id today that plannin« they have done , has been per~ formed both openly and for the benefit of the people 01 their future city and a.II of Orange County. Responding to statements made by UC Rr:gent Norton Simon, at a pre111 con- ference this morning, Irvine Company Vice Pre~id!l!l Raymond W~ts'!_n said : "We have 1 carefully ind upen1ively wrought plan designed to accommodate some 400,000 of more than two ml!Uon addit16n&l people predicted for Orin&e County by the year m>. -..!!.We-do·not-know...wher&-or....bow-thole other milliorus · of people will Jtve. We doubt that anyone else knows either," he said. Watson cited the company's plannln1 history, point.in& out that It& dtsilM for it.s futu;e city have been clearly spelled out for all to sr:e. Hr: .said the company didn't have to do It that way, "ll would have-been far eaa!er if we had kept our ultimate plans to our1elv11, or hJd nont, and instead merely tub. milted projects for approval tr1ct-by· tract," he said. He said U the company had done it that way, it would l)a·ve -~-~ ·~n 1 ~OD­ tlnuation ol the urbln iprawl ttiafb now at ·the 11tt1 «. tbt. Irvine Jllndl;1 • WalJOn Wei, "Ttle people of_ k!...._ine_ de- gerve better thin that. The Onlvertlty tJf California deeerves better than tJt.at. And Norton Slnion, surely, preferi -tblnl better than that... l Wa!JOn poinled out that prominent amoos thole censulted In the years of planning were officials tJf UCI. ''Nevertheleu,'1 he Mid, "Mr. Norton Simon his made well-publicized 1•er- tions that the Irvine Company baa done its destcnini. IDd dreamed It.I dreamt, unilaterally. "We 1re weary of denfhll this totally aroundleas impUcaUon," Wataon 1ald. He s1id. "Mr. Simon now bu' aoi:ie ir~ represslb1y from that char1e on to Other charges. We cateaortcally deny every- thing he has 11.l.d on the subject of ~ Irvine plan that casts doubt on thts com· pany'1 Integrity, .. d the lnlegrlty of lie officers and planners. "We wish desperat.el'y that Mr. Simon, and all sueh ·men Who criliciU-wldloat understanding-what wr: are tryin1 to do, f would addrtSs themsel ves to the issue involved. "It is a desperate wish beca.usr: it ill a desperate issue. The people art coming, by the hundreds of thoussnds, whether we -plan ror !Mir a.rriv11l or not. "And wi must plan," Watson said. From Pqe l SIMON ••• to the Irvine campu1 .the resents put'· cha.led subsequent to b · l,tJOO.acrt cam- pu.o ~te am. . Sln'.wln failed to name any resents who mar 'have profited directly or ·indirectly by the Irvine CornPIDY'• new plan. "[ have not charged anyone with ustna their poWer to feather th& own nest," he saJd. However. later in the 11me preu con- rertnce Simon 'fej,eated his charae of earlier this year SIYinc. "some reaen11 will benefit by Uiis. awitch In plans.". Simon claimed that the Irvine Company would reap "unjust enrichment" of "30 million -a "ci:lnstrvatlve est.Jmate ol tht incruse in value of U'lt 1ddiµon11 43.000 aerea they are promotiq at the expense of Univenlt.y of C1liforni1. ~ven if lncorponUon shauld fall." Nude AU Over, He Gave Girls The Once Over He was 1tlndinl: on the comer wat.. ch!n1 au the sir.la .. by • And 1ltllou1h he hailed them with • claulc ''Hey!" dtt lwa 11-yur-old mlues fl'!"'allna: their bicycles •Jona HunUncton e .. c11·1 fashlonllhl• Boardwalk Dr1•• .urday morning favored him with only one look. -He "'1 nudt: uctpt for 1 ptlr ol wlre- rlmmed spectacles. Police are investia•~I· MIL Y Ptl.OT llllMI ._ L.91 ,..,,.. PROUD FATHER APPLAUDS HIS SON THE SAILOR Ptllr Flcktr Put YOUlltl Wlllltm lo Hla first Stilboot In Newspaper Salvage Drive A decision by Newport BUcb officials on either sltr: Is needed by the next coun- HE:(JO _FICKER RETURNS ••• There arr: newspaper th ir:ve.s on the loose In Newport Br:ach and they are jeopardizing an experimental c:ity pro- • ell meeting, Oct. 121 because of a deadline imposed by the Ti'ViiieFOun- dati on on an offer of an $80,000 grant to the club. The foundation last wr:ek i grttd to an extension of tbe...de.adline, fromJkt. l,.i t _ the city's request. Department fireboat, followed by the Pavilion Queen excursion boat which was jam-packtd with civic and yachting of· ficials. Behind the Pavilion Queen came. C<ilwnbla under tow with hundrtds or pleasure era.ft bringing up the rear and awarming around the boat of honor. The parade was made up of everything from .small catboats .simllar lO the one Ficker lea.med to .sail when he was 1 youngster al eight, to buzzing outboards to chinese junks to ub lavish power yachl.S u Fi"aili'"M'uller~s Mojo:- Mosl of thr: er.aft in the parsde were colorfully "dressed" for the occasion and kept up a dln o( horns, beDs, whistles and cherry-bombs reminiscent of the celebr• lion tn Newport, R.LwntrlFiCle""fiifd-liii- crtw were towe~ triumphantly back to port after ·defeating the Austr~llan challenger Gretel JI in ~e ~t four~f. geven series th1t 1uured the Cup's con- tinued residerre in this country -at least for another three yr:ars. The parade disbanded in thr: North Lido Channel 1dj1e1nt to the Balboa Bay Club and the Ardell Marina and Ficker and his family were escorted to City Hill in 1 land parade. Mastr:r of ceremonies of the festlvltlr:s at City Hall was William {)'Byron Who in· trod•ctd offidalll-who """ to join ta tributes to the returning btro. 'Ple ceremonies were opened wi~b •!\ invocation by Fr. Paul Martin of San Juan Capistrano, a longtime friand of the Ficker famll y. Mayor Ed Hirth read the first of m.any proclamations and resolutions In which he proclalmed Sunday as "Bill Ficker Day" in Newport Beach and the wer:k of <kt. 4 to 9 as "Bill Fickr:r Week." Said Mayor Hirth : "This is 1 hisioric day In Newport Btach and we are real happy to welcome tile man wtlo has brought honor to our community.'' Mayor Hirth then prr:sented 1 Jiant replica of the "key to the city" Ul Ficlttr ind crewman George Twill. Twlst re.sponded that all ol the summer's hard work was justilied by the "recognition we are geUln1 at home." ·A ,Jetter ol commendation .and con- gratulation from Gov. Ronald Reaaan wu read by Assemblyman Robert Badham. A resolution introduced in thr: State LeaiJlature commending Flcker for being the first Wr:sl Coast yachtsman to defend the Cup was rr:ad by O'Bryon . A reolulion by the Orange County Board of Supervisors Was rr:ad by John Killtfr:r, executive a.ss.i.stant to the chairman of the board. · Jack Barnett, executive manager of the N~wport Beach Chamber of Commerce, of w!Uch Fickr:r is a director, presr:nted him with -1 framed membt:rshlp card. Tom Kee.vii, edit.or of· Utr: DAILY PILOT, prtaented Ficker with plaque replica of what he facetiously refe~ to as '1P1g1 One of the paper's first Sunday editlM. '' The "hem" tag was hung on Ficker when he 11ttpped of,f the pl11.ne by his 11· ye,ar-old daufhter Deon who pinned a red lapel button on his j1cket with the single word "htro." In his response to the communlty tribute Ficker admitted "for once I 1m at a Jou for words.'' '"J'ht reception here Is even more e1- citinj: thin defending the America's Cup," he continued. "I hadn 't realized the intense interest In a sporting event of this naturr:." He erprested his appreciation to the members ol Newport Harbor Yacht Club, ()f which tie is a wt coromodore. and Balboa Yacht Club, and Other yachting groups in the area for the moral support accorded him during the lohg !Ummer of trials and the actual Cl.Ip defense. "It wa1 particularly gratifying tn look fTom the Columbla during the parade and RH my old friend Bob RoUih.• who: first t.aught me to sail herll!I an Newport Harbor." Ficker said. Ficker'• ereatest tribute was reserved fof hll wlfe Barbara "who has been pa· tient wi th me during t0me 20 ye1r1 of ullin&," and for his fathtr. Peter, "who put me tn my first sallboat." Other members ar the family ahartng in the tribute to F~ker were Jd& two ilSWI. ~ and Sue, bolh of Plewporl Beath. · Ficker abo upressed his appreciation tn Pat ·Dol.1111n, owner of the 12·meter Columbia. who gave hfm his lir11t tiiate or 12·JJ'leter 1allln1 by assi1Nn' him cc»klp. ' \ pr:r in the 1987 Cup trlala. "When you 've got friend! like Pat you don't need many othen," Ficker said. Two Harbor Area hiah school bands provided music for the festive welcom· ing. On board the Pavilion Queen was the Corona, del Mar High School band, and the . Newport Harbor High School band took over for the welcoming at City HaU. Broadway Hails State's W on9(l!S_ A 12-day celebration fr:aturing the wonders of CalUomia. was launched this mornin& by the Broadway department ~ store with ceremonies at thr: .store and a 1>..niut-ar 111i1tv1ne· co .. t -counay- Club. Severa1 local dlgnl.laries, including Dr. Daniel Aldrich, -chancellor or UCl and Newport Be1cb City Councilman Richard Croul, and top store oUicial.s, were present for the klclt-0fl. Entitlr:d, "Discovery : CJ.lilornia.'' lhr: promotion will include the appearances of several well-known writers at-tht store's Southern California Ouutt.s. ! gram. JaCob F. Myndr:rse. general .services director, uid today thr: trial newspaper salvage program in Newport Beach has mr:t with dis.appointing results during its first 1nonth. but said il will be continued through October in hopes it will prove profitable. He blamed poor public resPonse as thr: major cause of ills of the pilot project, but .saidnewspaper pllferera are partly to blame. "Thr:rr: have been some cases-where unauthorized persons have collected newspapers aet out for city collection," he said. "This-is prejudicial-to the projttt and could jeopardize its success," Mynderse said. But the main fault lies with the general pubUc, who hr: asked to take a more ac- tive part in the program. He pointed out th·arso-far"llO morcthan·S01Jercent'of-the~· people in the designated areas are participating. ""Public response in b u n d 11 n g newspapers and &etting them out for col· lections on · pickup days has been !us than anticipated," he said. "So far' a total or 46 tons of newspapers has been collected," he said, ·explaining that this repruents 3.1 loM per collr:ction day. -. Boys' Club officials hive also indicated that if a satisfactory site is not located within Newport Beach, the city of Costa Mesa ~bas offered property within TeWinkle Park for • second facility in that city . Boys' Cl ub officials told the city council last week they originally voted on the pier site not knowing any land ln Eastbluff Park wa s available. · Construction costs would be subetan- tially lowered if the inland property Is made available, they'jlolnted out, lt would not be necessary for the city to ·conduct 1 · referendum on the.Eastbluff property. A city•wide-vote~ipprovint-private-uae of oceanfront properties is a l:fewporf. Beach city charter,requiremr:nt. A large number of residents from the ..various waterfront communitiea is ex- pr:cted to be on hand for the earlier beach curfew-hr:1ring'c.~~~~~~~~~ Council members, in rejecting th& PBR midnight , closing recommendation in August. agreed that perhaps a uniform closing time for all beacl)es in the city 111 a good idr:a, but that it should be at an earlier bour. Currently, all ba)' beaches close at 11 p.m .. the Corona del Mar beaches close at 10 p.m. wh ilr: all other beache& remain open until midnight. c. ··--.... ---.... --:!d-' I J I a 1P _...., ... life at Plus 54Y811'1ofSound11-eg I • I 11 I I I A ha.ff cenUy d lftlWWI .. llllgPlall Wi I ' 4' a ...-.·-olr8!111z'l 1 !al~ I.-.. _.,SlliO-. _, .. ,.....Ila..,._., short .. w•W• enwrmtnetowdsgaadfWS c'9 ••ta.._._ I Qil-aadd:•:=-~~·="~?~.·~·=·-=·==~st ........... , ... ·-b .. -:--. - Morris Plan ,,,,.,, ..... ....,,. .. ., 11,..111 tr Se Nowporl hoc~ -1700 Nawporl llv~. -'11-1100 --- t. I ., l' .. : I I . I r I I I I ' ' r l I \ r I .. I I ' ----------------~----~--- -·--- • • .. - BEA AN OERSON, 'Editor MMU:r. Odlllw .. '"' .. , .. " • New Plans Perking Friendship will be served along with coffee when Mano Con Amor Auxiliary o fthe Children's Home Society invites pl"05pecUve mentarian;-and.-chairmen Michael Hazzard, press-: Thad Montgomery,.- First activity of lhe new year for the auxiliary, the membership coffee will take place in the new Park Newport Spa between 10 a.m. and noon. Now entering its third year of service to Children's Home Society. Mano Con Amor serves the areas of Irvine, University Park, TurUe Rock and UCI. ""' The three main functions of the auxiliary are direct services to the society, fund raising and informing the community about the services provided by the society to natural parents, children and adop· live parents. · . The society is the nation's largest voluntarily supported adoption agency serving children and parents of all races, faiths and nationali· ties. More than 32,000 children have found homes and happiness since its foundinj? in 1891. New officers \vho will guide the auxiliary during the coming year include the Mn1es. Alvin Altman, president; Woodburn Gaily and WiUiam Marvin, vice presidents; John Campbell, recording secretary; Alva Wilt, corresponding secretary and Richard Hen:hol, treasurer. , Also appointed to serve are the Mmes. Stewart Morgan, parlia· ~~"'1~;.J,i\....-..mentarian._amt._chairmen Michael Ha~. press; Thad Montgomery 'J:l..&A"-".fu".:.:;',.; . .'t ,, social; Anthony DOrlililicis, ctrriic, and TiinUnskel, publiCiifterpnta:•7·-----1 -,,'!! 'i lion. FOR HOMES ANO HAPPINESS -Helping Children's. Home · Society's adoption program is one-of the major-aims of Mano Con Amor Auxiliary, sponsor of a membership coffee taking place Thursday, Oct. 15. Sharing the happiness a new baby brings are Women in the communities or Irvine may obtain more infOrma- aert to right) Stacy Hazzard _and Toby Smith , who are admiring lion reg~ding the coffee by calling Mrs. 1'1arvin, 833-0347, or Mrs. 8-month-old Kit Smith. Robert Smith. 833-0883. - ' I I l j - Clu b Recon-venes- Labor for Lido ' < -- ' w ...... I omens Slo·g-an Preparing to labor for Lido are members of the Lido Isle Woman'11 Club. who will open their season with a brunch in th'e home of Mrs. Geor.ge . E. Silver on Thursday, Oct. 8. New members will be guests of honor at the 10 :30 a.m. event, and greeting them will be the Mmes. Delbert Van Ornum. chairman, assisted 1 by Robert Paley, John M, Billings and Robert F. Bonner. Also extending1 a welcome will be the Mmes. Roger D. Brown, pres· .jdent; Robert L. BissOnette and James V. Loudon, vice presidents~ Tony Shepardson and Jack Marshall, secretaries, and Hobart Batson,_.treasurer. lnformation regarding the•various sections offered to members dur- ing the year will be ·provided including meeting dates and times· for art, bridge, book reviews, house beautiful and a speech forum. For the more•active, teMis and sailing are available, and intriguing members and their families will be a group trip during the Easter holiday. The opening meeting or the organization will take place Tuesday, Oct. 13, in the Lido-Isle clubhouse, when Mrs. Brown will present her new slate of offiCers and chairmen for the coming year. An added enticement will be a program by comedienne Arlene Harris: and a luncheon fashion show presented by Flo's Boutique featuring clothes for at home, casual and··-cocktail wear, announced Mrs. Bissonette, pro- gram chairman. • · Art lessons in oil, watercolor, sculpting and clay will begin Wednes- day. Oct. 7, at 10 a .m. Direction will come from Mrs. H;erbert Riley, Mrs. Phillip Wells and Mrs. Frances Wood. Mrs. M·argaret Stewart, book review chairman. has revealed plan~ to discuss both the classics and current favorites . \Villiam Thackeray's "Vanity Fair" is the first book to be reviewed. Other chairmen include the Mmes. Donald Jacobi, Lido Isle Com- munity Association representative; Van Ornum, Paley and Bonner, cour- tesy and hospitality; Hernaldo Avila, historian and Richley, parliamentar- ian. Luncheon host Mrs. Sterling Stanley will be assisted by Mrs. William \\1lyte and Mrs. Howard Lawson . Also introduced will be the Mmes. Edward Hayes and Robert Emmet Smith, publications: E. Morgan .Quinn, music master; Earl H. Hardage, publicity; Richard Mailander and Shepardson, special events and Mrs. A. Albert Spar, tennis. Mrs. Mailander and Mrs. Alfred Quinlan also will be in charge of welfare. LI CO WOMEN 'LIBERATEO' -Fleeing the kitchen to labor !or Lido Isle Woman 's Club are Mrs. J. H. Batson Oeft) and Mrs. Earl Hardage. while preparing 'to take over · and concoct a gourmet dinner dish garnered from the deep are husbands Hardage Oeft) and Batson. New members of the club will be honored at a get.- acquainted brunch prior to the first meeting of the season taking place on Tuesday, Oct. 13. ·Friend Knuckles Do~n When Crackling Sound Snaps Nerves DEAR ANN LANDERS: No earth-rock· lng: problem. this one, but I'd like an aqswer. Maybe you can get to It in a day wflen ' all the major woes of the world have been aolved. 1 crack my knucltles. A close friend in· lists that knuckle cracking damages the join~ causes arthritis and weakens the lig:mnents in the fingers. Any truth In these a11egatkm? Check your knuckle; e1- per~ and let me know •• -SNAP, CIUllCKLE, POP =R POP: The only damage done by e cracking Is to the llatc.ner wbo fs ed liy It. The &0uild sends some ~ up the wall aod ru bet your frleDO Is,._, lbem. ll&AR ANN LANDERS: What can be • ANN LANDERS ~ about • SURJ)OSe4\y grol'I! up man (falher ol tltree. b,lg iflds). who giv,. ibe whole family the below.zero silent treat- ment because the l7-year--0ld boy had a minor motorcycle accident? By "minor" I mean less than $35 worth of a.am-age -whlc:tr'ttle !M>Y is paying for himself. Nobody was injured, ·no 'laws broken. The kid ran into a post. Since the accident, my nusband refuses to eat with the family. He also refuses tn sleep with me. (He'a taktn to the couch.) --- When he ia spi>ken to, be doesn't answer. He has had mean spells before but nothing like this. As I write this letter he is going lntn hiS fourth day of silenet?. \Vhat can we do? -BABY TT'S COLD INSIDE DEAR BABY: lpore· bim -11 you ... jft_uld •DI+ 1aJtlag: -pouting t.hlld. His be-ii1vlor II IJ'Ol$fJ Immature. lie doesn't k*'1lf how .. dell wltb. Ills anger ao lte b tattng It out oa lltose elose1t to him. ln lime IN'll thaw out ud utter a few ~·ords. When he dot1. be pleasant and make no refertnce to his cblldlsl:loess. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was ln· t.erestcd in the letler about lhe child who was a compulsive counter. He had to put _on Jli' ~.1'.m!S frontward~ l h e n backwards, three times every nigbl He also had to count his piggy bank money twice. before...he-weot to bed, __ _ I had the same childhood problem. I was pC)SSessed with a terrible fear that something awful would happen to my molhet JI I dfdn't repeat certain acts ~such a.1 clicking to sec ii all the dresser drav.·er1 wern~-and gotng;olhe- closct to 5ee if all my shoes were lined up perfectly). 1 was a slavt to lhe rouUnc becaUse I loved my mother and believed I was protecting her against harm by performing these acts. My heart hurt ttr the mother who wrote to you. She said she WI! sure hel" son needed professional help but her hus- band would not-pay for lt.-'l'he-b0y'1 father ins1.sted that the kid "cut out the noMense and straighten hinuelf around.'' FortunaJe.lY. ( worked _my: way out of the problem In my early teens through sheer will power. 1 told m~lf over and over that I must not repeatlbose strange rituals beca!ISe they bad notl>ing lo do with my mother. rea 1u-now how delperately-1 needed-therap)'rHoW lucky I was<that J got well without it. Most peo- ple can'l -1 UNDERSTAND ' • O.EAR JU: r was Slaggered by tlte number of readen who wrote to say taey. too, underst.ud because. tbey Ud lllf· fered lrom &he same untontrollabla bt.bllvioral pattems. Most people wba ,.,... said Ibey .... 1ve<1 ,.., .. 1o .. 1 Nip. ¥oa •ere 1Ddeed~-2are1U wbo recoplze compulsive couttq: ud repetitive babtts In lbetr cllJldrta 1bolld ~. lake lbem lo a doctor lor evalulk>a. "" lbe earlier, tlle better. Unsure of yourself on dales? What's right? WhaJ's wrong? Should you! Shouldn'..t you! Send for Ann Landers' booklet "Oatlng Dos and Don'tl.-''~~ ~ Ing wlib-your request 35.ctnll.in coin.and- • long, Stll·addressed, stamped en~el01)I In care of the DAILY PlLO'I'. ... • DAILY Pit.OT , ·committee_ Members ocus on Show Plans A group of 11all chiefs and no Indians'' I has had a b'Usy summer tina!izlng p!ans for the tlilro annual Forum Jntematlofilil 1!orse show being given to benefit the City of Hope --Wednesday;-Oct.-7,...through Sunday,Jlcl....U. ·Working as a team on all fund-raising ~vents, the women, headed by Mrs. T. Bucllanan B akiston Sr. macfe several-lil-l-~no""'va""tions -in iheWhil~e tiiill aiK! sampled - the ball menu during a luncheon. Hosting a summer cocktail party to honor the Diamood Horse Shoe members were Uie M: Keith Gaedes o! Laguna Beach; Gaede is chaJnnan of the Diamond Horse Shoe-and Mrs. Gaede is a member of the women's steering committee. Ho roscope TUESDA,Y --· "OCTOB~R "ti ' dwallOb.. Muna 11Ve i. Jitife -mI'stakes. The vi"rJ nezt order to rectlve mu c h • minute should become the Message will be clear. first minute ol the rest of your By SYDNEY OMAJIR LEO (Ju)y :3-Aug. 22): lile. Five of ta p-eatm Ide• Avoid extravqance. You Can· AQUARIUS (Jan. 26-Feb. Uats to grace & he 1tqe Of not really buy affection. It will 18): Some who mean well may world lalstory wue_a.l.l.o -be Jiven w i J J-1-n·g>I y,,-en--be ~ndln&-1Q!t..m.uch .. Do a1tr o lo&er1 : Nlctlfas thustastlcally. But you must some comparaUve shopping. ~lau, GaUleo G1Ulel, ()pen )'ourself to the ex· You deserve to get money's _ ~ ~ Jdannea Kepler perlence . ..SlQP trying.JJL1o.rL wortb. Study Scorpio message. •ad IiUC Newtoa. wues. You can learn-now bydolng. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Procedural change majr be it necessity. What was taken for granted requires a new look. Be perceptive; detect trends and -cycles. Avoid extremes. Obtain needed rest -and priva~y. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): PISCES (Feb. IS-March 20): You may be in too much of a Som~ ~reaks in relatlonsh1p!I hurry fo revise and transform. ate indicated. Dulles may .con- Obtaln hint tram ·t-e 0 ruct :With per~ dts1res. message. Check details. Be Key IS to finish '!hat you thorough. Accent on how well start. Those ~o •n: unpatle11t you !lucceed in building a solid may be showmg their true col· base. ors. -==========-===;:::====-~TAURUS (April ~lay ZO): ·ve;-~equal-time-wilh LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): IF TODAY IS Y 0 UR Post~ 1ourn~y. if eosslble. BIRTBD~Y you have .sense of Avoi<IWrl fiifletters in anger. drama~Your-voice ts com-- Be diplomatic in dealings with pelling. You appreciate lux- neighbors, relatives. One close ury, beauty. Often you are too to you exp~sses frustration. sensitive for your own good. • t Fair iii the f<ill or 1971 to pro- vide scholarships for UCI students. Bus trips baY.e _been ar· ranged to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art for th e AH. and Technology Show, La Cienega art galleries and the Pasadena Art Museum for California Design XI. Mrs. Robert Dubin-will display and ~ b e r English monumental brasS rubbings during a December meeting, and in February Mrs. Murray Kri ege r will Jead a tour to the lithography studio in the new UCI Fine Arts Village. The May meelin& will take place in the patio ()f the Rex Brandt home, where the artist and his wife }¥ill display_ and describe ~ art works. WorksboM, will c o n t i nu e • thrOugh the summer i n . prepa:ratioil foi the ait fair. · Serving as chairman of the group is Mrs. B.N. Desenberg • .,. Olber officers are the Mmes. t Anne IUcbardaon S l e e I e ~ became the bride of Greg Alan •• William S. Buettner of Santa Lyman P()rter vice chainnan· Monica. I Ernest VerTe.'treasurer ; Jack t 1 B.-r, both or La Jolla, ~. during a single ring. rite In ·~ ~ . • Tbe bride Is the daughter o! t Mr. ml Mn. Richard Stoele ~of Newport Beach. Panda 0( ; the beiledict are Mr. and Mrs. FREE A graduate of Katharine Van E d e n , corresponding Branson School, Ross, the new secretary and Philip Maurer. Mrs. Buettner attended the recording secretary. University of C a I if or n l a , Cbainnen are the Mmes. Berkeley ancJ ltvine cam· Lloyd Dennis, fair; Dubin, pus~. publicity, and Phillip Shipp Her husband is a graduate and Newton· Wayne, hO!pitali· of San Diego State College. ty .. CONDITIONING & 1 ~ i;"l".....- TREATMENT I ~ I with your next shampoo and set •2.so • F.mout KRfOcondilloner means healthier, lovelier hair. Pena--~ frat• hair to add protein! Now free with our fabulous fa ll • coiffuree. Mon • Tues • Wed SHAMPOO, SET and CONDITION ER '2" ~IUJpiauli;!tTJAi:!1r HAIRCUT '150 •• ...,,. FROSTING SPECIA L .tf• 1l111t1M11t1 Wel<tmt ""' Hot -""'-" Slreak: • Utt le iwnllghl lnlo your h•lr whh ttils man- i>l••tlng brlghl look $12,, Mon e Tuts • Wed ! C1·own~g Glo ry . -ftM'mt>rly Capritt CofCluresl SOUTH COAST PLAZA 267 E, 17th ST .. COSTA MESA Lowtr~S:.7t.1 ~6 See.I"! Phone 541-9919 Open Evtnlna:• 01l(n Evcnlna &. /'iu11d1ly Appointments Wanted With Dental Wives Nuptial Vows Recited In Wayfarers' Chapel Wa yfal-e.rs' Chapel, Portuguese Bend was the set~ liDg !er !be double ring """'1looy linking Caryn Sue Shelor ol I.lx>g Beach and Michael-E. Moen of Hun- llllgloQ Beach. 'lbe Rev. Calvin Turley directed the vow exchange for the daughter of' Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Shelor of Dodge City, Kan., and the soil of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford P. Moen of Hun- tingtoo Beach. Given in marriage by Iler father, the bride was attended by her sister-in-law. Mrs. Ron Shelor. Candlelighte:rs were Nina and Danny Moen, sister and br o ther of the bridegroom. Attending as best man was Shelor, while ushers were Jim Klink and Andy Virsnlel<s. ~ After a honeymoon trip to Yosemite. the newlyweds will reskie in Huntington Beach. , • MRS. M. E. MOEN Yosemite Honeymoon Mesa Rite in Offing J Mr. and l\1rs. Richard W. Rouiley of Santa Ana ha ve an· nounced the engagement of their daughter, Sharyl Eileen RouUey to Johie Lee Davis, son or Mr. and Mrs. Harley Davis of Costa Mesa. The couple will exchange vows Oct. 2.1 in the Prince o( Peace Lutheran Church, Costa ?.1esa. Miss Routley is a graduate of Co.st.a Mesa High School and attends Orarige Coast College. Her fiance is a graduate of • GEN. OFFICE & S .. LES •• llill JOll W/Vl•iety. flmlll•r WITll O!• t ic• 1T11chlnn? O(C:ll•lorlal ,&les. Sol.IN! good? II c1n ti.. F•. (Ill Mir'( LIOy,l. IC:EV "IJNCH , . t•»S5'!0 (;oJd (lljp CO O!ffrt. AllC.,fl (!Ill, Know l e¥111>t Pref Bnl!s. Fret. Also la il>ln '••ll1b!f, Cl11 Mtrr Lloyd, SECllETJllllY JtOG No 5,HI WOr-111 ;nterlor ,,K, tlehl. loll of ""°"'"' 111/llllc CCIWllKI Hur- ry In! '"· c111 Ann ltuulll. MANAGEMENT TllAtNfE ,. k\O ~•c1ti...t po~1l1I for c1rMr-l'l'l~­ ed WHtl Wllfl -CO!lt>Gt, IE•· """""' ,.. M(, ""· C:•ll ltylll -· 2323 N. BROADWAY OMHS and OCC and now ls studying at California Slate College at Long Beach. Both are business administration majors. Rel:iekali Lo'dge Triple Link Club of Mesa Rebekah Lodge has meetings the fourth Mondays at I p.m. in various locations. Mrs. Douglas Morgan at 548-1938 may be called for additional Information. CLERK.-FINE...1£Wlillt'f .~ »2S Cl\1rm1"9 lrodlw>du1L n.-ded IO Qrttt c:uslOmH• h• plusll Jlltrt . B~gd. In 11111 ltW'11"J •I '" 111'11, fH, Cl ll Nll!Cl' CtrlMn, COLLECTION CLEltK .• UUO Sti r! c•rHr w !111111nc to NOwl II vou ••• CIC:otf'ldtb!t, tmblHou• a. lll•t 111111. JlO cottK11onl .......... 1!50 let lob1, c 111 Ntnccl' C.rbon. ESCllOW SE(lllTAltY , • MJJ U" !oo<m e~r.r. flttttM•¥ II yov olMlllly, tt11 allr"• IM llmll lor .. '"""'' In • ~ tl'llu, FH, Ctll '"" Wtilfnn • LOAN PltOCl»Olt • . \CS J......... .. "''' tllerw:t lo .... rti: .. IHri• wl"' tllf\ """ ~"YI Tllty lrt fl\, FM. (Ill ll!!IM Jl19tn. TJl.NEE. ,-IEJl.SONNIEL. (LI(. Wt $htr' l..O. fOr ITlll'IN fllhlllefo wllll Wi ii·--11"", '1nlll1!(: .. l!'t'.I l"l'N. AIM IN 1Dba. Mlrlil TllNltl', SANTA ANA 135-3111 tWtll• '•1'19 ll•nk • ._,,I emotions. Obtain g re a le r balance. Avoid outbursts which call for later apologies. Degree o f self-control can save money, time and em- barrassment. Act accordingly. SCORPIO (Oct. 23.. Nov. 21): You are maturing to point N_ot wise to mix. money_and where wise choices w i 11 friendship. Key is to be a cool, replictrec.tless ibiiidon. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): calculating investigator. You deserve more than promises. Make sure you are not be.Ing led into fool's paradise. "Why do I gain Hpld off on Jong-term com- mitment. Check with expert. Play waiting game. Seek delay if pressed. Time to finish what is on c;urrent agenda. CANCER (June 21.July 22 ): New approach could solve employment dilemma. In personal area, you must make first step to w a r d recon- SAGl'ITARJUS (Nov. 22.- Dec. 21): Some u n u s u a J demands are made. Overco me temptation to rebel. This is not the time. II is appropriate for you to perform duties, to add to prestige. Cooperate in weight? ·:i I never sit down~· to eat." 1 special project. · WEIGHTGl WATCHERS. • Guild Sells CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Aid comes from unorthodox source. Be a will· ing listener. Avoid brooding. Stop berating yoursell for past Some t1lking, '°"" listening and a prQ!lr1m th.It works. TM 2Rlt UOOfUll-tAll ISU'SOS Treasures From Tea Treasures uncovered during the recent Treastre Tea spo y SC-Mary i Episcopal Church o! Laguna Beach will be on sale Wed- nesday and Thursday, Oct. 7 and Boin the Guild Hall. In addition to unusual items, silver, china, glass and art works, the two-day sale will feature a (])ef's Comer stock· ed with kitchen items and a Craft Shop of yams and craft 51WPlies. ibe sale wil1 include the popular boutique with unusual accessories and coordinated apparel, linens and men'• and women's clothing. Doors will be -from ' a.m. until S p.m. on Wed- nesday and from t a.m. until noon on Thursday. FOR T·HE FJRST TIME! EXPERT CLEANERS & LAUNDRY -~oFFERS·~~- PICK •UP &· DELIVERY For All Your Laiund ry & Dry Cl eaning NHdsl n~ Minimum) I DRAPES CLEANED & FAN FOLDED SPECIAL KATES TO APARTMENT It MOTEL OWNElS LADIES & MEN'S ALTERATIONS , •• FITTED IN YOUR HOME EXPERT ·CLEANERS & LAUNDRY 333 E. 171h St. -Costa Mesa -646-5110 (Mfli11d tile P'OIKake HHMl ROBINSON'S M THE GEMINI CUT " TWO LOOKS FOR 'THE BEST CF' TWO WOltt.DSe KEEPING l'AC t: WITH TODAYtS WOMAN AND T ODAY'S FASHION. SHORT ENOUGH FOR EASV-c.ARE DAYTJME F"ASHlON•• 1&.oNG ENOUGH ~ FOR DftESS...UP EVENING HAIRDCS 1 INDIVJDUALL.Y STYl.ED ANO SHAPED 'TO FLATTER YOUR 1!5EST FEATURES. !S.00, GEMINI CONTOUR PEftM. AT 15 .00. IH OUR BEAUTY SA\..ON • DON'T ENVY HAIR-FREE l.OVELtNESSe1eDUOV l't! y CONSULT OUlt KREE E>CPtRT IN PERMANENT KAIR REMOVAL.. FROSTING SPECIAL! INCLUDING SHAMPOO AHO SET, ftEG. 30.00 VALUE', HOW CIHt..Y !9.90. ROBINSONS NEWFORT • FASHION ISLAND • 644·2800 T l- " ' j. 1 I I j .. . ,-- ' • J ' ' --~.ta •e••~· '. I, I - oe-s~. • • ~ .. . l "D' I -~-~ . ' -r .. ' . ' --.... ' - • ' -:-:-_. I I ' ' . . ' :1 l--' -=""""===~~~====;;;..._..:.,..;;,..,=..,,,,,,,,,,,,=...,.......,.;;."""'"""'.,,,,,"""'=="" ...... ~~~-..... · -,.,~,...... .... ·~: ~-·"" 'I Cult Leader • -. •· -soblllllg -F~rmer Blu~s Singer Janis Joplin T--hreaten;s~-- '' : T ti.te_:Jii.dge: _, . Maid Testifies . ' Dead'at ·27 From Wire stmce. By. JACK-BllOBACK Of t11e Dllllt Pllll • ..., The te&rfut sobbing of an attraCtive, ~ year-old former maid in the Costa Mesa hOme of Dr. Wesley G. Slocum dra~tically , ended this morn i it g ' 1 testimony. in the pbyaician?s DlW'der trial. Fa&ric -Fa-ir Showdown Due in City A iihowdown over a fabric and· fashion filir whose organiUr is d.emandin& $1.4 million in Tamages from the . city - charging tales allegedly told-about his , oJ>eration are ·of whole cloth ·-is due tonight before the·eosta··MeSa City €oun· cil. ~ Charles. Manson ' lun,ced aCross· the From Wlre Services council tible at tne judge In. ibi · Shafofa Consuelo Gutierrez. who was a maid at Janis Joplin, the gravel . voiced rock Tate· murder trial today, sere~ the home of the stocwm · durin& the blues singer who ran away from Port "Someone should cut your head oft" period in which the baby Cynthia died, Arthur, Texas JO years ago and still kept He was pounced on by a bailiff, wre.tl· on running, even after she overtook fame ed ti> the floor and hall-tarri·ed ·from broke into tears while being questioiled t and fortune, is dead. cour . by James G. Enright, c.hie' deputy . The 2J·year-old star of rockdom gave it The tiny M-year-old defendant went district attorney. all she ·bad, and in the emJ it was her life. hu.rtllng on the floor in ' front of ·the "Did you Joo\ for the child op the Oo9r "Ma·~-Lwon't_ li_st;.as long _as o_thef judgi:'s bench and had to be subdued by 1n--:tbfl-;JirK?-,, asked "Eriililif. Wit!ltltis, singer::';' she once told an in~iewer thttt-~~eputies-who -1ea ilim--'fto~:--t~ dark-l'ilireGMfS .. GUtierret· broke~ whO -.Sked_if_sbe wa-sn•t-arratd-her"'hard--:U-i!:.U-·wltb hiS arma twisted_ . ' DISR' PTS T1t.1AL A~'iiN'.1111- down. ~~~!.t :~ :::n.dri.ving pace Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older• . Definelant M'8n•; , , . F.nright , bad bff.n leading her through . "But I think you can destroy your no.w an O!ilinal member of the FlyiJ!g Til.WI , the period whe11 Dr. Slocum was alleged by wueying about tomotrow ... Say the u'' T•...._, before World War·ll, eabnly-nOted tlliU,. · · . to havebtaien !lJ<M!>~ . ·•·--• .~ ha' oocl the tlofendant had·jumped in the ~-----Ar -....~, . . .. . · The former maid aid she had aeen'the =~lb·•~·StaY---·mm· ve-a-& FOUND DEAD IN HOLLYWOOD of"tfie benCJi "lid O(ilii'iiftbil lljt .._. ft0.1 nlll "'1Jl[QD'. ____ __, ~~"-... b' b •1..-• s1-r Jani• Joplin, _27 60 reflect.that lac\. 0 ~· F ~-·~ < -surgeon 11Lrau; we a yon w~ fate-many Misa ·Joplin was found dead' in ber .. _ -Th•' -·t'-'~ cam' e ··•er· .... 1_~_ ·...:..:ii · times llld tick the baby-cllair in wJlieh Hollywood apartment Sunday night by thret ,;;;;:;'.~erend';,:ts :=; .i:i.: . Blasts Irvine . Cynthia reclined 80 ·she tumbled.out.-~-guit.atilt • John Cooke, ·of · ber.-recetly court (or ·'Ule"'ltlrt otT delayed-monpn1-· ~ _,_ --• ......_.___ . Sloeum, 4S, ls ~.o(.~illl.llio 2~ ronned Jaob J11P_lio Full Tilt lloo&Ie rock or:·nles sw·eep ....WO . .Atlomeya sald_the -iwlRJrM-.l-...d u • ' monti><>ld daqhter m·February or 1!164. group. . ..., givil)g_.them another ,chaoct to .. lithan n.11 _ · filVCrSity · The-maid'-1-tlitirnoaY. -eonflrmed-that---An.autopsy was ordered_to...deierminl_ --·-· -· -.: .... __ folloW1n1;thelr ejection twlce-la:it week . ' ___ , ·· g'iven-W:t weet by s10clun·s wife ,..-&riin. the· cause of death, estimated at-12 houn T . . C'-=-. .. I ---+--.·. -•• • • • . .... ' ' -B GEORGE LEIDAL. York, where both Dr .. and . Mri. Slocum before, but-Sgt-.--Eji--;-5anche.11 of-the .-W.l.nS., IU.l.T ge · for tjnatn& ~ shouting ~,court.. . ... Y 0t.1111 ~••Iii"'" repeate4Jy beat the tot. Hollywood Police Department, aaid she ' . ~ · d"!tn~ta •~t qw~U~ ,for ~ .f~w , . ~ . · . . , . Mike Turin,-of 3006.Country Club-·Dcive, was -force-a tO po:!ltpOneh1S-woaa•s Fabric and Fashion, Tr~•de Fajr· to ,.No-l vember -councilmen cleplay•1hetien-·i· '[ on · his ·~· li"'nse ·applieation ·two . _ weeks ago. · · · , His request Is up for C0111ideratipn ·i Anothp_witness todaya..--W i ll i am had a long string of two to 14-day~ld rr ... · _ J ·~ · • · second&, then MIDIGn ahOuted ~ls at UC 'Mgent Norton Slmon_ toaay ~•aiJl Rouscb,·deputy--probatioii o+H-eer-, nee<11emar~Jiti'cain!,=eoveriiil-tiy~.l'"OW«w,.,eJ"&eS -• 'thi"illi\P'. w~ tiil\i1<1t--:tlle =~;11';1"q~~i:n-t~:! - testified that Dr. Slocum told him on Jl!Jy pancake m.ak~. . . ' ' · 1 : 1 • • tab!e~ . ,. . , • , . Ding" of the:lrvine cainpus · • · l,J tf7,,tltn'be;l1a<!Ji.tlau&hter liVilll. 'No il?uga.WS.:IaUndJa.tbe-"!Olll-•et• BM,TIMORE · !APl. -'Die ~;-i~l~an!i~lft ~lirt'LkXfil<Ies""}tesildonre iiil!e 'SI· rdaUva m'1"e~-Yor~.-· -· -, . · ---lbe nlglltpwndad ~lnnr 111-~ween ~c9ri0l•·fhir.Jl.;.l!llo'!!'fil}'>" , · ~~UW..O'---li!IJ -it!Vl!if"-JiV!iie·o ·~~ • • irllJ' · ~ _ ln~aJon..!l!!!J:dloobd tlus llJ!l!t_the.be\tand.tilltilr.llblt. _. _,_ or1a-Ser1e1c!Gday, r1c ctlll'iiff · . ' _ _ J iilillif£81$'_:liiL-abaadoameiit1il·• JvI1"'21,!lt~a~ or-~~· tnor~Jiii(f1iave f~ no "OnlJ: teqqila, ~ and wlnri'' s•id PitchJ~i ~a( ~ Palf!lef to 1 •r ;W,•'..s., .:,,.~ laUli~~· 8i,r ~11111. ' ~·' '{· --.C:lllr-~~QJDPUl"t~at·tf!ciddtd •• _,,i; trac. ·ol the .ehild ha~ ""'1-m -N.,. . one poliee111an. , • • --lcto · , -'MilliieSoti' to· comlili • --Md' ..ue!W·ili·=a~ -mlllln of a 10 000.acre.cl\ji. , .,.,,_ '-., " I again l<lhljb~, with a ·roi:omajMdatiOii. o! ' denial, but· the unhappy entrepreoeur baa r vowed tbe·show must go on even without l ... a license. · Directors ol the 32nd D i s t r i c t Agricultural Association are backing him all the way for the exposition scheduled Nov. 5 through a on the state-owned Orange County Fairgrounds. They ct.im total jurisdiction over events permitted there, but advise each business or organization to obtain l city license as a courtesy gesture. ~~1 Turin has singled out Councilman Alvin L. Pinkley and Chamber of Commerce Executive Manager Nick Ziener for specific vitriol sinc_e the delay in bis license ap~lication two'w~eks ago. Councilman ~i.nkley re~rk.¢ that he thought the city's policy was not to allow commercial activity on the fairgorunds, -a·hich is zoned for institutional an d recreational uses. Turin alao has charged that hi.!1 fabrics and other merchandise have been smeared and re.ferred to as second quail· ty goods. . "I'm damned tired of watching city .of. . ficials try to stamp out small bUSines.!I and competition under the 'guise of city management and government," Turin liays. The charge is contained in a coyer note to a copy of the $1.4 million claim he deli vered to.city hall, in which he assert! if hi.!l"fabric expol!lition is illegal, then th~ Orange County Fair itself is illegal. Councilmen are expected to deny the .. claim and routinely refer It to the city at· · torney. · "If 1 have to file a St million claim every other day I'll do it," Turin vowed today. !'I'm going to laka.-tbis issue and keep bombarding them with it." He repeated the Position that no city license is required . "I sent them a letter saying l wa.s ask· lng for a license as a courtesy and not out of need," continued Turin, who was visibly irritated at the Sepf. it meeting when turned down. . . Councilmen said they merely wanted to -.. know more a u Tut1n atfd tfieWorld'• Fabric and Fashion Fair -which will run JO a.m. to 10 p.m., with a variety of booths and mercha~ise1 plU.!1 i Par'lailn sidewalk care -DetOce gn.nUng a license. ' "He came in at 4 o'clock for a Permit and our ordinance specifies a 5 o'clock· (lee FABRIC, P•ce l Mrs, Karstens SerVices Slated Funeral services will be held T\M!sda1 1n Davenport, Iowa for former Costa , Mesa resident MarjaMe M. Karatena who dl<d-thert Friday aUbt-agt oUI~ Mrs. Kantena was a registered nutR employed at Hoag Memorial Hoepttal un- til January when she Jett.for Iowa. She ts iurvived by her bi.lsband, her parail.s, three eons, and two brothers. I . Yorl!. 'wbei:t "91b Dr. and .!IJ:I. Sooemn Mlaiaopllnliftdln~. litlr Sin ;;,, ry '!"er . of ~ TW•·•P.. · ~ ant!~ lo MN lti~ r 'Wrffi'lilm1·ar 'il/corjx;ration ior 11&1.aiJll- liavt, retativea. . . . . · Frllidlco, but wai llaylng in l!Ollywoocl _ ... gamt •weep . "'°. '" lnlll«'irlliM wheil'lie ~ "Adt,clty Simon oald'lbe Irv1Jie•eomp1n1 · . A ,._ or marital problems came In a while .......nnc: an album !or C01Wlib11 Alnttican League cllamplonahlp piayolf "Ah yOU lolng lo·~ 1bb ~ 10 Jt •gullty of a· "lrreapolllible antf - l:iead .early _tJUs, year '!hen .Dr. Slocum Record Company with her new-group. series. ·· kill-'me?·~ -he suddenly-ieh&nded . or ~-act-!' -· · '1 • '--• •• allowed the couple's Mesa Verde bo_me to Friends almost unwlll!nJ to accept the It marked the secOnd str'aight·.year that Judge _Oldt!r.' _ ' ' · · · ' Charging complicity on the pil!t.df"U. be lost through foreclosure of a ltcond d~th of ~ hig~ted aing~ who the OrioleS had wiped out the Twins in . '01c'ier tOta him , lb keip 4wet , tr b& f\tersity regents he saY1 have. flifed \' t& mortgage. thrilled audiences with her to~ h'its said thr_ee _ Stiaight-'p!Qyoff gafile.!_ and gayr ~.be ~ed. i , . halt the V·i~lation . ~I the : ten~eir.:old A. freeier wu ~ken from the garqe she had $eemed happy ~n . recent them 14 Consecutive victories' lncludkig "1'e minute 1 aee you lre ioing to kill -•.treerhe"7,S1mon -wd ·f~tu;,e inTlftig:• dur~ days following that and butchered weeks. She made an . elec~Jfy~g ap-the 11 straight they strung together at the me you know whit .J'm 'Coinl to do," lipn ·may ~k the pubhc. remaw of a baby alleged, to be Cynthia pe:arance when performing hve WI th her d 1 th e 1 t • -M ' · id. · • He declined to name names f d . 't b km I . th ha" Bhaki h . hlb'ted en o er gu a season. anaon sa , . =~lia:. ID 1 !Y wor enc earun1 e Ion& . ~ •• _., ~ h~ky un~u~ing pfttmer was ~verpowering, striking out "What ire' y0u golni'to do?" Olderuk-Sin;ion contends that ~ ~ine . Com- Mesa Police Net . . Three Suspecls And Hash Haul A Costa Mesa police officer who checked a car to determine why it w11 being driv. en erratically early Sunday ·morning said he found one potential explanation. Patrolman Leo Jones conflScated 32 gram"°' suspected hashish and a pipe for smoking the potent marijuana derivative, Jee1:ding to the arrest of the driver and two passengers. Richard H. Wight, 13, of 21490 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, Douglas L. Lally, %2, of 2446 Santa Ana Ave., Costa Mesa, and Leslie R. Christensen, 21, of Long Beach, were charged with posses- sion of hashish and narcotics parapher- nalia . -Officer Jones said he pulled over Wight's car on Newport Boultvard at Bay Street and suspected something was wroni:' when lhe. two ~~ers got out netvoosly aa· tbOug!i=to divert Kini. n;orei:,en ~. Most of the' time ·she 12 Twins ahd dominating. the show. Some ed. apgrily staring down aJ the beardta PIDY s $3,000-acre plan. is tfle r~· of s Y e : ' ' !hoddy Minnesota' fielding ahd timely hipple cu1t' )eAder. . ·, the Jag(I devtl~s beilig pr!!aed ' .. , the ~no ra. f ,. Baltimore hitting provided a S.O lead ift • "Mr. MlnsOn, I'm going to have you ~itix ~efo'T-act." Re charge:d .~~ . ~he tore ~ guts out o. 10ngs, a the first thrff, irtnings and alter that, removed if you do nOt stop " the jucfre with having lobbied Uu'ough senator critic once said of brr 1ing1ng. al d 1 th .-.1 • • • · • • George Murphy to stbp that part of the Miss Joplin drank "southern comfort" ~ mer, 20-IO ur ng t r"'r"ar •aelSOn, aa!~: . · , act" which he said motivated them to by the quart and fans would bring her JUSt coasted. .J m,JQm& to hay_e you .re1Tl0Ve;d if you -.1.1 ''a-la·rger· clly Iha' n· w .. a agr· _,_;i to'" r-· don't stop," .Mans(ift aiid. 1'1 &ave a li~e ~,.., . , 8 ~ . · •.. bottles at her concerts. , I stem of m owd;,, · \ · . · ~otjftg that the uct·owned ·acreaie.11 "1 alway~ us~_ to ge~ ~un_k OI1 !~ge w· illi''am· s.· 'Da'vi's· .Y At 'Ulat, ~neon.:...n. from his-seat f'.a!DPle~ 'for qniverSity ,_p~~ea, Sfrrion.' bu~ now I d?n t need. Ii, she re~nUy and .. literali -di\red aCJ'Ols the table e~ed concern th~~ lh.e swltc~ in pll(ll said. "Sometames I drmk and t10metunes: toward the j~dge's bench •oukf· create slums 1n 9Ur-round1nr ciUei I don't I can get high jµst on the music." · · including Tustin,· Santa· AM, Oran·ge and Her singing was heavily in!luenced by Services Slated Ne,vpOrt Beach, He said the UC site ... Negro performers and she listed as the 3 B _ t: _ E }-.] lection committee in 1960 had chosen' tr. most inOuential Otis Redding and Bessie OJ.Ill.It; xp . uu.e vine 'because of its '1,000.acre gift ·to the Smith. R06ary will· be recited tonight at A Uniyersi~· and the ·availability ~ 13,000 she told an Interviewer once of her o'clock at Our Lady Queen of Ang~ls virgjn ICM! around it. . _ . style: "It's all feeling. When I'm singing Catholic Church for William s. Davis, Near . Governmellt He sriid the uhiveraity agreed to' the I'm not thinking ." U.S. Marine COrps pilot Who was killed 10,000 atTe city to prevent alum _develop. Among the songs for which she was Sept. 22 in Vietnam. ment adjacent to the ne.w campus ·such best known are "Maybe," "Work Me, Lt. Davis, 24, a re!ident of C.Orona del Palace m' Chili ' .. has \)een e~p,er~l}~ed at ,BerkeleY. and Lord," "Little Girl Blue,'' "One Good Mar, was flying a night medical evacua------Santa Barbara. , ' lion ln Quang Nam province when hf1 Man," 1'Try," "Kozmic Blues,'! "I Need Jk•ides cz;iti.ci&ing_.lrvine Company, helicopler-<iashed. --. , SA!fnAGO, Chili (tlPl) -S.veral · r ha ed Iba a Man-to .... Love " ·~·Turtle Blues," and He leives his .wife, JO~anria:-a ·dtulh--bombs exploded .ffl'ly today aithft!e •Hef Simon c rg t university regents "Piece of My H~arl" ter Hea~r; parents, Mr. and Mrs.: Fran-In Santiago, one of thein 'within . five had n'eglec~ to plan the 510-acre a~tion Miss Joplin Jet her long brown-blonde cis J. Davis, afl of C<lfonl del. Mar ; sis-bloclis of 'the governmn\ pillce. 1bert (let~~' Pace I) hair fall UJ11X1mbed and often wore floppy terS, MrS. ·Carole Weber, of Lafayette, were no ca.Sui:ltleil:. . ' ' hots, beads, bell-bottom slacks and Cali! .. and Mrs: Janice Newhall, Madi· The uplosionJ occurred ·1n a ·spon·of 15 p ·.l p· · ' d · .w' NY' ; hippl .. likt clothing. She said she was not son Wisconsin . minutet. The !lrst.,..nt-o!! on ground& ol 0 es ·8C8 e , a hippie but a beatnik : '"Beatniks believe ~ufem Mus will be . recited Tues-the Geographic Military . ID!tltote, ad- things aren't going to ~t any ~tter ~~ ____:_day__,_ JLa,_m. a\ ""'" '··dy~ of v.1 .. ; .... _•1...--palac•-c····•-·11·we •·-··•·~ -se.--.,ANIS; Pase J) -· Mgel~ · -~ w ....... ~ ..., --a _...._ The ~ bomb erploded n e i: r ' NEW YORK (UPlk-More than 100,000 Ho1ne Is the Sailor tran1rnitting planta: of two televUJkm channels. The third was planted at Torres De Tajamar Where apartment hoose eon- ·atruct.ion under way, shaUer,iq-4olcna of_ windows, . . . , Pollsl>Anieriew, IOC•udiilf"thoolilidlc.;r children drusecl .in· oolorful Poll&h dre51, marched up ·Ji'iftb AvenUe"Sundaj' in,&hl 34th Pulaski Qay plride. r· . , . ' . lntre id's Bill_Fkker Gets Her-0~s-W--ekome By ALMON' LOCKABEY parade, followed by an hour of accolades OA1Lv l"IWtT ..._ .. ,.... and resolutions from city, county and Bill Ficker, the first Well ' coast akip-llate oUlclals. per to defend the America's Cup, in-The massive boat parade fonned In tema.tiOl\oll yachting's most hallowed front of the Balboa 1Yacht Club and the prize, came 'home Sunday to a bero't adjoining Orange County.Harbor District wek:ome. · offices wbett Ficker and his wife and It wU 1'Bill Ficker Day" in Newport datJChter, and one of bl1 crewmen, Bead! from !he niomtnt the 12-yur old Gtorge Twist, boarded Pat Doug~'• 11- aaUor-architect-stepped off • _,. Air ~ meter Columbia on whk:h Ficker first California plane at Ora nee O>unty became affiicted with Amerlca's ·Cup Airport whtre be _was cr-ted by hi.• fever in 1'87. family, a.bolt of city and copnty officials He wu co-,belmsman on Columbia In and repraenlaUves of the· mt'• nine the Illi Cup !rials In which Columbia yacht clubs. wq runner..up to Intrepid, the yacht on Flcktr came to Newport directly from which Ficker de!endtd the Cup this ytar. San Franelleo where be had atttnded the The parade was headed by a Harbor SL Francis Yacht Clvb'a Tinaley Island Deportment fireboat, !ollowO!l.J>Y the S&q Crulae, pnual gathering of the most PaVillon_~ excursion boa~ which was prominent 11chbmen or the West and J&m·packed with civic and yachting of· Eut coats. ficiala. But the airport reeeption waa Ollly a Behind the Pavilion • Queu.-came ]>1'lude to a cala cornmvnltyolde Columbia under tow with hundred& o! celebraUon climued by a colorful boo! pleuurt craft brlngin& up the rear and • fl·-- 1w~Li:!I around the boat of honqr. Tht pirade wq made up of tvtl')'thina from amall •cltboats slmllar· to thf: one Ficker learned to 1all when he ·wu ·a. youngat'er of eight, to buuing oUttioards to chinese jµnU to 1Uch laviah power yacht.I u Frank -Mulltr's Mojo. Molt o'fi the craft 'In the parade were colorfuUy 11dresaed" for the occuton and kept"up a din'ol homi, bell&, wlliltlei and cheny-bomba mnlni&cenl o! the celtbta. lion In Newport, R.I. when• Flciier ind hlf mw· ,,.;.. towed mvniphlnllY 11act lo port after de!eaUng the • Auau.llan chill•""1" Gretel ·n in the belt follr.ol· aevtn eerte11 that auured the CUp'1 cgn,. -llnued-rtsidtnce ftl · tbla country -·al least for -ther U....1 years. The parailid116in<liil In the North Lido Cllannel ad!Ront to the Balboa Bay Club and the Ardell Marina and Flclltr aod hit flmil)'" ..... noorted lo 'Cl~ Hall In • (See HERO, Pap it · The bomb near the mllllary . in.tlW!• wu-lbe~flnt-to be-plaoted-""""'4-"I anned !oroeo utsblllhment. Four ·elber bombo uploded in the·elty wly SUnday but there ..Vt no euualties 'and ~ma1e wu·mlf'or. . . • Navy Hitchhiker ; &ateii, · Rohhe<l : ' A· 1.on1 !!eadl ~1or tlYinc Jo lilldl ~ riile ba<k,Iothe. U.S:Kfia! all!PJard'loal SaturdOJ ,, .. beat.n.,w·r.ut.ad' o1 iso in~ .. ·d~~· ,o!lolK ~ 814Ie Beacb Sa Q. • • . : • The Jlla!l,.ldenlUl by t>'llice,11,1 •rian W. Arin&. ..., lake1" IO ,lllJnllocton Intercommunlty lioopital ud· Iteated r .. minor..,. and bruiao.o ~wine Iba''* a.m. beatinf. · • . '. ' Re \old officers tlillf"he· wu.olrind a ride '10 the ohlpyanl bi-~ nie~ alter · drlnkinc in a ~ Ilea!'!' ltv.rn, - •lua!d In the ear ,'.and !akin to the beacll • where the inen took ldl wallel and waldl. .. . . :\l'eaqaer· "' :Bl~ M~ will.. ,e~ ,lnio TUeaday with low clouds and drlule in the Offing, sinking the hlah temperalw, to 61 locally and down lo n !urlber inland. ' • INSIDE TODAY . ' .., .. After strvino tvtrv Prtridtnt dnu 'FDB. th• prelidcnlial yachts -now co:llcd Tricia and --Julie -,art up 1/or salt . St• Boating, Page 20. ..... -e.11~· ~ll!tY• , ...... =.. --· :=::. .. .. . .......... . ,_ ' " • ' .... ... u • • • . .. ,.,,' I DAIL y '1LOT " c, • • 8 2'80 S tuents _ lass-e_s-=-Ilero~i-:g-,~- • Today tor4Jf;l l--~'--~~-' I • . . Clwes beran today •l UC lrvlM.~witb bullc1in3 boUJU the department of !ft. more. than •.ooo !tuclents and _tSQ f.a.culty formatlon,--1ht graduate schobl of ad· ~ on campus. 1 \. ministration and tht public . policy The Newport Community' Hoopiial, !bf main JaciJ& ol lhe MOO ml!Uon ll'!!J!f Medical Q n e to J1! l:!.l;tlllit!!LU..£1, will be open in 1974, officialA o{ the Netrpbrt Community Hospital Foundation uld to- day. Two building complexes nearing com-research unit u well as the UC:l com· pletlon lhJs wetk were partly opened ror puter facility. -clauea today bu t construction apparatUs Elevatol"S"in the nine-story ~netting provided 1 marked contrast to the neatly tower have yet to" bt !halalled, delaying lrtm.mtd ludscapinc around d l de r use of classrooms on the upper floors, a buililings on the sil-ye1r old campus. 15potesman said. The ninwtory engi1'leer1ng buildiftl will nie: two-building cornp1e.t cost $6.2 house the school of engineering, the new million and was financed by a 19&6 bond de_partment of social ecology, the educa· jssue and matching Department of tional opportunity Pro&r&m, and audio Health Education and Welfare funds. visual--mytees. . -Amo~ features the-$3-mllllon fine art& The four-story computer IClenctl village offers the university art a 425- Donald Stevens Funeral Sla.ted • • ·· MOnitloto ·o1 Sealarln1 MuooJc-Lodge 70I WUJ afflciate~ at fwiiral. ·ettVlcel!: ·Wednllday for Dould F. Slaven1, long ;tune; co.ta M,..' -and 'Jocige ·member wllo died tills ...,ktnd. Mr, s-· U. !lied.•l his home, 162 ):. Z2nd S~ He had lived In Colla M"a since 1'25 .. In 'addition lo his Muoolc membership. Mr. Stevens wu a charter member and ,put -preaident of the~Colta Mesa Lions Club. . · Until h1s death he was serving as 'aecretary ol that «1aniution. 11 For 'the put tt years, Mr. Stevens was ·a aali ,employed contractor In tile Harbor ..... 1 He lu.V•-hil-wife, B1rbl1'1; ·• -i'dau1hter, Mrs. Judith Hager of 'WashlnRtM: ltis mother, Mrs. Emma ;,i;tevens d W111Jnllll!er: a brother, Ted 1 of Costa 'Mesa ; a 1ist.er. Mrs. Vir1ini1 Field of Long Beach, and ooe grand- .eal studio theatre, a 240-aeat concert hall, an erperimental.drama llboratory, art. and sculpture studios workshops and gal!eri~ l!ld music rtheanal facilities. Portions of that nine-building arU center have yet to be completed although seats In most lecture facilities were in· 1ta.lled over the weekend. Among the students attending -ope~ng day classes .were Z,100 new atudent.s, either freshmen or transfers. .About ~ graduate and ~75 medi~al students have enrolled th.ts year, a spokesman said. Ei:act e n r o 11 m en t figures will not be ready for another JO days, due to tbt annual confualon of registration. . An observer who bu viewed the previous five opening days of ciu,,e!I noted this year that increued traffic and numben: of people on campw was more obvious than in previow years. Last ye~. UCl enrolled 5,000 students of which 3,600 were underiraduates. Continuing problems at the srowing -campwi are the ahortage of student hous- ing, parting l;od the lack of nearby abops and services. 1"----danghte".-------lr"Vine-Company~ Def ends Plan I I ,, Services will ~ _ he1d at 2 p.m. at the Seafaring Muonlc Temple. :Reagan Slates 'County T~lk Gov. Rea1an Is slated lo make hi.< third ·-;canopalp ltOP lnJli'1111e_C...ty Tltlll'•· day when he. 1peab before the Orange ~ty Eeonoml~ Onllool< Conference at ~aheim Convtntlon <:enter. ~H SPMi9z'td by tlie IndUJtrial Develop-pn( llivplorrol Orange·eowrty~Chamber Of Commerce:._the one-d1y confttena! ii expected to draw up to l,lm people from Joulhern California. J Reagan will be joined by four blisiness •xperls who will l)i<lk on lb>· otoclt market, money, todo-economica and the economic effects on Orange County~of the Vietnamization of the war. Mel Miller, chairman of the event uid tlcketa are avallable at the chamber of· fiCe or through the 100 membera of the chamber's Economic Development Coun· cil. From Pqe 1 JANIS ••• u y the hell with it. stay atoned and have a 1ood tlme," she once uplained. Miu Joplin said ahe hid. a frustrated and unhappy childhood in her home town of Port Arthur. Tei: .. rllMinl away from home at 17. Sbe worked at auch job1 aa keypunch operating, ev~tually seWing in San Francisco. Miss Joplin skyrocketed tD fame as the wailing , groaning vocalist with Big Brother and .the Holding Company at the 1967 Monterey Po·p Festival. Thtre, she was acclaimed for her version of "Ball and Chaln." Sometime SUnday, 1he slipped out of her own. f DAILY PILOT OIU.NGf. (0A5T l'Ulll5HING toMl'ANY Rob1rt N. 'W114 "••kl..,I •rid .-..usl'llr J•t• R. C11rl1y Tlio1t111 K11,.il lfltot Tlto111 11 A, Mur,lii"t Ml ... t"'9 flltw CMt. 111 .. OMM Jl b W11I l1y Slt11f M1ill119 Aiir111: l'.O. lot 1560, 92626 ...._ __ N-r1 IMc,fl: 2211 WU\ hlllof IOUll~tr• L11wi1 lwcl!: m l'Dl'•t ... ....,.,. ~..,.,l(llfen IMC": 1117S ... et\ lol.lle~I .. "" c~N: .. Norrll I I C61'1t .... 111:•1 OAll Y "II.OT, Wiii! Wftlc:I! ~ _.. .... 1111 fll-'19fi. .. .,,..ltlltd tl•lf'f' •• , .. """' .. 'f' Ill .....,..i. •ltllN fer l llUM t ll(}lj H.....,, tMdl, C.M M-. l+lll'f~ IM<fl 1rllll l'-tllll V1lln', 11or>1 w!lfrt ,.. ,.,.._,., .. II..... °''""' c.r.11 l'l/Mlt"lflf ~ """'""' .. ll'lh lf't I I U11 W .. I llllool I M •• ,........, MllCll, l fllll Hf W•t .. 't' lff'MI, C..tt INM. '""''''' (714) '4J-4J21 Cl .... Alwtlklll M.l·i671 tw(fftM, tlll. Ort• C..11 "'*l'-ftlf'll Coft!OIM". • He -·-~~ t!Jultrl hMI, •11W1tl PMMr ...-H_,IHf"tntt l'wfln PN'f' .. ii .. ••JCIW W!TlloVI 11*ltl _. rfllslllft ef ~I ·-· _..., , ... , _ .... •It 11 NfWIJ9f't hid! , '"' C..11 M•, llt...,111-. ""*',_."" lf c.l'rie• U.2:1 -ltlty1 •y 'Nit IJ 7J l!llftll'll't'I 111Ultery _llfllt .... , U~ IN!lrllly, After Attacks .. Irvine Company otfielalJ uid today that planning they have done has been per- formed bot.h_openly and f&r the benefit of. the-people of their future clly an<! all ol -orange Cciinty. Responding to atatement.s made by UC Regenl Norton Simon, at a press con- fert.nce this ·mornln1, Irvine COmpa.qy Vice Pre~Cieiir~-w1oorw.r.-- "We have a cirefully and upensively wroucht plan desiped to a~9C1ate IOmt 400,000 of more th&Ji fWo million additional people predicted lot Or&nltl County by the year m . . . . "We do nol know where or bQw ttx>8e other millions of people will live. We doubt that anyone el11e know1 .either~" he 11id. .. Watson cited the company's plannln• history, pointing out Uial its desl,cns for its future city have been clearly spelltd out for all to see. · He sa id the company didn't have to do It thlt way. . "It woUld have been far ea11er if we had kept our ultimate jllans to ourielvts, or had iione, and instead merely 1ub- mitted projects for approval tract ·by ~ tract." he said. He said if the company had done It that way it would have resulted "In a con· t.inultion of the urban 1prlwl that is now at the gates of the lrvlne Ranch.'.' Wats<>n 1aid. "The people of .lrvui:e de- servt better than that. The University ('If California deserves better than that. ~nd Norton Simon, surely, prefers something better than that." . Watson pointed nut that prominent among those consulted in the years of pllllning were offic ials of UCI. •·Nevertheless." he 11ld. "M r. Norton Simon has made we\l·pub1\ciztd a:!!er- tions that the Irvine Company ha!I doM its design ing, and dreamed it• dreams. unilaterally. . "We are weary of denying thl! to~1.l\y groundless implication," Wataon aaid. He -said, ''Mr. Simon nmr hu aone ir· .repressibly from that charge on to other charges. We categorlcaJ.Ix ctt;ny every· tliihg · be has said on the sub1ect. of the Irvine plan that ca1ta dou~t on ~1s com- pany'a .. intearlty,. and JI.ht intw1ly ol it.s officers an• plaaneft. . "We wish delperately that Mt . Simon , and all 1uch men who criticiie-without undemanding-what we are trying to do, would address themselvea to the issue ln volvtd . "lt ls a deiperate wl!h bec.a\l!e It !• a desperate issu1. 'The peeple are comlllJ(. by the hundreds ot thousands. whether we plan for their an1val or not. 11And we must plan," Watson aald . SIMO N ••. to the trvint campus the reaen ta pur· chased wbMqutnt to the 1,QOO.lcre cam. pus silt gift. • Simon faHed to name any regents whfl, may have profited d1recily or Indirectly by the lrvine Company's M" plan. "I have nol charatd anyone with us1111 thtlr power to feather their own nest." bl!l 1aid., However, later ln the 11me presi con- ' fertnce Simon reputed !Us charie o{ earlier Utis year HYfni. uaome reaenLt will bfofflt by tbls twitch In pla ... " Simon tlalmed Wt the f.rvhl• Company ~::reap "unjust enrichment'' of '430 milllon -a :'_conae.rvaUVe estJmate ol the Increase In value of t.ht: addJtfonal '3,000 1cres tbe.y art promotint It the expense of University of CllUornla, evt.n U lncorporaUon lhr>Uld fall ." • I • DAILY l'ILOT l'flli. ~W l .. l'IWM The h()fpltil. whlCh ini Ually will h1Ve approximately 2.50 •beds, ii deatcnecf tt1 compliment the proposed UCI tMcbinJ: ho-spi1-I .1t would adjoin. Plans for the major medical facility were developed in cooperation with bOth CI offici I and officia of Hoa Mt· morial Hospital in Newport Beach. Hoag Administrator William R. Jfudson said this morning that the neweat f1dlity will serve a need in that section of the __ cQQnJy, __ )'he medical center will be built ori ISO acres of property at the lnterttctlM of MacArthur Bnulevard and University Drive west of the UCI campus. Dr. Gera ld B. Sinykin of Newport Beach, vice presiden t of the new foundation, de. clined to state specifically ~here funds for the project woold. originate. but said CUP SKIPPER' FICKER RESPONDS TOWEL l WIS HERS DURING WATER BORNE PARADE With 'P•t Doua•ft •t Col umb i1 Helm, Intrepid Crewman George Twi1t (Right) and Mrs. Twi1t they will be from private and public foundati on"S. He said there is oo public solicitation expected. From Pagfl 1 Br~a d way Hails In addition to Dr. Sinyki n. other offi· cials of the foundation are Dr. Hugh J. Plumb, Jr .. who is president ; Dr. J ames G. Kidd, Jr., secretary and Dr. John L. Poyas. treasu rer. HERO FICKER RETURNS • • • State's W onders State Se nator Dennis E. Carpenter is legal counsel fo r the organiution: land par.ad,. • - Master of ceremonies of the festivities at City Hall was William O'Byron who In· troc:luced officials who were to join in tributes to the returning hero. The ceremonie!I were opened with an invocation by Fr. Paul Martin of San Juan·Capistrano.-.a..Jongtime..frie.nd of-the Ficker family. Ma yor Ed Hirth read the first ol many proclamations and resolutions in which he proclaimed .. Sunday as "Bill Ficker Day" in Newport Beach and the week of Oct. 4 to_9 as "Bill Ficker Week." Said Mayor Hirth: "Thi:ii is a historic. day in Newport Beach and we are real happy to welcome the man who bas brought honor to our commimity.''. Mayor Hirth then p!°e11tnted a giant replica of the "key to the city" to Ficker and crewman George Twist. Twist responded that all of the 1unµner '1 hard work wat juatified by the "recogni tion wa -ire geUiilg it liOffie." .· A letter of commendation and con- gratulation from Gov. Ronald Reagan was ·read · by Assflnblyman Robert Badh'am. · A re!Olution introdUced in the Slate Legislature commending Ficker for being the first West Coast yachtsman to defend the Cup was read by O'Bryon . . A reolution by the Orange County Board of Supervisors was read by John Kiltefer, executive assistant to the chairman of the board. Jack Barnett,-executive manager of the Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce, of which Ficker is a director, presented him with a framed membership card . Tom Ketvil, editor of . the DAD.. Y PILOT, presented Ficker with plaque rt:plica of what ht facetiously referred to as ''Page One of the pape r's first Sunday edition." The "herou tag was hung· on Ficker when he stepped off t.he plane by his II · year-old daughter Deon who pirmed a red lapel button on his jacke t with the sinale word "hero." In his response to the community tribute Ficker admitted "for once l am at a loss for words." "The reception here is even more e:r· citing than defending the Amer ica's Cup ,'' he continued. "I hadn't realized lhe intense interest in 1 sporting event flf~is nature." He expressed hi1 appreciation to the members or Newport Harbor Yacht Club, oI which he is a put commodore. and Balboa Yacht Club. and other yachting groups in the area for the moral support accorded t\.lm i::luring the long summer of trials and the. actual Cup defense: "It was particularly gfatHyina to look. from the Columbia during the parade and see my old friend Bob Rollins who first taught me ·to sail here on Newport Harbor ,'' Ficker said. Ficker's greatest tribu te was resuved for his wife Barbara "who ha1 been PA· tient with me durilll some 20 yeara of F rom Pagfl 1 FABRIC ... Friday deadline for appUcaUons," Coun· cllman Pinkley said today. •·we didn't turn him down, We just ask- td for mor, information. I hive no personal animosity toward Mr. Turin," he concluded. Councilman Pinkley also said the city doesn't completely ~ eye-to-eye with the Fair Board on its rest:rvin1 the sole right to permit fairgrounds: actlv!Ue... Board President Timothy Strader re- emphas!ud lhat Point last week during Fa.Ir Board dellberaUOns on Turin'• fa!hlon ·eipo, which would have bqun to- day undtr Its original timetable. Turin Aid the show is primarily for merchancflqn and will feature 180 l>ooths. 70 percent of. whicb had alrtady ~ 10ld at..#15 ror the tour-day period whtll lb> city iljmied hlrn. He added that lie hiA staatd ei,ht almllar tr~ Jbows at lhe ftlr1rounds and all of them were sanctlontd with a <!lty license. "' l .} sailing," and for his father . Pe ter. "who ~. put me in my first sailboat." A 12-day celebration featuring the. Other members of the family sharin g wonders of California was launched this in the tribute to Ficker were his two morning by the Broadway department sisters, Angela and Sue, bolh of Newpor t store with ceremonies at the store and a Beach. Ficke r <ilso expressed his appreciation breakfast at the Irvine Coast Country to Pat Dougan, Owner of the 12-meter Club. Columbia, who gave-him-his-fir.st tast.e...oL--seveFal-local-4ignatar.ie1. including...Or. IZ·m.eter sailing by a s~igning him co-skip. Daniel Aldrich chancellor of UCI and per 1n lhe 1967 CUp trials. . ' , . . "When you 've got friends like Pat you Newpor t Beach City Counc1~~n Richard don 't need man y others," Ficker said. Croul. and top store :ifhcials , were Two Harbor Area high school bands present for the kick-off . provided· music for_ the festive welcom· Entitled, ''Discovery : California," the ing. On board the P_avilion Queen was lhe promotion will Include the ippear1.nces of Corona de\ Mar High School band. and . . the Newport Harbor High School band several well-known writers at the store·s took over for the welcoming at City Hall. Southern California outlets . (Fundsla l ' .. :•.:. Offici als stressed that the mechcal ctn· -!er will by no means be in competition with the UCI hospi tal, which 11ined IJ> proval for a 350-bed facility from tht Comprehensive Health Planning Associa- tion last week. Carpenter last week indicated the two facilities would likely arrange a worktn1 elationshi p and...binte.dJhat someday ,lhe entire hospital-urtiversity complex mijh1 be merged to some. degree . The medical center, itself, In addiU01t to the new hospital. woul d include clinics, research and convalescent faci lity, med· ically related inQustries aod private med. ical officest Dr. Sil)ykin s1.ld_. He pointed out that more than t()(I area physicians had partiCJpated 1n plannina: for the center. SICi •If I I zsleclll• lrolclagl ... , I ••«lllll!llNNI II I It C:Wmo • -S'fo .pw-.lllld llp _ ...... _ ') ., ........ • ~tllld'11121tefq &ILL wllb dlllJ kllnnt din Plld on ,,,,-a P h>A:11 m lo I o1..,-.... ~" Pll'---1 . t to day Ml1• Ii II uet aldlld md ''WiiJil &idld ..-llrtJ. PIUI 54 Years of Sould Mrqsr•C A hall <*illrij d _, --•+¥ .. a perfect -d r9gllls --PIS •• -Ill excess ol $150 miD'ion. end h pr•• Doe ._., ol -k1 1 11 coa-11> 1 u 1,..11 a Mon1e Plln Im alWfl allt Oii di_.,_, 11¥ I El tor WllhchanL y_. lunda-llnrnedlllllJ IE 1' Ht Morris Plan Nowporf a. .. h -1700 Now)H>rf l l•d. -671·1100 \ • 1 . ' 1 J 'I 'j • ,, ' l· I ~, I -·· • '· ,. I f . I .. • ~*-_· -* ------""-. voi:. 61, ~0-218, l SECTldNS:-la'Pl':GES . . . ' -• ·--r--• ·' •• "4.::: NUclear Power Hearing~ .()pen o"; • In hearirigs estimated to tut 1t leul them twice the slf.e of the. uisUng atomic clean bill of heallh granted thus far 'io Uie ~at.er wtilch iUrges hick 'toto tbe RI hearings will be the. dt&rtt of r~ 'uwtt)T ipokmnen ay tblt a• Ieut five two days, the Public UtiliUes Commission plant on the eouta1 locatioa. uisting nuclear plant ·~ch uses cool sea · about a balf·mile sea.ward of the nuclear discharged by the nuclear reedin·into yurs ·are neeMd Wore tM;ftnt ol. the today began a~plir}g evidence in the The first 1e1aloo in tbe _bearings bqan water, ,Jhep Qtllll...P!_ it ·~t ~ ae~ J O reactor. the environment. two 11twnactan:--wciald-be-operatlonal. ~ci-~-~~?.':'!'.!'.:uw:ll:.u.-i•~t~1~1~a~.m~.-'ln:'..!San~c:Cl~em~en~te:._:cl:::t!.y~cowic=~il~· -:~===:-!.~~About~,OOO..gallona-pa:-minu~is""1&-~c0m~-throucb-an TbrseCond~-~~t.l'ttart--•• power -generaton at San Ollofre. Prelin\in4ry eetimates by ,.,.. llOUrces the geoenttiig pi-Ocess. . ed by the •san.Ollofre faci!llY: · ln1!1cale• ~ula, i.. llrtetly .-1f«M ofietalim a ,U.. after !be .nr1t a Amid local opposiUon which rallied have placed the length of the hearings at In the' past years of ·me of the San .The t~ new units p~ed ror a site tht«agh t p('Olram admlriistered tbrouP FfiWk::ing f~,tfte ~·"'8e J!O"M' over the weekend, the PUC' will bear two dafS, bur opposition to the ylans Qnolre plant, utensive· monitoring bu nearby wouJ~ ·inereale that -amol'.lnt af . lhe Ato~c ~ergy Cominlaskm. complts: wW coine..lrotJt a Britllb.buk.- testlmony on the application by the could eitend that tlrile. . · . tak~n place at rf«Ular ;int.erva1s. · discharge to an average of fW~ ·ti met; the IMarinp before that agency , :which bu Inc 1~cate. · N ~· tbe nq U.. Sauthern Califorrua Edison c.a~ and Thetmal paUutiao will bt ooe of aeveral TbWI far the San Dieg!l_ area ·Regional_..:..__!mowil currenUy_dilcil_a_raed atQUDd_tbe_the role_Gf..ultiJDafe_apProYaUw-nucltar--tJohl-WOWd..:be~bullt-on 13~aeres-tf ... twff.. Slifl Dl'lio Gariilir-E:Jednc company to nliior'-eowia'ilrlli<tleiitngs,·.00 Water .QUitifi'CiiiitiOf'Board hu. fotD!d clock. . ·plant!; 'Of1' expected to . tu. place top :1-eclljotolJI IOlltb ·it Ille• -- build twin nudear reactcn -eacb of utility speUen are expected to cite the no problems · with the warm u.haWlt · Other items of vast importance in the aomttime' early nut year. reader~ . . . . . . . . . ' . . . . . , ' ._ • • • J • •· • .ans on -oes 1· Ill ·Nixon Due Home From • rip DUBLIN (UP!) President Nizon flew home today, ending a 12,000-mile European odyssey with a prom.i.Se at the gravesit.1e bf his Irish forebears to atrive far "a full geDeration of peace" in ·I.he world. -' His topooat-still. damp from a 1udden doWnpour in the lush green meadows of County Kildare, Nmi.nuttede..fareweu-to New York-bora t ~--za..)~dl Valera..r.ltdi\id-inil~l'rim.-MlnJl!er Jack Lynch amfboaded far Wublqtoo aboard'bb jet liner; Air Foree One. Hi! Yisit to lttta,id marred ooly by weekend anti-Vietnam demonstrations in Dublnn, Nixon stressed throughout his nine-day tour the U.S. commitment to strength in the Mediterranean and renew· ed elfarts to arrange a neaotlated ·set- tlement of. the Arab-Israeli conflict. The President al.lo plans to addreu Americans sometime thiS week on new U.S. peace inltiaUves in Vietnam, which he discussed Sunday witb bb bargainlllc team at the Paris talb. On his way to a round of final con- ferences with Irish officials and a state luncheon at Dublin Castle before flylnc home the President motored '11 1milea past cheering. Oag-wavinc C1'0lfds 9Jld dedicated a memorial marker in a cow pasture at Timahoe that;contai:ns the re- mains Of his Quaker Milhous ancestors. "The greatest contributian I could make in affiCi! would be to bring peace to the world/' he told a chilled crowd of 400 persons. Noting that his mother, Hannah Milhous, was a pacifist, Nixon aaid his goal was to giv.e the world something It has Dot bad in this ce11tury -"a full generation of peace." He vowed to work for . peace, but aid the United States would not shirk its responsibility to itseU ar friendly nations. In Dublin, protesters broke through police cordons and spattered Nixon's limousine with three eggs as he drove to Dublin Casile for a state luncbf!on._ After a courle!y call on the 87-year-old Irish President, Nixon drove to the casUe to cordial waves from Dubliners, A heavy police guard had removed placard bearers well before the N'11.on motorcade arrived. Off Duty Cop Turns Robber NEW YORK (AP) -A tranitt patralman, hidden in a change booth at a Brooklyn 1ubway station; shot a holdup man today, only to discover the masked bandit was the patrolman he bad replaced an hour befare, police saJd. Patrolman Raymond Campbell was on duty in lhe token booth when a masked man stuck b1a gun through t.he window and demanded money. As lhe cashier, Mn. Dorothy McDonald, pushed the billl through, Campbell fired once, police~·d, hitlln& the gunman tn the a ... When took his nwk ltf, • Mt& Mc d recognir.ed him a1 patrolman Raymood Tbompooo, 29, who bad been wttb ber JU.t an boor before that. He w.,u still wearin& the blue unlform shirt he. wore on bi. I a.m. abllt. lie bad used his ~ -service revolver in the stickup. police 1tid. He wu taken to CumberJAod Hoopllal In aerlooa condlUon. " . . Cult Leader .. Tlttea-tens · . .. . . . ' . Front Wlr~ Services Chirlf:t-Manson lunged across, ·the council .table at. !M judge. in.Jhe Sharon · Tate murder trial today, scfemiln& "Someon~ shouia eut YiOW: head. off:" He wu pounced on by· a bailiff, wrest). ed to the door and half<inied from · court. · ' 1 1 ~· The-t,iny »;year-old defeodll)t Went · hortltng ao.'tb•, floor.Clh .fro!'f-ol-tile iud1e's.bencb .aod.lhad to k~\>dlled by lliree-<lejiutiea ·"""' led him ~ thji cOutlrOomw w;;il'• · · fwlilJ1r""•hiil Mriitr."\ • ~· m :~"t ·1· ~ &olper~CO\iil1!S'())ifet:. ,-.-..~ ..... It . . -'l'tfti:" billlle'WW War. ii; f.~1'\tiii tba ~bad Juilip.\! !n'ibi ~a. cil tbi iloi!Ch'aod orilmld tbal'lll<'-.1 .O~rbalfact. '· · : ·' • ' I ' • .. j Greaed 'Ughtin:g ion of •this ev-en~ it.·was ,diffiCuJt ·to tell Who· W~s. dirtier•-the pigS or·tbe ·kids. There wer~ lot of laughs and a teai o~ two; The outburst came •"-·MID"'!' .and ~ ~ '"°"!•f~ ."!tre,l"!' lntO court for_ tbe 1tart ~f a delayt!d mt)rllln& .......... AtlomeY.•. lllld .tb• . J~<W< . '!Ii 1Jvinl ,theJn1 another chance to behave fallqwlng ft\tir ejection twlc! 'tUt week fo'r olnilng IMOboullnl tn Cowt. Fun and games at third .annual Mis.sion Viejo'Days this past weekend included a traditional .greased pig chase.(A·potpourri\of civic organization.I) band· ed t9getber Jo 'atage the .fall frolic: At•the conclus· .The def~danta At .q~e~Y, for i .le" ..,,..,.is, then MllllOl1 shouted ·lnlltllb at the Judge and n111111 · himl<U ac:roa· !he table. B~'fr~,Ba;µU~.. Rock ldo-Jahls: .JopliJ1 ... Geu KowrDoor -··-· ·· · · · -· ·· · . . · · The three· girl codefendanb be~ charittiig'IOIDe phrilo about "killinc" aJid when they· refllled to iubstde they too. were taken from Ult. courtoom, , Slammed in Face Dies; Drugs Indicated , . · ManaOn-bld e~,thtroo~~ qUieUy and listened to the brief testimony of one minor wltneaa .when he suddenly erupted. "Are yot.i going to use this couitroom to kill me?" be auddenly demanded· of · A Jong-haired, bearded man wha at- . temptea '*°.rob a San Clemente mate! Saturday. night-only to. have the door slammed in h!s face--rnaY have been one of ii team-..that stuck up a finance compaity Thul'!day. Police-· said the suspect ln the at- tempted robbery of the Algodon Motel, 135 CaUe Algodon, closely fits the des- cription· ·of the team that took $50 from Household Finance Company two da)'s earlier. Motel owner· Lewis D. Einsel. said he answered· the doorbell at 1:07 a.m., only to find himHtf staring at a loog-barreled, 'cbro'"' pia!ol. . So be slammed the upper half of the dutch-door shut. Elnsel said he looked out and saw a man running for a 1961 Chevrolet, white, with one defective taillight and bearing out-of-a:tite license plates. , . Marine Nabbed On Kidnap, Rap A Camp Pendleton Marine who was-on leave is on leav~ Indefinitely today, u Kern Coml~autborille!: prepare a varie- ty lt'Cilarps =him In connedibn w1111a~ • "'\. Piii! A. V-, 19, wt11 captured followtU a blg.._.i cbaae by pottce tbal'-ondod. In .JIUenlield, when he waa flMtiy pulled over._ He was booked on charges of kidDap, armed rabbel y and grand theft of an auto u a i'esa!t of the weekenlll lncidenL IAwrenoe Schwendi~ 41, told Kem County Sberltf'• deputies le picked up a hltdJhlbr near Bakeraftetd Saturday, on- ly to f!nitJ>m.11-.,,,dowo lbe.barrel. 0£'a1uft.1 ' ' ••••• Ill• ' Ht Uld he WU lorced to drive •lilil miles north of the city, where he wa1 relieved of hll waDel and t!Cked oot ol -hi• car, which tbeo 1ped <ff down tb• hllbway. -From Wirt Servk:es Janis 'Joplin, tbe gravel· voiced rock blues alnger who ran away from Port Arthur, Texas 10 years ago and still kept on running, even after she overtook fame aJJd fortune , Is dead. The 27-year4d star of rockdom gave It all she. had, and in the end it was her life. "Maybe I wan't la.st as long as ether Singers," she once told an interviewer who asked if she wasn't afraid her hard drinking and mercilw driVing pace might cut her career short. "But I think·you can destroy,.)'OW' now by worrying about tomorrow. " .Say the H&ll with It. Stay stoned arxl have a good time." - Miu Joplin wu found dead in her l{ollywood apar_tment Sunday night by guitarilt John Cooke, of her recently formed Janis Joplin Full Tilt Boogie rock group. Judge Older. 1 Older told him to keep quiet or he would be removed. "The minute I see you are going to kill me, yOu know what J.'m going to do," Mitnson sakl. "What are yau going to do?" Older ask· ed ansrlly, staring down at the bearoed hippie cull leader. "Mr. Manson, Jim going to have )'OU removed U you do not· ll!Op," the judle aid. . 1 • "l'in going to have i)'OU'Jemoved if you · don't itop,~• Manson aald. "l have a little system of my own." - At tbal, ~ ipl'ang from bb,seat arid llteraUY dived a;croa the table toward the judie'1 bench. Laguna Trustees . . To Approve 14 . New lnstfUclors . An autopsy was ordered to determine the cause of death, estimated at 12 hours before, but Sgt. Ed Sanchez, of the' Hollywood Police Department, said 1he The Board of. Tru.t.ees ol the Laguna · had a long string of two to 14-day~ld Beach Unified School.~·wlll meet netdlemarks on her arm, covered by "'1 T......_ · Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. to apptove tbi Mr.,.o pancake makeup. FOUNO DEAD IN HOLL YV(OC!D Ing of If teechlng usblaob. No druga were fowid In the room were Sinter Janis Joplin,. 27 IAilW ·a..cti High; Sdlool:llu Ill\> the rUghtgown<:lad singer lay between , · mlt.ted the' namea1 of ' 10 people for ·•P-· the bed aJid dressing table. , . provll by'tbe•boatd ~'ptld·asllatanta IO "OnJy"tequlla, vOdk.t and wine," 11ld ' the replar,1thoo{ teacben. AlilO, Top.of one poltceman. , cr!tic once said Of her 1lnglhi. \ the World ml~ tcbootl arid ·tbe ' Miss Joplin lived in La.rbpur, near San ~ Joplin drank "southern ~' coi1tlnuiti0o tchool ~hive ·Hcb mtmktld Francl8co, but wu stayln( In Hollywood 1>y ibo qiiafl-arid.·fans md. bruig her tbe nariii «-iiotsiant 1or' -'!'111:-· white recording an album for Columbia bo\llos ·11 her c:Oocerts. ·• . At ti. li!l>I-n ,_Ing, !be. bsd ·.,. . Record Company wltb her new (lllUp. ''I llways uaed to pt ~ 111 slap p!1IVed "'"9dinc •••.IGO far !be leaclli>s · Friends almost unwillinfl to acct2!_ the _ .. L..... ........ 1~~ ",, t...i......Lreter tb' ,..._ .. ntanta...Tbe..wlltantl wm_worctroin.J d,.tb of the hlifi"iptrlted 1tnger WiiO ~··-;:•. ~ ' ·~ ' _Pw• ' • one t6 lltx -S per \!efand will be paid thrilled audlencea wttb her top hill aald said.· -T dtltt-'"'11-an hoartf wall! 'ol fnim '1iill to 'fi.llO Ill!' • Ille had aeemed bappy In recent t don '_l.l~get~i.ghjultonthe,-.t·' hcM'.lfaj>pmOdby_fllt'llOard,· • · '. -ks. She mado an etectrilytng ap-I !ltr• s~ m w~ tnOutneed by The•movt wu --by ao"- jif...nco when performing live wtlh her Negro. performers anil she Psted Ai the ' peeled ~ )I! .-• 'llhtcb • Jong hair cbakitijj ( lDllnhiblted moot lnflueitlal Olis ~abd.._ rtlUlled ·In over....-, 'In:-- movemenll, aJid her hU.ky shouting Smllh, · ' , cl ... -. • ' ' ' style of 1tngtn1. "!oil of tba time sbe She toJil an' ihlerVle!'W ooct· o( 'bir The ,,,..lhtg wljt be held tn t!"l u.<a- wore•no bra. .. attte.: "Jl's aO feettl!c! Wbell 1'11) U.... \Ion Cealer,al llO ~ ~~ &Cl'Olll ' •ishe tore the guts out of IOftCS," I 1'm.~tthlnklng."' 1• 1 ' -; r· rroi'n lf.a&una Beacb Blah ScboOJ. ' .. f • . ' PfQb~r~. rn M~i;e La: uiiil Beach . fg __ . .·. :. Medical Survey ., . . . ' ' , ... Appnixlmaltly 300 Lagunill11 wltl i be , contacted duri.g·tbo nm four -U by l!lembera of. the Orange C<!uJrty· Healtl) Survey Team during an"'intenaive· eettei of .re.sident : ·tnterview11 'throughout -the community. . . .. · ' · , TWe ~~: a~to·~.La~a ~ lo rHpc>!'''" ~ a. 9lly Council', J'equeit<lot a · coUnty bealth....facility :here, -ls.-1\. tempting · tO .aSeeu ·area · health Medi prier ta recommendin·1 Jpeeific aetviC!i. "fl1e ··1riterv'leW1 · will 1btlp the · teani tD!dmtAJld the views . <ii .. ml¥n!a ttg4rding Lapn,'1 needs for btaith fa·ciJitits," laid· anthropologirt · Nidia Rainey, in cborp of the Interview ar- r~iementll." · · 1 •'.We hope· to' talk ' to rtsidents of all ~eu af-,.,gtll'la. a.nd .the ~rillon of ~ ~munlty will . be greaUy ap- precia:led," the said. '"These lnterview1 at'.e ~tj~I to a,uceesslul completion of the IU(veY." ' · ' . Coaiacta-wll! be m•de· by-telephone and In perJOn durlnl the moo\b af October, Misa Ramzy·1ald. 1 , T!lt healtb team, funded by federal and county gt1nts, ""1 t"'iludtnc psychlatr!s.~, IOC.lal won.ri. nurses, 'apthropOli~ aild interYl¢wer1, w-as as.sl;ned to asseu Llguna'• health ~problems lihd mlkYa recommendation re' 1 a r d t n·I fadHtlea needed In the. Conidiuhit)', (ono,rtni a re- queal, made tut 1p~..by !be City Colill- clJ. · · · • . ..... ... " Biue MooU1 witL ·-~ , Tuesday wltb low clouds and I drlale jp, !l!e allil!I,. alnklng tbo _ hip t.mperat.ure to 17 locally aJid . ' down to 74 flu1her .Jolaod. • ~ ( . . • -Eases; 'foll_ . H-.. Reaches 13 ·. l ' f..oordinator Bid Up · for Approval By"7Capo 'ltuStees A teacher who can cooniinate apeclal Jll!Oirawt for Maica11 American children Ill' Ille Caputrano 'Unified Schc!>I Diltricl will be up for 1pprovatat tonight'• 8 p.m. meeting of the board ti. trustees at Serra School. A request for such a pe~son was made 1t the last meeting by Manny Puentes, chairman of the Committee for Bicultural Education. \Puentes empbaslzed the need for some-cfte wo could utiliu all the sources avaUable in the community, both volun- tlry and school affiliated , to implement pnigrams for youngsters with educational deficiencies ctused . by cultural dif- ferences. He said ~re might be 700 or IOO students in thi! category. Also on the agenda will be the modifica~ of the Meals for the Needy program, whidl will provide for full state reimbursement to the diatritt for money 1i:-ent for these meals. The program caused concern in the neighboring San Joaquin Elementary School District recently because the fun- ding was accompanied by a serie3 of in- s~ctio~ for lmpletnenting the program, which if not done would forfeit all eovernmmt &Upport of the school lunch program. Trust~ also will be asked lo consider enlarging the self·lmpo6ed scheduling program at San Clemente High School to include sophomores as well as juniors and seniors. DAILY PILOT N...,.., .._. H ...... 1• .._. --· -··-c... M.. S. Cl1•11fa OIUNGE C~T l"U&lllHING COMl"ANY l•\•rt N. w,.~ ,.,..ldtnl •M l"UbllUlolr J•ck It. Cui'l•V Vite l"r•lewlt tnd C.-tl M11119er T1'll1t1•1 K•••if (dllor T1'l•tt1t1 >.: M1i1rphi111 M-tl!IO ld!TV ll:ich1r4 P. Nill SOulfl °''"" c..unty E:dllOr -Cotti M-: UO W•I llt'r Srtilll Nt\111*1 lfftto: nu w.1 ..... aeu11¥t!C i...OV111 &tKtt! m ,._, "'"""" MUlllJfllltfl l•dl:, 11111 1-.:fl ... IMl'C ltl'I C.._l'I: l05 HIM'lfl ll Clmlnt a .. 1 DAil Y l"ILOT, 'Wll!I l'Nclt It. ~ lfll ~ ......... ....., ..... llY ~ £-. Pr Ill *'PfffM edit ... ttr lftuN ... "'-,,........, ltKll, C.1'1 MIM. Hiilltlll'llWI a..c.11 .,,. f'-lflft Yt...,., ftefll Wllfl twl n•..,..I •llllN. Of'.,.. a.u l"U&li.111111 C8milltlll' """"" "'""' ... ,, 1211 w.t' ........... ,.,...., NI~~ ttld Jil Wiit .. , """'· CO.If M9f. , •••••••• ,,,., '41-4121 Ct111IW Mc••• '42·1671 ... Cl ,, All hfi•l•iMtll , .......... ,,....2. c...,,ltM, 111' ~ CM.I l"Uelltfllfll ~. ... -,..,.... l!Mtrl ttlm. •1twt11 -"" ., ~-·ti """' ""' .. ,~ wttlllUt •11*'-1 ...... flfl ..... et~"'*'· ...... ~ ...... Jfkl It N""'"" lffdl .,_. C•l'I ,.._, Cetlf9mlt. lllCllC~ '°f u""' v.u ~"'i w-1112.n,..,.,.1y, flfllll .. ,., .......... u.u "'*' .. ,.,, • • - Varied Meetings Set This Week In Laguna Beach Civic - minded Lagunans may choose from a varied menu of public meetings this week, on topics ranging from dogs to underground utilities : -At 7:30 tonight, the Planning Com- mission discusses tennis, signs and other matters. -Tuesday ievening at 7:30 the regular school board meeting will find ttustees approving a roster of teacher aides to help ease classroom crowding probJems. -Also on Tuesday, at a p.m., the Laguna Beach Dog Owner& Auociation will bold a public meeting in the high school cafeteria to ponder its ne1t move in the dog ordinance referendum matter. -Wednesday'• 7o30 p.m. City CoUncll meeting bas an Imposing 32-ltem agenda weigbihg. with supporting documents, ap- proximately 2111 ~ds. -On Thursday at 7:30 p.m., residents of the Emerald Terrace arell have been• invited to gather ln city ball to discuss proposed undergroundiD& of uUlltlea 10. their nel&hborhood. • -· A resolu tion introduced in the State Legislature commending Ficker for being the first West Coast yachtsman to defenc:I. the Cup was read by O'Bryon. A reolut!Oh by the Orange County Board of Supervisors was rtatf by John Killeftr, executive assistant to the chairman of the board; Jack Barnett, executive manager of the Newport Belclt Qi.amber of Commerce, of -whlch P'lc:R:r Is 1 dirtctor, presented him with a framed membership card. Tom Keevll, editor or the DAILY PILOT, pr;esented Ficker with plaque replica of what he facetiously referred to as "Page One of the paper's first SUndly edition. 1 I Youth Souglit ' Visitor Asks Wrong Person ' On Assault Rap A yoon1 Marine who ollegedly !rle<J to throw his peUt.e wife off tht San Clemente Munielpal Pier In • dliput.e over a mill- tuy allotm"'I checl< Is beinl sougbl by pcillct today. TM victim -who suffered severe hatld cut.a during the Friday ni&ht fracas -said be wu only rtatraintd from atv. _ingl>er !be de<p 11' by 1 pe1r of Muinl budditl. Investi&1tors were told the man con- franted hlA wife while she was walk.Ing on the pier slPPinl eoda from • &Ian which 1ho!\trtd durlnl !ht •tnJuJe, re- IUltinl In her CUL!. Sht Hid ahe wu 1ble to brt•k frtt. only to be 1ss1ult.ed again, and finally ran to tbt home of !riends livin& near tie octanlront bowl. 'J'he.y called police and the vlcUm gave her account of tM a111ult. A young visitor from Hawaii who made the mistake of asking a Laguna Beach undercover officer to buy him a bottle of wine Friday night found himself under arrest on charges of contributing to the delinquency of 1 minor and soliciting alms. James Warren Elam Jr .. t9, and his companion, a 16-ye1N1ld Riverside girt, were stopped ror questlonln& 1t midni&ht Frtdoy on South-Coast Jllgbway near Mountain Road when oflcera noted the girl appeared to be tmder the lnfluence of drup. DuritlJ. the convenation, Elam sua· l"tod tlie olllcer might like to buy them a bottle of wine, which, police llld, coo. stltu tes aollcllaUOfl of alms . The 11rl wu booked for curfew viola· lion a.nd possession of n a r c o t I c 1 paraphernalia when a marljuan1 pipe .,., round In her purse . -·-·- • • • CJ~ss{}s _. ~Jlegin Among the studenll attending ope.nine numbers of people on campu5 wu mort day classes were 2,100 new student.s, obvious than in prevJcius ye.an. eitherlreshmen·oMrlM~rs. --t..ut...yw,....UCLenr.olled...5,000 atudent.a_ About 850 graduate and 575 medical of wh1cb 3,600 wert undergraduates. student! have enrolled this year, a ConUnuin& R-1:.QbJe.ma _tl-1be &ro!'ftnl_ spokesman &aid. Exac' e n r-o 11 m e n t camp~ .M.t th!_ shortage of 1tudti:nt hoUa.. figures will not be rea~y for another 10 ing, parking and the lack of nearby abops days, due to the annua~ confusion of and services. registration. Solution to ., least one or the problems An observer who has viewed the may be the increased use of bicycle:a. An previous five openln1 days of cla!set observer noted there were more bicycles noted this year that increased traffic and on campus this year· than ever biefore. Consider Proposals -Laguna Com'!1issione-rs To Check Tennis Courf,S by Harry Howard, deferred lrom the last Planning Commission mettina when action was blocked by ·a 2--2 vote, may run into the same problem tonight. · Commissioner Thomas Johnston, whose absence caused the previous deadlock, still has not returned to Laguna, ac- cording to the city planning department. The commissioners split in their views as to the num ber of lots that shoul d be permitted in the small subdivision. Lagunan Treated For Spiked .LSD EST ION ..,., ... ,, I &II ... ilt>lr:•!lll ........ -,.. ..... l I II Qloll 11 -l'l' Pit'-. pilit llf =·=~=-5 •: kial. ,. .., dlllr lnl11111Kloa PlldClalllJmlMIUnLP IU.11 ...... .,_, __ d _"pw---lli Jill~ to d9y •at LI 1 WI c~ r i•1 *C•-Jet· quwlltt):. Plus 54 v .... ol Sou11d 11•21(111 •d A illll_,,d ___ ..,,d1111o a portect r9COld ot .... _Ill,.,. Is, -• excea of $150 -.1nc1 .. JA• llN ~cl ._ ..... -. llcciatineD zrrz.-dJCM•• Morris .Plan Newport S.uh -1700 N1wporl ll•d. -61l·l700 = ·=== • . . ., I " I ,, j .. ( • 1 . , 7 I I r I I , I r I 7 ·~--r··-----·-·~ --,.----• •• • ---- In hearings e!timated to Jut at lust two days, tile Publlc UWities Qnnmission today began acctpting evidence in the pnijj0ieilli'f-iiillll0i1npam10ii Of nuclear power generators at San Onofre. Amid local opposilion which rallied over the weekend, the PUC · will bear testii:Dony oo the application by the Southern C.Ittornia EdllOn Company and San Diego Gas and Electric Company to build twin nuclear reactors -eacb of Nixon Due Home From Long Trip \ DUBLIN (UPI) -P,...idenl Nlaon new home today, ending • 12,oOO.In.ile European odyssey with a promise at the gravesite of his Irish forebears to str.iv1 for "a full generation of peace" in the world. His topcoat 1Ull damp from a sudden downpour in the lu.,,11 green meadows of County Kildare, N'ixon ·bade iarewell to New. Yorf.liOni.-p,.,.idenl Eamon_de Valero of Ireland and J'rimO' M1ni11nr Jack Lynch and beaded for Wuhlqloo ·aboard hi> jet liner, Air ForCe One. His vlsll ta Ireland marred only by weekend anU·Vietnam demon!trations in Dublnn, Ni1on atressed throughout hil nine-day tour the U.S. commitment to atrength in lhe Mediterranean and renew· ed effort.I to arrange a negotiated tet- tlement Of the Arab-Israeli confllct. The President also plans to address Americans sometime this week on new U.S. peace initiatives in Vietnam, which be discussed Sunday wiilt bis bargaining team at the Paris talks. On hia way to a round of final con-- ferencea with Irish officials and a slate luncheon at Dublin Castle before flying home the President motored rr miles past cheering, Oag-waving aowds and dedicated a memorial mark.er in a co" pasture at Timahoe that containJ the re- mains of hls Quaker Mi.Jhou!I ancestors. · "Tbe greatest contribution I could make in office would be to bring peace to the world," he told a chilled crowd of 400 persons. Noting that his mother, Hannah Milhous, was a pacifist, NiJ:on said 11is goal was to give the world aomething it has not had in this · centw'y -"• full generation or peace." . He vowed to work for peace, but said the United States would not shirk its resporWbility to itsell or friendly nations. In Dublin, protesters broke through police cordons aod spattered Nixon'• limousine with three eggs as he drove to Dublin Castle for a state luncheon. Aller a courtesy call on the 17·Y~!ll' .. ld Irish President, N1Ioo drove to the cutle to cordial waves from Dubliners. A heavy police guard hid remored ~ bearers well before, the Niloii. niotorcide arrived. Off Dut y Cop Turns Robber NEW YORK (AP) -A transit patrolman, hidden in a change booth at a Brooklyn subway station, shot a holdup man today, only to disCQYer the muked bandtt will the patrolman he had repla~ an bout before, police said. Patrolman Raymond C.mpbell was on duty in the token booth when a masked man stuck bia gun through the window and demanded money. M the cashier, Mn.· Dorothy McDonald, pushed the billl lhroll&h. Compbell fired once, police said, hitting the 1UJU1W1 In lhe 1bdome. .. When Utey tool< hi> mask oil, Mis-:olclJiiililij ~ hfill .. patrolman Raymond Tbompooo, 11, wbo had been with flor just an hour be"fore thaL He was 1Wl wearing tht blue uniform ihirt he wore on bis I a.m. ahUt. He bad used his service i:evolv>r In Iha .Uckup, police said. He wu taken to Cumberland HOl(>l!al In Mrioul condition. I , • • ( ; . 1 ' ' water wblcb surges back ihto tbe . sea bearinl• •W be the decree of radial.ion UWity spokesmen uy that at ieut: five about I balf·ziiile seaward ·of the nuclear diJcharaed by •the nuclt:ar reacted into years" art needed before the" first of. the them twice the size Of the exiltlng atomic plant on the IXIUlal loe&llcin. · The lint aessioo In the beatlnll• began at-l11~Dt.-in-Sall-'Glemea&e city COWlCil cbamberi: . clean bill of bea!Ut grllnled illus far to the existing nuclear platlt which uses cool sea water, lhen pumps it out to sea 10 degreesJiotterJller_lheJ>rinLiLiued "' condense the steam back into water for reactor. lhe einlromnent. two new rt;aeton ·wouhi ·be oper1UonaJ. About 350,poopuons per tnlirnteili-.11>"~-'l'lielljiCliifr,tOfilpuled-llltOiJih-an-Tllrsecood~t-rp11m11•i-1n>'-· .... ..---11 ed by Ute 0 San 'Onofre facilil)<.. lnlrtcaln fonnula, la· llr.lctly """"tored _.Uon a,.., alter the llist ooi. Preliminary estimates by :soine sources have placed the length of the hearings at ' two days, but oppoa:ition to. the plans could extau1 that lime. 1'1e?'IJ1.•! pollutiop. 1'il,l be one of sev~ral major issues covered in the hearings, and utility 1pukera are upected to die Ute the geDe(ating -· In the past years of use of the San Onofre plant, extensive monitoring 'bu taken place at regular intervals. Thus far the San Diego· area Regional · Wa~ Qualify Control ' Board has found no problems with the warm ezhaust oes >.•·· ... -.. ,•1·,101" Gr,eued Light,it,tg ' · ' , The two new unit. propooed f°' a site thro\lgh • pnigl'am iidmlnlaleted lhrouib Finallclng fer, Ute p<O(JCllO!l llllge' Po- nearby woUld 'lncnue that amoU,it of. the Atomic ~ .~mmlssion. ~ compJez will come from· 1 Britilh billlto dlscharge to an average.of fhie'tim~ the Hearinp before:'tbat .1gency, which bu 1nC ayndicate.:As propetled;tbe new a. aplOW1t cumnUy discharged arouna the lhe ni1e "of ultimate approval for nuclear tiom "ouJd be built on &1 acre. of bhJff. clock. . plant.. "f' ·e<peeled to · take ,,iace top · immedlatdy '°"Ut ol· Ute ,,..,.,1 Other !~ms of v.~st impcrtance in the '°?t~tµne ~ly neit year. . reactor. . , · .. , ·-~•1L.Y ;1l,o'r·,,.._,.,,11~-11r ' .. ., . . . . • I ·ll ........ our CuliLeader Threatens . From Wln .Service• Charles Manson lunged a.cross, , tbe council t4ble at the judge' la the Sharon Tate murder trial today~ screamlq: ~·Someone should cutpyour head off.'L: He WU pounced on by • bailiff, wreatJ.. ed to the floor and half~arried from court. . , 'lbe tiny -M-year-old ,defendal)t 1(ent . hurtling on-the floor· in . froat of 'the · judge's bench, and had lo be subdued ·by thre•ulepuUt•. wbo ~led.. biDL!nJlL.the ~'11"1 .'!.' ~ ~-~ ~~==-~~·P. :Sufl'Qor Court Judgo Qlarlel,11, Ol!lerl an crtc1uJ m11111ber pf1!1W·Flym~· bfto·'IYOr!d w.~,_iioit . tht dal~ hacl Junjpe( iii tht, ' ' . ' o('lht -h and ~nlerecl IJ!at""'. reOll'd IO'riGecl that fact .' ' · • , :'!be outburst· ~.t. ·•fter' M°IDSM · ~ three ~ co.defenduitl were led ID.to court for the start of a delayed morn!q •f I I ': j ' • '"I Pi:vlfer8 ro Malle ·~and games at · third ·l!Dnual Mission Vie)ol>ays this .pasl weekend intluded a.:.trat\iUbnal .greued pig chase. A potpoµrfl 'lof civic organlzations band· ed together .to stag' the fall frolic. At the conclus· ion of ' this event: ft wAS '41Hicult ·to tell ' who w~s dirtier. -the pigJ or .th'e :ltids. There were a lot· of laughs and a tear of·two. '. : · : · ,...Ion; Attorneys 11.!id the jµlfia , "" glvinr • lhsn ~ ch\QIC~ tq beha~e followlnll <Jielr .e)ectlon twice. la.I w<elr: for slngtq and shouting In. court. , ·The defendanta .ut;quietly for a fnr Lagif:na · Be~h M~dkal Surv~j-. · ApprOximitel)' SCIO La~ns ~J cOnt.cted ciuttng' Ute nm rour wee ' ·by members of the Or~ge County . tll SUrVey:Team. '4ui'iDf '° int~ve teriel of. ·recfdtnt · iltetvlews thrb.Ughout the ' ' . ' •> seconds, then Man~ 1hou\ed. iml!111 . at the judge and Ouni himlelf acrosa tbe table. ·~e~~~~r· ~~?i~~--~~9~!c_I@l Jaµis -Jo}>~.,··,: The three 11rL codefen<lants .i>!«ID cbabtinJll,IOIDe phrue about "klllln&"~ when !liey refused lo subllde Ibey loo community. · .. · · 'The:ie!m. :wilned=td the Lfiuha area / --~ res~ to a Ci,ty . Councll request for GetsMote Door ·. '" ·:.-·, .. ._ .. · ... Slammed in Face Dies; Drugs ln,dicated A Jong-haired, bearded man who at- tempted to rob a ~ Clemente motel Satw$y. night-only to h11ve the door slarfuned in his f8ce-may have been one of, a' team' th&t stuck up a finance company Thursday. Police said the sw:pect in the at- tempted robbery of the A1godon Motel, l3S Calle AJgodoo, closely fits the des- cription of the team that...took SSO from Household Finance Company two days earlier. Motel owner Lewia De Eln!er aald he answered the.' doorbell .at 1:07 a.m., only to find bimseH ltaring at a long-barreled, chrome .JiiatoI: · 5o he· slammed the upper half of the - dutch-door shut. . Einsel said be looked out and saw a man. l'.\UloinlJor a 1961 Chevrolet. white, wiilt ooe defective llUligbt and bearlnll out~f-state ·ueen..e plates. Marine Nabbed O~ Kidnap, Rap . A Camp Pendleton Marine who w•s on le.ave is on leave indefil'iltely today, as Kem County authoriliea prepare a varie-- ty of cbarga apinll him In COOlleCllon wlilta~ 1'v). Paul A. V-, ll, WU ClOplured folloirlbg a 'biglHpeed d)ue by J>OllDI that ended iin RUenfield, when be wls finally pulled over. He WU booked on charg~ ot kidnap, Wiiied rol;lll<ry and rrand. U\efl of ID auln u. reault of the weekend·Incldent.· Llwreooe Scbweodiman, 41, told Kern Coanty Sllerllf's deputies be picked up a hltcbbiker near Bakerafi<ld Saturday, on-ly to find blmaell IOolllng down Ute barrel of a gun . He said be was forced to drive tight miles north of I.he city, 'ft'here he w11 relfeved ol bla. wallet ond kicked out of his car, which· Uten •(led olf down Ute hlrfiway, From Wire Sttvlce1 Janis Joplin, the gr~vel -voiced rock blues singer who ran away from Port Arthur, Texas 10 years ago and still kept on ruMing, eVen after she overtook fame and fortune, ii dead. The 27-year~ld star of rockdom gave it all she had, and in the end it was her life. "Maybe I won't .last as long as other singers," she once told an interviewer who asked if she wasn'l afraid her bard drinking and merciless driving pace mfgbt cut ber career sbOrt. "But I think you _can destroy your now by worrying about tomorrow .•. Say the Hell wlilt tt. Slly slorled and have a good time." Miss Joplin was found dead ln her Hollywood apartment Sunday nigbt by guitarist John Cooke, of her recently formed Jania Joplin Full Tilt Boogie rock group. A'h autopsy was ordered to determine . the cause of death, estimated at 12 hours before, but Sgt. · Ed Sanchez, of the Hollywood ~olice Department, aaid she had a long string of two to -l4-day-0ld needlemarks on her arm, covered by pancake makeup. No drugs were found in the room were the nigbtgowtKlad singer lay between the bed and drusing !Ible. • ' Vl'IT ......... FOUND DI AD IN HO~L'.'l'WoOD Sint•r Jani< J~lil; 27 "Onl[i Iequ!la, vodka and wine," 11id ' critic once aaJa o( ber singing. ooe po iceman. Mi5I Joplin drank "10Ut.bem.cotnfOrt11 Miss Joplln lived in Larkspur, nesr San , . Franci!c<>, but was staying In Hollywood by the quart and fans woold bring ber while recording an album for Columbia botUes at her coocttta. a-ti O>mpany wlilt ber new group. "I always med to gel drd Cl! atiC4 • dea~ ~g~~ "',;"~pt ,.1l::; b now 1«m1 Med ·~·· ll*,.M1a, · thrilled ·-wiUt ber 1op hits ,ukL "SOlilOllJlles I drink ~-.. she had seemed haP)IY In I I clon;l ) cu g<t bfgh just '\" Jl)e 'I"'*:° weeks. She made an eledrHying a~ Her singing '".,: heavily lnOUeooed .bj , pearance when performinl llVe with he:r NelfO per(or1n1t1 and JIM!: li11ed "}the long hair shaking her unlnh!bllt<I-most ilrll...,u.I 'Olla lteildlnc add - mov.ementl, and her husky;. thoutlog Stnith.. , ' · 1tyla of sln(Jng. Most of Ille lime 1be She 1old on lnlervlewtr once .of:har wore no bra. style: "!l's oil feal!nr. Wben:l'm aiDglnf . "She tore the pta out of IOllP," I , I'm not think.inc.'' •; _, ., . •• + • ·~ f • , were ll~n from· !be ~· , · ' . ' ManlMMl had entered .the room qhleUy . and listened to the brief testimony of one minof wib)ess wben he ~ddefl!y erupted. "Are: you going to \lie this courtroom to kill me?" be suddenly demanded of Jt.idge OHier. · Older told him to keep quiet or he would be ·removed. ''The minute. I ~ you are going to kill me, you know what I'm gotng ·to ·do," Man.son said. ' "Whit are you &aing to do?" .Older ask-ed angrqy, tlarlng down at the bearded hippie c:Wt leader. . . "Mr. Manson, I'm goln1 to have you . re.moved .U ynu do nOt llOp," the jucfca uid. . . "I'm ,goJ.ng. to havt'you remov~ lf }'OU 'don't 1top," Minion Aid. "l bate 1 llttle 1Ystem of my oWn." ~·. . .• Al iltl~ MIDIOO SP'&ng from bia• Hit ond Ut<!rilly' dived 1C.... the llbla toward lbi!·judge's bench. · Lag0p~. ~ms~~· To Approve 14 · New .Instructors · ' ' 1 -- •. copn,lY he~th . f4ciµ~y .. ~ere; iJ at-. .tempting · io-assess . area healtti needs F,i<>r to. r~mm~ing •~Ifie servl~ .. "The intervl~Wl-will .help . the team upderstand. the · vleWs . of· resi;e'nts r~gardiin1· Laeu.na's needs . for . ,health facilities," said anthropologist Nadia Ramzy, -ln ,charge .of the, lnterviewi"ar· rangemtni.!. ", · "'We· hope tO talk io residents of all areas of .L;aguna and· the cooperation of the community will be .greaUy ap. predated," ·lhe said. "These interviews are ~li•l .to· SU!:cessful completion of the survey." · Contacts w_lll be ma'dt by telephone and ln persoil dw-ing the· month of October, Miss Ramzy aaJd; 1be btaltll tum, funded by federal and cowitY ·gae11 and includt\li psycbiatriJts, IOCial. wr_~. nurse.11, anthropoligista and .!D~ewl:rs. ·was assi'9e9 to.a~ ~i, btaltb'. r>{o.blem.11 and mate a recommenda(kin 'r f. l .•1 di ri'g ficililies needed in ~ eoo:ununily, foD~inc a re- queat mode ~ IPl'inr<bY lhi City CouJ>. ciL_ ' 0r .. ,.. lt'e•fl!er' · Blue Mondoy will extend Into Tuaday with 'low clouds and ' • drlDl•·ln the offing, sinking the hip le'lnper•tµre to 17 locally and down ~ 11 · l.nber Inland. ..INSmE TODAY' Afttr amrina ~trtl J)re.ri<U-nt rinco FDR. th• presidential ·wcJJu -now called Tricia and Julit -art aip for aclt. Stt · Boatin~, PaQi :IO. . ' . ... -... . -~ t ...,.,. M • """u..r. , .. ''""""' ~ . ,...,... ,, ""9dllllt U• 1 ......._. ..... "" ,.....,... ........ c...., .~ 'CMM& ........ • ,, ... ' (~ '""" ...... 1•1• DMlll """" ........... ,, ' ·'*"" • ""'"""" ~ ,, ' 1"""9t ,... ' ......... • I - ........... IJ .._.,,,...,, .... r •.-.-N!.!t...._.!'ftl .. ,._ ..w....:.. ~-- ' '. ' • • • ..J OAll.Y PILOT Fire Threat . • Olftlnly-10(, ......... and hight< tJmnidity crept. 1eroM"1ire«llftd..arw M California over the weekend as (_ittmeo declared the last in a tw1>week aerm ol. blues conl.ained. The death toll, meanwhile, rose to lS for ·the disaster perkld with the discovery al' tlµ'ee charred bodies during mopup o~rations in San Diego County's Mount Laguna fire. ~ Porooer•r depuUes attempting to iden- --Vfy-tlletemalns found neartbe mm· tpWUty of Jamul tbeoriled they we.rt Mexican nationals sneaking into the Vnited States . . ,,,ey W«e aj>parenUy c1ught In dle 8.000 a~e fire -largest in California liijtory-some time before it was finally ~tained Friday. -Authorities surveyin1 the destruction ~m Monterey to San Diego predicted It will hit Pefhaps $180 million, with more thltn 1,000 structures destroyed. ·A~ cold coastal fog over the weekend was a-edited with helping firemen finally contain a stubborn timber fire northwest af San Simeon that damaged erdwood.s and threatened famed Hearst Castle. The flamet blackened 44,000 acres of b:le Padres National Forett before being Nbdued by firemen. ;0ne Northern California blaze swept through a stand of giant redwoods so an- cient that they were growing before Christ was born, but damage was &llght brcan• they are fir&re:sistant. , Hot lf>Ob still filttd up today in the 1'allba c.nyoo oreu of Los Angeles Q>unty ,. while weary firefighters con· t{oued efforts to erlingulsb '!he Lytle ~k blase in San Bernardino County. ~Elnce virtually under control, Santa Ana winds whipped: it up •Jain Wt Tburs- doyrlng~'t •of amob boiling over ,..__,Ille"'_' anae --anatiiiCiiiilfili.-totil I ' !1"44,000 acres inland. Troubles faced by fire officials went beyond Dames and weather condJtions t'f.::f the weekend when 1tate firemen oLa_1trike. ~ _ 'Thw-pay 'Ind mlstrable working con· diUom were cited. Coordinator Bid ..____ lJp _for ApprDval By· Capo T-rustees A teacher who can co<a'dinate .pecW J:(Jlir'&a for 'MQican AmedCMl ch~ !JMthe Capistrano Unified School Distritt ~ be up for approval at to~gbt's a p.m. meeting of. the board or trustees at Sein S<:hool. ·.A request for such a person was made at the last meeting by Manny Pue¢es, chalrmlTl of the Committee for Bicultural Edac:ation. -Puentes emphasized the need for some- one lli'O could utilize all the sources ·~~lable in the community, both volun· UfY abd school affiliated, to implement pq:igram:> for youngsters with educaUonal d"k:iencies caused by cultural dif- feren~s. He said there might be 700 or Q stwdents in this category. .Also on the agenda will be the modiDcat.ion of the Meals for the Needy program, which will provide for full st.ate. reimbursement to the d.15trict for money s~nt for these meals. The progrrim ciused concern in the neighboring San Joaquin Elementary School District recently because the fun- ding was accompanied by a series of in- structions for implementing the program, which if not done would . forfeit all 1ovemment support of the school lunch program. Trustees also will be asked to consider enlarging the 11elf-imposed scheduling program at San Clemente High School to include sophomores 1s well as juniors and seniors. DAILY PILOT OlftAHGI COAST 'UlllSHIHG COM,AHY R•~•rt N. Weff 'r•ldMI 11111 l"ublt1her · Jacli: R. Curley Vlc:e ,rtiMtnt •114 Gw.artl Ml,,lftr n.-1• K11¥il E•llor Tiio"''' A. Mur,hi,.. MllMtl!w IEdllor Rich1r4 P. Nill kl/If! °''"" C-ty ldl!G• . .,_ W it M .. : »0 Wt1I 11¥ ltfttl Htwl*'t l iM<:lll tl11 W•t l•IMI la..tl•~•'' ~tllfl• 1fltfl: m "-' ,.,,,_ """'""'"" llMCll! 1"7) ... (It lel,ll1M11'11 $9i!l•CflmM .. : ,»I Mlrtfl. II ClmlM II.Ml OAll'f ~IL.OT, Wllll 'Miid! II _,.Jllef..,. N-4',..._ " ....,.., •ltJ .-c.i 111!'-•t't .,, ..,. ... It tlllltlllrle fW ~ lt9<.ll. .. ....,,., -..ctl. eo... ~ ,..., Hurttlftlllll •eedl .... ,_.Ill Y1"'9y, l""t Wltfl - '" .... ' ~ Or11111 c.et l'Wlllll\ftf C""'91n1 CWlllttril piltlt. lrt 11 221 I WM! ltlttiM tM., N-1 llldli. .... U1 W•I .. ., '"·'· c.11 Mflll. f...,. .•• 1714) &Uo4JJ1 c ........ ~ .. '4J.U71 S. Ci& i II A• D.,al ..... 1 'f••······ '4f2-44lt ~ ,,.,., Or~fltllrll ~-HI -""""' llll.lltfttl1111, .....-S.I "'°'""' 1t Id~ Mtll!t _., .. ,,,,....,.,. """""" tHtlil ,.,. "*-""' " .,,,.,~ -. :::r&.~~C."l:1ir:::r:.t~~· ~ •ll """"9'tly1 -,1J1t1t1t.1J-lflly1 ~,. .. ,...,a,at,._.,.,.,_ · . • • . ' ly l'hll ,.,.,, ...... Cla·sses Begin 6,000 Students Troop Back toCampus • • ·I C1uaes be1an ~ at UC lrvlrie with more than 1,000 atudentl and 450 faculty -on-Campus.--· -· Among the students attending opening day classes were 2,100 new students, e.itber freshmen..or_tra.n.\fers.. About 850 graduate and 575 medica1 e:tudent_s have enrolled Ws year,· a :ipo~esrnan said. Exact e n r o 11 m e n t figures will not be ready •for aniilher 10 days, due to the annual confusion or registration. numbers of people on campus wu more obvious than in previous years. 1 W ~~CI enrolled 5,000 stlldenL& o( which 3,600 we.re urulergraduates. · ''Well, If .You're Sick of.the Vlaw •nd I'm Sick of the Vltw, There's Nothing Ltft To Do But Get Divorced.'' ' Newport Gives Bill Ficker Hero's Welcome in 'Day' Tw~ buildinJ: comple1es nearing com- pftlion-thls week-were partly-opened for classes today but. construction apparatus provided a marked COJ1lrast to the neatly trimmed landscaping around o Ider buildings on the six-year old campus. The ninwtory engineering building will house the school of engineering, the new department of social ecology, the educa- tional opportunity program, and audio visual services. The four-story computer scienceJ building houses the department o( in- formation, the graduate school of ad- ministration ana the public policy research unit as well u the UCI com· puter facility. Elevators in the nine-story engineering • tower have yet to be installed, delaying use of classrooms on the upper floors, .a spokesman said. The two-building complex cost $6 .2 million and was financed by a 1966 bond issue and . matching De.partm~nt o( Health, Education and Welfare funds. Among features the $3 million fine arts village offe rs the university are a 425- seat studio theatre, a 240.~at concert hall, an experimental drama laboratory. art and scuJpture studios workshops and gallerif:l! and music rehearsal faciliUes. Portions of that nine-building arts center have yet to be completed although seats in most lecture facilities were in- stalled over the weekend. An observer who hu viewed the previous five opening days or classes noted this year that increased traffic and Continuing ~roblem.s at lhe growin1 campus are the shortage Of student holl&- ing, parking and the lack or nearby &hops and servires. Solution to at least one of the problems may be the increased we of bicycles. An observer noted there weft more bicycles on campUJ this year than ever'be.for.. Consider Proposals Laguna-Commi.ssioners To Check Tennis Courts ORIGINAL -HTK Planning Ad vance . Laguna Beach planning commission· ers tonight will examine a report of the Art Colony's tennis court shortage and consider proposals made by the Laguna Beach Tennis Association in a report presented to the City Council last month. The association made three sugges· Uons for improving the tennis outlook: -Creation of a tennis and recreation center on Irvine Bowl property. -Development, with the cooperation <>( the Irvine Company. of an elongated by Harry Howard, deferred from the last Planning Commission meeting when action was blocked by a 2--2 vote, may run into the same problem tonight. Commissioner Thomas Johnston, whose absence caused the previous deadfuck, still has not returned to Laguna,' ac- cording In the city planning department. The commissioners split in their views as to the number of lilts that should be permitted in the small subdivision. . B d H iJ greenbelt beside Laguna Canyon Road, By ALMON LOCKABEY Pavilion Queen excursion boat which was fOa way 8 S where meadows would provide flatland Laguiian Treated For Spiked IBD DAILY '•L.oT ... """ MO., -jam-packed l!itb civic and yacbtln& of· for additional courts. Bill Ficker, the first W~st Coast skip-ficiala:. -s· ' w d -Expansion of aisling facilities, in per to defend the America's Cup, in. Behind the Pavilion Queen came tate S · Oll erS -cooperation with the scbooJ' district. ternationaJ yachting's most hallowed Columbia unde r tow with hundreds of Also on tonight's agenda is the first prize, came home Sunday to a hero's pleasure craft bringing up the rear and A U-day celebration featuring the public hearing on a sign ordinance a-A Laguna Beach man who thought he welcome... . . ,, . swarminl around the boat of honor. wonders of California was launched this mendment that has been the subject of had been slipped LSD was treated and ~t ;a,s Bill Ficker Day in Newport The parade was made up of everything morning by the Broadway department more than 20 meetings this year. released from South Coast Community -~ -~ .. ~~JDomepednt the 1 J2, 1 lllr--from-tm•ll catboats-similar tQ the-one-~tore wltb~ere~.~ _!!. th~...!_tore and a The controversial amendment, spec!· Hospital early today. saJ . r·ai::w step o an Air Ficker learned to sail when "1ie. was 8 breaifast aflbe IrVirii CoiirCOOiitfy fytng the-method brbe-med-to-measure Williatn--John Chambers, -25;-128S S. C~liforrua plane · at Orange Coun~y youngster of eight to buzzing outboard a C1ub. , sign area, was made effective as an In-Coast Highway, called Laguna Beach Au1~ort where he. was greeted b~ _his tn chine.Ml junks io such lavish power Severallocal<qgnataries,lncludingDr. terlm urgency ·regulation and now Is police at about 2:20 a.m. today and < fam.tly, a host of city and county ~ff1c1~ls yachts as Frank Muller's Mojo. Daniel Aldrich, chancellor of UCI ind being presented !or mormal addition to reported that he thought either his food and representatives of the area s rune . de Newport Beach City Councilman Richard the ordinance. or drink had been spiked with LSD, ya~t-.dubs. Mior1"u'iiof '~d~ C:A~f.~ 1 1n ~A ~a -,. waenrde c.rouI.-and top st.ore officials, were It specilli?!_that "erte]'ior ""'rimeter".of police said . Ficker came to Newport directly from co Y .... s3~ or 1.1ic ......... ~s n present for the kick-of£. 1 sigJi shill be detennlnedby measure-Police went to his residence. at the San Francisc;o where he h1id attended.the k~t upt! d~ o( ho!~'· be;15f 7J:: :C: EntiU~ ''Discovery: California," the ment with "not more than 12 straight Del Camino Hotel and called an ambu- ,....St. Fran~is Yacht Club's .Tinsley Isl.and c. r:Y·N m Jei;:i~i: ~I k ~ h· · promotion will include the appearances of connecting lines." lance for him after be appeared' to be Sta& Crwse, annual gathering of the most bon-m ewpo • · · ':' n c er an 15 . severaJ well·known writers at the store's A v,,-ianct application for subdivision under the influence of drugs, offiurs prominent yachtsmen of the West and crew were towed 1!1umphantly back. to Southern California outlets. of Temple Hills Drive pro-..+.· owned said. East coasts. port after defelltng the Australian -------------:::----"--...:....:....:.;...:::..::.,..=. ·:::_'.:__::= _ _::::;:. __________ _ But the airport reception was only a challeng~ Gretel lLin the bf:~t f1nur-of· prt.lude to a gala· communitywide &even series that assured the CUp 1 con-- ttlebratiGn climued by a colnr(ul boat tinued residerce in this country -at parade, followed~by an hour of accolade• least f9r a~ther three _years. and resoluliona from city, county apd The parade disbanded in the North Lido 5tale officials. Channel liljatiiit to th<l-Balbol Bay-C!iib The massive boat parade formed in and the Ardell Marina and Ficker and his front of the Balboa Yac.bt Club and the family were escorted to, Clty Hall in. a adjoilline Oranpt!ountY'Harbor·District land Jiaradt. ' ·t" _. offices Where Ficker and hiS wtft!' and Master of ceremonies of the festivities daughter, and one of his crewmen, at City Hall was William O'Byron who in. George Twist, boarded Pat Dnugtn'1 12· troduced officials who ·were to join in meter C:Olwnbia on whEh Ficker first tributes to the. returning· hero. became afflicted with America's Cup The ceremonies were opened with an fever in 1967. invocation by Fr. Pa1ll Martin of San He was ~helmsman on C:Olumbla in Juan Capistrano, a longtime friend of the the 1967 Cup trials in which Columbia Ficker family. was runner-up to Intrepid, the yacht on Mayor Ed Hirth read the first of many · which Ficker.. defended the cup this year. proclamations and resolutions in which The parade was headed by a Harbor he proclaimed Sunday as "Bill Ficker Department fireboat, followed by the Day"' in Newport Beach and the week of Oct. 4 to 9 as "Bill Ficker Week." Said Varied Meetings Set, This Week In Laguna Beach Civic • minded Lagunans may choose from a varied menu or public meetings this week, on topics rangin5 from dogs tD underground utilities : -At 7:30 tonight, the Planning Com· mission discusses tennis, signs and other matters. -Tuesday ~vening at 7:30 the regular school board meeting will find trustees approving a roster of teacher aides to help ease classroom crowding problems. -Also on Tuesday. at 8 p.m.. the Laguna Beach Dog Owners Association will hoJd a public meeting Jn the high school cafeteria to ,ponder its na\ move in the dog ordinance referendum matter. -Wednesday's 7:30 p.m. City COUncll meeting has an impos~g 32-item agenda weighing, with supporting documents, ap- proximately 2~ pounds. -On ThurBdltY a' 7:30 p.m., r'sidents of the Emerald' Terrace. ma have bffn invited to gather in city hall to dl:sCuM proposed undergrounding of utilities ln !heir neighborhood. . Youth Sought On Assault Rap • A y"""' Marine who allegedly tried to throw hJs peUl.I wile oU the San Clerpente Municipal Pier ln a d!Jpute over a mlll· tary allotmont check Is being sought by police today. Mayor Hirth: "This is a historic day in Newport Beach and we are real happy to welcome the man who has. brought honor to our community." Mayor Hirth then presented a giant replica of the "key to ihe city" to Ficker and crewman George Twist. Twist responded that all of the summer's hard wnrk was justified by the •·recognition we are getting at home." A letter of commendation and con- gratulation from Gov. Ronald Rea1an was read by Assemblyman Robert Badham. A resolution introduced in the State Legislature commending Flcker for being the first West ~st yachtsman to defend the CUp was read by O'Bryon. A rcolutlon by the Oran~ County Board of Supervisors was read by John Killefer, executive assist.ant to the chii.rman of the board. , J11ck Barnett, executive mariaaer of the Newport Beach Chamber of C'cimmer~. of whJch Ficker ts a director, presented him with • framed membership card. Tom Kee vii, editor or the DAILY PILOT, presented Ficker with plaque replica of what he facetiously rererred to as "Page One of the paper's first Sunday edition." Visitor Asks Wrong Person A yo"ung visitor from Hawaii who made the mistake of asking a Laguna Beach undercover officu to buy him a bottle of wine Friday night found himself under arrest on charges of contributing to the delinquency or a minor and so\iciting alms. 'Ibe victim -Who 1u!fered severe hand cuts durln& the. Friday night fracas Jtmes Warren Elam Jr .. 19. and his _ 11id he WU only restraintd. from aiv-companion, a 16-year-oJd Riverside girl, inl her the deep slx by a pair of Marine. were stop~ for quest:ioninf at midnl&ht buddies. ~ Friday on South Coast HJ&hway near Investigators were told lhe man con-A~tlin Road when oflcers noted the fronted his wife whilt she was walking girl appeared lo be under tbt influence o( on the pier sl ppilll aoda. from a 1lass dru1s. which sNttered durltla the struuie, rt· .During the conversation, Elam sug. gultln& in her cuts. -gested the officer might Uke to buy thtm She: saJd she was able to break rte. a bottle of wine~ which, police Hid, con. only to be as:saulted q:aln, and· finally &tltutes solicitation of a~. ran to the ho~ or friends livin& near Uie The girl w11 booked for curfew viola· oc:e1nfront bowl . lion And PQ5Stsslon of narc o t I c 1 They caJled Police and the victim pve paraphernalia Whe11 A .marijuana pipe her accowit ot the. wault. was found ln her purse. '" .. --. I • ION uAt_+wty,. p llab a.b41 I 11.;mw1# I ..,MPM Ill' 1 Ht C:.•: ... --per,.., polil bf -.lltie,ncf-<'1111'11 i • ......... C 111 rlJ .. I !olq Ek , till: lllllY 11111 nl IClm . . · PlldcamrmlOlft.~-• cf.,, -·-ft~ por_...._ .. 111 ~ to day R • L 1 I • C191a.da U*4cmdld --Plus 54 Y_.ol Sou11d M•'ftll IDI A hd cei1111ry Cll ----f .. a perfectnlC<Jr<lcfNglllr-WIPIJU -.-111 ex..a of $150 lllf!lon, end Iha Pl-...., Cll sbon lufQ -· d COiilDlne1D iilAgcmd,.,.. ..... Monie Plln ._ ... ,. ... 1111 ";:F:r=1d~1:s:Alf '* I forusllhchaaaiYourr.11111-11 I' · , ...... 11 1¢&S5 - MorrisP~an ' For lntemt Mtb ICtloo, p/IOI» or rJalt yout l.lorrla Piao llOlce: Newport lttc~ -Newport Shod. ~ 'r I I ,. ' I· f: • • ' • Monday, Octol>er 5; 1970 . L DAILY PILOT $ Niguel -Residents Get • ~ • 'A • Reloeation ~Booklei By BARBARA KREIB!CH-- Of ttit 11i111Y r 1111 s1•tt -Owriers and occupants of at least 66, -IJld_ p"11aps 97_&h!gle""Tam!lf -Ill _ mulUple residenct.s and 157 trailer park spaces will have a 1peelal inlertlt .in a Cilirotiila D!vlaion or lliiliW•yiooold•t Ulled "Relocation Servi=." Copies of the booklet wete distributed Rugged Approach Photo toward hills from Riddle Field, Laguna Beach Little League ballpark, indicates rugged ter- rain that future Campus Drive must pass through before reaching connection with Pacific Coast I·Iighw3y near Boat Canyon Shopping Center. ' ' ' ' ' DAILY ,.ILOT Slltt '"'*' Campus Drive is planned as future connection with inland route of Pacific Coast Freeway. State plans currently call for preservation of Hillcrest Drive ex- tension across Boat Canyon. See accompanying map. WediiMdoj niaht 1t 1 n\itlli!i OCJ;iiUM Niguel realdmla called by_ Ule Dlv~ion n1 HJghw , to diJcull the tn1poc1 or "*t porllo!t r lhe ()Jut Freeway planned to be through lhe South County area. moaL of the meeting was devoted to protests from ·borneownt11 SolufJ on · T ijlil -• wliO wanted no Jflrl oflhe rr-.y In any location, representaUvu of the division nevertheless Mnded out thtlr booklet so lhe ostlmated 5IO to tll5 pmons who could .be ellecled by COllJlrucUon.or lhe highway would know what asalstance is available to them in the event · their • -r -.S-mo wiped out. , • Re;sideot1 -Who ltnd a ,,._,, ..... heading f0< lheir dwelllnp lbould, under no circumstances, move out before th• state bas acquired an interest In the pn- perty, lhe booklet warns. t • • ()n!y -ocatPYlni tbe property ii the time the state acquires interest ar1 ellgihleJauetocation.aen>icOL--4---- The-services Include ll!sl.stance In f!n· ·Speak_er Outlines Medical Campus ding ·•--new place..to.--live, or coadud « .busines:ii, and special~ re I o c 1 t Io D payments. First step is to establish contact with the . reJocati9n age:nt 1.S1igned to eaelr freeway project, whO will have lists of p('operties offered for sale or rent that are in a suitable coodition, price or rental range for the family that has to move. . Payments available include movin1 ex· penses within a SO.mile area, SUP" plemenial payments for those Wlable to ·purchase comparable replacement bou$. ing at price levels equal · to what lhei receive from the state for their homer; and supplemental payments . for those una~le lo find comparable rentals. A crisis exlsta today ln the field of health care and the solution is the "medical campus,'' according' lo ' Arthur B. Kania, president of Watern Develop- ment Corporation. Kania. speaking before the · Orange County forum of Town Hall in Anaheim Friday, outlined the health care challenge. ''Some think the solution to the high cost of medical care today i:ii socialized medicine ," the speaker said. "We.do not. "Most hospitals have no master plan, they are poorly designed and have: n\>t adopted business techniques in operation. The medical campus, or center, balances services," Kania continued. · Hospital! are over burdened and under utiliud in the opiriion of the speaker."' A hospital room coSt $10,000 an'd Ult equip- ment lo back it up $20,000. The patient who. spends 12 days· in the hospital does not really need the expensive room after five days, foi' ei:ample." ' · Kanis said today we are insuring the cost of health. ••What we should be doing is insuring health. That is what the medical campus will be designed lo do. To achieve lower cost and better health care government at all levels must cooperate, the business sector must. pro- vide plans for more efficient operation and the physicians must cooperate, the speaker contended. Lag!_1.na Power Knocked Out . . By Lightning The Divis ion or Highways also pays all escrow and recording fees and title in- surance premiums in connection of purchase· of property for rights 'of way. owners are advised and. in addition, no income taxes have lo be paid on aup- plem_C';ltal paymepts made und~r th.e.pr@. gram. PERSONAL PROPERTY If a person is obliged to store personar property or obtain temporary lodging a• a result of a move made necessary by freeway construction, the Division of Highways also will pay reasonable-' st:orage ch'atges for up to one year and A bolt of lightning caused a major reasonable temporary lodging costs. power failure in Laguna Beach early These paymenUi must be approved In ad-· Saturday morning, setting off three vance by the relocation agent burglar alanns and leaving 1,700 homes Moving expenses may be calculated OD without electricity for more than an hour. an "actual cost" bas.is or a Dal awn JllY· ment based on the number o( rooms ii~ According to ofncial:ii of Southern the home plus a $100 dislocation paymenL California Edison, the lightning struck a Mobile homes-are ·eligible for actlllll · power pole at Cleo Street and South Coast cost relocation payment only, based on · lli.ghway at about S:ZO a.m. 'Saturday. the lowest of two bids rrom licemed The to of the pole caught fire and power mo~ile home moving compan.ies. "It will provide diagnostic services of all kinds in one Ct>nvenient location. It will provide for the abmulatory patient who is using of valuable space in hospitals~ today anaaoes nor tilong there." P operators of farms or busmesses may was l~t ~ a large a:__ea of ~~na~:!1-L eJii:ible--1DL.ActuaLcost ....moWc---t in-the vtnlnlty or tlie COast H1gtiway. payments or a discontinued businesl' Proposed Rotate Shaded area on map indicates route of future Campus Drive as it curves into Laguna Beach through Boat Canyon. Road , part of county's long range pl an of arterials, is 10 years away, but La- guna officials already are studying implications of the new roadway. Under present plans, it could take out Riddle Field, but would split, forming a wishbone which would preserve Boat Canyon Shop. ping Center. He said the coming theory is that the person should be kept well rather. than cured later. CUT COSTS "The medical center will cut cOsts which today are becoming so high· that midille income people are becomi{li medical fndlgents," Kania adde.d. Pot Pm·c hase Attempt C.Ostly An alleged attempt by a Nevada serviceman to purchase marijuana in Laguna Beach got him an t.mpty wallet and a bump on the head Saturday night. Jamta Arthur Quirin, 22, stationed at Nellis Air Force Base, stopped his car on the South C.Oaiit Highway at Thalia Street and was approached by a young woman offe ring to sell him a kilo of marijuana 1 for $140, Laguna Beach police said .. Quirin drove the girl to the 600 bJock of Anita Street where she left the car to get the marijuana, police said. While '!a~in3, Quirin got out of the car and was ac- costed by two men. . He told police the next thing he rthlem- bers i.1 waking up sitting In his car .wtth a. very spre head.· His wallet. empUed ·of $260, was on the car seat beside him .. Et-Rancho has the hottest price in . wwn! FARMER .IOHH 1/2. LB •. PKG. '. •· .... •.•· .......... . You know the qualit~.,. ea.stern pork wiUi the western flavor : . , 'now,· tak'e ·note of El Rancho's low low' price! You'll love lhe sausage for bnmkfast ••• and the price for the. savinp you~JI recognize at El Ranc:hof Beef Liver 79 ~ Sliced Bacon -snu at-..................... ........................... . ' Tender. and mild flavored for more pleasu re l El Rancho's o.,.·n , •• with distinctive goodness I Super specials for ea rly bird shoppers! Apple Qder . .. .. . .. .. .. .. . .. . .. .. .. .. .. 59¢ Tree Top •.. half-gallon! •. , from \I/ ash in.gt.on Beef ·a· Mato Juice ................ 'Ir New ••• and delicious ••• from Mott's! Quart. Table Syrup ............................ 69¢ Vermonl Maid ••. 24 oz. bottle! Save !Oc. Sliced American . ·-··· ......... 3 ,.. '1 Burger shaped ••• from Fisher! 6 oz, l*kagu. Power was restored to all but 20 of the allowance to be determined in c:on- residences by 4:41 a.m. the official said. sultation with the relocation agent. The remaining homes did not have elec-. trical power unlil 11 :14 a.m. PAYP..1ENTS The power pole had to be replaced Supplerhental payments to property after the -top half of it burned, the official owners or tenants, the booklet specified, said. will be made only if the new dwelllnc Besides causing many electric clocks lo qualifies as "decent , safe and sanilary." read an hour and 17 minutes early, the A lengthy definition of this requiremen\ power failure activated burglar alarms at :iipeCifies·htat it must conform to buildinj Cost Les.!! Imports, 1294 S. Coast codes, have a safe water supply, kitchen Highway, Cove Liquors, 1043 N. Coast with hot an11 (j,Jd-Water. adequate Highway and Tic Toe North, 1390 N. heating, bathi~g ·facilities with hot and Coast Highway. cold water_, flush toilet connected to a Burglary Charges Jail 4 in Laguna A midnight raid on the ice box led to the arre!t of four young men early today on burglary charges, according to Laguna Beach police. A citizen called police al aout 1:20 a.m. after seeing someone moving around ln- si~e tl)e First Christian Church at 285 Legion St. Police arrived and arrested the alleged prowlerii, who were identified as Paul Frank .Agee. 19, 25472 Earhart Road, Laguna llil\s ; Charles Samuel Pope, 19, 25221 Arder. Court, El Toro: Phillip Sanchez . parcia, 19, 24172 Larkwood Lane. ·Bl Toro. and Joseph Raymond Walsh, 19, 23221 El Gato Roa~, El Toro. se'Wer .. lighting for each room, bave twt- safe exits, be s!rudurally IOODd and havt adequate habitable-floor spa.Ce for sleeP.. ing. Jiyi.ng, cooking and dining. ·Supplemental' payments for replace-~ ment housing ·can never exceed $5,000!; The new home is not reqtiired to be com-· parable to · the old one, but standardii Of' comparability are set forth to determine · the amount of payment that may be · claimed. :This include number of rooms,'. living area, type of construction, age, condition, type of neighborhood and aci- cessibility to public services or placts of employment. If persons are· denied payments or believe they , are entitled to l.iarger payments, Jhey may appeal to the . District Right of Way Agent who will rev iew the case. Jf still not satisfiecf, there may be a further appeal to the ·. Director of Public Works, who :wQI con.- duct a further rev.iew. · Super Shopper Produce Value! Pmet ;,. efff!'t JI ... , r ...... w..i.· Oct. S, I, 1. No 1~ to dtalm. mDIA: s....i 111d RU!lli._'lol Ill'. (D _. c..tltrl l'ASADEllk Pink Grapefruit ......... 5 •. , $ Ruby R ••• ripe and juicy ••• •·ilh distinctive flavor that makes for a better brutfutl • ' 320 West Colondo Bt.d. .SOUlll PASAD£llA; . f111110ft! lftl·Huntin&tDn Dr. HUNTINGTOll BEA® W11ner' 1nd Alionq~n (BolrmlLC.nl~J­ NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 Newport Blvd. 1nd 2SS5'bslbiutt Di. (tJstbllltt Yill!&o C.nll1) ' • • DAILY PILOT Moodiy, 0<.-5, 1'170 t;oup Attempt _l!Qliyla Ro~~ed Colly, reputedly th• world's fast· est snail,. died at the age of 4 In Hover, England. Owner Chris Hud-'°"' 15, said, "I don't think captiv .. lty agreed with her." The funeral was to ha held today In HudsOn's garden In Hoven, England. Colly iieat a host of International cha!· lenders last May to win the World Suell Championship• a~olkeston, EnJland. The creature covered two -feet in the record·shateriog time of three minutes. • Typist GIOftys 11.-.011, 21, got two fingers thoroughly stuck In her typewriter keyboard 'l'hursday In Dudloy E ngland. Six Firemen, with a ladder truck and tender, plus seven factory workers, four office girls an_d the office manager struggled for 30 minutes to free her -_In vain. Finally a typewriter mechanic did the job. • Honoy, a l~m<>nlh-old beagle in Laughton, England has a keen ap- petite for banknotes. Her owner, M .... G.rtrude Clark, who has lost '38.40 to the dog, said, "I hide my money, but ahe noses it out." • Sh<ffi<ld, Englmld Sud Pro- ducil. monu/acturer1 of cutkrtf and CMto part.. is 10 1hort of Ja.. r----•-"or.J /Jllll_ofl.e:t.•JS empJl>rtLL. $24 t=frtt bonut for •""11 triettd tMr can bring m to work. • Jack NollOll of suburban Olivette, Mo. found-his0 lawn churned up by automoblla tires when he r eturned from a recst trip. When Neaon got home after work Thursday, he fQUDd the damage largely repelred and a note on his front door, which M ld: ·••Dear Sir.'' ''We are sorry we ran over your lawn. We came -today and raked It up Iha hast we could. We won't do it anymore." The note bore two signatures, which :were not dtsd°'=. A farmer trlct-m<>torcvcle rider who tbrilled audiences throughout . the world for :10 years hes passed her automobile driving test In Hert·. lord, England on the 20th tey. Mrs. Doris Smith, 54, who already had driven 30,000 miles before she won her license. 1aid, "These tests were more nerve.wracking than the wall of death ever was.,'' • Dudley, England zoo keepers Nlcftbl111 Ordln.ns -and G1r111dln1 Bateman were manied Thursday. Onllnans announced that their guest of. honor at the ceremony was a 16-foot python, with this explana- tion: ''Karl the python has always been a favorite of ours-and we wanted him around on the big day.' • A letter to Indiana Ku Klux Klansmen from Grand Dr11gon WIJ .. liam N. Ch11ney has called for ''100 percent participation" in a walk Saturday afternoon through the courthouse square of New Castle, 30 miles east of Indianapolis. "Cold weather will soon be here and we again will have to go indoors," Chaney wrote. "Come on out and enjoy these outdoor activities.'' By .~rmy Revolt J,A !'AZ, Bolivia (AP -RetaiJg cootro1 ·o1 two_ f!nJ>011aJJL re~~{s aqc1_: the air force, BoliVlail"l>resident Alfred6 Ovando Candia apparenUy weathered an attempt by the anny chief of staff to overthrow him Sunday, a week 'after bis military regime's first anniversary. RETURNS IN TIME President C1ndi1 ·COUP COMMANDER Gener•I Mli-ande "I want neither war nor bloodshed, but I am here to rule the destiny of the na· tion," the president told a crowd Sunday n1ght from the balcony of the presidential palace. He bad returned to .La Paz from ,5.an! .. QM •. ;IO~ away._ _ _ There was no-report of .shooting by Sunday night. but Maj. Ruben Sanchez, commander of the Colorado Regiment guarding the palace. said the rebels had to give up tmCODditionally or "there will be no solution but to fight." His soldiers were posted on the balconies and at the windows of the palace with orders to shoot if threatened, officers said. Three of Ovando's ministers met in .military hea~quarters with Gen. Rogelio .-:. Miranda, the rebel leader, and reported that "it seems they ·are going to sur· render." Miranda made no comment. Miranda demanded Ovando's resigna· tion in an early morning broadcast over the army's radio station, charging that the Ovando government "has frustrated the hopes of the people and the anned forces and has not interpreted correctly the aims of the nation ." The dtief of staff told a news con- ference he would turn over the govern.~ ment to a junta, which Would call elec- tions by August 1972. The government ordered a state of emergency. Armed groups or pro-Ovando peasants were reported marching on La Paz and Cochabamba, 140 miles to the southeast. The government mobilized its forces, and the air force said it would "send planes over armed forces headquarters" If -r1eeessary;-;,Tets-tmzed-t.a-Par-an<Hhe Toledo Regiment, the army's largest and best-anned military unit J:>ased about 25 mi les from La Paz, threw its mechanized armor behind Ovando. Ovando's cabinet ministers w e re reported divided · between Miranda and the president, a general who took power Sept. 26, 1969, in a coup that ousted President Luis Adolfo Siles Salinas. Thirty.three relired ~military officers, lncluding two former presidents, called for Ovando'.s resignation on the eve of the regime's first anniversary. They, too, wanted to replace him with a junta which would set up elections. At least siJ: persons... were killed last monlll In anligovernmeot cllsturl>anc<s by student and labor groups. Peasants were mclillized in IUJ>porl cl ·OVandc. Laird Tours Greek Base lnFenceM:endingJourneri ATI!ENS (UP!) -Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird toured a U.S. Air Force base today, winding up a Greek visit seen by diplomatic sources as appeasement for President Nixon's failure. to visit this North AUantic Treaty Organiz.ation !(NATO) ally. His ntst stop ls to be Milla. ·Diplomatic sources saw Laird's visit to Turkey and Greece as an attempt to ap- pease the two countries for being omitted !rom President Nixon's tour of Europe. Laird described his visit to both NATO allies as "part of the President's tour o( the Mediterranean area." His visit followed by a few days nsumption of full U.S. military aid to the military-backed government of Greece. Laird discUssed the aid and NATO pro- blems in talks with Greek officials Jn. eluding Premier Gtorge Papadopoulos, who is also defense minister. His talks were marred but not In- terrupted by a bomb blast in a downtown park minutes after be appeared there to lay a wreath. ''The o1d friendship between Greece and America ·has been cloudless and steadily undisturbed," Papadopoulos said in a toast at a banquet Saturday night. "Our President and our United .States government realize the importance of the strategic location of this nation," Laird said. He also stres.sed the need for N A T 0 strength. "If we are going to have an era of peace, another decade of peac.e in Europe as we have bad these last two decades under the principles of the NATO alliara, jt is import.ant for us to main- tain and to rebuild the strength cl thll great alliance," Laird said. Cold Front Blankets East West Warm, Dry But Canadian C'!Ul Air Mass Seen v:s. s ..... _,,, Tet1tperat11ru All1nl1 81~1'1ll11d lltsrn1rck Bollt flo!.!Oll l rowns11lll1 ClllClt<I Glncl~.,.tl Oeflver ..... _ O.troll 1"1lrtoeP!kt Foti W0111t ·-··-"-'"'" k1nwsCJtv Hltlt L9w ,rte. n " .. " - 11 !I ~ " .. " IJ !J •S •S II 7' 2.01 ff !5 T .... 11 •I " " " " J1 ll " .. .. " " " ,, 7• M&tY -nin. ,.._I .. lltl'll ~l'Mbl• •"-"""' .,.,. "'°"""' """' --IM -ttmo J "' lJ Meft In ..,,.,_ D,.,, coiftfort.-.... ••l'fft -"*' ...,... '"''" Ille .. , -I kodlY ll'ltloutfl I C'°*" I ll' ll'lnl trM'I C.... " l ll"9ciMI to dl'Oll I MMlill't lit anow -tM -1flwwt tllnltfit. l11v .... s L•Artttln Ml-I MINIMllOllt ._.....,. _y .. Horltl ~l•tt. ...... Oll'-il'IWM Cltr ...... II IT .... " .. .. " ,. " .... .. .. .. ,. .. .. a " ... f'Odtr ttW TIMdtY. Mltl'I toQr n. C.Olltt ""'"''..,,... rlll!fl .,_ " .. "· lllllollf hrnMt•f\I"" ....... .,_ M II ti. Wtt.I' '-"'''"' ti, , ... 11 .... " " .... " . .Viet Cong Hit-Funeral Procession r.- SAJGON (UPI) -Viet Cong terrorbla _..killed 21 persons in a series of attackl on a fUJ'lei'll-p1'oceSSton, a,.estaurant and-a private home in the Saigon area. Fighting flared today a1ong two of Cambodia's major highways. Guerrillas threw a grenade into a line or mourners at a funeral 35 miles southwest of Saigon late Saturday night. The explosion killed 12 persons and woun· ded IQ. M06t of the dead and injured we.re _ regional force and_RQpular for ~ e milltiatnen who were burying one of thelf' comrades slain in battle. u,1 T•..-Terrorists Sunday night ~t off a bomb S. VIETNAMESE SOLDIER FINDS MOMENT FDR PRAYER In a restaurant near the Thu Due dislrict Fire Base O'Reilly Shrine Made of Colee Can, Shell Crate town eight miles north of Saigon, South Vietnamese military spokesmen said. Cambodia Votes to End Its Status of Monarchy PHNOM PENH (UP!) -The Cam· bodian National Assembly today voted unanimously to declare the country a republic on Friday, legally ending 24 years of limited monarchy. The date of the declaration, Oct. 9, is the day Chief of State Cheng Heng leaves Phnom Penh for the United Nationsl General Assembly sessiori in New YOrk. Aasemblyman Ung Mung, who heads the committee to draw up a neW Con· .stituUon for Cambodia, said after the all- moming session that the assembly would also vote soon on a new flag and a new national antb_!!fl.l .. _ Ung Mung said the Constitution, which is expected to give Cambodia a parliamentary system of government rather than a preaidential system, is not yet In final form . · Despite the declaration, Cambodia will remain at least until April, 1971, &mder emergency law declared shortly after the outbreak of the war in March and ex- tended for six months in September. Ung Afung said the official declaration ceremony would probably take place an hour before Cheng Heng's departure. Under the old constitutional monarchy of deposed Prince Norodom Sihanouk, ultimate power rested with the monarchy and not with the natiooal usembly. Police Academy Hit By Women Liberation -~--. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Women are liberating the police academy here. The Municipal Civil Service eom. m.Lssion informed Safety Director James Hughes recently that the next M person! eUgible to be appointed to the academY. are women. Six civilians, a policeman and three l!IOldiers were killed and five persons wounded. Five civiliarut Were killed and two others wounded early today when Viet Cong fired a B40 rocket-propelled grenade and threw a hand grenade into a house 20 miles west of Saigon. Informed U.S. military sour~ &aid Sunday Adm. John S .. M~ain J.r., U.S. Pacific Commander, lS dlSCUSStng the possibility of increasing American air strikes over Cambodia . McCain bas been in Phnom Penh since Saturday meeting with Premier Lon Nol and other Cambodian officials. Military spokesmen sa.id heavy fighting broke out early today on Highway I and Highway 4., two ~ Cambodia's main roads . Route 4 coMects Phnom Penh with the nation's only deepwater port at Kompong Som and Highway 6 runs north from Phnom Penh. Air strikes were called in to l!lupport __.B!Ound forces near Sre Klong, 60 miles soutnwestOf theaip1tai:----- Four Cambodian troops were killed and 14 wounded in fighting with communist troops on Highway 6 at a point 52 miles north of Phnom Penh. Two Viet Cong bodies were found at the scene, the Cam- bodian command said. Visit our Laguna Beach office for a free caricature of yourself or anyone in your family. Any day, Oct. 5th thru 9th , between the hours of 10 and 3. So come in, open or add to your PLIJS savings account tod ay, as little as $1. The experienced pface ... the professional place sines 1924 Frees.re Dl!ll•lllt Bexf• a&W•& ........ $2,580 •r•ie. PLUS 5% to 'Ph% imerel& u11 saviags i1uared to $28,oGO by an age•ey •I the federal gtvenmellt. LAGUNA BEACH : 292 South Coast Highway /Telephone 494-9481 Tiit MlfWrl -tor ti 1114 ntllln ,. rnelntd '" tl'lt cl'llllY "91, 'lftflM mMll'I bl fM A ff"" Ntw ~Mt...wil to ~ P'Jorldt. k •lttrW ,,.., ._., i.r.c.tt fW N llwt1ftldlt llf PMor -· ''thllu"" ........ 60 .U .DJ TUllDAY , ,,,., f'lltll ............ n .:i. •. m. J,1 ll'ltlt 1ow ....... • •• t:lt•·"'· e.r Svt1 Ill... •:50 ''"'' '9lll t :JI •.111. MOM l'* 111,ftt.l'l'I. hh t1•11.m. (Piii•• -- TM mkl C.l\ICl11"1iiiiU will - Into llOf!Mtft WYomlPlf In' ton191rt Mid ,......11111t ...._,. ,,.. ••.-c~ to """' lo MWW II tow.r l lfYlllont. Tr1vtl.,1 "'*rnl11t1t ,,. Ill tffKi tor "'' of tllt CO!lllf'lttlltl Olw!H tlld 1119 rnount1lM t nd HHU _, of tlie flwld-. ll11kl ''" ll9d l lvfl ·-$tert-lo &.ti U.kt City Stfl 01- Stll P:r1...clKo s..ui. SPGll;tne TMr?1'11l Wtsh!MIM .. " 11 H 11 •S u " . " 1• '' .. " ]t ,, .11 1t 41 M .... .. " BRENTWOOD HORTMltlDQE ll60l WU shire •t San Vicente 9036 Rtsed• Bl'vd.lt Nordhoff LAGUNA BEACH •ONTARIO :292 South Coast HIJhway 521 North Euclld Avenua LYNWOOD(Hom•Offtc•) SAN BERNARDINO 11170 Lena a-II Boulevard 15'55 Ent Hl&h~nd • I •AN DllGO 1170!SthAvenue 1t 8 Street WUT ARCADIA 1200 S.81ldwin at Duart. ROid WILIHUtE·ALVAMDO 20!3-IMl.,laAnlll• WOODLAND HIU.I 23325 Mulholl1nd prjYie 1tV11leyCfrcl1Rced ~ El Camino Shopplnac.m.- :11 . I - t 11 ,. •• ( .. . I-~-• • . --·. -~ .. ~. ..-,•.-:-:---..--,, . .... ----·...-. . . ' l • :~ San Cle•1•enie- -::+--I --_§=Cl!piSR~I!__ ~~i:o.1t1c.- *~ ~ v-o-L-.6-3.-N-o-".-2.;._31-. -3 -secn--o-Ns, 30 · PAGES-· I -=~-:-:--: .... ::t"'"~~~-=~·-=-==--:-~::..:::;_,~~:---:-::--:::-::::-:::::-~~~~-:--:-~-:::=:::::::-::::::::::::-:::--:--:::::::=:-::::--::::::::::::::;""'.'!,~~~~-::::-~~-:=;:::::-:::::::::::::--::::::::::::::::=::::::::::::::i:::::::. -~--~~---,..~---1--~----~-'--~--+---·-· :... San -Clefu@nte Nricl_ear -:e~wer · Heari~gs .c:Qpeti In bearings estimated lo last at !wt U....·twice lhe!abio ol lhe •Wlinl alomlc two days, the Public Utilities Commbsion Pilii'nn the coutaI location. ' -. clean bill or bealth granted thus far lo the water whlcb ....,,. back Into the sea bearlnp wl!l be lhe degree ol radiation Utility spOR1111<!1 sv tbat'at Jeo4 llve uistin& nuclear plant whlcb uses cool sea · about a, ball-mile seaward of lhe nuclear discharged by the n~ar rtacton into years art needed before· tbe flnt..ol the today began accepting evidence in the The Qrat le!ik>n in the hearing1 begin o+--J>l'lll'O'Od·lf7-""11lon-upansioo·Gl-nudeor__ll,.ll :a.m. in ~ Clem"!te tjty COU!l<il . t ·--~-·-cbainbm. water, thf:n ')>Wllpa it put to , tea 10 reactor. tbt environment. .. two new-reactcn woald be operatiODal. ~~:' t: ~ ~ ~8~r.f~~-,About-3!0;000-giillem per minute-ls-.. The-dlldwge,-eompuW-tbroogll~u-'l'lie oicoqd-plaht--lrpiamntd · ID . . the generating "'°""'" . ed by lhe Sah OnoU. facility. · lntriia!e tormula, Is -'1rlctly monlllrid operillbn a fear altef-Uie first -~ . ·. · power generators a ~ vllWI '"· Preliminary estimates by some sources Amid local opposition which rallied have placed the length of the hearings at In the past years o1· use or the San "!be two.new unlls proposed for a site lhrou,ch a program adml.u.te...t tbrooih fifancing .!or ,the pnpooe11·1\UC~- O.,Ofre pll!Dt. extensive 1monltoring bu ' nearby wou1lf lncteue that amoimt~of the Atomic Energy Qlnlll\iuion. · coqllu: will-icome fmn a~ bento over the weekend, the PUC will bear two ~ys. but opposition to the plans testimony on the ~cation by the could extend that time. . . Southern CaWcrnla O:mpany: and 'lbermal pollu.Uan_will be_one of_several taken place at regular intervais. ., discharge to an ·av.er age or [iv~ ·«mes .the HearJngs before \hit apncy, which bu inc:'.IY!_IC!icate. ·AJ. ~.rtbt ne~ .£a.. Thus far the San Diego area llegiooal . amount currenUy dbcharged arowid \Ii"·· the role ol ulUmate apfipvol_tQr_ouclear tioila would be &lilt oil 13 acr• ol-blulf- San [)lego Gu and Electric Company to major ilsbes cbveted in•tbe hearings, and build twin nuclear reactors -each of utility speakers are upected to cite tbe Waler Qualily Oontrol ·Board bu ·rOUJ\d clQciL ' . ·planls. · a111 oqiect.d 0lo· .!Aire pla.. lop ·immedl&laly• IOUth GI . lhe iw-t no problems, 1with tbe warm eibaust · Other items of vast importance in, the sometime early nut year. reldcr.' . , : · · ! . ··.· ... ,,... . ... ...•. ... ' . ' '· ·anson NixonD.ne_ Home From Long Trip -DUBLIN (UPI) -President Nlnn - flew home today, ending a 12,000.mile European odyssey 0-,vith a promise at the gravesile of hb Irish forebears to strive for "a full genera~ of peace" in tbt world. • oes I . . . . • ·1n ~·O_Ur Cult Le.ader Thteatens .· From Wire Strvlce1 Charles Manson luiiged acrou . ·the council table at the. judce..·ln_lht._Sharoa Tate mllrder . trial todiy, scfeamln& .. ~...,. -Id cut yout head. off." He wu pounced on by. a ballltt, wrestlo ed to the floor and half-<arrled riom court. ' . - His topcoat stlll damp from a sudden downpour ln the lush green meadows of _Q>!ii!tl ~:fiiili·~ to '.l'h~· tiny SS-7ear~ld -~ef~~ went hurtlinC-<111-the , flC\Ol"-.1!1-..lroqt._ of" the- . =·~·-,w,J .had to .li .. "'hdi*.l·by ; . . ....... 1r."'~· . • ~lb -·~ --··:;,..;:~~~ New \'ork~~wJt -Valero il . Jack LJ!!Ch and headed f<r WubJnitoo . aboard his jet liner, Air Force One. His \lisit to Ireland marred onir by weekend anU-Vietnam demona:trailonl in Dublnn, Nixon stressed throughout hill nine-daf tour the U.S. commitment to strength in the Mediterranean and rent.~ ed efforlt to arrange a negotiated set· tlement of the Arab-Israeli confliCt. The President also plans to address Americans sometime this week on new U.S. pt.Ke initiatives in Vietnam, which he dlM.'US.!ed Sunday with bis bargaininl team at the Paris talks. On hil way to a f9Und of final con- ferences with Irish officials and a state luncheon at Dublin eut:le before fiying home the President .motored' fl miles past cbeering, Dag-waving aowdl and dedicated a memorial marker in a coif pasture at Tltnah'of that contains UH!:-* mains oI his Quaker Mllhoos ancestors. "The greatest contribution I could make in office wouJd be to bring peace to the world," he told a chilled aowd of 400 persons. Noting that his mother, Hannah Milhous, was a pacifist, NiJ:on said bis goal was to give the world -aomethiag it has not had in thlJ: century -"a full generation of peace." · He vowed to work for peace, but 'said the United States would not shirk its responsibility to itself or friepdly nations. tn Dublin, protesters broke through Police cordons and spattered Ni.Ion's limoustne with three eggs as he drove-to Dublin CasUe for a state lwteheon. After a courtesy call on the 17-year-old Irish President, Nixon drove to the castle to cordial waves from Dubliners. A heavy police guard had removed placard bearers wtll bef<n the Nlioo motorcade arrived. · ' Off Duty .Cop Turns Robber NEW YORK (AP) ·-A transit patrolman, hidden In a change booth at a Brooklyn 1t1bway station, shot a hol&lp' man today , only lo discover the maaked bandit was the patrolman he had replace<! an hour before, police said. · . Patrolman Raymond Campbell was on duty in the token booth when a masked man stuck hll gun -through the window and demanded money. AJ the cashler, Mrs. llonJtby McllOnaid, pualled lhe bills' lhrougb, Campbell fired once, °police said. hitting' the ,IUMlan "1 the abdomeo •• ' Fun anii games at third annual Mis~ion,Vie}0·D8ys this past weekend included ,a traditional-greased, pig chase. A potpourri of civic organizations ,babd- ecf together to stage the fall frolic. At the co~clu5'-" · ' ion of this event, It 'W&S'. difficult to tell Wbo·w&s dirtier -the pigs or the kids. There we~e. a lot.of laughs an d a tear·or two. Beartkd .Bandit Rock ·Idol Janis Joplin _· Gets Motel'1To or___ -i ·· · . · · · .. Di~s; :Prugs Indicated · Slammed in Face A Jong-haired, bearded man who at-' . tempted to rob a San CJemente motel Saturda¥: night-only to have the door slammed in ·his face-may have been one of a 1team that stuck up a !inance c::ofnp'aiiy ·Thurs<lay •• Police said the suspect in the at- tempted robbery of the Algodon Motel, 135 Calle Algodon, closely rtts the des- cription or' the team that took '50 from Household Finance Company two days earUer. Motel owner Lewis D. Einsel ·said he lfll'ftttdrtbe-doorbell at t:irl a.m., only to.find him.elf JJtarUig at a long-barrelod, clli'iine-plstif. So , be slammed the upper hall ol the dutc~r shut. . Einsel said he loOked out &nd saw a man~ for a·ll&l Chevrolet, white, with ®e defective Wllight and bearing out.«-itate lJCenae plates. · Frein Wire Services -' Janil Joplin, the gravel -voiCed rock ·btue1 ainger who ran away from Port Ar,thur, Texas 10 years ago and still kept on running, even after she overtook fame and fortune, is dead. The 2'7-year-0ld star of rockdo.m gave it all sheliid, ailaliitlie end it was her life. "Maybe I won't last a.s long as other singers," she once told an interviewer who asked if she wasn't afraid her bard drinking and mercliess driving pace might cut ber career abort. -·•Biit"J·thlnk100-c.n destroy-your now by worrying about tomorrow .•. Say the Hell with It. Stay stoned and-have a good time-" Mils Joplin was found dead in her Hollywood apartment Sunday night by guitarilt John Cooke, of her recenUy formed Janis Joplin Full Tilt Bnogl.e rock M~e-Nahbed ~~utopsy was oraered Jo determine • . the cause or death, estimated at 12 hou.r• before, but Sgt. Ed Sanchez, of the 'on Kidna. p, Rap HollywOoci Police Department, said she had a long string' of two to liklay-0ld 'A camp Pendleton Marine who was on needlemarks on her arm, covered by pancake makeup. leave b on leave lndeflnltely today, as No drugs were found in tbt room were Kern County aqthoriUet prepare a varle-the nightgown<lad singer l~ between ty ol :~-againat him In connection the bed and clressi!f table. wi:t ~'. It, was cap~.. "Only tequila, vodka and w1oe," said fOllowli>g 1 bJgJHpeed chue b1 polloe one policeman. that ended· in Babngeld, When be l!U Miss Joplin li>ed Jn.Larkapur near 5an linaIIy pWled over -Fran<:ll<O, but wu ataymg In llo~ywood. He was boOted "1 charges of kidnap, while r~ an. albu.!11 for 1Colwnbia UP,1~~. FOUND DEAD IN HOLL~ s1,..r Jan11.Joplln .. 27 ' . Wh!rt they took his muk , off. . Mrs. McDonald recocnlud him as patrolman Raymond 'lbompoon, 28, who had been with ber just an hour before that. He wa1 atill wearing the bh1e unUorm shirt he wore oo. hit I a.m. shut. He had uied hil servk.'e revolver In th( etJCi\ip, police old. Ho wu taken lo · Cut)lberland. HooplW Jti oerloao coodltlon. armeji . .-Ty and grond th!fl o1 an auiD , ~ Conijlany wiU..lfe'r n~w IJOOp. • 1 u 1 ~Of tJie ~ tndderit '• •· · Friends almost uhwllliilg lo accept tlie u t!Wrenc::e Schwendimao 41 totd Kern death of the high-spirited singer w~ • County Sherlffls depuliel he· Picked up a thrilled audienc::es with ber top hits said hitchhiker~ Bakersfield Saturday, on-ahe had seemed ·hippy in recent ly to [ind himaeJf lookinl 49wn the barrel weeks. She made in electrilylng ap- or • gun. pearance .when ~onnillc live ~ith ~ He said he was forced to drive t1gli =lOl'lC hair shaking , bet urunhib1,ted mU.. north of the -city, wtiere be wu movemenls, and her bulky, JJ!Joutma 'relieved of his .wallet an!i klc~ed Ollt or 1tyle of. ainglng._Moef.!"Jb',tmle 1ht his~ car, whlcb then 1pe(f off down the wore no bra. bJibway. ''$!1• tore the JUii_ oljl, of-·" 'I . ' ~·- ,., l '°'' - . be!0re~i>i1td w111,n,"!. ' · . ~ ·, . ·~":": ·: • ·' • .. ·" 1 r thedd...tinlhodJwn ~ : -.. " ·" • ~::'~ftac1.ro"ed . lhe ~ PrO.bers to -Mak£ , r • • The outbur~ CIJ1\e ~~ Manll!l and three, .. ...,, •• eo<1•r~11,..,.10\l liilO /Ag' una Beach .. · cQUrt for the 1lart of a delayed momiq seakn.· Attorneyp raaid the. Jud&e~ 'Wu : · · ! · ' 11Yina theOt , ~ chance , t0 1'behaVe Medic l S " · ropQWJni their •JecUan !Jri<.• 1~r:w~k , . ; ,a . · .. "','V"'J.'. for alnglng ind ,•houllnl lil court. Ap)iroxiinately JIJG-La11J11&111 !tltll ·he -~,'.l'!~M~-~~ ~~~y .J.=-or 4 fewat. eontact<i! dlirlng 'lhe iloit r.ur-...ea ay ~. ·~· ~ ouWte.l ; -of• Ille ,n..o-"H""""llftlllt the. 1··"'•e in_d flung 'himself • lhe -~ ... ........,. ... Sumy Teaiinl111'1Ji1rin._1'0-llfitl table. ol· reliident : lillh'vleWJ' lliroughoul · 111e Tl1' three glrl.,~endantl· 11<1an com-lty. . . · · chantln&...,.Phr...,ab!>u\"ldlllng 'and '!lift<' ·~·" . to",_.La ... wben Ibey rduaed lo IUbolde they loci . am, -... · il""a aru tak f ••• -·~-ln'l"'!~'tO a. ty CiNncil""--"' for were en rom 1o1PC U1W-.r11i. • &-J.cOUbty-•liel1tb~'faclUty . .:.,:r;:=t;:.,t. Manaon·ltad entered lhe room qjileUy tein]itlilg "to ·a.a.as 'arei health neec1a and listened to lhe brtef testimony of one prio,~ to ,ecommenct,ing ,1pttffic .eivlCU. • minll' witness when he sUddenly enipted. • · · · ,. .. • \...! •· • • 1 "Are you going.to ue this courtroom to '.'The interrle)'s ·"ill r:lP the :team understand the . yl.Ws of . re.sl~ kill me?" he 1uddenly demanded of regardiiig . t.a&µqa :1 needs for bl alth Judge Oldtr. · · fatllttl~~,. si.i~ IJ)tbropologist . Nadia Older told him lo keep qulet ·or he • RIJM)', In char(' ol the Interview ar- would be removed. rahierii.ents." 1 • ' ' 1 "The minute l see you are 1.0lng ~ ~l · i'We 'tiope io: tllk 'tO re'sl<fents of ··all mt, you know what I'm coib& to do,"· areas· of Legi.m«·and ;&he c::90per8µ00 ()f M&naon safd. ' ' · the •. community will be greatly · •Po "What are you going to do?" Older Uk· · ~~led,'! she said. "These interview• ed' 1ngrlly •. •taring dawn at the tiwdod are ... ..,11a1 lo IUCCeSlluJ compietlon ol hipP&e cult leader.. · -~ ttil sµrv~y~·t--<-' · · · · . ~ , ~ "Mr. Man!On, I'm 1~n1 ~ have you Contacts wUl-be-made by telephone and' ::-•ed ll you do not stop, · ,the ,Jud(•. In' penon durinil lhe mooth ol. OCtober; "I'm going to have you removed ll you -Mis.! Ramzy sal!I· don't atop," iMa:mon llid. "I have a'Utti. [J'e·heaUhitMm~ f~ by federaJ .and,, l)'ltem'of my ·own." ' .· , ~.°j irfDll and w::lu~ ptyeblalriltl, At that Manloli 1prang from •hls ... 1 · ~ fn'!'f.~• nurses. ~UJJlata and ll,.Ca11y . '"~ -·~ '·bla · -~ ~,,..,.rs, •as anliJ>od to a-.. ~· "'.'~: aw __ "" ·~ Laguh&'s beltfb~blems ll1CI ln\i.tr'a" toward the jod(e 1 -. . recominencllf~1i ~ e·i .H d I ni·!aclUtlei Laguna Trustees · . . ' To Approve 1~ . New: Instructor.~ ,, • nHcied in the.-.iunlty, f.UO,.lng a,... ~made Iii\ 'P.'"11·b1 the ~ty Coln>_ .......... Weac~r ' ' Bi111 .......,. will· extend Jitio'. ~11 wUll low clouda J"" \ drlato 1n tbe o111nr. llnklnr t!io llJch te-atW"O lo rt locally and ' ! clo!rn lo 71 !uriher inland. ' I • . • ~ ~ I '. INS~B , TODAY ... : • • ! . • ' ' :Aftn M'1>illo tl/<OI' pnlld,.I I ,;..,· fDll. 'Ille ,prcridcfttlal. ' ,Jldth!i,'-•'!"''coll<d'Tr'<io'•Od , 1 JtiUt -ore vp fr.w tlllt. St• llooU"17, "41t 20. - . , ·I -" ............. ,,, -" --.. --' =·--:it ,......... ,, TIIMtlrt • '' ·-._.~ ...... ,,., --.. • t I \ • • I DAILY "LOT SC MofldtJ, October 5, 1'7G Fire lllifeat -~ .. ' ly ""Ii ,.,.,, .... , lrvin·e .. Begin ' ---. 6,000 Students Troop Back toCamp~ _ ~ases; :Toll~ .__,_Reaches 13_,_,.e:,-4iU r1~11n1odly -.t UC Irvine with Among the sludentl attending opening qumbers of peOple on campus wu more ----1-m~~~-450 fl;culty day classes were Z,100 new students, obvious than in previous years. on e.ampus:-either freshmen or transfers. l.a!t-year, UCJ enrolled 5,900 students Clammy fOf, -lho ... rs ond higher r-1Niiiffill1Y'""'!>rT<rosrllrFSCm<d-1reU of California over the weekend u f~ dedared the JMt ln a tw1>week -"' bluol C(>l!laiMd. The duth loll, meanwhile, ..,. lo 13 ror the disaster period with the discovery of three charred bodies during mopup operations in San Diego County's Mount J.!quRI fire. <:.oroner'a dep~ties attempting to Ide~ UtY the remaffiJfound near-tli"ec:orn--- u\unity of Jamul theorized they were Mexican nationals sneakin& into the Ul'lited States. 'Ibey vme apparently caught In die 2fJ0,006 acre fire -lara:est in California history -some time before if wu finally contained Friday. •. -~ -•' ..... Authorities sutveying the de!truction ftpm Moni.rey lo San Di•&• predl~ It ~rut-perhaps $180 million, with more than 1,000 structures destroyed. ''Wtlf, If Yeit£r1 Sick of tht View •ncl l'rn Sick of the View, There's Nothing lift To Do But Get o·lvorced." 'A cold coastal fog over the weekend WU c:fedited with helping firemen finally contain a gtubbom tirt1btr fire northwest of San Sime<ln that dam11ed erdwoods aild threatened famed Hearst Castle. 'The names blackened 44,000 acres of LOs Padres National Foreat before belng subdued by firemen. Newport Gives Bill Ficker One Northern California blaze swept ~gh a stand of giant redwoods so an- cf~t that they were erowing before CJ)rist wu born, but' damage wu 1U1ht H~ro's Welcome in 'Day' because they are fire-reslltant. •. By ALMON· 1.0CKABEY J{ot spot.I .uu flared 1lp ~y in the" DAILY r tLDT INtl• ... ,... 1'(alibU Canyon ...... "' Lot Angeld ~. while weary fireflgbten con-Bill Ficker, the fil'!t West Coast ski~ tt..ned efforta to --"--·•·"' the Lytl per to de.fend the Am.erica·s Cup, in-~ · . --.-e ternational yachting's moat hallowed a-eek blaze In San Beiiw"dlno COUnty. . ho s d • . once virtually und« eontroi Santa Aha prize, came me un ay to • hero s ~ w1nds whipped it ':J .... :.: iast Thurs. welcome_. 1 __ _,dfy: ..aendbll..cloJldl: ~over It was "Bill Ficker Day" in Newport tije-0...np Coast ud blaCkemnc a ~l!eaeb-lrom-IM moment U...42-.y.ar-Old L of'44 000 acres trumd sailor...arch1tect ltepped off an Air TrWhlea faced by' fire officlib went California plane at Orange County t>eyond f1ame1 IDd weather condiUoni Airport where he was greeted by his f 1hl weekend wbeD state firemen family, a hosl of, city and counlY: offici~ls _ aLa.IV'.i.ie __ _ _ and _ ~presentatives of the area's rune pa ud mlarlbl king -yacnt clubs. w~e cited. 1 wor COD· Ficker came to Newport directly from .. -San Francisco where he had attended the f.oordinator Bid _;,.,_ __ --. - llp for~pproval By1 caP@ 'r.:USi~ Jf. tdcbot who ca ·-.,.i. speclll prpgrami fof Meiican American children in .'the Capistrano Unified School Wtrict will be up for approval at tonlght'1 8 p.m. meeting ol the board ol trustees at Serra School. A request for such a person was made at the la.st meetlhg by Manny Puentes, chairman of the Committee for Bicultural Education. PuenteJ emphasized the need for some- one wo could utilize all the sources aVaD.able in Ute community, both volun- tary and school affiliated, to implement ply.~~ for youngsten with educational d~iaencies cau.sed. by cultural dif- ferences. He aaid there might be 700 er IOb students in this category. Also on the agenda will be the modification of the Meals for the Needy program, which will provide for full state reimbursement to the district for mooey tirtnt for these meals. The pragram caused concern in the neighboring San Jaaquin Elementary School District rettntly because the fun. ding was accompanied by a series or in- •tz:ietions ror implementing the program, which if not done wauld forfeit all 1avernment support of the school lunch program. Trustees also will be asked to consider enlarging the seU·impo&ed schedulina: program at San Clemente High School to include aophomores as well as juniars and seniors. DAllY PILOT .....,..,~. HllMI ..... .._. ....,._ -·-c.... M.. S..CI•..,. • OlllAMGI COAST PU8Ll~HINC COMrANV Rokri N. WeM , ..... "' 11'1111 ,~,....,. • . J1clr-R. C11rf1y ""' PretlO ... , lnll ~tl'll MIM§er lt.9"!11 K•evll Ed119r Th•rn11 A. M11rphi11• M-Oinl Edltw •1ch1rd P. N11I SOun1 a •• ,. CWntl' 1•1tor -(0.11 M-! s• W•I t1y lltwl Nl'W'llOl'I a11d11 :1211 w.tt ........ ltlltl'!ll U,11111 allk!'I: ftl .. fll'MI A\1.,.111 """""'*' MKl'I: 1111t a11<11 ae1,11..,.,,.. &M ClftMl'lft: 8lS """' •I t.atfllnt l:Ni 0All1' •ILOT, wtlt •llefl II......,..., 1111 N~ II ....... •lty -~ korl-.. ., ... ...,.. eillt ....... ~ •• ,,. N..._, INcfl, Qlfll MIN, Nllllllflt!M ~ '"' '""'•"' \11...,, •lflfll •1111 -, .. ~ WJlltrlt, Or.... Clftl P11&Ullllrlf COnltff'f ttlnllfll •Ma .,.. 11 2211 Wftl a11t1M IM.o N...,..rt Midi, ft DD wt.I .. , .ur-1, Qor,NI Mit41, Toto•••• C7141 MJ..011 Cl•HIM Al;;af ..... Ml·U71 1 --~ ... Cl ,. AJ .... ,_,,: fit•••• 4f1""4H ~. ,.,., °"""' Cte" """"""" c.n.111. He -INir.... llW1'1tltm, 11111tw111 -t111r .-... ..,.,~-n ...,...... _, .. ~ WIHIMt ..,..., ,.. 1111-ltfl flt ~I ._.,., I l«9'lf c:lti1 ... ,._ .. ff M M"""" ~ ~ e.s ........ (allfl!lr-W1K.!111llWI ...,. o"1w II.ta _.._..,., ...,. FMll U.11 ll'IOllltelyr Mllttorf •tlllttllM., U.b -11111. St.. Francil Yacht Club's Tinsley Island Stag Cruise, annual gathering of the most ,., prominent yachtsmen of the West and East coasts. But 1be airport reception was only a prtlude to a gala communitywide celebration climaxed by a colorful boat p11iae,'f011owect·by·o hour of accolades and rt!Olutions from city, county and 1tate officials. Tht m111iv• boat IJ&(•de fonned in front of the Ballloa YICbt Club and the adjoining orange county Harbor Dilllrict offices where ' Ficker and his wife and daughter, and one of his crewmen, George Twist, boarded Pat Dougan's 12- meter Columbia on whi:h Ficker first became afflicted with America'• Cup fever in 1967. He was ~helmsman on Columbia in the 19&7 Cup trials In which Columbia was runner-up to Intrepid, the yacht on which Ficker defended the Cup this year. The parade was headed by a Harbor Department fireboat, followed by the Varied Meetings Set This Week In Laguna Beach Civic • minded LagunaM may choose from a varied menu cf public meetings this week, on topics ranging from dogs to underground uUlities : -At 7:30 tonight, the PlaMing Com· missian discusses teMis, signs and other matters. -Tuesday tvenin& at 7:30 the regular school board meeUng will find trustees approving a roster of teacher aides to help ease classroom crowding problems. -Also on Tuesday, at 8 ·p.m., the Laguni Beach Dog Owners Association will hold a public meeUng In ill< high school cafeteria ta ponder its next move in the dot ordinance re(erendwn maUei:. · -Wednesday's 7:30 p.m. City Council meeting has an impasing 32·llem agenda weighing, with supporting documents, 1p- proximately 2~ pounds. -On Tharsday a.t 7:30 p.m., re,Mdents of the Emerald Terrace area have been ' invited to gsther in city hall to disCUM proposed undergroundlng of uWlties in their neighborhood. Y outh Sought On Assault R ap A )'OUlll Marine who allegedly tried lo tbro• his petite wife off lbe $an.Cleme·nte MunlclpaJ Pier ln 1 dispute over a mill· Illy aliotmeot check a bein& IOl!lht by polic< today. The victim -""° 1Uffered severe hand cutl during the: Frid1y night fracas -_s.ald he V{IS on'1 restrained from giv- inl her tbt detp 1a by a pair of M1rtne buddin. "" tnvestlgators were told the man COD- fronted h!I wife while Me was walktng on the pier sipping AOda (ram 1 gla.s' w ich 1h1tttred durln1 the 1tr1.11&Je, re- sullinC In htr cuta. She said she wu able 19 brealt 1r ... only lo be au aultecf again, ind finally ran to the home of friends UvinC ot:ar the oceanfront bowl. TMy called pnllce and lhe victim I'''' her lC<lOWlt ol the wault. ---~-- Pavilion Queen excursion boat which was jam-packed with civic and yacbt.ln& of· ficials. Behind the Pavilion Queen came Columbia under tow with hundreds of pleasure craft bringing up the rear and swarmin& around the boat cf honor. The parade wu made up cf everything fronnmaU-catboatrsimllar to-the-one Ficker learned to aail when he was a youngster of eight, to buzzing outooards ta chlnese junk.s to · aucb Javl!b power yachts as Frl!lk Muller's Moja. 1'.1QJ.b9f -the craft _in the parade w~re colorfully "dressed'' for the oCCasian and kept up a din cf horns, beDs, whistles and cherry-bombs reminiscent of the celeb ra- tion in Newport, R.1. when Ficker and his crew were towed triumphantly back to port after defeating the Australian challenger Gretel Il in the best four~f· seven series that assured the Cup'a .con· tinued rtsidera in this country -at leaat.fof..1DOther .u.r.....Yw,, •. Th_e parade disballded in the North Lido Channel adja~nt to ffie Balboa Bay Club and -Ole Ardell Marina and Ficker and bis family were exorted to City Hall in a land parade. Master of ceremOnie! cf the fesUviUes at City Hall was William O'Byroo wbo iD- lroduced officials who were to Jain in tributes to the returninl hero. The ceremonies were opened with an invocation by Fr. Paul Martin of San Juan Capistrana, a longtime friend cf the Ficker family. Mayor Ed Hirth read the fint of many proclamations and resolutions in which he proclaimed Sunday as "Bill Ficker Day" in Newport Beach and the week cf Oct. 4 ta 9 as "Bill Ficker Week." Said Mayor Hirth: ''This is a histaMc day in Newport Beach and we are real happy to welcome the man who has br.ouaht honor to our commllYlity. '' Mayer Hirth then presented .a giant replica of the "key to the city'' to Ficker and crewman George Twist. Twist res-pended that all of the summer's hard work was justified by the "recognition we are getting at heme.'' A Jetter cf commendation and con- gratulation fram Gov. Ronald Reagan was read by Assemblyman Robert Badham. A resolulion introduced . in the State Legislature commending Ficker for bein& the first West Coast yachtsman to defend the OJp was read by O'Bryon. A realutlon by the Orange County Board of Supervisors was read by Jahn Killefer, e1ecutive assistant to the ch.,innan oC the beard. Jack Barnett. e1ecutive m111aaer of the Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce, of wblcfi Ficker is a direCtor, presented him with a framed membership card. Tam Keevll, ed:itor .r the DAll.. Y P1L9T, presented Ficker with plaque replica of what be facetiously referred to a,s "Page One of the paper's first Sunday editian." Visitor Asks Wro ng Person A young visit9r from Hawaii who made the mistake of a.sking a Laguna Beach undercover affictr I.a buy him a bottle of wlzie Friday night found himself undtr arrest on charges of contributing ta the delinquency of a minor and solicltina alms. James Warren Elam Jr., 19. and his companion. a 16-year~ld Rivt.r$ide girl, were stopped for questioning at midnight Frtday on Sooth Coast High-way ntar Mount.tin Road when ofic:ers noted the i;irl appeared to be under the lnflucnct of drugs. During I.he conversation, Elam sug- ge1ted the officer mi&ht like lo buy them a bottle.of wJneJllic:h,.l)Q!lce lli<I. cone atltutes M>llcltation or alms. The girl was booked for curfew vlo\1· lion and possession of n • r c o t I c 1 par1phe.m11l1 when a marUuana pipe wu found In her purse. Two bJillting complexes nearing com-About 850 graduate and 575 medical of which 3,600 were undergraJtuata. pletion ttti3 weelt were partly opened for atudenl{I .have eru:olled. UliJ __yeai,_ a ConUnuing ptoble~ at lbe &rowinc cl&s!e3-today-but-conslrucUon ·apparatus spokesman said. E.iad e 11..LQ_J_Lm ~ n_t ca~pu.s are the sfiOrta.se alltudent fii)UJ:.- provided a marked contrast to the neatly figures will not be ready for another 10 Ing, parKin& and Uie lack cf nearby abOps trlmmed landscaping around o I d e' r days, due ta the annual confusian of and services. buildlnp on the aiJ.year old campus. registration. Solution to at least ane al the probtema The ftine-ltory engineeriilg building wil1 An oblerver who . ...ha1 viewed ~ may be ~ incrused uae of bicycles. An house. the ichool of engineering, the new previous five opening days a,r c:}uses abaerver noted there wett mpre bicycles department or 5:0Clal ecology, the educa· noted this year that increased traffic and on campus this year than ever before. tlonal opportunity program, and audio visual services. The four-story computer sciences building houses tbe department. of in~ formation, the graduate school cf ad- mlnistraUon and-U,e -public -pollci research unit u well as the UCI com· puter facility . Elevators in the nine-story eniineering tower have yet to be installed, delaying use cf claurooms on the upper Doors, a sPokesman s1!d. The two-building complex cost $6.2 million and was financed by a 1966 bond issue -and matching Dep~ent of Health, Education ana Welrare tunds. Amang features the: $3 million fine arts village offers the university are a 425- seat studio theatre, a 240-seat concert hall, an experimental drama labaratory, art and aculpture 1tu<lios warkshops and galleries and music reheanal facilities. Part.ions of that nine-bullding arts center have yet to be completed althaugh seats in most lecture facilities were in- stalled aver the weekend. Cons ider Proposals -Laguna CommiSsioners To Check Tennis ·Court,s ORIGINAL -HTK Planning Advance. Laguna Beach planning commission- ers tonight will examine a report of the Art Colony's tennis court shortage and consider proposals made by the Laguna Beach Tennis Association In a report presented to the City Council last tnQnth. The association made three sugges· lions for improving the tennis outlook: -Creation of a tennis and recreation center on Irvine Bowl property. -Development, with the cooperation of the Irvine Company, cf an elongated by Harry Howard, deferred from the last PJanniiig Commission meeting when actian was blocked by a 2-2 vote, may run into the same problem tonight · Co mmissioner Thomaa Johnston, whose absence caused tht previow deadlock, still has not returned to Laguna, ac4 cording to the city planning department. The commissioners split in their views Rs to the number cf lots that should be permitted in the small subdiv ision. B d U: ii greenbelt beside Laguna Canyon Road roa way .1-1a s where meadows would provide flatland for add_ltional courts. Lagunan Treated For Spiked I.SD State's Wonders -Expansl•n .r emting facilitie•, in cooperation with the school. dlatrict. • • . Also an toni&ht'a ag.enda is the tint A 12-day celebraUon featuring· the public hear~ on a sign ordinance a-A Laguna Beach man who thought he wonders of Calllornia was launched this mendment has been the subject cf had been slipped LSD was treated and morning by the Broadway department more than 20 meetings this year. released from South Cout Commllilty store~with c_eremQllies_at_lh~ Ugre~-L The controversial amendment; spec:i-Hospital early today. breakfut at the Irvine Cout Coilittfy fYlng .... lhelneth<M!~ to-measttre--William-John-cbambers,-25, 1285-S. - Club. tilgn area, ~as made effective as an in-Coast Highway. called Laguna Beach Several local dignatarles, including Dr. teripl urgency regulation and now . Ii police at about 2:20 a.m. today and Daniel Aldrich, chancetlor of UCI and being presented for mormal ad.ditlon to reported that · he thought either his food Newport Beach City Councili;nan Richard -the oh:li~ance. er drink had been spiked with LSD, Croul.-=-and top storLoU1cills. were _ fJ-1~ifies that ''exterior petlmeter" of police said. present for the kJck~ff, a ifiii. shall bi determined bY measure-Police went lD his r!!ldenct at th t Enti~ed, "Discovery: California," the ment with "net mare than 12 ·straight Del Camina Hotel and ealled an ambu- pramollon will include !ht appearances of conn~ting linea." . lance (or him after he appeared to be several well-~ wr1ters at the atore'1 A v~lance application far subdivision under .the influence of drugs, officu1 Southern Cal_lfom1a ouUets. ol Temple Hills Drive property owned said. • ION (ftlnds in•• aaa d bJ Ockltl • 161b 1 am flom Oc:ta1:11r 1aL) ILp 2 ,., s t•a:.1 .,_.QI I ..... WIM .. _,NI• . ' Plul54Y_.afSrmdllwq :nt A half ceu&my ol pilCW'I I I IQ•t• -I 1 ' • perfect reconf "' ""'* -_, .. -• oxcem of $150 mllllon. and tllo p • ..,.,, llqdcllJ ol ahol1 ... tc. • .0 oombN10MQW d jUW ..... Morris Plan 80 Oi I ml nRl.IGHOUT ClllEOfllA. Newport leac.J. 1700 Nowpo~ ll•d. -.iJ.1700 ' - I I I ' T 1 ~ ( ' I ~ I c 1: ( ' I f --~-----------~----------------------·-·-.. -·--·-·---·~-~---·-------------:-i""'• MON['I AY OCTOlt:• • 1m1 TtiiiUib • w111t i4 ll.IUtSl:s Illa MOMJ .-Illy. l!l"""' ,...., (30) • II!) -..... (C) (30) • ''" o till CD m"' ,,... ......, ,..~,.._..,,"""~ (C) (60) "Tiit Two Doll•r Thins.'"· Uw...atuo.nt AaraA Sllmman tllu tb htlp: an unma\ried· couplt r.t1h1 cuslodJ of their lion. Ptttr Strauis SF Performance - In Hamlet Role SAN FRANCISCO (,_UPI) -~·l~e range _or .!1er sUll _un..-_ Judith Anderson Is hkely to be di1ninishea yolct. But e com· a melancholy dame efter she plained that het movements reach what critics thought of seem to be a succession of-• ~ 4_:0D 8 lie Nlwl (t) (&Q) Jtrry Qu11pJ!1. "" D lllllC -l'J (00) 8 Tlle AO• .,_. (C) (90) T111!1· ti'l't!y tchedultd 1Ut$b •r• Jill SL .lohn, Tommr RCHI, Vidor Buono, ~blrt Reid Ind m1rrl111 «MJR· aelor Dr. P11.d Po11tnot. Announter ii Shldol Sl"'9N. and Joan De~nt)' ~~ tilt r.tiii.:_ "":'--. ple. Lte-J. CObb,7tlJMn Kini, Jutlj Pact st1t. -her performance .._as t h e poses." 8 117J Cil Ill""--.... ,.... (t) (Z hr 45 min) Chitlso ... rs n. Dtltoit Lions. li\'C from """"· \ -·"' s-t (C) (30) 'Thi Olplci· 1111rs D•ulhter." Smart 1u1rdt 1 Selndln1Y11n princeu. m TM fllabto11t:1 (Cl (30) Ill It Jibs 1 Tllllf (C) (60) ''When hr.Mteb Girf." Suzy Parker 1ue.sh.j f1ll DEIUT Htdcepoq1 LaClre (C) (30) "Crciws.." N1tu11 writer Miss Jun W11rth11y holds In lnlorm•I wnkd•J Optn ho\ISe lar dllldr111 to .., 111lmt l-, illlf(:1$, pl1nb, ind llttS that 1ppt1r 1round 1 small ....... IE>_,._ (t) (311) 9:00 R a (j) Ml)'tlmJ ltJ .D. (C) (301 Comedienne Alitt GllostltJ ma es her dtbut 11 • r11ut1r In this 1pisodt 1$ Cousin Al iot. who tomes llome lrom 20 Jt•rs In tile Anny lo becomt llousekwper for wid0wrtr Sam and his Xlfl Mitt. 0 Chrys~r Pruents *The Bob Hope Specill 17 Top Comediennes & Their "lib Movement" 0 1D oo m1 1•1<w1n.'" Hope SllGw (l) (60) .. Ladies' 0.1." Seventetn com!Mliennes 1id Bob Hopt in tellin1 tilt l1le ol "the d1y women locrll owr th• netwoit" 11 h• usllers in ll!s 1.970·71 Sirin of speci1ls.. Edie Adams, Klye Bll111d, 0 fie fuaitive (Cl (60) .. An1tl1 T r1vel on Lonely Rt»ds." P1rt I, 0 THE YOUNG LAWYERS * FOUOWS FOOTBALL! m '""' ""' tt> <"> ""'\'· out." Jirn Brius btcoflltll in1ld1 min for 1 baseb.111 stadium holdup. DAILY PILOT SltU l"llOI• -Lovers' Quarrel llJ -" (tl (00) tr;) ...... AdwfrtWI (C) (30) IE TllllM • Its Eltnlll• (30) Tm. "',~ Rulltiesd .. !_C) .. !60)1•"" ~ D"vt"d Enunes acts as mediator bet\veen James dePr, iest (left) _and Art Kou s,-, .,ret s ••. 1n ...,,.uiUCI n. o Th Bo th B d New weekl7 Hries with both docu-tik as the "lovers" have words in this scene from ' e . ys in e an • rnentaries uMI uperiment11 f011111ts resuming productio n \Vednesday at South Coast Repertory 1n Costa Mesa. &:!5 £1 C.. 1N111 Ptl itical (C} &:JI IJ C..dW CIMra (30) such 11 "liYe" n1tHin1t town meet· -~~~.'!.!'.'.::~'.::::'.'.'.__:.::::::'.=:::o__::.:..:=:.:::..:c:.::.:.:..:::c_-".:.:..:_'--------­inES and pbone·in pro1r1ms. m Tll1 nyh11 Nun (C) (JO) "Fli1h1 el Ov!rlldl/fil• (C) (30) of the Dodo Bird.'' EE lntri11 (30) m Jttt• a.. c.Hs <JO) "Moo· m Nltldle 1so1 Shi Po1t." !:30 0 fit (j) Dtris O.y (C) (30) -~-1 ... , ,_,_1 (30) Doris tries to llrlp publicize Ancie's ~ .--• .. ......., ind Lotlie's rest1urant in ord1r lo C Tiii Dlllrt llplrt (C) (30) !flch some much-needed CU11:omars but her efforts 1lmast doa the IE 0--J OlriUll (30) ptace ~. Robffi Emh11dt i nd 7:00BCIS &.ills,.._ (C) (30) Stubby h)'9 ire fe1tured. D 11.l RIC •--(tl (30J • B -(tl (JOI 'Dirty W 01·k at Cross1·oads' Enjoyable Tustin Melodrama IJ WW"1 lllJi U..? (t) (30) ID PWIJ' MnN (60) By TOM TITUS " The production receives a melancholy dane. The tritics also were harsh Thoreau Fihn The Australian-born Dame with director William Ball for Judith. 72, drew harsh notices cutting the five-act tragedy HOLLYWOOD (UPI) from reviewers who watched down to two hours, suggesting Producer Hal W~llis aqulrcd her portray Hamlet in a slim-it be called "Gems from med-down v e r s i o n of Hamlet," Hamlet eicerpts or the film rights to "The Night Shakespeare's tragedy at its a "Readers Digest version." Thoreau Spent in Jail." p~ opening last week . ...:.....::=:::.:..=:::::__:...:.__: ____ _;_ _____ _ Miss Anderson, who plans a six-month nationwide tour in the role, is the..lOth womaD to play Hainlet There may be a long wait for number 11 if the critics are any indication. Dame Judith 's prince of Denmark is a matronly crybaby who is neither com· manding nor mo ving ." wrote Stanley Eichelbaum of the San Francisco Examiner. Dan Sullivan of the 1..os Angeles Times suggested that "The grand marmer is not enough to base an evening on. Dame Judith is not Hamlet, nor was meant to be. 1t1ore mixed reviews came from Anitra Earle or the San Francisco Chronicle and Robert Taylor of the Oakland Tribune. The former praised her u r b a n e , d r ier-than-<lusl, throwaway touch," but also grumbled that she rushed through many or her lines "with what seemed to be Jack. of confidence.' Taykr insisted that .,her Hamlet is more than a curi.06ity" and praised the -1 ...,. • -(301 a;"! Mlllic9it/hltor'1 Dltk (C) (JO) c1 "'' 0.11 ... 1"1101 s1111 oiaTY woaa: AT decided boost from the presen-~ _, ~ ___ ;utl_C:_RQ_SS_AQADJ~ -ll----,llJ·liit~tfii'"CliCl (t)~(30r -m [116Kiti-(C}(l0) ThereTs a tendency lli cilrn-,.. me1octram1 1w 11111 John_.". dl•Kt·-ce Of Betsy -Hewe t as CISpeaditilft (C) (60) (R) "'A t:4SD @@Q)TheSiltntrotce(C) munity theater to regard ~e :~.ect~r ~\~'dsc~~~~;1_,'1~~"1C:; Bergen's partner In dastardly Conwrutioft With Girl Ropri #2." (30) "A Oe1dly G•me of Love." Tiit melod rama as an archaic 111ck euc1>~. coi1u,.,., nv J•'k Het1«1. deeds. Miss Hewett is a much-a2en!s inve.5tig1te 1 prostitution-theatr·ical form which went i>l1no acc01T1P1nl m""1 nv Ml_, 11.00. -Screen -Play " I 1 ~ • -~.., ,-.~ w d (C) (30) k . . PrtsHUfd tv 111e lusun communltv h nored ve•·ran ol comrnun1·1y -......_ 11a:1-•,.. •,..; or bl1cllm1il rilC et al • plush desut out with the silent movie and Plavtf's Wednei.c1ay rr.rcu9~ s1rura1v O i.c;:; CE D£1UT llllrit (30) 1esorf. when I plot develops lo dil· which con~""UentJy. should be until Oct. 10 11 Cunnl"Glllm Field, C theater Whose distinctive voice credit c•n 1ide lo 1 prominent • ~~.., ~lrte!, luslln. al~ N1ril (55) Uniled Stales senatl)f. Ma rk Rich· kept at arm's length. THE CAST and hallghty bearing CO'l1· 7:>0119(1)111MaOti• (C) (60) Doc min 1uests. But melodrama as a Nein., Lc~"1ace ... J1ckle Sh"rr111 tribute largely to the p\ay's ef- Mi!l'tl_D totnewh•I JMctl~ to fin~ IO:llO IJ a (j) Cir .. l ur111tt Sllow (C) h1"stor;cal exercise is qu ite MllNO M11rGllrCYd ' ••. 0111 Btrten fectiveness. Id• l!hinevcild .. lltt1v H-en ttlll: his t1111pot11'J repl-merrt ii (60) Guests 1r1 Eydit Gorme i nd another matter, particularly Aa.m oa~111rt .. o.~" counclll'l\ln Nearly walking off with the Doctor SM!! McT1vish (111tst sl.11 Join Ri¥trs. \\'hen il is done with style and =t"':.eu.:'11c"..'biii·:" ~~i!"n~~ show in a minor supporting Yen Mllet),1 felllll••llOll Pf•s.:!. '"o @@ ml sHC@OlllllJacl fidelitysuchastheproduction, Leoni• A.s1or111tt •..• SJ11ron .. ,..,,.ni1 role is Marc Rickles as the 111ct b 1 thr..t to llim ind his, '"' Dilij if> (60) Puts •ler· by the new Tustin Community F1Hrett41 ~ •......... F••-P•1"""" hollow .h eaded country PltilnU. tiininr tnCOU!lteB ill Eun1p1 111 Players, of a potboiler entitled L'111" Nell •·•···••·•···· Glee cirul•~ bumpkin who comes through depided., MUI aain 11nptwis on 811' (I) Cl W ...._ a.w situitiou u obwM ia u. Neth-'' Dirt y Work at -the its villain, and Dan Berger to "save the day." Helene 1 Ash Class Set Award winning writer Larry Coheri will he a d a sc reenwrith1g unit at the Lee St rasberg Theater Institute in Hollywood. . The unit will meet fo r a 12- week session beginning Mon- day evening, Ocl 12. Guest writers will join Cohen i n (C) (30) JahMJ c..i lnlradlltt$ trWlds.Jllly, Geraany, helllld .1nd Crossroads.'' answers the call with zest and Is highly effective, and owe of hi tanlstit Mib Coftnon •nd Enitand.. P•(s wife Mirilnt 1111 Watching: this mbst en. relish. Berger possesses an the few who really gets the ...,. MD 1mt. Alto futartd •PPlfiS • the prosrs111. joyable piece of work, one gets authoritative voice, even with melodramatic most from her "' Jb1 c..t1, Mm, M111111tS, 11 at..._ {C) (60} the feeling of how it· must jets flying overhead, and play!! part, as 8 fi lthy r ich society structured classes dealing with -~~ ~._... the separate areas of writing j ~~~;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~, ror motio• pictures a n d I; - - televisi01. Enrollment i s Jtdl n.,., Cu'CJI W1J111, J.11 Arvin. O TM Stint (C) (60) have been in b a c k w o o d s the black hearted baddie to matron. .. -Duw11 1t'ld tM I Lll'r111d, ED rnillr u. (C) (60) "'M J1p1-theaters of a century ago, for the hilt. Sharon Hoagland as Miss .,.. Sin.rn. nese 1nd Other fMllJI Imports In· the Tustin oUering takes con-Young J ackie Sherrill is Ash 's giggling, gargantuan • mo -(30) "Cltth 1 H1ro." v1din1 fll1 U.S.?'' Gum Is Miurlce siderable pains to mount a sweet and lovely as the daughter. Francee Peterson "'' St1ns, Sec. of Commtl'ct. od ct' It -· "d d a-$ MowM: "'llnllo" _..Ml M"*' (lO) faithfu 1 r~pr u ion. . IS', •n-woebegone heroine. but her as the pert French ma1 an (comtdf·lll}'llery) '60---'lenn FOid. Qi1 cidentally, presented in the lapses of timing and repeated Glee Caro1an as the heroine's (C) (30) a:> T.i.till••• AtPllUM (2 b1) open air, which f u r t h e r tendency to step on other ac· tousle-haired offspring com· • Trmlll • CoulqllllC9S lO·lS 0 t'il) Dick Cmtt Show (C) (45 ) enhances the flavor · of the tors· Jines negates h e r plete the Tustin Cast. m Dllllll ...... (C) (&0) ''A Hopi 10:30 ID lift JollM """ (C) (30) piece. dramatic effect. Portraying "Dirty Work" merits some I• Mlfllll.'" • Its se tting or Tustin, which the stoul hearted hero, Dave serious attention, if only to .,..._.. n. (t) (30) CECulnln' llllm• <30> ii.self has its roots in the soil, Councilman relies more on cast a glance at the im-., .. ,_...,..t•'-' (30) ll:OOll.tH!CiJ IENnn (C) lends furthe r credibility. physical bea ring than on aginatively designed souvenir J:tSll!)c.Hlll•~ D @@m._ (t) Director Richard Anderse n proud, sweeping ge stures programwhichshoulddrawas L'IDl!IS@ mt.a.p.ir1(C) (60) Ua..i111i.AdiM(C) has done bis homework in which could enhance his many smiles as the show o.1 TM11 •nci Dick Martin 1111. om""" (C) localizing the story, even to in-character considerably. itself. The melodrama con· 'Ullt mr Ktii E1MrJ 1ppe1rs as• -GOV •• REAGAN SPEAKS eluding a tehcnically correct tinues Wednesday t hr ough sltd IM*r 1 11, dine• ml -· reference to the playmg area SaturPay for four more H1n11 \'111. "iilod, Mod World" looks * OUT ON IMPORTANT as Los Angeles County-since Stars Reuni'ted rv>rformances at its outdoor limited. Cohen will interview all possible c:andidates. Call the institute at (213) 461-4333 for furthe r information and ap- pointment. Eddie's Guest HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Suzanne Pleshctte s i g n e d aboard for an episode of "The Courtshi p of ~~ie's Father." Fo· x· mn aiasr 9"LAZA '119 w 1t thl tu n«al businaa. Thi F1J1111 ISSUES TO All . · · d r~ h of fidll Flf'llw of r111 roes to 1 CALIFORNIA VOTERS the play s lime Per 1 o arena on "C" Street, nort .... rtment of ttM u.s. pemmenl. predates formation of Orange l·IOLLYWOOD (UPI) Main, in Tustin. OrtN 6:45 ~.. ,......_.. • ._...ic.I (" C t SHOWTIMI -7:00 .-·~--(tl (60) U Ill ,...._.. r""" v oun Y C t b. p· t "It shoot --· · O Um la 1C Ures Wl ~11•1 llDMT IGQUiln' & '111 If, r "'"'" ,_........, Tllll:llively IClleduled cuuts: Mtl m Yt1 Doli1 Sir (C) The key role in any sue-"Flight or the Doves" In ~ . .11!111!' a:im.a a • Tom11, Blll•nd 'Sommtrtill1, Jo~r· m Mllil: "Elfltlltn lftd ii.Mita " cessful melodrama is that of Dublin with Ron Moody and D~~ Mlist S11n SWtrtkiw who dlxuue! (dr•m•J '57-M1rlh1 Scott. '-===========;! • "IMll'• tib" i nd then dtbltes 111>m· Ir Jack Wild -the stars of , · ••llll .. 11 ... E()HHJE ., •• lib !elders rr11ane P•r\11 m World Press (C} (R) "Oliver!" reunited co-starring '----~INGRID 1*, wli)~w;\ ~ ~ ind J~t Gold11tr1. 11:05 OTIINtre 9: "'Yif'lln Sprh1(' (dr•· for director Ralph Nelson. ANfll()Nfi BERIJMiJl .... ~&..i.E> - m T• Toi .. '""" (tl (30) mo) '5>-Mu "" ,,.... QUINN, 4r.wwl'll''-~. ID Wtrt4 rn.. (C) (60) 11:301J Qt 00 Mm Criffin (C) t/ .-rNJa l!)llllltlly (C) (30) D llli@ ltJJt11nn1 """' (C) ~flhiiilMD ~ c-• .J.._ BD.BJCH CIDOUT LI t.qulit1 (C) (60) ~~'!i;lliot is hosteu. Lee MtfYin ilNEWPO....,..,.,..RT BEIACH • o.._;~ ~~ s....:nd':,';!~ WYM mast ... llil..,. ,,. •-< 25 > o "'"• -... ""'' '""'" <•u--~ r· -"" .. _. ffUl.DEl · IORGlllE a;a 9 QI {I) Nw1'1 lq (C) (30) ml ) 'SZ -Ricti1nl Robtr, ).tin~ 1...:y coiMnw drum ~ Duddy 0 llhvle: "Sub•lfiN C..••1111" Rkh w tiff cr111 ,,., "'*'"' 10 tdr1m11 ·:;1-Wim•m Holden. 'Aoemt REJ:m-O ·is·rousum~ • ~, ·· " hllp him win .1 schol111hip In •n KATHAAN:: ROSS 11111!1111' corrtut. m MIW: "1"1 Cl• .. Cenl1J1" A08ERT BLN<E ~ m..,.. FNll Slltlr (C) (90) Ar1 (dr1m1) '59 -GllJ Cooper. SUSANCl.AAK ,,..!'.. '· . ' Canlty Pit O'Srltn. P1ul H1rw1. 1:00. Ml'llt: ....,. " brtll" (Jiiii-wrt:LL 11IUI P.f..NAVISl()N9l[OiHICOLQR8 Dion, St.111 T111mptls of Brtl•in. siclf) '47 -Ri11 Hayworth. I WIW£ llOY " .... ' I ~·~' s~i'D.,:. ' tB Drlplll ('C) (JO) "'fllt l"JTlllld D Nftn ('C) ' ~ ...!-""'' •..:r'r __ SWlndll." An m nplhit·type wom1n l:U D C...•itr w.tl• a..1 (C) ALSO ""11•• '"", '""' .,_ .. )lltt Mr lllep l lllOMJ'•lftllinl l:JO f1lNtws (C) ... CUNT EASTWOOD Wlart Oo.yiey'S SllllU.EYMAOAlllE ··n-r l3(M ------------11 f ~~~R INTtil: mNV" ~ 1'UNM:RSALPIClUltt. CJlt :~d~, '61 -Emle btca, C,d C111tlDt,,\~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~------ill Georp Sandus. TUfS OAY m "Ctpper Sty" (dr1ma) '57 - Jtff Monow, Coleen C117. 10:0011 "Ovt et Thh World" (c.omedy) '4s--£ddie Br1c:Un, Y1ronlt1 li ke. E MOVIES m "A w ... 11 R_.. .. (dr1m1) 'J6 OAYTIM -1Utlllrin1 Hepburn , Yin H1nln, Htrliert M11Wll, "'"B(C) .,_ o1 ,_.. (-<rJ ''"'B<CJ "II-,._ <"· ..,. a..a....t Pmton Tonr Rindlll vtnlurt) 06l-Jo1n Gr•nwood. NJ. ....---• ' ' cti11I Craic. . I-ale ltol, Wlltlr Mlttll1u. 4:JO 8 ~ (tu"*"') '41 -,._.II.,,.. ...... .....,.. <COllMdJl CllJ' ~nt; .1ot11 ron1.11ne. FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER NEEDED IMMEDIATELY ENTERTAINERS FOR NEW TV VARIID SHOW e MUSIC GROUPS e COMICS e ·DANCERS e SINGERS CALL BILL JOHNSON 956-0980 letw"11 t A.M. I 5 P.M, hf i Mltfe• A,,.llltM.itt '#ftlf'l'Ulltlff' & W..._..,.-, Opon •:45 mr.aa .... .. ............ Watch . the; landlord get1 his~. ' NOW THIU TUUDAY 211d FUTURE \ Cllorl1tto11 HnhHt "THE HAWAIIANS" ill·1\:S·ll . .... .... RATED GP PLUS JAq>UltlMI...._ 11sm - PHONE 642-4321 BEAUTY CARE, INC . 1 ~24 ALLEC, ANAHEIM ... , .. ,,..,, .. ''T HE HAIN" ...... ,, 0,.,. & '-t Di. ,..,, 11 Clint EHtwoocl I. Don Suthorl•nd in "KELLY'S HEROES .Jtti DAVID NIVIH JU.N·PAUL llLMOHDO St•rt1 Fri., Oct. 16 ''AIRPORT'' Ex.cfusln En rnent \ 1 I • \ \ I JI DAILV PILOT SC Monday, Ottobtr 5, 1~70 LEGAL NatlCE LEGAL NOO'ICE Andy's Fun Ast Ill)' kid. "Ask Andy'' fs fun. See ft $aWrda,ys In tht DAILY PILOT. ' • Wh.O Reads the Srors J' or ihe Srors? It's Sydney Omarr And now this articulate writer who hos been celled the "astrologer's tistrologer'' reads the $fars for you. Sydney Omarr, longtim ,,-P.!:rson•I •slrologer to mony of HollywOO<r.''•nd the liter•ry world's most fomous st or$, is o DAILY ~eJLOl;columnist. Omorr:'s recoro for occurocy of pre<lictions based on ostrologicel -.11lysi1 is omozing. Whether you re•d · •slrologic•I foreco sts forfun or os o serious stuClentoht•r·g•zing , you'll enjpy Sydney Omort's d•ily column io !ht DAILY PILOT • ' BUICK'S CENTURIAN -New series Is exemplified ln the hardtop couple with formal roof line and sculptured accent line down the side. New Se.ties also comes in 4-aooi hardtop and convertible. Powered by 455 c. I. engine, the Cen-• turian offers power steering, and power brakes with front discs as stendard equipment. In High Gear Buick Introduces Latest Designs, New Centurion By Carl Car1easen Buick has introduced its 1971 line or cars and included is a 12.5°/o YIELD F.IRST MORTGAGES \VHEn PAID TO MATURITY S YEARS. DISCOUNTED MINIMUM $3000 INVESTORS PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 3700 NEWPO•T ILYD., NIW,O•T l lACM CALIFOINIA f2,60 PHONE 714:675-IJOl BROKERS TAX SHELTER INVESTMENT $5000 MINIMUM INVESTMENT IN PRESTIGE HIGHRISE APARTMENTS 'r•pelllil hlie'"t t• s.11., ,.., 1970 Ir 1 t71 1'11telteM l'rke •Her Actvol CeMffitctl .. C• I '""At• ,,.,..tty 100% 0c, ..... ,.~c.,.._..-. For f11ll d1t•ih ettend • ONI HOUI SIMINAI et 0111 of th1 f0Uowi1t9 loc•tio11t1 NIWPOR111 INN ·1c1ro1111f Rll'I,) T1111,. Oct.,, 7:JO P.M, C•ll Do1u'• Loc:klii•rt 111'41 151.7900 CINlUlT Pl.AU Malit 1W•tfw•H ftm .l Wtd .• Oc:I. 7, 7110 P.M.--Ct11tu1v City c.111C • ., l rown f21J ); 610-,110 S,-ce h lf.ftH.'PI ... ,..._ 17141 SS7·1'00 INh,_,. IHclrll ., 121JI •to.t710 ICetlhrry Chyl fM ~ .... Complete-New York Stock'.List • • .. ltfarliet Sgnabols .. ~ I I f .% I I ' ' _I I ' ' I ' ' ' ' I ' ' • • ' ' ' ' • • • ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' l ' l ' ' ' l l ' l l l ' l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l t l l L • • • • ~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' ' • • • ' • • • • • • ' ' • ' ' ' i ' • ' ' • • ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' i ' ' ' ' • • • • • ' • ' ' MondlY,-S,1970 SC OlllV PILOT J~ American Stock Exchange List I I ·.-.--· .• ·: :; ·:.. DAILY "LOT. , ~ w !1--+.1-t.acing - • --; Driver . • ~Killed • -. , )IJS!NORE (AP) -Lou !"Brommett, a member of ; ..,...rlioat racing'• JW!Of ~ ~Fame, died Sunday nigh! af1<r :hil II-foot Inboard crashed :-.rurlng the final race ol the -Elsinore 500 endurance com- •. petilion m Lake Elsinore. -Brummett, 48-year~ld ~driver from Pasadena. Calif., : died ol he.ad injuries in -:-Riverside Community Hoopital : "ilere be was rushed after the : Q'ash. • The Mandella boat, which he : manuCactured, nosed into the ~ water a n d dlsintegrll:ed. -Brummett was inducted into : the Hall <If Fame last year, an • ~ bestowed as a resu1t of numerous trium p hs in marathon races. . William Wiles, Kansas City, Mo., averaged 79.65 miles per hour to win the outboard division and Mike Wallace, • Anaheim, Calif., captured the inboard class at 74 .4 m.p.h. Wallace, in a 2G--foot Rayson Craft, fm istied 24 seconds ahead of Don St. Jolln, Van -Nuys, Ca1if., to collect $2,375. W'lles, who led from the fitth lap of the initial 125-miler on Saturday, collected $3,500. A full lap behind the winning 18- foot_Feajay wu Dick Sherrer, Seal Beadl, Cahl., In a 2l-fool Glasstron-Molinari. Coast Guard Boat Sinks On Mission PORT HUENEME (UPI) - A 40-foot Coast Guard rescue cutter began taking on wate r while on a ~scue mission Sun- day nl ght and had to be towed Into the station here in sinking conditiOJt. The craft had been se11t two m.ile,s east of Anacapa lsWld in the Santa Barbara Channel to he!p the 32-foot cabin cuiser Amalita, which had radioed jt was sinking. 'Ibe rescue boat transfered a pump to the Amalita. Then it was discovered that water was entering the Coast Guard boat through the engine room. The four-ma111 crew transfered over to the Amalita. • Two Yachts Lead Field For Argosy BALBOA -j f m Lin: dennan's Newport-41 Trend · from Balboa Yacht Club and Fred MacDonald's Columbia- 43 Encore, Newport Harbor Yacht Club traded honors in the ocean racing dlvlsion of Newport Oceao S a 11 i n g Association Alamitos B a y ArgOPiY Saturday and Sunday. Trend was the winner of Saturday's race from Balboa to Alamitos Bay, and Encore was the winner on the return race Sund ay. ' Trieia -and Julie-=oib-Bloek . . -. ,_ -- Buts Ca!,led for Two. Former Presidential Yachts NEWPORT, R.J. -"nle two reject any and all bids. In the Fi.sher, VJce-PreSldetlt ' o l the Patrick J. for the former Presidential yachts. event the hlgh respo~ve bid Fisher and Compaqy. President's late pate rn a I the Patricia and the Julie, are does not represent a fair Both craft were obtained ror grandfather. President being re4fe~ for sale on a monetary return to ~he the use ·of President Tnunan Johnson used both craft as sea.led bid basis. · government, that bid will be and bis Jamily at the end of formerly named. · Tbe ·Oct. 20-sale will-be COit--njected. Wocld..War n Tbeir_JDain use PJ:esiden Nixon o~ Jan. 20. ducted by-the Newport.-~l,.~l.SC,.a.field.activilj'.o.f,jll«' urin&_thls_(lllclod_w,t" ..__ J969, ren'!!lled "the <Honey:Fiti Defenie Surplus Sales Office, Defense._ Supply Age_ncy, ill the escort and uUlilarJan.cralt for the Patricia &rurflle-PitrlClf . one of ten naUonal sales of-governmelll's primary sales · the Williamsburg. AtUir'Pregj. the Julie after his daughters. fices of the Battle Creek, agency !Cl'-defense .surplus. dent Eisenhowe~ took office in ProSpective bidders can Michigan • ~ased Defense 11\e Patricia, former-ly 1053, the Williamsburg wu -write for a Cree descriptive ·Logistics Services C e n t e r known as the Honey~Fitz. decommissioned and the then catalog from the OeJense (DLSC). Barbara Anne, and previous to Margie and Lenore were Surplus Sales Office, Dept. Both vessels caa be fn.. that the Lenore was buil.lJn ref~rbis!ied and renamed the RN-1-4, P.O. Box 6 6 O, .spected now, the ~x-Patrlcia 1931' by the De:ioe Boat and Sus1e-E .BPd Barbara Anne.for Newport, R.l. 02840~They Can at the Patuxent Rrver Naval Motor Works Bay City two of has granddaughters. get applications for placement Air Station, Lexin~on Park Michigan. ' · ' On March 7, 1961, President on the Departme11t of Def'enJe M_d., and the ex.Julie at the The Julie, formerly · known Kennedy re• i m e d the Surplus Property Bidders List U.S. Coast Guard Base •. 100 as the Patrick J., Susie-E. Barbara Anne-the-Honey-Fi~ -to-automatically reeeive-salei McArthur Causeway, Mtaml Margie, Margaret T., ad alter his late mater n a 1 catalogues advertising other Beach, Fla . ~ff ere? on sa!e 16-prior to that the Dol-Lar, was gra n dfather, John F. government surplus by writiag 1028 the cabin cr;wsers.w1ll t_>e built by the Fisher Boat Fitzgerald, former mayor Of to DOD Surplus Sales, Dept. sold by sealed bids which will Works, Inc., Detroi t, Boston. The ,$ u s i e ··E was RN-1-4, P.O. Box 1370, Battle be opened at 2 p.m. on Oct. 20 Michigan, in 1940, for L. P. renamed shortly thereafter a~ Creek, Mich. 49016. at Newport. There are no restrictions on future use of Uie ships or the amount bid for t h e m . However, as is the case in all DOD sales of govemmen.t surplus, right is reserved to Shipwrecked Fisherman Re8cued Near l y 100 boats participatecfin the 13th annual Argosy wltidl ·features four divisions of. sailboats -Ocean SANTA BARBARA (UPI) - Racing, Midget Ocean Racing, When Charles W. Baird, 28, of Pacific Handicap and Ocean Santa Barbara, b e ca me Racing Multihulls. Th e r e stranded on San Miguel Island were no doubJe winners in any last Week, he scrawled the of the divisions. Following are word "help" in the sand, built the results: fires and sent up flares to at· s.1v,...,. hlllet ,. A i.nliii.. •• ,. tract rescuers. ~eAN AA~NG -111 l,!,•ndL_l_JJ Baird landed on th e -~rr:g::nd~·00e.1::-W:~~~'E~ -tininhabtted-lsl'and-Wednesday---· MORF -(II ·Dolphll'I, Miii AIU11n1, h h" -r t f"sb' I ~·v~. C2) Bl~ty, II, Ken,tmn"· BWCC1 w en IS"~ 00 I mg vesse t i~~~.,~ ~Mi· 8:';1'.;, a'!r~ FebcMr, Sea Mistress, developed bat-1$l. 113:2~.Ju;::'~oi~1~·~mi,~1tt1V~: tery trouble. MilLt1HUCLs .-in Po1.,nt11l1n He survived for four days on conc;el, &llG!IY EliMn. ever UJ lmY1, . •· br R°" aoti1nt11.,y occ; tJ1 Hur,..,. K.-. his catch (){ abalone and t ee Mlk\u~";h~~ ,........, gallons o{ drinking _wa~r he v9in~:H 11, ci!>l J,,~1 ~.:1 1Il carried along. He said several ScA'gl!f~"'tR'1fir Shine, •111 y°" fishing boats and an airplane :1~1nfr1d. NHYC1 121 ser1n11 1n failed to :see hiS distress fires. ,.:;~~~F BYCi ~~\ .t4,'l,7/C~11/~ ~~e.1:.·~~ lYI I IJ) Villi~ Lt<:!.,, In Shomtl!. OY . o CA -Rt1utl• ""' tt•t.-1, Tim Hogan LIYC Lists Winners · Following are the results of W • ~D Lido Isle Yach t Clu,b's Fall ins,~ace ·. · · Regattaror c euler tioa rd Tim Hogan, USC A t t .. A me r i c a n intercollegiate sailor from Newport Harbor Yacht Club Sunday won the Ken Davis Perpetual Trophy race for the Lehman·12 class in a seve n race seriCs at Newport Harbor Yacht Club. classes' ' held Saturday and Sunday hi Newport Harbor: SABOT A~(!) Mark Gaudio, LIYC; (2) Sue Puthoff, LIYC. SABOT B-( I) Pat Deneher, LlYC; (2) Suianne _ Aubert, NHYC .. SABOT C-(1) Jeff Scott, LlYC; (2) Scott Simpson, LJYC. • . . . ~ ... . . I See by Today's Want Ads • Plush double deluxe mo- bile honie for &ale. ll's -Jurnlshcd411d on ,t~bay- -1ront.Jor-only..$1.i,75n.-No.- one can &fiord Jo.ew;,s this beauty up, • Trade Jns. ?i'ew &: uaed bikes far your old one's • l.J.10 speeds for aale. • Say you need glasses! New Ta.sco telescope With a tri. I!ltd....and_BarkJL1e:m am carrying case. 000 po\ver, .• • 011e of the men on the Amalita was suffering from a possible fractured leg and was flown by a Coast Guard helicopter to a hospital here. 'The Amalita was towed in by a private vessel. while the cutter Jaybird stood by. By the Ume the 118-foot vessel Wind, owned by the Western Offshore D r i 11 i n g Company arrived the rescue cutter was down by the bow, and the stem was awash. When the Wind, which has lif- ting equipmeilt aboari, tried to pick the craft out or the water, the cutter sank by the stern. Hogan scOred 39:y, points in beating out ·19 rivals in the highly competitive 1 2 -f o o t dinghies. Winner in the Walton Hub- bard Trophy Series for the Finn Class was Mark Hughes of Balboa Yacht Club. There were seven entries. Final results : LJD0.14A-(l) Al Perez, BYC; (2) Little Twitch, Chad Twichell, LIYC. · LI DO·llB-(1) Kathy Watson, LIYC: (2) Gaston Ortez, BYC; (3) Edward Gold, VYC. 1'-f\-E MOUSE +\-OUSt • • • LEHM A:N-12.-CI) Tim Hogan, NHYC; (2) Terry Gloege. NH;YC; (3) Charles Lewsadder. NHYC: (4) Bbb Davis, NHYC; (5) Roger Welsh, NHYC. Kl.TE A-(1) C. E. Williams, BCYC ; (2) Nina Nielsen, NHYC, (3) Phillip Ramming, NHYC. KITE B-(1) Steve Scott, LIYC : (2) Page Camlin, NHYC. Pick a iob- any job from A to Z- and find it in the Want Ads Aoc1 I l •f N•""'Y s.,..,.., ......... OHln: We"-.,..,... .... ... ......... On ..... 9•"' W9fht .... _ ..,.. ..... ....... s ........ .._.,c .... Tool- MMrw ·-......... DBunit• YeufMHI .,., ...... -w.-........ Opacllfllf 1..., TecWcS. ""'-, .. _ M ........... look- OR CAU 642-5678 AND TELL THE WORLD YOU WANT TO WORK • • Sears --..... ,11 en_fl _M_,I ••-qy ..... ·-· 4111>11'11 ..... ,,, '"d' I .... ---··· -~-1-• -· .. ,..,,. ---·--- MM.I. .... _,, --lll4u, ------•n1 -·"--" ·-.. -· ...... ........._., ............. I I I l . '· '· 1: r - ,Mor!day, Oetobtr 5, Jq7Q. s DAILY PILOT f ·Niguel :fteside .. t~ Gei ~tl~loeatio.i, B:ooklet " • (;opies_ ot--thebooklet....wei:e <llilriliilia -Wbo·wanted-no·part.(>f-Ule freew~-in,111y~~ktenta who 'find~fre1way' 1'9'ite--19r.vlces-lncllld&-as&lstanct-· -fin~ra-a:iiilta6li:ciiid1Uon, prlc~r-riiiGJ::==. \tedn~Y nj~ 1.t 111\.etUn& _gf.. La~ locauoi;i. representatives oLtbe...dlv.ision llta<!ini_fqr_ lh~!r,.d..!'ell~ ~•b9'Jld und~r <!!_n_&. a Pe!! ~a o live r_cond~t . .!-__ rapgoJ.w Jh,e family _lhat ~ to l'l!_OV_t._ _ Niguel residents called by the Dlvi.sion or nevertheless handed out their booklet 50 no circumstances, move out ~the bUstness, and. spec al r e I o c a~ i o n Payments iViilible includemovfug ex· Hig~ays to discuss the ~pact of that the estimated 550 to 665 persoos-who . state has acquired an interest in the pro. payments. pcnses withln a SO.mile area, 1Up- port100 of the ~t ~ay plaooed to could be effected by con1trucilon of the perty. the booklet wama. .Firat ste"p is to estaf>Ush contact with plemental payments: for those unable to be routed through the SoU~ County area. highw!Q' would know what assistance is Only those octu.PYinl the . ~f9pe.rtY. at . the ~lqCation. •aeni assigned to . each purchase comparable replacem~t bous- Though most . of the meeting was available to therp.. ln the event their the time the state acquires iittertst are. freeway project, who will have lists of ing at price levels equal to what they dev.oted to-pr_o1es;ts from ~meowner1 homes are Wiped out. eligible for relocation a~ces. pr~es ¥offered for sale. or rent that receive from the state for their home8, , and supplemental ~yments for tbose Owners and occupants of at least 66, and perhaps 97 single family homes, six multiple residences and 157 trailer park spaces will have a special interest. in a California Division of Highways booklet titled "Relocation Services." Solution Told Speaker Outlines Medical Cam ~us~ A crisis exist! today in the field of health care and the ~lution is the "medi~al campus," according to Arthur B. Kania, president of Western Develoi> ment Corporation. Kania, speaking before the Ora-qge County forum of Town I-fall in Anah~im Friday, outlined the health care challenge. ·'Some think the solution to the high cost of medical care today is socialized medicine," the speaker said. "\Ve do not. .. Most hospitals have no master plan. they are poorly designed . and have not adopted business techniques in operalion. The medical campus; or cen ter, balances serviCes." Kania continued. Hospitals_ are over burdened and under Correctional ~. Medical -Care ... Advised utilized in the o}:>inion of the speaker. 0 A hospi~I room cost $10,000 and the equip- ment to back it up $20,000. 'Ml~· patient who spends 12 days in the hospital doe! not really need the expensive room after five days, for example." Kanis said today we are insuring the cost of-health. "\Vhat we should be doing is insuring health. That is what the medical campus will be designed to.~o. , "It will provide diagnostic services or all kinds in one ronvenient location. It will provide for the abmulatory patie nt who is using or va luable space in hospitals today and does not beloog there." He said the coming theory is that the person should be kept well rather than cured later. CUr"COSTS "The medical center will cut costs Which today are becoming so high that middle _income people are becoming medical indigents," Kania added. To achieve lower cost and better health care government at all . levels must cooperate, the business sector must pro- vide plans. for more efficient opeiation OAU,Y,,ILOT Sltff ,llolt SCHOOL OFFICIALS,.STUDENTS, POLICE JOIN FOf!CES FOR RIDE ALONG PROGRAM Dale Drager. (from left) Jay Wentz, Diane Adami, Patrolman Don Anderson un&ble to find comparable rentals. • The Division of Highways also pays all~--11 escrow an recor g fees an titleln~ . stlrance--Pfiffiiums in connection or-- purchase of prQPertY ·for rights of way. owners are advised and, in addition, no income taxes have to be paid on sup- plemental payments ma de under the pro- gram. PERSONAL PaOPERTY 1£ a person is obliged to store personal property or obtain temporary lodging 13 a result of a mov·e made necessary by _ ltte.way_conaU:uctiQll tbf: _Illitlsion....o''--• Highways also will pay reasonable storage charges for up to one year and reasonable tempora~y lodging costs: These payments must be approved in ad.\ vance by the relocation agent. Moving expenses may be calculated on an "ac~uil cost" basis or a flat sum pay• ment based on the number of rooms in the home plus a $100 dislocation payment. Mobile homes are eligible for aCtual CO!lt relocation· payment on1y, based on the lowest of two bids from licensed mobile. home moving companies. Operators of farms or businesses may be·-eligible for actual· cost moving payments or a· discontiruJed business allowance to be determined in con~ sultation with the relocation agent. PAYMENTS . supplemental payments to property a·wners 'Qi' tenants, the booklet specified,. will be .made · only if the new dwelling qualifies as ''decent, safe-and sanitary." A lengthy definition of thi s requirem~t specifies htat it must confonn to buildi!Jg codes, have a safe water supply, kitchen \Vitb hol · -i nd· cold : w11ter, adequate· heating, b,a.thing facilities with hot and col~ water, flush toilet con,nected to a ------------___ ,andJhe__p_hy.sic.@.ns...must_®Jler.lk.Jh.L sewer, lighting for t?aCh room, have two . D ff.. . . D D • safe exi4. be str.uc turauY sound and have ~ .. o . ee-.=-r-0gra.m~-oeg-1ns~ -~;;1~::~~~~:~~=W:~~ - Around-the-clock medical and dental speaker contended. care for inmates in Orange County cor· "The welfare dollar is depleted by 60 rectional institutions has been recom-percent by bureaucracy by the time it Supplemental payments for replace- ment housing can never exceed $5,000. mended -by the Grand Jury. gets to the consumer. Universal health Nine suggestions wCre made. head~ by insurance is coming but it must-be done a recommendation that there be_medical by private i n a u s tr y , not the 'Ride-along' Clemente Students See Law at Work. The1 new home: is not iequired to be com· parable to the okt·one, but-standards of ·-comparability are set forth to determine the aJl\O\!nt _Q.(· PJ;YJDj!t)l-thal Jl'l~-~ claimed. This include, number. oE rooms. livirig area, type of constru~IJon, ag~ condition. type of neighborhood and ae;- cessibili,ty to public services or places of ert\plo)1merit. ' · · : doctors on duty 24 ·hours a day at the government," Kania concluded. main county jail and at Juvenile Hall. All inmates should have preliminary physical examinations within 48 hours of admitta nce and a .thorough examination within two weeks, the jur-y insisted. Dental care should be provided at the jail on a part-time basis and the dental clinic program -at· ttie:· Orange----€ounty Medical Center should be expanded to care for Juvenile Hall inmates. The jlii-y iii.sisted that UCI di!ntal students provide such services. Specific policies shoukl be established for "administering all medication" and for "determination of cases that are treated at the jail and those that should be sent to the medical center." Also urged was 1p:pansion of clinical facilities at the main jail and "cither the establishment of a Department o[ Cor· rectional Medicine with complete responsibility for all phases of work. or place the entire correctional medical staff under the direct authority of the medical center,'' the report concluded. Tricia Parries . -- Romance Quiz .... ·ATLANTA, ·ca. ·(AP)" ..:.·Trlcia ·Nixon spent ·a-day at the Southeastern Fair pat- ting prize animals, awarding-trophies, signing autograp)l! and warding off ques- tions about matrimony. A reporter who asked the P'ti!sident's pretty '24-year-old daughter about mar· riage possibilities received this reply: "I can only say marriage is in Ure future." ' The reporter remarked that \9nle peo- ple art talking about a po!Sibli'tomance with Prince Charla:, the future king of Britain. Supervisors referred the jury's recom· mendalions-to county medical, ju~enile, - Jaw enforcement and administrative "They are?" e.1claimed Miss Nixon. .After spending several hours as the {air's guest of honor she returned to Washington on a private jet plane. departments. By JOHN VALTERZA Of th• O•llY ,1111 S11ll On a day late last spring, Diane Adams had an idea for a way to better relations between·fellow students at San Clemente High 'School a:nd police. And this week-days before the first grou.p of stW.ents reeeive a taste o( the -policemen'! wofld-firSt·hand-the-prcr gram which. the young coed launched is making history. With 140 signatures In only two days (and a projected total of 500 participants) the ride-along program which will be launched MQnday night will probably be the largest single activity in the school's seven years of operation. Following the succe~ of similar ideas in Newport Beach, L&guna Beach and Costa Mesa, the first four observers of the Jaw enforcement profession will muster at police headquarters Monday night at 7 o'clock. After a tour of the facilities the group will hop in a patrol car with a uniformed officer assigned to "stand· "backup" duty at the wheel. For the next two hours. the youths will see everything that wouldn't jeopardize their safety. ". At the-· conclusion of the. two-h9ur taste of law enforcement in the ·field, a con- versatio,n . period . will be scheduled for disc~i.on. That will·takerplace~125 nights through · the·s~I Yi?Jr--Friday&, .weekends and holidays excepted: To. Miss Adams, the ~aponse_ was ~ overWbelming from the start· - •;1-read a newspaper article abo_ut other programs, so 1 just came ,u_p ,with the idea one day with Mr. Dager. ".AU the kids I talked to were enthused. So it just grew. Summer holidays cot the planning short, but graduation day city permission for the idea alre~dy had been won. The summer gave police and school or- Cicials a chance to examine the progra.m in depth. A few ~ks after school started, ttie egg hatched. ... Three students-including ·M i s s Adams-already have participated in ·a. trial run or·tlie program. The results were excellent -and so~ewhat predictable. • "It was fascinating. The first im· pression is that everybody is staring at El Rancho luzs the liotfest price in .tOwn! FARMER JOHN V2 LB. PKG. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • You know the quaJity •.• eastern J)Ork with Ule We8lern flavor ••• now, take. n$ of El Rancho's law low price! You'll Jove the sausage for breakfast ••• and the price for the .savings you'll. recognize at El Ranmol Beef Liver 79~ Sliced Bacon ........................... Tender and mild flavored for more pleasure! El Rancllo's own .•. witli distinctive g ........ I Super specials for early bird shoppers! .. Apple Cider .. . .. . .. .. ..... .. . .. .. .. .... 59¢ Tree Top ... baJ!.gallon ! ... from Washington Beef ·a-Mato Juice ................ 11 New ••• and delicious •.• from )lott's! Quart.. Table Syrup ............................ 69¢ Sliced American ................ 3 Riii '1 Vennont Maid~ •. ."24 oz-. bottle! Save lOc. Burger shaped , •• from Fisher! 6 oz. packages. ·you. -1·m s ure m·aliy people who saw us wondered what ·we had done to be ar· rested," she said. "We also saw a student here get ar- rested . 'nlat was an experienct, too." -The.Jirst complaint was-similar-t.o-lhat of other ride."along-efforts : "There_wasn't enough time in the field. \Ve wish -we had much longer than -two- hours " Miss Adams said. • · · ' ·-. -~ -But the respol}!f-;-~h!-!ge by. ariy slan• dard-will mean that a critical schedule- be met. "I've been in the locker rooms ani;I other gathering· areas where the rest or the students congregate and the whole campus is buzzi ng With enthusiasm ," she said. A steady . stream of students \\'ilh parental waivers for the excursion fills the stUdent activities office. - Not all of th e signtips are from sym· pathetic students, however. "A lot .of them say they wouldn't be caught .dead going on a ride like that theit they reco!lsider and say, 'I think I ought to try" it 'JU.st to see what it's like,'' she Said. "I tried it,,and It sure changed some of my ideas abOut police." . '' : Jf persons , are· denied---payments i believ.e they are entitled , to ' lar pa)'riiep.ts, they · .may appeal .. ro , District : Right-of· Way-Agent -who wi . re~w__Mle ~. ·ff_s!!_Q__oot~s_fi! thtl'!! Jll!Y be a furQle_r _appeali~o _t Director of PUblic Works, Who Will co · duct a further review. Volcano Lava Flow Stops Momentarily HILO, Hawaii (UPI) -Lava foun- taining atop Kilauea volcano in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park have subside~ but scientists said indications are that more ~ruptive acti vity is forthcoming. The tilt or summit. pressure was reported high and steady Friday by . scientists at the U.S. Geological Survey Observatory. But they reported that tremors that were recorded Wednesday: had stopped. • Super Shopper Produce Value! Pril:es iA •ff ect M ()11., r .... , W eel. Oc~ 5, "6, 7. No Miu. to deakn • 'AICAPlk . ·sunset 11d Hlllllift:lon Dr. (El Raftdlo !'.Inter) Pink Grapefruit ........ 5 10, $1 Ruby Red··· ripe and juicy ••• with distinctive flavor that makes for a beL!<?r breakfast I " PASADEIA: . 320 WU! Colondo itvd. .SOUTH PASAD£M: fre"'°"r ind ·Huntiottoi Dr. HUNTINGTON BEACH: Warner: and Al1onquln (Board\"." "' NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 N,.port Blvd. and 2555 Ealtblutf Dr., (Eallblull Viii•&• C.nkr) t· \ DAILY PllOT (~ .-, ... Otllr PUii lfaM • €Ot1p Attemp~ l"--BfiliYia-Roc-ke-41 .By Army Revolt LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) -Retaining cootrol ol. two-important-reglmenta and -the-air force, Bolivian Preaideiit Alfredo Ovando Candia apparently weathered an att.mpl by tile army chief of staff to overthrow him Sunday, a. week after h1s mllltary regime's first anniversary. ''I want neither war nor bloodshed, but I am here to rule the destiny ol. the na- tion," the president told a crowd Sunday night from the "balcony of the preaidenuat palace. He bad returned to La Paz from Santa Cruz, 350 miles away. Viet Cong llit Funeral ---·- P1·ocession . SAIGON (\JP!) -Viel Cong le~risls killed-17-penona..fn a tterles·of attacka on -a funeral processton;-a-restaurant----and a private home in the Saigon area. Fighting Oared today aJona: two of Gambodia's majol' highways. Guerrillas threw a grenade into a line or mourners at a funeral 35 miles southwest of Saigon late Saturday night. The explosion killed 12 persons and wodn· ded 10. Colly, reputedly the world's last· est 1ll811, died at the. age .of I In Hover, England. Owner Chrl1 Hud- son, 15, said, "I don't think captiv .. tty agreed with her.,. The funeral was to be held today in Hudson's farden in Hoven, England. C<>lly ~__J""at.a. Ito~\ lli internatiolli!l cha!· lenders last May to win the World Snail Championships at Folkeston, England. The creature covered two feet in the record·ahaterlng time of There was no rep«! of &hooting by sunaay IilSJit;"lillf1dl!f.11Ill>OoSinc~ commander of the Colorado Regiment IUlrding the palace, said the rebeb bad Most of the dead and injured were _re'gional for.c_e and ~ f 0 r c .e militiamen who were burying one of their comrad~ slain in battle. Terrorists Sunday night stt off a bomb fn a restaurant near the Thu Due diJtrict town eight miles north of Saigon, South Vietnamese·militaey spokesmen iald. three mlnutu. · • Typist Gleny1 Broomhall, 21, got two flnfers thoroughly stuck in her tl')J6wp ter keyboard Thursd!Y in Dudley England. Six Firemen, with a ladder truck and tender, plus seven factory workers, four office girls and the oifiCe manager struggled for 30 minutes to free her -in vain. Finally a typewriter mechanic did the job. • Honey, a 10.month-old beagle in Loug_hton, England has a keen ap.o petite for b8nknotes. Her owner, Mrs. Gertrude Cl•rk, who has lost $38.IO to the dog, said, "! hide my 1 money, but she nosea it out ... -. ·--- ShtffKld. England StetZ PrO. ducti. manufacturtr1 of cuu.r, end auto parti, is 10 •hort of la- bor it 1w offered employe1 a $24-t=tr••-boruu....for.JJJ.•T:ll- frl<nd th<~ am bring In to work. • ·Jack Nel-of suburban Olivette, Mo. found his lawn churned up by automobile tires when he returned from a-recent "trip. When Nelson got home after '10rk Thursday, he found the damage largely repaired and a note on his front door, w~ch Hid: '"Dear Sir.'' "We are rry we ran over your lawn. We ame today and raked It up the best we could. We WO!l't do it anymore." • The note·bl>nl two 1!gnatures, which· were-not·dleclosed. • A former trick motorcycle rider who thrilled audiences throughout the world for 20 years has passed her autmnobile driving test In Herl· ford, England on the 20th try. Mrs. Dorla Smith, 54, who already had driven 30,000 miles before she won her license, said, "These tests were more nerve-wracking than the wall ot death ever was." • Dudley, England zoo keepers Nichol•• OrcllMM and Ger•lcllne latem•n were married Thursday. onilnons announced that their guest of honor at the ceremony was a 16-foot python, with this explana- tion: "K•rl the python has always been a favorite of ouri and we wanted him around OD the big day.' • A letter to lndlana Ku Klux · Klansmen from Gr•ncl Dragon Wi"- li•m N. Ch•ney bas called for ''100 percent participation" in a walk Saturday afternoon through the courthouse square of New Castle, 30 miles east of lndlanapoli1. "Cold weather will aoon be here and we again will have to go indoors," Chaney wrote. "Come on out and enjoy these outdoor activities." to give up unconditionally or "there will be oo solution but to fight." Bia soldiers •---;;w::,er:;e ~d on the J>ajconiea and at the ' windows cf the palace with orde{s . to RETURNS IN TIME Preaident C•ndl• -..-· lhoot if threatened, officers aaid. Three of Ovando's ministers met m mllltary beadquarters with Gen. Rogelio Miranda, the rebel Jj!ader, and rePorted that "it seems they are going to sur· render." Miranda made no comment. Miranda demanded Ovando's resigna. tion in an early morning broadcast over the army's radio station, charging that the Ovando government "has frustrated the hopes of the people and the armed forces and has not interpreted correctly the aims of the nation." The chief of staff told a news con- ference he would turn over the govern· ment to a junta, which would call eltc· lions by August 1m. The government ordered a state of eme rgency. Armed groups of pr~vando peasants were reported marching on La Paz and Cochabamba, 140 miles to the southeast. 'The government mobilized its forces, and the air force said it would "send planes over armed forces headquarters" if , .~essai:L....Jet.s buzze_<l_~ Paz ~d __ the Toledo Regiment, the anny's largest and best-armed military unit based about ZS miles from La Paz, threw its mechanized armor behind Ovando. COUP COMMANDER 'GIMrlll Mira~ Ovando's Cabinet · ministers were reported divided between Miranda and the president, a general who took power Sept. 26, 1969, in a. coup that ousted President Luis Adolfo Siles Salinas. Thirty-three retired military officers, including two former presidents, called for Ovando's resignation on the _eve of the regime's first anniversary. 'Ibey, too, wanted to replace him with a junta which woold set up elections. At least ·m persons wen killed last month in antigovernment disturbances by atudtnl and labor grnupe. !'euanll wei. mobilize(! in aupport of Ovando. Laird Tours Greek Base lnFenceMe~dingJourneri ATHENS (UP!) -Defense S<crellry Melvin R. Laird toured a U.S. Air Force base today, winding up a Greek visit seen by diplomatic sources as appeasement for President Nixon's failure to visit this North Atlantic Treaty Organi.z.ation (NATO) aUy. His next stop ii to be Malta. 'Diplomatic sources saw Laird's visit to Turkey and Greece ·as an attempt tQ._ap- pease the two countries for being om itted from President Nixon's tour of Europe. Laird described. his visit to both NATO allies as "part of the President's tour of the Mediterranean area." His visit followed by a few days resumption of full U.S. military aid to the military-backed government of Greece. Laird discussed the aid and NATO pro. blems in talks with Greek officials in· cludlng Premier George Papadopoulos, who is also defense minister. His talks were marred but not in- terrupted by a bomb blast in a downtown park minutes after be appeared the.re to lay a wreath. "The old friendship between Greece and America has been cloudless and steadily undisturbed," Papadopoulos 18.id in a toast at a banquet Saturday night. "Our President and our United States government ~alize the importance of the strategic location of this nation," Laird said. He also stressed the need for NAT 0 strength. ''If we are going to have an era of peace, another decade of peace Jn Europe as we have had these last two decades under the principles of the NA.TO alliara:, it ls important for us to main- tain and to rebuild the strength of thia: great alliance," Laird said. Cold Front· Blankets East West Warm, Dry But Canadian Col.d Air Mass See1i ' t ... l'I' IM'lll'lkwl ... .,. l ltflt Vl'1tbll .... AllM Miii -"""' ,...,.,, --ll'!t Wttlf'IY I te U tl'letf Ill 1tttnmn. todl'I' 11111' Tt.ltllCllY. Hltfl todtY n. c..ttl ,.,.,,llH'M "'"" .....,,. " ._ n. ll\ltl'ld ""'"1'1tv ... ''""' trtm M 111 12. Wtlll' .......,1111111 •1. llQN llltPI ......... 1114 ,,I'll. 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AlblHlutr- Anthor'I" A!11nt1 81kerilltld lllsm1rck !IOfH llot!(ln l •owntvlll• Cllfe•to (1Mln111tl Deflver DH Moin11 Dttroll Fllrblnk1 Fort Worlh ·-Htlftl1 H-lt.l!\I k1n111 City L11 llet1s l ., ... , ....... Ml1ml Mi--.IK . _ ...... HtwYortl Nef'7tl 'lllM ........ <*11"*"1 CltY -.. ~ •• 11oei.. -· ,lltlllu""' ........ ll"'ld Clf't llld '"'" ·-SKTlmtftfo $1111.tte Cl'IY .... ~ ... S111 "•tnc:llc.o *ll!t S11<111-1n1 TMflMI Wt ... IMIOll .. Hl1ll lft' htc:. " ~ " " " " .. " ... .. " " .. " " .. " " " .. n .. ,. .. ., .. M " .. .. .. ff ~ .. " " " .. " " ff " .. ~ .. " " .. " " .. " " " .. .. " " .. " .. " " " M n .. .. .. " ~ .. .. " .. • " " ,. " " " " " " ., ff 4 2.01 T ·" ·" ... . S. VIETNAMESE SOLDIER FINDS MOMENT FOR PRAYER Fire B•M O'Rtllly ShrlM M•d• .of Coke C•n, Sh•ll Cr•t• Cambodia Votes to End Its Status of Monarchy Six civilians , a policeman and three soldiers were killed and five persons wounded. Five civilians were killed and two others wounded early today when Viet Cong fired a B40 rocket-propelled grenade and threw a hand grenade into a house 20 miles west of Saigon. Informed U.S. military sources said Sunday Adm. John S .. M~aln Jr., U.S. Pacific Commander, 1s dlSCUSSing the PHNOM PENH (UPJ} -The cam. emergency law declared shortly after the possibility of increasing American air bodlan National Assembly today voted outbreak of the war in March and ex· strikes over Cambodia . unanimously to declare the country a tended for six months in September. McCain has been in Phnom Penh since republic on Friday, legally ending 24 Ung P,,fung said the official declaration Saturday meeting with Premier Lon Nol years of limited monarchy. ceremony would probably take place an and other Cambodian officials. The date of the declaration, Oct. 9, ls hour before Cheng Heng's departure. Military spokesmen said heavy fighting the day Chief of State Cheng Heng leaves Under the old constitutional monarchy broke out early today on Highway 6 a~d Phnom Penh for the' United Nationsl of deposed Prince Norodom Sihanouk. Highway 4, two of Cambodia's mam General Assembly session in New York. u1timate power rested with the monarchy roads. Assemblyman Ung Mung, who heads and not with the national assembly. 'Route 4 connects Phnom Penh with the the commiUee to draw up a new con. nation's only deepwater port at Kompong sUlution for Cambodia, said after lhe au-Police Academy Hit Som and Highway 6 runs north from morning session that the assembly would Phnom Penh. · . also vote soon on 1 new flag and a new By Women Liberation Air strikes were called 1n to sup~ national anthem. ground forces near Sre Klong, 60 miles Ung Mung-u.Jd-the Constltution-;--which--coLUMBus;-OliiO(UPJ)"=women are-southwest-of th~ capital. - -. Js expected to give Cambodia a liberating the police academy here. Four Cam~~n tr.oops ~ere killed and parliamentary system of government The Municipal Civil Service Com· 14 wounded .1n figbtmg with . commu~lst rather than a presidential system, is not mission Wonned Safety Director James troops on Highway 6 at, a pomt .52 miles yet in final form. Hughes recently that the next M persons north of Phnom Penh. Two Viet Cong Despite the declaration, Cambodia will eligibJe to ·be appointed to the academy bodies were found.a~ the scene, the Cam· remain at least·until April, 1971, under are women. bodian command said. ' Visit our Laguna Beach office for a free caricature of yourself or anyone in your family. Any day, Oct. 5th thru 9th, between the hours of10 and 3. So come in, open or add to your savings account today, as little as $1. The experienced pface •.. the professional place sine• 1924 t\NO LOAN ASSOC&ATION I RESOURCES OV!R $210,DOO,OOO M•MMrir.-.1...,.au..ii--eo.,../~,........_.._ .......... PUJS Free Safe Deposit Box for KCOllDt holden of $2,500 or more. PLUS 5% to 71/2% interest and savings inSlll'tld to $20,000 by an ageney of tlae federal governme11t. LAGUNA BEACH: 292 South Coast Highway /Telephone 494-9481 IR!NTWOOD NORTH"IDQ:E 11601 Wllshlrt •t S.n Vicente 9036 Resed1 Blvd.at Nordhoff LAGUNA BEACH 'ONTARIO 292Soytf'I Cotst Hl~y 521 North Euclid Avenue LYNWOOD (Home Office) SAN BERNARDINO 11170 Lona Bu eh Boulev1rd 1565 Eest Hl&hland IANDllGO 1170 !5th Avenue It B Street 'WEST ARCADIA 1200 s. Bat<twfn •t Du1rte ft Old WllSHIRE·AlVARADO 2033Wilshlr181vd.,L.o&Anaelu WOODLAND Hitt.a 23325 Mulholland om. •t Valley Circle RoM El C.mJno Shoppln1 Clntw ·- '" , Ul"ITtlffM!t ''MARCH FOR VICTORY" PARTICIPANT FACES DEMONSTRATING YIPPIE Some Scuffles Mar Otherwise Peecefu.I R•lly; Turnout Fer Be~ Exeected Last CaptiveS__Freed NY Prisoners Give Iii to Ultimatum Policeman. Statue Hit By 'Blast CIIlCAGO (UPI) - A bomti blash sborUy after midrugtit today destroyed the Haymarket Square policeman statue, erected in memory of seven policemen killed in a riot May 4, 1886. A person identifying himseU as "Earthmen" claimed credit foi the blast in a telephone call-to United Press Intema· tional. 'The male caller 1 aid Weathennen liad '"~estroyed the Haymarket Square statue for the second year in a row in honor of our brothers and sisters in Ute New York Pfisons" aiid to protest" "this -~-system ." One holdout prisoner shouted through a bull horn from the top floor of the six· - story red brick buildinc that, •'Mayor Lindsay has lied. The guards are beating inmates merciless ly in the courtyard He said if they came.-down peacefully, the inmates woo Id not be beaten, but they 're get- ~ir!g ~ate'1 half to death." Newsmen perched on the . roof qi a: neariJy ... -~ were able' to see over the prison wall and view the courtyard scene. Corrections officials had nO immediate knowledge of any beatings but said that the al· legation was being investiga. led. The Tombs prison was retaken peacefully a ft er Lindsay's broadcast to the in- mates, jn which he said be was aware of their grievances and promised to meet with them only if they relea-sed their hostages. " ••. this city cannot . tolerate vio lenc e and disorder," he told them. "I wish to emphasize that no other course except .the im. rriediate r~lease, ~rm~d. of WHAT'S NEW FOR BACK IN SCHOOL? • WE'VE DONE OUR HOMEWORK. From top: The new wrap-around look In cufflinks, suitabla for engraving. Gold tone, S 12.50. Cro1& pen in chrome, $5. Sterling silver kay ring, $8.95. (M199 AC-'I ..,.,.. AIMl'klfl •• ,,.... a1~kA-'C_,... .... Mio..., ~ ..... SLAVICK'S Jtwelers Sha 1117 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH-644-IJIO 0,.. Mootloy ...i FrWay Hiii t :JO WN coni119 throu9li. We're coming through with variety: Five comp&etely different ear lnes-76 different modets. More kinds of new cars than anyone else m the business. We're coming through with Yelue. Every Chrysler and Plymouth is bu/It and engineered with eKlta care. To make sure you get a dollar's worth of automobile for every dollar you spend. We're coming through with brand· neyr options. Like a Stereo Cassette Tape System evailab\8 with a mlcro- phOne. You can record your own voice or record directly from the radio. H's 1971. And Chrysler.Plymouth's cccning through lor ,ou. Mondq, Oclo0tr '5, 1970 OAIL Y I'll Of 5 · QUEENIE By Phil lnterlancll Kent Probe --Ran.elJlits-&t•--t----- \ Gu-~-d,~St-ud-en-. ts =Iii .. Cllj'tl•Mlw .. . ~#' ThoNewYoobr-""toll-of , , __ ~--¥"-quiet authortly. lt'a one of 15 dlrr.eut ~~-.. _,,.;;;···""'"'·'· Chry1lers coming through. coming ,,..,. _I';,... Wough with lhe 1lze, room, comfort ,, .. ' h's the newest Idea ln-two-doorl. From front to back lt'a deaJgned exeluslvety to be a two-door. With no compromiML So yc<l get ... styling and handling of. specialty "'1-all lor lhe price ol ..... termediale ear. And every one of our tour--doors (Satellite, SatelUte Custom. Satelllte Brougham) was designed from the ground up to be a four--door. The re- sult? People who take a back seat In ow four-docws. don't take e beck aeat. . ' and power you want tor all lhe ltvlng you do. Wtth new options Ike • ele<> Irie ..., roof, IO let In Die llghl of Die aun. Of &he moon. a.p1 ........ Owysler Imperial -lht<>UQI! lot. all ttle IMng yc<l do. --.... luxury you want. with peqonel touches. ·uke the exclusive oPtlONll ,.., Nit heater. This anowt your ,.... lllt .,... sengers. to maintain their own level or comfort-cool 0t wenn. ' . ............... ..., Ira coming u\rOugh lot yc<1 will1 • IOt more CIT. Ewrylhlng -Sf>on f\WY -lhrough big: ... -lnleilof room. body, onglno ..,. brakea. Pluo. we'vo added Tonlor>Qufet Rlde-wttll . • Sound Isolation Syetem that 1ep- .aln road noises from you. ' , . ..,,.audlhdlF . Ouraea:111 Cir II coming ~h for yc<1:Stlllomall-.gh.Stillblg~ s.nan enough to flt 1n 8bout !lo of a porlclng -Big enoutlh to -five, camf01111>1y. And 1UU -"'"'1"' IO flt your budget. Dual«. Tho blg'dlner· ence kt small cars. ~ ..,,.1..itls12111dl Tho IUpe<~ough sporty car that - through with torsion-bar IUepenalon for bitter handling. Coming through for you wtlh ~ omy In Barracuda. Coming through for you with luxury In Grwt Coupe. And coming lhrougll for ,.. wtlll lllWll per- formance In 'CUda. • •, ' • ... . . . . . .. l I _, I · I l , • . " . : , . . .··· ' .---D-ARY -P:iLdTEDITORLll PAGE o• _.::.. -I -- • • . .. ::.. -..: . . . '• •. -r . -"' .. . ~~ ,r .. ,.j ..,, ,.J.._ ''-11 f'l'\'11 ,. "' • ..,, -t 1"~ Js J'"Uonal t<i'wapaper Wffk, and as food .a, .:. ·' · ~-~~:~~~P:~'!hg "1 candl· ume as any to assess and explliin-"to rude rs of tlie . oni'lW'IY·oo ¥llY bii:Uoi:'Jt seelhs equa)fy .ufllik .. DAILY PILOT the political po;ition oJ Ibis oew9aper. ly lb• -our endorsements. and Judgments wUl be equally . divided betwaen Republicans and Democrats, Qr be- . Wltb tbe g~eral election cµnpalgns bemg launched tween the two or three contending groups • wbateyor ost simultaneously with-<>Ur--annual ~s~rvance_ of -----in• "bt:~e!rt t;tf e _ · -' · -Newspaper Week-;--"this-seems-.a-good tlme,.:to=J>rovide_..:~· ··' ···-..:. --~~-~ -~-Sid ';;,;..~ ·. ••me lnfonnation about our views Oii 1>0i~c~ fa~~-~:::-:r·.{m" -'.,ji • ..,· •...::, . ._. ~!!·~ .. --.-..... tJii,,.L ~·~;.: and candidates -and how we believe newspapers can · · · , "!' ..... ,,_,,.n ~ .~1 ~ _, •f'r.~ i•' ,· offer help to readers in selecting tbe best candidates · ~noWledge an . .o~lJga~ ':"""" to thange OU!· JUdg .. · .. d · · --mentif later events pmve:~t t9 be wrong. · . , '. .. an ~~~~s~ all, we view editorials 'not as dlctites. We ' . ~l!l ,ahy eve~t. th~ j~dgmenis on potit~~al issu'es and '· view them as only one opinion -an opinion that· you, can~~tes a171ved at by the. DA!LY PltOT are .never ' . I lib W off ~tUd to,influence our re~rtmg of th~ news, nor to · ' as.•. reader, may or ma~ no agree w . •• e., er ·~.;,•" .. ,, ·~~il:itt.~s..:.~~~tj&l;jilllt..W-ts~'"''.' opm1onsas1ust that-op1n1ons:. . . _ . , ~ . , -. thlS-~UeWspaper"on: -PolittC~t(efs·,'~as ·oD-hJi'~ey .., ... ,. . . ~e DAILY P.ILOT .15 polibcally in<\ependent. w,. __ ; ,,.19Pics,''8?'e "exp1'e'ssed~-aad~pmy;.h>< our· editoruah-; · ate Jnde ndent tio!._h with respect to candidates ape! ,. Colwnn.___.w.filch customar.YY. occyPies I.the 1PR teft· b@!l~ i• issues an ~rt1es. · . portion of this editorial page. \\~ t---.- . ~is me~s we consider ourselves to be n~ther , .:· ' Because of t.~s. independence, We ~hall get ~ and ; ,· ... politic;ally al~g_ned ~ith, nor beholde~ .to, ~Y pc;>liti~~l · ~ we expect - cr1t1c1sm . We shall bt!\acc~sed by p arf.i·.: -party, or. political figure. AU our ~ec1s1ons. in tJie polit1.. . sans of one side •or another of "lacking'-coll!(lge And cot;i·. !~ · . -'--cal.field will be· based on. our bes~ independent ju.dgm_,nt victlon." What they will mean, of course .. is t~at We i . oJjuues an~-candida~~s after all the fae!-' available·to ~ .. Ja_fk THEJR con~ict~on.s •. But-tpis is-fair ~~h .. Thi's· 1,. ut anr eumll1ed. Our Judgment• may be unperfect, ~ut . . ·-· li tlw;prlvUel(e>9f.:oill'.'~iP'lia"an~:J>i '.tJie vh\ers . We . :' ., !lief-will be ours -tlie judgments of ll!•. DAILY PILOT ... • · c!t~l _;iiia'J~te hones,t; ~·~<>Qi:. oT:'oi!jni~li. front ·" .':-·~.-not those of. any pol1tical party. .·, ·• . . our readers, even tbQUgh.i.fliey· '~r from \iW's.· ·We,· .... ~. Our political independence, however, d~! 99t m_ean would...be disapPOitiledJf,Jbl!y weii\u1ot forthcoriling. :·'r', , that we intend to be politically neutral iii our editorial, . ~erbap~ the d~y ~ill com~ When one paQ.y\~,one,~ . · column. We will. express ourselves freely.and frankly on ' pol1t1cal philosophy w1U have a monoply·on virtUe and ', issues and candidates when we feel we have sound basis ' a rrionowly ~ outstanding'.· candidate$. Until tliat· day . ~ fOr' such expression .. When appropriate, we will endors.e may conie, Wt' conceive . the role in: whiCh the DAILY ·: '. ~andidates for office, ~her~ we f~l therl! is a clear-PILOTr c_an1. best serv~ th~·:n¥.ds an~ iqte~sts• oI oUr ·~ \ .preference. 'nl.e same situt1.tion applies to proposals and commun~y( state and nat1on.j;Is :to. don ;our bard ha\,=, '\ questions on the ballot. O~r judgments will.be rendered catche~'s•mask, chest proti;ctor ~.st#,.~ gua~·· ignora, •i \1 on the basis of each candidate and of each issue, not on Qte ·fl~g ~ttl,es ~ ~u$,h1~ns atid ~ontu1ue 1thf; DAIL~ \17.\1 the l)asis of party designation. PILO 1: s long-eslabhs~ed' tradition df callin~• 'em as we·1 ,I ~ \ Unless candidates and politics enter some st.raJ:ie;. ,"· s.ee:'em. · :. . :: ' ' '.; . j' ' , ':~.:.\ ·.--- . ') -~ • ,• )! •• .. _ l '': . ~:; ..... .. . ... .1. . " • r ... · ..... ~ - I . . " .. -, ' . : . THE PUBl l( &E !X>UBL~-~AMNE D -)~ •'" . •-r-· ·"-·~~ ,ii.J.' ~ -. . 1r-. ' . -- Ever.yone Has a Lead ,_____In-T his-Plot Dear. ' ' Gloomy ·Gus~ ' " . ' . • J _ ' __ ,.I· DecU{JH.an J_ft.;.f~,~H~.~~~liud' _ .. __ . • j ,,...4 ..... >-\1 •, • ,_. l • • Un~R~!~l~;!Ji~en i ?rison Corpse w ASHING;roN -Jn • shocking at-. aelmow1tdged .. coiolng ' to the'hosiiiW to -rep>rl~" H~ also warnedllilS. Ci>liiiiin: Since aex Is beinc pramot.ed by tempt to whitewash a prison death,' · pick uP tbi..~•whlch Adin.ini!trator · "If you're not _careful, you're gomg ~ eet . I I ecboola, chW'Ch groups, movies, Fl 'da · funcll . • I Cle'· i .. '1 1~' ·· · ...;. · I t v~ •·lo·troubl e." f' • ··· ··· • .r;J.·.•,,~ .. ~· , ac-..-. ·· 1 .. falsified medJ~ record&: · ... ;ijtlajf...,lb , ·~11 whe.n Let ~ ~peeted it, the page Footnote: · Jlidson Clements, the 1 ( ... ~·~-. ~ . ..._"':1-i'~L --'--~::...:.::. m· '""""''"''"I ' · or1 prison 011.~~ .1.~v .; . . . tnen14 c~ was Lvmpee. •a .... I .• ·,,1~ Hop"" .... .. . -; "'l~J=~"l'j,. . t.j.' . boopitaliie:a cefrpse. .· ., •. ;:. ~"f;(~·-.~.-.' . . c1e:e.::!--'' rljl&I boutn•as gone: hospital administralor wbo answered i.. ~,, .. ' r :--~· ."t.1blnooence:U1...cb.ikl!vw.ol~ +l-f ™~~rescb~e"!Y!'~~~.J: ... ~~. -.-:-~·oose a ·~ng .of •ex-Whitten'sq~slions,bas beE:aorderedto ~ ... >;p,. , -' ;i.'~· ., . . r 4'. •• • ~1 -~ P. lf i! ' :u~{~!:\i~ls tbr~\.~tt;lf~'.-f ;:·~~· CI~n ·;~/the hospitk _ .. i d. '· ~~~;:Sg~~~~~~v!0~ =~c!}1~~ ~ ~~i::es. or Ro:rt s~b~ th:· :.:~~~ There's .a. ne1J reader f~r-tots on the ~ . :·-,.. ._, out ··or 1 the· '!'Stale • mlnistrator, also ~members being..asked . ,,~vlel.s,.'~ he qonoluded, ··you go ahead who ·was ord ered to type the phony ad· market.. Jt'a Q an old-fashioned reader Trilt '''"'"' """"' rMMn' ,,.,., ~ _ _P.l'.isop .at ~ord. l .. • by lJ.5:1Q.1'reclion~9.tficer to sign Qie fcirm. · ·arid do it:" • t_ mittance report, has also been subjetted about Di~k 8nd Jane. It's a modern ' -ntr .... et 111e .......,. ltil4I .. il~pa\thed my ~sso-~~ J·-, But·~; too, r.ef~.-,•'"'e effort tc)'lidtnit 1 '.Wbitten .. l)omted Ocit ttia. t the inmate.s• to harassment.by prison officials. . . ,....... .:, • ,_ .... "''!' .... Jllrn)' .... q.ltr, !'!l't· ·-Le Whitle ,;~ c ..thA r .. u-...i • t .. IPnw>nl11 bad ,__ f -· b ~-" v~ Dr ' Ba . I tt lo thi reader abioUts-'M.irt.and..J.,..... .• _ -,,. ~ ~t.--, •• _,_________.----.-· -+~ CllM::, S -.!!!, . ~~\·~ -'~*.z:;:'.:i~~-~~~ ;_'. . . _ .. J.,. Jila.7,'..'..:~~~.-,~,,~n ilml"'~. r ·P.'""'.n . ~ . .,ames X,,m a e er S Youtciri tell ll'a mOOern becauae Mark•j 1 ·' ·, • , , , .. • • • to _~ ;ta .in-.:i.1 . -~}..5 :;.· .. .ry,~~~t;. . _ , raised a S@(nijf. . oU~.A. tlii(thty ;were· also willing to . colillfill, had promised to see that "a total and l•..t batt &_llW.~nd .tin i.I~~~ ; ' J :• u....:.. ,.:_,_. . Ii'~~ .JI•:• WaS: I~.~ . ~~ :,-;:;,Jt .~rat.ti~• .j CLendon, 6~:~. '~."api-~ tit dtttttor test about and 'tborougQ .it}Ves1.igatiOR is made Of ~-"·· · ~ -~~ -~~--~ lll given free rt1n by ' ' · .... ~' •. " '·~·\· 'pr ' tt -u 'tht' f~~i ·· every·cbarge. l promise to see that any blouract~~Ve.i •. I'".._,~ -~ ~~ • •, • :~t:\f .~' ; ~ .. ~. 0 I ~ ;~. PJ~·.;'.fl 't,'t-1'!-ft<i' T• ::~If: j "'.;~i.-.. • 'tt' .. ,.• :~e~!t~!aJ ~~: ,_..:i~.&n-yl .. h.ing. ''. •SDinnt>d ,informants are protected from any pouk m..!:f~·OI ,<. *· .. ,,.: :,·~'ln i ·~~~!/u.Jijaa'mtiOOes'·';, .'· ;• .~;::i .atJK';~·-1 ,·~~J?~)'.&\:".'~· :::,ra;9;"·y~·,."hi~~~· ble,.prisaL".ltis nowup!DBaxlo.mak• Our Ameriean-Way '~~" ' · m:aa, ur. l"j, .1 ·of· :,z ~ ~·' umn i•1 ou · , ' 10 your •-WU&lt:U· · 1ood on his~promise. ol Life. Jt should '...-.t!.'::...:.:;.n:;; ·ldnef'Sf • a Bax, and prisOfl ·'~i-:1~'.~~.'t.,"!!'~~i·K:'~'., ~7'1-:, _,.J.' '10:~-·~, ~, .. \ ,·-;.~, ., .: ... salilfy everyone. It ~)~hat,1ii,stringU:e:i:,a1~He si:;~ni:rn:eSi~1!:u~l3 10f ,-~iin'.'.·:2"i~l'. ,,,~~;;:;" rp"~··· ·~:c'lf' ·r·~··:~..:: Ml.' . ·_· __ : ~· ..• --._L .... :;~~::=~ ~--l~ta~~!!~~c~;:re:";! ~~~~~i~ninlothe stran~~~~J..,t.;:·:~~ ;·If~ I] ip ____ o_ =---arx1st .. Ille Janet because their Leong and Conchita have many little ON MAY '1, REID had an asthma at- Mother wears an friends. '111ere Is Giuseppi . He is Ptili.sh. tack. An entry was made in hia medical apron. M o t h e r ~ He is smart': There is Cyznewski. He is record that he was treated at the: prison · WASHINGTON _ There Is one ttrik· coon. ·Mother sews. Mother washes Jri'sh. Ile i! smart. 'Ibere 11· ,Billy. He is hospital at 5:M p.m. He left the hospital 1 d · ngly significant similarity between that dishes. ~other never eve~ . r1;:!!S a car. AngJo.Saxon. Hf: 11 ~um~. . without bting admitt~-The next entry·is Black Panther ''Revolutionary People's Whit kind of male chauvlDlSt pi& wrote Leong aod ConcJ:tita Uve on a farm in dated fl.ta~ 8. As of 6.20 a.m., th~ record Constitutional c·0 nve n 1 i 0 n , • in. this inflammatory rot? the ~tto. They are ~0! w'bln re~al, state~. Reid was dead. . ·Philadelphia and the "Strategli Action Fortunp.te1y, to prevent riotinl a.ri,d ., the ~II Ba9k,_~~· mer.el!!~ welfare_.. ~.is ~lumn ~~s ti)e n!'_~eJ, -~'ll~.~~n. __ . ~· s.tagf.d,, earlier by ihe New bloodstielJ'.µi OU! firat.grade classroo~, · '.:a~n,ta '&¥·:~0!' .,· ~~-· ''. •¢fi<;ial ~ ~o . mmate~:W~·~ ~~ · MObllizatl~n ~ml\-iittee To End :'the War a new readW-ii ·~ rushed into pri.;t~ t~:~ ··hi fo,r. k~!l'i .~~ i..w,1uJJes. tbere.lB. ~ m~~g pa~ li,f~1.tPt.::r~~ .... ., tn JietPapi .on.~ ·l~ campus :' of the lt is called ".Leoni and Conchita." Jt fin .',,..aos,.. --9~~e..'"l"•l1taton· .1JM1:1 John ~eallng wit~ Reid s las~1Jje:.~M:; <.\tftlY'e'f!lty··of ~W.j9etlnsin at Mi!W,aukee . sive .~ rea1)1 tmoderD 'J)icuture of ~r ·· Wa~.'He ·''also for1~ equt,f1ty and.-·: lnl;·.Mi"'will,.1how, f¥.z ,~yJ'U:iat _.Reu~:: .: o ..:u. all . " ,\ C · . t r · -·· ot tif 1 should ti!ll ·lluyine .a d-asher. . " • , , ... .,_J>.•!'l<. lo the bospi!al' 1J! aogu1str.; .. --' ....,-·~ "!'"-·.._ om m. u n " ~W'\)', , •-.J . sa : .'· 'Mol1uny Is for peaa;, ir..1n1· Jimmy •. ~li00it afler·his5;05j> . .,.·~~ ~,rnoti~'l<\d aad doml!'aled. ;, ev6Y<!:~. · · ~ · ..... -•· . Hcifa and huyinf'a sprts ~·~is also< dif1Ma}''"1. ~· . ' · · ·:, ·~ .. i~· -~ ::· :-.~ ~were...fe;atut~i by.e~dJ~ss tlfades or LEOf'VG•ANnt'.lONCIDTA.Scbwartz«re .-for .esual equality_~--u·aoon.·q Daddy·. ":' · '" -;1· .. · •• ~ -.. .., . ... • the usliji.rtoryid Go~un1!t ideo~ and · · · i.eon· can ·lick .her in Indian Wrestllhg: THEY WILL say that.JlJld,. ·desWf.1,~ , .l 'nvective-p11netqija' ""Castigations of the ~rother,anr s~er.! ~ce v~s;· ) ~~~~ _ Little Vl.salaL1 1,g 't:bt only oM in the .. di&ti:es!•. WI! sent back to 11~~11. :An i'1·~ '.·· ""'a.r:. lfnperi8Ji$rrl ; fhe police, t~e draft ~ a c~%ti1f: is :: ~a;-vldlance o~n the fijmily not for . sexual equality: He is for' •~hgltrio!T w~I also,~how ,~ is ~ . .sri:i~I . ( caref11UY nl)~ _rp"~JU.iOning, or cg]lrse, the e~ ~ Lovecult _ & human -· 'i<gregation. . : ·no/<. ln, 111< fUes v.<rUyl . l..,,,\!'ii'ill!b·.1 ~¥~1'111:dts,[l'~~l Iron curtain coun· ~rce ptrsuasion lt is a good reader. lt wilLgive·our tots. , ~~~loYe, ~~l~ J. Kn1a ~ : mO~. · frh!s~:.'~t'he · 'Nmi:n~ Administration, etc .. . . ... · . a triie picture Of Our America.a Way of ~Re1a frbm !'IB•cell and acrorqpanied him 'elC. And both wo~nd up pretty riiuch the Their litue .~er. Vasalai, PHlay~ w!:i! Life. It will satisfy... '\ to \he hospital .•• betwet;1:1, 8:30,P,!m. and sa111~.-way. -with lhe avowed intent to doll! .• Va5:1J11 1! a homosexual. e u C1m1 9 p.m.". . ·.:t:.~~~.~~fif:~· ·~htilA;~~m"~ng in Washington. proud of .it. HOLD IT! The putilishers, 'Hlrping & Sometime after his m~~ tital!ow~.<• ;kf··~•.: .. --.B·. ; Daddy is a SAC Gene~at. Daddy 110:.,' Row. ·are being pkketed · by In angry trip, Reid returned to ~~li. ·· · ~lf6 -.. "'.'t"':T"'t -~Ilij~~ gatherinr, set no full-blooded Choctaw Indian. Daddy gon C011ition from the ' Angl&)Sa~· .. Anti· bad an asthma seizw-e.-Oft _j.he1 rilg t tf~ .date ,for a. strond. :slrategy acUon c.on- around licking cowboys. Daddy also does oetiination t.eaaue,-;the 'Male.J:.iHration 1'1ay 7. He repeatedly r~hi! ctll ... , J:§~e.''• AP.ear~~Y the Coni~un1sts the dilbes. Front, the Watch & Ward Society and, for more than an hour appe,aling for leaders who engineered and man1pulat. Mommy ls a Swno wresOer. Mommy among others, the Spanish Speaking help. Then he reU , in 1 ul of w~ing. to ed this aff~ir are still undeckled on . . alcing this. _line. Interlarded with repeated obscenities, he venomous ly aspersed the U.S., Constitution. ·the U.S. fonn of government, !he· ·po lid:. and Nixon ad· ministration.•. TabOr also acrlaimed the Sollth American assassinations and kid- napping, saying they performed a good and·ilseflil purpoSet ' .: · were Claude LigJ:ltfoot1 blzk Communist Party· .inolul~_·.'.aillt .-t.i.ed:, llabtead,· Trotskyite SoCialist Worker's Party ex-ecutive. TABOR Al.SO furio usly enjoined his Outwardly, the trapplllllg! appeared. to . black .and white liste~ers to use rifles. be different, but inside the co lot, .,the _declanng they were highly useful• for at· taeJting police "after dark." words ahd the leading actors were :Uie . . . .Hlley P. Newton, Panther chief facing. same -all Red oriented, motivat~ trial on. a number of charges , was '""Ually manipulated and dom inated. ~" As is characteristic of the :BlaCJt trucu.le~ _He proclaimed that "abuses'' p "·-· ddi · · 'M .Woa:ld J10 longer be tolerated and that anun;.i:> -tn a lion to spoutpig-iu'X-. ~wbaWler means are effective will be us. ist cliches and preachments, -'theY-also spewed out torrents of raciai bate· and ed lo combat them "even if wt have--to murderous violence. . -. _ level the fa:e of the earth.•• Michael Tabor, New York,'ie"p'Panfller~ By Robert S. Allen ideologist, delivered the ~liD~lwangJJt and Jolm A. Goldsmltla A Successful Failure belongs to the Peace & Freedom Party. Alliance. hill cell floor. such a sesskln. It· may dependi· on the Mommy is big and strong. Mommy They find the new reader denigrating, . outcome .of the Novembe! electton. and Comforting Thoughts for 1 Columnist drives a ~M~y .can lick Daddy defamiatQI')' ~d' "«t~t··'dlsiusf.ing. ---.IDS-:8QDY .:WAS,,_tUe.n ~the hospital . ._ ~:--ianU-w.ar · a~d·:b:'eed1ng heart can· v.•ho Confronts his Typewriter with at Indian ?'festling. Leong and Conchita Besides, it'• i" inclish. before da_wn ·~n .~..)no~ning. of ~ay '8. ···did!~inakt.-"OU~~.·-'! Aversion on a Chilly Day: are proud bf Mbmmy; · · · 1 So Hatptng·&·Row is hastily withdraw· Effort-. ~ revive ~ were in va1~: he The lih1ck' l?a~lll· set Novfi. 4, the Goethe conskle(ed hls·1iler'"1' .W-a·u · "nit faniUy ,has a cook. Her name ii ing il from publication. · , wa~~ad, ~Jo_r~.~ i:e..ched the h~p1tal. ~y, a(~er, e1es:090,.,for :Ute next ~orm-so much ·trfppery, ·aitd believed' {hat .his Aunt Jemipla. Aunt.Jemima i• big .and "You simply can't satiJy everyone," as . Smee'Re1d had lrk nds \ind relatives on ante of · therr . "Revoldtionary People's fat ad J'olly aDd wears a bandanna. Aunt Mr. 1Harplng hhnself put it dispiritedly.' ·the 'Olf~Kn!:. who might , ask Queslio~. Constilutional t'on•ff!Uon." But consid-!~eo'"',', . .,fam. e would rest on•~ r·en14tc: "-· 1 · ff' -•-*t lo ~ bl d bl · · h .a. loll Da Vinc.i :'ll'Ole the 7,000 pages of his Jemb:Da s.avs. '!ffeah Honey-cb.ile hava "whajustone·AmtncanWayofUfe." pr5011 e 1c1dlll SOU&1• cover 11p ~'>'."'.C"a .. e ou ex1sl3 R! to whet er u1ey Shakespeare d''li'k~1he "'·ter and "' .. •' ' . ~..awkward fact that he had d}ed in his cell, will 110 through with that. Soble top ~ cu mea Invaluable "Notebooks" in left-handed · • •. 14:alling for htW. alter being turned aw~h -~~ i;!lers. with close Communist r.esented writing plays>-stating ae~eral mirror script, completely coded, to mak• Faces l •n .. · the A"·llJ"·um : from the hospital. ~~,.J,,.~J;i ~;~r~ng hinLc; indicating they 11n:ies that o~ty his Sonnets. printed them unintelligible to the general reader ;i, At IO p.m. on.May a, after Reid hft(l'~ .... 1l1'8;~1y~f·~ond thoughts. pr1va,ie1Y.Jor hll:fr!ends_,.ha.d any.lasting ,-,and -1H , · t ed d been de ad for 18 to 20 hours. ~)·i:.·1 "'~ ~~of them are likely to be valU(·.; :: . , ·t _ .••.. -· .. ey w~re no r~er an. • ! ' · • "" j..; Spishock. an inmate clerk at the bospitg,~ · ... ~~.s~ifig trial on charges of murder Beil~ F'z~!i(I, ~-P;enll~ the ·::..r;:r1l5ed until _400 y~ars after his J•--1•• to 'COl\clusions : ,, . ,r¢elved a strange call.from a prison~-.~ a.f!ct,the~ ·~r crimes. worl~'s ~O'i: ~ar ~~On frpg~i-. Tlcha 'ko .i... COl!f-dtd t Mid' th t ._.,....._ ~ • ' 'rtctlonal officer. Spishock was instnic~ :. ··'~m ' . . ~ ty. wrote them to obfiln money Wause 1 w ..... T 1 ~ la:>' a ThlUlq Clf life and iis furbelows, one is ~ ''!'~ ~'!"' ~11')~~ up forms admitUn Reid to .u. · ~ , . . 9.¥-LY 1llustrahve of the he was hopelessly in debt 50 much· Of lhe -.when : he beard Mozart .s . muste. ~e temp&ld now tnd''tben· in the prevaJetct I ' ~ "' V6,.. ,11 hOs ltail' ~~ g ~! . ~rriUrii~\-.inte_r-relatlon between the time wanted to .&Ive ue COmJ>l?Slni forev~r • .w. of bk OWl}_-.·treublti to think of the.pro. • • , • " ~ · . • ~1ii~•:: llnthers· .rt'.onstitutional ConVe nHon'''-· '------· .._ --·-·• · ·· ---reCogfiltlon Ofh1s vaSl inferiority. ble!U of bll ancestors. The.ir set facea of \>, f ' • ~ c.J~r.k ~~Uy ~Jl:'d th~ !0r .. ~.~J~i~be ·~ Mo.he's "Strateg'y ,fCon· RACHMA~OFF couldn 't stand to . 1 yestel'Uy~tbe f~ily album achieve 1 .:~. , ~ :,.'·, , h Whil~ naQtl~ tn Reid.s f ~.~<ilefti11:~·:1.; ~s the attend~~ : and ~rllis tnfernaDy famous "Pre!ude jft c· · . wilttul ~e. We know thel'I) only they;;.':~. tanfper ·with, peel, or ,make . ~re-w~, bowel-tr, no admitlalf\:; ~pitfcm,,-al both · of officitli;· and 'Sharp Minor": and Ravel l\'outlneave by plllp ..»must guess abolll their gesl~or e<;'JIDO'!!' with, M~ like~ , ~";''1.J· echni·"O·'t> L Grttn sa;d~···-tf 'iltl\'i•"':l",~f . .'h< !~lowing eibi!mist the room Uthe on:hestr1 be~ playing 1-but ~we could with our lattt gnb-,Ghew ,or 11111>-..• , • " . . ..... , ....,..,_ '. · . 1h<l10ttt>llif·•~en.ts ' . .. his eq\\al1y.Ure19n10 "Bolm>. · --· . , 1 knowledie:\ lttve · made their earlier There Ii no)hh.l'.:i,e1taii.~•;eften with .';was ~·11 by '4: d:ltfecnonal officer ... " .·~ts·~'.~"'*' ~mmocralic Soit:iet Conlin ' DoYle became SQ borea With deciliam lor them, our own Uves *"t less9drilion than a. sW:vr4:QJe;. ~· .:to~d ,tio~ •dfll.I~ the' dead man to , ·• J :~DSl:""'tK'~ '~~ry Youth 'frtov: Shetlotll 11olrtiefthat he killed htro .c:iff....: · . : 1 be • much more oecur<. And they <onld Wbtl .•f•-fattlkts," ~!1151h' JIJ neJ1t *" )lliip!l_t't, {!" r:.,~~~· P•1sse\ ·~ .~.; '!)ltl!l, :.., · . )!arty alfihote; the · an( wa4 foi:cid' to revive him .. llUICh Monday: O.:\~r S. ll!70 bave been 'bappi .r. Or so we mJJY dre1in. timt~wlU4~ ... : ~ ·' _;o.,·~Nllet· a 1~ ica !ec nici:rr~•:;,:X~ .: ;· ~ .!jlce, a Trotikyist agains~~'\tl:J:,,wil~-bec1use 'Ol >:PVbllc in· , .-, . 'lltil'• .;.. ..... ,,,... pn>vocaUve ONE . or'l'llli 'lllllllri ....... bout' ,.,~u1 ~~ . Id th~ coi..-,.&,;-.: ' . ·:war and Rascism, dlgnal1on. ... ' . . ' , Th• •d1tori<ll page •! th• Doilu thinp aboat".Jlfo" OJr gu...U,.;tec ted-holrod tl'l•, wbe!llUJiie,:;;ii.:i·thii.' ~ ~· !!°1-P=,~·-~ IL I threw ~.,, · : .• , . ', ·nter "°'lP' Na· Sit · ~ :.~lllvM di!~ . his • tilot '""' to Jaform and cUm- mually ac.er.t m mo,tt I.baa . ..tbt perfortbiftct: of natun!"ir the·fn.iracle of -.:·~--_..__,: • ·• ..... ~-· __ : .. .£..1 --· ~ ! ts Orgamutlon : oper~tU . as. so . muth nu1r._.aod . con-... ~ .Mlo:tc rtade11 .blf-J?1tltnbng th.ii 1v1Jlable teatlmony. the dnl& store. is that. whatever Otty do BN f:-eorge Venceremos Brtga~. SOS studef.11~ who centr~ .\laiRly ·on h1s mort J*lder~ _ ntwspaJH:r'• opin10"n1 o~ .com.- AIL _.,.,1 1 la or tton•l do. they wlll be more talked Oto went to Cuba ostensibly to rut ~~ane compos1tiensr , • · · .'. ' -, mt'n~ry . on toplci of 1!1ttrt,st THE l!IT C1I ..,._,.b e wan about than if their hair were blue Dear ~ce:: but actually attended Castro.cqnd\icted Bactl ·w-•~: onhll'j)py as an orglnlst and and 11on1ficanee, blf providtno a the one 1 fellow fini8hel himseU Md hll . · l'm no ~l but 1 think men's seminars on guerr\111 w a rlf a'tr. -··lefl.;the.: -~551~ --,.)'l!n.· .. -blJ 111r~· . ,· 1~m for. th't •:Pr«ssio'A Of 60ns won't ha'l'l lo~ later. We ~peak of rightJ but remember swimmint ~ should have tops. \\'omenis Strike for Peace ; ~omen's employer imPrlJOned hlm. for refU1inl to out-rtl'ldtrsl opJniont, and bu Any ~~!-Fr1Cln ·b ~es mo00re thanbo :',!0 1qs, It LI ~ldbyby~~~ bu!.._'!y ~!~ MRS. R. Llberalion Front. . continue playing. presenting fhr divtrtt view-.. one milCunl at lune HN a ss w uoa we are 1ft: ui.; m..-e--. 't. points of infonn.td obttrwri takes more thin two -or did before be thong. DcTar ,'!11-b R.;:_ FURTHER. l\lll.ITANT headlinl!rs like BA.WC W RNED OUT c O·P It u t · 11n.d ipolctsmt"Pl on topfc4 of the was repl.tced.. An old-timer b 1 fellow who can e!u ave ~1 nm with swlm-Renn ie Davis. John Froine:1 and Da vid m1nuscrip~ only to keep onf HrRP abeld' do:u. Ont el the dillertnets betwten remembtt when IOrTRboclJ ceukt '.A:J ;. ··mint} ~·~th--•• 9". them. Belllnger. of the Chicago Stve-n def en-of the ~ert(!, .. . . . .. rnascullnt and femiAine eating is this: somethinc at 1 cocktail party that wouJd 1l's lmpossible to put them OR. danL~. were promintnt spleltrs and wire Vn:Gogh ilem·sold·a·aingtt painUn& Robert N. Weed, Publisher Gt111trAlly speakln(, women likt foods make 1 alrl blush rather than ariue. pulltrs at both. Also very much on hand In his whole life. ' T L I t • " , ,. --~---: · ---:-~--~-; :::coii6•uiier --... .. .. . --· -·-· · CHECtq_~_a .sam· J~~~. . . · -: ·-.-n:ae~s~tei.ctlon Is foog ·,_ DAILY l'ILOl . f. o i ' ' ' ' ' . " .. ~-uP-• · · ·. (!_~~-,~-~~~ ... ~ t h ---.~-~ -Sc mm . ----. . 1-.t::-~~1ns:are--s · o •. --. : Spiµster.s;.MQstJy : · r.m±k·:-.. :t..:.1 .. '. ... ~ .. ·.·~Jee.,· ,S~are shorte~ 15%.off. ·.Co11t ;;-,·re• 4•r'la1 ~A gresst.Y~jtls-_-_J. ~-·""'::=~ -~~~ . 10EAL FIGURE ·-·What mo••" .. ·"' ·\:io;.......,, n.i q~ in 111<9<1 tour . ' .J ::-~ ~ . ·-,~~ · •• 2_.;.:i>'.·1·~ I \ • • 1 1• • ....,. lilliol,y...,Y·uput'lll;a,Da; "°" or femlnine filure would A NEW YOU .ClTY bane -1 lffort 1o ··'''-•- 'you regard "as Ideal;' y.Una •-••n"'~• r1 · · ' ........ -. . lady? A piy<bololilll nanled , ~v--· > man~· P" OcjJx f«!Utlop noedod•)Y' Fedml, >Sidney M._ Gour!~ put Iii~ in-~pouf,Q. for :::; f.J:; agenci .. !:.'elapmtnt 1Pf,O' quiry to numerou1 coeds at· 1 of bis height. , .HERB'S Jr ~ iruns pa~ cm-mer s 0 u the r ll ·univ er slty. MATRIMONJ:'L A~ORJTY ~..:c!!::' fesidtnts'ln ibt Consensus was the ~ect ·girl -who claiml .~· I.Yoe.~ 1 1 e QNntt area wtll be uk-. -&lioo~--lM -il'eel-6-incMl,d ' d-=~: I ';'~:..:.~!.~~l----'-f<t~-1 we1g°' ... · p ~ u n s , an believe · 1l • .A LENGTHY 1-1 .. ,.._., ' I I I "2"" LOO .... ---'-·~'r"li •• oru....,~rt.e.en 1 apemeasure _........,, •.J;'ltQ t,..•~ n ~ purcbaledoneoftbeltttem1.; ilnteresttn1:< But that perfect beltep· .. turned up :~ in. Homeowner• will bl' uked ,tirlis.too~.Another lO ~-f~thi~ -~ -~impro~bGd ~ o u n d I d ( 1 I r I b u t e d ~ ~ood than "'"°n durlni Jlll)',-A- democraUciHy wouldn't hurt ~ . and_ s,ptomber •and any plan- h b. . • ..... ,... the """"'· ., a ii. LOVE ~ WAil -1t••·•---~------I THAT.·PARTY MOST APT commonly believed file ·tlnlid to report ·•· tu dodter to the tirl,. ri>t-the -bold ont, ·is most Internal Revenue Service is an apt to remain ·a spinster. estranged "lfe, it's said ..• AM That's flat out wrme. The ADVISED THERE'S no known truth is vice , ve~ Our Love fecord of an ir.stance wherein and War man c J ·1 i m I ~ bear ever used a bear hug in ~archers hav-e proved it's a fight. • ,STATISTICS ·JN. the aggressive female who ia bJCATE offspring conceived most likely never to marry. in cases m criminal asslult 'Ibey also . ·have " proved,. in-. · tend to be boys, although why cldenta.Qy, that 1.pi_n-aters ii WICiw'. l'!l'l"'lly f<¥ ~ be )>ell<!' .. AMEJllCA'S . ·GlllA'YWT · -AllE SlOllES saleswomen than wives. EVER SINCE E b e n " er , GET rf. JUGRT -Did I_ say .•. ~ , ~ Booze of Richmond, Va., was . convicted sometime baek for a hog rancher can get four . . . -possesslon· Of iUe·aa1 whiskey, maybe-five-litters-of-pip ·• -~ -- well-intentioned c 1 i en ts· year from one • o" ? •. M. . . ttpeatedly have nominated Remarkable, if true, which it , . hinr for membership in our isn't. Two"litteri" is, more·;ltke •· • Proptr Job Club. Unless he it. What'&· true ii 80IM hog ' - appliea per90Mlly, hoWever. • ranchers now With:he.atet pens · .' . stacger the tirteding oi dlf· ---YEARS-AGO-GAMBLERS t.reot . son ·ao:-tl"'l'41et -f!JU? , used lo dope their fill)lting may)!e five.pig cnipo annual!Y; · -" D gamecOcks with a. mixture 'of thus year~und ·income ·· spirits and bitters which they . therefrom. Now if this isn't OPElll" .... called cock ale. Our Language enough ~bout pig breeding to Man says that's just one more suit you, ju.st say so,·hear? .....:.. ...:.' of the numerous ·theories on --~ OCT-·D -22 - where we 1et ·the word Your questiO'ns ·and·com· . -.v• -~ .. :.._, cocktail. ment.t •ore welcomed· and · · · '. · '_ . wi!l'b•·W•d'in CliEClCING EV'EBYTHl·NG · T· UP ·wha•••" pouibl" BUIL-0.'ANYl'HING Plt_czse address you~ lettc!'• ~I 1 • E CUSToMER SERVICE -Q. Do all upectant mothers ce~~~ted?" A. Not qu_ite an. About '"" rutof lfve-do. ••• Q. "I claim half the cars iJ\ this 1:'0Ulitry are-pwked o ... emllht In-the 111i'ffU, rightT" 11.: Almoot. Forty-Ill percent an left ·outdoors ••• Q. "''llOw · much do a jockey's racing clothes wtig!lt!n A. Rarely ·- 1o-L.-'TM.__i_BoJl(l.-P..O. -·~~ -.. -- 1875;.Newport-Beoch, Calif.- .. . · M•k•-.• ~rp ­.. T rm~·,.,...-. .,, ...... 'Dim..oA'!liiiits ' '· ~ ,, ' , .. • ... .. . . ' and we'll send you a decorat.or,.free. , .. . . . .. r Custom drapeiy~and labor. 15%0FF Save 15% on fl bric and labor for ciistom llllde draperiM. a- frem 1n outst1nding collection of prjni. ind IOlid ·color flbllcl. All< our dlCOrlltor tor htr pt0f9to~ eugoationl.Gft ..._ ...i rely on Penneye lo finilll your .dreper;,o 111· perfectiori, to yOUr own -11 apeelffcltionL c.t1·~ .. -1066~ 966 .. ,.,. . t s n ,. -10.11·--- bn 't it ,,..., .. tiMI --· _ ... _yell cen •ffordt If• ... ,.... ---...... --Cldoft• "1klft. ,..... _..,._._ • '! ' • . ·" . 1 ' . I ' . i:.: . :. " . .. . !. ; : ; . ' . ; ' . ' -.., 1 -. ' :( ' ' \ r,;;,,'L. ¥lf:' ' •:·"ii,'' I· . . ~ ... ··c.w.·,(:.:,· -"'" ,·,.1 I. , • • \("Ii ll .' ,. ' I ! ' " ' ::1"': ".:~",·~ ·r l , .. , :-f".'f 'l .;f '1 ... ~ ••• •.J . ,.· '.'. .. . i : ·.·~ ·",.11·.;; • ~· ~ ,.. • • ' • ' •',. •' '~ . ,• I' . ~ . .... . , . ' /· '·' . ,, "';,• ·:•, ... ~. ·. 1· ;" · .. t .. ; ·\ . I ..... ,:r ' ' ' . . • ; : f ., . ' j •.. , ! t . " ' ' I , I .. ·I . . ., ~ . ' .. . '. '· . . .. \ . ' I " " . ' " ~· .. " i . ' 'I " I ·" : ·' r t ~ •· I . .. ' • " . . , . : . ' ' . l '. ' . " ' . .. .Sale279 , ·.~~ .. t4 r•t· l,-29 -. · · ·11.,1i.: pol~sler · ·.ntnOn.in~ " .. . .. ·. : : ·~oJors. " l!l).X«l.'2'11,.__ill'§ .~a.U.'.N_g.3,41' "v ' . a:.; ·~-..' VI &, .. """...-. . r ..... Utftlll;•.411 ;, ~ ' . . . ., .. ": I'; . ... .. . ' Sate.211 ,; six 24, • :s,2i ·'M"*''cotlon osnabcQ tii'dlic:ulto. · · corers. P.eftn11'feot'• . ' , . · "' ... · · ili:iCkecl'dot,· . es x!0:2.7treg:3.:i9 · · e&ii3S, 3.0I reg. 3.59 I ' ' • •, ' < •· ' J ·Vlla,nu,,1:M 'r1g.2.29 ...... I ' /1 " : ' . ... . ... •• eddld ....... ......... -.-»acft to .. IUl'tlct. . ......._..,..,_,.,... •-.naaa..... •4t&flmnillllls, ll.nn~•-. • I ' l\.1ne11• . . • -; i . ... Cbtlet\ vetvete'n in 1 • lhortlengths .. A~colO<S. 178Jd: . ...-.. •... ..-. Dec91•te now.•·• -.,,...,. • ...,., ........ . -•J''t. '· •; •' ' •& ~'!~~T'~~·ll'IM!IY ~T"Cft:I ' 1 . . ·-I I - ' .t. ' . ' '' ' • ' , ,, I .J t· " '1 ..... " . ... . . . I ._ . I '-----... . 70 Y30, Z."11 rlljl:2.49 1 10 x 31, 2.37·NGo 2.71 · · V1llnce,, 1.ASNQ.1.01 Fringed Vllence, 1.11NG·2.11 ! . . . . 80x24reg.3,1~ 'MlrOUtY 1-1' J)Oly9sW ninon Penn-•·111 decorlilGrcokft. ~-~~'1!!-!11,.I~ eoxw.ua-:s.41 .1v...,uc._z.a f!,, , Lt;iiiir.ut No.CA9 . · "' + --- ' ' " . Sale~: ' .... -· .. ... :r24'NO.t.• :o 'Os tuw111n1 · orint-""-....... . Pld•. doeondl" . fiwhron com. . 64 x 30, 2.!J't reg. :S:29 M x.3e.-'i.n;.g, :S.29 V1fmce, 1.M reg. 2.29 • • I ' r~ ' . . T • J I !. I > I ' ' L ; i I ' ' ' ~I ·J I • \ 8 • OAllY• PILOT MondU, O<..W 5, 1•70 :-¥='1!omg~er.' To Go on Stand LOS ANGELES (UP!) The state hopes to put on the witness srand this week a 37· -year-0ld--woman v.'ho blew open the Tate murder case after talking to Sus.an Atkins Jn a woman's jail. · 'Virginia Graham, vlho was tle ing held on theft charges, went to authorities in Novem- ber, 1969. after Miss Atkins flRESIOE'S Giff f,' YOU RAND McllALLY WORLD ATLAS fl[W JO" 1 12"'~ l111ptrial (~I , ...................... " ~$ fill wMft 'fl(j DPD or Ml to row flllSllE Acct. mt • ..... Doe tocust-.Olfer endl I0.2'-10. p/u ,. HIGHCR R IJTCS' PAID MONTHLY YOORS EACH AND EVERY MONTH, a $26.05 CHECK on e1ch $5000 Certilic1te. If held under Ii rnoolhs. pfillCiptl reduced bJ chrcks sent you. allegeilly «lllfided th< we~d · story of the involvement of the "Manson Family" in the Tate-LeBianca-siB~~ -~. wliOWas in jail in connection wilh an- other slaying, told a similar story to another inmate, Ron· nie Howljlrd. It led to the in- dictment of Charles Manson and four others although Miss Atkins later recanted her ad- missions. A touchy legal point was involved in the testimony of the two-women. They c a n relate what Miss Atkins said so far as it affects her alone but a mistrial could result from testimony a!I to what the 21-year-old "family" mem- ber" said -about the otber-de- fendants. Lawyers were conferring with the two women in private ill tile chamben of Judge Charles-He Older lo· try· to determine outside the pres· ence of the jury what por· tions of their stories would be admissible. Man, Wife Run Over . I_n, . Q~i:r~ Reagan Boosted By Stars LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Gov. Ronald Reagan 's re-elec- tion campaign is $100,000 richer today thanks to a star· studded event featuring Frank Sinatra, who explained for the first time why he endorsed the Republican incumbent. Sinatra, a l i fe -lon g Democrat who four yea rs ago campaigned against Reagan, said he switched parties thi s time because he regrads the governor "as a man of great courage and conviclions. "I don't like several things he's done in ·his career, but everyOOdy's gonna m a k e m~takes," Sinatra told 1,000 persons who paid $125 ap iece to eal Jamb stew 8Tld enjoy t'No1Kiurs or entertainment· BURBANK (UPI) -A fire The Sinatra produced gala captain and his wife were also starred Dean Marti n, Bob seriously injured Sunday night Hope, John Wayne . Pat Henry, when they were run over in and a Rock group called. the driveway of . their h o m e Orange Colored Sky. ----------~··· · ···~·· .... -······ ···-· .. ·--- Rule~ Changed State Forest Fire Crisi~ Declare·d Over -:...::; i: i' -: B k 1 z SACRAMENTO (Af~lale.. II) ~ bilk and juts..,. vw..:_director.Jlld s.nw. ~: une.asy-er: e ey-l~.<1IJlda!1-aay-lhe 1~._doy.-slat.Jorestzy_~ka:< H eaUmaltd ~_at o.'OC ~ 1 crilb m-oolfomla forests ap-fought more-than 500 timber $100 inlllion ...... ~ _....... '-'------. • and brush Jim coxedll&.mou:-!. Sl~h< d ·pears over. thaq half a' mUllon acres, of a two-week-old ban ofi fife -• Bltween the Sept. 22 fires Jama G. Steuru, foreatry W. permits .. ResiJ,mes Classes First Time In Huntington· Beach • BERKELEY (UPI) -The Unive rsity of Ca Ii for n i a , where ·the_nation'..s. campus "'ioleooe4ilarWd~n--19641 begini its lOlst year _today -wilh a res tless student body and a new set of guideline s. Prompted by regents, the guidelines prohibit changing course context for JX!litical reasons or use of t h e uni versity's name or fa cilities ,. for political reasons. Regents objected strongly when faculty members and s I u d e nt s •·reconstituted" classes in antiwar demonstra· lions last spring following the U.S. incursion into Cambodia and the slaying of students at Kent &late University and Jackson State College. No one kn ows what about ils busi ne ss. Most of us have had some periods of troubles and some periods or t' EJJ.-Atl=Il-J:T cahn.1 Jusrdi:fn't see-imylhing'~~:::::::::::::::-__ -1:: . I' . thar makes the-situation for" -LJ:--: ---- the fall ver y different. Sheldon Wolin. a political science professor who Jed the ' ·reconslituli on" movement, won't be at Berkeley this fall, h a vin g moved to the university's campus at Santa C~ Before leaving, he had · urged that the movement be continued. OUier faculty leaders oi ~e movement either have taken sabbatical leaves or moved to other campuses. Students for a Democratic Society, a leader in campus dfsturbance s and con- frontations, will not be on the Berkeley campus this year. It was banned after last year's anti-ROTC troubles. SMORGASBORD Every Monday Night, S:30 • 9:00 ALL THE PIZZA 'OU CAN EAT Adults $1.25 CAll'f OUT ·oaons AYAILAlll AT a1•YLAI PllCU . ._ ___ ... Children &Sc tUNDEI 101 I POPULAI YAllOllS AYAIU.ILE Off-<:&mJIU$ ]IOlitical com-SERVING MORE THAN 70,0l>O PIZZ'AS COAST.TO.COAST DAil Y California 's 27 ,500 studenls munes have replaced the radical students union . 19071 BROO'KHURST will do this year about their Mario saVio, who led the na· continuing targets -the Viet-lion 's first student revolt six na mese war, reserve office rs years ago, returns quietly t~ 962-1333 training corps classes, ecology day to the Berkeley campus. and "Peoples' Park" where a ,.~H:e~sa~y~s~h~e~is'._:a~ch~an~ge:'d~m~an~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~===============~~ riot erupted when the universi ty prevented street people from turning a vacant Jot into a volunteer park. But Chancellor Roger W. Heyns had this to say: "I ex- pect this place to open and I • expect the-university to · go . ----. Hig~piJe . carp_et_ •. ' ~..---11-pu·N-os-1 trl:AT-E-"lt:S- : 21TH U.llN FlltOM 1S1:. quring a domestic quarrel Sinatra a·11d Martin Y•ill -w11Jrthe""'ir-son:ln:law:----stage a s1milar ~h""OW""lfl sarf Unrul1 Sees Advantage - ·In New Poll Low · .low sale rices. That's Penney l)ays! 1 • I • t. ' 1 I ~QU.llTlilJ I l!Jilim .. PASSIOORS I AnJ Amount funds in lite 1s I Jl1ilflnymontll1t1mfrollllst Police said the son-in-law, Francisco tonight and a third Steven S. Lofvendahl, 24, in San Diego Oct. 13. Glendale, went to the home o! William E .. Davies, !II, lo tab -....---··--WffHlllWlls-Hlft llWAYS IHI PAID,DI DUUD his sla·moot!Hld claugbler R T · · By The ,4uoclatecl Pre•• away. --ep_. unney The latest voter poll shows He took the girl out lo hi! an increase in the percentage car jlDd. ~=to dt.lve away · Cl-alill' S H. C of voters who say they don't Onr 50 C11if0rtti• Offie1t ........ II I ear;.... FMllJ tittl lllE Tiil 1 llLLIOI when Mrs. Davies ran in front know whether they'll vote for of the ear to.stop him and was Democrat Jess Unruh for llLLllS II ASSETS -Sllllt Sllll7 ,,,.;;,,:hu111.i ~ by .the auto, officers ff · Bu} Governor or for Republican '""'------· 88 !! C Ronald RA!agan. Davies saw the incident and u Unruh immediately said the attemPted .~ grab his aon-ln-SANTA BARBARA (UPl)-trend acted in his favor. law-throogb tbe carwtndow;--..Rep. Jobn Tunney glanced out • Q11f1.1h SiiQ§uilday that-fu~ r.eouce ':r2~tbe cat bl1t blll\ ~ over Ole placid Pacific and pall, conducted by 0 P i n I o n COllA llSA • 22111 -IOI. . .....!:m ~ Y • were told a new.sman that Sen. Res~arch Inc., indicated "we ~~ mloall Botll Gticq;e Murphy's campaign is are 1n a whole new ball game -==========~--".~,..~-=,:~~-~1:.· ----''sinking like a stone." and we 've got the ball." - Hearin~ Aids at a Price You Can Afford ••• Backed by a f:ompany You Can Depend On, Your choice! Save10% Hearing Aids foreverylY.Pe of hearing problem ~fost hming problems can ht helped. Many different people have manr diffftU!t Maring Jos.scs, and Sftn has many diffettat rypes of hearing aids su.iu.ble for mild to scwre baiiag losses. ~an Hearing AidCoasu.ltt.n1:will~­ fu lly and c-fficieody ..Wyze your problem. Comeintodar. Prices Start Low as '99 CHARGE IT on San R"'ol•iag Ciw1< a FREE ••• tscmonc:h'•aupplyoftwc .. Wa widt JODI' new San Hesi.QS Aid. ' -------------------s. .... _, Roebuck and Co. ' 2650 t;. Olym&:· LooAnpleo, 90054 O.pi. 8501, IM•. 5. 1 would like Flt.EE fa(onnation .bout Seara Hearing Aida without any obl.iptioa Oil my put. N1amc'--~--~-~~-­ Add1rn'------------ Ci'Y''--'------------- Zip PHO!llE - 'The tide has turned the Actually, the poll, when Democrat contended and 'cited compared to another Opinion a new private poll lo prove Re~arch poll taken two weeks it. It showed Tunney running ea rlier, showe_d ho~ Reag·a" ahead of Republican Mu rphy and ~.nruh l?S•n~, poi_nts wh~le by 12 percentage points _ or the undecided figure 1n- the equi valent or one mi llion creased. votes The results for Reagan were •'N~ way. no way." Mur-48.3 percent in mid-September. h · Unruh went from 39.7 percent p y s campaign manager, Bill to 38.7 percent. Undecided Roberts, said later. went from 12 percent lo 14.9. "You kidding?" replied 1'1ur-Unruh interpreted the s e phy, when asked if•IJe ~lieved fi gures as gaiJI of nine-tenths the poll. of one percent iJ1 his drive to · But the 68-year-old Republi-overtake Reagan. can did say "I may increase ';The significance of Ulls my campaignin~ a c t i v i t y new poll," Unruh said, "is that now," and observed "that's Reagan continues to Jose not as bad as the condition 1 ground and \\'e continue to was In six years ago. 1 beat close the gap between us .·• Pierre Salinger and I'll beat ReagaJ1 had ao immediate Tunney too." comment. Beauty Bulletin from Penneys: Fashion style cut. 244 11"\ILLlltOM Orlfll'lltlr c ..... ""' ,..,., 111-tJll MUMTIMGTON •llACM t(""1;.,.,. c ....... '"" "°""' "1.nn a1•119' "T~• cnr •Jt.J"I MIWPOllT llACM '"•"'"" It ...... "'"9 fleer, tO-U1t ., 966 ...... fnst•lted 866 ... ... lnllltl«I reg. 12.24. You .... 119 Ng. 12.24. You UNl79 reg. 10.73. You uv• 53.50 reg. 9.73. You ,...6150 on 50 tq. ytts.! on 50 Ml-..... on 50 SQ. yda.I ·on 50 -i. ydL.I See how lwwrtoulty The peff«t ~ lsn1 it great to find Wow, What• '"\ dense 'Infinity' caipeltng tor Mediterranean such 1k:h-.looking A.lm0$l loo I lo SM of Acrilan• acrylk b. decof, tor Indoors or beauty at a price roa foot on, bu ylshag Sink right inlo Its tleep outdools. ll's 'Espana. 1;1n 1lford ? ll'a 'Stardt.lsl' carpel's m•_ ...... ..-~~ tr,xture. Nole lhe p•tt•med.,. • SpaniSlt conliniq.ia 11tamen1 walking. It's just .. rleh·loned deoorltOf tile dellan. Tllfted c1 rpel of lumino\IS p11clical as it is colors, interesting Acrlllll'I f' .cryUc on C1cjon • nylon, Randon! beautiful. Thi ck, 9tDnfy IC&.llptured surface etlecl polVPfOpylenl back sheared p•nern give& nyion shag pile tt'lll -enhanced by tip olves cJtanlng ••• added luster to lhe bounces back. In al'learlng. Whal • ntue outdoors. atuuty wear decorator colors. aoftl!lf' sharp tweed color ,,1 thk pnce! enywherel Heather1ones. 1ouch lo the 1url1ce. coml?inations. ~., IMt9lld ...... ~ ,..., llftd 9'M ped Of 41 .. sponge nilJMf. 8ftftg Ill J01tf ftoor ••• 91 I 7 tot • ,_ oblgeloft ..ci!Mt9 --·----~nnelft ---~- theshowpl- for carpet eshmate call today: l~UNT1NGTON BEACH {892-7771) OR.A.NOE "THE CIT Y ' l639-$)91) CAHCJt'iA PARK fw.:J660) CAR\.SBAD (m-mtl DOWNEY (869·4541 , FULLERTON (871~ LAKEWOOD (e34·7000l MONTCLAIR (&2t-381t) NEWPORT eeACH (844·23131 TORRANCE (772~9J) VENTURA (642·7~2) Use Pennoys IMM paymanl p4&n ' 1 tJ ... ,., .. J -...... _ .. erl W.J , .... 111 !ordt 11 ll. l"IJIJ " ... . .,.,... ........ (!!' '""" M..W. I Pendl I'll .- ll. \If! "' .. dHlll. wi/f, J -1-r P,wis. ..,.,11 ... V• ~ cerolt le• "'" ..... 19hl, Tundl· " -at! IM Abrll'fl Mttal,' MOrlUA M1rl1111 (oroM "''-Kiri! .. plOVrd HOii huS~llt Will!11r P1ul, I ~' ~ "'· ' , ... ' le AM, em1ort, morltl Inv. n- 10 !hi ·~­Nl•W, M1vd I °"'" ( -·. su vk• Cll1i>el fKlonl Je•" 8 llOUlll Corm le Cb,arlet (0$11 d .. lh, dlUOh~ lt•. J lowrv; ·~~ ol HU M1rstc let!, t (h1pel Pork. au. l W1lttr _ .. <><•~ M. Pt ol WI~ 1!1!er, St rvlc1 ,M ... 01kdll flt Vie OoM• ·~" Survlvo -· s• ttr. N brothl'I 11 !f l" Mesi • Olrect1 ··~ •!r1no, Octobe N~ncv •'••flll tl•~I chl!d, 1:30 I Churd m~k• if I bull ._, !!lolts (&Pl•t View ti.1rv, Ch1rl1 ,,,.,, .. Jiii&!', Citv; .... tl•Cll; ·~· 8et11: M•H """'' St., C 81rb1 H1gl!I'" l-1101!1'" WM!rt M e1111 lle1c11 t-11au l1rln1r ··-!1rme 8rCNld Co Co: II ... Sa -- For the ~··::·M~:·1AJ£~'.:.iD IN &•PT. ,, ,.ftA-Mllll!ll:, I•• It., n, et 1112 I'. &IY I!., anlll DMIMI C .. 22, f/lt 171 I . Mollbr, Ol;tobtr S, 1'70 OAILV PILOT 9 • Record 9 Members Named Coast-Water Study Mapped T c 0 • G The Comlnl>oloo of the cllJiwi IJndaley p.,,..., who .......... --..----~--.i-o 1tizen :rou Southem Colil«ui• Coastal •t?!""'i' 11 • ._0mp County fYo1~111.i~"r'lti.~~i:.~ -------.l"'"ter-~ Project Slnltatlon Dlltr1ctl on the .. 6dl Mid Alla f ., 23. If Jal AliiN'r' (SCC'WRP) al'VV't'IVed I """'""" conun11aoa, aald the lhtA., place over a dw•J'UI wiOcL It will he llnaneed by tlio ftve memberapnclos-and~biy • federal lfllll, lllHta Nici • Orl111. Wtttnllfllltr. ,.,..~ ,.,..... ,....., H•1t11.11<>1it-FJ1.AHC1S, Utt111 c .. 11,... SANTA ANA -Nine "1t tn1. Fullerton IA•"''-of draft desaJ'";_ of t be wUI be made ln tbe coastal ,..,.,..,.,. .. Sl1SI C-lno Cwlllf.., I.II'! JWin e-.,...,.. Wh A CaPl•tr-•rid wtrd'I .a... ''· tt ,., 11r1e" membtrs have betn Women Voters d Ire ct or : project. area froril the Ventur.s&nta y re vlGMI L•"'· OrlftM. .... Cl Tbomu F M rr1... ~.~1 . B-~-· ,,___ to ••· GOOFltEYJtlE.o.4ANE, Wlll!MI IE.., u. named to \1111:1 Uzen1 Dlrec· · 0 y, '~~ n, Or. Ceorge Hlavka, project uuwa county ~ Yl'C y A ~,.~l':!. ~~ ~~ 1021 tion Finding COmmlssio.a, a dlrteto1 Pbllr o!Flndustrlal relations managel-, told the five . corn-Mextcu -bonltt. OU A1tllEDl..M)1tt1E.oA. F .. llCIKo z .. i•. body created to advise t~ or CQ_ ord Aeronutronic: lssio The three.phase •tu d·y, Poor Talk-..A ;'75~,~~r .. •;::-~11H:;;tt~i: Orange County Superviaor1 on Frederick M. Lang. Laguna m n members the project whlch will ~be beaded by 9r • '' I CAii.Niii M•,N•. c~111u:-mt 1"111u111e1 crrclt, """"'IMIOll IMdL...illrvlYH tw .IOU, Rllllo erl W, Jr. tnd Arlllllr II:. Ca1Nnl1&1 Hiii~ !tn. ttlbKCI C. Mitri. -JUiiet C. Cr••· lard/ 11'1.,.._ Loultt 111 . Gllft 1fld KaltllMn R, P~hlfl'1 10 9'tl'ldctl"'9r«I. hrwlte1 wlll bl llild 111 Slrmlnll'Nm. Al•Urrit. Local 1.,.,.,,.,.1s tw P• 1<1mll'I' C..19nlll F~""NI HofM, oo8:N';.U.1E.l'.,,1A1tTHOLO/N.E.~"*~ the county'.1 General Planning Beach, landscape architect, de a c rip t lo n would be H!avk1, la tcheduled to Lake A no~ publllhtr In Qlica&o "~ "· °' ,. G•"*-Grovto 11~.. Program. ·~Richard N. Ballden,.of-~C-dJstrlbuted-to -re!leareh-llld ·~---lrepor.lf---a~pi. ttchnlQULDL-----'-1 n~""o':i:i-~.~~=t',;;!.__.._ 'J'be-nine new 'appointees-lrvmt--------civic agencies engaged tn- -·-------leveryda1 cotlVera&llOL...:WhiCh o~~o:=ita1;:~:;.;· ~ ~!°PII:'e UM;.. membe~pl of ._.Re ~ r en' e ~~.I n !._1!.~ e similar projects. Air -Travel ~~,-~Y ... )'DU .. ~~~4,!~~~n. •ntll J1111t .t.,, ,,, o1 m t1st s1 .. cot•• wlll:' rmemuicr comnuss on. •upervlJO on ""' COwuwtiHon T ks G ...,...uu V\alf,_. -v ...... ., .:.~IVINGITDM. lnt5-. lt, " The firat !Ive were named ~y are O'Connor; Rodger Howell. -rue et 'Ibe SCCWRP was organiud ment and workl Uke ml.lit to 1 DANllU rm Mtnt11rt11. Hlll\ll"'IM ~ •n county 1uperviaon from their SUtta Ana; Dr. touls c.ena ln 1969 by five coastal ageo· Meet Set a:tvt you poile, aelf-contidtnc• ~=:~n~t~~-im-l;Wfl\n'll""'"'· districts and the second five Jr., Santa-Ana ; Jerry R. Fe!'-p G cies--Orange County Sani~ and areattr popularlt,r. ,1,rtrlUI' t>anl.i1. ltn Clll.ll'hl St., Cella M-. Ooll1 at dffth, OCtoMf' L lenoltet Hfldl"' 11 Wt1lc:lll'I' 0Wi'91 Mort\11,.,, ",', ".• ... 11.1:._1..,. °!'!1 .. .,.tA. tt••'-" ""•-bfyClthe. Orange County U!ague reri, Garden Grove and Uoyd ropane US •= n;#tri ts c·1y of •·· _ ... _.. ·-0•• B uon "'"" c , 1 ~ ORANGE _ A ---'•• -n-Aceordlnr to thla publiaher. IC~ 20, of JU lulntloft L-, Cotti 0 tieS. .JlC:ll:"5e1 l'tl. Di ....,..., ~ do -"·- Mooo --ddltl l ~ N ed b th '-·~· f MIDWAY CITY ..,.._ ego, City of Los Angeles, le-on .1. "'-'-........ .t .. tioii many ~pie JlOt ~._ ....... OA\llS LI. Wllli.m S. 0..-11, llnklMt el UU SH l rNr1. eor-dtl M9r . .D1t1 ol dH!l\t SloPI. 22 111 vi.1nem. ~ "" wilt, JdllMa M. Drllll Uu911tv, Kff. flltor: "'9rfllf'I, Mr;: ttlll Mn. f"r.nrll J . Olvli. 111 ol CoroM del .V..rJ 1111\er 1f'ld rnolllll'·ln·l.IW, Mr. al'ICI M'I. Charin J. Vtt' ,k11tn. tever!Y Hlll11 1111.,, Mrs, (t roll w..,.,, Ul•r•"•· C1lll.1 WI. J1n- 1,, ~"'1~11, ""-dhen, WlKOIUll!. ll:DMN fOtllgl\\, Monda'I', I PM. RM!llllm /NH, TyesdmV. " AM, botfl at Our Uoty gu..., ii """'' C.tMllc c1111•ct1. a.tn c~ 01! M.lr Mcirh11nr, OlrKtor1. Hu11A11.e>-00111.0H, Rklltnl .a,. .• ''·°' 'uc a ona memucrs am y e .......,. .. t o llie ......... ~ ~ ....... r"'-.. h •-· ...... I n '"' Port sltf1i,_ l'IKI, M.-ort were named by the orlglnal 10 Cities were Nat Neff, Sanla 'J'..os Angeles County SanilaUoo Needs and Airport-Community now muc t'"'" ... vwu n uence ~n11 ... !~t'ut~~ '°" tt UISI ~ approved by the county Ana ; William T. Brazney, lnJ(ks of the Midway City Districts and Ventura County. Compatibility will be con-otbtts •imply by what they llf'UIT 11 and ••· le•m•e. A·-••cin& u·un·"·"'·· Beach· Mrs Sanitary District art going to The nur~· _of the n>ro,.·ec1, ducted he -ursday by the say and how they u.y It. HANN~l-NTLE, -i>i, .. T .. ,,, or WC • --.......... -_lll ~~~ ' • -=-=--~-J'--=.t:. re 111 -Whethe ~ 1>111! t aocla.l uo:n ,_,we11m1nsttr '"" Vickie the awo1ntmenta was com· Donnan commons, Fullerton; try fo clean up more th-an the as de3cribed by Hlavka , is to Orange County ~e of · r. n """ a · 0,1::....,•• , .. ,...".as1 "'""'""' $t., Hurt-misaion · chairman James Vincent Keyes, Orange, and garbage. The vehicles are "attain an understanding of Women VoteMJ. functions., or even In casual ·• f •-· M Do M b I . conversations with new •e-o ASHM01tE<HAJ1.LTON, How1r11 E .. "· O'Connor o .:JUI.Ith Laguna. rs. reen a r a a I , being converted from gaaoline the ecology of the Southern The program, beginning at q···•n•··-••-re are __ to "'121 w. l'•Mlldl. Sin ci~ •nd The new appointees ire Newport Beach. Califomi coastal •aten in I 30 in the Or ........... ...... ... , ...... """" ··-· '"'"' J .. n. °' n1 IE. conntc1kut to propane fuel power to a ,. : 1.m. ange ......,w.-make a &ood Un-·'-...,.,..., •w .. v1.11, ci uf. David S Collins Anaheim order to gain insi..+.t into t Medi al A i t Jon .,..__.. .. ··~~. ov1tsTDM..t.OAMs, J111\ft o., 11. "' : I ind '. 1 I rea.uce air po·-uutlon from ex· r y c s soc I lime yoo" IA.lk. 1H32 sntt brier ortv1, G1,..n commerc1a • wlr1a rea tor; --mm's past. present and Building, 300 S. Flower ' St., GIWlllTl J1.~r1.ft ~lrtr. 1t7J Mi.it St,, Cotlt MK1~J51rvlcn ptndll\9 ti ••II •radW1r MorlU.rv. ~.~~ ... ~'::':'~"'::.~~· Cll l1Dll ""' Becky BawnaM, a Cal Stale-Irvin' e Tn' al haust emissions. predicted effects on t h e will feature a number of e1.-To acquaint the ret.den of 1t•G•ZZO.HOLGATE, J..-11 M .. 21, or Fullerton student· Mr s . "We will also operate the ecology and lo advise on perts In the field o I this paper with the euy·t~ 2n 5'•1111, or111111• 1not Jin M .. 2t, of J hi C 1 'o ' MAVINS 11n L• P•1, Huntlntton ee•th. osep ne a nes, r a n g e trucks at a greatly reduced policy, procedure, research lr1nsportation. foll ow rul" for developln& AC1tEJ1.MAN·L•YMAN. ••111M1t J., ''· school and civic leader· Ralpn R hed led and tecnhi f mon1·1or1·ng R ti r th skill In everyday convttaatlon ~ul 0. M1vtnt.-261t Ort/11'1 Avt., COii• MIV. ,5-rYICM ,..,.Ille ti •1U 9noidwtr fllf au b20; S.n Antonio. >T•••I Ind • , esc u cost," said Donald Frank, ques or eaerva ons or e eon-• sut111t1 ic., u, "' 11,.· cr..1tnut st.1 A. Echave, Brea, Mexican· · and limiting the harmful eP-· 1ere11·ce -may be obtained ·the -pubHtheH have printed ... :~~~,:~.::::l.t.1t. Gter ... 21, of'°' American leader; Richlrd E. manager of the district. feels in the future. through local LWV repreaen-full details or their lntet'fllin& Mllr'lllll"f· ltARSTINS Marlllllnt M. K1P1I-. Aff 41, of 101' coroM Lint, (0111 M111. Dall ol dHth. OCT-2, In Da'tfnPOrl, '"""'· Mr1. K1rJTer\I Wll I •ftllMrld nvr~. '""' plo•ed 11 both C.O.r1 of L1bl,_ 1rld HOii Mem0rl1I Ko1pll1!. SurY1Vld br nu•balld, JloberlJ p1r1nt1, Mr. Ind MP1. Wlll\1m fler1lf, D1v1np0rl; Three '°"'' Ptul, Andrew 1rid Kiri, 111 o! !Ill hatnll ""° b!'Olhlf1, Wllll1m !ittlf', Dali: Mi r· bor, W1illln110111 Jl.CIMrl ,, .... , New Yor11 CllY. s ..... 1ca will bot held T\lllder, 10 1>.M, SI. P1ul'1 Lutl\lr1n Church, 01v· enPOrl, I""''· lnterm1nt, D1v1nPOrl Me- morltl P1rtr. F1mllr tufttllll li>o11 wlil\- 11'19. may m1k1 me.,_111 eerolrlbulltn1 10 tht NewPOrt H1rbDr Lu1hlf'1n Church, He""""' lltlCPI. Hlll &. Freo.rlc1 MM• 1u1rv. o.venPClrf, I""''' Olrecton. HJehl1nd, S1n11 Alli •nd Jud't' E., 11, Hernande'l Santa Ana dine· The trial of Ernie A. Smith. Among the cost advantages Newport Beach City Coun· tatives. ~lf·tralnlnr method ln • new. of 9011 "'-r Drlw, Hu~""''°" •~ f th o' ff. I S '. I Op-UC I . t d t h ed book! ' d In Co ""th--~f" ..,r o e tee o pec1a a rvme 1 u en c arg cited by Frank was the six·•------------------------1 et. 'A venture. n~ H~M~:!d9i!~NN.=;' :e~c~·.O:: portunities at Orange Coast with disturbing the peace and cent per gallon state tax WOULD YOU WORK? veraatlon. 835 Diveney Pkwy .•. Fr1ncef M., u. Clf MS w. Wltltlll,, COilege. using obscene language, has EVllNINOS 011 WllKINDS POii Dept 305-910, Chie&&o. llL s•c:l'~o~AHcHEz. Joe G .. 45, °' Also Mrs. Charles P. Green· been rescheduled for Oct. 20 in de<'•Jction for propane fuel VERY HIGH EXTRA INCOME 60614. A postcard will do. 1221 McF1c1c1en. s11111 .... Ind Lve11.. Harbor Judicial District Court. scheduled to take effect Jan. No sELL1Mo 1'. Clf 1511 w. Vlclorla, Cotti Mesi. I 1971 GUARANTIED & SICUlll 11PT, 11 Judge Donald Dungan • · ON THE TUBE W•LLAC E-PALME1t. G1-L .. 31. •lld UCJ Sets gran•·• the ch•nge from '" The distru.t includes areas w, win <~'-" "" •• • ,.,llMI-lllli'rill••• ""' ta w1""" .. ltrblrt L , 41 , both tJf 127 fn'\elt 11f ICU ,._, •1...t1 I I-IMMlrt I ..... tit 1111 ""'' II""° rntK•llf ltllfl Ir.tile. a,,, L"u"' ... c11. earlier trial date after Smith's or Fount a I n Va 11 e y , llc•1· t•'"lllflY.-t••NIMll ,,.,.. w1111 ,..,....,Y "' ... ...._ ,., • .. Met ,.1,, .. .,.,r, ···r.111111 Ill TY, ,.. TY WE IC -4id~ut.4 wltti tk S1t.Ni"y MlffH ef tti. DAILY PfLOT. f~~IE..:::11..z;.~:-!,; rc'.n~e1 ~-~ defense attorney said wit4 Weslminster, Garden Grove II"'" ... 11Mtr1 ~:p= .:~·:: ::.r::T,:.."~ ........ , ....... 1i:'A1~»:~~"~c.:· G~s". Drug Talk n~ !or the defendant wQll]d and Cypresa. Eighteen trash ::-~.=~'i:11~·~ r..rn"':"'~~~.:::-~-:~=" "" .. -:;..-Mr. o1 "'5 st1ttr Aw .• F-111n v1n" not be avaiTib1f: UnW after the trucks and twO pickup trucks IUINZLll •rid P1ula J., "' Clf 111 w, CC11il tart f ·-~1 t UC! Oct 5 hed led f · M1thw1v, .. _, IMcll. IRVINE -0 LSD -TruthJ~':::.~•::..;~::::~:.::~•::..;:::::..::.::.· ~·'-::--''~'~'~"':::.::::":.:::...::•~r~con::::~":"="~"~· :========== M1lld 1Clen11t. 2m •uror• Sl.1 Sift!• A111. O.t1 of 011th, October l. Sill'YIYed bY 1on, Jlobfrt H. o! Slnll Alli. l"untrtl wrvlcn Tl>fld•r. 2 PM, !11!11 C111t1 Mft1 Chapel. 111tl1 COllt M11.1 Morlu1rv, 01· MATCHAM-Jl.DSSON, 11\k/IMI Q,, 36, tit no 1f'Oldw1v 1no1 MM111c1e "·· 21, o1 and musiOn" wW be the sub- 1• Wtlnut St .• both°' COii• Mel.I. ·-of I lure b Dr s·i1n MeKAY-$ANOS. Slwtn JI. .. "· t)f 1" I"''"'· a ec y • I ey w1r1"', s.n Jott, c.111. 11111 s11erv1 Cohen, at UC Irvine, Wednes--t.., 11, rJ1 10050 San Ju.n Court, Faun-rectorl. M1Ll0VICM 11111 V1lllJ. day· COUISt:HS.ltlNTCHEM, ChrlltCIGMr J,, '""· program open to the JHn II. MlllGvlch. ,,, N. CCllSI Hlohw1r. 11 Cll 17357 •roakhv•ll F0<1nl1ln lllC ' La9Ul\I llt1th. Strvk11 P9ndlM t i Mc-V~lllJ •lld Lrndt J .. 1t.' of f"'2 public, will be held It 8:30 cormlck L1ovnt a11ch Mortu1ry. Gl'lll!Wldl. Hllflllnstcn fltKh. pm in Crawford Hall c-•· _ Olt_MU'!' • _$CH.00J.CIW".Lf..OJ(...Q.l'(lcl W~--·~ -·----__:.__ ""~ a.o cr..irln TJVml~ Orm1b'f. 314 M11nell1, 111 I:. 2'Zl'ld St., Co1t1 'Mn• 1iiil $1.50. CO•'• Mna . .u vur r11ldlnt. Dali ol P1ull J ,, 11, of ta w. Cubbon, S.~t• Dr Cohe • I ed In dHlh, 0c1®-r 1. $Utv1Yed bJ Wlff, llVl l Alll, • n, mvo V d1u1/!tlf, M ... John LGW,..,l 1r1ndd1uoh-AO ... MSON·SALV.MEOA. Arl!lur E.. research on drugs affecUng l!r, Jg l!lltnl 1r1nd1e1n, John Clllrltt 21, Ind Elvll'll, 23. bo1h Clf 1"°2 Dtll Lowrvi me1h1r, M11. M1rth1 Orm1bY1 v1111 Lint, Muntlnelofl Beith. mental procesae.s for the past br11tn1r, RO'I': 111t&r, Edn1 Pldtr9Clll. •II MOEM·SM!Lo-1.'",!i,,:et E., 72, ~' 20 years, currently ls serving of Munllnt lon 1111cn1 1lat1r, Fr1nca llU~ flrlml\111 Lint tnd C1rv11 5 JI, dJ of th · M•rston. COTOl\I del ""-''· M1...,.1c .. ,..,. o1 ,.,, Drli.coll t-. lltlth of ·Hu,.. as rector e Dlv1slon of 1c". !Od":-Mond•v. 10:30 •M. wuicutt .. rnarwl!wt· l'llOin-e 11 n11 Narootlc Addiction and-Drug cnal>tl. 1n1erment, Westmln1!1r Mtmorltl 11.aobin M 1• Miii :f 320' 0.1' J,, A"·· N 1· I ( ·1 of P1rk. w111.:1111 ChtP•I Mor1u1rv, .,.... co.11 M*. ' -' uu!t!:, I 1ona nsh ute ""'· 01rKtor1. l'A•Ks '"-',!c~1~-"Av't~Nc~0 ~ 'k'.r :.1 Mental Health. He formerly w1111r M. P1rt.s. 2Jn-• """'Id• Mtrl-~~'t"i~~ CM Hll.,.lon W••· was chief of p s y c h i a tr i c ~~i:;:n;,· i:~1'!i H~I. wC:::.' ::,:.:~~ ·~f,~H:.~r~"s'l;· rs:::i·~ i·;.. 44.~~ service at Wadworth Veterans M. P•rlu. of 1111 lton'll; ,,01,..,., it.Jpl\, "c•lrlcl• •~ 3f. lGIO T1Ylor W•r. Administration Htwnilal in Los mlt MeM. -'!""r of Wlli.tl, C1IH.1 Victor, Clf C1r111Md1 • HALUHAJri-altAOLIEY. l'tlrkll W;.·-~· Angeles and auoclate pr~ ,1,1er, l"•MY ShlMllltl<!, Yucc1 v111.,. •nd MMY E .• 21L tiolll « m -.-t I f .. Servlcts. T11K111y, 11 AM, P¥:1fk vi.... Hltll'!wtY.LIWM •MCh. essor 0 meclicine at UCLA. ChilPll, with entom...,...., to 1o11ow 11 LEGAL N011.CE He is the author of "lbe Oakd•I• M-lal 1'1rk, Gllndort. l'KI· Beyond Withi lie View Mortvarv, OIT'teflln. ........,,. '' HEREIY GOYEN .. , "" -~ n: 'Jbe LSD PllOVINc• ,..~1 ltlrM If touoW w M¥llll ....,."" Story,"' 11LSD" and the '"Ihe Oontld ,., "'°"'tnt•. '11 EmtnClfl It., 111,.. .;:.. htltl w "" l'elkt C..l'fmtnl Dru Oil " nd -.. !! New-' •IKll. 0t11 If de1111. OCto11er J. "' "" CllY °' COit• 111a1 ..... , _..... 111 I emma a ·-wr • su,..,lved w wl+t, H!10111rd l'rov_., Pent °' nlnltr 1"> dm: ten more · tban 100 ieaearch '°"'· s1 ... 1n, bCllll 111 N...-.rt e11c"1 ,,.. Of!t ormtt blcrcle, -'""" Mcvtllo articles In ••-fi•'d I ter. Mn. P1lrlcl1 Prvbrrl1, 11!1 Mont.1 -red blcvcte, -1111:Ycl1, colDr wie ~ 0 b•othtr, Jttk G1rullt. San l'lllr11, !lune,.. unknown. •nd -.l2 al """""''· psychopharmacology. 11 sel'YIA'I, T1111t11v, J PM, fltttz Cotti NOTICE IS FUJl.THElt GIVEN llltt lfl;:============I MM• Cll•"t. !1ttz CCllll Mn-Mof'fu1rv, nit owner ·-•n and ·-h11J i Olrectort. OWMl'lh!• IJf lllt ,._,,, wtltl1n ""'" CVllllV "•OQv• SUM GYM ROS( 11) drr• followll'!ll !ht ...,11na11on of 11111 M~r"'Hrtf F. 11011, 3Sl!11 Cimino Ciol-Hotlce, tht tttle lherelo 111111 Yfff In thl L081ADl'IUllllZE •!rano C•Pl~lr•"° llt•ch. 0111 ol de~lh, llndlr, 11 llltr1 br -· or In the Cltr of ~ '" 2 wrr•I 0 • S S ' ~ O " Ohl M • CO.II Mist, In wlllch CIM 111t tr,,,..rfy ct~ . Ul'Y ~ v u 1"· r · 1h1ll bt 111ld 1t 11ubllc tvctlon ti 1 llmt Nancv J. S!urlltvtnl. 5111 Jv1n CtPI· tnd dllt fo bt tll!'IOUncld. 'Ill 1••af!G: Mt1. 0111 Myft, Hertltrl691• Otlld: lo-5-10 HOMl •lftM 11r1ndclll!drett 1nd Giii trt1t1r•ntl· It . IE.. NETH ) DlMONITllATlOH <Mid. S.,l'Ylc•.t will bl h•ld Wldn•Ml11v. CHIEF OF l'OLICE JUEi: I TELEPHONE WALT l:JQ PM. CtPlslrlnG V11!1v !11pllll l'ubll•hed Or•M• CCIII! 01llr Pihl! Oct. A ILIM GV.lf (714) 1Jt·S771 Church. F1mll• sup<1l•l1 thoM wl1hln1 le:i:'~·~·~·~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'~"~'~"'~'~======~==;:::;~=I m•kt memorltl contrlbullon1, PIM• Cflll- 1•1~1e 10 lM J1tk 11\d M1rt1rtf lt11t1 Mem0t"l1I Fund. clo C1pl1lr1no V1Utr !laotl1I Chu1'cfl, P.O. 8Gll '7, S.n Jv1n C•Plslrtno. Prly1t• tnlClmlwn.nl. Ptcllk \llew M111N1rl1I P1rlt. 1'1tlflc Vfftl Mor- ti.1ry, Directors. SHA,,l'llt Cn1rlff l , Sh1fltr. Ml I!, llltl SI.. C•l1 Mtsa. Dalt Clf d11th, Oct. I. Survived bY 1l1totr. Mn. WUmt S. JMnton. ll t>dwood Ci1v1 th•• tlrill!MIP1. aenword J., of Jlld- mond, W••hl"""": Wynn A .. Stn "''"'" •lsce; W!lll1m JI.. Sh1ffllr, !lut tw1 P1rlt. ~U"ffll senlcts. Wfdntld1v. 11 AM. ll•fti C!ISll MIP Ch1Pll. 11111 Clllt Mtta Morlu1rv, Olritelor•. STllVINS Donald F. Slevln1. A" S2, IJf HJ It t1nd St., (0111 M .... Slil'YIYed b~ wife, Mr1. 1!1rbar1 Stevenu dluthllf', Mr1. Judlfll Ma9e-r, W1shlnt111111 _.1n-l1w, llldltnl I-later; moltltr. Mr1. E,..,,,. Slt•e11•i Wes!ml111ftr; brClll\lr, Ted, Df CCllll M•~; 1bttr, Mr1. v1.,lnl1 'ltlld, LOftt "'•ch; 1r1ndd1u1nl1r, J1t1n!llf' Oltnt M1~er. Sirv!CtJ, Wednncl1r. t PM, .... l1rlnt M1son1c T1mPlt with StlltrlM M11<1nlc I.Cid•• No. 1'0I ofllcl1ll1>1. ln- !erm"''· F1lrhtv1n M1morl1I l'trk ... n llr111dw1r Mortu1rr. Olteclort. Wl'll C1rollM1 W.tib. ''' CYP_.H St., l1tUftl !le1ch. Wilk• Pl(l(flnt 11 ••II ll'Olllwl'r' Mortuarr. ARBUCKLE • SON Wtttcllff Mortaary U7 E. 17th St., Costa Mtu -• BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona dtl Mar . , .. OR 3.1451 Costa Meu ........ ml 1-14%4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Co1t1 Mts• LI 8-3433 • McCOmUCK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1795 Lagun1 Canyon Rod. 414.1415 • PACIFIC VIEW ~IEMORIAL PARK Cemetery .MOr1 Chapel 3500 P1cUlc View Drive Newport Beach, California l«-110I • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL ROME '1801 BolSI Avt. Wtstmlns~r .... ISW5U • SHEFFER MORTUARY Llg1n11 Beach ....... 4M-tSU San Clemente ....... 41Mlll • 8MITHS' MORTUARY tn M1f1 St. H1111tlnJ!oo Beadl - "1f,J3R.OADWAY HUNTINGTON CENTER -HUNTINGTON IEACH 892.3331, Ext. 283 Let us .copy your favorite old family picture now SALE! ORDER NOW FOR CHRISTMAS! only395 l.r7 eO{IJ of any pktUrl ltt lood eottd/tfott Pf9MfVe fond mamorln tor all the ltmlty; h1v1 your ff'l'Orit• old pt\Ototr•ph copl.ct now. If your plctur• Is In poor condition, the •ddltlonal chi,... for mtofltlon •r1 ul•prk:ed, tool Ort&fntl photo&r1p" Wfll bti retum.ct unh•rmed. J Shop tool sale. Help~ us celebrate Penney -9 -ays. Sa-v~. Penncratt• 1ing1e speed, aabre saw, 12..H 2 speed Hbfo ,_, 11.H 1v.·.1 v2 HP circular eaw, 33.91 7y4•,2HP clrcularsaw, 44.91 Double intutated, single1peed Yl • drill,t .H 2iii .. siogte speed, 12.11 112 •single apeed, 23.H Double insu lated, ~ .. v1rlab!e speed drill, 11.19 Double Insulated, V4 .. vari1bl1 speed drlll, 1•.H Sale 2299 Save $41 Reg. 21.tt. Penncratt• 714" clrcul1r..w. Burnout protecled 1.7 HP motor develops up to 5,200 RPM. Features extra cutting capacity, saw dust chute, rip gu~e, blade WTench. l\nne111 the show place Charge it at any of these stores : CANOGA PARK FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH Sale2299 Save $71 R ... 21.tl. Pemctlft• 11.Cll.11 ..... --.-~ .. motor gives you 0-2900.1• ltfOktl per minute. Cuti boards up to 6" tl'lick. S1wdu1t blower kHPI cuftino line clear. llghtweigh« ••• oNt ·~poundl.tncklcflol- Sale 24" Save $SI A ... 21.tt. Plf"Mnlfl • 10 gaNon ahop .... ..... FeaturM durab'est ... .._ • PQ\Wrful 1 HP motor. r lncludHl>ole, UIUMy-- cloth filler b9g wfth rubMt' #. strap and eonwersbt ... 1or1 Y4" acC111~ • ... pnc ........ lln Sllunlef. • CARLS BA):!<.;:-·;___ ·-DO WHEY LAKEWOOD ·MONTCLAI" NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE "THE CITY" VENTURA Use Penneya time payment plan • • I • I • • I . J 1J CAIL Y PILOT MO<ld.11, Octobtr .5. l970 --- Life Seen ~=--=P-ossml~ Family Doctors ~-Ma ingEqm-elYac ' L ' . 011 Mars \YASHINGTON tAP) -Tv•o gpace-agency biologists ·have C'QOC!udcd from e v i d e n c e athe bv J.1ars spacecraft SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -ltsel! as a new medical The family doctor is making a specialty. the new president of the limited to 2,000 candidates ror "' ...in..Jpj_t,Lof arl..!P28ren ly harsh environment, life or some sort may exist there. comeback' because the people The first board tests in that am· need him and want him. says :ipeciality last Febr1,1ary were .,'. A"_ American Ac ad em Y or diplomas. but no limit will ap--GeneralP..rac,u·ce.. _____ pl · the f lW' LoUcr --~"~patient want11 a doctor 1Jd~n _ u ~ _ '1E~· Somt• earthly organisms can survive under co nd itions almost as seven' as those on 1'1ars. the scientists say in the current issue of The Quarterly Rev iev.· of Biology. Arab Leadei:s in Co1if erence Dr. Cyril Ponnamperuma and Dr. ttarold-P. -Kleift;--0( the National Aeronautics and Space Adminislralion's Ames Research Laboratory , f\1offett Field. Calif., base their report Libya's President Moammar El Khadafy {left) con· occasion of Gamel Abdel Nasser's funeraJ. \Vilh on data from the 20 percent fers with Egypt's aclinJ? President Anwar Sadat Nasser's death. one of these men could become the of the ~tartian surface that (right) ancf Jofdan's Kirfg Hussein in Cairo on the new leader of the Arab world. has been photographed. and on-'-''-'--------"-------------------------------- \\'hich temperature. radiation level, atmospheric pressure and water content have been measured. Most of the inrormalion was obtained by three Mariner fly- by missions. fo rerunners or the Viking 197>76 unmanned lander which is to sea rch for life on l\1ars. The \Vriters report these in· dications of the possibility or life on Mars: PoetesS, 80, Inspires l1unates Flournoy"s Complaint 2 Candidates Suffer Identity Gap By GEORGE SKELTON governor in 1974. Flournoy name might hav-e SAN DIEGO (AP} -\Vhen SACRAJ\fENTO (UPI} _ The others include Lt. Gov. added to his upset primary Elizabeth Morin s tarted State COJltroller Houston . I. Ed Reinecke, Ass em b I y election ¥ictory over better te'ch'·ng her latest poetry . . Speaker Robert T. Monagan of kn<l'Ylll opponents, he add s, Flournoy is faced w~th an 1m-T f Lt Go Robe " · -The atmosphere o! lhe writing class she •·felt fear probable but v~ry -re a I racyF ' onnander G.O v. rt "I'm going to kick it It also planet is extremely thin, com· and trembling." political dilemma which is ~~ incl h -. PEAti.l,_meJy helps in November and "I pared Y.'ith that of the earth, For P.1rs. Morin. a widow. best illustrated by a private ~nera norrunee ve ie • hope it will." specializing in knowing about He estimated 5,000 ca·,1· him and his family, and not didates would take cx- just an ailing area of his aminations next February. ·body;" said Dr. William E. In the family practice con- Lotterhof of Jackson, Miss. cept. the family d 0 ct 0 r j , "The country needs the handles comprehensive a nd G RA front line kind or doctor who continuing care or his patients can treat the 85 to 90. percent with referral to specialistslOPENI or-illness that does not require when necessary. a Spe(:ialist," said Lotterho( in Lotterhof Said the attitude of! ·an jnterview during the 31,000-!he.-. new.acneration-of-m. edical AJ#!..TOBER 41112 member a c -a d e m y 1 s con---e V"4iii ~ venlion. students was encouraging. Lotterhof, a general prac-."They arc more co~cerncd 1 EVERYTHING TO with people than with the l titioner since 1947, said there university hospital arena or BUI LO ANYTHING are fewer family doctors than I ~>. specialistsnow,c ompared research," he said. CONVENIENT CR _tulT with three family doctors to . - each specialist during the Who Cares? 1930s. No other n1w1p•ptr in tht • The shifl from general prac-world ~·'•' •bout your c:omm ... lice to specialties-developed nitv lilr• your co,,,muiiity d1ilv after \Vorld War II, largely as n1w1p•p•r do11. 11'1 the DAILY a result of financial support by ~~Pl~LO~T·~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~r.mj the military of medi ca l! students then in school. • , ' \ .. ·:; ·, -~ The American Board or Fainily Practice was Created ! i·n 1969, when there were 65,300 general practitioners in the United States, after the American Medical Association recognized family practice EVERY TUESDAY AND THURSDAY FROM 4 P.M. TO CLOSING IS and the pressure is con· was then 80 years old and her poll he recently commissioned. Younger. James Floumoy's opponent siderably lower-orr r..ra.r.rtJut -22'Stlldettts were male mental • v FJournoy's dileinma. is_thal has an even better knownlr-;;;;;;;;;:;:;;:;;;;~:;':1JI ··considerable variation in at· patients committed to the ce~tt ~';°7i:1 v~~:~so~~0;2 :~; he must not only win hi! re-nanle. The r>-e mo cf at i·c 'BUCK' NIGHT mosphe ric composition and maximum security ward or election bid on Nov. 3 to retain nominee for secretary of state not related to J ames L. the • • · Ed "nd G B w Jr 32 density can be tolerated by Patton State Hospital lor · a spot on ' top prospects' IS mu -ro n .. , Floumoy. Sixty-five percent 1 th I terrestrial organisms .. , the crimes of violence. list, he must win big. son o .e ormer go~erno~. don't know whether he is or H ft f ed. th h micr.oorganisms can grow or Now. 18 months later, tiny, , Professional politicans in e o en is con us w1 is r-------•'"'"''-''"-""e'.--"'at P.TCSSl!f!S_ m~h whit_e:llaired Mrs. Morin is not. And 62 percent aren t California remember how father, or Rep. Geroge E. lo"'er than Those on ear1lt proudly showing a book0!-~~:1 ~':eSwhe;~oys:-Flnclrenhanced his polittca1---1lro~n __JJ,,~_Unfill$C~Sf~I AT GRANTS 1 · I j • t -Because of the thin al-poems \\Tilten by her separ stock in 1966 by· ·outpolling candidate for the democratic persons. ~ R b senate nomination. n1osphere, ultraviolet radia-students. ' In short, 'there is a Flournoy eagan Y 92•065 votes. "The effect of my father's lion, harmful to life. may Poetry allows mental pa-identify gaP-voters are baf· "Any hope of hugh finishing same on my campaign is pret· penetrate to the· planet's tients to communicate with fled about which F1ournoy is ahe8d . of Reagan has been ·iy si mple," shrugs Brown: surface more easily than on themselves as well as others, who. greatly lessened by the name "Some pe<ip le will vole for me earth-but any Martian life she told the San Diego Mental '"There's a great deal of confusion," says _05e ot the because they liked my father; n1ay receive some protection Health Association at a confusion and il concerns us," controller's advisers, who asks some will vote against me in regions that are ofteft ·meeting to honor her work. says an aide of Houston not to be identified. -.... because they didn't like him." covered by a '·blue haze V.'hich ''It's a very rare privilege Flournoy. "\Vhen you add everything Houston Floumoy's private might effectively abs 0 r b that Mrs. Morin was allowed Hou st on and James up it looks like we could win poll shows that Brown leads NIVll AOAtNtMt lk• hell119 I ~~~av~~~~rsadi~~iont ~o~ ~a.r~~ to teach inrd !!le ~daxwimum Flournoy are both Republicans by more than I million votes. James Flournoy by 44.4 to 35.2 wlMn ~r..n.t-rhwa I Furl her m 0 r c . if blars security wa . sa1 ayne but the similarities taper off But to fhe degree confusion percent. -TOll.AFLIXe l Moore. executive director or after that. exists this will cut do\vn the H s •~ has a coll-l•·on of 1o1•-... @>""11 Plu-· I organisms exist they may lhe assoc•·at•·on "Only men · 0 U-c;.· '"'" _.. ··•- h I -• 1 . James Flournoy Is the 54-margin if victory, and Hug h's newspaper pictures, headlines I av.e evo 91;;\l some. 'lTleans o were-suppose·a lo be lher·e.·· --Id R-I ~d . . f . l ·11 h .... 11nljb,-Df'dine17 plunc=t.. 'l'b~ I year-o epub ican canu1 ate ma·rgin-o VIC ory v.·1 ave an "and stories confusing him wiu1 doa -siennit comPl"c$ICld •ir or rcs1slance lo uJlrav 10 el rays. M . ho 1 eta f t · ct th t Nove be · · · I -•••··-··•-••-• For Mrs. onn, wever, or seer .. TY o sate. 1mpa on e pos · m r James. His pr1nc1p e cam· "-1 -... ..-· -°"'"'~•l'C-Although the atmosn1'<>~e. 'th· be Wllb 'lbil•llb thC run·s-nure pio.,---· I"'..... -the--big-moment at her -·He is a-Los Angeles.attorney situ at i On v.·1 ig I --,paign problem isJo..ma~e sure th.J_ouab J~.c ~loaaioc m••• and n~ ~iars .. lacks OX)•g~n and testimonial obviously came who h'es been active for Republican Party. voters differentiate between ......,. it...,,_ nitrogen . Most organisms ~o when Lo Verne Brown read years in the Republican Party Among the political opinion the two on election day. • SUCTIOM4t1t1 ITIIPI s1Us-ac:a: 0?1 requi~e a I m 0 s Ph er 1 .c some of the men's poetry -inclucHng a stint in 1968 as makers-the party leaders, Secretary of stale appears on : ==~.~~:.~~0 nitrogen and even oxy~;n is aloud. national executive director of con tributors. analysts-the the ballot just ahead of con-._._ ....._ .,....,.... not necessary for some. One person wrote : Afrir.Americans for Nixon-significance of Ho Us ton troller. •2 .. "' MAnWAtf nOHi FAMILY SPECIALS YOUR CHOICE: * Roast Turkey Dinner * Golden F'ried Chic.ken * Roast Beef Au Jus * Ham Steak Hawaiian Witt. pototoe1, cllolce of ve9etoOle or creamy cole slow, roll and bwtter. $ Monday Aod Tuesda_y Onl.Y _ BRADFORD HOUSE STEAK DINNER Served with toued grHn Qlad, 2 s·300 ,otatoes, hot NII •nd butter. for -Temperatures on hlars "Reaching out for the most Agnew-but never held public Flournoy's Novembe r vote. "We really like Jim, he's a l---------- rangc from 85 degrees above for my fellow men. and kno"·· office. He is the first Negro win or lose, may be com·Ji~gr~e~at~gu~y~and~~al~l:t~ha~l~,"~sa~y:skiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~===;~;! to 112 below ze ro. But earthly ever to be nominated by either plelely blurred by the fact Flournoy's aide, "But ••. " organisms can grow over a ing what lies within, 1 enjoy · I f t ·d f h Flo I · the inner beauty that ii· major par Y or sta ew1 e o • anot er urnoy a so is on broad range of 205 above to 14 fi·ce the ballot luminates all mankind." · · above zero . and can survive at H 1 Fl · '" I If t t 1· · t ''Tortured by my past. and ous on oumoy 1s a .,v-n an e or o e 1m1na e much lo\ver temperalures. uncertain of my destiny, I lay yea r-old former Claremont confusion, Flournoy is going -Although the surface of in remorse and wonder of my College professor who served out of his way in campaign ad· f\-lars appears to be lacking, or experience," the same man six years in the Assembly, \'ertising IQ stress he is the in· al most lacking. in the liquid said in another poem. then ran for controller on a cumbent controller. '1'ater that appears to be a re· In a poem titled "You and dare in 1966 and won. He is According to the poll he quire1nent for life. water may ~ie," another prisoner told of Caucasian. commissioned from Opinion cxisl beneath the surface as freedom outside his bars: Houston F ro u r no y i.~ Research, Houston Flournoy permafrost or ice. A \'ery "\Vhe.n the wind blows by politically ambitious and is leads his Democratic op- li mali amount of water vapor the sea, v.·histllng through regarded as one of the handful ponent-former congressman is present in the P.1artian at-shells by you and me. time of relali\'ely young, attractive Ronald Brooks Cameron--by a mosphcre. seems 10 stop from now 'ti! California Republicans with a confortable 42.S to 32 percent. The tv.·o biologists say 1he then, an d life is worth living short at the ·senate or James Flournoy, agrees the tempo of work is quickening over again." At~•ttisemu1 on four experiments to be Another wrote of hi s deposi1ed on the surface of mother's untaken advice: Mars in 1976 in the spider-like "With my head propped \1iking lander craft. It is im· against this pillow on my bed portant to determine the "I reflect on things my presence o( life on t.1ars in mother once said 19i5-197G when the planet com· "Things that meant so Jillie Tormenting Rectal Itch Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues Promptly Relieved cs closer than usual lo earth, at that precious time to me the y,·ritrrs report. "Bring back pain to realize In many caaee Preparation H dredl of patimta lhowed this They ;idd that modern they have surely come to be." givespromPt.temporaryrelief to be true in many cases. In as1ronomy has sho"·n that life A member of the Nalional from web pain and itching fact, many doctors, them· in lhe uni\'erse must be or Penv.•omen's Club. Lo Verne and acblally helps ehrink telvt11. uae PreparoliotJ H9 or I common occurrrncc but "Un· Brown. concluded the poetry mwellinc of bemorrhoidal U... reoommend it for their fam. fortun::itcly, prop u I s ion reading by saying: "In her SUM cau.ed by inftammalion. ilieL Preparation H ointment I l'.'apabilities lo probe space classes. P..lrs. l\1orin holds the Testa b1' dodon en bun-or suppoaitories. " .. ._-.. .•• limit man's search for lire to door open and lets the ---------------------·11 this solar system." sunshine in." You ·Work Less You Save Money Keeps things cleaner without effort, eliminates bath tub rings Soap and clothing la st longe• Smoothf'r. F,a~ttr Slt.lvt:t , ..... l")'il t.lcawr ...... -fttlFrm ••Oua Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans Don't Be Fooled By The Beard, Long Hair~ Grandpa Glasses And 'Message' THIS IS NO LIPPY HIPPY This is Gloomy Gus, .invented by lhe DAILY PILO r a dozen years ago. 'vhcn hjppy still meant nlayba you needed a ne'v girdle. J·Je appears daily on the editorial page \Vhere he stars as a so rt of ventrilo- quist's dun1my who talks only when someone (DAILY PILOT readers, in this instance) puts 'vords into bis mouth. But he has been saying a mouthful every publication day for y ears 110\\1• \\"ant to knO\V \Vhat your neigh· bors are thinking ... ""hat's \vrong (or right) "'ith .the world, nation. slate, community, neighborhood you live in? \Vant to give ol' Gus a piece of your mind to pass on~ Then get \\':ilh the hippest lip in to,vn, Gloomy Gus, "com1nunicating .. tlaily (~londay through Jt r1day) , ON THE EDITORIAL PAGE CF THE: • • FREE Estimates! Phone Sears Today! '---11-• jsears) So. Coast Plau, 3333 Bristol SI . Plloee 5ff-3m .. .,. "'°" ..... ~ • - ' ) l ' l Ll lo -~ .__ l ty flc 7& It ch f~ hu 18 an ps dr le; . pr ai Sc wl "' ui th y Ai .. nc ol C<l ar. di to di .. in • ,, .. " Pl ' "' " J . • rt n• h. tl ft ----,-.. ---' • Moncf1y, October 5, 1970 DAI LV PILDT 11 • • Tough Tl'lr~s Seen --e kina=E.y-eTE ~r-yi~~~N ~-11------e ;JOB-PRINTINl<O------. ----li-1 e PO(LICAilONS- HONG KONG I (UPI) -Iy represent China 1t the Communist China Wants in the United Nations. United N&Uons -but only on her own terms. The' terms art simple·, but underlying theme: •11 •rt fn.. te.nded to realize. the aim of keeping the C'hiang KaJ-shek gang {Nationalist China) ln the United Nations. ''Whatever name may be us- ed, nobody else can occupy a seat in the United Nations as the representative of China or tough: expulsion of Nationalist of part of Its territory. "If the United Nations does Ghina-frofn-o-tbe-world-body-Whether-lt be-!two Chinas' or-not-evict-the Chiang Kal-ahek -~ and-a-permanent-teal on the 'One--China,-one-Taiwan/ or-gang from Us-organs, the•l"--- e NEWSPAPERS Quality Printin9 ind Oepend1ble Service for more ih1n a q111rttr of a century. security council. 'U. N. trusteeship · over Chinese government will have n11 WDT ULIOA ILYD .. NIWPOU IUCH -'41-4111 If the Peking regime should Taiwan' of the sending of an nothlng to do with it, nor will settle for anything Jess1 it 'observer' to. the United Na· it undertake any obligations - \\.'ould mark an extremely tions General Assembly or the towards-It. This firm and jlqt significant change of policy. · 'separate vote.' invariably, stand of ours is •absolutely There are no signs that the none of them change the unshakable." Bull's Eye View UA County Fair princess Paula Balog met another celebrify during the week- lo'rig county fair in Pomona. The white-faced Hereford and Paula both agreed thit the fair was the greatest. -The LA County Fair is the largest county fair Iii the world. · E''en Java Man Polluted ing." Red Chinese-are ready to make such a change. Communist China has set forth her terms for admission -to the -United-Nations many times during the past two decades. One of the most detailed and lucid explanations o( her 1>05ition was set forth in an editorial pulished by the of. ficial Peking People's Daily in December 1964. ''There is only one China in the world and that is the People's Republic. of China, and Taiwan IS part of IUi ter- ritory. It is only the govern- ment of the People's Republic of China which can legitimate- AD\llATlllMl.HT Mor• S.curltj With In a search for other in· FALSE TEETH WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Pi· were de veloping in ether pa- ty poor Old Java Man who tients he was treating. Said flourished, moce or less, Scienlific American: stances of fluorine-caused At Any Tlme 700,000 years ago. He suffered, "H f 11 bl t sh bone diseue Soriano found Doii.'t bt '° .rn.kl l.hai 70ur,.... it now appears, r r o m -e was ina t a e o ow , i...u. •W COCM 1-or dJ'OP Ju.i "' chfmical pollution of the that the abnormalities were that sheep graz.lng in Iceland :~ :!'lo~~~:"mr:i'-f'JI foods he ate. caused by the ingestion of areas contaminated with Dentun Adhed•• Pow.s.r oii. JouP ri1.1.u. PA8TUTH holdl. denture& Ja\ra Man, the famous large amounts of sodium fluorine from volcanoes "also rm~~-~1er. Mat• •lllll 1u.11r. --fl Ide · -..... -,,-h·a·d-been develo~ abnormal-b o rre •,~Tf'.!&J''· _.11,,'!.~~t. ~.·,.,~~S1,b'm.,mr,. human fossil discovered in uor • wu r• ~" ....... ..--... ..,., .... _ s1 18i2, existed long before fraudulently added (lo control growths." ~~~i:.:;:,.~,..ht;i~:l'ln.~~ anybody had heard or oor. fermentation ) to the bulk wine This was the vital clue to l'ABTDTHal&.U4t'Ua;counc.rt. parathion, or contamination of 1~th~e~pa~ti~en~t.<~h~ad~bee~n~d~rin~k~-_.:J~.M::_.'_'_•~a~ncJ~·e:'.'.n'...t m~al~ad~Y.:_· --=========I drinking water with mercury, lead, and cadmium. ..... .......... '* .. < ..... ,. •' • BIG .. 8'' i'l O'' • LIVING COLOR POltTRAiT Sears f-11--l'he-ail'-he b r-e at h e-<I --~"" I i I presumably was as clean as air ever h a d been. But as Scientific American noted a wtiile back, there was liJl ab- noqnal bony growth near the u~ end of Java Man's thichbone. "The bone is at least 700,000 y ti r g old." sad Scientific American, •·so that iUs ab- .norinality represents t h e old.tst-known disease of man." How d i d J.M. happen to come down with this disease and what was it? "Thanks to a: recent di1COvery in Spain," according ; to Scientific Ameri can, "the : disease can now be diagnosed , as a form ot_ fluorine poison- ing." ) ~Talk about detective stories! "niis was one. M. Soriano of tht University of Barcelona $0!11e years ago discovered, in performing an autopsy on a patient. a thighbone growth "strikingly like" that on J .M.'s femur. Soriano's patient w a .s an alcoholic who had died Of cir- rhosis of the liver. Thm-e were no clues as to why the growth had ' formed on the patient's thighbone. Bat the: Spanish scientist did Mtief: that similar gro~ ' I - • • • us ~US ., GENUINE FULL NATURAL COLOR PORTRAITS! 50¢ HANDLING Not the old style tin ted or pa inted blac k & white photos • SATISFACTION GUARANTEED or your money refunded. FOR AlLAGES! ! Babies, children, aduns, Groups photographed at 1n additional 99~ per subject." LIMITED OFFER! WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES • ._ ::,,..,.,_,....,..,.., 1hl• very speei1! offer rs ·-nted .. •n One per subject. two per family. expression of our thanks tor your patronage. dSearsl 1st On Llatn Finish! The newest lhln2 In color pholoanphy At Seara Store• L11ted 1.i-, Oct. Ith tlltv Oct. 11th ' ORANGE BUENA PARK COSTA MESA SANTAANA • -· SANTA FE SPRINGS The Big M is big enough to protect your interest with the nation's highest rate ori insured savings -you can choose from 4 insured guaranteed-to .. grow savings plans. o But equally imf}efffiflt -cares enough t&iJfve-you very -personal service. o -Why not-opel"I an account today ... and meet the people who ca~. MUTUAL SAVINGS -AND LOAN ASSOCIATION THEmBM ' . C«OM dot ii. olllco: ziu EMI COMI Hlghwey / 171-5010 Other officea In Covln1, WestArcadl1. Pasadena and Gltndtlt ' • • I ' • I " I ---,,.,=-=-~====-==··· --·---- r • II DAIL v PILOT r ~--~--------~------..-1 " -·+- / l t .. ~~ "Mommy, was this REALLY s'posed to be my lunch or did I pick up the wrong bag when I was leavin 1 this morning?" ' City • ID Despair Capitol Cleanup Styniied WASHINGTON (UPI) -make the national capital city Have you ever seen something into the "showcase" that bad happening in your town presidents have been talking and wished you could show it about (or years. to the mayor and demand to And they gaye explanations know why something wasn't for each fouled up example of being done to fixi t? urban decay that came into Joe Mack Jr., a veteran taxi view: this bridge was patched driver and fledgling newsman and bumpy because the rlver r ecently did something very crossing that will permit traf. '1lluch like that . He-took a ·11~ to be diverted so it can be group of highranking District fixed right isn't completed of Columbia officials and some yet; that housing project is or his UPI colleagues on a tour choked with trash because its or "The Other Wa~ngton," owners have neglected their -lhe one most tourists never legal obligations to arrange its see. He showed them on. removal; this body of water 1--~---conected"traslt,-abandoned·a~ffieWiilimgtOn tid31DasIBJ1S - va~dalized public h o us I ~ g disgustingly polluted -because · units, pot-holed streets. air-someone in Maryland or pollutin~ power P.lants. -the VirR"inia is dumping sewage whole picture of city bf.ight. into the Potomac R i v e r The city officials did . ~t upstream. Plus, t h e ex- seem to be men who did~ t planaUon that this or that pro- care. They spo~e . wit,h. bt~ blem is "uncie'r study."- terness about therr mabildy to Obviously, the city officials get money from Congress to were aware of the problems I l ) Drum, Bugle Corps Needs Applicants You can beat your drum in a bugle cof.ps if you li ve in thi! Huntington Beach area and are good enough to play with the Corsaires. Jim Senecal, one of the Organizers for the Corsaires Drum and Bugle Corps, said applications will be accepted as of next Wednesday at Hope View School, between Slater Avenue and Edwards Street. The Corsaires are still negotiating with the Recrea· lion · and Parks Commission for city sponsorshig. The corps will be open to any youth over the age of 10 and Senecal hopes he will be able to obtain at least 80 per cent of the membership from the Huntington Beach area. Further informa tion is 11vailable from Senecal at 893- 7437 or Mrs. A. Mendez, 84.7- 2783. Unruh Pledges To End Strike SAN FRANCISCO (U PI) - Democralic gubernatorial can· didate Jess Unruh ple<jg~ again Wednesday to end the 1,019-day strik e at the Los Angeles Herald-Examiner if 'he is elected. "I think th e governor has an obligation to sit people down and utilize the power and prestige of his office to end the strike," Unruh said in answer to a reporter's ques- tion. (and said they knew of even worse examples) .. And they had-,>lausible~ reasons why each had not been solved. Except that the problems have not been solved. Except that the people who Jive with them every day can't get a personal explanation from the housing director or l h e highway chief. Except that some . people believe the ex- planations are excuses, to be described in one of those short, barnyard terms that isn't sup posed to be uttere~ in polite company. Except that some people don 't believe anything will ever be done. Now this is a different kind of problem. It has lb do with th!!' fra giJe fabric of trust and belief that makes it possible for governments to operate without holding guns on the people. U the people believe the government will not or cannot solve their problems, the government is in a Jot of trouble. , Yet , despite the demon- strable ca pa c i ty of the subject to turn off people, reform may be the only alternative to violence on a scale not seen since 1860-65. Exei!pt for the unl ikely possibility that dissent will Wither or the unacceptable op- tion of kl I Ung. it. the solution is for government to start solv- -ing the people',\) problems faster and better. If govern- ment as set up now can't do that. the obvious first step is to-1ix gotemmenL The Defense Department has worked out ways to res- pond to missile attack within seconds. Is it im~lble for a city to figure out how to collect garbage twice a week? Is it really necessary to spend five years in Washington checking urban r e n e w a 1 proposals? Must a person charged with breaking the law always wait months or even years for trial ? Some governmental reform will cost money -for more garbage trucks and collectors. for more judges. Some will save money -for less paper.. shuffling, reguJaUCl'l writing and memo exchanging. You :i really can't count on refonn to reduce your taxes, but Jt might make them better spent. And it certainly might do something toward making government a part of the solu· ,, For An Encour•ti"I Thoutht 1___,0=IAL A PRAYER 646-0639 tion instead of yet another ·~ problem. YOGA t;ENTER 441--r.-ttftl tf, 111"1 I ......... -· I __ ...._ ---'----~- .. sale: -, • • -------_KoratrQO® go:tQgethers. all from a famous maker .. save on pant dressing of soft polyester crepe Lean panls. Slimming smooth in solid brown, eart hy brick. Lo ng tunic spiced with stripes. Suited together to creale one of Jod ay's great new pro- portions. Casua l. Comfortable .. And, there's more. Come See. Sizes 8-16. value40.00 27.99 miss cosmopolitan s.,op, 96 ., Sporty seµarates from a favo ri te California maker. A jacket a.nd proportion pants. Of Dacron@ po- lyesle r and cotton. T earned with a stripy nylon and Dacron® polyester top. Machine washable and dryable; Grey, bronze and purple. a. 9.00 stripe top, zip back, 36-40 5.99 -----b:·l6c00 jacket1Wo•zip-pockets;--10--l6·---tl0;99•---- c. 12.00 proporti<;>n pants, find tbem in size•short, 8·16,med.8-18,talll0.18 7.99 were 9.00-16.00 .1skirts & coordinates, 101 -· mey co south coos! pf.,•, sen iliega fwy -.t Dristol, cost• mesa-:0-'46:932 r 1hap monday fhru salurd•y I 0 am to 9:30 p.m. lundey .noon '!ii 5 p.m ' \ MAVCO • ~ . • > • ' I • BARBAR_A DUARTE, 494-9466 ......,,, 0c,... .s..1•11 s. ''"a. Club. Healthy Uiagnos ·i .s~ Favor ab.le Remedies for a healthy club will be prescribed in large doses when Laguna Niguel \Voman's Club spon- sors a clinic and potluck supper. Mrs. David Robbin~. third vice president and membership chairman, has invited two active and well-informed clubwomen to administer knowledge of ways to make a club feel and function better. itrs. Ruth Schemitzller, Orange District chairman, and ·Mrs. Ruth Granger, first vice president o( Orange District and dean of chaiimen for the Federation of Women's Clubs,' Will conduct the clinic. Its main objective will be to enlighten members on how to·be-a·gooct club-woman: Discussed will be-parlia- mentary procedure, how to be an officer. who should be responsible for what and how to handle the responsi- bility. Also to be reviewed. will be how to write reports and the federation and its !unctions. The clinic _will ca~ulat~ th~_I!!'ocf!9ures ~essary _____ _ lo have a working, accompliShing chili 6y Being agooa member, officer and co:hairman. All members, guests and interested women are· in- vited tQattend. A potluek supper will be served at.6;30 p.fn. Thursday, Oct. 15, in !lie Crown 'Valley Elemen-~ tary School, followed'by the clinic. Add,i.tiohal informa. lion may be obtained by calling Mrs. il<>bbins, ~95-5219. . • Ct:INIC FINDS REMEDY -Secrets of a healthy club will be re- vealed when Laguna Niguel Woman~s.~Club sponsors a potluck and club clinic Thursday, Oct. 15. Tr~ating patieJit Mrs. James Bullitt, (left) recording secretary, are the clinic physician, Mrs. David Robbins, (center) third vice president and membership chairman, and nurse Mrs. Gary Davis, president. Thrift Sale Re~ps Community Benefit . Dana Point residenls will reap a dual reward this month as they participate in the annual thrift sale in Dana Point Community House on Wednesday and Thursday, Oct. 14 and 15. • In addition to enjoying a selection of household items, antiques, jewelry and a boutique or better dresses, shoppers also will he con- tributing to upkeep of the building which is used for the benefit ol the community. Proceeds w!JI be used by co-owners, El Camino Real Women'5 Club, Dana Point Art Gujld and Dana Point Civi c Association to off- set taxes, payments and maintenance of the building and grounds . . Sale hours will be 9 3.m. until 9 p.m. on Wednesday and 9 a.m . untd 4 p.m. on Thursday with lunch served in the Lanai Room from 11 :30 a .m. to 1 p.m. both days. Mrs. Mary Payne will be chairman agai n this year assisted by Mrs. John Serences and Mrs. SE!ymour Nutt. Donations of usable items of all kind s are needed and can be left at the rear of Community House or picked up by calling Busy Bee Answering Service. 400.5717, or Mrs. Thomas Harrison , 4~5506. The art guild was instrumental in initiating a building fund !or a place to hold teas and art exhibits. In December, 1951. the Jot on San Juan Street was donated by the Chandler·Shennan Corporation under the condition that a building be started within the year. The corporation also arranged for a loan at such time as enough funds could be raised by the community to insure the success of the under· taking. -The civic association joined. forces with the guild in April, 1952. at which time Conununity House, Inc. was organized as a nonprofit organization to own and maintain the community center. Ground was broken in October of the same year for an audi~ torium and kitchen:-PlanS"Called for a-second unit with a larger-audi· torium and stage. Adjacent lots were purchased in ensuing years making possible a blacktopped parking area and improvement and landscaping of the grounds. PROFITAB LE HOUS ECLEAN ING-Stephen Mason (center) and Lei! Kepp (right) clean out their closets in an.effort lo fill the pig- gy bank held by Mrs. Mary Payne. The boys are joining other Capistrano Valley residents by donating merchandise for the an- nual thrift sale in Dana Point Community House. This year the sale will be bolstered by a b<>ulique of better dresses. The thrill sale was -Organized In 1953 as a means !or raising building funds and has been continued each year. In 1957 ,the organ~ ization was joined by the women's club which sponsored the sale !or the ni!xt five years as a means of earning their way into the, partne,... ship. Since then, the sale has been continued by all three groups. Community House has been used by many groups over the year!ll including reli~ious organizations, Boy and Girl Scouts, VFW and as a site for community parties • • ' Friend Knuckles Down When Crackling Sound Snaps Nerves DEAR ANN LANDERS : No earth-rock· Jng problem. th is one, but I'd like an an swer. Maybe you can get lo it in a day ~·hen all the major woes o{ the world have been solved. I crack my knuckles. A close friend ln.- sists that knuckle cracking damageJ the joUWl,i causes arthritis and weakens the ligaments in the fingers. Any 'truth hl· dlese allegations? Qleck your knuckle ex- ferls and let me know, -SNAP, -CRACKLE. POP DEAR POP: The only damage.done by nuckle cracklna: Is loJM: llsten~r "'ho Is rliated by IL. Tbe IOllDd &:ends some pie up the wall and l'U bet your friend 5!_m<1ng them. DEAR ANN LANDERS:· Whot can be • • ANN LANDERS done about a supposedly .~wn1 up man (father of three big tl<b) Who giv .. the "'11ole family the below-zero silent treat-' menl because the 17-year~ld boy had a minor motorcycle accident? By "minor" I mean less than $35 worth QI damage -which the boy is payjng for himseli. Nobody was iajured, no laws broken. The kid ran 1nto a post. Since lhe accident, my nusband refuses to cal with the family. fte also refuses to sl~p with me. (He's taken to the couch.) When he is spoken to, he doesn't answer: He has had mean spells before but nothing like this. As I write this letter he is going lnto his fourth day of silence. What can we do? -BABY IT'S COLD INSIDE DEAR BAQY: ·~ blm -as _JOU would any sulking, pouting-child, His behavior It grossly Immature. Re doesn't know how to deal wltb bis anger so be is taking 11 ott °" those closest lo him. In time lle'U ~aw oat and utter a few "·ords. When be does, be pleasant a.ad make no refereace to his cblldl&hness. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I was in- terested in the letter about the c.hild who was a compulsive counter. He had to put on his pajamas rrontwards, then backwards, three times every nighL He also had to cowtt his piggy bank money twice before he went to bed. I had the same childhood problem. 1 was possessed with a terrible fear that somclhin~fyl woold hapeen to my mother tr J didn't repeat certain acts (such as checlting to see U al! the dresser drawers were closed and going to the closet to sec if all my shoes were lined up perfectly). 1 was a slave to the rouUne because I loved my mother and believed I was protecUng her against harm by performing these acts. My heart hurt for the mother who wrote to you. She said she was sure hel" son needed profmional help but her hus- band would not pay for tt. The boy'1 father· insisted that the kid "cut out the nonsense and straighten himself around." Fortunately t wbrked my way out or 1,_he problem in my early teens through sheer will power. I told myself over and over that I must not repeat those strange rituals because Oley had notbinl to do with my. mother. I realize-now how dcsper&tely 1 needed lherapy. How lucky I was that I got well without It. Most peo- ple c1U1'L -I UNDERSTAND ---_, DEAR IV: I was staggered by the number of readers wbo wrote to 1ay tbey, 100. understand because tbey bad suf· fertd from tbe ume uncontrollable behavioral petlems. Most people wbo wrote said !My ,...lved pnlossloW ltelp. Y Oii wire lDdeed lucky. Part•ta who rte0pbe compaltlve eoutlag ... repetitive bablll la their ehlldrtn 1botlld take tbem to a doctor for evalntioa. W . tbe earlier, th• beUer. Unsure or )'Otlr31!1f on dates? Whe.t's right ? What's wrong?. Should you? Shouldn't you ? Send for Artn=""--i.a nden' booklet "Dating Dos and Don'ts," enclos- ing with your request 3S cents In coin and a long, self-addressed, ~tamped envelope In care o! the DAILY PILOT. }, I .. - I ' I . ' I ' J J I I I . . • • . • DAllV PllOT • ! • ; /\ melange of meetings. ex· ' cursions and· work . ·sessions ~ has been assembled for the =· UC[. Town and Gown _Art ' Interest Group during the ~ coming year. ~ Members will gather in the ' Corona del Mar home or l\1rs. ~t· Frank Gaines for th e first . general meeting, themed from t Bonsai to Tie Dye, wher e 'i plans will be made for an Art ·• . • ' • Mond11. Oetobtt 5, i q70 Fair in the fa11 or 1971 to pro- "Yide scholarships for UCI 5tudenls. Bus trips hav.e been ar- ranged to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art for the Art and Technology Show. La Cienega art galleries and the Pasadena Art Museum for Cafffornia tieSfgn XT. fl.1rs. Robert Dubin will display and discuss h e r Ceremony Performed : l l t Anne Richardson S t e e I e William · S. Buettner of Santa k, became the bride of Greg Alan Monica, ~ Buettner, both of La Jolla, A graduate of Katharine } during a si ngle ring. rite In Branson School, Ross, the new • Mrs. Buetl.ne r attended the • •: Coronado. University of Ca Ii forn i a, i· The bride is the daughte r of Berkeley and Irvine cam· ~ Mr. and Mrs. Richard Steele puses. ,. of Newport Beach. Parents of Her husband is a graduate ~ the beiledict are Mr. an~ Mrs. of San Diego State College. English monumental brass rubblngs dur ing a ne.!ember .meeting, and in February Mrs. Murray Krieger will lead a tou r to the ·lithography studio in the new UCI Fine Arts Village. The May meeting. will take place in the p:llio of the Rex Brandt home, where the artist and his wife wi ll display and describe their art works. Workshops will c 9 rrt i n u e through the summer in preparation for the art fair. Serving as chainnan of the: group js Mrs. B.N. Desenberg. Other officers are the Mmes. Lyman Porter, vice chainnan; Erne.st Verre, treasurer ; Jack Van Eden, corresponding secretary and Philip Maurer, recording secretary. Chairmen are the Mmes. Lloyd Dennis, fair; Dub in, pu blicity, and Phillip Shipp and Newton Wayne, hospitali· . ty. Cr»wnfng Glory li_eautv;-Salons I FREE CONDITIONING I TREATMENT ' with your next shampoo and set FlmOUI ~R10 condllione~ means healthler, lovelier hair. Pene-L \.lllliiiJ trltn hair to add protein! Now free with our fabulous fall ~ coiffures. Mon • Tues • WeCI SHAMPOO, SET and CONDITIONER s2os !'J"''""""lii!tl;!•':!" ~At HAIRCUT '1 50 ~Htn••t• W•lcem• lut ,.., Af'RJI Nii'! I try . FROSTING SPECIAL Sttt1k 1 llttlt1unllght ln'O )'OUr hllr wllh thl1 m1n- pl1ulog "''•" loo< S 12,5 M<>n•TueseWod Cr0cwning Gl91~y rfM""mt<rly C.1)rfcr CafCl1U'<'!l SOUTH COAST PLAZA 267 E. 17th ST .. COSTA MESA Lower Lewi-Ne~ ID Searl! Pftofte 5-il·fflt -· 546-7116 Optn £\lrnlni't 0 !l'•n twnlnp "' Sunday Horoscope ---Committee M....,....em_b_er_s -1--1o1-nis..,..Ges : -B:tJi:ies Cor-lfli-ct·-,. _.,____ FocusonShowP ans -· TUESDAY c;liation.MeansgiveallWe in 'A group of "all chiefs and no Indians" bas ,flad a busy summer f1nallzing plans for lhe lhird annual Forum lnternaUona! Horse show being given to benefit lhe City of Hope Wednesday, Oct. 7, through Sunday, Oct. 11. Working as a team on all fimd-ralsing -events;-the-women, headed by-Mrs. T.- Bucha!)Bn Blakiston Sr., made several iJl... novatloful in lhe while-tie ball and sampled lhe ball menu during a luneheon. Hosting a •umin•r cocktail party to honor the Diamond Hone Shoe members were lhe M. Keilh Gaedes of Laguna Beach. Gaede is chairman of the Diamond Horst Shoe and Mrs. Gaede is a member of the women's steering Committee. OCTOBER 6 order to receive mu< h • ~1essage will be clear. By SYDNltY OMAllR LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Five fl( tt.e Jrtll.elt tcle• Avoid extravagance. Yoo can- tiltJ to sract t • • a&a.1e tf not really buy affection. It will world IU1ierJ' were also be rtven willingly, en- • •tr o Io I e r • :-Nlcoll11 thusfastlcally. Biit yoo must c.n1ca1, Galilee GIHtel, open yourself-to the ex- Tyclto BrUe, Joh•1Dt1 Kepler perlence. Stop trying to force IDd kuc NeM& Wues. ARID (~Jarell 21-April 19): Procedural change may be a necessity. What was taken for granted requires a new look. Be perceptive; detect trends and cycles. Avoid e.1tremes. Obtain needed rest -and VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): mistakes. 1be very next mlnute should become the first minute of the rest of your Ille. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. ti): Some who ·mean well may be spending too much. Do some comparaUve shopping. You deserve to get money's worth. Study Scorpio message. You can learn now by doing. PISCES (Feb. 19-March Jfl): Some breaks in relcUionshlps are indicated. Duties may con· flict with personal desires. Key i.s le> finish what you start. Those who are impatient may be showing their true col- ors. ___ P!"_ivacy. You may be in too mueb of a hurry to revise and transform. Obtain h1nt from L e o message. Check detaili. Be thorough. Accent on bow well you succeed in building a solid base. UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct:-22): IF-TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you have sense of drama. YOur voice is com· pelling. You appreciate lux- ury, beauty. Often you are too sensitive for your own good. You are maturing to poJnt where wise choices w i I J replace reckless abandon. '------------------1 TAURUS (April ZO.lllly It): Postpone journey, if possible. Avoid writing letters in anger. Be diplomatic in dealings with neighbors, relatives. One close to you expresses fruStration. Nuptial Vows Recited In Wayfarers' Chapel Give l<>tic equal time with emotiops. Obtain gr e a t er balance. Avoid outbursts which call for later apologies. Degree o f self-control can save money, time and iem- barraasmenl Act accordingly. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Hold off on long-term Com· mitment. Check with expert. Play waiting game. Seek delay if pressed. Time to finish what is on curre-nt ageoda. CANCER (June 21.July 22): New approach could solve employment dilemma. I n personal area, you must make first step t o w a r d recon- Guild Sells From Tea !I'reasures UIK!O'r'el'ed··during the • recent Treuure Tea sponsored by St. Mary'1 Episcopal Oiun:ll ol Lquno Beach will be on We Wecl· D"...!day and 'lbunday, Oct. 7 and s. in tile Guild Hall. Jn addition to lD1U1U1l items, silver, china, glas.1 and art worU, tbe two-day sale will feature a Oief'1 Corner sloc.k- ed with kitdlen items and a Craft-Shop of yarns and crift supplies. The · Ille win 1nc1uc1e the SCORPIO (Oct. 23. Nov. 21): Not wise to mix money and friendship. Key is to be a cool, calculating investigator. You---------- desetve more than promises. _ Make sure you are not being Jed into fool's paradise. "Why do I gain weiqht? I nev er sit down "· to ea t." SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21 ): Some unusua l demands are made. Overcome temptation to rebel. This is not the time. It is appropriate for you to perform duties, to WEIGHT& add io prestige. Cooperate in 'Ill, special project. \A /A1'1(HERS. CAPRICORN (Dee. 2Z-Jan. Y Yf'\11 • 19): Aid comes f rom Some tilklno, some listening 1rrd .~nort~odo:i: source. Be a will· 11 progr1m th1t works. JM l!IJ listener. Avoid br-2.0din1. _ flR.llOQllH-cALL QS.SSOS St(!P !>er_!;ti_ng y~ell (gr P@&l ~,..._ ___ ~----'. FOR T·HE RRST TIME! CLEANERS &-LAUN.DRY OFFERS PICK -UP & DELIVERY For All Your Laundry & Dry Cleaning NHdsl {U Mllllmuml I DRAPES CLEANED & FAN FOLDEO 1s:.I SPIC:IAL IA.TIS TO-APAlTMlNT £MOTIL OWNl1$ Wayfarer s' Ch apel, -Portuguese Bend was the set- tmg for the double rinc "."""""'Y linlli!!I. Caryn Sue Shelor ol Lcq Bea<h and M-E. 1iOai ol Hon- lingtm Beac:h. ~ popul.or boullquo wllll 1IDllMlll acctSIOriel aat: eoonllnated llllfilrd, -ml ·mm'• 11111 Mmlll'I dotblnc. ' LAOIES & MEN'S ALTERATIONS ••• FITIED IN YOUR HOME .: EXPERT CLEANERS & lAUNDRY The Rev. Calvin Turley direclA!d Ille ..,.. exchooge !or the dauchter o! Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Shelor o! Dodge City. Kan., and the son m Mr. and Mrs: Clifford P. Moen of Hun- tington Beacll • Given in marriage by her father, the bride was attended by her :sister-in-law, Mr.s. Ron SheJor. Candlelighters were Nina and Damy Moen , sister and brolher ol the bridegroom. Attending as best man was Shelor, while ushers were Jim Klink and Andy Virsnieks. After a honeymoon trip to Yosemite, the newlyweds will reside in H1mlincton Beacb. MRS. M. E. MOEN Ynemtt. HOMY,,_, Mesa Rite in Offing ' Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. RouUey of Santa Ana have an· nounced the qagement of their daught.er, Sharyl Eileen RouUey to Johie Lee Davis, flOl1 of Mr. and Mrs. Harley Davis of Costa Me!a. The couple will exchange WWII Oct. I! in Ille Prine<! of Peace Lutberan Cl'llrch, Colt& -Mesa.~-- Mlss Routley Is a graduate of Costa Mesa High School and attends Orange Cout Colle1e. Her fiance is a graduate of OMHS and OCC and now Is studying at California State Collefle at Long Buch. Both are bua1ntu administraUon majors. Reb"eliali lodge Triple Link Club o! Moaa Rebekah Lodge hu meet!np the !ourth~ondays-at~f-p,m. in various IocaUons. Mrs. Douglu Morgan at $Cl-1938 may be called for additional infonnatioll. AVCO P•llll•DNN•L ••1111v1c•• All•NCY GEN. OFFICE a. SALES •. tl50 Jab wl111rl"Y· F1m1!!1r will> ot. flcl n...c:lll"•' O«a1lotlll ··'"· Soutlll eoad? II ca11 IM, FM. C1ll Miry L~. SECl:ETAl!;V . , Uot NO $/HI WOtfl I" lntrrlor t«. !leltl, loll of ~1. PVDllc; cM!titl. Hiii'• rr loll Fft. Ctll Mn lltwutJL lllECOlllOS CLE.Ill( .......... $M No ........ ...... °""' ·~,. fol" ,_... """' Ult •rt: willttt• lllPlf'. Merl! ~ ........ ,, ,,... l!'lfflor&. ... Ull JM11 Cflrtl&. c.LEJll<-FIN£ JEWELltY •• $l2S Ch,rmll'l9 llldl110Clll9I ~td to 91'Wt CUt lomerl Ill "'""" ,,.,,, 911.fd. I" 11"4' ltw1lry 11tft l'ft'I, '"· till Hin<)' C1rl.-i, t:IC!t.OW SICllT41Y , , IUS Ui- Some PPH, flt(fltl ,.,, If .,.... ""'lily, 1111 •kY'• tlle lllftl! ,., .... fH1ll1I Ill 1 ~ ll'flce. 111, (I ll ltt!'I WllltMY, LOAN l'lllOCEUOlll. .......... SOS J"""-I I lflft Cl'lfflcl 11 """" & l11n1 W1WI 11111 """' ~llYI Tllty trl ll'I, ..... C.ll l!lltl'I lltotm. Doon wlll be -lrvm ' a.m. unlll 5 p.m. on Wed- nlldq ml !rom I IJD. unlll noon on 'lbunday. 333 E. 17th St. -Cost1 Mau -646-5110 U ... IN ,._ '--• H••t ROBINSON'S ,,. THE GEMINI CUT "rWO LOOKS FOR THE BE'ST OF TWO WORU>S1 KEEPINQ PACI: WITH TODAY'S WOMAH AND TODAY1S FASHION, &HORT ENOUGH FOft EASY-c.ARI: DAY?IME FASHIOH1 e•l.oHG ataCJGH FOlt DRDS~P. E\'DCIHQ HAIRDOS• INDIVIDUALLY STYLED AHO SHAPED TO FLATTE,_ YOUlt 8£ST FEATURES, 5.00, GEMINI CONToUR PERM• Af 15.00. lN OUR llEAUTY SALON1 -DON1T ENVY HAIR-t='ft!E LOVELINESS, ,·.ENJOY rt! COHSIJ\..T OUlt tcftEE IDCPl?RT IN PERMANENT HAIR REMOVA\.., F1'0STING SPECIAL.! I NCLUDING SHAMPOO AHD SET, REG, 30,00 VAWE, HOW ONLY t9.90. I I ----.. 2323 N. BROADWAY SANTA ANA 135-3111 ROBINSONS NEINfORT • FASHION ISLAND • 644-2800 cw1r11 ,..,.. II.Ilk l l*t.J ------• -----------------------------------------------------·-·----~-·---·----~---- • -- I l -- -· ---=====·'..__!!==~~~='-----" ---- " Handsome is this shape and styling by Tizianl. · Top-stitching trims the beautifully shaped col· Jar, cufibands, pocket flaps and hem. The belt passes through loops and is set slightly above· the waist. Ideal for ·crushed vinyl, melton, fl.eece, camel's hair, tweed, wool. 71890 cut Misses sizes 10-18. Size 12 requires approximately 3~ ·yards of 54" fabric. Th is precut, preperforated Spadea Designer Pattern produces a better fit. Order 71890; give eize. name, -address and . zip. EACIL.pattern $2.00 postpaid. Address SPADEA. Box N, Dept. CX-15, Milford, N.J. 08848. Pattern Books by classification: Eve· ning Dresses -$1 postpaid. 1r--==m;;;;;;;;;;;;-=; Stories Added At Library s H-o-ut-o- K NEES SH OW? Something has been added1 al Mariner's Library rorl Newport Beach boys and girls. Otn'! P lr1 th• h•mlln• pn>blem - For the firsl time a story hour will be scheduled ea.ch Thursday from 2 to 2:3!! p.m. in the multipurpose room, ac· corclin~ to Miss Virginia Reynolds, new libraria11. It knit Vollr own ..-nt 111il on• "• .. 1111r" k11ltOn1 m•chlnt . 11•1 tft1t ltsllloMlllt ..., .... THE KNIT WQ Starting date for the new program will be Tuesday, Oct. South .Coast Plaza LOWER MALL ACNll fno m WMlw'Ortfl'I 8. CO$TA MEJA ,.h, So!J-:llU THERE'S EARL IN YOUR OYSTER ANDIT MAY BE WORTH $60! The oyster you choose personally, from specially constructed tanks, contains a cullurtd peart worth from $5 lo $60. Come to Bullock's Santa Ana any lime this week, and play our new game. It costs only $4. Bui that's nolall!This is one time you won't wait· weeks lo have a piece of jewelry made. You can have the pearl you choose mounted while you wait in 14k gnld ri_nt tie tack or pendant settings desi111ed especially for Bullock's.$10 to $100. Mori! Oar iill!llifiCllllcallection of cultu"d peatt jmliy, reduced 25%· $40 6\lmm Unstrunf pellfs. naw 19.99 f nhian Jewehy, Firitflol( BULLOCK'S SANTA ANA, I FASHION SQUARE. 547-7211, OPEN MONDAY Huntingtall Center ___ .,,.., Huntlntton BHch 197.-013'" South Coast Plaza ..................... c;osta Mo.. S4S.1Sl6 ···. "' .. · ... , .. •. ··t-~:1.·:. ·• .. · .. ·: ·. · ...... i •. ' • • • • ... . :.• .· . . . ... '.. .. . . . .. , -· .. -.···~ •• . • • ·':J . . . . . . ,.. ··e . .. ~~ 'I '··, ~ ©rn£TI~m)]Ill Mondoy, Oct°"" 5, 1970 DAILY PILOT J/S . Honer Plaza 17tti .. MRI 1---cSanta Ana 543.5551 Buena Park Center Orangefair Mall Or ... t~;p; elHI H•rNt Fullerton--526-2334 AN . -....... :.. ... .. -llVEl ·-Buena-Pir·r--1 t::=rl 826-6323 ;::=====:::...::=========::::~- SCAJRVESl PRINTED O.,,...,UTING FrnNEL L\ttle girl floral•, mod de•igns and colors for teens. A cuildly s oft and werm sleepwear fabric for 9r1nnY. gowns, p.j.'s and robes Great for toddlers, creepers and baby blankets, too! Comp•re 1t 59c Y1rd 36" wide W•sh•ble uilted fab .rics YD. TI·~® av_ril r1yon & cotton PRINTS 37" wide sheer_ </)) </)) (o\ ~.~~~~.PRINTS YD.(!:>.~ & F'L'6cKED PRINTS '<85: a (ci\ 50'' wide YD •. {!:J liJ 'i:!) acet1tt </)) /Jt (Q\ SATIN SOLIDS {!:J•t..tf~ · .·, 44'' wide YD . . _ ;'\ solid colors ~!~~~. TRIC~~ ~ •@@· , 1crylic & wool • .BONDED KNIT JERSEYS rayon/cotton, nylon, acrylic:, flax e ITALIAN MILANO TWEEDS wide r1n~e solid colors • ALL WOOL FLANNEL bonded with 1cet1te tricot • ACRYLIC WOVEN PLAIDS wool and nylon • e TWEED COORDINATES •cet1te .... tricot lining • BONDED WOOL FLANNEL 54"/60" wid.ths 100°/o COTION SUEDE SHIRTING. -•-FANCIES-------501;105 • ANIMAl SKIN PRINTS -N-VL-ON-S-QU-ARE·S-_ 1---1-- A fine selection of authentic shirt prin·n, 1 wide, wide rang_e of solid colors 21" x 27" Attracti'!_e J!oral desig_ns in an execllent color range. VALUES FROM 91c TO $1 .19 And absolutely great "skin" prints for-yests. jackets, and chikfren's robes. Hurry please for complete selections Machine Washable, Of Course ! For school, fun and play 35''/36" wide yd. MACHINE WASH COTIONS in wide;-wide color r•ntt• solid color TD~ . for sportswear TI @-® Hi~Lo WALE • 0 o 44''/45" wide TD. · grHt selections TI·@® PRINTS ... tht season's r•g•I u.®& NO WALE 45"/46" wide YD. for cir co•ts ~-@@' BIG WALE 44"/45" wide yd. ; .. 0 0 0 EACH ®@-!AND --®·@- Yd. • PLAIDS • CHECKS •NOVELTIES •SOLIDS ' A truly outst•nding selec· tion In wools ind wool blends. • 7,J YO. LONG ' 54"/60" WIDE Voluos to $3.91 YD. Yd. JACQUARD DOUBLE 100o/o POLYESTER MACHINE M' ASH * NEVER IRON A beautilUllecquar<ICleiign oit a first quality, full bolt double knit. They need no lining, they never s19 or lose shape. 56~/W! Wldhts $6.91 Yard Value YD. . '. ~ ,...~----~--~---~'"'\~ •a I UITINl!S ~ e PLAIDS e SOLIDS i e. FANCIES ~ An ultra smart selection of textured and bulky bonded clren end suit w eight fabrics ~ ~ ~ ~ Mod for 91ucho'r,swingin ' midis --l~a----/,­ and city wear pants suits. ~ wools, blends, acrylics acetate tricot linings VALUES TO ·$4.H YD. • 54" .Wlcll TD. ~ ~ • ~ • .. ~ l ' - THRU FRIDAY, 9:30 A.M. • 9:3-0 P.M., SATURDAY 9:3-0 A.~.· 5:30 P.M. J!..!::==================~--------=:...----===============~ \ . \. • , , . • !',,_"".l""llllll~l!"IO""'lll!."~""'""''l'"'""""'""'""'I"'""-""'-'"""""'"""' ____ .,._,... ____ ..., _____ ,_ .... ____ ~-~---~------·~--·----+•• • -~-----·· ·-• -' l • • ' • I . - • l !· ' ' • \ : h ' • ' OAllV PILOT Monday, Ottobtr 5, 11/70 ; ~ PARTY POLY CUPS 3/99~ : PolyStyrene cup.s for hot or cold bevr.ragr.s. 50 7-oz. cups I f , MENS "NO IRON" SHORT SLEEVE SPORTSHIRT Our Reg. 1.97 3 /.4~00o r 1.37 ... Bright Greeting !. per packai:t;.,~-i.t·i-= "*"ft4#" -...~.; .i ._. :;;" ~ Smartly fashoned ''no iron" s1.nrt shirt11; in thi~ season':oi most cxcitini ne1v solids, plalds and chrl'ks. Choose from regular and butlon do\vn collar models. Jn t·ollon and polyester blends. Szcs S·h1-L-XL. Rushing season will be climaxed for members of the Zeta Beta Chapter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha interna- tional sorority \Vi th a champagne brunch Sunday, Oct . ll, in the horn~ of J\Irs. Robert Ri ce, Hunting- San Diego Home -For . ~ewlywed:s- Deborah Jeannette Hill was claimed in marriage by Douglas CCCII Clark during ceremonies conducted.e_y Elder Edward Heppenstall in the Fullerton Seventh-day Adve n- tist Church. The bride is the daugttter and stepdaughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. Mark Hurford or CoSta Mesa anCI was given in marriage by her brother, ton Beach. Preparing for. the event, which will in· elude pledge and jewel ceremonies, are (left to right) Mrs. Ronald Miller and Mrs. Robert Whelan. An astrological theme will set the morning's mood. Demonstration Members of the Fountain ~ Valley Newcomers Cub will tr Nestles Giant-Can.tu Bars gather on Wednesday, Oct. ~. ~ .. 1 · ' tioo on arts and crafts. " I l -t _for ... JuDcbeoo and dt!DOllSU:•· --- --2-a"--- Miss Lavonne Harding will ~ be the featurocl speaker during ~ J th~ 11:30 a .m. meeting in Li's " Jn your· favorite choice of rich quanU1y chocolat~. Buy restaurant, Huntington Beach. sc\leral for snacks and treat..-. ,....,., __ ""'""'~--· -__ __,.. -~~ llA'UTIPUL CLOTHU ••• Only SllOrllt'f U11d lly i;11s WflO c.n't i.er to be 11en twk• In the ume d,n1. Tll•lr Lon -Yovr G1ln THI SICOND TIMI AROUND +II I . 11111 SI., C.111 Mfll 0-11 .. s -'4M911 SALTED MIXED NUTS 54~ Our Reg, 67c J DAYS ONLY .. Vacuum packNI ror fn•shness and flt1vor. Perfect for par. f\P!'! or snRc·k.~. 1.1-oz, si1..r. <:hari::c il. LifTlll.0 qu1n111v-non1 stld 10 de•l•rs Net wel1M ' " • Na.than Douglas Hurford. ~ ...-...... r · ;o ,a;a·~ '' MRS. D. C. CLARK Recites Vows New Work Displayed A nc\v tolleclion of lempcra paintings by Corona del fl.lar artisl Charles Payzant will be on display in the Corona de\ :fl.tar Library through the end of October. Payzant. an i!lustralor or childrcn·s books. secs the con· temporary art scene \Vilh a \vitty point of vic\v. He touchc~ on current art fashi ons and cveryda.v Jiving and incl ud es several fool·lhe-cyc pieces 1hal force the viewer to select the correct image. Also spotlighted \1·ill be a portion of :fl.lr. and J\1rs. Stabler's collection or rare books. including children's primers and volumes from the early 1900s. 1'1iss J ulie Swanson was ,lhe maid or honor, and bridesmaids were the Misses Terry Hayton. Paula Peden. Judy Saria, Cindy Lee and Jane Clark, the bridegroom's sister. The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Clark o{ Anaheim, asked his brother, Marvin Clark to be his best man. Ushers ,.., e r e Steve Eldred, Bill Hayton . Edward Henken, Terrance Shaw and Dennis Lee. Candle\ighters were J\t~ Anna Peden and John Cossentine: flower girl \Yas Elizabeth Distler and Bi- ble bearer was ?o.larc ReiS\\·ig. The bride is a graduate of Palmdale High. School. at- tended Antelope V a 11 e y College and Loma Linda University, and plans to con· tinue as a sociology major at San Diego State College. Her husband is a graduate of Orangc\vood A c a d e m y , Garden Grove and Loma Lin· da University wh.ere he was a theology major. The newlyv.•cds V.'ill reside in San Diego. JANE FLETCHER Engaged June Rites In Offing AMERICA'S GREATEST HARDWARE STORES " Elegance Functions Tt is only the fabric shoe t~at combines fresh elegance, 5]eek function. rhythmic grace and sort pliant wearabillty necessary for today's total fashion look, says the presi- dent of a shoe fabric assocl•· tion. Fabric shoes range from sportive contemporary bools in crinkle-textured vinyls to brocades, damask and velvet. 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Ellrltlas II lllltlli (C) (30) WDl17J!Jl Qln. '""' "-(C) {ISO) "Thi Two Doll1r Thint." Ltw student Alron ~ttman tn.1 to htlp 111 unm1rried ooupl1 ret•l11 I', ...... ;9 .. ~ll'!'!!iii•.::i l;OO 8 lit ,._ (C) (60) Jttyy DullPhY custody of their IOll. Pet1r Slr1uu t ,_ •-C 60\ ind Jotn Del1Key ilortr11 the GOU· ~~~:;, IAonda;, Octobtr ~-1970 SF-Performance -Judith J eere <l_ In Hamlet R()le SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -wide range or her sOll un- Judith Anderson ls likely to ht: diminished vok.-e. But he com· a melancholy d'Jme after she plalned that he r movements reads what critics thought of seem to be a succession of 1-tt<-peclormancc. as Lb e.. !)OieS."-''--------..8 !""e: i'WW•til?' ( t~ --111e:le1-i-eoti11;-Z1hn111 Kint. JlldJ _; 81\e Alltt a.. (C) (91l) Ten.la· Ptct 11'1r --~ u ... 1y schec111lld 1uests •r• J111 st. t:oo u a@M•ybmJ "·'·'· tC) 10<lancholy dane._ TIM! critiee-al .. w .. e-har•h-'J'horeau Film 'T'he Australian-born Dame \Vith director William Ball for ' John, T0111mr Rot, Vidor Buono. (30) Comedienne Alie• Ghostkr Robert llMCI Ind mtrrilrt ODUll· m1kls her debut 1s 1 rquJ1r i11 ait1ot Dt. Paul ""*-· An11DU11tt1 thi• ·tpisode u Cousin Nice. wbt Judith, 72 , drew harsh notices culling the five.act trag~y HOLLYWOOD (UPI) from reviewers who watched down to lwo hours, suggesting Prod er lial Wallis ,quired her portray )1amlet in a slin1• it be called "Gems from uc • , lt $111doe Sl!Mlll comes home f1orn 20 ye1rs In tllt ' Armr lo beco1111 housekeept1 tor 8 tm (I) El M ......, !UPI wlclowet S.111 ind hi• '°" Mltt. med~own v er s lo n ot llamlel " Hamlet excerpts or the film rights to "The Night Shakespeare's tragedy at it~ a "Readers Digest ve rsion.:• Thoreau Spent in Jail.'' •-tel <• "' " •> _., G Chryiler Presents press opening last week. ....:......:...:::....:.._.:.:_ ___ _:_ ____ --'------- lean n. Deir.It lloM. "°" frM * Thi Bob Hope Special Dltrolt. 17 Top Comediennes Gitt~ CC> (SO) "Th• Dlflo-&i Their "Lib Movement" 1111t'1 DluaMer." S1111rt ~rds • Sclndlnniln princw. ft~f,-\Mf~!fSi.s,~- 11 n. fliMlh •• (C) llO) Smntffn comtdltnnu 1ld t11 ~1iss Anderson, v.•ho plans a six,month nationwide tour in the role, is the 10th woman to play Hamlet. There may be a ,P1---f;.n~g-:wa1l-or nilln"l>er 11-if {fie critics are any indication. re lt 1-. 1 ni.t (C) (60) "Wh•n HO$)t In tellitlr the Nie o1 '1h• d•r M GI t $ p Iii I women took -r th1 nttworl" u . •lt 1 ·" tszr •Bir Ill ' ht ullMrs in his 1971)·11 Sirin of ., D0VT K.q I•• LNre !Cl • SPtCll.lJ. Edit Ad tms. KIJ'I l1tt1nl. -(30) -en.in. .. lt"1111 tnft1r-Miu A T\ii F .. (C) (60) "Anttls J•n Worthlty hokb 11 lnform1I fuYll on Lonely R1111dt." f'art L .-.i11 01t1n bo11U IOI' d111dtt11 lo D THE YOUNG LAWYERS • 1fllnl11s, INiets. plants, 111d * FOLLOWS FOOTBALL! "'" tl\tt lpplll' lflllHtd I Slllll 8 F..., S4llld (C) (30) "'Strike· ........ 81-/M-tel (lO) llJ-K tel (IO) ... p .. -(CJ (30) llDltllM ·-~(Ml) out.• Jim Bri1p btCOlllll lnsld1 ' la f min for. bastball stedlum holdup. Lovers "uar·re_ 1:25 .... --tel UOQC.HW ...... (30) ~::~. ~!:-J~,J~~t;~~~ David Emmes acts as mediator bet\veen James dePriesl (lelt) and Art Kou s- New wttkly series with both docu-tik as the "lovers" have \Vords in this .scene from "The Bpys in the ·Band,'' mtnt1ries and experimental lom11ts resuming production Wednesday at South Coast Repertory in Costa Mesa. s.ucfl as "liff" n1llon1I town mert-_ _.:.:~:'.'._'.'".'!!~~~~:._::_:::'.'.::::::::'...::.::::.:::._:::::.:_:.::_.c_::_::::..:_.:::_.:.:_:..:.: _____ _ GI DI Fl)'i111 fllllll (C) (30) '11ithl el tilt Dodo l ird." ...... -..... (30) ..... Siii f'art .. ., htt•• '" Uritt (30) m Tiit Dlllrt lltpoti (C) (30) m Qutt-. , 01Na11 130) 7<08CIS--(CJ (lOO EJIDOIC ·--(CJ (JO) inp and phone·in procr1ms. m o.tr.dltfii. <t> (31lJ Cll lllrifl (JO) 11!1-(60) .. •earn-.., t<> t"> Doris trit$ to llelp publicUe An&it'I and Louie's restaurant in order to re1th some m1JCh needt1! customers bllt her efforts llmo'1 chm th• pl act drown. RcHJert £mh11dt end st ubby Jl:•y. •re lutured. 0 NIWI (CJ (30) o Whr1 .., UH? m (30) ep ,..,.,., ... .,. (60) 81 1 LM IMJ (Ja) il>Mltllc:*/hlter's W (C)(30) ........ -tel Po) • .._ iCl (30) -.,--(C)-(llO)-()!J--.,,., uinrm m ,...,....,...,-tel. Cottwrstlion With Carl Rocm f?." (-i:t) '•A lietd11 Garnt of lo\te.· !hi 1pnb; ll1ftll1pll I proslifu!IOll· Im "rill .. I.Miit Wft (C) (lO) bl1cMl1il racket at 1 pluUI de•rt IE DOUT ....,_ (30) 11sort whfl'l 1 plot develops lo dis· credit 11• •kl• lo 1 p1omln1nl Em Sha,._.. Mlt'll 155) Unitld Stites wn1tor. M1rll Rich· 7:»1JQt@ C--* (C) (~Dot mt~ lutlt_!. Ad1ms is IOfl'llWtlat lhotktd to find 10:1118 iB (I) Cirtl llniltt SlltW (t) th1t his lt'"llOl'llJ np!Ktment ii (60) Qu1ll1 111 [)'di• Gorme ind Doclor Sam McT1vish ((UUI ahr1 .lwn lli'IMS. 't't11 Miits), I lem1l1 whost PfU·I Q ri) (j) m ! 1R¢ijl i nt .IKli: w.c:t is a lllre•t kt him tnd his p,.. ~ (f) (60) Pur's 1nter- '""' \ t1inin1 encounters in Europe 111 JN 1· lfepidtd, Witti ••In emphuls on • Iii Ci) m.. SW'9tt ... litultions ht IOwrwd in ttie Ntlh- (C) (30) .1ot11111J c.r.. lntlDUcu etllnds, 1t1ty, Gtnuny, lrel1nd 111d bd ~ M'U Collnors I nd E"l!Md, hlr'I wife Miriam •!to ..... Mi.. ~ AllO "1Mtiitld · •P!Miln • rfll Pft!lrt nt; -Jiftl CoftMll. Mlc97 111_,.rs. D ... fCJ (60) Jtct llllf, Cttd WIYfll. Jl11 Min. 1J n. sut IC>.160) Bob D111111n and tfll l llfl•IHIY ftl flrillr Uflt (C) (60) "An J1pa- !trllt Sinprs. RIM alld Other f"uel1n Imports In· • ""° tc) (.10) -cMdl • H-.." Yldlnc tht U.S.?'' Guest Is M111rlca SllM, Sic. of ComMll'ct. ·-l --· 111111-(30) ~ . .,._,, 'IO-lllln fanl. GD T• 0-1 ~ (2 hr) G)T~•C 4 nllll ~ (30) ll:lSIJOJDlcl CMtt Stw (t) ('5) m - -tel (llO) ..,. ""' m ·~ - -tel <"> kif Minto ... II!)-... tel (30) llJ ... J ·--(30) ., ... , ............ (30) ll:0089(i')O)flltn (C} ''"'•-·-a @oo m-1<1 L• 0 9 CIJ m LlllP-I• (C) l60l o 1n11u • Adittl CCI DH liMNn Ind °" M•rtin ••r. D m ..... (C) ==-KM 1": '::: -:n: D GOV. REAGAN SPEAKS """VIII . .;..,, ModW""'""' *.OUT ON IMPORTANT 1t tt11 tu...i "",_, Thi F1Jlal ISSUES TO Alt ~ flftatr al f1t1 ,_ to 1 CALIFORNIA VOTERS dtplrtmtnt rl tM U.S. twto11111n1. ·--.... tel (IO) Tentttl¥al' ltl'ltdui.d runts: Mtl1 0 ...,., .... P91itittl (C) tD , ...... , $IJ (C) 'Dirty· W 01·k at Crossroads' Enjoyable Tustii1 Melodrama By TOM TITUS Cl 1111 DlllW ,, ... Sti ll "DlllTY W(lllK •T THI! CllOSSll(IAOI'" There is a tendency in com· "' ~lodr•m• 1w a 111 JohnM>n. c11rect· -munity-theater to regard the-ff-1>'1' Aic.r..r.:1-Nodt!rHn._JedlllJc11 . dlredot StC"o11 Sctiw1M, 1llihlln1t b'f melodrama as an archaic Aldl BllC!'le. Utsturnn.,.,. J1ck Heber:, theatrical form wtrlch WC'llt p1a"" accotnP1n1.._1 bv Mlk• A•~· , pre~en!fd bv 11'11 l u•lln Community out with the silent movie and P!1v1rs Wt<lnM<111 ll'lroulltl s11urdav hl'ch consequently should be un111 Oct. ia •I cunnlnol'I•"' F!etd, c W , • Street, T~stln. kept at arm's length. THt: c•sT 'But melodrama as a Nt111e Lo¥11~c1 ·····---J1dl1 s111rr111 histor ic"! exercise is quite Munro Mur111rovd 01n 81reen ¥ loa RnlnQOld . . lltl•'f *"•wt tl another matter, particularly Aaa"' Oa~flar! .. 0.ve Col.oMllm.on h ' ' do 'th t J d Mool<le Mlowoln~ Mire Rld116 w en tt IS ne WI S Ye an Mr1. Ul>loOl'l A~torllin .. HOiion "''" fidelity such as the productio~. Ltonl• M1ort1111 .... s111ron H<M111r><1 by the new Tustin Comml.l'llity Flturen• .......... F''"'" '''''""" U d Lfltle Ntll , ............. G'" C1ro11n. Players, of a potboiler enti e "'Dirt y Work /at the Crossroads." Watching . this IJIOSI ~n-_ joyable piece or work, one eets the feeling or how It must have been in ba ckwoods theaters of a century ago, for the Tustin offering lakes con· t;;iderable pains to mount a fait.Mfu1 reproduction. It is, in· cidentally, presented in the open ai r, which furth er enhances the flavo r of the piece. its villain, and Dan Berger answers the call with 'zest and ,relish._ B_.erger pos~e~ses ~n authorilative voice, ,even with jets flying overhead, and plays the black hearted .baddie to the hilt. Young Jackie Sherrill is sweet and lovely as the woebegone heroine, but her lapses or timing and repeated tendency to step on other ac· tors' lines negates her dramatic effect. Portraying the stou t hearted hero, Dave Councilman relies more on physical bearing than on proud, sweeping g e st u r e.s which could enhance his character considerably. Stars Reunited 1'he vnxluction receives a decided boost from the presen· ce of Betsy Hewett as Bergen •s p!l'tner-1n da"St!fl'dly deeds. Miss Hewett is a much· honored veteran of community theater whose distinctive voice and haughty bearing con- tributeJargely lo thr play's ef, (cctiveness. Nearly walking off v.·ith the show in a minor supporting role is Marc Rici.16 as the hollow-headed country bumpkin who comes throu gh to "save the day." Helene Ash is hlghJy effective, and one of the few who really gets the melodramatic most from her part. as ·a filthy rich society matron. Sharon Hoagland as fi.1iss Ash'.s giggling, garganluan daughter. Francee Pelerson as the pert French maid and Glee Carolan as the heroine's tousle-haired of(.spring com- plete the 1'ustih cast. "Dh1y Work " merits some serious attention. it only lo cast a glance at the ini· aginatively designed sou ve(Tir program which should draw as many smiles as the show it.sell. The melodrama con· tlnues Wednesday th r o u g ll Satu rday for four m o r e performances al its Outdoor arena on "C" Street, north of Its setting of Tustin, which llself has Hs roots in the soil, lends f u rt h e r credibility. Director Richard Anderse n has done his homework in localizing the story, even to in- cluding a tehcnically correct reference to the playing area as Los Angeles County-since the play's time period predates formation of Orange County. HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Main, In Tustin. The key role in any suc· cesdul melodrama is that of "Flight of the Dove.s" in """/Jc Dame Judith 's prince or Denmark is a matronly crybaby who is neither com· manding nor_mov.ing." wrote Stanley Eichelbaum of the San Francisco Examiner . "' D::in Sullivan of the Los Angeles Times sugges ted that ''The grand manner is not enough to base an evening on. Dame Judith is not llamlet, nor was meant to be. r-.iore mixed reviews came fro1n Anitra Earle of the San Francisco Chronicle a n d Robert Taylor of the Oakland Tribune. The Conner praised her u r b a n e • d r ier·than~ust. throwaway touch," but also grumbled that she rushed through many of her lines •·v.·ith v.•hat seemed to be a lack of confidence.· Ta ylor insisted that ''her Hamlet is more than a curiosity" and praised the Screen .. Play- Class Set " Eddie's Guest HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Suzanne PlesheUe s I g n e d aboard for an episode of "The Cou rtship o( Eddie's Father." BALBOA 673-4048 o,.. 6:45 11ft ... lltN .. , .... Pnk'llN Watch, the!landlord get1his:. EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT NOW THllU TUESDAY 2114 FEATURE Chorleto11 Hnto11 "THE HAWAIIANS" Tonnt., lelllnd & Sont!MMnt, jour· ftlflst Setn SWtfllow 1IM diXUWS ~Mtll'I llb" tM tlltft debit.a WOCTI· tit 1111111: "'EiPtln Hd Alllilll" (dr1m1) '51-f:l1rtll1 Scott. 111'1 lib iu.rt F,_ POr 1!11 Wll'lll ,,_ IC) (R) Columbia Pictures will shoot ~1 1 .....,. ,.,., , ~ "' Dublin with Ron Moody and Jack Wild -the stars of j•llll•ll "Oliver '" reunited co-starring ·----~JNG/UD 1nd J1cil1 Wdllttf. 11:05 D n.tr. t: °""II• lplill(' (dr1- GI To l tl .. Tl'IUI (C) (30) m•) 'S~ax 'fOll s,dow. G) WttW ,._ (C) (60) 11 :JO 8 QI @ Mm Crittift (C) 1!)1111 ftllrJ (t) {30) C!J tiJ @ @Ji1 JollRny C.111111 (C) . Ill DEIUT LI ,..._.1111 (C) (60) C1u Elliot is Plosteu. Lee Marvin -... r1111t1- ~ l!DI .. ,,. ...... (25) ' • MoM: "Iii! Milk llNnl" {drt· 1:J08QICIJNln11 '-Y (C) (30) rn1) '52-Rldi1rd Roblr. = iioiMncel dnllll .,.i lud~I D lll9rir. .,._.rlflt eoi.1111111" htl' :W":n ~!.!:,:,'°': l ft fdr11M).'51-Wlllllm Holden. " 1m1IM1r contat. m lillN: -n., Cnlt h CotdlNI tD DMI Fl'lllt ... CC> (90) M {d1'81111) '59 -G1" Cooper. c.m.,, ht O'Brien, 1'1111 Htrf9, l,_:OO_IJ_Mf*: "lltwa " Elrtll" (11111· Dion, Sll'll Tramptb of Brit1ln. sic1l) '47 -Rill HtyWOrtlt. m ~ (Cl <"' -n. ""'"' a -«> ~ An M11plitt-ey,. Wlllllft l·IJ ....... -.... (C) ~ii Grid) hired ..,Rip Ciiiis" • 111tt i11r lllt11t fllOlllJ·ll'll'int 1:JOIP .... (t) TUF50AY DAYTIME MOVIES ... (C)-~ ...... (- ~ Prtllvn, '°"' bnd•n, .... Mtl, Wtlltt lltlttleW. f':JDD--· -l- FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER PHONE 642-4321 for director Ralph Nelson. ANfHONY, BEROMMI QmNN f/l'ltWk XrnuIDofX i s'P,..:nJ:,'!f:. HEa?Ofl' l[AC" • OllU3str' a -.me A~ -'""' HOlO[I BUi~NINE '7""9t'.Waimt ~~aU\;' . II'=::::::::::::::::::::::::===:=::::::::::::~ NEEDED IMMEDIATELY ENTERTAINERS FOR NEW TV VARIID SHOW e MUSl'C GROUPS • COMICS e DANCERS • SINGERS CALL BILL JOHNSON 956-0980 . l~-,:lltwff11 t A.M. & S P.M. hf A ... ltfM A,,_,..._, BEAUTY CARE, INC; 1424 ALLEC, ANAHllM p~AYISJON'.8 TC04MICOCOR6 ;·::=~·h~· ... , .. ".,, ... "THI PAIN"-- w1l'fl DAYID NIYIN .llAN-PAUL llLMONDO Elliott Gould Donald Sutherland RATED GP ... ••• STA.US WID. AT CINIMA LEE MARVIN in "MONTE WALSH " ill1\S·ll . JAC9UIUNI ...... _ llSSIT .... WHJJ!llMllH' A "'Wttt-tn~e-,'=-'P"'LU'S ;r,rnj, O••:"°On , ._.,._ ..... -""'' ,, Clint Eo itWoOcf & Oon Suthorl•nd In "KELL Y'S HEROES St•rt1 Fri., Oct. 16 1'.4:fRPORT''""ficliiilv"i Eii " tment . I • l ·~~·~'!'!~0~4~¥~4!!'!''4!!:'£t'!'!l~&~t~&!!!!!~~:~c~~·~~!'.z,~o~z1~zz:~t!'""!''""""'!"''""zz'""'""'""'""':"''"""":"":',_...,.:-:l"':~~=:~~~~-:-~:-•~·"""~'":"..,.~~~....,,.,,..,,,.,,..,,...~~~-,--:-·....,::=,-..::--;=: _::!:"":::--:::-~ iJ " • t I' •• • ·• ' ..._~ • •· .~ ->• •• ';'~-,--r--i h i • .. ...-:-,..........,.__,~ • ) & OA!LV PILOT S Monday, Octobtr 5, l 970 • • • • • • su,•1t101t ctlUllT Of' THIE ToUIM STATI. ~ CALIFOllNIA ll'Oll NOTICI!" OF INTllNDEO •UL K ~··couNTY Ofl' ORANG• -TllAHSF•R-- 141. A.f,1-NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT M. NOTICll OI' HIAltlMO Oii' PITITIOJI Welters .I. A, Clarll. dolft9 bul.IM:u 1s FOil PROUT'E OF H~OGRA"HIC W11tffa &. Ci.rte Tuaco ~kt. wllcn.e WILL ANO FOR Ll!Til.RS TESTA· bu$1t!H1 l«lrns Is 30Cll Hilrbor 81Vd., MENTA•'I' Coif• Mnt. CounlY ol 0..~ Ci1lllornl1, -• •RTHUlt BEANHAltD II ilbo!il lo mllte I bvlk lr1111!1r Hit lo E1l•le "' .. John P. D'Onolrlo. ~ b!,d,lneu ilddrtn WIRTH, DKe15"<!. Is IOOI S.n JOSIP Clrdt, 811tN1 P•rk. NOT.ICE IS ttE.REBLG~~.E"' Th1I C-IY of Or~ ~lfloml1, fhe fellow· Bir~ .. Liii!.,, RoDtrh Ml fheci twreln • hlll ~,.,.,. - petition for -~-of lwtlllt•.i>hlc wm All of in: e<IU1Pfntlll, .... , •• 1.11. MOP. end for lnu•nct ot Le!l11"1 Test•ment...., 11Ua. mtrch1ndlff 1no clhff ln"fl!torv ot lo ffle petl!IOM'f'. referenc• '° wMcll 11 • c1rt1ln rtl•fl 91sollnt ff,..lc1 sl1llon, "' m11111 tor turther Nrllc1111.., •1'111 ttllt Ille tnown •• W1111,. *' Cl•nt Tax.cc flme 1no plKt of llfffl"' tl"I! ,..,... Mt: Service. • been W for Odobtr 21. lf10, •I f :ll il.m~ This p._ny h loc•IM 11 :JODI H•rtor _ :kl the court,,.,, ol OtH.rtmtflf No. ~ of Blvd,. Cost• M6t, CounlY ol Or•nn. -•Slid (OU!'!, •I 7QI Civic Ccriter Wat, 1.n C•!llornf1. • .,,., CllY ol S.nhl N\il, C•lllornl1, This 1>.11~ lr•nster will be cansum!T\ill~ • Dl'ted Octobtr 2. lf70. on or •lier Oct. 21. 1f70, 11 Ille esi;row -- W. E . .ST JOHN, _,,,,_, of WESTWARO ESCROW coun,., C"'rk co .. 1on w. 17th Slreet, S•nl• An1, PAUL A. HANNA coun,., of OranDt!. C•tifDmla. "" E•d 11111 Strlltf Wllhln Ille p,osl fllrtt ve•r1 lr•mferor< Cnl• MllM, C1Hltnll• tl6J1 h•~· •Ito in.eel '"° followl1>11 buslne•• T1r: r710 J<lt.lffl -'4W147 l\llmft 11 llle f~llowln11 lion!nrn •d· ,.,,.,..., .., l"•llllNW drnH1: Publl~ Orilnge C.-1 Oillll' PUof, Sil~ ill ilboYt onll'. Oc.1. s. '-11. 1m 11:u.111 Tiit PU•cN~ ~ wm ti. p11d ;o, -:;:;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;I '°'lows: r C•sh thr-11 escrow Andy's Fun Ask _, kid. "Ask Andy" Is fun. Set It Salllrdays In tilt DAILY PILOT •. D1IK: SM>l!ml>fr 30, ltlG JOHN P. O'OHOFlllO Tr-ttrw WESTWAltD ESCltOW CO. 11n W. 11111 Sh'wl S•nll Au, Ca. t1"6 Escrow No. G•11tt P1.1bllilled Orlf>ll.I Coasl 0.llY PUot OCI. 5, 1'70 1117·7' Who Reads the Stars For the Stars? BUICK'S CE NTURIAN -New series is exemplified In the hardtop couple with formal roof line and sculptured accent line down the side. New series also comes in 4 door hardtop and convertible. Powered by 455 c. !· engine, the Cen· turian offers power steering, and power brakes with front discs as standard equipment. In IDgh Gear Buick Introduces· Larest D esigns, New Centurion By Ca rl Cartensen The Electra 225 ls Buick has introduced its 1971 distinguished by a sculptured Jine or cars and included is a character line that runs the new series, named the Cen-full length or the car, from the turion, numerous engineering front of the hood to the tip of refinements, and a complete the rear fender. A smiliar line re-design of regular size cars on the Centurion and LeSabre and the Rivieia, A new ends in a graceful arc near the tailgate design for the Estate end of \he rear fender. Each Wagon and a pressurized ven· ser~es has its own distinctive tilating .system are a I s o grille and rear end treatment. featured. . Ventiport s , a Buick through louvres in the lid. trunk Buick's new tailgate on its Estate Wagon offers com- pletely unobstructed access to the cargo area by retracting the glass into the roof -area and the tailgate section slides down into the underbody or the car. The electrically powered glass is standard equipment and the power tailgate is op- tional. ----- All regul~r .size cars -the hallmark, are mounted on the Electra 225, the new Centurion hood on LeSabre and Electra. and LeSabre -and the The roof on all regular size Riviera feature a completely cars and the Riviera features new d~~ "!it!!_ ~urv~. win· _A new laminated construction ~i'ass {!lat lS nearly Dusfi Olnsisting of an additional with the outer surface of the steel panel on Ufe inside. body, thin windshiel~ pillars The styling of the new Cen· Cargo space in the Estate Wagon has been increased form 90.8 to 106.04 cubic feet. 'l'he"'Est:ate wagotf is-al'atlabl in either a two or three-seat version with the third seal facing forward. f ·: • .: " :; . ~. ~ . .. " " ; .. :: :: " !· ;. •• " • ·: " .• • • -. • , " .. " . " ;: .• " " " :: .. '• . " " . . • • ·: • ' • • "' ' . '. ' -. ' ' ' • . . ' ., It'~ Sydney Omarr And now this articul ate writer who has been coiled the "oslrologer's ostrologer " reod s the st." for you. Sydney Omorr, longtime personol ostrologer to many of HollywooCfs ond the literory world's most fomous stors, is• DAILY PILOT. columnist. rOmorr'• record for occurocy of P'!dietions bosed on ostrologicol onolysi s is amozing. -Whether Y°" reoif ostrologicol forecom for fun or•• • serious .tuilent of stor-gozing, you'll en jay Sydney Om on,. s ooily column and clean sculptu~ .hoes. turion series is v e r y . Th~ n~w R1v1era Is distinguishable. lt is available highhghted by tapered rear Jn three models a four-door end st~ling with ~n expansive hardtop, a two-door hardtop rear w1n<.fow that 1s tailored to couple wit h a more formal the roofhne. roof design, and a convertible. Skylark and .GS model s also The convertible features a liave been restyled with new new tractable top that permits bumpers, grilles and ornamen-a fuJj.width re11r seal. tation. Bumpers o~ all c~rs Engines hace been rede!sign· are more rugged , with heavier ed for 1971 with lower com· !Jl<>unlings, and ~Um 1l er pression r;tio.s so they will ~ds are offered as an op. operate efficiently, and with tum on most models. lower exhaust em!ssion, on "This is a m~t disUnctively Jow lead gasolines. If low lead styled line of cars," said Lee gasoline is not available. any Mays, general manager of leaded regular grade gasoline Buick and vice president of with a res1!arch o c t a n e General Motors. Every linr. number of 91 or higher may be every surface <ln all of our used. Exhaust valves ii;i all regular size cars is new, yet engines are nickel p\aled for the <lverall styling theme re· greater durability . tai~s. many or the_ ch~r~c-. A new pressurized vcn-· te:1st1cs_ l~l are Jdenlifted tilatioa system", featured on all with Butek. regular size cars, helps flow .-clean outside air through the -[, passenger compartment. 1,000'I Of OIL PAINTINSS WHOUSAU WAllHOUSE l The air is drawn into the OPIN TO THI PUILIC f passenger compartmenl by a $5 (an which starts automatically '"' 1• Eo1Ho~ :rNt.t. AHA f after the ending has reached PHONE 1JS.<M01 ~I operating temperature. It CX· otALER.s WANTED ists under the rear seat and 12.5°/o YIELD F.IRST ,MORTGAGES a•;. \Vl·lEN PAID TQ 1'.1ATURITY 5 YEARS. DI SCOUNTED MINJMUM $3000 INVESTORS PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 3700 NEWPORT ILYD .• NEWPORT CALIFOI NIA 72660 PH ON E 714:675°llOl BROKERS IU.CH TAX SHELTER l·NVESTMENT $5000 MINIMUM INVESTMENT IN PRESTIGE HIGHRISE' APARTMENTS Prepoid l11fefftt to S.llM fer 1 f 70 l 1971 hrcU.. Price •Hft Achlol c ... tncriH Cest I TMrl Ato ,,........., 100,. 0cc.,1et1 Po...mot c.,1to1 s.1 ... For f11ll d•t11f1 •tt1ncl • ONE HOUI SIMINAI •t Ofl• of th• followint loc•tio11,: HIWPO lfll 1NN fCarou1•I Rm.1 Tu•'·• Oct. 6, 7:10 r.M. c.11 Do 11• lo,kh•rl 171 .. 1 551.7900 CINTUIY PLAli HOTIL IW11lwood 7:JO P.M.-C•nl1.1ry City C1ll k•y lr.w" lJ lll-•tO.f710. R'".I W1d., Oct, ?, i,_. h ll!Mt111, pt..,. pllowt 17141 Sll·7f00 (Newport a..•) -(JIJI 610.t710 (Cffhlry CltyJ fOf NMnetl ... T'lllJ Ml~l"""'6flf toroitll!,lttl ne!lh1r •n olltr to »II llOf' 1 totldlltlon If 1n otftt' lo evy, Si.ti! •n ofltr It ....cle only lhl'Ol.IOll fttt Off.,.1111 Clr- c1111r, ctOlft If wflkll "" bl obl1l"4d •1 lllt 11m""9r. Power brakes, with front discs. are standard equipment on all regular size cars and the Sport Wagon. and are of~ fered as an option <ln the other intermediates. All regular size cars have a hood latch release on the in· strumertt Panel and the in- strument panel itself is of Lwin cockpit design with all in- isrtuments set in &n arc . directly in front of the driver for improved vision and co~ venience. All instruments can be removed from the front for easier servicing. Joh Offers Down, But Salaries .Up NEW YORK (UPI) -While job offers arc down as much as 50 percent at some colleges, starting salaries generally are higher and signs that the graduate job slump may be ~sing are appearing. Even though 1.114 million white-collar workers w e r e unemployed in August, 241,000 more than a year ago and the highest percentage in Bureau of Labor's statistical history, 'Temple UnJversity in Pennsylvania reported salary offers "up across the board." That was generally true of 41 other colleges and universities checked by UPT . Accountants were the fair- haired graduates. All 105 graduated at Temple were hired at an average starling -salary of·JIO,t(IO-.up.$800 from last year. ''Increased business mergers, new tax laws and the economic downturn may have created this demand for ac- countants," said R i ch a rd Delmonte. placement director at Rochester (N.Y.) lnstltute of Technology. Statistics gathered by lhe University of Pennsylvania in- dicate better times ahead. Half of Penn·s liberal arts graudates who were jobless in June have jobs today. All of its engineering graduates are employed even though 1 per- cent were looking tn June. On- ly five percent of the 23 per- cent of Penn's economics graduates jobless in June are today. J I l\1ost placement directors said graduates stiJJ could find work at good salaries if they keep trying. stayed mobile, were willing to "change direc- _tions" to ride out tbe recession and brought specialized skills to the prospective employer. They also admitted teachers and liberal arts graduates had tough sledding now. Finance -ilr1efs --The lagging perfonnaoce ol I the blue chip aeclion, as evidenced by the Dow Jones Industrial Average, should not be overlooked since it is a widely watched and Important segment-and more often-than -not-over the past~year has-ten- ded to lead the market, E. F. Hutton & Co. says. The firm nevertheless advocates a "positive market approach" On ' the basis of favorable performances b y virtually every other market index. Since General Motors ac· counts for abo_ut_.3.5 J~:cent or all CODSUmer expenditures, all economic statistics for the cUJTefit period will require re'interpret.B.tion because of the strike, 'Jbomson & McKinnon Audlinocloss Inc. · obse_ves. Moat important to the stock market ls. the !act thJlt the strike will postpone rather than cancel economic growth, ii .ids. A strong period ol automOtive sales may be ex:. pected after the strike, just when other economic strengths are beginning to flower, the finn says. NEW YORK '(UPI) -11 Is finally becoming apparent to the big institutional investors thaf the market has turned, that last spring's lows will very likely never be seen again and that "the word for today is 'better late than never"," Wright advisory reports says.• Recent record· breaking volume reflected the switch from pessimism to op- timism and "a last miaute rush to get aboard the stock market escalator," it adds. . WASHINGTON (UPlf -=: Western Electric Division of the Bell System bas obtained $221.6 million in additions to Anny contracts for work on the Safeguard Anti-Ballistic Missile system. Much of the work-will be subcontracted, in- cluding $57.5 million worth to General Electric, $49 million to Raytheon Corp., $25 milli W Raytheon Corp., $25 million to McDonnell-Douglas €orp. and $14 million to Martin- Marietta Corp. MIDLAND, Mich. (UPI) - Dow Chemical Co. said Dow Overseas Capital Corp. has ar· ranged a five--year $110 million revolving eurodollar credit with 16 international banks. Proceeds will be used for global expansion activities, parUcularly in Europe. SEATILE (UPI) -Boeing Co. said its employment in the Seattle area will drop from a current level of 49,600 to 32,500 by the end of 1971 even if the supersonic transport develop- ment program continues at its planned ralf:. -~ropof[ rn demand for new commercial aircraft all ()Ver the world was given as the cause of the .shrinkage. DETROIT (UPI) -Bendix Corp. has obtained an $M million contract to operate 10 space tracking stations scat· tered around the world for the National Aeronautics a n d Space Administration for the next two years . High prices and Increased volume have rekindled sPeculaU ve fires in the stock market, Edward A. Viner and Co. says Caution in making new commitments is ad- visable, tile firm says, since third quarter earnings soon to be released are likely to be • • disa p_pointing.:.'' NEW YORK (UPI) -As a result of di s inflation measures. the bond market has bee" enormously strengthened, Argus Research Corp. says. The huge volume of kmg-term borrowing an- ticipated for this year "will go a long way" toward improving the liquKiity position <lf non- financial corporations, it adds . Over the Jong run interest rates should continue to drop, the firm says, but "the heavy volume ot new issues may lead to occasional traffic jams and temporary increases in bond yields." The market is In a recovery phase, bolstered by improved fundammtals. such as the }u- ly surge in busfness acti•lty, r ising consumer purchasing pawer, rising new orders for durable goods and easing of monetary policy by t he Federal Reserve Board, Spear and Start say.s .... Many stocks, however. are stiU selling at "incredibly low levels" In terms or past and pntenUal growth, management. and market value, the firm adds. 'ntli• - 1-&Eon..bb&Euis co. Starting s a I a r I e s for;=;;:========:;:: • DAILY PILOT 1tJf H•rtfMIR St .. OHi••· Conr. graduat-e-s at-Stevens l.nslitute or Technology ln New Jersey 1n~reaStd-abollt 2S percent In the last fou r years. 11 was '8.100 ln 1966: 110,500 this -THE BEST •••d;rshiP' pell1 pre•• "'••- 1111h''lt Oii• •' flit WorW', lftOtt POP•l1r comic •trill•· It••' It dtily in th• DAILY PILOT • JH~NEED1E-I IS MIGHTIER THAN THE PEN And the man who knows ;wt how to turn the phrase to get the most out of the barb is DAILY PILOT co!um .. ist sYcJn.ey Harm. H1 ha.s been celled the J'l1()d(rn -day H e n r y Mencken. lf you're ready for his we of the acid cdjectiv~ _and thought -provoking prose to give ~ou the needle •• -if you wane to find something to think about in what you ,.ead ••• if you have a sense of humor, you . b e l o n g toith readers who delight in telling others what "Syd said .. tn one of the Mtion'.s mo.st -quoted columns. Some Sample Barbs llecently Thrown -By-Sydney~Harris:--- ••one of the highest ,.id jobs in America . consists of st1ndlng Up in front of 1 mic· rophone, _Hparating the good NCord1 from the bad ones -ind pl1yin9 the bad oni 1.'' , "It's sad but true that while alcoholics are the best argument for abstinence, so many ahitainers are equ ally effective ar· eument for a little drink now and thell." "Most of the 1o-c1lltd 'ineompatibilit'( In marriage sprinp from the fact that to moat men, HX is an act; while to all women, it is an emotion. Arid thi1 differ· ence in attitude e1n be bridgtcf only by lowe." 11The sole difference between a 'dedi Ca· ted crwiader' and a 'nosy reformer' con. sists in our agreement or disagreement with his objectives.'' ''The most explosive combina~lon In the world consists of sincerity added to Ignorance.'' 41Whenever I am the recipient of an ex· cessively hearty handshake, I suspect Mr. ,Mwcles is trying to sell something, hide something. or prove iometbing." , Check The Editorial Page For This Signature It'll Help You Find Latest Quotables Created By . 'The Needler' For His Col- umn, the A Regular Feature of DAILY PILOT Your Ho ....... Dilly N1...,..per yoa r. ""========== ··-----------------' I. ' --• • :.-------------------------------------------------------------------------------. • . . . . . . ~ • ' :· .. . , . . . . . . " ' --+-•' . . ' • . ·-. . . . " . . ' • . ' ~ ' -- ' . ' . • • -. - \ ·r I ' --- AMWCAN _NEWSQ . RERS_ --T . . - • ' ¥EARS OF FREEDOM Nowhere is there a greater news gathering organization than the American Press. Reaching to the four corners of the ----world-in search-of-the tr-uth .and withou.~-•----" restrictions, it is the major link between peoples of the community, the community and the world at large . past and will be again whenever it is threatened, so that there will always be an open line of communication between the peoples of this country arid the world. We are proud to be a part of this Freedom. 200 YEARS OF FREEDOM . . . . . . -. . . '• . . NATIOllAL~EW-SPAPER Wl,K_ OCT. ~-10, 1970 ·- • . • . . .. -----~--- - I . ; If IWl.Y J>ILOT ~Racing -Driver Kilwd • ELSINORE (AP) -Lou • Brummett, a member of : speedboat racing's Hall of ~11 ame, died Sunday.nighLaf!«.. 11-'---~s Prfoot inboatd crashed during the final race of the Elsinore 500 endurance com- petiUon m Lake Elsinore. ~ Brumm et t, 48-year-old driver from Pasadena, Calif., died of head injuries in Riverside Community Hos pital where he was rushed after the ·crash. -nie MancreUa-boat, which he manufactured, nosed into the 'A'ater an d disintegrated. Brummett was inducted into the Hall of Fame last year, an honor bestowed as a result or -numerous triumphs in marathon races. William Wiles. Kansas City, Mo., averaged 79.65 miles per -hour to win the outboard- . division and Mike Wallace, Anaheim, Calif., captured the inboard class at 74.4 m.p.h. Wallace, in a 2G--foot Rayson Craft, fin ished 24 seconds ahead of Don St. John, Van _Nuys, Calif., to collect $2,37i>. Wiles, who led from the fifth lap of the initial 125-miler on Saturday, collected $3,500. A full lap behind the winning 18- foot Feajay was Dick Sherrer, Seal Beach, Calif., in a 21-foot Gl asslron·Mollnari. Coast Guard Boat Sinks On Mission PORT HUENEME (UPI) -- A 41).foot Coast Guard rescue cutter began taking on water while on a rescue mission Sun· day rlight and had to be towed into the station here in sinking conditiol'I. The craft had been sent two miles east of Anacapa Island in the Santa-Barbara Channel to help the 32-foot cabin Two Yachts Lead Field For .Argosy BALBOA - J i m Lin- derman's Newpor1-41 1nnd from Balboa Yacht Club and Fred MacDonald's Colwnbia- 43 Encore, Newport Harbbr Yacht Club traded honors in the ocean racing division of Newport Ocean S a i I i n g Association Alamitos B a y Argooy Saturday and Sunday. Trend was the winner of Saturday's race from Balboa to Alamitos Bay, and Encore was the winner on the return race Sunday. Ne a'rly 100 boats participated in the 13th annual Argosy which features four divisions ol sailboats -Ocean Racing, Midget Ocean Racing, Pacific Hand icap and Ocean Racing_ Multihulls. Th e re wer~ no double wilYlel'S in any Or the divisions. Following are the results: Tim Hogan .. Tri~ia and _Julie on Bloek Bid$ Called·for Two Former Presidential Yachts ,-NEWPOR'I!, R.I. -Tbe two tt}ect any and all blda. In the Flaber, Vlce-Pmldenl o I the Patrick J, for the former Prei!<lentlal yacht!. event the higb rtspOll:Sfve bid Fisher and 'Companf., ~ President's late pat t r n a I ~the Patricia and the Julie, are does not repri!eent a falt Both craft were obtalned for grandfather. Pres Iden t being re«fered for sale OD a monetary return to t b e the use of President T~an Jobn.so11 used both craft as sealed bid basis. goVemment. that bld will be and his famlly at the end of formerly named. The Oct..20 sale wlll..be COR-rejected. • • World War II. Tbe1r main use Pre!!ldent NiJ:on on Jan. 20 . ducted by lhe-r;ewport, R.I., . DLSC, a field adMty ol the during this peilod was as 1969. renamed the Honey.Fitz Defense Surplus Sales Office, Defense Supply Ageney, ls the escort and utilitarian craft for the ~tricia and the f'atrlck J . one ol ten nat.ionaL.W -<>£. govetnme11C. • ~rinl!llY..--ulu_lhe_W.llllamsburg..Aflu.l'r<sl~lbc_JWiull<U!i§.Jlaughte(!._ fices ol the-Battle-Cree agency_l~ll!rJ?IUf, • d•ll.lfil~t11!!*~ tn l'rolpeet.ive bidlf cJl n Michigan -based Defense The Patricia, ·r o r·m er 1 y 1953, the Williamsburg was write for a free descriptive Logistics Services Ce n t·e r known as the Honey-Fitz:. decon_mllssloned and the then catalog from the Defense (DLSC}. Barbara Anne, and prev'ious to Margie and Lenore were Surplus Sales Office, J)epL Both ves.sels ca• be bi. that, the Lenore, was built in refurbished and renamed the Jm-1-4, p .O. Box a 8 O, spected now, the ex-Patricia l93t by the Defoe Boal and 'Susie:E _and Barbara Anne for Newport, R.I. crl840. -They can at the Patuxent River Naval Motor Works, Bay C I t y , two of h11 granddaughters. get applicaUons for plac~ment Air Station, Lexington Park Michigan. On March 7, 1961, President on Ult: Departme11t of Defense Md., and the ex.Julie at the The Julie, fonnerly known Kennedy re 11 am e d the Surpfus Property Bidders List U.S. Coast Guard Base •. 100 .as the Patrick J., Susie-E, Barbara Anne the Honey-Fitz to automatically receive .sales McArthur Ca1,1seway, Miami Margie, Margaret T" IJld after his late m ate r 11 a t catalogues advertising other Beach, Fla. Offered on sale 1~ prior to .that the t>ol-Lar, was grandfather• John F. government surplus by writing 1028-the-cabin cruisers will-be -built by the Fisher-Boat Fitzgereld,-fomler··mayor-of -to-DOD-Surplus-Sales, Dept. sold by seated bids which will Works, Inc., Detro J t, Boston. The Sus le· E was RN·l-:4, P.O. Box 1370, BaUle be opened at 2 p.m. on Oct. 20 • Michigan. in lit&, for L. P. renamed abortly tb:ereafter as Creek, Mich. 49016. at Newport. , There are no restriclions OD future use of the ships or the amount: bid for th e ni. However, as is the case in all DOD sales of governmet1t surplus, right is reserved to Shipwi·ecked Fisherman Rescued SANTABARBARA(UP])- When Oiarles W. Baird, 28, of Santa Barbara, b e ca m e stranded on San Miguel Island last week, he scrawled the 'wtlrd "help" in the sand, built fires and sen( up flares to at- tract rescuers. Baird 1andcd on t h c uninhabited island Wednesday when his 29-foot fishing vessel, Sea Mistress, developed bat- tery-trouble. -----1--~'I He surviyed for four days on his catch of abalone and three gallons of drinking water he carried aloag. He said several fishing boats and an airplane failed to see his distress fll'es. LIYC Lists Winners • - I See by Today's Want Ads • PIU3h double deluxe mo- bile home for sole. It'& furnahed and on the bay- lront for only $14.750, No- one can afford to pass this beauty-1o1p,. • Trade In&. New I: used bikes for yoor old f.lne'i • 1-3-10 speeds for sale. e Say you need glasses! New Tuco telescope with a tri- pod and &rleu lens and carrying case, 600 power, cuiser Amalita. which had R ·••dioedJt was sinking ..•.•.• ·.Wins .. ooe . The rescue boat transfered a Following are the results of Lido lsle Yacht Club's Fall R~galta-for-«?>&-n t e. r-b o a rd classes· held. Saturday and •. pwnp to the Amalita. Then it was discovered that water was entering the Coast Guard boat through the engine room . The four-man crew transfered over to the Amalita. One of the men on the Amalita was suffering from a possible fractured leg and was flown by a Coast Guard helicopter to a hospital he re. The Amalita was to"'ed in by a private vessel, while the cutter .Jaybird stood by. By the time the 118-foot vessel Wind. owned by the Western Offshore o· r i 11 i n g Company arrived the rescue cu tter was down by the bow, and the stern was awash. When the Wind, whit'h has lif- ting equipment aboard, tried to ' pick the craft out of the water, the cutter sank by the stem. Tim Hogan, USO A II·· Sunday tn Newport Harbor: American: lntercoTiegiate SAB<!r A:...:{1) Mark sailor · from Newport , Harbor Gaudio, LIYC; (2) Su c Yacht Club Sunday won the Puthoff, LIYC. Ken Davis Perpe11,1al Trophy SABOT B-(1) Pat Deneher, race for the Lehman-12 class LIYC f (2) Suzanne Aubert, in a seven race series at NHYC. Newport Harbor Yacht Club. SABOT C-(1) Jerf Scott, Hogan scored 3934 points in LIYC; (2) Scott Simpson, beating out 19 riv81'i in the LIYC. highly competitive 1 2 -foot LIDQ.14A-(t) Al Perez, dinghies. BYC: (2) Little Twitch, Chad Wi nner in the Walton lfub-Twichell, LIYC. bard Trophy Series for the LI D 0-1 4 B -( 1) 'Kathy Finn Class was Mark Hughes Walson: LIYC ;. (2) Gaston of Balboa Yacht Club. There Ortei, llYC ; (3.l Edward Gold, were seven entries. Final VYC. results: . KITE A-(1) C. E. Williams, LE HM AN· 12--(1) Tim BCYC; (2) · Nina Nielsen, Hogan, NHYC ; (2) . Terry NHYC, (3) Phillip Ramming, Gloege, NHYC ; (3) Charles NHYC. Lewsadder-, NHYC: (4) Bbb KlTE B-(1) Steve Scott, Davis, NHYC~ ($) 'Roger • l.IYC: (2) Page Carhlin, Welsh, NHYC. NHYC. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Pick a iob - any job from A to Z- and find it in the Want Ads "~...t A4t clOldfkeft•H 7000.7500 te flM ttii I~ ef ,.., u.ke. AMH1to11t N11nery SuP9fYtw' Mcllloyw Offlc• W.,lillr C•pywrtt.f ,..,..., .. , "'""" QMny W.,.., l119l'IWI' ......... FIMst ·--c:i.n. Tool- 11-\E N\QUSE #OUSJ: f Disney's Mick IUtg and Olcl S ey Mouse© CJ et ••• ocks, lVa I cl e .E/ecir; ICS · c \Vall Cloe • DoobJe Be// AI k...._____J Q99 • .,. · lll'Jn Cloe•· •r.rve/ Al ......._ 899 ----::J •mi ClocL_ - •.Red Vinyj B .__ 999 •nd W,.; • Wide B 81 Watch-795 •nd Wrist ,.. -=:::--~ • HM•w ·----l11'9tter ~ .......... c .. -., ware 9.'i u~s.srs~nc--~-=:::::=,_,,l~!:I.~~==~~~~ cvo/1,;11 .. Cl ........ w .... .., ,. .. x.....,, ...... o,. ..... w .•. ,. y ... _ ...... , ...... z..- • • • OR CALL 642·5678 AND TILL THE WORLD '{PU WANT TO W ORK Sears ""9111-·~-·-·-·~ ~---, --~ ---"··-----· ~-----· ---........................................... , ........... .. ,.. Jar;:-c --• ... u1 _.,...,. .. , -'-·-·-· "'9WI---.. ,..... -· -... ,....,. --"· .,..,,., ...... .._ ...... , ...., 1 ........ '-.., ..... ·-·-·-· -........ u-... ---···· ._,,_r. __ -"-.. lfll ....... ----------......... _ ... _____ ..., ... _____________ .,....,.., ________ ,.. ______ ~--~,.-,,-.-~--:----~-----~---~·-··-····--· ~·-----·----~,---..,, .. • Monda)', Octobfr S, l"i70 DAil y PILOT 11 _Wil d Burich ·com_in~-_ ,_at QJJ. Too-Much--Pardee Rams Crush CIUirgers With Year?s ·Best Effor t By GLENN WHITE---~-"l still-enJoy-playing . ..Jn fact I think_ Of'" D•llY P11t1 tMH I'm better now than I was at 25.'1 he told LOS ANGE~ -Jack Pardee the DAILY PILOT. "I learn something wrveyed the aurrounsllngs or the every season. That's one of the reasons I Coliseum dressing cubicle he shared with think the team ill successful -we have Rams teammate Ed Meador. veterans who don't make so many Then he looked up and proclaimed how mistakes. We usually don 't beat happy he was not to be a quarterback ourselves. moment!: after he and his mates bad ·"I'd like to coach at· the pro chewed up the San Diego Chargers, 37·10, level ... foot.ball is my life. But for In a National ·FootbaU League duel Sun-something li~ that yoo just have to wait day played before 69,~ sun ~aturated for the opportunity to come along." f ardee had hii shot at offense and ans. d "l jW1t can't Imagine what it's like efense in college and require! no time to think of an answer when asked which he being a quarterback and seeing that wild bunch coming at you time after time. lt'a prefers. Defense gets •the nod, hand! bad enough j~ playing linebacker· do:;ked what hi{ ~t-ever game was , Pardee, a 13-year veteran with the Padree can't come up with a nominee. "l Rall18 and a former fullback-linebacker guess rm still hopin' it's still ahead of at Texas A&M, had played a major role me," he says. "I try to be ready for it In the stranguJatlon of the Chargers by every week ... you know, two or three the-Rama'....superb defense . interceptions and a Jot of tac:k1es.'' Time after time Chargers quarterback · Allen's entire squad saw action and the John Hadl was put under tremendous Rams chief was in obviously good humor pressure by the Rrum and during the · afterward. "The secondary and the pass decisive first half it was No. 32 -Jack rush "were very well coordinated and Pardee -who WI! giving Had1 fits and Kermit Alexander had one of his better spilling Charger ball carriers. games," he told the press. And, It WB! Pardee who plucked off a "Roman Gabriel called the right plays pass at the Rams 49 to set up the field and Les Josephson's return gave us a big goal which put coach George Allen's lift . out ground game again looked good , forces on top, 16-0, wilh 2:21 still to go in We've been con~ntrating on improving it the first quarter. · this year. We knew we'd have good pa'5- By hal ftime it was 30.3 and as Allen ing so we decided to beer up the running satl later, "we played our best game of attack more than in the past." the year as a team -gathered momen-. The Rams had magnificent field posi- tum and just kept rolling." ti9n th~ fi~ hal! and they scored on five · Pafdee made five key tackles in those of their seven first half series of plays. first two periods while mates Deacon The other score -a touchdown -fol· Jones , Diron Talbert, Clark ·lt1iller, lowed a blocked punt which was recov- Merlin Olsen and Bob Brown took turns ered in the end zone by Jeff Jordan. raising havoc with the Chargers. Padree, now 34, admits he's given '1:r "{:( DAILY "ILOT .. ,.. .. , .. ., J'•lrk.k_ .. _""_M_"_ SOf!_C: thought to reUre~-=~l'---'Cho~pe=full=y _______ _ JAC.K PAR-DEE 132! HELPS MAKE LIFE MISERA BL E FOR CHARGERS RUSS SMITH(20i;'"'"JOHN HAD~[ii).""" lnlil coachilig. . -""' ,._, --""::"'-•:;"' -.u,hl119 ytrd1g1 ~ '" . Illegal Pine Tar Baltimore Bo ss Accuses TWins' Ace ot Cheating BALTIMORE (AP) -The streaking Baltimore Orioles, newl y dubbed "The Big Orange Machine," will be ready for anything as they try to wrap up the American League pennant today. Even cheating. "It's tough to cheat a cheater," manager Earl Weaver of the Orioles said after charging Minnesota pitcher Ron Perranoski with illegally using pine tar on his pitching 'hand as Baltimore walloped the Twins Sunday, 11·3. The Orioles scored five of their seven ninth-inning runs off Perranoski as they took a 2--0 lead in the best-of-five playoffs and won their 13th in a row counting regular season games. Perranoski, who had held Baltimore &eorele& thrOllgh J5VJ innings in regular season games and another inning on Saturday, vehemently denied Weaver's charge even though he wu ordered by umpire Bill Haller to wash his hands before he couJd pitch. "It's resin af'li spit," the Twins' relief !'Ice said. "I've been putting it on my hands for 10 years and no one said anything to me about it. until this little wise guy comes along." When the Minnesota left-hander return- ed from the clubhouse and.had his hand inspected by Haller, he also walked past Weaver and shoved it in front of Weaver 's face . "It was not resin and spit," weaver in· sisted. "It was a foreign substance detected by Jim Frey in the bullpen, and Haller dld something about it." Frey reported Saturday that he and reliever Eddie Watt had seen Perranoski puttJng pine tar on his pitching hand while warming up. But Baltimore had a com· fortable lead Saturday, and nothing was said. "We didn't want to tell the world about It," Frey said. "Then Perranoski would have found another place to put the stuff. A lot of pitchers hkle it, and then you can't ac- cuse them without evidence." With Baltimore leading only 4-3 Sunday when Perranoski came in, Weaver decid· ed the time was opportune. He tipped off Haller. and a hassle developed. "I don't blame him for trying lo cheat," Weaver said. "Any little thing ex~ tra you can get in this game, you make more money. Bul when you get caugbt, you get caught." "A pitcher would pitch from 59 feet in- . steact.o! !O leet, g inches U he could gd awa:Y with it. -We were just fcrtunate enough to be alert enough to detect what Perranoski was doing and to have the umpire stop him." Brooks Robinson, the leadofr batter in the eighth when Perranoski was told to head for the wash basin, said: "His whole hand was black, I could see it." Weaver said a pitcher for him in the minor leagues used a foreign substanct to assist in gripping the ball for curves. "That was all right with me," Weaver said candidly .• "But when he was traded to another team, I protested, and he thought I wa.s a louse." Playoff Boxes •ALTIMO•E MINHISOTA 1llrllrM 1llrllrtll ll•I•"""· u • J J t Tovtr, cl • 0 I t llllllr, -ct-• O t t Ct"'-1, u J I 1 0 F,RODlr-., l'f J 2 1 2 1(1119brtw, 10 J 1 1 2 J .Powell, 10 5 I J J Ollv1, rt • 1 R"le'lmund, 11 J I I I AlyM, If J 0 l .RottlMOn, lb 5 1 1 o Holl, d t t O.Joh"'°", 2b 5 1 I J Mltt«-ld, c • I Elmeblrr911, c S I 1 0 R9111ct, l& 4 I McN•lly, p J I t I Tl!omptorl, 2b • D T,Htll, P 1 I ZtpJI, 11 0 t S.WIUllTll. p O 0 AllllOn, ph t I Perr1Pnkl, p O o Tl1n1, p O 0 Qulllcl, ph I D TD!lll Jt 11 n 10 Tol•ll JI 3 ' 81tllmDrt 102 100 007 -II MlnntiOlt 000 JOO 000 -J E -Ctrdfl'I•• 7, DP -B1Ulmor1 1, Mlnn.,ort 1. LOB -Btlllmor• 7, Ml1111'50l1 6, 28 -J, Pa-11 t, Mlll1rw11d, McNtlly. HA -F. llobl,,. ion fl), Klll1br1w (2), OUv1 Cl), D, Jotln.on Cll. SB -R..it911mund. " • • •• .. • • McH1!1y CW.1.fl • • • • • • T.Hall (L,0.IJ :1-1/J • • • • • '"' "' ' • • ' • 5.WJIH1ms ' • • • • ' P"'r1MIUI 1-1/J • • • ' ' Tl1n1 '" ' ' ' • • Tl11t1 -2:ff. ArtmdlMI -J7,.ff0, CINCINNATI l"l"llUROH Hr~rM tllr~rtll ROM, rt • 0 I 0 M.AIOl,I, d • I I 0 Tolffl,d 4Jll C.Jll,)b 1110 p.,...i,lb 'O J I Cl-lt,11 •Dll Concepcion. u o I I o Slnvulllen, c • t 1 I 8eflcll, t J t t O l.lh1t11•·bM, lb • I I o L.Mty, 11;1 • I I I St1roell, H • t I I McRH, It J t 0 0 P~~n. :Ill J I I 0 Ctrran, p • • • • AIM~. II • I 0 • Gilllt'I, p l 0 I I Wtlklr, p J 0 I 0 H1lms,2b •llOJtl•,pl\ 1011 Woadw1rd, t.1 J 0 I 0 Gii.iii~ p 0 0 I 0 Merrll!,p 2000 s-•rt,11 2000 TOltlf a. J I a Ta .. 11 n I I Clflcll!Mtl 001 010 010 -l Pl111°'1roll GOO 001 000 -I E -Wiik ... ,.,.,, s1nouu11n. OP -Plllt- burah 2, LOB -CltlcinM!I '· P!ttsburah 1. 21 -B. RabtrltOn, C11h, P.,n, Hit -Tolin Ill. SI -Tol•n. IP M • Merritt (W,1.f! J.111 J I C1rran lll 2 o Gllll" :1-1/J o t Wilk., (l,0-11 1 J • I GI011!1 2 J 1 '51¥1 -Gllllel. WP -W11ktt. Att"11N--J7,J1S. •••• 10 ' . ' • • • • • • ' ' ' ' ' . Tln'le--2:10. P111l"9 v•n11111 tl nz Re1urn y1rd1111 J JO Penn IS-25-4 tl·lf.O Po.ml$ 6'Jt +•l F1,1mblfi IOst t I Y•r•b pen.llnd M 101 '51n0iego OJJ0 -10 Lo• Angeln 10 10 o 7 -Jt LA -Snow 11 .,.,, from c;.brltl (RIY lr.ldt) LA-FG -Rty 21 LA -Jostpl\.on 12 '"" !Roy kk lr.I LA -Jonl1n b1Dtk9d PV111 r-td hi _,. 1-(Rty k ick) so -FG Mtrcer JO LA -FG -Rty!O LA -FG R1y ll 50 -f r11i.r 6 p.1115 )rom Domrn CMernr 111;ki1 .... , •• ..._ ••••• - LA -INw • p.ou from Sw"''" (Jlty kid.I Veale Calls Pittsburgh Cheapsville PITI'SBURGH (AP) -Bob Veale has a one-word description of Pittsburgh - 4'Cheapsville." Donn Clendenon, now a New York Met, but formerly a Pittsburgh Plrate, says, "the only time Pittsburgh will gi!t a crowd is when they give a w a y something. ti The Pirates won the National League East Division by sweeping the last three game! at the new Three Rivers Stadium before more than 126,000 persons. But, now in µie playoffs against Cin- cinnati, the Pirates have had more than 33,000 empty seats foi: two games. Gurney Quits-in One Piece The Reds beat the Pirates 3-l Sunday for 2-0 lead, and the tea'ms go to Cin- cinnati for today's third game of the best-0f·five series. "Some dude yelled to me from the stands before the game," said pitcher Dock Ellis, who lost the first game, " 'if you had a good team, you might get some crowds.'" Cos ta Mesa Whiz Fiftli in Racing Finale By DEKE HOVI.GATE Of 1111 Dlolly J'I ... lltff RIVERSIDE -ll should be noted lht,I Dan Gurney, 39, innounced his retire- ment from auto racing Sunday, the same day Parnelli Jones, 37, won one of the TrarurAmerican sedan road races -here and Bert Everett, 49, won the other. "I BUCSS 1 have been considering it (retirement ) ever sinci l began racing." Gurney said, "I believe that .one or the marks of a successful race driver ii that he can retire in one piece." , Gurney had just finished fifth in the season's Trans-Am finale held on the road course that has been called his private preserve. ·, In one part ot the _press room Jones: waa holding courl,-ducrlbiq..J>ow he came from behin~ after a wild collision and spin off the track and spin on the sixth lap. But center s.tage was Gurney, who t)egan his own news confere.nce. "Okay, Dan, give us the word," came the first question as reporters sought to confirm reports that circulated widely about Gurney's expected retirement. "1 quit." ''How come?'' "Because I want to." Effecting a playful mood, he had clowned before photographer11 after clim· bing out of his Plymouth Barracuda at the end of the race -Gurney was uneasy when asked to elaborate on his reasons for retiring. "A typical Pittsburgher," continued careful you are. There Is a lot of luck in-Ellis, "Ignorant, stupid." vo\ved. General Manager Joe L. Brown has Gurney said his protege, Swede Savage, always ~en~ opponent of bavirla would carry on in his place at the wheel games televised in Pittsburgh when the of a race car, while Gurney himself will Pirates are at home. And he thinks that's the reason for the poor attendance during concentrate on managing his business, the playoffs. All-American Racers in Santa Ana , and a "You certainly can't blame ll on lhe new racing team to be announced soon. umpire problem ," he said. "On the average Swede is as fast as I What hurts the Pirates all the more Ls am where we both have been driving," that the poor attendance takeJ money Gurney 11aJd. "I feel that he has showed from their pockels since the phfyoff pool great promise but he hasn't won a race ror the players comes from receipts for yet." th~ first three games, As for Gumey's swan song race, it was "I don't know what these rans want," captured in wild fashion by Jones, who said Luke Walker, the loser in Sunday's survived the sixth lap accident that game. "We've worked hard to gel here." knocked him out of the lead and sent him "l'm not speaking for myself," said baa..to_ninth ~.u·on..------~Q5efurClemente;-but-the..othec....pl Jones retook the lead , from his tea(l'l-think they 're (the fans ) takinR mone~y"'ou"i-~~.,,;..... Lions, Bears Clash on TV "Thert was no one thing that led to the decision ,'' he said. "The-deattrof ;Jochen Rlndt had no bearing on it. and hitting the wall 11t Ontario didn 't either. If there was one thing that affected me strongly It was the death' of Jimmy Clark." Clark, a.ctc>M: friend of Gurney, was mate, George Follmar, on the 70!h lap_ or of lheir ~~. the ~tap race and went on to wln by 1.4 "They figure by having television in the seronds in a Mustang, averaging ".771 city the crowds are going to be smaller. mph. Butt rigllte the ball park Is not ready. DETROIT (AP) -One of two men may decide the fate o( tonig!il's na· tionally televised Chicago Bean-Detroit Uons NaUooaJ Football League. game: Errol Mann or Mac P.ercival. Chicago and Detroit are age-0\d rivals and usually when they meet the game is a i'lerenslve one. So kicking spec:ialisU Mann and Percival may be the whole 1tory. But the Lions have won the last four •aainat Chicago, only 1ivin1 up 20 points while scoring 103. -llettoll ranks No. 1 !n the league !n defense to the Bean: No. 11. Last Yf. however. the Lions on1y ON TV Tonight <:llannel 7 at 6 -defeated Chi~o by acores or 1~7 and 20- , ailOlhere • is no reason to exp-:cl tonight's clash to have many more pomt.s. Last year Mann led the Liooa with tOJ • killed in 1951 while reigning as the World pointa and this lelsor'I he is as accurate Grand Prix champion. 'Their driving as ever. 1be castoff from the three NFL abilities had often beerrcompared. clubs hu kicked 50-yard field goals in Starting In the seat of a Triumph. !J'.R.2 each game thia year. ln 1955 Gurney had driven for 11 seasons, Percival also has long distance range. winning more world champions.hip Grand The game is only the second the Lions Prix races than any other American and have played. on that particular day. The scoring victories In every major racing last time they played al Tiger Stadium aeries. . Monday nlpt it wn Sept. 2t, 1'64r before--Yet in all that time he had ne'f't:r bten a crowd o( 59)03. terlou1ly Injured in an accident. Why ? 1'fiateii'fi>elillei1beca~ of new -,1'in cfitcken-;'' Gumey quipped . fire regulations at the 1tadium limiting 11Strlously, I he.ve always been a •try the number to just over $8,000. cautlou1 driver. But 1 don 't cart how Mark Donohue finished ·third in I ''A family has to take a bus, or boat, or Javelin, Savage and Gurney, fourth and walk to get here. There's no park.Ina. So I fifth ln Barracudas. Everttt, 1 figure that It might be better to watch it Conshobockan, Penn. businessman ICOl'ed on TV. Jt might coat a family SlOO to his 14th Trana-Am victory in four year1, come to a game. And Iota of people don't winning the two-leader c o m p a n I on have that kind of money. t don't blame feature that was a, hair-raiser from nag them a bit." lo nag. On the final tum of the Ja:i:t lap Everett "Maybe they 're walling fOr th• World ind second place finisher Horst Kwech Series.'' said Gene Alley, dejected by a ban1ed fenders twice, jockeylnc for 1he poor throw to home which e.Uowed the best position lfi tile arag race 1!'.:verett Reds' third run 1o aoore. won 1o the rinl1h line. The winner averag· ~11There's still a hope." aald Alley, "if ed 92.080 mph. wt get there." -~ U DAll ~ l'ILOT T1·ojan s -- -To Duel -· • Stanford Umps Still ·Threaten To Strike • • Lnss Will Make Us Bett,er Later, Says Shackleford-- By BOWARD L. HANDY "They tack the speed and Dona out of re1ch with 1:17 to PI1TSBURGH (AP) Of 1M °'1~ ''"' 119" slie of Pasadena and they play. "" "Hello, Bill. This is H•rry," FoolbaU ~ches who play aren't as physical a 1 A clutch pass on fourth I for a tie lack courage, ac-Bakersfield. But they are down from Steve Griffith lo said lhe voice over the cording to Golden West head· more aggressive and they will Mike Shaughnessy gave ~e By Associated Press ___ _,,'ml e-te11 t-e·d-Snuthem elephone J<011LPl!lll>.Yr&hJ9 -11ay Shackle! do_alLrlihlinJbtl~•ru.::"~,--J~U~erin..!!Ule at lhe Don 20 and -Minneapolis. · il-Ruatlen-loaW-20..19--A!ter the Dons-had. scored foutpjay~ lliirJ!'"Uckiindffnt 4'1 think we've cracked the decision to Santa Ana College the first touchdown with the l'ii"1 rom a yard out. California agairut once-beaten Slinford shapes up as this week's major Pacific-8 con· ference clash, and Tr o j an coach John McKay wishes the Indians had an unmarred record. "I think," McKay said Sun- day, ''it would have been bet- ter for us overall if Stan ford ~--~ad o,i,·on Saturday, i~ad of dropping a 26-14 decision to Purdue in an intersectional • > coo test. ! "An}1ime you lose when yo11 ' expect to win makes it easier ! for the coaches to make the • • I : ! i players listen the next week,·• he added . Southern Cal. 3-0-1 this year, cpened defense of its con· ference championstilp with i 45-13 rout of Oregon State. Trojan quarterback Jimmy Jones threw three touchdowns passes of eight. 11 and 42 I yards and ran over from the three for a fourth score. I J\.!cKa y em ptied his bench in 1 • the final quarter, b u t unheralded re serves, quarterback Mike Rae, ~tike Berry-and-<OphooK>r•- 1 McNeill, kept advancing the ball ror two more touchdowns. BEAVERS HANDICAPPED .... Oregon State "'as ban· : • I • dicapped by absence o f quarterback Steve Endicott. out for a month with a broken wrist. ' l t Stanford was "'hacked by an : aroused Purdue team on an OAILY PILOT Pboho "' Pl lrick O'DoftMtl KEY INTERCEPTION -Hunlinl(ton Beach High's Steve Pickford (25) inter- cepts an aerial intended for Loara's Bruce \Vagn er (84) in the Oilers' 21-14 loss to the Saxons Saturday night. Pick ford is the son of Bruce Pickford, coach of Fountain Valley High School. The elder Pickford was more fortunate as his Barons whipped Los Alamitos, 21-20. t upswing From il48-0 losS the -p e : As McKay might have ex-, r-previous week ~o Noire Dame. as sing 1 pressed it. the Boilerma kers · · ame Hurts 1-: missed no assignments. .. .. - nu t here. Get all the guys Saturday night in LeBard aid of a pass Interception anti It was here that the ~ant tooether in one room and Stadium on the Orange Coast an. unnecessary roughness center snap was bobbled aitd • College campus because they penalty early in the third victDry was denied the Rust· stand by. Have them ready to have courage and tried for a period, the RUstler defense set lers in a great comeback try. work. They are bargaining in two-point conversion with 49 up the first Golde• West score good faith." seconds remaining. _ ..... when Greg Forsdick re- With those words spoken by A rumble-oR the center snap covered a fumble at ·IJ:ie Saint ended the try hardl y before It 42-yard line. : National League. um~ire Har-started. and the DoJU were lhe Seven plays later Bob ry i.yendelst«;dt in Pittsburgh victors. Comuke -went Into the end to his American Le.ague col·--"We don't practice-to tie " wne -from one yard-out for league. 8111 Haller in ~in-Shackleford says. "We kne~ the score . nea~hs: the _end .« the flrst Santa An.:i. was going to be 1 Charlie 8\lckland then elec· umpires. slrike m baseball tough and they are the best trified the Rustler crowd with history was ~i~naled.. . taem we have faced tf1is year. an 80-yard run Slralght u·p the But surpr1s1ngly. 1t also "We have scme teal fine middle, virtually twisting and signaled what could-~!11e kid,s-at-&llden West this year pulling away from three an even more tense s1tuat1.on and this loss will only serve to would·be tacklers in the opeR by the time the World Series fire them up and make them field. John Gentile kicked the begins Saturday -for the even better later on." conversion point and the posslbllily exists that the um-Coach Dick Gorrie or Santa Rustlers led, 13-&. pires will again be placard· Ana feels the R u s t I er s Afttr the Saints drove for 47 carrying pickets. have an excellent chance of yards to a score by Steve That prospect was brought w1P1nrng the Southern Wiiiiams and scored a two about by the nature of Sun-California Conference football point conversion, it was 14-13. day's settlement between the title. A pass klter~ption by Chris striking umpires and the "They are every bit as ag-Michael was run back lo the owners, actually an agreement gressive as ·Bakersfield and Golden West nine a11d a fourth to retu rn to work while .Pasadena (both Tiled In the doWJI swing pass to Philip negotiations continued . top 10 in the state). Bland appeared ta put the But while neither Chub Feeney, the National Le:ague president. nor Jack keynolds, the lawyer for the Major Leagbe Umpires Association, Yes. eAM• STATIJTICI ewe SA ,.lr1! CIOWf\I rvshlnt I • l"lnt dOwt'll ••nfnt 4 • !"Int_, -hits 1 I Toltl !!flt IWwnl 1) lJ Y1ro1 ..,.,.1,,. Hf IM Y •rds NUIM 11'2 M Y••dl loll 3' 2' N•t v1rih 111ili(I'-·m M7 P11n1t /A"" dl1l•r1C• t lM.J P('¥J.7 1>1lllH /Yd1-tlrtd l tl.i J ll't '"" tu /Fum.i.,. 1o11 Jll 1/1 l iKkl•nd co...,.,k• Grlffl!ll Dow"lf\I Tet1l1 ,._ Wllll1m1 lltnd f•lcktllll WJlll1 T11t1l1 Grlffilll sc.... .,. .... "9n 016U-20 011~6-lt RUSHIN• " o.1 .... w.1 ~ ic• '' YI 1v1. 2J in I ', "' 7 II 2.1 I t2 :U -1.J 10 '10.o n ltf M I.I S1nl1 AM ~ ,& . ' . ~ . " " "' PASSINO Oolllen Wnt ' ' • • • " '" .. " "' "' '" 11 " ' 11't .JOO S1nt1 An1 U II ' . 11 11 ' M • • ' M ,,, ... .... mentioned any deadline for reaching agreement. the um- pires insisted there was ane. ·•we'll threaten lhem with another strike if they don't settle:," said Augie Donatelli. A fiber glass belted -whitewall for only S18. Oilers -F~;.~ltwllb Five of record-breaking In· dian, quarterback Jim Plun-,-r kell's passes were intercep-> t.d. Loitra-Comes From Behind to Win, 21-14 2 fiber gl-bella on a 2 ply riyton cord body • New dual whitewall dnign. r. UCLA quarterback Dennis } Dummit starred In a Iasl-se· ~ cond 20-17 loss to Texas. Oum- ---.-mit -rallied lh e.. I3lh:ranked , Bruins, 3-1. from a 13-3 halftime defi cit to a 17-13 lead ..... over second-ranked Texas. -· ';--" buf 8 . 45-yird ··rouchdoWn . • pass from Eddie Phillips to Cotton Speyrer with 1 2 ~· seconds to play kept the . •• Lon¢iorns undefeated. Dum- •. mit hit 19 of 29 to break Bob Waterlield1s '3-year-old UCLA '"" record of 340 yards passing. (.. SAfl.1E ROUTE • l ! After Texas' victory, coach Darrell Royal of t he Longhorns noted that the \Vin- ning pass play was the same route that UCLA ran when it : beat Northwestern with that late touchdown pass last week. Only 20 seconds remained \\'hen Phillips uncorked the : ~ame-breaker previe~·ed by • Royal i.: the film exchange. ' '·Luck was invo lved.'' said , Roy al. "but you've got to be in • a position to allow luck to hap.. • pen.'' "Dammit." said B r u In : quarterback Dennis Dummit. "We should have \\'on. We should have won ." Prothro absolved defens ive • backs Frank Jones and Allan Ell is from blame on Speyrer's big catch. NOBODY AT FAULT "We were playing man-Lo- man defense wi th some help," • Prothoro said. "The guy just got open. Nobod y's al fault." , "I had him in the middle." said Jones. "Ellis h11d him on • the outside. Ell is went for the ' ball and missed but I thought I ; had an interception because !· the ball WAS comi ng right at ! me." But Speyrer cut in front _l_ to make the grab. r -Dummit had rallied the • Bruins fro m a 13-3 half-lime I deficit with a great passinit: • display. completing 19 for 30 (or two touchdowns . His 340 I yards through the air broke lhe UCLA record set by Bob ~ Waterfield in 1942. I "I just hope this teaches us not to ever give up." said : Dummit. "Su~ it hurts lo i come lhls ·rar and come lhis _ • close and then go back "'ilh • ; nothing." • The Washington lluskles, 2- : 1. m1de tW() lnterc:£pt.ions and • capitalized on four fumbles to •--~~-swamp .Navy-:58-7 at Sc.>attle. 1 Ralph Ayard-and 1.-t a r k · Wheeler each acnred l\\'O touchdowns for the home I.earn. The Huskies pi\e:d up a la.-0 lead by half-time:. California was blanked by ~=~Rice.. 23-0. at Houston . fht ()regM Dud!!. :r.% downed Washlngton St.alt, l·S, 28-13, at Eugene. EnterlnR the game, Oregon was the nation 's leading passing tr.am . but chMe tc st&:-' on thr ground . ,. Quarterback Dan Fouts hit nine of 22 pB!lell tor 186 vards. 1bout Jf.4 under the Ducks' lhrff·gimi" averaite: Southern Callfornla a n d Stanford put their 1.0 con· f crenct rctOrds on the line in Pelo AlllJ S.turday. ' By ROGER CARLSON Huntington Beach output 01 '~' D•Hr P11t1 11..i1 The ia.assing game. \\'hat One ca.n only sunnis.e \\'bat the re was of it , nel\ed 10 coach Ken ~toats of Hun-. tington Beach ffigh School has yards on t"·o comp!etion.s out ~n doir)g Jor the vast 48 of 1.1 altemRts .. Three O 1 1 e r ·· .• · .. • , .-·• -aenals were 1ntereepted 1o· hours -but 1t might be a , k th Sa to the ' fir t good bet that he's spent a spar e ions . 11' s ~ great deal of time scanning ever S~nset League v1~tory. rosters and checking empty Despite the ha n d 1 c a p , lockers in search of someone ~1oats' crew held a 14-7 lead who can effectiv ely throw a over the hosts in th!! third football · period thanks to a 53-yard · return of an interception by Moats had opined last week Scott \Vhitfield with three that a passing game was vital minutes spcnl. if one was to survive Sunset League bait1e -and he was And the Oilers still had a 14- righl. 13 lCad later when Steve Loara Hi gh's Saxons took Pickford nailed Saxon Jim advantage of H u n ti n g 1 0 n Beyers on a two-poin t con- Beach's lack of an aerial \'Crsion try after Loara had game and collected a cnme· marched 58 yards in 10 plays from-behind 21-14 vi Ct 0 r y to pare the margin. Saturday night at La Palma Finally, however. the Saxon Stadium before 8.500 fans. mach ine accounted for fi3 As In the Oilers' two prac· yards in 12 plays behind the tice games the only offensive rollout running of quarterback spark wa& the runqing of 1.tike Hull to score the \\'inning tailback-quarterback Garth !ouchdo\\'ll with 9:24 left in the \Vise, who ran for 91 yards net game. and one touchdown -which Huntington had the Saxons' was 32 yards short of the total inside running game and the aerial threats fairly well in ch ctk, but the · defensive emph~is p_n that pha~ left Hull free to romp and the Sax·. ons look advantage of it. . Beyers crashed over from ffie' one -· 3ricf . f e-s· e r~v e quarterback Dean Lappin ad- ded a twOi)Oint conversion. It v.'ai1 here that Huntington found the passing g a m e necessary in order to catch up Y.ith time running out and the Saxons keying on the running of Wise. But it backfired as Loara in- tercepted three times in the last nine minutes to clinch the win. Huntington Beach had Lied the count at 7-7 in the second quarter when \\rise dove over from one foot out capping a 29-yaro march after John Garland pounced on a Loara fumble. Brett White toed t.he first of two PATs to equalize Mark HaMa's one-yarrl smash in the period. Coach Herb Hill's Sa xons held the Oilers to four first Pro· Football Ro1111d11p do\lnS In each halL Huntington Beach returns to Sunset circuit action S.!l!,!rd@ when it travels lo Western while Loara meets: cross town rival Anaheim Friday night in 't.fii eOuntY'S premier ciaSfl. OAMR STATllTIC:S •• F\!'"11 !b<m• n1'hlM 6 Flr1tdowt1ll'tllll.., .J ,.,,., -M Nftl ltltl 1 TDll l fl!'"ll dltwn1 I Y••d• ru1hlnt 11' Y1rd11!1Uln1 10 Yl •dl IMI 16 Nt! v1rd1 telnt'<f 111 Punt1/ ... vg dl1!1r1Ct '1».7 Ptn1ltlt 1/Yd1 Hn1ll1td 1115 l'umblt1/Fumb1,, 11111 '10 L " • • " ~· " " •» 3/olO.O 2/11 "' Sctrt •Y Ou1•ltrl , Hun!lnglan Setc~ O 1 1 0 -14 LOl'I 1 0 • 1 -21 w1,. D1wet Plc~ford M1rll<1 NU~ow1~1 T11t1l1 1-'ull ltvt r1 H1nr>1 l1rn1111n l l1rn1ton To!1l1 M1rdn Wl1t Tot1l1 Hull ltUSHINO- Hunllnf!flft l1tdl lcb '' fl " .. 7 • '' 7 ' ' . ' . . ' . ' JI Ut 11 LMrl IJ IJ " 4 . " " 41 11 47 •• 202 PAJllNO- Nwntlftt left tffc~ " ' • ' ' " ' ' , l $ 1 ' ' l!JJ lO lAl fl 12 I t 1S Fittipaldi Win s U.S. B1~011co s for Real-Belt l(C Grand Prix \\'ATKINS GLEN, N.Y. - Emerson Fillipaldi. a bright. new 23-ycar-0ld sta rt from BTazil. v.'On the U.S. Gr and Prix Sundar. as~uring that the world championship of dTh•ers \\•ill go 10 the late Jochcn Rindt of Austria. Fittipa ldi. dri\'ing R steady race in a Lotus i2 that H1 ndt helped make famous, dashed into the lead only eight l;ip~ from the fini sh \\'hen ~1cxir11n Pedro Rodriguez h11d lo pit his BRl\1 for fuel, He never lost the advan tage desp ite the challenge of se veral.drivers. ........... BE RKELEY -Cliff Rlchrv held the lead today in thf $20,000 Grand Prix tennis .series award. but the lil\le 'Texan \4'3S mmrttn~ "under ~ lopsided defeat by AT thur Ashe in the finals of the Pacifi c CMst Internati onal Tennis Championstiips. Ashe, secdcd second lo rucbcy. need~ only 111 hou1'5 Sunday-to .Pin .the $6,000-firs t prize 6-4, 6-2 !;-4. The Denver Broncos . a dog- eared doormat in pro football dungeons for ~·cars. finally pulled the rug (rom under the Kansas City Chiefs .. , and lt't !he sun shine in. "This y,•as a big y,·in-prob- 11hly the biggesl since \\"e c11111(' ht'rc,"' chortled Coach Uni Saban af\rr his perennial Jan1bs turnr<I int o tigers and sh<'llrd the pO\\'erhouse Chiefs 26·1 3 in the National Football Lcac.ue Sunday. "The boys played \\Cll." addrd the jubilant Saban. "it took a lot of people to get a vitlor.Y like this. All you can say is that it \\'as a great learn rffort. I kn ow it's 1t cl\che , .. but it:s .. aboul all yo u can say. If Saban was caught with his quiJlS dn"'n, it wns no \\'Onder . Sut11j11y'J1 !IUCCl.'SS v.•as the first time since 1964 that lh<' Rronco!! ha\·c beaten !he Chi<>fs. l11st>ye11r"s l'uper Bo~·l chnmps. In fact. Dt'n\'cr hns mastered Knnsas City only t\\'icr in il s histo ry. The Broncos ne\'er have h::id n '\inning yco r since 1960 and the closest tht'y'vc come \\'AS ·a 7-7 mark 1n 1962 Amons: 13 ...,.. " ...,.. paslings thcy\'e takt'n rrom Wll..i\1JNGTON. N.C. the Chiefs include scores or Cesar Sanudo made It plain 59-7 nnd 52·21 In 1963, 56-10 this weekend thnt ht' isn't an in 1966 and 52-9 In 196i. unknown f9lfer anymore. rs;~l!)l·s ''ictnr. ~nve Ile tooi,. care of thitb~;'~,:,.;:-....;;.,;',C.,~r 11 3·0 mark thfs-yt'ar. nlng 1~1000 Au.lea Qpcn ... .Jhc Dtunco bustc.r paced a golf toumamcnl Sunday 'vhen pa urrn ll f turnabouts on lhlrd·round leader Bobb y Rlack Sunday. Green Bay Mitchell faltered \\'ill'I boglc~ upscl 1tt1nnesot.a JJ.J\l, beat· on tM last three h21es. Ing lhe Vikings for the first time at home since 191''5 : Buf. fa lo derailed the highly-favor- ed i\c\v "York Jets 34-31 and St. Louis pulled off a 20.7 shocker over Dalh1s' high·po\\'- ered Co\l•boys. \Vashington stalled the Phil- adelphia Eagles 33-2 1; Atlan- ta slipped by San Francisco 21 ·211: New Orleans knocked off the Ne\V 'York Giants 14- 10, the Baltimore Coils turned the tables on underdog Bos- Ion. grabbing a comeback 14- fi \'ictory and llouston bullied Cincinnati 20-13. The Broncos' nuinhunting defense played get-the-quar- terback. and got to Kansas Cit~· ace Len Dawson seven tin1es . Saban v.•as obviously satls- fit<l "'ilh the performance: ''I th ink \\·e ha\1e sho\\'n in our three games so far that \\'e can hang tough. To win In lhis leai::uc you have to be able to stop people. something this club ht1sn't been able lo do in the past." Rob ffO\l'ficld, Denver's for- mer soccer player from En&- Land, JackeOfour field goaJS, one for 47 yards. The ferocious Bronco defenders let the big . rough Chiefs srore only on c touchdown-a $2-yard dri\·e late in the third period. Green Bay qurtrter~k Bart Starr. fisted as a quost i0n110le st.artc.r. bccawe_ol injuries. pla~ rdo th<' entire g11n1e. He moved his teafn "·ithln field goal range for two lhree-poin· 1ers, and Dave! Ha mplon pro- vided the Pack with a 101- yard touchdown run on a kick- off in the fourth quarter. "It was a vicious defensive game," said Slflrr, "it was very rough and if you can win one like this. yo u've got to be pleased. In this kind of game. neilhcr side gels a better sys· tern generated. The breaks make the difference." ~tinnesota coach Bud Grant had to agree : "This g ame just ended 13-10. If it had lasted a little longer, it might be another story." Dennis Shaw, cucumber-cool under fire in his rookie sea- son. passed for two tou ch- downs for Buffalo. His I a s t scoring strike was the clincher -a 2>yarder to Marlin Bris- coe with 7:20 left. Joe Namath also threw two 1D passes for the Jets. "We\•e ne ver really had a No. 1 quarlerback," said Shaw. "I've kind of worked my way up to this point , and I hope lo stay." Jiln Hart, booed foT inept pa !s ing in the first t..eo q~rters. pitched_ lwo scoring AtrikC$ In the last half as the Cardinals hog-lied Dallas. "\Ve did a pTetty adcqu.1.te job again.st the pass," r a I d 11Sfety Larry \Vilson of St. · Lauis, who had two key In· lerctplions to stall Cowboy d r 1 v e s _ -i-rOur Ul'ltbackers moved around. and as.Jar as our jlame plan was conctm· ed. we probably dld as well c11rrylng it out as we ever have." Penneya heavy duty muffler 17 88 lnotallod Penneys · Whit .... lull .. _ Slz1700.13 Fed.tal"1.!IO Slz1695-14 Fld.tn.1.81 30 MONTHS GUARANTEE WlTH 9 MONTHS 100°,{. ALLOWANCE ·-·· .... ___ ,_, __ __ ,_......,_.. ____ C•--.-_...,._ _____ _,__,, ..... .__ .. --... -.. _.... ..... _ _...._ ., ___ ._ ....... ...._ .. _,........_ 61 • .. ---.--................. -...... --.... ___ .. _,._. __ ~ .. ~ ...... - ............... 1 • ., --__ ,.,. --···-·-I-ol ... _._ ,..,..,_ r-ft, ......... ~ '\ ·~"', ..... , ............... IOO""-....-.-. _ _.""-'°"'"'""""' .. ~--............... ~, ........ ___ .... __ .. __ ...,_ 11--~· ........ -· .. .,._. __ ._ __ .... _,.., .. _,.., .. -'·--........... ro•.oSf nO'l'KnoH •UAUIN'Tlf c-.r Mlll'i MOW YOUI eUAUNTft WOHS1 1..i ... --....... -··-··--············-· ....... 1-.-,..-...................... 1 .. __ ,_ .. '--""'···· ................. 1 .. 11 -,, ..... _ ... ,.. .......................... 11-.. __ ·-· ~ .... ·--· w ..... -_.,. ,_ ~ - -.... ..._.""'" .... -,_ ........ I.ii loo--· .. ,_ ..... --.-1o .......... _, ... __,. __ -- •• ..-c.-.......... -....... -................ ......, .... - ·'-, ...... 1 ... -1 ... -.... --""·--Wo ..OR-•n ........... --.. 11·~ .... ---..... _ _....""--·--' .. ~ ---i..-~ ...... -........ --...-..... TOI .. _ .. __ ,,...,, ..... ..., .. ,,__ ·----- Service , """"" GUAaANTll! tf I Penneys he...., cMt mvlflw leitl ef1w il'l9lel- l•t1on by • Penn.ysAulO Cen1er, due 10 defective ""rchanat.e Of" -11· ft'lltrtlllD OI' -•fOU I .,..,il l !tit origintl Pl" cl'l•Mr owns 1119 car, ju11 con!KI " Md • P-..,s speeld-11 wil1 r•D•ICI llMt defec!M muffler, N •'ltnl dmOI- 21~ -Fcw...Oll •---eM tune •· lnc:IOOea new points, plugs, rotor, ecwt- denaer, c:Uatributor cap; 10jUS1ment of cam.awe.II, timing, c.artJure&or. ....... -twllflbl:I ap).,,S.18 YN , you can snop 12 to 15 SofK11ys, too, st •ffY ol thne Penney Auto Ctntm: CANOG A PARI( CAALSBAD CHULA VISTA DOWNEY FULLERTON MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH OMNOE "THE CITY" VENTURA. "QaflUIOCJl9 • VMJ v-lC-.. ~ -IUE:NA l"AM• HUNTINGTON IEACM DriY• inf CNrgll II '' v , • , •• Monday, October 5, 11170 OAIL V PILOT 2:J. • -Barons Hcrtd on to :P-ants -21-20 ' . Deep Sea Fisl1 Report By PRll. ROSS J.f Ille 0.llY 1':111! tltll Fountain VaUey Hi~h head football coach Bruce Pickford, who t u r n ed 40 years ol age last spring, figures he'll be lucky if he makes it to SO without a heart attack or an ulcer. ---.,,n·1olll<>!'Ji:L Ila"'"'· \l'.OO.l!O!t --'l"~ night at Hun. tingtoo Beach lllgh, came close to dealing their coach a premature fatal blow Saturday night in a balr·raising 21.w escape against the Los Alamitos Griffins in an Irvine League opener on the Oil City turf. Pickford commented af. lerwards, "I thought we were going to blow the m out for a while there wbeo we-ivere Chargers Next Foe For Corona By JOHN CASS 01 tllf D&Ur 1"1191 Shll Corona de! Mar High's foot· ball team. fired up after a 27-6 victory over Santa Ana Valley Saturday night, gets a . much stiffer test this Friday when the Sea Kings tangle with Edison at Westminster High. leadin&. 214 (a margin whkh know about them. But any would have meant a one-point earried~into-lbe final period). Wm that can tit, L.oaca l6-6 in differential in Los Alamllos' "But they did a very com-the 1970 opener) must have favor. mendable job in coming back soinething." after us in the last period. Saturday's win . which of-The visitors slruck for their "Frankly," he "-'ent on, ficially w e 1 c 0 med Los initial fourth-quarter Lally on a "they scared the pants off Alamitos to tile Irvine League I7·yard quickie by fullback fie." tthe Griffins won the Orange Kirk Rinella; who burst like Despite thefact his defense League crown in 19€S ). wasn't lightning through a gaping Wi_n~hcd 296 net Y~;e'ds~._.;.• _certainly ur.'ril Baron hole-on-Fountain ... Valle:y's left total offense to the Griffins, e f e n s v t back Gar PiCkfOrd lhougflt his stoppers Hf rnandez. l>iCked of( a Jim id••.c--~--- were tough in the face of ad-Hami~'con pass on the Fountain A successful tw~poh1l con· versity, V::.iiey II-yard line to stymie a versoo pass from Hamilton to "I thought we had more of-.. ·1a.st ditch Griffin scoring ef-end Dave Jovero narcowed the fense this game than again~'t fon. • count to 21·14 with 1):32 to go Garden Grove last week, but After Fountain Valley had in the game. our defense was lougb 0then it piled up its 21.fi lead i11 the Tne Griffins recovered the counted. especially~ that last third stanza, the Griffins BaroM' oniy fumble of the Los Alamitos d~ive." roared back with a pair of last nighl at the Fountain Valley 24 Asked abol:~ Fount a in period touchdowns and came five minutes later and con· Valley's n:.itt 'foe, J.1agnolia. within a pin prick of ringing verted it into a touchdown on Pickford retorted,.-llyou-ne~r-up a two-point c:on11ersion lhat--Hamilton"s-one-yard-quarler- back sneak. A second conse:cUUYe. ~'9- point PAT failed a·nd the Barons sighed a Uttle easier. FoW1taln Valley's TDs were pushed across on s h or t plunges by Rick-Hartsfield and Tony Sepulveda In the first quarter and by Hartsfield (also·a short dive) in~the third --period. Hernandez booted aU Raron extra points. GAMI STATISTICS " ,IOI -· r11illlM 1• l'ilo l CIOW~ Hlllll• 1 Fir1I CIOWl'll ~-Illa 0 Tot1t Ifni -Ill 11 Y1•1tt r11>111... no Y1ros N•llnt1 '' V1rd1 lo!ll I NII Yltdl ,.-lned 111 P11nlllAYw. Cll1l•OC• 2/1"1.~ Penalllt'1Vds. onlnl. ~­Fvmblet./Fvmlt!H ~ ..... sc-., °''""' LOI Altrntloil ' I t f'OUllfllll V1lll'Y i. I 1 Stuoy iol•m.lll<ln HlllOll A;!nellt ,_, si.wwn TOl•I> llUSHIHO L11 AlamU11 .., ,, ,, ~ c IJ ' ' . 16 111 0 It UI 0 I II 0 ' ' . •I 261 13 1¥t. ... 1.0 '·' ••• 11.0 '·' ••• Pilot Pigskin PICKEROO Co • Sponsored by Voit And The BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT Coach Dave Holl and 's Corona team. after a pair or losses in non league action, got off on the right track in tlJe Irvine opener Saturday with Keith Samuels and Karl Kil- lerer leading the way in the Davidson Field ( N e w po r t HarbOr-High) tilt. Samuels s c o re d one _ ~1-0~·IF~~aPsl~ ForW. ~ach _Week's 1rsr ace inner touchdown himself, then threw strikes to Killefer for another pair. Bob Ferraro, who was the leading rusher for the night, picked up the other tally ~on a one-yard shot over the-- middle of the line. Santa Ana Valley could not put anything together. The ----Falcons~had-onlY-one-good drive, a 52-yard eUort in the third period. Martin Van der Roest com- pleted two passes, a 21-yard toss to Keo Templeton ancf a ·24-yard effort to Tom Fields that put the ball on the Sea King three-yard line. Van der Roest carried over from there, then failed on a two-point pass conversion attempt. Corona de! Mar jumped to a I4-0 halftime advantage after a scoreless first period, in which, neither seemed to want to control the ball. Both teams turned the ball over to the enemy on fumbl es and pass interceptions during a loosely played quarter. It wasn 't until the dying moments of the first fr ame that eilher team started to do anything. John r..1il~ picked up a first down for the Kings after three: consecutive shots at the Falcon line, afler a Valley punt gave Corona good field position on the Falcon 43. Santa Ana Valley fell vict im to another mistake \11hen a Falcon got caught with his hand wrapped arowid a Sea King face bar. The 15-yard penalty pushed Corona to the Vall ey 16. Four plays later, Samuels scored on a keeper to his right. When Joe Ricca con- verted with a perfect place- ment kick. Corona del Mar led. 7-0. with only two minutes consumed of the s e c o n d period. Both teams went back lo the game of fumblitis again. until Valley's Templeton punted to the Sea King 33-yard line. Samuels wrapped up a 67- }'ard, eight-play drive with a beautifu11y executed pass play to Killefer with 2:39 remaining in the half. The scoring play covered 2t yards. Ricca made good on the second of his three successful PAT kicks. GAME STATISTICS C•M V Fl•1fdown1 rv1hl11t 10 ' • Flr1t downl Hulng ~ l'lrll dowll5 Dfl"•lli•1 I ' 'l'oi.I llr1t dGwn1 1t ' Y1rd1 n111\!n9 '101 ta Y1rd11>1Ull!t 111 ,, "••di lo•! ' u M11 ••l'il1 ••lntd m 1'1 P11nt1/AYfdl1t11'd '/JI.I S/2',6 P1r111!lltt/YP .,....J11ecl S/6i S/2S Fvrnbltl/Fumblet 11111 111 Jll ' k -" 0..lf1•~ S1n!1 An• V1l!tt O 0 6 0 -I Cort>n1 dlllM1r O It f 11 -21 ltUSHINO Stn!I •~ \11ll1Y Gtltioi. """'''' Klmt>i. Temil!""" .,._ V111di'rll11UI .... Tot1l1 t<err1ro ., .. S•l'l'llltls 1:'1!>•llftf "'"" Jalln""" Tot1!1 tc' '' '' M . I U l I.I IJJtS.5 S IJt J.t 1 • 0 •.• lll.J.I 7 ,. • ,,, 1 f 0 '·' 'JtalJU c.,......i~r " . " " ' ~ ' ' " . " I J.I ' C.I . " a '·' 0 0 0 lj l'!ll 6 I~ ,ASSING SIMI AN VIHtf H K llfll Yt .•<I, Vthtlt•ll:a.11 U S ' II 11' Ctrt!ll •~t Mtr It I l 121 '.IOC lam11111 DAILY PILOT P'Mltol by LM P'tT~I WHERE ,TO GO? -Fountain Valley halfback Tony Sepulveda (22) ponders ho\v to escape defenders Dave Jovero (82 ) and Sal Mungo (60) of Los Alamitos. Baron quarterback Ken Shibata (12) \va tches in the background . Sepu lveda rushed for 63 yards in 13 carries to lead his side in th at category. Fountain Valley won the Irvine League contest, 21-20. LOWERING THE BOOM -Los Alamitos llncbachr Ken lla rton (53) reache_L rrom beh ind in an '1ltempl to curtail the progress of Fount~in Valley halfback Bob Mc:.Kenzle (26), The Baron~ skirnmcd past l .. os Alnmitos. 21·20 , Saturday . . night at llunt1ngton Beach lligh. Lagu11ru1 s Face . . Col to11 G1·icld ers Ry CRAIG SHEFF Of 1~1 OailJ Plltl Still Laguna Beach High football coach Hal Akins had stressed execution in drills prior to Saturday night's game y.•ith Neff at Cerrilo!i College. "\Ve've got to cul down on our offensive mistakes." s.1id Akins. And although the Artists did look a little beltcr on offense in the Cerritos College tilt Saturday. they could not con- tain Ncff's overall quickness. falling to the Trojans, 28-0. Laguna. now 0-3 in the '70 campaign. will fa ce tough Colton Friday night on the Artists' field. The Colton en- counter will be the last non· league gan1e, prior to the start of Orange loop play. Colton defeated Cajon. Sl-6, Friday night. Although the Artists ran off more plays than Neff (57·48J, Laguna could just not contain Trojan ha I f b a c k Greg Estrada. a 5·9, 160-pound senior. Estrada carried the ball 1 S times for a net 2~4 ya rds, averaging 16.3 per carry. lie had runs of 60, S!t. 31.' 20. 18 and a pair of 14-yarders. tlis 60-yardcr went f o r e touchdown. Nerr did not get on lhe scoreboard until 2: 19 left in the opening quarter when quarterback Jerry J.taddox l \1 ent four yards for the six~ pointer, culminating an 84- yard dri ve in 10 plays. In lhe third quarter. Laguna 1 drove to the Neff 21. On a I fourth and six sil~ation, Artist quarterback Gary F'iseUe was hit from the blind side at- tempting lo pass. fumblin11; the ball. Trojan guard Kevin \Vhitc picked up the loose pigskin and scampered 63 yards for the final touchdo\vn. Laguna came within eight vard s or sco ring la!C' in the rinal quarter , driving from its o"'n 43. llalrback Rob 1 n GAME STATISTICS LI Hell F 1•11 (IOWn• rvs~lll'l ' 11 F irst CIOW"\ ..... ;~ 1 3 Ftril dow"I _..1111• 1 0 lol•I Hrst downs 1D 11 V•rd1 rul!ll"9 11\ l'I Y1relt pa••!~t 0~ 16 Verelt lost 4\ • Net f1rC119ail'lt<! 1" 3'1S Punh/4....,,.19e oi1l~1>t• ins J Jll?.01 P-lllet/Vd1 oe111h1H 010 1/9<1 FumDle1/t<u..,ble11011 5'1 1/1 Sc""' bJ Ow•rltrl L1q11n1te..c~ o o IO-o Nell I 1U 0 -2' sw~enev A Mire"'' Fls1!!1 Wl11bow•kl Tot111 Fl1e!le Tot1ls llUSHIHO LltWlll 8t1ch IUI fl n J4 10 JI ' '" " . OJ HJ ~ASSING L•t11n• INCh yt IVI. 11 '·'1 J 7.7 11 ·1.1 . " ~ 1.1 •• IC ·~· Jt •<I, UJ14l ,IU U ' I 41 .11• VW BRAKE SPECIAL R11ine 4 Whftll · Michln• 4 Drum• Ov•rh1vl 4 WhMI Cyllrtdm M .... Miit U11<t1111llllMI .... ,"lfte !NOT PtlO.ltATIOI S39.95 VW SHOCKS ·····-·······-$7.ts IMlallod 100,000 mile iiuaranteed tnol pro-rat(l(li. WE l">fl ALL ~·onEIGN CARS. e OISC IU.lll SPICIALIH e COSTA MESA STORE ONLY Jiii Morbet-"94. 14f"4021 •' Mf·12Sf 1 0 Voit Fo otballs each week Be • pigskin prophet. Play the DAILY PILOT Pickeroo game for weekly prit.es. W in ner each week receives $10 cesh e nd 1 Voit Collegiete f..,otba11 lsuggestecl retail price, $'1 .'IS l. Nine runner-up Pi ckeroo pickers also eech get a Voit Collegiate foot.be ll. Watch for this player's form each week in the DAILY PILOT Sports Section. C ircle the teems you think will win in the list of 20 teams and sencl in the player's ..form or reasoneble facs im11e. Then "Watch the '{)All Y PILOT sports pages for each week's list of 10 w inners. RULES I. S11bml! tl>ls 1111ry blink or I re~~on~blt fnc•lmll!! IOf~nt~r tl>t cnnlnl. t. SonCI ID : PILOT PIGSKIN PICKEROO COl')'TQ J, 5POrt1 OeNrlmtn!, P, 0. llOX 15'0, Coste Mn•. Ca. '26U. . J, Only o~ 111try Jiii• JM'•IOn H"' WOOif, •. Entrl•1 mu11..., Clel1vttH fby mail or In perSO!ll ta 041LY PILOT aUl'I by S p.m. Tl>und~y. S, AMF Voll •n<I OAILV PILOT 1mployt1 •nd t~elr Immediate famlHet no! 1ll11lblt lo en!fr. '· TIE llREAKER rn1111 be lllled In Dt enlry 11 vo'<I. 1, In (~te of tie lor llrol p11,e. d11p!;(lle merc~fndis• Drl1e' w!ll be f Wf,dl!d •Ml wlnner1 will ec1uallv >h••e In Jhe 110 t&lh o•l1e. I, Win11er1 who pl•<• In !ht tcp IO more lh&n o...:e during l~e conte11 h~vt int OJ>lk>rt, •fie~ !h• fi,.t win, ol eKd.,."11•11!1 !l>tl Vo•I IOO!bell tor l'llllh•• q1111lt1 Voll orodud of e<iulv•l•nf value. •................... , • ENTRY Bl,ANK • • Clrtl~ t.alM yo1 tfth1k will wh1 this Wffk's t omn • • lhotnt '""' h wcolld.,.. llstetll • • • • San Francisco vs Rams • • • • USC vs Stanford • • • • Oregon vs UCLA • • Cal vs Washington • • • • Oklahoma vs Texas • • • • Tennessee vs Ga. Tech • • Mississippi vs Georgia • • • • Auburn vs Clemson • • • • Saddleback· vs Chaffey College • • • • Newport vs Westminster • • LB Wilson vs Mater Dei • • • • Estancia vs Costa Mesa • • • • Magnolia vs Fountain Valley • • • • Colton vs Laguna Beach • • Corona del Mar vs Edison • • • • El Modena vs Mission Viejo • • • • Western vs Huntington Beach • • San Clemente vs Orange • • • • Santa Ana vs Marina • • • • Webb vs University • • • • TIE 811EAl(Ell -Mr oven °" Ill~ • 10t1I '""'""' ol poillll KOrld ill ft! • 1t .. ,.._ lllltd lbOvt II •. • • • • NAMI • • • • ADDltlSS • • • • ;1tT ZIP -• • • • PHONI SU • ••••••••••••••••••• •• I ' .. • !111!!1 ____ ._. ........ ~----------------------~~---------· •••..•. - J4-DAILY PILOT Mond1y1 Octobtr S, lt?O •.umas•,.~ Runners Win STROI DISTANCE ON LONG runs - • Football Standings IUMSIT LM•UI Wl.P"'" NeWMrl Htrbr I I 1 I A.nteater Polo ists Vpend.ed ---- By Aft-lJ--Champions, 9-8 LMr. l I 11 I• M•r!M 1 • 1 • UC trvtne 11 ltill tM champ aboul offldala -Uwy ire the euly ln the final period, IMltt AM I • D ,, J ~'"-und .L. ·-of ... N ~·-~-. ---t Into Hlll!fl,,.ltl'I ~ell I 1 14 fl ~ Wnl' etlf.iulut1 COrpt 9P0'MIQl'S Wft: 01 un;;m ~u.11 Wen I Z()~ w .. f!!'llnat•r • 1 1• u bUt 1ht DIAml Ytllldatlon Ctltfornta tournament. deiense and acored a pair of_ 1bt weetend'1 JW'fP crass Host Marina sot by pre-~ : ; : ; AAU cbam~p wl&lr polo 1bt An1eltert hid no trou-goals for the victory. couatry actioli l n v o t v.1 n I aeuon tit.lie f1vorite Stntt .. ,.,,..,.. ..,.. tum woe dM foo«h(U Jatlt. hie with five oChtr opponents. tn the acoring department, _or_llW c.o.at aru ~11 An~ts-30 ; H11nUO(ton Beach Lw• 21;,.':'.:;:-n..::"' 1• tional TournllDtllX wlUI • nar-Saturday they defeated UC Massimino had three, Jack ~Wellminlter Ltons ~Hd tt to ii51Un& Western ~ 7;:-.,.:•.:::""'"'* in row-...._""""1_4ft'._.O Ed_ ~. IO:I, and San_J_o_se_.Dickman Jwo and Martin,· --~)11!>::>! .. ~tnc ~In an in-tiy a lf.'..41 u.nr:-and the-..._---1-t• w--AMM1,,. ,, t • .... 1m,-Ntwland.'• ,UC...._Jawmay._ llill, 7·3, OQ,....tbe '!f.1Lt..o---1t!L-Bradbum and.Bliek one:eAch.._ vl~I meet and a I 1 o aforementioned Westminster "1111111•· 1111._..,..1 ••-night in Loi' AHol lftlb. ehanpionship flnah " I l ~ Mason Philpott, a slarier all paialed a more disUnc:t pie-ntnnf:rs bolted N e wp o r t w .. ,.,,. ,, H11t111"'1or1 8tedl 1be Anteaters •• turmUJ DeAnz.11. season, missed the 1 touma- IW't of the lt?t SUnlet League Harbor and absorbed a 2IJ.S1 kn•• Ml "' M1r111t ., W••m11111" t-1 for the .e.:in and Mf• yd ln the Bfrlleley clash, Dale ment because of a military c:bue. setback. t•viNI LU•v• to lose to• coUtge ot untfersi--Hahn scored three goals, Mike obligation. Coach Jeck Hedges' Lions, Wettmlnster was one of nini cor-... 1 ,.,,,, ~ ~ "':, "~ ty team after defe1ting the Martin two and Ferd Y UCI hosts Fullerton Junior plaped by lnoperienct in school• compeUng in the large C•i. ,,_., 1 • 1 o best, on the west cont, and Musimlno, Jim Bradburn, College Tuesday afternoon. lbeir rankl after a II-year schools cattgocy at the Staub ::n~111 \l'•lll'f ~ : :: ~ perbap1 the oat.ion, in two 9ob MCCellan and Bruce Game time ia at 3:30. domlft,aUon ol the. ana cross InvltaUonal. A total of ZS e•"-'-• 1 11 " tournament!. Bllc.11 had one apiece. country .cene, managed a schools wen entered In the M1ny colftrs mistakenly put too much 1mpha1ls ~,::.m1,. : : ~ 2; "li'e played well both days Ag a In 1 t San Jo se , nspectlble, second p I 1 c e meet's two divisions. on direction on Iona putts. I don't .mean that you ""'• ~ v1H.., • 1 • 11 and 1 feel the kids ga,ined a lot Massimino had four with lhtwU.,-Slturdly in the Ken. Although the-Crescenta shouldn't-be c1utiou1_jn_linfo1 up_these putts_._... c.-_ck~'::"ri. tt'v111.., ,, m va1uable tzperience in the Marttr1, Wade Arens and Jim Staub Invitational at Glen· Vallow Park ...,.. ... ,. 1-ei-B'ut I do f11t that ov1r-1,h11J1 on direction Cln ,,....,.., •-Nor t be r n tournament," McDonaJCI ICOrirfl' one each . .lal.o.1 "'--la v II p \. ~1 ....,_.. 13 I d U h I di ta "I h"" th lllefK'9 VI Celli MIN f l H-' 0 vaft: I "'"1:1een.. a ey Ira. tremely hilJy, weither has ea to unv9'"1mp IS 5 I nee. . -I C•M v. e:1111111 11 w.1m1 ... i.r Newland ukJ. UCI mined a number of ap- Westminlter was edged by usually been 1 prime deterrent line, but I for1ot to hit It," ii the conwnon cry. ~=1 ;:.:,.-111n V•H.., 11 Hllnt-"It takel a while to adjust lo parenUy easy aboU in the San team winner Burbank, 33-7,. at the Staub meet in the past. M1k1 it 1 pPint to Juda• the Hne and •ll&n the &A v11..., •• u. A11m1• 11 w""'" a big pool ud they have a dif-Jose contest but ba~ JltUe Three Sumet circuit dual Hedges c_ommented af· putterhead accordin&IY when ntUnc up th• putt. c•invurw LIA•u• ferenttypeofoffici1tinglntbe trouble wl.nning. meet.I on J'riday included area terwards, "Last year the Th1r11tt1r, din ct 111 of your 1ttention towlrd hittinc • L '" •• north," be added. ---1.!l.. the . ~-&~ UCI teams •nd area crews we.re smog up there was pretty bad the bill with just 1nou1h force to m1k1. It di• It· :! .. 't.:'-l : ~ l! Newland ilo.'t complaining fell behind 5-1 in the first tueetssful in each. and it affected some of the tt\• cup. •• ,,,.,..,.. ........ -~1~1,. l : :t 1~ quarter. Mnsimino suffered a Estancia Captures Polo Title Host EMancl1 aquelcbed the Garden Grove Argonaut!' bid fbr 1 third tourney tiUe Sotur- day In the flnab of lht Estan- cia JnvltaUonal wit.er polo tournament as coach Barry Frye's crew rang up 1 1..S vic- tory. tida' running. But this year it Fellftll 1 1 u 1t cul lip that wu bleeding pro- wun't too bad It all." :.·t-~!'!':i : l ,! :: JC R11nners fusely and came out until the Kevin Coleman·was the top Tti11t1n . J 1 14 » ____ ne1t quarter. The younger Llon finisher In the varsity occ, Rustlers K1lllll ~~ ~ players were nervous facing race, captW"ing sixth place. in "''*"' ._.. Notch WIDS'.. the national AAU champions. ____ ,_ ·-·· d I El ............ , 11111 .. 1111 VIiie 'f'I.& 1-ba k t 10:12, 14 lie\.Vl~ uculn Ve-l'"llllllllM "' vni. l'llt: 111 1 1 ...,,.._ ,,.., Anle81.Q3 <:amt C 0 torious Scott Schweitzer of K•19111 '' l 1111"' Golden Weit College's cross narrow the lead to 6-6 at .......,.., ._ .&.a t Burbank. ""' c1-i. ,.. 0r ..... ,, e:t -. country team opeaed the halftime and tied uic game a Other Westminster runner• F T h F -... Southern C 1 I I f o r n J a Con-7-7 after three periom. \'ith in the top 20 were Dave MiUer ace oug oes .. ,.,. ''°" •u•u• !e .. nce ,..... Friday with a UCI hosts Fullerton Jun ior (12th, 10:41), Jeff Young Gi NM Grw1 ~ ~·~ "'~ 17-43victoryoverLACConthe;lp;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;. .. ;;;;; ...... ., (15th; 10:5$) and Mike Braun-1"ect11c1 1 • 14 1 loaen' course to bigblight area 1tein (20th, 11 :03}. ::=-c,'!!:;1"" ! : ~ : junior college action. s.... F.nl will Met Miiie The latter was given 20th OMnge Coast and Golden t; and Santa Ana whipped Mt. u Quint• .. 1 12 • In Mission Confereace ac- aheld of teamm1t.e Richard West collq:es face 1tiff water SAC, 12-5. ~~-: : ; ~ lion, Saddleback ran its ~rd ,,__ L A. •-'-fMll ,.S"t· Hoy, also timed in ll:OS for polo competition Tue 1 d • Y Goiden West dropped an 11-1 "1""'.,.' '-to 2-1 with a 2W3 victory over .., ,_., llltM .. 7:lt0 P.M. 21st place. after both turaed in im-decision to LBCC in the 1"1e1tiu ~rl!';!'T...:.. visiting Claffey. Orange Coast n. ecc-'" 11 s..... Ferd'• Westminster w11 second pressive performances i n "'"'le.I "' u Gv1n11 11 1e11e Jogged a 24-31 qi~ph over behind Upland in the frost-tournament competiUon Satur· Northern CaJUomi• tourney .~:i.•:..,.m1i.. •' G•,.., Gl'O'I• Mira Costa at Oceu.side. ...., ''·''-.....,... &MMat, aoph resuJta as Bob Mendoza. day. Saturday. With the Rustler1 s.n11111 it H-1~ ,.......,_> Terry McKeon ~ the wWcll ._ WI! .. w...i.ter of the Lions finished second OCC Jaunche1 South Coast due to meet the Vikl•p 1gain 114._ er~' ~Amr ... 111 Golden West victory, clocking HJtlt ~ I• s..My. n.. individually in 11:07. Conference play Tueaday at Tuesday, Hennstad used hit Genlllt c;,..... 18:57.5, five secondJ off the 1-. ,...,.., will ,_Mt tM IUlllS AMERICA'S GREATEST HARDWARE STORES GRAND OPENING oc1oa1R 22 EVERYTHING TO BUILD ANYTHING Hnntlngton S.ach dropped it! opening round contest t-.--Th1i!iiliy .. Rlo<bo-Aiamltoo but then. went on to upture the consolation title with 1 M squeaker over crosstown rival Edison. Marina's Dave Lockman Santa An.a (3:30) ind Golden second itrin& during the first course record. established an outright posi· West hosts tough Long B<ach hall of lht ......,tu Jim Moo" led OCC to Its ....... ,. ,.. wl-. ,,,. CON VEN I ENT CREDIT .. ...__as -the _c. •••• at-Le1gue!1 City Colle--(J), -------~~· 'I' R win with • first: place time of lw .. •tt••••c• wlll M Ti•· ~ =~ .-1ber<Sil1Cwu I A"IJ!CC"-J.-8f8-omp -....,,., -. Bawa~= no.,•= b6t individuaJ perfonner Fri-Coach Jack Fullerton'• OCC ":<» cu r-r1c111 1uu,:,i1eu .., M-. a.ti. Mlli.r, -,.-, day in Ille Vikings' dual meet •ggre11Uon fmiahed leCOnd to lead at the baH. · fourth (Z4:20). John Walter win over Santa Ana. Fullerton JC bl the 25th an-Golden West then acorid The Newport Harbor -Tan was fifth (24:27) and Harry C-. a..w hf, Jeff --. Lockman set a new Marira nual Souther. c •Ii f 0 r n I a teven ti.mes in the third ran their Nuon'• record to 6-2 Noonu was &lxtb (2.f :SS). .-1 t..ry-Wtti. wtiy lhll't Foothill edged RID ch 0 Alamjtos fqr third place. course reoord of t :S3 in Jnvilatioaal wbi~ coach Tom quarter, but·LBOC maintained Saturday night with a t-1 win In the Saddleback victory, .... .t YM.,... ,_.., ..,. defeating slick Santa Ana jun-Hennstad'• Golden west crew a 1-7 advantage ud then over the Long Beach Wileon the Gauchos' Steve Patterson • t. S... Fer4 _. .., llele. ior John Genet. The litter wu placed teVentb in the tough outacored the Rustlen, three Bruina in • w1ttr polo game took incHvidual boon with 1 The Eagles, who won the.ir own tourney for the firllt time after llkinl runnerup bonon twice in the put four yurs, hiGto maM up deficits 1t the conclii!iOn of each of the nnt- three period! as Garden GroVe led S-t after one stanu, 4-3 at Ille· halt llld · H lfttr tbreo poriodl. clocked in 10:05. Northem California tourney at to one, in the final period. pllyed in the IORts'_J)O(IJ. time of 23 :0I. The lffllr -right down to tbe wire with the lead changing hands three time1 in the fourth period b e f o r e Estanci1 finllly pulled the win out of the fire. Estanci1 had earned the right to face the Argonauts in the ftnl.ls after 1n earlier path of dtltruction in its own pool which Included wins over Bola Grande (14-3), Sonora (!._,) lad Rancho Alamllos (II).$). Garden Grove reached the cbampiomhlp g • m e by recording e a r I i e r victories a 1 a JD It Wsuninster, El Dorado and Foothill. Dan Kent and Randy Blal· lerman ahlred high honort for Estancia in the E 1 1 t e 1 ' decision over Garden Grove with two gnats each. Huntington tot to the oon- IOl1Uon playoff by virtut of 5- 1 and U-7 verdicts over Marina and Bolsa Grande llW lht operung Joa (6-2) to Rancho Alamitos. Edison, meanwhile, clubbed Wutminlter and then had to ao into two overtimes before dumping Troy in i t s quortA!r!inol I n d oemifinal comolltion. matches. Pro Grid Sta1:1dings Marina's Bob Br I ck n er Foothlll. OCC bolted the SoCal (fourth, 10: 13), Bob PhilliP. event. _(filth. l_!: ill, Ken ~ariyn Orange Coast'• P I r 1 t e s (sii.1b. 10: 17 L •nd Preston PRtrteci Satunlf!y.'..1 COl!IJ>etitioo Campbell (ninth, 10:«) 1lso with 1 4-31etback to Fullerton accounted for apots in the top whell the H0111ets' Bill Heard 10. slammed In a goal In the cJos. · -HilnUngton "Be1dl'• ·oile!'I" ~ lq"201Mmds W-=play. ••• bogJed ail: of the fint .even After OCC dumped Slllta I spots in their dual with Jn. An.I, M, the Pirattl fell •pia ~ vading Westem. to Fullerton 7-4, in the cbam- The Oilers' John Mullins pionshlp I~· won the varsity race in 10:35 In the three lll11el the with teammate Dan Babin in Pirates' John Blauer t'.iliect third at 10:39. five goals with Tom Warnecke The fourth through seventh ietUng three and Bart Hinesly placers -all from HunUngton added two. John Ree1. Chris -were Joe Wheeler (10:5$), Gammo•, Paul Ibbotson. Ran· M.arc Mitchell (11 :03), Mai:k dy King and Bill DeHuff each Hill (11:07) and Rob McNair scored o•e. {11:15). The Plr1tes' freshman Coleman (10:20) garnered goalie. Bill Ri~ a product of individual honon ln the Huntington Belich Hi I h , Westminster-Newport du a 1 played an outstanding game at hookup, but Newport'• John goalie , blocking six straight Holoomb (10:21), Rick Flem-penalty throws, four in the ing (10:23 ), Dave Cr o 11 fi rst Fullerton game and two (10:43), Denny Cline (10:45) in the second. and Craig Clark (10:47 ) were .In other games, Sa11ta Ana the next five to cross the pounded Chaffey, 14·5: Mt. finish line. San Antonio edged Cerritos, 8- Collegiate Grid Scores ""' use 4S, °'"°" s11te u °'"WI •· W1tlllnQlan 511lt 1J l"urM 2'. s11ntor<1 1• Wlll'l~IOfl 5'1, ~·"" 1 c11 51111 (L""ll 1e1chl 7 kn Jott llllt J '"'"° llllt u , lclfhll u Fretno Slllt 3•, Pec:l!lc U Ctl l'olJ IPomon•) 17. Ct! 1!111 (LAI 1 ill! 0'"'9 Sl1lt 31, ll 'l'U 11 SOUTHW'IST Ttut 20. UCL.A U .. T11111 Ttdl 6J. UC i.lnl1 l1rblr1 ltk t H. C1Ul'Oml• t Arkel'INI •J, TCU H Arll•l'INI St. :u. cn1"1 1 Tt~ts Ct:I l"llO) 21, Nt• Ml.tlCI It. u Norlll TtQI S!. 37, Dt•k• lS MIDWEST Notre O•me tt. Mlchllll'I St. t uunol1 ,1. S•rlCllN • Wiii Vlf'llnl Ii. tl'ldllllf 11 Mkhlle11 1'-Te1et .U.M 11 SMU tl. Hlltlhwt1ltn1 2' Ohll $1. ~. 01111• lO W!~lrl :it. I'-St. 16 Nltlr19lr.1 :u. M!nnt10l1 10 -'-kM ~ Mlueurl .O. Oiillhonu St. :IO ........ °""*"-TlllN n . Me""'"fl St. n CM Wins .. ltlmor• -· ..... W \. T I'd ...... 01' 01.,..... :Ill. LOllltvlllo 11 t I I ,Ml ,_. "' S Wffll<l'I Mk1'11t1n n. 8owtl ... GIWll 1 t t Ml .. • .:•AM• "· N.w Me•ke 1s Costa Mesa's Muatanp Sot .... '!'"Irk Jtll 1 t 1 .m M " w.'""' s1. 11, Cotor• .. 111 fl I -'fort t ol •r.• I t e .1» D .. Mlt m! !Olli.) ... HDMhlr" Ullrl61t a Vf::-gol Cl OU ro.&Ae 1 ' • .m .., 11 • ,. .. '1. °" .. v. , Beal Saturday In pllint: up an ~ ~ ~~ ·"1 ., .., M••ll>tll s1, xlX1:t tOlllel '' 11·5 victory over visiting ·-· c...,.,.. J 1 • .w 11 •2 Temlllll 11. "''°" u. ' Lakewood i n water palo. CAMlnllltt 1 I • ..m ., " a.toll "'41111 w. \'Ml s 801 M-·-Mi" l'llMWl!t 1 , t ... n JI =~~1·,~'='u!ctw•tts u \;.Ailll:ney (3), ae • ....,. ........ '°""'" '" u~111t1 u O'Brien (2) and Ron Mi!iolek .,.,,..... I •• ,. ,, • VI"-"• ,., Dl11_ .. JI I) I --· f ~Te w......., c1rr 1 1 ' .m 11 n H1,...1r<1 Jt, 1tu11;1eu ' ( I !tO eo..V1~ or coa.... r- Oltll'lltl • ' 1 ·"°° " 11 .,.. •11and zsj M.11111 ·• ry Bowen'• Mesans. $111 01-I t 1 .a JI IO """'"' ___ .... _U ... ;;"'ii"i;1;i''i;'iio·-----------.. 1 ..,._,~ ll _ -::rr~::;"::··; "hy It Pays to Know It, Lllllt J I I M J 17 .SI W•IMlllll I 2 • .JD ., ,, BOB PALEY "-"'"* 01111" • J ... at .. "'""'"'" • t •.om• n cen.t DWll6M Dttr!llt t • • 1• n t c..... t • • 1.a ..,. 21 M....,_.• 1 I e .MJ 11 » o-•n 11tM1•1• --IAA-• Jtl l, .. fln 11111 •r....m. 1 1 I Ml • .. 4"11111 t I I Ml JJ M M•Orl•nt 111~17.ll -·-C1evll..rr u .... "'*"""' , _.,.. .. OlklMll I) -----~ ,., Ntw "'"" JflfJ " llltlmtrl ........ •• \.•I• JO. Cl!lr.""°'" 1) 0-. ,., KM11et Cll'I' I) 0-11• U, Ml""""91a 11 ..... ~ ,,, S.11 Dtttll •• A~ !I, ... l'l'llldecll'» w-.i.-... ». l'Mllfl"Me " .... °'*"' 1'-"'-'l'"lf'l Gllflh 11 ...,., -I(,.... -- ..., II ...., ,.,, " .. • wn, ... .......... efM ... •M• ., ....... l ... ~'t .... ...... ..... .,, .. , ...... ,..., .. . ......................... _,. ..,., ............ 1 ...... ... ............ ., ............ .. ...... 1•111111 ... ,., .. .... , ................ ... ... •• "'*• ....... ......... ,.,.,.. ,...... ....... , ... . --hi Wf ............. . """' ....... ic. .,, ............ .. .-. .............. ,.. ...... . ........................... ... .... T•'I flM Ill• • 474 L '"' ..... c:... 111 ................. . SA l'E '5 to 'B! SKI PARKAS YOUR CHOICE 88 '3311a'1SJim.U-....._ ,.,._ mllrtO " n.a.. ,...., r--. NM ''a "T' .. Wt. Two.- . ---· -!'o& ""'"-11,11.LadXL. '30M .. •~ 8-Stripe Pnb O .... d 1' el.,.._ Tllo.., ..... ,.._ TW ~ podilll: Mii tilt tk:t· ·---·-· _,....,_, S,N.LndXL. 130Y-'1Wmd,....,P..U . n... ....... .... .....rd... I I I 'nret--way tclGVU· ------· .... -. llolf ........... ~L. '30W-'1R-.Slripel'Mla W'....., .,-.a. NimlB b • ._ ....., tllll:r wttl IUIP' ror hid· ....... --·--'""7.-1,11,L. 5.41'.S .,, '15.99Y .. llo'oNy._Sti ..... e 1299 NJ(-.-' .,,.little .... > • t ,...., ..................... ..., ...... ~ ..... . A.,...._ Ms! SkltwtllaAJ ' u p.a. -.............. _,, .,... 3999 ..... .,._.., 7 ................ ..... ................... ..... .... L-~WSld-... $3 5 W* ~ ...,. ,.,._,_ P'e1m pedlled. ...... ,.,.., Jillllll: ••••••••••• Nllt•ls.rt...,.. ..... ,,,.. Sears -----.... ·-·-· ----..... ....... _ . ..,., --..-.-----..... ------~ .............................. _,....._ ........... ----· -......... , -·--------___ ,__. -·.-n.-_ .. ___ _ ............ • Alic.OU.O,,t Soaro Con-I Cred.lt Plan.1 ____ , -------· ---..---"-' ~ .. °"'""" ~,J ..... ~.... ... ________________________________ ..iJ'~--------------------------~~~-~~---------~ 1 , r DICK 'llACY TUMBLEWEEDS MUTI AND JEfF B!JT. T~AT5 W!iY1\lERES A 'WOMENS LIB&RATION MOll!iMENT- JUDGE PARKER WM'< CAN'T'IW JUST 51\'f." l'M GOING- OOFFALO HUNTit-.11.' UK< i:Y!'RYONE ~LSE? YOU~ MUSl!lrAND' HAS REGAINED' CONSOOUS· J4E55 .UW Y«Jtlll' LIKE TO 'SEE YOU ! PERKINS By_ ~liester Gould By Harold Le Don: \ J 1, f i :.-. I ~I • I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R .• : POWER I ACROSS l Tltorough· f11re S Corpu l,nc t 'Fabric 14 Sea t ag: It 15 Par! 111 "Made ·--··". 2 word.s 17 Cuaranlres of future tour I 1ppearancrs: 2 wo"rds 19 Kind of mining 20 Btlore lhr lirnr that 21 Wisdom: 2 words 23 Crushrd in· 25 Dry clranrr's concrrn 2" Hraiing organs 28 Offtr I thtt al J2. Prictd loo hi;hly 37 Particular flavor 38 514 yards 39 Tarrit s 41 Noun surlix 42 Chrmical com pounds 45 Turncoats 48 Road sign 50 Walktd 51 Sh11wlng mtn!ilf 11ttlnt ss 54 Units of ll'IOYlf rllm 58 Stalt ol txciltd inttrest b2 Scort in bowling: b3 Pi9tail li4 Exlri on ~ car: 2 words 61i lfJll Nobel prlzt winner 67 Motion~ Comb. form &B Unusual 10 Dtvit e for ptrson: rt ct Iv Ing Slang radio WilYtS 119 Numtriti l 11 Rtvolvt ~rtf it lZ Egypllan 70 'Vamoose 1" 9oddtss 71 Rhodt Island 13 Back of the nee k 00¥.'N 18 M1kr lht r yes watery 22 Flood l K•nd of conlro! riddle dtvic t 2 Ftmil lt pray -24 Uninttresli"'il Ing li9ure 27 Cook book ) Sanla --·-lnslrutlion 4 Srt at 29 Crr rdy librrty JO Plnr fruit 5 To anq -·· 31 Work units (, Yrarn 32 Mouthward 7 Moro, R ~y. 33 Sotto --- ti al 34 Arrangr lilm 8 llakr to fl! !hr inloxlc1ltd story 9 Tlll'l id 35 Dutch prrsons commune 10/5/70 36 Hol low lf!adr by prrssurr 40 Esnr or hr lot ~3 Filr rr a prrs on or subirct 44 lndonrs lan island 46 Furzr 47 Adjusting drvicr 49 Haft pad 52 Perils Sl Subjttl 55 Staitr 5" Cooft d 57 Tra tup rradrrs 58 T ilf 59 Btsldts bO Famrd cartoonist bl Zola novt l b5 Dtc1y MISS PEACH ~,~~ F.-...,........7 STEVE ROPER ~-----.L.,Taio WIU.1'tY A~O IN A SIML.L Pl.AH ~ PEANUTS A MP eE fl!>ll'f Fa! nE Bn(ES AT l1fE. FRST QlEOCf'OlrlT- ... --.,. -1 ;d~ * -:·"..· . .:·_ .. _ .......... __ Ll'L AINEI MOON MUWNS lllE'¥ llOT1I WOl'l<IN<1 I ,ANI> WO'RE NOT OUT OfiHE~Y!OT! _! • By John Miies ly Mel By Saundtl'5 and Overgard lilr ,_ !rA>!f'T 711"11' tJFF'frT Mt> - /Siii EAllN£5T~IWT1f-l.J By Charles M. Schulz sl\I. ... 8ElT!R tQj RlR "ES(5 ! Monday, Octobtr !5, 1970 ., ' By Roger Bollen Tltl STIANGf WotlD • MR.MUM DENNIS THE MENACE I t , I r u. 1' ~ H I' ~"" ............................ "r"'I ....................................................... ~ ........ ~~~ ... ~ ... ..,, .... ,..,..,..,~.,....,...,.,,.,......,.,.,...~_::-::--~::-~~--:::::::::::::::::-,,:::::::-:::::-•~=-:-::::::::::...;_~-=--· -~·~~ r Jl-OAILY-flL,Q M-. ·O,t-~. 1970 • ~ 'AlllBb'lfOil liLE HOUSES FOR SAl:E 'HOUSES fOlt.SAlli HOUSES l'OR$Atl HOUSES FOii SALE HOUSES "Olt SALE HOUSES l'Olt SALE HOUSES fOR SAtl HOUSES l'OR SAll • • : ' I 1000· -I'll lODI Gwrol .' .. · :_IOIO--Genetol . .. . :_ l•Q•-•I• · ~ · · IODI ·chnoral 1000-ol. ICIGO Caoto -· 1100 Conn• tleJ tMr 1250 :*'. '* -*'" '*. -*"'-* • TAYLOR • 26 Lindo 'hie Drive l~VINE TER~CE , ,. ·Corp : owned. 5 Br. 5 bath home lacing Har- NEW 4 BR, 2:l4 BA, WU rm. I REMODELED Home + luxurious w/w &bag crpt thN-out,cuatomctrsi..Ctioic. ta.r:ae.._brand new apt. Good. C:t.t, Br Owner 5.5T.J498. -.income. ttrrWC .lln&nc~. By-Ownar. -17.3-.6-9..Q.f,_, COLLEGE Pk. 3 BR, l'll ;<3-'19ij3. BA. Owntt. 282 Prin«!on l========'I =°'=·=$29=·""=· ~==·==I Hunt l"llon BHclt 14CIO • 111D Gre1l view of bay and ocean! Lovely pool .J>dr Ialand. Jacuzzi 8r. aauna. Comp. furn. surrouoded by lge patio & 4 bedroom &Jam. for immed.-occup. W/doclc $200,000 B'( Owno•. Iow_IJ>_ M,.. rm. home. Good financing. · ~ $1·1,500 -=-1-·Exce11ent ittm& & loans 'D~;, available Verde 3 lct BR'a, tam nn. i ''HAPPY HOME"I ' -'"' . .............-.,.._ shag cpta. dab.war, I01l FARM STYLE HOME & GUEST I: r· I I I"'" · · lislin · , I . T CALL: BILt~RUNDY, REA~TOR wa"' un•. back y!ll'd "''°· ~_..,~,.,nu. Jagc.h_byjy_re_s ... 1 __ • _N_.E_AR HUNTINGTON STATE BEACH , , B<. "' o see =new I '" rvm~ er· . ·ID DOwr ·Di. ·Suite 1 N.1, 642-4620 •" ga..i.n pal ott ""''" 1( lrr11 l•..,aiO _ !l.Uli · _Sp.au. BR'11om,,,.~o.Jiv..rm.o•erloou_. • ' ' . ...BR..s.e. 1hl .. mal buy....;Io I.JI""' ~-_ ~-!+·-·Q=u• ·~unH> ... ..-bY' -A--r--D'rDR-'-"0 ... -'-l"''•greai.patio_wl lall..frees. . _$54,900 -G I -' -~"'" o,.n ""~ & -. f -. .. !;. I' ,_ .. I ,. .. ,. " c : t._ ) .. l'- i" I ~ e .. . ' .. • • • . ·. '• ' I " -' l--': {' i~ I -' l . • • • ,,. f ~ 1: ~ •t ~· •• ,. ( ~ ... :. ,. •• • • • • • • •• • Fr';k..,a." A.yres &: Son. M ;;J DC .V • ener1 r. 100I Genira"I -. Mon, l·S, 1847 )owa St, Catnpletely modemtz&t""Ttn - HOME FO R ·UNO.ER WESLEY ··N.''t.Ai:.~~ .. ~C>.: «ealton 1 .;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;l ~~~i:ic ,,.,_,.,,, 3 BR+ ~J.~:h:~-~~~ ;~; The Ranch by Ayres Tb.Ill family nwned con· structlcin company has bttft building homes for Southern ca.Iifornlaru tdnc< 1905. The Ra11_ch by_Ayres N~stled among orani::e groves " 100 year old eucalyptus tree.s. The.Ranch by Ayres Green belt and a park. J{appy childrl"n and con- ttnted parents. The Ranch by Ayres '\Jnt N bas been open. ed for iiale for 4 wCt"ks. . Of the 60 homes in this Unit already 22 of them bave~d. The Rancll:Jry Ayres Some of tM homes In unit IV· will be ready .for occupancy just be- fore ChrlsbnaL The rest of them will be occupied by the end of Jan., 1971. The Ranch by Ayres Th4!! wise home buyer reserves his nev.· home eal'ly in the construe· tion stage, Tlie Randi bfAJfis During construction )'.ou may· order construction chanR;ts-to meet your individual family needs. The Ranch by Ayres Frtt decorator· sorvice by the renowned Jan Adarru; cf Niguel Inter- iors. The Ranch by Ayres .... Plan 2": ta. Pa1ma · - :t bedrooms, 2-baths. family r oom 1700 sq. ft. • $30,440 The Ranch by Ayres Plan 3 • l\lonterrey from 3 to 'J bedrooms from 2 to 4 baths (your option 1 · 3000 sq. ft. • $40.850 The Ranch by Ayres · Plan 4 • Granada "4 Bedrooms, 2~ baths.· sepe..ratt rumpus room with wet bar and fireplace l\Vov.,!) 3· Car garage 2500 liq. ft •• $37,440 -The Ranch by Ayres Plan 31 -San 1\1.lgul'l 4. Bedrms. 3 baths dining room 2350 Ml· ft • $33,200 The Ranch by Ayres Coccrete driveways. ce- dar 1>hake roofs. car· peU, rear lot line \\'ood fenct, ash cabinets with ma;netic catches. stain· less 11teel sink. cheerful fireplaces, etc .• etc., ('tc. The Ranch by Ayres GI financing f:vou hf.I· tn use it no"'" lhcre might. not be another war). FHA FiNl11cing CcrJ\~ntlonal financing with 10% down and no 2nd trust deed. (\Ve even •c:ttPL cash 1 l 2111 san 'Joaquln Hill• Rood PERFECTION! Sunsh"1ne d•n 2 "'•" 41 i..n •m '"'''e" ''"' hudwood $36 000 NEWPORT CENTER • ....,10 Finest view in Din' nn, :tn°t I. :.ear pa~ floors, coiy brick fireplace, I ; * · * . * • ~ -*-llarbor area s ' • I (rear w/firt. pit). $46,fm. ar,tique decor. Sep&ralll r .. pec1a 60-1364 guest facility that's cozy & Includes 3 full baths (sunken tµb in master ·p•~·-• l,.~1,?hom"" , unique. Huie ,crounds with b dr ) f I d . · fam1·1y room '"" ..... ....., 3 Bfdroom, 2 bath home with 3 BR. 1-ba. Screened 1•-• •-e oom orma mmg room, 1000 ·in exclusiw lfilme' Tomi-. .,_ h h room to roam . ....., ... _.. with wet bar & fireplace, aU bltns, ba_s.i~ car· ~-•Mr•I 1000 Gener.II .on Ba"yado,.. ~-mi-........ rovered encloaed patio, Bia; pattO, near SC•MD. c urc · tion, Don't hesitate to call I d ''"" ..... $19,000Gov'tJoancanbeas-library, oo c ul-de-1ac. 'I'' -"""" peting, 3 car garage, concre e r1veway,. !;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,J ·· 4 Bedroom1. 4·baths· s21 :m B Owner MG-3617 ·~ • ~ shake roof. and clean ocean air for yourJam• -BRING YOUR ·4;; View billiard sumed by anyane. Payments · Y ' · FOREST l -OLSON ily's health. · --; '.-ON£: ACR~ ~rofessiDnhl ~;~l'. ~~:.3iu~;~:b for every~· Newport B9ach 1200 , 0c BATlilNG SUIT!l ~--... ,_,. . .. . _ . ·"'"""'' qu'l'tf"' 524 500 lmmedl•ate . cup,ancy '!"" onjoy tltl• be•4Hful ,lfo,.•;·,.ttd P.Jential with • i..,.ge goorit><J kitcb<n ' wrought-ir6n enclosed heat..: •djoinlng c.ttifmrii:ial PtoP'.' _ --Si.80.000 · NEWPORT BEACH Inc. Realtol'!I 19131 BroQkhurst Aw. HuntinJ!on Beach (Somt Mod•ll ) ed p!'.IQI. Large patio~ lawn erty, best·cU all the home 15 ~for Y.OUr other ou.tdooc..actiY· an lpunacµJaie, charm.Wg, HA.Ra~ Nowport et 4 cf the beJt 4-bedroom, tam. ily rm home from a bargain fixer-upper -to a spacicus groundit Ir. home or one of Spanish Grandeur. F o r appt's to see these & others OLE'I AUTHENTIC SPANISH HACIENDA' Nestled on nearly -% acres with cool red tile roof, arch· ed entry and priYale ceram- ic tile court. Huge 1800 Ml· ft. rancher witb 3 beodl'QOms, 2 bathl and 12 inch tbick wall1. fANTASflC $27,900 FULL PRICE • YA or FHA & Conventional Financing RANCHO ·LA CUESTA ities -all overlooked by custom cottage. Yoo'U have WIYE • SAVING kitchen & 8. lowly home tountry at. family room. Immaculatt 2 mospbere,&nd 'a tolid,,land story home on quiet CUL. invesimi::nt · too • all f or AYRES-HOMES SINCE 1905 , MODE LS AT BROOKHURST & ATLANTA HUNTINGTON ·BEACH - 968C2929 e 968-13387 .I 1 >,.M. lo 7 P.M. OE.SAC in Newport f:leach. 'SSS:.950: .. · ' Realtors. ''Our 25th Year 4 large bedrooms & 3 baths. ~st of all, • ,only $48.000. Coles worthy • CG!TS I!" "the Harbor A!'ea'; WA!.LACE , ..., ... · !!!6!!!·73!!!-4!!!4!!!0;,.0!!!!!!!!!!!! REALTORS 1 ~ call: . $21,• Jean Smnh, Realtor General Open Daily 328 Aliso Newport Heights corner of Beacon 1 short block from Cliff Dr. MODLE HOME - CONDmON ! Bt>autilull:Y done ·~nd only ).1 monthli ""'""·A roomy 2 bed. room, den .and dinlrlg room home on aii elevated corner lot in Nrwport Beach, Oniy •$43,50'.t lincludi.Qg the ~-land). with outstanding terms. Call 613-8550. 'O TH£R£AL '"-f.STATi~RS Comfort .. Cherm Coty .r..comf!'lrtable three W. rms, lwo · bath h o m e on HARDWOOD FLOORS whfi "ltrgc diri/tm, BIN kit. and bni.kfaat a~ Covered pa. tlo • Dbl. pnt~ . ~ land. scfapM : assorted fruit tne!. Localed on TWO FUU.. SIZ. ED L 0 T S • EASTSIOE COSTA MESA. Priced to sell at only $37,500 • NO FlN· ANCE PROBLEMS, M. M. LaBorde, Rltr. 641)..()[)55 Eves: 642-7438 ZERO DOWN! NO Gl~MICKS Seller will i>aY all costs for any vet. 3 large bedrooms. 2 full ~t~, huge 1rte cover. ed l~t. prime area. large covered patio. $321500 full priCe. Call today, 546-8640 2629 Harbor, C.M. BIG LAND· GIANT SHADE TREES 4 Bel~. 2 bath ~·amlly Room with Fireplace Plush carpets and drapes Clean as a Whistle $27 .~ All Terms .Walker & Lee Realtors 646-3255 _ _,5,..·46~.4)41-' 675-3000 1000 '&Co. no down pa.yment ,. our Baycrest Repl"l'sentatiVe Walker & Lee Ideal fimily home :ilt--choice •I J ~ l.l11Ho1'> • Nor1h Costa Mesa·neighboi-11::::1:::1:::1:::1:::1:::1=:;:== hood, Massive "Palos Verdeli Stone. FIREPLACE, larriily ARE YOU room. and .c arpeting l,OOKING FOR . .' .. · hroughout! You can '!_ssume A_~uJtQrn.__j_jlR. oome_.on a sub.)e<:t lo 514 annual per. large lot where you oWn the centage rate VA Loan at Janel in Newport Beach? $204/mo. Including taxes and we;Ye got Jr & wilh a 5'h%· "1nsannce. N0 Vlt eligibi!Hy a~!!uh'iable i nsur&.nct! IOilfll ·(Open E.veningsl -BEACH DUPLEX The ~u!llber Jo call for alJ, You can buy ttils niee home I :1::::1:::1:::1:::1:::1:== real estate. needs. · even ii you don't have a VA * 3 RENTALS* THE' PEREECT· HOME eligibility. 3 Blt, huge trees, In N'pt. Beach, ~ blk. to -For some JucSy family wbo onJ,y 2 b!ks to sbopp'g. ~ ocean! $375 Monthly income '8.Qpreelatei c,Ustom built, porturrit)I tor the investment • offered for $31,000 • you "quaJity construct. Sho9t'S like buyer. own the land! • model.' BR. 3 Ba., focmru N1'chols Real Estate MORGAN REAL TY n.ru'°"' 7682 Edinger 8424455 or 540-514D NOT BRANO NEW BEACH -$19,950 din, rm; plus fam. rm. w/ 67~2 675--6459 wet bar .. Island kitch. plus 546-9511 , """"'"""""""""'""'""'""''\Not new, but only S yrs, hrl:cfst. rm Price only $89,500 PLUSH DOUBLE DELUXE young. Fantastic value nestl. • .yoo own the land. Mobile Home. Furnished, ed among 2-story homes val. 675-300o OPEN EVES, ON the BA y FR 0 NT ued at $35,COJ. 3 BR's, 2 tuU 2407 E. ·CO&!'lt·Hwy. Sl< ~50 B ._7 baths. Gourmet klt. with Jc.L , ,,. . twn; pm. . _,Opposite MacArthur Blvd. 673-8152, 67>-3271. est builtlns, Cloud soft car- ~II\\ ,\ Ill 11 ·11 Ill.II.I \ l\1 . ! \ ' . 4 ,Miles to ocean, absentee oWher must sell. Lovely l bedroqm, 2 bath home with a" largC patio -w/bfln BBQ"."" .· Es ..., • pets, Just take over existing ~ tat"-'JaJo,_.B:::l:;Yo;.lhoo•:.:<'°•:c• ===:<:w._,,,,, loan with paym'"ts much ~1 · clieaper lfilln----r'eril:-Better (Oceanfront) Charming 2 hr, lge living rm, hurry! Call (714) 967·5585. """· Pvt "'"c"'•· "· FOREST L OLSON Choice Newport Beach loca- tion. Large corner lot with modern 3 bedroom, 2 bath home In beautiful condition. A fanta.3tlc value at ~.500.._ can 545-8424 • $34,950. 642-1005 Unlvenitv Park 1237 Tnc, Realtoi'z ";;;;;;;;,;;:::;=:;;;::;;;;;;;;;;; f 19131 Brookhunt Ave, • Hy.ntington Beach SEE US'.-.- For a fine selection of homes offered for sale in Unlvm;ity Park Ir. Turtle Rock • Per· haps we have the right one for YOU? HANDYMAN SPECIAL ON 200' Lal' Corner lot with room for a DIRTY MESS boat or trailer. Walk ·lo all -c-!10\i"i 1 I' I\ d. Cute 3 bedrm rancher-with just a little polish & paint & what a value _ featuring Cri>ts & d1·pi; thruout, rear -""'"""'· s21.950, ---• -·IN .. HALECIEst _ required. A .Beautiful. Bar· $65,000,. . , .. ~ 2629 Harbor, c .M. W•·"'a"1'k~e."°°r -. ., lee ......_ .L .... Thi• on. • g At only S3SO mo. w/option to 2043 Westciill Dr. Colchvall,Bm*er 'buj·at. just S28.959. Strikin.& COATS .N"<I• paint and fixing. 3 -&. Large bedroom11, d i.n 1 n g room. 2 full baths. huge WAlLAC:E pool <.'Overed patio. ouer . . REALTORS $?1,0xJ. Htrndy ,,,.,,., para. ----,'I\ 1'11l!11r lit Western Bank Bldg. UniYenlty Park ...... P.a!Jo, 2 c,ar.g~i::. !m qt extras. Ideally located in the heart cf Huntington: Beach, $23,900 full price. VA no money down • make offer. Call HOMEFINDER REAL- TY 962-6677. 64fi.7nl ~ 0011~ tropic.al. yml SUJTODnding Open •t11 9:!)9 PM ------Inviting pool. Lush new Shag · carpet1 thruout 4 & Family, ,Y'tT+•fililill 833-0700 .644-2430 SA~ESP!OOPL~::ED Poot.-,.,,... Divorce Sale ~ •Gcr;i;m Single slory Pace5elter ~. · I ~MllJllal rm with beautifuJ. .Anthony Spacious 4 bedroom & fam- pool . Prime, c.entra1 11-Tesa ii)', J bath home on large Verde location near park corner Jot , ~ers say sell and school. Beautiful decor NOW! Subm it offers -·Ask· thruout & many line featur· ing .• , . "· A•klng $4!,.,.,, $42, 950 '"lllcs1f\ 'irb' ::Rrnli£ 546-5990 •. -- ~E ~-,..._ ..... , ~ ----··~ ~. -.. -. ...,, .... R•pair & $ave Hetf''s an opportunity for • 642.:Jnl Anytime hll.ndy man to assume a Jrg.1::1::::1:::1:::1:::1:::1:::1:::1:= 5\4 7., FHA LOAN WITI-1 NHds Fixing 1. 0 \Y A10NTHLY PA Y· Like pair11 yard v.'Ork & MENTS and enjoy lhis Sp.al'· "TLC". 5 Br·s, dining & fam. ious Three Bdrm, 1% balh ily room. Quiet back bay home with elect. BIN'!! and area. Offered at $34,750, but dining room. Large Dbl. Gar. your cffer n1ay buy i\. age . fenced yard. Listed al $25.000 and open to offers. SALESPEOPLE NEEDED SUBA11T LOW DOWN PAY • MENT • flexible terms. ~st Bliiff OPEN DAILY 11-5 2615 Bamboo, N.B. \'ou'IJ ht happy when you see lhi~ 5 bechiil, 3 bath home. :t~resh).y painted 'in & out. Best of financing available. Fa11I escrow!· Va cant! LAichenmyer Rlty Cail 646-39'2a . 'or 545-3483 1 Peninsula Point 2 Bednn cottage with fiN'· pl ace. Maintenance free ysrd, double garage, Near eX(.'1!\lent swimming. $38,950 673-366.1 673-lll86 eves. associated 9ROKERS-RE ALTORS 202~ W Bolboo 673·]66) M. M. LaBorde, Rltr. 646-0.'15:""1 E~: 646-45 79 ~-i::i-~~~~ D•na Harbor · Income Get In The Swim ' NE\V DUPLEX $44.950 1-;:;:;:;:::::::::::::: Largl', custcm: 2: betlrm, 2 -~544t6 ... 4141-""'· ...._ . (~n Eveni"l•I Local . Fourplex Deluxr uhifs wilh a:n income of 1555. a month. Needs a liltle paint" & care. 2629 Harbor, C.M. FOUR AND A BANQUET 'ROOM Divide and make six big bed. roams in this North Costa Me11a 2 story home. Seller is squeezed and must sell "VACANT", Make oiler on price sod terms lo • Doy 13:14101 Nighh FIREPLACE IN MASTER BR is only one of the specla.l features of this lovely 3 BR townhouse in Village III, the Stanlord Model. the localion Is great: Owner has been transferred. Ip $38,500. •red hill JUNIOR EXEC $47,950 ExclU1i:..e ~ith : Look at this beautiful t bed· nn. l ba. "Pf't'11tige" home featuring wall lo wa1I Crptg & custom drpg thruout. 3 car gara.gt, intercom speak· en: & phone jacks. 40' HEAT. ED &. FILTERED POOL. can be purchased VA with no money down or take ever S"-FHA loan with pymnts of S27l per mo. Call HOM£. REALTY FINDER REALTY 962-6677. N rt Univ, Park Center. Irvine Walker & Lee 11'4\'PD Realtors Cali Anytime ~ TOWNHOUSE •t zt90 Harbc!r Blvd. at Adami I ~~~~~~~~~~ 12 Bedroom 2 bath, existing F•lrview 545-9491 Open ·'til 9:00 PM I: 6% FHA loan, anyone qUal· REPOSSESSIONS Coron• dtl Mir 1250 ifies. $18.500 Full price. Elec 646-8811 bltn range &; even, forced Sparkling clean homes. some CORONA air heat, fireplace, ser9ice (1nytim1} newly painted & carpeted. 2. DEL MAR porch, crpts, drps, landsca~ .,,,.,.,...,..,. ....... .,,,..,,.,,,.,,I 3, 4 &: 5 bdrms, Some with ed, patio, immediate OCCU· cUTE AND cozy """''FHA-VA conv. '"""· SIX. PLEX .. noy with $1000 down, lrom $17,IKM) to $40,lm. ~ Eastside ruslic 2 bedroom Collins le Watu Inc. Six well kept 2 bedroom units and de n plus family room 8843 Adams Ave. 962--5523 on Bayside Dr., close lo ho'me on a big corner lot beach, only lo yeat1 new. \vith roorn for that boat or Coste Mt•• 1100 Built in kitchens -private trailer. Lots of wood panel-patios, and a tropical setting. Ing. large birch firepl:P , j .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ldeal for the owDer occupant. Cvt't aiie double car garage. QUALITY BUILT Call 673-8550. "There's much more. Please 2000 Sq. ft .. 4 bedroom, fam- call for showing 54S.23U. ily room, dining room. over- 1-o THEREAL \"'\. f.STATERS sized family kitchen with O THE REAL "-ESTATERS I' 1llJge Real EstJte Hl-4471 r::::J MMIDJ $19,500 4 BEDROOM Surrouncl~d by white plektt fence. Has carpets, drapes, modem built· ins and MORE. See to believe? Walker & Lee In I.his v.·ealhE'r -beat theji bath each anit. A home with heat & buy thi! sparkling an income, near new yachl WALK TO. pool home in ''Cambridge harbor . .Also 7 other l to 4 elec bltns, Located on quiet ;;;;;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;i;iiiiiii;iiii;iii; street near park and schools. MARVELOUS VIEW Owner moved and must sell. 2001 Bayside .Jr. Be au t. Shake rool, decorator block shake roof I-sty. l Br. 4 ba. ·v.il.IJ, sprinklers, greenhouse Reait01'1 7682 Edinger 8424455 or 54().5140 Esratl's". Really beautiful, 5CXl SAINT JOHNS fN'Shly redecorated & adult· rtealty Conipany unit bldg1. $30,950 to $69, . · See . 3.1iM'i J\.1alaga Drive, 3 Jarg~ bedrooms. 2 f u 11 vm NO DOWN · 2790 Harbor Blvd. al Adams The Ranch by Ayres ll;;;";;; ... ;;;";;;o;;;;"';;;";;;.";;;r ';;;p;;;";;; occupied. Asking only $34,950 DOVER SHORES oana Point. Bldr .. 642-4~. w/high rnA loan. f:qr lh( ~amily thy.t needs bt1ths, dining room, paradise and large redwood deck. waterfront home, xlnt 1rn1im· Jul!I reduced to $36.950. Cali ming beach. Newly redecor $175.000 SHOWN BY APPT. 540-llSl. Heritage Realtort. Bill Grundy. Realtor 4 Bedrm, 1% bath, Immacu- late thruoul, elec kit., beaut r:arptg .t drps, Ige cor Jot, close to everything, $28,500 847-8507 Eves: 96S-ll78 Peace and CJUiet and secun!y· The Randi by Ayres Salee offitt and f11r· nilhed models located at Santa Ana Freeway A Jeffrey R0&d. 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-4~ SALESPEOPLE NEEDED SPACE. F ive overslzed bed· D'ial·A·Rea· ltor . . in landscaping, covered Ian· & •• , .. 6 _ rooms, •fl;i baths. _ramily ai. A bargAin al S2.1.500. Low WILL SELL FHA TE.RMS _.._ room with cat.hed.ra.I celling. Call u" for bes1 buys in Har· dov.·n payment. Hurry on GI OR FHA HARBOR VIEW Decof11Jors delight • buy this ___ ..... Brealcfa11t room. Amp I e bor Highlands. Our service. this one. 546-S&IO West side Costa Mesa 3 bed· 4 BR., 2~ ha. Walnut pantled extra sharp resale with 3 -GE•R~11, s{>Rce lor a pool plus play proYides traiDCd homc·lind· rooms· freshly painted with f di ,_1 nd -~ 1 ••-ling and ---Jing ,·n am, rrn.: n. rm .... t' c. bedrooms and family room. """~~~~~~!!!"! yard. Active Bay View. tta • p1uvoern so Vl'nt. ,...--....... ,.... Anxious out of town owner? 1'hjoy • "'""" .. Ii. .... NEWPORT $145,000. . PEtE BARRm i;,, .. rom. H .. "'"" ,.,... 165 500 !leparate play yard. ConYen-675-3110 · ~ 642-1135 fenced yard perfect for child· ' ''"' •• ""°"" •nd i;hopping. HEIGHTS DUPLEX \!!!!!!!~~~"!!!~ ... , .R .. E"'A"'L"'T"'Y ........ · ........ 2 ... 5 .. 2 .. 00, 1---,==",.,"',.."°·'··.,.c.,..M-._ "" and ..... $21,500. Call -- m;z§li!:i Ju11t listed • hWT)'! FuU NEWPORT r.:= WILL SELL evenings and weekends, ' Co1&JN.M:Vn!Nj) Price sn 950 can 540 11s1 ~ bed. ea. c~s. rOom for . $'2J "SO GI OR FHA 67J.&568. ' 111 ••- Th Ra ch by A ' · · . ' trail<' tind'booJ, Newly de<· H""""'TS • Y w..,, •ldc t.,,. Mesa 3 bed· =-~-..,,...--...,.,.--1 8 0 yreS 11:::':'':'':'":"':::R':":':•"':·:::::::=1 orated uisKte ant'! out. Neari ~"""'' ,4 Bdr + Femily Rm . WestNy Income Homes GREAT VIEWI ll''~-HI, $29.500. Pho"" FIXER-UPPER room9 • frttshly painted wHh New Tri-Plex•s $57,500 Of harbor&: ocean.""· •plit DUMB de DUMB • DUMB~! Don't get caught by Sgt 'Fri. clay ateRlin& this near new 4 bedroom, 2 bath in .!'Port Udo" IJ"acl Walle IC beach and pari<. Only $.1850 cash + clogirc ro1t4 takea over GI loan, Hurry! '"'" Elegant PalO!': Verdes stone panellni and carpetin& in • -"'--.... [ ho 'th -... .. dally from 11 11m $21 700 ''"7171 to nupccc I n-•-m, + 1 n-•-m r•-I · h 1· · ..... rge, .._uo,., " mes wt lfJVCI home en R.-3 5100 ... '"'"'"°" ... ~ _ DnllVl1 oo:u • .,., .,.,p &Cf' 1n uge 1vmg rm., livina: room. Has vel')t I~ · " loca ~ · to·i pm . r rental -$240 per month in-4 Beflnns, Fami),y rm.: d!D. fenced )'81'd perfect for ChlJd.. ar income . t._.., in the fl Lot. 1dca.J for 4 apt. units. (~!'~t'Z ~~':;.~m:t~er l'OOlC -l°llJ'M; cltaning I< ing rm., En\:J'Y MIJ. bullt-ren and pets S21 500 Call Jlnest Er.l~e area o\ Costa m .ooo. 2501 Octan Blvd., nlte until 10:30 pm and 3 Bedmomhoon largt! I~~ tdeal patn1I,.-. -s22.SOO. Try 10% Int. No dcwn CJ. 540-lm e\.enlngs e n.d ~kmds, M2 "'BA· .:e turlng (Ill'? + B1R21' CdM. By app'1. only. h9d to go homt to a •larter mt', no ....,wn lo. 9iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;I down. -Call now. 646-Tltl Terbell 2955 Herbor -m.m., ootmen un Call: ~-- cokt dlnntt. but ii waa .Vett er low down •FH A. • ---::::::::::;-:;-::----1;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;12 BR rental units, Sff at Bill Grundy, Realtor worth It -"'~ ma.dt a LIDO WATERFRONT PENINSULA 2tm Tu.ltin Ave., cor Wood-. l&le!l APTS.·320 LIDO NORD AAYFRONT BACK BAY AREA land Pl.°' call 6424005· Bolboo Penlnsulo 13DO 1111 landl lly Ayres -r ·~-.....-"I -::...--__,..., . .. . . .. ~ . ~ . If ,... ''""' ttod thl• 64'2,.17.71 Anytime far you are either a i;tu-11•"""""""'"""""'""""""""'" dont of .,,,.,..~"'• o• • 6"'-LO &N prospectfvt home buyf'r, "/D llllli Come «l out •ltd e:llher 4 Bdr. + Family Rm. compl hnHtt us en this B«uitrul ho~. Msumc 6.-;, ad or b\t)' a home. aipr. kNl.n. 4 ~rooms. hur famUy rm, tlrt:place, built· In BBQ. Sprinkler systtm, The Rancll lly Ayres IJl.llM. er 1•51~. fl'.OOll ..... 1721! . T uboll 1'55...Hubor • NDW REDUCED TO S BR.-don, <in, nn., 4\i ba. , HOUSES FOR SALE 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;; $150,000-Xlnt Terms DOVER SHORES Approx. 1' ae'rr .••. $325,000 Spacious 4 l>Mnm, formal e OPEN DAILY 1 .. 5 e I' 6 ecautUul u.nitt. 6 car BRAND new .. Qu&lhy bit Shown .by ·.App'I., cnJy dining, family rm, priced 'TU aold! Assume 6'4% VA WESJ. BAY AVE. giu·1igts a.. utility room with .trom courtyard pool, pal'll':U. LIDO REALTY INC. under tnarktt. For appt: Joan. $148 Ptr mo. Jte4e<:w. Olanriing new 3 bdrm..-,ba. "' "· """''"" .. txcellenl "' lam nn. Wei ''"" """ • 337 v .. Lido 673-7300 Jean Smith, Realtor ' B•. W/W cpl>, ilrps_ Jm. Mtdllm'lnean ortyle; Block sv.immlna: beach, Unit& att to $unkt n !iv rm w/vaullt'd med, JIOSIHSlon! Onty $21,. from GeeJn A bay, Builder's ne"·ly tumiahed. <'f'llina. 4 hr. 2 ba + pwdr KING SIZE LOT 646-050. 1984 Fedmll Ave. home, 'top quallty. Bill Grundy, Realtor .room, P.tu1~r BR, liv rm. OOSf: m·octan. Build large·' ~~~~~~~2~5l~~~~I Call• :BPallllnH'd<ov~""", R. eS<b'elto2300r Bill Grundy, Reeftor 833 Dovtt Dr., N.B. 64246al dh nn & kltchtn .&I.I on 1 duplex wllh loW" Jlaraii:es. 1 • .... 83.l DoYtt Dr., NB 642-4620 Vif'w, $10$,900. Roy ~ .. \Van1,~ O"•ner w/fll'll!>l'l(:e. $29,SOO. !i/A ACRE, TUstin Are a, 2111 E, Coul. CdM 673-3211 ANY pey Is thee~ day ~o Rllr. 646 15SO. Open 03ily. ~rge W,lllJ1mson SIS.950. CoMldtr TDa. boat ./ HEATED POOL: rul\ an adt Oon'ITIUDER'S PARADISE ~ . . Realtor , or !?! F'or S9300 tq. 2 BR A Drn. $27,500 Ptind· de~ •. can loday. &!2-18 . lloe:._...s tin;ies-S bvck.s 67~•350 ~$.tSU Eves. 548;-0897-Wkd~-pa.la Only. 544676 btw S.T. MONEY IN . YOUR l'OCKE'rl Di&l ~11 A charre It . --· ·-. ' La·rwln Realty, Inc. 961-6911 anytime-. FOR SALE by owntr '1br, JS x 24 f~m lly rm. Cf'pts dtp«, COYl'.red patio, fhi lrt'er. UlOOO. A 1 1 u Jn e balance: of 6~ loan. 842-$l.34 aJt 5 Ir. wknds. BY 0\VNER -New hom4 $21,900, sm. down, f),lks. froorn ccean, 2 bdrm ... den, l\tlly carpettd " Draped, S3W296. ANY Dey ls the BEST da)' to run an ad! Doll ' t de.lay, .call todll)'. M2--5678 ilems with ease. use .Oiily PUot C\asslfll!d . ~2-a678 • ' • .. . ' ,· • , • . . . ' .. •.... , • • i • ' • .... MoMl1, Oct.bot 5, 1970 -------''-·•' DAILY ~LOT , If RENTl[I · ' HOUSIS FOR. SALi -RENTALS . RINTAL'S . . -RENTALS • . RINTAel • RINTAts RENTAU RINTAls ' J , Hvntl...,.. llNch l400 ·HOu111 l'Urw1.1l11d -U..rvml,,,... · Hou-IJllfumlihM ~ ,_llholl • , Apts; Fwnlllloot Ap11. """""'""" Ap!L Unlumllhid _ !;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;.,,."_-_po_rt_ ... _a._'_°"-_211111_ 0-01 • -Huntl...,.. ....., --!'!!'-.0.... -Huntl"!'!lll iMHh -~o Mt.. . 1100 -...... ~ch · s200 1_c_or_ ... _-•_• _Mo_• __ -,...., Apts. Unfurnllholl • 6210 W. Octantront -I ·Coort-.-~-M-... --tu.,.--tr-tr-.-.-1)1-5 3 .GR. 2 BA. tam rm~ -~ -------c&$ SPMCIY RMt•I• • P~i NEWPO~ ;.;1'; .f BR., 2~ BA. Stud» apt ~000-sq:ft~ ~513.!'.:1~~ :!' ~=r=·=~~~:-~11o.-":u, ~~1!!1i:: _;t;,. f,;/ui,,_,la ~1Jnno6a·-·• ~R:, Mi>SW-olt. ulll ~·~t~s£ ~~,%.,~ ~!~Jild.•i-- ----aider unfw:ni!llCd. Winter t BR kldt It peta ,,,;., $180 med. r-" $250lmo lit:. ... 1 Br unfum '120-sncls-ok-Blch 1 or 2 Br ·Alto 2 ,1y 2 Bft N. or -hwy.~ -: rental, 54-1093 or wkndt 3 BR hOne "rtni:h ..... $1t5 968-9028, -Cuual estate ltvinc. Enter La--Qulnta Her-utll 'pa ' · -~ El~ kt pri -ht.h.ly palnted.-Av&ll .,.. 1 • (213l 596--1109 'BR 0001. ocean tttt:r.e ~ 2 BR. Neu Park. wall to mosa's lush green atmosphere • stroll tree-Bache~ $115 bltnl hoVcold pat or bat &tt>trn 'prJci pei UlO. 119 MarltOld. m-Dll ' ' ii IMMEO. p~:,SES. 2 Br .. 2 &. New w/w ..,.1 STAR.LET · 776-7"8 wall, .,,,.. no pat&, C!Nn. lined i111lk .ways_lo,)'Out_apt. =r. >-wlr pd;__'._ ' maid~.'""' dtpo JuJt.N. Lide lilt • all * BRANO, N & paint, % bf~ to boy.·ms • F,. .... ~ (213\ >St-'1182 ALL UTILITIES INCLUulO 2 Br .!130, hfbla bot/oold wtr ol Fuhbl t,i a~ Jam-, * BEACH•l.5 Ml. mo Incl utilo. No-pets, alter6PM. , I BR. Uni. JUO _ Furn. $1'0 Pd. . lo(_ San Joaquin Hill> Rd. UNFUllN lBt -ttlc I ~~:JO: FHA 1::;~--. TELE· TREND llilMED oecu., ""' ·s ·BR, 2 Bit: Unf, $175-.. '"'"· '210 3 Br:~. dop· .l bOlv"ok. M-l900'°'1-ltw-lnto. forced air, ..;. ... w~ -- *OPEN DAILY -walerffunt.sc':~.blf:;~ ,..:,Bedfoomttoults~All Fam nn~ 2 ti., h ~me , SBpac. fir. pl~1 ~decor. f.llr1lishlnc1: live lMSNtWJIOM.CM .541-1161 •ONTHEIAY dl1t,to1tore,quJet.$17'·,mo adults. Winier. 646--263'. prictt. All areu. Parfc Hunttncton. CfK•. All within romantic setting w/fun or privacy. Like Lf'tfng lrt Your Enjoy waterfront activity ~ 1,... 67J..Sl48. , 8 13ll8 · a~•-.,.,.,. eltc kitchtn. 213/~ Terraced pool, prl. sunken gu ~BQ's w/ OWN-HOME ••• 1 l gethfr w/ ~ 1paciou1.neas _-9,6 " · --'N rt Sfi<F~· 2220-~"";U""-"-IMMACl\JL\TE 2 i.. ._. 8e<ulded ... Ung compL .w/Rlmadl "Foun·-Wh:rt>BY ll'r.5-fnr an·aptt~ oLl~&P.l<OA,..,.... l•I* l1l1nd -"'5. _.... --•!po-· res -- -&.ANOLORDSI I • Crpt. -drpl,-bltm.-patio. ·-tajn.--when.:we can-rtnt~JOU-one· ~ w/ Dlfl atmosphere ct a UPPER---2 BR;-d·wn";' 1--- 11 A.M. to 1 P.M. 4 BR 21,'s bau;·g tnos lease, V-.cancy Problems Ended =ly = ~~· 1i Color co-ord. kit w"'h indirtcf li9htin9. for $140 .. 2 BR., newiY dtc, ~v~m,~ BRi. 2 ~ =j ~ts/drps, frplc, sar, FREE 1UPPly ot qualified · M ..,.,... • *-Dthnce renge & oven•* P. 1h•9 crpt9. ,Cl'JIVdrp, encl patios, apac wa . 1,rOfl pa disposaJ. $a/mo )'r•1, lmm.cll•t. Poistsiion J:0~~e~'Estate 675-333\ tenant. at no coet to )IOU. NEW·5 B~ Sha, eptr, drpl, * lonus storage sp•ce + Cov. carport crnd9. 2 Pooh! Adultronly. mo. 67}&1 inclda utll. 615-8>11. VA/FllA terms OK. l.P rge 4 Alk for 1:.EE or OLA pool. 2 c:bildren, no pets. Ask *. SC:ulpfurecl mirble pullfnan I: file· befhs 2'll!3 Fountaill Wa~ E. (Har. Niwport Helghtt 52101-=========I bedrm,....2 balh-home near Coron• dtl "·r 2250 132-6600 'fot Dorothy 962-1373, 968-2645 * Eiagent reCr••tion room. ,.. bor, tum W, on Wileon). -. Huntington-leach-M -· Marina High School, Asking ~ 3 BR, 2 b&, cpta, -· .U ... FURNISHEO MOOELS OPEN OAIL Y BRAND New delxe 2 BR DELUXE S BR. 2 Bath. • FRESH AIR $27,500 with payments less Crpts drps frplc 1 garap · than rent. LUX ieaside hm $50 wkbd, Cost• M.1• 310I tru, fnd yd, walk to OCMn, Blk from ,Huntington Center, San Diego triplex apts, Private patioe, CIOR'to i.ij,• ~· IChla. Cali Walk. 3 blks to Bfach9 Rex L. Hodges, Rlty. $150 wk, $350" mo, Pool/ •')Qr;'. (I.SE) N·Si-'-Nr: s. park, 8Cbll. ~ 968--Ml3. Frwy .• GoHl9n.west ColliJt. shag ~ta, drpa, bltns, att 6. ~~ Beaut. big 2 br, apta. w/W 847 2525 ...... -. San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd.. So. on aaraee. Xlnt E-S~ loc. crpt1, c:1rps, bttns Qetpt ~ Qub avail. Ctys to Bknl. Coast Plza.s.o. " N. Fountain Valley J410 Beach 3 blks. to Holt; W. on. Holt to • . • si7s. Adults. 353 \Vbodland lrY1ne 5231 refrig. $150 " $155. 1 eblld -BE~~~~~,i.~~-sq-673-3696 ----~ly~~ 1!id.4 :; LeQuint• Hermos. 714: 847-5-441... ~;:~near TUstln • 20tb) ok. N_Q_1!_1ilsl~2~)ll._ fl, f ru;hion ,);ho"" home, Balbo1 . ~300 lam/rm, 1% b, lg kit " 4 Bdrm/2 Bath. Built-Ina, . S NOW LEASING! NEAR Hun-ff"""', overlookiris: park. N r: l c:lin'g. Bltina, crpts J drpl. coveM patio. PSO/mo. lat VILLA MESA APT • New Tr1plexe11 Quiet afta. Giesler Jr Hi Ask i n g ... --~ • Pool deck, c v r d/ pat t o. Ir Jut. &tJ..2264. Celt• Mna 4100 a.lb,. Island 4W 2 BR, Priv, patio. Htd. pool. New, family and adJ,llts units Lrg 1 Br. Will. furn. $150 ' $39,500 w/Gl 6%. Avail. OCEA'N F RO NT LRG n'/546-0066. ~ 2 ,car encld ear. Childl'fn with total recreation club up. Child/pet olc •. CJ13) 962,.1.JOh.(t _Sp HOUSE 1 or 2 BR. l BA. RENTALS . * SUNNY. 2 Bt. furn apt Immaculate! \\'elcome, no pet& pt~uel and prwcboot 1, 2, I' 3 592-2623, 714: 846--3569 •• · · · m, -· ·Yearly. ""!1'673-6!01 RENI HO~,l'//SE ~ · "Apti Furnhhod . * No dilldtt!>-no pats. 1225 1165 mo. 119 W. Wilton. bdnrul'lrom $i>!J, Nr, lhop. 1 BR, relrlg, bltnl, .,,..., Fountain V•ltey 1410 45' Baytront Balboa Penin, 5 * ACRES * )'Hl'ly. 6'Jl.6M5. 646-USl. Plnl', golf,, achools. Jual drps, pool, near titach, 1135 BR, 4 ba, pler. float, winter Both 3 bedrmt tl) $200 per Gitfteral 4000 * * $90/mo-ll~A-'Aptf. Cozy, LARGE-New 2 br, 2 ba. south ct San Dleao Fwy. on per mo., adults, no pets. . or yrly, 613-2039. mo. the 0fl?e:r $225. Motel-·~ dean Bachtlor. Patio. U!il.. crpts, drps, built-ins, dawhr, CUiver Dr., Irvine, 833-3733. Tradewinda Really M7-ell . Easy Terms/Low Int Nichol• RHI E1tolo RENT FURNITURE Studio .. I ........... pd. 1 matu .. adult, no pel priv balcony, priv .• .,.... PARK WEST 2 BR.· Ne ... O<ean, Frplc, Lido Isle · 2351 -... 9521 -_ _ LOW RATES ,. 1,~ !Jlilt from So. Coast APARTMEN}S patio .• CrP~ d.rpa, MJ.iltl_. _ Ne•r::P•rk/G01f . - -- ----itso Three -M. gar. utl.lities Day, We* or Menlb Huntlntton Bl•ch 4400 Plaza~ $1TS!mo. 545-1636. OWned" and ManaKea by LJNDB0RG co. 536-2519 ' 3 Bedrms, 2 balh + giant .BA'lF~, S br, 3 ba $l~ paid. :;mo2·Acacia Sa. Hta, ·*DIRECT TO TENANT e Color TV Air Colld. NEW 2 BDRM. Bf am Tht Irvin9 Company bonus room! {Could be hob. mo wrnter. Ken Brit· * * * * UHr. Delivery •Pool I: Phone Serv ind ceiling!, wcod paneling. All 2 8llta from bch. New 2 ~ 3 . - by rnt or 2 BR). Priced tingham, Rltr. 61S-Ol23 Also foot Br. tam rm, }ia!f 100% Purchase Optl<r.t e Ma.id Service avail ON BEACH'. rec features. $165. Adults, Br. apt. Crpts, drp1, patio, right! 3 BR. 3 Ba. ·off-water b.Jme acre. $230. 2449 Orange CM Complfte 1 BR Apt u 1 ~ .so. or O.C. llO pets. Call naw M6--0073 B•ck Bay . 524:0 garage . .4()5 Bth St. 96&-3132. HA FFDAL REAL TY Furnished ... $450 Mo. Bill 613-fi020 *· Low 11 $22/mo. F .. t-.-.. e s· 1 ta lrom ll6S * 387 w. Bay Strt'et. * VlEW 2 B -·· d 3 Br. in modem tri-plfX. Lee Grundy Rltr ., • ., '""'"" .................. 1nge ap • r, """"'• rps, pat"' i..i ..... ,ize br, -• 842-4405 . ..,...........,~ 3 rut. ],_~ Ba. cpts, drps. 2 30-Day Minimum 237fi Newport Blvd. i : DELUXE 1 le 2 BR. bl ' -1 nde k "'• '""6 •-• car gar, patD. $ll0. Meu '* WIDE VARIETY 5'8-9755 ••• B2RBFumR unturn' Fro~S285 Gardfn Apts. Blt-lnl, priv. tns, ..... poo Ir: iu c . frplc. $22S. 5.16-492'1 Balboa Island 2355 CUSTOM FURNITURE • ....., On Irvine. $110 mo. 673-3690 1 &: 2 BR N..w apts. ,..._1 .. •a. G•rclen Grove 1475 Verd~. 3W Sumatra Pl.. * MOTEL-APTS * Carpets-drapea.dilhwasher patio, heated pool, frplc. ..-~a-I~-----·--1010 so. Baytront; 4 BR. 31h 545-6328.. RENTAL $35 wk a: up. Kits, htd pool, heated pool-sauna-tennUI Adults. $145mo. 546-5163. East Bluff 5242 ~~'g~~n~.atio. ~:.;, TH E "ESTABLISHMENT" ba. waterfm(lt home&. 2 Br. MONTICEILO -At tr a c 517 W. 19th St:, <;M, 541-3481 air-cond, qu!!en bed1', pb rec r"OClftHICUJI Tiewa BEST area -Vacant now. ~ was.never homier lotsa leg 1 ba. garage apt. Dock, Bill furn/u.n( 3 br, 2 ba twnhse, Rrv, Daily Ir Wkly rates. pafiol.ampla park1nc. Modern 2 BR, Adults. . 2 BR. 2 ba mobilf home, UXI room for teeners or scout~. G'rundy, RJtr, 642-4620 Balcony, patio, pool $250,' ,....Front $35 Wk. DO Newport Blvd. af 21.at Security pards. $150-mo. 329 Cabrlllo, Apt NEWPORT BEACH sq ft, 20 X 60. .AduJts eeey. 3 Jge bedrrns, 2 baths + e Beautiful Bayfront s br, 968-26f7. Luxury Single Apta. Complttf 642·2611 FURN. abo Avail. D, 548-2165 or 64l-026L Villa Granada Apt1. I ,:053&4946;:..::,;:..,_=-,,.-="TI park-like huge Jot on dead· 3 ha hse. Winter rental, 2 BR. Enclosed yd, c&rpeb. ma.id lttV!ce housewares 8..Americard Master Charzt HUNTINGTON * .CLE,AN 2 BR., l~ BA $750 Furndish~.:. hF~~~ ~-2 br duplex-Close tp bch 6: erld ~stre'ct, Oversized gar-$400/mo . 544·9S26 drapes7 Children ok. llneru:, all uw: htated pool, PACIFIC SI'UDIO.. CrptJ, drpa .. r:,ms Ir e~ "'~1 U<U~niea dwntwn. Crps, drpa. stavl. age, sharp. $24,750, Gt no Oill 5494225 billiardg, re.rtaurant. cock-Newport le•ch GOO POOL. Workin1 cou P le a ve ~ ~ 0 . ow, r: No pets. $140/mo. ~· down or FHA terms. Huntlngf.on Beach 2400 E-SIDE 3 Br, 2 ba, 1-den&. tail! Tll OCEAN AVE., H.B. P~f'd. $145/mo. 646--0496. tous l\vtng quift iurTOu 2 BR in modem · trlill.ex Larwin Realty, Inc. .... VILLAGE INN (n4) 536-1487 1 BR. unf. $150/mo. Pool. ings for family witb cllildren. · ' · ' · $1fiS..Complete furn home. 'yd, Bltns, kids .l pets OK. · A New W•y To Live Ok. 10 am-' -.n.. Near Corona de! Mar Hi&h Lge patiO, klnc-e!J!·br,.pr 962-6988 anytime Walk to beach avail now. $250 mo. 962--2800. Laauna Buch 49'-M.16 In Newport Beach open Mam.red .;"' ~ :: t:s~ ~~t~· ;;:_ SchOol, .Fini;piace, wet. bar & frple. $225. 53M927. l630 Open Sal &. Sun. 8145 Fox-3 BR Vacant. Nie f yard Ba!boa BALBOA IN~'° OAKWOOD GARDEN WlLLIAM WALTERS co. Wilson Ave CM 548-1405 & bullt·1n kitchen apphanc-S nt Ano 5'211 . Sant• Ana_ t-19!~~ _hallJlr . ...962-,:5.123 J:..8.P1iliumlY~/m1t...A&!... ___. a PAR.fMENl'.~ l*""R-Uii!., -)-.,i.::;:a;, ;;;t-_es....-Mi&bLconaidttJmf_unt1;;;•;•;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;~;Jl-1 Ask for Don, 830-6)60. On 16th Strftt btwn 2 BR. Pool Adu l ' 1 · 0 • • AU UU1 t"'· isbed or furniture purchase.11 VACANT Sant• Ana Heights 2630. 3 Br ,+ tam rm, crpta, dtfls, .~iy . Irvine and ~Dr, Bet.ut/Quift! • um ,-1nc i ,$l5QlmQ. Adults, Infant ck. 835 AMIGOS WAY 644.299] VILLA.MARSEil;~ l Bednn, new shag crptg elec bl~s, __ cov patio. EXTRAORDINARILY (714) M2..a170 PIO/mo. 11'T6 Cameron. OOl Avocado. ~7442 Coldwell. Banker&. Co. BRAND NIW ~; tbruoul, newlyyainted, Close-1 Bedroom Rutgeni Dr. $235. 635-6750. ,B. EA!ITIFUL B •YCLIFF "OTEL M2-6llJ . 2-BR. 1~ ba, 1arage Ir-pool. Managing Apnt SP:ACIOUS -to eiem school. Assuine G.I. • All util paid $150/mo. " m •·OVERLOOKS THE POOL! No d\ildreii, -l!O pet1. Qui~ 1 & 2 Bdrm. 'Apt"' loan w/total pymnts of $191 * Call MS-7645 * Mes• Verd• 3110 Val.D IMreGarden Apt•* LOW WEEKLY RATES* 2 Br, 2 Ba Spacious, $185. ntighborhood. M~2 e NEW DELUXE e Adult Llvlnt_ mo. Only $24.950 with 10% 2975 -~U:. ~ ~..!1...!' Kl tchfn, 'JV'a, maid aervicll. -Uni $155. 536-J.10'1. ~ fJ$l' .ute • -1, br, 1% ba, -3 -BR., 2 BA Apt for lease. Fum. & Unfum. dn...Hurcy_ it-\von'Llast! __ Ouplaxes·Furn. ·TRI,LEVEL__l._BR_+ den. 2 --· ~ .... .,,:'.'.'" •. ~ ... , Heated Pool FJ6rkta -c:rpta, drps.-bltns. refria., Incl spac. ll'luter llllte, din Df:lhwuber.cakrwwwdluf. FULLER REAL TY NEWPORT BEACH frplc, I:.ge tam rm. Din rm, 45' pool, rtt. room, bfiliards, -646.:ms pool No pet. 6t&-6610 .,_dbl au"-.. ~ ...1 --11 .. ..-. --· ., .. 1. -14 Fr t &: tio& ( BBQ's, Sauna, !Urn.~m. **AT BEACH 1 Ir 2 BR's. 4 · · "'-nn • caraa:e: •u uuv..-... ~ ~ 1355 E. Balboa Blvd, 1st n; w/rire Pftjar ~ mo ~ 1 a-2 Br also Sing)es from ON the. Bay duplex; UPPfl", beaut bldp Pools 220 12th $145 Attrae sep --=· 2 BR, opener avail. Pool • Rec. carpet • diolea of 2 mkr 1==="'8==h==1"'705= I duplex, wntr/yrly, 3 Br, gardenu: ~1364 $135. Se~ tt! 2000 Panons dock avail. Furn or unfurn: St or ·215 isth St H.B 1 ba. cpts, ctr:'>'• adlta ~. area. IChemft • 1 batlw • ttaD Laguna eac _ , _ba ~l & oce~all fX· Rd 64U6'70 Between Har-3 hr. N~:CSWA._~. !it. • · no pe\1, &1•._ 2354 Senta e FROM $265 e sboftrl • ~ ~ -tras-wshrillryr, keraaker, 3 ~2-ba.--fam rm. dbl-bor'i.NewPof.t-"21ilk~N.19th prox 1500 sq rt. Adlta Ori)' B4CHELOR ApL Util 1 pd. Ana-Ave., 673-0395... 165 Amigos-Way.-NB -ntbe dOOfl. lndired lsht.: 3 UNITS relrig, garage, trplc, sand Jrplc, crpts a: dfl>I, encl 615-5934 962-7220. NEAR OCEAN . LRG 2 Br pool $155 Cone Managed by !nc tn kitchen • ~ ••orth •nd of town, z.2 Bed· shower, dsbwhr. Owner yard. $225. 61l-5809 Just for Sinai• ~ults ~..,.......,.y ,..._deluxe LINDBORG CO. 536-2579 · n1 .ho · · -· v • wn.LlAM WALTERS CO. bar hue• private ~ .. 1,13,_100., 7)13. OPEN SUN: soorn;BAY'CLu•-~·~~·-·~. ... ...... ' ---••• -.- . .. • rooms with ocean view decks t'··E:::""""~'""'"---'N•"WO&A.a Be1Cft'· "'"22GO • . ~· · . T'•'ENT. 5 :.r ·: 2 ·~~ apta .. \6.blk taLbc:b ... L.:At.Mo.a -Beac:h . -.4705 per.ons....only. ~ E,.17tb PJ,. lfNH~~2..hz'1-.21A! ba, bltns, ·~~ ;;-~~ •• l~£ Mii .. -.. -1 1 built·in kitchens plus studio RENTALS .....,., ' AP m Wlllttt 1.e, $159 A up. <n4) • ., ... , C.M. 548-6532. frplc patio encl 1ar, 752 ..,.,...,. DM"O"'IO( '. apartment. $56.500. -·Houieli~ ''IN n:IE BLUFF'' -N=--~ e:::h 179-4822. l~ISHED WR~~-e LRG 2 Ii 3 Br, cpll A.~ waf, 6~3l -',r.f's!.'lr:;tel it~; G I 3ooo Elegant. New wall to wall car· . •, DElAJXE 1 Br. Oc.anfmt ~w. apt. at -""""'• w/kld1 -ok. 1991 No. l m:-ot ~O 1,,,, enera pets, 3 bedroom, full dinill&' (Irvine and l&th), · xln't Joe. Stucle-nt1 we!· tee. patio: 150 )'di. to Maple, 648-0S2T nr Muut. Corona Ml Mar 5250 C1' ML N. of So. Cout ..,..., .,.,,,,0 e,~1,..-room, huge family room. (714) MS-0550 come. Sl95 mo. _MB-4928 beach. O:>mp]etely lurniahed. E-SIDE studio. 2 br, 11A ba, ·-PHg~~~ ~--REAL ESTATE , .,.........W Bkr, $425 mo, 5">1120 HOUDAY PLAZA 2 br, 2 b&, compl•l.Jy ium; $125 MO. LEASE ......, drpe, bfms, dlhWlbr, i190 Cli nneyre St. 494-9473 549-0316 • $750 DOWN• Permanent Octan view tot, $5,950 F/P. Assume bal. on existing Joan. Bkr, 497·1210 or 494-6632 eves. * The Hidden House * $18,500. Terraced gardens, patios,. sunroom, 1 BR. 494-7329 by 10 am for appt. BY owner. Custom 3 br, 2 ba.. Beams. 7%%·$212 mo. Pm 494--0428 c:la1 832-1449 .... * $32,500 * ' Sharp 2 BR, i;ecluded, w/ view. Place Rlty 494-9704 ~ ---C&S-SpMdy RMt1ls -D~ ~· -~. BR -Patio, pr,_ Wlntl!l" ntn. I ~._, flrephu:.-e, nc ~ncl pr. 64>2939 ""I~· RENTAL FINDE. R.$ • BR •--. Child ._ .I.... tum apt $135. 2 BR ,+ den scmin ,.,_tune ~ ocean VIew, a hw •tl!l'S to MODERN 2.Br •--E;!' YOUNG ~•Bnml--W:~ ., ,._ ..,.,,., • ~ $165 Hfated pool. Ample •'""t-• tllf Mnd at Victoria Beech. • erpts, YIJR>o ..-:(' 0 d~. Bl', 2 Ba apt w/tbq cgtl, ::: *Homes ok.-parkinc No .. children-no e~ONT2Br,2Ba. $225 MO. LEASE ~E kitchtn, encloaed __ ,;.._, dshwashr, priv. balcae:iY A i=. * Apartments 1648 Newport, CM. 548-U69 pebl. 1965 Pomoba, CM. $2fil/mo. Crpts., drpl. frplc. MISSION RLTY. Ph 4&f.-0131 p.rage, near bua. $145. ON TEN A<llES tar. Near So, eo.t Plui.. t:= , • BAY VIEW-BLUFFS 4 Br. 962-2341 985 So Colt Hwy Lquna Adults. 120 E. 20th. 1 6 2 BR. Fam 6 Unfllri KJd1 OK, $175 mo. HMl'l5. ""' * RoommalH 21> Ba twnhou!e. Fam area. *BUDGET WISE? LARGE 1 Bdrm. Near S~d;., S1'5 i::.. uW. NEW DUPLEX. 2 Br. O'pta, 11rep1a ... ~ pri•. patios I. .:"':;:':::"':;:5.1\l:;:'======I CALL 645•0111 lrpl, ""'"· dtpo, pool, l BR, C.rpai. & drapes, Utt> Ooean. $150 mo-YEARLY. 2 BR. w/!rpf 1215 d.,,., IUll/mo, 157<! Oranp -., ,_..Con.,t'lllltl.ol, -571IS for inform•tion on these Lease $375. 833-052.l, itfes included. SJ05 I mo. students: ok 673-8088 New ocean ~ unt $185 Avf, SB-8512, KI J-7219 IOO Sta Lane. CdM ~211Ql L•tun• Buch I bl RENTALS $450-Lease 3 Br. 2 Ba. Pool. MO~ TODAY!?, ' ....._., .. ~ONT 1 :i 3 • PLACE REALTY 494-970t Clean 2 br·bltns, dahwlhr', OlacArlhar nr. OMLlt Rwy) IL ILK TO BIACHI ·~ $~~·: ~til eincl. Furn. &~he. Yrd services. l10l Eaex Hom•Flnderl 645-2'51 • ffi.~WINn:a' RENT. SMALL 1 BR. utll pd, bar, crpt, pa.Ho, gar. $155. Adults, F;,m $160. New 1 6 2 Br. !or, CM. We have more! Ln. 646-5996. C Me 4111 ALS. m.ns. patio, 2 min to bch. %1 no pets. 548-6357 CORONA DEL MAR POOL. :nts s, Couts..,. $130 • Clean 2 BR, gar~. osf• •• 3 BR, 2 ba, fl'plc, encl patio, only.'$145 mo, 49'1-1153 ew, * Lrr. 2 Br. Studio, 114 bl, NEW 3 fk'•.3 Ba. lower c:lu-499-3929 or 497-1630 child&: pets ok. ' Nawport H~ghts 3210 $15 Ptr Wffk & Up 1 blk to bftch. Yrly $275. RENTALS new drps, paln;J140· =;~:~~;:~::: OCEAN VIEW• r.rs ·1 ·mt $150 • Incl util cozy Cottage. e Charming l br houje, Bachtlor &: 1 br, TV Ir maid 673-2455. Apia. Unfurnished 1 • 637· Complete blt-ina. Year lease aptl. Furn fit unfu:m. Opti, Stove, nefrig, chldrn ok. Fenced yard, no children. aerv. avaiL 450 Victoria, LGE, Uke new 3 Br. 2 Ba. Gener•I-5000 SEU.. Or Rent .. 2. BR. 1% a t'$325 per mo. Contact drpa, blt·itts, patlol, ~ $18S • 3 Br. in -go00-area. $150./mo. 642.8233 C.M. bcb duplex. SUndtck. pr, BA TownhoUAt. Crpt1, drp11, . 0 di1tancf to town. 100 CU! Children welcome. • NASSAU· Palml 2 Br i;ept....rune $225. 5C9-{1844. bltns; pajio/Pool. 545-6384. ~ I ,-&7S.&OIO~ -Dr., Laguna-Bch.--... CALL 894-7577 Unlverolty Pork :1237 apt. Furn" Unt Pool,plnf<-1 BR" Baohelor APt. N•ar YEN DOME e 2 BR TOWNHOUSE, cpb, -· a.a NEW 0 ••an side apa. pong, BBQ, 1hady lawn1. bay I: beach! 1ne: w. Bal· frple, pr. al9o l BR, Apt. w/pool. $169.50 Mont.Ji. San Juan DON'T DELAY I 177 E. 22nd st. 642.-3645 boa Blvd. '94-2250. ' DIMA~~andAPTSt call 548--1674. LRG New Apte, J Br, 2 Ba. PLACE REALTY ~ Cap~sfrano __ ,_ __ 17_2_5 $250. 4 Br Showcase hm, trpl, CALL US TODAY I AVAIL Oct. 5, I.cf 1 Br. DELUXE 2 Br. WetrtcliH loc. FAMILY Section 2 BR. Unturn. $130/mo, In-on MUKUeritt, So. of Hwy. DE~ 2 Brt. 2 BA. N. for inform•fion on these 111vailt11ble RENTALS ••• all elec, kids/pets. 3 BR. 2 Ba. tnhouse •••• $340 furn. $145. ~ 4 carpi'.'rt. Pool I: Bltns. Adult a. CloM to shopping, Park fant ok, na pets. Joann St. Bltns, CJ>t!, drps, poreh. f nd nice view, $250. A1ao i S ACRE estatf land or horse $?35 . 4 Br. Lease/Opt. Cor-2 BR. l ba. house ...... $280 1846 Placentia. Set mer No. $190/mo. no l•. 5421274. * Spacious 3 BR's, 2 ba CM. 549--3437_. $250. 548-1983. ai e. 497-1056, ~ i., ~~~'.e;a~::ce~~~~~~ ~·_i:~a1!~ee~B~;~l, • red h•111 ~/mo mob hm wflCl'DdNewpert HA 4210 :~~=~~ll ~!~bl~.~t!.m:~~: 1~.=bt~rp:~t·::.~. IJ•nt~l.1-VJfMtt*I _ ~ • w/$10,000 dn will release bl 1.~ 1 d pd pottb, compl film. Htd pool. IMS •·ohtlm A~. nr WeatcllU. 675-2150. plus $35 deposit. 603 DAILY PILOT ,._ .-~ ·· clear bldg site for 100'7c tns, •n..u, n sc • Adi" pats 4 Seaton'• -· "'• Marl-id 54>2659 U1U • LAND.LORDS FREEi .... na • a.EAN 1or2 BR. Adulti. no COSTA 1.IF.SA &U-212' av• wife want to rent or,Jeurt financing. Bkr. 493-1706 or REALTY Mob Est. 2359 NWJ>t. 548-6332 pets. Lrs kit. $13>$150. H2l Now' po~I •·och 5200 DELUXE Duplex _ 3 BR, 2 smalL furniahed oi: ~ 494-8100. Univ. Park Center, Irvine E. \1 St NB M&-UJOl _. -1======== RENTALS CaUAoytime8J3.0820 1c8,.'iA~°';s'°!..,...: ~•th • FORRENTll :,:'ti01'!,':n~'k".;.,~~=· -~:Jr".!:; Condominium 1950 WE HAVE THEM utiJ·;_ -.ill1 Ill' sfo..o&23 Coron• dtl Mar 4250 1, 2 &: 3 BR Apartrnfnt1 thrlJ. BEACON Bay 2 br apt. Pvt $250/~. Alt. 6~ ~ yon or o . • ir.u:..,...... ;;.;;...;..c______ 3 OR 4 BR Townhse, on out Orange County, Ranging patio. atove .l refr i1. atta by Dece~ber. -- ''TIBIJRON'' Townhouses. 4 BR, Exec home • ••••• $325 Green bf 1 t , Bnt of aft SPM. 1 BR apt. partly furn. Newly 1rom $69.50 to $188.50. Furn Adult&, $110/yrly Is e . 57S-484l , clayl, 536--ll95 f\ltl. ' .-Sign up now for choice re-3 QR, lg bonus rm •• •• S215 Everything. $375. '3 41 Furn Bachelor " 1 BR. or Unfurn. Alic Jor JODI. 615-2327. $175/mo. Ise. 1'· ·upper Z WOR.KlNG couple desire l' · ' sales. Assume eov't loans, 4 BR, Mesa del Mar •••• $265 $andburg Wy. 833-0053. Excep~ nice! dee. $1.9>/mo. 132-7IOO Br., eptfdrps, reftrange, br. furn apt at dutilx tn no qualifying. • Coifs & Wallie• Rlfrs. Below ~ value!' ~ -l BR. Unfum. O'pts, drps, gar; Mat. adita. 704 N.B. or Hunt. Bcb. -· , ' e VACANT·lmmaoulat•I CM t1l pd. NEW DELUXE 2 ·BR patio, pool, bltro. $160. __ 962-4454 Julllard 3 Br 2 Ba, •-m rm, 2110 Nfwport Blvd., l BR. Fum. Apt/U A •.r:""' NarclsSW'i. $1!G Max. Rel'1. C •'I 1 ~ ~-'---'-....,--:'--:,-1 .... x a: $145 % blk to 2 Ba. Blt·ln ranp · dahwhr, Seacllff Manor pts. ~ . ...-· GI NO DOWN 118.500 FP, 2 *Family DeliCJht * Pool/,... 1~,. $350. 6#0735 a.an, qu i •t 1 Br. ~ "'°: -crpts;drps,.0...From Pl&c:<otia. 543.2632 uk 3 BR, 2% BA duplex;·bltno, Collect <no'*~· • f.-.bedrooms. 2 baths, frpic, w/Garqe, Adult 2 0 3 9 oca.n. 2500 &et.Y>eW. '"lS. Nr, S, ,,__. Plua. about our dt.count plan. crptd, drpa, encl 1ar, conv. WANT YEARLY I.SE, Sin • bl. t drp SPACIOUS 4 BR. + Family -; W·"-·-"_, .._ .._ ......... \ location 613-Jt02; ·-~ _. .,.:.;,; ·L':.~i:~aalts.f, Inc. room 2Bathhome fenre<t Irvine 3231 wk::c_e· _,..inclli> ew1. •aallMta 000 ~19730iSCS..2321 • BAYFRONT • -BACHEi.'.;JR.patio.Sl60-~-~= P~•1.,.M•;: 962-6988 anytime yard .' fireplace. c~ts .. BRAND NEW Home. ad-LGE 1 BR. balcony. dlhw.r, P~lNSULA BAYFJlONT COit• MeN 1100 LUXURY Ap.t1. $tarting util't. 514 .Ffinlaar.. ftliable cpl.~No chWn or RENTALS drapes, $225/ mo, VACANT! jolnina: Oranie Grove. 3 bltnl, $130. Mamett 745 3 BR. 2 Bathl Furn. W\ntfr at $375. e '42·2202 64U766. 6'7>$)44 pets, 64~1 • Houses Furnished Home-Finders 64S.2951 Br/2 Ba, frplc, DfW. "BAB" J*me1 St. MJ.«>17, rental. ~ Morth. Dock ORLEANS APTS. NEARLY new GCeanfront 5411 · 1-""''------* COZINESS IS • • 01>"/drps. IAnd,..pad 1~ M&-2278. .,. .. av•IL 34' boat. Pentnoula Pt, luxury apt, c ,Fountoln Volley 5410 'ount1ln Volley :-~ner1l 2000 A SHARP 2 BR Home. Pa. ~=-743~~4/~792 **NICE 1 BR. Duplex. DAVIS REALTY ·&0-7000 ADULTS :ONLY br, ' ba, frplct 4 declal. lliiliiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiii'iill .. tlo &. yard. Sl~/mo. VA-,\dultl. SllSfmo. NEWLY DECORATED 1 BR 2 A 3 BR. Avail. Priva~ Pl-: $600/mo. 541-«m 1 ~ ocEA~~N:,achelor Apt. CANT! MOVE lN TODAY!! Coran. del ~r 2250 Call 5'&4111 nr beaches • •bop a tkl, poot .lndiv. laundry tac. DEi.XE 3 BR I: 2 BR. 2 BA. :JJ'he', _ Broker 534-6980 Home-Finders .645-2951 1 BR. pool UtU pd. Adults, ro $1.SO/mo. Util pd. ~O. (Nr. Oranae Co. A.kport: Tu. four plex apt& Bltna:, DIW, ~ FOR RENTI I 4 BR. 3 BA tri-leftl .. pets. Nr ahpg. $140/mo. 2 BR. Bea.chfront.. Cl'pts, t1n at 17tb St: rir. Wertditt), nr HOl!ii . Hosp. from '170 UlO -Uti1 pd, Bachelor apt. f, 3 .l 2 BR Hornet In Oro Mec:ltferrant an decor, 5t&-33tS <It ~USO. drpl, reap. adulbl cnly, no mo. '42-oCW? 642.lm. ,,.Avail now. 534-6980 ange Counly, Rentals start-redecorated, $375 he, .$400 $100 _ lnddf udl. Small: apt children. no petl. 6M-m53. 17-41 Tustln, Cotta Mna ** WESTCLIFF _ 2 Br. 1~ . • Broker . ing at $123.50. Furn or Un-mo to mo. Avail ··now. for. adull ... "!"'~~r. 15th A YRJ..Y 2 BR. Wnt Bay Aw., Mar. Mn. Canon. 6G*C1 BA. Townhee. crpt1, cfrtMI, ~ Jl•ntali to Sffare 2005 fum. Ask for BONNI. -646-0!IU 642-l!fl, Ne~ .,._........ Balboa. Bay YW#, f:rple, blt:nl. Adu1ts only, no ~ti. 1:12·7800 PANORAMIC VlEW bl N,. 1 BR. 112$. l'Ool. Spe.c. $250. f'IS-2153. HARBOR filEENS -$210. ~'15.13. IX>VELY sunny room for * SWIMMERS * Harbor, 3 Br, 2 Ba • .,,.,, _AduJts. tdeJl.!o r Bachelor. l .BR. rum .... UW'• paid. ~l!:tl-•·sruDfO-~ Jl~b&y .... bd>, bftutllul Ont. Ot' couplt. N\'Jrth CM . w/w drpl.-$450/mo orl 1993HChurch, CM. SM-tm.-SUS mo Ad\illt. No pets. SlO Bach.1. 2.) 8A'1. from snO. new ,-'Bit. 2~ cpts " -oouble bed. c:lre$.,ser " Chtoe~ out thl1' 1 BR. Stove, 673-8936 or 6'13-1351. * l Br. rum Apt. Quiet E. Balboa,Blvd. Balboa. 2700 Petti-Wq, ex. df'PI, 2 cat pr, $32S mo. emet. Privntc 'TV, w~her, rt!frig, carpeb, drape• + 3 BR, 2 ba. ktor)', ku' Adults. No pets. 191-A Vb 2 BDR 2 b& )'Mdy $210 S4iW370 ~or &U-19H. -Otyer,:._lsharOTV ~Itel~~ $rml00 POOWON~T? ! LA$ST130, I, mo. TIIlS Yard. a:~ ~aut~ ~05 tM\a.. CM. 548-C138. wlnlet $185. 320 Alvarado $170 3 Br. z S.. Unl Bltnt. erpta, ': f!O. '""' or in , • .,,g . approx ..,,;JI mo. VTT"V• Sa 6 1 Br Pl Ntar new $250 Call '"'54&-:1634~""'-..,,,-~,_,...,.....,. Hom•Flnde~• 64$-2951 2 BR. -·-ttach 1 ...... BE~50· ~~.. IL • aee. • r BR, 1~ B,\ pa.Clo, blt·ina, d .... ""15' 73. /rrtO, * ,. I ~=="""='=-=-I Ml""• a Ill', •'"' •Pl •'""' W11UJ • Up, C'l111tl drps AO about our · WANTED-COngenial llldy ID LOVELY 3 BR homf with a t*tio, Adults, no J)e~ Vt.ty )'Um., inc ufil, 5M-(H51 Lido .... 4U1 d~t ~ l80 c.nttt St.l'3"'B'°'R=","'2"'BA.="'u"'n1un=-."'er.=11",.., Pvlhrt/bf""',, !ally NpnB ·v~.hif;~(hmmo: lge yard._ IM .or ~~A~/opt nlet!, $2\S. 675-Ql ,urn 1 Br & LChelor SJ) Nord Bfach Ap.. f\lm MZ-8340 drill, blk to ~an. Yearly ""'' to bu,y. Big patio A:.,.~ pr. N 1•~ CM -. . .-. 673-«WIS . &M-<)369, Call °"'" & Walta"9 ..... Lido lilt USI 2110 "P"fl ·-• G<nr<. l br -· * THE SEVILLE ~·-· • · COLLEGE Or working man to 1ha.rt-Laguna cottage. $65 nio. 494-l!m. ROOMMATES \Vsntt'd-1 Qt 62. l block Cmm bet.th. Alf: 21~. Call 00-.9757. ' Nt.'ED 2 ma!@ l'OOf'l'lmatf's, ' ~' 2 BA Mu~. HB. beaut. ~·~- tort1 5464141. 1 BR. J'\lrn.Util pd. 1 adult Dlchelor ~. Avail no.,} Br. i"'L w/1111. Jm. FtJRN-1. UnlUrn ·z Br. Bltnl, 3 BR, 2 BA Q:mdo . all bltml. " WATER.FRONT H 0 Mi: orn. Eutalde. $14'/mo. 111 11'1 t e f nttt. 60-07, Adultl L crpta. dri-• fncd Cfllta. drpf, prfv J)&tk>, pr. CIO!'ltt to schools .t: shoppe. ON Udo Illand. $750. 3 64WS20 5$-6696, yrd w/paUO, Wtr pd. 2619 No pets. ~1867. • Pool & rtC fAcUlties. SD) BR'a, CalJ ets-3000, 't 1 BR. Lr1 clOMts Pool. "L'' S..nta Ana Aw. 6.'M-4l20 2 Bdrm, one bJock to 0ttan mo. Av•ll 10-1·70 Caltl========-= Shuffleboard • Ntw t.lb.N liJa_rtd OS5 QUIET ADULT LIVING 2 ttU yrly, •ha&: cpta, patio H•ri"t• RE S<l}.USI lolboo 1,1oild uss. cpt/d ..... um pd.·~--BAYJ'RONT Duplex: 3 BR/ BR. Sha( """'· bltns, pool, 12146th St. {%11) 2'&-19%1 • $140 ... J Br. in +-Plex. Yard. 2 BR/2 Ba A den, Yr I•. An'JUC. "1rn. Studio. itJ51 lowtr. 4 BR I upptt. Sandy bea11t, lnd1cpd. $1.TO mo, incl 2 BR. on the BeaCh! RIO ~rrig. Femily ok. Middle_ ace cpl. S2501mo. mo .• Adult.I only, ao pet.I. bfaeh, NR,, Villa&t. Ewt:. all util. AduJt1 etlb'rtbO pett:. ~)'tarl)I. Adultt, na Broker ~ 138 Topu. 6n-o2.12. 2135 Eide. See Ma. Apt, I . rn.a9 2.fl AVOCl(lo SL &46-0979 ptll. 60-3978 evtt A wkndl 1azw--i1o111o · .u.itu.tq l'anltW' a tlllftu I W ., ... e Dt1l1111W ·--.......... , ... eo....-... .,,_c.11 .... 858581allrA_.. I .... . . ~· ' ·~ -- :I ' rsuwo;w~z • YSJ!! S '. -::?~.8~nD•~l~lY:s-~-lO_T ___ l'iiiEAi::-EsM~olndT~E'-°'-'-'btf-~~~li9.)0illl ........ 111!1 .... lll! ...... !lll .... l!J!ll t<fNTALS REA L ESTATE *' .., ANNOUNCiMINTS - Aim· Unfvmlohed _O... __ .,_•_I ----I· * 'If '/f, . _,. ind NOTICIS SIRVlCI DlltECTOltY SIRVICI OIRICTOltY JOBS & EMPLOYMENT. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT ~ -- Rlnl1l1 W1ntad 5'90 Office Ront1I ~ ·~f Lott 1--------l'SIJPEJl.DELVXE QUAIJTY '755 Jeb1 Wanted, Men 7000 Jobi-Men, Wom. 7100 6GS ,,.., .. DIAlllOND Cvpot Cf'°""" IRONING lN MY HOME TOP VW """'"· _., "'Y'· * CAR WASH HELP •-e bANOL'ORDS e 1-" "'°m, ,.. ., 3,000-.q.l--,--- ..ER.EE..JU:NTAL SE;l\YJ.CE l t. ollice .ulte.-i, lmmt4. oc. Broker 534-6982 cupancy. Orange C n t y. Room• for Rlftt Airport Irvine Ccmmen:. ComPlex. adj. Ai~t Hottl A Rtst•ura.nt, banlr.:I, LARGE Sunny riio!ll, walk-S..n Diego & N'pl F'wy!I, in& distance 10 OCC. 5 mtn UNCROWDED PARKING to UCI. Dbl bed, eloliot lt LO\YEST RATES stresser. l..ar&1l student desk O"ner/mgr. 2172 DuPont Or., I<. pull down lamp. Kitchen Jbn, 8, Newport Beach, ~-lAuncJry--rm,-private 833-32Zl· Courtesy to.Brokers .:.'1.V. 11 Mni.e priY..ilel:.t's. DOVER DRIVE - avail. student $15 wk, olbers Muit see 10 appreciate. tL: $20 "-'k. ~. exquisite interiors, alr-ronct , YOU'LL BE SNUG AS A ~nt parking, bt5t locatlon. BUG I Happy Too in th!1 Contacl • upstain studio BR.--Lot1 of 0 priv, + full home privil. V>'/ 2 , 675-6050 pool. I.'mplyd Lady or CQI· lrge gal, $8.5/mo, 546-S740. .... u•Wllf CL.&. ---... _ """ Wh1ddy1 Want? Whlddy1 Got? SPECIAi: CLJ(SSIFICATIOlrFOI< . NATURAL BORN SWAPP~R> Spocl1I Rite 5 Lines -5 tlm11 -5 bucks IULll -AD MUST INCLUDI • l-WIMt 'I'" iwo. " ,,..... S-WMt JM wtwf ill ........ a-You• ,,._.,. .,,,.,w ,,........_ ....., ii... ., """"""' ....,,,OTHIJlle ..-01 SALi -TIUtOll OfllL YI To Place Your Trader's P1radi1e Ad PHONE 642..5611 .. Eltctrlcal LOSTI Vic ltarbor Atta Back to School Special lN C.M. $1.25/br will fix tour VW at nltt, any Many opeci.op... Full A: P../T. -BUYICUD.Ctntn-----st'BO)t"• 900' -$15;-Jl"rft Eat * 5tt-e9TO-*-problem, uk-lOIL -O·Loo.-0.C...Metro, 2950..Har~ 20" blu-bike. Nobby tirt, .brair-.Inatall. ~1317. -··· -J .B., $4g..1986, anytime. bor Bl, CM. !mt I bk lJe No. al! SI'EAM Jet carpet cle•n!zW. Landsc.pt,.. 6110 Houa;eketplllg, al.I types of C.0.0:-C,M-..,.-'----:hill.,,.-o-, -,,ol Reward! 546-3D. By OarKare, nation .. wide --cleaning. Rellable, own t:l'a1l$ time, no cxpcr neceu. Musl REWARD For kilt dartl aeivlcc. l'rff est 642-4055. JAPANESE Lalllscaph• 6 541-3524 or 541·933tl have dependable cu. Make iealpol.nt Siamese kitten, prdenfni te"'1cf:1. Call for SlS.$25 a day. Call Ot come: MU'l!dlth Gardens area. Sm, Carpet layi"I & -t~ e1tlma~. 548--195& or Job W1nted, • in lmmed. 548-5501, 1869 New. very lhln, al'llWI t 0 Repair 6626 546-0724. • Women 7020 I port Blvd, Suite F , c.r-.t "Eloise". aft 4:30 962--'1491. CAR-PET LAYING NEW LAWNS. n-teedl.nr. COMPANION -Pracdca.I Charming, 11tractlve, ~.,,_ SHACGY Diliy type dofl:, C.A. Paa:e 642-20'ro rot o • illlMC. renovttill&, nune avail. for ~I day _ gelic ·girl for "alet pa.rklng -~-.1-~ &: wbt W/JttL'E. EXPERr clean-up. 891-2417 or Jive-in. Gd skil.b. Min. $400 hosteM. 642-1224 _ ~ wh~tlp on tail, med IZ, CARP..ET JNSTAU.ATION • -,-mo. Employer pays fee. e CHEF. Prime rib or Rwa. !Oit '9-1, NB_ 6'13:so31 &: REPAIR. 646-4l.9i:' Limousine S.,;ic. 6ij5 Health &-Family Catt ~hef's helpef."Expu. ·-----' Avncy, S414'i681. • * 642-5619 * 6640 Al<pm;;.'H.,bon ORANGE Cout Coll"' •tu-COASTAL AGENCY ·---Anywhere. dent needs ~-tlme work~ A member o1 ~l"A>~!!IV..i~~c:ns:ii: ~:=,l ~a rri:: Rates, 40c a inil@. Min. 20 Evf!nifws except Tuesday, Snelling & Snelling Inc. Advice on an matters. ~ ml'a. 24 hr reav. 830-2404. al.I day Thunday &: Satur-The World'• Lar911t Love, Marriage, Business -·--.. --day. call Brian 642--0022. Profe11ion1I Personals DESK SPACE ; BR, 3 ba, Igo""' patio, Readings giW:n 7 days a Floors "65 MAID SERVICE 1125 DAY\VORK • Oeaning: • lron-· Employment Service {2) 3 BR 1% ba hom~.120x week. 9 AM • 9 PM ing. By day or hr. Chvn 2790 Harbor BJ.. CM 541).&lSj Xl.N'T loc~lion-lgt! f u r n bednn in,,bt>autiful home , plus U.5t' of decks, patio6, & nianY-priv~es. For employed woman or ri&:hl lJerson. $7511.B. 842-565-4 . PVT Home, ~·alk'g distance O.C. College or FairView Hosp. .s1a ~·k, $6.l mo. 305 No. El Ci1mino Rei1I f\-lesa del Mar. Eq $6000 San Clemant• F'OR smalll'r 3 ar 4 BR w/ _ 492-4t20 pool, Any area. 120' C-1 lot, Anaheim, 4~% 312 N. El Camino Real, CARPET VINYL TILE C & S MAIDS AVAJL, lJn. trans. Exp. Sitl-4972. Harbor ffivd. at Adams VA loan, nets $151 mo, eq San Clemente LIC CO?n'R. FREE EST. mediately. Reference1. XLNT housekeeper w/l de-COOK Compa.M>n wanted to , $31,500, Want v&c or imp R-492--9136, 492-0076 * 541).'1262 * 642-$813 Ol'·6G-187.C. pend. ChOd~Avall tor Hve in share charming little house &10-3810. ' NE\\'LY d<'c. Furn rm, e>nlm. balh. Costa Mesa. Student pref. $53 /mo. ......,., SLEEPING rm., no-cook's;, for day ~\lrk'g older man. By mo. only ;35. 1543 Qrangr. r~i. * S-15 per-.-. .,""•"··u"'p-•"·1"'k;"1- chen. $30 per v.·eek-up Apts. l\IOTEL. S48-9Th5 ROOM FOR RENT; Private entranct. ln CdM. • 675-8114 • S7:i & $5.7 furn room, Hntg Beach. Creal for Student. 1 blk to pier. 642-85al LARGE. A!ry Tm nr Ocean! Pool! All privil. MM. Fen- CORONA DEL MAR * 551"3331 * Ground llr.'.delux:e priv of-t LAGUNA BEAOI ~OME, fices. Priv baths. Prkg Fabulous Ocean View:. 4 $125/rno. Util pd. Also 3 rm BR/21,S BA. $19,500 Equlty. Suite; 2 ba. Owner 673-G757 \VANT -.TDs, UNITS. DESK SPACE 222 Forest Avenu o Laguna Beach '""""" 494-0209 or 497-1630 Divorce settlement forces liquiditt.ion, 7 U'Uit deeds at discount FOR equity in 4 BR home or ANYfHING, * 5'18-5068 * FOR LEASE Lr& modern -. OCt'an view OUices • Shops, Trade for clear lot, income. suitable-prof. or bu5iness. or '! Charming, comp furn 1900 S. Coast Hwy, Laguna & equip~ 2 br (sips 6) air Bch. 494-9471. cooled home. Desert hot LARGE oHice. 6 roon1 suite, springs. fllXXI equity, $ll,SOO $395 mo.. air, carpets, lotal. 644-1060 paneled, Beach Blvd. ex-'63 Rambler 6 cyl O/H valv • posure. will subdi vide. es.0 .D.P/S.R/H.Nutires. 842-2523. Runs like new. Trade for NEWPORT offices crpt & boat motor &. trlr, travel drps, ocean view, from $75. trlr, up/dn or? val, $450. can owner a.tt 6, 675-4644. 342-2098 ton 673-2110, 64i..993l. Commercial 6085 Delux 4=plcx w/pool & rec e \VANTED: Lady lo rent ,.::::::::::~=----rm in Tustin $ro,OOO eq. & nn w/kitchen priv &-use ct e sroRE Bldg for sale 100 A Orego~ land, $20.000 home. Balboa Isle. 548-8619. 686-698 \V. 19th St. Bethel l"Q, want larger unit!. com- Towers corner. 548-1768 agt. mereial or submit ?? :'I, Cl. Bkr968-l416, 968-2&4s '-.~MA~7L~E-&~F~E~MA~-L~E Garclenl--6680 LOCAL girl wants to dean WU'k. Call Homemakers, w/t>lderly lady. Sm. salary, Lovely high desert bllme, 6 standing by to elve )'OU the 1----·_..,. _____ , apts .I: priv. homes. Gd refs 54181. Prill, room & ba. Must acres. $30,00l value. Ex· belt massage in the WesL * LANDSCAPING * & rn..s. rates! ~12'.U drivf'. ~241. change for your property Separate Sauna's .for ladies New Lawns, lawn removal, Jabt Men. Wom. 7100 Day Shift -FemaJe. Newport, Laruna area. -&: genQemeq. 10 AM-12 AM, r!_novaUng, AU phues land-P•lnfiftl, Ages 18-28. No exp nee, must 494-4746 or 4~1331 7 days. 17434 Beach Blvd, scape install &; designs. Paptrh•ntlnt &l50 A Better have good eyesight & Jinger Have $5200 + $13,00J T.D.'s, •-"-·8~·~P-•~·-"~1_-18'19_____ Llc'd contr. 12 yr1 loc. exp. Temporary Position dexterity.' ApP]y In person. xlnt (SJ(XX) additional, 2 yrs) ALCOHOLICS AnonymoU!. s,]6..1225. No Wasting S.A.E. Advanced Packq"ing S25,00J land. WANT sm. un.. Phont. 542--7217 or write to AL'S GARDENJNG * WALLPAPER * DEMONSTRATORS JJ57 E. Edinger Ave, tis, CM, or NB or Dlx du-P.O. Box 1223 Colt&Mesa. tor G&rdeninr It lmail llbd. \\lhen )'OU can "Mac'' Santa Ana, Calif. · plox/watrfrnt. B1"', 61>Q144 ,.10 acaptniRi'Vi,.. call~ 543-1444 64&11111 lnte•im * DRIVERS * 21,i Acres, Las Vegas, zon.An -~"°-"-"-•~•~m~"'~'-•---~ Serv:in&.?,iewPOrt, CdM. Coe. HOUSES. docks, boa. ts. Personnel Service l!d tor 82 units, vaJ. $65,000. l>.1ISSING -Female Siamese ta Mesa, Dover Shores, fla&pole1, anyt ing 445 E:J.7th S[. CM No Experience Want units, T.O.'s. Blu PL v.-earing clear flea Westclift. everything reasonably 642-7523 Necessary! Pyramid Exchangors collar, crook in tail. Oc-JAPANESE Gard en er , painted. For me utimate AGGRESSIVE, swUt, brighl r-.1u st have clean California 6'ffi.6060 casionally o If-b a I an c e. monthly rate, Gen. cleanup. 646-9752. young man to park cars fur driving l't'COl'd. Apply ~s"'u"n"H_"_g_ood_,..,-,.-,-.tal...,..-are-a.·I Needs medicaUon. Lol!t vie Reasonable. Fl'ff est. IMMEDIATE Est. on quality restaurant. Sorry, no Jong YELLOW CAB CO. $38 000 equity· inc 0 me Monte Vista & Santa Ana. 642--2239 inter&: exter p8.lntlna:. Apts, halr. 642-1224 . 186 E 16th St. sl3:500. For~. commer-Lar&;e reward. 642-7604. NEW Lawns, re-seed. Campi homes or just a !'°°m. J ack, ALERT, neat, dependable Costa Mesa cial or horse ranch. CCYI'TON Jersey $1.49/yd. lawn care. Qean up by job 8311925, 894-3895 woman to clean apertme.n.ts. OWNER 67" """" Uke at old C. M. Knitting. Frtt t F info FALL 30 day _,_., I ,_ 642-lZU DENTAL Receptionist Must """""" o.r mo. es· or ape........,, ni=. · have dental receptionist ex-,,--====...,,-=-1 American Knits, 202&-A N. 897-2417 or 84&.0932_ & Exter palntina, ~est APT M &: Asst M Commercial income proper-Tustin, Orange. 6371ll'O. Local rel's. Lic'd le Ina. Se d gn 1 t · rr:· per. 3()..45. 54~ aft 6. ty, free ~clear; nexr to _ AL'S Land&caplnC. Tree Call Cb ck #•c ,_,.,, n compe e resume o DENTAL ASS'T Full time Se Val •~ ooo F -movat y-~ --. u • '",,...,.,.,,., Daily Pilot, Box M 1025, ars. · .....,, · or un. Auctions 6430 ... .. .. •" W chair side, schoOling-or ex· its, house or beacb prop. · ---------Trub haulin&, }ot cle~p. { JNT. or EXTERlOR 2211 . Balboa Blvd, N.B. 830-3200 OWNER~ AUCTION Repair spmlders. 611-1166. PAINTING. Loe. Ref. JM. A1TENOANT. 2 full time o,"'~'~·=-,_,~·--~~-1 MED s e r vi c e , Free DONUT ladies wanted-25 to ~~v~ ~=-d~ik!™!w~ VALUESI VALUES! GS~i~~e~e~;:,~~-0~~~~ll~ estimates. 646-0210 ~nV,:,5:4 ~~~~ 45, afternoon I.< night lihift. Wed-Oct 7th, 7 :30 pm. New lawns. gn ... yinr. Reas. PAINTING-Ext.-Int.18 yn:. Laguna Beach. 494-71110. MR. DONUT, 135 E. 17th $57,750 val. 4 Br. 3 Ba. tam. COAST 646-S848 r---I Lie Free t • St., C.M rm. For Duplex or Hme NB AUCTION HOUSE · ~xper. L ~illng$ 968-~ ~utomob1le S1l1sman ~FU""'LL~'"0,~P"AR=T'°'TIME=~-1 or Clil.I. Officto 644-457L 2426 NeWport Blvd CM. Lawn ~ U8 a mo. l>.1ow ' ccous · . · Used cars full or pl Ume. Earn up to $5. per hr .,._ 673-3101 Bkr. 11l~nd~u~1t~r~ia~l~R~e~n~l~1~l_:~::::~:l\.>:ii"J;;;;:;:-;1.;;;:;;;:-;:;;;: llO)!tior elderly, brigbt It I • _ . . 1958 Piper Apache twi~ Room & Board 5996 c}JeerfUI sumiuliihnas.. \VANTED: By~ov:-15th rnintoond totlmeeng $5CQ) Lovely ocean view, private ~ sq. Jt. Comm. or worth ot 'new radios' New rooms. For information l n<!us_t'I space for <lH~l paint. Trade l3500 ~ity Ba1anCe an 2 YI= oliflsfliiia Looi< fOf our Wiicru--"-edae...Free..est_on fiowieJ" PAINT~G. neat 1' reliahle. _,..., _______ 4U'_,._.__ '• BRUSl:l_~fi - contract approx $18 750 agon bed& A cleanup. 841-5802.-Call John for free est I~ ,,,,.,.,,. payable 'monthly. will ~e SERVICE DIRECTORY ROTOTILLING, Trett and 646-t871 or 841--Cl28 , 2100 Harbor Blvd. 645-0166 FOR hoUse, condo or units. Babysitting 6550 11hrubl ~moved, new la~. * PAPE_RHANGER * BABYSITIER -All day 613-5022 Free est. 548-fmt. -ReCO(llized Authority child care. MY, home or 492-4089. Ptmting shOp. Send in-formation to Box p 2041. for boat, property or ! Daily Pilot, Cl\'f. 542-7208 Motels, Tr1ll1r C...rh 5997 ·-------"-. :.A; BABYSITl'ING. My hom!:. Japanese Ca.rdl!oer, Exp. Prior Instructor 8f&-2+C9 live-In. Meu. Verde . COmfERClAL s lorage, * * * * .1' ~ Mesa del Mar, CM Ex-General Cleanup. Hauling EXPERT paintfne. Jntuior 540-4100. small or large area 10 sq. -cellent play facilities. Good e 54&-lB!M • &: Extmor. Flft etttmates. ~."-'=s-"E"°A""U~T~l~C~l~A-N--w-/ * + WEEKLY Rates. SEA LARK MOTEL. 23 01 Newport Blvd, Costa :r.1esa. ft. to 3,500 sq. ft. By monti!. [~!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!l!i!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'\!!!'J!!!.!!!J!!'!'!~'!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! lunches, Small c h 11 d re n EXP. Japanese Gardener. B &-J Painting 4~7842. (':l!entele, In Newport Beach (Ir year 831~ O.K. V~ BUSINESS and BUSIJrlE~S and welcome, Certified teacher. Cen, cleanup. Haulifli trtts. Painting in~r & exter. area. New shop, Lido. Com- & STORAGE FINANCIAL FINANCIAL 549--0726. 1'.1aint. yard 646--0619. s2a a room + mall!riall mission or rent space. FOR Lse-5300· sq fl . prime!-'-''------.-.-· WOULD l<We lo care for your GARDENING I: Landacap-* 64a,.~ * 673-4"3 or 67:)-.1330. wa r e h~e spacc-ail/pert. Business 6300 Monty Wanted 6350 child -in my home. ·in&: Pruning-Ttirom~g ·Ii YOU SUP.PLY THE PA1NT BOYS & GIRLS PRN. & semi-priv rooms in lrVine Ind, Mr. -BUllird Opportunities 1--,..-------Baker J Fairview area. Renovating 548-5209 an!; ~•n Per Avera•• Room Earn SSS taking orders for Guest Homes 5998 I. 'd t ho f 1.::'.....,..,,:::::;'::':_· =,.,,,,,--,,---1---------WANTED:' Private party to 5'19-4039. +Ml " ...,__, fro ic guci; me or am-JAPANESE Gardening Free Est. 557-8638, 540-7M6 ..... ..-.stmas trees m your b""'M. ~ ••oto...citizens ... 1 "'e Rt nl M-1 600 sq. n. AAA loan us ~(00.$6000at10% on. BABYSITl'ING-My b o me . fn'o-'o • -•·u··-• Call MR "Y'<I."'" -'""'ti ...... Service.~ .µeatwork.0.eaJ!UP ... A ... ___ p_;,,,.; .... ..-...-.. • ..... Gii'•-.... YC . -yard & patio, gOOd Jood, $75/mo. 294't RandOlph, CANDY AND "SN:ACK $13.uuu ·prova~ equity in ·Area ct Yairvie'W &-SU yd ·airit.9118-2:303 -~•u;.nu&iua ......... ~·-CHRISTMASTREE,546-9511 congenial atmolipbere, CM CM. * 615-5116. SUPPL y 9UJ' home, Our pttSent 2nd J»ego Fwy. Mn. BeUord, · m Inter. le Eder. -Sped.al rain for tnor'I! information. .;..a. A""'1 by Oct 1st 2300 ~ S BLISH ii due March 1, 197L We 549-tm Complete Yard C1rel on apts.-&l&-3M5 BOY• .... ·--•or -a"' -· NEW bldg., 1368 to "• WE ~ TA will 5 mu ? w 540-<8J1 ~ "~ '" • 548-SZL Nr ~r & Fa.lrview, 1 yr ALL ROUTES pay po or e Oilµ) care in my borne. JIM FOR yoorl"paintinz needs A _...... ..._,, ..,....... 6 can get all we want at 10 . from.,_ ...... __. .... ..., ... UIAe """"'" money, ELDERLY Guesls, ocean lease. SUllivan. 548-217 CNO SEU.ING INVOLVED)' _._ hat ill ff , Fenced bk yd, warm meah. JAPANESE GARDENER repan ~.., """""°' -.1~ p•-·• •. help ~y ..,.a, sow w )'CU o er. 50c hr. 642-0829 1 TIME OK ·call Paul 551-1455 ""' ''-"" •~ vicw, loveJy home in 6100 Pl~n one •••••••• $975.00 lf you don't have money 7--5846 school. 642-0803, 9-5. Laguna Beach. 491-1686. Lots Plan two •••••••• $1625.00 now, but expect lt before Llc'd Day ca.re, 7 am tu 5:30 *54 * * PAPERHANGING e WANTED·LOTS Plan lhrtt ,,, ••. $3250.00 3-1-71 rontact us 546-3634. pm wkly. Hot meals. Har-CLEAN UP SPEOAUSI' A: PAINTING. * 968-2425 to build Apt's. Cash Required. Excellent in-OOr!Baker, 546-1539. New tenee & repair. li1owing STORAGE SPACE for CASH come for a few hOurs week-ANNOUNCEMENTS CHILD Catt, my home. & edging. Reas. 548-6955. PaRlnflng, Call \V rite details to~ Daily Pilot ly work. <Days & Evenings). ind NOTICES Breakfast, lunch & mack!. CLEAN-UP tpair camper, boats. etc., • • • R rill· d 11 u * G42-6S60 * Box M-2004, 2211 w. Balboa e 1ng an co ec ng 642--0723 ~M~l"°'~;la~n~d~"'8~pi~ng!·C.:-~~91~4~I·-:-;:.::;:;:;;-;;;-;-;;;;;;:;;;';:' REAL ESTATE .om;:"':=· "N=.B=·=====I money from coin o(>l'ratcd Found (FrH Ads) '4001J::========l.,50 Hr W--'ino cleani.... * PATOf PUSJ'ERING ~ dispensers in Costa l>.1esa .,... • c.:u--., ... , ~-I SO and nd' \V Brick, Masonry, painting, etc. Ex per. All types. Free estimates ""ntr1 Ranches 61 SUJTOU 1111" area, f! PUREBRED Weimaraner, etc 6560 Reliable. John, 646-9548. Call 54o-6825 :.;;:;.;;:;;.;.;_ ___ ...,,_,I establish route. (Handles K-10 month& • old, VI c Income Property 6000 HORSE RANCH name brand candy and Newport Blvd & 22nd St. BRICK * BLOCK * Sl'ONE ---$88--000-~--40 Min. from Newport Beach. snacks.) For personal inter. C.M. 64&-0354 By the bour, after 5:30 Westbay ln~ome Homes New Rivenkle Fwy' at Nor· virw in Costa Mesa area, =s'°'LK~Seo-'tti<"'' ""m-.,~,---0~,.~.,-... ~ 642-1948 * 64S-0758 RAIN gutters I natal I ed. DRAINS ·m .. ---i? r-:n;_ Private 3 BR residence + (4) co, 14% hilly acres, approx. !M!nd na~. addres." and -vie. East Bluff, CdM High Rainy season here toOD. • • ._..,,. ............. 2 bednn apt!. Est. gross 2 Br, 2 ba. den, din. rm, phone number to MULTI-School area. 6#-lOOO days. Ciblnetmeklng '5IO Free est. Reas! 9684208 slew? Expertly cleaned $9. breakfast bar, old bldngs. ST ATE DISTRIBUTING, 5'18--49S7 on Sat &: Sun. 24 br lerv. 530-3854. monthly inc:Ome $1010. 356 E. Owner will carry, no poinls. INC. 1681 \Vest Broadway, Fine Cabinets ~ Shelvin&: Remodelinr, fence bldg.. 24 HR PLUMBING 20th St, Costa r-.tesa, Build-<2l3l s62-58'ZO eves. ,714i Anaheim, c.aur. 92802 (714) VERY Friendly beautiful ·* 494. 0602 * painting & ren'l repairs. &: REMODELLING er ftZ.-400). 735-9669 Mon. OR -write P.O. m-5060 long-haittd grey male cat; I::::========= 1 -""'i'i''n·_Xln-;;;;l;i;re;-f~'';;;' ;;;";;™;-n.W.l-==~55~1_;:-964<~'==~ Al&o Triplexes· $57,.500 Booe 440• Norco, Cali!. 91760 1~~""'·;,,...=====-wlfiea collar. Hoge green C 6S90 NEED typing done'!' We PLUMBING REPAIR "O\VNER Ill" • must r.elL COFFEE DISTRIBUTOR eyes. Vic. H.B. 962-7504 arpent1ring can do. Speedy, accurak, No job too __ ., Opportunity !or reliable 0 1. bl bl .,. •-0"~ Beaut 56 Space 1'1obile Home Acreage 6200 person fQ deliver cofftt 10 F UND 1te ue parakeet, CARPENTRY re&90f\8 e, _............ e 60-JJ.28 e Park with new studio type young (Mesa .Verde area) MINOR REPAIRS. No J"ol» F.d'• Cleaning Service home for owner. Valuable For Acreage 1n Orange Co. indu~trial and commercial 548-945.S. Too Small. Cabinet lD ...,.. Carpets -Upholstecy • Wi~ PLUMBING REPAIRS Misc. R1nt1ls 5999 - General Services 6612 Plumbing CARRIER BOYS WANTED !or the DAILY PILOT Dana Point, San Juan Capistrano and Capistrano Beach. Contact Mr. Seay al DAILY PILOT San Clemente office l05 N. E! Camino Real 4gz.c.oo *CASHIER/ COUNTER Gm.L * 7 to 3:30, JI.Ion thru Fri, Call :r.m. Pennington. 833--0600 Ext 2031. betwn. 2-5 Pi\1. , locat1ons. EXCEPTIONAL-, ========== ~.-• ,, .... ~--. •,. ~!7 & Install. 545--6688 C2 frontage for expansion. ~-la ""~alftt LY HIGH EARNINGS. 1~ apt A other cabinets. uvw• ......,.-., ~ Oericat $45,000 dn, su bmit trade. SI~•,. ~· :7 1 $'=~ ,. $3900 Lost 6401 545-1115, U no answer leave RUTH RYAN 6 w stment fl """"' -------··-6730 Remodell"I I. \Vally 1.teCoy 6Ta-OU · Call 64~. for an immediate income. Small Je_male shaggy dog. DUI at ~ H. O. Hauling 6940 AGENCY 11 UNITS in Ne v.· port ============:1 \Vriie for more information, Lost for approx 3 wks. Looks AndenoB 5· 1 Repair SPECIALIZING H ·-1 Si le h!les R E W tod 6••• ~ and REPAIRS • •• ......,...... T.N.T. Lawn e r v ce.,_________ IN e1 ... ts area. n,g , • an .4..U giving phone numu.:r like Raggity Ann, found vie . ....~-G·--cloa~·po hauJ)no .,. & a· 4-Plex in a court, oU address to QUICK KUP El Camino I: Mendosa. C.M. TIONS * CABINETS. Any ---. •r.o '.( ;;iil LESS '1llAN $9 SQ. Fr. OFFICE PERSONNEi. GAL FRIDAY $500 Two girt ofc. -const:ruttton. Xln't oppor: Top be:nt1il!. Call Miss Betty, Abigall Ab. bot Personne.•. Agmcy, 230 W. Warner, SUite 211, Santa Ana. , GIRLS-Sell "Trick or Treat" cardy. 1.take good money, win prin"s--& help nttdy school. ~2~. 9 to 5. HELP Wanted part er full -ume • dding · pleasant· tere- phone work. No exper, nec- ess. We train. Make $2 per hr. + bonuses. Call or come in immed. 548-5501, 1869 Newport Blvd., Suite F, CM. IR,VINE PERSONNEL SERVICES•AGENCY {Formerly Abilitie9 Unlim.) Sales Sec'y 90 SI-I, t10 typing. Prefer ma- ture girl w/ Wes It mfgr bckgrnd. Gen'I Office Bright girl ,v/60 typinr ' a gd ren'I olc bckgrnd, Secretary l>.lust have some exper In lending lield,. 00 SH, lype 60, 1 girl otc. in Newport area. 1he st 8 ..,...,, old. AsJdng TO Buy from owner; small ST c 1111 Rob'-•~ ... 9169 aize-.;..)., light moving, 5 8• 'Free plan M!l"Vic:e, add-a-rm, 1198 Newport Blvd,, CM ,.. CdM t mod I DI • o., UUIUUU,' ........ JVU "'"'1-J129 ' TRISH HOPKINS Sl'iJ,000. By CN.·nr. Call muse In o re e · =--------z yrs exper. 548-6713 "" gar. a>nvero>nS. LICVl!ed. 6f$.48M 548-9665 or 6'H925. Cash. 714/644--0310. Stockton, Ca. 95207· Min female daehliie w/collar, 1--~..,,,""==----IY A RD I Gar. Cleanup. 30 Y"Al'I in home bJda:, Ph; li931 Beach Blvd., HB 488 E. 17th I at Irvine) C.M. SS Y' PARTNER under medication. Inst on ROOFING Remove trftl tvy truh. 962.-0140 847-9617 642-1470 e 'VETS ATTENTION BUSINE ind M 1 · ,. btw Sa taA ~AllHomelmp:ovements. c-•·,bao...,;,9fi2.'..s745. 1;~~~===~~;1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 ' Sep. units -S·M.000. 2 Sep. FINANCIAL lo help manage & operate a on eva..., n n na Free Est. 53&-1059 '"""" Roof' " Tustin ,,\ves. Reward. TRASH G t l"I 6950 Un'.,. FHA, •~.ooo. S Sc", -local business. lst -ar·s in-& arage c ean-up, " ~· ,. B • ,,-548 3666 REPAIR, Remodel li: patlo6. I d }' l units, FHA, $50.000, u11ne11 ~n1r shoultl exceed $25M. · Let the s~·ede do IL 7 days. $10 a oa , t'ee es · 1---------· I Ltt Pereyda Realtor Opportunities 6300 Party selected must com· Black Labrador, answers to '494-7&53 or 673-54!7 Anytime, ~1. BEFORE you buy, call T. 546-1698 49-1·54,l:S iili~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml mence at once. $$00 ca.sh c .r-.1. .. _ MOVING, Ga.rare clean-up&: Guy Roofing Co. i:ecover Business R1nt1I 6060 CIRCLE THIS AD required. Write Box P201.9, "low", Lost 17th & Irvine Cement, Concrete 6600 lite hauling. Reuonable. spec. 64>71MI, SU-9500 Daily Pilot, C.M. Reward. Return From ~»tt~~es~ti~m~a~"'~·~61~>~l602.~:;;;1~~~:""="'"='""~~ Jobs-Min, Wom. 7100 Jo~n, Wom. 7100 RESTAURANT (Mal<l 11\ FARRELL'S RESTAURANT t OFFICE, STORE nr. N'pl. Bc:h. Post OHlCC' .t Greyhound depot. 12x21, $1S Mo. lse. Graham Really 646--2414. »ARBOR BLVD tronl. 19....:3;' w/re1troom. 2110 ilarbor Blvd, CM S200 mo. ytar'1 leate. 54s.'.o710. IS .::M=AooLL...:_we;.:l"1e-,-,-."'b_l_i ,-,-,-.'I The Fann, 64i.os::t, 493-1648 CONCRETE, All types. Free HAULING I CLEANUP Sewing 6HO publication. Jdeal J.>r Im· CH.llfUAHUA, male, tan. est.. Sawing, breaking, haul· =~$1~0~a~loa~d~*~543-SS2t~~~IEi:rni;pj;i0:;;>fu;;;;:;;;d mrd. expanslon to $17,000 Vic; 19th A: Pornons, CM. ing. & Skiploadln&:. Servk:t EUROPEAN Fuhlon trained per yr net. Now grossing 646--3473 t-ves, 83>2361 da.Ys. " quality. 548-8668 Bob Housecleanint 6735 otters her talents in $12,000. Ha• been 1 v.mnan LOST, maJe Irish setter, CEMENT Work of al.I kinds. dreumaldna, alterations, operation, Term' to right Vie: CdM. ple&Se call 67~ Free est also children's clothn. Very Thi.i ·o.n l.>C" 1he most Im-party, tncls. B.B .. C. 2888 Reward! -636-0374 reasonable. Simple ahlfts porlanl ndvtrtlscmrnl of 1nembel'1lhlp. Total price DECORATIVE CONCRETE TILE .Doors stripped" wued, $12 A up, 11dr11 $10 • up. ) "~ .. 1000 Grey & while kitten w/rhi· r.srpct shampooed, wlndowa -1••9, vour life -because t may .,:;,..,., .,..4-· DRIVES • WALKS -PATIO I ~ Quall rvl by "r~ Change your C'ronomlc pie-ORANGE JULIUS franchise nestone collar. 401 SUntlower CAU. DON 642--«5 c ea,..,... ly M! Ce Q"'U""ALITY:-:;=-,y="°~--al.,.--tu~ f1 "<1m "blf'».k" lo . -Aw., Santa Ana. 1 • 51~ professional janiton. Master ••anted O:sa:um;~ Office Rental 6070 "bright." :,=:: ~~ 3;~~~: ~°i: BICYCLE. ~~.~~c~ ~k~ ::~: Chafte ac~ted. 6t&-8096. t.lteratiMs. Key Sa,y, 1163 , p 0 RT Ov.•nt;>rs '''ho nov.· ~rvlcc S9 500, \Vill accept 2nd. Good hltsa Verde area. Phillips Cement. S48"6380 Qn.naf! Ave., CM. ~1292 * NE \V . I U.1.1. vrndlng 1nnch!ne' arc 1 ', lama •. business Owner Call Sl0-3283 aft 5 Al • ~2 ~•• Beach..modt rn/dlx nllict',. i:rov.·ing froni parl -~ to 0 &>J • MORE Ccncrete pe.tio fw HOUSE OF CLEAN terat1en1 ~ -.__ Atr/cond. Jlld. Priv. ba. tull-Ume olJ("ratoN v.i lh moving north, 646-9987 8LK 1.fed. ai poodle, Vlc: leu money. Artl1tfc lettin(. DOES EVERYTHING Neat, accurate, 20 yean: exp. KIO W. Coast llwy. Co1npian)''s r!Mnclns:. *ASSOCIATE 0.k a: Republic, CM, Lie., call l\fAX at 6«.o687 Comm 'l 1-Rt1. Oeanin& e o ELUXE alMOnd o~cc in As Uttlt: as 3600 t.o SlMX> S15,000 Cash rtqull"l'd for Na.1 ~"'-"'1S6.~-~-----I 642 LtM4 Tiie, C1r1mlc: Cmnplitet CMlttt B 1 d g. lnve~tmmt In U.IJ. profi t llonal expansion, UnUmltl?d Purebred Slamtme mlle cal Contr1ctor1 '620 -vGIA 6'74 Crpls. drapes. Up to 3600 511. 11roducini;: 11('ndln~ mo -Polenlial. Write Box P2018, Thurston School area, La· * THE ·~'MODELERS * It. "'1425 or 54~. chin~ con erow. Dally Pilot. rn•na BA .. 411• -" l\.MI -1..,:;""'C:-:"ic;;--;=;;--;<::;' I .. -ua. ,.....""°"' F'ree ests • 100?' tinandni SROOi\l SUJTE,Coronadcl Time rrquin-mt'nl I' 6 R ESTAURANT, Cash NOTIFICATJON Of birth Kitchens. aarates Mar. Slnragc & parkinr. 2 lo 8 houn llf'r '~N·k aloni.:: ntroed! Submit bid. Fan-certificatf! found on f'air c arport 1 cc m p I et, N . l® MJ lfl. Ground floor. wi th " scrvk<l'ft bl,. car. No lastic H 11. r b or oppnty, Dr. t9-30J 557-964.l aft l :30. Remodolo·ng. J;('l"SOnal «.lllM calls, Thr Ph. 6is-G1i>7. m1u·hinet1 do tht' ~~llin(i fo1· 4!H-3182. 496-.1\189. Very young black It white Qu11.llty Contractor& 642--JGfiO Downtown Hngt Bch you. Just i;lve. iood scrvlc:e! puppy round Avocado St, MY WAY. quality home • Cttamic Tile Work or Pluteril'I(. Reu. hee flL 536-206 aft 6 PM evtS., WINDOWS A walls wa1hed. rln, stripped, Half!d & v.ued. Free f'•I. 897·7834 day or night. 613-3)!!0, WOULD YOU BELIEVE Tr .. S.~ce 6lt0 I'll Ot:an Your Home for lob'• TrM Surgery Blue Chip Stamps. * 540.J'l98 * 894"'103 Remodek!d ·offk:e, J blk to \\"rtlt', sitvtns: name, ad· Money to L01n 4320 c.~I 642.Sm rtpair. \Valls. ceUlna, tloora ocean,. Undbora Co. !i3(;.~19 dl't'lllr phonr num~r and 1 I JD l SIA'fESE. Or ... __ kitt<n. etc, No job too small. Bay It Beach Janitorial JOBS & EMPLOYMENT :KXMQJ.J.2)0 .... , ti. SufiJcient tt(trences. s oan " ~u.a 54S-14!M O'pts., wiildoWI, ~oon etc. .... wht pav.-s. wb!te apt. v·1c of --~------Res. 1-Comm'I, 646-1401 Job Wented, Min 7000 OmCES, P.S!I04t80, Utsery 8% INTERESr Slater It NewlAnd M1·1.S34. Additions * Remodelln& -';;;::::";"":':l:::-;;:::r:::-IO..;;;...;;..;,;;.;.;.;;;..;.."'--= Colta M@a 646-nJJ lnduttrlet, Inc. D l TIME FOR 61~~i:wick .t*Son.t, .:1~-2110 1.fesa. Cleanlng Ser-flct PT 'Mme eves+ wlcnds, uy • SHARE niofty IUmlsMd 11~ Em)lin' Contnl, 2nd T oa n ~ ~· Carp<ll, wlndo"':, ...... .... ...... no ,.111,,.. Calll. of!iOt oullo, ha> '"""'hlng. ll<pl 67150 QUICK CASH ROOM Addi-. 1 & 2 1tory Rts • °'"""" 1• 54Mlll llrlvu• Ue 54HTI$. C.M. $12.YmG. 675-5111 or Dallas, Tt'x.u 75247. Temu; bastd on equity. A a•r. etll Gui. Contractor frvnl"I 6755 "MAKE Room l\lr ·t>Mf· 61Ml63. 642-2171 54s.o611 THROUGH A '"' Jow•1\ .~ ... 64)..2981, _ __,,_ _____ , d y .... d .. n out "" OPTJ~ Ren1.1i-.rum or uni. cor·rEE Sbop, xlnt loc.., 54!rvinr Harhot Atta. 21 )'n. DAILY PILOT CEN'L remodellna It ma.Int * IRONING * pn.;:e .. your truh Is CASH 33TE. 1Tt!t St, CM:tfJ/mo. pncc-1. mnt. AM. $10,000 Settler Mortgage Co. WANT •D No Jl)b too 11 mall. .A1y.Jtomc._S1 Jfr. ,Vflh • Dally Pilat C111lntd Ulil pajd, "5-2@, PLACE REALT Y ·~704 3S6 E. 17th St:rftt " u c·d/Wured. 61S.A.183 P ick Up. Dellv. 51.>-l&C:t .:•::'·'---------,. I • HUNTINGTON BEACH I Brooli:hur1t & Adams) 'FARRELL'S, • "Gey 90'1" resteurant featur- ln9 FUN, FOOD & ICE CREAM, hei immedi- 1te optning1 for: e FOUNTAIN MEN e WAITERS e FRY COOKS e SANDWICH MEN e BUS BOYS & DISHWASHERS We wfil employ approximattly JOO employcet. ?'\!ti or parl time schedules available. "E:tptrlf!nec It not nrccuary since candld•lf'' aeltcted w!ll rt• celve formal tra1ning ln their dep11.rtmt"nt*. Employment fntervi1•s will be conducted TUES. & WED. OCTOBER 6th & 7th . 20111 BETWllN 10 em & 6 pm /(f: FARRELL'S l rookhur-it Ave 18rookhunt & Ad1m1) Huntin9-ton 811ch . . f, • t I ' j I d• L. Tl II c. HS (;, ,., ,. HC T• Cf r •• w ho s r.1; " ' G ,. t: ; 21 " Al M p M ,, ' -• " • ' ' ' M < I ii \\ L t • ( I f ... --' ..... -.. -..• ..-;.-........... ~. -; -.,. ___ . ________ ,.. ________ """ .----------.,-_----·-----------------·------·~..----~ -----· ,)OIS & EMP.LOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYM&NT bt Man, Wom. 7100 Jobe Man, Wem. 7100 HOMEWOR.'<ERS WANTED (Envt>lope A~sae:rs). B.1.11h IJAJJIRl!d. '~ l-a.d. dre s•e d e nvelope. LANO DON WORLD TRADERS. P.O. Box ll27-A21, Redondo Beach, Calli. 90278 11SKPRS Emplyr pa.ya I~. Geom Allen Byh1.nd Ann- cy 106-B E. 16th, S.A. -------- il_newport . _ pemnnal agency 1.11 Dover Drive Newport Beach 64>-3810 547-0395 Exec. Sec'y HOUSEKEEPER ~ed for $550 Llond•r. October 5, 1'70 JOBS l EMPLOYMENT MERCHANDISE FOR ; MIRCHANDISI ,Oil MIRCHANOISI FOR PETS and LIVESl'O?K TltANSl'OUATIOH Jobt ·Mon, Wom. 7100 SALE AND TRADI SALi AND TRADE SALi AND TRADE Doti• llU Power CnilMrt 9G20 DAJLV PILOT J9 TRAH5PORTAttON I Mobile Ho"'" '200 . Furniture I IOOO Televl1Jen 8205 Xi11eellaneous MOO rAWN, M.tle Chihuahua. 1.::-=--------* SALES * 1----------Show' atodr, S mos old, 28' Don:d, eusrm mldf', 2 yrs W11nt To LfVe In Tor R.Pmrded Information KING-SJ: Slrrynons Sat!.n 63 .. COMBO tel Color 'JV * RUMMAGE Grandfather h1 Champt.ln. oMf. Just complct,ly COSTA MESA • --~-----1 .. ---6G.4lll0 -~Y.al!)'-Bed, Jinn. --Al -Stereo, AM.-FM, $600., 3 mo: .,.ALE ...&:; • ~L-\V.hitc...Prmc.....owµed Ot.!trha1U.,.t-l ol a kind bol.l, Lqcal .flJ)llCl/fl, .av•H•blt now! * SA LAO GIRL '*" linl'.ns. bl.anke.1. 'p.r~d, old. Call. s. c . 492-73A8. .>i "" by tbt. Empuor of JaP4f1. nllry, head, llPI 4. mat U ~arc. 1trioul tbout buy ?i:uit h•ve good prcpanli1on nearly oow. \i Cost. AlllO: Tn-a1uN11 fr om TttuUN! Worth $150-$300, lint SSO tlshini: boat. Spttdt nver SO Inv a moblle home .•. Now'1 experience. ?\Ion. thru i;·r1. Llte Oak dHk, y,·alnut e.nd, HI F ' & St l2lO Tea. Bootlq!Jf, Chel's eo,. cub a:tts, Or lr1de for Kood 200 ml tAnge. &-cpenslve the time 10 ft'O •• coflce tbl. 4 volvet oc-• I treo ___ _._ " _ _. •i:r.t1n •·· 7-3:30. Call ~Peru1i11i:::-m:r, Cn.ll S..WDliu, L11W'n1, t•pi ·~r. pow~r mow-•••• i:Ofltall..IS __..to ui\an. BAY H_AR80R. ~~~ """" cuional chn:, mabo1 -v ie-J I M • w ' •--TV AJ t··• cl•• 6"' •-ton o.>o.>-WW Ext bet¥.'n -t~ ry. en 1 ' omen's er, oAt<IY • 50 ~ .,., ser-.... i.-u. MOBILE HOMES ., • PM. • ' · torlan dre~r. I amps , AKAi M-9 tape recnrdcr. 1 · ·i ._, ~ ,., .. .. ....,, Clolhinr. ocr. & 8. \•1ce 11.v1u fh110 • .rru-..... ri. "[)o..lt;.youn1,lt cam ..... r" 1425 Baker St. (at HarbOrl 1 -Si~;o;s'fREl:si[S-1~•~10~R~E~!=S~<~1-~51l66~;,· ===I Garrard q·nchro-Llh ~ ,~ SEAMSTRESSES tumlahle. Ken1o1.'00d r-.todt'I S1, Mary's EpillCOpal Church AKC Re1:: purebred "57 POTI1, 2 ton VAn $7j() Costa Al~!I&. 5f().9470 Sportsv.·ear manufacturer Offlc• Furniture I010 'lli-1<10 amplifier. 2 e•ch 428 Park Ave., LAcuna Sch. miniature Doxie pup, paprr 208 Pearl, Balboa lltle. Tripl_t Wida Cornell • wants.exp'r seamstresses on Akai 25 watt speakers like DIAmonds, IOOM-, 11 pa.ii· 4T trnd, 5h0ts. Ntitl, Chanip, Hiiicrest e flamingo 1• t .. - .. ~ . .. Te11.cher'1 children, }~, V. SH 100+,.t.yping 75+, Pl'f!V• ca11 -968-m2. -1ou1 corp. f!"Pf!r.--fltlptut. I am IOOktng for SQmcone · Oynamlc employer. - single ncedlr, .overlock &: Refin'd 3'1x60 wood desb. ne~ f,500 total, 67:Hl695, pt! each, S200. Maki! nice !atllt'r, Reg, rnc>ther, ~. Spetd-Skl &oats t030 Paramount e Universal bhnd·hll'rnmer Apply 1n !'It'"" $69.50 • Refin'd Wood um _61r3929. ea.ttiou. _113L439!~7. Lt'[. ~~. FOR Stile:-tht Jatt 'G9-Hy.-..Baa:irtX-tM_._B12!Ld.m.OOt 1 _ I--MOil,~· S,----Main,--Suite J, rotary chirn:7'"'$29:50-...-We L...sure \Vnrlrl, St-al .Bch. SILKY TERRIER PUPS th'O Swift w.ttop &--!taller,. _C9n_tlncnJ.!1 e Sta.rc:----~-'---t-1 who la going to school 11.nd ls wlll!ni to work eveninj?s and \\'ttkends do!og janitorial \\'Ork $1.!iO hr. to start. Must have 0\\'11 transportation. Sa1-.\1on . ill-IJ91 aft 5 p.ro. Janltorii1I Maintenance titan 10 v.·ork from 1 PJ\1 to 10:30 PJl.1. All company ben- .t!i!!. Apply in person to Gent> Laney, Da ily Pilot. 3.10 \\I. Bay, Cotta Mesa before 12 noon . LOT MAN ~~~ 2100 Harhor Blvd. 64:>04fi6 MASSEUSE· Woman, exp'd. Also tra\n('f'. "* 841-7$179 l\!Ml"ICUR IST, Full or p/time. Hair \VeRt. 67:1-4186 Mor • Comfort custom lil- ted hra for fittinit or job, call Mrs. Con'.l.·ay, 968-6219. * MOTIIER: Over 30, WOO loves chldrn. Nt'l'dl'd as aide in large Pediatric Group. Ful l/T i me, W/Bcnefits. Mn. \Varren. 646--0545. MGR. Trainee, full time, over 21. Apply Me 'N' Eds Pizza, 410 E. 171h, C.l\f. mijj Gxec Agency for Career Girls • leasing Mgr \Vill train. Bcauliful new apls. Ty.ping, figure \\'Ork. Sat & Sun w/2 days oU durlni wk. Receptionist LUe typing, l)kkpn1: ~t>, hvy phones. Gen'I Office knowl· 1 Girl ofc. for car l't'n!al co. "Exper. helpful . OrRnge Co. Airport. Adv. Sec'y to $520 Act'Ui. typing EiO+, Sit Or dlt"- taphone, PtflOnabit. Work w/advertising mgr. Lovely co. Santa Ana, Ca. have the tara:esl ielecUon Cameras & e 21-llne cigarelle machine-~T/J.'Cm. Qualify -brtnling, Ei5 ll.P. Mere, Like ilt>\\'. $100 General • HU!erest $450 SECRETARY of used ottlce tum ln lh1I Equipment l300 !nr aa.le. healthy&· alert M. for Slud & a'8ume pmnts. c.ci for ski· CHAPMAN Fee Paid. Cal l L<lr11lnc, atta. 1$250~~====~";,;,_..~:'.;'°'.iA:""iO"'~'"'scc·Yi64'1"-1'733.liiH"'.fEimiiEii !""'&-.pleasure. Phone MOBILE HOMES faln::hild 8 mm ind movie AKC ""~!Sii TE""'~" ··• 64~2770, Westcll rt Pcnonn('J Me Mahan Oesk -----.-u•~ ''"'~,,. 543-6137. 1233.1 Beach Blvd., G.G. Agency,2!M3\\1{'5!cllffDrivc, 1800 Newport Blvd. ~;;t>:.-.~~.~"!50557'1~i Misc, Wanted 1610 f'cm. Brindle. Champ. Sit!'. e ta• Bristol-near new r-.1erc ~* 714!S30·2930 * N.B. (Also fl'C jnh.!11 &42-MSO -·-$125 or bst olr. Alt 4:30 LGE, clean AbaJone pearls. 540-3811 65 hp, ma11y extras, St09j. * SECRETARY* Miscellaneous 1600 The Golden Wavts. 16 GOLDEN 842-4563. 1969 UNIVERSAL 24X53, C I R t t ••14 p · s •-•• ,. ea . serial Ko. 15313, New $9900. For reron:lcd inlormalion, at, 11 auran -_ _ r1ncess t .• '.3.t1.u~110, · RETRIEVERS Customtr Service Dial 545-°2.473 SlLVERTONE 8 track open !M965 Phone 41!1/3.12-1019 Boat Trailers 9032 1969 General 24~1. aenaJ Rep. to $520 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii' ------.---.-1 reel .!lt('reo 1apc recon:ler $75 1 ..:=::...:==-..:.==-==--AKC * * 714/~ No. 6277. New $9\XXI. Enjoy phone ""·ork, type 45. II!) mat.chlni din-Pwlable stereo r eco rd W/W carpel3 !JI. ROOd cond. llT·WA\' Boat Trailer 1970 24..XGO Sheraton r-.fanor, Ti --SER'llc.E CENTER lng+cocklailhalt·.round _Jllayer in large homemade P(r ggld___Qr ~n. 646-8226 . GERr.t Shorth aire ct A«ial No 002 Sl.2000 ~t:~;11~;~:i~:~'. P"OPie. Employment Agency booth.!! w/tables. S2S each console cabinet $.1). ?IB 11nd lx-110, alt 4. ----~~~nter AKC 39 champs! g ;:.~::~·Sl~~7~i94~P to Dcidrr: (711) 5.11~105 ' L set. 3333 W. Coast lf""'Y· N.B l'' tube handling machine YOUNG couple furnishing * * * 543-B188 * * * '67 20x43 L• COrONI Legal Sec'y. $600 Gd typfllt, SH not req'CI. Ex· per. Lovely S.A. oft. F/C Bkkper Salary Open Rrstaurallt exper. ht>lpful. Lovely N.B. tocafion:-\VOrK ""'/accouot.ant. Payroll Cltr.k to $468 Type 45, hvy clerical, 1·2 yrs exper, Prepare info for com- puter. Lrg payroll, Great people. * Draftsman · · · · · $750 SSO. J onnson 10 hp outboard first home, nttd teak\l.'OOd Marine Equ;p. 9035 "'-· Ad 11 p k Military scrv. comple(e/mln. Garage Sale I022 $225. Hertl'rs turret loftdin"' bullet 54G-2'l79 aft 5 P t.1. * TOY FOX T~RRIER =I up in u ar 5 cha · I '"" · PUPPIES. UKC. Tiny Cha.m-SE · Complete w/1!ep1, awnind, yrs r:~~r. as inc n1ca tool, 5 sets rille dyes, 1 A KING electric fi shing d It I •-k •• 1 t Medical sNden1 with liamily pion Hoes. $50 & $65. ~ 145 1143 E 0 _. carport & shed. ra ~ .. I.ill ""gr,,., pan * FURNJTIJRE·DISHES shotgun dye powder nee ds r t fr lgf'tator, "'•S-"'"~ moivr. · · n ..... e AVAJLABLE _._ layout . equip, &. facility. & MISC. ** measure, shot measure $100. ,, .,.. ,...,,. Ave. Apt 5 Orange 633-7326. * S , $600 d Reasonable. 64n-3333. M. •-h . I-• AKC Jl\t.r.1 EDIATELY IC y , , , , ... , • . . EVERYDAY! Aft 4. p.m. A miral TV S30 548-6516. in ~ nauwr s •~, , D I (1141 5.11 81"'' b /1 · I • WILL BU Y REFR.IGERA· Worm•d c-p~. oho'·. Boat Rentals 901• ca er: -"' A le to accept resp g1r ofc 644--5177 8' DINGHY SSO 1·2' FT'ig. " au I""' ~ ..Je /gd i;kills/aptitude for fig· rclriil'.. like ne~ Sl2S,~gold TORS WORKING OR NOT. Eves & Sun 5.'l7-3760 COI'-tTJNENTAL by Cam- urcs. ' • G•r•e• Si1le 8022 Danish cha.ir and otloman * &45-02!17 * WIRE Fox Terrier pupg.-ch. Rent A Sailboat bridge ~fanu(acturer, 24x55, * Gen I Office ... $350 $8:.. Da nish wall p~que $12, sire & dame. Sho11o• quality. Cal 2:>, sl('('ps 4, fully c-quip-Custom Dcsii:::n. Xln't oppor. for conscientious GL.0Rl1"1EJ? Garage. Sale! dllX'11!! set $50. h~y. dstrd, FREE TO YOU 01 11itt al stud. 893--66.12. pc-d, S30 per day, wkdys; $40 CHAPMAN gal who has min. 1 yr. ex· l!U2 Seadrift Dr. Irvine Ter-mpll', bkcasc dr!lk $70, 2.1'' per day \\il"nds; S200 per ,,.,.k. MOBILE HOMES per & li'pe 50 accur, race, CdM. l day only Oct. B/\V RCA CCHlsote $SO, '1'2" KITIENS 8 wks • 12 "''ks 1 AKC REGISTERED Lessons inrl. 968-4B40. 1206 No, Harbor, S.A. * PBX R.c.pt •... $450 2nd. l{}-4PM .. Items from surfbd .• ,.,._ 6'10" surlbd. orange k ""'h! 7 Med kitten Miniature Poodle Puppirs 531-8105 t n . f I Fl •~ l II' I · Very reasonablr. 492-51!>R 44 ' HOUSEBOAT 11vail for Ability to operaCt> 608-A, semi e~ta e. oo.·ne 1 orence $45, moperl $25, Evinrude pt -inia ayan • lorlJ!il' \\'knds or \\l~kly, Perm '64 LAKEWOOD LIDO auto. cord board ot nnu iv. Crillcnton Home. lank $12. HB a.36-2381. shf'il &_ i;ilver gray 837-2171 AKC Scottish Terriers, ,_.., 836-4493. 10'6 femalr..11. 10 wks old, moored. 548-2434, 63&-4034 20X50 * Gen'I Ofc Steno $400 Appliances llOO BIKES Sl-$15 TV's v.·ork * 8:12-57!5 * 3 BR, New awning & sklrtinr, Type 60/i;::d w/ligurcs/some goo(f S10-S25. Port. sewing BEAUT. Au~il'-llhl'p n1ale AFGHAN PUPPIES Boat Charter 9039 new carpeting in bdrm's, payroll helpful . machint> SlO Baby hcd S7 10 mo. Well trained outdoor children's section. Serial • ... * Sec'y , , .. , , .... $450 DON:-r Fo~et DUNLAP'S ~s Early 30·s china cabinet S35 or stable dog. Love.!! kids. AKC, $15'1 * 6-16-7589 32' Twin«rew Chris Craft Sl220, $6995. Dlr, 531.$105, Type 50 accur/grn'l ofc du· ha~~ a s1dew~.ik. sale this Tools, chain, lablcs, light!! Pref son1eone with lots of AFGHANS-AKC $100 Sips 6 * Dclux boat 531)..2930. • Vault Teller 5400 Exper. Handle business accls & exccgg money, Cd bead for figures, Clerk $3'0 Gd llR"ure apptitude, ability to wo"rk w/money. Sell mon- ~y orders. Bonded & sttlble. Some Sat, work. ties/xln 't co & bcnefit.r.. }"'ri ~LI 9, Sat til ;:i, Dunlap " lamp.o;, Cheap! 117 E. 18th room. Eves 646-3032. 10/6 T14-1396 or 827-9413 * f>t&-2434, 636-4034 * Appliance Ol. 1815 Newport St., Cr-.1 . :l SPAYED fem. cats~ a SILKY Terrier puppies. Ex· 500 Ne\\'JXlri. Center Dr., NB Blvd, C.M. S48-7?8S. * AUCTION * home -1 Persian, friendly, c:ellent with children, AKC Suite 200. By Appl 644-4981 t' REFRIGERATORS: $25. l Tabby, good mouser. · 1 _ .. l 75 962-7o·7 LG. FROST-FREE, Fint! Furniture 494-3186. 1016 regtse, .. -... a. J • 1•1' !9j7 Glaspar, sport hull, SERVICE i;tation salesman DBL ID R, S 100 . &:: Appliancc.1 SILVER Bl p lan . Beautiful AKC l"C'g Shel tic ski or fish, l\1erc 45hp, GUARANTEED 646-7820 Au r r Id y 7 30 m ue en tn pups, 5 wks old. Toy collies, w/trir, $4~. 846-2572. permanl'nt. full time, even-· · c ions r a • : p. · an~stry. 1 m~e, 1 female. Sable & white. S49-07'l6. I~========= lng shift. J\1ust be neat in ITT':N~10RE aulo washer, Windy's AUc:tion Barn House cals, trained, weaned 1-:=::;::::::::::::::::::::::::=: I Boat Storage appe-arance. Apply, 2j90 lat~ model .• xlnt cond. Fn-e 20751h Newport, CM 646-8686 & healthy. 546-3634. 10/5 Fishing Boats 9040 9048 1130 1969 UN IVERSAL 24 X. 53, ~rial No. 15313, New ~. 1969 General 24 X SI, se:rial No. 6m. New $9900. 1970 2.tXfiO Sheraton Manor. serial No. ti02, $12,000. Dealer: (71 4) 531-8105 - l R /N Part T ime $36 Day Nev,.port Bl vd., CM. dchvery, $50. 5offHl672, 847-Behind Tony's Bldg. Ma1'1. 5 C.Olden Retrievt>r/Ge~an Horses SERVICE-Sm. Pump-lsl:-t1!.-8115. -·"'if ---Shepeh1·'Puppies. 22~2 &th··l---------- lt>ndan!. Exp'd prcf'd. Over RF.Jo~RJGERATORS -Large M~KE O FER ('rine Pl, C.M. 646-0409 after 4 yr old Quarter/1horoU£h· 20. 2801 E. Coll.st Hwy at sclcct!on. ;35, $45 & $55. Carpc!Jng ti:om apartment. 2 6 pm o.r wknrls, bred Palamina stallion. Dhl- BOAT Storage in Costa -M e..a a , 15c--per -IL. \\later/c\rc Inc l. Spar bldg shed avail. 54:;-8148 NE\V !\'loon, 12 x 62, Expan- tio nr Dana Pt Marina, l h1·' wl xtra-rn1,corne.r-lot,. -----1 children & pels v.·elcome. Re lieve head nurse on wknds. 7·3:30, Sal. & Sun. only. Goldenrod Corona de! J\.1a r. 646-7820 bathrnom 11nk.!I. Opera class· I h nd 675-0533 ' ical .albums, .other miscel· BEAUTIFUL 8 wks old reg., but ipapers are n a s ' -KENMORE 11.u10 washer, 111.neous, Call alter 6130, orange atripe male kilferi to of P!'n'lous own<'rs, bot Ob· SERVICE Station A!tend. ~ <'ond, Free-delivery 557_7407 ~d home B36-449:1 talnable, LR"e, strong, well- R.E. Sales exp duplex -four Exper. older man for Sun--SJ.">. 546-8672. Ml-8115. 1 ,' , 548---0813 10/5 tC'mpc-rcd. fl1ust !U'!I, leavinR p!ex salesman-9 ne"'.' bldgs day work. Shell Station, 19th 1910 K 0 . h .,__ 8eaut1full Like New I an!fll-$250: S.:-e al 20072 S. W. 1 ............................. · enmore is """'asner T 1· I k I . 11 ND Gd home for beautiful 7 e· h II i· 11.vail now -send 'resume. & Placenua, C.M. bl V 1 !'10 ._1· ourma lne m n sto e, -,.. ire , Santa Ana -ts, ~ii ~---~-----1 por1a e. au , .x: I 1 lh A 1 11 · k "'k old kitten variety of .col-blks •-o c "-" Box ~11068 Daily P ilot, 2211 SEWING machine exper in-$175, 968-912&. eng u ~mn fl1.e-min ors males & female 54.8-(1813 u-um · · .............. W, Balboa Blvd. Ne\\'l)Ort dusfrial operator.;, full time. C'ORI; Persian lllmb jackrt r 836-4493 10/J TRANSPORTATION Beach. Apply 825 \V 1Sth St C l\1 A t' v.•/mink collar. SACRIFICE! o --------====_,,.-,.,---· l;•"°ITT;;;o;E'°'R';-cNc-:::::-· -:t=c-;;1=t·lc::' n iques 1110 Aft 6 or Sun, 644-5939. -ADQB.AJJ_~ 6_ w~ u\d ~!.:-Boats & Yachts 9000 RUBBISH Truclc_drj\'f!~P. __., -anny YP"-"o l<'r tem torioJ.Se calico blk &t---------- on front end loader or ¥1ork.!I nitts, 2 girls 6&10, ANTIQUE bedrn1 M'I, 3 INVALID chalr, ptl SlOO, us· \\'ht. nd id homes. 54S-OS13 '69 FBCLS Boatel hsebt, 3::.· shu-pack 837-0-127. H.B. 536--8004 10 an1-5 pm. pieces circa 11!20. Compl l'd 6 moll. Make offer. ~1~1846 10/5 fast fleen....V hull ,.,.,. hn° Mobile Hom111 9200 :11 :t?l ul?J!l•I• lll):l NOW OPEN! 496--2311 1 ON BEACH : \V/Pool &- laundry. 17X3J. 2 br/ba liv'g rn1, kitchen, din'i rm, & 2 c-ar cen1enl drive. S.1800, · r-.1U!!I scll.-Pvt pty 6!<>--0331 Mini Bikes 9275 ~tlNI Bike 5 hp Ex C'OndiHon $110._ B&S engine, 1ront shacks. 546-5316. I 1 410 W. Coi1st Hwy. Brown ireezer top relrig · · •' • 4-N ,., I .(. _, h Salcl! ~ • , :. • s:fVD&N.TSt-&:Jl ·:Tri.ck or handcarverl. Rare, beaut. SOO 7148 San C•rlo' Lane. 'l'O ~ iood ~e pt..S,iai;nc~ 100 hrs. Sips 6. Ii & C press. N'ewj>of t Beal: .. YOUNG MAN'S Treat'' candy. Make R"ood rorid. S-t:t-6964 by appf Olil)'. of 54S.2367 " ' ki ttens, hsbk. lnc:lude 3 wx..~ ·v.'llier, sho¢et; radfo/tele.; ~ 646-3939 DREAM m6ney, v.·in prizes & help No dealcn. · ~pply cat food It kitty lifter 13J gal gu, dual batteries, ; _, hool 64?""""' " -GAS Fireplace logl! S25; l ....,., .. v.o 1 1016 front rail cover!, propane ST S J h , II >OU a.re over 21, like talk· neL .... y SC · _..,..,..,.., ~:>. M • I d I · 115 ~ NOW RENTING· Spaces ln Brand NEW 6 * Mobile Home Park MOtorcyc1es n.n.nnn ORGANI , t. o n s us1ca ressers w mll"l"Or5 ca. refrig, stove & oven, bilge Divine Episcopal Church. ing to girls, why not get pa id Tt'lephone Solicitors . Mature Instruments 8125 Regina floor pal!!l'hcr $25. % Schnauzer 1.-i Prodle 2 yn. pump, blower, head holding 26 for It'.' A sales p....,,..,.am, "-d-' 4 hr -r '' Waah • d old female housi>brk loves •548-83 * ·~.,. v.·oma "'"' "" s ,~ Y er « ryer, near new, tank w/elce pump, clec I~==='-"-~::;;--,,=:--;: dealing ""'/ single girls. Our Work at home. Call 548-2223, SER V I CE M AN 'S sac., $150. 64>1519. kids. Cats '.' 836-4493 l0/6 dual horns. Sac 112,..,. PAINTER -fo"'ull 1ime to $664 + "" paint ll'UC'ks. Apply in men earn ..-r mo. I to 7 pm. RickenDachcr 12 solid elt>c., N.B. Tennis Club charier KTITENS % Siamese, Days, 714/1146--0!lll2 llunl , Harbour. person 1343 Logan, CJ\.I. during training, Good bcne. WAITRESSES, expe-r . lo beaut., l~neck, easy fit , membf!rshlp. SJ95 + R33 -6801 . Aft 5, WHY NOT Boat Transit. fi!s. Call 14 pm ONLY, workdaysornites.Mu5tbc Vox Cambr1drereverba.mp, transfer fee. 642-2413 . 646-4637. 10/6 TAKE A CRUISE?? 534-3081, over 21. Apply, Beach House very good, bolh S200, 545--0548. t!EALTI-IY intelligent pup-For Lease Or PBX Answering Service. Ex-968 30'26 per. pre.ferred. Full time. s ALE s LAD Y, £.-.;per., Inn, 619 Sleepy 1-lollow Ln., · -· · Jdustrial parking aale. \Vork piC's. Weimaranf'r mother. Charter Hun t. Bch. area 536-8881. (women's W('Rt), seamstress Laguna Bch. 497-1188. LOWERY Organ 2 manual tables 11orage c11.blnets ere. 5.'17-9l19. 10/6 LOW WINTER RATES I P EOPLE To do industrial & & single needle power ma· Waitresses-Apply in pc~nn "Holida~ r-.1odcl'' with 6-15-0991, 16111 Ohm.!I \'lay, 2 Male killens, part Siamese, 40' Wheeler Cn1lser: SIC'ep~ 8. e<luc11tionial f i Im s. No chine operators. App ly in Delaney's Sea Shanty 630 pcrcuss10n. Was Sl ,000. 11.!lf'd CM. l blk, l grey, 7 wk.~ old-free J.fake 111ppt. NO\V! OWNER: Previous vt""r. J. A. G. lne. person. to Charles Stefan Lido Park Dr, N.B. 6'f5-0IOO ~','i1a'r~. l~'idFohododr,r, .ele;~pic SACRIFICING f'abulou11 art to s:ood home. 644-5967 1015 \Vkday!I 5..19-119'18 Eves & wk-.--Inc., 1621 Alabama St., ,.~ ,,.,. ...,, 835-3.JOl. S h I I ti 7600 2110 Monrovia, Cl\1 collPctions. Must see to ap-FEMALE Shcphcn:I pup 4 ends: ~27-1 431. PHOTOGENIC Girl to do _H_""_1_. _•_•_h_. -,,-,,.,-,----I c oo s· nstruc on II ON Or preciiate! Call 642-1559 for R\O!I. old 200 Cab r i 11 o NEW '70 Twin 23' r ormula brochure work for S. I. R. SALESMAN Discover i1 Great Ntw l\~~~ ch~rry c~~~:ie1.~~ appointment. 646-6289 lO/S \v/nPw Tandi>m trlr. List Servic~ In Representation New and used Fials, VW's Career With Tht under blu book. 6T>-6I02 or *. W~uld you ~f.use free FREE Fun loving puppie11 $11,300. Sacrifice $82:;0. 835-3501. and other imporl!, M'C 432 Carnafion, CdM . r:.,•"' .. Have a Heich toy pal'· lab mix Sunday on I Y. PLUMBING & h eating t ltd AIRLINES' 548.-1506 1014 40 Lobster trap.~. nearly servicemen. Good po1ential, auto spor • iARIN:-~·~os~ew.xJn'l -*Call6"6-22.43 • PUPPIES, Smnll m i xed finished. lots or hours. Call 6~2-l7:i3, 537-7777 Call Collect cond. · 1 esa Dr., JAKE'S Conllnuous S"'"P hreed,· very cute le healthy. '69 Mach y Mu l'i t 11 n g. r.-tr. Sch11.•eer. A niitural for young Pf'Ople S./\. Hghll!I. 557-9359 Meet. Buy-SelJ-T'l·MSe 117 E. R.37-3110 JO/;; 5,.,,.1, .• , 12595 . .,. ~'<. Sales.Qu een·, Way to Fashion '"-·1 I t • FRANK I' 1-11 $50 ._ ._ .,..~ .. ""' P R f. S Si\1AN . Exntoriencr.d "\\'uu wanl exc1 emen p us. ~o 1vn a o sax lll1h, CM 642-5666 ,,_ counselors. }lifh commission TickPt agent? Air freight? Rene Dumont clarinet S40. 80 G 1 . 11 1 1 r-.1ale R:rtY kitten, g~y 17' Bollton \Vhaler 100 &. 6 ~~a~~ .~in~tek~:.~nag~ f,:,", ,.l0•1~~~n,'w· ~.1•,·n~~~nl S_tatio~n a gent'.' Rescr"a-10032 Kukui, H.B. 962-1618. filte:.· :~a~~~Pi!te gS~~: ('ye!!. pt Siame11e, 7 \\'k~ld. hp, Xtra tanks, bait tank, <•~· ._ t1on~ · Ramp or lravrl SHURER niike. Brand ne\\', 494-11154. ~2-5719 O/S deck, rail, cover, lrlr, clt'c· 1;"'"""'~1~"-"~"=0-::::-96S-;;-cl.::-::-::-:-I SALESMEN wantro -&11 111g('nt'.' \\le'H traln you !or 5!ill on gurantee. Cost $100 Ml.:5ED Shepherd R!dgeback Ironic equip. $2500. &12-4048. PUNCH Prcsll 0 pe r ia \or· Christmas trees 10 com-1hl'se and morr, day or nite. sl'll for $45. 646-4277 aft 5 Steel Storage Building: 1 malr, 1 femalf', 1 wkll. 113 to 1,i, share for sale in Must lJ(! ablr lo make 01rn mer c i a I cslablishml'nls. \\'c include placem('nl as· UNIVERSAL Accordion 120 ** 5~76-~~J-• • 67~>-26.'>2 10/5 1968 M-40 kelch xlnl tax set·up.!1. , Expel'\ in 11lu>ct Call l\1r. Ch ristmas Tree, sisLaoce. ,.11,~• lik o•w m•k• u 11' German Shep. &. Collie wrile off Box P . 2040 NB · .._ iu, e ~ · " 0 er, "'rM A · 12 I II me!al "''Ork & or m11.rine 546-9511. "• * 7141830-!lJ.18 ~ utumAt 1r. · u Y puppy with shots, 5 mo's , hrd\ve. Also, Splnnak<'r pole E~I. 21 yrl'i. Approvrd fnr ··-~ -~---electrlc typewriter . Usl'rl t Id 673-5043 10/5 19 Chrysler Westport 2"ifl, SALES-Needed: a men & 5 -C t Sl70 k $110 o · ' ' dl'ep V hull, ]75 llP, V-8, ai;st>mbler, expcr. 770 \V. women to demons Ir A I e Veterans. El igible in5Titulion Pianos & Organs 8130 mo. o~ . IA c. , FREE wood. Mcxlrl Glass xlnl conti., Trialler. &1~2'131. .171h SI., C.M. A p PI Y SLIM-GYl\1 & JET BAnt. undrr 1he fNferally lnsun.>d Mr. Barrow, 642-2611 All 6 "'Company, 1644 Superior, t---------- l!:Jn-4P?\1. l\lary I.nu Good, 968-2416 student loan program. SALE BROWNING 2'J cal. lever ac. c.~ .• 646-3231. 10/5 "CAPTAIN'S GIG" Pilot ClllS.!lilied. 642-5678 ;..il-8.129. PIANOS e ORGANS tion with Wraver adj, 3x to Adnrahlf! % Siamese 6 wk! $1400. 714 t846-J.'i27 Airline Schools Pacific • 6x 1cope. Excellent con-1' amou~ brands at tremen-d' . 110 • ., ,0 _ 1 4 old kitlens, blue eyes box 610 E . 17th, Sent• Ani1 dous a.a.vings! All Y.rith our 111on. . ....a-i .... , a t pm. trainC'd 1133-2355 10/5 Sailboats 9010 Jobs--Men. Wom. 7100Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 JN JRVJNE ORANGE GROVES ,Jeffrey Oftram1) ol Santa Ana Frwy, SEE Fabulous Models -52 ~ acres oI fun liv· Ins:. -i\1ulli-million i mobile hnml' cnrnmunity. -F'ull time in park ser- vice: crnt.£or. -Conlinu•JUS 1moi free ot't'an brel'z£'s. -Surroundl'd by moun· talnll & orange grove~. -7 minutrs from "\\;orld's lari:::est shopping center. (Fashion lslandJ )."'Check Thl'S{' Fea!UN'S Championship Lawn Bo"'ling Gr<"'n, Fl'ce C1r THINK HONDA SU "FRIEDLANDER'' 1JJ• tlACM IHWY· •I 537-6824 • B93-7566 NEW-USED-SE RV. n.nn..n;n I .. ' ' '69 Jtodaka Ace 100 i. '69 Kawasaki 90 both dirt Ir. fitttet equipped "''!less than 1000 m i. l\tust sacrifice. lf se.rioo11Jy interested, c•ll 67J-2;j27. Wash, Put1ini;: GT'f'('fl. jiiil;;jji;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;; Ci•oquct Cou rt, under-1 1 . root Shuffl1J1Xiard. ~n· clos!'d Therapeutic Pool, Swim Poo l, Billiards, Game Room, Assembly Room, Boat &. Trail£'r Stnrai::r. Arca, Lovely Cnurtyll1'd. -Small l)('I.~ allowed. ' . -ln1agine all this from $11 .50 per month '62 I.fonda 300 SU r>tr Hawk. 14851 JeffrP.V Road. Irvine Comp new v.·i ring, linltion. RESTAURANT (Female) 54).6596 exclusive Coas! ?\1usic War-AITENTION SKIERS MERCHANDISE FOR SALE AND TRADE ranty. Mammoth ski cabin. Avall ORGANS from $250 for seru;on only. SUl table fcx CALL COLLECT Needs t Im In z , $250. 16' 714-832-8585 714-530-21130 67~98· 213-860-5210 714-531-BIOS '56 BSA CHOPPER' Voloed AKC 9 """ old lcmal• LL N. EW \Veim11.ranet aft 4 p,m. A FARRELL'S RESTAURANT HUNTINGTON BEACH I Broo~hur1t &. Ad1m1 l FARRELL'S, itt9 FUN, FOOD & ICE CREAM, ~" ;mm odi- .a t• optnin91 for: ' • 1.- • • • • CASHIERS WAITRESSES FRY COOKS PANTRY • J ull or part time 1c:ht'dules J vailable. Experience Is nnt nettsu.ry since t-and!da.te1 s,lttted will receive • lormal trainlnt ln lhtir de(l3rtmenta. .., EmployMtnt lnftrvi1w1 will bt conducted TUES. l WED .. OCTOBE• 6th l 7th- BETWEEN 10 1m & 6 pm A T< ·20111 - FARR-LL'S ".\, Broolchurtt Ave I 8roo\hur1t l-\u11tin9fon Bt•c.h & Adam1I Furniture 8000 SAVE USS WAREHOUSE SALE Drastically reducM prkct· on fine fumiturr It IH'N's!lm'- irs lrom 3 MODEL I-JOMES. Also, ustd office furniture - everything has to go!! PIANOS from $22.5 lrg & sm. groups. 675-8200. GRANDS lrom $69S NAUGU chr It stool, new $25. Bank tenns, Trade.ins Maple tbl Sii, tire !K:m- Op!!:i Sundays 12-5 eompl. $,'II, dbl bed $7S GE Daily til 6 -Fri 111 g sl\lvc. 54;,_fi.169. COAST MUSIC NEW Ta.!CO lele.!lcope NE\VPORT '-HARBOR \Y/trlpod &. Barlow lcn.~ & Costa ?\tcM * 642-2SS1 rarrylng CllM. 600 power, 11 WOW II 1195. 64!>-0681. \Ve't'i! Having a A STEAL \\'I-IA.LE OF A SALE Bunk beds, bx•prn~. mall on PIANOS &. ORGA NS $35. Oriental rtli. S2tl. T""'O menuaJ organs from $299 673-1200. Pianos .from Sl79 1 'M~u'°'sr=""'s=E=LL~!-7M~,-,~& \VARO'S BALDWIN STIJDTO Women's clothini. All 117.'R, ts-19 Newport, C.M . ..-64:z.8484 MC'd·l.4f, Very Re•s. Dl9 OPEN SUNDAY Fcdrral, CM. l ~==A=>~TI:=RN=OO-=N~S==-ITABLE 11aw. CR.APT'SMAN SCllOOL TIME SPEClA~ 8" ~wlng bll1des w/motor FURNITURE returned from lh1mmond organ w/Leslie S50, Call 833-1066, S99l, Ktmball Baby Grand, Rear of S!arbird Con~t Co 1375 Logan Ave, Su\tr E Colla ?\1C&a 546-3140 One blk eas1 of HarbOr One blk toulh ot Bllkl!r 10 A!\1 to S P~t Dally display 1t\ldlt1, model horn-br I Uni h lhis "" k ,,1., BICYCLES, 1-3-10 !pd, New ep: deronton Cl'nct.ll•tlon. .~~u s ' ee o • ..., le u~. Tntde-in old blke ' ~-' S{)Anlth &: Medltc?Tanean GouLD MUSIC CO. ~_Del ~tar. O.M. R 0 FURNITURE Since 1911 Fold up w~cl ebalr 1144 Newport Bl., C .M . 2045 No. M11Jn, S.A. Llke new! $50 l!Vtt)' nite •111 9 .. 547-0081 * • ~lS91 • ~ Sat. Ii. Sun. 'tit g MUSE'M'E Splnt.Ue & Chair CERAMIC mold!. uted.. Pfi. I' .,0£111, nevtr uM!d, quilted IITT new. ?i111g f.ini11h S400 vate patty. Chr!•p . noral, Scotchi\l&rdcd. $.125. pvt pty 675-3707 a.fl 5PM . 5.11.a&.37 1'-l•tching loveKat S73. , CANDLE Making & Demnt- 530-fl3.17 Television 8205 ing l.eMOn11. Limited enroll· I '. FLORAL LAWSON CURTIS M1lht.\ musi c m<'nt. 5.17-8616. • 14;,, • 6~6-3091 ew:s cen1er TV, m11ltiplt'X 111,.l't'o Rl':iUlatlon 117.e ~ table. SEU.ING nome: ll!~lul of f'rc11ch Prov. Sac. SlflO, sla1e lop, 111nt cond. M•kci rurn. Somt. rn11ril t, '1(1ffi>, 10032 K'ukul, ltB. 1J62...4618. offer, 64Uifi7R prden l!illllp etc. 962-4914. 17" Portlble B/W TV SM DIN. tbl. ft 4 uphol , din. SEWNC Your bot.tr "Litt'' AM-f"l\1 T&dil> $.21), ?-ir. Bar-'ehr11. round. Fold Olli t._nl wtlh ti! •• aell It f~t. OaUy row Ms-.lf!U.afl 8 tntJll!'r, Sl.50. MO-Olll. GAS wall heater 33x42 ,,.,·orkl'I, HOBIE CATS at SlDOO. \\'ill &ell for S500 ~ 10/6 ALL COLORS '67 20x43 Great Lakes ~~~e:.nzs. 847-SU7-Ask 842-4397 J0/6 3 lovable kittens silver, gra.y, FREE DEMOS Set up In Adult Park blue e-d 967-32fi3 lOta Pricl'd from Sll9S. Winter Complete w/s!cp.!1, awnings, 1970 HONDA 350. 1500 mile!. J'" rt &-h<'d Xlnt, $750. (4) 3 wk old kittens trained RAClnJt 1111rf1 llQOn! caA~ILABSLE . Cl13) 59U227 '"""I" 84l·""7 all.' !0/5 CAP'N EDS IMMEDIATELY '68 BULTACO 250 cr. Gd"" FREE Persian cats. nd lov· 2200 w Cs! Hwy NB MS--22« 1 ~~1le~al~c~"~l1~1§<1~'3~1~~~tn~5~~ 1 islreet or dirt. Extra•. $595. 1ng adults 549-3931 , 10/fl · ' · 540-5198. rERRO-cemcnt 11-28 wired "'=c-==:--,,c--c---= KrITENS: 2 ~autllul black form ready for pla!terin11:, Triple Wide Cornell DIRT BIKF: • Monteua 2SO I. wht, 1 blaclc. 962-~ 10/5 hard work c 0 mp I et e d, Continental • Paramount cc. Cnmrlt'lely reblt. $475 or PUPPY 4 m01 old pt Beagle 646-7886 Barrington • Uni''<'rsal !)('st offi!r, 962-!lR!i!l ~83 10/6 e 20' Sloop e F'lamlngo • General ·59 NORTON 650 twin, ex· 1 2 Guinea .Piil 642-7297 1016 Wood keel tmt, Sleeps 2. Broadmoor • SIAr ~lltnl condllion. S 4 50 , M k If •~ 10,, HJUcre1t • Cambr ldae 54~147 Boxer/Retriever puppies • 8 • en er. °'"-· CHAPMAN wksold . 54s.6308allet 3:30 Balboa 20' fixed KH'I MOBILE HOMES 1970 l.f1>nd1t 450 K 3, dJ11e bt11.ke, brand new condition. PETS end LIVESTOCK 54S-05.12 1206 N. llArbor, S.A. n..d Pt <"' =• WOO 14 * 714/~l·SIO!'i * rvi. )'. ,,.., ......... Pets, General U00 \V/HVY Duty 'J'r1'i1t>r NEW 12 x 57 LllnCtT l e YMWIA 2!0 Bia; Bur '-'-"-------1 $900 6~3431 Sc,..mblcr • 5,j()(l ml. XJnt f"OX, RARE. 7 mo, aold col· Bedroom on dc~irable spat'f' cond. 67:Hi6!13 l11r, blk ll!p le ean, must Pl-IONEJX Catamaran-Wood-in choice Newport-Costa .e:ll-teaving country, Aft t>n dcdtot, beautiful finish. MtM area. adult park, !·or '67 KAWASAKI 350 7:30, 54S.-2t63. --Sf!OO. 244 21111, C.M. 5-48-6660 We by private prty. Phone 40 11.oniepowtr $400 cash SOLING ~6--3783 Bruce !>46-44T8 NEW, llALF" PRICE SILVER Blu Ptnlan tn,J:2l:H;;!=l-=24!='8=Lo="'=:"':':'h= I •~stry. 1 male, 1 fjO,maJe-. Power Cruisers Trained, weaned ' htallhy Cats lllO .,~l'ffto•n~whov.1llP&Y SACRIFICE! S.i hoard bill 1;46--3634. 25• BaJtlc Crul.u, twin Vol· (21 Rtilstered Burm<'U; Kit· \'O'•. Best nffer for lmmrdi. ties S months old $20. each, 11le sale. Owner &i&-3794, Jl.IOBIU.: house rt:Aale 20:'l:43, '70 Yamba M,'I( lZ.Top lhape 1% bM., 2 BR. compl. tic~. '70 KIY.'uakt 100 Int.II utup, C?\t adlt pi.rlt' SU.500 s.m. O\\>ncr SiJ..3048 term-. 645--2881 i ~.6~9~Y~.-m-e~h-•~1~7~5 ~E~n~d-ur_o_1 BAYSID-E Village • Like new. $499, 003-4200 Newport's prestiRe mobil ·1969 ltarley pavid5on 1Z5 cc home park. 2 BR. 2 Ba. •1:.. Llk Ideal adult spot. S10,9j(), .-. e new. Ownl!r 675-1642 -~t-7294 645--0lnt Bkt. 543-1501 . MOBILE llome 20ida), mkl1)' ULAC POlNT SIAi\tESE 23' 0\\'tl\I Cabin CrulRr, •1 :ct11111, lop qu111. ~ Shi.r Adult kltlmi. Weaned ' r.ralned ia '3000, ror •PP' 10 ttt Puk. By •-PPt only. Call •It SZ. ~. bnal, man card to P.O. So" '7:30 PZ..1 or •nytlme Su~ &tu:rdq~a OIM£.A--LINES! 8484. Fountain VaJley, l2708. _d;.lY:.;•;;.·-'-"-'..;',_.46-026 ....... _0;_· --I '67 YamahA SS) Yfl..l, new IOfl elld, S3.10. 10031 Kulcu,I H.B. 96'.l-16111. e HONDA 160cc Xlnt t'tlnd, +-~ , ' • 1- I . ------~-----------------·-------- Trailer, Travel '69~Ti'ivel-rt-lf; 17' Us&! twice, 'Toilet ·shower. wl heater -refrig -litove & gd oven. Sips 4. Call 64.2-1264 • Morn. '68 Montgomery Ward Vaca· tioneer tent trailer, Used . very little. 842-4035. 14' TRAVEL Trailer. sleeps 4, ice box, dinette, etc. $425. 642-2&!6. Trucks 9500 \Ve have a gooc. stock of New 1970 GMC Cam_per trucks. Buy now, beat the price raise. Also camper combin. aliom and used trucks. UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE 6 cyt., stick, dlr, (827475) Will take car in trade or finance private party, 5464052 or 4940811. 1960 FORD, V8, automatic Overhead cam engine, 4 speed, radio, low mileage. Special interior. Sacrifice. (XTG566). Take trade or small down. Will finance pvt pty,. Call Maury dlr. 5a0-3100 or 494-7506 aft 10 am. DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAYS 18835 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 842-7781 or 5>!0-MG '66 1600 ROADSTER MG. , * '69 CORONA-2 DR. XI.NT Cond-Lo Mi, Auto, Air. $1750. Pvt Pty; 673-3751. transmission. power sleer· RAT ing, power brakes, air con-----~~~--­ '66 Opel Stn wgn, 28 MPG, Good cond, $650 or make of· fer. 962-5948 aft 5. '60 Opel, runs good, 4 new tires, $175 * 67>1125 * VOLKSWAGEN . '67 VW Bug Radio. Clean. dlr. Must sell, w i 11 finance. CTUU318). 494.7744_ ditioning with Hi way Camper Cruiser. Jost th e thing for the cycle group. Dir. 540-9640 or 540-3540 '63 CHEVY V2 Ton PU 6 cyl., 3 speed stick, dlr. (E83295) Small down. Will finance private party. 5464052 or 494-6811, '67 % ton Chevy, 8' bed, 6 cyl, 3 spd, step bumper. on/oU road tires, % ton rear suspension, trlr hitch. Xlnt runnin& cond. $1400. 557-7315. "52 \I, T. Willys P.U. New 6 cyl. flathead eng. Nc\1' r adiator , gd shape. 646-3167. '68 Dodge Van, 24.0CXI mi"s, xln't Cond. \Vill take trade. 646-2698. '46 Ford 11,i Ton, stake bed. good corxl. $400 1inn. Call 673'1932. '61 FORD VAN, air cond. r&:h . Will take trade, 64&-2698. HARD to get '54 7ord % ton P.U. Xlnt. corKI., $575. 54~7098. '64 Corvair Van in ex. corn:l. $750. R/H. 4 spero. Stick. 642-4996. F I A/T PORSCHE '6& VW CAMPER. &d cond. $1800 or best offer. * 536-4938 ii ""'° •port ltd Authorl...i Sales e Sendce '64 PORSCHE DEMO SALE 356 SC COUPE NEW VW BUG $55.89 pr. month 1970 Fiat 124 Sports Cpe. Balboa blue, chrome wheels, Radio, heater, special ex· radial tires, concourse con-$147 71 d I lud dition. Lie. XOG997 · own nc es haust, pin striping, radial t & LI O E d $3099 ax c. pon n tires, ;.ow miles. VW LEASING 9625 G.J.2:~rove Blvd. CHICK IVERSON AT 531.1117 Call ~""' VW CHICK IVERSON I - -....___. 549-3031 Ext. 66 ot' 67 VW --- -TM -INK -1910 HARBOR BLVD. IS70 RARBOR BLVD, "flAj I :==:ooc"'OST=A.,,MES=A=-= COSTA MESA · '00 PORSCHE c .. rlolel, 1600 w ANTED HI super, with hard top. New engine, new clutch, ne\V I'll pay · top dona~ for yoor "'FRIEDLAWIER'~ ·-. t AM/FM VOLKSWAGEN , .. ..,.. Call .,., .... "s, new pain , , d k J'ust like new, can be seen an as for Ron Pinchot. 13751 llACH I Hwy. Jf ) 549--3031 Ext ~ 673 0000 893·7566 e 537-6824 at 2089 Harbor Blvd., or · · · · NEW-USED-SE RV, phone 64~1982, 9am to £pm '62 VW ,Bug ~ '63 PORSCHE Radio,4spo•d,excellent «rn. '69 Fiat 850 Spider, Pirelli tires, approximately 13,0CXI miles. Lie. 195 A DY $1,495.00. JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS 2 LOCATIONS 120 W. WARNER 417 W. WARNER SANTA ANA Phone: 546-.f.119 COUPE dition, dlr. (BWM881) Small down. Will · finance private Hardtop, g]eaming metallic party, 5464052 or 494-6811. silver, with brand new ln- terior, chrome wheels, ra-'61 vw 1'.tial tires, AM/FM radio, Color me green. Economy Lie. PXW982. special, will finance priva!e , ,$2399 party. MFG 969. CHICK IVERSON $450 ·68 ;i Tun Dodge 8' bed. Big 6. sr.p ~.m ... r. Aotomatic. 1 -~,6=7-f=IA=T~8=5D~­ s1.4oo. 645-008,. VW CHICK IVERSON 549-3031 Ex1. 66 or s1 YW 1970 HARBOR BLVD, 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 C•mpers 9510 4 speed, radial tires, <llr. COSTA MESA 1970 HARBOR BLVD. (TQC 558), Small down. Will 1956 Porsche Speedster. New COSTA MESA New '71 Datsun fina~ private party. motor, tires. three tops, ton: Lan1e Selection 5464052 or 494-6811. neau cover, car cover. $200(). •':II 1600 OHC Pickup with caznp.,.17=~~-~-~--• consider VW Bos in trade. Of• YW C~mpers, er. Sal~ P•ke $2099 dlr. '69 Fiat 124 Cpe _64_2_'689====,,--Vans,,Kombis, <• 43827~) "".ill take c~r in Exotic red with black vinyl '70 911-T COUPE trade, \YilJ fmance pnvatc bucket seats. Low miles, baa 5 apd, mags. AM/FM. mm· Buses, New & Used party. Call S4M052 or had excellent care. Sacri· fort it'pi: $6800. Pvt pty lmmedl•ti Dellvery 49USU. ""'' (XLY235) Ta .. oldor 673-0693 CHICK IVERSON '64 Ford C11mper. Has car in trade. \Vill finance ~.~.,=,§°"=E"'EDSTER"==-."c'"LA"ss=1.· I VW everything. \Vill take trade. private party. Call Pat dlr. CAL SHAPE! Call Bi 11. 646-2698. aft 10 am 494-7506, 54().llCXl, B\i6lnes~ 547-8881, eve s. 549-3031 Ext. 66 t:Jr 61 833-.1213. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. '66 VW CAP.IPER: Rcblt motor, New tim; tape deck I spftkera. $1TA EVES: 6~5545 ~ Im~ Autos 9600 AUSTIN HEALEY AUSTIN AMERICA -11-~~~ All lli>clell J~l'lllPO ll 5illl('ll l [~, 3J:<> W. Orut H"l'., N.8. · ""'91(6 • 541).17'4 * 1960 Spra. * &At offer, 494-Sfi1.J JAGUAR JAGUAR HEADQUARTERS The onlY authorized JAGUAR dealer ID the entire Hatt« AreL Complelo SALES e U62 PORSCHE SC -Xlnt COSTA MESA- ~. new painl. $ml0. Pvt '68 V\Y coovt. , ·0utstandlhg pcy. 642-1316' cond. Best oiler. 543-8458 or '68 PORSCHE 912: ·s spd, 673-6830- Mag/Whls, AM/FM, Sloe. ----::.59c::-:vw=--- XJ.nt cond. ~-Good running. Best ofter! * 644-2432 * • 642-5172 • POR '70 911-T, 1200 act mi's. '69 VW _CAltfPER: Xlnt cond. Jlf!l'fect. .have to sell r&nbl MAJlY Xtru. Make. Oiler. .J>WlNo<!i>. ~.12@. >IS-!236 ti &Ji-11;7 1< • SERlllC&·- PARTL. BAUER - · e '68 PORSCHE 9ll·L 1958 V\V BUS w/1964 1500 en- -TARGA. AU extru. gine. Sfil)'.I or best otru. 494· BUICK IN COSTA MESA 234 E. 17th SUwt MS-1765 '62 Jquar 3.8 Sedan New Tiftl. Xlnt «ind . $1450. 673-25M, I -- M•l<e: oUer. 548-2532 ~. 1fft Porsc;h• 911-T 1 '·ss,,..-"vw=-: '"'XJ"'n"1-, "'M"°oc"h-:::Co"'oo"°. Xlnt cond, • 1·753-0010 CD. Trana. $295. 673-8117, • '&3 ~he 1600 cpe., new 6,12-8TI6. ,; • paln1 , black. chnn whl3, • • '61 VW • $38-.1678 or 646--8707 Xlnt Cohd • Aft 6: 817-04M '66 ~ncht 912. Need cash - -mUJf &ell lMMED. But of· fer 675-6177. 833-5839. 'G1 VW, lite blu, o~ O'<l'ner, lo ml's. wry-eood mnd, 615--0475. ~-·----..'?---·---------. -. '66 Toronado IITD • F u I J po~'er, radial tires, good , cond. Best offer. C a 11 69 DODGE RT 641-1191, Mon-Fri 9-0; "" • -oo· ·e'f'~.a---·i:J J.=]l;- MESA "Specializing . • ' - ' I ' • Ii ' I' '1 " FULL POWER + factory air, -64fi507. - 21,0XJ carefully driven miles. '55 Olds 88 4-dr stick 63 000 Must liqUidate immediate-mi':t, 1 tam onl-, xtr~ cl~an, m . l Quality" Jy, 1st $2677.boys. #1049, nu paint, runs good. ~. CHICK IVERSON 246 Cab<illo St., CM. , • V'li j :!96<~1io'11dd.s"cc..~u~.,.,, .. "';"mvrt;;;:.j11 ................ I 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. '70 Dodge Challenger, full pwr, air cond. 8-5: 540-6900, exr 222 Eve: 645-2538. Bucket seats, center con- sole. ,Xlnt cond. $ 7 9 5 642-0584 . PLYMO.UTH FINAL 1970 BUICK Close-Out •. ALL REMAINING 'ID BUICKS MUST BE SOLD NOWI RIVIERAS ELECTRAS tomaticr--POwer-steering,1------ -.... -- (ZVK 108) dlr. Will take car in trade pr finance private party. 546-4052 or 494-6811. LE SABRES > Ii ,, ' " j I• '"' '67-Valiant 2 Door. Immaculate! Factory warranty, 6 cyl., dlr., radio. SKYLARKS - CLEAN USED .CARS ·see-A'ncty "Brown THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 Jlar~r Blvd. CMta-Mesa-642--0oiO- '66 Must an g Convertible, Yello1V with Dlack fop, V-8 a U I 0 in a t i c &ansiTiission.~ power steering, radio & 1966 YOLKS '5" Che-ly 4 dr wagon. Re-heater, Lie, RPL 31j_ New .1000, eng., -w/exti'as. built V-8 & auto. trans., w/ $99S.00. $1,l'.IO or oHer. 5.16-6028 air. $275. 646-5396 JIM SLEMONS lMPORTS • (UZF'26.3) -Most s"ell. Will fin. ance. 494-7744. 'sa-Piymouth $)so: _Bun~_real_iid, depond· -111 Go A• r•yjnas . o61e.-80ily::OK.-. JI -.. l::olG: . ur. - 962-0520, H.B. '68 ROAD RUNNER: Nu ~ paint.,,cstm.int.&.--brakes 383., PIS. 896-4106. PONTIAC • " -.. t T ' ~~~~~~~~=~~~~~I!~~~ 2 LOCATIONS '68 FORD half.ton pickup, 8 " ·55 cne.,. :m c.M. Jaroi",,· __ ,,..w7W*RNER---H~1;, v.s •Jl<ine, ''""'"' -One-01-Dr-e-•--1'"·+--YOLVO ~~'t 6 ;~~e}t---;600. 411 w. \VARNER transmission. Lie, 91069A •"16 ·• ------==----f'iQCi;;-;;yJ;;:p;iac;m;;:f'IS SANT A ANA $l,695·00 '70 Chevy Impala Conv, PIS, Phone: 546-4ll9 JT~l SL.EMONS L.IV'Ul.ftl P/B, 350 eng. Xlnt cond. 2 LOCATIONS $2795. ,.._,126. '66 FAIRLANE WAGON 120 W. WARNER TH• '66 CHEVY station wagon 417 W. WARNER 'VOL .. · YO{ •V!l:, automatic, P/S, fac Automatic, !)ower steering, SANTA ANA 546-4119 Bir. $950 644-29~1 aft 6 pm. air cone!, stereo tape, dlr. '64 G T O- 'SB Ch $135 (TAY 279) Will take car in • • • ..FRIEDLANDER', 61~--~!. . d 1· · • s~ d. h ' k .,..J;J..,,, tra e or 1narn:e pnvate par. · I"'-~"• ra 10, cater, trac ty_ 5<16-4052 or 494-6811. stereo, dlr. A.merican mags, 127$0 •IAClt (HWY. ltJ 893-15'66 • 5.17-6824 NEW-USED-SE RV, '55 Bel Air. $200 OR BEST · V8 /3 ~--'67 Fairlane conv. P/s, r&h. new tires, w ca. u....,r. OFFER. Good transporta· J J b ill tion car. 494-4S91. elect top. 390 CID. 42.000. ators, compete y re u en· ~ • '69 Chevy Impala • Air, _____.._.._ ps/pb, \linyl top. $2550. call Sharp int, xlnt mech. No gine. (HSX531) \Viii take fault. $995. 846-1165 trade or finance privale par. '69 FORD Ranch Wagon. ty. S464C6:l or 494-68ll. Auto: fac air P/S -'67 FIREBIRO CONV. VOLVO VOLVO CLEARANCE ThtMEDIATE DELIVERY CARS IN STOCK "70-STATION WAGONS '70-SEDAN~2 & 4 Doors '70-18000 E CPE . '70-164 SEDANs--.t Speeds & Automatics 1800 F Cpe for delivery. Overseas del Specialist. after 6, 675-8998 stereo/radiQ. Xlnt ond. 4-Specd, radio. heater, bucket Sac. S2750. 837-4907. 11eats console. Very clean, CHRYSLER 1964 Fairlane Sports Coupe, mech'anically A-1. 'Gf Chrysler, N.Y, Sta, \Vag. VS 289, pis, goon tires, new $125 0 9 pass, lo mi's, air cond. brakes. S.'i50 days 536-3804; Call 'Other xtras. Dark grn. eves 53~7438 Beaut, cond. $975, or best --~-----~ offer. 835-5500, 644-1682. 1962 Ford station \\'agon. R& COMET H, automatic. Mechanics Special. Phone 9£8.5214 after 6 P.M . ** 55Ford ** Needs some work !11ake offer! 646-9269 DEAN LEWIS '62 Comot-6 cyl, 4 dr. Good transportation car. MERCURY '61 GTO-ps/pb, automatic. Xlnt cond. Asking $1400 or best offer, 642-1268. '69 LE MANS 6-CY L $1900. * * 846-6236 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 $250. 545-4681 '68 V I 142A co ET 1963 '65 Montclair 2-dr vinyl HT 0 VO M . stn wgn, very Air cond, ps/pb, new tires. RAMBLER good, new tires, $295. 2 Door Sedan. Automatic, ra.. * 549-1688 * _S=650=·=!J62.=3=1=21===== ---------I dio, dlr. Has had loving =========I -'68 AMERICAN xlnl cond. '""'· (YXU 24') Take !rad• CORVAIR MUSTANG HighcsJ oUer. Call Sal, Son. \Viii finance private party. -.....,-------or ev". 493-3938. Call Maury alt 10 am 1962 CORVArR hest offer '65 Conv. pwr brakes & 494-7506 or 54(}.3100. S48-J9J4 or 2IJ38 Wallace Apt Steering r/h gd tires -top E CM. $850. 5'15-4867. T·BIRD 9700 Did you ever think ot 1wap. "69 Mach l 428, 4-spd, lo ml. '66 T-BIRD Conv., air, pwr, ---------tng that White Elephll!lt in $2600 or reas oflt'r. Aft 5 low mil, 1 owner. $129;i. Autos Wanted WE PAY CASH the attic for 110methlng you 1 _,P~m_. ~&l_S-_281_7~, ~G~"'-'---04~97..,-71850~~or_4794-_71_92 ___ , can use? Try the Traders 1966 Mustang HT -Auto, fac '69 T-Bird. full power, air, FOR YOUR CAR CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd. Costa P.fesa 546-lXIO WE PAY TOP CASH fJ? used cars a:-trucltl JUst call Us for b'l!e estimate. GROTH CHEVROLET · Paradise column in the Dai-alr, new tires. p/s, White. stt'reo, private party. Call Iy Pilot Want Ads. XJnt cond $1350. 67~2226. eves aft 8 pm. 67~173.l .. .• County's Largest OPEL SELECTIONS At Close,Out Prices Too! • EXECUTIVE AND DEMONSTRATORS ALL HAVE FULL EQU IPMENT PLUS AIR CONDITIONING I See Us This Weekend " BAUER Bill CK IN COSTA MESA 234 E. 17th lt. - COSTA MESA -- 548-7765 . ---- • • •