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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-10-06 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa,. I • I ' --... ' . • -I • -an ow ow-n 00 ' ' ·Moiorlloat· .. . . -~ ·ad.it -·. "Ill Heated Debate Efieet a · Getaway • • • ' O~ New city Pia~ ~ With ·s ·IO"O 000 I . ' . l - DAILY PILOT l * * * 1oc * * * " TUESDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 6, 1970 ' Yot.. fl. NO. ur, ! SllCTIONI, • r ANS Sydney SIDiles ' ' ', ,j~:~:~;.r,:. _··"··!'.:_·:_:"I . ~.l.. ~n=-T.~:-~n're; . ..., .,. Ji . . . . ... ~ ' . -· ' · , · · · · · Delay •Vetoed 3~· ~ ' -·Nor_tonSimt)u,-l:Tni~rsi~ :~·~ANG~<~,·_ A. : · · : ·on.-- • • · 1 , , · , " ~J · , dt(eue ·motkr! tor ·• delay in the . . • • .. . . m.,.n-Tafe\murder trial !!fill the In ·Hot .Debate 0}'.er . City '~~:.r~7~~~.~~:. ~!es Manaon and his three women co-defendant.& were ejected Monday a(ter he took a flying l~p at the judg~ and they chanted aloud 1n defiance of an order ,to be silent. Everyone knows Its g~tting on toward winter here in the l"/orthern .Hemisphere. But Nad.ina ,Guilford, 17, ,could care less. She lives m Sydney, Auslra1ia~ where spring has · sprung. So she can affo.r.d to wear .a big smile and_small~bathing ,suit. Nuclear Reactor Hearing . ' ' Nears Climax in Clemente . . . -. . ' . ' . By JOUN VALTEBZA . 1aunched Monday by oppon~ts to the #' or tllt· 0.11'1' Plitt staff placetnent of the multimillion-dollar Tbe1!nvironmental conSequezlcerol'tWo · .power plants two miles Saf\ Clemente. new nuclear reactors at San.Clement.t,-After introductory remarb .from an an issue 18unChed at the' start of 'Public · 'Edison Senior Vice Pm:i&nt St the open- Utilities Commission hearings Mooday ~ ing of the hearings,Moqdaf, 1',fain heard a are expeded to reach a climax in San steady stream of opponents to the ap- Clemente today with testimony of a key plication fer swte ,permits to ,build lhe 11pok~an for tlie two utility firmi ift-'twin reactors m .13 ,acres . immediately volvedi · , ' do~coast ol ·the existing one at1 San David • J, FQgarty, manager ·of. Oriofre, , . ._ . 1 mechlniell ·engineer~ for Southern · Several :San Clemente ·residents. op- CallllX'lli& EdiJon Comj>any,,... scbe®J• · posing varioul aspects o! the· pemilt.s ed to inrW•,. before, PUC exa(l'\iner. Arch . conduc~ a min.ide~atioq of sorts Mam 'j;j=" today's ,.,,.eedini! out.slde"<ity oouncil 'chambers bdore the presumably to refute repeated criticllm opening of the hearinp. · ' · ' · The -demonstrators,· mmberil\i' ·less " · than a doiin. bOr~ placirds' clr1Wn In HALI J,l "Y MAIL crayon proteslil)g lhe proposed shoreline V ,'1.p.(1 , 'I loai\iOlloftlleil!<.,•, ~ ' , By ,:lEORGE tEIDAL Of .. .....,, ....... ,.,, UC Regent Nor.ton Simon believes he is "raising quesUons which property abould be asked" about the relationship between Irvine Company and the university, He told the DAILY PILOT falll1wlng a Los Angeles press conference Mohcla, he doesn't expect criminal proMalllou to result from his "exposure" of the Chane· ing nature of that relationship. However, he Promised "the public will be shocked" when the fUll story Is told at the Ocl 15 and 16 RA!gent.s' meet1n1. At 1ssue is what be terms "unjust enrichment" of lrvlne which Simon ~ eStimates at $450 million by incorporation of. a 53,000-acre city rather than lhe 10,000-acre city discussed 10 years ago. _ Simon asserts the Irvine Company"' is violating an agreement with the Universi- ty dated July 22, 1960 by planning a larger city around the 1,000-aett, UC Ir;vine campus. Raymond Watson,.Irvfue executive vice president, said the agreement with the university wu based on preliminary planning and thal any changes In plan- ning had been done with the knowledge of the university administration. Discounllng Simon's cbarre that In· corporaUon wu being -111 for la• reasons, Wat!IOO said, '''lbe 1111 Tax · reform act doesn't even apply to UI." He cited the threat of piecemeal annexation attempts by cities aurroundlDg ·lrvine as cause for rushing 53,000 aa"tt to city hood. "We don't care if there are one, two or ten cities established oo Irvine land -or for that matter none. ''But, we've made our plans public for the next 30 years and ·feel we have a responslbUlly to follow it through,'' :Watson aald. Simon alleged that the Jnrloe.Company had recenUy placed 50,000 ICl"el of land into a tu-favored agricultural ~preserve "and then I find they're ,(Olnr lo build I city on it." DATES LISTED Wataon, In a later press conference, r noted the agricultural prtlel'Ye status re- -quires tbal lhe owne( promise J10I to ; develop It for 10 years. Som<; alopns ~ the later lie contended that portions of lh1l land tesllmony by lhe f ... -move· the ,....,. ire within. the' borders or lhe propooed ' -' WASjllNGTON (UPI) -The Pent.goo bu ..._.,..i · °' f;Dowing dalei bj' w~I~ 1Clrlsllnas ~ka&H ind lell<n for IOKllO!W In Yielnan\ illould be mailed lo artfvt in tllne for the hoUdays: - Packageo more than Ove_J!Ollndl by llW'face mail Oct. 12'NOY. 7~ less than Ive pounds Oct. 19-Nov. 21: 0-W· rylng a 11 parcel •irllll !PALI stamp lo travel by air on a space available basis ~Oct. 26-Nov. 28: and ap '!8Ular Iii' m.U • ~1ter1 Nov. 30-Dec. U. tors Inland, downcoul llld undel'rroand. 53 ooo a~ city'.ol lrvlne. • 0ne-ker __po1n1-the_-""1Jllition-nlaed · li«ause the ~r rs necuoarily Mofulay was the~ of !he af· 1:, those Portions .can nol be fecled San lln<>M befdi on C.lllJ> -for al leut 10 yeon and-would Ptnllletoo lo lllo pollf!Cfii' fillure r<i:ru-' be 1 led to 1 bltJhs tu role. Uonal Wltl. • ·; ' While Simon c:banderlled an Orange Addir.g a loucl! of Irony lo lhe ar County Plannlnl1 Comm-.un otudy ment, )>owever, waa the testimlny 6y two ~ U>e Imne pfan as finding fai.dt with area women 1'ho preswed lhe pul>llc lhe ,,...-new city, w.-del<:ribed beach issue. nlatlonl between his C'Omptny, an d Both tptabrt -Mrs. W 11111 m county planner• u cordial ~although Llmtbrool<, 1 resident of the Btacb Road lhey have brought a few crlticltml to our CS. NUa.EAJI, P• I) atlenllon," Regarding lhe pooalbUlty that the ...... city will create slums In surrounding cities, Wat.son: said .this is "always a. con- cern when a new cjty forms." Noting tb&t~ plaM.ing m I n I m I z e 1 developmenti of "future slums" be con- ceded that there is a tendency for people to move into a oew area from an older one. "' The inclusion area concept Is key to Simon's criticism of both the Irvine Com· pany and the UC Regenls. The Inclusion area embtaces 510 acres of university-owned lands IWTOunding the 1,000 acre campus. Simon said it was suppoeed to pfovide space for university· related activities ,. services and low C08t faculty and ·student' bowing, and he blames truJtees for not having completed a plan for development. While the area around UCLA for ex· ample, has increased in value ·to the point where inexjiensive property near the campus prohibits !IUCb development,. the ·inclusion1 area• at UCI Is intended t() prevent tbls economlc barrier to locating n01H1cademic but university • related · f~Uons near to the campus. Simon. said, ''The inclusion area plan- ned fer aerving as a buffer between the campus and a city of~l00,000 .is one tping. A clly of ll0,000 people llUl'roUl1dinC the . campus ·ia quite another." .Further, Simon· -charged Irvine with dtveloptng ·a ''l\JXUl'Y cty" for 'the very (file mVINE, Pace I) At the morning aeasion, with the de!enda,nt.s llstening to proceedings via loudspeaker in detention rooms near the court, the judge said merely "Motion denied ... let'a nol waste any more lime," in response to the delay request. Driver Stabbe d, Runs Into Cars Going for Aid . • l An Anaheim gas stalll:in attendant re· mains in serious condition at Orange County Medical Center tc:>d&Y following a bizarre stabbing and series <Of collis'fOns · along .Harbor Boulevard In Garden Grove late Friday. . Through 1ign langua1e. and ,note· pau-1 tng. Emanuel Geier, 48,·rel•ted ~story to Garden Grove police eventa: following giving a ride to a bitcbJilker onHartJor Blvd. at First 1treet1 Santa.Ana. net. Walter Lowery .1ald Gelo .wu1 driving home along Harbor Blvd. when the bllchl11ker tried to i'oll• him. Geier refused to .give· him hir·mooey -and wai1 '.Bank Ro_bbers Escape by Sea ALEXANDRIA B~Y. N.;i. (AP)' -" Two muked rbbbers held up a bank .. tod'*y ,...ar)d escaped In a . motorboat wlth 'an ea ti mated 1100,000. slabbed or.punctured In lhe throat After the rider fled, Geier ht8CSed toward Orange County Medical Center. · I> ·Along 'lhe way ·hls car collided with . sevep pilr\ed. vehicles and fin&lly, :ovas atopped after. a collision wllh an eightht near tile lnleraecl1on of J!aypqrt and Qiapman. , -The Marine l\lidl~nd Trust Co. of Nocther,n New-YOl'k branch bank is on the wa~rlront o{ , the St.- Lawtence River. ·A" toor~l'in"!h!s 'resort vlDase telephooed police after ·,..fug lhe PA!rl•mR lnlo"Jbe boal wllh lllelr- abOiglms. , ;•The shotguns arciuted my sugpl· clons," tbe-tourilt, Edward lmler of Addbon, told reporteta. _ _!!uk olflci.til Slid nO .one WU liilr!thooglt the gunmen locked se,.veral women and M a n a c er Donald Munro In a record vault artci' keeping. a teller,, Mrs. lv10 Slrou1h1 at gunpoint: An ambulanct wu called--; to ClJTY Geier the final three quarteri: of • lllile to lhe boopital, and jlOltce placed,.a call to the coroi\er's office, beileving Geier\ wa1 dead, - . · 'Admitted to the intensive care unit from whlcb_lie.Jflf:i~ late Sunday, Geter Is unable to 1all<. •-Aid, until, a pipe --:bin"""..;,·-1• removed from hls .pipe, "We're 1'll\lill for !Um to ·f~ \t_ftl "l" delctlpllon on the bttdlblUl',tt !.owory aatd. Gas PedaLR11le Told W Allll!NGTON !UPI) -The National Highway ' Safely Bureau hu proposed lhal alter Oct. 1, 1172, all auto makers mwit lnstall accelerator• that cannot 1Uck. S11gges~ed ·WASHINGTON (UPI) ~ !'mid<'* Nixon,. in high splrils alter bis gruefin& European tour. an~ today be will addre!ls the nation at S p.m. Wfld. nesday and male a:major new propasaJ for .eriding lh~ Vietnam' War. Hll radio·and television broadcast from the White House, timed less than a month before tbe Nov. 3 Congressional elections, follows a personal report from the ·u.s. negotiating team in Paris on the latest CommLinist p!B.n for a settlement. : There was widespread' speculatlao. . which Nixon made no attempt Tuesdly to discourage, that the United States' rhight propoSe ' cease-fife throughout Southeast Asia and ... a. withdrawal of all foreign troops frOm Vietnam. He refused all · ~mment: ' The P:resident.-·Who returned to Washington Monday. night Crom bia 12.000-mil~ trip to 1fiy, nations, includinC <;ommlgtlsf.. Jl"IJC!.'l~y\a. l>olll!d«I ..... pectedly into the White Hou$e Press (oom: Jate in the mornlna:. A "'ft win be' the inost · pnhenslvo ' olalement..,er made OI) ~g and dll· flcult war and, wtll· Covet an the-major issues invdlvM ln .. Soail\east Asia area," be aid, speaking witbclJt DCl&ea :"we .dO nol ~lde1f 1lilir .,. -be a•propagando gfinmidt.'"he>ded.-''t/e are net JuR sayinglt for-tlwrecdnl."1 Before the ~ speech 'W e.-d D era.d a 7'J · CllH MXON;·~'ll ' . .. ·0r..,e' ' .... ,.--~ • lt;Udte11 ... ' = -. llclil....., -.:.i , i. --ln1"" ...... 6<1'1 bOtb an the· eo1st and further Inland wtll prevail O!l Wedneld1y, with token tunshine breakfnl through at raldaf\'ernoon. ' • l ' . - . \I IWl.V l'llOT s Tutsd1y, Octobtr 6, 1970 Frot1t Pefe I ;;__NUCLE!LPLAN'L._. .,_ ~~~~ Mn1~:yn1 _ Harilich 1 Hi 1 . cil~ ~ • . .,;j • .... ~,.. -'"11""'._ res uen -ea ve in her htlsband to protect aplnat lhe entire Colonies which have private be•chet issue of nuclear power, testified that the where the public la forbidden to enter. expanded San Onofre facilities •;would be • MANY SPEA.URS a sitting.duck for plane crashes,.mlssiles Flrlt on the llst of 1pe,akers, however, fired by a gunnery sergeant maldng a ,as Edison Stnlor Vice Plesident William mistake et Camp Ptndleton, deadJy equip. R. Gollld, who set tbe theme of the utwiy ment failurtS •. .'' senti(JQjji by Cltllil hil llrril'a "all f'1nc-l-.loyd-VOfl--H•cen al,. -reluled E'tmcnt"-to nut ear power ana---pu~lished -accounts-of-successful e • not to pursue further fossil·fuel ~rlment.s in warm water from (after the two proposed additions generating plant.a and the ability to f. ifl!-Huntingto'n U.,Cb). • . create "superlobsters" which grow to ogical problems, Gou)d stressed, ~aturlty ln a matter of weeU. She refer• the reasom behind the com· red to discharge of water back into the 1tttment. sea 10 degrees ~tter Utan the ocean tem- tlng oft-heard &rl'.Jmenls for electrl· perature. . ~ generator ei;pansion, Gould told the "It mlgbt be ad vantageous to grow the aaminer thal the. demanda..on..elemic:al. lobsten in that hot water and have them -r---~u through the Edison system in 1976 emerge already bolled Tor the dinner liN!d bt double that of today. Lable," said said. L San Onofre, ht added, ls 'the "only pro-In a mori 1ember note in the dispute ven . site" where nuclear reactor e1-over the possible pollution from the ~s1on could take place to meet Ille pro-350,000-gallons-per-minute of heated sea l~,ted ~emands. . . water already emanatina: fro mlhe exist-~t JS the only site 1n Southern ing plant. a San Clemente High School Q.lifornia cipable of further deVelop-' niarine studies teacher spelled out his ment with nuclear unita by the y e a t belitfa for the PUC. 1 1'19/' he claimed, adding tha~ the time· • · eonauming processes of aclentific studies l'ORST-POU.UTION for site adaptability 1would rule out any Phil Gr!gnon, who told Main he was not other fresh aite in tlnie to avoid a power representing any group , termed thermal crisis in six 'years. pollution -that created by heated water .. -dumped back into the sea -as "polluUon ALTERNATE SITE . of the worst form ." He a aid one other alternate aile has 'The teacher, classified as an "ezpert" been purehased by his firm -Point by the e1aminer, was sworn-in for the DAILY r t LOT l tt ff, r lltlt 'ONOFRE A PROVEN SITE' Ed ison Company'• Gould DAILY PILOT Steff r~lt 'SHORE DETERIORATING' San Clement• ~lgh'• Grignon Enroute to Claicago • Mayor to Attend Jet Noise Talks -"A-Clllcago-bouna flight carried Cor;ta ~).flsaMa9t;rrto~rr M. Wll~n and a five-point declaration on jet noise and aviation controls ·destlnl!d f9r federal consideration today. Mayor Wilson was scheduled lo meet in thl! Windy City with other members of a Nationa l League· of Cities environmental quality commitlee to develop resolutions for submission at its national convention in Atlanta. Acting qpickly, the City Council adopted a ~es_of five recom..mmd@tiont. from the Costa Mesa Aviation Committee al the close of Monday'1 meeting so that be could take them along. , The mayor planned to present parts of the committee's findings to the League of Cities panel on wh ich he is a member or the steering com mittee for possible adop- tion on a national scafe. . wlth---precis~ ntineertng data reque!ted- 15y-the-Orangl!-County-Board-of Superv isors. Wording of the final segment of the recommeadations explicitly as k_s, ho'l'·ever, that further economic and social research be conducted before supervisors adopt the Parsoru plan. Man Seized After Fires - In Mesa Bar Some portions deal only with Orange Thfre was a familiar (act on the bar· County Airport and its future in terms of Southlqnd co,nmertial aviation. _ ·-room floor Monday night, after a Councilman Willia m L. St. Clair ab-Cw"toRier walked into a Costa Mesa tav. stained from voting on adoption of the em police allege he had tried to bum ·guidellnes prepared by the a v i a t I o n down for the third time in, lour hours • committee because he hadn't had a ~aymond w. Dowdy, 52, of 132 w. chancl! to study them. · Conception, but production of a working record. then charged that thermal pollu· reactor there could not be accomplished tion "affcets all organisms" in the sea. before 1979. In his JS years of study of the problem, ·:,ReadlnC from a preparecJ 8Cellario Gri&oon said, he Jw found that quality of letween bis firm'• laW}'ers andihimself, the Orange c.oa.t shoreline has Gould told the examiner that locaUon or "deteriorated rapidly," then cited the nuclear reactors in remote areas to reporta of cancerous lesions in fish found replace the proposed ones at San Onofre near the Orange County sewage and Hun· would nol provide a "reasonable balance tinglon Beach fossil -fuel generator out.- between remote generaUOn and a:enera· falls near Huntington Beach. Marine's Thef4 Assault "I've had my fingers burned on these Wilson SL was arrested and booked on last.minute tblngs before"," he said, arson charges after being examined at emphasizing that his reluctance was not Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital for possi- a critcism o! the aviation panel's work. ble injuries. Councilman J"ack Hammett, a member of the comm ittee, said it made an ex-"The informant was very upset and ap- haustive. highly technical study of the S<> prehended hi~ by hitting him twice in called Phase II of the P.arsons Report on the head area ," Officer Dennis Hossfeld Spree Ends in Collision Orange County aviation. wrote in his report of the incident. Number one priority item is adoptio n Raymond W. Kruetz.kamp called poli~ by the U.S. Depa r t men t of t T Transportation ot a· national airc raft o he Oasis, 2101 Placen tia Ave., saying lion n~ major l~d centers." Grignon then stressed that his point in Adding an ommous note -resumed testifying was not one of strict opposition A young Camp Pendleton Marine faces Jiiter ~y opponents -Gould.ruled c;>Ut the to tbe San Onofre reactors. but, instead, charges of assault with a deadl y weapon ~ectiveness of . the remote .ge~era~rs to call for a major ea>logical study con· and auto theft after a series of incidents 1----~aUSe.JlW!Y~~-~~tr~rruss1tJn:1mes_ducteLby_impattial scientists _ "not before dawn toda y starting with a club- !ft!Uld fall v1ct1m to equipment fai lure, working for either the Edison Company bing altemt>t-=~r1n·an endlng-with-11 I-• !latural catastrophes and -more or the Atomic Energy Commission." spectacular freeway crash in an allegedly ~en Uy ~ sabotage." . stolen car. The last aspect wu revived aoon after ~ W!'fNESS District attorney's complaint.IS in two ~Id stepped doWn with6ut croas-e1· 'Itle popular hl&h schooJ instructor felonleS wouJa be sought by San Clemente .&minatlon by opponent.IS. .,. became the first witness to be cro.ss-ex· police today against David Duane Patton, I=--.:......ODeJODWJ traveling Jrom _Via;ta with .11mined ~y uUllty aj.torneys who queried 23_, who w~ a.rr~te!t_f.t the &cene of a Grignon on stucfies of the outfall area two-car crash on the San Diego Freeway " From Page 1 ~IXi>N ... near the e1~ting·San Onofre reactor. at 2 a.m. _ Grignon-replied-tersely that he has con· .The allegl!d string of lncidents began al ducted no studies in the vicinity. about midnight at the apartment of "The authorities at Camp Pendleton Steven Dougli!_ Hemmers at 116 Camino -will not-allow me-in the area to conduct Estrella, San Clemente. such studies," hl! said. . Remmers told police he was lying in ...__ httet~ of Sta!.t Wll.li&m P. ~ers ~ill As.Jbe testimony begins to accumulate bed v.·hen he heard a .noise in the living • ~ interested ~vernments, -u~ludin& ~ -1n·the~, ~appearances.by the . room and wtnt in_to ivvestjgate. ~no.Ii~-, li ;J:lose U.S. aU!ea tn Southeast Asia and foes to the locatron of th! plants bas been ed a crouched figure in the darkened ,_ 'P.rfSumably the Soviet Union, on the new Promisid. room . The assailant swung a two-by.four r"-'""'!di.plomatic ~ppr~h, Ni:a:o~ sai~. . · Plag\ltd by what they termed last· at the re sident, but missed. '"~The Pr~tt1l hunael! will d.iscuu }'111 min ute 1nowled1e of the heartnss, the op-The club drove a hole in thl! apartment 'peech with the cabinet at S .p.m. ponents promised to continue providing wall, the assailant thl!n fleet f t---'IY "· ~ay;-followtd-u-ibour-laterby-a-"'p:etttto:n·rol'P0!1ifg-t?re-1otatlon-or-the•--A1-poli~were investigating the ln- b nef1ng ~or Republican and Democratic plants in C001ing days. t 11 ,. o:>n~ess1ona.I lea~ers. Dr. Henry A. Mrs. Hieb, who beseeched Examiner ~rnger,, his national security affairs Main on the point of nuclear dangers, 'Wdviser, will see newsmen twice. asked that resldenll "be relieved of the -The President &tressed that the new misfortunl! of living in an atomic test U.S. peace iniUativ~ was being developed tube for the past two years." long before the National Liberation Front Representing GUARD (Groups Unlted offer~ Sept. l? to halt attacks . on Against Radiation Dangers) Mr1. Hicks American troops if they leave South Viet· relayed a list or questions on the isstie nam by .ne1t June 30. . which she' asserted have not been U.S. Ambassado~ David K. E. Bruce, answt:red by utility officials. who ~ew from ParJs to Ireland to report Among them are reque1ta for the to ~txon on Sunday, termed the Com· specific measurtments of nuclear wastes mu~~st propo~s "old "."lne in new bot· emitted by the existing rl!actor, the safe- ties . at the time but said they woukt be ty proceedurea for disposal of nuclear 1tu~1ed carefully: waste products, the exact footage of Nixon sal~, his announcement . Wed-beaches to be taken up by the plants and .iiesday was prepare~. only after il was the projected costs for moving the plants ~roui!tly consl~red and . covered all downcoas~. inland and underground . issues involved 1n the ParJs t~lks. He Main promised answe rs to the queries ~refused to comment further, saying only as the hearings continued ~t he expected speculation woul~ con-He a<kled that he ex~cted the pro-;fln~, and returned to his office without ceedings to last the week -perhaps wln-'\tkin~ any quest~ns from newsmen. ding up sometime Friday. Besides proposing a cease-fire pegged to U.S. withdrawals by next su mmer, the 'Viet Cong delegation chief, Mrs. Nguyl!n 'Thi Binh. ind ica ted U!e Communists were '.ready to negotiatl! with the present 6aigon government e1cept for Its top :leadership, including President Nguye n Van Thieu and Vice President Nguyen C..Ky. DAllY PllOT .. ..,... .... " ........ ... : ...,._ ... a ........ ..,. c..MeM s.e ....... ORAMGE COAST PVILISHIN!l CX)M,AICY 'loOert N. w,,, ,, .......... l"Hli.Mir Jee\: JI:. Cittl.., Vb ,,.llt9:lt trA '*'-l MIMOtr lliom•• JC,, ... u Ed1tor 1\ofn•• A. M11rphi"' Mtl'llllnl •dlMr tl.ich.1r4 P. Hill """' Ora"" C-ly ld1 ..... ' Offi.. C.te M-! -W•t ..., lll'wl 91.....,,, S11cll; J211 W.I 111• t oultvt'11 w-a.c11: m ,._, ... """"' MCl!l!I,,.._. ... di: 11171 -..di ....,!_..._ W ~ IOS IMrtll RI CMNMI a .. 1 .. Teacher's Trial Slated Nov. 10 In Morals Case Jury trial has been set for a Corona del Mar High School teacher and former Costa Mesa City Council candidate, ar· rested.two wee.ks ago on a morals char1e. in a bowling alley men's room. . Alan J. Schwalbe. 38, a social science 1ns1ructor, has pleaded innoctnt and Is due for trial Nov, 10 in Harbor Judicial District Court. A pretrial conferenct on the lewd con- duct charge is scheduled Nov. 5 in the &~me court, while Schwalbe, of 3121 Pierce Ave., Costa Mesa, remains free oa $315 bail. He was .~r~sted Sept . 23 art.er alleged· Ir propos1t1onmg a plainclothes vice of. ricer and was listed as selJ.·tmployed in the local realty business. Schwalbe, \\'ho was unsuceessful as a Cly Council write-in candldste during the 1968 election, has been suspended by Newpon-Mesa Unified School District Superintendent Willia m Cunniflih&m pen· ding the autcome. S:uch suspensi~ns a.re required by law, wh1ch·orders ~ice. to Jmmediately notify local. county and state educaUonal autli0rffi90fiiiai an arres . Vandals Uproot Tree In Costa J\'lesa Park Vandals uproottd a 12.foot 1Uk nosS tree at CostJ Mesa's TeWinkle Park Monday night and dragged it to• nearby wall. over whlch U was broken in half. Park employes reported the lncldl!nl at fWo Arlington !>rive lQ police 1Jter it was dlscovered, u.tinC a II~ 1..,. Ralph Parsons Firm Awarded NASA Contract The Ralph M. Parsons Company, author or the Orange County Airport development report, has been awarded a $380,000 NaUonal Aeronautics and Space Administration contract for engineering work on the new space shuttle system. A spokesman £or the Los Angeles-based engineering consultants said the project will involve NASA's attempt to develop wa ys to re-use missile booster rockets. The space agency is growing ever more cost-conscious and is working towards development of a reusable launch system and orbiting system in place of present systems like those used on the Apollo program. Stanley Goldhaber, vice president of the Parsons CompanJ', said basically the program is studying methods of flying the boosters back and landing them for future blastoffs. The booster rockets are now alwa ys lost at sea. Goldhaber said several aerospace firms 11re currently making presentations to NASA which intends to ll!t a contract for development of the program. The Parsons Company, he said. has been assigned to evaluate these firms'.re- q1.drements [or grouod .facilities to IUJ>" port the program. "We will examine the requirements from each of the contractors." he said , and analyze them as to their com· patibl\ity with each other. We will also analyze what facilities are already available to NASA in the current in· ventory in terms of what can be used and what additional or mod ified facilities will be needed to meet the requirements of contractors." He said the work will be performed ln the firm's Washington, D. C. office. Bribery. Suspec t Asks fo r Trial \\'Uliam D. New._&6.L..-who had wai ved a jury trial and agreed to fet a judge rule ·on-htrguilt or innocence ()ft c:harges of bribery, chanf.ed his mind ~fonday and asked for ltla . N"ew, of Photnir, Is accusrd o( offering rormer Huntington Beath ri.tayor Jack Gretn $4,000 for Greea's action in his favor on a pNposed ione charige on in- du strial land near Gothard Street and Slalcr Avenue. ll s a ested last Nov. 10 on the parking Jot of the Fisherman Restaurant after sllegedly making his third otter o( a "campaign contribution·• to Crttn. Judie Samuel Drelzen set Oct. 29 as tlle trial date for New. ' cident, San Clementl! Marine James noise level standard based on 0 th e r minor fires had erupted in the men 's William Gordan. also stationed at Camp criteria besides sound alone. room at 6 and 8:50, each time just after Pendleton, wa s e"Xiting his new car at 125 Ecological, socia l and economic factors Dowdy had left. S. El Camimo Real, when a man -a in the effect of suc h aircraft noise pro--He said he figured the 6 p.m. trash can two:by-four stuffed in t~ waistband--t1f -b!em.LarA.mentioned. --------'I H h th aze-was-an-accident,but changed hia-his pants -accosted him in a parking ere arl! t e o er recommendations: Jot. -That state, county and municipal mind afte r ~the 8:50 incident. lnvolvlng "A.re you with the cops?" the stranger governments of the Southern California towels igliited aiainst a bar.e wall ·and asked the motorist. · : • basin region immediately establish a came dashing around the bar at 10:10 Gordan answered "yes," then ran into governrnental agen cy to complete an in· p.m., when Dowdy again returned. a nearby bar, Jt!aving the keys in the ig-tegrated ground and air tranaportaton Dowdy protested he hadn 't been In the nit ion. system for the county. h bar all night before he walked into the When he emerged. his car wa s gone . -T at In consideration of future plans flurry of punches .. At 2 a.m. California HI g h way for Orange County Airport, that ad- patrolml!n, advised of the bulletin on a ditional In-depth research and study be sus pect, answered an accident call on the given to comml!rcial and general aviation fr(!eway near Valle Road tn San Juan to pin down precise economic and recrea. Capistrano . tional benefit! of aviation to the com· 'Willia-Dean Hunt 'l'ri~~ _ W e@.es_d~y, Gordon's car had rolled several times munity. ~fie! hi_lll~g an?ther .car. , '-.... ~~t th~ type.s of airport operations rn the auto, patrolmen found PattOn Un· be untiated·m Orange·County: the major conscious. jetport in isolated areas, the general A splintered two-by-four was found in aillX>rt near business and indu!try and a The murdl!r trial of Willa Dean HUnt. ol NeWp.rt Be"'-'! •CCll!<d ol llllbblnl her husband Willis. to death last Dec. 14, the auto, polict said. nearby practice field for instruclion. The driver of the 'Other car invol ved In -That the Phase II Parsons Report be the crash, Booker Hoover of Los Angeles, conaidered~a document cll!arly answering has been delayed until Wednesday, - ·The trial \Vas 1cliedu1ed -to begirf Mon- d'ay but defense attorney Sidney Irmas was tied up ln a jury trial in anolber court. was unhurt. San Clemente police, summoned to the wreck scene, took Patton to Ora nge County Medical Center for emergency treatment, then returned the man to San Clemente for booking on the two felony counts. Officers said a largl! splinter of wood found in the apartment where the at· tempted assault took place, apparently matches with the larger chunk of lumber found in the stolen car, Patton remained in police custody this morn.Ing. Gasoline Bomb Hits U.S. Si te in Milan MILAN, Italy (AP) - A gasoline fire bomb exp locjed in front of the U.S. lnf&-mation Service in Milan early today, blackening the front door. Police said it was thtov.·n from a passing car. Jt was the 12th explosion in Italy's chief industrial center in less than two months. Police blamed the attac ks on anarchists. From Page I IRVINE ... ~ rich, ignoring the housing needs. of student! and faculty. Watson countered that the Irvine Com· pany was "concerned" that building costs for single-family homes have rai!ed prices. He noted the firm was seeking develop- ments of four-plex housing and govern- ment subs idized low interest mortgages for single-fam ily home.s to provide hout- ihg in Irvine for middle and low income families. Simon w;ill ask the Regents Oct. 16 to begin a suit "for compensatory and punitive damages" against Irvine Com- pany for proceeding wi th the develop- ment of the City of Irvine in a manner which violates the agreement with the university. Mrs. Hunt, 44, the slzlh' wife of lhe slain man who police allege pluna:ed a foot-long butcher knife into her husband as the climax of a quarrel that was witnessed by her 13-year~Iil da"""ter Dru. ..... ' Polish Butcher Hit With Hijack Sentence COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) -A Copenhagen court has imposed a six-year sentence on Zblgniew Iwanicki, 29, a Polish butcher who hijacked a Polish airliner with 23 passengers aboard on June S and forced it to land at Copenhagen. The prosecutor had demanded the mar· !mum penalty - nine years' im- prisonment -saying lhat only 1eVere punishment could stop skyjackers. It Ain't Necessarily So! • The other Cley .another store. a customer wa s comparing our prices wit li We were informed that our price was bOc per square yard high!! Questioning the customer, we discovered tliat the other stor e was furnishing a cheap ureth ane padding Wh ich is 75c per squar e yerd cheeper then the b4 oz. sponge rub be r peoding thet we were including. Furthermore, in thi s case, we were comparing our installat ion against an installation wortM far less. (Many stores contract thei r. lebor by the yerd to leye's of unknown beckqround end skill - we have our own crews, trained and controlled by us, paid by the hour to Clo !he best que lity instelloiion possible.]. So • , • their estimete wes not whet it eppee red to be! In conclusion , when compei ring prlces1 mak~ ---sure you are ------comparing equal values:-- IANTA ANA. OIAN•t. TUSTIN, C.11 ••• ALOIN'S llD HILL CAlP'm a ou.ru1n 1tl74 lrriM. t .. tr1, C•llf. tll·JJ44 • A.LD-.EN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. • COSTA MISA 646-4838 • 1 • -. - _Huniin~gion Beaeh ~ --l DIIION 'l0Ul,-N0~2l9 2-SECTIONS,-lO!JIAGES--- I ' Meadowlark R.unWay Cut -Couneil-m:en-Ba-ittl-se ~f-GOO~loot-Ex tension~ ' . . · ·. •' By ALAN DJl\KJN cideoti liDce 11 wu bull\ In May. • • .. ..., "" ..,. ~a mon to deflr action on the Meadowtatt problem. llmlted to two hours after 1U11Set but no 1atar than 'IO.p.m. · llwilliiitiln ·-""!"'cil-llharW> .,.... iiid diilil Ori1ir J>"'ilii>1 • report Tbe C<!!!l!!;I! 'l!U 1!114.Jballbt.l'.llllWIY addition -lillpl --.. building permit had been obtatoed although an ap-~ ~ ty -llhoU!ii take the lead In seeing pawer lines along W&rne' Avenue and north of Heil A venue are obstruction lighted and the street light wire along Heil Avenue is undergrounded. ed the runway at Meadowlark Airport by the city's airport commlllH, Coon· Monday nghl by bannlnl -al the con-cilman Norman Glbbl COllUllOftled, "The plication has been made. trover!ial 500-foot eatwlin. utemloa II illecal -it's !bat bulc. The Tiie decision fD 1m,... the ..... and desist order was made at the 4:30 Ji.ni. councU aeuiOD.-.LateLat the iv.eniog ses..ion the council listened for nearly two hours to pl'9e.D.talion.s by the airport conunHtee and a homeowners' group and agreed thal: ' .-Spurred by another near crub at the ceaae and delilt order ii not out of order. airport. SWJday a!1d <411l.__J.r_o.rn_ ltJ too_bod it was noLdmie al liral. I 1'omeowners, the council voted to enforce wouJd thlnt the c!ty would be bible U an a cease and desist order !lahnt the ex· accident occurred. u tensiori -hailed by avi.IUOD ~ts The order bad been stapen<IM by the A li1ht plane clipped the 1treet light wire Sunday afternoon nearly causing a crash on the runway and knocking 1 lamp fixture onto a car. It was the fourth 1Ucb u · • safety factor-and blamed by city for five weeb while the council &J>" bomeownen for four wiredippin& in-poinled airport committee 1Wdied the -Ni&ht flying at Meadowlark be (See RUNWAY, Pap Z) Hunti ngton A·partment,s Request-OK'd nie fate of a much discussed parcel of land along Holland Drive, Huntln&ton Beach, was resolved J.!onday night. Apytmenls~•«--- Tb.e question was decided when Coun· cilman Al Coen cast his vote in favor of the 144-unit apartment projeet on the parcel east of Beach Boulevard. ne-request from the William tyon Development ·r.o~p.ny to change the mntng from commercial to-multl-residen- tial had been denied by the planning com· mWion. 11-procluced a 3-3 lie 1n· a C011J1Cll vote last month but O>erl was not premi.t at Jbe.bearlng_aocl delayed 'bis-voto unlil Monday'Dlght Tfdk Wedne•day Nixon to Tell New Peace Plan Pay Dispute Break Seen In '2-Weeks By TERRY OOVILLE Of *' o.Jlr Pl• s~ A compromise to the salary dispute -between JrufillilgtDn . Beach-poncea mr WASHINGTON (UPI) -President a propaganda gimmick," he added. "We Nixon, in high spirits after his grueling are not Just sayin& Jt for the record.''. firemen and the city council m.ay be only European tour, anoounced today he Before tbe Jl)eeeh Wednesday, two weeka away. will address .the nation at • p.m. Wed-~retary of State William P.....Roeers will The key tO a happy solution r!!l" all in- nesday and make a major new proposal brief interested governments, in;cluding volvea the amount of money public ·aafety for ending the Vietnam War. close U.S. allies in Southeast Asia and workers might receive under educational His radio ind televlskln broldcut fr<lm_ ~~ly-tbt Soviet \J@ioo, on U>e new benefits in their new aaJafy_pactaga. the: White House, timed less tha.ri·i month diplomatic approach, NIXOn aid. • .. _1_1,_,__ • EDDIE McCALLUM INSPECTS PRODUCT OF HIS-RESEARCH Digging Into Science 1t Fount1ln Valley's Gisler School Creepy.Classes bef ••· ' --Presl"-' "-.·-v wlll ·"--·ss hll' City """""'"'"tor Doyle Miller told ore 1.1~ Nov. 3 Congressional elections, .. ,1e acm u1uMCu WM:u follows a personal report from the U.S. speech •With· the cabinet at $. p.m. councilmen Monda)' D.llbt he felt the ~ S h l S J __ J • ~tud negotiaUng team in Paris on the lalest Wednesday, followed an hour later by a . educatlooal li>cenUftl woul~ b r In · C !)Q_ ·TIQ,.,IUJ-nter-m l fl-i:!_ __ · Y _!lommunist pion (or a ietuemem::----britfin( f0< ~b~aod l!o!mwali< .ev~ --~/--~~~~ "'-- 'l'bere waa widespru(I speculation, ~~ ·~·· l>r. u., .A. Pollet ¥<1· ffmnen hav~ .~a , .. · · "· · ~-Mon11ay ~ die Niie ·,... 4-1 With Coen,~--Glbbl llMl ·llayar -Sb!pley befnl iriawir and coiuicllmen Jack .Gi.n ad .Jmy Matney~ ; ___ lliifllieUiiilei{S!i•-aclvller willw·-•men-. . ~!J!frr~~ .... !li!fr era;! ~ffillenu. '"~~ "'.!-which~ made no attem"' 'l'Ueoda~ !Gamger •. bis nalimlal ae<Uri!J ;allair> lwlber •ctlon if ll>o c:oW.cll . -to _ .'Ca"'1!11lan~nl.ce:..:,_~ __ ._ ~.;',~~1dth!proJect~J:!'- -. --.... '@~ -~~· -!Ml .... ,.<\.•-'Tbl 'Pn.tclellt·Aitnded thiF,_j11iir~.'--iWr·.tid£r . 1ift .:U:JiW'' ltl-JOlf:You~jli.y'°':"WlUi'lhe)n_~n)'l..._.._iC!UC:a"iOfi-bi\ieiJ't "Deeii ge ~(·Ji1 A -stipulation al Coeli'1 Yote -that · Hollaiid Drive be converted Into a caHle- aac to we homeowners lean that the aJ>&rl!.nenls·would poerate .-e tnfllc. After lbe vote, G,_ ,.......,i that the plaJining commlsllon be Jnstrucled to study densities in the JU and JU multi- residential zones 1'with the intention of reducing dens I lies." -motion passed unanimouslr. 'nte apartments at Bolland· Drive will be built on 5.6 acrca.. Plannen said that 90 percent of the unill woold .be aing! .. bedroom apllrllll<l\ls. Bribery Stispect '.Asks for Trial William D. New, 55, who had waived a jury trial and agreed to let a judge rule on his guilt or iMOCence on char1es of bribery, changed h1s mind Monday and asked for trial. New, cf Phoenix, Is accused of. offering former Huntington Beach Mayor Jack Green $4,000 for Green's action In his favor on a proposed zone change on in- dustrial land near Gothard Street and Slater Avenue. ' He was arrested last Nov. 10 on the ' parking Jot of the Fisherman Restaurant 1 after alleaedJ.y making his third olfer ol a 1 "'campaign contribuUonu to Green. Judge Samuel DrelJ.eD Ht Oct. 2911 the 1 lriai elate for New •. ' : Architect Quits Planning Group Richard Thom, a Huntington Harbour architect, has resigned as a member of the Huntington Beach plannin( commJo. don. He said In a letter to the City Coone.it Monday night that growth in his practice prevented him from carrying out all Ilia duUes as a commissioner. Tbe council accepted the m:ign1tJon •nd namO!I Frank lliilfn3, another archl- tec~ to "'~ Tbom. The cooocll were Impressed with Hil- l \Cins' credentlall wbeo they COlllidered 17 applicanls for anoCher plllllling cam- ·\ 1 miaillO ncancy r-Uy. (At that time ~ cotJDcil •ppolnted Ed twim, a com-l~ter -to nu a vacancy <ftated by S<the mijnaUoo of Michael Bokor.) . "' ~~5 '.Reported Lost Jn-Thailand River lie BANGKOK (AP) -Elev"' penons bilrowned aocl.14 olhen were mialnl and 'fared dead afler a cossta1 launch with IQbout 100 JfU;ltnC'en abolrd Clpsiled at ~th of the Cha-uad River, :0 Thailand, reporll ruchlni today said. unch c1pglzed w1'en tts roof c~V· gnd under the ftiibt of·• -ol rice lo IL . ·.' . t:"""..: a .,1u.h-.~~ll · U.S. peoee init!aU.. wu~ l eeot-ralle. -.. · elght-~-old Karen Young. · )'OIWBlera could ·handle thelt own -from 'ti.tum. He · an long-• the I'~-· "l'nl!ll Tho 1'0UllCll1w already appr'CIV°" -mt Kami Is one of oome 60 second and reoearch. . ~ · offered Sept; 17 'ID ;b;-lft eight porcent ralae and made it ci~.. ·third grade studenta 1tltin1 a cl¥ loot "But Ibey are already adopting llUCb . ~-Americanlroopo!Hhq veSoutbV!elo hi·"-_,_ 't beJ'--" atlnsectalheaedt)'1atGlllerSd>oolin teclmical terms u thorax,·abdclnen. ~ Prfsldent, •-. r.tumed to n1m !>y nert June 30. ~r r-won °~r~. the Founlaln Valley SchOol Dislrlct splraclts, maoclible, antenna, cbryulil WlllllincfDo Mnoday mshl front ·llill U.S. Ambusaclo< David K. E. Brue<, Miller revelled Monday that, over the "Our emphasis Is on rUWch and In-aocl cocoon." 12,~e trip to five utJons, lncludinl who flew from Paris to Ireland to report weekend, 74 percent of the poUoemen dlvidual projects," Ed Suaman, Gisler The children f.ind ~mselves asking Communist Yugoel~via, bounded unu:· to Ni.Jon on Suodly, termed the Com-voted to take the aalary dispute to court, principal, uplalned. "It's an unusual ap-· quesUons of not only the teachers, but ~~nto:::. White House press room munlst Jl'OPOl&)I "old wine In new bot.-but he also said that m8nqement prOach for chlldren this young." , parents an~ other, adult!. They a1Jo do e 10 . m ng. ' . ties" at the time but said they would be . 1 . th r d ' TWo 'teachers Mari Wei8ert and Judy more reading on th.elr own to rind the "It will be the most ?>mprehens1ve stu~ied carefully. . personne in e po tee. epartment were Wilson, have shelved the' old textbook answers to questions they develop s~tement ever m~de on·t.his long and dlf· Nixon &aJd his armoaocement Wed-adv I.sing tbe Police of ricers not to IO to method in favor or sparking a-deeper hr the\nselves. . ~cult w.ar and w~ cover all the ma~r neiday wu uprtpare(I only after it wu court. , , terest in tcieflGe ltudy, amonc the 0th.er devices are used In the issues mvolved 1n the Southeast Asia thoroughly coosider,ed" and covered all Ed Pratt, preslden~ or ·the .Poll~men • ·students. . classroom for teaching student& about in- area," be said, ape.ak:ing without noies. issues involved in the Paris talks. He Association, .uJd this moi:ung that no ".'fhe kids like to ·do project.a. at .borne. sects. The old ga,me of "cooties" "We do not consider th1I to be (Set: NIXON Pap I) -' steps would be ~n until the council This meUlod '1vea them a helter chance becomes a valuable method.for teae'tint ' ta~~ rur:r =· t ti for.Individual 1tudy" Miss Welsert 18id. ·the parts of an ant. A song tuch as 'ifbe Huntington Planning U~t Takes Up High Rise Fight '!be balUe of the hi1h-rlse apartmenls resumes again toniibt before Huntington Beach planning commissioners who will ainsider the fate or a 17-story tower for the third time. In two previous sessions, planners wertJ unable to rtach a decision on the First Chri!Uan Tower by the Sea project, which may become the city's hiahest building. It has met opposltloo from the HOME Council which 11 .. declared !bat the 287· unit reUmnent complez would crute problema In aurroundinl reslilmial areas. Propcmeols of the project, which in- clude Rollo W"t, chairman of the Firat Cirlslian T"'"" by the Sea Corporation, Claim it is more than 300 reet away from any residential land . Although tonight's 7 o'ci.ct pllDDing sesslm in the city council chambers is a "decision only" meeting, the planning commissioners are upect.ed to enter a thorough discussion of the project'• pros and cons. Tbe plaonlng department ... ff bu s1.!o declared its opposl~ to the tower, claiming the proposed •lie at Main Street. aDd Adams Avenue "ii out of character with the immediate area which ii developed as low density residential." Both the HOME Council and the plan· nlng staff, however, have ncommended approval of a 950-teat sanctuary which is al!o envisioned u part of the total First Clrlsllsn Churclt development • U approved, the HunUngton Beach high rise tower would provide llvlnc quarters for pe!'ICIDI over 62 llviAC on a filed ln- coma. mJibt e ai:!C:. dl.flere!:D .:· == Their bas.le phll~phy is that stud~n·ts ants go marching ooe-by~e (up !'> 10),"· dis te IP. he id will become more involved in the sub1ect also .helps children leam to count. ~~tt' woutd ~ comment on the as they handle projecb such as colrecting '1W~. '~ wa~h a lot .a!' films on in· · weekend vote, simply empbasizlng that butterflies, watcblng 111 1nt farm or con-sects, Mw Weisert explained. . no action would' be taken· until further ~ctini, insects from P!Pler mache. The ~dren have already turned tn talks · ·tb. the cit ~ "Reading from a boOJf, then uking 11~cb pro1ects as mounted butterflies, Bran~er Cast!~ are assistant city 1~ questions on a test," just doesn't arot11e d1agram:i or beetles .• and models of ant.!. minlstrator ·d Uus morning that th much interest," MiM WU.son added:"But Gaterp1l~ai:s fascinated Karen more educational' i::eflta _ boolltlng a man': the kids seem to enjoy this approach." than. other crawly creatures, but but. salary for increased education -had te~fl1es seem the mos~ poqular among the been approved by the council, but with no c~~ldren. •el figure 00 how much money would be A' rra1· gnment .Set I caught a Uger swallow tall with • granted. ne~ in .my ~ackyard,'' Jay Frumkin, 8, "We've been authorized by the council said with _pride. to negotiate the amount of educational } H tin• t Marc Marlin, 8, said they were fun to be,ierits with police and flre apokesmen,'' n un g on catch becau~ they are "easy and some Castle u:plained. are colorful . "I think the admlnlstrator will have 1 S • • Ca The four.week inlect project comes to recommendaUon for the council in about mpmgl se a halt in two more weeks. The children two weeks,,; he added. 1'Police and may miss thelr Ilttle friends, but harass-- firemen might make up the 2.5 percent A 42-year~ld i:nan accused of taking • i;d mo then may feel ~ieved . when the they lost in pay 1n these educational ahot at his former wire outside her Hun-Jars of ants and caterpillars are left at benefits... Ungton Beach·home baa. been ordered to achool Vic Subia, spokesman for the firemen, appear at Superior Court Oct. 16 for tr· could not be reached for comment this ralgnment on atlemp_ted murder c~ges. ~ ' morning, but firemen bave held the same ~inc• the alleged shooting Aug. 11, . Gai . P edal Rule Told position as policemen during aalary Elmo Willi1111J of 2223 s. Main St., Santa cllscuulona. Ana, has been held st Orange County Jail W ASIUNGTON · (UPO -The National Neither group appears li.kely to press in lieu of $12,000 bail. .Higbwly Safety Bureau bas proposed acUon against the council, until a clear According to homicide lnVestilitors, a that after Oct. 1, 1972,· all auto makers picture Is drawn on the educaUonaJ man who was hidden in the·shrubbery of must iN:tall 1cceleraton tbat · cUnc< benefit& upect of salaries. Mrs. Willianu' home at 16866 &Isa Chica stlCk. Raad fired a small caliber weapon Jmt as Three New Schools Seen ahe was retumin1 home from work late at night. Mn. Madeleine Williams ·w11 ahot once In the mouth but Iha bullet puled through bet cheek, offcen 11id. She WU gjv111 emergency tru.tment at a local hospital and later relebed: Decision · to Ask State Funds Expected Toni ght Three ochoola ·are nearly m lbe_clqw-llls boardl and a tourth Is c1 ... behind In the Huntinllon Beach Qty (elementary) School District. -tonight ""' apeded to authorize di!trict ol(icial1 ~ seek ,,.le lw>dl-lo llulld _..., t1ie -;-'!be hoard meets at 7:30 p.m. In Ille llbraty of Dwyer Sdiool. "Winning !bat Interest increue electioo Sept. 15 bu opened the door foe us." <liarleo Palmer, 'cle1111ty d Is tr I c I 111perintenclent. uld today; The dlltrict baa 14.75 million In local bonds f..---Wl>ii:h ,..... Ulltllable until voters approved an ln- cttale in the interest file rrom five to ll!Ven percent. Approval on die local bondl aloo· opebl the way to 11.n millloo..ln "'II' aid to build new IObooll. ''nle 111'11 ocllool ft plan II 111 In- • ' lermedlale ICboni for a Illa Oil Jn. dlanlpolls Avenue betweesfMqnolla aocl Bushard streets," Palmer· II.id. Tbe int...nediate --.Id """"' 850 llludenll. If the lllalMid applications move omoothly, the ocllool wlli open !Is doors 1n t11e ran a11m. "Then ft have piano !..-a 750-llludenl lnlennedlate -In the .... bounded by Brool<hunt aocl Bushard -and Atl&ata and-IndianapOrlil avtlWel," Palmer ezplained. He lild !bat od>ool' II expected to be ready by Felruaq, 1171. Plana f« both ICbocili' lilva already bees> llUbmltled fD ,,.le alftctall, but must be updalld - A --sry ocllool II ocbed)ll· od for the old <OllOly dqmp .ii. IOllth ol Aillntl AYmUI bet~een MapfUI ind Newl1nd -... It ~.be nacly 1..- 'llO -ta In Foblinry1 ll'lt, Palmtr L llld. .. And r tlilnk ... will qualify for ... 11\0re scbooi within I ...it wilen .. flnlsb oar bolDe count " Palmer 8dded. "U so we will aa1t for boaid approval of another achoo! at lbe hoard's next regui&flllMUlil:" 'lllal next school would be localed In the 11m1 tiOurided by Bn»khural and Buahlrd streets and Adams and ln- -dlantpolit avenues. It allo ... woukl house 750 1tudonls and If plans con be-rtldiod qulcly enoOgh might. o]>en In February, 1970. The diltrlcl has sii!f'ered a dry l!l"ll in achool construction the past two yun becauae al 1 tlgbt bolld marl:tt and the failure in two JnVioul electlonl to ap- prove an tncre.. In the boocl interest ralel .. Now the picture has -<hlnced ·aod , Palmer uid. ht ~ .. f1!1rrY of con- llraCllOo. •• Polico arreslld Williams In his Santa Nia motel room hocln 'llfter tllil -Ill(. . . . Four, Huntiliglon. Park Sites · OK'd' '!be clty-<Ollacll baa authorized. tbe-clo- velopment of four new part" aues and the construction of two new firt ltltiona in HonUnatlm Beach. The council Mondsj''nfllit.ae<epted the bid of Jultan-Waterflelcl. Jo build the fire llsUona.at..Gotharcl Street ucl Ellii Av .. nue and Gothlrd Str!et and Murdy Circle I< I total COii al 1164,090. . Tbe Unlled Sprinkler Com~ has the part lites contract willl a '111,1111 low bid. The cootract 11 foe cleveloo111111t al the 1.ete View 1 Siio View, ljope \lllW ucl OM Yle• ntllhhorbood~ . ' f " ' Weatlier · I.Ow ~liiudi, uibt ·-and !em~ •mired is> t1ie Dppler eG's;botb on the roastand filrtber Inland •ill prtvall ·oo · w-.1. · with token sunihlne breaking throu1h a< mldallenlopn. INSIDE TOD-'V La~ botoUna i8 tllrivi110 '" lhe Orange COG.S't GTf'G, ror d full report, rtad Ho1D0rd L. 'HamlU'I" rtpott or the 1~ftl 1.C!fOll, Page 22. Cdfl...i. ' _ ... .. ,,_.,. .. • --" CHntfk4 ... ~, .., __ .. ·-· _ _,, " ._ .. --" --.. --...... . .....,,..,, .... • ---..,... , .. , . ." .......... .. ·-.. ·-, .. ,. -.. -•• --• .t.Ml1UMtn " ............... ,,. .. """'" • --.. I J .. ' ! Olll V PILOT H ' -,..... .... 1 -RlJNW.A:Y-••• Incident llnce mldlummer. . Tbe airport committee and homeowoen' .,...p. Raldtola Aaalnlt Airport Ilazarda (RAAH), Wert allo Mil •IH"menl on tlle •1oot ulellllon. ---• ,,,. UpQrl COlll!llitlal. ~ by-H a~sl e on MeadQwlark ~~.n:""~J:1:.t: ~---'1-~~~1"'---------------------·f--'-!"''t'..,o"'f,;.the SOO..l._~ns!On at_ th~ H_!!il venue-end of the ...runwaY'bt_rendere.d. T I Oominates Council Meet By ALAN DIRKIN Of Ille 0.11)' ,.,. Staff AN AIR Tl\Af'FIC controller would have been hard pressed to sort out patterns 1t tlle Huntlollon Beach City Council meetfll( Monday ni&bt. Meadowlark maneuven once qain dominated the council meelloc alloltOCh Ibis might have puzzled IOITlt llDoe the 1ii:11orUssuu•11.JtOLonJhe..aiendL Nobody WU Nyinc this occurrence 'WU without precedent. bow· ever. · nliJ time. the modern drama of homeowner· VUSUI pilot •u tbe main feature of both the afternoon ar.I eve- ning aeasions of tbe council It ltarted as a matinee, !SClped ce,,;.r.bip by Mayor l>oo>Id Slllpley, IDd flnllh- ed as the Jafb ahow by tbe popular demand of (Kl concern- ed citi:zens. THE LEADING. ROLE W'1! taken by Robert Dlnpall, bead of the COWICIJ-appointed airport committee, previously known for his blt parts under oral communications as_president of the HOME CounciJ. • Atthe ~:30 p.m. selsion of-the council-he faflea i.o get the council to defer action on a ce~ and desist order against use of the runway extension at Meadowlark. But he succeeded in extracting a promise from Mayor Shipley lo hear a report from his committee at 8:30 p.m., although the mayor warned that the council would not act on It. "Legislative bodies are not in the habit cf making decisions on report.a: passed acroM the table," Shipley said. "I HAVE PEOPLE in flight here from sacramento to &Ive testimony," Dingwall countered, explaining his committee would meet at 7:30 p.m. to flnaliie recommendations and then present its report at 1:30 p.m. CooncUman Norma Gibbs noted that there was only one pu blic hearing oet for 7:30 J>.m. and that Iha council would probably dlspeMa witll H before 1:30 p.m. She was rl&hl Wl1eo the councllmen relurned from dinner tlley found the council chamben almoet full -,.c:ept for tJie lrool row ... ta which Dlnpall had marked "Ro!erved HuntiDiion Buch Airport Committee." THE SEATS WERE aWI empty at 7:55 ,p.m. when the c:ouncll cleared Ila agenda, the"first ti.me in months the councll had cleaned the slate 10 early. With neither the councilmen nor the public wishing to 11.y anything further, lhe meetiin'g was recessed and the city waited. At 8:45 p.m. the committee flied in, Mayor Shipley reminded Dinpall 1----l-"of!,.Jh'!is....,ea._r.,~ar->..P.mmi.&Jo keep the presentation down to 30 mi.nut.es and ~at-ed that.the council would take no action. ------ DINGWALL LED the council through a 7S.J)ige report. A homeowners' croup .from the Meadowlark area was later given the floor and it too passed out a report. The evening ended 105 minutes later a't 10:30 p.m. and, ye!, action was 'indeed taken on several points in the airport committee report. Everybody must have liked the show, They all stayed to the end/ and although there. :ovas no applauae there were no jeers either. But don't worry U you missed IL A rerun of IOtts bu llre.ady been ttotaUvely booked for tlle inext counc:il meeting, oct.19. tempor:arily_unusa.~ aruLa...ltlMt fence and 20-foot high trte line created at the end of the runway. The RAAH group recommended that the blast fence be built 220 feet out on the runway extension "to decrease the posaibility of dangeroua and low ap- proaches." The staU will examine both recom· mendalions and report back to the coun-- cil Oct. 19, the day before the Planning Com.mmJon is lo bear a request for a conditional exception perm.it-for the runway extension by airport operator John Turner. Before the council took_ action, Tu.mer said be wu willing to put up a blast feqc~ and plant a tree line to ease the dirt and noise problem but objected ·to part of the extension being closed ·while the work is carried out. • "I'm definitely against sacrificing anybody's safety by not using the runway there .at plesent;While·the--work is being done ,'' he said. "I cannot agree to a com· promise of safety." Aviation consultants brought in by the airport committee had told the council that they considered the extension in- creased safety at the airport. One, Dr. A. D. Kessler, a consultant to the slate Department of Aeronautics, said, in answer to a question .by Cou~ cilman Al Coen, that be did not believe that the extension was responsible for the number of recent incidents in which )Vires had been clipped. Dingwall said that iii 111 the Incidents the wires had been-clipped by the planes' )anding _gear and experts agreed that if a wing lip had caught tbe wires the planes would have crashed. 111e airport debate came at µie evening session of the council alter Dinawall had conducted a speeiaI meeting of the -airpori...commit . - Earlier at the 4:30 p.m. session, the council voted to enforce a cease and desist order against use or the runway extension. : The order, which aiso bans use of two trailers at Ult airport, one of which is us- ed for offices fer a flight school, had been held in abeyance since the airport com· miltee was form~at ~end of August. Bi.J.lldinf 1>1rector•··Jact-C!eveland uid the order was ~u~ beCa.UJe perDiits had '10l been obtalned..lor-these facili.ties and • the ertension. He added, however, that Turner had sirx:t applied for a conditional Unruh ·.Heckled, K~sed .. • exception "and the Planning Commission - • -'#aSto bear tl'le'reqtiest (}Ct. 20 .... • In· V0rlley College Talk • • " l/ORTHRIDGE IUPI) -Jess Unruh waa heckled by a am.all group at San Fei'nando Valley State College Monda:y but an overwhelming number of students applauded.his speech and one coed kissed bim . About 10 pereent hecklers taunted the ~atic gubernatorial c an d i d a t e ~ut .his hour address to an esllmatil 2,00 student.a 1n the middle or ~ college campus. · (>n one occasion. a student demanded to~ know what Unruh would do as gayernor to clear up smog, which he pototed out hung heavy over the coll,ge. i!I'm going to pass legislation you • .'.," Unruh arowled back and stopped 5hort of finishing his reply. later another heckler stood up aOO yelled. Onruh's response brought the only ilapding ovation he received during the campaign visit to the 22,000..student cam· pus. Unruh drew a round of boos when he delivered hls tough speech on violent campus mllitanls, whom lie said should be expelled forthwith, including student and faculty members. Hia bardlin< pogiUon b""lbt lllCh responses, 1'yea, Spiro." DAILY PILOT OlANC!: COAST .. UILllHLNO CCIMI'""" 1'oli•tt N, WtM Prw1Wtn1 ant f'llllllllW Jo1,ck Ill. Cur11y Vke Pnslf.,t M.d Oetlor1t 11\.tMMr Thom•' K11 ... i1 · E•litt 1"011111 A. Mu1p~lne MtMtl"ll Edi.~ · Ali" Dir•i11 Wtst or.rw• cw.tr r•rw Albort W. l 1lt1 AllldltthlW HMtatlw .... o..... 17175 ......... ...... Miiii., MOreu1 P.O. IN 7'0, t2'41 o....- bln .-.~·=,,.. --CAii Maw: 1a w.J .., I~ .....,.. t.Kk: •n w.t ..... ...... ... c.llMIUll-....... G.-. ... \ I During the tumultuous speech and question and angwer 1esalon, students asked the hecklers to quiet down to enable Unrutt to continue. A!J Unruh walked from the campu!, blonde Karen Alberts of N.orthrid&• planted a big kiss on his cheek. Asked why she kissed hlm, the music major replied, Becauae I th1n.k he's out ol. sight.11 Flabbies Ignore Classes in Yoga Apparently too many Huntington Beach resident! prefer to be flabby. That's the conclusion of head Yogini Madeline Nelson who s aya all those jeJ\ybellies hav!: been staying away from her HuntiTJgton Beach YMCA Yoga classes in droves. Although the classes are alreapy under way, Mrs. Nelson claims there are plenty of vacancies left on her trainina: mat. Her course. she explain.s, will consist of breathing tectmiques. stretching, toning and finning exercises that help OM\trol weight mind and emotions. Individual classes art held from S p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Mondays and from 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. Thursdays. More information about them is available from the YMCA at &47·9622. Crash Suit Filed By Beach Widow A Huntington Beach man's death ln a Costa Mesa traffic aocident hu led to the filing. of a $1 million laWsuit ln Orana:e County Superior Court on behalf of bis widow and three children. Mrs. Patsy Roth claims that amount from Oreo Di.sQosal Co. of C:OSta Mesa and James Walker Young, the driver Of I.he car in whlch btr husband Ralph. wu a passenger when It coll\ded Jut Sept. 17 with a dump trucl< owned by Oreo. MN!. Roth states the truck, driven by ORCO employe Jesu1 Soto SantlnJ, struck Youna:11 rm&ll foreign car at the intersection ol Victoria Strut and Can- Ynn Drive. Her husband'• Injuries pro- Vandals Uproot Tree In Costa Mesa Park ...V,..dats vproo!HLWl-foot allk no .. Lree at Costa Mes.1 '1 TeWinkle Park Monday night and dragged it to a nearby wall, over which ll was bn>ken ln half. Park tmployea reported the lncldenl at t70 Arllnlton Drive lo police after It wao .cliacovtrtd.Aislln& a flllll I,.., · Olty · Attttney Don Bonfa satd that if lhe airport operator does not comply with tha order, the city's recourse will be to lilt ..i 'i. 1 ptisdemtanor 1COfnpltint-ti• mlf!'l1clpat court. . Dingwall pleaded with the council to defer a decision to the evening session of the meeting, stating that his committee report would not be completed then . A move by ~ncilman Jerry Matney to table Councilman Coen's motion for enforcement of the cease and desist order failed and the llouacil then passed Coet's motion. 5-1 with Councilman George McCrotbn diaseotfll(. Fountain Valley Looks Into Land At Mile Square Fountain Valley has an eye on 1 municipa1 golf course at Mile Square. The it.em Is on tonight's city council agenda. Councilmen will be asked to authorize the city slaff· to talk to Orange County officia1s about leasing 120 acres of land on tbe regional park site, Cou.ccilman Ron Shenkman proposed the Idea, wilb the PoSSibllity that revenue from an 18-hole murUcipel golf cour11e- adjact.r1t to the current Mlle Square course -would finance the entire recreation and parks program of the city. First hurdle in the project, however, b getting the county to lease the land. The entire Mile Square area is planned as a regional park, but a shortage of funds might convince county officials to lease a section of It to the city. "We could build lhe golf course by sell· Ing revenue bonds ," Shenkman e.xplained "the need for ~ore golf facilities Is ob- vious, but everything is just under dis· cussion now." Another parks item, the shiftin'g of $35,000 in surplus funds to a special park development fund . will also be considered at the 7:30 p.m. meeting. A~Jance Plea Denied by Council A bid by a Laguna Buch ambulance 1ervice to operate ln Hun~gton Beach WU denied by the City Coun<it Monday night. The Gold Ambulance Strvice. 210 Beach St., L&gua., applied for a certificate of n~d and nteessity 'to trarnipor1 PJtienU at the call of the Huntington Beach pollCf: and fire departments. City Adm inistrator Q.Q)'le. Millcr-1.nd<tM police department recommended denlff, polntin& out that Seal's Ambulance was already carrying out this service. City Attorney Don Bonfa 11id Ulal the 1ppUcent may ISk for a public burlJll followi11& deolal of the cutlllcatt. I ...._ -- DAIL.Y ,II.OT l ltlf ""''- Baron Boosters Keeping spirits bright for Fountain Valley High SchoOI i thletiC teams this fall are these yell leaders. In front is Pauline Khun. In the back row <from left) are Janet Seybert, Sharon Murphy, Heidi Hendy,Jrene Benevidez and Jan Kato. • Construction Costs Cut . On Beach Civic Cent,er -· . ~ Reagan Gt:~ Applau·se f • In -compton : .. .LOS ANGEbES-(UPI)~ 'Governor Rona1 Reagail' campa;lgned at a predominanlly Negro elementary s"Chool Monday and was loudly applauded when · he told parents and leachet that he op- poses forced busing of students . · With tight securlly, Reagan addre~ 1.000 youngsters in the school cc11p-ty1rd , and asked them not to l[sten to iadlcals who would "tear down" :society. Reagan later said the yisit to the Dickinson, Elementary School in Compton _ was "• great inf Pk~~o 'g'le.~· The ochool enrollment 11 80 percent Negro, · with most or the remainder Muican- Americans. Reagan was warm1y ·received. It was the first time be hes campaigned at a school during his re.election race against Democrat Jess Unruh. . Reagan. deleted from his prepared .speech to parents and teachers 1everal sentenees outlining his ~pposition to ~forcea busing-of children to achieve racial balance in schoois. But he was ask·· ed about the emotional is:iue during a post·speech question and answer session. "I have to tell you ," the Governor said, "I am a longtime opponent of busing." He said students who are bused across town '·can't really participate in the life of the school" because i is impractical for them to slay for after class activities, such as athletics. The audience interrupted him with ap- plause when he said, "Our responsibility is to bring quality education to the schools. If you're going to bus anybody, bus the teachers to the schools. Reagan last month signed legislation The construction costs for the new complished y,·ithout jeopardizing the prohibiting the forced busing of school Huntington Beach civic center have been y,·hole." children. cut from an estimated $9.9 million to $8.5 .irhe council had ordered the staff last In his s~ch in the 1 ch o o l's million. . . multipurpose room, Reagan said he is The reduction was made by going to a month to re.stu~y the civic .cen~er . costs "interested" in the possible creation of a fi ve-year-phased building-program on-afJ.er-Meyer 1 fir.st. presentation. md1cated _!.!.vaucher system~ior-financing.-educa·~ construction of the civic center-police the bill could be $9.9 milllon. tion. facility complex at Mansion and Main The items that "-1itler proposed defer-Under this plan, the state would spend slreets. . . . ring with the cost reductions includi!:d: its school mone.y. on direct subsidies to The city council accepted C 1 t,y . . parents by providing them with vouchers Administrator Doyle Miller's plan Mon-landscaping and parki~g ($40,000J, one which could be traded for their children'• day night. hair of a development wmg ($481,000 ), the education at either ·public or private in· Miller's recommendation was to limit third floor of the police building slitution.s. The system Would be financed the center to $8.5 million and the central ($336 000) and modilying the delenUon by a uniform statewide property tu library to $3 million to meet the bonding facility <frn 500). · proposal of $11.S million. ' He said that the deferred civic center items would not be built "until increased revenue Is available." Architect Kurt Meyer told the council that he agreed with the change, ex· plaining, ''1'1e deferments can be -ac-' From Pq~ J NIXON •.. Charles-Ormsby~ - ~tes Conducted " " Barbecue Slated For Bo ys Club Plans are being kindled for this year's big annual pit barbecue of the Huntington Beach Boys Club. lt is set for Oct. 11 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m: at Lake P8.rk. and Club Director Pat Downey is ezpecting 2,000 persons to attend. For a donation cf $2 for adults and $1 for children there will be a feast of shoulder clod beef preMfed Jn earthen pits by master chefJ Shorty Rider and Tom Artuniaa. Dinner will be rounded out with beans .• salad, potatoes and all the trimmings, served by directors of the boys club. Funds raised thruugh the barbeuce vt'ill go to support club programs ranging from cooking classes to judo. according to Downey who pointed ou t that all the food has been dona ted by a r e a merchants. More than 1,200 persons joined the pit barbecue last year·and Downey said he is confident more lhan 2,000 will turn out this year. refused to comment further, iaying only that he qpecled .speculation, would con- tinue, ani.. returned to his office without taki'rlg any questions from newsmen. Besides proposing a cease-fire pegged to U.S. withdrawals by next summer, the Viet Cong delegation chief, Mrs. Nguyen Thi Binh. indicated the Communists were ready lo negotiate with the present Saigon government except for its top leadership, including President Nguyen Van Thieu and Vice Presldent Nguyen Cao Ky. Golden West Offers Sign Language Class Instruction in manual conununication \\'ith the deaf and hard of hearing will be available to the public at Golden We.st College, Huntinglpn Beach, be.ginning tonight. Informal training will be held at noon Tuesdays and Thursdays in business building 208. There is no fee or registra- tion required. The instruction will be for those who - want to learn sign language for the first tin1e, and others who have some familiarity with it and want to improve their skill, according to officials, Funeral services were conducted M~ da)'. by the Huntington Beach Masonic Lodge. for Charles Truman Onnsby , a lodge member and long time area re!i· dent. ~~r. Ormsby, 53, died last Thursday while on a business trip in Midland , Tex. A resident of the Orange Coast area for 46 years, he had been employed by Signal ·Oil Co. for 2S years. At the time of his death he was serving as a production supervisor. He leaves his wife, Beva, of the family home, 384 Magnolia St.; a daughter, Mrs. John Lowry; a mother, Mrs. Martha Ormsby; a brother, Roy; a sister, Edna Peterson, and two grandchildren, all or Huntington Bead!. Gasoline Bomb Hits U.S. Site in Mil an MILAN, Italy (A P) -A gasoline lire bomb exploded in front of the U.S. Information Service in Milan early today, blackening the front door. Police 1ald it was thrown from a passing car. It was ·the 12th explosion in Jtaly's chief industrial center in less than two months. Police blamed the a!Lacks on anarchists. lt iin't Necessarily So! Jhe othe.r Cley; e cusfomer was comparing our prices witn ll nother store. We were informed that our price was 60c per square yard high!! Que stioning the customer, we discovered +hat the other store was furn ish ing e cheap ureth ane padding which is 75c per square yard cheaper than the 64 oz. sponge rubber padding that we were includ ing. Furthermore, in this cese, we were competing our installation egain~t an installatio n worth" fer less. (Many stores contreet their lob<>r by tlio yord to loyer< of unknown bookground end skill - WO hOVO our own crews, troined Md COnlroilod DY US, pofd oy the fiour to <Jo Ifie O.st quolity instollotion possiblo.). So , , • lh'eir eslimole WOS nOI whot it eppeoreO lo Oe! In conelusion, when comparing pri·ces , me\e sure you ere comparing eauel ve lues. lA.HlA ANA, OUN•I. TUSTIN, C•ll , , , ALDIN'S llD HILL CAtPm & DU.PllllS 11274 1"4-. Til(ftl1, c..llf, lll·JJ(4 A-LDEN'S CARPETS -9 DRAPES 1663 l'lcieentla Ave. COSTA MISA 646-4838 " • ' • I CRITICIZES IRVINE PLAN UC Regent Simon 'Shocking' Story • DEFENDS IRVINE PLAN Irvine Company's Watton Norton Simon, UniversitY, In Hot Debate Over City By GEORGE LEIDAL of the Irvine plan as finding fault With ,T11tldq, 0.1°"" 6. 1970 H PAllY moT :J Nuclear ·Pian·t · Testimony Due Utility Firm Spokesman to Climax PUC Hearings Today Bl JOHN VALTERZA area women who , pressed the public were the 4rm be.bind the ·com· other frah llte Jn time to avoid a poWll"" ot t11t ~ Pllllf ...,. be-ach Issue. mltment. · 1 crisis in six years. The ~ny!!ont:!!.~ COJ!S!Cll.le~S of ~wo &th speakers -Mrs. W i J.J I a m Citing ,oft.hear~'r:'~menll for electrl--He aald Jmt. ~her altelJ)lle ltt.e ha1 new nuclear rea it Sin Clemente_ 7 Llmebroak, a resident of the.Beach.Road ....... cal-generator ex , Gould.-,toUWJ:IO-~been ~ b bis ~ __1\11:nt an. i~. ~Cliiifif!He ~Ile _cj)JJlmunity. and..Mr.s.,.Lyn..Hirris.Hicks examiner that~tbc demands on electrlcal cOii<iption, but prodi:tt~-wo:rilu Utilities COm.mliSRin liei1Ufg1Mo~ay -a Cyprus Shores resident -each Jive In power through the Edison a}1teln in 1976 reactor there could not be accompU.bea are expected to ~ach a. climax in San colonies which have private beaches would be double that of today. before llr11. Clemente today wttb ~uumotny fof a k~: where the public is forbidden to enter. San Onofre, he added, is the "only pro-Reading from a prepared llCfnlrlo spokesman for .the t 0 uUUy lrrm m First on the. list of S""akers, ho\\-ever, ven site'' where nuclear reactor ex· between his finn's lawyers and blmlfU. volved ,.... Gould told the examiner I.hat location of David J Fogarty manager 0 r "'as Edison Senior Vice President WiUMm pansion could take place to meet the pro-nuclear reactors in remote areas to: h 1 1 · . ee ~g for South n R. Gould, who set the theme of the ut ·ty jected demands. replace the pro ....... -' ones at San Onofre mCaeclU an _caEd~ngmCo' heduler presentations by citing his firm's "all-out "It ,., the only site In Sout'"-t""""'" om1a tson mpany was sc • '""" would not provide a "reasooati1e balance eel ro appear before PUC e~aminer Arch co~mitment" to nuclear power . and Californi a capable of further develop. betwttn rtlll<lle generation and genera• ~1aln in today's . proceedings policy not to pursue further fosst)·!uel ment with nuclear uni~ bj the y ~a r lion near major toad centers." j presumably to refute repeated criticism plants <.after the two proposed additions 1976,'' he claimed, ·adding that the time· Adding an ominous note -resumtd launched ~fonday..-by-opponenta to lhc tn Huntmgton Beach). cooswnina ~of sc.imtific sludiu. Jater-by-opponents-Gould-ruled·out the-· -- placement of the mulUmillion--dollar Ecological problems, Gould s~. for site adaptability would rule out any effectiveness or the remote generators.. power plants two miles San Clemente. because mlny miles of transmi&Sion lines~ After introductory remarks from an would fall victim to "equipment fallllrf..,. Edison Senior Vice Pres ident at the open. natural catastrophes and -more~ ing of the hearings Monday, Main heard a r~py -sabotage.'' "· steady stream -of-opponents to the ap. The-last· aspecrwu reVlvtd'"IOOn-after • plication for slate permits to build the Gould stepped down wlthout ~· ·. t\\'in rtaCtors on 83 acres immediately amination by opponents. : downcoast of the existing one at San Onofre. Several San Clemenle residents op. posing various aspects of the permit-1 conducted a minidemonstration of sorts outside city council chambers before the opening or the hearings. The demonstrators. numbering less than a dozen, bore placards drawn in crayon protesting the proposed shortline location of the site. Some slogans reflected the later testimony by the foes -move the reac· tors inland, downcoast and underground. One key point the opposition raised Monday was the asserted denial of the af. fected San Onofre beach on Camp Pendleton to the public for future recre a· tional uses. Adding a touch of irony to the argu. ment, however, was the testiminy by two Riot Death • Action Put In DA's Lap From Wire Setvlen 'i politically touchy decil1on on -..hetbe•-: to file Charges against a lherlff's deputJ, : in tbe death of newsman Ruben Salnat ': ls right In the lap ol Loe Angela lllltrlcl • Attorney Evelle Y eunger. : 01 "'• o.u, 'u" '''" the proposed new city, Watson described ~ --UG Regent-Norton Simon-believes--he·is-retations-between-his-company-a n d San-Cleme-nte-- A split verdict by a corooer'a jury alter • the prolonged inquest Into the Aug. 29 : death during an East Los Angeles riot ~ has no legal weight, the district attorney • -~ ... "'1Q. ---• ....... -- _ \ ••raising questions which properly should be asked" about the re lationship betWeen Irvine Company and the university. He told the DAILY PILOT following a Los Angeles press conference Monday he doesn't expect criminal prosecutions to result from his "exposure" of the chang· ing nature of that relationship. However, he promised "the public will be shocked" when the full story is told at the Oct._!$ and 16 Regents' meeting. At Issue is what h~ terms "unjust enrichment" of Irvine which Simon estimates at $450 million by incorporation o{ a.-S3,cm.acre-city . raijler than the 10,00l).acre city discussed 10 years ago. Simon asserts the Irvine Company is violating iln agreement with the Untversi· ty dated July 22, 19&0 by plaming a larger city around the 1,000.acre, UC Irvine campus. Raymond Watson,.Jrvine executive vice president, said the agreement with the university wa:r; based on preliminary planning and that any changes in plan· ning had been done wilh the knowledge or the university administration. Discounting Simon's charge that in· corporati on was being sought for tax reasons, Watson said, "The 1969 Ta:< reform act doesn't even apply to us." He cited the threat of pie«meal annexation attempts by cities surrounding Irvine as cause for rushing 5.1,000 acres to cityhoocl. .. We don't care iI there are one, two or ten cities established on Irvine land -or for that. matter none. "But, we've made our plans public for the next 30 years and feel we have a responsibility to follow it through," :Watson said. Simon alleged that the Irvine Company had recently placed 50,000 acres of land into a tax.favored agricultural preserve "and then I find they're going to buUd a · city on lt." \Vatson, in a later presi; conference, noted the agricult ural preserve status re- quires thRt the owner promise not to devel op it !or JO yea rs. He contended that portion11 of that land are within the borders of the proposed 53.<XX> acre city of Irvine. Because the planning Is nece§arily long range, those portions can not .be developed for at least 10 years and would be shUted to a higher tax rate. While Simon chara~zed an. Orange County Planning Conunissioa stafI •!Udy county planners as cordial "although they have brought a few crilicisms to our attention ." Regarding the possibility that the new city will create slums in surrounding cities, Walson said this is "always a con· cern when a new city forms." Noting that planning m i n I m i z e s deve lopment of "future slums" he con· ceded that there is a tendency for people to move i:riti£a hew area -rrom an older one. The inclusion area concept !s key to . SlznOO:s.cd~cism_of.bolhJ.he ltvine Com. .. pany and the UC Regents. The inclusion area embraces 510 acres of university-owned lands surrounding the l ,000 acre campus. Simon said it was supposed to provide space for university. related acUvlties, :;ervlces and low cost faculty and student housing, and he blames trustees for not having completed a plan for development. While the area aroWld UCLA for ex· ample. has increased in value to the point where inexpensive property near the campu!: prohibits &uch development, the inclusion area at UCI is intended to prevent this economic barrier to locating non.academic but university .. related functions near to the campus. Simon said, •·The inclusion area plan. ned for serving as a buffer between the campus and a city of 100,000 is one thing. A city of 4.50,000 people surrounding the campus is quite another." · Further, Simon charged Irvine Wtth developing a "luxury cty" for the very rich, ignoring the housini needs of students and faculty. \Vatson countered that the Irvine Com· pany was "concerned" that building costs ·for single.family homes have raised prices. He noted the firm was seeking develop- ments of four-plex housing and govern· ment subsidized low interest mortgages for single-family homes lo provide hous-- ing in Irvine for middle and low income families. Simon wUI ask the Regenb Oct. 16 to begin a suit "for compematory and puniUve damages" against Irvine Com· pany for proceeding with the develop- ment of the City of Irvine 1n a manner which violates lbe agreement with the wtivenity. Police Arrest ' .Wild Marine A young Camp Pendleton Marine faces charges of assault with a deadly weapon and-auto·theft after a-series of incidents before d3wn today slirling with a club- bing attempt -finally ending with ar.- spedacular freeway crash in an allegedlyU stolen"Car, • · ~ ·~~ '· · · ~ · • . • Ul"ITt ....... All-weather Girl ' Distr icL attorney's complaints In two felonies would be aoughl by San Clemente police today against David Duane Patt.on. 23, who was arrested at the scene of a two-car crash on the San Diego Freeway at 2 a.m. Everyone knows it's getting ·on toward winter he re in the Northern Hemisphere. But Nadina Guilford, 17, could care Jess. She lives in Sydney, Aus tralia, where spring has sprung. So she can afford to 'vear a big smile and small bathing suit. The alleged string of incidents began at about midnight at the apartment o( Steven Douglas Hemmers at 116 Camino Estrella, San Clemente. Remmers told police he was lying in bed when he heard a noise in the living room and went into investigate. He notic· ed a crouched figure in the darktned room. The assailant swung a two-by-four at the resident, but missed. The club drove a hole in the apartment wall, the assailant then fled. As police were investigating the In- cident, San Clemente Marine James William Gordan, also stationed att Camp Pendleton, was exiting his oew car at 125 S. El Camimo Real, when a man -a two.by.four stuff.ed in the waistband of his pants -accosted him in a parking loL HOLIDA Y MAIL DA TES LISTED WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Pentagon has announced the following dates by which Christmas packages and letters for soldiers in Vietnam should be mailed to arrive in Ume for the holidays: Package.s lll<lre than Uve pcunds by surface mail Oct. 12-Nov. 7; less than five pounds Oct 19-Nov. 21; those car· rying a .$1 parcel airlift (PAL) stamp to lravel by air on a space available basis Oct. 26-Nov. 28; and all regular air mail letters Nov. 30-0ec. 12. . 300 Gather in Capitol In U.S. POW Mi,ssion WASHINGTON (UPI! -More than 300 men and women gathered on the steps of the Capitol ~fonday before visiting members of Congress to press for release of American prisoners of war in Vietnam. Mrs. Carole North oC Wellfleet, Mass., newly elected chainnan of the National League of Familiei; of Am eric a n Prisoners and Missing in Southeast A!la, told newsmen "we are far from satisfied that everything that. ~oµltl be dppe is being done .. .'' Mrs. North's organization, wh ic h helped to organize the recenlly held joint i;ession of Cangress to call attention to the plight of American POWs, completed its !our--day convention here today. ~1embers planned to meet with con- gressmen througboot the day to obtain their signatures on cards pledging sup- port for a greater U.S. effort to win freedom for POWs. J\1rs. North declared the organit_ation had .•. no intention of letUng up the pressure even for one minute until all of our men are Jdentified and, ultimately, set free ." lier own husband" was 1 bot down over North Vietnam in an Air Force jet Aug. I, 1966. While she conceded the "goven,unent is doing everything lt can, she emphasized more could. be done through a massive letter-writing campaign to the leaders of North Vietnarp .. "l want my husband home and 1 want him hea1thy," she said. Texas millionaire H. Ros s Perot ad· dressed the organization Saturday at a closed-door session to brief the .wives on what was being done to secure the release of POWs. Mrs. North declined to discuss what Perot, who has been cpn- cerned with the prisoner issue, :said, Jlowever, she said, 1'Perot gave us ex· actly what we asked for. and .•• we are tremendously encouraged by his asses,.. ment." It was valuable, Younger 11ald, becaU9e • of the recorded testimony of the many ~ witnesses. Younger has not decided ' whether to prosecute Sherifr's peputy ! Thomas Wilson who fired the 10..inch tear • gas erojectile lhat struck Salazar's bead ; killing tiim. If he does file charge.s, uld Younger, a :. candidate for State Attorney General the~ charge would be invo lu n t a r y • rtfin!Jaughttr -••the unlawful tllttng of .- haman-belnprithouhrullico-aloret1-hl and without intent to kill.'' Four members of a corner's Jury tnnnl .• that"·~-!'a&·'4M ~ ..... ~ -· . llllOlha-." The other three found tho death in the Silver Dollar Bar WU ac- cidental, I ' ·Salazar, U, a santa Ana resident. waii news director of a Spanlsh·languAJI television station and a columnist for U., Los Angeles Times, Two olber persona were fatally wounded in the riot that did it million property damage. The death of Salazar touched off new tensions In fhe big East Los Angele.I' Mexican·American community. Bank Robbers , Escape by Sea ALEXANDRIA BAY, N.Y. (AP) -Two masked robbers held up a bank today and escaped in a motorboat with an estimated $100,000. . The Marine Midland Trust Co. cl. .. Northern New York branch bank ls on the waterfront of the SL Lawrence River. A tourist in this resort village telephoned police alter seeing the pair jump In to Ule boat with thtir shotguns. .. ''The shotgum aroused my sugpl .. cions," the tourist, Edward Miller of Addison. told reporters. Bank officials said no one was hurt tliough the gunmen locked :several women and M •nag e r Donald Mtmro in a record vault after keeping a teller, Mn. Ivan Strough, at guflpolnt. _, ' • Apathy Toward Sea Hit THE RED BALLOON LTD. Ontheiawdwal< Hun~ Harbour Nee d for More Empliasis in Oceanograpliy Toui By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of lfltl Dlf!F 1"11911 ltl " Oceanography is as old as the first man who venti:zred onto a body of water. Vet, as a acli!nOi: It baa a Ur acted less 1 lntertst, less personnel •nd fewer funds than fieldl such as amonomy or biology. Robert Abel, head of the Nattoo.i Science FOW>d&Uon's Sea G r a n t Program. said he sees the problem t11s one of educating the public, then the 1chool children. Speaking this weekend al the Natk>nal Conference on Marine Scle:ncas in Educa· lion, 1n Avalon, Catalina hJand, Abel bluntly staled : -. "Our-knowlet:fse o( ocean sciencts as 1ciontists and educators will never lessen .Ille need to""""""' the l8'p!)'ff. '·Th.e prOble s t:hat they don't w11nt to , ''l.4 about the oceans, U!ty would rather r• about the scrcwballl and null who I P.acelessJy throw bomb11 about." ·Mon,!" of the 150 confenmco lllMlbers expressed concern ovl!r the fact the federal government has seen flt to 1ink tremendous amounts of funds in the space race .with the Ruuians wbUe tending to iBnore the race mo "inner space." Tbey cll<r11le dllapidat.d condition of the nation's merchant marine and the fact tllat America Imports 10 pereerit of U,. flsb ClOl1!llDled In this COWl!ty as evlden<e ol tilt problem. James L. Gearhart, chief of oceanography In public achool1 in New HIDO'Ytt County, North CarollDa, tx· pltln<d the problem. "We have Rliis.ian fiihlng fleets off our coast all the time. ADd what dJsturb1 me is not the fact that they are thete-they have a right to be-but-the fact that tMy are so much more efficient fishermen th11n our men. "For example, when our shrlm!>'r! come in there are hundreds of sea gulls tralling-lheir¥boata io get the wasted bllt and shrimp. But the Russian fishenntn have 'developed the abUily to we everything they take from the sea . You never see a gull lraillng their boa ta." Cmdr. Don Wal.sh, a member ol the team which made the record 35,000 root raan dive In 1960,-remain optimistic about the statt of marine sciences and what be calls &ea power. "[ see aea power as the abillty of ana. lion to project ti. Interest into and onto lhe world oce11n. And despite the fact that I'm in the Navy, I think that mllltary f.otce is the last sanctkm of this power. A country's sea power fa commercial ven. turn and yachting and fishing-things that are tmplementie by economics ind diplomacy, not military might," he said. He noted that the pt'Oblem• for U.S. ,.. power are formidable, ''but we know how to get out ol t.rwblt, If lbt national will permit us to," he added. Congressman Richard Hanna (0.. Anaheim) aounded the mOlt enthusiaBlio note as rar as generating public interest In oceanogriPbl'. J invi tes you to enroll your daughter in these delight{ul classes* I Hellos and Goodbyes II My Mirror Tells Me Ill Little Bites I Take IV What Shall I Wear v My Family Means a Lot To Me VI My-Room Is a Friendly Place Vil Getting Rudy for Graduation VIII The Fashion Show GraduaUon ages 5 through 7, 8 through 12. $30, call for reservations (714) 846-1666 classes limited, start oetober 19th .. •conducted by Beverlee Ke:py of WUahltt 16877 ALGONQUIN ST. Huntington Beacli • . ' I . • ' • • • T • • l • DAll.V PILOT Tutldlt, Octotter 6. 1970 ' • ElectiO.. Assured Coup Saceeeds Sadat Selected Bolivia-b ad-er --- -- As Egy pt Chief Falls • Re volt Ill CAIRO""tA:P)~Egyp\'s only polltk:sl' ---j;: arty namst-Anwar Sadat Monday night 1t-als6 UlaEgypt'laJUanct with~tfie--- to succeed the lAte President Gamal Soviet Union ii "a permanent factor, not Abdel Nasser, assuring his election by a temporary convenience," and warned the National Assembly Wednesday. that Israel might decide to renew .Meellng sbortly before midnight, the "!llilitary aggression" because of the !SO.member central committee of the present situaUon in Egypt. Arab Socialist Union unanimouslY ap-T I A Iv proved the nomination or Sadat by the In e v , Israel made its 21st com· ............ , executive committee. Sadat, 52, plaint Monday to the U.N. commisaton ..-•J supervising the ceue-fire on the Suei has been serving u provlsidnal president Canal, charging that Egypt wu con· (~ ..,. M Otll'I •llfl Sl.m -t;A PAZ Bolivia <AP) -Gen.-Al!rado -U .prealdent-Juat a.week qo. OVando ea'ndta reaJgned u president ear.-Tbe-president-11ve up-alW • rMttina ly today and a rl&ht-wing general who of army officers by a vote ol 317..te launched a revolt against blm took over M~y called on both him and MJruda in his place. to resign. Ovando aaked mllllary forces still loyal Ovando, who sel:ed the presidency in a to him not to oppose the rebellion qainJJt military coup, at lint wu dellant ud him. said: "Tbe desliny ol the COWJliy la J!01 Shortly afterward, Gen. Jlotlello Miran-decided ~iciala but by the ~ Wllo PrlncH• ~rgaret on her 40tb birthlay is seen by artist Bryan Orgen as a severed head. In the painting unveiled today at the Na• tional Portrait Gallery, the prin- cess' head appears to be sitting on a black base and is surrounded by a massive background of dark gray. Hali lli• -iace, benea1Jl-a tiara, dissolves in a watery ab- stract. •'I can't remember a prin- cess being beheaded• in a royal birthday portrait before," said Tim L-. an expert of Christie's. art apctioneers. "It looks as if Prin· cess Margaret's bead has become detached from her body and sus-- pended with mascara running riv· ulets d0wn her cheeks. in an unlit prison cell on a particularly dark night " '81d tho Daily Sketch. Or- gan. 35. who was commissioned by a lawyers society and recommend· ed by Margaret, said. "My thougbt was that royal portraits have stood still a very long time and it was titne to paint a princess in a way that reflected the age she lived in.'' And thtf queen's sister? "I under· !ince Nasser died Sept. 28. tinutng construction of missile bases .l'be_esecutive_ co m_mJ l t e e re_co~ within 18-miles at-the canal.-Egypt's-an· mended that the assembly meet Wed· u · aft mlssil da the army chief ol 1Wf wbo launched ougJlflil ezpresa their oplnlom at eloc-th~ revolt on Sunday, llllllOllDCed that be tons.'' But durinfl the DIP! be dwJpd was ll!Sllllling the presidency of a bts mind. ,.__,,mill ... ·~.J'!!'to. He did not Immedlateiy, Ovando ... M<!!!day_a!lll ~the~ name the ~ortfii llfOilp. of two Important recimtDts ud tho air nerday to endorse Sadat, that his election ·airer es are lllpplled by the Soviets. be confirmed by a naUonwJde referen· Some Western obsru-vers had predicted dum Oct. 15, and that the president be in· that Nasser would be replaced by a rul· augurateil two days later. In •~ to Id in'-·' Named vice ·president by Nauer In g uwy avo an ICI •WLI. power Ull'I~ NAMED EGYPT CHIEF Acting PrHldont Sadat Miranda aald be formed the ~1:13 "to force. Mlj. Ruben Sancba, mnmander direct the deltiny ol the lather with of the Colorado Regimellt llJll'dlnl tho jwtlce." presJdenUal palace, termed the offkan" Ovando etlebrated bll first annJverury vote a "fraud." Miranda-said ol Ovando'• re1ignallon: 1969, Sadat was considered by . most struggle. Sadat is confronted witli the Wk of striking a balance between the observers to be the leaat controversial of Egyptian regime's left wing, Jed by Air several potenUal contenders for the Marshal Ali Sabry, and rightists Jed by presidency. One of ·the others, Lt. Gen. former Interior Minister Zakarta Mohled· Nixon Plans to Deliver "It was the best thing he could do. \He was a good president. Now the armed forces Will decide who will be the aue- cessor or successors." EMollamt' ed Faedwzif, comn:~~~n-cltlthe ef of din. gyp s ann orces, cuowc:u cen· A 1 f · nd f h d d id t tral committee of the military'• full sup-c ose rie o t e ea pres en , port for Sadat. Sadat was among the "free officers The executive committee made a plea group" that overthrew King Farouk In Talk on Peace Efforts 'Jbe -official-armed forcu radio, Red Battalion, broadcast a communique saying : ,;For the Bolivian people, now begins the true destiny they deserve." A statement by Ovando issued by Information Minister Carlos Carrasco said he decided to resign because "the confrontation within the armed forces, aside from dividing them and causing divisiveness within their ranks, would al.so have resulted in bloodshed in the civil popuiaUon." -stand she is delighted," said the agent !or her husband, Lord Snow· don. • for IOIJdarity in the face of "the designs 1952 and provided Nasser's springboard of hostile forces who deaire to sow to power. The only other member re- discord in our ranks." It moved quickly mainlng in the ~ernment is Hussein el to replace Nauer, Jt said, to disaiwtt Shafel, 51, who little public support "re..-• -ad by the im ..... iali!t press and is known to have no preaidentlal ...,...., -,--,..... aspirations. ~gypthet. :mtence of a IO<Jll~ vacuum in Sadat, although a fierce nationalist and subscriber to Naaser's Ideas of Arab uni· "Nauer'• death places a great burden· ty and dignity, ls expected to be unable to on the ASU and ita various organs to d th f the wort closely with the ni;w president to comman e ervent devotion Et>'J>o further Nauer'• Ideas," the statement tlanl and olbe:r Arabs gave Nasser. But said. foreign diplomats consider him COJ!lenlal BJt:I. easy to approach. Government changet also were under WAS!llNGTON (AP) - A nine-day European tour behind him, President Nixon plans a special rtport to Congress and the nation on the U.S. commitment to peace around the globe. The report probably will -Include the prospect of further troop withdrawals from Vietnam, one source said, and could come as early as next week. But the Nix4 on Administration is not hiding its desire to get such a report on the record before the Nov. 3 elections. Palestinians -'.Accuse-Jordan way in Lebanon, where one of the rebel leaders in the 1958 civil war, Saeb Salam, President and Mr.i. Nixon ~ere ~iven a accepted President Suleiman Franjleh's red-carpet welcom.e on their arrival at i Of New Attack By THE A880CIATED PRESS Paleltinian suerrillaa accuaed the Jordanian army of attacking guerrilla positions in northern Jordan on Monday d le • ClJro.-ed ~fire that .ended the country's Jllne.day clvU war. In Amman, the Jordanian aovernmenf did DOI comment on tho cbarges but a 'y'OfiiiQ QiiiiitoilCiioPfT-fl<li1!4i .-~rr-· .potemru·satd' evacuation Jll prtflfu grin aa ht get.r hU pe:t frog recd11 for from the capJtaJ wu proceeding quietly. the Brcdnlton, Fla. frog jumping corr AI Fatah, the major guerrilla group,. u~t. made these char1ea: ·• Anny U.Opo lbolled the \'illage of People ani doin~ a double take Harima at dawn and then tanks and In Tbmpa, Fla. over an advertise4 armored cars attacked a guerrilla out.. ment on page 400 of the telephone po~ .. The anny also fired on guerrifla book yellow pages that shows a positions west of Ramtha, a village near mother feedin£ a big juicy spider the Syrian frontier still under guerrilla to her infant. General Telephone control. Jordanian soldiers arrested a Co. said the drawing.which depicts , prominent guerrilla, Hahem Hindawi and a woman talking on the phone other commandos, violating the tn.ce while spoon-feeding the child-did that called for the army and guerrillas l.o not include the spider in the Clrigin--release prisoners taken In the fighting. al version. Bob Cromwell, General The AI Fatah communiques, issued In nh U 1 · · Beirut, said the guerrillas "will not stand Te1e,.;;one pub c re alums man, handcuffed'" if Hindawi and the other saicI.: the bug was not noticed by commandos are not freed. company officials until the book Jordan's information minister, Adn•n had been printed. The advertise-ment is one of the telephone com· Abu Odeh, said an estimated 1,500 Pony's own and reads, "Additional Palestinian guerrillas boarded trucks and left Amman on Sunday under aupervision phones, ideal for mothers." of an Arab peace mWion named at the • Cairo meeting. . Sailors are still searchinlit: for the Odeh said the government expected the 30-pound solid brass steering wheel withdrawal of armed guerrillas from of the destroyer John R. Craig Amman and Zerqa, 15 miles to the which bas been missing for more northeast, to be completed late Monday. than two days in San Diego. Even Guerrilla unit!: should be out of trbid, frogmen are hunting the harbClr Jordan's second largest city located so floor today. "I'll bet my lieuten· miles north of Amman, and other ant's bars that this was a practical northern cities "in the next few days,'' joke." said a spokesman for Paci· Odeh added. fie Fleet Cruiser-Destroyer Force. The guerrillas were being moved to While the search goes on another mountain bases near · Jara sh, 25 miles steering wheel has been borrowed north of Amman and near the Israeli from the mothball fleet in case the frontier where there "are good destroyer, in port through October, sanctuaries," the information minister might be called to sea duty. said. invitation to form a new government. n~arby Andrews All' Force Base Monday ffiifilef'Rijlijd Karinilm~"Situr-• nigh. - ----- day following Franjieh's installation as Nixon repeated at the ailJIOrt that his president on Se'.pt. 23. tour had been aimed at "strengthening Salam, 66, is the leading Moslem pollU· the structure of peace in the Mediter· cian Jn Beirut but has been kept out of ranean and in the world. I think we made power since the 1958 strife by atmy op-progress in strengthening that struc· position...._Fra.njl~b--"'as elected despite ture," he said. army opposition. · The Nlxons were greeted by Vice: French Camidimt F act'ion Kidnaps ~~ . . . ·---··--·-····· .. British Envoy ' MONTREAL (UPI) - A French Cina· ~Ian separatist group kidnaped th e 1enlor British trade commissioner Mon· day, and gave the government 48 hours to meet Wng list of rarisom demands - lncludif!l"payment of hall a million dol· l~rs in gold safe passage out of the country. It was Canada's first diplomatic kid· naping. Four men, three of them armed with submachineguns, forced their way into the elegant downtown home of James R. Cross -the equivalent of a British con· sul in Montreal -and took him away in a taxi as bis wHe watched. In an eight-page ransom note sent l.o the news media and police the kidnapers identified themselves as members of the Front de Liberation Quebecois (FLQ), a militant underground group seeking in· dependence fr o m English-speaking Canada for French-speaking Quebec. Provincial justice minister Jerome Choquette told a news confertnce the FLQ's ransom demands for the release of Cross included : -Release of Ha certain number" of jailed separatists: -Payment of a "voluntary tax'' $500,4 000 in gold; -An airliner and safe passage for the released prisoners. the kidnapers, and the gold, "To Cuba or Algeria" -IdentificaUon in Quebec newspapers, with a photo, of tJie informant who turned in an FLQ cell to the police receotfy. . President Spiro T. Agnew, congressional and administration leaders and members of the diplomatic corps. Nixon said he had found in Europe a greatu Uftderstanding of U.S. policy-in Vietnam than on his previous tour last year. He said ''events in the future will · demonstrate" that ·the United States is making progress toward achieving ita goals in Vietnam. He reported a favorable sentiment for the U.S. attempt to win peace in the Mid· die East, and said the countries he visited consider it essential that the United States maintain its strength in the Mediterranean and in the North Atlantic .Treaty Organization. On the final stop of the tour, Ireland, Nixon conferred with U.S. negotiators at the Paris peace talks. In a farewell speech at Dublin Airport, he made note of meeting with Irish leaders and his Vietnam advi!ers: 20 Viets Killed By Cong Mortars SAIGON (AP) -Viet Cong mortars killed 20 South Vietnamese and wo\mded 40 in a government refugee camp Mon· day night as intensified enemy attacks continued for the third day along the cen· tral coast. Government spokesmen said 17 mortar rounds slammed into the cluster of houses at Phu My, in Binh Dinh province 285 miles northeast of Saigon. 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" ''As I leave Jreland and as I look back on these meetings I am sure they will be regarded 'as a period when we made a &ignificant contribution not only to rela· lions between our two countries but for the great ideal we all desire, a peaceful world." NiJon was greeted warmly throughout the tour. However, there were demonstrations in Rome, and in Dublin dissenters hurled eggs and other objects at his car. In both cities the acts were blamed on those oppose'tl to U.S. policy in Vietnam. He me;. with heads of government in Italy, Yugoslavia, Spain, England and "Ireliifd, a:na-wlth"Pope-Paut·Vt tn-Rome;- He also paid a Visit to the U.S. 6th Fleet in the Mediterranean. Nixon's message was much the same as he delivered to Jrish Prime Minister Jack Lynch; that U.S. policy is to "make it possible for Jreland and every other country in the world to develop in a period of peace." Bunker• Bombed Later OVando emerged from hls home with his wife and two children, Teresa and AUredo, and said. "I bape there will be no bl(IOdsbed," and left for an unknown destination. A military coup ousted the previous government on Sepl 28, 1989. The armed forces issued a "revolutionary mandate'' outlining government goals and naming Ovando as president Ironically, the man· date was signed by Miranda. ovanaonamea-rcablrret" ot-teftlst civilians and conservative army officers aild one of the government's first acts was to expropriate the $150 million holdings of the Gulf Oil Co. on Oct. 17. This raiaed disutisfacton among con- servativea,_"pecially since tQe act abut off all oil exports and deprived the government of badly needed revenue. Planes from Viet Bases Pound Reds in Canilioclia TAING KAUK, Cambodia (AP) -Jet bombers from air bases In South Vietnam pounded an enemy bunker complex hid· den In a village outside Taing Kauk today after Cambodian troops ran into hail of fire from the well-concealed positions. Thick black and gray smoke hung over the village of Kanthun as A'n jets dived down to drop napalm and antipersonnel cluster bomblets. It was not possible to make out the markings on the bombers. which are flown by both the U.S. and South Vietnamese air for~. They were called In alter Cambodian troop! were at· tacked for six hours during early hours of the morning. The Cambodians were driven back by fire from '\ line of bunkers. "I've tried everything I've got in the way of firepower -bazookas. grenade launchers, machine guns," said Maj. Doeur Kim Sea, commander of the Cam· bodian 49th Scout Battalion. "But I can't break through their bunkers. There was only one thing for It -churn up the ground with bombs." Sea's Battalion Jost one man killed and seven wounded during the protie of Kanthun, about three miles east of Taing Kauk. They are part of the Cambodian government's first major offenal.ve wtuch has been stalled for four weeU in or around the ruins of this small town on Highway 6, about 50 miles north of PhnOm Penh. The Communist command troops launched a aeries of attacks on Cam4 bodian position5 around Taing Kaut shorily after midnight wJth a heavy W· rage of mortar bombs. More than 100 bombs plastered the Cambodian outpos' of Svay Phloeung and the enemy iDl4 mediately unleashed a ground attack that came to within 50 yards of the Cam· bodian defenses. The enemy mounted a mllchlne gun tn a Buddhist shrine until they wtte driven out. Enemy medics set up emergency. dressing station inside a Buddhist stoupa, a spire-shaped monument found oublde all Cambodian temples. There were blood stains on the ground this afternoon -and five enemy corpses wert laid out by a paddyfield. Ul'I,....._ I 17 .. I I ' °"'"" t>ttJll ""'*" w fot'tcllt 11'11:111inum• IMt'I lil(luMdi 1.-lffcfl ~ """• ~ic.. .W7, ._.. ... ,. u.M1.wu .. ,..., • ..._._......., '"'-"• ,,...,, ,. .. ,... ..,.,.... ....,, llllW'llltlf "'44. "" tMflll ...... &lftt• ;::.."-'-..... ..., ""* ,, ........ ,,,,. ,..,.., llJtll ...... " ...... 2100 '·"'· ,,. fl lrt.f low .............. 10;• •·"'· 0,J • 4' ,11 ... '' ... .. " VILLAGERS OFFIR TO SHARE THE IR 'OOD WITH IMIATTLED CAMBOD IAN TROOl'_S. __ _.,_.,_++ lfHr Communl•l·h•lil Kouk ChHp, Commurilal Small Arma Fire Pln1"Tl)am Down 1 ll.tll .... ':to'''"" .... l :ID '''"" MMt •t. It:"'""· ktt lt:» '''"" " . \ • I -=-=----- 17 I I I, . Fo1111taii1 Valley • .Today'• Final . -' l YOL.63._NO. 239, 2 SlCTJONS, 3Q 'PAGES , --..--TUESDA y' octO~EA 6, ·19111 TEN C9!T$ -~· ---~-,--- Mea Oo wlar k Runway ·Cul Councilmen Ban Use of 500-foot Ex tension By ALAN DllWN Of -DMlt' '"" , .... BIDltington Buch eow>cllm•n lhor1<n- ed the nmway at Meadowlark Airport Mm>day npt by.,bannlng "" of 111e_.,,,.. trovenial 500-foot e:s:tensi.Ofl, ~ by ano~ near crash at the airport Sunday and calll l r o m homocl\men, tho council voled to enforce 1,.ct1se_and de1lat: order qaln11:l.Jhe__fJ· tension -bailed by aviation oonsultants u a aafety factor and blamed by homeowners for four wirt<lipping in- ·Huntington Apartments Request 0~' d .. -The fate of a much d.iscusRd parc:el of land along Holland Drive, Huntington Buch, WU molved Monday llilbL Apartmenta will be built'there. ~ ""°" 11 wu bull! In May. Opposing a move to defer action on the c<ue lllCI desJsl order ponding I .. port by the city's airport committee, Coun- cilman Norman 'Gfbb1 commen~. "The extension ill illegal -il's that baaic. The cease and desist order Is not out of ordu. It's tOO bid It was not done at firrt. I would tliW: the city would be liable if ah accident occurred. 11 The order hid been suspended by the city for five weeks while the council a~ pointed airport committee 1ludled the Talk Wednesdafl M~wlork problem. The council wu told lhal the nmway addition was illteal becaue no bailding permit bad been obllJned although ID If> pJic.aUon has been_rnade. The decision to impose tht cease and desist order wu made at the 4:30 p.m. council seuion. l.ater at the evening session the counctl listened for nearly two hours to presentations by the, airport committee arid a bomeownen' group and agr.ed that : -Night flying at Meadowlark be Nixon to Tell New Peace Plan limited lo two ho!Jrs after sunset but no later than 10 p.m. -The city ~ahould take the lead in set~ po~er Jines along Warner Ave:nue and north of HelJ A venue: &re obatruclion lighted lllCI the streol light wtro along Heil.Avenue la undergrounded. A lighl plane clipped tho str .. t lighl wire Sunday afternoon nearly causing-a crash on the runway and knociing 1 lamp fixture onto a car. It wu the fourth such (Ste RUNWAY, P11t II 'Pay Dispute Break Seen In 2 Weeks By TERRY COVILLE Of 1M ~ltr r 11e1 Stiff ' EDDIE MeCALLUM INSPECTS PRODUCT OF HIS 'RESl!ARCH . The question was. decided when Coon- ~ Al Coen cast hiJ vote in favor of the 144-unit apartiflent project ·on the parcel east of Beach Boulevard. WASHINGTON (UPI) -PrOlldonl 1 propagandl gjmmick," he added. "We Ni,1.on,.ln.hi&fLl]litils_alloLhla.aruelliig_ar.ulOIJUAt,oay.iOl.iUoc.tbe.record::_. European tou r, ahnounced today he Before ·the speech We dnes da y , A compromise to the salary dispute between Huntington Beach police and firemen and the city cOuncil may be only two~mu away. --DJgglng-lntcr-Sclener •rl'ount0ln-V•ll(y:".-0 1111rsclliiil-----1 The request from tht William Lyon Development Company to chanle the zoning from commerciaJ to mulU-residen- tiaI had been denied by the plannlDJ eOm- mission. It proi:tuced a 3-3 tie in a council vote last month but Coen was not pr9ent: at the hearing and delayed his vote11J1til Monday night . Monday night the-vote was .f..2 with Coon. Geor!!• McCracken, Norma G- and Mayor Donald Shipley being in favor aod a>Wlcllmen Jack Green and Jerry . Matney oppooed. • A stipulation of Coen'• vole was that Holland Drive be .converted into a cul* 1ac to eue homeowners fears tfilt t1ie apirtmetits would cenerate more traffic. After tho ..te. Green pnipaoed fllllt tho pl~<omm-bo~ID study-Jn Ibo R2 llld•R2 multi- Nllderd1al ...... "with the intention of ........... d ui.....,tt .,. ,. Thill -puoed lllllllimoculy. The ·apartments at Holland Dfive will btlbu.ilt an 5.1 acres. Planntr1 uid that 10 peranl of the unlll -.Id be 1i111Jo. -·...-. Bribery Suspect Asks for Trial will address the nation at 6 p.m. Wed-Secretary of State William P. Rogers will ne:sday and make a major new proposal brief interested governments, including I« ending the Vielnam War. close U.S. aUies ln Southeast Asia and His radio and television broadcast from presumably tbe Soviet Uniob, on the new the White House timed less than a month diplomatic approach, Nixon uid. before the Nov. 3 Congressional elections The President himself will diacuas his follows a personal report from lhe u.s'. speech Wiih the cabinet at S p.m. negotiating team in' Parts on the latest W~ay, followed ~n ~ Ia_te_~ by a ·eommwlist plan for a settlement. briefing for Republican and DilriDcratk There was widesprud ~lat.ion, Con~wiooa.l le~s. Dr •. 8-7 .A. wblch Mull mact.1-.11cr.1lternpt 1\lesday to Kissmger, his national aecunty ~-- discourage, that the United States might adviser, wll! setlltwsmen twice. propose a cease-fire throughout Southeast The Pres.1d:"~t . stressed ~t the new Asia ·and 'a withdrawal of all foreign U.S. peace 1n1tiativ! was .~1ng ~veloped trOOps .... fiom "'Vietnam. He refusld all · long befor~the NaUonal Uberation Fnnt- comment. offer~ Sept. 1~ to .halt attacb . on .,.,,. p ·c1en1 ~-turned t Amencan troops 1f they·leave South Viel~ ·-:'l: res1 , ·wuu. rt .0· nam by next June 30. . Was~ _Monday n1jht 1from his U.S. Ambassador David K. E. Bruce, 12,IJOO.m~e trip to llv~ nations,, J_ncludinl who flew from :earu to 'Ireland 1o report Commun~ Yugos11:v1a, boupdeid unex-to Nixon on. SUoday; ·terined ·tM GOftt.. pectedJy uito the; White House press room munist proposal& "old wine 1n·new· bot-· late ln the mnnuni. Ilea" 11 tho lime bul u ld they wwld • "Ji,.--.. tflo,-_,....... iiudted carifldly.. . . statement ever made on this long and dif· Nixon said his announcement Wed- ficult war aind will cover all the major needly was ''prepared onJi 1fttt-' it wa1 iss~, invol~ed in ~e ~theast· Asia thoroughly considered" and. eovered all area, be ~d, speaking wtthout notea. iseuea involved in the Paris talk.I. He "Wt do not consider thia to be (Set NIXON,·Pa&e 11 The key ·to a happy soluUon for all il'l- volvu the amount of money public sarety workers mlghf reCelve under _ed4._~i~nal boMfill ~new salary packages. City Adminlptrator Doyle Miller told councilmen Monday night -he felt the educational :Incentives would ' b r i n g everyone fogethe:r. · Police. and fnmen have threatened further 1cllon-i! tho-counciLfalled-.to. meet their salary request of an 11 per· c:e.nl raiR. The: touncil has already-approved an @lght perctnt raise and made it. clear a . . ¥&her ra •. won't ·be offered: Miller revealed Mond11y that; ov.er the ,.~!tend. 74 pel<iol of tho· policomtn voted.to Uk< lhi ~ ~10 ~· tiul he 'allo Aid > lhal I ~ --...... ,au;;.~-' adylafnl ll!O pol ice 01Dcer1-nol· lo: 10 W. c0urt._ I • ...+ ! Ed Pritt, president of the· Policemen'• AlloclaUon, uld this morning that no lteps would bl taken unUl the council takes further action. ~ · "1'1e educAtiOnal incentive progra.m might make a difference •and aolve ~ dJspute," he said. , Pratt would not comment on tM weekend vote·, limply einphulzing that no action woold be taken until· further talkl with tho clly ore conducted. Creepy Classe·s School Sparks Intere st in Study "Caterpillars are niCt:." ...... BecaDMltbey're-soft· and they-crawl on you. You can' play with theh:I,'' aa)'a elght.year~d Karen Young. ,, Karen ii.one of. aome-60 second and "third grade atudeot3 getting a .clo;,ser .look at imectl u,..e days al Gbler School in the "F«intaln Valley sChooJ Dl!trict. - ·•Our emphas is is on research and in" dlvi\f~ projocll," Ed ~n .. ,G~ler pr!ndpol, !llt'~i!led.-."11'1 on llftU9lial If> ..... ..., -., lhl• Y0\1111·" ;.1W ~ ilart Weu.i-1 lllCI 'Judy Wi!ion, have ~tid the old textbook method in'f4Vor of 1J)arkin1 a deeper in- tetlst Uf . .Cience · 1tady1 among . the· atudenb. . ' \ · "The kt~ 1like to do• projects at home. This methpd lives them a better chance for individuar study," Miss Wtl!ert·~ld. Their basic philosophy is that students will become more involved in the subject as they handJe projects such u colleding buttirflia. watchin1 in ant fann or CGD· atrucUng insects' from pa pier mKM. . . SuMman.1aid the project method ls G- perlmental for)'ounger -chlldren ~uae­ educators haven't been sW'e the youngsters cOuld handle their own research-. · • -· . "But tbey ace already adoptina: such technical ·terms u thorax. abdoq\en, spiracles, maodible, antenna, chryallis and cocoon." · The children find themselves Qfdng 'questiORf, Ol not ooly the teacben, .but pare:Ji.Lt and other adult3. They al!lo' do more read.inc on their own 1q-finiil 6 answers to questions they develop themSelves. / · O t,h.e.r devices are used Jn the cli"sm:oom for teaching students about fn· sect!. The old game' ot "cooties., becomes a valuable me~r teaching uie parti or-a'n 'ant. A so~l-sGCb u "The ants go marching one.bf-one (up to 10)," also helps chil~en learn to count. "We' also watch a lot ar films on in- sects," M,W Weisert eXplained. ·The children have already tutned ln 1uch projects as mounted butterflies, diagrams' of beeUes, and models of anb. . Caterpillars fQcinated Karen more William D. New, IC, who.bad waived a jury lrial and agreed to' let 1 judge rule on hii· guilt o)' innoctncf! on charges of bribery, changed hil mind Mooday lllCI asked for trial. Huntington Pianning Unit Takes Up High Rise Fight Brander Castle, mist.ant city ad- ministra~. said this momiO( that the educaUonal-benef~ -boosting-a· man's salary for increased education -had been approved by the council, but with no set figu re on haw mlfCh money would be "Reading from a book, then asking queaiions on a ~est." just' doesn't arouse much interest," Mi.ss Wilson added. "But .tll<.Ji<lu«OLto_onjoy_ tbiJ BJ!PNll<I!." ~n othe~ crawly creatures,_•bot ~b,.,u~t· _ _, terflies seem the: most poqular among the chilaren. New, of Phoenix, i1 accuted of offering ~ Huntington Beach Mayor JaClc Green M,lXKI for Green's action jn his f~vor on a propoled mne change on in- dustrial land near Gothard Street and Slater Avenue. He was arrested last Nov. JO on the parking lot of the Fisherman Reslaurant after allegedly making his third offer tJ a ••c&mpeJgn contribution" to Green . Judge Samuel DreiJen let Oct. n ae I.he trial date· for New. Architect Quits Planning Group Jlicbard Thom , a Huntington Harbour ardtilect, bu reai(ntd a1 a member of tJ:ie Huntington Beach planninr commls- "'"'· He said in a letter to the City Council Monday night that lf'OWlh in hil practkt preven~ him from carryln1 out all his dull~ as a·commiu.iooer. The council accepted the resignation and named Frank Hlutns, another archJ. tect, to succeed 'Mlam. ' · The coutcll were imprl!ned with Hi1· gins• crede:~am whe:n they cOMidered 17 lappllcanta for another plinnlng com- mialon vacanc:y hWltly. (At that time the cooncil appo1nted Ed Kerins, a corn- 'OOler expe:rt. to fill 1 vacancy cruted by the rtsipation of Michael. Bolor.) The batUe of the hich-riH apartments resumes again tonight before Huntington Beach planning commissioners who will consider the fate of a 17-!k>ry tower for the third time. In two pre:vious sessions. planners were unable to re:ach a de:cislon on the First Christian Tower by the Sea project, which may become the city'• bighat building. Jt has met opposition from the HOME Council which has declared that the 217· unit retirement complu would create problem! in SW'rounding reaidentia l areas. Proponent.. of the project, which in- clude Rollo We:st, chairman of the Fll'lt Otrlstian Tower by the Sea Corpx'ati:on, claim It is more than 300 feet aw1y from 1ny reildenU1l land. Although lonigh1"1 7 o'clock plllll1illl session in the city council chambers 11 a "decision only" meeting, the planning commissioners are expected to enter a thoi'ough discussio": of the project's pros and cons. The planning department staff has also declared its oppoeitlon lo the tower, claiming the proposed site at Main street and Adam.a Avenue "is out of character with the immediate area which is developed as low density reside:ntlal ." Both the HOME Council and the plan· ning staff, however, have recommended approval of a 950-seat unctuary wbJch is aJso envisioned as part of the total First Christian Church development. If approved , the Huntin(ton Beach hJth rise tower would provide living quarters for persons over 62 Uv!..ig en a filed in- come. granted. , "We've been authorized by the council to negotiate the amount of educational benefits with police and fire spokesmen,'' Castle expliined. "I think the administrator will have a • recommendation for the council in about two week!," he: added. "Police and firemen might make up the 2.S percent they lost in pay in these educational benellta. '' Vic Subia, spokesman for l~ firemen. could not be reached for comment this morning, but firemen have held the ume po1itlon as policemen during nlary diJculslons. Neither group appears likely to prea action against the council. until a clear picture is drawrl on the educational boneflll upect of lalorles. Three New Schools Seen Decision to Ask State Funds . Expected Tonight 'l1lree schoOls m nearly on the draw-termediate IChoo1 fot a lit& on In· aald. Arraignment~ Set In Huntington Sniping, Case A .f2.year-old man accused or taking a shol at his former wife outaide her Hun- tington Beach home bu been ordered to appear 1t Superior Court Oct. 16 for ar• raigrunent on attempted murder charges. Since the alleged shooting Aug. 11, Elmo Wllllanu of 2223 S. Main SL, Santa Ana, has been held at Orange County Jail in lieu of $12,000 ba.H. According tp homicide lnveaU,aton. ·• man who was hidden In the shrubbery of Mn. Williams' home at leaM Bolsa Clica Road fired' a 11111.ll caliber weapon juat aa ahe was returning home from -work late at nig~t. . . . ' , Mn. Made1elne Williama wa ahot once In the mouth but ttie bullet passed through her cheek, off~rs sald1.' She was given 'emergency treatnient at a local hospital and.later releaied. · · Police afft!!ted Wllllams. 'tn hls ·Santa ADl•motel ... m Ji0un .1fler the 1boo!Jng. 1ng boardl and 1 fourth ls close behind In dianapolis Avenue between Mlpolll and "And I think we will qualify for one F H • tho Hunllllgton B .. ch City (elementary) Bushard atreela," Palmer Aid. more IChool within 1 week 'When we . OUr:.·. llnfin. .gton. School .Jll*14 · -The intermediate IChool W<lUld -llnllh Oii' house count," Palmer odded. . "I caught a tiger swallow tall with a het in my backyard," Jay Frumkin, I, sa.id with prid.e. . Marc Martin, 8, 1aid they were fun to catch becliuse they are "easy and aome are colorful." The fOW'·Week Insect proje:ct comes to a halt in two .more wef:ks. The chUdren may miu'their little friends , but harass- ed mottters may fee l relleyea , when tbs jars of ~ts and caterpillars u.e left at school. Gas P edal Rµl e Told WASHING TON l(UPll -·The Natiooal Highway SOl•ly Bureaµ hll propoood that after Oct. 1,· um; all· ayto mUera must install accelerat'ors that ·cannot atick. ' Orufe Caut 1"eadler ' • 1 ' Low clouds, light drizzle wld temperatures mired. in the Uppar 90's both· on the coast and furth11r inland will prevail ·on· Wednesdiy. with token sunshine breakln1 ~gh at mldoftarnoon. Trustees 1on1g1>1 ... ..p.c1e.i to lllO s1uc1ont1. u the s1a~a1d app11 .. -.. u ..... wtll uk 1or bolrd ·-ii or p k s· -0K~d · 1utboriu. district 0Uicl1l1 to .e.k state move smoolhly, tho school will open ill lllOther school at the bolrd'1 nut ar Iles INSIDE TODA y funcJI to build lhrff of the ocl\ooJ1. The -. Jn tho fall ef Jfl2. recuJor meoling." ----• I boonl meell 1t 7::11 p.m. in tho library of "Then we have plono for a 711>-sludenl Tltot nut IChool would be located In The cJty.<OCJn<IJ baa ·iuthoriRcttho II.: Lawn• bOtDJina f.! thrlt>lna I~ 25 Reported Los t Dwyer School. Intermediate school In tho ,,... bounded liie 11tt bounded by Bniollbunt lllCI volopmenl of lour new park ,11,. ind the. tho Orang• c..,1 a"a. ror a "Winnlng lhat lntorm 1ncr .... dectloCI by Brookhuift end llulbanl str..ia lllCI Bulbard 11r .. 1a lllCI Adami lllCI In-c:onllruction of two ..,. fire lllatJona.-Jn full rtp0rt, read HOtD<Jrd L. In Thailand .lliver · Sepl 1$ has opened the -for "'·" AUonta lllCI Jndiln1polia ,.......,,.. dl1t11polls 1venues. It aloo wOClld -Huntiagtoo Beech. Hand~'•' 1'0j)Tt in the IPOrii Owl" Palmer, deputy d I 1 Ir I et P1lmer nplalned. ?SO 1Wdenll ind if plw con be nodted The council MOllday nllhl 1cctpted tho ttction, Pape 22. . • BANGKOK (AP) -. Eteve penons -">-Aid tod1y. _lie lllid that IChool l!_~ to be qulcty <llOCllh mJ&ht open In f'ebnl1ry, bid of Jullin-Woterfl<ld to-build the.file '· .____,, dto'trned uMf lt OtNff"Wirf'miilliilaDd Tli -dlslncl• tiiSJ4.1S niDUon in loci! ready by FebnW)', tm. lt'70. wt.ttions at Gothard Street and Ents Ave. ~ u. : = ,..... :: teared dead after 1 coaNl launch with borm for school ~ which were Plans f<r both ICbooll have already 1be district has auUered 1 dry sptll ln nue and Gothard Street and Murdy ctrcie c1t1111t1W • -"·•1 • ...,.., """' .., abou! lot ~m abolnl _Clpsiled at \l!llOtllab1e ~lil vokn a.PPfOVed an in· been IUbmitted.Jo Uta otnclals, but achool comtructkin lhe put two )'WI at a total COit of '6M,•. c-ics 1 <H-.,,.. Ctv11ff 11 lhe mouili-tithe ~ JUvw~ fa ett11e in the interat nte from live to most be wdlted now. becaUle of a tlsht bond market and the The Urilted Sprllikltr Company ha• won ~Jltfl&t ~: ::= 1'ttJttt .... souther" Thatlaltd. reports teleblng 1even percenL A KCOncl. elementary IChoot i1 tchtdul-failure in twv prMoue: tlecUonl lo .,.. tbe pulr lites contract with a ft•,DO tow ::::!"W:: 1; ~,....... , .. ~ Bangkok today l&td. Approval on the loca1 bonds alao ,_na . ed for the old' eounly dunlp att.e .IOU.th of prove an lncniM1 r1 the bond lntertst bid. ,.., .. ;:x_! • ,1M11ee it·•• .,...._ -...11 unc:h I _ _, '-· I -• "· ·~ ed ._.. ""-"" ,. Wtln1tt • The 1• caps M:U •1Ei LI ""'" cav-u111: way to '9.75 million in state aid to AUanta Avenue between Mqnolla and rites. Now the pk:turt bu clw'I anu The c:ontract 11 for1 dtvtlopment of the .. ~ ~ 11 ..._..,,. ....... ,,.,. I td in under the weight of 1 carp of rice build new llCboola. NewlAnd 1tiftt5. Tt should be midy for-Palmer aaid Ill upecta a Durry of con-Lake View, Sun Vie", Hopt Vie" and Olk MMllM ' ..,. .....,. H .. -tJ-~.,--oo~IL~---~-~-.,.-~~~-"'ll>e __ finl_._ldtool~---·_P_lln_w~on 1n.:._~110~n:udeo~ll~ln~F~ehc'.'.:".~~ory~,~1'1V~~·P~almer'."."'".'.._~':trttc:"'~lloo.~~-:--------::.:~Y~l•;w~·;·~llh~bor;:hood:'..~par:::_u.-=.~==~·~~~=-~-·~~~~"".""~ • !., J ·~I , __... ... _ ~ -____ ... ,._. ·~ ~· • , ft t 5 __ •• :ow; 1 a r' --• • .. -· >•''• t • _ ... -•r ___ --• OAlLY PILOT K Hassle. on Mea'do_wlark ~ ominates Co ttncil· Meet· By ALAN DllWN Of .. DllW l'IW Iliff AN A1lt TRAFFIC controUet would hive been hard preued to IOf't ool patlmll 1l lbe HUJ>linllon Beoch City Council meeliq Monday nilbl. 'Meadowlark maneuvers once qain domlna!M th& council meeting altoht.lah this might. have puzzled IOme 1lnce the airport issue wu not on the agenda. Nobody wu saying U1is occurrence was without pr~t. how· ·' . I ' P,... P ... 1 - RUNWAY. ~. Incident M mldoummot. 'lbe air.Pott committee and • homeoWMn '""""· Raidenla A&alnot Alq>ortlllllnll (flMHs-=-..,...,...t on tbe -. ,,.. . llrporl Nim! --by M>ert I. ~. prtl1denl al u.. HOME ~U _.,,_ U..l :m feet of the SOO.fnot erteMion at the Heil Avenue end of the runway be rendered temporarily unuaable and a blast fence and m.fOOt.liljh-tree IJne created at the end Of" the runwa.y, The RAAH group recommended ttillt the blast fence be built 220 feet out on the runway extension ''to decreue thl poaibllity of dangerous and low •P- proac~." 1 Reagan · Get8· Applause In Compton --UlS-ANGELES-hnm --Go• ....... - -.Ronlld-1\eagan ampallJl«l _ltd, predominantlyJ;~nlMY..J!'!"""_ Monday and was loudl y appJauded whtn tie told parents and teacher that he op- poses forced bu1ina: of 11tudenta. ' With tight security, Re1gan 1ddreued 1,000 youngsters in t he school courtyard and asked them not to listen to radic1ls who would ."tear down" society. Reagan later said the visit lo the Dickinson Elementary School in Compton was "a great inspiration lD riit." The school enrollment ill 80 percent Negro. -ever. - The staff will examine both recom· mendations and report back to the coun· cil Oct. 19, the day before the Planning Commission is to hear a request for a conditional exception permit for the ..lUID'li)' e1tension bl....lk.RQrt~ator John Turner. -----wtth-most-of-1he l'!maindf:r Mes:iet~ Americans. ThJs time the modern drama of homeowner versus pjlot wu tbt main feature of both the afternoon and eve- nln( aea.i.ONI of the council. Jt Jt.arted .u a matinee, eacaped <J~~t.._by,Mayor Donald Ship~. and fiftllh. id u"JheTalUli.,. Oi':t!i<. J)Ol!U . _ :miii<I ol'!O .gown· ed ciUzens. --- THE LEADING ROLE w11 taken by .Robert Dinpall, head of tht council-appointed airport aimmittee, previOUBJy knOwa for hll bit part.a under oral communlcaUOflll as president of the HOME Council. ' At the i :30 p.m. 1ess.ion of the council he failed to pl the council to deler action on a ceate and desist order agalnBI. use· ol the ··M way e1:tenlion at Meadowlark. But he succeeded in extracting a pr<>miae from Mayor Shipley to hear a report from his committee at 8:31> p.m., altbOuih the mayor warned that the aiuncll would not act on it. "Legislative bodies are not 'in the habit oI makinJ deciai'onJ on report.a pwed acroas the table," Shipley uid. · · "I HAVE PEOPLE jn fli1ht here from 'Sacramento lo giVe teaUmony," Dingwall countered, uplalning hill C!lmmiUet would meet at 7:30 p.m. to finalize rtCOmmendations and then present it.Ii report at 1:30 p.m. Councilman Norma Gibbs n~ that there was only one ~bllc hearing 9ei fDr 7:30 p.m. and that lhe council would probably dispense with it before 8::k> p.m. She WU right. When the councilmen returned from dinrrer they found the C1'1Uncil chambers almost full -except for the front row aeat.'I which Dingwall had marked "Reserved Huntington Beach Airport Committee.'' • TRI SEATS WERE aUll empty at 7:55 p.m. when the ct1uncll cleared il1 agenda, the first Ume ln months the council hid cleaned the slate ao ea.rly. With neith!r the councilmen nor the public wishing to 1ay anythi!!g further, the meetiing was receued and the city waited. · " - At 8:-45 p.m. ~ committee filed in, Mayor Shipley reminded Dingwall ol his earlier prom!M! lo keep the pre11entation down to 30 minutes and repeat- ed that the council would lake no action. 1----t·--OINGWA'.tt-LED the-cotincil-through-.-'IS-page-report. -A -homeowner~· group from t.ht Meadowlark: area was later given the floor and It too pawd , out a report. The evening ended 105 minutes later at 10:30 p.m. and, yes, action was Jndeed taken on several points in the airport ·committee report. I Everybody must have liked the show. They all stayed to the elld, and alt.hough there was no applause there were no jeers either. But don't worTy if yoo ml&sed Jt. A rerun of IOl't.a has already .. bee11 tentatively booked for the next council meeting, Oct. 19. Unruh Heck"le.d,_.K~s~d Before the council took action, Turne,. Qid he was willing to put up a blast fence and plant a tret line tn ease the dirt and noise (!roblem_ but objected to part of the exten!ion belng cloeed while the work is carried out. i'J'm definitely againlf. ' sacrificing anybody's safety by not using the runway there at present while the work is beln1 done ," he said. "I cannot agree to a com· promise of saftij." Aviation consultants brought in by the airport committee had told the council that they considered the extension in· creased safety at the airporL One, Dr. A. D. Kessler, a consultant tn the state Department of Aeronautics, said, in answer to a question by Coun· cilman Al Coen, that he did not believe that the extension was responsible for the number of r~t incidents in which wire..'! had been clipped. Dingwall said that in all the iocidenta the wires had been clipped by the planes' landing gear and experU agreed that if a wing tip had caught the wireS the plants would have cruhed. The airport debate came at the·evening M!ssion of the council after Dini;wt1ll had cooducted .A special meeting of the airport committee. Earlier at the .f ;~.m. 1ession i.he cbuncfJ V oita to·Tnforc~'Cease' and desist order against use of the runway extension. · Th.e order, which also bans use of two trailers at the airport, one of ·which is·us- ed for offices: for a flight schooJ, had been held in abeyance sirice the airport com· mitt.et was fonne<I at tile eod of August. Building Director Jack Cleveland said the order--wa.s lnued because ptrmibl had not been obtained for these f1cilitit1 and the l!JterWon.Jtt..added-bowever.~t.haL Turner had-since applied-for-a conditional exception and the Planning Commlsaion was lo hear the request Oct. 20. CJty .Attorney . .Don Bonfa .uid that. If I.he airport operator does not comply with the order, the city's recourie will be to In Valley College Talk • file a misdemeanor complaint in m\11'\icipal court. NORTIIRIDGE (UPI) -J"' Unruh was heckled by 1 email group at San Fernando Valley State College Monday but an overwhelming number of students applauded hl..1 speech and one coed kissed him. About. 10 percent hecklers taunted the Democratic gubernatorial can d I d ate throughout his hour address ·to 1.n estimated 2,00 ltudents in !tie middle of tht college · campus. During the tumultuous ~ ind question and answer aesslon, «tud'!ll! Mked the hecklers to quiet down to enable Unruh to conlinue. ~ Unruh walked from the campoa, blonde Karf!ll AJbtrU of Northrld1e planted .!. bi& k1ss on his cheek. Asked why she kined him, the music major replied , Because I think he'a out of sight." On one occasion. a student demanded to know wh,:t Unruh would do as ao~ernor to ctear up smog. which he Flabbies . Ignore pomted out hung heavy over the aille11t. "I'm going to pas11 legislation you r-----;,....." Unruh .mwled back ao<1 ''°~GUi.sses-in-f-oo:a abort of (irustung his reply. e \ Later another heckler stood up and )lelled. . Unruh'• response brought the only standing ovation he received during the campaign visit to the 22,@.student cam· pus. Unruh drew a round of boos when he delivered his tough speech on violent campus militants, whom he 11ald lhould be expelled forthwith , inc\udin1 student and faculty members. His hardline pMiUon brought auch responses, "yea, Spiro." DAILY PILOT OU.NG!: COAST l'U•LllHIMG COM,AM'I" R•bt rt N. WtH l'rHIClt!ll •M PltlWllW J t(\: R. Curley Viet ~ld111t .u.d ~II ~ ThDl'l ll KttYil ,., .... Tiio~•• A. M u1,~i1• Mt,,.tftl Etloor Alta Dlr\:i11 Wat Ortntt COunty hl'lw Albert W. ltltl "-ltt. Sdl!« "--·-17171 ''''" ••• ,,.,,. M1ili111 A.dli'rtui ,,0 , hJI 790, 926~1 OtW O""- L..9Uflt '*''" m ,._, •-c .. " M._.: nt-Wftl II)' Slf'tel .,....,.., IHOlt ttll w8't ... Mt leu~ "" Onl!MI&; -lfflrlll 1:1 C:-lllt ... , ·- ' • .., Apparenlly too many Huntington Beach residents prefer to be flabby . That'a the conclusion or head Yogini Madeline Nelson who a aya all lho&e jellybellies have been 8tayin.g away from her tlunti'l'lgton Beach YMCA Ynga classes in droves. Although the cla!!M!!! 11rl' already under way, Mrs. Nelson claims there are plenty of vacancies lert on her training mat. Her course. she explainll. will consist or breathing techniques. stretchinA", toning and firming exercls~ that help control weight.mind and emotions. Individual classe1 are held from 5 p.m. lo A:30 p.m. Monda ys and from 1 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. Thursdays. More information about them is available from t~ YMCA at 847-9622. Crash Suit Filed By Beach Wido w A Hunfut&lon 'Beach man'1 death in 111 Costa Meaa traffic accident has led ta the filing of a $1 million lawsuit In Ora.nge County Superiot Court on behalf of his widow and three children. Mrs. Pally Roth claUM that amount from Oreo Disposal C.O. of Costa Mua 11nd James Walker Young, the driver of the car Jn which her husband Ralph. w1111 a pasw\ger when it collided last Sept. 17 with a dump truck owned by Oreo. MN!. Roth ala~ the I.ruck, driven by ORCO employe ·Jesus ·Soto Santini, Htruck Younc'a 11mall forelgn car at the intenectJo11. nf. Vlctorl1 Street and Can· wm Drivt. Her !Ulbaad'a injuries pro- V andal11 Uproot Tree In (:osta Mesa Park Dingw11l "Pieaded with the council ln defer a dtel1i<1n to the evenin1 ~of th~ meeting, stating that his committee report would not be completed ttien. I A move by Councilman Jerry Ma~y t<o t11ble Council man Coen's m<>tion fM enforcement of the cease 11nd desist order f111ll'ld ind the council then passed Coeiti'J motion 5-1 with Councilman George MCCracken dlssenllni. Fountain Valle y Looks Into Land At Mil~__S_q.uar~ Fountain Valley has an eye t1n a municipal golf course f.l Mile Square. The item ls M tonight's city council agenda . C.Ouncilmen will be asked to authoriz.e the city 11taff to talk to Orange County officials about leasing 120 acres of land on the regional park site. C.Ouncilman Ron Shenkman propo.<ied I.he id ::!a. with the poMibility ttiat revenue from 11n 18-hole municipal golf course-- adjacent to the CWTent Mile Square course -would finance the entire recreation and parks progr11m of tht city. First hurdle in the project, however. is getting the county to lease the land. The entire Mile Square area ia planned as 1 regional park, but a shortage of funds might convince county officials to lease 1 11ection of it to the city. "We could build the gnlf course by s.e.11· Ing revenue bonds." Shenkman explained ''the need for more golr facilities Is nb- vious. but everything is just under dill· cuss.ion now.'' Another pa.r~ item, the shifting of S.'5,000 in surplus funds to a special p!lrk deve.lopment fund . will a.lso be considered at the 7:30 p.m. meeting. Ambulance Plea Denied by Coun cil A bid by a t.aruna Be1ch ambulance UTvic, tn ttperate in Huntinrton Beach ..,, denied by the CllJ Council Monday nigh I. Tiit Gold Ambulance Servic., 210 Beoch St.. Laiune. applied for 1 certificate nf n~ &nd necellity to lrwport palltnls •l the call of the Huntlnfton Beach police and lire dtpartmenfs. City Adn'linlstratot Doylt MUltr 1nd tht police department recorumended denial. poinUnc out that Se11'11 Ambullnce w11 alrtady carryin& out thls terVJce. City Altomty Don Bania uid lhll Ole· •wlieant-maY. ~uk -for-a -~bUc be&rlfll rono..nna dentaron!i cUillic1ie. DAILY ,ILOT ll1ff l'llfft Baron Booste r s Keeping spi rits bright for Fountain Valley High School athJetic teams this fall are these yell leaders. Jn front is PauJine· Khun. In the back row rfrom left) are Janet Seybert, Sharon Murphy, Heidi Hendy, Irene Benevidez and Jan Kato. Construction Costs Cut On Beach Civic Center Reagan was ~arrqly received. It was the first time he has campaigned al a school during his re-electlon race against Democrat Je!.1 Unruh . • Reigin-deleteO from his prepared l!ipeech to parent! and teachers several sentenw outlining his oppo11ition to forced busing of children to achieve racial balance in schools. But he was ask- ed about the -emotional ls.,ue ·during a post.-speech question and answer session. "I have to tell you," the Governor 11ald, ''I am a 10.,.gtime opponent of busing." He iiiaid atudents who are bused across town "can't really participate in the life o{ the school '' because it i!ii impractical for them to stay for after class activities, such as athletics. The aud ience interrupted him with a~ plause when he said, ''Our responsibility is to bring quality education ta ·the schools. Tf you're going tn bus anybody. bus the teachers to the schools. Reagan last month signed legislation The construction t'OSls for the new cnmplished without jeopardiiing the prohibiting the forc:ed bwiing of acboQI Huntington Beach civic center have been whole." children. cut from 'an estimated $9.9 million to $11.5 The council had ordered the staff last In his speech in the sch no I's million. multipurpose room, Re.agan said he I! The reduction was made by going to a month to restudy the civic center rosl.s ''interested" in the poSllible creation of a five-yea r phased building progritm on after Meyer's fir st presentation indicated "voucher system" for financing educ•· C1:1ostruct1on or the civic cen~r:J!!'.!llce ____!he bjll <;_au\d be }9.9 million lion . facility complex at Mansion and Main The items that Miller propnsf!d defer--. 11n<1er!Jiis •ptan, lht ifiilt woUld 1ptnd streets. ring with the cost reductions Included: •Is school mone.y. on direct subsidies to The city council accepted C 1 t y . . parents by prov1d1ng them with vouchers Administrator Doyle Mlllei''a plan Mon· landscaping and parki?g ($40.000), one which could be traded for their children's day night. half of a d~velopment wing ($481,000 l, the education 11t either public nr private tn· Miller'a recommendation was to limit third noor of the police building stitutions. The system would be financed the center to $8 . .S million and the central tS336,000I, and modifying the detention by a U!).iform statewide property tax. library to $3 million to meet the bondirig · facility ($79.:.00J. proposal of $11.S million. He 11aid that the deferred civic ~ntf!r items would not be built "until increased .re.v.eoutJs arail.ab!e.~· Architect Kur-t Meyer told the couneil that he agreed with the change, ex· plaining, ,;The deferments can be ac- Barbec ue Slated For Boys Club Plans are being kindled for this year's big annual pit barbecue of the Huntington Beach Boyl Club. lt ill sel for Oct. 11 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Lake P1'rk , and Club Director Pat Downey is expecting 2,000 persons to ~tlend. F'or a donation or 12 for adults and SI for chi ldren there will be a feast or shoulder clod beer prepared in e11rthen pits by master chefs Shorty Rider and Tom Artunian. Dinl'ler will be rounded out with bean.I!, 1;alad, polatOell And ;i.IJ the trimmings, served by director11 of the boys club. F'unds rai!led thruugh the bii.rbeuce will go to support club programS r11nglng from cooking classes to judo, according to Downey who pointed oul that all the food has been donated by A re A merchanL'I. More thAn 1.200 persons Joined the pit barbecue last year and Do"•ney said he is confident more than 2,000 will turn out this year. f 'rom Pagfl 1 NIXON ... refuse:<! to ~mment iur..iher, sayi11g only __ that he e~pected speculalion would co"" tinue, and returned to his office wilhout taking 11ny questions from newsmen. Bei;;ides proposing a cease·rlrie pegged In U.S. wllhdrawals by next .wmmer, the Viel Cong delegation chief. Mni. Nguyen Thi Binh, indicated the Commu nists were ready to negotiate wllh the present Saigon governmeonl except ror its top leadersh ip, inclurling President Nguyen Van Thieu and Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky, Go lden West Offer s Sign Language Class Instruction In manual communication \\'ith the deaf and hard of hearing will be av11ilable to the public at Golden West College, Huntington Beach, beginning tonight. Jnfonnal training will be held al "°°" Tue."'ay1 and Thur.sctayll in bus iness buildin g 208. There is no fee or registra- tion required. The instruction will be for tho!le who want to learn itign lan1tuage for the first time. and others -who have some lamiliitril.y with it and want to improve thei r skill, accorrlin}!: l.o official~. Charles Ormsby's Rites Conductoo , Funeral servic~ were -alnducted Mono_ day by the Huntington Beach Masonic Lodge rnr Charles Truman Ormsby, a lodge member and Joni ·time area re:si· dent. ~r. Ormsby, 53, dil!d ll1rt ThursdaJ while on 11ilusines..<1 trip In Midland, Tei. A resident of the Orange Coast 3rea for 46 years. he had been employed by Signal Oil Co. for 25 years. At the time of h.11t dealh he was serving as 1 produdion supervi.'°r. He leaves his wife. Beva , of the family home, 384 Magnolia St.; a daughter, Mrr. .John Lowry; 11 mother, Mrs. Martha Onnsby: a brother, Roy; a 1\st.e:r. Edna Peterson. and two grandchildren, all of Hun tington Beach. Gasoline Bomh Hits U.S. Si te in Mil an MILA!\'. Italy (AP) -A gaaoline fire bomb exploded in fmnt nr the U.S. Information Service in Milan e1rl y tnday, blackening the front door. Police said It was thrown from a passing car. It was the 12th explosion In Italy's chief Industrial center in less lhan twn months. Police blamed the 11tl11ck.<1 on 11n1trchiMs, It Ain't Necessarily So! The other day e customer we s comparing our pnces with tt no ther store. .We were informed that our price was bOc per square yarO high!! Questioning the customer, we discovered thet the other store was furnishing a cheap ure+hc!lne padding wh ich is 7Sc per 'quare yard cheaper then the 64 o?, sponge rubber pc!ldding that we were incfuding. Furthermore , in thi s case, we were comparing our install ation against an installation' worth far less. (Mc!lny stores co,,tract their lobor by the yord to loyers of unknown bodqround ond slill - we heve our ow" crews, tra ined a"d controlled by us, paid b'y the hour to Clo the best quolity instollotion pouib le .). So . , • their estim ate was not whet it appeared to Oe! In conclusio,,, when comparing prices. make sure you are c.omparing eg ~a l va lues. SANTA ANA, OU.Nil, TUmM, C.tt , , , ALDIN'S •ID HILL CA•'m & 1u,1•1n 11114 1,.11..,, '"''"'· c.i1f. IJt.1144 ' ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 166l l'launtla Ave. COST.t. 'MI SA 646-48l8 17 11 • • • • ' " . . ·' ,. T ... y'• Flul - ·- ~--lt'OL. 61, Jii0...239,_UecTioJ\IS,.30-PA&ES; __ • --~----'!RAN • • ' .N·ew Peace Plan R.ea:died • ,• ... ,::;. IL---~-Mak~P-~opoSBLin-W-,-A,~,-~ WABHIN~TON (UPI) --~ldeot. §" , wbo rilurned ~ )ll'elmlilbly 1be s..tel Union,.,. tile new 'Ilea" 1.'lbe 'lime l>ul ,.td they·""'1d be Nixon, ·tn hllh IJirib after bis ·cniellng w -y ntlhl 1nm· lils diplirmlllo approidl,~lsm aaid. . aludled Wtllllly. ,, EuropNll'_ tour, !_lllJOllllCed todl)' _be· -~ ·Ii llom~-The'~-'wlll diaclm hlit Nlsm aaid his IMOWICement )Ved--. ·;ruraddliu the nat!Oii 1t s p.m. wect-11• P • ve"' • llpeecti Willi -tliO cabinet at I p.m. •udif'wlli'"pr<pared only ifter·tt wu ~ ntlda1 and make a major new prop:>sal ~ Y~goslal'ia, bounded. une~.. W~ followed an hour later by a tbor:JaaChlY &0naiclered'" and covered all for ending !be Viejnam War. pectedtf liD the Whilll ff""' press room briefing !or Republkan and DemocraUc Jssueo. lnl'Glved In the Paris talb. He His radio and television broadCaat from late in the. ~· · CocicmaionaI leaders. Dr. Henry ~.A. r~ to eomment further; uyin1 only the White Hou.st, timed leS$ than a JJlOJlth "~Will ~ the ~ t;_O~Pl:_ehe~lve Kiss~r.,_, ~ D!Uooal aec~uti .....!!!•h!-~ 'that be elJ)ec~ ·1peculatlo!' would con- tietori lbe NOv. 3 CoiigreMionil eleetions, · statement ever made on this long and di£· adVi.ser, Will see newsmen lWice. • Onue, and~ to lib OlfJce Wlthouf follo·ws a ~rsonal report ftom the U.S. ficUlt ·war im'ct will cover all the major The President stres:i!d-that the new ta~g l!'ly~queslions from newsmen. negotiating team in Paris on the late!lt islues involved in the SOutheast Asia U.S. peace iniUati·:e was being developed Besides i>roposing a cease-fire pegged ~·plan for a settlement. area," he said, speaking without-notes. long be.fore the National Llberation Front to1U,.S,. witbdrawala by next summer,, I.he .. 'Jbere wli widespread speculation, "We do not consi<ler this to be offered Sept: 17 to halt attacks oo Viet Con1 dele1ation chief, Mn. Nguy~n whicb.Niup madt M·a~pt TUe.sda, to a propa,anda Pmnic~," he added. "We Am~rican troops if they , leave South Viet· ''I)li, Blnh:, ~atfd the Communists were discourage,.l.hat Ule Uruted States nugbt are not' Just saying it for the record." namby next June:)!). ready to ne10Uat:e with I.he present ptOposeiceae-ftrethroughoutSoutheast Before the speech Wednesday, U.S. Ambassador David K. E. ·Bruce, Saigob. •goveriunent except for its top Asia . am· a wilhdrawal of all foreign Secretary Of State William P. Rogers -will who flew from Paris to Ireland to report leadership, Including President Nguyen Voope: ·froin Vietnam. He refused all brief interested 1overnment.s1 including to Nixon on Sunday, termed the Com· Van .1bieu and Vice Presidt.n\. Nguyen f.OllUlie,at. · . cloae u.s ... allie. m. SoutbWt Asia and munist proposals "old wine in new bot· Cao Ky.'. . ~ .. . .. Cet&lf;al · Fire Planninf Beginning Reagan R af" Heildquarters City's · Hospital Race Busing; S.uhmittedl.IL..-_H--~~----N....---__,8,.....-.. ff____,Gets..A. --pplaiise . . . t OA>LY PILOT, .. _ ~ 1~~11:: ~!~~= . . 1r1ng ·e w -a --i!:d AN~~g~ ~:~~eel o.o:~mo: . Sa~pr Girls ' . . . . l --- -on1y 110,000 .,))ove·_.t estlma~; was · predonilnanUy Negro tlemen~. i<Jiool . • students· at Nevpprt Harbor Hlilrl!fboo.1-have-~lenfy to sm~· ;ibout submitted today for coostruction ot · , . . . Monday and was lotJdbr app)~uded when . ft>l~o~'!l~ ~he1: .Sailo~ ~oot.b1aij . ~ s wm o~er ~abe~ Iµgh,.u.st _... -· liiiidYI -rOleach Ital fire By L PETER KJlIEG ' Oll1uala Of Ille 1"'111datlon hav,a Wd ... told' ll and I hir ·lhal be op. Friday. ~ajmg lb~ SUlg~-are (~p-:fro'!' loll)· T'tl) .~l' 8lld , the pl •WJ>O .... 00 "' -'"" ~~ . that tile rroup does not plan .,y pubU.r , ......, . eac · . Marilyn-Nl~.Jr .. ·~\us ·~·E«iles-(middle)--and-(liottom-from I- ~ ~.:'y~ eo.-r~mf.,!::~p..u C:Zi . .!:'i~~-tioucttau~ o1 'uodL tor ~of, ~ 1;"=~=.~i~;.iiil'= .-:!tJ.fl,l!U+-8~,'.il)!gy,Ne'!'lind.Joily ~h'm'.· . . . ' ;-,-· 6f Coli&M.,.'wuCllllY 13,000lowerlhan direclor and otber ·steff m,..~ In Ibo ::e"' ~_..!11.:'.!i.'!;"t' t,Glil ,...._..lll_lbe'ldlclbt'~ . _ _• . . . • • _;;::·=~bltl ~mbm!ii*l-b~lllo fmmedlale .f~, -SebatorJl1111oil _ ,,...i --·, .. .....-,-L.~-"-~-radlcail ~ _ _ ~ . . -__, ' -r -E. ~ laW)'OI' lor-llie-leimdlltlon _Cluileil, =an._....,._"'""!-~"'"-'"~~-Qi. ~ . ~~~~~~y ~·:wlbe,_oa~;. aro~~-'f'l.r!"'e"°~:of.~=.::~;~;,;~: . .tLli. ~ ag~wJP!J a)rOf1 ~. 4· ••• ...... 1'~1,11111!!!'-"<!ull~ ~~{-~~~--·'°---. ~~·"'·' -~~. , ... ~.: '--~ ~ "'""~°"~· : .. ,. ... · ~l<ioal!\lllOl·•L•:!!!llJI!. ::.~tocantrftlull , .•iiii '"a\.,Winoplr1tl•i.fonie."The 'T'. n!; " . L'! • . _ .+. :.r~~T~ ·:;~~•=YliliWl,1~·. He eald Ihm llUtllt ·doutll .111a1 Ii II ~~Jl<,.Z1:"'~= 'I '0-""mgcnss .EillVlronmen .. . c · "~ ' ·-m ·the · Ht aid the --hopill 14 have.ill not on 1lli list. 'Amtt!CINI. _ . thla ~ bepn lewill· . p1aDl)ihg fully underway t;y Januiry, 1be current timetable calls for the Reagan was warmly received. It was bJda_for prestnlllion to the _city COWlcil 1971. openinC of Ille hoopital~which lllelf Will the f~sl time he has campaigned at a A Chicago-bound fiigtit carrlea Coeta 7 ~t stat~'.. county and mill!lC!paJ Monday night. On the foundaUon drawing board is a oost an e.stjmated fl5 million, aomet.ime school dafiilc his re-election raefl against Mesa Mayor Robert M. Wilson and a· governments of the Southern California -City Manager Harvey L Hurlburt aaid major m~ center that will include in 1974. · . . Demoanit'·Jess Unruh. five-point declaration on jet· noise and basin region immediately establish a Oda mominj tliat tlle bids are-not as far OOspilals, clinics, research laboratories Carpenter said .~ f.400 mtllion cost Reaian deleted .from his prep·arect aviation controls destined fbr federal governmental agency to complete an m.. out of line froin what had been an-and private medical offices in a complex figure attached initially to the entire speteh to parents and teachers several consideration today. tegrated ground and air tramportaton ticlPited 11 tfieftgur'es'lnigbt'indicate. on a 150-acre tract on MacArthur medical complex is no more than a.guess sentences · outlining his oJ>POSition to Mayor Wilson was scheduled to· meet In system for the county. He expl:atned that reviaed estimates Boulevard at the intersection of Universi.. as to "'.hat the final total cost Will tie. forced busing of children to achieve the Windy City with Ottier trieml>ers of a -That in consideration of future plans from. ~e offld: of Architect William P. fy Drive. "It would be. impouible to estimate rJcil'.l balanCe in sChools. But be was ask· Nation.ii ~ague of Cities tllvil'(}nrltental for Orange County Airport, tbat ad. Fi~er 10 d111 .ago had placed the a-po Carpenter disclosed that the foundation anytblnc that approlcbes an exact firw'e ed ~ the 'emotional issue· duting a quality committee to'develop resoluttona ditional in-depth research and study· i,. protimate cOst at $331,CMK>. liM Obtained a tw~year option on ltie at tJU tune," be said. Post~ch question and answer ses!lion. for subinission at IU national 'convenUon given to commercial and general avlation Hurlburt said the jun\p is due to pr~ larxl and would hope to knnally acquire He said that high on the list of staff "I have to tell you," the Governor said, In Atlanta. · to pin down precise economic and recrft.. blems in aoil' conditioni that were it before 1tarting coll.!truction on its first people to be hirtd by the fQUDdalion: will "I am a longtime opponent of busing." He · A'ctillg 'quickly, the . City Council tlonal benefits of aviation to the com- dilcovered after the budget "a I faCifity,.a ZfiG.bed community ho5pital. be a medical planning.expert. He' pointed said students.who are buaed acrtll8 town adopted a series of five recommendations munity. . prepared. . . He said there was no Sale price at· out that the organization ia very much "can't really participate in the life of the from the Costa Mesa Aviation Committee -That tl!ree .types of airport operations m· said the additional funds will come tamed to the Option that the figure aware of the need too for such an in-tchool" because it ii lmpradical for at th~ cl95e of Monday's meeting BO that be initiated in orange Cowity : the.major from revenues raised by ~· city o:cise would have to be ~blished J9intly by dividual wi?o would guide deveJop~ent of theqi to atay for after clasa activities~ be could take them albng. , _ . jetport in tsOJated _ateas, ttie geheral laXi.P.~ out also that~ ~eceasary • the fOUndation and ttie lm:toWner, tbe all medical requirements. 1uch u athletiai: . The mayor planned to present parts of airport near · business and industry and a projeet with lower-pnonty might Irvine Company, prior to exercising the Carpetner sakf he liu already started The audience in~pted him wi~h ~p-the committee'!! findings to the League of nearby practice field for instruction; -1!--necessarilY be_dropped..to...c.ox.eLtbe ad-option. fonnal-interviews-for-an-execulive-direc--plause-whtn-be-1a1d,''Our-respons!blhty Cities panerOnWtiiCh-lle is a member of--Tllafllie-PhSsellTafsciiiSReport be I ' ditlooaJ cost. . . . Carpenter pointed out that the master tor, and hinted that selection of the direc· is to bring quality education lb the the steering committee £or poSllible adop-considered a document clearly answering A to~ of µve buis. were recei~~ ~ plan of the City ol Irvine submitted by tor could come within the next few schools. U you're going to bus anybody, tion on a· national scale. with precise engineering data requested tbe prOJecl wllb. the highest ~ WU:, the lrVine Company designates the p~ weeks, or even days. bus the teachers to the scbool1. Some portions deal only w;lh Orange by th~ Orange County Board of Marine, Inc., of Newport Bea ' to perty for medical use .· He Aid that more than a director and a Re~~an last month !lign~ legislation County Airport and its future in terms of Superv1.sors,. . ~00:,· b'dden included the South Coast He indicated that because of this the secretary would probibly be hired ~hibiting tbe forced busing of school Southland commercial aviation. Wording of the f1naJ segment of the ! 1 "··•· M a'Ju 557. prict tag would be !IOmewhat lower lban right from the beginning, but did not aay chtidren. , Counci'l.man Wi'lllam L. St. Cla'•. a1.. ~ecomm-endatlons explicitly ~ !I ~ s • Construction Co. 0 .....,.,w. esa, ..._., ' ·t ould be :1 •1.. ..........,,......,, ere •· be di h t other -'• would •· filled ln ... •-ch In the 1 ch o o l s ... U" h •• t f ~•-d ··• R G W bb Inc: of Loi Alamitos I w u i.ue ., ... .,.... .,, w w exa y w a ......-.....::: iu.> ,...¥ •I i d Ir m voting on adoption of the ov:'ever, , . .,a u ... ll'r econ~m1c , an "f'U. • • e · ' aold for industrial es iinmedlately. multipurpose room, Reagan !laid he is a ne. 0 . social research be conducted tiefore $00,800. purpos • "interested" in the possible creation of a guidel~nes· prepared by the a ~ I a t I on supervisors adopt the Parson.s' plan •. . ..vouchtr system" for financllig educa· comrru~tee because he hadn t ~.~ a Driver Stabbed, R11na Into Cars Going for Aid Prosecuiio n Rests Case In Slocu m Murder T rial Uon .. chance to study them. . U~der this plan,' the state would spend "l'v~ had m~ fingers· b~1ed on ~ lt.1 echool money on difed ,subsidies :to last·m1n~~e things ~f.ore, ~e . said, parents by )X'Ovidlng them with vouchers emph~· t&.t hi.s· ~lu<!tanc~ wa~ not. which could be traded for their children's a crltcasrp of, the aViaUOn panel a.work. educaUon at either public or private fn.. Cou,ncilman Jae~ ~~mmett.,;a :membet' ltitutlons. 'nle system would be financed of th~ .committee, 181d it mac;'e .an ~1 by 1 uniform st.atewi<le property tu. haustrve, highly.technical ~udy o( the• · called Phase II of the Parsons Re1>9rt on· STUF.f ED STQKES ON·"'BlLl(·OF FA'RE ? ' . .. CLEVELAND (UPI) -Mayor Carl Stokes tok11 tbe American Dietetics Asso- ciatiOfl cooveollon here. Tuesday that the most popular ·menu ,in Wasliington the8I I An Anab>ijn gas lllllion att.ndani ,... mains in !lel'loua condition at Orange County Medical Center today following a biwi-e stabbing and series of collilions along Harbot Boulevard in Garden Grove late Friday. Through sign Janguage and note pass- ing, Emanuel Geier, 48, related the story to Garden Grove police events following givinC a ride to a_hjtchbiker on Harbor Blvd. at Finl street, 5anll Ana. Del 'Walter Lowery aaid Geier was driving. home along Harbor B!Vd. wben lbe bltchhllter tried ·lo roll btm. !Jejer refaled to glvt him bis -and .... rtabbod <ir pimctored In the lllnial. Aller Ibo rm fled, Geier· beaded toward Orup Quity Medical Center• · By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of w. DMlr PIJ•t ltlff Guiding a key wit{l(!ss again through the last days of Cynthia Slocum's short life, the prosecution today rested it! case against her surgeon rather, charged with the infant's murder-dismemberment. Orange County Superioi Court Judge Kenneth Thom)son dismiued Ille jury chose-n to weigh Dr. Wesley G. Slocum's guilt or innocence unW 10:15 a.m. Wed- nesday. ~ The cnce-promineut llll'ltOft'• ddeme -Willia Dean Htint Trial Wedne$ay Along the W!lY ,hll, c;ar collided with seven parked vehicles ud-finally· wu stopped alter a collbibn With an eighth near the lnle.-Josi of Blyporl 1nd The murder trial of Willia Dean Hunt, Chipman. of Newport Beach accused of' allbbinC An ambulance--wu called-to arry her buaband W-illla to death laat Dec. 14, Geier the llnal tin;,. quarters nf a mile to', 1111 been delayed until Wednesday. the boepital, and Pollet: placed 1 call to The trial-was !lcheduled to begiri Mon- th• coroner's office, believlnc G<ier.w11 diy but defense ittornty Sidney lrmu de~ltled to tbe. lnleNlve ca~ wit .,~ Utd 'up In a Jury trial In lll10tber lrom'Whftb"-anemoviiflale S'1Jwlay. -"'1rt . I Geier ia un1bt. to talk, Lowery eald, unm Mn. Hun~ 4l, the alxtb wile or the a-.~· -·--1 pipe which enableo him to breathe ia~ police allege pluiiged a removed Iron\ lils windpipe. ""We'rt-fool.iGng butcher lmlle Into her hullpand waiting !GI' bJm to Improve to (et a, u Ille cUmu of ·a quml' ll>tl wu :::."ptlon on the bl~,·~ .. -by her u.j-.Jd daaiJlilllr, • . -- attorney Michael Gerbosi, was to 1rgue a motion to dismin charges againlt his client before Judge Thompaon in Depart~ ment 11 lhls afternoon ... Chief Deputy District Attorney James Dog Show Slated In Fashion Isle G. Enright rested the case of the people More than 150 dogs are erpected for . versus Dr. Slocum at 11 :05 a.m., after a Fashion Island's bi-annual full·breed dog brief morning aession Wilb Mrs. Connie lhow, to be lield Saturday at 10 a.m. Gutierrez on the stand. AKC licensed dogs will compete for The attractive 29-eyar-old woman from Prizes in cllsaee: which include bnt Ensenada was employed as a maid In lbe match, bat ln groups, highest in obedi~ Slocuma' Costa Mesa home 1hort1y after ence aftd bfst of breed.· Cynthia was born Dec. S, 1954 until her Tbereiwill be two clalle9 in Junior hand .. abrupt dismissal early tbe foll...mr ,..,., Ung for bo7s ·lllld girls 1g .. ·t lo 12· and She Ind Mrs. Milian Slocum hlV<! both 13 to 11.· ' Orange Coonti aviation. · . . ' . Number one priority item (s. adoption by the U:S. · Department of Transportation of a national' aircraft noise leVel standard based on o t h e r criteria besides sound alone. , Ecological,. social and economic factors tn the effect of !J\Jch; aircraft nol!e J)rc>- blems are mentioned. Here are the other recommendations: . Orange· Freeway .' Mooting Sl~t'~ ., .· lestllied the blby wu beaten and ,...,. John ,Martin, of Muilnllale ·Kennel•• lngl,y de1plsed by her father. who llw1y1 San£i1Ana ,Will oUlCille. Jild(illl Will bi! · A meeli!ll ol · ewport>'~cli. treiled two other diughters ldorlqly. held ~'llie day·1t the'-nor111 eod Citizens -Advr.or,. CoonmJtlee , Oft' 111•· day& is: ·. , . "Applesauce .. Agnew, Mutton Chapa MIJchell. Fondue .Fulbright and Chicken Congress." The Mmcan mlid tesUfied abe found of the abotiPlni JDJll.. Orange Freeway will, tab .Pile< Wed- Cyntbla'I eye blaclteued 0n one """'1on ·nesdayal,7:!0P,m. In the Parb, Beach iNSmE T DAY and 1nother time 1aw Dr. Slocum kick be• T le d p ll llJld Re<re•li«> Dept. olllct on Bilbo& 1 0 • plastic lnf1nt clllir" causin1rt11e baby to· unney a 8 0 8 . Boulevard. LalDll bowling Is ·lfirivirra ·ln tumble acrou the tlOOI' like a foot.bad. 'DAl...n Carlson', ·chief -u-1...-dtrector ~-·""t .._...,_ .... i......-..... d '· J ' nuu.:: .. r-.,, the OranDt Coa&t 4rta. For a ~"'"'' qu~~ _, .. ,_ aR "' ·Aga'm' st·-l.bc'umbent -of the Sllte:P.ul)lic W°'kl "-':;'Will it.-. L ~-bl t ~... futr report, read Howard . w111: ac eye. , --• . . . tend the meeting to•dbcua proposalt for T_estifylng jn S~ thr!;JYtl1_ an iqteJ1.; the ___... perhjgbw Han~~·· TtJ>Ort in ,11,.e iporl.f~ preter. Mr•. Guti""°;10\<i.lhi'm1d< no• ' ·!.ONG BEAQll ·(AP) ~ l!eP John'Tun-p •• ,,.....'" ay. -. ,,ctjon, .Page 22. • pr«iae· ndf~ <J( 11\1 ci.IOi,tnvolvect, ai.: bey (0.C.UI }, INd1 incumbent Republi.· 111~ itate has prlJ!>O'Od c:omtnictinc Ille · itCle!~~bei'.... · ... can Stn._~reeMur~:by lJJper-fr~ay northerly from~ plll)ned , ~:!:::!"u. .: ::=~.-l! -Oerbosl, a rither ~.~ •~ centa:,r. -'-ta iJa their Beute-lace ac-PaclflC ~~~Jl'rteWIJ''1o a~on~ c,, .. .,... ,..,, . ...,...... ....., "" •--' ho fin 11 ... ::;:-! ..... _ SI d "'"" ~-Id U ~-.. -j b • Ute Carden ,Qrove Freeway. , c.,,.1c, 11 0t•11• c-rr 11 :;~tbe~~-ln= ~l\{~~1';,·&':~'VllUin.u:u 1 AroutefortMOrerige.Frttway,·Raute =W:,ltff ~: =~ ... ~ bl• 1otcdme"liijeU:liill ~ J . ™ .,OU ,d1<P!ed TumiiYJiioCli~ll(llhj4 .a~:'-'*" •dot>led l\ol'llLO!i 11111•::'-'~==.::r ._,; ~=--· 1•:: Cniil eumirwd W'~tbe'11bfriiMt •1'6 ss.r, wffll 11.3'. Urwfeddea . ; '. ' t ana:~. . ,: • ----: . •4-. r~-:.. .' .. }C .. :::.= ': lnddtnt. '" "'· j l .1'\o':r.ills,..e..·11.bu11181~J,lllO 'Thll 'stfte'W!~.thesoulherly. ,,....., " -'-"" "I dooi ~m~il)~~~ ~ ~,:. . ..;,i Jlif,,!i;:-·Jif" :._1!<;11\lll,~l~~;l'!lllk 4~al\¥ 4!o!!Cll>t, "''-' • .,. -.. see~ .,~ -. .. . · ;:saau·.,....1111-VV "TT I ·-· -. • ~ .. J • • • •, l ••. I l .~--~:-:: ~ •I t , '• ~ ~~ • I ---- z OllLY PILOT For Achievement s . ewport ~a,files ' . Top Fireman TOP FIREFIGHTER TAPPED Newport's C1pt. RHd c;,pt.J~M. a..dJw 1>e<n .•eiecttd Fireman cf the Year by the Newport Beach Firefighters Association. Newport Beach Fire Chief R. J. Briaco said, "Thi!J honor is bestowed annually on one member of the department based on his contributions and achievement.a: dur- ing the past year." Reed, 32, a native of California, bu Uv· eel In the Harbor orea 1inee 11139 Ind •t· leniled·µndbergb Ind McNalJy schoob. A srlduate of Tultln High School, he eerved four yeara with the U.S. Navy from 195& lo 1960. He joined the Newport Firt lltpsrt· ment-m J uly, 1961. In 1964 be wu pr~ moted 'to fire engineer and was made a captain in 1967. Reed ii presently aseigned as head- quarters captain at the Lido Isle Station. A resident of Newport Heights, he is a memQer cf the Newport Harbor Lutheran Church and the Newport Harbor YMCA. M fireman of the year, he has been honored by the Newport H a r b d r American Legion, post 291 and is slated to be feted by the Ezchange Club of Newport Harbor on Tbunday. Unruh Heck"led, Kused In Val"ley College Talk UNITED CAMPAIGNERS - Mrs. Carlton Smith of Corona del Mar (left ), head of the residential campaign for the Harbor Area United Fund's 197~ 71 fund-raising campaign, discusses $60,000 r esi- $412,000 Goal .- dential campaign goal \Vith her thiee division chair- men. From left are 1'.1rs. J ames Dodds of Newport Beach, Mrs. Robert Sorensen of Costa Mesa and Mrs. Stanley Jones of University Park-Turtle Rock. Harbor Fund Drive Set ; Given Pact . ' . . . With .NAsA The Ralph M. Pa;;;-aGnipanY, suttior of the Orange ~nty -AtipOrt deve.Jopment report, has been awarded a $380_,000 National AeronautiCs .&n4,)ipice Administration contract for engineering . ' y,·ork on the new space shuttle systeni, A spokesman for the Los Angeles-based engineering consult.ants said the pfoi,tct will involve NASA's attempt to develop ways to re-use missile 1lo9st.er rocket!. The spilce agency is ~ever: inOre cost-conscious and ~ ...,.Jdilg rofitdi development of a rellsable launch l)'lt.em and orbiting system in pli.ce of present systems like those µseq o" the A~o· program. ' Stanley -Goldhaber, vice presider:it -o{ the Parsons CompanJ'1 said Dasically ~: program IS studying rhethads' ·cf flying" the boosters b.ilck ahd landing them for fu ture blastoffs. The booster rockets are· now 8.lways Jost at sea. Goldhaber-said several aerospace-Jinns· are currently' making presentations to NASA which intends Jo let a contract far development of the program. The Parsons Campany, he said, has been assigned to evaluate these firms' re· quirements fetr ground facilities to 1up- port the program. "We will examine the requirements from each of the J:ontractors," he said, and analyze them as to their com- patibility with each ether. We will also analyze what facilities are already, available to NASA in the current in· ventory in terms cf what can be used and what additionaJ er modified facilities will be needed to meet the requirements of contractors." He said the wark will be performed in the: firm's Washington, D. C. office. With an all-time record gaal of $412,000 to shOOt at, U1e Harbor Area United Fund 1-'-----'-N.OllTRlUDGE (UPI) -JGs JIQ!llb_qd.Jac.ulty_memhm _______ kicks-off-its-1970.7-1-campaign-Wednesday was heckled by a srhall group at San His bardline position brought such with a reception at Philco-Ford Corpora· Among the key officials expected at the reception are Jack Curley . vice president an genefiiTnl'anager ar-thr DArL-Y PILOT, who is president of the fund this ~ar, and Robert Hield , general cam· paign chairman. whose job it will be to direct an estimated 1,500 men and wamen who will onnock!OgoHl!Ol!rs-thl'i>lfg11ounh.-n•a-feachet's Tr-liil ,, I Fernando Valley State Callege Monday resPonses, "yea, Spiro." tion's Aeronutronic Division . but an overwhelming number cf students During the tumultuous speech and Louis F. Heilig, Aeronutrooic vlce h:.lauded his speech and one coed kissed queslion and answer ~session, .students president and general manager, will Abouj 10 t heck! taunted the asked the hecklers : to quiet down to serve as host for about 150 key campaign ,. . ,~rcen . ers . enable Unruh to continue. officials at 5:30 p.m. Democtatic gubernatonal can d Id ate A. U h alked I ..... The i970.71 drive is the first for the throughout his hour address to an na nru w rom 1.111e Ca?!l.PtJ!, estimated 2,00 students in the-middle of blonde Ka!en ~ cf Northridge new Harbor Are.a charity~ an:anizaUon, -the cetllege-cimpus. _planted a bJ&_klss:_O? bi!_~ . which WJS fonn!!d earlier this year .with On ·one occasion a student demanded Asked why ahe killed him, the mtJlle tbs merger ol the Newport Beacb and to know what -unrUb would do i s mifor replied, Because I think he's out of Costa M~a United ~-· Members cf Hield's campaign cabinet and the Jeade·rs of participating member agencies of the United Fund also will be present. Among these people will be Mrs:. Carlton Smith of Corona de1 Mar, this year'a residential campaign cbainnan during the-month of October. · The residential divisioo has a goa! of $60,000. Slated Nov. 10 In addition to Newport Beach and Costa Mesa homes. workers will also be canvassing the ai:•as otTur!le 1\Qck .. ~ _Jn Morals Case University Park. · Mrs. Smith expressed optimism about Jury trial hi!!! been set for a Coron1 del the prospects far reaching her division's Mar High Scltool teacher and .former goaJ and.said giving th'e United Way is Costa Mesa City Cooncil .fandidate. JI'· th! best way.:. . -t_.e:sled two wee~J1go~or1:a:morals-cbarp-- The people 1n our area realize that too in a bowling alley men's room. · @:ov!rnor to--ciear uPsfuog, which he sight." pointed out hung heavy over the college. "I'm going to pats legitlation yoo •• .,'""1.Jnruh gro:wled back ,and stopped 6h0rt of fini&'hing his reply. A l.'Ospaoo Work Meeting~lated Sierra ClulJ )isks Stay many appeals are costly, and un· Alan J . Schwalbe, 38, a social science coordinat-ed spending means duplication· instructor,-has·-p1eaded innocent and is of effort," she said. due rot trial Netv. 10 in Harbor JudicTut ~ Within the • residential division, Mrs. District Court. Later another heckler stoad up and yelled;·~·--:""'"' -----:--~ ----..__r,_ Unruh's respon.!e brought the anly standing ovation he received during the ·campaign visit to the 22,000.student c·am· pus. Unruh drew a round of boos when he delivered hl.s tough speech on vialent campus militant&, whom he said shetuld be e1pelled forthwitll, Including student Irvine Acreage OK'd for, Lease Approximately 10 of 510 1 ere s designated 3s tht UC Irvine ''inclusion area" have been approved for lease to university-oriented religious organiza· tions. UC Regents approved designation of .the 10 acres located near to on~ampus mar ried student apartments at Verano Place, between California avenue and Adobe circle. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints is negotiat ing for 1.75 acres of the area. The rest will be set aside for future use by a University Interfaith Center and other religious organizations. Regents must approve each lease. The Interfaith Center has operated 1ince UC! opened In quarters In lrvlne Town Center, across Campus drive. , DAILY PILOT OflA.JrfGE COAST l'UIL15"1NG COM,AMY lt1Hrt N. w.,d J1clc It Cvrl1y Vitt l"rb!dent •lid G•~1r11 Mtf\lter Tho11111 1<,,.,a Edlfor 11iol!lt1 A. Mvrphin• M1111,ln; EdUIN" l. ,, • ., ICrtif f4twp11tl ~ C:!ly Edlfor ... .,... ... Ofllot 2111 w .. t f4ilt.e lo11Ttv1td Mtlll.,~ P.O. lox 1171. 9216J ~ -·~=.-' 1..-a.idlrm ..... A ....... M;M11c4 ........ 1'111$.tw:ll ....... " ..... ~:-lllrfll£lC...llteel t· A meeting called for Thursday at Foun· tain Valley · High School, supposedly to "bring the plight of u n em p Joy. e d aerospace workers to the attention of federal and state officials" bids well to become a full scale political debate. Invited to the 8 p.m. meeting as speakers by the Technological COm· munity Action Organi1.1Uon are Rep. Riclwd T. Hanna (D-Westminst.er), his opponent in the Nov. 3 general election Republican William Teague; 69th District Assemblyman K e n n et b .Cory (().. Anaheim) and 1oth District &sembly- man Robert Burke (R-Huntingt.on Beach). Also invited have been Rep. John Tun· ney {R-River:side) and his op)'.IOTlent for U.S. Senator, incumbent Republican Geo:rge Murphy. Program chairman Jack Armstrong says a feature cf the evening will be a recitation by the wife of an tmemployed space technician of the changes thal have taken place in her household since her husband has been out cf work. Work to Close Streets in CdM First Avenue between Carnation and Fernleaf avenues in Corona del Mar will be closed tet through tra.ffic until early ~mber, Newport Beach Public Works Director Joseph Devlin said today. He said the streets were cl06ed be. cause cf storm drain construction. The Babek Corp. of the City of Industry is working on the $116,282 project. Devlin said the contractor has provid· ed temporary access to properties wilh· in the construction area from the inter· section of Carnation and Femleaf Avenues. From P .. e 1 SLOCUM •.• rez, wbllSe racking sobs dramatized the proceeding Monday wblle Ille remlin<d cool and compc>Rd loday. "All I know is he did do it. .. 11No, I did not put it on,'' she continued 11 Gerbosi asked whether she hid fast. ened the strap on the infant chair after tucking Cynthia into it. The third chJ.ld of the couple vanished in early 198+ and Dr. Slocum has told authorities she was sent to live wit.h rel· atives in New York. Jncrenini-marital"dlseord and drinldng problem1 of Mrs. Slocum -beglnnlng soon af~r Cynthia disappeared -led him to perm1t foreclolute of. the famJty'a Mesa V e.rde..bome ur1)' -thla: )'ear. A mouldering freezer removed from lht garqe later reveaJtd the rem&iN of 1n Infant the IJl'Ol'Ollioft coatencb is C)'ntllla, crudely <Ill up auloply-Wblon, tben wrapped In butcher pepet. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The Sierra Club today asked for a. stay, so it ca~ take its case to the U. S. Supreme Court, of the most recent court decision in the coritroVersy aver Walt Disney Produc- tions plan to build a $35 miUWn ski resort in Mineral King Valley cf the Sierra., Last year the Sierra Club obl;ai~ed from a federal district court a prellminary in- junction halting the project. It was con· Former Resident Gets NASA Post A former Corona de! Mar resident has been named to a key post with the Na- tio'tlal Aeronau~s and Space Admini· stratian. Roy P. Jackson, former manager of marketing development for Philco-Ford 's Aeronutronic Division in Newport Beach, was appointed associate administrator cf the Office of Advanced Research and Technology for NASA. Jackson servied with Aeronutnmlc from 1958 to 19152 and since ba& been vice pres- ident and assistant general mi.nager cf Northrup Corpc:ration'1 aviation division. Rotary Sponsors Las Vegas Party Las Vegas y,·ill come to Newport Beach Saturday when the Newport· Irvine Rotary Club holds its Las Vegas party. al the Balboa Pavilion . The party is being held as the Rotary's annual fund raising~ event. Party chair· man Don Proul said the proceeds will be used on locaJ and internatianal service projects. He said an admission charge will cover dinner. dancing and ICrlpt to be used at the gambling tables. Door priies will include a trip for two to Aspen , Colo., and two'foWidtfip_ !!._ffits 10 -san Fran- cliCo Vii -JJf{;iII~ ProuI 1aid further l.nformatlon is ~vailable at 548-SSM. · Three Gunmen Escape With $75,000 J ewels SAN DIEGO (AP) -Three men held up the Neiman 'Jewelry store in suburban Fashion Valley Monday &rid estaped with jewelry eslimaled by the manager to be worth m.ooo, police said. l!'!llil!!l Schubac!i. Uie..manager ... id two or the robbers, wearing caps low over lheir foreheads and handkerchiefs over ~r m<M.Jlhs, ordered him and two other employes to a back room at cun· Point. tended that the project violated various federal regulations. Sept. 16 the U. S. Court of Appeals cleared the way for the project's construc- tion by reversing the lower court, holding that U. S. District Judge William T. Swei. gert abused hi! discretietn. The Sierra Club today asked the appef. late tribunal for a 30-day stay of the ef· rectlveness cf its decision to permit tne ffling with the Supreme Court oI a pen. tioo for a writ of certiorari. 1 Gasoline Bomb Hits U.S. Site in Milan MJLAN. Italy (AP) - A gasoline fire bomb explod!!d in front cf the U.S. Jnformatian Service in Milan early today, blackening the front door. Police said it was thrown from a passing car. It was the 12th explosion in Italy's chief industrial center in leSs than two months. Police: blamed the attacks on anarchists. James Dodd will direct ope"raticmS in A ,pretrial conference on the lewd con- Newport Beach, Mrs. Robert-Sorenson duct-chal'fe-is ·s~heduled Nov;-t; -in' the will· be in charge of Casta Mesa and Mrs. same court, while Scllwalbe, of 3121 Stanley Jones will direct efforts in the Pierce Ave., Costa Mesa, remaiM free on University Park-Turtle: Rock area. $315 bail. Area chairw."!n in Newport Beilcb are He was arrested Sept. 2.1 afler alleged-· the Mmes. Donald Adkinson; Fred ly proposilioning a plainclothes viCe _,of- Swensoo, James Tyler, Jack Curley, fice r and was listed as ael!~mployed" in · Ignacio Lazana, Hugo Schmidt, Barkam the local realty business. Garner, William Davenport and James Schwalbe, who was UMUccessful as 1 White. . Cly Counc~l write.in candidate during the Also, the Mmes. Gilbert Semple, 1968 election, has betn suspended by Robert Haward , Bartlett Brown, Kenneth Newport-Mesa Unified School District White, CLifford Springmeir, A. D. 5?perintendent William Cunningham pen· McKelllp, Gerald Van Hoven, Jeffrey ding the outcon:ie:- , Kincaid Snd Helen O'Brien and Merle Such suspensions are required by law Amundson. ' which orders police to immediately notifY Costa Mesa area chairmen are the local, . ~nty and state educational Mrries. JOseph Fogarty, Gordon cannon·, author1ties of such an arrest. Robert Lindquist . Earl Hubbs, William Nawack. James Schafer, Roger George. Robert Vi rcsik, Lawrence Englhart. Jack Sikes. Stephen Nortetrr;-Richard Ollver,- Richard Riley, Thomas Whitcomb, Jay Himmelhebcr, ·Theodore Foger and Frank Petitta. Area chairman in the Turtle Rock- University Park neighborhoods are the Mmes. David Roberson, La.mar Hill, Ronald Woodbury, M. W. Bouchey, Robert Fosberg, Robert Rechter i nd Paul Rimlinger. Vandal~ U pr!'ot Tre~ In Costa Mesa Park . Vandals uprooted a 12-foot silk noss1 tree at Costa Mesa's TeWinkle Park. Monday night and dragged it to a nearby wall, over which it was broken in half. · Park employes reported the incident at sno Arlington Drive to police after it WU discovered, listing a $105 Joss. It lin't Necessarily So! 1The other ClaY. a customer. was com~·ring our prices with another store. We were informed thet our price was 60c per square yar'd high!! Question ing the cus tomer, we discovered thtit the other store we s furn ishing e cheep ureth ene padding wh ich is 7Sc per squera yard cheaper than the 64 oz. sponge rubber padding that wa were including . Furthermore, in this c!'se, we were compari ng our inslanation egainst an insta llation wortli fa r less. (Many ,+ores contract their. laoor l:iy t~e yard lo layers of unknown l:iadground end sl;ll - WO ~eve our OW_n ~rows, trained MO controlled \:iy US, peid \:i~ > tho ~our to co t~e best ,quel ity installetion possible.j, So , , • t~olr estimate wes not what it eppeered to l:ie! In conclusion, when comF14ring prices, make sure you are comperir1g ·eau-al-velues. SANTA ANA, OUNll, TUSTIN, Clfll , , , ALDIN'S llD Hill CA•rm It DU.HllU ,.,, •• ,.,.. , ...... c.nf, ·I Jl-JJ44 ALDEN'S CARPETS-e=DRAPES _166-3 Placentia Ave. I COSTA MISA 646-4838 I • l . . ' ' . esa 'TotlQ'• Fl••I ; --ll>lTION ORAN&E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TuESOAY, OCTOBER '· ·ruo --· .. Mayor Wilson Ell ROute to Environment Meef A Cbicag .. boun<l flight carried Costa Mesa: Mayor Robert M .. Wilson and. a !ive:poinLdeclaratiQIL_OD_je.LnQ.ise_ and aviation controls destined for federal consideration today, Mayor Wilson was scQeduled to meet in ~ WJndy City with other memben of a National Lfague of Citi<s environmental qullit1 committee. to'deveJop reaotutiool for submission al ita national convention in AUanta. • AcUng quickly, the City Council adopted a stries of five recommendatkm from tht Cost4_ Mesa Aviation COmmittee ·at the close ol Monday's meeting eo that he-could talce-tbem aloog._ The mayor plaMed to present parts of the committee's findings to the Le.,... .or Cities .Panel on which be 11 ' member ·Of the steering committee !or poulbl" odop- tion orrrnational·scal • -=.- Some pOrt.iom deal 'only with Prange County Alrporl .ud Ju future in terms of Southland commercial aviaUon. • Cowlcilmln W'llllam L. St, Clair ob- 1talned from voting "' odopti<ln of the Number one priority Item ls adoptlon tegrated gr<lW>d and air lrtillpOl'llton system for. the cOunty. airport nw bullnm and lndultry one! a nearby practice field for inltructlon, , guide.llnes pr~ by the avlatlOn by lhe U.S. Department of committee because be hadn't bad a TranaportaUoo of a national alrtraft chance-to-study-thtm1 •. ------noiae-level-ltandard-bued an_oJ_h e r_ "I've bad my fiq:en burned on thtse criteria besideli sound alone. Jast·minute things belore, •• be aaid, Ecological, IOCial and economic factors et?iphasizing that his reluctance wu not tn th, effect of such aircraft noise pro- a critcism of the.aviation panel's work. · blerm. are menUooed. Conncilman"Jack H•mmttt, a member Hert are the ~recommendations: -~tin c:OnSl~ratloft of.tuture plans -!or ot1n1e couniy-Airpor), --i!>at-'-.<1---'- ditlonal Jn-depli) ,rfj!<a(Ch ond !(udy. be given to commercial and 1eneral avlaUon to pin.down ·precise.ecaDQmlc -and rtef'U·· t!_on.al ~ of aviation to the com-, -That the PbMe II· Poriom Report bo coasldered·r document-eleaily· --" with precise ..,.;neering data ftqualed by the. Oronge County --. ., SUpervlsoft. · • Wordinl of t6e final segment al till recommenda~ expliCitly a 1 k r, however, that further economic and 10Cial reaurcb be conducted before ltlpervilo,. odopl the Pll'IOlll pion. ol-the CommJttee, said it made an ex--That atate, county ind municipal bauslive, highly technical study of lhe M-governmenll of the Southern Calllomla called Phase 11 of the Parsons Report on basin rtJion immediately establish a Orqe County aviation.· 1overnmental agency to complete an in· munity. · -That three types of airport operations be initiated in Orange County: the inajor jetport iD ilolated areas, the ceneral New Peace Plan Readie:d Nixon to Make Proposal in Wednesday Address ' I . ' ' . . ' WASHINGTON (UPI) -President There was widespread speculation, late in the morning. close U.S. allies ill SOutbeut Asia and Nis:on, in high spirits after his grueling which Ni1on made no attempt Tuesda1 to "It will be the · mo.st c.ompreherlllve presUJnlbly. the Soviet Union, on the new~ European tour, announced tod1y he discourage, that the United State11 might statement ever made on ijlis long and dif. diplomatic appi'oach, Nixon said. will address the nation at 6 p.m. Wed· propose a cease-flre throughout Southeast ficull war Ind will cover all the maior , The President himself will discuu bis nesday and make a major new proposal Asia and a withdrawal of all foreign issues Involved in the Southea-t Asia speech with the cabinet at 5 p.m .. for ending the Vietnam War. troops from Vietnam. He refused all area," .he said, speaking without notes. Wedneaday,'followed an hour later by. a His radio and television broadcast from commeot. "We do not consider this to be briefing for Republican and Democratic th£Whtte House;1imed-}ess-tl\arra-month--The-P.resident~ wbo--retu?ned-to -•-P~aoda..gimmick;:,he...add.ed1~, ~"Wruto_Coo,,_.,..~eukmal leaders. Dr. Henry A. befe>re the Nov. 3 Congreaslonil elections, Washington Monday night fre>m bis are not iust saying it fot the record." Kissinger, hli nallonil ieCiJrllflffim· ..---4 follows a _personal report from the U.S. 12,000-mile trip to five nations. Including Before the speech Wednesday , adviser, will see newsmen twice. negotiating team in Paris on the latest Communist Yugoslavia, bounded unex· Secretary of State William P. Rogers will Tbe Presldent·.streued that the new Coi;:Qmunist plu for a ae.tUeQ:lm&. peetedly into the White House pres& room brief interested governm!'rllll, includlnl (See NIXON, Pap I) l!tz: Reagan Ra,~ Jury Dismissed . -RaceBusiug;.-P_xosecqtion Rest,s-'C_m~~ K~y. HospitaJ-:- Aides to & ~ DAILY Pll.OT _.. ~ Gatherinf •le.Eagles Estancia RlgnSCboo!Clieerleaoers ma!rel!O~bones-about backing their ·Eagles. Keeping .spirits bright for Estancia athletic teams this fa1i are (Counterclockwise from top) Sue Gordon, Joan Pren· tice, Donna Harbin, Sheryl Tornow, Becky Jurney and Yvette Gomez. Mesa Council Refuses Bid For World's Fabric Fair Threats of legal, action and threads of animosity were woven through colorful debate Monday, as thf: Costa Mesa Ci~y Co~il "ref ii~ to issue a license for the World's Fabric and Fashion Trade Fair. Organizer ~lchael Turin, ~ Country Club Drive, has filed claim for $1 .C million in damages as resulr of ptior discussion and handling ot bis business license application. Councilmen refused his claim Monday, along with his license. One .que.stlon . city officials _ want Manson Trial Delay Vetoed . LOS ANGELES (AP) -A defense mot.ion for a delay in the Sharon Tate murder tria1 until the defendants ·promise to behave in court was denied today. (See ad· illilooal story, page 7). &NWered ls who will be among e1hibitors using up to 180 corftmerclal display booths at the Orange Coonty Fairgrounds Nov, 5-1 and wbere·tbe"ir firms ari! head· quartered. "I don't trunk this ls any business of the city's," Turin replied. He also charged that Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce E I t: c u t i v e Manager Nick Ziener told at least one potential exhibitor not to do it during a phone conversation Turin overheard. "l did not say what he sakl t said and t have the tape here to prOve it," Zeiner Jater declared. _ Turin says comments by councilmen about him and his enterprise -a .repeat U eight others he bas held .at the !air£ounds -are d&,naain1 enough to bis repuLation to bring a cfvil lawsuit. 11You fed you ba9e been 1laodertdi"' osked City Attomey Roy June. "Very definitely," replied Turin. June ~explained that the law gives public officials immunity in most such case!, unJess the comments can be pro- ven to be malicJous. ''They are not to be munled conducUng city business by the threal of libel or ~ander octlon," June oald, •ddin« the legal precedent wu estabUahed yean Charles Mansoo and his three women co-defendants ,vere ejected Monday.after he ,took lfiying leap ot the Judie and they chanted alOud In deliaO<-' of IL~ to 1" tJ!eni. At the momlng -· with the def,.d1nu listening to proceedinp 1-q•:-. "If he wants to threaten, oke.y, let the question be settled In the courtl," said Councilman Jaclt Hammell-11 be moved to deny Turln'1 'J1c<11o<. 'llt.JoJ!!!!Rulter in detenllon rooma near the court, the judge aaid merely "Motion 4eniec1 .•• lett1 not waste any more~" io r8ponH to the del1y noquest. _ It ' Coundlman WJllilm L. St. Clair .. id II Is unfortunate Turin !eels plclted-on, (Si\T ABRIC;t'qe l) . ' Gets Appla~se .. In .S:loQum·-.Mui:~nli.:-Tr~.~ ! . LOS ANG!ILEI (UPI) --~ ~ Rooald 11tapn' eompoigned al ·• BJ AllTlllJI\ 11. Vnm;i. predominaotly Negro elementary tchool " • •11r ,.,.. ,..,, • -1 I . . Gutiorru oo Jlie otai>d, Tiie oltrlc:live IMyaN>ld •-!rim En5enada Was employed as 1 maid·Jn the Slocums' Costa Mesa home 1hortJy after Cynthii was born Dec. l , 1954 until bet abrupt <lismissal early the lollowinc year. Monday and was loudly applauded when Gulding a key wltness 11ain through · he told parents and teacher that be op. the last days of Cynthil Slocum's short poses forced busing of atudenta. life, the prosecution today rested its case w·th ti ht t Rea addi'eaaa..I against her surgeon father, charged with 1 g aecurl y, 1an ~ th e infant's murder-dismemberment. 1,000 younpters in the school courtyard Orange County Superior Court Judge She-and ·Mr1. Marian Slocum have both testUied the baby was beaten and 1eem- ingly despised by her fathtr, who alway1 treated two other day,pters ldorinlly. and asked them not to listen to radicals Kenneth 'Mlompson dismissed the jury who would "tear down" aociety. chosen to weigh Dr. Wesley G. Slocum's Reagan later. aald the visit to the guilt or innocence until 10:15 a.m. Wed· Dickinson Elementary School in Compton ne~:y~nce-prominent surgeon's defense was "a great Inspiration to me." The aUorney Michael Gerbosi, was to argue The Mexican mild teitifled ahe lound Cynthia's eye blackenea on One occasJon and andther time saw Dr. Slocum kid:'ber plastic lnlatit chair, causing the baby to tumble acros11 the noor liie-a footblll. school enrollment is 80 percent Negro, a motion to diamia charges against his with most of the remainder Mexican-client before Judie Thompson in Depart· Americans. Reagan was warmly received. It was the first time be bu camJ>!ilne<l: at a school during bis r~leclion race again!t Democrat Jess Unruh. -- Reagan deleted from his prepared speech to parents and teachers several sentences outlining his oppoalUon to forced busing of children to achieve racial balance in schools. But he was ask· ed about. the emotional Wue during. a post-speech question and, answer aession. "I have to tell you," the Governor aaid, "I am a longtime opponent of busing. ""He said students who att bused across town "can't really participate in the life of the acbool" becau.se it is impractical for them to stay for after class: activities, such as athletics. The audience interrupted him with ap. • plause when he said, ''Our responsibility is to bring quality _Jducation to the schools. 1£ you're going to bus anybody, bus the teachers to the 1cbools. Reagan tut month 1igned Jegillation prohibiting the forctd busing of 1chool children. In his speech in the school's multipurpose room, Reagan said he is "interested" in the possible ettation of a (See REAGAN, Pop I) ' War on ment 11 this afternoon. Chief Deputy District Attorney Jamei G. Enrighl rested the case of the people versu11 Dr. Slocum at 11:05 a.m., after a brief morning aession With Mrs. -coMie Orange· Freeway Meeting Slated A meeting of the Newport Beach Citizens Advisory Committee on the Orange Freeway will take place Wed· nesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Parks, Beach and Recreation Dept. office on Balboa Boulevard. Robert Carlsen, chief deputy directer of the St.ate PubUc Work! Dept., will at· tend the meeting to discuss proposals for the proposed superhighWay. The state has proposed constructing the 'freeway northerly froml the: planned Pacilic Coast Freeway io a juncli.on with the Garden Grove Freeway. A route for the Orange Freeway, Route 57, has been adopted north of that in- terchange. The state bas propoeed the southerly sec:lion follow a route 1eneraUy alon1 the Santa Ana River. Enright queftioned her on the date of the black eye. Testifying In Spanish tbroulh an Inter· preter, Ml'!I. Gutierrei aald Ifie made no precise note of the· dates iJlvoJve<I, ahe doe1 not remember them . · -6erbosl;-a-rather-tweedy,be1Mtd:;..at· torney who finally took over the Slocum case when the doctor succeeded in firlnt his longtime lawyer Paul Auiustine. Jr., cross examined her about the baby'• seat incident. "I don't remember," 11ld Mr1. Guiler- rez, whose racking sobs dramatlud the proceeding Monday while ahe remained cool and composed today. · "All I know is he did do it." "No, 1 did not put it on," she continued a11 Gerbosi asked whether &he Ud fut· ened the· strap on the inlanl chair alter tucking Cynthia Into it. , . , The third child of the couple vanished in early 1964 and 'Dr. Slocum his told authorities she was Knt to live with rtl· aUves in New York. lncrea11ing marital discord and drinking problems of Mr1. Slocum -beginning soon· after ~thia disappeared -led him to permit roreCIOIW't ottht family's Meaa Verde home early this year. A mouldering frttm' ~moved from the garage later revealed the remains of an in( ant the pl'OIOClltion .,.,,tendl ii Cynthia, crudely ctit up ·autOpsy·faahlon, then wrapped in butcher paper. Police Detailed Congress Told L(iwmen Special Targets <?f R~als W ASIIlNGTON (UPI) -Police have become 1 lpeelal laraet !or lenorilU ""1 anarchilta -who may be on their way to becoming better armed than the lawmen them*lves, a Senate subcommitlee WU told todoy. ' Holding alo(t tome powerful weapons, Deputy Attorney General Cborleo A. , 9'Brlen of C.Oli!omlo, lald they l\od been ~ized from "left wtr.i tetrorilt ~" -after belool llolen !rOlllr FI ON-lid camp Pendleton In hll home llllta. • "In tho 'eorly 'IOI, It wu Jlie right wJng r1dlc11J. "°" JJie tell wing iJ &h'IDI us trouble and min. more .to~ ~ told the Sir11to ~ Security' Suhcpmmllt..;1 opening helll'lril Into ' Wllat' CloinMll -Jcmn-o. i:e•lllld <D=MlllJ, called - ·' . ' war agalnat police." out.pnoed," be 1114. "We-hive octa of ,...lutlon in -O'Briell beld alo!l coalleco~P"'I C.OU!ornla todly," O'Brien uid . .,I don't -including IUbmocbtne 1"111 and lllnd thlnk there ia . any question thi.t the -nadesi -a1 colDmlttee meriibers Wuthermon ladloo of SllS (Sludenl> !or •· • • Democrotle SOclety) one! the Biid: 1tr1JHCI to ,.. lhrollP • thictel ot Pontllen .,. •-ed. Jn • coosplrocy. pholo{jropben. Tiie --·be 111d,.Jiod -'l'boit """ 'publlcolloal oro,deor proof. been lllolen from Ft. Ord ond Comp ' ''11 ii p1leoU1 clw !hot low o!flcm Pendleton· and were· "•lsod from ·1er~ hue become a special ta11et for the ter-win& ttrrorista groupt..11 rorlolo'lnd._ tn _ oocloty ... , O'Brien IUbmt~ coplel al p1mpbW1 the policeman today beors !be brunt ol he 111d .,.,. ciralllled by )'lllllb - the lolluru al the government." d"'°rlblng revolutlonuy ta~. "! un'I Olten mned With stolen mtlltary ,.. how the. rfllil o! frH qioecb ipenl w-,...,. block ud white nvoJu. !be rlrJ9I' !or dellillod Jmtructlon "' how tJonory""""' are'° heo•lly ormed !hot to inUe ond ·1ae onns," saJd ,O'Brlen In thi'otaW foceo "the CClfttinuiq sjrectre ol ur1Jna l<Cltlotlon 19 iftyoot ~ ,• llWIUOlrllrwtllcll'lhe'poUce 1n Htenll1-... ~ ....... II -~~j_l II L. llllEG . ~·---........... ~-· . 'llll , Ne~ , _Cominullity llalplloJ f-•Ucn._~,Jo --u uecuq'.! 41roctor one! othit it.Ir merNiOrs In tfi6; - ilnn\edlote Mure, iltate Sfiio~. Denn1' E. Corpenler, iowy<r r.. the !ollllditioll, said today. . . Clrpenter said the lomldotlon. il,,od1 bu enough funds to cover ~ltivt COits for ID initial period of tfiDe, at Jeut two year1. The money came from dOna.. Uons' fi-om private individuals, he ·l&ld. He aald the fo~atlon hopes to bite l1I planning fully underoay by JllllWJ: 1911. On the foundation drawing board ls a major medical center that will Include hospiOOs; cllnic11, rt11earch laboi'atorie.11 and private medical offices in a con\p!ez on a 150-acre tract on Ma<:Arthiit Boulevard at the intersection of Univen:l· ty.....Drive. ~-.-'~ Carpenter disclosed that the foundltion ha11 obtained a two.year option on the land and would hope" to formally acquire it before starting conllruction on lts firit facility, 1 JM.bed community hospital He said there was no sale price at. t.ached to the option, that the figure would have to be esloblisbed jolnt!Y · 111. (See HOSPITAL, Pop ZJ STUFFED STOKES ON Bl'LL OF FA.RE? " CLEVELAND (UPI) -Mayor Carl Stokes told the American Dietetics AJ90o ciatic>.9 conveption here Tuesday ~ ~ most populor meoo in WUhln(ton lbeoe doys Js , . . "Applesauce Agnew, Mutton Chops Miicbell, Foodue Fulbrilht .ud Cblckea Congreg... . Orpfe Weii4Jte~ ~ eloado . ""'I drlaloi mf '..... ' temperalum mind In Jlie u-llO'• botla .. Jlie -i ud IUrtbor lnlond will Pf'tV.11 on Wedneodly, with token ....,.hJne, -lnUIJic- tbroush II ~. INSmli '19aAY • LGum bmoUna ll 'thriarinO hi tht Oronoe-Cooat orta. ror .. c. full ,.,,.,.t. rtod H010G1d L. HaM11t• reporc i" tha lj)01'tl 1ection. Poot J:l. 1 ""-' _ .. ' .. __ ..,, ._ ' -.. .......... '' ...,.., ___ . ... 1 ....... ,, ....... ,..,, :· .. ~.. : -t_' ::,.... ~= __ .. "-C.... 11 --.. :::: ,....,. :JI -.. -" ..... --·-~--·,." .-.. ....... ~· ' n:T==--=;;_;-==------------·---- f DAI\. Y PILOT c • . Driver Runs Into Cars· . \ \ • ---- Parsons ; Co.~ ' . ' -.. Given=P~act ~ ~ ,.-~ With NASA ~ +---,Ait~im~1aa station..a.tte.ndanl-r~.,._..cThrough •ip JanluiiLilld..mte puJo: nfaini--ln ·eertou! condJUon at -Orange ini:.-Emanuel Geier, 41.-related the..stoey_ "IJ--~·'l!bt-a.Iph~M.-Pa'10lls--~1 - authot. of._the-Orange-CountyrAi~ _dt.Yelopment.repor.t.,_has._been.a 'fll'ded.a. $380,000 National Aeronautics aid Spacl Administration contract for enaineert.na· work on the new space shuttle system. 1 County Medical Center today following a to Garden Grove police event5 following biUfc:.e glabbing -"d series of collisions Riving a ride lo a hitchhiker on Harbor &loll& Harbor Boulevard in Garden Grove Blvd.. at Firgt street, Santa Ana. lat.t Frldtj'. Oet. Walter Lowery said Geier was Man Seized -After--:Fires ln'MesaBar 'rbett was a familiar face. on the bar· room· flOor Monday night, aft.u a cuatomer walked into a C.OSta Mesa tav. e:m police _,allege he bad tried to burn down for the third time in {our _how:_s. Raymond W. Dowdy, 52, of 132 W. Wilson St. was arrested .and booked on arson charges after being examined ~t Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital for poss1· ble injuries. driVihg home along Harbor B~vd. wti:en the hitchhiker tried to roll him. Geier refused to give him his money and was stabbed or punctured in the throat. After the rider fled, Geier headed toward Orange County Medical Center. rAlong-the-way.-his car..-collide<i_wilh __ seven parked vehicles and finally was stopped after a collision with an eighth near the intersection of Bayport and Chapman. IJt_.ambu!ance wu .called to carry Geler'the finil three quarters of a mile to the hospital, and police placed a call to the coroner's office, believing Geier was dead. Admitted to the intel1$ive care unit from-which he was removed late Sunday, Geier is unable to talk , Lowery said. until a pipe which enables him to breathe is removed from his windpipe. "We're waiting for him to improve to get a description on the hitchhiker ," Lowery aaid .. UNITED CAMPAIGNERS -Mrs. Carlton Smith of Corona del Mar (left), head 'of the residential campaign for the Harbor Area United Fund's 1970.. 71 fund·raising campaign, discusses .$60,000 resi- A spokesman for the Los Ange\e'-based engineering consultants sai~ th' _r.roject will involve NASA's atlempt 1o develop ways to re-use mi!sile booster rckkets. The space agency is growing eVer more' ,_ cost-consciot.tS and is . w~rking towar.ds development.of a reusable launch ~tem and orbiting system· in place of present -syste~-llke-~~used-on-tq"e--ApoUoo- dential campaign goal with her three division chair- men. From left are Mrs. James Dodds of Newport Beach. Mrs. Robert Sorensen of Costa Mesa and Mrs. Stanley Jones of University Park-Turtle Rock. program. ' · Staoley Gol.d~aQer,· vice President of the Parson! CompaDJ'1 s8id bulCally th~ program ill studying ' mtthoi:ls 'of fl ying the boosters-back-and----4andlng; them for future blastoffs. The• booster rOclr.e"Ls are now always lost at sea. Goldhaber said several aerospace firms are cutrently making presentations to NASA wbich_intends to let a contract for developme.nt of the -program. The Parsons Company, he said. has been assigned to evaluate these firms' re- quirements for ground facilities to _ sup- port the program. "We will examine the ret1uirements from each of the -contractors." he said, and analyze them as to , their com· patibility with each other. We will also "'Mw: informant was very upset and ap- prehended him by hitiing him twice in the head area," Officer Dennis Hossfeld wrote in his report of the incident. RayD,ood W. Kruetzkairip called police to The Oasis, 2101 Placentia Ave., sayi~g minor fires "bad erupted in the men s room at·& and 1:58, each time just after From Page 1 FABRIC ... $412,000 Goal analyze what facilities are already: available to NASA In the current in~ ventory in terms of what can be used and what additional or modified facilities will be needed to meet the requirements of contractors." Harbor Fund -Drive Set Dowdy.had left. · saying he has no justification. He .said .he figured ~ 6-J).m. trash can •ty0u can sue and be-darned," St. Clair blaze was an accident. but' changed hi! snapped. · mind after the 8:50 incident involving "Can I answer him'!" asked Turin. tow~s ignited against a bare w11ll and "No," responded Mayor Robert M. came dashing around the bar at 10:10 Wil!lon who called for the denial vote that With an all.time record goal o_f $412,000 Amo~g the key cfficials erpected a.t the p.m., when Oo~y again re~urned.. was unanimous. ~shoot a.t. the Harbor An;a United Fund reception are Jack Curley, vice president He said the work will be performed In the firm's Washington, O. C. office. From Page 1 Dowdy protested he hadn t ~ 1D the A group of associates accompanied ,k1~ks off its 1~70.71 .~paign Wednesday and general nlflnager of the DAILY f"----har--tll-nigbtcb--befora be.-w&lied.JntALthe_TurinOJ]d-he-conferred-outside-coun;il___:__wti 1t~-a-Areceptl1on~t -DR~-~F-ord C.Orpora":-PILOT; wliO is pres1 emorthe tuna thiJ flurry of pun es. chambers with one who questioned city on s. eronu ron1c 1vts1on. nd be Hi Id 1 v.:hose job it will be to direct an estimated 1,500 men and women who will be knqcking en doors throughout the area OllfinTtfirmonth-croc10oer. The residential division has. a goal of GUNS •• ,,_. __ _ of such material. 11 • I L \ Teacher's Tr ial S11£ted Nov. 10 ;;~ ... -t {n ·~~rau . Case _ -~trial ifat'ti«n 1eflorlCOiiii\iCtl Mar Higi\ ScbMl·· teacher and former C6!1.a-Me~y~it-candidate,---ar- • -resud-two We*i'"Qroa-a morals· charge in'I. boWling alley m.emsisoom: A!an-J. Schwalbe,.».:• Social science instruct.or, his pleaded innocent and is c:JQe. for trial Nov. 10 in Harbor Judicial ' • I . . f DW:rict C.ourt. ~ , 1... -1 , , • ·A -pretrial ~iillfeteif~;wt! the lewd con-· dqct 'Cbaf'kttls ~d ' Nov. 5 in the l!latne :COU\_t. while.'" Schwalbe, of 3121 Pterce~Ave.,· ~'-Mesa, nni.ains free on '315 b,U,. '"" He waj ~ Sept. 23 after alleged· ly PfOPOsi~i a plainclothes vice of; fioer and was listed as 1eU-employed in the loc~lty busineS!. , SchWi16e, who was unsuccessful I! a C.Cuncil write-in camidate during the tiect.ion, has been suspe.Dded by ewport-Mesa Unified School District ~perintendent William Cunningham pen- qi.na: the outcome. J!Such suspensions are required by law, which orders police lo immediately notify ~ llca.J, ~ount~ s,nCI state eduCational a11tboritiu of such an arrest. - Miss ile Launched ' ~OSCOW (AP) -The .Soviet govern· merit launched a high-altitude rock.et S.turday with an as t roph ysica l observatory for closer observation of the sun. Tass reported today. The rocket rjached a height of nearly 310 miles. the Soviet news agency said. After com· pleting its program cf research. Tass continued, the tontainer with the observatcry was parachuted to earth. DAILY PILOT ' OIWlff CDAIT PUIUIM.,._ COM.PAW loliert H. Wied Pr1tlll111t 11111 l"Wlltltlr J1ck l . Cutl•v \lta .,.~ .... 0---1 MIMell' n.,., •• k11vil t Editor , t lk"''' A. Mvr1>M11e f M-1-IEdllor ) c.... .. , .. Office • )JO WMt 111 Str"t )'•ITl'flf Ml~ P.O. In llU, '262' ' --11 .................... ......,. t , L-.9 ... , ..... ,. ... licensing l)t-ocedur~ during the council's Lo.uis F. Heilig, Aeronutronic vi~e ye:U-, a . Ro rt e , genera cam· oral Communication period. president and general manager. will pa1gn chairman. . $0-0,000. ' Although no specific legislation is before the subcommittee, EasUand laid "we need to attempt to devi.se a legislative program which will lllpport the effort_ of sta~ and local govemm~~ to stop Uie killing and wounding of police officers.'' Lawrence Odenz, 2983 Java Rd., pro-serve as hos! for about 150 key campaign Membeq o1 Hield's ~a.mp~ign cabinet ceeded to accuse councilmen of officials at 5:30 ~.m.. . and t~ leaders of .Part1c1patlng me~ber • In addition to Newport Beach and Costa Mesa ·homes, workers will also be canvassing the areas of Turtle Rock and UniVeTsity Park. discrimination against Ttlfin, who is also The 1970-71 drive is ~he ftrst ~or .the agencies of the United Fund also will be a Mesa Verde area resident. • new Harbor Area charity organ1z.at1on~ preserrt. . "I don't know if you're an associate, his which was fOnned earlier this y~ with Among these people will be Mr~. ·attorney, or with the fabric fair ," said ... the merger of the: Newport Beach and Carlton Smith ?f Corona .del Mar:. tlh11 Mf'.S. Smith expressed optimism about the pn:>6J>eCts "fer reaching her division's goal and said giving the United Way is the best way. Eastland, in opening the hearings. said nearly two dozen officers had ~ killed in assaults -and bombings across the na· tionJn---:the last eight mon:UlS. Ani:I O~Bfien said ~81 law enforcement officers had been murdered in California since 1960, !S _Qf tl)~~:1f:l1!s l'!!ar. -, -·---,.. __ •. 'The reswt in Califorrua, said O'Brien, was ·that police are "more wary and more deter!nined" irntthus play irito'the hands of terrorists "°who are tryjng to slimUlate over-reaction." Mayor Wilson, who sternly reminded him Cost.a Mesa United Funds. year's residential campaign chairman the Issue was considered closal and cnuld not be--=-brought..up-agaffi.-- Odenz did not explain, but he is a men's s • Cl b' A k Sta- wear store cwner recently convicted on ier ra u s s y chaiioi .!J!volviila .• $11,IJO!l )h•'![al)E.e. _ . _ .... ·-· • • . . • • . "The people in our-area realize that-too manY appea:is are eost1y, arnr un.. coordinated spending means duplication of effor1,0 -she said . policy taken out on the life of one of hiJ emp)QY.tf w_ho_i~ Qying of _cancer. . Turin, himself, went before the council again to say he wanted to change his re- quest from an itinerant business license to a petmMerit license .:!lowing hlm to do business on the fairgrounds. "I'm going to rule you out of order," the mayor announced. And he did. From Page 1 NIXON .•. U.S. peace initiative was being develcped long befcre the National Liberation Frcnt cffered Sept. 17 to halt attacks on American troops if they leave South Viet· nam by next June 30. U.S. Ambassador David K. E. Bruce. who_JJew from Paris to Ireland to report to Nixon on Sui1d&y:-TermeCI the Com· munlst-propo sah1-"old-wine in11ew-bot• ties" at the time but said they would be' studied carefully. Nixon said his announcement Wed· nesday was "prepared cnly after' it was thoroughly consid_ered'' and covered all issues involved in the Paris talks. He refused to comment further, saying only that he expected speculation would C<ln· tinue, and returned to his office without taking any questions from newsmen. Besides proposing a cease-fire pegged to U.S. withdrawals by next summer. the Viet Cong delegation chief, Mrs. Nguyen Thi Binh, indicated the Communists were ready to negotiate with the present Saigon government except for iU lop Jeadef$jp, including President Nguyen Van Thieu and Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky. From Page 1 RE AGAN • • • "voucher system'' for financing educa- tion. Under this plan. lhe state would spend Its school money on direct subsidies to parents by providing them with vouchers ... :hich could be traded for their children's education .at either public or private in· stitutions. The system would be financed by a uniform statewide property tax. Wltbln' "Ufe · r6ktenttal division;· Mr11 . In Disney Court ,Rule Jam es Dodd will "dlred operations in Newpori Beach, Mrs. Robert Sorenson will be in-_d'largt « Costa Mesa and Mr!I: · Stan!ey Jones will <tirect efforts in the UniversitY. Park-TurUe Rock area. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The Sierra Club today asked for a stay, so it can t.ake its case to the U. S. Supreme Court, of the most recent court deeisiOn in the controversy over Walt Disney Produc- tions plan to build a $35 million ~ki resort in Mineral King Valley of the · Sierra. Last year the Sierra Club ob~ai~ed fr~m a federal district court a preliminary in- junction halting the project. It was con· From Page 1 HOSPITAL ... tended that the project violated various federal regulalions. Sept. 16 the U. S. Court of Appeal~ cleared the way for the project's C<lnstruc- lion by reversing the lower court, holding that U. S. District Judge William T. Swei- gert abused his discretion. The Sierra Club tOOay asked the appeJ. late tribunal for a 30-day stay of the ef· tectlveness of its decision to permit tne nling with the Supreme Court of a pen. t.ion for a writ of certiorari. Area ch8innen in Newport Beach are the Mmes. Donald · Adkinson, Fred Swenson, James Tyler. Jack CU:rley, Ignacio Lozano, Hugo 'Schmidt, Barkam Gamer, William Davenport and James White. Also, the Mmes. Gilbert Semple, Robert Howard, Bartlett Brown, Kenneth White, .Clifford Springmeir, A. 0. McKelllp, Gerald Van Hoven, Jeffrey Kincaid and, Helen O'Brien and Merle Amundson. · Costa Mesa area chairmen are the 1'1mes. Joseph Fogarty, Gordon Cannon, GasollD. e Bomb H1'ts Robert Lindquist. Earl Hubbs, William Nowack., James Schafer. Roger George, The 'House In ternal Securify Com· mittee, meantime, was told that Black Panthers are succeeding in alienatin~ youlhs and creatj,ng a climate conducive to revolution. Howe¥er, the committee staff rej>ort said. that while the Panthers avowedly seek· violent overthrow of the U.S. government, they have largely failed even to gain sympathy for their revolu· tionary cause within black communities. Robert Horner, chief committee in- vestigator, submitted eJCerpts from Pie Panthers' own' pub1ieations that he said spelled out their goals for stirring ·up violenct they hoped would lesd to revolu· tion. Robert Vircsik, Lawrence Englhart. Jack vandals u root Tree the foundation and the llndowner, ~ U.S .. -Site Jn ~an_ Sik~, Ste_~hen Norton. !l!c!J,ard Oliver, Irvine Company, prior to exercising tne Richard Riley, Thomas Whi comb, Jay Jn Costa Mesa Park option. ~flLAN, Italy (AP) - A gasoline fire Himmelheber, Theodore Foger and ed t th t th t bomb exploded in front of the U.S. Frank Petitta. Vandals uprooted a 12-foot silk flos."J Carpenter point ou a e mas er •~-1 Area cha•'rman i'n the Turtle Rock· r._ M b Information Service in Milan early wuay, tree at ~ta esa's TeWink.le Park plan of the City of Irvine submitted Y blackening the front door. Police said it University Park neighborhoods are the Monday night and dragged it to a nearby the Irvine Company designat-es the pro-was thrown from a passing car. Mmes. David Roberson, Lamar Hilt, wall, over which it was broken in half. perty for medical use. Jt was the 12th explosion in Italy's chief Ronald Woodbury. M.· W. Bouchey. Park employes reporled the incident at He indicated that because of this the Industrial center in Jes! than two months. Robert F0sberg, Robert Rechter and 970 Arlington Drive to police after it was price tag wou Id be somewhat lower th an _:,P~ol;;;i';;';b;;;la;;m;;;e;;d;;(~he~al;;ta;;c;k;;s ;;on;;;;an;;a;;r;;ch;;is;;l;;'·;;;;;;P;;a;;u;;l;;R;;i;;m;;li;n~ge;;r;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;di;;sco;;;;;ve;;r;;ed:,:l:is:li:ng=a:l:l05=1o:':'';;;;::;::;:I it would be if the property were to be 1 sold for Industrial purposes. Officials of the foundation have said thal t.he group does not plan any public solicitation cf funds for construction of any portion of the Irvine Medical Center, the' Newport Community Hospital in· eluded. Carpenter said representatives of the group already have ~nlacted several major foundations seeking funds . He said the Irvine Foundation, itself, has not yel been asked to contribute. He said there is little doubl that it Is not on the list. The current timetable calls for the cpening of the hospital, which ilseU ~'ill cost an estimaled $15 mil lion, sometime In~ 1974. It Ain't Necessarily So! ;The other aey ~nother store. a cuslomer: was c.orn~in9 ou r ~rites witn We were informed that our price was 60C per square yarCJ high!! Questioning the customer, we discovered that the other store was furni shing e cheep urethane padd ing which is 7Sc per square yerd cheoper th en the 64 oz. sponge rubber· pedd;ng thet we were includ ing. 1& l lM ll., ;.-:um._,......_. . c rt ._ ... _.c.im ... -"•--.=----..-.~=-----Dona d Stevens ' Carpenter iia id the $400 million cost figure attached initially to the entire medical complex is no more than a guess -u.to what the.Jinal total cost will.be. Furthermore, in this case, we were comparing our insfallation ago inst on in stallation worth fer less. (Many stores contract the ir lebor by the yerd to loyers of unknown beckground end sk;ll - we l-ieve our own crews, troineCI end contro lled Dy u·s, paid b°Y, H\1 liour to Clo tlie.oest quelity iristelletion poS6ible.!, • • I •• L. Funeral Slated Funeral services will be held Wed· neosday, 2 p.m. at the Seafaring Masonic Temple for Donald Stevens, lodge member and Jona time Costa Mesa resi· dent. Mr. Stevens, 52, died In his home. 161 E. 22nd St. this weekend. Ke had llved In Cost• Mesa since 1925. For the past 18 years, h•-wa1 1 self· employed contractor In the Harbor are1 . In addlllon to hi& Masonic member1htp, he was a charter member and past presi· dent Of the Orange CGa•t Lions Club. At the Ume of his death, be •11 wvina as 1netary of that Organiution. "lt would be Impossible to estimate anything that approaches an exact figure at this lime." he said . He said that high on the list of staff people to be hired by the foundation will be a medical planniJlg_eipert. He pointed out thal the organization Is very much aware of the need too for such an in· dividual who would_ guide developmen~ of all medical requirements. Carpetner said he has already started formal' interviews for e.n executive direc- tor, and hintea \hit selection of the arrec· tor could come within the next few weeks, or even days . He 1aid that more than.a director and a secretary would probably ~ hired right from the bealnnlng, but did not 11ay e:ractly what other post.I would be filled immfdl1tely. \' • So ••• their estim~t· wes not whe! it eppeere<I lo oe! 'n conclusion , when comparing comparing eoual values. prices, make svre you are --UNT.t. ANA) OU.N•I. TUSTIN, Coll ••• ALDIN'S llD .. ILL CA•rm I DlAPlllft 1117• I~;::,~:' .. C•flf, . ........ ALDEN'S CARPE.TS e DRAPES 1663 l'lactntlo Ave. COSTA MISA 646-4131 I I 7 I -i I ~ 7 I I -. I ·. ·r Satldle1±~a · .k \ YOt:. 61, NO. 239, 2-sECTIOl'l>.l!rP-A"$E«-. -----\ -. -.. N&E-OE>UNTY;-<:AIJFORNIA --TUE$DAY, OCTOBER, 6, 1970' JEN CENTS -. Climax Nears in San Clemente Power Hearing By JORN VALTERZA Of .. Deltr "*' ..... The envlronmentalcoosequenw olt~ new nuclear reactors at San Clemente - an issue launched at the start ol Public UtiliUes Commission hearings Monday - are expected to reach a ell.mas: in San Clemente today with testimony of a key spokesman for the two utility firmB in- volved. David J. Fogarty, manager of meclianlcal engln<ering for South<rh CRITICIZES IRVINE ·PLAN ·UG ·R"°"' Simaot - ~S.lafH1clng'·. S¢ory ca!ifarnla Edlaon Copipony, was ochedul- ed to appear before PUC examiner Arch Ml.In In ·today's .......,..tirli• presumably to refute reputed criticism launched Monday by opponents to the placement of the muttbnilllon-dollar P-!lwg plants two miles San Clemente. Alter introductory remarks from an Edison Senior Vice President at the ~n­ ing of the hearings Monday, Main heard a steady str.eam of opP!)Denta to the ap- '""" DEFENDSilRVIN E PLAN ·lr.vf,...C:ornpony!1 Watson ·Norton Simon, Uniyersity - In Hot Debate Over City 'y GEQRGE LEIDA.L the _!1ajv~ity 4dministration. • _ • 01 t11t o.u., l'llllf 111ff Discounting Simon'.s charge that in- ----UCllegent NilftOO SilfiOlftielieve-s-hl! Is-corporation-was ·being-sought-for-tax " ·1 · r hi h rly hould reasons, Watson said, "The 1969 Tax ra sing ~ues ions w c _ProP: s reform act doesn't even apply to us." He be ~sked about th~ relab~hip_ between cited the threat of piecemeal annexation Irvine Compaqy and the university,. attempts bY cities surrounding Irvine as He told the DAILY PILOT following a cause for rushing 53,000 acres to ll>s Angeles pres! conference Monday he cityhood doesn't expect ~iminal ~rosecuti.on"s ~ ''We d~n't care if there are one. two or result from his ~~e ?f the cbang -ten cities established on Irvine land -or Ing nature of that re~ationshi,p. . . for that matter none. However, he promised "the public wdl "But, we've made our plans public for be shocked'' when the full atory is told at the ne:rt 30 years and feel we have a the Oct. 15 and 16 Regents' meeting. responsibility to follow it through/' At mue is what he terms "unjust Watson said. enrichment" of lrvine which Simon Simon alleged that the Irvine Company estimate5 at $450 million by lncorporaUon had recently placed 50,000 aett1 of land of a 5.1,000.acre city rather than the into a tax4favored agricultural preserve 10,000.acre city jJiscussed 10 years ago. "'and then I find they're going to build a Simon asserts the Irvine Compeny is city on it." violating an agreement with the Universi-Watson, in a ltt.Jer press conferenet, · ty dated July ~. 1960 by planning a noted the agricultural preserve status re- larger cit)' around the 1,000.acre, UC quires that the owner promise not to Irvine.camp~. develop it for 10 years. Raymond watsOn, Irvine execuLive vice He contended that portions of that land president, said the agreement with the are within the borders of tbe prop()led university was based on preliminary 53,<m acre city of Irvine. planning and that any changes ln plan-Because the planning Is necessarily Ding had been done with the knowledge of Jong range, those portions .can not be · ' developed for at least JO years and would be shifted to a h1gher ta:r rate. B k R bb While Simon characterized an Orange (In . . 0 eTS County Planning Commission stall study of the lr>ine plan as finding fault with E b S the pr:oposed new city, Watson described . scape y ea relati.SO. between his company • n d county Planners as corcftal "allhough ALEXANDRIA BAY, N.Y. (AP) they, have brought• few crtUclllllli to our -Two masked robbers he.Id up a •ttention." ' &nit ll>d•Y -'"'4 · escaped In" -~-the P*ibiii_ty that the-ne" motorboat with 1n ea t J m ate d city will create alums 1n suhounding i100,ooo. . cities, Watson said tills .is "aln)'I a con- '.l'he Marine Midland 'l'ru.t Co. ol c:ern .when a new city fotms." Northern New York branch bank b On the wa terfront ·of the St. Noting that planning , m In Im l 1 e I · development of "future aluma" be con-LtWftnce: River. ceded that there is a tendency for people A tourist in this resort village to move into a new arta from an older telephoned police after seeing lhe ~=·p in to the boat with their on~ inCiusion arta concept b key to "The lhotguns . .....,._, my suspl· Simon's crtUcism of both the Irvine C<>m· clona," the tourist, Edward Miller pany and the. UC Regenu. ol Addi.ton, told reporters. .a The inclw;ion area embncei 510 acres Bank olficial& sajd no one "'"'::o±::..:;of univenity-owned Janda IW'l'OUbd.in1 the hurt thou1h ,the •gunmen Jocked-,000 acre--cunpus, Simon aald il waa several . women and M a n a J e r supposed to provide spice for unlvtnlty- l>onald Munro in a record vault related activitin, lel'Vlces and low-COit alter keeping a tellti", Mrs. lvan faculty and student housing, and be -strcaah, •t"lUnpoinl;-biomeo 1n111a11 r.r riot 11a.,,,. completed Cloe IRYINE, P ... I) c plicaUon for slate permits to bUlld the twin. ructon on &1 a<;m lmmedialely downcoul ot-the-exi!ling one· at San- Onoftt. Several San . c&emeote residents ~ posing vartoua upecta of the permits conducted a mlnldemoostraUon of torts oiitilaeCicy counciH:hainbin-belCft tlie opening of the hearings. The demonstrators, nwnbtr1ng les:!! than a dozen, bore-placards drawn iD cnyoa prolelllnr Ibo proposed lhoreline -ol !lie alto. ----~-the-late< tattmoay by the foes -move the rue. ton lllland, downaiut and underJrwnd, One key. point the -itioo railed Mooclay .... the aaated denlll of the af. ieCled san-OiiOfie-o..ch iln Camp PIOdlelon to the public for future recru· tional --Addinl • toudl of Irony to the argu· men!, iloweftl', WU Ibo teotimlll)' by two ..... -who. preooed the publlc beach-taueo Both .,,..un -Mrs. w 11111 .. Umebrook, a ,...Ideal ol the Beoch Raad community, and,Mra. Lyn Harrla llk:D, a Cyprus Shorea nlident -~cb live in colonies wblch hew priv1le beacba where the public is forbidden to enter. First on Ille ilat of apeakm, however, WU Ediaon Senior v1 .. Presldenl WliliaJli R.-Gould, Who set the theme o1 the 1llWty r-oteUona by citing his firm'• "all«lt Commitmentn to ntadear power-and policy not to punua further ""9.fuol plantrCafter the two propooed adcllllam In H1111tington Beach). EcologiCal )X'Oblerns, Gould ttr·11tlf, were the reuona behind tbe' com:- mitment. Citing oft.beard lflllll1ents for electrl- !See NUCLEAR,·P .. I) Camp Pendleton Marine ' . . Runs Amuck in Clemente .Wild Spree Of Incidents ' A.young Camp.P-Mir1oe f.0.. cbarg<s ol UlllUll wltll • deodiy -pon and auto theft after-a-'series-of tncldenta before dawn·t.OaiY· stiitiD&.·witli &elilb- bin1 •!tempi -ijoai!y ~ ... w. • opectaeuJar·fl'NWay.<r,.·ln• alieledll ...-car;--_.,... -~ ' -Dtllrfd-.uome;-s ...... 1ilnca Ill .two felonlel -id-lie ioqht.llJ·San a.- police today qalnsl Dntd.Duane Pattaa, f.3,. who WU arrested at the acene of a two-car crash on the San Diego Freewa1 at 2 a.m. The alleged string ol lncidents bel•• at about midnight at the apartmtnt of Steven Douglas Hemmers at 118 "Camino Estrella, San Clemente. Remmers told police ht was lying In bed when be beard a noise Jn ,the living room and went into investigate. He notic- ed ·a""'CtoUdJed-figure irr-the darkened room. 'Ibe usailant swung a two-by.four at lhe resident, but missed. The club drove.~ boli in the apartment wall, the assailant then fled . AA police were invesU,ating the in- cident, San Clemente Marine James William Gordon, also stationed at Camp Fendleton,~was;exiting hia new car at 125 S. El Camimo Real, when a man - a two-by-four sfiiffed-i.Ol!li W8.i.Stband0 f his pants -accosted him in a parkin1 lot. "'Arc, you with the ·cops?" the stranger asked 'lhe motorist. ' Gordon answered "yes," then ran Into a nearby bar, leaving lhe key1 in the ig- nition. When he emerged, his car was gone. At 2 a.m. California Highway patrolmen, advised of the bulletin on a suspect, answered an accident call on the freeway near Valle Road in San Juan Capistrano. Gordon's car had rolled several times after hitUng another car. In the auto, patrolmen found Patton un- conscious. A splintered two-by-four was found in the auto, police said. 1be driver of the other car involved lrl CSee MARINE, Paso I) Do g Owners Map Action on City's Canine Ordinance Talk Wednesdafl -House-T£am T·o eye ·city -Beu:cli Sites N-ew :Peace ,Plan: With tlle proposed bouse-fD.boufo building inlpectlonl In L a g II n I ' I .Woodland Drtvt uu..ltmJ>ororlly In Um· Coam[nldg Yu~, "°'* -bO, pending CQll\Plelioo of• cltywida pro- peetodiy-Jlllf· !lie 'llblte 11-ina--.,im...lbUouling. InapeCuon twa will llti tn\Ole'.~. • -, --lta--,tteoti• lint oa ci(14Wne4 ·WAallDIGTON (IJPI) -Pruidal N1x..,-m-bilh •P!rtta a1ter-.1111-an1t1lD1 Eilioptin toot,-'.iimounad toa11 lie wUI address the naUon at S pJD. Wed, netday and make a-major. new-PfOPOllll for eniilng ·the Vleillam War. His ndio and television broadcast from the White HOUJC, Urned Jess than • month before the Nov. 3 Congressional l!leCiJtJns; follows , a personal report from the U.S. neaoUaUng team in Paris on the latest Communlat plan for a setUement. There was widespread apeculation, which Ni~ made no attempt Tueada7 to d.bcourage,, that1tbe. United Sta.,. nught propose a cea•flre throu&flout Southeast Asia -and a wi°*8wal of all foreign troops from Vietnam. He refuted all comment The Pruident, who returned to Washington Monday night ftom hia 12,000-lnile trip to five nations, inclllding Fire Denartmeni- Asks Additional $1,500 in Funds . Fire Chief James F. Latimer of the Laguna Beach Fire Department bu re- queated that 11,500 In add!Uonal funde be apprOprtated by the city council for thf! fire department The council will consider the request at Its W«lnesday -ting. . "II wJu.:"' aie. -_.., • .,11.. Ma" Beadl .pi'OperllM. ·• atatemenl-e-·riuode oo•lhil ,.,, ..., dlf· '·'!bl. wu reve.a]ed todly by adlDI dty ficult war and wlll eove:r , all the majat manaeer Joeepb Sweany Jn connection issues Involved Jn tile Southtut .Asia with a Planninl Commlu!on report on area," he aald, speaklna without notes. -certain Main Beach buildings which H "We . do not consider thit to bt r~mmends removing. a prOpas;anda gimmick," he added. "We Along with the .commiaaion'• report OD .are no!. Just uylna: .Jt for the record." five ·properties adjacent to the El Pueo Before the speech We d n • • d a 1, pariinc Jot. the City· Council Wednesday Secretary of State ·William',P. Rogers will night will receive an offer from one of br.Jef interelted · twemmenta, including the tenants to develop the ancient ttrue... close U.S. allies in SOutheut Asia and tµ.r es with a "park theme" instead OC tbt presumably the SOvlet Ullion, on the oew proposed parking lot. dipk>miUc approlcb, Nilon Aid. Jn a letter to the coUneo, the Jaiidscape The Presldent himself will di.!alu hit a'chilect Richard Bliler, who ...,.pies speech with the cabinet at I p.m. the quaint, two-story red buildint'lt m Wednesday~ followed an boor later by a El Pueo, requeatl that acUon on the briefing for Rl:publlcan and Democratic agenda item be delayed two wee.kl • Congressional leaders.' ·:or. Hen!)' ·A. that be may present an alternative plan Kissinaer, hia national security affairs which he says iJ financially feuihle ud adviSer, wlll 1te newsmen twkt. ••would have greater merit than the plan- The Pretldent 1tr~ that ~ new ned parking _ development." U.S. peace lntUativ~ was being developed Noting that"'he has worked on more long before-the-National-Liberation Front-than lOOClty parkl f0f"16CltYariiiCOUDW-- offered Sept. I? to halt atta~ . on agenCies, Bigler offers to donate bi. American troops 1f they leave South Viet~ services on a "no fee" basis to prepare nam by next June 30. the plan. U.S. Ambassador David K. E. Bruce, "I believe we not only have a great l)J>o - who ~ew from Paris to Ireland to report porhmlty to preserve a historic part of to NIXOn on Sunday, termed the Com· Laguna Beacti but also to help reactivate , munlst proposals "old wine Jn new bot· our downtown 'area " Bigler writes ties" al the time but .. Id they would be Planning cornntlasioner Tb~ ma 1 .., studied carefully. Johnston, in a report on the stat111 of Scila.zar Verdict Brings Tough Issue to DA Main Beach properties now owned by the "dtY, Jia~ tu11ested that old buildings on .five properties adjacent to the eliltlnl · parking lot be razed 1lnce rentl de.rived ·. from them are insufficient to cover tu· ... Ot.lef Latimer, in a letter to acting City M..,I<' Jooepb Sweany, noted lhal the injury of a fireman In the Laguna canyon bruabflre July 5 caused the department to be overdrawn '537.29. Latimer said that to maintain a minimum level of lire protection, other firemen bl'd to be paid From wre Servka overtime to replace the injured man. Af.litically touchy.decision on whether The City Council will contider Bieler'• offer, along with a Planning Commiaalon recommendation that the five neighbor- ing .properties be e1amlned with.a view to either reneeotilting or termlnattng. lhe leases aod possibly removing the buildings to Jncrease the site of the present' parkin1 lot or to develop a par~ area. bl! be U d h . f I tbs to f e chq., against a -·1 deputy w e was 0 u.,. or, wo mom · in the death of new.man Ruben satuar La~ 10id he b requ~lng enough la right In the tap .of Los Angeie8 Dlatrid funds to "maintain .our manpower at the Attorney Evelle Younger. minimum level through the yet to come A split verdict by a coroner's J·~ after high fire aeason." -1 .the prolqed lnqueSI jnto the Aq. .29 Acting CitY Manager Sweany hil death .durin1 an Eut Los Angeles riot recommel\ded to the council thal only haa no lep! weigh~ 1he dillrlct •Horney '537.29, enwgh to cover the deficit, be .. rd. . lrl!llfert<d to the 1ite deporlment'a It wu valuable, y.,,.,.er !Old, 'bicauae Oruf e .......... t 'of lhe ,....,/ded ~ of the . 'l11e Laguna Beach Deg Ownm "-la. opera-,. ..... • · Y • · ll)Oey tlon will meet at a p.m. today In u. "II wwld.seem 1'> be a better pian·to wllneaea. Younger· baa not · decided Wea.._er Laguna Beach High Scllool cafelerla to aliocate fundl u the deficieocy·oceumd = w~ a.J:':~~ plan a cou,... of action In the event the rather ~ ~ lrUlller •· larpr· flxed •as pro'-'"• ... 11~-• •-•--•• bead city COlllldl...clacidel.Jo pul. the doc amounl to covet the pooslbilllia," • .---·--- otdinance beloril&-voien. • Swany Aid In his -killing him. · Richard Challis, 1 apo1ram.1n for 1he If be -file c;li"!'I"'. uld Y.U.Cer, a cloR 1overa group, Aid, "SUch 111 eiedion candid1te for ~le 'Atlomey Geileral the ls •n unnecesury waate of money H HOLIDA.Y MA.IL charge would be !li.volo.n.tar.1 evidenced by the overwhelming .,.. mlnsl•ughter ~"the unI.twfU\ killlnl'of 1 position to tlle ordlnanoe shown by the DA.TES LISTED ==.:.~:l.~aforOtboiighl •liners of the two pelitionl." Four memblrl ol a _,, Jury found 'l11e cloR owner> ftr .. obtelned l ,000 WASIUNGTON tUl'll -o.llle.i'entaaon that Saluar died "at the bends of aigJlaturu nn • peUtioo Wine the ctty baa IDnOUllCl!d the followtnc dales by -aootlier." The Othet un. fiiuliil lhO - council to ractnd the ordlnanc<. Aile< which Clriatmu packages Ind lettm for death In the Silver Dollar Bar wu ac- · · Low clouds, Ughl. dt1Dle and IA!mperal""' m1rad In the ufll!Ot ~·· both on !lie coait and further inland will pnvall on_W<dnetciay, with token IWllhlne bn!lllns throucb at midafternoon. INSm E TODAY Lawn ·botolina U ihritrino frl th• OranQ't Coa.st area. For a. fuU rtport, read Howa:rd L. lfcnul~'• rtpon Iii iii< JPO"' 1tctioni Pooe 22. some ifgli rwardi. they got 1•711 voter. IOidlers In Vielnlm lhould be malled to cldental. to lip a ,._ potllloa, ,_, than arme in Ume for the ~: -Saiual', G, 0 Santa Ana ralden~ WU = .. e!IOUlh required to --pal ardtnance 'Pac\qa more than five pouncts by news dlreclar of • llponill>l..ipqe "- befote the -er -Ibo council aurface maU Oct. IJ.Nov. 7; . leat than teitvillon llalioo Ind • c:ol,umnill lor tlle =• ' ::.-11. Tl!e'COlllldi -wllicll lo flvt f'OUll!ll ~ ..lt.Nov..21;.Jbool car Loi ~ nmas. Two otber ---~...11 ...._ rylDC~ ~airlift. (PAL) amp to -werelitilij'1'iiiuded 1D tbtrlO\.turdlCl ~= The -· ...,...... by"111e · ,., 1 tr...i ·by alr on • opace aftllablt -··1-miliJOG ~ damaC•· ----councll Aug. It, -all . clop lroin , Ocl. Ji.Nov; a; and all . ...,.,.. air mail Tbe death ol 8alUlr iilltc1>ed oil "'" ::-=,.. bacbel·-t .. m. ~-'·"•.-...-li!lift.Jllov .JO.l>oc 12; • --""'""" In tile bis J!ul ·Loa Aflltlal-1-•"""' __ _ -themccmplaWJ ~ -porill. • . Mtllw>Alnerl<lll cammunity. .._ ________ __, . ,. • "1 I \ ~~ z DAILY PJLOT SC _JS~tate ·Sets -1Keep .-*he ... Peaee 'New5ewer ' Students Win 'Bid. to Save Symbol Deadlines -~ -, ' . -San----Clemtntt Rich School students Rick Kramer-,-th&.-gr-aduate-who ~In,:_ magulne-.Jtaling 1hLs bul lher_e___ '«.ti no uked for J HtUe peace ~onday. . eel the gift, pointed-OU~ that the sy)tibol is documentation. Trua~ of the. Clp1strano Unified only discernible in its 60-foot Circle if Kramer and' other students said the ...,.--.,,. -_ Castini....'.Lji..undice:d_eye at l.aguna's ~hoollli.\trld decided_ they shoWd h.a.'le someone walks around-it-orvtews·lt-from-ymbol--was---bgm-in th1;-l~te 19W! by -1~Sliid:ent effOrb to savia peace symbol above. groups protesting nuclear warheads on ---SUITOuriding the sun dfil, 'WliiCh Was the He pointed-out that the-plaque~at the Polaris missiles.-They said the fi~e in 'ecrePit•eewer·trtatment plant, the.State -l>lvislon of Industrial Safety has set a n~w deadJine for correction of unsllfe Fiditi~ns listed ln a 1968 citation. ·· Acting city manager Joseph Sweany ta.id today be will ask the City Council Wednesday night to authorize hiring con· tractors to speed up the required plumb- ing, electrical· and· carpentry work in the gift of lhe class of 1970 were rewarded base of the sun dial says "Timt for world the circle stands for nuclear diEarma- when the board voted to keep .it. peace". "It was my intention that since ment in Navy semaphore and later sym· Mrs. Leon Riley, who favored removal there was a lot of trouble ~ll over on bolized peace. of the sign, told the board that by leaving school campuses last year an~ 11'1.uch w.as ·-The symbol was afSo used by the San it there they might be 0 defacing public being tom down, we sOOUld build Clemente High School band last Friday, property." something," he said. . which formed it during the halftiine 1•1 object to it because it is be1ng used Supt. Truman Benedict said that the show. Benedict said he · took full by the revolutionarit.s in our country," symbol is often associated with students responsibility for the show which had &he said. "I don't want to identify us in who I.ilk peace while hitUng you on the been crit.ized, saying he didn 't think this way. I feel strongly that we shouldn't head with a rock. ''But if you say it students connected it with anything bad, +-~01a..plant_io_meelthe..Noy...,Ldeadllne. __ . "We have been trying t9 handle tbe work ·ourseivis to save money," said Sweany1 ''bl.It our 'present staff manpower -identify-with-anything-t b-l 1-con· means-peace--ln--your minds-and.hearts, -evil-or-malicious.------ is not sufficient to permit us to meet the Nov. 6 date." ' 'The corrections sought by the Industrial Safeb' department, Sweany said, amount· to about $5,000 to $6,000 worth of a pro- jected 571,000 upgrading · project for which the. city is .see.king federal assist- ance. Most of the items, he said, have to do wilh personnel safety. They involve ven- tilation, guardrails, sealing of tanks from electrical equipment to reduce the danger of gas explosions and installation of ade- quate shower and disinfection facilities for men working in the plant. "The pumping stations met legal re- quirements when they were built in 1935," engineer Sweany explained, "but Jbey are not up to today's industrial safe- ty standards." He noted that the sewage treated in the plant meets all water quality control standards and said the corrections re- quired are · "mostly small items" that have been approved by the council but not completed because of manpower &hortage. "They just feel we are taking too long to correct these things al}d I suppose they 1---_.·.,,e..rlght;' said Sweany.-.~-- :"" If the council authorizes preparing ~plans and advertising for bids, it pro- , bably will suffice to answer the show -ca use _ _order,_he said. _ • About a ~third _of the expenditure. should : J>e refunded with federal money, in· :eluding the cost Of.chlorinal.Ors ($28,000) : on which the council will receive bids • Wednesday ni ght. .-"It has taken us a year and a half just ~to get chlorinators to meet the govern• ~ meot specs," Sweany noted. J] ~OWD.ei' of-Truck ., ' . ~Firm Badly Hurt i \ The ownef of a Capistrano Beach :<-tm::king firm suffered1 extremely critical •'injuries before dawn today in a grinding ·.'crash of his car into a center divider on : the San Diego Freeway. ~: Raymond Harry Kesy, 35, of 26942 Camino de la Estrella, was reported under intensive care at South Coast Com· munity Hospital, suffering from massive head injuries and other multiple wounds. Kesy, highway patrolmen said, was removedJfrom tRe mangled wreckage after nearly ·a lialf-hour of rescue at- tempts by San Clemente firemen. The crash occurred in the northbound lanes of the freeway near the El Camino Real offramp. The auto slammed Into the raised center divider at about 2:30 a.m. I -Kesy is the owner of Kesy Trucking of ___ ._,· ,,._,wne Camino de la Estrella address. -. ' -i ·(;asoline Bomb Hits U.S. Site in Milan n MILAN, Italy {AP) -A gasoline fire ·bomb exploded in front of the U.S. Information Service in Milan early toda y, :· blackening the front door. Police said lt . >was thrown from a passing car. ~ · It was the 12th explosion in Italy's chief Industrial center in Jess than two months. ~Police blamed the attacks on anarchists. DAILY PILOT .. ...,." .... Hntillff•• IMdli .-Let•• ... , .. h••tel• , .... , CHt• M"• s... c1 ...... OltANGE COAST PUILl~ING o:IM,AN't aat.e1t N. w,,,J Praicl~I •Ml P1,1bll1Mr J1clt It. Cvrl.,. VIUI ,,..:denl •r.d Gentr11 Ml"'"r Thomtl K11vil Eollor 7liom11 A. Mutphln1 M1111111Jnt l!:ll!tor tl,lch1'4 P. f'f1U lclulh 0!'11111 Colin!)' E41W -CO.ft MUI: ~ Wal hY 11 .... 1 -..,,0.1 IN'trcttlt ~1 ••'-10...i-l'f • UrflN 11: m ,__, ... .,..,,.. NUlltll'lflOll Mite~ 1 11175 llM:h l tu,....Pd W '*"9r\M: al "*11i El C.11ntn. AUi • . • • . • • f>All.Y P ILOT. 1¥111'1 "'1\ldl ,_ Oll'lbll'ltd , ... • Ht-Pt"" la putlll1htlf filly ftte~I St,or.o • f•Y 111 ..-(•I• all1IOIU fW u111m1 liattl\o • • H..... IMCJ't, Golll M... H\11111"11 .. " • INC/I 1r.d l'OVl'lllf!'I Vtltty, ,,_._ "llt!tll 1-·r1111oft1l-~.-Orlllee-Cito! ''*""'"'-' t?b:'fl" orll'lllnt Olt11tt .,. 11 '111 w"' ' I I 11'111,. Hl'l'W'I*"! t.""' 1'1111 4lO WM! ' .. t llrlet, t;lt!I Mt», • T .. .,._,.. f714J. 64MJ21 • • Cl•lfld Airl'rtil"'9 '4W671 • I I• CJ.Mem All hp....-: ~ T-'•PMM: 4tl-44n ~ rn. °''* °"' """''"""• • ~,,,. N1 MWJ 111tl1._ """lr1119M. ' ... ,*11 l'MllW If' , • ...,,Mmtntt Mrilln , . -v et rtPrWuccf "WI,.,..... .-111 ,.,.. m~1fllll et _,..,.11111 '*'"'', ~ c1e .. --~ ~r• 11 w~..-oi-er.1 Ohll W:;t, tilt'""'. "1bfctlll!lltt W u,f'llr 11.ts '"""""' .,, "'111 u .11 ,.....1111y1 "'11tttrf •trl'llllonl, 12.U IMl'IMIY. • DAIL V PILOT $l1ff ,hete 'ONOFRE A PROVEN SITE' Edison Com·p..,y's Gould DAILY PILOT Ili ff PIMll 'SHORE DETERIORATING' S.n Clement• Hi9h'1 Grignon NUCLEAR PLANT ... cal gert\!:rator expansion, Gould told the examiner that the demand! on electrical power through the Edison system in 197S would be double that of today. Sin Onofre, he added: is the "only prir ven site'' where nuclear reactor ex- pansion could take place to meet the pro- jected demands. In a more somber n9le in the dispute over the possible pollution from the 350,000-gallons-per-minute of heated sea water already emanating fro mthe exJst- ing plant, a San Clemente High School marine studies teacher spelled out his beliefs for the PUC. "It is the only site in Southern California capable of further develop- _ment__with_nyg~units by-111!L_y_~r J97S," he claimed, adding that the time- consuming prcicesses of scientific studies for -site adaptability wo.uld rule out any other fresh site in time to avoid a power crisis in six y.ears. Phil Grignon, who told Main he was not representing any group, termed thermal --pollutlon-=-that-creatt?ct by heated-water dumped back into the sea -as "pollution of the worst form ." Hi aaid one other alternate site has been purchased by ·his firm -Point Conception , but production of a working reactor there could not be accomplished before 1979 . R_eading from a prepared scenario between bis firm's lawyers and himself, Gould told the examiner that location of nuclear reactors in remote areas to replv.ce~the.-,proposed ones 1l1-San Opolre -wodld·not·provide a)~reasonable balance · between remote generation and genera· tion n_ear major load c~tcrs." Addil\I an ominous note -resumed later by opj>onents -·Gould ruled out the effectiveness of the remote· generators , because many miles of transmission lines w9uld fall victim to "equipment failure. natural catastrophes and - more recenuy -sabotage." The last aspect was revived soon after Gould stepped down without cross-ex· amination by opponents. One woman traveling from Vista with her husband to protect again.st ihe entire issue of nuclear power, teStified that the expanded:san Onofre facilities "would be a sitting duck for plane crashes, missiles fired by a gunnery sergeant making a mistake at Camp Pendleton, dead ly equip. ment failures ... " t.1i's. Lloyd Von Hagen also refuted published accounts of success ful ex- periments in warm water f r o m g~neratin~lants and thL.!_b.iJily 19 create •·s erlobsters" which grow to maturity in matter or weeks. She refer- red to discharge of water back into the sea 10 degrees hotter than the ocean tem- perature. ' "It might be advantageous to grow the lobsters in that hot water and have them emerge already boiled for the dinner table," !aid said. Laguna Studies Champagne Plea The Laguna Beoch City Council will consider a request at its Wednesday nighl meeting from the Laguna Moulton Playhouse to sell champagne. The Community Players would like to sell bubbly by the glass in the city-owned theater during the intermission of au plays, says Playhouse president William Harcum. Proceeds from the sale would go 'toward a scholarshi p fund for students at Laguna Beach High School. The Playhouse has previously served champagne to patrons on special oc- casions and proceeds from the sale o( coffee and soft drinks at the plays have always gone to the drama scholarship fund, says Harcum. From PUfle I BEACH ••• a plan for deve\opmenl Whlle the area aroWld UCLA for ex- smplt., has increased in value to t.he point where inexpensive propeJlY near the campus prohibits: sUch development, the inclusion area at UCI is lntendtd to prevent this economic barrier to locating non-academic but unlverslty • related functions near to the campus. S'imon---Uid, "l'h&-inclusion-area plan. ned for St,!rvlng as a buffer between the campus and a city of-JOb,000 is one' thin&. _A city of .\50~ poo.plt surroWlding the campus is qUlte another." Further, Simon charged Irvine with developing a "luxury cty" for !he very ~I The teacher, classified as an °expert" by the examinu, was swom·in for the record. the·n charged that thermal pollu· tion "affcets all organisms?' in the sea. In his 15 years or study of the problem, Grignon said, he has found th!tt quality of the Orange Coast shoreline b a s "deteriorated r apidly," then cited the r eports of cancerous lesions in fish found near the OraOge Cowlty sewage and Hun· tington Be:ach fossil-fuel generator out- l~s.l}~ar Huntington, Beach. ~!iri@on J.htn stressed _!ha\ Jii~ _point_ in testifying was not on_e of strict opposition to the San Onofre reactors, but, instead, \o call for a major ecological study ~on­ duc!.f!d by impartial ·scientists -"not working for either the Edison Company or the Atomic Energy CommisSion." The popular high school instructor became the first witness to be cross~x· amined by utility attorneys who queried Grignon on studies of the ouUalt area near the existing San Onofre reactor. Grignon replied tersely' that he has con· ducted no studies in the vicinity. "The authorities at Camp Pendleton will not alloW me in the area to conduct such studies,'' he said. As the testimony begins to accumulate in the hearings, more appearances by the fOes to the locallon of the plants has been promised. Plagued by what they termed last. minute knowledge of the hearings. the op- ponents promised to continue providing petiti~sinj Jhe location or the plants in coming days. f\-1rs. Hicks, who beseeched Examiner Main on the point of nuclear dangers. asked that residents "be relieved of the misfortune of living in an atomic test tube for the past two years." Representing GUARD (Groups United Against Radia tion Dangers) Mrs. Hicks relayed a list of questions on the issue which she asserted have not been answered by utility officials . Among them are requests for the specific measurements of nuclear wastes emitted by the existing reactor. the safe- ty proceedures for disposal of nuclear waste products, the e:tact footage of beaches to be taken up by the plants and the. projected costs for moving the. plants downooast, Inland and undergroWld. Main promised answers to the queries as the hearings continued. 'He added that he expected the pro- ceedings to last the week -perhaps win· ding up sometime Friday. From Page 1 MARINE ..• the crash. Booker Hoover ci. l.M Anaeles., was unhurt. San Clemente police, summoned to the wreck scene, took Patton to Orange County Medical Center for emergency treatment, then returned the man to Sin Cleme'nte for booking on the two felony cou'nts. · Officers said a large splinter of wood Jound in the apartment wherli the at- tempted assault took place, apparently matches with the larger chunk of lumbtr found in the stolen car. Patton remained ~ police custody this morning . Vandals Uproot Tree In Costa Mesa Park Vandals-uprooted a 12-foot silk noss tree at Costa Mesa's Te\Vinkle Park Monday night and dragged it to a nearby wall, over which it was b~lten in half. Park employes reported the lncldenl al 970 Arlington Dr ive to police ifter it was dis.covered, listing a •105 lo1t. t I trov~rsial." then it is not subversive or irreligicius," "I thought it was beautiful," said Dr. Trustee Bob Hurst who abstained he said, addressing the audience. Robert Beasley, chairman of the bbard agreed that the 1yrrbol is offensive to One argument against the s:t:mbol was of trustees. some members. of the community. "I that It was an ancient symbol of evil and Benedict said, that iil the future delaiI- t.hink it-l!ihould atay however, because the anti-Christ. One student said he was ed plans-Of the school gifts .will.have to be kid! are sincere." shown an article in American Opinion submitted to the board for approval. 18 Artists Share Top Prize Money Eighteen artists share prize money in the Lacuna Beach Art Gallery's Expo '70, juried all-media exhibit, on view at the gallery through Oct. 25. Entries were judged by a jury made up of Harry Bliss, Vic Smith and Mary Holmes. Jurors' Award went to Jay Willis of use for his cast aluminum.sculpture. _T~ J:lin!t~ Aw!NJ~~Q!! ~-­Gil Moor of LOs Angeles and painting winners were George R. James of Costa Mesa; Thelma deGoede Smith, Orange; Gerha rdt Felgemaker of Laguna ; and William Motta of Newport Beach. 'GOOD BOY' BY LAGUNA ARTIST WINS 'PRIZE Ntp'• Delicatessen Aw•rd Goes to Gaylord Gillman Nep's Delicatessen Award went to Gaylord Gillman of Laguna Beach for-his large oil painttng, ''Good Boy." . Winners in the sculpture category were Dr. Edwin Lombard of Fresno : Howard James Lockway of Costa Mesa; Jane Vail of Pasadena; and Georg Rauch of Laguna-Beach. Graphics winners were Mary Tift of Corte 'Madera; Jack Rowe of Laguna ~Beach~ -Ray Bmo of Long Beach; and Ashantey from Laguna. Taking awards in the crafts category were Helen W. Richards of Garden Grove; Robert Hardy of Soulh Laguna; Sharon Berg of Newport Beach and Elisabeth Gateff of Laguna Beach. . The exhibit is on view at the gallery from noon to 5 p.m., with admissio n fees cf $1 for adults, SO cents for students and free for children. Tours are conducted at 2 p.m. on Sundays. Ambulance Plea Denied by Council A bid by a Laguna Beach ambulance service to operate in Huntington Beach was denied by the City Council Monday night. The Gold Ambulance-Service, 210 Beach St., Laguna, applied-for a certificate of need and necessity to transport patients at the call of the Huntington Beach police and fire departments. City Administrator Doyle Miller jnd the police department recommended denial, pointing out that Seal's Ambu lance was ' already carrying out this service. City Attorney Don Bonfa said that the applicant may ask for a public hearing following deni al of the certificate. 300 Gather in-Capitol In U.~. POW Misswn ~ WASHINGTON (UPI) -More than 300 men and women gathered on the steps of th~ Capitol Monday' before visiting ' members of Congress to press f.or release of American prisoners Of war in Vietnam. Mrs. Carole North of We!lfleet, Mass., newly elected chairman of the National League of Families of A m e r i c a n Prisoners and Missing in Southeast Asia, told newsmen "we are far from satisfied that everything that could be done is being done ... " Mrs. North's organization, whic h helped to organize the recently held joint session of Congress to call attention to the plight of American POWs, completed its four-da y convention here today. Members planned to meet with con- gressmen throughout the day to obtain their signa tures on cards pledging sup- port" for a greater U.S. effort to win freedom for POWs. Mrs." North declared the organization had .•. no intenli9n of letting up the pressure even for one minute until all of our men are identified and .. ultimately, set free." Her own husband was s hot down over North Vietnam in an Air Force jet Aug. 1, 19S6. While she conceded the "government is doing everything it can, she emphasized more could be done through a massive • letter-writing ~campaign1to the leaders .of North Vietnilin. "I•"Wttnt my husband home and I want him healthy," she said. Texas millionaire H. Ross Per.ot ·ad- dressed the organization Saturday at a closed-door session to brief the wives on wh'll.t was being done to secure the release of POWs. Mrs. North declined to discuss What Perot, who has been con- cerned with the prisoner iss.ue, said. However, she said, "Perot gave us ex· actly what we asked for, and ... we are tremendously eneouraged by his asses,s. ment." Bank Held Up, Teller Threatened With Lye SAN FRANCISCO {UPI) -"I have a botlle of lye. Give me all your money or l 'll blind you.'' This note was pushed through the win- dow to teller Marianne C. Smylie, 25, at the Wells Fargo Bank branch. ·She pushed out $810. The robber, identified as Willie D. Smith, 28, San Francisco, was cap- tured minutes later by patrol car officers, who fot.fnd a small botlle filled with a milky substance in his possession. It Ain't Necessarily So! \ Jhe other Clav. a nother store. e customer was comparing our prices with We were informed that our price was 60c per square yarCl high!! Questioning the customer, we discovered that the Other store was fu rnishing e cheep urethaoe padd ing which ls 7Sc per square yard cheaper tha n the 64 oz. sponge rubber podd ing that wo were including. Furthermore, in t his case, we were comparing our inslellation against en installation wortli far less. jMeny stores. contrect the ir laoor by tho yard to layers of un\nown background and s\ill - we liave our own crews, trai~ed arid con~rolled Dy us, paid by tho liour to 'do tlie best qual ify installation possible.). So ••• their estimafo w~s not whet ii appeared to l>e! In conclusion, wh~~ comparing c omparing eauel values . k ' ' pr1ces, mt! e· sure you e re o IANTA ANA, OU.NII. TUSTIN, Cell •• • ALDIN 'S -1---.. ...... n-c-....... I DIAPIRIU .11174 IM•, Tlllff .. C .. lf. lla.Jl44 ALDEN'S : CARPET~-· DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 • I • 1111a· YOC6l, NQ.. '239, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGE~ --. ' l .- • N.Y. Steeb :TUESDAY, OCTOBEK-6, '1970 .......___ --• TEN CENTS - €limax Nears in San Clemente Power Hearing: By JOHN VALTERZA ot tllt Dlltr Plitt Ss.tf 1----'lD'e_environmentaLCQDSequences..oltw.o new nuclear reactors at San Clemente - an issue laW'jched at th,e start Of Public Utilities Commission hearings Monday - are · expected to ·reach a climax in San Clemente .today with testimony of a key spoktsman-ior tbe-two ·utility-finnl in- volved. David J. Fogarty, manager of 1 mtthanjcal engineering for Soulhero CRITICIZES IRV1NE PLAN UC R-1-siman 'Sh,fH.!king' Stor11 . California Edison Company, was schedul- ed to appear before PUC examiner Arch ""Ma In ay·s----,;roceediugs presumably to refute repQted, criUcbm launched Monday by opponents to the placement of the mult.imillioD-doll power plants two miles San Clemente. After introductory, remark& from _ Ill Edison Senior Vice President at the open- ing of the hearings Monday, Main he.aid a steady s~am of opponents !O the a~ DEFENDS .IRVINE.-l!LAN 1 ... 1ne Compeny'• Wai- Norton Sim«;>n, Uni versity l In Hot Debate Over City -By GEORGE LEIDAL ot ttt. Dlllt "' ~ Sl•ff uC Regent Norton SufioRDerieves he is "raisb'lg question! which. pi-operly should be asked" about the relaUonsbip between Irvine Company and the university. He· told lht DAILY PILOT following a Loa Angeles press conference Monday he doesn't e,xpect crimina.l prosecutions to result.from his "exp:>.Sure" of the chang· tng nature of that relationship. However, he promised "the public will be shocked" when the full story is told at the OcL IS and I& Regents' meeting, At issue is what he terms "unjust enrichment" or Irvine whiclt Simon estimates at $4SO million by incorporation cf a 53,000-acre city rather than the 10,000.acre city discuMed IO years ago. Simon 'userts the Irvine Company is violating an agretment with the Universi· ty dai.d July 22, 19!0 by planning a larger city around the l,000-acre, Oc Irvine ·campus. Raymond Watson, Irvine executive-vice president, said the agreement with the university .was based on prellml.nary planning and that ·any changes in plan· ning had been done with lbe knowledge of Bank Robbers Esc~pe by Sea ALEXANDRIA l!AY, N.Y. (AP) ..:.. -r.o masted robben held up a bank today and ucaped ·in a motorboat wi£b an es tl mated 1100,000. The Miririe Midlind~ CO. ·o1· Nortbtrn New York branch bank is on the waterfront . of tht St. Lawrence.' RIYer. A tourt.rt In this resort village telephoned pollce after seeing t.he pair jump in to the boat lfilh their sholgunJ. ••'Ibe ahotgun&: aroused my 1U$Pl· cions." the toi.tttst, F.dwal'd Mllltr or AddiJon, told reportttl. Bank officlals Aicl no me WU hurt though the gunmen locked 11veral women and M a n a g « r Donald Munro in a re<:ard vault after kee ing a t~Uer, Mrs. Ivan Stl'ijij'1f, I gulijiOlll the universijy administration. Discounting Simon's charge that in· corporation -was being sought for tax reasons, Watson said, "The 1969 Tax reform acl doesn't even apply to Us." He cited the threat of piecemeal annexation attempts by cllies surrounding lrVine U cause for rushing Sl,000 acres to cityhood. "We don't care If there are one, two or ten cities established on Irvine land -or for that matter none. "But, we've made our plans public for the next 30 years and feel we have a responsibility to follow it through," Watson said. ' Simon alleged that the Irvine COmpany had recenUy placed 50,000 acres of land into a tat-favored agricultural preserve "and then I find they're going to build a city en it." Watson, in a later press conference, noted the agricultural preserve status re- quires that the owner promise not to develop it fOr IO.years. He contended that portlons of that land are Within tbe borders ol tbe propooed 53,m:M> acre city of Irvine. Because the plannin1 ls nece~y long range, those portions can not be deVeklpe<rfor at least IO years and would be shifted to a higher tax rate. While Simon ·characterized an Orange County Planning Ccmmisslon staff study of the Irvine plan as linding fault with the pro~ new City, Watson described relations between his company a n d -county¥ planners as cordial "although they have brought a few criticisms to our attentkln." ~ the possibility that the ,,.,, city will create slums in IUi"roWldlng cities, W~~ aald Jhis_is "&!ways a. COD- cern when a new·city forms." Noting that planning m t n t m l 1 e 1 development of "luture slums!" be con- ceded that there ts a tendency !<r people to move blto a new arta lrom an older one. The lbcluslon area concept Is key lo Simoo's <rillcl!m ol both the Irvine Com- pany and the UC Re,..,U. The inch.Won area embracrs 110 acres of wUvenity-owned lands ~ the 1,000 ~ Wliji(ii. Simon , said Ii WU ruppoled to provide 1pace for unlvenlty· related acUvtt.Jea, services and low COit· faculty and student hollling, and ho blamet·-for-nol-havlllg-completed (he mVINE, Pll' I) plicaUon !<r state permits lo build the twin reacton on. 13 acri:a immediately downcoast of tbe-ezisting-one ·at San Onofre. Several San Clemente realdents op. posing •arloua upec:la ol the permits conducted .a mln\demomtraUon Of IOria out.side city connciJ c}unnhen before.the opening of the bearin&I. The demonstrators, numbering 1 ... than a dowJ, bort placards drawn1 in croyon prolallll( the pr_..i lbtnllne locallon ol the lite. -SOme-lllopm-nltected-lbe-later tesllmony by the !oa -....,. the reac- lon illland, downcout and underground. Ooe key point tba oPPoalllon ralaed Moiiday wu tba ~ 4eOial of the If· fecled San_OllcJh _ beadl_on___Camp Peodlelon lo tbe public !or tulure r.crea- Uonal uaea. Addini a loucb of 1m1y to the arau· ment, oo.·ever, w11 the tMtim1ny by two area women who ~ the public beachiasue~.~~~~~~~~- Botb speaken -Mrs. William Limebrook, a real-ol the Beach &ad community, ml 11n. Lyn llarrla. Hicb, • Cyprus Sboftl mldent -each 11 .. In ailool<s whJcb ban )lllute ........., where the public IJ !arbldden lo enter. First on the lilt .of. speabn, however, wu Edlaoo Seolor Vice Prelldellt Willlalll R.·Gould, who aet the tbeme ol the utilltt: preoentaUont by citing his fir)ll's "alJ,out: ·commitment''-to Tilfclear power-and policy not lo pursue further 1'!1'11-luel; pl1nts (a!te< tbe two J!"'posed lddltiool. In Huntinglon Beach). : Ecological problems, Gould ltlea1d,: were tbe-reuooa behind tbe COUb-r mitm•nl Citing oft-beard arguments !or electrl· (See NUCLEAR; Pap I) Laguna Dwelling Checks Temporarily Sidelined -San-C lement-€ _ 'j'alk Wednesday Police Arrest Nixon\ to Tell ·w ild Marine --Hous e-Team- To Eye City Beacn -Sit£s -- A young Camp Pe!¥1leton Marine faces charges of. assault with a deadly· welpon and auto theh:-after a series of incidents 6il0re .dawn tooiYiWtfill With a ClUb- blng •ll~pl -.fiJll!IY-eod\oi l'llh a opectacU1ar--...,-c:r'w:1n ao'llloie4Jy ·stolen car. -~ · · ~.;:.'"' -. Dlsttlcrattonilr'a·compJalnta In two feloilles -111 be llOllgbl by Saa Clemeale police lodl1 apimt Dlvli Dat!!e -PallOD, 23, who wu arretted at the eeeoe f!l a two-<ar crasll oo the San Diep Freewl)'. at 2 a.m. The allepd airing of incldent.s began at about midnlJhl at the apartmene of Steven Douglas Hemmen at 118 Camlno Estrella, San Clemente. Remmers told police he was lying In bed when he beard a noise in the li¥ing room and went into investigate. He notic- ed a crooched figure In the darkened room. 'Ihe assailant ~g a two.by-four at the rea:ident, but missed. The club drove a bole in the apartment wall, the assailant then fled. At. Police were investigating the In- cident, San Clemente Marine James William Gordon, also stationed at camp Pendleton, was exiting. his new car at 125 s. El Camimo Real, wb~n a man -a two-by.four stuffed in the waistband of his panls -accosted him In a parking lot. "Are you with the cops?" the stranger asked the motorist. Gordon answered "yes," then rin into a nearby bar, leaving the keys in the i&· nitlon. When he emerged, his car was gone. At 2 a.m. California H i g b w a y patrolmen, advised of the bulletin on a suspect, answered sn accident call on the freeway near Valle Road in San Juan Capistrano. Gordon's car had rolled several times after hitting ancther car. In the auto, patrolmen found Patton un- conscious. A splintered two.by.foor WU found In the. auto, police l&ld. 'nle driver of the other e1r 1nvolved In (See MARINE, P11e Zl D!>g Owners Map Action on City's Canine Ordinance )ll~GTOM (UPf)_ -'President Nixon;' In hlgh 1plrlts a!jtr hb ·aniell'!I European · tour,· inllotiDCed 'tbidefllt ·will -address · the n1Uon at I p.m. Wfd. DtadaJ .... mallo-i malor-•w-propooal fi>r' eodjog the Vlelnlm liar. · · His r~o andleleviSion broadcut from the White HOUJe, timed Je_u than a nionth before the Nov. 3 Congressional elecllons, follows· a personal report from the U.S. ne£0f.laUng team. In Paris on , tht latest Communist plan for a aetUement. There was widespread speculation, which Nixon made no attempt Tuelda1 _to discourage, that the United States might propase a cease-fife throughout Southeast Asia and a withdrawal ot all foreign troops from Vietnam. He refuaed all comment. 'Ille Preaident, who returned to Washington Monday night from his I2,000.mile trip to five n1Uoos, ioeluding Fire Department Asks Additional $1,500 in Funds Fire Chief Jamea F. Latimer of the Laguna Beach Fire Department bas re- quested that $1,500 in additional funds be appropriated by the city council for the fire department. The council will consider the request at Its Wednesday meeting. Otlef LaUmer, In a letter to acting City Manager J01epb Sweany, noi.d that the injUrY of a fireman in the Lagun1 canyon bruibfire July 5 caused the department _to be overdrawn $537.21. Latimer said that to maintain a mintmwn level of fire Comm:an1st· ·Yu1a1Javt1, botindlcl unet· r:i:'fi:~:~~ouse_ pr!~--~ "fl wlll 'be the most· oomP,illenfl .. atatement ever mlde on lhb l!M and~ fieu!t 'war aod will CoVtr ill iiif m(JoP isllltl involved 1n the Sot.ithelst AalA area,"~ l&ld, speaking without notes. "We ~ not consider qil1 to be a propaf,anda gimm.lct," he added. 0 W• are not ust saying It for the record." Before the speech We d n e ad a ~l! Secretary of Slate William P. ROfetl will brlef interested governments. IDcl~I: cl0te U.S. allie.a In Southeast Asia and preswnably the Soviet U.nion, on the new diplomatJc approaclt, Nlmn . said. The Pre'sidtnt blmsel! Will dlscull hb speeeh with the cabinet at I p.m. Wednesday, followed aD hour later by a briefing for Rfpublican and Democratic Congressional leaders: ·Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, his national security · affairs adviser, :will see newsme·n twk;e. The President stressed that the new U.S. peace inlUaUve Was being developed long before the National Liberation Front offered Se-pt. 17 to halt attacks on American troops if they leave Soufb Viet~ nam by next June 30. U.S. Amb&ssador David K. E. Bruce. who flew from Paris to Ireland to report to Nixon on Sunday, termed the Com· munlst proposals "old wine Jn new bot- tles" at the time but said they would be studied carefully. Safuzar Verdict Brings To ugh Issue to DA proleclloo, other firemen had lo ho paid From W~e llenlcet cverthne to replace the injured man. A polltlcally touchy decision on whelbtr while he wu o"lf duty for two momths. ' to file charges against a aherlfi:11 deputy Latimer aaid he Is requesting enough In the death of newtll\111 Ruben Saluar funds to "maintain our manpower at the ii dgbt 1n the lap of Loa Anceles Diatrict Attorney Evelle Younger. minimum level throuah the yet to come A split verdk:t by 1 coroner's flay after high fire aeason."• . the prolonged inquest into the Aug. 29 Acting City Manager Sweany has death during •an E~: L4s Angeles not recommended to the council that only has no legal welaht, the district attorney $531.29, enough to cover the deficit, be said. transferred to the fire department'• It WJlll vtluab\e, Vaunter said, because Tilt Laguna Beacb Doc Own•n Aaocia· operating budget of the recorded tesUm6ny ol tbe many tlon will meet at I p.m. today In the "It "fOWd seem to be a· better plan to witnesses. Younger) baa not decided Laguna Beach mgh School calilerla lo allocate funda U the deflcleocy occurred Whether lo ptooecule Sberl!!'a Deputy plan a couTBe of action in the event the rather than to transfer a larger filed 'Ibomas WlllOO who fired the lG-lnch tear city council . decides lo put the ..._ amount lo oover lbe pioalbilllia," gu projectile tbat ltrud< Saluar'1 bead .... •••• kill•·· blnf. -• -ordinance befcn the -n. Sw""l' _....111 his r~t!on. •• Riehm! Oialiis, , spokesmln •!.r the ff be -rue cbarge1; .. 1d YOU111er, a ...._ ~ 'd ..... ~ ·~~ candidate for'Stite• A~ General the ""Ii Wt'-=nt group, Ill ' ~an 19ft;~ HOLJD ~ chsrge :.iroUld be i n v.o I u n la r 1 Is an unnecessary waste ol money u _.. nY MA.IL manJlanpter~"thtunlaw!uhllling-ol'a evidenced by the overwhelming "P' · hu.Wn.belng .tltboul mallco'W--.ht =:~..::=:.~ "1 !be D_ATESJ-JSTED and.wltboutl!Jt .. t1o·klll". • . , Tho dog owners !Int obtained 1,000 Four memi>en ol a -·s Jull' fOllJld algnatures on a peUUon ultlng the city WASHINGTON (UPI) -'Ibo Peutaaon . ~':!,\i:.!~~·~t.!' !harm.~ cooncll lo reaclnd the ordinance. MW has 1-.nced the. loll.Wing dalel by .. ~ ·CJOinll -'-If -,,_ _. I nl voltr1 wlllcb Cllrfllmal paekagK anCI 1e11m for deatb In the SU.er Dollar ' Bir wu' lC)o aome '"' • _, •-' aoldlen In Vietnam should be lllliled to cldental. lo sign • nf•-pelllloa. men t!lln llTln In UIDI r--uie-boll4ayl·--~-S.luar. ti, a Santa Ana -..~dent. w11 ellOltgh ,.qunr lo -pat on!lnanee Pacb or :...-..... nem director of a Spulfl>lqua11 before tbe eleclAJl'afe Of !woe tbl"collnctl (OI • more than five ,...;.-by television 1tallon and a columnist f°" the lo mclnd ll The CGUDCil -wllldt lo """"'" llllil Oct. U-Nov. 7; i.. than Loo -r.tteo T1111e1 ......... other -do fiff pounds Oct. It.Nov. Zt; -car-• ,. ~-·~ The ordlaanol adopied by tbe city rylng. •II parcel alrllft (PA~) itamp lo """ fa Uy wounded' In the riot that did council Aue 111 bani all clop fr9m' ~Wl-"1,alr on 1 "*° naUable -fl~1!l:°n1:='t:iched off new acberbet;..,,·,,.m. and·t-p.m,1id-iean~~~aU ~al( mall "'"1n-ln the-blJ Eat-Loi Anple& bans them c:ompletaly n.. .-parltl. • · · ' Malc:al>Amerlcat! cOmnumlty. I ' ';(• ,\ • Wltb the propooed hous..t<>house building inspections in L a g u n a ' 1 Woodland:-Drive_area tampor>rUy.Jll.Ji!ll!. bo, pending co~pletlon of a citywide p~ gram,_tbe houJingJnapecUon tellll ~II focus its ··1ttenU8n , firat en ·city•waecl MaJo Beach pl;pertieJ. ' . -. .... -. .. "1ed loday·by acllll( cltt manacl" Jooeph, s,...,.y .111 cqonediol witb a Plllll)ing CommiJslon report oe certain Main Beach bulldlnp whlcb ii recOmmends remov~-. Along with the commission'• report on five propenies adjacent to the El Pueo parking lot, t&e City Council Wednesday night will receive an offer from one of the tenants to develop the aneJent 1truc-- turea witb a "park theme" lolieed ol tbe proJ>!lled parking lot. , In • teller lo the COWlcil, the Iandicape archlle<t Rlcbard Bigler, who ocaupi .. the quaint, two-etory red building at 323 El Paseo, requests that action on the qenda item be delayed two weeka eo that he may present an alternative 9!111 °"'h.ich .he says ls financially feasible and "would have greater merit than the plan· ned parking developmen.t." Nq_ting Ulat he has worked on more than 100 cJty parks for 16 city and county agencies, Bigler offers to donate his services on a "no fee" basis to prepare the plan. "I believe we not only have a great op- portunity to preserve a historic part of y Laguna Beach, but al5o to belp reactivate our dawn town area," Bigler writes. Planning commissioner Th o m a s ' Johnston, In .a report on the status of Main Beach properties now owned by the 1 city, had suggested that old bulldinp on five properties adjacent to the existinli parking lot be rued ainee rents derived from them are insufficient to cover tu;. .,_ The City Council will consider Big1er'I offer, along with a Planning Commission rtcornmendaUon that the five neighbor· Ing. properties be .examined with a view to ~tbef rene1otlatlng Or te~tin& the leases and poaslbly removmg the bulldingi tO increase the sh.e of' the '"'""' parking lol or lo develop a parli aru. 0r .. ,. We•tller Low cloud&, lilbl drilzJe and temperalures mired In the UpPer l()'s ·lioth OD the coul and further Inland will pft.all oa Wedneadoy, with loken IUnlhhJe bre1klng tbrough 11. mlda!lerMon. INSIDE TODAY La""'•botblhla. It thriving In the Ormioe CO<llt area. For a full r'1)0TI, rood H owar~ L. Hcnd~'1 report fn the iportl section., Page 22. ._ I _., ' c .... ,.... 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" ., ! ..I t . l I • :t DAILY PILOT SC 'State Sets ewSewer .Deadlines -easttng -a jiundlced eye at Laguna's "decrepit sewer treafrnent plant, the State Division of Industrial Safety has set a bew deadline for correction of unsafe conditions listed in a 1968 citation. , A:ctlng city manager Joseph Sweany said today be will ask the City Council -.WidneS<lay night to authorize hiring con- tractors to speed up lbe required plumlJ.. tna, tleclrical and carpentry work in the ola plant to meet the Nov. 6 deadline. •'-we-have been trying tD handle-the work ourselves to save money," said 'Sweany, "but our present sta!f manpower "is oot &ulficient W permit us W meet the. ·:Nov. 6 date." ~ The corrections sought by the Industrial ..-Safety department, Sweany said. amount to about $5,000 to '6,000 worth of a p~ .jeeted $71 ,000 upgrading project for :which the city is seeking federal assist- "&llce. t Most of the it.ems, he sald. have to do wlth persoMel safety. They involve ven- itilation, guardrails, sealing of tanks from ,electric~! equipment to reduce the danger 1of gas e1plosions and installation of ade- ·quate shower and disinfection facilities .for men working in the plant. DAil Y ,ILOT 111'1, ,llolt 'ONOFRE A PROVEN SITE' Edison Comp.1ny's Gould 'SHORE DETERIORATING' San Clemente High's Grignon NUCLEAR PLANT .•. : "The pumping stations met legal re- 'quirements when .they were built in 1935," engineer Sweany e1plained. "but they are not up W today·s industrial gafe- ty standards." cal generator expansion, Gould fold the In a more somber note In the dispute • He noted that the sewage treated in the · examiner-that the demands on electrical over thl! pos!ible 'poUuUon froni the :,Plant meets all water quality control power through the Edison system in 1976 350,IJOO.gallons-per-minute of heated 1ea standards and said the corrections re-would be double that of toPay. water"> already emanating fro mthe exist.. :quired ·are .. mostly small items" that 'San Onoffe, he· added, is the "only pro- -flave been approved by the council but ven site" where nuclear reacUJr e1· ing plant, a San Clemente High School ~not completed because of manpower pansion could take place lo meet the pro-marine studies teacher spelled out his :6hortage. jected demands. beliefs for the PUC. "They just feel we are taking too long "~t ~ the only site in Southern Phil Grignon, who told Main he was not ·to correct these things and I suppose they Cahfor~a capable of. further devtjlop-representing any group, termed thermal ·are right," said Sweany. ment with nuclear units by the ye a r >---.. ··1rthe-council-authorizcrprefiarlng-19'76;'' he-claimed, adding-that the time.---pollutlon -th~t-crea~by hea,~ed water :plans and advertising for bids. it pro-consuming pr~esscs of scientific studies dumped back 1nUJ ~~e sea -as pollution •.bably will suffice to answer the show for site adaptability would rule out any of the worst form. . . . " ,, cause order, he -zaid. othe.r fresh _site in time to avoid a power b Th1he teache~, classdted as an. e 1 xper 1 ht ... About.a third of the expenditure should crisis in six years. Y e e1a_m1ner, wee: s"'.orn-1n or e • be refunded with federal money. in-He aaid one other alterna~~ site has r~co~?· then ~barged ~hat !!1~rmal pollu-· :•cfuding the cost o( cblorinators ($2.8 000) been purchased by his firm -Point t1on ~ffcels all organisms uf the sea. on which the council will receive 1bids Conception, but production of a working I.n his 15 ?'ears of study of the pro~lem, )\'ednesday riight. reactor there Could not be accomplished Grignon said, .he has found tba~ gual1ty of "It bas taken us a year and a half just before 1979. !~e <?range Co~st .. shorehn~ has .to get chlorinaUJrs to meet the govern· Reading from a prepared scenario deteriorated rapidly, . the~ ~1ted the fme:nt specs," Sweany noted. between his finn's-lawyers and himself, reports of cancerous lesions 1n fish found ~· --+ Gould told the examiner that location of near the_ Orange County. sewage and Hun- !:" nuclear reactors in remote areas to tington Beach fossil·fuel generator out,.. ~'O ' £ T k replace the proposed ones at San Onofre falls near Huntington Beach. ... Wller 0 fUC would not proviOe a ••reasonable balanc:e Grignon then stressed thaf his point in -· 'r · between-rerilote' generation and genera· testifying waS not one of-strict opposition F • B d} H lion. near major load centers." to the San Onofre reactors, but. instead. ;. ll'lll a y urt ~-an Ominous._note --reswned to can fqr a m~jor ¢tologlcal 1b.l~f.Ol'I• it The owner of a Capistrano Beach ~g firm su~fered extremely critical '1n!urles before dawn today In a grinding .crash of his car into a center divider on "'.'the San Dk!gO Freeway. • Jater, by opponents -Gould ruled out the ducted by Impartial 1cientlsta -•not effectiveness or the remote generaUJrs Y.'Orking for either the Edison Company ~ Raymond Harry Kesy, 35, (If 26!M2 ·camino de la Estrella, was reported under intensive care at South Coast Com- munity Hospital, suffering from massive head injuries and other multiple wounds. Kesy, highway patrolmen said, was removed from the maqgled wreckage after nearly a half-hour of rescue at- tempts by San Clemente firemen. The crash occurred In the northbound lanes of the-freeway near the El Camino Rea1 oUr&np. The auto slimmed into the raised center divider at about 2:30 a.m. Kesy is the owner of Kesy Trucking of the same Camino de la Estrella address. ·.Gasoline Bomb Hits "U.S. Site in l\1ilan MILAN. llaly CAP) -A gasoline fire bomb exploded in front of the U.S. Information Service in Milan early today, ·blackening the front door. Police said it ·was thrown from a passing car. i It was the 12th e1plosion in llaly's chief :; 1ndustrial center in less than two months. •, . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • l • • • • ' • Police blamed the atlacks on anarchists. ' DAILY PILOT . _ ...... --· _M,.. H ............. ........ ..., s..a. .... OllAJllG• COAST f'UAllSHING ctlMi'AttY lto\.ttl N. Wtt4 Pr•lclarit •r.d ~Wier J•clt-R. Cwrtey \I~ Pta!ll..,I 1r.d Gilnerll MIMttr Thom•• tC1ml Edl!or 7hom11 >.. M11rphine MIMllnl Editor f.id1r4 P. Hill ...,.. Or9ntt c.un1r unw OHi<• • because many miles of transmission lines or the Atomic Energy Commission." would fall victim to "equipment failure, The papular high school instructor natural catastrophes and -more became the first witness· to be cross-u- reccntly .... sabotage.•• a mined by ut ility attorneys who queried . The last aspect was revived soon after Grignon on studies of the outfall area ·Gould stepped down without cross·eX· near the existing San O~ofre reactor. amination by opponents. Grignon replied tersely that }le bas con· One woman travellng from Vista with ducted no studies in the vicinity. her husband to protect against the entire "The authorities at Camp Pendleton Issue oC-nuclear power, testified that the will not allow me in the area W conduct expanded San OnOfre facilities "would be such studies," he said. a sitting duck for plane crashes, missiles As the testimony begins to accumulate fired by a gunnery sergeant making a in the hearings, more appearanctS by the mistake at Camp Pendleton, deadly equi~ foes to the location of the plants has been ment failures ... " promised. l\1rs. Lloyd Von Hagen also refuted Plagued by what they termed last- published accounts o( successful e1-minute knowledge of the hearings, the op- periments in y,·arm water f r o m ponenls promised to continue providing generating plants and the ability to petitions opposing the location of the create "superlobsters" which grow to plants in coming days. maturity in a matter of weeks. She refer· l\1rs. Hicks, who -beseeched Examiner red to discharge of water baCk inUJ the l\Iain on the point of nuclear dangers. sea 10 degrees hotter than the ocean tern-asked that residents "be relieved of the perature. misfortune of living in an atomic test "It might be advantageous to grow the lube for the past two years." lobsters in that hot water and have them Representing GUARD (Groups United emerge already boiled for the dinner Against Radiation Dangers) Mrs. Hicks table," said said. relayed a list of questions on the issue Laguna Studies Champagne Plea The Laguna Beach City Council .will consider a request at its Wednesday night meeting from the Laguna Moulton Playhouse to sell champagne . The Community Player! would llke lo sell bubbly by the glass in lhe city-0wned theater during the intennission of all plays, says Playhouse president William Harcum. Proceeds from the sale would go toward a scholarship fund for students at Laguna Beach High School. The Playhouse has previously served champagne to patrons on special oc- casions and proceeds from the sale of coffee and soft drinks a't the plays have always gone to the drama scholarship fund, says Harcum. From Page I BEACH ••. a plan for development. While tht are.a around UCLA for e1- ample, bas lncreased in value to the point whtre lnflrptnslve prot>@rty near the campiu.: prohibits such development. the inclus.ion area at UCI 11 lntended to prevent this ec:onom1e barrier to Jocallng non-academic but univtrslty -related !unctions near to the campus. which she asserted have not been answered by utility officials. Among them are requests for the specific measurements of nuclear wastes emitted by the existing reactor, the safe- ty proceedures for disposal of nuclear 'vaste products, the exact foolage of beaches to be taken up by the plants and the projected costs for moving the plants downcoast. Inland and underground .. Main promised answers to the queries as tbe hearings continued. He added that he expected the pro- ceedings to last the week -perhaps win· ding up sometime Friday. From Page 1 MARINE ... the crash, Booker Hoover of Los Angeles. was unhurt. San Clemente police, summoned to the wreck scene, too~ Patton to Orange County 1'1edical Center for emergency treatment, then returned the man to San Cleme'l'lte for booking on the two felony counts. -..,- Officers said 1 large splinter of wood found in the apartment where the al· tempted asoault toolt place, apparently matches with the larger cliunk of lumber found In the· stolen car. Patton remained in police custody this morning . Vandals Uproot Tree In Costa Mesa Park Simon said, '·The inclusion area p18n·· --"andab uprooted a 12·foOl silk nos.s ncd for serving '' a buUer between the tr~ at Costa Mffil 's TeWlnkle Park tamp113 and a city or 100,000 Is one thing. f\tonday night and dragged It to 1 nearby A eity of 450.000 people surrounding the wall, over which Jt wa~ broken tn hall. _. cempus-ls quite anoU1er.'' Park employes reported thelncldent 1t F'urt}ler, Slmon charged Irvine with 970 Ar}ington Drive to_~lice after lt w~s deveJopihg a "liaury 'cty" for the very di~covered. listing a $10510is . • \ ' . -·· -. l Keep ~t~e Peac:~ Students 'Win Bid to Save _Symbol , . . . '" . . , ~ San Qernente H.iCh • School students Rick Kramtr, lhe lradua~ who deiign-magulrie itatiitg this,. but there was na. asked (or a UtUe puce Monday. ed the gift, po!ht@d out that the symbol is documentation. 1 Trul~ of~ tht caplstrano Urtifled only discernible in ll& 60-foot circle if Kramer and other students said the School D11trlct decided they shou!d have someone walks around It or vJews it from syffibol Was bOrn In the late 1950s by it.Student efforts tO save a pecice symbol ab<ive. g~o~p~ p~t~fing nucl~~r warh~adS on BUrrounding the sun dial, which was the He pointed out that the plaque at the Polaris missiles. They said the figure in gift of the class or 1970 were rewarded base ot the sun dial says "Time for world the circle stands for nuclear disarma- when the board voted W keep it. peace''. "It Was my. Intention that~ain~ m'ent in Navy semaphore and later sym· Mrs. Leon Riley, who favored removal there was a lot of trouble all over on bolized peace. of the sign, Uild the board that by leaving school campu.w:s Iii.st year and much was The syll'!:bol y.·as also wsed by the San It there they might be !.'defacing public being torn down, we should build Clemente High School band last Fri~ay, property.'' somethiog," heJaid. which formed it during the halftime "I object to it because it Ls being used Supt. Truman Benedict said that the show. Benedict said he took full by the revolutionarit.s in our country," symbol is often ·'associated with students responsibility for the show which had 1he 1aid. ''I don't want to identify us in who talk pea,c'e while hitting you on the been critized, saying he didn't think this way. I feel strongly that we shouldn 't head vtith a rock. "But if you say it students connected it with anything bad, idenlify ··with anything th i s con-means peace 1n your minds and hearts, evil or malicious. troversial" then it ls not'"'sub.verslve or irreligious," "I thought it was beautiful,'' said Dr. Trustee Bob Hurst who abstained he said, addressing the audience. Robert Beasley, chairman of the board agreed that the symbol la. offensive to One ariument against the symbol was of trustees. 1 10me memben of the community. ''1 that it was: an ancient symbol of evil and Benedict said that in the future detall- tbink It 1bou1d stay however, because tbe anti.Christ. One student said he was ed plans of the school gifts will have to~ kids are alnctre." ·ghown an article in American Opinion submitted to the board for approval. 18 Artists Share Top Prize Money ~ Eighteen artists share prize romiey in the Lqunl Beach Art Gallery's~ '70, juried all-media ahibit, on vie-,.· at the gallery through Oct. 25. Entries were judged by a jury made up of Harry Bliss, Vic Smith and Mary Holmes. Jurors' Award went to Jay Willis of use for his cast aluminum sculpture. __ 'QJe Hinkle Awwt_for..oil _Was_won..by Gil Moor ot Los Angeles and painting winners were George R. James of Costa Mesa; Thelma deGoede Smith, Orange; Gerhardt Felgemaker of Laguna ; and William Motta of Newport Beach . Ne.p·s Delil::atessen Award went to Gaylord Gillman of Laguna Beach for his large oil paint~g. HGood Boy." Winners in the sculpture category were Dr. Edwin Lombard of Fresno; Howard James Lockway of Costa Mesa; Jane Vall of Pasadena; and Georg Rauch of Laguna Beach. Graphics winners were Mary Tift of Corte Madera; Ja~k Rowe of J..aeuna Beach: Ray BroVo ·o( Long'~clij and- Ashantey from ,Laguna. · Taking awards in 11le crafts category wer.:-lftJen rW.J.Ricbttdi··'of ~n Grove; Robert Hardy of Sbolh Ugunt.; Sharon Berg of Newport Beach ·And Elisabeth Gateff of Laguna Beach. The exhibit is on view at the gallery from noon to ~ p.m., With Id.mission fees of $1 for adults, 50 cents for students and free for cbildren. Tours are condttcted at 2 p.m. on Sundays. Ambulance Plea Denied by Council A bid by a Laguna Beach ambulance service to operate in Huntington Beach was denied by the City Council Monday nlght. . The Gold Ambulance Service, 210 Beach St., Laguna, applied for a certifica~ of need and necessity to transport patients at the call of the Huntington Beach police and fire departments. City Administrator Doyle Miller and pie police department recommended denial, pointing out that Seal's Ambulance was already carrying out this service. City Attorney Don Bonfa said that the applicant may ask for a public bearing following denial of the certificate. 'GOOD BOY' BY LAGUNA ARTIST WINS PRIZE N1p'1 'Delicat111en Award Goe1 to Gaylord Gillman 300 Gather in Capitol In ' U.S. POW Misswn WASHINGTON (UPI) -More than 300 men an'\!•ob\11! plll<re<J. 0!1 •• 11er.-of- t.hi CaJiltol M:ondly before visiting members of Congress to pre.SS for release of American prisoners of waf in Vietnam. Mrs. Carole North of \Vellfleet, Ma ss., newly elected chairman of the National League of Families of American Prisoners and Missing in Southeast Asia, told newsmen "we are far from salisfled that everything that could be done is being done .•. " Mrs. North's orga'nizaUon, w h I ch helped to organize the recently held joint session of Cangress to call attentioo tD· the plight ol American POWs, completed its four·day convention here today. ~fenibcrs planned to meet with ·con- gressmen throughOut the day to ribtain their signatures on cards pledgi'ng su~ port for a greater U.S. effurt to win freedom for POWs. Mrs. North declared the organization had. • .no intention of letting up the pressure even for one minute until all of our men are identified and, ultimately, &et free." Her own husband was shot down over North Vietnam in an Air Force jet Aug. 1, 1966. While she conceded the "government is doing everything It can, she emphasized more could be done through a massive • letter-writing campaign W the leaders of fiorth·· Vie~ •''I ~want ,my· hqsband home and I Want him heilthy,'' she· said. Texas millionaire H. Ross Perot ad- dreSsed the organization Saturday at a c!osed·door sessM>n to brief the v>'ives on \\-'hat was ~ing done to secure the release of POWs. Mrs. North declined to discuss what Perot, who has been con· cerned with the prisoner issue, said. Howe_ver, she said, "Perot gave us e1- aclly what we asked for, and ... we are tremendously encouraged by his assess· ment." Bank Held Up, Teller Threatened With Lye SAN FRAL~CISCO (UPI ) -"I have a bottle of lye. Give me aU your mone'y or I'll blind you." . This note was pushed through the win- dow to teller 1'-1arianne C. Smylie, 25, at the Wells Fargo Bank branch. She pushed out $810. The robber, identified as Willie D. ·Smith, 28, San FrancisC<J, was cap. tured minutes later by patrol car officers, who found a small bottle filled with .a milky substance in his possession. It Ain't Necessarily So! ... Jhe other day e cus+ome'r was c.ompa.ring our prices witli .. •nother store, We were informed that our pr ice was 60c per square yerCI high!! Questioning the customer, we discovered that the other store wes furn ishing a cheep urethane padd ing which is 75c per squ11re y•rd .<h••p•r th•n the 64 oz. sponge rubber p•od ing th•t we were including . Furthermore, iti th is case, we were comparing our installation e gein~t 11n installation worth fer less. (Many stores contract their l•bor by the y•rd to l•yers of unknown beckground •nd skill - we have our own crews, trained end controlled Dy us, paid b'y the hovrto ~o t~e best ~uelilfinstollition poS1ible.). So ••• thelr eslim•le wes ~ol whet ii ep~•red lo l:iol ' In conclusion, when compa ring pr ices, make sure you ere c.omperin 9 ,cJuol velues . U.NlA ANA, OU.Nal, TUSTIN. Cefl , •• ALDl~'S ~ llD Ml\.L CAI"" & DU.Plllll 11J74 trwfM, Tllftt .. Cellf . Ut.Jl44.-. - . ALDEN'S _c CARPETS e DRAPES· 1663 Ploc•ntio A••· ._CQSJA_MU.A-.-- 646-4838 I , 'I • L DAil Y PILOT :J Pia house . a-· 'Disaster Area?~ .-' Problems Plague Cost~y New Laguna Moulton Theater ' ; • • : ........... ~ -~ : .,. . .,.,·--: ; i . : . ' .. ' PACIFIC 0 CEAN BROKEN LINE MARKS PROPOSED UNDERGROUND DISTRICT Planners Slate Study Eor Buried Utilities The "Dlsasr.r Area" llgn folcingly hung on the door of a drtuing l"OGm at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse could u wtll be ·placed on the front door ot the building. F,.. ·despite being one of the finest facilities ever developed for community !heater, tile young playhouae bu suffered · more than Jts share or creation pains. And they're not over. The disaster sign cover! a 0 women" sign but the small, unpainted room beyond the door is really the men's dressing room • After completion of the ptayhou!e a 'year ago, the men's room was larger than the women's. T!'.e actrnaes need more room to dress so they traded with the adors. But the signs on the doora remained the tame and, according to Jack Seymour. managing director of lhe 350-seat playhouse, the dressing room size is only one of several mistakes that were made in building the $7501000 theater. NO SHOWERS Although the womtn have a row of unused urinaJs, they do not have any showers, nor do the men. There are no showers because, when building the playhouse, the Lagun.i Beach Community Players ran short of money. For the current production of "The Royal Hunt of the Sun," Seymour rented two portable showers and installed them in the airconditioning equipment room - up a flight of stairs from the dressing rooms. The air conditioning is an o th e r • 1 problepi.mistake-disaster," Seymour says. 'Ille entire theater is air conditioned or heated 24 hours a day -except for the business office area where people worlt eight hours a day. A iPecJat Planning ConunissiQner study "We , urge property owners from the The stage, auditorium, dressing rooms, session to discuss po 1 s i b 1 e uo-aru to aUend," said commission control room and every other nook that is bulldlng," said Seymour, "unique In the Unlltd States ••• 1n tM world for com• munity thea ter. "That's the big problem. It's a proo fess ional building with a protesslonal staff and an audience used-to profesaiooo al productions. And they're getting tberq. "But it'~ so expensJve. The lighting can run up to nearly $600 a month ('I11e bill !or a year at the old theater). It costs $18 Just to get the air conditioning people here before they started to do anything. "And evef)'one who works here wants to be paid because they think this ex· pensive-looking building just reeks of money."_ BIGGER, BEAVIER-- "In the old theater," he said, "we always had volunteers to help us because there was not-as-MUCh work to do. But now, everything b bigger and heavier. You can't get guys with muscles to carry beams across the stage at J p.m, for: free." The stage, 78 Feet wide and 40 feet deep. woold hold lour ol tile old playhouse stages. It also takes far more lumber to make a pregentable set. "We used to have a little, termite-rld4 den building where you could drop stuff on the floor and'it didn't matter,'' said Seymour. "Now, Jt is all carpet and it has tG be cleaned." Seymoo r feels the newness and size or the new theater might have discouraged some volunteers who felt at ease put· tering in the old building. PEOPLE NEEDED His answer: "People make the building. It's not going to get any warmer without people. If volunteers go t.o work in there I'm sure there will be good vibes (vibrations)." Seymour said he can't nlse the priee of Uckets, and operating capital baa been a real problem fOr lhe Oedj]ling facility. "We are laking a lot o( positive steps," dergrounding of utilitles in the Emerald ~etary Al Autry. "Since this is just a used only a few hours each tvenlng are Terrac& area . will be held. at 7:30 p.m. .-." .... .,..,... rcmnal notices will not be an kept at a comfortable temperature. --1bursday·tn-c1ty-hall-coanctl·chambers.--._._,,.~, ~------~"--"be.people_warkingiJn..the business office Planing commissioner Robert Hastings sent out, but we hope there will be a good and, box Office swelter or freeze, said DAILY PILOT Pti.t. tl'f Lt9 ltlYft• PLAYHOUSE •. ~ESENCIWHVES ~USE -T.0-SMALL.B<lY. Like Child, Theater 11 Suffering Some Growing Pains he said. ••as many as we can think of.'' H&-iaid-balf--Of-lhe-3,300-SllpporliJJl-- subscriber-members are new Ulls aeuon. advised the commission at it.! sept. 21 turnoul , , Seymour, depending on what time of year meeting that this area is regarded as the If response to the proposed project l! it is. most suitable for the city's .next un· favorable, a petition will be circulated dergrounding project, if property owners and, if owners of mote than 60 percent of are intereSted. --the propertiesinvoived-1igrr,1he Planning ~'firit district, on Cliff Driye in the Comm.ission will ~d to the City Heisler Park area is scheduled to start Council tbe formation of an_ under~d this month. ' · utility district for the area. Representatives of the utility com· The area is bounded by Dunnegan panies will be present at the Thursday Place, Dartmoor Street, Hillcrest Drive, meeting to-discuss the project, provide a San Joaquin Street, one block-of -North-- preliminary estimate of costs and answer Coast ·Highway, Crescent Drive and queslj.oos. McKnight Drive. Oceanographer. Criticizes . U.S. Apatli~ Toward. Sea 17 inches of rain water In the orchestra ON CITY LAND pit and the players liad to spend $800 lo _The playbQ9.se w~ bui!_t sin city land by correct the problem. the players to replace the smaller, ti). year~ld theater on Ocean Avenue, since \\'ATERLOGGED demolished. The theater was given to the The water had run down the sloping city of Laguna Beach upon i~ completion service entrance driveway and seeped and is leased back by the players. The under a door, running into the orchestra first performance waa given on Sept, 30, pit. The drain5 outside the door, designed 1969. to carry the--rain water elsewhere, had The players had hardly enough money failed to handle the load. to buili a doll house, but they ra~d the On several occasions, ra in wa ter built dollars for the playhouse through an in· up on the roof -aga in as a result of tensive fund campaign. Mra. Lewis F. clogged drains _ and poured through the Moolton donated tile lllOll money -erh d til to · th b •·ta $100,000. The pla·.1u. ..... -ts named in her 0\-' __ ea ven a rs m e acrui ge 'uuu.x; area. bonor. The playhouse was burglarized in But there never was enough money to A st d th 14 ooo h f build the lumrious theater as it should ugu an more an , wort o sound equipment was stolen. have been, and the problems of the first The eqtlipment, which Seymour says year reflect the initial money ahortage was not the best in the world anyway. that caused corner cutting. has been replaced with much better By JOANNE REYNOLDS During the winter rains or 1969-70, the equipment -which bas not yet been paid than fields such as astronomy or biology. theater aJmoat drowned. At one time, In for. Robert Abe.I, head or the National February, l970, said SeymoW', there were "The orchestra pit is too small," Of 1t19 Dtillr Pli.t Steff Oceanography is as old as the first man who ventured onto a body of water. Yet, as a science it has attracted less Interest. less personnel and fewer funds Science Foundation's Sea Gr 1 n t Seymour said on a tour of the theater's construction faults. "It is impossible to Program, said he sees the problem as Water Directors get a full orchestra in it because u is not one of educating the public, then the long or wide enough. When an orchestra school children. ' is crammed in, as we did for "Oliver, .. Speaking this weekend at the National Named in Recall the pla yers have to duck down because it Conference on Marine Sciences in Educa· is not deep enough." lion, in Avalon, Catalina Island, Abel Actw" n Defended PIANO SHORTENED bluntly slated: He adds that during the rece nt pro- "Ou kno ledg of · duction of "Oliver,'' two legs of a piano Entering the plush lobby of the t}leater, he points to a slight rise In the m~ddle of the noor. ·~Because olthe rain water that seepecl underneath, the floor is buckling." ARCIDTECT'S ERROR To get to the light and sound control room above the lobby, it is necessary to go through the foyer of the men's room. Seymour -attributes, this to an arctiitec· tural error. "We are now desperately in rieed of money," said Seymour. "We had to bor· row ;42,000 to operate an~ buy eqWpment for use during the first· year A!;ld we hJve a $JO,OOO payment due Oct. 20. We don't hl:ive it and will have ,to renegotiate the loah with the bank." . · · And though Seymour sounds about as cheery as Hamlet while disCussirii the problems .intertwined .with the :playhpuse, it's a big part or his life and he has faith that solutions will be found. · · The $42,000 bank loan has been reduced to $32,000. A finance Committee has been appointed to raise money. Fund raising pr6jects included a fashion show Monday night and planning for a car raffle. "But what we real!)' iieed," said Seymour. "are big hunks (of mo_ney)." EXECUTIVE BUILDING Part or the problems come dirt<:Uy from the magnitude of the theater dream that became a reality. "It • is a tremendously t1cl\\ng The ratio used to De about one-third new in a season. Seymour sa id, "We have subscriber· members-fnltii all over Orange County, places like-Fountain ~ Valley~'n'd. \Vestminster where we never bad any before. BROADENED BASE "We have broadened our base and are hopeful we will be Orange County'• leading theater.'' He said the new playhouse sUpporters are the result ot direct mailing intolareas never before ap- proached. The playhouse operation, perhaps, b 1uflering from cultµral iliock. The dream theater -with flaws -is there. 'l'be small staff is working -seven 1hoW1 scheduled this season. 'lbe problem ts growing into th~ new theater, a giant llep, from the old playhouse. · "We will survive somehow,•• aald Seymour. "We have learned to use the building to the best advantage .with its limitations. "All theater is based on hope and op- timism anyway." Jean Millovich, Laguna· Resident, ' Services Slated 1 Laguna Plann,ers Hold Vp Advice 'On Tennis Issue r w e ocean 1C1ences as Will'•'-Moorhead, Laguna Beach h d be lh I ..,__.. a to cut off so e piano wou d fit in· 1cienti!ts and educatoni will never lessen County Water District manager, today to the orchestra pit. Blood biJ Jean B. Millovich. a longtime resident the netd to educate the taxpayer. sprang to the defense of four directors of He rioted that when the trams were mo . e Due f)f California, died Saturday at her "The problem is that they don't want to the neighboring Soo:th Coast County forced to stop running during the recent residence ii) Lagurul Beach. Sbe was 71. W ter D•~·ct al t •· II Fune'ral services for Mrs. Millovicb will read about the oceans, they would rather a lllw 1 ag ns wuum a reca ac-Fe.stival of the Arts, the attendance at F L Laguna Beach planning commlssion-ers tion has been launched. nighUy productions of "Oliver" m· • Or. agunaDS be held Thursday at 1 p.m. at the Art read about the screwballs and nuts who McCo · k M. t ~ I Interment decided Monday night that the "The South Coast County Water creased. rm1c or uary 1,..uape · Colony's tennis court problem would be in gracelessly throw bombs about." District has for years had directors ''It was either a coincidence," he says, The American Red Cross bloodmobile will follow St Pacific . View Memorial good hands without their advice·, when a Many of the 150 conference membtrs dedicated to the best interest of the tax· i'or the people forced to walk to the will be in Laguna Beach Oct. 12 accepting Park. in Newport Beach. committee named lo tackJe the matter expressed concern over the fact the payers they serve," said Moorhead. "We festival from downtown finally saw the doriations of blood from residents. Mrs. Millovich, 326 N. Coast Highway, federal government has seen fit to sink are at present working closely with tbe building. We have no outside marquee or is survived by two sons, Jack Bedard and moved into action. h tremendous amounts of funds in the space South Coast dlstrtct in construction of outside illumination and we can't afford The bloodmobile will be at the Com· David Millovicb; a· daughter, Mrs. The planners accepted a re~rt on t e race with the Russians while tending to facilities to provide and safeguard water to build one.'' munily Presbyterian Church,. 415 Forest Katherine Ohlson; a brother, Frank tennis court situation but refratned from ignore the race for "inner space.'' supplies for the people of this area and "The building li~ almost all new Ave. from 2: 15 p.m. until 7 attempting to Fraser; seven grandchildren and one action when advised that the City Coun4 They cite the dilapidated condition or find the present board to be equally buildings is settling," he says, pointing to reach a goa l of 110 pints of blood. . great.grandchild. cil, following a study session, had agreed the nation's merchant marine and lhe dedicated." · cr.ii.cks in the· plaster (In walls. ''The Mrs. Mlllovlch caine to California ln '!tee •-"'d be .. t up to follow The donated blood will all be used in a comm1 suuw fact t6at America imp()rts 70 perce11t of Four members of the South Coast cracking causes the plaster to flak e off 1920 from Denver, Colo., and bad lived tn through. the fish consumed in this country as board last· week were aerved with a onto the carpet. We can only afford one Orange County at various hospitals. Lagwa Beach for the past 14 years. Councilman Edw~d Lorr and Recrea· evidence of lhe problem. "Notice of Intent to Recall" by a South guy to clean the place and he works con· Donors may make appointments; if they where she was active in the auxiliary of tion Director George Fowler already are James L Gearhart, chief o f County homeowners groups which main· stanUy." · .,.,..1.. wish, with the Red Cross at 494-6557. American Legion ·Post 222..' working with the school district on joint oceanography In public achooJs in New talned, among other charges, that a re-,..:...:...;,,:,,: _________ :.;;;;_...:...=....:......:......:......:......:......:......:......:......:.. ____ _::.;:::._::.::::.:.::..:..:.:.:..:O~n~tht-l_o_ri-.-.-11-. recreaUon plans, it was noted at thaC Hanover CO\mty, Nortb Carolina, ex· cent 50 percent increue in water rates time. plained the problem. was 11unjustifled." Hantingtaa The Laguna Beach Tennis Association "We have Russian fisblng fleets off our Targets of the recall are Robert B. Barbour tias asked that its members Norman coast all the time. And what disturba me Malone, Thomas H. Brooks, Gerald s. Powell and Art Wahl repr~nt them on is not the fact that they are there-they Pell and Ttd J, O'Connell. A fifth board the tennis study committee. with a have a right to be-but the fact that they member, Dr. Anthony OrlandeUa, was representative of the Festival o[ Am are so much more efficient fisheMnen not included in the recall action. gerving in an advisory capacity. than our men. Taking note of the f&...1 that the rate in- tn the ·absence of commissioner 1'For example, when our shrimpers crease probably had come 1111 a shock to Thomas Johnston, it was decided to defer come in there are hundreds of sea gulls tx1nsumers, Moorhead commented that until Oct 19 scheduled action on a ten-. tralllng their boats to get the-wasted bait had rate! been stepped up gradually over tative tract map and varianCe application and shrimp. But the Russian fishermen the past decade, homeowners might have for Temple Hills Drive property owned have developed the ability to use found the increases more acceptable, by Harry Howard. everylhil1( they take from tho ,.., Vou "but they woold have been paying more Residents of the area a·galn were on never eee a gull trailing tbtlr boata." for their water all along'." hand to protest the variance, which would Cmdr. Don Wabb, a member ol the The incre.,., lint made In the South permit Jots of Jess than the required fron-team which made the ·rtCOl'd 35.()l)O foot Laguna dls:trict in the past 11 years, was tage In tile-smilJ development. The re-• 0ce1n dive iri. !Mt re11U1ln-optlnillt1G TllJd.-....uary beca111e of an-lriffiiii quest had been deferred from the about tile stir. ol marine oclencel end In tile Metropolitan Waler DIJtrlct'• ......-commlllton .,..ting after a what be call&,.. power, ~ price of wattr, 'be board had deadlocked 2-2 vote on~ variance. ''I see tea power u the ability ol an~· led earlier. The applicant aeckt to develop sevtn tkti to project tts interest into and on Moorhead 1Uggested that reaidenta seek lob, ot more than required overall square the world oc!tan. And despite tht fact that views or aome of the "many exceUent footage, but, In..,,,. ln•tances, laWng to I'm In the Navy, I lhlnk !hat military meo" -..ho have helped develop the .n .. t wldlh and depth requU.meots. !O<Ce Is tile lut Anction of lhla .,....,.. A ~trlct. eommWton chairman . Wllllam Lam. country's sea power ii~ commerclal ven· "J can think of quite a few residents o( THE RED BALLOON LTD. ' invites 'you to enroll your daughter in th fjf: delightful class.es* I Hellos and Goodbyes Tl My Mirror Tells Me Ill Little Biles I Take IV What Shall I Wear V My Family Means a Lot To Me VI My Room Is a Friendly P\ace Vil Getting Ready for Graduation VIII The Fashion Show Graduation . boo.me and commlMioner James Schmitz: turts and yachting and lilbfn&,-things that area who have contributed to the found the plan acceptable, bul com-that art tmplemente by economics and South Co8st District's development and ml&llonerl Cad ohn!OIL.and R®ert ,diplomacy, not milltary mlgh~ ".he llld. operation," taid the Lagun1 official. "To Jtastlnga felt the applicant should ht He noted that the Pf'Oblema for U.S. tea name a lew, there have been Elmer obllged to meet r.qulttmtnts 1nd redll<t power are formidable, "but wt know how Craw!ord, llkhard lloland, Haro I d ages 5 through 7, 8 through 12. $30, call for reservations (714) 846-1666 clas~es limited, start october 19th •Conducted b)' Btvirrlec KeJl1 ot \Vlllblt.t~ --- 16877 ALGONQUIN ST. the development to six Iola If ncce~;.q;· lo get out of trouble, If the n1U0111I will Edwards, George Gren~ C. E. V1"8hn, Commissioner CArl John.son sa is permit u.s to/' he added. Clarence Burner, Gustave Brossmer. report on starw:lard! for a Planned Congressman Richard Hanna (I). Glen D. Robert.ton ana J. Lewis Furman. R'8ldentla1 DeTelopmont (PRD) was Anaheim) IOUndtd lhe most tnlhultlllic "Perhaps lhe petltlonerl should talk to -neoring completion end-asked tbal-lt bl -note H ·l1r-u 1enerallng publlc-w.rat--'111-thete ...,,.ll'helr-oplnlon·ol lhl !~~=~===========~=~;· -;;-;;;-;=-;-;~-=~-;-;·==========~ scheduled for lllldy Oct. 12. In ""'lllOll'apliy. clralmstancu mlghl be belplul." •- Hnnlingtcin Beacli I ) , I l r ' D.IJLY PILOT T uesdly, Ottobtr 6, 1970 Election Assured Sadat Selected As Egypt Chief CAIRO (Al'l-E&YPt'1 only J>Oli!ical party namtd Anwar Sadat Mooday nlght to llUCCeed Ille late l'reJldent Gamsl c~ " .. Diil\' PDM ,,..,., Abdel Nauer, assuring his election by Princess Marg•ret on her 40th the National AAembly Wednesday. blrthd,•y is· seen by artist Bryan Meeting aborlly before midnight, the • !~member central oommltl« of the ji: It allo a.id E&YPt'• allianct with the Soviet Union la "a permanent factor, not a temporary convenience," and warned that Israel might dedle tO renew "military aggression" heca.,. of the present situation in E&YPL Coup Succeeds • • . Brrli via-fieader Falls • Ill • LA PAZ, Bol!Vla (APJ -Geno-Allr.do --lt-~0v"an"'do canala re sijlled&'rPte·s1ctent-ear- ly today and a right-wing general who launched a revolt agalnst hlrn took over in his place. Revolt as prtSidtnt ju!t a week •co. ----The1>residenr gave-up-1fter-a-mettini--- of army offlcers by a vote of 317-60 Monday called on both him and Mirand~ to resign. 0 rgM1(8S a severed head. In the Arab Sociallat Union unanimously ap- painting unveiled today at the Na-proved the nomination of Sadat by the liooi:1hPadortrait Gallto"'b' t~~· prin· party's uecuUve committee. S.dal 52, cess e appear~ 8 51 mg on hu been serving as provisional president a _ptack base and is surroun~ed by _!inC!_Naaae:r died Sept. 28. a massive background of dark The eucuQVe comm t'teTfeCOrn· «.ray. H.aU the face, beneath a mended that the auemhly meet Wed- tiara, dissolves in a watery ab-neaday to endorse Sadat that his election stract .. ''.l can't r~mem~er a _ Prin--be confirmed by a natlonwtde releren· c~s being beheaded '!! a. IOY~ dum Oct. 15, and that the pttsidenl be Jn. birtlld,ay portrait before, . s;u~. Tim augurated two da111ater. In Tel Aviv, Israel made its 21st com- plaint Monday to the U.N. c:ommiJllon supervising the ceaae-flre.J~n .. the Suez.. CansJ, charging that E&YPt WU con- tipulng comjrudion ol..ml»ile hues _ Within Ia mila of tbe canal Egypt'• an- tialrcraft mlsailea are supplied by th'4 Soviets. UPIT1._... NAMED EGYPT CHIEF Acting President s.d•t Ovando asked military forces still loyal to him not to oppose the rebellion againat him. Shortly afterward, Gen. Rogelio Miran· da, the army chief of stalf who launched the revolt on Sunday, announced that be was assuming the presidency of a military junta..Jie.did not illllll<!liotely_ name the other members of the group. Miranda said he formed the junta "to direct the destiny or the fatherland with justice." OvandO, who aeized the presidency hJ a mllftary coup, at first waa defiant and said: "The destiny of the country ii not decided by officials but by the people who ought to upress their opinioft! at elec- lorui." But during the night he changed his mind. Ovando on Monday.stULhad thi SUPPort of two import.ant regiments and the air force. Maj. Ruben Sanchez, commander of the CoJorado Regiment guarding the presidential palace, termed the officers• vote a "fraud." LM1~, an UJ?~rt of. Chnst~e s .!!-rt Named vlci prealdent by Nauer in auctioneers. ~t looks as if Prtn-1969, Sadat was considered by m05t cess Margaret s head has become observers to be the least controversial of d_etac~ed ~rom ~r body 3~ s~s· several J!OtentW. contenders for the -pended, .with mascara l'l;lnft.in~ r1~· prisidency. One of the others, Lt. Gen: ul~ts down her cheek~. in an unlit Mdwned Fawzi, commander-In-chief cf prison ceq on a particularly dark Egypt's armed forces, auured the cen· night;" said the Daily ~k~tch. Or· tral committee of the milit.ary's full sup-~an. 35, who ~as comm1ss1oned by port for Sadat. a lawyers society 8:"<l ~ecommend· The execulive committee made a plea ed by Margaret, said.. My thought for solklarity in the face of "the designs w~s that royal port~ruts hav~ stood of hoaWe forces who desire to sow still a very lo~ time and it was discord in our ranks." It moved quickly time to paint a princess ~ a ~ax to replace Nasser, Jt said, to diScount that reflected the age she lived in. ..reports syread by the imperialist press And th8 queen's sister? "J under· of the el.iiteDce of a so.called vacuum in stand she is delighted," said the Egypt.'' agent f6r her husband, Lord Snow· "N.-'1 death plac.. a great burden don. · on the ASU and 1ta various organs to • work closely with the new president to Young Quinton Cooper flashes a bi§ grin GI he geta his pet frog t'cady for ii.. Brad<moll. Fla. frOfl jumping coJ>o .... • People are doing a double take in Tampa, Fla. over an advertise- ment on page 460 of the telephone book yellow pages that shows a mother feeding a big juicy spider to her infant. General Telephone Co. said the drawing-which depicts a woman talking on the phone while spoon-feeding the dlild-did not include the spider in the origin- al version. Bob Cromwell, General Telephone public relations man, said the bug was not noticed by company officials until the book bad been printed. The advertise- ment is one of the telephone com- pany's own and reads. "Additional phones. ideal for mothers." • • Sailors are still searchinli? for the 30-pound solid brass steering wheel of the destroyer J ohn R. Craig which has been missing for more than two days in San Diego. Even frogme"n are hunting the harbor floor today. 11I'll bet my lieuten· ant's bars that this was a practicaJ joke," said a spokesman for Paci· fie Fleet Cruiser-Destroyer Force. While the search goes on another steering wheel has been borrowed from the mothball fleet in case the destroyer, in port through October. might be called to sea duty. further Nasser's Ideas." the statement said. Palestinians '.Accuse Jordan ' Of New Attack By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PalesUnian guerrillas accused the Jordanian arniy of attacking guerrilla positions in northern · Jordan on Monday despite a catro:-arranged cease.fire that ,ended the country's nine-day civil war. ~n Amman, the Jordanian government .did not comme·nt on the charges but a spokesman said evacuation of guerrillu from the capital was proceeding quietly. Al Falah, the major guerrilla """"' made -charges: Army troops shelled the village of Harima at dawn and then tanks and armored cars attacked a guerrilla out- po5!·. The. army also fired .on guerrilla positions west of Ramtha. a village near the Syrian frontier sWI under euerrilla control. Jordanian soldiers arrested a prominent gue.nilla, Hahem Hindawi and other commandos, violating the tnre that called for the army and guerrillas to release prisoners taken in the fighting. The Al Fatah communiques, issued in Beirut, said the guerrillas "will not stand handcuffed"' if Hindawi and the other commandos are not freed. Jordan's infonnation minister, Adnan Abu Odeh, said an estimated 1,500 Palestinian guerrillas boarded trucks and ten Amman on~sunday under supervision of an Arab peace mission named at the Cairo meeting. Odeh said the government expected the withdrawal of anned guerrillas from Amman and Zerqa, 15 miles to the northeast, to be CQmpleled late Monday. Guerrilla units should be out of Irbid, Jordan'• leCODd largest city located 50 miles north of Amman, and other northern cities "in the next few days," Odeh added. The guemtlas were being moved to mountain bases near Jarash, 25 miles north of Amman and near the Israeli frontier where ·there "are good sanctuaries," lhe. information minister said. Some W..tem obllervers had predicted that Nasser would be replaced by a rul· lng body to-avoid-an int.ernal power struggle. Sadat is confronted with the ta1k of striking a balance between the Egyptian regime's lelt wing, led by Air ,Manhsl All Sa!>ey, and rigblilts led hy former Interior Minilter Zakaria Mohied· din. I' A close friend of the diad president, ... Sadat was among the "free officers group" that overthrew King Farouk in 1952 and provided Nasser's springboard to power. The only other member re- maining in the government is Huuein el Shafei, 51, who lWl litUe public support and is known to have no presidential .aspirations. Sadat, although a fierce nationalist and subacriber to .Nasser's ideas of Arab uni· ty and dignity, is especlod to be unable to command the fervent devotion the Egyp- tians and other Arabs gave Noser. But foreign diplomata consider him congenial ari1 easy to approach. -Government cbanga aJao were under way in Lebanon, where one of the rebel leaders in the 1958 civil war, Saeb Salam, accepted President Suleiman Franjieb's -Invitation-to fonn-a-naw-1overnment. Premier Ruhid Karam! resigned Satur· day following Franjieb's installation as president on Sept. 23. Salam, 65, is the leading Moslem politi· cian in Beirut but has been kept out of power since the 1958 strife by ·army op- position. Franjieh was elected despite army opposition. French Camidian F act'ion Kidnaps British Envoy MONTREAL (UPI) -A French Cana· d1an separatist group kidnaped the serlior British trade commissioner Mon- day, and gave the government 48 hours to meet a long list of ransom demands .- including peyment of half a million dol- )ars in gold safe passage out of the country. It was Canada's first diplomatic kid· naping. Four men, three of them armed with submachineguns, forced their way into the elegant downtown home of James R. Cross -the equivalent of a British CQn· sul in Montreal -and took him away in a taxi as his wife watched. Jn an eight-page ransom note sent to the news media and police the lddnapers identified themselves as members of the Front de Liberation Quebecois (FLQ), a rnili_tant underground group seeking in· dependence f r o m English·speaking Canada for French-speaking Quebec. Provincial justice minister Jerome Choquette told a news conference the FLQ's ransom demands for the relea!e of Cross included: -Release of "a certain number" of jailed separatists; -Payment bf a "voluntary ta1'1 $500,· 000 in gold; -An airliner and safe passage for the released prisoners, the kldnapers, and the gold, "To Cuba or Algerla" -Identification in Quebec ntwspapers. with a photo, of the informant who turned in an FLQ cell to Ille Police recenUy. 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LCI~ ANG~S (UPI) -nt. -ti:"'"~~ w:s••v '' w-•.il '"" . . ""*' llf .. 11! Wttm .,..rf:, ~I !lllld :\ ~•Jiii :=1t•11 ~llorl ~flt"" -1 .... It 1'0 -I ar(Tlc ti::. WM Cl~lrtt tM ll«lc: ' ....... , -•• , •HflmNllY'll'lt ""• <1141 w*tllll. Tw• lnc:llH M --· ttll t i OrHI Ftlll, Mllrtl,, bl'hltlllt "'9 '91tl "" "" trtl.llld i. ""'" l!IC,,. •• NH•b'I l.tWll!ort l!H fWI lrtc"'I Oii Ille '"?:"'' -1;!: ~ ... ~·~· -,,, -••! .... wt r _,,...~ I ll'IOlt II tOrt ..... 'ft.WI t Wl tll ~11111/td 11111(\ ol lf:.11111 I ~· -~--rice J: ~rr· : fflll I II WI~"° ftOl!I "''' l lld 1111 ... • ?:r t11111;i. ¥.i'11v. '11 '~" r= \'I ._ ::M'J ~ llOl'llt ,_1,, lft~ -Ml Mhft. \ J\'a tlenal tilth Ltw Pree. Al~u. " " Anc:llorl" .. ,. . .. All111t1 .. " ··~-field .. " lltm1r~ • " loh1 .. " IMIOll .. .. 8<11Wmvlti. .. " C ..... M " .. Clflcl-" .. .. """"' • " Dll'S M°"'8 .. " ....... " " l'•!rbll'lkl ,. " F011 WOl'tl'I .. " ... ·-• " H•~ " .. ... -·· .. K•llMS CltY .. M .. l.•tV-J .. .. l.o. AllM!n n .. Ml1mt " " MlllMfl'Oilt u .. .. N-Ori.t11• u " N•wYerll .. " Nani\ lll•ne • e Ot-llM .. " C*ltfli!lr!lt (11'1 ~ .. 1.7. °"""' .. ., Ptlm~• H n ll111 llol>ft1 " .. LIN>tnlt " .. Pll,.Dl.tttll .. # Port11rid .. .. ... RH!tl CJlt .. .. ·-• ,, kott_,. " " S.11 ~1Cll'I " • .. ''" D!fto .. .. &.11 Ft11KIK9 " .. ·---· ... -·'· ..... ,,,. # " ... Tllerrntl .. )I 'W•fllJNrort " .. Ovando celebrated his first annivenatY. Nixon Plans w Deliver Miranda said of Ovando's re1lgnatlon:' "It was the best thing ne couJd do. He was a good pi-esident. ·Now the armed forces will decide who will be the suc- cessor or-successors." The official armed forces radio, Red .Talk on Peace Effort,s Battalion, broadcast a communique saying : "For the Bolivian people, now begins the true de!liny they deserve.•• A statement by Ovando issued by Information Minister Carlos Carrasco said he decided to resign because "the WASHINGTON (AP) -A nine<lay European tour behind him , President Ni1on plans a special report to Congres.s and the nation on the U.S. commitment to peace around the globe. The report probably will Include the prospect of further troop withdrawals from Vietnam, one source said, and could come as early as next week. But the Nix· on Administration is not hiding its desire to get such a report on tbe record before the Nov. 3 elections. President and Mrs. Nixon were given a red-carpet welcome on their arrival at JI~ Andrews Air Force Base Monday night. -~ ---·- Nixon repeated at the airport that his. tour had been aimed at "strengthening the structure of peace in the Mediter: ranean and in the world. I think we made progresS -in strengthening that &truc- ture," he said. · The Nixons were greeted by Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, congressional and admini.stratioo leaders and members of the diplomatic· corps. Nixon .said he bad. found In Europe a greater understanding or·u .s. policy in Vietiiam than on his previous tour last year. He said "events in the future will demonstrate" that the United States ts making . progress towai:d achieving its JOals in Vietnam. · He reported a favorable sentiment for the U.S. atteinpt to win peace in the Mid· die East, and said the countries he visited consider it essentiJI that the United States maintain its strength In the Mediterranean and in the North AUantic !reaty Organization. On the final stop of the tour, Ireland, Nl1on conferred with U.S. negotiators at the Paris peace talks. In a farewell speech at Dublin Airport, he made note of meeting with Irish leaders and his Vietnam advisers: 20 Viets Killed ,,.. By Cong ,..Mortars SAIGON (AP) -Viet Cong mortars killed 20 South Vietnamese and wounded 40 in a government refugee camp Mon- day night as intensified enemy attacks continued for the third day along the cen- tral CQast. ~ Government spokesmen said 17 mortar rounds slammed into the cluster of houses at Phu My, in Binh Dinh province 285 miles northeast of Saigon. Nine other enemy mortar and rocket attacks were reported during the night. "As I leave Ireland and as I look back confrontation within the armed forces, on these meetings I am sure they will be aside from dividing them and causing regarded as a period when we made a divisiveness within their rank!, would significant CQntribution ROt only to rela-also have resulted in bloodshed in the tions between our two countries but for civil population." · the great ideal we all desire, a peaceful Later Ovando emerged from his home world." with his wife and two children, TereSa Nixon was greeted warmly throughout and AUredo, and said, "I hope there will the tour. However, there were be no bloodshed,~' and left for an Wlknown demonstrations in Rome, and in Dublin destination. dissenters hurled eggs and other objects 'A military coup ousted the previous at hts car. In both cities the -acts were ·government on Sept. 26, 1969. '111e armed blamed on those opposed to U.S. policy in forces Wued a "revolutionary mandate'~ .Vietnam. ouUlning government goal! and naming • He met with heads of government in Ovando as presidenl Ironically, the man· _JWy_Yugcsla•i•~Spaio,J;ngland_ll!d __ dalU'JIUiB!!ed by Miranda. Ireland, and with Pope Paul VI in Rome. Ovando named a Ca6ineto r-tifti'if- He also paid a visit to the U.S. 6th Fleet civilians and. conservative army offictr1 in the Mediterranean. and one of the government's first acts Nixon's meuage was much the same was to expropriate the $150 mllllon as he delivered to Irish Prime Minister holdings of the Gulf Oil Co. on Oct. 17. Jack Lynch~ that U.S. policy is to "make This raised dissatisfacton among con· it possible for Ireland and every other servatives, especially since the act shut couotry in the world to develop in a off all oil exports and deprived' the period Of peace.'' government of-badly·rieeded revenue. Bunkers Bombed Planes from Viet Bases Pound Reds in CamHodia TAING KAUK, Cambodia (AP) -Jet bombers from air bases in South Vietnam pounded an enemy bunker comple1 hid· den in a village outside Taing Kauk today after Cambodian troops ran Into hail of fire from the well-concealed positions. Thick black and gray smoke hung over the village of Kanthun as >JI jets dived down to drop napalm and antipersonnel cluster bomblets. It was not possible to make out the markings on the bombers, which are flown by both the U.S. and South Vietnamese air forces. They were called in after Cambodian troops were at- tacked for six hours during early holll"S of the morning. The Cambodians-were driven back by fire from a line of bunkers. "I've tried everything I've got ln the way cf firepower -bazooka!, grenade launchers, machine guns." said Maj. Doeur Kim Sea, commander of the Cam· bodian 49th Scout Battalion. "But I can't break through their bunker!. There was only one thing for it -churn up the ground with bombs." Se•\Battalioo loot one men kiUe<l and seven wounded during the protie of Kanthun. about three milts east of Taing Kauk. They are part of the Cambodian government's first major offensive which has been stalled for four weeks in or around the ruins of this small town on Highway 8, about 50 miles north of Phnom Penh. .... The Communist command troops launched a series cf attack! on Cam- bodian positions around Taing Kauk shortly after midnight with a heavy bar· rage of mortar bombs. More than 100 bombs plastered the Cambodian outpos' of Svay Pllh)eung and the enemy im· mediately unleashed a ground attack that came to within SO yards of the Cam· bodian defenses. The enemy mcunted a machine gun tn a Buddhist shrine until they were driven out. _ Enemy medics 1et up emergency. dressing station inside a Buddhist 1toupa. a spire-shaped monument found ootaide all Cambodian temples. There were blood stains on the ground this afternoon -and five enemy CQrpses were laid out by a paddyfleld. UPI T•""""' ~tt.AGllRS-OFFER TO SHARI! THEIR FOOD WITH IMUTTLED CAMBODIAN TROOPS NNr Communist-held Kouk Ch11p, Commun11t Smell Arm• Fire Pini Them Down I , 17 I I ' I - • I \ • San ~le•nente . • • t • ,. • T...,.'•rn.al . -eapi-siraDo-..,.---.y.-s ue1u I Y,OL...63,. NO. 239,-2-SECT.IONS~lO~P.AGE! '; TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 'J 970 TEN CENTS -~--·~------ Climax Nears in San Clemente Power Hearing By JORN VALTERZA Of ... DlllJ Pllft Statf ' The tnviroomentaJ consequences or two new-nucleM-reedm-3 at~San-Glemente­ an issr.ie Jaub.ched at the start ot Public Utilities Commiaion heariiigs Monday - are eipected to reaC.h a climax in San Clel'!lente today with testimony of a key 1pokesman for the two utility firms in- votved. David J. Fogarty, manager of mecbanio;aJ eoitneerinf for Southern California EdiJOn Company, was schedul- ed to appear befor'e PUC examiner Arch ~fain in toda 'I roceedinp presumably to re.Lute repeated criticism launched Monday by opponents to the placement of the mu1timlllion-dotlar power plants two miles San Clemente. After introductor"y remarks from an 'Edison-senior Vice President at the open· ing of the hearings Monday, Main heard & steady 1tream of opponent.,, to the a~ plication for it.ate permits to b·ulld the twin react.on on 13 acre• immediately ~wncoa.st of the existing one at s.n Oriofre. Several San Cle.mente residents op- pooing various aspecta of the permlts conducted a mlnidemonatration of sort!: outside city council chambers before the opening of the hearings. The demonstraton, numbering less than a dozen. bore placards drawn in ' crayon protostlng the proposed ahorelin< location of the lite. Some ~ .. 1111 reflected the later testimony by the foeJ -move reac- tors Inland, downcoul and underground. One key point the opposiUon raised Monday was th~ asserted denial o( the af- feded San Ono~ beach on Camp Pendleton-to·the public for future ~ea­ Uonal uaes. Adding a touch ol irony to the argu-. - ment, however, wu the testimlny'by two area ·women who pressed tbe1 ~e beach issUe. llOOi speii""en...,_,,,__Mfii, · W'i 11 Ii m Limebroot, a mldent of the Beach RMd community, and loin. Lyo Harril HlcU, a Cyprus Shorea resident -each live. in colonieJ whh:h have private btacbea where the public la forbldden to enter. Flrgt on the lilt of speakers, however, was Edi!on Senior Vice Presideat Willlam I R. Goold , who ,.I the Iheme of !ht utility. preeentaUona by tiling hil firm'• ••a1J-<1Ut: colturutment" to nucl~ pcnrer and. pcillcy nano pw-aoerurtl>i!r~r ... u.lilOl- Plant. (alter the two proposed additkma: in Huntlnlllon Beach). . : • l!<Oloetcal p.-oblelll!, GoWd su...d, were the reuons behind the com·· mitment. . Citing ·olt-heard arg>.llOOlil for eleclrl· (See NUa.EAR, P110 I) Camp Pendleton Marine ' . Runs A-mucl{ in CI·emente ' ' 1:RITfctftS:ntYINJ P'LAN UC R....,, SI-. .. , . : . " ' 'Sla~Jtf'!fJ~ Star.fl Dl!FENDS. IRVINE PLAN 1,.,1n. ·'-'• w....n . · ; " ... Crash Ends --- Wild Spree Of Incidents- A youn, Camp Pendletoo Marine faces charges of assault with a deadly weapon and auto theft after a aerlea of incidents bt(ore dawn todar s~_"'.'l~ .!-.club- bing attempt -tfiiilly eDdinj w1Ul a spectacular freeway crl,Sb in an alleged1y stolen car. District attornex'•i i;Q!t>P1al~ µi, .hrO felonies wwld be "'"81)!' S"l'Clolp'll\e-· police kldly 11ainsffilvid Duane Patton, 13, who wu arr.a.d. st the acene d. • two.car trub ·11. tbl Se Diep ~J at 2-1.m. . · The ~-llrin( </. incidents bop~ al about · mtClnltht 1t the •padment ol Steven ,Douglu Hemmers at 111 Camino Estrella, San Clemente •. Norton Simon, University Remmers told police he was lying In bed when he heard a noise . in the living room and went into inveatigate. He notic- ed 1 crouched figure in the darkened room. The assailant 1WUng a t~by.four at' the resident, ·qut missed. In Hot Debate Over City The club drove a hole Jn the apartment wall, the. a~ilant then fied. . As police were investigating the in- cident, San Clemente Marine James William Gordan,-a.1.!0"'statloned at-Ca.mp Pendleton, was ex1lini bi.I new car at 125 S. El Camimo Real, when a man -a two-by.four atuff~ the waistband of hia panta -1ceo.sted him in a parking Jot. By GEORGE LEIDAL Of "" Daltr f'li.t $1.tf ·ue ~eltt Norlon Simon believes he ls "raising que!tiOns which properly should be asked" about·tbe relationship between Irvine Company.and the university. He told the DAILY PILOT following • Los Angeles press conference Monday he doesn't eipect criminal prosecutions to result from his "exposure" of the chang tng nature of that relationship. However, he promised "the public will be Shocked" when the full story is told at the Oct. 15 and 16 Regents' meeting. At issue is what he tenns "unjust enrichment" of Irvine which Simon estimates at $450 million by incorporation of a 53,000-acre city rather than the 10,000-ac:r~ city d~cus.sed 10 years ..ago. Simon asserts the lrvihe Com~ny Is violating an agreement with the Unlven.d· ty dated July 22, 1980 by planning a larger city lr«md the 1,000-acre, UC Irvine cainj>Wi. Raymond Wat.,,on, Irvine execUtive vice president, 11id the agreement .with the universfty waf bistd · on prelimlriary planning and ·fl!,at any changes in plan· Ring h1;d i?ffn doc:ie with the knowledge of Bank Robb ers . . . . • E.scq.pe . by Sea A!-EXANDRIA'BAV N.Y. (AP) -Two masked robbers held up a bank today and ~ped In a -motorbolt with 8'l'I e.1 t Im a tt d '*100,000. The Marine Midland Trust Co. ·Of Northern New York branch bank i& on r the waterfront of the St. Lawrence River. A t.ourUt in this resort village telephoned police after aeeing the pair jump Jn to the boat with their ahotgum. · · · "nit ahotiuiw llOOsed my suspl- ckw," the touristi, Edward Miller el Addilbn told re~' Bank ~ftla11· liJcl no OM wa1 hurt though Ille runmen locked aeveral women aod M a n a 1 er Donald M\Jnro In • record V1ult 1.[ter keeping a teller, Mrs. lvan Strough, a1 gunpoint. . • the univenity administration. Discounting Simon's charge that in. corporation was being sought for ta1 reasons, Watson said, .. The 1969 Tax reform act doesn't even· apply to us." He. cited the threa t of piecemeal annexation attempts by cities SWTOWlding Irvine as cause for rushing 53,000 aaea to cityhood. "We don 't care iI there are one, two or ten cities established on Irvine land -or for that matter-nOne. "But, we've made our plans public for the next 30 years and feel we have a responsibility to follow it through," Watson sald. Simon alleged that the Irvine Company Jiad recenUy placed 50,000 ~crea of land into a tax-favored agricultural preserve "and then I find they're going to build a city Orf it." ' Wat.son, in a later .press conference, n~" the agricultural preserve statUs re.- quire~ that the owner promlae not to develop it for: 10 years. Hi? contended that portions ol that land are within the borders of the proposed 53,000 acre city of Irvine. Because the planning ·Is necessarily Jong range, those portions. qn not bt developed for at least·lO years and would be shifted to a higher ·tax·raie. · "Are you with the cops?'' the stranger asked the motorist. Gordon answered "yes," then ran into a nearby bar, lea\'ing the keys in tbe ig· nition. When he emerged, hi.I car was gone. At 2 .a.m. California Highway patrolmen, advised of the bulletin on a suspect, answered an accident call on the freeway near Valle Rold in San Juan Capistrano. - G«don'1 car had rolled aeveral times after hltUng another car. · In the auto, patrolmen found Patton un- conscious, A splintered two-by-four was found in the auto, police said . The driver of the other car involved in (See MARINE, PIP I) Dog Owners Map Ac tion on City's Canine Ordinance While Simon dillracterized an Orange County Planning Commission staff rtudy of the Jrvine·1nan ·as finding fault with the..pioposeil new city .. Watson ,delCrlbed relations between hi.s company a n d The Laguna Beach 0oa Ownm Auoda. county planners as , cordial "although lion will meet at I p.m. today in the thi:y have brought a few crit.lcism1 to our Laguna Beach Hi&h School cafeteria to attenUon." plan a course of acUon~ln the event the Regarding the pogsibili\Y Ibo! the new cily council decides lo put the 'dog city will cr,:eate !luim · tn-surrounding: ordinance ~fen the voters. cities, Wat.son said this i.s "always a con-RJchard a..llii. • spobsinan for·the dog lovers lfOUP, llid, "SUcb an election cem when a new city forms."·· is an unnecesaary waste of money a1 Noting that planning m In Im 1 :z; es evidenced by the cwenrhelmlng ·opo - development of i•futurt ilums" he con-position to the ordiftlnce thown by the cede<l lhal there Is a tendency for people aignen ol lhe two peU!iool." to move into a new are.a from an older The doc owners nnt obl.ained 3,000 one. 11gnllures oo a peUIJOn uklng Ille city The incluslon area conctpt ts kty to ~ to mcind the ordinance. Aften Simon's criticism of both the Irvine eom.. "'"9e lepl rae1tch, ~.i..-· 1.'Dt voters pany and the UC Regenia. to 1i1Ji 1 nilonrolum -. more than The Jncluslon area emlir-uo:-' .....,,,,.reqllfr..rlo l!lthor pal oril- of univenily-owMd•Jindl aur1omidtncttit .......... blrdit fbe eledorate.«·llarce Che COWlcil l,OllO ..,.. compus. Simon aold, Jt wos to mciDd il The ......it-wblcb lo aupposed to pmvlde opoce for unlvusily· do. .relall!ir.1tll.ilrea, IU\'ic• Ind low cool The ordlnonee, iaiijW II)" lilt city racul ly and atudent housing, and be -ll ~ ll, bono ,aB <lop Jrom blames lru-for not hll\'ing compi.ted be•-between t •·Ill· ind e porn . ind (See IRVINE, P• I) bMa U-complllely -Uno porb. ' ' --.• I Talk Wednesday ~ixon to Tell New Peace Plan House Team To Eye City Beach £-i~ • .Wilh the proposed Jlooae.l<>- building inspections in L a,g u n ·a ' a Woodland Drive area temporarily in Um- WASHINGTON <UPI) -President Nfxon , in high spirits alter his grueling . EUropeiii -tour t announced today h.e will addreis ~~· l)!llion 'at'.! J.in._ WM;; nddo'y'Ull'n\BW • maliir-'ilef jlr.o~ tor ending the Vietnam War. His r~io.lff.l lele\ltslon bro"'iidcast fl'OOl . ~ Whltt.Hoiiie. tinied lea )hon• mqnlll before·the ~ov. 3 Congre11ional elecUons, follows a personal repofi, frOni t1ie U.S . negotiating team In Paris on the latest Communist plan for a settlemerit. .Thete was widespread apeculaUon, which Nixon made no attempt-Tu~day t3 di,courage; that the United. States might propose a cease--fire Uiroughoot Soothe a st Asia and a withdrawal of all foreign troops from Vietnam. He refused alt comment. The President, who returned to Washington Monday night from his 12,(l(IO.mile trip to five · nations; iii.eluding Fire Department Asks Additional $1,500 in Funds Fire Chief James F. Latimer of the Laguna Beach Fire Department has re-- quested that $1,500 in addltlonaJ funds be appropriated by the city COWlCil for 1he fire department. The council-will consider the request at Its Wednesday meeting. Chief Latimer, In a letter to acting City Manager Joseph Sweany, not.eel that the injury of a fireman in the Laguna Clnyon bruabfire July 5 caused lhe department to be overdrawn '537.29. Latimer said that to malniain ·a mlnimum level of fire protection, other firemen had" to be paid overtime to replace the injured man, while he wa.s off duty for two momlhs. Latimer a.aid he ia requesting enough fund! to "maintain our manpower at the minimum level through the yet to come high fire BeUOD." ' · Acting City Manager Sweany hu · recommended to the council th4t only $537.21, enooigh to cover the deflcl~ be lr1111femd to the fire departmenl'a operotfni budget. u1t would .tern to be a better pl~ to allocate fund& u the deficiency occurred rather than to transfer a tarcer fb~d amount to cover the pouibllltiea," Sw~y Aid in hia recommendatim. HOLIDAY MAIL DATES LISTED WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Penlqon hu ll1J!OUil<;ed "the following -by ' which Oirlltinu packqe1 ilnd lettinJ..- aoldlen In Vletnom lhould be moJ1od lo orrtv< br~ for.Ille holldoys: I . """"" ..n than five powida'oy ' Ffaee nilll Od. It-Nov. 7: .. i.a. lbln five _.is Od. ·f9-Nov. 21; lbOM car- rying i '$1 porc<I olrUft (PAL) 11mp'to lr•Yflc'1!¥ ... , .... -1v1U.~0-blll1 Od. 21./iov. 21; Ind Ill "'KUlor llr 111111 lelle!I Jfov. ~Dec, 12. . . -bo, pending compi.tl,on of_a cllywide.pro:, Communist Yug01lavla, bounded unes:· m the tioua1 .. ;,. 1......-. ...... team· will pectedly inlo the White House preu room gra . • u~ ~Y"'-'"':"' , late ilrthe~morning. -• focua ita attention first Clll city-owned~ .... It •Ill i>O-u.e::ti':~fi '·Mljn Beach properties..--' . ' -- sU!liiient'mr m.atilin'Uill'>loiil liiii'<lll• • 'lbta wu ,..-1oo1oy bf ocJln( city ficul1 war and will cover JU the' ma)o(. mtnJ&er:--.lollllil ·~m ~­ Issues in•olved in !ht Soulheui Aoli with-1 l'lomlnl ~1...,,; npiJr( cm 1re1,'"be aold, speoldng wltliOot nOtk chtaJn Main llNeil )IOlldtitp ftlcll K ·"we do not coiisldef thlii to be niioommeftdl reino'f1nl-1 a pro~ini:la ·gUnmJck," be added_. j'W• 'Along with. the Comlni!sicm's report Oft .. are not JUll uytng it for the recOtd." five pro~ adjicent to the El Paseo Before the spe<eh W e d n e s d 1 y , parking IOI, )Ile Clly Councll. Wedneoday Sttretary'of State William P. Roger1 ·wlll night will receive an offer from One of b~ief . interested governments, including · ttle. tenant,, to. develop the ancient ltnlc· close U.S. allies Jn Southeut Asia and tUrea with a "p1rk theme" instead of the presumably the Soviet Union, on the neW prOpo&ed parking Jot. diplomatic approach, Nlxoii said. 'In· a letter to the council the landlcape The Pr~dent himself will discuss h.ls architect RJchard Biglu,' who occu·piel speech With the cabinet at 5 p.m. the quaint, two-story red buildinl at. aJ3; Wednesday,· followed an hour later by a El Paseo requesta that act.ion on tbt briefing !or Republican and Democratic agenda Jt~ be delayed two weeks ao Conf'~ss1ona_l lea~ers. Dr; Henry A. that he may .p~t an alternative plan Kl~1nger, hts nallonal aecurlty affairs which he aay1 ls finaoc:iaUY feasible and adviser, will see newsmen_twk:e. ''wOUld have greater merit than-the pl.m- The President streS11ed that the new · ned parking development." U:~· peace Jn!Uative wu being developed Noting that he bu worked on more long before the National Liberation Front than 100 city parks fOr 16 city and coWJly olfere,d Sept. I? to halt •!tacks on agepcies. Bigler offers to donate NI Amert can troops 1f they leave South Viet-services on a "no fee". ti,ail to prepare nam by next June 30. . the plan. . . U.S. Ambassador David K. E. Bruce, "I believe we not only have a great op- who new from Paris to Ireland to report port.unity to preserve a historic Part of to Nii:on on Sunday, termed the Com· Laguna Beach but al.lo to belp reactivate munist proposals "old wine in new bot· our downtown 'area'' Bigler writ.ea ties" at the time but 1aid they would be ' Plannlng comntlnklner Tb~~ 1 1 studied carefully. Johnston, in 1 report on th& atatua-of Salazar Verdict Brings Tough Issue to DA From Wire Services A Politlcally toochy ~ion on whether to file charges ogoinll 1 ·11Wriff1• dtplly in tbe death of newsman Rullen Salazar J11 right in the lap of Loa An(elea Dlltriet Attorney EveUe Youn1er. A split verdict by a coroner's juty after ' the proton1ed Inquest Into. Ille Aq. 21 death during on Eaal liOa Angtle1 'riot han10 legal weJgbt, Ille di>tricl ottorney aikt. . It wu valuable, Younger 11id, becaUse of the recOrded !Ollllnooy of the lllldy wllnelael. Younger bu not · decided whether to prooeculo Sheriff'• Deputy Thomas Wilaon who fired the 10-tnc:h tear gu projecWe that ltruck Saluar'1 head ldlling him. H-be-dOel Ille char11e1, wd Y°'"'I« .. 1 candldaf< for Slit.· Attorney Cenerll the charge would be -Involuntary man11aughtu -"U\e unloWful kllllnl of 1 liuman being wtlhoul'mollOe .-....,Ilr and w)thout Intent to ldll." Four .memben of 1 come:'• Jurii Jound · U..1 Saluar died "•l the binds ol onolher." 'Ibo othe'r lhree 'found 'the dee th: In the SUl'ei Dolllt Bar wia .... dd<ntll., ' . ' " ' . " • · S.laz.ar, 42,· a .San~ Ana resident,, ••J.. ..... dirOctor Of • • ·sr.·'•turiuilo . loi..tlion 1tallon ~. ~ fOr'tlie • t;oa ~ Tlmeo. r.. ._,,,....... ,.... folllly -In llie riot Ibo! dlcl 11 million .\ltooortJ dolDIC'. • ' The-o1e.ih-on111 • ..,. toiiClitil orn ..... l<nllono In the ' lill El)I Loa Ana•la' Mul-Kmerloln cammuntly. l ~ J • • •• • Main Beacl) properties now owned by the clly. bad IUl(lesled that old !Jutldlnp on five propert.i,ea 1djacent to the elilting parking lot be rued since rentl derived from them are insufficient to cover Lu· ... . Tbt City Council wilt consider Bigler'• offer,. along wltb • Planninc Comrr..iaaion recommendation that tlie five neighbor· ing pr9pertJta be examined with a vi~w to either reneaotJaUng or lerminatlq the 1eo .. _Ind .pouibly removlnl the ~ ............. the size o1 ·a.. preoen! porkll>C IOI ~ to develop a pork lrel. ........ Weadler .1.ow ' doud1, llCl>I drhale ... , t.mperolllru mi..ci In the •Pfllt •'s both on the coast •nd further Inland will prevoil on Weclneodoy, with tot.n aumblne breoldq lhroqb •l mld..nm-. JlUIJ)E "I:OPA l:'. -to... botOtma Ir IAriolna ht Ult Orange COG.Si om. For cs full ,.,,...,, rtad Howard r:.. Handr'• · rq>orl I• th< spor11 1rction. Page 22. ( ........ 1 7 ..... ~ .. ._ .... ···=--... a.-111111"" 4't;11 ' I .... 'N. """"' ' ' or.. ~ 11 C~ 1t lytwtl """ M ...... ._,,....,. -........ ,, ... ' .............. ,, IWll I . II ......... II ,..... ..... """"" " --.-... ..... . .. Lllllln ,, ._,. ..... ,,.,, ...,. ........... .. , • 'i GAIL V PILOT SC State Se~ New Sewer • ct..,:tptt stweJ treitment plant, the St.ate ~slon of Industrial Safety has set a n~ deadline for correction of UMafi ccildiUou: lilted in a li6I citation. ~ctlng · city manager Joseph Sweany 03!!'t<>&y he wUI ask" the City Coun<:il \Vednuday night to authorize hiring con.- tr~ UI 5pted up the required plumb-lnt., electrical and carpentry work in the ~t to meet the Nov. 6 deadline. ~We bavilieen trying to handle the wm-k ourselves to save money,•• said Sweany, "but our present staff manpowtr i81not sufficieftt to permit us to meet the Nlv. 6 dat!." 1iie correclions sought by the Industrial S4fety ~epartment. Sweany satp. amount to about $5,000 to $6,000 worth of a pro- jected fll,000 upgrading project for which the city la aeeking feaeral assist· . ance. Most of the items, he said. have to d() with persoMel safety. They involve ven· til alion. guardrails, sealing of tanks from electrical equipment to reduce the danger af g.S eIJ>loaions and installation of ade- quate shower and dlslnfedion facilltieJ for men working in the plant. "The pumping: stations met legal re- quirements when they were built in 1935," engineer Sweany explained, "but t.bey are not up to today's industrial safe- tf standard1." He noted that the tew'age treated in the plant meetl all water quality control &tandards and said the corrections re- quired are ''mo.stly small items" that have been approved by the council but not completed because of manpower Mortage. .:'They just feel we are laking too long ti~correct these things and I suppose they a{t_rjglll.~S~n}'.. _ _ __ Jf the council auJhoriz.es preparing pjans and advertising for bids. it pro- tiably will sufiice to answer the show cause order, he said. ...About a third of the expenditure should ~~ ref~ded wlth federal money, in· au-amg the cost of chlorlnators ($28,000) $ whic h the council wW receive bids )f.ednesday night. · "It has taken us a year And a half just tq . get ctilorinators to meet the govern· ~t speca," Sweany noted. Clwn~ of Truck . Firm Badly Hurt ~The owner of a Capistrano Beach tru::king firm suffered extremel¥ critical injuries befo~ dawn today in a grindi.J!g ciash of hill: car into a center 4fvlder on t6' San Dle&o Freeway. lRaymond Harry Kesy, 35, of 26942 Camino de la Estrella, :was reported under lntensive care at SCfuth Coast Com· munity Hospital, suffering from massive bead injuries and other multiple wounds. Kesy. highway patrolmen said, was removed from 01e mangled wreckage after nearly a half-hour of rescue at- tempts by San Clemente firemen . The crash occurred in the northbound lanes of tbe freeway near the El Gamino Real offrimp. The auto &lammed Into the raised center divider at 1bout 2:30 a.m. Kesy is the owner of Kesy Trucking o[ the wne Camino de la Estrella address. Gasoline Bomb Hits tJ .S. Site in Milan MILAN. llaly (AP) -A gasoline fire 60mb exploded in front of the U.S. Jnformation Service In Milan early today, 6la'Ckenlng the front door. Police said It Was throwo from a passing car. .'"lt was tht 12th erplMion in ltaly'g chief industrial center in lesg than two months. Ptilict blamed the attacks on anarch!st.s. DAILY PILOT ~· ........... w ..... .. L.-t•• IMdi ........ ,...., C....M,.. s.a....,. OltAHO&: '-CAST l'UILISH1MO b:JMl'.t.xY Rob.rt N. Wee4 f',_illttll H4 P ... IMW J1e:k rt c .. ,r,., Vk l ,.,.,:1tt1t ••.d 6-1'11 ....... 1r Thom11 K11vil E411ff 7hom11 ;.. Murp\1111 M•n••ltll ldllw ~le:hetl '· ff11f 5oUfh Or11111• County idlfor . Ofllc• Clt!I M"': QI Wnl llV S\J-Nf ,....,.,, It.act\: 2'11 Wn! l •llH a11111-1'41 • UIUfla a.1c11: m fer111 """""" """''"""' htcJI: ,,.,. ~ &eultwlrC .... ~~as Hwll• 1.1 C..mlM 11. .. 1 OAllY P'ILOT 1111! Piiot• 'ONOFRE A PROVEN SITE' Edison Comp•ny'a Gould DAILY PllOT 11111 l'lllle 'SHORE DETERIORATING' S•n Cl1m1nt1 High's Grignon NUCLEAR PLANT ••• cal gerrerator eq>ansion, Gould told the examiner that the demands on electrical power through the Edison system In 1976 would be double that of today. San Onofre, he add ed. is the "only pro- ven site'' where nuclear reactnr e:t· pansion could take place to meet the pro- jected demands. ''It is the only site in Southern California capable of further develop- ment with nuclear units by the y e a r T97t. ,,-llec1a1med, adding thal the time· consuming processes of scientific studies for site adaptability would rule out any other fresh site in .time lo avoid a po\\•er crisis in six yea rs. He aaid one other alternate site has been porchased by his firm -Point Conception, but production of a working reactor there could not be accomplished before 1979. Reading from a prepared scenario between his firm's lawyers and himself, Gould told the examiner that location of nuclear reactors in remote areas to repJace the proposed ones at San Onofre "ould not provide a "reasonable balance between remote generation and genera- tion near major load centers." Adding an ominous note -resumed later by opponents -Gould ruled out the effectiveness of the remole generators because·many miles of transmission lines w9uld fall victim to ''equipment failure, natural catastrophes and -more recently -sabotage." The last aspec~ was revived soon after Gould stepped down without cross-ex- amination by opponents. One woman traveling from Vista with her husband to protect against the entire issue of nuclear power, testified that the expanded San Onofre facilities "would be a sitting duck for plane crashes, missiles fired by a gunnery sergeant making a mistake at Camp Pendleton, deadly equip. ment fa ilures ... " Atrs. Lloyd Von Hagen also refuted published accounts ol successful ex- .periments in warm water f r o m generating plants and the ability to · create "superlobsle.rs" which grow to maturity in a matter or weeks. She rerer· red to discharge of water back inlo the i;ea 10 degrees hotter than the ocean tem- perature. "It might be advantageous to grow the lobsters in that hot water and have them emerge already boiled for the dinner table," said said. Laguna Studies 01ampagne PJta The Laguna Be.a:h City Council "''ill consider a request al its Wednesday night meeting from the Laguna Moulton Playhouse lo sell champagne. The Community Players would like lo sell bubbly by the gla~ in the city-owned theater during the intermission of an p\a.ys, says Playhouse president William Harcum. Proceeds from the sale would go toward a scholarship fund for students al Laguna Beach High School . The Playhouse has previously served champagne to patrons on 11pec\al oc- casions and proceeds from the sale of coffee and soft drinks at the plays have always gone to the drama 1cholarshlp funcl, &ays Harcum. Ero1n l'age l BEACH ... a plan for devel"f)ment. \\1\ile the nea aro"und UCLA for e1· 1mple, has increased in value lt'I the point wher' incxpeos1ve property ne1r the campus prohibits such developmenl, the inclusion area at UCI i1 Intended to prevent this economic barrier to lotatlng non-academic but unlversit)' ~ related runctlons near m the campus. Simon said, ''l'he Inclusion area p!An- ned_ !QC..eet:Ying 11 a buffer between the campus and 11 city or 100,000 Is one thing. A city of 450.000 people surrounding the e1mpus is quilt anothtr." Furl.her .. Simon charged Irvine with develop1nc a "luxury c:ty" for the very ' ' ln a more somber note ~ the dispute 0\1er the possible pollution from the 350,000.gallons-per-minute of heated sea water already emanating fro mthe exist- ing plant, a San Clemente High School marine studies teacher spelled out his beliefs for the PUC. Phil Grignon, who told f\-1ain he was not representing any group, termed thermal -pollution-·thst· creBled by heated water dumped back into the sea -as "pollution of the worst form ." The teacher, classified as an "expert'' by the ex.aminer, was sworn-in ror the record , then charged that thermal pollu· tion "affcels all opganisms" in _the sea. Jn hiS 15 years of study of the problem, Grignon said, he has Jound that quality of the Orange Coast shoreline h a s "delerioratecl rapidly,'' then cited the reports of cancerous lesions in fish found near the Orange County sewage and Hun· lington Beach fossil-fuel generator out· falls near Huntington Beach. Grignon then stressed that his point in testifying was not one of strict opposition to the San Onofre reactors, but. instead, to call for a major ecological study con- ducted by impartial scientists -"not working for either the Edison Company or the Atomic Energy Commission." The popular high school instructor became the first witness to be cross-ex· amlned by utility attorneys who queried Grignon on studies of the outfall area near the existing San Onofre reactor. {>rignon replied tersely that he has con· ducted no studies in the vicinity., "The authorities at Camp Pendleton will not allow me in the area to conduct such studies.'' he said. As the testimony begins to accumulate in the hearings. more appearances by the foes to the location of the plants has been promised. Plagued by what they termed last- minute knowledge of the hearings, the op- ponents promised to continue providing petitions opposing the location of the plants in coming days. l\1rs. Hicks, who beseeched E:taminer f\-1ain on the point of nuclear dangers, asked that residents "be relieved of the misfortune of living in an atomic test lube ror the past two years.'' Representing GUARD (Groups United Against Radiation Dangers) Mrs. Hicks relayed a list of questions on the issue v.•hich she asserted have not been answered by utility officials . Among them are requests for the specific measurements of nuclear waste.8 emitted by the existing reactor, the safe- ty proceedurcs for disposal of nuclear \~·aste products, the exact footage of beaches to be taken up by the plants and the projected costs for moving the plants d0\\'11Coast. inland and underground. fo.1ain promised answers to the queries as the hearings continued. He ;uided that he eq>ected the prt> ctedings to last the week -perhaps win· ding up sometime Friday. f'rom Pqe 1 MARINE ... the crash, Booker Hoover of Los Angeles. was unhurt. San Clemente police, summoned to the y,,·reck scene, took Patton to Orange County fo.1cdical Center Jnr emergency treatment, then returned the man to San Clemente for booking on the two felony counts. Offi{'l'_rs ~Id a large spHntrr ol wood found in the apartmenl whert: tne at· tempted assault took place. apparenUy matches with ~larger chunk of lumber found in Lhe stolen car. Patton remained in police custody this morning. Vandals Uproot Tree In Costa Mesa Park Vaiidals uprooted a 12-·foot llilk floss tree 1t Co&ta Mesa·a TeWinkle Park f\-fonda)-· night and dragged U to a nearby wall. ovt:r which It was.broken in half. Park tmployes reported the Incident at 970 Arlington Dr ive to pollce after It wall discovered. listing 1 $105 loss. ( • l -~eep~the Pea·~e~· Students Win Bid to Save Symbol ' &an _Qe.mente HiCh SC:hool 1tudenU! Rick Kramer, the graduate who design· • magatine stating this. but there was no Ukect for a lttUe peace Monday, ed the gift, pointed out that the symbol is documentation. Trustees of the. C.plstrano Unified only disc:e.rnible in its M-font circle if Kramer and other st~dents uld the School DlstrJct decided lhey should have I nd I · I · h 1 19•~ b Jt. • sameone wa ,ks arou .t or v1e~s t from symbol was bot_n 1n t e a~ -y Stlfdent efforta lo save ·i· Jltace symbol . _above. . .... ~ groups prOt.esting_ nuclear warheads on suffl>un1llti'C-th~ sun"dlal';whictrwaS'·the --He-pointed out -that the . plaque al-the Polar-is missiles. They said the-figure~in gift or the class of 1970 were rewarded base of the sun dial says "Time for world the circle stands ror nuclear disarm&· when I.be board voted to keep it. peace". •lft was my Intention that aince ment in Navy semaphore a1' d later sym· Mrs. Leon Riley, who favored removal there was a lot or trouble all over on boliied peace. of the sign, told the board that by leaving sc~l campuses last year and much w.•s The symbol was also ~by the San It yiere they mlgbt be "defacing public bemg f9rn down, we should build ClemenU High School bind a!l Friday, property." something," he said. which rormed it during e halftime "I object to it because il is being used Supt. Truman Benedict sa.id that the show. Benedict said he took full by the revoluUonarits In our country." symbol is often associated with students reftponsibility for the show which had she said. ··r don·t want to identify us in who talk peace while hitting you on the been crilized, 1aying he didn't think this way. I feel strongly that we shouldn't head with a rock. "But if you sa y it students connected it with anything bad. idenUfy with anything t hJ 1 con· means peace in your minds and hea~. evil or malicious. _ troversial." then it is not subversive or lrreligiows," ··1 thought it was beautiful ,". said Dr. Trustee Bob Hurst who abs~ined he said, addressing the audience. Robert Beasley, chairman of the board agreed that the symbol ts offensive t.o One argument against the symbol was of lrustees. some members of the community. ··t that it was an ancien t symbol o( evil and Benedict said that in the future detaJJ. think It should stay however, because the anti-Christ. One student said he was ed plans of the school gifts will have to be kids are sincere.'' shown an article in Ame.rican Opinion submitted to the board (or ilpproval. 18 Artists Share Top Prize Money Eighteen artists share prize money in • • fhe Laguna Beach Art Gallery 's Expo '7of juried all.media exhibit, on view at the gallery through Oct. 25. Entries were judged by a jury made up of Harry Blis.s, Vic Smith and Mary Holmes. Jurors' Award went to Jay Willis of use for his cast aluminum sculpture. The Hinkle Award for oil was won by ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- CH ~oor of ~gt?liSTnapiintihg----­ winners were George R. James of Costa Mesa; Thelma deGQede Smith, Orange; Gerhardt Felgemaker of Laguna; and William Motta of Newport Beach . 'GOOD BOY' BY LAGUNA ARTIST WINS PRIZE Nep's Delic•t1111n Aw•rd Goes to Gaylord Glllm•n Nep 's Delic11tessen Award went lo Gaylord Gillman of Laguna Beach for his large oil painting, "Good Boy." \\'inners in the sculpture category were · Dr. Edwin Lombard of Fresno: Howard James Lockway of Costa Mesa: Jane Vail of Pasadena; an<! Georg Rauch Of Laguna Beach. Graphics winners were Mary Tift of Corte Madera: Jatk Rowe of haguna. Beach; Ray Brovo of Long Beach; and Ashantey from Laguna. Taking awards in the crafts category were l-lelen W. Richards: o( Garden Grove; Robert Hardy of South Laguna; Sharon Berg of Newport Beach and Elisabeth Gatetf of Laguna Beach. The exhibit is on view at the gallery from· noon to 5 p.m., with admission fees of $1 ror adults, so ·cents for students and free for childrtn. Tours are conducted at 2 p.m. on Sundays. Ambulance Plea Denied by Council A bid by a Laguna Beach ambulance service to operate in Huntington Beach was denied by the City Council Monday night. ' _ The Gold Ambulance Service, 210 Beach St .• Laguna , applied for a certificate of need and necessity to transport patients al the call of the Huntington Beach police and fire departments. City Administrator Doyle Miller and the police department recommended denial, poinllng out that Seal's Ambu\1nce was already carrying out this service. Cily Attorney Don Bonfa said that the applicant may ask for a public bearing following denial of the certificate. 300 Gather in Capitol In U.S. POW Mission WASHINGTON (U PJ) -More than 300 men and womeri gathered on the steps or the Capitol Monday before visiting members of Congress to press for release of American prisoners of war in Vietnam. Mrs. Carole North of Wellfleet, Mass., newly elected chairman of the National League of Families of Ame r i ca n Prisooers and Mis.si ng in Southeast Asia , told newsmen "we are far from satisfied that everything that could be done is being done ... " . Mrs. North 's organization, w h I ch helped lo organize lhe recently held joint session of .Congres5 to call attention to the plight ol American POWs, completed its four-day convention here today. Members planned to meet with con- gressmen throughout the day to obt.ain their signatures on cards pledging sup- port for a greater U.S. effort to win freedom for POWs. Mrs, North declared the organization -had ... nn intention of letting up the pressure even for nne minute until all of our men are identified and, ultimately, set free:• Her own husband was shot flown ove r North Vietnam in an Air Force jet Aug. 1, 1966. While she conceded the "gove rnmCTlt is doing everything It can, she emphasized more could be done through a massive letter-writing campaign to the leaders of North Vietnam. ''I want my husband home and I waTit him healthy," she said. Texas millionaire R. Ross Perot ad- dressed the ~tganization Saturday ~t a closed-door session to brief the wives on what was being done to secure the release of POWs. Mrs. North decl ined to discuss what Perot. who has been con- cerned with the prisoner issue, said. However, she said, "Perot gave ug ex- actly what we asked for , and .. ·"''e are l.remend'ously encouraged by his assess- ment." Bank Held Up, Teller Threatened With Lye SAN FRANCISCO fUPI) -"I have 1 bottle of lye. Give me all your money or I'll blind you." This note was p11Shed through the win- dow to teller Marianne C. Smylle, 25, at the Wells Fargo Bank branch. She pushed out S810:·The robber, identified as Willie D. Smith, 28, San Francisco, was cap- tured minutes later by patrol car officers, who found a small bottle filled with I milky subslance in his possession. It Ain't Necessarily So! The other day e c.ustomer was c.omparing our pric.es with :anothe r store. We were informed thet our pric.e was 60c. per square yerd high!! Questioning the custorrier, we disc.overed thet the other store was furnishing e c heep urethane pedding which is 7Sc. per square yord cheoper tho n the b~ oz. sponge rubber po~ding thot we were including. Furthermore, in this cese, we were comparing our installation against an inste lletion worth. fer less. (Meny stores contract th&ir lo bor by the yord lo loyers of unknown bodgrou nd ond skill - we hove our own crews, trained end c.ontrolle'd by us, pttid b'y lice ho~r to clo·th'e best que lily instollotion po!lible.). So • , • the!r estimate wes not whet-it eppeered to Ott In conclusion, when comparing prices. make sure-you are comperin9 eouel value$.. SANTA ANA, OU.N51, TUSTIN, c.11 , • , ALDIN'S llD HILL CAIP'fn a. DIA,llllS 11114 lr..i ... ""'""' c.tlf. tJl .JJ44 I ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MISA -6"46-4838 • I • ----~·~=~----~· --~,---------------.,,..,,..-==---:._-,:::r----~ -~ -~ • \ -• -• • 'Son of Nifty )\evue' ~ DAttY '1ttiT Iii I f \ i _BS&T Set · • TV DAILY LOG B lookout Sketches P-r-ove -Thurstiay -- TUES DAY OCTOBtlt t "'" 8 HEE HAW·EUCK OWENS * ROY CLARK STAR ON HAPPIEST SHOW on TV e 111m11w ... (C) 1ioi GIOllt J01111 Ind T1m1111 W)'Mttt 11,itsl. D ml•~ <CJ 130> "All1t i:,..• tlinnfh -~~ tnd 8unllf Htllder· 1:00 fl lie MM (C)_(60) JtfrJ-DUnpt\)i. .J!l!J {~ ~0)_11UM!Tttd · • 1ttw Jl1nn1 ewn:omu; 1 ct• fl/ DMIC ""'"•~Mnwl""ct"(C)160)---pr•-w~dlnr-yilfVOUIM,u. Ont••• -ICI llOl u,. e lHJCIJ mAIC -ti ... Hubert Humohre7 Bulttt Ctabbt ... : (Cf "flt, I DM't '-~ Te N •-b ' ' Sit MariWJ.• (corntdy) '70-Htr· orm "'Y' y, .lohn G1rr. Rosa scl!tt Bemar41, ShlrltJ Jontl, Sut Hun~tr, Dr. Stanley Rollow. An11etun. Lyon, N11lllt1 F1br11, Tln1 louiSt, ttr 11 Prot. Julius SUmlMI Milltr. Brandon Clw:. Stoty of W1lttr .. ,.. fJ "HOME FROM THE ~ar:!iti1' IO":.nt widower with twa * Hlll"-Part ~OLOR m...., '"" -IC) (IOI ~'" ROBERT MITCHUM! tor Bor11 1utsts. D Sb o•Cloct Movie: (C) "Ho•• m Dr1lflll (C) (30) "'Tll• Grtt1· I ... HI I Je." Sat, Fridlr Ind Olllcu Gin· ro• t" P1rt I (d111me) '60 non •fl etllid-tp 1 -1heitre-1orn: -Robtrt Mltch11m, El.,nor P1rti:1r, ¥Utl11t1 1n 1cld-thn:iwin1 Incident. teor1• Ptppa1d, Gtor11• Hamilton, Gl filMf , • .., (30) Everttt Slolnt. llle1it!m11t ton llVtl hil did'• life, but t.OITlll Ill LI CHltitlldM (30) f1t1-to·ltc• With le1itimltt IOft, t:OO a U_ (.I) m flrll T....., (C) .,. • hi C"fhr) Su"'er Y1noc11r I• host Pro-nows not nr ol his h•ll· ir•m lnc!udu 1 11port on tll• ••rth· bnrtlter's u ist•nte, qu1k• that shook Peru 11~ J1111t 11'14 1J ltt SNrt (C) (30) "Now You Set Him, Now You Don't .. ~ n>n.--fCl 130> Mixed Bag in Huntington . By TOM TITUS Of ftle 0.llY Pllel St•lf way traffic, door-to-door sale~ women and the11 "how \to\ do it" sex manuals. The nev.'fo paper serves as~a script in ''Son of Nifty Revue," an evening of' ol'igtfiil and-ofi:--- tieatC fitert'ain:ment-WlllCli op.. ens officially this Friday at Hwitington Beach's new Ni!ty t the.-Nifty~player$.!,..quest fo topicality. Theater, is a mixed bag in· -deed. It is composed primarily of loosely structured blackout sketches, 30 or 4U in all; which som.etlmes prove highly comi- cal but all too often do not. Like any offering of this type, it is left to the audience to pick the most appealing portions and mentally discard the rest. The youthful cast of four women and two men, plus a "spectator'' Jou'nging in the aisle, manages to brin& off a number of chortles with take- Othe_r sketches, particularly one on campus rioting, fa il to hit the mark either as eomed)' or food for thought. Much of the collegiate "in" humor also falls by \the way- side. Probably the best moment of the night is a lengthy mono-· logue by Susan Fried on the pjijbt o18hariiliurger h<istess whose indoctrination with a best-selling sex manual alter- ed her life hilariousJy. M is s Fried also has a funny bit as Lady ' Macbeth encountering a lady selling spot remover. · Climaxing the show is a potentially hi ·1 a r i o u s home oUs on such subjects as free-movie lampooning the skin f Ii c k-s whicH unlortunate\y- winds on too long and blWltS its effect. However, one scene depicting a girl's daUiance Who's the Chief? In County Blood,_Swea.l & T.un wiJI be perfonnlng In the Arena of the -Anaheim Convention Center, -Thurtday at .1:30 p.m. .A..major_attractloa_on_th~---• UOn'l-PoP-mUsicJCent- day, the . band 11 ex· lr19tdlnarUy popular w l l h European music lovers, as we!~ u youn1 people In Can~da, Australia, N e W Zealand and Japan. BS & T's \last local ap- peara"ce wa~ In July at Hollywood BM\!, where 't dld -SRO-busif1ess.--A--m o n-t h----<i previously the group of ni ne talented young m u s i c i a n s toured behind the kon curtain under the auspices of the U.S. State Department. Received with tumultuous acclaim In Yugoslavia, Blood, Sweat & Tears unwittingly caused a riot at its first concert In Rumania where government· authorities thought It wise to cancel the next two shows. All went well -however -tn: ID H T•u 1 Tllief (C) (60) m .....,..., """ 1<> 1"> @;)Outrudl /Mulllc:ll1 (C) (30) Ill -" (C) (60) m bl.llwb 11 lh• sun (C) (30) tml T..tro dt 1 .. btrlllH (30) took the livt1 of 70,000 ptopl1: plus 1 l1atur1 on m1rct11Y poUUllon. Oth1r ft1tures: "Tho City," 1 lllm sbmln It !ht 1939 NIW Yori World's Fair on ttlt comolexltJ ol citr llvln1; • proftl• of th• Rev. C•rl Mcintire, tlle ritllt-win1 radio pr11cher who is or11nizin1 1 Mutll lor Victory r1Uy to •upport Arnwica11 involvtmtnl In Vl1t111m: • t.om• !'Mile portrait ol A.rib studlntt studyin1 •t Amerian Uniwrsitlu; • look 11 • tommunity of 1Pirllull· isll In Cmad1p , Fla. Westminster Players Slate Awards Banquet with Jack ·from Jack in the Michael Owens (left) and John Ruggles clash over Box hamburgers is indeed el· who is to assume leadership as Joe Wilson attempts fective. to intercede in this scene from "The Royal Hunt The show will change £rom or the Sun," resuming tonight at the baguna MouJ- week to week as the cast ton Playhouse. Poland -where orderly. but highly enthusiastic crowd!i greeted the band at three scheduled concerts, Currently, the group Is doing the Scandinavian Countries for a series of one-11ighters: m ..... )ft tN Round (C) (30) 1:30 0 Calldid Cl••• (30) D Th• F1&ftlw (C) (60) "An1tl1 Triiwl on Lontlw Roads." Put 11. Ell1in Mta1rt.· Rut. le• suest. The annual Abbey Awards banquet of the \Vestminster Community Theater, honoring the top performances of the group's 196~70 season, will be held Oct. 16 at the.Mile Square Country Club in Fountain Valley. for "Odd Couple" and Burt and director Elliot Fried add --=;;------------------ Warner in "Streetcar." relevant material and dis· Stockholm, Sweden last week, then Gothenburg, S w e d e 11 , m Tht Fl)'in1: N1111 (t) (30) S!st1r BertriHe tries to !ind • hom• tor • 11lty·ton1ued P1rrol. m ,..., ..... <CJ '"'I lli1 NEW SWOll n.-(C) (60) Tht quntion of whtth1r or not eoll111 ttudents should hl\lt time off from school It ""'"' in politletl t1mp1l1nr Is dl#umd. Elizabeth Gordon of "Invita-card the unworkable. Inter- tion" and Rolinda Orlow from mission music will be provid·. "Streetcar" will be competing ed by visiting guitarists or for the best suppcrting actr"ess banjo players. hopefully bet- award. Candidates for best ter than Friday's performer. supporting ~ctor homors are There is no memorized Bill Cullen in "Invitation" and script as such, but a series of Tom Titus of "Streetcar." blackouts utilizing improvisa- 'Ch 'ld • th R • ' Copenhagen, Denmark, a few l ren in e ain more dates on the Continent,. then London before returning • fD l lsto'l'tr f1Jl111 (C) (30) "Orlen· lttlon." Q11allfied flilht lnstrudo11, pl!ot lictnst u1min1tions, ind flltllt hchniques •r• discussed. l!l OtdrM/Fll11t {C) (30) 1111-(30) for its appoi1tment with Off Broadway Trash,1=0='"n::::g•=eo"::::"'Y=m"=';'=1·"'=· Competing for the best tional techniques. They are on G'i) Ndacllt (60) Two nominees have been By WILLIAM GLOVER m n.. Dt.ert ""°" <t> <30> ml Qlr ... I OMHl1 (30) GB AIC &Ur News IC) (30) 7:001J·cas-t\ltrd111 Ntw1~(c)"-(30) a m NBC Niaht!J " ... (C) (30) 0 WMt's Mr LIM? (C) (30) selected in each of the acting . . a whole well carried off by the 1:30 BQI (l)T• hll• WiUi l~ (C) categories from the three-pro-mt_;,npohry 'a"rpepoMrlil'~fe ~~at~ e~; cast wh.ich, in addit~on to Miss . NEW YORK (AP). -. A (30) Th• ch1racltr1 of f1rn1lr N· •u ~ded cJud J t • u dg k I bo ., 1•1r-ruut 111 1 ~ii:iift"jii~d u c-t·i"o·n-s·e-,rs o-n-a-t ~A1ice Reich-both-1or -•·streer.--~ ,_lll: es .u ll;__A.-e es,_...i un Y P ay __ a ut-Jun.,es, which finds Mr, French, Clay, luf· Westminster. The shows are car," whil~ Ken Falsetto of Patty Brown, Larry Shur~. "Children in the Rain," spat- ty t:nd Jodr, tnroute "'· /il'tirobl, "The Odd Couple," directed "Invitation" and Roger ~an M<:Carthy, Dale Foye, Vi· tered onto the stage . of off. dtt11n.d 1t tht Romt ·11rport 'bJ b •·JI C 1 "I .tat" McB .d f "S•·eetcar" are v1an Winsor and Helen Wald· B d , ~ L m llll CIJ 1 tan ""' I"> 1nt1rpol oflictn, who mistake Mr Y '3G Y row ey; nv1 ion r1 e rom -... roa ways ...,,erry an e French for 1n lnt••1111Jol'ltl 1.....i to a March,''' directed by. Jo · f th · rt' g man. ID l•t t11e Ciocll IC> (30) ..,,., ""'"" vying ~r e mUlO~ suppo 111 Perrormances conline Fri-Th eater Friday night. thilf. Miki Endicott i• implltlttd Scott and "A Streetcar Nam· actor htle. Contesting the best . fJi),l lflC!A IDrH M1&ical Tilts WD Slllrt Lin (C) (60) (R) is Mr. French'• aceomplice. ed ~sire,'' directed by Doris" cameo award are --e h i p days and Saturday,. through Augmenting the v-e rt a I D Nftl (C) (30) Baxter Ward. Allen. Williams of "Invitation" and Nov. 2-1 at the Nifty Theater, garbage which Author Dennis !ID ........ """' ... (C) 13~ 111-(30) 8 Peny Mnp11 (60) Vying fol-the best actress Eric Lampel in ·"Streetcar." -3Q7 Ji!ain St. in downt.pwn. Mcintyre foolishly imagines' is Huntinlttm Beach. €E) M.i.t./,._.• D.a (C) (30) award will · be Yvonne Tardy The awards banquet at the dialogue, the i .r i 0 --0f GD) Si ... llltt Mlril (SS) QI Thi!: Cirl (Cl (30) Im MUllta I &tnllM (C) (30) for .h~r role in "Invitation" M_ile Square_ club will, begin performers is required to llurl and Beth (Ciciliot) Titus for with cockla1ls at 7 o clock, . • , -:o:oo,,ut~~=~ r: ~:l her-performance in "Street. followed by dinner at -8. .Nader Show pl~~Jes, pota~o Jl&lad_ and 7:!DIJ9 Cil lwerlr HiRbllin (C) In tlll c.111o11c au1n:h todar 1s a· car." Nominees for the best Reservations are being taken delicatessen nuscellany 1n pro- (30) Romance i nters Ell7 M•Y• lifl pl1ln.ed lor 110rt·Ca1:hollca. Lulll actor laurels are John 'Moran by Nancy Smith at 897·1164. lon~ed messy preparation for In 1 bll w11 whlll /il'•vr Lltut•n•nt B1r11n1 111rr11..._ liiiiiiiijjjiiiijjiijjjiiiijjijjiijiijjjjijjjjiiij-jjiiijjjiiijjjijiiiijjiiii(I Delayed a flnale strangulation . Mart Ten1pleton 1rrivt1 tl the 8 m Nns (C) (60) . The whole thing possibly ls C11mpett menaion to pay a visit. D @(]) m Mara11 ....,, M.t. T A L-E N T an attempt to dramatize a Ro11r Torrey II futurtd •• M1rt. (C} "{60) •'ffam lhll ·Worid About F 0 ur Woe ks trip. via pot, speed and some • D -... ,._<Cl <-•-Mikt." Dt. KU.,.1 ygunpr ifotller, '-"' more virulent, unnamed ~ ""I I rtlNrd! tcltntltt. klift8 ht II ar1 Jill St. Jot111, Robert Merw, and ctylnr from HodPln'• • ...., •nd narcotic, of a lass and her Th• Amcllti!lft. refu• to Mti ltil brvltlw'1 '*" w A N T E D Owing to production delays, boyfriends. ... "The Nader Report" series, · 8Jn'l'O (C) (30) .. JosllU1 flt th• en. ltllt (C) (80) which was scheduled to begin The plot, such as il is, would l1ttl1 of Fulton Street" Dint Cl1rt fl) DOUT Tll• San ,,...._ 11111 Wednesday on KCET (Channel have you believe th at they are IUffl:S. ("?)(IO) .. JoinlnJ-tomln1 To1tth· For new v•riety television 28), wi ll be delayed four weeks three actors who have come to B @(])l»MldSq•d IC) (60) ~':,~toon~~lllllllln tc• show st•rting November 9th. until Wednesday, Nov. 4. an empty theater 10 have a Rl~1r4 Kil•1 1uuts 1s W1rrtn Ill Ml ......,. (30) The Public Broadcasting picnic while resting from Wl!lt1, 1dmlnlstr1tor of I mtnl•I Em Flllllnl Mm-. (IO) e MUSIC GROUPS Service has replaced the labors in another drama inltltution whicll II invtst!1.ttd br • delayed series with four half· somewhere else, heaven thl l(jUld, In "Who Ar• th• )(Hp. tO:JQ m I ll JthM ..... (C) (30) COMICS hour programs dealing with forbid. •rs. Who 1r1 til• lnm1t11r lfJ HoJ 13o> • DANCERS the upcQming national elec-Frank R. Giordano acts and O MiHlolt $Mt¥!•: (Cl "?Int Pn· 11:00 IJ9 Cil IE Jltws (C) tions, titled ''Polltics 70." .directs with drag archness. He !Mr" (comedy) '64-David Hiwn, DID @ lfllN• (C) • SINGERS They will be broadcast on Peter Sellers. Rollert Warner. Prica. B C.i '" T., This? IC> Channel 38 Oct. 7, 14, 21 and 28 1.ss ''"' i• 1011c11t b~ }twel thlet am""" (C) c II II h at 9:3o p.m .• and w111 be h II • th ' " on.tre •= "PaUll -' ,..,.. a 81' 'K1'nn 1 Jo nson ted -d 11 w ose aca;imp ct • w • • (dlllma) ,57~1~ Doualu. _ :-f repea l'11urs ays a p.m. Frtne:h pohce Inspector. mYot Dol'I S., (C) 956-0980 · and Sundays at 6:30 p.m, CD Tmh er C.n1tq•tct1 It} (30) &J Morit: "ll'HI Fkll'fl" (dr1m1) ID Danit! loetl• (C) (60) '1ht '~Robert Beatty, C.rol Rtre. Ptri!out Journty,'' @ (]) hrf)' MllOI GU.ct.ct film (C) (30) ~ RMllkli (C} (R) '.Th~ Th rM ~ •.• i nd Su Educ1ti011 . htwe.tt f A.M. & 5 P.M. For A1dltlo1t Ap,.,.ln,,,,_..t to be sponsored by BEAUTY CARE, INC . 1424 ALLEC, ANAHEIM Ill Mt1 flltltl llH tar A11or (30) ll:30 fJ IB (I) M"' Critflll (C) 7,551im-""""°" D @@lml"'" .,..., <CJl~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ll 1:00 D a Cil Cret• Acru <C) (30l Carol Ch1nnin1 ind J1mu Wt!it· l: mar1. Li» Dou111s tells 1ittl• Lori 8ak11 a MovM: "'Al Ltnr • '" Lift" • f1nclful story about lier roy1I ro· ) (dr1m1) '64-Kurt Heindel, m11H:• Ind courtship with Ollvtr. D m Dick c...tt (C) Robert D YlrPlll CrW• Sltow (C) (60) Merull. Htltn H•rtL O,.n C.n110n, Tentltivtly schtduled 1uesll: Mtri· Albtrt St G)'Ol'1i 1u1st. m lhVll: -rM aacwer • ... lyn M1Y1, Refls Philbin, Fred Smoot. IMbpu.,.. (comtdy) '47 _ Cary ind pltchtr·author Jim Bouton. Gr1nt, Mym1 Loy, Shirley Ttmpla. m T• TM! tll• Trltll (C) (30) 1%:00 ~Cl) Dkl c...a: (C) fBllPIC!ALIA Pnlptr Hw IC) l:DOllMM: "Miii cf""ftJ'N o...- (60) (R) A look 11 wh~ Los An1111s {wtsltrn) '57-Bri•n Ke~h, Del• dotl not hlvt 1 resident cltssical Roberteon, Didi: Kallm1n, billet company, DD lhn (C) l!:l fllfl loec* luslnt1111t11 (C) 1:15 D c.. .. nltr l"'-'I~ ~ (C) fl) LI· CriHI l ltll Critd1 (C) (30) 1:)0' ~!:,!JM..,:.-;,.;::;:;;..: 1:05 m RltMI•• css1 .-.f o ~.:;co\ DAYTIME MOVIES t:OO D (C) "'M•l:fllfl111111t ObMll!t~"' (drtmt) '~k Hud10n, Jtnt Wyman, Barb1r1 Rush. t :lD II "'Fw "-•'t W:1'" (tom· Sp.ct" •nd ....... E1-Mn. '""""" tdy) '!0-Cl~n W1bb, .lol11 llon· dell • m .. -,....,... ,,,,...,, 'i'1-Trwor Howltd, Salfr Gr11. 111:00 8 "\M I.din" (d11m1) '45- ltnnlltr Jona. .loltPll Cotton. m ,_. "' St. 1.teil" 1wt11em) •:q._1ot1 McCrt•. Dorothy M1loM, 2:00 D "'Mtft MrL IMl5t" (itnm.) 'M -Shlrl., _Booth. hbtrt l!Jln, 4:30. (C) "rli'lh'• .,...... u-. turt" (1dv1F1tu11) '59 -Gordon Scott. S.n Sh111L FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER --.--- BALBOA ,73-4048 I Opon 1:45 '"'·"-.. , ........ , ...... INDS TONt•HT ''THE LANDLORD" ••• ''THE HAWAIIANS" SYAITS WIDNISDAY • \i<lkl<" ~•\1111>" '" FELLINI SATYl{ICON •"I"" 11 "ol'"' 1'\,\\l'I"' II lilU !I rJ ''' 'I , I -OPIN 6:45 SHOWTIME -7:00 THE WILD .BU:WCH ... ... HOU[I · IBRGNllE W11lll'll1!1"" 4 '" Wnt-tn<MH: ltwft. O.r, .,.., a Jiii Oitll ,..,, HELD OVER ... R::Jearr AEDFORO l<A THARINE ROSS ROBERT 81.AKE SUSAN ctAA< "Rll.THIM Wll.Lll -• _.. ~~·~· ALSO CUNT EASTWOOD SlllllLEYMAOAoo: 'TWO MULES FOR SISTER SAM ~ A UN,N'E"SltL PICTU"E dD BARGAIN MATINEE EVERY WED.-1 P.M. ADULTS $1.00 F,... R.tr"hlMllh Mllti .... Ad,,.lu/01 $do Nrw'°'' trACll -...... ·--•• , ••• , •• , 114• toi. •• ot. J•IJJ. INDS TONIOHT "THE BOYS IN THE BAND" ALSO Cllllt lot'-4 "KELLYS HEROES" STA.ITS WIDNISDAY llCLUllYI An epic drama of odwntur• and uplor:lltionf A1>1tho11y Q1in THE SECRET OF SANTA VITTORIA Ewe. 5 .. w Shirts 1 C•11t. 5111 FrM J STAm WID, AT CINIMA -LEE MARVIN h1 "MONTE WALSH " ------~--~11\S ·ll ••• RATED GP PtUS JAC.UILINI.-,._ lllSIT ..._. AM fteyl"' "THI IRA.IN" wl" DAVID NIVEN JIAN·PAUL llLMONOO -clinl Eoi!WOOCI & Don Suthorlond In "KELLY'S HEROES" Starts Frt, Oct. 16 ''AIRPORT'' Exclusive E a ment ' - • • • J 4 DAILY rllOT SC T11tsda1, Octobtt 6.. 1970 OVER THE COUNTER Compl~te-New York Stock List NEW YOftl( IAPl • "1'-41t'l't -tltlf W. .. ,,.._ .. ~~~--'"""""'" ~.J -._l!o ~ "~°"-Htw Yorr, SIOUI beti.""9 ,,-lea: &WU, .. L,n_Cillfl Clll,_ ~ H!tll_Y:!_~ - ,,_ ----.... • -----~., _ .. ,....... S.i.t Mtt 1Ju I l " -(Wt.I Mtlll LN Cl9M c""' gllMil t:"., ~ I~ tre l~; :: ~i r"'l:U J ~ ~ ~· . I NASO l l1ting1 for Monday, Octob.r 51 1970 ~,.,_T t ,. 23 )2\1 ttll +" uMlllfl ... 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A.AA Ent IYt l'it tel '°"' l'l4R1rt 1tl 'l'oo 1\1.UnMtGH ~ ''h "" 10 2~-U Z51h +CMA l>fAl.lQ 112 21 23\oo 2:H1 -i.~1t111ft1l,..O lt 't1 11• 6\'I+\~ VII Corp I l itffn 7~ 7Yi R\l'I S'°" l'"i 2A u1 ll•nol 6'\ 11 "UdMIJI .JSb "° 11 11 11 -1 Co.1151 0•1 117 "6 41'4 46 +114 yen r•rt 10 1 'i.a, .• ~ 1~ I h !' + .. ~..,,r s II l 11111111 25 ,..,.. Ar.ti\ Ho ...._ .. ,.. u Envtl 2~\lo 21..? ,,.'1'1!=~d Pt61 1 d 4S d !' ~ISG1 Pll.lt u 47\'i ~ 0 +1 lil!nnco 110 2tt. 24\.o Ht "' I• 'ITS Inc .,. loto Altlfl 2 l SU.n1n E \~ l7't US TtkL SI> ,-,,. A01d$up .l~ l6 n • "' 1"' It O(llllla l.l? 11 ~J\'t 43 '3 + 'II ......ulnPI "~ ~·~ 11\• 3'11 '2 -~ 'SG Incl Nii l\11 old CK 17 1r:i. ~dloll 111 •'4 '~ U• Ptnl" 21 ... "Ill Ch•lm ,., 1• l!l!r 1~ . . . oJ11 P1l 1.:IO 14 •Ni «Jl9 12 +Hi GI Ptc ~ _.. .» J"' -'> Co1npact Sports .... 10 I/IC 1,•,. ·.~ '""' w 1114 It Sfldllfr I" ' I.IS S....•r "° ~~~ .... ledStr l.«1 '" 2~V. ,J\. 24'11o I OC:l(OI l.oM )31 ll'Mi nh 11'l +~ GIM••• .;119. ,, I H1 i + .. '$C pf '"' ' L1 141. !"' d ·cltfT Hli 2\11 Ut1h 5Ld ' ...... A~PC olOe 10 1.i u~ ,,~ -Ill !olllftl A'k 1 50 30'A Jl'Y. 30 ..... i.;.PK pll.61 I 1•1'1 l\'t ~ -~I 'llM c. m .... c Nf, ~ ti Incl 3!tti I Utll fld 2,v, 1' 1 tci 61'0 S•"f 5J SI +1i... ollln1A .ioti " l1R1 11 11"--1\~ GaP.te: Pl1.<IO 5 SI~ S.l· "' + Ch 11 I rt I 'lb . I . d o\DM'll In Sit.SW. r-11 Cn t\li 1 Scot S<1t1t. ~ 2:14 11•1 LO •'i·· .1~ "m11s1'·_ l.611 1 m o ~ 2~~. -"' ololntor "'° " l7'111 36~ JTloio -:i. i..•o.r 1..<o 112 :ri '.II"' ire -~. Tb. 1971 Dodge a .ng.r • a .po Y-compac w1 more rn er1or room· an a ~~E1 ~ ""' k ~' 21"' kr+-w lt~ 1tl'I -s. ... - -, .. ,. • ,"' ,1 IT''t 11,,, _" ·ole '°""', 1111 '5--d "5 ... -.. Utt1YO 1.llM ..,» n .,.,. -1§ . '" Sht 1'-a IA Nllt l!ll!r l' ktll>le A 41,j, I'll lll•trOl'I ... Slll ,., E.s '1.20 l 1 l'O 1....:0 19\0 + 14 loll 11-d 1 t2 1119 II 1•Y. -Ito Ylll'I' otl:lll I 1.,,. 11'111 \i + low price tag. Three models: Coupe, hardtop and convertible. The Challen ger ,1< lf'ldin. JYt r-Mr 11th 1 i:•ri. pf i.t\ 11"' .cri Au 19w :ioi.. Am ~"s n r 711 ...v• 19 •• "° _"' o11111 Df4.u 1 ... 14 ~71.6 ..,. .. _ \,, ~""'Pc 6IJe x 11+11 11 11 _ 'lrtlm " cll:\t. n rnll AE 11~ UYt II Cmp No IUl.li Wld•W p 11 lf AmtH Pfi SO 121 M'YI 111., av. -~ 8.l '.. ~.· 3llo m. )l + » Uobrlll Fln Jiii 211-1 201• Jl'A + ' has a wide choice of 10 engines, many accessories including Cassette stereo ".., He: '"" '~ l?.i Pr ·~wl'I ~trn N '"' 1u1 8d .2 11¥1 AAlrF111t 111 io S6V. wr. .,s1<o -+H\ llf 1 l'O\~ l'Ot• 20\~ + .. i..l(ldt.•w .200 .1 ,,4 ¥1« t1:1. -1-1 "l>lf't' Rio •\.'t In • 41.'i ve Grp 6 •l'I W.A•-:::,•. ':-:!AmAlrlln '.to 611 2J n•. 211/0-i"I oluG11 l.M 7• lZM :n\.1 32VJ-~Glutn 1,., 2~1 ay, U n, "6(~-f l and air COnditiODing. 'l'OIK .... 5Vo Ult Cll ~ 5fl eYtn U11 17V. d '/• W1rlhw ,,., "m8Ne .05t Sl 14 13'1 1Jto + \lo Ol~lC:I .~f 110 13\o 13\t U\1 -.. Glm1111 llr I :I& :J,l>'I 31h 1' .+ .. __ ..:;..;...;...:..:_;c ___ _:: _____________________ ...;. _________ 'le• Lnd 1• l•VJ ulf 1111 IVt 1¥1 ndoh ~\~ w. W•lh NG l•I• l•l'l .... 8r1""1 2.10 190 ltU JIRI< 1fVt + .. ol I.I, '' 21'11 16'\4 2'6'11 + ... GlflOJ rnc $i 3'1'1 l1Yt 11: -"'r. kY ll't ~~ rrodn J~ \lo 11:"' M "' ~ W11h AE t:;., "' AmBdcs 1.20 'LO 29~. 21'\lo '"' -.. orno ~ 1..IO 90 .. c~ •tt• -It Gi<n Aldin 1'5 I 7~ 1<11. -'• 'II eel f CI Sit $\& lnllYt S 11 20 kl SI S n\ l V. W•I Tr t t V. Atn (In 2 70 ~ 4114 41\la 41~. + ta mb~p/1.10 2 0.... 12>,i 12'\lo +"" GltnAI 11tJ.Li 1 j~V, S9YI Jf\'I •• ,111'11 Geo •Va •lo'I WI\ In 1~ I,... II W1t I,..,,,, et>b At .,~ 10•,(; "(on pf i'.ls 1 """ 15 lilt + Vt oml [y «I 105 Jol'lll 21"" 23\i\ ....... Gl111Ald pl J l Soi .54\/t .w" -~ "ll'llldc !Yttl'n Ith Jn 514 WI SoffE Ttl ll 3111'. Weldtrn IV. • A.fn"Crm '59 .s t \!'r tl't t \!r ! , ~oml r/.90 t 1'\lr 16\'t 1'V, + ~ ttlfMI o!2.ll 1 31~ Jll'I 311'. ..... 'm 8U111 12 IN H.n....:I F 211'12tV. !"' GsCP 13\0 14Vio Wellno NI 11\~ U A Chtln 1'.60 .t 'Mi'" "U u~. v, omwEd 2.l'O 219 311" ll 31 -I GI-I M1r1n Ul 11 I.I,_. l.s;lo -1 .... El Lllb ·~ Jlii Htrll (p ~ l w E15YC 14\/o lS W1lc1t p 10ll; 11 \/t "CrvS1.111 1.60 ) 1,,... 1,-ll l""' \lo omE pit •• , IQ 1cp;, lj1YI 1011'l -\lo Globe Un .40 19 1 "" 111• H~ -" "m fxpr nv.cn,,. Hldoc: lfll J(• •t:. 5111c.,.v •~ s•.i. ~•n '"" 'I• si.:. ... mCr•n J.15 112 JMa "'• lD'la mwE o0.•2 2• 21~·· 1'111 jl~li -.;. e>owrlcll l n 219 2'~ 21i. 29 -+ \• "m Furn ~I'~ H1H~vn M• t\/t S'l!ldYrt 1,·.~ ""x•• Ww',',', M,0111 ''~ 1\11 AOlllTtl .lOt Joi 21~. 24"'° 2''h ·~ ornw Oii .6.0 2U 17~·, '""' '" -\._ tiOOOJe•r :1> )o4 Ull lJ~'a '11 + ~ • • ~"t 5' S6"' Holm EP 31 J7 Std Re-ti' ... .. b '"' lG Am lhlalV11t IS 11'1 I \\ 1~. ornDltl Sd 12•5 llV. ''"' 12'4 -"" ....... a lyA .. , 2 1611' '\(, i.\'J •.•• " dlcll 2014 20'lll Holobm 1"11 Mil S!ln HPd 21 'l'IVJ wl"' Wll e 'lh AOutl pf."61 , n 11~ 1n o +·v. om1•t Jll 43.\.0 •111 '2 -1"'1 Gouldlnc l.<IO J) :u 1"' ll"' ••••• lllm llY 16\!r 17 oovtr JS'AI liiV. Stull Sir lC•M 11 JC PL 19\IJ »V• AmEIPw l,IM W 2S 14'1• 21\!r -'Ii ont Miiii t 21 11\!t 17 It -l! lirlteCO l.ll,< ~,>, -»,,. ll -+ )o 0 Ml\tln • 70'4 10'Vo orlr At 111/J 12\lo Slrtw Cl ~1 l7 Wl'd!W E J l"' Am EJ!p Ind 300 16~· UV. 1SV. -Yi onl)M~ .... n jl f2 'h nu -Gtlntr.l-160 15 . 2... \ 'nktn 111 t "* owrd GI 6l't 7\4> Subtc fy 'I\ 2~ Wr l9111 W 23 2 'lo AEx lnd 111 .... 110D 51\11 S1\!r 57\'J -1\lo <>nr8c P .60 30· I'll! 111;. 111? -Gr1!ld1Jn .llO .W 'I.I\~ 2•h 24!1. -\lo Arel Ind 1'lli l\l!Sowfl\ In 11"°1,_Su911•1 F ' t \!r Vr.:tny E ~~· Hll .... G.nlni . .50 64 1•'11 U\li u\~ onEd' l.lkl 1.4 234\ l:Mii 23'11 +\'tGr•fl•l.C Sii 1~1 l• 1~1• lJ~+~l.o ''dtft M 1'14d\lo HllCk Mt •llrl1"' AGnln oll.IO 11 21Vt 23'Wi 23'0 +·iii. onEcrl1 Dt t 2 11 16~> 76'/J .+ ~ G11nllevUt I S 161/J I• 16 -~· Ardtn Pl 30 U ud PP 21 1' "mHGlll .70 51 11 10tt 1°" _ ._. on~dll Pt .S S '4h sno 611 -\IJ Ur•nlW I.SO Sl •1~ 'JV. .. ni. + V. ,,k MoP 13'-"'"' VI Ga• 17'4 13\~ --e·• i* ,, "'HorM 1.60 ~24 '3\'J 'N;o '3VJ +IV. p!C4,l5 1150 .S.VJ 56\!r 56\!t +1 Gr1nl pf J1$ JIO " S2 12 ..... Money's Your Wortl1 Mortgage Squeeze Loosens • •~o,,w, H 'r' ~ H~~J f. 2~ i~~ " HGmt pf 1 l 9l'll 97VJ tJVJ + :v. g:::~~!Dh\·lf 2f~ ir~ ~~ r.:: :j: :! vr1vOrg 1:10 2,0, ~.~. ','..,r. ~~ .+ .. " .. '• Am HOSP .l• lU 361h 36 36\lo -\.'o °" 1 I .. I ,,. ''" GI A .. j> 1.30 -• ..,.. By SYLVIA PORTER rate ()n an F'HA Insured There are "hidden" costs ~~.f ~'i" ':iZ'2r'" ~~~ l~~ J:Z ~? ... mlnYest • .so '' IOl't 10\lt io:i.. ••.•. onN•i& t'l'l 17-,,h 211._ "21,,,. .. ,. -14 ~tNorlr l.l){I t 13• IJ'll: lll• ..... . 8 ,,_ ll1lrd At lV. ll'l lm•D• Sy 1 7\!r AM1tc1~ 1.40 710 :s.iv. 33V. 3J¥o ..... ons Powr 2 2ll JHt ~ l2ili -1• GINoNek 1..ii t• .s~ .s .s +' Mortgage money is getting mGl'lgage now JS 'rz percent here, though, sG be on guard. Baker 1n-. 11-. Ind G•• ''VJ '11'" ·MUTUAL ~~er{;,~10!,.1 • ,&i 91n . 9~ t~Vi = ~ onPw 11u.so 1no st 59 s' +VJ g:~~ ~i'.: 1 22'"' 21 g::: ll't easier; the worsl of 1970's plus another ~z percent for in-B•I P•lnt •VJ s Ind Nud 77'll 1ll'I "N~tGa1 1.10 121 •2~• •H• •1\!i + ~ E::::l"d~n·;s:., ~~ ~~~: ~~ :f~ -11~ GI we~1 Finl 2J i~~ ~~ 21 ;;r· brutal $QUeeze on credit for .surance. the tak-.. er (qui'te a n B•ylen 16 16y, in•rm in 1;a ··~ "Ae•v .131 m " .. " -sv. °"' co l lJJ 36,,. 25,,_ :w~ 'M uwu11 1111.u 11 10\lo 1~ Jt>,a -"• Assuming the bank approves ::~\\in Pc n'iT. 3~v. :~r·c::,,, l~ J~ Am P1111to .12 n 1 Hh 1ofi ion. -lll ~001 Coo .11, 30 .,.. 1~. 1,.. \O ~rwnunn .PO "' 211o 21 21111i _,._. ~-......:~ · ·th th The odds are all your local .. ,... 8HCttm 25 26 1n1 11w1h ~1,1, S'• Am •atlne 1 ' ~~ ~~ ::"'-+ \2, 1 c11 "'"' .so 1, 1''111 li :iaw 1y, ~1w.~1n .xi 21 Pl'• I'll •'14 -.\<. •11.11.1nu1g JS over: w1 e assumpt1'on by ,·•·elf), the',','•'•' •,•,.• "• "•" ',',', M,~tll ~,, cu:~ FUNDS Am Ship .611 11 -'Cp DflU.'-0 J JI " lll +2 ureenGn1 ·" 5 22•:. 22 n .... • i .. -..i: rate no d mat'Clr mortgage leaders are "" •• ..,. " Sm.en 1.90 51~ 29'• 29'111 ""' + v. on1Mf11e .<n .:. n111 1111r 11;w. -\I GrtfnSh l.'lO to 111~ :it1.11 it•Ai-v.. prune ~ng w own _ . j•r.k H• Cl ,, Int sr pf uv. u AmSo"tr .10 11 41"~ •,•, •,.•Ji +21A corn ou 1.50 »t 21~ 21v. 2ni. _ ,,.. Grevllound I 121 1''~ 1511 1• -v, to 71~ percent, a full I perei!nl charging aboul the same rate previous owner slill may ask e11 Lib 11v.c.uv. 1n1.,,.t 1111 ll:o Ams ... ir tn.10 1 35,J: 1'\ .. 1'~ +·i4 cont 011 pf 2 2 3' Jt l9 ••... Groner .'IO 10 211~ 21\\ 2111o -"" • · I 'd bl 811111111 w 1'111 t'4 lonlc1 ltl'I '°VJ ... m Slil I 20t • '" Cont Sii I 1 ~ ~ ~ + v. GrummnCP l 240 20>0 "'' '°"" ..... below i ts peak, mortgage -including c o mm e r c i a you to put up cons1 era y awd Son n 1' 11 Sou111 71\fo 29 AmS1d pu.1s ' 11v. " t1 -v. cont T11 ·'° m 1Jn n:v. 2311 + "" GnL1H1e1 .• 91 llR• .z1e • + "- ·-• h 'ght Blrlchr l J~ J.te:Ol>I F 4X t1ii A.In Stff'U 4 51 21V. 21 '' -Yo Control Oita 111 SW. ~ 501k -2\'o GllMOh 2.to. 21 •1'4 M 1M ~ money rates must head lower. banks, mortgage companies, more c...,,., t an you rru Bl.te:k HI 211'1 tt\4 touin c '""' Ai A SuNr 1.611 11 ,n;, 31 11 -4'11 cno.1 .,14.so JJO so 50 so _ :v. G~u 011 1.so 1119 29 2111 'lt + :w. I · b 1Js ' he ' h I bee B-.it El 2'11112\li ;•m Wit 6 11'1 A$ug l>fA2.65 21 4'V. IJVI .tll!r -Yo ConWOOP 1.90 11 35 ~ lS ii Gulf Rt1rce1 61 ll'lt 11 lllilo + :t. But at Jast reporting date, mutua savings an , savings ot rwi.se ave o ause Bolt 8.,. 111o '°"Jo,.,.. F nu. .uv. "msu11 Ill' M 1 ..-fJ.j, 1.1Jo + 11o 0011 u1>1t .50 st NV. 291'1 291'1 ~ .. Gu1H1ea p1,,., , 1s1. u~ 1~ + "' ••-AVERAGE rate being and loan assns., pellSl'on funds, he'll -·rely want back a big Boothe c 1w. u•-. J1msPW 1oi;.~ 1111o 11t1111T11tio NTGN t.in t.11 ATt.T wt Sil ""' iv. '"' . c-r1n l,<IO 1n 35~ :J.41Ja 35\'o l'll GUA~J p11.JO • 1F.. 11~ 11i.:.-\• UR: "u BOOI AH l6V.1~ lffY Fels JV. I C<fM,.ANtlf nY C6'l 11 .9113.08 ... mT&T ,,60 910 '5\li 45'~ u·~+lil~-TA 1 6$ ll\< 12!'o 13\'a-\.t GIJUSttUI .9• 3U 22 21 n -4'1 cha ed f I life insurance eompanie!l, But Chunk o{ his equity in the Bos0 ,..t•P ~ ,•,, "'""'<•••-.,, 211'1 ~ HEW YOAIC 1"~1 Inv G~ld u"'v1!l AmWWk~ .Sil l<M f 'O t\lo t V. -'lo OOPT 1111 li 5 l6V. 16 l'V. -\.'o G~llSU pU.40 1511 56llo Siilik 561'1> -¥1 rg on new conven Jona r n ,.,. ~· llVi -Thi tollowln• ""'°" 1nu 1nc11c ,,90 '·'° ... w pref 1.2s z10 l •Yt 11\') 11VJ -'"' -1...a 1.l'O .100 ~. Sl>li »h -* Gu11W1,.a ,j(I .s11 1t ''"" 1•11o -·n home mortgages was still ;i there are still four big areas in mortgage a s well as his Brlnt:J 111 31 l11'1 K•11s1 "' ~ ~f\lo 1111c1n1. wpplled 1w 1nvn Bos 11.u !1.1' Aw .4.1111' 1.0 1?m 1n. 1110. lH'a + v; 0P1>Rft1 .SOo 1n 311• :J6 :J6 -1\\ G~ltw jij1 1s 1 ,1~ ""' '1" +lft. hi h chi · 'ij · • I d I And Brits kl lt\'a 1,,... ~·f".,.G mi :A\ 1t1t NlllOnll Asi«I· nvnt0<1 Group, Am Zlr.c S I~ l'h *°"' -\iii Ollwl II 1.l'O '3 U\'I 14~ Ullo+'-Gul!W p13',50 3 71 11 7114 ..... r ecord 8.51 percent. And it w c you can a eve sigru • or1g1na own paymen . B,.,.,.n Ar 1~ t"I • e rn 3 ,,,., •tlon o1 Securltln 15 nc11 4.<M •.3' Amer°" .iG 51 ~ ltv. ~ •114 or1nt1111 .n1 as JO"" xi JO + v; Guirw 1117.11 t 41"' .a'l ~ +" h •· hik the · f i!l'\l•ll 111 1R:il6\6Kll'Nll t ,,,.,o.•ltrs, Inc,, irt Miii 1.91 t.n .... me!~k .60I 11 Ullo 13\1) 13~\-lloEDrGW 2.S.. 3t•l10~161VJ169Vi +V.Go,111~ Incl tl \Olo 10~1 IOft-~ was far higher in many areas, cant s avings. e aQo may e pnce o !11ek1., 61'111 ,"',,',," •• •• 1i. Prices 11 which Prot l .93 1.11 "MF inc .90 :i..o 2714 2n~ 26.\li _"' !or-1111 .n .u 111:.. 211'1 2,"',, -+ ~ -H·l-ll 'bl tak th h ' the I st B\IM (p 'l'I S 1 t ,, ,_, lhne IKUr!lltl $lock 11,77 1f.2l "m!ote .10 J J'9\~ 39 3' -\Ir OWIH Corn " I~ 414 .,. T8'.l'lging from 9.1 to 9.3 percent (1) you poss1 y can, e e ouse -USJng ow-co BurnuP s 2J nv. ..:.11wo1 10v. iiW: wuld ll•v• lltt~ ~1ec1 1.n 9.lll f'.MP ntc.Sll 175 •l\lo ,11,. ·~ + v. o• Bdc11 .JO t 1n. 1114 JJ:i,, + t~ Hiuwit 120 • 33~ 3311o 3~ i" ' h " Atl I O'er an existing !ow-interest mortgage transfer as an ex ~tC Ltas 1'lli Iii ~llrlf E 11" lll~ solbldl ourbo Id ll•r Py 6·"° 6·116 "ml>t>C Corp 5'12 '1 l'Ol!r 20lolo ... r,'...!111,1 l.10 lllS ™-1' ~ + ~ H1llPrl 160. I 71\~ 27'¥1 2!'fi 1 m sue c111es as anh.a, rt F . ta I t' to . t 1· -=:WV t' n"" ~··I(:~: ~~~ 1• 11'111 (llr1>ak9dl Molldar. ~i:.1 Ann i:ft 1:·~ lllmslell 7.40 • 31"11 31"t ll"li ... ' crtdi111 m 1 J t'.¥: ~ r8*. t'"'ij H,1111~·: '1~~ 2'11 'i~' 'ln. .UY't v. Denver, Houston, Memp is, mo gage. or ins nee, e s cuse -a po1n cance mg =•11r1M a u " 1C1Yst PC Jl'I 1v. 1111 Alli ~ 1 u 611 "mtP.1r~.n1 }~ 2fJ 2~Jl Jo~ t1~ cromPKn .to ,, 1~ 16 16v, llll H::;:m ap,p 1 ~ 21,,.. :ioto ~ ;;·;,. Seattle. say that the nreYi_,ous_owne.r of p _ut _lhe financ!al_advan_t_a ge_o_f ~:nr, •,.d1 __ 1m_,l~ ~[:1 "~1 2~Vt ~""' "bel'dn 1.&S 2.0J J 111111 1t:»1t:lD ~:~Hock'~ l"' »'lo ~-JO\'f _ v. '=lfld 1 1 5 jJ~ tt n ..... Hammnd .10 11 11i. 11•.1o 11,,,. + \• :;.-,.:: c ~-· ~ Iii -~~ .. kirk c 5'1i Adrnlrilly Fu...U• ~11-F~~ At1Cor11NS"1 -y-l""~ !Pio 16" -vt c~own c!.-'f' lO :Uo...l~-l.M9.-Htrldlm~ 6f 31 J1~· 331,.-31't -'4 -Af SI percent, today's lYJ)iCal"' fJie 110Use you want has oet:n t aking over e m_ortgage. :::: ~1';\ i~ ! IC,."1n iJ'pt ~ 26'h Grwth •.u •.n t"°110 1.25 t.05 ... nc:r Clay 110 la 31•.; :J.4'/J :w•1t ••••• c,.,.,.nZtll 1 611 nf 1m l:~ ~f~ ,!1~ Hond H•r ·.n , ~ 20141 20\!r-11o. aki !hi t f 12) M k th b est d • T 11 l '/o :N ..:refllr 214 iv. jncorn J.'6 1·01 c111 !1 l1•1' 11·93 A11ach!Co '2s •9 1~ 16'• 1•'4 ..... CTS Corp '«1 11 lru \1~ 11 + ~• INnes Cp ,50 1111 11\.lo 16"' 11\.lo th $20,000 Z.year mortgage m ng mon · Y paymm s o a e e igg own :!fr 'oe., 'µ 10 LMC oat ,., 2v. ntur 1·:/ i·~ ,us K~ ,.~? •;·~' ... l)CO(l 1 1 in 1~1 11~ :J01• '°"' -.t\11 Clld•hy "' 15 13fii 3"' 131,1, _ ""111nn1M 1.Jo n 11o11 ""• .. 1·1 ~. Would COst You 130,352 ·1n 1·n· $143.29 for fi,e years on a ~ payment you can m a nage - a . :artt 80• ,•,,,_ .J"• i..,,e<•,',', '' 16~ •d¥linFd :·ii t'ao !111 1e1 1'21 1'91 "PL corp .._ 1'1'1 ""' 1""' -"'cuctny 1'11 2s , 11VJ uv. 11~, +,,. Harewr1 i '' •1 mt Ill~ t •• ~ 0 .,. ,, "" •'4 l'"' l\etnf... ·n ,·20 "' ., ·,, · 'l\AA Svc 1 Oil 102 111 109'.lo 111 l1 c:urno'" ,,·, '' '"·> ''" , •• , _ •• H11rrl1 Int 1 1' SI SO'" SI \<. $20 000 rt f nd t I • l .. ~· h I k .1r r P ' WO IV. "" 11111111•,., 6. • Ill " I, 4.9S Arc•taN i~ 16'! 72\lo 21 '1\(o 'Ii ,, -.. ,,., ~ C 1• '''" 0 .. Im + .. terest alone <lVer the year , m o gage. u amen a po1n wuic a es :11c NG 10\locll>'ll L 111e "~ 1,~ tAutr r •.es •.11 gu' s1 16.37 lr.M Arch o.in' 1 56 ll'h 32~• .w 1 cummln .IOb 3 Js;o 31.,., 31v. _ ·~ ar1eo 11 l ,. 6 ... If Id tak h. dded . rta . . "1111 C•o 2\/o'7'1\1 ••son 11"" 1N 'llAm F' .67 ,73 us S2 t .07 9.l'O "•l•PSvc I 08 ]' 19~• 11\/oo lll!r -lt CunnDru; .41 n· IOI• !Cl~ 10!1' + in lrtSMrx .to 11 2n .. ·1•1• 12" + v. interest on thii loan would mo r.t g a g e , your total of today's above-normal sav-;~ 'f.~ 1;¥: 1m L: veo.r ,}"' 1f~ :~P Fd s~·;~ ~r.r s. J:rl ~:: :r~s~~·fg ".ll Ui: i~ .... iJ:tt ~ l~~~.wH t.ii 1J ~t? if(; ~iZ + .,. ~:~~~ ".!..1111·~2 2~ 1~'~ 1!t:' 1U.v. ..::: mortgage's life At 8 percent you cou e over t 1" on a 1mpo nee 1n view :en•ex 'n""" t"'d'" {!' '°"" 2n~ A 11f•t• t .9310.61 us SJ 1.11 1.35 .. ,1,11, os :'° 162 .._ ,1• m l " curt111wr .IO n uv. 11~ 11~ _ v. Aary Al 1.20 25 11 11• • + '~ come to « 308 more t•-the paymen•-1·n interes t and pr in· jngs rate. The usual down pay"_"',.•!'!•..._ ?!~ '•'• t:~r: B'} 17,,. Jl\.\ "m 8u• 3.oo J.ts knlc~b 6.,2 7.2.S "rmr of 4' 1s ! .S6 5S'"• .S6 v. Cye1opr; 1.90 11 '' 2•>,1 2• +i:MI HazeHlrHI .... .st. 11"" 1o>n 10\lt ....• ~· 11411 ~ rt V<; ,,.,. I 71~ I lllm Duin t.4110.S.i nick GI 1.11 '·'' "'""'"'" '° Sl 11'14 27~ 'Hl\li "" CYorusM l.iG 11• S5 5' 4$ -1 HC" Incl .HIP I s:i. 5h H'f t ... Pn'nclpal. And mi'nd you, the ci'pal 'o "er •'e is remaining ment now is aboul 27 percent,;_•,..•',,." "', •,~,L~ ~.',' >•, Amt• E~pre11 : • Gr1h 1.11 1.1& .... rmek pfi 15 i60 si so !ICI 1 D-Ho:c11Mn .ur Js 761.o 25~ u111 "' IM0'1 O• OIL PAINTINGS WHOLISAU WAllHOUSE OnN TO THI rUILIC 1"t •• ~NG~ :.rNTA AXA PNON•UMIMI DEALElllS WAMTED • IJI •• '~.., l \it 1 CIPll 7.111.5' ·~ AKh 1•.05 1S.3eArmAull 1:6a 10 l:l'h 32 32 -"Ai -Htlnl HJ 1 12 U lo ~ ~-.... Years of the Joan would come but for an FHA Joan it's much ','"',, ,",!',' '.,'" .,'"' '""••""c-''" , 1ncm1 1.60 t.e> lbe1'1Y ~.e> s.90 "~ corp 90 12 1,;11 ,...,, 1•1\ -0D•nR!Yr ,1ll> ,.~ "' ,,'t' m -\1' Ht1,11e cvrt 11 lo~ l~ 1~ -\It • u• 1,~ lW nvtll 1.11 t.9• !'' S1k 4.19 5.J.I ANln Ind ·, 3• 26 »'• 15\lo :.:.'ii tnt Cp •.25 -Ill\ ..., 2l~ -lO Hl'ilt!' In! ,.., 20) !'OW 1flio 70'.lo + h to $25 792 In contrast if you less and no down payment is c11r10 s las 1oi tov E~n 17., 1111 s,...,1 1.'ff! re 1nv •·" 1.10 "'n1c1 111 1_10 ,15 1ru 26..., 2611r _\Ii O•rt llld .M Jru 35~. ""' t ~ Htlme Pd1 1 29 ••f'f 161.'f 1,.,. -~ ' ' ' Cllrlst pf '6 101 Vt!Ch 13,11 U 5toc:k l.OI l"c N•t t.ot t ,9) And Brew 2' 0•1, t ~ _\lo Dirt Ind Pl 2 121 41~ lMl! 11 1 HtlmrhP .10 1l ~1~~ 201" 21\.'t -111 got a $15,000 mortgage required on a GI mortgage ~·,·•,•, ""' , 1t:,• ,',,~ ::d 1~1~J si.:. S¥I Am E~tr ~ o ,... l .61 i.ts ...,,ICI DG l.l'O .u 31 J.S'.4 31 + ~ 0.11 Proctu 19J u 11 11\'I 1m _ '~ Hemlwh C•P s ii;, 3~• :M• _\II Inc I I nd b ked b th V -' • ·-· •• 'm Grth s.o ls S-i'l'lfJ' Assd 5Po 120 I 30 1t\) lO + "' 01vcoCp I.II 11 11~ .. 111':1. IN. -"" HrmilllC :ix J •Vt 6\1" •VJ ..... through a a e er at 9 ac y t et e r an !I e:1111 u A '''hd' M•Hkrt ;t" , 111m fny '·n 1n1d :JS.ti tt.11 l.!AITr•n c141 -,, t\li 9 ,.4 OtvtnHud .~ n s 761' 26li 26~ .+ '•Herc lr>e .1r.ie 17, :Ill:. '™" 3114 "'"" . d · · • Cltlr VB 2314 1l l' Mom! '-1 3~ l"li Arn Mui I.OJ C11>ll 10.01 10,07 Altilonoo 1.:.o:i lS6 l ti.I. ll'Jo 11,_.. .;_1 .. DIV!nPL l.j,(I 117 nv. 22 n -1'1_ Herll\Fd 1.10 JI 16\\ 7J\IJ 2S::O + \!) percent -and ~stretcbed 1t to A nurustration. ::ll'l'tn Mt 1~ "" •!>Ill t 114 !'lit "mN Gth 1.u Mui ll.'l!I 1J,10 11111crrEi 1.11 0 '°" 20 ,., _ 14 OPL ol'C J.90 "° " """ .,-+1 Heubiern .eo Sil "° ~ 39 ""'-1' l t t Th f II · · I tab) 1'.ltrlc Mf 20 'M!>.I Muior l ,. I ""'°'°' GrO\I~: 11111 B1• 11.11112.01 "11 Alcl'lfld? 7J7 StV. SI"' 5t Ottrt Co l 145 Jilk Jj.1~ 31'/J +I!'. HtwP•ck .10 246 ~• 'Jt~io 1'\i + \i 25 years your 0 a e o owing s1mp e e t:11v1on ni s•u 1r Mtv :~ ~~ C•Pll 7.lt 1.10 •tn• In 1.11 1.t1 ... ilACh Pll 13 1.io 50.,_ 511~ S0'4 +1111 Dtln1trP 1.11 :n l~ 1"11. UVJ -I» Hien v0u1vc us n•• 11"" 11:i,; -l~ "'1 '"'' ,. 'M LF lll.I 1''4 l..crn. l.J1 I.Oii Miu Fd 9." 10.95 A!!RCI> Pn IO If 4,.._ 161'.lo 4f'A; + t\ • r ..:J1 :1JV. J !lo 32 -\I. Hoblrt I :10 Al ~ lf''r ~ -'.11 "7,764. down payment on the tGtal in· ~-low c~ 1~~! 1;:,; ~~!, ~ ln' 11~ Fa In., •.oo 1.n 111 Gt11 11.0J 11.os 11ai Chem' 1 15 ~·'1' 2• 2• -"• ~K,,,.,J;t ·'° 1M 1\IJ 1'1' 7!4 -t~ Hoernwal ·'° 1 1•'') 14\lo 2'"' + u. paymen•·. would soar t 0 dramatizes the effect of your ;_•,',',!..!-'t0• •,,., ',:i ~··;no2; 21 · 11 Grwt11 t9s 111.90 111t1tn •.st s.01 "" ~lch pf., 11 101 tt "' -1 ~M"l' ':JI· .~ 2•1'1 2w. 2•'1' -~ H1nonHott1 1 n1 ~ Jtlio :Jt~ +4V• ... .... McO!n' ,,~ n lltl'll 31.n 11.66 IH Tr ll.70 U,f1 ,,.. H Corp 290 J\o J l -,,.. nYAIT .IM 195 2~: ~ :ioo. -Iii Hotr Electm ,?! ... ~ .!,,_ .n'. ~-•••• "' terest you will pay. The ex-~~.'' ~E •7,,,.tl,:.Medlc H 1~: 6r11 APOiio Fd 11u 1.nv..1~ •.02 4.02An1CP pt,15k 160 Ul'I IJ'i l.Jn. +'" t11>lvlnt 1 42 'l" l''·• ~J: + U Hor11JY1nn .n ..., ..... ...,_ ...... -• M~ert~ I r $ ~li1 1'1\ , ... ~ M.cr Mt• 2 ,.., 2''~ "•WCI• I I 1.21 \o\PI 10.Jt 10.lt ATO Inc Oh 2!1 1.1 4'™o 1~ -Ml 5G( 110 19 1 \4 1~ 1~ " HOllY5ua 1.20 1S '"" 1•1'1 '!" -• ampeis ()ra 2500025-year:oim F • ··.-... .., ''"~•"''lfOll 1.3 4.1 l~lfld Fd 11.1J12.nAurora p;.oc1 ,~, •,~ n,,~ ~ .... _+•. r1eo "•'·,• ,,' ··•...,,. ::"+•,~~~·,·.!2 llt '''~ 2l'4 2 ~t +\.lo Artif• • 111 eth N ' ~OIClfl Sir ,, 2< ... rn 11111 Ul4 AXt HOIJ9hlrr ldA Mu .... ~.» Aul<lmtn lr'ld ~ •• ... -..., lli'a =-+ ..., ,,,,.. .. ~-· .... ,,. ti'-.,..,., n l'I -\\ IC.a e ever loan at 7'h-aboot the lowest ;orn('t1r ,~,~ ~~ Mr~t: l: II'> ' Fund A ,Of, S,j(I c., n .u I .9l Avt11CP '°" 76 lll• 11\lo 11\0 ... So olnc .•O 1 ::,,. tt(.. ~l'lt -~ HDOY 81 1.20 151 2S\4 2•'AI 2''" -~ interest rate av a i la b 1 e c::: G•• """' "'4 Mld11• T 2• 2¥-Func:r • 6•16 7.11 's 11·'5 12·13 "vco llllio 2s 'lWI 35 JS -"'~Ed11 1.«t 111 1i•.r. 11 1• _ 11o Host lr!H ..J6 10 u Jl\16 " +2\li t"om T~! 71 21~ MllfW G 11" lt\'J Sci CP t~ :·: "-\:~ F.d 7,91 l.!7 ,,..,.,., Pd .~ ll m. 1''M :1'9V, + VJ Ed plJ.JO 1 1 n J) ..... HllUd Ind .ft St IOl'il ID 10 -~ anywhere In Iii.U S tod ' 'oc "'MPIS GiJ :JllM Jl 81blon · · Ill I.ti 5.31 AYnet In 10P 16S 9~ II\ 1'4-l'I I SIMI 2t U 11 11"' + Y, Houd of 2.2$ I 26V,, 261'1 26th +l N I B f . . ay. ""' Hllh • I VIG 15 15"' Bl..,Oll l1;ll 12 .... ~vus Gu 10,1• 10.31 AYClllPd 1:10 551 1'1'-11v. JtH\ +!'-...... u fi !' 161/lo 16\'o -I'll Houg Miii .«I •1 17'ill 17 11"' -\'o ~elt So atura e Ore Down Amt. Total ~::P P~Y l~'hclh:_ ~"R$ch ,1\ J But ~nt l·Q I·,2 u OmOmG 1.15 s.211 A.ztec 011 .n 1 129 15 "'" 141i -11o 1IFln1n .40 11111 10~!· 111'1\o .. .,, Houslr•F 1.l'O 11 lfl.'o lMli ~ i ~ B Cfl\P Cm t ''< l~ Sd !.-.. 6 B'"' lh · · U 1'1 9.M 1D.17 8--1mlnil l,M 33~ JSi; 3$<i +.,. HO\ISF pf'.«t ' 1141 114 114 T Pay-OrM>W• Inter-CmD Inst .,~ 5\\ MOl'IWk R '!'~ 17 lllllr Fd '-" 7.U ul Shra ll.71 ll.711 --~1•m Shim I 115 1r 11~ 1r~ .,, HousF Pl1.» ' 41'A """' ...... lt C T 5 ,, 5~ Monf (GI Hio Ph BCltldllk 5.71 6.2( ..,ut Tri! 2.00 2.00 Blt>clt W .50 HI 21~ 21 ?l''o .. ,.. t\,'Ollon .... UI :J'Wi 12~ j'M -YJ Housl' Pl7.l7 1 SIV, f!Vi JIY, 10 Now • , • Plastic Cream Discovery Revolutlonlzes Denture Wearln1 For the fint time. ICienot olfen II platic O'efJll th1t bolds dtlltW'tl ••they've never been beld btfort-fonman elMtk: mantnne th.It lltf~J ..U ,.in '"*"'a i. tlN "4dWf11l t11· ·-# 7f*f -WJi. It'•• rt'l'cilulian•rJ discciverJ «llled F1x00ENT" ror dllilJ bOllle uae. (U.S. P1unt 13JXl3,988) FlXOPINt bcitdl dttrtUJ'll lirmu ••• """ -• l""f/rn1obly. You may bik h•rder, chew better. ut mC11"1 noturally. FIXOOENT IMtl for bcnJn. Res1st1 moi1ture. Df:ntwa th•t fit .re a; • 1ttJtill to health. See your denti&t regularly. Get eby·lo-°" FIXOOENT Denture Adht11•« Crum at 11!1 dru( COWltel'I. 12.5°/o YIELD RRST MORTGAGES \VJ-{EN PAID TO MATURITY 5 YEARS. DISCOUNTED MINIMUM $3000 1 O"/, INVESTORS PROPERTY MANAGEMENT J700 NEWPORT ILYD •• NIWrORT IUCH CALIFOlNIA tZ66D PHONI 714:67S·ll0l BROKERS ment ed est c~r~ He:. 1\,, ~~ Monm Pk 11 11\lo g:1vn St 7·*• 7.n E'A Mut '-" '·'° Bakr011t 65 101 2• 2:1•t. 2.>h -Yt 111""01 Ol.l'O ti JJ~ 15 1 v. + ~ Houstt.P 1 20 11 41112 •!"Iii 11~ -'A I 2 500 122 500 $27 882 Con Rock tt JI Moore p I'" t lo:dn li·JJ 1~.CI 1t incl 9.:J6 9.:16 8•11 GE i .lt 17 21'4 26'\li 11V. + l'I II nchm .•O so0 ,·.~ >I~:? 0T!._l4,, .: .... HH~m"•'oll.,;.2I IKI l7':o 17~ l1lh _ ~ , , , Conlrld I'~ ~'!o~t $ lc'•IC!\11"* · .37 11 null'·" 1.5lBatG pfll4.50 J110 62 illl'4 67 .+1\.'i1Gli>r11lo .6G 21 ,. • .,. ••· 14 ~-·~ ltS IS'• u 15 -v. ' 000 20 000 24 340 Conlc&n '"" ll\ Mtge TrA 11"> 1f Brotd ~I 12.5:113.61 I I Se.:o,1r 5~r: Ba"l!Pnl 15p '7 ~I,(, JI~ '~ -1111 1f""" C:J(lb 11 !Ith 117Y, 11711> -2'11o Hubbrd j nc 16 2l'Ar '10/ 211't11-.._ ' • • '·-· l I•'" •"• M00'1 wO l <'o <• (lij!lock Ci!Yln• 8allll 9.1110.69 Ba"' r·? 4 10110 10 7'0 -\lo lpn 0 .6' S 15"'4 15 .... 1S '\o + to HudBI~ o'-0 '"'• '''"' 10'• + o• '· ,, ,, ' '' ,,. ' ' Bond • 10 $ r• •• '"'·• -· -... . .... ll Sh Pl C2 II 11~. 11~ 21• + ft ..• v .... ,. 7500 17500 2t 'JQQ C11r1> SI •"• •\~MOie~ M ! 5\~ euuck ' •.• ~lvld 3'11 inBkofC~ l.34 "' ..... ~ !"'' ·~ • ,, ... '"" ,,,,. Huah II~ ll 111'1 11 11 1'1+\ll • ' ,..., .... , cosm Yr ''" 1~ Mot Club lllh ll\lo C1nd11 U.811 20.67 ~th 0· -,· ... Bank pf NY l 15 •Jl<li •l 4 "> + \Ii else • '' ''" ·• .... · Hu11tChm .'12 II) 11t11 11'11 11111 +n• 0000 15000 18255 1 1. Mlle If Dlvld 3 .... 1.11 '"• «Y ·""eankTr78• S•6S'.'.641'1 6Sl!t +1\.li 15••01. ,,,••,.~.,'ti·",,~;.;.·.;,·ld1hoPw1.60 17l"l'i4.tt 29'11-"' 1 . • • ~~~rcrM~I ,~:.z B M~fA1'E\ , .. , 2\\ N•IW 5 t.1110.32 l~o.:.k :li !·fl BarbOil 1.S.1 ,. 3' 37~ 17>.:.-~ lve,.lnd ·36 109 2l\lo 22;:' nV ;. ldt11IB1s .60 1'3 ll\~ 17.\li 11~ .... "' 12.500 12,500 15,324 r.re•t /u\h '"' 1~ t':'l/'c' .~J 2S :ll'/J NV Vnt lA.d 15.IS Stoel! i ., 1'10 81rd CR .25 3' .,,, 11 VJ 11'9 + \<o ~lpMto 1.'1, 2ot lt " • -+~ ltl Cen• 114 16 17"' 27 21'.lo ·•· • he I'£ f Crnu Co 3~ J.'.''•" '"' '\~ t ,""",," ,•·,•, ,'·?! ,, .,,, ,·.,,·,,,Baile ltlC .ID 71 11'111 11 l0 IN +1 r 'e~T~ .io :J6 > .... l11~,1•r.+l\ilo lllCen ptj.50 7 41,_, 11 11 •Jo (3) Keep t I e Span 0 r.ru"h fl ~~ •\\ N1rr1e C 1•"1 1!'11 G · "" 'leuw C!I , 11 5 22 81Slc pl 2.SO !100 J6 35 :Id +2 Fftd ,ti• 1) ;~ ""~ ;i? .+ \ UI Powtr i?o 5' 11 36\t 36\i1 " h Cypres c IW t Nl!Clr Ill • 0 C1io.mr 1.21 1.fj) Neuw Fd 11'11 n '11 Bites MIO '' u U\'t ll\ilo -"' nllir .41 S• 11 1?1. 1,,,. -t: ltl Pw 111'1.15 130 :n 37 37 •• your mortgage as s ort as 01nt Lil' 6't 1 NCmP ca 1 jl'o C•Pll In¥ J.01 J.30 1w Wld 11 ·63 12··1 Bates Ml pf 1 )6 11v. u "' 16\< -\.\ 1c u .32 11 1~ """ 161,; +'Iii 111 Pw Pl2.1J 110 21\'o 211o1 21v. ,.. f 'bl f y D1nlv M 10 10>\4 N•t Eoot '' 1 C1plt $hr ~.15 6.30 ewt<>n n 'sa u·~. Bttn ti~! "-? l'f\\'h 15 U\.\ -r Hver JS 10•1 10 1~ +th Ill Pw 012.10 1,00,, •,,~,, •,,~ 1,•,~.· _ .. ·' easJ e Or )'<lU. OU Can Olla Oet ~ ''-' Nat Gf.O 16\!r 11 Cent S~r lU.69 11.6' 1 h 51 10'"1.1 !o':!!i B•lhl~ 1112 so l1 " 40 IO•'a + l'il ~fr Cp 70 11 39''• 3t 3t -... Imp CP Am ... YI d the Sp 'th t t 0•11 Gen '5 M Nat Lib 2,,•,•, ··i~ Cl!,•.·,~ •• •• '••".O'i','•." i,,.,r' H:211•:21 BIUK~LD '.10 n U'lti I]~ IP.II +l't cnm ).6G "' 6114 ,,, ... 67t'o ,.,_,IN" CP l,«t Jl'S l•'·• J.j!~ 34•\ + ... fe LJCe an WI OU 00 01!1tn p 1'f 7''o Noll Med .,.. "" "" h t 1f 6 :19 Bt~lrt.ab 10 195' 7Ji\ 1A'n UV. , • IY..C11 I Ct I 31 Xlio JOV. + 'ffi lnceme (opll 31 IO'o'l 1G\• 101'1 + '\ t boot . thl OtYIJ Fd :i>• 11, l'tll Pel ,,. ·~ ~~SI l·!; ~·~ ngp. ,;,, 6:23 BtYukCiQ :so 72 IOV. '"" 101/) +"" l>Ulnd '•O 17 lll" 3i•~ :n -+~ .,,s,cu~,·""., 19 ,... t,,,. 9~ T ., grea a 5 Jn your m on Y OiV Mir 1At"c1~ .... '11! SecA ·.~ ~... >--•.• >.'•> !00 d 12.•I ll.l9 llear!nos I 31 '1 40 41 +:!>\ rnsr pl2 'lO ll 3'\lt lSti l6 " nu 1n n • 2t 24\~ 2]\li '' + ti e t also h'.ghl1'ghled by OKM !11 ":I 714 N1t S'-·• "" ·~-"" 101 Fd I 611 9.IO BK~mtn .50 ,711 30'lli 1t\\ 'lt"--'ffi Ortssr pl 81 1 l1>.k •l7\~ 3216 -\!t nclolsPL l.SO l'O 14 ?3'h 23"' -,,_ paym n • O.tlb A ;n:Ui 3-1~~ Na! SllYr 11.'f •ti SpMI 161 I 11 ' • lU 40 lt\li .)91-+ \.1 Ort'l'IUSCO I 10 'nV. 21~ 22 +\Ii llld1tl Nat .tO • Ill; If 111'1 i" th .,, ,·1mple chart on a $20 000 O..thl In~ ..,,, "'i NEn GE' ,,•,:1 ,",• '"'f•",,,0 • '•;.•' ,·.-'N•~ms 1~:~ H:~ =~~k ,;jg " 12'9 111\ "'"' + v. OukePw l.4'1 '' 21•;, 21~ 21~ .. ., . ln11erAand 2 101 «1~ 39:W. -«I'~ I ' Oe1111< c.. ~~~ "4\!r NJ NotG ., UT "" ' '' '-11'' ·~t so '" n 19''< 20'11 -n OukeP "" 15 10 90 '° 90 -1" tnoA.d pl'J • .U n ff:.: tt• ~ ..• 7'' t rt •-C T '"" >> .. ,-,, ' ,,, .. _,., ufld I.SO t.2t · "' e ' o 1 '"' 1" + g o " > 1' .., -~ ,.,. -t'''"' >o > O" -· , 1 -• n percen fll() gage. ""' 4n ••• "~" ,.~~ ~:,r:. Frni n 4, 1."' "'NI t.1110.63 ':ir.~'• .~.., '"• •·· un r · •· ...... _,. •• ... -.., ,,, ·-ott IBr lt'hc"ll14 Nlfl$ A ...... , r,md t111e:..t (Sic: t .ll 10,11 Be . I 1~ 16\ii J6lti -uPI•~ .6111 ,)6 32"1i JOit ]1'19 -""Inmon! ,ltp ,1!! .," •"•' 1'"• +' t'' Dey Am 1• l"'lt Nlets 8 JS:U JeUi ~o •'• 0 '' •ct Fnd 1.s1 l.ll B How .14 m,, ,~,~ ~ •. ~ l6 -2 duPonl l 7k 1'111114 11tli) 1'1014 + \.lo lftlnOfll t:il•.SO "" R e pay •• Monthly Total B?:c~ 16 1""f~~~•rR~~ 1~1lU C11t;(1 ":n11:1,P•ul A•v 7•12 7·718'11 1 1n~cf 200 2'l 21 '" jl,"-1•".~~=:: ~tl: ~ ttl! ff~! ri~++~t!::!,~~~c:::,,,,. ';t !J !l J'~::~!\ I f)IK l~c ].1.;. A Ni!:ur 011 7 7\ii (oEIOftlrl: :""M~ ~·.~ !J~ :~11i 1,611 91 21~t 6V. OuC1 LI l.'6 91 71\\ »\It. 21 +\It n erco . llCI j1~ 3"" 37V, f ~ span paymt. nterest 01 ..... r CM l :i.:. .cv, NW"' Gas l6V, 1~v, Fo::OY J.'° l.t3 hll• 13 25 14 51 BeftdlJ: ot J 11 •1 '6l, 11 1n; DllQt.t 6Pf 1 :tSio 21.., 27 ,,.. + "" 1n1r1ktflC 1.IO n •'• 11 7•\1i +"'I 15 yrs. Sl9J $14 ;390 ggc~~I L !a ~ :W ~~~ i:~ li~ G':wth 't~ 1i:ll lltrlm i :l6 t:u R:,,":llc:,,13f ~f ~~\< fl '" ;~ lv. Dvmo 1nd st 1m 12\t •~ +1-. j&,MCl\4.~ i ~ ~\< ~f ~l~ iii 167 20 Ito Dow Jnn JS 3w, Nucl AK •l'I 1 lncom t .u '·" 1111 SI ID.ll lO.lt Benet ~i"° 1180 29'0 ,. :19 -ft Dvn.Am .l'Oll '°e F"'' n-. 1l'li -~ l~tFleFr ".'~ 67 61~ jl'ii '~1" 20 yrs. 26,280 ~~ ~~ ~ 2~ r: ~~11 2~\t 1~ f:jv'a',111 1::~ it~ l: ~~ 1g:J~ if:~::::::: In 't: f" ~ ~. ::.~ E1g!ef'cfl .IO -15 ·,~ 22\~ ~ +t :~:H~~oy 1 1•~ 11~ ?1% lj~ tm :,: 25 yrs. 154 • OUnltln o J ,1\lt 11 1 Seen 1t'h 21 · S Bo •.SI 4.tl Ian Inv t .61 I0.51 Berktv Pho 1111 "' t -• E•Ko Cp 90 6t l'O 11'11 19"'1 +•~ •nt 1nc1usi 2f2 17'·1 16\li '"'--"':. 30 yrs. 147 32,780 ~'r.1n1 ~~:tc:l~4 gr,~~" I ~I~~ ::;:: tB l:ll ::t r~~l~u~s2:.n n.11 R~r'l11 cl~g 12~ 2~"' ,f~: 21~? +•tt ~::: ~~ ~~ .,, gti ll:~ ~~! = ~ 1~: 1~1te'~·10 nl~ r:r: 'ff.: ir' + ~ t ') And fo'natly alth~·gh 1't • , .... wt s•r, m tr NA 3\~ )'!\ ...... "' I.It ,,,. N Er• '·" 9·" Bill Tllrtt .60 .0 .so:;. ••Vt Ill:~--+ -E••I V!ll 1.40 ' 11\;, Ill"' 11•• -"I"' MllO .Xie 130 ll\~ 12\1 13V. f ~ ' 0 -e·' o",. ... l'• O••CoO ,,_,,,,~ ~ompel 6.'3 6.t4 N Hor 2l.l6 2l.l6 Blic• C* .II 197 SI '9'11. ,... E ... nt Nie• "' ••I Uf '4"' .. seem! trite and tried. the E~ Ub n m4 P,ES, "•" 12\'l IJV: l'o,;;p (Id 1.30 t.02Pro Fund '·19 9·" e1•1rJOhn .A 167 ·~ lS'Mo Wl ..... E:::.~:k ,,~ fit ~~ ;;~ u~ +' .... nl Pap 1.5o ?Vt ]61~ ~~~ -\'I , be d F.duc svs l'oll 3'' 1u1 r 1J '5V, CGmP Fd 1.75 t.51 •o P~I '·" ).:JOB In L•w I ,',', -~·->tlO~ ., _,·· · E'hlln Ml ,52 JC 11 11 71 + ,_.Inn Aecllf 110 1~ 10''f 1D¥o '" basic role Cannot repeate • ' '' ,, •• ,,, PIK A\110 s ' !gtnllk J,91 •.li rovdnl •.1l •.•2 g1nck HA ,:16 .. ' .... ... E ' ", '' "-In! TtT 'CJ 1.139 11 ...... _ + •• r.I ai .. p F E _,,.. ,,~~ or.cord 11 ,5111 .51 Prud svs 9,JI 10.25 lu• Bell 1.10 37 ~ v. \• 16.\oii -I'll c • J55 33,.. 31\I nlil -'..\ T · .. _,., .,.. t ften E th h II '!bl SYS! ll n-. ec I .. ,,, ,,., on1ol In 10,75 10.1J ,u•llln ' t .U 10.0J BluBel pt4.1S 2 131 131 !JI + ~ EdlloriBrOI I » 15 ,.,.. 2•'4 -1'1 Int &T pfE' 110 143 1•3 1•J _, 00 0 • ven oug a ;;. 6t• 111 6•.Ji 1 P•lcco Co '" 2't Ofl!I Ml ,,Ill 6.fll utn•m utld1: BDbble Bric\ 21• 15V. Ul'I 15 + II. EGf.G .10 111 II ,.!lo 16'1't -I\ 1nt.;rt. t:lfH . 1 t(I t(I 90 I' le de-may Setm to Charge F.I N!te 7"° lX Ptncol >'c O"-Cont G!h 1.0i 1.10 Eciull 7,IJ 7.11 lla.etno Cc .40 7•7 171/J 17 111/o .+ l't ElMuslc .OVt It j\lr. Ill! ~i -Ioli IT o/1 •.SO 1 Ml~ ll''t II ~ ·I•~ n •<> El Nuc I 11'1 P11rkr Or 11'4 11"' CnlV ~•P 11.)! 0 .13 Got0r; 17.90 U,1D 9o!1C11 .lSb J'6 :S.l!I Jj 51'\0 -1 Elttt A11oc: JO 1 6~ 6!'t-'It l"'l"T ptJ I 3 fil• '"4 IS•to '1 virtually identical rates, olher ,'!',,',"my ;v. l>~ =:~t~ ': ~ ,,... ~Ol'o er 1i • .o 11.13 Grth t .u t.91 11onc1 1nc:r .a1 11 91/o t•-' ""' + '"' El M"'' M11 •ff 111i:i 131~ 13•~ -)~ 1"~./' t'I(' i~ !1~ ll}4 ~l.t ,~ •· 'II f I nd t '' < ,., ~ 7\1 P1velle 1; lJ'lo n!Y aP 11.22 12.13 lncom 7.74 7.91 BookMtt'I 1_11 3 191• 1'14 1t\~ -\~ l!")M0.•,•, •,~J 71 1' lJ'O llr,. -I'> l~TTpfi;: /·~ n1 S!1 o sev. .HVa ~ cos ... WI vary rom e er O '' 0,,,· 0~ 61 p"''' Mf 1,,~ 1, rn wo1v 5 so '01 1nv11t 6.•I 7.08 O!V'den 1 20 1t6 22t-21 2214 .+ \\ ' " '"' 3'I I 6'11o 6~il -Vi 1 1 u111 1 :.o 60 12 31.\'t 37 p I T 21·, 2i Crn W01I ,:~1 1:c1 ~Illa z.1: f·H l11t,W1r '1 2.S in 2JVJ 2(\IJ 21111 -+ .. :rr~·~~GI .Jo 1: ~r~ ~:., ~!~ :': :~ i~I Utll A J l•'·i J''" 11'"' ... lender. You must SHOP, com· ~:.,~oc16'1\ 1~:! 1~~ P:''r:'J11in 1v. 1\.\ ~•V;h M fr·1t 60.1t •v~~:" t1t 10.37 8orman1 .IO 111 1• 13 ll . ..•. mer E1tc' 1 127 6010 .sai. '° +ii: 1n1u111 111.31 s !'lli 'ltVt 2t•h .. par e c losing costs, fees, olher ~"'''Y •' ',' ~, .. •,•,,,••,I!.. lP'• 19" °'1"'{' 1rou111, trnrr11 11·,1 3'11 Bos Edi• '2• 91 34"" JN 11 -IA ~E• Ill' 11" l """ 11y, 41v. +1v, 1,','•·~~.« J, 1 5'"' ?J 251'1 + .. r.ntr1 e '' v• 1'~lll OKI .~·1n'•'>'•"> OMn!h $11 1.:IJBourns ltlC 26 12~1 1' 12 -"II ..,.,.l'...,lf 't0 .tf 52~ 57 $:,IV, • ·~ ,., •• 1, ".,.~ ",,~ ",,,•.+ .. " items -and then armed with E,·.',',.",,,• •,·,,, .. , •• ',',",,,',,,w1 614 1'' Otlwr '' 1• 1 Stt..m Fd s'ot s JS llr•~l1A1r ~ 176 • 1111 iv. -"" n1rt 1,,0 11 l3 ' 3214i » +-·~Int Brand tO ·~ • ,. boo s..._ .,. -, •l\.'t "11 o Oe!tr 12 6l 1t'l1 huslr ll IO u ,10 er101s1 2 ea. •I '" ,..d• '•'• + .,"' rnpD111 l.H t ,, 11 11 + '" lntt:,...Pw 1.7• 15 11t~ '"' 16">1 -VI Bil tht facts, C Se the ~t f:on,,,<~DI~ l~li l~ ~~dlu:' ~~~ t~"li §~:;: Fd 10.M ll:t(I Uddllr Fulldt. Brbl MY 170 lll 5'111 ~ " -E"'lhMln ,fl) ?0 2l'f 2j 13 _\lo ~~;'tij~1 ·611 'J; ll~ ~~ b"'° + tt deal for YOU. "e·:. T-l \'o ,,.., Pholon 1on 1ot1 rerf t.¥ 11.111121 Int Inv 11.,s 13,IO erhtMY ""t 6 ,,,,. •~ 39'"'++ ~ """'' eu1 .Jl 11 17'• 1 \• l?l'o . iowaF.IL 1 311 7 It\ !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_:_~'.'._'.:'.'._.:_:::::._______ ""' 1 ~ t\\ Plf'lkrtll .ff\\ 6llVi olon .. How1rd• Sl>cl 1t.7429.14 llrlt Pel .4111 2026 1ll~ 11 11•• E'utG01 2.:IO l'O J1'4 J01i, JI +VJ lowtlllG 1:,u 1~ ~t ~:~ ~ :,:·..,, , :,•, C~~ 1,~ .. ~ Portr HI( 11 lJ Blltn t ,.tj 10 :n 11•1 U.17 ll.17 llr Ptl ln.43e 133 10'.. '"'9 tO ····· ESB Inc 1 20 l 1Q>.) 2011.o 2Clt -1-t, t"""iPLI 1 611 16 :tt''t tti• tt~ . Ftrrlnt~ 3\lt :J"ll l"f'I Goll 1.ilo 4! Grwlh II 13 IJ,16 Corn St 1.91 1.91 llwl' H1l1 .90 U JO\~ '.JO 3014 i ~ E1C1Ulrt .lD 1 ll't 1....._ UlO + \'t lowaPSY 1'l6 12 lot\I 1.-.. !1'11 _ ,, • tncom 5 3' '·°' urlty FUf'ldl; fldwrHal p4 2 J 37 l1 31 E11t•llll 1.10 12 1t'!o :11'~ )t'\ +l'-'t loco Ho.o :11 '5 15 2I 7j + 'I< l .... " ........................................... " ......... " .... ".......... Sate! J ,s 1.69 Eou!v 1.t2 l.1t 8rkWV GI 60 ~· 71'' ,..,. n~ "" Eu n Pl1.ll I fl)\~ ..,...,, 40\, .. ,,.., ITE lmP 611 ., 26'10 M ~ + ... I Slodl 17.st ll.75 lnYl11 7.31 1." llkh<nUG (n l'O 23''1i 2l'~ 2;\1 \lo E,i...llnt .309 •V 1211 ll 12 -"" I'" Cor11 . 351 l~ J.1.!-'o JH. -t~ How to save money on your 1970 taxes. A well· planned inveslmenl slralegy during lbe final quarter may . mean important tax savings to you on April 15. Recent stock price movements and some important changes-in the tax law make such planning imperative this year. That's why you will appreciate our new lundamenlal book· let, 1970 Taxas and Your lnv11tment1. l!'s lull of posilive ap· proaches aimed at mfnimiiing or deferring your tax liability, including sire!egic security sales. straddles, and short sales. Also fealured is a review ol lhe current lax law. For a free copy, at no cost or obligation, phone or wrlle the Manager of our nearest office. ~uttan More lh1n brokers. I..'· Hutlcl'l I ~·k'le. .,,.,.,,. .mtt, .. "°"" .... ,"at .. $11.0101 \.one ---aoma:.111 E-. ll'09CI'...,, ~1411' Senior Citi:r.en Deadline Ebn-11 17.0llj·'° u11r1 6,2t 6.1781'CIWl'I Co I , .... 6 '-t'Et~vl CP .... ,,, 21 .. 211' 21~ ... TTSY pfl.$0 •lOlllWllVI Kll'~+l.14. Etnrl k 11.iG 1 .•I Am l .61 f.)f Bwn5~rp 211 21 Ki'' •'• 10 ..• Ethyl Pl2 Cl 21 3'1\lt ).I .wi. _ l't -J K Emt11 o,1n1.,1!1 I SPK5 ll.13 15.12 B-ShM )0,j(I 18 JO'~ 30•1 :JO'lt +\I. E11rofrld ::l!ot 10 11 .. 11\l Ullo -!4 • - Ent ... Y n .s111.JJ II Giii 1.n 1.lt 1ln.lrlrwll lC , •• "''' 11\'f , ... + ..... Eu•n11' .60b J :IP.lo lfl• Jlla -t4 JIN""11 .J( l) ' l 'ii l!!nll>fH S.t • 11"", ,',' .. ··r,,.?..,,, 8ut¥Er (70 "' ,,,~ ,3 ,.,... + ~ E•Ct IO 1.15 6l 'l0'-4 '°i. 'l!lllt + ·~ J1d1Atl 111.ICI '°• ••• •'4 E•wll'I' '·" t.n ..... . -· 111.!dd Co 20 Ill 11\\ 11 11 -F1btrtt ·"° 7\6'1 If\(. 1• 1''--1>• Jff9tt .20 ''"' l\!t Near f QUI C.lh I.OJ l.IO ':I """'" 16.0116.02 fluctd Co i.f J t.50 51 51 51 + t.I F•e!w" t<1b 17 "° 3'.\oo IO + \\ Jantrtn ,6CI) ,J 1.V-14\to IDut Pro l.51 J •s ~:... Fund1;}' t.SI Pudt F pf,fO 20 •1\. I 6 •"'--+~~ F•rU.C .io •t• J~ 11 1No -h J1p~nFd .o.ie ~, 101\ lOl't IMX 1J l'01j'l0 C I rf1 IMlludtJltn .41> It I~ I .--.FllrHlll 0154 11 IO't 101'1 1~1 ,. J10Fd ln,Cie ~ 17:\ ~;, Vff'tJ In 11.511 " ,::.:., 10· 111'n Buf1Fot11 1,10 ,, lilt 36\, 36\11 -':', Ftl•"-1 I 11 11'• 11 11 -~ JeffnPllOI .!O u ,.,, ,,.. . ,.11• 1 :·rs :·il Tru•I 1\5 t 01 11u1PY• w .60 ,, 1tato n 21 -Ft111111 .10.. s. 1w "" N• .... 1:..'rt~"' _..~ '' 01t'4 1~ The October 15 deadhnf: for F1r'Gr~ u~ 13·u mu11 B 1:s. 1:S.. llU!I-"•,m•• 11: ~ ~"" ~\lo -~ FtmHv Fl ·'° JI 111. 1111 11vi. ~· ,,.., 11 Fr.I Con 1o•t11At wtt Inv 1.13 1,19llunkll pl. d ~11o F•nl!etl Inc '' 11'" 10•1 1!"'11+"' tiling claims under the new FiO Fund u .29 uu w1nw Gt s.61 '·'' Bu~~nc1 11¢1. l~ ~~ 11~~ ~~~ t~ F1rwu1 Fln 11 1.i1 "~• 1•1t ••.. Fkl Trftd 21.n 11 .sa II Inv U.17 ll.tJ e,u rlMlll' pf S5 !M 1 "' t'lli = \'f F11r1hMI .toll 1 »W. D\<t 5,.,. -I~ Senior Citizens Property Tax FIN nc111 Pr011~ ~"· '·n 6.n 11urrw!f .,.; 30 11 111.\ 1w, _....,FAS Intl .16! J01 11.\o la>. 100. -~ · La I f I =1 ~·~ ~·n ~iiiem s?' .J'Il ~"ll 11~r111hs ·.60 "' 1u1i 171'11 ,,,,,. -11;. ;:::,':f 1 'fo t6l loll'< ""' .w ~ \• Assistance w s as ap-ncom s:,, 5)6 ~lt•dm•n FUncl"' 8uslrUn'I' .'NI ' 11 lOU lO?'o +111 FeclMot i.IO ~ ~~·~i ~~ ~~\'J :!:. i~ ch. d ~1 t I v~• ··n I 511 Am lf'ld , .... l.11 -C.-FeclNMtt •• "° 5'~. 5Jh .w~~ -2'· proa mg, warne? a r n F11I' "'-'· 10:11 "ldilc s .... 6.«i Cibot c .. 10 11 40 :ttl'I :>tll FecrP11: Etec s• n i1 n,,.. i 2r. + l < • Off' f th f ill" OIS 7. I 1.IS Sltfn Aef Fdt; (II F!n1nt· '' l'i l ''t 11') ""1' f Pac 1'11,21 t 1.Mlr 1$11 15" ... Hu!J, Executive Jeer 0 e FJT lnGth 8.0S I.to c•1 0. 1~·t6, ':·tt c.11.nn MM 113 131 .. 11\t 13'h +t f'tllPIPBd ' 10 If!• UVt Ulo + .. F"ranchise Tax Board, which ~:; N~I' t·r! !·ll !u~i~1 1!·~ 111: cimp541 i .10 11 21,..., ,,,, 2m 11o Ft11er111 1~ s1 •~ .,~ "" . . , '' ,,·, • 1 •1 ,·., ''' ccrn Brew .fll l6 ''' r·~ 7>1o 1\ ftllDePISlr 1 411 371'> 31\1 )l\oi + ~ Sy1nbob ' "'' ~sin •. Ol I.Ill IP • . C•mPRI. •Sa 55 11"'1 1'V1 ,,,,.. !''41 FeclSlonS 611 21116\ .. 16 16· -\, administers the p rogram. F ~1 ':: ~.1 '1·" ~~~~Gt 1:9s .:,t Cd" Pee t,» 1• "'"' """ _..._ ~'Fed o.v "' :ie t \1t t\lt ,,, + '• Iii Fl~ snd ~M lMA ... p IG5111.55 C•11tlltd J -10 .n "'" ~ ~~ ~ fl!'fll c, .70 u It\' 11\lo .... t Vi The flll'"1"' ... tn '9 •'191"1\1111t u ... To be eligible f<lr e pro-Fl• Gi11 J.?1 ;:,, Te•ch•j 1:1 '·" c1 .. ,b tn e, ~1 , ~U' ,1,.., ,1 '4+ ~ Flbrotbrd .1t ~ ~, ?~'\ ~" + .'! 111 fht i1ac:11: m•rk• _ Fr>d Gtfl • 7, 4 6" ffl:/111( 1.12 <1,17 0 [Ir II · 1I • ..\ Fl•kletM I.Ct ..., ,,., ,.. ,,., "' 1~~·· ·- .tram an individual must be Fouf'ldr1 1:J• 009 TKhllCI! •.70 1.:io :~sc:&~ s J20 U,., 1r,'~ l;~ + U Fl11ro1 1.«t 2 ll ~'"' '~ -•.it $tlb fllurn •r1 unoffldtL ft • Four" t.lt 1~.'5 ftmo Gt 2J,61 ,5,tJ ,., , • "' >• , t Pin F-••tn 59 !6"" 151-• 1$\lo -'' • •o~ --.. ·-.,. 65 ytars ::if age or over as or Fr1n11.~11 Group. rowr Mil 1.66 l·" ~=~TC.. 1:eo eo ,jf~ 241 .w; l'"" "1...,1..,. 1..0 6J .t5>t o11tt 45 ,., --·~"• "' .... ,L -ONt '·g •. n Trrn (Ip ,.... .'3 C.rrlWCll .. lto 31 ,. Ill ~ Fii Chrl ',,. jl 1311. '7\.1 ..,~, -.... 1>1"'9 II~ t1ly1*ftd, C-LJilllhllll"' ~ • I 1-· , his o j· t lit lttY Ee •.u '·" . "11:11 Miit l IO ll1 mt nn nn -"II January • lfU, ov;n OU'n VtU• . ~.ll fVOOr Flf II ." 13.10 ~r~ ':!t I.a,' n1, r~ Pio ~ l'"MCllY 1,tl 14 '''~ R &fl\ -)o fllrld, .....0.C..,..,, ... -Nlf Ill lm •IW home· ha\'e a household ln· hic:om • ' 2.1, """" coi 2·" i.21 cis11.c' .-,, ~.. 21111 = " F-11 "-'"" 11 9 ""' » 11'11 + .. Jtoc1; t11Yldlnd. ....,..111 11 • t ...,, ,_ 'of ,,,~ or less· ond ~~'Mu• l~il t:~ r~li;c Jr: l:1'I #:~ •t«Tr 1.10 1J1 ,,.,, :wv. + M ",','!!."',,' ·", , ?t l ... , . ., ~,• 1"', !. ~ ,.,,b .. 111 •IOCk ctun"' 1,,., ~ come ...,,....... • ·~ '"' 0 ,1. ~ '!~ t , ,1, c1 c-to •1J1 j~\ • • •• •·· • • •• • l(O C-fO "-fl 1t"' IS~ l!Yr----. l"ittlwkl ·1• 31 1114 11 11"' , , ., , utl'i Vtli,lt ... e>HllY'""" W .......... ht Vt paid his property laxes mmrc •• ,! ',·~ ,,,..'',~-.·?' -•. 'Celant...CP • l 71' 611\li 5e Sll'i'I ....)\;\" FltmM lf H 10'• A. 10 f the t96g.70 f , ___ , year /:::rf,111 11:";; iiil' Accm "'"'6At 1.11 c111111 PIA•.50 l S1" s->41 i l"ti + h FH11tk1>tt 1 11 u~ "'• 1'\~ +·,~ 11on "'-1t-Ottltrw • •Ill • Jtit or ~ • Pllet t':!' t}: ,_ n ,, U.17 ''""' 1111 .!IO ,, "" 11 '' _,..., F~ E (~11 ., 2llio ""' tl'i -ll• """ l'Nf'. l'l-0«..,... ., N it .,,. lnfonnaUon and claim l'u~Atn t# ,.~ ec• ;·: ~:ff~:1H~f , .. 'llJ ,1'1E~ tif~ ~it:~J: =ro .. if ~~!:~·~--4l•IOtnd • _.. utt. "-OltklM r-· may bt obtained from • ""' t '.s1 t'.s7 Ffl111 1:1• ,., r: 111L1 ... ?!1.11 .....: \' l'l•Powi.t t 101 •1'• !J.'l"' c + '' • Hid "'It .,,...,., • ~"'-._ "' u><> ttr '-12 .. n •hM LIM t1· tnlllPi 1.'lO tJ -~ flt. 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' . -. . -• TuesNy, Octobtr 6, 1970 WASHINGTON (UPI) the country would not know Independent. Byr d•• lo debate his rivals. Why decl&lon secret until the new 'The "what 1f" guessing ' baa unUI two months after the Republican friends were -con-should 'Ile debate, he askl, Senate convened. His waa the 1 t a rt e d a m o n g b o t h election whlch party would fident that he would vote for when everyone knows where deciding vote. Democrats and RepubUcam COllt!01 the senate. GOP control l>f the Senate. In Byrd'• Virginia, like about control of the Senate Jn Despite· his exit Jr.om the These expreBions of con-he stands. other Southern States, the " ' • 1971. Democratic Party, the man fiQence have·Mw turned to ei:-'lbe·voten of Virginia do not GOP ls becoming 8 rObUst The script fOl' their 1pecula-long knoWJ! as "Young Harry" pre!Sions ol hope. know wbere be stands on OOf: jcom~~poti~'tor~foc~the~De~m~oc~r~at.s~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ t1oo goea Utl.s way : Is favored to win reelection in VirgUiia Republicans who <>I the big questions of 1970: -The GOP in· the Nov. 3 a three-way contest for the wanted' to draw ' Byrd into Which party will control the elections postsa netgiln or Senate seat-occupied by Htm -their party tried and failed -lo Sen~ next year? -Sis: aeatJ ~~oc1-u.e: foti'ive~years and-by-bis-lat e---get him-the·senatorial nomkla--.Back_ in-1956, _Lauscbe_put number needed, wit& the ue: father fw 31. · Uon or to pe~de the state out the word that he might breaking vote of Vice , Preaf.. Senate-Democrats now ap-GOP convention to nom.ina\e vote for Republican control of l;lent Spiro T. A&new,·to put the • pear canfident thal Byrd no candidate. Gov. A. Linwood the Senate if his vote wouJa be Senate tmde.r Republican com-would vote with them nei:t Holton, a Republican, refused decisive and if President mand next year. January. They doubt that he to buy these proposals unless Dwight D. Eisenhower should NOW-IN-HONJINGT-ON-BEACH- fte •arl's DISCOUNT PLUMllNG HIATING & AIR CONDITIONING "Home Ba1e .For Do -It Yourselfer1" 18423 BEACH BLVD. 847-9641 -Sen. Harry F. Byrd Jr.,Js· ~d vote lo st.rip away the Byrd declar.ed himself a be reelected. He was then reelected in Virginia · u an power held by such friends Republican. · Democratic governor of Ohio independent. aJl4 allies of bis father as Sen. Ray L. Garland, a relati vely ·and a Democratic nominee for -Massive pressure ls ap-Richard B Russell, D-Ga., boscure state legislator, was the Senate. As Governor, he e 24 Hr. Emergency Service Z U plied '° Byrd from his friends' cha.trman of the Ap-nominated by the GOP. George · said, he had trouble dealing ---oo--n.eepers In bodt--parties-lo-v~wi\l<-"-proprlalion!..COmmitlee.--.ind _c, Rawling• Jr.,_a liberalform. with • Legislature controlled • Ceiling -Wall -And Slabs Leaks· E>ur Specialty them to organize the Senate in John c. Stennis, [).Miss., er state legislator, won Lbe by tHe Opposition party. -· •-Water Healers ·•-Drain & s·i!'wer Cl eaning ' B • T January. chainnan of the Armed Democratic nomination in a Eisenhower easily won · Ult rap If a reelected Byrd should Services Committee. primary contest. reeleclion , but Lausche voled 20j!. DISCOUNT ON ANY PURCHASE OR SERVICE WITH THIS AD :•~em~a~fil:£m~um~~as~f~o~rmer~JSe~n.~~When~~~he~ann:·~o~un~c~ed~l~a~st~~B~y~rd~u~· ~c~am~pal~gcnin~g~qu~ie~tl~y~to~kee~p~lli~e~Democ~~ra~t.s~fil~co~n~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ For Monkeys !ran~ J. t.ausche did in 1956. spring that he would run as an and shNgging off invitation,, trol of the Senate. He kept his FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) -Keepers of the Fort Wayne Oilldfen...,s ZOO have started a sneaky campaign to recapture 13 equirrel mon~eys, absent without leave. 'The monkeys escaped from their cage · about three weeks ago when the: door wasn 't Jatdled. "'Ibey're g:regarious -they stay together," said Earl Wells, the Uld superintendent. .. They have shown up in a few yards, startling the residents, but not many people Jive aroond the »acre woods where they have moved. "They live on grasshoppers. crickets and seeds and there are plenty · of them at this season. 5%0k Investors Passbook Account makes a great deal of sense. Your money earns a high yield. And you ,enjoy the ease and convenience of? passbook. · quarterly. $500 minim1llll deposit. And you can add to it any time in amounts of $100 or more. SY2% Investors Passbook. If a one~year maturity is about right for you,.we'll pay you 5'!.% interest. The same $500 minimum applies, as well as the privilege of adding to your investment in amounts of$100 "There generally is a killing _freeze her_ubou_Ll!g,_ !Q..-..@'!.<!. _ that will stop theiT food su~ ply," Wells sai4':'"'"J"tlen they'll want to come home." And depending on how long you want to keep your funds invested, you have three ways to earn high interest .. You might say we offer three helping hands. --~o~r more. ____ _ -----,------ Keepers took the monekys' old cage to the woods · and covered the bottom with a temptjng an-ay ol. bananas, peaches and apples. "The theory is,'' Wells said, "tilat the.y'U gradually get us- ed to feeding in the cage. The door i6 propped open and-at- tached to a rope. Some day, we hope, they'll all be in there at once and we'jl pull the rope," "This has been very fll@ly to everybody around here ei:- cl!pt me," We1!s said. "People ask why I don't catch the ll'IOllkeys. Why, you can 't even see theni in the woods until the leaves fall." "I told one fellow that 1 had left notes in the woods, beg- ging the squirrel monkeys to come home, but they . didn't seem to be ab le to read my writing," Wells said. "I'm now typing .90me notes." ~op General Wins Wings for Copter WASHINGTON '(AP)-He's rattier old as Am:iy helicopter pilots go, but one or the new crop to earn an av iator's badge is the boss, Chief of Staff Gen. William C . Westmoreland. The 5&-year-old general has been working at it on and off since 1958 when he took th.is first instruction at Ft. Camp.. bell, Ky. He was then in com- mand or the lOl st Airborne Di- vision. , Ano1her assignment that may have interrupted his in· struction was command of all U.S. trooP9 in Vietnam. "Because of the Anny stress on air mobility. Gen . W es tmoreland determined that it was logical to seek to become pilot qualified in order to bet~r understand the pr!). blems involved ," an Anny spokesman explained. Westmoreland's old paratroop outfit, the IO!st, and the lBt Calvary Divi31on are now ainnobile di vi11ions in Vietnam with about 450 cbop- pen each. The commanding generals of these divilton&--rouUnely leam how lo fiy Chol)j)ers since thou.sends or helicopters are in U9e throughout the Army f o r reconnaiSSAnce, troop !lpOWng. r e s u p p J y , medical evacuation and cloR oil' gunnery support. Westmoreland. at 1 o s . 5%% Investors Passbook. ,Leave your money with us4'or two ye-ars and it will earn 5'%% annual interes_t. Compounded and paid po-.oper, complet<d the same tralntng, all.houch on an Informal basis, .. -Army avialon, poooed a!Uhe same lella and Is qualified to fly UH! Huey helicopters. ....,, ·11 &1.6 1.t..Mrwt uE.O.U:. "W"""'°"'I tllo-'-fim --.-~- Army d\lef ol lllall lo be an avietor. 1be genenl 'II mtllled lo Sl&I a month ll!ght pay. However, be hu wlllled the -· I ( 5% Investors Passbook. This is our short term offer. 90:-day maturity.And you earn 5% annual interest. Again, a $500 mimmum • opens an account. Add to it in amounts of$100 or more. There's another reason for investing at Bank of America. The security of the world's largest bank. Hardly a small matter in today's financial climate. Keep your money working.1 'Keep your money safe. It's all part of ~e business of living. Let Bank of -;Kmerica-le~d;a-hand. ----. . BANl(oFAMERJCA m · · for the business <X living ' • --~------ • • - I . • " Reagan Gets Applause In Compton _LOS ANGE~S (UPI) -Governor Ronald Reagan campaigned _il__i _ J)ffiiominantly Negro tlementary school Monday and was loudJy applauded when be told parents and teaeher that he op- poses forced busing of students. - With tight security, Reagan addressed 1,000 youngsters in the school courtyard and asked them not to listen lo radicals who would "tear down'' society. Reagan later said the visit to the Dk:klnson El~ntary School in Qimpton was "a greal inspiration to me." The school-.enrollment-is e&-percent-Negro, with most of the remainder Mexican· Americans. Reagan was warmly received. It was the firSt time he has campaigned at a school during his re-election race against Democrat Jess Unruh. Reagan deleted from his prepared speech to parents and teachers several sentences outlining his opposition to forced busing of children to achieve racial balance In schools. But be was ask- ed about the emotional issue during a post-speech question and answer session. "I have to tell you," the Governor Said, "Jam a longtime opponent of busing." He said students who are bused across town "can't really participate in the life of the school" because it is impractical for them to stay for after class activities, such as athletics. The audience interrupted him with ap- plause when he said, "Our responsibility is to bring quality education to the schools. II you 're going lo bus anybody, bwi the teachers lo the schools. Reagan last month signed legislation prohibiting the forced busing of school children. In his sj>eech in the school 's multipurpose room, Reagan said he is "interested" in the possible creation of a "voucher system" for financing educa-" -----uon. Under this plan, the state would spend Its school money on direct subsidies to parents by providing them with vouchers which could be traded for their children's education at either public or private in- stltutklns. The system would be financed by a uniform statewide property tax. Similar legislation was introduced dur- ing the 19?0 legislative seMion, but received liWe support and was rejected without fanfare. · Higli Schoolers Seek Nurses For Training An appeal has been issued for registered nurses willing to volunteer their services to assist in the training of students from San Clemente and Laguna Beach Higb schools in a Health Aide pro- gram being jointly developed by the two schools. Mark Jones, director or the Regional' Occupational Program, says this initial vocational. training program will begin this month. Students will work under the direction of a qualified instructor in hospitals in Capistrano Beach and South Laguna. Volunteers will assist the teacher. More than two dozen students ha ve been recruited for this vocational prcr gram that will be conducted between 8 a.m. and 12 noon. The volunteer RN's, Jones says, will be asked to assist in supervising the high school students as they learn to perform various skills in the hospitals. He says volunteers selected to assist in the program will be scheduled as their time perm.its during the time periods established for the vocational program. The Health Alde program, for high school seniors, will continue during the school year. Volunteers should contact Jones' office at the capistrano Unifed School District, 496-1215 between I •.m. and 12 noon weekdays. C>AtlY PILOT Staff...,.,.. Singing Tritons These San Clemente High School coeds are singing the praises of Triton athletic teams this Call. The songleaders include (back to front) Julie Bunker. Sally Grab, Barbara Cheatum, Layne ?vlacbeUl, Tracy Smith and Angi Steffenson. Oceanographer Criticizes ITS-:1\patny Toward Sea · By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of Illa OlllY Pllof flt ff Oceanogra·phy is as old as the first man who ventured onto a body of water. Yet, as a science it has attracted less interest, less personnel and fewer funds than fields such as astronomy or biology. Robert Abel. heacf of the National Science Foundation's Sea G rant Program, said he sees the · problem as one of educating the public, then the school children. Speaking this weekend at the National Conference on Marine Sciences in Educa· tion, in Av<ilon, Gatallna Island,' Abel bluntly stated: "Our knowledge of ocean sciences as scientists and educators will never lessen the need lo educate the taxpayer. "The problem is that they don't want to read about the oceans, they would rather read about the screwballs and nuts who gracelessly throw bombs about." f\.1:any of the 150 conference members expressed concern over the fact the federal government has seen fit to sink tremendous amounts of funds in the space race with the Russians while tending to ignore the race for "inner Space." They cite the dilapidated condition of the nation's merchant marir:ie and tlfe fact that -Ameflca imports 70 percent of the fish consumed in this country as evidence of the problem. James L. Gearhart. chief. of oceanography in public Schools in New Hanover County. North Carolina, ex;, plained the problem. "\\le have Russian fishing fleets off our coast all the time . And what disturbs me is not the fact that they are there-they have a right to be-but the fact that they are so much more efficient fi shermen than our men. ··For example. when nur shrimpcrs come in there are hundreds of sea gul111 trailing their boats to get the wasted bait and shrimp. But the Russian fishermen have developed the abilit y lo use everything they take from the sea. You never see a gull trailing·'lheir boats." Cmdr. Don Walsh, a member of the team which made !he record 35,000 Foot ocean dive in 1960, remain optimistic about the state of marine sciences and what he calls sea power. "I see sea power as the ability of a na- tion to project its interest into and onto the world OCf:an. And despite the fact that I'm in the Navy, I think that military forre is the last sanction of this power. A country's sea power is commercial ven- tures and yachting and fishing-things that are implemente by economics and diplomacy, not military might," he Said. He noted that-the problems for U.S.-sea power are formidable, "but we know how to get out of trouble, if the national will permit us to," he added. Congressman Richard Hanna ID- Anaheim) sounded the most enthusiastic note as far as generating public interest in oceanography. · He is highly thought of b y nceanographers for his work on the lfo!JSe Oceanography Subcommittee. •·1 am impressed by the opportunity our country has in the wet frontier," he said.'"And it may be the new interest in oceanography being taken by politicians will be a contribution to your cause by bringing about the beginnings or public a\vareness and education" Hanna cenl· ured. "But in order lo get the efforts of this nation behind you, you need to be mission. oriented. We will need policies that will activiate missions such as we've had in the space race. "If you have a mission that means something to the people of this coun- try, then you will have a reason for people lo beoome educated along the lines you are proposing," he said. Pollution Talk Se t "Pollution '' is the topic of a talk scheduled for seventh and eighth grade classes at La Paz Intermediate School in Mission Viejo at noon Thursday. The speaker is F'rank 0 . Sclarrotla , chairman of the science division of Sad- dlcback Colleg~. Capistr.aJULGe1.&1lag__ . Fifth District County Supervisor Alton Allen (left) a.nd San Juan Capistrano Mayor Tony Forster dis· play new Orange County Flag during dedication ceremon ies for new city hall. San Juan Capistrano ' . .. Is first city In Orange County to fly official county flag. City hall dedication ceremonies tool< place last Friday. Flag Is bright orange with county seal in lhe middle. • s DAILY l'tlDI I OAtlY PILOT lttff PMtl Leading Triton Cheers ' Steve Sharp of San Clemente High School may be the luckiest cheerleader in Orange County. There are five reasons why. Their names are (back to front) Debbie White. Sandy Wormser, Lois Balliet, Lori Lindblad and Bambi Smith. Eastern DA Hits 3 Medics On Abortions PITTSBURGH (UPI ) -Three pro- minent physicians were _charged with criminal conspiracy by a counly district attorney Monday on charges or perform~ ing ''lhcrapeutic" abortions, a common practice despite Pennsylvania's anti- abortion law. District Attorney RobCrt W. Duggan said he Filed charges against the physi- cians on complaints received from "reliable Informants." lie vowed to "use the full subpoena powers available to my office to secure and review the individual case records where abortions have been performed." • Charged were Drs. Wilfred Finegold, Lewis Meyen and felix Miller, who operate a gtoup gynecological and obsterics practice at McGee Women's Hospital, one of the nation's leading women's hospitals. \\/hen asked to comment on the charges, the doctors said they had not yet received official notice of them. ·Duggan said he orderE;,d the doctors to appear at a hearing before a Justice of the' Peace Oct. 13 at 8 p.m. Therapeutic abortions normally are ap- proved by special hospital review boards on the recommendation of psychiatrists or other ph ys icians. McGee recently disclosed publically it had performed as many as 900 thc.rapeulic abortions. Other c i t Y hospitals are known to perform them. A spokesman for Duggan said the charges were filed against doctors at McGee "because we don 't know that there are any other places where abor· lions arc being performed.'' He said his office was obligated "to uphold the statutes of Pennsylvania." . Pennsylvania's penal code says anyone who "with the intent to procure the miscarriage of any woman, unlawfully administers to her any Poison, drug or substance, or unlawfully uses any in- strument, or other means, with the like intent, is guilty of a felony.'' A judge in Centre County, Pa ., recently ruled the state's criminal abortion law unconstitutional on grounds it invades the rights of individual and marital privacy. The state now is appealing the decision in the State Supreme Count Laguna Water Chief Sides Witl1 N eighhor District \Villiam Moorhead. Laguna Beach crease probably had come at I shock ,~ ·county Water District manager, today consumers, Moorhead commented ~ sprang to the defense of four directors of had rates been stepped up grldoally owt tfie neigbborlng-5olith-coast-county-the-p-ast-decadr,homeowners might·h.,. Water District against whom a recall ac-found the increases more acceptable, · tion has beeri launched. "but they would have been paying more "The South Coast County Water for their water all along." . District .has for years had directors The increaSe, first made In the South dedicated to the best h1terest .of the tax-LagUna district In the past 11 ye11.rs, wn pa yers they serve," said Moorhead. "We made necessary because of an ~ase are at present working closely with the in the Metropolitan Water District's South Coast district in construction of purchase P.rice of wate11, the board had facilities to provide and safeguard water. stated earlier. supplies for the people of this area and Moorhead suggested that residents seek find the present board to be equally the views of some of the "ma!!)' e~cell'f'.lt dedicated." men~ who have helped develop the Four members of the South Coast district. board last week were sefved .with a "J can llYnlt of qulte a rew residents ~ "Noti~ ol Intent to Recall". by a Sou.th that area who· have contributed to U'9 County homeowners groups which main-South ('.oast District's development a~ t3ined, among other charges, that. a re-operation," said the Lag!pll official. ''To cent 50 percent increase' in water rattt name a few; thei'e haVe been ~ was "unjustified:" Crawford, Richard Roland, Ha r o 1 d Targets of the recall are Robert B. Eflwards, George Grant, C. E. Vaughla. Malone,· Thomas H. Brooks, Gerald S. Clarence Burner, Gustave Bross:mer, Pell and Ted J. O'Connell. A fifth board Glen O. Robertson and J. Lewis Fw'maa, member, Dr. Anthony Orlandella, was "Perhaps the petitioners should talk j.t not included in the recall action. some of these men. Their opinion of thi Taking note of the fact that the rate in· circumstances might be helpful.". Unruh Heckled, Ki-ssed In Valley College Talk NORTHR!DGE (UPII -Jess Unruh was heckled by a small group at San Fernando Valley State College Monday but an overwhelming number of m.dents applauded his speech and one coed kissed him. About 10 percent hecklers taunted the Democratic gubernatorial c a n d J d a t e throughout his hour address to an estimated 2,00 students in the middle of the. college campus. On one occasion, a stu~t demanded to know what Unruh would do as governor to clear · up smog, which he pointed out hung heavy over the college. "J'm going to pass legislation you •. .," Unruh growled back and stopped short of finishing his reply. Later another heckler stoOO up and yelled. Unruh's response brought the only standing Ovation he received during tile campaign visit to the %2,000-student cam~ pus. Unruh drew a round of boos when h8: delivered hls tough speech on violent campus militants, whom he sald should be expelled forthwith, including studeot and faculty members. His hardline position brought sucti responses, "yea, Spiro." During the tumultuous speech and question and answer sesslOn, students asked the hecklers to quiet down to enable Unruh to continue. As Unruh walked from the campus, blonde ·Karen Alberts of Northridge planted a big kiss on his cheek. , Asked why she killed him. the musii major replied, Because I think he's out of sight" ' On ""' IOlrdWai Huntiqtoll Harbour • • THE RED BALLOON LTD. invites you lo enroll your ·daughter in these deli ghtful classes* I Hellos and Goodbyes 11 My Mirror Tells Me llf Lillie Bites I Take fV What Shall I Wear V My Family Means a Loi To Me VI My Room Is a Friendly Place Vil Getting Ready for Graduation VIII The Fashion Show Graduation ages 5 through 7, 8 through 12. $30, call_ for reservations (714 ) 846-1666 classes .limited, start october 19th 'Conducted b)' Beve:rlet: Keli, jJJ_ ~il&hire 16877 ALGONQUIN ST. Huntington Beocli I • • • I • ~ . • Election .A$sured S-fia t Selected A _ Egyp Chief- CAIRO (AP) -Egypt's only polllk:al -party-named-Anwar Sadat Monday night to succeed the late President Gama! Abdel Nasser, assuring his election by the National Assembly Wednesday. "Meeting shortly before midnight, the 150-member central committee of the Arab Socialist Union unanimously ap- proved the nomination of Sadat by the party's .execuUve committee. Sadat, 5.2, has been serving as provisional president since Nasser died Sept. 28. Pr'-' M•'ll•rel on her -40th blrtbd1y Is seen by artist Bryan °'9en as a severed head. In the ~Ung unveiled today at the Na· ti-1 Portrait Gallery, the prln· cNs' head appears tO be sitting on a black.baa• and is surrounded by a r massive background of dark gtay. Hall-ihe-face;-benea~ -a tiara. dissolves in a watery ab- stract. "'I can't remember a prin- cess being beheaded In a royal birthday portr.ail before," said Tim L,.., an expert of Christie's art auctioneen. "It looks as if Prin- cess Margaret's bead has become detached from her body and sus· pended, with mascara running riv~ uletS doWn her cheeks, in an unlit prison cell on a particularly dark night," said the Daily Sketch. Or· ian. 35, who was commissioned by a ·lawyers socJety and recommend- ed by Margaret. said, "My thought was that royal portraits have stood stilJ. a very long time and it was tirile to paint a princess in a way that reflected the age she Jived in.'' And thl! queen's sister? "1 under· a\alld she la delighted," said the agent for her husband, Loni Snow· don. • Yo""ll Quinton Coop<r'flasll<s • bif grin as ht aeti hil pet.frog ready for the B~nton, Flo. frog ;umpina con- t"L • People· are dolnir a double take in Tampa, Fla. over an advertise· ment on page 460 of the telephone book yellow pages that shows a mother feedinir a bi2" juicy spider to her infant. General Telephone Co. said the drawin.e;-which depicts a woman talkin2" on the phone while spoon-feedin.e: the child-did not 'include the spider in the origin- al version. Bob C romw•ll~ General Telephone public relations man, said the bu.e: was not noticed by company officials until the book had been printed. The advertise.. meat is one of the telephone com· pany's own and reads. "Additional phones, ideal for mothers." • Sailors are still searching for the 30-pound solid brass steerinJ,! wheel of the destroyer John R •. Craig which has been missin2" for more than two-days in San Diego. Even frogmen are hunting the harbor floor today. "I'll bet my lieuten- ant's bars that this was a practical joke," said a spokesman for Paci· fie Fleet Cruise~Destroyer Force. While the search goes on another steering wheel has been borrowed from the mothball fleet in case the destroyer, in port through October, milht be called to sea duty. ~~~ .J:; Q.m m I t t e e r_ecom· mended that the assembly meet Wed- nesday to endorse Sadat, that his election be confirmed by a nationwide referen• dum Oct. 15, and that the president be in· · augurated two days later. Named vice president by Nuser ln 1969, Sadat was considered by most observers to be the least controversial of several potential contenders for the presidency. One of the others, LL Gen. Mohamed Fawzi, commander-ir>-ehjef of Egypt's armed fora!s, assured the ceJl· tral committee of the military's full sup- port for Sadat. The executive committee made a plea for solk!arity in the face of "the designs of hostile forces who desire to sow discord in our ranks." It moved quickly to replace Nasser. it said, to discount "reports spread by the imperialist press of the existe.oce of a so-called vacuum in Egypl" · "Nasser's death places a great burden on the ASU and its variou.s organs to work closely with the new president to further Nasser's ideas," the statement Aid. Palestinians J\ccuse Jordan . l ·Of New Attacli By THE ASSOCIATED PRE.SS Palestinian guerrillas accused the Jordanian army of attacking guerrilla positions in northern Jordan on Monday despite a Cairo-arranged cease.fire that ended the country's nine-day civil war. In Amman, the Jordanian government did not comment on tbe charges but a spokesman said evacuation ot guerrtllu from the capital was proceedlng quleUy. Al Falah. Iba mljor guerrilla """1J, made these chaiiel: Army troops shelled the village of Harima at dawn and then tanks and armored cars attacked a guerrilla out~ post. The army also fired on guerrilla positions west of Ramtha, a village nea r the Syrian frontier still under guerrilla control. Jordanian soldiers arrested a prominent guerrilla, Ha.hem Hindawi and other commandos, violating the truce that called for the army and guerrillas to re1ease prisoners taken in the fighting. The Al Fatah communiques, issued in Beirut, said the guerrillas "will not stand handcuffed"' if Hindawi and the other commandos are not freed. Jordan's information minister, Adnan Abu Odeh, said an estimated 1,500 Palestinian guerrillasOOarded trucks and left Amman on Sunday under supervision of an Arab peace mission named at the C&iro meeting. Odeh said lhe government expected the withdrawal of armed guerrillas from Amman and 1.erqa, 15 miles to the northeast, to be completed late Monday. Guerrilla units should be out of Irbid, Jordan's second largest city located 50 miles north of Amman, and other northern cities "in the itext few days ,'' Odeh atlded. The guerrillas were being moved to mountain bases near Jarash. 25 miles north of Amman and near the Israeli frontier where there "are good sanctuaries," the information minister said. .. ""It also-said Egypt•s-aluan·ce--Wltlrthe Soviet Union i! •Ca permanent l•ctor, not a temporary convenience," and warned that Israel npght deciie to renew ''military aggression" beeause of the present situation in Egypt. In Tel Aviv, Israel made its 21st com- plaint Monday to the U.N. commission supervising the cease-fire on the Suez Canal, charging that Egypt was con· tinuing construction of missile bases withln -18 miles of-the-canal. Egypt?11-an-- tiaircraft missiles are supplied by the Soviets. Some Western ob~ers had predicted tha\ Nasser would be •replaced by a rul· lng body to avoid an internal power stnJ.ggle. Sadat is confronted with the task of striking a balance between the ~pUan regime's left wing, led by Air :ttf8rshal All Sabry, and rightists led by former Interior Minister Zakaria Mohled· din. A close friend of the dead president, Sadat was among the "free officers group" that overthrew King Farouk in 1952 and provided Nasser's springboard to power. The only other member re- maining in the government is Hussein el Shafei, SI, who has little public support and is known to have no presidential aspirations. Sadat. although a fierce nationalist and subscriber to Nasser's ideas of Arab uni· ty and dignity. is expected to be unable to command the fervent devotion the Egyp- tians and other Arabs gave Na~r. But foreign diplomats consider him congenial ari:l. easy to approach. Government changes also were under way in Lebanon, where one of the rebel leaders in the 1958 civil war, Saeb Salam, accepted President Suleiman Franjieh's invitation to form a new government. Prem·1er 1lashid-Karaml reslgned--Satur;- day following Franjieh's instaJlation as president on Sept. 23. Salam, 65, is the leading Moslem politi· ciao in Beirut but has been kept out of power since the 1958 strife by army op- position. Franjieh was elected despite army opposition. French Canadian Faction Kidnaps British Envoy , MONTREAL (UPl) -A French Cana· dian separaUst group kidnaped t h e senior BriUsh trade commissioner Mon- day, and gave the government 48 hours to meet a long Jist of ransom demands - ·Including payment of half a million do!~ Jars in gold safe passage out of the country. It was Canada's first diplomatic kid- naplng. Four men, three of them armed with submachineguns, forced their way into the elegant downtown home of James R. Cross -the equivalent of a British con· fiUI in Montreal -and took him away in a taxi as his wife watched. In an eight-page ransom note sent to the news media and police the kidnapers Identified themselves as members of the Front de Liberation QueRecois (FLQ), a militant underground ~p seeking in· dependence f r o m Engllsh·speak.lng Canada for French-speaking Quebec. 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" '' 61 ,, !l " " IS •7 U SJ " n '' ,. .oe " " SI 2t .U ... ...... n .... n " ,, 77 ti " .n .. " .. " . " .... ,. .. ,,,, .. .. .. " " ~ N U .. ~ ,, 46 .ol " .. .. " n " ,. .. ·" .... "' ., .M •6 ·'' ,, at ... '' 11 " .. • \ UPIT ...... NAMED EGYPT CHIEF Acting President Sedet ··------ Coup Succeea • Buiivra Falls • Ill -..-1--J>AZ, Bolivia (AP) -Gen. Alfredo Ovando Candia resigned u president ear. ly today and a right-wing &entral who launched a revolt against him took over in hii place. Ovando asked military forces 1Ull loyal to him not to oppose the rebellJon aa:aWt him. Shortly afterward, Gen. Rogelio Miran- da, the army chlef of staff who launched the revolt on Sunday, anncunced that be was assuming the prealdency of a JllU!WY_junta. He did Jl!l't Immediately name the other members oft!i group. Miranda sa1d he formed the junta "to direct the destiny of the fatberfand with jwtict." Ovando celebrated hia firat anniversary -eader Revolt -a1-prt1ident.juat a week 110 -'!'he~presi$fent gave up-after a meettae ot army officers by A vote of 317-40 Monday called on both him and Miranda to rtsl:gn. Ovahdo, who aelzed the presld~ 1n a milltari' coup, at 111'11 was de!lanl and said: "The destiny of the country ill no.t d<clded by ofiiclah but by the people wbo ought to upreu their opinions at elec- ~Bui during the lllpl be cha""" his mind. O..arufo.on.Monda)Cllillbad.lbe.JllWOtl of two important regiments and the air force. Maj. Ruben Sancht:z, commander of the Colorado Re1iment guarding the presidenUal pala6e, termed the officen'· vote a "fraud." Nixon Plans to Deliver Miranda said of Ovando's resignation : 1'lt WU the best thing be could do. He wu a good president. Now the armed forces will decide who will be the IUc- cessor or successors.-" Talk on Peace Efforts The .official armed lore.ea radip, Red Battalion, broa dcast a communique saying: "For the Bolivian people, now begins the true destiny they deserve." A statement by Ovando issued by Information Minister Carlos Carrasco said he decided to resign because "the confrontation within the armed forcts, aside from dividing them and causing divisiveness within their ranks, would also have resulted in bloodshed ln the civil population.'' WASHINGTON (AP) - A nine-day European tour behind him, President Nixon plans a special report to Congrtss and the nation on the U.S. commitment to peace around Lhe globe. The report probably will include the prospeet of further troop withdrawals from Vietnam, one source said , and could come as early as nex t week. But the Nix· on Administration is not hiding its desire to get such a report on the record before the Nov. 3 elections. President and Mrs. Nixon were given a red-carpet welcome on their arrival at nearby Andrews Air Force Base Monday night~ --- Nixon repeated at the airport that his tour had been aimed at "strengthening the structure of peace in the Mediter- ranean and in the world. I think we made progress in strengthening that struc- ture," he said. · The Nixo~s were greeted by Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, congressional and administration leaders and members of the diplomatic corps. Nixon said he had found in Europe a greater understanding of U.S. policy in Vietnam than on his previous tour last year. He said "events in the future w.ill demonstrate" that tbe United States is making progress toward achieving its goals in Vietnam. He reported a favorable sentiment for the U.S. attempt to win peace in the Mid- dle East, and said the countries he visited consider it essential that the United States maintain its strength in tile Mediterranean and in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. On the final stop or the tour, Ireland, Nixon conferred with U.S. negotiators at the Paris peace talks. In a farewell speech at Dublin Airport, he made note of meeting with Irish leaders and his Vietnam advisers: 20 Viets Killed By Cong Mortars SAIGON (AP) -Viet Cong mortars killed 20 South Vietnamese and Wounded 4<l ih a government refugee camp Mon- day night as intensified enemy attacks continued for the third day along the cen- tral coast. Government spokesmen said 17 mortar rounds slammed into the cluster of houses at Phu ?t1y, in Binh Dinh province 2S5 miles northeast of Saigon. Nine other enemy mortar and rocket attacks were reported during the night. "As t leave Ireland and as 1 look back on these meetings I am sure they will be regarded as a period when we made a significant contribution not only to rela- tions between our two countries but for the great ideal we all desire, a peaceful world." Ni.Jon was greeted warmly throughout the tour. However, there were demonstrations in Rome, and in Dublin dissenters hurled eggs and other objects at his car. In both cities the acts were blamed on those opposed to U.S. policy in Yietnam. He met with heads of government in Italy, :Yugoslavia, Spain, England and -1re1ana~ ii"!.<t with PopePa:ut·vt In Rome. He also p"!d a visit to the U.S. 6th Fleet in the Mediterranean . Nixon's message was much the same as he delivered to Irish Prime Minister Jack Lynch ; that U.S. policy is to "make it possible for Ireland and every other country in the world to develop in a period of peace." Bunkers Bombed Later OVando emerged from hill home with his wife and two children, Teresa and Alfredo, and said, "l hope there will be no bloodshed," and left for an unknown destination. A military coup ousted the previous government on Sept. 2&, 1969. The armed forces issued a "revolutionary mandate" outlining goverii:ment goals and naming Ovando as presidenl Ironically, the man- date was signed by Miranda. Ovan-do named ~a-C8.15inet or-leftist civilians_and conaervaUve army officers and one of the government'& first act& was to expropriate the $150 mllllon holdings of·the Gulf Oil Co. on Oct. 17. This railed diasatisfacton among con- 1ervatives;-especl1.lly-1lnce-the-act shut- off all oil exports and deprived the government of badJy needed re.venue. Planes from Viet Bases Pound Reds in Camllodia TAING KAUK, Cambodia (AP) -Jet bombers from air bases in South Vietnam pounded an enemy bunker complex hid- den in a village outside Taing Kauk today after Cambodian troops ran into hall of fire Crom the well-concealed positions. Thick black and gray smoke hung over the village of Kanthun as A37 jets dived down-to drop napalm and antipersonnel cluster bomblets. It was not possible to make out the markings on the bombers, whlch are flown by both the U.S. and South Vietnamese air forces. They were called in after Cambodian troops were at- tacked for six hours durlng early houn of the morning. The Cambodians were driven back by fire from a line of bunkers. "I've tried everything I've got in the way of firepower -bazookas. grenade launchers, machine guns," said Maj. Doeurleim Sea , commander of the Cam· ' bodian 49th Scout Battalion. "But I can't break through their bunkers. There was only one thing for it -churn up the ground with bombs." Sea's Battalion lost one man killed and seven wounded during the probe of Kanthun, about three miles east Of Taing Kauk. They are part of the Cambodian government's first major offensive which has been stalled for four weeks in or around the ruins of this small town on Highway &, about 50 miles north of Phnom Penh. The Comrilunist command troops launched-a-series-of-attacks on Cam· bodian positions around Taing Kauk shortly after midnight with a heavy bar- rage or mortar bombs. More than 100 bombs plastered the Cambodian outpost or Svay Phloeung and the enemy Im- mediately un1eashed a ground attack that came to within 50 yatds of the Cam· bodlan defenses. The enemy mounted a machine gun in a Buddhist shrine until they were driven out. Enemy medics set up emergenCY. dressing station inside a Buddhist rtoupa, a spire·shaped monument found out.side all Cambodian temples. There were blood stains on the ground this afternoon -and five enemy corpses were laid out by a paddylield. \lfllTI ..... VI LLAGERS OFFER To· SHARE THEIR FOOD WITH IMIATILE D CAMBODIAN TROOPS Nier Communl1t-h1ld Kouk Cheap, Com munist Smell Arma Fire Pint Them Down ( ' Holdout Prisoners Re1noved NEW YORK (UPI ) Forty-0ne prisoners, the 18st holdouts among rebellious in- ---n-iates ·who rioted -tn fi ve city jails starting last Ttiursd~y, were removed by fire ladder from the Long Island City House of Detention in Queens early today. Observers , including Dr. Howard Levy, accompanied them to another prison at Riker's Island tc insure that they were not manhandled. -' QUEENlt -Bi Phll lnterlandl Tuesday, Octobet' 6, iq10 DAIL V Plllr. S Tell• Newsman ' 5IaYing Suspect • A 'Revolutionary' CAMBRIDGE, Mass. CAP) by three men and two womco -J>ti!JieyJt_ Bon~, accused ol ~pt. 13. _ _ robbery and murderJn_a..Bo<--Cily-Edilor Vin McLollan oft ton bank holdup-slaying, says he Is a fighter in a revolution against this country -not a criminal. Bond, 25, said Ii< had "declaud war .. on the United States as leader of a combat group in an organization he called "RevWutionary Action Force ~ East." the Phoenix, who conducttd the telephone Interview with Bond, quoted him as aayln1: "[ e<rWnly lhlnk !Ml ' anybody who is going to make ~ the decisions that I've made, ; YoU know, they have 1ot lo 1et ' money somewhere, I'm sure. ~ "I would recommend that : evenroqi;_ 1~ out and rob a · bank If they wanl some .•. RESCUERS REMOVE VICTIM OF SHAWNEE TORNADO FROM RUINS Five Deed As '!wi1ter Destroys City H•ll, Police Station a nd Hotel Levy was <in Army cloctor who was court-martialed and convicted for refusing to train special forees troops. The prisoners were broughl _.!:====================~ The Y®OC es:<00vict college student, who was captured and jailed last wttk in Grand Junctlon, Colo., was quoted as making .his discl~res in a telephone interview with the PhoeniI, a Cambridge-publi!h- ed weekly which caters to university.age readers. "One thing 1 can say, they - don't have to kill a cop : though ••• to rob 1 bank." ! Bond was a student 1t Bran-\ deis University near BQ!itQn, f where he eRrolled after terv· \. ing three years of a slx.to-12· .1 year sentence in th • ~ Massachusetts state prlsoa 1t ; Walpole for bank robbery. .,, 5 Killed by Tornado Storm Blitzes Shaw1iee., Oklahoma smashed by the big winds. down from the sixth floor of the building in groups of three on a 75-!oot "Cherry Plcker." a move to keep them in full view of newsmen and spec· taters to prevent beatings that guards inflic.tcd on several prisoners who surrendered early Monday-· some of them GridTeam's Plane On Ground 2 Years while they were handcuffed. NE\V YORK (UPI) -CBS much lower than usually OHicials agreed to the strange News said Monday it had charged for charter planes. evacuation because guards learned that the plane which "lt appears," Fromson aaid, would ha ve had to break through four barricaded steel 'crashed in the Rockies with "The university made no ef. A Boston policeman, Walter A. Schroeder, 42, was ratally shot durjng tbe $26,000 holdup •l -> ; " SHAWNEE, Okla. (AP) -A suddtn autumn tornado which hopscotched across this cen· tral Oklahoma town of 2a,OOO has killed al least 5 persons and injured more than 40. Instances of Jootlng were reported and so highway patrol troopers, 42 National Guardsfuen' and poliCe and other helpers from a score of nearby communities w e r e called in for rescue and gu ard City Hail. where the poli~ station is localed, later was evacuated w h e n engineers declared it unsafe. Si Good, a mechanic at the car agency, said a wall col· lapsed shorUy after a fellow worker looked outside and said. "It's going to blow." doors to end the seizure. members of the Wichita State fort to secure other com· Ooafah ~ Prisoners rioted at lunch· Uni versily football t e a m petitive bids." The only man · 9 ". time Thursday and seize d aboa rd had not been flown for ~'ho could clarify that -tlu! 2'40 E.Coo.slMl&llJ•t Cotono cleJ MM9 seven hostages to demand possibly 85 long as two years. athletic director -died in !re toil11 9:30 +..S:)I Tel: 67.J·2.1f0 judicial reform and better _c~r~a~sh2._ _______ ~ __ _:-~~"11''~11~+.~5~---~l~el~A'..:-~M~d~•~r~O.~""'~'I"~ Mayor Pierre Ta r on eslimat.ed damage Monda y, mainly in the business center, at $3.5 million to $4 million. duty. · prison c 0 n di l i 0 n s. The Ci l i n g "authoritative1• • disturbances spread to four sources'' the report also said A twister. possibly the same one, killed one person in Prague, population 1,500 about 15 miles nortbeut of Shawnee. In Shawnee, the storm cut a four.mile diagonal path-aCTOsS the city from southweSt to northeast. Ralph Coa ts and Roy Lee Coats, not related. died when the tornado ripped through a car agency where both work· ed. A third victim. M rs . Allen Roberts, 25, lived in a trailer_ court which w a s Damage was concentrated in the downtown area . where Taran said at least ISO businesses were hit, and a northern section of the city where many residences were da!Jl~g~dor destroy~ ~ Police dispatcher Charles Knox said a v."Oman called to report a tornado fu nnel ap- proaching. The police operate a weather warning system and Knox said, "I managed to get the siren turned on, but 'whammo' the windows came in and the electricity went off." "The clouds got black and the winds started twisting round and round," Good said. •·When I looked up, tbe wall was coming in." Gov. Dewey Bartlett, who visited the sceneJ aaid h~ ha_d reports or 55 injured. The Red CroSJ estimated 40 and. a newspaper ca n v a s s o! hospitals indicaled 80. other jails and a total of 28 the pilot of a similar plane, hostages were held. At the carrying other me.mbers of the Kew Gardens Jail in Queens a team which Jarided safely, had prisoner was found dead of an his medical li«nse revoked by overdose of drugs. At Queens the trouble con--the Federal Aviation Agency tinued longest. Three ho·stages -before-the Dight..--- still were held early Monday, The twin~ngine Martin 404 but were released after a crashed Friday in t h e warning from Mayor John V. Colorado Rockies killing 29 Lindsay. persons at the scene. A 30th Lindsay. who had met earlier with inmales at the victim died Monday. There Tombs in Manhatlan, then met are 10 survivors. ~·ith the Queens' prisoners and Broadcast e r Murray said they had legitimate · Fromsol'I reporting on the grievances. ..CBS Eveni11g News with LSD Test Fatal Balloonists Still Hunted In Atlantic The holdout priso n ers Walt.er Cronkite" said that ac- removed today include nine of cording to informed sources the 13 Black Panthers on tria l Wichita State bad made a deal on charges or conspiring lO to lease the two old planes for Medical Student Stricken HAUF AX, N .S. (UPI) _ A -;:bo;;;;m;;b;;pu;;;;b;;lic;;:;;bu;;;;;il;;ding;;;';;-;;:;;;;;;;;;$;;1;;2,;;0llO;;:;;fo;;r;;the;;;;~"'~a;;so;;n;;, ;;a ;;pn;;-;"", J third search for three people!, missing two weeks in a helium HAPPINESS IS SHOPPING PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Authorities say a medical stu· dent who spent a summer working with mental paUents under the influence of LSD has died from taking a dose or the drug himself. An autopsy perfonned Mo• day on Mark Prager. 24, listed the cause of death as the "adverse effect to an illegal drug -LSD." Prager's wife said he took an orange pill Saturday night and told her to tum on some soft music and observe his reactions. · "I watched him going oo a trip,'' "frs. Prager told police. "And there appeared to be no ill effects after the trip balloon resumed today based AT because he started to ask me on reports by a private search c 0 A s T s u p E R questions about himself." party· that it sighted floating Later. he begaa to vomit and on Sunday his wife and a debris. M A R K E T friend took him to a hospital, The Canadian Armed Forces where he was described as Search and Rescue Center "violentl y ill." searched ~e area of the p.rager died Sunday night. reported sightings Sunday and MAN.NI NG$ He was in his third year at Monday with planes and a Hahnemann Medical College Canadian coast guard cutter. .-f,--11 and wanted to be . a The private plane said it BEEF psychiatrist. . sighted eight objects, ln- Mrs. Prager said her ~us· eluding a yellow life raft, ~ worked oae_ sw:nmer 1~ a -southwest or Cape St-:-Mary·s, Bait~~ psy~h1atr1c hC?Sp1tal Newfoundland. where e aSSlSted studies on Previous searches by the the effects of LSD on mental u s Coa t G d h d patients. She said he told her · · s uar a con-- Saturday he wanted to ex-centra~ed on waters hundreds pcrience the same feelings as of r,nlles southeast of St. those patients. Johns, Newfoundla_nd; The persons m1ss1ng are Rodney Anderson, 32, a New "THE FINEST QUALITY OBTAINABLE" Agnew Throws Support To Buckley Candidacy • DELI • BE~R •WINE York City commodities broker, his wife Pamela Brown, 28, a ·television ac- tress, and Malcolm Brighton, 32, a British aeronautical engineer who served as pilot on the trip. They were aboard the "Free Life," an 81).foot- NEW YORK (UPI) -Vice others among the 100 persons tall balloon on an intended President Spiro T. Agnew er-present said he made his trip to France. fectively endorsed con· preference obvious. The craft wa s launched servative James L. Bucll:ley They said the vice president Se pt. 20 from East ltampton. for senator Monday over in· did not mention Buckley by N.Y., and last was heard from cumbent Sen. Charles E. name, bijt that he assailed the evening of Sept. 21, when Goodell, the Republican can-Goodell and Rep. Richard.. L. the crew radioed heavy rains didate. Ottinger. t he Democra\ic and cold windS had driven the • FRESH LOCAL PRODUCE (/: ! Or1191' ., !lll•M \1 bflwHn ta n e.m .. ,, . \: : Delivery begins. •··-Y•ur :'}lt'f'~~ ·~ P"""'<e ..• °"" U.lb-ic 6ooi! ~·-CMSiSUP£R M ~ "3'1T &..e-1 ..,. °"""dd ..... ' '. 1 p.m. 673-3510 -.J Guests at a Manhattan fund· senatorial nomi n ee, as balloon down to an altitude of raising luncheon said Agnew '' o bstnlctionists'' opposing «lO feet and they were prepar- aJso voiced strong support ror 1_~Pr~es~id~e~n~t~Ni~ixo~n~'s~po~li~cl~"~---~i~ng~toi;iila~nd~.i;,,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~iiii~M~O~N~-~s~•~r-~t~ .. ~'~'1~o-~s~-~~"~'~,.~';;;;~~1 Republican Gov. Ne.Ison A. Rockefeller. who is opposed by a Democrat and a con- servaUve in his race for reelect.ion. Agnew himself a v o I d e d reporters after the luncheon at the Waldorf-Aslorill, but 'Hot Berets' Confiscated PASSAIC. N.J. (AP) - Federal marshals moved i• on a warehouse-Monday ex· peeling to confiscate I.tut Im· ported berets the Fede ral Trade Commission said were dangerously lnflammable. The f u z 1 y, Italian-made berets, worn as an O'Ver-the- ear ac::cenory with midi-length coats, COC1ld burst Into n1mes 11t the touch of 1 match. the FTC ,..med. Only rt _.. found at lhe warehou,. end J...,ih Mortin Jr. general mmsel for the --+~~'!ill.two New Yorll: Onn1 .:o \l.·ere "uncooperative" in the matter. 1-' u.id tht.y h11d neither noti fied st-0fe11 or the danger nor rtmoved the berels from the markeL Open their door to education College costs grow each year, Families must plan far ahead, must save where savings.re secure but where they grow at the highest possible rates, so that needed money is available when the day comes for choosing higher education. Systematic savings, begun NOW, will insure the Petersen twins an education which opens the door to their gre.itest potential. How about opening that door, for your chlldrtn1 Plan wisely. Save ahead .•. at Orange County's wg<st, flzst and Strongest independent Fedora!. MO &.OM AlloaA.'nOtf LAGUNA NIGUEL IRANCM J llon11U l•p P111.t &e1111ti. Llrunl. ctllf. 12171 T•lephollt: 41f.UOl l(ancbo Callfomta .. JW.EEl{LY ALMANAC ~ Rancho California, ... bour-uid·a- hall from the cmc: Ceater, olen superb ime-t epportanitiea. --ltaMeadowV--mityftr-ex- lll!fllle, hu parcela ti Ii to I l4 aau, with JNlYed roadJ, nter uid power 11! in and JNlid far, prioed u Io.. u $5,950 ca.h.And ownenhip includes ace<11to800-acre Vail Lake, the Ille ti the $?25,000 MeadowV°irY dub. home and stablu, and shared cnm- enhip of 380 ac:ru of undistmbed park and meadowland. ! ---' ' ·-· I t . • • e • -·- - -!IBYBIDlJ lllll'lt&ID;l111-' OalJt-,.:run-mliiflrl .. loobd lib this,tbe...,..Iatim .... 1..-. it look ID boor W 8*0 lo drift It Loo An,elea, and the land COii Uoal $4,511 an acre. Anoheim bu,....,., pn!IJ cho- olically, lo 170,000,UICf ID Mn ti lml, if you WI find -wiJI proi>ahly M 1'11 thirty.&..•~ lbeua'lid dollanl '8DlY TOBOllOW 11..i.. c.m ....... ..-... -- ,i..-i br 1'ilw "-,-..tho - -li1hreaed principles el halant.d J...I .. i. stalM n•Tmtiall .. •,;,,,,• pc' pW. n.., we mnnllJ 1; 1a U, SZI ..._ • • s 000o -.w.d11$ZS .... ....,_ .... Loek: ....... ,, hiiil) ..... . ~fill lrS"••····· ~~~-~~~~- • lullllll Ill umeumouu. UIJG.lDll.l ltmll CGITllT -l1JIJIT--l!-TH ' • I I • • _ _. DAILV-PILO'l'-EDl'l'-ORIAL PAGE ------'It.ow Wide Is That Gap? That tired old express_io_n "generation gap" may not be as wide as you think . UCI conducted extensive sampling of attitudes of and fathe_rs J,;fe begiMing !o absorb some of the philo- sophies of their children -or today's young people aren't as out. of step with their parents as was believed. . -both )1arents-and:-students du:ring-1i.11gustin an eUortto --- ~---<ind-ourwhat-both-.:ge grou~s felt -about some-funda··---- mental issues. · ' Follies in the Frenzy ' ' • • I In some cases-, there was predictable disparity in viewpoints-essentially along issues of whether the uni· veri;ity should ,act as a substitute parent in formulating 5tudent rules and regu1ations. They also disagreed. _ stron_glr on such issues as unpopular g~est speakers, •rrad1calPiofessors," student protests, lli.e draft, inter· racht dating and dormitory visitation rules. But it may come as a pleasant surprise to the older _ generation,_to-1iruLthaLtbey_aten'.tJM..J!P.fillfrom their __ kids on sdme very important questiol'ls of the day: Drugs. Seventy-four· percent of the parents said they \Veren't worried about their children using drugs while at college; 69 peicent of 'lhe students agreed that they \Vould never try drugs. The Pill. Fifty·(wo percent of ihe parents agreed that the student health center shoulct provide birth con .. trol to girls \vho want it. Seventy ,percent of the stu .. dents said the same thing. Marr iage. The survey -Jndicated solid agreement from both sides that marriage should be delayed until after graduation. · Political and social injustices. Sixty-two percent of t he students fel t solutions are essential; 47 percent of their pare.nts agreed. Value of education. They agreed unanimously that a degree is worth all the effort and money it costs and that colle'ge should not be delaYed. even for those who are uncertain what they want to pursue. One of two things seems apparent: :E:ilher mothers The ' California Legislature can pull some dillies. Don't bet it didn't again this year. One of the classic examples came up two sessions ago when-in its cu.stomary last-minute frenzy of acli4 vity-it passed a bill which allo,ved auto dealers to run hack the odometers on auto speedometers. Red4 faced _aLpubliundignalilln~the.J.egislalw:e hastily o_<er,rode its own biU. In the legislative session that ended Aug. 21, 3,960 bills 'were in troduced. Of these, 1;110· went to the gover .. nor, where 77 we re vetoed. But the statistics tell onJy a small part of the con .. fu sion that surrounds much of the legislation . In the final two.days of the session, for example, the Senat~ approved 120 bills on a single vote. It is obvious that not even the mOst conscientious senator could under· stand all of the ramifications of suCh a januned-up action. ' With last4 minute amendments and in the hurried confusion of tra nsacting t\vo-thirds of its business in the last fe\v days or hours of the session . it will be mo nths before ·everyone-the legislatqrs included-understand the ra1_11ifications of what they have done. '· It is about time the California legislature put its bill-producing apparatus On a ba sis that \vould produce more studious consideration anO more thoughtful pre- paration. Area Sewage . u.s. Firnts Profit Martha Mitchell's . N ewest---Bulletin Cleaner Tlian Boost to Market Heroin U yoil. don't have a bathroom telephone, ..Y<>Y are not..only not ~ut _you_can·t put out the untrammeled news of the day, because your husband may overhear, and tr4lT1mel yob. Martha Mitchel!, the little girl from Little Rock, wife of the Attorney General was -misquoted? Are you kidding? When of the United States:-phones around, as she hits the horn she starts slow, but she ---~y~qu-". "'ve~lieatd: a~ now shTis lnn·erffie3ns bUs iness. bathroom p~ne So Jo~~ (the Attorney "It makes me sick to my stomach. I • GeneJ:al)"""'.'on t-hea.r·me. (The professors) are a bunch of sidewalk Unlike L1lr~n,ill!'• tbe-telepbooe gal In . diplofuals that don't know the score. •·baugh-ln,"-Who<"JS•-~orever ~rustrated_ Tliey don•t~lmow what's going on. They when she calls 1600 Pennsylvan1~ Avenue . haVe no tight tO express -an opinion on to dun the occupant, Martha 1s never diplomacy some of them can't talk as frustrated. She phone~ the ri~t places, well as J ~n and I can't talk very well." this time with a bulleti n for Uru t.ed Press Wh say' ' hitemational in Washinglon. 0 . · . . 'll Martha's bulletin is ligh t and airy, but S~ s really dolhng it now, .~d you what's wrong with that? She says she never get a COJ!-O!lt from her .. They are likes to laugh and make the world laugh, to~Jly responsible for ~e sins of our and too much of the wire news nowadays children. The acad~mlctans have not · a somber record to make you weep. taken care of our children. They_ are at is fault for the whole generahon of IT SEErt1S JOHN was quoted by children." Women's Wear Daily last week as calling educators ''stupid bastards who are ruining our educational institutions." He averred he was misquoted , but he needn't have bothered, because Martha can pick up a conversation where i(·Jeaves off and ..habitually does. According 11> UP I, her bathroom message was: "The academic society is responsible for all Our troubles in thi s country •.• the whole academic society ii; to blame ••• th~ ptofessors in every institution of learning." WILL rttARTHA L.UIENT that she SO IF YOU had a vague and troubling suspicion responsibil_ity for the sins _of o\ll' children rests with the parents. dis· miss it. U you had a formless doubt ac. ademicians are not appointed by the Al· mighty lo take care of our children, dis- miss that, .too • ..Remember wben we u_scd to think poor old Adolf Hitler put the world askew? Ha! Little f'.1artha has wrapped it all up for us, who aforetime wondered what the-hell was the matter with us, that we couldn't get back to thinking straight, as ol!r grandpappies did. Just a Dirty Trick Earlier this month the White House took the unusual step of rejecting in ad- vance the reported recommendations of a Pr~slder\tial Co\nmisslon on obscenity and pornography, created by President Johnson in 1967. There had been leaks to the press. the main one being the Commission's conclu- sion that increasing expooure to porn· ography was not a major factor in sex criines and delinqueOCy. The present ad- ministration ''"as not abou t to buy that. MY journahstic adr enalin surged when a copy (If "The Obscenity Report" reach4 ed ·me. This purportedly is an initial report to the President which tlle publish- ing hou.se of Stein & Day claims to have gained on a confidentia l basis by un- naiiled \Vashington persons and publish· ers instanter "in the public interest." Jt reads like the usual government committee report, complete with graphs, footnotes and gobbledegcok. None of it is as runny as the news stories that emerged Dear Gloomy Gus~ . Tho question of 'which pATty Is tht real. war party in America WllS clearly answer~ in the Senate roll call vote In whiclt only seven Republlcan senators vottd to get oor ld<ls oul ol Indochina by tht ,~.,,..._..,.. ... -.....,.·~·-"-\ The Book~an l ... -.-··"'·•. ~' while the comm ission v:as at work. The (lne. for instance, where the Jesuit head of Morality in Media, Inc., got outraged on learning that 21 young men had been paid to attend daily seminars on hard- core pornography in an effort to regisler their erotic responses, and the reply of the commission chairman, a Minnesota professor of law, that this was only part of the study Congress asked him to make. On page 75 of the "Report" at hand, I find an historical note : "The first record4 ed instance of obscene behavior seems to be that of Rhonda G-Resh, a Babylonian peasant maiden who was said to have bared her buttocks to the first sectional, second regional seer and revenue col- lector in order to avoid the spring payments. Their subsequent death was by disemboweling." All r ight. l had been had. This is the sMde of Roberi Benchley at work, a docu- ment ln the vl!in of h.is "'Tre&Surer'S Report." but so subtle it takes the dimwitted fme) some time to become aware of ll Who the author is, or team of authors. remains a mystery. But they have got that official verbbge down pretty we.II: '"These figures, in microcosm . pro- vided unmistakable ·handwriting on the wall ror the survey the Task Force undertook to confirm the rist of obscenity in America." :=~c_.i_cond~~ol~n~~~llY~:;::::-~ A~. Al Jong as tht White House is rejecting the. real Sl mill ion report be.fore ill -release. it nUgbLuve..ever.ybody submit this Stein I: Day version. Few woutd-Jmow-tht diffmnce. and-ltiJ-pro- boblf Just as funny u Ille findings the real Hawkahaws in this shadowy culture ..w dellver (15.9.1). .,,... ..."',.. A!llCft ~· ......... .... ...... "4, ,.,.... .. .. _...... ....,,. ,..,,. Ht ""' .. 0"9fft1 ..,., o.Hr "' .... --- We .Thought . .-.. ·~··---~-..- ( -~-Q-== = -~-== = --tt ·· Mailbox ~ To lhe Ec;litor: A recent editorial entitled "Our Offshore Pollution" stated that the State Regional Water Quality Control Board of San Diego ''permits no sewage with only primary treatment to be discharged into the ocean." 'Fhe edit(lrial then ended by suggesting that perhaps Orange County would have . to meet this high. San 'Diego standard, despite high costs. _ This editorial was dealing with er- roneous information. A REPORT BY the city of San Diego's utili ties depa r tment entitled "Altern atives for Sludge D i s po s a 1; 1'1etropolitan Sew"a.ge System: November, 1968," clearly docurOents the fact that ·San Diego's sewage gets only primary treatment before discharge into the ocean (off Point Loma ). This means that the en.tire area niaking up the district in San Diego doesn't do much more to their sewage than is done in Orange County. Th e "Orange County Coast Associa- tion·s Preserve or Perish Committee'' has a title much rrfore impressive than its facts. I am in favor of the highest degree of treatment necessary to preserve our en- vironment; but not by mis-informing our public. as V>'as done in this particular editorial. VICTOR OPINCAR. JR. Civil Engineer Information pre.~ented before a meeting oj the Orange Co11.11ty Coast Association, upan which th e editoriaL comnieilt was based. has bee11 cllal· l.enQed by officials of Orange Co1111ty Sa111t.ation Districts. Reader Opin· car's point is in general agreenie11t t.Vitlt information provided by the dis·· tricts. OJ/icia/s state that tlte use of both pre· and post·chlorination produces a sewage effluent of at least as higlt a purit)I sfn11dard as that of the Soi~ DieDo district. iVhe1l the five ·rnil.e- long 11e10 <1utfa/l is completed, Or- ange County standards will be sub· stantilllly llighe r, they report. -Editor Who Run• the Schools? To the Editor: Saddleback Col~ge Board President. Hans Vogel was reported in a recent news article as having sTated that tfie fundamental issue at slake in the long· continuing college dress code controversy was not the code or the hair. hut the question .of ytho. federal judges or the school board . should "run'' the i;chools. Perhaµs the answer could be found in any one of the collcge·s political .science classrooms; school board.'I; do, of course, "run" the local schools, but in a polilical ~)'$tern predicated upon the supremacy of l...aw. no one. elected or not, can be allow- ed to violate the Constitutionally proo tected rights of others. The irony in the CWTent situation is that while the rest or us learned this fun-- damental principle in cSur classrooms. the Saddlcback board must apparently. learn lo .,_,,h xten~~w litigation in the courtrooms. ' Some of the nation's most respectable drug firms are profiting indirecUy fr om heroin smuggling. Two t.'<>t1J.P¥lies, identified in c9n- fidential crime files as Parke Davis and Eli Lilly, have been doing a brisk business in gelatin capsules used to package heroiO. A t h i r d prominent .drug manufacturer. fl.1erck and .Co., has been singled out for selling quinine which winds up as a heroin adulterant. Representatives of all 1three com.panies have been called to testify this week at House crime hear- ings. IN A CONFIDENTIAL memo to Cha irman Claude Pepper, D-Fla., the Crime Committee's chie~ counsel , Paul Perilo. has described the scope of the hearings.- ''\Ve will show," he reports, "that legitimate pharmacists use very, very few empty gelatin capsules and almost none of the very small No. 5 size." Yet ' Parke Davis and Eli Lilly sell ''these .non· controlled, non 4 prescription items" in· d.iscriminately. "No. s gelatiO Ci!psules are the prefer- red pack;!ging triaterial for h~roin in lhe greater Washingto n area." explains thi? memo. This is in sh"arp contrast to ·New York, where glassine bags <manufac- tured by U.S. Envelope Company iif Springfi~ld, Mass.) are the package of choice." PARKE DAVIS and Eli Lilly , according to the n1emo, "are the only known manufact urers in the United States of No. 5 empty gelatin capsules." Perito states that both drug firms "are testifying without subpoena but not enthusiastically. Both have attempted to avoid appearing before the committee to explain their policies but will appear \\'ilh the knowledge that subpoenas can be· served." • The Merck representative "will testify about the ir selling practices of quinine lo \vho\esale rs in the greater Washington area.'' Quinine. which has the sa me bit· fer taste as heroin, is used by traf(ickers to dilute the drug . P,erito will also develop testimony "that legitimate pharmacists have limited need for narcotics packaging materials and adulterants. (This) testimony will be in stark contrast to the gross sales of the pharmacists who are regUlarly dispens· ing narcotics packaging paraphernalia and adulterants." THE CO~IMmEE has also sub- poenaed three retail druggists who will be questioned about over-the.counter safes of materials for the heroin trade. lf they take the Fifth, Perito advises, "we can put on affirma!'ive substantive testimony to establish their participation in the illicit trade of na·r cotics paraphernalia." 1be purpose 91 the hearings... states the conUdcntial memo. _is to establish the urgent need for federal legtslaUon to B11 George ---• Dear George: Don't you thlnt it's twful that people who art for censorship are allowed to express their views in print? What can be done about it? S.A. Dear S.A.: TOM'WERT- San Clemente Area Chairmin, American Civil Liberties Union l certainly do think it's awful, a11 th se. le. trf!!!g_l9_. Censor · what's in print, 1nd l think we should paQ a law again~t ••• uh • . . f\fay I come back to lhls - qut'stion? • :·make. it a crime" to manufacture. distribute or traffic -in heroin side ' pro- ducts. "Failure to enact such a statute," Perito declares, "will only serve to aug- ment the coffers o[ the unscrupulous merchants and entrepreneurs whose pro- fits are gathered at the expense of thousands (If junkies throughout our coun- try who are condemned to a 'living death' by Uteir voracious heroin habita." Lawyer In response to comments published i11: Jack Anderson's column., Eti Lilly and Com.pany advised the DA ILY PILOT tOday ft will "do a"lf-ythtng witliin its po1oer to help solve tlie problenis of the use of empty gelatin capsules in t"lle-illiCit heroin trade." A ·spokesnurn said rhe con1.pa11y ha,' takcii steps ain1ed. at keeping the capsules i1L legiJi1nat.e_.chJJ11z1e)§ _ancl catted it "quite false to i.nfer that Eli Lilly is profiteering from the illi· cit l1eroin traffic." Profits on the sales of t he capsules tn quest-ion "w~re neg- ligible," the spokesman advised. Antics · Drawing Fire Activist attorney William Kunstler , who iias stridently defended numerous white and black left extremists and revolu4 liona.ries, is under fire himself on charges of being a menace to law and order. The. American Bar Association is being pre.ssed to institute disbarment pro- ceedings again st Kunstler. · . The demand for such a crackdown is being made by Rep. Louis \Vyman, R- • ; N.H .. former state attorney general. and one-time chairman of ABA"s Committee on Jurisprudence and Law Reform. tN SEVERAL forceful communications to Berna.rd Segal, Philadelphi-. president of ABA. Wyman flatly charges Kunstler with "flagrant misci:induct. .. in "<!nd out of cotirt. .. " and emphatically calls on· ABA to take steps to ·disbar. him. A slmflar letter was sent to the bar associa- tion of the city of New York. To both groups, Wyman strongly stressed tha t the "organized bar owes it to the public lo purge itself of pro- fessional activists who urge criminal ac- tivity outside the law and who demonstrably incite to overt acts of violence." Cited as an in stance (If s u c h lawlessness was the burning of the Santa Barbara branch of the Bank of America which. Wyman asSerted. was ··directly attributable to Kunstler's inflammatory incitatiOn ·broadcast on national TV." The militantly-leftist atlomey·s activities were causti cally characterized as .. so blatant, flagrant, contemptuous, unethi· cal. unprofessional and violative of his oath as an Officel' or the court. as to war. rant immediate effective disciplinary action." -c11 ·~ f fl! \?" "Boy! And I thought Chicago was bita~re!" nation. Even the great· American Bar Association cannot afford to stay aloof from such deliberately contemptuous conduct." Prominent among the defendant~ Kunstler has represented are the notorious "Chicago seven", whose con- viction is on appeal and H. Rap Brown, black extremist who is a fugitive becau.se (If failure to show up for trial In a recent ma gazine article. KunsUer declared he condones arson "if a point has been reached in a given situation where the mechanisms of society are not respon· ding to serious grievances.:· By Robert S. Allen and John A. Goldsmith ----Tuesday, October 6, 1970 rr JS UP to the bar. Wyman contends, The editoricL page of tht Dailll to clean its own house. Pilot seek.I to inform and stim- 1·nie bar owes its living to public con· t1ta.t1 rtadm by prestnting this fidence and alliance,'' he said. "Unless it newspaper's opiniom and.eot'l'l-' deals firmly and responsibly wlUi those menta.111 on topic$ of intere1t who disgrace the bar, who dt fy and dellJe and sig11i/ica11ce, by providing a. the law of the land, And who make • fon.un for the upressitm of mockery of the lawyer's oath to uphold our reoder.t' opin.io114, and by the Constitution, public confidence In presenting tltc diverse vitWt -lawyers-and the-bar. will-be.destroyat.~-~1-.m, .. n.«--qf fn/Orme.d ObSer-Ot(t "The cont.in u e d undl$ciplined In· :Jnd apokt.ttnfn <1n topics of ~ citemenll of Kunstler and other.J to-aedl· da11. lion. insurrection and civil disobtdicnce. are an indictment of the orgAnized bar. Robert N. \Veed, Publisher not only of New York but' throughout the. ---------------------. ------,; ~.::======·-=-=--=--.:....:· -___:____;__:=-=-= --' . "' -Tllfsllay, October 6, 1q7Q DAILY PILOT 1 CHECKING-WeHare · sli()wdown Looming ~ree Exe~~d .in-$-SOJ(idnaping--· ~ UP• AN'l'fOCK, Calll. (AP) -l®nd tbe bodies In the been smasbed open, and1 Two men and a woman were ransacked barroom. whiskey aod beer bottles were killed wilh bull~ts Jn the back Sheriff's Lt. James Stef· scattered about. There was no of the head early Monday in a fensen said, "All three were estimate of loot. $50 rJosom-robbery attempt -.t shot in the head in an ex· Meanwhile, Antioch police " -. --. . . ,.· . -" -" - Science Teacher SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Gov. Ronald Reagan and the f~era1 covemment are bat· ~."°""---''~~------tling-ove'r--charge!l-that the the only_ tavei:n iA. the·nee.rby ecution-type slaying." had rushed a v e t e r a n He said Young's body Jay policewoman, Martha Frye, 'to farm community of Byron. .1;bout eight feet inside the Byron to pose as Mrs. Young. Pollce booked two yoWlg door on the bk>od"'6pattered She arrived shortly after men ~for-tnvestiiation of noor ;-those-ot-Tracy-and his ·discovery of-the bodies. lirol'der-tna ~g1ary;-wt wife were slumped-over-the· Police sakt thal about 2 ~40 • DIAMONDS AND .E.Sit\lE. ,JJ;V,-:ELR'f._ PU RCHASED -raea ~ tlie.M ost -~=~~:•laling-federa1-acknowled&ecf there was no far 1end of the bar. All had a.m,, more than an hour positive evidence to Unit lhem been shot wit.h a small-caliber before the killings, a clerk at11 r---------..,.... -~ Reagan says the state Is threateaed with the loss of $3.1 billion and that the ac- to the e1«utions. pistol. an Antioch all-night market South Co•if Pl••• AI•ea Woman The victims were identified A floor safe was open, a had reported seeing two men l ri1tol •' '"• s." D•••• Fwy. ~ GAME -Our ]4ame , tends an educator of lengthy Came man notes that Miss experience. Robert Tr ,,~ coin-<>perated pool game and in a car threatening a third Cott• M••• $40·9066 · t f th Wild Idol the cigarette machine had man with a knife. cusatioru: are unfou1ded. A as acy, -· pro·l -~~~iii~i~i~~~i~i~!!!!!!!!~~iiiiiii~ Too<!plao De;Lee Cates ljv~·in CUSTOMER SERVICE -.Q. Casper, Wyo., and sod~ her hWhy is dogwood so named'" sister Miss PJezapa ShLee A. Because out of the leav~ Cat.es. . Fascinalq. Did yotJ somebody once cooked up a know ~Is are nOt lnfhienced flea remed)'. to be used on a s muC by unuSUal narnes M q~-.-Q. "What country are boys? That's the clai;n . has the most horses?" A .• -The ·social scholars say girls Brazil. After that in descen-a~ally seem to get some ·ding order, come Russia, Mex- good out of the attention the ico, China, Argentina and the trickY.~nomenclatu g i v ... e.s United States •. , Q. "How them,1bul boysf ,the sensitive many of the people mµrdered souls, are apt le> suffer more in the United States are kiUed selr~iously therefi:om. with ma i I order guns?" A. EVERY THIRD SOLDIER Aboul hall of lhem. among the U.S:: AT m y '-s NIGHT ATTIRE -A gar· enlisted men is some sort of ment maker says 7 percent·of sergeant ••. LOOK, WHEN 1 the American women wear said peacocks don't lay eggs. I nothing ~t all when they· sleep didn't mean peahens don't. except possibly a Ii t t I e 1'hey do, they do . • . IN perfume. Sixty-six percent of CAIJFORNlA, YOU need a the single girls are said to driver's license to go out for a wear pajamas. Seventy-five spin in a self-propelled percent of the married women wheelchair;-.. IT IS AU<> a are r e po r t e d to wear littJe known fact t.hat coffee nightgowns. What bachelors with real cream stays hot and husbands wear when .they longer in the cup than black retire was not determined in coffee. this survey. But it's common IF YOU ASK the average knowledge most single men man to estimate the length of sleep in their underwear while a minute and remain mo-most married men go to bed tionless for that long, he will either in their pajama tops-or under-guess and stand still for" · pajama bottoms Only. a~ 35 seconds o n I y . • • • Repeated tests prove th~t. Try _Your questions and com- federal judge and a federal F' h Ar prte or 0 e lg ts my tavern; his wife, Cella, $8, and hearing examiner have both Lloyd Young, manager of an ruled against the state. AnUoch food market. Examiner J, Andrew D!--L Ant.iocb police said that BroolCs, who coni:tCClea-a hear:--ll!iGU81!-g.e---young•s-w11e-, -N-o--r rn-a-, ing here last Aug. 25, issued a LOS ANGELES (AP) _ An telephoned them at 3:55 a.m. r di M d lh lh They said she reported S'he m ng on ay at estate, Army Reserve major con-had just received a call from to hold dowa costs, is ignoring tending sex discrimtnation her husband, saying ·Jie was several rules. 1..n!d · Jh bar t B M , won the first court round in an 11•• m e a yron, w U.S. Dist. Court Judg e at~mpt 10· prevent her miles southeast. of Antioch, by AUORso Zirpoli ruled Sept. IO discharge because she is a some men who threatened to that the state is violating mother. kill him unless she brought $50 federal rules and ordered it to immediately. hiKe its payments under the ~ ~.S. Di~tri~ ~ourldJudge A. st!iff;on~~: 10C:~es ~~ Aid to Families with n rew au issue a tern· was alerted, and ofr1·cers Dependent Children program porary injunction Monday, within 60 days. blocking the Army from If the state refused, Zirpoli Clischarging or altering the said, he would halt all federal service status of Lorraine R. aid to California· under the Johnson, a 4 3 ·ye a r -o 1 d Social Security Act. Such aid member of the Nurse Corps. includes payments to the Mrs. Johnson, a nurse With Coed Knifed In Library blind, medicare and a I I weliare progrlims. · the Cypress school district in LOS ANGELES (UPI) _ A Gov. Reaga1 said Mo1day Orange County, was l"(larried 23-year.old librarian fought off the federal action "is absurd in I967 and bore a son July 17• a six-rooi assailant Monday and utterly ridiculous.'' . 1008. The Army notified her while he pummeled her on the "Despite California's un · she was being discharged head and stabbed her with a paralleled generosity to the from the reserve under a pro-small knife in an isolated sec- needy on welfare." he added, vision that calls for dismissal tion of the University of I' ... "\ -so~..-. IN ~ONG Ill'}! Ca.Ii farn ia_Co_//iifJe Of Commerce ... ,,,,,,~,, .. °"""' ... '"' ...... ISl-ISS ,111t AwenYe ltnt lffth. C.lifo,nHI 90l1J CONTINUOUS ENROLLMENT TELEPHONE: 436-9767 or 435-5367 "DAY OR EVENING CLASSES" I TWO-YEAR COUR$!S luliRlll .t.•111inbfr1tiM Hitll.r kcountint Ace-tint -°'"' Prtuuiftl. b-c:utiH $«fefe1ial SHORf.TERM-'COOUES S11111.,r•phic Metlictl T"'n1uiptio11i1t Cl•ric1l ful1-(h119e lookk•.,int IC•l')lund1 lruth·UP Clo11t1 l u1iM11 Mochin11 Shortlion4 and lrPint Dtnlal A11i1tint (Grett tr Al( Sh•rtliond) -ONE-YEAR COURSES 'I l91al S1u11tirial Medic1l S1u 1lariol Se<r1tarial !Gr'9t or AK S~erthon~}, Ju"io' Alcou11!1nt / it on your dad, young fe llow... ments are welcomed ond A MO NG HIGH--S€HOOL · will be -used· in CHECK-1N6 faculty members generally, UP wherever possible. the moSl popular is the male Please address your letters science teacher and the most to L. M, Boyd; P.O. Box "the federal court decision we. of any woman officer who Southern California library. are appealing could con-"becomes the parent, step-Miss· Maria E. Delasquez ceivably add $3.J billion to the ~.rent, foster parent or guar-received superficial stab tax burden of C a l i r o r n i a d1an of a child under the age wounds in her side and bruises ciW:ens -since the ruli11g of 18 years." . on her face after she screamed puts iwtO poleilti3fjeoparttY811-'l'he-woman-has elght-yearr 1mif iictcea· her attacru. 'thi" _.,.._ !ederal .welf~e funds reci!i.ved !Dore t9 se_rve ~fore q~lify. man Oed as.. Qther Ubrary Jn California since July 1, 1ng for retirement benefits. workers ran to her aid. dictatorial is the fem a I e 1875,..Newport Beach, Calif. English teacher. Or so con~ 92660. Manson May Be Placed In C-age During Trial 1969." Blast' Rocks SF Airport SAN FRANCISCO (AP) SQmething_explode.<LMonda:t. in the airport cargo terminal of Pan American Airways, but LOS ANGELES (UPI) -three young women defen· authorities aren't sure~what. Charles Manson may be Jock-dants, who bave followf4 their A spokesman for the line . , ed m-a gla·ss booth Or Dound said a for:eman heard a-sharp idol's Jead and imitat"fd his d and gagged to ~ prevent a report an saw a 11uff of DELANEY'S SEA SHAN.TY LOCAL LOBSTERS ARE HERE! Seafood Sensation of the Season Eresh From our own-Fishermen COMPLETE DINNER ~ $4.95 MONDAY THRU THURSDAY 630' UDO PARK DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH 675-0100 recurrance of his attempt to histiionics during the trial. smoke from a stack of in· injure the judge at the Sharon They also were dragged from coming cargo. There was an Tate murder trial. ~lh::::.• .:.'::our::.:.lr.:oo::m::..:M::o:nd:::::•Y'..:· ___ .:od=or~ol~gu'.'.'.n'.".po:'.w::d"'e"-r:.. ---~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~j A source close to the trial~ r.ecalled the Adolph Eichmann case in Israel acd said Manson might have to be placed in a glass cage like the Nazi war criminal to prevent the cult leader from becoming violent in the courtroom. ManSon lunged 10 feet from the counsel table toward the bench Monday with a yellow lead pencil clinched in his right hand in an attempt to get at Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older. A deputy flattened Manson In seconds, but the incident demonstrated the type of behavior or which the chief defendaht. charged with seven murders, is capable. The source said the tria l will last at le&st two more months and that. Manson may have to be shackled or isolated to allow the trial to proceed. The same applies to the Star's Death Probe Set HOLLYWOOD (AP) ·Behavioral scientists will in· vestigate the short, frenzied 1ife of Janis Joplin to try to detennine whether the drug overdOSf! that kiUed the blues· ~·Shouting star was accidental or deliberate. The coroner's office said Monday an autopsy showed the 27-year-old singer died from an overdose, but that further tests would be needed , to identify the drug. Police called lo M 1 s s Joplin's apartment alter she was found dead Swlday said , they found small amounts of heroin and marijuana, Her left arm bore fresh needle marks, Coroner Thomas Noguchi said. Typhoon .Roars TOKYO (UPI) -Typhoon Tris whipped the South Otina Sea with 80 miles an hour winds today and headed toward Hong Kong. But the typhoon warning center said the typhoon was expected to disintegrate when it reached 1 lind. BOB HAYES 100.VARD DASH WORLD RECORD HOl.DER TA(KS ABOUT LONG DISTANCE .PHONE CAI.LS, • ,,,. 1.v111v ·1oov• SLIM GY • ,.- '~ ""'. ""'" '"' @Paclftc 1ila(lii9ile IN i WftU •••• \ HOMl OlMONt;TltAflOH "scS -TELEPHON£ WAL1' -A &~1MOY• (714) l )f•J77J ,,, Whenl wantloP-t - somewhere in a hurry . I dial direct.~Jti faster."' • Anaheim Savings proudly presents a unique display of Ripley's Believe It Or Not collec- 1ion. filo other name and no other phrase have gripped the imagination and interest of people throughout the world to such an extent and for such a long period of time as RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT. Visit Ana- _heim Savlng·s main office in Anah eim during 1he month of Oclober and en joy with us the remarkable s.et of rare playable violins made ou t of matchsticks, the African (primitive) stringed instruments, a two-headed calf born in Cal lfornia, a rifle that measures 9 feet 6 inches, made by the Nosu Warriors of Western China, and many display panel s with unusual Ripley material gathered from all over 1he world. It is a dispfay you will not want to miss, and a displ ay that Anaheim Saving s is pl eased to bring to you. BELIEVE IT OR NOT, •• THE HIGHEST INTEREST ON YOUR SAVINGS Current annual tale on passbook 91;count1 r.ompoooded dally DO day bonus interest eccouma with Slie'llJTll.Q balaoc• One to ttln year teno c•rfilicate .cQOtlt'ltl with 11,000 minirmn btfance Two to aer. year •rm oertificato tecounts with $5,000 rintmuin bela.nce on. yur term cettllleate accounts with $100,000 l'lllf'limullil belant9 5% 5%% 5~% 6% 7%% Ttnl'll Ind .avaJlabUity detennlned bf Fede ta I regutatlons. lnt9feit t;OfnpOUnded daily on 111 a~u,,ra. FRI! IAFE D!POSrr eons ASK FOR DETAU ANAHEIM S ·AVINGs- ANo LOAN ASSOCIATION AMAHllM I lllllA I HUNnNOTON llACH "l'l 2·1032 ~ .... 11 Ll ..e&11 '17W.L,_..-., 71'0S. .... lf¥f. .01tMtiT1$1tMt ' 1 I • •i ' ' ), ._, ' " \ -··~ . . -------- l ' The Federal Trade Commission doesn't seem 1 . F·310TESlS -UY-INDEPENDENT RESEARCH LABORATORIES In the more than 15 .years of research and develop- ment that resulted In F-310, hundreds of scientific tests have been conducted to assess and evaluate the addi- tive's quality and performance characteristics. Tile fol · Jawing four test programs are the most recent and most def initive in presenting F-310's effectiveness in reduc- ing tota1 emissions from automobiles an d thereby con• tributing to cleaner air. Scott Lab Tests Sco!t Research Laboratories is a nationally recognized research company and ~estlng laboratory eng aged in air pollution studies. '--· To determ ine the effectiveness of F-310 in cleaning up dirty carburetors an d Positive Crankcase Ventilation (PCV) valves-and thus reducing exhaust emiss ions -, Scott conducted·13 controlled tests in San Bernardino, California during 1968 and 1969. The cars were all 1966 to 1969 models with V-8 en- gines and automatic transn1issions. equipped with standard exhaust emissions control packages and PCV systems. The cars drove stop and go for5,000 lo 20,000 miles on a non-additive gaooline typical of some of the poorer qualify (deposit-forming ) gasolines sold in th e Los Angeles area. This low qualify fue l was used purposely to speed up the dirtying process and to provide a more severe test for F-310. When thorou_ghly dirtied· (idling rou ghly and stalling). the cars were switched to Chevron with F-310, and driven approximately 2,000 l'(lil es. Cleanup wa-s achieved and engine operation returned to normal. ·) The results: Hydrocarbon emis·sions were reduced an average of over 50°,{, in lhese very dirty engines. Carbon monoxide emissions ware reduc~d by an average of more than a third. Reduction in Hydrocarbons-13 Scott Tests 16-0o ~ SQO_ ~.I ~= 600 i~ ~· :c .. -<II -400 -~ •• . .. ~ 200 '" 0 D St•rt of Cle1n.Up T•1t • EndolT•tl 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Teat Number Los Angeles-County Sherills Cars This lest program was conducted in February, 1970. Six cars (three 1968 and three 1969 models) were selected by the County ol Los Angeles Mechanical Department. The cars were chosen from three different locations in order to include all types of driving-slop·and-go, idling, long-distan ce, and high-speed. All cars had been driven 30,000 miles or more, and al l had very dirty engines. Careful measuren1ents pf exhaust emission levels were made at a Federal Government laboratory on all cars before the te st. The cars were then switched1o Chevron with F-310 and re turned to service !or as little as 678 miles and as much as 2,093 miles. Then emission levels were checked again. The results : Unburned hydrocarbons werct reduced by an avera ge of 24°/o, and carbon monoxi de by 42 %. Orange CountyTest This 'test program conducted between March and July, 1970, involved 53 vehicles selected by oflicials of the Orange County, Ca.TI[, Department of fransportatiori from its fl eet of more than 1,000 cars and trucks. The I • • sel ection represented a cross-section of high and low- rnileage vehicles of various 1n odel years. There are two very significant points about this pro- gram: 1) The f leet was exceptionally well-maintained, and 2) the fleet had previously been usi ng a competitive, major brand premium-grade gasoline containing a high- ly publicized carburetor detergent. Scott Laboratories ran emission tests on these cars before and after they had been driven approximately 2,000 miles on Chevron with F-310. The results: Unburned hydrocarbon emisSions dropped an average · of 12.4°.4> and carbon monoxide emissions dropped an average of 27.5% • Pasadena Tests This 297-car test program conducted during the Spring of 1970, was the larges t and most delinitive of its kind ever attempted. II was scientifically designed to tell us what woul d happen if the entire California car popula· tion used F-310. Emission tests were conducted in the Pasadena Cali· fornia area by Olson Laboratories, an independent test- ing organization. The cars use d were selected at ran- dom, by zip code area, based on a cross-section of the California car population, according to the California Department of Transportation registration figures. The only requirement for participation in the test was that the cars had not used any Chevron gasolines since De- cember, 1969. The cars were given a me chanical check at the Rose Bowl Stadium and measured for exhaust emission levels. The drivers were asked to drive as they always had -but using only Chevron gasolines 1Vith F-31 o. A retu rn check-in date was established based o n how long each motorist estimated it would take to drive ap- proximately 2,000 miles. Upon completion of the 2,000 miles, the exhaust emission level of each car was again measured by Olson Laboratories. These levels were then compared against the emissions levels taken at the beginning of the test. · The results: Chevron with F-31Q achieved an average reduction in hydrocarbon emissions of 13.9%, and In av- erage reduction in carbon monoxide emi11ion1of11.8%. The significance.of this test is in its size and scope- 297 cars representing a profile of the total car popula· tion in the State of California. And in its implications for the future in the urgent campaign to reduce air pollution. ---- . • . ---~- • • • • ons1nas1n i to think that's significant. We think it is. A recent test conductecl jjf]>asadefia, California, demonstrated that the use of Chevron gasolines with F-310"' could result in the decrease of thousands of tons of exhaust emissions every day from America's car population. 297 cars, using 21 competitive brands of gasoline, and specifically selected to be representative of the total California car/population, were tested for exhaust emissions by an independent research laboratory. Then they were switched to Chevron with F-310, driven by their owners approximately 2,000 miles each, and tested again. The automobiles showed an average reduction of 13.9°/o in unburned hydrocarbon emissions, and a drop of 11.6 °10 in' carbon monoxide emissions. If Chevron with F-310 were used in all the cars in Los Angeles County alone, reductions of this siZe would have the effect of cutting hack these emissions by over 1,000 tons per day. This single test alone · is conclusive proof of the effectiveness of F-310; and it strongly refutes the Fed- eral Trade Commission's recent charge that Standard's F-310 makes no significant contribution to the air pol- lution problem. The FTC says that F-310 is similar to competitive additives and that it will not significantly reduce auto- mobile emissions of carbon monoxide and unbul'ned hydrocarbons, and that claims made for the additive have not been proven or fully substantiated by reliable testing. The FTC accusations are grossly in error and un- founded. F-310 is in fact new, and different. The U.S. Patent Office has approved a U.S . patent on F-3f0 in gasoline. Patents are awarded only for new inventions. Com- petitive oil companies-have111ade similar-claims· for the effectiveness of their detergent additives, but no one has come forward with independent proof that we have seen. F-310 does significantly reduce automobile exhaust emissio_ns of \:arbon rrionoxkle and unburned hydro- carbons. Proof of this is provided in results of tests which are covered in detail on the opposite page. The testing of F -310 is accurate, scientific, and reliable. F-310 has been extensively and repeatedly tested in the laboratory and in the field, utilizing inde- pendent automotive testing laboratories and testing procedures widely used and accepted throughout the automotive research field. Standard Oil Company of California has spent years in the development of F-310, and in testing to prove that it does exactly what we say it does. F-310 is undoubtedly one of the most thoroughly tested and documented additives in gaso- line history. Because the FTC's allegations may tend to lessen confidence in F-310 , Standard Oil Company of Cali- fornia is taking strong and immediate action against these accusations . We will continue to advertise and market Chevron with F-310, and continue to let the public know the exceptional ability of this additive to reduce auto- motive exhaust emissions of unburned hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide. We have complete faith in our product, its superiority, in the scientists and labora- tories who have helped develop and test F-310, and in the remarkable results it has achieved. F-310 is, in fact, a genuine and significant contribution to air pollution con tro I. ·R~i,:hrere.d Tr1dcmar~ ·fl'!' ro1vt11t1~nc Amine Ci•Mlline Addi1h~. We have not just made claims. We have offered proof. Chevron Standard Oil Company of California .. I I , -· l --·-· ' -J 0 D~IL Y PILOT /ursda)'1 Octobtr 6, 1970 ' l I Truilblu:in9 at IJCI ·· UC Irvine coeds Debra Long (left) and Judy Can- naro pick their way through construction area a s they head for class in new ~ine arts complex on the campu s, while, in background back hoe operator Gary Pearson keeps digging toward completion of For the Record Death Nati!'~" p _e,q_li Notices t ' - Press Cluh In Search Of Beaut · ~ 'Can.die' Suspect . Gets Cou1·t Delay SANT A ANA . ..,.. A three-with being one of three men month delay has been ordered who shot and killed Thomll3 C. in Orange County Superior Astorina , 25, last March lS In ANAHEIM ~ Tbe Qrapge County Press Club -whose Jn8le members constitute as -enthusiiiUcafrafefriity,-,,o'r•· -u Court action against a Costa a quarrel that erupted over i --u•esa man all~ly ffiVotVed disposal -af-a-stolen '30 f---,wim. a c c u s e IT. analellifi e eviSiOif"!et. .- DAILY l"ILOT Pr.r. bY LH "•Ynt the complex. About 6,000 students went back to school at UC1 Monday as workers rushed to put fin- ishing touches on art center. Also incomplete is school's new engineering complex. Alas, school opened anyway. Easter Seal Award Winners Announced ANAllEJM -Ten service Cepter Service Award : Can- award!l--were given -to · n-yon Women's Clubs for help- girl-watchers as you re Ii y to find -has launched its an- nual search for the fairest in Killer" Robert Willard Liberty Astorina's body was found in in the swampland killing of a a boggy area near Sunset homeless drifter. Aquatic Park in Huntington d Beach, Miss Mission Bay, Judge James F. Judge set Beach and a search was 1·m-Deadline for contestants an · J h Maid of California runnerup an. 6 as t e next appearance . . the land. sponsors to enter the Miss for Randall Greg Allen 25, or mediately launched for L1ber· Orcop beauty pagept is this and Miss Orange County Fair, 350 Avocado st. A freQuently '-fy wbo had just bee.n released ~riday (~~ 9), with pre-sponsored by El Camino Bank. delayed motion for dismissal from a mental hospital. ~udgtng activi~es and crown-Debbie Lttkwood, M I s s of charges of murder, kid-Libfity, was arrested in mg the following week. Anaheim, sponsored by the naping and conspira_cy will Colorado afterrthe alleged kill- •Bt1t-9>~far;-onJy-four--Anaheim-Polieemens'-As!OCia--preface setting-of-tbe-trial1 ng-ot-a-m.ate nurse-in San ~uties have been _entered," Oon. date. . Diego and now faces court ac- said Mrs. Bette Reinhartsen, Donna Flory. Miss Santa Allen Is formally charged tion in that city. Pres3 Club chairman for the Ana, sponsored by El Toro1;;;;i0iii0iii0ii;,;;;i0iii0ii;i;;i0ii;;;;iii0ii;;;:i0iii0iii0iii0ii;;;;;~~~~'i Miss Orcop contest. MCAS Marines. E THO UGH TS _Judging by Hol jy w ~o d La•onne Hagman, Mi ss ~B_l_BL, personaJities will bt Oct. 16 at Orange County r u n n e r u p , the new Royal Coach Inn, in sponsored by The Kettle CHOOSING-TO OllYI 11.egerding Chri1t, the .BIBLE 1ay1, "Though He were 1 $gn, Anaheim, with a press con-Restaurant. feren'ce Oct. 11 at 3 p.m., poolside . at the Charterholi.se y1t LEARNED He obed ience -and -He J b1c1me the 111tkor of 1tar'l1l 11lvation t 'tbr..ee_ others, Miss Orange vnt0_1tt them ·th1t OBEY Him"; Hob. 5:1· ~ P rincess Valerie Humphrey 9. AHho~gh Jiiu1 LEARNED oO"di1nc1 !-Inn. and Sharon Turner and Mi ss H1 new1r once DISOBEYED. As h1 ''e"' "The main event begins at Orange County Sheri Engel 11p. He le1•n1d to obey rather th11n to 6:30 p.m. and the public is in-will participate as soon as SIN. He COULD HAVE rebe lled, buf He didn'f, He 11id to God, vited," said Mrs. Reinhartsen they are able to get sponsors. "-nPt a1 t will but 11 Thou wilt", Mitt. 26:19. of the Oct. 16 pageant. which Jodt11• 11id to hii people, "-choo11 you tlli1 d1y whom ye w:ll f Prospective contestants and 11rv......=-e1 for me eftd my hP111e, we will serv• the Lord", Joih. eatures music by the El Can-sponsors interested in the 24:15 Sa:11111el 1•id, "Behold, tv ob1y i1 b.tter thin 11crific-". tar Brothers Orchestra. ' event may contact Mr s, 1 Sim. 15:22. Jnn iaid. "-whr c1ll ye Me, .Lord, Lord ond Sponsors don ate $100 lo the Reinharlsen at the Anaheim DO NOT the th ings which I 11y7. Al10 "If ye lov• Me, lr1•Jt P-·· Club's permanent Bil · tberMi Or Mycomm1ndmenh",!Lk.6:46,Jn.14 :1 51,H1re,He in1ep1r1bly '""""' u etm , or o ss cop d b building fund and provid• a be connected LOVE i nd OBEDIENCE. LPv1 ii d1mo1utr1!1 y committe.e mem f.$. obedience. silken banner bearing their They include Cliff Otto, of Do YOU obey Chriit, 11 yo11 live from d1y to d1y1 Heve yow name, which each girl will the Los Angeles Times , LEARNED this? He s1id, "-te•ch 111 n•tioni, b1ptili"9 them- wear during judging. Madison Burden. or th e teechi119 them to ob1erY1 .u things whehOl'l'lr I lle ... e cornm•ad· Bathing suits and evening Anaheim Bulletin, C ar I ed yov-". M•tt. 28:18-1 9. gowns are supplied, but more VISIT 111, •tudy fhe BIBLE wilh 111. Church pf Chri.t, 217 w. wa. Sawyer and Jim Duncan, of 1Pn St., Coda M11a, C1fff . 92627. Ph. 541-5711 , 545·2441, girl s and sponsors -up to 25 the Santa Ana Register, and 646-5761. ~ of each - are still needed. Art Vinsel of the Orange Coast TL· .. TY. Ch01W1el '· S••doys, 7:30 A.M. Here are the girls registered ~D~A~l~L~Y~P~ILO~T~.==~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ and with sponsors so far: fi Jill Shelton, Miss Se a I dividuals and organizations ing to form the women's guild Vacati'on Tri'p llOYLI! W<>$l<niMlerJ brott.er, Ted, Colla MH•f Meurke I. Boyle. '301 War111r Ave., Mu11t-•1'1er, Mtl, Vlrtlnla Field, Lont Be•Cll; . which contributed to the to aid the Easter sea I lntlon Beec~. Survived 11y wire, Martina -aralldc:hlld, Jenlllfer Olarnr Ha9er: Easter Seal Society during the Rehabilitation Center. '1-----1 l·AMS .. • So Good It Will J. BoYle: brot~er, Eu11efl1 80'/!r: lour Senile:-. weone$46Y. 2 P~, SHfarl~t F 'l S So ght !l•lers, Leola BOVlt. Marv Rvan, ICall•· MliOFllc Templ(t with Setflr>r>t Meson•c society's fifth annual Awards Patient or the Year: Cindy I m u eri11e IC~ler aMI Bernice l'orlrr Ros.rv L<Xlte ll'Ol!I olllcl11!ni1. Interment, Felr- tonl.9Jlt, TlleS(llV, 1 PM, PHk". F•mil; IWv"' Mem~l!I ~·rk· Beu Bf'INllWIV Banquet Monday. Kilgore. or A:iaheim, the 1970 Members aqd guests of the· Colonl1! Fu""''' Home. Requl!<n MIH, Mo!'luiry, Dir«fOI'.$. Wii'llr-esd1v, ' AM, st. eo""v~ture c1t1>-The awards were handed oul Easter Seal Child. Sierra Club of Orange County -~!,~11~~~:i;::: Fimnv coion1•1 FuM••1 D·iSSOIUt.iO'llS by }..1ary Ann Krane, a Easter Seal campaign have been invited to bring 10 Mrs. J°'~111ne ~~~!r! &•own. CllaJ>el Of Jtla-i·age Dis neyland executive, an d Award: Glenn Campbell, for 35mm slides of their summer •ervic. ind lrlt•""'""'t, W9dnHc11v, n • • Frank Herman of Newport his contributions as chairman vacation or a re«nt trip to the N00t1, WQtm!n1ter Mtm0ri.1 P••k MM· Oct. &-meeting o{ the group. fu1rv 1n11 cem.1_.. F-1«. o..rlft W!tlOll Jr. and v~kle Beach's Cablevision, of the 1!!_0 Oran_ge County Evere11 E. c1~~~~~1us Frldly, n ~~1:;~51'sm-=~~".l:r::'l~vdilll Here's a list of the awards: Easter Seal drive. The meeting will be held-at AM, sm1t11s Chepel. Entombn'len1, We••-"'=-~-Kuh, J. aflll ROMrt J. President's Award · Hews Community Involve e t 7:30 p.m. at Smedley Junior -Sl'lltAL SLICED WHOLE OR HALF • • Haunt You 'Til It's Gone" Our htms •re tlle 11M11 corn.fed lo•• porke"' -Our 1low fry· curing rM!l\Od, ret l W!KOflllrt hickory 111d 1pplewood •rnolll"'ll ... ~ llour oven lwlklng hor'ley 'n soice 9!1le ire llftlCllllJ In 111 !he -•Id. So delklous 1nd appet11lng we 11111 -ldn'I know now lo I~ lfl ls product we-'1<1 ~ matclng for :w YN••. Sl>!••I •lked too, lnim !OP IP bottom JO !1111 Nell delect&ble unffQ.rm sllc:e can be removed !'fforllessly, Completely ~ked 1nd reldv lo nrvt. Ord1r yovr ~y 81Med Him toc11y, tnd ..tventvre il'I hl,,.,.joyment W'Olf'll ne'tll' lol'9"f. RETAIL' STOIES 3700 Eolt COCISt Hitkwlrf, CorOM .. M.-67l·tt0t 1222 s. lrookhurst, Anaheim 635-2461 minster Ml!'ITIOl"lll P1rk. Smllhs Morf111ry, Averv. flobef"I Ale••-Mii Grace . -m n High School, 2120 w. Edinger orrecton. Jun Intermediate School, Tustin. Award: Tom Harmon, for his r-~'.:'.:,..--.,,--,.----::---,-,.-..!!=============================::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::c' GEWlltTZ Croiswonl, Chri•ll"'f A. •rid Allred ·· · k Ye. Abram Gewlrlr. 1911 Maple 51 .. Cos!• Jasellll for ra1s1ng $1 ,000 in a wee lo service as the Orange County Mn•. s11rv•w.1 tty w11e, •d•. Gr1vetroe i':i:/(.d~"iaT.,.E,;,. wwt ~:~ ~net Lkn-d aid an injured schoolmate. Easter Seal S o c ie t y ' s 5ervlcn, ':» toll1'f, T\lesdlv, Ml. Olive· ·HfffMI" ()u d. S rt d )llemberShip chairman. Ctm11erv with 1t1bbl GlorrlKlll~Geodwll'I ~':!'i~ LJnd1 J-•"' LN.E-tstan 1ng Uppo Awar : o111c11t1nv. eeu Bro11dw1Y Mortuarv. DI-Sech!'tsi. ~~ J.11:1i'~'lt~1'°" Pacific Telephone, Orange Communication A w a rd : reclorJ, ....... Olhl, P1trlda Lorr1!ne Incl Lon Allan MAMIE• L1mbl!r1, o.r1-M1r1e 1nc1 LHle< County A1D United Givers for Radio staliOn KFWB for help Rober1 B. M1t..r. '°' v1u1nov1 Road, Lorin be1·ng the largest AID c · bl . · · th · of c°'t• MeY. Servke• penc1r.., 11 aeu L•, M~~· •!Id Johri Chad · on· 1n pu 1cwng e services Broadw1v Morluarv. 2~~Rov°""e!ii~11':nc1Rrr .. ~1. kave tributors in th e county. the rehabilitation center. MA.kS Wf'kh, Audrev Mir end J•mt1 Ltrov S · I Se · A d w11helmln1 A1i-nn. Maks. ,,,1 s. p,,. BOWfl, 0on A. w, '"" F•aftca Marv pec1a rv1ce war : Two special Youth Awards ,.,,,, s1n11 An•. D11e 01 llNth, 0c1ober s. 0uJ~1~'M Ellwarll Fr..Wlck •nll Medallas, an organization of were given at the dinner. One S.Urvlvtct by hu1bo"l:f, Henri, of 1111 home; Sltctm1n, Bl!ttv KtV •nd Arnold Phillip ~ brolher, F. Ke11berry, Hollaftd: sisters, 0o111e. Jerome G. anct Pi1r1c11 ,._ women o are or are mar• went to Charles Wing of Buena V1nller Elsl·l<Hsberry, Rome: Mouthaan-Wvnn, Judith Ann lr>d Ar<:hle ried to orie s and who are Park for working as a full-ke11t1errv anll L•n<lca•l·Keasbernr, bo!ll Mt~ld, OonM Allene and Cherle1 'ed t ph .. or Hol!ancl. services, Frlllav. oc1. '· 1 PM. oittrlCk. Lvllel8 M. •nll SteYfll c. or are marr1 o ys1c1ans. time volunteer at the center, Pacific: v1-c11a1>e1. 1 .. 1enn11nt, P1c111c: Mm9ef". Mlrv Jean 1nc1 LN s.mve! dentists, or lawyers, for a fund and the other went to Renee View Memor!al Pirie. Pacific; View Mor-Flehier, Donald Gt!Gl'9IJ 8ncl Cltudla 1u1rv, Directors. MH raising benefit they gave the Ordway of Orange for design- Jetn e. MlllovlL~,v~~Mca.Jt Hlg~wav, =~·R~t~,~~" 1-,~nd E=: society at the Newporter Inn ing Christmas cards used by Lavune BeltCh ~ 76: dl1e o1 oeath, Jade-. earlier this year. the Easter Seal Society. Oclober J, Su vtct bl' two soris, J1tkl r __________________________________ .;; ____ I Bedtrll, LOll Anteles: David Mlllovlt;h, La ll Mew; daughter, Mr!.. Kathtlr!ne 0hl$0n, Norl!I Hollywood: broll\er", Frank F•l•f1', Denver-; le\lfft 9r1nck.llUll~1 -!ll'Ul-<iraftOC/11111. Vlsl!tllon, WedneSdlv. ' PM- S PM1 1 P-PM1 T ......... tv, t AM·ll ,._,.,,, McCormkk L1vun1 811ch Ch-I. Serv· 1c ... Th11•sd1v. 1 PM, MtConnlc:k L19'1nl Beien Cl\apel, wllll Rt-.1. Ha1el W. Van DuM!ll, M!nl1te.-, UnflY Chllrtll of Ll-ou n. Beach, olflcl1tlnv. McCormick La· 9un1 Beath Mortuarv, Dlrecro ... • "REHDERGAST flr!'ndan P1ul f'renOl!rt11t. lllCI E. Svea· "''"t! Ave., O••l'llf. Age JJ. 01te gl clt!11l1, Oct ... J, Surv!~ bv •lie, Bernice, ion, Noel; da~ht..-i, ~111 1nll R-. all ol tne home: pare<>li, Mr. and Mr1. JClhn P•endt!!"9as!, of Dl!bllfl, lrel1nd; brother, Noel, or Dublin: titler, Oon9tll Bt!htll, gh,Qnlar!o. C1n1da. Ro~1rv, lonltll!, J,XI PM; Re<>ulem Ml~I. Wellnttdav, 10 AM. bo!h 11 Lt P•rl1lm1 Ca!llollc Cllureh, Et MDd•flll. Interment, Moir Sec>Ulc,,... Cam-eTtrv. Oone1!an Funer1I Homt, Dlrec;lgrs, STS.VEHS Oontld f · Sltverii. 16' E. :11fld SI .. Costa Me11. A.qe !2. M!<nber Sett&r!ng Mtsonlc Lodve .. 101; cflarter '71tm1Jer, Pait P•t!•· lderil •NI currenl sl'l:rer1rv of O•t'lft Coast Llorl' Club. Sorvlvtd ll'f Wiii, M" B1rblr1 Steveriir lleughter, Mro. J\ldl!h Havir, WashlnGIOft; son·flt.law, Rlch1rll H1tel'I moll111•'. Mrs. Emmi Stevens. ARBUCKLE & SON Westclifr l\1orluary 427 E. I 7th SI., Costa l\lesa "6-11181 • BALTZ l\10RTUARlES Corona del l\1a r .... OR S-9450 eoSta l\feu ........ ml Uu.t • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, COllli l'ttesa LI~ • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY J715 Laguna CaJiyoa Rod. 41M-HJ5 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAb PARK Ct:metery .l\IOrl Chapel ,. Pacific View Drive Newport ~. CaWonUa '44-ml • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL F1JNEllAL HOME 'llll Bolu A ft. W<1-····-• SHEFFER MORTUMY Lap•• lleodl ....... 4H-IAI 811 Qeme1te .••.. , ,.ftwlM • SMITHS' MORTUA RY Cl Main St. llunUn1ton Btacll -' Would removing 99% of the pollen· in the air help your allergy? Ask your doctor about a Honey;. weR Electronic Air CleoHr, It FtmoYft up to 95°/o of an the alrbome ... irritonts p a 1 s i " • thrOIMJh. P,ollens , household dust, smo~e­ • Honeywell Elet;tronic A i r Cleaner c.•tches •II kinds of ir· rit•nts. All siies, too. In f•cf, it tr•ps0 p•rticles so sm•ll it would t•ke 7000 of them to stretch '•cross this dot .I.I! A Honeywell Air Cleaner Ts no cure for allergies, but c•s• his. tories heve shown if does pro .. vide relief. T •lk to your doctor •bout it. Then, t•lk to us. FREE ESTIMATES-NO OILICOATION TO PUlCHASI PACIFIC HEATING co~ AIR CONDmONING SPECIALISTS Call Us for Prompt Service and Repair LACOUNA llEACH LACOUNA HILLS-VIEJO 494.9745 837-2000 gas air conditioning 2175 L09uoo Co•yon Rd. LOCJ"""' leocll ' Waterfront nvestment Tahoe Keyi P.O. Bo• 1239 South lake Taho•, Calif. 95705 0 Send )'OUT Waterfront Investment PorJfolio. 0 Clft me details on how I ""'f quotofy for 1 ll1p lo Tahoe Keys. -----------------------------· ' I J I r I • ' . < Tutsdq, 9ctobtr 5, 1970 DAIL y mer J l Ca111paign. Seasoning I~~~~~~~ Yugoslavs Overjoyed With Vi sit -r--1 BELGRADE, Yugoslavia CAP) -"It was .gOOd that Presldent Nixon came he.re, He has bumped and bounced over this terrible road to the airport,-Maybe-America will build.us a.bett.er..on " _ To the simple Serbian farmer who saw the presiden- tial motorcade from a roadside field , the United States is an incredibly rich country. He viewed the first visii by a U.S. president to Yugoslavia. But the kind of maybe, if he is lucky, more dollars. .sm_ World War__ll, tbe United States has extended $2.87 billion wor lh of aid to ..: .. (~:.::.~ 11Watch out, Daddy ! o·orr't let tkat plane htt our kite! 11 Yqgosclavia. But the kind o( ----------------------direct help the peasant was thinking about ended in 1964. Presidents Tito and Nixon p f s k =.;:n00:-cr:i::e'1.~"°~~ ro essor pea s Yugoslavs know that, what they _boye Jor ar~ more in· o t I t h vestments and joint factories. u -0·n JJ egra,,,,on They were overjoyed \O,'ith Rusty Rlietoric Remarks ·Return to Voters NEW YORK (UPI) -The en e m le s p u ssillanimous lection or both new and old campaign rhetoric season is pussyfooters. ''I stole it from rehtloric. It explores llarry upon us. The biennial binge Ted~y," he added. Truman's snollyaosters, the from the hortatory hustin11s. Agnew , maybe with some e v e r~popular pussylooters, Alliteration ambles a g a In : hel p fi'Om the ghosrwrilefl -Thoma.s J~fferson's entanglfng specious speechifying full of although he seems to be his alliances, and a few thousand futlous.-phases,.....Le.u.le..s..S-..own-man~wlth.soaringrrt.etori eP.smoke-filled usages. ...pbane.Ucs,_an ar-llung Jla~ ----:-ha~~i~___<_!_vlcar1. f-A-report-oirthe Agntwi>lan doodle. vac11latJon, n at t ~ ~ t n ~ ts said to have• dubbed Agnew Agonizing alliteration as an nabobos or negativism, "a funcltlonal alliterate." ·B4t admirable artifice in the act of "h.o)>less, hy.sterl~! hypoc1~n-mode·rn-day political allitera- advocacy is -an ancient art . dr1acs or history, and the Lion doesn't have the real The device has been used for come-lately club on crime and rural ring or the old-time ren- various linguistic end s. But as dis~rder." Also "togkldytic dition, such as Ingersoll's one savan t has noted : "The leftists." nomination of the "plumed careful cl!!Hng of consonan1 s Even in, off-the-cuff talk he knight. James G. Blaine,'' who to pack a punch in politics is peppers across some fancy •·threw his shining lance full the moct common use, for ones. In the television del\ate, and fair against the brazen good and evil.'' he aceused a student of _!!:~g foreheads of the defamers ... " The savant's name i s "to use me as some con· The winner In the 1920s, and \Vllliam Safire. He is one of venien t bete noire for the probably still champion, was two presidential speechwriters violence that's existed in this Warren G. Harding: "Not \\'ho ""'as assignbi by Presi· country." heroics but healing, n o t dent Nixo:-n to make campaign-The term "bete noire" is not nostrums but normalcy , not time swings with Vice Presi· ooe usually on !he tip of a revolution but restoration, not dent Spiro T. Agnew. man's tongue. Especially in agitation but adjustment, not Agnew has come up with political debates . P-1atter of surgery but serenity. aot the "'COLLECTION COLOR" We call our diamonds of finest color, "Collection Color." Now these rare -- diamonds are avail~~le in a varitity: ___ 1 of sizes, one of which will surely me~t your budget. If you want value plus quality, these are the diamonds and now is the time. 0..1'9e 4«.ounl1 l11vll9d. Ametkan E•ptHI l .inkAmerlurG Ind M1ti..-CJ'll•g.t, loll. SLA.YICK'S sorn~ beauties, inc 1 u di n g ract, when the typewritten dramatic but dispassionate, "pusillal)imous pussy!ootinJ." transcript of the show was not experiment but equipoise, ~ ln a recent debate o n diitritiUled the day arter the nOt Submerge.nee 1 n _in-j· · · Jc\\'clers Slncl' 1917 television with co 11 e g e taping it read "to use me as ternalionality but sustainment · · the Nixon visit, the cordiality \VASftI NGTON (AP) students the vice president some convenient bait and wire in triumphant nationality ." ~ 18 FASHION ISLAND tegration is essential but so is , made an adm ission th at at· And it "'as Charles G. ~ , NE WPOR BEACH -644-1380 between the two presidents. Simpl y mixing up the races and what it might mean won't guarantee a better toward increasing the con· education for anyone , a Stan· fidence of American investors ford University pro(essor told in Yugoslavia. a Senate committee. The Ford Motor Co. already quality education. Schools. he b · 1 • O M da d ~1c1ay ··-II t JO tests to the dura ihty o so me Safire authored a book a Dawes who urged the nati on in ~. pen on Y an " ... , : said, must prepare much •. ~~~;~r~nTI:i11-1~~=c~;~~~~;~~;~~~~t=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ more for the changes that are political rhetoric. couple of years ago tilled 1924 not to stand "upon the taking place. He said Theodore Roose\'elt "The New Language of sinking sands of socialism ., "My feeling is that a child had called his po Ii t ic a I Politics," a fascinating col· "'ith Robert 1\1. Lafollette." may be born ve ry unequal, i·,1 has concluded an agreement ··1 personally didn"t believe for the assembly of tractors in that mixing bodies or a so-cal[. Croatia. Deals still in the talk· ed racial balance as has been ordered in Los Angeles is ing stage include a large Ford necessarily integration or high truck assembly plant and a quality," said Henry M. Levin. Kaiser Jeep plant at Belgrade . The Yu g 0 s I a v s woul<I "What scares me is that manufacture a g r 0 win g most of us arc speaking in dif· ferent lern1s \\•hen we arc number of parts and exporl t'alk.ing o( integration," he told some. A Yugoslav (actory the Senate Committee on near Sarajevo is making . airplane kitchens for McDon· Equal .Educ a t 1 on a I Op- nell Douglas in partial pay-portuni.ty · . --t fOi ---~ r -If 1ntegr.ation goes -no men or . ~ew F•5 0 r further than putting different Tug1_>5lav a1rhnes.. races in th e same classroom, Jomt ventures with Western without planning for the Europe are much more speclal needs of each group. it numerbu.s. But the Yugoslavs will be · real tragedy, Levin want to.1ncre.ase U.S. contacts said. to obtain the most advanced The problem with helter· technolo~ · . . skelter integration is lack of circu mstances, but society guarantees he')( ha ve an op- portunity," Levin said. Heavy investment may be required in schools \\'here most pupil s are poor . he said. '·so they can have the same chance 0.1 the starting line ."' He said he would .put that starting line at about age 18. the time when most youths leave high school to compe te in the world. -·irAgain:-tne race will go to the swiftest ru nner," Levin sa id , "but the race will be a fair one." Given the t reme ndou s disparities today between the nioney available to poor and rich school districts. he said. the preparation (or the rare is unfair. There IS s1.11l much e~1dence pro\'ision for the child whose of the massive U.S. aid that dialect and motivation reflects (lowed here in lhe 15 years a different culture. he said. 1;:::==========.I after Tito's 1948 br-eak "'ith Jf lhe sc hools don 't train Moscow. Nearly 200 U.S.· their teache rs and ad· modcl Sabre and Thundcrjel ministrators to allow for these fighters form the core or differe11ces. Levin said . "the Yugoslavia's air force . schools are going to eat the Yugoslavia is one.of the few minority pupils up." Ewypean cou:ntrtr:s where the . "I didb't ·find that to be a 4"1Stiriti~e twO-tone whistles· of ringing endorsement or in· American diesel locomoti ves tegration," commented Sen. are heard. {'rovided in the Walter F. Mondale, D-Minn., e'arly 1911lls, they stiU beai' the the committee chairman. handshake.-i~ignia of U.S. aid. Levin said he thinks In· For Weekender Advertisina . "' Phone 642-4321 PLAYING ''THE .GENERAL'' STARRING: BUSTER KEATON No inatter what -the-inarkets~doing,-- over 250,000 Savi·ng-s InvestinentAccounts keep • • Origin a] Investment $10,000 • January 1, 1'69 Average Worth of Inves,tment •August 31, 1970 ' . , • $10,688 I ,':'\ .. J -• -1 $15,291 . ·-. •• ,, ~•L I ' ' '1·, • ...... •• . ' ' . . . . ' . I . I ' -• $16,320 L SAVINGS ACCOUNT GLENPALE FLDERA 5°., PAS SHOOK $21,739 A $20,000 Thi• is a 20-month compa rison of '11 J Dow Jones ind ustri•I averages, · 12 ) average prices of sho res in leading mutu•I fun ds, I l I 20-year municipal bond, and 14 1 Glend•le Federal 5 •/. p•ssboo~ accoun t. NOTE: Our higher r•te certificate accounts have porformed even botterl . -. • ' ' n11 ii lllltft l("teA'i "'°'' f•m•111 film Dfld wltlch critics occl•IJMd It 11111e111 "th• t r .. mt fil•nv ... .'.'. -~--1 t-Titl1 II • .,.., 011 tfle Cl,il Wer 'fl'h-IC .. ton prCKHth te wi11 tho wor, slmMt sJ-.I• hulllffl,, .,... Ith bolewd lecemeriff, ''T\e G.Mrel", i1 ltitf111ppM i11 • "' reltl eH .. 111""5 file NettlteN lh1e1 te tot It Mc•. Tiie eniliit wdo-co111ic roe• betwHtll Nol'tllffll D111!1 S1111thn11 tT.!• -1..., tt.e IMlh ef Weft Ol•NJ'• pichlro ''Tllo ., .. , Loco111otf'• ll~•""· YOU MUST S!f THIS ON!! NEWPORT: Through Fri. at 9 PM; also Sat., Sun. at 6 PM. MISSION VIEJO: Mon. Vkd. Fri. at 9 PM l.Oc:al .a Channel 3 ~ Cablevision Call 642·3260 "There's More To See On Cable TV!" - INSTALLATION $1 4.95 MONTHLY SERVICE $6,SO '· • • TRIJSt GLENDALE FEDERAL ••• IDU--CAN'T-:tOSE 6% 2·10y .. r certlllcote $5,000 Minimum 5%% 1·10yHr certificate $1,000 Minimum • 11.INMllfHEMl SAVfNGI--- 5%% 3-month certlficot• $500 Minimum 5% Passbook 01y·ln. Doy.Out Any Amount I I • ' ~ -\ I 1 ..l . ·- lf O~ILV Pl(OT DICK TRACY Tuesday, Oclobtr 6, 1q7c TUMBLEWEEDS MUTI AND JEFF WOMEN ARE DEMAN DING EQUAL RIGWTS BUT W WIF'E ANO IJ.ER MO"n4ER ARE oEMANOlNG Tl<AT I SURRENDER ALLOFMINEI yOU KNOW WIJ.AT GENi;RAL M<AULIF'FE SAID TO TIJ.E NA"ZI OF'F'ICER \.\MEN TIJ.EY OEMANOEO HE SURRENOER··-- HE <;AID. 'NUTS!" JUDGE PARKER PLAIN JANE I DAILY CROSSWORD •.• b;. A. POWER I ACROSS 1 Foolltss animal ' 5 Major ····< Ttd Macl.:'s !ort r1111ne1 10 Mcul h: Prt lllr 11 4 European , capital 115 Natural earth 10 Art subject ·11 Musical inslrumt•1! )9 Makes angry 20 Atgis 21 Rigid • :12 Egyp tian '" 23 Turns to water 25 Di stant : Prel i~ 26 Social c timbr r JO Unit of reluclilnc e J l St ituTf. .3• Persian gazelles )6 Spine· chilling JB Cube 39 Two thousand: J words 42 "Alas1'' 43 He's in the t old, cold ground 4• NumMr 45 Goober • 17 f " " • ' .. I "' 47 Night t~ub enttr\a1ntrs: 1nrormal •9 Contradit! 50 Forty win ks 51 Ma~11n 53 Un!)'iociplt d t hal)S 55 Unusual mammal 51. Highly skilled person bl Dutch paintt r b2 In a celestial manner Ii~ R'ciion ti s Divlsion of a drama lib ··•· game &1 Nation of South America &8 Cut into sm ~l l p!rcrs &IJ Broadway 10/r ~ DOWN ' ' 7 FJnied pa in tiny: 2 word s 8 Sea birds 9 Membtr~hi p lO Hiddeu rillemil n 11 Te11n ol eudearmeul 12 Greek thealets l l Entang le lB. Tree 24 City in En9r1nd l Crrc le 25 Hairdo earls fea\l.lft 2 'Winn ie 26 Quantily of 111 e ····" ice c.rearn J All : 27 The prest nl Comb. 1orrn occasion 4 Fis h 28 Piece of 5 01v1sion 'j mining between machinery US A and 2'1 "··· Canadil hurn(11.1g'" Ii Calrndar )l He lp 1bbreviation )Z ~arnp I I ) • 10/b/70 ~J I/try small 35 Rtc.ap itulale: 2 words 37 Act in revers e manner 40 Min's nicknan1t 41 Comm ltlte for Economic Dt velopmt nt: Ab tr. ~' Capital of lhe B1ha ma~ 48 Looked fix edly 51 Equ1I 52 State : Abbr. SJ Fellow 54 Swiss river 55 Good Outen -57 Job 58 Miss Ch1se 59 Sl1sh &O Newc1slle· on-·· &J Compass / point • 1019110 By Chester Gould •MOW 'Tlll! MOOOS TR'i'. __ PERKINS MISS PEACH C . • • i ; ' ~ c [ By Tom K. Ryan B_y Al Smith ...... ~.,,. .. . ..... """-· .J'""' ·~"'"""_ ... .a,-1.. £M~1'1t--w ~: By Harold Le Doux MOW'!> TH E ME W,t.5 HE~E AT Kll?<?' HAS ME THE HOSPITAL UNTIL H~ ASOllT ,. urne WHILE "GO! -ME~--we-ntOOGiKr-He SHOUttl' GO OOME! By Frank Baginski STEVE ROPER IT Will BE PAJO TO )t)tJ Ol(AY, MAAUEL !-n.L ACllQ.5S TH~ BQRDER, G0 Al.OMG-FOR ~7500 SE MOR LUTCHER CASH-rM AMEl\'ICAN -IN CA.LIM~ •1 DOt.lAR5.' PEANUTS mJ. "'lt llt1T LET SE NORITA TOWERS SUSPEGT WHAT )tJU ARE DOING, OF COURSE ~ Ll'L ABNER SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS Tf-\e BOLi. QXJ SIL"E.l)n..<,l 0.IM85 THE TOIOERIAJ<So P~f;CIPICB - -l'!10M 1"'HIS VAJJr~ ltlW1; T>IE VALIAllT IUOE!i: cl4l Sfe f()li: MIL'ES- By Mell VEltV MICE, MR..~1$. rT MNt.£.S "IQ.I lOOK TEN YEit.RS YOL.NG£1t. By Charles M. Schulz r I l HE STRANG~ WOllD MR.MUM By Charles !larsotti By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson By Roger BoUen ---. ;p.j,-,;,,· OOi-no UN[ J.1111!1 PRfMllM -COUPlltl "· .. ,. DENNIS THE MENACE ' WEU., IF YA WEIGll 100 MLOl )OJ~ .AlSI' 11JlN 1lllS i./Tn.e WMEa'. •• I • El " ' T...i.,, <>ctobtr '· 1970 DAILY PILOT JJ 'Son of Nifty Revue' BS&T Set Blackou---i S1fetches P.rove ursday In County l:M TUE S DAY 8 HEE HAW·BUCK OWtNS * ROY CLARK ST AR ON HAPPIEST SHOW on TV aam ... H .. <C> <60> Gtoret J011t1 alld TtmntJ Wynett1 iuest. Mixed Bag in Huntington Blood, Sweat & Tears will be performlnl! IJI the Arena of the Anaheim ConvenUon Center. lf'bunday at-t :30--p.m. By TOM TITUS 1J ml Jullt (C) (3{1) "Alttr f.ao.• or tti. 0•11»' r 11e1 Sl1ff ~• ~" ""1.19 (!9JJ!ra DunohJ, _ ............ (C) (!O) tfinriill-V1rbf-1nd BunnJ Hender· ---!L(CuaL.iom«o)-ar._lllltf'IMI~ oLNUty_ Be~ &n.-11f""-- 1ttw H1nnth MrCOrnts 1 c&11 o1 evening of original and off- Pr•wtddln1 ner«HJtntu, beat entertainment which op- D ~Cf) m A1C """ tf tfli;e ens officlaJly this Friday at W-ttt: ~"rut. I DDl't Witt T• Huntington Beach's new Nifty 8 Tiii Allt1 ... (C) (90) Mrt. Hubert HUmJll!rl)', 811sttr Crtbbt, Norm C1oiby, John Gtiy, Ron Huntw, Dr. stanley ~~. Announ. cer I• Prof. JuHus Sumner Mllltr. fJ "HOME FROM THE * Hlll"-Part I-COLOR ROBERT MITCHUM! fJSb-0'""' _, (C)_._ f,.. lilt HHI" Ptrt I (dr11n.1) '60 -Rao.rt Mitchum, Eleanor Ptrktt, Geor11 Ptpp1rd, Geor11 H11nltton, Evtr•tt Slo1n1. lllqttl11111t eon NYU Ills d1d'1 lift, bLrt com11 ftct·to·f~ with le1ttlm1t1 tan, wbo knows nothln1 or hll h1Jf. broth1(1 1idst1ne1. D Ill SMllt (C) (30) "Now You Ste Him, Now Yctu Don't." IP Thi Fllllblona CC) {30) U) It Ttbs t Thltf (C) (60) m t1ec11•SMN1P lod11 (C) (30) C!!) Olltnadl/M11llcll1 (C) (30) OJ ....... " (t) (60) a;, l•INI• 111 tht Sein (C) (30} a!) Tlltrt dt las btttllll (30) G!) Mm: In Hit RGl,lftd (CJ (30) 1:30 O Candid C.1111n1 (30) ID"' n,tq: """ (C) (30) Slst11 Btrtrllt1 trltt lo find 1 homt fm a Nlt1·tonrutd p1rmt fD Dllctwr f1Pll (C) {30) ''Orkn· lttion.. .. Qu1llfled flirtrt lnrlrudors, pilot llcenM mmintllona, tnd IHstit ltchniqu11 •rt dlKUued. m 1111 .... -<Cl <30> Emo--J Olwldtl1 (30) let Mlm.n• (comtdt) '70-Htr· achtl Btrn1rdi, Shirl., Jones, S111 LYGn, Nu1ttt1 f1bl'IJ, Tina t.oulM, Br1ndon Ctu:r. Story ol Witter ltft. l•mln, 1 11ctnt widower with two lfOWlllJ sons, m .... '"" -<tl !90> ''" IOI 8of1e tulSl.L Ql--(C)-(30)-"!k .... •dt." Set. Friday ind Offiar G•~ Theater, Ls a mixed bag in- non 1r1 ettled to • t!'Hl•tte to In· deed. ¥Utl11t1 111 1cid·throwtn1 Incident. II!) FllM' F••ltJ (30) ll)LI .....,_ (30) l'°'B il>CIJl!llrnt T-(t) (2ttr) S.ndtr V1nocur l• host. Pr> 1r1m lnduda 1 t~port Oii the 11fttl. q111k1 that &hook Peru list June ind look th• lives ol 70,000 PtOplt; plus 1 lutute on 111m11ry1"'1hrtlon. other f1aturm: "The City;" e lilm shown •t the 1939 Hew Yo~ World's F1lr on tile tomplexlty ol cily livln1: I pmlllt of tht Rtv. Cul Mclntirt, th1 ria:hl·wln1 r1dlo pre1cher who is or11nlzln1 1 M1rch lar Victory r•llJ lo support Amtrie111 lnvolvetMnt In Vietn1m: 1 com· posit1 portrtit of Ar1b ttudtnts •l~dyin1 ti Amerian UnlYtlSitits; • look 1l 1 community of aplritu1lo ills in Ctwd111, F11. &I Tht f1(itiw (t) (60) "Anpls ~wl on Lonely Ro1ds." P1rt II. E1le111 Hecbrt, Rutt Lee 11111t. QI ......... (C) (30) IE NEW SWOll 1111 -(t) (60) Thi qutstion cl wheth11 or not coltep sludenb sllould 111 ... llme off tmm ltllool to work [It politlctl t1mp1{fm; b dllCUINd, II) ...... , ... (t) (30) OJ l""p (30) Iii) ....... (60) It Is composed primarily of loosely structured blackout sketches, 30 or 41> in all, which someUme_, prove highly comi- cal but all too often do not. Like any offering of th.is type, it U!I left to the audience to pick the most appealing portions and mentally discard the rest. The youthful cast of four women and two men, plus a "spectator" lounging ln the aisle, manages to bring off a number of chorUes with take- offs on such subjects as free- Westminster Players Slate Awards Banquet The annual Abbey .Awards for "Odd Couple'' and Burt banquet of the Westminster Warner in "Streetcar." Community Theater, honoring Elizabeth Gordon of "Invita· tion" and Rolinda Orlow from the top perfonnances of the "Streetcar" will be competing group's 196S.70 season, will be for the best supporting actress held Oct. 16 at the Mlle Square award. Candidates for best Country Club in Fountain supporting actor homors are Valley. Bill Cullen in °Invitation" and Tom Titus of "Streetcar." Two nominees have been selected in each of the acting Competing for the best way traffic, door-to-door sales- women and the "how . to do It" sex manuals:-The news;-spef' irerv-a-a~rJPr the Nifty playm' queat for topicality. Olhe.r sketches, particularly one on campus rioting, fall to hit the mark either as comedy or food for thought. Much of the collegiate "in" humor a]50 falls by the way- side. Probably the best moment of the...nigbUs a lengthy..mono. Jogue by Susan Fried on the plight of 1 hamburger hostess whose JndoctrinaUon with a best·selling sex manual alter- ed her life hllariou,,Jy. MI s s Fried al.so has a funny bit as Lady Macbeth encountering a lady selling 1pot remover. Climaxing the show is a potentially h 11 a r I o us home movie lampooning the skin f 11 c k s which unfortunately winds on too long and blunls its effect. However, one scene depicting •a girl's dalliance Who's the Chief? wilh Jack from Jack in the Michael Owens (left) and John Ruggles clash over Box hamburgers ls indeed et-who is to assume leadership as Joe Wilson attempts fective. to intercede in this scene from "The Royal Hunt :A-major-attraction-on-the,---< naUoii's pop music scene tD- day, the band Is ex· lraordinarily popular w I t h European music lovers, as well as young people in Canada, Australia, N e w ZeaJa.OOliid Japan. BS & T's last local ap- pearance was ln July at ~Hollywood Bowl, where It did SRO busiJ1ess. A m o n t h previously the group of nine talented young m u 1 I c I a n s toured beh.ind the Iron Curtain under the auspices or lhe U.S. State Department. Received with tumultuous acclaim ii'\ Yugoslavia, Blood, Sweat & Tears unwittingly caused a ·riot at its first concert In Rumania where government authorities thought it wise to cancel the next two shows. All went well -however -in Poland -where orderly, but highly enlhusiastic crowd:-; greeted the band at three , scheduled conCi!rts. The show will change from of the Sun," resuming tonight at the Laguna Moul-week to week as the c a s t and director E!Uot Fried add _t_on_P_l_a_y_h_ou_s_e_. ______________ _ Currently, the group ls doing the Scandinavian Countries ror a sertes of one-11ighters; Stockholm, Sweden last week, then Gothenburg, S w e de n • Copenhagen, Denmark, a few more dates on the Continent,· then London before returning~ for its appointment with· Orange County music fans. relevant material and dis· card the unworkable. Inter· mission music wiU be provid-'Ch;ldren ;n the Ra;n' ed by visiting guitarists or 11 11 .., banjo players, hopefully bet- ter than Friday's performer. There is no memorized Off B d T 1 script as such, but a serlO! of roa way ras t blackouts utilizing improvisa-DOllllf• ~ n;: tional techniques. They are on By WILLIAM GLOVER and his companions sagely! ~~~~v.2 ' --llJ·llC -· -(C) (30) - a whole well carried off by the declined to have ·the usualli I caot which, in-addltlon-to·Miss-NEW-YORK -(-AP) --A~1 --.:..~k-t he · '<11<( "lltlll j --j F :ft..i • 1 d J I' H d u ogra.,.uca1 s e c s m ~!.• 1 tlOl~ITl.J·--· ....... ··---~ minor suppgrting _jl c! i:__e11 s uo ..-..... .._ , .. , categories fr6tl\ the-utre~ptf5: tro h M'lt· F kl d ( 0) ht ch1r1tt1rs or F•mllf AJ. p Y are 1 1e ra an 7:00 11 CIS Ennln1 Ntn (C) (30) D Bl Mac Nl""1 -<Cl (JOI 0 ...... "'""'' (t) (30) ID IHHIJ < u.. ""' 130> m.., ,., a ... <tl <JO> f1lt tutst In 1 spld•I epltodt duct Ion seaso n at Alice Rei!:h, both for "Street. which linds Mr. French, Clsiy, Buf· Westminster. Th e shows are car," while Ken Falsetto of ty ind Jody, 1nrout1 to N1Jrotir. "The Odd Couple," d1'rected "I ···t· " d R g r del1lned 11 the Ram• •ffPOrt bl nv1 .... ion an o e fJi) ! IOC!A I ftrt1 Mlrbl T1lel With Slllfl LM CCI (60) (R) 1n11rpo1 olllct11, who mlst"tk• Mr. by Sally Crowley ; "Invitation McBride from "Streetcar" are French for 1n International )lwll to a March," directed by Jo vying for the minor supporting lhlef. Mlkl Endiaitt 1S-lmpllet1l•d Scott, and "A Streetcar Nam-acU!r title. Contesting the best .-.as Mr. fr111Ch'• KCOmptlce, ed Desire,'' directed by ·notis cameO award are Chip 0 Ntw1 (C) (30) Butw W1rd. Allen. Williams of "Invitation" and CD Cllrlll Utt LMna Wtrd (C) (30) 111-(30) ID ""1 Mato• (60) Vying for the best actress Eric Lampel in "Streetcar." GI:) ~llpltlntlltt Mtrll (SS) Ill 11111 ... (t) (30) &) Mnc.!1/hlW• w (C) (30) award will be Yvonne Tardy The awards banquet at the Ul y~ ~lal (C) _(JO) for her role ln "lnvltaUon" Mile Square club will begin lo:oD 119 m CIS ,. ... MHr (C) (IOt and Beth (Ciciliot) Titus for with cocktails at 7 o'clock, '1htC.iliOlic Dil1mmi." The eritil her performanCi! in "Street-!ollowed ~y dinner at 8. 7:301J QI (I.) lltwwlJ Hillblllill (C) In !he C.tllolic Olurr.:11 todtf 11 a· cai:.'' Nominees for the best Reservations are being taken (30) Rom1nc1 1nt1rs Elly Ml)"1 llf1 pl1l~1d for non-cathollcL Lutll actor laurels are John Moran by Nancy Smith at 897-1164. In 1 blr w17 whtn """ Utlllenint Blmnl n1rr1ltL lljjiiiijjjiijjjiiijjjjiijjjiijjjjiiiiijjiijjjjiiiijiiiijjiijiiijjijjjiijjjjiiijjjiiijjil M•rll T1111P1tton 1rrt¥n 11 th• am ..... <C> <r.o> 1 ~ Cl1mpttt mtMlon lo Pl)' • visit IJ ml (I) m liltfca ...,, .... Ro11r TorTIJ ls f11turtd 11 M1tk. (I:) (lo) ''Wim 1111 Worid About D CD Don Klllti (C) (60) Cunts :1~~ :.8'1~.ri=~~ art JIU st. John, Robwt M0118, 1nd drin1 from HodPin'1 a--11M1 Th1 Auoc:ltllon. rlfum ta Mek llis brolllw'1 1111,. 1J NYPD (C) (30) ".1othu1 Flt t111 0 Tlll Stllll (C) (60) Blttle of Fulton Sl/etL" D!nt Cl1rt Im DEIVT Tiit Sin ,,..._ 1111 1uesi1. (C) (60) 1tJo1nlnt-Comln1 Toplh.. fJ ~ nri ftl'I Mid""' -(!O) · er:• Striu bnld on 26 h1111111 "" wi ~"" \"' tlvitllt oomm&n le min. Rich1r4 Kill( 1uesls 11 W1rr1n Ill Ml .....,. (30) Whitt, 1dmlnl1tr1tor of • mental -,_..,. Maki (60) lnttitutlon whic:h ls 1nva1111ted br ~ 111 the squid, Jn "Who Ate !hi Kffp-lD:JO Qt Ill Wini Jkiws (C) (30) •'1. Who i re the lnm1tnr1 fll "" (30) 0 "'("", ..... <C> -~,...,."'°'•a C1J 111-«1 tller" (comedy) '64-D1Y1d Niven, D ~ @ m fllWI (C) Pet tr S1ll1r1, Robert Wlflltf. Ptlc. 8 Cll Y• T111 1'11111 (C) lw llm II IOlllhl by jewel !hit! fJ lfJ J1wt (C) 'flbose 1ccompllct Is the wile of 1 ~1~7~:-:Utl:. ,..,.. French pollot Inspector. mt• Doa1 Sey (C) m TMb et CCl1t11QUlllOll (C) (30) OJ Morit: "lr111 Fin,.,.. (dt1m1) ID DM!lel loon• (C) (60) '1ll1 •Tg.....Robert Se1tty, Clrol RIYL P1rilaus Journ17." @ Cll l'trlJ M_. £=J Wtd:tll flllll (C) (30) ~ ltuUtia (C) (R) :'fh! ThrM lfl ... ind Su Ed11e11ion. TALENT WANTED • • • • For new v1riety television show 1t1rti119 November 9th. MUSIC GROUPS COMICS DANCERS SINGERS Call Bill 'Kina' Johnson 956-0980 1etw ... t A.M. IS P.M. ,.._ Afllltf" Ap,.19'1M11t to be 1ponsored by BEAUTY CARE, INC. 1424 ALLEC, ANAHEIM II) Ma Futrt. q111 tu AMII (30) 11:30 II 9 (I) MtrW l rtfflt (C) 7:55111.)Cutetllfl di Squ:ndo• ~~@ m.loknnt c.r.n <Cl\~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~11 too II a (J) lrMll Aan (C) (30) m'o7~. Ch1nnin1 Ind J1mes Whit· LISI Dou1l1s t1U1 Utt!1 Lor1 81k1t 1J Movll: •,h Loni 11 y11 l.W' I l1ncllul ltory 1bout her roy1I l'O· (dr1m1) '64-Kurt Helnd1I. m1nc1 and ~ourtship with OllYer. fJ GD Didi c.wtt (C) ltobtrt 8 Ylrflnle Qralla11 Show (C) (60) Merrili, Ht11n H1yes. Dy1n C1nnon, Tenl1t1Ylly ad\1duled auests: Marl· Albert SI. G)'Ol'rl runt, m Mowlt: '1111 lldletw 111d .. lyn M1y1, R11is Philbln, fred Smoot, libbrloiet' (comedy) '47 -Ciry Ind plleh•r·•Uthor Jim Bouton. Gr•nt, MJl'nl LoY. Shirley T1mpl1. mTt Tell th T~ (C) (30) ll:OO~(])Dkt C...ct (C) ftl I IBC!A I A Proper ..._ (t) (60) (R) A look 1t why Loi An11ln does not hw1 1 rnldent claulc.al b1lltt company. Ii>'" -..... _ (t) OJ" ...... '"" ...... (C) (30) 1:05 ail llt .... ndll (55) DAYTIME MOVIES t:OO D <t> "M•lfllflctlll ObMt-fo11" (dr1m1) '54--Roc~ Hudson, J1nt Wym1n, B1rb1r1 Rush. t:)G D "F« "-"'• ..-(eom· "' 1:00 G Mowlt: "Mii C..IJ"lllll htkw" (westtm) '57-llrtln Ktlth, Dtlt RM!trtlon, Dldt Ktthn1n. DfJ-<tl ,,15 9 ... _ ·--(t) 1:30 m A1-*1Pt Slllw: -r ...... h MJ Tmi," "F'lrl M.W.. " Ollttf Sptct" '"' "'TM El ... lfllltn&. .. FOR ADVERTISING IN THE WEEKENDER PHONE 642-4321 ' . ' 1 r=-i, me u ea u 1e e ges, junky play about junkies, program, and It's a cinch ---71MJ/l/D . ) Patty Brown, Larry ShUTU:, "Children in the Rain ," spat-they won't include this number AN'f/lONY. IJER6MA!l ~an McCarthy, Dale Foye, V1· tered onto the stage of · off· in their subsequent dossiers. QfJJNN/ ac.wwrt.f. , . v1an Winsor and Helen Wald· Broadw;iy's Oierry Lane Mcintyre is 28, from Detroit V .a ....... m~~'normances contine Fri· Theater Friday night. with a list of academic cred_iU .;:-..w . ilJ dJe d d S t d th h and b having his commercial ~G S?-.!.,;,dVD.:n ays an a ur ays roug Augmenting the v e r t a 1 debut. His title is derived from ~ JM .u~ .a~• Nov. 21 at the Nifty Theater, garbage which Author Dennis the FOOi's song in "Twelfth 307 Main St. in downtown ji..i...~~ dialogue, the t r i o of wu al90 balderdash. ~ Huntington Beach. Mcintyre foolishly Imagines is Night," a hey-nonny bit that "'··~"'·. ,, , .• performers is required to hurl N d Sh pickles, potato salad and ~ '-· a er ow delicatessen miscellany in prD-PANAV!SION81TECHNICOlOR8 longed messy preparation for . ~~·g;. Delayed a fmale strangulation. The whole thing possibly Is an attempt to dramatize a Four Weeks trip, via pot, speed and some more virulent, u n n am e d Owing to production delays, ''The Nader Report" series. which was scheduled to begin Wednesday on KCET (Channe l 28), will be delayed four weeks until Wednesday, Nov. 4. ·The Public Broadcasting Service has replaced the delayed series with four baJf. hour programs dealing with the upcoming national elec- tions, titled "Politics 70." They will be broadcast on ChaMel 38 Oct. 7, 14, 21 and 28 at 9:30 p.m., and will be repeated Thursdays at 7 p.m. and Sundays·at 6:30 p.m. INDS TONl•HT ''THE LANDLORD" ••• "THE HAWAIIANS" STAm WIDNISDAT \ '' • •11111, FELi INI SATYR.ICON , I I " ' I , , I I'-\ ' ( " It I '"" ol i t r Aho Pl.,t" "THI HAIN" wffl DAVID NIYIN .llAN•PAUL llLMONDO narcotic, of a lass and her boyfriends. The plot, such as it is, would have you believe that they are titree actors who have come to an empty theater to ha ve a picnic while resting from labors in another drama somewhere else, h e a v e n forbid. Frank R. Giordano acts and directs with drag archness. He ... -NOUlll · llR~lllE HELD OVER ALSO BARGAIN MATINEE EVERY WED.-1 P.M. ADULTS $1.00 Fr" lefrMh111111ts M•ti ... AdMlulNI RATIO GP PLUS ..----.... 1 ~do HIW•Olf llACll -•I it.. '"""-It 1,hlt•• ll4t loJ. -Ot. l ·llJO INDS TONl6HT "THE BOYS IN THE BAND" J;LSO Clhlt hltw-4 "KELLYS HEROES" STAITS WIDNISDAY IXCLUSIYE An epk drorna of odventur• and u:pkw:.tiOfif I ALSO A11ttiorr ~h1l1111 THE SECRET OF SANTA VITTORIA 1.,.. Shew Sr.rn 1 COtlt. S•• hoM .Z l • .. •• ! • • J4 OAJLV PILOT s -~~~~~~-!~~~~~:~~!~Ne~1 ~:r:~Stoc~~:•_: .~;~;&;~! 'ti::ta..i ""~ 1. .. o.M c'I:. s::: ~1o'1° ,t t?,~ ~ ii" - 1 , ... i=t.1 :-i Jff 1f:e., 'f°i' 'll-·tt NASO Ll1tln91 for Mond•y, October 5, 1970 ~MHOrM I '.H ~ "f!l 1.. l~~=i ~ -G-,a n ... 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PWS Ne l!lft llf'o '!r.ior Vf *2\or toM Acirrll••1 llf ~ , ... lf !PlnmlH ,,, 131 '°"" to\\-1'fJ n .id 4 f'' 16l't -~· ll:l':'::r..,,,.·:i. ~~tr1e1 "::Gw~1: ~11 111'1 ~~~, ~·~ ir-' "it.recit.:m I~ I~ ~~1at,L,1 ,~Al 1J .,"" a111 ~ .... +1 hl'Otnll .;, s s '° 7'~ ,. ... ..-21.:. •r iM 1• ,,_ !"' t; .... . '-•• ··:::.... ·-· I • .. .. , ~·· ... 1~ ... M "'''"' ·'° Jtt 27~.. 2, ... »· -... !lwi:.~ " ··m '• 1 • ... ,, , '"'" r ...-.,.. B.,_. 21'\l , \It erlflfnl 11Vi It A 'f..iM ,. lli1 --~ h• 11\1 2 .0 15 '"' r.:: -" u " 'IOt -~tutl 1t1nNC-Fooo P >"" 31' Putl1Y SI u , ,.,..,.,. 11'9 lt\'o Ar .20b n ~" 47'• + · I ,.,.-emln • llorlt. b!U· 1r1 ,.,.. 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GeU'f •11.20 ' 1~. 114\ I~·+ 'Al "-lfl ExPr '2'Joc72>,; Hldoc Int l~ 1\4 SNC:!f't 1:tit. JV. Warn NA •ll'e s•r. AmCr111 1.U lit ~ ~ ~ -•·, omwEd 2:20 ll l?~• 31 3i Gl1n!PC ...ioe IJ II~ 11\'I 11\o\ Am Furn -*lll't HHlhvn lo/t f\\ SltNIYn 191~ 2011 Wll" MIO ~'l rt. Am 0111111 t ' II lt It +\I• ComE 111t.u U 101\lo 101~ !0111 +IO Glbrll! Fin It :zo~·, 20'4 20\4 :+'\{,, Your Money's Worth ! ~~11 ~v. ~ H~:..,EP 1:v. 1'" ii~,. ~~~J ~F ~t; =-r~ t./': :" 1!\'t ~~'~!!1Y~ 2~ 2~~ 2:~ 1::: t::: ~~!of1 1~:! J~ n .. , ll~ 1)11 +: i,t !ilfl:fiew! t::" ~ ~t\ ~ ~ +i~ .,,., felv 16..., 17 Hoovttr 'lH< :ui.r. Slerlg S!r lOV. 11 wl1c PL n •-11 20•4 AO~al ol.MI 1 ll"-111, 11~, •. tom1>11! Sci J43 13'1 lJl'o ll'I -""~ mt>e Ir 1 •11 :n 3\.1• 31ftii -+·~1 "'*'.IS t •70,,_ ~ Ol'll lie • 11 .... JM Sir-Cl 31 31 rdlW ~ 3 --!'.lo Amf_IPw l.U S21 ts~ 24'11 21!'1 -lit [O!YlWI 311 ....._ "1 ..... 41111 -11/li G!na1 Inc I'll. 321'1 lO 32~. +Nii .. llkell In t m Howrd GI ,1'1 7\.t SubK Tv ~·~ 2'11 Wrlthl W 73 2l:t.(i. Am Exp Ind 509 I~ ISV, l6 + ... on~ M!lh I 11 11'" 11 H ll, + VI l1n Aldtn 19' I W. ~ + ~ Arc5 Ind 7'111 JV. Sclwm In 11\'o 11.\.0 Su11hl I' ' '~~ 'l'rdn'f E S'i'o I\.~ AGenln1 .50 708 I•'" 13.,,. u•r. + •,; onnM~ .46e ll t2'il Z?•t 7''1 .. lenAj P!l.IS l S9\.'I !91/i Stl/J ..... .,rdcn M HO \II H111:k Mf 11'>1114 AGnJn pjl,to 29 Zl''I 2:Ho 23~ +lo Conr1c p .40 18 11!1• 17'• 17~ii + \'o ltnA d ol l I SS S.S SJ +1 Arden ol )0 :n ud PP '11 ff AmHolst ,lo 61 11\o 10\\ 10~~ -~1 ~n Ed 1 ljlO 230 ?ll1 1l',. 'l'lli -\~ ltnAI pf2.j5 J 31\'J JI 31V...+ ,,. ''k MoP 11.-. 1~ 1111 Gts 12'41 lJ\li A Horne 1,.0 201 •1•11 '2\.1 62~ • onEdli p • • 11\~ 161.11 7~1A -Ii:. lob•I ~r n 96 l•Vr 16 lffi + 14 Mortgage Squeeze'Loosens By SYLVIA PORTER Mortgage money is getting easier ; the worst ol I970's brutal squeeze on credit for housing is over; with the prime lending rate now down to 71h percent, a full I percent below i ts peak. mortgage money rates must head lower. But at last reporting date, the AVERAGE rate being c harged on new conventional home mortgages was still a record 8.51 percent. And it was far higher in many areas, ranging from 9.1 to 9.3 percent in such cities as Atlanta, Denver, -Houston, Memphis, seatue. At 9 ~rcent, today's typical $20,000 25-year m o r l g a g e would cost you $30.3~ in in· terest alone over t h e mortgage's life. At 8 percent, interest oo this Joan would come to $6.308 more than the principal And mind you, the 1,000'1 OF OIL PAINTINGS WHOUSAU WAllHOUSI! OPIM TO-THI PUILIC lilt l.~~NG~ :rNTJ. ANA PMON•-....... DEALERS WANTED ,,.,_ H 2"" )O'M Uf'll P t~\ 10~ A Home pf 7 l 92>./i 92 '2\:i + •.~ Edl1 ol 1 ll bl>'-loO 60'h + ~• loDe Un . .CO II Iii'• 101~ Hi:. + \4 "-nlldt ' ~ ¥•11 CP 2•:t.111s"' l>m Hmo ,24 16' l6\• l$lli l6''< +n• t11nE pfCi.6S z100 SSV, lSVt SSl'I .•. rlth 1.n ,",,' ",~ ,2~ ,n,v. :.'.'i ••• rate on an FHA Insured There are "hidden'' costs ",.•.£.C t8.°', ",!)<','\'I 't'Slt 1",,' •,~ "",... Amlnve1t .50 1• iott 10•.., Jo>.o -t '11 tonFood 1.10 1a 36'1 l6 36 -'" Good¥t•• ·15 2i,.. ""' - v•v .... ... .. .. ... AMe!Ct 1 .a 102 lllii ll\1 ""' -"'COftFd 1>f•..5ll 1 tlVi tlV,. '""" t -gOtdJl'fA .2• JO U\11 16 1111, + \'l mortgage now ·1· 8" per-nt h '"-· h be d 81lrd At l\'t 1\lr Im-S'f 7 w.r co' " , -..., .... _ ·'•' tOflFrtlaht 1 42 u •,\ 2~ U''t v. 0111dl111; 1 . .0 45 3:114 JI~ 31'M -I " 7Z ..... ere, ulVUg ' so on guar . l•ktr 11 .... 11tli INI G11 ,, .... 11\/o MUTUAL ~'Mo·~' ffl 71'.t, ·;\lj Tw. ~ ~ COii L•••lno 'I •h 6\'o 61'1 + " ••ctCo 1.50 " JO'-JO Xl\oi -Ii Plus another 16 percent for in· . th s11 P11nt ,.,.. ' 11111 Nuct 21Yr 2ll'h A .. ,0 1 ,, '" ,, •. ,1 ... , +·~ conN•tG 1.h :u .,..., 2a.,.. ''"' -._. Gr1nby 1.60 ll 2.w. 2'"' 21!0 -'' -Assuming e bank approves 811111 Pc: a s lnfr1rd 31'1 l'tt ""1 •s · ... " .. " Con1 Pow• 2 'l :n•o :n·~ n1~ • g'11111Un .IO s1 25~ ;s lJ\li ~ .\Ii surance. s • ..,..,,. l:!'M JJ'4 1n1 Cont "" 11,1, Am Pl>olo .i2 iw. H'h 111• 11"" · ·• conPw "" s1 110 sa111 s.·~ 5t'h + \0 r1nlltC sn .ID 1~• n 12111 '+ \o. Th d II t t th. tak.~ver (qui·te 3 n B1Y1en 11 u '"'"" In l~~ 111.i A,11e:~v,,.•~1 m, n,,:t 711,.,~ 7J1:fl_ +3,,_ ConPw pfi50 7110 s'l'l 51\o'I 51i;, . r1n11ev11e 1 ,•, ,",:'! !t~ ~.• +···;c e od S are a your OC2. " fl..cllm 1S 'U Int 8W1h I~ S'H A:;: "'S~lpng .60 7I 2ii:, io"" io ... ~ ~onlAlr .:i'S11 "6 Ulr:o 11 llllt ! °' Gr1ntW I.~ ,.. _., .., "' major mortgage leaders are assumption by itself), the R:I~ 11~ 1; 1:11, l~f '!'~111' ~,:~ FUNDS A somn 1.90 590,• ,•,;• ,•, .. "",, ... + •" !f'C'a~•nP,j;tg zff: !~ ~v. ttf~ +1'°' g~·~'ir, /:18 ll ~:,0 PJ: P~ tt": · 1.JJ k lerk Ht ,jjJ 11 Jnl s, pf UV. 11 AmSoAtr .ro I '' .,.. '" + on! Coo .22e 60 l\'t t II\ -\f GtNor!r 1.l5g ll IJ',~ 1)\11 lJY, + 1.1 charging about the same rate previous owner s 1 may as s,,, Lib 42\.\c:OJi;, .... 1., ,,,. '"" •,~sA,,•,·~1n.10 » JI :JI ..... 11111 '" 2 211 3S'H JJ.t.i . 15 +1 G1N0Ne~ 1.611 ;7 •I'~ 45\:. ,7 +l'9 · J d . • J t l ·d bJ BlllU9S W IV. t\lo Ion c1 1'1111011> '" 1'10 31~ 3• :k\i t 'ti I CD ~IA2 SO l1 Jl'h 3"° ll'li +1 GINN pfBl.60 1 21+1 21_,. 21~1 _ " -inc u 1ng c o mm e r c 1 a you o pu up CO'l'JSI e r a y Bird s.on 12 3' 11 Souru 21v. :n Am5td •.15 ' 91'1'1 t7'1i t1'11 , .• . . , c~ 111B2'50 1 l4 :u 36 -1 e r wesi Fini IJ.I 11 21 n t•• 1" · h th · ht ''''''' l 1•• ''''" < •< ·~ Am Sier I .41 33 7'1'19 21 2'1111 c <M< ·0, ,1 0 ... lO ,, <' G W b rtga e comp 1e "" · · · ·' on oe .... -• r nunn •G 11 21~i 2sr, 26"" '• an , mo g an s. more cas an you rrug Bl~ci< HI 21v. ffV• JIQuln c n:. 1~ A Sug11r 1..0 11, 32 J1 •;, 3\~ + '!¥.cont ou 1.50 •1• JS'\\ 2111i 2n:. + '°' GWUn 011 :11 1 20,, 70.,., ~ _ ''" t t • b •· · otherw'-• have to •··ause So11119-El 2liil2:\I< Jim w11 ' t'lll ASu9 ptA1·'5 "'•·· " • "' + ~· cont ou •' 2 ' ,. lll~ 3' ..... G1W1lhf~ .so • •v. ,,... ,,~ _ •.• muuasav1ngs an...:i,sav1ngs ..,._ '-'= eoltetr 1•1o1'4J1me1F 37~3ll'I :ri,u!f·61 1~ a'I:; I~ ~+-\.i!M'l"' •:nv.21:i;,v11o+~Grtef\Gmt6 •ni'o ll\oo'Zln+,;; and loan assns., pension funds, he'll surely want back a big 100111e c 13"< 1'"' J1m1D~ 111\:i HY. 1wvE1Ttwo NrGN 1.02 1.111 .,.,. T&T 2.60 18°JJ ,5i,., -0 4s ..... + v. onl 11 .10 109 2?'M n"li 21•, •. Grei!nS~ 1'20 1• a"' 2a 7l'lli + v. ~ h . Bool AH • l•\~l•'MJlll'f Fdi l .... ' CO'MPANIEI Inv (QA 11.9/IJ.OIA.mWWks .S6 \ii TO ·~ th+\\ onlrol D.,a 7M 53 ~'lo 5J .f411oGrtYhound'I 2311 t~''-lS~i 16V.+~ life insurance companies. out c unk of his equity in the Sm c1.. 7111 • J-n Pd '•"' 25 NEW YORK IAPJ 1nv Guk:I un1v1111 AWWJot 1.n 160 17v.. 11·~ 1,.4 .,. Cn01t 011.sa . uo 50\4 SO'!li .IOU+ 1:0 Grol~< t0 u 21 21 'l7U +lt'I h .11 I b. · ( JI h ' Br1Mn 7'ft IV. ll:1lser St •l~ Ft -The toll<rwlnt "''°'Inv Jlld1c •.90 6.90 A WPtel 1.25 illO l~h uir. \IV.+~. ~CM"'~'' I.~ 1 l• W'o 3' "-~~ Grumm11Ca I "9• 201io JIV, 20YJ -ton. t ere are stJ our 1g areas 1n mor gage as we as 1s Brinks 1n 11 371'1 K11ssr .,, ,.",. ''" ,,~,. , .. ,,,, .... ~ 1nvtt Bos 11.13 11.1 •m ,,.. , ,.. ''" ,,. + ._ k u~1 _,., 5 :1tv. ,,.,, :n>o -'• "''''"'' .., " ~· -•· _ +• Ill h ch. ·gnif· · · I do And B••s Sc:• ltl.'i l"'° 1i:11v1r • ~ .... N tio.l i "' ~· 111v111ors Grouo: Amerof.-60 HI lt~ 19V:' 19~ .. "': -erln 1.10 'l 3''~ n+. l''~ +'Iii GnMo~ 2:11:1 21 611,: 6,i~ f, ... ,, w c you can a 1eve SI I· or1gma wn payment. ltwn Ar w. ti!. Kitt Grn 21'41 W; atlon • °' ·~~~ 1s 11111 1,41 ,,39 Ametek :601 ,, u >.i. 11 14v. +14 c_..r Tit ' lot 1p, 13 111• • .. Gull 0 11 1 so IOll :z1v. 21 2'1'; _ .,. cant savings. he also may hike the price of ~r!'"'•-Be is:i.:.,· •• •,•,v. ~::r"r < l fl'I oe11eu. 1nc:. i;: ""'' 1.•1 t .n AMF inc ·'° 111 21 26'11 ui.:. -"' '""PT "11•15 .~ !~!' •"" !~ t+ ~. G~u 11,srQ, 1~ 11 n 11 n _ \1f •-.. , " ' '' ' ,. ,. !he ~·,-· •• wll Pn19 l.'tl 1.21 Amite .ao IS IOlil lll .... J9V. -lt c-l•NI 1.:111 •• ..... ~ ,,., GuflltH • -• ,,.. .... , .. ll)lf ·bt '·k theh thelo st unn" '"'5 e11 -~-.....-t•-• ''''''n • ''''' , .. ,,,., ...... C-Ree .SOb l:itll l6"'il7•• "11 ·•• ,.., ... ,..._"° you poss1 y can, w e ouse -using w-co BUO'nu1> s 21 n11, Ket....., n ,,... """' secw111e1 S.'iKi In 931 AMP •nc · ,,, , • .._ .:.~i _..,_ = rt c-1511 1.111 61 1,.,,, in;, u v. + .,.. G0!!,',,•,•, •, 1.~,, • 1si. 11v. 1v,, + ..,.. . . lo CIC Lfl ru '"' ll:11.11t E' IO'A 10'4 COUid lt•w llttn . . .Amoe• Co•• ...... ....... ...... ... Cotlnthl .... '' ... -· .. _... " ~ Ut ll? 211't 10: .. 21"' + ~ over an existing w-interes t mortgage transfer as an el-~·1 w s: 27,,. :nv. K• .... Fib 11\11 1m. wtbldl outtio td n~'R.~ :: :·tt ~:;r .J·'° 71! l~; 3}~ 3~~ .! ~·~ con:;w 1.10: 701 ittv. i6i"" 1ff" +..; G~11su ~u:IO uo 'n" so..., !7'h -ti mortgage. For instance let's cuse -to a point cancelmg ~·-M 11 10 ..... Cu• 1• 11~ llt>W~edl Mond•Y. 11fi 11A1 11:91 Aneccrid 1.90 ..u Ult 21'!4 n~ +Iv. !EIITTll!tU~ .n •T 21v. 27!~ 21~ +H4 GulrwlN1 so »7 1 ~ im 11'° + 1\9 ' -•MM B ..... Ktl'St PC IV. '" ei. Alll 'fY •13 'IJAnch Hock 1 11S XI'/• JO Jll\~ +'!lo owleJ Com 1f ~ •Ill •'4 GullW pf] SQ • I 71~~ 71 7714 +•lfl sarthatthe previous owner of-out-the-financial advantage ·of £-1e1., ~, ..... ,,.. ,-.,_,-••,-, -t~ ,, .... tit1d11 1;1' '·°' 1mrm..--1,:» ,,;:io AncotllHSV 1 1e i~ itl'J 1~ . .,. Bdc11 • .JO L 111.1o __ 1i, 11.,. · +11o G0~!!."Z ~.',11 1 "'~\. _ ll\11-.-'rli +*-- h h h ki th ,10 Of ... """ "11,dmlrlll't FuNls· IYll-FUNll: And Clay 1.10 20 l•"" U't. U'h .•••. CPC Intl 1.10 151 7tV. 21'/i ,, +1" v .... .,. 5 2 51:(;-sa•r. :>a\4 +Ioli I e ouse you want as been ta ng over e m ortgage. ~100 , ... ,, •,~ •, K!_r,•, <•,1 ,',i" J~ Grwth 6.u A.n A,j)oilo 1.zs •.o ANchlCo .1s ll ""' 161'1 1'""' + v. Cr1ne 1.60b j3 36\lo 36 u _ 1~ Guuon Ind 1.s n:ow 10111 u -II ki k -• n .-. "" v, h •~-n inc-361•01 Cui Bl 11u119J•~"'' '''' '''>I" -• ''" >• Crfd/lfll'ln 1 • u 16,,. 18 +• -H-J-· ma ·ng monthly payments of (2) Ma e the biggest down ,;111Tc11 3'~ 3'1<o Kre1s1r 2'·" ~~~ in.Ur" i:>0 1:00 us e2 11:10 19)•., Lcorri 7 1.,1 'il•1t 11f; c...,,.,,oicn .eo 1J 1s ..... 1s + ·~ ~ I f. , ••• Oev ,,,. 10 tMC 011 Ht 2Vt .. av11r1 A 91 5 lt ~UI Bl 1 91 I 6J '\ L Ill B 50 I u:v. l~ 14'11i ::::: Crous,Hlnd ' ,.,, :t21'i 21v. n ~i lt~Wll 1.20 l ll 3J JJ +~• $143.29 or 1ve years on a 20-payment you can m anage -a .1ne Bl 2•.i. 2"11 1nce in 26 261'1 .,fin• Fd 1'11 ''° cu• Kl · 1'21 i91 ARA Svc i °' •,•, ',",• 1!!!:~ 1,,10, .. !', .. c,!..~01f011n ,'l~ 11>,• ,",~' ','," -•.. , H:1:r:.:J,11i~~ ,.: ~:~ ,"," ... !I"'•++~ Year $20 000 morlg.gc fundamental poi·ot w"·h •·kes ~.,., .90• ',,1~ n,,~ t•'~ w"•' ,·~. !'n'4 'tt11111d ,:n 1:21 Cui K2 4:S3 ,:,s Arc1r1N .1°'= .v,. ,. -.. •w"" '~ -"' , H " ..... -~· , • ~ "" ,.1sc " "'' .. ,,.. 11 IAu1r ~ •.llS I.IS Cui SI l•.ll 11.'6 Ar;:I! Din 1 ll lli.r. J:Hi 33 -\~ Ctw~Ztl 1.60 1,1 321'1 Jl ... ~ + '!o lmW1t .2SI it •\~ 5111 ' + ,., JI you could take ever this on added importance in view •!!'0!.,,C•11 ,,~:!·,.•,"' 1.:~ M ,71~, 1~ 'HAm i: .11 .11 Cu• s2 t.01 t.90 ArltPSvc 1.01 15 1,u 1no l•~• -:it e"•'• z 1111.20 sa sa ~ .;., H..,,m Pip ' ~ 211'1 l'Dl• 21.., +'Ill .~ .. ~v·.. 1>" I L .. Ld _ .. >1'4 Al!sllte t.9J\0.61 t\11 SJ 6.13 1.:U ArllM OS .:zo 15' "" ''" ,,,. -"" CDr1> .Ill '' l' l1t1 II'\="" H1mmnd .10 50 1n , 11\1 111'1 + \.Ito m 0 rt gage your t otal of today's above-normal saV-:f"t L b 15 m L!t. 'Co.1 1~ 2V. Alllh1 Fd un1v1ll Cua 5.1 l,91 I.JI ArmcoSI 1.60 :U• 21 :!Oltt 70'.I -\\ ud1fly .611 4S ll'~ 17'-'i 1'~ + U H.tndl""' .b! 21 31\~ ll" ;3111 + ~ . . ' . • ,rn I -, 1 G >O lO'" A.mull 5;31 J.lt Po .. r 3.Jt-J.511 Armco Dn,111 :U 71~ 7714 71'4 ..... -Cvchy ofl:tt I 11~•1nt" I~·-·~Ind l:jlr .11 H ~ ~ -.., payments 1n interest and pr1n-1ngs rate. The usual.down pay-~11e,.T1~ ~ ~ t~"',,' "" i;v. 13;--.t 'm s111 1.00 l.1S K11lckD 6.62 '·" Armr pt •.11 1 s~ 1s:w. sw. + v. c~111"" .n 7• 151' 15l<t iv. + ... •nt1 P .so l7 "'• 1w. 1i + 14 'n"l • u.a 15 · · l · bout 27 t '> ", ""-~ .~, j:.';. Mio '" o" ..... Ovln f.611G.5l ll:nld! Gt 1.16 1,91 Arm11Ck .IO fCI 2"9 int 77'ii -~ C_,.ln .l<'b II 31\\ 31 \to 31'\ + .. HtrllllM 1.JO I ~ ~ "'* + \I Cl~ Q\1f.i_w.,__. ...r_emammg men now 1s a ~rccn , ~ 'i!: i"" 5:: ti;;c: Ml• 1;; 1 Amt•. Ex11<eu: ex Grlh 1,11 1.16 ArmCll o11.u 110 51 51 s1 -1 CunnO•uo .11 n 1~ 10 111* .J-,, H1•c0ur1 1 ll m , :Ja\I. JMI +,_ of th I Id b t f FHA t , -~ -.. .... • .. ' C11111 7 IJ IM •• RKll J,,o,s IS.;Jl. Ar'"~ ... \IO 12 J:Wi n~·· l2>it -···· CurU11Wr "° '' 12\0 11•• 11 ••• H1rrl1 In! I 11 sa~ sa .ID~+ '4 Years e oanwou come u oran oanll'smuch 11es 1J1;1 1~1~i,r; .. w ., 1nCTJ1 1io ,., 1t1er1 s.as90A c ·'° ; 11 1n o 1n•-v.cu11WrA1 1 ~··~ uv.. 74" ;?H1r1CQC11 12l ~~ 1"'~~ l!Y.!ct .. •• 125~ I t t ., 1 nd d . £t.1 8r&1 JS 5j l.oll tav , 2' I l lnwt>i 1:11 1:t1 lfl l1t .:" s::i.i A~I .. 0j~ . t .. :u•i, 2~ Uh + "' Cull~r H 1.10 ff nv. 21)•\ n~ +-µ; tllrtSMrx .tO ..... ... ,,. •• -"' lo '[/lfl, n C0rt raS, I YOU ess a no OWn payment IS ;:~•:1; Sf 1;s lfll tOll :1cn l~ a~ S1>«I l.t'I .. llt lnW 1 ... 1.10 Astud.011 1.20 79:! 21\'o 26\t 27\\ +Hll t~dOPS 1.90 ] 7Hii 71'h 71"' + v.M•tv At l.'XI f 11'1, 11\~ 17Yo + _. gGt a $15 000 mortgage required on a GI mortgage ~"~~el P :.r. io;,,, J.1'd' GE1 11~ 11 ' stock •.Ill l .ll 1111; N1r '·°' '·9J A1hOll on.«1 /4 ll'~ .u, !l~{i +3 CVP•u™ LIO •2,..mi. 51'111 " -n• ~:~~; E!1~·31' •,J 1211• \1:;: ~ + ~ thr " •1 1 1 d b k d b th y C'111L M11 11v.11;uM• 1R11 ... s11o ~ :~ ~~ :::} ;:n 1n1 11 51.,i!::°~ 3·9 ~::o~er'.211 :u\ti 36~ +;· _..,_ H1ie1une 0~ i>;. 1~ ougu....a oca eneral9 ace Ye eter ans~n11uA '1•1oa1 Mnll~r1 tl",!6'1 ..,.,1,.~ s,~3 5.u cir11d JS.ii 35.114.,,d.Soel-20 1;~~2s•:.zt4+1 :!0an1t1vr .H1> 2• ,.,, a\~ ,,,,,...,:,HCA tlld .too ,',,,s;~.·~t.,. ~11o+-,l..,' percenl -and stretched it to Administration ::il~'111 U J1 1~ 11~ M:~,. ~ ~~ ~\' Am Mui 1.03 I.II Clpit 10,07 I0.01 AldTtln .05P 2S 91/, l\'o 911.o +~ii gan1 CD l.7S •• lli1 ,] • 23~~ +1\1) MKllMn ,11r " ...,.,. 1' + . ", , M c ,.. ,,,: AmN Gill '·" 2.9] Mui 13.20 ll.20 AllllOllt Ind 1114 20 1914 1•14 _.,.. o••I Ind .JOb 2511 15~~ llV, 3511< +'h Htlnl HJ 1 :!% J,., .. "···· •,•,·,•.,_ = !-! 25 years your tot a I The following simple table tirk Mt XI 20'• 1"°' • Al'dlor Grouo · l.uth Ira 11 0411.17 At1CtyE1 1 31 2• :xi10i 20 :iov. + Vt 1" Ind Pt 2 ,., '40\.\ l9 •O +l H11e.,. curt •• • ---• ~!&Y!On 1~· .. t~\ M1r M!9 H 11• 1''~ c .. 111 J,;f 1.10 Miene In 1:21 1.9'7 All lllthllci 7 W.7 .s9V11 5&1k. 59 + ~ 00111 Prottll 162 Uh •16''• 161'> Htlltr In! ,6() 6& ltl'I 1911.i lm i ~ paymenls would soar to dramatizes the effect of your ~um Mr• ' "1 Mirm Gr ~ •11o Grwth 9 9S 10.,.;i MlnMn •.u 1.01· AnRch prl 15 t•«i '°111 .. .. -'h •~o 1.11 •H 1111o 11(0 11 + ·;>\ "leHir pf•.o7 1 u 11 u """ :;;1ln!Oll 0 I'? •'~ M BtoWt 11 '8 tntme 7.JI I .at Y.IH Fd 9.9910.95 AT! Rich p( J ' lOlt'h 91 .... 100 +11'1 8:'flnHud .50 17il 7711, Jll.r. 2614 + o,;. MflfN Pd1 I '8 1111.o 16'4 ll'lli ~1 $31764. down payment on the total in· ,,1ow cc 1A~ 11>, Maul LP n•~ 12v. Fd 1~v ~.CIO 1.71 'M~• Gtll 11.0J n .ll! Allll:ch 012.IO ,. ,1 16y, •l + "" 'ftnPL 1.60 2 ni~ ') :nv. HelmrhP .20 121 21•.11 :zov. ~1\4 u ' · ~ur De A'o 7W Mlyer 0 11a, 11'-'i V..,I ')I ~l C2 66 11 Tr JJ 70 11 97 Ati.o (l>em I IO 2•'4 2:v,ii. 2c'4 ...... ~L 11fB l .75 1 4o1:i,(, •6~ ~ "" • MenolsDll Ceo U ~ 4 • ..... terest you will pay. The ex· ;~e'' c: 12, .. ~. ~., H '~;• 'I·~ A11000 Fd i .11 1'.n '" 1:02 .:., Atl11 Corp 515 4\~ ,... l~ + v. PL o~ 1,l' ao •a 90 '° .:.:n~Hemllnc .lSt! .~ 6'h 6V. •v. -~ • .t,dvl'<'llllmeoll I . I Mc ~ m -""· ! • A110<i1 1 1• 1.17 111.-s 10.Jf 10.Jf ATO 1nc .Clll JU 101\ ftl 101.'i +~ f~ar't-0 1 11 'il f1~ f1. '!!', :!: jj ~=~~ ·7~0 i,, I"',. ... l,.,.1•,a 1>~>.~0 _ 1 ... )l, Art "f •. • I 'Ii . th N amp e is or a ......,,000 25-year =o,111ns F ,,'I' i1i;, MMfd Mia ',1.."'.' ??~ "•Iron •.JI i .1 1 'Mrkl Fd n .u n .. •1 Au•or• P[ocr u • "' ,,. -t v. &:: •-~1 ,.. ll" ,., ,1•m-t ~-... ,,, .. --• t I 7 bou .Don Sir ?• 1' edtr11 •·• .... <Ue HOllVl\ton· ldA Mu 4..11 !.33 Au!Omtn lld st I Sl.O S1~ " ' " " "" I IC.a ee ever oan a \ll-a l the lowest :omce! 1 Jl:, frld In l!YI 16\lo Fund A 5 oil 5.50 y Cp ii.II I 91 A~to Co IOI ..... , ~II r 50 t06 J2 J?l I 1(!'\W P•ck '20 21 ' :IOI• :lf\.l 2""' 'Iii . . :om Cir .,,., ... ~ Mldld Cl IV. t ' --• ··-'., •• I>" 1,·-• ···-ll' llh 12'11; l W. -~ IC •nl • lO JG no. )\It r411111 vctt191 142 Uh 12 ,,. .. interest rate a v a 1 I a b I e com G11 11,,, "'" Mldte• 1•;, ?~ u.... .... _, .... -·~ .. vco 0 .... v '' JI is.... isn -IK 1111 '" 1 1i.. ;~ ,., -HlhonH0111 1 116 :11~ J1 3!ttt 1 - ,_ ' ' ,, ,, ••.•• G• ···~ u·~ Sci CP l .U 4.50 IF Fd 1.91 l.$7 A'ftn' Pd .lO 1l 19'~ " " +14 Qe<ln Mkl IO 100 21• -· 'I'• 1···· ...... ' -' --.nywh.r. l·n the us today '"' H·,,, ••• _, •• • ,, "'' _,., ,, .. SIDSOn 1..511 1.)0 IF Giii I.ti S,Jl A'fntl In .20ol 102 '" th ''" + ~ OennMID ri1 I 2 ..... ,. .... ~· ~· Jf •.•• F It S N t I B f · • • ~"' ,.. ...-.. 12..11 l'l.a Y.uUS G., 10.1• 10.31 Avntt _11n.JO 1 " 16 16 _ v. EnYRlt N lJ 19 It '" Hoer11W1I .fO ,•,•', ~~-· '~','•; 2~•· _1,~ e 0 a Ura e 0 Down Amt Total ~::;oPl'f l~'ncl~.u::,"R~~ 1~ l~l'l 1.n 1.n u OmG 1.75 5.10AvonPd I.JG 21l 11 1S'!a n +111> llOl'flnt' r ~ }' 29~ t'!ii ~Holl EIKlrn ,,.. re · r c ,,. 10 i.'lod sci s•• , 5.M '-"° Y.u 0m1n t.:u 10.11 A11'1C on .nr 114 io1i i.•.i. IQ.II -t ¥. RGr 1.ro 21 11 1m Tr" ~\it*nr.~ Pay-Borrow-Inter. r:~: 1n7r •• ; s•• M°"wk R 16'~• 11 \f. I:~~ V:: l~~~ 1l,J: 11:~ -6-rco Pl 8 1 4J\'t ~l IJ'.'J 1'1 HollYSUD 1 '20 lI ~"! f~ t~ 'ij N ment ed est c:mo Tt1C s·~ s,,. MOnl co1 rn m 7,16 1.13 Eo\ Mui t . .i '·"' B•bdl. w .50 1n,,,",",.L~ .. ",•,.f • ~ral l',1~1'11:1..i:> 21~ i!r: l~•L 21,1!1 B .H~k,• •. :~~ ,',', .,n• 'u'· "" OW• • • Plastlc Cream Discovery com•es 1v. Jv. Monm Pk 11 1 1~ dn 10 io 11 G• N•I Ind '36 '36 1•kr1111T is .. .,,.,.. .. '°' E• 1150 l n .,. "" .. ~~·" ... .. '"' R I I I D $ 2.500 $22.500 $27 ,882 f:,,1.r~ 1;,,. 3~,., z:~: f ii~ l~¥t Bos!Ofl 1:61 1:11 Nt lnv1t e:n . 733 s:iM ~ftfll ~ J~ j1111 ll"--V. I sre:\ ' l l 14 V. {ii~ 1J -f ~ ~:';' 1~/1 ~: ~: i,5; ~~ ~ no ut on zes enture Wearln1 5 000 20 000 24 3•n Cont••~ U'o "~ Mlle TtA 11l'I II Braid St 12,!l lJAf iii' I Secur ,sy; io 69 BlntPnl ISo 11 ... ,. ,.,,, t'li"V:ii :1~r ... 1·" .~ l1' ,16:4 ,•,·.~ ,•,•,.1 !1 Maud 11111 .to I] 10\o 10 10"' • ' ' 'tU. c_, L 1f''I 20V. Mto7r wt 3\lo •V. Bullock C11v111: '1" · · f1111QPnl JSc> 7t '111 '''°' 9'111 t I'> iml!I I.to ·~ 30 .~ lS • • .. Houg MUI .oo· 32 11'"1 11 l7V. _:·u, Forthefinttime,.cience otren• ···"""-•"*/111llM/y,You ma1 7500 17500 21299cor11 s1 4'" IV.Mlltth M s ~ Bulltk u .111•.'3 gynld :·!: ~·J;B1fl<IP 111'1 I :zov. :xn"' 20•Jo ·~ em l\im 1 10 1i'li 1,~ Hl:+·u.H"""'nF 1.:io 206 ll\lo 17~ 31 t" plastic: Cl'ePl:I lb1t hold1 dentura bite: hardcf, che. better, c:•t ""°'' ' ' ' Cosm . .,, '''• 10 Mot Club 12'1o l~'"' C1111ln 11.N :ll't.'7 G~ll\ .. ,, 9116 Btl\QP pfl.25 'B j5 IS ..... ~·"' r' Cl ' 11'\li 11~ 2~ 1% Ho111F pfJ,«I J 11' llJ 113 I 11 the1'te nevu heel bdd befOfe-naturally. 10,000 15,000 18,255 Ctwlrd 1•~ IS M~ellfr I t p,iwlw' ' ~·1 11·!! pf S11( 6°ll 691 Bk QI cir 1.U ,'l 'm:'· ,?.•, •,ll! 1 ... " l•,,>,g_~I.~ 2,•, ,!!~, 1,,.., .. >,•,•~ : ... •"~•F' ,•,','.", 1l •S ~'h .UYJ ,__ 2 500 2 500 Cre1 Mg! 10'• 11 MutRI E• Ht 2ll .. 11 ·' ->• lncom .... ill llnlt Qf NV l .,., .,... ,. ...,,,., _ ,,. -. .. -w l, I 31Si S1"9. $1'°' -n>nm1.1Bdastitmembnntthalklp1 1'1xooun laat1f«bou.rt.Reli1t1 l , 1 . 15,324Cre•I M~ I~ l•~Mtff LE" 2s111 BNJ;.~i::1•,111~.,~ Slock i.i •'10R•'*T• 2 ... rls 31~ ~"'" tt? 21'g1~':.~i0~:0 • tJV,. tJ ,1,,,+·~Hou$1l.P 1.10 111 ,I .. 41\to 114\f = ~ ":::.:.,. 1111 Hltlfllhl-::~~ur:; ~~s:·,~: =~1-.·.1 13) Keep the lire s pan of e~~h c: 1k, 3:~ ~.~.~1111c 1:~ 1!111 c~ Fd ::11 1:.0 :!.wG(:'~, f~ ::~ B=~~ o~~ 1'Vl II ••'II 41 •l\o'I « 11fnithm ., tt l~ lj~ lff~ + ""~~~G:i1~ 11 sos:. '°~ ~ + ~ ~ "• t h t C"'"" C 1W t N~IC1t R: t 01 C1 ... mr 1.11 7.IO Fd 11.11 11'.t1 811lc Inc .IO J 1110 lllili 11"6 ..... lion C9 :61 11 lJ.19 1 \It UYt _*How J11hn .21 JI 11 17'111 1Rli + Tt'1 1 revolutionary di!lc:ottf'J' rqularly. Gtteuy-to-UR F1x00t:,..T your mor gage as s or as 01n• 1.111 ""' 1 Ncmo co J l.,.. C11>1t 1nv l .01 3.JO evw Wld 11•6111 -1 B111c 01 2.50 Z'°° :i.i 3' .ll ,,_ l5ntY .lllll t 120'tt 111~, 119i~ +iu. How<ntl .ro ts U\lt 15\.11 11111 + called F~KT' for daily home Deotur!!'!IAdhc:u•e Cre•m i t ill lea•;ble I 0 y D1n1., IA lo · 10'1 Nit EctUI 16 11 C1Pll snr ,,IS 6.lO .... , ll·5114·' lln Mia HI llV. 11 1Jl'o !1" !stse.., 1 '° 1 •11~ 11'11 11~ Mubllrd l .•2t :n 21~ ~ ,I + Ute. (U.S. Patent /3.00J,988) comitt: "' Or Y U. OU Can Oa!I Oe1 S:tit. tl/o !ill Gl.O 16\'t 11 Cent !.hr 10.119 11-'I re-;. ~I 1o25 IO ll!S loll of 1 9~ HV. lSllJ 11'4 l'!ji e<1lnd '» 101 1Hi llh 11"1. + iir, HlldBl'f .. 20 6 ?1'~ 7~ 2IV. + dno& ""· reduce the •pan w·ithout too 0111 Gen 35 :u N•I Lib ,,..,~...,0i1nnn10 Fund" ," ,,,,1.-111 11111 n1 U'ot ""' u~. 1 g1vMtQ 1i.e •1 21v. n 23"'-V.H"9llH•I .•G m 1110 10,~ H•+" flXOO&Nf bol.ck dmlutel 6rmc:r ;, g11.rn P 7'1 71i Nill M!d 11\li ~ Bal&n 10~ 11 ,5' ore•• ' · 1111" 012.50 f7 ltl'a ~ :19\~ ~ rPeo~• ·.JO " l h 11 1A i ~ H~nlChm n 19 11 1~ 11 + ~ great a boost in your monthly •vls Fd )'4 •'I< N11 Pet Ni 2l'o ~-111s1 :·s~ ;·t~ nva: ::N t'. ·fg :uJ ;~ ; •• , ;r,: +1,.. B:::r.:~n tf. ~; .51,:" st•• .s.10 \Ii 1d1hoPw 1·'° 10 ,,._ 19 ,,"' +.,. I h . h. o .... Mir 11'!'.cl'Wi NII SKR I R I tw a·~ ,.,1100 d n II ll ·~ 11 ''·l t '·' 9•.• -\Ii Oonnelle'f. •• 211 .,;! '"' 1:}~ -:" ldt•I Bii .60 61 n,. 12\.lo 11~ + " payment. a SO 1g lighted by ~V; ln :i.~~ .;rf• ~·: fi1ow ~:! !~ s::::' ,·61 1·11 101 Fd 1:111 '· 1 11 31+. 11•,. lllo t :i.. oor1c co •32 17 11;;; u i. IS'1 •.Ii 111 cent 1.u :n1 21"' ;na 2111o +" 12.5°/o YIELD F~RST MORTGAGES • WHEN PAID TO P.tATUr.ITY 5 YEARS. DISCOUNTED MINIMUM $3000 10•1. INVESTORS PROPERTY MANAGEMENT J700 NEWr<>lT ILYD .• NEWPORT llACH CALIFORNIA 92660 PHONE 114:615-llOJ BROKERS th' • J ht $20000~1hl 11 "N~ G'E l ' 1v.0111seGrBci1 · · :>~WmS1lS911 I 167 l'llo 32 32'"' \lo~rr 011vi• It t!! ,,,.. 9,,+i4•ncenoll.50 16 •11~ o.i IT\~+1\11 IS s1mp e c ar on a J Oellllf 'l~ !13~ ~NJ nNllG ,;.,.: 1l C111ll •.• ; 7.Ct l'Nell 11)6 11 : Be<:k'!"•!I ,50 HJ ,.,,, ,. •• 2'111> +2 Ytr Co 10 ! 3'~ 39:1Jo lf"lo ... \\ lrt Powe• t.70 ,.:16 ldV. lH~ l6\I! i .. 7•h percent mortgage, Det C3nT l•'~ IS N1c111111 F 311,0, n l.'I F,"',' ,,•,~, ,',·Il l'I~' "•"•• l·~J11~-.. ,ri~,'<"', ,",, 7t 3f''t 38\ill :ia•o --'" wchm :i.1111 lo 61'• 61V. 67lo + ~, lm1> Co Am 110 IH'o 11{1 l1'1o i.t. Der 18• 19\IK'!O'~ Nlrlt A 35'1.~ l61ft •II . ,..., C> ·, 10·-,, ~·~" · !] Uh ll\'; 12''-. ravoC11. 1.10 16 JOI~ '9 .)01~ -tl'h INA Co 1.40 JIO .34...._ 32!.11 311,0, 2 Drv Am 11 ,,\ii Niels fl 3!V. 31S'h Sllr~d t,111,.69 0 ,'!'. •,·,,' ,.,, Beko Pet ,SO 695 71 \to 10 11'4 +l'!o grenln.d 1,.0 IOI J2'1ii 3211 32\\ .... Income Ca~ll 1) l~ 10"• lOh -'Al R ,. Oewt'f E l\'11, NA Re:ie '""' l.... Soecl l .OI 8.1] ICf .... . . Belden 1.60 I 2•~1 ,. '''" +\ti renr p/1.70 ' J6 JS•. 3S• ...... 111111•~ Ha ·"' •? 'l'l 11'.'I 23'111 +1 • e pay. i•fonthly Tola! Oil"' Cr 16 16~ Nter NG 10 lGili 0.tmcl 16.2J 11.U ,1ul Rs" ,'·,',' ',·~, flelOneH ,60b I I~ '"" lt'oli -•· . Draur ol 81 l 2l") 2l"' 321/>, .. lllCl~l•PL I.SO tt 21't. '' 21 -'II • ( l Olit Int J:V, 4 NE ur on , 2'lt C:o.ion111~ e11n q · "" 8ell H-,60 21J JI"' 31"'-JI + l'O Or~lusC11 1 ' 11 21 ''• 11'1 .o. ·~ ln0ttlt1nd 2 00 39V. 3tll9 3f1A + l'o span pay mt. In c re!I Diver CM 3,,. 4•1, NPA Ga1 uv. 111'> EQUIY l . .O J.tJ "•, ,~1 ,•,·~ ,:-33,, Bell tnlfl'cort JO 10 •~ 10 ••.. OukePw 1.«1 7• 21 ~i 111" 21~~ + '" l~tlfd ..i1.l5 11s l' 3J'll 33V.-v. 15 It.I St • 300 D«utet 1'4 N NW HllG ..... I'll! Fulld 10.0610."I II ..... Bern!• Co I H•O 2''-'i 70U. 21 +1 Duk•P DN.1S • ti 90 !Ill~~+·~ lnl8r>d Sn 2 1n JS 21" 25 +" yrs. ,, Onldsn t. ~ ,~t NW P...Sv "" 1•11 Grwth S.31 5,U ~:lorl"'sr 1~·~ 1~1: ~lldl~ 1.60 1.0 2~ 26~ :u>.:. + '-lo Ounlrlcl l.10 3& •• ll~i '9 + \\ Inmont 2'" 90 101\ t:v, ""_ 14 20 167 20 110 0-Jon JS JS'hNUCtll1c: IV.7 lncom '·"'·" nt · 8'ncU~ol3 1~•S ~~-~Dllpl•n .60t 1'63'\11111.-o l? +'•rn111<:07cb rltll6 11 15'11.-~ yrs. • [)l)y'~ 0 8 22 1J lo Arf 74\ I Vent l,:k ,,Ii Ian Ent 6.3.J l .'2 Bellfll(o 1 60 f) 45'11 IS\li IS,_ + \.\ dul'ont ).1Se UI 120 111'4! 110 +1'1\ 1niplr Ci>P :II II 46 4S'11 16 + 25 yrs 15~ 26 280 O•tw NL-l WI 111 W1t 21 '' Col Grlll 11.U 11.•S !::: ~NI 1i·~ l~J1 BIMll oU ~ t• !2 S1 n -t y, d!.!Ponl •"-50 '"~l ;n: ~\. ri~ t :? l"! ... co t.!O 23 3''1 15"" 3W +1• ' ' OvnUn 0 151\ 1' I ktn If\), 21 CllmS 8d 1.5' l ,,l ~t P~i ' Benell oll llO I .,,.... 73\/t 73\ft + V. ~°t_\ rrust 6111 21 :!0'11 10'o h lntr!ktnc: 1.IO 14 11"9 24 24 .+ 30 yrs. 147 32 780 o..irlt(111 ISi~ II Ormonl ~ 1V,, Cf:Wllh ,As l,1I ,'·"· 'Grwth 22'11 221\ Bent'! 5p1j..50 J IO 1'.lt :lf'lli :lf'lli ..• OU<ll.T • .:. 1 ··-'''" '' ,, -llM •.to 3SI 3111 300Ya l06't t"" . ' • EZ P1lnt l'°"cll't. Tie rTP 1 71 11,o, tlll 1,0I . · ' a-' ,.. 11· "-7'r. + .. ..,, '" -• .. o o C> " < '' $ , .,.. .. (4) And f•natiy, although II E111!t ..i l\l ~-NA ]\\ 3Jii crnp,.... ·'·",, o0.>0•, ~ EH:! ,,•.~. J .21. o°'::.:~oO OR ' ~ ~· 0.. l.15of1At ~00 75V, 2S 25'h +l•i, n ..,uc ~ • ""'" _,. E s 1 c11m ,. -•• ~..... " 1~ 6'111 ''• ll\ · Do'mo Ind .» u"' 12\\ n·~ + 14 lnlFl1Fr .Stlb !• 6114 61~ 67\4 + ~ seems lrite and tried. the F.:!. l~b ti J.l! pr(;C1/srt l~ a~ CC11m11 Bd0 (lO,· t '.021 ·~ '•"o,""ol ,.: .... ,:!!_ ,',"',.!!_ 'c'"., 116 t:W. 9>. t'!r. -t V. Drn•Am .20P ~ 1"' 1\IJ 1~ +-111 Int H••v I 80 lH 1! 2~'~ 1""--'loll b • I be F:duc SY1 3~ WI P1b1t fir 45 45"1 omo F I. 5 t S fQ · ""' "-~ ~~t, '~~ 7ti• 2l~ ···· -E·f-10~',"',~~ ... ',·.U. 12 11'" lJ\~ 13..., ... ,. as1c roe cannot repeated E• P11EI 17'\ 11111: P11< Auio 5 6 com1t~ 3." 4.l! Provdnt 4.n •.~, Berti sn Lto .. , + ! P " '"'" "' 11 .... 11'1 111~ .••• f E h h It Flbl Jyi ll 11'111 p1, F•E '29'~ lH;, Concord 11 .51 !!.SI Pr\ld Sn f,3110.lS 8 19 TllrH .6.0 ~II SG') 491i SO IT &\ IOle lh .80 15 23\li 221< n1,, .... , '"' l"d Df! .10 70 21 7r>• ?71.., -"' too o ten. ven t oug a Flder B• 6,~ 1 "•-co co 3,._ 1,~ c .... 101 tn 10.2s 10.iJ Pur!~n t.11 10.01 11aci< Dll .11 1011 so" •''" •9Vi --.. •Ko " .90 •s 191, H 19 -~I 1~1 Mntr 111 1J<\ n•\ n•• + ot t d t h 'I N;te 1>,:; lX p111c111 ,,, 2'11 Conti Ml '·'° ~.IO P111111tm Fund" Bl1lrJol'ln .•I 51 IS'> H~> l S'o + ~ Ee1r "/ I.I" 1161 11\t 171'> 17'.l +ti t~1 M~p llle •~ 12•~ 171-12\fi +'Mi en ers may seem 0 C ar gC F. Nuc A 11~ P1rkr Or 1'o IVo Canr GTll 1.02 1.10 EQUll 7.11 I.I' 811H LIUI I I 20\/o :!O'lt 2011 +\I E11t G .171 102 3' 33"-Jl'• +'•Int Nie-I '0 .,, •••~ 41'~ .U~ +114 •rtull ·d 1· It th Fctc11v lYa ParkwH 11v.1• Cnl'f Cao11,n11.ll <::eor1 ll.,.;i 11.111 BleckMlt .:U U •"'-IS'~'' +1~E111u1111 .~ '11'1.111"911"'+«1ntP101 50 1~•l6'0l~'•l~i+V. VI a YI en 1ca ra es, o er r::i1rom 1 51~ PeuleY p 6 i•1> tor• Ld u .olCI u .11 G•tll 9.U t.n Blu• Bell 1.10 s1 O\.\ I.I\\ 111'1 +1 E•1Koa111 11 t50 ro•, 66~ 7!1•. +:;•) 1n1 P~D nr • 1111 sa•'o sa sa _ ,,.. Coo(S WI.}( vary l•Dm Je1••er to El C SYI ?>~ '~~ PaYf!lf I) ll'~ Cnl'f C•o 11 .'1 U.11 ·.~~. •'"'•' ',·!! BluBel 111'.75 1 1:10''< 1l01~ llO~ +l"• Ee!onVt l,IO IOt 31\o :lf\i 19~< -1'• l~tl <!pctll 1'1) 10'> 9'!; lOt~ + ~ ""' IU Ft 0811 ·~ 'I Petri Mt 1''> l! Crft WOlv S.50 6.01 nve5 • ·"" S..blllt Bf-~ 31 11',k 1'1\ 1•\11 -'~ Ed'llln Ml .S2 It 21'o 1111 21'o + \o Int T.lT I DI 193 OAi,, l~l.i ... ,,.. + ~ lender You must SHOP com· Et Modut pi; ••t. P!'i'rte1 T 11·, tt Crn WD•I 6.•2 1 01 vv11511 ,rn, •,~ Bl)tl"9 Ct .«1 l~ 11'4 111\ 11 -t1'4 Ec•e'd J .10 190 ln • ,",,., 31<1 + '1 lfttT.lT 11•<::' z100 isl T6l 153 +)',! . ' F.mos OTI 1l"' 131\ P1 E~~ln 1\t 2'h ;tevgh M '°·1•60.lt 1)..... .I ..... BoJ1C.s .,511 761 S3•~ 5tJV1 53\li +3'!;. Edl1onB•o1 I 11 ""' 2s·~ -"'lftlT.lT pl(~ 1\ , .. 1•• 111 1· pare CJOSing COS\S fees Other EMrg'f C 11 11 P1 Go\'N lf"• 19'0 Otl1w1r1 Grouo: 1v.-t ,•,.~ •• 1101,,', 80lld INI .67 II ,._ t>~ '"' ..... EG&G ,la 71 II 171.i 11'h .... lnt1&T PIM i 1 Ill! ll''o 81 lV)' • ' ' , Entrit Rt 1 11'1 Penn Pac 1~1... Oec1t I0.7111.7' ln!rel · · BoOkMlll l .'11 12 1"1 11'-ii 1~ + "'° EIMuslt .ott •1 It~ 4\1 •Yi -'Ai ITI ntl 1.'° 73 ltl'\ l'I'~ IJ'l tl"9 1\ems-andthenarmedw1thEf'll'lb8 Jt'o "t!Pe..11w1 6~111, oetwr 11.1112.11 ownt~,, ',·!l·,·~Bordenl.l'O ,,,,,~,,,~ tm-'111Elec!A11« •l no''' 1 -l\1n1To\Tl>IJ • ,~•'lit..tt~~ .. Fn!W!sl a:i,.1r~ Prlrolll 11 \'l ollV. O.t11 ~65 1.jl IM'I ·-....... 8-W1r l.'I 1M 21l., 2l"o 141'1 -+1 Ei'o::tf" Mee no l~ll\\ ,. +it tnt~T 11!1(• 11 11 1t1·~ II l. 04 aJI Ult facts, Choose tbe best Eon COl'e 2 Pio P~lldt 1>f '' ll Drelltl 12.61 11. 1 llullt 11.IO U.IO Bormtn' .IO 21 IJ 11~ ll + ~ 11 llf I ll ll't Ill 1''1 + ~, lnTilflN 17! 1?\ }I'~ S~ 511 "-1"' d If You EQuitOH l ?'l!Ut\Pll!IS4111 lP~U~Or....iFdl0 ... 11 .9'0 udOrrFulld" BDSEdl12.2111ll!ll'lll3' ll~+~ l1>lnN1t llld 3l )\of•'• 1 ,.,,ln!Ullll ol(I 711~Pl31'4Jl'~ ...... !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!'....::·~·::..::or:..:::::.·:... ______ Erle Tee l l'I •• ., Plloton I~ 10.r. Orevl I.~ n .11 ll.11 Int Inv lJ.IS ll.80, flourn• 111< 76 ,,,_ n 12"11 +"' EIP11oNG I 201 l l'• Uh 11 + "'tnt UUI A I 3•1'a 3'1,\ .llVr + ., Fl (Ko l°" J"" Plnkrln 5fl'l IGl'l E1tonl.,.._1rd: ~ocl 19.1• ff.' Br111!1A1r ..511 451 '""' ... f ,,.,. Eltrl Cp 1.20 20 25\il '''-7•l4 -'It lnlerORCt I ' ?S 1•t\ 1•" + \11 Fill Tll Ft II~ Porlr Mt( 11 It B111n '.U 10.17 Bil lJ.11 U.11 811otS1 2 . .0. 10 .. '8'~ """ -\!J E""r Ele< I 1114 51'• 53\\ st • + '11 lntr•ocr ft! ~ I 7'V. 7'1~ ,..,., 'I' l 'Jil•M ........ M .. M .... M .... H ... MH-eeeeeeeeeeeeellllllllllle•• How to save money on your 1970 taxes ... Awell 0 planned invesiment strategy during Jhe final quarter may mean important tax savings to you onApril 15. Recent stock price movements and some important changes in the tax 1ew make such planning imperaiive lh is year. That's why you will appreciace our new lundamental book- lal. 1970 Taxes 1nd Your lnvMtment1. It's full ol positive ap· preaches aimed at minimizing or deferring your tax liability, i.nctuding strategic security sates, slraddles. and short sales . Also featured is a revlew_of~lhe current tax l aw. For a Cree copy, al no cost or obligation. phone or write the Manager ol our nearest office. L f, H111bt & ~ lnO. ..... AMtmn, -Nottt1M91"~141-0101 loftt ..... ..,., 111Eat~417-tt" ............................. ~ ............................................ . Firrlnl 3 .... l~ Pro Golf Hll 4/ Grwlh 11.13 U .lt Com 51 l.n I.ft 8rl1ii My 1.20 :Ml 3'l:o 5111' ltYli +l'M! EmE! pl I .to 2 10>~ .OV. «l'Ai + '• Int Br•NI to 17 ""' l•~i. 1,m .f. 't tncom 556 1.0l*Url!'r Funds: BrlslM• pfJ I 3t~1 39 lt -1 Emef)'AI• .fO 1l U'> S2U !J'•+"'t ln1•rsf"w 11' 6 !~'\ 16'> l~'i +'t 5DKI I ~s 1.6' EQUIY 2.9'1. J,lt 8•1! Pel ·°' 32tO H 16 11 +Ii.. Emn1rt 1.10 I] 3'V1 .tt\~ 32\~ -'" lnlt•sl~tr .'60 SSt HI' l~•'o 17'1 +1 Stock 11.SI lJ.IS lnv•St 7.31 7,99 8r Pel tn . .ut 59 •l• fl'J f'11t "" EmpOl1! I.I. l 2& .... 21\lo 1''> + ~ low1 flttl 1J 75~ 1•ti 1.'I -'~ EDfrst lJ.Ol ll.70 Ullrl 6.29 ,,17 BW'f Htl• ,to ?I 30 :If'.< 19U + "1 En9l~Ml11 .~O 1f2 ni, 21 '2311< +11,0 tew1F.IL T ~ 11 11\\ 11•• 11'~ , Etrl! 11.60 11 ,11 le<; .. ,,.. 1.61 ,,ll Brkwy GI .IG U 211~ 'llf> 21\'o +-'-' !"' M oi.,)~ 0 1.0 139 I.ill +•'lo lllWllllG 1,JI t 1"ll 1ft''t 'M'\ Emra Sc un~Ytl! !ttll Si>ecS lJ.ll 15.ll B~!vnUG 1.72 • 211~ 23'4 231fo • •••• nnh Bui .32 I n •o 11111 n1.1i -\II iow~P•.t 1.AO •lSI ,.,~ ,10.:, 11-\t t··~, EM•..., "·" 11.u ;.,.11 Giii 1.12 l.lt erown C.11 l) 61;. I •~ t • !utG11 2.20 ID lilt~ XI 30Vt + 11o l~•PSv 1 .~ s 10'>t '""' """ ->; Entor~ $(• S~1mFd '"'''·"1wnSh1r11 .:io 1110 to lo ~EBl"C.1.70 1120'•~ 10\li -l•hv~!1oio 3• ~,, .... , 1\ EWHY I.JS t.11S~11r A11 ... 11 1Dl.91wnS~oe1 .50 1J 30>11 19i, ll'V. >1Eswlrt .30 '11>\ 1 1\~ li'•+lt•TF: Im o .i.o . ··• ~I~ ·~+ Eeut G!tl 1.03 1.10 5~ Oc!en 16.07 16.02 Bru11swk .!O 1!1 lA,,. lt lltli +"' EHl11lnt l.2a II 11•• 'n''> ;1•, + '\ I!•-Caro ~g J~ ~~;;; ~f.'! :--"-EQu1 Pro l .!1 J,li Sldl l.U t.Sf8~cvEr I.XI ICU 21 2? 21 ""+l'<Eutx !>fl.fl • '°'-' 3t"4 l9'1<+•4 ITTSv p1150 11"" 100 100 +1-&:tit~ l 3Jo u Slom1 Funds: 81111!1 Co ,70 6J 11 10~ 11 •1 Esttrll,.. .JOI 111' 12>1 12 111.'1 + ,.., J K E~"' '" lL!ln: C:11>tl l,r:I l .6'BU'ddCol>!5 1130 'l''t SC•· !0111 -1\'I Et~yt(D .I• 161 ,1\, '°'' 211•+h -• -"•hid •.nt.75 tnvnr 10.211r.1211..,..,F1>l60 s ''' 6 ,...,..,,,E""'11112~ 2JJll)lJ~Ji 11<~·~,11 11 ~·I'~,,. r.+" The {)q\ober I~ deadline for ~:mG~~ 1~·~ 1J:H .!Ii~" fl J:~ 11! l~~~~ ,~; ~ ~~ ,f;! ,~. 7 ~ ~~~~:1 ~ ,~ ~11 1.:'11 ~'\ ~.;: J~:i' ~·"° 1~ :~ I~: ~+·ii f·r·ng 1a·~ d th il'ld c •• 10.6tl1.61 Wll Inv 1.ll l .7'B111o¥1W .H SI 22'-Jl•'I 1219+1 EJ1Cetl0"1 75 ti 20•\ ,,,. 111•.+:r,, I I c hnS un er e ne\v Fld Furw:I l•.:!f n .62 >win ... Gr s.61 •.u B!J!ll< R11'1\0 1",, !~'· !2>t1 l.O)? :(''' i:111tr11 ..oo 211 111, 1m 11111 i ' , , • Fkf Trlld 11,lll!U~.,. ln'f ll.1111.17Bun-R pfl,541 "" ~· ..... •F~o' "' •• Senior Citizens Property Tax F1n,nc111 Pr011: · ~tr• 1,21 1'.fi flUf't 1nc1 1.«1 fM .,,,.. •H'o n i.o ... "" • .., Jt"-:iat; ,...., " DY""' 3.11 1.n •m GI •-51 4.u e11r1Nor 1.1h! l! 31! '!:! ~~ :':.,.. ~,:l~'mi1 ·~s. ~ r'oo.o ~:1~ ::~ + ~; AssistallCI! Law is fast ap-':':: ~::: ·lft ::~~m~ i~:~ 11~~ J~·u 10 1 "~ 11 + "' 11rmon1 t ,. 111\ IA. "'" + ., V ' I' • "' Am Ind l 111 J II .. ,..gt,, '° ·-_, .. ~ l?l 1161'1 +11~ F11111tf .10. Jf 7" n. no -'• p roaching, wamcd Martin Fst&"v. ;:IO 10:1! Flduc 5.1' 1:.a eUst1un ... ·.N1 ii 1i .. 10\ii 10. -t tt1 F1m1w Fl _.., ,, 121. 11\'> 11.11 -,.., , F11ln 011 116 I l! !tin ROotl Fd1: -C:-F1n•tttl In< ,. 11'0 10\t l 1, +I~ Huff, Executive Officer of the ,,, 1nG111 ~·.o3 a:10 811 11.u 11.66 F1r weu F111 36 1010 ll'• 1110 + 1, • F.i lnSt-103 1111 C1111 OJI I.It 7.ltCabol C11 .111 11 olO'.\ '1'4 3tlii +1 P:1r1h M! .IOb t st>li Sf\~ JI'•+'' Franchise Tax Board which F-11 Mu1u i'.119 1:n sroc-12.:t! 12.11 1c1F1n11't • ~,j •'• 1• ... + "' FAS rnu .111 nl 111~ 10\t 11v. _ ,, • Fll N~r 6,70 ·"le lnGI 1.21' .... lll!l!'ln Mf!of llllo llVt ll'r'J .. Fedd.-1 .llO l<UJ lJ~. 3:11'1 "'1. + \; administers the program, ~t!t s~"!: 1j~~ II.If vn~~SIGI f:~ IE c~;:o1. i~\~ ,n Jm J~,~ ;r~ t t: ~=~ ~·= ~: :m :1'-' t~: ~ To be eligible for the pro-~[~' l,~a 1~;~' 5.n r~~...,, 1l:ll 1~.lt ~3~ P:7 i~ :: ... ~ ,I:! J~ ;-1:: ~=~~'·E·: •:: ~,;: f;.": 1211: .:!:':!: Tllt hlllowl"' 11 • m to'°"*" 111tt . , • fl'IG Giii • ,. A"" fef"llCI l.11 •.11 Cl"llllG 1,10 >o' J.•,v. nl!._V. .Jt,•t-~ F p~ p11," I IS\fo u•-. '''~ + ~. tn 1111 11ottr m1f'tl;el rtlO!'I$. gram. an 1nd1u1dual must be Fou""'' f.!t ,,.., tcllnot •·!i J,JO c"" c e1K11 .. .. •" ... ~•IP1P8d 1 , 11., 111 11, P:our,., t 31 I~ 21 -G1 »11 H.11 f•rtlrUll 1.50 11 ;r~ u.f\il 1~ ' .. FedSlenS .Ml 1ll 11,., II'~ 11,~ _ '• S.lff fltU"'I ... UtlOl'f'IC!IL 6S i·ears :>( age or over a s of ,,,,.u,. Drft:a. ow• MR •. 5.0f ••111"' .. ~ ,,-.. ,. ... ,...,..., .. 1111: JO ··~ ,,, ai, _ ,, • .....,t,. •~"• "' ..,,,.'-.... _ ,,. Ofol1( 1.4~ • '1 Tr..-i C•• l.M 7.0 Ctr• a .... s ... "" _., 1"ec!Deut51r I ... Ji"nl.iary 1. 1970: own his 0\\'n 9r.f" IJ1 11? '::,. E:_. ,t~ it1: !':fr~~ \ :l "' ~ J~."' ~7 ~FM oev c~ xs~ l~! ~~! ~i +11, •lu• •ladt lliw~ ;.:l'-'tlditN ...,.. home• have ' hou••hold l·n· rl!Cflll'I 1 .• , f.1. l'wn (;GI 1 ... J.21 1rrio'rC1 .60 1 .. li'• ],j\~ 3.J:.l .fl'• F.,.,o C• .111 10 Ir,! 11 1'11 ~ 1 detld. "-Dfocltl'ld ff' Hiii Ill 1'11 .itJ1 • .,.. ~·-1 ~1 I.,. twne Inc ),t1 A.30 1r•Gn J.10. , 21 ,.... 711"' ... ~ Fllf'""11 ,IO 1• 7q , 7H'o M ... ~ ~ 11'1Tct dl'rldtt>d t-P11d I• I ' -.... f ... ~ I d "d l•M~I •• tlO t'llt Miit 175 '..51 lffll'W '°' ;n 1· UY! il t '• ll"lelclc!M 1.IO 1• !"' l' 111, + ~ • .~. come O ~.--., or css: an ;uM liK Gi!: · nnd 1:11 'i' ciiti.c-'.i!Ob !J'\ 2)"' !\ t1 FHiror 1 ..e • .t• s 15 _" Pt?lfJll ff! •T«t-etrrlnt "" ttffm.fM have paid his property taxes Crnr( 1 s t :µ 11 c1,11t •.le t. 'C.llr1r 1.:io Mloi Jill "' ~. Fln Fedt•tf11 " ,,,, U'\ 10•• • '' ct.it •11111 .,. u-Gf'llftnf w -li:1 6.15 I.If 1111H F11ncts~ !Cl t~ " , • .,., ! + '~ F1rlt'l!ne l,IO "' I I •• •• -•• -~-""'"I" lo' the 1~•70 f'••a! y<ar nl 1•2612>1 Accm '"' !'! l'CllCor1 to " , ... "'' '1t-JoFllChrt '·'" l•I •3'\ •1\t o •11~ llofl dt"'--O.Cl1r.ii., '41d • bir 11<17 i.x: • p 1 6".6 fl. l"fO"' n '.o I :. 11tll!'ltCP ·2 Jn 11 ,,~ 60':l +lh Fol M!ft 1,111 n ,,,\ 1> 11·~ • ·~ 1111• '"''· l!-011<11rM ., "" """' Information and .. c I a Im ,._, ....,, '·" ,.15 sc11n t,IO J.4! ct11n 111A1.• 11 n,.. nl'l s1"" . F11wc1tv 1.u 2,1 ''" u •ti •• + ,, .... r be b I ed f &•'rit"-f,fl ·" v.'1: 7,IO 1,1 ~·nco 1111 .lO 11 31~ J5fti 3'14 +,., FH N1tS!( 1• $ 2'11 ,,,~ 11'~ + ~ ....... dlYkltlld If Miit .,.. 1t-o.c ...... a":.ymsor~!>' of ·~h:8 ~an:~ &~~K: ~:~ :~ ~~~ 1.~l ... :~f= ::: ~E1~~7\! ~· ,i~ 'l~ ,;tt -·141 ~\~~~ .fs. \~ ~~~ ~~;~ r,;: 'i ~ !'1111N~~.:!:wi~'t' .~n,.::vm~:::: .:= Tax •··rd or by wrl"•• to "'", " 1.u 1,H tl'IOQ'I\ 1,$1 4.,. c ... 111Ps 1:,0 ,~1 f}:;:: n= ?J:t-~ ~J:::i'~1 .~' ~1 \~'' 1;tt \~'' + \' r=P1111 11111 .,. ••• dl'fldn!fl emltNd. • DUii , ... oa 81t Fd •.10 1. s..i s11 J.os I.A tfftl L1 11 t n "" 11 jH• _ " '""nfl!°"' 1 ,, l'"' ,-. 111' +·.;\ ·•· l'td "' nD Kllnrl tlkln .c 111t .,..... Senior Cltilens Property Tax COf'I $t ll.l.l l,. nctl YI ••• ) ·n (lftMP• 1,H ... 1 ... U'4 l lt +I'.! 1111111 ........ tl01 I 70 n +" f11Mtl"9, r-0«.i.f'ld If hllf"'"" 11111!1 ~ff A 1•i·1J 1,-~ tlldrtrl t~ it tl"ftt SW I.to i: '1~ .(I 4'\11t1111 f11 E Cotll "' 71'\ '1l.I "\I .1.1~ 9'Dct ~ldll'C. t-l'I~ WI tt.di ...... Mslstanct. P. 0, Box 1588, :.m""" I :S ,.::, ~""Tl'lllP ,,,. 4,1, ~:t!fil1 J: I.II r.,. ~ r.t: _ ~ ::: ~= rlG '; ~~ ~~ ~~ ~ l! 117'. n lltNfllt Ulh Vllut on _......._ Sacramento, California 95807. Srft• :.n :-~ 1,l:;, •n l·n 1l:ff ~:;;-~~. i.: ~fl: li•• ~r1' t1~ =~"r~ ? 1:i i'1~ t~~ ti~ t,.~ .. "'"'111r111ut"" .. "-~ ... ..; ..., 1~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1~~, ,:.aR 11'.·ff" f,•:r,,.'ri.v J~~2" S!,'!:.ted,, •.,·'° t "·~ 21._ 21~ +n, 111uorc1 1.)1:1 'I ,..., 11 ,~·~ t '• t111-e1t1t<11. u-Ew1v.._ ,_.JHIM. II .,... "'" l ..... .,, l1 11• 1•1.1 llfll +4" Flum' llf B , .. lto '' '"I '' II ... ... • -" -"t(I" Gor 1. ,1.. .'!,',' ,., .• ,11n·J: ~Ft s11 .io. , , , l' "fil"'' I" ,.,.. no. ,,., ~ .... 1. •fhd •nd .. 111 111 111n. Nr.-Elt4!...,. ~ •. Y., 9"9 _: ~";;'l .. ""..., • '·' .J1 MO.. ~· ::;., c:~ ~ Tl ~ m l =·~ ~~ ~'1.~' ~~ ~·i r,;~ ;~'· ;t, t1u11t11. ~-c. ~. --wm. ,,..,. = Mll'lll l~.Ol U.•1 1K~V :~!~'ii, Ch~t!JID' 1•10 1f Jl't 11\\ 1m +It ~fl0!:1~1r ·: 1' j\11 1..,. lr \..:. h •11:11., -Wlll'l •lrtlnfl. .,._wt. •f ,.., celh, '!i~~nl l·6~1 j i1 ~'"'Un ,11.~ 11.,1 Cf\.11'1-,N'I', , io Q \• 11•0 4 + It tr-r. ,, • 1 P.~ lt't ,-! ~. d!llrltlUltc. wt-Wh..-1 1111.!M. ttll--tlm Tll .. Ho.I I ' G• ,. • W '"' .· .. o·.t -••M> •.o >> •<> 4 '• •lo t'• _. )q '·~ .. II '" .,.,, Ul4 """-jlll \; «,ot ~ !1'71•• ,' '-\-~,.. '~'' + ,'•, ' Ill "'"'· 'ri-1" blnllt\"ICl' If , .. ,... ANSWlllN• •U•IAU ..:, 1r,,. lAJ :·n N~lt11'+r 1j:~ 1f:~ zr:, .. ·,:~f M,·.~ ': U•• ;,.\ "+"" ll'llM'lf • .,: ~ .. , ... t::t ! ·~ tf'1111• M lit! ... ,_ .... rHd """"' "" Senior Citizen Deadline Near JJlarliet Sy1nbols m• Giii 11 1.f~ s" l'O .1' •• n '" ••, · O IS !O •\l 11 -.. ~~ffJK:n ~ \ fi'' >'l'I I ft tnm •· 835.n77 Inc. il'de ,. 'S n11,1a l·n t .M m. '11'1 ,. ,..,. '' ,.it···,, "'"'' """'' ·• ., 8'• ,., i,,, ;;:->) n nl•,,, :';. •,_ •-1t1 ... .,., -.ldt f'ICltl'M'lf s ... 1. t1 t:d ·)' j·7• °"'""'v 2.IO » ~-. tt~ ,... .. "'tn' wi. ~1 ' 'j 11•0 t•i 111, "".G '-,,.... or1,.." IH1te Mita lf ------------------------------------------· '"""""""""" ________ , •llldJ!,.., •OJ 1 Nrw n J, J .a (Mm..., .'100 ,. I '"' t'\ -~ '•xt11r1 .JOii s '''• 2Sll H'\11 -• "'""•' -1111t1o1t 'ta. ' -~---.. ··---_ .................... ... --~~------~~~.J.--------~ , 4 : • . ~ ~ ,, ~ ... •• ... "'' ... ,,.. ... ... ... "' .. .. .. ... ... .. ... .. .. .. •• -... .... ... .. ~ --------·--- • l!<tobtr ' 1'170 D.llLV ~LOT Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List • ____J I ' • , ' ' •• .. I- - . -----------------------------------------------~-·~-~-:?I"-~ I ~ -~ • JC DAILY PILOT Both Parties Try to-Win Sen. Byrd . ·---- WASHINGTON (UPI) -the country would not ilnow Independen t , Byrd's lo debate his rivals. Wby 'J1W: ''what if" guessing has until two months after the Republic&ni friends were con-should he debate, be asks, 1 t a r t e d a m o n g b o t h election which party would fident that he would vote for when everyone knows Where Democrats and RepubUcana 0control the senate. GOP control of the Senate. about'-control of the senate'•in l)espite ,bis exit from the 'Mtese expressions of con--he stands. 1971. _.. l>emocralic PartY 1 Qte man fidence have now t.umed to u.-The votere of Virginia 4<> Mt The script for theJr specula-JOng known 33 "Young Harry" pressioM of hope. ) know where he stands on one tion goes this way: is lavored to win reelecilon in Virginia Republicans who of the big questions of 1970: -The GOP· in the Nov. 3 a· three-way contest for the wanted to draw Byrd into Which party will control the ~U><LI~ l~Jli~b him theif!J>.arll'Jtl!l!Unoj),ai~:"'---Se"'trna;;;;lei;-n,e::'x-'.t ;,Y•,.ar_?,-:;;=;--.:;a · -~~t.;SbQr!:'.9{.,: f~ rive )'.!~B and b -· late get him U!e senatorial nomlna~ · ac in 1'56, u e pu number needed, witb{ilie.'1ti~ father.for 32. tion or to persuade the, slate OUt ffii"ViOra-that-ne m.ig ·t brea~ vote -Of VJce· .~· . Seute' Democrats now ap-GOP. convention to nominate vote for Republican control of dent Spiro T. A&new, tD J)ut,tbe pear ~ confident that Byrd no candidate. Gov. A. Linwood the Senate if his vote would be Senate under RepublicaJi com-would vote -with them next Holton, a Republican, refused decisive and U President mand next year. January. '.I'hey doubt thar he to buy these proposals unless Dwight D. Eisenhower should -Sen. Harry F. Byrd Jr.,.ls woukl vote to strip away the Byrd declared himse\f a be reelected. He was then reelected in Virginia. .U an power held by' such friends Republican. Democratic governor of Ohio independent. . and allies of his father as Sen. Ray L. Garland, a relatively and a Democratic norl)iiiee for -Massive pressure is ap-Richard B Russell, D-Ga., boscure state legislator, was the Senate. As Govemor, be Z K plied to Byrd from his friends chairman of the Ap-nominated by the GOP. George said, he had trouble dealing 00 eeP-e_ rs in both parties to vote with propriations Committee, and c. Rawlings :~·1_• liberal form. with a Legislature controlled ·t.Deiifto orgaoue th~teln----:JOiiD'C.-stenn~TlSS~ .. ~'rstate-Jegwator;-won-ihe by the opposition-party•~. -- decision ~ret until the new Senate convened. Hls ·was the deciding vote. In Bynl's V~, like other Southern Slates, the GOP b becominl a robus\ ~rnpetjtor for the Democrat;.~~~~~~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii O\QN=HUNJINGt.ON=BEACH ·-- De "arl'.s , ' • ! DISCOUNT PLUMl lNG fJ HIATINO & Allt CONDITIONING 1 "Heme B•s• For De.It Yo11r11lf1n" ' 18423 BEACH BLVD. 847-9641 • 24 Hr. Em ergency Se rvice • Ceiling -Wall -And Slabs Leaks Our Specialty ----• Wa ter l'lea ters--.--Orairr&-S-ewe·r--Cleani n~--• B. • T January. "' \ chairman of the Armed Democratic nomination in a Eisenhower easily won . alt _. rap U a reelected Byrd should Services Committee. primar}r contest. reelection, but Lausche voted HIS AD ~re~m~am~·~m~um~a.s~~~nn~er'.:i!Sen~-~~Wh~en~h~e~anno~unc~ed~£1as~t~~Bynl~~b~c~am~pa~ig~rung~·~q~ui~~~ly~lo~k~ee~p~lh~e~De~m~oc~<~ab~m~C<lll-~~~~20~%~D~l~S~C~O~U~~~T~O~N~A~N~Y~P~U~R~C~H~A~S~E~O~R~S~E~R~V~IC~E~W~IT~H~T~~~~~ For ~Monkeys I· Frani: J . Lausche did in·t956, spring that he would run as an and shrugging off invitations ·trol of the Senate. He kept his FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) ,-K~pers of the Fort Wayne Qilldren's Zoo have starteft a sneaky Campaign to reca.P,ture 13 squirrel moiikeys, absent ·without .leave. The mookey1 escaped ·from their ~ge about Utree weeks ago when the. door wasn't lalched. 1'1bey're gregarious -they stay together," said Earl Wells, the mo superintendent. "They have shown up in a few yards,· startlirfl the residents, but not many people live around the · 20-acre woods where they have moved. "They Jive on grasshoppers, crickets and seeds and there are plenty of them at this ....... "There generally is a lt:illing freeze here about Oct. 10, and -that-will-stop--·lheir-food~sup.. - ply," Wells said. "Then they'll want to come borne." Keepers took the monekys' old cage to the woods _and covered the bottom with a tempting array of bananas, peaches and apples. "nie theory is,'' Wells said. "that they'll gradually get us- ed to feeding in the cage. 'The door is propped open and at- tached to .-rope. Some day, - we nope , they 'll all be in there at once and we'll pull the rope.'' '"l)is has been very .funny to everybody around here ex- cept me ," Wells said. "People ask why l don't catch the monkeys. Why, you can't even see them in the woods until the !eaves fall ." "I told one fellow that I had left notes in the woods, beg· ging the squirrel monkeys to come home, but they didn't seem to be able to read my writing," Wells said. "I'm now typing some notes." Top General Wins Wings For Copter W ASffiNGTON (AP) -He's rather old as Anny helicopter pilots go, but one of the new crop to earn an aviator 's badge is the boss, Otief of Staff Gen. William C. Westmoreland . The 56-year-old general has been working at it on and off since 1958 when he took thls first instruction at Ft. Camp. bell, Ky . He was then in com- mand of the IOist Airborne Di. vision. Another assignment that may have interrupted his in· 11truction was command of all U.S. troops in Vietnam • . ~'Because of the Almy stress on alf mobility. Gen . W e s tmoreland determined that it was logical to seek to become pilot qualified In order to better understand the pro- blerru involved," an Anny spokesm'an explained. Westmoreland 's old paratroop outfit, the JOtst, and the lllt -C.lvary-Divislon ... are now airmobile d1visions in Vlelnlm wllll about 4SO ctiop. pm eocll. The COllU1Wldlng generals ol -dlvl1ion1 routinely leof1I i-to fiy dloppen since ll1oillallds of helicopters .,.. m ... throughout 111e Anny r. r recomiillS&DCe, lroop ipllting, r • s u p p I y , medical evacuation and c»te air ~ support. We9tmelreland, aJ I I I potllr._, complded the ....,. trllnlnc. although on an WormaJ basis, as other Army -· ptssed all the same -and ls qualified lo fly 5%0/o' Investors Passbook Account makes a great deal of sense. Your money earns a high yield. And you enjoy the ease and convenience of a passbook. And depending on how long you want to keep your funds invested, you have three ways-to earn high interest. You might -say-we offer .'three helping hands. 5%o/o Investors Passbook. .Leave your money with us for two years and it will earn 5:Y.%_annual -interest. Compounded and paid ~ UHi Huey helicopters. _.,_l.t.a..._._,.ll.14 WtilbrKftland Is the Rm ArrnY d!lef of sta ff lo be an avlitot. 1l1o 1..-1 ~ enlkled lo llli • -.It flight poy. However, m bu waived the quarterly."$500-minimum deposit. And you can add to it any time in amounts of $100 or more. -51/2% Investors Passbook. If a one~year maturity is about right for you, we'll pay you SY2% interest. The same $500 minimum applies, as well as the privilege of adding to your investment in amounts of $100 or more. 5°/o Investors Passbook. This is our short term offer. 90-day maturity. And you earn 5% annual interest .. Again, a $500 minimum ' .\ an ' . - opens an account. Add to it in amounts of $100 or more. There's another reason for investing at Bank of America. The security of the world's largest ·bank. Hardly a small inatter in t.oday's financial cli mate. Keep your money working.1 1Keep your money safe. It's all part oftbe I business of living. Let Bank o~ America leild a hand. , ' I BANK of AMERICA m for the business d living • • • • • I 1 • • ' I I ......,, •~~~~~..:;;;;;;:;=-=---=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.,,.!- ' • -. . ~ ' ----~- . " ' " 1. I t • I_ .. + ' • ' • \• -;.r . , .. Boot lovers liy the milli ons , undecided about hemline lengths, deim ·l>'oots e re super~hic with everythi_n9. . "' ••0AF•Vf0f0¥'4U•JIM #'¥ P ii $ ;:zs ;: ; I p p po; ;s :apwpa;;:uucu1 f.•-1zpopu1 ,.,,:w:o ,..,.....,.,.....,...,...._..,..,...,_..-. ., '" Ordina y_Sho_es~Don't _l:fave. .t .--o-· I Boots Step Up $fy les By MARIAN CHRISTY The hemline hullabaloo, still: "xplodlng with heated controversy, certainly need! 1 strong leg to stand on. Ordinary shoes don't seem to have what it takes. Midis click only if booted. Big-city stores around lhe country got the surprise of their lives in August when fashionables, · ignoring scorching 91). degree-and-up temperatures, stormed in to-buy anywhere-from-ooe-io-thtee-palrs--.._ __ of boots in one enthusiastic try-00 session. The exclamation mark is notable. It looks as it boots will be to winter what clogs were to rummer. Boots -which cost twice as much as shoes -se61\ to be the one thing uh- tou<;hed by __ the econ~mic downswi_!lg which is causing-wi<lespread ~misery among designers who admit, rather reluctantly, that midls simply arerl't hot Items. MILLIONS HA VE THEM Bootlovers, who count in lhe milliom, have been telling store people that they're undecided about lengths -and that boots are superehic with everything £rom minis to gauchos to pantsuits. It's the first step toward high fashion on the part o{ wonien who have vowed they'll never, never midi'd, As a result, shoe companies are cashing in on midi volume that fashioa designers are losing. T h er e ' s un- No longer clompy, fo. d1y'1 boot might be ~ gl1mourou1 11tin like the one creeted by Vi- vier of P1ri1 (ebove) or comfort~• enough to wear 111 dey like Yves Selnt L1urent'1 high. laced i..c:k. derstandable jealously seethina: among about French couturier, Is a champion of of French couturiers who turned out 11tin designe rs who created the midi-and-boots the. young and he' has been boot bugged and silk boots to wear with the Wis pleat, ---combination.onJ.y_taJindJhat_tbeir..end.Qf ___ (or...Y.ears...Yv.es.J.alks...abouLboota-1>eing _ _;mosLdelicate_gowns..on~tbe..scene. Satin the bargain is a lost cause. "personal" ta a woman, how boots.are as boots. somewhat sllther)r.and heaven to Shoe designers certain1y are fanning close ta a woman as her unmentionables, ·touch, are footage with status. But too the boot flame. how they improve her legs, how they pull bad boot designers can't conjure up even· Dead and buried arc the clompy, func-on like nylons. Ing boots that won't show scuffs from tlonal storm boots of yesterday. Most of EQUALITY SYMBOLIZED ungrace£ul dancing partners, to aay today's boots aren't waterproof or prac· Not long ago women wore boots only in nothing of markings from snow, sleet, tical. But, my dear, they are dainty , lightweight and comfortable enough to be bad weather· But men who were military ratn._ worn all day as a shoe substitute. wore them -to say nothing of the male Boots ffiat reflect Granny are outselling BU'ITERY SOF"r Two -great-shoe designer!' -New York's Beth Levine and Paris' Roger Vivier -have been creating boots.. that pull on like, a stocking and honestly don't C>nllrict drculatiOR:", Newest' boots a.re roalle from S~tch fabrics or buttery son --':iather thit!it lep'ihe way gloves iii hands. One or the Jarring negatives of the mini syndrome was the undi:Sputable fact that zillions who bared their legs didn't have legs worth baring. ' -J Yv~ Saint Laurept, the. most talked· sportives who fished, rode, hunted in · those that don't. Designers who Play the them. Women who cry f9r liberatip}l and game of amateur psychology &ay that equality often rely on certain pieces of old-fashioned boots ~-particularly of the male attirt to subliminl!lly pronounce their-inQependence. In a way, boots have laced-variety of past generations·-·in- eome tol.IJ!llbolize that'.~ aaes an on dicate women have a aecret longing to , equal ~. . . ' · ·, ding to put virtues. Maybe total eman· '· Dlof·htla wu the looder o! the pOcli: cipatlon ....,. too difficult lo bandle. Milliners Rejoicing After Decade of Silence ' Palling 1-- H ems Raise Hat ls .sue I' • ~ ... • .. ... _, --.. . • ... ' • • ·-•, ' • t - ' J , '· . '~ .. ... ·1""-. -"' u'' w"""""" Hatm•kers ••• happy at tho soiling clim•to crHted by tho midi. They. offer (•bovo) • white and bl.de hackle fHlhor Clomo and (rightl a jersey helmet for stormy wHthor. NEW YORK (UPI) -The midlskirt turns out to be beady news for. the nation's hatmakers, ~ "This is the mo.st favorable hat selling climate that has blown our way in a decade,'' said Miss Maybelle Hall, com- mentator at a millinery exhibit to show c)ff what buyers ha ve stocked for you for fall and winter. "With skirts longer, a hat is a necessity to make the new generation of clothes work," Miss Hall continued. She. then reviewed lhe fashion uews ap- pearing in newspapers and magazines in recent months showing how hat and midi go hand in·hand in clothes coordination. Even the bard bats have lheir scenf!, she quipped. CUSTOMER READY "The customer is ready," she told the retailer representatives. "Are you?" -a question asked at the fashion show staged by the Millinery Institute of America, Inc., a trade and promotion organization. Miss Hall said one way to get women lnt,o hats was to put the hats where the clothes are, not stuck off separately. In • the pantsuits section of ·a store. put hats that go with pantsuits, for instance. ·As for styles, the look for fall included the. whole range of brims -snap brims, gaucho, western, fedora, swagger, musketeer, bowler and some in fur that come so far down over the face little more than chin shows. Running counter to the brim. was a revival of the 1930'! types, the brimless cloches and helmets that hug the head and hide !he ears but give the brow wide e1.4 posure: These come for both day and evening In felt, leather and kn its • One group of chapeaux,_called ."fun and feathers'' featured mostly evening wear with plenty of. glitter. Some hats were small, mere "chignon" caps or pillboxes. Some were• huge and the biggest hit of all from OU.. group was designer Jack McConnell's •White and black hackle "dome.'' GIANT SNOW BAU. Al l the fluffy white feathers were black-tipped; otperwtse, it would have . looked as' if the model were wearing a giant snowball gone astray . "That," said Ml§ Hall, "can blow the scene for every other woman in the room." Milliners expect continued popularity -r. for fur hats, ·ne""or-their"-best«lling Items In recent years label it mink or one _ of the.Jonahairs like itd lot... or_ . ...,ne.,w\!.-1-- bleached silver fox that is neutral tDllUlh to combine wi\b any costume. "Dark ranch sUll ·ii the dellre <I ""1 woman_," said· Miss Hall. But when a white mlrik fedora with leather chlo lie appeared 90 the fa.sh.ion runway, lbe observed that this was a hat for which a woman would "hang u, her landlord and have her husband's shoes reaoled" 90 lhe could afford It. It will retail for about 1150. or If a woman lsn't thinking mink, there was Mr .. John's. Argentine fo1, a _ · big, floppy . brim number almost con- cealin& the face, and retaltlng for around !300, , J,olldls click anly If boot- ed, •nd boots wlll lie to winter whet clop were to summer, cl•lm thoe ••lgnort ..... , ........ nlnt !he boot florM., I .[ ' t I ' • • ~M-aid . S e Fvice--Gut-0f~Busi.ness · cper7emonyd · · er orme DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am blllck. I •m employed in tn orfice where most or the ei:nployes .are white. The quefttlon I want to ask_is simply this: Why Is it that even though the black peraon performs the s1me services and is paid the same aalary as lhe white person, he gels asked, sooner or-later, if he knows a good maid or a reliable janitor. --ni1s~ha·s happrned to me so often I am fed up. The 18st person who asked me this question was told to call up an employ. ment agenby or place a~ ad In the paper. The woman looked shocked when I responded .to her in th ls ma'nner. l know for a fact that she did not ask any of the white employes -just me and anothe r black woman. Will you please explain this? -NO WATER~LON, THANKS Dear N.W.T.: 'l1tt old time •ttreotype ef the Neiro-was tb•L of a ltl'Vant. Nelf'Oel were uedacated aod explotted in America 'for buDdtedJ of year1 - brougbt here 11 slaves ind kept I1oorant. They bad to take mettial· job.s 1IDCe they · were lft~u~ped to do uytll:lng else. To- day Neiroe1 an Supreme Court Justices mayors of cities, colltge presJdents and joarnallstl. The neit time someone asks you If you ~~ of.! good maid or a i:ellable jllnltor tell them, .. No -b ut If yO.-. need a Negro pbyslcl1n who specializes ln dermatology there's a 111perb ont ID CbJcago." DEAR ANN LANDERS: l 'am only 17 but am more o( a woman than my mother and mOl!it of her friends. I also have lived more of life and know what I want and where I am going. Right now Horoscope ANN LANDERS ~ J'm in a messy situation and I need your to aet back on tbe trick of rationality advice. -1 (yoa sound temporarily deralled ),-1et.lt. ~st year l--~&d a-par~·llme job lq an-Famll)'°"!ervlcrbas n:ce:lle1tt counsellllg .. office. I fell 1n love with a man who worked there also. He tol d me he was Call for •• 1ppolntment. gcparattd from his wife, which was a lie. • J know now he lied because he was afraid DEAR ANN LANDERS: Help! Quick! 1 would stop seeing him if I knew he Was S.O.S. Did I do the right thing? A former living at home. By the tim~ 1 learned the neighbor telephoned this morning and truth J had already given him m}! heart, said she had heard my husband and I my body and my mind. were giving a party and she was sure @r invitation was lost in the mail because so His wife found out about us (I think I many mutual friends had already receiv- know who lipped her ofr ) and she packed ed theirs: 1 was so taken by surprise r up tbe.lr tw.o childre(LJIDd_moved ba ck to replied, "Yes, you were on the list. by their hometo wn. The following week he all means come." • got bimselr transferred to the same city Now I am annoyed with myself be<:ause and they l?atched everything up. they were not on the list and she I have sent him telegrams and letters outsmarted me. What coo.Id I have said but he doesn 't answer. When I telephone under the circumstances? -HOSTESS bill office I am told he ill "out of town." I WITH A CROWDED TABLE called his home last wee k becaUSe I was DEAR HOSTESS: Yoa could and desperate to hear his voice. He said, '"I h Id b id "N n't on the can 't talk now,'' and hung up on me. ;,,~,u buta':e'~oPe 1!' ~::ew~~~ another lf I could only speak tg him I am sure time." we cou ld work everything out. 1 want to move where he is and settle for wha tever time he can give me. I would rather have one hour with him than a lifetime with anyone else. What should I do next? - SCORPIO DEAR SCORP: Take the hint and leave him alone. U tou meed profe1slonal help Do you feel ill at 'ease. , .out of it? Is everybody having a good time but you? Write for Ann Landers' booklet. "The Key to Popularity." enclosing with your request 35 cenlS in coin and a long, self. addressed, stamped enve lope in care of the DAILY PILOT. Robert ' W. By de cl al med Victoria Anna Bell, both of Huntington Beach, as his brldt during a double ring ceremony in Community ·churc h Congregational, Corona del Mar. Solemnizing the evening vow exchange was the Re v • Edward P. Allen ol the UCJ Interfaith Center. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Victor Bell or Huntington Beach. Parents of the benedict are Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Byde of Fresno. Mrs. Ric Kline served 8! matron-of honor while the-- bride asked the Misses Diana and Karen Ham to b e bridesmaids. The benedict was served by fi.1ichael Jones as best man. Seating the guest5 were John Haehl and Bruce Bryant. A graduate of Hun tington Beach High School, the bride attended Oi;ange Co a st College. Her husband was educated in Fresno schools and holds a BS degree from UCI. He is currenUy doing postgraduate work in psycholinguistics. They will reside in Hun· tlngron Beach. FOR THE F.IRST TIME! Virgo: Ideas Shopworn EXPERT CLEANERS & LAUNDRY OFF ERS PICK-UP & ·DELIVERY WEONESDA Y · conceplS. Fresh, vigorous ap-high; maintain equilibrium . OCTOBER 7 proach attracts success. You are due to emerge vie-I LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): torious from minor crisis, For All Your Laundry & Dry Cle1ning Nuds PRACTICING J URISPRUDENCE -Preparing their case !or a Day' in Cou rt •--~.~,.~(lelC!Oi'igntJ Mfi, The{>(lo(eBangs;-presillent;M·rs:-Rob·ert-1\latthews. governor, and Mrs. Dee Kooker, representativ..e to the Nati onal ASsoci8llon of ·Legal Secretaries. The Orange County group 'will visit the courthouse and at- tend trials in both municipal ·and superior .courts Wednesday, Oct. 14. By SYD"!EY OMARR Sudden changes-due ~-affect --AQUARIUS-(.Jan;--·20-Feb ... f, (-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;._;;,;;,;;;;":;;';";'"~'•:•:·~• -------... ARIES (March 21-April 19): environment, personal 18): Immediate action mayl l Avoid temptation to commit residence. Be alert and flex-not be forthcoming . But you DRAPES CLEANED & yourself to bizzare scheme. Jble. Excitement is keynote. can prepare form at, outline . FAN FOLDED Stick to course which leads to Creative thinking is necessary. You have breathing spell; take goal. lJbra individual may Don 't force matters with Aries advantage of it. A long- mean well -but it is best lo pertiOn. distance call could clear emo- Gourmet. ,Techniques Discussed ' Gourmet cookiilg will be the lopiC ·whm ·the Mesa-Har bor Club meets for a seafood I~ in the Newporter Inn on Thursday, Oct. 8. The 10:30 a.m. business meeting and luncheon will be fi>Uowed by a film, "The Art ot Cordial Cooking" and a discussion by Scott Flack of a distillery · company. He will offer advice on such exotic recipes as KumiMI Party Dip, Pears de Cacao and Bra1ilian Cream Pie. A cordial cookery booklet will be given to those attending. Guests of honor will be the 14 new members of the club. drt=l ands All First Mates will be ex- pected to be aboard for Balboa Yacht Club'• monthly lunch. eon taking place In the c)ubhou:re Thursday, Oct. 8. Feminine hands will "tum to'' bridge following an 11 :30 a.m. social hour and 12:30 p.m. luncheon and lash.ion show featuring styl" from Lido Fashions. in command will be the Sea Sirens TOPS Sea Sirens meet in J<illybrooke School. C o s l a Mesa. Programs begin at 7 p.m. every Wednesday. HAIRST YLING rrJa/he; WIG 1. llEAUTY SAL DH 5413••• 21M .., 1 ntt ,,,... l·UU.•JllN SQUAii& COITA MISA Le,gal Secretaries Invited to Court A Day_ !n Court is in the of. that member! might Increase fing for Orange County Legal their skills, competetlce and Secretaries Association. _ u~uln_ess to _their employers •~· tr . 1 h 1 aoa: the courtS. ~"'"!iis at1on or t e annua . event will take place at a a.m. It al~. serves ~II. means ~ Wednesday, Oct. 14, in the recog.nizt~g the secretary s Judges' Lounge of the Santa conlr1but1on lo th e ad- Ana Courthouse,,followed by a mini~tration of _justice and tour of the Courts, both prov1d~ her with an op- municipa.J and superior, and ~rtun1ty to observ~ the r.u~c­ clerk 's office. . · tiOJ'.I! of. Uie court, 1n ad~1t1~n Secretaries also ale schedut-to meeting other secretaries 1n ed to attend trials in both the area. courts. Judge William Sp i·e r·B, Day in Court was establish· Orangf c.ounty Superior Cou rt, ed at tbe firth annua1 ccrn· will host and welcome all legal venlion of Uie n at i o·n a I secretaries. ind guestS, and association in 19:;6 in keeping Judge Eugene C. Langhauser with the code of ethics ind will welcome visitors t o purposes of · the I e g a 1 Municipal Court. secretaries associations &0 Mrs. Loutse M o o r e 1 on Dec~--,- cha irman of the program, will ass.isl the women in selecting trials tney are in terested in alte 1ng and direct them to the various courts. All legal secretaries and Mmes. Don V. Franklin, aspiring l e ~ a I secretaries, Edwin Steen Jr. and Jack whether members of the Baillie. · chapter or not, are invited to Models will include the attend. f.fmes. Richard Na~rs. Allen Cottle, Jay L inderman , Man::us Hall, Blair Barnette, Dee Boyd Glava and Miss Sue Ficker. Mrs. Leonard South, fashion coordinator. will comment and Mrs. Edward Lethen will pro- vide musical accompaniment. Emblem Club Gathering tor bus i ne ss sessions and programs are members of Newport Harbor Emblem Club every second Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the Elks Lodge, Newport Beach. rely on your own experience. SCORPIO (Oct. 2J..Nov . 21 ): tional debris. TAURUS (Apr.it 2(1..May 20): Short journey may bring . PISCE'.S (~eb. 19-Marc~ 20): SPECIAL lATIS TO AP'ARTMl NT & MOTIL OWNllS LADIES I. MEN'S ALTERATIO NS ••• FITTED IN YOUR HOME EXPERT CLEANERS & LAUNDRY Stay with current project. You answers you require. lntellec· • Have_ faith 1.n y~ur~own ide~s. can finish it and eam plaudits. tual curiosity acts as positive J-t:o could provide some f111e If you stop in midstream, \he force. Family member ex-ideas,. open .doors of ~P­ result is disappointment. pr~s unusual desire. porturuty. Cultivate 1hose Who Emphasis is on your ability to SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-can envision potenti~I. Steer 333 E. l7th St. _ Costa Me" _ 646-511 0 communicate. Dec. 21 ): Examine carefully bci<luar o~ ·one who sings the fl>!lti11d "•• P'a11ealie Ho.iMJ GEMINI .(May' 21.June 20): any spe<:u lalive proposition •• ~~"~·~iiiiiliiiiiip;;;:;:;:;:~~==~==~~~==::==::==::==~ Emotions fly_ l}igh~ .YOU can What appears a sure thing channel creative urges with may be only a certain way of 1/2 PRICE WITH THIS AD t0tt« ••.i•• 1•11-1t1) constructive rewlts. Gain Jos1'ng m-y. Rea11·-this --• • ........ .... 4lll.I SHAMPOO a,sm. PllMAN I NTS, TIN TS, I LU.CHI S, MANICURES, P'I DICU•IS shown if you do what comes . respond accordingly. naturally. Means adhere to CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. your own style. J9 ): Some in positions of CANCER (.fune 21.JuJ y 22): authority may push panic but- Play waiting game. Don"t ton. Your personal cycle is jump at f~st o(fl!r. Some,~lliiiiii~~~~~~~ .. ~~~~~~iiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiii~ around you offer superficial\ explanations. Dig for facts. face truth as it actually exists. , LEO (July !3-Aag. 2%): If you go lo extremes, there could be error which is costly. Be versatile without scattering your forces . Chance of routine would be good -dine with one who stimulates you. VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22), Unorthodnx approach resullS In profit. Take chance on your own abilities. Some ideas are ahopwmn. Replace outmoded Coffee Perking Retired and active Ai r Force Officers Wives will galher for coffee al 9:30 a.m. on Thursday, Oct. 8, i• the Los Alamitos Naval Air Station Golf Clubhouse. Additiollal infonnation may be received on the AIT Force Officers' Wives by calling Mrs.George Watts at 213-431· 3295. Siu. Tower or Pink Towtt o.tgn: Fiv•pieet pl.ce setting (Dinner Plate, Salad Plate, Bread & Butter Plate, Cup & Saucer), Reg. $12.95, now $9.56; foor five-piece settings, reg. $51.80, now $38.24. Ser."ing pieces also on special. IT'S GO GO GO• USED PIANOS-ORGANS .. e GRANDS ALL HDUCEDI 20Qth ANNIVERSARY SALE O N WORLDAcCLAIMJ::D S P ODE I M P ERIAL EARTHENWARE REPEATED BY POPULAR DEMAND, HAMMOND ORGAN~!~~ ;:;~:1595 With Full Rhythm, Pull '•rcuulon. L•sllt Spuker-Whll• They Lest CONN ORGAN ·::~ .~':., $879 MMtl "H" -Htw SU'K GULBRANSEN O~GAN PIANOS WURLITZER SPINET,.., .. s399 MELVILLE CLARK .... '"' S&8& Qfle.af Slllpm1nl • Wllilt T...., LHI MANY Nl!W FLOOR MODELS .. w 1 &0/o•" . U~ TO WURLITZER ELECTRIC PIANOS S386 NlW HAMMOND PIPER "' .. ,...._ .... ,,..,,. '" c-Ill .., . ._.,. .. ,,... .. . "'"' ~ .. ,.....,. ..,.,. ''""-' -fwl ,_ IM tllfln ''"""'' WURLIIlER ORGANS ·-"" All Ph'lllllH alOUUll Mff $699 /Miit! ..,. JtR f(ID P•OM '684 lllGUU.ll llm •1696 Ntw Shipment! GRANDS lhffl" "! ... , •.tttfft llO wr •rr•M• , .. Mlllllllt !1<1111'-- AH c1rry wttf-.Myl Slllllw•' M•-. ttllftllll ••lltwlll Chldlerlllt ,M ... ,._ " .......... ~ .,.., Call IM ~ •I "' .............. .,~ -" • Wallichs Music Ci~ COSTA MESA PHONE 540-lllS SOUTH COAST PLAZA ' ' l SAVE 28% ON EVERY ITEM We are aga1A pleased tn otter to our old and new QIStomers the unerecendented opportunity to buy bea utiful SPOOE Imperial Earthenware at substan- tial savings off regular OJlen stoc k prices. Select tile place settings or pieces you want tor yourself or for gifting. Buy a complete new service or add to yoor present Spode dinnerware. Gainsbol'ough, Buttercup and C~lsea Wicker design on special in addition to those shown. Choose from these eight time-honored patterns and s:aYI! 28'l. durint this special limited time event Sale ends October 17 ! Billingsley Rose: five-piece place.stt· ''"'·reg. $15.9~ now $t1.l6, roor five.piece plact seltina• "'I· $63.BO, $44.64 ' Blu• Birdt fiVl·Piece place sett ing, reg. $18.95, now $13.56; four f1ve- pi1ce pl1c1 settings, reg. $75.80, now 154.25 Jew.I tmbos.sed. fiv•piect-.-plac1 settir.g, reR. $8.95. now $6.36: four f1ve.p1ece place settiPgs, reg. $35.80, now $2S.44 • tt&! ,/ ,, -eHINA • CRYSTAL • SILVER • GIFTS SOUTH COAST PLAZA • COSTA MESA • CALL 540·2627 • • • ••• .,. , DAfl.Y.PflOf J9 Personal Commitment 1-~~LEG~AL~~H~OT!~CB~~:l~~~Lll~llG~A~L~·~NOO'ICE~.~~~ _ LEGAL N$11'1Cll ....... ..... p..,. . .... .. ~ lllOTtce TO atlDl ... 1 Clllnl•KAn Ofll IWtllfetl CUTlfltUTI Ofll lutl•UI IWnt9 TO cal"""' ·'P rog ra ms l\lot CllTl•KATll W IWINIU IUHI~ COUlllT Ofl .,... fltnntotn MAMS •tn"ITIOW ..... ,.,.,....._, ~ W ,_ E -1•--1~,.,=~ I_,~~:.·~ is-an:~ STATt OP' ¢Mo""°"'"" "'l-n.-.-C.W •-critr' .. h ... :TM ~-t''I''' --~ ~ -·=·c~":"'== n 0 U g <ilKtlJlt ._ ~ •I ti1t ...... ,. Or TMI COUNTY ff-....... du«lllt • MIMM .. D k . ltld&I. Ulllt CMlklctlftl • M-.. •t ---,,., ... A-Um: eo.1. ,,.. C.tlfwfll• UNIM' llM .i; ""' ....... 1s1,_c. .. MIN. Ctl!Wt4 llNIW:"" fie., l tw.. Ht'WW1 flKll. C•HfMll .. """""' "'91W If LOlf"nA v t v ...... tl!lout fl"" ' f//I THI!_ PllOOOC: (OM-'f' t 1 • I• , t L U l U 111 AC H I l llTI-fl"" -flt Allf Al.A CAll:TI 1111 ftcftttow flm'I -ef VILLACI! JACOl$0M .ti l. O a I t TA V •ANY ..... :-.. I'll~~ .. IHOl!:Mo'Kt:lll. ~. •flll .... , wld flnll •• ~ .. "" f'Alll( CONll'AHY Ind "'-' .. 111 llnn II 'AC:Olto..; .. LoturnA v co1..: ... "" •.llowl119 --· -In 11111 c.:l~~l fllS..:E.~'f ..:.:::N .:.": =.-:::..-;:.~ :'.:"IOWI~ fllll ::-r: ~l":'n0 "!.':"'~M J'~ wn:;: Gl:OYI!, ffll n l09.9TTA v: ~ ' By JACKIE COMBS / " ao ti ~ b 11 folletw! I C..N \Jdcll9rcl 111 'llt Ovitt. '°"""'' OltOVI JACOelON, o--t. project e.xamlnts the Plu'il-youth believe Iba' flU'tber pol· lllcllerd TllOfMI c11-. JUf It.+ tflllt •I..,_, Mvh• Cltlnll Ti:'Mt""' • " • NOTICI IS Hfl:llY Gl'tllH to tM cal reactions to ....,,_ in or• t .. 1t-! Ill •• led If I"* Dr .. C.tt Mete, C..llf. :::: =""'~ =~ 'fn.::. = ,._1t"IT:J=. ~m:i:ltlOI\. Hewwt c:'~: ~ .. 1* ,,,.,_ WtY, crtdlton fll fllt ''-" MlmM ~ ..... ...., -~,_.!f-W'lll pr'even_ ~iJt:: ,.,_.. ... ~..... ._,,,. , ...... "t11e..,. tntttlM eourt,., IMdl, c.ufwlll•. . w-1111* c-1ruct1on c.. .. • H. ~..!. '" "'"'"' ""'"" <11'"";.-r._1111t,:;: Federal ivrurrams a 1 one dir ~ riiabilliate usen and adults aren't dedicated 'A it'" ttATW °'" CAL1F01:H1A, _..__ • ,,,_, "*"" "'"" "" .._.., DlltM .. ....,.. 14·..,.. --.......,._,iw., .......,.._ 8HCfl. c •• --.. ~-... '""'"'-=111 ... tMtt ~·• p-•1•· potential dd~· with w · .... -. cou TY· ' ~ tt ""u1••ol11u:d """' 9'tlct .,..., .Hck-.,... -*" .,....._ -cannot-cure the ills of ton-•v._u.: I n;~ .i. at.a.I J('"'th ""' N · 11 111r 1ttwrMv11 COOKSIEY o.t1l:d l....,_ 0.IM 5-ltlftbtf 17 !ti' flllfMdltkfll .. ....,,... •" th. knowledge •· ward ~ aue 1--.L. ..-.. prognuns, Oii Otll9w i. 1m....,.. mt.• NttllY ................ ., -·-·•· -••Y••' s11te 111-c1111w111&.-0rMw ~~ J. "· w1r;.;(lllMll '° .,...... tlliilft. ~ ""! .._,. temporary America. dru ... w uu ~,_ In ... -....... -_,, ... """""'"~ ....... ~ ... -• -~~--... •·•utif' "· of ·u and "" .... ...... .... .,.. HOWAl:D. us TOWll a1111 coun1rv °" a.t. ''· Im .....,. !ftt, • Hettrv e. o. w'"""""°" ,... .,...., ,,,_...,, '"' r _·_ Spe..... before the state I • &1\:.4 ica~n Cl ea _r_. 1t"1Mr:d "*"" ci.-"'-"' ••· ~ ...... ciilfDmll tH6I. w11ldl i. hMtc ht '"" for Mild 1i.tt. __ .,., 1tk11tn1 1Hud14•' PLUHKllTf • ~UNKETT, Affllr'llWI ., -.. th d ·'-t of pollution to IM fo bt fl'lt ,._ "'-"""' II 1M »1K9 If..,..,._, ti fM "'*""'"" '" .....,... Gen.Ill LW..-. ft tUIW ST.t.Tt: Of' CAL.1,0l:NI.... l ... '1! Ollw A-. P• OfltiCf llall: -•e-ol W I ~.__.,--PERSONAL CB~I.I ~NGE ·-i"'e°""ev~_..,t!me.n MllttcrlbM to "'9 wlltlln 1,,.tt111Mllf .nd ... ___. ..... , -.... ,. h ,. •·h•• .. ,.Id J~ tftOW11 • "" fo bt ffle ...,_ OftAHGE COUNTY· Ut, Huntln9t. hecfl, ~INwft'-i ""9. \'Vi"1 .... ~ omen n ...... 111~ tttltrol-measures were cited ~·••••"' "*"'" ..... ..-. ~~ w'ml;';.,.. .. _n:· '":;. 111t .....,. ........ --.,.. '*C11t111 ..,..., 11111111111 -o.r~. 1m.~. -· • NOi•,., ~~•~ ,...__.,,...._,_ • -hers-or-commerce S8turday--"Ho8pltaJ..J'lleil'th-lndicatu-:-=--..---111.'1:;\.L"°'; __.._ ... 1 u tOttlclaLS..L) ..,.~_.,_lttlt-Mltao. ~--~ ..... _lift__ .. ~.M ..._fol'...ul:d_Sf•I .. -~ llllMn ..... Ill 111 -""* Nr'IMllM ··----1 . • .. A ......... , ith -"'"Adon .....,,, as oer 1116'"J' .,.... ........ ways Miry • """"' o11t111 s.ttmber u. 1m Kllf9d """""· _,.. J P w1rmin.1on. IE G. w ...... ~ ..... ,.~;-wtt11lrrfllllt'-m •ui= Newporter Inn, Pat Hitt, s.......... w UKlJ.MI e, ao .... p of preventlon ...... .., "1lllle • CtlHOt11i. HATTIE HOGUE IOFFICl.1.l. SULl '""°"' 1:1d..,.if IHlld'lt .... ~ .. -\'Mflfhl .,. .. ,,,. flttf --..lllOtkM " lfll• ... '~··t aecre•·ry f ro~ therapy arul nther COmblna· • PrlndNI Ofllm In t:xecvlftx ~ -... '"'Ill /'Mrv K. "'11ry .. "' tr. ""'°"' w!me "'"'" ,,.. niMi«. .. ww WI or """''"' --~ -"ln deallng with Ulll'eSt and °"""' C'.Mlty " .. ..; ':;;...;., ~ ,,....., l'\lbllc -C.lltorftl• tutilUlbl:d " ttw Wlfhlll ln1tr.,,._, lllld ~LIS I . CAl:lt 1nd munity and Field Services Uons of rehabilitation." I be .u~--' l M' ... -iwlltl .,...,... COOkS•Y, SCHllMACH•L COllMAJf. Pt1rw:I ... otlkl Ill l(knowll:dMCI,,,.., -IMll flll -· JAM•• D. PlllHkt:tT DeooM-f ff I°' ' added "but the challena. IJ· campus,._ w.:iw1o1er, we m U I Nw, 14. l'71 MIHYAll:D a MOWAaD Ori-Cwnh' lnll,.ICtM. 11.t.LJ c:.t[~ .it"'-WI• f# ,,.... .... ent o ea .... Educa. • e.. be f1rm but Lhe taxns"tt PubH"*I or.,.. co.1 D•llY '11o1, , .. T-..., c_,..,. ..., MY ComrnlMlotl n-ir• -i. Mlrv E G•ltnb't 91111 ...,. """"' ....., lion and Well•-emphasized upon every member of the r-v °"· '-1J. -. 21, "" 1-.10 ..,_ .... -"""· '" 1m --• , ••• ,. ''''"'''' PLVHtCln • PLllJNCITT ... -.. • · " should not resort to hitting. the T91: Jo4'.fll1 • "utllllhM Oninot c .. 11 O•lff Ptlllt, Pr1n({,.1 otf'1W 111 "' Off.-,.,_. "Local citizenry community community. students where It hurts LBGAL N011CE Alftf'lwn..,. hlatrl• s..>ltmblf' 11. n. n •M ocw..r i. °"'"'' C-'V ,..., OMCll au "' groups a n d y~ung people lndicating that the rise 1n . • • · Publl~ O••!!.,. eot•t D111, ,.11o1. 1m , ... ,. MY commtt1kl11 l!~•lr•• """"•.,.. ...... c111. ,..... m"•l aUack such problems as drug incidence may be i~ in the pocketbook," sbe stat· ,.._,. oet Lu.,.; 21. 1m , ~ 1e.u.10 Ju"' 1, "" T4~ -:.-::m.--ed dding "When r c11tTl,.tcaTI 011 •U1•N•11 LEGAL NOTICE "utlll~M or-Cot1t D11tv PllDt ·--·· -..... te·-· 011 ... ,1101 drug abuse from new direc· be.rent in the "Pill Culture" • a • 8 n I Y PICTtTKt111 RAM• LEGAL NOTICE 11111. n. •· °"· i. 13.-1t10 1131-" Putlllol'll:d 0•11* c..ut "1,._10 I tod Mrs Hi kl l citizens deleat bond issues, T1lt IHllWll ... dotl cfl1Jrr 1111 II _. P.-U s.t. "· Oct. '" 13. '° t:io;'!~ -Reilly mtt. a_filr~ ~w a~el~ ~hot~ p~ they .pe~ the future of ~"Tm.' c';ff,;,z. ·~~ :;. ~i:; c111:T:::,AJ:,:' ~~M•ss. <••T:::Ti~~v4r' ~ ... .,, LEGAL NOTICE ·-----------to to r--;, I America. firm--• .t..a.c. U"HOUTEltY 1t'ICI TM ~ e. ~ Miff 1,. Tiw 111!:denltntoLdo _urtJrr ..,...Mt =-T"2Ht __ ~ LEGAL_!!____,~ mer resident of Or an g e pep up, go w Sieep, ose n-..ue the Presiderrtial 11e-"'-' 11141nrm 11 COl'llt'Oll:d"'...,. "''-' ~ ... • bull-11 1os Mlln 11 .. C9tlduetlnl • 11w1MM 11 ai•W. ~11 NO•~• TO c1t•o1TOtt .-.. knocked such problems as' weight, to handle the blues. n ..._..., . y Ins --..,_ -111 11111 • .,_ ••""' <Ntwwt lt«lll C.llfor!lll • .,,,.,... F""'-....._.. hldl. Cet"""11WI. ""*" 11H'11:tot1t cou1:T 011 TH• ~ to of the education budget, of l'flidtl>ct It. II fllllkl'n; "" flnlllou• """ MIM ,,, UNIQUE "" flcflllout """ II. m. of STAT• o" (ALIPOftHIA POii: <••T1,.1CA.T• OtJ •UllJflSS drug abuse, "The Pill Cul· She cited the pennissiveneM M Hill 'd th t d E111 ... w. 8oll!lo. "'" kltft W1Y, AltTISTl:Y •t'ld tflllt ..... """ •• -HS.Ml>fll'I'" of N.-t •!'Id t" 11 TH• COUNTY OP Oa.t.NO• PICTITIOUI MAM• -' " educal>0' n, s tudent un· and apathy of n•~nts ., n.A rs. sa1 e curren a • G.,.llltll ~-. c1111. IHIMll e1 ;,.. followlnt ...-.. wt1ow 111d 11rm 1, cotnllOllCI 11 1111 1o111w1n1 1111. ._.,.. Th• llndt••llftld ..... ctl(tlfY 11e 11 Qll• r-~ I.lie'. -:-: ..... U ' str ' b:i:-D111d Oclobif' S. 1'70 •· ... .,._ WhMI nemu !11 full Mid "IKu l &lo• ·• JOHH l KAS ... P ""-:d11Cllt11 I IMl11MH •I G'2 C.~ Or. &• t f h f lb be.I 1uuu.>1o1a on 1S essmg . uur El•l"' w. emno :r;:.;.:"n n:d l>lecn ti rHlOlllc• '" ol! ,...id.nc, ,,. "follow•~ ed. .... • • ...,."., .._ "'•"" a..cfl, C.llfol'lll&. un:dlf"""' rest and parenlal apathy but r.00 ?.r muc •0 you 's. re ~ gual education, vocational $TATE OF CALIFOll:NIA. l_,.; Cellill' us 511 Gui Ln N1 Hiii Jt, llllf"M!. IPI w. """lid.. NOTICE IS HEll:EIY CUV!H It 1111 nc1111oi.11 firm llllmt Of PltOFEISIOfrilAL attributed the rising unem-hon. Youth IS susceptible to training and the upgrading ol OltAHGE C9UNl'Y: ctn H. ,,,.,,.; Lu WUllkt. ~ E l-. ""''""'·Clo cr.clllon f/11 1111 ·~ --~I COUll:IEll:S ..... llllt Ml:d """ .. ~ I the disease of disenchantment °" <>ctatw s,. 1'10, --·""'. N«try ••YA;. y ··-• """"'II. D!Plllt. lf7t lftfl SI .• "''· 11111 •II ",..,_ 1'11Ylnt cl•lm• -11\Sf flll ..... ., 1111 fol ...... ----p oyment rate &!I "part of the · technical training "1be bill Pllflllc 1n ..w tor Miid 11m, ..,_r.., D•• 10:i.11 • ,.. ... ,. He'#tl0!1 ~ C•. Miid •"*" ••• ......,1,.., "' "" !Mm. 111mt "' 1\111 11111 ~ f//I ,....... • • Pr''ce we pay ·-pul the 1·d But they need adults to show • . r IPPH"fd Elllnl w. llelwtll 11-n"'.... • -a··, ... , Stww J. DOllMll, Mn"',........, ... "" WI!" 1111 ntCeUal'Y ll'lllldllrl. Ill lht flffk• folklwli ..., I • was vetoed because 1t a r to w t11e --...._ ntme 11 .ui.:r111-Mo;;; lv w1111.-, •-P.it. c1. ,... f//11111 clli"t of "" •birlol ..,ti, ... nvrl. w Eclwefd c . P...ic:ff". 121 XllMftt Aw. on inflation. them wrongs can be righted." exceeded the budget and " to Ille wt1"111 lllltrvmlllf encl ll•te et Clfffo•1111. orl!Olf Ctvnty: °'""' s.itt. ''-1t11 te .,,._, ""'"· wflll "" _,..., "" '· Lone BMcti. "IJM ·ii· I dru b Adults sjlould en•er the main-ec11-1tdMd.,.. -vltd,... 11tn11. 011·0ciomr 1, 1t10, bdoor1 ""' • Not•,.., Nell 11:. 1"'"'" -..c:lltfl to"'* v"""l•nM 11 1111 Dl'llc1 DetM 9"1. H. 1'11 ~ ml JOn n g a use • • -stressed· 'impacted area' pro-{Otlk1-1 St•ll • hblk: In ...... for .... stmJ Wllll\lllY HtnrY P. DIPHll ., lttf' •Hornws. WALZElt. WllMSTOCK, l!,,_nl c. Plrlltr programs have been passed," stream of the community, lh th -t' I Mll'Y IC. H'"l'Y ....... ,._, Liffltl"d C:ei.tw Mll'Y lv SaMY J. D•ltoll -MANION .. KING, INC .. -$Quit! kv«· ..... "'C.Hfonllt. She •'-ted. "But, il 1 had m y lend s upport to the govern· grams ra er an voca 1ona Hot1rv Pllllllc • C1Hforft!1 wiihQ, 11_11 to ,... .., ~ "" ""Diii ''=" Clllfoml•, O••fllf C01.1111Y: IY °''""' sv1i. *· INWl'tv H1111; or•• Cownf'I': WI and bilingual education." Pr1,.c11111 Dflkl ht w11ou ri."'" 1,,, 111tt1cr111e11 " "" wi1t1111 •·-r Sip!, ,,, 1m ~,. mt. • Not•,~, c1t11cim11 t1»12, wlllch " 1111 -.i.u "' 011 a.t. 21. 1t7' • .._..,. ""'' • ,....,., way no child in America ment, supply answers to Or1nt1 cevnrr '"'"llmlllt trld IJCll_._.., thtv ... ...... c "' •nd "" .... ''•"'· WtOM v 111111 ... 11 of 1111 uncll1"Jl1Mif Ill 111 """*"' Pllbllc "' .,... fw ulcl s111t. __ 11, • • .. i.. •l and ff Children not capable of at· MY C-l1lloll S::.lr• ICUft:d 1111-. ,_,. "'II It. 1,..,.,,., HMl'Y '· Htl1lnl1'19 """' "'•""' 11\:d lltct'tllt • ...,..,.,, ECJW•N c. Ptrbr .--n,.. _ would ever need a system to :yo~w1 s queswons . o er lending a four y••• college Nov. u. lfn (OFFICIAL SEALI ,01111,.11e, Vld So1111r J. Dlltell t-"mt w""ll'I ttur mon1t11 •"• 1111 tlrlt """'kt-19 111 llM --wr-."""' 11 wtieu""' guides she admonished -...... Publllllld 0no.-CoHt 0.111 p11o1. C•t11ert11t MldlMI • "" ...,._ wi-. ........ .,. 11o1111 11111 llO!kt. M flt ... w1111111 1n11""""" •M get himself O[[ drugs." The I • shouJd be rriven •YT'laoded hori-()cl, 6, 1.1. •• 27, lf71• 11J1·10 NollfY Pubflc<•llttn'lll ~-" .. "" ~...!..ntt~I llllll Ottecl S9'llfrlblf' 11, lt711 ~tit tl!ICVM:d flll - federal Programs .m has. s-AN ~•~LE 1>• -.r . " 'r1n<9"1 otnce Ir\ ' u--'""' MfTll, EMMA KASSOFI', tOFl'ICIAl SI All p ize C. I ~~lC zons through varied training.. °'""'" County (OFFICIAL SEAll t:~KVll'I• of "" Wiii ,,,.,.., I(. HtfWY P revention and rehabili''•lion "The older generation must •• skilled k ••· will • _,. Non-"' .. __ , .. ,.. , •• ,,,, ftEIA H. CAHEm of""' •tllvt lllfMll Hm:dlrlt. Not.,,. Pvt111e<.i..,,.. I.a • n.:. wot ers un;y ~ '-D """i'ij'n-~ Hol!ll'Y ,.ubllc. C•tl...,.,11 WAlHft, W•INITOCk. Pr111dffl Oflic.I In she said. An HEW research set an example. How can become 8 boOn to the econo-•-PubllllMcll • 0r.,... c...i o.uy ,.1111 Prlrlc.INI omai in MANION a "'"' INiC. o...,... '-"' Clipp ed Win gs Trade Work for Soci abili ty Regular business will be put Corona del Mar home of Mrs. aside when prospectjve, new Richard Slaytoo. and continuing m e m b e r s . gather to sip champagne They will be greeted by f\.1rs. punch during the annual mem· Harold Madsen, area vice tierililp tea Of Cilpjled-Wlngs. -l""Sident. -Any funner -UAL 1be former United Air Lines stewardess is eligibJe for stewardesses wUI meet at a membership, and may contact p .m. Thursday, Oct. 1, in the Mrs. Madsen at 633-2411. The Los Angeles chapter is Art Tou r Arranged La Jolla Museum of Art will be the destination ot The University Gallery Associates when they open their schedule of museum visits Thursday, Oct. 8. divided into rive area groups including Orange County, City West, South Bay, Pasadena and Valley. Eacti meet s monthly in members" homes, and the entire chapter joins for luncheon meetings, social and funding events on an area rotation basis. ~1ental retardation receives support from the org \ion's 35 chapters through area and national dona:Uoa&. During the naUonal con- .... ~ l• .. " '"' 1-...: Of'I,,.. C-'Y «111, """'1Y DYM, fllttl,.. My CommfqJolt lutra my, she explained. ClltTllllCAT• 011 I VllRISI ........ .. ... • ...... ,u My COt'MllMllll • .,.,... 9-w MIMI. Cl! ...... ,.,, New, 2'. 1112 lllCTITIOUI tlAMI Sip!, 14, ltn • Tilt UlJ) 1U-l1oll ~ Publl"*I °''"" (oat Delly l"llol, ECONOMY ST"BLE The llndlnlolllll c1o11 ct'tllrv ht i. ~ LEGAL NortCE Putinl!MC °''"" c ... 1 Dlll'f Piiot. Altenlrf•..,. •..vtrt• ,.., tt, oct." 1i. a."" 1m-11 t'I. Cludl ... 1 bl.lllMll •I • IE. 17111 llr1et, S..""1W 15.. 22, 2' a!lll Octolltr 6. Pllbllolllcl Or111t1 COit! Dellr 1'f1Dt (·17!11 Commenting on the eco~ ~::!! ~~; c.1~1·Mor~i(t. P.-.e "'' 1101•10 ,._"'· tt. :w. 0ct. " 11. 1m 114,.,. my. Mrs. Hilt said, "'Tb e STATE INVE;;.=.NT co. _.""' 11111 .c••T~il:~;~" "!:~Hiii, LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N<mCE LEGAI; NOT'ICE temperature. respiration and ::.1s"'~1j'1,:' ~"°"':.~.:= ~":'"~ ":f~ty~n"AC:: ......,, NOTica llN'ITIMO •tDS ,.._ all vital signs are good and ll II followl: N-' ... di. C1tlfornll, und" , ... flt· Cll:Tll'ICAT• Of' •UllMlh. Jfolk t 11 ..... etw 1lv1n 111111111 9"'f'd.. Cl•TIPICAT• Oii l llSIJtlU. l b 'll · I I th · le l Tt.unn1n L. GrtYti, 1101 Dotllfll" llllov1 Hrm "'"" el ltAG ALLEY Ind J'ICTITIOUI HAN.a Trv1t'°" of 1111 Coul Co;'u"'1111lrr (615-,.ICTITN>UI tu.Ml s a I Zlllg n Ce y-e in r~ Tirrece. c-• ut Mir, c1111. '"-' 111d firm 11 comNHd el Ille ro11ow. TM u1111on1111111 dotl Cll"tifr tw-11 con-Dl1tr1c1" O••lllO County, c1111orn11, will TM undt!"•lillltC doft ctrtltr tit h ~ rate is easing down and infla· O•IM Odobtr J, ltl'O ln1 ...,.,on, ""°'' n•IM In tun •nil •l•c• 11uc1111t , 11u11ne .. 11 nt w. ltlll. C01t1 rtcel ... 1ffltcl bid• v1 1o l :CIO '·""·• :d11ttlM • M l,.... 11 ll.U Sau1ft Cont . Tllu""•n L. Gr•Yt1 ol r11ld11K1 II •• lollow1; M-. C.llfornl1, ~I'd., ""' tldlllous tlrm Wfd111JC11y, OdDber 21, lt10, II It!.-Hlth-. U.u11• BM<h. tlllforni.. ulllll•~ t1on seems to be under con-STATE OF CALIFOll:NIA, LISI H••vH1er, 205\11 So. F~U•• Ave .• IMIM"' D .. H SEl:VIC& Cl!NTEtt. •!lid Pvrcllll1l119 °"'· el $1ld Kllool :dltlrlcl "" flcllllou• nrm -"' UP Pft0H1 trol .. She believes consumer ORANGE COUNTY~ LOI ""'''''· C1llf. t003' fllll ~ firm I• ""'-' "' "" ltlltw· loellld ., IJ1' ~..... Awnue, c;o.11 .... 11111 uld """ h com,OMlll .. It!• ' . . °" Oci'ober 5,. ""· bttw. m1, • NOlltY 0111Cf ""'· 2t, 1970 1.,. -wlwlM """" Ill fvll ln:d •lie» Mal, Cllllornll. •I whtcll ''"" 11111 Did• fotlowlr4 ..,..,,,, wlloM -... tun •Ml spending and homebuilding Public 111 1rld for u ld s111t, ..,SOMllY Ll11 H1...,11loir ol! resk!MCI b 11 to111 ... : wut bt Pllbllm -*' ~ rMd tor· ..cace "' n1111tnc1 11 •• folkl'n· Hiii• lso . kin -f"llll Titurwwn L Gr ....... _,, to $11!1 Of C•nfornl1, La A119tlet Cev11ty : Afllft J. D1111. U5 N. WMI' St .. 0 I AG H 0 ST IC It AD I OGltAPHIC Johll ,...,. Abt, UN TtlnPll a are pte g up. ,,,. to bt fllt .,.,_ w11oM llllM ls Oit $tllil. 2t, lf1t. btfor1 IM, I Noltl'Y ...... tlllm. MACHIN&, Of"•Mt C011I Ce1'"9. Drlv1, LllllllMI lffdl, C1llfonll1 AJthN•nb unemployment is 111111Crlbld tD 1t11 wllhlft I~ 111111 l"Utllk. Ill 111111 for 11111 Stli.. --ll'f O.!M s.tpt, tt, lf7'1 All bkh •'9 fo ~ Ill .Cctr114il'tCI wllh tt>e 0.tecl ~btr :lJ, 1f1' ~. . .O_.._,illd !It uewtld "'9 ........ ....... ... Liu H-"r .._ II nM to Alltll J. °"" INlrvc:lloM Ind C"'411lollt a 11 4 JoM Pt!tr Abt continuing to r!Se lrom~t.b-e cOffictel ,.., ~ ~ ~" ~r1-.i Stttt--ll..c.utornll. oan..cM1tJ:_ 5Plclt1c11i-w111c11 ,,, ,_"" file 1nd "'"of c11ttom11. <><•-ClllfltY: 5 t d · J 1. .. -t Miry C" Hfftry lo Ille Wltllln frMiirvlfttnl 9rif ~ Oft S1J1f .. 1f11, bifor9 !M, e """"" nMY be MCVrtd Ill tlll Dl'llH ef Ille O!I SIPlll'l'lbtr :lJ, 1'70, Mforl IM, I percen unng 01u-..n I Holll'Y 'pl,lblk.-Glllffillr"" eel .,,. Uteirllld "" ........ Pvblk. lilt ....... fir .. 111 ., •••• ..,_ .. y Pvrdwlllne APl!ll of llkl IClm 11111rlcl. Hol•l'Y l"vbllc Ill ..... !or MN Slitll. }965 state Of the union speech, Prl11elHI otlkl"ln ($EAL.) ........... Al1'11 J, D1111 k-It m• to €1Ct1 biddtf" 1"'Ull lllllnlll with hit bid I ...-.fly .._,.. John ....... Abt, . . . .. or-c-!Y ""-t.o.111 bt "" -IOI! wt>oM MIM I• 111blctlbld c11hltr'1 chldl. qtll!llN cl\tdl, ., llkl· ~ to -t.· Ill "" --........ Mrs. Hitt considered 1t part My c-1111o11 IE11Plr• Mr eenwnt111en l11Plrt1 " fM w1111111 "''''""'"" •Ml e<Mowlllle-der'• band m.01 HY•b .. to "" •Mr ef !Mime i. 11111Krlt.1 '° lllt wllhlit 1,.. of the transition from war to PttbllllllM N~.:_ 1'i!..t D•ltr ,.., •· MA~'":O::'e~••a. (g.,"f,g~EA~ -· ~":..J:·~~:''i:''!n = ~·= ;:,."':'!,,.,.. __ ..,... he "'""" peace." lnilation Joss of man-Oct' ... 13.-z .11. 1'11 1...,.. ... ..,..., MAll:Y K. lllNl:Y .,, .... flv1 llfWlll (Nl Of"" -tlld ... (OFFICIAL SEAll -I ' l-" ltM ~ BIW~ 19111 llS Nol•rv J'ubllc • C1tlflrll!1 11Hr"'ltl 11111 fM bkllltr will fl'lttr illfo Elall E. ~ power, unemp oymen are ex-Lei "*'--Callttntl• •11 Prl11e1N1 Offlao 1n tr.. ••-"-·Can-Ind-If 1111 --1s Httlrv Nlllic.c.tlfilMll ceedingly painful for an Y LEGAL NOTICE .. 1.11111111111 °''~""*'c-t 0111r 1"11ot, Z'v''t'!mC...°rs"11~ E••lrn ;:.:;'::t~0 !~ C:.:C,~ ~..:= ~ ~~.=-~=~ 1t1 administration." Od. i. J3, 10, 11, 1m 1102•70 Nov. ,._ 1tn lt!e dltdl wm ti. IWl•JIM, or 1n 111e e11e M1 cemm1111011 Eu!r11 P.,Jlftt l"wbllllled Or111111e Ct11t DlllY l"llol of • bond, Ille f\111 l\lm tlllrlOI wllJ bt AWUf1 t. 1911 ~ ClltTIPICAT• 011 AU NDOHMINT Sepl, "· Oc:I ••• "· 20, lt10 Htt·1G c-n1• lorl•Ut!d fo ••ld ICllool :dlllrltl. l"Vbll1htd Or1Mt CO.st D•ll'f "!lot. Oii •USIN•SS. LEGAL NOTICE No blddtr m1v wlllMl••w hl1 bid tor • le11. tf, Oct. '' 13, :ia, IOI 11U.J9 l"ICITtTICHJt; HAM• Nrlolll of lorf'l·flve UJI ,,,,, 11t1r ltl'I=============~ Tiit vrlderil1111d, DA't/10 P, CAUDILL, ClltTll'ICATI Oii" CDlllPOl:A"-PO LEGAL NOTICE :dllt set tor IM -111.,. IMreof. ,.... Ctrtlrr flllt lie 11 tbllllcllllll1111 I ...., ft lM B01rd of Tr111tw.i '"'~rvn 9"' Mlelu 11.• E11I 11111 Stl'lfl, SUlll ~I, TaANIACTION OP •ut1H•1s UHO•lt arlvl!He (If relecll"' 1n1 1M 111 blll1 tr Cotti ~ C.llfllr11i1o llrlllllr lhl fk-PIC'TITIOUS HIJllll ,._..,. 10 w1!vt 111w lrr11911l1rltln o.-Iii· lmoul firm ,. .... ef MOTEL4tt()lill£· TM U1111tr11911111 C--•lltn lloefi C•llTll'tCATI 01' .COlt1'0ftATIOlil tOl"rMlllln ,,. 1ny 1i1k1 or !ft lhe •10dlfll, STATE INVESTMENT CO. tt'ld flllt uld her"ttrt ter"tlfr fh.11 lt h CMiluctll'll • lttll POI: TUHIACTIOlll OJ' BVSIHIU HOltMAH £. WATSON firm II _,,... If h fll~ .,...._, E11ttl llllllMU tt 2'91 CM'llllO 111! UHDl l. Seel\<, lolr:d If TfU$fffl p.JlllS ..,_ -Ir\ f\ltl 111111 pllcit 41f r'""*'6:i EllffUI, CUlllTIM BNdlo Clllflf"lllt PICTITtoVI RAMI Publl'llell 0<111" Cotlt 0111, Piiot, Od. C•ltTIJ'ICAT• W COltll'OtlATHNt NII ti a1 tollclwt: uncltr tr. flclltloln llf'll'I .......,,. If THE UNOEllSIOHED COltl"ORATIOh f, 13. lf1' lllJ.10 TRANSACTION Oii" •llSIRllS llRDllt .. • ' C "Ill "''. I .. ~-CK.t.ltLll!"S DA'tllUON ltEAl TY 11111 "'91 -•·-"'' lllOll It II _..wc_11"' • l'ICTITIOUS lllAMI v • • • • ,.._..,. ulll firm '----' "' tht f11111-1111 llwl~-;;,· ~ Sttll 11 C•llferlllt COlll1t'I" LEr " NOT!,... THE UNDEftSIGHED coaPOl:ATION ~ ~ t'~'· ~•111n. ..,_ ..,.1~1 "*' tf el OrOlllll In lilt City .it ~ 8e•ch u.tU.o "'"" don lltrtbY cttl"' lhaf fl I• CM:dvclln1 • Davlll p, CIUdlll bllllMsl fl .. follows: 11 ., Dovlr Ortv• llNln" "" flctltlOUl T..... O\lllMH ........ ''" W"f!::l'1f DrlYI. CllllllfY el Ti.I'-N1mt ef COlfPOr1tlon1 Ch1rlt1 D1v1uon llrm IMlmt af GIC COMM•ttC1i.l a. IN· SUPRltKtR COIHIT OP TNI Suite !I?, Nl'Wl'Cll"f IOlch, C.llfol""lt "'"""' 11111"' Callfll<llll c-trvcll«t, Inc. DUITRIAL llltOPEltTIES INC. •1111 11\it ITllT• O" CAlll'OltMIA l"Oll 1111 llclfllout """' ....... "' PtONl!!l!lt °" OdllbM" t, ''"" ..... """ • Netm '"lldptl !Ille•, If l111ln1N~ '6111 Mid firm " comltOltd ,;, "" followllll TNI COUflTY 01' 011:.1.N•• CONSTRUCTION co_._,lftd._"" .. w """' l'Vblk Ill end "' Mid Sltlt • ..,...1.., b,i=,,,c1a hlNl 1, (wblrwne IHdl, _,loll, whOM .,lnclNI •IKI of ..... ~'" II COll'INllCI -!hi """1119 _._.11an. ...,..,... Dnl:d P, CMlllU~ K-.. -WITNESS ltl lllrllll 11111 11'!11 111y of llwl-'9 u tofiow.: T It-HOTICI 0 11 HIAl:INCI OP P•TJTION =·,.-l11CINI pliao If llu•I-II 11 -.1111111--wlloMM!MlslVbK!'fb-AU'IVll 1t10 Gl:EAT SOUTHWES CO POtt OIUTNOl:ITT TO •Xl!CllT"I PlriNEElt ltOOF .I.HD SHINGllE LEGAL NOTICE The associates will meet at vention, Los Angeles received 1:30 a.m. at Fuhioa Island the 1!16if.70 large chaplor and travel by chartered b~ charity award. Barbo!' Schodl for the tour. Ethibitions to bei in San Pedro receives suppxt viewed are Modern Sculpture from the five area groups. from the Palm Springs collec·.1;==================== lion of Mr. and Mrs. Ted ~ loledllle wlltil11 ln~n.li'l'lftll 11111 HAMf OF COltl"OltATION: Clllrta r:~T~O:::..!l°c!V::-T:llElllo Ari· DRl!D OJ' TltlllT OH al!Al PltOf'Rlt· COMPANY, INC .• 1$01 We1ldlff Drlvt, -llld N e.iieculM -· DtYI-C-trucllo!>. Inc-. DI~· StPtemW It. int TY. Suitt SU, NIWPOff B1lcll, C1llf.,...le, (OFFIC~~~ se:l~eodl Cll1rloi1 0.YIUOll, !SEAL>° E'tl•t. ., WILLIAM ,, SALYEtt. WtTHESI ,,. 1111111 "'" 2Sfh .. , ,,, Nr:>t"::V ,;ubl1c. l 111,.,n11 :r::'t~1D•vluon. Gl:EAT SOUTHWEST COll .. OltATION ~~;~E rs HEREBY GIVE N Tfl.ll Seplemr:ro~~-ltOOF ANO P•lnc-lNI Of'llc• 111 .S.Cr•l•l'Y J. Al'loll AllUP H11111 J , ltlh:hle, II eitc:utor of 111d SHtMOLt:·COMJ'ANY. INC. Weiner aad paintings by James De France. FollowiJ1g the viewing they will lunch in La Valencia Hotel. Mrs. Patrick Cory i s coordinating the m u s e u m tours with assi.Stance from Mrs. Thomas P. Wilder. Information may be obtained a .t the UCI OaHery officl!, 833- 6610. or School of Fine Arts. ~15. Class Reunion I See by Today's Want Ads e Plush doublf: deluxe mo- bile hOme for sale. rt's tumishf!d and on the bay- lront for only $14,7SO, No- o~ can afford to pasg this beauty up, L~ll~ C_,J'11n I!~ STATE OF CALll'OaNIA STATI! ~1?/!°l:As;c'"1"' e1l•lt, hPJ fllld herein 1 p1llllon IOI" 111 (COlt~llATE llEAL) ,J r"''i "' COUNTY Of Ofl:ANGE ) 11. County ol TirrlM ' Ordtr 1vlhorllll\f •1111 dlr1c11,,. 1111 pefl. Geor1t M, Tlllildler, ll'llblh,.::' 2. '12 C 1 Otll ,.11111 Oil 11111 17111 :dn ef Au.ult, lf10. btfere °" ~ It, 1,7t btfol"• "" 1 fklnlr fo e•1KVl1 • deed (If 1rv1t ln!On Prnldt"nl Oct .. 13.-20. ~" -y laa-li -·. NolOry Plltlfk: In Ind'"" ..... c-Not...., l"vbllc IOI" llkl c;.,,,., .,,,, Stitt CIJl•ln n•• "°""" 1tt111lld ... l..ltVl'lll STATE OF (AllFOltHIA, • ' ,., ...... Sl110, rMkll .. tl\el"tln, dul'f COll'I-"''°'*l'f ·-·'" J AllOll AIWll ~ l•edl ~ ..... c-rr c • 11 'I. n I . COUNTY OP ORANGE, ... mlsllo!llll e!l:d -""""UV •-•!'Id of 1M to be Ille AIJlshnl S«rlllfY of 1111 ,....,...:.C,. tD w!>lclil' 11 11'1..s. ,,,; Ori flll1 2Jlti "'' "' StPlenibtr, A.D. LEGAL NOTICE Clllrt" O.v11to11 •1111 Elltn C. D•vl-corpora!IDll 11111 IXl'Cllfl:d "" wllt!ln 1~ f\lrlhtr ,1rtkul1n, •rid 111•1 1111 time lfld lt70,. _...,.. mt • No!1rv PullUc In llrd 11-fo ,,,. I'll be 1111 ""11dtnl •nd ilr'llmtftt °" Mlllll "' "" co•-•lklll al.ct Of llHrllll "" ••mt h11 bteft HI fw 11l:d C-'Y ....,. 11111. nlMrne 11·--,-,-,-1-,-10-,-.. -,-.-.-.. --.-,-1--~,..!~~lnol! ~r::' =11":"\:! "'9•1ln Mmlfd, •lld Ktnowttdtfd to "" fer OCl!IOer 2J. 1t10. 11 t:.>o 1.m., 111 Ille ::.=:';11:U!~c;:"~ M "';h!;';• COi"JIOi'llkwt .,,.,.11,. MITllCI, 1 n id 11111 sudl cOl"llOl"lllOll ••tcvllll lhl ttmt. covrtr"""' or Oe!l••lmellf Ne. 3 of 11111 k-ll ID m• to bf "" Preikienl f//I It!; S~~~·~.:=:.:-·:.~i:.i:~~ft ldlllOWlellted to ""' !hit llldl WfJ'llrl lltn ISEALI cou", II ,_ Clvlt C"'lltl'" Orlv1 Well, Ill torPOr1llon tll•I utculld flle wtrh1ll In· " .... -IJ."Klllld 11\t ••me Metr!lu W•r:d1 , ,. • ''' tl>I Cll'f ol S1nt1 A111, C1IUornl1. Jlrwment "" bth•ll of .,,1 cor-•rleft • t. , • ..,. ITNEIS ' ....... ottl I I Nol•l'Y" Publ < n I r 1 Dllld Octobtr 2. 1'10 th·-' Ill .. -... NOTIC• 01' f11EAa111• 01' Pnn10M w m' I c. _,, eavnrr Ind Slllr w E IT 0 N. ... .. n Mm ' • ec ' Ill " "" J'Olt PIOIATI! Off WILL ,t,JtD PCHI: (SEAlJ -T.nru ' · . • J H "'91 lll<h r:oraor1tloll IXttvltd mt"'""'· Ll"TI1lltl T•fTAMnfTAltT Vll:GINIA D, WIHElNGl!lt ...,.,.111\ed Or ft9e CDltl Diii~ l"llOI JOMJt CC~!!A'i1_rt. I" WllM11 Wl\enol, I l'ltvt hereunto 1et E lllt "' EDWAllD " HT H 0 Hy NollrY Pllbllc • (1lllONll1 • • -ll'IY "'"" '"" •lflxld nw Dl'llc.lal -· 1111 ool11:tt Dec ... '•l11e1HI Offiu II\. $ ... 12, 2'. Oci', ., ''· 1'10 17.,.,. nN WHIAIN ''"" 1111111 .., 11., ..... ,..., 111 lt!ls unlflcalt flf1t •tit¥• ' '' ' Orll!Clt COVfli'o' ' l .. AnOllll. C111for1le ,_. wtltlel aa<'n!'i~ OC:~tt:~g:~~~ ~~H• ,:';! Mv Commluto.. Eulrta LEGAL NOTICE T•I: nu1 1n..au1 fOf"Fl(IAl SEAL, tloll lvr ''°"''' .t wlU in:d for" lllUll1CI Ill Jvnt It, lt7• A...,_., .. l"llllllMr EHlllll' W. JordM Lei! .... TtSllm!fllltY te 1111 "'llklnt'r. PublllJ'ttd Or1nve CeMI O.llw Piiot, lllOTICIE 01' Tl:lllTll'I SALi"· Publllllld or ..... Cotll 0111~ •ilol, NDll.., Pvbllt-C•tlfOffll• •lltNftCI to Wflltll " midi fvr fv""" Od .•• u . 20. 11, 1f10 1aw-10 .. -.. Oct'. s. '· 12, 1'70 1t2l-7D Prlric!p1I Office In "' I ' T.I. . ,. I Or1M1 Collrlly P• cu 1r1, •!Id 11'1•1 11\e ll!llt •nd 'llct On 'flltJCllY, Oclobtr 13, 1'10 •I 11;00 M' Commr""" 1:.,,, .. of l!Hrll!CI the -"'' bMfl ... for LEGAL NOTICE A.M .. PFS CorJtOl"•lltll "duly 1Pl'Olntlll LEGAL NOTJC'!i APrll 2 "'' • Trade Jns. New & used octot.r n. 1m, •I t :JO '·""·• 111 "" Tr"'"' VIMltr •nd pUr•u•llf lo Oc<fd " It.a.rt l T1111hc111r Class of 1950, Hunting1on bikes tor your old one'• • ~~~ ,:' c~·= ::'"' ..::.i~.~ 1UPlll:IOR COVltT Oii' TMB ~r:' =~"'!':" ~.:!. .. K~:.i:. MOTICI IN'tl1Tlllf9 l lDI Ull W11idtff Ortn, 1111111 111 Beach High School will gather ""City ef Sin!• An.. C1llftr11I•. ITilTI OP CAllJ'OltflllA J'Olt llulbtflCI ...... wit• Ind recorftd' De<:«rlbtr Notlc111 lleretry ........ ""' 1111 lelnl ot = flldl. Ca/""1111 in the Disneyland Hotel Satur-1·3-10 speeds for sale. O.ltd Oclobw 5.. 1,111. TNI COUNTY Of' OllAN<ll! •• 1N1" lnltr ...... DM 1 ..... IM5' .... T•Ullttl"' Ille Co.it c-11n•rr Col!Ht Publllllld <W•nt• COllt D1Uy Pllet W E., St JOHN, No. A-6n10 N1 o1 Otllclll 1teconl1 In !Ill olllce ef 1111 Dlllrtd ef or111" COVflly, C1llfGrn1,, wlll S.,I :rt Oct &. 1J 20 1m IN-7' day, Oct. 24, for its 20th ye ar COl/ftrr Cltrll NOTICI 01' HIAl:INO 01' PIETITIOll CeunlY aecordlt of °''"" CounlY. recet .... JHltcl blllJ .,.. to ll:OI ....... • • • •• reunion. Reservations, which MUl:WITZ. NUll:WITI • 1t•Mltt PH P•OIAT• 01' Will AND l'O• Ctllfo<"nl•. WILL SELL AT PUIL1C AUC• WtolnnN,, October U, 1t1', •I "" e SayyouneedglMSes! New ..-S2ll:d Slt'ett L•n••s Tl!ITAMINTA1tY T10N TO HIGHEST ,100ER FOil CASH Pvrc11111"' °"''· o1 .. 111 Kllool •t11rk1 LEG.,. Ncm~ are due by Saturday, ()ct, 10, If--' BMcll, C1111trlll1 tuiJ £11•11 Of FllAN l . 8EllMAN, lkl f'1w1ble el JlnM f/f 1111 Ill l1wllll ,,.._v loc1lld 11 U70 Adami Av1nut, C"I• ~ \,J:I be d 'lh M J k Tuco tele&COpe with a tri. Cn4J 41HIH F•AN L, '· eElt/AAN, FttAN L. ot.,,. Ulllltll ll•fn) 11 lht IOlllll (ll"(M'l0 Ml$1, C1llloml1, •I whi(h """••Id blc11l·------------- may ma e WI rs. ac Pod and Barleu lens and A!Mmm fW Pll!lMMr PINCKNEY •Ettl.v.N 1n11 FltANK l. ..,1r1ric1 t• "''old county u:111rt"°'-'11, 200 will bl PUblltl1 _ _, •nd read for : 1'..nat John R. ( R 0 Smar y Publl11\ed Or1Me CHI! D•llJ Pllof, IEllMAN, DKNHil. Bleck, Wt•t 6th, S.1111 AIMI. C•llloml• 111 J'ILM "llOCESSING FOil GOLDEN Cll:TIPICATI 01' IUllHlll, caJTYinlr case. fiOO power, Dcl ... r, 13. 1f10 1I0-10 NOTICE IS HEll:EtY GIVEN Thlll r1"11, tlllt tnd lnttrnl COllV"M fo ltld WE~T COLLEGE. ,.ICTITIOllS "AM• Fredericks) Freeman, 705 Jay --------------IFlltST AMERICAN TttUST COMl"ANY -l'telll lw II""""' 111d DHcl "'Tr111t AU blll• •re to bt '" IC(ordll>H wUll TM vndflr•l•nM ioe5 cerllfv"' 11 c.111- clrcle, Huntington Besch, <'!~ LEGAL NOTICE "'' tllld htrttn • "1111tn ter •robtlt o1 In tr. ~,_,,., 1r11111ec1 111 .. 111 Cwnty 1t11 lflflructlllnl •nd c-111-11111 :duc:tlnt • bvllneM 11 111110 E. CM1t ...,... W111 If 11\t 1~ decell!'llt 11111 l'Cll" .,..,, .U•lt MscrlbH M: SPtclllc1tlon1 wllkh 1r1 now en flit ,...., Hl"1w1,, H•WPOrl lffctl. Clllf .. vn:dtr 11568. ----~===========,,;===============dl/ .. ~ncf<:;•~·~·~•~NYf,•~•r'''~ .. if1'1•~·~"°='~·~•/ 111v•t1t• of i.i~., 1es1 ...... n11rv """°" L91 '" o1 Trld Ne. -,m, es.,_.,.,, m•' bf 1ecurtc1 111 tl\f o111t1 ..-"" .,,. 11c1111ou1 """' ,,.,,,. " co.ur :-H TMIE S I Off ALCOHOLIC fo "'l"-r• relererte'9 I'll whkll 11 11'1-61 •"'"' r..:orlllll In loolo; 11,, -) to ,vrcti11!111Atf'illo111141 Ki-I :dllhkl. HIGHWAY·JAM&OllE! SElt'tllCE C&fll. 0 ~ GI AL fvr 111/"llltr Ntlkll'llrt,.,..,, Ille! IN time JI iflcl~IVI el MlK1lll1116Ut M11>1, Elth bllld.r m"'l 1ubmll with hit bid I TEil 11111 11'111 .. lid ltrm II ~el r I T he Spanish have a word for it. arid we have a THOMASVILLE price for it \ CASA GUHDE, a n__. Tliom1svillt tnftrpr•f1tion of tr1dition1I s,.nish 1tylin9: Whil1 this sp•ci1I offtr l11ts you c1n d1cor1t• yo11r bedroom with CASA GllANDE and all lts Sp1nish gr•ndtur. lnclud•d for this unu1u1I prict ara • l1rgt 74 " triplt dr11str with l1r9• m•tchln9 mirror, ind kin9·1izo ch1 lr-b1clr he1dbo1rd plu1 two l1r9• night 1tand1. Oon't--mi1s this unu1u1I Thom11Yill1 valut. CDmt (AJllO dlntng fumiture to match) , .. CASA GRANDE tod•Y· ~RTIN l!U RNITUR E ••• s595 lfftl!'Mt ...... C....M'" ,.._ .... llJI \ 1865 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA Phone 548-5131 a1-...1tA S ...... ..., 11111 ,11m"' ""'lnl the .. me 1'111 lleln t-dt If 111d Dr•"'' C_ty, cnlll1r'1 d>tdl, cel'llnld dlKll:, or bid-Ille fotlowl"' penof! wMllt ntlTIOI 111 fllll ""' ' ), lt10 ttl l'Cll" Ocleller 2S, lt10, 11 f :XI 1.m .. 111 C1lllor""· 11t:r'1 boncl mlOt P•v•.,,. 1o Ille order f/f •n:d 11t1ct of ""°111tl!Cfl b u folkl'n: Te WllDftl 11 ""'' Clll'ICtrn: IPlt covttreom Of rn.i1ttmtnt N1, l ol S1ld 1111 wlll M ml:de. lltJI wltlloul 1111 Cot'! CCll"ftmunlty Colltt• Ol1trk1 John W. Willi.. 1'°6 $al'lllef1H1 °'" Sublecl to lnu1rw:1 ol 1111 llClllJe •P. 111d COl.lrl, •I 700 Civic Cenlt• Drlv• CDYlfllnt or w1rr•n1V, nprtu It lmtllecl, Botrll of T•U91"' Ill 111 •mount not ltll Cor1111 111!1 M••· (tllf, •fled tor. ncillct I• htr.tir 1lvtt1 111•1 flle Weit, 111 1111 Clff ot St~I• A111. C•llfornll. r111rt11n1 11111. l>Olt*Ulofl, or 1n· t111n !Ive l'tl"c•nt u~•I ol 1111 11H11 blcl •• 011td s .. 1. ,., lf'I 'bridlrslpntd ,,_es te tell llcellolle Dtled Oc:loblr 2, lfl'O cumbr1f1Cn, to pay ttit. r.,...11111,,. "tin-1 1111r1ntee 11111 tht bidder will tnt1r 11111 Jolin W. Wl~ll btvlr..., 11 1111 .,,.,..., ... , llflulbtll II W £, ST JOHN. cJNI 111111 el ffle ncill 11eured llY' $1kl flll anlltOlfd CCll"llr.ct I! 1111 11m1 b SltN ol C1Urornl1, Or•t11t COUii!¥: follewl: C""""" Clerk. DOid f/f Tf"\111, wllll I""""' 11 111 ttkl 1w1rdt!d to hlm. In Ille evenl Of l•llure lo 0.. SOii. 21, lf10. bttort nw, • Not1rv 7'CIOO North NIWllClrt IMJ, COl!t MtM WITTMAR a SCHMI DT llflll tl'O'lhff:d. 111¥1nces.. II '"'' \IMlf" Ille ellltr l11lo WC11 COll!r~t. 111t '~ ef ,ubfk In 111d tor 11141 Stitt, -""' P\l'"IUlfll._ to~111'L_h lnttlllloll, 1111 Ullo •Y1 WM. Y, kltm• ltnrlf ti Mid Dttd .. Trwt, fMI. dllrttl ffle cl\Kl wlM bl florftllld, or lit 111t Ull lpPHred John W. Wlkll ·-It nM le d""llMd ,. -l'flill to 1111 Dlttlrtmlnl 1lf'I W9'tetltl Ol'lw 1rld t')tMllKI el "" Tl'li'dN 111111 ef tlw o1 t bo;id, Ille !vii -lllfftlf wlM M M fl'lt --.,._ -11 111llllcrlllt<f ot Akeftollc ..... , ... c.,, ...... "'" luutnct .._. ... 11. Ctllf. rrv111 Ufftecl •Y 11\:d OOl:d ,,, TMI. llrltlll:d .. 111d 1dlool :dl111"k l. lo "" wlllllll 1,.1"""1enl UICI .ciu-•· -11'1' lrlMtlr of Ill •ltollolk: llfttr•OI Tll1 17'•1 ..... nn Thi bMl'lkltrY ~ Miii DNd " .... blcld•r 1'1¥1' wJllMlttW Ml bid '°' • fd Ill fl!.Ci.11111 tr. ........ Hc"'w (or llcell-1 for,,..... l'l"lmllll al A!fwMrl flf'1 "91""-Trvtt 11¥ ,..._Ill 1 l:Wudl or llfllllllt 111 Mf1ocl If torf'l·tlve !.U) dl VJ dltf" !ht COFFICIAl SEAL} flllkion: Pvlltb"-d Or1nt1 GOllJf DlllY l"UOI, 1M 'et111Ht10111 tecUf'llf th1re•,, H'9 Ml tor 11'11 OPllll"' ""reof. M.ilfll:Y K, Hl!Nl:Y ON U..LI! ll!Elt Oct. '-J, IJ. 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Machi-ne O's Better Reealls Lean Prepared For Series [~~L~ CINCINNA'l't"CAP) -Nort<io-many -1..,.·p1tclter against Baltimore Saturday -hard u he t1>ouPt tt-was:-''lf"lt bed been BALTIMORE (AP) ~ The Baltimore ean aa:o Sparky-Anderson was ICl'ewtn8 In the-world-Serles. btt-lblrper-J-wouklntt-bave-hld-to bur--Orioles-celebrated with releUve-calm j I TWINS MANAG ER BILL RIGN EY SUPP ERS ••• Cards Beef llp Allen Acquisition Gives/. Dodgers Power Hitter ST. LOUIS (AP) -Ric.hie Allen has departed after lt:M than a year, and the St. Louis Cardinals say they're hoping to make the sacrifice of power for a more leCW'e defense payoff in the National League. The cardinals, coocened with an aging combination at second base, made their move Monday by trading Allen to the Los Angeles Dodgers for infielder Ted Sizemore and catcher-outfielder Bob Stinson . The 28-year-old Allen, acquired Oct. 8, 1969 in a .seven-player deal from the Buckeyes Still No. I in Poll; Trojans Fourth By Auoci11.ed Press Ohio State Is No. 1 and Texas is No. 2 go what's new? What's new is Penn State, which is nowhere at the moment. "We're just not a very good football team right now," says coach Joe Paterno, whose Nittany Lions dropped out of the Associated Press rankings - and out of 5lght -after losing their second straight game last week. Penn State's 2§.16 defeat by Wisconsi n came a week after its 41 ·13 humiliation by Colorado and shattered a myth of in- vincibility built on 31 games without a Ios.. What hapeened? "We have a lot of problems,'' Paterno said Monday night , but didn't care to dis. cuss them. "We have a lot of things to work out. We have to get reorganized. My kids are not happy about the losses -but we 'll find out what they're made of from now on in." Stanford plunged from third to 12th after dropping a 26-14 game to Purdue, enabling Notre Dame and USC to jump one place each to third and fourth. Notre Dame ambushed Michigan Slate 2S-O and Southern Cal walloped Oregon State 4>13. T .. "' .... , "'· T.,m •M P'ta. 1. Olllo 11. (17) 2.0 7U 11 , war Y1. U 1•1 1. Tntl 1•1 U 610 n . 111n10n1 S·I 134 S, Notrt 0.mt J.CI SJ• IJ. CO., T.c~ U IJI 4. use (Jl »1 !l1 l•. A•lllN'll St. J.O HN I. MIH. 111 J.CI .cit 15. UCLA J.-1 10 6. N .... llkl J.0.1 «IJ 1•. Mllnurl J.J 61 1. Mktileln 111 M '11 11. Clllor80o '·1 .. I, Al~ Forc1 4-0 2U 11. N. C1~1!11o1 '"° .» t. Al,lbur1I W Jll H. lllllh. St. 2·1 2• 11. Arl->1 '" 20. T-J·I It Otl'Mn t«~ 1'01a llllM tl~11M!l(1llr,' Hl!#fM, S-Sit"' l(ltl'lltJ. lt1nJ11 Slit., MIH i• 11"1 ... ,., l"r~ T .. ti "4/il, T•ledO. Tvll .... Welllinf*I. Philadelphi~ Phillies, was !ide.lined the final 40 games of the 1970 season by a torn hamstring muscle. Nonetheless he socked 34 home runs, drove in 101 runs and hH .279. . In his place the Cardinals have the 2f.. year-old Sizemore, who began the Dodgers' past season as shortstop and moved to second base when the team reacquired Maury Wills. The NL's ~ookie of the year in 1969 and a former minor league catcher, Sizemore batted .306 for the Dodgers in '70 and drove in 34 runs in 96 games. The reason behind his acquisition, Cardinal general manager Bing Devine said, was to shore up a defense rated the club'! No. I problem. "Julian Javier is 34 going on 35, and he has to play less," said Devine in reference to Cardinal status at second base. Bothered increasingly by back trouble, Javier was out of the lineup· at intervals in 1970 and 31-year~ld short.stop Dal Maxvill moved over to take his place. The Dodgers, second In NL team bat· ting, have needed a power hitter to drive home players who hit well for average but mainly with singles. ''We've looked for a Jong time,'' said Dodger vice-president Al Campanjs, "because we knew wtiat we needed more than anything was a big bat in the middle of our lineup." Campanis said a decision will be made during spring training on where Allen will play. With slick·fieldlng Wes Parker at first base, Allen probably will be sta· tioned at third base or left. fie.Id . Billy Grabarkewitz likely will be switched from third to second base. The Cardinals, who slipped from the NL throne in 11169 to fourth place in the Eastern Division, remained lodged there the past season despite Allen's con· tributions at first base. "Obviously what happened to our ciub this year and the position we were in weren't Allen's fault," Devine said, "but the fact remained that we were less a winning club this year than last. "He and I talked ... and I told him he did everything we had e1pected of him. It was just that the club ... wasn't balanc- ed enough ... the vital aspect was defense. "Pitching has been a problem with us." Devine added , "particularly with the bullpen. But the infitld has to rate as our No. I concern." Allen, who professed happiness in a Cardinal uniform , underwent none or the turmoil here th1t checkered his 5il:; season career with the Phillies. Jep into tables in a furniture factory, his Nolan won 11 games during the regular ry," said the Pittsburgh left fielder, who after winning the American League pen- bueball career apparenUy over. season and the firal of the playoff. He'll has a good throwing arm. nant Monday, perhaps loot.Ing forward Now he's the manager of the National pr'Obably be opposed by Orioles' Jim "'lbe throw had good enough stuff on it, wUh more resolve to the upcoming World League champion Cincinnati R e d I Palmer. but It tilled at the last aecona... Series. prtparing for Saturday's opening of the O~e .. w~ pinch triple I~ the Sanguilk1I had to I~ to his right to get . "I think we're goiq: into tbe World World Series against American League Reds wmrung three-run rally m the loth the throw and then dive back to his tert. Serie:! better prepared this year 11 u id champion Baltimore. inning of the playot'f opener, was calltd He just miS8ed the tag and it meant Cin-outfielder Frank Robinson. "we' really Anderson recalled those Jean days Mon-upon in the eighth innin& Mondly with .clnnaU's fint National League pennant came up to' a peak for the playoffs day as he stood drJpping with champagne two out and the bases empty. . ilnce 1961. against Mtmesota. I guess we leeme.d in the Cin<:innaU dressing room aft.er hi!: Cline said he made up his nund to try There were a number of dramatic from experienct." Reds had·defeated·tbe-Ptttsburgh·Pirates --momenta ln the hard-fought third and Robinson said the Orioles wtre---slrug· for a three-game sweep of the National Odd F R d final 11:ame of the playoff. Pittsburgh gling at the end ot 1969, prior to wtn- League playoffs. S 8V0 r e S manager Danny Murtaugh had a tough ni"8 thr .. >iralght from Minnesota In the 'Ibe Reds took the payoff game on a decision when he Wted. rigbthander. Bob playoffs -two ot them one-nm deci!ions play that characterit.es their manager'• ,.~~! .~'i!."t .!~:;:..; ..,c':."'::~1111~ 1;: M.oose in favoc: '!' reliever Joe Gib~ in e1lra iminp. phiJ010phy of the.game-aggresaivenw: !!y:!, 1G.::! ~~1:,1\.!:~-...K(=~·J1mrnr with l~thand hitting Tolan coming up in Then came the World Series ard the and the willingness to gamble. $n'fd•• alltd It • ''*i-W ,.,.._ .. •lid .. .,. the cnticaJ eighth. upset victory by the NeW York Mets, who The score was tied 2-2 in the eighth at ~"'~,n :: 11o1': :'Y.,.. .. ..!.~.!':.n 11:=~~ "I knew that Tolan hit well against left· won rour straight after Baltimore took Cincinnati's Riverfront Stadium. Ty Cline ~-ni·:r1i.1n11,,..=.~r;.. c1o1ar Hl1ll odd• ~ handers,'' aaid Murtaug~. Tolan hit .335 the opener. w.as on second and Pete Rose at first. ti111ory," .... wld. agalnat IOUtbpaws durmg the regular ~.•by Tolan la.s•·d.a •'••le to lef' and '" •Ito quoMd edcll ef 11-1 ... "'"' c1nc111M1t season. By beating the Twins 6-1 Monday, the \.IVU . !~ . ..ae . ~ ~W~-tour 1tr1\ght ,,..,.., tnd 1$-1 1~1-t Oriol•• -~ed ••·Jr [41h Vl·~-y in a Clln oonded !hi d a 111 1 1 1011 1n -"I went to the percentages," said ~ it:UAu 1u~ . ....... ... e r r just beating Willie • mo•• w nn 11111 ' 1 ~w. rf!W. In the three playoff games, they Stargell's throw to the plate with what for home as soon as he saw Bobby Murlaugh, ezplalnin.g why he decided to battered MiMeSOta pitchi.ni:r for 27 runs turned out to be the winning run in a 3--2 Tolan's hit to left. go to the left.handed Gibbon. "Tolan Is a o •ame. aood hitter •"ainst rim.t.handers too. and 35 hits including six homm and e _, "As I rounded third I slipped and lost e -~· d bl ' "We try to play aggress ive baseball," my balance completely," he related. "I Tolan bit the ball on the ground," added seven ou es. said Anderson. lost Alex completely," he said, referring Murlaugh, "but It went in the hole." "Alter we clinched the division last "Sure we've bad guys thrown out at the to third base coach Alex Gramm.as. wbo Murtaugh summed up bis team's quick year,'' RobiMOn said. "a Jot U us took plate, but that's the chanct you take," was waving and shouting for Cline to . ex.It from the playoffs this way : three or four days off in a row amt it af- observed the guy who six years ago was keep going to the plate. "It was just like our final games fected our timing. Maybe we relaxed a fired by Toronto in the International "I didn 't bear him either," Cline said, against the New York Mets that gave us little bit too much. League and turned to work in the "but I knew he would want me to try the divi!ion. We got the. big baseball "We didn't look down on the Mets, cer. furniture fa ctory. and score." breaks then. The Reds got the big tainly. They won more than 100 games. The 36-year-0ld Anderson, youngest Cline said that as he neared the plate baseball plays when they needed them in We lost, but we thought we had the best manager in the major leagues, took a he saw Pirates' catcher Manny this series." club." mome t •-pl · · h" tr t · San ·11 t d f" t "I 1r·ed J Moose was philosophical about his n u um ex ammg is s a egy 1n gu1 en go owar JI'! . 1 or Champagne flowed immediately after the deciding game against Eastern the third base edge of the plate," he went heart-breaking defeat. The right-hander Jim Palmer hurled a seven-hitter and Divialon champion Pittsburgh to an-on. hegave upkedoniyUnffourtunhitstelnl thfe 7him,~13 innt ingsf struck out 12. The clothes in the lockers nounce Gary Nolan as the Reds' first-Slargell said Tolan's single wasn 't as wor · or a Y or wo 0 were pr·'-ted by plastic, but there was ••• THE REDS' TONY PEREZ CHASES A FOUL ••• Munson Credits Luck For Detroit Comeback DEIBOIT (AP) -"I thought maybe they'd boo us off the field but they stayed with us," smiled Detroit L I o n s quarterback Bill Munson. And ln response to the confidenl'e from the capacity crowd of 58,210 -plus a aa· Uonal television audience -the Lions put on a second half show for the viewers by overcoming a 7-0 deficit to maul the Chicago Bears 28-14 Monday night. The victory gave Detroit IOl.e posses. sion ot £irst in the Central Division of the National Football Conference with a 3-0 record. Chicago, Green Bay and Min- nesota are all 2--1. Munson. who completed 13 of 19 pa'sses for 229 yards and a touchdown, indicated luck was a parUal reuon for the second half spurt. The Bean continually adju.sted their defense after Detroit broke Its hl.lddle to come to the line of scrimmage. However, "We wound up calling the rlghl plays more than not in the second half," Munson said. "In the first half they (Bears} shifted a little more and every time we seemed to run right into them." Detroit's running game got bogged down to just 18 yards in the first half, plus only 72 passing on six completions. There was brief booing of Munson and company until the final two quartera when things opened up and the Lions nailed Chicago for a 21-point third quarter. They ended up with 350 yards total olfense. the hits were consecutive home runs in ~ the fjnt inning by Tony Perez and John-relatively little horseplay compared with ny Bench. previous Baltimore celebrations. "They were bad pitches,'' said Moose, "We really wanted to win this year," whO'-feJt·ncrpain in theiender·e.lbow-otbis Robinson said. "We didn't talk about los- pitcbing arm which had threatened to Ing to the Mets and there was no rah-rah keep him out of the playoU. stuff, but we went to sprifll training and "You make a bad pitch and what can got ourselvi!S ready. It sounds corny, but you do?" we were dedicated to winniflg. MO\)Se said Perez hit a hanging slider "And it was more rewarding this year. and on Bench he failed to get the ball in When was the last time a team won two tight enough. American League pennants in a row? The The S..9 Anderson, a slim appearing 170 New York Yankees in 1964, right?" pounds, already i! thinking ~ut the Manager Bill Rigney decided to try Ba1Umore Orklles, · who won t h e with experience instead or youth, but it American Le.ague pennant in a three· made1ittle difference for the Twins. game iweep over MirmeJota. Rigney decided .Sunday night to st.art "Our scoulinj: report is that Baltimore veteran Jim Kaat instead of rookie Bert I!: the best defensive club in baseball, has Blyleven. the ·best front-line pitching in. the game "I felt Jim had done a pretty &ood job and is the third or fourth best offensive against them this year," said Rigney. team," be said. "He's been under more pressure than the 'l'be·Recil , however , don't appear awed. kid." Scout Ray Sbcft winked at a guy 1n tne Kaat gave up six hits and four runs, dressing room Monday as he observed: but only ane was earned. "T'fro of the Orioles' thret top starters "I guess he wMn't quite as eood as we are left-handed." had hoped," said Rigney, "but they e1m· A loot at the record shoW! that Cin· ed only the one off him. cinnati posted a 33-8 rerord against "I don't think we played as well as we squthpaws in the regular sea!On with onJy are capable of against them," said five going the route against the Big Red rugney. Machine. And they beat two left·handers "We gave them too much in this mits in the playoff. -something we didn't do in the reCUiar Are you listening, Earl Weaver? season." r 1ns1UllOH CINCINNATI 1llrllrtli "'""" P1tlll,11 JOOOROlf,r1 •010 8.llOIMrtlon, ph l O e O Toti n, cl J o 1 I M.Alov,cl 5110PerN,lb 4111 ci-ie, rl J 1 2 o Grlntltl'. p o o 1 t l!trvtH, II ' 0 l I Gvl1t!, p I O t O J t!•r, pr · 0 O 0 0 lltndl, t J I 2 I A.011.,,.r. 111 5 0 2 1 L,Ml'f, lb J O o o s.nov111to1. c • o o o tartlll, II' i o o o H...,,31:1 2020 .Ht!nw.,211 JOOO MIHfDlkl, a 2 0 0 0 Wooctw1rd, H J 0 0 ' Moolt, i:r • o O O Clonlng1r, p 1 O O O Glbbon,11 00008r1vo,ph 1000 Glvlll, P 0 0 0 II WlkOll, p O G O o (.llnt,ph 0 100 Conc•pdo11, •• o t o t Tolllt lJ 2 10 2 To1tl1 2' J I J PllfllKiroh 100 011 ooo -2 Clnclft11o11I 200 ~ 11• -J DP -ClllC'INllll 1. LDll -PllllDlwftl 11, Clll- tinr\111 J. 21 -H ....... 2, Mil -P1r11 fl), 1-11 11 1. I MINNllOTA IALTIMOlll ••r~l"lll 1llr~rtll Tov1r,lf 41208vfonl,ll •122 c..nl-1. u ' o 1 1 llllr cl ' t I t OUvt, rl ' O J O F.lli.b!NOn. rt J O e O Klll1br•w, Jll J 0 0 f J,l"O'tl;eli, lD ' O 1 I Holl, d ' I 0 I l .JlllM<uarl, lb ' I J I ll1tll!f, c ' t I O 0,Jd!nlOft, 2b l I 2 I •-· lb l I 1 I Eh:ti.o.rren, c • o O o Tllnt, pr \. o.., O e O lltllllfff', u l I O O TllOm_,,. :lb_,. 0 0 o P'1lrner, • l I I 1 AlllMI<!, ph 1 I 0 o Qulllcl, 21> o t o o AIVH, ph I 0 0 0 Kttt.p 1000 llyltv1t1, • 0 0 0 O M1t1119I, ph l 0 0 0 T.Hell,p 0001 Ctrew, ph I O O I J.P•rrr. p o o o o R1t1kk, ph I O O o Tol~lt JJ 1 1 I MlnMSOll Tet•lt Jl ' 10 J 000 018 000 -I atnlmort IU 000 10•-• Quarry Draws Suspension "We·ve been TUMing most of the year but 1n the second half we decided to open up 1 lltUe with passes," MW\900 said. Wide receiver Larry Walton caught four of hil tosses for 70 yards , including a 13-yard touchdown. Tight end Charlie Sanders and halfback Altle T1ylor each snared three for 77 and S9 ya rds respec- tively. SACRAMENTO (AP) -He•vywei1ht bo.Uns <'Olltendtr JelT)' Qu•IT)' of BcJU1ower and hil trainer, Teddy Ben. tham, have been susptnded aealn by the CaUfomla Athlellc Commission. The SUJpentlon, ll1l1IXUlCtd Mondoy, was for failure io pay lines asseued as the rowlt of a Qult11' fl&bt In New York in •hlch ht knaUed out Mac Foste'r of Fresno. Quarry'• out fight la titted 0t1 Oct. 26 in Atlanta •&•Inst Muhammad Ali. Orieinally, the Olympic Auditorium promotion VoUP In Loi Angeles had chara:ed a contract ~ad been signed for A the Quarry-Foster fight to be held ~.1:_.os ng~. During the contro\'~rsy over tht Los Angeles-New York site disagreement, both Quarry and FMter were temporarily suspended. After • hearlne, both flghte:rs wtre relnslated but fined becau.. they fought . ' while sUU under the tempor1 ry 1uspenslon. Foster and his manager pa id their assessments, but Quarry has not paid his ft,000 fine nor has Bentham paid his $100 levy, the commission said. Bob Turley, executive ~t•ry of the commisskm. said the fighter •od his manager can be reinstated by pa1lng the fines or they can 1sk ror a hearln1 oo them. Ollcago bounced back from the 21-7 third quarter score with a lilJ..yard touchdown pass from Jack Concannon to Dick Gordon on the flrat play of the fourth quarter to put the Bears b&clc in ·the game. But a key Interception by Lion cor- nerback Dick LeBeau ruined Chicago and set up Det;>'lt'1 final Jn 1ur 1 n c e touchdown. , • , AN D IALTIMDRE'S EARL WEAVER ENJOYS IT 4LL. I • ' I j cl " s. In w lG ol F c ... ll Ii " •I ti; " II " H u ... c I> w B ~ A b s p dl (I ('. "' B DAIL V '!LDT !J Prep Grid Star~ ~f Week Monarchs, Newport Rated 1-2 Mater Dei 3rd, Tars 7th, Edison 8th in CIF Polls -KEl'l"H SAMUELS Corona del Mer JIM SOLTIS Fount1in Valley BOB DeLANCELLOTTI Mater Dei PA:r-SWEETLAHO Cotta Mesa SCOTT WHITFIELO Huntington Beach JIM DULICH Mission Vie jo GARY JENNINGS Westminster $13,000 Prize Mone)~ For06lR.FunnyCars The first major funny ca r championshi ps of the fall season are scheduled for Saturday al Orange County International R.1.ceway. Qualifying will begin at 2 with racing follow ing from 8 Lo JUO. racing enterlainment w i t h flying aerobatics on his sky- kite after dark. Last Saturday's racing was cancelled because of rain, bul Sunday's motorcycle racing on the 2.1--road race circuit was highlighled by JOOn McGilli- vray's win in the open gran prix main event. O'NEAL BREWER Estancia KIM JOHNSON L19un1 Beech GARY BALCH Edison STEVE MONAHAN Marina A -major-r.shuffling of Orange County prep football teaw has oceurred in the third week of the season in the DAILY PIWl"s ofllclal listing of rated teams. Newport. Harbor's stunning 7-0 dedsioo of Anaheim drop- ped the Colonists to filth place and left Mater Dei in sole pc:wess.ion of first. Newport, by virtue of ils conquest of Anaheim rocketed into second place behind Mater Dei after falling to gain a spot in the Top 10 during the first two weeks of the poll. Estancia, nipped by third- rated Edison, l.f.12, fell out of the listings, although the Eagles did receive lour points. Another Orange Coast area team, Marina, nudged into the Jist on the basis of ils second Newport Harbor m o v e d Into the elite top JO of the CIF AAAA_1ootball rating t.bi5 week and Mater D e I ' 1 Monarchs ju11)~ a couple of notcl!_es fo thin!Jlace. ~ _ - Edison's Chargers, despite one first place vote among the 18 bal1ots cast, could move up only one notch in the AAA ratings from ninth to eighth. Newport. overlooked in the first two weeks of balloUng by Southland sports scribes, was listed in seventh place. The 1'-1onarchs will f~ fifth place Long Beach Wilsmi in 1 showdown battle Thursday night at Santa Ana Bowl. These are the only area schools involved in the rating this week with Newport facing Westminster 'lbursday nlibt in Sunset League actJon. Anaheim's Colonilt.s, off the IO. West Torrance (1·1) 20 Jou to Newport, fell from sew rs : Redlaocb (21-1) 11, d to lghth 1 · th Burbank (M) 10, S • n t 1 con e p t ee. m e Barbara (2=1) I, Pioneer (U) ratings. and Lakewood (1·2) S, Oom- Blshop Amat owns the No. J in~ez (l·l·l), /.rcadia (S.O) spot by a wide margb1, -aDd-'San-Gorgonio 3-0) 5, 1arnering all II first place Uiif1 (2~1) ~anONOi'th-Tot· votes ranee (3-G) 3, Thousand OW 1n ~ddition to Edison's one <2..0.I) and Qompton (2-I ) 2- t.ally, Bonita grabbed 1s·and AAA Garden Grove the othtr in the t. Bonita (2-1 ) 174 AAA balloting. AM.A Pl.ce Ttam I. Bishop Amat f:H) 2. El Rancho (3-0) 3. Maltt Del (3-0) 4. Pasadena (S-0) S. LB Wilson (3--0) 6. SL Paul (2·1) 7. Newport Ha-(3-0) 8. Anaheim (2-1) 9. Blair (2-1) 2. Garden Grove CU ) 142 3. Rolling Hills (3) 105 Pis 4. Glendora (S-0) 103 l!tl s. Crespi (3-0) 90 14G 6. Cabrillo (3-0) 'It :~ 7. sunny Hills (3..Q) 54 81 8. Edbon 13-0) 42 73 9. Orange (2-0-1) 40 70 10. Lasuen t2-I) 201r.i .. 4' Others: La Puente (U) 20, straight win, a 7-0 decision of ·-----------------.. 9,1 Western. The Vikings are rank- Rancho •Alamitos (3--0) 14, Kennedy (:H) t , Lynwood (2- 1) and Lompcc (2·1) 7, Santa ed ninth. a notch ahead of surprlSing El""MOdena,-which- won its third straight with a 33-14 rout of Tustin. The rankings could take another beating after this week with sever:al ranked teams under severe pressure. Week~s .JC Stars r~:ri~..:.~kn~~~~ .. Tt 0) 3. B13bop Montgoery (2-1) and Newberry Parlr (1·1-1) 2. Bolsa Grande (3-0) II. Long Beach Wilson tesls Mater Dei ThW:sday night as does Westmi~r against Newport Harbor. Orange County Top 10 1. J\1ater Oei 13..0l 2. Newport Harbor (3-0) :i. Edison 3-0 I 4. Ga rden Grove 13--0 ) 5. Anahei m (2-1) 6. SuMy ~lilts 3-0) 7. Rancho Alamitos (3-0) 8. Loara (2-0-1) ..,;.._ 9:-Mlfrifta{Z..1)- 10. El Modena (3-0) Others: Estancia (2·1) 4, Saddleback 13-0) and Servile CHARLIE BUCKLAND ( 1-2) 2 each. Golden Wett GARY VALBUENA Or•np Cust AA I. Temple Clly (3-0) J!tl 2. Murphy (3-0) 154 3. Barstow (3-0) 14t t . Nogales (3-0) 98 S. Nell (3-01 89 6. Central 13;0) 79 7. La Mirada (3..0J 75 8. Hemet {3-4) 53 9. San Marino (1·1-1) 31 10. El Segundo (l-0) 26 Others : Saddleback (3-0) 15. Royal Oaks (1-1) 14, La Canada (Z-1) 13, So. Pasadena 11·2) 9, Yucaipa (3-0) and -Miraleste (2·1} 8, Indio (S-0) 6, Sonora 2-1) 3, St. John Bosco (Z-1) and Palo Verde Valley (3-0) 2, El Dorado (2'1) and Glenn (2·Jl 1. IEMEIAL TIRE 4-Ply Nylon Cord ' Stanford Injured Ready; SC May Lose 2 Tackles GENERAL·JET Dual Tread Design • 4-f'ty Nybt Cord • Dutagen9 Rlbber Tread STANFORD-St an r or d coach John Ralston says he's doubtful Eric Cross, his top kick returner, will be in shape to go against USC Saturday. Cross suffered a charlie horse in a Joss to Purdue lasl Saturday. While Cross is a good can- didate for the bench, five regulars who didn't get to play against Purdue are ·expec~ to be well enough to play. They're linebackers Ron Kadzeil and Mike Simone, defensive tackle Dave Tipton, defensive back. Mike Ewing, and offensive tackle Steve Jubb. LOS ANGELES -Pass defense and conditions of two defensive tacles are prime concern for coach J o h n McKay as he prepares the USC Trojans for Saturday's Paclfi~ crucial with Stanford and Jim Plunkett. As the Trojans' linebackers and defensive backs familiarized themselves with Stanford's pass patterns Mon· day, the status of tackles Tody Smith and John Grant was uncerta.ln .• Smith is still bothered by a sprained ankle and Grant suf· fered a bruised knee in Satur- day night's victory over Oregon Slate. LOS ANGELES -Wide receiver Brad Lyman. sidelin- ed since the season opener with a knee injury, po.glbly will return to action for UCLA Saturday night a g a i n s t Oregon. Ly maTi-wou d g!Ye quarterback Dennis Dumm.it another top-flight receiver but Prothro isn't worried about his team's ~ssing attack. The team concentrated on ils running game at Monday's practice. The Bruins expect to be rurlher strengthened against the Ducks with the retwn of Ron Carver to a safety posi- tion. Bothered by a bruised shoulder, Carver was limited to punt returna against ·rexas. B~RKELEY -Cal coach Ray Willsey hopes injured run- ning back Bob Darby and defensive back Dave LaWllOR will be weJI enough to go against the Washington Huskies Saturday. Both missed last Saturday's game with Rice because of 45 6.5().13 SIZE $21 ....: 1n.t• .£Oli • • • 7.1S-IS $24 00 l.~l<I • • • • a.2$-ll $25..15 • • • l.SM.I ........~ ..._ ,.. Jl.11 .. $2.Sl F94. h. "'- , ............ •ti .. ,.. fR ..... ---= PREMIUM TIRE SAi F ______ ,._ ... _ ... _ ... ,.., ........... µ 7 .... RBERGLISS·BELTED GTW 4 WYLOll IELTS MD 2 G1.A8S E.TS The more youbuySllE .•. themoreyou . DllCBUKE &UY1 SAVE 10% Saturday's competiHon - officially dubbed the Eastern Funny Car and Pro Stock Championships - will offer a , $13,000 purse with at least 10, six-second funny car drivers going for the top money. The top pair or funny car specialists who'll be behind the wheel at ocm ~~rday are Fort Worth's Gene Snolv (the holder or 6.81 sec-217 .80 mph clockings) and National Hot Rod Associaliori funny car tiUist alld OCIITTi'ICl~rd hofdtr Don Schumacher of Cldcago. Tars Favored by Six; Marina, Oilers Tabbed ankJe Injuries. Williey, who noled the mi.9erable 28-0 loss, aaid run- ning back Stan Murphy and defensive lineman Shennan White were a couple of bright apols ln tHe game. s2°0 0FF REGULAR PRICE' WHEEL IUlllMENT REUIE (Front only) AlnA-CAR ,,,, •39 95 3-Ball GOLFER'S VALUE i:z:;:::;i.JATO SUPel 100 BOLF UllS .. a:d133 A second competilion, ror Southland runny c;1r drivers, will include Anaheim's Dave Beebe. Richard Siroonian or Wb.iltier, Garden Grove's Ray Aijey, Gene Conway o f Inglewood and Rialto's Mike SQively. The pro sloc kcrs will coin· prile the thin:! category with drivers like Dick Landy (North.ridge.) .and Bulch Leal (Tulare), to menUon just a ctMilP1e, enlcl'cd. Au..">lf'•lian blrdmim 8 111 Bennett wlll provide the non- NeYiport Harbor's new-found football glory i."i reflected in the DAILY PILOT sports starr selections this week with Ernie Johnson 's Tars a solid siFpoin f·avorite over Bill Boswell 's Westminster Lions. The Sunset Le.ague -en- counter will be held Thursday night on the Westminster High field. Game time is 7. Closest competition on the high school level in the area, according to the experts, finds Marina picked over Santa Ana and Huntington Beach over Western, each by three poiflts. Saddil~back COlle.ge is chosen over Chaffey College in open· ing ?.fission Conference action by seven. UCLA Is a If.point choice over Oregon, USC is Labbed by five ovtr Stanford and the Rams m a seven-point pick over the Sa n Francisco 49e.rs. Closest college games find South Carolina a one-point pick over North Carolina and Purdue a two point choice over Michigan_ After three weeks of com· petition. the., DAii.. Y PILOT staff Is picking at a . 719 average with U victories ia'S9 games. · EUGENE Senior quarterback Tom Blanchard, who has suffered from knee. ailments in his three varsity seasons, will probably return to the University Of Oregon lineup for SatUrday-'i'lighi.'s Pacific-3 football g a m e agalnsr Uetllln-tos Angeles. Coach Jerry Frei said be would start sophomore Dan Fout. of San l'randsco bot &~'oS:.siS:,"""'~1 woold probably UM Blanchard r,-.i,..-. Olll~~"'• "' 1 for at least part·time duty. r::.::'~ ~:;T~ "', Oregon worked against an-~~~ eJ..r ~....,.1r' 1 tlcipa.ted UCLA d e f e n 1 iv e =:.::,'=! ... _,, ~~ r, f formations in a brief practice 1 ,_ -"'"'~"''" t11 Monday. Ml "" Ori "'"1 ll '#1111111 bl! 1 IE1t1ric:it, ll~r C0tl1 N.tll bf 10 ""', 11111 ¥•111\' fttr MMJ'"''l 'Y 1 ,. CORVALLIS -The Oregon ffi'CH'I OYer l•tur>e at '' ) St • Bea h 1~ over Wlll'I• ~t ~, 11y 1 ate ver1 eld a light ;.;i=:: ri~::!.~J:.:y~ 3 workout Monday and then B.~'i.: = ~~1=n~ '7 4 watehed game films of the '!'1~11~"!' ~~-,~!':. ~ 1, Utah Redskins. W• contct c11t1r. cll!lbtr1 toHI. toe-out/ •lus lnspoct ... Id 'Jl slttrilll 111 tCh111 lsm. Ctrs equJpptd wltlt tor- sion bll'S Ind/or 1ir condltl0Ah1r trtra. INQ..UOESi ,.._ w.....-Fi• Br•• 1''61 .. _ IMPIC{ Cal...-i _, 1*'1: . , -letlltt IMtf Md 011ltf FrHt Wtleel Bewillp , •• Ntw fro1t Wheel SNk •.•. las,_t lcat A1 lt, ""''-- PLUS FREE 50¢ GOLFER'S GUIDE 1119 Ouf1lolil tutlns-conr! "N !fleftllWd Pl tllllet! Hitlt ttnsio9 •il>dill& kif llllU"llm tiitit! l...illitl~Jl9Cl,.._._ 3 WAYS TO BUY AT GENERAL !~/' C = ~ ~ TlllE ,..., ..... ....-n.-.c u1•·..,,....1111•1,1rs ..... ·c·Jso .. .,........, Dell Sw- COAJT GENERAL TIRE HS W. lttlt, C-M- 54005710 646-SOJJ AVERY GINIRAL TIRE SIRYICI 1041 ............... "'"'''"'"" ..... 147.5150 ~·"ru: \~.£ :m w.1M111 \;., , The two team!! meet Satur-~'r1'rmc1~:~y~~.! ~ day Jn • nonconference (ool-ti•sir'"' C1r1111 ... OYtr Nori!! C1r1llM ball clash in Corvallis. JL.:::=::::::::::::::=~~~'!'**~.:, .. :;·~-=~1:M~OM=f:M6=.!A~C"°9=~S~t~0~•:.10:::.!•~I =========:.J ~ ( l •1•1•::•: .... ,,.:•tllll .. 111614!•: .. :•: .. : .. ,1.•t•t•:•t•JJ .. 1•t"•t1111&•2 .. •szJ111J•t•.•s•+•s'2•S.,. .. ss .. •z ,...,.2•1.,...,s1~J..,.., .... ..,.,...,.,.,..,...,...,,.. .. ~ ... ~~~w~~-w~---~~--~~.~~---_ i I I= r 1 I U DAILY PILOT . A SERIOUS BUSINESS -Dr. Harvey C. Maxwell is on oD.e knee checking the ,distance a bowl is from "the white jack for a do\Jbles match at Newport Har- 1 bOr i..wn Bowling creens. Left. to right, the bowlers • • DAILY "ILOT f"MIM Q Rlcllllrf Kttllltr include: Angus Potter, club vice president ; Dr . Maxwell ; Chuck Wigler; Bud Klyn, club,..,secretary and singles championj and Ted. Tarbox, president. ..... .4 __ _ .... . : ... " • Bowlin_g_on Green :o;::;i;;;;;====;;:;;,· ... ~-. Comes Into Own By HOWARD L HANDY _.. e11 Ille 1>9!rllnt mlHd cloub!M cbomp!onohip Of..,"""" l'tw,.... veen. ~ ~ ,. in 1917. He bu aliq been · ...Palm• and Jatk Be hM wrltten a very Newport club c!1'-mpion twice JIU:klaua_eyeueolllJ1......_. p;jiil~ !loo lijUtlell, '"Slit -1117 ond ..... ~ t• .. bowline green iD their oft -AmmclilLlfirS o 1f 1-,,. .. -1-sueh-fuctnadon bra-game hours the world of golf inay Gulde" and1 tboae ·w b o that wu·once ~ted with Jose 1 jts two foremost· com. particlpe!f Jn tM-game, (eel it parUclpants too old for _any petlton. • ia 10rt of a bible ot the game. other sports activity, !J br- ,_._. ...... .... L.A .... ...... .. ,..., ..... 11 .. ··~· n. ....... If ._ ....,.. _..,,.IL ...... ~. ................... " ............ -.... ._,..,.. .. ,.. .. ... _.,.,..,.._ .......... n. ....................... , ... ~ .. -. Clerk ....... .. c........D..W..,..,.wt_ ...... _ ... LMry ...... ..., .. .. ...... ,.. ....... .., ... .......... ~ ...... ..... SUch 1 drastic move may Dr. Muwtll at one time inging pw: age bracket for not me immediately but any was the . chief eye IW1eGD _at paftlciPJtion and enjoyment of1 I~========~ num~ of memben'-of the ~. Artny'i. Lederman the 11me of bowls 1te1dilyJ: Newport Hubor Lawn Bow~ 116oplta), He wu one of ta_ downward. ON THE TUBE . ing"club will otttit Jo.~:111<1 membtrt .of an brt...,-The royal ond oncient 1ome. they were once ~ to ~ ~ team al that time., once restridtd to nobillty, ,., t"M Htt ,.,.u.· te _..,,, lf · Wlleb be ret1red to private has just begun to come into its h•pp•11i1t1 111 TV, re•4 TY _g_o · . 1 ~ -prac~ he joinllJd-the.:.Santa own-in the-United states ac--Wlli.lC. -ll!i1tri~ute4 wJtli the ~ ..,, 'UDUI they trief the Ana CoQi;i1rY Club and had of-i:oi:dlng to Dr. Maxwell. S•turd•y Miti•• ef tl.1 6AILY ~ta~ honorable seort of fices in downtown Santa Ana,1 ji_::ills::,:c~ro=n~les:_::be:a~rt~i!y~aa-~~!..;;liiiriitliiiOiiiT.iiiiiiiiiiiiiii".iiiii~ lawn oowling. for many years. Ii "lt doesn't take much to get "Wben I took up the 1ame hooked oo this lamt aod once o[ bow!J, I loot all inlertlt in p,· 1ot -p,·gski· n you do, you forget all obout goli," the whitt-boired J;Otirid golf," ,one member said this doctor qya. ·' • week. He ia forced to wa~,µ.e.'ac- That member is Baldus tion at the praent ~ .afttr Pi. ~l1~EllOD "Baldy" .'.lit!\, 1 !o.nner oil ~~ ! ~rt &!'Id .six"~. .. , . _ company executive. moo~ • but ii .'.lo0Sij 1• "About five months ago, forwari tit the ~ hl•qn Johnnie Walen asked~ !Pf: to return to let.Ive ~on'. go with him to the Newport 'pt:. Muwell and ' llil Wife Gr .... : I, in tum, said I woo!d Winifred ..., the ·uUooa! go if Allan Grubb would join Co • Sponsored by us. "We all .belong Jo .the" Jolly Boys at the Irvine Coat Cctun· try Club and have been avid golfera for many years. Since that day five months ago, I haven't been on · the golf course. This .game affects you that way." , Bolvlis -' . OwnC~eed ~Fl Voit . And The '.Roll Jack ~To Start Bowling Laguna Hills Club Hosts --'1o-tJ.S-;-£hampionshi p: Allen began his blllines! career as a servJct 1tatJon operator. He movtd to an of· fice job with Tn.aco Oil Com- pany and eventually became assistant general s 1 1 e 1 m f!r for the 10 western states. When be retired, be ond his wife favored a return to their native Texas but family ties kept them in So u thern California and the Newport area. For Action What i• the ~ ; bcrirli? Bowls ii a ldlnce,1the study of a lifetime. in which you ma exhaust but aever your subji;ct. Bowl! is a ·~ 1 duel, calling for coaraae, lklll, strategy, and aelf ~trot. DAILY PILOT IE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT In <;ash For Each Week's Rrst Place Wlililer Newport Harbor boasts a clorely crOpped bowliJll ........ Llguna Beach has two such greens and Laguna Hills, where the aalional singles and doubles championSbips "are beiag held thia-week; has ·two more full-size areaas. Laguna .'.Hills .Lawn Bowling Club iin. ·Leisure World is the scene of lhe 1970 U. S. Cham- pion of Champions singles and doubles lawn bowling com- petition through Friday with the six top bowlers from throoghout the country com· ·pelina:. Area Club Suth--bowling arenas art ~fnerally square and com· Jl!l!t.itlol can be staged in any cf toUr directions 'with a max---F-· ded imum of eight ,.,. .. in pro-0 on greu at one time on eight rinkl (Ines). Balls are knon as bowls f ud they . vary in circum- -ference from 4% to 514 inches. A weight variance from th~e pounds to throe pounds ond eight ounces is allowed. A coin tos.s determines which player c>r temn will roll the smaD white jack to the op- pomt.e end or tht green. oace It is in place, the players alternate with four of the larger bowls to see which can get them closer to the jick. Points are scored i• this man- ner. The bowls were once made entirely of wood but in today's modem world, tbey are made ol a plastic material and are more unifonn in size alKI ... 1ght. A game consists of 11, 15' or 21 ends. Each time tht · bowlert bowl to one end or ·the rink, they have completed an e nd. In national competition, ' three 15 end games are rolled fn .a;d~. ID team bowliAg. the lead is the first man tc> bowl. On a four man team. the second me is the scorer. Next comes ttte'vice skip and then the skip or team captain who directs the team throughout oom- petition. In 1938 The Newport Harbor Lawn Bowline · AssociaUon w a s formed in 1938 with the clubhome and grttfl at tsth and Balboa Bo u le v ard, Newport Beach (on the peninsula). Bowling lakes place every Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday throughout the year, usually-from-I-to 4 p.mo-- The Newport club and the local associatiOn'ne_ver bowl at night or on Surli:!ay. Thert are oow as plaYtrc members in the club -19 women and~G men. Playinc members range in age from 44 to 84 with an averq:e o£ 11.igbtJy more than 72. When match play with other clubs takes place about twice each year, an contestants are completely attired in white - from hats to shoes. Prospective members and guests are invited to watch the activity, And if' it is 'sougbt, a courteous explanation of the game will be presented by any bow~r nc>l actively engaged ia competition. Lawn Bowling Book- Has 3 Objectives : When Dr. Hanrey C. Max- i we.JI, M.D., F.A.C.S. gave up · ~ for the ancient sport of liWn -bowling, he found most !ot the boob aboot the came old and obsolete with em- phasis Oii the competitive U!Umament player rather than the be1Jaaer. Jt wg dtts fir>din1 that pro- "mpttcJ him to write. -The Ain•k:ln Lawn Bow ler 's Gillile; no. bool; ha three ob- Je<li,.: I -To JhlfJ'it I basic c.une Of lmtrvctian for the American Lnm Bowltr. 2 -'l'o .,,,._ beolth and lor ... .U, b 1 """""'Kini IOWld ood. ""8ible "'17,ak:al exerciJe. 3 -To capture the Interest ·ond '"'"" the ftlthuslum of ""COllVtrlo Jo the '""Jlderful -id of """"' by Upoolni them lo tu !obUioul llbloey-, ila !udnollns lott ..r Ju &rond old trodltions. Reviews of tbe book written b7 the lllled -ol boll! ' - the Newport. Harbor and La- cuna Beach clubs aay: The fabubis his t or y . fascinating traditic>n! and basie prb1ciples of the a:ame are presented in a clear and easy style. The author explains how the game Is played., and presents -.Ste])-by-step instrucUon witti the cartful precision of the skilled surgeon. _ Heo~lylo the former athlete on th e eound be a J t b benefits of partldpatloo in this Ideal out· doer exercise. The Americu L a w n Bowler's Guide is an authoritative textbook for the beginner with 10 easy ii· Juslrated lesson!!. It Is a guide ror the in· structc>r. with chert lists for the bowl s coach. Jl 1$ a relertnce manual tor • the official 01 bowllng creen etiquette, local cu 1 toms , ground rules and the offidal ALBA laws. The Southwest Wvisic>n en- ,compasses So'utbern California, Arizona, New Mex- ico and Texas with the balance of the nation divided among the other five divisions. Each entrant is a division champion with onlr Willis J. Tewksbury o( the Southeast division (Florida) and sur- rounding area, competing in both singles and doobles. He -will team with F. Ray-Gro ve in the tandem competition. Dan Howarth and Robert H. Russell of the Santa Ana Bowling Club, wlll represent this area in the doubles com· petition. Adolph W. Ehlers of Hermosa Beach is t h e Southwest district singles en- trant. This Is the first time this prestigious tournament has been held on the west coast In past years it has been held at Buck Hill Falls, N.Y. Other entrant! including their l'espectlve di visions, in- clude Raiph M. Dickman iii singles and Hugh M. McLaren a!KI William H. Jotinsoa in doubles from the Central IJ'.ta. "I am DOt good enougli le> participate in the tc>umaments yet," Allen apologizes. "But you can't beat bowling on the green as a sport. Every James E. Candelet-is the frustration of goif:.-is present singles enlrant from the a'hd 'I sometimes -think there Eestem division wi.th·lKugh are more than in_golf. "You ·can't make a bowl Gallagher and James Graham trayel in a stra1gbt line. Yoo as doubles partners. must curve . them in to the Robert N. Boetun reprtsel)ts jack and get Cl~U than your the Northwest division iil opponent le> score points. singles with M. B. Bingaman "There is a small circle on and Frank P. Webb conlpetin& ooe side ol the bowl and a in the doubles. larger one: on the other side. The Pacific Inter-Mountain When you bowl, the bowl division will be represented by ·curves in the direction of the Clive F01Tester in singles with . small circle." James D. Watson and Rob While Allen is a neophyte in Qullen in the doubles com-the game or bowls, Dr. Harvey petition. • C. Maxwell, M.D., F.A.C.S. is All morning stssions will bf a former national champion. at 9 o'clock With the afternoon · Dr. Maxwell is another whc> competition starting at 2. gave up golf completely to ''l'VE GOT vout• -A1 Morrison seems to be telling th is to club slngles chaftl. pion Bud Klyn as the two parti cipated In a match on the Newport Harbor Lawn Bowlin& green. Bowling on the green is fun , relaxing and healthy il the large number of retired doctors ·participating la IJ\Y criLerlon. Bowls ii .-test ol temper. • trial ol honor, a l't'{ialer of character. ., Bowls 11 a chaflCf: · to play the man, and i.ct ~ t b e gentleman. Bowls is &oinl into God'! Pllt-Qf-doors_, cetlinl ca.e to na~ enjoying fre5111~ lir, sunshi.e,. and healthy ex- ercise. Bow~ 11 a clearer..d·mental cobwebs, ·a rejuvenation GI the wealy brain.· · Bowls iJi a cure for cart, an antidote to worry. ., Bowls ii a tonic to-the.millCI, a sedative' to the nt.rvt11. Bowls is eompanionship ond friends. / Bowls I on Ol'POrtwllly for courtesy, t J • d n e 1 1 arid generosity to an opponent 'Bowls is a p-omot.er of physical health ond moral force. , Bowts is a happy miad, a body kept fit, and a spirit re·- juvenated. , . -Adopted from "Romance of Bowl Manufac:tun." Pickeroo To Woman Mrs. Shh'lef Richard!IOn of Newport Beach is the lop win- ner in the DAILY PILQT Pigskin Pickeroo fc>r. the thlr.d week of competi"'1. Mn. Richatd90n, who pick- ed 16 correct .wirmers in ,the Piclr.eroo, outnQdded nJ.n e other contestants who picked 16 by use "Of the Pickeroo Tit Breaker system. The Newport woman;.the,.. cOnd.'female entrant in a.row to garner.tOp· iDdividual honors 1n·t11e contest. m1aaec1·tht cor- rect point total of .. by only 13. SU eclied ouU~lllla' Mell'i Chuck Sneed, who -was on1y:u off the proper total. other top ·ten finisben am their point dlffermtilll were: Mike B I a I r (Huntington Beach) 20, Ka WllliamlOll (Costa Meli) · :i5, . · Je l·I Hindlllait (Irvine)• 25, . Kdl!e Flinn (Fountain Valley) JS; Dovid Powe It. (ffonlfnllon Beadl).45, Roy·-S<:oll l Cootii Meaa)-. 55,. Pat Broderick (Wtitmlnottt)•t!O and Shirley Ktndriclt · ( Weltrillnster ) 172. tntry blanks ror the fourth weelt of the Pipkin Picke"'° are in today'a aportl ~ FV ~sters Plan Breakfast The Fountain Valley Hip School -club wm lpOnlOI' a pencaU brtUfut Sawrooy rnorninl (1.: IO tO 11) at the ICbool cafeteria with tlckt!J priced ot 'IS....,, uch. The feed, wblcb lncJudes pancakes, 1ausaae. jtrict, milk or cof£ee, ii the fnt mooey ma!tlnz pn1Ject _. by the booot•11 club. Tickets are available at the school finance office or can bl purcliued 11 lbe door. • Volt Footballs each week I• • pigskin proph•+. Pl•y th• DAILY PILOT Pickeroe 9•m• f•r w••kly pri1•s. Winn•r ••ch we•k receiv•s . •tO u sh end • Voit Coll•giete feotbell lsugg•stecf -r.+eil -price, $9~951-. Nit1e runner-up Pickero. pick•r• el10 ••ch t •t • Voit CoJl'egiet• footbelt. Wetch fo r thi s pleyer's form ••ch w••k in the DAILY PILOT Sports S•ction. Circle th• t•ems you th ink wi ll win in the list of 20 teems ifnd send in t he ple yer's forn-or r•esoneble fe csimil•. Th•n watch the DAILY. PILOT sports peg•• for .. ch w••k's list of 10 winn •rs4 RULES 1 1. SUINnlt tltlt llfttry ""'* w 1 ,_..,. hialmllt te ..,,., 1ht ctnteat, l. ...... M: ,ILOT ,tGSKIN l"QEllOO COHTEST, .,,.,._ °'"111'1111'1t. , • 0, IOX I"°' C.•19 M-, C.. ,,..._ .. °""' -mntry ..... ,..._ 9"' .;... 4 •llfl'ltt "'r.:.~ftl._.. I~ rrwll er 111 1Mrtot1l 19 DAILY l'ILOT ltftld .,J,.m. )I. -• I. AMJ' \'lift ... W.ILY .. ILOT Ml~ltV. ..... tlltlr l111111edlete flllllti. • Ml •llllNll '!·~· . '' TIE l lllEAKU 11'Mt .. fllllll .,.~ .,iry.b .,. ... 1, 111 et••." fil IV t1r.1,i1n, dilpll(•tf _,-c11e11c1i.. "°"" wm M •111nlMI •nd Wlnnmr. wllf ""'lly lMr• In tlle 110 C:lltll ,.-fn. .. .. . ! L W~rw ....... Plac• "'-'ttlm 1" 11 rrwrt thl11 9M't fu.111J 1lte _:..,, llrl• fllt' ..,illol. •ftiw ,,,. flrtl wlrl, of ••thlntr!nl ttle v.n -*11 "' MtttMt ..-1n, Ytlt ~ 11 ....,iYlllfnl ¥11111. I • • •-•-• j~Tlc'f• ll_3lt• ,ii • • I • • • • • • C&.de ..... ,.. tWlli: ... -tltll ........... ........................ , • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • ·1z San Francisco vs ·Rams USC ·YI Stanford Oregon vs UCLA Cal YI "Washlnqton Oklahoma vs Tex as Tennessu vs Ga. Tech MIUlulpPJ vs Georgia Auburn vs Clemson ~tieback vs Chaffey College Newport YI Westminster LI Wilson vs Mater Del Estancia vs Costa Mesa Magnolia vs Fountain Valley C:Oll'on YI Laguna had! Corona c1er Mar vs 'Edison El Modena vs Mission Viejo Western vs Huntinqton •-h -Si::n Clemente vs Orange Santa Ana vs Marina Webli ·vs Unlvmnlty • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • IS • • • • • • • • • Tlf 111.lltlll -M, elMI 911 Wte • ,..., """*"" ., ~ _.. Ill '" .................................... _ ........................... . • •.~AMI • • ••••ns • • §IT! $ llP • : ~ • • • PHOMI ID • ••••••••••••••••••••• -,, - . • + ' I _;_ I I • ' • l I • ' " ; 'l1 l ' I I t l •' ' ' • 1 t t I ' ' F ' f • I I I ' J r I I I ~ I \ f. I ' l' r I I I ., l • • 1 I ' l I I l i • ' ' • I ·- . • + • I i l : • ' I -·-· -. .,, __ ~ . . .. ' . . . . . . . '. .. ----- ' ' • j ·t I ' I ' t-. II :1 ,. ' l I ! ' ' ' f ,, ' .. ... ,. ' · . • ! . . I -f • I l f I ji I ,. ' l • 1 ' I • ' 1 ' • • l I I J l' I ' I ' i' ' t I I f • " I ! r ' l I t I ! • ,. I .. , . .. . . ·'' . ti - . . •; '1 • l / . ' , . : v •• ' • ' . . . . - , .. :~ ·- -· •• • • -... ' . -.--....~-+-rl---. ---:""" ----- • .!~ .L. .•.. r ' . . ·'· " . ,. 1 ' I,._:.• • . . . ' " . • • 1 1 I • , , • , •' ¥ EA-R-S-() r-0-----4--4 . · F-Rf E r\.~o-· -M---· __,.... '---~ --··-=·-~ ~~~- I . " Nowhere is there a greater news gathering organization than the American Press . Reaching to the four corners af the wo-rh:J -in search of the truth-and without _, restrictions, it is the major ·link between · peoples of the community, the community and · the world at large'. This freedom has been defended in the past and will be again whenever it is threatened, so that there will always be an open line of communication between I I the peoples of this country and the world . We are proud to be a part of this Freedom. ' . . ' • ~--10; -1970 NATioNAL ~NEWSPAllER -W·EEK ·oc1 . ' . .. • ' ' I • • •-.. • ··-·--··· ' 1' ; . L •• • 1100 University Park 1237 Huntington Beach 1400 1000 General 1000 Oefteral tOOOGeneral 1000 1(:•t• Mtae liiii~i!iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~i;i;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil-:---,":-:---:--"'"':-"---::---...;.;~ _ lm.mfdi,tt• Possession -4 BEDROOM HOMr- With Formal Dining Room * * * * -*-* 2C0>~.~~.1 ~~:1a\fn--e~;:~~~~~~I v~;cri:~h0~m~a! AYRES BUILT HOMES lly room, dining room, over-D:ln't wait to buy .. , \vhlle r.tarina High School. Ask.ill&' TAYLOR sized family J<jtchen with you are waiting for interest S21,500 wilh tN'lYJtlentl le611 (sine• 1905) elee blt.ns. Located an quiet ratCll to come down the than rent. street near park and schools. prices are golng up. See. this Rex L. Hodges, Rlty. IRVINE TERRACE • 0\1.'ner moved and must se!ll. lowly 4 br, 2~> ba town. 847-2525 IRVINE AREA (YOU OWN THE LAND) Located close to Park in MESA VERDE'S fins'et section Shake roof. decorator block house ln perfect condition 0 ER Great vie\v of bay and ocean! Lovely ~1 'nkl · BY TRANSF. \VN d d b 1 t" & 4 bedr & f-"vv wall, spr1 er:s, greenhouse and a perfect setting, . • BEAlIT. 41 brJl ba. 2m sq Picture in your mind a beautiful setting with large trees, inanicured dichondra lawn, then add the convenience of 1800 sq_. ft. of floor 8pace, locate the home in a qwet nei~hbor-­ hood just 2 blocks to schools, park & library •••• you now h ave the picture of the ideal living situation, everything you could ask for. Seldom do these homes come on the m arket a nd with the price of just $34,500 -will be sold fas t!. surroun e y 1ge pa 10 oom am. and large redwood deek. close to children's play fl. Fashion Shores home, rm. home. Good financing. $77,500 Just reduced to $.16.950. Call area and family pool. Priced overlooking park. Nr : THE-RANCH--UNIT-4 22 HOMES SOLD--flRST 4 WEEKS ''HAPPY HOME'1 540-ll51, Heritage Realtors. at $.14,950. Giesler Jr lli. As k Ing ·Be ftrst1o see-this n-ew Ustin~in-lrvine Ter~ Westbay Income Homes • rej 1;•111 ~i.~oo :;:%m~'6 Avail. race. Spa~. 3 BR home. Lge liv rm overlooks N•w Tri-Pl•xes $57,SOO U n ASSU~iE 51470 Gr. 'Total great patio \Y/tall trees. $54,900 l.a.rgl", beautiful .. homes wilh pmnt Sl40. 3 br, den. bllns, 4 lo 7 BEDROOMS •'Our 25th Year'' ar. income" located in the REALTI'. 1rplc. See at 5142 Sparrow S finest E:-stside atta of Costa Univ. Park Center, Irvine 0 r . s 2 5, 2 50: p h 0 n e 2 to 4 BATHS includes all bulltln1, carpetinf, formal dining rooms, family rooms, fireplaces, underground utilities and many other quality features. WE LEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors M .... Feat"'""' (!) 3 BR, Call Anytime 833.osltJ Bake.,lietd aft 6 pm. (805J 2111 San Jo•quin Hills-Road 2 BA "ownen unit"+ (2) -==~~~====q .~87~2-<l~824~. :;::_.:_:=:_:=;:: NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 2 BR rental unit.II. See 8.t .-2035 Tustin Ave., cor Wood. SEE US • • • ,FOR SALE by owner -4br, * * * * For a Ilne selection oI homes 18 x 24 famlfy rm. crpts, PLEASE CALL ............. . PR·ICES START AT $30,440 land Pl. Of'. caU 642-4905. l-==========i'-=====~:;:=~~~1 jij(j;ijjfE!ff'OifSAi::!"-ottered for sale in University drps, covered pat io, fru it 1~ HOUSES FOR SALE! Parle & Turtle Rock • Per. troes. ~3.000. Ass u nre General 1000 General l==A=R;;;;E=Y=o=u== LOOKING FOR .... 1000 e OPEN DAILY 1 .. 5 • haps we have the right one balance of 6% loan. 842·5234 Select Your New Ayre's Bu ilt Home During The Customizing Stage Choice of all Models and Exteriors· Select Your Lot Location Now 'TU sold! Aaaume 6%% VA for YOU! aft 5 & v.•knds. WOW! loan. $148 Per mo. Redecor. SEE MODELS AT SANTA ANA FREEWAY & JEFFREY ROAD Sales office open from 11 838-5136 am to 7 pm daily 838-5120 ""!!!!!'!!!!'!'IA custom 4 BR. home on a :;: large lot whert' you own the 1000 General 1000 land, in Newport Bench! [;;;:;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;:;;:;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;:;:;;;I \Ve've got ii &. v.•ith a 51h?f., f>. n /) assumable insurance loan! ol..inJa .Jj{e 155 ·""· PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES -- General 52 Linda Isle Dr. Coldwell,Banker $2 000 PRICE 3 Br. \V/W cpt.11, drps, Im- ' med. ""'""'°"' Ohty $22,. REDUCTION 950. 1984 Federal Ave. 'll 11b '111'1!11, - - -1l11u l!or 1st \\'estern Bank Bldg. University Park Day 833-0101 Nights Coron• def M11r 1250 HARBOR VIEW ' Fount•in Valley 1410 Near Golf Near Park Low Int GI Loan Approx. $4500 dov.·n. no 2nd. 3 Bedrms, 2 bath, fam rm., giant bonUs room. \Von•t last! }furry! HAFFDAL REAL TY 842-44-0S General 1000 General 1;;.:==----:.::..: 1000 Cust 6 BR., study, 5 bath home w /3 frplcs., circular stairway, decorator s elected carp. & drapes. Shown by appt. .........• ~210,000 833-0700 644-2430 Excellent terms & Joans now available -- And it was a gOOd valUe al Call: Patrick Wood, 5'$-2300 the old pri~! Check into e Bill Haven, Realtor this BIG 2400 sq. It, 4 bed· 2lll E . Coast, CdM 673-3211 room 3 bath winner featur. PENDING FORECLOSURE. ing a huge 3 car garage plus Choice location and ron- room on lhe side for camp-dition. 3 Large bedrms, 2 l'r or boat a "mother·in-baths, family room, Iully law '" bedr00n1 by itst!U crptd, all bltnA and sparkl· downstairs and community ir'I&' pool. Must sell in 72 park, pool and tennis coorts hours -$30,500. Call 5'$-8424 only steps away. Now only South Coast Realtors. $40.950. Call quick at 673-8550 ~.,..7~YR~O~LD~.~.,-.~,~ .. -. -,,,-.., \1:)THE REAL ~ESTATERS kitchen, frplc, lge closets. 4 BR, 2~ ba. \Valnut paneled lam. rm.; din. rm., frplc. Anxious out of town owner! l-s.-.-1-0-A-n_a_H_g_ls_.--16-30- 165.500 Open Dai~ 118-Aliso Newport Heights corner ol Beacon I short block from Cliff Dr. · By 0Y.'OC'r $36.500 Spacious 3 bedroom '.? bath, living room with firep)ace, large dining area overlook· ing lovely secluded lanai, carpeting, drapes. built-in electric l<itchcn. Garagi oU alley-with electric._eye open- er. Nk-e:Jy landscaped cor. ner Jot. 640-4032 • , MR. POOL! a-18-144·1 Executive Home Country Clpb. with 6%0/o VA Loan CALL: BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR Atmosphere which Tings \vi1 h ;s a .truly· •--.•~~'""-.... _833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. _ 642-46_10 .• 1 h. __. -c.....uuJi.<Wo,.u,.;_M "'!!~~~~~~~~~' pr1 e, as )'OU appr.ooc I t IS ycur old tiome with all the ;-Mesa. Verde hon1c, a splend- features a person could General 1000 General 1000 Jd riot of color in nowcrs, v.·anL Yl's, even a high ba1·1.;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;; ·:;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;1 sh1·ubs. and 1rces greet wu. ancr, assumable VA loan.I" • This 3 bedroon1 and family The home has 4 bednns. 21h PERFECTION! . Su.nsh1"ne roon1 honl(' ncs11ed among baths, formal dining, lam· -Finest view ln terr<l.ced gardims provides ily roon1. heated and filter· Harbor area luxurious livi ng. T11u pa. t•d pool with jacuzzi and all Of bay & ocean Spec1"al lios. lovely near nc11· shag th( _extras from e.lec garage Plush family home " carpets. f'ull price $34.500. door opener to outside ndi-in exclusi\/f! Irvine Terrace J Bt>droom. 2 ba!h home with ~G-8&10 ant heating, This is elegant on Bayadere TctTace covered enclosed patio. Big living and entertaiRing at '1 Bedrooms, 4 baths Sl9.000 Gov•t loan can be as. its best. You must . .see to Vie.w billiard room sumed by anyone, Paymenls apprecia!e, A \lalue for ProieSikmal we·t.bur are $181 a n1onth for evl'ry- $<19.950. i;ervants quarte~ lhing . .f'ulJ prire 2629 Harbor, C.M. • COA&TS Lacge gourmet kild"'n $24,500 $180,0CIO WALLACE Newport REALTORS Divorce Sale Open Evenings • 962-4454 • Outstanding PaCl'setter hon1e I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!• I in the rincst Pll rt of Mesa CAPE COD Realtors Fairview 646·8811 (any!ime) Spacious 4 bedroom & fam- 11), 3 bath home on large corner lot. Ownl"rs say sell NO\Y! Submit oUer~ • Ask· ing. Verde \\'i!h 4 Jarge bedrooms ''Our 25th Year and an t8xl6 heated & filtl'r· \\'eslcliff comer lot with In the Harbor Area" ed POOL. Elect rlc garage abundant landscaping, Bay 673•4400 door opener, too. It's close window in living room. 'Two1";========= [ 10 the golf · cou~ and its charming fil"t'place9-Jarge11 VACANT & READY? $<16,900 covered hunt porch, cover. Takes if, fit patio & large enclosed • COATS Local ' $42,950 " $21,000 no down pa.yment 642•1771 Anytlmo PERRON -J ........ ., •• , •.• $29,950, By owner, 6~! Joan. M:Al.TC" 233 E. 21st St., 642--0581 Co M wknds or after 4 pm RBIN· ARTINij TOWNHOUSE :rBR, 2 BA, lg· ~~~::'l~li~·~U~I'~~= BEACH DUPLEX liv nn, din rm area. bar & GREAT VIEW! ONE LO'T FROf! OCEAN & kilch, patio. 2-car gar Of harbor & ocean. Attr. split v.·ith view. 2 BR. & l BR. w/storage, clubhouse. Jerry ievel home on R·J 5100 sq. \\'ith fan1 . rn1. PLUS 1 BR. Hall 838-6603--Bkr. • rl lot. ldCaJ for 4 apt. units. & Ba. guest rn1. Xlnt con-'N"'E;;;W;;-.4;;B;;;R,-, "21>;;-;BA,.-,.,fa::m::-::,=m. $200,000. 2501 Ocean Blvd., diUon. Top area for Jiving luxurious w/w shag crpt CdM. By app't. only. or renting. $51.500. thnJ-<1ut, cu11tom drpg. Choice Call: 6424620 5 HOUSES C.M. By Own<" "'"'"· . em Grundy, Realto• On 60 x 305' lot, Costa Mesa. COLLEGE Pk. 3 BR, 1% GREAT VIEWI No vacancy. Good money BA. OWner. 282 Princeton o r harbor & ocean. Attr. split makers . .,,..,. Mo. incoine. Dr. $29,900, 56-3260 ~w -~-------level home on R-3 5100 sQ. Asking only $69,900. ft lot. Ideal for 4-apt, units. CALL e ,4,·241.fl ____ V_o_nl_o ___ ll_IO 9 ., REPUBLIC tri·ll'vd J BR + t.cl'Jfd#C. den, 2 frplc, lee tam rm. llEALTY Din nn, Frnt &: rear patios Nrar Newport P••t Office (rear w/lire pit) $46,900. 675-3000 BAYFRONT TRIPLEX Lido Isle, with sandy beach & a great view? $115,000 675-3000 OPEN EVES. 2'107 E. Coast Hwy. OpposUe MacArthur Blvd. m II\\ ,\ Ill 11'11 Ill.II .I\ l\f . 642-7164 Newport Be•ch 1200 HOME AND INCOME TOO! $200.000. 2501 Ocean Blvd., CdM. By app•t. only, Call: 6424620 Bill Grundy, Realtor Balboa Peninsul• 1300 W. Bay Waterfront Beautiful, newly redec. 4 BR + bonus room. Patio-deck- bePch·pler & slip. $175,000. Bill Grundy, Realtor 83: DOver Dr., N.B. 642-4620 Huntington Beach 1400 & WALLACE REALTORS -54Ml41- (0p~n Evenings) rear yard. Outstanding buy at $49,0CIO & excellent f.in- ancing availabll". Colesworthy Fourplex Dt>luxc units with an income of S555. a month. Needs a liltle paint &: care. Yoo can buy this nice homeii;;;~;P.i;iii!W;P,i;; / even if you don't have a VAj eligibilily. J BR, huge trees, ,Ylt1+9'J·· • , "'==-=:=="'"=-..;; only 2 blks lo shopp'g. Op. •' ,.1111 1 . portun ity for the investment ''HOW SWEET IT IS•' buyl'r. Mesa Verde for $26,500 clean home on .. Big Lot". Built-in f' , One o! the mORt delightlu1 income properties we've ev- er had, Modern SPANISH STYLE 3 bedroom, 2 bath separate home PLUS 2 de· lightful 2-bedroom apart. mentll.. Unbelievably tmmac- ula'e in and out. Best EAST SIDE neighborhood. See this for "the best" at $64,500, Walker & Lee FARM STYLE HOME & GUEST Yz Acre Bargain VACANT 3 Bcdrm, new shag crptg thruout. nl"wly painted. cl:lose to elem school.. Assume G.I. Joan w/total pymnts of $191 mo. 011ly $24,950 with 10'/o dn. Hurry • it won't lasll FULLER REAL TY 546-0814 lagun• Beach 17115 OCEAN VIEW 3 Bt'drooms, 2 baths. enclosed entry court. Wood pa,neling 1hruout: beamed ceilings. used brick fire. place. Only $33,950. --IOtan REAL ESTATE 1190 G!enneyre St. 494.9473 . 5<19-0316 e $7SO DOWN e Permanent Ocean view lot, $5,950 FIP. Assume bal. on existing loan. Bier, 497·1210 or 494.8632 ews. * The Hidden House * $18,500. Terracid gardens, patios, sunroom, l BR. 494-7J29by10 am for eppt. BY owner, Custom 3 br, 2 ba. Bea11'l.!. 7%%-$212 mo. PITT 494--0428 da, 832--7449 & Co. REALTOR J\'e\\"port Beach Office 1028 Bayside Drive 67:>.4930 $47,950 Exclusive w ith ; Nichols Real Estate s eEDRooMs ';".''"· ao.,....,, """""'· Split le~I v.·ith large game HUGE formal dining room 2043 Wt'!ltcliff Dr. Completely modernized & ln _•_v.;.'·~~==~--- roob •,n: form1 al ditninkg' and L~ with plush carpe:ls and dnip-646-m.1 great shaPe. Counlry style , Sh *, $3BR2,5~_,* _ _. / S46-9S21 Get In The Swim In lhis '''f'ather -b!!a1 lhr heat & buy this i;pa rkling pool homr in "C111nbridge Estates". Really beautiful, freshly rederorated & adult- occupied. Asking only $3<1,950 w/high f1lA loan. SALESPEOPLE NEEDED Newport ac yart over 00 ing In•: es. No Down to Vets . Small Open 'til 9:00 Pt.1 kitchen with built-ins plush arp . •...:uud .. -u, w t.lcsa Verde Country Club. Down to all others. CALL. 1 --.,..-==~=~-.,.-carpets ove!° hard~ o 0 d vie\V. Place Riiy 494-9i04 •t O.v1K'r i• huildin" a new * MUST SELL * 11 b ick r· ta ·~ W lk & L oors, cozy r irep ce, * The Hideaway House * Fairview home anrl :inxious for offl'l'S! a er ee WESTCLIFF ar.tique decor. Separate $l8.SOO. 1 BR, l!unroom, gar. SWEET & LOVELY 64'8811 1":==========1 Asking $57.~iOO. Re-·-ReduCt!d to $42,500 with guest, facility that's co~ & dens, cptd. 494-7'.!29 -v-I ' ... $6,<XXI down. Immaculate 3 unim'e. Huge <rf'nunds with Jn a!tractive l1t'ighborhood. S Bed F ' U bedroo 2 ba••· '" •" (anytime) room 1xer.. pper 2790 llarbor Blvd. at Adams ms, u11J, room to roam. Ideal loca· ----· Ideal 1 0 r appreciative Back Bay area. 2585 Sq. ft. 54S.9491 Open •tit 9:00 PM University Realty 673-6510 tio n. Don't hesitate to call San Juan 511·5110 r,...c1nema thlltlll LLEGE REALTY 15(1) Adlllll It turbw,cM. pcopl('. Being located on one Need pa· t arcf 'llrk 3001 E Coa t H Cdt.I block Jon" street makes 1his s in ' Y w • $23 950 , ,_,==.,.· ...,.--•...,._wr_.,,• .,-7 _ 1 1'.>'.'. -962-5585 Capistrano .... some r<'pair, Pricl'd accord·1'°"==-'°"=====•I • 'LOVELY de9Cribes thls im-FOREST[. OLSON '1 bcdrin, 2 bath home a ter-~ ingly, NEED 4 BEDROOMS?? 4 Bdr + Family Rm. mac. 3 br & fam rm home. 1725 ri(ic place for childl"t'n. The I T k $18 400 GI Loan El Pal v "' -Lease -4 BR .. Poo a e over • egant os e es s.vne 1700 Dover, open Wed&: Fri, price is right at $31,950. The Ro-'ty p 'th G uaJ -tage •-I · h It · w any Lush new shag carpels .t.· WI ann pe .... ""n fu"p ace l1t uge vmg rm., 2 to 6. Walker &: Lee, Jo terms are good, so call now TWO+ ACRE paint thruout. Tropical back-rate and total pay.n1ent of 4 Bcdrms, Family rm., din-Shapiro, 646-Till. & let us help you make it $t51 oo Ow ill E till built 1--=--.,-...,,,...,-..,.,=-ch Tha COUNTRY ESTATE yard, poo l and patio. Option · ·. ner w carry ing rm., ntry h • • By ~r. Furn 2 BR eapet" n your home. Stables. corrals & tack room. at $28.950. . 2nd TO tf necessary_ J!UGE, lns. No down G.J. 540-1120 garage apt on beach. Rent in Nt>11·port Bcoach. \1•ilh SALESPEOPLE NEEDED and I ni~an HUGE; cul-de· Tarbell 2955 Harbor For appt call 213/37&--0891 P"llL•*'l11'l 'll Vil'11•s or Bay & niounlainr. sac lot w1 rh lree11 and \\"Ork I ii-=_,_,_,~~':"_," I..:..~======".:::..:, Vets \\'hy rent when you can A " ~ ~ ~ DER LOV J · buy thi!I 1 bl'droon1 gem CARNAHAN Over 5,cm sq. fPCt of sun1p-54g.5110 ....... shed . Nredsc' .-~ ~N · • Country UvinCJ Newport Heights 1210 a KAI.TY CO, tuous Calif. til•h"' J'ivr rntarcintmalhnu..,. TNG CAHE. ALL! \\'i1h nolhing 110\\·11. Full . .., Ol.LEGE REALTY & L NO DOWN TO VETS 2415 MARGARET prlct' S21.700 in Cosla i'llesa. 1093 Baker, C.M. ;.,i&.5'14-0 BR., den. family rooin. for· l51X1~11Hartw,CM Walker ee l BR. 2 Ba. 20x20 livi ng r1'11 .. DRIVE l large bcdroorni:. "huge. I ""'""'""'""'"""'"""""""'I mal dining roont !..· living 1-:::::;::::;: + lge dining rm .. bllns, dbl!! huge yard. No cJov.•n vets. $l l Z OO room. Cumpletely redL't.'Orat-1-Realtors gar., near Back Bay. $25,000 Four Bedrooms -2 Baths Low down FHA. ~10 • M. including beau1ifu1 rurn-East Bluff 2i90 IIarbor Blvd. al Adams Lachenmyer Rlty. 30· PADDOCK POOL 2629 Harbor, C.f'+l, Ea1tside Costa Mesa ASSfiltE $22.300 Fl{A LOAN, $190 Mo. includes taxes, ·Freshly painted 3 Bdrms. 1% Baths on cfioit>e HARD· WOOD FLOORS. 12' x lG' sunken Rumpus Roon1. Cor· ner Joi, 2 8<')laratc ynrtl~. Pric.'f'd 10 sell al only S2G,!"i00. CAU. 1'001\ Y r· 0 H DE- TAILS. M. M. laBorde, Rlt r. 646--0"".,SS EvH. 6~:'iT9 P.r month Hure, rarpeting & drapc!I. r.c.•i:n.•""' n.... 'tit 9 PM A Best value -hea!('(f .t fill. :P.1agnificent 5wfmming j)ooJ. OPEN DAILY 1-5 ~ uy.::n · ' Call 6t&39'l8 or 5'l5-3483 pool plus sheltered palio Ior pays all SUbstanljaJly r ed u cc d lo 2615 B•mboo, N. B. MESA NORTH ~~'.!'l:~"l"'.!'l:~'l'!'" I entertaining. Wood burning Yes, just assume 1 ~ )O\V S295,IXKI for quick l'IRle. You'll be happy when you i:;ee Located near large shopping 2 STORY ~FRAME fireplace. W/W carpeting. 5%<µ. per annum rate Joan. 67$.3210 642-8235 this 5 bedrm, 3 bath home. center. 11Chools and San 3 BR. + den. Like new! Insulated celling &: walking 2 large bedrooms, dl"t'am Redecorated in & out. Best Diego freeway, Park, picnic Empty • ready to ro. Steps dilltance to schools, OU- kitche n, clean and neat Eastside Beauty of financing availabl~ Fast grounds, tennls courts and to ocean. Only 132.500. street parking for )'QUI' boa.t, throughout. 2 full baths, cov. . . csCI'O\\'! Vacant! ' loads of tun near by. \Vell CAYWOOD REAL TV trailer or camper. Fruit cml putio. \Vhat a buy at Itl sparkle11 ."·1th cleanlinc11S, Lachenmyer Rlty kept Three B<tnnsand. 1% bath 6306 W. Coast Hwy., NB trees&: Ooftni. AD thl1 for $IG r:ie». Don·i \Va it. 54£i..SG.1o 1as new k1lchl'n, ne'v bath-home with B/N's separ-SQ.l290 60--){76 Eves. only $30,500. Call for -i>P't. ' room. new cnrpct11 and drap.. Call 640-3928 or 545-3483 ate din. rm. PRICED TO to see. l's plui: a bt•aur!fully land· __ _ _ SELL AT ONLY $26,500 KING SIZE LOT Mr. Robinson sCR!K'd )'llf'(I and 11111io -Peninsula Point \VITTI FHANA TERl\IS. Close to ocean. Build large DAVIS REALTY 642-7000 Pl'rfl·ct for youni. t'OU/lli· c,r 2 Bf'dtn1 co ttage wi!h flre-M. M. La Borde, Rltr. duplex with four garages. 1't'lired -$2 1.~J()()-S<·t' ;1ny. plat'\.'. f\1;iin!t•nance fn-e 6'16-1)55:1 1-:ves : 548-326,:; O\\•ne.r w/finance. $29,500. tim~ • , • G-16·7171 yard. lloubll' j!;:ira~1>. J\'enr c.:cc...~~-~~--· I George Wllli•mson O THE REAL ·""-ESTAT ERS excclll'nt S\\'lm111ir1t:. $JS.9;JO FHA VA Re1ltor 673-366.1 msoro 1•\'1'.'(. • Bcdroon1s, 2 Bnths. 1'.ing 67J.43SO 645-15'4 Eves. !lize yartl on CUl-dl'-sAC Newport Shore• 1220 WALK TO BEACH \\'ond~rfUI family llvin&l 3 LIDO·WATERFRONT APTS.-320 LIDO NORD NOW REDUCED TO FHA TERMS $1SO,llOG-Xlnt Torms Drttnron delight· buy ihl!! G Beautiful units. 6 cnr TAKE OVER associated BACK BAY AREA BR, den & tam. rm. Cpb. & -drapes, t.11n. yard work. Necds 110me pe.inlirs Ir: Inc. Realtor! l91n Brookhurst Ave. Huntington Beach NOT BRANO NEW BEACH -$19,950 Not ne"·· but only 8 ),·s. yaung. 1'~anta11tic value ncstl. ed. among 2-story homes val. ued at $35,000, 3 BR's, 2 full baths. Gourmet kit. v.'ilh let. est builtiru. Cloud soft car· pets, J ust take over existing loan with payments much cheaper than rent. Bt'tter hurry! Call (714) 962-5.58.J. FOREST l OLSON Inc, Realtors 5 ACRE estate land or hone ranch, w I nice view, adj. other el'ltatl" parcels. $35,000 w/$10,000 dn \\'ill ttlease clear bldg Nile for 100% financing. Bkr. 493-1706 or 1 4!M-8100. Riverside County 1800 By On11('r . Norco 3 BR. fireplace bit Jns new shag carpel llC'1v painl in & out, 12 acre, all 6' c · & L fenced, largt" co?Tals far 5 horses, storage shed. Good lenns $24,800 734--0Tr4 Condominium 1950 "TIBURON " 'Townhouses. Sign up no\v for choice re- sales. Assunie gov't loans, no qualifying. 19131 Brookhurst Ave. CT NO DOWN $18,500 FP. :l Jiunlington Beach bcdroonis, 2 Jmlhs, t111Je. 60/. FHA bltns, crp1s. d111~. 3 Bed,J;oon1 • bath. '2 story, Larwin Realty, Inc. $32,cdl full prict. Elec bltn 962·6988 anytime rangt & oven. 2 yrs nc'"· '"R:;E"N"'T"'A"'L"S-~---1 wood burni111 Iin!placc, Houses Furnished c:rpls, dl"(>S. \\1llk to beach. 1-..:..:.:.:..::..:..:;;;;;;;:::;:_ large Jack It Jill bedroom. Generel .2000 ahake root, o\'f'rsized dble·1----------".;I pragl", extra &harp resale \\1th S bedrooms an:t famUy room.. garages~ utility room wiUl G.I. RESALE l!IROKERs-llEALTORS %025 W Bolboc:i 673-l&•J -Street only o n l' blocit lo grade !IChool. A fantaslic home for 11. )al'j('r famtly. Only $27,9.;0. Call now Enl<>J a .......s .. tlo ond 8J " lrootinr 00 .. cellont l bod"'°'", 2 bath with cozy REPOSSESSIONS Rpa.t'l.te plu )'Ud, ConYf~ swimmirla bl'acb_ lJaJ.ta ~ fittp)ICC, lfl'p.A.Vtt klteh-Sptrkllng t'Jt'an hcmlea, sc>me 546-2313. Spack»us 4 bednns. fonnaJ cleaning. OUl'!'ed for $29,850. dining, 1amily rm, priced MORGAN REAL TY If W>dtt mari<el For ftpt>L 673-6642 67S-6459 Je•n Smith, Realtor-t61-4411 ( :::.J 54MJOJ *A "SHOWOFF"* COZY l BR w I patio &: pr- aae. NICELY DECORAT- ED! Util pd. $120. HURRY! Home-Finders 64>2951 Sent to achoolt and 1hoppinJt". newly ftanlsbed.. en HUG E at X ~ famll,y ncwty painted &: <"arp('tcd. 2. Just lined • hurry! f\dl Bill Grundy, Re•1tor rOOm Wlth AmaJl down only 3, 4 &: 5 bdrna, Some "1th 1-o'THEREAL 1~ ES'.f'ATER,S price S27,950. Call 541)..1151.i 833 Dover Dr .. N.B. 642462> $1 50 jmyg all. $26.SOO Fuu. pools. ntA·VA conv. terms, Heritaae Realtors. =======:::::::;[ PRICE. fr.>m $17,0C(l to $40,00). DOVER SHORES I""""~'!"'~~~!"""" Walker & Lee c outns & \v:ius Inc. BRAND nt'W -Q1111111y bH 6 0 '0 LOAN D1'ol·A·R-ltor ""' Ad•m• A,~. ,.,.,,,, 1c -from courtynrd pool, pnnell. 4 Bclr. +-F1mlly Rm. C'.all Ua l1.1r 'be11t bti>'s In \\'cal. JU.:iUo~ PENINSULA-ed fain nn. wt! W, frplc. Uci.utiCUI :M>me~ Auumo. G'A cllll Our wvicc provkltt 76il:l Edin~r BAY FRONT ro !nlnkrn tiv rm w/vaulted apr. loan. 4 Jkdroolns, hUJ'tl tra.i~d hom~Unders and M:Z..4-t'J.j or 5'10.Sl40 5 UR. dl'n. din. m1 .• 4\{i ba. ccilina. 4 Ur. 2 bA + J)\\'dr h1mijy rm .. Urcp.f11 et. bull!· Pf'Obltm sol\1!1'5. 5/8 ACRf:, Tuslln Arr 11• Approx 1t ncre •... $325.000 room. ~lnsler BR. liv rm, 1n ABQ. Sµrlnkl& sy11e.m. PETE BAUm Sl~.!)j(). Consldrr 'TO!I, 1.x>u.1 ShO"'" by App'f. onl;r dh rm & kHch1·n all on 400 E. l71h, C.M.. 641>3255 Bayshoros 122S 528,500 IT SPARKLES Charm;ng ,.,, 1g, Hvtng rm, GI & FHA APPRAISAL From the new root and paint frplc. Pvt beachc1. 6". SJllUi<llng ckan, 4 ti.?drms. $100 -Ulil pd. Bachelor Apt. job to the'.-pool. Can't Af· Sl<t,9!i0. 642-1905 l % hRlh I kl! lnvel,y OCEANFRONT. 10~ .-~i -.,.._, •'-i• on i========='i 11 ' C' cc ·• Broker "'~·· ...,.... '" " ,..,.. ''" "' <"fl>!s/drps, lge con'lt'r lor. J.n"'U""lV for tizc .•. 3 Bedroom~. cov-University Park 1237 84j.8507 Evt'll: 968-UIJS_ $ll0 :-Ulll pd. Bachelor apt. c-1"Cd p!ltio, Sol4r lit•!ti!I--.;..._. __ ._ --A.\•ail11ow. r#.~~~~ top &iC:~i1ion -::=~~~~~: (11 •''& o .. +n,Jll "MAK:ro:~! Imd· ._ ••• _.• • dy'' .• clean out •the ANY 08.y Is lhe m;sT do.y lo garttgt .. your trash ts CA.Sil 128.IXXJ. 540-JTJO REALTY 642-S200 °' '" t'o' l9Jtl) ... LIDO REAL TY INC. Vt•w, lt08.900, Roy J . Ward, Terbell 2:955 H arbor 1..,""""""""""""""""''..::":;:8--08:=::97:::·:::1Vl«l:,::AJ:;!"'::... ___ 111 __ n..,...v_1._L_;,_, ___ 6_13-_73tltl_._n_ll_,._64_&_t_..,_ . ..,o_o<_•_D_••_•Y_·--~==~~--- r 'O THE REAL ''."'\.. r:STATERS run an ad! Don' t with a DaUy Pilot Ousltled delay .. OAl1 1oday, ~7S ad. ' If ' I : • ' • : E 3 : 1 ' ' I l . J ; ... ~..,.--------.... -=...,.-:;,.,,"'-:.-,-;.:". ;o,,...--,;----:;-----. -.. -, -.-...... -.,;:---... -:.------•. -' . ,_ • • • -.-t.1970 OAll. Y PILOT 2$ RENTALS llElilTALS RIP;NTALS RENTALS RENTAl.S Housos U~lurnlshtd ......... Unfurnished HousH Unfurnished .AptL Fumlshtd Apia. Pumllhtd RENTALS Apto. Unfumlthed RENTALS Houlff Furnished RENTALS Apts. Unfumllhtd RENTALS ' Apts. Unfumlshtd 5180 lmne 5231 """'"""'"' -5400 l·R-°"='•;.;l•:...:.;to:...;;Sh;;•:;.rt:::......:2:;.005;:;; ~;~;;;;;;;;;;::;::;;:ll;D-;;llO;I G .. orol 3000 L)do loll 3351 H'l"llngton Bud. -Hunll!'lfln BHdo 4!1111 Coste Melo LOVELY Sunny room tor il$11per Shatp ~ l ')l'Ai'tRFRCJNT HO Mt ORl.EAJIS APJS.. tJnW LEASIN6l Wolk 1~A:::.,,,,:_ one or couple. North Ot. CLE'AN 2 en w/ nloe yard. Otf, ~ Island. $'150. 3 fJ {) ·f / '"Y =~e Pr~ie ,t~·::s~ RENTAL FINDERS CoOO locaoon. Peta & child-~~Call m.3000, -oLa 'a(Ut~nla ..J+ermo~a ADULTS ONLY N.:; "= =--= ':9u~ ~ ~ b~:*' ex::; ~~~·eo1~ lfn~~g ~ * Homes b~~·ci~ome. $l4S. SEE ro B«lbM lsl•nd ~ Casual estate living. Enter La Quinta Her- 2te. 3:i'.1!ct~ = 1':. ~ 1.Nr~:,;. ~ =:: si.~ 54&--3634. * Apertmtnts Ho,,,...Flnders 64.S-2951 2 BR/2 Ba & den, Yr be. mosa's lush green atmosphere & stroll tree· CNr. Orange Co. Airport: Tu& pine, eolf. echooU. Juat NEAR Hunttnctr>a\ IJ&rtJoUr, " Mld<U• age cpl, $250/mo. 14\&!d walk ways to your apt. tin at 17th St: Ill', Weltcliff), th or e.o.-~--~ 'New ~tet-srea: ROOMMATE W an- ted-fem~e. ~-P'ct room &: -bath. ClOlle to Htll'bor Shop'g Center. C.M. &f5-Thll (Ir ~. * Roomm•ll• Costa Mo11 311111 138 Topaz. 67J..<12S2. Q ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED "" -· --· '"'· -. -··..--~ ..,. CAtL 645 " 1 $110 1741 T\Uitln, Costa MeA Culver Dr, Irvinf 833-3Tl3. Ll'l 1 Br. Will ~· $100 6 · .., 11 1,,. LSE SI 8 1 BR. Unf; $150 -Furn. ' .,_ Mn. Canon. tlG.46<1 PARK WE.ST up. Clilld/pet qk. C213J for inforrn1tion on these Coas~ P1t~.t>~e, :r:-N: Huntfngton Bee~~ 2 BIL Unf. $175 -furn. $210 l ........ . APARTMENTS 592-2823, 'nf: 8f&.S559. •••il•bl•CRENTALS •• , ~-··..OC A&·~. •.. • i,r 3 BR, 2 !!"-f&m rm. ~ 3 ,Spac. fir~ plans, decor. fu,rnlshings: I ve Owned •"" M•-~ ~ _ L.BR.-. .C!>JL B.U>lt. 1100. ullf !lici . .Eurn. aacl.e-b;'. orily _..~;,.. ~d. Le JlAtio, new c:nts __ ,,.i,it. ~· 'tliin ro!lllntic •~ting w/fun 'o~ j5ri!!•Y:· HARIOR::~REJl!IS ~ Tiid..~".'...:.. _Wibi/fiiii, 1.!!5"1i\O: W ANTED-0>1\1<1lial Wly ID shr lovely NB ' Bluffs tun. Put/ba, all prlvl. $80/mo. 644--0369. Ior, CM. We have more! tam/rm', !Ml b, lg kit A Children walk to schl. Jm. erraced pool, pri. sunken gas BBQ's wl CARDEN • SI't.JDIO APTS Call Ardo Haze Ye • $130 .. Clean 2 BR, carage, dln'g. l~ltlnr, crpls I drps, med. J>OSS, ~/mo J.se. eculded seating com pl. w/llamada & Foun· Bach. I. 2, 3 BR'•. from $110. Back Bay 5240 ,,n~<t296-0!=--,,42,. . ....,.=-=-! child a: pets ok. Pool deck, c v r d Ip a t i o . -~. tain. 2700 Peterson Wl:f, CM. 1 BR. ttfrlc, bltns. crpts, COLLEGE Or working man $.1.SO -Incl util cozy Cottage. 714/546--0066. 2 BR. Near P&rl<, wall fD * Color co-ord. kit w/ indirect llghting. 546-0370 VIEW • 2 Br, Opts., drps, dlW, pool, near beach, USS to share Laguna cottage. $65 Stove, retrig, chldm ok. RENT OR LEASE wall. drps, no pets. Clean. * Deluxe i-1n9e & evens * Plush sheg crptg. $170 bJtns. Lrg pool a: sundeck. per mo., adults. no pet&. mo, 494-1971. $185 " 3 Br. in good area. 2 HOMES ' 1-·or appt. (2U), 339-7882 * Bonus storege SP'tc• * Cov. cerport 3 BR, 1% BA, patio, bJt,t~ On Irvine, $170 1no, 67J.3690 Tnldewintb Realty M7~~ !=="======== Children welcome. Bolh S btdnns (1) $200. per after 6PM . * Sculptured m1rble pullfnen & til• b1ths crpts, drps. Ask about ou,r 2 BR. Near Ocean. Frplc, Coate Mete -· .... 21,00 CALL 894-7577 rno. tM olhet $225. iM·MACULATE 2 br duplex. * Elegent recreetion room. discount plnn. 880 Center St, E.iat Bluff 52i'2 ,patio. Crpls, drps. Adults., 4 BR. + fam. rm. 2 full for informitlen on these Nichols Rea l E1t1te rerpt, dl'J>s, bltns. patio, FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY 642-8340 LTNDBORG co. 536-2579 baths. Cpts, drps. bltns. 1vei11ble RENTALS .. , 546-9521 jiovely fe~ grounds, gar. Blk from Huntington Center, San Diego e Quiet Adults Living NEWPORT BEACH 2 Bl.ks from bch1 New 2 &: 3 Cov. patio. Nr. schools. •'lnn l '"'"'-4Br Showoasehm,lrpl, LOVELY4BEDR00Mbo-·$IBO. MaITied cpl su.327s. Frwv., Goldenwest ColJeae. 2BR Shagcpts bl-· beaut .,.11 G Br. apt. Crpts; drps, pado, .,....,,,, ~ """ .. .,_ ~ -1:;;' .. ~·-..:r-. 111..-'.mo~,'="'"""ill.. -..1 •-r.aneda.Apts.. --.... ---.-405-BIJt-St; 9fi8.3ll2.. mo llwiieF6G=0128-. -allilec, ICidS/pets. -on. a quief:~r with Founl•ln Valle. y. ••10 Sail -Diego FrN)r. -to-JJeaCh,JVa.;-SO.-on 1!U3\:1"'· u .. "'""' ci. .-.c.. "'-'-bed Fi ·-··-· t •-M & 1800 It or -t H I I ., ....... ,&WTJUI • "ve bed· 1 • 2 BR., -Frpl ' $235~4Br.Lease/Opt,Cor. pnvae ,.,..... sq,. Beach 3 blks. to Hol ; W. on ot to... util.Adutsonly,nopets. rooms&den,withbalconies "' , .. e,wap~. cs. Newport Beach 2200 ne,· lot Ideal fam home. spaciousness. Great family 4 Bdrm/2 Bath. Built-ins, LaQuinta Hermosa 714· 847·5+1 I 241 Avocado St. 646-0979 above &: patio below Grae-Near Ocean. P&lio. Adults. 1--'--------;295 -Brand new 4 BR, Frpl, home at ~ per mo. Agent covered patio. $260/mo, ht ' BEST ~ _ Vacant now. ious living & m•~t , .. .:._ .. _,. UNDBORG CO. 536--257'3 6210 W. Oceanfront bl •--d lndscpd 1 ~546-4~~1~4t~.,-;;--;.,..,--=-::cJ~&~l~"~t.;,64~ .. ~2264~.,_---1=========~~~=-===:==;::=-:::; ,__ ~·~~ Lrg. 3 Br. 2 Ba. upper apt. LA""N·D•l•O,RDS FR. EEi MONTICELLO A t Modem BR. Adults. lngg for family with children 2 BR, 2 ba mobile Mme, 1200 $275/mo. furn, or will con--I rac RENTALS Costa Mue 4100 Huntington Budt 440! $~!)10. 329 Cabrillo, Apt Near Corona del Mar High sq ft, 20 X 60. Adults onl,y. side.r unfurnished. Winter furn/unf 3 br~ 2 ba twnhse., _!.Apt~!s.:.!F~u~m~l~s!!hecl~--1;::;:;:;;:;:-;;:=-;;::;;::-;;;-;; D, 548-2765 or 642-tl261.. School, Fireplace, wet bar 1 ..:SJM::..::.546::...,_~---~ I rental. 546-1093 or wknds $165 Balcony, IJltiO, pool $250.1.. ATIRAC Furn Studio SllS/ ON BEACH•. * CLEAN 2 BR. 1% BA & built.in kitchen applianc-2 br duplex.close to bch & (213) 596--1709 ~2647· 1 G911eral 4000 mo,. Adttll'\ Oniy, nO pets. STUDIO. Crpl.5", drps •• es. Might consider unfurn.. dwntwn. Crp:s, drpt, stove. 2 Br., 2 Ba. New w/w c:rpt 3 BR, 2 Bath, fenced yard, 2 BR. Encl yd. ca.rpetl, 2135 Elden. See Mgr. Apt. 6. POOL. Working c ouple lshed or fUmlture purchase. No pets. $140/mo. 536-3507 & paint. % blk-to baY. $2'is patio, double garage;·""bltns, d\aJ)eS . Ctij ren 9Jt. RENJ FURNITURE • Slngl& apts from $165 ptet'd. S145/MG. ~. 8.35 AMJGOS WAY 644-2991 2 -BR. in mode~ trl.plet. 673mo-07i3nlcl util's, No pets. dshwhr, frplc. Pets & chUd. Call . !M225 Newport 6e1ch 4200 • ~ ~'i,~:O~ 1 BR. unf. $150/mo. Pool. Coldwell. Banker & Co. Lge patio, king-size br, pr . ren ok. 3 BR Vac Nice yard * DIRECT TO TENANT her Elec & wU' pd. Adlts, no Managing ~nt & frplc. $.2'.!5. 536-4927. ON THE BEACH TELE-TREND 832-7800 Family only $225/mo, Agt 24-Hr. Deli~ AN W T L• Carpet&-drapes-dishwas pets. MESA MANOR. 2411 ~~=~=~=~,_117==::=====:::: A k f Do "~" ,.,..._,. ·~·or ew •Y o 1ve heated pool.sauna-tennis \"il A CM 54•7•= I· 5620 Nice 2 BR winier rental. $225/ *]BR + DEN* s or n, o.;Kl""UllUU. 100% Purcba!le Option in Newport Beech rec room-ocean views "' son ve., · o-'IUJ e NEW DELUXE e Santa Ana mo. Near Jetty, Good beach 3 Br + fam tjn, crpts, drps, Complete 1 BR Apt u OAKWOOD GARDEN patios-ample parkifll:. NEW Deluxe 2 Br. Triplex 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lease. I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 & surr. 2 21 Fel'IC«lyardp1w/hpatio,do~ble elec bltns, i~~ ,,!_a,.t7~. Lowas$22/mo. APARTMENTS Security guards. apts. N.E .• $175/mo. Adults lnnncl•opac.dbl ,!!:~e."'au'to"·adootln1 VILLA MARSEILLES Dick Berg Realty 962. 4 gara~I!'. us carpeting. Rutgers Dr. ~· ~ ..,,,. JO.Day Minimum On lGth Street btwn FURN. also Avail 359-A Woodland Pl. "' ·--BRAND NEW $12.>-~10. Small beach FIREPLACE. Cluldren \\'el-3 BR $175. AlL lITIL PO. * WIDE VARIETY' Irvlne and Dover Dr. HUNTINGTON 642-5872. opener avail. Pool&: Rec. SPACIOUS \vateriront cottage. 1 or 2 come. $225. VACANT.MOVE E-side. Fe yd. Dbl gar, CUSTOM FURNITURE {7lC) 64l..a170 LRG 2 BR, CI D, carport, 1 area. 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apta. adults, Winter. 6~&-263~. TODAY! Couple & chll 646-5607. RENTAL PACIFIC child <>k. $135 mo. + dep. • FROM l265 • Ad It LI I !====="""' ==·= Home-Finders 645-2951 LGE 3 BR, fam rm, w/w 517 w. ]9th St., CM, 5e3481 BAYCLIFF MOTEL 711 OCEAN AVE., H.B. 2214 College Ave No. 2 865 ~!:?~ayby. NB Furn': a uV,."'m.. Newport -~~~~s 2220 1 Bednn turn tot/pet OK $105 crpts, bltns, ~I. l 275/mo. * LOW WEEKLY RATES * <n4) 536-1481 646-0627. wn.uAM-wAi:TERS co. ~. oo&or-~f.. 4 BR 2% baths. 9 mos lease, 2 Bedims private home $110 324 \V, Joann.y\1:. ,._,From $-35 Wk. Kitchen, TV's, maid service. Ofc. open 10 am-6 pm Dafbr 1 BR. Large, Crpts, dij)S, ed app1i&Dcee .. plllllh lblt 2 Bednns kids/pets OK $125 b ! ! Luxury Co 1 Heated Pool Managed by stove/refrig. Patio. Infant TNHSE -2 br, 2~> ba, bltns, carpet • cbolce of 3 color Wl300to~~alo.Estat 67~ .,~-tt 2 BR furn Costa Mesa $150 Mesa Verde 3110 .d Slngl.e Ap~-_,_.?1P ete 64';.,.,,.,,, Wil..LIAM WALTERS CO. ok. $120/mo. 548-4059 aft 4. frplc, patio, encl gar, lo:.2 -..... • ..... -n m n n.c e ......,,,,,... 3 Bedrms on Texas lot $135 --. -ma1 service, Ul.lu:;c::"Wa!"t'Sllii""ibe"s;;~~~ii;,;;1u.;;u; I~~~~~~~~~~ :1 u«f.2&:Si:udiO<;pt:~ Amigos Way, 6~ .. • .. ·----~· -~ 4 Bedrnr ''i180 'I'RI·LEVEL 3 + den, 2 linerui, all util, heated pool.ION the Bay duplex; Upper, LRG. 2 Br. studio apt 11Ai =="=='""===='! abotlJ'en .. mirrored ward- Balbo• 2300 STAR*nlrE~an··77;;.73· 30 frplc,teetamJrm!Dln rm, ~restaurant. cock-dockavail.Fumor~urn: BACH,E.WRApt. Utilpd, ba, end. patio, gar., pool, Carone del Mer 5250 lncn>be•~kJ • ..:.~. lftt~ -r -Frnt & rear 'patiOS (rear tails 3 br, Nu:crpts & paint. Ap.. NEAR OCEAN! fir. sch!, $160, ~Zi47. ~ ....._. 45' Bayfront .Balboa Pen!"· 5 $150 wtfire pit) ~65 mo incl VILLAGE INN prox 1500 sq ft, Adlts Only IJNDBORG CO. 536-2579 1 BR. Unf. All utit pd. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Mr •bun prtnte fec:ed BR, 4 ba, pier, float, winter gardener. 642-J364 Laguna Beach 494-9436 61:.-5934 962-T220. $150/mo. Adults, Want ok. patio -'plulb J~ • l=or=yr'='lyi:. =G1=1-'=203'l=.==== ll BR w/ large fenced yard 1111 BALBOA INN COMPLETELY Furn delux"e Laguna Beach 4705 301 Avocado, 543-7442 -brlck.Jlar..SQ'a. larp 1-t. Lida ISfi -~ 2351 -gMa-ge, arpetso "drapes:· .Newpor.t_Be_l-cb ___ _nJ<IY. Bal . 675-8'140 -.Br~--ttptl,-~, blk -to-bcb.. f---------12-BR.-l\l-ba. garage.&.pool. -,a~:;.•, t<l3f0l" ~ 1Brf1to1 St. 1---------breakfast room. -Pets & ''IN THE BLUFF'' ~ \Vmter lse, $1S5 & #up. tn4) FURNISHED RENT AU No children. no pets. Quiet Oi ML N. ol So. Coailt Plul) BAYFRNT. s br, 3 ba $1COO children ok. Elegant Ni'w wlll to wall car· REMARKABLY 679-4822. 1 bdrm. apt, at Woods Cove, neighborhood. 642-8G42 ON TEN AOtES Sant• Anl mo winter Ke n Brit-TELE TREND 832 7800 3 be full d" · UNBELJEVABLY 2 BEDROOM furn is h ed Lge, patio: 150 yds. to NE\V' 2 Br. apt, crpl & 1 4 2 BR. Furn A Unfllnl . tingham. ruir. 675-0.123 . ~ -. ::,~ _ hu:OO~ily i:::: EXTRAORDINARILY .Mobile _ Home. $150/mo. bcJLch. CompJetely fw:iWi~. drped, _atove. Nr •• 11chla & Firepla• I pri•. patloJt--/ l'!!!P~H!ON~E~:. !SS~f-12111!~~~1 3 BR. 3 Ba. oil-waler home * 3 BR + POOL* Bier ·,425 mo ' 540-l'l20 · BE.IDTIFUL Elderly adUlts. BAYSIDE $125 MO. LEASE shops. $180 mo. 548-1309. PooJa. Temda. Coittnt'l BJdat,i 1; Furnished -$450 Mo. Bill PLUSH carpeting & drapes. • _ ' Val D'isere G~rden Apt' VJ~GE. {Z13) 245-4763 z bdrms., fireplace, exc 2 BR. Crpts, drps, bltns, & 900 Sea !AM, CdM 6'4-2taU L B ch 57Q5 Cnlndy Rltr. 642-4620 Appliances. Children fine, BAY VI EW-BLUFFS 4 Br, Putting green, waterfall &: • WINTER RENTAL • ocean viei~; a Icw sleps to pat IO, $145 I mo, 2260 (U".acArthur nr. eo..t Hwy) •vun·a-•• --~·· A REAL JEWEL• 21Aa Ba twnboose. ram area, stream flowel'J everywhere, 2 BR ~onfrnt Apt . the sand at Victoria Beach. V2 BLK TO BEACH I 2355 .......... · frpl, <TPlg, drps, pool. 45• poo1' b'"'--' ......_-.: -$225 MO. LEASE Pomona Ave. Ci'\! • •. B_•_l_bo_a_ls_l_a_nd ____ Heme-Finders 645-2951 Lease $375.,83J..-052:T. BBQ'' ·s."u'na,· roo*'~.:.. .~ns, * 642-5662 * MISSION RLTY. Ph 4~1 EAST aide .. 2 br, l'il ha, CORONA DEL MAR From $160. New 1 & 2 Br. ,. ~...,,,., wuw. ' DELUXE 2 B Oceanfrnt gg-So ~--H '--· t. -· bl-· frig NEV/ 3 Bl', 3 Ba. lower du· POOL. 2175 S. Coast Hwy. 1010 SO. Bayfront; 4 BR. 31hi * ELBOW, Newport z,1..,11 l &: 2 'sr. also Singles from , r. a • u.n;l wy., ~ .. na crp ' "'-II"• u ... , re " plex, Closed patio. Cov. ......... 499-3929 or 497-1630 ba. waterfront home & 2 Br. "1 •• 3210 1135 See .,, 'ltV\n p xln t Ioc. Students wel-Studio $145 Incl. util. '=poo-=-l._,N,,o-'-pe-ts_._64.,6--66'"""'6!0-:~=-·-· ==,,_,=,,,.-,-..,-= ROOM * -'-'-.;..-'--'----I • 1 • ......., arsons corfte $195 mo 5484928 •: ag~. Beautlfully landscaped. OCEAN VIEW • Lrg 1 BR 1 ba, garage apt. Dock. Bil ·· d e Channing-!-br-hoUse. Rd., 64Z-8670. Between Har-• ' 2 BR. w/frpl $775 $14S .Attrac .aep hse. 2 BR, Complete blt~tns. Year lease apts. Furn ar-unfurn. Crpla, Grundy, Rltr. 642-4620 LARGE 2 BR w/ fence Fenced yard no children bor & Newport .. 2 Blk N.19th 2 br, 2 -ba, completely furn, New ocean .side unf $185 1 ba, cpts, drps, adlt.s only, at $325 per mo. Contact drpa,. blt·lna, patios. walldne WOO. Bal Is, furn hse, nr y¢, carpets, drapes "!:" $150.fmo.· 64Uz33 , Just for Single Adults Patio, gar. Winter n.tea. PLACE REALTY 494-9704 no pel.5", Ref's, 2354 Santa . 0 distance to town • .100 Cl1f1 water, pat cov'd, fncd, ~ bd,. ~CE, $150; A REAL SOUTH BAY CLUB fiOCOW! Neptune, 642-5486 SMALL 1 BR, util pd, bar, Ana Ave., 673-0395. >, 6754050 Dr .. Laguna Bch. 494-5498 2 ba. frpl, family. ~7 ! Univer_s~ty Park 3237 APARTMENTS e OCEANFRONT 2 Br, 2 Ba, patlo, 2 min to bch. Sgl LRG. 2 Br, pool. $155. Conve. W •·jg m La NEW 0 c ea 0 side apt.I. 0 Beautiful Bayfront 5 hr, Hom•Finders 645-2951 Newp!irt Beech $250/mo. Opts. drps, frplc, only. $145 mo. 497-1153 eve. nient shoppi~. RespotW_, =====---:=,--,• 1 w/pool $lG9.50 ?&>nth, 3 ba hse. Winter rentat, ~ REACH * DON'T DELAY! 880 Irvine Ave. 962-2341 -~ RENTALS-.. persons only, 31l E, l?th Pl, DELUXE Duplex -3 BR, 2 PLACE REALTY 494-9704 $400/mo. 544-9526 FO THE PHONE! 5 BR+ CALL US TODAY' (Irvine Rnd 16th)' LARGE I Bdrm. Near Apts. Unfumllhecl ,_c_.',,1·,,54,--,8-6532=-·~,...-,,.,-,-I BA. 1600 sq ft. Cl'pl/drps, DELUXE 2 BR, 2 BA. N. S A H • ..._1 2630 G House. Fenced yard. Lease/option 3 BR ...... $340 (714) 64U550 Ocean. $150 ~,! .. ~ARLY. &Scrp~Edrpatu:iobj;, brdst~:-patio. Central loc6.;,. ~~.,pets. end, nice view, $250. Also 1 ant• n• 91~· 5 Pitts & chih:lren welcome. 3 BR. 2 Ba. tnhouse •••• $340 HOLIDAY PLAZA Students ok, 67.>-0VOO GeMrel 5000 encl Pr. &ts-2939• ' $250/mo. Agt. ,...........,.,, or Aingle.. 497-1056, 494-5810. l Bedroom $"9. BRING THE FAMILY! 2 BR.. I !>a. ho'"use ·····• $280 DEWXE Spacious 1 BR " OCEANFRONT 1, 2, 3, & 675-4847 R1ntal1 Wanted 5990 Hctne--Finders 645-2951 • eel h·11 furn apt $IJ5. 2 BR+ den 4 BR's. WINTER RENT-1;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·;;;;;;;;;I MODERN 2 Br, crptll, drps, API'. Spacious-Cheerful, 2 All util paid $150/mo. I · · ALS ,..,., ........, l 1 GE kitchen, enc Io s e d .,._ l •-encl h 2 bl"-* Cull 545-7645 *LANDLORDS!! r I $165. Heatod pool. Ample • o•~· VENDOME ....... near bus. 11<5. =· -· . pore. ~, _______ _ !===='="===:::::: lvadi.rn:y Problems Ended parking. No children-no 3 BR. 2 ba, fri>lc, e.ncl patio, Adults. 12) E. 20th. to heh. Util. pd. $215. Rd's DAILY Pn.ar repmter ~ . L•gune Beech 2705 ~ supply of qualified REALTI!' pets. 1965 Pomoba. CM. 1 blk lo beach. Yrly $275. IMMACULATE API'S!. req. 61:>-4943· wife want to rent w leue .. 'i'~ 673-2455 ADULT and NE\\' DUPLEX. 2 Br. Cl'pta, $115/mo. lae. 1.j:, upper 2 small turnlahed or unfurn. Leese/Sale Furnished ~Tts at no cost to you. Univ Park Center, Irvine Coste Mesa 4100 . FAMlLY Section drps, $160/mo. 1570 Oran&e Br., cpt/drpa, ref/range, iahed bouae 1n Laguna Can- L.v.ly Belch Condo ""'t fur LEE or OLA. call Anytime 83.1-0820 1 BR & Bachelor Apl Near Cl t ~ I P k Ave. 543-8572, KI Z-7719 gar. Mat adlta, 704 ...... or other O.C. ··-132 .. 6600 bay &: beach! m6 W,, Bal· GM~ e-.nopp "01 ar ~w ........,_, Avail Nof for lease thrU ~~='""-~===~ 3 OR 4 BR Townhse on * MOTEL-APTS '* boa Blvd. 494-2250, * Spacious 3 BR't , 2 ha Clean 2 br·hltna, dshwt1hr, Narclsirus. area by December. 54Ml380 JUpuneperor !;tbn'riJ .. ~R.. !~.: * "'4JINI HOUSE * Greenbelt Best' of $35 wk & up. Kit!, hid pool, DELUXE 2 Br Westcllff 1oc * Swim ~I, put/green crpt, patio. gar. $155. Adults, 3 BR, 21,l BA duplex, bltns, days, 536-ll95 ever. ·~ ... ....,....,'6 ~. l BR Home in good Everything. '$375. ,141 alr-COnd, queen bet:h1, ph Pool la: 81~ Adults' * F'rpI, Ind1v/lndry fac'b 1 .,.•..,0-"',.~.,."°548.filS"'"'°"'-',,.....,,,,..,.-I crptd, drpa, encl gar, oonv. WANT YEARLY I..5E: Sm. kitchen areas main floor ov-~borhood. Nice yard. Sandburg W'.J. 83.3-0053. serv, Daily &: Wkly rates. $190/mo. no lse". 642-6274. ' 1845 Anaheim Ave. * Lrg. 2 Br. Studio, 11ii ba,.1 ~1oca=ti.,·on-= .... "'..,1-'~24.,0'J.~~--· 1 unf hR-S. of pter, Balboa •Largrloo,kin2g,aber apou'!fupllu~:t~:: \ nsider pets&,children. • VACANT·lmmaculale! 2080 Newpo64rt22611Blvd, at 21st *FURN 2 BR g•-•e apt, COSTA lUESA 642-2824 new drps, paint. $140. 4 BR. 2% BA. Studio apt Peninsula. Mature.reliable '' SEE TODAY · -.._ l • 637·2943 Clean! 714 Goldenrod. cpl. No chldrn or pell. age & complete laundry fa-H o-Flnders Ms.2951 Jul!Jaaj 3 Br, 2 ~~· fa644-0m nn.,.,., B-Americard Master Charge On Beacb. sno. I FOR RENTI I-'•"2""n"R"'T"o""=~·H-.:o"u-.:s;;E;-,,,,-1 $375/mo. yr lse. ~1573. 642-Cll. cilities. All beautifully & Pool/rec. fac. $.:o.'lO, ~ * 213/378-089 * I 2 nn • cp s, ICOR RENT!' $25 p W k & U • &: 3 BR Apartments thru· f 1 al 1 BR A t 2 BR N .:>f hwy frplc WORKING couple desire 1 complelely furn ished, linens, I' • er ee P . PENINSULA POINT out Orange County. Ranging rp c, gar. so • · P ' · ' ' ' 1 china, elc, if aesired. Only 4, 3 '.I:-2 BR Homes in Or· Irvin• 3238 Bachelor~ b~ TV V~ :n~1d 1 br. $150/mo le~· from $69.50 to $188.50. Furn ~cal-1 _54_ .. _16_74_._~~--• ~~f;.9~=ld~~~w br. furn apt or duplx n 100 steps to private beach. ang~ County, Rentals start· serv. av ic ona, 675-8990 or Unfurn. Ask for JODI. DELUX Lge new 2 BR, cpts, ~i~· ~ax~Wl~f~ ~~j Tennis court & 2nd pool al· ing rt $123.50. Furn or Un. BRAND NE\Y Home. ad· C.M. 832·7800 drps, bltns, patio. garage, BACJiELOR, •Chllrm l n g Collect tn4). '4~l9S7 so on property with gorg-furrlj Ask for BONNI, joining Orange Grove. 3 C & S Spucly Rentals Newport Hgts. 4210 NEW DELUXE 2 BR nr Westcl!ff. 675-2150. patio, $150 Incl. util's, 514 eons landscaping thru-out. 832-7800 Br/2 Ba, trplc, D/W, 2 BR furn Duplex w/ garage. ----------I --~3-=·-~---Ad~ul~ta~-· I Ferleaf 6'15-6044, 642-3645~ WANT YEARLY LSE, Sm. unfurn hJe.So. of pier', Balboa Peninsula. Mature- reliable cpl. No chldrn Cll' pets, 642-6301 t mk• 1 d •. CJ $185/ 2 Ba, Blt·in range, dshwbr, ........,vum. • s Easy access o super .. *In' Stant Desire* crpts/drps, andscape .,. ose in. mo. CLEAN 1 or 2 BR. Adulta, no ha d Fro $165/mo. Near Ocean & hop 'g shopping, etc. $325 month, fenced, $295/mo. Ca 11 1648 Newport, CM 548-1169 pets. Lrg kit $1J5..$150. 2421 11 g crpU, rps, garg. m * Call 540--0154 * Brand new 2 BR. 2 BA winter basis, Will consider SHARP 2 BR w/ garage, 2111382-7437 Cit 714/832-5792 • NASSAU Palms 2 Br E. l6th St. NB 64&-lSOL $6417i).5!.973Nr0.,s;, • .,et>M2321t Plaza. 326 Matguerlte. 548-7983 lease _purchase or outright Newlf pttinted. Pels & clUld-..,.._ ... Uni Pool Ing .,.., -.: LRG 2 & 3 Br, cpls nl Refs ren ~ $130 WON'T LAST' d I M 3250 apt. i: ..... -.. "' • , p • w/kid11 ok. 1998 No, l Lid I I 5351 ::n:_:1~r~T~f91any:1:Hr;•~m~io-~:'i.F;ii":'ic1e;;·;;ri';;s~64ii5-i295f.;;;l~·l l~c-..... -;;;:-•-;--:';;--•:r;--;:::;--12r':!;1f"!..;E~··2~~B'!'!Q~,s~Lshoc.!64~~~~1~'..""'.,,...·1:c::o::r::on;;;;-•:;:d;;-1-:l::M7"'.ar;;-;:;;4::250--;:C _.._"-' ... •_Mt_•_• ____ s_ioo_ ,,"',.,a"'',.,"..,·..,64,,,2-<34='-·=,....,=,.1--'o-•-'•----'-'-' time. I' bl FURN & Unfurn 2 Br. mtns, UNFURN. l Br. Range, frig, '""""'======== llCJBo~e' 2toBA,cCohoondt,o &·.all1hop: ""°pg. 4 BR. 3 BA tri-level -AVAlL Oct 5. Lge 1 Br. BACHELOR apt. 2 blka to llko li·vi·ni 1•0 Your crpts, drps, priv patio, pr. forced air, garage. Walking NICE Mobile home, ,_ ,.~. 0 LANDLORDS 0 FREE RENTAL SEBVICE Broker 534-8982 1-~ Medi le rra ne a n decor, turn. $145. Pool & carport bch. $125/mo, Respotlfl\ble, No pets. ~1867. dist. to store, quiet. $175 mo ~ -..,., Duplexes Furn. 2975 Pool & rec facilities. $220 redecorated, $375 lsc, $400 1846 Placentia. See mgr No. neat yng lady only. Avail ll· OWN HOM • • • I I 1:~~~~~===:::1~lse~.~67>-S~~I48~. ~===~~1~al~""~· ~CM::;or~NB:;--~~Cal1:1 mo. Avail 10-1·70 Call nw to mo. Avail now, H. 1. 675-4943. Why pay $175 for an apt? -646-2148. NE\VPORT BEACH Heritage RE 540-ll51 646-0911 642-1771. $ll5/mo mob hm wlscrnd when we can 11!-nt you one Newport Beach 5200 Balboa Island 5355 1355 E. Balboa Blvd. 1'1 fl' * BONANZA * 11 Hid 1 B•lboo 4300 for $140. 2 BR., newly d0<:, 1 ________ Roomo for Rent 5995 d Pl·-wntr/"rl" 3 Br 2 2 BR, frpl c, attach gar, lge porch.comp urn. poo . crpt/drp, encl patios, spac UPPER 2 BR, d e n., _________ _ u ...... 3 or• ' FIXER UPPER·2 stGry 4 BR, patio' Adults, no pets, Very Adlts, no pets. 4 Season's ... 2 p ,_ d I nly PARK NEWPORT -Catt •~tdrp ~I , ba. bny & ocean al l l'X· fen ced yard. Pehi & child· nice, $215. 675-4523 1'1ob Est. 2359 N.wpt, 548-6332 NEWLY DECORATED 1 BR grrJUs • OO!l>! A u t.s 0 · free llvg ovrlk:g the water. 7 Cl"Poo s, .. ., c, 1 a r' LARGE SuMy room, walk.o tras-wshr/dryr, iceinaker, I ~"'-'-'--7"-'-_,.,=--l,~-,.-,°""ccc-7'.-.,.,=:-;;-I nr beaches I: sho p 6 2283 Fountain Way E. (Har-pools. 7 tennis ctr $7SO.OOO dlrpoaal. $2GO/mo Yr ly ' ing dlatance to OCC. 5 min re.tr ig, garage. trplc, sand ren ok. U>asc/option $153-no 2 Br. newly crpted $200 mo, 1 Br. Apl. Close }O 'hpng & $l50/mo. UtU pd. 675-5SlO. bor, furn \V. on Wilson). Spa. From $lf3 to $il50. inclds utll. 675-6017. to UCJ. Dbl bed, closet A shower, dshwhr. Owner down. SAVE-SAVE~ no pets. 432 Fernleaf. Call C.M. Park. $125 mo. Incl. BRAND New delxe"2 BR Bac.h.1 or2 Br. Al!Kl 2 sty ---dresser. Large student desk 213=790-TI73. OPEN SUN. Hom ... Finders 645-2951 (213) 761-4767, util's. 548-4157 or 54o.-o623 2 BR. Beachfront. Crpta, Huntington Beach 5400 1;.;;,"".:.:;:::.."':':::.:,:,,:::::-lruo:-.-;;:--;:-.-;;;:::;-v.;;:;· I ;i::::';;:=-.::::::::;-;:c:::::-;::;:I aft 5PM. drps, resp. f\dull.s only, no trlp!ex apts. Private patios, Townhouses. Elec. kt. prl. & pull down lamp. Kitchen AIDES -for convalescence, $140 -3 Br. in 4-Plex. Yard. Turn thOse unused items into1..;::""'='ii;..,=-,,..-,-;;;;--I children, no petll, 644--0'r:i.3. &hag crpts, drps, bltns, pat. or bBl Subtrn prkg, pot prlv. Laundry rm, privatt elderly care or family care. RIO refrig. Family ok. quick cash through a -Furn Bachelor&: 1 BR. garage, X!nt E-Side Joe. ma.id ser. epfJ, drpll Just N. $150, 2 BR, 2 b&. cpl.II. drp!!, TV. All home privilep9 Homemakers, 547--6681. Broker 514-698) DAILY Pll.OT WANT AD. Exceptionally nice! 1 BR. Fum apt. Util's paid. $175. Adults. 353 Woodland of Fuhkrn Id at Jamboree just paJnted, kids Ok. m avail. student $15 wk. otben 1.=:=::===============~=========I Below rental value!' $125 mo Adults. No petll. 31D Place (near Tustln A ~th) &: San Joaquin Hills Rd. pets. 830--1548. $20 wk. 546-3634. r -~G~e!!"'!2'e!•!!_l ____ ;!3a~OO~-G~G:!1!!n1!!r:!i!!_l ____ !30~+~l)~G~1n~•!!'!'!.l ____ !30~-0-~0.1;;;2ll::;;O:..N::e::;"";;po;irt~Bl::.v::d?.,_;CM=ii:~l;E;;;.jjBal~boe'i°°'jBli;;"""'"o.;Bal;boa.~'ffiijl 6t2-4905. 644-1900 tar lea.sing info. 2 BR unturn. Duplex, nr RENT Top floor of eon.., I• Clean. quiet l Br. 2 BDR 2 ba """"' sno VILLA MESA APTS. 2 BR. Unlurn. crpt,. drpe. 1-:h. Adulla, 1dtlld1145. do! Mar Cottage. Empklyed • $~\l~lJ.-.!&£~S" The Punle wiflt fire Buiff./n Chuckle 16'IMED1 ! t--.l'"°i .,.,--.., ...... ,, -I ~. for9tgrr Cllln "lltlt car Is 10 • -• • •· • hi;jh class I~ even bookflros r..,1,..N"""'1 ""a...,11:'"'1=---.1 w1¥t 0 -aa:ont.• • 0 Completo tho ehudl 'I~ • 1 ) ' I I I I' by fill!ttQ' In the mlui~ \.ont · _ . . . . . • ~ dwelop froft'I sltp No. 3 below. :• ~~l~~~~:~~E~tnERS r: r -11 r r I' I' I & ~sc:~;~umtsTO 11 I t I I I I SCRAM·LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIRCAnON 8000 w/Garage. Adult 2 0 3 9 winter $165. 320 Alvan.do 2 BR. Prtv patio. Htd pool. patio, pool, bltns, $160. 53fr7646. 618 Gene:va. HB. lady. m.2564 att S. Wallace. 548-1885 eves. & Place. Near new. 2 car enel'd gar, Children Seaclftt Ma.Ml' Apts, 1525 •'knds welcome no pets please! Placentia. 548-2682 ask Faunt1ln Velley 5410Founteln V•lley 5410 1 BR.' $125. Poot Spe.c. Lido Isle 4351 $165 ~-719 w. WUaon. about our dlsoount plan. -.jiiiiiiliiiiiiiiii-miiiiil Adult.s. Ideal for Bachelor. 646-1251. NEARLY new oceanfront 1993 Church, CM. 548-S63l. 320 Nord &ach Apts, fUm. • THE SEVll.LE Peninsula Pt. luxury apt, 4 :J~e:. • BEAUT Bach & 1 Br. Garage. 1 br $225--$250, 2 BR, 1% ba w/ gar. br, 4 ba, frplcs &: declol. · bachelor $200. Avail now, $600fmo 548--8077 apt. $~.5(1 wkly le up. winter rates. 6424097, Adult...epi., drps, fnr.d yrd ..:;:;:;;::.;·...:,:~~=--:= Jo'urn ., inc ulil. 546-<»51 535-&696. w/ patio. \Vtr pd. 636-412). DELXE 3 BR & 2 BR. 2 BA Furn I Br & Bechelor 2619 "L" SllntA Ana Ave Sl55 four plex apts. Bltns, D/W, '0 7 "K" Viet·~• St. 1155 H Ito f 1170 2110 Newport Blvd, CM B•lboo Island 43SS w ~· nr oag •P· rom NEW 2 BDRM. Beam ~II-mo. 642-4381 64%-JTil. 1 ~R FURN $1&1/~0 incl lngr. wood paneling. All rec ...... bt tifl I util. Pool, gar. digpou,I, BAYFRONT Duplex: .S BR/ features. $165. Adults, no ~ hlk bay w ..._,., &u l Adultt , no pet!. &n-2381 lower, 4 BR I upper, &ney peti. Call now 646--0073. new 4 BR. 2 bl, cpts & 1==""":--::<--=-,,,,,...=:ol be h NR yrn ..... _ ..,.._ drps, 2 ca,t 1ar, $32$ mo. FURN. 1 BR Apt, oil TUstin ac • , .......-;. ~"'""'· e 387 W. Bay Street e $73-9152 or 642--7994. Avt. $135/mo. Wtr &: cu 673-$299 2 BR, AvaU Oct 15th. Ne-w 3 Br. 2 Sa. Unf. Bltns, crptl, pd. 542--3379 or 838-3919. 2 Br. tum apt Immaculate! ahag crpt'§. Re.frig A atove. drps $250/mo * Call l BR. Furn-utn pd, 1 adult No ehlldtcn-n:i pets. ~ Car. Pool Patio. Walk to 5tt}-7m, ' only. Eastslde, $1Wmo. ytarly, 673-6lMIS. ~hop«. Reap. •duJt. $150. s BR, 2 BA. Unfurn Crpls 642--3520 5'i3--156S aft 2 pm. d blk to ocean.· Yeui; $12>2 BR 01'NHcr. l or 2 Huntington Bud. 4400 C & S Spei'dy Rentals s:rt. m-m. ~~'15. no pet!, Utll 1 BR unf. All util pd. Close 2 a.. on the Beach! , 2' BR. PooL A d U 1 t I· In. $120/mo. ~mo--yearly Adults 110 NO\V RENTINC-2 Br tum. lkllut/Qulet! UUl I nc ) 1643 Newport, CM S48.ll69 pets &12-3978 ~1 & wknds rec 1"00!'n, htftted pool. No Saxlt mo. 17676 C.meron. 1,. DEL.UXE 1 " 2 BR. • ' chtlfl'm'I. ~. ~l2t_____ Garden Apts. Bit-Ins, prJvL - • $120 1'--UR.Ntunf, util 1»1id. "** AT BEACH t-tt 2 BR'a. 4 patio, hCAltd pool, trple. Newport Hefghh 5210 Adult$. 1662 Newport Blvd. be•ut. bldp, Pools, 2ai 12th Adult a. $145 mo. M&-5163. 642-61.94. St or 215 15th St, H.B. NOW ALL REDEC. 2 BR. * 1 BR. Lrg cl0111ll, Pool. 1 BR. Condominium, nletl.y Nu cpt.,-, drp5, pe.tnt; ht pool, Shntfle board . New f\.lrn, eoolOl!ed palJo. adlts/no pets $135. 642-953> cpl/c\rJ>I. Utft pd. -$150/mo. Ph. -llO?mS ARRANGEMr.NT DELUXE 3 BR. 2 natl\ . Crpta:, drp1, frplc, & i:arnge, Close lo 1hop'1 a: Khll.. Call •II ~ 515-8395. :J.ounlai"ru' · ' M~ Sty!. C-.U-, 1112---1 Bolbtt A4a1t tholq ........, Ir '11.,,.,,...... • r ." .I ""' I\ •t "I'•',•,·'\ •l '\. ol • ... ~' ., ' 4• 1• .. ~' " '• . ... .. , .. . . " '• • . • H . Wl V: PIL.OT Tu<sda1 .. 0ttob<r 6, 1910 • I ;liiiiiiiiiiiiill111!1••11!1••!1iliii!i!l!!!~RfiE~AlLL ESTATI BUSINESS and _ ANNO.UNC&MENTS SEll_VICE DIRE~Qg!_ 1f 1f .1c ----* • Genenl FINANCIAL and NOTICES Babyslttlnt '5so Qffly It 8u1lnttl -lost ::_ ~I AFTER school-ciare;-my SUPl;Ro-OELvxi:JiiJNjji O pportunltlts 6300 Mlnklnale. dachsie w/co_U!lr, home, COUege Pa:_k, Nr acbl J.2.3 room, up 10-3.000 sq. AAA under medicalion. Lost on bus •lop. ~1S$ ft. ottlce sulteJ, Immed, oc. CANDY AND SNACK ~toAJevlsta, b1wn Santa Ana BABYSl'ITING In rny Mme, cupancy. Orange . C n t y, SUPPL y &. Tustin AftS. Reward. Costa Mesa. days only. Airport Irvine Commerc. WE ESTABLISH >18-3666 ee....,, ,.,....,,, C.Omplex, adJ. Airporter ALL ROUTES LOsrt Vie Harbor Area BABYSITl'ING m:J home, Hotel &. Restaurant, banks, (NO SELLING INVOLVED) Boy's Club, Center St. Boy's Costa Mea &.reL Day -or San -o & N'Pl Fwys, P l ·~ oo 20" blu-blke, Nobby tire, night. Infants OK. 642-5299. all Orto ,,.,.,,,..,.,;), UNCROWDED PARKING Plan two •••••• "tS162.5:00 frnt I bk-Lie No. 20588 NEWPORT Hel.gtJ,ts area, ll;e LO\VEST RATE.S Plan three •••••• $3250.00 Reward! 546-3208. yd & sand.bot, ~baJanced l Owner/mgr. :1112 DuPont Dr., Ca.sh Required. Excellent in. REWARD For lost dark lunch, xlnt care. 64~21M. ~ Rm. 8, Newport ~aeh. come for a few hours ~k· ~ sealpolnl Siamese -filtten, OULO care in my homt. ---•---WMctciya::W•ntt wit.ddya Got1~--83'l.3m Courteay~to..Broken-fy-wotll <DllYS &~ltffi'ig!). Meredilh Gardens area7 Sm:-Fenced bk Yi], wariii mFalr SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR DESK SPACE J<.lilll"g and collecting "" thin, a"'w' to SOcbr.64>-0829 I I • • NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS lOS No. El Cimino Real moJV.y from coin operated •·Etoiioe". aft 4:30 962-7491. Llc'd Day catt ,. am to s:30 Special R•t• SGn Cfemente dispensers' in. Costa Me~ SHAGGY Daisy type dog, pm wkly. lloi meals. Hal' 5 Lints -5 times -5 bucks _, ~,..... and llUrroundUlg area. \.\ e male, blk & wht w/grey &: bor/Baker s-a&.1539. auLtl't -AD MUST INCLUDI! .......... -tabU h route (Handles I=====·=====; 1-W1111 YM ,.." " Ir...._ ~'#'1191 ~ ••Jlt 111 w.. es s • tan, whl tip on tail, med szo1 : ~YOUl P'*lt •Mtot ~ .._. 11-ff MY""INllt-DESK SPACE name brand candy. and Rwd. Jost S.1, NB. 673-50ll Brick Masonrv j....lllOfNING f Oll SALl -TllADliS ONLTI snacks.) For personal inter· , . 1 ' 6560 To Piece Your Trader's Paradise Ad 222 Forest Avenu~ view in Costa Mesa area, l Yr. ol_d redlb"'.11 ~·1-..:•o;lc'------- PHONE 642·5678 Laguna .Beech send name, address and fem, ~i:: W~tcl,i¥ No col· BRICK * BLOCK * STONE 5 BR, 3 ba, lge encl patio, Mt'lft de! Mar;-Eq-$6000 FOR smaller 3 or 4 BR w/ pool, Any area. * 557-3331 * Divorce settlement forces liquidation. 1 I.rust deeds al diSt'OUnt FOR eqully in 4 BR home or ANYTHING. * MS-5068 * '6J Rambler G cyl 0 /1{ valv. as. O.D, P/S.Rllt Nu tires. Runs like new. Trade tor boat motor & trlr, travel trlr. up/dn or? val. $450. )42.a198 Dclux 4-plex w/pool &: rec nn in Tustln, S.20.000 eq_ & 100 A Oregon land, $20,IXXI cq, want larger units, com· mrr<"ial or !lUbmit ?! 673--3101 Bkr. 1958 Piper Apache twin , 1'lint OOnd, lo time eng, $5000 worth of new TB.dios. New paint. Trade $3500 equity for boat, property or ? 542-7208 :..agJna Beach commercial, SJ2,000 (!(fully. \VANT acre- ige or small units, Roy J. Arntson, Realtor. 494-7260, 1000 N. Coast Hwy. Have 12 units, Garden Grove, \V&iif ilnIIS, com-:. - mrrc .• indust., San Francis. 00 Penin. or L .A. area. Pyr. imid Exchangors 675-6060 \Viii Trade" S600 eq, in· Ocean View Lot , in Baja, Cal. For Boat or Anything of vaJ. ue. ?? 008-1875 Aft 4 pm * * Motels, Trailer . . Court• * 5997 ·------~ • * \VEEKL Y Rates. SEA LARK 1'10TEL. 2301 Newport Blvd, C.osta f\lesa. , Guest Homes 5998 phone number to MULTI· ::.0757 Da is y ' Rwd . By the hour, aJtcr 5:30 l2) 3 BR 11,S ba homes, l:!Ox 494-946G ST AT E DISTRffiUTJNG, • 642-1948 * 645-0758 ----1l0' CJ Jot,.Anahelm,4~!'FO=R="°'LEA=~s~E~Lrg=~-.....,-=,~n-. INC. 1681 'Vest Broadway, BICrCbE. BRICK, block, stone. Patios, VA lo&n, nets $157 mo, cq ocean view Ottices. Sbops, Anaheim, Calif. 92802 C'l14J Mesa Verde area. entrance ways. No job too $31,500, Want vac or imp Jt. suitable-prof. or business. m..5060. \p;;;;C~al;;;jl !>(().Sia""';;;;;;;-at;;t;;;;5:-;;;;:l~'~m~a~IL~..,_~782S.~~==== 3 Cl. Bkr 968--1416, 968--2645 1999 S. Coast Hwy, Laguna RE ST AURA N T. Cash J>urebred Siamese male cat. Lovely high desert home, 6 Bch. 494-94n. needed! Submit bid. Fan-Thurston School area, J.a. Cabinetmaking 6580 acres, $30.000 value. Ex-CORONA DEL MAR 1asUc If a rbor oppnty. l ~·~'""'~~Bc~h~.~<~94-~2985~:0--;:;::;;:l f;;;;;c;;.;;.;-;s;;;;;;; change for ~ur property Deluxe 2 Rm office iiuite, 4!}4..$182, 496-5789. NOTIFICATION Of birth Fine Cabinets & Sbelvi*·.,. Newport, Laguna area. pl'iv ba, scp cntr. Prkg. $145/ l·co=r=i=·E=Eo-Shop="°.--=x1:;:,:=t-. "-1oc::-., certificate found on Fair * 494 " 0602 494-4746 or 49C>l.331 Util pd. Owner 673-6757. l ~p~<ice~t~~-~~·~Af,~k~,~$~10~,000~~ l~D~t~. ~(9-30J~l ~55~1-~96<1~f:af~t~3~:.30~. !~~~~~~~~~ Have$5nl + $13,~T.D:'s1 ~EWPORT offlctt °1>t & PLACE REALTY 4!H-9704 LOST Brown Ge rman Carpentering 6590 xlnt (SJ(XX) additional 2 yrsl dr:ps, o.cean vlg~. from $75. Shorthair poi~r vie Harbor CARPENTRY $25,000 land. WANT~-UI\. Call owner a.ft 6, 675-4644. Money to LHn 6320 & Adams, CM . 545-5311. MINOR REPAIRS.. No Job Its. CM or NB or Dlx du· I 6085 1 t TD L 2 DOGS: .Male Genn.an Shep Too Sm.all. Cabinet iD Pl' plex/~trfmt. Bkr. 675-&'.W4 Commercla $ Q an & re male sm. b!k dog. H.B. ages A: o t be r cabtnets.. 2\,2 Acres, Las Vegas, zon. e SfORE Bldg ior sale Reward! 842-2025 a1l 5. 545-8175 H no MllW'er leave ed for 82 units. val. $65,000, 686-698 \V. 19th St. Bethel So/. INTEREST Very young black & white nuig ~t '46-2372. IL O. \Vant units T.D.'s. Tov.i:!:n corner. 548-1T68 agt, 2nd TD Loan puppy found Avocado St. Andenoo Pyramid Exchangors C.tll. 642-8Tl2 RE==PA~J~RSc=--.,--..,.AL'°'TE=RA;;-;:· 6"" """" Industrial Rental 6090 T-.. based OD -tty. TIONS * CABINETS. ""' '""""""' "" '""" ~.... SIAMESE Or Burma kitten, 642·2171 54>0611 ·'·•job WANTED: By Nov. 15th II Units, good rental area. 65(1..socl sq. n. Comm. or $38,~ equity; in come Indusrt space Jor offset $13.500. For house, commer. Printing 6hop. Send in- ciaJ or horSe ranch. fonnation to Box P 21Hl, OWNER 67!>6259 Dally Pilot, CM. \\'ht paws, white spt. Vic of ...... Serving Harbor area 2l yrs, Slater & Newland 847-1534. 25 yr5 exper. 54S-6TI3 Sattler Mortgage Co. ROOFING 336 E. 17th Street Personils 6405 & All Home Improvemen!ii. ========== 1.:..::,:c:::.:.::;::_ ___ :.::; Free Est. 53&-1059 Money Wanted 6350 * FULLY LICENSED * REPAIR, Remodel & patios. . . FOR L.'IC-3300 sq 1t prime D p . ty t ReBlwned Hindu Spiritualist Let the S\\•ede do if. Commercial income proper. wa t eh 1 e space-all/J>6l'l. WANTE : rivate par o Advice on all matters. 494-'1853 or 673-!'>4l? 1y, lree & ~ear: next to ltvine Ind, :r.tr. Bullard loan us $1())).$6000 at 10'1~ on Love, Marr iage, Business Scars. Val. $65,IXXI, For un. 546-805l. $13,00J provable equity in. Readings given 7 days a C C t 6600 its, house or beach prop. EW bid 1368 to 2.100 ft our homr. Our present 2nd "reek, 9 A:\1 _ 9 PM ement, oncre e _ OWNER 675-6259 N g., • is due 1.farch 1, 1971. \Ve 312 N. EI Camino Real, CONCRETE, All types, Free ----------1 Nr Baker & Fahview, 1 yr 'A'il! pay 5 points or T \\'e San Clemente est. Sa.wing, breaking, haul· OY.'NER. Granada Hills 2 lease. Sullivan, 548-2176 can get all we want at 10 49'2-9136, 492-0076 ing, & Sklploading. Service slY. view home like new, pts, 50 what will you offer'? e MALE·&-FEMALE & quality, 548-8668 Bob ir...f,--750--vat:-ffr:--J Ba. !am. L-ats --•100 -i:r~1I don't ".hive money .,, N now, but expect it before standing by to give you th~ CEMENT Work of all kinds. rm. For Duplex or Hme B e WANTED-LOTS 3-l-7! conl.act us 54&-36l4, best massage In the West. Free est. or CdM. OUice 6444571. to build Apt's, Separate Sauna's for ladies 636·0374 CASH ANNOUNCEMENTS & genUemen. lO AM-l2 AM, DECORATIVE CONCRETE Bala.nee on 2 yr old 1st land \Vrite details to: Daily Pilot d NOTICES -7 days. 17434 Beach Blvd, DRIVES _ WALKS • PATIO contract. approx Sl8,J50 Box M·:D:l:f, 21U \¥_, &l_bQa. an H.B. Ph. 847-7879 CALL DON, &4U5l4 payable monthly. ~iU ~e Blvd, N.B. Found {Free Ads) 6400 ALCOllOLICS Anonymous. . t'OR. hOUsc, condo or un1ts.f==========' I Phone. S42-72l7 or write 10 * CONCRETE ~'?rk: patios, 673-5022 Ra~ches 6150 Si\fJ\LL Female shaggy dog. P.O.· Box 1223 Costa Mesa. ~'.ays, etc. L 1 c e n s e d · Lnst for approx 3 wks. -Phillips Cement. 548-6380 * HORSE RANCH BUILDERS SACRIFICE 6200 Huge East Side 110x207 Loi. Acre11ge \Vill take 16 units. Good cash.I ---~--.----­ rel um -Tax shelter _ Ap-For Acreage in Orange Co. pttt.iation shows 18% re· 2'.ti • f 27 (ftt !urn on $10,00J. Do\vn pay. ~att a ~ra :J ment. $69,200 full price -ca:JI &12-6560 exclling terms. R. E. Wonted 6240 ~THEREAL ESTATERS l'j '• ,•,. L < p• TO Buy from owner, small b:Juse in Cd~f to remodel. ---==..----! C.a."ih 714/644--0310. OFFICE. ~'TORE fl!· N'pt. * ASSOCIATE Bch. Post Office & $15.000 Cash required for Na. Greyhound depot. J2=.;Z7, $75 lional expansion. Unlimitt'd r..·10. lse. Graham Realty pott'ntial. '''rite Box P2Dl.8, ~6-2414· Daily P ilot. HARBOR BLVD front. l!tx3i' w/mtroom. mo lla.rbot Bh-ii. Cl\f Sax! mo. year's lease. 548--0783. Office Rtntal 6070 ' looks like Raggrdy Ann. AnnoUncements 6410 l\tORE Concrete patio for t'ound Vic El Camino & -"---------I Jess money. Artistic setting. l\fcndosa, C.M. S.10.9169. .MISSING -Fl"male Siamese Lie .• call ?\t ax at 644·0687 BLK Scotticrnale-old erdog Blu Pt. wearing clea r flea !========== -vie. East Bluff, Cd!\1 High roller, crook in tail. Oc-Contractors 6620 School area. G-l·l-1000 days. ca.sionallyoff-bal ance.l---------- M8-49:S7 on Sat & Sun. Needs medication. Lost vie * TilE REMODELER.S * !'.1ontc Vista & Santa Ana, Free ests -100% financing VERY Friendly ~aulifill Large reward. 642-7604. Kitchens, garages long-haired grey male cat. rt'Vl'>'N'\N T h' 11 bri n 491 c 8 r p o rt 1 C cm p I et e w/flca collar. Huge green ... ...,. .... ..s tr a c · R model' ryes. Vic. H.B. !162-T;iM yd. Li~ at o!d_C.M. Knilting, ~lity ~";tractors MZ-3660 GREY Striped, yng. cat. American Knits, 2026-A N.1-'---'-------- J.-lale, \\'/\\ilite collar. Vic: I =T=u='~":;"·::=0:;'""":=='·="=' .. °"'"'=· ==I Goldenwcst & \Varner, llB. Auctions 6430 847-2386. FOUND, Large male Basset }found. O.vner pl ease call &12-5236 lx>fore noon. OLE' Yellow type dog found 2600 hlk Weslminsler blk C.\i. 646-3125. DOG, Italian Greyhounr'I. fcmulc, w / collar, Sat. !>16-9723. FOUND 10-2 Parakeet Vic: 18th & Tustin Ave, 01. Ca!! S.18-9857. Bluck Lab. <1ns To ''Lovu". Lo~t 17ih & lrvinc C.?-f. Re· "'ard. Return 1'"ro1n The r~arm. &48-9-155, 612--083t 49.l-16411. Gl"t'y & \\'hite killen w/rhi· ncslone collar. 401 SunOower A~. Santa Ana. ' AUCTION VALUES! VALUES! Redeemed pawn items, Furniture, appliances and imports ! Wed. Oct 7th, 7:30 pm. COAST AUCTION HOUSE 2426 Newport Blvd, CM Look for our Wagon! ?i.10THER \\'ould like to care for Your child in lo\·cly H.B. honic. :Fenc'd yd, hot lunches, any age. 557-3166. \\'ILL TEND CHLDRN. !lli' J{Or>.1E DAYS. • CALL 645-0459 * e CHJLD CARE e !'.1y Home, ~Ionic Vista area * 646-2106 * NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD .... '· " ./ . /·-/' • ' .. ,.~ ! I t •.) i ... ""-' { I i I . -i ; • " \ ' 1 ; ~ I : 1 ;J ';&I !;l Read Class1fic.1tiona For Expm Assistance 6500-6900 In the DAILY PILOT . - NOW! I llEW!_" PlLOT · PENNY I PINCHER CL~SSIFIED ADS -. WITH A NEW-LOW-RATE· 3 LINES 12 T-IMES \ $2.00 ANY ITEM \ $ OR LESS e EACH ITEM MUST BE PRICED e e No Item Over $50 e No Commercial Fil-Ms e .• No Copy ChanJ,. • No Abbrovia!IOM • ASK FO DAILY PILO ANDY.OU MA JOUR ' AD-VISOR' CHARGE IT! ,. • ' ' ' ' ' I I I ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' \ ' I I I ' ' ' ' ' ' ' I ' I I I ' ' ' ' ' I ' ' ---------------------·--- Tutsd'1. Octob« 6, 1970 DAILY '!LOT %7 !_·------------------------. Sl!RVICI DIRECTORY SERVICf DIRICTORY SERVICI DIRECTORY JOIS & EMPLOYMDIT J<;o> • •M•LuYo••NT JOiS i IMPLOVMINT ..,.,.,.,._.. ...., p1D th.Ir ... ~ ......... l'hoMS Are Open 8:00 a.m. • 5:30 p.111. 9 lo Noon'Solurcfay -Closed Sunday DIAL DIRECT ••• 642-5678 WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUNrY DIAL FREE 540-1220 ContrKtora Houoeclunlft9 6735 Tllo, Certmlc ilf74 Jol>t--Men. Worn. 7100 MY WAY, quality home Bay & Beach JanJtorial • Cfl'amk Tiie Work ot repair. Watt., ttilinl, Doors Crpta, wiadowl, Doon •le. Plu~nc. Reas, Fl'H Ca~shfar $390 etc. No )>!> too unalL Res. Ii Com.m'I, 641-140L Mt. ~ aJt f PM L~•. Sell money ord4!ra, 1lamps, 543-1.494 Mra._ OM.nln& Sct:.vlce i,, -etc. Prtvtms t)(Jler, helpful. Addltiorul * R.cmOOeUna: C:a.rpetl, w1Adows, floon, eic. Tr .. strvlce "'8 Newport Cerwick &: Sons, Llc. l="'='=•=Com=="i:m::';;'';,· ;:MMI;:':': Paraonnal Atancy m.6041 * S4S.2l10 Bob*• TrH Sur99ry 133 Dover Dr., N .B. ROOM Additions. l &: 2 story Ironing 6755 j0.$i*~"'°'~"";tc;;*r;;.&N;:J.!!!!!!!!!!64;,;2;·38;7;o;,,,!!!!!!!!l I & g,r. call Gen. Contractor IRONING, M:Y home. tl hr. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT -for lov.:est prioe-_642,-2988. D~aklng .t: AlteN.tlona.' Job W ted M , * CAR WASH HELP CEN'L renlOdeling &: maint. SQ..-7641. •h , .., 7000 Many opeNrlgg. Full &. Ptr. Hlmtl""°" laaeh: ~1220 t avuna laaeh: 494-9466 San Clomonto: 4'2-44'l0 Hour-Regulajions-Deadlina• lllOl.1:~...,. li*thl ciiek tMlr ... 4•11Y •Ml ,.,.,. lmlMllll•tely-;.,..w; er "'lacluMfluffMI. THI DAILY PILOT auuma llelt&lffy fer.,,.,. only te tfM exNftt el IMf•llahlftt tM HwwtlMIMflt Cotl'fttly •• tlm .. DIADLINI roa COPY AND KILLl1 1:11 P.M. the llay Mfwe pullillcetlH, ••• terMW.y 1t11tt.t _..... ._llne 11 l•tunll•r. 12 noon.. YOU MUST HAVI KILL NUMtlll when ldlllrtt lrt 141 Mc•UM of 11Ulclc ,,_,Its, M ..,. .. IRH• • rec:9N If the kill '""""' 1'"8 1" ~ y.ur 1111 takff as •lll"ffkllttM.,,_rulL I 1...., effert le ..... te klfl .,. c..-rect a MW 141 tNt hu MM • .,.., ltut we Uftoo net 1111nlttM .. 4e M untH tfM tMI Ms .,,..,... In tfM ,.,.,.. DIMl•LINI M1 .,.. '""1ctly caM Ill atlvance ., mail-er at My Ml .t .ur .nk-. No job too •ma 11. moNING IN MY HOME TOP VW meCh. works dan. 3 Loe. O.C. l\tetro, 2950 Har. Llc'd/insured. 615-8183 1N C 2S wlll toe !our VW at nite, any _bo_• _8_1·~C_M--'. -----·I .M. fl. /hr -* 5'i8-6970 * mcch. problem, ask for C.O.D. Mt'S&'l)ICJ' f\1ll or p/ C£•!!]1J>O[!!!l~C~le~o~n~l~nt![:_~'6~62S~ll-'f=:~'fj'="".=;---=~=:l ,~'~-•; .. ~543-~::!'~!l86~; a~ny~JU~-ne~-~·--1 time, nO exp;.:r l'M!ct11s. ·Muiit Diamond Carpet Cleaning: Janltorl•I 6790 Pl' Tune eve1 + wknds, any havi depen(IS:ble Car. Make Autumn Special \l/Ol'k, no tielling. Calli. $18-$25 a day. Call or come CLEANING Sf:rvice, Inc. Drivers Lk: 54~745. in immed. 54&-5501, 1869 New. il!XI' $2.0. ..Free Est. Floors, windoM, janitorial. 1 ~~~~~=====1;~~rt~B~lvd~.iSu~;1~0JF~.~C~-~M~.~ I R.epair-ln&t~I. 645-1317. R & Co "'" ~• "fi'iiji:j~;;&;;;i~;;i~:l~~··~-~-~~m~m~.""'.,..-'~~-~~:;;; JobWantod, STEAM Jet carpet cleaning. •... _ Channing, attractive., eMr- By ClarKare, nation. wide Landscaping _,__!!!! IO.:W;,;;'.o~m;;•-;":;:;;-;::;,;;;7:-02;:;;;0J!f:,.~"~·,';..,~".'~· 1~&12-".:lo~;224':v~al<-t-""~ki-'1ll 1ervice. Free est. 642-4055. 0 Coll JAPANESE Landaca.ping &: RANCE Coul ege stu. e OlEF Pri rib or Ca__. Loyi-& gardening aervicetl". Call for dent needti part-time work. h 1. hei me • ,..., ,._ Evenings exct>pt Tuesday, c e 1 per, Exper. Repitlr 6626 free estlmate. 548-7958 or all day Thurtiday &. Satur· * 64Z--5619 * -.CARPET LAY-ING N;::"EOl"LAL·;v .. W>i~•S:s.:>-;:; ~-><ii·~;;;;•: I .!!:'"'2:.· ~Cal~t 4egn~-.~nJ&t~2--0t122~~·-JcoMPANlON Jo'or mature Jobe AW., WCMn, 7100 Jobe Melt, Wem. 7100 J•nl~-;1~1 -SALESLADY, Dpc,. .Mlilnten.nce (women'• wear), amatra1 Man to work from.1-P....M to A aina1e nffdle PDWft' ma. 10: 30 PM. AU COl!lJ>&ll1 ~ _ctilhe oettakn. Apply tn tflb:, A.PPb' In ~ to 29non. to Ol&rln, Stefan Gf'nc Laney Delly Pilot 330 Ihc., 1621 AJibama SL, \V. Bay, ~ta fdeu. bttore•1..::"::unl:::..· ;llc;:h;:.· ===--1 l2 ""'"· I SALESMAN J. W. ROBINSON'S tlew OU<I ....i ,.,.,,, VW'• -NEWPORT &EACH--Ind other tmporfs. auto aport ltd. "".rm &11 Col)oct Sale»-Quee:n'a Wa;'/ to·ruhion -COtJ.iiieJOri"Hijll con:lfulU1on btt fasfii0rfs,-ri01nvestment For Interview call 968-62a Has full time openings tor e DISFIWASHERS e -STOCK BOYS Apply in person 10.5 pm SALESMEN wanted -Sell PcI'90nnel Dept, Clffiatmu tm!!s to com- •2 Fuhkin Isl., N.B. n\ er cl a t e1tabllahments. Equa.I Opportunity EmplCJY1!:r Call Mr. Christmas Trff, J . W. ROBINSON'S ,,...;!L NEWPORT BEACH LSALES-"'7ii;,::;;N,-......,=;,,-,Sc-=me-:n:-:,.-,5J has full time opening In our \\'Omen to demonst rate SLIM-GYM & JET BA.'TH. Mary Lou Good, B-2416 S43-832i). HO,._...._ • The DAILY PILOT l'tMf"W• the t11ht t. cl1ulfy, eillt, c......, er NfuM •ny Mftf'o. tlNfMl'lt, •NI t• chante lb rat• aMI retti1l•H9M wlthwt ,,,.,. Mtka. c A p 642-2010 "'~ ~~na. EXPER Woman la'dy, live !n, 11 hsicJ>!. rm, · · age roto-tillnng, renovating, Companion, driver, light ·brd & Ml. Ph: 6n.oo511. SALE-Earn Christma s EXPERT clean-up, 8·9 7 -2 tl 7 or hsekeeping COASTAL AGENCY (Ex-rien~ P referred) mooey part tlme. Sarah STAMP DEPT. CARPET INSTALLATION 846-0932. ...--Coven*-hiring now. No in-----------1 64Z.5Ti4 A member of .. " & REPAIR. 646-4191 . 5 ·-•t -del ~-~•-•-·-----t-------··· -DAY Companion. PractiC'al Snelllnll: & Snelling Ine. Apply In person 10.. p.m. ~-·1,:j PH."!.!.-=-~ ......... ..,.. 6640 Limousine Service 6815 nurse avail. for perm, job. The World's L1r9e1t Personnel Dept. rv•· 0 : JIU~. Mali Mtlrill: 'hz 1175, N..,.. IMch. Call~I• Electrical ___ ,.__ ·--· · Ex. skills & ref's. Call Profattlon•I # 2 f'ashlon Isl., N.B. * SALES * ELECTRICIAN. Small jobs, Ai..-ports. Harbors H k .., .,o1 E I 1 <-I Equal opportunity employer For Recorded lnformatlon • CU.SSIPllD COUNTllS ire l9C11teil •• follow1: COSTA MESA NEWPORT BEACH ma.lntenanee & repa irs . ... ... _ .. he omema crs, ~. mp oymen -rv ce . 1 n>OJ.. re, 2790 Harbor Bl Cr>.f 540-6055 LADIES! Host wig .... m..s Dia 56-0l70 ~ Rates, 40c a mile. Min. 2{) PRACTICAL rurst> -exp., • ir ··~ 330 W. BAY 2211-W . BALBOA mi':'!. 24 hr·reiv, 330-2404. gQ<>d . ref., prefer beach Harbor Blvd . At Adams for pmfil Wholesale prices * SALAD GIRL* ~a. 645-0638. COCO'S .. REUBEN'S . 644-5889. -:r>.IU11t have-pxt Jm!pal'll.tion ----------· l11ousekeeping, all types of -COMPLEX -LADY. AVert1.ge--i77Per hl', eXP@l'ience. Mon.-thnl Fri. CARPET VINYL TILE MAID SERVICE 6125 cleaning. Reliable, own trans Plus Fabulous Wardrobe. 7·3:30. Call Mrs. Pennin&:· HUNTINGTON BEACH -LAGUNA llEllCH 17175 BEACH BLVD. 222 FOREST AVE. SAN CLEMENTE -305 f'!· EL CAMINO REAL UC CONTR. FREE EST. 541-3524 or 541-9330 4647 MacArthur Blvd. No Investment . Car ton 833-0600 Ext 203T, betwn. * 540-'r.E2 * C &: S MAIDS AVAIL, fm. NeWpOrt Beach necessary, Ph: TrG-7383. Z.5 PM, =========:I ~~!!:1Y· 1;~ .. 1 98•7r4ences . LADY, Share hme, in exc. SEAMSTRESSES D 'I P'I t Cl f '(! Gardening 6680 ,.:~~='°-•::.•..:~:.:-~=· --1 Jobs Men, Wom. 7100 INTERVIE\VING MON-FRI for rm &: brd, It hskpg &: Sportswear manufacturer 111 Y I 0 l!ISSi ie AL'S GARDENING LOCAL girl wants lo clean 3 TO 5 PM a~·t hndycp'd lady wantsexp'rseamstreseeson CL SS for Gard nlng &: small land-apts & priv. homefl. Cd ref's A Better 673-:ml. single needle, overlock & A IFIED INDEX "'Ping :...V,,,.. call 540-5198 & ""-'·rates! 64>-1224 Tomporary Pos;tK>n e BUSBOY e LOT MAN bllnd h<mmor. Apply In por. HOUSES FOR SALE RENTALS CA1tl"•NT•••111• '"' Serving Newport, ccn.t, Cos. Painting, DEMONSTRATORS son, 29XI S, ?-.lain, SUlte I, A I F •hod CIEMl:NT, ~ Hit ta h1esa, Dover Shores, h "0 EXPERIENCE NE....,.~ *'----~• ~-.1--a Santa AnA, CalU. HN•u.&. 1• P s. um11 CHILD CA11•. uc.... u11 Paper anging WO ·~ ... i;..J-,-~ '~ c.osT.t. M•IA u" ••NUAL -coHTJIAcro111 "" WestcliH. lnlarim SARY. FULL Tif\-IE, PART 2!Jl0 Harbor Blvd, 645-0!fi6 * SECREiARY * MatA D•L .. all IO•.................... .. .... ,.,,.,.~ .. Ct ~ANlfrf°' 16U ._, W tl F -.. ,,_ uvoNa a '''''' ., ... JAPANESE Gardener, • •~o 8ll ng Ptr•--·I •-rvi'co TIME, DAYS OR NIGHTS. , or recorded infonna.tion. MHAVJ:llD• 1111 •n• ..... "'' -*WALLPAPER ·*· .......... ~ MASSEUSE -Woman, expd. o·oa1 ""2'!3 COLU .. P'UIC NIWP'ORT •UCM .... OltAl'l!lll lS .... monthly rate, Gen. cleanup. ,., E 17 h s CM ~ ...... T IDCN :: N•Wll'OttT MIGMTI Cit Ol!MOLITIOM MU Reasonable. Free est. When you call "Mac.. . I I., c OOKJCompanion Wanted AIM~"'~""~;~ ... ~-~~·~~847~·~78'lll~ll8E'LL:-I:AiiYc11AfRRi'ifEI NIWl'O«T K•l•HTS lJ11 N•WPOIT INOl;•S "721 Dlt.&"INO ••IWln l6l1 642-7523 let share chamling little :-; Full SELL LADY CuRR l NE IALSOA cev•s 1HI ~=~~'~:v PAIK ~. :~;'l;~~AL = 642-2239 543.1444 646-1lli AIRCRAFT "-1·-lor, mar-house 4-days a weeKOr ? MAN/ ICURHI~, or COSMETICS, &. WIGS. Nl.,._T ...... '"' .. NEW La ·-• Com l HOUSE• doc~ b t •="' / Id I I d Sm l P time, air WesL Appl. 547 -U'RllnT' Itta MCIC U'f' -..... •OUIPMllNT ••WTAU Ult wns, re.~. p ~ ""'• 0 a '· ried, over 21, w/local re['s, w ~ er y a y, • sa ary. ===,.,.,!''~ "°~"~"'"=~liii:itviti"'iiiti;;;;-~'~;;;;;;;I U'f'IHO••I 1221 •AIT•LUflJI «au fl•NCIN8 ,... lawncare.Cleanupbyjob flagpole1 , anytlng 40hrwk,expreq'd.M;~0 Pr_iv, room&. Ba. Must '1'"""'UO<> _. SERVICE s1ation salesman DOV•• IHO••I '"' COIOHA Dal MAI GM Pl.OOlll .... ~-t F inf ~,;.. bl -uo '2 MEDICAL I F/T W•STC:LIP" ,. •ALIOA ._ l'UIN.t.c• 1.,.,.1•1, •tc. .. 1, or mo .... ,_, cs. or o ev._."""''6 r eason a y Beechcraft, o.c. Airport. drive.'".,.... 41. . secre ary, . ·permanent, full time, even- MA•so• MleMLANM tus ~~:O •r~"" : 11u•:~-r:,.~:,::::•1M• "" ,tm:,.,,·~"~'~'-"'~--~-'-· =--1 painted. F('!' free estimate Alert, neat, depend a b I e COUNTER g!rl, part time, Exp. nee. &: all ins, fornu, ·ing ih!Jt, Mu.st be neat in :'.~~-.r•rrr l'AllC 1m •ALIOA 1st.ANO 055 11JA1tDI NINO ... AL'S Landscaping. Tree c..._:.:.:~97~52:::..· ------woman to dean apartments. must do laundry. Apply In good know. of med. term., appearance. Apply, 2500 ••c•-•.tT :::: ... UNTINOTOH ••AC .,... .G1.11auL 111v.1c11 .. "11 .... removll.1.-..Yard-..Jemodeling.-FAfL..30-<lay-.speciall Inter. _ 64•1224 _,_ per50n, .Fa.shion F .1..t r mUAt type 55 wpm accur .. Newport Blvd., CM. hlTSLUflfl 1141 l'OUNTAIN VAUl'f' .. " OllAD tNO. DISC:INO h 1. ,_1 1 & E.~ __ , Li --l -Ct 570 W 1ruh CM Sal open. Dally Pilot BolC -•• y.,.. 1144 llAL •rACH '"" °'u.ss '* Trash au ing • ..., c eanup. "''er ,,....n ng. r•-= e~ eane.rs, ' · '" • ·' · · SERVICE Sta. Pump hl. at. UlVINa ftaU.ca 114' L.ONO aucN o• •ou"•'s" .. ',KUMI 1111, Repair sprnklers. 67l:-llfi6. LocaJ rers. Lic'd & lns. ~.· ~mpl<&lo As~.u mMo""lo. e COUNTER GIRL, exp'd. M -2050, 22ll W, Balboa tendant. Exp'd --1'd, Over "CDllONA o•L MA• 11H OU.NOi COUNT'f' ... '" c II Ch ck 64" """" ""'" '-" ...... Blvd Newport Beach ........ TUITL• llOCIC ............... 121' OAllD•N OllOV,• 4'11 Hl!ALTN CLUll •111 GEN. Cleanup-Tree & a u • .........,,.,,.,, Oa.ily Pilot Box M 1025 Clown Cleaners, Bayside ., • 20. 2801 E. Coast ijwy at IALIOA f'ININIULA IJM WISTMUtstll .. lt HAULING •1.• Sprinkler Serv. Ro to·t i 11 . ·Y INT. or EXTERIOR ..... 1 \".Ba.;. •• Bl"d,' N.B. ' Center, New·porl Bch. MCft _J'ralnee, full tirne, Goldenrod, Corgna del Mar~ l•ACON IAT t• MIDWAY CITY .. u HOUSICLIANtNe •111 _, ,y uJU<t. • 21 A l M 'N' Ed 533. LINDA ISL• , .. SANT• ANA ... INT•111011 DI CDllATIN• •1J1 New lawns. Spraying. Reas. PAINTING. Loe. Rcl. IM· Day Shift -Female. over . Jl'P y e . l! 675-0 '"" tsLANDt 1a SANTA AMA H•IOtn'S .. ,. INCDM• TAIC ,,,.. 646-5848. MED s e r vice • Free ASSEMBLERS Ages U.2S. No exp "'"· mUflt Pizza, 4l0 E. 17th, C.M. Is '~ER=vi=CE"'°"""Sta'""tK>~o-~A~tte,....od~.· I LIDO tlLI 1»1 TU1:1°1N ..... lllON, C>nll_..., •le. . •1f• •AUOA ISLAND 1.. COASTAL "1tl lllONINO •ni Lay,•n Care U8 a mo. ?o.lo\v I c"::::ti=m=act'='c· ~6'6--02C::.:::1~0---I Assemble prinled c tr cu l I have good eyesight &: linger ORGANIST, SI. J O h n ! 5 Expcr. older man for SJ~ HU .. TIN•TON ••ACN 1• LAGUNA ••ACM "115 INSt.L.ATI... ,,.. &: edge. Free est on flower lMi\l.EDlATE Est. on quality board romportPnls, poy,·er de:xteriJy , Apply in penon. Divine Episcopal Church. day work. Shell sta.tion, 19th HUNT!'""" HMIOUI 1• L.AGUNA-NUIUIL •m INSUll•MCI •711 P'OUWTAIN VAU.l'f' 1411 M.ISl lOfll VII.JO 4111 INV•STIG•TIN .. Defldlv9 •1• beds &: cleanup. 847-5802. inter&: exltt painllng, Apff;, supplies, plug.in uiiits, wir-S.A.E. Advanced Packag\ng *548:-8326 ...--&-Placentia, C.~1. SIA&. •UCN 1• SAN CLIMENTI! ""' JAMITOll lAL ,,,. ROTOTll.LlNG. """' and homes°" just a room. Jack, ing bA.rness. Work with 1357 E. Edinger Ave. PAINTER -Full "m• to SEWING machine ~r in. SUNllT •IACll' 14tl SAN JUA/111 CAP'llTllAHO •!15 Jl!WILR'f' 1t•f'AI .. llt. ... " ~,... •A10.-N ••ov• 1m U.PISTllANO •IACH •1)1 LANDtC.Af'tNe 6111 shrubs removed, new lawns. 837-6925, (213) 430-2866. small hand lools. Mechani· Santa Ana, Calli. paint trucks. Apply in dustrial operaton, ftill time. LOtte ••AcN ,,. ,. ... ,.',"°""T ..,.. LOCKSMITH ""..,, Free est. 54S-59'24. . P,AtNTING _ Ext.-lnt.18--. cal dexterity required. * -DRIVERS * -rson 1343 Logan, O!. Apply, 825 W. 18th St.. C.M. u1ts:wooo 1,.. L x. "'c. .,.._ MA10-s.-11v1c• .............. ·r··-: ~·y ,... o•AN•• coUNT"f' 1,.. cOHDOMtNIUM ~ MASDNa.,., ••1c1e ... JapanC'se Gardelll'!r, Exp. exper. Ins, Lie Free est Call Industrial Relations BOat Transit. -SHARP RELIABLE GIRL OUT 0, couwn 1• NOT'ILS ...... --··-----· 4'7J MOVllllO .. STOllA•• ""' Ct II ul" Accoust. Ceiling!. 96S-9U'6. cn4\ 4{».9401 No Experience iieeded fO!' ., •. ;.. ... --·-· in OUT°" STAT• 1• Rll:NTALS PAINTI,.._ P'8Ht'll...,lllt •• General eanup. a Ing ONIC .. _ -ITANTOM 1•11 • ,AlfllTltfct. ,... "" e 54&-1894 • PAINTING, neat It reliable. TEL Necessary•, Payroll Clark Boutique: shop, exper. 18 or wanM1111m11 1•n Apts. Unfum11hacf P'.t.'f1Ds "" t u70 A pt o A'f' c1TY PHO'f"OGRUH'I' "7t EXP, J a""-Gardener. call John lor free est. INDUSTRIES Must hav• cloan Caltlornla 0 "" over. P Y 5911 Wamer, Ml w 1'1f "Nl!llAL -PLASTllt•Na. , .. di, • .,.., ... ....-·---,,.,, A<>71 ... , ... ,_ ~--45 ,_ cl--· 12 H B U.llTA ANA .,. COSTA MlllA 11• Gen, cleanup. Hauling trees. ..........., or . ..-Laguna Beach d"vlng --. Apply '"'"" • , .. avy ei·~. · l=·~·==~,.,,--~~-U.NTA AllA Hn. 1 .. M•IA v••D• • l lOI PLUMllllO ''" 11 ,._t.v1u y oll.Ulq 1ut """'ll'OttT HH:N ,_ P'ET G1tOOM1N• .... Maint. yard 646-0619. YOU SUPPLY THE PAINT Equal Opportunity Employer YELLOW-GA:B -CO. rs. expcr. SfUDENT8-Sell "Trick or 'UST'. • ... -•••• •••oom "'' P'OOL se1tvtcl! fll H •10 Per A·---•-m Newport ~at" __ ......... ••-•·----' MOITN TUSTIN 1641 Nl'M'OllT IHOllll Int l'OW•11 SWllPIN• HU GARDENING &: Landscap-• '""•"""-n.uu ATIENOANT. 2 full time 186 E 161.h St, I ' ''"' ......,,..._,, ,,......., auuu I ANAN•'•'"oo MM ·w11TCUl"I' :;.a :=:,~:1v1c1 :::: Ing Pruning-Trimming & Free Est. 557-8638, 510-7046 men, exper. Appl y Laguna Costa Mesa. IPertonna DAgenNcy money, win prlze11 & help ~i~AI: t.J:"YON ~: ~=~~=:''" f'A•• = llADIO, ••"" me. ,,. Re110vating 548--5209 aft 5 YOU SUPPLY THE PAINT Chevron, 604 So. Coast Hwy, DENTAL Receptionist Mu!!t 33 DoLv"•2'311'0'' .B. netidy 11ehool. &42.(8)3, 9-5. LAMINA MILLI 1711 ••Cit •A'f' 1141 llEMOOl!LING a lll,All "411 JAPANESE Gardening $10 Per Average Room Lamina Beach. 494-TI40. he.Vo dental receptionbit ex· -• SOLDERER For small ..... UNA a••<M 1,. ••IT o•U>• n-11•MOOILIN .. ICITCHINI ff4I F v-t =1 oo•o ~070« •· .. ... sduenllNlrtNm • Service.Neatwork,Cleanup ree-""'.-".l...,.,...,,,,...,....ll"n> A b 'I SI r 30-45 54~95a!t6 parl5. Experienced only LA•UNA NIGUIL 1m COilltONA Dll. MA• 1111 SIWlNG '"' utomo I • • esm•n Pf! . . • PBX Answering Service._ Ex· should apply. Full tim•. MllSIOll VII.JO 110I •ALIOA SM .,., ,, yd. ma int. 968.-2303 EXPERT painting • Interior u f ll t . E T L ASST F ll . SAN CLIMINT• 1111 •AY llU.NDI me llWINO MACN1N• illtll" '' sed cars u or p . time. D N A ' u time per. prefe~. Full time. permanent. F.stabliahed s,A: s!:'::NCAP'IS'cllANO ,ru LIDO ISLI su1 ;:r~~1~:ru,s-.. 11" :,: Complete Yard Caril k Exterior. Free estimates. """---·~• ,,,.,_,., __ • chair 11ide, schooling or ex-Hunt. Bch·. area SJS.888L local com pan,, Ph: A I 0 ••A H 11• HUNTINGTON ••ACM 5411 T•1tMtT• COfllTIDl. .. 11 JIM 540-4837 ."::..:•:..::J_P~·~;="="ng"'-~"':::.:-'="='~---I ,~ ,~ per. 830-3290. PEOPLE To ·-ind ... ~-· & , .. """'. DANA P'OINT 1140 l'OUNTAIN VALLIY 5411 TILi!, c:.nmk , HM p · t\ · &: 1 21 ~ BJ d 645-0466 uu ....... _. .............,. ::A:,~:: ;: n;·~~o:.~~':ND :! ,',",'•' ~v~ a ~ :;: JAPANESE GARDENER $2Sru: ;:~nt~ me.~~~s 00 1 arbor v · DONUT ladles wanled·25 to edu~tional fl Im s. No Telephon@ Solicitors. Mature •1v•1110• CO\INT'I' ,. • ••ACK • -TILIVISION, .... .,. ate. "91 '1 TIME OK * 645-2505 * BABYSI'M"ER wanted for 9 45, al!crnoon & nlght shift. prev1ou11 exper. L A. G. Inc. woman needed 4 hrs per day NOUlft TO•• MOVl:D ''°' ANG• COUNT'I' , Ull UP'901.STl:l'I' me •547-5846* mo, fo.fust be clean &: MR. DONUT, 135 E. 17th 83&-3.'iOL ··-··· Work at hom@, caJ1 548-2223, ~~f'L"::~~iu~ SAL• ~~ ~~~:~.~~011v.-:::~ w•LI>ING 'on"~ CLEAN UP SPECIALIST McAdams Painting Serv. reliable. Thur/Sat. C.M. St., C.~f. PHOTOGENIC Girl to do l to 7 pm. Al'AITM•WTS POI; tAL• ltll •••W•Y ''" -··· WINDOW C\.IAHIN• -• . . Inter &: Exler Special rates area your home 646-0702 .... 2t New fence &. repair. MCIWlng · · • • FULL or PART TIME hroc~ure work for S. I .. R. TRAINEE f fine. . 1 __ R • ENTA ::;",ri! !:!. NllGKTS :. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT &. edging, Reas. 548-69:>.5. on apt&, 646-3645 BABYSITTER -All day Earn up to $5. per hr Setv1ce ln Representation · or JC!weu.r LS TUSTIN ..,.. Jo• WANTED. """' "" CLEAN-UP FOR your painting needs &: child care. My horn' or FULLER BRUSH 546-57-15 835-3.iOl. store sa_lesman. Male, 21-25, Ho F I L~~ COASTAL 5111 JO• WANTl!D, w-n• I I !loo -~ ,. I ., v d aggressive. H.B 892-5501 uses um lowu LAGUNA •l!"ACM sres JO• w .. MTED, ~finor Jandscaping. 962-4914 "-'P8 rs rom n •u .......,,.,, l\'e-n. "esa er e · PLUMBING & h es.ting . · •INlll•t. -LAGUN.t. NIGUEL 5111 MEN a WOMIN "31 call Paul 557-7455 540-4100. GAL FRIDAY Aervicemen, Good potentia1, * TRIMMER OR UPHOLS- ••fllTALI TO Pll• 2t11 =s~~~,!"~~~c:i :m ~~~~~ .. ~~::::'ctiow ::: S2·50 Hr. Weeding, cleaning, * PAPERHANGER * •BABYSJTTER in my $S00 lots of hours, Call 642-trO>J TERER to work on boat tn . ~~~~s~• 11• SAN JUAN CAPtfTllANO ms TNS:AT11u1. ,,.. painting, etc. Ex per· Profess1e1nal 646-2449 home, r>.1esa de! 1'1aT area. Twn girl ofc. -construction. Mr. Schweer. ' teriors &: canvas eowrs. MnA \11D• ~: ~~!T:~r~ IEAtN ~!: MERCHA~QIS.E . FOR ="'~'~;a~b~l·~-~J~oh~•~·~-~~954;;'·== ~=*/rFPiiA~PPEE~R~H~A~N~Gii!INNCGf° Call after 5, !i4fr9630. Xln't oppor. Top henefitJ11. p RE s SMAN -Experienced Perm. job, fringe henefUs. ~~,::T ':::ctt ~ Tl1t1PLl1t, ttc. nt1 SALE AND TRADE General Services 66l2 & PAINTING. * 968-242S BE AU Ty CONSULTANTS Call Miss Betty, Abigail Ab-on 1.250 W Ilelf. nu1.nage-in-LAKE ARROWHEAD NIWf'OllT NOTS. 1211 ~~~,.~~~TllD = ~~::::~u .. "u ..... "U•• :: ~:;;;::..:c:..::.:.;-:-;..;.:--::-'-7 1-"========== needed by General FOCICH! to bot Personnel Agency, 230 titant print ~p. Good MARINJ:ln4) 3.17-2501. :~1i::1T,:KD•11 g: llltOOMI PO••INT J1tS ol"PICI ioulf'MINT •n RAIN gutten Installed . Painting, teach makeup artistry. Will W. W~r, SUite 211, Santa benefits. 540-9682. WAITRESSES, Upl!r. to D0\1illt 1t101n m7 1 ,. ::,.:Lt,~~~~•• cou1.n :;; STORI. ••u1,M•NT :\' Rainy sea110n here &00n. R I 68IO train. Exec. po!!.ltion avail. Ana. work days or nltes. Must be nm::Lll'I" •u•sT HOMll ttt1 m•m~~:rta",.~T ..,: Free est. Reas! 968-2208 apa r VJVIANE WOODARD COS-PRESSER, Qus.Hty work. over 21. Apply, Beach House r.:v'i':.lllTY f'AlllC = MllC. lllNTALI f Im NOUSINOLD OOODI NH NEED typing done? \·Ve * PATCl-1 Pl.ASTER.ING METICS. 544-1464 GIRLS-Sell "Trick or Treat" Pl-time, 1-luntington Ctr Inn, 619 Sleepy Hollow Ln., IACIC •A'f' n• REAL ESTATE, =~=~?-:'uir.L:uCTION = can do. Speedy, accurate, All l)'pe!ll. Free e11tlm1tes • BE A UT IC I AN w/ candy. Make good money, Cleanen, 892-6813. Laguna Bch. 497-1188. :~;.!L"'" ':i: General AP,L.IAN C•I 1111 t'f'asoneble, 64~2311. Call 540-6825 clicntele, In Newport Beach win pri7.el'I Ir help needy PUBLIC RELATIONS Waitresses-Apply tn per90n ~~::A-r::~A~~. ::! ~HuC:::,,"::~::i;., = r.'~~:~·~CKIMIS :~: F.:d's Cleaning Service -area. Ne\Y tihop, Lido, Com· school. &12~03, 9 lo 5. Front 0 t t Ice Appearance. Delaney's Sea Shanty &JO IAL•DA t• T11...n.1111t PARlt"S ... MUSICAL INSTJIUMINT llU Plumbing 6890 mission or rent space. Hi\lRSTYLisr, male, for Good typist. r.tust work Lido Park Dr, N.B. 675.otoo ~fi:;., •f:t;" = :~::~:s~ .. i:,~:IAL :;: :~o~gs • OIGANI :: c:;:~ 1':1;;~~~:.11~~;-673-415.1 or 675-1330. Hotel Salon, Laguna Bch. f~.kCall-ends.LoCoral?°;:.,27pa1"'0 2 YR. ol_d boy dayti, Mon thru •ALIOA ISUllD 2W INDUST•IAl PllOPllT'f' fftt TELl!V1$10N ms DRAINS Plugged'!' Draining ••Call 494-0064•* ~.. .. ... '""' cl ==~~:o,:A~~.;" ;:: f:.=;:f~~L111tlHTAL. :: ~!·:~ ~.·~:111•::.. ru: c .. ~:: ~~~~~~tes;v.i~Vin· tilow? Expertly cleaned $9. Belly Bruce HELP Wanted pa.rt or full Westclilf PeMK>n,,;l A~ncY: ~i ~31re to Pomona. llAL al.I.CM 161 LOTS ,,. CAM•llAS a IOUIPMINT IJll ~...-24 hr serv. 530-3854. m l time dninit pleasant lele· 2043 Westcliff Drive, N.8. , . ~:::.~·ro::"" : g.~1,~r~11ov•• ::: ~:;::1"•:"~'o~ : dow11 • F1oor <:are. 545--<»87 PLUMBING REPA1R • phone v.·ork. No exper, nee-~'-•-"•R•1-j"'fiJoI:b~•~1·'ESifATio l:S~c~hoo~~11-~l~n~ll~r~u~c~t~lo~n'.'.._'.7~600~ lA.NT'4 ANA Hll ACllltlA•• '"' •INOCUL.AllS, 1co,11 WI No job too small t.1.6 XeC ess. We train. Make $2 pe.r * REAL ESTATE =~~~~"rJ: ::: ~:.;L:~i:,~~~n :: :::~;i.:;::~• ::: Hauling 6730 • 642.3128 • A hr. + txmuses. Call or come SALESPERSON for Rental IT'S YOUR MOYE SANTA ....... H•telm me OKANO• co. PllOPl lT'f' '"' MACHINEkYo II& ::: T.N.T. Lawn Se rv Ice . 24 HR PLUMBING -H-aencu In immed. 548-5501, 1869 Sentice'. * Ph. 548-1169. ~!~:f:L::8:L 5 =o~~::1::"::· iffi fu~l!~~ MATll!AU :: ~.~~~~~;u~ .. ~~~n:l~ & RE~~-~UJNG ii (/ HNO'MwpoEWrtOBRKElvd.,RSSuiWteANF,TEDCM. INDUSTRY CAREERS ·-SWAl'I '"' <110 W, Coasl Hwy., N.B. . REUBEN'S ::."~J~m = =~L=:.~.~""vtc• :: 5.n-3729 PLUMBING REPAIRS By appoint. 6f6..3939 (EnveJope Addre59ers) • ._...JUAN uPltTaA... m1 1. L WANTIO '*PETS and LNESTOCK YARD/Gar. Cleanup. & Install. 54!Mi688 ~~~~~~!'!!'!~!!!!•IRu~h stamped, sell-ad-C ta M CAf'llTIAKD •™" = BUSINES' end ~~:-·•N•llAL = Remove trees, ivy, trash. ========.===•BOAT CARPENTER &: dres s ed envelope . ~ esa ·~:::.fi:~coulm" -FINANCIAL DOGS -Grade, backhoe, 962-8745. Remodellng & REFINISHER. Penn. job LANGDON W 0 R L D VACATIOfil 11NTAU ..... ,.. lllSINIU w•on.D ,_ ND•t•I ... 1 Repair 6MO v.•/fri""'@ benellts. LAKE TRADERS. P.O. Box ICOHOOMINIUM ' NT~°"' • • LIVllTOCIC ... TR.ASH &: Garage c ean-up, ·~ ioUf'L•x•s ,UIM. _,, ltYUTMI: -•w"t Utl ARROWHEAD M AR IN A 1127-AZl, Redondo Beach, r,.u:~~~~·.:~":~~~~~111 :.': ~!~~r.~RNIA LIVINC:,. ~~e~l~~: Free est. LESS ntAN $9 SQ. FT. I c•~n~4:;1 ~337~-~"":;:cl.':-==-,....-l..:'.Cal::!:il~. ~0027~;'~---~-m:,i:~ LL:::. :: SWlMMIN• f'OOLI = = .. ~O~V~IN=G~.~G~ .... --.-.~,.~.,,,,-.,-p-&~ Free plan service, add-a-rm, BOYS & GIRLS •• HOUSEWIVES-Milke '1w1L111t'f' LOANS alt :~~::.'.s "" lite hauling. ReAMnAble. gar. conversions. Lil't!Ml!d. Earn $$$ taking ordeni tor money, from homes, HoUMI Unfumlahacl COLU.T11'4L Lo•Nt ml VH:ATtONI mt 30 years in home bldg. Ph: Chrl•tmM trees trom your de m onstrat.tng household - illtll.&L •ITATI: L•ANS .,.. Free f'SUmates . &1.5-1602. 962-0740 "NII.AL MOllTN.OIS. Tr.I o.... uu TRANSPORTATION lrii!:nds&relative11.Cal1MR. necessitte1 in k:lcal COSTA MllA :: MON•Y WANTID '* •OATS a YACHTS ,_ HAULING & CLEANUP CHRISTMAS TREE, M6-95ll neighborhood. Oihera earn. " .. ',." •"•'•'•"'• • ••• ANNOUNCEMENTS SAILIOATI "'' $10 a load * 548-5924 Roofing 6950 ,.ow•111t c•ull••• ,.,. for more Information. ing over $5. per hr comm. RENTALS Now Interviewing * LUNCH WAITRESSES AGES 21 TO 30 APPLY ONLY IN PERSON 3 TO 5 P.M. AIRLINE & TRAYll ~ OPERATIONS AGENT e TICKET SALES ' e RESERVATIONS e Affi FREIGHT..cARGO e COMMUNICATIONS e TRAVEL AGENT Alrllne Schools Pecfflc 610 E. 171+., Santa Ana S4U5ff COLL••• f'AlllC ,_... a-' NOTICES -N . p rt • ' ' MffPOIT 11.i.Cft ..... ,, •• n--41(! •OAT1 LEE ROOFING CO; Rooiif¥,? BOY8-Sell "Trick or Treat" Q canvassing, a m ' NIWf'OIT H•n. nit POUND c11,... AMJ .-•oAT nA1L1111ts ..., Housecleaning 6735 . c f 1 all Ph· 962-5087 155.'i W, Adams -·· .... a. -LOST ""' •O,IT MA!NTllU.NC• "-·· rnpa1rs, 08 1ng 0 candy. Make good money.1c,=· ""~~·~---,.-c-1a M...... FUNDAMENTALS of vo!Cfl .. ••v•1·-·,·, ..,. f'lilltlONALI •• •OAT LAUNCNIMe lype1. Lie A bonded, since HSKPRS Empt~ pays fee v" ... ,... MMINI IOI.Ill'!. tnt win prizes &: help needy ~-• 1 ~~~'!"!~~'!"!'!!11• .. J development taught by tX• -.-It ••••s nP ANNDUNCljqNft .. " '''' ,.,,, "°°''"' "" _ , ~ .... 1 71"1/&12-1222 ,......__... Allen Byll'lnd "-n __ .. · ;ilTtLl,11 •• •••TMI • ..11 .. ~ • ac:hool. &1.2-0803,..9-5. """""5" ~" • RUBBISH Truck' drlvt"I', exp. perle111."l:U ainger &: teacher. UN1v1111t1m f'A•• !?!?. •'"••"•'"',',,',,,, ~.", SOl.T s11v1c1s· = TILE noon stripped .l ~axed, BEFORB )'OU buy, t'all T. --=~====--1 2',·_.~ E_ • 16th, S.A. on front end loader or 497-1358 or 642.Sfil2.. 1111tv1111• -O• .. :~:~ ~==~;~~ "• carpet .11ham~. w~ndowt1 Guy Roofinp: Co. ~ver CARRIER .,. """ h k 837-oo7 11oc11. uT ,.. ~::.m OUl•CTo•s :; ,, ... ,,.0 •0,,n • cleanet:!. Quality aerv1ce by s ......... ~27*>. S4S-9590 8 u-j)llc · MERCHANDISE FOR L .... T •LUl!fl : can w.-~-... SOAT MOYOt• -ttolt professional janitors, Masttt ·--BOY:S •.tUI SALARY SALE AND TRADE Ill T--...... ..._ .. J •OAT ITOllA•I -~ ~=:,. '::~~ ;;; c••:::ft&.OTI ''" 1f:'i~::NTl:O = Charge acctptcd, Gf6.$96. ~~'!J!'S •960 N'.JED M11.nagement Trainte. Long IAUOA • CUii• •'CllYP'fl "'" , • --W' .& ... Hours and Hard Work. Call Furniture IOOO JAY -.vtot = :i=~~'='~ -.. = :0~\~: -=~=· .:.. EUROPEAN Faah~ A ~ -~ Ann A.;:2770~ -. -~-..... -AUCTIOWI .cit MOTDll..... t1t• HOUSE OF-ELEAN -Offen her talents . n for the ~ sonne1 Alf!ncf, ~ Vl-'lt· DECOR.ATOR. Ortcotal :".=r=r mt A'hATIOll-..Ce ..., =~."ccT".~~ ult :: DOES EVERYTHING dreumaking, alteratioM, DAILY Pl'CO-Y · cllH Dr., N.B. -Mod/0-t. 40!t30Jd6.~111Ji: t1UNT1N•ro111 •1.1c111 -TllAYIL ... ,, ..,, -·-•lid · c1o·~ v -··-E·--~·n11 •• ,-... ,.. ........ ... Altt TllA,....,A."911 ... MINI.. I ... -.. ... Cbmm'I Ar Rel. Cluning """"c ren I u ..... ery n--. Polnt, San J..... ...... m.1•. ·--_,... •• 0 • ··-ftA--ATIOtf -MOTOllCTCL.11 tJM bl Sl ! ';Its &.1&1"' _... SaJtj .11 ... , •,orouNTAIN ¥ALL.a't' •1• "'" " ........ , MOTOllStOOTllll '* 642 LD24 ft!uona. e. mp e l iu CaDl.atra.m and • oq• "'.,,' .. '•"'~ = ~1::-nc•1 : AUTO si11v1cts 1 PA•T• ,.. -VU $12 A: up, 11drts $10 • up. Capistrano Beach. YOUNG MAN'S 1 's~.-.... ~-,,.-,.,--n-ud--,....--ted-I ~ •ut'111"'"-... SERVICE Ollll:ECTORY i'.:'I.t1~L.t1'..°"1"· ;:: WTNOOWS is ...,'alls wui'ifii. 673-1849. Conttict Mt. Seay at IRYJNE PERSONNEL DREAM flora)' Scolc~ $11S. ":::'A~:U"" :: !~~=~~~': 11iJica :: ~~,"' 1111111Y ::: }1rs. itrlpped. 1eilfa & SOMETiflNG ELSE . CUa1om DAIL y PILOT SERYtCES•AGENCY lf YoU are OVfr 21, like talk· Matchlna kM!11:at fis. MlllTI• •n APPLIUKI ••PAlaS. ...... 6111 ,...... "" ... ued. FTff eat. 39'7·7834. d~•k1n... ~~tgn yoUt • Ing to girli, why llOt cet paid SJ0.3337 I MIDWAT CITY ... A ..... AlltN• .... CAMl'•lll ",. d . ht rNI............ own, ri ..... pleturtor1kttch. San Cemcnte oWce (fonn<"rly Ablllllt1 Unllm.) tor It? A salff proaram. APLE .. MNT& AN M91etfTS -Alfl>NAL'f. Ollt '"' CAMl'I• llJITAU .,.,. ay or rug · ",.,....,,,.,. ''"" Di N. El Camino Real df'ali""' w/ 1in .. 1 .. <Pirls Our M di~ ti.bl• 6 & JcDMT._l ,,. Afl:CNIT•ctUll.t.L 1••v1n MU DUMI •~111 WOULD YOU BEIJEVE Wll P)'. Jean 49'1-3642, S H S •oe """' .~ • cbaln $225 M tcb ... .......... 1.AO""'A --.u.. ,,. •uto •1.,..t.11t• ,,..5,~"'~'°~'~'~'~'~'f:·"~'~°'~ ,... 492-44ll TRI H OPKIN mtn earn $66t + per mo. • • a • ... <Ul .L .., AUTO • ..., ....., T,... 1-. !I* "',,',', I'll Clean Your Home for "ou've always ~Ulll fet Jrv\ne) C.M. durlns tralnil'll. ~ tJtne. ~. ~. M1UIOlf VllJO 1M •••TllT'fl,._ -AMTIQUIS. CLAll!tl "" Bii.ie Qdp Slampa, WAnled, ~MmakinJ • * CAS'n_/_ "2•14--•~n-o•-· _.,. 2 M'-CL.eM• .. n "11 MAT "'-'UllT••MCI -llACI CAllltl,_ltODI ....... Lb.. n•~n. -1111 ntJ, Call l..f pm ONtY; "'"""""'' ml~ ..vw, 'AM ,uAN u.'11T111••0 ms ••Kit. llAAMftllY, ft -..-AUTO •V•Mtt w · ---!9H103 ·t.:1t't'Ta.1~ns.---1Cey Saf, 1763 O:UJNTER GIRL '* !i34-308l. leavts.. bufff.t, 5 cb&ln. i:..ArltT~ .......... J7JI •USlllllll Yfl:YKll ..,., AUTOS WAMT•D ,,.. 2 -.,...... Onnp Avf! CM 645-1292 nct1 ., ... A-!JAJIA "°'"' "• •UILDllkl "" ~1w CA•• ,. \VO~fEN. eu ....,nt, tor · · ··• ' ' 1 to 3:30. Mon thtu FT'!. Call IT'S Beach hou9t !Im~. Bia· • .._. '"~· WONIOMHt1Ufl' ..., CATa1i111e ..... :_ ........... •n A.OTO laA11M "-1• b:'tu9ecitanfn.s. CM 1ru. Alt1r1tlon1 -642·Sl4S Mn. P4!1nnlllllon, &lJ..0600 cert 1electkin everl SM thl TRADER'S PARADISE llne..S, timet-5 bucks lvf'Uxu u111•u•a. 1101 u11,.1TMA1C1Ne ... us•o ca11 548--1227 Neat, acatr111tte., 20 years exp. Ext 2)371 betwn. J..S PM. NC1Jon QOWI -·· ;.;;;.;;;;;...;;... _____ _ I <' I r -----------------------------.,---------------·------~-------------- H ~YfllOT 1$ SALi AND TltADI Pumltvro - SAVC-1$$$ WAREHOUSE SALE Drutkl.lly redooed pricft on fine fumltun ' a.cceuor. ies from 3 MODEL HOMES. -Alto. used ottlce tamtture • ey_e[)'thiJl& has to i:o~ ! Rear ot Slarbird Const Co J.37$ LoKen Ave, Suite E Co5tA 1wtesa 546-31'10 one blk east of }(arbor One blk IO!llh of Baker 10 AN to 5 PM D&l.)t Tutsdlt, Octobtr ti, \970 FOR FREE TO YOU PITS on<I LIVISTOCIC TRANSPORTATION SALE· AND TltADE Dop 1115 Mo~ll• Homos 921111 1500 Sportl,,. Goods ' TaNNIS RACKET STRINGING 'Reuonable prlcts Ful ~ .. 4!M.-256S Mlsc1ll1neous l600 K.f'M'ENS I wb • 12 wb 1 oranae A wht 1 ford ldtlen l pt Himalayan • torti!e shell & lllver &ra¥ m...nn 8364493. JO/I BEAUT. Auaie-4hep ma1e HOl'lff 1130 JO mo. Well trained outdbor --'"-'-------or ,sable doa'. Lovel kids. 4 yr old Quarttt/thorough. Pref' &0meone with lotl of bred PaJJmlno st&lllon. Dbl· USED J"f('Cl'ds tmka,Jampi. 4 drwr sJnlg tilt, new room . -Eves 64&3032, 10/6 ree .• bi.it~ lnl ln bands furniture, bunk bt-(1, !\ BR BLACK ft>male lab retriever. or previous owners, bul ob- set.s., king t1iie b t' d , colt it' mlxlurt Love a ta.lnable. Lge, strong, weU· bookca.ses, de!!k, Columbia childl't'n. eood ~at u r 41.d . tempered, Must licll, le1.'ling NOW OPEN! TRANSl'OltT A TION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ~~~~~~~~~1~~~~~~~---~~l!_!l•~Hoo!!"''!!' ! .. !.__:f~lllll~j!Truc~~ks!._ _____ ,!;500~ Imported Autoo 9600 Imported Aul°' ffOO 19111 UNIVERSAL 24 x 53, STRIKE POWER DATSUN MG ..... , Nc. "313, --· li69 Gtneral 24 X "· ocri&l We have a eooc. stock ol New '66 1800 ROADSTER ............ No. arr, New $9900. 1970 GMC Camper trUCkt • THIN" 1910 2-IXGO Sheraton Manor, · " rial N 602 $12 ~ Buy now, beat the price 4 1peed, radio, beater, dlr. ''~f!'' ~ler. (rt.fl 5.ll-ilDS ' · ra.~~-~~~~1~~-mbin. (R.UC8511 Will take car in Q .._.. llllll uu:u "'--tn.do or flna.ncc pri)'&le par- ON BEAC!l o IV/Pool & UNIVERSITY ly, '4&-1032"' ·l!IH81J, laundl'y. 17"'5Crbl'·ba Jivg ''FR'IBILA""'ER" rm. kltoh•n. .,, .• rm. • 2 '70 DATSUN nu "' "'""'"' drlvr. $3800 OLDSMOBILE Must sell Finance. Pvt pty, llJJt l lACM UfWY, )t) 4 Doo,. Sedan. u~ (601AVA) 1193-7566 e ·S37.6824 Solid Stat• A."'llFM stem ~54S.5163 10/8 are&-$250. See.at20012 S. W. -~ 1 ~--· •1 th· · ...Blrch. Santa Aoa_ .Uts,_l ~ r~ .. p &,)'er, ........ tis " a 111 2 SPAYED fe~ cats need 1 blki from o.c. Ar-. Color 'IV console, kllC'h ho J p I fri ndl ... ....,. < items, love scat, co l I. 1 m~bby, ~n, ~~'. l'RANSPOlTATION NOW RENTING Spaces-in Brand 615-0331, 2850 Hubor Blvd. -;'M;;,n=,i:B;l;;=k::: .. :::::::::==::;.:::;;92;;75;Jeo.t.._,.,,,.__ ...,_,,..o ----1'65 CHEVY !1 Ton P.U. dlr. \YilJ take trade or lin· NEW-USED-SERV. ancl! pt!vate parly, C a I t .-=---=---:::. 54640Mor-49+68U, ~ labl~. din. rm Rt. 54()...$421. 494-3186 1016 Ask for Rev. Beals. · . Bo.ti It Y1cht1 9000 UNIQUE Kittens, 8 wks, HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE Burmese/~ra, L1tter '69 FBCLS Boatel. hltbt, 35', NEW 6 * Mobile Home Park G. E, refrlierator , trained, weaned. fut, deep-V hull, 250 hp, 11.ulomatie, 6 pi~ bedroom 968-3262, 1018 100 hrs. Sps 6, H & C press. IN mVINE set, leather lop coffee !able. ... t" -•-.. -rad'•/tel• hp. Motorcycl11 '60 A1GA·1600 HRDTP. XLNT: OJND. ASK S!llO. ,. ___ f_E_R_U_R_I ___ , * 545-t129 * Newpaot lmporb Ltd. °" MGB _. C.U.17'• ool1 • ..-' FERRARI ZEBRA, 3\1 S1'5 6 cyl., stick, dlr. ($27475) WiU 5460024, alter g pm. tW car in ti:ade or finance :=::::i::i"'=======I private party. ~ or 9300 49'<1811, ---------l9ro FORD. V8, aulomatic SCR·AM-LETS ANSWERS Rather -Tryst -Mi~e - Bikini -BRITISH LOVEABLE k.illens, 8 wks, .... • ............ ., "' . ., ORANGE GROVES shelf 4r mirror set, nested White, black .Ir. white, eoal 135 gal gas, dual battt'nes, Jeffrey OffTamp end tables, rocker, Hoover tro t il -'" P"'P<"' t San ized dMls. 1---------1 SAL!S.SERVIe&.PARTS 168 MGB-Llk1 newl 3100 W. Cout Hwy. * $2100 846-1807 * · """"°" B<acli •-,,io==· ===== 11 -..... .._.. transmission, pov.·er sleet· I ... - -__. ing, power brakes, air con- Foreign car: "This car lli 50 hi&h class ii e\len back. tires with a BRITISJI ac. ~nt." FURNITURE returned from displa,y studie-5, nuxkl hom- ell, decorators cancellation. Spani&h k MedlterftJlean R D FURNITURE 1144 Newport Bl •• C.M. every nite 'ttl 9 black &:. ...... y. 83&-4193 or n ra .. vv • '"' o ta Ana Frwy. vacuum. patio c ha i 1 e . 548-08l3. ..... 1018 refrll', 1tove &: oven, bilge SEE 14 dishes. uten&ils. U:aving the pump, hlOWl!r, head holding titate. 1644 Tustin Ave. ADORABLE 6 wks o«1 kit· lank w/elec pump, elec Fabulous Models ~P.,,"°,,,"'=64&-=-.""',.,.·====-· I tens tortoise & blk & whit dual horns. Sac $12,500. -52 i,s acres ol fun llv- Wl NTE R'S COMING ncl 'd homea. 548-0813 714/MG.-0982 Hunt. Harbour. ing. So keep y0ur "Summer" fig. 836-4493 10/9 WHY NOT -!\fulti·milJ.ion $ mobile ure w / exen:::ise f!CIUip. 5 Golden Retriever/German TAKE A CRUISE?? home conununity. C"----an.,. .. ;...,._trom Sien.. Shenord puppies. 2242 Calh-O -Full time in park ser· •.....u:.c ,.......... ,.... For L1•s1 r vice center. der Gema & exercl§C bicycl. erine Pl, C.M. 646-0409 after Ch•rtlr --Continuous smog free es to belt vibrators'! 6 pm or wknds. LOW WINTER RATES! ocean breezes. UNITED RENT J.LL TO A good home pt. Siame!e 40, \Vheeler Cnriser: Sleeps 8. -Surrounded by moun- 710 \Y. 19th St., Costa A1esa kittens, hsbk. include 3 wks Make appl. NOW! OWNER: tains &: orange grov~. * '645-0760 * · ...... 1 • • -1 minutes from world's ~-~,,;,,;,..;,,c:,,-... ___ 1 sul'2"y cat lood & kitty l1ller Wkday9 539-8978 Eves-& wk-Jarge$t shopping center. ITIECE wrought iron dir'f. * AUCTION * 962-6368 l0/6 ends: 827·1431. (Fashion ltllandl nette set turquoise, sH.ls. &: Fine Furniture BLK & wht v.·i~ halr terrier c17~.~ .. =-,.,..0-.~W'°hol,...,-o-r-l"00,,-&:-:6 t""Chcck These Features Wed .• Sat..•_sun.. ·w g back.s never mar lop $50. 7 mos. old, B!k male poodle h X i--•· .... 1 .1 k Championship Lawn & Appliances l ~~ yrs. eood v.·ith children, P, tra ....,.,,,s, ..... 1 an . BowliJli Green, Free car 1,,,.._=.,,.==·~l~••_r_5_o 30~-~~~ 1 Auctions Friday, 7:30 p.m. &16-4.l7l or 548-2932 1019 deck, rail, cover, trlr, elec. Wash, Putting Green. SEl.J..ING Home: Hsetul of Windy's Auction Barn troniC eqUip. $2500. 642-4048. Croquet Court, under. furn. Some maple, stereo, NDS fncd yd lovable spayed RUNABOUT • ski boat. roof Shuffleboard, en· -~n -••'p d •• ~ •914, 2075~ Newport,. or &4&8686 female beagle mi:ic br &: -~ f . . closed Therapeutic Poo l, ..,_.,... ... ,.u """' ~Vol ._,,.~ L many ex.,-..,,, air pnce. Swi p 1 Beh111u Tony's Bldg. Mat' wht. 6 mo. all fihots, hsbk. 892-l63S aft 7 pm, 548-4l2f eam"' R 00 • !l~~llardsbl • Office Fumlture I010 Beautifull Like New! loves child. 531-9541 lOt9 days. Roo~. S:.,(· &n=.f.::.ile~ Reftn'd MxOO wood de&ka, Tourmaline mink: stole: % ADULT female PeI'fiian cat 113 to ~ share for sale in Storage Arca. Lovely length Autumn Haze mink to adult home, NO 1968 M-40 ketch xlnt tax Courtyard. $69.50 • Reftn'd wood arm coal; Persian lamb_jacket OIILDREN' OR D 0 GS, v.T!te o(l Box P. 2040 NB -Small pets allo\\1cd. rotary cbaln. $29.50 e -We w/mink collar. SACRITTCE! 54~3931 10/8 -Imagine all th ls from have the largest selection Aft 6 or Sun 6f4..5939 FOR beautiful 7 wks old kit· ''CAPTAIN'S GIG" $81 .SO per month ol used otfl turn in lhls ' · Z1 14851 Jcffrev Road, Irvine area. , ce WISCONSIN V-4 a> h P tens variety or colors. male $1400. TI4/84S.35 CALL COLLECT . $1504 r tri & female. 548-08 13, ti-1'c Mahan Desk engine, . cu t tt . g 836-4493 10/9 Sailboats 9010 714-83i..858s 714-530-2930 lloo Newport Blvd. SlO. 4 cu ft l2·volt ~lrig. -----213-861)..5210 714--531·8105 "2-!M05 540-!7641" Al,!t,!]Srd~d_fi..rtaJi. .Q.ea.kr_ _. THiil d\ttoning with Hlway .. Hot'T"W"''t1'11.'. camper Cruiser. Jwi1 the :&.,_ ~ lhing tor the cycle group. Dir. ~9640 or ~ FIAT '66 Opel Stn wgn, 28 1'1PG. •=,6~3~C~H~EYY=-Vi-2~T~o-n~P=U -------i ~"'~-;:m•k••I·, "FRIEDl:ANDER'l ,... .uae .......... I I ~0,,..,fl 537-6824 • 119~?;66 ' crt. ' '"""' •tiok. dtr ... J rQJ PORSCHE . NEW·USED-SERV. (E83295l. Small down. \Vill I---------\ ftrLrV'lrl =0:~~1t.party. A~=~~ed 8!:~t ~!! '69 911 'S' [ /'J= .. =p=s======9"5"1a=I DEMO SALE Demo! 5700 actual miles. 5 ---------·I 1970 Fiat 12'1 SPorts Cpe. speed !rans .. ~g wheels,~ + '52 \VILLYS: 4-Whl/drive. ~ Ton PU. Nu radialor, reblt·6 cyl eng. Gd Shape. 646-316i JEEP 1965, excellent. \l/arn hubs, lo1vbar, top, good tires, paint It cushions. SI/JO. 4~7901 '69 H~ Ace 100 ~ '69 e '57 JEEP F .C. 150 % ton Kawasaki . 90 both dirt & P.U. New e~. trans, tire.s. street eqtnpped w/less than 646-2305. 1000 mi. Must sacrifice. Itr========= seriously interested, call Campers 673-2527. 9520 '67CAMPER Radio , Jit'ater, special cx· AM(FM. Special . Jactory1 haust, pin 'ltriping, radial ~qw~pcd. Yellow with blackl tires, :ow miles. 1rtenor. (#301224). . $2795 BILL YATES ,;'~Gato•n c~ ~~;.,. VOLKSWAGEN 1 - ------32852 Valle Road --- -TH -INK -San Juan Capistrano 837-4S00/ 493451V 49'J..226l "FIAT". '64 PORSCHE ' IU ' 356 SC COUPE ''FRIEDLANDER" Bolboa btuo, <hrome .,...., .. radial tires, conroune con- 13150 IU.CH (Hwy. JtJ dition. Lie. XOG~ 893·7566 • 537..6824 $3099 NEW-USED-SERV. CHICK IVERSON ..... _ _125=. 536-39~~'-"~-~-MIXED Au.lr•llan Shoph•ro ALL NEW 16, ~ ~ ll w l''Ully equipped, fUQH 692) JAKE'S Continuous Swap mo. !Md lemalt>. anlToLiveln Moot Buy-S.ll·Tooade ll7 E. 54:;..sl.JO 1019 HOBIE CATS COSTA MESA $229_5. '69 Flot 850 Sp~•r. Ph-.IH C.~3031 Ext, 66"' 61 18th. CM 642-5666 TOY Basest female puppy 8 Local spaces available now! tires. approximately 13.000 1970 HARBOR BLVD. ,t REFRIGERATORS: $25. 80 Gal. aquarium, all &la&&, wks old. Loves children. ALL COlOR·S--Jtsou.are.serious.about.bey. ·=========i miles. Lie~ 195 A.DY1 __ _:C.:.OST:,:cA:..;.;M::ES::1::·-=·I l.l'U'l.rl.rU vw Appl lances 1100 ~BLita~STst:o~EE, !~~~le, Complete $100. c:Z:~ pupPies, 6 ~~ ~R:O~D~O~mter :~=~~!~~me .•. Now'1 ·~~nclr!w~:'rig~i~:~: Harbour v w rr~9jS~EMONS IMPORTS '70 Tarqa 91 -1 'T' GUARANTEED. ~7820. =,,-"'""-,-_,_..,,.....,,..,,.-! blk & wht, 2065 Flam!-, Rao'••at·~-aoo,; BAY HARBOR Noed• liming' $250 • • 2LOCATIONS Demo! Exactly 682 miles. 4 KENMORE auto wu:her, SCM Automatic .12, fully 546-4159 CM' ]Q/9 U'6 ~"' • MOBILE HOMES 673--0498. • · 18'71:1 B~ACH BL. 8424435 120 W. WARNER zpeed, AM/FM, chrome late l'n0&!1. xlnt cond. Free ~~ci,,?'!i:~ke~5;~10~ % Schnauzer % Poodle Zyn. CAP N EDS 1425 Baker St. (at Harbor)' 1970 HONDA 350. 1500 miles. HUNTINGTON BEACH '117 w. WARNER whC'f'J<;, delivery. ~. ~72. 847· Mr. &now, 642-2.611 aft 6 old-female housebrk love• 2'lOO W. Cit. Hwy, NB 645-2".M Costa Mesa 540-9470 Xlnt. $750. , New '71 Datsun SANTA ANA BILL YATES 8U~ k Phonl!: 54S.4119 '"===--,--~-I BROWN'iNG 22 cal, lever ae. ids. Cats ~ 836-4493 10/6 FERRQ.cement H-28 wired Triple Wld• Cornell (2131 592.5227 1600 OHC, Pickup with camp.. ---------' KENMORE auto washer, I.Ion with Weaver adj. 3x to FREE to good home, adults form ready for plastering, Hillcte!t e Flamingo 'GS BULTACO 250 cc. Gd for er. Sale price $2099 dlr. '67 FIAT 850 VOLKSWAGEN &°(JOd cond. :f'r!oe delivery 6:it scope. Exc:eUent con. only, Loveable, affectionate hard work completed Paramount • Universal street or dirt. Extras. $j95. (<I 43827.i) \ViU take car in 32852 Valle Road .$35. 546-8672. 847-8ll5. d!Uon. S70. 548-4987 afl 4 pm. Labrador. 6.36-0235 10/8 646-7886 BarTing:ton • Broadmoor f>.ID-5198. trade. \Viii finance priYale San Juan Capistrano •MAYTAG SttVlce man has ATl'ENTJON SKIERS I MALE grey kilten 8 wks, Balbo1 20' fixed KMI Continental e Star DIRT BIKE • t.1ontessa 250 party. Call 54&4052 or 4 speed, radial tirc-s, dlr. 8.1i4800/493"45IU49!J.2261 wasbe?'fi, dryers In match. Mammolh ski cabin. Avail part Siamde, il'eY eyes. 548-0532 General • llillcrest cc. Completely reblt. $475 or 494-6811 . fTOC SS!IJ. s.maU down. Will '60 PORSCHE Cabriolet. 1600 8el:s. best gU&r. 5.3l~. for seuon on!y. Suiblble for 962-5719 10/8 LIOO 14 CHAPMAN 1 • best offer. 962.9869 lc;'°'A",;;1P"E'°'R"'"'•he=11-a"nd::;-;boa=c;-;:1o=r I financP private Part Y· super, with hard top. New 1970 KentnOn! Coppertone 1rg Ir: am. groups. 6'15-8200. ~f. ITALIAN. l{l'eyhound, •,~ \V/HVY Duty Trailer MOBILE HOMES ·~ NORTON 650 twin ex· DaL~n pick·up truck good S4640".l2 or 49<l.G8ll. engine, new clutch. new Dishwasher, portable. Value NAUGH chr & stool, new $25. lerrier, female pups, 9 "'ks. $900 675.3431 12331 Beach Blvd .. G.G. (_'£'lien! condition S 4 50 . eond .. $295.00 alt. 3:30 p.m. '69 Fiat 124 Cpe tires, new pairil. AM/FM, szm. Sell $150. 968-8126. "ap!e tbl .$!, fire scrn-Call eves. 61J..1456 l0/8 PHONEIX ea•--·-·Wood. * Tiol/530-2930 * 54CHil47 ' 53I-i 25.l just like new, can ht> aeen ~· ..... u ... .....-Exotic red wilh black vinyl Bl lllO comp!, SJO. dbl bed ;75 GE FREE to good home, male, en decks beautifuJ finish. 1969 UNIVEftSAL ..24X53. 1970 Honda 450 K 3, disc '64 Foi:ct ca.mper. Has bucketseats.Lowmiles,hlll at 2089 llarbor vd., or s~. 51>5469. pt terrier, call E 11~ en $800 if4 2tst c M 548-6660 serial No. 15313, New $9900. brake brand new condition. everylh1ng. \Vill take trade. had e:itcellent care. Saeri· phone 66-1982, !Jam to 6pm ANTIQUE bedrm •et. 3 NE\V Tasco le I e SC 0 p e 548-3421 be fore s. 10/8 . so~~ . 1:. ~~~w =: aerial Pvt. Pty. 494-5668. 646-2698. fice! CXLY235) Take older '63 PORSCHE pieces circa 1820. Cornpl w/tripod & Barlow -lens & PUPPIES. I male, 2 femaJt', NEW, HALF PRICE 1970 24X60 Sheraton Manor, e Y>J.lAHA 250 Big Bear '66 V\V C~1PER: R~bll car in trade. WiU finance 'S' roupr Agcan Blue finish han::lauwd. Rare, beaut. canying case, 600 power. mixed breed. Adorable, niet" 213-431-2498 Long Beach serial No. 602, Sl2,!IOO. Scl""mble.r • s,500 mi. Xlnt motor, New tires; tape deck private par ty. Cali Pat dlr. AM/I";\!'. {JGE 971) · rond. 54l-Q64 by appt only. I -'$195-'-._.......,-ci--;;.,· =---r ,;:"'=;''-''·,:!J68.;;:..:3587::::·c.,. __ .:l0::,:18 I =====o=:;;';::;;'F:=:: Dealer:· cn 4J S3l-810S cond . 673-6693 & speakers. alt 10 am 494·7506. 540.3100. BILL y ATES l=N=o=d<al=:':"::·===== A SJ'EAL PART Persian Jong.hair kit· Power Crui11r1 9020 ,67 20x4l La Corona ,67 KAWASAKI 350 SIT.JO EVES: 6is-.5545 Bunk beds, bxsprng, m~tt tens. Hsebrokcn. J-blk 1-28' Domi, cu.sbn made, 2 yrs Set up in Adult Park 40 HorsePower S400 cash ''[)(r.il-yoursclt campe("' JAGUAR VOLKSWAGEN Mu1ic1I Instruments ~1~.rlental rug. S · grey. 67:J.Sl2S 1018 old, Just comp I et e ly Complete w/steps, a1VTlingS, Bruce 546-4418 '57 Ford, 2 ton van s750 -------~-1KITT'ENS % Siamese. Day•, ha _, 1 '"odboal 208 Pearl, Balboa Isle.• TABLE saw. CRAFTSMAN over uli=u. of • .. , ' carport & shed. '69 Yamaha 175 Enduro '67 1125 HAMMOND Organ, aplnet . 833·680 1 . Aft 5 , galley, head, sips 4, gTea~ AVAILABLE Like new, $4'9, 968-429(1 r·ord Super Van. MlOO, cheny cabinet, S3>0 8" awing blades w/motor 646-4637. 10/6 f.lshlng boat. Speeds over 50 IMMEDIATELY automatic. Xlnt eond. Must under blu book. 675-6102 or ~$Sll=·..,Cal=l=8Jl.-..,1"6~.-~= HEALTHY intelligent pup. 200 mi range. Expei:isive Dealer: (TI4) S3l -8lO:i 1969 Harley Davidson 125 cc sell immediately. &f4..6105. M!fl 432 Carnlltion, CdM. CERAMIC molds, used, Pri· pies. \Yeimaraner mother. and gorgeous $6000 to finan-$350 Like nc"" ,_ party ~ . 67 .. ~-CONTINENTAL by Cam· 531-7294 Imported Autos 9600 liR.IlfET, almost new, xln't Va<e · ..... ..::ap. 5."17-9359. 10/6 cing. ,,....,.,....... brid M f ctun 24 55 cond. $75. 2031 Mesa Dr., 531-8637 AKC 9 mos old fem ale SACRIFICE I Cust~':n i:s~;.. r. x ' ·~7opY=~~~~ ~lk::~ AU_STIN HEALEY -S.A. Hghts. 567-9359 CANDLE Making & Decorat· Weimaraner aft 4 p.m. 25' Baltic Cniiser, twin-Vol· CHAPMAN SHURER mike. Brand new, ing U:ssons. Limited enroll· 842-4397 10/6 vo·s. Best oUer for immedi. MOBILE HOMES _1_1·..,8 ·--"'.,,.....,_.1;;8·,..-;-;=:--i still on gun.ntee. Colt $100, menl. 537-8616. GA s s 10 v e & g as ate sale. Owner 646-3794, lZJ6 No. Harbor, S.A. e HONDA 160cc sell forS4~.646-47TJ afl5 Regulation size pool table. refrig.oralor. 301 Mt-iJa Bkr. 548-1501. 531·8105 Xlntcond. * 968-5606 slate lop, xlnt cond, Make Drive. 548-54<12 101' 23' Ch11ens Cabin Cruiser, as ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; '69 YAMAHA 125 M/X P i•nos ~1n1 1130 _oHer~6'Ui678 PETS anti LIVESTOCK ~ $3000. For appt 10-eee ,64 LAKEWOOD LIDO Manye:ittras. t.t.W .ell. Make SALE .. ''D~I~N'"."-t""b~l.~&....,•_v_p""oo-1'". -d°"ln-. boat, mail card to P.O. Box 20X50 orrrr. 644.0154 chn, round. F,old out tent Pets, General l800 8464. Fountain Valley, 92708. =='=======I PIANOS e ORGANS 3 BR, New awning & skirting, Auto Service !railer, $150. 54()..()111. new ca r""ling in bdnn'i;. Famous brands at tremen.1 ~--'--,,'-,,..----,---,; FOX, RARE, 7 mo, gold col· Speed-Ski Bo1ts 9030 ,.... & P1rts AUSTIN AMERICA Sales, Service, Parts Immedial~ Delivery All Mod~ J1rtupor1 ~l111por1 ~· JAGUAR HEADQUARTERS Tht>oruy authorlzedJAGUAR dealt'r in lhe entire Harbor ""'· Com pleb. SALES SERVICE PARTS BAUER BUICK IN COSTA MESA 234 E. 17th Street 513-1765 32852 Valle Road San Juan Capistrano 831.<1800/ 493-4511/49!J.2261. '63 PORSCHE COUPE Ilardtop, gleaming metallic silver. with brand new in- lerior. chrome wheels, ra· dial tires. Ai\I/YM radio. Lie. PX\\'!m2. $2399 CHICK IVERSON vw 5-19-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD, COST A !\IESA dous aavinp! All with our Diamonds, .Joose, a pair 47 Jar. blk lep & ean, musl children's section. Sc.rial # I P ... a"h •~ M·"e nice FOR Sale·. ("·-1 JS') •69 Hy-s•-$6995 Dir 531 ••05 ••()() W Cout H-N 8. '62 Jaguar 3.8 Sedan ;:;~ve Coast Music War· earrings.· 2iJ7.f30-s&;1. Lei. f:'~le~~~G3.country. Aft dro Swift .:it'op &: trailer. sl0.~30. · • ...,... ' VW Chassis, Transmissions, &12~94tti • -..... 540.1714 New Tires. Xlnl eond. 170 911 1f 1 ORGANS from $250 sure World, Seal Bch. 65 H.P. Mere. Like ne~. $200 I ;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~ and others. * 1960 S 'f * $J<lj(], 673-255t Demo. 3'100 actual mile!'!. S PIANOS from S225 • 2l·line cigarette machine Dog1 1825 & usumt> pmnts. Gd for ski· 10X44 GREAT LAKES • &lz...o-143 • pr1 I KARMANN GHIA speed trans .• Al\f/Fl\f, mag GRANDS lrom $695 for sale. lng &: pleasure. Phone w/10X35 Encl screen rm e '64 VW Eng $175 e Besl offer. 494-8629 v.•hee.Is, eine.raJd green with Bank terms, Trade·ins S2.:IO 642-8030 FAWN, 1w1ale Chihuahua. 5'18-6l37. ," Space Rent $42.50 * 54(}.3118 * ---------black interior. (#101166). 0-·. Sunday• l"S Show stock. '5 mos old . 1 M $2550. Financing avail. ood C d BMW '63 VW GHIA BILL YATES na1J,'W 6 -Fri ti1 9 POOL TABLES! Grandfather Is Champion. e \5' Bristo-near new er<: c.~f. area (CT59301 VW Engine, G on . COAST Music Wholeal~ to the Public Dale's White Prll\C'e' owned 65,_.hi;,~many extras. $1~. *Dir. 545-8242 * e 642.0.143 • Convertible. Recent engine VOLKSWAGEN Terms. 832-952{) by the Eniperor of Jap'". ='='=:,,,,,=·====== Authorized Dir. overhaul. hard 10 find m°' NEWPORT , HARBO.. NEW t.1oon, 11 x 62, Expan· T T I 9425 Salo• e Se-"-e p r1 d 1 Rad 1 I 4 ~ ~-1& Mo,.-. 6l"_:,"1 ,/STANDARD SIZE POOL Worth Sl5Q...$300, flrsl $50 Boat Trai'lors 9032 do, nr Dana Pt t.larina , J railer, rave , ....... "' as e . 10, iea er, sl"=", I-~=..;..,~~=~-~-'~"--I TABLE cash gets. Or trade f9r good / ---"------I All Models to Choose From etc. 11 WOW 11 * 89i..s410 * tape recorder, 'Pl)'W6 mOYI· obhro'ldw_x,tt•& •m,.·,,'~w'"o'l:m'0,'.· '69 Travel 1'rlr. 11' used Service !\fonday 'lill 7:00 PM $1099 32852 Valle Road· San Juan Capistrano So TV Al Jlf.\VAY Boat Trai le r ·~ ... v twice. Toilet. shov.•tt-w/ Sat 'till Noon Mf~ ~~vlni:s.:LE Misc, Wanted··~~ Mto ~~ a~ilabie. ~. se_r. \\·/~hocks, like ne1v, up to 4~2381 heater 4 refrlg . stove & g:d COAST IMPORTS CHICK IVERSON on. PIANOS & ORGANS -----"-16. boat. Sl50. 6ll--Ol94.0 ~°"N,.-"BE"A7CH=,-:;w"1°'P1>0=1 --:& oven. Sips 4. Call 642·1264 • VW 8.11480014934511/ 49!).2261 1956 Pon;che Speedster. New motor. tirei;. lhrtt tops, lo":; neau L'O\'t'r, car covt'r. S20(n. consider V\V Bus In trade. .. ~.., LGE. cl .. " Abalo-....,arl~. SILKY, TERRIER PUPS I od l!X" 2 b lb ?t1orn Of Orange County Inc. Twomanualorgll11JlfromS299 '"'"" '!/Fem. Quali'" b--~1-. •--Sii Moo' 9036 I~u ry. ,,.,. 1 ' ' The Golden Waves. 16 v n.~ ""' -t P _ #.!.!!,!!._ 1v'g rm 'k ilchen d n'i;: rm * lT SANTA FE Travel UlO W. Pacific C~t ilW)' Pianos lrom $179 n-:.,_., St -uMl>"lo C• healt_hy & 11lcr t t-.f. for Stud & 2' •• ' Id~·,, s•·~· ~ail•• u.~-ul;• brak••. 642.0.lOS e 546-4529 WARD'S BALDWIN S'l1IDIO '' ..... ~ " ~ ' . Ser\'ict, &.lfr7335. 16' by 40' U SLIP 4·wsy tie. Ccu cemen .i · "°""'' •• • ..,..._.. .... .... l8l9 Ne"-"POrt, c.r.f. &12-3484 94965 Phone 415/332·1019 $140/mo. MuSt sell. Pvl pty 675-0331 Nu tires & v.·ater tank. Vay '69 SUNRF. 2002. auto trans, OPEN SUNDAY \V/\Y carpets in good cond. GOLDEN 6"" "°"" Bier Clean $700 Cash. 89i-&110 A~t/l"~f. take o"T· pymts. AFTERNOONS Plr ,old or ., ...... n. 646-8226 '"'"""'°" '67 20x43 Great lakes Pvt pty. 644-2950 be( 8 PM. r --RETRIEVERS bl'l 10. a.fl 4. Boat Rentals 9031 Set up in Adult Park True~• 9500 SCHOOL TlME SPECIALS AKC * * 714/532.o.lSS Complele w/stcps. 11wninil:s, Hammond orpn w/Leslie YOUNG couple furnishing Rent A Sailboat carport & she-d. $995.. Kim~l Baby Grand, first home. net'd teakv.'OOd ?tfin Schnauzer sirr-d, AKC. AVAILABLE beau( tinifih. this week only bulfet.~~1l1'9 alt 5 Pt.1. \Vormed cropped, shots. Cal 25, sleeps 4, fully equip. l~U\IEDIATELY $895 Medical 5tudt>nt with family Eves & Sun. 557·3760 ped, $30 per day, wkdyt; $40 n...a1 CTI<) 531 •105 Goui.o MUSIC CO. needs rClrigt>rato r , WIRE Fo:< Terrier pups-ch. perdaywknds; $200pe.rwk. ...., er: -.., Since 1911 Reasonable. 646-3333. sire & dame. Show qu11.lity. Lc&..!Ons lncl. 968-4840. 2045 No. Main, S.A. e WILL BUY REFRICERA· Ch si re: at stud. 893-6632. 44' HOUSEBOAT avail for * S47.468t * TORS WORKJNG OR NOT. e 10 r.to'5 TRISH SE:TI'ER, \Vknd5 or Weekly. Penn IllUSETTE Sp!nette & chair * 645--0207 * male, AKC. mu~I sell! moored. 548-2434, 636-4034 like new. Mag linlsh $400 Lovable. trained. i>"S.2988 P" ply 675-lm aft 5PM . FREE TO ' YOU =,.-,,.-c=o='-,,,-°"9 I Boat Chorlor AKC 'foy Poodles. maJc. DARLING short M ir kitten.,, v.·eek.$, :la~: * l2' Twin-5CrtW Chrifi Crall 21'" RCA color TY $1'0, 19" PT. Siamese .. f blk, 1 all Sips 6 * De.l\lX boat ,,.,..y. Male. 64+.:J96i l0/8 AKC REGIS'l'ERED + 548-2434, 636403-t ;t portable $35. ··-l\t \n~!l_re ~le Puepirs ~29 ntEF.: tetrltr~. Hetrur 1 _v"'ery==......,==·~•-l•.,'~',,'-~'=158"""I Fl1hlni.Bo.tti-··--9040 !=:==="'""'====~I vlrlety. female & maJH, 7 ADORABLE BASSE'T Hf.Fl a stereo Gii wb . 546-3810 10/8 l!OUND PUPS AKC 14' 1957 Glaspu, sport hull. 3KITTENStwhilelcalico8 **.u.,_'ICKI:•* ski or f'\ah, Mere 45hp. STEREO Oxl'lponentr. dual mal .._._...... w/trlr $450 M&-2:>12 10lt ~ Kenwood ~n otd. 2 lemales, 1 e. AKC Scottish TerTien. ' · · 1205 T1levis5on Tripi• Wide Cornell Continental • Paramount Barrington • Universal 1'1amingo • General broadmoor • Star lflllcM'll e Csmhrldge CHAPMAN MOBILE HOMES 1206 1'0. Harbor. S.A. * 714/531.$105 * NEW 12 x 57 LallCt'r l Bedroom an desirable space in choice Newport-Cosla ltfesa area adult park. F'oC' sale by private p117, Phone 546-.1783 ampll&r w/AM·f'M .ndio. !>4()..2te7 1019 lcmale1. 10 wks oJd. Boat Stor•p to4I 'it:1f'l:I 350 Tape Deck. 2 AR PUPPY 7 mo. old mixed * W-571S * -----=-----1 B A 'i SI p E V 11 1 a&: e • "" Speabft. SSOO vault: Shrphml Lib. 542-5488 1019 1-A"F"'G=H"A""N"""'P"'U"P"P"l"E"S-BOAT S«nge 1n C0$13 Newport.'1 pre1tlge mobll 1.;";:""~-==!'4M137=:ii'::·==±.I LDNG bl.ired klUens to good AKC, Sltio * 6"1>.?S89 ~lesa . 8.je pc-r fl. home pM\L 2 BR. 2 Bo.. r homes. s.31-2236 10/9 \Valer/elce !nd. Spar bid.a Idt'aJ adull spot. $10.950. Cameru a AFGHANS·AKC $100 shed svall. 545-814$ Owner 67>-1&42 ltlUft:IMnt IJOI GAS v.-all ht'ater ~G works, 774-1396 or 87l..st.11 9100 li-10BILE bouiie ~t.aI81Cb:43. .....;===----~ 10/6 ==~~--"-,--=-I Aircr•ft OLDIPUS. Pen y .~ frame PUPPY 4 alOI old pt..&aglt Sit.KY Ttrrkr puppk!s. f:y. ...;...;...;..;.______ 1* ba., 2 llR. comp!. HARO to cet '54 :'otd ~ ton JS mm wtth two lf:n.. tll MS-0483 l Olti ttlll'.'nt with chlld11'n. AKC PVT pilot lnterei;ted In ren· IC'fup, O f adlt park. $1.1.~ P.U. Xlnt. conct.. ~?~. U "M c~ J 2.... 70 n!j(iStt'red . $7S, 962-70l7. ti-a privately owned ... terms. 64~2881 54$-109&. l~ ,._mm ., : ,.. • 2 Gutnt. pr-63.1297 10/G . .., =7.'C=--=-~-=-'""",-,,;-1 mm ~th lera h>od, ario ,.. • ~autitul AKC ~i Sheltk 0111 U'cnlfl e.t O.C. Airport w11.me tror. .I: rrlddlc!s 1tt11 ·68 1,; Tun Dodge a• bl!d. Big ryinl cut. AU b' itoo. Box11r/Relricwr J>UPP~• • B pu~. 5 v.•ltl old. Toy ooUiei.. from time to lime. Owners likf: Hot Ca.kts w l th 6. Stt'p bumper. Automatic. ~ wk1 old, S4m aller 3:30 SAblf' • whht. Ms.-0126. only, CR.II 613-ll?l. 0111"-fltd Ads! $1,fllO. &ts..oo!l2. ~-------"------- a,i~3031 Ext. 66 or 61 1970 HARBOR BLVD. OJSfA MESA '70 91I-T COU PE =========15 s.pd. n1ags, AM/F~t. com· MERCEDES BENZ 1or1 10·p, ,...., ""' ply 673·069:! •'63 RENA'ffi:i'R..s, ou·ncr. 1n1n111c In &; t2::J:-Call !WO.~. • l>dy OU~ J1rtupoll 31111p0 II ~, "111 t1torc Ir in the attic wt'K'n )'DU can turn 11 fnto a100 w. o..t Rw7 , ttE. mo~y throu~ a DAILY SU"~ MO-,~ Ptl.OT ~·11nl Ad. ' ·~ , • I I • • I• • .. TRA -Imp< -- r.i. so Oro"t Cl .. 1200 ' $ = -'4 • Do heatt Bl vc W11 Aul D 1966 f, BI I! ,. HUii . .. , .. '69 Cond· $1750. '66 : re mo '"'"" TFA JIM 1!>19 Yelin ' tr• All ,., $2()()(1. vc Gtt• Ha 187ll '. HUl Al Black "°"' .... XEU CH 54, 197 •• 4 SJK" fXD1 or f 54fi..41 1970 \ ra\ia r11dio ronrl new! 5fi-R: 'fi.l V\ """ mill'I 1'5(). nlte5 " Ml CH _....~--... -~-----~------·-------·-· • . ----. --· -------. . • Tu1id.iy, October ,, 11170 ' DAJLY Pll01 18 TRANSPORTATION fRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION T RANSPORTAT ION TRANSPORT.TION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION T RANSliORTAT ION 1--------1 1.m~fl0':!-od_A_u_to_1_· __ -_ 1 _1_m_pe_r1_od_Au_to_1____ lmporiod· Autot -u...i Cort 9900 Utod Co ro 9900 Usod Coro 9900 U.tod Cort 9900 Utod Coro ~ U...t Cort - • SAAB VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN PLYMOUTH PONTIAC Authortttd Oealtr 1a1e1..e Service ·~ Sonet C.oupes in Sioclc . Oranre Councy·, Newe$t Otr. COAST IMPORJS of ()n.np County lnc. UXI W. Pacllk: Cout Hwy. -• !W!-P ·- -LEASE~. '71 YW BUG '66 vw BUICK CHEVROLET FORD . '67 RIVlERk NU J>Olirtu" '58 CHEVY BELAIR ' e FORD 1969 Plymoiifn V IP-e PONT. alr, F/P,, ~.ooo ml. 348 hp eng; PS/Pi!, >001 en, '61 CNT RY SQR:-WAG . '•oor ""'"' '61 CATA(INA CPE. ' tnOO. * .. 5464-475 gine, cltan, new paint. FACTORY CA.llfornla Cold ONLY 23.150 tc>CAL ~ e •54 BUICK e Must tell now: $300 or best AIR CONDITIONlNG'~ ' Black Vinyl Interior ~ FACTORY' ON L y Sedan GOOD . TRANSPORTATION offe r. 642-0757 9 ])a.Wnger,. vs, automatic, Under 25.000 ml. Am CONOJ-TlONING • $51.00 $95. * * 6U-9877 \.'69 Nova power· ateerlng, power~rak· 383 cu in, V-3, 2 bbl. Bet.utlti.il)torh.on Blu.t .u.nilib ~ t es, electric windows, !UI Automatic Tra.nsmiulan tV / m.atchtiii vlnyl. Inter. Pti-Month CADILLAC Immaculate. 6 cyl,. atlck. wheel, 11tl'reo A}.f/FM muJ. rower DIK Brakes ~wer sletrlrc, auto b't,t11., ·BAUER"" f ·BUICK IN -llL·t\fATAT-IS-Ra$d11o.Bl(Xll!,48G_)_ --Must sclll-dlr. ·<~YPM 736) tw''s''w":-,t~ggagel r&.£!._,n•,; ~hw1,."v~indo1 .... ~'-t .ftdio,';T.heater, ,WSW itira. e CAD. Will finance. 494·77~. · ires. mmacu a e. '1nf lWU Tinted &la.ls. tk. A real '69 FLEETWOOD 'MCHtvY~t.... wltbcam-(~). • Free.way .Speed Control j,~ :Putt·," (XWZ, 362>. CQS'l';A-. • VOLKSWAGIN~ -uxuR1ous BRGUGHAM -.. .-·-~-'=="/ -·N•lters-Ced1lloc-'i"'1'El•K !\fiht_J)o•< Seat Pri&d,. .•" '°""'· --. _ ~ , • IW,;lllll, · 1p., 0010.. , Air Condltlonine · • '62-sun~anr."10;00tnl!l .... n· -~321!52-Vtll Roa 'Ha •tiou r~v:w, · -~ACTOR:--~ --'-'-l-poun1How1. split-nm•, _,,. -2000 HARBOl>il"VD;-Ex<e flont COiillllO_n ___ , ""b'n -Gocllllac ·1--'"'-'=;r..==::.....j SUNBEA_r,t • " eng. Hard Ir toft topa, Ton· San J uan q,plltrano I ' AIR CONDJ'I:,IONrNG. tll'ea. ;:!5. Lt 8-3935. COili Mesa 19 2llO neau ci>ver. apoke rima £: ~7~49UBU/4$lonlt 18ru BEACH BL 842-4435 l~pressiv.e ~m7 :ge .7~ '5'T Chevy 4 dr wagon Re-540-9100 Open Sunday Contact M!2 G~ at· ~ -~~LV~., ·.ME· SA radio. s7oo. 613-2877. '66 vw· HUNTINGTON .BEACH ~~::a~~nti:·leat~~:\~. J:i~ilt V-S & auto,~., wi '68 F\)nliac . Firebii:J.· .400 the DAILY .PILOT, 330 W. 540-9100 ~n .~l.Y LEASE terior Full power includ ing air. $275. 646-5396 paclqlge, All' cond1t1on1ng, Bay, C.M. &12-4321 . TOYOTA """' romfort ""'With hl• "' Ch"' 327 C.M. Jardlno. :;",.::r ":··~·"' ··~er '68 SATELLITE wa~10N LEASE '71 YW BUG & hers individual adjust-4.56 posi, }lolley $600. d ... ,ra 10 ..... a,ter, h~tn· I\! ,71 YW BUG '68 Corona Sed . . I .. , ·o~ fl • PM au roo • mac wuet' S, w 1 c . an ment~. tilt te leacop1ng whee' ,,. -· ·IV a • wall tires Lie V\VV 929 . . -. . 4 Door, automatic,. radio. ONLY power dQftr locks, automatic '67 IMPi\l.A 4 dr HT, auto $2.295.00. ' ' · ~~~~"1~· dr'\':;11 ~te:mg, ONLY heater. CVHH 379) $51.00 cruise control, plus all the trans, alr-cond, lo mi. $1495. Jltd SLEMONS l~tPORTS l r: 1 a . car $51 00 "Specia lizing • Ill Iii -Ls lyl 9.AJ9_T_E_S __ , __ R_•$dlio._r 'T99R.i_ a<_»_ features !hat make thi11 one Pvt ply. 644-2950 bef 8 PM 2 LOCATIONS In trad~~~na~~ate • ----. -Per-Month--~f the \\.'Ol'ld:s-mosLJuxur .. •70 Chevy-Impala conv:-P/S;' --120-W;-WARNE-R party. or · Per-Month AT ious automobiles. <~QE). PtB. 350 eng. Xlnt <:Ond. 417 w. WARNER '67 Valiant AT VOLKSWAGEN BILL YATES Nabers Cadillac sms. ,.._""· p~;!,TA .;'.".~19. 2 Door. Imm""'•'•' Faotory BILL YATES Quality" 32852 Valle Road San Juan Capis~ 1374800/493-45111499-~ -'71 CQROLt'AS HERi NOW Wq;9ns, 2 Dn, Coupes Automatict &: 4 Speeds DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 BILL MAXEY !TIOJY!Of TIA! lUll BEACH BLVD. """'· B .. ~ · -141.wss l~H. olQutHwy.onBdl * '69 CORONA-2 DR. XLNT Cond-Lo ''Mi, liito, Air. $17511. Pvt Pty: 673-3751. TRIUMPH Harbour v .w. VOLKSWAGEN 2'00 ~~~0:.!LVD, ·w .. :~1• cy'i".~~~ '""'" ---'-L7=E~A~S~E~--I ~~=·~,:';',';.?i\v:U~~: VOLKSWAGEN High 32852 Valle Road 540-9100 Open Sunday $350. 847-3180 ance. 494-7744, 32852 Valle Road 11711 BEACH BL. 142-443! San Juan <:apistrano 1968 EL DORADO • Fully ========== '71 VW BUG San· Juap Capistrano HUNTINGTON !JEACH . 837--4800/493-4511/499-2261 CHRYSLER '68 ROAD RUNNER: N11: p rf equ i pped, all-leather in. ONL y palnt-c:stn1 int &: brakes 383. 837-4800/493-4511/499-2261 e onnance '64 YW lt7(I VW beige sedan Pirelli terior. Xlnt terms & Interest -----·----P/S, 89&-4106. tires, chrome rims, coco tRle. Pvt pty. $4150. Phorw? '67 CHRYSLER 300 conv. $51 00 64 PLYMOUTH 4-d 318 V8 '64 Le ·Mans s "alt Gltamfna whltt, 'llth ~-in-mats, R/H S2000, 1969 1'!d 549-0377, 8 to Sonly, m f9j. ij.cd w/blk lop, air cond. , • · r, • ~ y terlor, can finance private VW Conv R/H w/v.' coco Lori full pwr. buck. st!!. many Per Month auto tram. Xlnt cond, Aak"': VS, 4 speed, radio, htatu. . r-v• - party, Lie. 865-BEJ mats, xlnt cond. 548-42:p. · e CAD. xtras. Pvt. pty. Must sell . AT ing $525. 968-8506 COLR 626), Ca $799 '69 vw Bug-Xlnt con~ '69 SEO. DE VILLE """""'· BILL y ATES PONTIAC $69? • rs CHICK IVERSON $!650. 5.J6.80J6 '"" s,,. AIR 66'~i:ciNJNG COMET VOLKSW4GEN BILL YATES YW VOLVO Fwl pow". v;oyl top, Lwru,. 32852 Vall• "°'d ,64 GT 0 · VOLl(SWAGEN '69 MUST~NG 1970 HARBOR BLVD. ,·0,, clolh & t•ather interior. '62 Comet-6 cyl. 4 dr, San Juan Capi~tral'M) • • • ..... ~ .,._._d • Good · ~ Valle nu. Coupe. VS, automatic, pow· COSTA MESA ~ Dual comfort seats. Stereo S250 transportatio~'i4~6st 837-4800/4!:i3.4Sll/499-22fi1 4 Speed, r:,adio, he.ater, 8 track San Juan Capistrann er steerin((. power dlsc '68 VW BUii ~ ' multiplrx, power door Jock!!, · ' TOP 'DOLLAR strreo. rllr. American mags, 8374800/493-4511/4~2261 brakes, vinyl roof, factory ':I THINl ... ,_.J tilt & tcl1?scopic ~·heel, Twi· COMET 1963 stn wgn , very ne\v tire!, V8 w/3 carbuer-air conditionina. CZNV- N d & ~ 'VOLV .0, 1;ght Sentinel, power truiik good, new tireS. $295. ato-., -mpl .. tely rebuilt en-·~ FORD hal(-ton pickup, 8 685), ee ~~~ 794~ater. . -Al I open!'r, etc .. e!c. (065AGC) * 5'19-1688 *. . for gin~·~ ~Hsx~11) Will lake fl. be'd. V-8 enrine, .tandard . s249·5 $119 SALE $4m PRICE CLEAN USED CARS tradeorfinanceprivalepar. transf1llllsion, Lie. 91069A 9 ---'"fR1£. OLANDE.R" O""" Co"°IY'' Largo•! CONTINENTAL S.. Andy B'owo ly. 546..,,,2 or 494..,,11. ll.695.'.::M SI.EMONS BIL-L -YATE$ S.le<1;00 of Qu•llty cad;uacs THEODORE '67 FIREBIRD CONV -N be C d'll LINCOLN Coot;<><olal '69 4 ROBINS FORD • 2 LOCATIONS 'VQLKSW A:GEN 111t1 t1AcH cHwv. '" a rs a I QC: dr. ln illint condition. Vinyl 4-Spet'd, radio: heater, bucket 120 w. WARNER 893-$ • 537-6824 2600 l.fARBOR BLVD., root lca!her interior, air-2060 Harbor Blvd. seat11 console. Very clean, 4}1' w. WARNER VB, automatic, radio, heat- 32852 Valle Ro&d NEW-USED-SE RV. Costa Mesa cond,' pwr r;trg & bkrs, p~·r Costa Mesa mechanically A-1, SANTA ANA 546--0.19 er, power steerin&, power San·Juan Capistrano "A"SIOO 0.,..n Sund~" 642-0010 $1250 -::i:=======I brakea, factory air condi· 837-4800/493-451l/499-22S1 ~ .>'f\.I'" .-. '"" windows. 6 ~·ay seat. laPt =~---~--~-I ;;; tlonlng. CXWA.891). '&9 TORINO GT ·66 rr;umph SpdHr" '67 VW Bug removable . he.rd top,-:-4 ltidio. Clean. dlr, MU!!.! sell, speed. radio -heater. Lie. w i 11 finance. (TUU318). TI"A 354. ~995.00. 494-7744 •60 CAD. C'pe. De Ville. All stereo, till wherl. $4,J9:i. Ph '66 Must An I Convertible. Call 968-22S3 T·BIRD $2495 VOLVO extras incl. AIR. Xlnt tn.ns. days 673-7022, nit ea Yellow with black top. V-8 * * 55 Ford ** _ for only $395. Da~ 833-0lOlj_ _548=-~"=''°'·======~I Au Io ma I i c transmission. Needs !IClme \\'Ork VOLVO CLEARANCE ""· 833-014'. • CORVAIR powor ,,.,,,;og. rad;.-& -. Mi1ie olt•t!-646'9269-'66 T·BIRD Conv .. air, pwr, '69 BUICK 6S 4f0 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • CAD heater. Lie. RPL 313. '67 GTQ-ps/pb, automatic. low mil, 1 owner. $1295. JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS ==o-z' ==,__...,..-,.,,,..,. 2 LOCATIONS '6& V\V CAMPER, gd cond. 120 W. WARNER $18Xl or best offer. 417 W. WARNER * 536-4938 * SANTA ANA Phone: 546-4119 1969 Triumph GT -6+. Yellow w/b!k int., radio, 4 k 8 track stereo ¥:/4 spkrs. All new ti~!. new exha.uat. $2000. ·Cal: 833-2262 aft 4. VOLKSWAGEN '63 vw Sedan Great transportation buy! (ASL634) . NEW VW BUG $55.89 pr. month $147.78 down lncludas tu I. Lie. Optn l!nd VW LEASING • AT CHICi<-1VERSON vw llTO HARBOR BLVD. , cosrA MESA- '68 vw Sedan .$865 Rad;o. (WAK O:ll) CARS JN STOCK • $995.00." Xlnt cond. Asking $1400 or 497-1850 or 494-1192 ' '70-STATJON WAGONS '68 CPE. DE VILLE '62 Monza. good ori~ cond. JIM SL.EMONS IMPORTS beat offer. &42-l268. ---------ISp<!rt COupe. Full power, ,70-SEDANS-2 I: 4 Doors FACTORY. Eng recently o'haul. xlnt 2 LOCATIONS '69 T-Blrd, full power, air, factory &Jr ' conditionin&:. _.70-l8000 E CPE. AIR CONDmONING mt'ch cond. $295. 892-7291 120 W. WARNER '69 LE MANS 6-CYL !itereo, private part)'. Call bucket seats: vtnyl, roof, s-4 d Beautiful Baroque gold with beJ 10/alt 5. 417 \V. WARNER $1900. * * 846-6236 eves aft 8 pm. 67:>-1733. sport wheela. (410AG8 ). '70:-l64A~~~~cs Spte s black vinyl top. Plush black _'6_3_C_O_R_V_A_l_R_ro_·b-,-;i-,-,-,,-., SANTA ANA 53395 1800 F Cpe for delivery. l!'ather intl'rior, Full power brakes radio, healM', $125.1 ==,;;P~ho~o~':O' ~546-4:;;;;",:;'===liU~tod~i;;iiC~o~ro~·---;;;i;9900i;iii;iU;itod;;;iii;;C;iaii;rr.;t;..._,...,;9900,;,;~1 Overseas del Specialist. Including till • telescoping Call 557-3350 · '68 P~YM. GJX DEAN LEWIS wh~I. StOl<O AM/FM m"llL LINCOLN '64 Corvair,, Good cond, plex etc;. This loci\) owner Owrhauled eng, Bell!· oUer. car sold and servfc"ea by Na-bers. (\VXE70l).-Call after 5 pm:_83G-04'16. Orange County's Largest 2 Door Sedan. Automatie, ra. Seleclion of Quality Cadillacs dio, dlr. Has had loving Nabers Cadillac: '64 Corvette·Dark blue w/blk 1968 Ha rbor, C.M. '68 Volvo 142A CORVETTE '66 Continental, air, .P~. leather, Xlnt cond. $1625 or olfer. 494-4712. -· MAVERICK care. I YXU 248) Take trade . 2600 HARBOR BLVD., int. 350, 4-spd, flattd wells Will finance private party. Cost& Mesa ; & spoiler, 10" A naen s '70 MAVERICK. auto tra1111, Call Maury aft 10 am 540-9100 Open Sunday \v/Goodyears $1800. Call real pretty, Xlnt cond., $300 494-7506 or 540-3100. 536-0327 aft 4 pm ..:::.:.;::::_.::_.:.;:.;;;.:.:c..._~· I e '61 Cadillac Coupe de Ville ' T.0 .P. 54a-3l50. ·s9 VOLVO 4 dr sedan, like _ Xlnt cond. New tires. $700. ·ss Corvette hrdtp (borh =:=::;:=:====='II new, air conrl, 16,000 mi 673-2554 . tops) 327, 4-spd, AM/FM, MUSTANG $2300 owner 673-6004. 1.:=-='-~C~A~D,_---mag rims. $2575/best oUer. Autos W1ntff 9700 161 CPE. DE VILLE 541--Mn, ~. '86 f'utback 2_+2 :.;.;=-'--'-------! FACTORY '63 CORVE'M'E Convert, 327, Upd £: XlJit cond. LATE MODEL AIRi· CONDm9NING , _ Custm bddy, -R.eal Sharp! $1200 or Ta.ADE or OETtR CADILUCS Fintahe<i: In btauttful tire.mist 1.;':;:127:,S.:.;M:;:S.OO==tt-;0:, ====-I * :Wo;f.lJT:'* WANT1'4D roaewooC:li ,wlthcolotcool'din-'65 Conv. pwr brlJct• A 1<•ANY OTHER atod bo:o,..n viny)«I'•· Sad· COUGAR s ... ri•• r /h ad u..1 -top \ LATE MODEL die leathfr interior, full pow. $850. 54$.4861, 1969 FIREBIRD CONV; • Sp1r~li11g r•d with bl.ck cu1to111 trim, pow•r •t•1ri119 I f•ct•rv •ir. IZLH021 1 52795 1970 OLDS CUTLASS F-1t f. 1ir, pow•r lt••r., 1t•r10 t•p1, 1110111u• l1r 4·1P••d, 1p1rkli119 t•d w/bl1ck ¥i11VI fop & buck1t •••h· flrlfl 215 ) $3295 1969 CAMARO f 4r. H.T. VI , f1ctory 1ir, turbo hydr11111• tic, •ta. Di r• t r•v with ¥inyl top. fYOM '012 1. . $2895 Automatic, rid.lo, htattr. power stetrin;;-vinyl•·roof. sport ._.hetla, low mileage . {\VIB852). • $16,-5 • Prestige CARS Sensible PRl~ES '69 RIVIERA Harbour V.W. $158f,:'. . · "m BEACH BL., 1<244Js Harbour V W HUNTIN.GTON BEACH a • , 68 VW "18711 BEAC:U-BL. 1<2M.l5 HUNTINGTON BEACH GENERAL MOTOJis CAR e r including tilt, teleseo~ '69 Cougar, loaded + air, un--'--'--------11 SEE CHUCK TRAPP OR ing wheel, stereo AM/FM der 14,000 mi'g, S2800 firm. ·69 Mach l, 428, 4-apd, lo ml. BILL MAC CR.ACKEN multiplex new WSW tires,_ 644-1205 wknd1/or aft 7 pm $2600 or reu otter. Alt S Nabers~Cacfllloc -very low ~lleage on this im. ·57 Coua:ar OT, alr, p/1, · pm;-!S:jS=-2lll , Gres macuiale IOcal owner car, 'R/H, Diie braktt. Must 1966 Mu1t&ng' HT r Auto, f1.c 2600 HARBOR ·BLVD.; h. h ;· d ,;_ ---.i--.a ... 11-... "'50 air, ntW tltt1, p/1. White . -1'70 MUST A:NG M1'CH I F11t1ry l!Jr, p•w1r 1l1•rin9, pow1r tl i11 '-'r•k••· A ••ll•·•ovc• tr14• with ~uf Full power, factory air. vinyl roof, AM·FM radio, 11trato bench "1!eat-----tactory - warranty available. {647· BQK t. -$4095-AUTO MATIC WANTED Costa-~Ua '" ic was -•-._ ...... """ ' •JV·--· XliifCoM~S13so:6~5'.72228. by Nabers. ( J~7) Black with black interior, econority -...apeclal, will fin. ance private party. Llc. XEU-224, Open Sunday Orange County's La~t'sl DODGE ru pay top dona~ for )'OUI' :54;;~.;:';;'""""==-'-'-,..=-' :,~·;,™~"'%.~ WE PAY CASH 54 .. 3031 Ext 66-fl. m®t. FOR '.YOUR CAR '65 MUSTANG 6 cyl, CPE R & H xlnt: cond. $895. or best offer 64~2842-528-6305. $1499 CHICK IVERSdN vw '62 VW .Bug ~ CONNELL CHEVROLET 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA ~fESA ~BVWBug 4 speed, radio. heater, dlr. IXDT 628) Will 'ake trade or finance priva!e party. !'116-4052 or 494-6811. 1970 VW Camper Bus West" fa\i1a modrl, pop-top, tent, radio, all extra!!. Gorgeo\l.!i cond. 6,000 mi Slill 1"1mells Radio. 4 speed, excellent con. dition. dlr. IBWM881l Small down, Will finance private party. 546-4052 or 494-61111. '61 vw Color me green. Economy ii;peeial, will finance private party, MFG 969. . S450 CHICK IVERSON vw 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA new'. $3500. call ~7-8117 or 54i-8'248.. ·68-VW~-.. -,-v-t.~Ou-1'~1~...d-_ ~,,,.­ '6:1 VW Bug, metallic brown, cond. Be!ll offer. 543-8458 or reconditioned thn.i-out. Low 673"6830. mileage on recent overhaul. $850. cau days, 545--0401, nites SJ&-2673. '63 vw llUCJ MECHANIC SPECIAL . ·Uc. OKC612 $299 ' CHICK MUON vvi 549-3031 Ex!. fi6 or 6t 1970 HARBOR BLVO. COSTA MESA '59 vw Good running. Be11t oHer! • 642-5172 • '69 VW CAMPER: Xlnt rond. Many {(tru. Make Otter. ** 84)..1257 ** 1958 'VW BUS w/19641500 en- &lnt, ·'51Xl_or belt ott.if, 494- 5352. '67 V\V. lite blu, orig owner. lo mi'ii;, very good cond, 675--0175. 2828 Harbol' Blvd. Cost.I. Meu 54f,.120Q WE PAY TOP CASH for used c:an Ir trucla!: just call us for free estimate, GROTH CHEVROLET Ask for Salts Manq:er 18211 Beach Blvd. Huntlniton Beach &47-6087 KI 9-3331 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS I! :your car 11 extra clet.n, see us first. BAUER BUICK 234 E. 11th St .. • Cost& Meu. 548-7765 IMPORTS WANTED 'tlnnce CoW'ltletL TOP I BUYER BJLl; MAXEY TOYOTA lJ8Kl -Bl .... R. Beach. Pb. 347-35.'it Used C1r1 WE BUY VW BUSES auto spol't ltd '64 V\V w/'ti6 englll('. am/fm, sunrool S600 .. 499-3600. 3"'18116""1~ 8th "St., -SO, guna:-- WE BUY CARS 9625 Garden Cro\'e Blvcl. 5.17·7'177 Ci ll Coll€Cf 'b7 VW Camp.,i1•d Bus Top cond. .673-3269 ~~ 2100 Hubor Blvd. 645-046_6 '65 vw •63 VW, rebuilt engine, new IUG clulcli, low milecage, xlnt UHd C•r• .~ wt' ti co...,. im. 536-3.144 ------~- 9900 A-can maa" 0 • "'· ....,.--~...,..---,.,.--BUICK ""'om m•talllc ""'"' w 'h Large Selectiqn Selection of Quality Cad\Uats --------- Nabers Cadillac '69 DODGE RT, 2600 HARBOR BLVD., FULL POWER+ factory air, Costa Mesa 21,000 carefully driven mile!!. 540-9100 Open Sunday Must liqu idate immediate- S200 + take ovf'r payment.II ly. 1st $2677 bu,Ys. #1049. oo '65 Cad Coovl. All pwr, CHICK IVERSON Xlnt cond. 557-3331. YW e CAD. 549-3031 Ext. ti6 or 67 1969 CONVERTIBLE 1970 HARBOR BLVD. FACTORY ·AIR CONDITIONING '70 Dodge Challenger, (ull E>qllisite Empire white w/ pwr, air cond. 3-5: 54().(i900, matching top. Plush red leather inter. Full power, tilt & telescopic steering ext 222 Eve: 645-2538. FIREBIRD Stl're<'I AM-FA-f, Multiplex, --------- etc. Locally owned, LOW ·~ Firebird 350-17,IXKI mi, 4- mileage beauty. Sold & ser-1pd, loaded! Beaut. $2000. viced hy us. (ZLK751). Pric--"='-'='='=T=o='="="-=3=77=3=== t'd to sell 1oday! ' • Orange Coun1y's Largl':llt Selection o·t Quafity Cadillacs FORD Ni!~~,;~~e~~c -,6-6 -F-Al-RLA_N_E_W_A_G_oN Costa Mesa 540-9100 Open Sunday e '61 Cadillac 4 dr HT-Like new, 58,000 mi. Full power, a\r. !J68.'6829. e CAD. '69 CPE. DE l/ILLE FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING Automatic, !)Ower 11teering, air conn, stereo tape, dlr. (TAY 279) Will take car ln trade or finance private par. ty_ 546-40.12 or 494-6811. ATTENTION BUYERS Let us help yo-u lind • - car at n~t to yotl. Sellers (\M welcome. Call now &12.4431 Auto. Referral Service Full power, vinyl top, leatJ:tcr interior, till • t!'le1cop1ng "'heel stereo AM/YM multi. plex, 'etc. This \oclll owner ·67 Fair1anc conv. P/1, r&h, car sold & serviced by Na· elect lop. 300 CID. 42.000. be.rs. (Z.YC5651. Sharp fnt, xlnL mech. No Orange County'11 Utrgest fault. S995. 8-16-1165 Si:'1ec tron·o( Quality GJdlllaca '69 FORD Ranch Wag~n. Nabers Cadlll111: A"'" tac ,;, PIS - OLDSMOBILE e OLDSMOBILE '67 91 AlR CONDITIONING Thia cfean ronvc~le h1.1 full power, tlh teJ,senplng ~·heel, radio & heater, white- wall tifes. Very nice condf· lion due lo the low mileaae & fine upkttp, IVEH6821. SALE $1666 PRICE Nabers Cadillac 2600 HARBOR BLVD., Costa Mt!sa 5'10·9100 Open Sunl'laY '62 Cutlass V8, 4 ,peed, radio, heater, (QRH 277) $599 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Road San Juan Caplst.ra.no 837-4800149.1-4511/ 499-2261 e ·OLDS '67 DELTA U 40 H.T. FACTORY j AIR CONDITIONING Green miaf w/ma~ching bro· cade in1erior. Hydramatic transml11sion. WSW, elc. A beautiful car from a local owner. !UUJ644l Nabers Cadillac 26l)J ~!ARBOR BLVD., Costl Meaa 540-9100 Open Sunday 26(.0 HARBOR BLVD., 111erro/rad~. Xlnt .ond. Costa ,.1caa I ~S.~'·~'~"~50~·-837~-'~!IO-'--l.~--'66 Toronado JITO • Fu 11 5"0-9lOO ' open Sunday 1964 J''airlane Sport. Coupe, power, radial tires, good Vi 289, p/i1. iOOd tlrta, new oond. Best offer. Call beautiful lace work. YPU. 001. Of VW Campers, CAMARO hrakes, $550 days 536--3804; 547-7191 , Mon-F'ri 9-5; evea '69 RIVIERA-Lie No. XOX· eves 536-7438 "":.:'-';....:507;:,:;·~~----JI •.ooo il\HH. 1071ACN)1 - $3495 1970 G.T.O. J dr. H.T. l11utiful 9014 with t 1it411w••4 .. t11yl lep & l11i•rior. F•1lory air co11di• tioni119. 121 277651 $3895 1967 MUSTANG 2 + 2 390 1119., r•clio, h•1i•r, 111•w•r •t.1r. ho ••ptio111lly 111e .. to.'"il••t • sir. (00f41) $1995 1969 CHEV. MALIBU 396 F-•&I. •Ir, bl1(k .. i11yl top, 1p1rklift'l1 vi i· •tow •xt1ri or. !ZICFBf7J $3195 1969 GTO 4-SPEED l•tuliful V1rd1ro Gr1111, pow•r 1l••rlftf I ,ow1r cli1c 'br•k•1 . I l .000 rnil11 I f1..- tory .J1rr111ty. !714AFXJ $2795 1961 CHEV. MALIB\I U11b11i1 .. 1bly b11uti.fuf. II.ck w/lll1c~ 111• t•rlor, VI , •uforn1fic, ,ow1r tf11rin9, low 111rr... 1vzz1441 $2195 1969 PLYMOUTH GTX Only 14,000 1111. Gold with 8row11 l•p I l ~t1rior, buc••t 1t1h, '•clit, ht r., pow1t ••••'· 440 v.1. IYU41111 $2895 CLOSID IU NDAYI s.v.r.1 ''""' aatomim Vans, Kambls , VW to choose fron1 CHICK IVE1t50N 8-1, New & UHd VW l~lall O.llwry 563011 E•I 66.or..SJ_ CHICK IVEltSON Im HARBOR BLVD. VW IS4 Air, ate~, Nu Mlchtlln 1962 Ford stallon wagon. Ft& 1964 OLDS CUUaM ronvrt· tires. Powder blu. w/drk '68 CAMAR.0-8 cyl, aood 1"1, Automatic. Mechanics Bucket scats, centt!r COO· I R Q y CA R V E R blu t09. ~531» cuh. For (000. Pvt pt)', W7S. 1U W. Special. Phon9 ~alter 901e. JP.nt tond. 1595 ot of· Quick Slle! Pvt. Pt,y: (Qast Hwy, N.B, ~55.51 ~6:,.P:,;·:::M:,.·~~=~--J_,,;';:";;,·;.~;;:;;;f:~~-=---il m1-. CHEV-·lt··-OLIT-'811 GA~ 5QO.Pl/pb, "" T'li OLDS Station waaoo • RO LL S QYC E '6LBJY.1P\A: NU ~ 1lr, ~ ~k. 11trY JDOd !_poMr. r\1!!1_~11 _ _ - ilr, Fff', 52,000 ml. . • cond. to ml. 642-n:i otttt. f1W907 NO mattir Wbat it II, )'Oii 54W031 Eld. '8 Of ct 1271111. * -" 546-4475 e •19 aie., lmJOala • Air, '8' COUNTRY Sq\11,. -· e '68 OLDS CUTLASS Ur 2925.HARllOR BOULEVARD, COST/\ MESA '88 ·MERCEDES BENZ 230 l5L coupe-roadittr. Automatic, radio, bet.ttr, poWtr •teertna. factot7 air conditioning. (ZSJ302), $4795 '66 JAGUAR 2 PLUS 2 Coupe. Autornatlc, radio. and heater, extremely low mllt1ae. Leather 1ntfrfor and ehrome wlre weeela . CSYW808)' $3195 '67 CONTINENTAL Coupe. Full power, factory air conditionlnJr, power rt· tllnlni •~at, Orla:in&J 34,000 milts. IYWS613J. s2995 BAUER BUICK IN COSTA MESA 234,E. 17th St. COSTA MISA CAft .. u tt With • DAILY lJJO HARBOR BLVD. P!LOI' WANT ADI -'* COSTA MESA lNi iu1c11: 111v1l111A potpb. v1ny1 "'•· 11S10. eau _, "'-'Ill --N•• !tld1p. "" air. •"· 21.000 5464444 $2900/otter. 6'1'>1007 _•_t,._r_6_._,_~ _____ ._ttr._•_· _Mc.•k_•_o'-'H-'•r'-.-""-'·i._1793-"" ml. 646-230'5. 'l!!"'""'"'""''"""'""'"'"""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"..;'l••!!!!!!l••••lf t I I " " ' .. .. • • " .. ,. ' ' . • .' • .. ' ,• ' . • ' • .. ' ' .• .. ' ( i: " ' .. ' " ' :· ! I r ' ,. ' -1 ' • . . • • • • • , . I t • ' ' ' I l ~ I r I • l f i I • ' I • I • • H . ~L'( PILOT . -• • • I; • • ... ••• I usqA CHOlt\ •· lARGE,EYEI . . I \ .. ,, • t • • . ... - • . . PllCES EFFICTIYE WEDNESDAY THROUGH TUESDAY OCT01117,1,9,10,1J,U (13 - SJ ANDING Rib Roast USDACHOICE . OVE~lENDER . eof'IEltSS SHOUlDlR CtO ... 4STAR -l SPECIALS ARE EXTRA SAVINGS MADE POSSIBlf BY SPECIAL PURCHASES FROM THE MANUFACTURER AND PAS'SED ON TO YOU! ' USDA CHOICE e BONE IN ROUND STEAK. USDA CHOICE e BONE IN RUMP ROAST USDA CHOICE e CENTER CUT 7BONE STEAK FARMER JOHN e PICNIC STYLE PORK . . ROAST 95,i. 851i. 691i. FARM ER JOHN e FAMILY PACK e SLICED PORK LOIN CHOPS FARME~ JOHN. a.oz. PACKAGE LlltlK SA USA GI 29c USDA'CHOICE e BONELES,S, GOURMET CUT -EYE Of-THE ·149 ROUND RO.A .ST · 1--=-1ti._ EXCELLENT FOR BAR BEGUE- BEEF -:s&ort Ribs -49~. #scooiERPiiswbo·~ 39c -· H~;~r.;~ Punch 33c DEPENDABLE QUALITY GROUND BEEF FAD BACON #c;kN8;k$~;~;;·31c ·cARQus.iiwaili··· 59c . • #·i~;~t~j0~ice 33c '·• MORTON Pl,ES ... m 05·H·3h• c exTRA FANCY . NORTHWEST APPLES • LUNCH.Box s1zE c lb. ;,.. DELM()NTE •<f>.OZ •P;neoppl•·G•oP•fwa C 'W' MINUTEMAID •lf>.OZ •FROZEN .C RED ·DELICIOUS . •·FRUIT DRINK 31 i# Orange Juice 65 .. EXTRA FANCY You• c•o•c• ,.QoELMONTE •3oaCAN°•sot10PAc""7· C . 8.1NcH 37 "JONATHAN 00 "~·32.0,UNCEBOTILE •Btue . - ..,,,; YELLOW, GREEN or WITH FREE GLOVE PINK SAKKARA - BATHOIL c EACH PLAYTEX GLOVES CLOSE-Up e 6.2-0Z .. FAMILY S1ZE . TOOTHl!ASTE 0 1/2'!1.0NG.9.l!EBBLE GRAINEO e M.olOED' • LAC~ BROWN AND WHITE COlOR·•·VOIT .IUNiOR FOOTBAa.1. 7~s W TOMATOES ~ i#· FAD Pumpkin Pie c CAUF_oRNIAGRO~N •FANCY ~. • MANHATIAN •S·OZ ~ALLVARIETIE25 9 . BOXOF2 .. •REGUlAA: • 7 PIPPINS . . s # Lunch Meats c 41J.. CONFIDETS · 6 c CALIFORNIA GROW~. EXTRA ·~NC:v ·-. __ _ " .•ARMERJOHN ••• oz.CHU• 29 . ··. 8A8Yscon·•··•'3•• Newb ••• 105 Golden Delicious B h • c ... DIAPERS . ••·REGULAR raunsc we11•r · v · . '"'' · ,, ~- ' ~"=' . \ 1 83 ... BABYSCOTIA,B,C.ORDSll.E c •'Diaper Panties " .. KNUDSEN e "48-0UNCE ~·orange Juice • Gllllfif CDliN~ FORGET-ME-NOT FLOWERS e FREs'H CUT 98 C ·GLADIOLUS DOZ.SIZl l UNCH DEL MONTE e 26-0UNCE BOTTLE a··CAISUP~--- • f ifi'"CICKTAll ~ FLORIDAWHITE -'.-._ -· fOI •100 -:---ORAPll!RUIT.=;._J ~-+-- ucH 49c WHOLE PINIAP.PLIS . ' H0."'2 e RUSSET POTATOES BROWN ONIONS . . • .,. . \ ' • ' • t •• 17